HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-12-29 - Orange Coast Pilot• • ' ~ ~Y' :AFTBNOON, DECEMBER 29, ff'7,f' /" , ................... .......
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l'olb111ay be ·iuffeHlig'~~qd'fN)d'n09es·lhese days along
Ille Orange <Q>Ut ,IJut, wumer climes prevail in Sydney, Australia,
... :ZO.ye&NJJ4,.SUJie 'l!Jsci>ok demonstrates .. Jlo.w ,terrible it-would be
J.l<lhe w0rld M llat Bd'ther., ,were-no'Winl8r-summer in Australia.
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Air. Attack
Heaviest· •
Ill 3 Years
From Wire Service•
SAIGON -'The heaviest U.S. air at-
tacks, on North, Vi~tnam in more than
three yeiirS continued fo"r the fotirtli dly
today with no letup in sight. North.Viet-
nam claimed foUr planes were soot down,
A broadcast dispatch from Hanoi of the
official Vietnam News Agency said ~
F4 PhantOm jets were shot down in
Quang Virih and Nghe An provinces whllt
attacking "populous ar.eas." Hanoi claims
seven· American aircraft were downed in
previous raids since Sunday.
U.S. mllltary.sourooi said the bombinc
would conUnue Thursday in a fifth day,
Returning pUots reported seeing MlGs tor the rm time, and missiles.
The U.S. command retorted the MlGr
stayed al e1treme range and said there
was only spoi'a'.dlc antialrcratt fire, fn..
ditating bad weather· was fon:ing the
, ~pnots. lo bomb from bi&h alUtudes. (See ..,.~. 'poae·l). • , '
• l"9<. ground war also Intensified after a ~uloll~·~ ~tl\eio ........
ond90Utllaoalol~ ~
alleilin& of South Vllbiimese -Ill the rubber plantation eou!1liy alone the
l>order DDl'llf"'!I ol Saigon.
Pilots said Ibey saw at less! three SAM
missiles !ired et them ond tbat lhere
p:>.sslbly were more. Other pjlols said
they saw MIGs ~·Several 1bnes" but that
in all but, one case the Ml Gs were at 1 distance and that there never were more
than two !\!!Gs togelher.
The last MIGs reported in action was
before Chris'tmas when at least three FU:
were repOrled shot down over La0t by
the MIGs -part1of the Sliplane loss thit
helped tooch oil the current bombing
campaign. heaviest since President Nixon
took offic'e.
U.S. dJplomaUc sources reported that
the armada or 3SO planes and helicopters
flew more than .500 attack strikes and
hundreds more support missions. in the
Th-st 3\!o days of lbe t:QUDd-lhe-block bom·
bing that began Sunday.
To · keep the attack force al fuJI
strength, a scheduled port leave for the
carrier Constellation wu delayed and it
continued to launch its planes from
the Tonkin Gulf, along with the carrier
O>ral Sea.
The 7lh· Fleet's third carrier, the
Enterprise, was sent to the lndJan Ocean
during the India-Pakistan. war, and no
replacement was available ror the
Constellation.
The Constellation and the carol sea are
supplying about lSO fighter-bombers to
t~ force attacking NOt"th Vietnam. The
rest of the ·aircraft' come from bases irl
(See V!En>IAM, Pap I)
2 Gunmen Shoot ,, .. ~, .-...~-:,,'1~'
:Sunny Day_~fi~gs Orange Resident .· . .
S'tay 1
· · · In Pomona. Fray Jn Me.rcury : :ff00£lings An 0rangeman·1a 1n fair condition ...
• • cloy after be was shot In lbe leg and a
• ·. ' · companion fatally wounded by 'two men After ..,. ol the wettest ~ ·In -Interstate & and U.S. IOI were open armed wilh sbotguns wJio prec1 !J>1o a
itouthem CaWomla hlltory, the rain was 'l'UeSday, but heavy snowfall and icy·con-Pomona office Tuesday a~n.
finally gone today -and in ).~ place, dif,iona in higher areas such as Ca.Ufornll Kennetti Buchanan miffered the Jee
Were record low temperatures •tuch sent · ·h· t . wound as he sat at hb de!lt at the bualltt:ds of motorltll 1iyddlng and· 1¥1.waxs 11 ~d 30.1".t~ San Bemardmo Pomona,Medical Cen"'r, a medical refer·
ctaishlng on ~ (Olds. . Moun~ms staffed can f?r more than an ral center for low Income families in
OraflMe Coast reiidlnts awoke to hour as ~nds Oed the snow-clogged Pomona
rqp.rcut1 ·~adtrlgt'·in tile ,Jow 4<11 1bti pea4 Emanuel Leon Cheek, 30, or Los
rdomlng, whUe.tl>t_guick treen on rfl9UO""'"' ·~Loll~. where-doz.ens of 1treell Alig'eles, another employe of the center, ~ ..,.11s procllic<d cong,.Uon ''ao bad became muuature labs and ,. .. "II was killed Instantly when one blasl struck
yoo w-1 bellev•ill." acc:ordio& lo a motorlsls wm briefly marooned •lo!> him In lbe chezt.
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Stor111~~g::_~11~ · ~~r£: . .
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'. suaii1lis TAKE ~VWM• Ol"m,..t111t!*i1N lllTIWICl'TO NtWilolt'r'flA.. • ',· H~· ~a .. 1R~ .... 1..,.... ROl.n to Slide°"~ 5'1rvo .Th""'8h MoUth<Of Harlior, • ' .. • : l " r . . . ' Woman's ' ' . Swi.ss · Re jeci.· · •
U.S: Atten!pt
To Grab Leary. Fire Death 'Acciilental'
~·!!' llJre -. • BERN, Switzerland -Sims aulhorftita Tbe deall> iii a Coeona del'Mar "oman
tod1y rejected 1 lJnited.I States" demand whose nude body was found 1n her burn-
for elfradltlon ol Dr. 'l'imotl>y Lwy, illl ,.partment bas ~ niJed.a&idental
Beach 'dl'tliicMrgis111iJd.Jtlttieieal*d ,,.._.S,0,.L)'IM' ,21,-waa ll>ui><I °"'·
llso acCOUlllal for. lhe dlJheveled at!' pearance ol lbe aparlnient. .
Funeral services bave been -for 2 p.m. Thuraday at Pacific View
Memorial Park. I
LSD CU111st wb!> was con~iclecf ..... ~ by corooer•a=· '°"' tor Harol~'r.\inlck.
from the mfnlmum ~ priaon coJon1 " rr ~Y: · 1 by ffremeo' ~tUJn&
at san !Luil 'Ob15po'. 1..1 •4> • ~ • • , ,. ~ ,the tilaie that efupted"" iir, 1iei single • ' 1 ' • rJ'
At the' same Uri1e ·the S'11ss officlalj. .blCFobm !'-Partme\K'at50flEernlUf Ave. P'lo Pub1!,_I...-!. , :!:
denied tbe U.S.'tX1n'dltlon:demand, Ibey lnv~~gator~ ~,ev'e ,Mlss·Mledel bad · l t . Ullfrelf:, ~
al&o declined Leary•1.req\lest for -aJylwn been smollng fn 1:lea an<l·ht.r. cliarette 1g. . . . , • . r ~
in Switzerland. ' nited· the rbecldlng. !n 4n \attempt ' l01 • ·o· . JI I 'I! J ·_
'r.eary', now 51, was :arresteil In LagUna escape the e.flaln!s. ~be. ran, .l!'lo lhe . ver ouaay.s·. . ';
Beach on Woodland Drive L'l December ot bat.hrOom,where,.•h~ feitaud ¥f.her bead, •
1968 when detective Ne.ii Purcell spatted police,.theorlze. .. ' 1 1 , "· • HoHaay edJUohs of. tl)e IW:uv PILOT
him, his .wife Rosem!9' !Ind son John in , .pealh w~srcamed by anl<*e·,lnhaiation, will be published botll. Fr~y and Sltm'·
a station wag9n' trc;m which oozed ·Ute .Minick aai4 • . · day far booie deUVery during •moriJnl
distinct arom'> of marijuana. _, Detedlveo said they or1gJna1Jy believed hours. • ~
Leary was convicted of drug charges in ~ was Joul play intGlved,1n the death Fridayis wUal detdlfr.e tor sa:t
Orqe ' ~ty Superior .Coui1, He )lee..,. \he. ape~l ,apP<ared lo have Dim .. A-Lin. d1S1ifted ads will be mo
escaJJt<)'-lrom prloon In 1970,.jolned lhe Jocbetntlonransaof hercked....,~ lhe _ condition and up to 3:30 p.m. on Tlnindq far,~
BlaCk ·Panthers in Al~eria and after a 8 •-v· · · · Year's Day ads . 1 t ,,._,~ · '~ _ _.._ ~,·~,. --'-" ~ve Set, Ed Cibbal:eW Aid !heir "--;;pj;;:;_i/;d.ii'::d:''-=-••·,,..,.,..,. lnvtlllicaljoo ljJo.wod 11Ja only·~ ol All DAJLY PILOT olllcelc""' ill doAil swru olndali lllitd'tt•'9ill ..Wbe bp.fo 1r1mna on the body ,was •lbe one ~llll!P on bolh •day1 ol lhe ~-a,c.Jollln
Jmmlgral'"• • aalhori!iet lo 'de c J a~ "" her1lleod. • ·, Dept. calls regarding dellJerlo9 WtD ill
whetlier : ~ Can \:ollUnue ' living' .in , ''She WllS )'P!lll"n\IY sleepln( In lhe handled unlil .00. ob l!olb ~ys. ..
Swibirland. .. · nude ~11he ~e ~ findher-ro:c>m1n
Leary ·was not immediately .avail8ble names, he s8td.' . She probably ~am~
for comment, but his lawyer, Dr. Horace confused In her attempts to get out of the
Mastronardi said he was "very satisfied apartment and JH'K>dced quite a few
with the\dec'islon.:' thin(s d'-:tr." , ,
Mastronardi said It ,..,, unlikely Im-Cllibarelll Aid lhe es-heat from
mliraUon o£fici8b would forCe Leary to the flte melted· IOme f'1l'Dilhlngs which
leave the country 1ince the government
has denied -the ofilclal U.S. re<\uest tor hin:~=.m •• 1 ssld lh• ministry ·Son, 27, Charged
1'flmed to order Leary's · exiradlUOn · · • , ·
beci ..... lhe reque•t conlalned 1orma1 ... ·In, Murder Try rorr •hteb could not be correctld. ~t.'alao ~e~~ed Leary's ,Plea !or asylWn. .A fe.thm' and IDrl quarrel lhat aJlegedlY l:4~~~1>'.r~t~b ~·~ ~ .!','S'l~"J._~l\>.it.i.T..'r.*" .a~pt led "' nounctment said Vie .__.15 ... l_,-lfl a 27·tarr-ola
It .. 1 .... llkl , :. .. _ bu ~been .we1tnt~1ter man on charges of assau.lt
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Button .up.i....:-;iif,'U.get
down Into tlle -~' lollowecl 'by dOlidy lllJes and chllly
(508) t.niperatutes m 'lbill'ldoy. • INsmE TODA.'Y
Red Chtua WGI ~ bfg 1torv
•! 1971 ... t/Jc i!IUrnatio..U
front, ofld !he Lor A•P<k• I
tartllqwok< of Feb. 9 ri.. top
tuor.V..,bel<l llreman. • 111,eir ~· -ts (llOPpod up from a Wilnt3iel' In the wailing room 11 cloo-!lrllll" Ooaaly lodiy,~ 11p f".'111' wett;.,... do!lnpour that cleposlled neat-· f1!i time said two•Nqm ~ wllked
&ioay-'oo'<ll-'wbl<b.dllnjled 1y . .a ~of "'ter<nh city. • ib '•lld lilasted tbe'two meo ·and quickly
• ·..,.. .....,~, . wfll> Intent lo cOmmlt mlll)ler
granled utJiim b\ a. 'Ihm fi'{I • . 0rqe .c.onty ~· ~s ruec1
.lllerfll'OPillCtrom ~~ cfiarfes,q~ wll'M v.n... no)'d ~r t.ea!J, ... &1"11frjvacl llr...,,,_'t"!' taa lfeeCO SI, aftfr lhey ~ill to
wftll 11'1 1ill(; Blllfeinary, on lmw 11, ball what Floyd'• lather iaJc[' waa blJ
eou1 .... 1o •torr o/ tile -· ... cording to edifor1, 111rDt)lfd. 1111
'11U .Anodalol llrcu. Stones .,.1
P(1(/0 14. .;,......p ol tM '""""of~-" · 'Ille Nallonal Weatller Sorvlce set tbe ffed •
Tlli rainfall nc-...,...r from s.111.. . total ralnfaIJ'Jn Southern 'Calilomla -l'l>lice COClld ropoli 00 motive for the
ct. iD Santa Ana to a floodllke 1.1 July I at 6.tl inchea,.eompared lo 1.11 ror atlaclt but aatd the wife of one of tht vlc-
readll'll ln Silvtrldl ~ , 1lhe same ·period last year. December. Ums bad rect.ntly received threateliing
· weatt>erdamqe1urnelfromlow·1Ylng bdwtw, was· far welt.r than hut 1olr . phone<ealls.
property to Soutllland-bll)lwllS :• • lhe with IJI Inches or rllhl-llll•Jnst t.12 bl Police !ear~ that prior to the
wll<rJoaed """8Jme lo lbe grip of a 1970. shooting lbe gunmen walked Into the .CW coJd sna,p; 1'lt 'CIJitomia Righwiy 'The'obtlook for tht rei\ of the' Weelr: Jt Pomona Medical Center on the prete1t of
Patrol eaid ll waa ....-nl*! by aO many for partly cloudy skiu, peak 1~· gelttng employment inConn•Uon. 1llty
nccldtnt a;llt thtt lnveattgators wert peraturw over 80 degrees .and "pc.I returned at least once q:lln to find out
bandlin& only the'molt teriOld.· football weather" New Year'• Day. •hen the office closed for tbe day.
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from,Alptta, ana rtnted a clialet In tbt <"'!''• bid lo munler blin. -in SlHu alpine resort of Vlll&rasuf-O!Deet:1 said the )'bUllle\' Floyd al·
Ollon. temptea lo strangle Robert l'ICJl'd, IO, of
Slflu police arre,oted hlm there In wl)' 8722 Roo1eve1t Midway City, at lhe
Jujy at tbe ~ of lbe U.S. embuly helaht of a qu1;.,e1 ~llegedly spar!led by
alld detained blm hrleOy In lhe "Bolt-'lbe lather's refusal to pul up 'ball !or tbe
Mermet" prllon In Laueanne1 · aon'1 jailed girl friend.
He w11 rde-oo ball pending lbe Deputies "'Jd the younger Floyd will be
govemmenl'• nillng on boll> hia requeal arraigned on lhe charges lodll' In
for ellle aJld lhe 11.S. extradltlon plea. ,Westmlnllu Munktpal Cow1. .
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I DAJL't' 'ILOl S • Wtdf!UNy, O«tll!Wr 29, 1971
llospitals'
•
: County Suit
•
onfirmed
A d.-t7 1ttorne1 general's argumen,t
t Oruce County Superior Court had
jurildlctlon In a lawsuit filed aga inst
at.ate by a nine-hospital organization bMa quashed by a Superior Court
gl.
1 Jut'!gt Claude Owens rejected the plea
iflled i,by 1 Deputy Attorney Genera) ~ward Belasco and confirmed a trial
:date of Jan. 11 for the lawsuit filed by the
Ewly formed California H e a I t h
rovidtrs Auociation. Pretrial motions
ill be heanl Jan. 3.
• Thi! borpltal IJOOP Includes Hoag
jlloopital, N<Wporl Beach. and South ~ Community Hospital, South
]lapnJ. amohg its membtra. C.•ludp Owtm' ruling appeared to clear
't"IY for trial or the hospital group's
~Uo111 that the st.ate ls permitting
~ construction of unwantedrhospltals in
""8' Cowl\)/.
... It further argues in an action which
ij\ames director of public health !Aul!!:
ylor as defe~ant that the quality or
edlcal care Jn· Orange COunty can be
peeled to ri pldly decline I! present
nstniclion plans for several proposed
w hospitals are allowed to proceed.
Seven proposed ho.spltals, in Orange
unty could be affected if the judge
"':ig;ed to the trial agrees with CHPA
~egattons that backer! of many pro-
posed hospitals have violated the spirit of
the 1969 Duffy Act.
That legislation erempted builders of
private ho!pitals from obtaining the now
needed approval of the local Health Plan-
Ding Council if they ahowed evidence of
ccnstrucUon by July 1, 1971.
CHPA principals claim that the
deadline led to the filing of 1 rash of
"phony" hospital plans. J'n one case, they
claim. a hospital group filed for
permission to build a hospital on ground
they didn 't own at the time of the ap-
plication.
Mission Community Hospital In Mission
Viejo arfd Saddltback Co m m u n I t y
Hospital were two of 133 California
hospitals proposed before the state's
deadline.
Mlsslon Community has now opened
~d Saddleback Community Hospital has "'gun construction.
... Santa Margarita de Loi ! ;ores Hospital
tn San Juan Ca.Plstrano baa betn offered
by CHPA as an example or a proposed
f>Ospltal which allegedly failed to meet
fequiremtnts that should be jUJt as rigid-
~ enforced against other applicants. Sta~ ofnclals rejected plans for the
•J.2a..bed hospital in a dtnlal which in.
duded the comment that the faclllty'1
~ers did not own the alte.
T•
:Guard Wounded
Foiling Brinks
H9ldup Atte~pt
WS ANGELES (UPI) -A Brinks
guard who lost a fool raei! to a gunman'!
bullet was in satisfactory condition today
with a leg wound after an attempted
bank holdup Tuesday in Century City. ·
_ Henry McCarthy, one of two guards
making a morning delivery to United
.catifornia Bank , was wounded when one
ol the gunmen drew a semiautomatic rl·
Ce from an umbrella and fired.
.., The gunmen ordered the guards to halt,
'but they made a dash for the safety of
.the armored car and Mccarthy was hit in
the left leg. The other guard made it.
_ Money spilled from fallen sacks but the
(wo holdup men apparently panicked and
faced down Santa Monica Boulevard in a
green sedan. None of the cash was lost,
boweve r, said police.
_ FBI agents joined police in an ex·
tensive search of the area but It failed lo
turn up any suspec l.5. McCarthy was
OOspltali.ted at the UCLA Medical Center.
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OU.N•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
QlNtGI COAST "11LISHIHCI Cl:JM'AH"{
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OAJl.'f" •rlOT, wffh "41ldl '-~ *-t ~,, .... IJ '"'"II"'" Hiit ••CWI S-.. ,. 111 _.nll llf"*W IOI l ..,.._ tl<ldl.
N.....-1 hid'. ,... """'"'· l'l ... 1"'91M
IMdl. •-'-"' \ltl!fY, '"' '*-"" ~·· '*ltM«. ......... -,.,.....i llltlM. l>tlfw.1"1 """'""' ... ~ lil M • WW .., l trM:. C-141 M...a.
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....., cw ........ ,.111 •• ""'"" lttdl .... '-!• M•.. C4ot"9nl"· "*'-r~llll .,, ......... •• --.llllyl ., -11 ., ,, _,..,.........., lftoll~, NU -~t~.
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PRESIDENT NIXON ESCORTS WEST GERMAN CHANCELLOR WILLY BRANDT IN FLORIDA
Chief Executive He1.dln9 for Sin Clemente and Metting With J1p1n'1 Sito on Thursday
From Page. I ·
VIETNAM.· .•
SOulh Vietnam and Thail and. ..
Radio Hanoi clalmed that a seventh
U.S. plane was shot down Tuesday, in
Quang Binh Province just north of the
demilitarized r.one. It said nothing about
the crew. Radio Hanoi reported earlier
that five pl~nes were shot down on Sun-
day and a sixth on Monday. It said a
number of the pilots were killed or cap-
tured.
The U.S. Command refused to com-
ment on the report or the number ot
strikes flown, Hanoi's claims of seven
planes do'wned or its rewrt tbat the
raiders had killed or wounded many
civilians. The command said that for
security reasons it would disclose no
details of the operation until it was com·
pleted. •
Despite the magnitude of. the eam-
paign, the< U.S. !>dense Department
denied that it had turned the clock back
to 1968, before President Lyndon B.
Johnson halted the ifmblng of North
Vietnam. -
"'Wt have not resumed the bombing
campaign of the North," Pentagon
spokesman Jerry W. Frledheim said 1n
Washington. "Our operations are limited
duration strl'«es. They are limited 11 lo
geography and targets."
When newsmen pointed out thlt
Johnson's officials also claimed bombing
attacks were lim ited as to gergets~
Frledhe.im replied, "They were not neat'""
Jy as restricted as now."
Sheriff 'Guest'
In Own. Jail,
Raps Conditions
MARKSVILLE, La. (A P) -Sheriff F.
0 . "Potch" Didier, a prisoner In his own
"crackerbox" jail, hopes that something
good will result from his 4Xlay sentence.
Didier. who was sentenced after con-
viction on a malfeasance charge arising
from an alleged scheme to bilk a scrap
metal dealer, com mitted himself to jail
Tuesday. Dr. Henry Kaufman , the
Avoyelles Parish coroner who
automatically became acting sheriff,
made Didier a trusty.
"This is going lo give me a good time
to really analy1e the jall situalion, which
I've been wanting to do for some time,
and write up the weaknesses of the }ail
and get this to the public." Didier said.
He said he hoped his report would con-
vince the parish police jury that the jail
is dilapidated and needs to be replaced.
''This jail is nothing but &. cracker·
box," he said.
Didier is being held In a fou rth·floor
room assigned to trusted Inmates.
"I don't expect to leave the fourth
floor, period." he a aid.
''I )lave trusties who go all over the
courthouse, work all over the courthouse,
cleaning and all that, but I'm not going to
leave the fourth Door."
Pentngon Considers
National Guard Draft
By FRED S. HOFFMAN
WASHINGTON (AP) -Top Pentagon
officials an studying the possjbility of
drafting young men into the Army Na·
tlonal Guard.
There are some 1egal and political
hangups, but guard sources say the draft
JJJ.ay be the only way to bolster a saggin g
but critical part of the nation's military
establishment.
Army Guard strength has Qipped to its
lowest level in six years -384,000, 16,000
below the authorized level.
Guard officials think they may lose
1,1nother 80,000 citizen-soldiers before next
fall and then face serious manpower
shortages.
For now, they are relying on higher
pay and other incentives to re-enlistment
to reverse the diminishing size of units
around the country.
Mission Viejo
Neighbors' Feud
Runneth Over
What Orange County sheriff's officers
described as a Jong standing battle
between two Mission Viejo neighbors led
to their adopting a peace keeping role
Tuesday wh en one homeowner , com-
plained that his neighbor had deli~ately
rerouted the communal drainage <fi,tch.
Officers said the rerouting spilled
water and mud over the complaini ng
resident's property and apparently was
the last straw in what was described by
the complaintant as a long history of
malicious mischief.
Deputies were told that the offending
neighbor erected a block wall between
the two homes last summer and refused
to clea n up the debris that spilled on the
other side.
Their relationship furthe r deteriorated,
officers were told. when the wall builder
allegedly allowed his dog to roam his
neighbor's property at will in what was
described as a deliberate attempt to in·
troduce some novel landscaping to the
area.
Officers are still investigating the in·
cident.
Brasselle Guilt y
In Barroom Figl1t
VAN NUYS (UPI) -Actor Keefe
Brasselle has pleaded guilty to a charge
of assault with a deadly weapon in the
&hooting a man in a barrom brawl.
Sentencing was scheduled for Jan. 24.
The oHense carries a penalty of up to 10
years in prison and a 15,000 fine .
And they emphasized that Secretary of
Defense Melvin R. Laird would probably
seek congressional approval before going
ahead with a draft into the part-time
Army. But the idea is a Jive one, officia ls
say.
The idea of using the draft to support
the guard, and other military reserves, Ls
starUing because it comes even as the
Nixon administration Ls trying to end the
draft for the regular armed forces by
mid·l973.
But Penlagon officials do not see any
necessary conDict. They cont.end the
go\lernment can continue to cut the siu
of the regular forces only if it can main-
tain a strong guard and reserves to meet
crisis situations.
If the country and Congress can accept
that reasoning, they may also accept
drafting young men into the guard, the
officials say.
But unt il that becomes nteessary. of·
ficials are banking on what they call an
"incentive package," chiefly a proposed
re-enlbtment bonUJ, to st.em guard man-
power losses.
With ct1ngressional pressure on to hold
down /the defense budget, guard officials
fear tbat 'the bonus, costing ~ million,
will fall by the wayside.
Defense sources indicated Laird would
hold off on any decision regarding the
draft and the guard until he has had a
chance to gau-ge the effects of recent
military pay increases, which trickle
down to gu&rdsmen, and of a recruiting
campaign.
In any event, officials agree the law is
hazy as to whether there is now authority
to draft men into the National Guard.
President Nixon and Laird both ha ve
said they want some kind of standby
draft authority kept on the books to han-
dle emergency mobillt.alion, even after
the regular forced draft expires.
Some Pentagon officials believe a draft
for the guard would keep the Selective
Service machinery running at just such a
low level.
TODAY
by
PREVENTION, NOT CURES
Remember when you got that
shiny new watch !or Christmas
last year? Chances are good that
it looked great, and kept good time.
Bands'" Battle"
Now. arter a run year of use, Its
lime to get it back into "like new"
condition . \Vithin a few days your
'vatch can be cleaned, polished and
serviced, keeping it looking its be st
and keeping you on time !or those
Important appointments.
Michigan, Stanford Ha ve at It
LOS ANGELES lUPI) -A con·
frontation between members of the
University of hf.ichlgan and Stanford
bands was desc ribed today as "humorous
and nonmalicious" by David Ruiz,
manager or the Stanford musicians.
There was no immediate comment
from George Cavender, leader of the
h1i chigan band.
Both bands are housed at dormitories
on lhe UCLA campus and while the
1'1lcht&an band was drilling 1\Jesday for
its appearance at lhe Rose Bowl game
New Year's Day, some members of the
Stanford band went out to watch.
According to a slory flied by reporter
Ann Getz. of tl'le Detroit News, the
MlchJian band ...,.,., "stoned, apat upon.
partly blockllded during parade drill and
verbally 1ssautted by rival Stanford
1tudents.''
Ruiz who said he observed the entire
Incident 111d this was "highly ex-
aggersted."
"We were preparing to go outdoor& for
rehearsa l and about 65 of our guys -
there are 182 in the band -saw the
Michigan band marching and heard their
drum section. Qur guys are very spirited
and fun-loving and they went up and lined
the streeli and 11.·ere cheering .
"l didn't hear any obscenilies. At no
time did anyone throw anything. At no
time did anyone spit. A Jot of our
members joined In behind the h1\chigan
band and If one is tak ing it seriously
tnOURh. one could say they were mock-
ing. There was humor in ii. Of courst,
Mr. Cavender, took it very seriously. He
did not think it was funny 111 all. The
situation was fun and humorous and non.
malicious.
"Last night Michiga n and Stanford
band members were together at ll party
h<>sted by UCLA and we laughed about
it."
Upkeep on your watch is a good
case of "an ounce of prevention is
worth a pound of cure." Annual
cleaning and minor repair such
as replacing a scratched or 'crack·
ed crystal, can prevent major
damage lo the finely calibrated
inner workings of your watch.
\Vatch repairs are handled right
at our store, Vi•here you are as·
sured of quality wo rkmanship. re-
liability and safety. We are full y
insured for your protection and
have skilled craltsmen to handle
you r needs.
StArl the new year on time after
a visit to our store. '
AO'I.
. --.,
. f~lt!fl TtiP •
'
Nixon, Bi:~ndt
• t
Discuss Ch·ina
....
f'Nm Wirt Servkt1
, KEV BISCAYNE, Fla. -President
NJxoo today turned to his upcoming trips
to China and the Soviet Union as prime
1Ubjects for the second and last day of
his summit conference wlth West
Wisconsin
Entry Set
By Lindsay
MADISON, Wis. (UP!l -John V.
Lindsay, a newcomer to the Democratic
Party, officially entered the Wisconsin
presidential primary today and then set
off on an aerial tour to cover the state's
largest cities and at least one of the
smallest. •
The tall. dapper New York mayor, who
entered the Florida primary Tuesday,
said he wou ld carry on his fight for the
presidential nomina tion in Wisconsin's
April 4 primary.
"l expect a crucial test, for the beliefs
I bring to this election the principles on
which I run, are a part of Wisconsin's
()Im tradition of progressive politics and
vital reform," Lindsay said.
"The people of Wiscon!in have always
been independent," he said. "They have
kept alive to this day the heritage of the
great Robert La Follette. Wisconsin had
led the fight for cleaner water and decent
wages and falr taeatment for workers in
factories and on farms."
Lindsay sa.id both Wisconsin urban and
rural people "share common needs and
common tiopes with the people who live
in my city aid "every city and town and
suburb in thls country."
Lindsay repeated his statements that
he was running as a representative of the
"America that Washlnglon has ignort:d ."
He said he Intended to "help shatter
the illusions spun by the N J x o n
Administration."
From Madison, the stale's second
largest city, Lindsay was scheduled to fly
to two of the middle·siud cities -Eau
Claire and La Crosse.
A side trip from Eau Claire was to take
him to Cadott, a city with a population of
le.!11,than 1,000.
Lindsay was scheduled to appear in
~Uwaukee, the state'1 largest city~
tonight.
Max Steiner, 83,
Composer, Dies
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -~cademy
Award·winnlng composer Max Steiner, a
veteran or 42 years In I.he film lndUJtry
who scored "Gone With The Wind," has
died at age 83.
Steiner, who !Cored such films as "The
Cane Mutiny," "Life With Father,"
"Treasure of the Sierra Madre" and
•·Battle. Cry," won an Oscar in 1944 for
the score to lhe motion picture "Since
You Went Away."
Steiner died Tuesday In a hospital. He
is survived by his widow, Leonetta.
Funeral servicts are scheduled Thurs.
day.
German Chancellor Willy Brandt.
Nixon wu parUcularly interested ln
thi s not only to explain the historic viJlta
but also to gain from the impress.iOlll
Brandt picked up in his meetings la1t
summer with Russian Jeaders.
Officials on both sides said the talks
have ~n a success, conducled with
warmth and full understanding and
agreement on the wide range or subject..
Nixon and Brandt resumed their secood
and final round of talks today in the
President's paneled study facing Bis--
cayne Bay.
Before dep ar tin g the Four
Ambassadors Hotel in Miami where he
spent the night, Brandt-wal ked out on the
terrace and looked out at the ocean. H1
told a reporter the meeting has been
''very fine, very relaxed, very useful."
Th'e major de velopment from
Tuesday's opening rounds was a pledge
by Nixon, in the words of Secretary of
State William P . FWgers. "to dG
everything we can to maintain our troop
strength in Europe."
Nixon announced that Ambassador
David Kennedy had been appointed the
U.S. ambassador to the North Atlantic
Treaty Organization. Officials said the
announcement underscored the American
commitment to the Atlantic alliance.
Brandt had sought reassur.ances of a
continued tlrong American presence in
Europe to buttress his negotiating posl·
tion to reaching an understanding with
East Germany.
Rogers, in his meeting with Foreign
Minis ter Walter Scheel, and Nixon, ln his
se!lsion with Brandt, stressed that the
United States will in no wa y negotiate
any agreement with the Soviet Union on
troop cuts or other European matlera
outside the framework of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization.
"Jn other words," Rogers to 1 d
reporters, "we are not going to make any
agr.eement about reducing our forces in
Europe unless we do it in consultation
and in full cooperation with our allies."
Rogers said he and Nixon told their
German counterparts the same holds
true concerning the Soviet proposed
European liecurity conference.
"Obviously we will discuss the Euro-
pean security conference when we are in
Moscow," Rogers said, "just as our allies
discussed the European security con·
ference with the Soviet Union, but it
would not be done ercept in a way that is
fully consonant with the position that w1
all take."
Some doubt was expressed by both
delegationa that the recenUy negotiated
treaty between Moscow and Bonn can be
ratified before Nixon goes to Russia in
May. .
' I \
Prisoner Alleges
Attack in Jail
Orange County sheriff's officers today
are investigating a newly booked
prisoner's allegations that he was sex·
ually assaulted by fellow Inmates shortly
alter his admission to the county jail.
'The 33-year.old prisoner told deputies
that he was jumped by "five or six
males" who pinned him down while the
assault took place.
Prisoners held in the area where the
alleged attack took place are being ques-
tioned today by jail officers.
How
to make
Money
(look beauliftil)
'M1h it 1o&\ Mntif11I bf .,..rinf it in be jewel!'" TMrr eofttl'
.,. out•, oaa be Mt ia 14 Ur1t fol• fn.m••, ind woni. 1 aumbtr ol
•iltmnt wwyt : .atckl10H, P"ldutt, hr1celet1, ete. Coi11 Jewe.lrp
coetill'llM to ht lffll 11111. wonr. llTtfJ"htre, 1ad make. utra ,,..
Wl '1fu. eo..-. Md ... ov oomgleu -~ c.dilp.
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVINIENT TlltMS
IANKJ..MEAICAAD-MASTER CHAR&E
24 YEAll:S JN SAMI LOCATION
PHO NE 141·1401
-·---.. ·~.
~unungion ~di . .
· Foan~ Valle1
. .
VOL 64, NO. 310, 4 SECTIONS, 48 P.A:&ES
.....
•
N.Y. Stoel£•
• '
•
Unificati~n : · Battle · Goes . ' to Supreme . Courti
' ' •
' The baillc tgllnll the COllll'ov<riw
unification plan for lhe Huntington Beach
Union High S'ehOOl District hai reached
the Call(omia' Supreme Court.
A .petitioR'hls been filed for a hearing
befort the court by rour Wt!t Orange
Cou!lty achoo! dlatrlcb. All are opposed
to the conaoll\iation plan.
lb aim is lo seej< a "111 <I maodat.
which w9U\d fozu . ll\l 'llraoge C.untY
Superior C.urt lo h~ a lawsuit dlrede1'
agllilsl lh• C.unty C.nunittee on · Schqof . .. ~ '
't. ...
The disputed plan would join the Foun-
tain Valley and 0coao Vl.w School
Distrktl into a new school system serv-
ing students from tdnderJljrt.n ""°"'h
t:lth 11ade. • • ·•
A sin)ilar combioauaD. would be ar-
fected' by j<>ining .seat ,...... and' Los
Atamllol School Dillrldl~ rOmalllinf
two dlslrlcli ::.. Hun~• lleic1i· CllY
aod Weatmlnsler -'riuld unllj alol1g
lhelr o'lln bOundarl.ea. ' · • ~,11-i. l>dna! .. ~ oJ>'
poaed b7 -~·ollltl>li, lhe plan . .
• "'.t • . . ' '
U.S. l\:eeps Up Bombing
.Re_ds Claim ~.:planes Downed .in Heavy Attacks.
Fnm Wtre Smlces'
SAIGON -The !><aviest U.S. air a~ tacks on North Vietnam in mOre than
three Y,ears continued for the foUrtb day
today with no letup in sight. North Viet-
nam claimed four planu were shot dOwn.
A broadcast dispatch' from Haootof the
official Vietnam News Agency · Siid the
F4 Phantom jets were shot down in
Quang Vlnh and Nghe ..,n pi-ovinces white
attacJUng "populous areas." Hanoi clailns
1even Ainericln alrtraft were downed in
Rain Makes
E~it-:-Leaves
Cold.Draft
Airer one of -t6o weltal 'weeks In
Sou!Ii!rli ~ Jds"'1, the~ '°u fln~y 1.one jo<\AY -. and 1n 11s • p1aoe
were record JQw temperaturu which sent ' hundreds of motorists' lllddding and•
crashing on ley !)>8dl. '. · ·
Orange Coast residents '" afioke to
mercucy reading! ·in lhe low 40s this
ming, WhUt1.the\qUick freeze OD motm-'
""'.__... aln roads ptoduced eoegestion "so tiad
yp11 wouldn ~ belleye jl," according lo a
Lake AITowhead fireman.
Orange County·today mopped up<from
a soggy sesllon of storms which dumped"
an average of nve'illcbes of predpitation.
The rainfall figures .ranged fi'oui 13.I( irr
ches in Santa Ana to a, ISoodllie 9.1
reading in SUverado Canyon.
Weather damage turned from low-lying
property to Southland highways as the
\faterlogged ro·ads froze In the .grip of a
new cold snap. The California HJgbway
Patrol said It was swamped by IO many
accident calls that investigators were
handling on1;· the most serious.
Interstate 5 and U-.S. 101. were open
Tuesday, but heavy snowfall.and icy•
diUons in higher ar.eas such as qallf~a
highways 18 and 30 in the San Bernardino
Mountains stalled cars for more than an
hour as thousands fled the anow<logged
peaks.
In Las Angeles, where ~ns oi ttreet.t
became miniature lakes and several
motorists were briefly marooned atop
their cars, residents mowed. up from a
week-Jong downpour that deposited near-
ly six inches o( water on the city~ ~
The National Weather Service •set ~
total rainfall in Southern Callfomii sioct
July 1at1.91 lnches, compared to 9.97 for
the same period last year. December.
however, was far wetter than last year
with 6.31 inches of rain against 4.52 in
1970. The outlook for the rest of the week is
for partly cloudy skies, peak tem-
peratures over 00 degrees and "good
football weather" New Year'• Day.
* * *
pi-evtous•raJds ·sioce Sunday.
U.S. milljary "'!fC<S iald".the bQmblnf
woUld 'conljllue Thursday !D a filth'~y'.
Returning pilots reported ,..Ing MIGs
for the first time, and missiles.
· The U.S. commanc!I retorted the MICs
stayJ,at exp-~e range and said there
was·'only sporadic antiaircraft fire, in-
dicating bad weather was forcing t!le
pllo~.I<> bomb from .high alUtudes. (S..
story; ·pllotoa, page · 4). ·
The .ground war also· intensified after 1
1
Christmas lull and ttporls from Plmorn
Ptnh 'alld Ibero were hii .. 1tacb north
and southeast ol Pbnom Penh and heavy
shelling of South Vietnamese bases In the
rubber planlaUon country along lhe
border northwest of Saigon.
Pilots said they saw at least three SAM
ni1sslles fired a1 them and that there
possibly were more. Other pilots said
they 8'W MIGs "11everal times " but that
ill all Jmt one case the MJGs wer~ at • distance and that there never were mora
$11.l Million Bond Sale
I -• ; .
~ ~d fo~SeacJi,,Facility · . --~ .
BY Al.AN DIRK1N
.. . . " • l'f". ""' -• '.l'!itfeil k ~:,._,b IS ~ v..-lisbl( till s.fe;:;flil?~u1oo wortl!Gf. l>oii!IJ to ~ con1lnilllon, q!,the ~
civic center and pollceiacUlty.
C!ty r:elJ;C;lrts ~ve long referred to tht
new.center-to bt bullt ;6n Ii lt-acre atte
oppoSite Ille HunUngloit B<ach Hlgb
~I -u an 18.i mlll)9n pro]ecl
BU!,Ac\hls City Admlnislralor'Brandaf
CaiUt · wli01w beaded planning for lbt
facility, eap(alned lltls momlng lhal the
incruse m· $1"1 million' was lo iptlude
b)tetosl 'Poi'mnnli durl\11 lhe 11--.tli
constructiOD period and a reserve fund to
covtr •year's rent. •
Those' two ttema t0\,11 IU7 mllioa.
CaStle sii14 !hat II was necesaary for the
dty to have th.is moneY io meet pro:
visions of the ·bond aales,-b.lt agreed that
UUs money dJd not necessarily have to be ,
railed tbrou&)I the boulill lhem11lvos. ·•·u if,. lbal much money in hand ~·'"*--t6~1Jn ,lhebotld ialt,. e aid. "!hot .,. woo!ld t1'ied lo
U (II I ~al ln1JI. food 'lo tJill the
ii(ifeH would, see we were cOvertd
I the !irsl ill¥~ paY,Jlltnts and had a
reRtVe for one year'• rent."
; The .bonds are l!llnl· sold tiy the Hw>-tmcton Belcb .. Public Facilities Corp., a
non-prOnt body-which will lease the civic
center lo the dly.
The bida Oil the Ji,000 :is.year bonda ...
clue1cl• be received Jan. 11 and rold Ibo
aanie day. The couocll ...uJ meet at ,,,.,
p.m. ~n. u.
FlDancie Mperls flay,. worlrtd out lhe
Int.rest ,,._nla OD the bull lhal the
inttrUI rate will be 1.75 pezunl, but the
ltaff ill believed to be hop&ng lhat tbt·ule
mi&)il be~ at near 61> pel'<tllt.
This city iJJn a 80Und fiscal condition,"
Castle D id. "For Ulat • reuon and
becam •e prese1rt1Y baye a low percen-
7 SL Q k tage of bonded indebtednus we have a
. qOrt Ua es '~1s"':~ i:;~1;w;"eslimlltec! -s 01 the
i. • center. bre~k d9wn : Shake Southland Buie c ... 1 .. c11o .............. $6,484,500 . Comtruction coD;tlng:tDC)' ........ $299,500
. HOLLtsiBR (A" _ Seven minor OJHlte, Off-1lte im:::lements ... M46,000
earthquakes alo~ lhe famed San ~~a ... ~ .. :::::'.:';:::
Andreaa J;:1\ ro eel through lhe hill Legal, uaaacl11 ............... : :$265,050 cquntry o ct!r.ere. startling residents AdYuce lite rental .... , .... _ .... $350,000
j>ul ca~ no age. lloblotal ....................... $8,765,050 "Just 1 IlUle rock and roll, but not too ._._ d · 1 t· •1 M• -'"'""'''"'• ur1ng cons rue ton ; . ·!I ,_,.,,;J much lbab," 18id San Benito c.unty ~e lud (onl! year's rent) .-.1951,575
Deputy' Sberlff Gene Bereaini. Lt11: Interest e a r n i n g 1 at 4
lo H~~ ':ny.fu~~~taq::: ~i:iof;: percent .......... , ... , ........... $240,000
'"'"' ......, P.rbdj>ll amou1, ........ : ... n1,100.ooo
oooe ~ any property damage. Coostructlon ()f ·the center ia 11ehedtded
'llio «UnlVerstty of Calllorala lobelinlnFebnwyaodbecomplelecfln
~le stallon ot B e r ~ e I e y ~ ;ii mMllll:
~ lhe strongest of the quakes · Oiiier tables in lhO bood proepedos
registered 4.0 on the Richter scale, • abow that the .average yearfy brterut
force J?OWuful enough to cam moderate payments on the center wil1 be about
damage. The other quakes reglslef<d 19511,000 and lhal tt all the inlensl Is In·
from 3.0 to 3.7. They OCCDrred rrom 2:33 eluded through 1991 the total cost of the
lo 5,31,p.m. project wUI be $2U million. ·
.The Los Angeles earthquake last Feb. I Another table shows 1th4t the city as of
reglstued 8.6. June· 30, 1971 had a cash balance of $9. l
Hollister is located about 70 miles million but most of thls money i1
soutbeut of San Francisco. (Set CENTERi Pase 2)
County Weleo1ne~ Rain
Fresli "Water Supply Worth Estimnted $4 Million
Flve inchel or welcome raln -aod
even $0JTle snow -tell on Orange County
dllrlng the past seven dsy1 adding 1111,li»
acre feet of rresh water to underground
and surface reaervotrs w;tth an estimated
value of more l.han "' mWlon. " County nood ,q,ntrol Dlslrl<I oHltjal
John Kem said today the wt!ek long ralnll
fell rather comlstent1y and gently in
moet areas and only 10,000 acre feet was
lostlo !he_
Snow wu rtF!ed thla morning In
•
Sllvorlido aod Modlalal canyons and on ahtt. highway culveR, Oooding lhat
Sbtlago Peale (saddleback), roadway."
''B«a°" of lhe dryneaa ol the aoU aod "From a flood control llandpoinl, the
O» consistent rate ot precipitation, molt · nlDI have been eaey on the county," the
of the storm water was absorbed' Into tbt distrtct oWclal stated. ' ' H o w t v er •
grotJnd or trJpped in water comervat\on residents are warned that another large bnhia and •reservoln,'' Kern aaid. Mries of storml within a few weeb
"Runoff wu not heavy tn most ar~ nilght be dangerous."
but last lllonday the Westm!Nler and Kem aald Ilea.; ln\wlly ol nlnfall on Analiein>kber City flood control :chan-· the now well 18turat.d ground mlgbl lead
nela reached capacity level and San lo eatena!Ve flooding, parllcuiarly ln
Di<fO Creek near UC lrYlne uceeded the areu, ol heavier aolls and unimproved
capadty of the MacArlltur Boulevard dlrl Oood cootrol channels.
'
than IWO MIGs lofether,
The last MIGs 'reported· in act1oa was
before Chrlslmas wben•al lout -Fu w'ere reported. shot clown over Laos by
the M1G1 -part-of the siJ:plant toss that
helped touch oll the current bombing
campaign, heaviest since President.Ni.Ion
took office. ·
U.S. diplomatic sources repomd that
the armada of S50 planes ·and helicopters
flew more than 500 it.tact strikes and
(Ste VIETNAM, Pap Z)
..
Darts HutWd
lnw Tires,
~a~f':;W 9~'1rer-:.
11? TOM BARLEY · • !! .. J .. """ .....
A yq '~DI wiio tilld lliilliltl••.
Beoch ptllil'" !hit felloy empioytl II Ids
Mobile "'"Ice ll<!llon !Ill"' u11nc .~
datja lo ~ --·today
became tht.l!l"'-Uon'I ~~ID
ita.caae aiainal nine~
in a widespread auto ropoir ~.
Wesley Ciriener; IO, laatlfled as the
Orange C4unly SUperior Couil tiial, wonl
Into lb fourth day lhal be "didn't like
what was going ·on'' at.the Belch ·IQd
Edlp atallon operat.d al lhe !lqle 'by Clltlalot>hor .Enriquez, 15, of. 'l\l8Z Volga
Drive, lilllllinclon Beach.
Grlener tqld Jll'Ol'CUlor BJcbaM .81tn-
too lhal allimlanls bolst.d ~ oil tht
racb In the atallon In the ~ lhal
they bad spoiled Ure domage 'l!bile lhe
autos "'" being 1iven ,.. mt oil al. lhe
lalan4s. -(
Then, lhe Tustin man alld, •playing
darts were reJ)eatedly ja'mmed into the
ttrea ·an11 the · ....Uing 4anac• pointed
out'1o cnou~ufig C\ll&loftitri' Who ...,.
oft.n persuaded lo buy btw !Itta:
Griener said attendants carried boWes, or oil or brike fluld which wett uaed to
spray the shock absorbers of cars being·
examined on the rack.
He repeateCI the teitimony of other p_ro-
secuUon wltnessea In telling the jury that
motorists were ·then warned that their
shock absorbers wert leakl[iJ and should
be Immediately replaced.
Grlener·was asked by 'defeDH attorney
Al S10J<ke about a reporlad CUil shC>rlage.
at the Movil station sborUy'before he left
lhe facility operated by· EDFiqllet and
Henry Culonguay, it, ()f 7Stll C.m-
rnodore Drive, Hunllnglon Beach. ·
Bui Grlener mtde it cletr lo Slenlon
thtl no one bad ever followed up lhe ,.,._
geitl/>n lhal bl. take a lie clot.cfOr tat 0\1
statemenls be made lo both Hunllqton
B<acb police llJCf tM ·or.mp ,eoun11 Grand Jury. -.__ .... ... I
"Are you willing to take tbf:·test now?~
Stenton uked. · -, ·
"Yea," the Youn& attendant replied.
Grtener's testimony follOwed that of an
Army colonel who told the Jilry• lhil new,
tires on his wife's car were I1J>laced at a
aervlce staUon atle.gedly involved In an
auto repair combine that rqed from
Seal B<ach 1o San Clemente,
LI. C.I. Charlel Diehl ,ol · Rou,
Callfornls, told St.nton 11111 the linll ~
(See llEP418..Pa&e I) . .
Pilot ·P.riblUhes
'Over Holidays
Holiday editions ol the DAILY. PILO'l'
will be publilbed both Friday aod Satur-
day !or home delivery durin( momln&
houn.
Fridl,f'• wual deadline for Saturday
Dime-A-Line clusllled ads wtll be moveit
up lo l :30 p.m .. oo Tbunday for New
Year'• Day ads.
• All DAILY PJVlT·olrt..I will be clOlld
on bolli days• O( lbe ltolldoy. CimJUllon
J;>epl calls reglrdlng dellvtilea will be
baodlad 1mUI noon oo bolh d.Qa.
has won the endorlem.ent of the Los
Alamllos, Seal B<ach and HunUngton
e..c11 ctb-.&oof dlslr1e1'.
Its critics say the Four-Way Plan, as ii
Is called, woold ad•eraely offed the
ec!Ucatloo.tl opportunlUea ol '1 percent of
the school chlli!rin in wesr Oranp-£o!Jn. ty, .. ~
Opponma of the plan have made two
major dalms: Cloe Is that the plan would
pnJled · the 'WR!lli of • ...., 1c11oo1t distrists while ~ c:n&Ung•.' 'fo, v'e.~t y. .. .. ...
pockets'' ln others. The second objection:
i.s lhat the eommlttee did not conduct a
lmparlial publlc hearing Oil l!Je jilan.
1n ib decision lb uphold lhe Four.Wal"
Plan, the Superior Coor! ruled that lb&
committee is a ~e,lt&lJlaUve bod)"'
wbose deciafon. may not ~ cballenged;
The mulls <I the plan llse\l were not ale
il$ue during'that e_arUer'IUit • -· ,
The plan b now before lhe stat. board'
of FAucatill!) J<ir ratillca!)oi!. If It is •I>" • joroved'll wtll be _.,.ndi!d ftl"l...i ..
by the' people' nut J-. ' . .. ' . . --
. . . . . ~·
fi1tat'•· tlfe1i'~h~ ~ . .
' ' ' } . ' . . ~Cool 1dOwn, .. lf&Ddm~," SQ& JaCkie Na:talia, 3, as ~. John Natalia
of, sailnas.boldil Jrlsli •sweepsi.tes t\<;ket worth $180,000. Even ~J:.:;•::;•·'~ie:.':.·• ..:sister::,::"''~" Bo:;.::•:::Pl:;•;• .;_w;;b,;;;o,..:ls:...:;•ix::...:.m:;•..:•..:lli..:':.• ::'m=il=ed:.:..ov....::er:....:.•l..:ct:..:ory=·---
• ri
~~Q~. ·n.:f inishes Firs~ . .,.._, .
But Fails · to Break Mark
' . ' f •
TASMAN!A-'KlalOa•ll out •ofNewporl'
-h waa !Int .horilei lit lhe ·syclney-
H~'~""h~ r~ loday blll ihe · t.s ~ff • Y~cht Club · tAlrY skippered hy
Jim I{ttroy fell . eight ltours short of set· ~a ne\Vi·record·;in~1 650-mil! jaunt.
Thi ''ll'fool•""'8el !Ogg"1 an elapSed
time of"three 'days, 12.1 bpurs 48 mlnujes"
and 21 seconds, elghl boun longer lha1>
the record aet in !!IQ hy another u:s.
yacht, OndlM I. • · Klaloi. n lost time 1n nearly.a day of
llgbl wealher but made up for some ol lt
Cniollng Storm Bay and up lhe River
Illnrllll lo lhe llnlab JIM and ·hundreds'
of cheen·from ~· • ' Two,.Am-. boala·-Ondlpe u and·
American Eagle -and. New Zealand's llo<ca'nOer and Ausfralla'a .SllU botlled
tor aecond ii! storm l!ay. Wt!b 100 nilles Cl 'uie fmlah line, Klaloa
111htld 1 10.mUe lead over•'I;d Turner's· "
C~evalier; 83,
• Lis~ as GoOd
l'Alll&. (uPIJ -Enlertalner Maurice
Che\'olle1" was, In• good condllloll loday al
Neclrer Hoepttaf, allboutlli. a ,,..klJ
maculne pul out a special edillon
,_tin& bis death.
Tbl ~ teod, "Mama, Mama," be
mdrmUrtd, and bl.I ejuclOMd .•• ''Tbe
maculne, 1'rancit lllmanche, a !'a o
publl-~ of a pr1esl who
"admlnlst.red lul rllea aod carried with
him lhe last.wonts ol Cbev~er."
Delplie the beadllnee, C b e v a 1 t e r ,
bolpltaflaed linoe Dtc. ii wltJ a IOrloUI
kidney allm"1t, spent a calm nlfhl and
wu. 111n geDtrtl aood o.ndit¥>n" th1s
morning, ,,..tal olliciala aald. '1110 SI-year-old l)ar's b!O\)d pressure.
i and t.mpenturo were normal. Tha
ttal ,aald tt will not Issue a medical
ethl on Cbev'1ler lonl,1111.
Aml!riC!ln Eagle. "I'b1td ,on elapeed' Um~
at.that point tn the race was.Sumner A.: ' . ~ ... "Huey" Lang's 'IJ.foot ketch Ondine 11! :
Ondine Il, lrom 'lhti, Larchmont, N.Y:.
Yacht Club, waa sklpPered hy t.ng all\J
the American Eagle,' a conveI'tet:t
America's Cup 12-meter '!&chi, h~ 'I\uner of Atlanta at the helm'.' ·i
J Trucks Fired On ·• . ' CHARLESTON, W. Va. (UPI) .,;
Gunmen walUng in ambush filed ahols al
rental trucks deUvering·C bar l e.s to• ~papers in 'aeparate lncldtlils M~
ahd Tuesday, llate police reported. :
Oru11e •
.
'c:.ua
--
•
• Button up your overcoat: il'll get ~
down intO the thirties ovemlght,
followed by cloudy al<les and chUly •
(SOs) temperaturu on Thursday.
INSIDE TODAY . • Red China toaa lhe big •tory ;
of 1971 Oii th• lnlern<lttcmol •
front , and the Los Angele1 ..
earlhqll41«' of F•b. 9 th• top ,
CaJjfomia Jtorv oJ tht vcar. cc-
conflng lo •dltort '"""¥•d b¥ •
the Auocioted Prtn. Stam~ °" ..
PO/It· 14. -..
•
•
I
1
. .,
•
I
)
\
,;a OAU.Y OllGl H . WOClllftd'1, -19, l9n
Donald Doek .Under Fire ·, .
Leftist Cliile Book Harangues Disney Characters
~ 111 WILLWI ,. NICllOLllON
&\NTJAGO, ·ai1te~~ to ~
])ona1d Duck," a nt:" book attacking
.6>nald and other Walt Disney characters
• "' "elm enemies'! of Ch.lle's leflbt
pvemmenl and lls supporters, has
~ a big Rller here.
·.Slnce lls release last week, the 161-page
biOoi:, which among other thlngs claims a
''sado-masochistic '' rtlatlonship exists
between Donald and his nephews, has
been snapped up in bookstom.
"We're all out.•: a clerl: said Tuesday
In the Book Fair, the biggest book store
1n Slntli.go. Other capita) book stores
allo repcrted that their stocks were ex-
bauoled.
Tbe baoll •u wrlttoa 1>y two leltilll,
Ariel Dorfmao, 1 UWary erlUe-whO
_._ In the Juvenll• publlcallom d!vlolon
of Quimantu, tht governm<iit P11bllllhln&
house; and Armand Maltelarl, a Belgian
• sociologist who heads Qulmantu's "mass
rommunlcations" division.
The publishing house rt.CenUy launched
several publicatilons aimed at the
Chilean youth market to compete with
Disney comic book!, widely distributed
here in Spanish, and other non-govern-
ment publlcaUons.
A Quimantu comic book called "Cabro
Chico" -Little Kid -competes directly
with the Donald Duck C:Om.lcs. A recent
Corona del Mar Woman's
Fire Death 'Accidental'
The dtath of a ·eorona del Mar woman
whose nude body was found ln her burn-
ing apartment has been ruled accidental
by coroner'• Investigator Harold Minick.
SaUy Lynne Maedel, 21 , was found ear·
1y Tuesday rqomlng by firemen battling
the blaze that erupted in he r single
bedroom apartment al 500 Fernleal Ave.
Investigators believe Mlss Maedel had
been smoking In bed and her cigarette ig-
nited · lbe bedding. In an attempt to
eiclpe-the names, she ran into the
blthroom where she fell and hit her head,
police theorize. i.Dealh waa caused by moke inhalation,
Minick Aid. . ,
y>ret.ectivea said they orlgtnally believed
~ wai foul play involved In the death
because the apartment appeared to have
'"
been ransacked and lhe coodltlon and
locaUOn of her body.
Detective Sgt. Ed Cibbarelli said their
Investigation showed the only evidence of
trauma on lhe body was the one bump
on her head.·
"Sl;le was apparently sleeping 1n the
nude when she awoke to find her room In
flames," he said. "She probably S>ecame
confused in her attempts to get out of the
apartment and knocked quite a few
things over." .
Cibbarelli said the eitreme heat from
the ft1'f! melted some furnishings which
abo accounted for lhe disheveled ap-
pearance of the apartment.
Funeral services have been scheduled
for 2 p.m. Thursday at Paclfic View
Memorial Park.
When It Rains in State
~:" . . . ..
It Pours-Lots of Chaos
~·. •• '
• By JOHN BREWER r. , 411MllMll l"i:t-Wr1• ' j.katn Is rain Is rain ls rain. E1cept in
llMl-Plagued Southern California.
.:J!llh most sections getting Jess than 14
l6l!hea of Wet stuff a year, when lt rains
I~ a Happening.
~vtn when the weathennan warns of
1Howers, ill hard to believe, Thousands of
umbrellas are left at home. Slickers and
~ halS are unheard of. And few f~lttes
.,,.. built for rain. Most grew so fasl that
6-iinage systems never cau;bt up with
111,o population.
,:;tms 'l~k an lnc.h and a half ~I rain f!.ll in 1-~ay In l.<J's Angeles. The resulta
~predictable. Wa"' 1ur1t1f dowo t.be
lln!et.S, marooning -wnbrelli-less and
O"'fihoe-less office workers and 1hop-
per1 and fioodlng some homes.
)«:Flash outs " caused by dust and water
C!>mbining on transformers blacked out
~igbborhoods. Traffic a c c I d e n t s
rilcketed. Rain stories with agate ralnlall
ttb1es beat out the bombing of North
Vietnam for newspaper banners. ~e Chamber of Commerce talked
Hout "liquid sunshine."
:Many persons look forward to rain,
happy at the change of pace. It binds
wsons together. Those who walk in lone-
1~ untouchable paths when the sun's out
qowd under wanlngs and together lau1h or curse at the falling water.
;li8o1ses who usually never lose their
1pufy decorum have to dash through the
~s like scarecrows. Women who see
the world through a makeup mask leave
Uje eyelashes at home. Nobody cares
w)\at you look like when it's raining. :aatn cleans the skies of smog.
• • >
•
Ol4M61 COA'ST ..
DAILY PILOT
OM.WW COUT l"UlltsHINO COM'AH'V
•••• ,.. N. w •••
.......... ftPtlllOlllltl'
J at\ •. c.,.1 ..
ft9 ""*"' -.._.I .....
Tlri•M&• 'fl\'n IEdllllr
1\o111t• A. Mu.,~!11• MMllllll Efllw
Ala111 Ditlr.i11 •
W•I er..... ctunlY Efnw
H•llti ..... ai..a OHke
17171 S.11411 l •ula,ar4
M1!1l11t Aitlrt11tt P.O. S... 790, 91641 --""""" a.di! m .._, ,..,,._ C•'-...... 1 * w..-t I.Ir &tNtt • ......,. ,_., »» ""'"""' ...... 11111 c--..: as ,..,.. &a ~ ._,
Los Angeles doesn't just look washed
alter a good downpour. Jt looks new. It
smells new.
A computer pointing his radiator cap
toward the city is astounded by the
mosaic of shapes and colors alter a rain .
It's as ii a freshJy painted Hollywood set
has been rolled on stage. The brown
blanket is go11e. _
The moUbtalnl that surround the city
are usullJ,y nothlng but shadows behind a
gray backdrop. Now they burst forth.
Sharj>..Uned. In front. Three-dlmenslonal.,
Often topped with unbelievable white
IOOW.
Laments science fiction writer Ray
Bradbury, 1"t0day 1 clrlr sJcY qmly comes
alter a rain • ..,dJ t 111•!11• the 11t1rt •cha
with remem t:i'anct ol ~ys Iona 1on1.n •
Huntington Man,
Son Surrender
After Shooting
A father and his son have surrendered
to authorities: after being sought by Hun-
tington Beach police in connection with 1
Christmas Day shooting during which one
man was injured.
Dennis Paul DeMers, ti, turned himself
in to police officers at noon Tuesday and
his father, Albert Romta DeMers, 46,
surrendered this morning at West Orange
County Judicial District Court.
Det. Gene Pool of the Huntington
Beach Police Department said the· two
Santa Ana men are being held oo charges
of asi;ault with intent to commit murder
and assault with intent to do great bodily
hann.
A third member of the DeMers fam ily,
Michael DeMers, 20. of 10373 loth St.;
Westminster, is scheduJed to appear in
court today on the same charges. "tt
Police are still searching for two other
men who allegedly assisted in the assault
on Robert Oliver, 46, of J6712 Lucia Lane.
Huntington Beach.
One of them Is believed to have fired a
shot from a small ea1iber revolver which
eraied Oliver's head but missed Its
mark. Both men are described as
Negroes and in their eairly 20's.
Jnvestlgators believe the assault may
have been motivated through the firing of
Michael Deti.1ers who once had worked
for Oliver's cleaning service.
Police cla im the group of five men
\'isited Oliver's home, wished everyone a
"Merry Christmas·• and then began
healing Oliver and his friend, Steven
Wilkias, 20, of 1514 Huntington St.
Police said the shot was apparently
fired by one of the negroes shortly before
they sped away in their car.
Ma x Steiner, 83 ,
Composer, Dies
HOLLYWOOD !AP ) -Academy
Award-winning compoatr Max Stelnt:r, a
veteran of 42 yurs In the fllm Industry
who M:Ored "Gone With The Wind ," ha•
dted 11 •i• 13.
1llue WU devoted to a 'tory lboul lllu-
tyto"" ')'OUl!ptln be!l*I by tbeJr alden,
who aeltt 11\d oe<:upy 1 parttl of j><IVlto-
ly owntd Im! and tum It Into I cliildrtn'1
park.
Dorfman and Mattelart claim that the
Disney comics are a threat to "the
Chilean reality" a!:! the Allende govern-
ment worb to l.ransfonn Chile into a
Socialist state because they advocate
such "bourgeois " Institutions as free
enterprise.
Scrooge McDuck comes in ~or heavy
criticism. Most. of one chapter is devoted
to concrete ~xatnples of how Donald's
skinflint uncle takes advantage of people
to earn his riches.
From Page I
REPAIR ...
his wife 's car were checked by him
before a.be left for Southern California
and shouJd never have been replaced at a
station operated by the defendants.
The officer told Stenton that a
"perfectly good" spare was replaced 1t
the station by a tire that bore evidence of
many repairs and was clearly inferior to
the tire removed from his wife's car.
Stenton has said he will introduce
testimony from empJoyes of all 11 Sta·
lions allegedly involved in the conspiracy
and statements from customers who
allegedly were de!rauded at all those
facllitie!.
He has identified Stanley Davis, 32. of
1086 San Pable Circle, and Jerry Kendall,
35, of 969 Sonora Road. both of Costa
Me sa with Edward Carney, 27, of 20862
Shell Harbour Drive, Huntington Beach,
as the three principles In an auto repair
racket carried out by stations dispmsing
Arco, Mobil. Shell and Texaco gasolines.
Named with Enriquez and Castonguay
as codefendants are David Conchola, 22,
of 6000 Garden Grove Boulevard,
Westminster, Roger Mendenhall 2&, of
26095 Aveoida De Seo, Mission Viejo,
Ralph Carney, 29, of 32852 Calle San
Marcos, San Juan Capistrano aJld R. C.
Weisner, 18, of Santa Ana .
It has been alleged that Davis, Kendall
and Edward Camey were in co ntrol of
the 11 sations despite oil company regula·
lions aimed at limiting operations of
member service stations to individuals.
It is also alleged that the trio ran
schools at which employes were in·
structed to mutilate tires, slash hoses,
spray shock absorbers and generally
pressure motorists into accepting major
repairs on lhe cars.
Stenton has stated that the trio supplied
all the needed parts used by the combine
from a Garden Grove warehouse which
was oo,t a part of the servicing Qstea:i
-oorinalfy oj:ieratea by all four ail com.
panies.
Most of the 11 service stations iden·
tified for the jury i1J Judge James
Turner's courtroom are now under new
managOIJlent.
. .
·sa:llitation Fee
Change Given
Newport Backing
An amendment to the fee schedule of
County Sanitation District directors that
would cut down on the pay for attending
joint meetings was end<l'.sed Monday
night by the Newport Beach City Council.
Councilmen urged adoption of a pay·
ment schedule that would permit direc-
tors representing more than one district
to receive only a single $50 fee:.
Under current rules, directors who
represent two or more districts get S50
for each district they represent at joint
meetings.
This change would require special
legislation since It could be declared
discriminato ry, according to attorneys
for the district.
C:Ouncilman Lindsley Parsons, a
member of District 5, argued against the
endorsement of that particular change,
instead favorin~ a plan that would con·
solidate all districts with only com·
m.1ttees representing existing districts.
Le1iie11t Courts
Scored by Black
Chief of Police
GA'RY, Ind. (AP) -Leniency ln the
courts is making it "impossible to protect
the black community." Police Chief
Charles Boone has charged,
"I hate to put it Ott a racial basis, but
you can't put a black person in jail here,"
Boone, a Negro, said Tuesday.
He made tbe statements after releasi ng
the re::iult.ol of a police department survey
which Indicated 90 percent of the persons
arrested In Gary for burglary, robbery
and theft are "on the streets today."
Boone said juvenile court is releaalng
"kids to parents who Jailed to
demonstrate any control over their
youngsters in the first place."
He said aduJt criminaJs are allowed to
plead guilty to lesser offenses than their
origtnal cha!'ies, then are 1iven suspend·
ed mtence.,,
hBut ii we catch a white bur&lar In the
while community. he probably goes to
jail," Boone said.
The chief said he had been told by
court officials the.re Is not enough room
ln jails and prisons to hold all ~ ar-
rested.
"More had better be built lf we are to
8ive ~ protection needed," Boone. 11ld.
"The courtl mutt help us by giving 1c>me
Goin' Swimming
Merwyn Hollyfield, Portland,
Ore., demonstrates spd"cially
designed snorkel breathing de-
vice from Belgium that ten·
ables people who have nad
their larynxes removed to
swim. He plans to organize
swimming club composed of
people without their larynxes.
2 Gunmen Shoot
Orange Resident
In Pomona Fray
An Orange man is in fair COl"ldition to-
day after he was shot in the leg and ..
companion fatally wounded by two men
armed with shotguns who fired into a
Pomona office Tuesday afternoon.
Kenneth Buchanan suffered the leg
wound as he sat at his desk at the
Pomona Medical Center, a medical refer·
ral center for low income families In
Pomona.
Emanuel Leon Cheek, 30, of Los
Angeles, another em ploye of the center,
was killed instantly when one blast struck
him in the chest.
Witneues in the welting room 'It clog..
ing time said two Negro suspecl5 walked
in and blasted the two men and quickly
fled.
Police could report no motive _for the
attack but aald the wife of one of the vie·
tinu had recently rei:elved throt1nint
phone calls.
Police learned that prior to the
ihootlng the gunmen walked into the
Pomona Medical Center on the pretelt of
getting employment Inform ation. ntey
returned at least once again to find out
when the office closed for the day.
ToH Hits 164
SEOUL (UPI ) -The death toll in
history's worst hotel fire continued to rise
tod ay. with search crews bringing new
bodies out from the wreckage of tht 22-
story Taeyongak Hotel. Five bodies found
by crews brought the total of known dead
to 164.
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
PREVENTION, NOT CURES
Remember when you got that
shiny new watch for Christmas
last year? Chances are good that
it looked great, and kept good time.
Now, after a full year of use, Its
time to get it back into "like new''
condition. \Vithin a few days your
watch can be cleaned, p<!lished and
serviced, keeping it loo'iing its best
and keeping you on time fo r those
important appointments.
Upkeep on you r watch Is a good
case or "an ounce of prevention is
worth a pound of cure." Annual
cleaning and minor repair, such
as replacing a scratched or crack-
ed crystal, can prevent major
damage to the finely calibrated
inner workings of your watch •
Watch repairs are handled right
at our store, where you are as-
sured of quaJity workmanship. re--
liabili ty end safety. We are fully
insured for your protection, and
have skilled craftsmen to handle
your needs.
Start the new year on time, aft.et
a visit to our store. .,,,.
Talk~Loom
'
On Airwest
In Capital
A federal ~lnr haa called both
•idea together today for oqoUaUons to
end the meebarucs strike which ha1
grounded nearly all Airwest flight!, in·
cludloi those from Orange County
Airport.
Kenneth Quinn of the National Media·
tion Board saJd negotiator& met Tuesday
to set ground rules for the meeting which
was scheduled lo begin today 1n
Wa&hlngton at 10 a.m. (PSI').
Some 900 mechanics, members of the
lndependent Aircraft M e c h a n i c s
Fraternal Association, struck for higher
wages and fringe benefits. Airwe¥ was
forced to cancel all Oights Dec. 20 in
eltht western states, Canada and Me1k:o
when pilots and other unions refused to
cross mechanics' picket line!.
The airline later resumed service to six
cities in Northern California, Nevada,
Utah and Ariz.on.a , using supervisory
personnel to do the mechanica' work and
fly the planes. ·
'There have been no Airwest flights out
of Orange County since the 1hutdown.
Another area served by Afrwest, the
state of Idaho, has asked the Civil
Aeronautics Board to either ordu
Airwest to resume servlct! to Idaho citiea
or authorize another airline to provide
service.
The Idaho Aeronautics Board, In a
telegram signed by Otairman Clifford
Hinkley of Lewiston, uld Airwe.st has
cho.sen ·lo provide limited service to cUie
which are served by other c.vflers,
"without COfl.!idering the needs of people
with no other airline service."
The Idaho boanf .UO sent telegr11111 to
Irving Tague, chairman of the board of
Hugbea Airwest, in San Francisco, and to
the Aircraft Mecbanlcs F r a t e r n a I
Association at Flushing, N.Y .. whJcb is on
strike against Airwest.
Hinkley said the effect of the Airwest
shutdown in Idaho has been more seriOUJ
than in some other areas because
southern Idaho has no railroad passenger
service und er the AMTRAK program.
Student's Car
Hits Power Pole
A car driven by a 17-year~ld high
school student from Huntington Beach
upended after colliding with a telephone
pole early today. There were no serious
injuries.
Police said Edward E. Str1ub, of 20732
Mansion Avenue was eastbound on
Pacific Coast Highway near 9th Street
around 1.30 a.m. when the mishap oc-
cured.
Straub ,as treated for facial cub and
bleeding •t Pacifica Hospital and then
released to go home. He told ofllcers he
had fallen asleep at the wheel, they aaid.
Brasselle Guilty
In Barroom Fight
VAN NUYS (UPI) -Actor Keefe
Brasselle has pleaded guilty to 1 charge
of assault with a deadJy weapon in the
shooting a man in a barrom brawl.
Sentencing was scheduled for Jan. 24.
The offense carr~ a penally of up to 10
years In prison and a $5,000 line.
'
THE TAB GOES UP
Civic Center Tower
From Page l
CENTER .••
earmarked in special funds. The general
operating fund, however.. had a cash
·balance of $1.6 million June 30.
Castle said that civic center interest
payments will be paid from the 5 percent
utility tax on all phone, gas, electrlclt}'
and water bills. This tax, imposed a yea r
ago, raises about $1.3 million annually.
From Page I
VIETNAM .•.
hundreds more JUpport missions in the.
first 3'k days of the round-the-block bom·
bb1g that began Sunday.
To keep the attack force at full
strength, a scheduled port leave for the..
carrier Constellation was delayed and It·
continued to launch its planes from·
the Tonkin Gulf , along with the carrier.
Coral Sea .
The 7th Fleet's third carrier, the
Enterprise, was sent to the Indian Ocean
during the India-Pakistan war, and M
repla cement was available for the
Constellation.
The Constellation and the Carol Sea are
supplying about ISO fighter-bombers to
the force attacking North Vietnam. The
rest of the aircraft come from bases in ·
South Vietnam and Thailand .
Radio Hanoi claimed that a sCventh
U.S. plane was shot down Tuesday, in
Qttang Binh Prov~ just north of the
demilitarized r.one. It said nothing about .
the crew. Radio Hanoi reported ear:lier
that five planes were soot down on ii.lo-·
day an<i a sixth en Monday. It said a
number of the pil9ts were killed or ca~
tured. I
The U.S. command refused to com·
ment on t.be report of the number of ·
strikes nown , Hanoi's claims of Hven
planes downed or its report that the .
raiders had killed or wounded many'
civilians. The command said that for
security reasons it would disclose no
details of the operation until it was com·
pleted.
Despite the magnitude of the cam-
paign, the U.S. Defense Department
denied that it had turned the clock baa
to 1968, before President Lyndon 8.
Johnson halted the bombing of North
Vietnam.
"We have not resumed the bombing
campaign of the North," Pentagon
spokesman Jerry W. Friedbeim said in
Washington. "Our operations are limited
duration strikes. They are limited as to
geography and targets."
How
to make
,Money
(loo} beal#iful)
M ... fl:i..t Mntil•l ., '"'"'•«kill bl ;...lry. y..,_...
er..,., ...... -hi 14 b nit aol d fn•Mt ... _,,. ..... r ..
cl'-'--'_,..; .aMkJ .... ,...iu ta, k-eel.U, ... c.i• j.wol" -ti-.. bl -... "°"' .,..,.,.....,... .,. •••• alr'I """ ei&I aifU,C.-.it.tM .. ov...,.lao..&tctiono...,..
1823 NEWPOR T BLVD., COST A MESA
CON\llNllNT TllMS
IANKAMlllCAlD-MASTll CHAl&l
24 YU.lS IN SAMI LOCATION
PHONl 141·l40 I
Steiner. who scored such fil ms as ''The
Cane Mutiny," "Life With falht.r, ''
"Treasure tlf the Sierra Madre" 1nd
"Battle Cry," won an Oscar In 1944 for
the 1cort to the mot.Ion plc:ture "Since
You WenL Away." of Uw.,e people aome Ume in prison." /----------------------------------------
11
I
I
DAYTONA BEicir. Fla. (AP) -The
motor yacbt Miu' Flailer bu <>rried the
body ol ber captain to the bolloOI ol the
AUantlc Ocean on the lut..,... ii thtlr !~year parlnora!llP alcM&. . ·
The eeo.ooo,. 13-'IOOI yacht died hard.
Seamen from t!)e ftuel that adld is
Mill Flagler'• pallbearer had l<p ..,.;h
holea In her deck and 1'lt> before 1be allil
under the wives {~ to become
C.pt. Joe ~~'!'±Ii:~~~ .-' . .. .... ~
' -.. . ....
. ~ . . .
suUn died at the ap-ol Iii on Diie'.211
alttr 40 yun In the employ of P'!orlda'a
Flqler funily. The Ital 11 111rt ha WU
captain ot fbo Ml• -J'lqler. , •
Mn. Flq!Cr Ma~. grandda~ « railroad baron Henry M. Fluler and owner of the yacht, on.en hurd Serzan,
express a wlab that be be buried at IM.
Sha· never told him that aha ineant to
honor' bl& Willl by &lvinl him I IW>Orll
. '.
Leary Confused
Swi.ss Tell Cult Leader t,o Leave
i . .
Niio.1;1. Meet.s
• . . '
Widi:B~att8t·
From Win Services
BERN, .Swlturland -Swill author!Uea
today rejected a UDited Stltu demand
for extradition of Dr. Timothy lacy,
LSD cultist who was convicted on Laguna
Beach drug charges and later escaped
from the minimum security prison colony
at San Luit Obbpo. .
At the same time the .swiis o(fiCiab
denied the U.S. extradition demand , they
also declined Leary's request for asylum
In Switzerland.
Le.ary, now 51, was arrested 1n Laguna
Beach on Woodland Drive Li December of
1968 when detective Nell Purcell IPOtted
him, hls wife Rosemary and aon John in
a statlon wagon from which oozed the
distinct IJ'OIDa of marijuana.
Leary wu convicted of drul charaes in
Orange County Superior Court. He
escaped from prison tn lrTO, Joined the
Black Panthers in Algeria ind after a
dispute with Panther Ieaderehip, popped
up in Switzerland.
Swiss officials said it will now be up to
immigration authorities to d e c i de
whether Leary can continue llvin& in
Switierland.
Leary was not immediat.ely aVail1ble
for comment, but hls lawyer, Dr. Horace
Mastronardi , said he was ••very satisfied
with the decision.''
Mutrooardi uld H was unlikely Jm.
migration officials would force Leary to
leava the country since the government
has denied the official U.S. request for ru.. 0.trad!Uon.
The llJlllOUDOtlllel aald the mlmalry
refused to order Leary's ertradiUon
because the request cpmained formal.#·
rors ..,blch could not be corrtd<d;. 1
It also denied Leary's plea for asylum
because bis "political persecution can not
be conslclered credible," t b e an-
nouncement said.
It a1so said IAary has already been
granted uylum in Algeria, where be Oed
alter eac:aplng from the Calliornla priaon.
DAILY PILOT Sleff 1'Mtt ..
NOT IN, BUT NOT OUT
Swlhorland'a Leary
Leary, now II, arrived In Swllzerland
wilb. bl& '"l.•1 Rose~, ~t J...,, 11.
from AJgerJa': and rt11\eil a diiJet Jn. tho
western 5wla llptne reaorl of Vlllmlur-
Ollon.
$~·poilce~ him~ tn'm1Y
July at the roquest of l!le U.5. embuay
and detained him briefly In the "Bo!>-
. Mermet" prison in Lausanne.
He was released on bail pending the
government's ruling on bolh his request
for Wle and the U.S. ntrfd!Uon plea. ·
Nixon Not Seen Arriring
On Coast 'Til After Jan. I
Prt.sident NiJon bimseU had predicted
he would arrive in San Clemente Tbtn-
day, but apparently things have changed.
Speculation has il now the Chief "-X·:
ecutive and bia staff will use the New,
Year's weekend to rest before the nut
top.level summit talb In San. Clemente
next week -di.'ICussi<tns with Japanese
Prime Mini!ter Eisalru Sato.
No firm date has yet been announced
for the President'• arrival here, but in-
dications are th1t he will arTlve late in
the weekend or early nerl week to
prepare for the "striclly-busineu"
discussions with the Japanese execuUve.'1
The original mention of the trip west
came during 1 network documentary on
the Pruidency, but Mr. Nixon's filmed
comments on his grueling itinerary were
made on Dec. 5.
Schedules have been c b 1 n I e d
10mewhat since then.
The President today was winding up hil
twtHlay conference with West Germany's
Chancellor Willy Brandt. He will return
to Washington, D.C., from the Florida
White House before the trip to Californi1.
The quick pa ce will resume next week,
however, when the Japanese delegation
moves into the Newporter Inn in Newport
Beach to prepare for the summit talD,
primarily ~Ued so that the President can
dlocual , nuaill:ea of hia scheduled trlpo
Chis spting to Moscow and Pelting.
Because el the "business" label at·
tatched to the Japanese visit little fan-
fare ind ceremony ii opected during the
e,Veats in Newport and ·san Clemente.
·. It bas been Jlinted •that the Prime
Minister will travel between his quart.en
and the Weste;n , White House by
helicopter and ~P8 make no out!lde,
public appq.rances with the President.
+San Clemente .Chamber of Commerce
olflcial.s.had been planning for a possible
reception fur Mr. Sato, the blgheat.rank·
ing foreign official ever to visit here
since the President set up residence.
Besides J>FOPOSing a reception for the P\'kne minlaUl', chamber officlala have
nilppe(J plans to enltrtaln the estimated
'60 to to Japanese newsmen who will ac-
company the Japanese representative to
the coast.
'Ille talks will probably become the
tnolt utensively covered national news
event ever in San. Clemente, with nearly
100 domestlc and European reporters on
J>,arid, combined with the J1rge corpa
from J1pan and elsewhere in the FIC Ea'st. .
AVen'e Presidential visits here draw
40 to liO reporters.
In Florida
From Wire Services
KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. -President
Nixon today turned to bis upcoming trips
to China and the Soviet Union as prime
subjects for tbe second and last day of
hi5 summit conference with West
German CbanceUor Willy Brandl
Nixon waa particularly Interested In
thlinot.only to explain the blstorlc >!Jiii
but also to gam from the lmpreuiona
Brandt picked up In hiJ meetlnS• la.st
sunµner with Ru!{lian leaders.
Officials on both sides said the talb
have been a success, conducted with
warmth and full understanding and
agreement on the wide range of subjects.
NW>n and Brandt resumed their aecond
aod final round of talk! today In the
President's paneled study facing Bis·
cayne Bay. ,
Before departing the Four
Am~adors Hotel in Miami where he
'Plint the night, Brandt walked out on the
terra._ce and looked out at the ocean. He
told a reporter the meeting baa been
"very fine, very reined, very uaeful.''
The major development from
Tuelday'r opening rounds wu 1 pledge
by Nixon, Jn tbe worda of Secnlary ol
state WUUam P. Rogen, "to 4o
everyWna we CID to ·maintain ltU' tro&p
1trength 1n Europe.·~
Ni>:~ that Ambuaador David bad been •PP!>lnted Iba u,~, Id thelNorlh.,Atlanljt
Treaty Organization. Official• aaid the
aonouncement underscored the American
copunltrp.ent tO the ,4..Uailtlc alliance.
BraMt had sought reauurances of a
continued strong American presence in
Europe to buttress hia negoUatlng 11!>•1·
tlon to ·reachin& an understanding w:lth
East Germany.
t Rogera, in bis meeting w:ith ForeJgn
Minister Walter Scheel, and Ni>:on, In bl&
session with Brandt, stressed that the
United states will in no WIY negoUate
any agreement w:ltb the Soviet Union on
troop cuts or other European matttrl
outside the framework of the North
AUantic Treaty Organization.
"In other words," Rogers to Id
reporters, "we are not going to make any
agreement about reducing our forces in
Europe ufilesa we do 10 ID <:Qn1Ultatlon
and in full ~aUOn with oui'-IJ.lles."
Rogers said he and Nixon told their
German counterparts the same' holds
tnJe concernJna the Sqvjet' ~posed
European security conference.
"Obviously we will dlapuu the Euro-
pean security conference when we 1re in
Moscow," Rogers said, "just u our alllu
discussed the Euro~ aecurlty ·con-
ference with the Soviet 'union, but Jt
would not be done except in a way that iJ
fully consonant· with the posltW>n that we
all take."
Prisoner Alleges
Attack in Jail
Orange County sberll!'1 off_.. today
are lnvullpting 1 newly booted
priaoner'1 allegations that be wu Hr·
ualiy aauulted by fellow Inmates ahortl1
alter hia admlAion to the oounty JaU.
The :13-y.....,ld priaonor told de!>ull ..
that he wa.s jumped by "five or m:
maJes" who pinned him down while the
assault took place.
Prl11;>11er1 held in the aru where thti
alleged attack took place are beina: que•
lionod today by jaU olllcen.
POW Gilts Returned ·-
Hanoi Refuses Packages Sent by V.S. Familia
Famm .. of AmerieaD POW• and MIAa
4re beln& Informed by Iba U.S. Postal
Service that pacb&es lhe1 -to the~ relatives In North Vietnam between
August and October hive been returned
Qi thla coontry.
, A spokesman (or thfl pod office said
'flrtu&lly all the paicU1e1 tent oversea&
bi the three-month perk>d have been
returned -Including the packages ad-ciressed to most of the men North Viet· .Nm 1cknowled1ea P POW•.
There ha• been no explanation by
Hanoi fe< the uturn of Iba packq ...
Most were marked "rtluaed by Vietnam" and "' bope that Iba o4her side will
and a ""' were marted ....... 1atit. The permit our men to ....ive them," ha
spokemwi said 1 spot check of the Jd
allegedly overweight pon:els Indicated 11 · Ibey -• within the allowable wel1bl The poat office haJ ln!Uated lnqulrlea
limit. through lnl~malional postal channels to
POW and MIA families have been fmd out wby Iba parcelJ Wert rejected.
allowed to send ail< packsges a yw to A lj)Oktsman for the POW·MIA
their impriloned or mlulng relatlves. International, Inc. in Tustin, cont.cted
The post oU!ct oUiclal alld the return-this morning aaid thia wu the first they
ed packages do not Include Chrlltmaa • ·bad heard of Iba returned pacl:qea. No
parcels. action •W be taken "Y the organization
"We have been 1diVMld lbe Chrlltmu until more f1cta are tvall1b11 the
pacl:qea bavt beeu forwarded to Hanoi 1poknman llld.
-..
H DAILY 1'11.r. 'f
Go DOwn Together·
ktpt the boat at bar moorllljp unW Tue>-
day.
Just alter dawn, Mn. Mathewa, 1
Roman Calhollc priest and ._..,.11
mournen boarded I filhlng boat that
took the Mill Flagler to a point about IO
miles off shore,
Sile wu anchored ln 180 feet of water
and men opened sea cocks tM,t allowed
wal<r to gush Into her bull.
Sbe beg'" to aetUe. The water IOOll
Pia Weds Broker
oovmd the thrw ..,. 111glnet that bad
been tnmlled Jn the white bull two ....U
bef ..... Joe Serzan died. Socio!, ......
wuhed over bar fore<lec:k. but Iba Mia
Flagler atoppod 1lngl111 when ·bar cabin
top wa1 barely awash.
It was then that the men went aboard
and smashed holes In bar In an ef!ort to
let tripped air escape. But the Miu
Flagler still dldn1 alip to the bottom until
night blackened the .....
. ..
• Ill
Mrs. Mat1hews lllcl lllt WllMI to i.,
the burial l1te • -to:-allvqera from attemptlnc to Iba
yacht
Hutcblnaon aald !Ira. FllClar'• wi!li, probably would be lullUlad. •
"I could never go back and find her 1 he alld. "We changed ooune IO llllllll\
tlm .. that I don~ kmw what bar ...itlo~
ia. Nobody will ever bolbar olcl CnL Senan or b1a bo&L" --.--~
• '
•
I
Buil~
Projects
Set Aside .,
• I
By GEORGE LEID.U.
Of ..... ,....... •
A 90-day freeze on bulldtna ot ~;
permits waa enacted Tbelday nlPt lit
the Irvine city council durlnc Ila -cit.;
llclal m .. Uni In Sci"°'"' Lectme RID dij.
the UC Irvine cunpus. ··:I
The tempor1r1 freeze hllll even Cllfto,
st.ruction of p1Uol or fentet by~:
realdenla of Iba new city ol Irvllll.
And, the freeze elledlftly boldo .,
further development of nve tract. bl -
tral -tbat -!llO"lda up to '"' new bomea. ~ •
In inother adloG, Iba -promlli4 to study monlnp approved ID .-1
weeks by the Orange County PllllDll!C
Commiuton and board of ~
allowing development of the nw ~
by five developers. .;-
All five tracta, apprnved for rtzonlng
from agriculturaJ to residenUaJ U!e in the
past 30 days by the aupervllon,
Television newswoman Pia Lindstrom, daughter of actress ln&rld
Bergman, leaves St. Thomas More Church in New York Tuesda.y with
bride~oom, stockbroker Joseph Daly, following wedding there.
Brides mother attended ceremony, but did not pose for pictures with
couple.
tecbnioaUy have reverted to their orlg1llaJ
toning, Mayor Wllllam Fiachbach pointed
out. ~
The county !Olllnll -1111 comio ell will lludy have not lecallY becomo tf:<.
lectlve bee-Iba 1ncor.,._ ol Ibo!·
city CllDll beloro tho end d Iba llMlltr..
Lindsay Tours Wisconsin·
For Presidental Primary
wailb!& period batw--d b ""'""'and Ille -tbay becomo lnr. .. ~'Tbe alfeclad -""'' ·, '•~ -'Walnut Vlllqa Eat. u -0-.
pany developmeal of l,000 11ncJio faml!t,
homes .. 405 ..... -JllfntJ ... Culver Drives. , :
,..l'oaderooa ~ a traet iii 1JDtl
bomea on MO amo ~ to lrvll!0-
1 Boulevard. ~
MADISON, Wis. (UPI! -John V.
Llnduy, a newcomer if.I the Democratic
Party, oUiclally entered tfle Wlscqnsin
presidential primary today and then set
off on an aerial tour to cover the state's
largest clUes and at least one of the
smallest.
The tall, dapper New York mayor, who
entered the Florida primary Tuesday,
said be would carry on hls fight for the
presidential nomination in WIJconsln's
April 4 primary.
"I expect a crucial test, for the beliefs
I bring to this election the principles on
which I run. are a part of Wisconsin's
own tradition of progressive politics and
vital reform," Undsay aald.
"The people of Wi!COnsln have aJway1
been Independent," be said. "They have
kep& alive to this day the heritage ol. the
great Robert La Follette. Wisconsin bad
led the fight for cleaner water and decent
wages and fair taeatment for workers in
factories and on farms.''
Lindsay said both Wisconsin urban and
rural people "share conunon needs and
common hopes with the people who live
tn my city aad every city and town and
auburb fn this coontry."
Lindsay repeated his statements that
43
STORES Dl---'M
TO
SERVE
YOU
2300 H/lRBOR BLYO.
AT
WILSON
be was runnlng as a representltlve of the: -A Hirker Deve!ppmeot OnPR"-:
"America that Waahlngton hH !plied." project Jnvolviq *8 -00 71 -;
He said he Intended to "help shatter Jn Centrll Irvine. ,
the illusions spun by the· NI x on -A Willlam Lyon Camp&aJ ~,.
AdmfnJstratlon." ment of 2811 homes on 15 ·acrea. ... .c;_
From Madison, the 1tlte'1 aecond -And, a Llnrin O>mpuy deftlopmlalll
largest <111'1 Llndaay w" acheduled to fly of S90 bomeo on 11...... '• •
to two of Ille mlddlil-alzed c1u .. -Eau One other .-Inc ibo balldl11 pnilf.
Claire and La Crosse. -.: A side trip [rom Eau Claire WU to take freeie wm delay ta the developmtmt" ~I '
him to Cadott, a city with I populaUon of ""'"of the lrviM lndmlrial OJmplG fi,i
less than 1,000. McDomlell-Douglu Corporation. 1'1111
Lindsay WU scheduled to 1ppear fn finn 90U1ht and WU iranted • ~
Milwaukee, the 1t1te'1 laciest city, change to allow commercial devtlop:Dllil
tonight of the lnduitrlll parctl. ,,,
Pablo Casals Is 95
5AN JAUN, P.R. (AP) -Pablo Caalla,
the Spanish cellist, celebrates his 95th
birthday today. A special Roman Catholic
Mau was planned at h1s new home in the
Rio Pledreu aectton of San Juan.
Afterward, he and h1I wtfe Martha Wert!
to meet old friend! and acqualntances
who traveled from New York Ind other
world music centers te be with the
maestro.
By 1111ctlbg the building permII !nm,o\
the Oodgllna council &alna Umo to illlllll(l
the Mcllonne1J.Doug111 IOlllnil, ~
no permit on that ~ject bU yet "'9'. Issued. ,
Zoning chancH .,.. not demi!
permanent unW a permit to build llilo
been Issued, the councilmen were adviM,
last week. ·;
An Irvine COmpaey opo-• aald "'· day the freeze prnbably wodld not inttf ,
developm lllnce "-i bullden ~·
bave permlto fol' ll'OJecta Dillillll -
It.ruction stag~ :. • • .. ~
YOUR
CENTER·
WITH
FRIENDLY, COURTEOUS AND HELPFUi: SERY··
ICE. PLENTY OF F R E E PA R KI N G IN I0111
FRONT AND REAR MALLS. ALL ON STREET LEVEL
A HAPPY NEW YIAlt
TO ALL OUR FRllNDS
PROM THI HARIOR
CINTIR MIRCHANTS -
JUST SOUTH OF
SAN DIEGO FREEWAY
'...,
2300 HARBOR 8LVD., COSTA MESA
IN THE HEART OF COSTA MESA
•
..
• • .
•
•
•
' .,~ . .
\t11 t 11••· DlicBltllt' at,-1971
.... -""¥' • • ,. -
for ·Wal-3 Bandi4
Cornered -'
! -~ lnGetmnny ·
>-8AA11111t1JEC1C,' C«nian:r ~AP) -..
~ ... i.cl bil'11be;«<nndtllreo
• -""' robbed • ~ -ol
"7,GllO, -... ol -and ar-·.-the two olhen.
"' Sborlly bd<n the ...-. the bandits
'1liad oebe4a11-}'W'<lid ,..U. • "°""'e.
1111,..U. --..mrmed, PolJoo
llld. ' The bondlta made lbelr ...,;po from ·
" Colope alter robbing the ·bank oo Mor>
··l •Y by taklng hro pollce oflidah
• • ..._ 'lb07 releued them In a f.....t
.... -the Fnncll bonier.
The -. iolit>« ... tentathely )
-.. -IMder Kurt Vlcenlk, ... In Auslrla with Ilea to the -
Deci·sion ·
-oarld to Manelllell., • , PoUce opened flri alter the blndits
pilled a car~ere driving into a ··· · Jl'l' • ~ . C:: ~~ olwi~ AIR WAR HEATS UP -ilombs are loaded aboard an • ..,,..... .A·~ ~d J';4 flgbler-bQ_mbers on aircraft carrier j,~ll>e police abwt ... ~ .the "l'tag• · Coil&ienattoll ·for most !ntenQ!ve attacks on North
.+< ~ ~ ~ P*taDI .;'J.=~ . .Yte1nam.11!.recent years:~erW photo at.ri~t (frOIJ:l
'\Th. .... <myiiC tht'robhm 11111 lbelr •
,
. .,. ~
U.S. Alr Force) shows ·• North Vietnamese artillery
tractor knocked out on' Ho Chin Minh Trail by·U.S.
warplanes. . -. -'
hostage wu 11nt .,.tt..i -11 mn .. from A A" :.~~"°the.r;r:t:.ii~ .·· ... i.r. ttaeks No Sur. prise !IJ•flimr allpo of paper ..SI -of tbelr _
~'car. The papm contained the ~ljen'
I
,,olfortoopmnegollallons. ' .... ~· The ear -turned off the lllgl!w>y tJ>
'1 ID' a lflrkinl area when one of them ,..,~, hlid .... to'thO head ol the
Intelligence Reports Point Ou.t Major Red Effo_rt
)oidap wb11e Ibey·-for police to By STEWART Hm.EY
•• 1tspon1 In their oil"~ . --WAm!INGTON (UPI) -l're&klent 1.'lw ~ pollce aid, .,. .. al* to Nhon's d<doloo to.l<!Ullle heavy air'a~ tr.0 llhnletf· dortng.,... struggle lhal lacU'agaJn.st North Vleb)amese mllltary -
~ ~bmltt. ..... tanO ; l:Zi1!.,:d.~~tono1::
lo.the pollce allllon at SI. Wendel. • Into Wasblngtoa Soulhea.rt Asia ln
Pollee uld Ibey ...,. trying to ,_.t m_._
~ wllere the trio obtained the '!iii> J!l"iidemlal advisers eoncludf;d
\$*"· .~-~-uo·~t)IJnoi wu embark~
on a oourse Jeopardizing the success of
· N~O!!-'S effort to remove virtually all
te G -· American giumid lorees from Vietnam r tJDmen,. by mid-!!172. niey contended some U.S.
, ~teracUon was clearly required. ~n"ti"sh Troops The White House r«:<ived in Jato !51' ... ~ wpat it considered conclusive
, · • · ev1dence ,that Hanoi was preparing a '
~I an e .U 'IJ pay a fir heavier price than ben!tof0!8
forces to attack Royal Lao troops, move
Into Cambodia along the South Vle~
namese bonier not for from SaJ&oo.
lntelllgence eq>eria In WashJollon
believe that Hanoi11 principal objecttve
would be to l'HS!ablish • •lnN>i
War Defeat Pn.bed
Former Pakistan Leader . . .
-~·
Xahya 1~8Il Being. Held m_ch g F~ ...... '' suwemeefforttomaketheUnltedStotos
~ for ,ill continued air support of South From Win Servlm ~AS!', Nortbem lr<llnd (UPI) -Vietnamese, Laotian and Cambodian A Pakistani newspaper reported today
•u quickly u possible" were lliDounced
ln D&oca lftor talks be!Ween Soviet trade
mlsslon-ehlef V .. V. Zvreb and .Flnanc< ~ ..... ., 1"" l!rl!bli lilldlen em:hanged loroes. that fonner President .Agile Mohammed
.-alaor'the fl1sti Rtpilbtle lxrder·~ Intelligence io.irc.s reported that the :Vahya Khan Is under bou!e-arresl .and ~and a lltddeo lllllper opened fin·on·lft North'Vietnamese were Installlng a coo-will reJ!lain under deWitlon during ao tJ> -M. Ma.....,. AU 11111 ·Home ~ truct In 1lelfall;i In ' -. .,,fderalile fltl!itbi!i"of-smw-~Ied ' ''"•'-'Into Jiis warttme'l<adenblp. -A. IL Kamltmaman ~-Wd. aotialn:rafl milSlle battories ~';;'.;.';"'the 'Th', Dally N"' Tlm•n•l4 i'fil!, who TliO' 'Bangladesh iOVemmeiil" sild it ... Thin,... DD euJaltls. · demilitarized zone as well as in Laos, all dropped from sight When ' All needed cotton and tlectrlcal eqblpme.nt * 'l1ie at~"':' aid ~ = :.= ' of, lil<m Iii.• position lo,.operale agawt • Bhutto replaced1blm u pmlden4 '!>a< u ~ ~ ,:f"1=l<o to ~~ -lbO .,=-~~f.;~:l.~" cootifllod •.to 1liH to .<lhe. .~:.i.ichAllllldwli~ ~'lie oDIM . 'aol' Wi!'llie Minli;)rall , ~ .. oog ... _-ceameebi.H'"1f!Olionlast t ... In4la •lllid Blmllll ·an the··miIJ mt!om
bal aimed -'.ilt _....._ . , . · • : , , The rellOl'I Sllld )le WOIJ\d be mov <Ii> a thuJ far to reco-•·· the itate· of In lleld •~·• 1ntelllgen<e llOOl'Cel also reported ,Io private ns1.i.n.:..1n ~walplndi. ....-
Ten ln~tel Jaier two more lhots were late October that the North Vietnamese . &veral political . and military leailen ::td~i:· ~eco~~n-:: ~ ·~· m -·-,aPP,Wed, to .have bl'O\'llht back to their have demanded that Yab)ia be broug!U to I"~~ ............. •--.. ·
W1p;1 at the •=--~e they U: i:;wn ... airfields, virtually an of ttlelr"" trial fOr the loSs of EUt PatistU to \11Tl::-1~~i;t;. -v 1aid ''..-ial II'-~aid. . ~ ... . ltusslan-made Mi;G warplanes. TheyJiad .. lgdia. Bhutto responded by naming a range.menta" wen being ~'to-bring
1o ,,,. bu 1-11 destl he minor ~sent to China several years ago lot" commission to conduct an tnvesttgatloa of in Soviet uperta and their ·families to ~ :::fua Into the lriib ~ 10 . Ufd(eeplng when the United States IVas the war. . resume work on projeets started befo"' llOP the . Irtih Repobllcan Army (IRA) carrying out continuous altacks against The new admlhistrall<iil held finn In lb the-war and belp In economic develop-*om •aJIDc napoql and mea into airfields and other target,, all over North .first major crisis, protest demonstrations me.nt. jlo!~ lrellnd. · · · .VJetnain. · " · against Bbulto" choice of Sardargbu.s Zvreb nid the· Soviet Ulilon ·could sup-in the Anilenlontown .,.. of Bella.rt a <,.!!M<>I Jl!!W Is ]>elleved. to have al Ila Baksh Raisanl as governor of Baluchistan ply eotton for the Bangladeoh tatlle . lildaen. opened fire on an army msposal some ~ MIGs of varying Yin-Province. milla: and drafting proposal f ~ Cr n•n ~ Fire Wll rd' .,.ta~:V~ =:iu:,s~. for ihe lirst _lnfo'rmation Minist~ Abdul Hafiz ~of the~ indilstry, ~ ~· · ' · • · · tlme, MIGs rose ~galnst BSZ -hers, Puuda pledged !""'1'1""ent for tJ> countrYs biggest foreign exchan.ge
, In London a unsigned dradar wu which previously 'Jlad operated un-~gators of. Tuesday a protests 1n the.pro-earner. e to news media c1a1ming the challenged In wid~ranging attacks over VUlCial capital of Que~, about 500 mlles
Broadc:Mbll .Corp •. (BBC-) Southeast Alia. MIGi have again tried to aouthw_est ~ PawalpindL One-person wa1
certain nen reports froril Utterriept B52s o6' srienl oceuioosln the kWed . e.od four were wounded in the
lre1aDd. past eight weeks but so far as is known turmoil.
drcalar caDed for a total ban on DODe·of the big ti.s. warplanes bas been The government said Ralsani, an in-
-bt'!WWW ~ N~ Ireland U brought down. dependent, would be gworn In today u ~ wu not stopped. Should the North Vietnamese succeed !cheduled. He is opposed by the National
1n bagging a B52, the psychological ad-Awaml party, a rival of Bhutto's PeoP,fe't
:irt,.1i"an-~ak-. Oath v~e would beconsid•rably more than party and the strongest faction 111 . the ~---!'.!----.1: ~ the military victory, in the view of -province.
.. • ~--·. -American officials. Meanwhile, the Soviet Union and the ~ ROME (UPI) -Neapolitan li.wyer Meanwhile, taking advantage of the newly proclaimed Peoples Republic of
~ Leone was nom in today u early onset of the dry season, North Viet-Bangladesh announced plans today to = and Premier Emilio Colombo nam. for two rnc:rihs has been sending draw up a trade treaty· and begin ar-
hilf announced his resignation in relatively large numbers of men and rangements for Russian engineers and PlbJr; ol reopecl wlllch to<bnlally substantial mat.rial soothwanl alont the technicians to help rebuild sbattued Eul ;lnuPI down Iba nation's 32nd postwar ·Ho _Chi Minh trail to a staging area In Pafutan.
.,.....,..,..,. -Laos. From there It can deploy The plans to draw up the Irade peel
"' " '•
• . .A.retie ~ir llits ~id-'\Vest
Zero Temperatures Seen Hea.4-ing for East
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THUIS~Y
.lllft .,_ •:•1.m. .. •:• '""'" ~ .... l t47 ..,,,. Stilt •:JI IJft.
,.
War Foes Plan
New Year 'RUlly
WASHINGTON '{J]PI) -'Ille National
Peace O>allUon announced Tuesd.ay ''the
antiwar movement ls starting off the new
year· Out 1n , the 1treetS" With •
demoostration bi front of the White
How;e ·New Year'• J>ty.
As a group ol partlclpanls.111,the Vlei·
nam Veterans Against the War (VV!t,W)
condacted small Washington demonstra-
lioos, Jeny Go<don, director ol ~ cqa]l-
tlon, lllllOUllCed plana for .-end·lhe-
war acUons. '
"We will stay tn the s~ as 1ona u
necesaary to put an ehd·f9 _th1J ·vlcloui
war," Gordon said at a nen conterince.
"W.e ref eel the "'!ii!estlon that we, 'stay
horile ind ~·iin.t!Je 111'12 el<!Clf<iill to
atd the kllling la Indodllna... . .. '
He aid dmnonlitraton',,_ P.lher on the sld.....rt In -of the Wblte lkRlse Satunlay -eaJJing f,.. I tuilloUI In ·u-
t:OSS 'ol the legal limit ol 11111-to protest
the new U.S. bombing ·attae0 .oo North
Vletnam. , · Ii> • '
Calling the bombing "genocidal torrO<
assaults," Gordon •uld they "make a
shambles of Presldent Nixon'• claim that
be ls wtnding down the lodoch1na·war."
Disney World
. ' .
Snarls Traffic " .,
ORLANDO, Pia. (UPI) • For jhe •
eond otralglit clay Irafflc In 11111 ·u:oimd
Walt Disney World wu, ·bNugbl. to a
llandlllJI by holiday ...... di-~ to &ti
Into Iba am...,...t altncliOn ~· The highway patrol reported early
Tu"'1>y allemoon, !Dtentale • and U.S.
Highway fl were backed up 30 and IS
miles respectively.
Galet to DlsneJ· World wn dOled al
10 a.m. after S0,000 peraon1 were Inside.
and at lout thal many 'I"' oulslde.
Similar traffie IClal'li have oCcurrtd
prevJously, ln even area:ter.,proporUOns,
aince the lllrac~ lii October. Tito big tjuibes !f;eoine on days
when cliIJdren are Off m sch061.
-
' ' Says s ·aaat·
UPIT ......
British Prepare
To Pull Troops
From Malta· Bme
toNDON.(UPI) -Brilaln ~preparing
to -.. all British troops -the
M0attmanean tallllll <i Al>Jia, the
F~ Ol!Ice announced today.
II aid the govenunent decided on Ibis
-alter Malteeo Prime Mlnlstorllom
-. to· a new mess&P to the Fomgn
'Olllce reeaived today, demanded Im-
mediato payment <i Ill, million for the
. right to staUon . British fon:es on the
Island. .
The Soviet Union recenlly signed •
tni!e agreeinent wtth Malta and
diplomatic aources 1n Loodon said this
was another step In the Soviet ~ of
establishing naval facilities on Malta~ for
iis growing Mediterranean fleet
Malta baf served both as a naval base
for the British Royal Navy 11111 Is eo im·
portant NATO base u well NATO of·
flcl.als have lilied Britain to retain Its
position there In bopes of freezing out the
Russians,
Tbe fore~ olfice said Mintolf's latest
message reiterated a similar demand by
him received here on Cbrisbnas Eve.
Tbe 1tat<meot 1ald Britain already bad
agreed to pay 18.3.1 milJion. al ooce for
staJfonlng ol British troops on the Island
for six months starling Dec. 30 .
II said Britain Is not Jlrell8f'd ~ make
1 any l\D:tbel' pa,,,..,t~ •
· "In these Cirdimstances," the FOieign
Office said, "The British govemm¢ are
~ In band· preparatlOns for the
withdiawaJ of British forces from
Malta."
Senate Wing Sinking
-One Fifth of Inch
WASHINGTON (UPI) -During the
pasl"45 yem, the Senato wing of the U.S.
Capitol building asnk .... filth of on Inch.
~ Nattonal Oceank 11111 Abnospberic
Administration (NOAA) said Tuesday a
19211 survey· p!aCed the elevation· of the
senate wing at SI0.6" feet, while a new
titeasurement came out to.525 feet above
... ievel.
During the same period, the House
Wing of the· Capitol did not sink at all.
NOAA oUicials bad no uplanatioa for
that
Massagers Arrested
POMONA (UPI) -Sherill's vice of.
Ocera Tuesday conducted raids on nine
massage parlors within the city limits
and arrested J1 women on , charges of
lewd conduct and prostilutli>n. The af.
ternoon raids, conducted by the sllerifl'1
department and Pomona p o 11 c e ,
culminated a month-Jong investigation.
••
High CairG
r· • :: "i M .. " 1n1sters
Given Word
By Ullltocl Prost lalonau.al
The semiofficial Cairo nenpaP,r Al
Alnm said !Oday ~ .J'resldent
Anwar Sadat told bis polllical lea\ler1
~ that the decblon to go to war
with Israel is final
Fon!ign Minister Mahmoud Rlad added
~Y Iha! the 'dlances of peo,ea are -dllng. .
Arab political observers In Beirut said
If hostilities do resume it probably will
not be ~tely since Egypt a!nady
has armougced its eupport .for new peace
efforts by United Nations peace
negotiator GlU'lD&r V. Jarring.
The Swedish diplomat Is expected to
hold talks With Egyptian and 'llnlell
representatives separately startJng in.
mid-January.
Al Abram published a partial text of
Sadat's speech to a joint se.sslon1 of·the
Central ·Committee of the Arab Soclollst
Union (ASU) and· the People's Council
Parliament which met to take what Cairo
Radio called "the final decision." ·
"The decision to fight bu already been
taken," Sadat said. "It remalni the
same. 11lis means we must mobilize all
our reaources for the batUe of llberaUon
of the ocoupi<d lands.
"We shall cootinue our political action
in all fields and~Jtave the door open· for
all cmtacta. We mall continue to ·tn.siSt
that not one inch of our occupied ter-
ritories. will be surrendered.''
Egjptian -.govemment ~officials in-
terpreted Sadat's ·speeCti I<> mean be
would go to war only when all these
Peaceful efforts have -failed. But ill# ad-
ded Egypt felt the efforts were doomed
because of Israel's reluctance to
withdraw from 'alt Arab lands as
demanded by Calro. 1
Riad went before Parliament today to
endorse Sadat's speech.
"It is our fate to fight, as it wu. the
fate of thooe before us/' ·Riad-aald. "The
hour of decision Is la.rt approaching and
the chance for peace-if ever there wu
one -is dwindling."
"The Arab 113lion's strength, 11 It Is
erganit.ed, Is enough to guarantee vlc-
tory,''.Riad said.
U.S. Delegation
' . Depatting Today
For Rel( China.
WASHINGTON (AP) -A second While
House advaiice team, beaded by No. 2
man on· the National Security Council
staff, leaves today for COmmunlat auna to make technical preparations for Presi·
dent Nixon's February trip.
The FJorida While House, announcing
this Tu~ay as Peking made a
&imu1taneous disclosure; said a ~
member delegation, including f o u r
.representalives of the three major
television networks, will .spend about a
week in mainland China.
Heading the team is Anny Brig. Gen.
Alexander M. Haig Jr., deputy to Henry
A. Kissinger who twice this year made
trips to Peking to lay the groundwork for
Nixon's yJ.sit, set for Feb. 21-28. Kiuinger
is the President's assistant for national
security affairs.
In addition to government and TV
network personr:.el, the American group
will include representatives of American
Telephone & Telegraph Co., and of
Comsat, the Communications Satellite
Corp.
. Although officials w o u I d not
acknowledge the supposition, the in-
clusion of a Comsat representative was
taken as an indication that plans are in
the works to use communications
satellites for live TV coverage of Ni1on's
visit.
Consumer Chief Scores
Auto Repair Ineptitude
WASillNGTON (AP) -Car ownen
nee(! a watchdog to protect them trom
h!gl>priced Incompetence In the auto
de8Ier's repair shop, presidentlal adviser
Virghlla H. Knauer said today.
Mrs. Knauer 1.Presldent Nilcri'1 adviser "1 consumer aualrs, ~ c:realloo of
an objective revjew boord to Inapect and
pidectoale<Ml'Vlce.
'flfoo many CODSumen have found Out
that 'the lowHt price In loon' can be I
bod baflaln," Mrs. Knauer said to le«en
Ip auto and """umer organlDliOOJ
sollcitlng their support r.. her Idea. "Too
many coniumera have pUl f<l' uo-
nece•ry rei-ir•·
''And IOO many consumers have bad
npatn made with unsatisfactory resulls .
t am sure you will agree with me that
lhele uperlence1, oo the p,art ol many
Americana, are Intolerable. •
Mrs. Knauer said sbe •tint proposed
crtaUon of the review board In letters
Oct. 1 to major domtaUc auto maken
and to the National Automobile Dealers
Association.
In replies Mra. Knauer made public,
General Moton, Ford, Chrysler tnd
·American lloton..-rted that tl>elr O\TD
watchdog plans to some extent already
provide the monitoring Mrs. Knauer
wants . '
'lbe NADA endorsed aome reatures of
the proposal, and Ford and American
Motors indicated willingness to e1plore
the idea further.
Mrs. Kanuer now has asked tht
Transportation llepanment, the Cent.,.
for Auto Safety, the Amer Jc an
Automobile Association, Cons u m e r s
UDi.on, the Consumer Federation ot
America and individual dealers for su,g·
geslloot le Implement her Idea.
The geiieral terms she ouUlned would:
-create a "quality service recognition
program" to bonor dealers 1iven top
ratings by consumers. '
-Provjde consumers with an easy wa1
to comment about Ule quality of dealer
service.
-Set up some aort of review board -
perhaps composed of c ons u m er 1 ,
educators, engineer• and com pany of·
ficiaJs -to evaluate consumer com.
men ls .
. -Provide for the review board to in.-
spect participating dealerablpo t o
determine the adequacy or stnlce
.facilities.
•
•
VOL 64, NO. 310, 4 ~ECTIONS, '41 PA6ES
Stor11i Surfers
their moorings,· but these hardy surfers took advant·
age of the rare surge through the mouth of the
harbor.
Once in a while, when conditions are just right. you
can surf between the jetties at the entrance to New·
port Harbor. Monday's storm kept yachtsmen at -~~~~~~-'-~~~-'--'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~
Coroner Rules
CdM Burn Death
As Accident"
Tiie death of a·~ ~I IW woman
whose nude body iru foWld' la be'° b.Jrn·
inB IPIPIJl!ODI "l!i. """'!l'W'~lal by coroner's investigator "'JWoJd ¥Jn1ck.
Sally Lyone.Maedel, 21, was found ear-
ly Tuesday ~,by f\remln bi!tlling the blue t11a1 trilded kl llet: ,11ag1e
bedfoom apar\ment at Silo Feni)eai Ave.
Iovestig{ltors believe Miss Maedel had
been smokinr in :bed and her cigaret~ l&·
nited 4he bedding. In an attempt to
escape the ·flames. she ran into the
bathroom where she fell aod hit her head,
policC theorize.
Death was cau~ by smoke inhalaUon,
Minick said.
Detictives said theyoriglnally believed
thert was foul play involved in the death
because the apartment appeared to have been ransacked and the' condition and
Jocation of her body. Iietective Sgt. Ed Cibbarelli said lbeb'
investigation showed the only evidence of
irauma on the body was the one bwnp
on her head. . ·"stie ' was apparently sleeping l.q the
iiude when·&he awoke to fihd her room' in
Barnes." he said. "She probably became
Confuse4 in her attem~ to get out of the
apartment and knocKed quite a few
thing& over.'·
Cibbarelli said the extreme heal from
the fire melted some furnishings which
also accounted for the disheveled &J>
pearance of the apartment.
Jewisli, Pa'P':r
· ·Stops Publishing
NEW YORK (UP I) -. The Day Jewish
Morning Journal. one or the larg~ Yid-
dish language daily newspapers tn the
United States, ceased publication with
Tuesday's final editions.
S~nny Da y Brings Stay
In Mercur y Readings
. Alltr · -of tjle Wt!le!I ..;.eek( :.ii ~i!!'""• h~, ~.rain JM,. y gone today -ana In 1'5 pl><e
were recoid low tempiratum wblch·te0t •
bundreds of motorl611 skidding oncl craahinf{"'\_icy~_ro.dJ. '
ONillt ~ ~ awoke to merdlrY ~eodfllg· • In lllO low :IOO •tJli&.
morning, while 'he·quicl: freeae on 1J100Do..
tain 'r0ads-pr00Uced ·CQngt~tiOD "'80 'bad
Y.ou 'wollidi1 't' tieHeve it," aceording to a
iake Arrowhe3d fireman.
· Orarige c:Ounty today tnopped up from
a soggy session of storms wblch dumped
an average of five inches of precipitation.
The ·ralnflll figuris rllll8ed from Uf In-
ches in Santa Ana td a floodJike t.J:
ruding in *1verado Canyon.
Wealher damoge turned h;qm IOw-lylzijr
property to ·Soutbliind higlniays .,, the
waterlogged ;roads froze . in the grip of a
new cold snap. The Cafifornia Highway Patrol said it was swamped by so manyT
accident cans · that investtgatars· were
handling only 1be most setioUs.
'll!~ ... 11~ 5 aDd~ 101 ...... '¥"' ~ • .l>!l!~' Ill ~,JeJ-:
d.itions m hi,per areas such as .eauro~il.
hlCbwaJ> 11oncl30 In tbl'Sao-.'
M~totns 'llallel'<:irll ~more Ihm\ Ml
hi>1lr u lh\"sai1d• Iled the •now-clogged
peaks. •
In J.ot Angeles, where doae.ns of streets
became mfniature lakes ·and seYeraJ
mOtorist.s were briefly marooned atop
their cars, resktent! mopped up from a
'9-eek-Joiig downpour tblf deposited near-
ly sil:,lQches of water on. the city. The National' WeathOr Service ,.t the
tptal rainfall tn Southern CaUfomia since
July1at 6.91 inches, cOmpared to·9.97 (or the same period lasf year. ·o.c.mber.
ho\fever, ·was far wetter than· last year
with 6.31 inches of rain against· 4.52 in
1970.'
The outlook for the rest of the l'etk is
for partly cloudy sties, peak tem-
pera~res over · 60 degrees and "good
football weather'.'New Year's Day.
Parker Says Hi~ Officers
' .
In Reno Won't l(eeP,· Gifts
Accepling1the appointment of chief of
police of Reno, Nev., Newport Bea~h
police Capt. James Parker said today he
plans to carry some polieies from his
current job to h1s new assignment.
One of. the ground rules Parker said he
woo.Id probably institute when he takes
over his new jqb Feb. 1 will be a pro-
hibition oo gratuities.
·,
ported the policy. "I think they're pretty
proud of it." be sakl
_ Parker, who holds a degree -ln police
science rrom OrangttJCoast College and
has been wilh the Newpod Beach depart-
ment 13 years. said he considers himself
a progressive policeman.
The paper, with a daily circuta.tion of
38 000 endt'd ib $7-year existence ~.~ of an apparent lack .of fWlds. Parker's predecessor in Rtm, Elmer
'I'here was no anoounce.meflt of ~ ~ Briscoe, retired in July following a
newspaper's closing in Tuesday's edi-Washoe County Grand Jury investl&atlon
Asked why he felt he was selected for
the $2{1,000-a-year PQst from about 60 ap-
plicants, Parker said: "I',n young aod
eager and maybe that's what they want:•
. Of Reno and his new job, be said: .. It's
a growing area al'ld l lhlnk it has lots of
pOujbllitles.
tions. or acceptance of gifts by the department.
j
l
Orange Coast
Wenther
Buttoo up your overcoat: It'll get
dov.n into lhe thirt.les overnight.
followed by cloudy skies and cbllly
(505) temperatures on Tbur!lday. . .
INSIDE· T ODAY . .
Red Chillo ..., th< big •toru
~of 1971 01' lhe. fntcmotionol
froni1 and tlie LOI Angeles
'earthqua.lce of Feb. 9 the top
Colifornia. 1torv of the ..,:ar, ac-
cordi11g to . tditort surveyed by ,
tlie Associated Pre1& Slories cm
Page 14. ·
... llM H MWlllJ n
... M. ..... 1 Mltllvaf ,.... "
Cfll..... 11 "" .... ' NtWI W CIMilfllt .... Or-.. c...itfT lf Qinllk.l M S'l'l'M ""'1• n .,..., M ' S...,,. IJ•ll =:. JW!iwo • U SMa.: .....,.., M>t•
OI-• II ~ f"'""'-d
•41,.,i.t '°"' • "'91111'\ n 111twt.i-1 n •••,._. 4 ,_. Q-U W11i. WMtl II ""'"'°""' • --·· ....., ,,.,, -. ............... .,.. ...... 4
•
· Parker !laid his own feelings about SC·
cepting glfts stem from a long-held con-
viction that it is wrong.
He said the Newport-Beach department
has a firm policy forbidding police to ac-
cept any gifts, even coffee from a
restaurant.
"OUr people are well paid to do 1 job
and pollce In Reno also are well paid," he
.sakl. lofDie public should show Its ap-
prec~aJion bY, su~.",
He said New;Port Btlch polke sup-
Pilo t Publis hes
Over Holida ys
Holiday editioos of the DAILY PILOT
wilt be publial>ed both Friday and Satur·
day for .home delivery during morN~
hours.
Frid11'.s usual deadline for Saturday
Dlme-A·Une ctassUied ads will be moved
up to 3:30 p.m. oo Thursday for Nt#
Year's Day ads.
Ali DAILY PILOT office• wl11 be closed
on both days or the holiday. Circulation
Dept calls regarding d<ltvlfiU wUt be
handled until nool:L. on both d•yt.
He presently heads the New?ort Beach
department's ~trol division. He directed
the administration dJvtslon for two yean
and said he feels he is qualified in all
phases of police work.
Parker also said he opposes total con-
solidat.ion of law enforcement agencies
ror Rm!, Spafks and Washoe County.
He favors some•joint eUorl. aa ftOOl'll·
mended to city and county officials ln the
Nevada area by the lnterna.Uonal
AaaoclaUon of Police Chiefs. Total con-
IOlidation was urstd this year by the
Wuhoe County grand j\Jry.
Parker said he favors consoUd1Uon of
aome polict functions u "l lhlnk there
are advantages to conlOlldaUng records
• and )JOS!ibly oommuokatlont and lhlhg• nu that, but not onran C0010lldat1oo. I
think there is a lot otdapllc:atloa of tUon
which could be eliminated, especially in
the records system."
Trucks Fired On
CllARLES!ON, W. Va. (UPI) -
Ga.nmen waiting In ambush fired sbotl at
rentaJ trucks delivering Ch a r-1 est on
ne.wspapers in sept1.rate Incidents Monday
and Tuesday, state police ..,,porlfd.
'
I
' '
Tetla1''• .... . , .
•
N.Y. StAlelY '
.
Rech Repori Dmv~ing _Four p·fnnes -, "•· -l>I _.,, I ~ •;1'1
From Wire' Senlcn Plloll S.1'1 they:sri.fl t111t 1hrie SAM were. l'fl)Orled shot doirn <Mir 1-by
.SAIGON ~'!'he ·beavieat ·u;s. ·air at· miloilel!' 6"'fl at•._, lOd lhal there lllfll!G• -11111 or the~ i.111at
tacks ,oo Nortli'1/ldilam m'..oie than """'bly were•-'lother _1pt1011 <aid belJJeCi touc)i off -the c:amnt llomblllt '
tbree y~s ,<ontilll!f{d. IO,l\.the foUl'ih day, ::u ui:; e .:..~~-" bUI -:t; ~p, -lellftlOtl'hlldnNIDn ,
today with b()..Jetu_p IP-·1'iahL•Nartb vief... ""'' ::.d;o , a. were a :i. ~~ • ~ • nam claimed four plane.s were lhOt down. dlatanoe abd that ,there nevi( were.more ~1JCS.i diplomatioi. aource1 ± ~t
A broadCasl dispatch from Hanoi" of the -t!'•n· lwO MIG• i.(tlhor. ' •• . ·, ' ' the armada <( 3I01Jlaneo ~iii*•·
official Vietnam News Agency sakl the The Jut _.MIGs ~ aetipn was flew lnOre than 500 attack ~ alJil
Ff Phantom Jets were -down In . bef~re Chrillmu-wben al lelll lhree Ffs . •. (Set ~AM, • ..,. !1';:' ,
Quans: 1inh and Nihe An provlDcu•wblle '1 ---4
A
attacking ''populoUI areaa." Hanoi claims
.seven American aircraft were downed in · Kia) · F
previous raids since SUnday. 08. irst
e<!S. military sources.said the bombing
would continue Thuisda)'. lo • fifth day.
Returning ·pllots· reported seeing MIGs
tor the first ti.nle, and missile.s.
The U.S. command retorted the MIGs
stayed at eztreme rangl!l and ·said there
was only sporadic antiaircraft r~ .. iO"
dicating bad wealher was forctng the
'ilots to bomb rrom high altilud ... (See 1tllry,.ppotos, page 4l, ·
The ground war also iDlensiiied after a
Cbrislmaa lull and report& rrom Pbnom
Penh said there were bjg aU.Cks north
and southeast of Phnom Penh aod heavy
shelling of South Vietnamese bases in the
rubber plantation country along · the
border northWest of Saigon.
2 Bands 'BattJe'
In Rose Bowl
. .
Game Preview
•
Yacht · Home.,
In Australia -. '
TASlllANJ,A ,;_-II ou~of N"!'porl '
Beach was flnl l)ome kl th<! Syilney•
HOl>an .Yacht .r .... today bul-the 'J:.o0
Angelea ·Yacht Club entry ~ l5y
Jim Kilroy !di •ilht hours short ci ael·
ting a rfew .record in. the '50-mlle'jauiit. •
The 73-foot vessel logged an e!aJised
time of ~e days, 12 hours 46 minutes
a9'1 21 ~nds~ eight }\otn:s longer thin
the record set ln 1962 by, another~ U.S. yach~ Ondlne I.
Klaloa n IOlt time In nearly a day of
light weather but made up for some of. tt
crosaing Storm Bay and up the, !liver
Derwent to tbe ,finial> line and ~of cheers from by~
Two Ammcan' boall -Ondlne II oncl
LOS ANGELES (UPJ) - A con-. American EgleAi1slr~ N~ 7f'llnd'1 I
1-.tion between •members oe ibe ~ and la'• Siska ,balllell
University .or MiChigan and. 'Slllllord -!or -.id la stonn.Jlly. •
IMIL Y PILOT wt "*""• HE'S FlltST> MA YQR •
! lrVlne'a · FiMhlllidt
' bud4 ·~~ tocW".al:,.1 q ~ With tOO"'miles a! Iha flnllb J1oa. 'j(lalGia •DI! -:rJ'•" Iii .IJOwtd 'fi& ll loeld •0llknll.,W ~-1'1ti.Tll!W• ··..i ' ' -..-0!,. BtufardmUllc:~ ~'loile.:lftdrdoil~.llm! · IJl! __ hL-chN___::.-..1 ~ WU llO Jmmedliite -It lhol pqint Jn Ille ~"l"I'-.... J...• '.('o.~UJNI ' nJIU:'U
;
from 0e<qe Clvender,.-·o111w· "JiiioY" Long's ~foot -OidM 11,,.. • .-•· ••
Mldilpabucl. I . -A F' M Botli.-'Jlouoe4•~ Oodklon,rrom l)loLa-•• N.v., s··ll'St , ayor ,
on the UCLA~ 'ani -Ille ~Gill, -_.. .. lir 1*" ad
Mi bin band •~••-~· .... .....;,_ 1111 -. IMlo.' 'I ....... Of• . I r Ci c '6an Wll W"Ul~U6 ... __.,, tor Xlllriol'I· Cup Uinelir ,.., 'llid tv
Its a--at·the ,RO!e Bowl game Turm'ofAllanlaat·tlJt-. . • ~.ne · ... ~J· New Y,.t·s .Day,, some nieai&rs o( the, · ( 1 l ·• ' . . ·
Stan!or'd band went oat to watch. MiDQtes al'~ the fJnf ..... Ing ol the
11-vtot Cit}> eountjl w.s openeil w • According to l \&tory filed ·by reporter .
Ann Geb: pl lbe . l>Jtrolt ,New1, the
Michlcin band was "Sttited; spat upOn;
)JIJ11y bloclladed cjuring ~· clrill and verqaIJy assauJted ,by riY&l St'.aotord ·
students."
Ruiz wbo said be observed lbe "'lire
Incident aald thlS WIS' "~y U•
aggerated."
"We were preparing to go outdoors lOr
rebearaal and 1bout 65 of oUr PYI -
there are 182 in the band -'saw the
Michigan band marchln8 and heard their
dhlm section. OUr ,guys are-very spirited
and fun-loving and they went up and lined
the itreets and were cheering. .
"I didn1t hear any, obscenities. Al no
time did anyone thrf!w apything. At, no
time did anyoqe spit. A lot of our
members joined io De.hind the Michigan
band and il one is taking it seriously
enough, one could say they were mock~
ing. 'Ibtre wq humor in it. Of course,
Mr. C.avendtr, ·took it very &eriously. He
did not think it was funny at all. The
situation was fun arid humorous and non-
ma)jcious.
"Last nigl!:t Michigan and Stanford
band members were together at 'a party
hosted by UCLA and we laughed about
it:'
•
' Parade Prvl~
'· Chevali¢r, 8~,
Listed as Good
• PAllJS <1/Pfl -Entertainer Maurice , Ctievau,r wu ln,BOnd'eoJidiUoo today at
Nacter -Hoopllol allbouib I weekly
mqulne put oat a -'81 edtllon'
rejiortlng hla ·ileaui. · ·
Tbe)adllne read,··~" be murmured, and his ey., clooed .•. "Tbe
magailne, France Dimaocht. a I 1 o
published l'hOloirlphs of a priest wbo
"administered I~ ri~ and carried with
him the last words of Chevalier."
Oespit.e the heldllnes, Chev a.Ii er,
fl.osp~t.allzed since Dec. 11 witd. a serious
kidney' ailm<nt, spent a calm night and .
was .. in general good Cx.ndWcin" thll
morning, hospital officials said. '
The IJ.y..,..ld star's blood pressure,
pulse and temper(l.ture were normal. The
·hospital said it wlll ,not issllfl' a medical
bullet'ln on Chevalier l6ol&ht
•
'cowity offialat's • slip of the ~. a
~ and 'mayor ~-"!"•
elected ....
RobOri Carlllo, depity>CQllllJ dolt, Of·
fidalcd at Q>e.1:«1 p:m. meetlna Tuesday
i!f SClence Lectm'e ·Hlll'on the UC lrvlile • • C8Rjlpul. -.
"May I call (his orflclal -11n& or the
City Council of the city of the -lrvloe -
Comp&ny,•to ~rder pleue?'"Carlllo Aki
to theduproarlous d<light of both the new
oounc .¥<! ,the. audia>ce of aome 3iO maons. ' . .
Tbe remark was funny in contat of the
chargea: made during the cltybobd cam-
palgri that the Irvine Company would
control the new: city council.·
However'-1,ater balloting fer the 'mayor
and 111l1Y9f ~tem pooltione·on ~ccun
cll di..,..ed'company1d0mll!atlon of Ibo
countu;.' "" ~ Alto~. 'Willll!m Fi.ctilJoch, Ht•
Teadln&-v.ofe-getter'lo Jut ~t'• el.C.'
tion, waa.ll1lde mayOho! the '"°"'.uv 11y
a'.s to-1 vote. Counci~' · Mn. ~e Pryor and Henry · ~
Fl<chbacb. ' -
John H. Burton, . of tlla
(See'lllAYOR, ,Pqe Z)
I • '
Drum Maior Ernie P.;.. pUI&. Newport Harbor
High School Sailor 'Band through lta Pf••• br Pl'l>-
paration lor appearance In Saturday:• l!Dse Par~e.
Tho 150-meml>Or band has bMn pnctlcinc this
, week on street& around the &rbor Hlib C8llQMll
to jet In shape !or the !iv .. mile..Pasadena parlde. •
,.
' ' ·' • ,
•
•
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"
pt DAILY "LOT N •-_ Wtd1'1HC14t', D1c1•r zt, 1971
$15 -Million · HQtel • ID Mesa Witness: -Computer. .. -
,350-room Building .Planned Near South Coast Plaza .. ~~ .
Darts Used Pact Eyed
I BJ TP.IU!Y COVILUl
Of n. Det1r "flt' ltttt
'ConstructlOQ Is sche41;1led to start In
ro!d»971 on • f!S .mlijlon, 150-room holel -.,r Costa Mesa's-South Coast Plaza. 1'bO U.11 Story bolel will be a j<>lnl ven·
t0n or the SCgerstrom Family which d~feloped South Coast Plaza arnJ Western
lnternaUonal Hotels of SeJ.Ule.
Western lnternatlonal isl !ubsidlary of
UAL, Inc., >vhich ls a holding company
th1t includel United AlrUnes. The firm
operatet sldl well-known._ luxury hotels
u lhe Centw:Y Plata near Loo i\llgeles
JnternaUonal Alrport,' lhe St.' Francis in
SU ~...,, lllJc! the Olympic In Seat· ,..Ue.
Details of the new C.OSta Mesa facility
-to be called South Coast Plata Hotel -
were revealed 'l\lel<lliy at the Century PW..
It will include lecal c o n v e n t i o n
facilitles, serviet-telaled' &boPI, possij)Je
tennis courts and swimming pools and
otbtr hotel accessories.
'lbe hotel will be built on 6.5 acra ol
land owned by the Segerslrom Family on
the east aide of Bristol Street, om f9 the
San Dlqo Freeway.
Hearing Slated
Jan. 10 on Plan . f or Bike Riding
&)lewport Beach councilmen have tann
~ lint llep towanl banning bicycle
rl!Jna a""" the Santa Ana River bridge
BJ.ipvl of a deal ·to get tbli state to open
asfence touth of the bridge .8' part of a
b)cycle trall roonecllng Huntlllgton Bdcb
Md Newj>ort ll<ach.
S.OUOCUmen set 1 public hearing on tht
pJDpoa.I for Jan. 10, one or several they
will conduct that night. · :
~{le · Engineer Robert· JaUe told ~ihnen Monday t1uit to construct a
~ from the west end of Seashore Drive ~the ifVer to 'the Huntington Beach
sliite roadway that an opening muJt be ~~ 1n the exlitln_g fence on the east a:I! of itie river.
, ?be: division of hlghwajs will permit
I.II; fence opening for the tr,ail on the con-
• that Newport Beach, Orange CotJn. tf and Huntington Beach each prohibit
bicycle riding on the bridge," Jaffe sakl.
~Jaffe. aald the county already has eMcted ..uch~· an· ordlf\ance and Hun-
lblgton Beach is expected to consider
airnuar ltgielation early in January.
0'3afrt said blcyclls!I wlll be required lo
walk lbtlr vthlclea on the emttng
aide.walk on the south side of Wut coast
~way during I.be interim.
' ~ • From 'P.,e J
t IETNAM .••
" l:Jiidtedl mo.re support missions in the
flrlt 3'n days of the round-the-block bom-
}$g that began Sunday. TO · keep the attack-Iorce at full
attength, a scheduled port leave (or the
carrier Constellation was delayed and it
<:qlltinued to launch Its planes from
ille Tonkin Gulf, along with lhe carrier
Cbral sea.
.,.be 7tb Fleet's third carrier, the
Dlterprtse; was sent lo the Indian Ocean ~g the India-Pakistan war, and no
r_,taoement was available for the
COnstellatk>n.
The Constellation and the Carol Sea are
IRQ>plying about 150 fighter-bombers to
tl)t force attacking North Vietnam. The
r'!t of the aircr1ft come from bases in
SOUth 'Vietnam and Thailand.
.Radio Hanoi claimed that a seventh
V:S. plane was shot down Tuesday, in
QUanR Binh Province just north of the
d&nifltarized zone. It said nothing about
the crew. Radio Hanoi reported earlier
~at five planes were Shot down on Sun-dfY anQ · a sixth on . Monday. It said a
nwnber of the pilots were killed or ca~
tdred.
ot.UC•I CO.lit
DAILY PILOT .
• ..... ClCIASf f'WUIHIMG CDMf'AJIT
l•Mrt N. w.M ,,....... ..............
J•c\: •• em.., 1'k:t ,,.... _.. 0..•I M1M111r
l1101J1•t IC•tvil ......
n •111•• A. ,....,,.11111• l!MftlW".... ...,
L f'tttr ICritf
,....,.,. h9cfit Ctty •"llr ---JJJ1 Ntw,•rt lt11l•••r4
@•ltlftf M dr .. u P.O. ltir 1111, t2lll ...... .._
( Otll ,,,.., -Well ..,, """' ....-,-::Jn:......,, ... _ IM i ll'l7S Aldl ...,._,. ~ -........ GllllDI """"
JI ls ptanoed u part of tho ov....n
Secerstrom dtvelopment known u South Coast Town Center. Future pl1111 for tbe
toWn center lndude 1 40 pe:'rcf.nt ex-
pan,slon of South Coast Plaza and corr
struction of South &out Financial Center
with several hii.h rise office buildings.
Town center expansion ph1na also In-
clude possible construction of multi·level
parking structures next to South Coast
Plau and an underground walkway
under Bristol Street conoectlng I.ht shop.
ping center with the financial center.
Officials of Western International uld
Tuesday completion of their hotel will
create about 350-450 new jobs in Costa
Mesa.
SpokeMnen for the large hotel chain
said about 10 members of management
would be brouaht ln from out.side Orange
County, but the rest of the jobs wouJd go
to local residents.
Western lnternati-Onal oUicials said
they selected the Segerstrom site because they~upect the South Coast Town Center
to 1*ome the metr<ipalitan center of
Orqe County. They also liked the
ne&:rneaa of the ocu.n, Dianeyland, Lion
Country Safari, Ana:eJ stadium and
Anabe1m ConvenUon Center.
Weltero International operates a
hotels In ' !he U.S .. Canada, the Oriti!~
and South America. South Coast Plau
Hotel is expected to open in 1974.
City officials who attended Tuesdry'1
press conference were delighted wlth r the
announcement.
"Jt's the start of an almost new com·
mercial city in Cost a Mesa," said Mayor
Robert Wilsen. ''In the next three yeara
we're going to aee a bltildin& boom
slmUar to the one in Newport Beach the
past three years."
"This sort of thing is the backbone of
city finances," he said. "And It costs us
so little in city services."
City Manager Fred Sorsabal estlma.ted
that the $15 million hotel would provide
Costa Mesa' with $40,000 a year in pro-
perty ta1es alone. That figure doesn't ln4
elude room tax, sales tu or other
revenue.
WUson added that the hotel would be
strictly" covered by city building codes
and should not cause the same concern to
the fire department as the lktory Bethel
Towers.
In Racket ·
By 'TOM BARLEY
Of ''" Otlfr ...... ft•".'
A young attendant who told Hunttnaton
.Beach police that fellow employes at hia
MobUe servict station were ualnf pla)'in&
darts to puncture cuatomtia lira today
beclme the prosecution's sixth wltneo in
IU c1se aaaiNt nine 11leged participants
in a wide.spread auto repair rackel
Wesley Grlener, 20, testified q the
Orange County Superior Court trial "e:nt
into its fourth day lhat he ''didn't llb
what was aolnc on" at the Beach and
·Edinger station operatod at the time by
Christopher Enriquez:, 25, of 7582 Volga
Drive, Huntington Beach.
•
By Newport :
•
NewPort Beac~ city councilmen Mon-''
day told City Manager Robert W)'M 'to"
preparf. an 11reemept fo'r 1harlng Costl'
Mesa 's computer system.
Responding to estimated data system
needs in the next three to jive years,
WyM told councilmen the city must have
a larger capaclty computer:
. Comparing proposals from Costa Mest.
and Huntlngton Beach and in-houae ln;
1tallations from Natlbi\al Cash Register
and IBM, Wylln said Costa Mesa 's cost
estimates were best because they were
only about $75 a month more than
present eity costs. ·
Costa Mesa city staff estimated that
the monthly cost to Newport Beach"'
(including employes, travel, supplies and
computer running time) would be ,1,913.
The neit smalle.st proposal came from
Huntington Beach 1t ,2,lOll.58.
Council Ol(s Resolutions
Griener told prosecutor Richard Stena
ton that attendanta hoilted can on the
racka in the station in the pretense that
they had spotted tire d1m1ge while the
autos were being civen cu and oll at tbe
Islands.
Then, the Tustin man aald, playing
darts Were repeatedly jammed into the
tires and the resulting damage pointed
out to unsuspecting cUJtomers who wert~
often persuaded to buy new tires.
GofK' Sw lnamltlf
Wynn said that any agreement would
probably be for a five--year period, after
which time "Jt will no · longer be
economically feasible for Costa Mesa to'
continue sharing."
Councilmen order.eel the contract to
contain an escape clause, however. •
But Doesn't Commit ·City Griener aaid attendants carried bottles
of oil or brake fluid which were used to
spray the shock absorbers of cara belnc
examined on the rack.
Merwyn Hollyfield, Portland.
Ore., demonstrates specJally
designed snorkel breathing de.
vice from Belgium that en-
ables people who have ·had
their larynxes removed tO
swim . Jle plans to organize
swimmin' club composed or
people without their larynxes.
Wynn added that this la "advantaceous
at this time, but Is merely an interim
measure" until the city has the apa~ and'
budget to tinance its own new system .
It costs $1,908 a month for Newport .
Beach lo run its current inadequate ;
system, Wynn said.
The Irvine city council Tuesday left the
door OPtfl for possible county funding of
the·fl00 ,000 extension of Campus Drive to
connect UC Irvine and the Irvine
lndwitrlal Complex.
The • council unanimously a~opted a
series ol resolutions that do not commit
it !o approve the controversial road proj.
ect, but would allow the city to take ad-
vantage Ot as much as $500,000 to $600,000
of county money for the project.
On 'l)Jesday the Orange County Board
or 51,Jpervlsors turned road plans over to
the new city which with incorpori:tlon
Tuesday gaiJls legal control over the proj·
ect.
Supervisors' approval was delayed
because of environmental concerns e1-
pressed. by the sta~ attorney general and
others.
With the plans for the mile.long
roadway ICl"OSI the San Joaquin Marsh
Fr om Page 1
MAYOR •..
Council of Communities of Irvine, was
the other mayoral candidate and wu
supported by E. Ray Quigley Jr., anothtr
active CCI plember.
Fischbach, Mra. Pryor and Henry
Quigley had been supported by an en-
vironmental action-cifizen's Io r urn
organization, Irvine Tomorrow in the
heated city council campaign.
Burton and Ray Quigley ran In-
dependently, but were endorsed in a last
minute letter campaign by State Senator
Dennis Carpenter (ft-Newport Beach ).
CCI was the organiiation that laid moit
of the groundwork ror the incorporatioh
election sought by residents and the
Irvine Company 1like.
The 3 to 2 vote split of the new City
Council occurred during the election of
Henry Quigley as mayor p~tempore.
Burton was the other nominee.
The council decision on officers a~
peared to be the last traces of pre-elec-
tio11 division of the new council.
Later, unanimous votes were heard on
16 council resolutions, six city ordinances
and five minute order1 approved in the
council 's first session.
That first session was adjourned at
9:15 p.m. Tuesday and will be resumed at
7:30 p.m. 'Thursda y in the Science Lec-
ture Hall on the UC Irvine campus.
environmental preserve, comes an en-
v!fonmental impact study done by the
county.
That study indicates the roadway
sought by UC lrvine officials will not
damage the ~acre marsh, recently
purchased by the University of California
from the San Joaquin Gun Club.
UCI officials a.rgue the road is needed
to provide cl.rtulation to the campus. It
would link the campus with the Irvine
Industrial complex along an alignment
east of the environmental preserve.
The road will require a bridge acroS!I
the flood control channel that adjoins
University Drive. The road would connect
at Jamboree Road in the industrial area.
Mayor William Fisch bach said today
the council action means the new city can
take advantage of county funds for the
project if the council decides to go ahead
with the project.
The council action provides that public
hearings will be held to determine
whether the city feels the roadwa y is in
its best Interests, the mayor added.
One action taken Tuesday commlts use
of city gasoline tax revenues to a fund which may be used as the city's tole
share In an "unbalanced" share of any
initial road project the city might ap-
prove. That may or may not be tht eam.
pus Drive project, the mayor noted.
Newport Agrees
To Shift Sewer
He repeated the testimony ol other pro-
secution witnesses in telling the jury lbat
motorists were then" warned that their
shock absorbers were leakil~ and should
be immediately replaced.
Griener was asked by defense attorney
Al Stokke about a reported cash ahortage
at the Movll station shortly befora he ldt
the facility operated by Enriquez and
Henry Castonguay, 21, of 7&el Com·
modore Drive, Huntington Beach.
Council Orders
Newport Police
To Give Rid es But Grlener made it clear to Stenton
that no one had ever followed up the sug-gestion that he take a lie detector test on Newport Beach councilmen have told
statements he made to both Huntington the Police Department to continue its
The bid received from NCR estimated
a $2,307 monthly price tag for an in·houae
system, while IBM's was even bighe.r at
12.767.
Administrative assistant Judy Kelsey
reported that she had investigated
modular computer systems, but found -
those to not be signlficanUy leas ex.:
pensive at the present time.
Wynn alSo noted that the share agree-•
ment wouJd release needed space in City
Hall now used for data 1ystems.
He added It would also allow time for ·
development of "management system& to
take ·maximum advantage of the In· -
vestment in the computer when it ls '
eventually Installed in-house."
Beach police and the Orange County popular ride.along program, even U tfley
Grand Jury. have to use regular on-duty units to do it. T lks Pl d
"Are you willing to take the test now?" Police Chief B. J ames Glavas had told 3 anne Stenton asked.
"Yes," the young attendant replied. the cou ncil two weeks ago he neede'd F F• ,
Griener's testimony followed that of an more money for the program -about Of ffi8llClDg
Army colonel who told the jury that new $1,700 foc the rest of the fiscal year -
tires on his wife's car were replaced at a because he was hiring off.duty men for £ Air U •
service station allegedly involved in an the public re lations program. 0 port mt
auto repair combine that ranged from Glavas ¥id he doesn't like using on-.. ,
•·al n-ach to San Clemente duty men because ol the potential ex-
-oi:: • • ,. ?ftwport Beacb will coo!Ult with U . Col. Charles Diehl of Ross, poscure to troutblled.the 1. ch·Jh •··emblyman Robert Badham ( R · .. C Ill · '·Id St •· that th · ouncilmen o po ice lea e was ~ a orn1a,. w enwn e hres on _ .. t h bud t·• d t 1 1 New~rt _Beach) 'to determlne the best hi.I wife's car were checked by him suppost:\I o ave ge cu a equa e Y or l·"'•I . . t od ...i th t
be.fore she left for Sout.hetll ' California the program at the start of the "ff;er. wayl1 1.i ,&,t ~JP. at10n 1!' r, ~c; ... .,_t':-_.a v "[ look at a budget as a cootract -wou a !dfCe O?ii{ge County SUpemaor~. and should never have been repl~ced at a to 'be Jived with or reviewed," Council· to provide more money for thelr own .
1tatlon operated by the defendanta. man Donald Mcinnis observed. Airport Land Use Commission.
The officer told Stenton that • Councilmen indicated they may con-City Attorney Dennis O'Neil presented_
''perfectly good" spare was replaced at sider addi11g more money for the ~ a proposed bill to councilmen Monda:Y ..
the station by a tire that bore evidence of gram when they cond uct their mid ·year night and the council directed Mayor Ed,.
many repairs and was clearly inferior to budget review in January or February. Hirth to meet with Badham to see if he;
the tire removed from his wife's car. or the California League of Cities, shoul4
Stenton has said he will introduce propocse the legislation . ;
testimony from employes of all 11 ata-B II G '}t Supervisors budgeted only $500 for the-Directors of Newport Beach'11 sanita· tlons allegedly involved in the conspir1cy rasse e fil y. newly-created panel this year in an ap-
lion district, meeting in Fountain Valley and 1tafernents from customers who parent attempt to discourage its potential
Tuesday night, approved an agreement allegedly were defrauded at ill those J B F' ht effectiveness. ...
with Irvine Company for repla cing and facilities. ll 8fl 00fil Jg The commission has authority to act on
enlarging a section of the sewer line that He has identified Stanley Davis, 32, of land use inatters in the vicinity of the
serves the Corona de! Mar area south to 1036 San Pable Circle, and Jerry Kendall, VAN NUYS (UPI) -Actor Keefe county airport and already has Jocked
Cameo Shores. 35, of 969 Sonora Road, both of Costa Brasselle has pleaded guilty to a charge horns with supervisors over a 10ne
The Irvine Company is planning a boat Mesa with Edward Carney, 27, of 20862 of assault with a deadly weapon in the change for the *acre McDoMdl
channel for its new Promontory Point Shell Harbour Drive, Huntington Beach, shooting a man in a barroom brawl Douglas property. . ••
development, and this r~uires relocating as the three principles in an auto repair Sentencing was scheduled for Jan. 24. The change was eventually granted but•
the existing sewer line. racket carried ou t by stations dispensing The offense carries "' penalty of up to 10 now may be reversed by the new Irvint
In moving a 2,800-foot sectio n, the corn-Arco, Mobil, Shell and Texaco gasolines. year.!i In prison and a $5,000 fine. City Council.
pany offered to replace the 21-inch pipe 1-lmiiiiiiiiil-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~.iiiii=f:=~:::==========::::::;;:::======::::::=:::::::; with 36-inch pipe to meet the growing I
needs of the area, provided that the
sanitation district would make up the
cost difference.
Tuesday night the directors of Orange
County Sanitation District No. 5 voted
unanimously to pa y $93.000 of the $140,000
cost of installing a 2,800 foot section of
the 36-inch sewer line. The company will
pick up the rest of the tab.
GEM TALK
TODAY
by
Filing Deadline Set
How
to make
Money In Newport Electwn
Candidates for \he thret seats on the
Newport Beach cltY CouncU up for elec·
Uon April 11 .may Jlbtain nomination
ptpeia from City CJerk Llura Laglos
beginning Jan. 13, her olfJce said today.
They must be filed by Feb. 3 in order
to qualify for the general mun icipal elec-
tion.
The four-y~ar tenns oC Mayor Ed Hirth
In District 5,.J.Councilman Donald Mcinnis
In District z and Councilman Lindsley
Parsons in District 1 ei:pire in April.
~ far all three hive declined to 1ay
whether or not they intend to aeek re-
election.
To became a .candidate, a person must
file a nomination peUUon 11.1ned by at
least five but not more lb111. IO qualified
voters. according to Mrs. Latlot.
"Once a nominaUoo paper 11 filed, It
cannot be wlthdtawn," Mra. L111lo1 nottd.
To be eligible to hold olfice a c1n-
dldate must have bttn a resident and
registered voter in the district he seeks
to represent for 90 days Immediately
prtttdlng his nominaUon, Mn. Laglos lilld.
"In other word:i:, he must have resided
there a1 nf Nov . S.'' she 1ald.
In addition, candidates must hive been
qualitied voters In NC!\\•port Beach lot
tliree years prior to the elecllon.
Mrs. Lagios said th1t candidate& must
alJO "prepare a statement ol quallfJca·
tlons on a form provided by may office
that includes the name, age, ocaipation
and education and a brief description, in
150 words or less, of the candidate's
qualifications expressed in his own
words."
For those who may make an 11th hour
decision to beeome wHte-in candidates,
Mrs. Lagios aaiO that time runs out as of
April !.
"No name written upon a ball.pt shall
bt counted unless such declaration has
been made," Mrs. Laglos sald.
Mrs. Lagloa also reminded potential
candidates of 1 new state law requiring
the fillng of a •1statement of Polltlcal
Contributions!'
She noted this statement must be filed
In addition to the regular campaign e.x-
pense1 statement.
"'Between March 17 and March 22, and
between May 11 and May IS, a candidates
staltment of political contributions shall
be filed as a publlc record," she saJd, 1d·
ding that both the eandidale and all com·
mittees 1upportin1 the candidate must
file auch a docum~t.
She said the alltemenls aball name
each peraon or organiiation from whom •
contribution h.Js been rteelved that total5
more than $$00, tos:ether with the specific
amounts.
She aald that statement must be flied
with the county clerk.
Re1Ular campal;n 1tatement1 are filed
with the city clerk.
PREVENT ION, NQT CURES
Remember when you got Utat
1hiny new watch for Chrisbna1
1ast year? Chances are good that
it looked great, and kept good time.
Now, after a full ;Year of use, il5
time to get it back into "like new"
condition. \Vithin a few days your
watch can be cleaned, polished and
serviced, keeping it looking its best
and keeping you on time !or those
important appointments.
Upkeep on yo ur watch 111 a good
case of "an ounce of prevention is
worth a pound of cure." Annual
cleaning and minor repair, such
as replacing a scratched or crack·
ed crystal, can prevent major
damage to the finely calibrated
inner "'orkings of your watch.
Walch repairs are handled right
at our atore, where you are IS• .
sured or quality workmanship. r~
llablllty and aafety. We are IUlly
Insured for your protection, and
have skill ed craftsmen to handle your needs.
Start tlle new year on Ume, alter
a visit to our store. . ...
(loi>lr b•ariti/ul)
M1h It W hntlf.T .., ,,..ht!. it i• lot ~IT· TIW ....
•r omn, eu M Mt Ni 14 !rant a.ttl fraM••, tn4 worw • ...W 91
41ftrMt _,.: .11.Ul•ett. peffeeta, bracitl.t .. •• Col. j..,.h,
.. tiefft to H Mte ••• ""'"' -~ ... •tk• .ii. .. .-J&JJ•C..0..9. .... ..,..,.,, ..... t ..... ,.
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT TllMS
IANKAMEllCAlD-MASTfl CHAll:Gl
2C 'l'lAltS IN SAMI LOCATION
'HONI l4&.J401
. . . .
' . ·:
•' .. •• :: . .
'
•
' '
•
13· 01. SIZE
Aqua Net
11 01. AEROSOL
Barbasol ·
SHAVE CREAM
2T 01. DISINFECTANT
Lysol
SPRAY
£1lar1in111ts
From
vour 99c Negative.
Count Vasya
VODKA
Kedacbrol)le
Bmm -Super 8·20
exp. 1 49 Slides. •
2~ 01. SIZE
Old Spice _
Stick Deodorant
"Softie"
Rich solid color that
wraps itself up in solt-
ness for you..
BATlt TOWEL 1 59 R11. US •
FACE TOWEL 119 R•&· 1.49 ,
WASH CLOTlt 39c a11.49c
CANNON
"Titan"
TOWELS
Sol~ solid color teny,
so thick and luxurious
to brigtiten up any room.
53c .
TWIN SIZI
Flot or Fitted
R11. 2.99
2.69
, PILLOW CASES '''''" (42136) lfar 1.19
100% shredded foam
filled with printed cov-
er.Non-allergenic
dustless, moth proof.
Rt f. 99c 1.29
(1l"•l 3'1
Wtd-. -29, 1971 N DAil y Mor· J 3
10 LB. 11 01. ~AMILY SIZE
Tide
DETERGENT
":1.9 ' .
CANNON "MONTIClllO"
''No-Iron''
CANNON
Rhapsody
TOWELS
Beautiful velur1 print
with bold brilliance and
tich fashion design.
BATH TOWEL 1 59 R11. 1.11 •
HAND TOWEL 119 R11. 1.41 •
WASH CLOTlt 39c Re1. 49c
CANNON
Maharaja
TOWELS
1.77
1.17
POLAROID
SHAMPOO
14 01. SIZE
Listerine
ANTISEPTIC
6.2 01. FAMILY SIZE
Close·up
TOOTHPASTE
Clear Red or Clear, Mint Flanrs.
DECORATOR
Ice Buckets
"JACK. FROSr' -Beauti·
ful leather & wood grain
finish with lnsocor insula·
tion. Patent color finish.
Rt1. 4.49 3.88 '"
DYMO Home Budget
and Income Tax Record
B11k • ( • Recomended by
accou~tants ••• in liea't'Y 1 29
duty'"' "''"· . Re1.1.ll •
LADY CLAIROL
Ultra Blue Lightener
It lightens lighter quicker,
more gentry .•• leaves hair 11 9 solter in better condition.
111. 1.57 2 Ol. •
Sominex TABLns
~-······
~.
~
tor acid control in relief of 1 98 indigestion and heartburn.
P•k of115 •
"A I" . 1 29 nUSQ Svppolltor111
He,.,nloidal. h1. 1.63 1 l's •
..
• " .
• .
•
". ;. :
~·
I ' . '
• ".
' . ~
•
'
)
I
l
I
•
•
.
I
'
' t
I
'
•
• • '
-y NLOT
• ! ' .·J ·p~~ident
' " .· OptilniStic
· . ov~,.Plans
" " ~ . .. 'BJ NORMAN DMPSTER 1 KE}'. BISCAYNE, Fla .
~I) -~sldent Ni.Jon .con--~to"" optimistic about
Ille -eecia ~ the economy
l!L.tbl -year, bot appean tO "'have toned down his rbetOric .• bit .. 11172 "•J> ' Jlh!acbes , with '?llal1)I pocket·
• -problenis· still festering. • • /'We can now .confidently
•• ..,, _ .11'11 iJJ eodlng .on a
Jdlit--eacoarqinc ~economic
~f Wl \Ntl YS!5
:.-ml that 11172 wiD
· ... a-year· of·arUt ·ecorxmuc: . .-NiDlf· .aid 'I ·=1
:
1
1ipmg Jegi!laiton u-· l<ollli& hta authority cto -
trol nges ind prices. " 'illat may IOUnd lll<e I pre!•
·ty rosy assea:ment. Bu.t not
wben it is·conlras_lted with Nix!
, Cll>'I earlier I~ of ,the economy m the COl!>ing elec-
1ilit year.
: ' > AbOut 1 year ago, Nixon told
nationwide television au-dleace · • ,
f' .i04Aad ·tJiis " a prediction:; k= to be •·1'"' of an 1 . economy in WhJch ! , the riaeln inllation, 111 going to continue to go
down; in which 1JQemploy·
.m .. ~ which· i.. presently toq
high, will nDally oomi under
'iioo.frol 'and begin to recede.
1971, in eueoce, wm be a good
; yeir, and 1m will be a" very,
·good year." T' !
Well, 1971 W4$"·~ .a good
y~r. It WU not·ql}iti U bad
overall aa: 1970, when the na-
tlon expe-,simul-
ly 'tfte flnlt recei i'OO of tht -.i lrifllltlon ,JD .3) )\fJarS. •
Biit it ..... bad:enough.
Unemploymei\t.'b. v eT e ii
.around the ~ -I mark a)l year, l!llking it worse than' mo aM the want 1year for JOl>lessness a1nce.1161.
InOatioo aubskted late in the
~ but not until Nixon im-,
poied a 91).day.wage-price-rent
!rem, followed by a n
t.laborate 1et of economic.coo-
lrol5.
~hQut l!lOsl of 1971
N;Xon regular!~ repeated hii
~ that the year would be I good one; and 11172 a very, 100!1 ~for the economy.
· 1 Tbe Prealdent' p r o b a b I y
ooped he could talk the
economy back to health. The
idea be}Uod this is that if
buaineasmen and consumers
think times are getting better
tlJty will spend their rponey in
a ,way that will spur the
eoooomy and fulftll the proph-• . "'Y· · · But with election day about
, tl .inonths away, there has
• bffn _ a subtle change in the
~.rl>etorio.Tbeidea "°" ia to ni.-hopes bot not
-l!>o lll&h-
--1e11 doUbt that the eew;ia•inv can reach robust ,._., by the lint 1\iet-
dBT -0.. lint Monday of ~-
' Bot ·-of them ··-e.1 ~ obould be o liWe
-by election day. n 11 1n Nbon'• political in.
-lor the public not to 1et "'Tr."11"" too btgb. ~ ,,...,-nteofs ,.,.., r. lnltance, wu one
· amlda ad anocceptable. Jklt
It 111 ·• i.n .......,ia,o point
ballet thlll the nte moat of
thia .,..,.
l
• • 100,,. s.1r111 .... -~ ..............
..
HANDCRAfTED
.~0tt.01·tv
SPACE COM~AND
. REMOTE .CONTROL Q
1
··, SLIGHTLY \ry EXTRA
FIE
'$2750·YALUE tARt ..
' ' . ' ' : ' .. t \ltnyf cl•d mel•I c<1bin.IJ11 gr•ined K .. 1h111ir W•lnut colo r ..
, ~illv'(Hf ·~UHF Concenlri11 ~nin9 ..,..ith illumin1t1d
'" c~iit..l number1. 5" J ]" Tw:11.Co111 Sp.ek•r. ..
' < ~ '\ , ('l .' f•r "
' .,
25 1 ,,., . '•1••· . ·. (
,$.oJi~ Stat.e
'IMMEDIATE
; .: . DEUVERY . ' ..
eA--T-e-. ,,, .... ,," ... ~ .. .. , .......... .
. ' ' . :
C-i711
VERY·
.. , .• LOW.
PRICE
.. . . . . . . . • • • • • • 9' .. • . .. .. ... .. ....
Pitrtt Given
$15;000-Graat Qy.ake Biggest Stat_e Story_
d. 1'he DALTON ~C4s12w
Contempojj.ry •1)1td cornpitl
1, ~ • console In grail'lfd Walnufcolor
• •• oi;i aelKt tietdwood solids and
Yfl!eerf. s• x 3r!)~win.·~ ~ ~all.tr. • • ·~ . '!' • 't
LOWEsT l'tllCE. IN oUM~E COUNTY
•• 25" DIAG. PICTURE
AV ANTE .·.
' Ultra Modern styling for the c.ontemporery room settings .
ebintt finished in Bermude Shetl White high 9loss ft!Cquer
with Roewood color top. Chrome'color 100 Pic:fure Tube.
Titen IOI Hendcrefted Chessi.-C,.73QX.
THE FAMOUS
TRANS·
OCEANIC
BY
ZENITH .••
LOWEST
PRICE '
EVER
' :.OY.li.. 70.0.1-FM) AM pl;K "111tliriu1tio11•I 1hort W•'l't, 'Mlrlllt ·
••f~. fwll f lrrler AM emete111r broMcesh -11 b•ll4'11'1 ell, '1P1 'C.!l'le~•" Wether l•IMI. Opet1t.1 •fl 9 "D'' cell lt•tt•ries. 11 iV
or 220V. '''"' li9lit, EerplilHI• jeck, S-,..reft' b•llCI 1wltch with heM·
preed h11i119, fbo11y color c1bin1t
·~·WHY BUY
. ··AT · ABC.?
'· • • J.
• 1 • Vec.r Free Parts t f • • I e l :Year Free'Service . , . . .
• l Y.ear Picture Tube
WC1Jri'anty·. ·
'
• f.ree Delivery and Set Up
• N9 Commissioded Salesmen
• We, Service What We SeH
•
TOP
RATED
MODEL
~ • vaoNrsl. am
BOTH SeT':"'tBot°E'1V"AILAB~E '
WITHOUT REMOTE CONTROL .
ALL ·ZENITH MODELS ON DISPLAY .
• J ' ' •
AT . ·ORANGE COUNTY'S LARG.EST ZENITH DEALE·R . . . -·-
• •
·': •
I ,
I
Coast
•
Raciii to . s·eek
Mesa Council . . . ' .
S~t in .April
. . . .. 7 ··I• ' ' . ' .......
Dominic RaclU, owner ot. Costar Mesa
Jewelry and Loan, todoy .annou~, his
ntenUon to l'Wl for city council in the
lJiril t972 eledioQ. , • , · . .
Raciti, 54, has liytd In, Costa .Mesa for
15.Y~"rs. H"is a•dlrecW of the ~mber
1f commerce, .one pl the founders of the·
~aternal Order of Sons of Italy, and Is
,fee presldent(lf Costa Mesa Tomorrow.
The new candli:tate lists several other
!tUb afflllaUohs. and cl vie activltiff.
"I have been act.tve 1D many clv~ and
>y&iness affalr!," Raciti said · in ' a
~pared statement "Now I wish to
}edicate-the necessary time to my com.
~Unity ... ' Jll!bllc "'F''1!·" • <. Tine c11y.Cfuicttmoo -Mayor Robert
WUaoa, Al~ Pinkle1 llld Wjjijam St. ~~?a:e9!'~ toi't. . -• ;
1llldll .id "' .... :i..;;.;..o ...,,_ ~112"' two'"~'lli:'!'
'A pair of gurtq'len.toot aboqt $200 out of
1 Costa Mesa fruit Jlfici atanii 1'laclay
night, pollce·sakl today.
The 1g..year-old clerk at tlit ~
Julius, 2200 Harbor Blvd: told' ]iollce he
was serving a cw:tomer at the front win·
dow at aboUt 7:.40 p.m. when he heard
sQ\neone come In the re·ar 'door ol the
~nd • Wh~n he went to Investigate, he add he
vt:•S confronted by a maa wearing
sunglasses and anned with a handgun
who derpanded the money in tW: cash ' ' . rtglsltr.
The tee111ger said he turn<d ""' the 4'1> and the robber Deel with I CO!ft-
panlon who apparmly bod stood watcll
o~ide the 'door.
IOIJTll
COAST
P.1.AZA
'
r 1 tf"n.Y PILOT""",_
.· •
DARKENED ARIA MARKS SITI OF PllOJIOSIO HOTEL
350-room Fodllty Scholl ..... to °"" In 1974
•
•
J
.
ORAN&E. CO~'t, cALIFqRNIA ·-. "· ' ..........
• • .... --
Qlevaµ_e!', 83,
Listed as Good" ,
. '
_, . . ·-. -....
' . ..
wellaro cloparlment wwld move,. I! f-
eel lo••• cltY hall. Heiaaid !l>Jt' would
.)le up lo i:)>unty· officials.-· •.
There has beeil som~ apeeulaUon that
new ftl!~re of!ic'es might be.built· in C0!1·
juncUon 'WI.th 1 new ,, Harbor· Judicial
District cou_rthctuse If one· is buUt. ne'ir_
Oranae Cowity Airport: • •
The elimtmiUon of weUare offices at cl·
ty ball bu been di.acussed Beffral tunes,
~t coi1firm0tloo of l!Je city'1.bunfto do
so w11 "brooghl oUt this· week at• a plan-. 1----1-~ ..:..."""'"' . ' . ' """~-......... ,., -~--~ ;41ti't ~·. ,, ~~
l!I: .... lrfio. ~·'~-~
...,.!tC'.T:
.ol lhi iNlt.M -
•
Harlan J)ies,.12;, ·
Former Justici ' ' . . ! ., • .,
Of High· f..Outt.
.,....,., .
lie .uccumbed at George Wl!hlngton
Unh'G"Olli' lloopltAI at · 3;30 p.m. EST
with JusUce Potter stewart, hi4 dau&h·
ter tnd three liltet8 at his bedside.
Wllllam Rehnqlliat Jr., Will be ~
In as Hirllrn's,..llUccMlor ·Jan. 7' along
with Ricllmond, Va., attorney LeWis A.
)'owen who rePl¥ia the late l!U10 lllack ..
Callie ol doilth" ..... nc!t .imliledli!Oly
rnniMiJicod fiat ot U.e time 'Harlan "an·
llOUl1C«I hil nliremeflt on sip\. ,23, It .. .. kiloWn !hit ho h~ llffn treolecl for
bOne caocef '1nce Au;u.f: ,.
Pr!Ylte -and' buriaf''wlll liii·!n Welton, Conn., 'f'.ueeday. _
Amef!cm 0111 In front ol 11"! Supreme
CO.ri; at the Wliii. Hoilae'iocl<tl!er .ro•·
ernmtnt = were l rD.mediately lowered ht to the dejld lun.t, wflo
,.rYed II terms Oil the bilh tribunal.
~Jen, ..--srandfather abo -.ec1
Oil the l!UPltme CO\nt, 'bad A lq and ~·"lllllatlon II I --
dilqrtld ~ ·-1111 -~ ovet'1be .... ~·-,. tbe7+ -..umed ~ -:S, ~$el ·~~~:
" .. '
'
• °'1l y .. Ii.lit
Road• I CJf
•
Colder Weather -'.Follows Rain
' ,.Alter one or the wettest weeks In
Southern Callfornla history, the rain was
tin.Uy gone today -and in Its place
were record low temperatures which sent
hundreds of motorists skidding and
cnsbln& oo icy roads.
Orange Coast residents awoke to
nwcury readings 1n the low 40s this mmrtnc. •hile the quick littz.e OD moun·
tlin roads produced oontesUon ''so ,bad
you wouldn't believe It/' according to a
Like Anowhtad fireman.
Orana:e County today mopped up from
a IOllY session or storms which dumped
an •veraae of five lncbes of precipitation.
Tbe rainfall figures ranged from 3.14 iJ\..
cbu ln Sant, Ana to a floodlike i.~
reedlQ& ln Silv(.rado Canyon. weatnu damage turned from low.lying
propert1 to Southland highways as the
walerlogged roads froze in the grip of a
new COid anap. The California Highway
Patral aaid lt wai swamped by so many
acddtmt calla that investigators were handlmc oDJ, Ibo mo•t wlous.
Interstate S and U.S. 101 were open
TUesday, but heavy snowfall and Icy con-
ditions in higher areas such as Callfomla
highways 18 and 30 in the San Bernardino
.. Mountains stalled cars for more than an
hour u thou.sands fled the snow.clogged
peaks.
In Los Angeles', where douns oi streets
became miniature lakes and several
motorists were brleOy marooned atop
their cars, residents mopped up from a
week-long downpour that deposited near-
ly six inches of water on the city.
The 'National Weather Service set the
total rainfall in Southern C&llfornia since
July 1 at 6.91 inches, compared to 9.97 for
the same period las~ year. December,
however, was far wetter than last year
wllh 6.31 inches <lf raln against 4.52 in
1910. l'be ouUook for the rest of the week la
f,or: partly cloudy skies, peak tem-
peratures ()Ver 60 degrees and "good
football weather" New Year's Day,
Fr om Page J
REP AIR TRIAL .
<ll, tOOO Garden Grove. Boulevard,
W#ltmlnste.r, Roger Mendenhall 28, of
26115 Avenlda De. Seo,~sslon Viejo, RJlpb Garney, 29, of, Catie $an ~cor, Saa Juan Capistrano and R. C.
Wel.sner, 11, <lf Santa Ana .
.n hat been alleged that Davis, Kendall
8:Q1f Edward Carney were in control ()f
~ 11 &a'Uons despite oil company regula-
Uona: aimed at limiting operations of
member service staUons to indivldua!J.
;it Is also alleged that the trio ran sCboota at which employes were in-
1tiUcted to mUtilate tltes, alash hoses, f}!aY shock' absorber• and generally
pi:llsure motorlSts Into icceptin& maJor r#• <ln' th~ car11. -~ton has atated that the ir10 supplied
all the needed part.a used by the combine
fn>in a Garden Grove. warehouse which Wa's not .a part or the servicing system BOrmailY operated by all four oil com-
• ~ Short Qua~es . .
Shake Southland ' .
-HOLIJSTl!li (AP) ~ lltv;n minor
!artbquakes along the. famed San
~ Fault rolled through the hill
C!/¥ntry IOUth of bef~.1 starUina rt31derlt.
1>111 , ... ~-no dallilCe. --~ .. \ .. "JUI! a llllfe ~k and roll, but not loo
rntich shake," said Sin Benito t:ounty
Qeputy Sheriff Gene Bereslnl.
fie aaki many residents called his office
l.e . rtport the Tuesday quakes but said
no.ne reported any property damage.
The University of Ca Ii for n i a
lebmOgraphic .station at B e· r k e I e y
reported the Jllrongest of the quakes
~tered 4.0 on the Richter scale, a
l<lrce powerful enough to cause moderate
tan.age~ The other quakes registered
~ 3.0 to 3.7. They occurred from 1:33
tcrl:31 p.m.
file Loa Angelea earthquake last Feb. 9
~gtstered 8.6.
. Hollister Is located about 70 miles sciutbeut of San Francisco.
~rasselle Guilty
In Barroom Fight _.
.YAN NUYS (UPI) -Actor Keefe
Brassellt has pleaded guilty to a charge ,r assault with a deadly weapon in 'tht
aMoting a man in a barroom brawl.
Senteoclng was scheduled for Jan. 24.
The offense carries a penalty of up to 10
ytan 1n prison and a $5,000 flne.
DAILY PILOT
NMGI CCAlf PUllllttLMIJ COMPANY
-•Mrt N. w, ••
p,...... .... "* .....
J•c.k l. C11,l•., YICll Pntl!IW ... Ol!Mrtl MIMlll
n•11111 Ke nD . ., ..
lUin•• A. "''"'"'•• ~Ed ....
• f Chtwf11 H. L.01 afch•ti P. Nell
Aulll111t Mfrlll'lllg E.dl!W6
t c ........ Offk.
1JO W11t l•y Stfett
>AtTIT~t AdJr•u: P.O. lax 1560, •2l2l
. ---,..,.._, hMti1 »n H-' lw'"•nl '"""""" llKfll .m ,._, ... _
"""=~; 1"11 hid! ~ .... ._ ali _.,,. II CMNne *.-i
••
paniea:.
Most of the 11 service stations Iden-
tified for the jury in Judge Jamea
Turner's courtroom are now under new
management.
2 Bands 'Battle'
In Rose· Bowl
GaIQ.e Preview
LOS ANGELES (UP!) - A ~n·
frontation between members o'r the
University ·ot Michigan and Stanfo'rd
bands wss described today as ''humorous
and nonmalicious" by David Ruiz,
manager of the Stanford musicians.
There was no immediate comment
from George Cavender, !eider of the
Michigan band.
Both bands are housed at donnilories
on the UCLA campus and while the
Michigan band was drilling Tuesday for
its appearance it the Rose Bowl game
Ne'W Year's Day, some members of lhe
Stanford band went out to watch.
According to a story filed by reporter
Ann Getz of the Detroit News, the
Michigrn ha~ was "stone4, spat upon,
partly blOtkided durlna: parade drill and
ver~ally assaulted by rival Stanford
students."
Ruiz who said he observed the entire
1 incident sald this was "highly ex-
aggerated.''
"We were preparing to go outdoors for
rehearsal and about 65 of our guys -
there are 182' In the band -saw the
Michigan band marching and heard their
drum sectioO. Our guys are very spirited
and fun·lovlng and they went up and lined
the streets and were cheering.
"I didn't hear any obscenities. At no
time did anyone throw anything. Al no
time did anyone spit. A lot of our
members joined in behind the Michigan
band and If one is taking it seriously
enough, one' could say they were mock-
ing. There was humor in it. Of course,
Mr. Cavender, toolt it very seriously. He
did not think it was funny at all. The
situation was fun and humorous and non-
malicious.
"Last night Michigan and Stanford
band members were together at a par(y
hosted by UCLA and we laughed about
it."
Guard Wounded
Foiling Brinks
'
Hold up Atte mpt
LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A Brinks
guard who lost a foot race to a gunman's
bullet was in satisfactory condition today
with a leg 'ffOUnd after an attempted
bank holdup Tuesd-"Y in Century City.
Henry McCarthy, one o! two guards
making a morning. delivery to United
California Bank, Was wounded when one
or the gunmen drew a semiautomatic ri-
fle from an umbrella and fired .
The gunmen ordered the guards to halt,
but they made a dash for the safety of
the armored car and McCarthy was hit ln
the left leg. The other guard made It.
Police Capture
Third Mesa Boy
A Costa Mesa teenager was arrested
this morning after escaping police who
Ii~ a shot gun blast at him Tuetday
night.
The youth and two companions were
spotted by officers near a televlllon
repair shop located at 837 w. 19th St. at
about 11::0 p.m.
Two of !he boys, 16 and 17 . surrendered
to patrol men . but the third boy ned, llC-
cordlng to Police reports.
A patrolman shouted at the fleeing
teenager lo slop lhvt fired the one shot
which missed the youth. Police said the
boy was picked up this morning without
incident.
AD three youths were held oo suspicion
ol burglary.
..
DAILY PILOT Sl•tt Pllott
HE'S FIRST MAYOR
lrvin•'s Fischbach
Fischbach Named
As. Firs t Ma yor
Of Irvine City
Minutes after the first meeting of the
Irvine City Council was opened by a
county official's slip of the tongue, a
mayor and mayor pro-tempore were
elected.
Robert Carillo, deputy county clerk, of·
liciated at the 6:45 p.m. meeting Tuesday
in Science Lecture Hall ori the UC Irvine
campus.
"May I call this official meeting of .the
City Council of the city of the -Irvine -
Company to order pleaSe?" Carillo said
to the uproarious delight of both the new
council and the audience of some 350
persons.
The remark was funny in context of the
charges made during the cityhood cam-
paign that the Irvine Company would
control the new city council.
However, later balloting for the mayor
and mayor pr,.,...tem positions on the coun-
cil disproved company domination of the
council.
Attorney Will iam Fischbach. the
leading vote-getter in last Tuesday's elec-
tion, was made mayor of the new city by
a 3 to 2 vote. Councilmen Mrs. Gabrielle
Pryor and Henry Quigley supported
Fischbach.
John H. Burton, chairman of the
Council of Communities of Irvine, was
the other mayoral candidat(! and was
supported by E. Ray Quigley Jr., another
active CCI member.
Fi.schbach, ~irs. Pryor and Henry
Quigley had been supported by an en~
v.fronmental action-citizen's for Um
orianlzation, Irvine Tomorrow In' the
heated city council campajgn.
Burton and Ray Quigley ran in-
dependently, but were endorsed in a last
minute letter campaign by State Senator
Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport Beach).
CCI was the organization that laid most
of the groundwork for the incorporation
election sought by residents and the
Irvine Company alike.
The 3 to ~ vote split of the new City
Council occurred during the election of
Henry Quigley as mayor pro-tempore.
Burton was the other nominee.
The council decision on officers ap-
peared to be the last traces of pre-elec-
tion division of lhe new council.
Later, unanimous votes were heard on
16 council resolutions, six city ordinances
and five minute orders approved ln the
council's first session.
Talks Planned
Fo r Financing
' Of Airport Uni t
Newport Beach will consult with
Assemblyman Robert Badham ( R •
Newport Beach ) lo determine the best
way to get leg islation introduced that
would force Orange County Supervisors
to provide more money for their own
Airport Land Use Commission.
City Attorney Dennis O'Neil presented
a proposed bill to councilmen Monday
night and lhe council directed Mayor Ed
Hirth to meet with Badham to see if he.
or -the Galifornia League of Cities, should
propo!'ie the legislation.
Supervisors budgeted only $500 for the
newly<reated panel this year in an ap-
parent attempt to discourage its potential
effectiveness.
The commission has authority to act on
land use matters ·in the vicinit.y of the
county airport end already has locked
horns with supervisors over 11 zone
change ror the SO-acre McDonnell
Douglas property.
The change was eventually granted but
now may be reverse<:! by the new Irvine
City Council. '
Temple Gets OK
To Open School
Temple Sharon in Costa lilesa bu been
g I v e n permission by lhfl ~lty to o~n a nUrstrY IC'hool for 34 toll It eft
\V. Hamllton SL
Councllmtn ovemiled five protest let-
ters and decided lhe hll'sery school op-
ttaUOl'I would not create P. nulstince In
tile re1identlt1il area at some neighbors
ht:t complained.
. -. . -
·Ho spi:tals'·
County Suit
Confirmed
••
A deputy a1torney general'a argument
that Oranie county Superior Court had
no jurlsdlctl<ln In a lawsuit filed against
the state by a nlne-hospita~ organiuUon
has been quashed by a superior Court
judge. 1 Judge Claude Owens rejeCted the plea
filed by Deputy Attorney General
Edward Belasco and confirmed a trial
date of Jan. 11 for the lawsuit filed by the
newly formed California He a It b
Provldera Association. Pretrial motions
will be he<l.rd Jan. 3.
The hospital group includes floag
Hospital, Newport Beach, and South
Coast C.Ommunlty H,ospital, S o u t b .
Laguna, among Its members.
Judge Owens' ruling appeared to clear
the way for trial of the hospital group's
allegations that the atate 11 permitting
the construction of unwanted hospitals in
Orange County.
It further argues In an action which
names director of public health Louis
Saylor as defendan£ that t~ qua_lity <lf
medical care In Orange County can be
expected to rapidly decline if present
construction plans for several proposed
new hospitals are allowed to proceed.
Seven proposed hospitals ih Orange
County could he affected if the judge
assigned to the trial agrees with CHPA
allegattons that backers of many pro-
posed hospitals have violated the spirit of
lha 1969 Duffy Act.
That legblatlon exempted builders of
private hospitals from obtaining the now
needed approval of the local Health Plan-
ning Council If they showed evidence of
construction by July 1, 1971.
CHPA princiP4ls claim that the
deadline led to the filing of a rash of
"phony" hospital plans. In one case, they
_claim, ~a hospital group filed for
permission to build a hospital on ground
they dldr;i'l own at the time of the a~
plication.
Mission Community Hospital In Mission
Viejo and Saddleback Community
tlospital were two of 133 California
hospitals proposed before the state's
deadline.
t 'rom Pqe J
HOTEL ..•
Anaheim Convention Center.
Western International operates 62
hotels In the U.S., canada, the Orient,
and South America. South Coast Plua
Hotel Is ezpected to open In lrl'.\.
City officials who attended Tuesday's
press conference were delichted with the
announcement.
"It's the start of an almost new com-
mercial city In Costa Mesa," said Mayor
Robert Wilson. "In the next three ~ears
we're going to see a building boom
similar to the one in Newport Beach the
past three years."
"This sort of thing ls the backbone <lf
city finances ," he said. "And it costs us
so little in city services."
City Manager Fred Sorsabal estimated
that the $15 million hotel would provide
Costa Mesa with $40,000 a year In pro-
perty taxes alone. That figure doesn't in-
clude room tax, sales tax or other
revenue . Wilson added that the hotel would be
strictly covered by city building codes
and should ·not cause the same concern to
the fire department as the 13-story Bethel
Towers.
TODAY
by
PRE VENTION, NOT CURES
Remember when you got that
shiny new watch for Christmas
last year? Chances are good that
il looked great, and kept good time.
No\v, after a full year of use, its
time to get it back into "like new"
co ndition. \.Vithin a few days your
watch can be cl ea~d, lished and
serviced, keeping m 'ts best
and keeping you on time or those
important appointments.
Upkeep on yo ur watch is a good
case o[ "an ounce of prevention is
worth a pound ()f cure." Annual
cleaning and minor repair, such
as replaci ng a scratched or crack·
ed crystal, can prevent major
damage to the finely calibrated
inner workings of your wateh.
Walch repairs are handled right
at our store, where you are aa·
sured of quality workmansblpl r .. llability and safety. We are uJJy
insured for your protec:tion. and
have skllled crall•men to handle
your needs.
•
Start the new year on time1 after
a vJslt to our store.
ADV.
. .
,
~omputet
Pact Eyed
By Newport
.
Newport Beach city councilmen MM:
day tpld• City Manager Robert Wynn to,
prepare an agreement for sharing Costa
Me.sa1s computer system.
Responding to estimated data system
needs in the next thrtt to five yean,
Wynn told eountjlmen the city must have
a larg'er capacity computer.
Comparing proposals from Costa Mesa
and Huntington Beach and in-house in·
stallalions from National Cash Register
and IBM, Wynn said C.osta Mesa 's cost
estimateli' were best because they were
• -only about $75 a month more than
present city costs.
UPI TeleJlltte
Goin' Stclmmlng
Merwyn Hollyfield, Portland.
Ore ., demonstrates specially
designed snorkel breathing de-
vice from Belgium that en·
ab1es people who have bad
their larynxes removed to
swim. He plans to organize
swimming club composed of
people without their larynx.es.
Kialoa II Makes .
It Across First;
But No New Mark
TASMANIA -Kialoa II out of Newport
Beach was first home in the Sydney-
Hobart Yacht race ·today but the Los
Angeles Yacht Club entry skippered by
Jim Kilroy fell eight hours short &f set-
ting a new record in the 65().mile jaunt.
The 73-foot vessel logged an elapsed
time of three days , 12 hours 46 minutes
and 21 seconds, eight hours longer than
the fecord set in 1962 by another U.S.
yacht", Ondine 1.
Klaloa 11 lost time In nearly a day of
light weather but made up for some of it
crossing Storm Bay and up the River
Derwent to the finish line and hundreds
of cheers from bystanders.
Two American boats -Oqdine II and
American Eagle -and New ZealarJ9's
Buccaneer and Australia 's Siska battled ' ' for second in Storm Bay. ·'
With 100 miles of the finish lin'e, K.Jaloa
II held a IG-mile lead over Ted Turner's
American Eagle. Third on elapsed time
at that polnl In the race was Sumner A.
"Huey" Long's 73-foot ketch Ondine II.
Ondine II, from the Larchmont, N.Y.,
Yacht Club, was skippered by Long and
the American Eagle, a converted
America's Cup 12-meter yacht, had
Turner of Atlanta at the helm .
Costa Mesa city staff estimated that
the monthly co~t to Newport Beach
(Including employes, travel, supplies and
computer running time) would be $1,99.1.
The next smallest proposal came from
Huntington Beach at $2,199.68.
Wynn sald that any agreement Would
probably be for a five-year period, after
which time "It will no longer be
economically feasible !or Costa Mesa to
continue sharing ."
Councilmen ordered the contract to :
contain an escape clause, however • ,;
WJ!lR ~dded that .this Is "advant~geous;
at this time , but is merely an lnterim-
measure" until the city has the space llld
budget to ·nnance its own new system. ~
11 costs $1,908 a month for Newporj..
Beach to run its current lnadequata ,
system, Wynn said.
The bid received from NCR estimated
a $2,307 monthly price tag f<lr an in-house'
system, while IBM's was even higher at . 12.767. .
Administrative assistant Judy Kelsey:~
reported that she had lnvestigatect"
modular computer systems, but found...
those to not be significantly Jess es--
pensive at the present time. :
Wynn also noted that lhe share agree-;
ment would release needed space in City·
Hall now used fdr data systems. "
He added it would also allow time tor
development of "management systems to''
take maximum advantage of the In-.
vestment in the computer when it II
eventually installed in-hou.se."
Cross Country
. Track Meet Set, :.·
~Y· ~sta Mesa ,
The Costa Mesa Recreatlolf'
Department's annual cross country meet
for boys and girls 15 and under 1;··
scheduled Jan, g at TeWinkle Park. ·,,
Registration starts at 9 a.m. with th&-•
first event to be run at 10 a.m, and the
last at noon. Races range from a halt-
mile course to two miles. ·~
Members of high school track or cross
country teams, or any holders d • 1971
Ol' 1972 AAU card are not eligible to co~
pete. •
No spikes or cleats will be· allowed , but
shoes of some type must be worn. ac-
cording to recreation officials.
The first eight winners ln each Costa
Mesa event will compete in the Orange.
County cross country meet Jan. IS at UC-
Irvine. •
There are seven races for boys and
seven for girls.
How
to make
Money . '
(look beauJiful)
·MU:• It 1oolr: btletlhl i17.,,..TI11j it ia Int j..nlrp. T• .oh•·
., oun, e1a H Mt M 14 Ira.tat ;ol4 frt!Hft n4 ..,. • -.-IM:r .t
4if•r•nt "'*"J .11edil1eM, ,.adute, hraeel.u, et.: Coi1 jenlty ... u ....... " .... M4 .. ,. STW)'1'b•re, .... .a. ~ .,...
QM~C-.il.llM _ ... I 11 .... h , ... ..,..
1823 NEWPORT BLVD ., COST A MESA
CONVINIENT TERMS
IANKAMERJCA~D -MASTElt CHARGE
24 YEAfS IN SAMI LOCATION
PMONE S41°l401
A apokesman ror the ttmpte said there
had betn 110me complaints tbou\ noL~e
from Tellgious iservlcet but he didn't
believe lhe children would pruent any
problem. !--=---------~~=======================:!
VOL. 64,. NO. t. .4
.•
. -
-••
·~ j
r t , t •·
... ' , .i.,: ... • •
" . ... : . • I r
Rain Goe s· ·• . . . ' --· . ' -. ~ . ,. ' . .
C9ldSQap :~
Takes O,ver :
'
As Aecide~• ~-•
•
1be death of a Corona del lar-woman
whose nude body .•u found1n ber burn·
ing apaftmeilt 1hAs been• rqled iacc1~ntal
by coroner's investigator Hatold Mtmck.
sally Lyruie Miede!, 21, wal found tar·
Iy Tuesday morning by firem.ee baUllOC
the · blue t)\at '1)1pt0d tn her sliigJe
bedroom apmtment 1t $00 F~ Ave. ii>vesliJators.l>elieve,M(~~-had
been smoklllg in bed and lllor cil~"• tg-
niled the' bedding. Ill an JU0mpt to
escape the flaDieJ, w · ran Jato the
balhroom wheri she !ell ani! hil'b<r lle'!d. "'-'I • po»ce -....ze-. -~ ,_, -'-~'. ~ . ·" . Death.,, .. qiµ~ u1 ~1-1~
Minick. aild. , ~~-·•"·"'·"~ 1Jet¢iV01 said they ~ ia~-" .,,,_._
ther< w8'·foi!I play invol<esl .in !he dejl\b .
1>«ause the ipartment ~ IO haye
been· ranUtlOd and ~ coodltk>O and' ··u r··"""""· . "' loCa on o m:c ~,., .. ·~· ' · S"'' Ed ,.,..,.._,. _,, thell" , Dettcl1ve a"' ~'.""'t ~ • lnv!',llgatioa iboril the only eYldeilce of
trallma on the body was the oae bump
on her J:iead. . "She WU -Uy ,11etp1ng ID tha
nude when sbetawoke to~ her room in names," he said. :Sb< [ilOOab)j' .became
confu&ed Jn her auempta Jo lel'oilt o! the
apartment and knocked ~ a few
things ovet.t• • ' •
Cibbateni At<! 'Ille ~ llOal fnlln
the · nr. melled '"'"" !IJmlibJnp w!lioh ~ a<:<OIHlted 1or the 'cllllhevtred • ap.
pear1nce o/ th! ~!"!· -
Funeral .ervices have been tchtduled
' fol 2 p.m. ~ al Pldllc. View MOmorial Park. ~ ·
• •
--
dtstance. and that t~ never Wett!' more
than two MIGs logetbir. ~
The last MIGs rtported '!' .. act~ was
before Christmas when at least-three F4s
were report~. abof!' down •over Laos ti)'
the Ml.Gs -~rtof the li¢apt lolS that
helped touch off tbO curr<lii bomblnt
caDJpalgn, heavies( since Preildent Nixon
·took omce.-· · · •
'· U:S. dlplomaUC eq.,... reported that
the armada, of 350 planes and>j>elicopteril
·flew more than 500> attack 3trikes Jud -.
-"
• < . ,.
•• • hundreds more support missions tn the
nnt s~ days of the rouOO..the-block bom·
bing that began So11day.
·To ~p the attack rorce~,at I· ~I
streng)b, a•sCbeauled'potrll!ave ·ror· the
carrier eon.tellatlon ..U cWla~'l1., lhd It
continued to lauDch ill plaDes !ro~
the Tonkin Gulf, aloQg wlth lhe cmitr
Coral Sea.
. The lth Fleet;, fhlid ' c!"'iet, '\Jje
.Elntef:prtse, was sent•tO I~Otean
durin& the Jndla!PiJdst.lii liar. '"ll!>DO ' ' -'-........ ""1. I
:""1_., ... , ••
. . • •
'· ' ,,,
Today's Fhud
N.Y. Stoek•
TEN CENTS
• replacement was available
O>nstellaUon.
. '
(or tht
~he Conmlla!Jon .,,.f the~ See -" supplying abolll 150 flihter--to
the foree attacilnr Nortll Vletliam. '!bi
mt ol the'llrcraft·coale.fl\>111 ."-fj
South Vietnam and 'll1alland. ·
Radio Haml claipled that a .evenlti
U.S. plane WU shot ~ Tueaday, in
Quang Blnb Province ju'at north of the
demllltarlud zone. II aald nothin& al)oul
the crew. •· .; . . -
~ . •• • • ' . .a > "1:·-:_'r·eeze ~ • ••• . -..
' -• • -~-
" '
'
' ·' ~
" B~ilding' .
Projects · '
Set Aside ·: t
' •
By GEORGl!I LEIDAL
Of .. Dlltf' ...... ...., •.
A 91May freeze on ~ or IP'adllir
permits was enacJecl Tueodoy Dlght bj
the Irvin• city council dll(big Ila fu:st. olr
ficial meClng Ip Science Lecture Hall °' the UC· Irvine camiw:. ~
The temporary freeze hllil even con-
llructlon ol palioa or !enc.. by Irvine
realdenll of the -ci)JI of Irvine.
And, ,tha tr..z. ejfecllvely hok!o up
lurther development o! fiva tract>,in ~
tral Irvine that ~ provide up to $,111
uw homes. · .. ,
' ID another, acttaa. Ille -_.....
" ·lo study ............ _... In -
weeks b)'-1111 Orange Coltnl7 Pllmlnrl
Commlaalon and board of supervilors
allolVlng developmenl of the ..,, -by llV. elev._.
All ftve -•"PP""_""". !or r-.. ln>111.qrlcultural lo l'llJde<dlal -1n tho
FiSeh'b'ach· Elected : First:
past ~ da71 by the --.
lecbnlc•llY have revarled lo their originll
r.oolllg, Mayo. William Filchbach pointed
ouL , ' . . ., ' " .
f .
·:Mayqr of:lrvi'e City :·
·Minutes after the first rm,etlpg of tbe
JrVine City COuncil was opeDed ,.;;. a
county official's ~slip oL ,!he tongue, a
mayor and mayor pn>temPore were
' .
The cowrty zoning -Uie"'"""
ell will study have DOt legally -et-fecllve beca111<1 the ~ o! tho
city came before the end of the »day
waiting porlod between puSige .of tho
zonlnga and the time they become Jaw.
The affected tracts are: .
, -Walnut Village Eut, ID Irvine Com·
peny development· of S,000 llngle family
homes on 405 RCrea between Jeffrey ml
Cu1ver Drives. .
~ electea. . I
. Robert Carillo, deputy county.clerk. o(-
-Ponduosa Homes, a tract of 1,200
homes on MO acres adjacent tO hv1M
Boulevard. .
' . ..-. . ·. • •,~ -• , -. f ~ ""' •UPI·~ .... ;
~l;tj:TC>~uncill!lln;wen~QUfltley ·flJbs tnCorp.ia Op. f j 1·tn\ll• Jlj)rotby-Andel'l!On,tw1st~t. cerllllcatioh >offi!"r· 1n tile •
1 tirY ..OCStlte•s~ Office, . m~ _Irvine California's ~new~t,,. city~
wllld .JJlane tdp. to state l'Jlp!W and baclt'.Tuesdl)I 'beat ·aead· ~.crlliwto ii!'W~ci\y'.s 'rust. year:o1·opuation. .. · >
~ ~-. ~ ,. ,.,. . . . . ' ·.r·. • ' . • I ,. ~· . ·' ~~iI··oK·s Resol\ltions
-JJ~~r:f><iesn'~·Gohiniit Ciiy ·
• 1 ~~
·~~~-~~y.1en•t11e of~ tuJ:Ded'1'ied•plans..., to
door \>pil(ftr pcioslbl"coomy fJJnding o! . ' ~ new cliy w~iCh with incOtPorallon tlle,~,GllJ tlleqsioQ o! ~mP,U> Drivo to· ' '!Uelday gtlu Jqil contrOJ ..,...-u\i pfoJ-
coAoed UC• Irvine and the lrvlnt ed. ' ll)CtllllrlaJ tomi!Jex. ' SUpervlson' -approval' v;is ' ilelaYed
. nO ~ WJanimoualy adopted a beea"°" of •nvironmenlal '!'"!""'" ...
sertU If -lullcm,.that do .not commit pressed by the ~ attorney general-and
lt 1o ipj>roloe llio! cootroversial road proJ-othen .
<ti,' but would allow ~ cll y Jo tal<e ad-Wllh the plans for the mile-long
Vfntqe.t>I u ml\cll as l!00,000 to l400,llle roadway a"""' the San Joaquin Marsh or CllUJIJ-~ for lhe,.projecl. •nvlronmenial pruerve, comes an ....
Qp ~ tha Oranp County Bo,..r Cleo CAMPUS, Pa(t I)
"·
• • " • ' ,.
' ~----.. -----·
f ficiatod atthe'6'45 p.tn. meeting :rue.day
irt Scfenee ~cture HIII on •the ,Ut Itvble campus. "' ·• ,. ·,., ·,
"May I call tliiB·offjcial me:eting of the
City Council otlhe cit~ of the-·lrvine,-
Qimpany to ordei: please?". Garillo said 19 the uproarious deJfgbt ~f both the Jlt)'I
council and the -audience of sork 3IO ' persons. _
The remark waa'funny ln:context>of the
charges made durblg the cltybooct cam-
paign that the Irvine Company would
control the new city coui>ell.
· Ho·wever,ilater bitlloting for"the'mayor
and mayor pr~tem positli>ns OJ) 'the couir
ell' dleproVed company domination Of the
council. ·
Attorney William fuchbacb, t h e
leading vote-~etter in last 1\luday'' elee-
tion, Was ma'de mayor of the new city by
a S to 2 vote. Councilmen Mrs. Gabrielle Pryor and Henry , Quigley ·supported;
Fischbach. • · "' 1
. John H, Burton, chainnan or' the
COuncil of Communitia of Irvine, was
the • .other mayoral candidate and was
supported by E, Ray Quigltjl Jr,. anotbel:
aCtiVe CCI'member. ·
Fischbach, Mn~ Pryor and Henry
Quigley bad been ·supported by an en-
vlromnental a"ctloD-Cltiun'• Io r u m
orginlzation, lfvine Tomorrow in the
heated city council cainpalgn.
Burton and · Ray • QuiJley ran In-
dependently, but were endorsed in a last
minute Idler campaign by Stale Seoalor
~la Carpenter CR-Newport Beacb).
CCI was tbe-organitatlon tbt t laid most.
fl.., the. irouodwork for the incorporation
electlorl llQUgill by realdenb and the
Irvine Qimpany alike.
The 3 to 2 vole spilt o! the new City
CounctJ occurred dUring the ele<tlon ·of
Henry Qui&leJ a1 mayor pn>lompore.
Burton ;-was· ttie, other nominee. ~
. The <OUnCll declalon on 'Of!icers ap-
peared t,o be the last traces of pre-el«!' uon i ivisiort o1 the.,,.,, council. ~ter. unanlmous votes were 1-rd -on
16 council l"QOluUons, six ctty ordinancea
and (ive minute 10rder1 approved. in the
councll'1 fint &e1Slon. •
That· first . session was · adjourned at
9: ts p.m. Tuesda,v aod will be resumed at
7:!0 p,m, 'lllunday In the Si:ieoce Lec-
ture Hall on the UC Irvine campua.
' ' • I
.. • . • .o.t.n.V ~•i.ciT·t1e1;... HE'S 'l'JRST MAYOR '
· lrvlne'1' Fischbach ' . . ' -
' ' Pilo t Publishes· ·
O.ver .Holidays ... . -Holiday edl)Jons ol the DAILY PILOT IVI~ be J>llbllsbed bOth )7Jdair·and Salur-
day .fOJ' home dellvory dUi"ing J1¥Jmlng
hours.t 11· ,·
Fri<!;ly's usual 'd1"dllile.for Saltirday DIIDe-A~ classllled ads will be nioved
up to S:30 p.m. on ~ay. for N.,.
Year's llJy ads, ,
All DA'.ILYPfLOTo!!kes wnt 1lnl01ed
on bOth days of the · holiday. ClrculaUon
Dept. calls regaNing deliveries will be
baodlecl uDtil.inoo1 on both d'ays.
-' 'trucks F.ire(l On . ' Cl!ARLES'l'ON, w . .-va. (UPI)
Gunmen waiting In ainbwih fired sholl:•t
rutal trucks delivering C h.'a r I ea t on --in.-indd .. ll Jllonda1 and Tuesday; llale polloa reported.
' '
-A Harker Development Com~
project lilvolvihg teo honies oo 11 acres
in Central Irv:lnt. • · ..
. -A Wlllllm Lyon Col!'Jl"lll' develop-
ment of 281 homes on SS acres.
-And. a Larwin Compeny developm<nt
of 380 homes on 3f acres.
One otber rezoning the bUlldl!>g permit
!reeze wlll delay·il the development of IO
acres o! the Irvine lndu&trial Complea bi
McDonnell·llougtaS Corporalion.· That
firm 10ughl and WU JP'aoled a .....
change to lllow corhrnerclal development
of the Ind-ta! .,.,;,.i. . .
By eMctlng Uie building permit froelo,
the Oedgllni council 1a1na tline ti> stUdi
the McDOnnei~Doiiglaa zmihig, beca.,.
(See fllEEZE. I'll' II •
Oru••
11'eadler
. •
Button up ;... avercoat; 'It'll get
down Into, the thl!'tlel Oftnllght,
followed by cloady sltlel and chilly 1 (50s) temperatures oo Thursday.
INSmE TODAY
Red China ,~ &ht big 'storu ·,
of 1971 on the fnlmlatlonal .
fron t, and the Lo• Angeles "
eartllquake of Feb. 9 the top '
CaU/ornta •tori# o/ tht ytGr, cc-.
cordi~ ·to tditor1 nrv~ ~r ';
the A11ociated Press. Stories °"' .
Page 14 •
'•
·.
;
• ' l
•
•
•
j
-
DIJL'/ 11~~ r
.. . . -
POW Gifis '"ll1't1*bed ,, . .
Hanoi Refuse• Packages Sent by U~~·. Faf1!ilies ·
· Families of American POWs amt MW lillll -.....i bf tllt U.S. Pollil
.. '1ol ~ u., Rdl to tlioi< 1tlvt1 In ~ Vletn&m between
at Mid Octobr:r havr: been returned
lhl1 counlty.
A: spokesman for Uie poll officr: said
Ullly all the package& stnt overseas
the three-mooth period have been
~ -Including the packa·gee ad·
~. to rnost of the: men North Vir:t· rum ad:~wledges as PqWs. l. T~ bat been no -~x;planation by
taanol foe the return of the pac~ges. • • •
Mo.t Wtrt matktd Ut'IAJsed by vt,mlm"
IDd 1 few were m1rkld overwtJcb_t~ The ~,
apokeomao .. 1d 1 •J>OI cbtclr or ~
111qodly ovtn1eJPI pmola lndlc•lld
they were within Ult fallowable wetabt
limit. POW and MIA families have been
allowed to send six packages a ye&r to
the1r imprisoned or rtllulng relatives, 1 The post office offlc~al !laid the return-
ed packages do not ltlclude Christmas
parcels.
"Wr: have ber:n adivsed the Chrlatmas
packa.ges have been forwarded to Hanoi
al\d we ho.Pt that the other side will
pttm1t OW' men to receive them, 1' bf''
Aid. .
Tilt post 'office ha• lnlllai.d lnqulrlea
throuab International postal 1nnel1 to
find out why the parcels were r jected.
A spokesman for the OW-MIA
International, Inc. in Tustin, co~acted
this morning said this was the fir t they
had heard of the returned packag s. No
action will be taken by the orga tion
until more facts are availabl the
spokesman aaid.
Var~ Punctured
~
Wisconsin
Entry Set
By Lindsay
•• rf ires Witness
f !~ t'. By TOM BAR.LEY
, 01 t1t9 0.11)1' 'li.t Sf•ff
~ A young attendant who told Huntington
eeach police that fellow employes at his
""obile service station were ~sing playing
itrts to puncture customers tires today
':became the prosecution's sixth witness in
jts case against nine alleged participants
jn a widespread auto repair racket.
; Wesley Griener, 20, testified as the
Orange County superior C.ourt trial went lnto its fourth day that he "dldp't like
what was going on '' at the Beach and
Edinger station operated at the time by
Christopher Enriquez, 25, of 7592 Volga
Drive, Huntington Beach.
Griener told prosecutor Richard Sten.
ton that attendant& hoisted cars on the
racks in the 1lation in the pretense that
they had spotted tire damage while the ·
autos were being given gas and oil at the
islands.
Then, the Tustln. man said, playing
darts were repeatedly jammed into the
tires and the resulting damage pointed
out to unsuspecting customers who were
often persuaded. to buy new tires.
Griener aakl. attendants carried bottles
of oil or brake fluid Which were used to
spray the shock absorbers of cars being
examined on the rack.
He repeated the testimony of othe.r prcr
ltcution witnesses in telling the jury that
etotorlsts were then warned that' their
abock absorbers were leakit-b and should
6f lmmcdiately replaced.
• ·Griener was asked by defense attorney Al Stokke about a reported cash shortage
it the Movil station shortly before he left
the facility operated by Enriquez and
Henry Castonguay, 21, of 7661 Com·
~ore Drive, Huntington Beach.
:·But Griener made it clear to Stenton
ttiat no one had ever followed up the sug.
gestion that be take a lie detectcor test on
1tatements be made to both Huntington
Beach police and the Orange County
Grand Jury.
~ "Are you willing to take the test now?"
atenton asked .
"Yes," the young attendant replied.
Griener's testimony followed that of an
4rmY colonel who told the jury tha t new
Ores on his wile'• car were replaced at a
HtVice station allegedly involved in an
auto rr:pair combine that ranged from
Seal Beach to San Clemente.
Lt. Col. Charles Diehl of Ross,
Calilomia, told Stenton that the tires on
his wife 's car wefe checked by him
\ltfott ahe left for Southern California
and should 11eve.r have been replaced at a
itation operated by the defendants.
~ The officer told Stenton that a
~perfectly good" spare was replaced at
the atation by a tire that bore evidence of many repairs and was clearly inferior to
the tire rr:moved from his wife's car, ~.Stenton bas said he will introduce
testimony from employes of all 11 sla-
~ns allegedly Involved in the conspiracy
iJ)d statements from customers who
~legedly were defrauded at all those
fa cllitiu.
·He bas identified Stanley Davis, 32, of i'<les ·san Pable Circle, and Jerry Kendall,
IS, 9f 969 Sonora Road, both of Costa
Mesa with Ed~ard Carney. 27, of 20862
~ell Harbour Drivr:, Huntington Beach,
; • f
01.ANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
M•tl .. t.11 .._.
h••t.i• Y.iMy s. c._..,.
OllAMCil '°"'T l"Ul1.1$HING COMPANY
•obert N, Wtt4
l"f•ltMI •l"I ,utollll\fr
Jedt l , Ctirl•'f "'°' l"rMIHlll IM 0.-tlf Mllllftf'
lho1111• K1 1~il
f-llO("
1ho"''' A. Murph;~•
M•Mtlnl ld•Mr
Cll1rl11 H. l101 •i,h11d '· N1tl A1tlsl.,.I 111-,tr.1 £fire"
""''" Giiie ,,,,._: 3111 WAI Sty ~lrt•I
lf-1 lMdl: :u» N-•t teu•.,.,.,.. L11U111 teldl; tn Foo-wt ..,.,.....,,.
MU"t ... •. •~i in1J tN(~ h11Jtv1~ ... 'r.r..n1t1 al Herlll IL C..l!lil'IO llMI
as thr: three principles in an auto rep~ir
racket carried out by stations dispensing
Arco, Mobil, Shell and Texaco gasolines.
• Named with Enriquez a.nd Castonguay
as codefendanls are David Conchola, 22,
of 6000 Garden Grove Boulevard,
Westminster, Roger Mendenhall 28, of
26095 Avenida De Seo, Mission Viejo,
Ralph Carney, 29, of 32852 Calle-San
Marcos, San Juan Capistrano and R. C.
Weisner, 18, of Santa Ana ,
It has been alleged that Davis, Kendall
aild Edward Carney were in control of
the 11 sations despite oil company regula·
tions aimed at limiting operations of
member service stations to individuals.
It is also alleged that the trio ran
schools at w'hich employes were in·
structed to mutilate tires, slash hoses,
spray shock absorbers and generally
pressure motorists into accepting m'ajor
repairs on the cars.
Stenton has stated that thr: trio supplied
all the needed parts used by thr: combine
from a Garden Grove warehouse' which
waa not a part of the servicing system
normally operated by all four oil com-
panlr:s,
Most of the 11 servicr: stations iden~
tified for the jury in Judge James
Turner's courtroom are now under new
managr:me~.
Sheriff 'Guest'
-In Own Jail,
Raps Conditions
MARKSVILLE, La. (AP) -Sherilf F.
0. "Potch" Didier, a prisoner in his own
"crackerbo1" jail, hopea that something
good will result from his 4s.-day sent.r:nce.
Didier, who was sentenced after con·
viction on a malfr:asance charge arising
from an alleged scheme to bilk a scrap
metal dealer, committed himself to jail
Tuesday. Dr. Henry Kaufman , the
Avoyelles Parish coroner who
automatically beeame acting sheriff,
made Didier a trusty.
"This is going to give me a good time
to really analyze the jail situation, which
I've been wanting to do for some time,
and write up the weaknesses of the jail
and get this to the public," Didier said,
He said he hoped his report would con-
vince the parish police jury that tt\r: jail
is dilapidated and needs to be replaced.
"This jail is nothing but • crackr:r·
box," be said. ,
Didier is being ht.Id in a fourth-floor
room assigned to trusted inmates.
"I don't expect to leavr: the fourth
Door, period," he aaid.
"I bavr:4·trusties who go aU ovr:r the
courthouse, work all over the courthouse,
cleaning and all that, but I'm not going to
leave thr: fourth lloor, ''
From Page 1
CAMPUS ...
vlronmental impact study done by the
county.
That study indicates the roadway
sought by UC Irvine officials will not
damage the 200-acre marsh, recently
purchased by the University of California
from the San Joaquin Gun Club.
UCI officials argue the road Is needed to provide circulation to the campus. It
would Hnk the campus with the Irvine
Industrial complex along an alignment
east of the environmental preserve.
The road will require a bridge across
the flood control channel that adjoins
University Dri ve. The road would connect
at Jamboree Road in the industrial area .
Mayor William Fischbach said today
the council action means the new city can
ta ke advantage of county funds for the
project if the council decides to go ahead
with the project.
The council action provide!! that public
hearings will be held to determine
whether the city feels the roadway is in
Its best interests, the. mayor added.
One action taken Tue$day commit..~ use
of city gasoline tax rtvenues to a fund
which may be used as the city's sole
share in an "unbalanced" share of any
initial road project thr: city might ap·
prove. That may or may not be the Cam-
pu8 Drivr: project, the mayor noted.
~ferger Approved
\\'ASHINGTON 1UPll -The Tllirrois
Central and the Gulf. Mobile and Ohio
Railroad• wlll br: allowed to merge,
cre11tlng a s.vstcm with 9.400 mllr:s of
track stretching from Minnesot1 to
Louisiana . Thr: 1nter•tale Commtrce
Commission (tCC 1 approved the merger
Tur:Miay.
MADISON. Wis. (UPI) -John V.
Lindsay, a nr:wcomer It. the Democratic
Party, officially entered the Wisconsin
prr:sidential primary today and then set
off on an aerial tour lo covei' the state's
largest cities 'aod at least one of th.e
smallest.
The tall, dapper New York mayor, who
entered the Florida prirhary Tuesday,
said lie would carry on his fight for the
presidential nomination in · Wisconsin 's
Apiil '4 primary'.
"I expect a crucial test, for the beliefs
l bring to this election the principles on
whic h I run, are a part of Wisconsin's
own tradit ion of progressive politics and
vital reform," Lindsay said.
"The peoplr: of Wisconsin have always
been independent," he said. "They have
kept alive to this day the heritage of the
grr:at Roberl La Follette. Wisconsin had
led thf: fight for cleaner water and decent
wage:s and fair taeatmr:nt for worker! in
factories and on farms."
Lindsay said both Wisconsin urban and
rural people "share commo n nteds and
Common hopes with the peoplr: Who live
in my city and every city and town and
iuburb iil th{s country."
' Lindsay repeated his statements that
ht was running as a representative of the
"Amedca tbal Washington ha:; ignored.'1
He said he .intended to '-'help shatter
the illusions spun by the N 1 x o n
Administration."
From Madison, the state's second
largest city, Lindsay was scheduled to fly
to two of the middle-sized citir:s -Eau
... ..Claire and La Crosse.
A sldr: trip from Eau Claire was to take
him to Ctdott, a city with a population of
less than 1,000.
Lindsay was scheduled to appr:ar In
Milwaukee, the statr:'t largest city,
tonight.
Nixon Probably
Won't Greet '72
From Clemente
TAKE OATH -Deputy Cou~ty Clerk Robert Car·
rill9 swears in Irvine Councilmen (from left) Mrs.
Pryor, Burton, Fischbach, H: Quigley and E. R.
Quigley. Event took place at 5:45 p.m. Tuesday at
' . County Courth ouse in ·Santa Ana. County Clerk 1
office stayed open late to acoommodate leaders of
Orange County's 26th city, making its formation
legal.
Mrs. Brandt Becomes
Irvine's First Clerk
A University Park woman who was ac·
live in an organization that backed one of
the successful city council candidates
Tuesday was named acting city clerk of
the new city of Irvine .
Mrs. Norissa Brahdt of 17921 Angell
Road, University Park, was chosen
unanimously by the city council to serve
for 90 days at an as yet undeter?])ined
salary.
Mrs, Brandt · was active in the Com·
mittr:e to ·Elect an Independent City
council which endorsed thr: candidacy of
Heriry Quigley, who was elected, and two
others w~ were not, Wayne Clark and
Alan Snodgrass.
•
Mission. Viejo
Neighbors' F<(ud
Ru1ineth Over
She is the daughter of former Los
Angeles Mayor Norris Poulson.
Her first official duty was to swear in
the council-approved city attorney, H.
Rodger Howell of the firm of Rutan 1nd
Tucker or Santa Ana.
Howell llso will serve for a period of 90
days. The firm will be paid hourly rates
ranging from $35 to $&0 an hour for
service lo the city. .
Mayor William Fischbach said today
the firm was selected because of Its. re-
cent experience with newly incorporated
cities including Yorba Linda, the -next
younger city in Orange County compared
to Irvine. '
Fischbach .said the council had only
recently been made .aware that the firm
also handled legal matters for develoPers
including sofue that have projects wark·
ing in the new city.
"We will be looking into the selection
further to determine if there are any
potential conOicts of interest," he added.
Fischbach pointe<l out that the Rutan
and Tucker firm was geared up to hand!·
ing the details any new city must face.
Whal Orange C.Ounty sheriff's officers Their recent e.rperience in incorporation
described as a Jong standing batUe matters is an added plus cited by the
between two Mission Viejo neighbors Jed mayor.
From Pnge 1
FREEZE ...
no permit on that proJeCt has yr:t been
issued.
Zonlng changes are not de~ed
permanent until a permit to build has
been issued, the councilmen were advised
last week.
An Irvine Company spokesman said to-
day the freeze probably would not hurt
developers since "most builders already • have permits for projects n~8!ing con-
struction stage.
"I'm not aware or any projects that
would be halted or slowed by the freeze,"
Gilbert Ferguson,-Irvine Company. public
relatio0$ director said, ,.
Mayor Fischbach said Tuesday night
by singling -0ut the six parcels for at•
tention th'e council was initiating coo-
sideration of the· ionings. Otherwise, the
developers would have bad to come
before the council l-0 request the changes
that were granted by county government.
The 90-day freeze came as no surprise,
since the council members had indicated
they would consider such a movr: at their
pre-planning meeUng last Thursday.
Three of the five elected councilmen,
Fischbach , Mrs. Gabrielle Pryor and
Henry Quigley were endorsed by an en·
vironmental citiien's forum, Irvine
Tomorrow, in ihe council race.
to their adopting a peace keeping role A city clerk's appointment prior to year
Tuesday when one homeowner com· end .was required m order for the new ci-Guard Wounded
plained that his neighbor had deliberately ty to complete the recording processes
rerouted the communal drainage ditch. necessary if it is to share in the state
Offl Id th ti illed gasoline and retails sales tax revenues F iii' B • k cers sa . e rerou ng sp o De~ nn S water and mud over the complaining beginning nex:t July 1. ~
resident's property and apparr:ntly was Mrs. Brandt 's signature will appear on
the last straw In what was described by documents to be sent today tn the State H Id Alt . l
the complaintant as a long history of Board of Equalization and the County 0 up emp
malicious mischief. Assessor 's office. Those documents in·
Deputies were told that the offending elude a legal descriptio n of the new city LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A Brinks
neighbor erected a block wall between and a map outlining the lB;200 acre area guard who lost a foot race to a gunman's
the two homes last summer a,nd refused within its borders. bullet was in satisfactory condition today
to clean up the debris that spilled on the with a leg wound after an attempted
other side. 164 bank holdup Tuesday in Century City.
Their N!lationship further deteriorated, Toll Hits Henry McCarthy, one of two guards
officers were told, when the wall builder making a morning delivery to United
President Nixon himself had predicted allegedly allowed his dog to raam his SEOUL (UPI ) -The death toll in California Bank, was wounded when one
he would arrive in San Clemente Thurs· neighbor's property at will in what was history's worst ho[el fire continued to rise of the gunmen drew a semiautomatic ti·
described as a deliberatr: attempt to in· today, with search crews bringing new fl" fro.,1 an umbrella and fired. day, but apparently things have changed. troduce: some novel landscaping to the ,._ • .-:,,~ nut from the wreckage of the 22· The gunmen ordered the guards to halt.
Speculation has it now the Chief Ex· area. , story Taeyongak Hotel. Fivr: bodles found but lhey made a dash for the safety of
ecutive and his staff will use the New Officers are sUll Investigating thr: in-u1 L.~1< .. .,,uug11t the total of known.dead the armored car and McCarthy was hit in
Year's wr:ekend to rest before the next cident. to 164. the left leg. The other guard made it.
top.level summit talks in San Clemente \_:~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~=========~;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;:;:=====;;;;~=====1
next week -discussions with Japanese
Prime Minister Eisaku Sato.
No firm date has yet been announced
for the Prr:sident's arrival here, but in·
dications are that he will arrive late in
the wer:kend or early next" week to
preparr: for th r: "strictly-business"
discuuions with the Japanese executive."
The original mention of the trip west
came during a network documentary on
the Presidency, but Mr. Nixon's filmed
corJtments on his grueling itinr:rary were
made on Dec. 6.
Schedules havr: been c h a n g e d
somewhat since then.
The President today was winding up his
tw<Klay conference with West Germany's
Chancellor Willy Brandt. He will return
to Washington, D.C., from the Florida
While House before the trip to California.
Th! quick pace will resume next week,
however, when the Japanese delegation
moves into the New{'JOrler Inn in Nr:wport
Beach to prepare for the summit talks,
primarily called so that the Pres.ident cab
discuss nuances of his scheduled trips
this spriog to ,Mosco"' and Peking.
Because of the "business" label at·
latched to the Japanese visit little fan·
fare and ceremony is expected during the
events in Newport and San Clemente.
It has been hinted that the Prime
Minister will travel br:twer:n his quarters
and the Western Wh ite' House by
helicopter and perhaps make no outside,
public appearances with the Presiden t.
San Clementr: Chamber of Commerce
officials had been planning for a possible
reception for Mr. Sato, the hlghr:st·rank·
ing foreign official ever to visit hr:re
since the President set up rr:sldence.
Besides proposing a reception for the
prime minister, chamber officials have
mappe(t plans to entertain the estimated
60 to 90 Japanest newtmen who will ac•
r.o mp;iny the Jtptnese representative to
the coast.
The talks will probably becomr: the
most extenidvely covered natlonal news
event r:ver In San Clr:mente, with nearly
100 domestic and Europe11n reporters on
hand, combined with the large corps
from Japan and elsewhere ln the Far
East.
Averaae Pre1identlal visits here draw
40 to 50 reporters.
TODAY
by
PREVENTION, NOT CURES
'Remember when you got that
shiny new watch for Christmas
Jast year? Chances are good that
ii looked great, and kept good time.
Now, after a full year of use, its
time to get it back into "like new"
condition. Within a few days your
watch can be cleaned, polished and
serviced, keeping it looking its best
and keeping you on time for those
important appointments·.
Upkeep on your watch is a good
case of "an ou nce of prevention is
worth a pound of cure." Annual
cleaning and minor repair, such
as replacing a scratched or crack·
ed crystal, can prevent major
damage to the: !inely calibrated
inner workings of )'our watch.
\Vatch repairs are handled right
at our store, where yo u are as·
sured of quality workmanship. r~
liability aod safety. Wt are fully
insured for your protection, and
have skjlJed craftsmen to handle
your needs.
Start the new year on time, after
a visit to our store.
ADV.
How
to make
Money
(look beautiful)
)ftk• tt loo\: betmifut hy -ri11& it i11 liM j-.ilry. Toar ciefn'
or oan, otn he tet i11 14 kiint &old f,.m11, utl _,. • at1111btr of
dilereat '"'": .neekl•ce., 9eod1nt1, hrtetl .. ., et6. Coia j-elry
eo11ti1'11et to ht 1een •"-111'!m eTe!T"'httt, 1114 ,.,.11 .. GIN epi.
eial &ifu. C:.111• ill, ud ... Mt oomplec. Ml~ tod•r•
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVENIENT TE•MS
IANKA'MllUCARD -MJ..STE~ CHAR•l
24 YEA•S IN SAME. tOCA.llON
PHONE S•l.J<401
r
I
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J,agt•••• ~aeb
fDITiQ.N
T•••Y'• na1 . -
. • VOL.~. NO. 310, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAG~ ·, ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WE i\IESDAY, DE.CEMl~R 29, 1971' . . ' TEN CENTS
' . " ... ,\ '
.New Ei!~n-ts~ :Fal'-es 1llarh1,Laguna
. . ' ..
in~'11
• •
lly BARllAllA ~ .............
New face, new )ftl)lem1 and • new
community awanmeu have' marked ·the
year 11171 tn IAl\llll Beach h!Jl«y.
\An ilftln\e hljJh In cWzen parllelp:Uon
In local go.,etrunent wa: ·ruched durlrig
tile cam""8n that led to the Aug. 3 blgh
rise InlUati.ve eleetklo. The i"ecord St-pei-cent vote< twiloul arxl J.1 backing of a
~oot buildlni height Un!lt •for the Art
ColQi>y my well bav" 1haped tbe
.~ ...
&ilbolle~ ~. ~ aeveiopfl><nt for
years t,olcome. •
As the j.ar openOd, the c1ilr.enry wa:
•tlll . ....,.ering from. tbe -~ of tbe
Christmas "happet'lin.g" that lured 20~000
youths to.a three-day "c0mi.Dg togeUMr"
In Laguna Canyon, totally dl!rupt!Jlg the
holiday seaBOll for illAlll''r<Sldentl. • Aft~rshocks of the "happening" were
still being feltimonlhs laUT, '"hen the ci-
ty addod up its m,ooo bill for the unJn.
vl!ed gutJ!a•and, later,"when the <oUnCll
'
L,eary Confused·
Swiss T-ell Cult Leader .to Leave
fi<lm 'lilre S.r>Jce<
BERN, Swlliertand -Swiu authorities
today rejected a United States demand
for extradition of Dt. Timothy Leary,
LSD cultist who wu convicted on Laguna
Beac,h druc charges and Jater escaped
£rom the minimum security-pri.&on colony
at San Luis Obispo.
At the same time the Swiss officials
denied the U.S. 6tradlfioa ciemaiid, they
· alao declined t.eary's ffiluest for asylO.m
in Switzerland. _
Leary, now 51; was arrested in Laguna
Beach on Woodland ·Drive tl December of
1968 when detective Neil Purcell spotted
him, his wife Rosemary and sOn john in
a station wagon from which oozed the
d1stinct aroma of .marljuan~.
Leary was convicted of drug charges in
Orange County Superior Court. He
eacaped from •prison In 1970, joined the
Black Panlher1 in AJgerla and after a
dispute with Panther leadetship, popped
up in Switzerland.
Swis.s officials said" it Will ooW be up to
iJtlmjgratlon authprities to d e c i d e ·
wbelher Leacy can """1m~ liv••• in <1ji~land -' . ,T"--. -,., ·'~~~~:.~~ Mastionai'df: aid be ~ "Ytrf iallafied
will\ the dec!Jm... . . -.
MasUoomdl=ll-~l!n-irustoltoa ' ~ ... ~:~to Jeave tM ...-w. ~
has deiiled tiie-.~ -U.~. J'tqu& Jor
hb extrlldllion. . • · ·
. The..--said/the mlnlalry r:tfused to order , Leary11 ertraditlon
because tile.request .contaliled· formal er-
.... ,;:;..
NOT IN, IUT l!OT OUT
Swltwlond': l.Mry
: ., ff
i!1 !•1 A•, ·~·nSf.>:rrl9od'-"'<hitl<rland '!lib ~ wife, Rosemary,, o,n June ·21,
from Aieeria, and rented a cl'latet in the
w~· SwiM· alpine rQSOrt of Villarssur·
Ollon .. rors which could not be conected. . · It 'also denied Leary's plei for asyt11m Swiss poliCe1lrrested him thm in early
becluse his'"poliUcal peraedltiOn canJtot July at !he.reql}est oE tlie. U.S. embaw
be considered .. credible," th·e an-and ·detained him briefly in the "Bo.lt-
oouncement, said. , · . -Mennet" priSon In Lausanne. ·
· It also ,.Id Leary bas alr,.dy been He was released on b:ll pending the .
iranied uylwn ln Alg~a. wliere lie fled govemmenl.11 ruling on both his reqYeSt
aft<r ....,Pini f!Olli'tbe ~ 11",f°"· far exile "'1cl .tbe-U.S. extradition plea.
' *·· * '* * * * Agents ·to .Focus· Effort
•
On 'Respectable' Dealers
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL
Of ... Dally Pllet SI~ 1
With drug problems in WOC>ljland Drive
and the intersedlon of_ SO.uth \Coast
Highway arxl Cleo Str.ol" IUJder conti!)I,
Laguna Beech narcotlca agents WUI begin
to move up tht IOciM ladder to'"respec-
tabie" drug users and dea~en during
1972.
That"s the plan of Det. Kell Purcell.
who this year Jed offJCers on six huge
drug busts and whose department Jogged
nearly 600 "nickel and dlme" arrests dur-
ing the past twelve months.
''I think we'll be seeing more respec--
table types -such 11 docton and
teachen -arrested next year. We'll be
seeing a lot more than the longhair teeny·
bopper who -mmg :round Woodland
Drive," the veteran n;rcotics officer --pr l'\Jrcell referred to the establishment o1
the Orange County Narcotics Task Force
-a collecUon ol agen~ from various
pol ice agencies -collabor~lng to JaU the
"behind the scenes" dealers.
smell I do-n't know what we'll do," he ad-
ded.'
''.'lbe use''of heroin,:•, t}U! agenl said,
"~ked out about March." He said a
lme mbnber rOf addict.; called hypes, ale still Jn ·town and aft Often f o·u n d
~~··in the l•\e night and early
momlng hours.
''The heroin Js"comlng from Mexico
and we doi>t think the syndicates or the
Mafia is behind It. It's not very good
stuff. The !>est heroin comes from Viet-
nam," said Purcell.
A particular problem, he sa id. ls that a
powerful and dangerom animal tran--
quilizer, known as PCP, is being sold as
LSD, .,.,,,.;a11ne and heroin. Other drugs
are.""PW' with deadly llrychnine. 1'CP tr -i:ngel dust" u It Is called ou·
the street, acts m:uch11D a hallucinogen,
but with. reJttated use severe. paranoia.
''bum" ,trips and brain Jesl.>ns can result,
ocoordlng to Julte Pouloon at South
Orange County Regional Mental Heallh
Servlcet1
·~tt's a lot worse than speed," she ad·
ded.
Purcell said he Is encow·aged ·by the tSee NARCOTICS, P.ag:e %)
adopted a strict !'Z""d coillrot ordl!lance
to svert return: qageq:ients ol the
gathering.
In January, the Planning Commissfon
1aoncbed its studies of the new General
Plan - a task that was to oontlnue
throughoUI the year as resignations :nd
replacements repeatedly changed the
make-up of the commission.
'nle five-member body saw the
dipariures Of Tom Jolwton, Robert
Haolinp, Jack Ei!l!Cl!badl, Wtlllam Lam-
L
boume -:nd Jamu· Schmlbl and tbe .,..
rivals ol John MCllowtll, 1'1ld>Mlllllay,
~ Campbell :nd Rocer Lanphe:r,
with only chairman Carl Jobnoon ~
matnlng Crom the orillnal appolntas.
, New faces were the order of the Y.etr
throughout city ball. Pollce Chief I\..,.
neth Huck delJ'lri<d for stmt Valley :nd
Chief Jo:eph Kelly took bis pla~. Wlll:D''
Moody arrived u planntng director :nd
Bob Gree1t replaceCI · Fhiance Director
Shelby Langford. ~ Cit, Att«ney
J:ck'-Rlll>l!l-deported, :nd•wu "Placed
by Tully Seymour. ·At the ,e!Ooe of the
year, PulJIJc Worb' .D!rOctor Jooeph
Sweany announced bll i m p • n d J n 1
....tgnltloh: .
The tilgh rlae battle got wider way :a
early as January, whe:n overflow cniwds
p:cked Planning Commlaslon bearings oo
the proposed CR ( commercial·reaiden-
Ual) be:ch!ront hotel rone.
Tile orljlnat jiroposal at1Qnted a IOll'
fool hel&hl ltmlt In -..... bul
\ .
altar a -of beatod ....... ,.._.
fln:tly ~ I fUool llmtt.
The Civic ~ :nd • -....-. tion.calltng illell Vllllp Lapna rOCIDd'
even thl: too hlih :nil l!llllCb:d a
vil!OMIS camp:lcil to Jowor-lhe heitlll
limll.to 31 leel
By mid-February, the. anU·hlah rise
faction, bad filed notice ol Intention to
clreutata petlllons calltng for an lnlllatiff
election on the Issue. As clrcuJMioa. of the"
(See LAGUNA, Pap I)
Jlig Residential Project . '. • • . : . -
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Introduced for Laguna •' ••
Robb Trial
Delayed
For Ruling . .
A further two . month delay wat
authotiled lbda(cfor the'&rilitre ~!>" ~.Ciiuil 1$1 of.,..,.. ~ Of per!~ .'allwilpnt .~
th:n Jn, yepn ~at ~-La4W ~
ofnc.. .
Prrslll\!C Judllt William C. SpeU.
tefitllW the triAI ot Dr. ~ 0nn.
niin, RobO, '10, ol J!5e1 Sceillc Drive,
Oana· Point for .Y•b. :II after noting that
the courts are still awaiting a Calilonla
SUpreme Court ruling on the. con-
stitutionality of the state's Therapeutic
Abortloris Aot. -•
Robb ·will be defend~ at that trial by
American Civil Liberties Union Jawyen
Fred Okrand an4 A. L. Wirin. He ls free
on his promise to.appear.
Bolb sides in the criminal action hope
to have a Supreme Court ruling on l&!
valldty of the state's abbrtlon coiie before
the' trial data. .
llObb .,., c1<arf.d of :borllon dlargea
ohortly aft<r his ~n when Santa
Ana Manicip:I Court Juifge Piol Mut
rilled that the ,abortion act was un-
cbnStituti:ma.I lince it dl.!Crimlnited in
fivor of one major religious sect.
District Attorney Cecil Hicks refused to
t1ccept the diSmissaJ and revived the
charges against the elderly .Physician ln
the form of an indictment from the
Orange County Grand Jury.
Robb was arrested by Laguna Beach
police after be allegedly procured
miscarriages In young unmaM'ied pa·
tlents at hUI art·colony offlJ!e.
Holiday Deoor
Winners Cited
' Five Laguna N:iguel homeowners have
been honored for outstanding holiday
decorations by Av'co c omm unit~
Devtlon Inc. .
Sweepstakes prize for the area was
awarded to Mr. and Mrs. Cbarle1 V. Dix-
on~:1i:;a:w~ark .,:;i~j· decorating
!ob wept to Mr. :nd Mn. Michael
J,lcCalllster, 2Wl IA , Hermooa, with a ,
fUllJler'l!P awmfto "!'· .... "'1s•Jo:eph ,
E. Shank., 2m2 Elleridaje.. , .
Aliard !or the be8I ffilglous Iheme
went to Mr. and Mrs. John' A. Patterson
Jr., 32631 AdriaUc Drive, and for the best
decorative lighting to Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Robertson, 32762 Meditemnean
Drive.
4th Heavy Day
U.S. Bomber Atwcks
2,000!"unit
Project
Outlined Continue Near Hanoi ·
· From Wlre Strvlcel
SAIGON "-Tiie heaviest U.S. iir at-'
tacks oru North Vletnorn;\D· ll\'jl"e ~
lllr'" -· CJID!lt-t \:Jr•.,.,' '*'---lit ~-· __ ..... planeli .............
·o\.~ ... tdi-·Hanol'tl•tlie
olflcl:t Vtdum w .... Agency !All! tbe
P:~ ·~ jtll .... -.. In ~·"V!nl> ... ~ All (It ...... _ atLadlal .. ,._.lolll ateU.." Banal dlblll
-'VIII American alrttoll wse dOwnld In
previous raids 11.nte &mday.
U.S. military sources sald ,lbe bombing
would continue Thursday in ,a 1fllth day.
Returnlog pilots reJJ0rie4 seeing l\fl!ls
for the first time, ·intf missiles.
·The U.S. command retorttd the MIGs
afayed at extre'me range and said there was only aporidic antlalrcratt fire, in-
dicating" bad weather was for&g the
p!loll to bomb Crom hljJh alUJi!des. (See
1tory, phQtos, p~e !). ..
The. glOund ""' also lntamllled altar • Chrts)maa run arx1 reporls 1ro111 Phnom
Perih said thei-e w.re ' hll' attacks llOl1h :nd ooutheasl pf P)mom l'eoh and heavy
shelling ol'Soulh VldMmele bases In the
nibber ptantatlon country U>ng ' tbe
bOrder northWest of ~on.. .
· Pilots sa1:1 thef. saw at least three SA¥
missiles fired at thtm ·and 'that ~
poBBibly were more. other pilot.I· said
they saw MIGs .. several, times" but that
in all but one case the MIGs 'wtre a~ a
di.stance and that there nevtr were more
than two MIGs tOgetber.
The last MIG• reported. in action was
before Chrlsbnat: when at least three F4s
were reported shot down over Llol J:\y
the MIGs .. par! of the lliplane loss that
helpei! touch off the cumot 'homblrig
e1mpalgn, heaviest 11nce PreBldent·Nlzon
took office.
U.S. ,diplomaUc sources reported that
the armada or 350 planes and helicopters ·
new more than 500 . attack strikes. and
h1111dttds mort support missions m-tbe
first '* d.:ays of the round-the-block bom-
bing that began Sunday.
To keep 'the attack force at full
strength, a acheduled port le1ve for· the
cvrier ConlleltaUon "" delayed and it continued to launch tis plane: frelll
the TGll& G:tl/, alOOC with tbe 'curter
Coral Su. . ~ •.
The 7th Fleet'a third Carrier, tbe
Enterprtoe, . ..., sent to the lndt:n Oce:n durinl the Indl•Plklitan nr, and no
r@laceinent wu .. available for the
Conslcllatlan.
Tbe Constellatlon and the carol s.: ,,..
supplying abllut llO flghter·botllber• to
the force a\!Jlcklng North Vietnam. The
reat of the aircraft come from bases in
South Vietnam and Thailand.
'
.Radio Hanol claimed that a le'Ventb A plan for 1 2'~ planned ?fS~
U.S. plani war shot down Taelday, In , Ual developmmt,. ollerlng ?5' ~ at
Qll~ Province just ~ of tbe ~ 520-8"' S)'c~ . HJlll • ·l:nd I*
d -· It llld !IOllltns ahonl · LIC\m& 1leach u OJM1ft opace, .,., reveal-~ !lfdlo -··'!t: -eci lhll ...... llf ~-. -flllt.11'1 ~ ,,... -Ill -[l\'llldiot of N~!llV.-....t:; lac.
.i., ~ » -"" ~-It :olil • The Orm· .I: l1Uf!l[laalnl. Iha '"""'" -ti Ille pl[ala _.. kllM or <llP" ' from Great . I.aka carboll !fir :p-lured . •. ' ~ _. ~ 1 proxtu/atet, $! -• -b· U"-...... 1111 ~ to 'ID; Aa:ordlng to Miu.r, ii,. 1--"'7 oon-
-.. Ille ~ " .Ibo -"' -lntwnf. WOllld be "cloaland.'' In
-,.., . ~ .... ti -~--woulil be bu!& :t rutoua pi... -.. II! ~ u.i lllo localloiis .. tbe Ille. localed' :t lbe In• raldin h:d ldll:d fr -.S:cl ~ teraectlon of Lquna Cin}llo·and El Toro
ctvili8111. The command ~ th:t 'for · RDada. Opell :pace wtO aunourx1 tho
aecurlly t"ff!Otlll It .....id dllclo:e no villages · d~i'Of the oPeratioll unur Jt wu com-.iwe have allo added some •rnenMilit·
pfeted. . s1,1ch aa a system of brldle traila, i com,
·Dea:plte ·the rmgn.ltude of the .cal!l" murltty clubhouse and recreational areu
palp, the · U.S. lllleme Dep:rbnebt ' in the targe•uUllty line easement&," said
denied that It bad tumed:lhO clock baclt lollller, In a telephone 1ntarvtew. :
to I~, before· Presld~ ,Lyndon B. "Tbt land ts iltuatod Ideally" hil-
Jolmaoo haltad the' bomhlng of N~ Unued. "It u. near major traak arterlils v~ha· not med tbe bombing and' Is rWollably cloae ti> shoppin&
' "'1 ,,. · rau centers " -jll)p of · tbe North." Pentagon "We · tlllnk It, could be qutta an II·
'spobsman Jerry> w. F.ri-said In tracUop. olferl111 rural type of llvtnr. W.~. "Our:operatlom ai:e llinltbl evm though 11 Ul llDI fir !rorp the•clt,," duration strikel. 'Ibey ~. limited &11 to commented Mnrer.
g-:pby :nd ·tarpta.v . Impleineotatlon ol 'the plan, lollller
:Wiien, llftlmen .pojnled out thal pointed OU~ Would be-~~Oft plin-
Johnson I' oU1ciaJ1 allo claimed ·bombing n1ng comml!L!km spprovll of such a plan-a\t~cts were llml.ted as to gargets, ned residential use .
Fnedhelm. repUed, ~ were not near--"But with ·those people down there
IY:•• restricted aa now. trjing to limit the. population and keep
the ta:nd fof\a ll'etnbelt, I don't kmw If
we coUJd get approval," Miller said. Kialoa II CJings ·
To ~ohart Lead;
f.iniSh ~earID.g
Special ta the DAILY PILQI'
SYDNEY -Easing wlndl off the
Tarmant1n coast today gave · Uttle pro.-
mtse Of a new elapoed Ume record In tbe
650-mlle Sydney to Hobart (Tasmania)
yacht race, but Jim Kilroy's 73-foot yawl
Ktaloa n ch.mg to the lead for line
honors. ·
Ktalcia, from Newport 1leaclt but-salllng
undm' lbe' Loa Anaelea Y:cht· Club
burSet, WU )eM tbah 11111 miles from the
flniah 'and held • 11).rnile le:cl ..... Ted
Turner's AmetScan ·Eagle. ' Third on
elapsed limo -oome alx mlla: aolem of
Eagle ~ war StllilDer A. •1Huey"1 Long's
~root·tetch Orxllne n.
.Ondtne I, aloo akeppered by Loria. hOlda
the elapsed time record ·for the race. set
In 11112. .
In fourth place, with a shot at the oor·
rected ttme victory, was the Western
Auslrallan yacht Siska. ,
The Siii-~. ba:. been ·con:lder:cl 'a
key piece M•the LaBuna. Gl"ftbell 11em-
bera ol the gn>U[J have warned that Jepl
steps .w~•"' be taken • U'Newport Inveit·
nienl. tri;'!O devel'op Iha land,' Miller s&ld. : :0... •
Another altarn&Uve, the ,Y1co-(lNoldeiil
said, tsto .noheel: a...,. chanp lo alfow
the planned developm<nl, !JUI' to ·bullcfon
the property 1lllCler , the. pftsenl R·H •
(residentlal-hlllslde) IOOlng. •
The zone allows for . varytna. densitle•
on the Janel. Tbe majority allowa: for one
unit per acre, ·With other areas allowing
one unit for each 15,000 1quare feet. one
unit for each 10,000 square Jett and Ol'll~
unit for·. eoclr 1. 7GI :quare fe:tJ A1lo ln-
claded (;'.. ~;b"'~. ;:,f,'* for
.
~-
Major drug dealers, the o[flcer said,
1re still located In Laguna Beach. "It's
just that they have moved from the ob--
vk>us spots and relocated In dlfferent
parts or 1.agunl. They're getting a little
ranc.ier and movln1 1awiy from the com-
Ollllle set-up.• . .POW Gifts Returned Lead.bciatl were expectbl to flnisb lata
today or tonight.
Button up your overcoati It'll get
dOl!'l into ihe thirtle: OV:mliht,
followed"hy cloudy sldta :ncf,chllly '
(IOo) tamperaturu on Thunday.
INSmE TODAY
\ lly tbe and of the yur. PuTcell said,
abO\lt sio c1n1g arrdts wm have been
made. In 1t10, tbtte were 40I am:stl
mode, with 111 :msll in Itel. "'rhe truc1 ....,, to be toward ~
caitle " be uld "whkb ll •mo:rtect' or ln-1ected.11 eocat'ne Purct11 ldded. has
become 1 po!J?l•; replacement ror mati·
ju:na • .,hich h>s be!ll"ln short 111pply and
poor In quality. Another u...i tald P1lrcell. la the
manufatlm and UH ol "hashlsb oD" -
, liquid 40 umes as p>WtrlW u dry
bashlsb. Tiie oil Is placed on lhe tobacco ol
Of\llnary c1garette1 arxl :llowed to dry.
.. Whtn the claarette la lit. il amens llke
bUmlng huhlsh," commtnted Purcell.
"U they find I WO)' la gel rid of !ht
Hanoi Refuses Package~ Sent. b,y U.S. ·F~milies
Famine. ol Ammcan POW1 :nd MIAll
are being Informed • by the U,S. Postal
Service that packagu they sent to their
relatives tn N"9rth Vletnam between
August and October have been retmned
to this country.
A .,okwnan for the post office said
vtrtually all the packages sent oversea•
i11 tbe three-month period have been
returned -Including the packages ad-
dmsed to most of the men North Vlet-
nam acknowledges as POWs.
There ba: been no ealllanaUon by
HanoJ fgr the, retu.rn or the paickqea.
Most were mtr~ "refuled bf Vietnam"
and • few were marked overftllbt The
opbke:man said : spot clieck Of Ibo
11legtdly overweight parcels lndlc1ted
the)i were within the ollowable weight
limit. POW and MIA families have been
allowed lo send sis: packages a year to
their imprisoned or mWinc relaUves:.
The post office official said tho return-
ed p:ckages do not Include Christmas
parcels.
"We bave-betn adivaed the Christmas
packqu have been forwarded to Hanoi
arxl we ~ that the otlm aide will
permlt our men to receive tbem, '' be
:aid.
Tbe post of11ce ba:·IDlUatod tnqµlrla
throllgh lntematlonal PoOlaf cbannels to
find out why tbe p:rctlt were rejecled.
A , spokeam:n for the POW-MIA
International. Inc. In TulUn, contacted
lhll momlJill said thla was the flrlt they
bad heard uf the returned p:ckqe:. No
action will be taken by tbe oraantzatklo
uotil more facta are avatfable the
1poke1man said.
•
Pilot Publuhes
' Over ·Holidays
. HDDi/ay ;..uUon: ol the DAILY . PlLOT ·
will be published both Friday :nd S:tur-
day foe home delivery during memin&
houn.
Friday'• usual deadline for S:turday
Dime-A·Llne ctuslfled ods will be moved
up to !:30 p.m •• ~ 1bund1y for New
Year't D<Y edl.
All DAIL Yl'ILOT ofllcel wUI be clo:ed
on bolh day: ol tbe holiday. Clrt11lotlon
~pt. calls ftfardlng dellvertts wtll be
bandied unUI llOoo on both doYO.
Red China tD01 t11< lilg 1l<>l'1f · ,
o/ .1971 .,. •lie· llllmlclllmlal
ffonl, cmcl U.. Lo< Angela
eorlllqvGkl of Ftb. 9 tllc lop
Cali/omio •torr of"IM ,...., al>
c.,,.imp ti) cdllon _.i bw
tht Auodoted Prtu. S~1 ON
Pcge 14.
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• 1, DAILY PILOT
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, ,...,,.r ... J Rain Does Good SYCAMORE HilJS .. .
~bood "°'"'!''"'Ill COllkrl.
"'U wo .. , -a ION cbaar<. all 'd ha" ID do is go down and set the
• • ISCODSID *8try Sel I
•
y Li~dsay
\MADISON, Wil. (UPI) -John V.
L,{ldqy, I newcomer to the Democratic
P~, officially entered the Wisconsin
p{uident.Jal primary today ·and then aet
• on an· •ertal tour to cover the state's
bile.st ciUes and at lust one of the
lfll.].lest.
:he till, dapper New Yor\: mayor, who
•ed the Florida primary 'l\luday.
... he trould carry on his fight for the
~dentJal nomination in Wisconsin's
AJtil 4 primary. ~ expect a crucial test, for the beliefs
I 1to thls election the principles on
w run, are a part of Wisconsin's
own tradition of progressive politics and
VIC.I ffiorm," Lindsay said. ..
:The people of Wisconsin have always
been independent," he said. 11They have
kept alive .1o thia day the heritage of the
1reat Roberf La Follette. Wisconsin bad
IN the fight for cleaner water and decent
Wfles and fair tal!!atment for workers in
fa6toties and on farm1." ~ said both Wisconsin urban and
rthl people "share" common needs and
cctnmon hof)e3 with the people who live
in my city and every city and rown and
suburb in thi! country."
Lind.say repeated hi!: statements that
he was running as a representative of the
"America that Washington has ignored."
He said he intended to "help shatter
the illusions spun by the NiJ:on
Administration."
From Madison, the state's second
largest city, Lindsay Wf' acbeduled to fly
to two of the middle-sized cities -Eau
Claire and La Crosse.
A side trip from Eau Claire was to take
him to Cadott, a city with a population of
Jess than 1,000.
LindsaY wu ·scheduled to appear in
Milwaukee, the state's largest city,
lonight. .
~ormer Laguna
Policeman Sued
" .. man who claims a former Laguria
Bt.;ch Policeman ignored Injuries that ln-
claded.:i broken leg when he was jailed
for alleiedly beln& drunk in public hu
1\id the officer for $100,000.
John Jennings Gabrlels of santa Ana
~es Art Colony officer Joseph Reagan
in his Ora"ie County superior Co\Jrt
la.suit. He accuses the officer ot ag·
frflYatlnc die injuries he suffered while c:ri>ssing a feoce in the Broadway area on Pee. 30, 1970.
Gabrlels states that Officer Reagan
booked him for being drunk in public on
that date. He claims that Reagan ignored hli frequent demands for medical at-
tenUon.
Reagan and three other Laguna of·
flcers left the department last June with
former Laguna chief Kenneth Huck to
organize a police department , in Simi
Valley.
Max Steiner, 83 ,
<;omposer, Dies
' HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Academy
Award-winning composer Max Steiner, a
veteran ol '1 years ln the film industry
wbo scored "Gone With The Wind," bas
djed at 1.ge 83.
Steiner, who scored such films as "The
Cane Mutiny," "Life With Father,"
"Treasure of the Sierra Madre" and
"&llttle C)y," won an Oscar in 1944 for o._ score to the motion picture "Since
Y(l!l Went Away.11
. . . •• •• ~
OIAll•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
~ CiMllC't CO.UT PIJILWUMO CCIMPAl'fY ..; •. ·. •• =: •• ' • .. . •.
'•
lo\•tt H. WoM Pr•IHM and PllOlllOU
J1clc It. Curl.., VM ,._lllMI Mii 0-61 IMltil&"
:Qet• M. l oot l1cl!1'4 P. Nall
': Mlilimt MllllllWI Ellll•n
"" ....... omc. • 222 fot•1t A..-.1110 •! M1lti19 ffdttitll P.0, low •611 '2111
:"' S.. C ......... Office ~~ 305 Nottll El C1MI~• ~•ol, '2112 :: °"""' OHkft ;.;.. c.te --.. la Wnt lt1' Sw.t
a. ............ IMUI; IUl Nt-n .... i.'41'f ':. ..,,,.. '-"' Vt11 tMCll ....... ,. , -• . .
bc•Odlnr permlt.s,• •Id lllller. "and .,,.
, .. the --ol Ille publlc •lll<>J .-rapiD( the hll!J." Ml\W, aald, -~his !inn wOQJd
Reservoirs in County ~eplenished . ' fa.or llaylq with the r .. ldentlll Pl•• Jnc:h<t oJ welcome rain -and
ideo "wllldl will -property tba f·" "'-•• r-.. •· !wt and pnl'fldt bet,...., 11 and 11 pet• aven aome IDOW -~ on ~ ~~ _ .. ,
ct11t open ._. n ~urinl the pu\ aeven !/aY• •-ll0,000
The declsioii u to wlilch route the com· acre feet of fresh water to underground
l>W will take will be made next month, \ and surface reservoirs with an estimated
MUltr 1d~«L value or more than $4 million. ~e noted. that clcsin& or the escrow on County Flood Control District official th~ land 1s conUngent on a , llnallzed John Kern said today the week long ralti"s
de'{tlopmenl plan. "1tle can't s~ on this fell rather consistent!)' and gently In
thing forever," ht added. most areas and only 16,000 acre feet wa1
Miller 11id the plan has bee shown to Jost to the ocean.
city <1ftlclak', who "seemed to be very Snow was reported th.ii mornlnl in
plemd with IL"
OppositJon to the plan was expressed
Sil..,ado and Modfeal<a c-11111' on
SaotJa10 Peak (Saddleback).
"Because <1f the dryness of the soll a.ad
the conllltent ra.te ol preclpitaUQfl, most
of the storm water was ablorbed, into the
ground or~trapt>ed Jn water coft9ervation
basins an reservoifs, 11 Kem uld.
"Runoff was not heavy in moat areai.s
but last onday the W~tminiiter and
Anaheim·Barber City flood control chan-
nels reached capacity level . and San
Diego Creek near UC Irvine exeffded the
capacity of the MacArthur Boulevard
this morning by James Dilley of the
Laguna Greenbelt, Inc. "We will oppose
every square foot of development on that
land," said DUiey. "That land is a vital
~ as open space."
When It Rains in State
Dilley said the ·ariee.nbelt will hold firm
"and hopefully they will give up thls pro-
J>O!al and work for public acquisition of
the land as open space."
Nixon Pr:obably
Won't Greet '72
From Clemente
Presid'ent Nii:on hi~self bad predicted
be would arrive in San Clemente Thurs·
day, but apparently things have changed.
Speculation bas it now the Chief Ei:-
ecutive and bis staff will use the New
Year's weekend to rest before the nelt
to~level summit talks in. San Clemente
next week -discussions with Japanese
Prime ~finister Eisaku Sato.
No firm date has yet been announced
for the President's arrival here, but in-
dications are that he will arrive late in
the weekend or early next week to
prepare for the "strictly-business''
discussions with the Japanese executive."
The original mention of the trip west
came during a network documentary on
the Presidency, but Mr. Nixon's filmed
comments on his grueling itinerary were
made on Dec. 6.
Schedules have been ch a n g e d
somewhat since tben.
The President today was winding up hi!!
twCHiay conference with West Germany's
Chancellor Willy Brandt. He will return
to Washington, D.C., from the Florida
White House before the trip to California.
Tbe quick pace will resume nut week,
however, when the Japanese dele1ation
moves into the Newporte:r IM 1n NewPort
Beach to prepare for the summit talks,
primarily called so that the Preside.at can
discuss nuances of bis scheduled' trips
this spring to Moscow and Peking.
Because of the "business" label at-
tatcbed to the Japanese visit Jtttle fan-
fare and ceremony is ei:pected during the
event& in Newport and San Clemente.
It has been hinted that the Prime
Minister will travel between his quarters
and the Western White House by
helicopter and perhaps make no outside,
public appearances with the President.
San Clemente Chambe r of Commerce
officials had been planning for a possible
reception for Mr. Sato, the highest-rank·
ing foreign official ever to visit here
Since the President set up residence.
Besides proposing a reception for the
prime minister, chamber officials hive
mapped plans to entertain the estimated
60 to 90 Japanese newsmen whO will ·ac·
company the Japanese representative to
the aiast.
The talks will probably become the
most extensively covered national news
event ever in San Clemente, with nearly
100 domestic and European reporters on
hand, combined with the large corps
from Japan and elsewhere In the Far
East.
Average Presidential visits here draw
40 to 50 reporters.
From Page 1
NARCOTICS. ••
fact the number or drug overdoses in
town bas dropped sharply in recent
months. "I can't help but think that users
are saying 'let's not use eve rything that
any Tom, Dick and Harry ha s lo sell.'"
"The kids are being more cautious;
they realize there·s some danger at·
tached with drugs," the o f f l c e r
speculated.
"We haven't seen an overdose in six
months," commented Mary Stack, ad-
ministrator at the Laguna Beach Free
Clinic, 422 Glenneyre St. "In fact, we
haven't seen many people coming in
really !toned."
"1 don't know If it's indicative of a drop
in use, but it shows there's not so much
abuse. There's not as much totally Ir-
rational use of drugs," she added.
A help, Mrs. Stack said. is the Do-Tt-
Now Foundation of Los Angeles wh ich
persons may call, describe a drug And
find out whether it ls good or bad .
Purcell estimated that during 1971 $2
million in drugs were seized In Laguna,
comprised cf : 200.000 LSD tablets, 3,000
pounds of marijuana, 150 pounds of
hashish, 4,000 barbiturates and am·
phetamines and several pounds of PCP,
cocaine and LSD powder. Several-ounce
quantities of mescaline and heroin were
also seized during tht year.
"For a small town ot IS,000, lt'1 amu-
lng," aaid J>urctll.
Toll Hits 164
SEOUL (UPI) -The death loll In
history's worst hott.I fire continued to riae
today, wltb search crews bringing new
bodies out from the "'rtckage of the U.
story Taeyongak Hotel. Five bodies round
by crews brouahl the total of known dead
to 164. '
'
It Pours-Lots of Chaos
By JOHN BREWER
A ... cllltill ~, ... Writer
Rain ls ra in is rain is rain. Except in
smog-plagued Southern Calilornia.
With most sections getting less than 14
Inches of wet stulf a year, when it rains
it's a Happening.
Even when the Weatherman warns of
showers. its hard to believe, Theusands of
umbrellas are left at home. Slickers and
rain hats are unheard of. And few cities
are built for rain. Most grew so fast that
drainage systems never caught up with
the population. ·
This week an inch and a half of r ain
fell in a day in Los Angeles. The results
were predictable. Water surged down the
streets, marooning umbrella-less and
overshoe-less office workers and shop-
pers and flooding some homes.
''Flash outs" caused by dust and water
com bining on transfonners blacked out
neighborhoods. Traffic a c c i d e n t s
rocketed. Rain stories with agate rainfall
tables beat out the bombing of North
Vietnam for newspaper banners.
The Chamber of Commerce talked
about "liquid su11Shine."
Many persons look forward to rain,
happy at the change of pace. It binds
persons together. Those who walk in Jone-
Jy, untouchable paths when the sun's out
crowd under wanings and together laugh
or curse at the falling water.
Bosses who usually never lose their
stuffy decorum have to dash through the
drops like scarecrows. Women who see
the world through a makeup mask leave
the eyelashes at home. Nobody cares
what you loo k like when it's raining.
Rain cleans the skies of smog.
Los Angeles doesn't just look washed
after a good downpour. It look1 new . It
smells new.
A computer pointing his radiator cap
toward the city is astounded by the
mosaic of shapes and colors after a rain.
It's as if a freshly painted Hollywood set
has been rplled on stage. The brown
blanket is gone.
The mountains that surround the city
are usually nothing but shadows behind a
gray backdrop. Now they burst forth.
Sharp-lined. In front, Three-dimensional.
Often topped with un~lievable white
snow.
Laments science fiction writer Ray
Bradbury, "Today a clear s~y only comes
after a rain. And lt makes the heart ache
with remembrance of days long gone."
From Page 1
LAGUNA IN, 1971
petitk>ns began in March, the city council
deferred action on the proposed hotel
wne ar>d, on April 16, tbe filing of peli-
llons bearing more than 4,000 signatures
set the stage for the Aug. 3 lniUative election.
Rumors of an Easter "happening" un-
nerved city officials momentarily, but the
event fln11ly took place In Death Valley,
though sponsored by Lagunans and falled
to reach the magnitude of the Christmas
gathering.
The April school board election found
12 candidates in the running for three
board vacancies and the r e s u I t i n g
balloting placed three conservatives,
Patricia Gillette, Gerald Linke and
William Thomas, on the board. Their elec-
tion promptly made the usually deserted
school board meetings a popular gather-
ing place for Ure new body of local
government-watchers.
Environmentalists remained a c t i v e
throughout the year, and a plan to build a
new service stat.ion adjacent to the city'1
famed Star Pine on North Coast Highwa y
caused a momentary flurry -but the
service station won out.
A committee that had been named to
study development ol the Main Beach
Park came out with a recommendation
opposing any commercial installations on
the beach.front ei:cept limited food and
beach-<>rlented concessions. A n ap:.
plication for a government grant to help
finan ce the development was successful
and beachfront tenants were given their
eviction notices by the end of the year.
An offer from the Festival ol Arts to
help the financing by adjusting its lease
terms resulted in a momentary furore
and ultimate dropping of the offer, peo-
dlng further discussion .
Jn June the Art Colony'1 elderly
greeter, Eller Larsen, fell ill and was
taken to hospital, where he remained for
many months, returning be f o r e
Christmas to become a resident of the
Laguna Beach Nursing Home , but well
enough to make occasional appearances
on downtown streets.
Parting and traffjc circulation re-
main ed at the top of the city·s "problem"
li1t and there were extensive studies of
both, including sev~ral proposals for
building parking structures. At year's
end, nei ther problem seemed much closer
to solution.
The library and Chamber of Commerce
moved into temporary quart.era to make
wa.y for the long·Jwalted new library
building, but the project bogged down ln
financial snags until the very end or the
year. when the county agreed to accept a
higher bid than planned in order to com·
p\ete the job.
A coort suit atlempOng block the high
rise initiative election came within Inches
of success, but a ha sty appeal to a higher
court resulted In a green light for the
· vote, and overwhelming popular suppo rt
or the 36-foot height limit.
When the falterlng local bus line neared
collapse l.n summer, It was taken over by
the city and expanded lo a full-tcele
municipal transit line, with the 1ddltion
of four new buses, financed by a federll
1r1nt.
Report.a of raw &<!wage In the waters
off Laguna called attention to the city's
aaing .ewa.se treatment plan t, which was
undergoing a pa tch·UP Job pendlng con·
clustnn ol rt.ud.lts for a rt1ion111l plant.
But the new Water Quallty Control
Board lowered the boom on the facility
and came up with new requlrement.s and
new deedllnes which sparked frenzied ac·
• • •
lion to improve the Interim operation.
An attempt to recall the mayor ind two
city councilmen w1s launched In August,
but met with litUe response from a
citizenry apparently weary of political
battles, at least for the time being.
An old Laguna tradition, the Labor Day
'1drinkers' waUt," wherein particlpants
celebrate the end of summer In a light·
hearted pub-crawUng exp ed i t Ion ,
erupted into minor disaster when police
intervened to quell~ sidewalk fracas and
made 15 11rrests.
The freeway issue , la id to rest years
back when the state agreed, after a siz-
year argument, to adopt an inland route
behind Laguna's hills, burst for-th again
as environmentalists proposed aban-
donment of the entire freeway project.
At yea r's end, Lagunans were talking
about a new court attempt to overthrow
the height limit initiative, the upcoming
City Council election, and the burning
issue tha t promised to become a key to
both the election and Laguna's future -
the land use element of the general plan
and the possibility of zoning to put a ceil-
ing on the future population of the
village.
PREVENTION, NOT CURES
Remember when you got that
shiny new watch for Christmas
last year? Chances are good .that
il looked great, and kept good time.
Now, after a full year of use, its
time to get it back mto "like new''
condition. Within a few days your
watch can be cleaned, polished and
serviced, keeping it looking its best
a nd keeping you on time for those
important appointments.
Upkeep on your watch is a good
case of "an ounce of prevention is
\Vorth a pound of cure." Annual
cleaning and minor repair, such
a s replacing a scratched or cra~k·
ed crystal, can prevent major
damage to the finely calibrated
inner workings of your watch.
Watch repairs are handled right
at our store, where you are as.-
sured o! quality workmanship, r ..
liabillly and safety. We are f\11Jy
insured for your protection. and
have skilled craltrmen to handle
your needs.
Start tho new year on tlme, after
a visit lo our store.
ADV.
ala~ ~hway clllv.tt, OoodJD( that roadway.'
"From a Oood control 5tandpolnt, tbe
raJns have been easy on the county," the
dlstrlct orficlal stat8d. • • H ow t v er ,
rea1dents are warned that inolher large
series of stonns within a few weeks
mlgh~ be dan&erous. ''
Kern said heavy intensJty of rainfall on
the now well saturated ground might lead
to extensive flooding, part1Cu1arly ln
areas of heavier aolls and unlmpr<ived
dirt hood control channels.
* * * Rain Makes
Exit-Leaves
Cold Draft
After one of the wettest weeks ln
Southern California hi story, the rain was
finally gone today -and in its place
were record low temperatures which sent
hundreds of motorists: skidding and
crashing on icy roads.
Orange Coast residents awoke to
mercury readings In the low 40s this
morning, while the quick freeze on moun-
tain roads produced congestion "so bad •
you wouldn't believe it," according to a
Lake Arrowhead fireman.
Orange Cowlty today mopped up from
a soggy session of stonns which dumped
an average of five inches of precipitation.
The rainfall figures ranged, from 3.14 in-
ches in Santa Ana to a fioodlike 9.1
reading in Silverado Canyon.
Wealher damage turned from low-lying
property to Southland highways as the
waterlogged roads froze in the grip of a
new cold snap. The California Highway
Patrol said it was swamped by so many
accident calls that investigators were
handling only the most serious.
Interstate 5 and U.S. 101 were open
Tuesday, but heavy snowfall and icy con-
ditions in. higher areas such as California
highways 18 and 30 in the San Bernardino
Mountains stalled cars for more than an
hour as thousands fled the snow-clogged
peaks.
In Los Angeles, where dozens of streets
became miniature lakes and several
motorists were briefly marooned atop
their cars, residents mopped up from a
week-Jong downpour that depos ited near-
ly six inches of water on the city.
The National Weather Service set the
total rainfall in Southern Calllornia since
July 1 at 6.91 inches, compared to 9.97 for
the same period last year. December,
however, was far wetter than last year
with 6.31 inches of rain against 4.52 in
1970.
The outlook for the rest of the week is
for partly cloudy skies, peak tern·
peratures over 60 degrees and "good
football weather" New Year's Day.
Brasselle Guilt y
In Barroom Figl1t
VAN NUYS (UPI) -Actor Keefe
Brasselle has pleaded guilty to a charge
of assau lt with a deadly weapon in the
shooting a man in a barrom brawl.
Sentencing was scheduled for Jan. 24.
The offense carries a penalty of up to 10
years in prison and a $5,000 fine.
Goin' S1cb11111ing
Merwyn Hollyfield, Portland,
Ore., demonstrates specially
designed snorkel breathing de-
vice from Belgium that en·
ables people who have had
their 1arynxes removed to
swim. He plans to organize
swimming club composed of
people without their larynxes.
Clerk Records
Own Marriage
In County Books
Recording Clerk Louise Keith added a
personal touch Monday to her work in the
vital statistics division of the Ora'nge
County Clerk's office -she recorded her
own marriage.
Jt was her la~ entry after four
years in which the tall, attractive Garden
Grove girl has put an estimated 5,cm
marriages among the vital statistics
entered in the records.
She immediately left with Navy
trwnpeter1\'illiam WayDe Newton, !2, for
a continuanon of the hoiieymoon that ac-
tually began Christmas Eve in the
Laguna Beach home of her brother
Douglas Keith.
Friends said the couple recited their
vows in a sunset ceremony on the
balcony of the Keiths' hilltop home In the
Art Colony. Newton will take his bride
with him to New Orleans where he is a
member of a Navy band.
Participants in the ceremony said that
Miss Keith was determined to defer her
trip to New Orleans until &be could
record her own marriage.
~frs. Newton's office was immediately
next door to the courthouse pressroom.
Newsmen were unanimously agreed Mon4
day that the most vital of the county
clerk's vital statistics are no longer in
view.
How
to make
Money
(look beautiful) • 'f.f&h Tt Sooli: '-ntifol liy •Hrin& it ia lrw i""ttf. Yftr eofnt•
or"" NII M "tin 14 klrtt ~old lrtmtJ, tnd woni a 11umbtr of dife~t W'll"i .J1tdcl~•'i pclldtntf, bnceltU, •~ Col11 J-elry
eo11U"" to bl .... 1.0 •oni ...,,...,,.,..,.,, a11d a11ktt UV. .,.. cill_..C.0-.., .... W OlllOO•Pl .. Ml--.todlJ.
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CONVINIENT TERMS
IANICJ.MIEll~RD-MASTElt CHARGE
I
24 YEAllS IN SAME lOCAltO!l
PMON E 141.)401
..
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I
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I
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au Cle1nente --
Ca istrano
..
VOL 64, NO. 3 0, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1971 • . 1 TEN CENTS.
. I -
·south Coast Area Had 'Rich Harvest' in 1971
,
By JOHii VALTERZA
' ' Of .. Dlllr , .........
All tplrigs Considered,· if's been a intty
good year for the South eout. ·
·Jn ternls of recreaUonaI r~aJ estate,
1971 yielded an e.rcellent -harve.st and the public coastline itretcbed (or several new
miles.
President Nixon and his opponents
harruriered out an agreement that gave
the public slx ·Straight.miles of gorgeous
Saq pootre coasUine once the private do-
•
Nixon Won't
Greet 1972
•
On Coast
Presldanl Nixon him&ell bad predicted
he would arrive.in San Clemente nwrs--
day, but Apparently things have changed.
Specu1aUon· bu it now the Chief Ex·
ecutive 4nd his ~Wf wW use the. New
Year's weekend to .rest befou·the out
tQP-level ·~it talks ii San· Oi~te
nut ~ -: •clJ!ICO.-wllll '-..
Prime Minhter Eisaku Sato.
No firm dale bu Ye\ been-.~
for &be Prtsldent'1 arrlt'al ~1 but iz>.
dlcatioos· ale 1iiai he will mNe 'lall ID
the wtekend or aarly neit week lo
prepan ·for I h·• "llriclly.IJuslneal"
cllscUBslons wlth.!he Japallele ~live."
The orlaJnal mention of the trip wesl
came during a network documel'it.ary on
tile Presidency, but Mr. Nixon's ftlmed
comments on his grueling iUneraey were
made on Dec. G.
Schedules have been c h a n g e d
si>mewhat since then.
The President today·was winding up his
two-day ~nferehce with West Germany's
Chancellor Willy Brandt. He will return
to Washington, D.C., Jrom the Florida
While House before the trip to California.
The quick pace will resume next week,
however. when the. Japant!e delegation mom Into the Newporter um in Newport
Beach to prepare. for~ the summit talks,
pr~rily called ao that the President can
disaiu nuarice! of bis · acheduled. trips
this. spring lo Moscow and Peking.
Because of the "business" label at·
latched to the Japanese: visit little fan-
, fare and ceremony is expected during the
e*nts In Newport and San Clemente.·
It has been hinted that the Prime
Minister will travel between bis quarters
and the Western While HouJ< by
htllcopter and perhaps make no o~taide,
pUblic appearances with the President.
San Clemente Chamber of O>mmerce
officials had been planning for a possible
reception for Mr. Sato, the highest1'ank-
lng foreign official ever to vbit here
since the fresldent set up residence.
Besides proposing a reception for the
prttne minister, chamber officials have
mapped plans to enteriain the estimated
M to 90 Japanese newsmen who will ac-
company the Japanese representati ve to
the coast. ·
The talks will probably · become the
most extensively covered naUonal news
event ever in san Clemente, with nearly
100 domestic and European reporters on
hand, combined with the large corps
from Japan and elsewhere in the Far
East. Averqe Presldenilal visits here draw
40 to $0 reporters.
Chevalier, 83,
tisted as Good
PARIS (UPI) -Enlerlaliier Maurk
etievaller wu ip good condition !Oday al
fiecker Hospu.J -althoCllh a ~
rilag1ttne puf out a , spec:jal eclltioll
reportinl bil. cle>lh. · Tbe'heldllne read, "Marni, Mama." be
murmared, and bis eyu cJooecf •• -"The
magazine, France Dimanche, a 11 o
published ptiotolrapha ol a pries( who
"adminislered lut rllel and carried with
him the Jut -o1 Qienlier." Despite the headUna, Ch e v 1 I l e r ,
bo8pitallied slza Dtc· 11 wltJ a serious
kidney ailment, spent a calm ni&ht and
WIS "in g-a) good c:..ndltion" this
morning, hosp!tal olflcl1!1 uid.
The 83-year-old IUlr's blood pressure,
w11e and temperature were normal. The
hospital said it 'Will not ls•ue. a medical
buUeUn on Chevalier tonlgbt.
main of the Marine CoJ']>I.
The County or orange hammered out
anolber agreement that returned Salt
Creek to public hands.
In between the two gems of shoreline,
in Dana Point, a $30-mllllon yacht harbur
wu officially christened at midyear,
heralded as the nutrient for un-
precedented growth throughout t h e
coastal area.
But that growth followed at sucb a
strong rate that county oUlcials put oo·
'
the braw late ID the year and declared a freeze on any new zone changes pending
a total reevaluation ol the county area's
master plan.
Besides hitting Dana Point and
Capistrano Beach, the building hoolll .
struck with force in San Clemente as
well .
But so did the deinolillon ·boom.
Two of the city's oldest landmarks
went for the final ride lo the dump during
the year.
The community clubhouse, which Jay
charred from a co.stly fire the year
before, bit the dust and a new structure
is growing in its place.
The city's first scbool, !As Palmas
Elementary, van1sbed in two days -of
no more use to the school cqsb'ict because
it was labeled unsafe ln eMtbquakes. A
new Laa Palmu is .llDdet"l'-ay.
San Clement.'• only hospital, San
Clemente General, was bom after agoniz-
ing labor pains. II will house tta first pa-
Uents .,arly Ulis 1prhlg. .
Tbe city's Ora · d~rtmenl hOad-
quarten also was spawned and late this
year long. tlme1 Fir~ Chltf Merton W.
Hackett rttirtd. Hts last day coincided
witP the start of construction Oii ~the
htadquarten.
The )'µr was ~t without its agony fu
San Clemente.
Bitter quarrels with· a private operator
led the city to launch Its own emergency
ambulance service. ·
ar ane.s our
Dana Honored
Harbor Will Erect His Stat~
A memorial statue of Richard Henry director of Harbors, Beaches and Parks,
Dana, lof whom Dana Point Is named, received a telegram late Tuesday saying
will be erected soon in the new harbor the statue was en route to Ensenada
with dedication ceremonies planned for because of the dock tie up complications.
March. Sampson said when he discovers where
That's what Fifth District Supervisor the sculpture really is his ,department
RonaJd W. Caspers of Newport Beach will pick it up and bring It to the harbor.
said Tuesday. But there is some doubt. The bronze memorial was done by John
The rune.foot bronze memorial is on a Terkin of New York and cast In Italy.
ship which is (ta~ your choice) in San "This statue of Dana, depicting him as
Pedro Harbor waiting to be unloaded ; on a young man as he was when here on bis
tHe way to Ensenada for unloading or in voyage and told in his book, "Two Years
Ensenada· rudy. for delivery. Before Jhe Mast'," c'.aspers r$led.
Caspers accepted the gift statue Tues. "Dana ts in fatigue clothes, holding a
d"7 from Les.Rumrpers r'Pf"'enllrig Ille notebo\>k and looking ol(t lo'sea. .Jt 1s·
Sail JUan Olpiftl:anO Hlalorlcal . Society. b<lieYed tha\'tlils Is th& ..... eat 9'lllio lie
Remmers was chairman of the drive ptobably wrote, 'Sao JPn ' Is the on1y
which. raised 111.SOO In public .coo,... .l'O.O>all\ic spot.in Cali!Orllia.'"
tributions for the memorial ~n said the atte for the llal.Ue
He llllnkl ~ Is in Sao Pedro overJ60u the main CbanDel iII OU. Point
llarJ?m-. lloi( Sampson COlllll1 llarboi' a.r a -' park.
Darts Hurled Into Tires,
Young .AttendantDeclares
By TOM BARLEY
Of•MM DllW ~Ult lllff
. A yotp1g attendant who told Huntington
Beach' police t.6at fellow employes at his
Mobile service station wetellSing playing d8rts to puncture cu.stomers tires today
btcame the-prosecution's sixth witness in
its case against nine alleged partlclpants
in' i widespread auto repair racket.
Wesley Grlencr, :W, tallfied as the
Orange County Superior Court trial went
into its fourth day that he "didn 't like
what was going on" at the Beach and
Edinger station operated at the lime by
Christopher Enriquez, 25, of 7592 Volga
Drive, HufJUngton Beach.
Griener told prost:cutor Richard Sten-
ton that attendants hoisted cars on the
racks in the ltallon in the pretense that
they bad swtted Ure damage while the
aotos were be.ing given gu and oil at the
islands.
Then, the Tustin man said, playing
darts were repeatedly jammed into the
tires and tbe resulting damage pointed
out to unsuspecting customers who were
onen persuaded to buy new tires.
Griener said att,endants carried bottles
or oil or brake fluid which were used to
spray the sbock absorbers of ears being
examined On (he racX.
He repeated the testimony ~ other pnr
secution witnesses in telling the jury that
motorists were then warned that their
shock absorbers were leakln.J and should
be immediately replaced.
Griener was asked by defense attorney
Al Stokke about a reported cash shortage
at the MOvH station shortly before he left
the facility operated by Enriquez and
Henry c&at.oQguay, 21, of 7661 Com·
modort Qrlve, Huntington Beach.
But Griener m~de it clear to Stenton
that no one bad ever followed up the aug-
geMion that he take a lie detector test on
statements he made to both Huntington
Beach police and the Orange County
Grand Jury.
"Are you willing to take the test now?''
Stenton asked. ·
"Yes,1' the young attendant replied.
Griener's testimony followed that of an
Arm y colonel who told the jury that new
tires on his wife's car were replaced at a
service station allegedly involved in an
auto repa ir corqbine that ranged from
Seal Beach to San Clemente.
Lt. Col. Charles Dithl of Ross,
California, told stenton that the tires on
his wife's car were checked by him
before she left for Southern CaIIComla
and should never have been replaced 8t a
station operated by the defendants.
The officer told Stenton that a
"perfectly good" spare was replaced at
the station by.a tire that bore evidence of
many repairs 'and was clearly tnfertor to
the tire removed from his wife'• car.
.stenton has said he will introduce
testimony lrorp employes of all 11 sta·
, lions allegedly Involved in the amsplracy
and statements from cuslometa wbo
allegedly were defrauded at all those
facilities.
He has identified Stanley Davls, S2, of
108tl San Pable Circle, and Jmy Kendall,
35,. of 989 Sonora Road , bJth of Colla
Mesa will! Edward Carney, fl, of :Jll8ll:
Shell Harbour Ori .. , Hµntington Beach,
If the three principles In an auto re'pair
racket carrJe;d out by stallons dispellllng
(See REP Alli, Par• Z)
'
Rain Goes;
' ' .
Cold Snap
Takes Over
After one of the wettest weeks in
Southern CallComla history, the rain wa1
finally gone today -and In Its place
were record low temperatures which sent
hundreds o( motorists skidding · and
crashing on icy roads. . · ' '
Orange CoaSt residentl .iwoke· to
mercury. read\ngs in Uie Jow .OS. 11>1•
~ ·~:lllt.qulck-lln·illi!Ui
tllii ,.. JijoclJeH. -~:r"""" . r:.'IPUll!n1 )el~~ . ' • ,to .. . °':~~.,~~t':2· aa et lft lDdiei .. jlNdpltl The llpret _ .. lmll IJI JD.
cloal. in Santa Ana to a floodlla t.1 hadfna ID Sllvetado Canyon. -
Weather damqe turned from Jow.Jying ·
property to SoutllJand, highways as the
waterlogged road1 froze in the gr)p of a
new cold snap. The California Highway
Patrol said it was swamped by so many
accident calls that investigators were
handling only lhe most serious.
Interstate 5 and U.S. 101 were open
Tuesday, but heavy ·soowfall and icy con-
ditli:>m In hlgber areas such as California
highways 18 and 30 In the San Bernardino
M"ouotaln11 stalled cars for inore than an
hOur u tboullOds Ded the .anow'clogged
peaka. .
In Los Angele•, where doiiens of atreets
became miniature lake• and several
motorists Wl'l"e brleliy marooned atop
their cars, rtstdenll mopped up Crom a
week-long downpour that deposited near-
ly six Inches of water on the city.
,
UPI ',......,. •
· Merwyn Hollyfield, P.m;tJllld,
Ott., demonstrates specially
. de1lgntd snor~el breathing de-
vice · from Belgium that en-
ables 1 people -who have had
their larynx es . removed. to.
swtm. He plans to organize' , 1
sWimmlni dub compostcl ·of' '
people without their Jarynxes. , The National Weather Service set the
tota1 rainfall in Southern California since
July 1 at e.911.\nehes, compared to 9.97 for
the same period last year. December. p _ ·1m s·
however Wll far wette< than )Ill )'••r YJUDCI en . et
with 6.3i inches of rain against 4..52 in
197-li;, outlook f9f the rest of the week.I• Special ~sion
for partly cloudy skies, peak • tem-
peratures. over IO .degred and &ood .. ·
football weather" New Yw's Day. Over Restaurant
Pilot Publishes
Over Holidays
Hollil.Y ej)itJons "' the DAIL y PILOT
wlll1be published both Friday aDd Satur·
day for home delivery duriq mol'IUnl
houri.
Fridat1 ullUll d,.dlioe for Saturday
otm .. A-Line cluslfled Ids will be -
up lo 3:30 p.m, OD Thurlday for !lew
Year'• Day ads.
All ·DAILY. PILOT offlce1 will be clollOd
op both day1 of the hol)diy.Cln:ulatlon·
. Dept. calla regarding dell..,,iet will be
handled utitll noon on both days.
A kink developed eatly Ws .....t In lhe
city's t.en_lporary solutla11 to ·aw8rding a
flve-y~ lease for the municipal golf
course clutshouse, and ctty councilmen
will ·meet in specl.ol sesalon tonlfht lo
work lt Out.
'lbO 7:311 o'clock me<:lial bu developed
lqto,an elaveril:h-bour attempt to tesOlve
the months-otd Issue of who 1will nm the
re1tlurant. lt·was spawned· after the ex-
f&llng Jeasebolder tossed Ille potato beet
into the OOWJCl.lls lip. .
Peter ller(er, who bu feuded with city
~f during hi• five-year leliancy at lhe
cfly facllity, said he wauld not accept an
offer ot ,a 80-day r~lon 'to bit lttse '
Whfch exvtres New Year's day.
;eounc1fnien mlde tbe ofter'a week: ago
POW Gifts Returned
to give themselves mol'fl tlme to make a
choice among three bidder~ for the
restaurant concession. •
Bergert• bid Is the lowest of the three.
1be city last. fall advertlaed for bids on
awarding the Jeue ol the clubhouse.
COClncllrnan hoped to !ind a solution to
Jiging rev•"l"' al the f'l"Wty, which
bu not paid hi way in r'ecftlt years.
\Berger hu·ukl the clubbeuse suffers
!(<IOI .. Identity crisis, that ttl kil<ben is
fer too srnaI1 to uae for a lucraUve dinner
tr• and that oooperatlon f.nm the city lllfl bal added lo prohl .....
Hanoi Refuses P(lckages Sent by ll.S. J:amilies
' Familia of American POW1 and MIAI
are being Informed by the U.S. Pootal
Service tbat packagu they lent to thtir
relatives lo North Vietnam between
August and Odober have lfeen returned
lo' tilts COW\lry'
A •ROkestnan ,or ~ post office said
virtually all the packages sent over!Us
in the three-mopth period have been
returned -Including the packages Bd-
4"8'ed lo most of tho men North Viel·
nam 1ctnowledges u POWs.
There has been no e1planatlon by
Ranoi for the. return of the packagea.
Molt WtN~madted-••rtfuled by VW.m" 11111 a f.., _ nJtteci ~ '1'11'
apotesman -.• spot, dllcl-ft Ille aliegedly P.enreJ«hl percell lndiUled
they wtrt within the allowablt weJcllt
limlL I
POW and MIA families have' beei1
allowed to seod sit packages a )'Uf. to
the.Ir lmpfiloned or miulng relatives.~ ..,
The post \)fflco onlcial said the !*Wl'll-
ed p1ckag!I do not Include Chrlslfnll
parcoll.
"We'have been adlvsecl lh• Chrlatnw
packlges have been f0rw1Nlecl !9. R•119.l
' . .
and 'WO l<>\W thil the oll1or llde Will
pmnll .GUI mm t4 ncem them," be•
I u.kj. ,
'l'he_pool •lfice ~ lnJUaled 1nqu1r1et
Ulrough lnternatiooal Wotal channels lo>
rtnd 'out why \he paii:els were rejected.
. A lpOWman for the · PQW·MIA
lntarnatlonal, Inc. In Tustin, ""1todecl.
thJJ morning .. Id tbil WU the flrll they ~ hear.! of the returned packageS-No.
adloo will be lalcen by the organliatlon
t(ntil more racta. are available thl
11>0kesman oid. '
'
Ws .compeUtor• for the new nv~year1
leut are Vern Oakley, the owner of a
hambW'pr reatlurant m Avenida Pico,
and the W.P. Stewart Company o1 ~ullenonlon a profeaslonal, statewide
organl1a1 that 1peclsllzes In running
aolf l»Urll dining facllllleo.
Jn the middle ol the entire headache for ~city Is the local goUer who o! late has
Iliff CLIJBROOSl!l, Pase I)
Taxes went up a dime -fGr•the, flrat
time in many ye .... -to pay for the oew
a:immwtity clubhoale. l
A major developmeftt on hills near the
golf course sparked 111D1jlhl of marathon.
debate over access routes.
Councilmen halUed with the Rav. earl
Mcintyre over the use ol sound equip-
ment for a massive march and protest
rally qainst the ,Prelide;dt's Qllna
policy. Lovers -and hater• -ol dogs
(See lll!TROSPECT, P•· I) .
• •
Air Attack
Heaviest
In 3 Years
From Wirt Servlc
SAIGON -The heavies\ U.S. air at·
taeb on North Vietnam ln more thail
three years continued for tbe fourth dq
today with no letup-In aight: North Vie\-
nam claimed four planes Were shot down:
. A broadcall dlsJiatch from Hanoi of the
officW Vietnam Newa Agency uld the
F4. Phantom ) jets were shot dOwn In
~ Vinhand Nghe An~
aUacking 0 populoul llUI." Hanoi claims
..... American airbalt """" downed Iii prevlOUJ raids a~ &mday.
'U.S. m111WJ-. QJd the .'bomblnc
wnuld liootlnue T!runday In a' Mb daY.
Relilrning pilots reported 1eeln11' MIGs
lot the llnt time, and m!alln
The U.S. .....,..... ~ die MIG•
llsyed at exbsne ,_ and said there
was only apora\IJC llilllbmft ftft, In-
dicating bad ~ .-f<>rm1 Ille pilots lo bomb from high altitudes. (See
story, photos, pqe. 4): ' ·
The ground war ai.o lnlemifled after a
Chriitmas lull and raports from Pblml.
Penh uld there were big attacU norlb
and IOUtheast or Phnom Penh and hNvY
shelling of South Vietnamese haseJ in the
rubber plantation COllOiry 1aiong the
border northwest of Saigon.
Pilots 11id the)' 11w 11 leut three SAM
missiles fired ~\ them . and· that lheie
possibly were more. Olhei' pilots said
they 11• MIGs 0 1eVeral thnea" but that
in all but one case the MIGs were ara
distance and that .there never wue mere
than two MIGs together.
The lasl,MIGs reporled In action WU
before Chrutmas when at least three (l'fs
were .re~ ahot down o~er. Laos by
the MIGs -part of the sixplane Jou that
helped ·touch off the current bombing
cilmpaign, heaviest alnce Prealdent Nlion
took oUlce.
· 1,1.S. dl,Plomatlc sources reported that
lhi armada of 350 pl.oDIB and bellcoplers flew more than soo· attack lllrltes and
lnmdreds more wpporl lblsllonl ID !he
first 3\0 cifyi'O! !lie nnmd-thH>loct hom-
hlng that begail,Suncll)' •• '
To keep the attacr -~ al fuJJ
strength. a acbeclUled port ~ !Or !Ila
carrier Constellation wu dela;ed-and II
conllilued lo launch Its plallOI fr01l1
the Tonkin Gulf, along With lhe carrier
Coral Sea. .
The 7th F1eet'1 third canier, the
Enterprise, was oent lo the Indian Ocean
during the India-Pakistan war, and no
(Bee VTErNAM, P ... Z) •
--~ l!ullon up your "'""""!: ll'U pt
down Inf<> lhe thlrll'" ovlhllaJ>I,
' followed bJ cloucly •kies and chilly
(50s) lemperaturel oo Thursday.
INSmE TODAY
1!4d C""'4 10G1 U.. big 1lo7U
•f 1971 °" u.. l•l<nleltioftcll
frpftl, ancl Ule Loi A!lge!ic<
cm1llqtiokc of Feb. 9 lhe top
Callfonda •lotJ of U.. W«I'" oo-
'
~':!.,t1.i'.~~:s=! := .
'PoQ• 14. ..:.... " =-.. "'·""''-"' ' .. ""-11 =-= .. ........ -.. ·-.. l t :vl• ,.,... u ·-.. ..,,. . '~" --.. ... ....,... .. -.. ·-.. .., __ • -.. ·--" -• ·-..... _,. .... ,. -• ---... .._ • --.
\
0.11.Y Pll01 SC
fleeial c1tar1e• Year's Top ·
· Camp Pendleton Man Sought
' .. Prohers Named ht Clemente
I I :: -\. I 1 1 •
~enl or • San Diego Judie ~ a W~hington O.C., attoroey to 1n-
te charges of racial dl5Cl'imination
p Nodleton w•s announced today.
se •PolCesman 1ald Hobart Taylor .Jf., the at...,,.y, and Superior Court
J~ Rlcllar<I L. Vauahn frrive Sunday
&.t"" look into chargei by Rep. Augustus
Jlewklns (o.caJ.U.), a member of the con-
. ... -
Wisconsin
i ntry Set
,y Lindsay
";. I I
)IADISON, Wis. (UPI) -John V,
lfidsay, a newcomer tv the Democrat}c
PCrty, officially entered the Wisconsin
P!ridential prliriary today and then set ~ on an aerial tour to cover the state's
Ia,1ut ciUes and at least one of the
smallest. .~tall, dapper New York mayor, who e~ the' Florida. primary Tuesday,
1ald he would carry on his fight for the
presidential nomination in Wisconsin's
April 4 primary.
"I expect R crucial test, for the beliefs
I bring to this elect.ion lbe principles on
which I run, are a parl of Wisconsin'•
own tradition of progressive politics and
viJ11l reform," Lindsay said.
"The people of Wisconsin have always
been independent," he said. "They have
kept allve to this day the heritage of the
great Robert La Follette. Wlscofl.!lin had
Jed the fight for cleaner water and decent
wages and fair taeatment for workers in
factories and on farms."
Lindsay said both Wlscofl.!lin urban and
rural people "share common needs and
common hopes with the people who live
in my city and every city and town and
auburb in this country:."
Lindsay repeated his statements that
he wail 'n.lnnfng as a representative of the
"Al'ilerlca th8t Washington has ignored."
lie said he intended to "help shatter
the illusions spun ·by the N i x o n
Administration."
from Madison, lhe state's second
largest city, Lindsay was scheduled to Dy
to»\wo of the middle-sized cities -Eau
Claire aod ~ .crosse.
A side trfp from Eao Claire was to take hlft to Cadott, a city with a population of
Jiu: than 1,000.
--lindSay was scheduled to appear in
Mllwe~kee, the atate's largest city,
lol!llh~ ..
•' Frottl Page J
CLUBlIOUSE •• • ' ~ to take a brownbag lunch and
thermos jug of coffee along with his golf
clubs for ·a day on the local links.
Councilmen must decide the best way
to lure the gol£ers away from the sack
lunch and to the counter at the clubhouse.
The clubhbuse, at one time in Berger's
ttnure, offered dinner !are and an even-
ing bar and revenues were u p
J~cantly.
i:But Berger f.9ld councilmen the opera-
tiOn could not function smoothly because:
the kitchen was far too &:mall to handle
tJle dinner trade.
·Among his solution&: for thf next five
years would be a new sign on El Camino
Real and the expansion of kitchen
flldlities.
-Oakley has told councilmen he would
make a strictly coffee-shl>p operation pay
oil at the facility and would not offer din·
ntrs. /fhe Stewart firm, however, which of· res the highest financial yield to the city,
prOposes to transform the clubhouse into
a;f.ormal dining establishment.
OIANll COA$1'
DAILY PILOT
••"'' w. w.J Pruldtn! and l"lltttltJ'lcr
J1c\: •• c.t1..,
VIII Pte"Mrlt 8'111 co..a1. Mlllltr
1\oll'I•• IC11-rll EOl!Of
Th~"''' A. Mwrphl1• M.MQlnll Edi""°
• Q.,{11 H. loot Rich1ri P. N11t
Auil!M'll MWIM!ifto Edllwt -l -ci11e IMcll Offlc•
l11 f or1it A••11w•
MaTli•• o44rtn: P.O. lo11 t•6, t 26S2
S..Cl.-...Offk•
'OS North ll Cimino J11I, !2672
CtWOHluo , ~ Miu· 2» w .. 1 •rt 11,.,
-"""""' &wtfl.: ~ ,.._, ."""""" •. ~ ·"* l.l:VJ ..... 1111"-l'C • ) •
•
1resslona1 black caucus.
Taylor and Vaughn, a former Navy of.
fleer who has developed drug rehabilita-
tion programs for juveniles, are among
1Z civilians on the Commandant of the
Marine Corps' Advi'iory Committee for
Minority Aflairs.
After an.fonnal hearing with some
black Marines, Hawkins called for an in-
vestigation. He said Maj. Gen. George S.
Bowmao Jr., outgoing base commi.Qder,
was "either indifferent to the faclS or is
ignorant of them." . . Bowman denied any organized rac1a1
discrimination on the sprawling base,
biggest in the world. After 35 years in the
corps, he will be relieved Thursday by
Maj. Gen. Herman Poggemeyer Jr. The
Marines said Bowman was concluding a
routine tour of duty.
llorselllen Slate
'
Council Meet
'
On Trail Systelll
An effort to preserve some of Sin Juan
Capistrano's scenic areas for equestrian
trails will be made by the Capistrano
Valley Horsemen's Association which is
sponsoring a special meeting with the Ci-
ty Council Jan. 6.
The meeUng will take place at 7:30
p.m. in the cafetorium of San Juan
Elementary School.
"We want to explain why we feel we
need bridle paths and why the city shouJd
support them," said member Arlene
Skiles.
"Not only are we trying to preserve
scenic areas, but we are trying to
preserve horseback riding as a form of
recreation for our children.
Mrs. Skiles said that horseback riding
was a good way·to teach children respect
for animals and nature. Children who are
able to own horses learn responsibility
a.nd how to care for special equipment. ·
"The city has a plan that includes bridle.
paths. We want to explore, ways .we can
help to keep the ones we bave, to connect
them wlth others. and to preserve a.rear
where more could be set aside."
From Page J
RETROSPECT ..
squared off at several meetings over tb"e
iQUe ot allowing tfle pell OD city beaches.
The dogs lost.
San Cleniente had its share of tragic
lrafllc crashes -several deaths oc-
curred along stretches ol freeway where
no cen ter strip protection exists (one of
the last freeway stretches ln the county
where the'med1an is bare). .
No one was murdered in the city (or in
other Sou th C.Oast communities) during
the year.
But murder noneUleless commanded
the headlines.
San Clemente Marine Mark Johnson
was sentenced to prisoo after a
celebrated trial studded with a precedent-
setting admission into evidence of a truth
serum confession. That convinced a judge
that the tall Marine battered and stabbed
bis wife to death in the summer of '70.
San Clemente's Chamber of C.Ommerce
opened nominations from the public t.c>-
day for the Citizen of the Year who will
be named and honored later in January
at Qie chamber's annual banquet.
Any San Clemente resident can make a
nomination in writing to the chamber.
Deadline for submitting nominations is
Jan. 11 and the banquet will be held Jan.
15 at the San Clemente Inn.
The previous winners of the accolade
will form.the selection committee for the
new recipient.
Those committee members and former
winners are Don Hansen, Max Berg, Clif-
ford Murray, Paul Presley and Dr.
Robert Beasley.
Chamber Manager Robert Evans en·
couraged nominations, but added that
petition-format nominatio!15 ~igned by a
membership of an organuabon w!ll not
be weighed heavily in the selection of
the winner.
From Page J
' VIETNAM .•.
replacement was available for the
Constellation.
The Constellation and the Carol Sea are
supplying about 150 fighter·bombers to
the force attacking North Vietnam. The
rest of the aircraft come from bases In
South Vietnam and Thailand.
Rad io ltanoi claimed that a seventh
U.S. plane was shot down Tuesday, in
Quang Dinh Province just north of the
demilitarized zone. It said nothing about
the crew. Radio Hanoi reported earlier
th.at five planes were shot down on Sun-
day anti a sixth on Monday. It aaid a
number o! the pilots were killed or cap-
tured.
The U.S. Command refused to com·
ment on the report of the number ot
strikes flown, Hanoi's claims of seven
planes downed or its report that the
raiders had killed or wounded many
civilians. The command said that for
security reasons it would disclose no
details of the operaUon until it was com-
pleted.
Despite the magnitude of the cam-
paign, the U.S. Defense Department
denied that it had turned the clock back
to 1968, before President Lyndon 8.
Johnson halted the bombing of . North
Vietnam.
"We have not resumed the bombing
campaign of the North," Pentagon
spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim aald in
Washington. "Our operations are limited
duration strikes. They are limited as to
geography and targets." \
·When newsmen pointea. out that
Johnson'a olficisls also claimed bombing
attacks were limited as to gargets,
Friedheim replied , "They were not near-
ly as restricted as now."
Toll Hits 164
SEOUL (UPI) -The death toll . in
history's worst hotel fire continued to rise
today , with search crews bringing new
bodies out from the wreckage of the 22-
story Taeyongak Hotel. Five bodies found
by crews brought the total of known dead
to 164.
School Head Says Report
By Jury 'Flimsy, Unfair'
By JACK BROBACK
Of 1/11 DlllY ,1111 Sllff
A report released Monday by the 1971
Orange County Grand Jury on the C.ounly
Department of Education Tuesday as
termed "flimsy, incomplete, unfair and
unbalanced,'' by Dr. Robert Peterson,
county superintendent of schools.
Hitting back at sharp criticism by the
jury, Peterson charged that a key sug-
gestion in the report would only serve to
weaken local control of education.
He referred to a statement which read.
In part: "orange Cotmly no longer needs
the expense of a separate level of ad-
ministrative responsibility -the Qiunty
Department of Education. FuncUons of
the Department can be m o r e
economically and effectively employed in
cooperative di strict programs or in a
regional division of the State Department
or Education.
··~foreover, a regional program offers
exciting possibilities for coordinated data
i:irocessing. elimination of dupllcate
financial supervision, and research pro-
Jttts aided by computer analysis.
The latter part (If the statement was
attacked by Peterson as "unlvorrmed.
We alread yhave t'Omputer services from
our own coont y Data Services."
The superintendent said he gave the
report as a whole a grade of "F" of fail·
ing.
"The jury Is disregarding the wishes of
the volt.rs In recommending that the
elKCtive position of county superin-
tendent and the County Board of Educa·
tion bt abolished ," the edueator argued.
"Jn 1970, voters overwhelmingly In-
dicated that they want an el~ted
superintendent and board to aid the coun-
ty school districts.''
On the jury's report bc!lng ''Incomplete.
and Olmsy" Peterson 11\d. "I have talk·
ed to every district ~uperintendent In the
county and not onr of lhtm had been 11sk-
td to discu ss the subject (County Depart-
ment of Education and ils worth ),"
Jn reference to jury recommendations
that the county Library he designated to
purchase textbooks, handle acqulsltlon
and circulation of audio-visual materials
and school library · operations, the
superintendent said:
"The jury makes recommendations in·
volving other departments of county
government without coosulting heads of
those departments," he c o n t I n u e d .
"C.ounty Librarian Harry Rowe Jr. told
me he was not consulted. and the same is
true of County Audilor-C.Ontroller Victor
•leim in reference to a jury suggestion
that legislation be sought to allow
transfer to the auditor-cont.roller of all
auditing responsibilities now performed
for districts by the county Department of
Education.
Peterson was especially angered by
jury criticism of one of his favorite pro-
jects -the Orange County Academic
Decathlon (0CAD).
Tire jury report said the use of county-
paid staff should be terminated and that
private funding should be insisted upon
for the OCAD .
The superintendent said .• the
Decathalon, now lour years old and wide-
ly praised by outside educators, has
alwa ys been funded by private sources
through the OCAO Association.
He 1190 rtsf:nted to a phrase calling the
OCAD a "private projl"Ct."
"It certainly Is not private.'' Peterson
stormtd. "It is open to the public and 11 a
non-profit project of educational value,
like the aMual Science Fair."
Pet,rson said the OCAD was rin1nced
throuah $8,000 In private contrlwtlons
last year.
•le added that 1.500 hours of depart~
ment staff time was devoted to th•
decathalon but no county monty In cash.
"Ten subjects are Involved and my staff
has ~pent Jess than 200 hours per subject
on this fine vehicle to encourage student
excellence.''
i ,
Rain Does Good _,
· Reservoirs in County ,Replenis,_hed
• • F\Yt inclles, of Wei ..... rala -llld
aven '°'"' anow -feU on Orange Cotml)'
durfnfr 1114 put aeven days 1ddin1 1110,peo_
acre (eel of fresh water to underground
and IL\rf&ce reservoirs with an estimated
~11lu1 Ot mort than .. million.
County Flood Control District official
John Kern said today the wtek long rains
fell rather consistently and gently in
most areas and only 10,000 acre feet was
lort to the ocean.
Snow wu reported this morning ln
Sllverado llld M.odJaJc• <lllfOM and on
Sanlla10 Peak (Saddiebacl<).
"Because cf'thl drrness of the iOil and
the coiul!tent rite o preclpltatlon, mott
of the atorm water was aPMrbed into the
ground or trapped In wafer conse.rvaUon
basins and reservoirs," h"ern said.
"Runoff was not heavy In most areas
but last Monday the Weatmtnater an·d
Anaheim-Barber City Oood control chan-
nels reached capacity level and san
Diego Creek near UC Irvine exceeded the
capacity of the MacArthur Boulevatd
1tm bJGhway culvert, noodlnC lhal
roadway."
"f'rom,a fiood conlrol ai.ndpolnt, the
rains have been euy on the county," tbe
district ·official stated. ' • Ho w e v e r •
residenl.1: are warned that anotir large
series of storms wttbln 1 fe weekl
might be dangerous.I '
Kern said hellvy intensity or rainlall on
the now well saturated ground might lu.d
to extensive flooding, parUcularly in
are.as of heavier soils and unimproved
dirt flood control channels.
When It Rains in State Veto Remap,
GOP Leader It Pours-Lots .of Chaos Asks Reagan
By JORN BREWER
AJNClatlMI ,, ... Writ#
Rain Is rain is rain is rain. Except in
smo~·plagued Southern California,
\Y1th most sections getting less than 14
Inches or wet stuff a year, when it rains
it's a Happening.
Even when the weatherman warns of
showers. Its hard to believe, Thousands of
umbrellas are left at home. Slickers and
r ain hats are unheard of. And few cities
are built for rain. Most grew so fa st that
drainage systems never caught up with
the population.
This week an inch and a half of rain
fel l in a day in Los Angeles. The results
were predictable. Water surged down the
streets. marooning Ul!\brella-less and
overshoe-less office workers and shoir
pers and flooding some homes.
"Flash outs" caused by dust and water
combining on transformers blacked out
neighborhoods. Trafflc a c c i d e n t s
rocketed. Rain stories with agate rainfall
tables beat out the bombing of North
Vietnam for newspaper banne(S.
The Chamber of Commerct talked
about ''liquid sun.shine."
Many persons look forward to rain,
happy at the change of pace. It binds
persons together. Tho5'! wha walk In lone-
ly, untouchable paths when the sun's out
crowd under wanings and together laugh
or curse at the falling water.
Bosses who usually never lose their
stuffy decorum have to dash through the
drops like scarecrows. Women who see
the world through a makeup mask leave
the eyelashes at home. Nobody cares
what you look like when it's raining.
Rain cleans the skies of smog.
Los Angeles doesn't just look washed
after a good downpour. It looks new. lt
smells new.
A computer pointing his radiator cap
toward the city is astounded by the
mosaic of shapes and colors after a rain.
It's as if a freshly painted Hollywood set
has been rolled on stage. The brown
blanket is gone.
The mountains that surround the city
are usually nothing but shadows behind a
gray backdrop. Now they burst forth.
Sharp.lined. In front. Three-dimensional.
Often topped with unbelievable white
snow.
Laments science fiction writer Ray
Bradbury, ''Today a clear sky only comes
after a rain. And It makes the heart ache
with remembrance of days long gone."
Thomas C. Rogers, chairman of the
Orange County Republican Central Com·
mittee, has asked Governor Reagan to
veto the Assembly's reapportionment bill
because of a boundary error affecting
Fullerton
Rogers charged Monday that some
1,400 Fullerton residents would be
represented by two assemblymen if the
bill were approved.
He also charged Democrat Edmund C.
Brown, Jr. with failure to carry out his
responsibilities as secretary of state
because Brown did not catch the error.
According to Rogers, the Assembly-
passed bill features a technical error that
places both Assemblyman W 11 l i a m
Campbell (R-Hacienda Heights) and
Assemblyman John Briggs (R·Fullerton)
in the same small portion of Fullerton.
From Page 1
The area Rogers referred to is bounded
by Brea Boulevard, Rolling Hills Drive,
State College Boulevard and
Bastanchury Road. It cov'ers 12 stee•·
the Rolling Hills Elementary School r
about I.400 residents.
Rogers said the error was discov c
over the weekend as he tried to place l:1e
proposed new Assembly districts on an
Orange County amp.
REPAIR. ••
Arco, Mobil, Shell and Texaco gasolines.
Named with Enriquez and Castonguay
as codefendants are David Conchola, 22,
of 6000 Garden Crove Boulevard,
Westminster, Roger Mendenhall 28, of
26095 Avenida De Seo, Mission Viejo,
Ralph Carney, 29, of 32.852 Calle San
Marcos, Sao Juan Capistrano and R. C.
Weisner, 18, of Santa Ana.
It has been alleged that Davis, Kendall
and Edward Camey were in control o(
the l! satlons detp~te oil company ft!iUl¥·
tions aimed af hmltlng operations Of
member service stations to individuals.
It !s also alleged that the trio ran
schools at which employes were In·
structed to mutilate tires, slash hoses,
spray shock absorbers and generally
pressure motorists into accepting major
repairs on the cars.
Stenton has stated that the trio supplied
Merge r Approved
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -The Illinois
Central and the Gulf, Mobile and Ohio
Railroads will be allowed to merge,
creating a system with 9,400 miles of
track stretching from Minnesota to
Louisiana. 'Phe Interstate Commerce
Commission °(ICC) approved the merger
Tuesday.
GEM TALK
,l TODAY
I by
PREVENTION, NOT CURES
Remember when you got that
shfny new watch for Christmas
last year? Chances are good that
ii looked great, and kept good time.
Now, after a full year of use, iU
time to get it back into "like new"
condition. Within a few days your
watch can be cleaned, polished and
serviced, keeping it looking its best
and keeping ycu pn time for those
important appointments.
Upkeep on your watch is a good
case of "an ounce or prevention is
worth a pound of cure." Annual
cleaning and minor repair, such
8! replacing a scratched or crack·
ed crystal, can prevent major
damage to the finely calibrated
inner workings of your watch.
\Vatch repairs are handled right
at our store, where you are as ..
sured of quality workmanship. re-
llabillly and safety. We are fully
insured for your protection, and
have skilled craftsmen to handle
your needs.
Start the new year on time, aller
1 vtstt to our store.
ADV.
•
all the needed parts used by the combine
from a Garden Grove· warehouse which
was not a part of the servicing system
normally operated by all four oil com-
panies.
Most of the 11 service stations iden·
lifled for the jury ln Judge James:
Turner's courtroom are now under new
management.
" Max Steiner, 83 ,
. Composer, Dies
HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Academy
Award-winning composer Max Steiner, a
veteran of 42 years in the film industry
who scored "Gone With The Wind," has
died at gge 83.
Sleiner, who scored such films as "The
Cane Mutiny," "Life With Father."
"Treasure o( the Sierra l\.fadre" and
"Battle Cry," won an Oscar in 1944 for
the score to the motion picture ''Since
You Went Away."
Steiner died Tuesday in a hospital. He
is survived by his widow, Leonetta.
Funeral services are scheduled Thurs-
day.
Brown has replied that such an oveP' ,
in the boundaries can easily be correc'.ed
by the state legislature when it recon-
venes next week.
"This illegal drawing of lines in the
Democrat bill affects a segment or
Orange County and leads to conjecture
that similat errors could exlst in other
counties," Rogers ch.,-ged.
"Brown's activities (he is filing suit
to force the Governor's approval of the
bill) have served as ~ smokescreen to
hide the last minute, blatantly partisan
attempt of the Democrat legislators to
embarrass Governor Reagan instead of
seeking equitable and legal reap-
portionment legislation," he added.
Rogers, a San Juan Capistrano resi-
dent, also s8id he is urging the governor 's
veto because the reapportionment bill ia
grossly unfair to Republicans. He also
wants Reagan to veto reapportionment
bills for state Senate and C.ongresslonal
reapportionment.
Reagan has until Saturday to decide if
he will veto any er all of the reap-
portionment bills. After Saturday his veto
power over the bills runs out.
How
to make
Money
(loo k beauti/rd)
t.f•h h 111o11k hMttiru1 hr w•rint it i• '11• ; ...... 1,,.. Y°"' eofrrt•
e r oun, caa bt Ht ht lof kar1t cold fra"''., •nd. "o"' I number of
diff1nat -l";.11eeklt~•. pt.fld1ntt, hr1ttlt1., etc. Coia jt1'1lry
OOC1tln11t1 ta bt .... ind WOr'll eTtry,..be'°' ind 01-.ktt exin ''*'
.W a,i.lu. eo .. m. ud ue OW' eompltto Mltctioo. eoclar.
J. C. ..J/umphrie~ Jeweler~
1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA
CO~VENIENT TEJMS
tANKAMEJICAJD-MASTEJ CHARGE
24 YEARS IN SAME LOCATICN
PHONE 541·!40!
I
I
I
I
·.~ .
-~ n<=Yfln . ~ Jilii (j)
'" -"
DEAN JIAJITlif U1AJf BEITlt
'something·
' big'. ''"' ...... " .. ....... ..., ·~ '"'Mirr'
IN MISSIOft VIVO
IDWAllDS CINIMA VtlJO
....... ttO •••
"fRINCH COlllRPJOll" rws • "1111 id.11.l Gf A TDVH ITO<DIOdl"
,Jtfofrile B.,ae Firna
. . '
I
' Underwriter .. . ' .
Marla 20th .
. -
DAILY PILOT J.1 ,. •
t outhful Outlook: Bullish ' . ~. ' Jan. 1 will muk ·an a~
..,iversary for Weodell G. Udall · SANTA ,\NA •(BW) -lne. on Nov. !O. • cumcl. (I) E •Pe ni ea of San Clemenle By SYLVIA PORTER Some llJabllghta of this recenUy 1tai.d, ''l'he Jaret
Goldeq, west J.fobile Homes Karsten said, 0 as staledt-in associated with the rtdeslgn of ' True or fala? ·report: proportion of Amcrlcll1I whl Inc.I ach}evtd, 11lgber ~in our announcement on Nov.130, a line of recreaUq;nal vehicles LA~ that date1 bole . ~~ have ""': Mott iJOUDI' Amerlca,u have ei:perlenced progreu and
:the f.in~ half ~f , ' nt the second quamr this YW" • facllity. Eicelleot demand for Yor~ Ule Inaurance C.mpeny concerned about ihO p' ' TY More than two out of five upgade tbelr pc>waloDI ...i
the the lower profit registered ln products at the San .Jacinto ~1 an agen ~ New . today ere r'elatlv,e:vy t:f1NANaAL SECV'IU· expect progma are uger bl
~ ·fi8ci,J ytai. llowever, an-was · primArily attrlbuta*to the comlW'.Y'• newlf dealgned t 20 n. • ..i .... ,.., .. t time r tut financl·''
l
Uclpa\Cld, earninga were~ four lacton: (I) '~ recreallcillal velilde products or ,,..,.. ~-· .. '--· " 0 ~ure . ...~Uy. efc polled ara "V<r/ con-are attracted by Innovation b
. tbe leNel of laat year,. ""5f· aboorbec!,ln the completion ~ is Ujlected ckrilli t1>e:cornlng be ltas insured mo,_ than' 1,000 -· .The 1)1>1cd Y o u n I' cerried" about 11 nan cl a J loocb and wvfcll." HardlJ
dent Hai'ry E, Kariten Jr. an-ao unprofltablt moClular bQm. spring &"111umoer Peak sales people for iiuire · than lf = at1 n)ectt 1 the tr~ • e e 11rr l t y,, and · ·among · the picture ~ the anU-
' nounoed1reeenUf. • J ·, Ing ~11b:act. The contract was period.~ . million dollars.· · tton . -yanke:e concept of tot.al nonwhl~s the ~portion la gs , material11t.
• 1 • For 1116 ll!f montha. it>ded ~le¥, iii October .. and,no "(3). 'die ......,nil'• new Udall is a member . of the financial ,.Jl-tellance In favor · pe-t. onfy ooeln •~counts ~ Paycholoellti •D:a n 1 e I Nov. ,.~ Sales ~ to fu'rthej' e~nse8 wm be ~ w~; Teus, facillty ·11 pr. Na~ Auoclatlon · of We of reliance to a· considerable himself • • 1ome1iba t 1un-Yanktlovlch1inN~Yort, in1
. $\7,&Ir,896 from $13,109,jg lh 1 • gressiqg at a slower rate than lfnde.rirrlters and tbe'· Million degree on ~vernmeot pro--concerned" or "v.~ un-recent WJ)iubllsbed study fot
the comparable period (IDe · · • l anticipat~. Although t b 11 Dollar · RouJxl T•bl~. He is a ·dams, family, etc.· · concerned." · John D. Rockefeller 11 I • f' Y_eat ago'. Net income I 1th'.e 1,..:.~ .... e'Ma· n· . operation ts not as' yet pro-memberofthecompany'l,Top ,-TJte yavng generation in . . diaciostd thit for most younf
< first haU of the current al • ~ ,l~ · , fitable, the facility :will be Club and Premdent's Council the U.S. prefers to live· where, . ON FIN AN CI AL IN· Amerleans the by forces ID
ye.ar an;iounfed to 'ps613pr . ..-~ operating on a profitable basis and a It-time winner of the and . wlth whom It chooses DEPENDENCE: This ls as · making career Choices Include
25 cents per liiare as -H "d n ·· in the near future, &nd (4), all National Quality Award. free of obllgaUon -and 1f deeply 1,,ngralned as it bas .•• f. mt I y •• collllderaUons,
pared with. $318.ID o rt . . ea 8 I''ll'IU eipenm of the Key West a.. ..W.to solve ,aoclal problems been among their parents and "money" and "oecurity" -.~nt.l per share last . . . . , , 1 quisitlon have been deducted rather than to pursue matertal next to' bank sivin&s accoupts, along with an opportunity to
Ptr·share figures are bastd 911 · .R. p . ~te;.ol lr.9ine bas in the second quarter." UCB Names goals. )'OWll adults today are cboos-make a me a n_i 11.1Ju1 con-
1,113,698 average ;Jha es.'-been elected vice pmldentlor Kaisten conduded, ."sales _ Most young .AmerJcan Ing Ille insurance ·as a key lrlbutlon, out$nding ,in·.1971 n d,1, tlbahceol.Geniacoteclmology ~ strong ,and we an-menandwomenrebelagalnlt'· means of acbleying financial " ThelmpllcaUons ·of ·thesea~
1.394,746. average • inl; .eorp . .,r 'C.oip!OO, " • lkii>a!• I m p r o v e m e n t New Veep tbe . old-fashioned Idea that aecurity, Only one in 10 owns · l\tutea are Profound -and
1970. ,.: ; : · · : 1' . ·In' makihg f he .,. an-thlwgbout the last hall of our "woman's ,ptace Is in the ' commoo ltecb. • bUically optimistic' -for the
in llie _..i. wirier ed -·"'"~-~;-• "coM••· ' ·-flscel ...... We ........ the nine Am ,.,_ . ~,_
1
:.L__ , nuuut.u.11 ~ .. ~,y ,prest .,-t .. I"""... Santa • '. ,.J Ro , home." erican ecoqonu',over.thl!
'.<WV• .30 .. _. """' to, .dent Roiiert Pblnlzy !'.aid months ' result! will equal Ana resideJl1. berl Each r these ta~ ls ts ' ON. SAVJNGS: A majority lo111-term. ' ' . $1.2~8,273 . fr!>m $6,~,i~ in . L a B a.*'!! w.11"~ -2'. II s ~ m e thofe ·(or the same Wiod a A. Barley has been elederl ex-0 5 , n •. believes that.savlnas accounts Consider 'that tl)ere are noW, the .co~Dding period one respj)J\Sibillty 1or o v.e i:: ~~I >"at 'earµf!r', Improvement in, ecutive ~m president of !~!se,•aecordJng ~ 1 s~ey•of are."a.good _f.hhlg.aDdjbat j\ is nearly 40 million AmerkanJ ! year earlier. Net 'incom ,in linanclal" lnanlgerbent of · the Ufe ·san Jacinto. and Waco United• 'Celifqrnla Ba~'. if'" fmance-related attlttides of . also "vUy · tmPortant ( o •ged 14 to 25 am that.this age
1
.this)"ear's second quarter;· as : CoJP.Oratioi'I:· ' ' · · operations wUJ not,. hOwever.. cording to ,bank debt youth~" conducted' byr social dtvelop •a regular pattern of . group Is• to IJ'OW by fWiy so
$117
1
073 or ~ cents per ·S are GenisCo de s I g n s and Jiave ~.' miterial .lsnpact on Norlnan Barker. . ' psychologist Dr., l-1ar P1 d saving" · ' percent during the 19708. w,eip
as agalnSto$t92,814 ·or)4 nts. manufactures e I ec tr o n.i c .operating ' :results until the Barley,_ formerly a seruo.r Edrich for t n t er lo 'r con-· ' · · th tb
a. shale tast.)'ear. ' • * 1 filters, miniature lamps for fourth quarter .. We fem a in o~ vice president ln the Naµon,al ~pUon. 9nly a~ qte liistltute ON •'WOMEN'S PLACE": rO::ri~ 'our 1i!,.J:i~~:i
'nle' (igures ha.ve b' e en electronlc • s}'stems, airborne UmistlC ~t the-corOpeny will division, will be responsible of LiJe lnsurance .in New Nearly two out of three youi)g iocome is , e a r n e d in
restated, On a poOling of. i&-data r·ecorders and other ach;ieve reco~ sales and earn. for coordlnaUng the bank's :Y~~k. Sars Edrlch bluntly : . I men antl wpm"en' tlilnk ft's stUl Jxiusehold,, headed by. perlOQ
terests basis, to reflect the ae-precision electronic a n d ings fbr the fiacil1 y·ear ending marketing, operations, ·.person-The glamorous· ~ers of "in the home'.' -. even a,galnst · under the age of SS. and that
quisition '!' Key We.st. Homes ~lea! pro,ctucta. · May ~I, 19'12.' nel relatio..,, q u ,a.I i I y tbe counter-c:ulture · actually all the piuloilate · fight of this proportion 1J to expand "' r~,f.~~~iii·~·~~;Jiifc~fc~i;;J~;;;a::r;~;;J;~;;I~fl-, assurance, miearch and.plan.. turn out 'to represent a very . Women's . tlb ·ana. t'be one.third by'l9llO. • 1
L n!ng, trusts and public-affairs.' small. percentage of ~oung statlsUcal realityitbat so many Trarisl.a'te tbeee stailstks in-: BarieY 6aS ierved as branch AmerlC&llS, The old-fashio~ed millions of married . women to·tem: _nay, bundr!ds _of
administrator ror UCB in tbe v@'ues of ftl8lTl•1•.. family, bold and must bold jobs. . billio.., of dbllara . o1 yearly,
Orange, Countr-san ·D l.e go fl!la™:ial securlty, saviilgs, a The inslltute wW repeal Its :ipendlng arx1· what' do you
'ii. !--...-· 1 ' Ii _ARD 'ill. KOCij"°""""'" . :
. ~STARSPAl'".qlRL,.
. . Apal:riOtic,chaolic Ccirnedy. ·
._.SandyDuncan ... TonyRoberts. Todd~ onc1 dizabethAllen ~"'~ MAAGOUN-.-MllKDt -...... t<w--~.,.,.,..j,W.Kij ~-~PARIS Jill*"'°'"""'"-..,._"'°""'.._ cd.....,~tGI~# ~· '• ; ' * j( WORLD" PREMIERE.ENG'AG.EMEN'I' * fc -· NGW SHOWING.-' AT ALL 3 'l"HEATRES
•
Detective Harry Callahan.
'b.l cbi't assign him to rrurder cases.
~. ........
YoU just tum him loose.
IRl-.:..~-1
CUNTEASlWOODln"'DIATY tlARRr A.M•ll*OCOl'l'IOll'l}'~~tvrltlo HARRY GUARDINO• MHI
Sf\NTONI • A.NOY ROBINSON •JOHN LARC1f1nd JOHN VERNON 11 "The MtyO(" • fJcecut}wi ProdUe~ Aobert Osley ,• Scrffhpl11 11'f Hltty Jul1'!1 FJnk l R. M: ffnl(111d Deln Reisner • SlofY by Hlrry JuHln flrlk I R. M. flnlt
Proouc.d llld Oll'Kt9d by Don ll•oel • PANAVISION" • TecHNICOlOR' •'W1mtr Btol~ A Klnnly Cofl'lplny
PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT e2ND AT BOTH THEATR"E,eGREAT HOLIDAY SHOW
1XCU11MN>001ttHU1MMI >llM!Mlfil: OIBlll![OO --• .._ ·-~ ~ 1'hl!
• • ....e .. ·~•o, '" •w• • • Delta filL!C..-bJr._"' -·=·~-·-..... -. ... ., ............... -..
county · are.as sirice ,1968. He good, Job -,those are the. o,ne:i "''a~jtuOes" l!W'Vey eaclt year . have?. · .
has ~a wltli the' b4rik" sin@ to. which ~e ,freat ma,JOrlty atteriipt to clia;t , changes. You have spiending for the r·l~95·7~. ;;;;i!i~~!!!~~!smt!W!su•OO<~ri!!be~. ;;;;~mlJ Meanwhile, the results of this basics tn the martetPtacea -year's J>CObe 8":. confirmed by . houses, apartz:D~ts, furnltutt.
other researchers. · appllances, cara: -shattering
-For instance, ooe study . all records y~ after year.
Plllll. 'NEMH , ., \1
HENRYfOllllA'. . .
l&iRQ.llCK ! } I ~ J.,J · \, ll!CllAEL SAlU!IZJll . : . ,.-------------.,,,
i "Sometimes '
L a Great Notion" J --. -·-. -
cited in the Harv~ ~ You have ever-rlstne de-
Revtew 118ts among the top mand for -consumer prOducts
reasons why Business School -even though the young
graduates , quit .ttietr nrSt jobs American adult D)IY not
"limited opportunity for pro-splurge on super-gadgets or
motiori." · anii "inadequate extravagant f lrat .. c la ss
salary" 'grow\~ ... -How square airplane seats br1tigh-powere(
can you get? · · · muscle cars. '
-EconOm!St:.Psrt;.bologillt You have wha,t ·the Youtti
George K'atbna" -of t b'e Researcl1 InsUtute. calls "1
University of, Ml c b I g a n hJ&h degree ol acqulslUVl!besl
HIW LOW PllCISI si.oo s.... ...,..M. s1:ot
S-., 1 tJO ,. 7:11 P.M.
111-. tin M-6;11o7:M ,_
C.Cll It'll!.~ ,w ... _. .. .._1 :11 ~M. . ..... -IN
1 ''Rallw•Y Chlfdren''
PWS
· Dlmoy'a· .
/'Livint ~,
,iind ''Va~11hlng Pr1lrte''
tile,... •• .., . ···-.... ... -Cflmt ... ww4
"PLAY
MISTY
FOR ME!'· _.,...,,.,......
''HI RED HANO''
a m o n g a n U.materialllUc
youths."
Arid that, Mr. and Mra.
America, ta bullioh Indeed lor
your economy .•
. ALSO ,
· ·~Jbe .Savage Wild" ..........
Dec. 29 thru>Ji1n. 4
•• ._. POPILAI A nucncMI. ••
GREGORY
PECK in "SHOOT OUT" ( GPi)
EXQISM )M--Tm1111U•
DWARDS
•
• •
.. • • •
•
DAILY PILOT SC V/tdMJda)', Otetmbtr 29, 1'1/l .,, ...
Olaos Cited
SEC Asks Own
INCOME PllOPERTIES
COMMERCIAL/IUIDlllTIAL
TAX SHRTER
: 88°1° WRITE OFF
FOR 1971 "·'". '""'°' UIVISTMINT
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• •
Complete-New York Stock List .
OVER THE COUNTER
Wcdn"4'1, Dt<tmbtr 2', !9n SC
Wednesday's aosing Pri~Complete New York Stock Exchange List ·
Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List
DAILY MLOT ~
"
1.11411 -tl!Q,) HI ... Ltw ( .... en,.
DAILY PILOT
"l>Ollf J\llr ~nND11!ERE! •fAir
rll46 Slttnl NOT\C~S ! •
'
Paperw ork
Bli7:l3rd
Attacked
WASIUNGTON (UPI) -
The General Accounting Office
bas told Congress that too
'many military doc!<>rs, den-
)lsts and nurses are wasting
fbeir time on paperwork when
they could be treating pa-
'tients.
The GAO said in a report
that better use of manpower
ln all the mllllaIY. medical
aervJces "would help to relieve
the critical shortage o f
medical professional personnel
in the nation."
The congressional watcbdo'g
lgency over government spen-
ding found that many pbysl·
J:ians, dentists and nurses fill
i:taff and administrative posi-
F"' In SUrgeons Gel)etal of-
fices and intermediate com-
lnands of the Anny, Navy and
Air Force.
It recommended t h a t
wecially trained mnmedical
penonnel be used for ad-
m l n ls tr at Ive positions
~berever possible.
More than 200 dqctors could
be freed for paUent care by
baing Medical Service Corps
Officers -wbo are not pbysi-
eians -fQr hoSpilal command Poaltlons. It Aid.
~-~:i~ver, ~ statement,, at-""'°"" to the report, the um-
td aervictl were wianlmously
D.ppcl9ed to u s l n g p~
fessio~· trained manaeers to CommaJJd military
hospitals.
The-Air'Force, for ea:ample,
Mid the change "places an
jmwarranted and 111 o g I ca I
premium on the executive
Ullls ·of the administrative of-
ficers with a dangerous
disregard for the medical
knowledge and experience so
euentlal to the medical com-
mand function."
t '_'!be GAO report cited a
Defense Department study
!lhowing productivity or den-µata could be increased by
more than 40 percent through
revised work practices and
uae of dental assistants.
The military medical com-
plex includes 33,000 doctors,
dentlst.s and nurses at 222
bospllals with 51,000 beds and m dispensaries, at a cost of
more than $2 billion.
Congress· has passed legisla-
tion authorizing $3.7 billion
over three years to increase
the number of civilian health
professionals. The House has
passed a bill to create a
nUJitary· medical school and
authorize $210 million in
lcllolll'Sbips' to attract doctors
to the military.
Lockheed's
Jumbo J et
Doing Well
BURBANK (UPI) -The
flight test program for the
.Lockheed LlOll Tristar, the
Jumbo jet being built with a
U.S. government-backed loan,
iJ ahead or schedule, the
airC.raft company reported.
1be plane received pro-
visional certification from the
Administration, 1 company
spokesman said. f "It's a mile.stone and we're
ahead of achedule on it," he
Mid.
He did not say how far
ohead.
t.ockbeed, threatened finan-
cially by the collapse of Rolls
Boyce of England, which was
to mate the engines for the
Tristar, was granted govern-
-guaranleel for l2SO mJUton In loanr after heated
itebota In COl1(rtsl this year.
1bl oper1UOn1l modtl will
be lible to carry up to 400 _....,..
Five completed planes are
anclttaotng OlflJrt ttJts, two ""°'" •~ ocllcdultid to go to 1e11 p11o11 next month, and 12
plana will be turned over In
alrlineJ In March for .lrainlna
pllotJ, Lockheed 111d.
. I
' . " . ' . ' " ••
Wednt~, Otetmbtf 29, 19i l
Chess Boomtng as Leisure American Pastime
By ANN HENCKEN
NEW YORK (AP) -Chess.
ooct considered tbe exclusi,·e
pasttime: of intellectualls un-
pressed for Ume, is boOm.Ing
acrosS the Uniled states.
Department stores are sell·
log mart expensive chess sets
and mamifacturers report an
increase; in business.
New ctiess'Clubs are.popping
up across the country.
Chess tourniinents a r e
drawing bigger crowds than
ever.
Some devotees of the game
say its increased popularity Is
part of a trend that started
three years ago and was
sparked recently by Bobby
Fischer's bid for the world
chess championship.
Fischer, t be 28-year-old
American chm gen I us,
defeated the Soviet Union's
Stores Selling Scores of Sets in U.S ..
Tigran Ptrtosl.an 1n Buenos
Aires last October. His u~
coming match is with Ru&sla's
&ris Spassky, and the con-
tests have me.thed new life
into a game which hiirdly has
been conslc$ered an a 11 •
American palttlljte.
Last fall, tbt U.S. Open at
Ventura, Calif., drew some 400
contest.ants, 100 more than the
previous year.
The U.S. CheS! Federation
reports an 18 percent increase
in member&hip in the last
three mon!ha alone . .It boasts
450 affiliated clubs in 1971, up
from 2Z5 in liQ.
Cardinal. Industries, Inc., a
manufacturer-wholesaler, has
seen a 10 ~t increase in
business this year, bringing
the number of chess sets mov-
ed to about one million. At
AUantic Playing Card and
1'-1atch Co., turnover in chess ' . sets has risen some 40 percent
over the last three years.
Rossolimo Chess Studio in
New York has noted a 10 per.
cent incraase in chess set
sales this year.
At Rich's Department Store
in Atlanta, ea:pen!live sets,
$30.00 and up, are outselllng
less expensive models.
At Neiman Marcus i n
Dallas, the best seller is a $..15
alabaster-style chess stt.
Membership at the Manhat-
tan Chess Club, estatilished in
1877, has almost doubled to 300
in the last seven months. The
club has moved to larger,
more elaborate quarters but
already needs mou room.
11U membership keeps in-
creasing, It'll look like a
subway train at rush hour,"
says Leonard Marclis, assii-
tant secretary. \
Some new members say
they've joined the c 1 u b
because of Fischer.
"Reading about Bob b'y' s
game made me come back to
chess after 14 years,'' says
Amos Kamlnsky.
"When you get Involved in a
game you forget everything,"
says Paul Spi.l)del, a new
member of the1club and a
management consultant.
He stops off for a game on -
h.i1 w1y lM>tn1 from work
about t1'1ce a week.
O)l'f the grutest llOllCt In
time of troubles that lhtre ls,"
says retired s lo c·k bro t er
Schuyler Jacboa, a member
of the club since 19t9.
When he's not ·~ the club,
he's working out g~mes ·ln one
of biS' 150 chess,boob.
"Truly gr-eat· chese playtts
come along OJ)Ce about every
30 years. Fischer's it," says
Jackson. "This Js the most in·
terest the country has ever
shown."
Before his nui.tch wlth
Spassky is oyer, B ob b y
Fischer may be a household
word and chess a household
game, wrenched !tom ita
pasty-faced intellectual image.
"I hear they even want to
put out Bobby Fisc.htr sweat
shirts," says one fan.
•
.,
•
I See by Today's
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Draft Board
Walk s Out,
Fires Blast
HARRISBURG, Pa, (UPI) -Five mid·
die-age men said Tuesday they resigned
en maue from a draft board in Nor-
ristown because lhe government is mak·
Ing a mockery of the Selective Service
System.
"I don't think we should have IS.year·
olds on the draft boards "and I don't think
we should have women on them," said
Robert L. Townsend, one of the rive men.
The five-member board of Norrl.stown.
a residential and Industrial suburb of
Philadelphia, ls out of business until
President Nixon can a p p o i n t
replacements. &:sides Townsend, the
men who resigned were Frank Biahop,
Allen Keely, Laverne Lene and Thomas
Wolf.
Townsend said the "last straw for him"
was a newspaper article about the Beach
Boys 1'ock group, which he clipped to his
resignation.
One of the Beach Boys, a conscientious
objector, said normal alternative work
programs did not suit his talents. The
government allowed him to sing and
perform for servicemen ss alternative
work.
"They're making a mockery out of the
draft by such things u as.!igning con-
scientious objectors to play in dance
orchestras," Townsend said.
"I cannot agree that IS-year~lds
should be on local draft boards because
18-year~lds are being drafted," Wolf
wrote in his letter of resignation. "lf we
followed this reasoning, students should
run the schools and the prisoners should
run the prisons."
The state draft director, Robert Ford,
31, youngest man in the nation to hold
such a position, said tbe five me.c were
objecting to an act of Congress.
"I welcome the resignations of people
who were in conflict with the rules and
intent of Congres.!I," he said. The ob-
jections raised in the letters, he said,
"are the type of attitudes we are trying
to get away from."
Ford said he expects similar reslgna·
tions. The new draft laws not only permit
persons aged from 18 to 30 to serve on
draft boar4s but also require ~ns to
retire from the board on reaching 65 or
finishing 20 years service.
About 200 state draft board members,
or one-fourth of all the members in the
state, must retire by Dec. 31 under that
rule, Ford said. Seventh replacements
have betn named mo.st under 30.
Mariner Orbit
Changed After
Mars Dust Storm
PASADENA (AP) -Mariner 9's orbit
around Mars will be adjusted Thursday
go the spacecraft's two cameras can
make up for lost time while waiting for a
huge Martian dust storm to clear.
Spokesmen at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory here said Tuesday scientists
will send a signal that will fut Marine.r's
main rocket for 16 seconds.
It will boost the spacecraft's minimum
height above Mars from 862 miles to
1,025, and lower its ma:s:imum height
from the present 10,66S miles to 10,$12
miles.
The new orbit will all ow Mariner 9's
cameras to photograph larger sectors of
Mars, but lb success In mapping 10 per-
cent of the planet still depend! upon
further clearing of the dust storm, scien-
tists said.
Pia Weds Broker
Television newswoman Pia Lindstrom, daughter of actress Ingrid
Bergman, leaves St. Thomas More Church in New York Tuesday with
bride~m, stockbroker Joseph Daly, following wedding there.
Brides mother attended ceremony, bU:t did not pose for pictures with
couple.
' Laguna Chamber Assured
Of No Freeway Changes
A spokesman for the Slate Division of
Highways has advised Lagurta Beach
Chamber of Commerce president Roy
Marcom that the state road agency has
"no intention" of seeking a change in the
adopted inland freeway route behind
Laguna's hills and believes the con-
struction of such a freeway ls essenHal to
handle coastal traffic.
The statement! are made tn respon!le
to a letter addre!lsed to Kaig Ayanian.
District 7 engineer for the Division o[
Highways, in which the Chamber of-
ficially stated ii! support of the Inland
route and urged construction of the
freeway at an early date.
The Chamber missive, sent to officials
throughout the ztate and county, was
designed to off-set growing anti-freeway
sentiment in the area.
The Highway Division's response, sign-
ed by deputy district engineer A. L.
Himebodl, states, "I wish to 8&!Ure you
that we have no lntenUon of seeking a
change in the location of this freeway
which was adopl.td lnlnd of Lag\ma
Bea~ .llY the Calllliro!& H!gh-:ar Coln·
mission. '
Hash. Oil 'Lah'
Suspect Set
Free on Bail
Following a preliminary hearing in
South Orange County Municipal Court
Donald AIJ!1ander Hambarian,
arresred in Laguna Beach Dec. 15 after
police uncovered a drug "laboratory" in
an Arch Beach Heights home. was releas-·
ed on a reduced bail of $25,000. Judge E. Warren Knight ordered Ham-
barian to appear in the South County
court again at 9 a.m. Thursday, De<:. 30
for a continued preliminary hearing.
At that time he could be bound over to
Superior court fer trial on the charge of
possession of dangerous drugs wilh lntent
to sell, or the preliminary hearing could
again be continued, a court spokesman
said.
''We recognize that the existing traffic
artery, Pacific Qio.,t Highway, ls becom·
ing Increasingly inadequate to handle the
traffic volumes as you mentioned in your
letter. We believe that construction of a
freeway is essential in maintaining a
viable transportation system.
"I am sure ,yoo are aware of the pf'Ooo
blems af{ecting the Pacific Coast Free·
way throughout Orange County which im·
pede its orderly development. We beHeve
that cooperative effort by all agencies
and organizations such as yours will be
necessary to provide a 90iution to the
transportaUon needs of the area. Your
1upport toward this: end ts appreciated."
Executive Nabs
Burglar After
Tear Gas Attack
SAN FRANCISCO I AP) -The pres I·
dent of a pharmacy chain was. tear gass-
ed In the face by a man trying to crack a
drug store safe -but pursued his at-
tacker, pounded him and pinned hlm on a
sidewalk until police arrived.
Officers said Frank Ferguson, 46,
president of Bowerman Phatmacie,, Inc.,
dropped by one of the stores Monday
night to do bookkeeping and spied the
suspected burglar, who fired tear gas at
him. Ferguson was bruised but not
seriously injured.
Booked for investigation of burglary,
assault and other charges was Robert
Andrews, 40, of San Francisco. Pollce
said a ootebook with the safe com-
binations of all Bowerman branches fell
out of Andrews' pocket.
Ferguson said he was furious when
MunicipaJ Court, Judge. Al~rt Axelrod
released Andrews on $2,500 bc.nd Tuesday
morning.
Bond was later raised to $10,000, but
Ferguson said "Andrews got all of our
safe combinations and the judge didn't
even give us time to change the com·
blnations and the locks."
Trucks Fired On
·, Yacht Takes
lts Captain .
To Bottom
DA Yl'ONA BEACH, ~'II. (AP) -The
,,...., yacht MIN F114Ier hu .:mild, the
body of her captain to the botlOllHI the . .
Atlantic Ocean onjhe Iastwyace of their
11-,.ar portnerthlp at .... • •
The 16(1,000, •• foot )'ICht dieci bard-
Seamen fl'Om I!\!> ve.uel t:ilt a.!t.d u
Ml" Floglor'a..eaitbeam bl to' lllWh
holes In her deck Jnd top befOre • llll4
under the wa"""'l\Jeodly' fO ~
Capl. Joe Senan's oceanic tomb.
Senan dled at the oge of a on Doc. lO
after 40 years In the enipkjy of Floiida'•
Flogler family, The last IS years be WU
captain cl the Miss Floglor.
Mrs. Flqler Matthews, ll'lllddaughter
of railrood baroo llellry ol. Flqler Ind
owner of the yacht, ofttn beard Senan
e.11:preaa a wish that he be buried 1t sea.
She never told him that she meant to
honor his wish by giving him a funeral
that would also send the yacht to the
ocean depths.
Capt. John Hutchinson of the Hooligan,
one of the vessels on the scene at the
burial, said, "The E"as weri:! calm. She
was in beautiful condition and really look·
ed lovely out there."
Mrs. Matthews got permission from tbt
Coast Guard lo scutlle the Miss Flagler
Dec. 22, but high winds and rough sus
kept the boat at her moorings unUl Tues-
day.
Just after dawn, Mn. Mathews, a
Roman Catholic priest and several
mourners boarded a fishing boat that
took the Miss Flagler to a point about 30
miles off shore.
She was anchored in 180 feet of wate:r
and men opened sea cocks that allowed
water to gw;h Into her hull.
She began to settle. The water soon
covered the three new engines that had
been installed in the white hull two weeks
before Joe Sen.an died. Soon. waves
washed over her foredeck, but the Miss
Flagler stopped singing when her cabin
top was barely awash.
It wa.s then that the men went aboard
and smashed holes In her In r.n effort to
let trapped air escape. But the Mlss
Flagler still didn't slip to the bottom until
night blackened the seas.
Mrs. MaUhew!I saJd &he wanted to keep
the burial site a secret to prevent
salv•gers from attempting to raise the
yacht.
Hutchinson said Mrs. Flagler'• wish
probably would be fulfilled.
Casals Is 95
SAN JAUN, P.R. (AP ) -PabloClaafs,
the Span!Jh celll!t, celebrates hll 16th
birthday today. A specllll Boman Catholic
Mass was planned at his new,home in the
Rlo Pledreas section of San JuAn.
Afterward, he and his wife Martha were
to meet old friends and acquaintancea
who traveled from New York and other
world mll!lc centers to be with 'the
maestro.
Doggone Fire
Destro ys Home
MILL VALLEY (AP) -FU-..
fJgbters rushed to the scene Tues-
day as a dog barked and clouds of
amoke billowed over this residen-
tial neighborhood.
By the time they arrived, the
Chips residence had burned to the
ground. Total damage: $50.
"Mr. Chips," a Cairn terrier, was
uninjured however and plans to
move In temporarily with his
owners, the Norman W. Daus.
A faulty heater in Mr. Chipi'
doghouse was blamed for the blaze.
WldlltSdl:t, Otumbtr zq, 1971 s
That's the Ticket
"Cool down, grandma," says Jackie Natalia, 3, u Mrs. John Natalia
of salinas holds Irish Sweepstakes ticket worth $130,000. Even
Jackie's sister, Bonnie, who is six months, smiled over victory.
Oklahoma Offers Jobless
Acreage, Cash Guarantee
OKLAHOMA CITY !AP) -If you art
unemployed, but would llke to earn your
way and don't mind working bard, the
State of Oklahoma has a proposition for
you.
The state Office of Economic Op-
portunity Is looking for ~ families it
plans to set up with IO-acre fru it fanns
and a minimum inct1mes of '7 ,000 a year.
If the program is successful, several
thouund more Oklahoma families will
re<:elve the same deal within five years.
Gov. David Hall stres1e3 that the pro-
gram requires hard physical labor and
perseverance.
To acquJro ~tle to IO acm ln
aouthea1te.rn Oklahoma you have to cleat
the land of black jack and scrub oak.
The OEO will provide free use of chain
saw1 and other equipment for clearing.
plus Instructions on how to run the fqulp-
ment.
Then the OEO will help grade the land
and provide vines and trees for an
orchard. OEO ofticial1 aay the orchards
will produce at least fT,000 a year for
each family in the program.
The 1tate agency will prcwide in-
structions and assist in getting the opera-
producing orchard, officials estimate.
OEO Director Rex Sparger bas ob.
tained 3,100 acres nine miles eut al.
Stringtown to accommodate appro:s:imate.
ly 310 of the vineyards and fruit orchards..
The area, green and rolling, ia fertile
with wild grapes and thick woods. Grapel
are a cash crop in nearby Arkansu and
the nortbeutern parts of Oklahoma.
The land for tha project wu obtained.
from Donald Fugate of f'uaate MlllL
Money obtained from sale of the t.lmber
cleared from the llnd will be UJed l>Y Pl1
Fugate f(OO per acre lbr aa much Lllld ¥
is used. 'ntle to land will ro d!rtictJy to
tbe family that clears it.
Comments Sough~
On Campground
At Aliso Beach
tion started. C'.ounty Parks Department 1 ta f I
The OEO will offer temporary hou!ing members are seeking comments from
during the clearing and, later, will assist aru residents 84o0t the proposed
in obtaining financing for a low-cost, campground which will be built at Allio
modern home on the farm site. Beach.
To qualify, you must earn lw than the The concept of the campground wu
federal poverty guideline, which range.s approved two weeks ago by the countJ:
from Sl,600 for a farm family of one to Harbor C.Omm.Jaalon. Construction bu
SS,SOO for a nonfann family of seven. You been tentatively a.et for apring of 1m. also must receive some type Of subsis-tence income! such as welfare assistance, Tentative plans call for 40-50 camp1tta
Social Securl y or a private pension. to be developed on county property lnlaltet
The subsistence income is necessary of Pacific Coast Highway along the Aliso
because first-year Income from a berry Creek.
crop will total only about Sl,500 per fam i-Fifth District Supervisor Ron a I d
ly. In addition, the OEO will offer $200 Caspers said ••care must be la.ken 1o
per month for part·time work clearing minimize tile Impact on the residential
land on adjoining property. community adjacent to the property
In the third year a family can e:s:pect while at the &ame Ume muim111ng tcUl,
They said they hope to start the map-
ping Sunday and complete it before JPL 's
Goldstone tracking stations has to turn
tts powerful antenna from receiving
Mariner 9 television picture signals to
assisting in the Apollo 16 mission next
March.
So far Mariner has photographed only
scattered clear spot!. Scientists say the
storm is clearing at higher altitudes and
in the south polar region.
Hambarian had been held in custody on
$50,000 bail since police assertedly
discovered a drug cache, including nearly
a gaJlon of potent hashi sh oil and 30,000
LSD tabl~ts, along with $10,000 on cash
and an usorlm'ent of identification cards
at the Miramar ~treet home, where the
defendant was the sole occupant at the
time of the raid. Estimated 9treet value
of the haul wa.s $150,000.
an income of $7,000 or above with a fully public use."
CHARLESI'ON, W. Va. (UP!) 1.liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiii iiiiiiii Gunmen wailing in ambush fired shots 1t
· rental trucks delivering C h a r 1 es t o n
newspapers in separate incidents Monday
and Tuesday, state police reported.
$15 Million Hotel • Ill Mesa
350-roorn Building Planned Ne ar South Coast Plaza
By TERRY COVlLLE
Of tM 010, Plr.I Slltf
Construction is scheduled to atart in
mid-1972 on a SIS million, 350-room hot.el
near Costa Mesa's South Coast Plaza.
The 12-15 story hotel will be a joint ven·
ture of lhe Segerstrom Family which
developed South Coast Plaza and Western
International Hotel s of Seattle.
Western International Is a subsidiary or
UAL Jnc .. which is 1 holding company
that 'includes United Airlines. The finn
operates such well-known luxury hotels
as the Century_ Plaza near Los Ange~•
Jntern1tional A1rport, the St. Francis 1n
San Francisco, and lhe Olympic In Seat·
tl'oetaUs of the new Costa Meu facility
-to be called South c.oast Plaza Hotel -
were revealed Tuesday at the Century
Plau. It will Include local c o n v e n t I o n
racilitlts, service-related aho!)', possible
tennis court.s and swimming pool1 and
other hotel ac:tesaoriu.
The hotel will be built on 6.5 acres of
land owned by the Seeerstrom Family Oil
the east side of Brittol Street. ne.xt to the
San Diego Freeway.
I
It is planned as part of the overall
Segentrom development known as South
Coast Town Center. Future plans tor the
town center include a 40 percent ex·
pansion of South Coast Plaza and con·
struction of South Coast Financial Center
with several high rLse office buildings.
Town center erpansion plans also In·
elude ~ible construction of multi·level
parking structures next to South Coast
Plaza and an underground walkway
under Bristol Street connecting the shop-
ping center with the financial center.
Officials of Western lnternaUonal s1id
Tuesday completion of their hotel will
create about 350-450 new jobs in Colla
Meu.
Spokesmen for the large hotel chain
said atxrut 10 members of management
would be brought In from outalde Orange
County, but the rest of the joba would go
to local residents.
Western Jntttnatlonal officials said
they selected the Segerstrom site bcclilU!le
they expect the South Coast Town Center
to become the metropolil•n centu of
Orange County. They also liked the
nearness of the ocean, Disneyland, Lion
Country Sl!ari, Angel Stadium and
Anaheim Convention Center.
Western International operate! S2
hotels in the U.S., Canada, the Orient,
and South America. South Coast Plaza
Hotel is expected to open in 1974.
City officials who attended Tuesday's
press conference were dellghted with the
announcement.
"It's the start or an almost new com·
mercial city in Costa Mesa," said Mayor
Robert Wilson. "In the ne:s:t three years
we're going to see a building boom
aimUar to the one In Newport Beach the
past three years."
"Thll sort of thing Is the backbone o!
city financtS," he said . "And it costl us
so UUle in city services."
City MAnager Fred Sorsabal estimated
that the $15 million hotel would provide
Coat.a Mesa with H0.000 a year In p~
perty taxes alone. That ngure doesn't In-
clude room tax, sales taJ or other
revenue.
Wilton added that the hotel would be
strictly covered by city building codes
and should not cause the same concern to
the nre department as the 16-Jtory Bethel
Towers.
4 3
STORES
TO
SERVE
YOU
•
2300 HARBOR BLVO.
AT
Wl~SON
JUST SOUTH OF
SAN DIEGQ FREEWAY
IN THE HEART OF COSTA MI S.A
YOUR
-~
CENTER
WITH
FRIENDLY, COURTEOUS AND HELPFUL SERV·
ICE. PLENTY OF F R E E PA R KI N G IN .BOTH
FRONT AND REAR MALLS. ALL ON STREET LEVEL
A HAPPY NEW YEAR
TO ALL OUR FRIENDS
FROM THI HARBOR
CENTER MERCHANTS
2300 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
\
'
I
I
I
I
• ~ 11 OAllV-111.0T
3 Bandits
Cornered
&URlllliJEcKEN, '. Gemwiy (.(!>) -
' Pollco._ted today they cometed threl·
-'lillo robbed · • Cologne bant of 111.-. WOllllded one ol them ml ..-.
('< -lbe two othm. ' . . .
·~ !bol'tlJ before the arrests, the liandlts •
1lod -• ll·ytaM>ld.:Y<Jllth u Jio;iage.
"• 'l'bl ,.mil WU ieoCiJed unhanned,' polJco "' .. ,. . "' aid. ' . n.. bondlll llllde the1r ucape from'
bf Co1opo aftor .robbing the bank oo Mo .. ·
·!l!-., bJ iUlng tWo police olllClak
rG W-'llllJ rel-them in I fomt
..... -Ille: F,rencb bo19er. . ne WOW¥fed robber wa.s tentallvely
-'1loil u 11111 leader Kur\ Vlcenlk, ..
44, .. -_with ~ . to the j'rencb --1d lil Mlnellleo. ' .. , PolJce opened fire after the bandits
• '
t)lUlled a car ~ were driving into a. . -·,.. :-:.. . • . ~19l,Wil!!_Saar1'"<;1 .town Of St. AIR WAR HEATS UP.~ Bombs are loaded aboard ~ Wencleftn an attempt to negotiate with A·l and F~ fighter-bombers on aircraft carrier
)<lbe . .poll<e ·~ nchanginle~n!i!:'I! COnStellatym 'for mosf,iJttensive auacks on North .. ~ :,~ ~~~:1o1 llamblirg. , : .. · · Vleluam bi recent years. Aerial photo. at right (from
U.S. Air Force) shows a Nortb Vietnamese artillery
tractor knocked out on Ho Chin Minh Trail by U.S.
warplanes.
H.! The car carrying the robbers 1n4: their . ' ~·-• ··
__. ... -··pOtted.11 nUlea lrom ~ • A k N S ~~i.~<~~ :; . "ir .... ttac s O · urprise
'!(;.'car. Tbe papen contained -the robbers' • .... •
offer to open negotlatlonS. · .. k.~; 'l'lle c:ar1ben tw:ned off the hlgbyay In-•
. ~1o a parkl111f ateo where· one -ol them
""~i beJd.a-gun·to the bead .of. the
lnt.eUigence Reports Point Out Major Red Effort
bosllge wblle lhey-..au.ct for polii:e to B7·8'1'EWART lm!LEY
:-z:.respond to tbdr offer. --WA.5HmGT0N (UPI) -President
.. Tbe boltage, police Wei, was~ -to NI1on'1 decision to resume heaVY. 8.ir at·
)rte 1llmself durlilg .-strudle-that· taCICs agaiDst North Vietnamese military
~ the shooting. _targets came as no surprise to those ~if-'ibe-iWo uninjured bandits were taken."" fi.bliliar•wilh intelligence r,porti howing
jo the police staUon at Sl Wendel. into Washington from Southeast Asia jn
forces to attack Royal Lao troops, move
into Cambodia along the South Viet.-
. namese border.tM>tfar. from Salgon,
InterugenCe experts in Washington
believe that Hanoi's principal ob)ecti\le
would be to re-establish a sfrong
presence along the &l!th Vietnamese
bonier. Clinging to that belid, they look
upon the North Vietnamese successes in
Laos, as principally div~ionary tactics . to be followed by a major push to the
SOUtb Vietnamese"·border-.
Police said they were trying to recent month~
il!~termlne where the trio obtained the Top presidential advisers concluded
.,.,. , tOme dl;ya: agoithat Uanol Was embarked War Defeat Probed
·~ ' on a course jeopardizing the success of
• Nixon's effort . to remove virtually all ;Tn-ter Gunmen American~ forces from Vietnam f U.le ---~ ' by •nnd·l972. '11ley contended some U.S.
~ , CQunteraetioo was clearly required.
~Dn'ti'sh Troops The White House reeeived in lale ,;u October what it oonsldered conclusive f evidence that HanOi was preparing a •Ex h g F're supreme effort to make lhe United states t (( an e . ·I __. pay a rar heavier Price than heretofore
Former Pakistan Leader
Y ahya IO.an Being. Held
t for it! conlinued air support of South
.t BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) -Vietnamese, Laotian and Cambodian
~ and British aoldiers exchaDgt;d force~. . .
,,,_.... alQng the 1!'lsl! Rel!¢>)lc bonler1o-~l'eui.ence · sOun:e.s reperled t11at ,\IJe ~~1a)lidtftn sniper oPeDed fitei'bn an ~ '"Noft6 ViBria.meSe were installi'1g a coir ~ truck in Belfut, an army 5iderable number of new Soviet·supplied
aa&d. antiai.rcratt missile batteries near the
l'U qp '"••\t.":J, · , ···-.:."' ; demilitarized zone ii well a1 tn lleos, all ... _ .. , ~ l~ 11¥>ltt'l!@l't.,.,o1 li1ml tn a.posilioft to operale<agalnit· = ~. -~ .• Wf!f,. crew • . .American aircraft Dying recoonli!!ance !iii!. ~ '""'u1d'ls "!" · theth ond ·~tljlcl; mbslOOJ along !be Jlo Cbi 1'ie so1dier1 co not see ~ . .Mipb trail. .
but aimed shots at. gunfire intelligence sources also reported j n
in a field. . late' October that the North Vietnamese
minutes later two more shots were appe~ tp .have _brought batk to tb~tr
llred. at the aoldlers. This Ume they saw Own airfields, virtually all of their
".!>!gunman'""'W .and i:'~ rue, ,·.!th~,_ R!,lssill{l·Plad.e ~G wrui>lanes. They .had
• sakL -·-· · • been·sent to·ChJna. several years· ago ror
The army bas been destroymg minor safelieeJiing·"hen tbe Unlled Sta1es was
leading into the Irisb. Republic to carrying out continuous attacks against
the ~ Republican Army (IRA) airfields and other target! all over No,rth
smuggling weapons and men into -V.ietlam. . ·· • ..
t<'111"'1l lreJand. .· Hanoi now ii' believed to have al .its
Th the Andersontown area of Belfast 8 disposal some 300 MIGs of varying vin-
dden guomao o~ fire. on an ""!'Y lal!et and·CQnditiogs.
, the spot~ said. Fire was not ·_.Toward the.end ol October, for the first ~ turned. _ time, MIGs rose against B52 bombers,
, ~ London an unsigned circular was which previously had operated un-~ted to news media claiming the diall.enged In wide-ranging attacks over ltritlsb Broadcasting Corp. ( DB1C} Southiast ~sla. Mic·s have again tried to iemored certain news reports from iritercept"B52!! on several occasions-in· the
ortbern ~·lied f total ban past eight weeks , but so far as is koown
BC'l'lle ar caln N~ !rel"...:.. ~u none ·of the big U.S. warplanes has been newsmen ....-.. brought dawn\· ;ilomonblp was not stopped. Should the North Vietnamese succeed
Italian Takeii . OaJh ' •
• ROME (UPI) -Neapolitan lawyer
,:piovannl Leone waa sworn In today as
'}lmldenl aed Premlei EMrno Cc>loliioo ;im-tstely IU1llOlll1Ced bla reaigna.Jlon in
getture of respect w1*b tecruucally ~gbt down the nation's 32Dd.postwar ..,vernmenl.
tn bagging a B52, the psychological ad-
vantage .. yr'Ould be considerably more than
the tnilitary victory, in the view or
""Amel'icai1 dfficiills. -
Meanwhile, taking advantage of the
early onset of the dry season, North Viel·
·riam for" two months has been" sendin"g
relatively large numbers of men and
sub$tantial material southward alonJ the
Ho·Cli Minh trail to a staging area in sotitbem Laos. From there it can deploy
From Witt Strvlcu
A Pakistani neWBJ>llper ,.ported today'
that former President-'Agha Mohammed
,Yahya Khan is.under house arrt!t-and
will remain Ul\der defention during an in-
quiry into his wartime leadership.
The Dail}_ New Timet Mfi,Yahya, who
drPJ>ped lil>m stghl *bm Zull!kar'. All 'BliUttb ttPTiced hlnt'8s president, ih.ts
cotinnued, to -live tn the prealdeoti.al
· residence Slnce his ralgnation last week. The. report said he would be mo\led ,to 1
private "residence in RawalpindL
Several poliUcal and .military leaders
have 'demanded that Yahxa· be brought to
trial !or the loss of East Pakistan to
Jndia. Bhutto responded by naming a
. commission .to conduct pn investlgation of
the war.
The new administration held firm ln its
first'1Il8.jor crisis, protest demon!tratlom
against BhuttO's ch>lCf! of Sardarghus
Baksh Raisani as governor of Baluchistan
Province.
Infonnation · M'lnister Abdul "Hafiz
Pin.ada pledged puoisbment for in-
stigators Of Tuesday's· protests in the, pro-
vincial capital of Qlletta, about 500 miles
southwest of Pawalpindi. One person ,was
killed and four were wounded in: the
turmoil.
The . government said" Ralsani, a~ in-
dependent, would be sworn in today as
scheduled. He is opposed by the Natlonal
Awami party", a rival of Bhutto's People's
party and the strongest faction in the
province. -
Mean-While, the Soviet Union and· the
newly proclaimed Peoples Republic of
Bangladesh announced plans today to
draW up a trade treaty .a.nd begin ar-
rBf!iements for Russian engineers and '
technicianS to•help rebuild shattered East
Pakistan. ~
The plans to draw up the trade pact
l. • Arctie--.-Air Hits Midwest
' ' '
• •
.,
Zero Te'!'"-pe~atu!es Seen Heading for East . ,
~ lr.m tM ctflll'll Gutt CO.ti ,. ... ...+6>Mlltbtlllll! .... 1..,.. 1:1,.. ..,,.,.. felr t-lft wef8 t1141 rvle. Oft nw w.,,.,.,.,. t~. eelmv •nd ~
••••1111bh ft'lfld' -""" lltld 110!!9 .... Gun •nd l(llllh AIM!ftllc CM1!1I r .. loM.
T~I...,... ......... ll'le llllllofl Mrf'f
tlldty r"lflftd '""" 1J II Fort L ........ e.11, Fll., '9 Z1 b1o1Gw un 11 ~ .....
Calftnrulo
"Ttie ~ ..... Ill "TI!undrfo "-Cltttn MM, .,. Mff nn.
A clo.ik of "'"' •-w•• ~ ti r.,.,.ln 1111 ~ C.Hforni., -e, from .,,_ Tiltl9~• -!ti-cl, _. IM1t for 1 w.ek, r9frlt91"11td IJI' 1...,.
~u,... In ftl,e Jtll 11 -eln•tlorl•.
' ltlml -• '°""' clilUdlntb •rid mom-"'9 toe m•lnW 1fl fl-. -"""" ,,.-.
tNt CllMrwl,. •Ir •lld brllk -"*' JloreYlillld. ~
J<" 111111 low <Loud• OIOllod tM Mol-
Dl-MM bit! lrf mldOtY flll lki.t daAlll
•nd "'' 111' ~'IO_, lit Jn 1l'le low cleMff 1trc1 Nici hl·ltlll mkMQI 11 .. lllM'I .,.,.,,..
Hlt!lt Tundly 9'111 ,fweall IMlll-
""""'1 ..,.,, tncl\lfedt
8u'1*'*; a-w. ~ Minke »-Jt,
I.-. h9cfl ..... Al)tllflin tlld Sant• Arlt .n.51, ltt-.~ 'WI. $In or-
Jl'~. S.1111 e.ftlffa M-W, 9H,'""lelcl
JO.JD. h lmcte .. JJ-c. Mt. WI'-11.JI.
Sun, Moon, fide•
5'lflm '°*¥. Li.tit ~· wllldt
MM Miii "*""" 11Wrt *-1111 Mlt 'IO ~t 11 • i• k""9 111 11--. ~ lfllCI °!""'IMW• Hltll .. ,. ... '°""'' ,..,.._"""-,_ fr.ti • to !II. lnl•lld ~,... ,_ trom
a to .o. W•hit 1'mPfflture st..
Constal
WID"llDAY
Stcond 1111~ ........... ':Me.m. S.7 ~ IOw ............ J:Oll 1.'9! •••••
Flr-tt 1\lt~ .............. 1:111.m. '-' FJl<tl IO'W ••••••••••••• 12~~ •.m. J.t
5lcond llltll ............ t !ll•.m.. l..t
rtcOfld low ·-····· .. ,~,, "·"'· •1-'
THUlllOAY
111.1 ... •:M1,m. kb •1De.l'l'I.
lllM• Jr41,..m, s.tll 4:U•.m.
"as qUickly as posalbl!!" were annouoced
in Dacca after talks between Soviet trade
misaion chief V. V. Zvreb and Finance
Miniater M. Manaoor Ali •·and 1Home
Mtnlster A. H. Kamaruzzaman.
. The B~la~esh govenu:Qen\ said it
Meded cotton and tiecltlcM 'icfnlpmenl
as well as cash and technical ~let to
ttbuild agricultural aild tndufulal pro-
dudiOn which Ali laid was 'thru.abere.''
· lodi& and Bhutan are the oply Muons
lbw far to recognize the !life of
Bangladesh but the Sov1et &dions in-
dicated Russian recognition would be
forthcoming shortly.
The ministers satd ~'speCial ar·
rangemeri.ts" were being made to bring
In Soviet experts and their families to
resume work on projects started before
µie war and help in economic develop-
ment.
Zvreb said the Soviet Union could sup-·
ply cotton for the Bangladesh tutile
mill! and was drafting a propasal for
reconstruction of the jute· industry, the
country's biggest f6re.ign · t x c h a n g e
earner.
War Foes Plan
New Year Rally
WASfilNGTON (.UPI) -The National
Peace Coalition announced Tuesday "the
antiwar movement is.siarting off the new
year. out in the itretts" with a
demonstratioo in front of the White
House New Year's Day. .._
As a group of participants in ·the Viet-
nam Veterans Agaigst the War (VV.'iW)
conducted sm~U Washington demonstra-
tions, Jerry Gordoµ. director of the coali-
tion, announced plans for new .eud-the-
war actions.
"We wlll stay in the slr~ts as long as
necessary to put an end to this vicious
war," Gordon Aid at a news conftrl':nce.
uwe reject the: suggesUon that we stay
home and depend on the im el~onS to
end the .killing iR Indochina,"
He said demonstrators would gather on
the sidewalk: In fro,nt Of the White House
Saturday -calling for a turnout in e.1·
cess of the legal limit of 100 -to protest
the new U.S. bombing attacks on North
Vietnam.
Galling the bombing "genocidal terror
assaults," Gordon sald they "make a
shambles of President Nixon's claim that
he is ~ dO'Ml the Indochina war."
Disney World
Snarls Traf fie
ORLANOO, Fla. (UPI) -For the ,._
cond. straight day traffic tn and around,
Walt Disney World was brought to a
standstill by holiday crowds trying to get
into the amusement attractk>n Tuesday.
The highway patrol reported early
Tuesday afternoon, IDterstatl!" 4. and U.S.
Highway 27 were backed up 30 alld 15
mlles respectively.
Gates to Disney World were cloeed at
10 1.m. after 50,000 persons were inside,
and at leut that many were outside.
Similar traffic snarls have occu,rred
previously, In even greater proportions,
1lnce the attraction opened ln October.
The big trU$hes usually come. on dnys
whe.n chOd.ren are. <>U from school.
s
UPIT......,_
British Prepare
To Pull Troops
From Malta Base
LONDON (UPI) -Britain is preparing
to withdraw all British troops from the
Mediterranean Wand of Malta, the
Foreign Office announced today.
It said tbe government decided on this
action after Maltese Prime Minister Dom
lifhrtoff, in a oew ~ge to the Foreign
Office receiv.ed today, demanded im-
mediate payment of $11 million for the
right to station British forces. on the
island.
The Soviet Union recenUy signed a
. trade agreement wlth Malta -a n d
·diplomat~ sources 1P London said this
was another step in the Soviet hope of
establishing naval facllltles on Malta !or
its growing Mediterranean fleet.
·Malta has served both as a naval base
for the British Royal Navy and is an im-
portant NATO base ·at well NATO of-
ficl.als ha\le urged Britain to. retain its
position there in hopes of freezing out the
Russians.
The for~ office said Mintoff's latest
message re1t.erated a similar demand by
him received here on Christmas Eve. 'l'be statement 1ald Britalli already·)lad
. agreed to pey $8.!5 million at once for ·
staUoning of British troops on the island
for six monttui starling Dec. 30.
II said Britsin ts~.~ ...... to make 'imj f\lrtl;er pl)'111Cits. r--r:--~ '
"In these cirannstarx:es," the Foreign
Office said, "The British government are
setting in . hand pr~ratiant for the
withdrawal of :British forces from
Malta."
Senate Wing Sinking
-One Fifth of Inch
WASHINGTON (UPI) -During the
pa$* 45 years, the ~te wing_of the U.S.
Capitol building sank one-fifth of an inch.
The National Qceaoic and Atmospheric
Admtnistratlon (NOAA) said Tuesday a
19"l6 survey placed the elevation of the
senate wing at 90.544 feet, while a new
rpeasurement came out 90.525 feet above
sea level.
During the same period, the House
wing of the Capitol did not sink at all.
NOAA orficiab had no u:plailation for
th11t.
Massagers Arrested
POMONA (UPI) -Sheriff's , vice of-
ficers Tuesday conducted raids on nine
massage parlors within the city limit!
and arrested 12 women on charges of
lewd coi:Ktuct and pro~itutlon. The af.
ternoon ralds:, conducted by the sheriff's
department and Pomona p o I I c e ,
culminated a monlh-long investigation.
... ' ; -~ ..
f. '" -
.~~<;~~
Ministers··
Given Word
By United Press Internatloaal
The semiofiicial Cairo newspaper Al
Abram said-today Egyptian .President
Anwar Saqat told ))is political Jeader1
Tuesday ~t the decision to go to war
with Jsraej is fipal.
Foreign Minister Mahmoud Riad added
today that the chances of peace are
dwindling.
Arab political observers in. Beirut said
lf hostilities do resume it probably will
not be immediately since Egypt·atread)"
haS announced iU supJttt'for-new·peace
efforts by United Nations p e ace
negotiator Gunnar V. Jarring.
The Swedish diplomat ts expecte(I to
bo~d talks with· iEgyptlan and Jsraell
representatives 5eparately starling in
mid-January. '-'.
Al Abram published a partial text o[
Sadat's speech to a joint seSslon of the
Central COmmittee of the Arab Socialist
Union (ASU) and the People's C<luncil
Parliament which nlet to take whaf Cairo
Radio called "the final decision. •1
--rhe dfcision to fight bas already been
taken," Sadat said .. "It remains the
same. This means we must mObiiize all
our resources !or the battle of liberation
of the occupied lands.
"We shall continue oµr politlcaf action
in all fields and leave the door open for
all contacts. We shall continue to Insist
that oot one inch of our occupied ter·
ritories will be surrendered."
Egyptian gove.rument Qfficia!J tn-
terpreted Sadat's speech to mean he
would gG to war only when all these
peaceful efforts have failed. But they ad·
ded Egypt feJt the efforts were doomed
because Qf Jsi::aet's reluctance t o
withd.raW fro~ all Arab lands as
demanded by-Cairo.
Riad we.nt before Parllameot today to
endorse Sadat's speech.
"It is our fate to fight, as It was the
fate of those before us," Riad said. "The.
hour of decision ls fa.st approaching and
the chance for peace -if ever there was
one -is dwindling."
"The Arab 11atioo's strength, if it l!i
organized, is enough to guarantee vie·
tory," Riad said.
U.S. Delegation
•
Departing Today
For Red China
WASHINGTON \AP) -·A sec<>nd While
House advance team, headed by No. 2
mail. on the National Securi\y Council
staff, leaves today fOr Commlinlst China
to make technical·preparations for Presb
dent Nixon's February trip. -
The Florida White .House, announcing
this Tuesday as Peking made a
simultaneous disclosure, said a 25--
member delegation, including f o u r
representatives of the three major
television networks, will spend about a
week in mainland China.
Heading the team is Anny Brig. Gen.
Alexander M. Halg Jr .• deputy to Henry
A. Kissinger who tw ice this year made
trips to Peking to lay the groundwork for
Nixon's visit. set for Feb. 21-28. K.i.ssinger
is the President's ·assistant for national
security affairs.
In addition tO" government and TV
network personnel, the Ametican group
will include representatives of American
Telephone & Telegraph Co., end of
Comsat, the Communications Satellite
Corp. .
Alf.hough officials w o u 1 d not
acknowledge the su pposition, the in·
clusion of a Comsai representative was
ta~en as an indication that plans are in
the work! to use rommunications
satellites for live TV coverage of Nixon's
visit.
Consumer Chief ·scores
Auto Repair Ineptitude
WASHINGTON (AP) -Car owners
need a watchdog to protect them from
high-priced Incompetence In the 1!-Uto
dealer's repair shop, presidential adviser
Virginia H. Knauer said today.
Mrs. Knauer! Presldent Nixon's adviser
on consumer a fairs, proposed creaUon of
an objective review board to inspect and
grade dealer service.
"Too many consumen have found out
that 'the lowest price in town' can be a
bad bargain," Mrs. Knauer said in letters
to auto and coosumer organizations
sollcit.iq their support for her Idea. "Too
many coo.aumer1 have p&ld. {or un-
oecessaey repairs.
"And too many consumers have had
repairs made with unsatisfactory results.
I am sure )'OU will agree with me that
these. experience1, on the part of many
Americans, are Intolerable." .
Mrs. Kna\lerr said ahe first proposed
creation of the review boa.rd in letters
Oct t to major domestic auto makera
and to I.he Nat.ionel Automoblle Dealers
Association. ' In replies Mrs. Knauer m•de public.
General Motors, Ford, Chrysler and
Arn.erlcan Moton eserted that their own
watchdog plans to some extent already
pro\llde the monitoring Mrs. Knauer
wants.
The NADA endorsed some features of
the proposal, and Ford and Americiln
Motors indicated willingness to explore
the Idea further.
Mrs. Kanuer now has asked the
Transportation Department, the Center
for Auto Safety, the Am erica n
Automobile Association, C on s u m er s
Union, the Consumer Federation ot
America and indi\lidual dealers for sue:·
gestions to implement her Jdea. .
The general ternu slle ouUioed would:
-create a·' quality strvice recognition
program" to honor dealers ·given top
ratings by consumers. ·
-Provide consumers with an easy way
to comment about the quality of dealer
aervice..
-Set up some sort or review 1>0ant -
perhaps composed or co n s u m e rs ,
educators, engineers and company of·
ficial s -to evaluate consumer com-
ments.
. -Provide-for the review board to In-
spect participating dealer.ships to
detennine the adequacy of service
facilities.
'
AMA Raps
•
Pl1ysicians'
.
Fee Ceiling
r ,, .
WASlllNCTON (uPI) -ll'QAmerlcan
Medic1l AsaociaUon, lnaia:Unl Jt wants
"to cooperate with President Nixon's
curb on inflaUon," has complained to the
Col~ of IJvin& C.ouncU about a~.5 percent
cellilll on lnCreaHo In J>bysJ?ia' f ....
In the hierarchy or Phase II economics
the Cost of Living Cooncil sits one step
higher than the Price Commission, wbkh
imposed the ceiling Doc. 15.
Donald Rumsfeld, director of the Cost
of Living Council. 111ggelled that the
AMA take ill case directly to the Price
Commislkla, according to bis Jpokesman.
Rumsfeld beaR! the complaint Tuesday
from a oon.Ungent beaded by Dr. Mu H."
Pln91t, dlalnnan of the AMA board of
trustees.
•
DAILV PILCT I
Blg'R.t In We•t ·--•
Violent Crimes
Continue Gain . ' .
WASHINGTON (AP) ~ •Qinie f. the
United stt.tes lncrtUed I 'percent aur1n1
~ firat nine tporitlls of ·~ year, 11>1' Fil reported tOda)I. ' ~,
Violent ~e WU up IO ·per<enl and
. property crime 1111, 1· ~ compared
with the same petjod,11111 Y•·
Ally. Gen. Jolin N Mitcbell, In reJeu.
ing the FBl'• stltllUcll, uld the perce~
tage increase WU the smaUeat In five
years. He noted that 53 dties 'with more
than 100,000 popolliion ttported fewer
crimes than Jp tbe first nine months of 1170. . • .
4eCreaM of 3 percent In rocor""4 crim ..
during the nine monthl.'Oiilr ~··"limo.
aqravaled assaui~ showed y tncroue
In those cities. It WU up 1 percooL
The FBI uid ~ ~-'which
makes up lifo-thlrda of all rcllbery of•
1....., incrWed 17 -~ while
usauila wllh f~ aceounl!!>I for
oot-fourth of serious uaulta, lncrWed
II percen~
Tl>e I percent "'("'.all ~ for, lhl
nation comparea· with, -ta&•. In-
creases tn tbe put.,flve years of JP iA
1'70, 11In1911, II In 1111, IDd II In 1161.
•" In a statement after the meeting at the
White ~. the AMA said, "While ,
ilresslng medicine's desire to cooperate
with Presklept Nixon's curb on inflation,
Dr. Parrott took ex~lon to price con-
trol proposals that would deny treatment
equal to th1t given other pmViders of
professional services."
' ' . .
LOKI! PROTESTER ·SITS IN'FRONT OP ABRAHAM ~INCOLN STATUE
V•teran1 SurrenderaCI With Hands Placed on Thtlr HNd1
U,l .l.._..I'
The iargeot cities, thole I@> ID!"t than
250,000 popu1nton, reported an aver1ge
lnetta!<! ( .,.rcen1 durlnJ !he .period.
Suburban and rural 'areas reported crime·
increases of 11 percent and 6 percent
"Polic.e Advis!ng
The Z..5 percent annual limit on fee in-
creases was the same imposed on all
other services and industries at the start
of Phase II Nov. 14. But the commission
gave specia1 attention to health services
because the annual rate of inflation in
that sector of the economy was estimated
at 13 percent.
The commission ruled that doctors and
others in their category would be re-
quired to maintain for inspection a Jish of
prices that were being charged for
medical services during the 91).day
«OD01Uic freeze. 'lbe 2.5 per c en t
guidelines require increases to be
justified by ~operating costs.
Hoffa Gets Okay
To Speak Out,
Go to Florida
DETROIT (UPI) -The U.S. Parole
and Probation office has clarUied parole
cond!Uons for fonner teamsters union
president James R. Hoffa -including
such Issues as travel, a p e a k i n g
engagements and wion ties.
Charles T. Hosner, chief federal parole
officer in Detroit, gave Hoffa permission
Tuesday to take his wife to Florida for 90
daya, associate with old union friends on
a limited bad:, ~ on tel~!~ and
speak out on political issues.
Immediately after tbe meeting -with
Hosner, the fonner union boss exercised
bis freedom to speak out.
Hoffa told a news condreenc:e be felt
many facts of President Nixon's Phase II
econom.ic policy were still unclear but
"that any restrictions on labor activities,
other than in time ol war, are not in the
interest of the working man and woman."
He also announced he has taken the
pension due him from the union -$1.Z
million after taxes. 'lbe. total penr;ion due
him was $1.7 million after 39 years o[
service, Hoffa aald.
The 59-year~ld former union head has
, met twice with parole officials since
Preisdent Nixon commuted his l~year
sentence for jury tampering and pension
fraud last Thursday. Hoffa spent nearly
five years in federal prison at Lewisburg,
Pa.
Hoffa said he planned to leave for
~tiarni Jan. 4, for a 90-dsy vacation with
his wife, Josephine, who has a heart ail·
ment. While In Florida, he will be r~
quired to report monthly to the U.S.
Parole Office Jn Miami.
~~~~~~--~~~
Welfare Mo.ther
Jtlandatory ·Work
Measure Signed
WASHINGTON (AP) -l're>idenl NI"
on has signed Into law 1 bUI initiated by
congressional conservatives wh~ch re-
quires many healthy welfare mothers to
work or accept job training.
Critics of the measure aay Nixon's
signature idlla any cbances for enactinent
of the other key parts of the Prt.sident'1
welfare reform plan: A guaranteed an·
nual income and welfare benefits for low·
income job holders.
The bill Nixon signed at the Jl'lorida
White House Tuesday during tht con·
gressional recess goes int.o effect July l.
It makes it mandatory for many of the
2.6 million parenta in tbe controversial
aid to families with dependent children
program to sJgn up for available jobs or
training.
E>nly lhe aged, the sick or disabled,
those in school or mothers of children un-
der school age are exempted.
The measure, attached aa 1n amend4
ment to a larger bill. was qul.etly passed
by the House and Senate Dec. 11 wlth
little debate or advuice noUce.
Welfare administrators say the pro-
blem is not finding welfare. reclpienla to
sign up for jobs, but llnding any Jobi at
all for those who will or are able to wort.
Onio Republican
Tells' Candidacy
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Rep. John M.
Ashbrook (R-Ohlo) announced today as 1
challenger to Prealdent ·Nixon i n
Repulilican primari~, saying he: would be
appealing "to the majority senUment" in
tllt GOP.
Ashtirook, a conserva-uve· serving his
sixth tenn In the House, accused Nixon of
allowing the nation's military strength to
deteriorate and with failure to take "a
more forceful position" toward the Soviet
Union and Red C\iina.
He said he would oppose Nixon in the
March '1 New Hampshire primary, the
first in the nation, and that his "PhW I"
plan then also will include running ln the
Florida primary March 14.
After th8.t, Ashbrook aald, will be his
"Phase II" -determining whether his
campaign, "starting baslcaUy from
uro," has gained enough support to
beeome an all-out national effort.
FanPsyehoanalyzed
TV Football Viewing
ls Really Very Sexy
NEW YORK {AP) -Wives, your husband's vacant start during da)'I of
TV football might mean more than eyestrain. He might be subllmatlng hjs leE
drive -·"Men use TV football games to sublilpate their aeXual need,,," said Dr.
Morton Golden, a Brooklyn psychoanalyst. "Men idmtify with the plunging
halfback. the swashbllekling tackler, the crushlng blocker, and eventualzy, the
athlete who scores." Dr. Golden first presente dhis theories in a paper on "the emoti-Onal
aspects of sports" for the American Psychiatric AssociaUon Jn 1116?. He elab-
orated on his ideas Tuesday in a telephone interview for the ' mlUions of ann-
chair quarterbacks who have at last nine professional and college bowl games
to watch over New Year's weekend. •
"It's no longer just for entertainment that men watch eight houri or
football a day," said Golden. "Men use the games as a fantasy to relive that
youthful sexual aggressiveness that may have ebbed with' age and boredom.
Jt's a need of most men who live a passive emtence to JdtnUfy with the ag·
,ressive football heroes on the field ." Dr. Golden, who has spent 25 years in
private pracUce, says the average man in analysis often bring1 in these fan-
tasies. He cautions that compulsive football watching mi(ht be suapect.
A man woo watches eight hours of football could be jUat 11 pathologk:al
as the woman who watches eight. boon of aoap operas 1 day. '!bat's her ne«f
to relive the fantasies or her own romantic past."
Since football -physical strength and ma1C11line domln1tioo , GoJd.
en suw-ta the TV lllDIH might make the woman viewer feel ,..ak and fn.
odequate. · He 1dvt.ln suflerlng wives who approach this coming football wee.tend
with dread vllklna ol. neglect. to recognb:e It aa a aeuonal 1cllvlty. "Ltt your
husband have his fiing. Tolerate: his withdrawal. He'll come back'ttn'I and mce
again be a good father and husband," predicts Dr. Golden.
Golden hesllltes to draw any conclusions about post-game activity If the
man haa been subllmattng hla sex drive by watcf'llng TV football all day.
•1vou just can't generalize and say that a man's tel" drive would be low·
er after "atching so much football ," sa)'I Goldtn. "But then agabt. It ls possl·
ble. just aa youngsters who ere very acUve in athletics hive le11 need for
their btologlcal ur1n to come cut."
.. respectively. • . 'Party Balloon(
86 War Protesters Seized
Murder, raP.t, robbery and assault -
the Violent crimes -all rose during the
nine months, as did.the property crimes'
of burglary, larceny and alJto,tbeft.
.ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) -!,«al
police SU9est that New Year's ~ve
wues include cine of their free
diJposable-breath leltlng J>ll)bb. ;
In Barricade at Memorial
Murder increastd 10 percent, rape 7
percent, robbery lJ percent and assault I
percent. Burglary rose 7 percent, lan:eny
6 percent and auto,theft 21pelc;_ent.
The western states recorded the
greatest oveNll n,l.ne-month increue of
10 percent, with crime up t pen::ent ln 1he
Northeastern states and 3 percent in both
the North Central and Southern stat ...
The packeb include a balloon add a
tube. When a guest bloWJ UP. ~ ball,oon,
hil breath pwea. lhrouab ebeml9'11y
ir.ated ayslaJJ, Ind~ ebaJ111ng.qiior
determines his sobriety or lack of.it. ,
By THE AS.IOCIATED PJIF.'lS
More than ao peraOns were arrested at
a h\11111D barricade put up by Vietnam
war veterans ,staging a -antiwar protest
at the µiicoln Memorial in W1shlngion.
'lbe. arrests Tuesday followed by only a
few hoi,J.n: a decisioO by 15 membe~ of
the same VOOP• the Vietnam Veterans
Against the War, to eod their 46-hour oc-
cupation of the Statue of Llbeey,
At the Lincoln Memorial, the U.S. par\
police arrested 8'6 demonstrators who
refused. to move from the entraoc:e.. The
• ,, I • prole!ters lliilced"their hands· on u .. 1.
heads in· prisoner of war fasbton and
w.ited for pOlice to le1d thtm to; waiting
bdses. Tbey were charged wlth'blocklng
the entrance to a building, a miacfe-
meanor.
'Ibe last person arrested was Gerald
Evan, a University otMasJactiusetts 1tu-
dent and an Air Force veteran. Evan had
·climbed atop. a huge um in fl'Ollt ol lb~ ...,,..wand bejd·liolt. Dag~ .....
eel "Vietnam Veterans Against the War."
· ,.mtnutes alter the )ast al his
es was arnsted, be lhouied to polic.:1.~ _., ' f .
'!YO\I tOia Jl)t I was under.arrest ,00 I
s~er. I'm your prisoner and under
yqur custody. All you have to do is 'cOme
and get me." ,
In the end, be climbed down, and 1ave
up.
Earlier, park police chased one pro-
tester .from tlJe. urn across the memorial
steps and knocked him down. Two othen
were arrested wben they moved close to
him.
Some 150 protester! had marched · pea~fully from the base of the Capitol to
the lront of the White House and then to
the memorial.
The . group bad burned copies or the
North Vietnamese seven-point peace plan
atOthe. ba&e of tllt capitol. Then, at !he
memorial, the group placed an empty
coffin in front of the seated likeness ol
the Jeth presideM. 'lbe protesters stood
Heroin Hunters . .
Seize Six Tons
Over Past Year ...
WAS!IlNGToN' (UPI) -The Stale
Department reptirted Tuesday that the
United ·stateS and 'other ·cooperating
goverrlments in an in~matJonal. drug
conlrot program stlzed six tons of heroin
valued "a! 13 bUUon 1n mt. o ·
Nelson Gross, department eo<>rdlnator
for intemaUoiial narcotics matters', told a
news conference; "We have liad · thla
year, JS 1 resu1t of the escalaUon of our
effoi1s •. a meaningful Impact on the drug
traffic."
Grosl elaborated on a report reJiased
by SeCntary ,of State WUUam Rogen
called "the ln\erniUOnal Nlrcotics 'eon.
lroi Summary" which detajfetj ad-
ministration eUortS in 1'71. Rogers
serves as chainn8h of President' Nixon 's
cabinet convnlttee for in~mational
llQfCOlica ~ntrol wl)lcb was. estlblilhed
Sep!. " 1'71. Grou· explained that the cabinet com·
miltee Which held Ila aecond fonnaf
meeting Dec. ta intended to continue tn-
tensUylng drug crontrot efforts by r .. ·
quest!Jig an npended budget ·w by
formulating "action plans" to be applied
at every stage of tbe narcoUcs proceu.
Grou ..id be believed the,~et ol
the aeizUre of ail tons of heroin durini
1171 could he detected In the U.S,
noreotlcs market by a decline In the
·quallty of drup being illlcltfy peddled.
He noted that while the pdee of •
pael<et hod. rcnoined apprm!motely t11t aame, In _, IRIS of the Un!~ States
the heroin content hod dropped from 10
~ to 3 percent and even less.
He added : "We believe we have
deveiop>d preuure points which wlil
enable ua to cut back on the supply. But
there ii much to be done and anyone who
aay1 otherwise would be kidding."
The Rogers report provided • r1llldown
of•cooperotion being offorded by various
forelp couotrles In the proaram.
sllenUy while taps was played, then stag·
ed a ·short slt.<fown befo~ Jocking anns
and attempting to barricade the ...
trance.
The 20 clUea between 5001000 and one
mllll~ in popula~n reported an, over-all
FREE
Tl>e Albuquenjl!e Poil<;e IJeW!menl
says the perfect boat wUJ ~ve ~
wllo Ounlt-bu\ only alter the -...,.,
up his own balloon.
TAX RETURN
PREPARATION.
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p11P1fation ofJour)leiOllll Ftdnl.md a.a ax ldlm&. ~people wit ••(*2001a $IOO cirmos,Jft' ·~
wountint1-. (Thil ...... ._.~...., 1Dwpami0ftw,._-. be II 111 cirtilnlls ...._,
. : .:f>~QF"ESSl~N~L-...-.. __ ..,. --pa,..111 _ _. __ .,.. " ' __ __,_w._,_ ........ --wflll•h•iliO'>flllo~· ... ,-il';bi''
• h~·-.;.d.illm. All -" -In .. ......., ol -l'lolflC "llMiit olfloi ....... trolnod _,,..of r .. eo.po.otion ti -.1o1u..,iy •-Tix ~.100. 'lllkflrm, .a..t In 1948, It._
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so HURRY ----~ ... v-or..nor-bi'~--.... -lnfonnotlon.
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Saturday 10:00 A.M. to 8:00 P.M. . . .
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paci~c ~aviri'gs UDlDUUSOC!AlfU --~-------------------~-----------------------~-~-
, .
• DAD.y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Broader Ba·se Needed
The need for a 111pport lluO for community Uunlor)
colleges broader than the property tax is revealed once
more In a Coast Community College District survey of
student body makeup. :
, Forfy·three percent of tut June's gradu tin dw-~ from the 10 high schools In that dlstrict ~ed as
freshmen at the dirtrict's Golden wen Colleee and
Orange Coast College wnpU5es. Since 1966, when
G<ilden West opened, the number of graduates entering
the two lnsUtutlons bu ranged from 41 to 48 pereenl
Undoubtedly, Saddleback and other Orange County
community college districts woU!d show similar resU!ts.
Grsduating seniors make up on .. fifth of the fresh·
man class at the two colleges, however. Of the other four-
fiftbs, many were graduated earlier and are only just
beginning their college work. Many others are new res-
idents in the dislric~ and still others are out-of-district
and out~f-st.ate students.
Escalating student costs at the state university and
colleges -supported by direct legislative appropria·
tlons -bas put still more pressure ·on community col·
Jege enrollments. U. turn putting more pressure on the
property taxpayer. It's one more reason statewide tax
reform is so urgenUy needed.-
Garlic Instead of DDT?
Garlic, that fragrant member of the lily family,
may become the cinderella plant of the environmental
protection drive. Its oils could replace DDT as a houae-
bold and agricU!tural pesticide, without any of the
health hazards attributed to DDT.
Garlic oil has been used medically for centuries.
The Romans fed it to their &laves and soldiers as
a stimulant And in non.scientific circles in modern
times, garlic bas been advanced as a preventive of bi~b blood preuure. In romance, however, carllc stands in
low esteem; e.1pedally when favOted by only one part· ner. ! ' ' 'l\\'O researchers from India hlVe now reported in
the technical journal, Scleitc'e, that they have isolated,
ld011Wied and even duplicated synthetically ingredients
within Pl'llc oil they said were zetpOIU!ble for the
crude 01!'1 recenUy rep0rted j)owers for ldlllng the
larvae or ho...rties, moths, bup, weevils and certain
mosquitoes.
The research blolQ&lsts point out that the nonto.le
nature of ~arlic to higher animals bu been establlahed
on the basis that It bu been use<! for edible purposes
for ouch a long time.
Perhaps now the patio barbecuer will have a new
defense against guile-haters' .complaints when he rubs
the dove over ~t steak. He'll ju.st be debugging the area. .
Idea for New Year's Eve
Traffic deaths over the 78-hour Christmas week·
end set a new record of 614. Of these, 67 occurred in
California -highest of any state.
This prompts a suggestion for New Year's Eve.
A recent study showed that most Americans don't really
do mu,ch of anything that evening. The frantic drive
for a celebration occurs mostly in the largest cities. So
why not invite the neighbors over to watch on TV as
the big-city folk in New York celebrate the New Year
With horn-blowing in Times Square, listen to AUid Lang
Syne and jolt have a warm, informal get-together?
It would be one ny~to be sure of shunning travel
on the drunken driver's big nigbl
\ '
I
.~
1
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" ,.
l •
•'
:.
..
To S ustain t he Econom~ Ult • • • , , . .Sµpervis ors ,
Ni xon Has New Programs . Play Elect ion
, .Keep Separate:
WASHINGTON -Some new ideas are
on the threshold in the Nixon ad-
ministration for sustaining the eoonomtc
lift begun with dollar devaluation and
ecoOOmic controls.
The general thought is that American
ir.ctustry has become fat, lazy and non-
c:ompeUtive in a world growing in-
crusiogly competitive. A new look must
bt taken at the practices of bolb business
and labor.
N~ efforts are urgently needed in
basic research to improve American
kdmology. An In>
pet.us to new ~
-compared to the big push of
NASA's space pro.
....., b regarded
u imperative.
Coupled with tbll
drive for revitaliza.
tlon of the American
~ve system
are proposals under study for a more
Complete 4?verhaul of the tax system than
ha yet been attempt«!,
SOCK PROPOSALS a.s the "value ad-
ded" tu: widely 1n use in Europe are
btJng diBcussed but this kind of taxation
so nt.arly resembles a natiooal sales tu
that congmaional reaistance would be
very great. The more general aim is a
more widely shattd tu: burden which
would allow individual income tu reduc-
tio111.
Much of this discussion is expected to
find ill way into President Nixon's
mesages to tbe new session of Coogreu
w.mbling in January and will undtrlie
his general program for im ..
Once again, as during the monetary
and economic controls crises, Treasury
Secretary John CoMally will be the ma·
jor 11pokesman of the new Nixm pro-
gram.
'<mipetitive pn!S8lln!S boildlng up from
Japan, Wes! Germany. a future strong
lllina and a pr .. enuy strong Soviet
Uoion.
Nixon's warnings of latent isolationism
!n America ii in the same pattern. What
be .seems to be saying is that America
can1t pull back into a hole, nurse its
wounds or go inte> a period of
psychopathic withdrawal but m u st
prepare itself for a new competitive
phase requiring hard work and ita highest
skills aod technology.
Coonally'1 stature in t b • ad-BIJT rr WILL TAU; more tlian a pep
ministration; already If!'~ bu '-' talk In the locker rOQm ,between halves to
enhanced bY his handling of dollar gel the country bad; Into a winning
devaluation and his persuaalve auPP!J<( of mood. The apeclllc 1!IWlq'es fbl<h must
Ibo ......UC control l)'atem. ThO !"'1' . ~ ~en have the dilalfvlhtil'e..r 'l<tmt
Jl'Oll'l!DI now being diJcuased wUI re-, ~Jng to favor business at a time when Nil·
quire a grea~ ~al of pe:iuallon, too, t ien•1 political opposition ii clamoring for
since the nation• top business and in.. he)p for individuals. Tax ctedits and m.
dll:"'ial leaders are not likely ~ nli.sb 1 cent.Ives to expand tndultry and increue
bemg called fat and ta~ even 1! they f!IQ.ployment are hai'd to explain to people
recogn1ze that they aren t ampeting I! C<10oemed about bospil.al-bills, mortgage
hard 11 of yore. payments aod supermu~et pricU.
THE mEAS WRICH are now coming to Technology is ~so somewhat ~ of
tlwdore "'" Implicit 1n many o1 the favor aod the g~ old American com·
things President Nixon hat been saylq In petillve instinct Is tlkl!ig some hard
the last year or two which have been knocks from ne_w gi!nera~ons · o f
given onJy passing attention. humanists who dende the Par1tan wort
His &peecbes about hooorinl the ethic. · American wort ethic, his wam.lnp of This ls not the beat atmosphere in
gfeat power groupings in the wOrld m. which to talk about bold new programs
cludiag :Western Europe witb England in fCI' atlmulating reoearoh mp indl/!Jlrial
the Common Market. his suggeotians that expaMlon although it will heVe a delinlte
the U.S. is lh a 0 ntw ball game" with appeal to the growing army of young
.powerful economic. fOl'Cel ~ technicians, engineers and scientists who
.".merican economic superiority were not find themselves l e ch n o l o g i c a 11 y m... dlet«ic. They -. booed upon Ibo unemployed.
Will Public Buy Wrinkles?
YCIU can•t help feeling sorry for the
ciprette companies. For years they've
been waging a lonely battle against hmg
cancer, emphysema, heart disease and so
forth -or at least against the idea
cigarette smoking
has: anything to do
With such things.
And d05Jlite the
fad Ulat cigarette
smokers keep drop-
plog off from tbeoe
diseases like rues,
I.be cigarette com-
panies ha ve game-
ly bdd their own.
What'• a little lung cancer if you could
snare a date like that?
But now science bu dealt the llnll·
gllng cigarette companies a blow which appears mortal: cigarette 1 m o k i 11 g
CIUlel wrinkles!
which is always looking for something
new. "The charming young Contessa di
Haggard shows the new IN look. With a
simple make.up pencil she accentuates
her laugh crinkles and brings out her
worry lines, thus flaunting her com·
mitment to life's joys and sorrows and
her depth of character. Men find her
fascinalioo irresistible."
ONCE WE'VE sold the American
public on wrinkles, the ci.gareUe com·
panlel can quickly retool their ad·
vertlslng campaignl.
.,The cigarette for men of character,"
I mumm)'·faced young man mighl pro-
claim. Or, for the ladies, "You've come a
long way, prune face!"
Games W ee~ly Reality, Fantasy
~l" :---1~~." .. ·, ' ., ,-,~, I atiended a revival ol. Mary Chase's ~· 'i?;~;~.MaUJ:W'•~. ~-~J ,I ~m= ~:;:!· ~::!:;~ ";!:.~~t!~; I . . " . . ~.t · .. f I . Harvey was a ~foot 2--lnch imaginary ~..!... ~.~ .. ~ · rabbit who was the boon companion of an
To the Edilor:
The article, "Election Manual", by
Mark Davi-. (Olmment Page Dec.
J8) Is a perfect deoaipUon o{ Ibo' deo-
·tiOD fllllD"S being played in this· l'oo."ty, ~ 1tate and tb!s country M a whole.
r Would like ~add ... thing,bow ... r.
Thlt i1.1t:one is intemted in seeing
JQl'llt of. games in action, a first
hand gllrftpie cari be had by merely driv-
·ing to 515' North Sycamore St., Santa
Ana, wbife each Tuesday morning
members of ij>e Otange County Board of
Su.pervisoi's do their version ol the game
playing ..
CONSTANCE BENEDICT
Communbt Goar.
To the Editor'
The Communist party has givtn up its
teehilique ol trying to Jell the insidious
CommunlJt; dcictriae as an utopian solu·
tton to all tbe.illil of bumanity .. 1'bey have
now sugar-coattd It and under the new
guise, the)' are trying to .allp it down our
throats as a new aophisticated u:clusive
movement called the "New Left."
amiable alcoholic, beautifully named
Elwood P. Dowd.
Although Harvey is never seen on the
sf.Me (ea:cept in the glassy mind or
El\Jood), he is the most reaJ character in
. the play, and in-
deed the fulcrum on
which it.. story is
raised. We come
absolutely to be-
lieve in Harvey's
existence, through
the hypnotic faith
of bis creator.
What most people
doo 't know about
the play, however, is that as originally
written, Harvey was visible on the stage.
He was played by a tan actor enveloped
in a nbbit oostwne -and the whole
comedy fell Oat during tryouts.
THE PRODUCER, director: an d
playwright were puzzled by the public's
reaction -until someone realit.ed that
nobody in the audience really bel.ieved in
Harvey a.s a rabbit. The suggestion was
made that he be struck ·out as a visible
character, and exit only in the words and
gestures of Mr. Dowd.
'Ibis made all the difference in the
world -15 soon as Harvey was made
"imaginary," he immediately became
"real" to everyone.
The moral cf this little tale. as J see it.
Is that the reeJms of reality and fantasy
must be kept distinct and separate in our
minds; when they begin to blend, we r•
ject the fantasy as "improbable," or even
as "imPossible."
WE CAN EASil.Y accept an bn·
probability that we cannot see or hear; ia
fact, this is what "faith" consists in. But
as soon as it takes corporeal shape and
substance, we apply a different standard
of cognition, and become skeptical or in-
creduJous.
One reason that the ghost ol Baoquo in
''Macbeth" is so much more convincing
and frightening than the return of the
dead King in "Hamlet" is that we cannot
see Banquo, whereas the King appears in
all his royal and military trappings, and
seems more pompcu.sly absurd than spec-
tral.
IN TIMES PAST, children were qui te
old before they stopped believing in Santa
Claus; in modem times, however, with a
Santa Claus in every department store
and on every downtown street comer.
even the very little ones quickly become
disenchanted with this abundance ol. cor·
poreality.
Seeing is believing in the world of
fantasy; the mind creates its own visions
(we can all see Harvey , though be
never appears), but repudiates a vision
that is forced on it in the guise of reality.
The imagination simply refuses to be
confined by the senses, er confirmed by
anything but its own primitive construct&
Their front-line salesmen are telling us
that what we read in the papers isn't a
true picture of communism. '111ree-day
trials with execution sentences for hi-
jacking an airplane, a Uthuanian defec-
tor kicked uncoosclous in a lileboot even
before being transferred to a Russian
shi p, tanks machine-gunning unarmed
women and children in a Budapest
square. To all this they say,· "Ah,
w~tever has happened in the past is
regrettable, but OOw be.auutul 1t would be
ii you bad true communism in America.
A ccidental Death Cases
"11AT THAT father of true com·
munism. Karl Mar.r, proJloses is
Americans killing American• ln a bioody
revolution, followed by a police state
where every hour is filled with fear . HI
proposis eliminating God from our lives.
He extols the "joys" of people sharlog
equally tbe fruits ol commi.mlsm.
John Walker had a few too many drinks
and started to walk home. His tract
house was a lot like all the others on the
block. Sure enough, he wandered up to a
neighbor's house. He pounded on the door
and then broke the side window. The
frightened neighbor got out his shotgun
and aimed It at John.
The "'1otjUn ""nt off when John grab.
bed at it. ~me hours later he died from
the wounds. Johll's widow claimed th.at
she was entitled to "double indemnity"
under his insurance policy. She claimed
be died accidenlally, The insurance com-
pany refused the double pay.
,.,--~-···· "'l'"' ....... r;· ~ .,. __ ' ,,4 -J
f . ' ~ • Law ·in Action. ~Jfj __ ..._ °:J
and run driving charge. He jumped out of
the patrol wagon and hit the pa,vement
hard. He was run over by a truck before
he rould get up and run away. His widow
claimed double indemnity and won. The
jury said that the death was by violent
but accidental means. This they've done, of course. by con-
vincing us that cigarettes are food for our
au lives.
Any cigan:tte ad worth lts salt depicts
a handsome young mu and a beautiful
)'oung lady intimately lighting up the
clpmtes that obviously have made hlm
virile, bu aoplllsUcat<d aod both of them
alloolutdy lmsistlble.
80 REPORTS Dr. Horry Daniell in the
prestigious AMala of lntemal Medicine.
After studying 1000 cases. Dr. Daniell
found an e:s:tremely high correlatJon
between the amount d wrinkles on a
peraon'1 face and the amount of cigar-
ettei he or 1he rmobd.
You can see what 1his is &oine to de> to
the cigarette industry. Getting lung
cancer ia one thing, but no one'a coinc to
stand for loolng Illa er her ae...i a~
tracUven.., In the -· Partkularly her. Lui year alone, 13,IG'l ladies bad to
be forcibly dragged from burning
bulldlngs kickinf and acrwnln( -IO!aly
becauae their hair wu in curlen.
True, there may be liOmt defeatist cap-
tains ol the cigarette htdust:y who'll say
such a project will never wort. But I say
hang in there, fellows!
The Qmununist party has fiv• distinct
classes, ranging from their party official&
enjoying $100,000 per year 1al11')1 to un-
paid slave labor. 'the average work week
is 72 to 80 hours for the common peasant,
at a salary which does not even pro'ride
all the steples of me.
IN COURT John's widow won. True,
John was not "accidentally drunk." But
his going to another house aM the scuffle
over the gwt resulted in the accidental
death.
~ven though Frank's fall and possibl~
in Jury from jwnping out of the car waffl't t
an accident. getting run over by a truck
was an accident.
OllANOa COAIT
DAILY PILOT
~ N. W ced, Pubtf•hcr
Thomas Kecoil, Editor
Alb1rt W. Botu
Editoriol Poa• EdiloT
'lllt ~torlll -of the Dall7 Pilot _,.. t.o Inform and •timu•
late f'l!lilkn by J)tt5llnUn1 lhla
MWIP'W• oplnlons and com·
mm.tu')* on topics qt lntetttt and ~ by provt4lftc a tnrum tor the QSll"tlllon cl. ·wr readff*'
ooWom, Md. bp' prncnUn• the d1wne .. ntl o( informed ob-o
atn'lf'I a.d ....,_, • topics
"'lbo'°T·
w~1. De<. 211, 1in1
Wha~ then, can the embatlled cigarette
1ndustry dcl? 'lbl only aoswer ta a na·
tionwide campaign to sell the American
publle on wrlnkiu.
With men II sbould be .. .,. Qoow's fetl
have been popular Iii Marlboro Country
for years. Wltb the ladiel tt may be a bit
more difficult. But I say that If )'(MJ can
lell the ladle1 on puncturing lhetr ear
lobet, sttcklnJ jewels in their belly but·
tons and painUng their toe nails aold,
their lips silver and their ~yellds areen,
you can aell them on anyth1n1.
"WE MIGHT START irtth simple
tt1UmonltJ1: "J used to have a 1mooth,
bland, blah complexioo, but ever alnce
ualng Retch'• Rlnkle Cream, men want to
talk to me 1bout affairs -world aod
otherwise."
Then we could graduate te> Vogue,
After an. if you can sell the American
JllUbHc tung cancer, em'Phnema and heart illsu.ae, a few Wrinklis should be a
brt'2e.
Dear
<?Ioomy
Gus
1'he closer we came to Cllrlrtm1s,
the faster motorists seemed to go.
From the number of fatal acci-
dents (C81Uoml1 agaln·led the na-
tion), many went so fast they
ntVer got there. Now, anyone want
to try for New Yean?
-Diogenes '71
""' ..... "'""" l'MtHt' "'"" ... , .........nrr ._ .t "" -••r . ...,
,..,, "' """' 9-•IMl'llY On. Dffly 'lltt.
I TIDNK THAT while Messrs. Man and
Lelin pre.dated pot and UD, they were
on a bad vodka trip whOll they penned
lbelr Immortal, lmpooslble words.
Anyono confused "Ith the tnie meaning
of. communlsn s:hould pick up a copy of
their "Communist Manilesto''. Read
"What is Communism," by R. Ketchum,
and ''Toward Soviet America," by Com-
munist leadtt W. Z. Foster. 1 guarantee
~'ll ~ humming lbe Star Spangled Banner from now <11. ' '
ERNEST W. MOYLES
Letttr1 from rtadtn ate welcome.
Normally writtr1 1houtd convt11 their
messages tn 300 word.I ar fess. Tht
right lo conMn1t letttr1 to fit space
or eliminate libtl ii rtse1Vtd. A.ti let·
rers miut includt tignoture and moil-
ing Mdrtss, b11t namer mo11 be toith·
held on rtqutit If iufficient rta1on
ii appc.rtttL Pottrt1 1Dill fM>t bt piib-
Jishtd.
In a second case, the decedent felt he
had been cheated in a poker game. He
left. went home for hiJ pistol and return-
ed to get his money back. The operator cf
the gamt also had a gun and returned the
fire. The gambler's widow claimed dou·
hie indemnity, but loet. The use of the
gun under I.hose circumstances led to the
natural and ~ resl'lt of this violent
conduct. Deatb coUJd n<it be said to be
"accident.al." ·
IN ANOTHER CASE, Frsnk was trying
to escape from police custody on a hit
GENERALI. Y ANY ambiguities or
uncertainties in an insurance policy are
read in favor of the Wured. The in-
surance company writes the policy. If ill
language creates the doubts, those doubts
are interpreted against the compeny.
Many policies speclflcaJly eJ.clude injur~
ies that result from voluntary into:s:lcat-
ion, Some policies exclude coverage when
the injury results from the commission of
a felony-say by the use or banned drugs
or from illegal violent acts.
Nott: California lc\Dlltrr of/tr thil
column so 11ou mot1 1cnow about our
l.aws.
I .
By George~~~~~~~--,
Dear George:
My wife maktl me walk our poo-
dle wearing a pink sweater and a
halt ribbon and won't 1pe1k to me
If I dnn't. Would I be justified in
refusing·? HffiAM
Otar Hiram :
Don't ·let your wife push you
around. Put your foot down &nd tell
her, at least, you refuse to wear the
hair ribbon -it's bad enough walk·
Ing tht stupid dog.
i
' '1
L. M. Boyd
Poor Rich Girls
Get Passed Over
I
"Old 11• -a --t111t 1111 --to • wllll learninc .._ W,l)'I It: M atuphl." ~
T ' , -J.C.Solali
BOW OLD DO you bave lo be be/ore you're <Ollllder.
ed old?, 1'1te IOCiology boys have an answer. They lay
you're aOt old wita you're "too infirm with age to carry
on a social funcUoo." Take the New
Year's Eve party, for instance. 11 you
chat ' bit, dlne, maybe take aome re-
lresbmellt, il Yo• do mott !ban just
sit ID the oomer and waU:b, they aay,
you can not get categorized u old.
Good news, what?
PECVLIARL Y ENO!lpB, 1!'1 a
otatJstlcal facl that the weaJthy llngla
-git! finds less opportunity lo lnalTJ
than that IB!gle girl wilhout much money, Dr. Paul Glick
of the llareau of C.OSW. hu coof1!11led that finding. "Rieb
girls often get.left over," says be.
EXTINCl'ION
, When women take too great an Interest in aome living
thing, it's said, that thing is threatened With eittnctioa.
Like Somali leopards. Birds of Paradise, Hollywood screen._
heroes.
GET IT RfGHT: Did I say no man.made vehicle could
accelerate as fast as a cheetah? Wrong again! Sever,i
dragsters do better, I'm now told.
THOSE STUDEl\'I'S of color <lllllend political lihmb
tend to prefer red. Extroverts do, too, they say. But con-
servatives and introverts, they claim, like bhit. .
-QUERY
Q. "Whidl university gives out the most doctorates?"
A. That would be Columbia. And the school whose
undergraduates eventually wind up with the most PhD! is
the City College of New York City.
BE NICE TO UGLY men: That's the advice one ex.
pert in romantic matiers gives to the single girl in search
of a matrimonial mate. Maybe It works. SUU, wbat'a
wrong with it is the Nme thing that's wrong with most all
those husband-hunUng hints. They don 't really lead to
husbands, Just to men . There's an awful difference. My
old secretary told me that. By old, I mWJ previously em-
ployed.
$30,000
The computer boys now sa.v it cost better than $30,000
'to raise just one youngster to the age of 18.
WHEN DEPRESSED, Elizabeth Taylor says she eatl
chili. Oh, you don 'l care?
MOST POPULAR feature in Soviet Union's new can,
the correspondents report, is the reclining front seat.
IN FRANKENBERG, Germany, the fire chief l!sued
the fallowing public pronouncement: "If not enough money
fOr a new hose can be collected, we firemen may find our·
selves caUed upon to stage a concert." Sufficient dooa·
tioos promptly came In.
Addrtss mail to L. /If. Bo¢, P, 0. Bo%· J l 7S,
Newport Beeu!h, Calif. 92660.
'Jilted' Man Finds
· New Home in Fresno
FRESNO (AP) -Simon
Bedrosian, 78, has found a new
home. climaxing his trip to
Fresno to be with friends who
weren't there.
Bedrosian agreed to live at
the California Armenian Home
after having lunch there,
Adm In Is t ra tor Michael
Sohigian said.
Sohigian said Bedrosian was
"very vague" bu t added,
"He's quite a remarkable little
guy."
Police Hunting
' Killer of Man
OXNARD (UPI) -Detec-
tives here were seeking an
assailant who fatally shot a 32-
year~ld man who was sitting
in a car· in Oxnard 's Colonia
area.
The victim. Ricardo
Candelaria, was sitting in the
car's front passenger seat late
Sunday night when a shot
smashed through the
windshield and struck him in
the head. He died later at St.
John's Hospital.
Officiab learned t h a t
Bedrosian left the home of
Irienda in New York City early
this month and flew to Fresno.
Bedrosian said later h e
wanted to visit friends for
Olristma&. His New Y«k
friends reported be baa no
relatives.
When no one met him at the
airport, Bedrosian ljlelll 11
days alone in a hotel room and
was dJscovered only when the
management b e c a m e con-
cerned about his $188 bill.
Bedrosian was vague as to
whom he planned to visit,
Salvation Anny Capt. Jim
Schaal said, and the people
Jlt!Ver were found.
However, news articles of
the situation spurred several
area families to i n v I t e
BeW;lan for Christmu d in-
ner. He ate with a namesake,
Peter H. Bedrosian. They are
unrelated.
A hotel employe t o o k
Bedrosian into her home tem-
porarily, and hotel officiala
said they would coMider waiv-
ing hil bill.
"I'w got a lot of friends
now, and they are all nice,"
Bedrosian said
New Yean Eve Part31
SPECIAL MENUI
FREE
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AFTER CHRISTMAS ·.....,
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shop mondoy thN lrld1y lO o.m. to9:30 p.m. u turday 10 1.m. to 6 p.m.
1und1y noon 'tll 5 p.m.
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4' OAILY PILOT Wednttday, -29, 1971
~------------------------------------------------~~~~~~ .... -----------------------, WEDlllSDAY, THURSDAY, AND· FRIDAY PllCIS lfFICTIYI DIC. 29th, 30th, 3111 ••
aosm.NEW YEAR'S ·M AT 6 P.M.
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19" SHARP PORTABLE TELEVISloN . ' 19" (184 sq.;o.) picture. Slimline ponal>le._ 3D.,s0.I,
Styled in 10ft off-white with charcoal and
chrome uim. "Split·Second Sarr" -iostaot '9 9·· 7 picture. Instant sound. Fold-a~_y carrying haodle.Oip<>leVHFaodloopUHF~
Earphone. U.L 22\.ji" Wxl3~'Dxl614" H.
( 12 .. IN.•
I
'
~~~~!,?!1 7400 ,
~\
20EX.
Slim. easy-to-carry portable
f.ves aisp, bright pictures. ~plit ~econd Start" for instant
pKtUre, aound. VHF/UHF
tuners. ...................
' NO-FROSTING
REFRIGERAlOR
Disc••., Sile 'rice $27
3 D•1sOn'1
4.36 cuft. freezer com·
parrm.ent bolds up to 153
lbs. Twist-eject ke trays.
11.2 cu.ft. refrigerator on
easy-roll wheels. Total
space I,., cu.fL 6WO':
1'fJtl SlCNT 1151
COLOR DIYELOPING
'J0.,•0"11
•
RCA SPORT:ABOUT . COloR .JY
MODELEQ405 ;
·119°0~
· 3 D,,1 0.1, I
• The Adait ia i pomhle packoge tha<
contains a lot of color viewing plea·
sure. Vivid color-generous Kreen
1ize-ttaditiooal RCA quality and
· · dependability. All at a conveniently
low price. 18-in. dilg.
[~~
··'XL 100"
100% S18'.Stet1 T .. lo M1,1I
ACCUCOLOR® TELMSION
Console-quality color viewing pleasure -
at a table model price. RCA'• fabulous 100%
to lid state. AccuColor · perform.a.oce with
AccuMatic Color Monitor. Come see how
good color can be . .21" diag. screen.
M..UI PQ-JOJ i
$489
M.UIXT ...
--AM/FM ·sniio
; TAPE PLAYER '
3D'1•0•1,!
77fJ~~
8-rraclc cartr~ tape player·
phu AM/FM stereo rMtio tuner. Includes jacks fOr head •
phones and record player. Wal-
nbt finish cabinets with cwo
full ranse'•pealcer•. 5-: now!
NO-FROST
Refrigerator-Freet~(
Credit r'e11111 Avalla•la _
T;ue No-Fron ... even tbe 168-lb. "Z<io-·(
degree .. freezer ne'ttl' needs defrost• •
ing. Super-freeze ict·trty twnnel ·Slide-'
o'ut steel shelf. Porcelain enameled
twin aispcrs. Model EVTl 7J
288 SLIDES -MQVIS
SI YAWJ
1111 ..........
20 apClll.lfe color dntlopil!ll
-· low •••• d ... loped Mdpri....r.C22proceulaoooly.
Cll'M•C..• OQI C-
110 • , ____ ....
.; . :::::.:-..... -· .
A ...... " ......... ...........
................
111111
97.!
FU • •• ...... fl""', ... "=~ .. .... "= ...... .... ,..... .... .. ........
'''''" ... , ......... 'Uir\•--•lil'llW ,,.., ........ ...
11111 ............... ~'lr.r:'ill:l 11 ·-·
J ~AllY <PllOf 9
··=·-----------------------------------
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•
,._,. OPIN DAl\T 10.10, IUN, 10.7 ~i;---., PllCIS IFHCTIVI Dtc. 29th, iot11, i 1 It WEDNISDAY, THURSDAY~ AND .FRIDAY
3 Days
lit 3 ~ ·lb.• tin of delicious Spo11idt
peanut$. Just ri9ht for Ntw Ytor ond post·
holktoy enter1oi11ing. So't9 now! ..... _
SELECT BOUDOIR LAMPS
3Doys 3 96 • Ea.
3 chormi"'l!I style1. AmerW::on provincial,
wjth print thocle. Blodc. metal bose, with
drvm .hod•. Marble haw, gloss front.
OVENWARE AT SAVINGS!
3Days 79c . Ea •
1 ~.qt. round CM'O'ICltCOIS«okt, I K: •qt,
utility dish, 8" sq. cok• dish, 51t9" loaf
di~. Meodow grun, llorol decor. So11e!
MEN'S COMFY-FIT SOCKS
3'::;·84c
Quality oll~otton llodt socl11 with cuth-
ioMd fHt, Com• in while only. VerKJtile
and good loolcing. 10 ~ ~ 13. Chafge ii.
45" BUDGET FABRICS
3 Yds.$1
J Doys for
Our )HHncl collt<tion of .u• fobrKs in
liQtlt ond clan solidt. .prints. 2'to•10 yord
lengtht.: drip-dry, mochine wa~ble.
we ..... .., ,...., ... llllC.....-.......... •
l·LB. DELICIOUS TREATS
YourChoic1! 42c JDays
PKlr: •ithtr K morl'Ko"' Kutls or Caramel
Corn, or toke hom• eoch selectton.. Both
the goodies come in 16-oz.• bogs • ...... ~
Discount
P,ice
Easy-clean plastic garbage con with mold ·
ed hoMtl•. Afl·weother resistant. Charge it.
Pkg. of 12 Tra1h Ca• Llner1 ....... lc
12 OZ. DI-GR
JDop . 1.28
AftfOcid -anti.gal. Urttn:lpt painful 1101.
l•li.-s acid indigetfion, h .. rtburn. ·
10x7-n. STORAGE SHm
3Doy•Onlyl $97
• Struchfra1 Steel Con1trvcti0tt •St••' is
Weot~•r·r .. i1tont •louvered Pea\ for
Ventilation • lx7-14.11 10a10-14UI
POL VESTER DOUBLE KNITS
J Doy~ 2.97
Sewing ""' w;il, 5HO" JOIKI ond mony
potte,ned •nits. Spring color.;Need no
lrOl'linf. In 12· 15'1d. '-noths.
I , .......... s......-1.., •«""'*""""' ANT S
nntt ..., Il l .........
«OSED NlW YEAR'S M AT 6 P.M.
A Dlvhi... .. S.S. "-Ce., ""'h ~ 111"'9 Ullit..i s.,i.t. Cooo~o, Pwtto llc9, Alltltollo
I I I \1 .
PRE·COOKED SLICED HAM
30oys 1.19 ~8.
SucC\llent ond tasty, freshly slM:ed, rtody·
to-serve, ilo 9r90t to 9ive holidor gvests .
Good for sandwiches, too. Save now! ,
•PLASTICWARE SPECIAL
3 Doys 1.7• .Eo
A 43·ql. wastebosltet ...... qt. wo1tebin with
d ide top, "O-qr. dust·bin •ith swin; lop. or
'o sil·on hamper. Chorge it. So .....
HANDY PARTY PAPERWARE
YourChoic•t 28C
·Ea •
fot easy entertaining ond •.ven •d•ier
cleon"P· Potk of 250 poper nop\in1 or
pock of 51,7-01. inwlo~ 1tyrocups.
CHILD'S BOXER SLACKS
3 Doys .93c
Toc:ldlen' coHon·bfend boxer ll'odct wif"
elastic waist and 2 lront patch poclcets.
Flore 1991 aofid color\,·2-4. Choro-it.
NEEDLE-WOVEN BLANKET
3 Doys 2FOR$5
Soh'n fluffy J>OIY .. 1 .. /rayoo bto..ltet ..;1h
:1' oylon ~. -72r.'Kf', doco· 'ator colon Garoe it.
D
................. !9!ill ........ ,
........... ~... _ ..
""• big 14 OL bag of Mlh, crisp borbe-
cu• diips or the dellclovt plain potato
chips.
Sttom "91'1t top for cool ironing, Adi1.1•to·
ble tubular legs. non·'1tp ca•ttti.
,,.,.,,. •. P•tl •1141 Cover ht .• , •• 1.27
BIG·PACK PAPER PLATES
3 Ooys 49c
5'iper lOCkount pock of 9'' white pop1r
plcrtet: .•. for portie1, go1he ting1.
Pl•t• Meltl•r•, Pkg. • •••••••• ,,,72c
FLUFFY TERRY TOWELS
Your Choicef 2,ofl
Cotton ttrry both towels. 22x44". in either
"E ... x"' solid cqlor1 or "Holiday"' •tripe. '
W•1a. Cloth ••••••••••••••••• 16c -·
NYLON SHAG PILE RUGS
:J Uays 3.96 '
Nylon shog ........ 21 • .-...... bod<· i,,. OtcorotOf color11 oofd, rtd, ovococfo,
to,.m., bl'lt. Chotgt itl Sov9.
-,
'
•
FOAMING ralil Oil
Jo.,. 79c ..
6' OL foo .. ing bath olJ, COf11C.9ftfrcs"'411
wilh coco11ut oil. lave11d.,, -. •• Creo-.
Chorv• it. '.
JIGSAW PICTURE PUZZLE l
JDays 48Cf
Greal wl«tion of inlerloc.kin.9 jigsow pu1•
. tin, ~any different '\ct.!11'•· Hex.Ir• of pu1•
·rliftl;I FVnandchollenge, Chorge;t'.
, •
\
DISPOSABLE TUMBL~RS •
,o.,. 36C
(l .. t plcntic dispotabfe fl.IMbftn JO.Or.
1i1e cwps co.... i1t packogn of tw.nty,
Savel Cho1110 itl
3·PIECE BATHROOM SET '
30oys .2.96
Three·pieco set includ•s 20•320# rug,
~22" contour guard N9 ond lid co.w.
Nrfon cul IOop pil• in bright eolQn.
SPUN POLYESTER THREAD
3 Ooys 2 'j;~' ~, .
~pad, 2 wh;to, I Wadi,"°""· to -h spool. AllO 12-spoot podl.';o colon,
35 --hspool. S...t Chorpff • . , ........
I ..................... . .........
•
..
..
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'
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1·
fl DAILY PILOT WtdrtesdlY, Dtttmber 29, 1971 \
O'IN DAILY 10.10; SUNDAY 10·7 -QOSED NEW YEAR'S M AT 6 P .M, ---. .. ....
. :--. ADlv/llff .. S.S.IC-C...llfl .. S-.1.-........... c•o• .. ~.._ .......
After Christmas Discount:· Sale . . ~ . ' ..
Popularly Styled
DRESSES'
Reg. 6.78-10.88
End-of·year clearance! Get
dresses, pant dreues, pant
suit1 and en.sembles. Choose
from a vast selection of fabrics
and colors. Jr. petitie;
jr.; misse1'; women's. Charge
itl
Unlimited for Git/sf
FASHIONS
• Dresses, pant-dresses, blouses
•Slacks, sweaters, polos, slack·
seh, skirts .
•Robes, gowns, pajamas,
culottes ensembles and raore.
Sht' a1• S1•11t K m1rt-C~1ra1 it!
SUPER BB 11110 sac ' Reg. 92¢
'
Fashionable
COATS
R"'j 12.96~32.96
Coots and pant·coots galore!
Choose: ff.lfm·cl'.lar!(,~allec·
ilon al styl.S·bnd fabNcs'ln all th•· 1110St· stu.nnlng fashion
shades. High fashion at low,
low prices. Charge 11 now!
Men's and Boys' K marfQuality Full.Cut
COTTON UNDERWEAR
MEN'S TEE SHIRTS* MEN'S ATHLETIC BOYS' TEE SHIRTS*
011 BRIEFS SHIRTS OR BRIEFS
I !~3 I ~g~3 I ~g~3
Lang·wearlng, machln•washable briefs, tee shirts . and
athletic.shirts, fashioned out of soft, line. white combed
cotton. They afford yoo comfort, ease of movement. Boys'
briefs and tee shirts 8·16: Men's· briefs 30·42. Men's
. athletic and lee shirts S·M-L-Xt. Stock up now and sovel
;;;. • Llnltted t1U111tltr. Miii• Mid to dulm,
MEN'S STRAP &
BUCKLE snP-IN
o .. a.g.3.96 291
30ays0nlyl f
Comfort in wh.ots happening
in this Vinyl Crepe Sole Strop
& Buckle Step-in. Available
in Brown. Sizes 7-12.
WOMEN'S
SQUAW BOOTS
•••• 96 2aa
Women's Sueded leather
squaw boots have a padded
inner sole. Sand, black,
and chocolate. Sizes 5-10.
. _ ... _ ..
-~---~':".:::.~.::. w w __ _
.. ,_., __ w --... -----
BISiETBILL &OIL SIT
OurReg.4.97 3.9.7 11•11· 1.11
l·YOLT BlnERY
Reg. 97, JIC HlllD· WIRIER
Copper-clad •tffl ahot hy
CtoNfto"tl. Ha,.dy packa,
with aplll•ptoof d i1p•n1 ....
You ore 1ur• to make the goal wlth this batketboll ktt!
1he sturdy ond strong \linyl boll Is the official sb:e and
weight. Includes l 8"J13/8" no·lle 9001 and net. Sovel
Highest veloclt)' .22 1.ollber.
long rifle 1hell1 In handy
plastic cartridge holder.
Completely sealed in steel!
Spring lantern type. life·
preserving cddilive. Sova!
Reg. 73' 5 7c
Pocket·siz•. All chrome on
brossconstruction with
carrying bog. Charge it.
fU
Plll..ilt"t-'tll"'
.......... 111 ••
N 'tt" .... 111 , " 1111r1111
. Bl&·SAVINGS ON
FILI
MOVIE COLOR FILM
. 3 Days
Movie cartridge of Super
8 color movie film. Con
be used both indoors 'n
outdoors. 50 ft. Save! li.,, 1 O.trf
1•7
COLOR SLIDE FILM
3Doys
With Kl 35/20 you · 901
beautiful results. Shop at
Kmart foroll your photog·
rophy.needsand charge it!
137
COLOR PRINT FILM
3 D,ayr
print cortrldg• into your C Just drop the 126 color 7 7
camera, ond you're ready
to photogrGph!
BRING YOUR HOLIDAY FILM TO •,
KMART PHOTO-DEPT.FOR QUAL •
ITY DEVELOPING AT SAVINGS
SYLYllll
nPEI
llGICUIES '
114
Box of 3 cubes or :
12 flashes. Works :
I Ike magic without
ba!lerles, Save..
G-E
PROJECTIOI
UMPS
3 Days
Top sellers on mar·
ke! I Choose OAK,
DJL, DFN, OCH,
OJA, CZA, OFA,
DEK , DFW, CZX,
DAB, DEF or BVR •
SYLVANIA
FLASH CUBE 78c
3 cubos. 12
flashes.
'
Airstrip ·
Tien Up
In Cotton.
BAKERSFIELD (.\l>) -A
member ·of the Kem 'County
Crop Subsidy Committee has
admitted placing a small
au.trip Iii ibO <"!ton "!Mlt ..
sjde" prtgrain bu\ said he
avoided a ,-lolatlon because
,. e}lOOih land Jilreody bad •been
~removed from product.ion ..
~ Jack Frey ol !he Kem ~ ~ty Agriculture Stablliza.
g hon and Comervation Com-~ mlttee sold Tueoday he 'inter-·
preted federal regulations to
mean ~ could' set aside hi!
5.7-acre airport. used by crop
dusting planes.. ·
However, federal officials in-
vestigating reports of set-aside
violations in Kem County told
him an airport musb be tern-; .. Ji,;.<;~iiil
~rary to be eligible, and his
; ls a pennanent installation,
, .Frey said. L ..
1' essel Grounds in Harbor
<
DAILY PILOT JJ
San Diego Taxi· Drivers Strike
~onunion Firms Try to llaudle Traffic
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Taxb -. Db( made public.
were at a p<emlum today aa Picket llnet were honored by
the 9b''• small aonunlon com-Tellnlter Union mem)>en'who
Wt,. !lfl\llled to handle the ae;v,kO tjle llrm'• ~ <a~s.
oftrt'l6W .created by a drivers Moat of the!.veh.i"'ces were fdle
walk.but at San Diego Xellow Tuesday but the company used
Cab, lhe. supervisors and dispatchers to
Proapecta for an early 'set· put several dozen on the
tiement to the strike, which streell. Hil ton said they were
began Monday night in a con-hiring new drivers.
tract dispute, ~ere dim. AUensworth said the drivers
percent after more than all
monllui uperlence. Avtraa:e
earnings of a cab driver are
$100 a week, he aald.
Marty per&OM took buses or
were stranded In the rain
because of the strike. None of
tlie .other taxi.,companles has
mt\_re than 1.4 ·vehicles.
.\ tourist arriving at ttie
airPort looked at the rain, saw
there were no taxis waiting
and commented, "This' L! just
like New York."
No meetings were scheduled were asked for an increased
and Yellow Cab president J!iU percentage of the fares they
Hilton said the firm could not are allowed to keep, now 50
mate another offer until theJp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;m;
City Council acts on a rate
boost requested by the city's tut companies April 11.
Yellow Cab's 470 driven
called the first major 11trlke
against the company slnct
1939 after a 184-144. vote to re-
ject the latest contrBict pro-
posal.
Union president Ed
Allensworth said the drivers
are seeking increases in sal-
ary, pension funds, fringe
benefits and pey guamitees.
Details of Yellow cab's offer
HAPPINESS IS NEW YEAR'~ EVE
AT THI
VOLCANO . HOUSE
Complete packa9• inc:lu~es:, Dinner, BottJ• of Cham-
pagne, ~erty Favors, Entertein ment encl Oenclhg~with
GERMAINE & THE YELLOW BRJCK ROAD .
$15.00 ~=~·'·
Reservation• please -557·7057
1400 PALISADES ROAD, COSTA MESA
'" •NlflWA • UIH P"""lture
t: : · }Jut Frey w8.s aaved from a t: .•noocompliancecitation ~ he<au!O he kept more than the ~ required 20 pereent of his land Battered fishing boat Yankee Trader, owned by
~ out of production. Frey said he Sherman Miller of Portland, Ore., rolls on side in ~ had 232.4 acres set aside and rain-tossed surf off Terminal Island in Los Angeles ~ needed 0.,, .. 193.4 acres. Harbor. Crewmen failed to stm engine while drag-
vessel into rocks. Load of lobster is presumed ruin·
ed by diesel oil, and Miller estimates loss at $70,oo'o.
Coast Guard said wreck rer!'esents no threat to
navigation.
~ . ., ..... ..
&% ~ ·;~1 i..F-LRd_~_· _,
NEW
IN .
~ uv ging anchor, and high winds rammec;l 136-foot f. "Even "1th the airstrip out, -=-=----'----"""-Ir===~=~~~~=====================: L:AGUNA
BEACH .~ he bad more than enough,"
:.;; said Lee Siddell, state ex· ~.. ecutiye ASCS direelor.
Another county ·b>mmittee
..., .... , member, Ali.!ter F. Lltue of
I Wasco, announced earlier he
will not participate in county
: .committee activiUes during
:the over· a 11 investigation
,._ beeause a payment reduction
~ was ordered on hi.! subsidy.
Bill Cuts
Welfare
Numbers
By CARL INGRAM
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A
top Reii:gan administration of-
ficial bas disclosed that the
r;: Investigators al!o ch,rged t:: earlier that the set aside of
~·! Jack Sill or Bakersfield, a
::; member of the state ASCS
:f! committee, violated the rule t!: requiring that set 8.sides equal :.f• the productivity or land on ~.._ which cotton is grown. new state Jaw extending legal
Land set' aside on a farm adulthood to 18--year~ld! Is ex-
partly owned by Kenneth E. peeled to bump' about 29,000
~ Frick, federal AS C S ad-young aduJts off welfare. ·
'-• ministrator, was cited for fail-State Social Welfare Direc-
:.: ing to adequately meet the •) equal productivity rule. tor Robert Carleson said the
I. ! The county c 0 m m j t t e e savings total about $30 million
. ordered a $2)57 payment in sta_te, local and federal
reduction against the Frick funds.
holdings which had a 1971 cot-.J Tbe new Hage of majorlt.y"
ton subsidy totaling $94,110. law .. which will take effect
he~~c~r :~~'::t ~n:;a;t_ iB.rly bl Mar~ reduces the
fi ce, has contended many of leg~ a~e of adu1tlx>od in
the violations appear to stem c:i.1iforrua from 2~ to l~ for
from o!nce clerical omissions. vi~tu~lly everything except
S But Drennan added that drinking. :~ gome !and UnsUitable for A1m~t overlooked In the ~ .. farming, possibly including lo~g list of state statutes that
t~ desert acreage apparenU)' will be rewritten by the new ~ has been used is' set aside. law ·is the controversial Aid to
~ Families wi~ Dependent ~ Childre~ progr8m.
~ Carleson sakL that until ~ M D • Tuesday he wlsn•t certain
1:1! an ies hhnself how the law wilt affect
~: the welfare eJigibU:.ty of young
&" I Fle people. :s:i 11 ece An analysis of the "age of
LONG BEACH (UPI) -lawyers in Carleson's depart.. ~, • majority" law prepared by
A man wit.i a heart ail-ment indicated that generally
ment died about an hoot an 18-year-old no longer will
after two thlevcs posing as be considered a "dependent"
underrover police robbed child and ther'efore cannot be
him in a darkened alley. eligible for AFDC.
Before he died, Ralph ~-r Gordon. 51. managed to ...-.~ iminary figures com-
tell officers TUesday nit?ht piled by the department. show
how the men rifled his that the new law bas the effect
tJOCkets after bull.ving him of eliminating entirely the
into a nearby alley. He family welfare grants of 10,000
sitld when he shouted for persons in the 18-1~20-year~ld
helo, they fled. . category who now receive
Gordon collapsed mo-AFDC.
ments later telling hi.<1
story and two policemen
administered heart mas-
sage at the: scene to re--
vive him. An hour later
he was dead at St. Mary's
Hoopital.
Carleson said grants to >P-
proximately 19,000 o th e r
families would be reduced.
This is because an l~year-old
may have younger brothers
and sisters who will still
quallly the family f0< AFDC,
but at a lwer leveJ.
Reagan Aid.e Sees
No Tax lricrease
By DAVID JENSEN
SACRAMENTO (UPI)
Gov. Ronald Reagan will pro-
~ pose hiS first $7 billlon-plus
' budget next year but his top
:. ,. fiscal adviser says Califor-~-. nians will not face another tax
increase.
Verne Orr, state finance
director. said Tuesdl\v that
anticipated genUat r u n d
revenue for ISZ.:73 ts upeeted
to swell by $400 mlllion,
boosting thi! year's $&.a billion
• budget to at least $7.2 million
~; and probably more.
· Orr allo ukl ln an interview
• that he expects a good year
: econoqdcally Jor California ln
: . tm with tilt only dtm.apot.Jn
aerospace employment.
• According to Orr, an ad-
~ dltional 51000 aert>Bpact -jobs
' are expected to be lost during
Orr predicted that during
1972:, an election y ea r ,
legislators will "shy away"
from anJ1 bills requiring an in-
crease in taxes.
"I do not see any tax in-
crease next·year," he said, ad-
dtng that there may be tu
"shifta" in an eftort to finance
schools in ine wlth August's
Stale Supreme c..nt dedaion.
The mAin todicatcn for a
bright t<'MOlllk: plcturs, Orr
said, were upsurges in sales,
income, bank and corporation
taxes.
He said that because of
atrOng federal controls over
the economy, "it appear we'll
have cootrolled inflation'' of
about 2 to 3 percent • year.
According to Orr, t h e
revenue generated by a
stronger economy plus • fiscal
cushion crurtd by a $501
million payroll witllholding tax
package enacted this ye.ar
For Top Sports Coverage
Read the DAILY PILOT
GOLDEN CITY OF LAGUNA BEACH .
GOLDEN CITY OP CALIFOllMIA INC.
ISIOA SO. COAST HIGHWAY
LAGUNA IU.CH '
OPEN DAILY, 8:3.0 • 9; SUN., 9 · 6
• Ra·dial Tire Headquarter
FREE
lnstallalio• &:
Tire Rotation , ·
BA'lTERIES
,.... .. 1 Her.';. .... -.,..,.
,...,..,. ti.. i.ol>"fl Iott
ll•li•,• it or •ol ••• A.
fllff IE,lACEMENT
GUA.llA.NTEE•, with
lONG lASTING ,OWfll-
IZED PlATfS & A.MPEllf Hours. And 10 top ... ..,.
thi .... Mark c.J'-'°""''in <H• to! 11qwol
•r 1t1p••ior lo 11•w cor
lllo..dordol O.:.n'I M left
_,;..the cold. AU P'OP"'lor
1 l ...,11 .. '..ti IP'Oilobl•. &....;;~~
3 Year Guarantee
88
, .. _,/ft ..... -C.11.
All 8.atte')' p,; •••
Witli EltM>n~•
SAVE 1 7.80 .
Alignment
95e
With 2 Ttte Pwrchose fr.ill
$i1e U.S. Canirteh1d9$: Car•
reefing cmt.r, a1mb•r, toe.
i., whea HC•UOJJ"· lnclud-
lng air conditioned OCU$ &
eril rte•'""''"''' •r IOAO JfSJ M•GAllHf
Rel(.
•7,95
•
C'.'i:N DAILY 8:30-9, SUN. 9·6
.90G78fl5
, ... .,_
bet..+ Sl,4l f..t.f,._ To• ........
Fa•trali
78 Serie•
1f l'ull 4 Pl11 WHITEWALL Tubeless
* MOU SUPERB TIRES FOR THE BUbGEl' MINbEb WHO MU~.,. INSIST ON
QUAlJ'IT A CbMES IN VARIOUS SIZES AND TYPES.
7 75 15 tillr/1-t 7.3Sx14 fho:til/l( llr&/1!; Jo"ii.· t"i~· 7.75xl4 ~·iln , 7.00xl3 8.25xl5 , 8.55x14 r;.,, 8.85xl5 9.00xlS J x3 :• 8.llfji;s~" 8ix9 95" U12 i9i
fodt.+t1 .14i.s2.N '"· f•. Too ... IUCIWAU $J.9S UIS
3005 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA
CORNER of BAKER and HARBOR -PHONE 557·8000
GARDEN GROVE I ANAHEIM-BUENA PARK I
14040 Broolchunt-.530-3200 4962 Lincoln Blvd.-IU.5SSO
CLOSED NEW YEAR'S.
FULLERTON
1321 Eucli6-87o.G100
the coming year, mainly In
Southern California.
Otherwise, he said, employ-
mtnt will be "very good.·• should http stave ofr any tax !•-----------------------------.,=== lncrcnse.
I
JI DAILY ~ILOT
For The
Record
Di••olutlon•
Of Jffarriqe
OIPCILUTIDM 0 1' MAtllAt•
"llMI 0.-W 1• Hin_, Dlnakl Mutttll 1...cl Strtll J,
CllU, lllc.llard Dar,.11 ll'ld Lort'1I.,.
... nclrr.r1a. Ill, ,.1trl<l1 "· 111111 Mlr11 Colbtrl, Jr .. C.tti.rh .. LM Mii wm,_
lhlHlll
lu'1&11rt, Molt' M, Ir.I llOlllld L. l1·~n011, LUI H1m1nclu -.rid Cor...I~ .. ,,.
M1Uoo;f, J.,.c1 Lwan .I. O.rl1~ ,, ....
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S...ld..,, 0.11 M" '"" C1rt Efwlf'f llludl. NfftC'I' £,Ind Wly,. N,
l"'JUoft, Rodfrld! H. Ind GrtlcY E•~ F11Ml1, Dom. J. Incl lltw It. ,,_,_,,..,CO.... incl Fr11>eea
('a;rnl'I'. a.rt1a11 C1r.t ""' WlllM' 0w.~ ...
C1rs..eo, Mld'IHI ..... 5111111
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Jow:1. J1 Ann 111d Gf...,,. A. Jo.'~'°"• Mar111r1t s..,. 11111 J1,.... . ..,,
G1rcl1, S11>C1r1 Ann ~ Jdlfl wnn-
H1ri.v. c i.r1 J1M ind llDlltrt G-
Ht'*s. l"tlrltlt A. Incl ,,.rt J.
l..::lctt, Jr.. 1t1r1n 1'1tr1c11 t nd
llldltrd S1111rl
•rMIY, Ptlrklt A. tNI lttry I(.
Ttllll'lt ll. JO\ICI I, Ind "tlltllf l , flowl.,, ~Mn IC, t nd MlllOll D.
Sl'11Mt, ~MVIWI M-. Ind J ......
Ltot1tnl
Space for Schools
Pair Push Land Project,s ·.
'
SANTA ANA -Two Santa
Ana city councilmen have
be<n named to draft • policy
which will require developen
to provide land for schools.
Attorney Jerry Petterson
and &alto• )lay VIila -1 selecl<d by thdr fellow counj
cilmen !or the job. They will
meet with clty and achoo! ad·1
mlnistrators to attempt to
adopt a local policy slmllar to
one in effect in San Diego.
Councilman J. O a: d • n
Markel, a retired o:>ntractor,
objected to the move, sug-
gesting that the school board
should take care of "Jt.s own
knitting."
11No developer is ~oing to
· jeopardize his own interests
by not making sure of spice
for schools," Markel -asserted.
Vice Mayor Wade Herrin
agreed partially, adding, "the
San Diego policy ii too
vague·.'1
Jut month to ask the city to
require subdivlden to donate
land for schools.
The San Joaquin School
District board ft wmUinl
wltb the same problem ln tb1
fast growing Jrvlne, El Teo
and Mlssion Viejo areu. ~
' Peppen.C>ine Univenf?ify
ORANGE COUNTY RESIDENT CENTER
COSTA MESA HIGH SCHOOL
£VENING CLASSE5-BEGIN JAN .3
Buslntu, Sociology, Psychology,
Pollet Mln1~nt.
EVENING GRADUATE CLAS~ES
BEGIN FEB. 7
Educ1tion.
-
•
ALL COURSES MAY BE 'APPLIED TO :
L1nt1t'lffl, Donnt end l"liml II, H
ktl!1r, Mlct!NI Ou1ne Ind Ketlllt anna Discusses Communists
The proposed policy relates
largely to the South Santa Ana
a fast developing area just
north of Costa Mesa which,
under present building plans is
becomingo v ercro wd e d ,
peoplewlse, councilmen have
been told.
DEGREES. . -
M1r\1
A<11m1, ll•mona Jo end Leul1 r:, C-. Geno S. •nd Auth M.
...... ..,., CMI Eltn.t Ind lloberl lffll•
N1ct1hMlm. GKWve Lto ind C•rol LM
Clllfll_, Parlcle L" Ind Tllom11
Mtlvln
H1Wkn, Ji!f<I H. ll'ld G-1-l1rold
Lut1, Jud"r L~nn Ind w1m1m AIC111rd
8urM. Ll/ld1 A. end Dwl9111 E.
lUfO, Ji•lrlcl1 M. ind EdW1r' A.
Str111U. Mlctl1.. Edwin end J1dllt
'"" caniM11, Ev1 L •nd Jol!n
Gf"Kt .... Doo.>tll" Phrno 1/ld .J.o111 Marie
H14a. 0 11¥1 Mery Ind HHm1n lt1U1
SI-• ...,nit Jt1n 11'1d L1rry Don
9rwc:tmll\,. Norbert WllU-ind ,_., ...
wu-. O...ld ••• Jt. 11111 Heltn "· Stlllfrl1a. ChHIH II. end 51ndr1 J .
Ak1r1, sn.ron S\111-11'1d CfltrlM 111 ... llul1, 11!1ron end ._...,...
McCO!OVlllf, Dore Jor1ne fiM Jlflll ·-Couttff", Dint M. M. 1nd J°""
~....,,,., Dotllfl ... M. 1nd Seymour
Mat-, k l rffl E. I nd 1(11111 A.
Waite. lllYfflY AM 1/ld Orllt !I Burton
Trefrtl\en, Jon M. ll'ld S\11111 C.
Co~. Olel1 J1nlu Ind llobfft L ..
Rodman, 5•~ llrt/ldl C1rol1 ""' J er-
rold L ... M
Wll•rr. Thomtl L. '"" !.tllrl., M.. Wint. 0-141 J. Ind llobtrl 0 .
i..rv1, Lindi 11. I nd Fr1ncltc:o A.
W1ln1u, V1ronk:1 Jo Anrw 111d •••nd
H1rm1n. JCll'(I II. I nd Al ndtll W,
Gower, J,,....,, A,. Ind M1vl1 A..
Wrlolll, Llno1 Jnn t nd A.llttd Gllllll
O'Nul, Jol'ln Ind JtMI
Wlllcff, Frlldl'IQ Thclnwo1 Mid Tlf'ftl '· 0.n!tla, O.vld L. Inf J.-1 M.
ltunkt, Ltwrtnc• J. 1ftllll l11CHl1 T,
Wtlli. PnrlCWI L., Jr. i nf Carol T.
Minn, Mlr!t end illlobtrt W. Sink, Fffll!Nl Hom" Jr, enf Carmen
JQHP111M
K11!rcrff, Joan A. end Wllllam Ciftr"
Qulnlt n, Nll'ICY leuh1 and Jittrldt
Tllomll
•rltfl; T...,... Ind illtOMld 0Hn
Tutllt. Slnfllfl Wt ... 1'19 Ind Su...,, Jlll'lt
Edmond-. 11a1m L" i nd J•r
Frtclrlc
ltoll«'lt. P'atrlu J•ntll ~ Sl•nltr ·-Girdner. Olborth A.. end Jdl!t J.
SNwt, Mld'lell W. anll lltYultr J,
• -. M ... rllce T. tl'ld flllll• Ill. W11vrr, Lllll111 J . ellll wm11m C. "*' Mt lolll' t .. 11111 •r11et M'!'l'Oll CM11111tn. F•r• Mtrl1 Md Klnnlllt ·-· •urt, J.c:ll a. t nd Atk:t
Ur•, JGl'ln A. Ind M ... rnt L. Coo11111o. J-UOl'i'fll Anft .fncl J ...... ..... GI-, LHl!ef> AM encl Jtmtt Oavld
Sehr)'"· Kenn J. •nd ...... c .
Death Noti<'e•
MAIDIL
Stll ... ~MMcltl. !Oii """lffl, COl'Olla de! Mar. I• Ill Cl"tlt, Dec:.,,,t>tr 11, lt111 Survl lt'f' rne!MI'", Mn. Luer Ht rrl1,"' N-.cw1 a..dl1 fll!Mr, Mr. Wlllltm H.
M1..stl, Ill' C1Y1M 1 btolhtr. MlctlHI W.
lo\tldel, of W11t Covlntl ••tndoart""I Mr. 9lld Mr1. J. P'. s~. C-dt Mir. Strvlcn wlll tit M id Ttlu....cla"f, t .. M. ..tcl!!c VI .... CtltHI. lntffm..,t, •1ctflc View Mtmo!'l11 Park. ,.,cnlc 'II..,.. Mortwry, OlrlCtors.
NICHOLS W!lll1m H. Nlc11ol1. "" 4 . ol 11•1 :=.-o!::m~· ~ ... (~\tf1.M!~l~:J' :~
Vl'lft, M'!_rto; brotl'llrl (lydt Hlchol1, QI Tt•ll. MrVICff, Fr dll'. ID ... M. lell a roadwt"f Cl\epel, wl h or. /''"'' l !t ln ot!k lllllM. lfllffm.,.I, '-wit le Vtltr1n1
Ctmtltn. WtSI LOI "-""'"· 81U 8rOldw•"f Mor111ttY, Olrtct~1.
WILLIAMS
Or. Dttwt 8rMllt'1 Wlllllml. "" lt1.ol 2111 Ocllf' lllYd., CorOnt <l~I Mu' ll•lllY• _, tlvtblind ol Olde A.. Wllt'9ml1 lo¥1119
f1tlllr ol Ha,.,....n K. Htndrk kMn; 9r1n4ftllllr ot Certlt H-rk•H'ft. P rlYIM \ef"Vlc.. ....,. htld 1aor•· WednttdaY In 11'11 o.tPll tf fll.I 11 !1, •llMOlh 1AMt1H1n>. Allthtlm. R_.... &rl llCff 1" ·;;11 namt ma ... lie medt 11 Ille (O\H'lh HHrl Anodt ll .. .
ARBUCKLE I< SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
U1 E. 17lb: SL, Costr Meu -• BALTZ BERGERON
FUNERAL HOM E
Cortina del Mar 173-9451
Costa Me11 54g..uic • BEIL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broadway, Cotta Meaa uwm • Mc<JORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
17tS Lapna C1nyon Rd. ·-15 • PAClflC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARlt
C.....W, Momuu,
--~lewllrt.< ~ -· Calllonfa 14Ul• • PEEJ: FAMILY
OOLONUL Ft1NEIW.
HOME 'llll llella , ... W'--.WPS • IMITRS' MOllTUARY ., ........
Ruliqtoo-
&JIU
U.S. R<!p. Richard T. Hanna (D-Anaheim) paid a
tourtesy call Monday on Mexican President Luis
Echeverria and Predicted Communist regimes in
Cuba and Chile wouldn't last five years. Hanna is
on an official tour of Mexico.
The San Diego plan states
that "developers must set
forth in detail measures which
will be taken to Insure that
needed public services are
provided. . _ . "
location: I mile 1outh cf the S.n Oi190 Fre1way on
Fairview
INFORMATION: '17141
1714) 737-4399
5'46-3911 or P•ul Buc.klty1
UC Irvine Bar her Sane~ Auto Death
Trial Slated
Fully Accr•dit•d hy fht
Sc.hocl1 ind Colle9•1
Economist
Gets Grant
ffiVINE -A UC Irvine
economist has been awarded
$33,113 by the Es.so Education
Foundation of New York to
study the cost of gaming
simulation facilities for the UC
system.
Dr. Robert Bt ckner,
economist in the UCI Public
Policy Research Organiiatlon
(PPRO), will determine the
"current state of the art" of
gaming situation studies in
California.
The "gaming" referred to b:
not bridge or monopoly. Gam-
ing in scientific circles refers
to the setting up of fictitious
real life situations and may
employ the use of a computer
to predict outcomes if certain
events occur .
War games are a familiar
ex.ample, but the procus is
also used in situation studies
of po I i tic 1 , international
diplomacy or di 1a1ter
preparedness, a university
spokesman said.
The ES9CI grant will pay ,.,.
the design of a mu1ti-prpose
simulation study facility for
the UC system. It could
become a c e n t r a l clear-
inghouse for information in
simulation and gaming, be a
laboratory for game research
and the development of new
"games" and act as a center
for training programs ln game
theory.
The Esso Education Foun-
dation is supported by income
from the Standard Oil Com-
pany of New Jersey and its
domestic affiliates such as
Humble Oil and Refining Com-
pany.
Coast Firm
In Lawsuit
Over Loans
SANTA ANA -A Newport
Beach firm and its two prin-
cipals have bun named es
defendants in two Orange
County Superior C o u r t
lawsuits which allege the non-
payment of $50,000 in loans.
Thomas P. Atkinson of
Newport Beach asks that the
Spectrum organization and
controllers Ronald Blevins and
Lewis Hemphill be ordered to
repay 11 $20,tXX> loan which he
has taken over from the
Newport National Bank.
Mrs. Mary C. Axelson
demands in a lawsuit filed
Tuesday that Sptelrum of l~li
Placentia Ave ., be ordered to
repay a $30.000 loan she made
to lhe company a year ago.
She also accuses Spectrum
and its principals of violating
state law by announcing its ir ..
tention to sell stock in the
company. She claims the firm
did not obtain the required
permit from the California
Corporations Commissioner.
Grant Given
To Hospital
ANAHEIP.t -The Anaheim
Momoria1 Hospitol Guild hal
made a $t06,000 pledge to th<
bolpitel'• acute inten&ive cart
........ wtllch Is ocheduled to
be opened Augui;t, 1972.
The money from the pledge
will be "'ed to equip the oiglll-bod pulmoalry tnttnaive ..,,
unit wtthlo the «nt«.
Tes ts Ordered for Star
The Santa Ana Unified
School District board voted
BOOKS!
BOOKS!
BOOKS!
SANT A ANA -Barber
Ricky Star has been ordered
to undergo psychiatric testing
in Santa Ana municipal court
action that will delay his prcr
secution on charges of barber-
ing without a license.
Ju_dge Joh n Flynn ordered
the study to determine if Star,
38, is capable of understa11ding
the nature of the charges
agalrus t him and if he can
assist in his own defense. He
ordered Star's return Feb. 24. ·
The oolorful Garden Grove
haircutter has been involved
in a series o[ civil and
criminal actions over the past
two years with his alleged
fa ilure to observe minimum
haircut prices set by the state.
His license was suspended
SANT A ANA -A man ac-
this year following allegations cused of manslaughter, hit and 'Small Guys'
Get Counsel
run and drunken driving after
that he fa iled to disinfect the his camper allegedly struck
implements he used in his and killed a Huntington Beach
barber shop. Star was charg-girl on her way to Bolsa Chica
ing 99 cents for haircuts at a State Beach has been ordered
time when the state minimum to face trial Jan. 19 in Orange SANTA ANA -Owners, County Superior Court. managers a n d prospective was $1. owners of small businesses
A judge issued a bench wail Judge Byron K. McMillan may now obtain free manage-set the trial date for Lee rant for Star two weeks ago Sherman Hall, 381 of Buena ment counseling from retired
when the barber failed to an-p 1 t" H 11, executives through the federal ,, ark, a ter accep mg a s Small Btl3iness Administra-
pear in court for a hearing on plea of innocent to multiple
the charges. charges filed Aug. 27. tio~he service is provided by
Lawmen said Star challeng-Police said Hall lost control volunteers from 10 a.m. to 3
ed seve ral officers to come of his vehicle and struck two p.m. in the Old Courthouse
and pick him up in what they girls near the entrance to the Building, 211 W. Santa Ana
described as a cat and mouse Bolsa Chica beach. Blvd., Santa Ana.
game between police and the ll";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_;;;;;;_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
barber. 11
Star finally checked In at JARDIN D' ALLAH
~=i~~~::!i ~i~n~i~af1t~i~~ FRENCH ANO MIO-EASTERN CUISINE
arrost him. NEW YEAR'S EVE SPECIAL
Carl Downs Chosen
Foll 10.c ..... Dloo.,.-$10 Per p.,....
h•hring 6 ovnn•t Delic•Ci•• Fror11 At•vnd Tli• Werld
Sf•rtin9•t1:00 P,M, OFF For Top Fire Post
Ntw Appeorlft9-ADNA.N AND HIS HAlllM DA.NCIU
M11 f•r Chef -lucky Pitrr•
105 S. OLA VISTA-SAN CLEMENTI
IESEIYATIONS---49241001
ORANGE -Deputy Orange
County Fire Warden Carl
Downs, 49, has been named
aclitig chief of the joint state..
county fire services.
He succeeds State Forest
Ranger and Coun ty Fire
Warden Elmer F. Osterman
who resigned, effective Tues--
day midnight, because or poor
health.
Osterman is critically ill In
St. Joseph Hospital in Orange.
He has been incapacitated
since he undtrwent surgery
early this month.
Last October, the veteran
county fire 5ervice officer,
who has served for the past 37
years, was honored by the
U.S. Forest Service i n
Washington D.C. ce remonies
where he received the Smokey
the Bear silver statuette from
former Se cre tar y of
Agriculture Clifford Hardin.
Osterman was the fir st
Californian to receive the
coveted award and the second
go vernment employe to be so
honored .
On Dec . 9, supervisors voted
to name the county's proposed
fire training ctnter, the Elmer
F. Osterman Fire Training
Academy. It will be built on
property adjoining the County
Industrial Farm near El Toro.I~==================~
Osterman has been the
county's chief lire witrden ,and
state forest ranger since 1~.
Downs, who will serve until
a permanent successor to
Osterman is named by the
state, has been on the local
staff since 1951. He has been
in charge of the joint state-
county fire protection agre~
menl covering a 11 unin·
corporated areas and ail con-
tract cities.
Downs has a rtcord of 30
years service with the U.S.
and state forest services.
Villa Park
Taps Mayor
VILLA PARK~ction
company manager Do n a I d
Winn is the new mayor of
Villa Park.
Winn, 45, was named by his
fellow councilmen to succeed
Mayor Fred Knudsen who i.s
leaving the city.
Winn's appointment Is
scheduled for confirmation at
the city council'• Jan. 3
meeting.
WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY
COLLEGE OF LAW • in
ANAHEIM AND SAN DIEGO
now 1cceptin9 mlft ancl wom.n who •N ellbtr:
e nw 11 w11h I YMn1 •f MC:eptMle ctll.,e
uwditl 160)1 .,
• ..... , 11 ...., hrn -'91'"4 '"' ..,,...., flt.
l•lltdv•I 11tllit'( ttlt "'lUh"•ltnf flf .._.. Ctl
Ito tltltnllln ... •y lt1ll
Th• J.O. er ll.9. degree c:tn bit .med In " ,...n of puf·tim•
cl111ew 3 d'"" par "'"IQ J houu P'r d•Y•
Apply Now for February 7th
Day or Evening Classes
WRITI Ol PHONI POI. INfOlMATION Cl CATAlOGUE
800 South Brookhunl
An•haim 92804
17141 635-3453
Til9' deg"" of J.O. or tLI. wlll Ji. tonmr.d UJ:1011 gr.d111tlC111
from tt... 4 yo.r progr11n of ~ Coll.;1 of Llw, op«ltln; Ul'ld.r
Ch.uttr of rh• Sute of Ctllfomle.
Gl'Mlvtl~• .. , ellglbl• to hi;. the c.nfotri11 Shi. ltr &tmlnlT'lon.
Al'rlOYID fOl YmlANS
BOOKS
All Popular Best
Sellers In Hard Bound
and PAPERBACKS!
SHOP EARLY
For
BEST SELECTION
POSTERS
GREETING CARDS
GIFTS 40%~
BOOKSTALL
333 E. 17th St, Costa Mesa
{lehtncl The Pancake Hou1eJ
Mon.•Frl. 10 to 9, Sat. 10·6
Only Coast & Southern offers savers all three:
• 6% two lo five year guaranteed certificates.
' • Saturday Service. •The Insiders Club.
Effective 5.00%~5 .13o/o Passbook . No minimum.
Annual 5.75%-5.9211/o One Year Cert ific ate $1,000 Minimum.
Earnings 6.00%-6.18o/o Two to Five Year Cert111cates $5,000 Minimum.
Up to 90 days 1oss of interest on amounts withdrawn
before maturity on all certif icate accounts.
The Insiders Clu b: A new way to beat inflation. Us membership card
permits you to buy nearly everything you need from the finest closed·
door showrooms at substantial savings-appliances. furniture, stereo
equipment, sporting goods, draperies and much, much more •
You can even buy cars at the. "fleel'' price and mobile homes and
motorcycles at substantial savings. The Insid ers Club also provides
big discounts on tickets to sporting and entertainment events .,.
plus a whole lisl of free services: safe deposit boxes, money orders,
travelers checks, notary SeNices and the use of document
duplicating equipment.
Membership requirement ror savers-$2 ,500 minimum balance .
Coast borrowers now receive associate memberships entitling them
to a ll outside referral services. As k about joinlna: at any Coast office •
1
MAIN OfflCl: ttll 6 HUI, Lot.Mr-1H • 623·1351
O!Mrofflcn
WILSMllll. 11 OltAMM[ltC'f !"LACI.: S9ll WlllhlN •lvd., L.A. o lll-126S
'L.A. Cl¥1C C[NTl.ltr 2nd a. eroedwe, • 62g..1102
HUNTINGTON a fACH1 91 Humlnl\On C•nlor • (1141197-1041
•SANTA ANA LOAN Sl!IVtCl AOlNCT:
1905 N. M1l11 St. • (714) S47·t257
SANTA MONICAi 711 Wll1hlre llVCL • 3934741
SAN JilOltO:
10111 & Pit.Ille • 131·2341
WlST COVINA: [e1lltt1d Stlopph11Ctr.•331·2201
JiANOllAMA CITY:
861& Vi n Nun Blvd.• 892·1171
T,t,lllZANA.:
18751 Vt ntufa ISIVd. • 3451611
LONC llE.ACH:
3rd & l ocull • 4l7·741l
CAST LOS ANG[l[St
Ith & SOio • '66-4510
Dl,t,MOND •Ai1111
321 Ol•molld B•r ISlvd .• (7\4) 595 7$~5
Dally Hour1-I AM to 4 PM Open S1turd•Y• -9 AM to 1 PM
•Not Opon Stturcl111
. COAST .
AND SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS
~ '• . ' "' " . . •
' I " '
13· or. SIZE .. Aqua Net
HAIR SPRAY Recular, Super, Unscented & Moisture Shield.
11 oz. AEROSOL
Barbasol
SHAVE CREAM
21 oz. DISINFECTANT
Lysol
SPRAY
••
•
PLAsr1c Barware
for the New Year't Party
"Snowflake" 9oz. lOoz .
High Quality crystal Old . Size
clear tumhlers that Fashioned Mi-llall
will not crack or shat· gee 1 19 ter under normal use.
l1tPaksof25 • ·
. . • . • .
Pik 01 89 Pak ol 10-to oz:
10 oz. Clear 25 c 3 1 00 Hi-Ball Re1. 9Bc PIKI •
m Pakol& 79c .._,, 4 oz. Chamoagne hr. lie
" , • : 9 oz. Old Pat 112s 59c
Fashioned Re1. Jsc ·
SUPIRLECTRIC limed tested •.• for warm comfort
on the coldest days!
Fan Heater.
With exclusive Venturi de-
sign attractively designe d
to blend with any back-
ground. Safe even if acci-
dentally tipped over •
(#600) 7 .88 . AUTOMATIC
· Dual Instant Heat
Instant Heat
Oelu~e tan forced, tip -over
switch witfl chmme sefety
i~:d/ .. yl 0 49 handle.
(#627) •
• W_•_dn_•~-q~,_D_K_1m_M_r _2'~·-1~_1~~~$~~-=DM~L~Y~P=IL~OT-'"J~3: .. '
2'12 or. SIZE 10 LB.11 or. FAMILY SIZE
Old Spice Tide
Stick Deodorant DETERGENT
" 53c
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Jj( QAILV PILOT ;! W-. O..-btr f'• 1'171
Pitzer Given
· 15,000 Grant Quake Biggest State Story
:• ... .. Red Chin~ Calle~ Top Story of ~ 971
The James Irvine Foun-
NEW \'ORK (AP) -Red U.S. ping pang team¥ !hi! lop and tbe!T naLlooal and in· (5) Ule successful Apollo 14 dation or Newport Beach has
Clllllll wu the biB story of news story ol 197J~ , lernaUona1 •effect! the. No. 2 and Apollo 15 moon landings ; awarded a $151000 matching
JIJ1. accerdinl te editon aod Perha,ps tbe.'eloltsipificarit 1:1tory. ol 1971. (J) violence •11t Attica prison gr.ant to Pitier College in
,... dJ.recton rJ. Allociated aspect of tbe JW China' JA«-1 The ~ ttversed his results in the loss of 43 lives; 'Claremont to support a pro..
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The second top story ol tho year.
Los Angeles earthquake on and gave third place to the
Feb. 9 was voted tbe top California Supreme court's W.
California IMWt' -1&ory of 1971 validation of local property
io a poU of ed.Jtors coOOocttd ,tau:. tor school support.
g...Q)arles -a~~ three women are found ~
or tho Tat .. LaBlanca mun!~
and sentenced ,. deatll. ;;;; 7-Jlarr)' Bridg& and • ,.. Preu member newspapers was its aamtssion to \))e ecommk: policy Aug. 15 when gram which sromotes better
llDd radio and ie.ievlskm 6la· 1\lnited Nations., When U.'N. he banned worker raises and (7) the Vietnam war, troop understanding between the
tilm no voted for the top 10 fdelegates votiea Oct,. 25 to i+ ordered prlcee of manufac-witbdrfl.Wals. and tbe election urripus and the community.
..... ol the year! 'ulit Red aim. and '."OUSt lured. .. to remain where · of President Nguyen Van t The grant, to be matched by
WWt more tlw1 )0 stories on Taiwan, they enabled Rtd they were. Thieu; (8) the school busing college tunds, will aid the ~ ~ ballot to choose from, the China to bleP ~gh a 2Q-The othlr"top storib of 1971 i88tle; (9) a California earth-eram, called the Alliance, In
by The Associated Press. Here ls bow the editors
Of tlM! 30 editors .. aurveyed, rated other stories:
13 said the earthquake that 4-Soledad Brother George
claimed 65 lives: was the moet • JaCbon arid five others lose
important news event and six: .theit lives in an alleged escape
Jongshoremen's unlon ~
down West <;out port! !or lM
days until they are ordJ
back to WC¥"k. _.+,
a-Fifty die ln a two-pl
crash over the San GabrW.: newsmen voted Red China's ear barriet. * • 1 • IS voted by ~ the newsmen quake claims more than 60 encouraging practical working
admlu.lon to the Unlted Na· J President: ffiioP also llprtd, werf : ('3' the ~tagon papers live&; ,end, (10) the Senate Telationship between the busi-UOns""""l~Presldent Nlxon•s plan 1i1JJ!ominentty'ib~the !J'C(lDd tbp aod the r.esulliqg light over v.ot ~own the Nixon ad-•ness world Md the ,campus
to vwt that oountrY. and a story as .u.e,. neWsment ~ted pUblleaUon: (4) ifie conviction• m· ation's-· foreign a id throogh an intem program,
voted II second. atlemfl at san Quentin.
. Editors • s e I e ct e d the 5-,0ll spills#into San Fra'n-
d1scovery of 25 bodJts Jn cisco Bay iollowing the col·
orchards along 1 the Feather lision of two Staphard1 Oil
Mountains northeast of ~
Angeles. L 1 :•:·
9-Cov. Ronald Reagan~
no personal income taxes. •::: ~p to tbe Asian nallon by a 1 s "'age-pri4ftreeze; P,.bu&;J. pl U. ,..wllliam L: Calley Jr.; ·au, riza_l_ion_bl_u~_· ~---COIJ.Neling and seminars. ·\ Rfver near' Yu~ City IS the tankers. ----'--
President
Optimistic
Over Plans
.BX . NORMAN KEMPSTER
KEY BISCAYNE, F I a .
(UP.I) -President Nixon con-
tinues to wax optimistic about . ' till: prospects for the economy
111,the new year, but appears
to have toned down his
rhetoric a bit as 1971 ap-
proaches, With many pocket.
~· problems still lesterlng . .. We can now conridenily
uy that 1971 ls ending on a
most~ encouraging economic
mws ANALYSIS
iFSte and that 1972 will begil!
u a ye.ar of great economic ~.·• Nixoo. said last ..et. in signtng legislation ex·
~ his authority to con-
trol wages and prices.
'J'hlt may sound like a pret·
ty rosy assess.-nent. But not
when it is contrasted with Nix-o~s earlier forecast of the
economy in the coming elec-
tion year.
About a year ago, 1';ixon told
a. 'nationwide television au·
dience:
· ~"And this ;, a prediction:
19'[1 is going to be a ye& of an
e~ing economy in which
infia\ion, the rise in inflation,
is going to continue to go
down; in which unemploy-
m~t, which is presently too
high, will finally come under
control and begin. to recede.
lJ'll, ,in essence, will be a good
y;ear, and 1972 will be a very
g'ood year."
Well, 1971 was not a good
year: It was not quite as bad
overall as 1979, when the ria-
tlon experienced simultaneous-
ly the .lint recession of the
W0<$1 lnllallon tn 20 years.
.But it was bad enough.
Unemployment h o v e re d
ai'ound the 6 percent mark all
ye.ar, making it worse than
1970 and the worst year /or
joblessness sinct 1961.
InOatton subsided late in the
year but not until Nixon im·
posed a 90-da.y wage-price-rent
freeU, followed ·by a n
~ate set of e<:'(>nomic con-
Thniughout most of 1971,
Nixon regularly repeated his
prediction that the year would
be .a good one. and 1972 a very
'gooil one, for the economy.
The President p r o b a b I y
hoped he could talk the
economy back to heal!h. The
idea behind this is that i[
businessmen and consumers
fhiDk times are getting better
they wW rpend their money in,
a way that will spur the
"""'10IJ1l' and lulliil the propl1<
ecy.
But with election day about
11. months away, there has
been a subtle change in the
presidential rhetoric. The i~ea
. now. is to raise hopes but nob
too b;gh. MOil economists doubt that
the economy can teach robust
Jll')ll>Ority by the first Tu ...
day art.I' the first Monday ol
November. .
• But many of them agree
·t!Jat thinp llloWcl be a litUe
. belltt by election' day.
Jt ts in Nixon's political in-
tmst !or the public not to get
.....iatJons too h;gh. An unempk>yment rate or 5
perceat. /or hM1tance, wu one
COMtdlr9d waeceptable.. But
ti 11 a lul1 pen:tntage point
boiler !hon the rote moJI o!
this '"''"
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Woe!-. Dt<tmbtr 29, 1971 DAILY PILDT JJ
Going Gets · T ougher for Rampaging L aker~
By GLENN WHITE
Of IM DllU\' l"llol Sl•tf
,INGLEWOOD -Wllh lillle time to
sl!;vor hls Lakers' 105-87 vJctory · over
Iµctless Buffalo Tuesday night at the
Forum, coach Jiill Sharman was already
beginning to concentrate on Thursday
night's invasion of Seattle.
"''We've got two of our tougher games
coming up . . . Seattle 'Thursday night
(Uve on Channel 5 at 8) and Boston he~e
Swiday night (at 7).
!'Seattle Is physical and has lhe super
-Spencer Haywood ,and Lenoie
ms. Remember, they're lhe · ooly
~Devaney .. •' . MIAMI (AP) -The pressure is Just as
h~y on No. 2, which is trying harder, as
oifi.."'"No. 1, N~braska's Bob Devaney. said
tOday, insisting that Alabama wou1d have
no;psychological edge in Saturday night's
Orange Bowl football game.
t.'We want to win the national cham-
pi~ship and remain No. 1," the pixieish
he.@.d coach •of the Cornhuskers said.
".4.Jabama, as No. 2, will be just as eage r
!ve it should be on top. ~ e pressure Is the same with both
t s. Neither will have a problefn get·
t!up for this game -too inucb is at
s e."
ebraska risks a 31-game unbeaten
st k and the national college crown
agilnst a strong-running, defense-minded
Ali!bama team that swept through an 11· g~e card with its Wishbone-T .
COmparing Alabama with OklahoJ'Qa,
th(Big Eight rival whom Nebr<1;ska beat
3541 in a dramatic Thanksgiving Day
duel ,· Devaney said: ~klahoma was not ,rated a great
d~nsive team. We felt we could move
[£em , if we ever got the ball. Alabama
is great defensive team, both against
ning and the pass. It makes few
mlitakes.
':The difference in facing · Oklahoma's
Grtg Pruitt and Alabama's Johnny
Mi.so is thlS t;, we fj!lt we could stop
P itt O:fi: tt;te-1fkl(ptays and·we did. We
m ·#Xlfsso wide but he'll hurt us
so9 place else. He is a great runner."
iOth teams ended heavy training Tues·
daj and prepared to tai>f:r·o!f for tbe rest
of 1he Week. After 1adaf .. p1ayen wlll1M:
pliCCedt tilhinct' a · palBt\ tree cur~,
unl'vaitable to ~kleJ'S.-' • /-" 11~1• 't!i• Oirnbuskers ht!O>/.s ~or ut.11!'-Ntfth Dadi Jtjllior CoUege, ll>en fool ii!f
fott_ the .races. Alabama ,drilled at ttt&-
Milolni ~demy. • • •: • .
'1Wei d&t.'1 -have any./\inle for s0c:lal
thiligs -Ud j.e doijlt wan\ aoy of I\,"
s~Mqsso.. 'the w~~rse of Alabama's at ck. •twe cam~ here to ~in the na-
ti I champion~ip, and'that's all we are
thi&king about/
.Qevaney and hi! Nebraska team a~
pear Tl'IPte re1axed , tbough no less
de\ermined; in the task.confronting them.
1The boys.can gO to shows when they
like, as long as they get to bed at a
re&sonable hour," Devaney said. "They
kn0w what they're supposed to do. We
dotl't keep a tight rein on them ."
Devaney, a plumpish, pleasant man
wb\}se career coaching record of 126-iMi
is 'the best in college football, has been
1006e and jovial at press conferences. His
joltes have enlivened the normally dull,
te~nical sesslons.
~labama's veteran Paul ' ' 8 ear ''
Bqant, with more victories to his credit
th,M] any active coach -his record is
2~15 -has appeared much more
~. but close associates are worried
~ he hasn't bee.n even more pesslmis·
~,, . hen the Bear is ready to pull off a
b' . one , he ,poor-mouths a lot -he talks
abo.\lt how tough it's going to be on his
pqdr, stringy boys," one Alabama
s~esman noted.
1,'But not this time. He seems to, be
wi'hting lo Keep the boys' spirits up.
Ab6ut the most pessimistic thing he's
said is that Alabama hasn't played a
game this year good enough to beat
N~raska.
"But he woo't say they won't be that
good Saturday night."
team to beat w on the road this year,"
Sherman cautions.
"Too, they always pe.ck their arena and
those fans are really rabid. Then Sunday
we come back against Boston and right
now they're one of the hottest teams
around, having won nine straight.
"They run the fast break as well Ss
anyone. •
''And whep "'e play a team like Boston
we'll be ~p wlthou looking for any
special motrvation,"
Sharman and his assistant, K. C. Jones,
starred on some ot the great Boston
l.teanrs or the past. · • ·
Shannan's forces wi)l .carry an Im-
posing string of conque1t1 -29 to be u:~
act -into the Washingtoo city and Al he
admits, 30 in a row seems a lot more Im-
posing than 29.
"It's like 1 baseball player bitting .199
or .300. They seem a world apart. Too, If
we can win 30 that will be pretty tough to
beat • . . especially In tile National
Basketball AS90CiaUoo.
"We don't ea>eet any more ~nslon
for awhile so tfie so-called weaker teams
will get stronger and win streaks will be
harder to put toge\ber," Shannan says.
Look.(ng back at the win over.Bllftalo,
Sbanftan .credits defenslve a~ent to
loose officiating far forctng ~rav~s·
UP I Ttlilllllett
AL L-AMERICAN CAND IDATE K~NNETH HOUSE.
He'll Start for Seton Hall Tonight Against UC Irvine.
•
Contrer as Coo"led Off;
Vallely S itting on Bench
Mike Contr-:ras, • the ex-Huntington
Bea.ch High basketball Dash whom they
refer to as the Flying Chicano at Arizona
State University, has finally been cooled
off.
He was limited to three field goals the
other night in ASU's 109-88 blitz or the
Hawaii Marines in the Rainbow Classic
at Honolulu.
In the previous three games he hit 21 of
32 field goal attempts for a searing 65.6
per:cent accuracy. He canned eight or 10
at Northern Arizona ; got eight of 12
(including seven stra ight) in the loss to
New lo.1exit'O State; and potted five for 10
in the victory over Fresno Stair.
Arizona State is currently 8-2 for the
campaign. including that opening con-
quest of highly touted USC.
Contl"(?ras. starting as a junior, is
averaging 12.4 points per game.
* * * John Vallely. who tlnrred al Orange
Coast College and Corona del Mar Wgh
before going on to start two years 't
UCLA, still ta setillg lltU• playing lillle
since being dealt from the Atluta }la'l'ks
to the Houston Rocket• In the NadOual
Bas ketball Association. -1
He played six minutes
. __ _.........,.._,
WHITE
WASH -------
OL•IHI WHITI
Laken Sunday and had two assists, both
at key JuncloreB to give Houston a lead.
He also bagged two rebound• and a
bucket.
(JCLA-Ohio State Final
"fl '• tough coming off the bench," he
told lhl1 column. "Some gamea You come
In bot, others you 're cold. And when you
know you'll orily be tn a abort time yea
try and get a lot done In a hurry."
In an earlier meeting ·w1u. the Laken
he played 14 mlnutes and 1cored 13
points. But this th;ne around Ille was cold,
hitting oaJ.y one of 1lJ: from the floor u d
did not gtt tn tile last half.
\,
~ooms .in Cage Classic
itis ANGELES -UCLA likely will
mtt;l Ohio State in O\e finlls ol the Bruin
ic Thursday night and Bruirui <CO&Ch
J Wooden said Tuesday be lhinb "It
be our first strong test.''
~t Wooden doesn't expect that game
lof.!ndicate how goOO his sophomore-
®'dlnated defending NCAA champions
w be in 1971-72.
m not going to find out how goOO this tel:i"b for a long time," Wooden safd.
1'ooden'.1 (6-4) Bruins must survive a
f~und meeting with Texas, 4-2,
lotlght and sixth-ranked Ohio State, 6-1 ,
mU\ gel by Arizona. 1-8, to set the stage
lot a UCLA-Ohkl State meeling.
1be UCU coach said he knows very
llUle about Texas and ''I don't know ho"·
1tfong they (Ohio State's Buckeyes) ar'
' ' f;i.ed Taylor, the Ohio State cnach ,
lemented that UCLA's average margin of
victory "is greater than , the number of
points we' ·e scored, for crying out loud!"
UCLA, ave.raging 111.8 points a game,
has been winning by 46.5 points. Actually,
Ohiu State Is averaging 72 points a game.
But, said Taylor, "any wln would be
good and to win in· a tournament like this
would be super."
Taylor said he has see.n UCLA twice in
television this season but '"you can't
make an assessment from TV."
Asltf!d to speculate on the potential
ma~p between Ohlo State's 7-foot
junior ctntet, Lulce Witte, and VCLA's 6-
11 aophomore, Bill Walton, Taylor again
said he Couldn't form an opinion on
Walton from wlltching televjsed games,
and first "I'm rea{ly concerued with what
my team is going to do tomorrow night
against Arl1.ona.'' ·
He did say that \Vitte, averaging 20
points a game, "b sb'Dnger thin last
year." Walton Is averaging 20.7 points.
Vallely says lf the Laker1 and
Milwaukee played a seven-game aertea
right now, he'd tab LA lo win. ''The
Lakers have more ezperieace and a bet·
ter bench.'' ·
* * * Elsewhere:
Chris Tbotnpt0a1 former Corona del
Mar Hlgh-Go1de11i West Colle1e type,
holds s t .5 1eorbig average a1 a ataner
for the Unlvertity of Oregon ca&er1.
One o( the wiMers or divisional com-
Ion In pass, punt and kick competit-
ion at the Astrodome was Jon Arnett.
'"'Is one hails from Modesto and Is not
ri?lated to the fonner USC whiz who
bears the same handle.
You might have 1 preview al Ute lt'Tt
NCAA b11ketbafl playoff• ch1mpio111blp
game Thursday alght al tlCLA, as11mtn1
tlu:u the host school •ltd Obie. State
di1po1e of the opposltioD tonight lD the
opening round ol the Bralnl ' fORr..&eam
'9u.mament.
turnovers in the declalve second quarter.
Buffalo, which baa Iott seven atrataht
and which hasn't won a road encounler
since Nov. 5, cwned a 38-27 lead with 10
minutes left in the half.
Thim the Laker& cut lOOR and a1 the
defense choked oU the losers with ODl.y
1ix pc.ints tmtil Intermission, the game
broke open,
It WIS beautiful teamrork on pas&in&:
and Wilt Chamberlaln' attack or the
bucket that blended wl the defense to
give LA a 5J.-44 half'Ume bulgt.
And tbe defense pressured Bllffalo Into
10 turnovers duria& that big effort before
the half, •
Chambedaln bid II pobit& a\ tbe hall
and U for, tha &ame wblle old reliable
Jen:)" Wett' poPfltd In 24 for the evening,
15 of that total coming the last two
quarters.
''Buffalo was 'iery aggressive -they
pl•Yed a bUmp and run defense . Of·
flciatlng was loose so we in turn used
more handl, contact and reach than
normal yet we were never in foul trou-
ble," Sharman aays,
The detense did check the losers to the
lowest scoring output ol the season
against the Lakera. PreVious low was 89
by the Warriors.
Elmore Smfth, a rookie 'from Kentucky
( .-
State. had a career high or n polntl fOr
Buffalo and as Sharman pointed out, Ills
hanging one-hander was one ahot WDt
couldn't bloc k. ~
IUl'PALO . ' ' .. 1 l·I uw
J 1-1 .. , ' .,
·--..... _
"· 51111111 Ga"911
""md lsrV•lll Hiiton "'~-.., 11:.sm1111
' .. ... •. "
Anteaters·, Seton Hall M'·· 1x ·· •
In Convention Ce nter Tilf-
Streaking UCI
Seeks to Avenge
' Earlier Setback
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Of !fie Dli'IY f'li.t Stiff
UC Irvine makes its first appearance In
the Anaheim Convention Center tonight ' . against a perennial basketball power
from the East Coast, Seton Hall Unlversi..
ty, and coach Tim Tift's Anteaters will
have a double purpose ln mind at the a
o'clqck tipoff.
First, the' Anteaters wOuJd like to
avenge an ~lier M-88 loss to the Plratea
that closed out a four-game opening road
trlp and left tt>Pm with an M record.
Second, the UCI squad would like to
brina its season record above the .500
mark for the fint time this season wlth
its fifth Victory.
In the first encounter, UCI ran into
early foul trouble and before the action
ended, had four men on the bench with
five personals against them. In addition,
freshman cenler Dave Baker, 6-8, ll!ft the
entourage prior to the game with a case
ot Influenza ..
"Seton Hall ls a very physical team
and has several outstanding players."
Tift says. "We played a goOO game with
them back there but we ran into foul
trouble and couldn't qui le catch up."
The Pirates have an AU-America can-
didate in Ken HOUlt at a'foi'trard Posl·
tion. House scqred 21 ~lnts in the flr1t
game with UCI and pulled down ll Ire-
bounds.
Teammate Frank Zelesnit , a
sophomore, is the leading scorer by a
narrow margin and hit for 33 against the
Anteaters. He is averaging 20.8 per game
to 20.4 for House.
UCI has made an about face since
returning from the disastrous road trip
and has won four in a row. This includes
capturing its own tournament as well as
an all-time school scoring mark against
Wheaton College of llliltoi.s, a 120-101 vic-
tory.
All five UCI starters are scoring In
double figures for the first eight en-
counters. Phil Rhyne leads with a 19.5
mark but was held lo his second lowest
output against Seton Hall , 17.
Others include Troy Rolph, the floor
general who brings the ball ~wncourt
and has a de.achy aceurate outside shot
with a 12.8 average ; and Bill Moore,
Rhyne's running ~teat forw~rd and the
team captain at 12.4.
Baker has a 11.0 average for sli game•
as a starter and Ed Burlingham, the
other guard, has an 11.5 mark.
Baker missed the final two road games
at Anny as well as Seton Hall, wtth the
flu. Otherwise, this quintet has started
every UCJ game and is expected to open
tonight at the Convention Center. '
A preliminary game between the UCI
Frosh and Cal State (Long Beach) year!·
tnp, will precede the varsity tilt at 5:4~.
Thursday nlght the Anteaters will
return home to Crawford Hall to host
Chicago State University with tipoff at 8.
Wolferines
Want Revenge
PASADENA (AP) -"Do I want
revenge, you bet I do," declared
Michigan's fleet ruMlng ' back Billy
Taylor. "So dou the whole team. .
"Playing in tbe Roi<; Bowl and winning
in the Rose bl art two different things .
We dellnitdy have the!revtnie factor for
the 16 of ua 1enlor1 who have been hert
before.''
T•ylor played ln the Ro1e Bowl two
year1 ago as a sophomore when Michigan
lost to Southern Calllomla, 1~3. Knocked
WOO'J' In tbe first hall, he admlts remem-
bering little of the second.
"That game atkks in our minds~· con·
tlnued Taylor. the all·tlme rushlna leader
at Michigan, whole former 1tars Include
Ron Johnson and Tom Harmon.
"We 1enlor1 feel we!re fortunate to
have a second opportunity. Not many
pl•ym ft! il" . The ll'Olverlnn of Michigan, ti<!, faet
si.nfonl this Ume wltll tbe lndianl hop-
ing to repeat their upset vknory of last
Ne~ Y~ar's Day when they 1>4!at Ohio
State of the Bil Ten, 2'7-17.
•
•
U'I Tlf..,.._
ED BURLINGHAM PACES UC IRVI NE CAGE ATTACK.
Antei ter1 Seek t~ Avenge E1r lier l oss Against Seton Hall.
Penn Upsets T~oja11s;
Toledo ,, South T1·iumph
ROCHESTER , N. V. -Penn 's Quake rs
upset the nation's fifth-ranked team,
Southern California, 8U7, in the first
round of the Kodak College Basketball
Classic Tuesday night at the War
Memorial Coliseum.
Penn will meet St. Bonaventure for the
championship Wednesday night, St.
Bqnaventure earlier defeated Rochester,
M-60, behind the shooting of.Matt Gantt,
Paul Hoffmann and Glen Pritt!.
Penn got outstanding shooting In ,the game~a early stages from Corky Calhoun
and Bob Morse to build a 31-13 lead .
Southern California cut the deficit to 41·
37 at halftime but Penn, behlnd t}le
shooting of Morse and Phil Hankif\¥n,
pulled away midway through the sed;ind
half after the Trojans lost /heir
backcourt ace, Paul Westphal, on fotils .
HankiMOn had 21 polnta and MorSe 20.
Joe Mackey led USC with 17. t
• .
ORLANDO, Fla . -Junior tailback Joe
,Schwartz 1cortd toucbdowni of one and
three yards and di!:feo1iye tackle Mel
Lo.ng scored on 1 recovered fumble Tue.
day night as unbeaten apd untied Toledo
downed Richmond[ 28'3 before 16, 750
Tangerine Bowl fans.
The victory rln 'Toledo's winning
streak to 35 games, the longest current
streak, and secoo4 only to Oklllhoma's 57
In modern colleae hlstor.y.
Quarterb&ek (:buck Ealey ICOl'ed the
fourth Toledo touchdown on a one.yard
plunge. George Keim kicked all four ex-
tra Polnl>.
•
MONTGOMERY, Ala. -Stable Vin·
ce nt of Rice tcored one touchdown and
Tennessee's George Hunt licked a IS.
yard field goal Tuesday night to give the
South a M win over the North in the 34th
annual Btue-Gra1 football game .
HoYfever, the defenses of both 1quadJ
stole the show. Guy Roberts, a ~
defensive end from J.farylaod, harassed
Blue quarterback Neil Graff of WlscoMin
and Gary Fox of Wyoming all night and
was named the game's most valuable
player.
Both teams !ailed to score in the first
quarter, but the Grays broke the let On
the first play of the second quarter.
Vincent's run £rom the seven capped a
74-yard drive that fealured the passin1 Of
TCU·s 'Steve Judy to Louisiana State's
Ken Kavanaugh and the ru nning of Yip.
cent and LSU's Art Cantrell. )
t • ~ OAKLAND -'Varren Wells. h'O-
prisoned wide receiver for the Oaklarlil
Raiders, wlll appear In court Jan. 14 f~
report on his possible release, a judo
ea id 'I\Jesday. •
Superior Court Judge Leonard Dledtit,
ordertd \Veils transferred from a 1\8;fe
prison camp at Jamestown, Calli., to tOe
Alameda County jail in Oakland. .•
He also asked the county probatldir
department for a report and record-
mendation on the footba ll player '• ~
gresf while ln custody. ' · • ••
LONG BEACH Cal Sl>le (La!i:
Beach) streaked to a 5t.39 h&lltime le~
'and breezed to a 103'33 victory over qi
State (Fullerton) Tuesday night behhJll
the 22-point scoring o( Ed Ratleff ~
Chuck Terry. ~
The 49ers, 8-t and tOUwanked 1"'
tionally, meet UC.Riverside WedneadiY1 night in the finals or the International cs.:
ty Basketball Cla"ic. UCR, 4-4, hung cjil
in the final l'.conds to de(eat ~~
(!\an Lula Obispo) 711-77 tn
night's first game.
'
I
•
•• • •:.
} C DAILY PILOT
Two Area Stars Accorded Ritncho Falls
'
1
Alll-CIF Football· Honors
Trito ns Dealt
113-61 Defeat
By. Griffins
Edison Gains Semifinals
With 79-64 Upset Win
'
I AUNDRE HOLMES
'
Not-shooting
Clark Downs • .
$ailors, 77-63
•. By CRAIG SHEFF
Of tlM Deltt Pl111f Sl•ff
Some splendid outside shooting in the
third quarter earned Clari< lllgb of Las
Vegas a TT-63 victory over Newport
Harbor Jn the oemifJnal.s of the Newport
christrna.s invitational basketball tourney
TUesday night.
Newport bids for the third place trophy
at 7 tonight against Narbonne while Clark
and Venice battle for the championship at
1i45. Venice downed Narbonne, BWO, in
the other semifinal Ult.
·Clark, hi tting 12 of 17 sho1' In the lhlnl
quitter, turned a clo'se game into a rout.
•The Clark 8treak actually started with
a minute to play in the first haU.
At that juncture the score was tied at
~ But ~ Clark forward Sam Smith hit
oo a three-polnt play With 50 seconds to
go, teammate Bill Miller, a 6-5 center,
fdllowed with a pair or free throws 20
seconds later and the Chargers' Willie
Smith capped the spurt with a three-point
play with just eigl)t seconds !en.
Then ln the third quarter, the Otargers
rtally put the game on ict with Sam and
Willie Smith banging ln four field goals
each Crom long range as Clark raced to a
6M3 advantage with 1:30 left in the
period.
Newport, after a good li~t quarter (the
Tars led at the buzzer, 18-16), wtnt flat in
the second and third quarters, hiWng On·
ly five of 29 shots (17.Z percent).
Despite canning only "i:e three two-
polnters in the second quarter, coach
Dali Hagey's club stayed with Clark due
primarily to some accurate free throw
shooting.
. Newport hit nine of 12 charity throws in
the second eight minutes and for the
game finished with 27 frtt throws in 40
attempts.
And forward Jim Swick clicted on 15 of
21 from the gratis stripe. He finished.
With Z7 points for game honors.
Newport could only can 29.5 perceDt of
Its shots from the field ( 18-61) while
Clark hit 3(l of 70 for 42.9 percent.
Holm~, Madden
Gain Third Team;
Judge Top Player
Mission Viejo's Atmdre Holmes and Bill
Madden of SaJJ Clemente rei-esent the
Orange Coast area on the lrTl aJl.QF
Southern Sect.ion AAA football squad.
Both DiaWo tailback Holmes and TrJton
center • Untbaci:er Madden were ao-
cord<d third leam berths cio the 51-player
dream unit.
Tailback: Cwies Judge of section
champion. Kennedy was selected at AAA
player of the year while nmnerup Wt$t
Covina had the most players picked from
one school with five.
In addition to Holmes, Madden and
Judge, other Orange County performers
honored on the three-fold squad are
linebacker Mart Davison of Kennedy on
the first team; guard Ron Vance of ken-
nedy an back Steve: De!>etg of Savanna
on the secood team; and end Larry Hlrt
of La Quinta, tackle Frank CaPola of
Rancho Alamllos and back Randy
Hutcherson of Fullertoo oo the third team. "
First Team
Pos. Name, Scbool Wt. Qua
E-T. Cuesta, W. C.Ovina 185 Sr.
E-J. Miller, W. Torrance 190 Sr.
T-L. Quino, St. Bernard 230 Sr.
T-J. Allen, Hawthorne 215 St.
G-Steve Braum, Bm..lta 2.15 Sr.
'G-R. Beoi.., Loo AllDO UIS 5'.
~. Snyder, W. Covina IllO Sr.
~M. Davison, Kennedy 195 Sr.
LB-G. CUrcb, Edgewood 1111 5'.
LB-G. CoOiier, Upland 215 5'.
B-R. Eliialde Pioneer lllO Sr.
&-S. M~r. W. Covina 135 Sr. B-C. Judge, Kennedy 153 Sr.
lhl. Torgeson, Newbury Park 155 Sr.
B-J. Sullivan, Crespi 185 Sr.
B-C. Webster, Garey 167 Sr.
K-li. Dunn, Los AllDS 160 Sr.
Second Team
E-D. Shamblln, Bonita
E-A. Annda, Pi<>Beer
T-J. Snow, BelJnower
T-D. De Gues, Righetti
G-S. SO.k, Crespi
G-R. Vance, Kennedy
C-J. CorkeU, Pomona
LB-M. Kalati, Lo. Arni&"'
LB--J. Surcb, Lompoc
LB-T. Patterson, Newbury Pk.
B-0.-Kreltz, Rollin& Hills
B-T. Brannigan, St. Betiiard
S-R. Hertel, Loo AllDS
B-S. Deberg, Savanna
B-C. Gordon. Cabrillo
B-R. Whalen, Culver City
K-T. MacK!llZ.le, W. Covina
Tblrd Team
175 Sr.
160 5'.
200 Sr.
190 Sr.
llS Sr.
185 Sr.
190 Sr.
205 Sr.
195 Sr.
180 Sr.
160 Sr.
185 Sr.
IM Sr.
JU 5'.
185 Sr.
176 Sr~
160 Sr.
E-L. lllrt, La Qulnta 185 Sr.
E-M. Steele, Crespi 135 5'.
T-Randy CI'OS!, Crespi 250 Sr.
T-F. C!lpola, Rancho Alamitos 195 Sr.
G-G. King, Hart 195 Sr.
G-M. HarrisOI!., Bishop Mont 215 Sr.
C-B.Madden, SanClemente 225 Sr.
LB-L. Worthington, W. Covina 180 Sr.
LB-M. Ensminger, Rolling llllla 220 Sr.
~D. Formt, Aviation 180 Sr.
B-B, Kessler, Claremont 200 Jr.
P-R. Hutche.rson, Fullerlol 190 Sr.
B-A. Holmes, Mission Viejo 165 Sr.
&-D. LeCocq, GI end-Ora 180 Sr.
P-M. Hill, Beverly Hills 170 Sr.
B-R. Chapman, Upland l&a Jr.
B-M. Jakoblc, Upland 2.10 Sr.
Player Of the year -Charles Judge,
Kennedy.
BILL MADDEN
•
Diahlos Mix
San Clemeole's Triton baoketball team
ran into a reeord shattering oerf'onnance
by the 1..41 Alamitos GrUlins in first
round play d the annual Rancho Alamitos
Interact Classic Tuesday "1ternoon and
as 1 result suffered a lu.61 utback.
Coach John Baiter's. Trltons, after
gaining the flnals a year ago, ran into an
early dry spell and after the first four
mlnut.ea, were never in the game.
''Terrible. Simply te.LTible," was the
only comment of lhe disgruntled Trtton
coach after the game.
Wendell Witt, first-year coach of the
Los Alamito.! GrUflns, was asked if be
had planned to score 100 points in the
game when the third quarter score in-
dlcated such wu J>OS'ible.
"No, we didn'~ think about it. But Van
(Ezra Van Horn, last year's • Griffin
coadl) wanted us lO erase the stigma o~
having the most points scored' against us
in this ,tournament."
Van Horn's team lost to Rancho
Alamitos in 1969 when the host school
tallied 102 points for the previous record.
By BOWARD L. RANDY
Of ... 0.lll' PllM SI.ti
Edison JU~ School blllzed Its way to
the semillnala of the Rancho Alamitos
lnteract basketball cl11slc Tues~•Y night
with a 79-&f UJ>Bet victory over the host
Vaqueros and will face Magnolia High
toolght 11 8:30.
Magnolia defeated El Dorado, 89-78,
despite a rec#settlng 37-polnt output by
Mike Farra of the losers.
Dave Mohs' Otargen played a superb
first halC. shooting flawlessly and running
against the full court pressing defense.
thrown at them for the entire game by
the Vaqueros.
"This was probably our best baH of the
" beaming Mohs said following
th pb.
t we might be a little rusty
tonighl but the kids did a good job and
kept their poise against the press. I'm
always glad to win."
Ed.Ison had been Idle ii.nee the Hwi--
tington Beach tournament when they lost to Corona del Mar HJ days ago.
Th.e Chargers wasted little time getting
the offense in gear. Rod Snook and Greg
Parker !tit four field goals apiece In tbt
first stanza and the Chargers acored 011
11 of lf attempts to take an eight polDt
bulge.
Ill~ eight of 13 attempts In the , ..
cond period, the Chargers posted a fan-
tastic 70 percent shooting mark for the
halI. They closed with 51 percent from
the Door for the game (31 ol fl ).
The pendulum began to swing in favor
of the Vaqs in the second half with tho
Chargers commlttillg n u m e r o u 1
turno vers but the hosts were never able
to close the gap to less than 10 points. lt
was 7UZ with 2:55 Jett when tho
Chargers spurted for seven straight
poinls to assure the victory.
""" ,_
"Ed~ cn1
fttl""' J 2 ~ • I 4 I 211
2 1 2 5 6 0 I 17
l J J II
5 l ' 13
' 0 2 '
HIT,_,
P1rk1r
'"" WU!ltrns
2 2 1 •
•IMM Allmll• 16'4) ft ft pf till
I J I If
' ' ' 11
' 2 J "
Al'ldtrwn
"'~' VJ11lt s ......
Ar1gon • J 2 1• • • l •
CHIOOI\
Zlm_,.,.,.~
To!ll•
t:di1on
ll 17 1• n Tottl5
kor• b~ a 11111'" 21 21
1l IG li•Mflo Al1mltos
1'n15•t
'' 11 -n 21 11-'4
With Servile
In Title ,Tilt
It is small consolation to Balcer and the
Tritons that the combined scoring of the
two teams, 174 points, establishes a new
mark in this category. The old standard
was set by Rancho and Western a year
ago at 168.
Frequent turnovers, missed shots and
lnat>illty to rebound after the first four
minutes caused the Triton downfall.
MD Suffers 594 7 Setback
For the game, San Clemente ha1 2f
turnovers to 21 for the Griffins. And when
the Irvine League eDtrants carried a 2-1
advaDtage to the dressing room at Mlssion Viejo High's Diablos have halftime (56-1.8), it was all over but the
another crack at a basketball tourney recoro setting.
To Western in Tourney
ch?mpionship tonight when coach Pat Lo.9 Al's third quarter barrage or 3f Jerry Tardie's Mater Dei Monarchs
Roberts' quintet meets potent Servile in points eclipses the lowest point total for a will be happy to leave tournament baske~
the 8:15 title clash ol the seventh annual team in a game for the tourney. Le~ ball competition and return to single
Brea Invitational. i.nger set the mark with 28 point! in 1969. game achon in the near future.
'Ihe Diablos gained the shot at Servll• Griffin center Rick Quinn left the ac-. · For the second Ume within a week, the tlon midway through the fourth stanza Monarchs suffered a defeat at the bands
after shooting down host Brea Tuesday In with 30 points and fell three short of the of Sunset Leaaue foe, Wemtn High, and
the semifinals, 69-57, behind the hot hands tourney individual mark of 33 set by M a re..'\ult of the 59-47 loss Tuetday in
o( Gil Nonnandie, Rob F~uson and Dave Cass of Santa Ana in 1967. the first round d the Rancho Alamitos
Craig Citro. 'Ibeir last crack at a tourney For Sip] Clemente, Mlke Dowling hit 20 Interact Classic, will move to the con.
title WM against Edison in the Aztec In· points f6r individual honors although he solalion bracket.
vitational -unsu~uU:f. didn't start for Qne of the few times this Mater Dei tangled with the San Cle-
Servite pushed i way tnt.O the cham· year. mente Tritons tb.is afternoon to get the
pionship picture th_~ 82-59 conquest second day ol action started.
of Sonora in the other half ol the semis. sin c11men~ 1~'~ 1111 L" •i.mi~ ~1:/ 1111 heA week earlier, Western had defeated
The winning Friars po.steel their tlth o-nng • 2 2 XI M•mmon 1 1 2 1s t same Monarchs, 64-50, ln the Anaheim
Mater Dei feJI behind early in the ac-
tion, trailing S-0 after two minutes ol
play. Bad passes, missed shots and fre-
quent turnovers saw Western iocreese
the advantage t.o 12 points (18-6) at the
end of tbe period.
'11le Monardis barged back into conten-
tion just prior to halftin1e and narrowed
the margin to six at the intermission but
couJd never get closer for the balance ol
the night.
The big difference was in the accuracy
of the shooting as the Monarchs hit only
32 percent of their shots from the floor
(21 d 66) while Western tallied 45 per·
cenl (24 of 53). win in 1( outings and included in their ~:'""~ : ~ ~ ! ~:~~ 1~ : ~ ~ tournament.
list ol vlctims are Corona del , Mr.r, ttlddl• 1 1 ' J Miiier ' • J 22 "\\'e didn't shoot well today at all," M•fer n.11•11 w11teni Ut l
Kate.Ila, Compton and Long Beach Wit-~:th : ~ ~ ~ ~ ! ! ~ 1: Te.rdi.e said after the game. "I don't think Kniffin '.' ~ ~ :~ Ger/Oen ': 1: '; ~ son. k111ney ! o ' ' unoermtn 2 1 1 s the layoU hurt us but we certainly didn't H.ro1d , , 1 1 McK..,111 2 , 1 •
Robert!' Mission Viejo five cruised to :.!..,.~~ r : ~ ; =~~~..,1 ~ ~ ~ ~ do well shooting. ~~:;J : ~ : : = : : : :: Its eighth win in 10 outings ~Hy Tues-tt1u5 o o 1 t s1rton o 1 • 1 "It woo:ld have been a lot closer if we J. i>oettven 1 1 l 1 Soaru 2 0 0 ,
day,taklngtheleadforgoodearlyinthe ~ii:.._ ?J::: hadbeenhittlngevenafairsharedour :'.'~ ~ ~ ! ~ ;~f.'f1~; ; : ~ ~
third period Md then holding off the Tot111 ,, 111' " Tot115 G 11 11 111 shots. But you have to give Wentem To11!5 21 s 16 a ro111s 2• 11 10 St
hosts with clutch outside shooting and s.n ci-11 s.:o ... 11., °":2"':': 22 11 _ ,1 credit. They have a good bell club and M•l•r Del k9n 11'>' °"'~'7, 1 11 _ 0 free throw tosses . La Allmltos v n u tt -n> 'they hit welJ.'' wntenr 11 1o 11 1, _,. '11le0iablosforced 17B~aturnoven t-~~~~~~~~~~~--~~'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~""-'~~~~...::..c:....;__c__.:::.__
In tho loosely played tiff and connect«!
on ~ of 64 shots from the floor for 39.l
percrnt
Normendie did most of the darnaft In
the rel>Ounding deportment for the 1rin·
nen and he added 2l points in a nice ef.
fort.
Citro's 18 and Ferguoon's 16 points
gave the Diablos a three-pronged attack to offset the 19-p:lint outburst by !Jrean
Harry Dowell.
The last threat ol a sort to Mis.1ion
Viejo came with 5:28 to go when Brea
pared the margin to three at 53-50.
But each or the Diablo trio quickly
countered with buckets and it was agrin
a nine-point bulge.
..... IJ7J MiuiOrl 'Ile!• l'fl ·-<•re>en!tr .....
Frlht H--MtlC" """ Tottt.
ft fl " ., a a 1 o
1 0 0 1
1 J 2 If
2 ' J $ 1 • $ 2
5 ' J "
' J ' 15
Citro .....,
Ftrguwn Horrntl'ldil
lhldb•tl '""w
22 ll 11 S1 TOl•ls Sctr• a., Q~• l•n
ft It ,i l&t
7 ' I 11 J 1 I 7 I 6 O 16
I I ' 21 I S I 5 I 0 I 2
Mlulon v 1110 14 n "lt"''
lJ :ra -" lll'N I• It t 15-SI
Kurt Spreen was the only other
Newport player in double figures. He had
IS.
The Tars' leading scorer, Bill McKin-
ney, could only score nine. He hit three of
17 from the field,
Orange Cagers Hold Off
Eagles' Upset Bid, 62-57
OUR BEITER • HALFLOSTA
Ll1TLE WEIGHt •• Nn•rl ttt,..r !611 L11 v .. n c 1111r 1n1
" ff pl 1, ' , 2 10 ) t I t
2 • ' ' • ' 5 22 f ' I 22 • 1 1 1
Mc:Kln"t'f s .. k1t Cllne
Sore.n l-tel•ls , .. _
-~'
lg fl pl tp
l J ' ' • u 2 21
I 0 J l s s ' u 0 0 2 0 I l 2 S
I I J I
llry•"' Mlll.,. M,_,,
S. Smltll
W.Smllll
OKk Mltl'91n
Cooper
p ......
11 !1 XI il Tor1l1 k••• ~y ~rl.n N~""'°'1 Mtrbor 11 U
La '11g11 . Cltrll: lf 2'
1 2 ' ' 1 0 l 2 2 0 0 I JO 11 21 T1
u ,, -fl
24 U-71
By ROGER CARL.'lON
Of 1111 0.1/J' Piiiot Sltlf
Estancia Hlgh's Eagles test Lowell al 5
p.m. today in the consolation bracket or
the seventh &Mual Orange invitational
basketball tournament following perhaps
their best effort of the year.
Coach Dave Carlisle's small, but U:·
CM Ousted From Tourney
By Las Vegas Five, 84-7 4
By RON EVANS
01 lllt O.llY l'lt.1 ll1K
Wts:tern High of Las Vegas parlayed Jls
lightning quick fast break with a
dominate rebounding game into an 1(-74
victory over Costa Mesa in the con-
solaUon round of the 10th annual Newport
Harbor Christmas invitational basketball
tournament Tuesday night.
The. lop eliminated coach Emil Ne-
eme's club from the tourney and shot
Western '• Warriors tnto the consotaUon
championship today (~:15) agaln1t
Octanside, a f&.511 winner OV?r Gardena.
Costa Mesa's Mustangs stayed with the
Las Vegas crew through two quart.en,
de:splte a definite height disadvantage.
But that "a.s due mainly lo the fact
that Western had problmu with Mesa's
fu!l oow1 press ln the second quarter.
Western, leading 39-111 in the second
balf, t0lved the press for the ll'lOflt l)llrt
aCter the Intermission and In the process
aot ill fut bruk going.
On nume:rouJ times In the ltCOnd half
lhe Warrior• popped In easy shot.I off lbe
fast br••lt.
I
And they got BeCOnd and third attempts
if they missed, because of the advantage
in height.
Western put Jt away late fn the third
quarter. At.tad by just one point (50-48)
with 21Ai minutes to go, the winners reel·
ed off 10 rtr.t.lghl points to late a com-
manding 60-48 advanlage.
Mesa cut It to five early In the final
period (60-55) on a tong jumper by Fronk
Roldan, a trio ol !>et tlrows by Jock
Archer and Jon Marchiotlattl'• six-foot
bank shot, but Western dpped back
ahead by nine and it wu all but over.
Archer had 1 flne game, finishing with
24 poinls.
(M/t Mtu 00 Ut 'ltt41t Wnf9,.,,. lt•I .. "'',. It ' I '' s • ' 10 I J I t
l J I t
11 t f H
4 O I t
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21 11171t T .. 11t
kwo " ... ,..,,. LM v..-. Wflltm ... , 14 It Jl
C•ff M-. If Jt It
J5 " '' ., ··-,._,,
ceptiOnally quick band of guards, nearly
pulled off the upset of the week in
Tuesday's opening salvo at Orange before
falling to the host Panthers, 62-57.
Coach Walt Hamer's Panthers enjoyed
tremendous height advantage with a
front line boasting measurements of 6-6,
6-5, M and a 6-7 sub on the bench.
Carlisle, however. offset the awesome
advantage by employing a devastating
full court press and tunning tactics and
the maneuver seemed to neutralize the
Panthers' advantage.
1t was SS-all with 2:49 to go be.fore
Orange finally got the upper hand on
buckets by Chuck Van Patten and Bill
Dowden.
The Eagles fought back by tying up the
winners three times in the next minute
but ea ch time they utilized their ad·
vantage in height to control the tip.
Carlisle was happy with his tea m's ef.
fort against Orange and said afterward,
"l thought all five or them played a
helluva ball game. They hustled, it was a
good team effort."
The combin1tion of &-1 Doug Confer, 6-0
Buddy Confer, >to Scott Innes, 5-JO Scotl
Gayner and f>.6 Ctalg Hays w e n t the
distance lot Estancia without substitu~
lion.
The Eagles bit 23 of S8 sho1' from the
field for 39.7 percent while Orange click-
ed on 2li or 62 tries fOI" 41.9 percent.
Four: Eagles were in double figures
wtth Doug Confer high with 16.
The llCOre was tied or the lead changed
hands 22 times.
o ....... ('21 l:dtll(j.f "" ......
11 lllOtt
"""" M<-M.tllvlO M•-V1n PlllM far.ti
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And gained a lot of friends.
The new Early Times Half Gallon
bottle ia now two pounds lighter.
And stronger. Which makes it easier to
carry, easier to handle. Easier to
pour, too, because of its unique built-in
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1
Lions Bag
61-36 Win
Over Uni
By PRil. ROSS
Of tM O.Hr ,HM Iliff
Westminster's !Jons moved
Jnto the championship
semifinals of the Santiago
llollday tournament via a 61-36
conquest of the University
Trojans In lint round tourney
basketball action at Santiago
lllgh Tuesday.
The Lions of coach Don
Leavey earned the right to
face Tustin ln a 7 o'clock con-
test tonight, while Joh n
Driscoll's Trojans were
relegated to a consolation
semis game against Bol.sa
Grande earlier this afternoon.
Tustin stopped Bo 1 s a
Grande, SM:J, in another first
round battle.
As for the Llons.-Trojans
clash, it wasn't an artistic suc-
cess for either side, as both
Leavey and Driscoll later ad-
mitted.
Said the winning mentor
afterwards, 1'1 feel we're still
about a week behind where we
should be. We definitely didn't
look good out there against
University."
There was much truth to
what the Lion ooach com-
mented on. Because although
Westmln!ter zipped to a 12-0
lead at the outset, the Lions
just didn't appear sharp in
doing so.
The winnm put the early
clamps on Uni with a
floating 1-2·1-1 zone defense
and did not come out of it -
and into a m.an-~man sttup
-until the Trojans started
hitting to draw the Lions out.
Putting the contest virtually
out of the Trojans' reach very
early was the talented trio of
forward Glenn Lantaff and
guards Jay Johnson and
Gordon Blakeley.
While Uni managed to sneak
back to within five points on
several occasions ln the se-
cond quarter against Lion
reserves, the Trojans wel'f;
just never really able to
threaten.
The taller Lions dominated
the boards by a 56-20 margin
and outhit their shorter foes,
42.4 (25 of 59) to 25.9 (14 o( 54)
in field goal pereentage.
URIVfflilYltlUOn ~ hi
MuMlnl.-' O 2 ' ~iw;n• ~ & i 7 ewn !ii,J
V:1t W•tmll1rl;111u' ;· :
l.ttll•lf $ " J ,,
$1-S '81! Jot1"SC!I 5 1
COllhlll 0o 1 0 I c.,. . 1 0 •'• Mll$e"ht1mtr I ' f ~':!.e~IY 0 ~ 2 1'
$0lltllwlclt 2 2 0
~~1::,nslcor. w rl~I~: ,~~'1 weumlns 1r 14 20 ,,.._.,
Barons
Victimize
BP, 54-52
Although they were outhit,
22-20, from the field by the
Buena Park Coyotes in a San·
ti.ago Holiday basketball
tournament first round contest
Tuesday night at Santiago
High, the Fountain Valley
Barons still are nevertheless
ln the championship
semifinals.
The reason, according to
Baron head coach D av e
Brown, was consistent
shooting by his squad, which
captured an oppurtunistic M-52
triumph.
With the win, the Barons
move into the semis tonight at
8: 30 against host S&ntlago, . a
57-Sl victor over Kermedy tn
another Tuesday nJ.g)lt game.
Fountain Valley banged in
Its 20 shots from the floQr in 48
attempts. for a respectable 43,.5
percentage. But, more im-
portantly, the Barons were
hitting at the same Ume the
Coyotes were turning the ball
over. In a contest whlch was very
close for three quarters, the
Barons i!Ot the upper hand in
more convlnclng fashion in the
fourth period.
Slx-foot.ftve forward BW
Burns, who left the tilt with
four minutes to i!O with a
charley horse. was t b e
catalyst in a fourth quarter
Fountain Valley show l n g
whlcb earned the winners ar
much as a nlne--polnt spread at
14-45 with 2:21 lell.
•-'':: '"I " "' ~ Iii:! ~'~~ j'inl ''f':.\" ! " ott' 1"•1111 V1llri IM "'*"" !WM ! 4 1 1• ~]'/:' I l ! Jl tl" i i ,2 ¥.= J .! I Jl ottll ktl'I " QMrttn
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Fits Many of These Cars:
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Your Choice of Sizes: 93 6.00xl3 Blackwall
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Your Choice 93 of Size••
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Or Your Monty
Back
'·
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•
Vikings
In 69-56
Over Blversld'e·
.
Tech Star ·
Awaiting
Bowl Tilt
ATLANTA, Ga. -G<orgla
Tecb'1 All-America defemive
end Smylie Gebhart will not
mlaa 'lbund.oy night's Pead!
Bowl action against Ole Miss.
The cont.St will be telecast
on a ta:pe.(felay bash on Chu-
nel 13 at I p.m. Tburtday
night.
"I'm counting on playing,"
aailt Gebhart. who was a
doubtful starter earlier due to
a slight knee llljury Monday.
''The knee [eeia pretty good.
I can go."
Coach Bud Carson, who lliD
faces the loss of second unit
tailback Tom Lang to a rib in-
jury, commented, "ll S1DJ1lie
wants to play, he'll play."
Tech defensive back Stan
Beavtra likened Ole Miss to
!be Jackets' last opponent.
"I think Ole Mia ii a lot
like Georgia,'' Beaven said.
''They've got a good running
quar!Bbact_ good backs and
Ibey can throw !be ball."
While Beaven and a
number of his teammates will
be playing their last football
game for Tech, the Bebda: will
be fielding a aophomore-stud-
ded twn with only four
Rfliors on the starting units.
Sophomore quarterback
Norris Weese, who guided the
Rebels through a lilt-game
winning streak at the end of
the season, will start, and so
will sophomore fullback Geoa
Allen.
Coach Billy Kinlnl com-
mented on Allen, "He'1 our
lullbadt o[ the future, and if
be hadn1 come through to big
when injuries hurt us so badly,
we woold.n't be in the Peach
Bowl."
Allen ii 1 devastating
blocker who seldom earrles
!be ball, but he did rip oU 1
*Yard touchdown run agalnst
Alabama.''
The Weather has 1'ttn fair
and mild ln north G<orgia this
wttk, and bowl officlatJ are
hoping f« an interruption of a
three-year rtrin& of milerable
football daya in the young
Peach Bowl, which will be
'played at AUanta Stadium.
Driving rains drenched the
first two contests, and 1 heavy
IOOW' blanketed la!t year's
1amt.
Cage Loss
VENTURA Clmarlllo
JDgb toot advantage or aome
cold shoo!Jng by Marina ln the
-hill· to teCOrd • -~ball victory over tho
Vlldllp Ill !be opening round
of !be Ventura basketball toornam.111 bore Tuesday •
1be setr.ct placed Marina
Into the consolation round
against Warren thi& afternoon.
Worren dropped 1 51 • &O
decision to Buena.
The Vlldnp of coach Jim
Sl<pbeos trilled by only two
polnla (-) going Into the
llnal quarter, but lbey<:OU!dn1
hit the key baskets.
And Camarillo'• ScorpJons.
oltbough equal ln belght io
Muina, took control or !be
boards ·to zip away .to their
com!orlable margin of. vie.
tory.
Dean Bogdan paced Marina
with 16 points befott: fouling
out.
ln3
Uneasy Feeling Hits
Florida QB Reaves
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
John Reaves bad an uneasy
feeling toward !be •od of bis
college football career that be
was going out of stylt.
The coming National Foot-
ball League draft could do a
Jot to cheer up the UnJvenity
of Florida quarterback.
"If the pros are going to
start using option
quarterbacks, too, then I
guess I 'm not going to play
pro football. I'm just not a
good runner," Reaves said
after a practice session for
Friday's Shrine East-Wm
Game at Candlestick Park.
Two years ago, as a
sophomore, Reaves led the na· lion'• major epllege passers.
Few• &i'chtS ·were concerned
about wllether pawra could
run too.
Then wne the mad clash to
the wishbone and 0 t h e r
QUorterback-optioo orr .......
Almost everyone no.:w. wants· a
quarterback like Oklahoma'•
Jack Mildren, who ran for
1,140 yards this season and
threw only 54 passes.
"I think the college coaches
.
are becoming too con-
servaUve," Reavt! says. "It
seem1 they feel co 11 e g e
quarterbackl can't handle the
intricacies of the passing
game.
"I don't agree."
The &.foot-3 Reaves, UkeJy to
be the first quarterback
drafted by the NFL this
'winter, threw for 54
touchdowns and an NCAA·
record 7 ,549 yards at Florida.
But his best season was hi•
first, when be passed for 2,896
yardl and 24 to<lcbdo ......
"When I was a 10phomore,
we faced man·to ·man
roverage 95 percent o( the
time," he says. "'Ibis year, it
was zone .coveraa:e 95 ~· cent" · f.
"I'm gled It htppened,
though, because I guess that'1
all the pros are qs1ng now." '
Florida.was t-1·1 two years
ag0:. But most of the linemen
graduated and Reaves' top
two receJvers, Including All·
American Carlos Alvarez, suf·
fered knee injuries.
Basketball Scores
The ttam alto got a new
coach, Doug bickey, "who
believes in establishing the
running game first," said
Reaves.
Tht Gators• were 7-4 last
year, f.7 Ull! weason.
Artists Rout
Rival, 68-41
-E· .. -c-·-_.. -..... .....
For SoCal
ASHLAND, Ore. -Southern
California College's Van~ards
were back In action this af.
temooo to the Southern
Oregon Co 11 e g e basketball
tournament after drappinl a
95-94 verdict to Willamette
Tuesday afternoon ln the
opener.
The Vanguards had fought
from a »44 ha1£time dWcit to
take the lead. However, they
lost John Curtis on five fouls
and then John Gregg sprained
an ankle and the victors once
agaJn surged in front.
Jerry Riaker (23) and Pat
~inn paced SoCal acoring
with 2S and 22. Greg Jacobs
canned 15 while Kip Humm
added nine. CUrtis made six
be!°"' departing and Gregg
made one polnl Dan Hoffman
contributed It.
DAVE ROSS, PONTIAC
Lease · o~ Buy All Models •••
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nMTES YOU TO SEE
THEIR EXHIBITS AT ••• . .
the BIG "1 show in '72
PWS
RVI Recreation Vehicle Expo
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CONVENTION .CENTER ..... _
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A GREAT SHOW FOR TM! DmltE F'AMILYI JJ::ASKA -1nfOfTn,UOft 6fl th9 entlf'll Siita. . i E'afdlnol -Alnk.tn ,,,.,__ T~ Pole Cerwrw.
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14 Events
Top '72
Schedule
Fourleen events, headed by
the 8t.h annual He~ Cup
world championship offshore
classic and the fifth annual
National Drag Boat Associa·
lion National Chainpionsb.ips,
are on the 1972 powerboating
!CheduJe announced for Lo,ng
Beach Marine Stadium and
Long Beach Harbor.
The Hennessy Cup classic
and the NDBA event take
place Aug. 19 and Aug H,
respectively, as events of the
seventh a n n u a I Caiifornia
lnternational Sea Festival at
Long Beach, the c i t y ' s
celebration of its status as
"water sports capital of the
world."
Power and sailboat com·
petitions and other community
and competitive events in last
August's Sea FestivaJ involved
more than 6000 participants
and nearly half a million spec-
tators.
Sanctioned by both the
Union of International
Motorboating and American
Power Boat Assn., sponsored
by the famed French Cognac
brandy-distilling firm of Jas,
Hennessy & Co. and utilizing
the ocean liner Queen Mary as
both official headquarters and
finish line, the Hennessy Olp
race is regarded not only as
highlight of the Long Beach
schedule, but also of the
Pacific Offshore Power Rac-
ing Association calendar which
also will include three non-
Long Beach events t h i s
season.
The drag racing program In
early August will be one of
three NDBA-sponsored events
en the Marine Stadium
schedule approved earlier this
month by the Long Beach
Recreation Commission. Also
sanctioned are trad!Uonal in-
board circle racing regaltaJ · •
C<Jnd.Ucted by 5 o u1t h e.r n
California Speedboat Club on
the Memorial Day, Fourth of
July and Labor Day holidays
and multi~lass regattas to be
sponsored, respectively , by
Long Beach Boat & Ski Club,
Los Angeles Speedboa t
As.sociation ( i n connection
with the SponS(lrs Club of
Long Beach, an affiliate of the
famed City of Hope ) and Boat
News Magazine.
Five rowing regattas and
the annual Greater Long
Beach Girl Scout C.ouncil's an-
nual Senior Girl Scout Mariner
Garn ; it complete the
special events schedule for
Marine Stadium, w h i c h
otherwise is open to the
Southern California public
daHy from a e..m. to 8Unset for
recreational boating and water
skiing.
TV Boat
Sliow Set
By Bridges
"Let's Go Boating", a new
television series s l a r r i n g
Lloyd Bridges and his family
will be aired starting in late
January . The series will be produced
by Heathertel Enterprises,
Inc., distributed by Century
'Telesports Network and CD"
~poosored by t.1ercury Marine.
It will be shown on pr1me
weekend sports time across
the country beginning In late
January.
Bridges, well·known for hiS
role as Mike Nelson of Sea
Hunt will be seen in an en-
tirely new sports format. He
wl\I be host narrator in the 13-
weeks series whic h will also
feature his wife Dorothy and
sons Beau and Jeff.
It is designed as a magazine
format, non-fiction show that
will tour the recreational
boating waters of the con-
tinent. Bridges will ta~e his.
camera aJong for a peet at
every type of water sports ac-
tivity. The program will cover
bodiu of, water from quiet
ponds to roaring surf -from
big game fishing to be
beachcombl'bg, from
hydroplane racing to canoeing,
In bQat.s ranging fro m
johnboats to cruisers.
A sample program will show ,
Bridges arKt bis wire on a
charter cruis;e through the
Grenadines.
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I
SUNDAY 11 A.M. TO 6 ,,M. PARK FREE
AutAMMA.
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M14'71 ... , ....... ,,.1111 1u • ..,..1,tM.11w
VllMOHT Satlsfactton
7Jf.lfl I Guorantee4
Or Your Monty
Bode
' • ,
'
'
' DAIL"' PILOT
QUEENIE B~ Phll ln1erlandi
l "Daring the holiday season, be suffers from overex ..
posureto lhe bowlgames-.pllll<b-bowl ••-eo that is... 0-' ..........
lnsu1·ance Poses
Double Problem
NEW YORK (UPI) -The
high cost and scarcity of
medical malpractice insurance
Is becoming as serious for
the public as for the medical
profes.sion.
This was .brought o u t
forcibly In testimony by state
ill$UI'ance commissioners and
their witnesses In hearings in
Washington held by t h e
Department of Healtb, Educa-
tion and Welfare.
Among the more startling
disclosures was that only 20
cents out of each dollar paid
f o r malpractice inSurartce
ever reaches a victim of
malpractice or his family.
That compares with a claim
payout of 42 cents on the
premium dollar for automobile
liability policies, a record the
insurance companies admit.
they are not proud of.
Another was that malprac-
tice insurance costs some
hospit.als as much as $2 a day
per patient.
Greater concern was voiced
by some of the commissioners
over what they said was the
cost Inflation of medical care
and actual deterioration of
medical care resulting froip
the practice of "defensive
medicine" by doctors and
·hospitals seeking to ~destep
responsibility and • a v e r t
malpractlce suits.
Pennsylvania's insurance
cornmwioner, Herbert Denen-
berg, said many physicians
unhesitatingly order e x t r a
testll costing as much as $100
and put patients In hOspital
beds at $100 a day for tests or
p rocedures where
hospitalization is not really
necessary just to protect
Gr aduate
Gale Olander, daughter
of Dr. and Mrs. Robert
Olander, 2215 Pacific
Drive, Corona del Mar,
has received a bachel·
or's degree in educa·
tion from Concordia
Teachers College, Ne-
braska.
New Aide
For Di.sney
BIJ1lBANK IAP)-Donn
B. Ta tum , president of
Wa1t Disney Productions,
bu been named board chafrman and chief execu.
tive offlctr of the enter.
tainmenl corporallon.
Tatum, 58, replaces Roy
0. Disney, who died a
Week ago.
E. Cardon Walker was
appointed Disney presj..
dent. succeeding Ta tum,
while Richard T. ti.torrow
) was elected to a full voting
member of the boa rd.
Tatum joined the Disney
orgJniultion fr o m ll'le
American Boardcasting
Co. in 1958. He was lhe
network's director or tele-
vision (or the Western di·
vlalon.
themselves from a possible
charge of neglect.
"li I'm wrong, I may be
sued for a million dollars, So 1
won't hesitate to make the pa·
tient P2-Y an extra hundred
dollars worth of tests," he
quoted one surgeop as saying.
Denenberg and o t h e r
witneses told HEW officials
that defensive medicine also
may involve avoiding surgery
and other procedures,
regardless of the medlcaJ In-
dications. because of the risk
of lawsuits. "It even include
refusal to treat some patients
altogether if they seem .to be
likely candidates for filin~
ma 1 practice .claims,"
Denenberg testified.
Testimony showed that even
though s o m e dramatically
large judgments have been
awarded to victims of medical
and hospital malpractice. in
the aggregate the victim's
chance of recovery in the
courts is small.
Denenberg concluded that
the malpractice problem "ls
helping to assure low quality
care at the highest possible
price."
Among the measures pro-
posed at the hearings to
relieve the problem were:
-Regulation of lawyers'
contingent fees In malpractice
suits to protect the public
from excessive judgments, -
Stricter regulation of hospital
to prevent accidents.
-More stringent licensing
laws-for doctors and stricter
disciplinary measures for the
profession.
-Taking steps to develop at
least a partial no-fault system
of medicaJ and hOspifal
malpractice units.
Socialite
To Clear
Her Name
REDWOOD CITY (UP!) -
A former peninsula socialite
just released from prison hr.s
announced that she hired an
attorney to prove she was in·
nocent of. forgery and in·
surance fraud .
lt1rs. Ina L. Boales, ~8. told
newsmen, "I'm innocent and
can 't stand that ex-convict
label ."
Mrs. Boales was convicted
in November 1968 in San
Mateo County SUperior Court
of 27 counts of forgery. per·
jury and insurance fraud.
She . was charged with forg·
ing $76,735 worth of prom·
missery notes which she used
in filing claims against the
estate of her late husband, .,..
manufacturer Siegried Funke,
\\'ho died in 1963.
She also was convicted of
falsely reporting the theft of
$15,510 worth of jewelry and
other items and fraudulently
collecting insurance on them.
In February 1969, she was
sentenced to a 1·14' years at
the California Institute for
Women at Frontera t n
Southern Calirornia.
She was released on parole
and has taken a job as an ex·
eCullve secretary in anolher
city.
Of prison life. she said, "At
first I had a hard lime
because some of the other
girls fell that t thought I was
better than they were, but
then I ran a Christmas party
for the inmates' children and
it went beautifully and, after
that. it was better .••
"It's true that there is a Joi
of lesbiarU!m in prbons, and
at first approaches \\·ere made
to me both as threats and Ir
other ways, but before lonr
!My lcrt me alone."
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•Avocado or while-hardware included.
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& k11ps it hot as long m
needed. · · ' • Twowayfcucetsorvosono
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rltTlt., "9•
WtdMsdq, Otet11ibtr 2', 1971 DAILY PILOT :U
FAMI LY ClRCVS
11-Z.t .nil::.=-«>
"That's P J ••over there --the one who's
not smiling ."
Book Discusses
Troubled Waters
BERKELEY (UPI)
Recently Gov. Ronald Reagan
turned the tap that started
water pouring from Northern
California to the southern por·
Uon of the state.
Whether th1a is an action as
progressive u indoor plum-
bing or whether the governor
turned on 1 leaky faucet that
will start all the pipes in the
state a-hammerlng Is a ques-
tion that has been argued long
and acrimoniously and will
continue to be so argued.
The acrimony la left out or a
new book, "California Water:
A Study In Resource Manage-
ment ," edited by 0 a v i d
Seckler and published by the
University of Cahfomia Press
(115 ).
"The Delta Pool is thus the
heart of a vast arterial system
fed by the rainfall in the north
and transported to users in the
southern and central areas of
the state," Seckler writes.
"But the fact Is that there Is
not enough water ln the Delta
Pool lo meet all the increasing
demands being made upon It.
He.rein lies lhe essence of the
problem of Callfornia water.
The book does not dictate
solutions.
the northern coast o f
California must be dammed
and diverted. Again, such
developments wiU substan-
tially affect the ecoloaical
balances in lhoSe systems with
consequent damage to flah,
wildlife, and people."
Air Jam
Predicted
'·
PASADENA (UPI) -The
Los Angeles area, long af-
fliated with traffic jams on
the ground, acquires a similar
problem in the sky each New
Year 's Day the Federal Avia-
tion Administration reports.
The FAA Issued a warning
to local pirots to avoid
sightseeing flights over the
Rose Bowl game Saturday,
and noted that light planes are
supposed to stay above 5,000
feet over the city, helicopter•
above 1,900 feet .
The FAA said light planes
and helicopters have cruted
aerial traffic jams over the
Rost Bowl in past years, caus-
ing 1 safety problem.
"If p I an n e d withdrawals ----------from the Delta Pool are to be
reallied, several consequences
mu.st neceuarily follow. First,
the sheer volume of water
wilhdrawn will significantly
change the level and rates o{
now of water through the
Delta ltaelf. '!be coosequenceB
of this lo the quality of water
In the Delta and to its
ecological balance are many
and complex, but certainly not
good.
"Secondly, the now from the
Delta through San Francisco
Bay will -be slgnJficantly
reduced. Recent evidence sug-
gests that the Bay depends Qn
thiJ freshwater flow to Omh
pollutants and sediments out
to su~ There Is a very real
danger that the Bay could 'die'
In the ma'nner of Lake Erie.
"Third, partly In order to
offset these effects and partly
to provide for shortages of
water in the Delta ltaelf,
further sources of water will
have to be develo11ed
upstream to augment Delta
5Upplies. This means, in brief,
that the now rather un·
developed, 'wild r Iver'
systems of the Klamath, the
Trinity and the Eel rivers on
Pr ess Club
Honoree
Gets Po st
Thomas C. Seals, {ormer
winner of the Orange County
Press Club's HeadUner Award
for heroism, has been ap-
pointed director of security at
the University of Alabama.
A criminologist, Seals was
responsible for the conceptual
design of traffic records and
criminal justice information
system for the state of West
Virginia prior to his ap-
pointment.
He fonnerly served with the
Orange County Sheriff'•. Office
where he worked as 1 deputy
lher!U, 1n Investigator and
academy training officer. 4
While off duty In 1968, Seals
was working as a security of·
fleer for a film company
which was working oil. the
beach near Treasure Island
trailer park In South Laguna.
A l~year .. ld boy, witching
from aome nearby rocks, was
awept Into the water by a
llr1e wave. Seals went lnto
tl\e wottt oiler the boy and ,
apent 30 minutea diving in 1t·
tempta to reacue the youth. He
w11 pulled out of the water by
1 rescue boat ntar eshausUon.
The child'I body WU found I
few houri tater 11veral m.Uu
from the accne .
1'tme Out
Secretary of Defense
Melvin Laird breaks in-
to big smile after re-
porter in Washington
addressed him as 11Sec·
retary McNamara" at
news conference. Rob-
ert McNamara was de-
f ense secretary under
Presidents J oh n F.
Kennedy and Lyndon
Johnson .
Tobacco
Tax OK'd
ClllCAGO IAP)-A flve-
cen tll-a-pack tax to be Im-
posed on all cigarettes
sold In Chicago has been
upheld as constltut.loRal
and the way now appears
clear for It to go into effect
Jan. I.
Judge Nathan M. Cohen
ol Circuit Court upheld the
right of the city to Impose
the tax, which several
cigare tte dlstrlbullon nrms
conlen<:ed was in violation
of the equal protect.lo•
clause of the Illinois and u.s. eon..uwuons.
Revenue from the tas,
wblCh was approved by the
City Council Dec. 10, will
10 toward aalary increas-
es for cllf 0Ulclal1.
The state t11ea clg•rel·
lea on a lliclin& acale tl'ult
begins with 1 ntne-<ent
levy per packa1e on the
first $700,000 worth of tax
stamps p.i.rchased by 1 dJz.
lrtbulor.
I• . ' '.,
"
. '
....
''· ,,
'
DAILY l'tLOT
Evening
Wed,,..day
~I) (I) Clfll 1...U Sim LI•
ferD and Diet: Mutln rual
B m Ml•ll "Pick-Up" Olfictt1
Millot •od Rtld ·~ I dope pH-ll:U IE Cill ...........
dlll' Ind lltf IUPPll« lfttr I wild
ehasl. Rublr1 H1l1, BUI Willl1111t ll:lD 1J (I) IWf Miili
{~ I tl , .
11111 ~ G.1"'4' 1UUL B ®' m ,.,,, ear..
0 Motit: (211)•"'111t C..-, °' 0 0CU labW Clnlk BrulM
1111 L111f (COIMl!y) '38 -Gary n. Ttm 1R lllllt pllytd urfler thl1
Cooper, MW Obnuft. ftlfllllC at P111ley Pntlio&. u mw m-· u moo m,..._
W.rledl~or Wnhout" S.1111111ia'1 Qlll*-"'Os.._ flClilllr' (dr.
m1rril11 to · Dtntn hlnps 1111 tM ..,, '43--ffnJ fOfldl, DaN Ae-
mulls of the wttcha council test-m.n, Ketlry Mcwprt.
Int cocarnfttte't dlebiolt. OJ USCIWll ...... Glsek m • ......., 11"* ..... (ftrl Th• rroi-M wtn ,,.,. t11t winner « .,...., T..r (lilnttm) '41-Qflt; l•mt llltwttn UnlwtnitJ ol Rodlllt· :e~=· ;::: = tr fN.Y.) ind st Bonnenlurt (ltf.),
A-a hptrrt Hil J.tdcson Ind T1pr dtlay. . "
Annt tfanlord co-host •• 27 JOUlll m Motif: "111 Home, u.u. fdr1·
!Idles vie for tht llUt. 11\1) 'SS--Brodtrlck Crl'll'fonl, Ralph
SI (JI) Tiit F1111dl °"' MHktr.
mJ Nino lZ.'flO fl!) Allerkl1 Drt111 MIUllM (R)
l:•DGI NIC MJ*J 1'tlhtrl--Mc· l:OOfJMoM: "Join If Pl!W' (1dwln-
CltOlf ''Tht Dlspoul Mtn" A praft1· tun) '42 -Micllti1 Mor11n. r1Lll
slonll tlllef 11tks the Ill• of • Hellrtld.
111111t1ty corportt1 head M111hll Me> CJ) D G Cll9l, -Cloud hh bten 1ssi1111d to proftcl JlllllS Dlsofl tllllb. IJ Th , ... .,.,
o IIl w m "'""• ~ ,...., 1"" m....,... -.,,. ,_
F•r "!'rfnCI Channlnt' Eddie ..,.,,,."IMRlttlt'"-Afs.R°I
p1ty1111 t11t prt11C1 111 • IChoDI ptar, PMt" ' '
l'lbll1 Wbt11 he le1m1 fMI !In to kiss ,s:;
t111 prlncaa. 2:>0 a Mitri Ir· 'r,·.----------... -(;J-~)-"IA-.... --~-... -..... -(•d·
t. J Thursday wntu11) '57-Jolln Wmt. Sapl'll1 'L= ~~~ i . m "Ptftnln ,,.. ...... (mus-OAmME MOVIES k11) '36 -Bins Crosby, M•dl'
l \:eo fJ (C) "1111.-.. U. Kin(• Sttt· Ev~s. 2:00 (!)"'Rud HollM" P1rt I (mystery)
1 let" (comtdY) 'M -Yolct of Jim '43-Cornel Wilde, tell Lupino.
B.Uus. 3:00 (I) "Thi Furin" (westtm) '50 -!I ~) ~~~u~:-'r <"'31· fhrblr• st1nwyck. ®) "WONt hi Hidlnt' (drtml) '50 ~:XI U "H11117 Aldrick Ceb ClllllOUr" ld1 Lupl'11a, Howard Dvft.
(~ '53-Jlmmy Lydon, Char· 4:301J (C) "1Jle Flllt TrMllllf SalQ.
le Smllll. "Colni It Town" (com-lid(' (corMdy) '56--tln11r Ro1tn,
ldJ) '35 -M11 Wnl, P1ur C.v1n· C.rol Ct11nllln£
··~ 1111. l])Sa .. nlOAM lstln1 i ~ (}) 'frtltdt 11 UN MIWJ" (comtd1) :1:00 0 "lebecu If S111117brd ,,,. .. ! ~ '5S-00Mld O'C'.onnor, Mtrl~I Hy11. (dttlM} '3'-&llrltr Ttl!IPIL
I.
I ..
f.111~tlfte1lc1r• e ,,.,, .. , ,1i,,,.
7 f11lii111 itlte4, 11-porf Clllfet 444·1070
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
.Laguna ... action
'Nutcracker' Ballet Shines
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of .. ~, ....
The hollday eeuon •long the
Oran&e Cout WOuld not have
been complete without the
wonderfully warm gift tucl<ed
neaUy under the trees or
Irvine Bowl In the Laguna
Moulton Playhouse.
All the llft l•cked was a big
red ribbon and crinkly poper.
But then, how do you gift
wrap a spectacular staging of
"The Nutcracker" ballet?
Laguna Beach Civic Ballet
didn't attempt to hide this
present that filled the Laguna
Moulton Playhouse for four
llroaolmeyer and .. the While the production was
somewhat camp ' ' M other "'not lfllhout flaws, Mlss LU.:
Glnjer," delJlOQStnted a fine Zall 'de$ervea much credit for
1ct1ng myle that dollghled bringing lhl6 holiday delight to
youngsters and tb~r parents the Orange Coast.
alike. In ,...,.11, Ille costumea by
Colgan's broad, Christmas Bert Pettey, Mary Segawa
twinkle added much to the and Miss Zall were colorfU.I,
warmly staged ooenfng Yule functional and pre t t y .
party in which . the youngest Methinks lbe double and triple
members of the cast projected casting, however, made ae--
much truth in their styled propriate fittill{i!s difficult.
rompings. Little can be F-31d about the
Cynthia Mlller was a charm-p e r f o r m a n c e of the
ing and credible Clara, but she Tchaikovsky music, since It
seemed uncomfortable In the was taped. Someday, we hope,
c h oreographic assignments the Christmas treat will in-
dealt to her. elude a Jive orchestra.
performances. Four, I ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ suspect, were not enough to
1
,:
please all who might, or I
should have, taken t h e i r NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
children to see this spun sugarr-;,;!!!!!!!!!!!! Christmas treat. ;:::;;;::::===== The Laguna company on the
whole displayed particularly
fine dance fohn and the whole
was highlighted by some ex·
ceptional moments -some by
dancers, otbera by actors.
First, the dancers.
Stephen Smith, a new face
among tbt Laguna Beach
ballet talent!, was a welcome
sight. In•both his solo and pas
de deus: exposures he evidenc-
ed a great deal of energy, con-
trolled in grand style.
As the Snow King opposite
Kristi Moorhead's fine work
as the Snow Queen, Smith
showed a great deal of ability,
though hiJ partnering ap-
peared to be as unstable as
the rest of the male leads of
the Laguna Beach company.
Carol stasney and Hal
O'Neal offered an exciting
performance in the Act 11
grand pas .de deur. Mias '
Slasney charmed the: youthfUl
audience with her lighl as a
feather solid as gold dance
z;tyle.
Charles Colgan, both in his
role as Councillor
.. _ ... _ ..,.,,...
c.dlr .......... GOt"*lr;
""'"""'..SMarck _..__
!!!I· .. .__ ........ liolil...iOll
amt• IJIMl)(lllAS.\'Ymf.G
Ill•
CALL THEATRE
FOR
SECOND FEATURE
'I '
2IMll ir .. 111n Arte Htlr ..
"ALICl'5 ltllTAUllAMT"
MIDNIGHT SMOW
frl. •114 S.t. hlly 11115, 1125,3135
S14S,l r00•11' 10115
• • SHOWING NOW' • •
CO·HIT ZIG ZAG (GP)
""'"* ,,....., -~-·tH•l$H
.... Sll6w .. 10f'll* ........ ,,,
I
..... __ .. _ .......
EXCLU,IVE
9tf!' SMASH WEEK
PUii DYNAMnr
-N.Y, DAILY NEWS
NlfHw C._ 1e41i-. s.... ,..r·
~EWSWEEK __ .........
-N. Y. POST
"im11 THAN IUL..,;,,.
COLOR CARTOON -I
--· ""9AW .... ra1
IMtMt a:._., 0..,
Helt .............
Biker llu Ille lllggest, fil!!lest,
gu la Ille West
See lllm me II oa uytlllag
tllat moves!
., .................... _
et.ACKMAN ~~ ~'1:."l:~=:u.. .. :,: CAROL WiflE:..
Pies POJ11lar Co-Hit SltrtlriluH• i1 ''LE MA ... ' ... ' _ _,
nADIUM 11 c1N•MA wan n I •1tooKHu1tsT K1 ... "' llNr Sl1<tltlm Wt1!mlt11ter & Sttl •I Sf'Mkbvnt Or'Mlgt C.ld111 Wiii -AMM!m
~ W111ml1111tr ~ lt:l_..,S
* * * * THE HILARIOUS COMEDY I
"A SmlSH, NUm, ENJOYAllE AND
ODDl Y PROVOCATIVE MOVIL"
CHARLES CHAMPllN, LA. TIMES
"MAYBE l'M YOUNG AT HEART. I LOVED ITI"
-MARILYN BECK
HOLLYWOOD COLUMNIST
. "HAROLD AND MAUDE' IS PARAMOUNT'! 1972 .
THEGRADUAT!I" J
-RONA BARRITT '
METROMEDIA T,V,
"AN ENCHANTING EXCURSION INTO THE
JOY OF LIVING"
CONTINUOUS .
DAILY FROM 2
THRU SUNDAY
PllCD UNTIL 4 P.M.
ADULTI. JlS. -$1.iO
All Ale ~RIC:-,, l'rtltlll&lloll 1,
A "llttd!" COMIJrfllY ,todllClllll •COW ..
d'A Libil61trJ .t tM Alllt<ktll SrMk•1ll111 eoir.tllltl, IN:.
011trl011ttc1 br CJHrt1111 •-.1 .. 11~1 CtrPOlttltrl • lllttcttf tr uc• ltlllf!IOll GP•
Also
James Garner
Suzanne Plesltette
"SUPPORT YOUR
LOCAL GUNFIGHTER" 1••1
No. 1 on the Coast
Y out Hometown NAwspep•r Is
The DAILY PILOT
I
• •' ' WtdneMllJ, Dtctmbtr 29, 1971 DAILY 'ILOT J3 • i ~~~~~~~~· Mobile IJ.,.ae l'irUJ 1 Underwrit,er
Marks 20th · 1
. -Your Jtfonev ~ ,, •
c
lGFI """' ., '°"""'""' ... _,
,-
PlUS·AitM~;.
1'GOGDITI COlUMIUS" (I)
• IHJIUSSIOlf.VltJO •
IDW.AIOt CINlMA Vrbo
•• ,IJ0.4fto,,,
"IRINCH·CONNIC!JON"
run. "Tiii MAlt\Atl Of ' lOUll lfOC:lllOlll"
" .
Youthflll Outlook: Bullish
' . . . ' . S~es Rise, E~nings Drop
' •o • • I Jan. 1 wW ,mark , an an-
nlveraary for Wendell G. Udall • SANTA, .ANA (BW) -Inc, Ol1 Nov, :!O, curred, (2) EI p. n I.. of San Clemen!e, ' By SYLVIA PORTER
Golden 1 Wdt MobUe , Homes Karsten &Sid, .. a,s st,ated> In associated wfth the redesign or .True or false?
In chi ed ht ·her aaJis ln our announcement on Nov. JO, a line or recreational vehicles On that date be will have _ Most .,...1"" Americans th~· !_!1 e~-:;.,,_ fg ··'--the lowei profit ..-i .. -......1 in produc'-at the san Jaclnto been an agent of the New .,....._ llD llall' 0 WO CW'l'eflt _ _;: •"'&"'...._.9'0 \.II today ate reJatJVe)y ijl)o e • , the secona quarter this Year facility. Excellent demand for York lJle Insurance Company concerM1f about the P.roblem
tisqal ):'ear. However .. as. an-was primarily attributable to the company'• newly desiSned for 20 years. During·tbat time, of future financial seeu'rity.
ttcipated, earnings were below (our f&CW'rs: (1) Ex~es recreational vehicle products
the level .of last year, Pres\· , abeorlled In the complelkx) of ts elpl!ded <hl'lng the oorntng he~ insuMd more than 1,000 -The l}'plcal Youn C
dent Hab'y E. Karsten Jt. an-an unprofitable modular Nlus--spring.and sununei pbk sales people for . more than 14 American rej~ the, lr~l-
nounced recetitly. · .i. tng·eontracl. 'Itie contract 'tfu pettod. million dollars. ·. tional Yankee CQnCept of total'
For the Slx.tJDohtha ,ended completed In October and nti ''.(3r 'Ibe, company's new Udall is a member of the ruianclal sell-rell,ance,in favor
Nov .. ~ ··~es . lncr~ to. further expe~s will be •~ Waco, Texas, ·facility ls p~ National Aasc.-ciatlon .,of life of reliance'° .a considerable
$17,81-7,896 frorri $13,109,9!9 tn, eressinl at a slower rate than UDderwritera and the Million degree on government . pro-
the comparable perlOd . one , arilicipated. Although ' th t 1 Doll~ Round Table. He is a grams, family, etc,
year ago. Net inc:otne in the } • • M operation is not as yet pro-member of the com~11 ToP -The yOung generaQon1 ln
first Jialf Qf the current "fiscal rviue · 8D ritable, the facility will be Cub and President's. Council the U.S. prefers to live where
.year .amounted to $.156,311 or . ' . ... i opera Ung on a profitable basis and a lf.Ume winner of the and with whom it chooses,
25 cents per share as com-.'ffe!l :J,_:!. Fll'lll• · ·• in the near futµre. and (4), all National Quality Award. free of obligation -and it
. pared ~wiib .S378;121. or 27 ._.~ expenses.of the Key West•~ seeks to solve socia1 problems
cents per ~sficµ"e •last year. quisition hive been deducted rather than to punue material
Per sha're figures are ba!led on R. ·p,; I;aBate of Irvine has in the second quarter." UCB Nam es goalJ.
1,413,696 . average sh a'T es -~ dected vtee preskiept for Karsten conclucfed, !1Salt3 · -Mo.st young American
outstanding in 1971 J. ri <t' finance of Gerti8co Technologj remain ·strong and JWe an-men and women rebel again.!lt
1,394/146 avera~ shares in• Corp. of Conipton.· • ticip.ate Imp r 0 v em en t New veep the old.fashioned idea that
1970. . i 'lo · Jll&ldng : t be . an-throughout the last.-half of our "'woman's place is In the
In the second ltu3rlet ended · liouncement, ci:lmpany pr'6i-~-year. We expect the nine home.''' Nov. SO '"sales inc_reased :to d~nt . Robert Pbinil)'· said moJJths esulb pill equal ·Sanla Ana residf;nt Robert
Some hi&hJiibt. .of W.
report:
ON FINANCIAL "SECVRI·
TY 1 More than two out of five
of those polled are "very con-
'cemed" about fin a'n c i a I
se"curl.ty, and among
nonWhlteS the prbpoi'tion ia 63
percent. Only one in.ill. counts
himself cia·omewhat un-
ooncerned" or '.'very un-
concerned.''
ON F,INANCIAL IN·
,DEPENDENCE : This Is as
deeply ingrained as Jt has
been among their parents and
next to bank aav~s accounts,
young adults today are choos·
ing life insurance as a key
means of achieving financial
security. Only one in 10 owns
corrunon stocks".
ON SAVINGS: A .majority
believes that savings accounts
are a good thJng and that it is
also "very Important · t o
develop a Jlgular pattern of
saving." ·
$'9,218.%73 from $6,858,109 ·tn La Bate w i 11 as 1U.m e toose ·fOr the sairl~ period a A. Barley' has beeft erected u-Each of these statements ls
the cory-espondlng ~~od orye ~spoiislblllty for ·o \te r a 11 year· .earlier. tmpryvement in ecutive . vice pr~ent of false, according. to• survey of
year ' earlier .. Net income tn Jin'1)cia.I nu•naD'~. eut pt· the the. 88..ftl 'acinto "arid Waco . United Callfontla Bank, ac-"fmance-related att1tudes of
tpis year's second qu~rter was .. 1:0rporati~~~ , · . . operatioQS ~ wjll nett. J'l<lwever:, coidirig to · bank president youth/' conducted hr social
$117,073 or 8 cents per share Genlsco dre s i"g n s 'and )laVe~ a ·material impact on Nonnan Barker. , : psychologist Dr. Haro Id
as against•$192,814·ot 14 cents manufactures e J e c·t r o .n I c 0perattnr' results Ubtll the ~rley, formerly a senior Ed.rich for In t' r i o r con-
a shale' la~ear. '· ,, filter.t, miniature , lamps for · fourtll quarter. iWeftlllaln op-vlce president in the Na,tional Sumption only at Uie Institute ON "WOMEN'S PLACE":
The figilres. · ht.ve b e en· ele<:troilic systems, airbOrne UmisUC 'that the coinpeny will division, wlll be respohslble. of Life Insurance in New Nearly two out of thiee young
· restated, on a . pooling of in-·data recorders 1and' other achieve iecord· Sa1eS and earn-for . coordinating the ' \lank's :York. Says Edrich bluntly: · men and woinen ttmik It's still
terests basis, to re~ect the ac· pfecislon electfonic · and ipgs 'for ihei-flsCal year endink markeUng, operaUons, person-"The glamorous chimers of "in the home" -even against
quisition of Ker 'West Homes mech_anical products. ~ay 131, 197%." , nel relations, q u a·I i t·y the counter-culture .actually all the passionate ~ight of l~~~~~~~~;;~~@~~ro~~~~~;jfj~~~~~=;:f,~;=1-1 assurance. research and plan-turn out to represent a very women 's Lib' -and t n' e I . mav. . ·. . _l--L!-_.] T nVnr, .1..-1'-m" Q ning, trusts and public tffalrs. smaJI. pereentage or young statistical reality that so many ~> .... -.JJ>, ~ Barley has served'as branch Americans. The old-fashkined · mi'l\lons of mar-'.:..1 women lot <J!-deQd things like patriotiSm and'the COnstilution; admln\slratoc for UCB in the ~alues. of ma~iage, family, hold and must holdJ.;bs. mid I like appje,pie, becaµse thats the dumb~ I was Orange County-San Doe g • financial secur•ly, savings, a The institute will ti.peat its
i.-,,..i.> · --'-'that' •"--dumb .. _, a:>Unty areas ~ 1'968. He good )06 -those are the ones unuo'tudes" ""rvey each year ~~·~ lJI>• ~· s, W..· Way I~! ' has been· with the bank since to. whkh I.he .ra• majority ai'i::mpt tu -chart changes,
1·• ~ 'AHOWJiD"W"A(c;&~ ~ .
''STAR·IFAll"•GQIL".
A paliiotic, chaotic ' iedy: . . QCal • .
..... SandyDuncan lOnyRoberts ToddSUsman..,, ElizabelhAllen
~wARNOLO JlllARCOUN ..i .... MMur _.;, ............ SIMON _.,HOW.Um W.KOCH -~-:.·-:• ';~';; ~";:7'e7e'7;~~;:~f· .... ~ _;-J~I
.. . 'NOW SHOWING ·-·AT AlL.1 THEATRES .
,1 ' ' • .....
~Harry Callahan. .
You don't assign him to murder CjS6S.
' ' '
You just· tum him.loose.
l~iilii9Sii?ii, j;lilliliMlillilmlil;;;'~till~s~ubscri~~be;,;;;j;;I fl.1eanwhlle, the results of this year's probe are ~ed by
other researchers. • SHOWING NOWI • -For instance, one study
PAUL NEWMAN
llllirt fDNllA
LEE RENICK
, MICHAEL SARRAznj
'2ND WEEK ' 1mr:=a,..~~
........ -.. , . ....i ... --lOl~.:t': ... +---l'OIM.-·-·-,----...... ·----.....n ....... ll~'I---~ ...... -."· .. --Olll,Ollll>l.WUf(M ___ """'.._ ~--·-
loll!DllQI--_ .. ¥.........:•-· .fi'ST·-.-llTit,11,'.1 • GI--
9Ni;<"JIU,-"I ' ' • I '
CAL
•S
' ,. 'lhe 6-et
Mnnta ...
of
cited in the Harvard Business
Rev.iew lists among the top
reasons why Business School
graduates quit lheir first jobs
"limited opportunity for pro-
motion" a n d "inadequate
salary growth." How ' square
can you get?
-Economist-psychologist
George Katona of t h e
University of M t c h I g a n
NEW LOW NICUI
$1.00 s...,..,. fft. $1.00
S•Hcrr l :lO to 7:00 P.M.
; ....... "'· 6:J0.7:t0,.
co11tt .... lha'I
W ... .W. S.L'1:JO P.M.
DINI\~
IN
''R1 Jlway Childlen''
,LUS
Disney' a
''Living DeHrt"
1nd ''Vanlahlng Pralr,I•''
tHwe-'•.., ...,. .. ..,. ....
Cla.ts.twM4
"PlAY
MISTY
FOR ME"
•"41 PitNJ .......
''HIRED HAND"
lotli Coler -"l'* .
recenUy stated, "The Iara•
proportion of Americans wba
have experienced progreSs and
ezpect progress an eager ta
upgrade their powasiona and
are attracted by lnnovaUon In
goods and servtoea:." Hardly
tbe pleture of &he antio
matettaU.st.
-· Psychologist D a n le 1
YankelovlchJn New York, In a
recent unpubliahed study fot
John D. Rockefell~r I I I ,
disclosed that for most ynung
Americans the key forcts in
malting career choices lncludtl
' 1 f a m i l y ' ' consideratkiru,
"inoney" and 11secarity" -
along with an opportwllty to
make a mean·i ngfuJ con·
lribulion. ·
The implicatJons of these at.
titute.s are prolound -and
basically opUmistic -for th'l
American economy over th =:
long-term.
Consider that there are now:
nearly 40 milUon American.i
aged 14 to 25 and thit this age
group is to grow by fully 50
percent during the 1970s. We.igh
the fact that t o d a 1 on e-
fourth of our naUon's pers<>11aJ
income is earned. in
households headed by. a person
under the age of SS and that
this propQrUon .is to f:1pand to
one-third by 1980. ,
Translate these statistics in-
to tens -fl4Y, hundreds -of
billions of dollars of year1Y1 spending and what do you
have?
You have spending for the
basics in the marketplaces -
houses, ·apartments, furniture,
appliances, cars -&battering
all records year after fear.
You have ever-rising de-
mand for consumer products:
-even · though the young
American adult may not
splurge on super-gadgets or
extravagant rir1t.c1ass
airplane seats or high-powered
muscle cars.
You have what the Youth
Researcl1 InsUtute calls "•
high deeree of acquisitiveness
a mo n g a n u.materiatl.stic
.youths." •
;.nd that, Mr. and Mrs.
America, Is bullish indeed for
your economy.
AUO I
"The Savage Wild" . ..........
Dec. 29 t,hru Jin. 4
'If MISTY fOll Ml . _.,~·";"-'-. ·-----·-
Clint F.astv«>od
Dirty Hany,,, "11. Ratiwai Ghlldoon"· -DINAH SHERIDAN JENNY AGl:flTER ·BERNARD CRIBBINS
.......,.., __ .......... -.11{-iwrn.o-·~-·--,_ __,.,,..._. --.. ~---~-·
• ~WILLIAll MERVYN·SALLYTHOMSm ·GARYWARREN D
AITM N'lll JitlS Ufl
111: Ill· llD ·191 -.. -.. '
i WOR• D PRIMllRI . ' ••• W POPOLAI AmACTIH.,,
;:i~o~v in "SHOOT OUT" (GP)
IXQVSIVI 1-.0001 THEAm IUN
DWAll.DS
• ••
,%4 DAILY PILOT s
Oaaos . Cited
SEC Asks Own
INCOME PROPERTIES
COMMIRCIAL/lESIDINTIAL
TAX SHELTER
UP
TO 88°/o WRITE OFF
FOR , 971 ............... INmlMINT
Welton & Company
214.S I. COAST HWY .. COIONA DEL MAI 671..6900
If you've been waiting for that once· in-a-lifetime
desert real estate rnvestment, Sunrise is it!
Palm Springs
Luxury Condominiums
From $31,495 Fee Simple,
But Hurry!
Thret succn1f11I Unll Grand Openings in • row at Sun1i11! Now,
239 luturfous condominiwn homes are under eonatrucUon.
This may be your last oppor?unlty to irwnt In such cl'lolc• de1t1t
fell estate. t oca!'d In !he helrt of f1bled Palm Sprlng1, Sunri••
fe1tures :;tunning 2 and 3 bedroom, 2·bath Cltibbtan villu In
a setting ol lush green lawns and 1111 trees. For your recrtationat
pleasure. hffted swimming and 1herapy pools, 3 lennls courts
and other tun facilities, Management renlal service is avallab!e lf
de1!r9d. Sunrise won't wail! Corne tee. I! may Change your llitl
1200 s. Sunris& Wty /llSt v, mile north of Pa.Im Canyon Or.
Ca// COiiect (71 4) :J27-B576 •
8
. . . . . ~
OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List
•
llt<tml>fr : ' nn
Tuesday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List.
DAJl.Y PILOT
Phone
6424321
For
Weekender
Advertising ·
.. . .
.. •
,:5 DAILY PILOT
t=~-:.
•l)Oll'f J\llT SfAHDf!llRt! (f.\iT
l'llJl'f~"6 8Htf~ NOTIC,?!.
Paperwork
Blizzard
Attacked
WASHINGTON (UPI\
The General Accounting Office
has told Congress that too
many military doctors, den-
tists and nurses are wasting
their time on paperwork when
they could be treating pa-
tients.
The GAO said in a report
that better use or manpower
in all the military medical
services "would help to relieve
the criticaJ shortage o l
medical professional personnel
in the nation."
The congressional v.·atchdog
agency over government spen-
ding found that many physi-
cians, dentists and nurses fill
starr aDd administrative posi-
tions in Surgeons General of-
fices and intermediate com-
mands of the Army, Navy and
Air Force.
It recommended t h a t
specially trained norunedical
persormel be used ror ad-
m in is tra ti ve positions
wherever possible.
More than 200 doct.on cou1d
be !reed ror patient care by
using Medical Serva Corps
officen: -who are not physi-
cians -for hospital command
positiom. It said.
However. in statement,, at-
tached to the ~port, the ann-
ed services were unanimously
opposed to u s i n g: pro-
rUlionally trained managers
to command military
bolpitab.
The Air FMtt, for eumple,
said !he change "places an
unwarranted and i I Io g I ca I
premium on the executive
skills of the administrative or-
ficen with a dangerous
disregard for the medicaJ
knowledge and experience ao
essential to the medical com-
mand function."
The GAO report cited a
Derense [)reopartment study
&bowing productivity of den-
tists could be increased by
more than 40 percent through
revised work practices and
use of dental assistants.
The military medical com.
p\ex includes 33.000 doclor1.
dentists and nurses at 222
hospitals with 51 ,(KX) beds and
49'2 dispensaries, at I cost o(
more than S2 billWn.
Congress has passed legisla-
tion authorizing $3.7 billion
over three years lo increase
the number or clvillan health
prore.uionals. The House has
passed a bill to create e
mJHtary medical sctml and
authorize $210 million in
scholarships to attract doctors
·to the military.
Lockheed's
Jumbo Jet
Doing Well
BURBANK IUPI) -The
night test program ror the
Lockheed LIOll Tristar. the
jumbo jet being built wilh a
U.S. government-bac ked loan.
is ahead or schedule, the
aircraft company reported.
The plane reteived pro-
visional certification from the
Administ ration, e company
Bpokesman said.
"It's a miltstone and we're
ahead of ~hedule on it," he
said.
He did not say how far
ahead.
Lockheed, threatened rinan-
clally by the collapse of Rolls
Royce of England, which was
to make the tngines for the
Tristar, was granted go"em-
ment guarantees for $250
million in loans afitr heated
debate in Congress lhls year.
The operational model will
be able to carry up to 400
pu:sencers.
P'lve comp~ted planes art
undergoing flight tats, lwo
more are acheduled to go to
lest piloll nut mooth, and U
pl.Ina wUI be turned over to
airliner In March for tratnln1
pilots, Lockheed said.
• , ' • , I •• )-' ' I , { •
Chess Booming as Leisure American Pastime
81 ANN HENCKEN
NEW YORK (AP) -a....,
once considered... the o:clullve
bis . w., home from work
about twice a week. Stores Selling Scores of Sets in V.S.
•'lt'1 the greatest tolace ln
club hu moved to larger, Ume of troubles that there ls,"
more elaborate quarters but says retired fit o ck broker
already needs more room. Schuyler Jackson, a member
pastti.Dle ot lmeUeduall un-Tigran Pertoslan l.n. Buenos
pr.ssed lor'lime, Is booming · AU<. Iasl October. Ills up.
across the United states. coming match Ui with Russia'•
Department stores are stll· Boris Spas.sky, and I.ht COil-
ing more erpensive cbesl sets test. have breathed new Ure
and manufacturers report an into a game which hardly has
increase in busiftes.t.' been considered an a I I -
New chess clubs are -popping. American pastUme.
up across the country. Last fall, the U.S. Open at
Cheu tournaments are Vtnlura, Calif., drew some 400
drawing bigger crowds than contataol.S, 100 more than the
ever. previous year.
Some devotees of the game The U.S. Chess Federation
say its illcreased popu1arity is reports an 11 percent Increase
part of a trend that started in member&hip in the last
three years ago and wu three months alone .. lt boasts
sparked recently by Bobby 450 affiliated clubs in 1971, up
Fischer's bid for the world from 225 1n 1969.
che~ championship. cardinal Industries. Inc .. a
Fischer, t be 23-year-old manufacturer-wholesaler, baa
American chess g e n I u 5 • 5een a 10 percent lncrtase in
defeated the Soviet Union's business this year, bringing
the number of chess sets mov-
ed to about one million. At
AUantic Playing Card and
,.1atcb Co., turnover 1n chess
sets bas risen fOffie 40 percent
over the last lhtte. years.
Rossollmo Chess StudMJ in
New York hair not~ a.10 per·
cent lncraase in chess set
sales this year.
At Rich's Department Store
in Atlanta, expensi~ sets,
l30.00 and up, are oulseUlpg
less ei:pensive models. ·
At Neiman Marcus i n
Dallas, the be!t seller is a $35
alabaster-style chess set.
Membership at the Manhat-
tan Chess Club, established in
1m, baa almost doubled to 300
in the last seven months. The
"11 membershlp keeps In-ol lhe club •!nee 1919.
creasing, It'll look like a When he's not at the club,
subway train at rush hour," he•k working out games in one
aays Leonard Marros, ,_ssi.s. oC bis 150 chess boo~.
tant secretary. ,:Truly great cheJS players
Some new members say come along once about every 30 years. Ji'lscher'~ it,-r says they've . joined the c I u b Jackson. u'I'hi.s is the most ln-
because or Fischer. terest the country has ever
"Reading. about Bobby's shown."
game made me come back to Berore bls match with
chess aft.er 14 years," says Spassky Is over, Bobby
Amos Kaminsky. Fischer may be a household
"When you get involved in a . word and chess a household
game you forget everything," game, wrenched from Jts
says Paul Spindel, a new pasty-faced intellectual image.
member of the club and a "I be~y even want to
management consultant. put out Mby Fischer sweat
He stops off ror a game on shirts," Yys one fan.
I See by Today's
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e SHOCKINGLY GOOD
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e 1'HIS AD OFFERS A LOT:
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.,9.11 11 ·>
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14''
Satin block frame.
Smart block mesh
curtains open manually.
Stylish block poker and
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CLEARANCI
WHILE QUANTITIES
LAST
0''
%~'x4'x8'
PLYWOOD
MICHAlllC'S
TOOL •OX
BARE RtlOT
ROSES
EXTIRIOR GLUE NON-PATENT
Shop grade sanded stock. Great as a mounling
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for those projects with your new tools.
3·~.
ARMSTRONG'S PLACE 'II PRiii
LOOR TILE
·--....... -·-··-·-· ... _ ... -----
This is the self-adhering
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PEGBOARD HOOKS
-·
Convenient for hanging
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cleanlng utensils or
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SAVE 3.30
Tkis rugged, flat top
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has.o-i3<ompartment,
corr)'.all tote tray.
19''x7"x7". Can
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5''
PRIS TONI
ANTI· FREEZE
•
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"·
179
OAL
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Choose a liner to fit' almost
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All of the most popular
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PLANTER
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77'
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For maximum eHiciency of
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ONE 8LOCK E. OF NEWPO.RT AVE
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AT TUSTIN AVE.
eEAST LOS ANGELES • SIM:.l~O~L0A:MN;:CA;;S,;T°i'E0• -~---"...C.C.:..:..:.0.. _ _J
Co.TA Ml. "" "'"SI, LA HA••• "" w. LA H•B•• Bl VO. i L-------.;.,·~·~l~IA;;;:;N~l•:..;:A~NA;i,AV~l~.~~~~litti;x-Oi:iC:.iic."Ni'.A'i:"TllACHILVO. I ••AN NU \'$ e RIVERSI O • •LA CRESCENT A • LADlfltA HEIGHTS • THOUSAND OAKS •
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•
• . New Pattern to ·oebut
Social Bows Made
In Glittery Garden
A fairyland garden of flowers , Cypress
trees and tiny twinkling lights was the
setting as 17 Newport Harbor Children's
Home Society debutantes stepped into
society's limelight last -flight in Balboa
Bay Club.
Ushered· to the ballroom by her rather,
each presentee proceeded across the
dance floor up on to a gazebo stage where
she made her St. James bow.
Tiie debutantes, all dressed in white
formats C<>mplemented by French bou·
quets and gold pendant necklaces, sym-
bolic of the organization's help to
homeless children. performed a chorus
bow when assembled on stage.
Fathers then accompanied daughters lo
the dance floor for the Debutante Waltz
after which the young women were
claimed for more dancing by their'
escorts.
Edward G. Warmington was master of
ceremonies and present.or for the 18th an-
nual ball.
GeOrge Perkins Yule, host for the even·
ing, Introduced Mrs . J., Robert Meserve.
aw:iliary president and P.frs. Robert
Hodson, ball chainnan.
Debutanles. their parents and escorts
are Miss Diane Rulh Barrett, P.fr. and
Mrs. J. Peter Barrell, Steve Ray Ben-
nett; 11-fiss Carroll Brewster Beek. Mr.
and Mrs. Barton Brewster Beek , Mathew
Mark Greer; Miss Pauline Boyd, Dr. and
Mrs. Edward A. Boyd and John Bailey
Potter.
Others arf ltfiss Claudia Ann Carver,
Mr. and P.frs. Leroy Langhenry Carver
Jr., Donald William Killian Ill : Miss
Catherine Lee Chichester. Mr. and Mrs.
William Ellis Chichester, Daniel Stanley
Thompson: Miss JUI Ann Conine, Mr.
•nd Mrs. John Robert Conine and Steven
Walter Schwind.
A\90 presented were M1ss Diane Maner
Fraser, Mr. and Mrs. David Ladson
Fraser, William Jacobs~; Miss Victoria
Ann Harpe'r. Mr. and ?.1rs. William Fran-
cis Harper,, vliIJiam Henry Jones, Miss
Sandra Holstein, Mr. and Mrs. George
Meade Holstein III and Arthur Jeffrey
Bortner -Thomas.
More were Miss Melisa Beth McCr~y.
Mr. and Mrs. Maurjce Coyle McCr•y.
Gary Richard Launberger; M ( 1 s
Kathleen Ann Nabers, ;Mr. and Mrs.
ruchard William Nabert; Robert Stuart
McFarland Jr.; Miss J.l¥&Y Ann New, P..fr.
and Mrs. Don Elijah New, Dennis Byron
Bena llJ; Miss Deborah Dorene Pen·
nington, Mr. and Mrs. Donald A. Pen·
nington and Robert Michilel McCellan.
Completing the list, were Miss Oovell
Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Gared Noel Smith,
Thomas Frederjck , Newmeyer; Miss
Solveig Store, Alr. and Mrs. Jonas Store,
Michael Frank Mutter ; Miss Lesa Lee
Wagner, Mr. and Mrs. Loran Lee
Wagner, Michael Baldwin ; ~Kss Lisa Ann
Woodman, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Vernon
Woodman. and Richard Heath Phllli1>5.
Debutantes and escorts were en-
tertained during a week o( parties before
the ball.
The News and Holsteins ro.hosled when
Dr. and P..1rs. Boyd provided 1upper in
their Beacon Bay home and an eveam1 at
Disneyland. Other evenU mre parade-
watching aboard the Beeks' yacht Vamoa
and a danlant in Newport Harbor Yacht
Qub given by the McCray1.
The rehearsal luncheon at lhe club was
hosted by the Chlchesters. Frasers,
Harpers, Nabers and Penningtons. Mr1.
John B. Parker was in charge of the pre-
ball party.
The Mmes. Richard A. Sewell, Robert
Unger, Delbert Van Qmlim, Fred
Swenson, i\lfrtd V. Jorgensen, James
Murley, Ira W. Smith, William H. Hudson
Jr .. W, PheJps Merickel and David Lang
comprised the ball committee.
Miu Catherine Lee
Chichester appears·
for presentation
in gown that
began at sewing
machine (below) ..
Several of this
year's debutantes
designed own gowns.
,I
J
•
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
'"' l1
By CAROL MOORE
Of ... Dell• , .... lltlt
Thlnl: making a debut Is a 6.obbish, u;.
button alove !Ylldrome?
Think qaln -especially of Miss
C&therine Chiche!ter and the sixteen
other ChUdttn's Home Society
debutantes.
Presentation rules call for "white (not
lv~ry) floor length evening dress with
shoulder straps at least l~ inches wide;
no sheaths; hoop!! are nol allowed; white
mld·beeled pumps." ·
"I'd really rather have high 6utton
boots, leg-of-mutton sleeves and high Vic·
torian collar like fashion magazines are
showing," summarized Cathy, a
freshman art ~ucatlon major at San
Diego State. ·
Like a third ol the debutanles, she
made her own gown, staying within the
guidelines but showing personalized
cnaUvJty. Jt's not an easy task and could
leave you rufO~.j in more ways thin one.
First there's lhe challenge oC finding
white dressy 'fabric in winter when ecru,
ivory and candlelight tones predominaie.
Plus the materlil ha!1 to be lightweight
'SO long skirt and liner are comfortable
from the 5:40 p.m. group portr?Jt untii
~ wee hours of ~t..parties. Cathy prac·
tlced one patlern m gingham, found the
finished dress too fuU and chose another
design.
Then come the real rufnes and other
lacy trim that make each dress even
rr:om the same pattern, an original -
giving the debutante more satisfaction
and the ball chairman less worry about
duplicated gowns.
"I didn't wa11~ to buy such a special
dress from the look·alikes on the rack "
explained Cathy, who sews most of h~r
clothes anyway. 'I'o meet the white
fonnal requirement, some debutantes
resort to buying wedding dresses.
Dressmaking shows the debutantes to
be practical, clever and au courant.
Other concerns also show them to be
more human than their Dresden doll-type
form.11.J picture (below).
For instance , their continuing interest
In Children's Home Society. Funds raised
by the debut go for adoption expenses
and counseling care of "Those pbor little
children," as Galhy calls them.
Debutantes toured the adoption head-
quarters this summer and got together
over the Thanksgiving holiday to make
toys for children in foster homes.
"The honor of being presented adds to
the excitement of begiMing college life,"
Cathy said. "But it's especially satisfying
to know a worthy charity is being sup.
ported by the ball."
Yesteryear's staid and proper debut
circuit tun of nosegay bouquets and
teatime. etiquette has given way to the
informality and spontaneity of parties on
the belCh, at Disneyland and aboard a
Norwegial\ rescue ship.
Another aspect of bowing frequently
overahadowed by the elitist image is the
family spirit behind the event that m2.k:es
preparations and rehearsals resemble a
wedding.
Six of ·the families have presented older
daughters. And the event appeals to all
ages as evidenced by t.he beaming
grandparents and enthusiastic teen table
at the Balboa Bay Club last night.
Amid the generations of merriment and
"hope the shoes stay comfortable"
frankn ess of the celebrants, a tradition
remained, a stereotype disappeared and
dedicaUon to purpose carried on.
1971 .CHILDREN'S HOM! SOCIETY D!BUTANTES -Presented last
night to society are (back row, left to right) the Mi.,..s Diane Ruth
Barrett, Deborah Dorene Pennington, Melisa Beth McCray, Jill Ann
Corzine, Djane Maner Fraser, Katbleen Ann Nabers and Victoria Ann
ilarper; (middle row, left to right) the Misses Solvelg Store, Usa Ann
• •
Mrs. William Chichester gives moth~~y
advice as C athy chooses gloy~•
and Bear, an Austrian Puli, keeps 'htr
company as she checks fashion
magazines for design ide~~·
Woodman, Pauline Boyd, Carroll Brewster Beek, Celberine Lee
Chichester, Cl audia Ann Caner and Lesa Lee Wagner, and front row
left to right) the Misses Dovell Smith, Sandra Holstein and Judy Ann
New.
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• ~AILY PILOT
1~Guess Whai's Coming to UCI Booster Dinner?
It was none other than the
school's official mascot, the
anteater, who came from the
Anteater lfl5iitute in Pasadena
with c. Carroll Adams Ill,
director.
Ever wondered where UCI's
antt:atu is hidden, since he's I !ht~ mascot and is pictured
J all around the campus on pen-
~ nanta and decals! i ' 'Ibe reason you'll never
catch an anteater on the
• Irvine campus is that there
' '-isn't one there and there never
wiU be one in residence .
Anteaters are fragile, e.zotic
.. animals and their care Is ex-
t re m e I y complicated. ac-
''tOrding lo C. Carroll Adams
Ill, director of the Anteater
lnstltute in Pasadena.
He brought ooe to the
unlversity to help kick off a
series of evenl.!i planned by the
UCJ Boosters. with the help of
the Boostemtes. •
Ant.eaters are i m p o r t e d
from South America at very
young ages -from two weeks
to nine months. and are
USU2lly suffering from dietary
deficiencies when thev arrive.
Adams said. This is the result
of their lack of food during the
period of transportation.
BABY DIE'T
~lany pet shop owners sell
young anteaters and tell
customers that the tamanduas
(lesser anteaters) require only
a diet of strained baby food,
he said.
ln reality. the diet recom·
mended by the institute is a
highly specialized one -
powdered proteins.
multivitamins, water. milk
and minerals lo combat both
starvation and deh ydration.
'Ille young anteaters have no
immunity· to such "Ci\'ihzed"
diseases as inCluen:za,
salmone:llosis and Valley fever
when they are taken Crom
their jungle habitat soon after
birUt. Adams said.
"The physiology Is so dif·
ferenl from that of any
domestic pets that diseases
are difficult to diagnose and
nearly impossible to cure.
"At best, a tamandua re-
quires continuous attention
and for the first si.x months of
life demands constant care by
e\'en the most highly trained
professional animal keepers"
he added. '
SPECIAL CARE
T~ i~itute's general sug·
ge&ion IS. "Tf you are thinking
of buying an anteater. don't·
if you have one. get in touch
with a veterinarian. your
nearest 'l.00 or call the
Anteater Institute at {213\ 79g.
8181'.l.1'
What do you fetd. an ;:o.it·
eater? A lesser ant1:at er's
daily ration .lncludes ¥.a hard
boiled eg~·yolk, 1 ih teaspoons
yogurt. l2 teasw.1n lemon
juice or a soft fruit. 5-fi ounces
J!:round be<>f. Ji.! teaspoon
Pervinal. 1 ~ le f'.s poon
Mucilose Flak!'S. 1 ~ ounce high
protein baby cereal. ) ~ tea·
£poon cod li\'er ci!. E~in Cral
Conditioner per label for
y;ei~ht and v•arm \•;ater.
He should be fed as late a!!
possible b e f o r e suns"t. at
room temperature or slightly
above.
Horoscope:. Pi sees Cooperate
THURSDAY
DECEMBER 30
By SYDNEY OM.A.RR
Aquarians have a unique
tiense of humor at limes
bordering on the bizarre. They
are gregarious, love to make
olhers laugh and almost
desperately need affection.
These natives are inventive.
unorthodox and capable cf
building a large public fol·
Jowing. Aquarians should be
wary in dealings with Taurus
and Scorpic, but get alcng fine
with Libra, Gemini a n d
Sagittarius.
ARIES (March 21·April 19):
You may be trying to expand
too quickly. Take one step at a
time. Then you make pro-
gress. Accent in on relatives,
neighbors in transit. Check
dlrections. instructions -and
reservations. Be realistic.
TAURUS (April 2G-May 20):
'Money, investments, tax situa·
tlon -these are emphasized.
Ability to move with times is
spotlighted. Means get rid of
wasteful methods. One who
advises you is capable and sin-
cere. Respond accordingly.
GDfINI (May 21-June 20):
What starts out as disagree-
ment could result in a more
firm uoderstanding. Know this
and refuse to he discouraged.
Faith in special project is put
to test. Reach more people.
Outline advertising program.
CANCER (June 21.J uly 22):
You find "'a)'S of o\'ercoming
obstacles, breaking through
red tape. Much that occurs
now is behind the scenes.
Clandestine meeting may be
OI) agenda. Ir mature. you
gain. Othen\·ise, ~·ou learn
lesson.
LEO (July 2.1-Aug. 221: )'our
desires are mixed. t.1.eans you
may not really kno"' your O\.\'n
mind. Realize this and take
your time. Rash decisions no\V
could eventually prove blow to
pride. Show friend you do air
preciate favors.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 !:
Entertain at home. Stay close
to fa mi 1 i a r surroundings.
Sagittarius person plays key
role. Be flexible, but don't lose
sight of goal. One who 1nakes
many promises may not be
sincere. Respond accordinglv.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Plan ahead /or travel, holi~y
cclchr<1l!on. Tahing persons.
events for granted now would
be error. S\utly Virgo
message. Be s1>ecific. Don't
Je::ive loose ends. Check in-
vitation list. Return past
favors.
SCORPIO !Oct 23-Nov. 21 i:
f.i\'e full play tu intellectual
curiosity. Ask questions -otr
tain answers. Don 't he·
satisricd thal something mere-
ly happened. Fi·od out \.\'hY it
cccurred. Take precautions
against theft. Pro t e cl
posses~ion~
SAGITTAH IUS ~1'ov. ~
J)('r_ 21 1: ltemtmber health.
diet resolution". Key is
inoderation. Fine lo celebrate
-bul not too early. You will
understand . Cement relations
with family members. Ad-
juslmenl in domestic area
should be advo<:atrid.
CAPRICORN ( Dzc. 22-Jan
1~1 · See !::ituation~. individuals
a~ they are. not through 1naze
of v. ishful thinking. Pisces
person can play prominent
role. Temporary res:riction
may eventually 1rork in your
favor. Pace yourself.
AQUARIUS (Jan.· 20.Feh.
18 ): Friend who seemed to
forget promise or appointment
com'es up with pleasant
surprise. Avoid jumping to
conclusions. You have allies.
And some major wishes now
.<ire due to be fulfilled .
PISCES fFeb. l!l·March 20 ):
Family member may surprise
'vith announcen1ent of unusual
plan. Don't interfet'e. Hanging
on to past \rould be error.
Kno\v this and w e lcome
fu ture. Aries individual is in·
1·olved. Be understandiJtg.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you have spark!·
inJ( sense of humor. You also
exhibit a. tendency to try doing
too much at once-: Learn to
concentrate forces . l! this you
do. success can be assured.
Adjustment in domestic area
will prove beneficial .• Not
many persons know the real
you. For you. love is of para·
Jnount i1nportance. But you
arc selective and many. who
should know better, do not
always appreciate you.
!lo find ou1 more oDolll '°'""" ar.d •str<>lo9v, otdtr Sydnev om1rr'• $0·
DM!e bQOl<!et, Tilt Tr111n Abolll
A1!ro!ollv. Ser>!! birtlld•!e ~nd 75 ~Of'I•
to Omarr Booklet, tne DAILY PILOT,
Ba.< 3240, Gr1n11 Central S!•1i0J1, Ntw
Yotl<, N.Y, 10017.
•
• "
I
,
• , I • '
I
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Making Midnight Menu Marvelous
\Vhen the clock strikes 12, ?.tr~. r.11(harl l~aun1 llcr11
and ri.1rs. John King. i:o·chatrn1cn, \l'i r t·c· rr•:-H'V
u·ith the spread of hors d'QeU \rCi. tht'.'y arc prl•:,.11·
in:: fnr :-il':i C11:1•I .l11111nr1'' Ne.\V Year's E\'e buffet
illHI p:irl} 111 tht• l\in~s· Laguna Niguel ho1ne . Dane·
JJJ0 ;,11d g;1nll"1 II 11! 1'l:11'l Ill !) p.111.
To avoid disappotntment, prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories wi th black and white ,l!iossy photo-
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De-
apartment one week before the wedding.
Pictures received after that time will not
be used.
For engagement announcements it is
imperative that the story, aJso accompanied
by a black and white glossy picture, be sub-
mitted six weeks or more before the wedding
date. If deadline is not met, only a story will
be used.
To help fill requirements on both wed·
ding and engagement stories. forms are
available in all of the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further ouestions will be ans\,ered by
Women's Section staff members at 642-4321.
STORIES BY JO OLSON
VIPs will be honored at the
Jan. 21 dinner planned by !ht
UCI Boomrl, IO il seemed in
order to invite a celebrity to
ihe university campus to call
atlention to the event.
Real live ant-
eater gets VIP
treatment from
Ken Washburn
and Mrs. Gloria
McDowell. A UCI
benefit is
planned for
Jan. 28.
The Jan. 28 VIP dinner
dance which will honor the
guests at the event, Is being
planned by Mrs. G I o r i a
McDowell and is one of a
series of events planned by the
support group.
A celebrity auction is plan-
ned for the party in the Bii1boa
Bay Club. and packages
already have arrived from
John Wayne , Sugar Ray
Robinson, President Nixon,
Vice President A g n e w ,
Lohman and Barkley, Jerry
Lewis and others.
Host and hostess will be
Chancellor and Mrs. Daniel G.
Aldrich Jr.
Ticket chairman is Ken
Wasmann and decorations
chairman is Richard Ste\'ens.
Members of the Boosterettes
are serving on the decorations
committee including t h e
Mmes. Edward Newland,
Alexander Black, Doris Klien,
Robert Searles and Tom
Ashley.
Members of the telephone
committee are the Mmes. Jae·
queline Snvder, Maxine Erwin
and Paul MarK.
Proceeds will augment the
Roosters' athletic scholarshio
fund. Anyone wishinp; tick'!!!5
mav call Gene Adams, presi·
dent.
UCLA Students
To Be Married
The engagement or Laurie
Bird to Michael Hefty has
been announced by h e r
parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
Donnell Bird Jr. ol Emerald
Bay. Her fiance is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Charles
Hefty of Orange, formerly o[
Laguna Beach.
Miss Bird and her fiance are
graduates of Laguna Beach
High School. They are now in
their junior year at the
University of California, Los
Angeles where she is majoring
in mathemaUcs and her fianci!
in political science.
The engagement was reveal-
ed to Miss Bird's sorority
si!lers at the traditional can-
dle passing of Pi Beta Phi.
Her fiance is affiliated with
Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity.
A wedding date has not been
set. LAURIE BIRD
Flipping Wig Can Get Sticky
DEAR ANN LA NDERS: I felt so rry for
that fellow who wore a hairpiece but il
was always on crooked, or getting lifted
in a high wind. My uncle had the same
trouble. To add to his problems, cne night
11c got his hairpiece hooked into his lady
fri end's earring and had lo take it off his
head to free himself.
Here are a few tips for men who wear
hairpieces. First, buy a good one. 'The
cheap pieces look like yam after a few
wearings and you can't clean them
properly. Also, the color fades.
Next, make sure the hairpiece is fit by
a stylist who will tell you how much of
your own ha ir to let grow so it can be
properly tapered. Next, use a good
adhesive agent to insure against slipping.
Nothing is more embarrassing than to
look in a mirror and discover that your
loupe is on sideways.
I hope this letter will be of value to
you, Ann. -CHAPEL HILL FAN
DEAR CHAP : U you're hinting th at
perhaps my husband might need th e in-
formation. be doesn't. He bas a wonderful
head of hair. But I thank you in behalf of
my rtaders \\'ho are oot so fort1111att.
DEAR At\'N LANDERS: Your advice to
"Yuba" was logical but not human. I say
il's better to sound like a fool than to
keep the resentment OOttled up and ge t
an ulcer. Since that husband relieved his
guilty conscience by confessing to an af-
fair which happened 13 years ago, his
wife was entitled to the satisfaction of
phonfng the woman and telling her she
kne"·· I speak from experience.
Se\•eral years ago. my husband and a
\\'Oman employe had an errand lo do in
a hate!. They decided on the spur of the
moment to check into a room. When he
told me about it five years later I \Vas
furious. I telephoned the woman 2,500
miles away and the call cost $14 but it
was worth it. She swore on her Eastern
Star ring that my husband was imagining
things. I knew she was guilty but she lied
her fool head off and sweat bullets.
Needless to say, my husband did a little
sweating, too.
I might be addle-brained, but we ·ve
been married for nearly 40 years and I
don·t have an ulcer. -NEWPORT
BEACH
DEAR NEW: You sound like a per1on
who doesn't get ulcers, but I'll bet you've
given a few. Tbankl for writing aboul the
joys of vindictiveness and the pea1ures
of revenge. I'm from a different scbool.
myself .
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I like your
sense of humor. Sometimes you get off a
real corker, but you exceeded the limits
of taste in a recent Confidential when you
said, "Nuts to you" to a reader who com·
plained because her letter did not appear
in print. This was especially uncouth
since her ·salutation was "Sweet to the
Sweet." I believe an apoiogy is in order,
-JUST THINKING OUT LOUD
DEAR JUST: rm glad you dtcided to
"think out loud " on paper J>e(ause I'd
hate to have you go around believing I
was so rude. Your letter is an excellent
example of the damage that ca n be done
by one small typographical error.
Actually, the person who wrole said nuts
to ri-1E.
The column SHOULD ha\'e read as
follo\\'S: "Confidential to Sweets to Swtet
and Nuts to You: Sorry r can't publish
every letter in the paper." It came out:
"Confidential: Nuts to you. Sorry I can'l
publish ever letter in the paper."
I appreciate the opportunity to clarify
the foul·up.
Alcohol is no shortcut to social success.
I! you think you have to drink to be ac·
cepted by your friends. get the fact s.
Read "Booze and You -For Teenagers
Only," by Ann Landers. Serid 35 cents in
coin and a long, self·addressed. stamped
envelope with you r request in care of the
DAILY PILOT.
Parties Welcome 1972 Hermanns
Announce
Betrothal First chimes of the New
Year will be heard by couples
dining and dancing at many
Orange Coast cl ubhouses.
Bah ia Yacht
Tomorrow Is the reservation
deadline for the Bah I a
Corinthian Yacht Club's New
Year's Eve party themed Bal
Unlimited which applies to
cocktails, hors d'oeuvres. dan-
cing and favors. A sitdown
dinner also will be offered .
Committee chairmen 1'1r.
and Mrs. McKee Thompson
14'111 ht> assisted by Vice Com·
modore and "1rs. William D.
Durgan and lhe Messrs. and
Mmes. Larry A. Miller,
nonnld "1. Moss, William R.
Tighe, and tilrs. Jlalph 11.
Tandowsky.
South PWP
Single parents and married
friends of South Co a s l
Chapter, Parents W i t h o u t
Partners are bid to the
group 's bu!fet-dance in the
San Clemente Plfunicipal Goll
Club. The $5 per person tickets
may be obtained by calling
William Graydon or Charles
Coe. chairman.
City of Irvine
A New Year's eve party,
themed A Flying Start Into
the New Year, has been plan·
ned by lr\'ine Tomorrow (or
all Irvine residents in the
University Community
Association Center. beginning
at 8:30 p.m.
All proceeds will help pay
for a flight to Sacramento that
must be made by officials of
the new city ol lr\'ine prior to
Saturday, Jan. J, to complete
legal transactions.
Trojan Guild
Trojan GuUd o[ Orange
County members, t he i r
husbands and guests \\'Ill
gather Thursday. Jan. 6. at
7:30 p.m. In Island House,
Fashion Island, N e w p o r l
Beach for a dessert meeting.
Craig Fertig, assistant fool·
ball coach at the University of
Southern canrornia will speak.
Mr. and Pltrs. Chesler
Hermann of Anaheim ha ve an·
nounced the engagement of
their daughter, M a r j o r :i e
Christine Hermann, lo Lel«nd
Stanley Stebbins, son of ~r.
and ~1rs. Paul Stebbins ·of
Newport Beach. •
The bride-elect was
graduated from Laara lligh
School, Anaheim and is active
in Kappa Phi Sigma sorority.
Her fiance, a fourth genera·
iion Orange Countlan, ii; a
graduate of Gal Poly, San Luis
Obispo.
An early summer wedding iJi
planned.
Crowing Glory
Needs Attention
" .1 .
-.
< •
L -__.r,. ,....._-~-·
Footwear
Featured
Voyage Charted
~~
~ ~ ~r-.:.......
"
A high laced platform
canvas boot by Golo,
sandals in suede a n d
crisp patent and little
girl style pumps are
among spring designs
shown by the American
Footwear Institute for
well·heeled strollers. The
new looks take minimum
care and provide maxi·
mum ventilation.
New Ye.ar Greeted
Voyagers Yacht Club has
charted a course for 1972 with
the first stop to t;~ the Balboa
Pavilion for the 31st annual
Commodores Ball
Setting sail for its 32nd
year the y a c h t club will
gather Saturday, Jan. 8, at 7
p.m. to begin the evening with
cocktails. Dinner at 8 will be
followed by dancing to the Hi-
Fives.
Decorations in red. white
and blue will follow a naulical
theme. Making plans are the
Mmes. L o r i Arm.strong,
~1arilyn Gr2b, Diane Hubb6
and Dorothy Burns.
Officers and directors will
be honored as the new season
begins. The club participates
in local, national and in-
ternational events.
year End
[learance
STARTS TOMORROW
Y2 ·OFF
DRESSES, SWEATERS,
PANTS, TOPS, SKIRTS,
COATS, AT-HOME-WEAR
VERY SPECIAL
Dressy Things 1/3 OFF
WESTCLIFF CENTER
Persons who worry about
having too much or too Jiltle
hair would do better to direct
their concern to the quality of
hair.
This advice came from Dr.
David Reisner at a cosmetics
seminar where he also warned
tllat nothing humans do -
shaving, plucking, singeing or
cutting -can alter hair
growth permanenUy.
ot the 100,000 hain on the
bead's surface, 80 to 100 are
losi and replaced every day in
the natural growth cycle.
such techniques 8.IJ shaving
cut the hair at the skin's
surface where the strand's
cells are dead and plastic.
Thi.s changes the hair's rela-
tion to the follicle hole, caus-
ing the new halr to bristle as
it grows out unlil length pulls
Jt straight agaln. • ,
Electrolysis is the only
method of removing hair
permanently and abould only
be done by prolesslonalJ alnce
a needle is inserted into the
hair follicle to destroy tbe
nproductive bulb.
But even electrolysis has lls
pitfalls. Twenty percent of the
time retrtatment b needed.
Also there is a lemJ>Orary
increase in pigment because of
skin reaction to the bot needle
and the treatment should not
be used on a mole or growth
unlea first lated 10< If' are the ool7 w11 to rev•""
ritation. If too many ha1rs a~ baldneu and they, too, must
rtmoved by llec1zolysll from be done pn>leulonllly. Holt1
the same .,.. the· adjoining "' punched In the ocalp and
needle hol" 1m1 join and hair cut from the bid< fl'llli•
form a acar. 11 lnlerted. Extent of coverage
Hllr losa, to the ment of Is llmlled by the notural hair
men's baldneu, occura wllh line and n,,., not mett 1tyle
both auea but is more .pffierenca.
prevaJent 1n males. "You hive He dtlCrlbed the ao-ealled
to J~ half the balrt on your weaving method of adding
tiead before '1Jcb th1nninC ls hair u a "atuct on toupee."
noticed ." For women who u I e
Women'r hair Jhedl inore per m anen t waves ,
noticeably •ben· under emo-depUaldrit1, llralgJ\Jenera and
tJonal strea, during prtgnan-hair dyes, the doctor advlaed
cy and after prolonged use of following the dirtcUons com-
detergent shampoo, rollers, ,pletely every Umt. Allhouah
dye, bleach and frequent t.be totuUons are carefully
C'OOlbite. formulated, the skin can
Dr. Rtl.sner said transplants become semiUve after years
of lllinl hair products so a
J)'tch or trtaJ !tst, as e1-
plllned ln package d.irecUons,
ahould bo made rtjU]arty.
Hti compared hair ~
dlllonen to lllck.Y mortar
•lnct they make the halr feel
flf\Y•lcally 1lrongtr b<lt don't
have any restorative or nulri·
Uonal benefits.
Halr, like any pbyalcal
feature, Is only part of the
whole human and shol,lld be
kept ln that perspective, Dr.
Rebner empbasiied. "Don't
let concern over length or
fullness be overriding. Just
take advantage and care ol
thi.s natural attribute while
you hive lt."
BIG JANUARY FABRIC
DAILY PltOT 29
MMl'Y .... TIP• I .... -
c
TREMENDOUS STOREWIDE REDUCTIONS
DllGE
20 Fashion ls kind, Newport leac.h..-'phone 644·2525
278 Forest Awenue, La91.1na leach-'phofte 494·6695
All Items not OYaltable In both stores!
Lowest prices of the year on first quality yardage
reduced from stock! Now is the time to stock up
and save on all your favorite fabrics! Sew the
latest fashions fram this exciting selection!
TIMELY FABRIC VALUES 1
GR EA TL Y REDUCED! 2 • price
BROCADES ... reg. 3.50 to 25 .00 yd . 36" to 50" wide . Choose from 11 won-
derful selection of tone on tone , prints, geometrics, and metallics. Many im-
ports.,
LACES ... reg. 2.49 to 50.00 yd . Chantilly . Alencon , and reimbroidered •• ,
from heavy cotton to fine silk.
GEORGETTE and CHIFFONS •.. 1.49 to 1.98 yd. 42" to 45" wide. Luscioul
colors in prints or solids.
EMBROIDERED BONDED CREPES ... reg. 5.95 yd. 45" wide. All-over or bor·
ders . An outstanding buy!
CUPRAMONIUM RAYON-SHANTUNG WEAVE ... Reg. 2.00 yd. 45" wide. I
Beautiful prints some with matching chiffons.
50°!o DUPIONI SILK-50°/. WORSTED WOOL • .reg. 13.95 y'd. 50" wide. A
beautiful rich fabric with 11 subdued sheen for making everything from wed-
ding dresses to suits and coats.
82 °10 WORSTED-10°/0 SILK ..• reg. 8.95 yd . 50" wide.
ITALIAN DUPIONI SILK .•. reg. 7.5 0 yd. 45" wide. Good color range in this.
herd-to-find fabric. ;~ ;·~
DONEGAL TWEED .•. reg. 2.50 yd. 45" wide. Rayon and cotton blend. Good::
suiting weight. Washable, of course .
TRIMS ... table of trims now reduced to 'h price.
MANY MORE BIG FABRIC BUYSI
COUNTRY SQUARE PATCHWORK COT-88¢
TO N ... reg. 1.55 yd. 45" wide . Washeble ..... -yd.
BONDED ACRYLICS ... reg. 4.50 to 5.00 yd.
~~~~~~e~:~~i:~ie'.olids, and "°.~elt:. ~::::ns: • ~
ASSORTED FABRICS., .reg. 1.49 to 2.29 yd.
Voriety table including soi1cloth, convos prin ts, 88¢
piques, and mony other volues ... ···-·········· . yd.
TREVIRA® POLYESTER® FLANNEL ... reg.
2.98 yd. 54" wide. The look of wool. Machine
wo sh ond dry. Handsome color selection -···-···
ACRYLIC CHALLIS PRINTS ... reg. 2.50 to
2.59 yd. 45 " wide. Don't miss th is greot volue!
BANLON AND JERSEY ... reg. 2.50 to 2.98
yd. 45 " wide. Str<pes, dots. and prints. A good
chonce to stock up on these greot trovelers.
Washable and dr ip dry._ .......... _. ____ ,_ ........................ .
MILDA RA BOUCLETTE KNIT ... reg. o.00 yd.
60" wide. Acetate and nylon. Machine wash.
drip dry. You'll love the colors ,_ .......... -... -......... _.
POLYESTER® GABERDINE ... reg. 7.00 yd.
60'' wide. Woven fabric in beautiful shades.
Good all·oround fabric. Machine wosh. __ ,, __ ... _
BARGAIN TABLE
18!.
48!.
A little of everything
Greet Values. 2,4t 100
MENSWEAR POLYESTER® DOUBLE KNITS
•.. reg. 4.50 yd. 62" wide. A great fabric
value!--.. ·-····· ....... . ........ -········-···············-··--·····---·······-
DACRON and COTTON BLEND BOUCLE' .••
reg. 4.00 yd. 60" wide. Single knit stripes. __
STRETCH TERRY PR INTS ... reg. 3.98 yd. 58 "
to 60" wide. Happy color selection ..
QUILTED LAME '. .. reg . 6.95 yd . 44 " wide .
Glittering gold, si lver, or copper ....
BARCAROLE ... reg. 4.50 yd. 45" wide. Aery·
lie prints with o velvety finish ond luscious colors
WOVEN POLYESTER® TWILL •. reg . 4.50 yd.
45 " wide. Solids. Ma chine wash and dry ...
POLYESTER DOUBLE KNITS ... req. 5.98 to
7.00 yd. 54" to 60" wide. Everyone's favorite
in plains, la costi , ribbed, and jacquards. ·--···-
STRING BEAN SWEATER KNITS ... reg. 5.00
yd. 54 " wide. Ribbed acrylic knits perfect for
today's fash ions. Machine wash end dry._
REMNANTS
3~
1 / 4 off marked prlc•
Ull YOUI IANKAMlltlCAID 01 MAITll CHAlllGI
,(
'
rl
I
.. . " ' ' " . . . , .. . . . . . . ' .
DAILY PILOT •
......,· ·cruisin' .Down the .. RiYer .Women Open
<:allege Doors
..
• • . • .. ...
. .
• . ~-
;
. I
' '•
By~ THOMAS
WASlllNGTON (UPI)
The Labor Department 11y1
there ls a growing intereet on
the part of •imature•• women
in the coontry to return to col-
lege.
For adult women Interested
In going back to school part.
tllne or for evening cl.asses in
a wide range of 111bjects, the
women'• bureau bu published
a pamphlet listing colleges
and schools with apecial pro-
grams for women, state by
state.
The brochure -"Continuing
Education Programs a n d
Services for Women" -may
be purchased fli>m the govern-
ment printing o f f i c e in
Washington for 70 cents •
The pamphJet says that
more and more 'fi<)lnen w21Jt
to refum to college t o
"develop their urlderstanding
of the complexities of modem
life .
1111lere Is wldespread
realization t h a t additional
education can bring deeper
personal enrichment as well
as job skills useful in the
working world," it said.
The courses being offered
are not all satWactory, ac-
cording to the pamphlet. It
said that some women with
recent experience in univer1i-
ty courses were critical of the
methodology and content of
the classes. feeling they were
aimed strictly at teenagers.
"Such courses do not satisfy
women with considerable life
exverience." It said .
The most frequent request
of the surveyed alumni was
for individual counseling.
E•st
SNIP 'N STITCH SHOPPE
Co•st Hwy. e Coron• del M•r
Phone 473-8050
For those who dream of floating down a
river on a Jog raft, Jantzen introduces its
California Bright for spring, 1972. It
starts with the well known bikini (seated
model), to the mio (right) which covers
what the bikini shows, or the latest caftan
\vhich 'vraps milady in softly flowing
material.
I SALE
• BONNIE MARLING
Marl.ings .
Tell News .
Mr. and Mr!. Robert Marl·
1r1f of Costa 11-{esa have an-
nwnced the engagement of
t~r daughter . Bonnie Marl-
ing to Steven Macey 111 , son of
Mr. and Mrs. Steve Macey lt,
alio of Costa Mesa.
' The bride-to-be is a sludent
at Newpot\ Harbor High
School and her fiance. a
grajluate of CQrona del t.far
Hitb School. attends Orange
Coast College.
No date has been set for the
vow exchange1 which will take
place in St. JoaCnim's Catholic
~urch, C.OSta ~le5a.
Gross Comes
From Gloss
EAST HARTFORD. Conn.
{UPI) -Old jars and bottles
salvaged for recycling are
helping this bustling suburban
cof'J\munlty beautify one of its
principal streets wlthout cost
to taxpayers.
..\mOn& other things, the pro-
cetdl will pay for covering
three median strips on Con-necticut Boulevard w i t h
·•astrotwf'' -similar to the:
artlflcl&J grass first used by
the HOUIJIOn Oilers and other
leading football teams.
Childbirth Closs
-
State Attacks Disease . .
ALBANY. N.Y. (UPI J -
The nation's first fu1ly state-
funded .attack on epidemic
gonorrhea is being launched
by New York State.
"I;llls i& true of f~r of five ir.-
fected women, authorities
• r.eport.
Fuel Wasted
,
NEARLY
EVERYONE
LISTENS TO
LANDERS
20°/o OFF.
ON ALL FABRICS
e IANKAMlllCAID
S.• y,., S••ri
JACKIE
e M4STll CHAl•I
A gonorrhea screening ~
gram, using a re cent I y
developed culture test, is
being made available without
cost to all private health
clinics, collnty and city health
departments.
I ~~~~~~~~ NEW YORK IUPI) '-========= Homes built during th~next lOlr
Principal target of the·
screening program: the
fema1e patient v.•bo is infected
but unaware of her infection .
years will waste twice the
'amoulll of gas used to heat rill
the U.S. homes in 1968, says a
f i b e r g'I a s ·rorporatioh ex-
ecutive.
He sug~ thit one ·way to ·
ease the cUrrent fuel ·waste U!il
to design buildings that use
energy more efficiently.
AN EXCITING LUNCHEON
FASHION SHOW
By
£jwen's 03outique
(2300 HARBOR BLVD • COSTA MESA)
Featuring fashions by
"(]Jig Jt 11
of California
---•4 -e i~-
Tuesdays & Thursdays, Noon
fashions for •
Fosi.loo lllao4. Newport c .. ter
Stoflewootl Cnter, Dowwey
~:: l3'1i1 ,,.,: tm
and once-a-year
BRA and GIRDLE
OLGA
Reg . 5.50 1=342) SOFT CUP BANDEAU. Wh;te. A-B-C cup ....... 4.79
CHARMFIT
Reg. 6.50 1=676) SOFT CUP UNDERWIRE. Wh;te . be;ge. C cup .. 5.49
Reg. 7.00 1'676) SOFT CUP UNDERWIRE. D cup 5.99
Reg. 7.00 !'670) STRAPLESS CONTOUR. Wh;te, be;ge . B·C __ 5.49
Reg .• 8.00 1'670) STRAPLESS CONTOUR. D cup 5.99
Reg. 6.00 ('45 7) BRIEF PANTY GIRDLE. Wh;te, be;ge. S-M-L 4.99
. VASSARETIE
Reg. 5.00 ('1905) CONTOUR BANDEAU. Wh;te, be;ge. A·B·C .... 3.99
Reg. 4.50 (=4063) LACE BANDEAU. Wh;te. B-C cup .. ---------·-3.49
Reg: 05.50 1'1605 ) PADDED BANDEAU. Wh;te, be;ge. A·B ·----·--··· 4.49
Reg . 6.00 I' 1324) LACE UNDERWIRE. Wh;te. B-C-D cup . 4.99
GOSSARD
. Reg. 6.00 1=3490) SOFT SHELL UNDERWIRE. Wh;te. C·D _
Reg. 5.50 1=nao) SHELL CUP BANDEAU. Woae. B·C cup
BALI
4.99
4.75
Reg . 7.00 1'2620) LACE UNDERWIRE. Wh ite. B·C cup .... 6.00
Reg. 8.00 1'2620) LACE UNDERWIRE. Wh;te. D cup ____ 7.00
Reg. 5.50 1'2601) LACE BANDEAU. Wh;te. B-C cup --------4.50
.... •• .. . ' I •
I ,_
LEGAL NoncE
PICTn1ou1 IUl!dll
MAM• STATaM•NT
.. ••
The falloWI,,. ,.,_ .,. '"'"' butJl'ltH H : l"klrlui • ., K'-r YKflh. 161'6
,.1,citntlt ""'"' Cmlt ,.,.._, CtMfoorlll1 PICTITIOUS IUllM•ll · tHO.
Ml.Ml. ITAT•Mll'tf St9wtrt A. kl ..... 711 Lido P'wt. Or .. ~ fal11DWI"' --II ,_,,. Ml-N.-.-1 hid'!, C.l1Jor11i. ,,__ •a: W ... L. Kl_, 711 Llollo Ptrk Or ..
l"OCAL LIEA$!NG AN D IN· """""'1 lffd'l. C... fMA.
• VESTMENT ~ANY. lfl .... M-Tllll ~-I• lli9IN ~ lrt M
l'i.c;.. C•" MeM, Callfflnlll. lftdhtldt.NL "ACIFIC OILCLOTH AND Sll'W"trfA.19(1-
LINOl.EUM COMl'ANY, A C91H'tlrtllt TMt tt~ flt.II with ""' ceuftl'I' eor_. .. llft. lfl,_,, Mlrf« "'-· ,.,.., cM " Or•,... cou,,,,, "' DK. 11. un. Mtlt, C•M"'lllL I, 8-tY J. M~, DffutJ ,...,..,.,
lllll 111111""' II ~ dllllu<tt!4 ty I Cien.
C11lfaml1 c_._ttlM. ~-t
C. A.. Hltblt "1.lbl!lllelt O!'t"9e C6'11 o.JIY l'!lot, s.u"'"'' ,,_,.,. o.e.m....-t2. " 1'11 ..... Jt""9r)' •• u.
11111 "''""'"' nw """" 11w COl,llll'f 1m • ns...n c1..-k o1 Or•-'"'""' ""~ n,1----~------"'-' 1'71. 11'1' lnttl~ J. M.00.. Oe...,h' Cou11-LEGAL NOTICE tf CIMI.
'""' ~llllhM Or1-Cent Dfl!N Piiot, ,ICTITIOUS SUSIM•IS O...,..r Jt, 1'71 Aflf J1n11wy4. 1t. 19' 11a11111• STAT•M•MT 1'1t JM.ri Tiit fol"""'M Pffllorl ii '""" M l""* 11------------• .. ' . LEGAL ~CE OAA.lllGI! COAST A\.ITOMOTIVI, 1111 1~.1• P'omon. .<w .• Co.11 "'"'· C1U1arril1. -""" ..... c-. •m Jlldl•l'lllllOI•• Mt1 $1 ..... HllllflntlOOI Slldl, (11\,...ril1.
lllOTK• TO CR•DITOIU lltlt llll1l11n& 11 -..il'lll ~ .-, •
IUP'IRIOll COURT ff lll• INl1¥'*'1t.
ITAT• OP' CM.1,09.JUA P'OR .l9'lri a. c_.
T14• COUlfTT °" Olt.AN•• TllHI '"*""" llltd w'lfl'I .,.,. C-.tt k A·MIM Cltrk " ~.._ C-ff '" ~ J1,
•1t11t " HAUY llAL.1111, ~ lm "' ..,._IY J, '~ o..vtf C-
HOTICt: II Hl!R•eY GIVliH .. tJle ty 0..-.. trtitl-. " ,... ....... ~ ~ ,.,~
lt\ld 11 -~ dllml ......... tJ1e ...... !ll'loMI Or-CN~I 01!ly l"IW,
.. -.Mn! .,. ,_,,.. " .... tMrll. ~ "· "" •lld J_,.-s. u. "· ....... _.,~ .. 111....-~ ltn Dll·"
... "" dlrtt ... 1111 ...,. Mltltlllil ~ .... i. ..,.._i hlft. w1111 1111 ~ LEGAL NOTICE
A nlnt-week series o t R __... ._ w. .....,..._,. "11111 <ll"l'k•I---,==,-------~~=~ euben·s GROUP OF FAMOUS MAKE~ro%,~' I ~1ilg!k~ .. r:-tME-!:!{=!:~
Ult Huntlngtoo Beodl home of •' ROBES AND SLEEPWEAR I ..-"" --'"'"' -""'"' --· "-·-•
wtl ttart MOPdl)', Jan. 10, ln ~ 2 '/ -1•'1".M " • ttt••"' wld dlUdlnl. MA1t1t.•TtMo 'I.US. '"' ••rdl ,,
Mn. Roalld Travis. · • . , • ~:!, •,;:.= ,. •m. .!".":"...!; .::::,:~:_ T''"
t«Wra, ftJO'll •nd tutbook in Costa Mesa, 1555 A,dams ~~';:r':i !;'~ "'" ~llWll 11 ~ ~ .., •it •• ~ ln t•· hou • fll fhll ..... MfMlll ._....,.., ll:ICMN e. MC,lrlll'lll .,. -,.., one-r • MIL.UT•• AllD AJllL. Tiii• ,, .. ~ flltf •1111 "" (Wiiiy
tdllh• delJgned to prepare Fasft1olll ltloftcl 'pltCMle "'44-0170 Ml'-" ........ ,. . • Clotrk" °"'""' c_,.,"' Dtc""""' it. ~-• ~ren•· for the ............. ,.,...,... ,... ' 1m. "" ,_,., -'· MldCIM, °'Pllt'f' ,.,.: _.,_....... r-.,. opt" dally 1 O o.m. to 6 p.rn.: moNcry Clftd friday to 9:10 p.rn. T.i1 t1111 11H111 "c--.
nat11ral, lhared experience of "':::.'..•::::"':-• °''"' ...... N•ll.,.,.. e>r.!.1"'t!.in 0.01.,. ttii.t.
chUdlilth. Courie fet la $2$. ------------------------'!. _____ ':':'~:::.' :-:.":::":":-:..:•:':':'":""='~"':_:':' :':11"~"":~~•:•:K::"::"-=~-="':.:•:-::."::"'"::_ ____ J o.r.wnw 11. 12, tt, 1•71 w J--:l~ DtcittnW JP, 1m Ml JIW'IVlrr s. u. 1' 1m T' ma mwi •
•11e·1 tJ>e~i
)).pt. Molo9er ~ is °""'Y' · eager to assist '
you in any
way he con.
1t's a good
idtc 1o get to RnoW the'mon in
the red jock.et-!Ji°e~s yotft" meat
,xpert, 100.
.-• . . .
. •
..
,. ...
• •
· Dli!luque's $ lloJQI Buffet
Bonele~s and
Fully Cook~d.
Dubuque·or luer's
5.-11>: ' $495 '·(~11 . '
4-lb.
Can
DISCOUNT BUYS ON WILSON MEATS
All Meat Franks ;: 58'
Com Country Bacon ~::I'~ ;: 59'
Tenclennade Ham ~~ ._$13•
Canned Hams .:.:;:;.c:;:: .. ~::-$419
'.
j Fresh l~mb Chops :::: ._ 9~:
l11mb Rib Chops .,,. c:,.. ~""' ,. $]
"
1 S.afeway Bologn·a. 'Z'~~ .. 19<_. .
' .
Hebrew National·~:.'\'~~~·~:; 59< . . . '
G 110 Sala 'lloli'"D~Sol>mi l·OL 49" a me {b-f¥.pks.J19ti ,q. I . . :
Oi1tDUHf
. POPULAR BRAN. · ,p,;eef
:-CIGARETIES ;· -· ·
' ' ~ .. ,. : . '
, . Rft!}UlorotKia9sOOO'MM's'dn..$3.~ ' ~ . 'I " ' '
$
ctn.
' . ..
plus tox
' . • ' ' ' • '< •
Sare all year long at Safeway Discount
i
. . .. .
.
"'! • " ~
lb.
RED APPLES .
NAVEL ORANGES
. I
Ddlc1Ni 4 -10. Foney Qdty Ii Northwest Gfown · &
l L"t• 6 ~!u
,,.----------...·" .. .
_ G~apefruit 6 $1
.
POTTED MUMS .
.Assor1ed Color! S.f•. 1 Floro! Qoolty s 199
Gift Wropped • pis. '
• Texas 1\IJb~ Red-large Size I~•
.1taha11 ~qu,ash • large ·Atocados . . .
: . . Anjo.u Pears
G;een' eanage '. .. .
· Fresh· Cucumbers
' .
--.... ..,
U.S. Ko. l ... ..,
.29'
3 •• $1
4 II. $]
.. 15• '
2 tM 25'
' Shank Portion
· S1vory-Smoked
lfutt P.ortion
lb. 69c)
Whole Hams
Farmer John 69' Gift Wrapped I~.
·Gourmet Hams
• S~mon's Hickory Smolc:ed
• former John • OUbuque
Hormel Cure 81
•Morrell Chef • luet Mini
•Armour Hom NiJggets
~139
!149
LARGE·'AA'
EGGS
Cream 0' 1he Crop-Farm Fresh
COTILLION ICE
CREAM
Half
Gal.
COLD DUCK
Sov Bo n s) 89
. ii 5th
DISCOUNT HOLIDAY BUYS!
il Onion Soup Mix = ';:: 35' t Tomato Juice .;:.-:,~: '::-29'
I Tortilla Chips • .:::,~ .. ~~ 29 '
flHandi-Wipes ,.~~·~:::...,, :r,: 49< I Ajax Cleanser ""'~"i"" '!: 23•
ICranapple Juice ~.::; ".;t• 69'
fi Instant Coffee ,=. ~ 99•
Peanut Butter :,:, ~ $pt
USDA Choice
Grllde Btef
Rolled & 'Tied
Chuck to
Pot Roast
DAILY PILOT
. . '
M\ Satella~ Stores •• OP£ it
"ell "i ears \la~• I~ ~ Regu\ar Rours · ·
USDA Choice
Gro~e lamb
Fresh American
Short Shank
Lamb Chops
S'!lll $)79 Lti• h.
I I
•• t •
Fresh Pork Chops i~:~i:;·~::P::~ .. 69
Fresh Pork Roast ~;~~:£1• h.49e
" Ground Be·ef '"'''''""''"'' s·3C ·I 11 Air Sire Patkaie
USDA l1sptclc4: l1r W•1l1s111111ess ll
Boneless Beef"Roast i::, ._ $J2•
Sirloin. Tip Ste'aks J.:::~. 11. $1 49
Boneless Beef Steaks "''"' $1 19 Round hi.
T-Bo11e Steaks orClubS1eoks $169 USDAClloite Bftf ll
SAFEWAY
COFFEE
ORANGE
JUICE
FRESH BAllERY BUYS!
8RJe .. Bread r,;;~:;:::: 3 ,:~$1
fiAngel Food Cake w~"' r:,:~ 39'
FROZEN FOOD BUYS!
IMeat Pies .=-:~ ~:; 19'
• Bel-air Waffles r~:!n ::; 12'
8 Bel-air Com =.:'c.;::' 2 ::, 52'
FRESH DAIRY BUYS!
r N '-"'•-•99 C!!I Q<oWCd.89"
Soft Margarine '="
Grade 'AA' Butter ~
'<:.'.' 47<
~:r 29·
Boneless Pork Roast I: 11.79'
Fresh Pork Steaks 'c:,~:· ._79•
' • leg Of Pork '"''w""''~'"°''""' • 69' {B~U HQlf lb. 79c) ru.
Fresh Liver Sausage ~=rt.49' ;
'
COLDBROOK
MARGAR.INE
CRAGMONT
Quart $
Bottles
(plus deposit)
HOLIDAY LIQUOR BUYS!
i'nce1 !!iec1.vt In LU<l~ S.Otewoyl>i$CIMl1"
MacNair's Scotch .. ~,~~ "$5"
B b Bowliw,JGreen $39' our on 6yrs.Old-861'ruof 5i'
• •
I·
I
Stanton's Gin
Kavlana Vodka
Fidelis Brandy
!OProof
(rylhllOear
80Frwf
Colifom1a
1( $419 •
"$419 -;
,.;$3"
HOLIDAY PHOTO SUPPLIES
Kodacolor Film
Super 8 Film
CX126 12 Exposur11
Flashcubes '""i.!t.:"!..... r,: 99• .
HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS
Aiko-Seltzer Tablets !~ 58°
Pepto Bismol Liquid •,~' 87°
Prices Effective in
los Angeles & Orange Counties
(except Catalina) '-~..;_-=-~~;...__J ,
I
•
I
. --'
. . ....
U DAILY PILOT
Steiget's Choice
'
• j -• ~I ' ' ' . '
Wod!Msdq, Dectm!Mr 29, 1971
Gourmet Food
I
Life's Dessert
Jly JOHNA Ill.INN
NEW YORK -Rod
ste)ger'• an incredible actor,
frustrated director, seli-con-
fessed "wino" and "bum, .. oc-
casional coot with elegant
tastes and be likes to llve ln "caves." ' He's a poet. too, but mosUy
ROO STEIGER
he'1 a gentleman with a
gargantuan appetite for life,
who manages to reduce most
of life's traumas to the
ludicrous. His grace is his
beautiful, warped sense o!
humor.
He was here to promote his
new comedy, "Happy Birth-.
day, Wanda Jane," but would
. lhortlJ be enroute to his
California "cave,'' a Malibu
beach house, where he thrives
on 5UJl, water and solitude.
Rod's preference for
&Olitude and aversion to big
parties won him his "bum"
label and one of the great
"'desserts" of his life. "I was
going to Schwab&' Pharmacy
(the Hollywood drug store
where Lana Turner w a s
dbcovered} to meet a friend
who was a little bit or a bum
at that Ume.
"A Hollywood columnist was
comUc out and asked if I'd
like to go to a big party. When
I found it was foc Carl Sandburg, I said, i I want to
I' 10!' It wu at the Beverly
Hills hotel so I got a jacket ' I from a waJter and rented a tie
from the guy selling cigarettes
(for a dollar). I had on a red,
checkered shirt.
"When I was introduced to
Mr. Sandburg, he said,
•You've got a little of the bum
ln you, a bit of the hobo.
That's good!' For days I walk·
ed around saying, ' C a r I
Sandburg said to me . • . ' And
that's hOw tt happened, which
la rather sweet •.• That great
face with the silver hair."
steiger, the poet, writes in
Jong hand, almost illegibly in a
red leather bound notebook,
often recapturing the emotion
of the moment ''I often work
on them over a period of
yea.rs, often throwing some
away, keeping others.
Eventually, I'll be down to a
blank page, where I belong!"
Rod reduces life t o
simplicity: "You must have a
e>ncept, otherwise, you can't
select who to be around, what
to be around, what to talk
about. 'lbere are certain su·
jects, smells, tastes, foods,
even colors that bother you. So
just get them out ! It's very
simple, but people just don't
make the efiort to do it.
''There's only a good
woman, food, and a clean cave
and that's about it in life, isn't
it -and sell-respect! Our
caves haven't changed that
much: now they're air con-
ditioned and wall to wall. But,
bui.cally, they're still caves.
lt'1 important to own, not
rent, even if it's only a room·
and-a·half."
Rod once had a voracious
appetite., but "not anymore.
J've di&coverei diet aourmet ·
cookbooks. You get thlnp like
chicken mare.ago and mate
them in a way they taste the
same, but have bout two-
thirds of the caloric count.
I lost 40 pounds. But I have
to have a diet that tastes good '
on lbe tongue. I can't just sit
down to carrots and boiled
eggs. I also have to figure on
at least hall a botue of red
wine a day because I'm a
wino!
"I used to cook more than l
do now. I was very good at
pumpkin ples and pork roasts.
"I love C2llnese food, but 1
destroy everything with black
bean sauce. I mean, the poor
arlnese chef! You know bow
people are with catsup. I love
Chinese sausages aod greens.
'lbat,.killa me."
1be actor gels a strong
reading on people through
their palates. ' ' I t • s a
psychiatric fact, J've never
seen anybody yet who loves
food who didn't like everything
else that's good in lile: usually
they like to make love, to
drink and to laugh."
ROD'S PUMPKIN PIE
l 9-inch unbaked pie shell
l !Ai cups cooked (or canned)
pumpkin
l tablespoon molasses
J,i cup light brown sugar
lf.t teaspoon nutmeg
lf.t teaspoon cloves
11.t teaspoon ginger
l teaspoon finely grated
orange (or lemon) rind,
optional
1 pinch salt
2 eggs, sllghtly beaten
1 cup Half and HaU (Cir
evaporated milk)
Prepare pastry fr om
scratch, according to favorite
recipe (or use prepared or
frozen pie shell.)
Line 9-inch pie pan, leaving
fluted edge for crust. Combine
all ingredients for fi lling; pour
into sheU.
Bake in prehated 425 degree
F. oven 45 minutes (or until
silver knife inserted in center
of filling comes out clean).
Chill before serving. Serve
alone (best for dieters) or
with slightly sweetened whl~
ped cream, dusted lightly with
ginger. Serves 6. •
BAKED CHICKEN GRAND
MARNIER
2 whole chicken breasts
About 1 tablespoon vegetable
oil
1 teaspoon salt
1' teaspoon paprilul (or
white pepper to taste)
l cup minced white onion
IJa teaspoon finely •grated
orange rind
Vt cup eva porated milk
l tablespoon fresh lemon
juice
l tablespoon frozen orange
concentrate
1 egg yolk
2 tablespoon Gran Marnier
(or Cointreau)
Cut chicken breasts in
halves. Spray vegetable oil
lighlly on tenon-coated skillet.
Brown chicken breats quickly
on both sides; lift off skillet.
~ighly grease bottom of
ovenproof casserole, cover
with half the minced onion;
top with chicken breasts.
Seasoo breasts with salt and
paprika (or white pepper ). Top
with remaining onions, cover,
cook in preheated 350 degree
F. oven about 40 minutes.
Combine orange rind, milk,
lemon juice, o r a n g e con-
centrate, beat egg yolk and
Grand Marnler (or Cointreau).
Spread over chicken.
Cook uncovered 15 minutes
longer (or run under broiler
with name set low to brown
and crispen), Serve with crisp
green salad with diet Ro-
quefort dressing. Serve with
good bottle of Beaujolais.
Each serving has about 200
calories. Serves 4..
Pineapple Sauce
A Tasty Topping '
Tbil sauce benefits cake
dtlect.bly.
CllEAMY PINEAPPLE
SAUCE
l can (IV. ounces) crushed
pineapple In heavy syrup
2 '"yolks ~cup augar
l teaspoon lemon juice
l conlal.ner (I ounces) heavy
crwn • Jn a atrainer thoroughly
drain pih<opple. m as h I n i
down wilh a apoon. Re.serve V•
aip ol tllo plnUpple syrup;
allo reserve the crushed
pineapple (thera will be l4
cup). In a W'l' Ill quart
aucepan. with 1 wooden
spoon, beat egg yolks aUgbUy; .
stir in the sugar and lemon
juice, then gradually stir in
the reserved .14 cup pineapple
juice, keeping smooth: cook
over moderate heat, stirring
constantly, ulit.il thickened -
about 5 minutes. (Mixture
won't curdle even if It comes
to a boll). Cool.
Several hours before sef'\'-
ing, beat the cream unUI stiff:
fold it into the cooked ~lk
mi1ture., ~ •t a time. Fold In
the reserved crushed pineap-
ple. Turn into a serving bowl.
Cover and chill. Serve over
1Uct1 of spongr, anglefood or
daffodil cake. ~fakes about 3
cups -about 9 servings.
. . I • • • .. -. . . . . . .. . .. ' . • • ·' . . -. . . . . . . ........ .
WHOLE I
BODY
. .
RIOM:i-~=1AM1Lv--. BREAKFAST SfECJALS
. CiAMEGHENS fJ!!,!i!~.~.~~~~~'.E. PKG. 29' ·GROUND BEEF =~~--~65c .
TOP SIRLOIN.... -: s1.a9 ·
BEEF STEW MEAT IClllEWl -~9Bc,.
BEEF SHORTRIBS~'i'i.in _~4f 1
SHOULDER CLOD ROASTSawn _ .. i 1.09
BONELESS ROUND STEAKS •· .. 1.1.2 9
ENGLISH CUTSHORTRIBS _:·._79c
MAYFllSll K'5 :~
UIGlll .-.oo•43c ·DOZEN IN
U. LAISI AA oor.47c t cARTON
MED.AA ,,,.,,.,,,,,37c
QtATEAU LA REINE
, ~~:69t ~~~1:~~s?£cl.4!~S9<'
RIB · TEAKS ___ ~ ~1.29 ~ fftll.~~.~!.~~ .............. •b. 9'
RUMP ROAST IClll£1N ~ ggc: allTER CUT SUCES ................................ lb.49c
BEEF RIB ROAST 11. sl.19 ; !.~~~-~.!5.~~~.5.......... . .. s 119
MAYfRESH ' Ml~:\ BEVERAGES ~~ NON llfTURNABlfS28 oz. llOTTlfS __ ............. ..
MARGARINE
$
l fOR
CHAMPAGNE
DRY, PNC Oil COLD DUCK MAGNUM $3.29
Flftse:Hlt\ANN 1~. ReG ............ ~M .................................... _
SNACK CRACKERS
NABISCO-All VARIETIES REG .................................. .
llSTDT ·NIMIS. $112
COFFEE111z.s1.., 6oz.
lll0
'---
·~CAN N
HAM
PHIWl£lPHIA&-OZ.P1CG. _,,, ••
F $
0
ll-
(
IAIOLA SAIDWICa IBF ~o .. 59c DAIOLA COOllm HAM ~i':.o ........ aqc
'
.·
J
c
'
' f ;-
MAYFAIR MARKETS WILL REMAIN OPEi
NEW YEAR'S EVE DEC. 31. WE WILL BE
OPEN All ,DA¥
. NE W YEIR'S :Dll
fllls , !
BONll.ESS--CStTER QJT ................. ! ............................. . •
SAV! 15cWITH THISCOOPON . SUGAR
SPRINGFIRD GRANULATED S·lb.
49~
ORTERHOUSE. s ~BO NE STEAgS 57 l-.. 1
TAILS OFF .................................................... -~ ........................... ..
ONELE55
EEFROAST '· CENTER a.IT OolUCKS ................................................... ~ ... .
AMILY
TEAKS
BONELESS WELL TRIMMED ................. ~ ......... -.... ,.:;. ......... , ..... ..
AMB
HO ULDERaoas1
U.S.D.A. INSPECTED FRESH FROZEN FROM NEW %EALAND""·
HOULDER
~AMBCHOPS
lb. I
~ I
1b. I
t9
lb.
~~lll:~~:'!~~~ ......................... 35.c JR. PEPPE~:i~~:~,f !:~; __ 95c
CANADA DRY QUllllllE n-0< ...... -......... -·--·-Cle . • SAUSAGE PIZZA 1111. .. ~--··-··-89c
CHEESE PIZZA 1Ht ~ ·--85e
FOLGERS ~ $225 COFFEE .. lib.
1 ·lb. CAN 84•
175 E. 17th St.
COSTA MESA
DELUXE COMBINATION nu. .... . . . ........... -. 95e
SAVE 11' WITH fHIS COUPON COMET
CLEANSER 14 OZ. CAN
to~
""'" GAINESBURGER ·
MOIST DOG FOOD 36 oz.
uMITONt.
COOl'ONml t AOUlT CUSTOMER
DE.C. JO TO JAN. S 79~
ARDEN DAIRY SPECIALS
50UR\CREAM _..,..,.~. ARDEN PINTS •
FROZEN FOOD SPECIALS .. .
DAILY PILOT 33
COLO SPLIT PEA SOUP
Peas Please
In Many Roles
Split Pea Soup, Vlchyssolse-
ia p]easantly different,
poMesslng both eye.and taste.
appeal.
Despite its fancy name,
whlch indicates the icy<0ld
way that It ls served, It is
aimply a flavorful puree of
spilt peaii, milk, and cream in·
stead of the patato base of the
origtna\r.up.
It wi obligingly wort Into
your party color acbeme, since
there are both yellow and
green split peas. And by leav-
ing oCf the French name and
using larger servings, It may
be served hot with hearty
garnishes of thin-sliced
frankfurters or V l e n n a
sausage, bits of ham or mi~
ped broiled bacon for a satis-
f ying meal-in-a-bowl.
SPLIT PEA SOUP
VICHYSSOISE-STYLE
Puree:
1 pound {2 and l/J cups)
green or yellow spJit peas
7 cups chicken stock (see
note)
%; cup chopped onldn
2 tablespoons butter or
chicken fat
no salt
Combine washed split peas
with other lngredlentl, uaing a
heavy cooking Pot or Dutch
oven of 3 to f quart capacity.
Uncovered, over high heat,
bring to bolling point rapidly.
Reduce hat to simmer.
Cook un til split peas are soft
enough to sieve. Stir up Crom
the bottom occasionally to
avoid sUckiag. This will take a
blt more than 1 hour. lf the lid
does not flt well or lf the heat
is uneven, add 1 cup h o t
water to finish. Do not use a
pressure cooker.
Note: homemade chicken
at o ck Is the best for real
chicken navor. Use the broth
from cooking a nice fat stew·
Ing hen for a chicken dish or
use backs, necks, and wings.
Your favorite cookbook will
tell you how. Canned chicW.
soup may be used.
Remove from heat. While
still hot, put through sieve,
food mill or in blender. Tbe
latter gives a smoother puree. r.oot puree quickly by set·
Ung \DlCOVered in cokl water
or crushed lee, at.l.rriI1i fre-
quenUy. Yield: I to 7 cups.
Soup:
3 cups puree for C servings
1 cup milk
1 cup heavy or light cream
OR
1 cup undiluted evaporated
milk
an1pped chives, fresh, frozen
or freeze.dried .
Measure the amount of
puree for desired servings.
For six ,.t-c\IP servings, use 3
cups puree (about half the
yield). Gradually stir in mllk:.
When smooth, stir in cream or
undiluted evaporated mUk.
Taste, adding I a I t lf
neeessary.
Cover with lid, foil or bawl
cover. Place ln refrigerator to
chill to an lcy~Jd, the whole
business preferably done the
day before.
The recipe may be doubled
to use hot or the remaining
puree may be fro:ien for use
hot or cold. Be sure to thaw in
the refrigerator the day
before making it into IOllp.
COLD SOUP .
Stir sou p well. Serve well·
chilled soup in bowls placed ln
crushed ice or ladled from a
~ salad bowl embedded in
larger bowl of crushed lee or
small lee cube!. Top each
serving with a liberal sprtnkl·
ing or chives.
Good served as a main
course at a "luncheon for the
girls" accompanied by piping
hot Pannesan cheese squares:
angel, sponge or pound cake
with a compote of mixed can-
ned and fresh fruits of the
season.
For Parmesan Ch e e a e
Squares, trim crusts from a
day-old unsliced a an d w i c h
bread loar. Qit bread in large
cubes or fat fingers, as yoll
please. Brush each liberally on
all sides with melted butter.
Then give a genero us
coating of grated Parmesan
cheese. Arrange on two cookie
sheets. May be done ln the
morning. Keep cold. Just
before serving time, place in
350 degrte F. (moderate) oven
to brown and heat through,
about 8 minutes. Serve bot but
do not cook all at once.
New Dish Introduced
Tomatoes Make ·Hit
GOOD BEEF LOAF
I •gg 1 can (8'4 ounces) stewed
tomatoes
1 % cups soft bread crumbs
1 '12 teaspoons salt
2 tablespoons m Jn c e d
scallion (green onion ) or 1
tablespoon finely grated
onlon (pulp and juice)
2 llblespoons m 1 n c e d
parsley v. teaspoon dried lialian
herb oeaoonlng
t\\ poondg gTI11Jnd lean beef
In a medium mixing bowl
but egg just enough to com·
blne yolk and white. Add
tomatoeo (Including liquid in
can): with a fork thoroughly
break up the tomatoes.
Add br<ad cnmtbs, salt,
tcalllon, parsley and herb ,....,,1ng, Lei lland unlil
br<ad absolts oome ol Ille li·
quid -10 minutel or longer:
with a fork, beat well.
Add beef; mi::r well witb
your fingers until blended.
Oil a shallow baking pan; or
line pan with foll and greas.
foil. Turn irieat mixture Into
the center of the pan and
shape fnto a row>d loaf •bout 7
inch .. in dlameter and 1 \\ i...
ches deep.
Bake in a prthealed fOG.
degree oven tot 40 minutes.
With 2 wide spatulas rtmove
loaf lo serving pillte.
Garnish, if you lite. wltll
wagon-wheel macaroni mWd
with butter and 1raIa4
Parmesau cbeele: lll'VI rt-
maining macaroni with boel
Joa/. Makes I .. rv1np.
Note : When you make tile
soft b1'tld crumbl !or tho l>oef
loaf you ... do ao by cutting
alicod bread fine with a knlfe;
I
l
I
I
• t, • ..... ' .,
J <f DAILY PILOT >
' . , ..... ' ... ' .... ' ~ .. ,.. \ ,. ~ •-.'• o ll •-,.,. ~
\
FARMER JOHN
ORKtRUSE
c
• • ' •• -..... ~ •< , • •• • • • • • ' " • • • ...
STATll DOS. CllTIFIEI
IUF •WM' TfllDll
GCIWllTUD
CLUB OR CUBE
STEAK:S .
YOUR s 123 CHOICE LI.
RIBSTEAKS .
SIRLOIN TIP;;;.;t; ....... ·······;Ll.99'
T-•ONESTEAK·s ......... L•.,.l.2 3\
' . • ........................... Li. 1.45 STATER BROS. MONEY BACK
MEAT GUARANTEE!
'-• ' I
YOU'RE ASS~D OF THE FlNEST.fATll'ki QUALITY WITH
Atl sr•reR Bttos. ME•'TS. 'f.Vt:RV PJ!CE OF MEAT vou
BUY AT STATEl BROS. IS UNCONDITtONAllY GUARAN·
TEED OIYOUR MONEY Will BE ,CHEERfUllY REFUNDED.
LB. I
BUTI Pomo11 OR 5nc .
PORTERHOUSE STEAK · · · · rt·-""·
TOP SIRLOIN STEAK . . .. LB.$ ~·9 . '
• ................... LI. 1,79 -""!::=~· ' --·· WHOLE HAM -·-·-.. ·•· 1&. '7
iiouNi°iOiE aoAsT .. LB. 73c R&.~10·1HARSIBT 80NELESSROUNDSTE.tK LB •.•• S1 .07 97. CARNE ROUND STEAK B?~E .......... LB.-•' • . ..~ ....... HA' MS' ~
STATEIBIOS.CERTIFIEDIEEF S3 ~
CHUCK ROAS'.~ ................. LB. c pA,l~~TJii~ .. y ,~,
IONEUSSIEEfSHOULDD " 9~ r ~ 1 .,
ROLLED ROAS ......... -. .... ~~-· ·7 .-· 5 $.A '39,.
FRESH •LEAH• DIUCIOUS' GllOUND HOURLY 63 " G . OUND BEEF . c STATIRUOS.CERTIFIEOBUF .. ;_ .... : ........... LB.
8
LEAN •
3
TINDER
,TAILllRAfrC>•'l-Ll.P~CKAGE , r C , ·,, c ' SLICED BACON ................. LB. 48. , r' ; •
w1LSON·s . 6$c LB. WIENERa ALL MIAT -·-.......... LI. . 1-sTTHRU,S-TH RIB .... Ls.s1.os
STAnlllOS.CDTIFIED•IF · · 95 .. RUMP ROAST ....................... LB. · · c Pou~~~ tfA.r.f ... $&.'s9 ~
GRAPEFRUIT
LARGE FANCY DESERT SWEET
8
LB.BAG
APPLES
SMALL X-FANCY RED DELICIOUS
2 POUNDS
LARGE EXTRA FANCY SWEET 2 2 9c 'ANGERINES ........ .. ... LBS.
LONG TENDER CRISP GRUN 3 2 9c CUCUMBERS ................. FOR
LA.RGf TENDER EXT RA FANCY 19'
URO•F•NCYSWUTNAVEL 39' EGGPLAMT ORANGES 2 '"· .... ••· ·
?leaLtJt. & '8~ Ai4
' DRISTAN WASH
CAPSULES & CARE ' ... s 129 ~~L s 1 00 43(
Of.IQ LOTION U.
PINEAPPLE g~0~~~~i~"'° . ~~"'~~~ 40' MIXES ~~;\,':,';~~~.:°.~.~~ ... "'OT 90' LUNCHEON LOAF BOLTMOAE 3 i.i~ 'I
FRUIT ~Cl(JAIL ~:,');, .. ,. CAN 43' SLICED OLIVES OB£RTI -2 2'-0l 33' SWIFTS SALADS ASSOATIO,. 02 55' PEARS .~'!... ·v: 45' ~. 32'."' 20' CHOPPED OLIVES OB<•TI 2 ... "' 29' APPLESAUCE 11;:'J."~'ll'.?" ·" 02 35'
DRESSING ~·,l',•,~1;~~~-"---· •oz 39' HUNTS KETCHUP --·-·-""' 41 ' CINCH CAKE MIX :'.!~~.':~--.. 28'
CRYS.TALS :;~;~;:~~f.~~~~. ,..oz 49' SKIPPY DOG FOOD .... 3 "°'· 33' GAINES BURGERS ... .. ""' 93'
PRICES EFFEC. THURS. thru WED., DEC. 30..JAN. 5: •
14•00 s.. •eol"•nt ... " ... """ ...... 707 WMt NIMl'Hl!lttl Sh-Mt, C..,. M-
6162 ldl19ft •-· H11tl1ttto11 koc•
'JHJ W• S..twr••"" '"""· s-to A• n11c..., ............. ......
U60 Nertti Tllri• Aftll-. s.t-A"
•
tSM W• ltNctw"f, AMh.1111
1180 HltWf'orl 11,111,, Cetto MeN
1171 lllll•r '""'· Costa "'"• 14171 lelll Hin A ... M, T111ri1
14J1t ............. WWfr'-
:: .
•
• ..
•
JI~ ILLINGWORTH
".STORE ~4 At-l>IGER
. 241 E. 17th STREET
. COSTA M.ESA
~. ·-,'
·' ~ Slou HouU
:~ :~ MOM.fllt 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SAT. I $lit 10 ~M. TO 7'.M..
~
. '
°FL.AVORFUL
IRISH BRAND
Clol'Hdleef
·111$10 .
JULI ! lHSCOt.f NIS
lwlRT DAY
tE'iPEPSODW ADULT
ljiiii( TOOTHBllUSHU 391
" ~ 11ruSOa."'"" oli-
..--. 'jiOiii' SHAVE CREAll 351
~ iiiaL'" · 6CEl<TED ""tl!ISEHTII>
~ 'jiOiii' AITl·PERSPIRAIT 111
1.otJNC2 aomz NOltMAt • DRT • O'lt.T lllECK SHAIPOO 871
11-0UMC! JonLE
'"""""" IOTTL£
.... ....
271 ...
I.COUNT BOX • 22.--«1 GAU.ON sm; TRASH CAI
LllERS •r FUCO 49c
·-~------------n GW.ON • F, UJ) HllYJ DUJJ Trasll Call 3"
•:r----------------
!Ye.OZ. TUI! • 1'!GUUI 01' ntSH MINT ~·•lCWIS
'jiOiii' TOOTH PASTE 66f --------------
'
• WITH &&IO.UBLE DISCOlm
FEAtilED HrTHIS AD •
flll At .JJISC0Ukl$-: ;-:"
fVErfY OAf ;' .
AllHA ICTA Dl~lfl'" "'"
ll·OfNC! COHTAUl!ft rwtTH !GO 37• ALl'ltA BETR POTATO SALAD '
32-0UNCE' CONTAINER ...
'"""°' ·-; WISCONSlll LOMCHORM CffWE 9U a.
JH)UHCE TUB 1'11£CIDUS RICOTTA
l•N••cz jjUOii POLISH SAUSAIE
3-0UMCE PACV..GE
ALl'ltl lllA SLICED llEff ,ff_'
' ...
1" ••
. '
-... JOfAl Ul~CtllJKf ) ,
IV!~T DAY
Al#HA lfrA DISCOl.lllT PllCI
@ ~ilfTiilun,111111US 791
@a'c~OuTE C111PS 31'
~lnu. PDfll 271
ic~(aom llllCU 29'
' ' ' .'
All ALPHA BETA STORES
Will BE
Cl.OSED · NEW Y!AR'S DAY I
O.PEN ,
Wt. 21111l.11.TD7 P.11;
ltlfAI UtSLOUttJS
lt'lRV OAY
AIJ'lfA I fl A DllCOUHT PlllCE
--~--·~--------
J&.OUNC! IOTTLt
POIPlll
OLIYEOIL 881
-----------P.RESSllfG • J.~OUNct BOTTLE 48' HAIT lOlDEN CWH
~ ~ CA!I • Em.Y CALIFORNIA ~ a1.t'Ptnm ouvu 311
@iHtmttra'llfu 291
@mm~CAI! 11f
@~Twis><>LCAJf D
@mN"Alr CAI! ti'
@r=!!-~
COITA MllA-fll I . Intl Sf,
MUNTIQTOfll .l.t.CNf-fMI Mimi
MUNTIMOTOM IUCff -1tM1 Jill, Mall! M.
POU•TAIN VAUD -1M .. ._
U.OUMA HILU ,-UMI ~llt .. i. L ....
lltVl"I -1 ... C."tr' URl¥.nlty P•l'lt
IOtlTM LAIUMA -Mn S. C..11 ......... ,
' .
"
• •
I
' '
•
WE WWIOIE FOOD
STAMP lllOPPERI
11' ~,JP:? AllGUl&. 11$11Dt a. -COUNTY AllllA lllA
J(HAt UISCOU~TS ~ ' EVlfif UAY ""'
'PufCK PRIDE • 1.4 OAU.ON • FROZEN 39' IMITATION ICE Mill ' "': '
' (SY Eo'm"~ii'AtfWa'til• 40'
35-0Z. CO/fTAUWt "'
@ VAND&UM'PS•lJ.OC.
BEEP • flt.OZEH II•" ENCHIWA DINllUS IN'
~ ORE-IDA HASH BROWMJ. ~ 14.0Z. BOX • f RO!l?K tlil:" POTATOfS O'HIEll W'
~ DOU: • •qz, CAN • ,.c;izm · 2 Al ~ l'INEAPPll-VllAllCE Dlmll U'
~ •OU•CE CAO • F119mf 26I ~ WELCH'S CIAlllEIRT JUIC£ .
~ B~'ill!ilA"ti~~om •11 ~ ii-O'i: COfTtt RICH ~
FROZEN .... @ 12"-0Z. BAG.
DOWNTIWE WAlfW wl
~~~·ox· ~·DOWlfffLW HOT
SUCUIWD 441
~
--
JU!!,IS! num 6 VEOCT.UU:S 8111IU'S
lllY FDOO 13'
r
. . ..... ·•
;.,,j ~:.:LV fllOT
TUMBLEWEEDS
Mun AND JEFF
1, ,,
r
PLAIN JANE
' . • .. '+ .. "'
WA~ i
OFTHE 4
SEXES ~
£ •
I DAILY CROSSWORD •• ,by R. A. POWER I
ACROSS 42 Swttt doughy
'""'' 1 On fop 4) W19tf s COl'l'lokt 44 Dainty IJ Wtlghtd down 45 Food of tht
14 Twist 1 mast lsllllds
arour.t on lls 4l Sfr Thomas
"" -: ""· l5 Whrrt lniq Is statesm111
l6 Soap plant 4! Small fry
17 Rusts 52 Rivers flowing l8St~; into 1 hwgtr
Abbr. ''" 19 Cutting lnslnr 5& Set of
mtnts: Suffix h1strumenls
20 Distneuni>tr 57 Finnish poems
21 Ont who SS Lustrous
throws his mtl•lllc
money 1.Wl'f tltmtnl
23 One ptylng 59 Astronaut's
111\0 othtrJ employer;
affairs Abbr.
2:5 Dbservtd bO Thfow Cl\lt
2b E1gl1 plLll bl Bone: Prefis:
'"' bl Vul!lfrablt
27 Lm;-(allld 6) Letters
rodtn!S 6.4 Actor -
'9 Alu: Gtrman Parker
32 Sheller •ta 65 Enclrclt with
along a short 1 btlt
35 Altnt
~ Sh1lterfd DOWN
flltttlng plact
of lflCienl l Tho!.e who
Grrecr partake or
37 Farmer 2 Easily under-
J;ipann• toln •I"" ,8 BIC>Ckhtad 3 Exctl 39 Me~s of proof 4 New England
•O 5280 fHt States: Abbr, "l D«ays S Biily-:
MOflllY Nottd golf"
YMlerday's Puzzlt Solvfd:
b Flower
7 Charge against
l)l'Operty
8 Rtal rstatr
9 Patte rs'
whrrls
10 love: Italian
11 Rules ovtr
lZ Htb<tw lt!ltf
lJ Colony of
lnstcts
21 Breadth
22 -sysltin:
Ust of
T 'flurnbefS to
indic att
i2/l9n1
34 Pl acrs of
h~b1t111 I
drudgery and
conlintment:
2 words
35 Photograph
Jb OiscolOf
38 Vinegar
coot~i11er
42 Singrr l ily -
44 Outer portions
of the rarth
4S P«tlons
47 Portly
48 Cofns
49 Gl1afff'-ll kt
cilmtra ;wiim;ll
aprrtires 50 Morr srns iblt
24 Think 51 Tolrratt
27 Highwtty 52 Canada
28 Donations to balsim,
l11t l>CIOI' for onr
30 CUlay cl m::ney 53 House fumish
31 Loathe iflg llrms
32 Explosi~t 54 Arm of thr
weapon Black Sta
"Rose's boy 55 Extend t1pwlfd
friend 59 Egg drink
.,,-..,,.....,,...,.._ 10 I I
'
\, ... ;
ms· PU&UCITY IS NOT
GOOO. IVlltY NUT IN
TOWN WIU. WANT 'TO
S1\JOY GERn!'S MUD
""
By Tom K. Ryan
ly Al Smith
W1$51M1 .
'TllE Pl!OPl.E IJNDER!
'Tiii TAeUls!
By Dale Hale
ly Frank laglnsld
PEANUTS
. -. -
MISS PEACH
PERKINS
'
U'L AINElt
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
By Charles M. Schub
I ADMIRE 1HE lolll/ 1He{
STAND 6IAAD OVEP.1HE 5llEe'
. . .
•&-M ....
ly Mel
By John Miies
1y Al Capp
NO'SEN'SE. APPl.'l'IH1
FO' THAT TV J0&-
·1T'U. '""-NI> Ill HODOU&T-II
11
I
By Gus Arriola
ly Ferd Johnso~
By Roger Bollen.
THE GIRLS
The finance chairman reports she's nre wt have enoug•
n1011ty for new drapes, as lhe last time lhe looked tbe
teapot was filled almost up to the 1po11t."
Wtdntsday, Det•mbft; 29, 1471 D41LV Pl~OT 37
::'.:·Rice Is ' Nice.1· B~t American Ham anq Eggs.~1.s Much Quicker
• • . ' ' , '
· By JEANNE LESEM foods . ''Spaghetti and plna are a part or \tie ne"( rood see .
Ul"I ,._ 1•i1W She said lhat I.he cooking very pcpular in Japen ·and • }!e's a "French'' c'lleC in J a Whlla' tastes in food an qull'efi the westeqreullom QI Jmauers to dise1111. • 11erved1rlght after a tpeaJ. chanalng, oorne. old c;:usloma .wQlnen~s lunc~s u soclll She said she was •urprlaed I '1We .aeparate sweet UUDgs
prevail , Because homes don't eveDls. Mrs . .Akiyama IJll'd to see, on a~ earlier v~t to rom the meal. In Japan, all
u,aually have bla fretien, wom'e~ rmly entertaJo at the United Slates, that men families have thrte o'clock tea
~omen aUU.Jbop daily. lunch iny other 1fttil at eat so many very 1wett with 1weeta at home. Just for
NEW YORK (UPI) -llhowa demonstrate ail kinds of Chloese food has1been, popular Tokyo restaurant and WPuld
Weatern-style foods are cuisines, includina; Japanese, there for a long time,'' she like some day to owft 1 a
catching on ln Japan for the Chinese, French, G e r m a n , said. • restaurant, ol his own, fealur·
same reuon that eooveni~ Arnerlcan and Italian. Her elder son is very much ing Freocil food, of COlp'Se. And they haven't yet a<> home, uAlturthey blW' ICbool thiJlis, and ·that deaSerla are the family, no guests.'' -'--~--.~-'--~~-;,<'<I-~~~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~ foods find a ready· IJ'Ull'ket ln -•••
the United States. Both make'
· less work for mother.
· _ In an interview here, Mrs.
Chieko Aklyaoia, a television,
news commentator in Tokyo,
said many urban families eat
: . i. ham, eggs and toast
: . breakfast because it takes less
: ·t!ql.e_ to prepare than a tradi-
• tlonal J apanese meal built
· around rice.
VAlUABlE COUPON
•
Mrs. Akiyama was here
with the fourth a n nu a I
Japanese housewives tour,
which is based on an essay
contest sponsored by the
J apanese subsidiary or the
Johnson Wax Co. The tour is
designed to acquaint Japanese
women with Americ an
DOUBLE BLUE 11· , .
CHIP STAMPS . 1
"
WITH THIS COUPON 1!11 I
VOID AFTER SUNDAY, JAN. 2 Ii'
NO MINI MUM PURCHASE-NO MAXI MUM PURCHASE I''
customs.
Now, about that break away itom the traditional rice
_ .breakfast, :r.trs. Akiyama ex-
~lained :
, "The wife has to get up ear·
ly in the morning -which she
:doesn't like to do-to cook rret. Even with an electric
:~er, it takes 40 to i5
:-minutes. It used to take an
· • hour over a wood fire.
~~ "In my childhood, for every
. "'~ekfast, we had white rice,
: : : ~ybean soup, seaweed and a
:; ~w egg over the rice. Soy
_ '.: ~uce, tOo, and pickles."
:·~:She said the pickles were
:-made from va riou s in-
"gred I en ts .inc Judi n g
cucumbers. horseradish or
. cabbage or, in summer, egg-
plant.
The American-style salad
that her three grown children
now eat with their western
breakfast apparently is a
substitute for the pickles. She
said it consisted of tomatoes.
cucumbers, lettuce a n d
sometimes, celery, with either
French oil and vinegar dress-
ing or mayonnaise.
"We have white rice at
every dinner," Mrs. Akiyama
said. The main course,
tiowever, consists of such
things as steak or hamburger
or thin pork cutlet, breaded
and deep-fried in Japanese
fashion.
· · But it's children'~ tastes
that really are changing, she
&aid.
Like their American
counterparts, primary and
middle school, or first through
ninth grade, pupils lunch at
school. A typical meal in·
eludes milk, a beverage that
was alien to Oriental diets un-
W recent times.
Plus western hamburgers or
ONE OROER ONLY ANY AMO,UNT
YOU CHOOSE TO BUY
GOOD ONl. Y AT BARGAIN BASKET
3 BIG SALE
DAYS
THURS., FRI., SUN.°'
DEC. 30, 31, & ~AN: 2
GARD·EN FRESH
Vl!OETABLl!S
ONIONS
MILD
SPANISH 3~29¢
ORANGES
SWEET 'N' 6 ~ s1 00
JUICY NAVEL S
BANANAS
ff ~1~iDEN 1 o~B. -~-GRAPEFRUIT
i~~~~ 8CE~8LO 69¢ COACHELLA BAG
VALLEY
APPLES
Chinese food or fried fish. 6 L s1 00 ':!J'bere's bread instead of rice, EXTRA B
and it's mostly white bread. FANCY s
Daily cooking shows ind
•
I Uith thi1 coupon, 11e "'in•rnum purch 11• rtquired. l imit J
p•r coupon. -One coupor. ptr c"1!0111er. Void efl1r Sund1y, ! J111u•rv 2. • ·
iH --GOOD ONLY AT BARGAIN IASKET
STOKELY
e~R2~~ s~$1 or e WHITE KERNEL · R
;#:303 CANS .
SACRAMENTO
TOMATO 4F$1
46 FL~~1~! CANS :
SPRINGFIELD
PINEAPPLE
JUICE -
' 12 OZ. CANS'
ROLL ON DEODORANT
EXTRA LARGE 49 SIIE-1.S FLVtO oz. c I
••••• $1.09 ....... ''""
Our l"ric• Witkout I
Coo;pon 7'1e
With thi1 toupon, no 111!11!11111111 pu1ch •1• requir•d. Lill'lll 1
p•r coup11111. -011t coupon per cu1to111•r-Void efl•• S1111d•v,
Jenu1ry 2,
GOOD ONLY AT IARGAIN IASKE
CLOSED AL~
DAY SATUJlDAY
JANUARY 1st
-~-.... Oz>eiCl• .--~ .. ·---a:.:.;_::.:.
·tot~.Pi.~
TRASH
BAGS
TOTEM
BOX OF 10 BAGS
LIQUORS
WINES
BE E'R S
COUNT MICHAEL
VODKA$2 89
FIFTH ' , .
CALYllT
l.XTJ:A ILINDID
WHISKEY
LICJHT, AlllY
SCOTCH
food commercials on etch of DELICIOUS 16 PROOP _;_ DISTILLID I
ILINDI DIN SCOTLAND
Tokyo's six television.stationsl '::~'.::::::'.:::'.'.::'.::'.:::'.:::::::'.:::'.'.::'.:::::'.'.::'.:::::'.~~~---:::-:::-::-:=-=::-:::-:------------:::-::;:-help create an appetite for I-.
wesi.rn and otkher foreign ~!'Jf.! DE:LI SPREADS 5·9c ~~~~::s ' Lo. <•N -·· $2 29 f R Q Z £ N
.: Coo i e ALL .. .,n... ,v. oz. l LB. CAN ··--·········· 0 i~~~~~~~;~~~~~))"( : . ,., .. , ... ,.... . 10.. PET cARNA TION ,, oz. 4 / 51 ·. OG FOOD .. COFF·EE °CREAMER 59' SLENDER c••• ::: Dou bl e 1.P ... _oz._•_o•_· _. _. _ .. _ .. _._"'_'_o_•-:----..i.-".;.•.'.;.'.'·-'·-·--------:----.... "-9_.,_._•':::in:"•_ .. _______ '."'"_
·Treat
A two-layer cookie is offered
for a tastt treat.
APRICOT BARS
PPJD:E or nm msr BAR ·M E HICKORY
-. tnmm-SMOKED
BONELESS
LEAN EASTERN
W~OLE GRAIN FED
~t~~r~~ CENTER CUT RIB
T_AV_ER_N _HA_M_S.....,._,.·_1---c-1! PORK CHOPS
PATIIE
JEAN ·
SMALL
SIZE
.C
Jb
OSCAR
MAYER
SPRINGFIELD
OR4NGE
JUICE , oz.
CANS
CHUN KING.
EGG ROLLS 'oz.
GREAT fOI PARTIES
Prices Effective:
Thurs. Fri. and SundaY'
Dec. 30, 31, & Jan.
c Prfcn Hbjoct to •lodl oo -.·
WI GI.AOL Y .t.CCEl'T
U.S,D.A. FOOD CO~PONS
lb
•
2.
'
•
•
8RANDNEW
'72FORD
ECONOLINE VAN
(E14AHND1492)
DISCOUNT
' '72FORDLTD
4 DOOR HARDTOP
loaded. (2J64N106054)
.
DISCOUNT
'72 FORD '1 TD ..•
COUNTRY SQUIRE WAGON
loaded. (2J76N129583)
$1 .230
OPP WINDOW STICKIR PRICI
DISCOUNT
'72MUSTANG
2 DR. SPORTS ROOF
loaded. (2F02J114212)
s539
OPP WINDOW STICKIR PRICI . '
'61 Comet (OOVWI $177 '67 vw
Cpe,, $!kit Shift, 11:..tl"' HNIW.
. " .DIS-UNT·
'72PINTO
RUNABOUT 3 DOOR
loaded. (2R11Xl33962) -" '
OPP WINDOW STICKIR PRICI ~ . ..,
Dl,SCOUNT
'72TORINO
Gran Torino Spt. 2 Dr. Hdtp.
loaded. (2A35N141370)
on WINDOW STICKIR PRICI
~~~~~~~~~~~--~ '59 Ford. ~w..,:~ ... 'f"'· ........... ,,.~. $177 '68 fiat STATION WAGON
----.• • Stick Sllill, rMlcl, helter. fXEX S!.21
DiSCOUN'r .. , ·· .. . . I
'72 T·BilJD
2 DOOR HARDTOP
looded. (2J87N118821) $ . , '
. OPP WINDOW STICKIR PRICE
9RANDNEW
' '72 FORD
~/2 Ton Pickup
(F10ARM84458)
'64 1 od 1 e DART $277 '65 Mus· t . n , · · 2 DOOR HARDTOP $577 '68 Chev ~!;, :!~~~~: ... ~: .~ .. ; ' Door Sed1n, A11tometlc Tren1mlulon. Tran5,, Alr't:oodltlonl/19, "°"""" $1 .... :
i Gaod Trf111p0rt11lon. !II.TU l'Ml VI, Und111 tOP. Alr. • Ing. (QISD.Hl) ,..-
• .
'51 GMC ~I~~.~~ Shift ...... ""'"°"'~' $277 r 65 Country ~;~:E .. :~::~.""" $577 r 68 Dodge t~;:~.""'·-""" ,.•] I 77
'60 International F~.:!.,!ED -s277 '65 vw ~.~G'"'"·'""·"''"·'W<MNO< $677 '70 Ford :::K:.:: .......... ""' 7
r 6 7 Toyota ~~.~~,~--,,,,_ <USC
5577 r 69 Chev. ~~~~7i'.="f.;;,::;,·:: ••. $16 77 r 68 fiat ~::': :::.~ '"' $ -77
'64 .Dodge ~~~:~-:,1=.·~·M··-:·~ $477 '67 Ford ~;;;.~~ .. ~~ .. , ... -~877 ·&9Tri°"1ph ~::._ .. »» ... , ~/ 977·
'70 .Ford · ~~~~~;;1~:~ ... , ... $2477 '67 T·Bird =:nvv~· .. ~~~:.·"·· VI,,, SfJ]~' ~70 M'u$tang ~~~~=,:·:,~ 2577.i
LE E• lONG TERM
: LEASING AVAILABL:E
•
. '
•
' .
:~H·B ··R&:A·' . . . . . • ••
' ''HOMEOWNERS DREAM"
Thick -.,.,,,.,; !hi. 4 -· (ormOl dip· lnl;.:room, 2~ bi.thS, family rdQ.n ·hon\e. 'Loads
¢Dric.k work hont and rMr patio and lush green
landscaping ~pletei this picture. All' this for ·
01'lly $29,"r.i(t'""Won~t 1~t
0
ca.ll now 842-2535.
' .
DUPLEX IN
CORONA · DEL MAR
.Wdl-bulll, beautiful. malntalned 2 bedroom du·
plex on CORNER LOCATION. Close to all shop-
ping, 10%. down. ·can now to see. Only $46,950.
Phone 67J.:8550. ·
;--_, .. '
' ABSOLUTELY TERRIFIC
-4 bedrooms, family room
.. -Stone fireplace
. -Encl01ed patio
-Fine neighborhood
-Oose to ahopplng
~ to schools :
-Tastefully decorated and landscaped
-AuUrnable GI loan -iaa,500
-~-23~''./,
FOUR BDRM. CHARa.i!ER
$25,450.
Tttriflc value-Room for Boat, Pool, etc. Spade:!.
Ing Clean -Owner Anxious. 646--TI71. SUBMIT
TERMS.
' "COWGE PARK" •
FHA·YA TERMS·
In Cnllete J1irk UIU e a $a0,400 GI toan~and
pay only f187 total per month. • e 3 Bedroom& and ranrlly Room • • e Bik Yard '
I Oa1e to Schools
Close to Shopping
Oo.e In on tl}il o~.
You'll be ~"yqu did. • Call 546-2313
•
'~Uf'GRADEb EXECUTIYE HOME"
AU this home nttdJ,-ls you.~ 2,~ feet of· luXUl'o
iotis 'living, • bedrooms \\.'lth a mammoth fin. tshed bonus ~ qver the prq:e. over $6,000 .
or upgrading ln thlS lathe A: ~laster beauty. call
Now 842-~ • ·.
•
" ' INCREDIBLE VIEW-:' •"
To enjcy t~e 1flnest in' Newport Bee.ch living, see
this gorgES>US 3 bedroom, with ¥'P8rate muter
1uite, large.family room leadlng out't'o a spark•
ling heated and filtered pool~ the moat breath·
taking view ·of Nl?WpOrt }'>&Y and C&tallna that
could be tOund. Truly a gem by the Pacific •. call
646·7171 for 'more details.
22· ~~~u:~.~.~ :~o~ ~~~· •
bedroom Mesa Verde home, 3 nreplaces, 2 baths,
iary patio areL Over 2,000 sq. 'ft. foi-only
$37,500. Phone 546-2313.
"NOTHING LEFT OUT"
Three ~ plus larie plush add-on family
room nestled tn quiet cul*sac. \Valk. to shop-
ping and 1choo11. Year around family ~vtng with
beautiful patio for enjO)'able eVei\inga. Don't
wait, a listing investment in gracious living.
&12·2535.
.BAY.CREST LOT $18,500 .
80 x 100.lot in PRESTIGE AREA. fmancµia: avail·
a bie--call now 646·717L
DREAMY VIEW! MODERN!
One in a million ls this excellent vacant 3 BR
home plus large separate faJ'l\Uy room with wet.
bar. ~~ muter bedrQom with drtsslng room.
ARE YOU READY FOR THIS
Just l~k at' thb: t\\.O story~ Bdrm 'liome plua
swimJliln&: poo't. Extra l&l'&e 10t, room for trailer.
Plus many maf.e extras. A barg&ln al $17,950 G.L
ro F.R:A. 847-8010. 1
COWGE.PARK
"REAL BUY!"
\Vhere could you find 24' living roon1 \\'/flttplace
+ separate 24' fiµnlly room, rorrpl!l dining area,
bullt·in elec. kitchen \vith am~e·storage ~pan·
try, rm. tor Klng 11.u: refrigerator, 4"bedroorna &:
2 bath. BeautifUUy lands~ AJl for only ' ' $32,950 -Try 10,%-down or VA Terms -No
down. can now 64ri·7171.
RENT OR BUY
This older· 2 BR duplex with 1 BR apt over ga·
rag~ with Jg bedroom-newly painted exterior,
2 patios. Owner baa reduced price $2000 for quick
sale. Call for det.al~n-8550.
• HARBOR VIEW CARMEL
No move in pa.in wifh this 3 bedroom executive'•
home. Shag carpets, custom drapes. brick patio
v.1.th wooden beamed·cover, formal·~ ~
electric garage door opener, and wattt softener. ' . Looks like t. model! Shown by appolritmenl.CaU
. ·~ ' 546--2313. Priced at $5:4.900. .
"HOME ENVIRONMEN1'" -1'1at • approaches lhe· ideal -may we suggest
this 4 bedroom' and family room. Formal dlnlna:
and covered i:-lJo.•New Orleans colonial? It of·
fen· a lifetime of gracl'ous living. Call 842-2535.
BA YFRONT LEASE OR
LEASE/OPTION
Fronts on 1unny beach-Y:ltw--3 large bedrooms
-3% be.tbs, 2·patios-3500 sq. ft of living at Its
Ch?ice Shorecllff location, park·llke yard. can best-Immaculate condition. 2 flreplaces-e;tudy
now, lt will be the wisest call you ever made--breakfast room-large sunny kitchen. For de--
673-8559. tails call 673-8550.
APPLE ·ptE CONDmON
Neat 4 ~ 2 Bai llome. Sparking with
new paint and all new ca.rpets, nee.r t.U schools
and shopping. Priced .t only $28,000. 847-6010.
ARCHITECTURAL MASTERPIECE
Tb.ls unique ~' t bedroom home la a must ~ to
appreciate; iaccesa to Bia Corona beach, breath·
t&king ~le. view of the ocean ansJ Jetty,
20x33 muter bedroom. 2 dressing :rooms~ U
yoo're looking for something different call for
appointm:nt tO 1ee this ~ Priced at ~
6~
'
FHA OR VA
4 Bedroom home in great location. Very 1harp
throughout. Walklng dlltanee to beach. No down
lo vets low down to non vet. $33. 750. 847-6010.
CONDOMINIUM WITH
FIREPLACE
Vacant, Immediate posseuion. Lov.•est priced 3
bedroom condominium in family aectldn t.vall·
able. Close t o pool, Recree.Uon area I: shopping.
$19,500. Call 546·2313.
' "GOLFERS DELIGHT"
If your a duffer swing Into thl1 Jar&e 3 bedroom
borne-. -Mlle high cathedral celllng1. Juit t. good
f wood to Mlle Square a:olf course. Tee up and
call 842·2535.
3 SALESMEN
NEEDE D
'
U9.rn More -Earn More -Serve Better
If you're t.n alert, dynamic person who'•
Jobking for. a grflll future Wlh one of the
fastest growing Companlta in Oranae Coun. \y, Sffw:. We»Hd)'ou!I
'
W•dllOlday, Dtct-29, 1971 DAllY l'llOT
NO " ONE-OFFERS· MORE!
1 ·, ........ __ .... -... -~ ft_... _.9 2111•1• In,• elf&c.,. ...... ..,._ 1 , •. ~ ..... -c ... ,...,.,_.......,...,.
' .
1 lft ~ M th. H•l'Mr ANI _ n 11 s.....,.....,... Actt• ,,. ..
..... _
FOR FIRST. IMPRESSION
1hls doll house has f .bands do"1n. The ;floor
plan la superb. 4 BdmJ. plus famUy room. Owner
motivated for fast sale. For more lnf6nnation.
call 857-6010.
FAMOUS ·LAst· WORDS!
"It I had onJy Invested' lft income property.11
Here's your chance to o"·n a fine 3 BR home plus
a s tudio a pt and live rt'nt fl'ff In beautiful Co-
rona del ,.tar. Impiaculate condlt.lon, newly paint·
ed, buill--iri, kitchen, 2 baths, You know loday'a
price! Tomprrow Is anyone's guess. call 673-8550
$25,990
A Spanish 3 bedrt:iom hacienda has l~ta .of ap-
peal with cul-de-sac locaUon. Lar1e living room
with brick fittplace, family room, 2 baths, plus
ahag carpeting and custom drapes. Lo~ of house
for llttie money. Don't miss seeing It, 546-2313.
PAYMENT LESS THAN RENT
When you. biy this beautiful home located ln
prime Hunt. Beach area. Beautiful shag c&t"P't •
Cov. patio. Gov't. appraised at $27,200. 847-6010.
. LIVE LIKE AN EAGLE!
' ' With ·a breat!ttaklng view· of the blue Pacific In
this outsta~ng f bedroom home In Laguna Hills
priced under the market at only. $!52, 75p.-custorn
I • , features throughout. High vaulted expoged beam
celllnp, expensiVE; panelling In living room, din·
In& room. expensive wall to wall carpets In mOl!lt
rooms. You'll never have another crack at a 4
BR home In this price ranae. Call now 673-8550.
"OWNER WANTS OUT"
MAKE MONEY ON THIS ONE!
This one needs some tender lovlna: CU'1!. A little
pa.int inside and out would fnake this, 1paclous
three bedroom and family i:oom home. Very de.
slrable, Corner lot 1ives ff.!Y boat acees1. Thill
is still a bargain at $28.500; Call 546·2.113· for
appolnbnent to see.
BUOY~ OH BUOY!
I Smack on the Water! New float for 40 footer,
One 3 bdrm. bOtne t.n4 aeparate one ~
........ Ev..,.lhlnc In --· $915.500. Call
646--Tln NOW~
' . •••
•
LUXURY AT LOW COST
\Vheq you-.own thl8 sharp 3 BdmL ,homt' with
extra lar~ bonus room over K8;I'&i:"· Heavy &hake
room, 2 baths. Priced at on1y mm
·: . SUPERBLY SPANiS!'I
IN 'BA YCREST ·
ls this 4 bedfoom. delightful, large home with
ramlly room, rormal dining 6' arl ehormoUll
courtyard patio. This unique home.in one ot th•
rreateat areas in Newport :Beach ls a must lo
aee and appreciate. $89,500. Call 846-7171.
·LOWER THAN RENT
By ownin1 this fine home. Shows.prlde of owneo
1hlp. -
'3 bOOrooms
•2 ba.thJ
•Newly palnted '
•New carpets through out
'Pool
•Only $26,950 rnA~VA terms
•cau nqw~S.2313.
.. , • • • • • • • • • • • . .
"NORTH': COSTA MESA
FHA·VA TERMS
•
Yes, .Y~ read right, this represents one of the
very best values In C.M. This home ts within
walking di.stance to St. Jobnl and shopping .na
baa 3 bedrooms and1 2 baths. Thla 11 the type of
home that does not last long, so hWTy and call
~-2313.
' .. "
"IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY''
The ~ers are movlng•back east and must sell
this bee.ilty. Shftg carpets tbrout;hout and doubl•
~ping on each window, There 11• a huge cover,
f!d patJo and it is walking 'dlatane& to the beach ..
q, AIL TERMS AVAILABLE. Don't wt.It. it
won't lut. can 342.2535 or 847-6010.
. • . •
THB REAL ESTATBRS
' NEWPORT. BEACH
1700 Newport Blvd.
646-7171
COSTA MESA
2790 Harbor Blvd.
546-2313
' '
Ope11 'TlJ 9
'HUNTINGt ON 11EACH l'IUNTINGTON BEACH CORONA DEL MAR
17931 Beach Blvd. 6014 Warne~ Av e. 332 Ma rgu erite
INVESTMENTS
2790 Harbor Blvd. Suite 20 II
842-2535 847-6010 67 3-8550 Cost• MoMI 546-1600
I
I
I
•
• .. '" . • .. . . . "' f. ,-•• _, .. .. .
DAILY PILOT
Everyone Has
Something That
Someone Else Wants
DAILY PILOT . CLASSIFIED ADS
' '
You C•n Stll It,
Find It, Trade It
With a Wa nt Ad • 'The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
G.neral ..
MACNAB.· IRVINE
Realty Compony
ON THE BAY -DOVER SHORES
A Holiday Home. Enjoy the beauty & excite-
, · ment of Bayfront livi ng in this distincli\•e -
1 and verv special - 3 vr. old custom home.
'. Creative desi gn or \\'ainut & tile stairway &
' bar area. 4 BR., FR .. DR., brick -v.·ood and
I•' a sunny bayfront gourmet kitchen overlook·
' ing private beach. $135,000. Call Barbara
Aune 642-8235.
' .
CAMEO SHORES-VIEW
2 BR. + den. Split-level home. Ocean &
canyon view. Adult occupied • immaculate
througbouL $69,5-0Q
: 1644 MacArthur Blvd. 901 Dover Drive
: •. 644-6200 642-8235
********** *
0-rel
* * * * TAYLOR CO. *
LINDA ISLE -$143,500 EACH .
HERE is your chlince ! Owners of 3 NEW
waterfront homes will consider in exchange:
smaller home, land, apartment bldg. or trust
deeds. Will consider lease/option. "Each bas
4 BR., FR., DR! & study. Really spectacular.
See today & submit your exchange.
''Our 26th Y1•r''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., R.altors
2111 S.n J .. quln Hl111 R .. d
. HAPPY NEW YEAR ...._ NEii/PORT CENTER 644-4910
...._ IN THIS TOWNHOUSE ...... Genor•I Gonor•I "f" JN BACK BAY area. 3 Bedroom, 3 bath,
...._ builtin kitchen, community pool and...._ BA YSHORES VIEW & POOL "f""' recreJ.tion area with sewing room, bil· ...,-· : NEWPORT BEACH
' "'-liards and card room. Pick your own "'-.. f~-~"""""""""""""""~!!!!!!!""1"""""""""""""""' l"f" DRAPES & CARPETS. $26,250 "f" Waterlroni custom home, 4 bedroom & den ~en•rol J _Ge;;;";;;";;;';;;al;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
1
...._ HAPPY NEW YEAR IN ,72 ...._ or 5 bedrooms, 5~ batbs. Top quality car·
"nltl'rnr6'1
THE BIGGEST
BARGAIN IN
MESA VERDE
3 Bedroom single atory home,
across the street from golf
;aiurse. 1''f'w shag carpet in
;living room, l.arg~ lot. lm·
·medlale possession upon
'.credi1 approvat, lO!J~ do~·n
:"1111 present lender. $39,950.
'
•
• 'lllcsa"\ ·~c '.Ren ft r
546-5990
10 UNITS
• ...,.. ...,-peting, draperies, wallpaper & fixtures.
TREES I TREES' WITH PIER AND FLOAT * View from most rooms. 87' lot, spacious yard • • ...._ . • • for a 40 foot boat. 3 Bedrooms. 2 """"' ""' """"' "°""' ...... baths, builtin kitchen. large patio plus with beautiful gardens. $280,000. '°' """""""' w, .,., • ...._a STEAM ROOM & JACUZZI. All car·...._ BILL: GRUNDY, REALTOR ~:~ t!iit1!d~m wi~~ ...,-peted and draped $ll9,soo "f"' Isl enders Bldg. at Linda lslt
""'" and MANY TREES . ...._ HAPPY DAYS ARE HERE "'-341 BAYSIDE DR., SUITE 1, N.B. 675-6161 including apPle, peach, apri-...,...... IN LAGUNA .,,.-
rot Md avocado. VACANT ~ 3 Bedroom, 2 baths, fireplace, builtin * ~~ =:~, ~~!:'~.,,.-kitchen, SUNKEN LlVING ROOM. VA l·G;;;";;;";;;";;;'";;;1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!G-•n_•_•_•_1 ____ _
$Jill . ...,. mooih, and '"II "'-no down . Only $35,000 "'-I' 4 BDRM., 2 BATH
priced at ""·500' Call """k' ...... LAST MINUTE TAX BENEFIT ..,-EASTSIDE $12,795 "'-.. LIKE NEW 3 Bedrm 2 bath,
COATS ~ 20 UNITS .,,.... located on quiet banJo 11 & .,,..... ~ARTMENT now under constr~ction New ahag crptg, newtY Built On XG:Ur land
WALLACE "'-. lD COSTA MESA. By consummating a...._ pa:inted . vacant and ready -1343 aq, tt. hvmr area
REALTOR$ .,,.....pre--sale prior to January l, 1972 you ....... for yoorYULE LOG In your -All lath&: pl~er -~54Ml,..4141 ....__ can save on your taxes. Call us for de· . ....._ fi~ace:. Bring log&:: cheek· -Hardv.'OOd cabineta (Op~n Evenings) Jrtails. 4'f" book, and be in for Chri&t· -~~b~
A HOME WITHOUT
TREES
mas,
$29,500
(all tennsl
-Spacious wardrobes
JUST $9.53 SQ. FT.
Planning-Design-Financing
''1400 Homes &: Apartments Newport built alnce '57"
•I CALL 537-0380
_,., ..
brand new
big canyon
home •••
five bedrooms,
3 b•ths,
f•mlly room,
3 c.ir 9•rage1
bHutiful
corner lot
~ hmnitage lane at
royal at. gtorae road,
newport beach.
this home is bein&
finished now and
should be available
in mid-february •
drive by and ate it,
then call owner at , ••
644-1140
STEAL THIS ONE
General
VA Repo
5 Big Bedrooms
S450 Down
With no seeonds or balloon
payments! Can ~ believe
it! Well, we've got It -in
one of H. Beach's finest
locations. Completely
refutblshed with new paint
In &. out and dean u a pin.
Non vets O. }{. and you can
even trade your preser.t
home. call for appt. and
further details.
Walker & Lee
Real ton
17213 Brookhurst
546-175<
"Million$$$" View
Paint 'N' Save
Fantastic paooramic view of
ocean, mountains and brigtlt
lights. Ha.ng your stockings
on e beautilul brick fire-
place. 3 eXecutive •size bed-
rooms.• Complete WORK-
SHOP for Dad, Bring paint
and earn ''n!OUSANDS''.
Best Buy • Won't Last •
Hurry Dial
645-0303
IORl\T L Ol~O\
'" 11£At ro11s
This 4 BR • 2 BA area home
is a trem~ buy! It's
located in an xlnt area and
boasts a firep!, w/w crpts,
drp1, all the bl tins plus a lrg yd w/space tor a patio! 1 -----~----
ldeal fDr the growing lam--" -ily~ FP $24,950, -Submit? c.u 84'1-U'l! UNUSUAL
SEYMOUR REALTY, 17141 and hard to find. 3 bedroom,
Beach Blvd., Hunt. Bch. 2 bath & family room home
Coron• del Mer * DUPLEX * So. of Hwy.; 1-2 Bdnrl. • 1·1
bdrm. Room to bui\d )'\'.Kil'
dream home In the lront.
Convt'nlent location, Ottem:!
for only $42,tQ). * UP & DOWN '1(
Approx. 2,000 sq. It of fl>&C-
klu11, Uty, Jiving, in this 2
fc convert. den for ! BR.)
view hon'lt. 2 Fr}llCll,. bltn.
kirchen: wet bar. Va-cant &
rea"dy for fast posses.,,
MORGAN REAL TY
67J.6642 675-6459
L'IL OLD
TAX BEATERS
2BR '+ 1-BR So. Hwy 146,500
2-2 BR. So. comer $47,fOO
2 'BR + 1-BR add on $48,500
2 B'R 2 ba + 2 Br. $49,500 :
University Realty :
3001 E. Cst. Hwy, 673-6510 ;
LUSK - 2 STORY
Love'ly Burlingame model,
lnduding land. 4 Bdmt11.,'
bonus room, 3 baths. Huge
lot. $84,950. 3400 catamaran,
Hartior View Hills.' 675-722S
LUSK
Harbor v~ . 2 story, 5 br,
3 be., huge fee lot. Agf'nl,
615-1225,
Costa Mesa
Pending Foreclosure
Owner will not refuse any
reaSGnable offer, Prime lo.
cation, 3 large bedrooms,
2 baths, 2 huge fireplaces,
large irregular Jot, separate
service pon::h and large tiled
kitchen. $33.50'.l -Be s t
terms possible. Owner des-
pera.te -Call 545-8424.
(open eves.) SOUTH o:>Asr
REAL'IURS
smLE DOWN tastlide C.osta !desa. great
;rental area. Seven
~ -bedrooms a n d thrtt
·2-bedrooms. All &epante
d.mits with lots of space.
ShoWI a fantaatic tt!urn
'with income of $1,400 per
,mo. Submit on doo.\11 or
itrade to -
Jg like & day without Mln·
shine. This cazy 3 binn., 2
bath, nt>Y..iy carpeted COR·
ONA DEL MAR home is lo-
cated on a flowering Eucal-
yptUs tree lined llitreet. Pa-
tio • ztlrage on paved al-
ley. Located near grammer
81:hom, shopping and C.D.M.
Beach, ONLY $39,950,
REALTORS
644-7270
fairvitvt 10666 Westminster Ave, G.G.
646-8811 OPEN SUN 10 " • 6 UNIT TRADE
'-::::=~===''="=y=tl=m~•) r::ii:IS TAN c 0 ::~~.e~~~a~~. \: ~i
on one ot the nl'-"!St streets
on the EastsidE". Generous
size rooms and closets ga.
lore! Hup living room,
cheery built-in kitchen, with
BBQ, enclosed lanai, Park
like yard \\lith fruit ~ &:
lovely plantings. Even room
!or a pool. JUST LISTED
and wun't last at on J y
$35.000. CAU... 6i5-4930
And relax in this chttrluJ 4
bdrm., 2 bath great faimly
home near Newport Hts,
jUJt a few steps from a
lovely park. Kitchen bltni;,
FA heating, new carpets,
J~ fenced yard. $29,900.
CALL ··e: f4,•l414 Walker & Lee
Real ton
t190 Harbor Blvd. at Adam1
: 545-9491 Open 'til 9 PM
• HALF ACRE , with 2 bed-
' roosn honte •••••• $25,000.
'
• 3 BEDROOM • home, l~
, bat!t • .......... • $21,SOO.
'
' 4 BEDROOM & HUGE
, DEN, Back Bay •• $36,750.
' e HOME (2 bedroom, crptl,
, drps, range, refrig, wasb-
. er) PLUS 1 bedroom rent·
: al. Im.med, poss. $31.950.
Roy McCardle Realtor
: 1l1D Newport Blvd., c.M.
; 541-n29
Ptninsula Point
~~ to ocean. Newly decor·
µed. &: carpeted. Comp.
tumlshed 2 BR., 1 ba. Huge
trpl., open beam ce.IL in
)erge liv. rm. Dbl. garage.
Jmmed.. Jll)SSe95. $49,995.
€&11: 673-3663 615-8886 Evn,
WE HAVE RENTALS
associated
BROK ERS~EAL TORS
2025 W lolboo •7l-l6•l
$23,950
dn tree lined r;treel, prime
:a~a. 3 bedrooms plus den.
-e'ntty hall, spacious living
•ml. ~1720
: TARBELL
' 2!l:6 Harbor, O:ista ?-1eu.
BAYFRONT APTS.
Vista Del Lido. Pier &: slip
available. From $31,500. Sell
or leaAe.
George Williamson
REALTOR
.14US70 645-1564
General
2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF.
11 l!J!l 1UJLDllS. INC. change tor larger apartment,
148,000 'E>lUi1y. ~::1 A.:*-
7:iALTv· · BEAM
CEILINGS COLWELL
PROPERTIES. INC
F<:>•ITH•<iy laBordo_• Rf
220 £.17th St .. C .M .
Call 646· 0555
Immacula~ 4 bedroom Cen-
tury Parle home, only 1 yr l,,.--,,.------
1
-,Ge""'°n-•-r•'l_./...,.----· I old. Beam ceiling in the
--------~1 la.rre family room and 3 of 1---------1 0\1!' 4 bedroom.!. Built.-tns,
**********
Eveniop Call &n-7,438 YOU WIN!!!! --------•!Doctor must sell thl1 year BUILDER'S
REPOSSESSION
for taX reasons. C'beck tlwlae
feature&-* 3 Big Bedrms. One man's 1osa can be )'OU?' * Huge family rm.
gain. Priced to Ril al * Beaut firepla«.
$.12,500. with F11A or VA '* Corner lot
tenns. Huge 2 story, 4 bed· * Separate praee
room, famtty &: bonus. Great * Boat access.
Costa Me-sa locaflon near Sped.ally priced at $29,900,
school, now vacant· 1ee FULLER REALTY
anytime. Builder v.:ants last 546--0814 Anytime
sale!
MO-U51 (Open Evenings)' $3000 DN.
Vm Sl .00 ,...,,, • .,., <Ul>Cl<d thruout.
Room for boat and trailer .. TOTAL DOWN ......... 13Uoo. FHA/VA
Owner bought new home-will terms.
pay all your costs. Terrllic • COAi.TS
location in plush green
residential area. 3 Bedroom, WALLACI!
2 Baths, fantastic paneled REAL TORI
game room, all builtln11 and Open Evenings
1parkling condition. Govern· e 962-4454 e ment appr aised at
1
________ _
$29,950.~ mo, P&I. I-:==;;;;==;;;;;;;;;;; Cail 545-84Z4 {Open eves) I•
2 BEDROOM
TOWNHOUSE
l~AGI 14 Bedrooms, huge family nn.,
u 1Sfl1l v;-ith i~ own natural brick •·=::;=====::.·1 fireplace, entry hall to rear 1---------• living rm., built-ins, $3000 1---------
down • move in. 540.1T.D
2 BA, many extras, lots ot
privacy. Care.free malnten-
ance. IDEAL FOR O)UPLE,
Firm dass shape. Uniwr-
aity Parle, Only $28, 150.
LOVELY WIFE
WANTED
with family and channi11g
husband to occupy this
' dreamy 4 bdrm. home +
tlen. Surrounded by homes
TARBELL
2955 Harbor, Costa Mesa
ASSUME 6°/o
-VA LOAN-
priced up to $50,000. Sharp 3 Bedrm. home on
847-6010 large Jot. $162. mo. pays
all. Full price $24.900.
FULLER REALTY
546-0814 Anytime
You WIN I $34,500
• prime area. 4 bedrooms, fire-~ transferred. Must 11tt place in cozy den, full din·
this 2 atory, 4 BR P11cet1Ct· Ing rm .. buiJl·ins, disbwasb-
ter In M~sa Verde. Walk to er, large rooms. 540-1720
"""" D!"· rm & •op. Jam TARBELL rm. Asking $43,9";](),
ROY J . WARD, RLTRS
646-0'l2ll
General
2006 Harbor, Costa Mesa
Gtnerel
HOMEABIUTY
SOLVED --Coldwell, Banker Spaciowlness e.nd elegance
inside and out. ?t1ark this
the best buy In Huntington ~EALTOR~
Beach. 4 bdrms. plus guest ~
room, plus D/B pool all this 833-0700 644-2430
and more for $30,000.
847-6010 2-Srory Home
With Everything
4 ~rooms. family room,
=~'="""cc="='oo""~0 I 200J sq, fl. plus a brand new 4 BEDRM., P L heated & fil terf"d pool. To-
ln dffirable Mesa del Mar. ta! price only $32,950 -best
Vacant &: dean. ~'l'ICT will Huntington Beach location.
constder sa.le, lease or lease· w I k & L
opllo,, A gttal b"y al a er ee
$29,995. Try 1070 fl0\\1n.
SOU11l COAST REAL ES-Rea1tors
TATE 545-8424. 540-5140
General Gentral
FROM
EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA
Gr&nny can hop, akip &: jump
to · Westcliff ahopping;> Jr,
walks to schod: ~atian
at home, 17X34 htd. I: tilt'd.
pool: 2 bdrm. &: den ptus
guest house; in immac.
c::ond. Won't last long at
$31 ,500. You can ai;sume
luge nlA loan!
CORBIN-
MAR·TIN
REAL TORS 644-7662
WHY ARE WE
~at Estate Professionalists?
TO GIVE YOU EfFEX:IlVE
RESULTS AND ADVJSE.
Buyin1 and selling demands
cooperation it sincerity.
CAIL US AND SEE US
6f6..3928 or 545-3483
Lachenmyer
Realtor
Sell the ()Id
new ,stuff
General
stutt Buy the
675-3000
BAY & BEACl-I
REALTY"
Ntiir.N~wport Pe1t orrrre * HAPPY HOLIDAYS NO DOWN TO VETS
WE'RE HERE ro HEl.P Big 3 BR, home 'on quiet
YOU 'J"H'R.U 'IliE SEASON. 1 _ fam a1 PETE BARRETT street. ~· • rm., i.,.
REAL TY 642-52 00 ha. Huge patio. twrox.
'ADAPT ABILITY S23S mo. ;od PlTI, •% mt. DINNERHOUSE, E-s;,,, m,r.,.
,, the koy "''' ol thi> horn<, BAR & -GE .. Mi--truly a fine solution to ttlf:
I I. . d COFFEE SHOP 1610 w. Coast Hwy., N.B. fami y's 1v1ng nee .!, REALTORS 642-4623
Here's what you get for only
$33,750. -4 bdrm., famUy Seti.ts 2'25, parking for 90 cars, BY OWNER. nr Irvine &
x1ni industrial area, long 20th 3 b 2 b lrg yrd room, carpets, d r a Pe I' lease. GrOSB approximately ' r, a, wuher and dt'Y"'r com-W/beaut trees, frplc, hwd
trttzer, Walk to the beach.
1
_$400_ .• 000.·.'.'.'rl•y•. ___ firs, $36,500 642-7892.
Let's make a date right now -~~~=~~-JMMED, Posi;ess. $24,fiOO.
to see th is one. F.H.A. OR V.A. Hrdwd fin., frplc, 2 BA,
841-GllO EASl'SJDE CWI'A MESA • bltns. 3057 Loren. Baker &:
\0 THEREAL
"'\. l:STATERS . ' .
Ar.a Conscious?
See th.la 4 hrorm. family
home in good NeWJ>t Bch.
area. Needs imaginative
couple with ch;tdren's In-
terest at heart. Vacant.
146,500,
DAILY PILOT
.CLASSIFIED ADS
Only $2j,fi00. 3 bedroom, Fairview. Ownr.
H/\V Doors, b ig 00 x 130 8S9 CONGRESS. No down to •
parcel, paved all~y. calm Vets, Immed. OC'CUp. Drive :
11treel These properties are past. Call Prlct! ~alty, ·
aca.rcl', call now. 5"8-3209.
Duplex, alllO 4-plex. Xlnt in·
come & condition.
FORTIN, REAL'IURS
642-5000
General
East Bluff * THE BLUFFS * $43,500
3 Bdrm., 2~ ba., funna1 din,
rm., faJJrlly area. 9 ?t!os.
)Ollflf. Greenbelt v I e w,
Owner trans. & holdina:
plane tlckC't. Call:
EASTBLUFF REAL TY
644-1133 Anytime
LOVELY 3 or -4o Br home
\\'/view and separate din-
ing. Call after 6 pm
644-5510.
Fountah• Valley
Huntington Beach -842-4455 I Newport Beach Office -646-7711
7682 Ed lngr1 Optn Even ings .540·5140 20•3 Westcllff Dr. et Irvine Open Evenings
J4t:r 1111..., .,'"'•• H•lltf11t1'•" c.,.m
Costa Mtsa OHie•
2790 H•rbor Blvd.
Days 545,9491 I
Nights 545·0465 961.J371
Fountain Valley Office
Open 'Iii 9:00 P.M.
a....1tt11rtt oc,... fre111 LlftbNell Heutw•,.
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l\'ed•1edt>'. °'«lllbfr 29. Im DAILY PJLOT
, ....... -_"' .. __,~ I _..,.. I~ [ -...... I~ I. _.... I~ I _,,,_ I~ I
Fountain. Valler
3 BEDROOMS
6% FHA LOAN
Huntington BMcfi ll'"ilM
$1'·'50 IS THE P(UCE PACESETTER HOMES for thlJ ....,. lcw<ly I bod· At The 1""no Ranch room, 2 bath .home-, 1be 1oaD 000 Is high eJ'IOO&'h that ·)'OU can 1mmed OC(py .... Save $1 !
UINme wifb Pl.)'rMnta a/. 'For inlorma.tkm e.U
Mob ile Homu Houses Furnished 300 Houses Unfum. 305 Townhou1e Unfurn. 335 Apt1. furn. UO Apt. Unfurn. _F_•_r,.s_._,, ____ 1_25 1,8:-1-lbo<t--l-1l_1_nd----1·c-.. -,-.-Mo-,.----Hunllntton Beach "c..'"'"1a"'""Ma,.....1a ____ Balboa l1land
I I:'.:'.:!:::,_,.,,-..,, ___ I'.'"'"'°'-.,----,,--' ---,---·--------¥I Comp ete CHEERY 2 Br., nlet'ly ' BR. lam rm., Uv rm TOWNllOUs.£: S Bdrm 1~ 2 BEDROOM Apl. Lrrrt.E Ba.lbol Jat • C.J.. d~r., f'rplc, ldulll. $22$. v.·Jfrplc, lovely hom e , Ba cpta. drpi "'"' Spaeloul. Carpel@d. Nice brate N•w Ye• t 1 tn
l2t.Arllf!UQ·at. 6?5-2137. avallable. Leui. 847-TI36. w.hrJdcyr, dshwshr. bltillll: kitet)Cn. Brick $11a('k bar A a deluxe 2 Br apl on Cr
Take over thla Jow Interest
r•te lot.n A: save $$. Thi!
k>wly home ii only 3 yn.
old , 1t In too aha.pe. ~.
sptclous bedrm1. wlw1 car-
pet.a 1hruout.
$1tl) per month, 'Which in-s.1 •• Office 544-tl57
eludes all. M<>dem built·lnt, Modela at Jeftrt'y Road .ti
deep pile carpet,, •l,IO I ,_,.,..M_ooJ_ton.--P::•---•~Y· __
matching drapea. Double La,una BMc!'I
pra,ge to boot! C.aD 1-.0... .... ,....,-......... --Wa Iker & Lee ROOM To
S D• Coron• del Mar CHEERflJL 2 Br bse, iar, patio., pool, club h 1 e. plant~r. BaJeony. Walk lo C.1\81, new bit~, Swedish an lego . d!W. stv/rt'fri,i. $1.50/mo. SlT;>/mo. l..au. Stretton, 11.hOppinr. School ,bus &IOPt frplc, bot.I dock; yearly GI'
1 BR. Fumllhed l!ouse in 773 w. Wllaon. 646-t12S. wk632-4481, home 962-))24, at door. Attractlve.ly lon1tr lae, no childre'n or
CdM. $170/mo Year Lease. dee c r ._ted. Beautiful pe11. $2!i0/1no, To See-Call
County Call 114: 615-.361G. 3 BR, l BA, cpts, d~ Duplo•• Furn. JCS fumiturt. Very rea80nable _o.,_·"'--'61~""'~'°~'~·---.
C •• t. ~-,. s!ove. ear. S215/mo. 2260 B Ibo P • I rent. ChildrEc'l'I & 1mall pets Coron• dtl Mar l'
"19 Federal Ave. 646-1728. • • •ntnsu • wtlcome. 351 Victotlti, Apt. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Sparow Rlty 842-4474 GROW ·,.-N.E°':W--,--B-,,-,--Ba-.·1,~1,.~M=O~NTii=---,~B~R--_,,N,..ow 2 Bedroom, ~n' i.,-eltlng .f.
"A nnt tor every bird"
Huntington Beech "'"'"" 279o Harbor Blvd. at Ada.mt M b'I Townhouse w / pool. ?-.tea, vac. Jmn1ed poss. Could use apt., par1ially furnished. 501 C 'B°"R;-;F'U;:::m::-.-..ll"'SS;-;lncl:::;--,u:;ti;;-1. 0 I e 'Verde. Blint, cpts. drpJ, aome paint. 54>8424 Bier. ft 11'.1 the beach. relrlg, W&· Newly dee. Btaut. aatdeh,
patio, aar, $225 to $250. Nr 3 BR Howe in court ter &. elect Included. Gu-pool, rec. Adult,, no pet•.
schls. 557-MOO. $155/mo. Garage. ;~e~. i ;:21~ deck. Call Mark 19.59 Maple Aw., CM . r-.lgr.
545-0400 ~ 'til 9 PM
DOWNTOWN
CUSTOM BUll.T 5 BR, 2% FOR THE BA, panl'd. tam rm. •tone
"YOUNG AT HEART" tpl, lo"'1y ""'" • """·
Your children will love bl.tin RIO. hntwd On. A.pp
thia sP1dOU. back yanl, on am sq ft. 3 car gar w/al'ley
a quiet cu1-<fe.ac lot. act'l'S!I. Qoice loe., all trma.
Walk to llC'bool, beach&.~
pina-tn:im this 3300 111. ft,
fam'lly dell&bt. The easy
'floor plan can be CUftom
t.ailoftd into 4 to 6 bdrm1.,
with large livinc room I
..-para!e family l'OOll'I. Com-
pletely fenced, private patio,
lend chann Ir warmth to
Oh! al l...quna's most Uf).
UAal prvperd~. Call -
Home
Community
lnforma,fion
Laguna Beach kids ok. E/side. 642--SS&l. ' l BR $130 I~. Ideal for ON TEN ACRE'S
1 BR, utU pa.Id, near beach, LGE 2 BR, like new, displ, barht>lor, 1wim pool, adl!1 l 6 2 BR. .Furn, 6 Unf'IJ.m.
$l2S. North encl of tov.·n. aar, privacy. IOQ(1 loc. Wtt on I y, 1993 Churcb St., Fireplaces I priv. P&tkl&.
Avail now. 213:244-6386. pd. Adults. $145. 548--00Sl. 54&-9633. ~;·=.~'1!~
You1l love the beautitul 842.f46li • Lido Isl~ Huntlnvton Beach ~!!i!~ U-nl~•-m_. -~ Ali:cw~1iru~~~;s, 1 (MacArthur nr Coli.It HW7l
upcraded &fttll &f\lJt Car·
· pets, mirrored closet dool"J ~ I ... , tn~"' '"'""" '•cilitie>. ../T'o,,an
COZ\' 2 Sr, 2 Ba, [rpJ, dbl •WE have a large selection Costa Mts• Br'1 Sl2S. Adl11, no pelt.
gar, appJ. Winter; or yrly or 3 and t bedroom bomet NEW Spanlih 3 ar, i Ba 2135 Elden, Mgr Apt. 6. NEW
2 BR .. 2 baths; upetaln. Cu-
lll!led Ii draped. End. pr.
age, Corn!>. bltns. Private
P&tio. 70MS Orchid. $250 Pe.t
t:anien kitch. firep1, •hake I ~==-==~== REAL EST"TE : roof, l 00. 1% BA, ,.,,,... URGENT. OWNER MUST "'' &fore you purchase yoUr
mobile home -Choose
where you will live. Smog-
ftee San Diego County h81
fresh air, shopping, moon-
light beaches & recreation-.a.I fllcilities.
he. ~ at 218 Via Dijon, that can be moved Into bll·lns, ihq cpt, drt>s )'Td.
NB. , almost immediately on ou.r E tdde. S22;;. $.f8-·f42t,
~N•,-w-po-..,rt~Bo-a°'chc----1 Rent· Opt Ion p I an . &12-2222.
FURN 2 Br. Children OK. No
pets. Heated pool. Lndry,
rm. 126 Monte Vista CM. , immaculate, in terrific seU today. 2-aty, tam nn., 3 1190 Glenneyre St.
; nbrhood. ba. SS.000 & assume GI loan 494-!M73 549-0316 SHERWOOD REALTY'sPACN B 2 Ba I BACHELOR apt, SllO mo month, yearly. 3 Br, 2 Ba beaut., Ba,yshorf'! 540-8555 encl d~w !ar~' yard'. f~'.
Home, c om pl . furn. • Nice area, 4 BR House, 54&--1309, 675-1849. : ;vould )'CU like kl look at at $317. mo. $.lJ,00'.I. Prin. Lagun• Beach
·It · ciples only. 842-8434. ' ~.:;.;.;;_;,.;;..;,..;;;,,-...,.-
incl utilitle!I. * * 642-8400 • • > , C7S.,OiO 0 : :cALL JERRY GllJ...F..5PIE I ,-~-7-.,--,,,.---, e SELL OR LEASE e 847-960.I Eve. 968.2974 3 Br, 2 ba, tam rm, 2200 F l B ,
Sublc.ase 111 June. 2525 Villa 1% Ba. Cpts, drps, bltns, .
Dr. NB. 646-1393. h'plc &: gar. Big yard. 8382 DUPLEX 2 br, garql', qu1t>t ONE Bedrm. Adults, no pets. -•rip 1 a.• :
uJ • lull I d Sq. t. R, 21111 BA. KASABIAN c -u~c. y er P •
d kil 131900 .. ,.892 Lg. lam. rm., din. rm., ftp!. For More Info. Write: Sun11t Beech Bryant ll.B. Behind ~8-~'. cats or motOl'Cycl~ Pool It. Utilities included. ;
$145-$150. MB-7689. 2 BR., carp, drapes, rari&e 1 REAL ESTATE gar en · ' · ,....... · Cpt &: drapes, bltin.•, wet ----------1 Leonard's, 2 blks E. ol1;:;::::;o::'.~::Oo:co:;:-Mobile Hom• Info. LARGE 2 BR, frplc, near Beach Blvd. Just painted. Huntlngfon. Beach •Sl39 DELUXE l Br., pool, rerrig. Prlv, patlo, Pta&t: •
cpl.5, drps, bltns, 145 E. 18th N~ar Big Corona. S2'J5 Mc11 BUILDER'S
CLOSE-OUT
Irvine bar, etc. lmmac. $47,950.
Full price. beach. 10092 8th Street. $725. S225. 714: 521-2889. MODERN 2 BR Bit # 7 mo. (213) 28S-0479. , rtll, I".--,-.-,..,._-,--=· TOWNHOUSE 2 BR, 1~ BA, Crpts, drps, trplc. Well s1., Apt , 10. 6.fr.-5429. Un1ver1ity Realty 673-EStO
Cost• Me•• ,
' bdrm Spanish style l:Jme1 '
: with 2 ball•. No down CI
PACESETTER
NEW HOMES
MISSION REALTY 494--0731
&yfront lot $150,000
TED HUBERT & ASSOC.
Mn Via Lido 675-8500
802 W. Mission Houlff Unfurn. 30S c pt s. d rps, ref r i g, maintain~. $l3!'i. M2-46&1 NICELY turniAhed bachl"lor ,,---------1 h /d dsh ht bltn apt, $100 including utilities. Escondl'do, Cal1·f. Genere1 ws r ryr, w • s, aft 5:30. patio pool, clubhouse. $175.l;Nc----:"Hc;,-,;--;-h-:---~8-2706 ews.
cau This ToU.Free Zeni".h I ~j~~~~~~i per 'mo., lease. Ara S\•s •wport ••D tt lru=RN=.--,-.B"R'" ...... 1.=,.,.,,,:--:,"7pt.
DELUXE
APARTMENTS . buyers and min. down FHA.
. Priced tmm $30,fliO, Pritt
: includet landscape, sprink·
· lers and bu~r choost's col·
. or on carpett. aase to So.
1 :eoast P1au. and new schools.
· ?i.!ode!a opeh. Call. If you
·used )'OOr CJ benefit.. be-
:.rore, call anyway • you
might be eligible tor another
one,
Walker & Lee
Real ton
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
545-9491 Open 'til 9 PM
$18,950.
It's 3 BR 2 BA, 9J x 100'
fenced lot, dbl aar w/boat
dr, covd patio, elect bltin
RIO, f'A ht, crpts, drps,
min dn, paymll less than
rent.
I' 1l1Jge Re al EstJte
'62-4471 ( ::::1546-llOJ
BUY OF THE WEEK
on a tremen&ius C.alit. du.
sic. Super 1M.g crpta, 3 BR,
2 BA, fabulous terms. VA/
IBA or what haw ~
FOR JUST ........ $24,900. * CALL 847·8507 *
~~ ~
SELLING
YOUR HOME?
Free apprai&al. . , We buy
equities. Personal •ttenllon,
7> yrs. exi:ier. 962.5511
COLLINS & WATTS
-REALTY -c. & w.
$800. Down
ANYONE QUALIFIES
to take cwer the low in-
terest rate loan on thls
lo~ly, near new 3 Bed-
room home. 540-R55.1
SHERWeeD REALTY
18964 BrookhU1'51, F.V.
A \VHALE OF A BuY?
With just a little cash )'OU
can move in10 1hi11 charm·
ing 3 BR Dutch Ha~n home
w/fpl, nice area. Low dn • nc qualifying. $24,500. l'.P.
Real Est.ate by
McV A Y 545-0458
$ (j)UICK $
WE BUY HOMES
MR. KASABIA:N 847-9004
KASABIAN
At the ranch tn beautiful Lido l1la
Irvine Area. ---------
IMMED. OCCUPANCY <BR. 3 ba. ~ 1'71.SOO , _ _. . 3 BR. 2 be.. .f2x88 $19,500
on a few ... , minute e&J>. 4 BR. 3 ba. 10x88 $125,000
""''s'AvE $1000. LIDOll~E~~ r-~NC.
673-7300
MOVE IN CASH
Telephone Number; j I = • • 5.»-3240. HIDEAWAY nu charmlna: 3 water pd. $165 lrplc, a"d. loe. 714/747°8410 RENTAL FINDERS NEW 4 BR 2 BA,< blk to BR, 2 BA, Vu, R•lax lo 1910 M'3'" Pl.
435 W. l trtr,, COSlA MBA elem schl, Ref. req. Avail dream home $325. 548-9682, NE\VLY Rede<:. 2 BR Up~r.
Houses* Apts. immed. lTI.f) 847-9548 bct. 54&--5527 adults only. $150 incl. util'•·
Real E~t•t.. * 64S.QI 11 * 10am-6pm daily. By appt[iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I :;'"1&--';;20.19"";;. c--::::=:--:::~ I
._ __ .. _-_ .. __ _, ~-""'~F'rH tt> lAttJlartb only. Owner. $265/mo. r-----~11•1 2 BDR?i.t.. garage, yard.
-·FURNJS1~ED -3 Bdrm. 2 Bath, fam rm, Ap1rtment1f111'Rnit AdultR. Prefer coupl~. $135.
Income ProJNrfy 166 lmL Pd. Priv Bachelor epts, drps, dsttwhr. Creal ';;;;;;;;;;;~;.~ 548-8335 fwkdays after 6).
w/ sep ki tchen. Nr. eoJlegc, neighbors. STJO incl la\.\·n • Huntington ileech
Air Cond • Frplc'a _ 3 Swlm-
mlna Pools -Health Spa •
~nnis Cns -Game A: Bil-
liard Room.
l BEDROOM
FROM $156
MEDITERRANEAN
VILLAGE
2~ Harbor Blvd., C.M.
(714) 567-80')} ·: ' • SPECIAL • Long ha!r ok. ""'· "'" , • ..,. 1· 841-654o. Apts. Furn. ~ 1---="'.",.,.---
Buil<l" P•>" "'°""" """ PRINCIPALS ONLY -2 BR Twnhou ... ll> Ba., aB STUDIO &. Joan fees, e,pproximately Always a good teleclion ol $1115-m.JD'E'NTS Fine. 2 Br, bltns, cpts, drps, carport, Generel ::~:;=~al~ !':t ~':fng~fro':1:es. CUr· 3 Hou!'~~arge lot l~ Ba, nr ocean. Avalt 2/1, pool & f1!C facil. $165/mo.liiiiiiiiiij~iiiiiii $l4 WEEK & UP
law son RENTAL OFTICE :•
OPF.?i 10 AM TO 6 PM ::
FAIRWAY
VILLA APT~
. .
a.re our moat popular le dra· $41,000 7336 Elden, Co!ta Mesa -UNF'URJ'lllSHED -!162-tJS9. A HEATED pool, fulJ kitche.n
matie custom design•. Nor· h Zli l 1 Neal' Back Bay fl2tJ.LCE 2 Br Dupl~x. conv. 3 B1: Condo, 1~ Ba, Pools Bold New Concept laundry facilities, phone
ma.Uy a .f month wait for ~ llCG~ a. Ole, 642-U21 Eves 646-5302 Joe, tot ok. Move Today! Patio, dbl gar, frplc, nr gervice, utilities paid. TV It.
one ot fuese mOOell. 56 UNITS -ocean. 962--0986 a.ft 5 pm. maid service available, gas 2 & S BR's 3416
Via Lido ""4S'2 COSTA MES·A. SISS.IVON 'T wl. l Br, 111225 l BR, 2 BA, <>'pt, Drp•. FURNITURE RENTAL Bor-B.Qu•. l'rfvai. palk>, pool • ln4l•. Tht Appaloo11 San Clemente yard & gar. Kid.!!. Snrls ok. Frplc, Fncd yard. Lease op-1 Bedroo'm Av1il•bl1 laundry tac. ·
4 BR, 21' BA in an impres· BRANO new, OCt'an view. 3 $525,000, 4.2XGros.!i --lion. 644-8009. • ~fonth to Month E xecutive Suites Near Oranre Co. Aitpm1 A
live 2 Jtory design. Featur-Br 2 Ba fa nn frpl w Ike & l e I ~96-0CEAN View 3 Br prlv f I bit ' * 100% Purchase Optlo:i 727 Yorktown Blvd. UCJ. Adulta only. · · ., All., blt-i·.,',,.'. w"'.;, 10" ··-•1' G r e ftC. home. Encl g11r, lge yard. 3 BR., 2 BA ., rp c,i....... -,.'nns, * Wide Selection. 19471 Beach Blvd., 21122 Santa Ana Av.. Jng a mam"' ma.90nry .. re-'"' ... WB..L (TI4) 776-9350 Orlldren v>'eleome, close 10 schools & s • ....,p g. Styl~-Colon a t Yorkto11,.n Mar. Mra. Joachim, Apt S..A
piaO! in spacious living crpts thru.out. $3:2,500. ,BY M C7.~b~ •. 71.~H~.-m-.-,~---846-5848. • 24 Hour Dellvety (714 1 5 .. ~ 0411 5f6.QJ5
room, accenttld by 2 story Ovmer. (714) 67ft-3593. $21 "--' 1 1 -
high glass ws ca • Sen Ju•n C1plstrano BR 2 Ba home: ObJ gar. patio, dbl gnr. Nr. Bf'aeh. ri( ~ 1 BR Furn, S 13 5 / m 0 · lllf' windo It the I~-~-'--~~~--Trailer Perks 172 &FIREPLACE & S"UQl, 4 2 BR Condo, ~ts. drps, rp ' • * STUDIO APT. ..._.
dra! ceilina. 0vel"!llied 3 AT the beach, pet ok, l r amuy or sinfdes ok. Poot privl. $200. 64!r1~7. W! '!:;I Ovtt!ooklng beau1. garden : ~:=M ~a.g~~= ~~~ Sell!:.°~~ ~:sedn:o new ~·· .:g~d:t ~~ y BEACON * '45-0111 3 BR. 2 Ba .. cpts, drps . .__-1::;:;::11---=~~ 1:is~h :1~~~~ e ADULTS ONLY
oul!tanding example of to-homt", must &ell 3 bedroom, pa IO, Y ' · FREEll dsh1,11lf\r. Quiet cl<l&sac · from Lake Parle. ~&2. •POOL
dividuaiity. l'h bath, ~tor)' townhouse. Mountain, Desert, l•ndlotds·Owners stra!t. $Z'l5/mo. 67~230/ 517 W. l 9th, CM 548-3491 102<! Million Apt D, CM • •
,._, Beautilully pane.It'd & •10 e w ,,,.,.,~ tenants to you Huntington Harbour $110/mo, C.11 &46-87 • ., 950 R rt 174 w ill~ 1~~~~~~~~~1i""'~!N~.~M~a~tn!!SA~~54~1-03;;1' FURN. 1 BR. APT. 54<>""8 54<>""9 .
The Cttcedt =~! <;: U:r::~e':* ""'B"°t'°'G,...,B'°'E"A°"'R,..,.L"'A"'K°'E"*-=\JI~~~~· ~ 1'!9:~ LSE Hunt. Harbour Caff· 81lboa Penln1ula Ltguna BMch Ntw adult 1•rden Apt1 , '
Our most dramatic new cus.. CAPI,s:rRANO VALLEY Happiness is sl;'l'nding Christ· waitl~ lilt, water) c:tiarminr 3 Br, 2'f----------',-,0--,,,.,-,,.,-,-,...,, $180. 2 BR, l'.4 BA ,
1Dm architecture. All the ASKING $29.000 mas in yoor own cozy cab-ALA Rentals e '45-3900 Ba, fam nn, immed. occup. * OCEANF'RONT • ~nler. l BR Beautiful bltin kit, all S2Z. 2 BR, den, 2 BA '
CAPISTRANO VALLEY in. Try this one for $8,900. 846-1652 Lg. 3 Br, den, $300. 1 Br, ehlO'cl mledalllkM>n, r a ~_lhan_i ISi E
above feature9 + more Call Ross (714) 536-1738 or -&~ . lanai, $175. Alao Bach apt, 'at. b to "" • • 21 ''· ••• ''"
room A: a beautifully fUr· Realty 493-l.U4 write: Spencer Real Estate, •COZY Cottage-I Br+ Den, lrv1M util pd., $9S. Bmse Realty downtown, view ot ocean Yf••tbay 21 Apertm1nt1
nished wet bar & • tiled Mobile Homes P.O. Box 2828, Big Bear nr bch, $98. 673-3012 or 213: 596-2306. hills, also •ludio w/sep. I ~==~~~~~-=.~-~~n~~"~./custom For Sele · 125 Lake, Calif. ALA Rentals • 64$.3900 .f Bdrms., 21A ba., family LARGE 1 BR turn, Penln Pt., ;-B;;R;;. -":;l-::307-:39,.. =-===-= NEWLY DECORATED
""""' '"' rm., partly furn ...... .$340 r 1 BR 1 " ho · 1130 Oiarming 1 BR d\l..iex, "'w $37,950 BRANO ~w cabln on 21\i e BEACH Bungalow-! 'Br, 3 'BR 2 ba atrium ,, •• $.125 Pvt patio, w/w erpt, adulta mo.• c~Y:. .. ~ .. ~~g~ c e, carp, dra'Pft & pa~. Lo\le.
The Cheyenne
A 4 BR &. den, 2 BA home.
One is on an eXtra la.rp
pttmium Jot. ($500. extra)
V uy rare these da.y1.
$29,750
7% -10~ down financing
available. For informaUon,
call ",.sales office at THE
RANC>I.
544-a.57
or drive by development at
Jellrey Rd &. Moulmn Park·
way, 1'1'. miles north of San
Die-1.0 Freewa.y.
l9TI. CHAMPION1 ~ bdl I e bl'autiful view Beres. Only yttf for pe!, utiJ Incl. $150. 3 an' 2J,!i ba fain •.•• $325 only. L ca• e 'lll June, 494-4Ult' J h ly garden aiu·roundlnK•,
heme, 3 mo. o d, }..,..,.,, rp!I $6,995. V>'\lh 'Xlnt terms. ALA Rental& e 645-3900 3 BR: 2~ ba.'fam ...... $350 Sl50/mo. 644-fi016 """• 0 n. Mature adulll only. ~. ~~ '!';• ~~~o: Breck' Nott RJfy, 557-3169. -UNFURNJSfE'D-4 BR, 2~ ba. fam •·•• $350 e S25 WK&. Up.On Ocean e SI I Simo, $40 wk up. Bach, Sf8..eJ20 •
• HARD to n. , 2 B ·'k WE HAVE O'JRERS Lovely Bach-1 Br-Rooms cir TV utll pd. Crescent Bay LGE 2 BR be Family park, pets all<TNed, ~at . r, w.... Maid aervice-Pool-Util pd Bch l4l5 N. O>.a9t 494-25lM. · • •ut )'ti!, elec
pool & recreation area, I~ lo shops child ok &·120 atove, 1u heat, 21L BA•, Fi nclal ' · ' e Call 67S-8740 e Lido Isle ~ l'lkate rink. See at Golden "" ALA Rentels e 645-3900 ,...--------acrosa at. from ahop'r.
Coach Mobile Park, 32742 2 BR $150. Util 's pd, Adult1. l BR. Furn. Util paid. Carport, ln(lry rm. Multi
Al.lpaz, San Juan Capistrano. • RUJtAL l Br w/ huge fncd No pets. Garaze. 1 Bachelor, no pet&. only. $160. 998 EJ Camino
NEW AOUL T PARK Busines s Yard tor kldit & pets. $135. Call 673-9749 Sl&5/mo. 673-al.17 eve!!. Dr. No. 1 CM. 546--0451.
Huntington Ar'bor Mobile Opportunity 200 ALA Rent•ls e 645-3900 ·~ ~n·"" 1 BR, Bayfronl $140. Wlnttr. Newport •-ach REOEC. 2 BR. l BA.
Home Parle. Fadlit!es In-PARTNER e FAMILY -..,.. 1 3 B I/ .,,.~ .14"1) Adull!!. 926 E. Balboa Blvd. gs upstairs, Nr. Estancia H!1h. .,.,._-...:i~ • r:.. 1st WesMn Bank mdg. dude: Jacuzzi, card nn, Active with some bu.sit~ & yard, encl g&, lod!I. $155. University Park Irvine 673-9749. 25 YARDS from oet'lln. f BR, BllM, crpts, drps, garage.
MAT'V, outdoor BBQ, poo1. management background. ALA Rentals e 645-3900 Da • t•• •101 • N'ights Coron• del Mer 2~~ ba... huge llv rm., $160. Adlts, m pet•.
billiard nn. shuffleboard, in· Assi$t in managem~nt of SINGLES OK Y _.,,. w/fpl ., new cplg: mod. 5'~1693.
dividual metering. Pet sec-highly lueratlve business. :.l=c-....,.-:-,o--:--1 kitchen, paneled den: comp. D°'EL=ux=-;2'B"R.,..'°2"'BA,.,--:Bl=:--~I tion. 19350 Ward St., Hnfcn H•. 2-story older 5 bedrm., Eleg•nt 1 Br. house • lat year's income shoUld 2 baths, 2 car gar. At! kida 5 BR .• 3 baths , •••..••• $3!5 compl furn Incl utlls furn. $295 incl. util. until Ju-Dshwaih, s h ag crpfi;'
Beach. 91i&-#45. exceed $50,DXI. Capital re. and peta are ~leome. Mow .f BR., 211': baths ...... $l"IO & •rd•ner. $lOO/mo ly. Will a1ao Jae. 675-1642 frosUe11 refrla, Elec ~
Lovely To L0ok At QUICK CASH quiremenis are $25.000 cash. oow _ Vacant. 3 BR., :l ba. homell • S32S/350 I SI R d I I Ag!. garqe. Nr So. C.O..t p~
W;"lllh• ".,.",w,.•ll, '•""'· wall"' cpaarpepert·. For lm.ervicw, write Box 776-7330 Agent 2 BR., l'Aa ba. home •• $250 5~~'1'34· 6 tip e u ton Y• ST'EPS to beach. Spacious $185. MS.-2321. . 1188, Huntington Beach. l BR & d 1~0 -
B kB . Pn .......... =v new l br duplex, 2 full BEST A Tn 2 B DRESS &bop, hair & makeup •c •Y ">-u=R°'N,-;A,.,t-S"1°"35~"111,--,.,td rea. ...,.£'. r ..
Thill .f bdrm., 2* ba, home TIME FOR i eel h•11 , P. u . pn . ba!ha, 1arage, private J>ll.· bltna, refrl1 .• cpts, drps, hag covettd patkl, beautiful studio;:i, a 11 co-<1rdinated 3 BR, 2~ Ba .. lam. rm., r I ,,. block to Ocean. No pet... fio, bllns. lrplc, dshwshr, patto. No pet.I. Prf!..tc:hooltr
lllnd&eaping & a chol0t: lo-together. Dress shop open Newly cptd & decor. $.U5 XiOO Seavlew, CdM. w/d, garbage d!!pOlal, !av· ok. $1.50/mo. ~48 _2765 ,
cation, Ail for $37,000, now. Need partner to com-mo. Bryant \Vlei;!, 675-2723. Coste Mes• l•hly furn, MOOlr. 1!)4lng. 64~. '
i eel h•11 THROUGH A :=1~~tlr&~t'\lpas;u:~: Corone del Mer REALTY ~~. ~; yrly, W.O. * LOWER * . r I 1 ,'c:l3-,.,.".,.,"=-°',,.42<-8000_,,,~·-,-7'. Univ. Pork"'"'"· lrvl11< * $30'WK. & UP * All Eloclrio • 2 BR Ci>~. ca:li Anytime 833-0820 * 2 BR, 1 BA. SUndeck. DAILY PILOT 8 EA u Ty 5 h 0 P 1 n RUsrJC 3 bedroom t.c den, 2 • • Studio It. 1 BR Ap!1 Hanging frple. Nr beo!!ch. dfP!I, gar., petio, Nr. bua &
bath, blt-lns f Ire p I ace e Room ns WK Ii Up. theater. Adulls, no petJ. RBALTY
Westminster, call 962-314-0. walk to to~. Alt. &7>49JO: UNIVERSITY Parle 3 BR, 2 e TV It. Maid ~rvlee AvaU Car. ;axl/mo, Wlnter. S225 $l!'i6/mo, &tS.3SlS.
Monay to Loan 240 1 -:-~c---o-=-0'-=-c-'-,= BA. ] floor ]('vel, lea.o;e or e Phone Service. UtU Pd Yrly. Inclda util. No pe!a. WANT AD -,.._,.._ ••New 3 &R. 2 BA, tam . rent. $l!XJ mo. Day ~7226. e Bo( A, M-Charae, Dlnrrs 557-8400. * TOWNHOUSE * Un iv. Park Center, lrvtne REAL ISTATE Call Anytime, 133-0Q)
SHARP 3 BR 131.f BA, din '!!!!"""""""""""""""""'"""' nn, bltlns, dahw•hr, Ip!,
crpll & drps. Vacant ?a1.ust
'sell! Xlnt trms. $24,COO.
* * 835-4422 • * FOUR STAR REALTY
FOR ACTION •••
CALL 642°5678
SA TILER rm., w/!rplc, near pool. Evea. 774-8442. 2376' Newport Blvd, 543.9755 3 very Irr bdrm1 l blk to 2 pa~~·: ~11.8;·i60~pt~~'. 642-5678 MTG. CO. ~~:OM::.~. ~~ Be•ch Thi~~~e~ ~=~nt ~hS.:~ ::~ ~re:in~:;. :t~. Ln. 548-5986 or ";st ~1: L~~ •OCEAN VIEW~ . Unbeli•v•bly 8e•utlful (7141 &12·140l. MODERN 1 Bdnn. apt. Cpl.I,
S@tt~lA-~r.trs·
The Punle willt the Built-In CAadle
' 'f~m·.\·· r r r r r 1· r 1· r r· 1
1 ;.u.i.1LI ng11 1 1 111111111
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900
•
3 BR, l BA. frplc, bltJn kil, VAL D' JSERE Garden A.pis. WINTER rental avail ti! mid drps, dahwihr, b It-In• 7~ INTEREST $200. PER MO. crplit &. rlrpi. I.east". Ca1l Adults • no' peta. Flowm June, 2 BR, furn. lower apt. 2ND TD LOAN aft 6 pm. 64&-3185. e-•·-. ••-.am & garage. 1 child ok. All util
3 B ·~·.r -"'"'" .->Ur.' $170. plu• utU. 67!>-7816, ll2 pd 11=1 307 A &do ' Lowest ratl!S Orange Co. edroom -Eestslde * CUTE l BR. trplc. FA \VaterlaJl, 45• poo1 Rec. Rm, 40th SI . · <IV mo. voe • '
WE BUY TD 'S w/bu~tin kltchfl>, J1m.t.IJ en-heat. 496 Graceland Drivt'. Sauna, Sgit 1·2 B<fnn, Furn-Apt 9• CM. 645--0984. :
6t2·'l171 545-0611 Eddoaed >•J'd, (U'age. Pet & child OK. 494-7754, Unfurn. from $135. SEE IT: 2 BR., 'Ai blk, lo beach, l blk. NICE 2 BR upstlllrs apt,:
St'.'rvJng Harbor are,11. 21 yrs, Riddle ltltr. 646-8811 I ~ P.anoni 6'2-86'TO to market, $180 Mo. to July wtrarage, itove A refriJ',
L•gunt Nlgu. ~ ' · lit, or $200 mo. yearly l1e WAter-a:as-elec. furn. Adults M~ey _W•nt~ 250 -00,0,...o;;;~v--I'."'::· ""'.:-:-~"-"'.':"'.'""'--LOVELY Lp l BR. apts. Ne-wport Be•ch Rily 675-lS42 · • ~ 2 BR. DUPLEX 4 Br, 2 be, tfY &: dining area, sbaa rugs elec atove gaa · only. $145. ma.~.
HAVE client who needs Crpta, drps &-bltns fam rm, frplc, bHn!I, fence, heat. F~. UtU 'pd, ON THE BAY: 1 Br. Furn. 6 2 BR, 1'1': Ba. unf. Twnhlt,
$12,000. Will pey 10~ lnt., LARGE Fmcet> YARD &prinlder, cptf, dJM, 2 car ~. lndry rm. Nr mot .• J yr. Jl95. Sl50. Bllns, cpt1, drpii, no
se't:Uted by over $100.000 F'OR CHTLmtEN & PETS gara~. Immaculate. $310 ahoP'Jt. $150 & $155. 998 El 673-9358 pels. Chlldn!'n ok. Nr.
equity In local prop. Pvt aa.raae. $l.S5 mo. Fint A: Lut, d"POrit. Camlm Dr No. J CM. LUXURY 3 BR., 2 Ba., Fairview & Baker. StS-1882.
644-6Ul 8'11 raularlno, C.M. SfS.1746 49'M2-l4 ~l. • ocean vw. Winter. $2&5 mo. $l70-2 Br 2 Ba Studio, •dJ.
The IN'ln Co. Realtors :l t!-newl~~f;' In A out Newpor t h•ch Furn. Bach. & 1 Sr"t. 67H'JiO. JJhop1, ept/drp, patio. 1.r.
HocMs for Rent )~
Hou .. 1 Furnished 300
Gen1r1I
COSTA MESA
EASTSIDE
3 bdrm with 2 bl.Iha, dbl car-
qe, ~yard, New ,ree:n
th&& carpetlfll, neWly pajnt-
ed. Tor rent or leQt at
SJ>5 ptr mo. Call w ALKER
6 LEE R.caUor, 545-0465.
For U\Jt Uem under
try the Ptnt\7 Pitlaher
~NOWl ""'·
ditpOUJ, ";.:;,• ~ ~· 3 BR, tam rm., 2 Ba. S375 .. EspeclaUy nlct, $130 NtwPort Heights 54$4301 dt 5; 213-m.-ml
lawn, lot, or brealh1ni Avail 1/1/72, 1807 Port up. 2110 Newport BlvdJ cr.EAN l Ot 2 BR. Adllt, no "co~'·~-~-----·
space $l85 mo lo mo. $173 Owi~a Pl .. H11rbor View CM. pet•, Jr lrit, $125-S~. 2421 SPAC. 2 A! Br. ApL i1t0 up
lse. 6'6-ll46, 646-6961 alter Homn. C2l3) 292--7507. No. ~· E. 16th SI., NB. 646-1801. Pool, cpt/drp., bltns, Kld1 ok
S p.m. NEW 3 BR, DR. FR. Harbor 1 BR, cp1', drp•. water I .Apt. Unfurn. 365 12206 Colle1et No. 5 ~7035 * NEW 2 DR. l Ba Tvwnh$e View llomn. $395/mo lncl. gll'tltncr furn. No pell. '1994 Maple No. 3 642.-Mll
w/pOOI, Meu. Venie. BH1t1, g.rdcrl(T. 644-1 791. A.dulls only, $120/mo. S.ck hy LARGE l BR, bit In•,
cpl.I, drp1, patio, gar. Condominiums ~954. n.-llul •·· V 1 B dtwshr, dtp1, aha& crpll, -1 ·-N .. ,_ • --.vt ~ ltw! t, laud facil . Dbl car. No peta. =:!.. '"""' r. tc..... Unfurn. 320 BACllELOR apt furn, $115. cpl.I, drps. bltN, pool. $l45 mo. 64&-6Sl5 aft 5 pm. ·~~~~'.:,-=:-;.::c::--=:7[(G,;;;;;;;j-----Incl util. Matutt WOfldni $170/mo, ~. 0.EAN 2 BR, Beam ceu. t ner1 peNJOn. JSI Meu. Dr . 2 BR. l!oii BA. abarp crpll,
lhll:a. frplc, Crp11. Blln Nl;W-i'n·;;_,,bluH lwnlhfl 3 ~ T.M2. B•lboa lsl•nd drp1. llXI sq ft. $165 mo. 9'1!
Ch Id a:.ci. Valencia. ~7~176&. ' nnge, Iara.at· I OK. hr, 2\1. ba, rug1, drpa, A * Avail Jan 1. XT1tA LCE 2 UNFlJRN. down 1taIr1 .
Hun')' for thla. $16.'I per mo. bltns $350. (213) lSl--0567. Br, 2 BL Pool. UTll. Po. Carpeted. l BR., 2 BA. So\itb <I /BIG sunny 1 bdnn upper,
548-&970 to. RESULTS )'Ol.I Cf.ft 0. $155. Adulta ovtr 3 ~, Bay Front, $450. pr -mo. By ntw cpt. drpa, bltina, SUS..
3 BR houJC, no peta. Ptnd on, c.&11 th• $Uprr" &t&-4292, ~. OWtl(!r. 6«-7922. 54$-$70 Ol' &33.-M40
$183/mo. $'i5 cleanlng lee. :.al eam • n. .03.Uy Pilol 1 BR. Fum. Trallrr. $7S, Util $400 Yearly. 3.17 E. Bayfmnt. 1 BR Apt S1%1Jmo, Drapes
l!MO Pomona A've. Nr sch11 Oualfted 6()..5671 • p1act peld. Ma1ure adult only. No 2 BP.., 2 hi .. dbl. pr, No 1a.rqt. No pell.
ol mrkt. )'(Mfr ad A cbarp ltl pet1. &4~. Winton lteal Estate $15-3331 ~l ot ~.
"
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••• • • • 4 ·~ ...... , .. . . I • ~' ; ' ... ~ .
DAILY I'll.OT
[t}\I : ·--~· l~I ----f~J1a]! ~--l~fl--:--1~·1 .. .,,_ ![II] I ~ . .,.... llm
1 I I , I \ 1 ~=~~:1 ;;;;;;;;;;~~1 J6S Apt.. ~........ . a.~ 1f?:-.. I• .~ C.rpet S.rvla l'•lntlne i. l ~~M V 110 HolpW1nt..i,Mi. 1'710
lrvlno . · """" "' Unlu"'" m * PRJVAtt Roe;;\ """1!Y. --•,...." ~.;;. JOHN'S 0upe1" u)>bol.....,, P~ ... "'""'1"' 8ABR:~~'"1si:;:11;;oh;;':.:; . .,,ynb,:::;;;r.~,J~ .. :. I=======;.! ;::::;:,::;;:~--~-1;.;,.;.;;;,;.. ______ C..to MIN For <!du1f -· Br!PI • opqi.. TGwld Ole ~ 6 a....,.,· Ji:X1ra Drt-Sbam-P.uNTING. P"'1; All wor11 ,Jrk; ~,.,..'old boy,. 1$. da.
•rk·Llke Su.....,ndlnt PARK WEST cbfftypnleA--Doi II"\ ,Saa '?-~II. poo tm Sc<>tchruard (Soll IUI"'-Color apecl1lht ·Iii-w11rnL clilld 'OK
QUIET • DELUXE • IMrllfoua ,...iL ~ -; • " 1 f l!<l&nlanla). °"""""' A JJG.CIU, 51T-114L ~-" , ~
"' l ·• ... ' BR APTS 1 :-~rr!!~~ie BRAND" NEW ' v--RO!ll••· ~ '?""D ,..... bl&Cil•....i. Ill -brich••-• ,. PAINTING/Pa-. u ,... &\e.rSJ'IVER. $ lilaft .. "1111-..
INCOME
TAX AUlll FUJU<. BAOIEUlRS -•--•C.t,-vldlll'f <loldft'W"'\. "'1"'!te bleach-tor wblte In H4rl>or ...._!Jc• boocl-U!IO .. ,;l;\io·J'l'· rlri· Balboa
• • p,y pa dos * Htd Poo!a 1 Bdrm., 2 a.. Flom IH~ Dt.bwuher, ..... WAIKDQ ~~ ~ f.br ~·U.. KllD"'°'"!': . ....,... ...,,.... Savo ~ !!'I'!"> "'· 'llere ..,. IC-'356. 1~. t"'-~ ..,...,... ' ·
UI,. Nr ahop'1 • Adults only Frorri $195 ca.r'PttinJ. walk·la doltta. ·~ "'"flirii ~. WW Jf7.!.111Ko , ~;r.;o · it -1• f by ·~ rM tf1' :l , ,_."'* '"' Marti I · APttc.-3883' Pa:rlcvie La Forced tit beat, dtla ...,. ti.CCs n1k;af a ~an.·~ itf, • .,,,. ... , , , ! ww &an u f.: pa.lnttnc~lnter/etttt. ~ Bl:t ¥aid v.'Mted. Brltlah
'Male or Female ..111'. lm Sao~ ~Avo..'"c; !"'1M. (Jo:.· orr"° ""'"'·~aullfulpmeroom, ·p.~ d&, Ii>< 2. '"' OI) 1-. !~~oil~.~~l::r.i nnA ballflW ;..,.,q. Lie/Ina. llllbo\i. °"'!'r.?C-. E-.• ·, Mar. Apt 113 6f6.5M2 San Oleao Fwy at CW.va Rd) heated P>Ol. BBQ' .. ~n&.· m..25G. 'a. Ball 4684 l'lq. A Wi , , near i • ·~, ! COUCb $10, , ~ f ;)?N .~ 1 "'!•• ~ thnl
--ed prqn,, qltle:t ~ n.g..,_tt Ave San Qltao, amtr ......no. · ~ up la ~ !O/· 'No~ rit'fl'r9930 ~ j,., BAY MEADOW APTS. L• N191* JnaAduJ' tv1clooe to ll•>PPlnr· Cal.¥,.: ','. _ i. , B • "1l dor -method. t t'WA!itfilpi;:)t...., BOOKK 111 ' Hl(h V<>lome o!lke nNda
,":., 8elJa celllnp, peneJtna, tuna t na. no ptU. RMt 11 IR Sha .QI illte part wolf, aPPJ'QX. '-Cood ref. , ~aa-·1JIU~ 9"r quallfied tax preJ>&ftn •
• b'I' prl• patio&, recreation ta~ LAGUNA NIGUEL EL CORDOVA A1,TS. ,, .~ .; . N __ ,5.moll\bl o14.~t6 nn ·. 1 CMMnt c ,_l41 -t MG-lT.ri ~uto ~tin pretenW!. conunJuk>n or aalll?J'.
,.,_...-c:C.itie&. AU adultl, no ptU. APARTMENTS 3m' Ow.lie St. MS-U.70 GIRL '""ted to share tum!. 2 MAN' J1" Qtb' ' one • -s ~......!~~A~tl. IJ\I., Va. C•ll: West•rn . ...-e 2 BR'1 FRO.\I AS LOW 1 BR, 1 BA * 2'BR, 2 BA Near Harbor A: Hamilton St. BR. lWI A pell 0.1C. ~ •~ 'CK. Uc'! qD anil CEMENT WORJ4'1i°~· -,.,m~· ~ ~ ,_ . co~·jn ~J'IO'ft Bu &.in1s1 S•rvice1 11'c •
.,, •; lll9tmo. lully ...,,.,,. & draped 1' ~-ia ..... -..m; I" 1c1e1oiY . .Mi.*-, ama11. naacealifj t • ., "..'(bt E Pt°i1r:::O ~. ,. . ·-l.E~!NG 'Ul;):I( •. 19th St., C.M.
3r. W. Bay SL, c.JI. From $17S ' ' 8'>-QUlWa Bch. .• · . ' ~~-H. SIUfllc ' "'if':_•ll'~l~•ol --·BNd., y,ll. .-'.' .• L"'0•0212 O\D 6*.ol13 ' -POINTER, am.le ·401, -~· ··~:---..,-... ,...--, l"-~-""-" .. 64$.'61 •. 1. V!'T• ~ ind gu. 'JV c.ble, v.'attt, ROOMfl'ATE to ahatt 2 BR.. biown·· , •, ~. vi•· WINTER R&tei!· ·! ~~ihl?iiiliiil'.·1 r .JK>OKKQ;f:J:Ro' A/P • ~. • 'Ii
, , e BEAunFUL GROUNDS e all kit bltnl, Indry areu, HACIENQA 2 ba qt Wl~cher. ~ ~ Newport Hts. m-&56t.1 , fioon, patb;, • 1·, · ; ~~ ~ ~---:7;\~ : :~terized\fi'a·y ro i{:~ ..,;·m' ~·~~~"'!'~i!!!J
1
"' SPAN!Sll DECOR bid rovlm pOol, BBQ'' priv HARBOit lrom ..,..,.. ~ ~o;. YNG !Ilk A Ian ...... ,,., .... --.Doo. · ' <e · • "/' 1 ..,...,...,,,.Will -ld<!r . · ··fNYEST IN
,, _.,,, ...... Gu, wtr. pd. pados • baloonles. ""'" >II AVOCADO STRE,EI' ~ . lnb<'1'ma!e,vle'-~~ QUAUTYCftn•nf~. , ... Rep•!' < ~i'llt um .. Ne,.,,....'Beocl> You· .. FUTURE , Garage, Pool, Rec. rm .• 10 AM tot PM * 4SM2'12 Adult 11~. No peta WORKING gal "filill lbare ·ana. S..Tllf" i ~ :i.• • Georae do iL Uc'~~ . ·~ -{ .. ,' *'ta, &U-U00 ,. ...-I\ 'r'". ~=-.s. I BR 11'0. 2 BR ::g;;.,,* v:! = ~~::.!.~~Ill. .:"' 'ha.YOO: ... ·~· .. Lost . . .'." w 16-1'115. ' ;. .. '_ltlen..Alt•r•tli#,; '· ll<i!jKKEEPER -Glrf Fr\-tiJ~o~·~ ()_WN BOSSI
•. •' Hacienda de Mesa Apts Nilwport Be.ch FROM $150. 6f6.l.JM ~~1039 .• nr bcb. $95l .~ ••.• : ,,; ,. ~~~ Contr•.ctor ~ ~~~tru~~~-! ... y:··~Seuona1. J~'n , •, .• ',Mtlft or Women
100 W. Wilson.~ Mgr. No. 1 LOST ~~~ '(' ~· ~r-pa · • , ~pe.ys 9am-4pm. ROO/dATE. MJF; ., ..... 3 boa Bl)' D»b<, .. MY Way, qUallty . . ~ 4) 49'1· _0 : ..
"" '"THE GABLES" *NEWPORT* ,v.IAZING A~ult LlvJnr, BR -!Jivate BR. m·-~ at'....,.n ftmod. Walla, c•I \ll.W . ;.; "1~.-"'.•US80Y · L1H1 A Y•llow
..,...11.ct. 2 Br wfprl gar. Adlts. Be&uL1•2rB!f,fQmor¥nl mo ' ~·c:rntal• ~·-wtt'-' nocn;etc.Nojobt.oo 1
': ,, ~~~p: t · _, T•JCI C•b
V aoundproofed. Fncd. yrd. SHO~li~) c-Apts. Self clel.D. · ovens, · '' ·· bl,aclc '9l'll~. lt.4.U ·rl.~ 547~ 24, hr aN:. aerv: '; ~--4'.'l:uy ·Rooftni, ~ '!';ltit.i...r ,., ~:;;:en { Call for Appl .. w I patio. w Ir pd. 3 Bdnn, 2 Be, arem.ng area, D/W ~~~Br) dlspl1, aha&: * Moccale. --SD ~.~~·-B~ fered. ~tJmfl\tal ,;.;.;.fu.o.l,14 .Aotttions * llemod•l'M ... -~D~t. I do lp)' OWD ~ ,:;:<,,.·*'~.~er ·' -; -Gardner/malnt. Call bhnl. 1 Large dtluxe apt. W/W cpts, _.,. jacuu:i Ir: 11.una nr • .-... :1 _,..-8Sl..a519 "-t .. ,. MS-2780 548--9?9(1 ~-· -..: -¥'' ! I• It: 5, 636-tllO. carpeting, Children O.K. 'battw 'Huie ')!001 -wtf..or by mo. :557-Uoo. i 1 owner., r ''-?!: ~ Gerwiclr: & ·Son, Llc. ' : ~ "t:,·:.: { ~~~ • / 1
"'""'"A'" 0ranp Ave "G" $155 $235. month, ~rrlmac Woods G ·for· R nt .... E 1Lo~t ~'IMJllW'~ , 67)..8)U' • ,r·~· 5'~2170 R.EltAIR. recover any roof '...,1fAf1a;~ ,P?<I, ,
546-1311 I
-.....,. ' CALL 546-0370 ,_ M•gU • -F!btty'¥amr:totie • .. i problems Weneda Roo1ing ('No Phime Catts) • Ask fur Herman 3 Bdrm * 2 lath <25 Mel'fim&c Way; C.M. , . . , Loll v1c.1i'7 '. n.: Eloctrlul Fre< "' .64>-1691. . Thi FIYI Crowni ' '1--------1
3 Living room with ca-.! I" BRAND NEW I" 1100-MOVE IN Allow'""" St~~~YJ_,~m41. Nff.& -~~= ' ELECTRICAL." ~~i ·$0winvi~1t~·:r· · f!.Htaurant '" C'@iling I: trplc. Separa.tt rom Santa Ana Ave {AC!"(IU Pre-5¢1 children welcome . ~-Call 547111 I comm'l, iftd.J~:~ SJ ' ~ • . • 'T ·~ 3*>1 E. Paciftc Coast Hwy.,
,·r ..... ...._ area. End P,.tlo. .,_ S.A. ~-·--O••b) NASSAU ~ALMS Offldi R..-tal , 4'0 l"'UD1~1 tf< · ~ ' jobs OK. 1.1,.•dli ifts~Jfeu~ Aiter•tloni ' 2;5145 Corona B'lta'i-. Noph. cans~ G ~:1 ... ........, ...........,, .... 1 .. lTI E. 22nd St. &0-3645 ......... ..., • ..,_.. pyppy-4. ~ ..,--. ' -•
SWlmml.bg poot A: chllt!rea'a Spacious" l A 2 BR. from NASSAU PALMS CORONA DEL MAR t' em a I e G e'r-man pricH. Free est. 5ff-::0211· Neat, ¥XW'Jte. 1:1 yean iexp. BOYS 10.14
i:t p1a)'grOl1nd. PXI. $150 A: SUS, FtREPLACES. Furn. a: unturn. 1 A DelUJte. boa. ofc, choi~ Jqc. ~Vic. Litelt;).1ie 4 Electronlcs Telavl1klin Repair. . to deliver papers 1!' ~ San
HARBOR GREENS Priv patios;, loads of doseta. . 2 BR'• from $135 UP Sep entr. priv bath, cpt'c 1:. Ae~ Hill~ M.V • .Jkwud ~=-~ , _ ,. . , , ---r _ Oe~. San J_13!' C.pls-
546-435J Heat'l'd Pool. Adult.a. Man-D p I drps. Prk'g, Util 'pd. $1TW &'J)...4669~ • & ~~i·.£.O"r" J r ... ~· ,. -t __ ~'TV~ '-tri:no<&rid (apl.rtrario Beach
f>, 1,2~B~R.~~~--.-~ ager m..U63. •n• o nt mo. Owntr 673-6757. 1 SROWl{ · ,,,· Bkac · \it;t dmP ..t: ,.ihort · ~ing"iJi~ ··am.-~
"'" dopooal, aoi.. $1.10. 132 E. e NOW OPEN i BEAUTIFUL 2 BR, boal<d 2 ROOMS :f!IO sq 11 w/crpi., hili'4 ltnl 4oi1 · .;i$;j •• '"'" apedalllls 1 "' !OO, ~ Mqnavox DAILY PILOT """NE PERSONNEi. ~· Bay St, C..'1. 494-7192. BRAND~ 1 I: 2 Br From pool, aiee to apprttlate. See ~s. & JinltotW RrV. "Vlc. -0m~~taf-.'Aft?,r4: Kffne Entft111'\ses, 962-l759 ~for honesty ~ 49M420 1"v1
,. •WILSON GARDENS• $148, Priv patio,· bllllard at 24.lll Santa Clan; Dana l.nCld. 2172 •Dupont Dr, ~21.27. ~· L. ;~ .. : , · ' ~I~ !!:_M S!rvl~• . mµ.ING qerk nee d.e d, SERYK:ES•AGEJ\CY
; 2 BR. l'* BA. cpt I drps, rm, heated pool w/ jacuzzi, PL or phone, 493-3039. Newport Beach, cal; (113) LADJ;o_c::: 1Xildl!Q)fl', 'dl-t AL's Cl.Macaping:. Tre.e: r.'l'tia'R.&1 .. 'J'tl!f ~~Yard prey1ous ~ exp -nee, 488 E. 17th fat Irvine) CM f' · encl. patio. $140. 642-Qll. twee cloleta, deep pile C&l'· Huntington S..dt m.o866. · ~ :wr}at . Wf.td!.,·-~ riell¥JVa)~ Yard'remodel.lni' ~:-bi:~ ~er inedical pref·, Apply .Turner 642-1470
1
.. ~ 1 Bedroom, Sharp. 0ote to ~~ .J;:t-M~~ DESK apace a~ble ·$50 R!dm'd'I Matket.,Udo.la!e. Tnlh>~oling, lot cleanup, 11!pain. Reaa. ~-l'.>rµg. 2542 W. Coast Hwy,
" o.c.c. 1: u.c.t s 1 J s. 0nei 3Jl02 em st, New-La Quinta Hermosa :°Ss ':! Cn, "= 1tewm .. ~1l-·" ... ,. · Repair IPtfnklera. m.llfi6. Newport. LADY needed for 1>ousewor11 ~. 5.57-TI63. port Beach. 9i:7-4246. . available; l7tr5 Beach Blvd~. ~ ·~~:~..! .. AL:s GARDENJNG L :. . · 1tm ~ERS;. Car Wuh, part 5 daya a wk.
'-2 BR&: den, 2 baths SEACLIFF\ ~OR apt&-2 SPANISlt COUNTRY ES· H11t1tingt0nBeacb. ~-.tuie~;.red~.· 'We. ~M.i~ A: •m~_lj {' L1~11•«· '\ I It: full',j:imf' -for LagUna Call stS-1503
I''"' Some patio&. All for Br, $160 uni, $115 f'?"' .. Cpta, TATE llvi""' Ac ... cloos DESK --· a·-"·ble .e 9t)\, st., ~~~r;.:Jm&, ==pbtl--N-=-..;l • -·, • • t f' ~.area, ~· Req'd. UTE housekeeper, 1 hop ' • 11<5 & 1150 546-7331 .i~ bl-· -..a. d p1 1525 ... _,....... "'"""" 'Reward m. ~..... -.... _., ,.,...., ~'1 " _,,/ M ",.Qv~ !8:: ~· cook, live-in or wnrk days.
I . ....,;,, ....... 6G.l.U I • apta. Terraced pool, SUnken mo. WW provid9 tum! . • . ; or . ~u. CdM Ooita M Dover • •• "" ·~LARGE 2 Br. 1% Ba Studio Placien~ Ave. Ask about . gu BBQ. ,t.$S)no. ~ *"'* ('.-·ShftPl~ .. l:'tz':-.;,~ Shor9. Wn1dm. esa., Job W•ntad, M•le 700 CHILD Care, live-m, 2 boys. ~~~tls~~~~~orld,
. • Apt. No pets. $1'5. 726 our dilCOW\t. 642--8340 or UnbeUt'Vable Jlvlng tor ONLY available. , U . No. ,El "to ~•crietti''•i_ . · ff.B. ;,fl'", ROFESSI' ON. . _ _.____ . Newport Beach are a' 1--c--~~-~--·"'K JoaM St • 846-1514. 548-2682. 1 Bdrm. UnflJrn $150 C&mlno., R-e&l. San 12J25, rewatd. ~7tm. P AL , .... u~uu , WANT J1?b with building or 6#<5468. Loan Officer Trne.
c• J{O()MY 3 BR• 2~ BA, PARK NEWPORT F\lm $175. ' Cementa. '9').40) ' · ·; LOST:fUvez:. Offor fml HUD-~o.t.t:"" A,..~!,n,i;~ ~sc~C9~rEx. Civil. CLERI~ce .. Alert in· ~~program for UPPl"f'
·, carport, laundr). facWtlea. APARTMENTS 2 Bdrm uhfum. $175. DESK space a~ble · $50 tin&:~; ~·· Bi&lboa Ia1. jY.~'7" ' ~ -.---r-'160 --.. -~ ,;. pet'. tell14ient ~ mteftsting .,.--:ment. Nat'I corp. -;'l-
$20'.I. No pets. 546-859t Bachelor, l or 2 Bedrooms, Fum. $210 mo. wm provide ~ 1212!tti. &r>-cxrf4. ... ~ca P n I ,, : ~· ~lew-. , . ·, ~ eadt'i 38 >'"· wark. Wt· w1ll ti a\ n • iers ;th11 fantastic opening 1"'":1 -'"'-.C...,~=-~--~ I and Tcrwn.bouJeS. Spa pools ALL 11I'IUTIES INCLUDED at SS mo. Answering aemce · . ,rltt; ~-~No. 97 MacG~ Yachts. '1631 : t'or ~ career minded ind.I·
• C LRG 3 BR, 2 BA, no pets. tennis. From $i10. ·~ ADULTS ' NO PETS available. 222 Forul Ave, , , ~ Trimming • .!'Generil -fiail.J'~Pllot, P.~. BOx 15i!0, Placentia~ Colla Mesa. Vi.iu&J. Paid ins., major
·-Children OK. Nr schls & from' FubiOn I~ at Jam. vrsrr OUR ?\-10DELS Le.gun& Beacll. 494--9466 I ' II~ I Oean • up. Spec. Pruning Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626. COCKTAIL waitresses Qr. med.. stock <J?lions, profit
.:i" Shpg. $170. mo. ~ boree I. San Joaquin H.il1s l62ll PARKSIDE LN. Busiwi Rent I 4'J httucU"9 fruit tr e ie •. Re:aaonable. Job Wanted, Fem.le 702 phanage Restaurant, L&guna sharing It retirement. Call
SHARP! l Br, lge: closets. Roads. fn4) 644-1900. ffi4) 841·~1 I MM318. E " --· · jj , Beach. Experiencied & must ~ McCoy, ~Z1oO, Den.
pool. Nr. lhops. Adults. 1884 REUSI'ING • Back Bay 4 Blka. So. ot San Dlero FOR rent commerdal, i~ . EXP Japanese Gardener. NE D HElP AT 01\lE. }iye dose. nts It Denn~_ Pers~nel
·Monrov\a. St&-4336. area. 2 BR g"-a-,_,ta Fr.Yy. on Beach, l b1lc W. on d\l.ltrial. for del.v.xie oUice1. Schoolt A 1 , J :,_. JCnoW' how, up.-kffp, p\a'.ftt_; •}Vdee h ~v ieN~aJ~ I t "'""'K • 1A~~nc)', 2082 1\1ichelson Dr., . • ·-~ .. ' Hol p-~" N ,u. •--D'• 1--i.-.....a.1-a cw · tr!mmi' . cl T 7"' ~)b I ·• l"' ur1e1 • .. :. ·~ , 1·v1ne. 3 BR, ~ Ba., spacious drps. patiO. Adults. No peta. t to an<alUe. ew .......,.. nieu ...., ,...go 11••~ • • -~ J>l!lt. ng, eaJHJp. Jlou.¥keepen e . Com· 2n4~~ il!imie .. .convaJt&. --~MA=~c~H~I =E---I
studk>. Sha&:. washer/dryr 6f2...2267. FURN or Unfurn Apia. 1 or 2 Frwy A Cl'own Valley PIANO ~NS .968-:MBS attu 2PM. ' ~fl.I . -. ttnt boiP.!~3013. N
1
1 .. 1 onprem18et:.$200.645-1496. ••PENINSULA 2 BR, BR+ 2 BA from fW. Pukway. Choice spots Bettnma.·ta:~ ~TOM'• Gardenlnc. Exp"': H<ffl,EMAkERS/UPJOHN· DENfilASST , BOOKKEEPERS "~ est Bluff unusual tri.Jevd, fr p I c, monthly. Adults orily. "'Nr. avail. S31.~l~. ~o1·Aat·,,.itlitelt. J~11e Lawn Malrr Fill the cavity in this ~Ion ..
'\W'S dswshr, l bUc ~a.rHll.y. beach. Call Mn. Donner SI'ORE i:rtJrit bulldlnc, M-1 Meu Vflila.. Collta Jllfla tel'.llUICe' A Clcan·up. 547...f'i681. otti whi:I. iextr ding top NCR/Burrough•
.NEWPORT" BEACH Year!y. ~mo. Avail Jan. ~.at 220 12th St., apt zone, ~ 14 ft. 2)T2 C411 ~ ..... ' • 531....f.HG. 339'o9585 aft 4• EXP. Practical Nurse. Will doll:. P.S.eposi~ \s pain-Keypunch Opri
'< VIII• Gr•n•d• Apts. 3rd. 615-4125. 12. or call 1\1~. Buxton, Placentia, , Costa M ie a a LAWN Maint. Hauling, n cook I: do _bou.sewo~. g..12 tess. .CIJl ,, Penny Ryan,
Illa our bedrooms with bal~ yEfily NR OCEAN SJ&.1244 .at 2l9 l5th St .. apt 54Pr7698.. · ..,. ..' • ·1~· 'tawn1, die&JHU), prunin&. hrs ol' nljh~ ,duty. Rell1 RaJ..2'700, Dtnnia &: Dennis a ~~:r!orjob
let above" below. Gradous spacious upr 3 Br 2 aa' 1• lndu1trl•f R.tnt•I . 450, ...... _.,...... ~.Eat Call 546-7379. Reas. 557o.&HT Have cir:' -Pu!lonnel-Agency, 2082 today
.'<1 ,. ivlng A. quiet sunvundlnc frplc. $2'Z5. ~fa. A~ now'. Newport Be•ch· -~ ' '. · . · .. ' .. : !. ·' • EXP Hawaiian Gardener. BABYSITTING N-.. yaa-Michelson Dr, Irvine. Jntervws: "12
l'i"'· .Jor tamlJy with cbUdrien. ,_2128 • "'"' ~.. .,.,.,,..A -'--'-•AM · ~ ,.._ Near Corona del ?.far High ~ • Complete gardening aerv. Eve. My home. 9-9 Snack le D~, • L .=.:.~11, chai~-Equal Oppor. Employer
1 ... School. Fireplace, wet bar I 150' to Beach. patio view of • ' \, .,_-. ~ Kamilani, 646-467~. . .• .. Bf,eaklast. 548--4260. side, ~r ~ some iexpen-l\fale & Female
,n bullt·lft kitchen appllant'ff, Ca~, delux l BR., $260 RESORT UVING ' JIMS GARDiNING · · 1
• £x70IR,L Fri. and pn. of-ence. • · Western Girl Inc,
-"M 835 AMIGOS WAY 6"·2991 mo. incl utU. Yr I y. EXP.fil\IEN~ ~ care I Complete Gardening Servi ficie type seek• put time Or DJSHWASJ:IER wanted, full 4007 MacArthur Blvd.
I Cold'ftl.l,BankerltCo. 673-7422. FROM $125 in m, N~,(::M •. ~ '0eaJHJpll. 54~~;_ -•. ,,~:awk.work.846-~ .. ~~ v:~ 1!::-00 127 N~;:,.;;acb
t'l t'I ' Managing-Agent S•nf• An• wfprd. Luncbea .A: snacki. EXptr Japanese .Gardenet •Hilp W1nted M & F 710 -' -· VIEW Tellder lovinr',care. toe just Complete yd serVl.ce.' Ne~i , ' , .,. , • ·DO~STIC MAID vKlrk ncedetl in ex-
2 Bdnns., 2 baths. Upslaln FAMILIES l l'a o.n'OOd G 1 rd e n oil ~ S!.n DielJO I: Npt A: Rella. Free est. uJ...4:t89. • 'A<X.TG '! • 1 $6S) women /or lite houseclean-Change· for apt. zrn; New·
;;' view apt. Carpeted, dra~, Apartments nd it' freeways. 546-7'8'1. JAPANESE ·Gantenlrit i>y· ;-·;. e FEE PAIQe 1, ',, inf. P h.:774-0321. port.Blvd., C.M. 548-9755.
DI -Mtina. 2 cowred parking fun, .fine ~I~~ an: OULDCatt,Wantto6·)TS. exper gardener. complete .• :, ,_\be F~~oba ,,i rDaAPERY..CARPE:I'.aales MEMORIAL
a...i. spaces. S2SO Month yearfy. WELCOME! Ha,_ve 1'2'1t Pornl,. ftDced yd \\'Ork. Oean-up. gsg..~ New . c;-o. near O.C. ~ txPitr. ~tDecorator t Y Pie
-: '. '7MOSO 0 ,....u .. llvi"" In one ....... tµ:AL'Il:>RS , ..... l yr old chlld. Ex-GARDENING SE!Wlm;:. ' .~"" '°' """' ga1'_~ 1' l"!!f"'-sro .. ''""· Draw COUNSELING
I c • )owl package. There'• $1 ...-1S'INICE ·19" pe.r:lenoed. Mf11i91'io'VieJo, ·El • _, m. l>ol!ting. Exmi.tn + 'lomrn. 492-2254. ---•PP' &CL.a million in recrieatlon •• , 673~00 Turoan:a.Q)...Q70. CLEAN-~~)!'i'(· ~'\1b oppor. J.i1'fKEL JliiOlili..Oiiii ......... .., ..
P. .. ' • SINGLE stt>RY ntmmlng, ~nnls. billiards, BABYSITl'lN(;; my tiOmie, ~ e 646-e ' ,t.\.~. 1~~ Rl.~~l~e · ., . E~ECUTIVE"'· • Start the new year in 1 pro-
fessk>nal career. Ml Munttntfon Beach South Sea Abnospherie health clubs, saunas, pro. Store.... 455 bouill. · Weelr dlya I: H•ullng , Ave., N.B. 645-3100. ,Personnel Age~f:Y
2 BDRM-2 BAnt wieekenda. Hot !MlflMI a . AMBITIOUS sales I frl I·
carpeta and Drapes shop, Indoor rotf driving STO~GI; SPACE' snackl. Di2 Wallace st. Hauling, cle.an-IU';·.-:1~~-~l ·Start $2.50 ari -·ht. + LEGAL TRAINEE
Air CoodltJontd rarwe, dubhou&e, etc. ta!. mo. -• e 645-3569 C.M. , JI? Pomona. Sehl'. :c;:s. (;i·~~"f' ... re_';i. 'lxitluaies. Will ·tr a1 .. n. Seb'etari&l Skills ""'.ON BEACH!
'top ff.rnings. fringe bene'fib
end a prestige company.
Private Patiol Custom decorated alnglea, Rantal1-WMtecf . 460 M&-58&1. 53'-1846. '.1,1., '• -•• ,~3318. ' ' ·~·Too Finn, Fash, lsi..
BR. Unfum Fr. $230/mo. r~D P9(>L 1 ._ 2 BR. ,,..·-l•h•d ._Un' . .. . ...,..,...., YEARS• • I .... N.-....i~ . ·.NI W. Coast HWy., Nll . Prefer 30 years or older. Furniture Available -..vu~• &: Storage • "'· "'" • • YNG. working women netda ~,£>" ... ay • ewn nc YARD/garage, deanups._ltt-....,,'.u'":"°'NEW CAR Su1iI Jl &Q-2716
Carpef&..drape....dl1hwasher Nr. So. Cout Plata ' furnl•hed· Nolieasereq Bdr. home w/fencie yqt. 'Batiyalldng .my 'bom8' all movie trees~ dirt, iv)i.·:Sklpi c· 0 C ESK
heated pool-sauna.tennis HIDDEN VILLAGE Modela Open Dally JO t0 'fP. for 2 ·~1f'tfaine;d dogs., qie1. 548-lMl or 548-3311. io.dtt, bacijp-:. 841:-., , NTRA T D ~ room..ocean vlew1 2500 South Salta Within walk dlsl:allce I Mature 1"0tntn wru babytit-TRASH It caiiff1~up.1i i::XPe,'· rl~~ 0._"!Y ,~ !: .,_A_ •-Santa Ana • 546-1525 00 \V. Bay SI., Costa Mieaa New Ye•,"" ,F;Vf.•E:xel rieta.. - -· PY· .-... ,.e ...,.ne lb, Kuuu pe, .............. p"I' parkift& OAKW D GARDEN r.--dQ1. Frft e!lt ~t! · good 1UJTOU d
Securtty guarda:. 3 Hea.ted Poola 548-1,881.Ati ';00 Eye.'. ~ ,&1673706. M&-50ll. ~~ta t M Bell n •
I For an interview
644-0212 ElXPD ser.<lcie Station help, .~wn!np. Full or part ti~. !'!"'~~~...,""!""! ... ,.J 'RaY Carey Chevron, 604. So. M/F to bundle cu' fabric for
Coast HW,. .. Laguna Beach. N.B. garment mlgr. $2 hr.
Apply fn~person. !i4G--i5U. ' • HUNTINGTON wt• Oubbouao •le. BBQ APARTMENTS C · ~-• • ~· oc "· ' Oilld ea.. C.o"' ,, ........ ~ ' .... : . . HooiM<IHnlnt WI ~s N FORD
PACIFIC Great new l 2 "A 3 Bdri:na I 11•1 ~-· ·~;' ·~ •. • '"'" " ' . ~Beach Blvd. ' NEED ,'1,,.lo ""11
" '"
1'""
TU OCEAN-AVE., H.B. From $149 (Resort Llvinr for Sintle a:; Pttaonala r HOME . .'rt~N?. job 100 Mesa. Oeaninf.~·,'.f Huntl~Beach F~~=t Area) to $800 t~":'."~~ ~.:r:.:si:,.
<n4l 538-1'8'! SOUTH COAST M..m.d AduJ I>). · • · small.;<., !Mar fnnmi<t~ Cal'pob, -~~.' ~'"' f5oo tn
ore open 10 am-6 pm DaDy VILLAS NEWPORT BEAOl p I ~ ~str.t · ·. ~ er Resid. & Commc'l. 54!..nll ~UTOSA; LESMAN'\ GtrF Friday S450 N= 'm:,::· female for WILLIAM WALTERS 00. ll01 MacArthur Blvd. !"" al Irv'--_.,...,.. .._ -· -· . · ~ DEDICATED CLEANING : .. ~t. ,Lite M>i.nt> S400 d '"""'l:""i~~i':''"='i:'""l-=--o--!•~!!-~---~ ·~ .,EWPORT pvt. ut!es, R. N., •'
L: * FRESH AIR Apts., .,._~. 6CS-«iiO er -G4i.il70 PROBLEMPrtgnancy'.~-'ftM~R *:~ht~~* ~= ~~nz= ' Peri\nne1 Agencv ~~~;;,' .~;i~t.9 ~-2 ~= ~ Walk :s blka; to Beach! Furl). or Unfurn. 370 , '"' Ddeiitial. l)'inpathie-tic Jde· QUIC~ CASH Palntlnt & pt¥fme:d. Good Penonal.lty. 113 .OOY111ir Dr., N.B. Lindsey Nurses Regtatry,
1 ~b!'.:::ci:·.:."::.~~ Cost• M.s. VISTA DEL MESA :'"Z..,.":.';'°'~~boi~ TM!JOUGH A 1 P.,........,.1ne ~=• ~::..~'."!i° 642-3870 23331 El Toro Rd, No. 211
Ba; bl1nt, .,.,... -.. '" 2B!"!'!.ment. • u~.·o•-• CARE. "'""11l· ~ DAILY PILOT , PAINTING -. Go·~-·-~ • ..,, pl11a """"'"''°,..Apply GIIT • Smllonel'y -"""''· D. :u";."'s~~"A· IDES
·$225. No 1ngla, DD P<IL 1"E EXetmlG •= ••· ~~ ENCOUNTER GR°"P ,f: WAU9 JI.a , --·~ ~ r''."'~ Ooly apply. F/tim" Call ~lTU. PALM MESA APTS. ~~t'=~~.! itc R=~~ A p
1
1
1
acie to ~~ter P»w yc:rur. • ~·, .n'f' ~ ~~.pri~JJ:.c'd ~ ,....,·• . ..tGt. appt MS;.1423. ~. Ex?tt. 549-3061
e MOVEINTODAY e MINt.rrESTONWPT.BCH. RENTsta•rta$155 ~ a.nd546.tonnre.treiation-,, , ; v·· GTRL Bookkeeper&: OPERATORS. exp'd alngle
Kkll & pets wiel<.'OIM. 2 BA.. FURN. OR UNFURN. Tustin & Mes• Drive Pl. M27 ..• ti .. \ , . .,~ .. ~Hrl fl.Ill or pert time needle, to work on
i 'Sl.39 ·1: $1f8. All extras, Pcoi. Ynbellevably large apta, hu1ie * 545-4155 * AI.L"OHOUCS ~ * * • • "*. * * * ~.. N.IJ; U: ~~2062 ' sportswear. Top plet'@ v.wk ~.~gar, patio. Furniture avail. pool. Jaeuttl, elect bltina, ~~ .5'2.:. 121. 1 or wll, I• ,· ,· '. ! :. 11 • ; • • a. ·• -rate•. Call 545--0892.
ha ' "'. HEAD CASHIER , l7J62.A Kieelaon Ln H.B. s r crpts, drps, sauna, P.O. BoX 1223. Oostl. M,.. . · · OUTSIDE salesman for auto
968--7510 or 842-6235. etc. Adults, no pet1. I ]( •J _ •.· > 1 l~, 'I " w .... ~ ·\C'""EVIER "'O/TO.,RS·,' • : ... ~ •. -'1',!_N!.,_ •. · :. parts store. m Placentlri, BEACHWOOD APTS. SING~ •••••• rrom $135 lttntlla: ,,. ~ .,, ... _; .:r.'t K m· . Vtl&lle • ·~ \..ml .~ Costa Mesa.
' . I BEDRM ...... Fl'om 1110 . . ·1 ~··-..:...._L. l I T"-~er"~ Par!!ll,' 'd' 1"se· -w ,_St Sa .. A °"'"'"'.bright future w/ =CKE=~~--~· Bnndnewl-WBR.'.:bJk 2 BEDRM •••••• nomn60 un_.,... r fdU J.U -......... ., n na this~i~oo.Take.note-PA RS: Nal lonally
I to BEACH! epu, drps, bltns, You're right they're Wider-Rooms .. _ AVON CALLING I }Jn ~lngs, Call Mar-~·n firm In Irvine com·
trpic. 12S lfith SL, HB. pri~! 1561'. Mesa Dr. -, .•· 1 For a. wonderful earninf ~ kin_ ~. 833-2700 Dennil pleox oUen great op-
147-3$7 (Ii lika t:rom Newport Wvd.} "n.... Found. (free .d1) J50 ~ . , i nes portun!ty, in )'OU!' own tu-I: l>e6nis Penonnd Agen-portunity far the gal who
2 I: 3 BR. $1.0 UP. Poot st&-9860 ROONS-n5 wlr Up ,...,.., ' . rttory, no expiet'. neceu. cy, Xl82 Mlchd!Jon Dr r,.. can v.'Ot'k on own. St $2.23.
MORA KA1 Apta. 1888'i $30 wk Up Apt&.· 2!11 . • • • C•ll S.-7041 V'int. . Call Jean Brown, 54G-«l55
Mora Kai Lo,, 1n,ik E. of * 1 BEDROOM * Newport Bl•d .; CM. COCK·A·POO Terrio> ma!• times Coallal Age Beach 962-.1:99(_ 1~ Ba Townhou.&e ccmciept. ses-ms • curly t coat, wtUte w(tan 1
, BABYSnTER: mp~re. m.y HOUSEKPR LIVE IN 2J90 Harbor Bl ~da
· Beam cell!np, "'1n Ira ,,_.,. blck 4 ean. 2 ""1an, 1 blk ~ , • l>o(n•,U,Ooa.olillli 1 .P!9!< """°""" Pvt 11'1 A · ' m•
$150 NU 2 Br .. cpta, drpl., bedtms, encl J.l.tio. ftC:l"U• SPAC Br ... prl ... 1ac.tlil0i: 1-fiff. Vic. Sa.nta Ana Aw. . do'l la' rs .: '"':I , PM't. Mon-Frt r~ o.,. tnnt ....: &eiuti(ul ~ beautf. PACKERS: Growtng m . in
patio, f'!c. rtn., 115U Jet. tion rm, sauna betha, etc. ldtch. pnvU. Conv. anoa. A 22nd SI. C.M. u.;u. Priel-d Dt.ys ~7000 eJCt 47 ful people, 642-91n3: Irvine a.ITJ . Gf'f"at chi.nee
ff/r1cn Laae, Multi. (),uo SuJKlQ ate.a. Woman. ~mo. + utU. ~76. ... e\-es&l'.HOtl. HO U SE KEEPER-live-in. for adnnctment. S tart
IU-6441/16-2834. noon 8-8-Q'• I: Fne ~ ~1971 evea. 1_ •' 4 n1oe ..i..•1.1-fl.~
• ~-ORO "_ , -·-· ~--·· """' ...,."",.. • FND: .. 6 white very Uirne • • ~ BABYSITI'ER. )Iv \fpr6' ••n• ~n a&ff 7 to 14. ,.._,1 J B • _tt ~-ftl'"l~ • ~HARBO.~R-O~REE,NS ........ , room lt.B. • CJd. nbblt w/blaclr lpltclde1. '68 C~fC 'Dl.oi....... 7:30-3:30, .S d)t.1i:~~Ci:!O'. sard:a Ana Hgta area ...... ea.n rown, 54..,.,,,,...,,
8ZM Atlanta. 1-U BR'L UW. Ideal .Jor alUIMlt. l Vic Frandacan Foun::t; 1 ..--..,.. l.U Xll'u• UPlAND 1ll'l't 2 story lite h8ewrtc. 0,, transp. ~. Coe.1t.1l Agency
Pool. Private doted JU. ~ Adult. $65/mo. a S'IS/mo. ,._,' .. _n W••I t. Sia • ~L-a:iqd, dear, want 8p&n, 5 ·Br, 3 Ba, hid pool, ~7SIJ. lNSU" "'CE 2790 Harbor Bl at Adam•
W ho 1•--..,.._ ~ · to .... "" JO ..-, or D/ft, q cpt 115 000 eq ~· ' Top ootch •
u ' -~ * IRAND NEW * . 841-1164 2n4 --. do For beach .;.,..,.;,.. Cati BABYsrrn;R. .....,,,. ~ romm,'l Unes pl ~od due PERSONNEL $550
BEACHBLU,I' APTS LGE. Com-bi.. ...., tor ooa, ,; ... ,, about l mo." oil ......,.. at n · ;.::· <tt<l ~ lilytlme. ! .. .., ·old l!olo, 5 'days lo ·~ ~"''°"· lllu11 ~EF PA;o:
Spt.c 1 Br, 1 B&. Poot Patlo. U Cost• Apt1, employtd adult. Con.,,.nlent old. ~nd Thon ll/23. R&vt ~I ~ ·ln '!Jq. ~ ?!Jr_ .~. -~l · be 't.ble to work · 'ln-eie. 0
D/W. IZll El1Jo 142-7111, l t. i BJt. '!'Ille,~ ..... $15/ .... l<~IS. ahort balr black. HQOI, ..-.. ·-•-·"b. ~" -~TRAD~,. 6·1o " i'l;;il.' I• , •o<..ttotiY. Saial"Y 0""1 N4'W co. ""' 0.C. al ....... poot l&hal ~.l:Pf'o ~ "!':'"'!~ ·~~-:~ ...,..... u-...-rAutonJ.1Je · · . lf:t '· l 6.lt.Mn;Si • 833--u. : want br'liht lau lo hHd NEWLY dtoOtaltld l .Bit a.pl ..,.' .U -.di pd..JJ,!IO '1'$110. ~[ in prlv< honw Jkh,, Edwards I: Slater. £Di:t" ~ for Inc, 'ID'f or, With t(1)pt-lot ma,. ABYsrrt'ER ft! for !i ims. <Til.At. up penonnel de:pt. Gen. of.
1'902 1tonald no.d, J(.8.. Apt Adultl, no peU. $1$.1$25. Pft' -.'tt'Jt. AlJ 847..()696. · PdllW lanll. Wfflty~N. Tay. 10 ~ Bicycle day1 wk. My home or youn. From "Christmas Nec:krles" flee akil111. UNKEL AGEN·
A. Net plll&. &1.1137 35f Avocado, CM, fU.tTOI privileges:. ~--FOUND; wbt ah&117 poodle tor Co. Jluhen. MM910. 644-1008 2 children, 2 I 5. El Toro 10 outilt'O"TI Levla _you can CY, 149 Riverside: Ave ..
I BR. llS Bl studio. Encl ROOM W/bath pvt e:nhnce type doe. ftmalr, blue col-* * * * * * A~. 830-6928, alt 6 pm. turn "truh to ca-'h" In a N.B. 645-3700. I pr.. t.cd JT4. WO/mo.~ HuntuwT Watclri thl no c:ooklnr -'i6 bile tD Octan lar. Vlc. Goltc:oum. M'iulOn .. A pod want ad ii a Sood 1 DAILY PlLOT clusltled ad Se;;:;;ll"ldl"-•'"11;: • .,.;:;-:-=1;-;d
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2. Gultor
3. Baby Crib
4. ·El-le Saw
5 •. .Camer•
6. W.asher
•7, Outboard Motor
8. Sttroo .Stt
9 • .., Couch
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29. 81cydt
10. Typewriter
31 . Bar Stools
32.· !neyclopOilla ·
33. VKVum • C:loiritr1"
34. Trop1ca1 Fish ·
35. "1t11ocl Equlpm'I
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63. Skit •
64. 1Y .Stf . ; . . 65. ·W..tdltnch
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11. Refrlgtr1tor'
31 l_lldl"' su--
39. Vlctorl1• Mllr-t ..
"40. BedrOom. ht·
66. ~Witch ,
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12. Pickup T ruel<
13, Sewing Mtchlnt
14. Surlboard
15. Mlchlnt Tools
16. Dl1hwo""'r
17. Puppy
18. Cobln · Crul-
,19. GOif Ctr!
41 . sndt· P~•lte!.;. 4+ a: • ...-.-..
43.·~ 'Tobit
44. Tires
45. i'J,ne
46. Fur Coat
70. Ant!'l'!O ,Fur:11itl!N : ·, .
71. Ttpe'RtM..i.r
72.Sollliott -~-·;, n.. Sptrlt•.C..
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20. Barometer. ,
21, Stomp Collte!lon
2i Dlhotl. SOI·
47. Drliptt
U. Linens
49. HMM
-50. AlrJlont
51.~
,.n.-~--.. 71. Dirt GalM '' ~ ' .. ,,.
. 23. Ploy Ptn
24. Bowling loll
25. Wtter Skis
26.F-
27• lull<IM
21. Clock
52. iitr<,.i.
53. Roro 8oolct
54. Ski loots
SS. Hlth Choir
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. llon..li -_ !\Ill U... -t. \l<IJ Trne, far -~· .. u,..,, . ........,., n</Sa!ISWi. Goo ii t . ..... -~ Fif.. nw.._ • pebp1t · • atmoiphtre. 40 galore, Gttat buys S0c up, --•• ,.11r ""~ .· --.,.<. '· • --~ -~ w p 30 )Tl • 4> ,.re APOIY ill '.hlber, M ~ F.t, U-3--• • .... ?'" lffS are Oft!'. · IJ'll pore tbl, belt ~~ pn Apply in PIS"°'\ Deli CD TVDISJS Mernr· M&1d Co.1 Inc., 1110 Scott •~l'fO. water ~ • .;:~: SOot, taao0o llllle .......... "l"\\I!'" ~. lilonrotla A .. ., 0... M-. """"''• am, ...-..+,.; ~flnta~"Hf&. .. r •• Center,§Toro·<rc.qi:r . ~ .. WA.l'n'ED.~coot.A~ houewam, camer
PRODUCrlON 11i11rlilotto --~ ~ Nl'lllf'Jftlllf'ft' PlYio""°"is.ttaru4P.M., bric+brac, Jeteutbrd .ti ' ~ llN ........... •!chi~ 111.U111 •1.1r.1•••· Si\aibett1 -· wt w. ,,...., ...... ~ loe. " • · ~ ~-ill, !IN1 pt 11mt • • • Ceat Hwt.,.N.B. · m V• Borranca; llll>'
' ~..,.r:: · T·U. xlot trtncc ., ' WELDER! ~ co. tn 1JOO Caraae Sale, ~ft~~ ,,...... Manor •• ~Ca1po CtERK$ · · tint new pied hat snt.t Sat, am.1 CcodWa :1a1>~t1a.AY¥.·~ ~ ~~·· 11 , • • • .am" .. '~'+ omt ~-SOe up:.;'#~I 'M.W:'.i-· J • ~., ·~t RN evt &hU~: Mlllni.• l or . wp btnittita..$4 .bl". JIOfV table, Belt ·-~ ~~;_i.J·~ =~ .X,:..,~t~i;-Ac'C~~NT CLE~KS _.~ ~Wlbo~~ ~'..~.·~" .. ouopl!a• ..,.. .. 1 ~ . "~"" Beach. ~ l !'2190 Hilrbor Bi: at Adami Bric+bru, Water •
WJ1CS lb~~ .Q: "'ATT11NTION , WOMEN Mioc ... ~ equJ,;. 112 Via ~M •W ID ·..-: '-i LICENSED · • BOOlllEfPEaS F\111 or Pan run., who lil<e 11a ... 1o .. , 61>-"28.
135-14111•·-t•ot ..m. " SAtESMEN & . -·· and """111 II .. "' dl•NOO. · fl < .. ' BROKERS Mii. earn money, We are &11 ts·
P,Ull(1e!.RnAT10ijf Nal!onal ~ 1notltu·. KEYrvnCH OPRS 't&Nllbed ·oiyan!za11on Just ~W>fhm..illl!l' .. al'l:eet. '(kl'I ~~for 1kebf. movtfte Into Southhn C.11·
Ewa. ~-onW.tlfrf:J «I Real Dlltete pllt90llne1,u '· fortd.a and we need wonien
. -··-80f!30.-M ........, anc1 ......... "' PBX OPERATORS '°""'" "'niul<et • ........ ~ .. 'f. __ ,.ro,. c ;·""'_ i ; ~M=tn~ ··:·• • : ' =:1~~~ 9clpt~lttr· ''.. 1 ' '425 -... ___ ,;.......... •lCJlftltnc-Way, C'olrta MC!M. Ca 11 ~-""'·· ........ tail·• .~ ~Q ...;,, -..attoi: ihlili! ,,;-"""'* ~ Apply .. , • 1 " ' WORJ< WHEN 66<'1!93 .,....,, 12,00-!i;OO G~ Dlshwuh<r 1'15, N
"'' ·~-·-•• --O>l\Wll ~-Inc. & w_ H. ERE ,,,..u pm, l ma ..... $25. Mlac Grelli'\a.ou:r.,. ~'mmt ....._ F~O. ~~ l W see at 2140 'ttllrin St,
··--•Clll1-Tddd. .· a.ta"'-· c.Ilt WANT'' I lrKl betwn•lllam/2Jllll, ~~·~ tlf..n71..__ .,. ON TEft,tPORARY . Modi*'-'& M. lsctll•neou•
~Dr~ · • · 11"m,39:11 · · MSIGNMENTS
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I IWXP'll~ U~lqlu• SALESMEN : _ Applloncn 1111 · . 10th . .
_,,'!lilt...., rapid..,... Nftd .... -.,. "'"" to VOLT -ANNIVERSARY SA I! :
ing: coo Ideal.Joctition b Jeam_~11 .. ~·~M&nd Instant Per1onntl MOVlNG..must sell. Relrlr .. Pew1er & silver '"H ' = ""''""'"' kr ani ...... ..,.to .. -....n " ust ...,,.o ..... ....._._ ' 125 •• 125 Ir nd lanlwds charlN ~ 1 JM1n10n ·.,,...--1 have .........i -nona1itv be . .-._..,.,....., Dr .• Suite 100. ., was r . ., a co ., • • -~ enr. .. t/'!IJ·. ~ ,fnte~""":'m'Ctututt ~ N~ Beach , MMT41 $50. 548-8102, eves. . jewelry le executive
.Call flelen H~•. ~ well, aatesmindtd.·&1tefit.1: ~ oSP>rtunity ~ HOTP.OINT nfriaeraklr, Hand I: machine e.D&fl, . ._ =~~ Demo., '"""' Ina" ...,... '"~CRETAR·Y Good condition $3$. ...._ .. N~s -"••.;,;.;~..;c.=.c~--'•"". _.. _,. .... ftedr ...i..ry-plua comml1· ~· ** 6'6-9'2'1 **
RMrEKl.tFSdf!lr-: ~·-j mor., Unliinflred Income. Ap. For Newport Bei.cb,Ad Attn-HOT p O INT !tt[f'!gerator 10'J E •. l~ C:.M. • \ *INS!~NT MOl'.IEY* ply I• Ponoo. IJNIVERSI. ey, All "'11!, lncludlor SIL while, t door, ... ,., .,; vox "llomcat" EI ... ~~'"" ..... ~ TY OLl>SMOBILE, '!5" Shl?p ..... , long """"'· top.·$50. Call 66-3356. & C8mbridge ,._ "ent'"is tinure ,lLE,. pkt Harbor Blvd, a.ta Mtsa. rood pay, 833-1670. Fumlture 110 Xlnt cond. wu S600. , -~-A~~~ SALES REP: The top cttam SECRETARY, 5 day,, now UX). Hard top tor t
··Ulet A•:tnvett,·.:i:''lK. in marketing. Contacttrw in. sborthand 90 typlo& 7lJ. · ··•· .. ., --124 Spjd N $108. '~ PIJd ·'Up '°--~ rttruuonai ~,bUy,(rr ln So. to 30, satai1r open. ·~ . 3 ROOM GROUP ;50, Mus~r'seu~ea~lnl J 1 oimm.: •<hid vacation. I + Callr ~th ~ tqps to 60-220 9-5 for ap-ALL NEW rvt 013 i1'29 MI medioll·1t·~;··f>r;i~'v,..,· ··Juno C •• • aU -1m.~t · FURNITURE !~~ · ' •, ·~ li'"'.drii. .... ~ .. ~ • ...,. . ~ . , ". ' ~-l ~~,A&h..Hfl'Bcti'"exp.funs.b)>mQrPJVtlge SERVICE e1tab. Full'tT .--. -FOR. Sale. 12 cubM:' ft.,
t. ~ alco.0J:Oli-;latlr ~· _.l!lod• .......... WOO. °""" °"""""" C.Mt tip -GI I pc """°"" U_.. Admlral
-~-or 837-1221;'. ~ ~ ~. 540-arli to n&0 wkly IO start. . P'OUP, 'I pc living room *50 2 Uphohittnd itJMo 's OUR .:.u ~ ~ """ ~ -croup .l 15 pc dtnl.na: set. . · ' ~t~ •r
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•• ·.I ~i ·. I ,279o ~Bi"t '.ldap! =•tatlonsalffmin, .. · ALL °FOR '$299, ~~~~,:;:n:: ~ I
Rnt1urt"'. :· , • SAtESMAN ·.xp'd;'W\ltorins, ol~'m't" 833--0003. ·
I-:_ __ -~ " Young, ~l'. experi-0K.t~8971Aa.m. KB TER~S..ALSO siHn-:,;;:,,:: ... ~ .. ::..IM;::;t-:w1::;;;:1K., , . ", ~ ·<:O~~ ::."mi:"!i>o ~; ~ ·SWITCHBOARD , . ,..,. 1'15. value $250 • PART · ,,,.,E ,, )n<.,Management.,.~tanoe CLERK LAY-A-WAY PLAN ,.,._ ,..._ Twl• ~·
at all times_ Sales position TYPE 45 WPM • bedroom set with wa bt ,.;:;~ •. "L,;.;i.:-.,a;. ~ with ,a ~ . .Demq .a~-. , CAPISTRANO lJlllIFIEn TRADERS chest and lamp t · 2.
APPi> In Ptnon able, !Dauranca.. Ca•! I SQJOOL DISTRICT , FUR"flTURE 61>-396.1 aller 6 PM. . • :: TllE"lllGGEll '""""" ;.• . "6126 Vlclom 201 N. Broodwoy, S.A, YN~. -!">D'&" "'""'° SALESOWINE I C.p1'trano B"ch 835-13115 , ()pm 7 Days 2 Br, -. w/.h!llcd YtfL
·'fl.it>~ (I.¥ :~ .. .i-.. ·~--,, 1'11hlon. ilt.nd ;-Ne.,,.,. ·lll•lh -·--·--·. -·~ ~-()ji,tt: ~
JOn~<ralnlnlf,-.,l<d .... TELEPHONE Sotlcltatlon SACRIFICING tor I well fraloed
.....__nia! co-worktn. t73JO. for benefit cin.w tickets. FURNITURE I WHhtn ~distance -·~· - "W. ~ ••• St,~ M Call Dt.'rid E'ry, D!-2700, Fu11 or Prrnne, students. ¥edttt Queen 11 ·bedrm set, ~ .....,.,.._
Denni1 .\ Denrds Per'lonne! Start tt.75 hr. NO comm. boy'• Rdrm Kt. rnter 548-7881aft6:00 Eve.
~Jtt'IC)',ni2Mk-h!:~Dr., :.J.ru>b'302W.5th. S.A. Queeftw~cleaner.~ ROYAh pxtallle ~. ... · · TEXX's 'oJL coMPliN;Y· port-a~. dreeling table, f!J: "°'VIOlia ~~
1···.i ,·,..,.(2)·,11ltrf'$ • l' : SALESMAN ''neecil '~menovet40for Ele(troph::rlfc stereo, 4' MicroecoP.e'&'Catc!'$5. ew
Jl.fm;t, :nifdl~~ 1 Young Co. Gd po~nttal' Abort trip!!!"" 9 u r r o u n d in g Ming tree., frp1c Lt.ems, ~-~ ~· il •c?
.,.;,N,-1 ·L .flN', ..;,._ f • ' ' Call' Mni. Schmidt 1 beach ~a. contact woOd =-: .benches, Pie-!HSLVIN&1tftl. .b • 1i'• 1 I
, S.llpm, OB -· WFSOCLlFF ~ttr. Wf! train. Air 'fUrH, "' ~ m1*:. duty. W' Jr 3'; 2--3' 1: tri ID
! "' l ~RN~' . ' . ~l90ia.'ld' Areney, JP&il B.E. Dkknlon, Pres., ~~~Sama Ynez Dr., Tl' tall. 982-1981 ev& ' ' \
u.Tam. 1c.u .. c.c.u. unl_t, :IM3 W.~ Dr., NB Southwfftern P~tr'ott um ~GERATOft. •of moP Benches, Mavy diJtY, 1
..... 5 .. • 1'-~$' , SECRETARY: Start the Nrw; ::f"P'! Ft. Wtlrttl, Tex. klvnetit. Slria-er It w In~ 3 metal, J wooden. jQ..f983
llPID· am.R;;,59f'tJlt ~· 'Year out With. the right WAITRESS machine, zig·aat 1n cablntt =•,;V'='=-· ..,..,,-.,..,.---; 1_1~ ~-~ position. Gri!at , ~ to ~ ·~· I: Attti1ctlve ·soo. Baby Nm .. mrpenter EI.re il hand I&"-~
;·.-. -,.AJI-T!CH adVanc:t yOu,r 'blr nnile Ood Waffren toOll Ji:, misc, lil62 Mission metal cab, tools., ~
.. "w~ OriJy :i. • will 1and . ~position. Fee , ~.;;::,urant Or., Colt.a Mesa,-Apt. A. 1tems. 968-0213. "~ ,,.,.~ )( .. 'RA,¥fl!CH , pd. to $500. ~ · 644-3>30 • T EARLY American Couch CU~ Wl'OIJlht I. on
· , ) I ~ere~ ~· J 1 Other f'ee Jobi Avail' W !TRESS. 'd or Hldnbed, $50. Like new. fel'JCt!I, gate a It. irlUs • ' ,. M· • , l I iC&U Jtuf'h~• .r-~""" A exper ., over .,.,, ,,.71 ••"-·!es ·~ ~•• ' ~.,,TRAL • · , · · ~ 0 ~· 21. Gravtryard shirt, apply ....._ ' ·· _ um.a • ~-
SiJP.P.LY TE'CIL•t 1 tnO =llL al"M.,,,. "'"""Butler, 613-<BT!. 6 dra..r· _..., S2S. Blad< WANTED, One amaJI JfCk ~..::z.!'.:.~ d:iu:fAi\y . ', -, ·151!<i . WANTED = :.io'.':..:· Cottee ~.=:.:<._,.::
- ' MISSION eFee ' Ii<-• 1 c:"'~;.=.,..nd~ il!:VTICAL tab!,., 2 <nd Slmplox Time Cloe~ ·CQ~UN~TY·· Ftt/~i...~IUon11 .. ,,.:._3 211318~~8!-CM t«'ble1 l'coft'ft ·tabl~. S >Tl 96U983 eves 1 · "-!l'1r•• !rYb»ollt......,. .. ......,, ~ ... • =~ ·• · · · • · · ---.,,.. ~"-· _;,.; !l>llP ""1 J'llll .;..i l!dlb , KING'S OlOSS old $200. 6l>-30IJ'l, .PRANGE FIREWOOD _POR '.,......,~ ~lo ~·,.:, for Int'l dlviilon. ht be. formetfy Rembrandt'• MEDITER. 10fa • lovnee.t, I SALE ddlvertd.and atKlced • 1xmalUQ" ,.;e • 1.. '""~ • rood cond. f15. 5&-9887. I ~-San1J>ieto . , !: bl-1.lngual. ,...~~n.i:...., tGEN.-HOUSE Huntlng? Watch 1be 642-«i81 11:-.,---.,.--,,.-,-::::L,,._-I
· Q9wn '.Vdl<Y;Po!llw<>l f ·CY, J<9 Rl-ld>o Aye., OPEI'i HOUSE column. FUt ""'111 .,. JU!!.•--
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S·SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE UN~NO AD USS THAN 3 LINES .. • 1 11 'ilMIS 'ilMIS TlMIS 'IMQ " .. " , . t ----' ~ .. ' $4.50 $7.40 $11.70 $11.10 L . -.. ' . " '$5.IO $9.0I $1-4..lJ!. $22.5•!
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• • 0111111<oi~ DAILY PILOT '
P,O, ..XJJ60
c.... Mew, C.llf, 9262'
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DAllV PILOT Wednto!.IJ, Dt<tmbe< 29, 19n
~~~
"--•• _. __J~ I ., ·· I~ I ....... ......, J~!--~ .... J§J 't , ...:. ... ·.1§1 ......... l§l 1 -.... l§l I ........ lij
-... ---111!11111 TV, Rod)o, ~If~. ~ H-t 156 l?Je! '!'!!lH... , 9', AW. w'. ..... '.@ = Avlot, llnpomd '70Avlot, lmpo"°'I°
N>lef, ... ,. 1291 ""' Stor~ , SHEn.A!!D ,,..,,., Colt & '71 DUllEBIJ()GY "!~ ~ WI PAY TOP
. 1 Bowlliw 4 BW1an1a STEREO Afttt Chrlltmas saddle $250. 5 3 I -I 5 I l dliar&e b>rva1r. Leu than ~SH
t7SO Harbor Bvd. at Clean.nee; Headphone 1 842-73811. ' 609 ml~ cond. ~\
Ad.uni, C.M. SI0-7"13 °""' 16.90, ,_ck home dtob Tl1)<~•· , "2 , , , :
Sun'•· $4S..G;i••tt.AM t FM I J~ _, ... .... · .,. Slloreo .Re-ceiwr $ 6 I *, letts • ,.. 't.. lf '., '" -• f tlr lllld lin A truclilt )Ill FRIGIDAIRE fro11-free AM/FM Stetta with 2 . ktM~-· _ 1'.-, 11• r .. can 11•heftct.r.tibil. =;~~~ _.. ... • l-'fra<ll;,$119.. •• ., . ·" CDlllll ;CllEYllKJ
· S30 stt* ~ts .~oJ.1...al;j,n'!l n..., 1 , .::.. "' \ "J!~~. • --' a.matt.A-bar:~ : 11S1eakersri.~.Garra1rlct ,.. .... tfN ·· · · , .. ~Ha.rvue.r :·~..,toriiii..'....,_ .,..,..'17. turn ... ,.. ""· ear .... SCRAM LrTs RECREATION CENTER ll2ll .._., 819'!.
wIG SALE 1n -"" ..... $39 .... ""'~ _...... ' -Ii" ROY CARVER, Inc; ·' llWJllltlb> ·-· • ~iltmu. 50~ oft. '"The Nrw A. used rqulp reduced 2925 Harbor Blvd. ln'.aT Bl 1-SS!l tilt.~· to~: ~-:m ~ for clNnnce. U.S.A. Stereo ANSWERS Costa Mesa Mt).4f4f TOP DOLLAR
"""'•· w~. I'9 E. .., FqRD VAN. mi oen... IN CASH ffr Jail. 17th SI., O.ta Me.a. &fS.2442 D .. "" ..... -AUdit -Ilc>\\leJ' -H D · A to ti ("" · · • ...,..., .• van, u ma c • ........,. MOVING ool or state. T.O.P. Siclren -UNDERTAKER OC) · ' . · PaJd1or )'OUr dun med car • • 1
Alfa Romeo
•• ,
JENSEN
AU'IllORIZ&D .
8AL!'.S ' SERVICE
NEW PORT
IMP ORTS
LOTUS
'70 Avlot,•lmpcll19d '70
MERCEDES BENZ
"JU MERCEDES BENZ Ill
SE; Coupe, 28,000 mi's. Pai.
lhape, full pwr. l owntr-
drivet", Tobacco b r n •. ,
w/C:tJc¥c lthr 'lllter. (7141
!l2fH51G.
MG -.. . . . ;
1""' !..&Lan~ Health ... , ~ °''" ... '""' "I koow.""" DAVE Ross PONTIAC paid,.,........ Coast lnuio(b ~ membenl:up, 2 yr ( ,,.. to You J • "'ho's in businesa, ~he nev-l480 Harbor Wvd. at Fair Dr. SANTA ANA DODGE •••r JlOO w, Cout H"7.
, pymnts lii pd, $15/mo. . .. er talks. to IQ CCMtomen:. Cosla Mesa ~ . 1401 N. Tuatlo Newport lch. 642-0406 Newport Beacb
LOTUS
AtrI'HORIZ.ED
SALES le SERVICE
r 8»-ll33. $llO s 3 LI-, 2 Tlmot, $2.00 He';..,an l~FJ{IT~," '63 " Ion """<; P!B;P)il; "'~ l.!S-369I 1000.12111 w. Coo1i Hwy., MGB
, iHonda, rd-cood.: . '!.ne OllSU ant auto. New tires., Good coQlf, ., PAY TOP DOILAR · z
3100
w. '--~ H~. .., ,;GB .. ~-~·· ' ~ ~ . Taco mini bike, gd MIXED Poodle/Cbckertrer-""DEPENDENT Priced to sell, $550. 494-0675 ..n>R TOP USED CARS Autos, JmportM 970 Autll, l ...... rted f70 ............. ..# .... nua 1""
' , $100. :m bus a: lier Puppy, 10 wk male. e Purchasing-be.twn 8 & l pm. U .7'111Z car Ji atra dMn.1----~-.,.--'· i< Newport Beach radlalS, flawle11 • cat. '°"· Id '°""· n 65. ~~'"" i.ov.. cbildnm. ""'"'"""" on J>Un'hu"'& 'SI DODGER u , """' -· "' llnl FfAT JAGUAR M~CEDES BENZ M •• ":'.,~-.-ed. u:l-mt
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
S,-1836 64Xi<8I . boat•'&: equipment. Best oUtt·~ $75 ~~VER BUICK -..1 "'•" FJ$iER, F.M. soo B Multi «.oo bill with each cute I Marine Surveyor 645-5839 • E. 17th St. 1969 S SPIDER. 1971 124 ~ _u ..
o.a... J.B.L. ~r 33 ...,, __ ., ·~ n-. 9 ··•·. 2 646-2977 ()lrta Mea, ... ' . Sfl.7715 Sport Coupe. Both excel -" l ' ·····-, r. .!. M~ 'SS black, Mechanic.....,. ·-,,_ ~= ·-~· ·~ '68 DODGE Van '·--· V BAUER BUICK •n · -· ""' tobaoo> brown, -•M ""7.37 !!rm. •aken. Ex cond. 642-72ll. white a: black. l black. Soait1, Malnt./ -•>fl""•• • IMPORTS WANTED col'ICft ,Mab otter •. Call . ~rial, auto, air, -'""-*;"' 646--6424 ** $175. ,,.,.. ••n. •-rvli>-,,,_ 8, Aulo, Pop-top, ACDC n-wo-• Cowi&I 4!M-8l28. Tbt Harbor Attu
.,...,....,.. .--7'U refrlg Make Qfler 646-w:Qlt. ""....., Onl _, __ _, nawless • '&5 ~SE. auto,
-II-' . " = TOP I BUYER i HONDA , AUlho<-air, P/S; 3"'100 orig ml" • , !anhd ' l20 BABY ~:;rs BOAT bottoma cleaned 25c 1968 CHEV. Van V-8, auto. BILI. MAXEY TOYOTA JAGUAR DEALER Many c.:,; . .. 8 wks. old, a e pets. per Ft. <i len.Kh at water Xtras. fl.550. · 1 ..., :• 11881 Bach Blvd. Always bas an exmllent ae-mere~ MBZ "--•• ,645-0077. lind, ..... i:r-. .. 1·,.-, CALL ~ _ H." ~--ch. -.. .... _ .1971 HONDA car. Lo miles, lection of both New It: Used cars i,;. ~CERTINA on •maa ac-<>JV'">h>.W <>•..i-•<U11 Qal r :i.. .,.,..._ A-1 coDd. Newly pain-J at •
cf:dian tha.I can l>t' u9l!d GOOD watchdog, 3 yr spayed Boats Power 906 Auto Le•tlnt 964 A·~ I ~· -o ·fed rltrl TO p 548-0988 aguan. HOUSE OF IMPORTS dioard a boat. &r;J-()99f fem. wanbl low A: attn. No ' .,,_, rnpo •• _ 71 ,-... · · · • ·•~1.ime. kids. 'W2-9006. 14' Lyman Lap Strea k , , , 't\ HONDA 600, Red, tape 1971 JAGUAR V12 G862ManchesterBlvd, Buena 1 ~ e \\'ANTED e NEEDS i:ood home. Lovely w/Grey "Marine inbrd eng, LEASING! ~··~:. r:;•,n• Al: deck, radlala, $'1195. Air condltkJnin&:, autamatic.1 ~(:~::rt Fwy.,
UNIMAT LATIIE white cal, good matured Perfect bey boat, $795· 8:nVE on ~~aculate lft'" Spyder Roadster e •n Alfa MS-236S. ~ B.OOO =-<92f>MN1 CU 523-1250.
•fr 646-00l& ** female. 548--7140 er 546-7308. Eves: tH&-4&t2. •rt ~~~~k'~· dt. Auto., GTV • •n MGB Roackter JAGUAR
CHllJ)'S p?qbouae, and cat 2 PERSIAN cats. dedawed, Boats, Rent/Ch•rYr 908 air, P.S., Rd:H, Jftdtlven • Zeee can, 3 to choose --------
trte. neutered. Very lovin&'· Call CATALINA. 27, SLOOP appX. 9,<m miles. $15 mo. from '53 JAG. SK 120
Pbobe ""'687 betwn ... ,.._7"'1, B"""')>Ow boal A 2' mo. opeo '""· _... Me-Alla C~AS$j.C In
Mnlc 11 strument 122 PUPPIE:Sl-% toy poodle, ~ s1 six SIS ;:'d~;· '71 LTD 4 dr. H.)': Full pow. Dealer (1) m.1250 ~einal~ouT·~~
· ~ a n :T 1
'!?? 1 mah!'. 1 female, 7 wkl A:,;M 'tuner, co,,;plet; er, fact. alr. Very, ff!!ff mil· BMW ally ~---·-·t, Ht.ad
ll"'Slrin&'. Hofnet Quttar ld'·uo~-all 6'~'hed lull es.$95mo.24mo.openend. --------~· .. w••-~d · " ·...., o.JOr'tUUU· g ey, "" a room, WE LEASE ALL POPULAR ·-Ughta: alone would cost over
1970 JAGUAR 2+2
Aulogl&tic, factory air con.
-.·(26IBQD)
'51!15 " "Specializing In Qualll;y''
BAUER
Oral1".JC' County's
L.;rge~t Selection
r/r·v. & ll•.,•d
1·: "' '·' ··~· R·~· I
J im Slcm on s Imp s.
Warne1 & Main St.
PORSCHE •
OVER 25 1
Clean, Rtcondltiontd,
& Guaranteed.
{'ORSCH~
tll'•.c 912'1 • 91~'1 1957 to 1971 l_
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 W. O:>ast Hwy.
~tachable neclc: Like 4 FRISKY Schnauz.er Ttt· safety gear, convenient New-1972 MAKES AT COMPETI. Automotlv. bcellence $300 to replace. p h 0 n e Bulck.()pehl•siuar
,:;;;, 8»-4669. rier pups brn/blk coloring. part s!lp w/pienty of ~rk· ~ RATES. & 893--2544 ~· ews 531·5033. 234: E, 17th St .. · '69 MERCEDFJi 220 D_ielel. POROCHE 9\1-S Tarp, blk,
rl!J"' Electric guitar, Ampeg XJnt ~u. S3:J-.3529 4-9 pm. IDg. From f15/day. For info Ca'll :r.talcolm Reid for 3.8 MARK II. '62. UnuJual a.ta Mesa ~TniS Xfut cood. 1 owner, $33:0. like nr'll', 8 trk:, fog laml;ll'. ~ Anmtrong, Am~ AC EE 7 '· old do bl caU ~7•9046 aft 6:30. fu~ details Classic car. Wire wheels: '69 J 2+2 CTI4) 499-3018 Must sell. 543--9736. '12 amp. 962-1259. FpuRppy _,,w·-1• • ra e Boats, Slips/Docks 910 THEODORE a•·-nd. •-· • drl·-to ap. ....,. ,... • ...-...v """" "' ""' auto trans, air, Fast results are just a plxlne Hoose HuntlJ!i'!' Watcb. tile
, Ice ~umltvre/ '•67'3-4923 * CENTER slip $2.2S ft-act'IJTTI . ROBINS FORD ROY CARYB, Inc. pl'Kiate. $1500. 642-7000. make offer • 646-0062 call away -G42.-fJ6'18 OPEN HOUSE column.
Santa Ana 546.4114
Newp::irt Beach
642-9405
quip. 124 ~ 46' Sail or power. (FronlJ Costa% Harbor Blv~O , ~ 29IJ5 Harbor llvd. Autos; {Cew 980 Autos, New 980 I Autos, New 980 Autos, New 9IO r II 'Li I 233 I9lb St ~. c. NB. oint. :u:-5411 .... ::;;;;;;;::;;;:;;:;;:;;::;:;::;;;;;:;;::::::;;:;;;;:;;;;;~~;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;::;:;::;:;;;;:::;:;:;:;:;::;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;:;.1 191p IBM •landard et.ct Piii ... -r, ~ LEASING? · CAPRI ('
, ~ter used ~ry litOe, NEWPORT slips, from $2.25 Try our ie8.81t ~ ~, ,..,.: ... , ------
;r:.utely. perfect . con d. . , J)e1'" It. sail w power . Sa:"''!P .. Sa1'isfaction • Ser· •n _, tt xlnt eond . etiek tt.~i:'~·:,;. Cati '152 Dicys:&ts.259'JEves:C!K-21m~i£~~~ sh i ft, d'ecor 1r~up , M-6.,i,. . WANTED. One small black 1912 ·~ATCOMPEn.' yellow~pld .. $2495. SU-.111&
.'. ·pru, ~~ ::.~:;::e~·~~ I r~-. l!r1t) ~~~ ~wi1or ·; .~!='\~~~.;
Inc. 2 "L" lhapod • BURMESE. Kl:rTENS' • lurth<T detail.! .. · '68 Cortina W kpd, ~·w
cbahs.,Good1orbomol30Up. *· "1'1-<744, , THEODOR!;,-' tins &j li&ttwy ~Ho.
----·-"-' ... Cycln Biko• . · ROBINS l'ORu ,..._µJO, • ~ ~ e-..~. -.... • · ._ . ' · ' ml Harbor a;lvd. ----=-"-===--f::~-~-=l<;;:cba.,.,,Jr"', '=..-,""' ADORABLE lylri AK<? ~tors . 925 °""" ,,..,. 6IUJ)10 . DATSUN "" ~-$60. Cub, . Da<;hsbind puppy. Hat 'IRIUMPH •69 Bonneville Autos Wanted 961
67l-&t91 eyu. shol& Good home • must. Excellent condition. Cerlonl , _,-NEW=-.'12:.....,P"'ICKUP"""''".-
/Organt ·au iioo 21462 Paci.fie C.oul i:ront End, CUstom Paint "wn.r.. Buy YoUl'. car pakl for t spd. dlr, $ . ..'.BumJl!il' • .Al·
HY.'Y., Sp f.31. H.B. ~'43. Job. ~-Call alter , 6. or m t. Call R9Jph Gordon c1io. Mln'on., PL'l21120.1'ake
SALE SALE * • Sl'UD Senioi!.. Mbla~ "6-0989. l 67J.-090J) -SW.,Jlll 1970 &mall down or trade. 4l!lMll1
· . · P°"""'. ollwr, AKC, $«1 or "!".YAMAHA 2'0 MX. mlii! Har1"" Blvd., Coota ;..,.,, altr Io ""736. • -
JANOS ** 0, R,~~. pk k al t!tlu c.n ""-f i:ood. K + ·)I mooll. , . '86 DATSUN --., -'D~ etc.--~ prii, &'J3.9'JM W ~~ · vittt-TT set up. Beat otter. 1!fa! :'f:!'n;~~ tires le~~ won. ~ .... ,. 13 MOS.-FeiWe Lab. ,If+.~. · def •. Witl pay ash. &K-72Dl Sacrifice U!iO. ~ .·
I ~3AlfQ..9t10 ~· ~~ .. AKC FOR sale:· '8l Yamaha J06 WANTED autlJ dam8.led er "° Z '70, d.oC eood. llillY i ' · 10-6 Sun 12"5 *' 5t8-2001 * Big Bttr, 5 speed. Excellent ~ ~ older ok. loaded, air,. mars. must ~ , FIELD'S. PIANO CO. 2 PART Sbeltie puppies, to{)dition. ·54.8-4960. Casti. $-~ ', · sell! ~ ~3633.
' ~ Newport Blvd. . paperbn:i~n. tood child'• I . ~nt to. buy 10 gpd man'11 PORSCllE "Vanted '66 rtrru FIRIAJll ,,. ,
! Mesa 1i4f&l5.3%'JO pet no. 642-4818, 534-a885. luke. '68. 'l>r!vate·r· 673-7613 r • ·~··
. USED SPECIALS GERMAN -mJ!Am. Call 644-1'"' or 61,_-' FERRARI .. ...,.. ..... w/..... dor Mil',-· 6 ""'·no * ..., OlOPPED-l!OG * TIME FOR AUTHORIZED ! , e ~ L10o $745 ea. ~-SHOW BIKE, AU. OUtO~ SALES 6: SEB.VJO:
i •Hammond M·2 $595. y,. * BEAGLE. AKC, 7 "'°' ** CALL 49'1.'l911 ** QUICK CASH
I mahs~:~~U mal~, 1hota . Good '70 BULTAC'O Matador, THROUGH A i
~ w/dtll""'n. •~ '1725. Super Clean, X..,, $650.
• " -~~E.:!'~OR""'G·AN1~ -** sn.30n '·* DAILY PILOT
NEWPORT
IMPORTS HAOUUvnu mISH Setter pups, 2 ma1et,
" • ' snIDIOS '" AKC. Clwnploo """'·Shoo<. '71 KAWASAKI 125 w ANT AD
.'' roRONA DEL MAR 96>-!"19. $45'1. e Sfl-4111; , 642 5678 1; . E. Cout Hwy 67~ GERMAN Shepherd PUpPies, Motor Homes ffO • '
( Pianos Ii Orxans: $10 ea. Extremely IOOd Autos, New 980 .,,,... Plano•°"'""''• ........... S58. *Marv·m Pearce* + ~ln1n1 P1anol. Best buys SlLKIES AKC femaJes. 3
/, tn new I: QM!d. Schmidt monlhl shots' show at )Qll'
, "'""" QI •• Ert. m~ 1'07 N. horn" "'-""' Motor Homes . Main, 'lanla Ana. ·
INWAY Grant bony Yorkshire Terrier Sa • R t. '°"' ...... • .
1
, w .... """ 213, 434-2989 les . enta ••
M6-8I05 TWO l'oodle puppi"" 1 ma!•, 558•3222
1 femllle, sg~ 7 Wttk:s. l(ll s V"'ft-W s A.
1 IANO tuner bu all kinds Phone 89t-3564 after 6 P .l\t. . u-.s., ay, ·
~· ;ef planol. Very, Very ..,.,.,NAUZER Pu 1 d Trailert, Tr•Yel 945 r IJ\eMonable! 523-9nJ. ....... ps, s u
1 S 1 Good ••o aerv\ce, grooming, terms.
:· 1:p.ort "I I .., 846--0839 '70 Nomad 21 V2' Trailer
· . Futly sett-contained. Bf.st f · Boob:, flnttit Nordica FE!\~. Wennaraner, 7 .mo's, ot!tt or trade? Private
. .• ~13. Cost $150. Like ttg'lS. Great penonality & Party. !167-0552. , , . lovt'll Jridt. 645-$14 alt 6. • l"'W.$95./Gtrmi&ch ladies Avto Service, Parts 949
: • le•thf:r sire 8-$25. 64H534. Hor1e1 856 ·
' ' ~-------... TV, Redio, HIFJ, HORSES boarded $40. mo. WE repa\r auto heaters on
S..,_ 136 Lirhted arena. Horses any make car, $8. &: tiv.
trained. U!uons English &. TUNE-UPS .l BRAKES. l,972 ZENITHS at the lowest western. Parker's Riding Curley's Auto Works, 1617
~. prices in On.na:e County. All Club. 557-43CM or 66lt72. ~lo"., OJsta Mes a,
' models in stock I: on From "Christmas Neckties" 543--071.f. =o--.,.-.,....-""".,.... : dlspla,y. Pbclnt:' ~ ok. to OUtgrm\'11 Levis -you can FOR sale 4 new Goodyear
• Qiromacoior avail. at $323. tum "trash to cash" in •I F00-14 tires mounted on 14x7
ABC Cdor TV, 90Z1 Atlanta, DAILY PILOT &ssified ad J Ansen Sprint II ~fags. 557.
,Hwittnaton Bnch, 968--3329. -ca.II 642.-0078 6Z75
I
J
' , • '
f.
'· • ,, . '
•
All'" ClftdlllOnlflll, Cllrome wlrit Wht:tll, Lit ... (IAV !91) e '10 JAGUAR 2+2 .
A\lf'f. Tr~ P'•d'WY Air ONH!o.'llf'lt. c•t·tODl e '71 IGB RDSTR.
Air Conclll~lrlO. t.a ml. UOS EAD) e '69 DATSUN •2000-
ltMdtlw. S ~. loM/'1iM ll:tdlo. H"ter, (llD tlU e '68 OPll SPTS. OPE.
4 J,hid, lttdlo, Httllt, Lie.itt IXDX •I, e '68 VOLVO CPE.
4 $pltl>ll, Rtdlo, H .. ter. 1*91 • e '66 PORSCHE 111
S3486
s1491
•1216
•1111
•2111
•
Be~t Wishes
ff,, the'
Holidays
'I to ourF"
•
Yamaha
Customers
from Bob & Jim
AWARD MOTORS
1'IO NEWPORT BL VD., C.M.
Clttllll'rl ~ DI', tt.T,. Fedor, Air Condlllafllnt, l'ull Powtr, Vlnyl lloof,
i 'io BUICi llECTRA 225 s3095
CUsNm COn\'Wllbllt. Full P-. (Stir. 21Ml e '89 BUICK ELECTRA s2995
CUltan'I t Or. H.T'f FllC!orY Air COlldlt1'nlnf, l'wtl ..._., Vlnyl ll:oof,
IYOI M) • • '71 CHM NOYA s21a5
Sporb COl,lplt. '(yllr!dtr, AwlO, T•1ntmlt110n, "Mio, Hltltw. (WI' CTOI e ·11 FALCON FU.TORA s1095
s.-tt ~ -h-.. ll:Hlo, HMIW. iw.ov 7'71 e '18 FALCON FUTURA
SJ1Df11, C:OUP9. Allll, tr ..... , ltNlkl, t'+Nffr. f2UH llOl e •BUICK WILDCAT
S886
s1195
,,_
1 · -...... " l§JI ·-~.. l§ll 1§]1 l~I ---'
'
980Auto., -
-....... _,,, ... ]§) I _,,, ...
' .
••
f
'
' • '.Year .End .. i • • • . l •
'
1972 OLDS DELTA 1968 OPEL
11:11110 1114 M1t.r. IWXT112) ., ~1
1969 MOK .111
H11 •••rvthl119 l11cl. f11t. 1lr, tll p1w1r,
AM-FM, /11th1r, l111cl1u ,.,f, J111f ti.1a111tlful.
IXXIOSO J
1969 VOl.IS,ACEN . . I~. 111:14111H h11f1r, 11QC71))1 • j
1967 BUICK SKYWK
VI, a11tom1tic tr1111mit1i111, rMlo, h11t.,
I
'
ITVFSJ11 88 4 DOOR
Automatic, power steering, power windows, vinyl
roof, cruise control, 455 VS engine. low mileage uesd.
{401143).
s4495 . :~1195 s995
s44·17 1968 OLDS DELTA 88
C1up1. ft_1d lo, li11t1r, 1utom1tlc, 1ir coH.,
whlt1 wt ltt, vi11YI ro1f. IW,1••11
1970 CHRYSLER WAGON
T1w11 I Co1111frf, RIH, 1tr co1ut, powtr
1t111i"~9 I br11f11, f1ctory 1lr, roof r1c::k.
f7911XDI
1968 FORD TORINO
VI, rtdio, h11ftr, power 1t..ri119, pow1t
"rele•. IVQZl521
• •. s1495
·-' :r~ ....
s945 . ,
' FINAL CLOSE-OUT . · '·· f970 FORD LTD 1970 GMt 2 TON 1969 SIJCA 1968 FORD ~ TON . .
ireV9h.e111. 4 .Ir. H.T. RIH, e11t~ .• 11.S., elr lte.lio, hooter, 4 11tetcf tre'ii1111lt1lo11,. -'716-.. ON ~L( •• Picl11 p. VI 1t119ine, redio en.I heeter.
. 1225lAI coH,, •inyl roof. 27,000 1111101 17111HJ ) CQS> • I , , l
• • 1971 DE·MOS. '3295 s1295 \ . '·
•
WINTER RENT AL SPECIAL! 1971 llOllDA ~AR 1970 MUSTANG MACH I 1971 VEGA 2300 1970 BUICK SKYWK
llllt • G.M.C. 1.tf contained camper for Fri., Sot. &
Jn, for oily •••
4 1peed, reclio, h1oter. 1121EAEJ
t ' '
·A11lo111otic tren1111i11Jon, roclio, h1e .. l'1
co...liflo11l119, IACH601l
oir HetcMi1ck.•ltotl lo, h1ot1r, 1,000 milts. 1121·
CKAI VI, e11t.m1tlc1 reclio, hooter, po-r 1t.1r•
1119 l "'•k111 fectory oit coff. lltllUHI' . $5995 FOR ALL THREE DAYS!
FIRST 300 MILES ARE fREEI 511195 s2395 • s1777 ~2495 . • '
'540-9640.
• .> 2aso· Harbor ·Blvd. C~ITA
. aESA __
Autos, lmport9CI 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Used 990 Autot, Utlld 990 Autol, UMd '90 utos, UMCI 990 Autol, Used --'--------PORSCHE .
'70 PORSC'HE 914 cpe. 5
speed, AAf·FM. (0934)
TOYOTA
WWW •
'12 TOYOTA
$2995
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
2480-Harbo.r Blvd. at Fait Dr. ~la Mesa 546-8017
1970' PORSCHE 9J4, whihj
W/blk inL AM /FM lilereo.
Arf&erlcan ~ • g s , ·~ pear~ group , other xtru.
64&-lfA32.
Large Selection Fo;
· Immediate
Dellverj!
Big-Savings On
Remaining
'71 TOYOTA$
'86 'PORSCHE: ~
black interior. Must
646-ll.l6.
with
sell.
.Jleon Lewi& 9 TOYOTA
646-9303 PEUGEOT 1946 Harbor, Cos!a Mesa
' PEUGEOT
Dema Sale Now In
· Progrtitsl Service dept. open 1:30 am
Sales, Service, Parts ... • 9 " nd ••-· Fri
SANTA ANA
TOYOTA
'.FRITZ WARREN'S ... pm luo ~ <U<"1I •
SPORT CAR CENTER dayPHONE 540-2512
110 E. ht., S.A. 541-0764 41'7 \V. W!ll'ner, Santa Ana
Open daily 9-9; closed Sunday 1 ----~---
.. .... Tum unused items into quick A aood want ad a cub, call 6'2-5678
investment
Autos, Used 990 A11tos, Used
HAPPY NEW YEAR!
. SALi!
'70 CHEY _,, ..... '"· •·••· 1 DIK ....... '· WIMI., .llCtl ....... C........ uve »o
'71 -llft•c ., ........... ' $AVE rull 1111 S!llHI, Air, AH ....... ,
"'"""' 11• ........ . ,Kt. Wel"f._ty t• MHll. lhl CDOI
'71
'70 T BIRD ••• .._, '"· "" e 1'lrt1, Liiio H .. 1 lUI Clk) . $369&
'70 FORD ·-... u •• .,, 119'f. 1'*701 $2696
'70 CHEV ""~"'" ·-~' 1 'Mlill INWfJI 11ttlfl!I $2686
'70 IERC Mo .... ,_, .... " $389&' l • Peu •• ....,. ••tre v .. , ca ~ ...,.,.,. t• • Al"XI
QR c....,r lit II Harber
s...ia Ana
990
.: ~~~PH • VOLKSWAGEN ·:,~:::"' • M~ g;~ CADILLAC CHEVROLEY DODGE . MUSTANG ,;~
[I .. , " ' ..
1
.69 v .w. BUS. 3 11ea1, low Coupe ,de Ville• 'tO El LARGEST '83 CHEVY WAGON., Auto., FOR SALE '65 Dodge riart•00°M~tang,1red w/~lk1~ TRIUMPH o~1VE=·s (Wcf.f:\A~---t:,~==: ~~~~Ell~?::. ~,poweriteerina.COKL-i:ckei-8,teaa~~ tone.!°:; ~vs~:t ~;?tedutf
~-""""'--------'· 2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fair"tfr. Authorized MBZ Oeall!!r' ORAN~! COUNTY $395 whl"el1. $250. Finn 567-9305. R/H I: many xtrta. Mi VB STAG C0<<a Mesa 546-81117 Cll 523-72'0 SALES.LEASING DAVE ROSS PONTIAC cond. WW tra"' for van,
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! •n VIV Super Beetle Xlnt BUICK AUTHORIZED "'80 H.-Blvd. at Fald". FALCON ac<ePI beat oUor. Coe1~J , NOW" cond. !200-below ·,OO.Ok. war· -SERVICE· , Coo<a Me,. 546-81117 61;;-7716. '1•
' .kf ranf:: 11\"'!=•bl• , ,.., '71 Cent . 2' D Naben Cadflac ! 1f '11 CHEVY'• * '60 Falcon W•gon $125 lt71 MllSTANGS f : ~,J~ :'i:'~i.;~f;'-014 ... r ·payments . ""''' Pvt unon r. 2IDO HARBOR m... !¥PALAS • CHEVELLES .. Bftt alter. 6'6.Ql!l6 l:IEITZ· C:::.,;ORP j:.
FRITZ WARREN;. ply~· •, =· ·~·· . . CAMARO'S FORD -'w ~-1 ·-':) Gen. Man11g1r'1 Demo " -HERTZ CORP _... · .n.a ''"'• SPORT CAR CENTER VO&;yO Sport Qlupe, low mu., Sand. 5411.9100 Open .~ • (714)°~ ~ ;.
no E. ht St., S.A. 54'1-0764 ' . p!per•Bel•• with 8'0dle ,,. "69 Cad E Dllf'Cl!lo m w. Katella, Aoahelm '61 FORD WAGON C..try.... °()LDSMOBILE' '.
o,,., dolly 9-9; •k/<e<l 8W>day '72 VOLVO 1'rlor, V8, Autmnatlc Tran•. F 1 W -·-. (7141 778-4050 dan 10 pan. Auto., P.S., . . [
'68 TR-250 FUii '''"'"· Factory Air. "• arranty. ·-· · CHRYSLER l.aet, ak. (70191 • t'
6 C)1, wire wheels, Michelin Large s.i~tlon . For Power Windows, Seats, Door $4l9S $895 • ,,, OLDS ··~ •.:
x ""'· conool,, R&>f, 11795. Immediate l.ocq, Trunk Re1..... Macffoward' '68 cHRYSLER NEWPORT. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC' ()>nvertlbte. Vll. ...,~·· 968-2209 . Cruise Mallter, AM I FM '"""·U I t _,_ 2480 Harbor Blvd. at Fair Dr. cond PS PB tilt lr-
D n S •t03873 1.•M<:: ~ 11 power, ac ory ..,.-Cos M "A" ..,...7 ·• • • , VOLKSWAGEN • very tereo. . . ~-· S39"6t!O or '3l-06Q8 """' landau -(VT!). ta ... ~· whoo!. Runo & I.... • Big Savint• On $250 Comer 1st & Harbor : 8.15) " • * '71 FORDS * Mu.t oaert!te. Imm Ja>t,
Bill Yates
Remaining Below Dealer Cost Santa Ana $1599 GALAXIES.• MUSfANGS ly),! ~.Private par!y:QllJ.
• '71 VOL vos MIKE McCARTHY "" CadlUae eon.. AM/FM DAVE ROSS PONTIAC TOrJNos "" 6 pm. """11M6. • "'I
~e.u Le.mi& W VOLVO
646-9303
1.M6•Harbor, eo.ta Mesa
Autos, ~ · 990
Au1horlud Sal,. & s.n.tee Transportation 32852 Valle Rd.,
s&.n Juan Capistrano Speclah
&37-4!00/'93-45111•!19-2261 '87 P1ym Conr •••••••• :. 'ta15
'60 V.W. BUG. Radl(I, heater, 1JEY281 <
4 speed, ex-ceUent cond. · '95 01&1 88 • , ••••••••• , $495
$4tS <lLWJIO '
DAllE ROSS PONflAC '&I T.ftt.\I ., ........... 1399
2480 Harbor Blvd, at Fair Dr. UQP& '
Ooe:ta Mesa 54f.8'.117 '67 stt.tlon 'W&,on .... 11299
'65 vw Sq. Back. Xbt't cond.r ~ Country-Loaded.
New paint, 'fitta, cj_lltdl.
Reblt eng. S875 14• )lnipe 'fS CadUlac • •• • • • · •• •• • $395
u.llboat w/tralla· $4lt: 9'!;-l'~~ rtW1E ~" ············ $199
' VW Bug compl rtblt, ?Ml 'frT SUnbeak •••••••••• '495
wh11, 169 motor I: tran1.1 Rd11tr. yi\091
{Mint cond. 54J...28&4. '64 Rancbe!V ............ $f99
'&I VW bug, IUn f'll{l(. oril". fl9193H owner, ~eel cord. '63 Bukk .............. $399
49C-0380' alt 6 or ""mdt IEK«l6
' ''6 VW BUG $700 -:v=ana ·:"" ...... 1899 ** 541-3941 ••
'61 VW Bus.. 65,000 Miles.
Factory ~Ht enaine.
Xlnt cond .. $850. 536-;474'.
"3 vw Camper.
• excellent condttion
, $1150.00 531~7294
118 LeMans •••••·•••••• Sl399 •
'68 MUMarw-, ·• ,, , ,,, , $~ Vlll!f16 •
"68 Fllit ,,,..,,,,_., •• , •• $399
wxJJl87 • •
A Ak. ~ ""'· b"kes A "'80 llarbor Blvd. at Fak Dr. HIRTZ COJlP' '68 OLD)! 442. Bil\ "?1Yi ~;
BUICK new 1boc'k: absorber1. Gd. Calta MeA& 546-8017 221 w Katella Anahelni &.track atereo, alitO ~:
cond, Consider trade ,oa FANTASTIC Transportation ti14) ni.4osO air, Giel, bJk inlet., ~
V.W. 54&-J.630. n._1 , ,61 N y ke acceu. Good cond. ~. .__. .... n. ew or r, '68 Ford LTD 2-dr auto · • i
cor. ~~e!t!i~:&dden, '61 EL DORAD~, , ,.50,000 ml. Perfect $32). tram, ndio, fac a~, P/S, PONTIAC
194-133'' 531-2450 Full power, fact. air, vhvl. ~7. . P/B, Pvt ply, $1495 . , '
-· exeelle"1 cond. """" . CONTINENTAL • .,,....,. '61· "'?I"'··--<$t: '71 Riv' 1'era Spl Cpe Private party !l62.ffi52. • Auto, power, air . ~· • · • ,71 El Dorado eo.,1 bU CLEAN 64 Ford Van, nblt (UOG'6ll , • 1 • mry xtra Ri<l/Wht; I»! .~ 1971 MARK Ill enr. A eamper w/tent. $800. $1299 ) I
THE QWNERS DEMO m• tmm",' pvt owne• .. uw A ""•"'Y • loaded, 3CICIE. .,...,,,, DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
Bamboo Cream with audal· OVttteu $7950 644-7315. Reduced to '6' Country sedan Wgn. :Ma::l Harbor Blvd. at Fair DI. ·~~~ T~.~~ '11 Cad Convertible. Alr, f'UlJ $6995 , ~JB, •teerinf, auto. V-8, Colta.Jteaa stMO_f
Air, Power Wlndow1, l'oy.t· JJOWtt, Sacrlflce $1700. ·f:vt . atr, ~· $Q). ~~4• '69 LE MANS 2 dr, HT, a
., Se<ts, St'"" FM, Thlt owner. '*'™'· Macffowanf' '6" LTD 4 Dr HT, xlnt c:ond PS/PB, .,..i top, -~
Gius. •9C6CL $52SO. 113 COUPE Dy all xtru: 8J9.860il • Pia., J'ac air. $«15. conaole. 350 V-8, 56,000 in.t1i $250 .... condh i tamlly cv: Q>r..,. ht.OJ:f. 5.11-0608 567·1763 Xlnt. eond. 11'95. Pvt. P'f
Btlow Dea1tt Coe! $595. ~2510. Santa. ~ 1989 FORD van. chrome Eve. 115-1437. . . !t
MIKE M CARTHY , . wheels, mariy xtru. 118. ·•Grand Prix Must Seil al; c CHEVROLET -· ·-CORVAIR orbeateuhoUer.49'-3212 ' ·P/1. \;lb, p/W. -r.:
•-,,;.,,.-,....,..,...-.,,,....,...· '60 F I R -L-" 'belt otter m.mT. ~ BUICK °'Ill Oorvair be~ oold r.r a con an-ro •
--------....... , From le~ .... at CLEAN e 1'2131 '°'1111 '63 PONT. Cataltft!, d•'t'·
.., Qoevn>let Statton waaon. ·w """"""' St., eo.1a · MERCURY Good -. ,.... -· cor. Beach i: McFadden. 1981/52'7 •engine 3 IP. MelL -1 '$6l-ll80. ~
Westmimter Tranamilaioo with Hunt. , JlUllMltt •59 Pontlf:
194-1336 531,2450 Oe-ble, R/W n>d. 61 GD. Loeol .transi>ortatlon '68 MEf!C. Montego >18. w.;.n air ;... top ..,r.
'70 Le Sabre Custom Sport, ·'-',l!(lt!_;,,. _16_7-1331 __ • ___ -~"·,..' or dune bun>'. SUO or belt Auto., factory air, v1n)it top. ~-2"lt6.rt $ ~ ( ~ ~ 1 1 ~ otter. 842--'JQI, H.B1 ' (96199) • ~~. -enr, •· r • '66 Capt!"' W'iOO, roclloo , "OR-., $1299 '6tl LE Mana..2 Dr., lo mt~
Jiydramatic, p/1, di.c ~rb. beattl"+alr •. ~Orlllnal owner. r~' ,., 't'liil llii DAVE ROSS PONTIAC XJnt ~·Alf. 51: ...... ~
vinyl roof, owned by G.Jt line Nnni~ cond. ~· 455 ..J:.,, $4&-(11)1.
engineer $3195 M6-J.tl2. ~~t. •. Laruna !Jae~.: .~~~tte Q,;,vi." '4 ~~. ~ta~ Blvd. at F=;l ...---=T"'~=RD=--H
'61 BUICK Speclal 4-Dr., , . _ . ~ New. 8Ht Offer ova lf7J MERCURY
...tan. PIS. P/B, Ate. rr CHEV van, .am/rm nllO; "floo. Pvf. Pty, M7-J5116. STATION WAGONS '63 T-Bll\D, "'«· owner,
V•'T .... cond. 175-1119. 4 apkn., id· """!(. .. ·°""" DODGE --r .. ~ m.,.. 11.a or -'Offar .. -HERTZ CORP. ,.... ·-
147-n. •• 221 w. Kaiena, Anahllm $575. ~1 9UICK CASH
THROUGH A '67 c.maro, "'"' lhltt/ 16 '711 Dod .. Chall. 1:noo:.2 dr (714) 778-4050 VAIJANT
eyl., $900 or· belt oder. HT, V....a, Power tteeri~, 3 '67 MERCUJlY Colon)' Park ::::":::'.'::"'.'."~'"::'.'"::~~.fl
D &ILv PILOT 5&-6340. -sxt. Ml--6t97• wcn.. air com.. AMtFM. 't6 va11ant ' c1r, U» ....
,. • **'!II CHEVY . Na mad PENNY Save,..'11 Dod .. > ... ldve action dU. Bat c(. -A brb, aato,
. I Waaon. um or ~oner. Polara Sta Wan, • ..,. •• f&o. fer. m-so74. Very Cd ahape. Prtced 'f
WANT AD 61M!77 or 645-<'m ""l' a~. 111')11. 5e-ml. 'IO WAGON, auto, RAii, ~ --
642.5678· Dally Pilot Want Ad1 have '62 Dod9a Dart, •SO. reblt '"'· "' !rant. IUIJ. DaUr Want Adi ~ pion. N-rtnp. -'567-41162. barialna 1a1ott.
• •
•
ff DAILY ~LOT
EVERY · CAR CLEARLY RED TAGGED
TO SHOW THE GREAT SAYilNGS!
ONLY
.$
RED .TAG SALE
~495
CORTINA
A11lot111lic fr1111m in ion rtdio h 1 .,.h;1, ..,, u r 1 • • •• ''• CORI ' ire•, ow, low mH11, f46 1.
ATLAS SERVICE
Wei DEPARTMENT
' Cornea •nd h Chryalor C ono,. •fl orpo,. ,. cl11 '-qulrl • •on Ve1t1.
'V•rrenty "I .. rvice •nd ., Work ,._ . d
"'"''• , -.-•r '••• h car "" c ••ed. We h •• Pur. Charge B onor M11ter
C I an I.A •rto Bl ""'""•rlcerd E •nche A , "P'••• •nd 01' tn•rlcen 111'• Club.
COlONfT
Vt., 1utom1tic, r1dio h
•!••ring, whiti "'•Iii, ~Ir 111••: .Po.w1r vinyl top. ()(SPOii) concl1t1011119,
~1095 ·
•
RED TAG SALE • • • • • • ·~~0 '72 SATELLITE
.SKYLAR.I
va, •utom•lic, fldio, .... ,.,, powtr
sl1eriri9, pow•f br11res, whit• w1U1,
1ir coriditiot1in9, •inyl t-op. fXEU991 I
'66 PLYMOUTH
Sl'OllT FUlY
YI 111to,,,1 tic, r1d io, k11!1r, power
,t.'irin9 & br•~••· 1ir conditioning,
vinyl top. !TESOSI
'68 l=ORo
\'1 CAl.A..\'/f SoO • •uto,,.. 1· ''•••itt' 1 tc, ••dio ! c d • Pow, ii • ••I on il/011/119, (2', ••1'11, "in ~'· p,..,.,, $ E6s11 V fop, •ir
1095
::=:= AwMl .... 1f11
FIVE REASONS WHY
YOU SHOULD' IUY FRo'M
THEODORE ROllNS FOU
TODA YI
TheOclo..-Ro~lns Forti wlll ·buy the 1972 license plafea for
any new car .r new l~9h. cluty truck pure fl a 18 cf fro ID our stock betwe~n . Dec. 281'9 a,c1,. .6" p.m~ Jan. 22ncl. . · · .
1. With the 7°/o excfse ta~ tltcl1etecl froftll nery
new car 11 otKk J IO'.> from Rght dllty trucks>
1 t71 Ford• !"•Al hr lllOdei-e piked lowir l
thint, 1t71'1a ytar ago this month.
1. Tlleodore .lOW.. will pay for the 1971 lie-
, pa.;ttt '• •Y. .new car or HCJltt truck puclNned
~ stock before 6 p.m., Jan. 2.
3. You t•t oddltlonol Robins volume dtKOuntl on a•y
car er truck you buy.
•
4. Every -..W by Tlleod01e Robloo Ford lo backed
lliy °"' of the larttst, most mocl1n1 strYlce c•
ten lo t'• WHt. 71 t.lly equlppad oenlce bays
hw yow C01Ytnlenc1.
5. ·50 yeors of Integrity bock of .. ..., Mlel Th ...
dol'e RoblM hcls oentd o..ige CGunty o•tr half
a cintilry uftcl• the ICllM ownlf'llllP. alMI llNllll•
'
'
1972
TORINO
f.:. .• ONAFIDE AD ITIONAL . SAYl.NGS ..
.,, IF . YOU ' BUY NOW!
'
CLOSED
NEw YEARS DAY
OPEN
SUNDAY
'·
' I .
1972 THUNDERBIRD
'91.!""'· . ' JAN.· 2 ' ' 1972 MU~ANG
L. T .D.-Galaxe-T -Bird,...Ford Sale! .
~
Moay to choooe from. '65 tin '71 Modelo, Sport rook, fonnols, Z .._ .. 4
d-houltops " '°"'"'" Fun power, air .-tloolog. WOft'111ttft .. ollable. ' EXAMPLE: '71 T·BIRD HARDTOP
Auto., P.S., P.I,, P-wi11dow1, p;bueket •••h, AM-FM ller10 r11dio, elr 1oncl., tilt wh11l, WS~,
body 1ide 1T1ld91., r1mot1 mirror, good mil11. (69'48?JI ·
ILUI IOOK PltlCI $4711
OUR PRICE $4096 . ' . '
. . I •
1 ;, 'H TOYOTA CORONA $1296 MK n. R&.H, automatic,
low miles. <ZLK366) ~ llu. look Prlc• $1170 1
'69 OPEL
Automatic transmission.
(841 AGA)
' ~ .. ~
·t
5996
'68 V.W. IK , .-'' " $996 4 Speed, "R.adlo, Heater.
C757 DFD) '
70 POID LTD 4 Dr. H.T. $2496 'R&H, auto~ P.S., a ir cond~
vinyl roof, good miles.
(Z72ACF)
•
'70 GALAXIE SOO $2596 2 Dr., H.T., V8, Auto., RAH.,
Fact. Air. P.S., Vinyl Roof.
(701 ACDl
ILVI 1001 PllCI 52111
4 Dr. &,J., fac. air cond,.
, -
ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED . . • . ' TRADES ACCEPTED
PAID FOR OR NOT!
TUNSPORTATION
. SPECIALS
• .
MAVERICK-PINTO SALE!
1970 & 1971 11 4 •Pffch, J 1petcl1, 0110 oir cortd. I 011to1111tlc 111.Ml1l1. EXAMPLES: .
'7!t MAYERl<;K . '71 PINTO
Fully f•1tory ~wlpp.d. lt1dio, h11l1r, 1611·
IEP1 .
•
Coronet 440. VS, auto., P.S., ' "66'DODH H..... $796
radio, heater, &ood miles.
(SJP169) • .
•'70 IMPALA .1 Dr. H.T, $2196 Auto. tran11., P.S., radio,
heater, alr cond.
(091AKU) . • /'
'63 iulCK SPECIAL $596 . ~~-~~ .. ~:~~:.to., $2196 4 Dr. Rl:H, auto., 1ood P.S., air cond., rood miles.
miles. (KLC790) C621ASI)
--------------lhtt look Prlc• $2420
'70 IUICK llVllU. ., s34· 96
Full "°""· lactocy'a~. R &H, tilt whl, vinyl roof,·
good miles. (066AFWI
-.----------------' 69 CHEVY IMPALA s1996 Cust. H.T. VS. R&H, auto .• '67 SIMCA 1000 $496 4 door. low miles. Original
thru·out, IVTM 868},
ILUI IOOK PllCI SJ711
'70 DODGE CHARGER $2496 2 Dr., H.T., Auto., R&H., Air
Cond., Vinyl Roof. Cll.8 AGF) ,
ILUI IOOI PllCI S2flS
'67 OLDS CUTLASS ·
Supreme. VB, 2 Dr. H.T.,
R&H. air. P.S., good miles.
<TSR640l
'69 FORD GALAXIE 500 $1596
pawet steering, radio, hM.t·
er, V.:S.' (ZDX'l81) • . j65. PLYMOUTH FUJY Ill $69'6 $1196 •·.-69-FO-RD_X_L ____ $_1_99--6-· ___ !_.o_,d_.i_·~_ .. _R!_~_,~._:·_t;_ir_~_:._,:_i· ___ _
P.S., P.B., vinyl roof, air
co~ .• good miln.. CXTLT13)
ILUI IOOK PllCI S2075
'70 LTD S9UIRI WAG. $3196 10 pass. Full power, fact. '67 CAMARO $1396 2 Dr., H.T. Fact. Air, P.S., air, auto., immaculate thru·
2 Dr .. H.T., Auto., R&H.,
P.B .. P-wlndows, Au to., R&:H.,
Llk•Now!(ZVDOOll TRUCK SALE!
MUST ANG SALE!
ILUI IOOK PllCI SI J40 out. Good mlln. (244BQCJ
P.S., Air Conditionina-. CUZF
236)
. , STATION WAGON SALE!
Muy to ...... from, '65 thru '71 models. Couptt, hardtops, coowmlble aod
' 2+1 lcntloacb. Some with 4 opeeds, oho air condltloolng ond automatic mode~
EXAMPLE: '67 MUSTANG FASTBACK
OUR PRICE $ 1 196
•SALES DEPT.
HOURS
•
I AM TO 9 l'M MPN·Pll
I AM TO 6 PM SAT
10 AM TO 6 PM SUN I
M1ny to choos• from. Chevy, 01t1un, Ranchero, 'It ton
ind~ ton11 Flit bed. '67 thru '71 models. ·
EXAMPLE'
'71 DATSUN P.U. wltll CAMPIR
Perris V11ley ceb over. RIH, 4 speed, a ir cond., ~P:awl
thru c•mper. (616CTQ I
OUR PRICE
15 TO CHOOSI FROM. Imparts .. Domtotlco. Cauntry otds., Squlr ... Torino,
V.W., Volwo, °""""· Olds., Mere.,' Toyoto, Opel. '65 thrv '71 models. Samo
with '1111 power ·• olr ceod.
EXAMPLES:
'65 FORD WAGON '70 TORINO WAGON
Co1.1nfry 1•d111. lllH, 1uto., 11r, P.S., 1off A1dio, Heattr, Auto. Trt nt., '•w•r St1ori119,
mil11. IWWK7•91 Air Concl.
OUR
PRJCI
•
$750 $2296
PARTS-SERVICE
HOURS
7 A~ To 9 PM MON
7' AM To 6 PM TUE·FRI I .
PARTS DEPT. ONLY
8 AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS
' I
ff DAILY PILOT Wtdnesdiy, Ommbw 2t, tm
•
'69JORINO
G.T. SPOIT IOOf
:. '70-PONTIAC
. CATALINA H.T.
'69 FIREBIRD '66 CADILLAC
. COUPE C-H VIiie ........................................... ,... a....w.t.t.w.hll ...... (llT ... ............... hst. ...... ,..,. ........ Ua.wPI rKt.elr,Y ... _...._,_ .... ..., .......
• , .-............ Ui •·••••" tftl••• h ct.•lf , .. .,,. .... 11-1 ... ,.., .. , ....... Ul.t ll AM • .
51388 ·s1 ·aas
-FULL PRICE ULL PRICE ~'6~8 F~AL~CO~N~'~7 RANCHERO
WAGOll · • DEMO. , .... ,_.,,_........,..., ..... mw ti.Mtaa...,,...,......,,.....,....,,.. '·' ...................................... ...
WllSON $
JIUntCE 2940
••
1 • ' •