HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-01-03 - Orange Coast Pilot•
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·tountian Stabbed
' ' 1n · Ana,hei1n Fight;
' . , S.ix ·S~nspe~ts B~Jd
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· DAILY :'PILOT
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MdNOAV:
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AFTeRNOON: JAN lj~RY 3, 1972
VOL. U. NO. 2. 3 SllCTIONS, st PAOI!~ •
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ID Mesa '
...-•.I I' ~ltiv·P!1i:'rrr,liti1fw8.~' . '" . . . \ FIJIE~N DOUSE· S'710LDERING BLAZE" AT PAWN .SHdP
•. -Cound l· C1ndld1te'1<Place ol Bus iness Ono of Tivo Hit
; :[ ~ .
Bctckers. Enter Nixon . I
lti March Primq ry
.,
:®NcoRD, )l.H.. (AP) .-Petllions campaigning. ~flled,'611•~ to get ~t Nixon'' "As, Ult one 'l'ponsible for the cam-~n tll!;;billot lor;New HamPl!hire's palgn in thi! state, one Would like to have ~nc~1Pttl\dent1al pr,·elererice one's ·candldate· on the grounds," Dwin·
....... ~ "•""" 7 nell said. • ....... , .... ,... .... _. ' . . , ' il'&mer'Gov. """9'Dwlnnell, head of a He sald'hls group takes .. very aertously
~.;Croup <;arlipaignll!g !or 'Nixon, any cippoSitlon," Nlxoa's candidacy,
'il'l!•l\'";piqllllona'lo enter tliU'mldenl's including the challenges . of RepubllCJlfl niloi1e ln 'tll'i.natlon's earUest primaty. Reps.' Paul McCloskey of . California and
~~ ~M. ., bad more' than John Ashbrook of Ohio, but predicted the !~ sJlfiiii ·· eo ~ e8ctt·of¥1b~ slate's · .. ' preside.nt would win handily. ·
tjjc\/!'JJii¥ion'ai k!ljtrlcls -11\'R:e the In llle 1968 prill\llry, Nixon, a formal
nQtnllel-~..:. p~cted lbe l'resi-candidate, receiv.d 77_« percent of the
would !(ftt :the contest . "V$:f ria~ Republican votes against 10.8 percent for
.... • 1 New York Gov. Nelson Roekefeller.
nelhaie ho had!#-coizlerred.wi!h lile'Wblle ltoue befofe filing ' the peti-
tloill )>Ji( 1'..U f11formlng_NlxQn In a i ......... 0 .iJ. ot_ W1'll 'G1've t.¥.1~~1been ii!Od. , " ,-,,--E !~ 'wl)l have 10 dai'k ·llJal 'the ,,,P • ~~=· ~~ ": ~'fi;c~ets to .Shq~
~the Prflid..t does nic allow his •• 'l1ie DAILY PILOT has sel«:ted 100 p to be ~!ited formally 'u a candl..' readers a~ random to re<elve a pair of
~. the, If =te and 14 alternate llcklts to the Southern call!omla Sports,
<l!"!<ebutca,:.t,be ~=~• ~ar::O Va~tlon and Kecreallon Vehicle Shdw.
l ~ You coulll be among those recelving O, vu. ,
,,i>Wtiiiiell said' be h"1 "mlsed Jeellngs" the 200 free passes. courtesy of the
IWul"U,. Pi:o8jdent'1 'Itel.ton lo Clo no DA!LY Pll.01', for the show which opens
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~ucei: Suicum bs
) B°EVERLY ll!lJ.S (UPI) -A \..qw.m
ma'ls wu lo be ~ WcW lot Lucien
llPbbant,. 14, whoeO.· 1'7 .Jllro ~It.
"W)np,• captuied . lijo nm Academ,y
Antd I!•._;, to• lni>V11 producer. . ' .
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}i'rlC!iy In .the Anaheim Convention
Center.
Check the cias;ilied ad pages now to . , see if your name is listed in one of the 10
apecal "ads" scattered today, 11mong Ll?e vanou. advll'llllng clas1ifzoaUon1. New
winllerl will be llllld dally !nan """
throagll Jin. IL
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• Pro hers
Put Loss
At $4,500
Striking just before dawn, an ar.90nist
caused $(,500 damage to newly-an-
nounced Costa Mesa City ·Council can-
didate Dominic Raciti's jewelry and
loan shop today.
T~ downtown C9sta Mesa blaze broke
out ll(OOst Simultaneously wlth one a rew .
bl~ away,'and invesligaton dlscounted
any pblitical .implic8tions 'against Raciti.
11No indication whatever ••. r. said Bat·
talion Chier Ron Coleman.
He said the blaze which damaged
RaciU's Costa Mesa Jewelry &I: Loan, 1838
Newport Boulevard, wi! discovered at
5:34 a.m., by none 'iither than Fire Chief
John Marshall-hims<ll. -
Chief Marshall Was , returning from a
similar b!aze ,tha~caused.minor damage
at Coastline He'llth I"ooda, m E. 17th SI.,
when he saw ftames shooting from
Raeiti's business.
A lrash dllm1'6~ container and been
shoved up again!t ·the rear of BiciU'a
firm 'and, ignited with aome type of flam-
mable material1 Chief Coleman aaid.
The • bl.u...reporled.,15 minute! urlier
at lbtbeallb'.food store.ilivo!ved piling up
of flammable ·materials lri a buildin&
archWlly, which were.then ignited.
Investigators said while damage waa
kept to a miRimum that two firefighters
:suffered inj uries in the pawn and jewelry
ahop blaze. ,
He said Capt. Barry Adams and
Fireman Bob . Crunpbell did not require
ho8pilalization, with Adams 111Jffertng a
bruised foot and C.mphel! a back injury.
Bu~ .Aicill, a longtime civic
leader, announced last week be will be a
CJlfldldate for the Costa Mesa City Coun-
cil in !lie April electiOo.
The two arsonitt-sel fins followed by
two hours another~ that routed.tenant
Don O..n lrom !iii borne at 3111 Rochester
SI .. i~ the same dot#!ltown vicinity.
Chlef Goleman said )hat In caused on-
ly $50 damage and was blamed on srnok·
ing in bed.
He added th~t today'• fires got 1172 off
lo a bot start for firemen, who have log-
ged 17 calls so far in just three days of
the new year.
King Recovering
<X>PENHAGEN, Denmark (AP) ~ A
palace 1potesman say1 King Fredertt IX
I• recovering rapidly alter falling W N.,.
Year'• Eve. Tlifl-1!2!.em!!l) said SUnday
lhal the' k1nf'lliil suflertd an attack of lnn11tnza.
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Snpporters Enter
President ~s NaD1e
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I~ ND Pri1nary
Jump for Joy ' Paula Dimilrouleas leaps into
I~ap y e a r 1972 in Miami
Beach, Fla., where the weathl!I'
is ~most as ~vy as jt is in
Southern calilornia.
Police Seize Six
After Man Slafu,
Three W 01mded
A llshl in an Analieiin apartment' Sun-
day nlsht led to the ala~~lng death oi one
man,i the wounding of three others and
tlie bg<lkln& of alx persons on charges of
asilu1f with intent UI commit murder,
police reported . •
Dud al the ocene at 3380 W. Lincoln
Ave;, was Stanley R. Joyce, 24, of
Fullerton.
Liited u 1 second victim and ·sufferlng
from slab wounds In Orange County
!\ledlcal eenter b Francis M. Shea, 29, of
the Lincoln Avenue addr...,. Jils condition
II IJst«I aa satisfactory today.
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·. ·-'S lets Downed'
Hanoi Claiming
Big Air Victory
TOKYO (AP ) -Five U.S. aircraft
were shot down by ground-to-air missiles
Jn Nghe An Provinpe last-ThuisdaY.
Hanoi!a Vietnam News Agency said Tues-
day.
. VNAt In *· broadcast monitored in
Tokyo, said two other U.S. attacking
planes were downed by antiaircraft guns
on the same day in the proVince.
The North Vietnamese claim was in-
eluded in an account reported by a VNA
local correspondent on what it called '1the
big battle" in Nghe An Province against
U.S. planes on Dee. 30, 11171, II did not
identify the type of missiles.
VNA gave the following account:
"It was a cloudy day. At 6:30 a.m.,
more than 80 U.S. jet fighler bombers
roarecflnto the coastal area of Nghe An
from the sea for a massiVe surprise at.
lack.
• ~'At mlaslle 11ile H, Commander Tan
closely watched the enemy's movement
on the radar• screen. ·waiting until a
group ol right 'Phantoms' had flown into
the target sight, he shouted: 'Fire!·' Two
miss.Hes shot up and tore Into the
Jetmghl. Two F4s were shattered in the
aky. All the other planes, thrown Into .
confusion, fled to the sea.
"Forty minutes later, the enemy again
came 111 many groups totalln& too planes
fl ying at different altitudes. 1bey were
met by a real wall of fire put up by the
missile, antiaircraft atid millUa units.
"A groop of three Fla and one A3J
threaded their way Into the afrpace of
Ylnh city. The batteries defending the ci-
ty roared in unison. At the same time,
two ground -to -air m.lssUes were laun-
ched, chasing arter the tnarauden. One
F4 was blown to plece.s. 1bt two pilots
perished in the sea . Another Fl had Its
tall shattered and burned viblenUy before
PlwnmeUng on a mountain range in ne~f!nr.Ha Tlnh 0 Provlnce. TWO red
parachutes ejected, and the downed pilots
obvlously tried to steer themselves
towerd the sea .
"Wiping the dirt off his face after lying
down lo avcld the blaat of a Ourry of
bombo reloased by the rescue planes, the
military commander of Ngbl Xuan
village 1houted hlmJelf boe;se: "F~ at
the chutes I'
"At the same time, all the guns ol bat-
tery 1 of the antlalrcrall force turned to
lhe rescue planes, J>l"Venl!ng them mm
atlacldng the battle~ of tbe militia.
An.other F4 caught fire and cra4hed on
Hon Ngu island. lts two pilots managed
to bail out but they fell like two stones in.
lo. the ..., be/ore. the dtules could -
MeanWhile, another surface--to-atr mlssllt
blasted down an, A3J which was winging
over the artillery ground.
"Like a flock or hawks. lbe air
marauders powiced urn Hon Ngu but
there, too, they me with withering
ground fire. An F4, caugh t whi le on a
bomb run, crashed into the sea with its
crew.
''Thus. wlthln Jess than three hoW's, the
acmed forces w people of Nghe An
Province broke a <bzen waves or
attacks by the U.S. Imperialists. sbootil!g
down seven planea, damaged dozens of
others, captured two U.S. pilots and kill·
ed many others.
"The massive onslaught launched by
more than 200 planes on Dee. 30, 1971
ended in a flop."
Oruge
Weatlae r
The skies' along the ofange
Coasl should be moaUy fair today
and Tuesday but strong, gusty
oortheast windl should begin blow-
ing today . and~tbn>uih Tuesday.
Highs should be 70 with lows near
IO.
INSW E TODAY
A Laguna Btach woman is
gitll'.•g· ~r broiM r a belated
~h~~ irtsr•t -""' of htr ricidMD'S: toeol narcotics oddict3
1re changing their ta~tes; a.
;tate ltf&ator ezploin.t his "press
'.iceniing" idea. See toda1111 s~·
:iol Pou• 28.
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Supporters Enter
President ~s NaDte
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In _NH Pri111ary
l'llJI.
Seize Six . -
Man Slain,
Wounded
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'S lets· Dowtaed'
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Hanoi Cl~iming . .
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Big Air Victory
-TOKYO (AP) -Five ·u.s. aircraft
wero 11¥J1 down by -.~. mi,!ailea
ln NghO· An Prov• .!Qt, Thurscjay,
Jlanol's'Vieinam NewJ~!Dey•sald Tuea·
day •.
. ·~A, la •· broadcast monJIOfed' in
Tokyo, said two . olher U.S. attacking
planes ·were downad. bY. ant)alrcralt guns
on, the same day in U., prpvlnce.
The North Vietnamese claim was Jn.
eluded in an actount reported by a VNA
loCal COJTesporident on what it called 11lhe
big battle" in Nghe An Province aglinlt
U.S. planes on Dec, 30, 197L It dld not
identUy lhe type o! m1soi1e1. '-
VNA pve·tbe following account:
"It wu a cloudy day. At 1:30 a.m.,
more than ao U.S. jet fighter bombers:
roar.d" tnto tbe coutal area ol Nghe Alt'
from the sea for 1 massive surprise at-
tack.
• "Al mlsslle site H, Cilomn&J1dei-Tin
clooely watched tbe enenly•s movemenf
on the radar screen. Waiting until a
group ol right 'Phantoms' l\Bd !low1! Into'
the target sight, be lhouted; 'Fire!' Two
missiles allot up and tore Into the
jetOlght. Two Ffs were shattered in the
sky. All the other planes, thrown Into
confusion, fled to the sea. -
"Forty minutes Jate'r, the enepiy again
eame In many ll'OllPll totaling 100 planes
flying at dU!erent altitudes. They were
· met by a real waU of lire put up by the
missile, antlaircrall and mlllUa llnlla.
"A lf'IUP of three Ffs and one A3J
!breaded tbelr way· into the airpace ol Vinh city. The batterltl defending the ci-
ty roared in unlsoo. A£ the same time,
IWI> llf<lUDd • to • alr"!niailtl .,.. laun-
ched, chnlna: alter the marauders. One
F4 was blown to pieces. The two pilots
perished in the sea. Another F4 had Its
tall ahattared and burned viblently before
plwnmetlog on a mountaiq ran~ in oe~;HirTtnll •Pravi006. f1ji\"-red
parachutes ejected, and the downed pilots
obviously tried to steer themselves tow•nl the .... -.
"Wiping the dirt o!f blf lace llfter· lylnl
down to avoid the• blBll of a flurry o!
bombs released by the rescue pl&ne1, the
mmtary commander o! Ngbl Xuan
village thouted hlmaeH hoarse: 'Fire at
the chuteel' •
"At tbe same time, all the guns o! bai
tery I of the antlalrcrslt force tnrned to
the rucqe planes, preve0Un1 tbem !rom
•tlacklnc the battlelfOll1ld ol tba mWtla.
Another F4 caught fire and cruhed on
Jlon Ngu lsland. Ila two plJota managed
to )>all.out but they. fell like two stones in·
to the ·aea before. the,~ COQld \II"'!i
Meanwbllo, anolhenurface-to-atr.mlJa~
blasted · down an A3J which was winging
over the artillery ground.
11Uke a flock of hawks, tbe air
marauders ~ced upon· Hon Ngu but ~. too, they met with wtthtrin&
ground fire. An n, caught while on a
bomb run, crashed Into the aea with ita
~-
"Thus, witllln lea than three hours, the
lrmed forcei and people ol Nghe An
Pn>vinCe blcCe a dozen wav.. ol
attacks by tho' U.S. bnperlallsts, shoothig
down "'en plaila, domaged dozens of olhen, captured two U.S. plJota and kill·
ed many othen. •
''The maislve onlilaught launched by
more .than -200 plantl' oo Dec. 30, 19'1!
eRded In a IJop."
0r .. ,.
Weadaer
The skies alonl the Orange
Coast should be moaUy lair today
and Tuesday but strong, gusty
oortbeut wlndt lhould begin blow-Ina: today and .through Tlleaday.
Highs lhould be 70 wlth lows near
IO.
INSIDE TODAY
A Laguna Btach woman U
11ioi11g htr brotl&cr a belattd
:}\~~::;"" ~qrnt -~ of Ja•r ' 'lid } i<i<Gl """"otlc1 • addict..
2r1 changing ·their ttut.11; a
1tot• .'J'"'IM expi<llm IJU ""''" ~icemtn11" idea. See todat(1 1pe~
'"11 Page 28. .... ,. ... .._, " ....... 11 ....... .. L,M,_..,. ' Mtf!MM Ntwt ..
C•f""111• ' Or .... C..ty " Cb1IMIFIM .... ,,... .. ...,.... . _ .. " ....... -c....-" TiM1 .... . ..
DNlll Nftk• " ........ " ......... 1 .. .,. • ··-' ·--. ,. -· ... .. ·-..... ........ ""' ,,, ..
M9I FTl9jle "
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OIJlY Pll01
Heist Nets '.• $1 Million
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Suave Tliieves Loot Posh New York Hotel
NE\V YORK t UPI l -Four suave, pr~ tion headquarters there al)d .:f.rlstotle
ftssional thieves Invaded the Pierre Hotel ·, Onas~ ooce maintained an apaQment in
'fJ'here Mrs. Ri i1ard Nixon stays on her the hotel.
New York visits and stole more than $1 Police and hotel employes gave this ac-
Jnilllon worth of jewels and cash. count or the robbery:
·'rlThe thieves gained entrance to the About 4 a.m. two men emerged from a
«otel by posing as late-arrivi ng guests limousine carrying suitcases. They in·
The bandits then read tbe gutlt
regi1ter, picking out alnglt women or coupl~s as the rooit nke)y cbolce~, Police
aald. Using a chisd or 1 /.unch. the
thlevea opened about $0 aife eposit box-
es out of 208 ln the hotel vault.
early Sunday. They proceeded to hand· dicated ~o a security guard that th.ey had
cuff 19 persons. including three guests, reservattons and wanted to check 1n . The
Nearly two hours afler they entered,
the thieves feft unobserved . A hotel
employe broke loose and called police.
and rifled through the hotel's safe de1k>5it guard opened the door, normally kept
boxed using the guest register as a guide locked Over night, aod the two bogus 1i hotel official said gueats wintering In
Palm Beach. Fla., the French Riviera
and other resorts btgan telephoning the
Jk>tet shortly after news of the robbery
Wu broadcast to determine if they were.
vi'Ctims.
to the most lucrative boxes.. guests and their ''chauffeur'' entered the
Police confirmed Sunday night that Si hotel.
million in Jewelry and $5,000 in cash were The phony chauffeur drew a gun and
liken by the armed thieves who arrived held the guard while the other two also
and lert the hotel in a limousine. drew guns and rounded up 16 hotel
Police said the victims asked not lo be employes-guards and maintenance men
The case was turned over to 11 ''major
critfl.e squad" which still is invesligatlng
a $15.000 robbery at the nearby Drake
Hotel on Christmas Eve. Chief of Delee-
UveS· Alhirt 'Seed.man sa1a tne same-gan1
may have been responsible for bOtb rob-
berle., The-FBI joined in Ille in-
vestigation. ~ ·
identified. -and herded them into the hotel 's ex-
. Amoae the resldem,, ot the hotel. .which e~ulive offices. The hostages were
includes condomlruum apartments whkh blindfolded and gagged and handcuffed.
tell for $250.000 to $300,000, \Yere former Thr~e guests who happened doy,•nstalrs
t,;ew York M•yor Robert Wagner. also were taken hostage and put with the
'. President Nixon had his 1968 post-elec employes.
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, .~ Vet Officer
Kills Self
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:Beat Belief .. ' ..
;\tJe.ast 18 persons have died in the-la•! q2 hours from the effects
of a 4corching hef.t wave in Buenos Aires, tfte Pa"fJJiC Health Service
saitt. l\rgentine bather! are 'hown as they t'rowded one of the beach·
es along the River Plata in search ~! relief from the heat.
!POW 's Mon1 Dissati sfied .. ..
::With Ni xon 's Comments .. .
DUNEDIN, Fla. (AP) -The mother of
.an American prisoner of war in North
:'Vietnam has expressed dissatisfaction
:With the response to a question she posed
;to President Nixon and says "the Presi·
Jlent does not intend to withdraw from
Vietnam ever. ..
"This means our boys will never come
home," Mrs. Gerald A. Gaitley said Sun-
day. "A good many families lof
prisoners I think the President is using
their sons as an excuse to stay over
there."
Mrs. Gaitley's son. 27-year-old Navy Lt.
Mark Gaitley. was shot down on a
mission over North Vietnam in August
1968.
Dan Rather, CBS OQrrespondent ~~hi!
conducted an hour-long tele~ised· i.n-i
OU.N•I COAST
DAILY PILOT -.
terview with the President Sunday night,
posed one question which he said came
from htrs. GaiUey.
She inquired whether the United States
asked the North Vietnamese if they
would release the prlsone.rs a n d
guarantee safety of withdrawing U.S.
forces Jn exchanJe for a declared pullout
deadline. • • •
Nixpn &j,lled' ,)hat the 'North Viel·
namese ,rejected such ·a proposal.
Mrs. GllUM.-1akl she doesn't "believe
the Presfdeftr ·answered the qUeSUon l
posed."
Nixon's response, she said, showed that
"we have never negotiated in Paris
seriously for the release or prisoners.
"Jf we would just ask the question. we
y,·ould open up negotiations never opened
before," Mrs. Gailley said. "Jt would in
no way endanger our position just to ask
the question. This is the crucial question
·concerning the opening of negotiations."
. She said the question was never asked
at. the Paris peace talks. Nn1Nrt heel! L.-t•-.. ~ ..
C•ttc MIM
Hw1llltfl" .... ..............
Still C ..... 19
' OAAHGE COAST PVBL1SH!JrfG COMP'NCY
tlo\.tr! N. w,,4
"It's a question many of us wanted to .. !k the President. But we have not had· · reel communications with the Presi·
. ent. only with lesser members of the ad-
i:nitiistration." she said. PrHiclff!I f ro! Pl#bllihtr
J •• ~ R. Curley
Vic• l"rn111·~1 •!Id Gef!tr•I M1n19N'
lho'"'' 1(11vil
l!d•!Of
lhom11 A. Murp~it11
M1t11gl111 £dl-
Ch1r!f1 H. loot Ric.h1rd P .. ~1!1
Auilt~I M-glrtg fdlto11
Off1:11
C..tt IH>M: DI Wnt lay S"'t•I
,......,, IHCll: JJJ! NIWl)O<! Beu OYtnl
L1911N I-"': nt "'--' ...... .,.
M""""'lln IHc..,: 11'7J I•..,. leultvt..-
Slf) 'ltmlll!t: »$ N0tlll al '-tmlno AMI
tl1rs. Gaitley said she had tried
numerous times for a personal visit or
phone conversation .with Nixon; but was
ahvays refused.
She said she learned her son was a
prisoner when other POWs released in
August 1969 reported seeing t h e
lieutenant.
Nixon said he raised the PO'V issued
with. Soviet foreign minister Andrei
Gromyko and that presidential adviser
Henry A. Kissinger discuised lt wUh
Chinese Premier Chou En-Jal.
When the full record is published, Nix-
on said. "our lady from Florida. and
others, will recognize we have gone the
extra mile."
North Vietnam asserted tqday the on-
ly way Presldet!l"Nlxon can":tree ·u.s.
prisoners of wM and "ge't Jilt of the
swamp 1n VH!tnam" is to abandon hopes
of military ~rtlOry and "oegotl~(t ser·
k>usly at the Paris confereAce on Vlet-
nam." ~
~-&liltment lqlled by Noith Viet-
nam 1 ftpresentaUves to the confere~
w11 an attempt to re1pnnd to the
statements made by Nixon SUnday night.
A fter Chase l , UJS ANGELES (AP l -A, veteran
' police sergean.t shot and kijled . hims~lf
early today when trapped by police at an
intersection in suburban South Gate
shortly after a bar holdup. authorities
said.
South Gate Police Chief William
Henderson identified the dead man aS
Sgt. Leonard F. Hayes , ~. a member of
the police force In nearby Vernon for
nearly seven years.
He said Hayes' private cat sideswiped
one of three South Gate police cars that
had been chasing him after the 1:10 a.m.
holdup.
"The officers saw him raise his hand lo
his head and then his head jerked slightly
and his car rolled into a utility pole.·•
Henderson said. He said no shoU were
fired by his officers.
He· said Hayes was pronounced dead at
the scene from a head wound. Hayes' .38
caliber service revolver and police iden-
tification were found nei:t to his body.
He said Hayes' death came sli: months
after a man pulled a gun in a bar,
ordered the barlender and f o u r
customers against a wall and robbed the
till of $140.
Police were called immediately after
the man left and a chase that reached
speeds up to 75 miles an hour began when
a South Gate policeman. Richard Davis,
spotted a car that fit the description of
the one driven by the holdup man. .
Vernon Police Capt. James Jordan
described Hayes as ''a goo4 cop and a
nice guy."
Hayes I! survived by his widow
Patricia, 30, and two daughters,
Elizabeth, 15, and Deborah, one week.
Si riger Charged
With Slitting
Lover's Throat
A Corona de! Mar crooner who polle'e
allege tried to slit his girlfriend's throat
with a razor blade after a New Year's
Day 'quarrel Js jailed today, faClng pro-
secution on attempted murder charges.
Anthony A. Marchionda, 41, of 900 Sea
Lane, was arrested by Newport Beach
police about 11 p.m. at the Cltile Pepper
Restaurant, 3201 E. Coast Highway,
where he is employed.
A criminal complaint charging the
singer with assault with intent to commit
murder was bein4 sought today from the
Orange.county District Attorney.
Officer Larry Gabriel picked up
Marchiooda after his female friend,
Sabrina Lokaj, 26, contacted authorities .
· Detective ~ Ken Tho~pson said Miss
Lokaj sufferef:C'\>arious cuts on her neck
l)ut·was not iuiously Injured .
She told Newport Beach potlce they
were inOicted by Marchionda, claiming
he used a razor blade.
Investigators said the injuries were ap-
parently suffered at the Sea Lane apart·
ment following a quarrel between the
couple earlier on New Year's Day.
Miss Lo·kaj also appeared to have been
beaten In addition to auffer.ing cuts,
police said.
County . Man, 70,:
· Killed as Auto
Rams Into ·Train.
John Howard Miller, 70, o( 8061 Atb st.,
Buena Park, was kilted &lnd1f •hen his
car struck ·the side of I movJng ~i&h\
train 11 the Staninri .\teini, cross!.W ~·
Buena Park, the Orongt C O,JI 11'\'j
Coroner's Offlce repotted i«!ay. • ·'
•••
OAJLY P'ILOT Sift! P'~G/f
Afr. Toad's Wild Ride never included a si~npost \Vith this many
'roada.' But this one in Santa Ana Heights directs incoming tourists
from Orange County Airport to here. there and everyv.ihere. \Vant to
see it in person? It's right on the corner of Palisades and .IJ'vine, er
Acacia ... I mean, aw forget it.
Nobody to Help
W omari Tells of Trek in. Sriow
·GORMAN, Calil. (AP) -Stanley
Culver bad heart trouble, asthma and
empbysem11 . He kept an oi:ygen tank in
his tiny trailer: With it he and his wife,
Georgina, fell. secure.
Eight days ago snow started falling in
the Tehachapi Mountains north of Los
Angeles. Six feet of it snowed in the
Culvers' car. They had no telephone.
"Wednesday morning the oxygen ran
out," recalled Mrs. CuJver, 49. At !1:30
a.m. Culver, a 53--year-o!d retired
mechanlc,· told her, "I can't breathe." A
f~w minutes later he was dead.
Mrs. Culver began looking for help
she didn't get for days.
"I got out a sheet and painted 'Help' on
it in big letters and put it on the roof of
the trailer," she said. "Helicopters pass-
ed over many times, and t wa ved for
help. I even tried signaling them at night
with a flashlight.
"No one would stop to help me.
"By Saturday I couldn't stay any
longer. I'd been there four days with him
P oli ce Probing
Mystery Death
In Hunting ton
Police ~oday are trying to unravel the
mystery death of Sam C. Sparks, Jr., son
o( Garden Grove Fire Chief Sam C.
Sparks,· who was found dead in his car at
a Huntington Beach intersection Sunday
afternoon.
Sparks, 29, was discovered slumped in
the front seat of hts car at 1:30 p.m. by a
passerby who summoned po 1 ice.
Investigators who made a thorough
search of the vehicle say foul play is not
suspected at this time.
Detective Sgt. Monty f\.fcKennon said
Sparks, a resident of 6200 Edinger Ave.,
Apt. 505, was lying over on his side near
the steering wheel. The car bearing the
body was located in the Sunset Heights
district near Blanton and Pearce streets.
McKennon sald the young man's deaJh
ts still unclassified. The <;ause of death is
being inve~tlgated by both the Huntington
Beach Police Department and the pra"ftr
County C.Oroner's Office. ~:
. '
on the bed. The snow had melted down a
bit. I put on my heavy booU, a ski coat
and gloves, and took a shovel to help me
keep my balance, and started toward the
road."
Jn 31,1. hours, tiirs. Culver trudged t L.):
miles through four-foot drifts to the two-
lane Gorman Post Ro;id. There she found
an emergency phone, but it didn't work.
Two miles down the road she saw
tourists playing in the snow.
"I must get help," she told !lie first
man she came to. "My husband is dead
back in our trailer.'' She said the man
pointed to figU.res in the distance making
a snowman and replied, "I can't help
you. The children are playing."
"Arter ·that, I simply wouldn't a~k
anyone else," Mrs. Culver said. "I could
hear the children playing. I was afraid
somebody else would tell me no.
"So I put out my thumb and tried to
hitch. a ride . . . I just kept plodding
along ."
As she walked two more miles down
the snowy ~· drivers ignored her outstretched thu ·
Six hours an ne y six miles after she
star.ted, Mrs. Culver reached a
resUfuiaQt . .and tailed the local deputy
sheriff. Ttle deputy was gone -on duty
at tbe Rose Parade in Pasadena -but
his wife drqxe ¥rs. ~!J/ver, to· a felalive's
house In OOrtnMi. NObOO.Y was Ho?ne, but
neighbors let her in.
"I turned on the heat , made myself
some dinner, and went to bed, thankful it
was all over.''
A sheriff's party brought out Culver's
body.
Mrs. Culver said Sunday she has made
no plans for the funeral or for her future:
"But," she said, "I know I'll have to
move the trailer out of the mountains. I'll
have to move close to other people, in
case I need heTp .• .-
Climbing Trio Killed
BAD REICHENHALL, Germany (AP)
-A JO-year-old boy and two me11 on a
mountain climbing expedition were killed
Sunday when the boy plunged over a
steep cliff and the men tried to rescue
him. Police said a third man in the party
was 1 seriously injured In the mishap vn
the sid~ o! 5,905-foot Mt. Hochstaulen in
the Bavarian Alps.
Tbe,.Norlh , Vltlname .. tta""1ent r~
Ject<ll lt.S. claims ol an Wldtnlan<llnf
that tho Commtmllta would cut down on
Wll' ICIMIJ wllm tho \!Rited Stal .. OOH·
Bu<na Park police iatd Miiier died .,
Beach Community HOIPltal Slindat after-
noon a few minutes after the JJ:JO p.m.
accident. He was alone tn the car wh:kh
overturned, ptnnm, him to Iha ground. Big New Year'• Da11
'
Ove1·ride
Of Veto
Attempted
SACRAMENTO (API -The Senate
voted today lo O\'errlde one of Gov.
Ronald Reagan 's record-long list of
vetoes. but Republicans in the Assembly
were expected to stand solid ly behind the
COP governor.
Six Republicans joi ned the 2 1
Democrats in the Senate to override
Reagan 's veto of a bill sponsored by Sen.
Anthony C. Beilenson ( D-Beverly 1111ls)
ta require better soundproof111g 1n publie
housing.
Reagarf was upheld on lh~ee other ef-
forts to override some of his record 157
\etoes of bills passed during the 1971
sessio n -the largest number of vetoes
since the early 1900s tenure of Gov.
Hiram Johnson.
Sen. Alfred Alquisl (0-San Jose), failed
on a vote of 16-14 to override Reagan's
third veto of his bill to create an Oregon·
style presidential primary in California
where all recognized candidates go oq the
ballot.
It takes a two-thirds vote of 27 ln the
Senate and 54 in the Assembly to ovtr·
ride the governor -something that
hasn't happened since 1946.
The major effort had been expected to
be on the three reapportionment bills
Reagan vetoed last week.
But Sen Mervyn M. Dyma\ly of ~.!I
Angeles. sulhor of the Senate re.mapping
bill, said he probably w.ouldn't s~ek
an override because of possible legal 1m·
plications if the override effort failed.
Democrats maintain in their legal fight
that the governor's signature is un-
necessary on reapportionment.
Reagan, 60, starting his sixth year_ in
office, accused Democrats of passing
partisan redislrlcling bills "aimed solely
at perpetuating themselves Jn o!fice."
The veto overrides effort was the first
item of business as lhe lawmakers
relurned to their desks after just two
weeks of rest.
Then the 80-member Assembly and fo.
membe1r Senate had to lt,rmally adjourn
the December special session on reap-
portionment.
And finally, the legislature could get
around to organization of the 1972 regular
session with the Democrats in control, 42·
37 and one vacancy in the Assembly and
21-19 in the Senate.
There seemed to be no opposition to the
re-election of the two house leaders:
Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti CD-Van
NuysJ. and Senate President pro tem
James Mills (0-San Diego}.
Co_,st , ~olons'
Pay, Expenses
In Median Ran ge
Figures totaling the salaries and ex-
penses paid state Legislators in 1971
wert released today in Sacramento.
Local Legislators' expenses and
salaries fell into a middle ground. with
the highest pe.yment.s statewide fall ing
into the S34,000 range and the lowest
coming in slightly more than $26 .000.
Robert Badham, Republican
Assemblyman from Newport Beach was
paid $29,400 ; John V. Briggs, Republican
Assemblyman from Fullerton reeeived
$31 ,008: Robert Burke, Rep u b Ii can
Assemblyman from Huntington Beach
was' paid a total of $28,160 and Keooeth
Cory, the Democratic Assemblyman
from Anaheitn received $29,<.
The county's two Republican Senators.
Dennis Carpenter of Newport Beach and
James Whetmore of Garden Grove
reteived ,28,722 and $30,418 respectively.
•• -~ -
-ed al ol Notti> VJ1tnam In tale ~ '111~ II ~Ille, • W Ill~ ~-... w. -... .: "' • f • -
Milltr was the th1nt pmon to die In
Or&n1-Counlr traffic aeeldAnta over Iha holiday .... tend, Ille corontl(J ........ --~-'. ~ ·...--..
• The J\rcberl-qlllntu~eta oC Gdpnsl!, Poland, play
on th.ell' tint New ui'4 Dq ..Iii Jhefr home...The
lllree &Olli and.111'0 usJlltn ol Mn. Leokadl1 Ry·
I
chert were born In lolay. Tho <tulnlt n1mu are
•Adlm, Agnleulra, Ewa, Piotr &ud Rolllln but tell·
Inf whit.II la which ii IODll~I' ellil .pin:.
•
(
•
'I
f'atlaet• Helpless
Mom, Four Sons
• Perish Ill Blaze
VISTA, Callf. (APl -A young mother
and her rour sons died 10 a fire that
swept their two.bedroom home early to-
day while the father was outside, trying
to get in .
The blaze apparently was started by a
wall healer while Kenneth Collins, 30, and
his wlfe Joyce . 28, slept on a livingroon1
couch.
Collins 11i•oke up antl ran outside, but his
\~ife tried lo find their 20-month-old son,
Steve, in heavy smoke, investigators said.
A neighbor found Collins outside a11
empty bedroon1 . screaming and cut from
broken window ~lass, Sheriff's Deputy
Richard Cook said. Afler the neighbor
ran home for a shovel and nashlight, he
said he returned and heard a boy in
another room cryln£· ''8Dbby. we've got
to get out."
By the time Cook and Vista firemen '""
rived, the bodies of the older boys -Bob-
by, 9. Jimmy. 8, and Keith, 6, -were
found in the other bedroom.
f\;frs. Collins was dead in the kitchen
and her infant son in the living room,
botll apparenUy or bums. The husband
was hospitalized in deep shock.
The older boys appeared to have died
of asphyxiation. investigators said.
The wood·frame stucC1l home in •
$20,00()-$ZS,OOO tract In northern Sal\
Diego County Is located between Vi.sta
and San Marcos. Collins is a laborer at
Rancho La Costa Golf and Country Club
a few miles away.
Column Says Kissinger
'Got Hell' From Nixon
WASHINGTON tUPJ ) -Henry A.
Kissinger complained during the India·
Pakistan conflict that he was "getting
hell every half hour" from President Nix·
on for failure of the United States to take
a tougher stand on lndla. a \\'ashington
columnist said today.
"Contrary to Kissinger's statement to
the press." columnist Jack Anderson
wrote, "the minutes of administration
policy discussions snow that Pres~dent
Nixon not only ordered a pro-Pakistan
policy but became furious \Vilh his
subordinates for no! laking a slronger
sland against India "
·"J am getting hell every half hour fron1
the President that we are not being tough
enough on India,"' Anderson said Kiss-
inger complained at a Dec. 3 strategy
session.
For nearly n week . Anderson has
disclosed in his column. "The \Vashington ~lerry-Go--Round". secret minutes or
alleged conversations a1nong Kissinger .
Central Intelligence Agency and State
Furry Stowa,vay
Causes $10,000
111 Lost AssetS
ADEN (U Pl l -A mouse which hid in
a sack of cucumbers bound for InIDa has
co.i1...,,..East African Airways about $10.000.
airlln~fficlals estimated today .
They said the animal jumped out of the-
sack when the East African VCIO jet had
taken off from Nairobi. then disappeared
into a l'letwork of the aircrafl"s vital in·
temal wiring.
All efforts by ere\\' members to draw
the mouse out failed. So the aircraft
touched down Saturday al Aden. leaving
mo re th an 100 passengers. lhen returned
to NiarobL A relief plane picked up the
passengers and 0e\V lhC'm On lO Bombay.
Offic;ials said the cost represented ex.-
Ira fuel expenses, tr a v e I ac-
commodations for the passengers, in·
Department officials relating to Nix:on's
orders during the 14-day war.
Askal whether the \Vhile House
. ordered. an investigation to determine
who leaked the documents to Ander~n.
Gerald L. Warren. acting pres s
secretary, said, "l will nol discuss it."
In today's column, Anderson ·said: ·'We
can now document from secret White
!louse minutes our charge that Presiden·
tia\ braintruster Henry Ki ssinger lied to
reporters when he told them the Nixon
administration wasn 't anti-India.''
Three days after the Dee. 3 meeling
\Vhere Kissinger complained. '·Kissinger
directed that henceforth we show a cer-
tain coolness to the Indians". Anderson
quoted from the documents. "The Indian
ambassador is nol lo be treated at too
high a level."'
The secret minutes were excerpted, ac-
cording to Anderson, from an almost dai·
ly review or the lndia·Pakistani connict
by the Washington Special Action Group.
a crisis team in the National Security '
Council.
Tltief Picked
Wrong Coat
MILWAUKEE (AP / -Polict Lt.
John F. Halaska's evening out wilh
his wife had been spoiled Thursday
when someorie 1valked out of a
restaurant wilh his r1ew $125
o\·ercoat.
Halaska was in a good mood
again Sunday, relating bow his coat
had found its way to hill desk Satur·
day night. .
WhUe booking a man whom other
officers had brought in, Halaska
glanced up. blinked and said to the
man "I 'II thank you to return my
coat."
The man blinked back, then
ihrugged and said. "It's too big
any~·ay."
spection and repairs on the aircraft. ----'====-=======-c::
Back to Capital
FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. \vho 1narked his 77th birthday on New
Year's Day, ended a five-day mid-winter vacation _in Florida wi~h a
flight aboard President Nixon's plane back to \Vash1ngton. The d1rec·
tor accompanied the President to Key Biscayne.
Pe1·u Calls Off Searcl1
For Plane Carrying 92
Ll~1A (UPI! -Authorities called off a
search by land Sunday of a Peruvian na·
tional airlines plane ¥:ith 92 persons
aboard. includi11g five Americans. that
has been missing for nine days on a fUght
over the jungled mountains of central
Peru, government. sources said.
Tbe Hwch' by air for tile four-engine
Electra turboprop of Lineas Aereas Na·
cionales (LANSAJ will rontinue. the
sourcell said.
The flane with 86 passengers and a
ere"' o six was on a Dec. 24 flight from
Lima to Iquitos. 650 miles northeast of
the capital. when It d i s a pp eared
some¥,rhere between Lima and Pucallpa.
292 miles northeast of Lima. It had been
scheduled to land at Pucallpa.
Reports from Pucallpa, a jungle to1vn,
said the last police rescue squads \\'hich
bad gone out to search for the plane
returned to the town Sunday.
An air..search through most of the day
failed to find any trace of !he airliner.
'Pbe Americans aboard the flight werr
attached to tbe Summer Language
Institute. an educational institution for
the Amamn Indiana in Peru.
The Americaru: have been identified as
Harold Davis of Ilarrison. i\1aine, a
linguist who has been working with the
institute for seven years: Roger
Hedges, 37. and his wife. Margery. 34, of
Tacoma, Wash., both professors at the in·
stilute: David Erickson, 18. of Min·
neapo\is, Minn.: and Nathan Lyon, 13, an
Amerkan born in Peru.
Mru>L . of . the oth~ . passengers were
.Peruvian students.returning home for the
Christmas hblldays.
Bill to Shorten
Legislative Year1
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -State Sen.
George Moscone (0-San Francisco) said
hi! planned to introduce a resolution to-
day limiting the 1972 legislative session to
six months ending June 30.
He said in a television intervie·w Sun·
day that another session like the 1971'11
record 12-month one would be "one of the
most devastating things I can imagine."
"lt seems to me that anything that ha11
lo be done can be. done Within that six
month period,·• Moscone said.
CHlJN KJJIO
I
MontUr. Jat1vary 3, 19n DAIL V Pllllf JI
Charges 'Failures'
Hartke to Run
In NH Primary
MANCHESTER. N.H . (UPI) -S.n.
Vance Hartke (0-lTid.l, saying America
aod the world cannot afford any more of
President Nixon's "fallure s1" announced
today be will run In New Hampshire's
lofarch 7 presidential preference primary,
llartke made his annotmcemeTit at the
exact spot where 12 years ago John F.
Kermedy announced he would run for
presldent.
Speaking lo newsmen in the lobby of
the Sheraton-Carpenter Hotel. Hartke
said "the American people and lhe world
cannot afford four more years of Rkhard
Nlx:on's fal\ures .''
He said the American people ''deser\"&
1omething better than half measures
grounded on hnlf truths. duplicity, con·
fusion and deceit .
"The tin1e has come lo slop insulting
our national intelligence,'• he said.
"It's time to tell the ln.ilh to the pe-Ople
find deal with our problems forthrightly
and realistically.''
lie said he will campaign actlvely \11
New Hampshire and ··1 1vill win.''
Hartke said that ir the Democratic
Party expects to receive a mantle of
leaderiihip it had better start leading. The
Democratic Party is entiUed to have a
candidate ready to lead the fight , he said,
•·and I am ready."
An aide saJd Sunday students in the
past week gathered signatures from
about 3,000 registered voters on
Police Report
Italy Ne'v Year
'Like Wartime'
ROME (UPI) -A Rome doctor said
1,Wl fingers were amputattd and police.
s&kt at least 2,000 perso111 were injured in
a ftt and wild weekend of Ne-w Year's
celebraUons. Newspapeni said it was ll~e
wartime Italy.
Romans and Neapolitans used up tons
of fireworks, much of it illegal, and lit up
the skies of their · cities for hours.
Genoese drank more than ollf! million
bottles of wine. The girls of t-.1atera 1el
their hair go stringy and knotted.
' That waa Jan. I and it was still a chief
topic of coffee bilor conversation today,
more than 41 houri after the big blowout.
"Nol so much a resUve report of New
Year's, more a tragk: war bulletin," said
the Milan newspaper .COrrlere Della Sera
in reporting what happened as 1972 ar·
rived.
What h·appened, police said, was this:
Seven person& were killed in incidents
blamed. on firewor~ or gWlfire. by
celebrants. At least 2,000 peraons were
Injured, 22.0 of them hospitalized hi Rome
and another 203 hospitalized in Naples.
Dozens of Cires were set by exploding
fireworU. ,
A Roman doctor estimated that
fireworka caused the amputation of 1,000
fingers across the rountry. l>ouns more
vidlma were reP.Orted suffering severe
eye damage or partial bllndnels.
In the deep south area of Matera, girls
did not comb theJr hair Jan. 1 because
tradition says if they lose a single hair on
New Years Day,· they will not marry.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • •
nomlnatlng petitions which will be rued
with the !ccretary of state's office kt
Concord. * i.· '{.{
Conservative
GOP Solon
Eyes Primary
C6NCORD. N.~I. (UPI J -Rep. John
~1. Ashbrook t l~-OhioJ , sa id today he had
half !he signatures needed to file in the
New llampshire presidential primary and
enou gh rnoney to mount a strong canl·
paign .
Flanked by abouL25 youths -1nw.ny of
the1n 1nembers of the conservative
Young An1ericans for F'reedom -
Ashbroo k 1old a news conference he
111ould like to grl 15 to 20 percent of the
Hepublican \'Ole in the r-.1arch 7 primary
11•hlch kicks off the nation's presidenUal
runoffs.
'"\\'e might gel more than that," he
said. "We have enough money to mount a
strong campaign in Ne\v Hampshire.
"I plan to spend more than 20 days ~n
the state perSOJlally campalgn\ng."
Ashbrook said he could spend up to
$100,000 in lhe one-state campaign.
He annowx:td his presidential C.,,..
didacy IBSt Wtdnesday, saying he hoped
to head off the leftward drift of the Nlzon
administration.
"I think we expected a wide difference
between this admJnlstrallon and previous
ones." he told the news conference in the
senate chamber of the State House. "\Ve
dldn 'I gel It.
"This admln:istr1tion has continued
almost In lock-step y,•Jth previous ad-
ministrations. _Business as usual in
Republican politics lsn't good enough, as
far as we're cancemed."
The Ohio C1lngressman said he wanled
to give Republlcan conservative! -
whom he sald were the ma1ority of the
party -an allernatire lo Nixon 's
policies.
Big Chug-a-lug
Proves Deadly ·
LOS ANGEL~S (UPI) -FrlendS'
of Robert Majors, 25, doubted his•
claim at a party New Year's day~
that he could drain a fifth of scotch
in one drlnt.
Majors aod hla audieoce went out
on the front. lawn or Ule house,
where he drani: nearly an entire
botUe of whiskey without 1-0l'+'ering
it from his lips.
Then he staggered inlo the house,
collapsed and died . He l'+'as pro-
nounced dead at Broadway
Hospital.
'
See ho'v eaay it 1s no"·. to make delicious Oriental Dinners .•• in yo\ir skillet ..• In a matter of minutes? And you 1et lo choose
Cho\\' Mein, Egg Foo Young, Chop Suey or SUkiyaki .•. at El Rancho'111pect&.cularly low price!
'1 OVEN Meat Balls ..... ~~~ .... 89fb LIQUID 4 Sego ........ ~~~~...... for $1
El Rancho's O\\'n blend or lean ground meats, deliciously seasoned!
... ~19?. A d S k U.S.D.A. ge tea s .. ~.
llellciou~ly l£lnd!'r ... more flRvorful ••. because t.h~y·re naturally ared!
Cubes of Beef for fondue .................... '1.89 11.
Lean and lender,,. ready lo be cooked rigllt at lhc table:
Lean Grouncf Beef .................................... 79~
Alwaya freoll .•• to offer you Ille flavor tltat make& a dirf ere nee !n meala I'
' Pri.ctlintf/tetM011.,Tu'8 .. Wcd ... ,Jan .. !,4,5
No iaJ.u to d~n l;r1
Bat too mucll during; Ille holidays? ... Try S.iO .•. all flAvors. 10 oz. can•
S • FACIAL 2ftc cott1es ........ ~~. . . . . . 7
lt'a the &eat0n !or 1ni!nts and sneezes! ••. and Scottie& are :sirong! 200 cl
Fresh Hawaiian Pineapple ......................... 19~
S1!1·ve ripe navorlul 1licea tor the dessert in your Oriental menu!
Quip Puddings and Gels ......................... ~ '"' '1
Two pla1tic cups in a 6 oz. pkg. I • , . So euy to aerv• ••• or pack in lunchec
ARCADIA :\ ";·• H C''"R' ID· '',1,1 P.ASA~ENA: 11 '.' SOUTH PASADENA : ,ll/i1I· HUNflNGTON BEA CH: :1,1111i NEWPORT BEACH : 7117 ~!•µOf~ Bl•O .. ~
t ~.:1'r.r1a Ce·1e. J~O Wt1. Cr 10 JC: B.,1 l·rrior.' .1r1r1 H11n!1nR l011 01 · Warner and A l~on~u1r B~,!ld 'lj Jlk Lentrr ~J:,i l1•t!J1ulf 01 [.1~tb\11ll ~1IL~r.e Crnte1
I
ll
j
f OAll V PILOT t.t~, JMIUlf'Y l , 1972
Nixon Hints
Agnew Still
On Ticket ..
WASHINGTON (AP ) -Hinting broad·
}y be wiU uek rHlecUon with. Spiro T.
Agnew as his ruMlng mate, President
Nixon has given Amerjcans a glimpse at
a campaign-ye ar platlonn built on hiJ
moves for peace abroad and a healthier
economy at home.
In an hour·long nationally televised In-
terview Sunday night, NiJ:on said he will
announce by Jan. 14 his decision on run-
ning for another term, and added he &eel
no reason at pre3ent te "break up a win-
ning combination" by dumping Vice
President Agnew,
Res poodiJJf to questions of CBS cor·
1espondent""Dar·Rinrer as tney ·s-arm----
lhe White House OvaJ Office, Nizon said :
'
-The rote of withdrawing U.S. troops PRESIDENT NIXON, _NEWSMAN RATH~R CHAT BEFORE PROGRAM
from Vietnam will continue at present -· Still Photographer1 Could Not Film Actual Interview
or perhaps acc.ele:ated -levels in early peace in th~ year 1wrZ, we are going to shlpments to Egypt and ''we will not l!m. "Uut he 1nd1cated that a residual 1 .. .
force of 25,000 to 35,000 Americins would bring the unemployment rate be ow" the allow the •• , mtlilary balance in the
1tay until priaoner1 of wa.c are freed. 5.8 percent average of the nonwar years Mideast to be shifted " against Israel,
.-He will c.u( drastically the coverage in·the-·d~ade of thi 1§6os. whlch'is seeking more U.S. Phantom jets.
ot his wage price rent controls. this year -He will not allow the Communists to -Negotiations still are under way at
if they conttnue to-aucceed in trimming gai n "any bargaining advantage due to various levels to free Vietnam POWs.
the rite of inflation, bllt aome contml.L my de.sire to allec~ our election cam-This will -be diacussed when he goes to
may ~ce,ond 1172 to keep the paign" when he travels to Pe~g and. Peking ud Moscow. and recent Chinese
economy cool. · Moacow for election-year· summit talks. release of two Americans offers ''one
-As the nit.Ion moves "from war to -The Soviet Union has escalated ann1 sllihtly hopeful note."
Rockies Get 4-inch Snow
Arctic Air Rushes Into Arizona, Northern Texas
CaHfonaia
Ntw Y11r'1 resolutlen1 for lt72 10-
1:11r111t1¥ didn't h1du6t e!Y!llCI IOUll!et'11
C1lltor11 l1 1 lli'tlk from Ill old nemul1
Coa1tal
Sun11¥ lod1¥. l l•hl v1rl1bl1 wlfld1 1111111 llnd mornl n• houri becOfrl!ng w1srerl¥ I lo 16 k110l1 In 11ternoon1 today Ind Tu~•Y. Hleh lod1v 55.
<"l1sr11 '""'""'"ure1 ·~n•1 fro"' l5 10 61. lnllfld lfff>Ptlr1turn r111e1 from lO
lo 12. W1ter lt mPttr1h;r1 .S•.
Sun, Moon, Tides
l'irat Hiqh F irst 1-S.C:Otld low
Sun rl1ts
Moon rllll
MONDAY
T Ul:SOAY
10·4111'1\. 5 3 '51 I .I'll !.!
.S:U p,m, -<11
•·!O a m, Sa l• •·!! pm. t· n 1..... s111 t :M 1.m.
Nike Surplus
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
-~
No Partisan Activities
r •
Until August-President
...
WASHINGTON (AP) -Here ore teJr.
tual highllgbta of President NIJon'• CBS
interview SUnday night:
"Before the 14th of Jahuary, I wW have
to matt a decision and announce that
decision w_!!.h regard to my candidacy,
because that ls the Ume I will have to
decide whether to enter the New
Hampshlre primary, I will say that I
hive deckted already what I will do dur-
ing the period of the campaign.
"What.ever my decision, I have decided
that I will engage in no public partisan
activities until after the Republican con-
vention. If I make the decision to become
a candidate . . . the man who is best
-qualtfted"'lo nm "lbr<:ampaign .. ts Atty.
Gen. Mitchell.
"Most aasume that a man who ha1
served in the office of president will be a
candidate for re-election if the Const.itu·
tion allows him to do !IO. You may recall,
how~vtr, that President Johnson, when
he was faced with this difficult choice,
decided not to be a candidate. I do not
anticipate that events such as led Presi-
dent Johnson to his decision may affect
my declslon-
"With regard to the vice presidency,
the dec!Jlon will be made at the con-
vention as will be the case for the can-
didate for president.
"To give you an inkling as to my own
thinking with l'!gard to that decision and
if I em • candidate, I obviously will
have something to say about it , my view
is that one should not break up a winning
combination. I believe that the vice presi-
dent has handled his d i f I i c u l t
assignments with dignity , with courage.
He has, at times, been a man of con-
troversy, but when a man has done a
good job in a position, when he has been
part of a winning team, I believe that he
should stay on the team.
Q. On everyone's mind is the resump-
tion of the widespread bombing of North
Vietnam .
A. I said that in the event that the
enemy stepped up its infiltration, or
engaged in other activities which im·
periled . in my opinion, our remaining
forces as our forces were becoming Jess,
that I would take action to deal with the
situation . The enemy did step up its in-
filt ration. Under those circumstances. I
had no other choice but to bomb, in' this
case. selected military targets and supply
buildup areas.
"Well before Jhe first ol February. I
will make another withdrawal an·
nouncement. OtJr withdrawal will con-
tinue on schedule, at least at the present
rate, possibly at somewhat a larger rate.
"As far as American invol vement ls
concerned, we are still pursuing the
negotiating track. In the event that no
progress is made on the negotiating
fronl, then we will have to continue on
what We call the Vietnamiz.alion fror1:.
"Can the president ... withdraw all of
our forces as long as the enemy holds one
American as a prisoner of war~ The
answer is no. If POWs are stil l retained
by North Wetnam, in order to have any
bargaining po.si.Uon...at all_ with. the .North.
Vietnamese, we will have to continue to
retain a residual force in Vietnam, and
we will have k> continue the possibility of
air strikes on the North Vietnamese.
"In the event that at the time o( the
meetings that I will have in China and
later on in th& Soviet Union, we have not
made progres,, ln thla area , the subjects
will again be raised.
"I can assure r,oo that ending the war
in Vietnam , building a lasting peace
through openina to China, lifniting
ten sions between lhe U11.ited States and
the Soviet Union -those decis.ions have
no political connotatiorn whatever,
Q. There ha\'e been widespread reports
that you have agreed in principle to sell
additional Phantom jets to Israel. Is that
lrue?
.I\. We hav e made a decision ~
plementing a JXllicy that I ha ve Iona u-
nounced , that we will not allow the
military balance in the Mideast to be
shifted. Now the Soviet Union has been
sending in very signiflc~nt a r m 1
shipmenls to the UAR .. In view of those
shipment s, as that continues to escalate,
we have had to consider the requests of
Israel for planes in order to see that the
balance does not shift. We bave made a
commitment in principle. As far as im·
plementing that co mmitment ls con·
cerned, however, th is Is not, of course.
the time to go into it.
. Q._W~uld you mlaiJJ -Jn 00 Yott
said, "I pledge to redress the present
economic imbalance without increasing
unemployment ." Unemployment was, I
believe. 3.6 percent when you came in. It
is at or near 6 percent for the last several
months.
A. Unemployment was 3.1 when I came
in at a cost of 300 casualties a week 1n
Vi
0
etnam. Since I have come in, we have
brought 400,000 people home from Viet·
nam. There are 2,000,000 people who .have
been let out of defense plnpts and out of
the armed services as a result of our
winding down the war in Vietnam, and if
those people were still In the defense
plants and still in Vietnam .. unemploy.
men t would still be 3.6. That IS too high
a cost."
Interview at a Glance
WASHINGTON (AP ) -Here, at a glance. is what President Nixon said
Sunday night during hls hour-long interview with CBS White House correspon-
dent Dan Rather:
Politics
· He will announce by Jan. 14 whether he plans to seek re-.election and
is inclined at this JXllnt to keep vice president Spiro T. Agnew as his running
mate ii he runs.
"One should not break up a winning combination,'' he said.
Economics
Phase 2 economic controls may be eased this year if they succeed in
cutting the rate of inflation in half.
But the controls could be in effect longer if the economy fails to resJXlnd.
Sun1nJ..its
.'4 -th1 h11ta Allli wll\Ch.. .. Tt.. H1llon1I WMINr 15 I r Y I c t
1ir..alct1 1lr-!lOrlN'l ll S1nl1 Al'lll
Rep. Williams. Mailliard CR-Fire Toll Revised
San Francisco) says a Nike
His scheduled trips to Moscow and Peking are not "politically timed''
and would not be held unles.s a substantive agenda v.·ere possible.
.04 wll!d1 throuo"' TU.SO.w. wll'lr ou1ll ioe
ID 70 mU11 •n hour In Hml mounllln ·" 1111111.
Thi wind!. WOl.lld bt 111 1bnlDI dllllll9 ·" ,(If from !"9 ~Im¥ w111h1r SundlY 11'111
11w 1 hlClh ot Ji dear•• In llow'ntow11
missile site near downtown SEOUL (AP ) -Authorities announced today that the death toll in the Christmas San Rafael has been declared Day fire in Seoul's Taeyonkak Hotel, the
surplus by the federal govern· worst hotel fire in history, was 161 and
ment. Mailliard said the 18\t!-not 165 as previously announced. They
acre plot, a miie northeast of said remains which had been counted as
the downtown area, is avail· four bodies 'belonged to bodies already
Vietnan1
He ordered the reci!nt stepped-up ·bombing pf North Vietnam because
the enemy accelerated infiltration of South Vietnorn, shelled Saigon and in\""'
sified their firing on reconnaissance P.lanes.
He will make another announcement on U.S. troop withdrawals from
South Vietna m before Feb. 1 and it is possible that the rate of pulloUt will be accelerated.
counted. able for public purchase. ....'.'::'.'.'.:'.'.:_ ___________ ...,!:============='================'
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DAILY PILOT t
Weather Bir.I.es . Outconae
Teton Climber Carries On
GRAND TETON PARK Wyo. I UPO -
Mountaineer Paul Petiold't weathertd out
40 mile-an·bour winds and sub-uro
temperatures on the side of the snow-stpi,
Grand Teton peak , unable to establish
radio ~ntact to reveal the success or
failure of his mission up the 13,700.foot
peak.
Grand Teton park ran cher Dick Monroe
said the Petzoldt party tried to set
through by radio, but the contact was so
poor "all you could hear was him calling
us.
"That probably means they are still on
the lower saddle or in snow caves right
below because we always have poor con-
tact there ,'' Monroe said.
King of De1imark
•'
Recovers; Felled
B y Heart Attack
COPENHAGEN (AP) -King Frederik
IX suffered a heart attack today and was
rushed to a hospital, but a hospital
spokesman said there was "no special
reason" for worry.
The SPokesman said the 7l·year--0ld
monarch had been hospitalized so that he
could be giv~,n the best possible care.
An e:arlier announcement from the
palace described the heart attack 8!1
acute.
Queen Ingrid and Princess Margrethe,
the 32-year-old heiress to the throne,
drove tp the hospital behind the am-
bulance that took the king. They left the
hospital after about an hour.
The king had been ill with influenza
since New Year's Eve. Looking old, tired
and ailing, he made his traditional radio-
television broadcast from the Amalien-
borg palace and went to bed immediately
afterward.
The royal court reported Saturday that
the king had high fever and symptoms of
the early stages of pneumonia. But on
Sunday spokesmen said he was much Im-1
proved, the pneumonia symPtoms were
gone, and the illness was a "quite
ordinary case of the flu ."
The rllJlier said ii Petzold! and hi• par-
ty !ailed to rtach lhe top o! lhe •
northwestern Wyomlng mowitaln ove.r
the holiday weekend, chances were slim
that the climb would aucceed.
"If he hasn't made it yet, It doesn't
look real good," Monroe said.
It marlted the seventh Um. thal
Petzoldt baa led a NeW Year's usault on
Wyoming's best known peak. On only one
previous occa1lon, In 1969, has the cllmb
succeeded.
tfemperatures on the peak were ex-
pectte to hover around zero today with
~lnds averaging 25 miles an hour. Only
ligtit snowfall was expected.
•i1f lt shOuld clear up, we will try to get
'
a loolt at lhem with spotting scopes and
fly over with an airplane.." Monroe sald.
"There is no great avalanche dqet
where they are at," the ranger tldded.
''They're above the heJVY anow areas.
Petzoldt bu food !or a week, and u ~g
as we know he's calling, we're okay."
Twenty-six climbers began t b e
treacherous ascent with Petzoldt last
Tuesday, btlt two since have returned to
lower elevation!!.
Joseph Desloge Jr., 47, d. Florissant,
Mo., gave up the climb after becoming
ill.
The other man retwned to make
necessary preparations for the descent of
the rest of the climbers,
Bur~al Planned
Beside Mother
For Chevalier ...
"""..(---PARIS {AP) -Maurice~Cbevallel',-who
wanted "to go out discreeUy and with
dignity ," will be buried after a simple
private ceremony Wednesday. He wlll lie
in a vault alongside his mother.
Ul"IT .........
HE MADE US SMILE
Entert1iner Chev11ier
Graham in Liberia;
Pat Nixon in Audience
MONROVIA, Liberia (UPI) -Mrs.
Richard M. Nixon and William R.
Tolbert, the president-designate of this
African country. heard evangelist Billy
Graham tell an overflow crowd Liberia
cou1d become a ''spiritual superpower."
Mrs. Nixon, the first wife of a U.S.
president to officially represent her hus-
band in Africa, is making an eight-day
tour of Liberia, the Ivory Coast and
Ghana .
The 83-yeir-old entertainer who for half
a century spelled "Paris'' to audiences on
both .sides of the Atlantic, dled of heart
failure ·Saturday after three weeks of
hospitalization for a kidney ailment.
His nephew, Rene ·Chevalier, said
funeral services will be held in the little
church at Marnes La Coquette, where
Ch$!v~lier lived just west of Pari1, with
burl.al In the village cemetery. Hi1
mother died in 1926.
"All his life he considered himself as
an ·artisan," said the nephew. "He
wanted to finish like this, to have no
visitors, not have his body on view at the
time of his final departure and to join,
with simplicity, his dear mother."
Mourners were twned away from the
gates of Chevalier's luxurious home Sun-
day.
"No one Ui permitted in. These were his
last wishes, and no exceptions will be
made," they were told.
-
1\K.E .. A .
MEMO ••
FROM
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US! •
Remember 1;o think of
Keysrone when you want
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. "
Bengali Leader Freed;
May Head Bangladesh
President Georges Pompidou, in a
tribute, said: '"C'he French people
recognized themaetves in him and
forelgnen found in bis person an image
of France. a partial image no doubt, but
gay and "arm. That is why tl!is popular .
tenderoesa which wilr accompany hlm to
the \omb will be even more touching than
hls triumphs in the theater."
January 3rd through I 0th : .; .i1i. ,..Ji..,
.
By United Press International treason charges by the former military
Pakistan President Zulfikar Ali Bhutto government of ex-Pre.sideot A g~
t.o(Q announced the unconditional relase Mohammad Yahya.Khan but was rel
of "bengali nationalist leader Sheikh Mu· ed recenUy to house arrest by Bhutto.
jibur Rahman, official Radio Pakistan Rahman's party won an absolute ma·
reported. jority in lhe Pakistan Parliament a )'.ear
UPI correspcndent Robert Kaylm'I ago but Yihya Khin never permitted 6hn
reported from New Delhi the an-to take office as premier. ~
nouncement presumably frees Rahplan to Instead, there was an uprising in East
assume the presidency of the goVemQlf:nt ' Pakistan, civil war and then the India·
of Bangladesh. <Pakistan War that created the ·in· ~an, le1:1der.of the Awami ~gue I "l:te~~t state of ~des~ Jn ~Wbat
Party ID East Pakistan, had been tried on I was Rast Pakistan. . ;
Mrs. Gilbreth; 92, Dies; 1
Fignre in Movie Plot
PHOENIX, Ariz.' tkPf -ing home. where she had been
"When my hwband firlt told confined !or\ the past three me be wanted to have six sons and six daughter•, I asked years after falling and break.
how on earth anybody could • ing a hip a~ Mrs: Carey's
have 12 children and continue home. Her hlisband died in
a career," Dr. Lillian M. 192,4. Tea of their 12 cllildrert
Gilbreth once rPCalled. survive.
"But rny husband said, 'We Private memorial aervtces teach management, so we
11hall have to practice it.'' Over are scheduled Jan. 9 in
a 17·year period, we had our Scottsdale, Ari i .. , and
chlldrtn -all planned, I Montclair, N.4t, lite ~ the
assure you." GUbr.eth family home. A chronicle of the family life,, ____ ~·~~---•
of FraJ1k and Lilllan GiJbreth
and their 12 children -writ·
ten by a son and a daughter -
became a best-seller and even-
tually was filmed, starring
Clifton Webb and Myrna Loy.
Appropriately, It was entiUed
"c.heaper by the Dozen."
Mrs. Gllbr<lh. who died Sun-
day at the age of 93, married
Frank Biplktr Gilbreth in
Boston in 1904 and logether.
they plonetred In the field ol
time and motion study, the
developmenl. of more efficient
job performance.
Guerrillas' Rockets
Hit Base at Da Nang
SAJGON (UPI) -Guerrillu !ired lour
rockets into the huge U.S. Air Force base
at Da Nang today in the first attack there
since Aug. 25 and heavily shelled. three
South Vleliwne!e haw _,,eor..lbe cam. l>ociian•crossroads town or Krek, military
aources reported.
The command also reported !he Com· ·
. munJsts hJt SOuth Vietnamese positions
just belirW Uie Demilitarized Zone Swiday
with 40 rouncb of 182 millimeter mortar
11hells. · • · ·
For Your Conuenience! We will be open Saturday, Janu<,JTY Bt~.f~~ .. ~~ 'fi
Sit down and talk to us over free refreshments .and see what we can o'ff er1f*f . ·'
•when minimum savings balan~e of $1000 Is maintained.
@ KEYSTONE . SAVI-GS
. . AND LOAN ASSOCIATION '
• , .,RPaoll JV, C..w•, CMirllH• of Utf Roar4
Executive-office: Wostmltitttr+--.-Anahtlm offle1: -· J4011 Beach Blvd., next to H•' Pennr Inn : . . • .l,1 656 N. Eltclid, opposite Broa<lwar-aH
Phone 893·249! Phone '1'12'7440 ·
• • ,. .J •
•'•1
Watch far Opening of our MUJ Newport Beach'Office.
lNMf o....,_ C..11ty Alip4ftl
NEW SHIPMENT ARRIVES FROM, HONG KONG :
' . ::t-
' ..)(.r
·-tit .~
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~
r "Cheaper by !he Doun"
was a humorou1 account of
how the Gllbreth3 applied
their field to ljJe running of
their 14-member family. The
aulhors were Erneatlne
Gilbreth Garey.ind Frank Jr.,
now asslstint publisher of the
Charle1lon (S.C.) Even Ing
Post and Charleston News and
Courl~.
Truly Distinctive Oriental Furniture & Fine Decorative
Accessories From Across The Great PaCific Ocean
Just In Time For Our
; anuary
Mn. Gilbreth died al a """°
LOCAL
EDITORIALS
The DAILY PILOT
Quite O~en
Fights City Hall
~~*i!l_l~
Com~ementary Decorative Service
-48 Fa1hion l1land, Newport Center, 644-4737 • _, 3375 Hill at Redondo, North o'f Paciifc Co111t Hwy. 597-1359 '
DAU,Y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE
Uns ol ved '71 Probl ems
Plu.s ca chanQt, plUJ c't1t la menu chose.
Alphonse Karr wrote IL that way in 1849. Trans·
Jated, it became one of the great cliches of the English
lan,:uage: The more thlng.s change, the more they re·
maui the same.
It certainly applies lo the allairs or Orange Counly
in the year just ended.
A year ago today, a DAILY PILOT editorial listed
I 971 county problems. The same 11$\ could run today
without much alteration. No doubt other concerns for the
year ahead could he added, but these '1971 problems
will suffice as a starter for 1972:
-Budget. It was predicted that the county prop-
erty tax rate would go up because of state and federal
cuts in welfare and mental health, plus increasing costs
due to growth and Inflation. It dld, by 34 cents per $100
of assessed valuation, to the highest in county,,history,
$2.0~. But Orange County maintained Ila pos~·on among
major California counties as having the low t tax rate.
The same seems likely to occur this year, wit a lesser
increase.
-Airports. "The probltm that simply won't go
away," read last year's editorial. It is llill with us. A
regional airport at Chino Hilla remains a faint hope.
And there Is l!Ul talk of joint civilian-military use of
El Toro Marine Corps Air Station or a new two-county
facility on Camp Pendleton land.
The Orange County Airport problem worsen• as
city and county officials give lip service to reducing
noise and air pollution while fostering new develop·
ments which can only increase pressure for more jet
service. ....
unilaterally canceled the lon&·llanding land excblJll•
a~eement with the Irvine Co. but the problem ™"•Ina
with environmental protection a stronger factor than
ever. Legal problems remain as well.
--Orengo County Medlt1I Center. A year ago we ob-
served that the county bas found th!$ to be an incre ...
ingly expensive load to carry. It Ls even more so today
with state and federal budget cuta and new regulations
in Medicare and MedlCal, mental health headaches, mao·
datory programs -and on and on. UC! Irvine may take
it over eventually, but it isn 't something to bet on.
The accompanying editorial a year ago could also
run again, unchanged. It was beaded, "Pity the Football
Widow." After the pigskin banquet of last weekend,
such widows deserve even more sympathy.
'Maxi' Vog ue's Dangers
"In th!$ age of adequate beating and croweded
conditions in our daily travel, it seems as foolhardy as it
ls unsafe for the followers of the 'maxi' vogue to dress
like a cross between Napoleon's retreat from Moscow
and the women of the covered wagons dodging Indians!"
That year-end quote might have come from a mlf·
fed arbiter of fashion. But it didn't. It was Marjorie B.
May talkinf She's home safely director of the Greater
New York Safety Council.
-Irvine Rench ind PropoMcl City of Irvine. Some-
thing did happen in this 1ltu1Uon. The new city was
bor,_n Dec. 21. Planning of 18,SOO acres of central Irvine
Ranch land bas now been shifted from county to city
government.
The renewed maxicoat vogue replete with maxi·
dresses, long droopy sleeves, filmy ruffles and knee-
length tight boots worry Miss May. She's concerned not
about the sloppy look but that the garmenta are condo·
cive to tripping, to getting into food and machinery, and
in the case of high boots, setting up their own static elec·
tricity, causing long skirts to cling and catch the legs.
\Ve wonder if the safest dressers around aren't the
micro-miniskirted women with little other encumbrance.
-'Ill!!-........... _ ..... ~·~-~~ .......
-Upper Newport B1y, The Board of Supervisors ~MAKIN6 IT SMAL!.E~ 61VfS IT BETTER TRACTI ON.~
How Do You
Pronounce
Prefix 'Ms.'?
. A reader in New Or1eans wants to know
how I feel about the Women's Lib cam·
pa ign to abolish "Miu" and 11Mn." u
prefixes to women's names and replaoe
them both with
''Ms." to designate
married end unmar-
ried women alike.
Indeed, Rep. Jon.
; athan Bingham of.
New York, respond.
ing to this campaign,
has introduced a biU
in Congress requir·
ing that women be
not required to discl0&e their marital
at.ate when voting, unless the same dis.
closure Is reqwred ot men.
11IE REASOMNG behind this Is that
men are called '·Mr." whether they are
single, married, divo rced or widowed;
and that women should be consklered u
individuals, not as the wives of men, or
singled out as "M iss" because they are
single, when no such distinction Is made
for bachelors.
I think they have a point there.
Actually most women may be surprised
to lu.m that the distinction bet\lr·een
"Miss" and "Mrs." is a relatively recent
one , in terms of linguistic time. The dif·
fereotiaUon has been made for only a
couple of hundred years, which Is not
much in the long history of the English
language.
IN SHAKESPEARE'S day, "Mistress''
was used for both married and un-
ma rried women. "Mrs.,'' of course. is
just an abbreviation of "Mistress," just
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
More Highway and Street Facilities Will B e Needed
Road Chief: 'Tran·SI eans Buses'
Great news from the eastern sea-
board! The long hair and beard·
moustache fad has about run its
course and the drift Js now away
from grandpa's mutton chops and
back to the clean, well-trimmed
look. And about lime!
-R. D. M.
u "Mr." ls the abbreviaUon and weaken.
ed form of the early "Master."
"Mlss" as a tnmCation of "MiStress''
was uaed under· Charles I to denote
Women of UJ repute, and later c.ame to be
applied to any unmarried woman.
Meanwbile, the lull c.iglnal word,
"Mi.stress" took a pejorative turn and
From an article by Francis C. TW11er,
federal highway administrator, ta
Highway User magazinr.
One oC the phrases repeated often today
Is the need for "balanced transporta·
t.ion." What balanced transportation does
not mean ls to spend exactly the same
nwnber or dollars on each of the severa1
transportation modes .
A balanced transportation system must
be designed to meet the total transporta-
Uon needs of urtian areas, and should do
thls in a way tba.L wW provide the most
efficient, effective and economic service
attainable.
However, to assume -as some er·
roneously do -that construction of a rail
rapid transit system will be the im·
mediate and easy panacea to all of every
city's transportation needs would be a
cosUy disaster.
came to mean an Ulidt lovu which it GOOD MASS TRANSIT can be -and
atW daet. ls being -provided by buses on modern
(Jn some modern languages, lhe wile streets and freeways -and I believe that
takes not only her husband's name, but this is the real wave of the 70s insofar as
his title as well ~ In Genn.any, Prof. mass transit is concerned.
Brown's wife is known as "Mrs. Prof. Bus transportation is the only readily
Brown," and Dr. Smith's wife u-"Mrs. ~ available mode that we can realistically
Dr. SmJth. ") expect to obtain within the nen 20 years
or mon.
The reason ls that, at most, there are
only about 10 of the largest cltles in this
country where rail npid transit systems
could practJcally be Implemented. Simple
economics dictate that ooncluslon -
along with the fact that rail tranalt Is
adaptable ooly when a city bu cerllln
definite characteristics such as densely
crowded population corridon ol eo,<m to
701000 persona per square mlle.
SO FOR PRACTICAL purposes, when
we talk about rapid transit, we really are
talking about bus transit.
Almost always overlooked by
transportation critics is the fact that the
movement of people in an W'ban area in·
volves much more than the rush hour
movement ol. commuten to and from the
cenp-al business district.
Many who travel our metropolll&n
areas >-at all boon cl day and night -
rarely, if eTer, go downtown.
Surprisinl!ly, aome 85·to 95 per coot ol
all metropolitan area trips do not go
downtown. These are the trips made by
people who travel at right angles to the
radial transportation corridors which
lead into the center city, plus those who
travel around entirely within t h e
suburban areas.
THEY DO THIS, of course, by street
and highway -because it is the prefer·
red way, and reality &hows that it will
conttnue lo be the only way for a long
time to come. In .a balanced transporta-
tion plan, these residents of the
metropolitan area must bt served no less
than tbe center-eity commuters.
I think it would be manifestly im·
possible to provide either rail or bus
transit facilities to handle all or even a
majority of such widely di spersed
movements, simply because of the
almost infinite number of combinations
of trip origin, desUnation, route and tim-
ing.
In the Federal Highway Administration
we have projections which tell us that the
PoJJUlation of a medium large city is like-
ly to increase by as much as SO percent
by 1990 -less than 20 years from now.
DURING TBE SAME period, the daily
vehicle miles traveled in the metropolitan
area will also increase by 100 per cent -
but transit trips will account for only !lvt
percent or the total movement.
I believe it becomes obvious why we
had better keep on vi'ith the job of Jl~
viding the highway and street facl11t1es
that are ~lng to be needed in less than
two decades. Because if we don "t plan
and begin now, our cities are going to
face staggering transportation problems
that cannot then be sol\'ed.
Let us not be lulled into believing that
any amount of mass transit fa cilities will
completely eliminate the need for a lot ot
new and Improved highways. or that
some presently unavailable scheme can
interchangeably provide the services and
movement of goods that realistically only
highways and streets and motor vehicles
today can do.
~10RE FUNDS are needed to ac-
complish our mass transpor1ation goals
-and highway people will readily agree
that they are -so by all means let us try
to find these funds.
But not at the expense of the highway
program with its equally compelling or
perhaps more c:ompeUing needi.
SINCE A UVING language keeps
~hanging Jta fonns to accord wlth chang·
1ng CU!toms, Jt seems eminently sensible
to me that the emancip.e.tion o( women be
accompanied by the new covering form
"M!." for all. The only problem i.s how to
pronounce It; I keep wanUng to call it
"Manuscript," for that is what the ab-
breviation now commonly l!ltand.s for.
'71 Winner: Mr. Informed Sources
And what about college degre .. ? Will
a woman no longer earn her V.A. -
Bachelor of Arts --or he"r M:A. -
Master of Arts? The latter could easily be
turned to. ''Mistress of Arts," but who
could doubt that Women's Lib would
rrown on this sexual flippancy . In fa ct,
what the movement needs may be. a
higher degree of -Humor Quotient.
It's high tlrne once again to name our
Newsmaker of the Year. And in 1971, by
unanimous decision <lf the judges, the
award goe11 to the most knowledgeable,
the most peripateUc
and by f2l' the m05l
w id e I y quoted
spokesman of our
time -Mr. In·
formed Sources.
j
These olliclals, who modesty and
shyness precludes their having any desire
to make news them!elves, daily send Mr.
Sourcu everything from d e f I at e d
balloons to that old miracle fabric, Whole
Cloth, out of which be auto the day's
top stories. •
Supreme Court?" Then he releases It
from the cupola to see who shoots it
down.
LESS SPECTACULAR, but more dif-
ficult, is weaving news out of Whole
Cloth, at which Mr. Sources shows Un·
canny akill. For example: "America's
))Oll:iUon in Asia has greatly improved
thanks to the U.S. maintaining a strict
neutrality in the conflict, Informed
Source.s said today."
his level best to suear coat the pill :
''Inflation will be curbed once for all,
Infonned Sources said today, once
Congress passes the 75 percent ta1 In-
crease the Administration is now going to
be forced to propose: if the economy ls to
be saved."
But on the whole, the news Mr.
Sources makes is good. In fact, the old
record book shows that 86.2 percent of his
news is good--86.2 percent good and 83.1
percent inaccurate. '
'Tracy and Hepburn'
Without question,
Mr. Sources has
made more news
than President Nix-
on, Henry Kissinger
and Secretary of State William P. Whet-
shisname combined. No citizens can pick
up a newspaper without finding him
prominently menUoned in virtually every
major 1tory of Washington.
The balloons, of c:ourae, he simply in-
flates and ~ thereon a musage,
IUcb as:"How About Agnew for tho
Even Mr. Sources' detractors admit
that the new1 he makes Is almost in·
vari11bly good. When he does have to
make a bit of bad news, he always does
ANO IT'S TRUE Mr. Sourcts has hi!
detractors. For years, there's been a
rumor floating around that actually all he
does is drive a cab for a living. But men-
tion this to any Washington newsman and
you're likely to get a punch Jn the nose. The late Spencer Tracy represented the
ant ithesis or phoniness in an industry that
thrives on it, Garson Kanin recalled in
his Huntington suite the other day. The
writer.director's book of reminiscences
about his two old friends, ''Tracy and
Hepburn," is studded with anecdotes that
emphasize this point.
At a Hollywood gathering there was
much high-blown talk among the glit-
tering professionals about what makes a
good actor. Tracy listened for some time
without uttering a word. Katharinl!I Hep.
burn suggested he might have some Idea.
The answer to that was easy -0 just
learn your lines." He got up and left the
room.
"TRACY AND HEPBURN " ~ not the
1v1rage movie book Vi\'1dly 8necdotal. it
is an "intimate memoir.·· as the subtitle
puts it, of two i;trong. int elligent human
b:?Jngs who hap~ned lo be actor 1'nd •c·
tress. The fact they were unalike as
possi ble, Ktnln suggested , turned on the
sparkle they created as playr.rs and cer-
tainly as !rfends.
Kanin doean't Uke the subtitle "inUmate
mem oir," which ls the pubU1her'1. In a
prof<ulon where backbltlng, the putdown
and gossip are a way ol JUe the word "ln-
lim1le" might be mlsamsil'llod. Yjl !he
bo6k Is intimate, u Kanl1I. who waoders
In and out or It 11 ador " well 11 nar-ralcr, describes the professional and
rtt!"onal frltndshtp or the palr ov'r near-b JO )'tlrl, He dOfl IO with lllln,
wannth, humor, OCC!IJionaUJ evm an
unnau.rtns bft cl bll•!Deu.
T DOD Miu ll!pllum thlnlt of
I
" '
I ... The BooJunan
"' . ' .......,.,,,.
the book? Kanin .suspects ~he hasn't read
it and probably won'L He has spoken
with her since Jt was published and she
hasn't mentloned. it. Ll.ke Tracy, she hate~ publicity and guards her private
Ille Jealously. She did read Kanin'a piece
~bout her 11ot Jong ago in McCall's (she liked that ). Kanln based the book on that
making It a double portrait. A kind o(
me~orial to Spence, Kan in hoped, and
their fr1~sbip; the t h r c e . " a y
friendship, or four-w ay, w~ you in·
eluded Kanin's wife, Ruth Gordon, who is
In the book too. Kate, as he calls her,
kno1vs all about that and doesn·t have to
read about It.
TRACY WAS more th.on an actor, Kan.
In emphasized. He wu a whole man: for
example, & voracious reader, 1 mystery
fan who was a speclalist on CardiMI
Newman, Hem1ngway, Thoreau, Thoma: Mertoo.
A ta!11ated raconteur, Kanln touches on
a variety of personaJIUes, Thornton
Wilder, Heifetz, Artur J\ublnstein, Pat
O'Brien, each Ume shapinl! an an<Odote
about Spence. And MJu Hepburn?
N~lesa th add. Kanin Joves her. Al he
tnds this book: "For the sake cl wilat 11
ltf\ cl the· human race, l hoi>e 1"" live
fom.t. What UM htll. llou alraady h.1va.
Leve to 8penoe, Sincerely yours • , ,•
Wlllu B-
Who jwtifies past government
mistakes? Who explains present confuaed
policy? Who predlct.s what dl.wtroul
future moves ofHclals have in mind?
Informed Soorces, of course. He Is
literally everywhere.
Why did Mr. Nixon support the
PakistanJs? What dm Phase ll reaJly
mean? ... Will we ever .stop bombing the
Vietnamese? Well, according to lnfonned
Sources ...
Hett, obvioU1ly, l.s not only a grt11t
Newsrilaker, bu! one who know• aU the answus.
MR. SOURCES lives in the little COID·
munlly or Background on the outald!U or
Off-the-Record. There, seven days 1
mek. he energetically makes news.
Understandably, Mr. Sources could not
po ssibly tur.n out all the news be makM
wllhout help. He relies on thousandl of
1overnmenl ofriclalt, from the Pre!ldent
on down, to supply him wltlt the raw
materials.
B11 Geof'fe --
Dear Georae:
How did the term deeJ1¥, 'llbkb
came from the lforda "disc jockey"
and was -WILL YOU LEA VE ME
ALO~. W. R.1 YOU )\NOW I
FEEL BAD IN THE MORNINGS!,
(S!nd your bolly ~ to
George and have· your trlbulaUom
!rimmed.) •
Jacqueline Isn't Saying
WASIUNGTON -Mr1. J uquellne
Kennedy Onlllls ii belnc urged to take a
Oler In poJJUcs.
One of~ the numeroua Democratic
PreaiclenUal candldalnl would like her to
publicly endorse him.
The former Flrlt Lady l•uctansI.Y
dlocloeed thla to ..
old lt1end a\ a New
York party. Siie
aeemed very much
amuaed at the Idea
cl comJni out ror a
Whir. HOlllO hope.
fill.
Bui olle carotully
gave no hint a.s to
who appol]ed for her
backlnf. . \
Even more lntrtguJ,., Mrs. Onassis left
dangling In the air what Ille ii doinl!
about It.
Oooe lri<nds aay OaUy ahe wtlI do
nolhln8; th.ot It would be "wholly out of
characier lo< her to Inject bonoll Into a
poUUcal Cllllpaip. • They note lht toot
no part In bu lain husband'• eiec> -me.
the 1l80 nomJnaUon, later wu on hla
Whit. House stair u ~lei wlatant
and director of the FoOd /or Peace pro. aram. Alao In hi! curren campaigning,
Mt<lovern Invariably ~ his Jong.
time Kennedy u... and hi IOIDe quarlnn
bu been tagged u actually being "ltonl
runner" for Se.n. Ted Kennedy, D.·Mus.
The New York party .WH al the
onetime El Morocco nlglltclOb, !he zebr ..
striped hangout of flll>eeelllng aooiallt ..
and woultJ.be socialttu, now 1 ao-called
privlte club. The occulon w a a
numeroualy attended by u am e
penonallties, male and ftmalt -most 'of
the latter bedecked wllll dlamonda and
various other 91'1\&mental hardwara.
MM. ONASSf!i..acmnpanied by her
htJtband "Ari," WU modestly )<welled.
Ber red dress wu IOI off with
diamond-cluster urcUpo -and that wu
AHO 0 POUTrOOI, <on j ee tu rt " all, other than a plain ,old band on be< seoeralll' Ollll<ro •• Sta. George left hand.
MoGovtrn u most llk!lf to havt IOUl)lt She setmed 11¥ and rtlased, and ~
Mrt. Onuail'a tlldol'ltlll<nl joying ben<ll. She danced aeyeral Ume1
11 II poinltd out Iba~ of all tbt ..,,. with older parlnerL Ari doeln't dance.
dlda .... be WU cloout to """1d<nt J<tt>. bu! IHmed to bavt DO' objectloa to bis
llOdy, w~ln 1:-lorttnml ol bis drtn for wile ~ ..,
•
Lately, however, a few Washington
newsmen have refused to quote Mr.
Sources any longer or to accept any news
he makes. They want to hang it on the
ahy, modest public officials behind him .
In a democracy, they argue, the public
not only has a right to the news, but a
right to know Its source -so that they
may better evaluate 118 meaning and
worth.
But the above article on Mr. Informed ~urces takes care of that argument. And
111 personally stand behind Its accuracy
-even though It ls, of course_, not f«' at.. trlbullon.
OltANGa COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robrrl N. Wred, l'llbU.hcr
Tllomiu Ktetl!f, Editor
Albm W. Bakr
Editorial PaQe E4UOr
Th• edltodal .... or the lllll7
ptJot scdcs to lntonn and &Umu ..
l&to r..dm by ..,....tin& lhla
ncwspe.(ltt'• oplnlOna and ~
mentary on topics of Int.ft-ell and
atinineanre, by ~JcUne • forum for thtt txl'J'ftllon ot 'our ttadW o~nions, 11nd b7 rirtaenUnr the
dtvl!ne vftwpobu.11 ot lntormtd Ma
8CfVert and •PGkcsrntri on tO(lk:a or the du.
Monday, January~. 1972
i "
I . '
!--· M. Boyd
Not P1·in~ple,.
It's the M~11ey
"tht•re 's no reason wby any chlld!sbould lack a
complete knowledge or lire. since there' Is no censor-
tiihip of drug store windows."
1 Don Herold
'
WHEN TROUBl.1': crops up between ymi and your mat-
rimonial mate. who do you talk to about n. if anybody!
A clergyman? A soc ial worker maybe? Some other reta.
tive? The sociology boys wanted to find out all about this,
so they ran a survey kl New York
City. Lo, they learned,\ that prolet-
sion al gentleman most_ ~&ht out to
hear such complaints thereabouts ls
the neighborhood pharmacist. He's
even a better listener, they claim,
than the bartendf'r.
TllE llECORD shows every 201h little girl who 11at on
the lap of a department store Santa Claus thi s recent sea-
son told him. "I'd like a baby brother for Christmas."
A LONDON BANK tests the eyes of its job applicants
fnr color blindness. However. the only colors they need to
distinguish are red and black. That's wise. Very wise.
QUERY -Q. "T wear falsies. ~1y boyfriend doesn't
kno1v. [)()you think I should tell him?"
A. Only if you sus pect he may discover this intriguing
piece of intelligence for himself someday. In that 1event,
suggest vou disclose the nat truth by wearing so~ C05-
lume without them. And treat the matter in a lighthearted
vein . As you might, say, some tropical fungus or inte6tinal
infection.
TF llE HAS slept for three years or more in a barracks
a! an y time in his life. he's not apt lo v:ear pajamas tn
bl'd f!gain therl'nflcr. Such is the contention of tlie sleep
researcher s. Exceptions are rare, they say.
\\'EAK CHIN -Do you put much stock in the elderly
claim Lhat a fellow with a receding chin tends to be weak?
Neither do I. Still, numeJ_QUs experts insist some faOial
characteristics indicate perWrrelity. Protruding blue e)les,
for instance. Citizens wllh same art said W be highly ex·
citable. If you ~·ant a placid and peacful matrimonial part.
ner, believers advise, dodge those prominent eyes of blue.
AF'T ER CHEC K(iQG out salaries around the country,
th P cnmnuler boys report the average woman needs a
(''ltlc~e degree to eam as much as the average man with
an cighlh grade education. That's not good.
ROOK -Arc you old enough to remember Dale Car-
nf'gic·~ book "llrl\v To Win Friends And Influence Peo-
ple'..''' If nnt. never mind . Bll! in Berlin. Gennany, it was
quite a curiosH~·. once. Right in the middle of World War
11. when the liC'rmans and the Allies were killing one
another \\'ilh horrible abandon. and both hate and fear
y,1ere at their peak. this book was the best seller of all in
that city. Even outsold Adolf •Utler's "Mein Kampf."
NA~I ES -Young fellow, if you had to choose either
Irvin~ or l~'in as a name for your son. which would you
prefer~ \Vhcn !his query was put to a sampling .of collfge
men. the rhajorily picked Irving. Irwin, they ' said. offe red
no nickn ame. But An Irving e<>uld be called Irv, for short.
Th is study or the matlcr indicated most men do not like a
name that can't be lightened up in some familiar fashion.
Wll\' IS unknown. hut natiooal observers contend a
cro...,·d of professional footb11!1 fans lends to harbor an un-
usuall y large numher of whiskey drinkers while a batch
or professional baseball fans is more apt to contain a high
percent or beer drinkers. Exceptioos occur, I think.
A<l<lre~-~ mnit to L. }.f. Boyd, P. 0: Box 1875, New-,,
rort Rrnch 92660.
Greatest Gilt
Miss Margaret Mahl ,
63, of Syracuse, N.Y.
cries while neighbor·
hood children serenade
her. House had been
declared unfit tor habi·
tation, but concerned
citizens assisted her in
saving it and gave set
of keys to "new" home.
U.S. Urges
State Court
For Hearing
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Government attorneys have
asked that litigation involving
a ~roposed new international
airport near Palm~ale, Call!.,
be transferred to a California
court.
U.S. District Court Judge
Willi am B. Bryant also was
asked to let the city of Los
Angeles intervene In the legal
dispute between the govern-
ment and the Sierra Club.
Bryant. after he a r I n g
arguments by attorneys for all
three parties, said he would
rule on the motions after
reading the testimony of a
Administration official who
prepared an environmental
impact statement on the
airport project.
~ The Sierra Club contends
the impact st a·t e men t
prepared by Robert F. Bacon,
the FAA's ch~f of airport
plaMlng, does not meet the
requ irements ol the National ·
Environmental P.olicy At of 1969. .
Frederick L. Miller Jr., a
government lawyer, asked
that the case be moved to a
federa l court in California
because ev,idence representing
•·the real meat and potatoes"
of the case would be most
readily available there.
But Ron Wilson, a Sierra
Club lawyer, said the question
was not whether the airport
should be built but whether
federal ofricials at the
Washington le vel prepared an
adequate report on the en-
viron mental impact of !ht prtr
posed airport as required by
the 1969 act.
Protesting
Planned at
Convcntio11
SAN D!Er.o (AP) -Some
local activist groups say they
plan lo stage demonstrations
at next year's Republican Na-
tional convention her(?.
The 'Festival' perm.
Mid-winter special.
Just 7.77
Spokesmen said they intend
the demonstrations to be
"massive, legal, nonviolent
and dignified."
Six spokesmen for the San
Diego Convcntinn Coalilion
said .Jerry Rubin and other
··national figu res'' h a v e
recognized the local protest
leadership.
The Republicans w i 11
nominate a presidential can·
didate expected to he Richard
M. Nixon in S.:in Diego next
Aug . 21 ·l1.
Rubin. as leader of the Yip-
pic>~. recently predicted a
mill111n de monstrators would
ma rc h at the convention,
There will be exhibits of the
air war in Indochina, put up
near the campsites o f
de m oru;trators, spokesmen
said. as well as "educational
movies.'' panel discussions,
teaching, music programs and
theater.
The coali~on was descrlbed'
as made uJf of students, pro-
fessiona l people, underground
newspapers, antiwar
organiuitions and women's
groups.
()>r.lilion mt:mbe.1'5 said they
would demand an end to the
Indochina war. Among other
objf'Ctives would be an effort
to "CXPQM and st rug g I e
agRinsl'' certain policies or the
Nixon edminstrotlon, they
said.
Reid 9Zll<l Sllme ~tabliAh
menl111 have minority cmptoycs
but lhey arc mogtly In th
lower echelons Q( work.
Limited time only.
Our Sue Cory 'Festival'
perm gives your budget,
as well as your morale,
a boost. Shampoo, cut,
and set included. 7.77
Style cut special.
2.24
JCPenney
beauty s'llon
NEWPORT BEACH
,..~,.._.
)!'ICl"-'...._IJl1
HUMTIMGTOI BUCH _,_
h4,..., 9tJ.m1
I
.
' Mond.iy, J•nu1ry 10, l '172
Mllscle Transfer Success
By ROBERT MlJSEL
LONDON (UPI) -After 1
century of failure, 1Uf'C601\1
finally have acbleved a suc-
cessful transpionl of 1 mU1Cle
from one part of the body to
another.
The lmpUcaUona of lhil 1d·
vance in 1urglcal technique
are wide. It 'conceivably may
lead to operaUons for repla~
ment of the Important
sphincter muscles, the rina:
muscles which control the
body orifices.
Inability of these muscles to
function ii among the most
distressing of human coo-
ditlons.
'l'he·nnmcJe-lranlplllllt WU
"'ported by Medlcol News-
Tribune which said fl 'had been
performed by Mr. N o e I
Thompson, consultant plastic
surgeon at Middlesex Hospital
in London. Surgeons are
designated "Mr." in Britain.
The weekly said t b 1 t
Thompson operated in aome 30
case~rinvolving par a I y 11 d
muacJes around the mouth or
eye by laking a muscle from
either the foot or the foru.rm
and transplanting it to the
face ,
Attempt> lo do thiJ had been
going on since 1874 but all had
fai led, Medical News-Tribune
said, e:xcept where the mugcle
wu simply swung around to
on 1dj1cenl site ond coold
keep its on nerve 1nd blood
supply.
Once de!>l"lved of thla 111pply
It lnverlobty dled before the
teveral daya needed t o
utobllah connecllon with lllr·
rounding ttuue.
Tbompeon WU quoted IS
saying I team of Boston
bloloaJ.U "opened the door"
'Falls Test'
with the discovery that mU5Cle
could be 1lven a longer life by
taking out th• nerve. Without
the nerve, the muscle no
lona:er contracted and thus bad much lower metabolic re-
quirements.
The lranJplont Ilk" place
two or Uiree weeks later.
Tbompaon f o u n d the
denervated muscle becomes
more heavily vascularized and
this increased bleod ne:twork
apperently helps it establish
connection after transplant
and to survive over the
crlllcol period.
It takes about two to three
months for the nervta of the
new aUe to grow into the
tran,,planted muscle, ~1eclical
New&-Tribune, said.
Darwin Theory Illogical?
By DELOS SMJTll
""' ict.u wrtw
.. monophyletic'' theory that
the first livlng cell over
PHILADELPHIA A millions of years changed into
complex m a n y • celled
organisms -from a simple
amoeba-like animal to man.
Michigan S t a t e University
••turalist aays that Darwin's
theory of evolution fails a new
test based on chromeosome
oount which giveJ rl,. lo the
poutbllily that there were
numerolll 1pontaneoua begin·
nlni• lo life.
Prof. John N. Moore said
Darwin'• theory wu "more il·
logical than lnological."
The theory of evolution ei-
po!lded by CharleJ Darwin in
1159 1tre11es the
lf thls were so. Moore told
a scientific group here there
should be an increase in
chromosomes and the quality
of gene material ca~ried by
chromosomes as the e<>m·
plexity of animals increase.
"Absolutely no pattern of in·
crease of chromosome number
from less complex to most
complex is at all detectable,"
Moore said.
He said chromosome counts
ahowed man ranking lower
than frogs and toads.
"It ~lves the quest ion
'Did life begin spontaneously
just once, or many llmes?" he
said. "Since we ha\·e the gaps
Rnd inconsistencies in the
records, H's reasonable to con-
jecture lhat there v.•ere mulli-
pte beginnings of life .. ,
Moore sa id there also was
no scientific evidence of links
between major kinds of plants
and that the study of fossils
had not shown a,ny connection
between plants and animals.
"The typical evolutionary
txplanalion doesn't make
sense in view of today's
knowledgt," be said.
DAil Y PllOT f
No S1noke
To Bother
Supervisors ·
LOS ANGELES (UP!) -
PoJltlclans and smoke-filled
rooms art supposed to go
hand In hand, according to a
popular myth.
But the County Board of
Supervisors cieclded to pro-
hibit smoking from their
large, 750-seat hearing room.
None of the five supervisors
smokes, and the air pollution
proPQSll is expected to pass
easily in a vote in two weeks.
"I thJnk It will add much to
the dignity of our I>l'°'"
ceedlngs." said C h a i r m a n
Warren M. Dorn .
Supervisor Kenneth Hahn
agreed, but recalled the hollow
victory they enjoyed a fe\v
years ago when !he board
outlawed cigarette machines
from county hospitals.
;.They were taken out or the
hallways. but were put In doc·
tors' quarters and everyone
went into the doctors' offices
to get clgarettes," Hahn said.
TAKE THE
NEWS QUIZ
We Dare You •.•
Every Saturday
(
Pen_neys low sale prices.
Just what your budget needs
to fight the winter wearies.
,
Sa1es259 ..... •. 15......_...,..... __
8 tnJck ~ -Solid -chassle, -stereo-· -indlcatot' llglll, 4speaker& --1111 ct«, \IUQ (Vok:9 of Mullc;) NCOld
chmager ... to" .. , , ...... 5 •• to ••
Cbilll .... lllldwoud cabinet In 3 ll!llM:
°Oaftt8ffCW!M•( Wlh 21112• * 11r, "Elllp
All9ic&i" wlh tmlSlllW!'J11r~ ... 1:1'1s12alE!4n' ---·
Sale$169
-l.20 OllilSllZHEIZ .. dllly
lleg.1tl.lf, ...... t.211 .......
••111111 dutr. Saft ....
Penncres~ 4-pe. stereo
component system. Solid state
cl\asala, AM/FM·FM otereo tu-,
FM stereo Indicator light. BSA UA
65 cllanger. Handsome walnut
¥eneer -celnolty. Includes
OOIM1 I *i 9Q OOldl. dmt COlflM'. ~ ++t+
JCPenney
The values are here every day.
Shop Sunday noon to. 5 PM at the followlng stores:
•• l
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NEWPO~T BEACH, Foshio" Island; HUNTINGTON BEACH, Hun+i"glo" Conlor. Ust Pe""eys limo p•yrnonl plan. ., -----.,,
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I
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• DAILY PILOT
ur great sheet sale is now.
In prints, stripes, colors.
1b fight the January greys.
Nation wide• muslin.
Cotton muslin, 133 counL 143 Flat or fitted. Twin alze,
Reg.1.99 Now
Full aim, Reg. 2.29 Now1Jl8
Piiiow caoes, Reg. 2 for 1.09 _ Now 2 lor au
Penn Presl9 white percale.
50% cotton/ 50% polyester. 224 Flat or Elasta-fiL Twin size,
Reg. 2.99 _._Now
Full size, Reg. 3.99 -·-----Now 3.24
Pillow cases, Reg. 2 for 2.09 ..:.Now 2 for 1.84
Queen elze, Reg. 6.99 --5.73 Queen plllow cases,
Reg. 2 for 3.09 ··------Now 2 lor 2.53 King size, Reg. 8.99 __ __Now 7.37
King plllow case•,
Reg, 2 for 3.39 Now 2 for 2.78
Penn Preaie muslin 'Parillenne'
50% cotton/50% polyester. 221 Flat or Elasta·flt. Twin size,
Reg.2.99 .. ow
Full size, Reg. 3.99 _ _N.W 3.27
Pillow caoes, Reg. 2 for 2A9 _.fiow 2 lor 2.09
Penn Pre1!9 muslin fashion colors.
50% cotton/50% polyester. 2~.7 Flat or Elasta-lit. Twin size,
Reg.2.99 Now
' ' .
Fun aim Reg. ·s.99_ Now 3.27
Piiiow caua, Reg. 2 for 2A9 ...Now 2 for 2.09
Qu-.i size, Reg. 8A9 Now S.32 Queen plllowcaoes,
Reg. 2 for 2.89 Now 2 for 2.37 'King alza, Reg. 8l49 NowS.81 , King plllow cases,
'Reg. 2 forS,19 Now 2 for 2.82
'
Pa Presl9 muslin 'Blossom Boutique' llJICI 'Duotone' stripes.
l50% cotton/50% polyester. 221 Flat or Elasta·llL Twin size,
Reg.2.99 Now
Fun size, Reg. 3.99 .Now3.27
Pillow cases, Reg. 2 for 2A9 -Now 2 for 2.09
Queen size, Reg. 6.49 Now5.32 Queen pillow cases, Reg. 2 for 2.89 __ ,, NOW2for2.37· King size, Reg. 8.49 -Now6.9S King plllow cases,
Reg. 2for3.19 •.• " Now 2 for 2.62
Special 3 88
Polyllltrflllech111Ht-PIML
Sanfortze~ cottoneldrt with elastic snug fil edge.
Fullslze ... 4.88
King size ••• a.es
Queen size ... 7.98
Twin slza ••• 3.11
Saleprlcel effectlv9 for a Hrnlted Ume only.
•
Special 2 tor 3 88
Polyester filled pillows. What a
bargain in sleeping comfort! At this
fantastically low price you can
afford fresh new pillowa for svert bed.
Cotton ticking. Standard size.
-
Special 134
Balhf.,,..I td Thick •n thirsty cotton terry towels .. Jacquerd. pattern
or&olld In green, gold or rose. Luxuriously fnnged,
modestly priced.
Hand towel 84•
Wash·clolh 44•
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S .. I gee P•Cl8 Twinsizewithsinglecontrot.
Colorful electric ·blankets
of polyester/ rayon/ cotton.
Special SS
U.L. listed. Choose marigold, avocado or true blue.
Full size, single control ••• 10.88
Full eize, duel control •• , ·13.88
Queen size, dual control ••• 19:88
King alze, dual control ••. 29.88
•
Special gee
Oacrone·Fiberflll II polyester pillow
for the u!Umate In easy care 1111d .
comfort. Machine washable, allergy.free.
l'llnn ·Preste 011erone polyeater/cotton
ticking.
Duck down ftlltd pillow. Full 20 x 26
flnlshed size with cord edge. Old
fashioned comfort at today's low price.
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'JCPenney .
The values are here every day. j
Shop SundaJ noon to 5 p.g1. at th• following atorM: I
I
NEWPORT BEACH , F1slii9n lsl.nd. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntir19ton Ceoter • .COSTA MESA•, H1rbor Center. Prices in effect at an Pinney •tores Monday.
•CLOSED SUNOA y
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'.l'op Earner
Republican Assembly-
man Charles Conrad o[
Sherman Oaks was the
top money earner with
$34,084 when it was
disclosed that Califor-
nians paid the average
state legislator $28,870
in salaries and expen-
ses during the 1971
session.
Peter Duel
Services
Held in LA
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Nearly 1,000 moumei:s came
t o a non-denominational
service at a Hindu-Christian
temple Sunday for actor Peter
Duel, co-slar or . television's
"Alias Smith and Jones," who
apparently committed suicide.
The service included a
reading ol poetry wirtten by
•
State GOP
' To Rewin
Officers
(UP[) -
bllc1ns voled
retain their
same ollicor> for the 19'12
lqlalature, Including B o b
Monaga~ of Tracy u minority
floor lea&er.
Jl!onag..,, I lZ •ye Ir
leglaWiv~ veteran, w • 1
returned to the post during an
hour-long caucus as wu John
Stull ol. cadla as caucus
chairman.
••Ali ' the officers w· er e
re e I e ct e d unanhnously,"
Monagan said. ••No opposition
was expressed."
Jn addition, Frank Murphy
Jr. of Santa Cruz was
reelected parly whip and Ray
Johnson of [Chico, ~
Burke of Huntington B<ach
and Ernest Mobley of Sanger
were endoraed again on a peti-
tion flied Friday witll the stale
su,preme court by him and
Stull urging dismissal of
Secretary of State Edmund
Brown Jr.'s reapportioment
sull
In that suit, Brown urged
the state's hlgh"t court to
step into the state's reap-
portionment impasse~ He also
aought a ruling that the
goveroor lacked authority to
veto reapportionmtnt legiala-
tion.
Gov. Ronald Reaean Thurs-
day vetoed Demolc ratic-
sponsored legislative and con-
1 r es.sional rea~ionment
plall!, stating they iwere un-
fair.
r--
Gol.den Gall
Bus System
Inaugurated
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
A new bus system for carrying
commuters acrou the Golden
Gale Bridge begins today with
gleaming new vehicles.·
The 110 milllon Golden Gate
Transit replaees the
Greyhound with 152 new buses
and within five yea.rL.Wlll be
Integrated with a ferry fleet
on San Francisco Bay.
Operation officially bepn
Jan. I but today is Ille firlt
test of lllesyatem under work·
day trafOe conditions.
Duel. .----------,
The idea is to lure com·
muter1 to and from Marin
County out of cars and back
into using public transporta-
tion. Tbe Golden Gate Bridge
District estimates that 17 per-
cent of the commuters ride
buses, but that -many have
been discouraged because of
aging e quipmtnt and
haphazard service.
Duel. 31, was found dead of
a gunsnor wound In the head
early Friday.
·His girlfriend, Diane Ray,
told police he had been
despondent over a drinking
Just the
Facts •••
problem and took a revolver LOS ANGELES (UPI) _
from a dresser drawer, Dum de dum dum.
Performer
Dead at 91
remarking "~ you later.'' &--'ary n!port: aher-BURBANK (UPI) -Britlah·
Moments later a shot sounded '6 ' born Jane Morgan, 91, a iff's deputies w<rking day · f and ~he found him dead watch were called to of· pK>neer emale performer ln
beneath the Christmas tree, fices of ·Mark VII Produc-vaudeville and radio but whose
shot through the head. tions. They found 8 secre· best--remembered role was the
Coroner's deputies said the tary. She said six electric goesipy, pebble-voice landlady
death was ,;consistent with a typewriters had been sto-in television's "Our Miss
self-inflicted wound." !en. Value: $500 apiece. Brooks" 1eries, will be buried
Duel will be buried Wed· They took the report. Tburaday.
nesday in Penfield, N. Y ., after That's their job. Funeral aerviet1 will be con·
a service at the First Baptist The film company went ducted here for Mic Morgan.
Church there. oo producing police-typo wflo died of a bear! attack
A number cf television teleViBio. serials. like Saturday following a lengthy
personalities attended Sun· "their old y: illness. She will be buried at
day's' service at the Seif· Dra sea, according lo her final
Realir.ation F e 11 o w s h l p wlshe.s.
Temjie, including Shirley~==="======-...::==-------=--!
Janes of "'The Partridge
Fam4y, •• her producer hus-
band,' Jack Cassady and Roy
Huggins, pr¢ucer of Duel's
series. Ben Murphy, Duel 's co-
star, was reported "too emo-
tion.ally c>Vercome'' to attend.
Miss Ray N!ad a poem writ-
ten by Duel titled "love" and
the service was conducted., by
the minister of the-temple.-
Brother Dha rm an a nda.
Among the mourners were
Duel's parents. Dr. and Mrs.
Ellsworth Deuel (the orig!MJ
spelling o! the family name)
of Rochester, N.Y., bis brother
Geoffrey and sister' Pamela.
New-horn
Baby Found
lri Ice Mud
LANCASTER ( AP) - A
new-born boy rescued from
foozen mud' behind a gas sta-
tion here is reported in
satisfactory condition a l
Antelope Valley Medic a I
Center.
A sheriff's department
spok011man said Carlene Kay
Bell, JI, and her 44-year.-old
lather, Carl W. Bell, bQlh of
Lancaster. were booked SUn-
day for investigation of en-
dangering the ure ot the six·
pound IS-Ounce boy.
Tl\e spokestnan said Bell
had brought his daughter to
the same hospital where t~e
abandoned baby was being
treated because Miss Bell Was
hemorrhag!hg from what doc-
tors said was the after.effects
of chlldblrlll.,
' ' i
t
0 WEEKS ONLY!
Now bring in your favorite
old tainjly photograph, and
heve it copied by experts
at a price worth waifinglor
'
333
COPYSAtE regularly •s.oo
• fine 1Sx7 Nproductlon
of en:r picture In good condition
Why wait any longer when you can now order
!I work-of11rt copy ol a treasured old fam ily
photograph at thlsepeclal bargain prlcel If your
picture la Umewom, add~lonal cllargea for re>
torat!on are ul-.pr!cad, too. Your original p!t>-
!ure la returned unharmed. One-month de!!very.
JCPenney ,
The values are here fMlrydllf.
•EWPDRT IEACH IWITillGTOl IUCI
I ,
Mollday, January ~. 1972
State Leads Natwn in Autn Deaths
1S1 u-,_ llllonatloOll
Cllifomll blg~Q)'I bad Ille
moet falalJUes ot aoy atato
in tho 'naUon with $7 ~
reported killed C1Ver the Ne,.
Year's weekend.
Tho stale Ibo led the coun-
try during Ille Chr1'tmas
holid1ys.
New Year'• Eve and early
New Year'• Day look Ille most
llvea. The wors\ occident. kill-
ed four pmons al Solvang and
four at San Jon. Three
chlldren dled near Corcoran.
Tbe Solvang misblp, C11P
Investigators .. kl, occurred
when a ear drlvtn by Frank
Lewll, 17, Ballard, rounded a
curve .. CalliOl'1111 246 II I
high apeed, croased the center
line and smuhed Into 1
camper. The camper driver,
Walter W. Lozier, Cora, Wyo.,
Lewis Lozier, Robin Roberts
17, and 1.mier's wife, Nancy,
50, were killed , and three
others were injured.
In San Jose, four young peo-
ple died when an II-year-old
driver, traveling 80 milt! an
hour, collided with another
car, police said, Eddie D.
"1aes, .sufiered minor injuries
but his passenger, Joe COrona
and three riders in the other car received fatal injuries.
The d~d were klentifled u
Llndsay Ann Overacker, 18.
Fremont; Linda Ch a r I en e
Scales, 26, San Jose, and
Rebecca Lynn Smlth, Fre-
mont. Driver of the other car
suffered serious injuries.
Jn another crash. a car ran
a stop sign near Corcoran.
crashed into a car and killed
three ~rscms. They were Bill
Carner, 13, his brother Ronnie,
9, and sister Susan, 7, all of
Waukena. Both drivers were
injured and so were three
other passengers.
Two persons died and a
third was seriously Injured
when their car, traveling at an
esUmated 100 mll" per hour,
struck 1 uUllly polo In
Olkland.
Identliied 11 dead by the
Alameda County coroner's of•
flee were Paul Ma.son. about
lO Ind Eloutso Muon, lO, both
of OakJand. Walter Jackson,
Olkland, was hoapitalized.
Patrolman James L. Baca,
26, an off-duty policeman,
drove lllrough a red light and
struck another car, killing
Albert Sarracino, 23, Los
Angeles and injuring three
others.
• DAILY '1LDT 9 j
WRllR m_amn
.,~,..,_tco11a.
ton.ET TANK BALL .....,..,..,...,,...._ "".-..w .......... ~...,.· ........................ ..,..........,.
.1St AT HAIDWAll S1011f'
Sale. Sleep sets and best
selling carpeting. .J. -.
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20o/o off on all better bedd!tlgP,!1 Best Seller Carpet Sale
Sale price.a effective through Monday, A . _ Sale. prices effective through Sunday,
January 10 . January 15th
Sale 3995 . rJ,
M1ttre11orboxapring, twin ortull1ize. .. .f. """'
Reg. 49.95. Collon teH and 11111 pad.
mattress intulaUon. Both mattress and
box spring are covered with quilled
rayon in a floral pattern.
Queen s ize mattress and box spring tel,
Reg.159.95,. ,Salo 127.95
King size mattress and box spring set,
Reg. 229.95,. ,S1l1183.95
Extra long 1wln size mattress and box
spring set, Reg. 109.95., .Sale 87.95
Sale4795
Mattre11 or box apring, twin or tu II size.
Reg. 59.95.121ide supports In th•
mattres11nd 12 in the box apring ldd
extni aupport. Cotton felt, slaal pad
and flex olatormattress insulation. Rayon
sateen covers quilted to polyurethane foam .
Queen size mattress and box spring set,
Reg. 199.95 ••• Sale 159.95
King size mattress and box: &pring set.
Reg. 279.95 ••. Sale 223.95
Exira long twin size mattress and
bOx spring set, Reg. 129.95 .•. Sale 103.95
Sale6395
Mattress or box spring. twin or full liu.
)leg. 79.95. $10 coils in lull 1ln-'
:seo tn lwin. cotton felt and sls8' pad J.'
insulation plus polyurethane foam
padding in the mattress. 12 mattress and
12 bOx spring side supports.
Rayon print quilted covert.
Queen size mattress and box spring set,
Reg. 229.95, •• Salo 183.95
King size mattress and box spring .et,
Reg. 339.95 ••• S1Je 271.95
Extra long twin size mattress and bolC
spring set, Reg. 169.95 •• , Sale 135.95
Sale5595
Mattr .. or-box 1pring,twtn or-tu11 llze.
Reg. 69.95. 12 m1Hteu lide supports
and 12 box aprfng 1ldt 1uppartt n1ure
tirmneu across entire sleeping 1urfac ..
Rayon sateen cov~r qullted to 31,. ..
polyurethane foam pad In mattress.
• plastic box spring comers.
Queen size mattress and box spring aet,
Reg. 219.95 ... Siio 175.95
King size mattress and box spring set.
Reg. 319.95., ,Silo 255.15
Extra long twin size mattre1s and box
1pring sol, Reg.149.95 ••. S11o 119.95
Sale7195
M1ttrH1 or box IPfil'.19· twin or full size.
Reg. 89.95. 612 coil1 in full 1iz1 mlttrMt,
442in \win. Flexolator, Tutlex pad, .
quilted cotton fe lt and polyurethane foa m
give this mattress super li rm support.
Qu illed rayon damask covers.
Queen size mall ress and box spring set,
Reg. 249.95 •. ,Sale 199.95
King slze mattress and box spring set,,
Reg. 359.95 ... Sale 287.95
Extra long twin size mattress and box
spring set , Reg. 199.95, •. 5111159.95
Our lu1h "Whisper carpeting cf
~odel" polyuler-nol as shaggy
as 1hag or as form al as plush.
Lats of very smashing colors.
Reg. 7.99 sq, yd.
You teve 50.50 on 50 sq. yda.
Now 324.50, reg. 1375 ~
•
Our 'Ranger' Acrllan • acryllo
carpeting goes Indoor& or outdoors.
Long wearing. easy to clean level
loop. Heathertone.
Sale4~~yd
Reg. 5.99 sq. yd.
You save $50 on 50 sq. yds.
Now 249.50. reg. 299.50
Contemporary_ drama tor.your ho
.•. ou r 1heggy 'Intrigue· carpeting
in polyester pile. Sensational
mOdern sollds and tWO-:tone colors.
Sale5t~yd.
Reg, 6.50 sq. yd.
You save 50.50 on SO sq. yds.
Now 274.50. reg. $325
Warehouse Clearanc
. 'i .
699 NOW sq.yd.
Orig. 11.50 sq. yd.
'Tropic Isl•' ls the ulllmata in
carpet drama ... too-tickling 3"
deep shag. Nylo n pi1' cleans
easily, stand a up lo wear. 16
stunning trl-colortweed
comblnailons.
499 NOW oq.yd.
Orig, 7.99 oq. yd.
'Foroc11l' levol loop style,
aptly named, btcau11 It's as
new as tomorrow ••. priced for
savings so you can buy it
Jodayl Chooselrom 7
decorator colors In this
carefree carpeting!
JCPenney
The values are here every day.
/<voll1blo l<t: N!:WPORT BEACH, fo•hion l•land. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntin9ton Contor. u .. Psnnoy. Time Poym .. t Pio"' -.
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For Tl1e
Record
•
Births
Death 1"otices
l
GllSOM ..... , Yorlr. Glbion. 2Qlll'h T111111'1 Ave,. Cosl1 Mft4. 011.1 of dull!, J1ou.rv , lt Tl. survived bY llui.1>end. Rov F. G!MOn ; da11111httr, M1rv M1•ln1 8•1d!l'v,
NtWPOrl 1•Kh1 1r1ndM111. Oav<d Br1dJ1v, NewllO'"I ra<ll1 ur1nd<Sllll9J'lltr. Llnd• C.
Wilk.,, Ll l Ul'll N\111111, tllr~ 11r<!al·
sr•l'IOI; llOrtn. s..,.vlcn "'''' i'><'!d 11><1~~. Moond•v. J PM, P.c:ltlc View cr.n..el · lnll'i'imt'f'll, Paclric V11w M1morL11 l'.:irP..
Pie fie vi-M°H'X~'Jtf••e<:tors.
J . Cllnll!f H1ckl'r 111<15 Mo"rovl1 M , !.P. ... Cos11 Mew 01lt al lfHlll, Ot-<r 1t ·r
:)0, Jf11 S11rvlved bV wilr, <kirtnc:•: d1111h11r: AOC.II\ Ral\Cltl of Sin• /<n~; .on. Johl'I C. Hid.tr Jr .. (o~I• H.eu; allltt", Edna Sl1,1Db\11W, Florl<Uoi 1 .. e
1r1ndchlldr..,., Prlv1r1 11rvlcn wer1 held
"' P1c111e I 1 ..... Mrmorl11 l'1rk. F1m•IV IU99t'1!1 lllaw wl11>ln11 to make mtmOflll cCH1lrll)llll0t111 pt111• co<l/rlbule lo tti• HNn Flll'lll. P1c1llc v ew MOfluerr,
Dlia<IDfl. HOOGOON
Frederick M. HCICl!don. 21A·A C11llt Ar1oon. L1'8Ullll Hll I. 0111 o\ 1H111n,
Oeo:tmt>lr JO, 1971 Ml!f'l"lber ol N•wPOrl H1rbor E1Ch1nve t1ub. Survlvtd br ,,,.;ie,
\Jlo!" M. Hod!tdOoi " IWO IOn.I. F•cderlck M MododOfl, P1t1tfne, 1111rn11,; R11vmond A Hodlldon. Villa P1r111 f Ive 1randcflltdrtn1· two ure111..gr1ndchlldren. Funer11 ..,.,. en w••• cond11c1eu !odav
Mol\dl¥. 11 AM, Balll Bergeron Fun1r1I
Home. Colli Mew, wlln Rev. Fri!<! C.
H1mmci!\d oflldll•no. lnltrm~•t. H1nx1r
R11t Mtmorl1I P.tlt"RoY
John M. K!lrO¥. Ne1loen1 of Se11I Be6~h. Oltl of dff1h. Dlctmbl• 10. 1'171. $11,....,.,.,..
eo bV •Iller. Mtl, Relph A. C!1rk1
brotlle•I, Wll ll1m F., J1,...1 H.1 Edward
P . tnd Slf'lltlln P, Kltror. s....vcn we•"'
hlld F ridlv, lD AM. Dl~r lrottier•
c n1P"I wllh Fr Anthonr K•llY1.. Ill Holv F•ll"•I.; Cn1J<ch, L11wr1 World, 01"1ICl1rlng. lnt1rmenL GOOd 11$htrd Ccnwteno. Oil· dlY Bro!helJ r.:r11NrY, Hunrlntlon
h"'h. loll·l111,p'iij'[~~~·
FlorlflCt Eona P1ulsan. JO( A~I• L10fr1, New~l B11ch. Dalt. of de~th, J.tnu1rr 1. 1tn. Survlvtd D~ hUltllrid, C1rr E P111\ton ""'' Mabe . PIVl$Cn. of Rock!wo, 1ulnot1l 1111~. Irif K. Kr11nu. ti R°'klord. Nellie &n. ~nv.r. color•do; three t r•" c rrn. Service•. Wt0ne1<111v, 2 lD PMI P1clf•C Vlow Ch.&i>el. Entombment, Pie He View ~l!'>orlll Perk. P1clllc VJ1w Mor1111rv,
D ••c:lor,. REEKS
1(1rhfvn Rttks. 2\9 lnl AVt .• (Of'l)l'll del Mir 0111 ol d11r~, J1nu1N I, Hn. •rV1v1c1 .,.,. hv,tMnd, w111111n "'· R1tk1. o th1 no1111; molher. Flo'*"=• C.
Wooller, CorOlll dll Mir; 11rother.L MOlllfld c:. Wi;iolllY . Lan' Btlch; 5ls!1r. t:Htl.l>lth w 1e .. net1v. o N-Jtrt•r. Ser\11cn. T1.>ft61¥, J1nu1,....,. ~. 2 PM, ll11 l1z krl;lervn
Fvner1 I Horne. Coron• def M1r. Prlv111 1nlorment. $ervlctl will conelud• In
ch•"91.
ARB UCKLE & S0'.'1
\\l ESTCLlff.' ~10RTUARY
427 E. 17lh St., Cost'' fltcsa
6464888 • BALTZ BERG ERO N
FUNERAL HO~IE
Corona del 1\.1ar
Costa !\lesa •
fi13·94~11
fi-t6-2121
BELL BROADW.'.Y
MORTU~V
110 Broadway, Cdsta !\tesa
LI l-31:13 • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1715 La&ana Canyon Rd.
lH-9115 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PAR K
Cemetery Mortuary
Cbap<I
)500 Pacific View Drive
Ne~r' Beach, CalUornta
6"-tiOO • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7301 Bolsa Ave.
Westmla1tt.r 8934515 • SMITHS' MORTUARY
IZ"I Malo SL
HunUngtoa Beach
515-4$31
··-
•
Getting Off Ground
I J eari 11 g Set u11 (.'hiuo 11 ills Project
B\ J \l'K 1-UtOH \CK
Or tnt 0•11, ~ll•t S!••t
PLACJ:.:'\'1 l:\ -Ch1110 Jl 1l\s
Reg1 onul \irpot t. no1v jusL a
drean1. v. dl try to jUtnp Jts
fJr:.t hiA hurdle Feb. 3.
Un l h:.il <lHle the Fedt·r <II
A \ 1 al 1 v n 1\d111.1u~truu1 Jt
(1:'1\A I 11dJ hold iHl "111f1111n.1l
;~1r~J)<1C"E' ht'<Ulng'1 al \ ;ilc11<·1a
!!1g/J &hooJ, 500 N U1<1df!11d
S1, here. The 1 :1u p 111.
!1ll'el1ng will be 111 tllc h1µt1
sl'hool's auditor1urn.
()range County Avi:'l\\on of-
ficra!s 11erc no!Jhcd \;p.I \\Tli<;
ul the hrar1nj.( dt•1'1gn<-<l lt1. :It·
<·11rd1ng lo the FAA . "Tn l1ear
all persons intt•r..,tcd. jJl'U or
con, 011 1h1· proviisecl puhl1c
use ai rport 111 the Chino ll dls
area ni)r\h rJf Y1trha J.inOa."
The FAA lclltr c1111lL11ucs
"The se:;~11Jn i!i tu ga!hrr <ill
fat.:l s rcve\anl \11 the rflc~t of
the propo:;cd airport on lhe
.<;;:ifc and efficient use of the
1111 vigable ai.r:-;paec. ''
'l'lle airport pl:in, cn11cei\·cd
by Santa Ana Rc111tor Reg
\Vood, hs three big hurdles to
cl ear before one shovel of dirt
t:<Jn be turned -financi ng, aC·
{'CSS lhigh\V<lys, freewa)J and
.FAA blessing.
\\'hen \Vood and Project
J 1i1tc101 J11hn Lon1afl formally
1111\C!ll·d 1·h111s for the facility
1:1•1 (~·tnh{'r, Frt:d J. \\1i!d,
t h1cf (if 1h1· Los Angeles FAA
.,1111·('. ~.11d hi!i agency was
.~t11dl'ir1g ll 1l' pnije!·L
·· l:1·Jinc \I<· decide t o rn·
llnr•r rir c·plH!~l' it, \'It \\111
:-.ulic·lt irlpUl from othe r
gt1\ c·1·11111enl ;1~(·r1tlt•.<;, airlines,
p1h11s, lndu!ttr1es and many
u1lu•r ~ourcc~ ... Y/1\d stated.
lh' did <1dn11t that the J.~AA
1 l'l:u!;H!lCS thl' need fur more
;iirf);·rl.~ 1n the Sou I her n
1 ·;1t1ff111 1ia n•µ11111 and added,
"\\e !1upe that hj lhc tin1e this
;111111111 v.uulcl he in oper:-tnon
!1-<·hr1nloi:y \\1J11ld he in1pru\'ed
lu l/u• point v.!1C're <11rpur ts
1·•1u!d he located closer to each
olht'I ''
(11·;111~'.t~ f'11untv Din .. •ctor of
fi.•.1;1!11111 J{11btrt llre~nahan
!hl'l'\Y t.:<'tld \Yater on the pro-
p11sed airfield more than a
year ago when it was first
1nrntinnl'il. lie hased his op-
pnsit1on on ;in infnrrncil FAA
rt.'por1. issued in lt/iO by \\'ild.
e:-:prr-;si ng: concern that the
~liino fl i!ls lan!ling and takeofr
p:i!!erns might inlerfere \v ilh
0 11lari0 International. Chino
~lunicipal, and even LA
lnlt"'n1at ional and Long Beach
airports.
Food Inspection -Fee
For Vendors Altered
SANTA ANA -A "more
equitable" inspectio n f ee
schedule for food V<'ndi11g
machinc-s in t1r<in~~e County
has been adop\L'(I \iv the eoun·
ty Board of Supervisors at lhc
request of t'ountv llcalth Of·
ficer John R. Phil p.
.The amended schedule
assesses fees for the tota l
n1tmber of 1n:1chines
operated by any one bu siness,
rather than rC'<)uiring a fee fur
eat:h individual rnahcine, Dr.
V'hilp said. lt goes into effl•et
Jan. 1.
"Such a system, in addilion
to being fairer to the vendor,
\'Iii[ be more econon1ical and
erncient to. adrhinisler," the
health officer stated.
Fees are collected anywhere
in the county. in or out or in
corporated cities.
He uid it would eliminate
the present need to n1aintai n
lites and issue Identifying
decals for each rnnchinc,
"This •Nill reduce clerical
and ins1>CClio11 costs, justifyin g
the lo\vcr fee to be charged
the operator.''
Dr. Philp said lhe nc\Y
schedule \vas worked out after
several conferences \Yi t h
Cahfornia Aulomatic \'ending
Council representatives.
·'The new fee plan will
enahlc the county to recover
th e t.:ost of enforcement of
st<ite l:Jv:s and \~·ill result in
sufficient re venue to operate
an effective vending machine
inspP clion progra m," t he
health officer slated. The
chari~e applies only to food
1n.1chines and docs not affect
vendors of cigarettes, for ex-
.an1p\c.
At 1>ersc11t. operators arc
1·hargl'd S7 each (or the fir st
fuur 1naeh1ncs and $4 each for
all additional. Under this
schedule one company with
150 machines would be charg-
ed S612 annually, Dr. Philp ex-
p.lainrd.
"When compared lo the
1Jlaximum ch<ltge of $100 for
the largest restaurant in-
spected, ·we must concede an
Jnequi ly," ·he said.
'!'he new schedule:
Person, firm or corporation
operating one to f o u r
machines, $25 ; 5 to 25. $50; 26
to JOO, $100; 101 to 200, $200,
O\'Cr 200, $250.
Resta urants pay fees on the
basis of seating capacity rang-
ing fro r"2_. under 31 persons,
$40, to 2(J'I and n1ore. $100.
6 Fro11t Harbor Area
Face Pot Sale Trial
SANTA ANA -Six Harbor
Area residents alle~edly in-
volved in what in\•estig11 lors
beli~ve is the larl!est 1nari-
juana selling ring in Orange
County history have hcen
ordered to face tri al ~l arch 15
in Orange Co!;lnty Siiperior
Court.
.Judge Byron K. l\tcl\tillan
scl !he trial dale for Le<in
(;eor)!c Phoenix, .2\, and Lea
Jlae Phoenix. 20. of 2130 Con-
tinental Ave., Costa ~tesa;
1\nthony ~lichael Christian, 25,
Cal State
I.aboralory
Under 'Vay
FUI~LEBTOX Interior
\~:'Ill' of lhc (';i} St;i!e Fu!)rr-
11111 l.1·llf'rs ;ind Sf'irn<"<' nu1lrl-
inc :1rr 1un1hl 111g d1l\l1l ;'.;
\\·nrknien ;ire <·1u11 1'rl1n 1~ p111t
of 1)11· hu1ld1n(!'s hflh f1011r Jn a
n<•11 liii~hf'n11<1rv 1:1h11r;!l111·~._
The arr<i. \\)lll'h is fonnerlv
lhr c.·1Jll1•g1•'s c~•1npt1\E'r ccn1er,
i:; h£'i11~ <'nn\·1·rtrd hv the B C.
f'on..,!n.1clton ('111nr<1ny of \Vtlit.
tier nnrlrr ;i $1i1l~lfKl ron!r:i<'I.
\nmrlet1nn is s<'t f11r Julv 1~7] ..
Th" nrV•• fi'(ilit1· \\ill bf' u.~cd
h\' r!11 r111.~tr\'. lun!ug:1.· and p1i ....
);I!'• r.11·ul1v llnd t.:1.ISSC!S-It
\\!II ha\r .111 un1ll.'rgrntC' rca<·h.
init l.1h 111!h ~~ 1 rat~1ing .i;t:i·
lt1111s, :-. cr.11h1:111> r1><:earrh lab.
l\\'O fnur-m:'ln la~ fnr fnrultv
r P s earch. tv.•o i11.<;fn1ment
rooms. <In ailimal roo1n and a
rold room.
Accordin~ to 1lr Bruce
Weber. ~i<;toitl profe!'.<;or o{
chem isl ry, tht n('w lt1 b will
<'nable the. ooll~e to c1pand
ili hi~\tff'\L~try ~m.
Two ~'ea~ ago thrrr wrre only
17 stuc\enlli enmHM In bio-
chemistry. and this )'tar lhf!r•
r.re $5, h' said.
of 521 f\larguecile A v e . ,
(;orona del Mar; Jean Pb ilip
Rau\vin. JO. of 1814 W. Joann
SL, Costa f\1esa: James Dean
Sll·ord, 21. of 1161,Z 35th St.,
Nc\\'porl Bc<lch and James L.
l'vlcDnnald. 21. 0£ 1582 Baker
St.. Costa f\lc~'tl.
Ordered lo face trial \l'ith
then1 on identical charges of
posscss1 flg and selling mari-
juana were Ed\vard Frank
Bonnet. 25, and Eduardo
Ballcga JJcrnandez, 22. OOth of
Ri \·ersidc.
All eight v.·cre ordered to
return Fch . .13 for a pretrial
hearing.
Underrorcr agen ts testified
before lhf' c:r:ind J ury that
they boui.;l1t n1ore tha n 300
pounds of marijuana fron1
n1embers or the alleged com-
bi'tle in the \veeks before the
arrests Nov. J7 .
Jnvestigators a It e g e d I y
found a onc·lon cache of mari·
juana in Ri\crside and the
rn~11ing invci.1i~ation revealed,
llir1· s11id. tl1al a hig hly
nphi~!ientcd tlr ug s e 11 in g
!1u~Hll'.'.s '~ t1s being npcrated
1111! uf centers that included
H 1\ er~1rlc ('ntrntv localions
and !hr Costa .\leSa address of
the Phoenix couple.
Med Ce11ter
To1u· Slated
ORAN(;[•; -~1l'n1bfrs of
the Oran~e Empire Section o(
the Am(•rirfln Socie ty for Qual·
ity Control \vill lour. tbe
Orange County Medical Center
prinr to tlll.'.'ir dinner meeting
J an ll.
1'he lour will be held at G
p.m. at the Orange hooplW,
\\>\th the dinner meeting sche-
~Ull'd In~ 7::111 p m. at the
Rcvt're llou"e in Tustin.
RMC.rv~tions 1nny bt made
through Bill Mcrony by call·
In< 5~901,l. OL 203.
...
FAA approval, while not
mandatory, iii vital to the
airport because such sanction
is needed lo obtain federal
construction grants.
AnoU1cr problcnJ. voiced by
Loman in <Jctobtr. is the need
!or spons(lrship of an airport
service. dislr1ct financed by
propcrty....owners in the area,
Recently, opposition to the
plan has rropped up from
flrea, Yorba Linda a n d
Pl11centia residents.
The Feb. 3 hearing offers
op(Xlnents a n d proponents
lhe1 r first official opportunity
io be heard on the issue. THIS IS ARTIST'S CONCEPTION OF NEW AIRPORT PROPOSED NEAR CHINO
•·Details \vill be outlined, Major Facility Would be Located Just North of Yorba Linda
prior 10 Qf)t'ning the mcetingl::::::::::::_=============~==============------------::-----::::-----:-:-=t(J !he pubh c," the F'AA letter
suid. .../ ...£ ~OCM t JJ03F l\i The government age n c Y s e:....eo
would like those p<rsons :I.
wis hiog to be hea rd lo wr ite to the sounds of the harbor
l he FAA Western Regional Of·
f1ce. P. O. Box 92007 , Y.'orfd
Way Postal Center, L os --'==Ji~~-7 24 hours' a day
Angeles 90009. ~
Orange County airport com·
n1iss1nners have asked Avia·
tion Director Bresnahan to al·
tend and some commission
members may also listen in.
' Free yourself from some drudgery.
Free!
Now you can get
best-se lling
He/olse books free
at.Imperial Savings.
They're loaded with
helpful hints to eave
you t ime, energy and
money. And, provide a little relaxation.
Choose Heloise's Housekeeping
Hints: A magic wand of short cuts and
solutions for the most common house-
hold problems.
Heloise's Work and Money Savers:
Great ideas for every housewife who is
fighting the battle of the budget.
Or choose He/Oise's Hints for Work·
Ing Women. A collection of hints galll-
ered especially to save the working girl.
They're free at your nearby Imperial
Savings office, one to a family pleasb,
while supply lasts. Come 1n now end get
yours. And while you're here "open a
savings account. We pay the highest
ra(es the . law allows on your Insured
savings.
and loan association
"£iiocutlve Olllee: 3366 Via Udo, Newport Be•eh, (714) 673-3130
Main Olllce: 61 Soulh lake Avenue, Pasadena, (213) 795-8441
Newport center Ollice: 550 Newport Cenler Drive, Newport Beach, (714) 644--1481
East Pa51dena Olflce: 387P Eatt Foothill Boulevard, Pasaden1, (2t3) 795-0447
Glendora Office: 194 North Glendor1 .. Avenue, Glendora, (213) ~CM3
Woodland Hllll Office: 19900 Venlur1 Blvd., WoOdland Hiiis, CIUf .. (213) 348-3920
%
A WHOLLY OWNED SUBSIDIARY OF 1.8 BILLION DOLLAR IMPERIAL CORPORATION OF.AMERICA 01!1
' \ .....
•
f
\
)
·26 Yaclits
Join Race
To Mexico
Twenty-six yachts h a v e
signed on the dotted line for
the start of the San Diego to
Acapulco race Feb. 6.
'
Race chairman Ash Bown
said another four or rive boats i~~lni!lll
are expected berore t h e
deadline for entries Jan, 8.
Four of the entries are from
Newport Harbor Yacht Club.
They are Peter Grant's ta.foot
sloop Nalu IV, Robert Lynch's
83-foot cutter Sirius 11, Burke
Sawyer'• CaJ.,'Jl sloop Al·
torante, and Bob Beauchamp'•
Columbja-51 Dorothy 0.
A record number of erltrles
fron the co-sponsoring Club de
Yates de Acapulco are signed
for the l,4~mlle race.
Here are the entries as of
today :
Vector JT, 41i ft. sloop, Herb
Johnson, SDYC.
Windstar, Commanc ht
sloop, Walter East, SDYC.
Alegre, PJ-43 sloop, John
McAllister, Lahalna YC.
Vixen , Erlcson-39 1 Io op,
Frank Hope Jr., SOY C.
Sayula. Cal-40 sloo, Ramon
Carlin, C.Y. Acapulco.
Blitzen. Morgan-33 sloop,
William Corbett, SDYC.
Nalu JV, 48-ft sloop, Peter
Grant, NHYC.
Barco de Oro, Cal-48 sloop,
Enrique Br au n, C.Y.
Acapulco.
Nemesis, Ericson-39 oloop,
Tom Tobin, SDYC.
Sirius II, 83-ft. cutter t
Robert Lynch, NHYC.
Zapata. Calkins-50 yaw I.
UPI PM•
Buxo1n Boater
Stewart MacOougatt, SDYC. Tzchak JJ. Ericson-39 sloo, Boat show queen Angela May invites all boating
M.:lnuel ,Senderos, C. Y. enthusiasts to come aboard for the first 1972 boat
Acapulco. show in the nation, the 30th annual San Francisco
Blackfin, 73-foot ketch. Ken Sports and Boat Show at the Cow Palace starting
Defl1euse, St. FYC. Friday. The show runs through Jan. 16 and fea·
Alert, 60-ft. ketch , John Dee, tures all that's new in boating. SDYC. ~~~~~~~~~~...:::..~~~~~~~-
Thalia TV. Cal-0 sloop, John
Barbee, SDYC.
Rainy Day. 33-ft. sloop,
Robert Levi, SSSC.
Melteml, JS.ft . s Io op,
William Jonas, Corinthian YC.
Iemanja. Ericsoo-39 sloop,
Jorge Escalante, C. Y .
Acapulco.
Pericus, Ericson-41 "tloop,
John Williamson, Lahaina YC.
Windward Passage, 73-ft.
ketch, Mark Johnson. Lahaina
YC.
Atlorante, Cal-32 s Io op,
Burke Sawyer, NHYC.
Thera. Red.Jine--41 s Io o p ,
James Ahern, SDYC.
Salacla, Cal-48 sloop, Joe
De~eter, Richmond YC.
Ake!arre, Erlcson-39 sloop,
Romanos Cardenas, C. Y.
Acapul co.
Docothy O. Columbia-S7
sloop, Bob Beaudiamp, NHYC.
6 Finalists
Get Nod
In Cup Race
America's Cup Yacht
Given to University
The America's Cup yacht
Valiant has been presented to
Brown University as a gilt on
behalf of the Valiant syndicate
by Robert W. McCullough of
Riverside, C.Onn., a 1942 Brown
graduate.
the spinnaker poles are made
of a composite of boron and
caroon.
B~ating Has
Boom Year;
Sails Soar
Valiant was one ol Uiree U.
meter yachts involved in the
competition to represent the
United States in the 1970
defense of the America 's Cup,
the world's most prestiglou.s
sailing competition.
Or. Donald lo'. Hornig, presi· If any doubt remained about
dent of !li:<!.W. !!e<:.ePl«l the the growth in the popularity or
gilt !or the University and boating in the U.S. it would be
said a decision will be made ~dispelled by year~nd statistica
later on what use wlll be made of the sleek sailing yacht. compiled by the NaUop,al
Valiant was d._,lgned by Association ol Engine ll!1d
OUn J. Stephens, who also Boat Manufacturers and the
designed successful CUp def en-Boating Industry AssociaUOns.
dera Columbia ( l 9 5 8 ) , It should come as no
COnsteDatJon (1664) and surprise to boating bulls in
Intrepid (1767). The 12-rneter Newport Beach and other
Six finalists have been nam-was built by Robert F. Southland yachting centers
ed to the 10.-man roster of the Derecktor of Mamaroneck, N. that the repart shows a .sharp
Congressional Cup match rac-Y. increase in the number of
I · so ed b l.<>ng In la.st year's America's Cup 1allboats. Sailboats without ng series spon r y competlUon, Valiant raced Beach Yacht Club. The series auxiliary powr n u m b e r
is scheduled for next March. against two other yachts, 643,000, outSEripping inboard·
Congressional CUp chairman Intrepid and Heritage , in a powered boats -including
Barney Flam announced that preliminary serie!, observa· aalling auxiliaries.
Bob Mosbacher world cham· tion trials and the final selec· tlon trials. As of Jan. l, 1972, there will
pion Sollng Class skipper; lntr "d bo b the be roughJy 8,981,000 recrea·
Wl·111·am S. W1'dnall, Com· epl was c !en y America's Cup Committee and tlonal boats in existence on all
monwealth Cup winner of the successfully defended the Cup waters Df the U.S. The total is
Yacht Racing Union of against Australia's Gretel 11. broken down as follows:
Massachusetts Bay, and Cy which had earlier eliminated Inboard motor boats, in.
Gillette, from K a n e o h e • the French yacht France. c 1 u d I n g aux:illary-powered
Hawaii, are the latest three to Valiant has an overall length saUboats, 639,000; outboard
be conflm>ed for the lamed ol 63 feet, 8 warerline length boats, 5,315,000; a a 11 b • a t a
round-robin series. of 47 feet, a beam of 12 feet, a without inboard p o w e r ,
Doug Rastello, .ttyerlarhtotld draft of nine-and--one-half feet 643,000; rowboata (canoes,
USC student won wi:: g 0 and 8 displacement of 60,000 dinghies, prams and other
represent the bo!t LBYC in a nni,~.in, • • U aft) z -· 000
f k nd r--'""' nusce aneous er ,_..., .
sailo f last wee e · ht · · I I ked (Many of these occasionally Named earlier were Bill The yac ts tripe Pan
Ficker Neivport Harbor Yacht with mahogany on laminated use outboard power).
Club defender of the 1970 oak frames. Her deck is The growth In small boats la h plywood c o v e r e d with also seen in the figure that
Amerlct.'s Cup, and Jo n fiberglass. The top 5' feet of 7,300,000 outboard motors
Beaston of Toronto. winner of her mast ls titanium and all were In use during the year,
the Richardson Cup, Great mast stay fastenings are in-nd ed 3 7~ 000 Lakes match racing cham· a owners us , ~.
h ternal. trailers to haul them from pions Ip.
Two additional s 0 u t h e r n. -,;;;:;V;;;a;;;lia;;;n;;;t';;;';;;m;;;a;;;ins;;;;;all;;;;;boo;;;;;m;;;;;and;;;;;;;;po;;;;rt;;;;;to.;po;;;;rt;;;o;;;n;;;l;;;a;;;nd;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
California finalists will be,i
selected ln 6Imlnatlon sailoffs
during the coming weeks .
Area aslloffa are scheduled
consecutive weekends begin-
ning Jan. 3-9 for the Long
Beach-Loa Angeles, S a n t a
Monica and Newport Harbor
areas, respectively, leading to
an all.SOuthern callfornia final
eliminations serle1 Feb. M .
In the final eliminations the
first and econd best sklppen
on double ellmlnatlon, round
robin basis will be advanced W
th• nnai.. Cal~ sloops ,.111 again be
used Jn the 1972 Congreaslonal
cup with all boats to be
scruUnlzed clooely for CUp
rules and eque!Jzatlon.
Eat!
I
I See by Today's
Want Ads
• EUROPE BOUND . So
they must Sier~ the
car. It's a ahatv '59
Pors:he 1600. Super Road-
11,r! It has a new motor,
paint, interior, clu!ch, and
s1creo.
• t.AOO 'N LAS.51ES: Shel·
tie pups (smaJl Collies)
are on lft.le. Ownpton
11ired, best SOUtbttn Cali·
fonrta 11hOW quality, 'MJe5l!I
little doil have an ex.otJ. ,,,,t t~rament.
Kids Like to Ask Andy
•
)
annual • January
sales
•
Tt1""9M 0....,. W.icemt •H-7'1f
Ttl_,.,_ Ordw '""' O~ O.lly 11)1 AM. Stmll•Y ,,. '-I P.M..
Stu 1 Price
............................. ' ....
............................ ' .............. .
City •• , •••••••• , •• , ••• , , • , • , • , • • Stclt9 ..............
0 c,,h -I e11clo,• S . , , •.• 0 C.O.D.
My l ro•d'*'•Y llUITlb•r i1 •• , • , ••• , , , , •• , , .••••••••• • •••••
Pi.M Mii .. ,_ t••· MtM!IM dM1rwt ff~llltft•I ~rtd Tiit l""4lw1y
'tll'l'lfl' ...... AH nc ""'" di.,... efl ....... 1111C11r ».• .,... 111 C,0 .0 .'I
• Mondu, Jtnuil'J' 3_, 19n OAl~V PIJ.OT Jl
blazer •
pant solts
The dosh of bross-buttonod, bock belteii
blozers with softly flored pants. In colon,
ploi ds, or stripes. All in ocryl ic
bonded to ocetote.
A. Solid in burgundy, sopp hire bluo, purple
erred. I0-18ond 141/r241/i .
B. Pio id in brown , green , block or
novy.10-18.
C. Stripe in novy or brown stripes. IQ.18.
D. Potchw ork ploid in rust /green or
grope;' navy. I 0-18.
Moil ond phone orders invited.
Ca reer Dresses
8
A
-
•
at the broa.;1-way
ANAHEIM NEWPORT
444 N. E1icli4 1714J iJl-1121 -41 F11h 10 ~ 11111\d 171 41 644-1211
HUNTINGTON BEACH
7777 Ecl in9tr .4.•1t1 Y1
1714) l'll -l Jl1
OV.H<Ol
1100 No. T1o tl11 Sitr1•t
17141 ttl-!Jtl
CllklTOS
100 L..t C..-ri+.t Mtl
12t11 ••o.o411
SHOP 10 A.M~ '••.JO P.M. MONOAY THROUf;H FRIDAY. SATUR DAY 10.A,M.. to 6:00 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON•• I P.M.
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Primaries Strain
Democrats' Funds
J!y RAYMOND LAHR
WASHINGTON (UPI I
The early presidential
primaries will provide the
first tests and strain5 on the
agreement among Democratic
hopefuls to limit campaign
spending so some money can
still be squeezed from con--
trlbutors for the autumn cam·
palgn.
Even compliance with the
agreement means big tooney
can be spent by contenders for
the presidenUal nomination of
a party already weighted with
debts carried over from the
1968 campaign.
The agreement· was
sponsored and outlined by
Democratic National
NEWS
ANALYSIS
Chairman Lawrence F.
O'Brien at a meeting with an-
noUnced or potential can!
didates last July lot and its
formal terms were accepted
by four ol them Dec. 2.
It limits each candidate to 5
cents per registered voter for
radio and television in the
primary states and an ad-
ditional 5 cents for newspaper
advertiaing and billooards.
Radio and television spending
is easily polictd beet.use of
reporta required by t b e
F e de r a I Communications
Commission.
After New Hampshlre holds
Its traditional first presiden-
tial prilJle,ry Marcil 7, Florida,
Illinois and Wisconsin hold
theirs during the next four
weeks.
Only Sen. George S •
McGovem or South Dakota is
eyeing all four.
The Democratic formula
aUOws $522,000 for radio and
television and an e q u a 1
amount for newspaper ad·
vertislng and billboards In the
four states. a total of more
than •t million, wlth Illinois
accounting for abotu haH o!
that tot.al.
Sen. Edmund S. Muskie is
looking at the other thrtt. and
Sen. Henry M. Jackson of
Washington and Mayor John
V. Lindsay of New York are
entering F 1 or i d a and
Wisconsin, the two most
crucial of tht first four
primaries.
The Democratic agreement
permit. '500,000 for the media
in Flotlda and Wisconsin com·
bined.
Muskie; McGovern a n d
JacksoD signed the agreement
Dec. 2, along with .Sen. Hubert
H. Humphrey ol Mlnnesola,
1968 presidential nominee who
is e~ to announce he
~ls to run again after mid·
January.
Fonner Sen. Eugene J .
McCarthy of MlnnesoLa, who
boldly challenged , President
Lyndon B. J-'• J>Olicles
in tht 1968 primaries, Mayor
Sam Yorty of Los Angeles and
Rep. Wilbur D. Mills or
Arkansas have aioce been in-
vited lo join the agreement. I
Lindsay, who previously had
'been contacted, wlll be invited
to sign as a result of bis Dec.
28 annbQncement that be is a
candidate.
The Democratic National
Headquarters reported n o
response yet from these later
invitations.
Provision# or the
Democratic agreement are in
line with the bill awaiting a
final vote m the House a rew
days after Congress returns
Jan. 18. If the HO\\Se approves,
the new law becomes effective
.flJ day' alter it ls signed by
President Nilan or not until
about April J.
Along with other drastic
changes in existing laws, the
measure would apply federal
Jaws for the fU'St time to
preoominalion campaigns of
candjdates for federal ollices.
Even with their agreement
and the new Jaw, if enacted,
the quest for .the presidential
nomination will be expensive
for Democratic contenders.
Af~ Wisconsin come "com-
pulsory" primary contests in
Tennes!e May •, Nebraska
May 9, Maryland May 16 and
Oregon May 23.
Nothing compels a candidate
to enter California's JW'le
primary. but the bloc of
delegates to be won is t.oo
large to be overlooked by any
candidate who can survive Un-
til lhen.
Cease River Pollution ,
Agency Tells Groups
SAN FRANCISCO I UPI I -
A federal agency is threaten-
ing court action to force 13
municipal and ind us tr i a I
organizaUo,. in .c:ark C.Ounty,
Nev., to stop polluting the
Colorado River .
The Environmental Prolec·
tion Agency'• kgional ofrice
issued an order in San Fran-
cisco giving the organization
180 dayt to take correclive
measuru U they want to avoid
legal action .
Paul Ot Falco Jr .. regional
administrator, said discharges
by the 13 agencies "are caus-
ing economic damage to
municipal, industrial a n d
agrlcullural users
4oWT1stream."
Bec11use or pollution, there
Is lncr•aslng sallnlly In the
river and "excessive algae
grown" 1n W Vegu Bay, 1
J>U1 of Lake Mead which II ' pari or the river, he uld.
On Jan. 25 in Las Vegas. -in
informal hearing will be held
in an attempt to "reach vol un-
tary agreement for a n v
necessary remedial action,;,
De Falco added.
Although not a po\lutU
itself, the Las Vegas Valley
Water District was put on
notice, because It is respomi·
bk-for finding a soJuUon tD
pollution at Las Vegas Wash.
through which Vt'astes go lnto
the river.
"W• art ~ lo,go to
the oourt U that proveJ ;::::=========!
DeC~FM"J'," Del F 11c0
Those cited by the EPA are
the City of Las Vegas, Clark
County Sanitation District, Ci·
ly or Henderson, Nevada
Power Co., Basic Manage·
ment, Inc., Kerr-McGee
Chemica l Co., Staulfer
Chemical Co., Montrose
Cbemical Co., Flintkote C.0.'a
U.S. Llme Division, Titanium
Metals C.Orp., Jones Chemical
Inc., Slate Slo .. llld Manufac-
turU., Co,, 11111 tlll Nevoda
llockoodSondO..
THE BEST • decland. 0 Bul we .... taut111
Seven
Sea s
Primrose
Poth
I
• 1anuary
white
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sale
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onnoo roy al family
no-Iron sheets
2.99~3.99 twin
''Primrose Path" in quaint
folklore p•ttem. Gold, blue
or pink. "Seven Seas'' flowing
graphic pattern in fire red,
azure blue and cinnamon.
Motching solid color sheets.
Fl•t or fitted.
4-:00 twin, 2.99 ; 5.00 full, 3.99;
I I .00 bng, 7.99; 3.50 c•ses, 2.98 pr.
King coses . 3.98 pr.
Allow 2 weeb for delivery.
"Heavenly Doisy" bright big flowers
potterend on coiton polyester/percale
blend. Pink , blue, gold ond blue/red.
Flot or fitted.
1.50 twin, 3.99 ; 7.50 full, 4.99;
10.00 queen , 6.99; 13.50 king, 8.99:
4.60 coses, 3.98 pr .; 5.20 coses, 4.58 pr.
Sheets.
-
new machine
washable
Dacron~ pillow
4.99 slan<la rd ..
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A sensationol new pi_llow of
DuRont Dacron~ polyester Fiberfill II
Just toss it in your washing machine
•nd dryor .•• comes out plump end
fluffy os ever with no ironing.
Permanent press cotton ticking.
"Debut" by Pillowtex.
Queen , 6.99. King, 7.9'1
Bedding .
·.11!> s at the-hroad~a7
· MIAMEt,. NEW'°AT HUNTINGTON IEACH 0MN&E -114•11 •f Ort,M• CU.lrtOS
•
-lllO-dat -wllll lhe hope that oomdh'• meatUttS wnr-w IJlllllled and furtbor
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Readenbi\'. p o 11 a pro"' ''Peanu lS" OM of Ole
world's moat popula.r comk .~-tt daily ln the
OA!LY PILOT.
«<t N, E1te.114 17141, lll·llJI •7 f••hlo11 lit..... 17141 M4·1212 7177 EJi111,, A"•J'lll• 17141 lff.Jlll lJOO No. Tiutf" Str•.t 17141 ttl-1111 100 lo• Corrit.. M•U ~2111 IM-Mlt
S~' 10 A.M. t• •rlO ,,M. MONDAY 1'\'IROU~H FAIDAY. SATUADAY 10 A.M. ''" kOO ,,M. SUNDAY 11 NOON t+ I ,.M~ I
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FAiHll.l' ClllCVS bfl Bii Ke•Re
...-ii--1"-....-.
• 'We 're finished ployin' with the Christmas toys.
What con we do now?"
~
Bengal Girl Learns-'.
To Survive in War
By MAX NASH
SALT LAKE REFUGEE
CAMP, Indiana (AP) -Her
little dress is torn, and her hair
needs washing, but Chanchala
Roy is an attractive girl.
She i.! a 9-year-old Bengali
schooled in the art of survival.
soldiers who shot at us. Some
of the p&ple were killed, but I
don't know how many because
we ran into the jungle."
Two hundred fam ilies left i
Barunapol, in the Faridpur
di strict, early in tbe Pakistani
military drive to put down
rebellion in East Pakistan . 1 ...
She learned it from a 125-They b~e up in groups of 25
Jnile forced march, dodging · to deter detection.
bullets and. disease along the Chanchala's family and
way, and eight mootM In the many others gravitated to Salt
wretchedness of Salt Lake, Lake on the outskirts of
India's largest reservation for Calcutta where more than
lO"l'ii'iTlion refugee s from East 350 ooo r~fugees are housed. ~akista n before it became She spends hours in the sun
angladesh., waiting for her share of the
Chan~hala s parents s ~ Y family's daily ration of food
they will take he~ back with and milk at distribution points.
the rest of the family when the . Indian government beg I n s . She has stayed dur~ng her
repatriating there f u gee 5 . etght months he~e w.1th her . . . elder brother, his wife and
They will be ~1ven a little their two children in a tiny
money and. a bit of food and bamboo hut. There is no room
sent on lhe1r way. for her in her parents' hut
But for Chanchala, there are because of the IO other
man y bad memories back in children.
her village of Barunapol, 60 Jn East Pakistan she wa11 in
miles south of Dacca. the first year of school,. and
•·Grandma was killed during here she ·attends occuional
the long wa y here," the little classes. As squalid u life at .
girl said in Bengali, tearful at Salt Lake is, Chancbala seem!
the memory. rather happy witfi.:$"-1ti1'
"We walked for m a n y playmates. . 1
nights, sleeping during the The joy or returning .home,
daylight, moving malnly after to the field.! where she once
dark. Daddy would go ahead played, will be lessened by tbe
with the other men to see i{ memory or how and why she
everything was all right, while left.
we hid in the forest and in the Her parent! say 3 0 0
fields and even sometimes ln members of the 200 famUie.s
the water. · that left the village did not
"Often I had to, nm off the make it to the (amps. Some
road with mortmy because were killed. Others fell to the
soldiers were coming and once roadside with sicknts&, and
we ran into &0me Pakistani were not seen again.
Aztecs Ploi Seizure
Of Mexican Regime
By Pieter Van Beonekom
MEXICO CITY ilJPI) -
Although thl·Mexic8 n govern·
ment doesn 't seem afi-aid of
being overthrown, a Mexican
religious sect quietly is plot·
ting to overthrow the republic
and restore the ancient Aztec
empire.
It's all part of the revival of
the ancient Aztec religion. the
worshiping of the sun and the
earth, and a new enthusi asm
among Mexican Indians for
their race" long related to the
backgroUni! by lhe 'Mexicans
of Spanish or mixed Spanish-
lndian ancestry.
The modern-day A z t e c s
claiming several hundred
members in and outside Mex-
ico City, consider the present
government of President Lui.!
Echeverria and hi.!
predecessors as the direct suc-
cessors of Spanish invader
Herman Cortes who conquered
the Aztec empire in 1S21.
They 'note that Meiico's
rulers have always been of
remarkably white blood and
have generally done little or
nothing ror the pure-blood ln-
dlans who continue to live in
Mexico's most out..of·the-way ..
places in abject pov.erty.
The modern Aztecs are led
by the Tata Ca Nahuatl word
meaning teacher of initiator)
whom they recognize as their
spiritual and earthly leader
and whom they would like to
place on the throne once oc-
cupied by emperors Mon·
te2uma and Cuauhtemoc.
fie Is 11Don Slxto," a little
dark-skinned peasant with In·
dian feature.! who wears dark
glasses and 1peaks continually
as If h• wue liddrtlsl111 &reat
multlludes from the lo~ of
some ancient lyraml • -
Don Slxto llves tn a . place;
which cennot be dl1elosed end
does not grant Interviews.
Aztec emperort do not receive
1111 Jll'l!I.
• Aflholl&h hie followm hove
1iven In lo clvUIUllon by
I
acrapping the human
sacrifices for which the Aztecs
were famous, the i r
ceremonies match the pre-
hispanic da ys in splendor if
not in human numbers.
High priestess is Margarita
Montoya de Gonzalez Rubio,
whose title in Nahuatl -the
language used at all official
ceremonies -is Cihllacoatl,
meaning the .serpent wol}lan.
Mrs. Gon:z.alez Rubio is an
anthropology professor at the
National University of Mexico
and Jays she find s the Aztec
religion "marvelous."
"These ceremonies are a
real rebirth of the culture and
the religion of the Aztecs," ac·
cording to the high priestess.
'1 think thi.s Ls the mo.st Im·
portaot thing I have done in
my lire, because all the young
people I initiate have found a
point of fundamental support
in their life : their race.
"The past which we believed
lost an4 of which we are the
orphans . . • we have
recovered it. When you have
such a rich racial past you
have a great spiritual support
and innately we, the Mexican
people, have an immense
c:espect for beauty, flowers
and monuments."
Sisk Firm
On Busing
FRESNO (UPI) -Rep. B.
F, Si•k ([).Calif.), oays h•
feels busing Jr ocbool children
to meet cOwt-imposed racial
balances Is wrong.
Slak uld he "menb that
thi courla have gotren lnlo the
Jtglalatlve nel4Alld.-l JlllilLII
"°"Id be ...U tO keep them out."
The Frtsno DerMcrat uld
ht lhougbl • chanct In that di·
reolioo may be acconipfished
In view o1 Netnt cban1., In
the malteup ol 1he 1!.S. Su·
pr<me Court. ....
ANAHEIM
444 N. Eu,Ud
f 7141 115-1111 ,
•
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white_,~·
sale
~· ,
save on
fi.elderest
towels
2.99. 4.99
•
"Imperial Brocade" regal fleur de
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bittersweet, bronze, gold, bristol
blue. b.00 bath, 4.99: 3.00 hand
towel 2.59 I. I 0 wash cloth, 89¢:
1.20 fingertip, 99¢ "Samarkend"
medallion jacquard pattern in
black/strew, bronze /gold, sable/
navy, siomese pink, end · verd; an
green. b.00 bath. 4.99: 3.0o ·hond
towel, 2.59 1.10 wosh-Cl~th, 119¢:
1.20 'fingertip, 99¢ "Lustre'' cotton
velour i11 marina blue, cerulean blue,
wisteria, moss, olivene, strew, sable,
bronze gold,conary, cognac, ebony,
white pink, siom~se pink and pi men·
to. 4.00 bath, 2.99; 2.30 hand towel, ,.
1.89 85¢ wash cloth, 69¢; 95¢ fin·
gertip, 79¢-''Royol Velvet" in bristol
blue, veridan green, bronze gold,
siame1e pink, canary, cerulean blue,
bittersweet, show, olivine and
white. 5.00 beth, 3.99; 2.50 hand
towel, 2.09 1.00 wash cloth, 79¢;
'I, I 0 fingertip. 89¢. "Pattern Stripe"
by Yves St. Laurent. In chianti /pi·
mento I cognac, ebony I Spanish
straw I sable, marine blue I tropic
blue I de,ep purple, end sable I oli·
vene I Spanish strew. 5.00 both,
3.99: 2.50 hand towel, 2.19; 1.00
wash cloth , 89¢; "Folk Song " cotton
velour country print in blue, gold or
red . 2-:-1s both, 2.25: 1.70 hand
towel, 1.49: 75¢ wash cloth, 65¢.
Linens.
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PAMIN
ITllPI
IOYAL YILYn
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DAILY "LOT ' J3 ~ .•
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at the broadway
NEWK>AT HUNTINGTON IE!-CH
•1 F••hitJI 1,1,,.,. 1777 Edl119er A"•"v'
(71 4) 644·1 212 171 41 •• 2.1111
10 A.M. t• t :JO P.M. MONDAY THROUWH FRIDAY. $.A.TUR.DAY
' ~I
ORANWE
Mtll 11f Or1119•
J200 N11. T1o11li11 Str11t 1714 ) t91·1J ll
10 A.M. to •:OO, M. SUNDAY IZ NOON to I l',M.
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soo le• C11rit•• Men
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• Monday, J.inuary ' l 97 l
Airline Outlook Skyward
lud1istr y Sees Risiug Pusse 1t{.{e r Traffic in 1972
By ROBERT F'. 8UCKllORN
WASHINGTON t lJPJ 1 -The ulrl ine in·
dustey. hopeful its Jong financial dr~ht
is easing, hall be~un to bilk eaulinusly or
break-even points and rising traffic for
1972.
The feeling in the indu.slr~ Ls that the
worst may be uver . Bui there are ilO
predictions of a quick return to !he heady
days of the 1960's when profits and O\'Cr·
optimistic passenger trnffit proJe<.·t ions
\Yere the norm Jn the airlines.
United. the 11-·s largest £·arrier. is
emerging rroilr"a yee1r-long belt-tii;iht~n
ing program that wa s typical for the 111·
dustry in 1971.
United President Edward ~. Carlson
ended his first year as president with an
airline that had 10 petC'Cnt fe\ver
cmployes and JO perctnl re\\'er flights
than the year before.
To savt= money . Carlson also canceled
eight of Unlfed's 30 urders for $16 million
DC-JO jumbo jetliners.
But Carlson admits •·you can't save
yourself 10 prosperity."·,
The bal;1nce sheets show Carlson right.
United ls nol going to be in the black for
1971. but will fall short by only about $3
million. Evrn this is a dramatic recover,v
compared \Vilh lhe company's $45
million loss in 1970.
For some other airlines, the financial
picture remains grim, despite im·
provements in 1971.
Pan American lost $43 million in 1970
and Its 1971 deficit could be around $35
million.
The decrease Is attributable to such ae:-
tions as payroll reductions. fight cut·
backs and the recovery of Pan
American·s $15 million deposit on the
But PanAm and lls i;islci' U.S. !>Chedul·
ed overseas airline. Trans \Vorld , htn'c
specia l financinl problems.
The major one i~ ron1petit1on rrorn the
supplemc:nlal airlines on lhe lucrative
North Atlantic route.!!.
Added lo this 1s the pressur{· by
foreign. state-suoporlet.I . ;url1nes to c·ut
rares, ~·hich earlier thts ~·c:-ir triggert'd n
fare war.
Another probll'n1 fur P;u1 An1 tli the
facl it has no domesli t route svstem to
feed passengers into its overseas nights,
Despite Pan Am'~ smaller deficit for
1971. President Najcrb ~:. lt alab.v i:;
guarded about the outlook for 1972.
.. The 1972-73 period sllll looks like the
most di!ficult and challengin g In our
company's history." Halaby recently
told PanAm employc!I.
The Civil Aeronautics Board has told
• President Nixon PanAn1 ulumately might
need either a governrncnt subsidy or 11
guarant~ federal loan.
But Trans World , \11hose $~Ci 1n11!ion loss
in 1970 was the largest iri !he inclustr.v,
has · re.versed the trend through clrastic
cost.cut ting, including the furloughing of
4,719 employes. combined "'ith a rise 111
passenger traffic.
The Tesult was $7 niillion in earnings
for the first 11 months of 1971.
Financial gloom 1s not universal in the
airline industry.
Contioental Airlines expects I 9 7 I
re9enue of $325 million. compared with
$289 million in 1970. Revenue passenger
miles will jump by about 6 percent. Vice
President Joseph. A. Daley said.
The Air Transport Association. a trade
organization representing major airlines
is cautiously optimistic nboul 1972.
"But without cost controls "and as!iun}·
Ing no new fare increases. the industry
earnings for 1972 are expected lo be
about S90 million." ~n ATA spokf'Sn1<111
Said .
CAB Chairman Secor IJ . lirownc
predicted the airline indu stry would ring
up a $200 million net profit 1n 1972 .
"In my view , the airlines have es!icn·
tially turned the corner in their fin3ncial
predic-dlllent," Browne said.
But he warned the industry that profits
could be eaten away by a big jump in the
number or seats offered by the airlines.
Overcapacity has been a 1najor pro·
blem for the airlines. A •glut of jumbo
sized airliners, duplication or service
among competing airlines and simple
overeic:pansion produced more airline
sea ts than there were passengers to use
them .
To solve the problem. the airlines
worked oul an agreement in '.1971 limiting
ca pa'clty ·on four major routes. Bro\vne
noted recently that the agreement is due
to expire in 1972 and added : "I 'hope this
won·t be followed by an orgy of new
capacity."
.\1ost observers think it \\-'on't.
One airline official put il this way:
··rrom now on traffic growth predictions
are going to get a helluva lot closer
scrutiny berore any airline commits itself
to expanding its capacity:·
One thing ls certain for 1972-there will
be fe\ver airlines in operation than in
1971.
The Civil Aeronautics Board is ex·
peeled to approve shortly a merger of
Allegheny Airlines with ~1ohawk Airlines.
'~ now..<fefunct ~upetsonic transport. The
· lcitter also helped oUier major car· 1
U inllation is held under control. it
<Said,, the industry could earn $270 million
in Jjn and $36.5 million in 1973.
Delta is expected to \Vin approval for
its proposal to take over financially
anemic Northeast Airlines .. · riers cut their deficits. '
. '
•
•
,.
/ . ,.
the 1972
Biggar's Anniversary
SALE!
" STARTS MONDAY, JAN~ 3
f P11!11ri11p .• ,
• Dre xel 0
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• Biggest Custom 'upholstery
Plus ·Many Others
As in oll 1he Bigger things, quality is the nome or our
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•
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Main 11 Eltventh 547·1621
• POMONA PASADENA
\
I • t
.I ·I
annual ~
• .January
sales
Tht 8roadw•v
PtrtOl'l•I Shoppin9 S1rvic1
P. 0. lo• 2072
Cltr"'intl Ann1J:l
lot Anqtltt, Celiforn ie
90054
'IHH •end me the followlnt:
/
•
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,
·-3 •• i 1 .. 7.~11 of1'E-~ ~·
'l\I "'1 . h ooi~5, "'~OP
.··· ...
.·
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r.1.phoP• Ora.,, w.lcorn•
l:illi.7411
l•l•phon• Order Bo•rd
Optl'I 01ilv l :JO A.M.
Sundey ':lO lo&' P.M,
I Q11a"tity I Item & Style I Slrt I Col•r f 21ull c.ior I ,,le• I
I I I I 1_1
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U Ceth-1 1ndo11 $ .••• ,. 0 C.0 .0 .
Mv 8ro1dwey Number ii , , ..... , . , . : , , : :. , ............. .
1'1t1.. ff4 $11lts 1ir. 11.H ""llllkl• cllll"lfl Mdlllttlll lltW11M Tiit
.,.Hw•v Hliflry 1r1N. AU nc Mntlc• Clllltp ""' ,,..,. 111111 ... "·"
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;
i
l
___ ,
.:::---:--. ""·--) .
• I
I ~
..
I I ~
skin care savings
by revlon
.3.50 • 6.75
Beauty on a budqet with Moon Drops : $12 volue
Moisture Bolm-' o.'15. $12 volue Under Mokeup
Moisture Film. o.75. $7 volue Cleonsing Lotion,
4.~~7 ;-olue Skin Conditioning Toner, 4.od.
Introductory offer: Moon Drop s Hypo-ollorgell.ic
Speci ol formula Both Oil. $5 value, 3.50.
Cosmetics.
at' the broadway • •• . •, • • ... ' .
I : I
ANAHEIM NEWPORT ORANGE ' CEAltlTOS HUNTINGTON IEACH •
444 N. Ewcllf '41 Fit~len hlirtJ ' ZJOO ~o. T1uti11 Slrttl SOO lo• Cerrito• Mtll 1777 Etl"t'' Af•~w• !1
171 41 SJ!o.lll l (71 41 644•1212 . 11141 •••·Ill! 12111 ••0-0411 171'4} 192-JJJJ I ::
SHOI' SUNOAY 12 NOON TO i P.M.-10:00 A.M. to 9:JG P.M. MONDAY ..!,HltOUGH FltlOAY -SATUltOA'f 10 A.M. te 6 ,,ht,;
-' ' --
•
ID llC Ill• Monday
Evening
JANUAltY J
l :IO (J)"1ptt
Evening
1:00 O t ic Ntn .ltrry Dunphy >'
A KNIC Mtw1 l &lll Sny(lu
QI Dmd ff'Nt lift Guisti: Alt
ILICll'iltld, Atchlt Moon, I 11 1
Wl1htta./An161'11 J11, 1St.vt l;ood-
Nn.,.)iild1 Ron't1dt..
Qt Movlt: (C) "On tlll ltMtr.-
D•n111 Ktft.
GD Mo'tlt G1m1 r '1oe.•" D11ni bl lht D1llle1
A r.ri(it)~ftlA l11t1tb1ll
{Cont'd. from ~ PM)
~ Wiid Wiid Wtst
I" Tht Alntston••
Pl I !)rf1nt ti Je1nnlt
ffi) I Jifllll j A R1111lmntt Utt
f'l'I t'-~"~oed11 Lod11
t:OO D ((} Ktfe'1 t.., Htl111 HIYtt
ru11ts 11 plxlt ·lsh Kl!htttn' l (tdy
wllo lllC)'. Kim ind Unclt H'lriy
(!.)mt to btlleve i, t confldtnct
t rtist who his swindled H1r,., oul
of $5.000.
tT) ro News 9 M1ybtrry MD
l:lO A ste111 """' Show G111sh Ill
Rkh1rd DIWWI, Jama. fr1nclscus
ind Dav!d Btvant.
(Jl Cl!.S Nein Walttr Cronkllt
lf6l NIC News J&hrt Clt1ncellor
f'l Andy lirfflllb Show m Biii CGSby SM11
(fJ) Evenlnr 1t Pops
fn P11yln1 tht Qultlr
mw1111hrtutt
~ Grttn Al:r11
ml El Pro!. Sta\t1rt1
00 Miwlt: (C) (?hr) "II 1 Man A.,
tlNl1" (Comedy) '62-Slindr1 Ott,
Bobby D1t111.
A!?)NIC M""1 """' iCl (21tr) "Showbl1t" (musical) '51-
A~• Gardn~r. Howard Keel, Kathiyit
G11ysan. Thi story I)! !he mtmbtr1
ol 1 M!uiulppl River boll show •l
the t11m of tht century,
(i) Movie: (C) (2hr) "fltl Top"
(1dvtnl11re) '52 -Sltflint M1yd1n,
Rith1rd Carlson.
~ Movj1: (C) (2hr) "S4ntlnt In th
Rain" lmu,ic1t) '52-Gtnt Kelly,
Dtbbl• Reynolds.
mu ••tt·
7:00 ~ CBS Mm Wtllu Cronk!lt S1) No Uortt por Ml
0 a;, NIC ~m John Ch1ncel!or aJ !h• rers111d1r1
{Tl Onrn.t t:lO 0 (])Doris Day Peter l1wford 0 Whit's M1 Un11 miktl 1 r1t11rn 111tst 1ppe11inc1
(fO) Ad1111·12 In !ht role or Dr. Ptttr l1wrence, m I lo'l't Luer who presses Dorls Into strvlc• IS h1 i
s11r11ea1 nurse "flhtn 111 ls 1tqulred
f1i) I Dre1M 1! .S.1111111 10 perform ·~ emefittncy ope1ilion
l1JJ AllClllo 15 "Moun!1lns ol the on 1 wortd-f1mous Grffk billion1h1
Moon" (Atltllony C1ruso).
fT:) H1lhiytp Kathlttn Hilthtock fJ a1rttr Wini "'"'
g) Lt l11truu ffi It lites 1 Tllltl
9 Th4I Vlrf11la1 fJ!l l1elsb11 II ~ Qvttl ti a:> Los Tlntlloc. Spadu
7:30 ~ St111d Up 111• Chttr Ct) Phn 10:00 fJ ()) Son111 I Cl'ltr C.llMJ tf111r
SilYtrs fUHts. Dln1h Sho11 and Tony CUrtll f\llSt. m News 8111 Huddy 0 Movie: (1111 l4111! ~ el 11111
A Dr. Sl111011 l.td1 "Cuclloo In tht SU(' (wtsttrn) '~Keith L1110n.
Nest"' Don• Dr1k1,
(1i1 Ta Tell tllt Truth m Mtws Milltr, .Jonu
A News Btntl, Sthubect 01I Masterpltct Thutf9
(ll 1 Drtllll 01111111111 Em Soul!
f'l MUllon $ Movlt: (2tlr) .. ffffltr" €tJ Lt Crilda llt1 Cri1d1
(dr1m1) '&2 -Rlchud Basth1rt, S1) 0 TomlH1
Mul1 Emo. (1l Mantr1p
ITTi) Ltt's M1l1 •Doi l0:15 0 Nm eeor1e Putn1m
l't Ho11n's HtrttS CHI Mrrit: "CloM Tt Mr Ht1rr ID Dr1cnlt
f,!11 DEBUT Jtcob lroeewUI: Z0tt 10:30 It) Mm 1111 .lohl'll
Cr,,tury M111 ii) Abmtnttdt
r1 Cttywatchlrt aJi lilo'lle C.1 ..
f'l Do·Rt·MI 10:45 (D Nm musslt
c:r,i 1u,.11e11to Y11d11 Show 11:00 fl CI)(}) el Nm m .... cu~ m ,,..
CJ) M1rsMI OIU011 1:00 IF;J (J) ll'i11n1111okt "No Tomoriow"'
A conylt\td hme !hit!, •llo Manlltl D m ,. ...
Dillon be lirvu lo b1 Innocent, OYtf· m Te Tell tM fnrtll
power1 1 crutl 1uerd 111d 1supes l!J M111tnip
110111 prison In 1n lnddtnl In whldi EID CHJntcNll
the 1u1rd IS killed. ~ _
0 ~ml ltuP.ln Robert Goo\11 ll:lSll MO'fle: "tw tf Nmdt" (wtsf·
,uesb i nd umte1 1111111 111 Tlny 1rn) '67-Geora:t Martin, Adri1n1
Tim and Mon• T111. Ambttl
O Movie: 12flr 15111) "Still• Din"'° ll:SO 8 (JJ Mirr li tffft11
(dr1m1) 'J7 -Barbara Sllnwyck. m.~m JD~nny C.rwn
John Bol11, AnM Shlrley. A 1l1t born U ~ fI) aJ Die~ C1fftt
Into lht world of the poof m1rTiu w
Into wea!th 11\d po&itlon. m hilWll: •Afftlt Ill Tr!flldd" {drt·
(il Wild Wiii Wtlt =~52 -G!1n11 ford, Illa Kay-
0 Movie: (C) (lll1) "lalntrll ID Rtlltr Ct•I
Cotrnly" (dr11111) '58 -Ellz1btlh
Taylor. MonllOflltlJ Cllft, EY1 M1rlt t1:l4 D Mtrit: (C) "alrt fipttrs'"
Saini. Lee M1rvlfl. (dr11111) '56-Vlctot Maturi , Karen m Trtrfll er Ceutc!tren<lt Stttlt.
(B Tiit Virri-l11t 1:00 1J Miwlt: "Tiit Tlttertd Drtss•
FT:l ~ Spedal If Utt Wtt-"NEl (dr1ma) '57-Jtlf Chandler, .klnnt
0tie11 Thealrt: 'The Qde111 ol Crain.
S111de~·" J11111i. Tourtl stars In
Tcha1kovsky'1 o~r• of llll1l1ut Ind ill l!JfJ(J)®JKm
tire 1uper111tur1I. blsld on • 1t1o1t 1:15 It Thi liitlltlf
story by Pushkin.
HJ Lt Recer!d•
a:JNlno
Tuesd ay
DAYTIME MOVIES
!1:00 m "A Wo1111n11 Sec11r (dra11111) '4t
-M1u1een O'H1r1, Melvyn Oo111ln.
!1:30 0 (Cl "\..tlf lllfl'l1" (ldV!lllU!t)
'56--Mluren O'M111, V!cll!f Mel•&·
len.
10:00 rn .... ttlt at Aplcllt r1u" (we31·
ern) '52-Jol'tn Lund, Jelf Cllan~ltr.
1:00 O "Otllr." (drama) "36--M11lu11
Dltflith, Gaiy Coop11. o .,., ..,.ito<o uodo"1" .,..
Z:lD 1J """
lery) '62-Jaek Lemmon, Kim Nov· ... m HDfr\ Wt!trs" {dr1m1) '45-
Merl• Oberon, Fr1nchct Tonl.
Z:OO Cl) ''Gtrv1iM" Cont!uslcn (dr1m1)
'57-Marla Schill, f11nco1sa Pt1l1r.
S:OG {I} "Motorie11t Ltl'ldl1df Put I
(eomtdY) '62 -Kim NO¥tk, Jltk
Lemmon. a <C> "M~sd• k•dl r1rty"
(m11slel1) '&4-Frtnkit Avalon. An-
11ttt1 Funk1t10.
':30 1J "follrtff.11 Heurs" (dr1m1) '51
-Paul Doucl1s. Gr1c1 Melly,
(IJ S.1111 IS 10 AM ll.Jtlft&
Nearly Ever)'One
Listens to
'
f.
Landers
I See by Today's
Want Ads
e EUR.OPE BOUND • So
they mu1t sacrillce th"
car. It's a sharp '59
Pom:he 1600. Supu Road·
ater! lt hu: t. new motor,
pain!, Interior, clutch, and
11ereo.
e LADS 'N LASSIES: Shel.
tie pUpS («mall CoJlJet)
l1l'f on aJt. Cha.mpfon
atrtd, best Soulllern Call·
-thaW qlWI ... ,._
little dop have an excel·
lent temperament.
Hartford Extrava ga nm ' 'The Big Show of 1928'
Not So Big These Days
•
l
By TOM BARLEY
6t 1tM DtllY Pll•I lllff
If tom• •nterpri1ing and
lucky showman could ha ve got
the likes of Cab cauoway,
.tripper Sally Rand, the leflen·
dary Ink SPots and deadpan
comedienne Virginia O'Brien
on the same bill back in 1923
he'd have been able to sit back
and enjoy a record run of such
a st&r·studded revue.
That's assuming they were
all available in 1928. The Hun-
tington Hartford T h e a t e r
thinks so since it lumps them
all logether in a n ex-·t lr?.vaganza billed as ''The Big
l Show of 192!."
They'd have been b i g
business at any box office in
1938. And all of them en joyed
the kind of esteem in 1948 that
would have brought (ans flock··
Ing to the type of offering
being staged this week by pro-
ducers Stan and D a r r e n
Seiden.
Baek t o St ay?
But this is 1971. True. sexy
Sally (at 67 !) can still do her
eye popping parade with the
ostrich leattiers, a chubbier
Cab can stilt belt out a
number with the best of them
and Virginia can still deliver a
torch so ng without a flicker of
expression.
There'!! only one of the
Sonny and Cher, ""'ho came up with the top sum·
mer show of 1971, are back in a regular slot for t~e
second half or the TV season. They'll be doing thetr
thing tonight at 10 o'clock on Channel 2. BYU Brings
Orcliestra
To College It Wa s Great W eeliend
-For National Anthem The Brigham You n g
By RICK DU BROW
HOLLYWOOD (UP!i
Memoir on the New Year's
wekend television football
lunacy:
All right, everybody, we can
open the drapes OO\Y. Say hello
to your wile and k id s .
Introduce yourself if you have
lo. What's the baby's name
again"? Find out w ha t
everybody's been doi ng around
the house since Friday. Are
we at war or anything? And,
oh yes, Happy New Year.
It was a great weekend for
learning the national anthem.
And aU lh06e parades and
floats, with the enormous
funds poured into them. were
really terrific, weren't they? I
mean, you can imagine wha t a
thrill they must ha ve been to
people struggling for a job or
to have enough food in the
house or get a decent place to
U n i v e r s i t y Philharmr.n1c
frozen smiles on floats. Orchestra will present a con-
The announcing of the cert Frid&)' at noon in the OCC
games was wonderful too. It Aud itorium . It ls ope.n to the
was deeply moving and in-public, free or charge.
spirational to hear some of the The ~member ensemble,
network spo rts shills tell us under the direction of Dr.
how proud a team sh.ould be Ralph G. Laycock, w i 11
even though it was losing by present a program th at
about 30 points because it was features works by well-kno.,..·n
putting up a great scrap. And masters of past eras and com·
reminding us, with great positions by contemporary
foresight, that the losing team artist.!.
would be back next year. Who h said it wouldn 't? And haven't The program will open wit
you had it up to here with the "Overture to Russian and
way that video turns almost LudmUla ," by Russian com·
all of its basic entertainment poser Glinka. Br ah ms 1
_ including sports -into "Symphony No. 1" follows.
some kind of a promotion The work is the famous com·
snow job? Read your local poser's first composition to be
newspaper to learn what titled a symphony.
really happened in the games. "Peace Memorial" by Dr._
If a team is getting creamed Merrill Bradshaw, composer
by 30 points, why the idiotic in residence at BYU, la third
announcing charade of telling on the agenda. The final se1ec-
us that the boys on both sides tk>n ill Liszt's "Les Preludes,"
are hitting really hard? What a symphonlc Poem. based on
are they supposed to be doiIJS, Lamartine's "PoeUc Medi~~
after all ? Dancing with each lions."
'
Ulle tht curate's egg, good In
parts but some o( the acts we
aaw had no business being on
1 stage in 1971. Diosa Costello,
George Givot lhow could
anyone. even in l92JI, laugh at
that "\'es, We Ha ve No
Bananas" gibberish~) and one
or two lesser performers
would have improved the
evening by being left out of it.
Yes, mother, Louis Jordan.
Calloway, t-.1iss O'Brien and
the shapety Sally Rand ha\ e
all aged very well and it's
good to know that they're still
around.
original Ink Spolll in the ('Ur· But I think I'd rather have
rent quartet bui they do a the vintage records "·axed in
reasonable racslmlJe of the another era bv the Ink SPots.
likes of "If l Had My Wa y" to Jordan and ccillowav and view
the joy of those of us who care those Jus('ious movies of the
to date ba('k to the forties. f forties in whi('h Miss O'Brien
refuse to date back to 1928 and did her splendid thing.
so, I think, would the Ink "I gave a Jot of people some
Spots and Miss O'Brien if lovely memories," Gr a<' I e
someone cared to ask them. Feilds 0 n c e said v:hen she
Nos talgia, yes. but the au-was being urged to ('Orne ou t
dience reaction on the night 1 of retirement. •·And I err·
was there was who need s ii? 1 tainly don't intend lo interfere
wasn't the only one who felt a with any mental pictures they
Jot older when it was all over fll!~t have by going ba('k on
and, in the light of some of the Ole stage to sho\Y I ('an still do
offerings, sadder and wiser . \Yhat 1 once did but in a di!·
For all that, most or us tried ferent way."
to get into what management
decided was the spirit of the Yes, 1928 \\'BS a very good
evening with lusty "Hi de His" year. Too bad we can't bring
and "Ho de H05" in response ~il~ba::;c:::k.:.. -------
to Callowa,y's "Minnie the
Moocher" entreaties. We had
been told by at least four
entertainers that we were a
"lovely. very beautiful and ln·
telllgent audience" and so the
least we could do ' wall yell
ba ck at t~~ apparently
delighted Calloway.
Management did tt.s part
long before the show began
with a Popcorn vendor who
showered ·us ]fitb popcom and
192&-type joke!!, a got111a who
took a lady patron on hl.s lap
and the spectacle of a quar:
reling couple in the audience
who later turned out to be two
members. of the c 1st.
(Surprllle 1 surp~)
"The Big Sho\f of 1928" was,
11!mn•101!f
I J11Wro1T 1£ACN • 01.1 .. ,1D·
9th Smash Week !
th• yt•r't t•'
l-llSP6'U. t*irUler
Cll11t lastwood
"PLAY
MISTY
FOR ME"
011d '•ter '9.0•
''HI RED HANO''
WALTER MATTHAU
"K OTCH" -. .,. ..................... ~
.,.. • ' hlw -
. AIM C.rnHf -6P
"LOVERS AND
OTHER STRANGERS"
. live. r guess it's just silly to
think of the good that mon ey
really could ha ve done foi"
people in need when fa~ with
the im mensely significant op.
tion of staring at the vacant
looks of grinnina: girls with
other? And CBS.TV still treat!: The BVU Philharmonic was
its pro games as though they founded in 1969 by Dr.
were some kind . or holy Laycock and has performed
ceremony. And N B C · T V , numerous outstanding work!
tbough slightly looser, has including Beethoven's only;~~~~~~~~~~~~ enouah of an alliance with oratorio, ''Mount of Olives,"I~
lootball so lhal it also lend• lo . produced last November and NATIONAL GENEJtAL THEATERS:..--Lido T ryouts
Date Changed
be on the overly polite side. I Arthur Honegger's • • K i n g
like Curt Gowdy, but I'd like David," performed in 1969.
to hear him open up even The orchestra has also
rn~~.· most exciting New premiered many important Auditions for lhe Lido Isle composl"o•• lnclud1'ng "• -~ Year's football game was " .... "'1 ca:· P\a"ers production of "Sheep tremely -plex "DI e 1
J underdog Stanford's 13·1! win '""""' on the Runway " will be con· Ulll " by led C·-• Over Mich1'gan in the Rose ma, no ........ 11· ducted \VedneMay and Thurs· A I V I Bowl. You never saw a looser, rner can composer, ac av day of this week, rather than N lh •-1
more informal loo king team r-:::;:':--'-Y-:~:;::. ;;:;;---:-A,;;::-J Tuesday and Thursda y as
previously announced. · than Stanford.
The tryouts will be held in,l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,o;I
the Lido Isle Clubhouse, 701
Via Lido Soud, Ne w po r t
Beach, at 7:30 p.m. both days.
Dustin Holtmtn In
"ITltAW DOGl" llt)
No 1tu1rvtd l1al1.
ALSO
"The Savage . Wild"
I
1H:;-;-...-,-.-im-,-ro-.--:-: .. ~. I _..,,.,..,,.,,,.,.,,.,_.
I Ill . • .-. ........ -oo::11111:.--...
I '*,.... llml * I riding ctF"-
"T'llllnUlllf ·~._.__ .• _......"t' ....
.. ~-1111!1 0
-·-lit l-.• ,, • .,. [;.-1.s...~>0 C..... ... 1f
.., .. '""· ,,, .
DAILY 'ILOT J/S
. ,,_ . ........, .. _. ,,,..
•WORLD PRIMIERI e
MHGORDON
Bll>CORT ,. ........ l'lcM9t ,,.....,..
~
MAUDE
lGI'\ Cc*w by l«lw.kolor•-.-1
PllU ·Ah Moc(i.re.,,.
"liOODITI COt.UMIU!"
At.SO.fROM WAl.l OfSNO'f "MILLION OOLLAI Duer (I ) cm:•z 1111-m• • _.. .. wn . tN:..wes
11•1111• ....... ·-• -..... '9TI
• fll lt AIU IKllllMUT •
DEANDBTIN
BRIAN KEiTB
'something
big' (GPI _,..,. ..
llllMMIAl·• ... ....,.
1111 MISSION 'llUO
ID'WAIDS tllllMA YllJO
•• .IJ0.4ittt. ••
"l~INCN ~ONHfC1'Qll"
f'l.lll·"llllMAHMillot &
lO\lltttltCllttll ...
'
\
(8 OAILY PILOT
Journalist
Was 464;
Now 236
ALHAMBRA (AP) -Wayne
Monroe was ''Tiny," "Willie
the Whale." "Groceries."
He 18'Ughed when he told
people the only place be couJd
weigh himself was at a
railroad yard scale.
It was no joke. Monroe
weighed 464 pounds.
He Jost a high school
teaching job because o! the
enormous girth spread over
his 6-foot·2 frame.
He became a sports writer
for the Alhambra P o s t •
Advoc8te, and when he travel·
ed with the Los Angele s
Dodgers he needed two seals.
lie could laugh about that, too.
Bui about a year ago, his
doctor fuld him how serious
his problem had become.
"He said I had two chances
of living another 10 years,"
recalls Monroe, 34. "Slim and
none. He said if I caught
pneumonia lhre would be no
hope for me.
"'I'd long since given up
hope of losing weight-I'd
tried every conceivable way
and nothing worked ."
Nothing worked b e c a u s e
fdonroe's system s i m p I y
couldn't burn up the food he
was eating, even though he ate
like people half his size.
"Then my doctor told me
about Heal bypass surgery,"
Monroe said. "After that, my
whole life was turned around.''
On Dec. l", 1970, Dr. L. Ken--
neth Countryman c ' s h o r t ·
circuited" Monroe's intestinal
tract by bypassing 19 feet of
small intestine. During the 63
days Monroe was in the
hospital, he lost 114 pounds.
After that, his weight loss
slowed to two to five pounds a
month.
MOnroe weighs 236 today,
and his doctor says he may
drop to 185.
''Essentially, what is hap-
pening now is that Wayne is
getting enough nutrients from
his food but the fats are going
right through him," said Coun--
tryman. "It's risky surgery-
it's used only in extreme
obesity cases."
Monroe said the choice to
undergo the surgery was easy:
"I didn't want to try to live 10
years as a sideshow."
Monroe says he feels as if
he had been given a new life.
"I mean, you don't know
what it means for me now to
be able to walk into a men's
store and buy clothes off the
rack,'' he sAys. "Or si t at a
restat:rant counter. Or ask a
girl to dance without feeling
like a fool.
"The greatest feeling of all.
though, is running into people
v.·ho don't recognize
me ... and say, 'Hey-it's me,
\Vayne Monroe.' "
All Sig1is
Are Good
For Nlxo1i
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
The ()mens are right for Presi·
dent Nixon's forthcoming trip
to Peking, according to an-
cient Chinese tradition .
On Feb. 21, the president's
planned arrival date in the
Communist mainland -capital,
the signs are best for human
relations.
The date falls on the seventh
and most auspicjous day of the
JO-day ChJnese New Year
season.
If the sun shines on that
date, the "year of the rat" will
be a brighl °"" tor mankin<I.
Arrival of the lunar calendar
year 4670 fall5 on Feb. 15 and
lbe first 10 days of China's
New Year are dedicated to.
successively, chickens, dog~,
~lgs, ducks, cattle, horses,
human beings, rloo and cereal.
fruit and wgetabl... and
barley and com.
San Francitco's Chinaf-Own
sages say the president'!
mission Is fortuitous r o r
-alondJ>oinL
' I
•
M011<141, Januarr 3, 1972
Ultra Modern
SWACi LIGHT FIXTURE
• Clean, contemporary $fyling-this
fixture can be used in any room.
• ~ 6 inch smoke colored styrene ~hade
with an 8 inch glass globe.
• Includes 12 ft . chrome chain with
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hardware.
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REG. $13.95
SAVE' $5.001
TUES. & WED. ONLY!
··.FLUORESCENT FIXTURE ' ~..... ;;,. . ., .
',;"' . 1 "For More Light-More Ecanomlcally1" ~\~f \ · ,4 ft., double tube fixture with reflector. ~ .,. . ., .. .
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fixture Only-Tubes Extra!
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REG, $1,.99
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..
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• Gleaming nickel bearing •teel with a •ciiin finish.
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• 33''x22''' double comportment sink.
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·-
8y .cAROL MQORE •
! °' ... \Dfll'lr """ '"" Com!IOflhg lht clintrat nfrVOUS sYswn
lO tayer1 or an onion, Or. Mu Schnelcttr
told a UCI Extension course on 'I'r!at-
ment of Alcohollc AbUM how excessive
drinldllf penelrates body tlsaue lo
damqe'by irritation and sedation.
"T'ne ~rye system has a central, vital
core surrounded by rings otUssue related
lo judifpepl, nremory, "'°rdinatlon and
more sophl8Ucated abUilies,'1 be said.
"Intoxlci.Uon, like an 1 n e 1 t b et I c ,
deadens each layer in succels1on-'wtth~
judgment going flral. Brain tissue has
higher water COfllenl so abBOrbs .ateobol
the ln08t, resulting in delusiooa and
hall1.1cinat.ion:s:ln extreme :cues:"
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Mlftdl W, ''*'.,.., l, ttn P'tM 17
Dr . .lchnelder believes alcohollsm Is • \IY-1Uvlty. A person la born with a
pr<dlapolitlon lowll'lj It ~I may develop
anytime during bis life.
"Alcoholism ls not a matter of will
power but. of chemistry. II a drbllting
person lgnore1 or d~nle.s his limit, it's a
stupld blindnesa, '' he warned.
LOMOF~XES
Symploms of such. a I co ho I l_c
"blindness'' ·~ loss of· refiues, memory
and the ability to .-allow; aspiration and
dulled vibratory senses resulting in "pins
and-need!~" sensatkm. _ · ·
CoD!WDpUon of alcoholic beverage!
abo changes blood pressure and now
resulting iii dilation with mar& blood to
the surface wh1cb causes Uie warm,
.to
6uahed leelin8. he ..plained.
·The •i>tr Iha effects of alcollOI
penetrate-t · the nervous system, the
greatl1 danger there ii to heallh, or even
life, as vl~IOUs body funcUona and pro-
tecUve reflexer are impaired.
JIEVERSE ORDER
· Oe!q'!fic•llOI\. <i:oroJng out) occurs In
.tho ....,,. Olilcr. through body Ussues
·with judgminl helng U., last fl""'llon lo
be .re.stored. ho pointed oul. The alcoholic
Iriust b6 wa~hed carefully to mohltor
body responses and prevent convulsions.
Delirium · lreabnenls drop lbe blood
pressure but may cause respiratory ar-
...t.
Dr. Schneider said drugs used for
detoxification shoufd be administered on-
ec ts
ty long enouah lo dry oul and allevtale
bad eff«ls. Resto 1 bland dlet and
p.sycholberapy ,make up lht Io111 term
trutmenl.
Sinct"an ah .. 'Obolic's judgment is out or
conlmlssioo, Dr. Schnelder u ld persons
trying lo la!i< lo persows In such a slup<r
1tw>Wd not argue or try to reason but
ralber be a.,..able and lllll!esdve, 1111<·
int t1*n down lo realily. An angered
alcobollc Is more Inclined lo cause
physical harm.
PARTIAL ·ANl!STllJ!SIA
Misinterprttatioo Ls most likely during
the hallucinatory stages of alcohollc syn-
dromes. During the toxic-, acute brain
syndrome the decision maker is com-
pletely altered and the person, although
conadouJ, It under all stages of partial
onestboa!a.
"Alcollollsm la very much like a dru1
dependency where Iha addicted choose
not lo lace reality, J\nding ii easier lo
avoid than aofve,'' Dr. Schnelder ex-
plained. "Bui lhty deny lbe fact Iha! lhe
liquor la only a c:omloriing substitute."
As !\le body becoroes accustomed lo
elCfMJve llquor h\put, chemJcal systems are read)illled and 10lerances are boil~
up. Withdrawal creates all new symp-
toms.
"The booze Is out of the bod).' (one
hour) long before the sedation wears off
(four hol.l:rs). You don't have to have the
liquor in you to have the chemical er.
fects," he added . ·
~. Schneider described a seven-hour
lhJnt C)'de and ooled alcoboUcs UIUllly
lab anotller drlnll lcr.nnl Iha ood ol 1111
ttnre perico!10>ward oil nervous agltalloa
!hat reslart,t QI aedaU"'I....,. oir.
Drastic cut.oil of liquor Intake ln-
quenUy ruult.s ln coovula.lons. When an
1Jcohollc Is chemically, rather .than
m-chologlcally, addicted., withdrawal
n\usl ho gradual lo rebUlld tbletanees.
UCI Extension Is oflll'llll thO second
course. Seminar in the Treatmen.t of
Alcohol Abuse, In lht proll'am Counseling
on AICQholism and Related Dlsordera Ulla
winter quarter . It is opea to all '11-
dlviduals actively engaged ·in giving
service to aJcoholics. Recistratlon 11 .UU
open for the class which Is offered Wed-
nesday, Jan. 12, through Marth 20.
House·wives Bottle Boredom
fM.lt.. Y' l':ILOT '1Wtl ~ l ldMIN ltMller . .
'Household ch~~es are dull . •
she begins to look fo.r something
to relieve the day's boredom.'
J
By JACQUELINE COMBS
01 "" O•HY Pllal 11111
Men alcoholics lie and hide bol-
tles. get the shakes 3nd black out,
drink and drink again.
They lose jobs, cars, hom e s,
families, spouses and Jives.
The symptoms and results are
the same for women alcoholics but
the progression of the tragedy
takes a twist.
It is believed that 7112 to 13
million alcoholics exist in the
United States today, women com-
prising one third to one fourth of
the total. Marceline Tamayo, MSW,
psychiatric social worker, Orange
County Community H e a 11 h
Services, disagrees. "I think it's
more like 50 percent but there is no
way oI fi nding out."
Women alcoholics, pr o t e c t
themselves -hiding the truth from
family and self. Once the family is
aware, it attempts to ~tuate
the illusion that 0 Mother isn't feel-
ing well today."
''It isn't nice to have a woman
alcoholic around the house," in-
terjects Ms. Tamayo, guest lec-
turer on Women Alcoholics during
lJCl Extension's series on Treat-
ment of A1coholic Abuse. consider
the friendly drunk at t h e
neighborhood bar or that hilarious
guy who "got really bombed at lhe
party." A woman in the same p0si-
Uon would be thought pretty
palh<Uc and definitely dlsguallng.
80CIETY FAW>
Society fails to giVe females
slack. Viewing her as wife and
mother, it doe.a not accept her
frailties nor expand her horµc>ns.
1' Alcoholism is a culturally pro-
duced phenomen911," said Ms.
Tamayo, who credils the very role
of housewife and mother as the
major factor in female alcoholism.
Most · women alcoholics are
housewives -of every race,
religion and social status -who
begin drinking after passing 30, she
notes. The childrtn have reached
school age and "the household
chores are dull, there's not enough
to do and she begins to look to
something to relieve the boredom
of lhe day."
Housewives aoon find it is euy to
drink unobserved l.nd still get their
chores done -for a few years.
6'Women alcoholics usually don't
begin drinking until after 30 but it
~· takes ~omen a much shorter time
to get to the chronic stage than it
dOes men,'' contilltled f\-ls. Tamayo,
''They telescope it into three to six
years, reaching the same point it
might take a man 20-JO years to
reach."
TELESCOPES
The reason for lhe ability to
telescope the drinking span is
Wlknown. Being smaller in stature ,
perhaps a woman can handle less
liquor. "l\laybe she is more
de.sperate. more disturbed." added
Ms. Tamayo. herself a recovered
alcoholic of eight yea rs.
UCI 'LECTURER
M1rc1line T1m1yo
A major difference between
male-female alcoholism is family
attitude. •iwomeri;, married to
alcoholics, are-more involved Jn
their marriag& and family. They
are apt to take. a_ mothering role
when deaJing Wltft IJcohoJic men."
If the coin ii flipped and a man
finds himself t coupled with an
alcoholic,· he Is more likely to
divorce her. "The husband will not
coax an alcoholic Wife," she pointed
out.
Ms. Tamayo looks ·to t h e
feminine mystique as a rationale
and solul~ 1'> lhe problem of the
alcoholic wo0)8n. Freud taught that
woman is fulfilled through her hus·
band. sex and children-"Loving a
man and llving through him. Some
women settle<l for it and told
thcn1selves, 'Great . This is all
there is.' " said Ms. Tamayo.
Olhers get restless. They look to
school, take jobs to supplement the
ramily income, get fat. havt
psychotic breakdowns, multiple
love affairs, tum to alcohol or tran-
quilizers.
"Some, like me, lry all o( Lhese."
It is so frustrating to know yoo
are not fulfi lling yourself to the
fullest capabilities and yet not
knowing what to put your finger on,
what direction to move in, said the
lectu rer, drawing from her own ex•
perience.
ANESTHETIC
Alcohol Is an anesthetic. When
the alcoholic d r I n ks , be
anesthe tizes his pain. The alcoholic
escape is a problem solving device
to relieve unpleasantne ss, anxiety
and tension ror the time being.
Friends and relatives may kid
themselves by saying, "If we could
just get them to stop drinking . , . "
"But, there is a difference between
being sober and being dry. Being
sober does11't alleviate the pain.
"Al\eviallng the pa in may be a
becoming process . . . where she
becomes aware of all her skills and
talents." Alleviating the patn may
mean ''helping them find their
Identity throuah develC>pment ol
&eU, not throtigh olber1,'' Ma.
Tamayo continued.
Quo~ from author ,B e t I y
Friedan, Ms. Tamayo said, '1Ad·
justment to a cul~ure which doe1
not permit the realization of one'1
inner being is not a cure at all."
Ms. Tamayo hopes woman ht
society will soon pass t h e
dependent, sell-negating stage and
enter an area where she can be a
"marveloos mother and housewife
and/or doc'tor, lawyer or Indian
chief."
How can one help an alcoholic,
male or female ? "Find out who
they are, what it all means and
how they got there. Where they
want to start from to· become wh.at
they want to be." Any alienated
person has to an swer these ques·
tions, she added.
Open up humanity and let them
ln, sh.e adviles. They have tG
thOOOe: between life and deatl).
"If they choose lite they have to
•lop drinking."·
(
The Vi ·lla Reopens Door to
• Living • .Family Finds
-:Helpful Hints
By ALLISON DEERR
Of 1M o.ttr P'll9t SNff
The .Villa is a rambling tw .. slocy house
in Santa Ana with a spacious tree-shaded
yard, a dog and a cat.
The family that lives there changes
every month but each new tenant has 1
comm9n . background with those wbo
came before and those who follow.
They are women alcoholics.
They come lo The Vlll& for 28 days lo
beiin their lives all over again.
A non-profit organiJ.ation f u n d e d
through tndlviduaJ donations, The Villa is
a re.habllltation center for alcobOllc
women.
In a Wfl'JD, home-like a,tzµospbere the
woman alcobolic gall . a . clinc.e to
relrleve 1itr ..U.respec\ and~ by.
remaining ·¥t>er and regaining her emo--
llonal and Jillyslcal health.
ADMIT PROBLEM
Helen Lehr la · housemother for lhe
c;enter which can care (or up to nine
women I~ 'i time. ·
"A woman alcoholic lr~bamed
lo admit lier problem !ban r man," Mrs.
lAl>r allld .. "114• harder for her lo ateep\.
It and talk about I~ lo come :here and
111rt from acralc:h.
"We want to provide a:COinfortabfe af...~
mosphere where they can re.la• aDll-koow
Iha\ other people have been throuah what ·
!hay art Upertenc:lllf. AU have ·a CllllV
lllOn problem.
"Some are able lo talk abolll It for Iha
llraf lllr10 and,lllllc11ta!¢lt. Talkioi·and
llltenln& and applttnC 'wbal lhl1 i...,,,
t.hi! la the basis or our program," she .ad-know they are upected to stay for a
ded. month.
"Women always have been the pro-
tected. ones. When lhe wife and mother
became an alcohollc !he family would lry
to cover it up. Now more and more the
"Once they leave for good we cannot
take them back. There are too many who
need otir bolp.
"We bave DO waiting list. An alcoholic
stigma 11 being removed. Alcoholism is needs help now and cannot w~l<· until
· beinC trtated as the disease It is," Mrs. there is room."
Lehr explained. For those who want It The VlBa offers
STRIKES MANY music, sewing, gardenine1 telev}sion and
"Alcoholism acknowledges no racial, individual counseling. 'Pile . spacious
age or financial differences. J have seen grounds provide a restful atmosphere for
alcoholic teenagers and women in their reading or thinking. · ·
605," the housemother said. "You never duests have confidential status •during
know who or where lt will strike." their stay. Visits from family are. allowed
The average resident of The Villa is in on Sunday afternoons from 1 to 4 p.m.
her «Is. • There are house rules like an 11 ·p.m.
Encouragement, empathy and com-curfew but most roles are not rigid.
panionshlp are weapons used .against the FRIENDLY PLACE
4ownward spiral of loneliness, rejection, "What is most important ls that we
ffif.Joatblttg and discouragement. provide a warm, friendly comfortable place where they can relax and rebuild
Four women ~hare a roqm, giving am-their self-confidence. It Is tn easy pro-
pie ~nlly li>talk. l'bere aro 1>'1Yat• • •gram 1!ut 11,1s hard lo d~" Mis. tehr ex·
·counselJJ11 "teaalot11. Residents are re-pl ined. ' · / •
quited to •!lend lour Al09holli;s Anony-• . 8 • moua meetings each w..i:,altbooigll The ' ·AU111or!Ues estlniate thal .mora lhan
Vllla Is not ~flllaled w!lh AA. · 'ISo,000 American women cannot Ond ac-
ltA hold!! three meeUnga per week In •cepla~ ways of copln& with life and
lbe lacilllY Ilaelf and AA members often seek oblivion lhrough excesalv~ alcohol
visit the rehabllllllloli center or P!O•id& COl!SUl!)ptlon. They art women whole
lransportaUon for ,..sld•ntr to AA body ~lltry cannot lolerote' aleohol.
meetlll(I and Procr•ms. 'l'bey .,.. rejected and mlsunderlllood
.. , ~~ by family and frlendt while Iha problem
""""" CHOICES &ell worse and W<>rse.
"The.re ii no compp]Jory program," •rMore aod more, women are btfnl
Mn. Lehr said, "ula'e fiom Iha AA helped belore lheit lives ar• destroy• mt<tl\IP. They® wbal lbey, Wint lo do. 1o1aJbo, The problem la lhal !hare an not
The patlenta check ~vei" In ~ enouab vuiu 1o bolp evoryone. U ,,.
-'
t
cannot help they have nowhere to go,"
Mri. L~hr explained.
Tbe Villa Is admlnlalraled by a
volunteer board of governors, comprised
of aeven men and women who live · In
orange County. Physical operation is
handled by Mrs. Lehr and her assistant
aided by volunteers.
WQmen are ref.erred to The Villa from
everywhere -the courts, the Crisis
Centc); and by fofmer Villa residenl:!I who
have made it back.
0 We believe that a third or the women
who have gone through The Villa have
nol,L n!Wmed lo drinking," the hoose-"""°"" added. •"rliOy keep In louc:h wllh
ua, Cill, write and send people to us. We
bear · when they are reunited with
fam!lles or get a new job."
A '#om.an enters the rehabilitation
ctnttr morose, tllent and in deep depres·
•Ion. After 21 days most have rebuilt
lhelr aell-<0nlldence enough lo face lhe
long hard flght of regainina; and main·
lalnlng a normal IUe.
PAYS nWN WAY
Eacb woman b uked IQ donale flllll
during her ally loward her auPPi>rt but
no one b wrned away !or lack iif money.
They, an allowed lo repay wbon back on lhelr 1 .. ,.
To enter The Villa a guell must have
been without alcohol for at least IS houri
r lo reglalratlon . 'l'bey assume
, ,..ns1billly for keepln& !hair rooms
clean -and perlO<lll belonclnga and
i>Jrtlclpate In bouaebold duties.
In rotum tliey are olfered ta days lo
!Ind themoelv• again.
l
•
. It Is :Oa&ier to find a list of don'ts In deallni witli alcoholl'.,.._-.J-
lor it is easier to understand why you !all than to know why you
succeed. · . . '
The following !isl, written by Josep~ t: Kellerman, dlr..,,
tor ol the .Charlotte, N.C., Council on Alcoholism, Inc., is not in·
elusive but it makes a good beginning.
-Dqn't allow lhe alcoholic \o Ile to you and acce~l it as
the lnlth for in doing so you encourage the process. Truth I! pain·
ful but get.at.it. ·
-Don't let the alco holic outsmart you, for this !4achos
him to avoicf responsibility •nd lose respect for you al the woe
time. ·
-Don!.t lecture, moralize. 11cold, praise, blame, threaten,
argue when' c!tUnk or sober, or pour out liquor. You may feel bet·
ter but the situation is worse.
-DQn't• accept promises for il postpones the pain. Don'l
keep swltclrlng agreements. If one is made, stick to it. .
.-Don't lose your temper, destroying y,ourself and any
possibility !or help.
. -Don't,allow your anxiety to compel you to do what I!>•
alcoholic must do for hlmseU. -Do~'t cover up the consequences of drinking: It reduces
crises but petpeluates the illness.
-DoD't follow this as a rule book: It lJ simply a Jllide,
used with .intelligence and ev•luatlon. U poulble, seelc profe•
slonal help. You need it as well as the alcoholic.
-Don't put oll facing the reality Iha! alcoholism b a pro-
gressive lllne5'. It gets in<reas!Dgly worse. starl now to learn,
understand and plan !or recovery. To do nothing ls the worse choi~ you can make. .
.·
DAILY PILOT M~,J"""'13,l'ln
'
N~ Comfort In This 'Psalm'
DEAR AN\ll LANDERS: Senator Sam
J. Ervin Jr. of North Csrolina irulerted
thl5 Jnto the Congresaional Record. Jt's a
heartbreaker. Will you print it, please?
"King Heroin ls my shepherd, I shall
Always want . , .
•·These lragic words, part of a twisted
rewording or the beloved 23rd Psalm,
were discovered recently in Reidsville,
N.C., in a closed car along.side a dead
heroin addict. She was 23 years old.
"Her death was ruled a suicide. A
hookup with the car's e.1haust bad sent
carbon monoxide fumes from a running
motor into the vehicle. Here 's the com-
plete 'Psalm.'
"King Heroin ls my shepherd, I ahaU
always want. He maketh me to lie down
1n the gulte.rs.
"He leadeth me beside the troubled
~
'4•.l~ I .... ..
tor fold my lam\ly It \Vould have beell
better, and indeed kinder, Jr the person
who gGt me hooked on dope had taken a
gun and blown my br-.111$ out. And J wish
to God he had. My God, how I wish ii." -
A READER
DEAR READER: Thank you.
•
that woman out of our house he was leav·
ing. You are right, Ann. There is no
polite way to haftdle clods. They must be
told off in plain language. They dG no' un--
derstand tact or social grace.
Please keep telling 'em, Ann. People
need to hear It again and again and
again. -A SLOW LEARNER
DEAR LEARNER : I wUI, I will, I will.
Thanks for writing.
walers. He deslroyeth my .soul. ~ ';He leadeth me in the paths of
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Somehow, I
became the victim of the unwelcome
neighbor. I remained vlctbnited by her
{Gr two years. Mrs. Noodnik was at my
door ringing the doorbell before I was out
of bed. She invited herself in, had coffee
and stayed. At 11 :30 it was necessary for
her to go home and take her pills and a
nap, so she left. At 5:30 Mrs, Noodnik
was back. She had fed her husband a can
of tuna for supper and was ready to join
us at our dinner table for a cup of coffee.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I enjoyed your
statement about family trees, ''Too oftea
they turn out an abundance or sap."
Please print this added thought: ''Also
some crooked branches." -M. B. (CHI·
CAGOl
1 wickedness.
)j ''Yea, l shall walk through the valley of
poverty and will fear no evjl for thou,
Heroin, are with me.
"Thy Neeate and Capsule comfort me.
Thou slrlppest the table of groceries in
the presence of my family. Thou robbest
DEAR ClUC: Jligbt, you are. And
&bady, too.
~ 1 my head of reason.
•· uPi"T .. ~~".... "My cup of sorrow nmaeth over. Sure-Every time J backe9 the car out of the
garage she was standing In the driveway
with a "request." Would I please bring
.her .a pack of cigarettes or a IGaf of
. bread or a quart of milk or some post.age
stamps?
Drinking may be "in" to the kids you
run with -but it can put you 'loot" for
keeps. You can cool it and stay popular.
Read "Booze and You -For Teenagers
Only." Send 35 cents in coin and a long,
~If-addressed, stamped envelope wi~
your request in care of the DAILY
PILOT.
Electronic Device Helps Deaf to 'Hear'
With the use of a teletype and special converter that
permits the written word to travel over telephone
equipment. Wilh the help oi Allison, 2 and Laura,
14 months, the private line is more like a party line
for the entire family. lines, Mrs. Dianne Loeb of Dallas who is deaf, can
converse with other deaf persons wbo have similar
Warning: Don't Judge
Book by TV Coverage
By ERMA DOMBECK
The selling ol a book today
takes the physical stamina of
an athlete, the :statesmanship
of a politican, the rhetoric of
Clarence Darrow and the
showmanship of Pearl Bailey.
As I was sitting in a Green
AT
WIT'S
END
'
never met before and we want
yo.u to be comfortable. Are
you an9thing like S a m
Levenson"?·" ·
"No, not really," smiles St.
Luke.
"I meant do you have any
humorous stories from yciur
book?"
"I hav~ a wonderful
Christmas story."
"Sorry, we're taped and
Christmas could come and go
KATRINA ROESSLER
Room somewhere holding my you get 30 seconds before sign-
new book that J have just off to tell bow yO\l-wrote th"e
finished with cartoonlst Bil book. bow long it took, a little
Keane, it occurred to me what about the plot and your views
a time SL Luke would have on pornography, L 1 t t I e
had trying to promote his !.e>gues, Phaso 11 and the
third g0.9peJ of the New Testa-Miss America pageant."
·by the time you were carried Pa 1• r to Wed in Seattle. Know what I
mean'?" ment on the talk shows. On the Merv Griffin allow,
Krazy Shirley of the Johnny he 10ou\d have been told bow
Carson show would probably the ahow not only strives for
have atared at him over • variety but bow. to mesh a
large, yellow legal pad and group together.
On the Fros\ show, he would In Las Vegas
have to hold his own with a
asked, "You say you work "Have you eYer don•
witbagroup?" enytb.ing else beald••
''That's right, Matthew, apottle?'' uka t b • ln-
starlet in hotpants and a man A Jan. 8 weddin~ in Las
Who invented a tube of Vegas is bejng planned by
toothpaste that requires no Katrina. Roessler Cllxl Em est "f.· Dick Cavett, possibly the Ai.$libault.
on y host .who has read his Their parents are Mr. and
book, will cancel him out due Mrs. Franz G. Roessler or
to a rather lengthy ·story on Huntington Beach and Mrs.
what Richard Harris said to Viola Thibault of Garden
Rex Reed in a barroom on Grove and the late Mr. Ernest
Mark and John." terviewer.
"What do you ca 11 .. Yes," smiles Luke, "I was
yourselves?" J a doctor for awhile-!'
'2nd Str~t. Thibault.
If St. Luke has the stamina, The bride-to-be is a graduate
''The Apostles ." "Too mdch," grins the In-
"Catchy," says Sh Ir I e y, terviewer, "It'll work great.
"You can do your hit ,recor• We have Dr. Stillman, Dr.
the first segment, then come. Joyce Brolhers:, Eddie Arcaro
back and •.. " and Totie Fields on the show.
"You don't .unclerstand,.. We can get a dialogue going
says Luke, "We're authors, ot health food."
not musicians." . lo the Mike Douglas com·
he ~ill go o{J to make a souffle or Fountain Valley H i g h
on the D~ Shore show, a School and her fiance is a
co'nfession on V i r g I n i a graduate of Garden Grove
Graham'• lhow and take a High School.
chance on being a winner on --;========~ Shirley pencils: hi9 name on plu, an interviewer will try to
the bottom and sa)'s, "Okay, humanize 'st. Luke. ..We've
"The Datini Game." -,:.
And that'• book 'biz!
Your Horoscope
: I
Libra: Gain Indicated
TUESDAY IJBRA (Sepl 23-0ct. 22): qulrements. Quesllon of lease
JANUARY 4 You may be moving in circles. may be paramount. Regain sense or direction_ CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
By SYDNEY OMARR Gain indicated through written 19): Examine, contemplate
ARIES (March 2l-April 19 ): word. Information required and meditate. Obviously, this
· can be obtained through your is no time to rush. Avoid ac·
Put off journeys, if possible. newspaper. Make inquiries. tions based on impulse. Your
Timillg now calls for re-Observe details. You can win. nncition Ls strentrt ...... ed if you evaluation of plans. Some _.. 6· .. ~· relatives are argumentati ve, SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): do not appear overly anxious. Friendly persuasion may not AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
Check your own needs. Being do trick. YOll will have Co c.une 18): Postpone matters relating
self·SaCI if icing w i 11 not up with hard facts . .Know this to legacies, court actions.
achieve goal -or be ap-_ proceed according1y. One Authority is on your side. But
preciated. who ad vocates .. """tio' nalism t t· Id t TAUR s · .x;.i..-prema ure ac ion cou upse U (Apnl 20-May 20): should be ignored. Get-rich-apple cart.
Financial affairs re q u ire quick scheme is really 1 pipe PISC~ (Feb. 19-March 20):
cautious approach. 0 I d e r dream Put finishing · touches on pi.lj-
persons have right to be con-SAGiTrARIUS (Nov. 22-ect. You may require legal
servative ~w hi money mut· Dec. 21 ): Avoid wishful think· guidance. Choose quality. Best
ters. You have something of Ing. Obtain hint from Scorpio now to pemu"t mate, partner value to offer. GEMINl (May %t..June 20): message. Plug 1 o o Ph oJ es . to take inlti•tive. There are
Finish rather than begin ; where outh1y of cash is COJ)o obstacles~ ~gnize this and
stress wider appeal. Contract 1_c_e_rn_od_. _Ch_ec_k_l_e-=-g_a_l _re-___ r_ld_e_w_i_th_ti_d•_· ____ _
STARS
Sydney Omarr ls one of
the world's great astrolo·
gers. His column ls one of the DAILY Pll.,()'J"S great
features.
'
Jy heroin addiction shall stali me all the
days of my life and 1 will dwell in the
House of the Damned forever."
Also found in the car wiUt Ute dead
woman was this written message :
"Jail dldn't cure me. Nor did
hospitallzaUon help me for Jong. The doc·
My husband got so fed up wilb her
presence he told me that if I didn't keep
Variety Stressed in 1972
Clubs Stack Up Opportunities
Backpacking, orchids and
11tamps are in the news during
the coming days.
Sierra Club .
A demonstration of
backpacking equipment will
take , place at the Tuesday,
Jan. t meeting of the. Ora/ige
count;, Section of the -Sierra
Club in the auditorium of
Smedley Junior High School,
Santa Ana.
Speaking at the 7:30 p.m.
gathering will be Ben Lin-
denstein of Anaheim,
coordinator of the Sierra
Club's basic mountaineering
training C<Jurse.
Orchid Society
Ricardo Mendez, a florist,
will recount events on his re-
cent trip to Venezuela during
the 8 p.m. Monday, Jan. 3
meeting or the Long Be~~h
Amateur Orchid Society 1n the
W~rdlow P ark Clubhouse,
Long Beach.
Pen Women
Art and customs of the
bushmen or the Kalihari
Desert in Africa will be
described by Miss Marguerite
Atcl'ieson -for members of the
Laguna Branch of the National
League of American Pen
Women at 10 a.m. Monday,
Jan. 3.
The meeting will take place
in the Laguna School
Administration Center.
Miss Atcheson, a resident of
South Africa for 15 years, will
show slides to illustrate her
talk.
BPW Club
Huntington Beach High: Vicky
Ridenour, Marina High, and
Carolyn Fillman, Westminster
High.
Art League
Darwio Duncan, landscape
artist and teacher, will speak
for the Monday, Jan. 31
meeting of the Huntington
Beach Art League in the Hun-
tin'gfun B e a c h Recreation
Center.
An instructor at Orange
Coast College since 1957, Dun-
can bas appeared o n
television, is a member of
numerous art groups and has
been affiliated with lbe Don
Foster ldyllwild Summer
School of Painting. Students _ from four high
school! will speak during the
Monday Jan. 3, dinner Beta Alpha P i
meeting .of the Huntington Mn;. Alex Ferguson will
Beach Buslne ss and
Co-authors ol 16 novels, the
Gordons:' newest book is en·
titled "The Tumult and the
Joy."
Mrs. Gordon formerly was
with United Pres.s and editor
of Arimna magazine. Her hus-
band was managing editor of
the Tucson Daily Citizen. A
correspondent for Interna·
tional News Service and an
FBI agenL
They will be introduced by
Mrs. Horace Proulx of Hun-
tington Beach, a Town and
Gown first vice president.
Rho Lambda
Mrs. Gary Mot.shqen will
host the Tuesday, Jan. 4,
meeting of the Rho Lamb:la
Chapter, Epsilon Sigma Alpha
in her Huntington Beach
home. An educattonal pro-
gram on France will be given
by Mrs. John Hillman durliig
the 8 p.m. gathering. Professional Women's Club in open her Huntington Beach J: er i c 0 I s restaurant, Hun-home for the 8 p.m. Tuesday,
tington Beach. J2.ri. 4, meeting ol Beta Alpha
Speaking will be the Pi Chapter of Bela Sigma Phi. BSP Council
students the club sponsor~ at d Representatives to the West Stamp Drive the sixth annual Youth Town an Gown Grove Area Council of Beta
F 0 r e i g n a n d c 0 m-Leadership Conference a t Mildred and Gordon Gordon, Sigma Phl will gather at 8
memorative stamps will be Golden West College. suspen.se writing team, will p.m. 11lursday, Jan. 6, in the
collected and given to patients They are Calherine Ben-speak on the Tumult o{ community room of Golden
in Long Beach v e t e r 8 n s veniste and Bruce W. Ken-Writing and the Joy of success West College.
Hoopital by the SouUi coast nedy, Fountain Valley High for the Tuesday, Jan. 4, Treasurers from the 17
Junior Woman's Club. ·. School; Cindy Marker, Robert meeting of Town and Gown in member chapters will be
Anyone wishing to donate Butler, Anita Varela, Lynn the Foyer on the University of honored by Mrs. John Bower,
stamps during the drive,ffrAJ~var~ez~and~~V~ir~gi~ru~·a~Ro~be~rt.s~·~Sou~~tbe~_~rn;C;";';ifo~ml~a~c;a;m~pu;s;.;;;coonc;;;;il;tr<~os;;;;;urer;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; which now is tmder way, may --___ _
call Mrs. David Kellner or
• Mr,s. Frank Fleck, both of ·
Huntington Beach.
has a
SALE
GREAT CLOTHES ••• dresses, coats, suits,
pantSUits, knits
•
and cocktail ····~········-·-Off 40%
pants, sweaters, blouses,
blazers, knit tops, skirts,
suede and leather ......... --...•• 30%
SUPER SHOES •••• •. boots, pumps, wedges,
sandals, belts, bags
and accessories ................. _ ... 40%
FOR MEN •••....•••• store wide off can be r~negotiated -if you
observe rules, regulations.
You can handle overtime
as.5igoment. Don't run away
from responsibility -pri:r
fusional or personal.
$35 REGAL CURL ...... 17.50
$25 GLAMOUR CURL ••• 12.50
$20 MAGIC CURL ••• , • • • 9 .so
30% to 50%. Includes:
leather and suede,
fancy shirts, sweaters
CANCER (June 21.July 22\:
New approach succted.! Jn
dealing with relatives. Be in-
dependent. You do have life of
your own to live. The sooner
some persons are made aware
of this -the better in all
areas. Develop ideas.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 21!1:
Guard valuables. Don't place
templation in path or one who
Is desperate. Evenl! occur
now with dramatic sud-
denness. Friendl who take
ma lt.era Into lhelr own hands
may oot be acting lot 1our
best lnteruto.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Stpt. 22),
One 'fh4 haa way• ol aiding
)'OU IJ'!Wflllng to do IO. U ..
flat\erJ'I protect jlGUrMJI iD
emollonil cllnchel, MINl81
will <II e c o m • lncreutngly
clear. O>nlllllon ulstL Bui
)'OU can build order out ol ap-
pal'lllt chaos-
' •
I
MAT~RNITY . .
JANUARY
Clearance Sale
1./.3 TQ 1 /2 OFF.
MlTllNITY SHOPS
Solt, lustrousc\Jrts that hold and hold. At thes&
·tiny priceS you can.attord fo look sensalionall
MON. • TUES. • WED. SAVINGS
SHAMPOO-SET $3.45 HAIRCUT $2.00
SOUTtt,COASt ,L.At'"""""'• .. '4'·7116
U..... L•tttl -HP.I ft a..n
Oll9fl ·-"'-'
2'1 L 11 .. ST •• COITA lllSA--141•fflf
OMlt •Wfllllt• •M Slll!llay
W. CAlll• ....... plll LMlt.,.., "'II
' .
and slacks.
STARTSMONDAY,JANUARY3
ALL SHOPS.
543-1760 127 Town & Country
• All Regular Orange Stock MercharuJJ.se
• Credit Cards Accepted ,.
• AU Sales final
.. '3363 Via Lido
Newport Beach
' · '29 Fashion Island
Newport Beach
FOR MEN
127 Town & Country
' I
-'
673-6563
644-2652
543-8182
...
It Works Both Ways
"Designers are inseir~d b.)'.__!!l_y_lat:cs and then I
am lfisp1red by mefr Oei1gnS ·10-du DeW fabriCS,11
says Violet M. Porte, who supplies high-style fabrics
for leading designers. With her is Jim Gibbs who
wears one of the artificial furs Violet created for
Glenoit Mills after a trip to Lapland.
To avoid dluppolntment, prospective
brides Are reminded to have their wedding
1torles with black and white ~lossy ~holo
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Womens De-
apartment one week before the wedding.
Pictures received after that time WllI not
be used.
For engagement announcements it is
Imperative that the story, also accompanied
by a black and white glossy picture, be sub-
mitted six weeks or more before the wed.ding
date. If deadline ls not met, only a story will
be used.
To help fill requirements on both wed·
din~ and engagemen_t stories, forms are
avaJlable In all of the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions will be answered by
Women's Section staff members at 642-4321.
June Rites Set
Meserves Tell News
Mr. and Mrs: J. Robert
Meserve of Newport Beach . . ' have announced the engage-
ment of their daughter.i
Pamela Jean Me.serve to
: Robert Eugene Newell, aon Or
. Mr. and Mrs. James F. Newell
: of Turlock. ·
Miss Meserve wa1
graduated from N e w p o r t
Harbor High School and now
attends California S t a t e
Polytechnic College, San Lui.I·
Obispo.
Her !iance attended
Hollister High and W' i 1
graduated from Live Oak High
in northern California ·aitd Will ;:::========I
graduate in June from Cal P~
ly, SLO .
.the couples plan _an early
June wedding in Newport
Beach.
Carpets
·Keep Up
NEW YORK (UPI) -Shop-
ping for carpeta and Won-
'dering If that loam rubber
'backing will list ior the me of
• the rug'? · .I Tht buyer ... ~
: himself on the JpOt, uya a
• tlrm which makes· tht 1yn-
lbttic latex lhal goes lnlo
foam backlog.
1ge1 9 to 17:
IMrn ·1o lkl In our
Bllmrd 5k( Club.
A completely supervised
program that teaches you
to ski slfely and correct-
ly. Call the nearest May
Co and ask for Laurel
' Plaia utenston 431• for
Inform lion. , ,
MAVCO
The compony liYI backlni should bt al leall II Inch
lhlcl<, welllh 31 ouncu per
square yard, .1nd be fairly
rigid. . l'====="'-==~·
A good loam backlog ·won't 1U "d J t•-cric~ wh<n vigorously bent or ..._.. S 6 •e
twisted. and 11 won'I crumble To Ask a -dy when rubbed brlsltly. "8
' I
' .
Vera® designed nl).iron
sheets by Burlington
Vera<ll teams bold stripes
and semi,circles for Rain·
bow Stripe sheets. Kodel Ill
polyester and cotton blend
in · black/brown, Iliac,
yellow/orange, red/blue.
reg. 7.00 twin 5. 4 9
flat or fit bottom
full !lat or fit, reg. 8.00 6.49
flat, fit,reg. 11.00 9.49
Cal. king flat or fit, reg.
14.00 12.49
St case, reg. 5.00 pr. 4.29
king case, reg. 5.50 pr. 4.79
sheets34
Burlington House
no-iron floral sheets
Capri sheets depict a field of
wild flowers .•• all. fresh and
blossomy. Kodel® polyester
and cotton percale is no·
iron. Choose blue or gold.
reg. 6.50 twin J. 99
or fit bottom top
full top or fit bottom, reg.
7.50 4.99 '
queen top or fit bottom, reg;
10.00 6.99
king top or fit bottom, reg.
13.50 8.99
standard case, reg. 4.SOpr.
3.39
king case, reg. 5.20 pr. 3.99
oheets34
Fieldcrest velour towels
with rich brocade-look
Sophisticated cotton jac-
quard design called Venetia
comes in tropic blue/verdi-
an, desert pink/Spanish
straw, cinnamon/ebony,
wisteria/loganberry.
2.79 reg.3.SO~towel
hand towel, reg. 2.25 1.89
wash cloth, reg. 85c 69c
lowelsJO
'
. '
' . ' .·
t ' I >
. '
save 23% to 38% ' .
Spri ngmaid ,Gala
no-iron sheets
The brightest, freshest flowers are yours on Gala
no-iron sheets. Kodel® polyester and cotton per·
cale come in orange or blue. Come in today.
.3 ~ 9 9 reg. 6.50 twin flat or fit bottom
full flat/fitted, reg. 7.50 ....
queen ·flat/fitted, reg.1 a.so
. king flat/fitted, reg. 13.50
standard cases, reg. 4.50 pr.
king cases, reg. S.20 pr.
oheets 34
4.99
7.99
9.99
3.99
4.59
""Y co. -th:c°'af j>li111, Ii~ dlt90, fwy. 11 brl1t0l• <flll IMll; 546-9321 •••
shop rnondty thru fr!dlY 10 a.ft., to 9:30.p.m.111tUrday, 10 1.m. to 6 p.m.
1und1y "00!' 'Ill S p.m.
. .
DAJLY '1\61', JI
•••
,·.
. ::
•
MAY.CO
'·
•
•
•
DAILY PILOT ' ANIMAlogic
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Denture Invention .
For......,. with .,...i, ,,,:,: .,,.,, ••u....,.•• and ''IAwwa" = ~ m. =. o1 lllttie
Lead, Effect Seems Neglihle
By ELDON BARRETT
SEATTLE, Wash. (UPIJ -
Thirty-Ulree years ago, J,23l
persons took part In a federal
research project in an effort
to determine the effects of
lead arsenate spray on hum•n
heallh.
Wenatchee. She had been a
caseworker in sociology and
wa.s familiar with methods o(
tracing persons on hazy In-
formation.
TbeOCllftllt tbina tohamtJJNI udcbetriftl. •'~ detennlne t h e i r aclenti!ic own t.lttb i.. pc.able now •1th a With FtxmlN1' many denture
worth. pluUo aw.in dilc;o..,. lhat actu-wurenmay •t. aped;, II~ witb: ally bold• both ••uppe:r1" and lltt.lew(lff)'ofdecl.turetmmoslobe. "It Jooks like it may have .,owen .. 11 Mvc bdcn pomlN~. O"c applicat1on maJ lut tor
c.. · · h t Jl'ea.it-.. wrJ"c.allt.d F1xoo«NT4' bouts. Denturcs I.hat fil _._,. ~n an exerc1se m w a cao lot dati,"'homo u&e cu.s. Pat. tial to bealth. See your dcotlst
tw:-done under such 13,003.988) and It ba1 reTOhi--recularly.Gtt~1·t1>'u1el'lJOD1:NT
circumstances," uld Allard, t.lonUrddaltutawu:rirl1. FlxootNT Dentwe Adhesive Cream.. 4l:.. Dr. Jack Allard, a state
health officer, said that it had
been determined that about
~ of the I,l.11 died in the in·
terim.
who was In charge of the com--1----------------------
~:t~tper!~~~e~t~d~roi: rr.-~~-1.-¢"0...C-~o~o'
LEGAL NOTICE
The spray concerned was a
type then used almost ex·
elusively In Wenatchee, Wash.
apple orchards as a pesticide e.~-_6l_l.., and even then there was great
111or1c• TO c1101T0111 ~ concern over its effect on
PfC'TIT"tOUS SUllNSSS :~:~:1g: ii~:;.~~= ~._A 9'ilD 'lb::R~C'C" l'M A penons wh<l came Jn C<lntact
llAMm STATIMINT YMI COUNfY Ofll OAANel llllU) W4"i:M£R "fbO/ • With it. .._ w1ow1n1 _..,_ i. dol"' 111u11ne11 111 .. A-n1•1 The J~ kno .. : ''''''°'MATTIE:"· LINO, Ota••· pron;~ was wn as
•AOI ltACING l!NTtlll,IUIES. ,,. NOTICE IS HERl!IY GIVEN lo 1~1------------the Neal Study and it was
"O"' w .. t '""""'""""" Sffwf, Coll• crHlton ol tllt •llcwe ,.."*" dteNtnl fin ed !hr h t f ,,,._, c.i11or111,. !ti.It 111 pertoni 11.v1ne c1•1m1 •••lnll lh• ~ARLY anc oug a gran rom
PAGE RACING ENTERPRISES, Mid ow;~! •t• rt<111lred to tll• tnem, l .. ~ the National Communicable
l'HC., s1111 ot 1newwtt1on< .. t1orn11. w1111 111e 11e<1u1ry YOllCh1r1, In me 0111c1 Dis· ease Cen'·r 1•0 Allanla.
Tt!li IMllMM 11 @ndl,ICtlll by PAc;f of the cltrll el 11'11 •boite enlllled cour1, « EVERYO.rv ~
lllACIHG ENTl!RPRISES, IHC. to ,,_, lllem, wllh '"' llCCllMtY l .. ~ This agency now Js the Center
lat,,,,_N L. f'•• vOlidl«"a, to lht U'l'ldtr.Jtned •1 QO J2rlCI for D;0 ease r··•-t.
Of these deaths, he added,
lead arsenate did not appear
to make "'one bit of dif·
fettnce."
But Allard was quick to add
!hat !he project could not be
classified as a "complete
study," not only because of
missing records but also
because of the relativ ely small
numbers involved.
The results still are being
evaluated in an effort to
0 Had we been able to get into
operation earlier we might
have had more concrete ORD· ER D 'fuf resulls." '!"eautl
He noted that most or the Stick.On persons ffiv<>lved back in 1938
were adults and h>d the eldesl YOURS LABELS Jived they would have been 11~
years <>f age. The youngest
participants are in their 50s. TODAY! "A lot of changes ln
pesticides have been made
since then," he observed. P~ $rrffl, P.O. BOii IW, N--1 t1•U., ~ 1..A.HJl,,u
TM• tt1twne111 wu f!t..s w1111 ''"Cot.In· C•ll1otn1• '2663. W111c11 i. "" !MK• °' LISTENS TO Three years ago, an effort•-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; W C!totk et °"'"" CcNnlY °" O.Ctmbtr lkl1Jnu1 of Ille u11c1tr1klned 111 •II m•t1er1 he II 11. 1r11. pert•1n1,.. hi ""_.,,,, °' ••Id dlltldant, was gun to trace those
JAM•s T, UPR•n w1m1n tour monm1 1t1•r tne first OUbllu· LANDERS persons still alive who took .,..,.,.,.. 11on o1 m11 notlc:•. ' • l -
'111' °".._.. ori,,.. 11,111, 1 O•tK Oe<tmber 11, 1t11 • part in the original survey.
""""' a..a. C1llter1• ,,..... K•"''"" H11rw111 This task was made difficult <nt} awut Extc111rfx °' "" wrn ,,.,.,., or "" •boot• ntf'Md dtc:tdll'lt LEGAL NO'J'ICE because a fire destroyed
P11blllfltd Q••-Co.11 Co." DlllY Piiot. NUii.WiT?. HURWITZ. 11.IM•ll records containing the ad-~ jQ, 21, l'n Ind J11111•ty ), 10 • .QI Ufld ""'" NOTIC• TO Cl:IDITOl:S ,,,, ml·1'J P.O ... JUI IUPllllOll COUl:T 0, TH• dresses showing where the
......, •-.ii, a.11...i, nMS &TAT• o,. uL1P'ORNIA J'o1t subjects Uved 33 yem ago. ------------IZ~m..: •Hc:vtrtx . THI co~~~-::..0••NOe But the names were
-___ LE __ G_AL __ N_OTI __ CE___ Pi.rtMJtlltd Or•• C.lt D•llY ~llot, .Elf•I•" ~llVIN ALMERON Tll1PP, avaaah'e and '"• task waa Dectmber 21. 30, 1'71 Ind Je11111,, 6, 13. •Ito k'*"'" .. AAAl:VIN A.. -TRIPP, •Ito l.I ~ Lil
•tCTITIOUS •UllNlll 1'12 aa-n k-11 •• M.A. TJllPP, 01CH$0d. turned tq~r to Judl_Makle. an
NAMI STATIMINT NOTICE IS HEREIY GIVEN fo the employe or the ••·te ffeaJJh Tiit follow!Pll Ptl'IOM •r1 dolr111l---LEQAL;.,;::.-;-;-===:---lcredltort fl tr.. ........ n1mtd clecedenT QWI
bu•l"V': • ., NOl'ICE ltl•I •11 P*"IOl'll rt1'11ne cl•lms •••In$! "'" D e pa r t me n t office in <... _MUSKET AND SAIRE ANTIQUE illl M14 deetd1nt .,, r.Qulrtd to file flllm,
'"-;A;ttM$, 46' w. lfth SI., COlll ~. wltlt !tie ntetn•ry Voocher1, Jn lite office LEGAL NOTICE Celllornl•. f1ft7 l'ICTITIOUS 9UllNlll of ft11 dri Of the lbollil entlfltd courl, "'
J -, ···J .. NAMI STATIMINT 10 PrtH'llt them, w<-1•o -····-'------------·II ..., ... ....., I ,,..., 1'711 Bus>!tl"d Sf.. Tllto f Uowl 4o1 '" " ·~~-· • 1-tr11nlll'ltlon BeK.11, C•lllof"l• f1"'6 b'.li.I o M lllr'llOtll •ti llf voudllr•, kl Ille Ul'ldlr1l1Md 11 TM olllce l'ICTITIOUI 9USINESI
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
Lease or Buy All Models •••
' P1nonallzed • Stylish • Efficient
Order For Youralf or • Friend'
Mey be used on 1nv1fop1s as r1futn eddre1s
It.bits. Also v1ry Jiandy es idenfific:etion
lebels for marlcing p1rson1I lfems cuch ••
books, records, thotos, etc:. Llb1fs stick on
glass and m•r 1 used for marking hom1
canned ·focd 1fomr. All labels ore printed
with 1fylish Vogue typo on fine qu1Ufy whit•
gummed piper.
Moll Gl'Ol!Mr, 21).1 Ml,..,,,.t Dl'l~i, ~,:.;'.oYER INVESTMENT COM of lier AllOl'lll'Y• GrlM'l•m. Wl"11on, NI.Ml STA,TIMINT 8elbol, Celflort1I•. • Velll:ltrtltr9, Not! •nd C<1Woy, 1000 Jw1!n1 TM fOlloWll'll Pl'r-'1 1r1 dolnt
Thli bu•I-I• blllll COtldllc:IM "1 • PA.HY, IJO NN!IOl't c.nt ... Dl'lw, Sutt. tr111t Sutlcllns, LOl\I 8nclt, CelHwnr .. bu1lllftl e1: P•rhlttllllp. '°°1 N~ Mdl. C.Hf.ntle JtiMI. ftlOt. Whldl b tM plKe ot busl11ts1 Of llKEVER INTEllll.t.TIONAL, 31111
Jd'ln L. G•llNI "''old hrll, 1'20 "lldli-ct L1111, "'t ~Flder1!1Md 11'1 111 m1"er1 iierrtln1nt Chtmln ell Ftr, Cosl1 Mt11, C1Ufornl1
Ttil1 rt1ltf'nlr'lt filed wtltl tti. C0u!'lfY NtwPOl'I IMdt, c,.Ultn11•. lo tlll tslltt Of llld ~nt, wllflln tour '262,,
lr·-·----------·--·-·--·-----·--···---.. 1 Pill 119 tlllf c""'""" dl' Ill NII Vrltll 11,21 ftl
Plf•t Plilllltlf L• .. I Div., P.O. leot ISM I cut• M-. caur. f'J04
I I I
Clwk of °'"'"" CounfY on Dtcm1bo"'· Alt111Mllr ._.,, I Pl"""'lll'lt LIM. month1 •"'1' tllt flflf p.ubllet!lon of thl1 Albert W. RUu, 3111) Chemin di Fw, DAVE ROSS ' 1 NewPOrt a.cit, C.lllomle. !'IO!lc•. (01l1 MtM. Cellfornl• 92616. ,:1 C1t"l lnll'IY J, MlddoK. °"""ly Coun. Frid P. Oronch, 701 Cliff Dti'..,., O•ltd Oecetribtf' 21. lt71 Merl'O!'I M. Riise. 3110 Cf\eml11 ell fir,
'·l41Sf L•tulll l•1cll, C1llfot'lll1. Julil t. Sllttl•r. C01f1 Mtu, C1tltornl1 9:1'2f· PONTIAC
f'utlllthed Ot•l'llll• Goolat D•llY ,.,lol, Llhll• A!kltl•n, 1•10\.'r South ••r ExtoITTbl of Ille Wiit Thi• bu1l11e11 11 bel"t COl'lduCled bv ~r 2Q. 11, l'7'1 •nd Jin1.11rv :r, IO, front, B•lboti l1llfld, C.U•nl•. fl tfl• •tlo¥9 n1mtc1 d1c11H~t M111bel'ld •nd Wife.
1m Slwl.. s-tn1111, 12:11 SlntlllO OrltMM, 'W...._ \11.....,_.., M1rvon M. Rl!u 2410 HAllOl ILYD. crt FAil DllYI ~ , N¥1 2314-11 Orlve, N"""'"'1 lt•dl. Celllomt1, Nott'*' c-•r, Th!1 t11twn1nt tiled with tlte CouMl'I COSTA MIU •• 101S -------------! Thll tmhitt·• 11 bellll aw!Ouded by I 1 ... Jlf'lf111 Tt11St 911141111, Clerk ot Or•11t• County on Otcember 11, I -~ I I .. ntr•I iNrtnl/'lhlo. Liii• •Mdl. Cellflrltl• Mtt. 1t11, bv a1verlr '· Meddox, OtPlll~ Coon. Ph 546 8017 ~·-LEGAL NCYI'ICE Herold 81r•I Tll1 IJIJ) US-1471 tv Clerk, • • -•~ 1 •-...rH A1ex1nd1r &owll Aftlr'NY• fw &ualtrhr l"·IUlt I I •'"" L ___ ~!_l._9-!_PR!~~~ .. =· J Fred P. OrOHth P11bUlhld Ol'•11t• CO.ti O•llr Pllol, PubUMed Or•llf• Co.11 Oallr Pilot, DP•N 7 0fuYio~~e,~K.~~ '~~· :~•=t• P.M. l (_ ...
PICTITIOUI IUllN••• .L:-11· ~~':'.'..°.'!., O.CtmbW n. .. tm end J•n•rY '· 13, 0.C•mb91' 20, 27, n11 •/'Id J•Mu•ry J. lC, ~~•17
Thi tollowl!'ll per'°" I• dolfle blJlll""' Tiil• lltl.,,,tl'll filed with thl County ~....C-~....C:.C-~ NAMllTATIMINT II ....,_'"'M i:':"'.:_--------~~~·~>·:n~1~n~> ________ _:3ll>~~>l~!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'!!!'~~~~~~~~<O!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
11: Cltrll of Or•llH Counl'f on o.c.. 20. 1m.
GllAEF A.SSOCIATEI tu Emwild ICALMUCN, DIMARCO, KNA"P
.. Y. L .. Ufll INCh, , ... • mn • CNILLINGWORTH
Clllrln OOMld Grfff, U. E,,,.r1ld A,._.,.,. It llw ••v. ll11Un1 Be•ch. c1. nut ut IN_,.. c.itw ~"""' S.119 "' Tiii• bullnth 11 bl!n1 condllCftd aw •n N_,.,. 8Ncll,, C1llf. nwt. llldi'lldu1I. P·l4'71
Ch•rln Dorlild GrMf P11blt111ed Onona• Coe1t D•llY' 'llof,
Thi• llltlmelll filed with thl Cou11ty: o.c.mbtr 2L JO, lfn •nd J•n1,11ry •· lJ,
c1m el o~ COul'flY on: o.c. 21. i•n. 1'12 ;u..n
IY 8Mrl\' J. Medcklll. OfPlllY Coun!y '""'· ·------------·· ,,_ LEGAL NOTICE
Pub111111d Or•FIM CO.It D•llV P11ot,1------------·I "'-nl>lt a:J, 10, Int Ind Jll\lllry' ,, 11. '"' _,,
LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICE Ofl TllUSTll'I SAU
TRUST NO, '"4 o., J•1111•ry 21. 1m, tt ll:Oll o'clock
,._M, THE Flll$T AMERICAN P'INAN·
(IAL Cml:POllATIOJ\I, f«1nlffy fJrlf
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starting January 3rd
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Trained Tax Professionals
An Anaheim Savings Tax Consultant will analyze
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BEST IN THE LEAGUE FOR
ORANGE COAST SPORTS NEWS · ,.
If you're any kind of an Orange Coast area sports fan, our
'home team' covers your 'home team' and it's 11 simple fact
that the DAILY PILOT covers Orange Coast sports Detter
th"an any other newspaper 'delivered in the Orange Coast
area
e Complete Statistics
e Steff Photos of Action Where It Happens .
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" Here's Th"e Team Tliet Produces Tlie Real Fen Fare For Jlif
Orange Coast Area:
GLENN WHITE
Sports Editor, columnist, covers tho
pros and often reports on 'hot' teams
on tho prep, junior college and college
circuits.
CRAIG SHEFF
He's your m•n in the press box
•I 1·unior. :college :contests4 Sp_.
·ci.t attention js focused on
Or.tn9• Co.tsf, Golden West
•nd s.ddlebock.
HOWARD HANDY
His primery be1t is UCJ, wh•r•
'he covers ell sports activities,
plus other arees of local in ..
tere1t includin9 golf,
ROGER CARLSON
He's the DAILY, PILOT's pr•~
•Porfs •P.tcialist, Fourteen high
schools •rt on his re9ul1r be•f,
He often ~overs others, too,
PHIL ROSS
Sports features end prep school
•ctivities tr• his specialty. He
wes the DAILY, Pl LO T's m•n •!
Rams •nd Ch1rger1 training
~1mp1.
Plus Our Award-winning Photo 'Squad'
LEE PAYNE
Cw.t ........... ,,
RICHARD KOEHLER
Steff ...... ,.,w
Consistent winners in competition
•mong nows photographers at the
county, state and national level are the
photojournalists of tho DAILY PILOT,
staff. They love a football game, ba ..
kotball contest, wrestling match -or.
1nythin9 else that furnislios action for.
their. lenses. When it comes to sports,
those are some of the festest shots
(anCI ii.st shooters] in the West.
PATRICK O'DONNELL
~ ........ ,..w. TecMltS..
Fol"low Our Team To Follow Your Team
I
• Mondly, J111uary s. 1972 DAIL V PILOT ~(
Orange Coast Area Men in Service
Second Ueutenant Jell"'Y
N. Wllllam11 IOI\ of Mr. and
Mrs. CllHord 0. WIUW.. of
W3 BelWt Ave., Costa Maa,
has been awarded ~er-wings upon graduaU<>n fro U.S. Air
Forco oavlgalor at
lllalher AFB, .
U~tenant WIJlJ11115 u bt!ln&
assigned to MacDIU AFB,
Fla., for Dying duly with a
unit of the Tactical Air Com·
mand which provides combat
units for air support ol U.S.
ground forces.
Army Prlvalo Terry L.
SmWI, aon of Mr. and Mrs.
Earl L. Smith, 6395 Lewis,
Leng Beach, recenUy com·
pleted basic Army
Administration course at Ft.
Ord. Call!.
Hls wife, Rileen, lives at
9543 El Ray, Fountain Valley.
Marino Sergeant Georc• G.
MWer, husband of M r 1 •
Ellzabeth A. Miller ol !1;11
M.adllon Ave., Westminster.
was •warded the Good C.On·
duct Meilal during ceremoni'8
held at Marine Corps Air Sia·
!Jon (Helicopter), Santa Ana.
He received the Medal for
bis exemplary .service to the
Marine Corps over a three-
year period.
Coast Guard C.det, John F.
Russell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edward G. Russell of 25581
Charro Drive, san J u a n
Capistrano, is on Christmas
leave from the Coast. Guard
Acadetpy, New Londori, Conn.
Ste\'t L. Kelley, fOn of Mrs.
Dorls 'A. KeUey, ~.!il29 Coke
Ave .• Lakewood, tecenUy was
promoted to Arfi!Y SpeclaUsl
Four. He ls now servlng near
Wieabaden, Germany., as a
rnecbanto In battery D, 5th
Batlallon, Isl ArUllery.
His !albu, RUl!ell H •
Kelley, lives at 165.1 Bimini
Place, Costa Mesa.
Army Spedallsl Fow: All••
S. Lewh, aon of Mr. and Mrs.
fornt D. Lewis, 112 Hunt·
ington St., Huntington Beach,
recently participated in a
Yearly tank gunnery qualirica·
tion lest at the Army Training
·~ .~ _ ........
~ '""f"C,'i'
Ground In Grafe n wo hr•
Germany.
He is a tank loader with
Troop L, 3rd Squadron o( the
21)d Armored Cava Ir y
Regiment.
ralne A. Kline, 5&U Nordine.
Drive, Huntington Be a ch ,
Calif., is assigned to Ft. Ord,
where he is training under the
modern volunteer ArJDJ'. Field
Experiment. ·
Army Specialist F 0 u r Army Private Peter
Rkbard J. Boll.nboff, !On of 7'1icbalskf, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. hlelvin \V. J ose( Mich a I a k 1, 6871
Bobnhoff, 9851 Bolsa Ave , 1delboume S t. • Huntington
Westminster, recently was Beac h, recently was assigned
assigned to the 720th Military to the llOth military police
Police Battalion near Long co mpany. He is now serving in
Binh, Vietnam. Korea , as a Security Guard in
Spec. Bohnhoif is a n the company.
Armored Personnel Carrier ---------
Crewman with the battalion's
Company C. Kids I.Ike
Army pri~ K•aoelb L. . To Ask Andy
Thompson, son of ti.1rs. l...()r·
• j
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12 DAILY PILOT s Monci.,, J'""lltJ l , 1~72
l' our Money
Economy Looks
Great .fo r 1972
By SYLVIA PORTER
tn the erim aprine of 1970,
when both the .st.ock and bond
marktt,s were crashing, cor-
por.iion bankruptcies were
IOltl.ng and unemployment
w11 climbing, I met Paul
McCracken, ch.airman of the
President'• co u n c 11 of
Economic Advisers, at a small
dinner party in Washington.
Havtng flown in from New
York City that very afternoon
juJt for the party, I was
lhorouahly saturated w i t h
Wall Street's despondency and
l tried to impress upon
McCracken that a continuation
of lbe bloodbath in Wall Street
could have a disastrous im-
pact on business and con-
gumer psychology.
McCracken listened politely
but he argued in turn that
such painful developments
were esaential if our galloping
ln(Ja'.Uon and In flation
psychology were to ~urbed.
While he didn't actually de-
fend bloodbaths, bankruptcies
and joblessness, he didn't
demonstrate what I thought
wu appropriate conc.ern about
them either. Finally, my party
maMers slipped a bit and I
blurt<d:
0 What the hell do you want,
Paul?"
for th& uplum 1ppear1 !alt!)< '
sure: a moderately better firlf,
quarter, a much better second
quarter, a stlll ' belt.er ·third
quarter right into November
1972 -wit!& all that bnplles.
There are solid reasons to
believe this.
•Yoo, the consumer -by
far the most crucially Im·
portant spending force Jn our·
economy T are atepping up
your buying acrou-tbe-board.
You showed that during the c.,..__.,...;:;;;r;
Christmas season. W h a t • s
"'°'" the .... iuve index of S••hedule Brea•-er .. consumer confidence put out ~ K 9
~~at5~'n1~~:e;n!i~io~is~~~! 'Air trucks' can shorten the construction schedule for the proposed giant 1Al-
Aug. 15 hu now been regained askan oil pipeline, according to the Lockheed -Georgia Company. The use of
and the picture looks: "right Hercules airfreighte~uch as shown in this artist,'s concept, could put t~e
for a consumer buying ad-pipeline into operation · onths earlier. The planes could air·
vance" of significant pro-lift 60 and 40.foot lengths o four·foot diameter pipe along a 195-mile segment
portions. of the route from Fairbanks to Prudhoe Bay. '
Your Federal Income lases-------------------'-------------are being ait. Your rate of
savings ii still abnormally
high; money ts ample for in-
stalment and other consumer
Joans; inflation is slowing
down.
NY Shipping Circles .
Face Import Crisis
Abandoned
Prin1e Rate
Plan Eyed
NEW YORK (UPI) -Bank-
ers Trust Co., seventh largest
bank in the country, has aban-
Finance
'Briefs
e Ore Cuthtuk
OAKLAND -K1iler Steel
Corp. announced It 11 1l1ahing
produ<ilon of ore and pellel!
for uporl ll'om JI! !:ogle
Mowitain mine In Callfoml1
by about half. Mining opera·
lions .wlll W. shut down for
tour to siJ: weeks. The cause
or the slash Is that world price
of pelleUzed iron ore has
fallen below the price of Eagle
Mountain pellet:!.
e WeU Drilli119
LOS ANGELES -Reserve
OU and Gu Co., said its
1ubsidJary, Canadian Reserve
Oil and Gas, Ltd., has farmed
out 1.15 million acres in the
Cape Isachsen and Meighen
Island areas of the Arctic to
Dome Petroleum, Ltd. The
agreement gives Dome a half
Interest in the big tract in
return for financing and car-
rying out exploratory work
and drilling at least one well.
eLeather
MOUNT VERNON , N.Y.
-Geoscience Instrument:!
Corp. has obtained a license
from DuPont Co. to make and
market Corfam poromeric
materials resembling leather
for indutrial use. Geo.science
has been DuPont's biggest
customer for · Corfam since
DuPont cea58d marketing the
material to the 1boe industry. His face cracked into a
quick grin and he shot back :
"I want to be my suc-
cessor.''
•voo, the U.S. businessman,
are also 8Cheduling a 6.5 per-
cent increase in your Jl)ending
on ple.nt and equipment dWing
these first ais months over
I97l's last si:s: months. The in-
crease couJd be r e v i s e d
upward as the year rolls on
and tbe value of the tu: lo-
ctntives you obtained last
year sinks in.
NEW YORK (UPll -The
recent decision of United Fruit
Co. to move its big banana
terminal up the Hudson to
Albany was a shock to New
York shJpping circles, but ap-
parently they face worse
news.
U.S. ports on the Atlantic,
Gulf and Pacific coasts th is
year. Arch a I c regulations,
huge pilferage and other ex-
pensive drains in the U.S.
ports drove shippers to take
the routes through Canada.
doned the prime rate conetpt E i tor a flexible Joan-pricing e Cat ng nes
PEORIA Calerplllar That quip effectively ended
our serious exchange and I
moved to another gr o u p
whlCh, by coincidence, in-
cluded Herbert Stein, the man
President Nixon recently nam-
ed to be McCracken's suc-
cemr.
•And there's no question
about the direction of the third
great force -government
spending at all levels. That's
ap! Jn fact, the Federal
budget deficit for this fiscal
year is projected at an
enormous $28 billion and for
fiscal 1973 (to begin next Julyl
at around $26 billion. If
anything, those deficits are too
high.
United Fruit said that since
jt made a change some years
ago to boxing it.s bananas in
the tropics instead of shipping
them on stems, it no longer
needed the specialized handl-
ing equipment installed in its
New 'York terminal. Other
considerations also made it
desirable to let its ships move
up the river to a convenient
truck and rail center.
Inuner's view was sup-
ported recen\IY in a statement
by Louis P'. Swartvefwer,
manager for trade develop-
ment in Europe of the Port of
New York Authority. .....
policy, leading to speculation
that prime rates. or current
lending rates, may drop .
The current lending rate to
most credit worthy corporate
customers, which now stands
at SVt percent, normally will
be subject to adjustment
monthly, Alfred Brittain Ill,
bank president, told a news
Tractor Co. announced Thurs-
day it will build a factory at
Mossville, Ill., to make
engines and engine parts and
will enlarge Its engine plant at
Gosselies, Belgium, w h i c h
makes a wide range of p~
ducts, including engines. Now, as 1972 opens and
McCracken fades from the
Washington scene, his smart
crack turns out to be pro-
vocati~ely perceptive. For
McCracken did preside over
the nightmare economic-finan-
cial years of the Nixon ad-
ministration -three years of
unmltlgaled disaster f o r
millions of Americans.
.. Now his successor will
pr!side over a lourth year of
economic expansion -rising
production, sales and profits,
rising employment and
paychecks, a falling rate of
joblessness and bankruptcies.
We would have to make just
about every mistake in and
out of the books to m~ µp
our economy in 1972.
The recovery which was so
sluggish in 1971 that it -often
seemed nothing more than a
hiccup in the 1969-70 recession
is now gradually acce lerating.
While some of the optimistic
projections could well tum out
to be too bubbly, the blueprint
/vl~FWl.tb
MOTOR HOMES
"Meanwhile th& Federal
Reserve System has shifted to
an aggressive easy money
pollcy to quicken the upturn's
pace. You can get what you
need for loans.
•And the devah.Jat\Qn ol
the U.S. dollar again.st foreign
currencies must help increase
our ei:ports, directly stimulate
many industries and create
new jobs.
The "standard." forcast for our total output In 1972 puts
the rise in dollars at $100
. tiillioo -the first time in
history thal nice r o u n d
number ha.s ~n used for a
single year's increase. The
w1despread pr~iction is that . ' our ''rea l" growth ·-growth
minus the contribution of price
incre&.5e1 ~ will be around 6
percent.
As McCracken said during
that dark spring of '70, it
would have been nice to be his
owu suecesaor in brightening
'72.
Low-interest
Home Loan
'
Plan Eye d
'These "other considerations"
apparently are d r i vi n g
huge amounts or import and
export ocean freight out of
New York and other American
ports to Canada, particularly
to Halifax. The other con-
sideratioiu are (1), the Cana-
dian ports do not experience
the f r e q u e n t dockworkers
strikes that tie up U.S. ports
for WHks at a time, (1)
Halifax and Montreal have
new intennodal c o n t a i n e r
loading and unloading
facilities that save time and
money, and (3) for some im·
port:!, the combined rail and
ocean freight to U.S. cities is
less than by way of New York, .
when handling charges are ad-
ded.
Halifax, despite its far north
location, is ice free the year
around and its harbor is deep
enough for the largest con-
ventional or container ships.
Montreal, lhe other principal
Canadian port, is more con·
Swartverwer said dock
unions jn the United States
have "killed the goose that
lays the golden eggs."
He predicted that many
European shoppers w h o
diverted cargo for the United
States to Halifax and Montreal
during the recent strike will
not return to New York. He
said that Europeans are pleas-
ed with the wa y the i r
shipments were handled in
Halifai: and Montreal.
He also said the ports of
~stoo and Philadelphia do
not stand to lose as much to
the Canadian ports as New
York. But, said Swartverwer
the de facto devaluation or the
dollar and the U.S. 10 percent
tax surcharge have made
European exporters determin-
ed to explore · every op-
portunity for savings in Ume
and money in reaching the
U.S. market.
Speculator
Shift Told
venient to U.S. markets but A new, pro-speculator al-
has winter ice problems. titude of Washington coincides
SALES • RENTALS
18 ft. to 28 ft.
John R. Immer, president of with an important shift in
Work Saving International, a leadership wJthin the in·
Washington Manager ia I vestment community, ac~
Consulting Firm, said recently cording to Hoppin, Watson Inc.
thit the diversion of U.S. ex· That shift is from mutual
ports from American ports to funds to the banks: "whose
Canadian ports already is so huge resources make them
far advanced that he expects ideally competent players in
SACRAMENTO (UPI) $4 billion of such traffic to the new blue~hlp game Which
Assemblyman William T · move through the dominion is just beginning ·and which
Bagley. <R-San Rafael ,) said ports on both coasts next year. mind s still frozen Jn the mold
Wednesday he plans to draft He said the diversion began of the 1960s do not yet fully
legislation setting up a state during previous dock strikes in grasp,·• the firm says. program or tow-interest home ------------'-----------
UTE LINER
IALIOA-PACE ARROW
''" Indoor Storage (Limit· H Time Offer) With Your
P11'rchaH.
0
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> • % u " IDINOll:l't I:
558-3222
1411 S. VILLAGE WAY
SANTA ANA, CALIF.
loans.
Bagrey said he will meet
with banking interests and the
construction Industry to work
out details of the program . He
said he plans to introduce
legislation during the 1972
session which began today.
"This program can be made
without cost to the state,"
Bagley .. id, "Md will rely
upon the issuance of state
revenue bonds to give the
housing induslry the benefit ol
tax-free interest costs In the
construction of ]ow.cost hoot-
ing. This program would be
111uch like our successful Cal·
Vet program ••. "
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LEASE or BUY • • •
1972 CONTININTAl 01 MDCUIY -
Tete YWf' ~ !Nm ,.. ce"'"'"
MM _, kewtllul ..,. LIM•• M'
MIW'C..,,, 14 rt'lf' <Mk .. Wt -•Mt
1' tffflt ~ -IVH IMlftl-· .....
~,.111 Niii.... 19 ~ I'"'-' -FREE BOOKLET
• s... 111 ,... ~ "' ._ti,,. -,,. .,.,.-.., •MWtrtiit 4u ,...,, ~ I : ,..... IWINlll!f INll"I .1~ 11nt!MM1&. C
• • : KAMI .................................. ----··-••# ............... _ .. _ :
: A.1>011111 ................................................................ _ : ' . . • Cn"Y .............................................. ,HoHI .................. o
'·-···--..................... ..... t
'
Mini·co1nputer U'ITtl .......
conference Wednesday. e .Smoke Plant
The new flexible loan-pricing
policy will take into account
rates on negotiable
Ci!rtificates of deposit as well
as commercial paper, and
other underlying m a r k et
factors could lead to more fre-
GREENSBORO, N. C.
Lorrilard division of Loew'1
Corp. plans to add 1 41,188-
square foot tobacco processing
unit to its Greensboro cigaret-
te plant.
quent adjustments, Brittain e Mobile Homes
said. CINCINNATI -Schott
The bank's move followed Industries, Inc., says It will
by a day a sharp dip in short-open a plant in Glens Falls, N.
term interest rates along a Y., to make aluminum com-
broad front of the money ponents for mobile homes by
market . -resulting in the . Jan. 15. The •cost wu not
Si:>fCUlat1on that curre~t ten-revealed. ding rates may be 1n for
aoolher reduclion. e Oil Reflner11
The Federal Reserve Board
Tuesday lowered its key rate
of dealer rep u rc h ase
agreements to 3% percent
from 3% percent, a rmve
market sources said sparked
the downward trend in short·
term rates.
Bankers Trust said it would
establish its "current lending
rate" based on spreads over
the current fiv~ay average
rates both on 90-day dealer
commercial paper and 89-day
negot iable certificates o f
deposit.
Card Abuse
Ma y Cause
Extinction
MENLO PARK (UPI) -
Instead of taking over, credit
cards may become extinct by
19801 sccording to a Stanford
Research Institute economist.
The reason: Abuses are so
widespread that some credlt
card companies may be losing
as much as half their gross
profits.
"Criminals have begun to
use stolen cards instead of
guns," Ray Zablocki wrote in
SRI's publication,
"lnvestmtnts in Tomorrow,"
He said a stolen card sells for
between $75 and $200 in the
New York area.
"! understand that the
airli nes make few credit
checM on the typical credjt
card." 1.ablocki said. "That
means a stolen card user
could quite possibly get from
the East to the West Coas'
free.
"He could even buy a couple
of extra tickets and cash them
In or sell them at a discount.
Then when he got out here, he
could run up quite a bill,
b e c a u s e communicaUon.1
between ~ East and West
Coast in terms of credit
vttllficatlon are IO poor."
Pnaent methods of curbing
lo .... due lo stolen cards have
been I 1 r g 1 I J ineffective,
Zlb!ocltl said.
EflectJve methoda are possi-
ble, such as voice prlnta or
finaerprinla lo verily the card
owner, on. even a computer
1ystem that would record each
customer'• purcbasa H he
mak .. them and compared lo
his "•pending proWe.'l
"Bui the practical dlf·
flcultles of developing such a
system 1nd 1etUng all the
credit cord C<lmP1nl.. lo •cree to ... 11 ue mlnd-boQI·
CLEVELAND -Arlhur C.
McKee '& Co. said its Italian
subsidiary has won an $80
million contract to design and
build an oil refinery near
Lysekil on the west coast of
Sweden f or Sbndinavska
Rafinaderl. Capacity !'ill be 7
million metric tons a year.
eAerospace
WASHINGTON -The Com-
merce Department 'reported
Thursday that new orders in
the aerospace industry rose to
$6.51 billion in the third
quarter fro m $6.35 billion 1
However, govtl'1Unent orders
dropped to $4.71 billion frorn.
$5 billion a year earlier.
•Boat Bid
NEW YORK -Lilton
Industries, Inc., has given
Bird-Johnson Co. of Walpole,
Mass., a subcontract with a
potential value of $21.5 million,
to make controllable pitch
marine propellers for
Spruance·class destroyers for
the Navy.
e Partnership
LOS ANGELES -Signal Oil
&r Gas Co. said a complete
plan to rtol"ganize the troubled
oil,.. empire ·of Jd\n Mecom,
the Texu financier, was
presented 1o New Orleam
Federal Court with recom·
mendaµon for approval. The
court set a hearing for Jan. 17.
It fs pnipQ&ed lo put the
Meco.m properties into a
limited . partner1hlp w I t h
Signal as the general partner
and a Mecom-owned company
as a limited partner. Signal
said the plan ultimately will
satisfy the claims of all the
recognized Mecom creditors.
Mecom wlll put 110 million
plus his aoutllem X....Wan1
oll and gu producing pro-
perties into the partnmblp.
51gna1 on will lend the
partnenhlp l20 mllllon. The
partnership will ......,. all the
obligatlono, freeing Mecom
from poraonal U1blllty for
dalm1 agllnst the oll pro.
perties.
• PllOM s,ateM
NEW YORK -The Bell
Telephone Syllem Monday
propo,ied 1 new hl1h capacity
m o b 1 l e telecommunications
1ys1em <lfflJned lo slam co!la
ind_ multfply • e rv Ice 1
Developed by Be ll
Laboratories, the propoaed
aysl4m employs 1 honeycomb
Plltero !bat -It poalbl•
to ""' and rOlllO local tr.
qum:W many tlmU Iii 1111'
FAME-LESS
'FACES
. '. ~ ~). --.t,
ti.LEN L SKAfff
•
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Think You Don't
Know Them?
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You probaby don 't recognize a single namo or
loco in this group and •yot, if you're ono of the
DAILY PILOT'S very well informed ed itorial page
readers, it is this talontod loam of writers which'
helps you keep informed. They write t~o Editori~
al Resea rch Repo rts. Though thoirAwn nam ..
don 't appear on tho articl es which aro published
under tho Editorial R11oarch Reports heading,
those are the real pros -digg•rs who go after
all the backround fa ct• which put today 's top
issues into perspective -without t hought of
seeking the fame that goes with the na me when
you're • national columnilt.
They're -Your
INFORMERS ·
Yes, they CQuJd be your "informers." It's f11tures;
like Editoriel Research Report s which make the'.
DAILY PILOT fn uch more than just the most:
important ' hometown nowspeper available to:
Nsid1nts along t~1 Or1n91 Coast. Thi DAILY
PILOT is the total package, It makes whatever
happens in the world "local news'' and d1livers
it daily rig ht to your home, l et this tee m of d1di-
.. tod "informers" l*p 'y h ep informed. Rea ct
Editi>riel Research Re on the editori1l p19e;
-and an the other informativ e special f11tu re(
in other ports of the ·:
DAILY PILOT
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A teehnician carefully tem circuit wiring on a mlnl·
computer being assembled al the Westlngbouse El·
eclr1c Corponlion plant in Orlando, Fla. The unit
ls used for. wide variety of induslrial and commer·
cial appUeaUons including procas control and m1ny others.
'"'·" he uJd. d~ ~--~,_.;.~~~~--------~..v
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Recipe For Variety
a dash of-S. I. Hayakawa
a pinch "'Of lliam Hogan
a· hint of spice a la Jack Anderson
season well with Art Hoppe
ll119redients which may be substituted
without losing any flavor include: Bill
Sanden, Robert S. AUen, Royce Brier,
Hal Boyle, Charles McCabe, Richard
Wilso'1• Sydney Harris and Bill Mauldin.>
Good chefs know in any recipe it's the ingredients that count. The .,7'1L Y
PILOT emphasizes the "home grown" and local· ingredients (letters to the
editor, Gloomy Gus, local editorials l, but only top quality ingredients are
used on the DAILY PILOT'S editorial page, whether local ~r national.
Besides its strong local emphasis, the DAILY . PILOT serves up a variety
of columnists with a wide range of flavor. Here are a few of the diverse
columnists that can be found on the DAIL V PILOT'S editorial page. (There
is no set· schedule as local material has priority over columnists, but some
of the top national columns appear several times each week.>:
Hayakawa ..
S. I. HAYAKAW/\ -eClds to
the variety of flavor with his dis-
tinct writings ·on higher education,
semantics and communications.
He also writes about the mecha-
nisms of understending end mis-
understending; ebout the weys in
which our decisions ebout rece or
wer or public policy are sheped
by the words we use in talking.
"I hope," seys Hayakewe, "that m,y column is like e
weekly letter to a friend, telling him "'.hat's on my mind and
why I think it is important."
S. I. HAY AKA WA is usually associated with San Frah-
cisc:o Stete College where. as president he took a hard-line
approach to quiet a·nd contain student riots there. But now
he has gdne b~ck to some of the things which concerned him
before he became a college president.
Hogan
WILLIAM HOGAN has the
fresh flavor in the book field . 1-je
presents e truly national outlook .
free from the pressures of pro·
vinciel literary feddism •
His book reviews say exect-
ly what he thinks. "I feel it is im-
porte~t to ~e a reporter, 111 well
111 11 critic, covering the ectivities
of writers and publishl.~ as well
as evalueting their products." That's how Hogan explains
Hogen.
j
WILLIAM HOGAN presents his book reviews lion-
tstly. That's how Hogan readers deicribe Hogen. Check
his reviews for yourself. Reed Jhe Bookman •
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Hoppe
ART HOPPE Ii tlie 1eeson-
ing needed ·for any recipe. An
outstanding political end social
satiritl, he has been likened to
Will 'Rogers and Mark Twain.
His topics can be anything.
He reads through the paper until
he finds an item he doesn't under-
stand-then he explains it to ev·
erybody, he says •
. He combines solid feet and his . own whimsy to cre.+.-
11 un1qu11 column on the people and forces she ping' our world,
A~l ~.OPPE hes "the p_erfect . sol~tion to. absolutely
everything, he gleefully admits. And most of h11 solutions
appear oil the DAILY PILOT editorial pege where they melrit' .. : ·
delightful reeding. · · :_
Anderson
JACK ANDERSON'S 1 m'uck-
reking is the perfect spice for
hose who like the taste of~ good
·controveoey. He seeks out cor-
r-ruption in government end mili-
• tery effeiri and exposel' them in
his columns. '
As the lete Drew Pe11r11>n's
former No. I euistent who inheri-
ted the column, Anderson s e e s
himself as the "voice for the ,voiceless." He is a herd-hit-
ting columnist with determlnetion end drive •
He keeps his keen eyes on both foreign end n~tionel
effiirs, often · comments on ·Congrenionel bills and is "the
men with the X-rey eyes orl the se'c~ef files." •
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They Add up to a 'Tas~yr: ·Edi~o1rial Page . in The
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Zf DAILY PILOT Mond<y, Jan11117 3, 1972
30222 CROWN VWn PARKWAY AND HILLHURST IN LAGUNA NIGUR
11 Inch O..nl1htor
•k"\l ...... t1.-w .......... , .... W •11.Wll-~-...... M ... •16.ftll.,_JW...C.-...~ 'tl.W
' I ·' '"'I --~, . .._,.., with touth ... ,,. ,,., ., ...... o,.....
t111lt .. ,1.fr\,~n 91 .. rvic.. ,_,. .. ~~~.
CARLOAD of COOKIES SALE!
OY0 1Fr,1h
Jun,bo C~)Jles
3 Bog s s1 f or
Jumlto Cremo
Sandwiches
FAMILY FASHIONS at DISCOUNTS!
$6'' Value! Deluxe
Striped Sport Shoes
~ 10.. Mon & Boys
s333
PeneHI Sl1e ~ '
Woodbury Soap
.4~25c
· s1-e~"' Kotex
Saaltary $111 lap Id al
'1" Value!
Bayer Aspirin
$J18
c;, • ...._
$J2t:. lst Quality Muslin
Printed Piiiowcases
• S ..... lty M•lt~olor Pri11t
11t' quality cotton 1n11,U111 with
Pin~, l llHI, Yol1ow C. Multi•'
color pri11h.. 421<36" tlzo "fith
3• h•'"· Co111plotoly colorfa st.
S..ve45"
Supef'-Ob.orb.nt.,.
wmhed bleodied, Ii
r.ody• u.._All lat
q11olity. luy 3 • '° .... 23c.
I
$3'' to $5t~•-• Beacon
1st Quality •lankets
....... ~·· • 1'Mnnlllt~.
Prillh, aolid., plaids, ch.W '
1tri,..·l11 polYftier i.'"'YOl'I blond, p.i;..,... « ..,.le fabrtU: .l• '
tfio right -ight fot COMt'Otfol:llo
1IHpift1J 0111 ti-of year. 721&90"
ala. "S;,pw' Val•• li }; ..... ,. . . .
'
•tt·· '3..Y .. y~1howor .
: . -. · . . . (urtaf11I , -' i . • .
With· Rings ·
$247 ·:
'6a6' eu0
rl\tiM 111 pti11h w
totidt: compfote with 12
«!or cffrdinat . .d n,. ..
'
' . . $3" Cannon Mont cello
No Iron Print Sh · ts
'
••• ef 40 ......... ,...
R•9· •1 Children's
Spec-I lozenges
wlth,49c Mat~hbox Toy
$),49 Value!
.F11t Temporary Roliof of
Minor Sore ThtGat Pain
'''" q~oll'Y p•l1•""" G•<i <o•a•
~o·i••• .~ .... i• 'Alo~o' !lo"'I
P';""· Moc~•••'""'~' '"'"blo ~,.,.
••• -...... 1 ....... .
\
. Fin! q••lity, $1•• white ,cotton
... muslins ••• fi.rm-
11 •ovm.=-ooth. ! ... loq weuing ! \ ·
• $4.79 full Siu Flater FittH ......... ~ .•... $2.H
•'lfl. 2)$2.79 Matchi"I Pillew <•••• .. 2 for$1 .ff
Reg. $p• to $po
Model Kits
'
Reg. 96• Bradley
Games & Puzzles
,.,,11 .. f°'" Agt1 YHr
•S2.!I Fill Sirt Fl• tr fittr• $2.19
• 2 ftr $111 lf1tc-i1r; PiUt• Cise.s 2 tor 98_c
S24'v.1 .. r ~
Syringe & Bottle
1~~ Combination
\'.~ $J23 '
'
12" lnstantload: t
Camera Outfit "'~"'
lndant load Ma11l-
Reg.$2"~
Chewable
Vitamin C
Bottle of 365
$J77 f•atwr• rugg•d Yi11yl.
uppen, 11on-1lip soles,
full c1Hhion iruol'" •ith
cu1hio11 on::h 1upport5,
pcidd•d IOllSJU•-In
_,... & boy$' •i1•1.
Ll-.Pritr·, fantaiticn.wfa1lt-ion11 Including
pant 111itr., poa1tnl
12 to ad11ft and tf.olce
... ftfM2 ... ,. play.~, ago 4 to C 12, By Milton
with cartridgo cup.. ca .. n outfit $·9·aa
filM -gic11b. and • ·
Complot.e with
attacllmonb. "fop
q11alit)' -gllOr-
antood far 2
1C id1 lovo tlie
flavor1. Clloo1•
Orongo or L.moft
flavor In 100 "'9o
tablilb.
*2,. Mon's Acrylic
Knit Shirts
f11lt fo1hioned 1hort
1l11111d thltf• '" $2 34 11-t colo11o, Tl1rlf..
ty'1 OWft Courtl1y
lab.I. 5-M-L
*2,. Long Sleewed
Women's Tops
,_ ,,..~1y ...
tw &. cotton blinds $2 h1 hl-ttyle 1hl"5 T1t 33 eollch,prlllb,stn,...
$11 .. 32-31.
$3'' Value! ontrol Mates .. . ·t::~·I Control Panty &
· ,· ' ·. Replaceme,at
· > i\' Nyl,ns
A1m!~'$3.oo 99c
et Thrifty
ContMI -.. ,_., net comrol
,...,Y-.itft ,.ploceobi. long l•ngth
11yl.R lfNkh ttedclftfs. Pon,Ygirdl•
prorict.to111fwtobl• flt with no bln4,
$-M-L tiu. 111 fcr.h lo11 d1odH..
' "
011tfit1 & l'l'IOrt.
$5" Value!
Colorful Plastic
Molded Chair
Save
'$2.56 $3~~
Tou11h polypropyle11e plaatic
1110ld.d clloln ldoal lot' dl!lin;
f'OOfl'!, P4fio,· pool•lde ar office. In Avocoih, Tt111;orine & YeU __ ,
s 1.. '' vli11M1 v1nr1 .~~'••l•· Sholl Lining
11" wld•.112' '-
111 cholc• of d.. ,
l11y all .,..., ft...! "'"' ...... 1on. $J09
., bl1 "'""' ...... 11111,.
$)4" Valuo!
E11cyclopodla
Book Caso
• Wolnut $999
Finish
HandAO-&. p.radl~I d .. i11n for
atudortl's "'°"'• dt11. 28x23•9"
1i10. !aay to auomhl• too.
•1n Brooms or
~14' Spfllge Mops
, • .,, ... 1 .. '""" • .... 99c ltt•••.-Metel Mtul ~1• ""P .
... Thrift)' 1 ...
I ,,
Bradl•y. ,
Blue, Green-& Hot Colon
'10u Motal
Foot Lockers $596
St"'"I Qnd aturdy wood frelM
111otal foot l11;1:kors witll MllKI,.
on11lo blndin; and MIOY)' dvty
corntrs, vinyl ttrep llandle, flb,.
linln;.
wri.i strop.
flMi scluors In delu•• 11"1M11!11•nt
for oll-purpote hauMllold tiM.
S... 75e duri119 tolol
SJO:.ruol oa. TUSSJ
lip Riot
lipstick
Sa ... llolf on. lat.st
fashion 1llcidt1.
.iMliiiMlil.liii
'100 valuol Shulton j
DfSERT FLOWER _;
Deodorant": . soc
Clloi~• of trooM .,
roll-on. On~ Q Y•tir
llolf pric• 1a¥irtg1 on
Shullon'1 doli9llth1lly
•C•ntod doodorant.
$1.5D Spr1r D••-•r11t.
r 4 tl., 75c
Rowl•11 .Natural Herb
~leans•r or lotion
• N1tlnl 1!1r'1 Ski• Cl111s1r13·11. $225 • Ntt11'11 MutJ lftlst1r1LlllH17·1L •
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Mond.lr. J""'illJ 3, 1972 OAll.Y Pit.OT
He·insohn · -Offers Little Praise f or Lake rs
•. By GLENN WHlTE
' 1 Of lie D6llJ , .... Stttf • INGLl!lWQOD -He dldo'l coone out . • and HY It dlrectly. but you had·to gather •• . • •• that Bolton 'Celtlcl' <0ach Tommy • ., lfelnsohn wan:hagrined with officlattnc • • Sunday •night at the Forum as his forees • ? dropped a lD-113 duel to the Labra. • n was only the sedond loss in Bost.on'& • • Jut dozen gaines white:tbe ·Lakets have • •• now ' swelled tbeli: National Basketball . • Association wln a tr Ing to 31. . · . · ~ · .
' · Tb' Lakerf now emQarjL on, a. six-game • . trek, beglnnillg at Cleveland Wednesday • • nlgpt. . . ' "W'e abould.bave won," Heinsobn told •
tbe DA!i,Y PILOT following the struggle. . • . • We're Still •
I" • • . Favorites . • • .
' . . -Wooden • .
.. "We are sUU the favorites," conceded ·~ .. UCLA coach John Wooden on the eve of
the PacUll>B bas.ketbaU season.
;:: His Brblns. unbeaten in eight games,
IOP.-ranked, the natl911's highest scoring
~ team, and national champions the last
~ five · years, certainly rank as odds-on ·
r favorites to survive the conference race
~-.and make It to the NCAA playoffs. But, ~ as Wooden knows, there are pitfalls along
'ft the way.
1~ "USC, Washington and Orunn State 1 ,. are the teams we fear the most," be
1 says. "If anybody ls going to beafUJ it'll
~-: have to be one of those three."
',:. • The use Trojans, playing a far ~:. tougher schedule than UCLA, have won ~~ seven of their nine games, and f.igure. to
~ ~.: Qe the biggest threat to the Drums with
~ ...... three starters back from their 24-2 team ~ Jast year.
' But In drubbings by Arizona State and ~ ' Pel1lllylvania, USC showed weaknesses in
rebounding and depth . ·
Both games were close for a half. but -
the Trojans, their bench crippled by three
pre5eason injuries , seemed to nm out.of
~. ; gas in the second hall. Neverlbel~, with ~ auch players as Ron Riley and Paul ;~l Westphal, they can't be tak~ lighU.y ..
1 Oregon State has been unpres11ve 1n
:~ ~ posting an 8-S record, with two losses to :s.! unbeaten Hawaii and a one-pointer to
Florida State in the finals of the Far
Wesl Classic last w~k. 'rte: Beaver'1
have a talented guanl In Fredell• Boyd
and plenty ol promising young players,
but they · have a· touglreany-;l<h<dule,
hosting use and . UCLA. this Jl'rlday and
Sit...Uy. .
Washington got oll to a 3urprislngly
qukk start, wlnnlnt' its lits! six, losing
., .. two, pd theft winning its last two. In
; Steve Hawes the Huskies have a center
• who can challenge UCLA's Bill Walton on
• the boan!s, and they also have a break in
the early schedule, starting oll with com·
paraUve breathers against California,
Slanford and Oregon. As for . ua.A, the Bruin> .,.. !1llllling
and pressing again and in Walton have a
player Jrho can· male an opponent change
!ta olltn!ive-style by his shoi.b!oekilog
and Intimidating me. They have five
..
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good sl)OC)ters In the starting lineup and
plenty more on the bench, and have a
good ·backup man for Walton in Sven
Nater.
, •:: 'Ibeir only weaknesses urlgbt be in-
• • • experience -three llO!lllomores In the
1tartlng lineup -and lack ol height at
forward, with two starters and tbe top
.......... all 6-5.
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Buffalo Ace
Gets Booked;
LA Triumphs
PHOENIX -J. D. Hill, rookie wide
receiver for the Buffalo Billa of the Na-
t!Onal Foo~all League, WU arrested
here today on traffic charges and two
outstandlng warrants.
Police said Hiii, who formerly pla,_.J
at) nearby Arizona State University and
1i11es ·heTe in the off-season~ WU Cited
Jot making an illegal left -and drJv.
tng without a driver's u~ense.
: A pollce check revealed there were
! · tWo outstanding warrants for his. arrest,
: •! one for a paternity charge from the
: Maricopa C.Oun~y Sherilrs office and a
•. • speeding charge Jrom the Department
I n ol Public satety. ; •t Hill was released lrom the city Jail on : t; ' $35 bond 'and then WU l)OC)ked fn the
i' county jail Oii the patemil)! cllargea. Be
tater waa releaaed from the coanty jill
I
on hJa own roccJtllllzanee. ' ••
• • .
'I · V ANOOUVER -The t.ns Angeles
Klnp appear lo be blclt wbrre they wera
· • ! at the end of last fWIOD. AM ·ror tbtm, , tblt'• 'l\rntJffU., • l · i1 For /he"l.atiiv.e w..O the Kfnp; who l couldn~ beat anyone al the start of this i ' , .euon, have been defeatlng well Na-
; , 1 Ilona! Hockey League teams and nar-
• rowly losing lo strong ond.
'_. They followed Iha patltnl laat weekend,
, ' bowing 3-t to Mlnnellota and defeating the t , • \',ancouver Clnucb S.S. ' .. ' ~:. .
" MINNl!:APOLJS.ST. PAUL -The
\7nlte4 States, with five playen scorinc 1oata. trimmed ~vakla, thl, Sun-
day night lo capture second place in the
World Cup hockey lournall1en~
Then be pointed to the staUstlcs sheet tine! oC streak -even 1')0-game 911<,
and uld, "lonl< ••• look al that. '!'bey get ''Their liW'd• are going cruy so WU!
37 Im thro!' al"'1>pla, we .get 15 .. We . OWnbel'laln Is under no grest pru$ure
JOet lt'ai the Ille thiow Une." ' l to shoot. U. plays one end ol the floor the 1be Lakers Oll!acOred the lnvaden ~ waf BUI Russell ustd lo do and there'• no If Ill; the chaf)ty line. ' . · pn!SSure!
"And wbat gels me la tbe Lake.ls •l>ol>t "They're gambling and they're Jooae.
!.r,<KJ1 oq~lde w¥.I• we go to tM baskOt But 11 they get one player bljured -
uom ·clQle In. ,Yet 'they lei' tlio free · esJleciailf Will or Jerry Weit -then >llirfl!I: Jolui Havllcek'bandloa'the bell eo llley'U b<i a eo~Y, dlll-1 team.
pen:ontoflhetlinefor,uoyell\Oooly.has "As 1ot ua • .:.. we'le one ·pi.yer away
i.f'l!ll1free·lblvw ch•ncu•-none theJ!rst 'from be"'-gmt. We 1eed one ol
half. • . . ' ' · ' · ~e 7~fool. monsters who Is quiet· and
) ':niaJ just .doesn't make sense to me." :, who can imbye.'; .
l!eln3oll)l, a fotmer .pjaying ,1ar for the • Lakers • oOa<b,IBilJ Shannan admitted
Ce!Uca, wu i!SO'll!lf'lng·ln·ltil pr1ise loc · that ·his ~omr. ·go1 caret;sa ·When they
the La¥fa. 'Ydll 19tta;be ,Ilidiy fn apy hach Mi>oint lead reduced lo lfM.99 with . . .1. • .••
! • , •I •
5:11 tq pljy.
"We let clown on swttclllng and putllng
pre.ssure on their shooter.
"Boston la quick enough and dangerous
ffl>U&h wbere if you get careless you'll
get burned," he said. "Ttley were getting
clown court !>efore Wilt and the defense
could g.et st!.
"Bul when it gets close •e seem to
como u1·wJtb the big basket·•
BoetOh bld1 turned on a searing
lhootln& 1treak, hitting 19 ol ZS shots
from tlie floor (76 percent). But the
Lakers pulled away when Chamberlain·
blocked a Dave Cowens attempt !rom un·
derneath.
Then . Gail Goodrich caMed tv.·o,
straight s~ and It wu Uwt with 1:11 •
tell and !lit Lakers were -... agllla
wtousJ,y threatened.
West !>!it the Lakers ahead for good In
the ~ quarter, gelUng bt1 5,oooth
career a1sI1t to Jim Mcl:fllllan, who
made lt JS.all. Then W~st's ensuing frff
throw noond latei put LA In front to
stay. ·
O@y four other ,players -Bob Cou•y •
Giw Rodgers, Lenny Wilkens e.n:ct Oscar
~rtson have more than 5,000.
I Goodrlclr led both t1ams in scoring with
~ while West and Jim McMlllian put in
17 apiece. .
Asked for his impression or \Vest's
caftet assists mark, Shannan said,
"Jerry amazes me so GI* tllll I -'* figure out anything be can'l do. Whalefff
vie 'Ve needed thl9 yeu. be'• ibeel> ~
-shooting, 1teall, del-or ~,..!!·the Shannan. by the way, flu cJ..,_
,.le of West coach 10< the Jp. JI NB.4
All.Star game here. Lat
•orroH "°' •••. , 1
H•vlldltll
S."6ttl c.... Wh11t . .... , wun • ..,, .. ,_ , ....
Tor•ts . ....
o P T 11 ,, )-4 2' ~llliM 13 14' ..
• 1·2 ,, .... ~ : !# ..
l• l•I tt C~lft I II If 71
1 ,., '' wtlr.t!.L. ut1'-ii.t.•
' l•I •, 0..n~ti ' •1 ii I M 'Zltabl~ \.
7 .. , 20 l'lfft. •• :: •
0 ., 0 11119~. " ,_, IJ.U llJ 1'm.i. '1 -~ t
LOI At'lll"lfl
• u • .,._n,. ...
JI. • 11 fl -111
i<ouilld OUT -Non• Toll! '°'-'It -6os'11t! U. l• ......... II
All'IMIN:I -17,lQS.
It's Dallas Against Dolphin~
• ••
In Pro _Foothall's Title Garn :=~
Stauhach, Andrle
Spark Cowboys
Pas~ 49ers, 14-3
DALLAS (AP) -A bloodied youog
quarl;erback on his way to stardom and a
veteran defensive end fighting for his job
keyed' rthe perenpial ''Next Year's Cham·
pi~·~ Dalla! Cowboys into the Super
Boirl Sunday for the second consecutive
year.
Quarterback Roger Staubach, a three.
year man from Navy, scrambled SJn
, Francisco dizzy in a 14-3 National
Conference title victory in Texas Stadium
,. and defensive end George Andrie made
the big defensive play.
DA'LY (llin.o'T Pbli9., llcMr• KMlllW
GOING UP -Gail Goodrich (25) of the Wers,.battles John Havli·'
eek of the Boston Celtics for a rebound. lfappy Hajrston, (52) of. the
Lakers and Don.Chaney of Boston, look up. · · ·
In IJose .a,...,1 .. Upset
I
Ex-Rustler· Grid .Flash . ' '
Turns ;Out Ke y,,Tackles.
r •
One.of the generally<M!flooluol1hen>ea
ot<Sliptorcl's' 13-12 1-J Bowl •IJ9sel of
Mlcl>Jgan'wu Mike smroe· the '!Onher
Golden West C.llege,',P,erfonner.. who
macje two_ or the biggest. tackles ol his
career, back to bact. 1 ~
'Ibey came during Stanlon!'s llemen-
dous goal-line stand al the outset of, the
third quarter. , •
Michigan' bad seconcl and goat ,Ill• go
from;the ooe. Twice tl>e Wolverines were
a lie1tl g~ to subdue the guUy Oregon
team, 10:.1.
Try the 1967 ,fill between USC and
Purdue. i'lbe'Trojans scored late In the
game to i sllce the bulge to .14-11 tlien
mi~ on the ·enoulng try for a tJVo-poirit
conv~ion iand wound up Josillg by one.
'Or·Jake the 1966•struggle.
Uq.A·Jed .Mlcblpn 'Slate, IWZ. alter
the latter lJCOl'ed in the final minute. MSU
""°t far lwo points and the tie but the
Bruins1 Bob Stiles ,made the stop on the
ooe and• UCLA had Ila linl .. ver cenquest
, ln°P&sadena. •"'"=-==--"-"'.-·-·. : HoWever, the best I've :5een '}>trsooally WHITE . siOCe 195S .... the '51 duet · •
W-"S~H Michigan'. State al)d ·UCLA were
n · deadloclced.at 14. The·Brulm.had the ball
-='= ._.:;;,..._ · cleeptln lj>ejr.own territory· with,..., than
two ·rptnutes to play. -.r••• 11ga A-!lll<l,l!!li! bT 11oon1e l(llQX .... the
. . _; -. . ~-good . lleJd pogltionJ' u Uni•
ha1i,<1·byS!mone'..-me-taclkr.'f/><.9'---be~ to nm oat. FinJDT with ""r
ncJ .. ~--·-"Un ·t · ·y·!d 1 ,_, -left and-the ball inllde UCLA 1 CO w.ue •=w g D a_one-• ~ "' . 30, MJchfg., Slala lln'll up for a field
FriiJ Beyferih. , . . goal.! , · • •
Then on fourth dOwn from tlie :-two · 'F~itbe place where 'it'was spotted It
Sinlone'1 mates , s_topped b!UISUtl • J!illy , wciU!d be· a 4l·yard attempt. A oopbomore
Tay16r •·Yard •hori ol the goat. nam~ Dave Kaiaer wonld try IL And,he
I So Instead of trailing 10-0, the TrJbe had nev.,. made a · fleld goal as a col·
wu only down 3--0. Then It look over and legtan. : ,
mOv<cl>forthe tying fletd goal U>get·back Tbe RA>8e Bowl IOllJCfed like Paria on
fn tbe pme. llberatlon dAI' 11 they· lined up for the
Shtvijje, wearing jeraey No. lO, ·may play. Kalier got oll Illa 1dCk and for a have been overlooked by tbooe w)lo IDOIMlt It -II might never come ___ .__, · back to earth.
repuncu the game in SU.day's papen. Bui it dld opUlting the UJ>rights to glvo
But wbat be dld will IUl'Oiy be Jong MSU a !Mt triumph with only ,.ven
remembered · by Stanford -a n d seconds lelt. ·
Mlchiglllf. • · And of oth<'r Roae Bowl c!Utla I've sten
* * * on television, two stand out. . •
One was in 'tt whb Northwestern
SOme are calllng 5aturday'1 match one
of the moot thrilling llole Bowl clwics.
And perbapaJl wu -at least for the last
quarter.
ocored a conil'oVerslal touchdown In the
last two miriulea lo wipe out a IHI Cal
lead and win 20-11. 'J'he · dlapute WU whether~ Murakonkl had (l11n,bled ~
fore or after be crnsaed1be goal line for
the wln$1i tally.
Tbe o~r wu·ln ll60 '!hen Ohio State
booted a rourtb period lje1d coat to topple
Cal, 17-14. ' .
"Look o,ut Super Bowl," said Cowboy
tackle Bob Lilly. "SOme fans sort of
ridiculed our play last year and I think
we have something to prove."
There was litue disappointment among
• the CoWboys players that they would not
get 1 chance for revenge against
Baltimore in the Super Bowl and instead
would play Miami.
"We never really cared about the op-
)>Qllent,'' said linebacker ~ Roy Jorda~
"I said Jut year we would be back. Arid
we are going to do it this time."
Andrie's interception of a John Brodie
pass and his sixyard run to the 49er two-
yard line in the second quarter was the
defensive gem of a bitterly fought game.
Calvin Hill,. wbo later left the •game with
an injured knee~ crashed across from
ooe-y&rd out for the·touclxlown.
Dallaa' 7-0 lead held uj> until Brµce ao;.eu kicked a 28.yard field goal to
make it 7-l in the third period.
Andrie, who ·had shared duty th.is year
with Pat Toomay, said, "Jt was just an
impulsive play, We.had studied San Fran·
cisco's screen plays. We were blitzing
and I just saw the screen coming. Brodie
threw the ball right lo me. I don't think
be saw me."
Andrle was tackled by ~e and toot
severe .ribbing from his teammate..
"George didn't wait fot my block,"
said Dallas' other defensive end Larry
Cot.. '
Staubach finally took some pressure off
the Doomaday Defense with an 80-yardm
. drive . in 14 plays deep in the fourth .
quarter.
..etaubach, who had guided oa11... to
nine ·conaecuilve victories aOO has never
lqn a game be-bas started and finisbeCf, nalle.d , tight edd Bill Truax for 2Z yards
on a crucial third and four situation at
the DaQas.45'on -the drive .
1be.n the former Heisman Trophy win·
ner~scrambled tor eight yards -his fi{th nm of tbelday against the 49ers. Duane
Thomas climaxed the drive with a two.
yard. touch&twn .run.
Ffl"lf doW!l1 lltll!hft-prds
P111ln1 Ylll'dl9e
Rl'lvm y1rd19t ·-·~· Fum~ltt '°9t Y•rds S*\tlli:td
4'wt CiowMrt . " 1641 "6-112 •~ n " " I~ f.114 ....... .. ' " ..
But i,.,. about °the 11183,duel!'USC WU
leading WlidlNln C-11 wlren the Badgers
w1111 wild and cul the lead to 42-37 and
had U.. baU In. SC territory When lime
finally was exba1111ed. Saturdt1'1 pme 1!111 IUl'ely J01n lhe
others mentloned u a choice for the
DON SHULA
5 Top Blocks
Helped Miami
To Key TD
MlAh-11 (AP) -Five key open field
blocks, so obvious that the routine looked
like the railings of ·a picket fence falling
to .th• grotind. 'J!'&n&, Mlaml'1 'D!Ck
Anderson tol>se. on ·a. i;:,yancLnm that
helped the DolPwn• lo a 21.0 victory over
Baltimore ~y foi the American Foot·
ball Conrerence chainpionship.
The precise blocldng was so perfect
that It could be used !or textbook
purposes.. Coach Dcin Shula of the
DolpblnS, after the game, c i t e d
Ander.son!s return of an JnteJ:Cepted pass
aOO said: ''This i.s what the game is all
aboul" Millions saW the run On television.
Ill _the third period, Johnny Unltas,
Baltimore's quarter~. arc&ed a Jong'.
. pus from his 18-yard line to Ecldle Hin-
ton past mttjlield .
The ball was deflect~ by .Miami's
CUrtis J ohmon and· fell into ttle iu-ms. of
Anderson on the Miami 38.
Jake Scott ol Miami Immediately.cut
down · Ton\ Mitchell to sh*• Andenon ·
free. Anderson scooted down the right
sideline for abolit 2Q yards,. tbto brake lo
hia left acroso the field. · , ,.
Three quick blocks, one' after ,another,
opened the way for him. Doµg Sw;ift
block,¢ Dan Sullivan; Milte Kolen cut the
props from under Glenn !Waster, and·T1m
Foley turned John WllU&JJJS upside down.
M. Anderson cut for the goat line,. l!Qb.
Heinz banged , against Uriitas, who fell
against Bob Vogel, both Colla bl!llng the
ground . ' l
Don .Notltngbam made a Mile grab al
Anderoon u he crOHed the g~ ,line.
Unitas: Miami . r
"'
Has Good Chanee ·-Of Bea~g Dall~
MIAMI (API -The Mitlml Dolpbjllt
are Super Bowl boUrid, and they take wJtb
them the hopeo ol the downtrodden 1114
the loudest, wildest cheering section ID
professional football.· ...
Batten down the hatches, New Orled.
Fasten your seat belts, Dallas COwbo,a.
You haven't seen aliyth.ing yet.
The Dolphins, the one time step-cbllifol
the American Footbtll League, ...
bumping off the big boys.' And the peopfit
here on this sub-troplcal Peninsula 1ust
keep on yelling, Screaming, bragging~
waving handkerchiefs until the outsider
fears his ears and nerves will surely pop.
·It's the 1969 baseball Mets with palin
trees, green sweat .shirts and helmets.
On Sunday, it wu time for the cham~
pion Baltimore Colla -the poised team
of Johnny Unitu and gargantuan Bubba
Smith -to get tbtir come-uppance just
as the Kansas City Chiefs got theirs in
double overtime the week before.
The Dolphins whiwed the Colts 21-0,
the first shutout 'tor the defending Na·
llonal Football League Champions since
the Chicago Bears pulled one off Dec. ~.
196.l. and qualified to meet .~ Dallas
CowOOys in the Super Bowl •at New
Orleans Jan. lS. , . .
Dolphin tans fell' Jhl• ··•',,state of
hysteria. . , . ·. , ... ..
Now nobody Is sbruggl'!IJoU ,thl.! brPJ>
band of fonner ragliiili?fina, coached by
Don ~hula and quarterbacked by Bob
Griese, five years out of Putdue:-Jea1t
ol all the vanquished C.llJ. •
"Can Mi•ml beat the COWboys? I don't
know why not," sa.iCI Baltimore's 38-year·
old field general, Urtltas. "They're a fine
team. Griese is a·good qUarterback. They
. have a good rush. They don't make many
mistakes.
"Sure, I give them a real good
chanct."
Don McCa!lerly, who moved up to head
coach when Shull Jell the Colts to take
over the DolJ>l:!lgj' meager fortunes two
years ago, oqeted his , own considered
version of llil; upset.
"They came up wfth the big playo," he
said, "and we didn't. When we neeaed a
field goal, we mlased. When we needed a
pass, we didn't get it. When we needed
fJve yards ~ tlµrd do)Y)I, we failed.-''
The Dolp~ prpCluied'a te:dbook ., ..
,Jory, ''llle1 .tave Uoltas' breatlllrur room
and. then al<>pped him cold wlien he
ataried to threaten. Their blocking was
. decfBlve, the.Ir tac~g 'vicious. they
struck with mercurtal swiftness.
C•ltl Otl~ 16 ,,
')II.ft SS.liW 711 IG
71 11S ..... , ... ..,, • • . ".
... -And how ah!Jut the 1151 atruqle
betw..., huvlly flVD1"d Ohio Slat< lllJd
poor little Ortgon! For throe quortera It
wu 7.7, Tbeo the Buckeyes C&lllecl fn on
most uciWtf. ·
But thla conler'1 peraonal pick bu to
be that '5' chlllet.
UNITAS SACKED -Baltimore quarterbact Jobn
Unitas is hit by Miami defensive end Jim 'lllley
as he tries to pass during the AFC ~amplonshlp
1ame S1111day in MWnl.
l
I I • -•
...
'· •
JI DAILY PILOT
Start
Yo11r
EngiQes!
by Deke Hou/gate
• m k From JJmmy the Greek to the bartender at the locaJ club,
r:.-eveeyone la • prognosticator. If he doesn't make a bet or1enter
his name In a pool, the typical sports fan is guessing the number
of yards Roger Staubach will gain tltis weekend when trapped
at~mpting to pass or how many times Wllt Chamberlain will
miss from the free throw line,
Auto racing is no exception. To find out what iJ in store ror
fans this year, we consulted the well known authority, Charlie
Crankshaft, who was happy to issue his annual predictions.
He has a great track record . It was Charlie who tipped us
that Ford was getting out of racing. He was right , only Charlie
sald it at the end of the 1969 season, and the company waited 11
more months to withdraw.
Charlie al.so let us ln on the scam that Dav id Lockton would
be elected president of either the U.S. Auto Club or the Screen
Actors GuJld and that Pat Brown would make a triumphal re-
turn to politics by accepting tht nomination as president -of
Ontario Motor Speedway.
The way Charlie put it, "J thought you'd never ask." Hert
. ..are his crystal ball gazes for tm:
· Harlan Fengler. chief steward of the JndianapoUs 500, wlll
win the sweetheart of the year award, Jarge.ly for his permitting
rosseye_d Corrigan to drive the. pace car on race day. Corri·
an w.iU focus on the photographer's stand at the end of the pits,
ut he will miss and wind up parking the car Jn the fourth row
the grandstands.
' Tony Mamowicz will be-elected to the ~uto Racing All
; American by 67 sportswri~rs from the Midwest who mhtaken*
ly think he plays defensive tackle for Notre Dam.e.
Rerun of Pre•• Release
Ho1·nets
Cit·cuit
Choices
The South Coast Conference
baskelbaJJ rice figure.s tG be a
()ne-team affair with Fullerton
JC txpecte4 to run away with
the circuit title.
It'll be a surprise if coach
?11oe Radovich's Hornets lose a
game in the circuit.
Fullerton has two of the best
guards in junior co 11 e g e
ba sketball in Rick Aberegg
and Brad McNamara, plus a
solid front line.
Thus the DAILY PILOT
tabs the Hornets to win the
South Coast Oag rather easily.
Orange Coast (3-10) has had
a few problems thus far and
unless coach Herb Livsey's
club decides to jell, it'll pro-
bably be another losing con-
ference season for the Bucs.
. Here's , how the. DAILY
PILOT tabs the finish:
·-·
STRIKE PUTTS AT BOTTOM OF ARC
' ' -
Golfers who play the ball too far back In their
putting otanco will seldom achieve consistently tx•
cellent results.
When the clubhead slrikes the ball belore reach·
Ing the lowest point of Its arc, It applies a slight
amount of backspin. The ball skids-often slightly
sideways-instead of rolling •moothly forward. If
the greens are slightly rough, striking down on
putts will accentuate the ball's rough roll,
Most golfers find that the lowest part of their
putter's arc occurs at a point about oppostte their
left-or forward-foot (see Illustration). Determine
where you must play your putts to achieve solid
contact. Then consciously see that you position the
ball in the same relative spot within your stance
on all putts. e. o ~ .._.,.
Pro Standings
EI Dorado Tabbed to Win
I
01·ange League Cage Titl~
El Dorado High's Colden in three oJ their laat four together a winning litreak.
Hawks wlll dethrone Orange starts. $. Brea. The \Yildcatl of
League champion Sooora in s. Valencia.~ Bob Hamblin'• coach Saylor Smllh bout
the 1971·72 race according to guard Harry Dowell in their
DAILY PILOT predictions. Tigers, like five 01 the seven attack. Dowell is a consisten t
Coach Nash Rivera's Hawks teams in the Orange clrcult, threat to score in the 25-30
have displayed an excellent have a losing record prior to Point range but It'! ques-
quintet in tourney play but league play. tionable that he has enoueh
figure to receive stiff com-But included in their four support.
petition from the likes of wins (five losses) are victories 6. Uolverstty. Coach John
Sonora and Valencia. Driscoll's Trojans haven't llv· over Santiago (twice), Glen· Loop action gets under way ed up to expectations, drop.
Tuesday with University and dale Hoover and Santa Ana ping six of 10 starts.
Saddleback tangling at Uni's Valley by 52 points). TJie major so re spot I!! th e
new gym Jn a 4;30 test. 4. Laguna Beach. 1· he most basic item in basketball
At 1 it'll be Brea at Laguna Artists are the dark horse con--shooting, Four times the
and Sonora at Valencia. tender under coach Jerry Trojans have been limited to
Here's how the DAILY Fair. less than 40 points.
PILOT BUS it: Junior Norm Bedell (6-S) 7. Saddleback. The Roadrun·
1. El Dorado. Coach Nash and 8 0 p h 0 m 0 re Dave ners are in for a long season if
Rivera's crew is led by senior Kiessetbach (&-!) have been December results are any in·
forward Mike Farra and Mike the most prominent scorers. dicaUon.
Moore, a junior guard. . The biggest question mark Lack of height, speed and
The Hawks compiled an 8·3 ts whether the Artists can put shooting ability makes the
mark through December and Roadrunners underdogs 1 n
their only losses are t<> Troy every outing.
(twice) and Magnolia. Gn'd Sc·ores DAILY PILOT DOPE SHEET .z. Sonora. The ClF AA Orange Leape
champions ' are off to their J. El Dorado
customary slow start because llanforil' 11. nm1:.~w:, 2. Sonora
of athletes Jnvolved in the 3. Valencia
f tball I Ori,... 1-1 oo payoffs, N._._ SI, Aleblm.' 4. Laguna Beach
Coach Paul Bush's Quintet Cott• •owl 5. Brea
•,,
1 , After CbarUe Glottbach end Bobby Alllton wln a few stock
·:car racea, General Motors wUJ feel eompelltd to dig ap the old
t.'intmeograph stencil and rerun a few tbousand coplet· of tbe
';!preu release tllat states the compaa,y doe• not endone or par.
i 1 ticlpate In auto reclng.
I. Fullert-On -McNamara h
one of the better shooters
around and both he and
Aberegg are excellent
playmakers. And with Phil
Carlile (6"11 and Bill Boyd l&-
3) getting the boards, the
Hornets appear unstoppable.
...
•AST•aH COHl'•lllNCI
All111llc Of'll1i.11
TlltldtY'I Otmt
Pitt~bl.lr1h 11 21 6 I! ff S!. LCM.Ill 10 21 7 1 lo.t Loi AllffleJ 10 ?T 1 I M
lost a half doun of its 10 en-"""' s1•'-30• T••11 ' 6. Univer&ity
'I' counters, but were victorious o•t1•t1om• J.'Tu~~~~ 7. Saddleback m1-~~~~~~--'====-=="-"--~~~~~~~~~
•' •' The day after. each Chevrolet win on a N<'SCAJ\, super
speedway, martet!Jlg a:ecutlves will conceal tbe Information
that ales showed a 15 percent lncreaae.
The turblne wlll mate 1 big comeback at lndlanapollt.
When the gates open on race day, Joe Scbulb:, an eqineer from
Lorain, o., wlll drive Into the speedway ID bit bome.baUt tur-
bine-powered pickup truck. He wUI 1et bhntell Iott ID Ute crowd
before USAC ofUclals can ban him.
Don Garlits will Invent a retractable widget for bis rear-
lne dragster and prompUy lower his elasped time to 8.05
ds. Ia the afterm1tb he wlll be trampled by any army or
ag netts ruthla& back to tbelr 1hop1 to build retractable
etJ for ibelr own rear~n&lnt can, wblcb they aJso copied
m Garlltl.
MC'Laren Team Will Win Again
The McLaren team will win the Can-Am championship
again and all the promoters will sit around wringing their hand~ bemoa~lng the fact that Jack of competition is ruining
the series. They will once again fail to note that attendance ls
up 20 percent.
Television networks will continue to teach themselves how
lo broadcast auto races and will continue to bore the folks at
home with inept coverage. A network sports official will issue
his annual declaration that auto racing isn't exciting enough
for general audiences.
By Feb. 1 the dri vers will be threatening to boycott Day-
tona and every other NASCAR track over the carburetor plate,
the manifold sleeve or whatever they are upset about this year.
Bill France will put on his races anyway, and all the drivers will
be there.
Jackie Stewart will once again tour the country complain-
ing about poor sarety condiUons at race tracks in Ameri ca.
Everybody will wring his hands and call Stewart a grandstand·
er, but ofllclals will make the necessary improvements. as they
have already done at Mid-Ohio, Laguna Seca and Riverside.
Some poorly infonned motoring joumaUst will make the an-
nual suggestion, that auto racing get ltsell a czar. In a tactful
way, he will be told that Pete Rozelle already bas a job and
doesn't need one. Somebody else will remind him what the Rus-
s did to !l'HEIR czar.
;same Old Llt1e at Ontario, Rh,ersfde
~ Promoter:• at Ontario Speedway and Rlver1lde Raceway will
, 1st they aren't trying to burt the other guy11 track but will go
d and put on competing races Aprll t anyway.
2. Mt. San Antonio -coach
Gene Victor's club has the
front court strength in Mike
Muir (6-10) and Dan Spindler
(6-9) and fine shooters in Jim
BogdMawicz (6-.1), and Gory
Fisher (5-10). But the Moun·
ties have a hab it of losing the
close ones.
3. Cerritos -The Falcons
have a couple of good shooters
in Ron Kruidhof (6-5) and
George Rodriquez (5-I IJ, but
should get ()Ut muscled by F JC
and Mt. SAC. Bob Foerster is
making his debut as a head JC
coach.
4. San Diego Mesa -The
Olympians have a freshman-
dominated club with forwa rd
Emlow Henry the best of the
bunch. Mesa has very little
backboard strength and this
will really hurt against teams
like Fullerton and Mt. San
Antonio.
5. Orapge Coast -Livsey's
clu b may be hard pressed to
finish fifth. It figures to be a
battle with-Santa Ana for the
No. 5 spot. The Pirates have
two good ones .i.n 6-7 forward
Skip Williams and 6-2 guard
John Seymour, but after that
the talent goes downhill.
6. Santa Ana -The Dons
have been hot and cold, but
could move up a couple of
lipots in the standings with a
little more consistency. Tfie
best or coach Bill Oates' crew
is 6-6 center Jim Keyes.
1. San Diego -The Kn ights
ha ve only won a cou ple of
games thus far and things do
not appear any brighter for
coach John Early's club.
Win Lo11 ,.ct. Gt Boston
N..,. Yor1t
f>t!U1dell>!'ll1
8u1t110
27 14 .&jf
21 l• .6.Jl! 1• '' . .xi
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l't>off>il( bJ 17 ,575 ~II f.s 14 .315
P1clrlc Olvlllon
lc1 Antt ltl JI l ."15
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Golden SI.ti 2<I 19 .Sil
1-10011011 11 16 .l50
Portltnd 9 31 .1:IO
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P!'ooe!il• tlil, 8oston HM
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Atl..,!1 116, P1'>ololx 11l
o.trolt 109. Holn!WI l(lf,
LO!! Ant •11$ 12%, blon 113
Po..-llarld IOI, 8u'fl1to to
Or>!v 11rfl~ schfd11litd
Ton.t11rt's Ol"'tt MllwoukH 1t ,....,... York
On!y 111rfle 1c'h9dut..:I
Tu11d.-,•t G1m"
Phllad1!ohlo 11 o.tro!T
Plloe-rol• 11 (lllC110
Bul11 11) vs, Golden $ttll 11 0.klfnd
So1t1l1 .11 Havst""
New Ycrlc e! M!lw1ukM
Att1n!1 11 Portlond
Onlr temtt td!edul..:I.
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Only t•mts Kll9Cl11lld Slllllllt't AIW!fl; ~ A,,...111 6, Vlr>CCM.IVlf" I • 1tor1 4, Ntw York I !roll , Molltr I 4
tltornf1 4.._ suir.10 '· tl1
lcl80 '· t'hllldl l&l" tv 11m•1 sclltdu Toril1ht'1 mtt Ne v1m11 1ehldu!9d Tuuct11•1 011~ <•111ornl1 I! Lot Anttltl On Y 11m1 Khldulld
Title Bout
Ex pee too
At Forum
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Sports magnate Jack Kent
Cooke, who co---promoted last
ye a r's heavyweight cham-
pionship fight between Joe
Frazier and Muhammad Ali,
says he's certain a rematch
between the two will be held
here this spring.
"I have not heard from
eitber fighter, but I feel cer·
tain the fight will be held at
the Forum in the spring,"
Cooke said.
Cooke', who said he would
prefer the bout tD be held in
June. didn't specify the day or
month the rematch would take
place.
"I can see no reason why
the second fight of the cham·
pions won't be just as suc-
cess ful as the first," he said.
Cooke and Jerry Perenchio
put on the first fight, held
March 8 last year in New
York 's Madison Square
A race driver'• anion will be formed , but A. J. Foyt will
from Jt.
Sam Posey will drive In If race1 and declare himself the
vor:Ue to win II of them. Nobody wUI laash, because be Just
,. , I $5 122 " 21 11 ,, 99 73
11 70 I JO 111 lSI 11 ,, 6 2' 12 tu
Cllktoo Minnnct• Ctllln•ni1 Phll1d1lphl1
REMEMBER
Garden.
Jn first round act lo n
Wednesday night, 0 r a n g e
Coast tra vels to San Diego.-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.1 Fullerton ls at Santa Ana and 11
Mt. San Antonio hosts San
Diego Mesa. Cerritos has a
bye. ghl.
Mart Donohue will not cultlvate a Southern accent, but he
learn the right way to say tire (tabr), when to stand up
bea the band plays Dixie!) and how to tell the 1tewardes1 be
eats &o change planes in Tampa (Ah'm Jl•t goan with )'OU.all
' far '• TayoW11-pah).
" Bobby Unser wlll be stopped by a traffic pollceman late at
tgbt ln Spet:dway, Ind .• In May, but all the officer will a1Jk for
llJ an autograph to take borne to his kids. The cop learned bit
lesson last year.
Pamelll Jones will be called before the Federal Communi-
cations Commission for having radioJ in bis race cart and a
cigarette company for a 1ponsor.
Traffic Ja111 i11 Front of Ward's Shop
Jf the formula J race does come off at Riverside in April,
there will be a traffic jam in front of Ron Ward 's shop in On-
tario. All the visiting teams will try to headquarter there at
once, because Ward's sprint car crew rebuilt Mario Andretti 's
car atfer the crash at the Quest-Or GP last year, and it bandied
better after be repaired it than it ever had before the crash·. '
To try to hold their own with the auto racing vote, all the
Democratic candidates for president will issue statements flat.
teting to the sport and try to be seen·at the important events.
..Ibey will, however, have a tough time lopping President Nixon's
:; invflation of the racing fraternity t.o the White House.
i! J . C. Agajanian· will be matched against a little old lady in
1} the Indianapolis 500 Festival gin ru mmy tournament. He will ;J Joae. a1 usual, in the first round after uttering those immortal
• 1"ords to start the tourney: "Gentlemen, shufne your cards."
1 J Evil Knievel will come out with a new line of toys -the j; Eval KnleveJ dolly; you wind it up and it breaks a leg.
: ! · NASCAR. drivers will lake up a collection, which they will ~: oiler to R.lcbard Petty as a pension if he will retire. When he
•' does qatt. J1il IDlile will be enshrined at the Smithsonian.
~ 'raclog will have its best year yet, a season notable
CdM Hosts
Jordan Five
Corona del ?-.1ar High's Sea
Kings get a /inal tuneup prior
to Irvine League basketball
action tonight when they shoot
for their ninth win in JO starts
against invading Long Beach
Jordan.
Tipoff Is slated for 8 o'clock.
Coach Tandy Gillis' Sea
Kings are coming off a 16-day
rest after annexing the con-
solation champiomblp or the
.f3rd aMual Hunllngton Beach
Invitational .
Their only Joss of the season
was a one-Point decision (61~
60 ) to Servite.
Leading the Sea Kings' at-
tack is junior guard casey'
Jones, who has averaged 18.1
points per game.
Senior center Mike Sevier
(6-5) is the leading rebounder,
and has scored between 10 and
14 points in elght of his nine
start>.
for haftal nol a single fatollty. U Charlie misses on the other r::::===------11
predictionl. we hope be ls right on this one.
with
1Bob Paley
And Associates
~ s ..
SAFECO
INSURANCE
IDSl'f"~ Cid' __ ......... ...f.rwltNll:•-.h •
...... ,:.w..t.br'..,_~--~ip~ ' . ,... Wla-,G&IW..ctc:w,...h.-f..t ............. Area Prep Hoop Results ... :r-clrM ..,..ic111.i:.,,. .... ..t .atftJ'll'ftl'ir-adMdli)' --~ ..
'4U~!lllftoll (l.)j
W•lr !16)
kt1wl.,.kl (10)
lteti. CIOJ
Con11'9r't• cn1
Clertlll 16) G 1101 IChvdt.Y
Hllflllnt'*" tc«lnt ~blr Moll t,
"thomtt s. ••""'-t. ~ A.
Colta MIM ~ .W.: lllllNll A.
Hoffll'll!t 7, '''"'°" t M41111tbu,, 1, Halft,.,,.! H\lntl111MI'\, .C·n. -
lit lwt;pa:wJ.ltt t '-"!,met ••Mi&W
--
._.,,at e..--.:.-..... .....,....._ · . -. ~ . ~
S TO~D~E ·B ~A~K E1R
. J.111-.t o..;....
A super
coseout.
Whlle quantities last.Tremendous
savings on 4·ply nylon cord tires.
44
W•a 15.11 plus 1.80 tM. tlx
too-13. bl~•lftvt..I ...
ar1ckwtH
tub•I••• •lz• Orig, Prfc• Clot.out FH,tlx
650-13
700-1
695-14
735-14
775-14
825-14
560-15
685-15
735-15
775-15
815-15
845-15
16.95 14.44
17.95
189
20.95
22.95
7
1
1 .
20.95
22.
24.95
Wl'llt•w•ll• 13 mor•
3 day tune up special.
Mon., Tut1., Wed. Only
Htrt~S what WI cl:o1 lnstoll new polnti ond plvgs, con-
d@ns•r. rotor bnd cop..: odju1t di1tribut9r points, •ngine ti'f'I·
ing, ond cobur•tor.'
Vollt1wa91tts, ••.••••••• : •••••••• , •••••• 1J.ia"•
Most 6 cyl., Americatt cars, .. , ••••••••••••• 19.11'
Most 8 cyl, Amtricon tors, ••••.•••• , ....... 23.ll!
• u ... i cars
•
JCPenney
auto center
1.76
1.9
1.94
2.01
2.14
2.3
1. 4
1.91
2.05
2.16
2.37
2 .48
Shop S1!nd1y noon to 5P.M.1tthe lollowlngAuto C1nt1r1:
NEWPORT BEACH, Fuhion hl1nd HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington C.nl°'
•
' . ' "
Use P1nney1 tlm1 peymint pl•"·
\ ,.,
. .
DICK TRAC.Y
NH GRAHOMCJTl<U
MAO ll<AT &-VEAR·OLO
Ol<PMAN TATTOOED
SO VEARS Al:AJ.
TUMBLEWEEDS
1!1US&ANl7 llUNTE:RS' HANPPQOK
ls he neglecLin~;ru,Future llride? :?"' su:reafyou. If so, drastic adion
!'-ailed for! Titrowytnir engageJrumt
•ring back inhisface! Threaten to
'breakaffyourenga90lMilt! That
will brin hinttofusknees!'
"'
MOTI AND JEFF
PLA IN JANE
/·3
-. -
By Tom K. Ryan
LETS GET
ENGAGED!
,,, ...... _ .. '•'-' ........
By Al Smith
°™ATS
HoW!
Hale
By Frank Ba9inski
Ll'L ABNER
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
QA IW()ll, \JIJ.E ... WHEkl
I FIRSr Mer c,oo .• J:
!l«)IYT" LIJ:e Ill.I Ar AU...
. .
r-r-----~ .• I MEAN , I.
IMM~DIAT'E\.~
p~ <.\:)()
l<S /.. Wl68'>'T !
L o
I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by •. A. POWER I
A.CROSS 43 Eltclrical
1mit:
l "Good Ku111 Abbi.
·-·" 44 Marie to bt
4 Oo withou!
'+ Poplar
14 Gone by
lS lnstru111t11l
lb Freeman
granttd larw:I
b~ !ht ki1111
11 Meat cuts :
1. words
l q T ontd down
20 Tht ribs:
Slaog
21 Dlstanu::
Prtfir
22 United States
Pharm1·
copoeta: Abbr.
23 Hither
24 Kind or
;automobile
2& Those Pf'Oplt
1.ll Pad or hair:
Informal
}l Grapt·likt
fruit
}2 ,6.ppellation
of Athtna
33 One's
t rna\11)11dl
attitude
30 Hoosefly,
ror °"' 38 Dtviate
from
DtOptf
CQj,JI St
39 Htav~
41 A tttritt
r!lllOVt d
46 Effaces
47 Ej«I
41J Ttnnis
court
lixturt
50 LiktwiSt not
51 Rabbit's
rtlativt
52 Bright
54 CMtra! idta
58 Calmdar
abb1t'liali011
liO Sttl-tslttm
bl Se evas l~t .
112 Simila!
&4 Ribbon worm
&6 Consumt
grtedi \y
li7 Swap
bB In favor of:
P1,f1x
oq Put forth
70 lmpo1t
71 Thr!!:
P1tl1•
DO•.'N
l ltr1lJl1119
2 Active
3 Rela11ng to
part o!
the t al
4 Chronic
dn.i'r.ards
5 Before in
till!!: Prtfix
I ' ·1· 5 '
" 15
' 17 "
"' ,l "
" ' ,.
. ., ' " JO .l! '
JJ l• JS
" ..
<l "
" .. ti): "
\ ·-.. ..
'
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"
h Stont
7 Did a gara!n-
i119 chort:
2 words
8 R!ducts to
bondag!
't Alwt1.11n
island
10 Ca!llornla
m01inta!n
II Unbound
i,1n2
J~ ··· Bay : lnltt
of th! GtJ!f
or "''~ico
35 T !nd Ing to
bt standtrous
37 ···bravo·
Fighting bull
40 Flll1damtnlal
constilu!nts
42 Thing whict1
is aim!d at
prinled wct'r.s 45 Futnittirf \ltm
12 Ch!mical for holding
sulfii bric·ailrac
13 Ntw English 4B Less robust
Oittiooary: 5) L111gua9t of th!
A.bbr, aicitnt l!alia-ts
IB Rtar parls SS Not s!m01b!t
of ships 50 "larm
14 WJltace ---: ~1 PtJrpo1t
Amencan ~If lt!m of
llO!I camping 11ear
25 Comir19 into hi Pol1t1c•!ly
t~1stence ind!ptnd~1t
27 'lr'tud 02 U:1sl
28 Ftm1.lt horses 03 Negt19e01t
30 Sour bS Sullivan
33 Batter and Amts
I • 10 II " IJ
' "
"
'" " • '
25 " 27 21
'
hl'. l2
" JI
l " "
" ~ ..
"' I,,'. ~ .. " " l7
" I
I '2 '3 "I I " l
'ii ·-" -•
.~ 70 ,,
PEANUTS
JUDGE PARKER
WELL. ».Y WV,
WMEN ARE YOUR hro•
LEAVING
S'4.M PR\VER,
ERIG GOES
PIREO'LV 10
MR . .'.PP\..ETOt.1'$
MOTEL ROOM AS
FRIENP'5 LEAVING?/"'"--,
O'IREtTEP !
MISS PEACH
PERKINS
I
... ""' 'J.CKEP TO
CHEU. oar OF
MERE TMIS
AFTER.NOON!
yr:s,
MISS PllACH ...
MI'S •Al.P Nt:IN.
IUT jQON Ml'l4
MAYE A NIW
)l<ltAO OF H~ll. !
I ,
By Harold Le Doux
I PtDM"T
THINK we
WERE LEAVING
TOP-.v, MR.
.'.PPlETON !
TMAT'S
..TIRIST'Jtf6,
AltTHU" •• IS TMalllf
l<MY<-11
OF
Rl.wc;l'lOM?
I
By Men
" ' Ii.' . ' . . , " , .. -. ' . ' /•)
U' ,..°"'
. "'~
By John Miles
'
•
"'ondcV, Jariuarr J, 1972
By Gus Arriola ..,---.. -~~..--,,
'
\UE'lL, ])()[:() .• ARE~'r
4'.XJ REAL.I-Ii s.lliti.l"'
TMT F1~r IMP~!S!IDOS
CA~ Be l/CJIJ M~LtAIJl~i<;
MJO ~ 61100.0 NEVl:R. .
By Ferd Johnson
IT's JUST"Tt> PUT'
Oii TH' PMONE··O<Jll
1'E,l.CHER SAYS IT'•
,.\<;OOD IDE/'.... }
By Ro9er B.ollen
: IM~E 1lll•P ~EMIWTS
§ A~ P!!O=\.E :f "'
E ,
THE GIRLS
11Th1t11 tbe "'ay I fttl rlgbt now about bavlng 1ny
more company.''
DENNIS THE MENACE
rr< .. !\ ;"v ·:
..
'I 1Xlll'r Ul<f 1'11E WAYlUIS'fWl. IS STAA'lllolG M.'
I •
•
•
•
II DAlLV "LOT
Wo111an Gives Gilt of Life
By FREDERICK SCBOE&!.EBL
01 IM Mll'r ,, ... Iliff
Tlamn Barth's Chrtrunu silt from hl1
oialer Sylvl1 CllJaold of Llsuna Beach
wlD be late this sea.son.
But the wait will be more than worth lt.
8ylvla's 1Jft will be unusual. It won 't be
wr1pped in pretty paper or rlbboni there
w111 't be a card atlachtd.
Her girt ia a live kidney. It ls
desperately needed so her brother, wbQ
bat been stricken with debllitatlng
nephritis for the past nine months cl.n
Jive a normal life again.
1 She will leave her husband KeMeth and
three daughters at their home, 3044
Otsla Way and fly lo Barth's home in
Indianapolis for the transplant -
scheduled for the middle of next month.
The story leading up to Sylvia's kidney
dolalion is a sad one. It began in March
when Barth, 32, became ill. The family
physician thought he had flu. But when
the illness didn't give up, Barth was sent
to the hospital for tests.
The diagnosis was acute nephritis -a
di!lf:ase so powerful the k i d n e y s
deaenerated within weeks . Mandatory
treatmenta by an artifical kidney
mlctune three tlrnes a week became
necwary. A blOPIY confirmed that both
kidneys were diseased.
.8&rtb wu releaMd rrom the hoapital in
Oma.bl, Neb., near the end of May -
after three months ol care and l't'O near-
fatat boull with death .
1Ua futW'e was dark. Unle~ a suitable
donor could be found, Barth would have
to continue the dialysis tre;i.tment.s -16
hours a week -for the rest of an un-
natural life.
Then hope began to glimmer. A
younger brother, Phllip, living in In~
dlanapoll.!1, had made friends with the
head of the kidney unit at the Veterans'
Administration Hospital there. fl was
suggested Barth -faced with stagger 1ng
medical bills -move to Indianapolis to
continue treatment and wait for a donor.
As a former Navy man, he was entitled
to Veteran's Administration benefi~.
The move wa s difficult. He was IU. And
his wife was expecting the COtJple's fourth
child. With hope and encouragement they
made it.
Soon after they arrived In Indianapolis,
hospit2J techniciaM began exhastive tis-
sue and blood teets on Barth's relatives
-searching for a donor within the fam-
ily.
Sylvia's blood -transported to the
mld-weat by jet airliner -turned out to
match her brothers almOl!lt exactly. In
fact, 1be related, doctors say the chances
Narcotics Addicts Change
TheirTastesDuring 1971
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of tlle D~IY llllfl ti.ff
Conversely, they find themselves hook·
ed on heroin, which at year·s end runs
$300 up to '800 per ounce, depending on
quality and geographical source of sup-
ply.
"faH in the high ;cr1" for a 1ucceuful
transplant .
Then came a moment Gf truth for the
young mothtr.
"I heard from the hospital In early
September and was told I'd be the best
one to donate a kidney. I knew r wanted
to help Warren , but I had to take time
and think about myself and family."
She contacted the local branch of the
National Kidney Foundation in Lo!
Angeles and learned the operation would
put her in no ph}'sical danger. lier re-
maining kidney will increase in size and
do the job as if she had two. The same
should be true of the kidn!y her brother
receives .
Barth learned at an appropriate lime of
year that his Sister would become his
donor -just a few days before
Thanksgiving. He "''as thankful.
"He had been very depressed before
then, typical of the dialysis patient."
Sylvia said. "And then we told him. He
was speechless.
"Now he is floating."
Sylvia will board th! plane Jan. 10 for
Indianapolis and undergo "four or five
days of tests to make sure everything is
okay." Then the deft hands of the
surgeon will remove one of her kidney!
and place it in her brother.
DJ Passe s Out
During Show
LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP )
Louisville disc jockey Gary Bur.
bank passed out on the air Thurs-
day after downing three-quarters
of a fifth of whiskey during a 2~
hour radio broadcast.
...
"We ohould beth be In &ood shape
within 1 month," the 33-ye11-old blonde
bouMwlle uld.
Barth will be able to return to work
wltb Slit StaUons -a mid-western radio
network -whete he has worked in
publldty Ind Pf"'10Uon. "The company ~been flntastlc: He won't even have to
move b1ck: to Otnaha -he'll work at the
1taUon Jn lndla'1apolis,'' hla Bister 11id.
In recent days. Sylvia has spent much
time spreading the word -encouraging
people to become kidney donor!. "I've
told many of my friends about It and, in
turn, they have told their friends. I've
had fantastic commenl.s. Jt'1 nice to know
the people who are Interested in Ibis."
"There are so many people needing
kidneys. People really don't realize how
many unW it strikes close to home," !he
said.
She hopes than an lncreasing number
of persons donate body organs for use in
transpl1nl.s upon their death .
She looks at it this way : "You see 1
guy like Warren, active and on the go and
then you see him suddenly become
vegetable-like.
"With a transplanted kidney, you know
he can become his normal self and really
live again.
''That," she added, "is what It's all
about."
San Clemente
Ride-along
Program Ends
•
A police ride-along program that lasted
for more than a year and e.-posed hun·
dreds or students to the world of the
patrolman has ended in San Clemente. o.AILY l'ILOT 11111 Photl
·: . •
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"nle year 1971 was one of change and no
cbana:e at all in one specific realm:
narcotics use and nan:olics law en-
forctment.
?io change at all was recorded in the
fadt ·there are addicts and would-be ad-
dle;!• rapidly becoming hooked on drugs.
~ changes were reglatered in what
they smoke, swallow. inbale or inject into
· Heroin Crom the Mideast is encountered
more often now than shipments from
Mexico, while agent! are Intercepting and
seillng more than ever before.
The 29-year-old disc jockey at
station WA.KY said he wanted to
demoostrate the effects of alco-
hol as a warning to citizens to
limit their drinkin.11: during the
New Year's holiday.
Just before leaving the air Bur.
bank muttered, "I'm smashed,"
and told technicians to "take over
... I think I'm going to pass out."
And, if anything , the project was too
successful to continue.
Public Safety Director Clifford Murray
explained that in the past few months,
high school students were signing up for
r.epeat sessions and because of so many
s1gnups, four youths crammed into one
car were common.
HER GIFT TO HER BROTHER Will BE A PRECIOUS ONE
Rear, Julie, 11 , Pam, 10; Front Sylvia, Kenneth, Cindy, 4
. .· .· .. ..
'lhelr veins . •
A variety of r.easons for the changes
are either known or su1gested by
1peciallsts in the field of narcotics law
enforcemenli
-Smuggling crackdown s make for
lower quality and higher prices.
~Users who began in the 1968 through
19'111 !).'ychedelic craze quit. They turned
to other drugs and ult imately some were
addicted to heroin .
-A range of synthetlc drug compounds
were created by underground chemists,
trying to keep ahead of changing laws.
-Underground suppliers seem to be
expanding the scope of their activity,
which Orange County I a w m e n
actnowledge Is centered In Laguna
Beacb.
One unprecedented raid recently netted
hashish oil, a completely new, super-po-
tent distilled derivative of refined sap
from the marijuana plant .
A distinct change shown In surveys of
police and social agencies' !taliitics dur-
ing lfll shows a drop in drug e1-
pe(Unentation by young people.
'!Our st.atisUcs wouldn't show that,"
sa11 Paul Pulliam, acting a re a
supervisor for the Stale Bureau of
Natcotie Enlorce ment offices in Santa
Anl.
standing in tor vacationing area
supervisor Dalton Newland, Pulliam !ald
this is because the BNE is concerned
with larger scale drug traffic.
They go after the big de.lers and in
1971 they got more than a few .
"There Is definitely more," says
Pulliam, relative to general dru1 use and
availability among young adults.
Herold -the killer compound -is
among them.
Pulliam says many users of
hallucinogenic chemicals who now suffer
recurring trips wlthout taking more-a
drug-induced psycbosis -have found
heroin to be calming.
County Delays
Ma cArthur Road
Work for Irvine
The much debated widening of
MacArthur Boulevard between the Sin
DltgG Freeway and Campus Drive
bordering the Orange County Airport
may be delayed for some lime. a county
road department ofricial said today.
According to Murr ay Storm, assistant
road commissioner, !he planned widening
ol~he busy thoroughfare in the vicinity of
M~haelson Drive jusl south of the
F~way will be held up because of the
i~rporation of the new cit y of Irvine.
''The roadway iJ now in the new com-
munity and planned improvement will
have lo await their decisions." Storm
s&id, adding, "the Michaelson Drive
a1'a is heavily conrested during peak:
traffic hour1. Something should be done
as soon as possible."
Work had betn 1!1ted for early next
year by the road department.
Storm told 1upervlsor1 Tuesday, in con-
n«tion with another project, the Campus
Drive extension near UCI, that the coun·
ty will provide Arteri•I Highway Fina n·
ctng Progr1m f1111dl If the city will ap.
p~prlale whaleter &•• 111 monies they
receive tn the next ftw mont.bs.
He Hid ti la nonnaJ that the cqunly
pick• up the lfl'e•ltr part ol lbe tab for
planned road Improvements ln new cltfet.
lmprowrnent of MacArtllur llouleYlrd
near the airport "" the 1Ubject cl much
cantn>Yeriy dililii) recent heotlllf• oa fl'OPOSed commercl1! erpanalon bl the
area -the Mcllorulell Douilaa $0 ocre1
ind the planned Collbla ~ Company
d.vt!opmenl.
Operation Intercept cut the now of
drugs by plane, boat and motor vehicle
across tbe Mexican border, but much still
slips lllrough.
Not much new has tumed up in smug.
gling, says Pulliam.
"They're just trying to be more evasive
about it in their scheming ." he expl ains.
Just what does 1972 portend on the drug
scene?
"That's almost impossible to pro-
phesy,'' says Agent Pulliam.
-He lists the organic and synthetic
hallucinogens, heroin , plus dangerous
drugs such as barbiturates and am-
phetamines among the most often-en-
countered drugs.
Cocaine also showed up ,..ith steadily
increasing frequency during the past
year.
Derived from the leaves of a South
American plant, cocaine -known as
coke in the drug underworld -is a
narcotic-stimulant generally s n i f f e d
through the nostrils.
"IL used to be found ma inly among
black -drug users," says Agent Pulliam,
noting it is finding favor among a broad
class of users.
Questioned aboot the novel new hashish
oil, he said it is one example of the way
drug dealers develop new synthetic or
organic-based compounds.
"We've run into a little infonnation on
it and just small amounts up until the
Laguna Beach seizure," he explains.
"All I can llAY is, drug use seems to be
on the increase," Pulliam concludes
" ... with no foreseeable drop."
The Right Lane
Burbank was given breathalizer
tests throughout the broadcast.
The last reading before he passed
out showed a blood alcohol con.
lent of .1 4 percent. Kentucky law
holds any person intoxicated on a
reading of .10.
The station said it received a
deluge of telephone calls com-
menting on the broadcast, most
of them favorable, but said it re-
ceived a few calls from local bars
"asking Gary to come in for a
last drink."
1st Male Child
Born in Irvine?
The birth of possibly the first male
child born to parents who live in the
new City of Irvine was annouitced dur-
ing Thursday's live-hour city council
mee ting on the UC Irvine campus.
Dennis Hauze, of 4461 Wyngate Place,'
Jrvirie, said his wife, Carmen. delivered
their second child Thursday in St.
Joseph 's Hospital, Orange.
Daniel Robert Hauze weighed in at 9
pounds, 15 ounces, the president of the
Willows Communitv Aasoclatlon proudly
told the city eouncil.
DAILY PILOT PMN., llcMtf ftMfllW
Br•l Stovall, 13, and Linda Bradley, 12, try out Cosla Meu'1 ilrst bike
lane on Arlington DrlYe between the Orange County Fairgrounds and
the clly's ToWinkle Park. The whlte line on the rlfbthand aide of
the road sets off a portion.of the thoroughfare for cyCllsts, separating
them from autos. City Is contemplating extensive use of bike Jones
u I,, safety device on huvUy·traveled roadw1ys.
I I
"Patrolmen found they just couldn't
adequately answer all th~ questions at
once and still carry on their routine func-
tion s.
"We stopped the program so that we
could take a good Jong look at it. The
school district people will do the same,"
Murray said.
From the standpoint of public relations,
the project was a huge success . Murray
emphasized.
"But we were sometimes running to
cars full of kid! a night and that eats into
patrol assignmenta." he said.
One necessary drawback of patrolling
street! with youngsters looking on in the
c.11r is that in cases involving potential in-
jury, officials were reluctant to respond.
Throughout the many months of the
project, however, no guests were ever
imperiled and no injuries were ever
recorded.
Besides hundreds of high school
students, patrolmen exposed
businessmen, service club members and
other adult citizens to the same ex-
periences.
In the final as.sessment, Murray said,
the merchants may have benefited more
than the high school youngster in the uni·
que program.
"At this point the program has gone
full circle. There is always the type of
young person who would never llign up
and believes his mind is made up and
nothing will change it. The rest who
participated had seen it all before and We
we re selously wondering if taking them
out a second time was worthwhile or just
performing an. improvised chauller
service." he observed.
"We'll keep the whole thing in limbo
for a while and take stock of the whole
idea ," he added.
Runaway Aid Slated
BALTIMORE (AP) -A bill establish'
Ing !halters for runaway children and a
nationaf network to help .families locate
runaways will be introduced in Consress
early nut year, says Rep. Paul S. Sar-
banes.
Armadillos Could Hold
.. .. , , .. .. ~
J(e y to Ancient Disease • • • . • •
WASHINGTON (AP) -Because not
one, but two armadillo! in Louisiana
have developed leprosy, researchets say
there is fr"'h hope that 15 million hu-
mans with the ancient disease will be
cured.
Scientists say they also · seek to dispel
the belief held by .some experts that the
fir!l time the hlrd-shelled mammals con-
tracted the disease marked "a genetic
fluke" rather than ·a medical break-
throogh.
Irvine Gunman
Ge ts 12-year
Prison Sentence
A man who took more than $2,000 at
gunpoint from an Irvine bank has been
sentenced to 12 years in federal prison.
U.S. District Court Judge David
Williams Imposed that prison term in Los
Anaeles federal court on Tommy Frank
Donald, 24, after the Tustin man ad·
milted the holdup Aua:. 10 of the First
Wes~rn Bank, 18002 Culver Drive,
University Park.
Judge Williams recommended
psychiatric treatment for Donald after
impolling sentence.
Donald, a freelance writer, took $2,170
from a teller in the noon hour robbery
and then led sheriff's officers on a high
speed auto cha.se along the Newport
Freeway.
He was captured by two ambulance at-
tendants who joined in the pur!Uit at the
Edinger Avenue off ramp and grabbed
Donald shorUy after hi! auto plowed into
a utility pole. The money was reeovered
from Donald's car.
•
Last August, U.S. Public Health re-•
searchers at the gove rnment's leprosy ~ • hospital in Carville. La., announced with •
some fanfare tha t ltprosy h8d shown up
in one of 77 animals in a research co!-•
ony. ~-
All 77 had been injected with human !·
lep rosy bacteria since the experiment be-;.
gan in February. 1970. ~
With leprosy-afllicted ariimals tit ex. ::
periment on as models, sclentists hoped
to move toward a cure for humans or a •
preventative vaccine. ·'
But conservative-minded scientists ex.
pressed skepticism tbat the success
achieved in giving leprosy to a Jone arma-
dillo meant anything for the· 15 million
persons with the disease around th e ;
world, including 3,000 in the United States.
There are 100 new cases in the U.S. each
year. •
Now. in a new report, researchers say
a second armad illo has contracted the ,
disease. The flews first showed up in the ::
"Star," a newspaper published by pa-:,.
tients at the CIQllle hOllpilal. ,.
Scientists atlffie Gulf South Re(lional ~
Institute of New Iberia. La ., told the ·•
paper about the breakthrough in a story .:
approved by Dr. Waldemar F. Kirch·
heimer. chief of Carville's Laboratory ~
Research Branch. •
It said in part : "By assuring that the l
Initially infected armadillo _ . _ was not {
a genetic fluke . non-representative of his .\
species, the likelihood increases that 1
more armadillos susceptible to HD (Han· •
sen'! Disease or leprOlly ) will be found .'' l
And. aside from the potential for Jep-I
rosy patients. the Carville researchers i·
say the new finding! may eventually lead I
to better understanding of why some • people develop cancer while others es· :·
cape and some answers to problems sur· ::
rounding rejectioos of transplanted hu-•:
man hearts and other major organs. :
• • . . • • • •
Solon Rocking Leaky Boat? ~ •• • '$ •' ~ By JOANNE REYNOLDS
• Of tllf t.1llr Pll91 ltll#
The relaUcnshlp of the press and the
men elected to public office ls sometimes
abrasive .
But action proposed thls week by an
Orange County Legi.!llator could rock the
media-government relationship m o r e
than u1uaJ.
State Sen. James E. Wbetmore (R·
Garden Grove ) in an interview suggested
the news media be required to conform to
a set of educational standards and licens·
Ing. "such as doctors or lawyers."
He emphasized lhat the ide.t is just
that -he has oo definite plans for
legislation and he wants "to hear from
the media and people of the 1t1te" about
the f>'OP<>Sal before takblg defbllte action:
"The way 1 see It, there are three pe>r·
lions of the proposal. First would be
educ1tlonal 1taqd1rds for -le worltlnc
1n the news media, the econd would be
polkinl of the lndusu, by them1tlve1
Ind the third, ~ the second failed, would
be llceiistnr by the stale.''11e Hid.
Whelmore upl1lnld that no 11pect ol
the propoaal 11 designed to rtstrlct the
press In any way. Jn fact, he 1iys be
feels a court lest of such ltglilalloo , bi. ..
' ..
ed on the First Amendment to the
Con1UtuUon., would uphold a law of this
sort.
Wbetmore's motives in proposing the
1tandards and licensing are based on the
impact of the media and what he regards
as 1n apparent Jack of standards Within
the industry.
0 1 was very surpriled to learn tbat
someone who doelln't have a high achool
diploma , or even an eighth grade educa·
tlon ror that matter, can become a prac-
ticing journalist here," he said.
He cited the Impact -particularly that
of the televised media -as another
reason for the slandard11. ''Take the
lelevlslon Industry and the people who
select whit wllfbe used In a broadcast,"
ht said. "It's a classic eiample of what
I'm talking ahoul."
j't'hetmore caullqned lh•t these ideas
an .. ool a vendetta •lalnst the press. 1'1
have no ax lo gr!n<I. In fact I think I'••
gotten very rooct coverage from tho
prus," ~ said. "But where there b th la
l!IU<h ll!ipacl, I thllll: Ihm CJUihl lo ~
some control1.11
The senator 1ckn<1Wledged thal bis
knowl!da• of the working preu Is
lbllllad. "My son 11 • 1raduale aludeot bl
telecommunications at Cal State,11 he :~
said. "And I've discussed It with hlm a #~
little." .~ When ·asked if he had done any
research on the operaUons of newspapers :: .. and radio and television news coverage .. • .. he replied. "Golh, no. That's why I hope •'
to get some N!actlon and maybe find out ::
about some of theae things." ~
He stressed that he was more in· '
terested in gettlna public reaction than In ~
lnJUating legi1laUon at this point. ~
"I seriously doubt that II will be put In-~
to a bill this year. Jl's much more likely ;-'
to be in the form of a resolution ask.log -:
for 1 committee study. ~
"A bW would be premature and we -
haven't really evtn scratched 'the ~
surface. That's why a eomrnlttee in--~
veaUgation -committee •hearings -·~
would probatil.Y be more useful al th!• ·:·
1tage than anythlng else," he said. .i:
Whetmore aald he fetll !hero la llltlt •..
dancer of federal lqlllaUon auJllfCOdlnl
any legislation !hat could be enacted by
the stale.
"Ttadillonally we have led the n1ll on In
certain leglalaton and It'• our place 11
the number ona state lo take lilt l
bert if we can," ht aald.
•
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• • •
. • • • • .
Are You. Letting Cash
Slip Through Your Fingers
See If You Have Any
Of These Things A
DAILY PILOT
WANT-AD
Will Sell Fast!
1. s1o .. 29. Blcy<la 57. Eloctric Train
2. Guitar 30. Typewriter 51. Kitten
3. Baby Crib 31. Bor Stools 59. CIH1lc Auto
4. Electric Saw 32. Ency<l9peclla '°· CoffH Tabla
5. Camera 33. Vacuum Cleaner 61. Motorcycle
6. Washer 34. Tropical Fish 62. Accordion
7. Outboard Motor 35. Hot Rod Equlpm't 63. Skl1
I . Storto Sat 36. Fllt Cablnat 64. TV Sat
9. Couch 37. Goll Cl ubo 65. Workbench
10. Clorlnal 31. Sterling Sliver 66. Diamond Wtkh
11. Rafrlgarator 39. vtctor11n Mirror 67. Go-Kart
12. Pickup Truck 40. Badroom Sat 68. Ironer
13. Sawing Machine 41. Slide Pro)ector 69. Camping Trtlltr
I 4. Surfboard 42. Lawn Mow.r 70. Antique Fumltura
15. Machine Tools 43. Pool Tabla 71. Tapo Recorder
16. Dl1hwHhar 44. Tl .. 1 72. S11fboat
17. Puppy 45. Plano 73." Sports Ctr
11. Cabin Crulstr 46. Fur Coal 74. Mattraq llox Spg1
19. Golf Cart 47. Drtpos 75. Inboard Speedboat
20. Barometer 41. Linens 76. Shotgun
21. Sl1mp Collection 49. Hor11 n . Saddle
22. Dinette Sat 50. Alrplene 71. Dort 0.ma
23. Ploy Pen 51. Organ 79. Punching Bag
24. Bowling Ball 52. Exercycl1 80. Biby Cerri• ..
25. Weier Skis 53. R1rt Books 11. Drum1
26. F ... nr 54. Ski Boots 12. Rifle
27. Sultcast 55. High Chllr 13. DMk
21. Clock 56. Coins 14. SCUBA Gaar
These or any other extra things around th• house
can be turned Into casli with a
DAILY PILOT WANT-AD
so
Don~t Just Sit There! •
DIAL DIRECT
642-5678
• •
,
MondiY, J111uary 3, 1972 DAIL V PILOT ff ---------------------------------:---------
DAILY PILOT WANT ADS !
_,..... l~ I _,,,... 1~1 -'·-I~ DON'T PINCH ,_G•n•r•_I -1=:.::::::Ganera::::::::::;:I :::::::::::::;;G•n•r•l==:::::::::::::I ':
"A SURPRISE * * * * * *
YOURSELF
(You're Not Dreaming)
But You Can
PINCH YOUR
PENNIES
with a
PILOT
PENNY PINCHER
cJssified Ad
'3 LINES
2 TIMES
Any Item Priced
$50. or less
•
Of mere than -Item, the cem~lnt<I tetol
un11ctl axcHd ~.)
642-5678
AWAITS YOU"
AdapL•bilHy Is '"-k"Y nole TAYLOR co. ot th.ls 1Wo slory rolon!al
style home. Huge ran1i~
room ~1th fireplace ll'ading
to covered patio. t-·om1al
dining and living room wuh
fil'!'Pl•ce also ror formal r11·
tertainment. Dt-sigM<i for
-·· • •
11>1s ol room plus Iota ot
privacy I 4 huge bedrooms
and 2% baths. Cali us now. .... _
\-01 T HE REAL ,ry_ ESTATERS
./ '' ', L ', '',
DOG LOVERS
WP:'ve built Jn a dog run for
your hounds! Ea1:1stdf' An11-
he1m Joca1io11 • 51• AS.'UM-
ABLE F1-fA LOAN. f'our bd·
rms., 2 bath, 15' x 24' t'OV·
ered patio, .FenC'l'd yard •
fruit trees. Oose to park &
schools. ONLY $2).950.
Ewning!J Call 54S-:r.H>
BAYCREST BEAUTY
Owner movM ro J\.fe:irico,
'Beamed cethf"clral ('t'i\ln~s.
3 bedrooms, 2% balh8, huge
hving plus ran11 ly roon1.
Planned especially for en-
tertainirw. L a r g·e patio,
shake root. ~r ii.nxious,
a>l6 Commodore. daily 1-5
Lachenmyer
Realtor
1800 Newport Blvd., C.M.
Ca1J 646-3928 Eves. 675-18'17
$19,950 IS
THE PRICE
for this very lovely 3 be<J.
room, 2 balh home. The Joan
la high enough that you can
aS6Ume with payments of
$100 per month, which In·
elude~ alt. l\.fodem built·
tns, d~p pile carpets, also
matctilng drape~. Double
garage to boot! cru.1 -
Wal.ker & lee
Rnlt>n
7790 Ha.rtior Blvd. at Adams
5«)..9f91 Open 'tit 9 PM
BEACH RETREAT
Own your own deluxe apart.
ment In Laguna. Pool, prt-
vab!: beach. MMy extru -
lncllJdine YArite water vie-w.
$45,,..,
o!o
DOVER SHORES -$99,500
Elegant & colorful! Exquisite master suite
with hu ge \va\k-in <:loset. ~1any fine features
in this 4 BR . home with study. sun room &:
formaJ dining rm. Great kitchen. 3 car gar.
,, .. ,.
,..
' ' "Our 26th Year" .,
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO .. Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hills Road
'·' NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
Charnllni;: 2 lxlrin. family
hollH'. 1\Hh 4 bdrn1s. & farn .
t!y rrn., on hucc lot. Grf'al
privacy & ranyon v i t' w .
16'.000.
675-3000
BAY& BEACU
REALTY ""
PLANNING ON
RETIRING?
\\'IJV NO'l' OJRONA DEi.
hfAR. \\'e havt> a lJt'at l"'O
oversize bdrm., 2 balh home
"-ith n&rdwooct noon. Com-
lortablc fil'C.'pia('t', cozy pa.
tio, prolf'Ctl'd hf'aled pool
for your daily exeN"1se. Th15
\l.'On't Inst long at ONLY
$39,!Y..iO.
COLWELL
PROPERTIES, INC.
formrrly lnSnrdr Q E
2 2 0 E.17th St., C .M.
Call 646·0SSS
_F'~g~ C~li__64~~
EAST'STOE •
NEED LARGE
LOT?
We hav<' 2 to choose from
2 BR. \Virh 5'1'xl78' comer
101. -$19,'.ZJO.
3 BR with !il'C.'pl. Ofl OO'x139'
w/alley access. -$24,950.
NAME YOUR TERM'S!
Nawporl
•t
F11irvi1w
646-1811
(•nytime)
brand new
bi9 canyon
home •••
~ five bedrooms,
~ 3 baths,
t family room,
3 car garage,
beautiful
corner lot
l6 hermitage lane at
royal st. george road,
nt:'Wport beach .
I • this home is beinr
finished now and
.should be •vall able
' ln mid-february •
' lfrlve by llnd iree It, l ''"'" call owner at ..•
644-1140
..
'r" •' ..
~
..~ .
" ..
•
"' ...
"l ..
"" ,,,.
\,,~
Builder's Close-out •
4 hd rm Spanish Style horn~•· '1'
\Vllh 2 bath.11. No dO\.\•n Gl r ...
buycN1 and min. clo\\•n i'l lA .
Prie@d !ronl $30,GJO. PrlCt': " ,,
includes landscape, spnnk-
lers ond buytt <'hooses col-.f:
or on carpels. ClOM> to So, ,
C o a 1 t P\axa. and MW
........... _, • .. i.. Soe..1l<>Ols. ••-..e11 open. Call.
11 you U8ed yoor GI b@ne..
flt1 before, catt anyway • "
you might be <llrft>1• tor
another one.
Walker & lee
~a1tors ,..
2790 Harbor Blvd. et Adamt '8
54S-04"S Open 'lll 9 PM :;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;J~
Macnab·lrvine ~
--'!!!!!!'!c""'us"""ro""'M=Lo""'T"" ~,Bar"'-One of the Jut lots ~eft next
~EALTOR~ -to the Mesa Verde Golf
-course. Owner will ~bordin
l3J.0700 '44-2430 a te and this spacious Jot is
Realty Company ~
BUY OF THE WEEK ,~
Location • style -quality .• ~
Ox-lice Baycn:iit sl:reet It. •
stunning 4. BR. home \VI q
loft¥ ceilings & 2 masJ!ve ;
t:tone frPcs, Ownet -builder ·I' prio?d at Oldy $11,495. Call CAPE COD 546-zm. bu ~t~eo· :=Es :J.
OCEANFRONT
Everything about iltt'i1 4 BR.
home is excellent! • Loe&·
tion . condition • lot size. •
oversized bride fireplace.
Pl.eue ca1' far •pp't. to see
this lovely home being otf.
ered at mz.ooo.
PETE BARRETT
REALTY
642-5200 642-4353
Enjoy The Security
af ltiis attractive home. In a
most desirable area, in
Hunt. Beach. We ctassi'fy
thi• propert-y a.s real shatp.
Prked et $'l1,ni. 847.QJIO
0 THE REAL
'""" ESTATERS
LUSK
2·STORY
Love1y Burlingame modet,fn..
eluding land. 4 Bdrms., ban-,
us room, 3 baths. Huge Jot.
$&4,$0. ~ Catamarwt.
Harbor View Hills. 675-71JS
'O THE REAL
\,'"\.. SSTATERS
-~-ASSUME
VIEW
()Jffl"tandlng canyon & ocean ~~
views from this (J'lrty gorge.
ous 3 BR., sPIH • levl'I, adult •
occupied home. Profftllion-
alty landocap<d. 169,,..,. ~.
64<-62Q)
Macnab-Irvine .... This low • loW \nte~gt loan
& save lot'sa $$.lS. Anxiou s owner willing to a.uist in ad-;64:;2:;-12::;3:;5::;::;::;~::;:;2:;00;t~.; ditional ti~. Neat 3
bedroom, famUy room home.
Modem, «tepoav!ng ldt<loen. S-h~·h! <
Generou9 fenced yard with
covered patio. Paymenls
1ess than renl at only $30.!60.
·1::1r~::1
Premium 9uality
At BaTg,_in Pr!~. Time Is
Presiinl. owner transferrfli.
t0a lON1 )'OU gain, Check ll\ls. ono .-.; • r. $24,1!00. t47.el10 ,
O 'l'l!E REAL
'"\.. !~'..;TATERS --
We found a charmer. S BR. h ~ 2 stocy • 3 car cuaee. i..10l!le
10 Harbor High. ),ol.
ALOO: -1 BR. furn. apt. for
rent,
<Small enough to kMw you, ,
11.ree @OOUgh to 1erve you.)
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Fveryone Hos
' Something Th o! D/tll;Y -~PttOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trode It
With " Wa nt Ad Someon-e Else Wonts '' '· ' • ' •I • .... ,_.,f"y ' '
. " The Biggest M~~.~~tplace. on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast ResuJts
l
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•
POP ON Q~E.R TO PP.I'!'~ ·,
in Corona deJ Mir . . ._
UPPER fRONT _µ;:VEL UNI'Jl, :t-.Qedroom,
2 "ba tH. formal dining room fireplace, built-
ins. g>WER UNIT, private entrance, fire-
place, •BACH UNIT one bedtcom ,11eJu2e
apartment. Adorable at ..... '·.· .... $6I ,500. . ... , '
INSTANTLY APPIOAl.J NG .
YCfU'll have to agP.ee , SPAN !~H sty le 3 bedroom, 2 p aths, dining
room, tfreptace. extra large builtin modern
kitchen, carpets & drape s. two LEVEL
PATIO. See this extra sharp one yea r old
beauty. . . . . . . . . . . . .. , . . . •. . . . . . . . $49,500.
SEA YOU AT THE BAY-' •
Balboa blond
CUTE beach cottage. 2 bedroom, 1 b~th ,
FIREPLACE, front patio, one block to South
Bay .. Only . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. $32,500.
WHAT A TRAO!I
3-4 Plexes , .
... all in a row. AU units have 2-3 bedi-oom ,
2 bath, 1-2 bedroom 1-1 bedroom. SPACIOUS
and close-to shopping, in SUPE)t RE1"1'.!;L
AREA. Each . . . .. . . ...... , ..... ,. $65,i;po.
RE-ALTOR.S
644-7270
2828 EAST ~OAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIJi, •
:O £,..ral
1111... -
> I •'·,•I
I G-enero11 · 1
' .
~M BAYSIDE DRIVE WATERfRONT
I
I
Linda & Harbor lsfaocr· View . .. .. . .
Fron\ this l9vely 4 bdrm ., 4 bath home. On
a 59' lot, wit h pier & float.-CuslO'ni dlap-
er«;~.-A~·~e~t$139,500. . _
. '.,µ.;/.GllUNDY, REA-LTOR ~'~·~Jlldg. ,, lliidi' 'Jtli ~)>i!i'l's!* Ot:;j 1$uita .1, N.B. ifS~llll -' ' . '·' ' .. • GeMrltl Ge'ner1l
: l=H;;;:;;AR;;;;:' ';;;:;;:D;;;;:Wi;;;:;;:O;;;;:O;;;;;D;;;:;;: I BUl~DER 'S
: • . ·FLQORS REPOSSESSIO,N •
·' Th iii beautiful Costa 1\lesa One man's loss can be your
•·' hoint will pica~ and d<'-&aih. -Ptloecl fo .sell at
l l Jigh! with it's 3 shinine bed· $32,500 ... 'f1tti ntA or VA
roomi, 2. gleaming batfl)1, tem)s. Hµge 2 story~ '4dbe<l,
._. plush NE\\/ CARPETS, big roorn:, fam~1;t: bonus. real.
doubtc garage at1d a big Costa ~esa 1~ation . near f school, llO\V vacant w .1 e e 1·~ t>nced yard with patk> and a....i...i me . .Builder warits fasr , •·1 . BIG TREES! IMMEDIATE· s::fe~, , ii 1 J..Y YOURS for $24,900• A.ny f: terms offered to fiknce 540oll5l {Open Evenings)
11:;. your pUrchast-. [~'QI
I. • . COATS · ~---BTAn ·· . 0 & ·~ . W WALLACE
. -· . REA~ TORS
-~6-4141-I· I,~ i""""'l'"O!!p1'"h'"E""'v1'"n'"int.,,,,•,.l ,..
I!; A MESA VERDE
VALUE t:Z Featuring warmth anq hap-t._. piness. Also inclu<fed a re
I three bed.room! and a fan1-' . . r ily room. lhick tihag ca rpet.
" .
" .. G.ner1 I
BAY FRONT' APTS •
Vista DE'I Lido. Pier & llJlp
a\•aHa ble, From Sl l,:AIO. SeU
or lease.
George Williamson
REALTOR
548.6570 64> 1564
5 BR .• 3 ba., form. dm. +
fam. rm., Z-st)., 2600 9<1. ft.
Im111ed. posst'SS. Reduced to
$33,500, Jow dn. Terms.
' Huntl119ton llHch
DOY(~TOWN
CUSTOM BUILT 5 BR. 2~
BA, pari.l'd, lam rm, 11orie
•rpl, lovely ctpls Jc drJH!.
bltln RIO, hrdwd Cll'$, App
:2l'XIO sq ff. 3 ear gar w/a.Uf'y
nca)ls. Choice k>c., all 1rnu.
842.4466
Te a d e rship .U REAL ESTATE
5-l&-l11J. 1 ""'B~U~Y"'O""F=-=T~H~E~W'"'E'"'E'"'K7 1
3 BR. $11 ,000 on a tremendous Calli. etas.
Ideal home for 221-02 buy-sic, Super shag crptg, 3 BR,
<'rs! Oversized., lot. Nice 2 BA, fabulous l~rms. VA / I
clean star1er home• Ltirge IBA or what havr y<>u .
Income ProPertv 166 Income Property 166
9 GARDEN TYPE BUNGALOW APTS.
4 separate buildings. Shake roofs. P rivate
patios. No stairs. All 1 story bun gaJows . 2 &
3 bedrooms. Some haVe fireplaces. The ty pe
of buildings that attract and hold good ten-
ants. Income $16,740 yr. $145,000. Excell ent
financing. , ''Our 26th Y1ar11
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San Joaquin Hiiis Road
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
Jiving roon1, lnnHly siu."d FOR JUST ••••• ••• $29,900. ";iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;; ~ ~ kilchen \Vilh R 0. Lois of * CALL 8~7-8507 * ~ MONEY SAVING store-all cabl he" Pl"' d;n. L19un1 Boach Lota for S•I• 170 ing area! J<~ull price $21,000! ~ '
.. . . · · REerP-t . . , , , cau 8-17-lm • sEu. OR LEASE • l O S rA,ll Ff! IATID '' BA SEYMOUR REALTY. 17141 \... _ .. _,. ( 2WO Sq. Ft. 3 BR, ,, · f'OR 11alt'. Triplex lot In ~
Clemente~ Ocean & Hillside
\"ie\\"$. $12.500 642-7216. _. ·-• · · _, . -\INIQ.UE HAS GRru tlSTINGS Beach Bh•d .. H"nl. Bch. ~ Lg. ram. om ., din. rm, O·pJ. ~e · one 4 .bedroom. 2 1 ASSUME 601 Cpt & drapes, bllins, 'l'et
h<lb · hom,o'.;n c~ta' ...•... IN THE.BEST AREAS 10 ---,S"E"L~L"'l~N7G~--1 b"'. "'· Jmmac. $41.9,,.'Mountain, Desort, Mesa, add on .. anXlous · . -VA LOAN-F ull price. Rtsort f!\1!~ r~~~k~ihcv~~~-~ u~1vu11= ti()"--"S:~ Sharp 3 Bcdnn. home on YOUR HOME ? MlSSIO REALTY 49"~731 174
f"lllllll9 L ~L.3t f"rcc appraisal. , .\Ve buy l--,--:-,,------·t prlnkle wlth~"thc t>est O F .· M E SA V E R D E lt-tr~f' 101. SJio. n10. pays . L'd I ,_
poss! e tenns ($150 I all. F"ull pr1c<' $24,900 . bl ~ equities. Pc1110naJ attentton, I o ,,..
1
** BIG BEAR LAKE
down +,closi,ng costs);· FULL ER REALTY 'Jc'o'"'L·l 0l'N"'s '·&962W-;.;2:1A-TTS BUJLJ) A SNO\V:\1A N ....
place in escrow for 30 FIVEBEDROOMS 'O · 0 RANOAPANE LED 54&-0814 'Anytime lOWSOn in lront or rhis cabio De Bal . c-_, d E . P k -REALTY -I ;, th• •'OOd•. o.u, -day& and you ~ve th!' n, near ear1c .:le: UV!. an stanc1a· ar GH W' c &
beat buy in to\vn at in pride of owner ship Mesa Verde. 75' x 100' RI T NO • • W • Always a good sell'Cli!ln ol S9'l.)Q. At thi!! pr ice
Chi•ner tramltrrt'd. :\1ust !ell ---,==--;;-=;,--;:c---fine Lido Isle hon1e!. Cur· it v.·on·1 las! }o~! $23.900! Hurry -it f ee Jot, 2-story floor plan with added room YOUR FAMILY rent listings ironi _
won't last. 546-8640. for workshop or · stotage. Exlras include this 2 story, 4 BR Pa{'CS('I· \VlLL .FLIP! $48 000
IT'S THE
TALK ·or-
~ ' ~ .
-TH( TOWN '
' ' '· ·. .. . .
TQl1 beautiful home :Jo.·
ca ied. in Mesa '.v erdo Is
a speclou! 4 bedrQOm,
with. family, , 2 baths,
-electric built-in kitchen,
cozy brick firepla~.
prestige arce. ·gorgeous
yar1ts and prlc'ed to sell
rast 'at S32,95o'. o"Wner
must sell. ~1ilke 'offer.
546-8640.
BEST BUYJN
: MESA VERDE
$27,900
Ne<ldA paint a nd cl~an
up bUt v.'hat a valuC'. 4'
big· bcdroomi;, :Z · f.ull
baths. bullt-in kitchen.
double garage. best
Cos ta Mesa a rea. No
ddwn ' to v~·~. rriirilrh~m
, dowri FHA.' See' tilts for ,ure. ·54s.s&10.-~ • · ·:. · .. ..
·114MBLIN~-,CHALET
NEWPDRr HEIGHTS
Expansive tri"·INt'I 'fc11.-
tures lavish 'gUest quar-
tet's \Vith Sc>parirte k il·
chtn. bath .. and Ii.r~place,
2 additional bedroi:11t1s,
kitclien a l'ld f ir'Cplitce,
fru it t rees <'v.Cr;'\Vhcr~,
+ as a bonus xO.u get a
view of Newport Bay· -
'at $46,500 -It's a must
Sec! 546-8&10.
· water softener. immaculately fini shed gar~ t<'r in atesa Verde. \\'alk 10 .over lhi.3 3 BR, 2 BA '
age -and · a housewife \\'ho's super neat! No schls. Din. rrn. & scp. fan1. Seabury home '"/lrg patio, hcxoaRb lowaor::a JR..
h th. k od l·m. i\.sking $4.1,950. in tovcly arett. S31,900. aealtOll nonsense ere, 1s ma es go sense at ROY J \V LTr.~ 67.)..4.76:?
JiAVE FUN AND '.\IAKE
SOME i\fONEY ON 'TlOS
I NV ~li\JENT . 6 CABINS
... on 8 lo!s, 11·i1h ·a
.~pcc11:1cular lakt-\'le'4": . $46,95(L PHONE 546-5990 TO SEE THE MIL-
1
___ ·_,"""'·l6-0_·'R~l~_i_R __ ·_· /McVA":;.JJ E•tatc ~~>0458 31 __ l6_V_m_L_•do ____ _
LER RESIDENCE. ', Balboa I stand REDUCED $2 0001 4 BR. J ba. 60x90 sn.500 RcnraJ.~ l'flver paymts.
Only S~l.900. Lo. ctn: GOOD HOUSEKEEPING AWARD OF THE VACANT! ONLY $21,000! J BR. 2 bo. 42"88 $79.500 Call
year goes to the JoVely little lady living in * * * I All Spanish 2 BR condo. Db! f BR. 3 ha. 70x88 $125,000 \1•ri1 c: Spencer Real Estate,
Ros.'> !7141 :J36.1738 or
th"is low profile 4 'bedroom Mesa Verde R e-David Ure gar! Lush Jdscpg: Oii•ner LIDO REAL TY INC. P.O. Box 2828, Big Bear
pt.i.bnc'Ho'rne. Has a lawn like a bi ll ia rd1ta ble 3702 Toland an."<ious. 33n VIA LIDO Lake, California.
'and inJ~rior like a model home. No fooling! Los Al amitos HAFFDAL REALTY 673-7300 Out of St•t• P rop. 171
Would Jiave Sold Joni ago, bu t Mrs. Clean 's You are !he \1·inner of 842-4405 Eves: 541-244£ New-.. , Beach
ttew home w.on't be rea dy until ·mid-April. 2 tickeis 10 the 5800. Down _.. · ARIZONA
"'Prfc ed at todays market $43.500. PliONE· Sports, Vacation Lar'i" level lot!, v1atf'r. poy,·.
546-5990 TO SEE THE MATTA RESIDENCE. & Rec.eaHonal ANYONE QUALIFIES NEW ,LISTING "··Good mad•. S795 foll
Ve hicle Sho w to take over th!' lo\\· in· And Jikf" new. warm & rich price. Easy !rnns. Free
U~l()Uf'. ti()Mf'.S
O F C ORO NA DEL MAR
RARE; OCEAN BOULEVARO MANSION WITH
bed:rooms galore and a view that rtiakes the
horizon bend. High ceilings, We entryway
-and -g.racious step-up dining r oom. This
property will fore your i1nagination a i'l.d pro..
-vide plenty or room for your ideas! On tl'le
market at$135,000. PLEASE PHONE 675-6000
TO SEE THE OCEAN BOULEVARD MAN-
S ION.
BIG, NEW J BEDROOM IN OLD CORONA
d~I· Mar .. ·Just finished ! Two story with huge
~1tchen,. thick c~rpets, \vinding staircase ~nd
JUSt. a .bit or a view through th e stately Pine
. trees ... .fireat big master suite \vi th beam
-ceiling and a small portico fo r greeting th~
... , !hf'
ANAHEI M
CO NVEN TION
CENTER
Nm1· rhru .lttnuary 16111
Please call &i2 • .J678, C'.'i1 314
bet"'·een '9 and 5 pn110 clatm
yuur tickets, fNorth County
toll-free number is :Hf-I.ml .. . * *
Balboa Peninsula
DUPLEX. hay \'le11·; large
lot. $72.500.
3 BR . home -.~;,9,500
Marshall Reali)' 67.1-1600
\\'ANTED: Ol~anfront 3 or 4
Br. OOme for quick salt.
Marshall Really 61'>-%00
Corona del Mar-
P5_lce<I .at $85,000 PLEASE PHONE 675-6000 .. 1-:l'u'-~E'..'.J'HE NEW HOUSE JN OLD CORO-· · ·""' ready •0 "'" th;,
!eres1 rate loan on this home. -4 Bdrms .. ramily rm., piclUl"f'll. maps. \\"rite Elrne.r
lovrly. n<.'ar nC'1,· 3 Bed-21 ~ baths. Everythtf'K:" ror I Butler. &x 480. Kingman,
roon1 hon1e . .im.8~ gracious living 1nclud1ng a , Ariz . 86-!01>
SH ERWeeo REAL TY sparkling pool. Prim(' Har. ~~~~!1!!11~~~~~1
18964 Brookhurs1, r.v. bor H.ighland1 arel!I. S43,t:m.1 ~,
SH ARP 3 BR 13/4 BA, din CALL Ci) 6<1 6 ·2<1 14 finlnciaf
rm, bltins, d!hwshr, fpl. 91 ~
crpll Ir: drp1, Vacant. Must *"""" ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimlii
sell! Xlnl trm11. $24,000. I EA L TY B • ** 835-442'2 * * Nr•r Ncwp•rl P••t OFfltc us1nes1
FOUR sr AR R£ALTY Sit'n on a Suitcase Opportunity 200
3 Bt·, 2 bB. fan1 rm, O\vner packed a nd ready to New listing
cul-de-sac. fully c r P t d , go. Great five bedroom fan1. Typcv.·riter Sales & Scrv.
garden kit. $31,900. 962-4892, ily home in University Park Holland Bus. Sales
R. E. SALES
l'M LOOKING FOR
PROFESSIONAL
SALESMEN
BE YOUR O\VN BOSS
CALL ED 8.J7.900f
KASABIAN
REAL ESTATE
near schools a nd pools. Ne\\·· "The Broker wi1 h Empathy"
ly decorated. J\fastt'r is huge , 1116 Orang<' Av t .. C-\.1.
and downstairs . be'ds up.: 61~17D :>I0-0608 eves
Corner Jot fenct'cl for Fido.
O.Vner asking $36,500 bu1
really wants out! Subm it
offer. Call 64S-TI71 but hW-·
Liquor license for sale * On sale pl'!'-1961 .-
Call Dick at 673-7722
GIFT Shop -&th -Botique
on Balboa ls!. Sm. invest.
675-2118 or 83.l 8834 . f
morning-"·stin -fand checking the days surf!) OWNER A"XIOUS
·NA·delMAB. · · 1o\'ely 2 bdrn1 ., 11~ hath ~~!!'!'-----""!!"'•"!"••---I home, 1'-Z °'" loo: F.A.
1
$18,950. I; heat: log-bi.irning frple.: f,.s ] BR 2 BA 60 x -OD' •
, _!3_•..,n,..11_,•_' '----,....~ I General view of .ocean -~ !<'11y. May fenced lot, dbl &ar w/boat Newport He1ght1
: 01 ' -;;;::;::;::;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;::;:;;,t 'MQ'RGl~ ~1EAL TY ! dr, cov~ pa tio, elect bl tin 6 BEDROOM
Investment
Opportunity 220
• • *
'1 £AS' TSIDE ' • v · R.10. ~A h1. crp1s. drps, • '-· ETS $LOO 673-6642 • 67>6459 mm '"· paymt• 1,., than FIXER UPPER
. COSTA MESA TOTAL DOWN LU SK ""'-w;Oh .. m. repa;n; • pa;ot-G~1111y can 001?. skip & junip 01vner ~·ught new home-will Harbor Vie\v · 2 sidl'y. 5 br, I' ing, you can have a big val·
IQ )Vest"Jif! shopping; J r. pay all your costs. Te1Tific 3 ~ba, huge ft'{' lo!. Agent, ua.ble family home. Charm.
. w&tks tp. schodl; recreation location in pJuah green 67<>-722'>. 962""'471 ( =.) 546-11.03 ing 2-story early American
.at home,. l,p0-1 htd. & filt'd. re1kfential area. 3 BedNom. Costa Mesa only 10 yrs old . 2~ ba1.hs,
poqJ; ,,;':~· & den plus 2 Baths, fanlastlc pancll"tl A WHALE OF A BUY! frp1c. Stiake roof. Asking
guest JlOjise; in immac. game _room. a1_1 _bull1!ns nnd Pending Foreclosure With just a litUc cash you S38,cm or dtfer.
cOnd. ·Won't 'last long .a t sparkling cond11Jo_n. Govern-Owner \\•ill not refuse a~y can move into this charm· CALL Ci) 646·1414 $3 1.~.~ !911\ can as.suine men\ a Ppr a 1 s e d a t reasonable offer. Prime lo-fng 3 BR Ou1ch Haven home A~A ~la ..
)ctrge FHA lqan! . $29.~-"?-~201. mo. P&I. cation, 3 large bedrooms. w/fpl, nice area. Low dn · 7:",,.,...,
Bruce MacDonald .
17812 Mann St.
Irvin•
You are the winner of
2 tickets to the
Sports, Vacation
& Recreational
Vehicle Show
at the
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
CORBIN •. ·CaJJ 5"<>-8~24 ")pen e\'csJ 2 baths. 2 huge fireplaces. no quRalifalyinEg.,St24·500by. F.P. Ne1 r N r!p~:tllo~1 ortlc-r
r,,. ·large irregular Jor, separaie e s a e
I
·_ '-MA.R·JIN serviceporchand largeriled McVAY 545--0458 San Clemente
NO\v thnJ J anuary 16th
Pl~se call 642-5678, ext 314
between 9 and 5 pm lo claim
your tickets. (North County
toll-free number ls 540·1220) • • *
YOUNG Corp dealing in
Medical/Surgical products,
all product! ready fW
marketing, ls ~king finan.
cial help. Contact Bob Kent
of Kentoo Surgical. &15-5040
Seriou1 inquiries only.
CUTE, C1£:AH
COn\rortablc ti0me• 'vith
m.an,y 1;:usto111 fuuchfg, 3
·~oom Eaststde, cor-
ner ' 1ot. bOaf•'o"r 'tra11er
,,P.i;. s24,~. :Ws-8640.
3000 SQUARE
FEET' . •
kitchen. $33,.:;oo -B e s I $ "'UICK $ terms possible. O\vner des. llf!' . BRAND new, ocean ''iew. 3
REAL to~ ~7662 pc"rate '7" Call 5-j.).~24. WE BUY HOMES Br., 2 ~a., fam. nn., frpl.
(open eves. I SOUTH CO.AST r-.m KASABIAN 847-9604 All bit-ins. Wall to v.•ttll
"HOME ,.,, REALTORS K" ASABIAN crpls Ohru-oo t. 132,500, By v:r 0\\-ner. {714) 67>-3593. • THE ~ MoNTH" •HALF ACRE· with 2 bed-RESOLVE San Juan Capistrano
A ,_~. • room bOrne •• : ••• $25,000. ,ft ho I REAL F..STATE nd Wnat r lovely hOfne tt. _ w OV.'TI your O\.l..'11 me n
is. Large 4 bed~ wi th e 3 BEDROOM _ ho P 11 ., 1972. See this almost l"K.'w lrvlne SPANlSH MOTIF
fa milY TOOm.··3 balh, 1:arpet '11etlf •••.•••••••• 'i'zi.j()O~ l\.\·o story 3 bdnn home with I,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;•;;·;;;·;;·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I Tile root. archways & scclud-
lhnnigtlOtlit. Landscaping1.1a· · _ sunny kitchen and large fen-POPULAR 1 ed gardens. Old \Vorld Money to Loan •I.~ '-• o-c .... ' _... F n\ I 1 charm with modern con---. •. .,..,.._ ----~ "uoe ·-· ..... v.ate part~ .• .( BEDROOM & u u cE l.'-'\.I palio. a j y ~m-3 RUTGERS MODEL SATILER ·1y cl ~ • " N Vf'niences, 2 Bedrooms. 1 m11n1 .. i.: eanest home ' DEN. Baek.Bay •• $36,r.:iO. ca:r garage, near ewpoV rt Townhouse priced for qulck extra 1"-e \vllh celE"Story Ult' mar_t:,Gali /84%-253SJ • 1 ' _ Heights. Only $37,fJOO. oee.l --• •-d" · -• MTG CO :Jdle . .;x.-pe.rate ining .room Y.'iDdow; 2 baths. P aneled • •
, • ing and ne1v drapes. Thi~
~ '~ tiome pri~ a1 only $3().49.'i ~ has brt-n frt'shly painrt'd in f _ and out. and is a waiting
! · your inspection a t your
t' a r Ii t' s t convc>nicnct.
LOoking for 5 bedrooms
Execulive l ~tory h~•2400 :·\lt -N'ewpdrc "H~ights? 3 sq.~~. !irePIA~. forrnat di.o., 1.
• • drps, range. refr1g, wash-v . . patio area. low mainte11-dining room with tile floor : 1ST TD LOAN U-·111 • HOME (2 bed~l, CtplS, ~f· d N~-8-~~ 21l52 NewpprJ and (amuy room. Lots oJ den with 1\replRO!. Formal 336 E .• 171lf STREET
.!~~~iggg· er) PLUS l bedroom JT:nt-tMMEO. Possess. $24.600. ancc Jandsc,_ping and many lovely livin& room with lush 7% JNTERESI' I j4tj.~J J lng.roonl, 2pJLiSh bath areas · 1oaths! L 11.illf<' 11 Vlng
and "S:\IJl!hioe Brig_hr · kitch· roon1? Sundecl<~ Gl'f'at \RTHEREAL \: ~~:rtn:~.~s en wlfu "bUijt·in R/0 . plu1 k itchen ~ ~ec, rbii .VJll'~
· dl$tiWdh~~~tcnfbome • JL'1 vacant •. $ 4 6 . 9 5 O. ..
in excellent ~tt clOl'le 10 '4'6-8640.
··EVERYTHING! Futt price • 10 UNITS · S3.3i...5Q) ....... Submit att otters! ciirlh1'1211 · ' ' · '"
SEYMOUR REM.TY; "17l41
Beach Blvd ., "Hunt. Bcb.
G Eaa1111c1e q,sta i\1t sa. gTtf,l
! , rental area. Seven 3-bed·
rooms and three 2-~rooms. ~ All EPfll"8.le unitg with }ot1 ~i ol ... ,,,_ i;m-, • lanta"k HAPPINESS'. 15
"''"'" '"" ;""Om'°' si .400 HARlOR VIEW per mo. Subm11 on down or .
trpde to • Lili,. OJ>tn !Pllet'!: grttn Walker & Lee I parka, ""mmlng pool, and
, cisu!I livfn(? Talre a look
Rffilota ar 1hl!t Por10fino· Mont-I with
2700 Hllfi>or Blvd. al AM.ms 13 ~rooms and J:. .Oa th1, ~ Open 'til 9 PM HIJie id~ce .J?)ffif fully
decorated \\.'ltl\c;ustom drap. H'ARD TO P.LEASE 1 .. ant1 _,..,,.. ; • .,,,.
• • • r Whttt. ~Uoo. is unbea t. It "" thla cl!armlnr home ~ able,-R~~fere.o e.ttt_
for .YoU1 V&lue is written QlU now ll;l~UIU &eu· au ..., 111 ~·When "" ... -~, . WAY 1t' • but:tfu, fnlkel UI l7• ,,v•,~. • ll ' ,,.. ... n. , aan. phll many
•! ~117~
0 THt. Rf'AT ,
'"'\,: ESTAT ERS
-;z Tri!:: REAL
F"" ''·.'PERS ........ ' ..
1'lnl """""ti "'"' qulcl< I ~~-'-~~~--'-''°"'-=~..n:;::..o.
. , 1/3 ~~RE
~EwPDRT HBGHTS
1.oned ror Unltf. $34,950.
:i \iMroo"" i\~te:' m.,-
.slve co~ner~ fin'pl!l:ct,
open and a\ry ,,.mod<'led
kitchen. ~6"8640.
, -.i1al. lmmed, poss. $.11,950. Hrdl.\'d fi rs,, frplc, 2 BA. other .amenl!ies ol'fered carpel & nreplaCe: \Vould 2ND TD LOAN $3000 DM. ' .. ,. KOY Mt~·rdl• .. Rtaltor bltns. 3057 Loren, Baker & here. 3 bdrm .. 21,1 ba. Only lease at less than cost. LowMt rates O.range Co.
4 B d &nl\b'. · ~810 Newport Blvd. C.i\1. F'alrvie11·. O'\'nr. $39,r1'Xl. . CAPISTRANO VALLEV WE BUY TD'S v.·i~h r:m;~.':;t·~nit:'~' .548-7729 ' FOR sale by ol'.·ncr: 3 Br, 2 {ired h·.11 REALTY 493-1124 642--2171 545-0611.
rireplace. entry hall to rear . . . • .Ba. Nr. \.\lestclilf Cntr. New Sotv1n1 Harbor area 21 ~
Jiving rm .• boiJt-ill5; "3000 Pen1nsul• Point . paint, shake roor. $34,500.
down • move in. ~1120 · Steps to ocean. Newly decor-~8-2!J25. [ Rell Ett•I•. I rAJ
• J ARBl:lL· . · . fu~1st!d ~~~.17ba.cHu:~ 1889'~c°'·o~N""G~R'"'£'"'ss~. ~N-o~d-ow-"-,-10 .u:n~;~v-~P~ar1<~R~E~~:;~~ty~.,.~-~Irv=lne:1:·~=="'~"":-~"~;;~~~;:;~ I HuarorRent .. ~ ..,,..~, ! Jn».,.. open A)ellJll ceil. in Ve!s. lmmcd. ~up. Drive Call Anytime. 83J.0820 '::· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
2%5 H~ta )! Jqt-Jiv. rm.. Obl..ga~agc, pa.st. Call Price Realty, Commerci1I •
"Fa 'I C · ot " 'lotnod. J>O<,.,._ 1<9.99,. I;=:~-:--;;-;·-.::-----Laguno Beocll Proporty 158 HouMs Fumiahod mt Y. ~"t,•! . ?.l!i Jill-lllil 67;.8886 Ev.,., E~at Bluff ~:::h ~:~:~ ~ ~,; ,I · ~ . ~VE l!ENTALS "i:.o""-"'vE,...i. ... i>"'-""?-~-,--·;-· .,..ri..-.. ,..~-;,;. SfOTLESS .80!x-150' Corner G1nerol
-a amilJ: •.r ··· di High beam ~ilina1 a<iQenl Wlth 3 ...t*lroom. "' bath Cotta Mesa 111.mily enteffttritl'l'rtt'~ Op. \\'/vieW and separate ,,.. the oozy fireplace fn thla home • A/P zoned, PQulble
ponunlty knocks apitJ'. foOJ,. ing. !:ill a tier ~ pm immltCU'lale, newtr family C-1 with pennil. $31.950. * NEW "~ B;, 'i . al~
the smart 11et M1f·mOve Tnto 644-0010. home. ~ floor nl•n ta e1sy I'\.·---\\'&ni. ~or! Call .......... hou I\ lifetimt or cpmfortable -:-c-:-::-.,.--:-c:c::-::--''"' r" vwncr VIII. •vwn ~ w I pool. MN
living ••• ~·alk lo inft}t:e("-. * THE BLUFFS * to maintain l,.ofttrt Jobi ol 647171 Ve:rdc. Bllna. cpl1, ~.
Anti ochoola. Cltll 8<).$ ..-, t fl S.,,_ISft" .'• WOrth 1't" $43,500 Prl'<cy. ' Bdnrur. A den, pal lo, (U. S2'l5 10 $250. Nr
,,......_ . ~.-l : 3 Bdrm., 2!ia ~-. formal din. with modml buJH-ln kitch· , achla. 5:17-MOO.
Qied the Wl!Je man \vhcn rm., !a.mily area. 9 J\.fM. en. Only S33,SOO • and a Lklo Isla ·~balU.I) Istand sold tor ·young. -O~belt view., .qrain at t1'l1 Call · l;:::::::-::-::--z~-,....,..~
' f P! .tent iand dArte, pllu1 • Owner trans. &: hbldlr!I" ~I r,,come Property 16' COZY 2 Br, 2 Ba, frpl, dbl
SPANIS AD08.~· :: -~l~."'at~~i·~; :a. t l~'Stm';:fi"~EAL TY ./T'O~an .... 'snciA'f 'e ~ f:.• ;:"1~,w:"'J..°'D~
Sharp, o1de&i 3'~ ,.Jm. I •tit ~'!WI lhlt 4 """"'°'" 644-Jl33 Anytimo REAL ESTATE PRINCIPALS OHLY · _N_B.-;-:..,-,,.--,~::---:I clole to • ..\ ~ ·~.~ tn1 trom the ' ....
0w..., .., ....... i>Ut •f ·-. lJffCll. ~U "'"""· 142-l5!11 ':Ala~ Room For o..s-ll90 Glonneyre SI. $41,000 It'• alwoys th< Jiahl llml a -~ -c-~'""1-tt n oul !lie ~·stll __ . iHS-Oll.{ ! --<>n-l~• Joi alWl)'ll lhl rJiht plltt! II
$24 "950 -•• -· -l'O'J• trftsh I• CASH Bayfront Joi n ;o,ooo '336 Elden, Cotta M... ""' """' RESULTSI
• • • . ' • with a l/AILY PILOT '!'SD HUBER't • ASSOC. N.or Bock Boy _. A place Ulat
PERROll REALTY· 631nJ ~~~~-..:_ __ J _1Jl11~~\l'lo~Llcl>~~6~1S-&9110~!!!__j~~~e.,..!SC.~ll21~.;;• _!~~~. ~·!!bl __ ..,_I ------,
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' DAILY PILDT
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J~,1~ ~-;wii"!jiiii-·~J~iWll! I ................. -~ [ ., ............ -j~ f -"'-
H•-Fumlshod 300 1.a_ ..... _ .. _s_b_.C:: __ ._.._ii Af>tl. Fum. w §'. P ...... _ .... ~ A#fl. untvm. KS "1t· Urifwft.
[ ----Hunlintl<lft Bolldl Balboa Peninsula LW. hl•eo • .;.ol_a_Mo_.;.,. __ .,.._
KS Apt. Unfurn. 365 / Ajot .. , R-• _____ .;..;. __ ·-------'"m. ., Un.tum. 37t ' ;;,_ IBALBOA::-:-:-:::~111:'.':'.e~.~.~~.,.~.~.,'."'.'.:".'I ·
Nowport Boadl TOWNHOUSE,2 BR.!\, BA, e 125 WK A Ut>-On Ot\OIJI e I BR. tr;urn. Utll paid. --------CMto 'l"oa Huntlntten -ch Costo Mou •lilt•~· mo. up. TV · ""1'f c p 1,. d, P,. re 1r 11 . Lovet)' Bad>-1 S..Rooma G..-aa., 1 Badwior, no pell. DILU)(E ;;Ji'iioof;"Q '1 . llACHWOOi> APTS. '"°"'· tt1CJ14n. m-3111 *ti!'!s~f~ 3 :~." J~' 1h~ \\ .. hr/dryr, dahwhr. bl\fl•. Ma.id Rrvice-Poal·Util pd Sl85/mo. 613--0831 ew:s.. Air ~~~~~r~l'l'l• OP A Br.nd new 1.2.3 BR. ~: Wk THE .£XCJ'J'fNG Gvt•t H.me "''
Jv.llt'. SlSS/mo. Cl 1-l J paOo, pool, chibboult. it75. ~'jfrjejlC-:-allm~fl5;;>1~7~40';pe~i;;ill ~N~ow;!po~rt:_.:Bo::•:::ch::.___ 1 Paoli 11 a!tb S ~NC JilOUNr.uN to 8EAOi! CpU, dlJil. bltns. ,
28 per mo., ll!ue. Ana sv, 2 BDR. modem 1paolowt ~~I• Crtt: a!,,,. A~: ftJ>fty ~you"' 1b1.1 h'p!c, US 16th SL, HR PAtM MESA APTS. ''t PRIVATE ROOM
if-683-1. 53()...32'10. deJWI: a.pl. Near ba)o. Elec. YARDS tron\ ocean. 4 BR. ,, . .,.d Roon1. Wt'l.1Joca1....:. weU.---" Ml-39$1 MINln'E.S TO NWPT. BC!t. &' .:._, ... I r>On -•t • 3 Br ' •• ~ t e· ho ....,=,.....,...,~......,--2\, .. h lj -.. --~ >VR"' "" ·~•'U•M • ~~r r pe . ~·-. -u. uo:pu " a,ys res 3 Bdnn, 2 &.ti\, fam rm, kJt. $J63 • 171--9467. ., up v rm., t BEDROOM t'OC'ner ol lht World Whel't' 2 A: J .. A. 1140 UP. Pooli, '"'· r ·• "''"' rw.,. ebee:ry ,.:rdt.a JQa'OUftdi~
Home, rum pl . tum. rpts . ..a-~-d&h·~·hr. Gl••I C •-11..1-W/Jpl., new cpl&; mod. FROM I'°' you can enjoy adult livlrc MOM KAI Ap~ .• 11811 Unbellt\>ablyiu.,.1-pta.l\Ute Nulrlli<>"--·'·. ~• . ..o1tsa.. Soble ••• 111 J ., ~2' VI ... ........, .. orone -....,, 1-''-'"-n. " ....... _ ..... -n·. -mo. -~ pool J·---·• l t btH --a.a _.. "" u . ~ , ·~ . """ "'"" . ' I ··~·-~·-~ = -"EDITERft ·NEAN .w.., !lun the -.. ytl MO.. Kai Ln .. II blk £. ol • -·-• "' .. '~-~· ~-~--=0 • Or. i.e. &1&-1!t.!. ntl( "· ,...., 11/C" awq El-'•t I 8r.""i,'.;.,,. JUm. s»s incl. utll. ••tit Ju-"" "" nle .. UC! nd he " . • oboC -·-...... ""''•'· .. si...-. ;Gt care. A\'ail Teb. l. 841-6540. ....1 l \Vlll aJ.ao la ts..l VILLA"E °"'~ nt a I Beam. 9&2.-... 1 Adul ' • ' ·
Suns.t B •• ch • N • B compl fum lncl utll1 Y· • 6 00 • "7 a.irport. 1150 NU 2 Br -1• .,_ sm• cGLES. ts. -. peta. * ...1.. * , ew t. 2 Ba Dr echl. & nf $200/ .\at *tee ro0ms, 1-btdrooms •o wr t ... .,.., •• , .... j"ron1 $!la __ !1.4._.
Ref req, ,714} M7-9548 or 1• ener. me'l•-"2~·-8~R------2400 Harbor atv4., C.M'.' * Waik·•'n d-·. 11 , ... patfo. rec. rm .• 1150 Jtt'· 1 &£DRM •••••• f't00i $1.«I . Ji~.-1•
LARGE 2 BR, fr,Plc. near
beach. 16992 81h Stl't'e\. $Zn. mo. !2131 ~79.
"'" =•~. B• •ppt ""'"· INso. Ro1p adult ..,1.. , l BA. SUndock. !7Ul !567-~ ~ -t<roo n L a ne • •r~' 7DD LI'· p k D •:n
<J"U'""oNW ~ "' Vl"'J $36..1346 ' Hanclne frplc ,.. Nr beach.. RENTAL O!TICE * Priv. Pltio. rue. pool 1 ~ ---:?-·'l ···•·• 1'"rotn $1&0 -•r '·
Owner, $265/mo, Car. ~/mo. Winter. $2'l5 OPEN 10 Al\I TO I Pl\I * 1·tioor 11~, trpke IU-64'4l/U2-2AM. y~~ Mthe)''reD und«-y Newpo;t hech J
Houses Unfui'n.
2 BR Twnmu.~. 1\i Ba., all 1 BR. Fuml1b~ Hou• ln Yrly lnclds util N ts * Lodry~'Ol"bbop, Gan.ae QUIET' atta, trij>Jex, lr& ,..__.! J...,_... et.a r. OU are the winner •
bltns, cpts, drps. carport, CdM. U7(l/mo Ytar Lease. s.;;1-itoo. . 0 pe . P•r~~~llETko S
0
ur""""'L,,,.,..,. i"I Your ·new W1l.>' ot livt"I" in/ deluxe 1 br apt, all eltt.. () b1k, ~ NeWpOtt Bl\'CI.) S l tlcke1V1 to °'!
pool &: rec tacil. Sl65/mo. f ~Ca~l1_:1~14~, ..'!67>,!8~~16'.:... ---lmi:Pii!o"e;icii:O:;G;i:Tii; """ · E .,_,,,. the new )"Ml' can ,tan now. bltN:, drPt Ir: fully crpld, ~ ports~ Ration
962.-1189. Coit• Mei• STEPS to Beadi, mod. 2 B•, 1·2 • l BR AP1:'$ Vitit or~ la~. tacll. &46-2191. & RecrMtion•I
305
2 BR Cando d ..,1 -upper, b.am cem,,,._ ... le. Al.SO"rol\N. BACH!!LOllS THE-,Ai'RWAY 1••cHBLU•I' •PTS Vehk:I• Show
""'" '"'" ' *~WK.AUP* Adults. 1175 wlntu. Prvp.Lioo * HldPools VILLA.APARTMENTS -._ r ~ . IRA.ND NEW1 •llbe
patio, dbl au. Nr. Btaoo. e StUdlo Ir: l BR Agls ~3-t90. Nr ahoJ'I * Adulll d'lJ)' • .Jml Se.nta A,. 4ve. Spic. 2~PI", S ~ Pool. Patio. I Fto01 :stE. DW.W.ther. •ha& ANAHEIM
RENTAL ~INDERS Pool prM. !200-M>-U57. • Room $15 WK • Up. 3 very 1-bdmuo l blk to Mafttnlque Apts. I _, DIW. ~l Ellio ..,._, -~-. "'"''"' ........ CONVENTION .. s. w. '"' COITA. ..sA H ,. .... • -· • M •• .. ....... v ·~,._,,_,. I •• --~· un 1ngton H•r-r '• • aid !Wrvlc.e Avail bch. new crpll orde~. Yr-1m Santa AM Av•., air: $140 i BR. Ooa.e t o n£on .... 1. .,......lW\i ~apt. I FCll'eOd air beat, extra. lar1e CENTER
Hou•* Apt1. e Phone Servlct. Util Pd ly 5325. mo. $225.. wlnttr Mar. Ai>t 113 ~ ~vtrythi ... , l ehiid OK. Key ~RID~ Road, H.B. Apt rooms. BMutirul pme mom, Now 1bru January lb * 6U-0111 * LSE Hunt. Harbour <oU· e AH major credit card• f7l4) &U..J403 BAY Ma.A.DOW APT$, Apt , "A", aso Hickocy, A. No pelt. 961-X!7 he&ted PlOl BBQ'1, enclOll· Aeue ed. ~· ext lJ.C I~~~-,., .. 10 LruwUorb I ~~ef1m ~~eJ. ·:cup: 2:_N~o!v~ :8R:~ 1-BLK. to ~ch; comp~ BffDl eeillll&a. paneJJ.q, ~7911 l BR. l'it Ba atudio. Encl i td 11.J'l&ff.· quiet llln'OIJnd· between t and 5 pln'to ct.im SING-Les OK--'I 846-1652 : Children A Pet Section furn. Clean 1-81'., 1ar. $165 priY p&tiat, ~tion fa. ~ICE' % Bit upstairs apt. Pr fncd yrd. $1!A>/mo. I lngs l-close to shopplnc. your ttdceta. lPlorth Comrt)r
I-I 2 Id 5 ~-d --"-"------------~-'-"-'--'"-I Mo. dWieL AU &dUlts, no -. ti. wta..-. ... •.tove l. T"e~... ~ ta.ell. MMSU. . AEdLultCIOlvRinD•·o""vft':·pTS. t*oll·trte numbt*r !-5f0.~.) uge, -story 0 er l.l'C:' rnl., Irvine I BR J•'urn. $155 incl util. 646-4071 or tW2.!..9tJS e • ••• FRO" •• LO~'" w 1 t Ad-ul~r. ~ ~ 2 b.a.th!l, 2 cal' gar. AJI kid11 );;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o N ,,, 'd • PA•. "1. ..., " ater·tat-t ec. urn. Irvine .. 20n Charle SI'. 642-4410 GIRL -·t·• to , ... ,. ~--. , ,. 1 ,1 ewv ec. Beaut. prden, W'~TER -n•-' a-" tit_,.. A~ e-t•--·"· 11~::;. ., •• ,,,..,,,~ I-----------· ~ '""' '""'" "T a1,.. pc11 ant we come ... ove 1 Adul u • ... .., vAU nuu. ~ • ~ .........,-. -mo. ~. I Nf!a.r Harbor It HamiHon St BR. Kid• le pots O.K. ~ now -Vacant. . 4 Bdrms., 2~ ba., family ~' rec. t1, no pets. Junt. 2 BR, •·-. lo••r ap<. ll'l W, .... ,. !t. c.M T 'RGE 2· B 1" •· Stud'
part! tu ~ 1959 M I A CM M uu-u ""-J ' ' ..-r, .,. .pa IO 1 Un-.-S88 turn. 968-7510 01' 776-7330 Agent rm.. 'I :n ······ · t •Pe ve., 1 • fl'. .$170. plus util. 61~7816, 112 °'11 W-0073 Apt!' No'" pela. $1A&. 1216 PARK WE1T '"'''lo 3 BR, 2 bo. •"'um .... 1325 Unbollovably Booutlful -St. e BEAU'm'UL GROUNDS e Joann st e ~1514. APARTMINTS g~ Hntr. lkh. 5 BR., 3 ba .. iorm. dtn. +
Iam. rm., 2·tly., 2600 sq.
ft.; i.mmed. posleSS. Nt-IV
pain! in &: out. SJ.j() 1\10.
3 'BR, 2'4 ba., I.am···· .$325 VAL o• 1--Gard • 1 •• , •160 * M"• a ___ ....... .., ....,v BR '
3 BR 2" b ·~ .x..n.L en '~pts. $17~Furn. I Br. Wat,___•, SPANllH DECOR ... rm. rom • .. • °" .. ~ .... ,.. r· ·
4 BR• 2~l ~: t'amf ······:::; Adult. -no• petg. Flowers .mall•-• 0 ....... ~=. Alrlcond. Ou, wtr. pd. LRG 1 BR. 2 BA. ro peta. 2 lclrm., 2 le. HACIENDA nr 0CC -SD !'J'wy. SlW8Z ' 711 ....... am • , •• ..,..., everywbett. Stream I: 675-6467 <IVl;JI, I rioet;A, ,, __ OJ Oilldten OK. Nr .chl9 I: HARBOR t Ol' by mo 557-l400
\VE HAVE ornERS \\'atmaU, 45' pool.Rec. Rm, • ~=-i°:'R ,';;.· 21;R Sl\H. nm. mo. S4S-.899l .i;:::,!~'~ne I 141 AVOCADO STREE'l' ;,flee R1nt~I ... Sauna, SMs l·2 Bdnn, >'u•n. LUXURY 3 Blt, 2 Ba., .,.., ... ft, 1 D~ 1-_.____._ ........ t li · N I g• • $1.&B.$115. ~ • a..• •" ~... ll'Vine. (Ju1t off AUlB Yll"I( • o pt ~ Unturn. from •1 ""'. SEE IT.· ocean V\\'. \Vinter. P85 mo. ..._ • ..,, ~ Ad·"l.I •-• ~ 1 • 2 BR Pool
546-111J.
Back Bay
3 BR, 21.s Ba.. fam. rm .. 1
Ne"'•ly cpld It decor. $325
nto. Bryant Wiest, 615--2723.
~ llaclfndadeMeaaAp!JI ....-. .i.~r.-.._. w • .ioo'T SanDiet;o Fwy atCu.lv~·Rd l ~lL-..:e • ·
XQ) Panon1, 642-11670. 673--6310. .. lfK>' W. Wilton,·5" ll.lr· No. l Monrovia. S&I 0336. Garage. Dt.hwshr. Paid ulil. New Walertront Ottlce1
From $360 Month
PJ:ime Location LOVELY Lee 1 BR. apb. 2 BR., 1,1 blk. tcrbeach. 1 blk. .. .... Tr<I ....... 2 -t -FROM $150. 646-12G4
3 Id * 2 •-th .V"' v~ ~ ·~' no -· La1._ Ni9uol Sha& nigs, elee •illve, ru to marlcet $130 Mo. to July rm .-$155. mo. ·lli1-n70
b<aL >'um. Utit pd . ht, or ml ino. ynatly lU LMq ,..,. with calltednl 2 BR • 4"1. 2 batho LAGUNA NIGUEL
Carport, ,,lndry rm. Nr NewportS..ch ~. 67S-t642 colllnr & bplc. • S.pan.tt Som• ,.tloa . .lll 1or A~ARTMENTS
lbop'1. ll50 " 1135, 9911 El Nt .. Porl Hoi9hto laundry ....._ Encl patio. 1145 I< $!SO. 546-Tl!l 1 BR. 1 BA * 2 BR, 2 BA
M It 01 Camino Or No. 1, CM. ..., __ , •• poq1 I< cldldr<o'1 f1111 1~ • d ~
er ltn 54&-04.51. a.E.AN 1 or 2 "BR Adlts, no ~;;;;:a. $1)1), ~1 BR Dupltx. 1 adult. Y eupe ~ • ra.,..-
1204 W. Bolbaa Blvd. •C pets If ~· i ·-1150 •••1 U••~R '"•~• ,.,... amoker. No peta. From $175
N B h * SUPER I BR ' -. ~ . ~ ~ ~" !nJ -• bl I ewport eac · E 16th St. NB ~1801 c,,,,. ~ .. ,,,.. oeP,.it. Rer1. ~ w. 1Tftl. ~ •"· "'" c.. t , wa er,
You are the winner or 5 BR., 3 baths '······ ·• • $375 Lovely flJmlturJ. Frigidaire · ' · · ~ 6fi..J78T. all Jcit bltfll, Indry anu,
2 lick~• 10 the 4 BR., 214 baths ...... $330 appl'r, fl'OA't • frte refri&:, Apt. Unfvrn. "5 NEAR occ. Spacious 3 BR, htd twim JOQI, BBQ'•, P'f.v sr~:~,~=~=~=r ~ ~~·:. 21~·:.n:ri:,i:~~: 1':~. :a, ~:~n. c~~'fs i;ljb;;. i;i.~-·· .. , . :~~ •dult ·~r:~~e'.i · 2~~ '.BA: carport, laundry ~ ~ 1~:'1~"*-4~;
Vthiclt Show l BR. & den .......... ;250 $10&"mo util Incl. Studio ii: 1 LfJTLE Balboa Ill _ Cele· $25;). ! BR, den,·J1BA ~ ~. No pe t 1 . $2:111 * 29041 Aloma.
at the i · red ha·11 BR.apl.2376Newport Blvd, bratt New Yeara in 151E.21st. 6461666 ··: odCtown.ValleyPtkwy
ANAHEIM CM. S<._915'. a delux• l Br >Pt on Grand Wtstbay 11 A,.rtmento A~CTIVE 1 Br, bltn Nowpert ... ch
CONVENTION All Major Credi! Cal'rls OK. Cana.I, new blt:nl, Swediah · • ~ •tov• I: refric, -....:-------
CENTER NE.WLY deoor furn. 2 Br. frplc, boat dock ; ye&rly or --.-.m-E_G_AB_LE_.S_"..:·-UP! !Qm, No children _. e NOW OPEN •
Now 1hru January 16th REALTY TripleJC. Pool. Car. Bltnl. loneer JM, no cbildren or Lee. 2 Br w/prl 1u . Adlt.. peta:: Sl~ 646--2161. BRAND NEW t • 2 Br From
P!ca5t call 642-5678, ext 314 Univ. Parle O!nter, Irvine Very qu.h!'l. s 1 4 s J mo . pets. $Z-..0/mo. To Stt-Call .aundprooftd. Fncd.: yrd. S· BR._t.2 __ ~A, drpl, dllhwbr, $148.he..Pri~ PAtio.1 ~illi~
bti\\'eet19ancl 5 pm roclaim Call Anytime, &.33-0U> 548-5376. Owner673-0207. w/patio. Wtr pd. dbl p.rqe. patio. Harbor nn, t pcd,w Jl:CUZll,
"""'t tickets. (North County ''.~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!~!!' I un=•RN Gardnt'r/maint. Cal1°,btwn l Hatt Apt'!I. 551-54.58. buce cl09tta:, deep tiife C&r· ,.-"UN!VERSITY p "· 3 BR 2 1 BR ;130 larae. Ideal for "~.rv · down1tair•. _.i,..., lulh •---'·cap'~.
toll.free number is 540·1221H a.-... ' bachelor, •wim pool. adlts Carpeted. 3 BR. 2 BA. South I: 5, 53'-4m. J BR, • 2,S Ba., IP&Ckiul A"chij~ You M:.t~ Thia • • • BA. 1 floor lev~. lease or Ba F 1450 8 2437 Or•ntre Ave. "~'.' 1155 $290 D $4()..7'226 only, 1993 Church St., Y ront. · pr mo. Y -... 'Y studio. Shaz. wuher/dryr One! 30102 Birch St., New.
RUSTIC 3 bedroom .l den, 2 rent. mo. ay ' 5t8-9633. o\vner. 644-2922. NEWLY DECORATED on p~mile1. ~· MS-14915. port Beach. S61...f)46.
bath, blt-iru:, r i r e place , Eve.s. 774-8447. •WINT£R RATES• $400 Yearly. 337 E. Baytront. Olarming 1 BR duplex. n@W & .. t IJuff SEACLll'F MANOR apta-l
walk to town. A&:L 6Ta-49XI. Lagunt Belch I Attrac furn Studl.o& tll5. 1 2 Bk., 2 ba., dbl. gar. carp, drapes .l. pai.nt. Love-1160 1 fl-C -1 d ~-··-...1 · Br, un , ,.... • .., tum. pts. Costa Mt.. 9 Dollhooae-l 8r FUrn F;t Br's $125. Adlts. no peta. WWon Rea.I Estate r&m.t ~:.i • r ~ti:~.,...""~· NEWPORT llACH drp1, bltnt, 'sub dip!. J5l5
• * • ~ANTED ok. All uH11ncL nso. . 2135 Elden. Mar Apt. fi. Coron• ..... Mer tt • y, -Viii• o, ...... Alt•· . Placentia .Ave. Aak about ~. '--ily th•l .._"OUld _,.._., ALA Rent•l1 e '45-3900 Furn. &.ch. & 1 8~1. ' !itlMllm. LOWER * . Four .bldzoome wilh balCI» eur diKoont ~ or ~~ '~" ~~, E I 11 . 51-* l., .i.o.. Ai.to.. Graciolll 540-21!32. thi1 lovely 4 Bit, .2 BA home e Strps to Buch·l .Br, Stv/ spec • Y nice, -All El Irie 2 8Jl Cpts lirinz quw ..urroundUC ~~=~=-===-
wl trplc ~ Poot. Gnat toc. •-r "" , . S150 up. 2110 Nowport Blvd. •-"' • N ·~·-' &, PARK NEWPORT · -' "" ~ ..,., . CM -~. rar .. patio. r. -A "'°' family with . dllldron. •PARTME.NTS Oose ro major •hoppina. ALA Rentals e '45-3900 1 ~=~· ,..--.,-,..--~-lhtl.ter. Adult., no pet.I. Neu COrOna Ml Mu Hiah "'
$3.15/mo. ' 1.EASE w/option to buy, 2 Sl$/mo. 645.-3515. Schoci: J"ftplace, wet her It Bachelor, 1 oi-. 2 Bed:room.r, Call 54;).8-124 (Open ~ves) built l ki~· .. --.-1' end Thwnhoultti c.. .. -.J .. br. :z ba, ocean view, Ire MODERN 1 Bdrm. apt. Cet1, • n ~· a_.ia~. · ..._, _.,
Coron• del Mo1r .. • •
* 2 BEDROOM * >It 111"'"" Dr .. N'pt, lleocl! ., B T BHl Grwtdy RJtr. 61'5-tlft
17-a OWnhoun eoncept. I •,..l!!J!lll!!!!!l!!!~!!!!~!f!!ll1 I
BMin ceilinea. extra 1"' CORONA DEL MAR bednna. ~ F.\tio. ft<'rN.· ...._1 bu ~ --...: ........ UOn rm, -..una b&th&, etc . ....., UXe s. ~c, ~-ee , ~
Adult&. Our SUnda.y aller· Sep entr. pnv bl.tti, cpt I •
nooo B·B-Cl't '° !'rte Art drps. Prl<'s. UHi pd, Sl?.JI
Letilanl atartinC eoon. mo. Owner 113-6'P57.
HARBOR GRIENS 2 ROOMS lllll 14 ft w/cspto;
541>!025 m-,.. • janitorial ......
A:\IAZmG Adul t Livinc, loold. 21r.t Dupont br,
Beaut, 1 4 J BR tum or unl = Beach, cal. (7131
Ap~. Seit clMn. ovena.1...;-'o=.:...·--~~,--=,l
D/W (in 2 Bf) diapl1, lhl.& DESK apace avaUahlt 1't ,
cpta, drpt. j,\cuui le •Un& mo. WW sirovJde furnttuN
btthl, Huse poo1. at a& mo. Anlwertlll'. !"!!:1'ri
Morrlniac Woods avalllltlo. nm Beodl-.
425 Mttrimac Way, C.M. Rantilllb'I Buch. ta-Gil
O 1J16ct available * BRAND NEW* mo. WDI pnvld• -at $5 ftlO. Answerln& ~ · La Co1ta Apls. avallable 1111 Na. g
1 &:. 2 BR, bltna. 1win1n1lna: Camtn~ R•al. la•
pool, lanai, be.r·l>-Que It car-ataMrll•. m-fGO
•re. AH ut.tt pd. U50 to Sl.10. _, · ... _ .. , _ _.
Adulta, no pets . D~ _..,. ev--.-..-~ AvoCll.do 0.1'. 142-'7~ mo, WUl JC"O'ride -. •t•--llOO -l\IOVE IN Allow•""' aftllatlleJ m ,_ •w;
Pft.Sd\J ~n welcome 1qa& Btub. .. ••· ·
NASSAU PALMS 11~_..~.....,~~R~-~ol~;Qi~ 177 Z: '2:11111 St. 642-JMii .,..,...,.-
NASl!AU PALMS ul J'\an. le Unturn. 1 I: 1 ,_ •
• BR·a ~m "~UP aoo Sq •. rt. ~Y Io;'., ,
ini .......... Jn Cott& ._, with" '
IC?nCed yd. 494-89t5 eves. dtJ>s, d'shwshr. bl t-ins, 835 M(IGOS WAY "4·29tl tennia'. From $110. Aero.•
ran.re. 1 ehlld ok. All util a:.tdwefl, Banker A Co. from Fuhion llJand ·at Jam. ;,;.;.;,;.;;,;J:.;;;;;;...;;,.;.;-'--, * CUTE l BR. frplc. FA I BR ,, d , pd. l150/mo. ,.7 •·-ado, :Man11Jna Apnt lx>ree • Stn, Joaquin Milli
Huntl"9f.., Btadt ollJ<:e • -_,, . ,,,....__
La Quinta Hermosa $1'10 -111-• \outh , (-oast heat. 496 Graceland Orivf'. • cp.... rps, water • -"'•"" Roa'· (nlJ ti'-1900
Pet & child OK. 4!M-1754. &arde ner furn. No petJ:. Apt!, CM~ MS--0984. ' VIEW .... ....,,.. ·
3-Bedrm.-Loguno Niguol =..only. 112o/mo . 2 BR, 1\1 ea. unL -...-. ·2~":;i:.= i:tr:r:: * NIWPORT * S,::t~i.v~u~..,.y }!.:
II!;). BHM, cpl•, drpt, no bltino. 2 .,,.._.i · parlrlnr SHORIS -~ s ~ Eastside 4 Br. 2 be, liv ~ dinine area, • Avail Jan 1. XTRA LGE 2 NEW pet~ .. OUldren ok. Nr. spacer. f.\50 Month yearly. J Bdrm, 2 Ba. 4l'l9illC are.. apw., Tem.ced pool. Sunken
(SINGLES ~· frplc, bltni, fence, l~i;.., 2 ~~-~ ... oUTv,!L 3P5D .. 2 BR .. 2ba.tbl; up!taitl. C&r4 F&ll'View. Baker. ~1887. M• 0 t.rr• ddux-apt W/W ui_?.a:~ltl· L.1 • t'l.NLY
WELCOME) ·-'.r·~=-2 ~; ..Z::.292 ~,;;..""' • -"draped. Encl. ear· 1 BDRM, all bltna, .... cpts, Ni .,,,,_ • .....: Ot.lfdrelJ O.K.. ~·ii:;:;iiSO:
1 blk. to Newpt. Builtin kitch· mo. First Ir: Jut, 9$0si.L ' · a.re. Comp. bltns. Private drps, doeest pl'llle .\ pri. -· a_& $235. CALt· J46.017I Furn SJ.lo.
en. small enclosed yard, 495-4244 1 BRld. FumM . TradOuler. f75nlJ. u .. ~ patio. 705% Orchid. $250 Per patio. OH.n! 540-1901 · .. 2 Bdrm unturn: i 11s.
. ~
11£AL10RS SINCE-
673-4400
aarage. S200. mo. ~L~UXUR==y~ .... -.~2200=-,~,_-3 pa · ~lure a t 0 Y· 1""' month, yearly. BESI' Aha. ~. 2 Br., Hun,inpen le•ch · l\ira. 3210
Ed Riddle Rllr. t;t6.WI BR. 3 BA, oceao • hill ~ ..... ~ .... _64 ... >-08'--"-'TI_. ----: ,,. ···so 0 bltns, ttlric .. ""· . .i,p., ~ BRA~D NIW ~ ALL UTIL1'l'IES UiCLUDED ... ,, JSOO .. tt w/ .m.. .. :
COSTA MESA NICE_ LY furn . t B, .. rar. t• """" patio. No pets. -..ct>ooler ON BEA' CH' ~ Sant.-1.na Ave (Acroao ADULTS NO PETS bolh•SlSO mo. 2lllO .. It w/ ; vH!\\', ~. ~o. Lie , 11 •~1 Qu N 111~ 2 Ba"" l
EASTSIDE 496-3702 alt 4. ~ mo. "' area. o -. ..... ok. $150/mo. >II-2715, . • ,,,_ S.A. P..,.10' QubJ VISIT l)UR, l\lODW o "" ~. 1• ...., :
children or peta. 837-9511. 642--0261. Spadoul 1 I: 2 Bit from. ls:JU tt.ru{smE LN. dooc. $S25 mo. 1240 l.l:Wt.n
l bdrm with 2 baU., dbl e:ar-N•wport 8•11ch WELL furn 2 Br in triplex. LUXURJOUS Fn:nch Hege"* SENIOR Citittm Dtlfaht. L& :l BR. U.oAlm Fr. Sl3(1/.mo. $150 ~ $1&5. FlREPLACl'.8. (T14) lf7-5f-U St. CM. Oya: 6t6 50.U, WU
age, fPnced yard. Ney,· green I blk trom •·ach, 3 BR, 2 Adul.,, no pell. 1165. 768 cy. 3 bedroom, 2\4 bath, FupUtun Available Pclv patios, Joada ol cloeet1. 4 Bl.kl. So. d. San Dl~10 14S-061l. , ""' likt' new 1 Br unl $140; twn C•-tJ.dra--.1~ .. 1.wuher H • shag carpe1ing, newly pain1. BA, Frplc, Blttls, Patio, Sc0tt Pl, CM. 646-232:1. Fireplace. Dining Room , .... ,_ .,..-._.... ea"tltd Pool. "dulls: M~ Frwy. on Beach, 1 blk W. on JRVINE t ND U S TR 1 A , ed. For rent or lease at $205 laundry $400 Alt 675-4930 $160. ~ dog ok. 'M3-MJO. heated. pooi-.a.unu-tt'llbil qec' mJ.288 Holt ... 'ft-.;.J • ..1. .. _ .. .,,.. • ..,._ ~ """ -~ Completely lncd, S28S mo. FURN 2 Br. Children OK. No . • • • rec room-ocean views . <V ..-~. .fUl,.c.11. r ~ ... rn ..................... I
per mo. Call WAlJ{ER & 2131831_1483. pets. Heated pool. Lndry ,._Adulta only. $170-2 Br J Ba Studio, adj. patkiwmple J1Ukin1 RELISTINC -· Back .Bay FURN or Un.furn AplL t ·cr 2 A U'p. Wanibolfle .. ~
12E. Realtors, 54~9491. -N~E\~V~J~B-R", 0-R.-FR,~-H-a-rbo~r rm.126 Monte Vlata CM. OCEAN vie!t', elegant S ahopl, ept/drp, patio, Caf· , secbrlty IDll'dl. ar•. 1 2 BR, trhq crpta, BR + 2 BA from. $135. maniillctmbfc, Co11ta.•t ~~~~-~~-~~-~~h View Homes. $395/rno incl. ONE Bedrm. Adul!a, no pets. =m~:~~~O:: ::-'3°1 aft S; 21J.59'J-5227 HUNTINGTON :r~Uo. Adult.a. No pets. :a':'Y·~:""~;tr~l~n=; =· Forney, :
ALA Rent•l1 • 645-3900 1 ~•-•"'-'"-"'-·_64_"-·_17_9_1.___ Pool ii: Utilities included. isDO: Pft' mo .. Act. 6'1>4930.' SPAC. 2 le S Br. Apt. $140 up PACIFIC ••PENINSULA 2 B 1t , 5.18-0f92. at 220 12th SL, apt·1·R..:.ENT;;.,,"""M--1-1-li>~ .. -,ll"'ll>li='°m-o'1;
e Singles OK·2 Br. F/yard. 21!1~~/J. ~! g~rqe,;_ Sl4~S15'!· 548-76S9. 2 aff.., bltns-. Walk to beach. Pool, cpt/drp., bltm, Kidl ok 111 OCEAN AVE., H.B. u.nulU&l trl-level, tr JI c, 12. 6r c&1l Mrs. Buxton, ~ 1Loean, C.M.
Encl K\cb •Sl39 DELUXE 1 Br., pool, S190. On.net Coast Re..1 2206 Colleit!' No. 5 C0.-1033 . (Tl4)J53S-l.fPT · dlw1tlr. l blk ocun-bay. ~1244 at 219 1Mh St, apt fT&.50&
ALA L~~t.11· :~3900 beach. NICE! $240. 67l-l937. cptJ, drps, bll.ns, 145 E. 18th Estate. Call: IM4-48t8. 199C Maple No. S 642-3113 Ole opeD 10 ~ pm Dally Yearly ... mo, A\'ail Jan. l. Stor... 415 :
2 Br. ne,vJy painted in & out 2t!rt,!~~: ~ ~;. ~!: NSEWt., LAYpt.D:O~-~~i:·unN'r, Coif• Mes• 2 BR. J1Ai BA. ~ ~!,; WILLL\M' WAL~ CX>. lrd. 6'f>4125. , Ntwport Beach STOe •~E SPACE ,
f b d ~ , •• ·1--------1 drpo.llOO .. tt.Jl-mo,,., YEARLY NR OCEAN, ~v ' Mw roo · crp • rps, 1>tove. Adults. ~1·3216. adults only, SBO incl. util's. LGE. 2 BR. beaut yrd, elec Valencia. 551.7791, · *· F1E5M AIR •pt,clous upr, J Br, 2 .Ba, VISTA DEL MESA fJ). mo. e etS45:i : ~~::"11ots&ar~r J':a~ Dupiexu Unfum. 350 646--~39. s!ove. 1a.s heat, 2~~ BA, </</B£G IUMY 1 bdnn uppu, Walk, S bib to·Beuh! frplc. =· R.efl. Avail DOW. Ap.mrtrnent1
space $185 mo to mo. Sl75 ---&':':'"' -* Avl now 1. • 1 Br f\irn, ~~ •t,,_~ ~:· new ~t. drpl, bltinl, $J35i. lee a BR Apt, newly decor. -.u. 1 '-i BR. F'uim • ._ Uf!!:.~· 1 ~· .::. lse.646-U46,646-6'961afttr Cost•nwH pool 1ttnn ad lot:. No~-.......... ,,. rm. 1 545-57Tooran.3540 Dblattacbedpr,trplc,1~ Wi:'STCLif'F area. 2 WUbtr ·SloY•"'~· .. -.....,..
-------..,,.. childr.n or ,.·ia. M6-'.532<. nnly. $IQ!. 9911 El Comina Ba· 111"--·~ ~ 0.~-t ~u.. ·~·· 91oc . ..,,.-,...., Ito< O<ftl••". ~ p.m . NEW Spen1ab .i Br, l Ba .or. No. 1 CM. st6-()651. 1 BR Apt .$1Z/mo. Drapes. ' -. ~-..... ........... _._u, ---u ~ f\ENl' SW1a $1$ l'~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~I * NEW l BR, I Ba Townhse blt·tns, Wg ci>t, ...... ynl. Huntl"""" ilNdt No P,r'I'· No peta. Call ~ni'o -· "° pell. 'l.· $2'1>' • .\II._. Tu1tln & M ... Driye .
w/pool.M ... V•rde.BllM, :::~.~· 513-4124. __ .;;..STUIJ--IO---,:.~r.E~~Hi~ 646-46llor54M333. . eMOVEINTODAYe BEAQI Aptl-llnnd New * 545-41SS * Por...,.11 ,..
cpts. drp" patio, ~· Bllnl, crpl.I. dl'PI, -· e wn.soN GARDENse Kidl ,,.pota .welcome. 1 BR. Deluxe>" 3 ,,..,...,, AI>' ~KWOOI> GARDIN · .
l'OO·to $225. Nr. " •· 2 BDRM .. rara ... yanl. • .. WIEK A UP !~9-!693.Adll.I, m p• to. 2 BR, 1~ BA, cpt / di:pt, 1139 .,Sl!l!. Alloxt'nt. Pool, nllli -~ !U-.11! W. BaJ .• ~i1-• ~"--'-C... 551-8400. Ad\llts. Prefer ooup\e. $135. ~ .,, encl. patlo. iMo. ;p.au, iar, patio. Furniture avail. A~. C.U San Bernardino ,~·UYIA( lor Sinlle • tidenUal,: ~Jr'&·
S BR., 3 ba.; M~ ®I ~ar SC8-W5 (\\:~aya after 6>· ~= ~iiJ: k= Fer that item . under $50, F11t re.Wt.I are :tu.ta phone 11382-A Kffl.on Ln H.B. tn4i) m-.29f3. ' Manif'd AduttJ) ~~ ~
home. $350 Mo., mo1. se. DUPLEX 2 br. aara.-~. quiet -·--. u•lt•'--paid. TV .._ by the PelUlY Pincher call away · eca'fl · •'ISlO or...,._, · EXTRA 1 .. e. J BR. 2 'Ba., 'Jlfewpcrt ~ ,._..,..., ,._ ~-
or $330 Mo. yrly J11e. no 00gs1 cata ar motorcyclea ;;f~ia.~.ervice ~allabl.e, 11~ walk-in ":utr. doMt; new ~tb·at lrYine l~N;-OU· oo::OUP :
540-43<0. ~mo. Bar-B-Que . ...., 6 ""'"'· Rall<d din-l6<lS50 or IM:l.JITD •
8• ~. " "' • • N' I ~-A pt ... to -)dlO-' 3 ~ ,~,.. "' P'~· Nowport S.tch 1 BodrMm Avallablo ~flQ-0 .J\' ( 1)-Q °'• Ins ......, P · ~~ * l BR . .-..Block to · ..it nd form ...i ...i.-·
$185/mo. STh cleaning Jee. Executive Suites · p\Q, ~at.I ~s."!l'q, p p -..1029, ~a,n. Ytar\y. $135/mo. ~'5f6.7crt . '
't&940mrPkot-.mona Ave. Nr schls LUXURY 3 br, 2 ba duplex l2J Yorktown Blvd. ·t , s-~. _._.. 61S-2'llS. 8*-~ •ver. '""' ... ,A'\~ 1CS •--·· ,
w/vl•w '' eac• &y. l3Cl0. T n• '•nle with '1k luilf·ln CJ11iule -...,. ,-.-----v·-
4 BR, lam nn., liv rm &allor. 642-2'22.
191~. ~:1.~::d.. FAMILIES r -. I~ ~~~~M-=-: wlftplc. 1,_~1r 1tom •, 111ci 5-11 Or:;r:a:~ ~ =:· . I . . ~ -·--.
available. Lr•se· 847-7136. I ~nta ... torl'rrlt )[I) 1 BR hrn. ii s 5/mo. lowtofamfour_..WDteft. ~~~:~~:;: uo =~~~~~ I j.-,y i1Ei' la I WELCOME! =~wk Up .~I _..,,.._ I
I BR -In court !ntm Lak>Parlt. S3&-269l. I 1 , . S30 wk Up Alfa. 'ff:. ........ 1,_ .. ) • ,
1156/mo. Garq .. Fenc<d. l FOfiN. 1 BR. APT. 111 0 N l QI I j SJNGU: STORY Ntwpllrt Bl•d.,
.k1<1< a1<. E/sldo. 64:1-SJ. iiii 111111,.,.. cau 646-:1117 • I t .toulh s. .. _.. ,:-"'='i~--,,.-:--:-=,I·.----.--.,....-~ j9l' 111oNTH -1 BR -Now A ' Loi..,. .... h f a I I I 2 BDllK·2 BA'DI F1l1IN """" u .a. " c.111. 0 H ~ ~
vac. tmmf!d pm:. Co11ld use --• , ~--C.~tl and Drapet UW. lde1l for 1tudtnL 1 U., i•lle¥ t.ar! I
10m• pelnl ~24 Bkt Bold ,New Conc:ept 1115/mo, !40 wk up. Ba.ch. I i : E I r ...,._,,, Air Condltidoed Adtdt ie;Jmo. A 17>/mo. c .. 1. Moto :·:;•:.::= 1 ~r. FURNITURE ROOAl :?1':' ,.J>d~,::. • ".1·
1
) & i Al • ..... !!'-p 'Pf ~hitfldtlJja'd ~~ ~~ =~• =in prjvato bnme You,'~;":'~
''" d 11~ -TIME FOR ..._ llOl!h ·~ Nr. llo. Otoat Plan $15./12$. pt'I' -· All sr"'· v ... 11on A'rA'~i.1~~ ~ 1· RE. i,u L ,-ly. • '":-' HID=:.~~OE prjvil~. S.1'Jl5. v!~::=I tLi/:::~;.~ ~~u!:S: [ I, 11 J' ~J!!i!~m'. :~~~ 9~: ~:SH c=l~N :~= .. ~= lfAILY PILOT jra~~uiluJti .r r rt r·r.1 -c---~<r:2':""-.. MOUQH A ow :f.!!.1119
:!o.i18~1a~:\~ WANT AD ~~~nm I f-1' I Fl ;I sou~=.., ----:-i.A11:n1cor -~-:,.c;n .... ~.:"J!!
ft••l·Optlon pl ~· 5llW l9tlt;CM 511-$11! , VILLAS WANT AD ~L-(ll<tlh Oow>CI< =:-w~~5~ A LT Y •, iim6iillil~ •• M.iiiiiiin.lii0SAtiloli5<7iiti!iii-tl!;;14 642-5678 SCRAM-1.ETS AHSWEIS IN CLASSIFIED 700 1111 ": • .._ ' 642-5671 ;--'"""!"' 11 w..m:l •
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•' , ..
' ..
I
DAii. Y ~llOT
• ' FREE PASSES
\
You Could lie One of Today's Winne"
10 Poln of $1 .95 Tic:kets Given Daily
FOR THE YEAR'S BIGGEST 'RECREATION' SHOW
5SO Ge ner•I 7>aintlns &
FOUND: wht lhagey Poodle
type doe, male, bl~ collar.
tic: Golt Course, Minion
Vteio. 831-1014.
MANS jacket on .Killybrooke
Lane. 5'>3349.
Lost
TitINGS by M~. Lt. _P_•_P_•_r_h_o_ngl_n_g __ _
eiect., p1.umb, fence, tHe
instlns, eArptntry, paint ete'.
545---0820.
No Wurini' * W/ILLPAPER * When )QI call "Mat" Cemenr, Concre:e MB-1444 640.tru _ .. ,. ..... ,....._ ... ___ _
CEMENT WORK, no job too PAINTING/Papering. 18 yr1
am.all, rtuonable. Fr e e in Har~ area. Lie k bond·
Eatim. H. Stufllek, 5'8--8615. ed. ~·a furn. ~2356.
LOsr Chr1stmaa nirbt Bal-WINTER Rates~ Concrete PROF. painUng-lnter/ater. 1 tioA Bay Club, P;nd.tnt Ooors, patios, d riv~•, Honest work. LI e I Ins .
1 !&n"irc, eirclt>t of. small 1ldewalk1. Don, 642--8514. 548-2759. ~1444.
a-ystals encircled w Ith Contr•cfor PAllNTING, prod'. All work ~ black enamel. Reward of-euam. Color 1 p e e I a I i , 1
, fered. Seltlmental value to MY Way, quallt;y home 842-4386, 541-1441.
oWner. 837-8619. remod. Walls, c e i It n 1. PAINTING, prof. All work
. L6sr: CUrly Ion& ha.ired red floors, etc. No Job too small. guarn. ColOl' • Pe c i a I l 1 t
4 white {peaches & ere&m) 547-0036. 24 hr &ns. serv. 842-4386, 547-1441.
Otlhu.ahua. Vic. Baker &: Additions * Remodeling PAINTING .. Guarantffif
Fairview about 3 wka. qo. Gerwiei: A Son. Lie. work at fa.fr prlCff. Lle'd k
l'Costa Mesa) 5157-6847. 673-6041 *" 549-2170 Ina. 675-5140.
LOST man 's collea;e rini. Electrlc1I Plumbing
j bijue stone, South C.out ·-""=-,-,.,---I ~ men 't ttlt room. ELF.CI'RICAL. Resldential, •o HR 1 h' eomm'J, lnduabial. Small «> • P um 1"& &:
I Reward! 54M465. joba OK. Lie'd & 111.1. Reas. Electrical Repair.
LOST part Siamese with 642-2'155 or 642-1403 nto tJ San pricn. Frtt est. 54&--02U.
JAll.7·18
llllll IPllll8
DlllY, "8. 1 •IP JI.
PRlctS
.ADUllS $1.95
KlllS$1.DI
• ·Find Your Name
If your ome 11 llstod In o 1pec:lol od -It could oppoor unclor ony
clo11lflc Ion, IO look ot thom all -phOM '4W671, Extension 314, be-
twHn t .m. •nd I p.m. to m•k• arr11npmenf1 to pick up you r 2 frM
show ti ets •t any convenient DAI LY PILOT office.
Be he Guest of the DAILY PILOT
!.___"'_ ... _ .... _. ~l[Il] ._I _""'"' __ ,·-----l[Il) I ~-· !!Ill
Holp Wonted, M & F 710
Holp Womod, M & F 710 Holp Wonted, M & F 710
FRY Cook·Bttakfast le
IW1ch, 5 day wk. Apply in MACHINIST: Top no t c h R t t
person C.M. Golt & Country local Co. hu a aiecu.re & •• •Uran
Oub 1701 Golf Coune Dr, rewarding 1pot. Best work·
C.M.' ing oonds. in brand new
GENERAL Houaecleani.ng, quarters. $lOO.
Jove chlldrtn, mother home. Call Bob Wibon, MlHm6 Couta1 Agency Mon thru Fri. 9: 30-6PM. 2190 Harbor Bl at Adams Rl!ttnt ttfll. $75 w k.
~9213. MANICURISf-Exper. only.
ApPly Ln pel'IOtl. Hair West.
Girl Fridey 3305 Newport BIV'd. N.B.
For a mature etlt 1ta.rter. 1 MAINT. MECHANIC
girl ollice. S500-$'600 depend-One of counties show place
COOK
PART TIME
Apply ln Pencn
THE RIGGER
16 Fuhlon l1lond
Newport Bt•ch
Ing on exper. plants will provide ucurlty
Sales Secretary & advancement. To $000. F.qu&J Oppor. Employ.,
No sh nece55, Environment Call Bob Wilson, 541).EmS
of this job Ideal tor attrac-O>utal Agt!ncy
tive bright sec'y who enjoy9 21'J) Harbor Bi at Ada.ma (2) RN'S
job stability, Sf50.$500 w/ NEED single eui'tar enter-11-7am, medie&l IU!lict.l
rai9es. tainer that can draw the RN
NEWPORT In-set. Alley West Restaur. 3-llpm, OB
Personnel Agency ant ~1714i N.B. RN
3848 Campus Dr., N.B. NEED to ,.., ll-1am, J.C.U .• C.C.U. unita (Branch Otftee)' p....., • 0 me LVN'S
Nona W. Hottman 540-lll35 Chrlatma• blllt! Si.o w llpm-7am, Sub acute unit.
""'""'"'"""'""""""""",.;,· ""-I Sarah Coventry Jeweley. RN'S ~~~~~~~~~~I HISTOLOGY Technician. ex-Min. Alt 20. 540-0614. Surif!ry Experience porienoed. Tue, -Sat. 6 am NURSES AIDES LAB TECH
to l:l pm. South Coast Corn-Exper. 549-3061 Wttkends OnJy II i lj rm.Jnity H05pital, South La-PRESSERS. e.xper. only. X-RAY TECH
• t e "'°"· " Ana & Eloctronlcs ~~C~ObL~E~P~L~U;M~B~IN~G~!/I;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Stn, ta Isabel, C.M. 646--0066 ._,..==---_,. __ 124 hr. service. 645-1.161 ~ard! .:. ......;.,..... PRINTED drcuit boud1, PLUMBING REPAIR u:#f: Doberman/Shepherd. delian &: fabrications, abort No job too 11mall
B1ac]( & tan. Vie. 1550 So. run 1peclaliJ:ta 1 or 100, e 642-3128 e
' t Hwy. Phone SST-'817. ~ Ent.,,,..U.., 962-11591 'R~o-mod-~o~l -&~R-e-p-al-r--I ~-----~ _ f' gu~, 499·1311, Personnel Sportswear mtgr. Steady. Wee~Days
Orttce, An equal opponunlty Pd vae. &U-3472. 1580 CENTRAL C , fem., tri-color, ap-Gardening '
I yr old. FV. Owner .,..,__..;;.____ Addltion .. Altoratlon• Holp Wonted, M & F 710 Holp Wanted, M & F 710 Holp Wonted, M & F 710 dxtou. .. 988-4885. AL'• Landscaping. Tree New consll"Uction, Concrete, •.,-,,.,,,,,.,:-:0,,.-:::=--.,,,....-removaJ. Yard remodeUng. 1: f : Youn& blk &: ta.n Trash hauling, lot cle&m1p. slabs &: Ptlti<>s. BJock, s1one AN OHIO OIL CO, offers o~
p. Huaky mlx female. Re}ltir sprinklers. 673-USG. &: brickwork. (714) 497-2051 portunity for high income
BEELlNE Fashions-Diree-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
tor. lull or p/time. No EXECUTIVE Meu Verde. 5«).6551. Roofing PLUS ~gular cash bonuses, Gardening conven1:1on trips & abundant invst. We train. Car necess.
Call 636-0842 or 539-5435.
S"1ool1 &
l notrucllon1
I~
575
AL'S "'GO'°ARD""'ENJN==G,--e 'I:· Guy Roofing, Dt'al fringe benefits to mature BRIGHT girl for furniture
for ~ 6: 1 ma ll Direct. I do my own work. man in beach area. showroom. Must have typ..
landlCl.plna Ml'Vices, call ~2780. 548-9590. Regardless of experience, ing &. knowledge of oflice !Sf•~~. -•-N-a.tr mail G. F. Read, Pre'&., procedure. Mn::. Cowa", ~ ._....... ~-...-.. REPAIR. recover any roof Am \ Luhr! •-Co " CdM, a:.ta Mea, Dover er can can.,. ·• 833-al33 betwn 9 & 5. Shore•, Wtstclitt. problems. Weneda Roofina-. Box 696, Dayton, Ohio '45401. ;;;;=""""""'"-'--'""~-lFre~e~e~•~t~64~~~~ffi91~. ~~-IJ -~--'-'-----'---~-BOOKKEEPER: Modern
TREE Trimming. Gfneral Sewing/Alter•i'ions building in Irvine complex
Clean • up. Spec.· Prunirc I-,.,--·.,---.,., area. Your own private of.
fruit trees. Reasonable. Alter•tions _ 642.SMS ASK US ABOUT fiee. Report to pres. Work
548-8318. N 20 GETTING INTO on own. start the New Year eat, accurate. years exp, BUSINESS EXP Japanese Gardener. w/a fine co. Fee paid. Start
Know how, up.keep, plant, T_•_l_•v_i_•_io_n_R_•p:..a_l_r __ ·I FOR YOURSELF $600.
pat, trimming, cle~up. * BLAINE'S TV * It can be done selling our Other Fee Jobs Avail ~ after 2PM. Servicing All Brands New 1972 Line o1 Specially Call Jean Brown, 540-Q}55
TOM'1 Gard~. E :r p. Authorlud Magnavox Advertising, Calenchu'5 & Coastal Agency
J L M-•· Known for honesru 540-4313 Executive Gifts. Every bus!-2790 1-larbor Bl. at Adams apanest a w n a.u.r ..,, ness & OJ:angizatlon a po-
tenance &: C 1 ea n -u P • Tree Service tentiel customer. Part or BOOKKEEPER
B!by1fHlng ., 53l-+W6. 83t-958S aft f. G~c""'"'"'A..,....,TJ'ee __ Serv __ Y_ard full time. No investment, Auto experience preferred.
LAWN Ma.int. Halllin&, new ._. ...... ......,. • collections, quotas, reports, Full co. benefits. Ins., Va-: IC'i> CHtLD. c'ARE lawns, clean-up, pruning. clean-up, hauling, sprinkler or Dlstrict Managers. Many cations. Apply in per.;on
Hlirbor & Baker. C.M. 6 yrs Free Est. Call ~1379. ttpalrs. Reas. &16-5848. promotional ideas to help CORT FOX LEASING
_._ ,,_._ I/Utt!: ._.. Tiie you get started with a 63 2568 N,_,..,,._. B1vd C M e.ti.p. flAC'Qi, ,,,..,.__ EXP. Hawaiian Gardener. -··"""·' ., ..
year did, low pressure firm 645-3ti61 BABYSI'ITING Ntw Ytan Complete gard«minr ll!fV. .....,,....-------1 rated AAA-1. Prompt, help-E\.e. My home. 9-9 Snack Ir: Kamala.n1, 64&-4676. CERAMIC tile new & ful cooperation. Weekly com· BOYS 10-14
Bfsakf&at. 548-4260. JIMS GARDENING remade!. Free est. Small missions. Liberal bonus. to deliver papen in the San ._. __ ,, jobs welcome. 536-2426. a ~ 0 --J c ,_ ~n-nt1r Completl! Gardening ~lee Writt> John McNttr, Dept, eme ... .,, .-s:i uan ap>.&-
.;:J. · · < · Ii Cle~ups. 54>3662. mi, Newton M'fg. Co., New. trano and Capi.rtrano Beach
HQME Npa.tn.. No · job to Exper Japanese Gardener II i I ) ton, Iowa SCOOS. &reiJ. r ::n. 1.tPf. ~; Complete yd &ervice. Neat (mplo)n•it f' DAl~~J:~LOT ~. • &: Relia. Free est. 6.fi.-4389. ';;;;;;;;;;;;:~;;;; 1,-==-=-,-==~--0--
JAPANESE Gardening by I ATTRACTI VE bru .. t BUSBOY ~-rpet Service exper gardener. Complete Job W•nted, M•le· 700 w/long hair for documen. Ful1 Time. Pennanent
------2303 tary by photographer. Ap· Jq»N•s C-upet i: Upboltttty yd work. Clean.up. 968-. SCR·AM .. LEJS prox. specifications s·6", 106 Neat & Depe?ida.ble
Oeanera. Extra Dri·Sham· GARDENING SERVICE lbl. PeUte figure. No 18 or Over
P» free Scotebguard (Soil CLEAN-UP. TRIM JlOrno(raphy. Refer. will bt' Apply in Person ~ta.rdants). Degn!asen &-• 646-5469 • A NSWE.RS furn.' $15 hr'.. for 10 hr wk. Afttt 3 PM -• ~-hr'~te ' 10 ---------(NO Phone Calls) ~ ........,. •" nera "' H•uling No e>eper. necs. Ph. for ap-The Five Crowns mlnur. bl.ea.dl for white Bakery -Owing -Aging' -pointment or write Richard clrpets. Save yoUr money WANTED! Messy trees, Bu~er _ LAWYER Phillips, 675-65~. 6 0 6 % Restaur•nt
bf savbl& me extra trips. yards Ir: garages. moving & The gUy Who said talk ts Orchid Ave., CdM . 3801 E. Paejfjc Coast Hwy.,
Will cl~n livin& rm., dining hauling, $7.50 per hr. +odd cheap hasn't hired a LIAW---,A"'T"T"R~.-..W°'A"l"T"R"E""S"'S.-Corona del Mar. No ph. calls.
rm .l hall SlS. Any rm $7.50, jobs. 543-5863. YER recently. CHILD Care, live-in, 2 boys.
Personnel Agency
Wishes You A Heppy &
Prospe rous NeW Veer.
We Invite You To C1ll
Our Office If You Are
lntere1ted In A C•r••r
Opportunity For 1972
CURRENT
POSITIONS AVAIL.
Fie Bkkpr
St"c'y/nls
See'yfBi-Lin&ual
""'" Bkkpr Gen't Otfice
Sec'y/Legal Trne
~fed. Writer
Keypu°""
Accounting Clrk
Clerk Typist
File C'lerk
• • •
se;o
i<>l'OO
•• $ffiO
~up
1<>$550
$500
$500
to $525
$47'
$425
$.ISO
Product Msr1Mlc1oc tom<
Acct/CPA. Cenlral Ca. $18K
Sales, Intangible to S17K
COlltrolltt to $15K
Sa2es Engr BSEE Open
F in. Analyst, ~ S13K
Appl. Engr, BSEE to S13K
Elee. Tech to S'lOK
Ofe Mgr!Cust. Rel to S12K
Looking Forw•rd
To H••rlng
From You
Mary Baughem
&
Betty Bruce ooucb SJ1), chair $5. 15 yrs., d R Exper., not under 21. NO Newport Beach are a. op ts what countl, not YARD/ga.ragedirt,. earil upsSk·e-INDpeU~RIOdUS I young. mti an PHONE OALl.S, apply in 644-5468.
method. I do work myself. move trees, • vy. 1~ ex ence n pain ng, person, &lrf & Sirloin 5930 410 W. Co•ll Hwy., NB
Suite H 645.2716 ! Good ref. sn--0101. lo&der, beekhoe. 847-2666. Apr. maintenance & pool w. Coast 'f-iiWy., N.B .•
TRASH & Garage clean-up, cleaning needs full tiine job. AUTO * * * days. Free est. Anytime. CaU Greg 642--0022. N I Phillip Lloyd 518--5031-Job Wanted Fomalo 702 SALESMA 17803 Sant• Ge rtrude ' New BMW dealership needs
Fountain V•ll1y Housecluning NEED HELP AT HOME? Wesmen with experience
CLERlCAL-OUice. Alert in-tell~ent "'Oman, interesting ~~~~~!!!!!~~""" work. We will t r a i n . EXPERIENCED Med i ea I
MacGregor Yachts. 1631 Insurance Clerk in luge
Placentia, Costa Mesa. group. General medical of.
fiee background desirable.
You are the winner of CALL Us Again, Dutch Main-e we have Convalescent preferred. Good Petsqn4Ilty.
2 tickets to the · tenanoe Sentice tor earpf!t, Aides e Nu r s e s • Many benefits Including
CONOCIENTIOUS, Responai-Benetits, 646-0545 M rs .
ble woman to super clean Austen.
~mall CdM home 4 hrs ,,;;;;:;:_'"'"',-,------=--,--:--
employer. Monrovia, N.B. SUPPLY TECH
HOUSEKPR LIVE IN PRODUC110N S loo t Excellent worlclnr condJtlons
Cook for couple. Pvt rm & . uperv r_ 0 • fringe benefits. ,
ba, BeautiftU home beauti-~ge ll&il boat production MISSION.
fut people, 642-96(W5: lines .. Supervisory exper. COMMUNITY -~77"=-~==~~~ I euentiaJ. Boat bldg exper.
H OUSEKEEPER-live-ln. mt req'd. Fa.at growing oo. HOSPITAL
4 nice children ages 7 to 14. 1631 Place'l'Jtia Ave Costa 27802 Puerta Real Hwy,,
Santa Ana Hgts ar e a. Mesa. ' Mission Viejo, Callt,
545-6Z11. {E. on San Dieeo Frwy. &
,...,..,.., PROF'ESS'IONAL p hon e CroYin Valley 'Parkway) H.:uu-RS Emplyr pays fee. 10Hdtw • Dana Point. San PHoNE
George Allen Byland Agen-Clemente Capiatrano area. (714) 49' ••-ey 106-B E. 16th SA. Work in ' )'OUr own home ...--w
s.1--0395_ a..t deal tn ...._ Pho~ (714) l:iG-noo
~14615 between 9:00 a.m. RN ... ,1 ti •'•h -• and noon. • ..... me, ..... t MJ.ift -'iei;:;C,::T.i-::=,.-,==:-1 7-11, RN, pt tlme ~~I PUBLIC ~ELATIONS 7-11, x!nt !rinre bnfta.
Telephone from our offices, Beverly Manor Ca p 0 Eves. 5pm-9pm only. Hrly Beach, 496-5786. •
wagt! + bonua. 645-3030 ext. RN "" lull 69 · eve Snu t, time or P~EE INDUSTRIES parWme. Xlnt frinp hnlto. Be~rly Manor, Capo NMcl1 Tr•lnees Beach. 496--5186. t
$50S.$650 Por Mo. Routs Sale•
Youna men. -,._ ASHING?
Payroll/Pers •.. to $550 per. hetpfu!, but not nq'd.
F ·d EDP yrol1 of Mt.tft be 19 or ~. Abie to 1~, :min. in!I t!'!itti pl.an start wor1c lm~ediately, if TN of punching time clocks
etc accepted. For into on job wtrre YoU have no career
NCR 3200 Bkkpr to $650 placements, can Tuetday 9 mgrnto pp o r t u niti e at
ETnpkiy .d f Know!. am·lpm onty. Wouldn't you rather •tab.
edge ~,.:;"'mac:,"' Gd ""n 776-8551 tish •..,...,where"'-paid
acdg eXJl bene:fits include re~
B'L · 1' s I $550 plan, mecficat plan, lick a..:-•s,ua :._~v. ·h~' h REC EP T.-Gir1 Friday leave, life inl A lllOl'I!'!
"'l' tt ee. ...po.n1s , ........... s . n •• t l ~ f SA M ' PBX R pt .:x:au . • ... o c., . . ust ece · · · · · be ambltlous, lfAble, well I1 you ~ neat & In top
Salary Open educated, sophisticated and physical cond .. a trlth school
PBX exp. T.YJ>e 50, SUper, have pleasant pl!'nonallty. 3-g'l'&duate, min. ~ U, min. Ms~a~I &1 •w""'ict\t ve. $500 5 yr. ex:: resident prerd. ~'.tt 5'8", min. wei&ht lf.6,
.u C• r •r · · · Good 1atary + 10lid op. thi.s is lor you.
Split fee. 2 yn colle-ge tech· portunity for outstanding
niea1 writer exp. II .....,, ha bee ti.sh'-.-f Asst. Tech. Wr iter lltA50 girl. 547-6400 (9 to 5). .,~ ~ n u,. or ..-. a good oppor. this is Yo'f' Split lee. 2 yrs col1ege-. Eng-R EC E PT 1.0 N I~(Sec'y, chance to land • bir one.
list\ major. ~ small congenial office. Good
4818 E. 17th (at Irvine) CM a.lary. Fring benefits. No $900 + 642-1470 dictation. 8:36-4:30, 5 days.
INVEST IN
YOUR FUTURE
Interesting & Challl\'\i'ing
work. &l:l-~.
RD:EPTIONIST: Crowin; Brina: <"..a.Iii. Drivers License,
" I""" I · ·-Be Draft Cm! & Military Ser· co. In p WM• f'Vtne ..... ..,.... · n.---..
right hand gal to the Prel. \'lCI! n=..vrul,
BE YOUR OWN BOSSI Tu;, ~Uon «_tor the. r•I INTERVIEW Men or Women who liJCi!a pubhc relations. GPM.s?M """-·-...
LN•• A Y~/low
Toxl Cob
Call for App!
546-1311
Start $400 ' "~ ~ay Dec.
Call unda Ray, 5®-60$ 6th Only.
Coastal Agency
2790 Hubor Bl at Adami ARROWHEAD
PURITAS
EXPER. Uphol. Sea.mstress. weekly. $3. Hr. 673-3210. Apply: Johansen & Mk kr Herman
C.O.D. Messengers. Make $20 Christensen, 898 W. 16th St., I iiiiiioiiiioiii;;;ii;iiiiijii;;iiiii
Sports, Vacation Doors' le windows. Free Housekeepers • Com· Group fns, Demo Plan, Ml·
& Recreation•I estimates. 537-1508. panlons ary plUs eomminion. Apply
Veh icle Show Mesa Cleaning Service H 0 M EMAKERS/UPJOHN-in person
RECEIVING 61Y No. Ma in St.
Or•ns•
&I the -.a-.. Fl I ANAHEIM Carpeb, Wiuuvws, oor e e.
CONVENTION R..td. & Omunc'L 5434lll
CENTER DEDICATED CLEANING
Now t.hru Janua.ry l9th * We Do Everything *
Pl--Olll 642-{;6'18, "'' 311 24 hr-Call 6f3.«lT2
CLEANING lady, ex-
perienced for your office,
apt. or home by the ds.y,
636--0974.
to $30 a day. Mu111 have neat N'pt Bea.eh (corner 16th &
appearance & good running Monrovia). '
cai." Apply 18582 Beach Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Blvtl., Suite 3'4, Huntington ~ Fee Paid
Beach. 962-4722. Recept. to $400
>' COOK A/ P Supv lo $600
M 0 .tz_ • 2nd Cook, f/time. Con°vales-Fite ~imbuned
cent hosp_ 645-3013. Ropro Typist le $550
DA VS work, ge:1eral clean-NCR 3300 to $550
~ 9 and 5 pm to claim IT'S Beacb booM Ume. Bil· ~ tickets. (North O:lunl;y ~selection ewr! See the DAY Work. General cleanlng ER M ORS
!LOT ~--~·~ Sat's. Re1;able. Full or pt. CREVI OT free number lo 5'0-17l0l DAILY P ~-
1 * ~ * * section nowt time. Trans. 543-7006. 2M W. lat st., Santa Ana
1jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim YNG. women desires posi-AVON CALLINGI ing, no ironing. Wed . & Fri, Appt~nt Pa)'« Fee 1
tion. Dental aSll'ittant with For a wonderful earning op-* chalnlde exp. rt!f. 962-5458. ~nlty, in your own rer. * * * *
Own· trans. N.B. l!lrea. Ex-Recept/ Bkkpr to $600
perienc. 6 Rots. ~148. A/ R Bkkpr $500
• • ' • • • . • •
. • .·
~,
Trader's Paradise
..
lines
times
dollars
WILL TRADE
22 Caliber Auto R.itlt
with 9COPe: for mans
1'l Speed Bleyde
6M-UX.
5 BR., 3 ba .. form. din. + ...,_ rm., '4\Y. 2IQ) .,.
ft. Trade IS!Uity for amaJl
lnoomll IC\IPH11 j
!5f5.17U
* --------
I
H I W t d M & F 710 rltory, no exper. neccss.
• P an • , Call 540.7041
DENTAL Receptiomt, exp'd. Secret•ry to $600
Full time+ Saturdays tn (Speak & write Japanese)
od •-ta! f · H Freelf.ee Positions '? em ~n °' '" un-R''TH RY-AN A" GENCY A . C'lerl< $4 BABYSITTER: mature, my tington Bch. Must have u
ccounting 50 home Laguna Hilts. 8 am'-6 chairslde knowledge . Good 1793 Ne\VP.Ort. CM 646-4854
p:;:; ~T".+ type ~ PM, 'Mon-Frl. Own' trans salary & benefit!. 830-3309 1793'1 ~.HD 847-9617
0,nmuction &. EDP bckgrnd pref'd Days 83()-700), ext 47 DE'N'I'AL Assi.sta.nt. chatr-
F /C Bkkpr to$800 eves ~7• side, over 21, tome expert. F/C Bookkeeper
Min. 2 yrs cdll<ie & 5' BABYSITI'ER. 5 nlgtm 5:~ ence. 49'-3538. Min. 5 yra Expo., in small
yean ltlble work history. 11:00. 21-2 yr. girl. Balboa * * * manufacturing. Muet know R~st $400 Isl. F/Time. 67J:.OJ65.. r-rwn P·-A~ AIR Mrs. Jack Llnklettor ~ur, ~'""• '" ' Attract. gi.rt for busy o(c. TB ~ •""'al tm~ To . NEWPORT BEAUTIC!AN wantod, new 61 Emerald Bay . • un,.,.-' ••·
Mlon. The Hair Parlor, 31401 L:"luna Beech $800. r'~ Paid •
Pt raonnel Agency Camino Capi5trano, San You lire the winner of F'rftNrrl .. GUPE"'Llt1on!I Bll Dover Or., N.8. J t•a .. Capo 493-642.3870 -· · ·~. 2 tlcmi. to 111<
BANK MGR TRNE Sports, Vecotlon Po;;:i~~~g;~cy
ADVERTISING WOMEN OR Top ro. hlll' Immediate open· & Re Creatlonal L&a\lnA N\ruel
GIRLS. Maft St75 an hour ing for ~mbitioua: career Vehicle Sho# &31a14n
plus bonU&eS, doing pte..,.nt miode<I J)(!n;on. No limit to at the
telephone work from our of. money & promotion. Call ANAHEIM FJC BOORkE·EPER
fi"'. Mu1t hove pi....,,, llob M<eey, 8.13-2700, Dv>-CONVENTIPN Youna, aa-tve ~ ~TIOnfllty No experience nis &: Ot-nni1 Pert011net CENTER Call Lorr1tine
nttf1!my," 962-472'J, 18582 Agency, m Michelson Dr.1 Now thN Janw,ry 16th W~rtd.ilf
BeOl<h Blvd., Sul!•~ Hun-lrvtne. Pl ..... oa11 ~. txt 311 Pmonn.i Agency
tiJ1C1t>n Bead!. BEELINE Styli.st ne.dod ~n 9 and~ pm to df.lm 2>13 w..tdtlf Dr, N.B.
ASSISTANT -Por who aood money , home lhowJ. ,,..,# ~cbta. (N-o.m11 8f5.m~
<'an operate a NCR :m> Call Donna. 968'86!t tcUbee nwnbtt ts 540-1.n>) Put a. UttJe "Jool' in your
ma<:l:dni!, Pe'mantnt pogi· Thi futest craw '" tile West * * * Jm . 1ell those bauble• tlo., Colla M... .,.., •.. o Dally Pllbt aul!W ,.,,.., -..dllms Into quick lcr "bocloo". 00 Ousitlod
S414Z!!. Ad. w..1611 c;u11, caD Gl:Mm ..;61J.56'7&;;;;_;=-----
I. ,
"
STOCKROOM
SHIPPING
Newport lleoch
EquoJ Oppor. E-
SALESMEN
Need men who a~ ready to
le11rn the car bu&i.ne-q and
are wililng to train. Must
..... ]lO<XI ...-llty, be
interetrted tn a future d.rnl
We are •kine an individual well, aalesm.lnded. &ne11.ta: IRYlNE PERSONNEL Who ... h&d -In Demo ........ '"'-· ..,.,.,,_
SER.YICES IP!,ArC• v-v •11< receiving, ~tockroom & tttd oaluy ptu1 conun\1•
"""-' ~ 1 l'lllpping tunc1ion.t of an .ions. Unlimited lncome. Ap.
488 E . 17th (at Irvine) CM electronic imtrument manu-ply in Person. UNlVERSI-
642-1470 laeturing firm. ~dates TY Ol.DSMOBILE, 2SSO
INSURANCE: Top l"t:>tch
comm'! I~ gal need!d due
to agency expansion. Must
be able to work in.
dependently. Salary open.
CaH Mn. Sims 833·!l'60.
LADY ..ne-eded for hoURWOrk
5 days a wk,
Calt M8-1503
req'd. Front off ap-
pearance. Congeni stnC
eelected will be regpons:lb!e: Harbor Blvd., Co.ta Mesa.
for rece:iv1ng, storing & ii· SALESMAN
111J.lng materi!-1 & for pa.de-Young, &ggressive exper1·
Aging & •hipping instru-ence not ntoceulr:v Full
mentt & pertc. Ability to comrniaion paid wbll; tntn..
m&lrtta1n a~tt-Inventory Ing. Mana.a:tment ualstlnce
reoordl '99entil11. For add1-at aJI time.. Sales J)Olltion
tlonal infcrniation or to at· with a future. Demo avatt-
rarc. for • penonaJ )nttT-able. lmun.nces,. c a 11
vitw, ~MR Oll.1J penonneJ, 5.f6.M17,
(713) 441-1171
Ext. 231 ,
ABBOTT
Scttntlfic ~ Div,
----SA-,-,L"E"S"'MA=N~-I
Younr Co. Gd potont!al
C.U Mt1. Sehrn.ldt
WES!'CLJFF
Pe:r'llOnl'l!I Agency
LEGAL Secretary with top
skills needed by busy, well
e8tablished law f~S.H.
. ~ Weareun Dr., NB 645-:mo roundlnri:111. Must bt a It to Equal Oppor. Employu
work under own direction. SALES! La.rp well known
Salary open. Contact Mabetl~~~~~'!!!l!!.!!'!'!'!'~ firm needs ltro~ tales
Nelson, 647--0997 day• or RESTAURN'T HELP-tne· Wtn train. Co. cu +
639--llJ7 ••••· SMdwtdt .i. Gi;111 Tmo. /or .-+ bont11. Slut
LAZlt'" .,..,._ In ~na d&>I, Moo tllnl Fri. D!odt· ~·Don. BenlOO, ~-'
l!e•cb ne<ds cuper!>, """'1 wut>er, Mon 1li'o ~ U-3 ~
worldrw -.tar)I. Sloould pO\, Apply In W-Dell ~ ~oey
be ~extble but oompUl.st,.. Shel, ~ llJlb ShOpptrw 1lllO Korbar Bl ot Adiuol
Muit bi .. •-.. or humor. °""f•.!J.'!r or °'!I ti< l'llt 0 Ulllt "loot' In YoUr ~9'-971:)7. a,'ppt., ..,..,........t •
Like to trade! our Trodi!r'1 Like to trai!ef. Ollf ~·1 ~:.;.~. -baultl .. lor
PIJ'adbe columa Is for youf Plr'lll"" colwnn ii for you! Clll Clulllled
5 u .... s-~ for 5 bucb. 5 -5 .,.,. lor s bueb. NMm.
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0
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!'-_ ... _ ..... _ .. "__,·l(jJ) I ... dwidO•
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Nolld41, J...,,, J, 1972
.. Vlot, UM<I
BUICK
HA,.PY , NIW YIAI!
SA Lil '70 ONEY M ......... "" •••• I DIK •t•k .. , 1".i W,,..,, l\ltktlf "IH!I, 11;t11Mlt. IZYI 164)
'70 BUICK .... -... ,,, 1•1
,..,,.1 '"' "'"•
OR
Comor Ut & Hui..,
S.nt1 Ano
•
•
OAILY PILOT -. ........,s.1m
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•
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! '~ \. ., I ' '
~ , wm··out ·the . applicat!-oti' before thf deadlin~, ·an4 that's on.e . probleJ? y~u can
strip-worrying about. We'll pay ybu $100 a week (up to $10,000) .of t~free -.. <:
(nco~e. Read· on :about : this . new kind of protection that everyone can .afford.
..
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•
f·
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-.
' ~ • •
. 'Ul ' . ,, .
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7 'l1it W:ieltj ~ ID()tllne
is pWl direcdym)'Oq.
TJ.in;..,....u.n-, Thediecb ere;,.riglit to ,..U. (No ma-where
~mthe-iclyoa.U..or,..... to.) Not wtho doctor. Or the hospital. Wo pey
yoafma the 8nt day'fOl/re m tho hotpitaL (Many poJi<ies insist OD 0 ,..;ting
...... tlao Jiotp!W Won they pay,.... dime.) . . . .
8 .'The pren~um -yo~ ~nowis the premium ;ua'll Cll,llpinue to pay. It~'t be raised
0 bec2use of .. Or because of sidmes.s.
' ¥ •
Qa Jfll/.• W l!WI :;:• 1hno -' ~ ETOD if 1"" Ii" Ii> be ~""'1--~ __ .......,,_
. • ,.. • , .. 'ii .... .,..... jalnod the l'lao, ,_ -...m .-m. •-n.-,.JiW.l-·' .. -----isif.Uimw .... . I'""<* ofilill tne ... ,_ __ • -1 rate ad~ Whit -
. -"""""'"'1p_,..,...11 lliat ,-rotes wo'l't go up beco-yoa. c« °""'' 0r "-• ~ ~ m-~ 1iosp11a1 • lot.
\ . -• I ~
9 Mooth11~ratesfurthe
. · '.iddefamily~Jess than33c a .~
JI~ ...i. ell,~ All Pamily ~will ... ~you ooly .fjj,90 a -mh
(olllo' 6a Int-,..._ ytllire .......i by tho t1 ym/ft -In.)
' .'lhol~·l'lan II only f7Jl0 a molth, as is the Ono Pared;
l'.-lq l'laia. And if ,....~the IndMdoal Plu>,il'1 oolr $4.50 ap>0nth. . "·(Jf,w .. -es/c1on't _.,.no Poi;c,.11Ooir·*3tooro.0r ss·ii\ore
..... ,.,. ac1 ,_ ·--SS.)
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'The \\eekly,Cash h1colne Ptah -pa )'Oli an irori~gaarantee.
'
Yoa cloe"I riolc a thing. II ,ou 1111 out tbO oppllcadoa, ...i·moil.•41,-'a
be potectod the very day -,_; .. )'OUr appqtioo. lf, 11f!or _.., 0,. .
policy, yoa"renot~yplldlod, yoa. ""'7-llto as ~U..,.,
llfter,... ........ U>d we'll nllllld ,_ ·~ Ancl,dmlq tbot ... ,....
be putected. °".... . '
1. 4 ~~is.hadredby~of~· .'.· ·.
_ counny5~respel:f~~~tie
& insilr.u¥:eoompaUs. .
n.o p1an;, uoc1~u ... i.r the Intemational ur81mura.-c.. « ....... ~ ~y auries lull Jegal raer... for ill policy 1'oldei'1 ;e.coediil~
l< Uc<..sed by the Depor-.it .l IMna-el !Ilk -The WoolJlr CeJii ·
Incomel'!n'1odndnj~olllcoo-localed-..... lcValWyl!'-M . . .
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•
r •• San (;Jemenie
• • I I •
· .C~pistran~
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ORANG!: COUNTY, CALn:61tNIA . .· ' . . . .
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MONDAY, JANUARY 3, 1972
.
Toda;y's Final
;·
N.Y. Stoeks '
TEN CENTS
Coast Youngsters Score High on State Tests
Sludents •lOni the Orange Coast
N)>utod •'1!¥1r a.b'OV•·•v ~race
per!C>mWlCO <ii uQ.io by again 'i<ortnc
Neb on readlJia and aclllevemenl lat& tn
197o-71. • •
~g · lo the recenUr releaoed m,U!ll, ·the ~oung'sters acoud ,above lhe ~ .a~r..Ne .in all areas tested, With ~ ·-or.t gradeit achlevtng.lht ~\~ Score tn au of Or~•
<The.~,. nft•c•in ... k ,m terms of
....
per<ent!IM. For eumpls, flrol gra~ tn
LagUna Beach were II( the llst perctJjlll•
.Iii \el'llUI oJ .reading', mtfntnc Iba! 811.per-
ttnl of aU student. in lhe state scored
lower on the test thaq. the Laguna Beaeh
students and 19 percent of them ,scored
tilgher. · ·
The ~adi9g tests were administered lo
students in grades 1, 2., S, 8 and· 12. JiJ ad~
di\ion, languagt, malhwatlcs and spell-
ing tests were administered to the . sis: th
and ut~ grade ~udents.
Followlfig is a percentile lir.ting of each
.
Orqe ~ scbool .dlalr!ct ollowflJ& ~ , Buallogloa Beacll Elementary School
reiidilli ~We pl~ for each DI.mid: v,acle 1-59; t -59; 3 -17; 8
gradt loDqwed by lhe Other test r~lll" -.13; l~e, grade 6 :-60: spelllll8 ,
C•plstruo Uaffled Schoo~ Dlltrict: ~de 6 51, mathematJCS, grade 6 -
grade 1-72 ; 2 -65 : 3 -SI; I -13; 12 BllD!lqtoa Beach unton High School
-66; languoge, cr.4e 6 -.5':\ 12 -.Ill; Disltlol: grade 12 -53; language, grade
spelling, grade 6 ·-51;,__ U· -19: 12 -'58; •e!11izig, ll -49; malhemalics,
matbe.matJcs, I -ff! 12 ~ ~-· 12 -55. •
Fouat.Ua VaUey EI<menlary Sch:lol Laguu Bea~ Ullllled School District:
District;,erade 1 ;-~-t -65: S -13: 6 grade I -'II; ~ -65 ; S -72; I -74; 12
-II; language, lir8!le 1-&?; ipelitng, -53~1anguage, grade 6 -75 ; 12 -43;
grade l -41; math'l'l"'tlcs, I -53. I' speU\nc, !'r-66; U -.49; malhematics, 6
• .
-74; 12 -55.
Newpon..l\tesa Unified School District:
grade I -65; 2 -72; 3 -69; 6 -63; 12
-63; language, 6 -65: 12 -61; spell·
ing, 6 -54; 12 -53 ; mathematics, 6 -
59; 12 -60. ,
Ocean View Elementary Sc h oo I
Disltlct: grade I -65 ; 2 -61; 3 -lll.6
-63; language, 6 -63; spelling, 6 -51;
mathematics, 6 -SS.
SaD Joaquin Elementary Sc ho o 1
District: grade 1-62 ; ~ -58; 3 -63: 6
-61 ; language, 6-60; spelling, 8 -61;
mathematics, 6 -SS.
Seal Beach Elemeotary S c h o o .1
District: gradel-72; 2-.74 ; 3 -74 : 6
-71; language, 6 -68 ; spelling, 6 -61;
mathemalics. 6 -62.
Tustin Union High School District:
grade 12 -60: language, 12 -63 ; spe114
ing. 12 -58 ; mathematics, 12 -60.
\Vetitminstrr Elementary S c h o o l
District: grade l -'5; 2 -6.S: 3 -55; 6
-54 : language, 8-$.1; spelling, 6 -S4 ;
malhemalics, 6 -SS.
lXOn ue Olli. ~oas
..
Defraud Witness Mum
' . . 'M'fin·-Detlines tQ Confirm Tire Staiement
' .
111 T0¥ BARLEY
Of .. D1itr "9t Stefl
A proeecullon , wllness who allegll(lly
"""" lold ·a district atlomey'a tnvestl(alor
Iha! he .... more"· than ·'1,000 ,tires
djll~tely (lUJ)Ct)lred b1 att~la.at;a·
San ' Juan Capls~ .serV!ce Btiiticin to-~ ~ .io·~ that itatement in ~('Oiunly suWior Coutt: · 1111oafd Leut!W'dl 27 .. •. tile p r ..
aeci!llir'•.eleventb ,.11neu In the trial of
nfBe tu"' ,oCcuae4 <t ~racy lo cheat . ..
and defraud motorists, lold depuiy
District Attorney Richard Stenton tha t
the written statement before the pro-
secutor was the investigator's invention
and did oot·reflect his:Own experience.
l:.euthard conftrmed that he worked for
defendant Roger A'lendenhall, 28 of 26095
Avenida De Seo, Mission Viejo while
Mendenhall•operated·;he~S.an Juan Tex-
aco in san Juan Capistrano.
Leuthard said he worked at the San
Juan sllUon ,for a year and "'for juSt a
. '
$_155;~; J • • ",~Uzo Pr_~f,estprl ..
vir~ b~t~~'l.I .. .. . I ~'n:~: Big (.f esf ~.~ _ :A 'Santa Ana -COUege lnSti:uctor
• gol J$'ll off to a bed start In
Co ,:.._-.,.'U~. Newport Beach by fll!Jlking a 10:-cu '1;11.Ri pofiCH!lministered geogripby lest.·
· ~ , , . ., , PtlrOOnan Richard 141llers said
few weeks" at the San aemente Mobil
station, IOO Avenida Pico,· also owned by
Mendenhall.·
But be denied today. lhat he · had told
the investi~tor thal · Mendenhall used
sharpened tnatrumentJ to delibera~ely
puncture tires at the stations.
He also rejected Stehton's suggestion
lhat he had heard ·lhree de!eooants nam-
ed as principals in the allgeged con-
spiracy, urge their ~ploye1 at a:Garden
. (Sot llEl'AIR, Pqe Z)
. . . . R~Jltian 1'1 e!Qt:~: ·~
·~ ,. -\•
~•;wr: ·.
Stands Solid
A 'll6,GOO'·N<lf ·Ytat'a.'Day-lire at be had occasion lo i>loP'lhe less-SACRAMENTO (AP)·_ Tbe Senate
, ._..., HUis Lebiire_ ·_· • Wodd'""'s bl8J>led tlian-"'°'r scllolaro, both SAC voled today to ovemde· one ot GoY. ' ' _.,._ "-'"'" taehen and bolh aged 4.1,' at East Ronald Reagan's reCord·lonc lilt of
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today oti a'cJi~e_wl)iC!\!o!l behind.~ Coaat Highway and Poppy Avenue vetoes, bul Republicans in.lhe·Alaembly IR.' S" B I Fin d ~ ... "(:ia ,liil',:~ !M,,Orlli&e Q>un!y f0r 'it$plCioUsly erratic dfiving. were .. pected to stand IOlidly bOhind lhe •. .' , . . races· . .-o· r· . 0 ' Fil'e "-' lnient ~-r,ted. He a,rr.ested the .drive~· and then GOP governor. •
""""' ·~..-attenlpled lo r°"'e tlte slumbertng ft. bll '"'lned lh 21 Tiie blaR llntllonidl Jn •an.apartmebt Six ,..,pu cans ,. . •
comp!u 'at ii910\>li ldari1"1U 'early ~~.~~ lbtre?''.·he qubted lhe ~"=~of~bill~..!dt';.~ ~~. ~&'l'&-"1.'lllDO'oilrlt•• ~{~ to ~~aa ~!~ed Q!flcer;?.liller. Anthony c. Beilensoil ( Beverly Hills) lhe,~~·;.:..;J.~~'I"· of ''Al ,. repH"" 1c. ~ to require belier so~g· Jn public
lhe. '.c.n.:..::.:ili , "'7-:W,·r~. • ' ....,. "" · · ~ _ · housing • ~ 'I Offt<tr-f.rJ!ter ·~ ... ""' • ' _L "'--. ~.
')''WU •~.aeoond·fire.ill·ll ~y·days sodden 'oqjoumer "to Slep outside Reapn Wll Uj!beld on tl!r .. .....-a· • -forts to override aome of bli record 157 al ~ WarW.'Friday a $»,Ollll fire Jn and see if lhe sui;ounding terrain vetoes of' blllJ paased during lhe lfll
a ~ooDdoriiililwli~ed lolhe·lfealh ~ r';"ikB~= 1::i~]=to~io aession -lhe largest number of vetoes Alice ·'~·Siulth, • ,.·17, of .2ri0-0. VJa . the car, the SAC teacher surveyed since the early 1900! tenure ·of Gov. 61"-r"'' Hiram Johnson. · Pui!rla. Tbe:corontt'•' office· said M'ra. lhe scene. Sen. Alfred Alqw'st (0.San Jooe), laUed · · "Yep, v.!e'"e ip Alaska," be Sllllth 'died <t alPbY>fa!JOn. declared. ' on a vote tt 16-14 lo override Reagu\'s ~ N.ew · Y~a 1 ~' fire was From there it wa!, just like a third veto or his bill to create an Oregon-dlBcoV~ all<JUf(a.fu: ID ,lbe ~floor Monop0ly Game: Wrong _ go style pre.ldentlal primary . in ca!H0<1Jia • oeol' JM,:ind lits. Lo\ll&.7~ ilitectij> lo jail. ' · where all recognlxed candidates co on the ~ . ' ~ " ballot. .. ~: COil': =~~~dja0~'1 -. Se~~::r:: 51~t~~ ,.:~~y271o ~,i~
n!ibfili· .. ~ Iii i1ie ,apol,tme!lc They Vehicle O:umers rid• lhe so•ernor -...... !bat ~•-ed" altp·•."·'--~ ..... ;.;..~.' ll'Wl!h '" .u hasn' hapj>ebed since 1~. row •v ~ """""' '\'"}-.,,..·· • 'llte major l!fforf ha~ been·upllcled lo wa~: but !~-b!Jm1nl° maiertal later Can U B nks be on lhe lhree rea!>llOrllonmellt bills
Oared.up and ~t Ille bulldblc afire, se 8 ' Reagan ffioed last wie'L
Counly. firemen responded lo Bui Sen. M<rvyn!Af, KymaDy Of Lclo · • _..,., 1 • , _ _. ~ M. •1 R • ~ .. , alilbor of the Senate remaPPIN Satard~& .amt "~l>S '!~._.,,.wo " O• to egtster bilf., I aa,ld •he -bably wouldll~ lOU.lli, wCk comJiin1"1liiilf:tl!i ~ 11hill.'"" . ' ~ . . ' 0\1etrldl ~.;;, of -lbl·~ J.dj !in,.
f0w, itr.m.•-~ Ill mld-d,Y • Motorl&ll who don'l ·want to pay their . P1=:18~ldees,:·r:::tfiani
Sllurday ~ up. · vthlcle registration at the loCal Depart-Iha! lhe govmior'a ~ature Is ..,. ll'1!'11'~ ~.e B!d<Jl~· ~I. i' }p!! ment of Motor Vehicles offices, may seM necessary on reapportionment.
Bil'"'"· II., Wu~t.K &llJll\ed 'while lhe paymmls through lhe mail or make Reagan. fO, starling hll s!xlh year ·In ll..:iT. fbe ~laie and seil&isli> b\jilred a lhe renewals at six county ban' ks office, llCCUled Democrals of pualng ~'l""l! &mda and · partisan redlJlrjctlnJr biU. "alm<d ........ knte.He ,~rwd~ y , DMVwtndows willbeopenatlhe·banb (lloo~Y.P.,.JJ _,,
llio coadl!IOO II aiJa,to•he aatwactorr:J. _ "'""•~••••ban""" hours "-··h lho ! · ' Sire,...,.~.~·~ to 1!le ~ --,~ ·--..... --
.. "' . . -. .
Of -~ag~·:F~~~ze Q~rf£s .
• , . J.'-{,' >j v .. ,. • , -. _.. !'~ " I
EmptOyei"'of 16el~i11111et(:ouMr .mi;. ·:~lions. r;r lax payers; ',,..km,·. In-
of~ Internal ~.mie'Seffice are bric· · :totmlliiori: " .
ing tbemaelvtS for lhe pie-April 15 rush ~The 'majort~ of lax andl.eC'llnOml~ . · slabllizattO!I policy questJOns can be of• taxpayers who. bave <!J!esllons about . liandled by phone. ·For tnformatton on In·
!heir laxea and . lhe wage and priee · come · lix, call 836-2381 arid for in-
freeze. !ormaUon on' lhe stabilization dll 517·
Roger A., BHtmann, manager of the '1581.
Jocal office of -IRS offered aome sug4 -lf a visit to a local IRS offi<!e 'b
Vending ,·Ma~fue
Smas1led'. ·by Thieves
• I Intrud,eti wbo '1J!oke into. !he 9fllcea' of
· an. lrvtne: !l<m Stumy night ransacked
lhe bulliMng, ....... ~ ft!lld*i•
and. look an ;i,m4et!ei:l\i~ ~ .t taah. .. ... .. • <.i ·~-;;~ -
.()l;ula:e domii)l ahei'lll:i ·lJ!llceh·lre to--
day ...e..tn& tile lnU amoonl' of damage
and cub llolen froiu lbe offtces 91
Co~mrn ~, 11142 Teller Ave.
Depotles said. !he office.area appeared
lo have been · thoroughly searched by
burglaro who emptied doors and !Ueo of
lheJr contenla and dumped them on lhe
lloor. ' ,.
n~ry. the Orange County of!Ice · !s
located in . SUite 221, The City Finanol&I
Center, Oranke.
· -The best hours are 8:30 · a.m. to 10
a.m. and 3 p.m. to · I p.m.' Wednesdays
· arid Thursdays and as aoon be.fore April
u ·as possible. There ate-personn,et on dU-
, ty to aaslst Spaniib-speaktng citl!ens.
· -Two booklet.S: "Tu Guide for Small l!Ustness" and '\Yqur Federal ~
; 'tax" can. 'be. )llrCha.sed tOr .75 ceata: •at
any post. office. 1
' -Requem for bulk suppUM .of.farms
must be sefit to Tax· Forms, P.O, Box
1711, Los Angeles; ca!H. 90053. · '
"I Would like to streu," Bittmann.lald,
"lha t IRS peraonnel are not permlttedt(Q
actually prepare tax ·retumJ for,cttllenl.
We will all!wer any que.stiom 'YOU may
have lo enable you lo' preparo a corriitl
return." •
I/Arm· ·ht•ze , Sltillday,: •Jed, .cllo1\11>.f close of ~.1'eb.,4, the~~ine·for ~II.lo sal~~ den1e. cloiida tear i.gistration.
o1 smoke. · , 1 • , Robert Cozens, DMV director ooted •Y!J'ba. ~ ~ ba~ ~~ lhat all bUlings sent • to ca!lfomla llf:;i.,. ~~ 1wd' and"ilaws motorists contain instruclions for maUlng
~anipµs .Par:k Idea Offered
T,~;~~1t.lpktiy." .,. .. " ~nll to save registrants.a trip tot.he xea~~wsw,"!:":i.:;::ifO: · ~:.: !~v:~:; 0111009 in 0r.... San. Clemente High. Seniors Give Vp 'Quad' Vse
1111en • On Ille daol:,aw•lened u1 " · , • reJat.ed. a. 70&. .~>te coul~ mieu, th. Coubty. Tiiey are located aHbe follow~ Friction over lht uae of 1 "ienlor.t-For 11111 zeasoi>;b.oenlor clan decld-The 11udents l1ope to oblaln funds for
•llio~a '~~ ~· Wd q~.io put pn ; .ICldrMstl: oaly-" area al San Cltmenle' Hlah Scl>ool ed to-~~ and lr8nsform It loto the project through contrlbullons from ·~ 'w'ldn _~ );;.& 'iea .. 1M no W. 19th St ••. eo.ta M~; lOI W. ll!ilhl 1e,1d to,;'.tbe davoloplnent <ta com-a ~,:~~headed by afudenl , campus oraanaatlons, vario\11 fund.-rala· baJ~'l111/Q6dllltw~' , • . Clnada, San Clemente; 1iOG JackaoD ... pus part. , councO.....,.. Mlh'Dlrnham and Mike 1ng 1CUvltie1 al lhe school.
, ,. ,,. ..L ·, ' ~;iQ City; U!O E. 111 St., Santa.Alla Sludeata' frondbe ICllool will preoenl Ciitni\iUL TWy baYe formed a oommittte Contribuloil•"'ould be noled on a corn-Ja:I•' G~~ Be~omg' ' ~ wit.a~ P~ ~~le plan~ Jo . IM!ee• of lht CIPlll!lnO ' tt :io ·-1o help. memontlon plaque. •
....., • CCI • reatsritJon are: , Unltler Scbool DiJtrlcl 1~ lonJ&bl'a 7:JI Landwpln0ian1 lhc!ade planthlg new The slud~ls plan lo use ~udellt la1*' :~ .Now .Yw;1 -111!1 .:y..ny Vnlt!.'d caJU11f1s;.~ ~ El,,Toro o'cloc~ in<etJn& In ~· SchOOl' Caa>!f· grasa~ cover an area of 12.166 oquare wherever possible and Ideas from llio
.,.. "'-~ •tandlnl·l'<l<inl41IY-.f >al . '1lolld,,Yluna · Banlt.or Amerlolt, tnao '~. , !eet.'pantlngp••nbnlllt..-u.;irea'~ scbool'lorilamentalborticultureclass. ~ MDI., Id bl. Baa CIMt-1-Ulls LIDCoill. •'Avenue at ~ St'rtel, · '1'0r ....,al felll'I Ille ~ lw bad a and adcllng tnt1. ,. 1 II tent>.tlve plans are approved, ll)e ~::;;.-:~c:--;:';... ~ii.,.~~S. :.~~~Be= ~~.ciu:;;;:ua;•.::~f°!.,~ ~~~;.~ = ~ f=~per~I~~;'°~~
II. Ille 1'olllty ""1t pllltn aalf Iha! u MriaoC. Bank, 10422 Ganlen Grove crowdiJll a\ lhe. ICl)ool hlil ,made .,,. yarda of COllCl"Ole Ins~ the qUlll, final · plans and draw bigs lo lhe IC/1091 <JC'~ j¢oy--bad -Pied Bl'ld. Garden Grove; Dant of America, !otct..W-ot lhe "l<i>lorM!l11' Nie dll· relluildlna lhe e'al\ wall, aniJ lhe poftlble boanl by Jan. II. The conslnictlon wbuld a. _,..tlbas &hlct-lllo Nit of a6o Ctntral Ave., Lo Hatira and Dant of licuJ~ II not lmpoMlble, accorilllll \0 a reconsb:llcllan of !be prtl<lll top c:overlac ~ March I and 1ctual lanclsc1plng
~.it~ ~ America, -H. Tllstln Avt., a.a.. 11udett body -ltlee. or lhe quad. would btaill Aptil 15.
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President
ToPreeare
For Sato
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of 11141 ~ 'li.t Sl•H
President Nixon was scheduled to ar-
rive at the El Toro ~CAS at about 7:30
o'clock tonight to begin preparations fgr
the fifth of his awnmit meetings wlOt
world leaders -talks late this week·ln
San Clemente wlth Japanese Prime
Minister Eisalru Salo,
Tho President obvioualy ,.W . arrll'e
with a retinQt of ·aldtt and advlsen, bUt
Mrs. Pat Nixon, who nearly 1lwa11 ac>
!'JIDP8l1lel lhe Ollel Execlltlve we; wm ·
not be on hand.
The Firs! Lady fl Oii • Wfltl'1 four.of
Mrica. :. . .
The arrival lonlgbl will be folJowod by
another imporlanl one late Wednesday
night when lhe Prime Mlnlstet arrives
at the same alrfJeld, a~ Will •o doubt
be greeted !hero by Mr. Nixon.
Alt<r resting overnight at t h e
Newporter IM Mr. Salo and his aides wUI
begin lhe IWO<lay round of talks at ll)e
Western White House in San Clemente.
White House, tpokesmen have not
detaUed the euct .substance of the topics
lo be di.!cussed, but Washington writers
have speculated U..t tile conferences will
deal with recent U.S. economic poUcles
which have bit bard at Japan'• Importa nt
picture, plus lhe Taiwan sltuatk>n In tha--
Unlted Nations and lhe decision by lhe
Vlblte Houoe lo launch trips to Peking
ai>d•Moocow later this 1ear.
. All, !hose American declalons bavt
cauaed some grave concern 1n Sato's
homeland.
The White House has yet to give any
details for lhe welcome ceremonies for
.'the prolocol-<ODaClous Japaneoe delega·
Uon.
A motorcade through San Clemente ha1
. been mentioned, but not eonfinnecf.
Treasury Secretary John Connally was
"JlOC!ed lo jotn lhe President In San
Clemente lo• participate In lhe two days
of lalka ·with Salo, cbarlcterized as
11atrictly bualness."
'llte label Jn dlplomallc parlance means
lhlll ceremony and lavbh welcomes will
lie kept al a•minlmwn. ·
The aact duration ol Mr. Niaon's first via~ or lht y-ar lo Lo·Caaa PacUlca bas
-been IJIDOW1eed.
0r .. ,.
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Weadaer
The aklM aloof lbe Oranp .
Coast should be moo11y fair !Oday :
and Tuesday but llrong, gusty
norlheaal wlnda lhould bedn. blow.
Ing today 81d lbroqb 'Maday.
Highs should be 70 wtlh lows near
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INSIDE TODAY
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Dr. G. J. "Pete" Fielding. 37·year-old the aecond year of oper1Uon tor the new
UC Irvint profu10t !Oday wu namtd'. COUnty l'ru1lt Dlllrlct.
1_,..1 !lllftll~ ol t\IO Ollnc1 C®nt,. ~ "Thalilc iiu ~fr'/ 'much," tqe UC! pro-
Transit "l>lstrlt:t. fessor laid'L Ott direct.ors Wlltn'.hl1 ap-
Oi.strict directors selected Dr. f ielding polntment was announced J.hla morning.
from a field of more tha n 30 candidates "I look forward to thi! fine opportunity to
after two months of nego tiations. ffe Ir)' to impc:ove rapid transit in Orange
N:sumes the ,25,000 a year post on Feb. County."
J, Since 1965 Dr. Fielding has been engig~
Dr. Field ing holds a PhD from the ed In research and teacJUng on urban
University of California at Los Angeles in pollcy problem.s with emphasis upon
geography. transportation.
His selection marked the beg lnn1og of He 1al~ in an interview this mornlng . .
PO W's · Mother
Dissati$fied
With Answers
' DUNEDIN, Fla . (AP) -The mother or
n ,American ··prisoner of war in North
Vietnam has expressed dissatisfaction
With the response to a question she posed
I> President Nixon and says "the Preli·
dent does not intend to withdraw ·frorn
'fletnam ever.
"':"This means our boy1 wiU never come
flome/' Mrs. Gerald A. Ga!Uey said Su_n.
«ay. "A good many families (of
prisoners) think the President is u.slng
ftiteir sons as an excuse to stay over
there."
Mrs. Gaitley 's son, 27-year-old Navy LL
Mark Gaitley, was shot down on a
mission over North Vietnam in August
11163.
Dan Rather, CBS correspondent who
conducted an hour-Jong televised in-
&erview with the President Sunday night,
Po,!:ed one quesllon which he said came
Crom Mn. GaiUey.
She.inquired whether the United States
laked the North Vietnamese if they ~~Ould release the prisoners Ln d
tuarantee safety of withdrawing U.S.
'forces in exchange for a declared pullout
deadline.
,."Nixon replied that the North Viet·
namese rejected such a propasal.
· Mrs. GaiUey said she doesn't "believe
ftie President answered the question I
posed."
·':Nixon's response, she said, showed that
·~e have never negotiated in Paris
1ertou1ty for the releee ()f prlsone!'B.
~ 0 If we wouJif ju.st ask the question, we
would open up negotiation! never ()pened
before," Mr!. Gaitley said. "I would in
~ way endanger our position just to ask
e question. Thls Is the crucial question
onceming the opening of negotiations."
1 She aald the question was nevt,t uked
•t the Paris peace ttlks. . · ' ~ "It'• a question ·many or uS wanted to
isle: the President. But we have not had
ili....,t toJnJ1lµn!CaUons with the 'J!resl· ~ent, ()nJy with lesser members of. the ad·
)ninistralion," she said.
; Mrs. GaitJey said she had tried
Jlwnerous Umes for a personal visit or
J>hone conversation with Ni1on, but was
~!ways refused.
~ She said she learned her son was a
prisoner when other POW1 released in
ftugust 1969 reported seeing t h e
lieutenant.
Nixon said he raised the POW issued
»vith Soviet foreign minister Andrei
Gromyko and that presidential adviser
Henry A. K1ssinger discussed it with
Chineae Premier Chou En·lai.
. When the full record is published, Nix·
on said, "our lady from Florida, and
others, will recognize we have gone the
extra mile."
Key Men
Henry Kissinger (foreground)
and Ronald Ziegler are among
key planners for President
Nixon's historic trip ~o Red
China during the last week in ·
February. 'Kissinger is · Presi·
dent's advisor on national se--
curi.tj· a(fairs, Ziegler is presi·
dential press secretary.
From Pagel
ASSEMBLY. ••
at perpetuating themselves in offi~e."
The veto overrides effort was the first
item of business as the lawmakers
returned to their desks after just two
weeks of rest.
·Then, the 8()..member Assembly and 40-
membet Se11ate had to formally adjourn
the D~embe.r special session on reap-
portionment.
~ llnally; the JegislatUJ'e ~ould get
around to organization of the.1912 i:egular
session with the Democrats in control, 42·
37 and one vacancy in the Assembly and
at·li in the· Senaie " i • f l-1
Hcirtman Baby
First in County
For New Year
Michael John Hartman, age 3 days , is
"frosting on the cake" to his prbud dad.
The Costa Mesa lad was born at 12:03
a.m .. J2.11.I, in Hoag Memorial Hospital
to become Orang'e County 's first baby of
1972.
At 20 inches, seven pounds and eight
ounces, he also became the first born of
Mr. and Mrs . John Michael Hartman, 682
W. 18th St., Costa Mesa.
John Hartman didn't spend· the. m:ld·
night houri' pacing the hospitil ha11~ayt
like most new J>Wpas. He Was ln the
\
Transit
that during the p11t year he bu bttn ae>
U)-. In a pro1ram 11 UC! designed to
train atro1J>1<e eogineen for urban °"'
CllpttioQJ, .f
On J>Ublle ldmlnlstration, the doctor
said: ''As a membe r of the Graduate
~boOI of AdmJnlstratlon at UCI, I ant
fainJUat with the theories oC human
behavior as' lJ'ley 11pply to urban , educa-
tion. hospital and b u s i n e s s ad·
ministration,"
Dr. Fielding has pu blish.ed books con·
ctm1ng the role ol poUtlcal Influence in
I
dot.nnlnlO( ~· lllld ."'t d with the
d,rnam!cs ol clllua In ~ Ill tr~DlpcirtaUon piilpilnc. . ' , ·
He uld ,that llnce 1161 be b.a~ .On·
ducted a series ' of studies for the
Callfomia Tranaportatlon 4ctncf on
alttmatfve •tratqiea 'ftlf ~ .. lrr
volvemerit in transportatloti'Jfµdfe's .
At UCI he teaches a three course se-
que1tte Jn urban pollcy. He ls aJso a con.
tri butor to the interdiscipJ1naey program
at UCI in which computer systems are
used tor in1tructlonaJ purpo1e1.
Heist Nets $1
The new transit dlstrict a:eneral
manaa1r bold• a joint appointment In the
Gradllatt School fll Ailmlnlltratton and' lo
associated wiµ1 lhe program ~ n
Environmental )ilanagement sponsored
by the School or Engineering.
Dr. Fielding is a native of New Zealand
and a naturalized citizen o( United States.
Berore coming to this country he at·
tended the University of Auckland In New
Zealand where he received Bachelor'•
and Master's degrees.
At the..,resent time he serves as a con-
sultant to the clty of Comp((ln in Los
Million
Suave Thieves Loot Posh New York Hotel
NEW YORK (UPI ) -Four suave, pro.
fessional thieves invaded the Pierre Hotl!I
where Mrs . Richard NiXon staya o'n her
New York visits and stole more than Sl
million worth of jewels and cash.
The thieves gained entrance to the
hotel by posing as late-arriving guests
early Sunday. They proceeded to handcuff
19 persollJ, including three guests, and
rifled through the hotel's safe deposit
boxed using the guest register as a guide to the most lucrative boxes
Police confirmed Sunday ;ti,ght that $1
million in jewelry and $5,000 in cash were
taken by the armed thieves who arrived
and left the hotel in a limousine.
Police said the victims asked not to be
identified.
Among the residents of the hottl1,wl)Jch
Includes condominium apartments which
sell for $250,000 to $300,000, were former
New York Mayor Robert Wagner.
President Nixon had his 1968 post-elec4
tion headquarters there and Aristotle
Onassis once maintained an apartment in
the hotel.
Police and hotel employes gave this ac·
count ol the robbery :
About 4 a.m. two men emerged from a
limousine carrying suitcases. They in-
dicated to a security guard that they had
reservations and wanted to check in. The
guard opened the door, normally kept
Jocked over night, and the two bogus
Nobody to Help
Woman Tells of Trek iii Snow
GORMAN, Calif. (AP ) -Stanley
CUiver had heart trouble, asthma and
emphysema. He kept an oxygen tan'k in
his tiny trailer. With it be and his wife,
Georgina, felt secure.
Eight days ago snow started falling in
the Tehachapi Mountains north of Los
Angeles. Six feet of it snowed in the
Culvers' car. They had no telephone.
"Wednesday morning the oxygen ran
out," recalled Mrs. Culver, 49. At 11 :30
a.m. CUiver, a PJ,year~ld retired
mechanic, told her, "I can't breathe." A
few minutes later he was dead.
Mrs .• Culver began lookinJ: for help
she didn't get for days.
"I got out a ah~t and painted 'Help' on
It in big letters and put it on the roof of
the trailer," she said. "Helicop\e{!H:JS·
ed over many times, and '11 lf~ tor
help. f even tried signallrig them i night
with a flashlight.
''No one would stop to help me.
"By Saturday I couldn't stay any
longer. I'd been there four days with him
on the bed. The snow had melted down a
bit. J put •on my heavy boots. a ski coat
and gloves. and took a.shov~I to help me
keep my balance, and started toward the
road."
Jn 3 ~ hours, Mrs. CUlver trudged l'h
miles through four.foot drifts lo the two--
Jan"e Gorman Post Road. There she found
an emergency phone, but it didn't work.
Two miles down the road she saw
tourists playing in the snow.
"I must get help," she told the first
man she came to. "My husband is dead
back in oor trailer." She said the man
pointed to figures in the distance making
a snowman and replied, "I can 't help
you. The children are playing."
"After that, r simply wouldn"l ask
anyone else," Mrs . Culver said. "I could
hear the childre'o playing. I was afraid
somebody else would tell me no.
"So I put out my thumb and tried lo
hitch a ride ... I just kept plodding
along."
As she walked two more miles down
the snowy road, drivers ignored her
outstretched thumb.
Six hours and nearly six miles after she
started, Mrs. Culver reached a
restaurant and called the local deputy
sheriff. The deputy was gone -on duty
at the Rose Parade in Pasadena -but
his wile drove Mrs. Culver to a relative's
house in Gonnan. Nobody was home, but
neighbors let her in.
Backers Enter Nixon
In March . JVH Primary
·' guests and their "chauffeur " entered the
hot.el.
The phony chauffeur drew a gun and
held the guard while the other two also
drew guns and rounded up 16 hotel
empfoyes-guards and maintenance men
-and herded them into the hotel's ex4
eeutive offices . The hostages were
blindfolded and gagged and handcuffed.
Three guests who happened downstairr
also were taken hostage and put with the
employes.•
The bandits then read the guest
register, picking out single women or
couples as the most likely choices, police
said. Using a chisel or a punch, the
thieves opened about 50 sare deposit box·
es out of 208 in the hotel vault.
Nearl y two hours after they entered,
the thieves left unobserved. A hotel
employe broke loose and called police.
A hotel official said guests wintering in
Palm Beach, Fla., the , French Riviera
and other resorts began telephoning the
hotel shortly after news of the robbery
was broadcaJt to determine if they were
victims.
The case was turned over to a "major
crime squad" which still is investigating
a $15,000 robbery at the nearby Drake
Hotel on Christmas Eve. Chief of Detec-
tives Albert Seedman said the same
gang may have been responsible for both
robberies. The FBI joined in the m.
vestigaHon .
l'ro111 Page l
REPAIR ..•
Grove meeting to puncture tires and in-
flict damage on their customers' ears.
Leuth•rdl said he Was. awalting trial on
drug charges at the time he was in·
te~iewe~ by the district attorney's in·
ve.stigator in . 1970 a'.nd , that the in·
vestigator promised to help him on those
charges in return for his statement.
He insisted under close questioning
from Stenton that the investigator had
"invented" the allegations and that he
had cooperated to avoid what he felt at
the time would be a state prison term of
five years to life if he was convicted on
charges of possessing and selling mari-
juana.
Leuthard named Ralph Carney, 29. of
32852 Calle San Marcos, Sa11 Juan
Capistrano as the manager of the San
Juan Texaco station.
He identified R. C. Weisner, 28, of San·
ta Ana, as the manager of the San
Clemente station at which he was also
employed.
Stenton has named Stanley Davis, 32, ol
1086 San Pablo Circle and Jerry Kendall,
35, or 969 Sonora !load, both ol Costa
Mesa with ~ward Camey, 2'1, of 208$2
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Anieles County. J1e is trylng . to
delttmioe aJtematlve freeway locations
and rall rapid transit rout.ea ~ccept1ble to
that community. He said he Is also work4
Ing on the development of local bus
routes a few of which hnve already been
adopted by the clry.
"Presently I am conducting a stud~ on
communjty response to the rev(tahzed
Santa Ana city bus system. The research
11ttempts to analyzt attitudes oo bus
trav el and reasons why people do or do
not use the system ." the doctor ex·
plained.
U,I Tt""'°" Breaks Barrier
l1rs. Jane Currie, who crashed
the sex barrier to become the
first woman postal inspector,
relaxes during an interview.
Eight other women are now in
training - a course which in·
eludes karate and firearms.
Esther Willia~' ..
Mother Succumbs
In Capistrano
Funeral services were conducted in
Santa Ana today for Mrs. Bula Williams,
the 86-year~ld mother of former film
star and champion swimmer Esther
Willlams. The woman died last week in a
San Juan Capistrano convalescent home.
Mrs. Williams was a retired Los
Angeles school teacher and was the
founder or the South West Counseling
Service in Los Angeles.
The rites were conducted at t :30 p.m.
in Blower Bros. Mortuary and burial fol-
lowed in Penis Valley Cemetery.
Mrs. Williams was a resident of San
Juan for the past three years and a resi·
dent ol . Southern California for the past
5Z years .
North Vietnam asserted today the on·
ly way President Nixon can free U.S.
priS()ners of war and "get out of the
swamp In Vietnam" is to abandon hopes
of military victory and "negotiate ser-
iously at the Paris conference on
Vietnam.''
delivery j.qpln cheering ·his wife on, CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -fetltions
coaching lrof!' the sidelines , in what be ' were liJed today to get President Nixon's calls "prepared delivery."
"We took eoU111es in it," he explained name on the ball ot for New Hampshire's
formal ballot.
If t-be President does not allow his
name to be listed fonnaUy as a candidate,
the 14 delegate and 14 alternate delegate
candidates would not run pledged but
wou14 ~,listed a.s. favorable to Nixon.
. Shell Harbour Drive, Huntington Beaoh
iis the three principals in the alleged cort-
spiracy.
She was a member of the Christian
· Science Church of Sun City.
The statem,ent issued by North Viet·
nam's repre~ntatives to the conference
was an attempt to respond to ·the
atatementa made b)i N'i:IO!l Sunday nij"bt.
DAILY PILOT
~ mMT PUll.ISHIXO .COMP'AH"r
Rtl.•rt N. Wood ,, ....... .,.,, . ._
J•clr 1t. Cirffty Vb ,,.., ..._.. 0-tl ~
n .... k' .. .,a
Editor
n0111n A. l>lV?•!ne
......... ld1f0r
QerTt1 H. loot Ricli1rd' P'. Nin ~ MllllD1n9 1.fi!Ofl
this morning. "I told her when to push Republican presidential prefer e n c e
She didn't use an anesthelic and was able primary March 7.
to see the boy when he came out." Former Gov. Lane Dwinnell, head of a
The mother , Jeanne, said the prepared citi zens group campaigining for Nixon,
, way was "fantastic " and a lot quicker filed the petitions to enter the President's
and easier than she expected. name in the nation's ear\lest primary .
Both mother and son are doing fine to-Dwinnell, reporting he had more than
~day at the hospital. John said his wile 1.000 signatures from each of the state's
should be home Tuesday, but added .,she · ~wo congressional districts ,..... twice the
·was healthy enough to leave two d.aYs num~r required -prediC_ted the f>resi·
· Igo." dent w_ouJd win the contest "very ban·
, 1 John is' triple happy to have ac .. r d.ily." , ~ · ,
complished the birth in the "prepared''· Dwinnell said he had not conferred With
eiriamer, be the first in the county and lo "tht White HoUse ·before .fillJtf -tht _peii-·hay~· A boy which he wanted and call! . tion! but was j~prming Nix9n· m a letter
-••I!Osting on the cake." that his name had been filed. -
Doctors, after listening to the unborn Nixon will have 10 days after the pri·
baby's heart beat had predicted a girl, mary filing period ends Thursday to
but they guessed wrong. keep or remove his Dame from the
John wasn't even sorry he missed a
DwlnneJJ said he ha4 "mixed feelings"
about the President's decision to do no
campaigning.
"As the one re~po~ibte' for. the cam.
paign in this state • .one 'would like kl have
, one 's c;an,didate on the gro\lnds,11 Dwin·
nell said. ·.
He said 111.! group, likes "very seriously
. any ,opposition,'' to NixOfl's candidacy,
including the challenges .of Republican
Reps, .Paul M<;j:!Oak~y·,ol Cal~o111I~ and
. John, .Uhbrook or <ll>io1 but Preiliclod !lie
pr~stdept:wo\lld Win l\<lodily. " . '•
Jn the 1961 primary, Nixon, a formal
candidate, received 77.S percent of the
Republic~ votes against 10.8 percent for
New York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller.
He and prosecution witnesses pave
stated that the three men controlled a
chain of 11 service stations ranging from
Seal Beach to San qemente and ..,.ue
responsible for autq datnage that cost
motorists "many thousands or dollars ."
Also named in charges that were later
contained in an Orange .county Gra'nd
Jury indictment were Christopher Enri-
quez. 25, of 7592 Volga Drive, and Henry
Castonguay, 211 of 7661 Commi>dore
Drive, both of Huntington Beach and
David Conchola, 22, Jf 6000 Garden Grove
Blvd., We~tminster~
If is· alleged that the nine defendants
were Involved. in the deliberate destruc-,
tioh '.ol .tlfes,-sla1hing .of hoses ancf the
apray_ing of. ··shock absorbers in a way
de!lgned to convince the motorist that his •bOc'~ leaked and 1hould be.replace!f.
Besides her famed daughter, Mrs.
Willia.ms leaves two other daughters,
Maurine. Sellstrom and June Sherwood.
Other survivors are a son, David
WUliarns; a brother, Lester Gilpin; tt
gr11nttehildren and 19 great·
grandchlldren.
Frien<t., · whQ wis.h may make con·
tributionJ..i':,'t Mrs~ Williams' memory to
the Soutb Weit CoWl!e1Jng Service of Lo!
Angeles.
t• ' ·, ., I
Disillnsienment .... . ~ '. . ·' ' . .
Could 'Be Cause
Of Medical Suits
I.et .. IMc• Office
222 Fo1•1t """•11u• ILIZtt •dclt1u: P.O. I•• 6~&, 92651 s..c-.....Offlc•
IOS Nett• El Ctmlo• a...1. 92671
. C!tW Offlul
qitit ,._.. a.Ill Wttt M """' ·~-_._.., U13 ,,.._,. "°"'-"'"' kwi"'P--..aii 1111$ ~ 1ow1 .....
1971 tax deduction by three minutes. He's
~n electrical engineer at Hughes Aircraft
in Newport Beach. The cou ple was mar·
rled AprU 4, 1970.
Caspers' Son
Faces Pot Rap
Army Off!cer, Wife Missing
' ., I
Foul ·Plciy Siisp~cted iii Pair's Disappearance
sAid;A! . ' ,'B.<liJWl.1. ru P r i
Disillusionment by Americans led to
believe that medical science can dD
almost anything may be a factor in the
rlalrig fneldence ol malprlctiot suits, 1c-
C:O!'lling to a fe<lcntl olllflal.
The, capabl,lltles , or mOdem ,medicine
ire "ballyhooed to the point where p1·
tlents expect miracles from lhelr phyal·
Kirkland T. Caspers. 18. son of Ora nge
m.n.v PNIT. :n ... ,.. • _... ... County Fifth Districl Supervi!or Ronald tt.....,,.._Ji,i!Wblltl>tf ••u,. .. c.,., ~ W Ca I r . ch '~ ·~" .. ~,..te _.'-tw L"""'' ... "" . spers. s acmg . argcs,o._..,.,csess· ....,, ••di. ~1• Mtw, ~""'~ ing mariJ'ua.na toda~ fOJloWind" blt arrest· Pa!rttM "•llf'V, S~ C~f •"&
tt-..... ...,,..,.rt, •ior. •1• -Sunday morning y Newport Beach
, .. ltnal «1'1111!1. "'"''"'' ttrillllftt plflll " po11·-. ., Q Wttt .. , lfrttf, CO.I• IMM, '""
'""'''' c714, '4MJll Cllspers, a rtsidenl of 133 Avt.nlda Cl ..... A4••hlni '41·1•7t Pelayo, San Clemen~e. was a.rre~ted 11t s.-C...... NI ""•twh: 6:to a.m, wh.ilt 1deeplng in a car near his
t...,....,,4,t..fUt famUy'a Lido Isle home. Police assert
i..,.. 1N11i Al ••••• 1 t 1 they found about one ounce or marijuana ,...,~ .. 4t+t4" in Caspers' car whlle he was removing £WI!,.. "7t, 6--Ont r*""' vehicle reaiatraUon material from the ~'-.,. ..., '"''"· nrw:,,..tttn.. I • .. ,.,.... •ttw .,. .._,IMlnMll "'"• g ove corripartment. :=-.-.,•= ..::.."":' .,... ,.. Harbor Juqiclal Di.strict Court Judge ~~ ~ l:."" "":.' -Ca!vio T, Schmidt aulhorlud his rele11a :' ~-Q';'I....:..,,--.,_ ... ~z; -: 1'1P--~nd&J. '1!1Wning .•a ~It 9!f'I -,., .... ,. -;w,11 • . ~ollance. ~ ll'lu be arrtlgntd ---------:.~-.---·-•• latet-thir'weet, ·........ t ·~. " .... .. ~
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JACKSOJ:IVJLLE, Ala: (UPI)· -
Author!Ues -..111 SundOJ< they ••-t foul
play in the disappearance 15 days ago of
·a. promising young »rmy officet 11nd hls
wife, a fdtmer tieaUty...quHO, while 0011
holiday tri~ -· .
Lt. Thomts·l\endfli )>l!Uflpt; ~f, aOd
his wile Susan, 12, Miss !5etawaft·g.~ 11167,
Wert last seen"tt 8:3() ~.m. (>tc.• Jj when
they bought $2.80 worth .at IUO!ille ,_1,a
service station In the RabbUtow:n com-
munlty Just east of herf!._: . • .
Phillips had orrlciaUy checked out at
nearby Ft McClellan at 12:01 a.m. aft.er
attending a party on base and the couple
plaMed to vi.sit his parents tn lAurtl,
Del.
Neighbor• seld the couple packed tlieir
blue and whtll Camaro coqvt(\tblt ind
·• left. They have been traced only-11 i., as
RAbblttoW!I, where I Wvil:I atatlon a~
teodarit reroen\bered their'ltop as he . She said Phillips' superiors have al!O eians," said Ell Bernzweig of the Otplr.t·
opened for. the day. · ;.. . discounted the theory that the }'Ol,U11 of· ment of Health, Education and .Welfare tn
Th nd ~ h fictr deserted the army. a repoct lss~~ SWlday on • conference • •rt11l'. a stat'-. •,~pers ave con-"Anybody who knows him doesn't ori mal15taclll\t", , . · · due~ ~ .£f0und ana •.lr search In an believe that is what happened," ahe'aajd. ••nieh . whth , somet'bm,':1oe1 wrong:
area from Ft. McC!lila~ and Jacksonville "They just count that completely oul HI. when there Is a mal6ocurrtl)ce or a
· ea~t' :..the Georg , 1ln• and north to commandin& officer coosidered him an therapeutic misadventure, ..... Bernzwel' ar · iihOOga, Tenn , oulltanding oUlcer," 1atd, "the POJbllc tends to 111ume negli·
o · U!eful ctu., !have bttn fOWJd Mrl. Phillips' younger brother uld he c••'-"' ta Involved and some comJl<OSA· ~ aul.hortUes said. 1 ' • wu sure they Would bave told the min'• Uon ls due/• ' •
, ;'We're kind of reluctant to believe It elderly parenta If Ibey had decided to Tht report °" a tbreO>dlY conlerenct ~""an accldenl," uld !jeilon J. Levins, cancel the week·l•Di trip home for on malrpractlce probltmt was Issued by
Mrs. Phllllps' 11·yell'Old brother, a blih Chriltmu, the Center f()r tbe Study or Democratic
school senior. The l'OIJlh accompanied lllJ Tht couple met while 1he wao the IMtituUooa, •
par•l\IS, Mr. and Mr•. Howard Levins of relcnini Miu Delaware when Pbllllps. Don11a Mcllonlld. tdltor oMhe report,
Media; Pa., here to help In the Jo. home from college for t vlJlt, waa ltked Hid th• DJllft topic diJ"ll~~m"' the ef·
v .. ugallon to eacort MiJS Dtlawue to homecoming fecU•ene11 of th• P,..... ty system
• "We 1ttj that , we ,hay, ruled out the ll'f!lvltlts 1t the hflh lchool Wiim h1 ' IOf ~I Jt~:cn;~ ~ lb~y
· l>OISJblllty.ol an uildiiOO'/lr,""' accJdenUn .• ba4 been an athle'.a ""1 clua 'l'llec!Jc. rakll pou •
lh• mat Uld Col. Role litaalltr, Pubbc · torl1n. • • ·• !'mao..., '11>Ch"n '!'>f•lllt °" Social
lnfl>rmatlon Offi<ler at n. Mdlelllll. 1 Tiley were marril!d OCl I, 1'10. IJ' lt!Jaranot.
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THE DAILY PILOT TEAM • • •
BEST IN THE LEAGUE. FOR
ORANGE COAST SPORTS NEWS
If you 're,any kind of an Orange Coast area sports fan , our
'home teem ' covers you r '-home t eam ' and it's a simple fact
that fh e DAILY PILOT covers Orange Coast sports Detter
t lian any other newspaper aelivered in the Orange Coast
area
e Complete Statistics
e Staff Photos of Action Where It Happens . e Exclusive Reports on Home and 'Away Games
Here's Th"e Team That Produces Jlie Real Fan Fare For ;The
Orange Coast 'Area:
GLENN WHITE
Sports Editor, .columnist, covers tho
pros and often reports on 'hot' teams
on t~e prep, junior college and college
' (;ircuits~
CRAIG SHEFF
He'1 your man in the pr••• box:
et l'unior college tont11t1. Spe ..
cl1 attention js focused on
Orange Coest, Golden Wett
ond Saddlebock,
HOWARD HANDY
His primary beet is UCI, where
h1 covers all sports 11etivitie1,
·plus other t rees of local in·
t erest including golf.
ROGER CARLSON
He's t~• DAil Y, PllOT's P••P.
.s ports )P.•cialist. Fourteen high
1chool1 •r• on hie r•gul•r beat,
Ht often ~ovtr1 other11 foo.
PHIL ROSS
Sport1 features ind prep school
a ctivities are his specialty. He
wes the DAILY PILOT's man at
Rams end Chargers treinin9
·c1mp1.
Plus Our Award-winning Photo 'Squad'
·LEE PAYN&
CltW l'Mtut•.,••
RICHARD KOEHLER
Shoff ..._._
Consistent winners in competition
among news photographers at the
county, state and national level ere the
photojou rnalists of the DAILY PILOT.
staff. They love • football game, bas•
ketboll contest, wrestling match -or.
•nything else that furnishes action for.
' their lenses. .When it comes to sports,
these are some of tho fastest shots
(and liest sliootersj in tho West.
PATRICK O'DONNELL
Follo w Our Team To Follow Your Team
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Mondoj, JillUI/)' l, 2q72 DAILY PILOT SI
.
Orange Coast Area Men in Servic~
Second Lleuten1nt Jelfrey Ord, calll.
N. Wllllan, ..., of Mr. and 1 Hla wlle, Rlleen, llves at
Mrs. Cllllord O. WlllJams of 11543 El Ray, Foontaln Valley.
1213 Bollut Ave., Colla Mesa,
hU been awarded silver wlngt
upon gr1du1tlon from U.S. Afr
Force navigator tralnlna at
Mather AFB,
Lieutenant Williams la being
assigned to MacDill AFB,
Fla., for Oylng duty with a
unit of the Tactical Air Com·
mand which prpvides combat
units for .alr support of U.S.
ground forces.
Army Private Tony L.
Smltli, oon of Mr. and Mrs.
Earl L. Smith, 6395 Lewis,
Long Beach, recently com-
pleted basic Army
Admini3tration course at Ft.'
!%
Marino Sergoont 6-(e G.
MWer, husband or M r a •
EUzabelb A. Miller of 9M1
Mad.lion Ave., Westmlns'ter,
wu awarded the Good Con-
duct Medal during ceremonies:
held at Marine Corps Air Sta-
tion (Helicopter), Santa Ana.
He recti\led. the Medal for
his exemplary service to the
Marine Corps over a three-
year period.
Coast Guard cadet, John F,
Russell, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edward G. Russell of 25.581
Charro Drive, San Juan
Capistrano, is on Christmas
leave from the Cout Guard
Academy, New London, Conn.
steve L I tiley, son or Mrs.
Doris A. Kelley, 51.2» Coke
Ave., La.tewood, recently wu
promoted to Anny Specialist
Four. He Js now ser\llng near
Wiesbaden, Germany, as a
mechanic In battery D, ~th
Battalion, lot Artillery.
'His falhe.r, Russell H.
Kelley, lives at 1653 Bimini
Place, Costa Mesa.
Army Specialist Four Allen
S. Lewis, son of Mr. and Mrs .
foreat D. Lewis, 112 Hunt·
ington St.1 Huntington Beach,
recently participated in a
yearly tank gUnnery qualilica-
tion test at the Anny Training
. \' ""'' "
Ground ln Gr a Ce n w oh r • raine A. Klloe. 5M2 Nordine
Germany. Drive, Huntington Be a c b •
He is a tank loader with CalU., Is asalgned to Ft. Ord,
Troop L, 3rd Squadron o( the where be is training under the
2nd Armored C a v a I r y modern volunteer Army Field
Regiment. Experlment. ·
Army Specialist F o u r Army Private P e t e r
Rlcbard J. Bobnboff, son of r.Ucbalskl. son of Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and h-1rs. Melvin W. Josef MI ch a Is k i, 6671
Bohnhoff, 9851 Bolsa Ave., 1.ielbourne St., Huntington
Westminster. recently was Beach, recentJy was assigned
assigned to the 120th Mililary to the 110th military ti0Uce
Police Battalion near Long compa ny. He is now servmg in
Binh, Vietnam. Korea , as a Security Guard in
Spec. Bohnhoff Is 11 n the company.
Armored Personnel Carrier ----'-----
Crewman with the batlalion's
Company C.
Army private Kenneth L.
Thompson, son of Mrs. L<ir·
Kids Like
To Ask Andy
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STLVANL\ COLOR TVM,ODEL SYLVANIA HOME ENTERTAINMENT
CENTER MODEL CL419Inlo!odl-'
otyle.111125" (di.If.mm.) Color Brli!ill.00"' .I
p1cmt11be ror tholmpost, bd&h!OK pl-•
"""'• Alo!/FM/Fl4-tunor/11nplllltt wlllt ~-
60 nt1a peok music po-. Sealed air llUlpeU•
~ou-ker l)'llem.
SYLVANIA PORTABLE STEREO JI.ECORD PLAYER MODEL EXP730
'Wltli chtacbablo air ..,_.Jon IP"ui,, aull>·
moUc: Quntable llld tlnttd 111111 oover.
I CL144lln ContemPOIU1111y1ow1t11111Ct26•
(dlaj. meu.) Color llrillllt 10ll"'plctu1no1"11·
"In tho new11c:tansuiar ahapo. Glbnlllr lOQTI&
eliusls with lhltanl PuJh-button Tunln( and -f ! :Perma-'Dnt control. 1
SAVE 5200
Only;~95
SAVE 510
Only 579.95
-
SAVE 5150
Only 5645
SAVE 530
'OnlYi 543995
Jn'tefll'ltt1 •H DepenublHtt1Since1947
• COITAMISA HUNTINGTONllACH
411 E. Seventeenth St. Laguna Hiiis Plaza llrookhurst It Garfield
'46-16M Oally •·•1 Sat. 9-6 137-313~···~:i1ys;~~~~11. 10-6 962~;;~ 10 ~~~ ::.·~~ 9.6 L~' T j-
JIADIO DISPATCHED fACTOllY '.AUTHOlllZfD TV & 'APPUANCE SEllVICE PHONE 541·3437.
IL TORO
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ZJ OAILY PILOT SC l.4ond1y, Jamiary l, 1972
Yo11r Itloney
Econo1ny Looks
Great f 01· 1972
BJ SYLVIA PORTER
In the grim spring or 19'/0,
when. both the stock ant;! bond
markets were crashin&. cor·
porailon bankruptcies were
aoaring and unemployment
was climbing, 1 met Paul
McCracken, chairman of the
Pmident'a Council of
Economic Advlstrs, at a small
dlnoer party Jn Washington.
Having flown Jn from New
York City that, vuy afternoon
just for tbe party, I was
thoroughly saturated w i t h
Wall SU..t's detpondeocy and
I tried to lmpresa upon
McCracken that a continuation
or the bloodbath in Wall Streel
could have a disastrous im·
pact on bw:lntss and cort-
1umer psycholot1Y.
McCracken 11.uned politely
but be argued in tum that
such painful developments
were essential U our galloping
inflaUon and irirlation
psychology were to be curbed.
Wbile be didn 't· actually cJe.
fend bloodbaths, baokruptcies
and joblessness, be didn't
demonstrate what I thouaht
waa appropriate concern about
them either. Finally, my party
manners iilipped a bit and I
blurted :
"What the hell do you want,
Paul?"
His face cracked into a
quick grin and he shot back :
"I want to be my suc-
cessor."
That quip effectively ended
our serloua es:c.hange and I
moved to another g r o u p
which, by coincidence, in·
eluded Herbert Stein, the man
President Nixon recmtly nam-
td to be McCracken's suc-
cessor.
Now, 11 1972. opens and
McCracken fades from the
Washington scene, his smart
crack turns out to be pro-
vocatively perceptive. For
McCracken did preside over
the nightmare economic-finan-
cial years of the Nixon ad-
ministration -three yelfs of
unmitigated disaster f o r
millions of Americans.
Now his successor will
preside over-a fourth year of
economic eipansio n -rising
production, sales and profits,
rising employment and
~ychecks, a falling rate ol
10bJessness and bankruptciea.
We would have to make just
about every mistake in and
out of the books to mess up
our economy in 1972.
The recovery which was so
sluggish in 1971 that it often
seemed nothing more than a
hiccup in the 1969-70 recession
is now gradually accelerating.
While some of the oplimistiC'
projections could well turn out
to be too bubbly, the blueprint
M~ f UlJtt,f;,
MOTOR HOMES
SALES • RENTALS
18 It. to 28 It.
UTE LINER
IALaOA-,ACE ARROW
,.,... Indoor Stor•9• (Limit-
Ml Tlrne Offer) With Your
Purch•"·
.0
N
.... ,
··~
Me,ADDIN
> ;
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IOINQI" C
558-3222
1411 S. VILLAGE WAY
SANTA ANA, CALIF.
. . . . ' .
Complete-New York Stock List
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Monday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchang~ List
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~ 24 · OAJLY PILOT Mond.,, Januory 3, 1972 •
30222 CROWN VALLEY PARKWAY AND HILLHURST IN lAGUNA NIGUEL
.
·11 loch O""'lthtv
•N.ft'l ...... 11.-......._,,,,,IJt,,.
•P.ftY•l .... 14-"'W-•••••• M.ft •N.ttW-11 .... ~~ $\,ft
,.11-.1119,_ ............
tough "'"Y' i. ·111,.·., o,._
l11ilt to gW.· ,._.. ol aervlce.
luy Ol'I• or a ........
Jumn Creme
Sandwiches
FAMILY FASHIONS at DISCOUNTS!
$6" Value! Deluxe
Striped Sport Shoes
~ for Men & Boys
s3a3
Feat1.re rugged 'tl~yl·
upper., 11on-1llp ..-.r ...
full c111hlo11 intol• with
cu1hio11 arch 1uppol't$,
podded IOflgue. 111
-·· & .,.,... 1i1n.
'2" Men's Acrylic
Knit Shirts
full faU.io11ed •hort
n-.t c.lors. Thrlf. '''"'' '""' '" $2 34 f)"l own Courtl•y
l11b.I. $.M.L
$2" Long Sleew ..
Women's Tops '·-,,..poly-
, •• & cotton bl•nd• $2 111. hi-style &hlrtt h1 33
.olldt,pri11h,ftriF*o
Slt .. 32-31.
; •3 9.a. Value! tontrol Mates
• f • . . . ,~:·! Control Panty &
·· · Replace•ent
' •
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Nylons
A1m!:t'$1.oo ·99c
ot Thrifty ·
CCM1tffl Mai. P*\l'W' ~ «Nitro!
poMy Witt. ,.ploe.Gble ioftf J.n,th
Jlyloro str.kh .tod.ing.._ Par1ty t lrdle
,_id .. colllfortabfe flt with 110 bind.
5-M-l •i1n 111 fo1hl0tt rhod.t.
•
$1 2'-lst Quality Muslin
Printed Pillowcases
• ltrHlty M•ltl-Color Prh1t
lrif qNlify Cotto.I 11101lin1 with
Pink, llv., Yellow & Muhio
color prinb. 42-36• 1!10 with
3" he111. Complet.iycolorfost.
'""Al"
Pack94c of 2
I Bttit
Buys I
s39• to s5v.,,_1 Beacon
. ·-1st Quality Blankets ........ .., .... '""""'' ,ri11b. ~ift. plaids,. ~ ~
1tripe11 h1polylldltf'1.·wryo11'~•
pol,..._, « ocryllc' fGbrla. Jtnt .
the right -ight f91' coltlfo.r1Gble
1leepi119 ORY ti-of Y"'· 72-90 ..
aln.. .. s..,per Valff"' •-11mettt.
37• ea. Hemm ..
Dish Towels
Polyester Fiii
Mattress Pads
. .
Reg. *3" Vinyl Shewer
Curt, Ins
With Rings Buy3,San23c
3:99c
SuP9M1b.orbertt •••
-•hod bl ... ched, ~
r-dy to UM. AJI lit
quality. luy 3 &.
-23c.
$347
• Twt11 Si11
• Polyester Filled
No1H11/orgo11lt fill
-n't Mlh of lu"'P·
Eloltlc. Anchor bond.
atcornlft.
• 5'171"F1ll Sl11 $1.41
$37' Cannon Montlcello
No Iron Print Sheets
$247
6~' cwtah• in prlnb or
tolidt co111plef9 with 12
colw to0rdlnoted ri"1•·
'2" cANNON. +) ~.
, .. Muslin Sheets
72x108" TwfR or
Fitted Bottom
Reg. s1 Children's
Spec-I lozenges
with 49c Matchbox Toy
. •t.49 Value!
Fut Temporary Relit! of
Mloor Sort Throat Pain
""' ,.,..., ....... ........ $ 2 3 9
,. .. ;_ 1h-I~ '"'-~""' tle,81
p•;~,._ -~1.,. ...,.~. "'•ble <l•r ... --;~w.. .....
p;~· quilt,, s1•• white cotton
muslins ••• firm·
Ir woven, smooth. la •
long wearing! • $4.79 Full Sia Flotor Fltto4 ............... $2."
• .... 2/$2.79 Metthl .. P1118wC•1•s •• 2 fer$1.H
55" Value!
Colorful Plastic
Molded Chair
Savo $343
$2.S6 · . -
Tou;lt polypropylen• plattlc
fllOld.d cJ,o1n Id.al for dlnl11;
,_, potlo, pool1tde or office.
In A¥OCade, Tangerl11e' Y•ll-••
$1. 98 Valuel Vl11yl
. Adheslwe
Shelf ll•lnt
1r'llrid•x12'1o!tt 111 choic• of d•· .
OlfM ........ ~ $109 1.., oil,..'"" ,., bit Tltrifty ....
ln91. •
Reg. sps to '1 50
Model Kits
Choose '""" z1,.. •" Nov.tty Ca", Minlcro~ Aitpla11• 99 Al.od•lt, and r.al· C
l1tic Aurorv Ta11k
Mod•ll.
SJ4"Value!
Encyclopedia
Book Case
•Walnut $999
Finish
Handto-& pradleal d011911 for
1tvdent'1 '°°""• d•n. 2la13•9•
111•. l!cuy to ou ... ble tM.
.,
fJHlreemser
•1•• s,..., ....... s
YourCIMlca
• :,~;~, l.M:~~j 99c
h.-4 .,.,_. • ..,
.i • flufftr ltw.
. "' ... ~-
Reg. 96• Bradley
Games & Puzzles
'u.1::rle1 for A11•• Yffr
12 to Gdult a11d Cltoic• gcslllftfor2to4 8 plGyen, age 4 to 6 C 12, ly Milton
Bradley,
Blue, Green-& Hot Colon
'1013 Metal
Foot Lockers
$596
Stni111 and m.rdy ~d fra1119
-'el foot lock.,, with .quo,.
on1I• bl11di111 ortd h""f dirty
cot'Mrs, •lnyl rtrop handle, fib,.
li11ing.
49~ Saf•tr Plus
Drain 19c Clea•r ·
.... *P'·JI'"•
Owen 9 c Cl Mr . ·
49:0.lws•tll••
re11et '3:$1 (IHMr I
•S.2JI Fill Sire FIJt 1r fittel $2.19
• 2 !If $1.71 M1tc~i11: Pillew Cl~
2 for 98c
Reg.52"~
Chewable
Vitamin C
1211·1nstantlead t
Camera Outfit
Bottle of 365
$J77
llllklnt load Mo#l-~ui~ eGc~:'d11: s9aa
film magicube and
-itt 1lrop.
'I" Quality
Household
Scluors
$J23
'i11e 1el-n 111delu••1H101"11!19nt
fer all-pu~ ltfftehold lllOo
Sav. 7.5c durlllf •l•I
Save
$2.11
t4ts Value!
Detect•
Bath S~ale
o.,.ndaltl•, OC>o
""'" e~''" $277 ef d•c•rator
..ion.
Reg. •2"-6 Qt •.
SeupPet
'"""••llrSln ''" -.._,. ., ....... _ ....... $J87 4'1r'lneceld__....,
er' Oroot •tlllry • ........
--
Compl•I• with
ottach1119nfl. Top
quality -gua,...
onle•d for 2
s1e:.1.,1 ... Tussy
,; "'}. Lip Riot
'~ Lipstick
$3.50 Valuel Dulany
Cleanslng Cream
ltjj $225
$0¥0 $1.2.5 Cl Jar Oft ::=: ~ulorry '1 d•IU••
a.cun. I oune..
Kid1 lo ... the
fla .. ara. Choo1e
Orange or L.1111111
flo¥Or 111 100 -0.
tobl.tL
SJ~ Voluel Shulton
DESERT FLOWER
Deodorant 50c
Choice of CNO• .,
roll-on. 011ce o y .. r
holf price M1¥in;1 Oft
Shuhon'1 doll;htfulty
1c•11tod d•odoront.
Sl.51 Spny D11-1r11t,
-41L,75c
Rewlon Natural Herb
Cleanser or Lotion
' • lf1ttnl fl1r~Sll1 Cl11111r.13·1L s22s
• Nat1nl Nt111 M1ilt1rt L1t1111l•t · ·
<
JANUARY CLEARANCE SALE! '
• RIJ. $J1" Record Cabinet ... : ......... •9"
• Reg. $)511 50 Pc. Stainless Flatware .. .,~.~
• Reg. 77• Wrought Iron Caiiflle Holaer .. 4: .·
• R8JI= *I*' L11CJ1'19rware Pieces ........ •"-~
, • "eg. $4" Twin tiiilf ~Susan ....... $3~
•Reg. *311 Bottle HOl: .............. •,2~
• $po Value! Alltllf!! Bottles ........... 'f!:.~
• Reg. •7» Decorator Clothes Hamper •• ~1:
• R191 ~I" Sofa Pillows .............. • 2 i*t
•Reg. '1'4 Deliliie Eyelashes ........ ~ ... 9.t~
• Reg. ¥7t1 G.E. Snoor Alann CIOCk ..... -'3:,::
} ...
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•• Lagu11a Heaeh
EDITION
••
T.,taY's F•••I ·
N.Y.S..._
•
Coast Youngsters Scor.e High on .State Tests,
, . . . • ~enls-.alone the Orange Coast
~ttd tbe.1r 1•bove·average
_._,,1uaance9(. t•?O by again acoring
1!!111,oa rt1'i.ltnt and achievement testa In rm.n.
Acconling ·to the recenUy re1tased
l'\llllts, the youngs~rs scored above the state ayerage in all mas tested, with 1-na Beach first graders achieving the hlcbt31 ttadil1g ll<Ore in all of Orange
~~were lga;n scored in tenm of
, .
••
percenW... l'or-e<ampte, llrst graders In
Laguna Be..it were in the 8151 percentile
In Imm of n:adlng. meaning that 80 per-
ceot of all students in the state scored
lowtr on the test than the Laguna Beach
students and 19 percent or them scored
higher.
The reading tests were administered to
students in grades l, 2, 3, 6 and 12. In ad-
dition, language, mathematlCB ani:t spell-
ing testa we.re adml.nlstered to Ule sixth
and 12th grade students.
Following b a percenUle listing of each
Orqe Coast tdlool dlllrlct !bowing the
reading percentile placement for each
grade followed by the other t.est·n:suJts.
Capistrano Unllied School District:
grade 1-72 ; 2-65; S-51; 1-6.l; 12
-!I; 'language, grade 6 -56; 12 -.18:
spelling, grade 6 -54 ; 12 -Al;
niathematics, 6 -49; 12 -55.
Fountain Valley Elementary School
District; grade 1-62; 2-55; s-.63; 6
-61 ; languoge, grade 6 -60: apelling,
trade 6 -47; matbemaUcs, 6-53.
eietiocl--Bea Elementary School
DtstrlCI: grade I-'-58: z -58: ·s -n: '
-·61;" l•D&Ulie. vade 6 -60; spelling,
grade I -54; mathematics, grade 6 -
59. • •
Haadap~ Beael Ualon High School
Di>lricl: vade 12.-53; language, grad<
11-~i ·apelUng, U-49; mathematics,
12 -55. •
LalJlll& Beach UDllled School D~lrict :
grade 1-81;,2"";"85; 3-72: 6-74; 12
-$!: lalllWl.e .. grade .6 -75; 12 -48;
spelling, I -69; 12 -<9; mathemaUcs, I
•
-74; 12-55.
Newport.Mesa·Ulllfted School Dlstrict:
grade 1-&.li 2 -72; 3 -69; 6-.63; 12:
-a; language, 6 -65: 12 -61 ; spell-
ing, 6 -54.; 12 -58; mathematics, 6 -
58;.Jf -60.
OceU View Eleme!M.ry S c ho o I
District : grade 1 -65; 2 -61"; 3 -63 6
-63; language, 6 -63; spelling, 6 -54;
mat.beJbaUcs, 6 -59.
. SID Joaquin Elementary Sc b.o·o I
Dtslrict: grade 1-62; 2 -58; 3 -63; 6
-11; lquage, 6 -IC; spelling, I -II;
mathematics , I -59.
Sell Bearb Elementary Sch o o I
Dtslrtct: grade 1 -71: 2 -74; s -74; I
-71 ; language. I -ea: spelling, I -SI;
mathematics. 6 -61.
TusUo Uoloo Hlgb School Dlslrlct:
grade 12 -60; language, 12 -63: spell-
ing. 12 -58; malhelllaucs. 13 -60.
Westminster, ·Elementary· S c h tJ o I
District: grade 1 -U; 2 -6$; S -55: 8.
-54: language, I:-53; spelling, 1-54 ;
mathematics, & -65.
.
;
lXOll ue -Oll-1 on ___ oas
' ..
• Bus Route
9~·Agenda
For Council
. ' ~.from admlnlstrators and let· terrl6 fhe•.thool IJoiord -<me COlla!mlng
~ cootrovenll} Nyes Place bus.route-.
.,., upected to .overshadow a· relaUvely
riiuttne .,....., ot Tuesday . nlgllt 's
1110fliDf ~ Cagµoa·Be~.school lrustees. · 'll>i'• .~ .~ !)eld ·~ginning at
.7:3!t..M. attli(dllltlc.t..idl(ClUoo. ollll:e, --II. . "" ""'"° ~'optnlonttmr"ffle .~.
Two Professors
Flunk Big .Test
A Santa Ana College instructor
got 1971 off to a bad start ih
Newport Beach by nunking a
police-administered geography test.
Patrolman Richard Millers said
he had occasion to stop the les,s..
than.-sober scholars, both SAC
teachers and bpth aged 43, at East
Coast Hlghway and Poppy Avenue
for suspiciously erratic driving. He arrested the driver and then
attempted tO' rouse the slumbering
passenger.
"Are we there?" he quoted the
man as saying.
"Where?" asked Officer Miller.
.. Alaska," replied the teacher.
Ollic:or Miller said he aaked the ·
·!Odden sojourner to ~ •. ~tslde
1nd """ )f the surrOoiiidlng t.rraln rNl!Y lookod like Yukon 'j'errilory.
Stoggerlnf out and l\oldlng onto
tlie car, the SAC teachor llll'V<Yed
the,ocene.
"Yep,· we're in Alaska," ht;
declared.
Hashish Oil
Suspects
Face Court
Three persons who were allegedly
working the Laguna Beach end of an in-
ternational drug smuggling r i n c
specializing in potent hashish oil will be
arraigned in South County Municipal
Court Tuesday,
The three peraons arreated la~ Thura-.
d"ay. at a (llllnt at Ille ~ of Ctn llrjoW • ' \ .r; and ·Jumine street ...... l!lchaol •
Theodor":l5 ol,El!incrl; David Kuf\k, II,
ol (Ari.bad, .Q4 DeboHit Gi!JIM, d, of
O<eanslde.
They Will face charier.al conspiracy· io
SDlllggle marijuana.
•
~'· ~~ ~' liablllt)' (or ~ lllonJ tbo n...ty adopted 1ins
,..la ·wtll be ·~ to the 'ltustees.
'I'* opinion """ ftlluested by trustee J1k Boyd, •ho hid Olll>Olled upoilslon of llill!ne -ces 14, JnclUde studenll OYing
Jil.the )llflllde bon)es lbove Nyes Plaot.
'Mrs. Boyd uld i;day that.the letter In-
dicated the . ....,_ coitld !IOI be held
From there it was just like a
MollOpoly Game: Wrong -go
din:ctly to jail
Kulik's older brotbtr, Anthony ns ar·
rested Dec. 13 In the Middle Eastern
country of MIJIWUslan wbere l!ie buhbh
1 4·., 1 t : 4 •~_. , _;, Tllk111•
oil -oome «I times more potent than dry
C ilm n Ey e hashish -is syntheslied.
NIXON':'NttL\MEIT.JAPAM<S-sATO'IN·slvf<l.l!MEN:'l'~~DilY
· . ,....,...., Su'mmlt·Afrno for NeWIL<taii:•ln Fropd' •a.flphl: , , '
reflPOll!ible aa 11\dlvMuala · 1or bus ac-~lilenls on lhe •st.ep"hlll. '
'"The letter (from the COUDly counsel'•
~) r.eally . ~t say much," Mrs. ~noted, qplaiiing·that it merely 1111· ~ !he trUJtees )D c:lleck with !lie dis-
IC'lit'I ~...ilner 10·~1te aure the
bUr route WU coverfN ·"! ,..,.hopiof lit "l"'flhin& a lillle
~ becojlle.. I do. f°'l .that it b ~" abe added.' .
The bul 1'11111 officially began today Jn
1iWlgJ!lg tlndetprten yoQngSlerl borne !ii>9t Aliso ~lal')?<School. Students WfJf only be returned llilme via the route
and wJJl siJD catch.Ille bllO going lo school
11 the fool ol Nyes P)ace on Coast
way.
addilioq to discussing Ille legal opi·
trustees .will consider ;, .
-.-The ftClnsif{ealion of'll'homas Dog· Pr ·io ilio4'aiik" ci~prinCipal. Dugger la
dlrtctor , of i.idi!ral projeda foe the
dJairlcl Ond ii claastfled U I Vle<-prln· dDIL Action on ·hil ..recla•sif\catlon wu r,bltil a\ -.f).lt ~bet . ~.board = ~' ~Jpt 1ol ·~j>lete .'-~~Ina-~ fOlldoilt • • 8"'ves con 'pro.
llr-"11 niallflilf..,lllll ·memb,erl. lrd OlllllJllil""" ·~1,. the , ~r ~led .. n Bill. Teaebert Ind · ators
ip workina lo determine educa oats
tM stuc1"111,IO_ tbat leacbera m be <ltillated In ..,.,,,. of how these g are
~h!IOed.
OUDC e Laguna Beach, according lo Det. Neil
Purcell, is the only place outside Downtown Area Al&hanistan w11ere. the hashish oil has been uncovered.
An ounce of oil is prepared from a Parking J imils pound of hashish, the officer noted. ' Cigar'etlea, he said, are soaked in the oil
· ~ and tben smoked. ..The smell .iJ what A proposal lo eijp>lnate all metered gives the fact ir1 haobisb,away," PurceTI
parked in c1own1o..n 1.aguna Beach and 1o added.
replace meters wiµi;,igldly enforced one-Purcelf speculated that the oil ~
hour or tw!Mlour parking lintlts will be prepared in the remote Mideast country The controvenial1 four-fifths~ vot.e..-rule
tntrodue<d lo the ·city council Wednesday then shipped lo Laguna Beach. He could will be llred·once ·more al the ,Laguna ~ not place a "street value" on the Beach city council i:neeting Wednesday:
night by councilman Edward Lorr. molasses-like product because it is so nlght.
Noting that residents and businus peo-new lo the area. Councilman Edwanl Lorr will ask that
pie alike are dissatisfied with metered On Dec. 15. local narcotics .agents three o'rdlnances presented for ,counctJ
parking and the new $3 meter violation allegedly found a gallon of the uoUc approval be amended to J)roVkle that only
essence In the home of Donald Ham--three COUJ'lcil votq be required 10 over·
fine, Lorr proposes: barian, 21, in Arch Beach Heights. Ham· ru1 a decision of the planning commJs.
-RemoVal of all metered parking ln barian posted $25,000-bail following hls sion or board of zoo.fng adjustment a~
the downtown basin, including parking airest and is due for a preliminary hear· pealed to the·council. , .,
lots. ing on aMOrted drug charges Jan. 13. Since the <Cilfs · ·master z 0 rrl n g
-SeUing up of one-hour or two-hour N!:~~ on~b 29~;samae:r:;:e, ~· ~ ordinance was .adopted in lMO, a ·four.
tree parking in various zones. sm,ooo warrant in connection with the filths vote of the entire city council. bu
d enl t f the •·• I" • been required lo grant the appeal of I -Rigl orcemen o pos~ une Hambarian.arrest. , p!anrlln& ~'ctenlal lo'Variance
limits to Insure traffic lunlover. II Is not kmwn whether the arreals o[ and condltlonalF, """'"'~""1'-.. ,
-Issuance or mulUple parking ttcltets Hambarlan and Cowie Ire-related lo lbe · When lhree ~~per.
lor conllnbed overtime parking in the •muggling ring. talning lo ~urea U/,.~;.-.
same 1pace. dltllmaf uae permit and· site plan reilow
-DestgnaUoti of a parking 1o1 or lots Pr· emi'er puffer matters """ forwarded lo 'the cOuncU. from the planplng commlaslon Dec. 15, for down!awn ~mployers and employes Lqrr proposed amendment· of ,the voting
who would purchase • sUcl<er !or the GLASTONB.URY, England (UPI) . rule. .
privilege of using the lots. Hotel head waller Robert Reynanl, 41, A limple .mojorily o1 the councn, he
Lorr ,.id that other cities have used has claimed the record for blowlOf .aid, &bOilla be llllllclent to overrule Ille
the propoll!d system and found It more smoke rings from one puff of a c!gareli• jilannlng bodies. Ablence or abltenlltton ·Pflot · Will :Give 'i · successful than parking meters. He~e'6 tn1 ~onone Inhale. of a<OUDCliman, Lorr pplnl"1 out. could
!"'· .
' .
··~C::~ha~ w,~ Laguna Cott · 'cilmeri Study Future ..
.......,., ~ to r""1vt 1· (l&ir ol , ·
. lllti11 te 1!11 loolhern ca111pna 11PDrts; 1 ·
, .
\'ec11ion and )lecrHtltn Vebl Show. By BARBARA XREmlCB expect Wt'll make veal lltJdH hi up-elect lwo councilmen In April 1'ho wlll needed bypau fr<!eway .
. You could be lll10l\fl °'9iotncelvlng I""'°""'"""'" daUng lhe preaent facility· and 8"•1 use "'l'Y rea"'111ble means available lo "The council should pail$ thene<euary ~IL~..!~ ~ ~ of lhe Porklng and traffic problems. the Main Pia!" for lhe future ID /ar as a MW lilc!llP. avoid 'urbatll'fUoo'. Jn oor lo\\'11. Ollf feg~JaUon . to follow thro!lih on the r'""~c•r ho1"11llkh -• Beac~ Park, the general pl1n, the -ti• ty "concerned. , people .,. llic:ruslngty· aware that In-·woodJaild 1'Jlve housing lnlpeeljon. ~ !ti ' ""' ~ COnven!Ioo tn:alment plant and quesllona rel,lln' to ;'Also, wei must &et busy 1nd cdnlldet ·ere~ Jhe lax -~IJlh..COfti~ Wa'r. ~ In 1 ~lllon .,.hfl't w" caa•t Qecit ,.._ cni.siJJ~ id pl(ea "°" to Laguna's il'O)'lh are on the~ ci\1 the very serious parking prohl"l" •\rhich developmenl -n.,. ~nt 1bt 1et-llMt 1rea upgraded. ·untlf ...i .. JnllJala It ,..T..,.,. tillmd In ... qf Jhe 10 offlclab ~ llio new year begin.I. .cqJJl~~v1bly-,wlth tnt.advent 'til&liiil llld lf1!11 .. : ~--apace; .le&lalatlon,lc! glVe tho ~1ty-lo caoa
"eda" IClltend toclay, 1"""'1 lht M~or ,Jlidllrd GoldWrs lrid ~ 9f the -· park, )lnlea We iet that "Abo/ ~npecl1o .... ~develop-the te1rltig down of sltuCl\ael tbal don'I
'liilcM --oluornbUoni. N.W , fello'! COUllCilmeft. ll""'inl lntoik*'lln.. JIOl'lllng' II provided -1iltbln rani• ol. the ment o the 'Mlln ~h Pait ml with ~ ~ requlttmenlt ucf; COMOI tlo '=":' ~ lllltlf"dlllJ ~--==~t='!i ~~eat wemuatln:imToplo .. ,.........i ~r';....~=:;,d!~thllt ~i.rn .. a:~::rJ°'ite:="~
' • • What Ibey feel mllJ' be 1CC9mpllm,d,.or forthwith with demotltion of ~ ""1ldlul . <;cyndJman Etbnnt Lorr: "First wo' UJllTllded, It can be declattd 1 publlc
' II lellt at~led Jn lflS: Ind building the Main Be1cli Plft. Tbls ..UJ Doec( comploled plllUI ud I lolullon llJlaance Ind the city CID ClllJl It lo lit ll'~--Recovierm' g Mayor Richard 'Goldber1: "Tllo ntt 11 what everybody Jn La«an* 1111111. 'for u..--latloll plant, A C0111pltttd ·~ W• cfon'I have:ll\Y lllCb law oa ~ 'lltlng I want lo .... 11 a }ieallby economy 'l'hert'1"" controversy onJhlS IUbje<;t. !'"!~ alt!iciqre Jocated, tn t h • ,our boob. ,
• and happy community. We llopo peopl• "So for as controvert)' II c.'Oll<'llnled, JI· dOiMo!lll bMlt! II an 1baolu!e muat and "l suppooe manr peoplt fttl the
JJOPENlfAllEN, Deomark lAPl -A wJJJ oontlnuo to participate In civic If. there ls lo be one n will be on u,, Jlnd> ll=bt l!l<IOJllpllahed tblt year wbtn 1"""'1 plan It an item lbtt lhould bt ~-laytKqrr.derlkllt ftlra ind that by workJrc togaJher In a uae element o1 the "'1•111 ptan, f -I lCSllfll<IY!i"<001pletodUtl.;c1ty -comp1•1*1 this year," Lorr conllnlled, -"""'lirtDf rapldly lllu lallll!6'. IU ~ poolUve WIY we will bt 1blt to .. 1.. lhll .. """ of the tor islues in Ille up. '"" I *"1 l:ommitmenL "but f have I dllfereol opln!On. I fetil It'•
\'oar'• Sw. Tbe rpoU.111110 ••Id Sundly ""'S ol the community'• proble,.... comtna elecUon cam~" . '1l'd lllO Ullo lo obtain 1 firm com-::.=r.r a priority !tom etnc. an ...
fllol tM ldrC lied auf!ered 1a 1tudl cl ' r<ahnllY, one of Ibo ~lunt "°"'""" c.uncuman RQy Hofm: "I'd Uke lo,.. mltlnenl lad lllrlln( dote from lbt Sllll • tu bul waa a.nllal to m..
idlUOllJll. ls the condiUon o1 the -plant Ind I Laguna Bead! aitrlnC tile comtns )'W Highway l>eitertmeiit for the crltleall1 (Set NEW YBAll, .... I) ..
• •
President
To Prepare
For Sato
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of ... ..., ........
Pmldent Nl1on wu scheduled to ar-
rive at the El Toro MCAS at about 7:SO
o'cloclc tonight to begin preparations for
the llllh of bis IUIDmlt meellnp wllli
world leaders -·talks late this week in
San Clemente with Japanese Prime
Mlnl!ter Elsalw Salo.
, The • l'resldall ol>l1tliaJy wUI ~
. _Jlllth. re,llnUI ol,lida lllf-.. llut
Mn: Pal Njlan, Wlli Mlrly ~ ...
,... ..... tho Oilaf ~ Wlli, Will
DOI lie On hind. •
The Fll'll Lld,y II Ol\\I -'<'1 lou1'. of
Attica. · · .
The anival !onflhl wJJJ be lollowed by
lllDtber Jmpotlant one late Wednesday
night wllen Ille Prime MinJJler 1rrlvea
at the Bll1le alr!leld<-and will .. doubt be Jlreeted lhert1 by Mr. Nixon. ,
Alter resting overnight at t h t
Newporter !nil Mr. Salo and hb aides will
begin the twO.uy round of lalu 11 ihe
Western White lloQ,. In San CJ"emente.
White H.._ spokesmen have not
!fel~Ued lhe euct rubltance of the topics to be dtacusoed, but Washington wrHen
bava speculated that the con!-wUI
deoJ with reCent' U.S. tcODOJnlc policlea
which have hit bard at Japan'a lmportanl = plua ~Taiwan situation In Ibo
illled Natlolla eel the decision by the
. "1.loule to lalmch lrtpa to Pelln( i'nil.14oacow11ter lhll yell'. ·
. 'All those Americ!an decWolll blVO
cat.lied aome.. grave concern ln· Sato'•
boineland.
1)ie Whlla Houae has yet to give any
details for the welcome ceremonies for
the PN>locoJ.conaclous Japanue delega·
lion.
A· motorcade througn San Clemente-bu
bee~ inentloned, llut not confirmed.
Treasury Secretary John Connally waa
expected lo join Ibo Presldanl Jn San
Clemenla lo partldpate in the two day1
al taJb .,.. Sito, dlllrklmud as
••strictly bclalbesa." -•
TbOlabel In dfpl0tn1tlii JJl'linca me..,. !hit'~ Ind la\ilab we1coma wJJI
bO ~ at a rnlpltilutn. " ·
. ~ct durattoa al Mt. Nixon'< firsl Vlat of the -lo LI Clu Pacifica haf .at ' amwnced. •
•
Ol'Psfl
•
. ' ~ .. Uiilr Ult ·~.
Coul llloald be ,,...,. fllr lil4oiy
Ind ~·lit~= ~-=~~ . Hight ahollld be 70 •1111 Ion near to. • •
.... ..
..... 'II .._..__
~~ .J -" ·-" --" ......... ,... . .. ....... u ,..._. DD Mln•t1•• 11
•
Al DAil v PILOT LS
Defraud-~ Witne·ss Muin
t . ' . . ..
Man Declines to Confirrn Tire Stawment
.,~ .;-.. I •
By TOM BARLEY ; lhe "rttten 1jitement ~el()fe lht II""
Ol n...o.111 'H•t "'" !, aecut« Wlf the lnve1tJ.&:Mo(1 tnve11tlbn A prosecuGon witness who allegedly and did not reflect his own experience.
onct told a district attorney's investigator Leuthard confirmed that he worked for
.that he saw more tht1n t,000 tires defendant Roger Mendenhall. 28 of 26095
Aeliberately punctured by attendants at a Avenlda De Seo, Mission Viejo while
~San Ju<i.n Capistrano service statio~n to· ~endenhall operated the San Juan Tex-
day refused to confirm that statement ln aco In San Juan Capistrano.
Orange County Superior Court. Leuthard said he worked at the San
Ronald Leuthard, 27, the pro-Juan station for a y~ar and "for just a
aecutlon's eleventh witness In the trial of rew weeks'' at the San Clemente Mobil
nine men accused ol consplra cy to chta station. 600 Avenida Pico, also owned by
and de(raud motorists. told dep4ty Mendenhall . •
District Attorney Richard Stenton that But he denied today that he had told
• .
$155,000 ~ire Spa rk~d
:By Cigarette in Sofa
" A Sl&S,000 New Year's Day fire · at
Laguna Hills Leisure World was blamed
today on a cigarette which fell behind the
Cusbi6ns of a sofa, the ·orange County
Ftre Department reported.
~ Tbe.l>Jau broke out in an apartment
~pte,x al 2396 Via Mariposa early
~il~y, damaged nine 111\11& and !!!!. to
t~e evacuation o/. 30 sleeping residents o!
the retirement community.
It was the smnd fire in as many days
at teisure World. Friday a $20,000 fire in
a nearby condominium led to the death of
Alice London Smith, 67. of 227G-0 Via
Puerta. The coroner's office said Mrs.
Smith djed of asphyx.iation.
.. The New Year's Day fire was
, discOvered about 3 a.m. in the third floor
apartment ol Mr. and Mrs. Louis Fox.
' tJie lcvfftlaalor • lll.i 1 Altodenhall · \!ltd
1111.vported hutnunentl tA .d<llbera!ely
p\Jnetore tires at tbe staUons.
He also rejected Steoton's suggestion
that he had ~eard three de!endants nam-
ed as principals in the al!geged con..
spiracy. urge their employes at a Garden
Orove meeting to puncture tires and in·
!lict damige on their customers' cars.
Leuthard said he was awaiting trial on
dfug ·:-Charges at the time he was irr
terviewtd by the district attorney's in·
vestigator in 1970 aod that the irr
vestigator J>rom lsed to he.Ip him on those
charges in return for his statement.
He insisted under close queslioning
from Stenton that the investigat.or had
"invenled" the. all.egations and that he
had cooperated to avoid what he felt at
the time would be a state prison term of
live 'Years to life If he waJ convjcted on
charges of possessing and selling mari~
ju a pa.
1.euthard named Ralph Carney, 29, of
32352 Calle San Marcos, San Juan
Capistrano as the manager-of the San
Juan Texaco station.
He identified R. C. Weisner, 28, of San-
ta Ana, as the manager of, the San
Clemente station at which he was also
imployed, .
e .• .• . .
Big New Year's Day U'I T1l11>Pttte
..
Laguna Police
Studying Rash
Of Burglaries
F"iremen said investigation disclosed
that the couple noticed a fire Friday
night in a couch in the apartment. They
moved it to a balcony and doused it with
water, but the burning material later
flared up and set the buUding afire.
Stent.on has named Stanley Davis, 32, of
1066 San Pablo Circle and Jerry Kendall,
35, of 969 Sonora Road, both of Costa
Mesa with Edward C~y. ~. of .208S2
Shell Harbour Drive. Huntington Beach
as the three principals in the alleged con-
spiracy. ·
The Rychert quintuplets of Gdansk. Poland, play chert were born in May. The quints' names are
on their first New Year's Day in their home. The Adam, Agnieszka, Ewa, Piotr and Roman but tell·
He and prosecution witnesses have
stated that the three men controlled a
chain of II service stations ranging from
Seal Beach to San Clemente and were
responsible for auto damage that cost
motorists "many thousands of dollars."
three sons and t\VO daughters of Mrs. Leokadia Ry· ing \Vhich is which is something else again. ~~~--=~~"--~~~~~~---"~.:........::'--~~
.. l..aguDa Beach police are investlgatiJ!g
tbree weekend burglaries, one of which
l.ovolved the theft of more than 3,000
~rted_plll$ f.rolJl a physician's office.
. Inves\igators said theY. were unable to
determine how Ulegal entry was rnade to
the of(ice of Dr. Carl H. Weber, 1929 S.
~st Highway. The theft was discovered
by an offii:e employe arriving for work
f!iday morning, poliee noted.
· The missing pills included penicillin,
various types of amphetamine! and Qtt\er
assorted tablets. Dr. Weber told police
the pills were valued at about $500.
·•-Another burglafy was reported at the
tiOme of bail bondsman Ronald KauhnJn,
432 Park Ave .. officers said. Some time
New Yea r's Eve, an unknown suspect
c1lopp!d the Jock out ·of the front door of
Kaufman's home and stole assorted home
tumlshings and clothing valued at $554,
lnvestigators relK!rted. · . il
: A tjl)'jl ~ll•!"JI. ~red at th om•
1Dr Malcolm EOwards, 27~ W land
' •Drive, officers said. According to in·
._,esttge.\ois, -thitvts broke. a bathroom
~indow, entered the residence and stole
$875 in home applianc~, a coin collection,
)I camer,a an4 a typewrlter.
'
~Caspers' Son
Faces Pot Rap
Kirkland T. Caspers, 18, son of Orange
Coun ty Fifth District Supervisor Ronald
W. Caspers, Is facing charges of posses.s-
ing marijuana today following his arrest
Sunday morning by Newport Beach
police.
Caspers. a resident Of 133 Avenida
Pelayo, San Clemente, \>as arreste d at
6:10 a.m. while sleeping in a car near his
farnily~s Lido Isle home. Police assert
they found about one ounce of marijuana
in Caspers' car while he was removing
vehicle regislrat ion material from the
glove compartment.
Harbor Judicial Di strict Court Judge
Calvin T. Schmidt authorized his release
later Sunday morning on hts oWn
recognizance. Caspers will be arraigne4
later this week.
OMNCil C-d¥f
DAILY PllOT
owot CO.UT PUll,tHiHG COM'Aff,Y
Ro\itr+ N .. w,,4,
Prnld.nt 1rp1 l"~Us~
.,J1c\: R. Cvrl•v~ Vitt 1'r~iO•M •l'llf ~ .... rtl°)\tl)tftr
Tho1111• K1tvil
E11>1~r
Th~11111 A. Murp~i11•
M•a.ttll!9 Editor-
Ch11J11 H. loot Ric~trd P. Nill
AnlJl~I MIMGlfll E4i«lr•
County firemen resp on d,e d to
Saturda1's .. ata.rm with sir engines, two
truck companles and two rescue units. A
few firemen remained until mid-day
Saturday mopping up . Also named in charges that were later
contained in an Orange County Grand
Jury indictment were Christopher Enri·
quez, 25, of 7592 Volga Drive, and Henry
Castonguay, 21, of 7661 Commodore
Drive, both of Huntington Beach and
David Conchola, 22, of 6000 Garden Grove
Blvd., Westminster.
Major Water Pipeline
Fli'emen George Biddle. 31, of 15332
Balboa St., Westminster, slipped while
fighting the blaze and 'erlously injured a
knee. He undeN'ent surgery Sunday and
his condition is said to be satisfactory.
Bursts in Laguna Beach
Fli'e .flgh~J'I, responding to the three
alarm blaze· Saturday, led choking
residents to 1afety through dense clouds
of smoke,
"The fire could have been much
worse,'' the departent reported. "The
wind wa1 blowing pretty hard and flames
were spreading rapidly."
"My husband and I had been at a New
Year's Eve party earlier and were asleep
when a knock on the door awakened us,"
related Mrs. ·Fox. "We could smell the
smoke and a fireman told us to put on
M>mt W4l'JI\ ,clothing tnd leave the
bulldlng immediately."
'2 ·lla'ii(li'tS llohi' ·
.,. I • '1
. Pair of $3,00Q
Orange County sheriff's Qfficers' have
nD clues today to the identity of a ~uple
who broke into a Leisure World apart-
ment Saturday night and took more than
$3,000 in -cash and jewelry at gunpoint.
Investigators said the male intruder
and his female acc<lmplice, held up two
women residents of the ,Laguna Hills
retirem~nt community and .pocketed $700
in cash and jewelry valued at $2,500.
The occupants of the Ronda Mendoza
apai:tment .told officers that the couple
knocked on their door and .shoved their
way into the home when the door was
opened. Neither occupant was hl!rt in the
holdup. . . , ,
They were identified' as Edna Eiker. 83,
and Clarice ·Goodall, SI, both of Apt. Q,
859 Ronda Meodoia.
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From Page 1
VOTE RULE. • •
the views of the planning commission on
amending them with regard to the over-
rule Vote requirement
At its Dec. 2tl meeting, the planning
commission voted unanimously in favor
of retaining the four-fifths rule, noting
"the comihission prefers that it be dif·
ficult for the council to overrule planning
commission decisi.>ns whether those
decisions are to approve or deny."
In support of ils position, the com-
mission states in a memo to the city
council:
-The commission is less subjected to
outside pressures than the council
because it is not elective and therefore
less inclined to grant "favors."
-The commission and zoning board
build up a consistency of decisions
through hearing similar matters at each
meeting, which is not the case with the
council.
-Appeals should be based solely on er·
rors made by the planning bodies and if
an error was indeed made. it should not
be difficult to determine · this and obtain
four coucil votes to correct it.
ln support of this three-vote plan. coun-
cilman Lorr cites a telephone survey
made at his request which, he states,
reveal~d that.It Orang~ County cities re-
quire: ~nly' a simple majority of ·their
e-0uncils to overrule planning commission
decisions on .appeal.
Crews of the South Coast County Water
District are faced with the tedious task
today of repairing a major break in a
transmission line near the C()rner of
Beverly Street and North Coast Highway
in Laguna Beach_
Laguna Beach police logged the break,
which sent an eight-foot geyser of water
into the air, at 2:11 a.m. The spouting
water landed on a dirt bank next to the
highway causing a masive accumulation
of mud. According to John Smith, manager of
the water district, which serves South
Laguna, recent rains loosened the sup-
porting soil around the 16-inch line and
the pipe fractured. . .
SIOith estimated the cost of repa1r1ng
the break would reach about $5,000 by the
time all work is completed .
"The break will pose no ·problems to
From Page 1
NEW YEAR. • •
plement the plan. The whole plan was
shaped around this and I feel the guts . of
the plan was ripped out by the Aug. 3 1!'"
itiative (height limit). I feel the plan will
Just have to io on the shelf with its lofty
ideals and pipe dreams because there's
no means to finance these dreams.
"Uppermost in most pe<>ple's mind is
having the Main Beach Park this sum-
mer, but unfortunately this can't be ac-
complished. Demolition may take place,
but there are problems that will block
constro'ctioo of the park ' this' year, and
reirettably we don't kn'oW i! we'll be,~ble .
to work it out for the follow1ng year.
Dr. G. J. Fieldh1g Named
The principal·problem, Lorr said, is .the
city's inability to com~ ·to tenns on the
longterm Benton's. Reslaura~t lease
which extends unhl 1974, w1tl1but a
termination clause, and the difficulty of
finding a new location with required
parking for the p<>pular restaurant. .
County Transit Unit Head Councilman Peter Ostrander: "I'd hke
to see the general plan approved so we
can implement the things thtt 1go al~ng
with it especially solutjoils to the parking
and t~affic probfems. I don't '.see any
Dr. G. J. "Pete" Fielding. 37-year-<>ld
lJC Ir"ine professor today was named
general manager of the Orange Couut){
Transit District.
·District directors selected Dr. Fielding
frOm a field or more than 30 candidates ~fter two months of negotiations . He
assumes the $25.000 a year post on Feb.
1
determining urban· land use and with the alternative to parkin_g structures. The
dynamlcs of ·citizen involveme11t in TbPICS StUdy 'is coming along 'Well and
shOuld be finiahed ih· March or AprB and I fransportation, RlaMing. hope w.e'll get some-good· posiUVe public
~-said th.at sinc:e 1968 he has con-interest because that's what it takes to
ducted a series of ·studies for the get ttifngs done.", .
Calitomia Ti'ansport8lion Agency on CounCilme"o 'Charlton Boyd: "It is Im-
perative that all six elements in the alternative strategies for personal in· general plan be completed in 1972 -the.
volvement in transportation studies. economic, land use, goals, central
At UCI he teaches a three. course se-business district, circulation and
quence in urban policy. He ls also a con· transportation and capital improvements
our subscribers," Smith added. "We have
plenty Qf water in our storage faciliLies ."
The pipe should be repaired by late to-
day, Smith said.
Assembly Foils
Plan to Override
Veto hy Reagan
SACRAMENTO _(Al'j -The Senate
voted ~ay • to overrfd!' one of G<iv.
Ronald Reagan's record-long list of
vetoes, but Assembly Republicans stood
solidly behind the GOP governor and the
effort lost in the lower house 39-19.
The Senate first voted 27-13 to override
Reagan's veto of a measure sponsored by
Sen. Anthony C. Beilenson (D-Beverly
Hills ), to. require better sound-proofing of
homes and public buildings.
Six Republicans joined the 2 1
Democrats to vote to override Reagan -
the second time this year the upper house
has voted to put a bill into Jaw in spite of
a Reagan veto.
But the override attempt fell 15 votes
short in the Assembly.
It takes a two-thirds margin in both
houses to override a gubernatorial veto -
something that hasn't been done since
1946. ' .
By midmorning, the ~s_erribly had sus-
tained '3~ of the 52 ve~s before It. Only
six of the issues came to a vote. Reagan
vetoed 157 bills this past year, a record
for him, ' ·
Most of the overridt effQrls ware made
by Democrats but ·on~ Republican was
caustically critical of a ·Reagan veto of
one ot his bills. ' ·
Assemblyman Frank .Murphy (R-Santa
Cruz), rose on the Assembly floor and
said the veto of his plan Jor· a prison om~
b~sman "rqakes,you. want to throw up."
l:.lthough he dido't try jo ove;-rlde the
ve o,.Mu'rphy said, "For five years I've
lis. en~d to DemOcrats say th'e governor's
veto · messages are· untrue. 'YoU'r! s0
right. You're so right" :
The .. veto. message is where the
governor gives his reuons for vetoing the
bill. .
Ttie veto override drive was one of the
loose ends the lawmakers had to bandit
bef6re ~glnnin( their 1~2 Work.
V chicle Owners
Can Use Banks,
Mail to Register
Motorists who don't want to pay their
vehicle registrati<ln at the local Depart-
ment of Motor Vehicles offices, may send
the payments through the mail or make
the renewals at six county banks.
OMV windows will be open at the hanks
during regular banking h<lurs through the
close of business, Feb. 4, the deadline for
car rejistration.
Robert Cozens, DMV director noted
that all billings sent to California
motorists contain instruciions for mailing
payments lo save registrants a trip to tha
banks o! D~ ?f!ices._ ·' i
There are five DMV offices in ' Orallie
County. They are located at the following
addresses:
1'6J W. 19th St., Cost& Mesa: 106 w.
Canada, San Clemente ; 15062 Jackson St.,
Midway City;-1330 E. 1st St., Santa Ana
and 1750 W. La Palma Ave., Anaheim. ·
Banks that are handling vehicle
registration are;
United California Bank, 24032 El Toro
Road, Laguna Hills; Bank of America,
Lincoln A venue at Claudina Street,
·Anaheim; U.S. National, 6301 Beach
Blvd., Buena Park: Farmers and
Merchants Bank, 10422 Garden Grove
Blvd., Garden Grove; Bank of America,
500 Cehtral Ave., La Habra and Bank of
America, 2680 N. Tustin Ave., Orange.
RQse Machomich
Services Slated
Funeral services will be held at II a.m.
Wednesday for Laguna Hills resident
Rose Mary Machomich who died Thurs·
day at Hoag Memorial Hospital. She waa ' 95.
The .lervices will be held at St
Geoige1s ~Pl~copal Church in Laguna
Hills, ac~rding',eo Utt Jllperal directors,
.Tumer'·i •n·d. Stevens Mortuary of
/'•iailOGO. • -. Mis.~M~~micb, w!>O· lived al 85$-Q
.lfuJtd'I Mendoza, ·11 wrvlved by her ~augMer, Di>rothy "Siter or t:aguna Hilla
and.~1granddaughler, Rosemary Sater of Sou~,.Pasadina. ·
Th a family r~uests ·that memorials be madt in the form ol cOO.tributlons to the
Ani!rlcan . cancer S«:lety.
1 , .. , ...... Offke
212 for11t >.v1~u•
M1illng eddr•u: P.O. ler 666, 926SZ
S-C le1Mltt9 Offke
IOI North £1 C1111!110 R••I, tl672
Dr. Fielding holds a PhD from the
University of California al Los Angeles In
geography.
His selection marked the beginning of
the second year of operation for the new
C-01.lDly Transit District
tributor to the interdisciplinary program elements. It is equally important ~at
at UCI in which computer systems are work be started on a cultural·recreation·
used for instructional purposes. social element.
The new trans.it • dl~trict general •·Jn the city organi14tion, we sh~ld
manager holds a joinl appplntmel)t in.the. ~ for better distrlbµtk>n of function!
Graduate School of Administration and i&. -• bet\ften the staff; llfegual'ds, police and
IRS Braces fJr Flood
"Thank you very much," the UCI pro-
f es sot said to the directors when his a~
pointment was announced this morning.
"I look forward to this fine opportunity to
try to improve rapid transit In Orange
County.''
Since 1965 Dr. Fielding ss been engag-
... ed in research and teac · :.A(' urban
DAflY P"MT;'-'111 .tlldo ti combtnM ftlt I" obi llh g ~po N_,,..,, ... ,.,oll .... 6111r '"*' s~ po ICY pr ems w e I II "" D ••r 111 ... ,... •nio. w LAtllM IMdl. transport•11·on • .,.......,. ltMtl• -C.P• N.MM, HIMll"''-· ~9Ult'I~ ..,.. '~'' He said in an Interview this morning
, ...... ~:. rf""'"' .:,:=, ·~-;: that during the past year he has been ac-
•1 S» w.t .. , ltrtt!, C.lt M"'-tlve in a program at UCf designed to ~tti•1•1 C7141 '4lo4Jh ~ ., ... u.rai 44a.1111 train aerosp(Ce 'engineers for urban ~ s.. e.__. An ..,., sots cupalion1.
T••••••• 4tJ-44ll On ""'blic administration, the doclor ~ ..... Alf 0.,-M......, I"" · T••••••• 4t .. t4'1 said: ''As a member of the Graduate
~ ,..... ~ 0.11 """""""" SchoOI QI Admint1tr1tion at UCl, I am °"""'""· w. ---..... ,..,. .. , mus11•t..,..,. famttlar with the theories of human ..S!Wlt>I ~ .,. ......,!.......,_ ~·-fnt)I .. ,.... ,._, ...._.. .,..... MP bthavlor as they apply to urban, educa-
'".._ " .,.,.., ...... •I ho I I !Jlt:'Sir.lS:i.".';9 , -~l.i.:.~~ ai:;. b•:lneu ad·
L-"~"'~·~·.,.::·•:1•:.,~.:=.:..:::::::• ~-~-r.:;.,:;:u•:••:·~t"'J J!I', '11,'ltldlnc 'hi J!Dbll1!ied fiooks eon-• ctt11Jnc. Ibo~ Ill plllllicit lnlluenee In
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i' associated with · th& pro gr*!" l n ~ · firf: departments. · · ' . .
Environmental Manag_emerit sponsored ••we should strive for cont1nu1n.1t
by the School of Engj.neering. retPon.sJveness of the sta(f to the general
Dr. Field.Ing is a native of New Zealand .public: develop a special progran:i geared
and a natW'.aJlzed citiien ol United.states. to fuvenile rights; ,take fi?1'11 action on a
Of Wage Fr~eze Queries
Before coming to ~s ¢0ul\t(y he at-.sanltarY system, -.a ·J>a!'il.Og plan and a Co ff!
!ended l~e Univtrslty .. r Auclcllnd in New tralric pion: and pu~ ~ the acqulsitlpo Employ., or the Orange . unty 0 ce
Zealand iWhefl be receiv¢ ';Bache or'• .of smalJ par)<s and ~~:space. -,. ol the ln!ernal.J}ev~nue ServJce ari brac· l
and Master's·deeree., · '~In the area o( .. ~ram COJts W& 1 Ing themselves tor the pre-A:prll t~ ~usb'•
At the prtscnt time he serves •• • coo-should accelerate ~ J> r o c e 11 in I of taxpayer• who have queJUons about
sultant lo tho city ·of COmplon in Los system~ devlopmej\t ~ shift tlJe ,!'"dget their-tu es and the wage and price
Angeles County .lra · ,.!& trYl!>s~ .Pl".~\itlon lo 1 prosi'im format. •
determine alttmatlvf, Cretway loc1Uon1 freeze.
and rail rapid transllrol\l~ol<Oj>table 1o ·Rocer A. BlttmaM, mon1gar of ·t!JI
that community. H"uld h~ Is also WOf~· ''Costly Thefr Probed focal office of IRS offered oome wg:
ing on the developmtl!I of ~al ·bus 'I g..,tlona for tu payer• ,..kllll In-
routes a few o( wbicl1 hate already been Orange County 1berltr of!lcera are to-formation :
adopled by the city. day 1nveJtig1tin1 the reported thtll of ha -The majority of II• ond economic
"Presently I am eonduclin1 1 sludy on •lO·OllO diamond rlna lrom a Soul '-ltablllzation pollcy quhllon& can be
community response to the revitalized taluna motel ro<fm. bandied by phone. For lrtformalfon on In-
Sant& Ana city bus 1y1tem. The reoearch Mn. Betty Roen told deputies lhel the come tn, coll 836-2331 and ror tn-
•llompts to analyu attitudes oo bus .rlog "., \llieji SUQday nl«bt 4rom .. 11\e ,lprmallon oo Ill< otabll!J•Uoo, eaU I'
ltit>el anl! reaion1 wby people do or· do bedroom of her mole! rqom al il.J!lll S. '1581. • \ • ' '
not u11 tho system." lb6 doctor. •· rCoatt Jllgbway wb~• lho .,.., abletil ' -ii 1 viii! to a ·JOCal ~ olfaot lo
plained. from llJe prembts. • ' • .,.wary, lht Orqa ,Cdm,, .olllct: la
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located In Su\1• 221, The Ci'1 Financial
Cl!nter, Ora~Je_. f1
-'!'fl• bes~ houn are ;a:ao •a.m. to 10
'""· and 3 ~:m. lo 4 ~m. Wednesdays
and Thursdays aod as to0n before April
1$ 11 pos1ible. There are personnel on du-
ty to atsllt Sp1nlsh-apeakllS::ncitlzen.s.
-Two booklet&~'.'Tax Gu de for Small Builneu~, a:lffl ''Your ~ iJ Income
Tax" can be purchssed for 7! cent& at
1ny post office.
-Request& foe bulk supplles of forma
must be 1tnt lo :ru Flltllll, P.O. l!o• nu, Loo Angi!lot, Clallf . ._,,
"I would lib lo alress," lllttmano llld,
"that IRS peraonoel are not p0rmllted lo
actuaJjy pnpoi•Jax retut,. for cltlzena. ·
o We '!Ill 1111Wer •111 ltuatton& you may
ljlv• lo ~bl• J'OU lo tri!>llJ: a cornet reiun>. •
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addlehaek
' , 01... ~ NO. 2, 3 SECTIONS, 34 PAGES ,,
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OllANGE COUl'ITI', 'QALIFORNl,t. -J
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MONDA'(/ Jil.Nl:IAR.Y 3, :1v2
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Today's Flnal ~ -. -. ---N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS:
·".l~vine Council ~tarts ~~hinfi · Laws
• • •
. •
Irvine City Council's orginizatlonal
metUng that began last TU<llday when
the county11 26th city was lncorporat«![d.
Thursday's .. .,1on, la.Ung nearly liv•
hours, was adjourned to 7:IO p.m. today
Ill llcle,.,. Lecture Hall on the UC Irvine
.campo1.
The Irvine councll' will resu111& con-
s!*tatlon ol city management consultant
'applicants In public -.OOuncilmen
Henry Qulgley, Mn. Gabr!dle Pryor and
Mayor ·Wllllam Flscbbaclt'voted to con-
. . ' .. · ..
tinue the hlrln& dlecusslOls Jn )>u.blic, heard !or a -rid time at the council'• mmcll 'llwrsday ni&bl
defeating I motion by Caundlmah' n mat:. ocbedaled m .. u.r-7:IO p.m. ; ORDINANCES
Ray Quigley Jr. to adjourn lnto prlvalc WedllOidiy in University Park E~ , The'· following lawa received · llrst
.... 1on. Sch I: H the . ' : reading a""'°val by lhe-councll -muat Alblongh CaUfornla's apt;.secrecy law tary-00 · . Y pass ""'\"d. re1,dipg., by!law be heard again prior lo.filial ap.
-the Ralph M. Brown ACI -allows a 30 days.later they wlll becomO law In tlli" l'(Oval. The council iiidlcllted' lhe'IOllow-
pubUc body to consl<IB peraonnel mailers oew City~ Jryme. ,. inf will be heard at Wedne>d'1'• council
ln private, the lrvine ··council has Cowicilmon also approved five •resof· ..,.ion.
l•dlcaled it will use lhe rl&bt 1paringly. Uons and .tllree minute ~ duriag -aTAMP TAX. a law placing a city
DurJng Th.W'lday'1 council sesaion a 'I'hunday's continuing Ql'.&aniZltklaJ tax of zt.S cents per $.50Q .of value on rtal
tqtal of five ordioaDCe! were given tirst meiitUDi selsion. The DAILY 1PILOrlias· pNiperty transactions within the ne,w city.
readlnc approval. Tbe·ordlDances·wlll be COIJll'.°e<l~list ol all actio .. tal<!n If.Ille Tho tu Is not a n•w·one, but·allowS half
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lXOll on1.-.r ·~· .·b on
'$; 155000
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Fire.·Cause:
.A tus.000 1 •New Year'I Day fife, at
LallJlll'lllll•·Lellure •World w11 blamed
tOclly-l>l! 1 cll!orttle·w'liich l•D behiJid \he
C)IShl!)l!S· or:a· soil, 't~ Orange' County
.. ~~-""eel .. ""IRJ re~ •. , ' ' '\ . . . . -. '!11ebl,i!'l~lie' out in an apartment .. mPlei: /a\ =w: Via .Marlf>osa early · 5'1urday, d~od'nioe units and led' to
tlle!•viouatioll'O! .,,.Uw>lng residents ol
llierellrimelif oomtm11Uty.
It /l'H .. ihe iecopil'firt•ln 81 many,t14ya
a(.l:.elt{lll'O Wor1d: Friday, .. '20,000 lln In
I ~iml~ed t.Jho deflh GI ~~ 8"1Hb.· 111, oc2210-0·v1a t.U<rta .. 'She -·s oUJt:e: aald r.in. Slulth <lled ol 1~ · .,.,c.. TiJO lier Year'1 ))iuo· fire· 1'11
dlacovmifitiwf'S a.mi la the third floor ~ otl(r • .,.S:Mn. \A>Ub FQr.
· ~ sa1I( lnvest!ption dlkloled
thai1 Uit1,eoj:apf~ -nOficed ra fire Friday n'Ji!il In I tOucb in 1!Je ipartlilenl Tbty moved It 16 a lieli!any allddousecl11 witll ~ter. but · the ·~ .material later
fiored up and set.ll10 bujldlng alire.
,.aiuµty ftrf.men . r e 1 po n de d to
llltfml.al''s alkm. '!ilh .ix .engines, two
truck oompinles .,oo two~ units. A
,;,,, firemen . r1t11illaed 11ntll mid-day
.aa111ri!Ay mO!>P1nc up. •
o.:J1rpnen George '"~ ~I, GI 15332 Balboa SI., )V .. lminsler1_~ while ~,!he~ ~ser-ly lnjured a ~· Hi! unclerwetit 1urgeey ,SUnday and
bis conditio~Js .,Id tobe .. usf~ctory.
:, Fire figblara,. respondlnc to tbe tiu..
a!Jnn blaJ• .. Salyrday, led cbolting
rilldents to aa!ety tbrou&b .denae cloud• ·-· ' .''tfie !lte ·could ba\oe been much wwse::•' the departent reported. ''The win~ wu~ pretty hard and !lames
W•re ·spre,o!lng tapldly." ' "MJ'.'""blJl!l •nd) bad~ at a New Year'a,Eft 1*111. arlier·and. were asleep
when a.knod on 1tbe door 1111&1(~ u ,"
~ated Mrl. Jl'ox. ''W• 'COUid smell ~ llD(\ke a1ld 'a .fkeman told us to 'put on
~ :Warm c;l<lthlng and leave tbe J1llldlil& 'hlmiediatel)'!' . . ' ' .
'Brown Bag'
·Tradition Ends
A t~year old "brown bag''
tr.adilion ended today at University
'.High School, Turtle Rock, a. the
acbool's cafeteria officially opened.
• The historic first .menu prepared
far Uni Higb's t,775 students in·
eluded. Sweet 'n' SolU' Meatballs
over rice pilaf. or Cblcken Fried
Steak with potatoes and gravy.
Assorted salads and pies com-
'. p)eted the bot lunch offerings In the
new cafeteria. A sn8ck line serving
hamJ>urgcrs and sandwiches will
continue, .school Officials note.
fry Takes .Ope.r
A-s ·cc1 Leader;
Pe·r.si'so1i · VP ·, -.
The CowW:il of Communitie1 of Irvine
(CCI) todly 'aDnouncecl election ol -W.
Fred Fry to succeed Councilman John H.
Burton as ,.chairman.
Miles E ... Pete" Peterson, unsuccessful
city council candidate· who lives in the
Recquel, Club development, wa. elected
Vice cluiitman.
· rel, .one ,of two orgaaizatiOl15 active in
~ cityhood campaign, also named 1
task force to work with City Of Irvine
Now ·(COIN) .. to estabilsb new Wrection
for both .organizations."
Named ti) the task force were:
Cbainnan Fry; Peb!noa; Art Danelian,
chairman ot the Urban Planniwg Com.
mi\tee, and Denny Glenn of tlle Si•rra
Bonl1' d•velopmenl. M lorce goala includ•'
-Continued efforts to solvo the school
ov~ crliifi:
-Expanllon of -Ole charter study com-
mittee and continued work towart1 "a
cb'.arter form of two-level government
(cl'ty and ~e).
-support the Urban Planning Com-
mittee goal of city councll adoption of a
city general plan.
Fry, who served the past year as vie~
chairman of CCI, WU preoideat ol the
Turtle Rock Hills Community Asoocla-
Uon.
l'elersoo Is president GI tj1e Nortb
lrvlne Homeowners Association and ~
cbaired'lhe'CCJ publlc·school COJll!Diltee.
King Recovering
Prisoner's
Mom Scores
Nixon.Talk
DUNEDIN, Fla. CAP) -'Ille motlier ot
an American prisoner of war ll;t North
Vietnam h.a.s e~res&ed dissatisfaction
with the response to a quesUon she posed
to President Nixon and says "the Presi·
dent does not intend to withdraw from
Vietnam ever.
"This means our boys will never come
home," Mrs. Gerald A. Gaitley said Sun-
day. "A good many 1iamilie1 (of
~) think the Pr.,ldent is using
their sons u an ex~ to stay over
there... (; ~ • . • '
.,_ Gai".:,,,. · · 11""'--"I'''""' "~ ,._., ~.r l'IOlli ~ •,ft; ~
Mart Gaitley_, was a'hOt down •OD a
mlssion ov.,. Nortb Vieinam Ill August
1968.
Dan Ratlw, CBS eom.spoodt!llt who
cooduclod an hour-long i.!levlsed in-
terview witb the Prelldeilt SWlday night,
~ one 'l\IOS!io• which he lllid. came
lrom Mrs. Galtley.
She inquired ,.helher th< United Slates
asked the North Vl•toiu)lese i1 Ibey
would reJease the , Prisoners a n d
guarantee safety of wi,lbdrawing U.S.
forces ln exchange f~,a declared pullout
deadline. ,
Nixon replied ·tJiat the North Viet-
namese rejected such ·• proposaJ.. .
Mrs. Gaitley said s~ doeali't "believe
the Prtaldent answered , the question I
posed."
N"ii:on.'1 response , she said, showed that -.e ~ve never negotiated in Paris
seriou&Jy for the release of prison.en.
"ll we Would just ask the question, we
. (See POW, Page !)
2 Bandits Rob
Pair of $3,000
Orange County sheriff's officers have
no clues today to the1dentlty of a couple
wh> broke Into 1 Leisure World apart-
ment Saturday nlg!lt and ,took more than
$3.000 in cash and jewelry at•gllllpolnt •
Inveatigators sakl the~ inale intruder
and his female accomplice held up two
wom~ residents · or the I:.agun& Hills
retirement community and poclteled l'/00
In c•sh add jewe!Jy valueil at SZ,SQj).
The occupants' of · Ille Ronda Mendoza
apartment told officers' 11111 the coaple
knocked on their door andi shoved tbelr
OOPENJl'AGEN, Denmark (AP) -A way Into the home when ~ door was
pala<e spokesman says King Frederik IX opened. Neither occupant ila! hqrt Ill the
iJ recovering rapidly afler latllng DI New holdup. ' ".
Year's Eve. 'fhe spokelroan said SUnday . They we.rtideoUfied.iS.Eana Elk.er, &1,
that 'tbe lang had sullered an attack or and Clarice Goodall, 11, both of Apt. Q,
inlluensa. M9 Ronda Mendoza. •
• ·•
•• . '
' '
Coast Kids SCore ItigJi in RelfdJtjg : . . ' . ' , .
•
• •
!be ~ tetll were:admlnlstered to l!luden~ In gradOa I, Z,.3, C and U. In Ad·
•<!fUon, )anjiiqe, matholi)IUcs and spell-
lilg ~ were admlni1tered to Ille alxtb
and 12th grade 1tudents.
Followlng,Io a-oOreentile U1t!nJ of each
Onntl• Coqt ocfioot di.lrict sbowb\I the ~ pm:ontlle ,Pl~ment !Of eac1J
greda t.DOftd by lhe,otlier tut mutts. __
• CallillraM 11ollltd school Diotrk!:
grad'6 l'-)2; S -~i S-511 &\.::,'3;. U
·-a; language, ·graae ' -N; 11 -<if; .-iilng. r grade I --14; 'u -:-49;
'""U..matlcs, I -•: U -'!5.
r-.it Valky Eiementarr ~liOol
.,Dllttlcti lfade 1-U ; Z-'5; 3-"1i 6
-11; llJllWlie, grade I -ell; opelJJnc,
grade I -ti; matbem~1 I -11. .
' 8 ........ lltf<~ ~~ Scbool
•
• . , ' ' ,.y " ....
' • •
of the pr ... nt 55 cent tax collected .by the'.
county to be returned to the city.
Estimated yearly income, $27,500. (Irvine·
Ordinance 71-7, moved by R. Quigley,
unanimous}.
-HOTEL ROOM TAX, 1 new tax by
tht city charging six percent on the value
of a pight's lodging ; exempts hospitals,
convalescent homes and student housina;.
Estimated yearly income, $32,400, (lO '11-.
I See COIJNCll., Page I) ·
President
To Prepare
For Sato
By JODI V ALTEllZA
Of ... NllY l'lllf....,
President Nlmn ·was simeaUied to 1r-
rive at lhe El Toro MCAS at about 7:30
o'clock tonight -to.begin preparations for
the fifth of his summit meetings with
world leaders -talks late this week·~
San 6lemente with Japanese Prime
Minister ~lsaku Sato.
'Ille Preaident obviously wlll arrive
with a retinue ol aides ancf (~, but
Mrs. Pat Nixon, who nearly alw1ya .C.
paniH tbo.Clilel -.itift !V..i. '11111 be Oil -hand. f •
.:rbe First Lady II on 1 w"k'• lour o!
Africa. 1 t
The arrival 1ml&bt'wW !it followed bjl
another Important one lali WeC!neaday
night when the Prime Mlmm!r arrlv ..
at the same a.frfleld, and will IO dou~t
be greeted there by Mr. Nixon.
All•r restfnC overnight at t h-.
Newporter Inn Mr. Sato Ind hla aides wUI
hegln tlle tWO<!ay round ol talk> at tbo
Wertem White· House in San Clemente.
White HOUie tp0kesmen have not
detalled the u'aet tubstance ol Ille topics
to be diJcuaSed. bUt Wa1hington writers •
have specula!M that the conferonces wUI
clW wltb recent U.S. economic policies
whlch have bit hard at Japan's Important
picture, plua the Taiwan sltuttlon in Ufe
United Nattona .and tlle decision by tbe
White House to launch lrlpo to PeJdni
Ind Moscow later tbJJ year.
-All-~Am'-'~ de¢110na lurle • cau.ed eome arave concern tn Sato'•
homeland.
The While Howe hu y.t to give any
details for the welcome ceremoniq for
the protocol-conacious Japanese delega-
tion.
A motorcad8'tbrough San Clemente ha.
been mentioned, but not confirmed.
Treasury Secretary John Connally was
upectecl to. jqln Ille President In San
Clemente 1o participate In the two days
~ ""1ka with Sato, cbaract•rized as .. .trlctly businesl." ••
I Tho label In dlplomaUc parlance m•ar.s
· tbal\ttnmony and lavllb. weloomea wlll
be ~ 111 minimum. ,
· ni..enct duntlM ol Mr. Nixon'• first 'riall.GI tba,7ear to La, Claa Paclllca bas
11111 bean announced. '
Oraai•
I ·• ' lt'eadt~
The 1klei· along Ille Orange '•
Coast ahoold be ~ lair today ~ •
and Tuesday bul ...... ~y '•
nortlleast wlnda lhould bealn bJo\v. •
Ing today and tbrdugb 'l'lleldty.
lltgha ahoold be 19 with Iowa near ,
Ill. •
·-" -'} L.M.-.,. c..,.,." ' ~ »:
.-17 .,...,..... 11 .. --. ........... lS ·--.......... .
.
........... Tl
-u . ,.. ............
Of'9lltl Cewty '' • .,.., .. ""'"' tt --_...,. T ....... IS n...t.n IJ ,.. ... ...., .. --" ............ ,,,,,.
\ .
• . '
l f', f DAIL V PILOT SB Monda,, Ja"""" l , 1972 ...... .._ __________ ~-"'=:::.:;:,~·~·;r...:.:.:..:__.:.._
Def raurl ~ Witne ·ss Mum
• • I ' ' . • • • . -J
Man Declines in' CQnfirm . Tire Siate.,.,_,,ent ·
. -'
By TOM BARLEY • del~ -Mtodenh~t \. O( -'. nl(\ dtn\U .. oh their ..... , can.
0t •• 01th' i.1 .. 1·s1111 Avedld.;-De'fSeo, Mf11ton \ljo while ' Le_~tbard'iAid be•wa• JSW•ltlnc ·trtaJ on.
A prose<:utlon wit.nus-who allrgedly Men~enhall open~ the San Juan T~x· .. drUr cbatgt·s-at 'the time he wis 1,...
once told a di stricl attornt'y's lnvestigar or 1co in San Jua~ Capistrano. tcrvlewed by the district attorney's Jll->
that ht saw .. tnore than 1.000 tires Leuthard 1a1d he worked 111 the San vuUgator in 1970 and that the in-
lftlibtr1tely punctured by attendant s al a Juan station for a year and "{or just a veatlgal6r promised to help him on those
·San Juan Capistrano servire stat ion to-few weeks" at t~e Sa_n Clemente Mohi! charges in retum for his stC1lement.
day refused to confirm that statement in st~lion, 600 Aven1da Pico, also owned by He iosist.ed under t lo.se questioning
Orange C.ounty Superior C.Outt. Mendenhall. . from Stenton that the investigator had
' Ronald LeuUtard, 27, the pr(). But be dented today that he had told "invented" the allegations and that he
&ecution's eleventh witness In the trial of lhe inve1tlgator that Mendenh~JI used ha~ E<?Operated to avoid what he te'U 1t
nine men accused ol. eo.nspiracy to chtat sharpened ·irutrument! .lo deltberate!y the 1Jme would be a state prison term of
and defraud motorJsts. told deputy puncture Ure~. at the stallo~s. , . five years to life if he was convicted on
District AUorney Richard Stcnton that He also rejected Stenton s suggestion charges of possessing and selling marl·
the written statement be.fore the pro-that he ha.d ~eard ~hree defendants nam-ju~na . ·
1ecutor was the invealigat.or's invention ed . as pr1nc1pal1. 1n the allgeged con-Leuthard named Ralph Carney , 29, of
and did not renect ~is own experience . sp1racy. urg_e thetr employes _at a Gard.en 32852 Calle San Marcos, San Juan
Leuthard confirmed that he worked for Grove meeting to puncture tires and in-Capistrano as the manager of the San
Juan Texaro statio n.
GOP Thwarts Two Professors
Flunk Big Test
He Identified R. C. Weisner, 28, of San--
ta Ana, as the manager of the San
Cll\l'llente station at which he was also
0
Reagan Veto
Qverride Bid ,.
SACllAMENTO (AP) -The Senate
A Santa Ana College instructor
got 1972 off to a bad start in
Newport Beach by nunking a
police·administered geography test.
..,ployed. .
·.};tehlon has named Stantey Davis, 32, of 1• San Pablo Circle and Jerry Kendall,
35, .or 969 Sonora Road, both of Costa
Mesa with Edward Carney, 27, of 2C&l2
Shell Harbour Drive, Huntington Beact\
as th't tnret principals in the alleged con·
spiracy. DAllY ,ILOT Stiff ,lltl1l
Sittin' in the Su11
• '\toted toda.y: io override one of Gov.
Ronald Reagan 's record-long list of .-tots. but Assembly Republicans stood
eolidly behind the GOP governor and the
effort lost in the lower house 39·19.
fatrolman Richard Millers said
he had occ"asion to stop the less-
than·sober ·scholars, both SAC
· teachers and both aged 43, at East
Coast Highway and Poppy Avenue
for sus piciously erratic driving.
He and prosecution witne5.5eS· have
5tated t.hal the three men controlled a '
chain of JI service stations ranging from
Seal Beach to San Clemente and were
responsible for auto damage that cost
motorists ••many thousands of dollars."
Students at Unii,.iersity High School in Irvine use
school's new snack court. The facility, along with
new cafeteria. library, offices and additional class·
rooms, opened toda.v as students returned from
Christmas vacation. Trojan basketball teams will
play their first home 2ames in ne\v gym Tuesday.
Ne\v buildings complete $5.5 million campus, "'hicb
currently serves 1,775 students'.
• The Senate !irst voted 27·13 to override
Reagan's v,eto of a measure sponsored by
' Sen. Anlbony C. aeilenson CD-Beverly
Jfills), to require better sound-proofing of
homes and publ ic buildings.
Six Republicans joined the % I
Democrats to vote to override Reaga11 -
the second time this year the upper house
has voted to put a bill into· law in spite of
1 ·Reagan veto.
But the override attempt fell 1~ votes
1hort in the Assembly.
.•·It takes a two-thirds margin in both
b9uses to· override a gubernatorial veto -
~methlng that hasn't been done slnce . Uf6
· By midmorning, the Assembly had sus-
'-"'ined 34 of the 52 vetoes before it. Only
-a&-of the issues came to a vote. Reagan
Vetoed 157 billl thiJ past year, a record
(6r him.
~Moat of·the override. efforts were made
by De:mocrat.s but one Republican was
Caustically critical of a Reagan veto of
one of his bills.
.r'Assemblyrnan Frank Murphy {R-Santa
£ruz), rose on the Assembly noor and
said the veto of his plan for a prison om-
budsman "makes you want to throw up.''
; Although he didn't try to override t_he
!eto, Murphy said, "For five years t've
listened to Democrats say the governor's
Weto, measagu are un~ Y9u're ao •iabt.. Y~•'rwo·rlgbl.' < ~-i ~ The veto menage 11 where the
tovernor gives his reasons for vetoing the
~ill. . '
; The veto ovefride drlW Was one of the iooae ends the lawmakers had to handle
j>efore beginning their 1972 work.
jeaspers' Son
:Faces Pot Rap
' : Kirkland T. Caspers, 18, son of Orange
County Fifth D~ict Supervisor Ronald
W. Caspers, is facing charges of possess.
tng marijuana todiy following his arrest
Sunday morning by Newport Beach
poJice.
· easpers, a resident of 133 A venida
Pelayo, San Clemente, was arrested at
6:10 a.m. while sleeping in a car near his
family's Lido Jsle home. Police assert
they found about one ounce of marijuana
In Caspers' car_ while ~e was removing
vehicle registration material from the
glove compartment. r
Harbor Judicial District Court Judge
Calvin T. Schmidt authorized his release
later Sunday . ,~prning on his own
recogniU1nce . .CaJpers ·.will be arraigned
later this w{ek-:-: . ..
DAllY PILOT
,.~ ....
L .. , .. h.cli
Cfft• M"•
Hwtl•tt.1 ..... ,..,.,..... ,.,... '-" c..-..,.· .
Oii.ANG( COAST l'IJ!l!SMIN!O COMl'Ak't
'o'-••' N. w,,J
Pr.,•llM •toO l'Ybl"""'"
J1tl R, Cur!1v
Vkt l'ftol'l)•M 1.-.G G('fl•'ll M•~•ftl'
l~'"''' A. Mu•p~; ....
M1111plf1t !:''"lr
c~ •. i •• 1-1. 1001 11;,~.,J "· ~.u
An1.1t1nt MIMO•ng fOl!O•I
OH'k11
C•I• """'': .l:wl ""'"'' ~ • ., S!•vl ff-t llNCll: J.JJ! I.ti-'! 8~1' ••»d L~ ._.., m ""'"'"'' Av.-,.,, M111"111fte. •n<": l/'flS 8NC" hti•••11NI
l<IJI Utn".tfl!t; Al Horlh ll C..'91W'IO 11"1
CAllY ,lLOT", wllh ... ~ 11 ~ h • H-.fr ... !, INlll'lt~ ... ~111y 1rc .. 1 Sii">
NV • _.,.~ •Iii.ow 1-r LtfUl\t INd\,
H....-t IM(ll, Ctlll Mal, MWl'lt;,,11on
•ltdl. '"""''"' \'tilt'(, $111 c....,,., .. , c...-... -.,., kdta.blt•. '""" '"''"" ..... rt0•11 tollfll>ll. "'~""1 .....,II ... ~111\I 11
•1 m Wftl l1y ltrM:, C:NUI "'-"'·
,...., ... 1714> 642--4121
Cl ... Hle4 A4Yetth ... 642•1671 '-, ........... -De, ........ l
, ... ,.... ••2·4420
C_,.,lfhl, 1m, 0r-. C..il "*11~11'11
c;,r-"Y· N• -'let"'" 1!11,>ll'Ultlll. ••lo• ......... ... fflvwtlt_,, ... ".'" _, .. ,.,...M1• Wl"*'t .,.cit! ,.r-.... " ..,,,flf'll .........
~~If!.~ &l:U.~'11'.'.l~
He arrested the driver and then
attempted to rouse the slumbering
passenger.
"Are we there?" he quoted the
man as saying.
"Where?" asked Officer Miller.
"Alaska," replied the teacher:
Officer Miller 1aid he asked the
sodden · sojourner to step 'outside
and see lf the surrounding terrain
really l09ked like Yukon Territory.
Stagu:ring out. and holdipg onto
the car, t.ht SAC teacher surveyed
the scene.
''.Y~p. we're in Alaska,'• he
detlared. 1 •
From the.re it was just like a
Mon0po1y-· Game: Wrong -go
dl.-..Uy to )lilt.
Tustin Trustee •
ijQpef ul Backed
. ' ' By 'lrvine Unit
One of the si~ persons running In the "
Feb. l 'f4stin Union High School District
.. T"";%~t'?I! hat ~· endorsed ~y lh• Clty o( Irvine Nbw (OOTN) cilliens'
group ..
Chairman Andrew May said tod~y the
group ;s backJng Mrs. Elizabelb "Lee"
Sicoli in the special trustee eJecU0.,n that
is combined with a lax override .and bond
electioii. All voters in the district will
decide which of the six candidates will fill
the unexpired term of Mrs. June Smith
who is.moving.ou't of the state. The term
runs through June 1973.
May-noted lhat Irvine presenlly has no
representation on the five-member. high
school djstrlct board.
From Page 1
POW ...
would open up negotiations never opened
before,'' Mrt .. Gaitiey 1ei~. ·~'f .. would in
no way, enctan·ger our pooit19n: just'to-ask
the questi«?f1. '.JJlla is the crucial question
concemlng...,the opening of ~goUJ.Ugn~:_
She said the~question wa1 never aslred
at the Paris Pelee talks.
"It's a question many of us wanted to
ask the President. But we have not had
direct communications with the Presi·
dent . only wilh lesser members of the ad·
ministration," she said,
Mrs. Gaitley said she had tried
numerous times for a personal visit or
phone conversation with Nixon, but was
always refused. '
She said she learned her son was a
r.risoner when other POWs released In
1\ugust 1969 reported seeing the
lleutenant.
Nixon said he raised the POW lmed
\rith Soviet foreign minisler Andf.ei
Gromyko and that presidential advfSet
Henry A. Kissinger discussed it with
Chinese Premier Chou En·lai.
When the full re~ord is publl.shed, Nix-
on said, .. our lacfy from Florida, and
others, will recognize we have gone the
extra mile."
North Vietnam asserted today the on·
ly way President Nixon can ;ree U.S.
prisoners of war and "gel out of the
swamp in Vietnam" is to abandon hopes
of military victory and "negotiate ser-
iously at the Parls c911ference on
Vietnam." . . :: ·
The statemenl Issued by 'Nor[b Viet·
nam 's representatives to the conference
was an attempt to respond to !he
statements made by Nixon SundAy night .
Buses for Bridge
Frotn Page 1
COUNCIL ... Reds Claim Five
U.S . Aircraft
IRS Braces for Flood
$. n;ioved by H. Quigley. unanimous).
-HEALTH NUISANCE LAW, allows
the city to force cleanup of hazardous or
unsanitary conditions or collect costs of
city cleanup from property owner. (10 71·
9, moved by H. Quigley, unanimous ).
In 'Big Battle' Of Wage Freeze Queries
-VEHICLE NUISANCES. a law allow-
ing city removal al q,wner '1 expense of
abandoned or wrecked cars. (10 71-10,
moved by H. Quigley, unanimous).
-PEDDLER CONTROL, a I a w
regulating ~dlers, solicitors a n d
itinerant merchants, re9uiring .a $100
license application fee and exempting
religious, civic and political solicitations
and children under IS years. (10 71·11,
moved by R. Quigley, pas!ed 4-1, Mrs.
Pryor opposed ~.
URGENCY ORDINANCE
-TREE CUTTING BAN, a law re-
quiring a city permit to cut any tree in
the new city that is larger than 3.S inches
in diam·eter as measured two feet from
the ground. Violation is a misdemeanor
carrying a $500 fine and/or six months in
jail. (10 71-13, moved hy H. Quigley,
unanimous).
RESOLUTIONS
-71-17, adopls the select system of rity
slreet.s approved by the state for Orange
County ; allows city to qualify for county
funds for streets less than arterial status.
-71·18 includes improvement and
signalization of the MacArthur Boulevard
and Michelson Drive intersection in the
county Arterial Highway Financing
Program, allowing the city to share in
county highway money should it want to.
Does not commit city to the project.
-71·19 establishes a city of Trvine
general fund and a traffic safety fund to
receive traffic fine mone vs from viola·
tions occurring in thC new city.
Estimated yea"r'ly income, $50,000.
-71·20, names Mayor Fischbach,
Mayor Pro-Tempore H. Quigley and City
Clerk Mrs. Brandt as the city officers
authorized to sign city checks.
-71-21 continues use of Orange County
·road, buflding and planning departtnents
for issuance of permits ~t no cost to lhe
city.
MINUTE ORDERS
-City banking service: council . ap-
proved formation of a committee in-
clud ing Councilmen John Burton and E.
Ray Quigley Jr. and the city manage-
ment consultant designate to determine
which of the four banks in the new city
shall recei ve the city's business.
-Building freeze exception: allows
Miles E. "Pete" Peterson of J37n
Margene Circle. The Racquet Club, to bt
issued a permit to build a patio and cover
·at his home.
-J'rjvate session: motion by E. R.
-Quigley._to adjourn to exe<iutive session to
-'discuss city management consultant ap-
plications. Defeated, 2-3, Councilmen E.
.ft:--.Quigley ·arid J~ ··Burton , for; Coun-
cilrrttn Fischbach, H. Quigl~y and· Mrs.
Pryor, opposed.
TOK\'O (AP) -Five U.S. aircraft
were shol down by ground-to-air missiles
ir. N~he . An Province last Thursday,
Hanoi s Vietnam News Agency said Tues·
day.
VNA, in a broadcast monitored in
Tokyo, said two other U.S. attacking
planes were downed by antiaircraft guns
on the same day in the province.
The North Vietnamese claim was in-
cluded in an account reported by a VNA
local correspondent on what it called .. the
big battle"' in Nghe An Province against
U.S. planes on Dec. 30, 1971. It did not
identify the type of missiles.
VNA gave the fotlo\\:ing account:
'•Jt was a cloudy day. At 6:30 a.m.,
more than 80 U.S. jet fighter bombers
roared into the coastal area of Nghe An
from the sea for a massive surprise at-
tack .
··At missile atte R, Commander Tan
closely watched the enemy's movement
on the radar screen. Waiting until a
group of right 'Phantoms' had nown into
the target sight, he shouted : 'Fire!' Two
missiles shot up and tore into the
jetnight. Two F4s were shattered in the
sky. All the other planes, thrown into
confusion. fled to the sea.
"Forty minutes later, the enemy again
came in many groups totaling JOO planes
flying at <!ifferent altitudes. They were
met by a real wall o'f flre put up by the
missile, antiaircraft and militia units.
"A group of three F4s and one A3J
threaded their way into the airpace o(
Vinh city. The batteries defending the ci·
ty roared in unison. At the same time,
two ground -to · air missiles wi:re laun·
ched, chasing after the marauders. One
F4 was blown to pieces. The two pilots
perished in the sea. Another F4 had its
tail shattered and burned violently before
plummeting' on a mountain range ·in
neighboring Ha Tinh Province. Two red
parachutes ejected, and the downed pilots ·
obviously tried to steer themselves
toward the sea.
"Wiping the dirt off his face after lying
down to avoid the blast of a flurry of
bomb! released by the rescue planes. the
military commander or Nghi Xuan
village shoutect himself hoarse : 'Fire at
the chutes 1'
"At the same time, all the gUnll or bat·
tery l of the antiaircraft force turned to
the rescue planes, preventing them from
attacking the battleground of the militia.
·Another F4 caught fire . and crished on
Hon Ngu island. lt! two ,Silo~ .managed
to bail out b~ they fell Jike .iwo stones in·
lo the sea belore the chutes could open.
Meanwhile, another surface-to-air ,mW.lie
-blasted down .an -A3J which wu winging
over the artillery ground."
Backers Enter Nixon
In March NH Primary . . .
':I
fohnal ballot.
Employes of the. Orange C:Ounty office
of the Internal Revenue Service are brac-
ing themselves for the pre-April 15 rush
of taxpayers \\'ho have questions about
their taxes and the wagl and price
freeze.
Roger A. Bittmann. manager of the
local office of ms offereJ some sug·
gestions for tax payers seeking in·
formalion :
-The majority of lax and economic
stabilization policy questions can be
handled by phone. For information on in·
come tax, call 8.1&.2.181 and for in-
formation on the stabilization call 547·
'1581.
-If a visit 101 a local JRS office i"
necessary, the Orange County office is
located in Suite 221, The City Financial
Center, Orange.
-The best hours are 8:30 a.m. to 10
a.m. and 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesdays
'T ehicle Owners
Can Use Ba11ks,
· Mail to Register
Motorists who don't want to pay their
vehicle registration at the local Depart-
ment of Motor Vehicles offices. may send
the payments through the mail or make
the renewals at six county banks.
OMV windows will be open at the banks
during regular banking hours through the
close of business, Feb. 4, the deadline for
car registration.
Robert C.Ozens, OMV director noted
that all billings sent to California
motorists contain instructiQn~ for mailing
paymen~ t? save registrants a tr ip to the
banks or OMV offices.
There are five DMV oCHCes In Orangll
County; They are located at· the following
addresses : . . .
500 Central Ave .• La Habr~ and ll"ank of
Blvd., Garden Grove ~ Stink of America,
720 w. 19th St., Costa Mesa : 106 W1.
Canada, San Clemente; 16062 Jackson St.,
Midway Citv: 1330 F;. lst. St.. Santa Ana
and 1750 W.~ La Palma Ave., Anaheim.
Banks that are handling vehicle
registr4tion are:
Uni'ted California Bank, 24(132 El TorQ
Road. Laguna Hill!"; Bank of America,
Lincoln Avei:iue at Claudina Street,
A~aheim; U.S. National, 6301 Beach
Blvd., Buena Park; F~era and
Merchants Bank, 10422 Garden Grove
America, 2680 N. Tustin Ave., Orange.
Tax Measures
Receive Irvine
Council Okay
. Tax measures providing a total .or
S59,400 of income to the new city of Jrv.lne
were passed Thuraday by the city coun-
cil.
CONCORD; N.H. (AP) -PetitiOll!·
"'ere filed today to get Pr'esident Nlxon·i;
name on the ballot for New Hiim~hJre ·s
Republican ·pres.identlaJ pr tier enc t
primary Merch 7.
F'ormer Gov. Lane DwlnneJJ, head or •
t·.iti?.ens group cai.npalgi~ng for !"ixon,
hied the petitions to ent~r the Pm1dent'.1
name In the naUortl tarllest Primary.
If "the President doe3 not Allow his
name to be listed formally as a candidate,
the 14 dtleaate and )4 alternate delegate ··c~didatea would not run pledged but
would be llsted as.f1vor11ble to Nixon.
Owinnell said ht' h,d ''mixed feellnc~"
about the Presldenr1 decisic.n to do no
One law which puts a six percent levy
on hotel room rentals in Irvine, ls a new
ordinance and u~ the tax charged in
1 neighboring ciUes _by one percent. Laguna
Be:ach and Newpbrt Beach the councfl
was told charge only five percent.
Dwinnell, repor1lhg";.lfe· bad· more than
1.000 slgnatures ,fi1>tn ea~ ot.lhe 11tate.1s
two congr~SJlonal district& -twice the
number required -p~edkted t~ Presi-
dent would win the Conlesl "ve"r)i hin-
dily,"
Owinnell 1aid he Md not conferred with
the White House before fillnr the pell·
tions but wal lnforming Nfron In a Jetter
that his name had been fJled.
campaigning. · '
11X1 the one res1>9nslbfe for the cam-
paign'in this state, one would like to have
'One's 'candidate on the arounds," Dw1n-
ne11 said. , .
-He said hi! group take! "very ~erlously
any oppoeitlon," to Nlion'1 candidacy,
including the challenses of Republican
R<ps. Paul McCl.,.key of C.lifomla ;nd
John Ashbl'(IC)k ()( Ohio, bill predicted ll!e
)>resident wotila win hand ily .
The other, a law placing 27.S cents per
$500 value t11x on real estate transactions
i11 Irvine, merely allows the city to col·
lect half of the ~H<nt& already 01tsr1ed
by the county. n, room tu 13 estimated to provide
Mme $32,400 in income du.ling ill first
year, while the property exchange it.Imp
tax will yield about $27 ,500, eouncllmen
said.
and Thursdays 1tnd as soon before April
IS as possible. There are personnel on du-
ty to assist Spanish-speaking, citizens.~
-Two booklets. "T11x Guide for Small
Business" and "Your Federal Income
Tax" can be purchased for 7S cents at
any post office.
-Requests for bulk supplies of forms
must be sent to Tax Forms, P.O. Box
1711, Los Ange'Jes, Calif. 90053.
"r would like to stress," BHtmann said,
''that IRS personnel are not permitted to
actuallv prepare tax returns for citizens.
We will answer any questions you ma y
have to enable you to prepare a correct
return."
lrvi11e Council
Eye Managelllent
Consulting Post
Among the Hems to be. considered al
tonight 's third session of the Irvine City
C:Ouncil':s nearly a week old organiza·
tional meeting is the selection of a city
management consultant.
That item, and six others, were held
over from Thursday as the nedgling clty
council labored to past midnight.
Tonight's session is called for 7:30
o'clock in the Science Lecture Hall on the
UC Irvine Campus.
The agenda includes setting a lime and
place for meetings of the city planning
agency, which for the time being is the
city councll.
Other items to be considered are resolu·
tlons: desil(nating a bank to handle city
funds, authorizing purchase of officfl
equlpment and supplies. appointing 1
temporary city treasurer and a tern·
porary deputy city clerk, and naming of
an inte.rirn city engineer. The three ap-
pointees would serve for 90 days.
From Page 1
TRANSIT ...
tended the University of Auckland in New
Zealand where . he 'received Bachelor's
and Master's dCgrees.
At the p~ent Hme he IF.rves a~ a con-
sultant to ,lh;e t:ily or COinpton in Los
Angeles ~pnfy. He · 'ls trying to
determine altejnlitlve freeway locations
and rail' rapid lfllri"~lt toutes •cceptab!e to
that comrrtunity. ·He said he iS also work·
Ing on· the: deveJopmenl ""Of local bus
routes a fe-tt of which1 have already been
adopted bjr the tlly. •
"Presently I arg•eonductlng a study on
community .re1Pon1e to -the revitalized
Sanfi ~rt.I tity bo! 1yste01.·The research
attempts to analyze attitudes on bus
trav~I and reasons why people do or do
not use lhe system," the doctor ex·
plained.
I
'Foot Severed
With Gift Saw r • ~ ·~
WOODLAND -Jlllt.LS •(tiP!) -A
pillrfially crippled mac glvtn • pOwer saw
a~ a birthday ftlft Sunday accldental1y
dropped the lool ind severed hi• right
hand and toot.
Doctors al Apt.lope V•lley Hospital
11kt there' wasn't enoUgh b Io o d
circulating In the severed limbs to rtat·
lach lh<!m.
Rr•cu• Firemen said John Ludwta, 57,
l'hq 11 p1(1lally pualy•ed on his tell side,
dropped the 1aw while warkina on lht
b&ck.ol his plciup truck. ,
Ill . ...,... etK· ~' •t •;:Jr1:i1i "'llW!IYI ~ ... lf-t ... , n II ,..,.,..,,r.
SAN FRANCISCO ( API -The Golden
Gate Bridge went into the mass trAnslt
busjneSI today: to rtlieve It! .._own con-
gestion. The Oolden G11te1 · Bridge.
Highway lnd Transportation District
begari runnlnf 152 new t11rconditioned
buses, purchased for nearly flO million,
be~n ~11"' Francisco and.JWo auburban
cotmttes in a· cOmmuter lef(rfce that ti·
tends 80 milu to the north. The district Is
laking ov;r iullf pperaled by Greyhound
fllf '31 ft~" Mid. 'Pr<>tni-biotl« wvlee
.... ~ far .. J$ C<illll • 1ew,ii -~ nin1 U • COllUnUltrfbu)r boolt& ol lici<tlf.. '
p ~ •·
Nixon will hove 10 ::X: •lier lb' pr1·
. tmrf (jllrig period • T!!Urtdll' ",to "litep Or rtmOVI his rillme frOm ,..
In t?'lt IJS& primary, Nixon, a formal
«andldate, ~\led 7T,,. pe~ent OI ibi Rept1~llc1n vow 111mst> 10.3 pe~I for ~Ne•'York C... Nelloo.JloC)ielrller. ,
In another •ction, the council &el up •
fund to receive traffic finu levied on
vlolalll>"' In U.. ne• dty. Thu fund n11y
collect u much u '50,000 In rovtnile ht 1m.
Hll teen--.age tOn, Gary, witneued tht
~dtnl •ncl qutakly •P,Plltd toilrnaqueu
lo;tlOp )be l!fo'! ol blood. A dljl rescuo Crt'1 urtved _, allM. •
( ' r
t
7
• •
:tington Beaeh
Fountain Valley
Today's Fijal
N.Y. Sto&s • ..
. '
VOL 65, lljO. 2, 3, SEt;TIONS, 34 PA~ ORANGE COUNTY-, CALIFORNIA ' MONDAY, JANUARY l, ,1972 ;• TEN CENTS
/,
on State Tests CoaSt YoulJ.gsters Score High
' .
Sludents :~ !ht ; 0ranae Coul
t1petleid lhelr ,;,,~ v O•a v er a I e
ll!l(fomlal\ct or 1111\).'llJ ~Y agalo,.li:oring
ll!g)I on , .. ding anit achl<Yiment tests In
1~71. AcCording~· l'JCOfillY' :released
nauJll, tl)e • w •• th<
alale .a·•~e. !•Sled; with
"Chl•vlni th< Ill -cl oronge ;,
IAa'l"" Beach we"' In lhe I~ pei<tntlle
in lernis o1 reading, meaning that IO per·
~ <ii ·all 1ludents In the stale scor<d
UiWor Ill! the teil than Ult Laguna Beach
sllllj@'l•ond lt perceal of Ulem scored lillher. • -
Tbf-teadlng tests were administer«! lo ~la In •rqdes 1, Z,),-1 and 11. In ad-dit!Oit, llnguag•, mathemltlcs and spell·
illg tesll•were admln~ to the sixth
and 12th J!'•"" student$.,
Followirig ta a pe""'iitlle llsting of each
' ~ ._. t" \, ' .l 1 , ~p!AILY PIJ.DT a.tf"""
HE WAS ENERGETIC AND HEAL;f'H\','TH. ii CMlE LEUKEMIA
Paul 11 Undor In-Modlutltiq to Stabllln Hta Blood .. . . . ..•
.Battling ·oeath
.
Tot Hris ' Leukemia, Needs Blood
-
1 •I( I
Oran1e Coast ocbool dJstrlct allowing the
reading pe""'"Ule placement for eaoh
1rade followed by the otller last results.
Caol1truo UDllled School Distrid:
gracfe 1-72; 2-65; S-51; 8-63; 12
-M; language, srade 6.-56; 1J --.\8;
spelling, grade I -54 ; 1J -411;
mathematics, •·-48; 12 -55. Fouatm Valley Elementary School
District; grade 1 -62; 2 -86; 3 -63; ~,
-11 ; language, grade I -IO; spelling,
grade li ...J 47; mathematics, I -53.
HuaUngtoa Be1cb Elementary School
Dtalricl : grade l ~ 51; 2 -!8; 3 -117; I
-.13; lanpagt, ~I -IO; spelling,
grade,.1 -54; malhemltica, grade I -
59.
HllllllactoA lleacb Union High School
Distrlcj: grade 1J -53; language, grade
12 -Ill; spelling, 1J -49; mathematle>,
12-; ~-LI .... lleOCb UnUled School District:
grade l-81; 2-15; 3 ~ 72: 6-74; 12
-53; language, gra&! 6 -75; u -~;
opel!lrig, 6-69; 12 -49; mathematics, I
-71; 12-55.
Newport-Me1a Unllled School District:
grade l-15; 2-72; 3-69; 6 -63; 12 ·
-83; 11.niUage, 6 -85: 12 -61; spell·
Ing, f-M; 12-M; malhematlcs, I -
51; u -80.
Oceaa Vl<w El~enlary S c b o o 1
Dlstrld: grade I -15; 2 -61; 3 -63 6
-63; Janguage, 6 -63; spelling, 6 -54;
matbe.maUcs , 6 -59.
SU Joaquin Elementary Sc h o o I
District: grade I -62 ; 2 -50; 3 -63 ; 6
-II;· language. 6 -IO ; spelling, 6 -61 ;
mathematlcs. 6 -59.
Se.al Bu~b Elementary S c h o o I
District: grade 1 -72; 2 -74; S -74; 5
-71; language, 6-&8; spelling. & -61;
mathematics . 6 -62.
TusUn Union High School District:
grade 12 -60; l1ngu1ge. 12 -13; spell·
ing, 12 -58; mathematics, 12 -60.
Westminster Elementary Sc h o o l
Di.strict : grade 1-SS: 2 -65: l -SS; 6
-54; language, 6-5.1; spelling, 6 -S4 ;
mathematics, 6 -55,
Nixon Arriving Tonight
·.
President to Meet Japan's Sato in San Clemente
By JOHN VALTEl\ZA
ot *9 DllllY ,Htl $tiff
President Nixon was scheduled to ar·
rive at the El Toro MCAS at about 7:30
o'clock tonight to begin preparations for
the fifth of his summit meetings with
world leaders -talks late thls •k in
San Clemente with. Japanese Prime
Minister Eisatru Salo.
The President obviously will arrive
with a retinue of aides and advisers, but
Mrs. Pat Nb.::on, who nearly alwaye ac-
companies the Cbief EaecuUve West, will
not be on hand.
The Ftrst Lady Is on a week's tour of
Africa.
The arrival lonigbt will be followed by
another Important one late WedneMay
night when tlle Prime Mini.!ter arrives
at the same airfield, and Will ao doubt
be greeted there by Mr. Nixon.
After resting overnight at t b e
Newporter Inn Mr. Sato and hta aides will
begin the two-day round of talks at the
Western White House in San Clemente.
Wblte Hou.se spokesmen have not
detailed the eaact subatance Qf the topics
lo be dtacussecl, but Wl$bin&loll·wrllert
have speculaled tbat the conferences wW
deal wllh recent U.S. economic pollcles
which have hit hard at Japan's important
picture, plu.s the Taiwan situation ln the
United Nations and the detlslon by the
White House lo launch trips to Peking
and Moscow later this year.
All those American decisions have
caused so me grave concern In Sato's
bomelsl)d. The While House baa yet lo give any
details for the welcome ceremonies for
the protoool-<0noclous Japanese delegf'
lion.
A motorcade through San·Clemente has
been mentioned, but not confirmed.
Treasury Secretary John Connally was
expected to JolD the President in san
Clemente to participate in the t\o day s
of talks with Sato, characteri!ed as
''strictly business."
Ocean View
To Consider
Beach's Fitst
•
'72 ~aby F.ine POW's Mother
I Huntlnpn Beach's llrst 11172
bablsM ' M¢<M · 'Year' School ·· · .. ~·~~=w-~· ' -.,-.:. .•.. -"l_J•, on Talk
• By l\Vof NJEDZ!Euoo TM bilont; who.! " law . • °' .. ..,..., ,...., -. peupdl.):ll ounces, 11
4 .. ,.,. .j •
~ .....• ..._)ii>
an=~:t 1<orih . A lallr. force ol educators bas rioom-til.~· .ad Lilda
mended that the Ocean View School W'll Qlpar Lint, 1lllnl1nlfim
District start 1 pilot iJOicd in year-Bell$'h. . . around scboota beglming this summer. Tile baby ,. clomg wet~ hotpltal -
v;elf..m llai llip.-4 . dlaltlsfacUOn with the ~ lo • quelllon Ille poled
lo l'Mldent Nlml lllld ·"'l'J "the Preoi·
dent doel not loleDd to wltlrdraw from Whether lhat suggestion be<Olnes reall· officlata nported.
ty i5 up to Ocean Vjew trustees' who will
discuss the subjcd at 7:30 o'cloclr:-tonight
at district headquarters, 7972 Warner
Ave.
The plan recommended by the study
team la lhe "15-15" plan in whicli
studenll WO\lld attend school !or 45 days
and then take a 15-day vacation. lts ma·
jor aim, acconling to educators, is to pre-.
vent a "learning Joss" oVe'r lengthy sum·
mer vacations.
Ocean View Schools Superintendent
Clarence Hall claims other adVllltages of
the plan include more eificieni use of
school buildlnp, Increased flexibility In
vacation schedules , and in.creased
availablllty of library books, tnthooks
ed. audio-viaual equipment. ,
· If adopied, tlie 15-15 ~11111 wOll)d caJrlor
a division of the studenf populatlor. into
four groups. Three groups would be in
school at any one time, providing for
alternating vacation times.
The Ocean View 45-15 plan is ~milar lo
one currenUy oonsidered by the San Joa·
quin School District. Unlike San Joaquin
Schools, the Ocean View project is not
aimed at relieving overcrowded
classroom conditions.
During January It is upeded that each
of the dlstrid'S 23 ClmpuB<S will C()Oducl
indiVldaal studies oo the fe11lbluty•ol the
15-15 plan ln their .Umdanct srea.
If they wish lo pOrliclpete in the pUot
project, the schools must forward 1 lellir
of Intent by JM. 211, a«Ording lo Dr.
Hall.
Before llklng the pllol projeet back to
tnistees for ratification, etCh scboo1 wllJ
make surveys to determine· the extent of
parent interest In the new attenaance
plan.
"We have recommended that no aChool
be involved In the pilot progrJ!D unlelS
there is ovenme~mlng community sup.
port," said Dr. Hall.
Parents whose chlldr:eo are scheduled
for parttcipallon In the pilot program wUJ
be noUlled by May 15.
<
HqUday Tras'1,
Welcome Here
P'ountain Va'!:/; reslde~ll 11m burdened b1 le lover cootaioor1
from holiday parties are Invited lo
donalo them to the c~y'1 reeycllng
ctnter, n.. center, located at 'l'llomPton'• Texaco on Brooldlunt
$!reel and Talbert Avenue, will
lalte both i\All botU.. and alWI>-
lawn Cina. Pm Of Iha llmd• collected llom
the recycling project ta dooalad lo
the <ity Beautlllcllion Colnmlllee
for the planting of tr. and
Oowtn on parmys and medlanl.
-(Y
Po)ice Probing . .
Mystery Death
In Huntington
Vletllam ever. ' · ·
"Tb.la meanJ our btiys-'yill nev.er come
home," l\ln. Genld A. Camey said SUn-
clay. "A good' mi!Jy-~es (of
prtsoners) tl1lnk • llie Pre'ald<rrl ts 1131ng
tltelr ...,.. u an exCllle to llaY ~
then."
Mn. Galtley's oon, 27.yw-Old N1vy'LI.
Mlrk Gattley, WU sbot \!p1frl GI a
mlssti>n over North Vletiwn ID, Auiult
1918.
Police today are trying to unravel lh• De Ralher, CBS· _con;_.itnt ;wlw> · · coodllC!led an hour-:lOGI'; fol"'8eCI Jn. mystery dellh of Sam C. Sparks, Jr, son tervlew with the Pr*ldtnl Sundly nll!i~
o! Gafden Grove · Fire Chief Sam c. posed one questloo wb~ lie·uld' eame
Sparks, wbo was found dead In bis car at from Mn. Gattlet. • .
a Huntlnjlon Beach' Inter~ Sllll!f1y She inljlrlnol 11bether tl!e United Stales'
sflernoon. • utea l'1t ·~ :V~ tf ,41111 would -'•te•1 tl!e ~ 'lt n d Sparks, 29, was.dlacovered slumped In guarantlie silfefy' of wtiliTniwlnt u:s.
the !root seat of bta car at 1:30 p.m. by a rorees Jn excbanie lot 1 declared pullout
passerby who summo:ned po J l c e. deadline. .
Investigators wbo made a thorough · Nixon replied that the North Viet-nameae rejecttd auoh a propc)oal. searcb o! tho vehicle 11y foul play Is not Mr!. Galtley llld she doesn't "believe
suspected at this ume. the P,..ident_ llllllered , the qoestlon I
Detective Sgt. Monty McKennon said poled.''
Sparks, 1 resident of 6200 Edinger Ave., Nl>on'1 respo.nae, lhe aa)d, lbowed Iha!
Apt. 505 wu !yin• over oo 1111 slda ne.sr "we have ..,,... negotlaled Jn .Parta
' . r" . --aertoualy lor the rel-of prlaonen.
the steering wbeel. Tbe car liearlnr the "If••-just Ult llie·qualk.n, we
body ..... located• Jn· the.~ Heilht• would open "II negotlaUOOI -opened
dt&lrlct near Blanton and Pearce-llreetl. be!ore," Mn. GalUey said. "f WGUkt'ln
MJ:Kermon ·~·the younc Dllll's death no way endlnger our posltiOO j'!'l lo oalo . • . the qoeslloo. 'Tbll .. the crudtl <NatiOD 11 still 1111Claa1illod. The ._.,. of delth is conaernln& the _,tng cf.' negotlatlOaa."
being lnvesttcated by both lbe.Huptingllln She aald·Ure-quesllon wu .never ated
lleachPollce lleparllllent and the Orange 11 the Ptt11 puce·111Jc1. . r • 1
County Coroner's Offlce. "lt11 a~qQeeuoo mny of, us ~ to
Huntington Cycle Ri«:fers
Map Plans for Trail Push
Iota.
A lldOrld ""'te, 're!~ to u the
~ circuit, nnw about 24 mo.. and
8"J'l'ally lollow1 ·the boundaries of Hu,,.
tJngton ~ch. II ,_ u rar oal u
Bushard Street Oil .... tut,, l19ng \ho
Cont Hlg11wl,l' lo Hunllqtlloo llafbout
and to Golden Well <JoUec1. ~·· ~ ' The btb palhl are del1ii>e4 lo pc:omote
wety ·for~ ,ml """""'"' oll\e, '8kl Mra. • dlVeruiil bkyd•
away from betv y ~-rvoclnys,
and by connecting ~· ochooll1 beaches and 'other pobtta of lnterell
wllhln the dty.
Jim Mallanl· or the OrtrfCe Cour>ly
Wheelmen and l\alpb Leyvo,. a dty
qi ..... , alJo ·WlU port\clptla In 1111
meeUng, Mn. Carlberl said.
In lddllloo, Bill Hunl, I "'vdenl 1!
Mu:inl Hieb School, wJU clYJI t. slide ~nflllon of die jlOoposeif lllCdL . .
• ~I
•
alt the PrtSldlGI. Biii wt hlfe not bid
direct ~unl04tlont wllh the Pritf.
dent, only -mtmben of the ad-
ministration, she 1ald.
Mrs. GaJUey said she ' bad trled
numerous tlmet for a pet1<111l visit or
phone conversation wlth Nixon , but was
always refused.
She said she learned her son wu a
prisoner when other POWs released in
August 1989 roported seeing l h e
lieutenant.
Nixon 11ld he raised the POW taaued
wllh Sovltl foreign minister Andrei
Gromyko and thal prealdentlal adviser
Henry A. Kllalnger discussed It with
Cblne>e Premier Chou En4ai.
When the lull rteord is publial1ed, Nix.
on iald, "Olli-lady !rom Flortcla, and
others, will recogntae wt have gone the
eltra rnJle."
Ecology Plans
Set for Valley
Two proposals of ecological Importance
will be beard by the FOWltain Valley City
Council Tuaday night during Its first
meeting ol the new year.
Qne would f~ major commercial and
lnduatrlal developers to put In nearly
twice as moCb Jand1CBping as before.
ll'ramed In lllo lonn of ~nee. Ult
Rian provldet that a ~I of the COll-
llltUctlon 1lle be laridscaped. ,
The olbe~ -ai Is I chani• In Ibo
Clty'1 muter, DIJJl of parts. It calls for
preaervatJon. of.open 1poce ;Jn cnnncotion
:!~:~o1,:~ Sanla Ana(
•
0r .. ,.
Weailler
11Je •ties alooc the Orange
Coalt llbould be mostly I.it loday
and TUeoda7 1'11 slniog, IUllY
northeul windl lboUld bqJn blow-
1118 l\>dlY omd lhroug~ Tueoday.
Hlgb1 &bould be 10 with Ion n .. r
IO.
....
t'°M.""1.,. -..._ .-. ·--OMrlll JMtlftl -· ... l•fWf•lt:: ... ·-"'"'"''
•• " , • ... .. w .. • .. ... •
•1111 UMtn ti
MMlel I• .............. w --.. lff¥'I "'""" n .. ---.. = 'l --.. ._.....,. 11•11
I
..
f1.2 OAJLV PlL(ll H MondaJ, Jat1111rt l, 1'72
,.
••
Man Declines to Confirm Tire Statement
By TOM BARLEY
01 ltlt DtUr ~llM 11111
A proeecution witness who allegedly "
once told a district attorney's Investigator
that he saw more than 1.000 tires
i\i11>erately punctu!'M by tttendants at a ·~~ Juan Capistrano service station to--
day refused to confirm that statement in
Orange County Superior Court.
Ronald Leuthard, 27. the pro-
1ecution'1 eleventh witnes.sin the lr1al ef
nine men accused ol conspiracy to cheat
and defraud motorists, told deputy
,, '; . '
Di•trleil Allonio• Rlcluord Slt41Qn that
the w'l!tt.il ~ent ~o" !IJe pro-
seculor'WaS' Ille . lnl'esUga!or's lil~enllon
and did not reflect his own experience.
Leuthard confirmed that he worked for
defendant Roger Mendenhall, 28 of 26095
Avenida De Seo, Mission Viejo while
Mendenhall operated the San Juan Tex·
aco in San Juan Capistrano.
Leuthard said he work&i at the San
Juan station for a year and "for just a
few v.'eeks'' at tbe San Clemente ft'tob1l
station. 600 Avertida Pico, also owned by
Mendenhall. "
Nobody to Help
.. Woman Tells of. Trek in Snow
·.
1, GORMAN, Calil. (AP) -Stanley
!CUJver had heart trouble, asthma and
,mpr · He kept an oxygen tank iri'
hi! ! :. With It he and his wife.
Geor, --~ secure.
l.1 Eight days ago snow started falling in
the Tehachapi Mountains north of Los
-Angeles. Six feet of it snowed in the
eulver1' car. They had no telephone.
tourists playing in the snow.
·~1 must get help,'' she told the first
man she came to. "My husband is dead
back Jn our trailer.'' She said the man
pointed to figures in the distance making
a snowman and replied, "I can'L help
you. The children are playing."
"After that, I simply wouldn't ask
anyone eJse," Mrs. Culver said . "I could
hear the children playing. I was afraid
somebody else would tell me no.
"So I put out my thumb and tried to
hitch a ride . . . I just kept plodding
along."
I But ,,. cltnled todl)l4h1t-11< luod lcld lbJ -l!l~tor »i.t /o(enden!lall u..a lbarllilDtil-lnslnaiiled 1D clollberalebr • puncture Ures at the stations.
He also rejected Stenton's suggestion
thit he had heard three defendants nam·
ed as prioclpals in the allgeged con-
spiracy. urge their employes at a Garden
G.rove. mee:ling to puncture tires and in·
flict damage on their customers' cars.
LeuUlard sa.ld he was awaiting trial on
dfug cbarges at the time he was ln-
terllifWed by the district attorney's in·
veslfgator in 1970 and that the in·
vcstigator promiiled to help him on thost
charges in returnJor his statement .
He insisted umler close questlonlng
from Stenton that the investigator had
''invented'' the allegations and that he
had cooperated to avoid what he felt al
the tlme wouJd be a state prison term of
five years to life if he was convicted on
charges of possessing and selling mar).
Juana. · • .
Leuthald named Ralph Carn.ey, 29, of
32852 Calle San Marcos, San Juan
Capistraho as the manager of the San
Juan Texaco station.
He identified R. C. Weisner, 28, of San·
ta Ana, as the manager of the San
Clemente station at which he was also
employed.
Stenton .bas named Sfanley Davis, 32, of
1086 San Pablo Circle and Jerry Kendall,
·Big New ,Yea1·'s Day
... "Wednesday morning the oxygen ran
out," ·r~alled Mrs. Culver, 49. At 11:30
'l.m. Culver, a 53-year-old retired
mechanic, told her, "I can't breathe." A
fiw minutes later he was dead. ~ Mri. Cufver bf:gan, lookiRg for help she didn't get for days.
' "I got out a sheet and painted 'Help' on it in big letters and put it on the roof of
Ute trailer," she said. "Hellcoplers ·pass-
ed over many times, and I waved for
i<lp. I even tried signaling them at night
with a Jlashllglit.
As she walked two more miles down
the snowy ' .road, drl.vers ignored her
outstretched thumb.
Six hours and nearly six miles after she
started, Mrs. Culver reached a
restaurant and called, the local deputy
sheriff. ~ deputy ~as gone -on du'ty
at the Rose Parade in Pasadena -but
his wife drove Mrs. Culver to a relative's
house iD G-Orman .. Nobody was home, but
neighDors let her in.
35, of 96;9 Sono.ra Road, both of Costa
Mesa with FAward Camey, 27, of 20812
Shell Harbour Drive, Huntington Beach
as the three principals in the alleged con-
spiracy.
He and prosecution witnesses have
stated that the three men controlled. a
chain of 11 service stations ra nging from
Seal Beach to San Clemente and were
responsible for auto damage that cost
motorists "many thousands of dollars."
__The Rychert quintuplets or Gdansk, Poland , play
on their first Ne\v Year's Day in their home. The
three sons and two daughters of Mrs. Leokadia Ry·
chert were born in May. The quints' names ar~
Adam, Agnieszka, Ewa, Piotr and Roman but tell·
ing which Is which is something else again.
Also named in charges that were later
contained in an Orange County Grand
Jury indictment were Christopher Enri·
quez, 25, of 7592 Volga Drive, and Henry
Castonguay, 21, of 7661 Commodore
Drive, both of HuntingUin Beach and
David Conchola. 22, of 6000 Garden Grove
Blvd ., Westminster.
V e11icle Owners
Can Use Banks,
Mail to Register
IRS Braces for Flood ,/ :-"No one would stop to help me.
"By Saturday I couldn't stay any longer~ I'd been there four days with him
~ the bed. The snow had melted down a
flt. I put on my heavy boots, a ski coat
~ glote.s, and took a shovel lo help me
keep my balance, and started toward the
s<>ad."
"I turned on the heat, made myself
1ome dinner, and went ·lo bed, thankful it wasaJJoVer." ' ·
A sheriff's party brought out Culver's tlfotorists who don't want to pay their
vehicle registration at the local Depart·
ment of Motor Vehicles offices, may send
the payments through the mail or make
the renewals at six cou nty banks, · ·
Of Wage Freeze Queries
body. ..
f.frs. Culver said Sunday she has made
no plans for the funeral or for her future. t·ln 31ri hours, Mrs. Culver trudged 1~
AUiles through four-foot. drifts to the tw~
J~e Gorman Post Road. There she found
an emergency phone, but it didn 't work ..
, Two miles down the road she saw .,
"But," she said, "I know I 'll have to
move the trailer out of the mountains. I'll
have to move close to other people, in
case I need help."
lt is alleged that the nine defendants
were involved in the deliberate deslruc·
tion of tires, slashing ol hoses and the
spraying of shock absorbers in a wa y
designed to convince the motorist that his
shocks leaked and should be replaced.
OMV windov.·s will be &pen at the banks
during regular banking hours through the
close of business, Feb. 4, the deadline for
car registration.
Employes of the Orange County office
of the Internal Revenue Service are brae·
ing themselves for the pre·Aprll 15 rush
of taxpayers who have questions about
their taxes and the wage and price
freeze.
Roger A. Bittmann, manager of the
local oftice of IRS offereJ some Rug·
gestions for tu payers seeking in·
formatiOn: ~ackers Enter Nixon
DAllY PILOT
01A11t1: COAn PtJl1USN~Q COMj""
· 1'o'otli N. w.,d •r•llllrllaMl-~i.Mr
J1cL R. C11rl1y Viet Pr.!Mtl Md ~I ~
Thorrut ~ •• ,a
Ellltor"
Tl.o"'•t A. Murp,,i111 M _,,., "'8 f ll I l'Ot'
Af1" Dir~i"
W•I Orintt Coutity !d'1'or
H•lttf ..... • .._. Office
17175 l11ch loul1r1rd
M1 l1lllf A4Jr111: P.O. loa 7,0, t2l41
.. OtW Offkel
L~ ... cti: m ,.,_,A"""'
C•,.. AWlll: i» W•t .. y ltrwt
Wl'lllfllOrt a .. "'! an ,,."""°"' '°""""'"' .. ,. '*'-11: XI .. OMll II Cua Atal
Suspect Ilunted
In Hµ,ntingtoll
!#J 1 .. . ··~:;t . ~J Sh~filig )ail~d .
Another man wiinted in connection with'
the Christm'as Day shooting of a Hun-
tington Beach man has surrendertd to
police.
Booked on suspicion of assault with
Intent to commit murder and assault
wi~h intent to d0 great bodily injury
was Leon Baker, 34 of Long Beach. ,.
Baker, now held in lieu of $12,000 bail
·gave himself up to detectives Thursday
through the minister of a Long Beach Church, · ~
Baker is one of fi ve men who allegedly were involved in the beating and subse.
gueat shooting of Robert Olivery, 46, ot.
16712 Lucia Lane a week ago.
Alreadv booked on similar charges are
Dennis P. DeMers, 18, and his father
Albert R. DeMers1 46, both or Santa Ana.
A third member of the DeMers family,
r-.1ichael DeMers, 20, of 10373 10th St.,
\Vas arrested the same night of the alleg·
ed shooting and also booked on the same
charges.
Caspers' Son
Faces Pot Rap
Kirkland T. Caspers, 18, son of Orange
County Fifth Distrjct SupervlS9f' Ronald
W. Caspers, iR facibg Chargea' ofpo8JC!Ss-
.Jng marijuana today fotlowtng his arrest
Sundal mornipg , by 1'/ewport ,Beacll pohce,
Caspers, a resident ot 133 A vcnida
Pell'yo, Sao. Cltmeote. wu arrested at
6:10 1.m. while sletj>ing In a car near his
family's Lido Isle home. Police assert
Oley found about one ounce of marijuana
in Casper•' car while he was mnovlng
vehlcli r.&1stralion material from Iha glove Compartment. ' ·
Harbor Judtclal District Court Judge
Calyln T, Schmidt auU>orlttd Im release
liter Sun~, .ll!omfttlll . oA hit OIVD r«ocnl~._.tu~1 will 'be -arratsned liter, tltb ..... '.
I
Ponies, Colts
Set for Signups
Signups for Ocean View Pony and Colt
League baseball have been &ehedµled for
this weekend and next.
Boys from Hunt ington Beach. Fountain
Valley and Seal Beach are eligible.
Registration will be at the 'JeagUe )fleld,
Bolsa Chica Street and Los Patos
Avenue, Huntington Beach. Boys must
have a birth certificate to show they are
from 13 to 16 years old, and must be ac·
companied by a parent.
Signups will be held on Saturdays Jan.
8 and 15 from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. and on
Sundays Jan. 9 and 16 from 1 p.m. to 4
p.m.
Robert Cozens, DMV director noted
that all billings sent to California
motorists contain instructions for mailing
payments to save registrants a trip to the
banks or OMV offices.
There are five DMV offices ln Orange
County. They are located at the following addresses: '
500 Central Ave ., La Habra and Bank of
Blvd., Garden Grove; Bank of America,
720 W. 19th St., Costa ·Mesa; 108 W.
Canada, San Clemente ; 15062 Jackson St.,
Midway City; 1330 E. 1st St., Santa Ana
and 1750 W. La Palma Ave., Anaheim.
Banks that · are handling vehicle
registration are:
United. California Bank, 24032 El Toro
Road, Laguna Hills: Bank of America,
Lincoln Avenue at Claudina Street,
Anaheim: U.S. National, 6301 Beach
Blvd., Buena Park; Farmers and
Merchants Bank, 10422 Garden Grove
America, 2680 N. Tustin Ave., Orange.
Dr. G. J. Fieldn1g Named
County Tra~sit Un~t ~~ad
\ . . .
Dr. G. J. "Pete'' Fielding, 37-year-old
UC Irvine professor today was · named
general manager or the O~ange eoUrlty
Transit District.
Di strict directors selected Dr. Fielding
from a field of more than 30 candidates
after two months of negotiations. He
assumes the $25,000 a year post on Feb.
1.
Dr. Fielding holds a PhD fro m the
University of California at Los Angeles in geography.
· His selection marked the beginning of
the second year of operation for the new
County !I'ranS:il District
"Thank you very much," the UCI pr~
fes.Soi' said to t~ directors When b~s ap-~ .. poinbnen t was aMounced thfs morni1'g.
"'f1ook forward to fhis fine opportunity to
try to improve rapid transit in Orange
County."
Since 1965 Dr. Fielding has been engag·
ed in research and teaching on urban
policy problems with emphasis upon
transportation.
He said in an interview this morning
that during the past year he has been l\c-
tive in a progr;1m at UCI designed to
train aerospace eng ineers for urban oc..
cupations. · ,
On public administratiqn, the doctor
said: "As a member ot lhe Graduate.
School or Admfnlstratlon at UC!, l am
familiar wuh ''the theories of" human
behavior as they tpply to urhan,1 educa·
tion. hospital and bu a Ines s 1d·
tninistratfoti." · 1 ••
Dr. Fieldlng.h11 publls)led bookl con,
C.rning t~{ole:ol po~ Jnnueo~ in determining~ le"llUJO'IOd '!l'llh ib•
dynamics of' bltiRn vptvellll!ll rn
transportation planning.-• ,
He said that Alnce 1088 be. has con·
ducted a ~eries of studies for the
California Transportation Agency on
alternative strattgles for personal in--
volvement in trans_portatlon 1tudles.
At UCt he teaches " three course se--
quence In urban policy. He Is also a eon-
tribulor to the inierdiaclpllnary .program
lt UC! irl Which oompuler sysltms ·~
wed for Instruc~oba! purposes. , '
Tbe ne" tnnsl dlstr1CI geoerar
manager holds a joint appoint ment in the.
Gradoate School o! Administration and is
associated° with the · ·program ! n
Environmental Management sponsored
by the School ot Engineering.
Dr. Fielding is a native of New Zejlland
and a naturalized citizen of United States.
Before coming to this country, he at·
tended the University of· Auckland in New
Zealand where he.· re~lved Bachelor's
and Master's degrees. ·
At the present time he serves as a con·
sultant to . the city of Compton in Los
Angeles County. He i1 trying to
determine alternative freeway locations
and rail rapid transit ~ute$ acceptable to
that conimunity. Ht said he is also work·
ing on: the 9f'!tlopment ~f Joc~I bus
routes ·a few of which have already been
adopted by the city.
"Presently I am conducting a study on
community response to the revitalized
Santa Ana city bus system. The research
attempts to analyze altitudes on bus
travel and reasons why people do or do
not use the system," the doctor ex·
plained. ...
Seal Beach Sets
Election Date
• March 18 has been ·men as the date
for the ~al Beach m~nlclpal election
dur-ing which two coqncllftien, 1 city clerk
•ndi a tjly treasurel;wt(libe cbosen. '(be /~adllne lot: lJJlng nominatioq
paperr1t noon. Jan. to.
To date th• only pei;aons lo file for r ..
eJecUon are City Clerk.Jerdys Weir, cur•
tent city Treasurer Barry Morgan and
t:ouncilman Edward Smlth. ,
Smith will be seeking o seat in Qiun-
cilmanic District 4 which cover1 the
College Park West area, The other 1eat
to become vacant ls In Dlatrict 2 which
covers ~t of Leisure World and
&ssmoor Center. • ":
CouncUmap Ft~ank!Jn ,Sal~, ~strict I liicumbent, ti t Yel annowiced
whelhtr--bt will o&olftl -•
'
-The majority ol tax and economic
stabilizatio• policy questions can be '
handled by phone. For information on in·
come tax, call 836-2.lal and !or in-
formation on the stabilization call 547. 7581.
-If a visit to a local IRS oJfice ii
..... t ••
2 Firms Suing
Over Taxation
On Beach Land
Two corporations are suing ·Orange
County and the City or Huntington Beach
for what they claim is the illegal levying
of· taxes on beachfront property.
Both the Huntington Pacific Corp.;'
owned by Southern Pacific and Standard
Oil, and Fluor-Huntington Corp., a joint
venture ol the Fluor Corp. and Hun·
tington Pacific, allege in a Superior Court
action that county Assessor Andrew
Hinshaw illegally brought about taxes of
more than $61,000 on their properties
through .his.1971-72 amssments.
William .. ll'oster, vice' .p~ildent ·or. HUn-
tington·Pacific, explained 1oday that the
· suit i~ the r~sult of the ~y's aotion to
estabhsh a recreational easement over
the 2.5-mile Huntingfun Pacific beach,
"If we Jose the main cause and the
court finds that a public easement does
exist over the beach, then we shall say
we should not have paid taxes on It,"
Foster s3id.
The Hun tington Pacific ~rp .. which
owns the beach. is demanding a refund of
$24 595 and Fluor-Huntington , which owns
the
1
beacl)front apartments, Is seeking the
return of $36,436 in tax payment&. ·
Women Hear
Progr._ess Talk ' . ' ' ~
A lalk oit ""Progress· and" the Develop.
ment or tne Central City Park" by Erik
Katz.maier win h\ghltght a meeting of the
American ASsoclaCion' cif University
Women in Huntington Beach Tuesday
night. Katzmaier is an architect with the
Los Angeles firm of Eckbo, Dean Austin,
and Williams.
· Mr1. Margaret Carlberg, chairman ~f
the city's environmental councll, also will
speak on "Improvements in the Envtron--
ment of Huntington Beach. 11
The meeting wlll he held at 8 p.m. tn
the Mercury Savings and Loan Asaocia-
Uon building, 78U Edinger Ave.
' Buses for Bridge
SAN FRANCfSCO (AP) -'Tbe Golden
Gate Bridge went into the mass transit
bu.!lne11 today to relieve Its own 09'\'
gettion. The Golden Gale !!ridge.
11!$hway and 'l'tansportatlon Dlstrlcl
began running 152 new aJrCondlUoned
busts. purchased for nearll"'llO mllllon,
between San Francisco •nd two 1uburban
counties in a commuter aervrce that ex·
lends 60 miles to the north. The district Is
taking over runs oper,ted by G~yl)ot\nd
'lot 31 year1 and promlm b<tler ..,.,,)ell
'at r,re• 2S centa leS1 OJI most flW U
commutu1 ~ boob or llCkrU. ,
necessary, the Orange County office Is
located in Suite 221, The City FinanclaJ
Center, Orange.
-The best hours are 8:30 a.m. to IO
a.m. and 3 p.m. to 4 p.m. Wednesdays
and Thursdays and as soon before April
15 as pcssible. There are personnel on dU<o
ty lo assist Spanish-speaking cltizem. \.
-Two booklets, "Tai: Guide for Small
Business" and "Your Federal Income
Tax" can be purchased for 75 cents at any post office.
-Requests for bulk supplies of forms
must be sent to Tax Forms, P.O. ~i:
1711, Los Angeles, Calif. tooM.
"l would like to stress," BittmaM Raid, "that fRS persoo111t are oot ~lle4 lo
actually pr~ fax returns for c~lns.
We will answer any questions you may
have to enable you to prepare a oorrect
return."
Com1cil Weighs
Extending Halt
On Apartments
The Huntington Beach City Council
tonight will consider extending the
moratorium on apartment construction
another three months.
A 9!klay ban on apartment construction
In nearly all the city north of Ellis
Avenue was due to expire today.
A resolution drawn up by City Altorney
Don Boitfa at the council's direction
¥'0!Jld. extend the ban, 'but contain the
following, exceptions :
-Permits could be Jssued for pro-
perties whl.ch have received final tract
ma p approval by the council.
-CoostruCtion would be allowed on a
parcel which has been rezoned since the
moratorium went into effect Oct. 4.
-Any ~&reel which the planning com·
mission has indicated will not be rezoned
may be <1.<veloped.
The mqratorium was Introduced to
change the master plan and zoning of two
large 1ta'4}t Jreas In the north of the city
lo decrea!" denslll~s. '
The ci1*COWlcil .meelt ,iR.chambers at
Fifth Street and Pecan A~enue in two
le5llon1 beginnlnl al l :30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. ,.
J
Two Professors
Flunk Big Test
·" A Santa Ana College instructor
got 1972 off to a bad start 'in
Nev.·po rt Beach by flunking a
pOlice-administered geogr~ehy test .
P1trolm1in Richard · Ml.Jlers said
he had oc"t~fon ,tb stop the le55-
than·sober scrtolars, both · SAC
teachers and both aged 43, at East
Coast Hlshway and Poppy Aven ue
for suspiciously erratic driving.
He 1rreattd the driver 'and Then
11tempted:1o rouse lb• fl1Wbering
passenger, I ..
'Me wi hero!". lie ~uoted the
man as 1ayi.na .
"Where?" asked Officer Mlller.
''Alaska,'' rtplled the t.t:acher.
or11ctr MOier uld ~· asked the 1o8den so}oumet to , step < out.Ide
and see if the surrounding terrain
really looked !Ike Yukon Territory,
Stagaertna out and holding onlo
the cor; Ille. SAO teachu 1urveyed
the' tcene.' -
'1Yep wt1re lo A11U1, '1 he declar~.
'Fr6i11t there -~ WU Jul( like • M~ll0?9l.Y : Gl/ll•t Wroac " -10 directly lo ja1l.' .
I
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Ur~ng~ · .Co~st
EDITION
Today's l'l•al
N.:Y .. Steeb
. ' •
. '
VOL 65, NO. 2, l SECTIPNS, 34 . P,AGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANOARY l, 1912 N TEN CENTS •
Coast Youngsters Score High
Sludenls . along the Orange coast
repeated · their above·aVetage
performance or t96HO by again sooring
high on reading and ach)evemenl tests In
1970.71. . . --
According to the . ~Uy released
results, the youngsters scond above the
statt avetage ln all areas te!l~. wltb
Laguna Buch !Int grader's achieving the
highest ruding soore in 111 of Orange
County. ·
The tests were again scored ln terms of
percentiles. For example, first graders itl
Nixon
Laguoa Beac111were In tlle IIst percentile . . .. , . . .
ln"'terma<lf reading, meaning that 80 per.
cent of all itudents in t.bf state scored . .
lower ,..1~test than the Lllguna !leach
stuc!i:nt<;8""rlt·~l;0f lbem scored
higher. •
'l'6e ~ tests were admlJ!lslered to
studeoi-.in·Podes I, 2, 3, I and 1.2. In ad·
dition, ltnguage, mathematica and spell-
lng·~'lnre admw.w.d to the sixth ll!ll· 12lb ·grade ~ts.
Followilla ls a percenWe llilting or each
Orange Coast school dlatrict lhowinl the
reading percentile placement .for each
lVade folklwed ll, lhe other tes11'9111ta.
C.lllsVaoo tlallled School lllltrict;
gra<fe I'-71; 2 -15; 3 ...,'51; 1-93; 1%
-66; language, grade I ·-58; ·IS -.II;
. spelling, grade I -54 ; 1.2 -• 49;
maµ,ematica, 6 _, 41i 12 -55.
Fonnlala Valley Elementary, SC)>ool
Diltrict; grade 1 -'-82'; 2 -15; 3 -15; 6
-61; llngll8ge, grade 6 -60; lll!dllng,
grade 6-47; mathematics, 6-'53.
Huntington Beacb Elementary ~I
Dlslrlcl: grade 1-59; 2 -58: 3 -17; I
-63; language, grade 6 -60 ; spelling,
grade 8 --54; mathematics, grade 6 -
59.
Hllllllqtoa Buell Union High School
Dl$1<t: grade "12 -53; language, grade
12 -51; spelling, 1.2 -411; mathematics,
12 -·15. •
Laguna llelcb Unified Schoo( Dlstric\: srade 1-11; 2-15; 3-12; ,_ 74 ; 12
-53; language, grade 6 -7$; 1.2 -48:
spelling, I -69: 12 -49: mathematics, I
-74; 12 -55.
Arriving Tonight
·President to Meet Japan's Sato in'San Clemente
By JOHN V ALTERZA
Of .. D1MY PPM lltft
President Nixon wu scheduled to ar-
rive al the El Toro MCAS at about 7:30
o'clock tonight to begin preparations for
the flith ' of bla summit meetings with
world leadm -talks late this week in
San Clemente with Japanese Prime
Minister Elsaku Sato.
Tbe President obviously will arrive
wlth a reUnue ol aides and advlsers , but
Mrs. Pat Nixon, who ne1r1y alway1 ac-
Real' Straw Ballot
HARllS\'II.LE, IL CA/') -A c1 ...
elpctfoo ..... ~ been dodcled ~' • straw. 1iliiil .ballots •...,.. <Ill DOG. ·n, w.cie ~ u11 .Dory! ~ .....,, Stl '\'Olel eich for • aeat dl·llle AY07el·
1 .. ·Parilh PoiJCI Jill)",, tlle ,Pltflah (OV•
erntng ·bacb'· -
r
. T~o Professors
F~unk Big Test
~ San11 ·1'na C.llegt INlfuctor
&Ot 11112 off to a had ~tart Jn
Mowport 'Bdch' by nW)klng a
poUcHt1m1n111ere11·1eograpHy test.
Patiolman Rich!'!' Miller• said
be hill' occaalon lo a!l!i> 'the le. •
than-IOher llObolan, both SAC
teacber1 i!>d )>0th apd ~. at Eut
' · Coall llljlhway and Poppy Aven ..
for llllplclou&Jy maUc.drivli\.. at~~~ drJ:'.t.:1berinl
• puaen(tr. . "Are we .there?" he q®ted the
man as ufinl. ,;Where!" ulced Ofllcer Miller.
"Alubi" replied the ltaober.
Qmcer Miller sai<1 be ~ the loddJ:n sojoumer to . 1tep ·outtft!e ·'
and ... li the ll\U1<)Wld)111 -really looMd llb YUkoo Teqttory.
Stqpring out and hojdlng «Ito
' lilt car. the SAC teacher; IW'V•Y'4
the tcene.
11YfPt 'we1re in Alaska;"' he
-J
declar't:d. \
$tom tbeit U Jl'U Jllll lllro .I
Mon6pol)i Gome: Wrq -,. dir<ctl1 lo jall,
companies the Chief ExecnJive West, will
DQJ be "!' ~· . ,
·The Plrst Lady Ui on a week's toiµ-of
Aftlea.
Thi arrival tonigbl wUI he followed by
another impOrtant one late Wednesday
nigtit· when the Prime Minister arrives
at the same airfield, and, will 10 doubt
be gr'eeted there by Mr. Nixon. ,
Alter rt.Sting overnight. at t b e
Newporler JM .Mr. Sato and his aides will
begin the tw<><lay round ol talks at the
... ~ :, ·, 1'· · • 'r 1.. •
Western White House in San Clemente.
White House spokesmen have not
detailed the exact substance of the topics
to be discussed, but Washkigton writers
have speculated that the conferences will
deal with recent U.S. economic policies
which have hit hard at Japan's import.ant
picture, plus the Taiwan situation in the
United Nations and the decision by the
White House to launch trips to Peking
and Moscow later this year.
All those American decisions have
. , '. . .
caW1ed: some grave concern 1n Sato'•
homeJand.
The White House h" yet to give any
details for the welcome cerernohles for
the protocol-ccnsclous Japanese delega·
tion .
A motorcade through San Clemente has
been mentioned , but not confirmed.
Treasury Secretary' John COnnally wu
expected to join the President in $an
Clemente to participate ln the two days
of talks with Sato, characterized u
"stricUy business."
•· i.•, :!\: . L :.i.•.~'" L.:.L I"~ lllOlllCaalllll -1Qllii1
haa ~ a, N.,;por! Beach ~
that publlibes two well blowlt natimll
special interest ma,pzinel, Road Ir Track
•nd Cycle World.,
CBS officials an'""•aced . today they
have acqulred qi. . .-Of Bond }'Ub-
lisbing Company and· Parltbunl Publish·
lng Company whldl had m•raed·ln 1969,
undel' the name, Bond, Parthunt · and
Bond, Inc. .
The company will stat el ila' MOom!a
Avenue headquarters w!Jere lt <mplO)'I
95 penonl in'11le Bond ·Ilull~; ocoont· . . ( ' !nit too 'Jl!<odore Binder. --of the compa!ly •• Co .. @r 1ot. Whdt: \ r .1 , -'t• • • • •
Rbad ""'l,'fack,.one of ·t11e,oid<11•1uto-
mol>lle niq"azlnes was bought bt MJ:.
and Mrs. Jcpba, .Bond 'lie Newport llel,dl
U · I ~bil iournaJ ln 19$1.. , Mr: ~~ ·'l(llcf Jll(e, neV,er-llic!udea ~ s¥post with this ~y
'rqacii.' Butlt.llis o~n•~Santi Anl·flelgbtS ·directs incomlo{ 'tourlots
from .Orange Cb~ A:i~or(fo here,"'there and everywbere .. WanMo ·
see i~ in! pets00? ll 1 r! t'-on ttie corn~r ·of Palisades and lrvine, er
Acac1a ..... ·I·mean, .. aw or~et il. , ..
· Its first atidited. circuliU~ figl.lref, iD
1955, showed a• paid c!rculatlen of 81,000.
Today IL aells 315,000 cOpies.
Cycle World, founded In 1962, by Joseph
and Bettejean Parkhurst, initially acid
33,600 copies per issue.
Dr~ G. J. Fiel~it1g Named . ' ..
It.s circulation has grown to--190,000.
Ross D, Sackett, president ol the CBS
education 8Jld publicattOllS group said
thi• morning the magazines will he pul>
lished under a new CBS publications
dlvlJion which baa also jull atqulred
Field & stream, an outdoarl .magazine
and Popular Library, a publloher ol pa-
pert>ock books. Co11·nty. T~ansit Unit Head
Sackett said CBS baa 101111 bee• 1nt<f.
ested Jn ~J involv..S Jn Ille 11'<¢•1 Interest publlcatiooa field and u1c1· he aw lhe Newport llelch company u the "Perfect DllC1'us" of 10Ch .. _,...,,..
·llf. G: J. "Pete"TMd!nr,•fl·YelNlld
UC Irvine ·pro/elllll" today WU nuned ' . g~ 'lllanager of · llie Orange COOnty
~nslUDl&\rlcl,
Dlstrkt dlnctor$>1tlecled Dr: Fielding
fl'OID· a fieldrOI more lh\IJ 00 candid1tes
after ' two months of negotiatk>ns. He
asaumes the 12S.OOO a year-post on Fl!b. I. .
·or. Fielding holds a l?lfD from the
UnJYer<y of California •t Loi Angeles in
&eegr11phy.
.HJ• 1eletlion marked the beginning of
the --.! year of operation for the new
COunly Transit District.
• ;"Thanlt".)<ou ve,Y much," the UC!~ 1_. uia1lo tbe.dlrec:tOrs when hl•. •I>"
p,?lnlffi'p\ WIS ~ lhil ~·
"l loo~ r..,,,ard to thta fine .0t>1>0rlllnlly to
"Pilbti.Will :Give
Tic ets io: Show
U:,.. to . Improve ·rapid . transl I in orange
County." .
Since 111115 Dr. Fielding,baa been qag·
ed · 1n reaearch and teaching ,on, urban
policy probltma with empllasls upon
transportation.
He said in an interview this morning
tbat during the past year he has been ae-
tlve in a program at UC! designed to
train aerospace engineers for urban oc-
cupations.
On, pubuC admini stration, the doctor
said: "As a member of the Graduate
School of Administration at UCJ, l ahl
familia r with the theories 'of human
behavior as they •apply to urban, educ.
Uon, hdspital and b u I I n I I I ad-
,mlnlst.ration."
Dr. Fielding bas publis~ boon Cllll·
cerriing the riJle of Political tdlumce In
determlnlnc · lii'ban I.,.! UIO ll!d will! the
dynamics cl cftlzen lnvolveme~t· In
transportation planning,
He uld lhtt. aJnoe 1961 he. bu COii·
ducted a aeries of stUdlel ~ the
Ca!Uomla Trani;poltalibn Af""'l' oo
He indicated CBS> Will cootlnU. to .,,.
quire olher publicatlooa that ire. alm..t
as specific a~d~. , Binder said the pnce .of !he aale will
not he di11elosed by· CBS !or another two
month!.
He said ·the actual maMgement cl the
publishing house will rtmain the same
and the Bonds and PanhurstJ wW all r•
main active.
Binder has been president aince lhe
merger in tlliQ.
Betides their two magazines the pareat
co'!lJ)any, under tllO lll!llle Bond-.PArk·
huist Pu611cationa alao hu plibllabed •
number ol apeclal inlertll baoQ and
Binder said he expects tllil wlll ~nue.
'Clmsy' Section
·In PiWt Today
alternati" strate<s !or pUsot)al In-A complete. ca~ of evenlnc col·
·voivement In transpol:\!l.ttilo fludles. · loge COUJ1ts and 1.-·1.<ture aeries 1o·11e
.At UC! he leaclle.t a three 'courae .e. offered by Orai\g• Coal\ and Golden West
-li1·~1c7. 'He ·allu...,. oolloges l!l lhe semester bO&llu1tnc~•b. 7
trlba!or to th& l&terdl!dPJfllary program Is Inserted inside tbla copy cl !he DAILY
at UC! In which COllJlliil«'; lyllems are PILQT. ufed for ln1truction1l purporu, . Appearing Jn \be form of a . 12-paae
The new transl• ~ , ceneral tabloid aectlon, ' the cataiogue lilts
manager holds a Johll UllJO(ntmelll ln the ' courae1 brolten down 'by •oc.ationil
Oraduatt School ol Adniiiilttratlan end js ca~rie1, It alaa offers delallJ ol DllW
a11ocloted with tlle p~gtam • I n nal(.ratloll metlmd1 which will be used
Envlconmenill Manll~I •pcnaored on tiOth campuau -slcn•~ will ,be b,)'
by \be School of E~ • -bl~t f~ the -~~and Dr. J11'1dlng la 1 nail¥col N<w i.JaDa lilla phqpt nurnb<r!I to call for ftCi1ter·
• (!lee TRANSl1:' ••> · •Jnl at Orallge Coast and 11.llolden West.
•
-
on State Tests
Newpon.Mesa Uailled School District :
grade I -65; 2 -72; 3 -69: 6 -6!; 12
-1,1; l4\lgu•ge, I -15; 1.2 -61 ; spell·
ing, 6 -54: 12 -· 58 ; mathematics, S -
ii ;:~ -60.
~ View Etemenlary Scbool
Dtslrlct; grade I -65 ; 2 -I I: 3·-6! I --' J-1; language, 6 -63; spelling, 6 -5';
11111hema\lca, 6 -59.
SU Joaqul.n Elementary S c boo o I
District: grade 1 -62; 2 -58; 3 -13; 6
-61; language, 6 -60; spelting, 1·-61;
mathematic., I -11.
.--
Seal Beach Elementary Sc boo 1
District: grade 1 -72; Z -74; i -74; 6
-71 ; language, s-sa; spe~l-11;
mathematics, I -12.
Tustin Uoloo High School Dillrict:
grade 11-60; language, 11 -13; spell·
Ing, 12 -58 ; mathematics. 1.2 -IO.
Westmlnstt.r Elementary S c ho o 1
District; grade 1-65; 2 -85; l -55: 6
-54; language, 1 -53; t pelllng, I -54:
mathematics, 6' -55.
• · DIJLY 'It.OT S11ft PMjl
MICHAIL! 30HN ' HARTMAN GR$ETS:.i.ti N!W YEAR
Mot'-', HlitM1 ~ Sdn Doing N!WJ> Tluink Yo~ -·-r,.:;r'' ~ ttJ ,
' .. SANT/. BARBARA; (UP l) ,.. ·
Disillusionment-by Amettcans led to
believe Iba\ tnOdical science con do
almost anythlng l!l•Y be a factor in the
rising lnciderice of malpraclice, aulll, ac-
cording to a .federlf official. ·
The capabilities of ~'"IMdlclne
are "ballyhooed to the polnt wllere pa·
tlecl1 eipecl nlinclts from ·ll>elr phys~
cianl1"·uid EU ll<"""ei& al U.ll\epart-
ment ol Health, EdllCollon *"'1 Well.i. in
I ftl)O<t issued Sunday 'O.i • 'conleitnce .. ~ • .ue.: ,.
"Then when -~ -wraog,
·when "flitta ll •. \nalo«<lmoco or a
lher•petlllc ml-lllUlrt,'" IlemzWelg
5'1d, ''\be puhllc t.,.rs IO illalime Mal~
Cenct .II llvolvOd aod ioq1f cnmpenq,
lion la due." .
The npod 00 a ~ conference
on malrpractlce prohlams• wu llllltd by
the c.mer far Ibo Stucl1 ' of Demotratic
ln1Ututiona. • '
Donald McDonald, editor OJ the report,
said lhe main topic dlscilsaed •U I.be al·
fectlven•u ol the prtsent DibUlty 1yste111
for colnpensl,llng )leflOlll h~ b7
Jl)edlcol treatm<)l~ , ~ the po11llll'e
olfunaU"" sudl .. no-faull or .so&!
S«:urlt,J .Insur~
•
' .
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' -•
f OAILV PI LOT N
Architect· Tries {I J ~y Work Wee/a
By t. PETEil KIUEG
01 ht. 0.111 il'iltt lllH
An archltoct i... brou&hl !ht four-day -k wMk to Newport lluch.
Slarllng today, the to employe5 ol Rollf
Pulaski •ill work 10 hours a d:.y, Mon·
day through 'l1lllr'1i•Y·
'·They 're 1all jaucd about it," Pula ski
Mid this morning. TI1ey will be c<lmlng
Jn at 7 a.m. r.'Ki "'Orkin~ until 6 p.m .• ~th an hour o(f for lun('b. "° PuJuki said he's bttn thlnkine about
making the dlaoge for t year, "even be'::
fort ft b<lcamt populu," ht IOld.
'1 thouiht It would be 1 oleo ldttl.''
, aald P~1 ~lb!f..Jhat he tpenl a great
deal of Umt rtAOi'<hing the ~
He .aid lit went to a stmlnar lbout It,
-rtad a book Oii It and hM t..lliOd with
mher companies who've tried it t11d liked
it.
"A lm~! all have bttn very successful,"
Pula~ki ~a_v,.
He sa id that. as wlth any busint!s, pro-
ducUoofl. a key factor and he is COllfident
he'll get 11 much, or mott, umu the
new l)fsltm.
• "I lcno" Oil the sut!ace it ....., likt 1t1
ldvuse ~•." Pula•kt "1d. "It l®b ~Ub wi'rt ~ a ltmly aorl of
•lfltl. "Bul that'a not true," he af'.ld. ••Jt's just
the ooposlte.
·•we still will be working 40 hou rs and
4'1 111111 be more produc:tivt. In addi tion,
we 'fl even ha,·e more time to v.•ork extra
Ume when It's roqulrtd. ,
"ill Jhls klncl d burint11 .oomt8mtt
1'"' , .. In a crlJlfi and 'Ollf!I Vlt ~Ve to -k D<tl'ifm. ii will be boll« OYa1lnlt," he ll'Jd. ' . •
Puhil)tl-;old tho ••w .schedule 't
ipp(y to hlm.
'.'!'II be in ~e oJllce t\•ery day.'1 he
said. "But Friday? will give nie mor~
time· to do the thing, I have .(o do as a
principal in the business .''
Pulaski is a pioneer in the four-day
Defraud Witness Mum
Man Declines to Confirm Tire Statement '
By TOM BARLEY
01 "" 010' 'U•I 1t11f
" A prosecution wllness who alleiedly
1mce told a district attorney's investigator
that he saw more t.hah 1,000 tires
'9elibtrately punctured by attendants at a
San Juan Capistrano service 1tation to.
day refused to confirm that statement In
Orange County Superior Court .
-· Ronald Ltuthard, 27; the pro-
aecutlon'a eleventh witness in the trial of
ulne men accused ol c:ons~racy to cheat
&Od defraud motorist11 told deputy
•
District Attorney Richard Stenton that
the written 1tatemtnt before the pro-
iecutor wa• the investigator'& invention
and did not reflect his own experience.
Leuthard confirmed that he worked for
defendant Roger Mendenhall, 28 of 26095
Avenida De Seo, Mission Viejo while
Mendenhall operated the San Juan Tex·
aco in San Juan Capistrano.
Leuthard said he worked at the San
Juan staUon for a year and "for just a
few weeks'' at the San Clemente Mobil
5tatian, &00 Avenida Pico, also owned by
Mendenhall.
But he denied today !hat he had told
the lnvestlgator that Mendenhall used
sharpened instruments to delibtrately
puncWre tires at the stations.
He also rejected Stenton~s suggestion
that he had heard three defendants nAm•
ed as principals in the allgeged con-
spiracy, urge their emp!oye! at a Garden
Grove meeting to puncture tires and in·
nict damage on their customers' cars.
.CdM Crooner Arrested
Leuthard said he was awaiting tria l on
dhlg charges at the time he was in·
terviewed by the district -attorney"s in·
vestigator in 1970 and that the in·
vestigator promised to help him on those
charges In return for his stateinent.
He insisted under close questioning
from Stenton that the investigato r had
"invented'' the allegations and 'that he
had cooperated to avoid what he felt at
the time would be a slate prison term of
five years to life if he was convicted on
charges of possessing and selling mari·
juana.
UPI Ttltplltlt
'In Assault on Woman
Las VegaY Lady
Judy Bayley, Nevada's "First
Lady of Gambling" is dead at
56. Mrs. Bayley, a philanthro-
pist and the only lady casino
O\\'Oer in Las Vegas, lost a long
fight \Vith cancer Ne\v Year's
Eve. She \vas chairman of the
board of tlie Hacienda Hotel
and Casino.
,,
.,,..A Corona del Mar crooner who police
•llleae tried to slit his girlfriend's throat
with a razor blade after a New Year's
1>ay quar~I is jailed ' today, facing pro-
)cut1on on attemp_ted murder charges,
-c•.Anthony A. Marchionda, 41, of 900 Sea
t.:lne, was arrested by Newport Stach
tllce about 11 p.m. at the Chile Pepper
eataurant, 3201 E. Coast Highwar-,
here he Is employed. _
ti. A crlminal complaint charging the
Moger with assault with intent to commit
murder was beinJ sought today from the
Orange County District Attorney.
-Offlcerr Larry GabrleJ picked up
tlarcbiond1 after his female friend,
~brlna Lokaj, 21, conl.\cted aulhorities.
Detective Sgt. Ken Thompson said Mils
Lokaj suffered various cuts on her neck .Mlt Wu.J:lOt..suioualy injured.., ~ __ L
: She told Newport Beach police they
Ca~pers'· &o}l ..
jFaces Pot ·Rap ~
( Kirkland T. Caspers, 18,, son of Orange
unty Fift.h District Supervisor Ronald
, Caspers, is facing charges of possess-
ng· marijuana today following his arrest
unday morning by Newport Beach
lice.
C&spe:rs, a resident or 133 A venida
f>elayo, $ail Cleme~e,_ was arrested at
': 10 a.m. while sleeping in a car near his
jamily's Lido Isle home. Police assert
fhey found about one ounce of marijuana
ln Caspers' car while he was removing ~ehicle registration material from th4!: ~love compartment.
._Harbor Judicial District Court Judge
Calvin T. Schmidt authorized his release
later Sunday morning on his: own
recognizance. Caspers will be arralgned
liter this week.
Premier Puffer
GLASTONBURY, England (UPI I -
Hott! head waiter Robert Reynard, 46,
has claimed the record for blowing
smoke rings frQm one puff of a cigartt\e
He made_ 86 in• conteston one inhale.
DAILY PILOT
OIWllOll COiU'T ~ING CCWJ1Ai1Y
R•Mrt N. w, ... '"'*-' ..... ,.. ..
Jeck W. C111'1ey
VlU Pt1t1cNnt W GMenl ........., -,
no111•1 1('•1¥U
EOllOf'
Tlioll'•• A. lotvr~l.in•
Ma.....-.... Editor
l. '•'•• kr••t JffllllPOl'"I l•dl City Edllot
>l"'P"f ...... Offk•
)))) Ntwporl 101111"'''
M•lllnt .Yir•t•: P.O. lox IS7i, 926•1 .............
0.lw IMia! :aD W91t M\' 1trwt
'-"'-hlcll: n: ,_, ·-.....,,.,.,.,, '4ildo: 1117$ IMCl'I ~lrf ..,.~ ....... ,,~ ..
..
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trrl..,..,,. lkldl. c.-Miii. ...... ,~
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.,....,... eiffliM. ,l1flc:,,.I """""' lllW • • -w.:t ..., ,,,.... c.i. ,....
t•••••• 1714) MJ.-4>Jt
Cl..tfllill A~ '42•1471
were inflicted by Marchionda, claiming
be u~ 4 razor Qlade.
Investtgators said the injuries were ap-
parently suffered at the Sea Lane apart·
ment following a quarrel between the
couple eartier l:ln New Year's Day.
Mi" Lokaj also appeared to have been
beaten in addition to suffering cuts,
-police said.
Mrs. Schoepe
Rosary Slated
In Newport
•, I A rosary will be reclled tonight at 7: 36
o'clock at Our Lady Mt. Carmel Catholic ~~h ,ln New_port'~each for Jeannette M~• 'schoi!'l!t. : a 23-year tesldent of TNe\ipart 'BeacN wHo Was active in · the
Jloilg M~morlal 'Hospital Women's Aux-Jllary.
She died Saturday. Mrs. SChoepe, 64,
resided with her husband, Frank, at 3509
Seashore Or.
A mass will take place Tuesday at 9
a.m., also at the church.
Her husband , also 64, is financial ac-~Ounting m8nager for Garett Corporation
in Newport Beach. an aerospace firm for
which he has worked 30 years.
·,Her: brother-in-law. Fred Schoepe, 66.
W'as a lon,-tirrle resident of Newport
Beech until moving to Sen Juan
Capistrano last year. A former president
of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Com·
merce, he recently retired as president of
the Lido branch of Bank of America .
Mr's. Schoepe was graduated at Queen
of AngeJs· Hospital in Los Angeles and
worked as an industrial nurse during
World War Tl. _
She gave<\ip prolesslonal nursing after
lhe war, -"but worked as a volunt~r at
Hoag and area convalescent ·homes until
her death.
Burial will be a Calvary Cemetery In
Los Angeles.
In addition to her husband, she is
survived by a sister, Kathryn Ashe of
Whittier and a brother, George Probert
of Torrance.
In lieu or flowers, the familv has asked
for contributions to be made io the Hoag
Memorial Hospital building fund .
Buses for Bi:idge
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -The Golden
Gate. Bridge went lnto the mass transit
buiiness today to relieve its own con.
~ion. The Golden Gate Bridie.
f,fighway and Transportation District
began running 152 new airconditioned
buses, purchased for nearly $10 million,
between San Francisco and two suburban
counties in a commuter service that ex·
tends 60 miles to the north. The district is
tAking over runs operated by Greyhound
for 31 years: and promises better service
Al fares 25 cent.! less on most runs lf
comm~ters buy books of tickets.
Leuthard named Ralph Carney, 29, of
32852 Calle San Marcos, San Juan
Capistrano as the manager of the San
Juan Texaco station.
He identified R. C. Weisner, 28, of San-
ta Ana, as the manager of the San
Clemente station at which he was also
employed.
Stenton has named Stanley Davis, 32, of
1086 San Pablo Circle and Jerry Kendall,
35 , of 969 Sonora Road, both of Costa
~fesa with Edward Carney, 27, of 2C8j2
Shell Harbour Drive, Huntington Beach
as the three principals in the alleged con·
spiracy.
He and prosecution witnesses have
stated that the three men controtled a
chain of 11 service stations ranging from
Seal Beach to San Clemente and were
responsible for auto damage that cost
motorists ''many thousands of dollars.''
Also named in charges that were. later
contained in an .Orange County Grand
_Jury indictment were Chris\opher Enri·
quez, 25, of 7592 Volga Drive, artd Henry
Castonguay, 21, of 7661 Con'l.modore
Drive, both of Huntington Beach and
David Conchola, 22, of 6000 Garden Grove
Blvd., Westminster.
It is alleged that ,the nine defendants
were involved in the deliberate destruc·
tion of tires, slashing of hoses and the
spraying o( shock absorbers in a way
designed to convince the motorist that his
shocks leaked and should be replaced.
2 Bandits Rob
Pair of $3,000
Orange County sheriff's officers have
no clues today to the identity of a couple
who broke into a Leisure World apart·
rnent Sa turday night and took more than
$3,000 in cash and jewelry at gunpoint.
JnvestJg8tors said the mal~ intruder
and his female accomplice heljl up two
women re sidents of the Laguna Hills
retirement community and packeted $700
in cash and jewelry valued at $2,500.
The occupants of the Ronda ~fendoz.a
apartment told officers that the couple
knocked on their door and shoved their
way into the home when the door was
opened. Neither occupant was hurt in the
holdup.
Newport Harbor
Drowning TQld
A Riverside man drowned 'm Newport
Harbor Friday morning, apparently a,fter
falling from his 38--foot power boat
moored at f\.1arina Dunes.
Donald Harnish, 48, was round dead ,
floating next to his power boat. Coroner's
investigators said there were abrasions
on the man's head, indicating he may
have been stuooed by the fall.
Investigators said another man asleep
on the boat at 8 a.m., Friday, was ap-
parently not aware Harnlsh bad fallen .
ltalia11 Cl1armer
Eyed in Newport
Big Crime Spree
A 2.4-year-old Italian immigrant who
p o I I c e allege charmed businessmen
from Las Vegas to Newport Beach out
of more than $43,000 is being sought for
extradition by officers from fou r citie:S.
Franco Nicoletti, who has been in and
out of the United States for the past
five years, is currently in Italy, either
in Como or Ostuni. according to New·
port Beach detecti.ve Bob Hardy,
Hardy alleges Nicoletti is wanted on
suspicion of committing the following:
-The theft of $3,000 worth of jewelry
from Jewels of Caesar. a jewelry shop
in Ceasar's Palace, Las Vegas.
-The purchase of $22,000 worth of
diamonds in Los Angeles using worth-
less checks.
-The theft of $500 worth of clothes
from a former roommate in Newport
Beach.
-The cashing of two worthless checks
ln Costa Mesa worth a total of $10,000.
-The thefl of $7,600 from a Santa
Ana attorney \Yho allegedly gave Nie~
Jetti the money to buy a sports car for
him in Italy.
Hardv said detectives from Cos ta
Mesa. Los Angeles and Las Vegas have
joined ,him in filing a complaint against
the young immigrant.
He exolained that if Nicoletti is to
be brought to trial in this country. the
warrant 'vill nr.ed to be processed
through the Stale Attorney General's
office and the State Department.
"And after that, it's up to the Itali-
an authorities, depending on what our
extr.l'ldition treaty with Italy is like,••
Hardy added.
Hardy said they believe that some of
the schemes Nicoletti used were alleg-
edlv committed with a partner.
The detective said Nicoletti bad ,made
repeated tr1ps to this toUiltry over the
past five vears and, had $~rv~· in the
U. S.. Military. His last ·address 'fn this
Country wcis in Newport &a'ch. -
~e alleged cMme spree begi,n in
June, when the attotner. $idf!ey Les-
·1,.r. ~av~ him S7.IOO in buy a Lambor-
p;hini sports car during a return visit
to It.alv.
Hardv cl aims the ltalian bought the
car, but left it in Italy and when he re-
turned to lhls country Jn August. asked
for an additional $1.000 to cover ship·
pin<! costs.
The attorney assertedly gave him on·
ly $500, but says he never saw the car.
~
Newport Faces '72 'Issµes
' Upper Bay, General Pla 1' 'Top List. of .PrioritU!s
' ~ ' ., . . . ' .
Cmmpletion Of I new general pfan for -Complttlon Ii! I U,$. 'Afmy Corps of OWntrl:WOOse deveJbPmenl projtcfS haVt
the city and a specific development plan 't.nglneers project for new groins in ,West been· frozen while the clty puts the new
for property surrounding Upper Newport Newport · 1 + • ' plan together.
Bay are tht .. two 1 most ~(Klrllnt -Determining if the c\ownooaat an· · Wjnh said he also ~eves the city can
mbnltlpal issues lo be re~e\f I• 1972. nexalion fs In the btst Interest.. cl Ibo cl· 'enoct lhe 1.0ning that will determine the
Newport Bea~ Clty Manaa"er Robert L. ty. ·tand use around the entire Back Bay.
Wynn sald today . ~!early defining the 'need of a Wynn sa1d M dldn't put anything about = ~ ..,::":',..f:"n::.= WyM, lookµlg forward to his first full cultural center somewhere In the city. Orange County Alrp0rt on hls llst because
..,..........,... .......... ,..,....,. ...,..'-' year _.at-11he .~m of the ~ity at "1 am C(lnfJdrnt w-e can accompll1h ht doesn't know how much abou~ Us ·=-~., ~ ::::::' .-ci.a ... minlslrat1on. listed 111 Issues he beUevt1! rach of these goals," Wynn sald, futurt can· be detmnined next ~ear.
._. .._ -,.., ., .,..,.., ._. must be re$0lVed durina: the coming 12 1f Wynn is right, tht new ma.stu plan "l was going to say somethlDf. about
.,.. c.111 ~~.-...a""*' months. will be done six months 1head of the the airpo,rt,': be said, "but l ~n. t know :t.;;,"'..,':;~~~ "f. .O:;t'hlnlcnbls 'llstl1toget1·newpollt8 original achedult h• cuUlnacl lo C10llll-what bl say. , •,
1 __ .,..,,.._...;·;......;,,;;..;. _ _. _lmildlna under ~ctlon. · I cUmen two monthi ag0. •IWe!re going to'•eep a conslanl vljU
• • • · Tilt ot111tt, lo ordtr: This woold dellghl doWll of lr'ol*tY cvu I~'' ht vowed.
week in Newport Beach, says Jack ea,.
nett. rxecutive director of the Newport
Harbor Chamber of Commerce.
Pulaski believes !ht concept will catch
on -to lhe point where a m1jorlty ol
businesses wiJI be on lht shorter wee.k
in five year&. Barnett Is sktptical.
··Jfe migh t bf' right," Barnett sa id.
"bul it would be beca use the unio03 !orce
i !. "
Barriett pointed out that stores couldo't
af!ord to do it.
1'They have to stay bpeo seven day~
DOW jult to pay overhead," he 11td.
Barnell 1aJd ht didll't think there's
enough interest In the plan among other
businessmen for the chamber to do a
study of lht posr)billly.
"l like to work," Barnett sai,1. "Our
office would never go on it.
"I'd rather be working tha11 horsin,1:
around -you stay out of trouble thal
way," he added.
Crowding to End
Newport Postal
Complex Eyed
The Newport BeaCh Post Office will
n1ove its headquarters from crowded
facilities on Riverside Avenue to a seven-
acre site in the Irvine Company's Nort~
Ford industrial complex.
•'\Ve're hoping to have the building up
by the end o( the year," Newp::irt Beach
J>ostmaster Payne Thayer said today.
The ne1v headquarters complex will be
a 60,000 square foot building -about
twice the size or present facilities -to be
built on Ca1nelback Drive, adjacent to the
new Pacific Telephone Company project
at the intersection of Bison Avenue.
The North-Ford complex is north of the
Aeronutronic plant between MacArthur
Boulevard and Jamboree Road.
Thayer said this morning the move will
not affect any postal operations in
Newport Beach -or Corona del Mar,
where residents and businessmen las:t
year were !earful they might los:e their
individual distinction with a merger with
the Newport Beach Post Office.
"The money will just give us more
room." Thayer said. "It will relieve our
terribiy, terribly overcrowded condi·
lions .·•
He said the Riverside A venue building
wiJ! be retained for use as a postal
su bstation "at least until the freeway is
built."
The present building is in the right-of-
way of the Pacific Coast Freeway that
may or may not even be built. The site is
owned by the State of California.
Thayer said the move will not
necessarily generate more employes in
his office, other than those who would be
Mesa · Arsonist
Strikes ; SMY.e·
Of Candidat,e
, Striking just before ~awn, an arsonist
caused $4,500 damage to newJy.an·
nounced Costa Mesa City council can-
didate Dominic Racitl's jewelry and
Joan shop today.
The downtown Costa Mesa blaze broke
out almost simultaneously with one a few
blocks away and investigators discounted
any palitical implications against Raciti.
"No indication whatever ... " said Bat-
talion Chier Ron Coleman.
He said the blaze which damaged
Raciti's Costa Mesa Jewelry & Loan, 1838
Newport Boulevard, was discovered at
5:34 a.m., by none other than Fire Chief
John Marshall himself.
Chief Marshall was returning from a
similar blaze that caused minor damage
at CoasUine Health Foods, 270 E. 17th St.,
when -he saw flames ShoOting from
Raciti 's business.
A trash dumpster container and beep
shoved up against the rear of Raciti's
firm and ignited with some· type of flam.
mable material, Chief Coleman said.
The blaze reported 15 minutes earlier
at the health food store involved piling up
of flammable materials in a building
archw3y, which were tben ignited.
Investigators said while damage was
kept to a minimum that lwo firefighters
suffered .iojuries in the pawq and .jewelry
shop blaze. ,
He said Capt. Barry Adams and
Fireman Bob Campbell did not i-equlre
hospitali:tation, with Adams sulftrlng A
bruised foot and Campbell a back injury.
llusinessman,Raciti, a longtime civic
leader. announced last week he will · be a
caiRUdate for the Costa Mesa City Coun-
cil in the April election.
Tbe two arsonist·set fires follow«{ by
two hours another one that routect -tenant
Don Deen from his home at 380 Roche1ter
St., in the same downt0\\1\ vicinity.
Chief Coleman said that fire caused on·
ly $50 damage and was blamed on amok·
ing in bed .
He add&d that today's fires got 1972 of!
to a hot start for firemen, who hive log·
ged 17 Calls so far in just three days of
the new year. . '
Newpo~t Beach Flier
Sues in 'Plane Crash
A Newport BeacJI man who claims he
w11s seriously injured when hi.a Piper
Comanche alfa'aft cruhtd at Oranse
County Airport hu sued !he Plper Afr-
crafl corporation and Martin Avi&tton
Inc. for 175,000, ·
Henry Kaoe11 e, 1801 Button.shell Lane,
blam" both deftndan!J for lhe alleged
engine failure Dtc. 26, 19701 that led the
twln .. nglned machine llsleo In the own-
enhip of llolsa Agricultural Supply Ille.
to 1muh •ioto the ground.
Kanegae •!Jltts Jn hb Oran1• CQUD\Y
Superior Cotlrt lawtnti~ ilia~ lib lJIJwitl
lnclllded uten,AY• denlll"~'l'"lL Hls actio!I Is aw1ltlllJ .. tllQI o( 4 lrfal dil'!·
• •
added as the area grows. 1
Glenn Skirvin. manager of the Lo:;
Angeles Metropolitan Center for the U.S.
Postal Service, confirmed Thayer's state-
ment that the new facility will not chang~
the status of the Corona del Mar Post Of-
fice .
"There may be some. internal ad-
justments," he said, "but it will be
nothing that affects the public."
He said Thayer may have been op.
timistic in hoping to have something built
on the new site by next December, saying
he figures it will take two years to get a
building up.
Reds Claim Five
U.S. Aircraft
In 'Big Battle'
TOKYO (AP) -Five U.S. aircraft
were shot down by ground-to-air missiles
in Nghe An Province last Thursday ,
Hanoi's Vietnam News Agency said Tue!-
day.
VNA, in a broadcast mf?nitored In
Tokyo, said two other U.S. attacking
planes were downed by antiaircraft guru
on the same day in the province.
The North Vietnamese claim was In·
eluded tn an account reported by a VN A
local correspondent on what it called "the
big baitle" in Ngpe An Prqyinc~ against
U.S. planes on Dec. 30, 11'11. lt dld not
identify the type of missiles.
-1 , f l·'I
t'rom Page J
TRANSIT ..•
and a naturalized citizen of Uni ted States.
Before coming to this country he at·
tended the UniJ;ersity of-Auckland in New
Zealand where he received Bachelor's
and Master'.! degrees .
At the present time he serves as a con·
sultant to the' city of Compt.on in Los
Angeles: County. He is trying to
determine alternative freeway locations
and rail rapid transit routes acceptable to
that community. He said he is also work·
ing on the development of local bus
routes a few of which have already been
adopted by the city.
"Presently I am conducting a study on
community response to the revitalited
Santa Ana city bus system. The research
attempts to analyze attitudes on bus
travei and reasons why people do or do
not use the system." the doctor et·
plained.
Realtor's 'Open
,House'. Burgled . . . .
A N'WJ!Orl lleacll · RtOllor unlnten-
tionaily slagtd' an open hotlse over the
New Year's Day weekend ·while away
and a· burglar took advantage of Jt, a~
cording to ·polir.t reports.
Craig S, Grainger, of 554 Hazel Drlve,
told officer Dennis Gilman the family
relurned to find nearly $1,200 In valu·
ables stolen from a bedroOm.
Police said tfte Jnh1.1dep. c I I m b e d
through an open window, gathered up
assorted camera and stereo sound
equipment, leaving other household val·
uable.s untouched. , ..
Police Feel,
.Can~t R~ach
. Nprmally p o 11 c •· departments
must do all In their pow~r lo
safquard the health and wellire Qf
prlJOnen, within reucnable limi!J.
They couldn't do , much for
viliUlll )l-0 sanu llatbiira student
Mark P. McCulloch, 20, of Goll!!•,
when he w11 ll'1'Uled S.turday on
1usplclon of ~Ion of marl·
ju,~•· ._ , He 11111, when quri\limfd about
any potenUal heilllt problerru, that
ht sufltrJ rrom clao111rophbla, tile
, .~ear '<!( 1111 conllnld ln •·small
place. • :.
(
I
J •
!
3
7
• • I
. .
-.
N.Y. Steeb
'·" " (9~ .65; NO. 2, 3 SCCTION'S, ~4 PAGES' OltANGE C04NTY, CALIFORNI '
•
· · MPNOAY, ~ANU'ARY 3, '1972 <
I
c TEN CENTS:
'"• I .
• j • t -Co~t ,,Yo:t;t·ngsters Score High
•,
State Tests.
StOcfents·• along lbe Orange Coul Laguna -h we,.. in tbe 81111 percenlile
r•ted their a.b o v e ·average tn terms oi reading, meanIN that I> per.
p<l'fonn"!"'e of lil!S.70 by again scoring ~t of all student. in ibe _stat. scored
hlg.b·onTtactini and achievement lests in • lban ·~La Be··• 197~71. 1 lower QA ~test ._ guna . ~
Ac.cording to the ttcenUy released "Sl_udeiit's ,cand' 19 percent of them scored
raqlt.V tllr. 'yOOJipters ·scorec1 above' the lljgber. . " " .' , , • • ·
•taje ,avilige ' bt an .,.,. tested. with . '.fhe re.dine tdls wtre;adJ!ll!>latered to
Laglin,a 'cb flr•I JI'~ achlepng'the , students in 8!adiis·I, 2;; 4 al)d U. In Id-
-b!~, -· .nc·-· in a!l ~of Orange dltlon. langua1-.1114tht~ llJd •I?tll· .diillity. hit teals were a~.~fo the -sinll
·'the-tea\$ V;ere a1a1n scortd bt terms of ai>d Ulb grade ltu<lenll • 'pei<errtil!il, For tiample, llht graders in Following la a pereen11Je,¥1Di of. eacb
'
. ' .
• . ,
' Orange Coa..t acboo1 d1strtd showln& Ille
re1dlng percenme .Pll"'ment for' eldl
grade followed b)"the other tell reault..
CllJl41ruo Uallled Scl>ool Dl>tticl: grade 1-7%; Z-65; J-51; 6-63; 12
-18; language, grade 6 -58; II ---'8:
1pelling, grade I -$4;' U -49;
matbe!llatlca. 6 -41; U -65.
l'oulalo Volley Elementary · School
Diltrid: crade 1-11: 2 -65; 3 ~ 63; 6
-~. f1111111ge. ~' -111: spelllna,
grade 1-47; mathematics, 6 -58. ·
Rut!Jistoa S..eb Elementary School
Nixon
DJ>trlot: grade l -S9; 2 -58; 1-67; I
-~; languoge, grade 6 -60; spelling.
grade I -Sf; mathematics, grade 6 -
$_
llulllinP>• Btacb Unle• High school
D\,5trict: grade 12 -58 ; lanroge, gr~de
12--56, spelling. 12 -49; mathematics,
11-56. -
t.pu Biub Unllled School Dl!trlct: ~e 1-al; 2 .-65; 3 --.72; 6 -74; 12 --' 5*; lan&'!"-&C. grade 6 -7'; 12 -48 ;
spellinl, 6 ..'..:69; 12 -49; mathemalica, I
-74;-u -65.
on
Newport.Mesa UnJIHxl School District:
rrad• 1 -65; 2-72; 3-69: 6-63;·12
-63; language, 6 -65; 12 -11; spell·
ing, 6 -54; 12 -58; mathematics, I -
$9; lZ -60.
Octan View Elemenhr.y S c b o o I
District: grade I -65; 2 -61 ; 3 -63 6
-13; language, & -63; spelling, 6 -54~
Jll&~matics, 6 -59.
. SU JoaquJa Elementary S c b o o I
DiBlrict;.grade 1-112; i -58; 3 -13; 6
-·11; language, 6 -60; spelling, 6-61 ;
mathematics, 6 -~9.
Seal Btacb Elementary Sc he o 1
District: grade 1-72: 2 -74; J -74; f
-71; language, I -68; spelling, I -11;
mathematics, 6 -&:l.
Tustin Union High Sc~ District:
grade 12 -60; language. 12 -63; opell•
ing, 12 -~: mathematics, 12 -IO.
Westminster Elementary Sc hoot
District: grade 1-65; Z -65; 1-65 : I
-54; language, 1-58; spelllJ!i. I -54 ;
maLhematics, 6 -55.
Arriving Tonight
President ,1,o Meet Japan's Sato in San Clemente
By JOHN VALTEl\ZA
ot *' Dtll't Pl'91 SIMI
President Nixon was scheduled to ar·
rive at the El Toro MCAS al about 7:30
o'clock tonJ1bt to begin preparations f.or
the fifth or his summit meetings with
world leaders -talks late this week in
San Clemente with Japanese Prime
Minister Eisaku Sato.
The President obviously will arrive
with a retinue of aides and advistn, but
Mrs. Pat Nixon, who nearly alwayS ac·
Ireland .Bomb
-8how.ers-:G-lass~-•
companies the Chief Executive West, will
not .be on band.
The~Fir!t tady is on a ~k'S tour ~f " Africa.
Tiie-arrival tonight will be· followed by
a~ import.ant one. late Wednesd_,
nielrt:~ when the Pr.ime, Minister arrives
at Ille same airfield. and will ao doubt
be greeted there by Mr'. Nixon.
>\lltr resting overnight at t b e
NewporlU Inn Mr. Sato and hla aides will
bejin the IW<>day round ol ,11,lb al, lhe •
Western White House In San Clemente.
White House •JW)kesmen ·have not
delalled !be ~cl 111blla!ICe,of tbf'toplcs
to be di>cussed, but WalhingW!l 'Wrilel'JI
have speculated that the conferences will
deal with recent U.S. economic policies
which bave hit hard at Japan's important
picture, plllS the T'iwan situation in the
United Nations and the declslQn by lhe
White House to launch trips to Peking
and Mosc0w later this year.
. 4ll those American decls--ha••
cawied some grave concern in Sito!•
homeland.
The Whit. 11ouae 11u yet to a1ve any
detalll for the welcome eetemOlllel for
the protocol-<:0nscious Japa..,. delepo
lion.
A motorcade through San Clemente bu
been mentioned, liUI not confirmed.
Treasury Secretary Jolin Connally wu
expected lo join the Presldent hj San
Clemente to participate in the two da)is
of talks wiLh Sato1 characterized a:s
''strictly buaioe.u."
POW's Mother .
Dissatisfied---
• ~-~ " ~ . .. Oit SliO~· , . ' _ .. · r ·r~rl'~u, <--· .. ·With Answers ._
~ ' . i
I ~· ~;r.WOl"(l@),,~ bomli,lj(•~~ ~-o1*1tl.JIY
1i..r bbtU~• e1plodocU•l'!ay, ninfnc loC·
g!d glass ~ lblnll onto "'°"' .. 1
scrwhing women shoppers m Beuas:t.
Sidewalks ran red with their blood.
· P-0~ said/ 13 pel'!Oll! were lajored, 53
of them wotnen alld girls, when1·tfle new
)'ear's most violent Nast ripped through
the city's Cllllender Street district packfd
with sh~~n'lumtingJ>•rgalns in' por.t-
Chrlstma.11ales over~tbeir lunch hour. ,
""'-BriU.li'Army'blained Ille bombing
an_ 1j1e Ol!llawed Iris~ llapublican-Am>y (!RA!: ' • ,.
"There were girlt nmnint ev~ some : o1 · tliem covereil w!lh· blooil," a
witness said. "There were traili of ..bloOd funiDi -. the ]>lfvemenl and Jn the
road."
Police said 57 penons were treated in
howltals, 11. •of 'lh«ll witb,:aeriOus in· :illii•s: : ' . ' .. -
--1l'tle'"iftjt1r'Y toll"War one of the biggest in
any single ezplosion in more than-two
years. of escalating violenoe in Northern
Ireland.
A British Aq:ny spokesman said gunmen hijacked the ,trucit In the Rhman
Catholic Falls Road area, ,planted the
bomb deep in the load of empty bee< bot·
t1es on-the vehicle's open back and drove
it to the busy shopping district where
they abandoned II.
Wilnelses said the 1UJ1111011 abandoned
tbetr"'8ual practice and gave no warning
of the' blul.
Pvllce•Uid ll•WIB the W,oR of !be lRA,
which · bas . claimed mponsibillty 'f""
oilier _bomb alla.cks that ba~e. rf!loced
parts QtJjelfa!\ sho!ll>inl!-dtll11<ta lo nJb.
bl• 1n -months. ''J11e IRA sm• !ottefltl unification of predominantly
Protestant Northern Ireland with the
C.tholic Irish Republie.
When the bomb .. i>Joded jagged glass
shot in· all dii-ecUons. ·
Anoe Moore, 23, was ih a toba~ shop
nearby. • ·
'1Tbere was a sudden 'blindlng ftasb and
a sound like thunder," she told police. "!
was thrown to the bod> o1 the shop.
When the tho~ assl•lailt picked me up I
saw broken Jieer bollles littered all over
the place." '.
· 'C•lassy' Section
Iii .Pilot Today . " .
A complet. catal"IU• ol .Venln( col: lea• counes ond rree 1ecture.ltr1'1 to Jie
otlerecfby Orang• Coast~ GOiden West
-collqu In the semellor I>Mlllnlna Jeb.,7
. la llllerted ID1ide this "°PJ of the DAILY
P!WI'. Appeartna In the John ol a U.page
lahlotd McliOn, lbe catalogue ll1t1
, c:ouraes broken down by fOCltlon&I
caltgoriet. II also offerr. i!atallJ ol new
rellalrllloo method• wbll:h will be uled °" both campu.U -11aJ1Upc wru be by
-lntment tor Ille "<!' st!llOfl!.:i_~
Hill, )lbo!Mt aum1>m IA!. call !« 'W""""
Ing al on111e Coalt and II Gok¥'> 11ea1.
~ .
DUNEDIN, FIL (Ael -The mother 0t ~ ...... el .. Ill rt.a.
Vietnam hal expres1ed dllldlflctlon -. with the r..._.. lora'-1laa * )ICilod
to President 'Nim>. and llYl"'tbe Pre¥·
dent does not intend to withdraw (\'om
Vietnam ever. , • I "'Ibis means our boy• will never com•
home," ~ G<r~d A. G1fUey laid SUJl.
day. "A good many !amllies !ol
prisoners) !ltlnl: the President ii UJ!ng
their 10DS u an excuse to •ta)' over
Uiere." .,.
Mra. Ga(U.,'1 IM, Z7-year-<1ld Ntvy U.
Mart Galtley. !'IS abo1 down oo o
ml!llon a.vet 1 North Vietnam In Auguat
1118. '
Dan Ra\ber, CBS correspondent "'hp
conducted an. hour·loog lelevJaed 111-
tervlew with the PreSldenl Sunday nl8)1t,
poled one. queallon which be laid cam•
from Mrs. Galtley. •
~ Inquired' whether the Unltad Slatecr
med the North -II 11\tY
-would --releue the~• a-n d
guarantee salety of wllhdraw!ng u:s.
forces in escbange for a dectared put.Wt
deadline. '
. ~ ~ . ......... ~n."""n.OT lfiff lilft FIREMEN·DO,USE~L-0Jllt1NG -1~. A'f J!AWN $HOi' -.Council•Cond~e'a Pl-!'f-11qtl~ Ode.of ,T-fflt --• -
Mesa · Co~nt;il· ll~p~lur.~::.
., . ' ~ .
Jewelry 5w·re Torched ....
Striking just before dawn, an· aroonilt
cau!td ~.~ dJmai• .to newly..,..
nounotd Costa Mesa City Council ca ..
dldate Domlnt~ • RaciW• Jeruy ind
loan shop todaJ-
Tbe downtown eo.ta Mesa blue broke
out alino.t iri=Itaneously·wttb one a-f.W
tilQCD away and invatltal«s•dllCounted·
any politlcaflmpllcafi®f oa'ati!st Raetu.
'!No.ibdicatlOn wl)J~ ~.-t;""'slid~Bat·
tajioo Otief Ron Coleman. • • -__
, ~ uid , the blue which dimaged
RaciU11 Costa Meu'Jewelryl< Loin, 1138
Ntw)>i>rl Boulevan/, was dlicovered at
'5;14 a.m., by nOlle OUiet !ban F!re.Cltlef
)/Jlin• Mar1.,iil~ h,Inuelf. . ·
Clliefj ~· wu ntumlnt l{Oni • llmllar blau that caused mlllor dam1ge
\tCoutllpdloalth'FoOdl, ~~.17th St,
!'MD .lie saw flames S!jl>qlln& ltom R&clll'• buslau:&. ,.
A tr~ 4umpcter coiltainer 4nd been tltoveci ue asalnlt t1te rear <>f Raclll'•
!Inn and flnlled with aome'lype of flam.
4tiabla Qlllerial, Cblif C'.ol•ma' 1114
t1io blue iieper1ed a mlnutol earli.t
at the health loOd ll<ire lnwlyld pUilll up
of, llampuible. malarlalo bt • a bolldlni
mhwt.Y wblch.l'.,. thm.lpllod. • ~ iaJd whlla ,ilimap 'llU
epl to I m;.lm11j11 lbai' t,.Ot n.Wptei1
,
. . . ' suffered lnjuries-1rt the pawn aluf fewdl'y
shop blaze. .... .: • ~ ~ ;-,
He said eapt. Baqy AdOm.I' and
'Fireman Bob Campbell ·d'Jd not rtqU!re
hospttaU..tlon, with Adoim •'llitrerlill a
brulled ·foot and Campliill ~ ba<!t' ItUuey.
BuslneSsm!ln Raciti, a Iong!Ane el\'le
ltlder, -antloUn<el last ,_'!k; lie~!l'lll'~· I
calidldat. f'1" the Cc»ll'M,.. • ~ · cU tn the APriJ· e1ectt0n. J "'
The "'° arionJ,wei'11r;c 'roUOW'ed by
two boors 'anothOr • ooe that ~Oull'd ,Jenant non DeQ li'om bll hol!ll at., llo<bultr
SI., in Ille same downtown vlchtlty. · Clllel Cotem8n .. ia thal ·fir• .. _ ...
ly'$10 damage ..a -~ .. ,..,...
• in}1 lzt tjed( I f • •
He aMtd lllaUod1y11 Wpl Im oil
to • bot atarl for f1remello -wi.·11o .. 1og.
ged 11·ca11a., fir lnJual u.... da15 or
the new year. .. J
Real Suaw-Ballot
•
Nixon ~lied that the North Viet·
IWN!ae rejected such a proposal.
Mra. Ga!Uey aald abc doean't "bellev•
thl Pielldenl llllWered the question I
poled."
Nb:on'1 nspocme, abe Aid, showed !bit
"wo have never negoUai.ct itl Paril
aeriously !or tile rtlease of priloners.
"If we would )Ult &al: the question, wo
would -up ...,clilloaa never opened
lbefore," Jlrl. Ga1tlef ~3d.:'I would lri
""'..., ...,.., -juat to oak the!qaplion. 'lNI la ·the cndal question
concemlJ1i Ille openji)g d. nego\taUonaJ!
She ulc! Illa ~ "'"-never asked !lie POW, 1'ap l) •· . .
INSIDE TODAY
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I
DAILY PILOT c
Two Professors
Flunk Big Test
.
Def rarid Witness Mum
A Slllta An.I Collqe lnalructor
1ot 11172 off to a bad 1tar1 In
Newport Buch by fiunklnl a,.
policeoadmlnislered geography test.
Man Declines to-CoJJfirm Tire StQtement : ~ . . '
~ ly TOM BARLEY °' ... o.t.11¥ ...... '''".
Dll1*t All<ioar Rlchard 6ltnton tbJ1 Bui lte denlod )Oday that he had told
•lhe trttt.n 11a1'11\tft1 \><fore the ,... the Jnv.,tlaotor that Mendenhall UMd
'
Patrolman Richard MJller . said
be had occasion to stop th~ less·
than-sober scholars. bolh SAC
teachers and bo lh 1tged 43 , at East
Coast Highway and Poppy A11ehue
for suspiciou!ly erratic drl11!nl(.
}le 11rrestr the driver and then
attempte e the slumbering
P•.~se " he quo ted the
' asked Officer' Milltr.
ka." replied the leachtr.
:ficer P.1iller said he asked the
sodden snjourner to step outside
ind see if the surrounding terrain
really looked li ke Yukon Territory,
Staggering out and holding onto
the car, the SAC teacher aurveyed
the scene.
"Yep, we're Jn Al•sk•,'' he ~:.. decl1red.
From there It was just like 1
Monopoly Game: Wrong -go
, dlreclly to j1U.
.. 'False Arrest'
:tawsuit Filed
:'By Pawn Shop
A p~lc\JtlOn wltnm who allegedly
once !old a district attorney's lnvestlga1or
lhllt he saw more than 1,000 tires
deliberately punctured by attendant s Rt a
San Juan Capistrano service station to-
day refu sed to co nfirm that statement In
Orange County Superio r Court.
Ronald ~!hard, 27, the p ro-
aecutfon'a eleventh Witness in the trial of
nine men accu.sed ol ccrupiracy to cheat
l!ld defraud motorl.sls, told deputy
aecutor wa1 tht lnve1tlg1tor'1 inventloit &barpened inslrumeots to deliberately
and did not reflect his own exptrlence. puncture tires at the staUons.
Leuthard confirmed that he work~d fQt He also rejecf.ed Sten~·s suuy,t¥>n
defendant Roger Mendenh11\J, 28 or 26005 that he had heard tJ\ree aefei1dants nam-
Avenld1 De Seo, Mission Vi~jo while cd as principnls ip the allgeged ·con-
MendenhalJ operated the San Juan Tfx-spiracy, urge their imployes at a Carden
aco in San Juan Capistrano. Grove mee ting to puncture tires and in-
Leuthard aaid he worked at the Sa n fllct dam age on their customers' cars.
Juan staitiGn for a year and "fo r )USt a Leuthard said ~ w.as aw.ailing fi'laJ on
f~w wee.k s" at lbe San Clernente ~1obll druf charges at the time be w•• in·
sta tion, 600 Avtnida Pico, also owned by terviewed by the dJ1trlct attorney's ln-
Mendenhall. ve sligator in 1970 and that the In-
Anti-aircraft Guns
vestigator promised kl help him on those
charges In return for hls 1latnnen1.
He insisted under close questioning
from Stenton that the invesUgator had
"invented" the allegations and that he
had cooperated to avoid what ht felt at
the tlme would be a state prison term of
five years to Ille lI he was convicted on
eharges of possessing and selling marl·
juana.
Five U.S. Planes Shot
Down in Air Attacks
TOKYO fAP ) -Five lJ .S. aircraft
were ahot down by ground-to-air missiles
in Nghe An Province last Thursday,
Hanoi's Vietnam News Agency said Tues-
day.
confusion , fled to the sea.
"Forty minutes later, the enemy again
came in many groups totaling 100 planes
flying at different altitudes. They were
met by a real wall of fire put up by the
m.issHe, antiaircraft and mllltia units.
Leu Ula rd named Ralph Camey, 29, of
32852 Calle San Marcos, SaJ'i Juan
Capistrano as the manager ol the San
Juan Texaco station .
He identified R. C. Weisner, 28, of ~an
ta Ana . as the manager of the San
Clemente station at which he was also
employed.
I
D.llLY PILOT ltttf l'lltlt
Corner of lJ'liat1
A1r. Toad's Wild Ride never Included a si*npost wlth this many
'roads.' But this one in Santa Ana Heights directs incoming tourist.!
from Orange County Airport to here, there and everywhere. Want to
see it in person? Jt's right on the earner or Palisades and Irvine, er
Acacia ••. I mean, aw forget it.
Mesa Reside11ts Battle
Welfare Office Location
,.-A Costa Mesa pawn shop optratQr is
JUing 1 f75,000 claim against Ult: city for
what be charges wu • "falH arrest."
, \\'inlton Verdult, CG-<lperator o( Mesa
:Pawn, 175.1 Newport Blvd., was arrested
~t 17 b7 Coeta Mu& detecllv,. and
dw'ged with five C90nta ol poaession of
rtolen plWU!J•.
VNA, in a broadcast monitored in
Tokyo, said two other U.S. attacking
planes were downed by antiaircraft gun.s
on the same d~y in the pro¥ln ce.
The North Vietnamese claim was In-
cluded in an account reported by a VNA
1 local C()rrespondent on what it called ''the
big battle''. in Nghe An Province against
U.S. planes on Dec. 30, 1971. lt did not
Jdentify the type of missiles.
Petitio1is Filed
To Get Nixori
l1i NH Primary
Stenton ha s named Stanley Davis, 32, of
10ll6 San Pablo Circle and Jerry Kendall,
35. of 969 Sonora Road, both of Costa
A1esa with Edward Carney, 27, of 2Ql32
Shell Harbour Drive, Huntington Beach
as the three principals in the alleged con-
spira cy.
He and prosecution witnesses have
stated that the three men controlled a
cha in of II service stations ranging from
Seal Beach to San Clemente and were
res ponsi ble for auto damage that cost
motorists "many thousands of dollars."
Resi dents or Costa Mesa's Mesa del
P.far neighborhood are e1pected lo C()n-
linue their light against location of an
Orange County welfare office on El
Cam ino Drive at tonight1s City Council
meeting.
The city's planning commission sided
with the homeowners last week and
unanimously turned down a wne ex-
ception request to allow the welfare of-
fice .
--
welfare proposal was orrered as a
substitute after public pressure forted
the county to abandon plans for a prc>-
bation office at the same site.
Even If the City Council denies the zone
exception request -and it ls li kely the
council will -the issue of a welfare of·
!ice on El Camino Drive will remain
cloudy.
··'"-He was found innocent ol all rive counts
1in ·Dec. I in Harbor Judlcial District
Court, Costa Mesa. Now, VerduJt ii ask-
'1b.g the city to pay fl5,000 In "faltie ar·
flit'-damt.qes without going to court.
~In hi.I cla1m filed with the · city cltrk,
J1erdult ('.barges the city with han!S-
ment, invasion ol privacy, conspiracy and
:F1:USing hlm mental dlstreu.
-.::, .. Verdull, who IJ represented by the legeJ
.nrm t.f Beam, Du!fy aod Ure. name.a 7.t Costa Mesa detectlv two Newport
"Beach officers, an undercover o(ficer
. from Huntln&ton Beach aod an lnvestt-r.tor In the Orange County District At-
iomey'1 office as the Individuals re,,pon-
<l!ble for the allepd labe arrest.
• His daim ...,.. before the city council at toolght'1 6:30 o'clock meeting. Coon-
cllmtn normally refet-aueh ctlims to the
f:lty'1 Insurance carrier M<I leave ll~!D
1 lbe clalmanta to file autt In oourt. . .
i.Caspers? n , ·
" jFaces Pot Rap·
; Kirkland T. Caspers, 18, 110n of Orange
~County Fifth District Supervisor Ronald
•W, Caspers, ii facing charges of possess-:1nc marijuana today following his 1rrest
:&und•y morning by Newport Beach
!police.
; CISJtUs. a resident of 133 Avenida
:Pela)"JI, San Clemente, was arrested at
:t :tO a.m. while sleeping in 1 car near his
:family '• Lido Isle home. Police . assert
;they found about one ounce of marijuana
;in Caspers' car while he was removing
;veructe registration material from the
•glove C()mpartment.
' Harbor Judicl1I District Court Judge ~Cilvln T. Schmidt authorized his release
later Sunday morning on his own
recognizance. Caspers will be arraigned
later this week.
Pren1ier Puffer
GLASfONBURY, England (U PI / -
Hotel head waiter Robert Reynard, ~.
has claimed the record for blolilng
smoke rings from one puff of a cigarette
He made 36 in a C()ntest on one inhalt.
DAILY PILOT
OIA,MOI C0AJT P\llL11Hff!ICJ c.oMfAN'f
1.Mrt N, W,M
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J•clc I. Cini.., Via ,.,._,..,, •rid 0-tl Mt~.,.
Th•"'•' "'''"a ldilor
Tho ... 11 A. Mu,11\i"e
MIMlintl ff1!1;1r
Ch1rlt1 H. l••1 li1~1,J I', Ntll
Mli1111nr Mfl'lollllla EG11'1:1r1
c .......... Offk•
3Jo W11t 1 • ., Sn•••
M11tf'1 ,Yi,..11: P.O. Id 11.0, t212l
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"At missile slte H, Commander Tan
closely watched the enemy'a moveme.nt
on the radar screen. Waiting unUI a
group of Mght 'Phantoms' had flown Into
the target sight, he shouted : 'Fire !' Two
missiles shot up and tore into the
jetOight. Two F4! were shattered in the
sky. AU the other planes, thrown into
CONCORD, N.H. (AP) -Petitions
were filed today to get President Nixon's
name on the ballot for New Hampshire's
Republican presidential p re r e re n c e
primary'March 7.
Also named in charges that were later
conta ined in an Orange County Grand
Jury indictment were Christopher Enri·
que:(:, 25, of 7592 Volga Drive, and Henry
Castonguay, 21, of 7661 Commodore
Dri ve, both o! Huntington Beach and
David Concho!a, 22, of 6000 Garden Grove
Blvd., \Ves lminster. Former Gov. Lane Dwinnell, head of a
citizens group campaig ining for Nixon,
fil ed the petit ions to enter the Pr~sident's
name in the nation's earliest primary.
It is alleged thal the nine defendants
were involved in lhe deliberate destruc-
tion of ti res, slashing of hoses and the
spraying of shoc k ab sorbers in a way
designed lo convince the motori st that his
shocks leaked and should be replaced .
Frotn Page 1
POW •.•
Dwinnell, reporting he had more than
.J,000 aignatures from each of the state's
two C()ngressional distMcts -twice the
number required -predicted the Presi-GOP Solons
Block Override
Of Reaga.11 Veto
at lhe Parb peact talk1. dent would win the contest "very han-
"l~'• a_ cniestloa..Dllll)' ol us wanted to dily."
aak the Pteaident. But we have not ha.d Dwinnell said he had not C()nferred with ~ ~~~tlons wlth the Presi-the White.Jlouse before fillng the .,.ti· ftfti: onh' ji{th 1 .... r membet1 of t)je,1d-..-mlniithlton:" ih"e Said. ·uons but was informing Ni.Ion ln a letter
Mn. .GaiUey . aald ahe hid · tried that hls name ha!! been flied.
nQJnena&lltitimH ~for ,.r 1t>erl0Dll visit or Nixon will have 10 days after the prl-
pbOn• «in•ersatlon · W!tll Nixon,.., but waa mary filing period ends Thursday to
1Jway1 refused. keep or remove his name from the
She aald she learned her son was a formalfbanot: -prltonet when other POWs released in
August 1969 reported seeing the If the President does not allow his
lieuten111t. name to be listed forplally·as a candida!t,
Nixon said he raised the POW issued the ti delegate and 14 .al~mate 'deleiate
will) Soviet foreign minister Andrei candidates would not run pledged but
Gromyko and that presidential adviaer would be listed as favorable to Nixon.
Henry A. Kissinger discussed it wlth Dwinnell said he had "mixed" feelings''
Chinese Premier Chou En-lat: aboul the Prcaldent's decision to do no
When the full record is published, Nix-campaigning.
on said, "our lady from Florida, and "As the one responsible ror the cam -
othera, will recognize we have gone the paign in this state, one would like to have
extra mile." one'a candidate on the grounds," Dwin·
North Vietnam asserted today the on-nell said.
ly way President Nixon can free U.S. He pid his group takes "very seriously
prisoners ol war and "get out of the any opposition," to Nixon's candidacy,
twamp~Jg V.Jetnam'' ii to abandon hopes f:nclud1ng the challenges of Republican
ot military victory and "negotiate ser-Reps. PauJ McCloskey of California and
iously at the Paris conference on John Ashbrook of Ohlo, but predicted the
Vietnam." \ president WQUld win handily. Th~ alal'\"O;ll lsil\le<I b1 l'{or1h .VI,~ .: , 1¥" .tilt Illl(Jlri~i' .. N)1on, • lonruil
nam 1 repc.e.sentative• to the conlef'tl\ctr ~an¢ld•te; receivett ·n .s percent of the
was an ~•ttem,pt· •to respand to the hep1,1bllctn votes against 10.8 percent for
1tatementa1i:nld! b1y Nlxon Sunday night. ~ N~~ York Gov. Nelson Rockefeller.
Dr. G. J. Fieldii1g Named
County Transit Unit Head
Dr. G. J. "Pete" Fielding. 37·year-cild
UC Irvine professor toda y was named
general manager of the Orange County
fransi t District.
District directors selected Dr. Fielding
from a field or more than ~ candidates
after !l\·o months of negoti ations. He
assum es the $25,000 ,a year post on Feb.
I
Dr. f"ie!ding holds a PhD from the
University of Californ ia at Los Angeles in
geography.
His seltction rnprked the beginning of
the second }'ear or operatlon for the new
County Transit District.
"Thank you very much," the UCI pro-
fe~sor said to the directors when hls ap-
pointment ~·as announced this morning.
''I loo k fonvard to this nne opportunity to
try to improve rapid transit Jn Orange
Co unty ."
Since lifiS Or. Fielding Jaa s ~n engag-
ed . in research IQd te~dllnl -. urban
policy problems with tmpliatll upqa
tran1portatlon.
Ht aald In an Interview this rooming
that during the past year he has bet.n ac-
tive in a program at UCt destined to
train aerospace tnglneers for urb11.rt oc..
cupatlons.
On public t1dmlnlstratton, the doctor
said : "As a me1nbt:r or the Graduate
School ol Admlni!tration it UCI, I 1m
famllli• with ti.. theories of human
behavior 11. they apply to urban, tduca·
!Ion, hoapilal and b u 1 I no 11 1d-
inl•ql(1t1oo.. •
Dr. J'ltl&ni • publfi bed --WAlllf .U.. niie -ol polltlcal Influence tn
•,
determining urban land}use and with the
dynamics: of citizen invoJveme.nt in
transportation planning.
He said that slnce 1968 he has C()n-
ducted a series or itudies for the
California Tf'an1J>ortatton Agency on
alternative strategies for personal in-
volvement in transportation studies.
At UCI he teaches a three course se-
quen ce in urban policy. He is also a con-
tributor to the interdi sciplinary program
at UCI in which computer systems are
used for in structional purposes.
The new transit dlslrlc~ (enerat
manager holds a joint apj>Olntment. In the
Graduate School ol AdmfnlstraUon and is:
assoc iated with t:ie program In
'Environmental Management sponsored
by the School of Engineertng.
Dr. Fieldihk Is a l\aliVe o[ New Zealand
and a naturalized citizen of United States.
Before coming to this 'cOuntry · ht at-
tendod the Unlverrlty of Aucldlbd In New
Zuland '!her' Ile re<elvod Bachelor'1
Ind MHtl!i''S ~e~s. ,
At the present Ume he sttves at 1 con-
sutt1nt to Ille city O! Compt<>o 'in Los
Angeles Coun~ He ii lrylnc lo
determine aJtem,tlve h'te1fl1 Jocatlol\1
and roll rap id tnnstt routes act<ptable t.
that community. Ht .. id be ts also work·
Ing on the deveJOpment of local · bus
routes a few of which hate already been
•doptod by the city.
"Presently I am C()nductlng • atudy on
community response to the revltallied
Santa Ana city bus system. The re1earch
attempts to analyze atUlude1 on bus
travel ud rea10D1 why pooplo do or do
Ml Ult ~ 1y11tm." the doctor ti•
plalned.
J
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Senate
voted today to override one of G<>v.
Ronald Reagan's record·long list of
vetoes, but Assembly Republicans stood
solidly behind the GOP governor and the
effort Jost in the lower house 3~19.
The Senate first voted 27-13 to override
Reagan's veto of a measure sponsored by
Sen . Anthony C. Beilenson (0-Beverly
Hills ), to requi re better sound-proofing or
homes and public buildings.
Six Republicans joined the 2 1
Democrats to vote to override Reagan -
the second time this year the upper house
has voted to put a bill into law in spite of
a Reagan veto.
But the overTide attempt fell IS votes
short in the Assembly.
It takes a two-thirds margin in both
houses to override a gubernatorial veto -
something that hasn't been done since
J946. I
By midmorning, the Assembly had sus-
tained 34 o( the 52 vetoes before it. Only
six of the issues came to a vote . Reagan
vetoed 157 bills this past year, a· record
for him. ·
Most of the override efforts were made
by Democ rats but one Republican was
caustically critical of a Reagan veto of
one of his bills.
Assemblyman Frank Murphy (R·Santa
Cruz), rose on the Assembly floor and
said the veto of his plan for a prison om-
budsman "makes you want to throw up."
Although he didn't try to override the
veto, Murphy said, "For five years I've
listened to Democrab say the governor 's
veto mC!lsages ere untrue. You're so
right. You 're so right."
The . veto ~essase ~ where the
governor giVes his ruaons for vetoing the bill. . -
The veto override drive was one of t'he
loose ends the lawmakers bad to handle
before beginning their 1972 work .
Disillusionment
Could Be Cause
Of Medical Suits
SANTA BARBARA (UP I )
Disillusk>nment by Americans ltd to
believe that medical ldenct can do
almost anything m1y be a factor In ""
rising incklence or roalpractice suits. ac-
con!Inc to a federal official.
The capabilJlies oI modern medi cioo
·are "ballyhooed to ~ poil!t where pa-
tients expect mlracle1 from their physl·
clans," said Ell Bemzweig of the Depart-
ment of Health, Education and Welfare In
a report Issued Sunday on a conler~
on malpracllce.
"Then wbeil &0meth!ng g0<s wrong,
when the:re 11 1 maJoccurrenoe or •
Jher4peuttc misadventure," Bmzwelg
Nld, "tilt public tend.I lo q.<ume peili-
''""' II l•Volved aJld .-"""PIJIA· 'tl.. II due." I
City ordinance requires all zone ex-
ceptions to come before the C()Uncll. no
matter what action was taken by plan·
ners.
The county pl1ns to open an adult
services branch of the welfare depart·
ment at 1055 El Camino Drive. The
Costa Mesa officials requested· the zone
exception, not the county, because county
officials contend they are not obligated to
obey the city's zonlng laws.
The Board of Supervisors will decide in
the near future if the Welfare Depart-
ment will press plans for its branch office
in Mesa de! Mar, even over the city's op-
position.
Pay Board to Cut Back
On Aerospace Contract,s
WASHj~CiTON (~p I' ~ b~alness
member o"r the. Pay Bbard said Monday it
will cut down somewhat a 12 percent pay
raise for aerospace workers, then begin
living by 'its 5.S percent rule.
The business member, General Electric
Co. Vice President Virgil Day, said he
and the other four business members
want the aerospace raise cut at least to 8
percent, and the fiv e public members
al&0 want them trimmed by an
unspecified amount.
Such a line-up would mean that the five
labor members, who want the full U per-
cent raise, would be outvoted.
The board takes up the aerospace raise
Tuesday.
Even an 8 percent raise would e1ceed
the board's rules, which say raises in new
contracts generally may not exceed 5.5
perc;ent a year, and even in special cases
'can't .go over 1 percent. .
"Once aerospace, and perhaps a couple
of last few contracts · are rounded up,
however, the S.S percent guideline must
and will become a tight criterion," Da,y
said.
His pred iction is especiall y significant
beca u);e he and other business members
so far have sided with labor members Jn
approving guideline-11tretchlng contracts
ov er the objection of public members.
The only ,two. oontra1to,l!fcJ4ed,11Yit1>1
board sO far i:Jve a IS percfnl fii!f.ye1r
raise to coal miners and clear the first
part of a 42-month rail signalmen's pact
C()ntaining 47 percent in raises.
Day, who voted for both , C()nceded that
they "clearly exceeded the S.5 percent
guideline, and were clearly inconsistent
with a policy of stable prices."
But he said they were justified because
the unions had just missed a round of
"flagrantly inflationary " bargaining and
were had a catch-up coming.
"This theory b knoW11 as 'geUJng the
last cow throu~h the gate and then clos-
ing the gate,' ' Day said.
Housewife Sets Self
On Fire in Mesa
A Costa Mesa housewife who set
herself on fire using cigaret lighter fluid,
remained in critical, though stabilized
conditon today at Orange County
Medical Center.
The 40-year-cild woman doused herself
with the lighter flu id TI1ursday night in
her resKience on Mendoza Drive. Police
sald_sbe bad a long history of mental pt'o-
blems.
Nobody to H~Jp
W oma1i Tells of Trek in S;fiow
GORMAN, Calir. (AP) Sianley
Culver had heart trouble, asthma and
emphysema . He kept an oxygen tank ln
his tiny trailer. 'VUh it he and his wife,
Georgina, felt secure.
Eight days ago ,anow atarttd ralHng In
the Tehachapi l\1ountalns north of Los
Angeles . Six feel ot it snowed in the
Culvers' car. They had no telephone.
"Wednesday morning the 01ygen ran
out," rte.ailed Mrs. Culver, 49. At 11 :30
a.m. Cul ver, a SS-year-cild retired
mechanic, told her, "I can't breatbt." A
le.w minutes later he was dead .
l\frs. Culver began looki11g for help
lhe didn 't get for days.
"I got out 111heet at1d painted 'Help' on
ll In big letter• ind put It on the roof of
tho tr1Uer," she 11ld. "llelloopten Pl~
ed over many Umes, and I wived for
help. I eve:n tried signaling them at night
with a flashlleht.
"No one would stop to help me.
11By Saturday I couldn't rtay aoy
longer. I'd been there rour day1 with-him
on the bed. The mow bad melted down •
bit. I put OD my heavy bootl, • lki CO•t
and gloves. and took a ohovel to help mo
keep my balance, and 1t.art.ed toward the
road." ,
Jn ,~ hour1, Mrs. Qilver trudged t ~
mllu lhrouah four-loot drtlt.1 to the two-
lane Gorman Poll Rood. There aM r..nd
an •11\411'1"'"1 pltone, bot II dldn~ work. Two miles down Ibo rood Ibo liw
tourists pla)'trig In the snow.
"I must 'gel help," sho told the flrll
man lhe came to. "My husband la dead
back in our trailer.'' She t&Jd the man
pointed to Cigures in the dlJtance making
a snowman and replied, "f can't help
you. The children are playing."
"After that, 1 simply wouldn't ask
anyone else," Mrs. Culvtr said. "I' could
hear the childrtn playing. 1 wa1 afraid
somebody else would lell ,me no.
"So I put out my thumb and tried lo
hitch a ride . • • I lust kept plodding
along." ·
As she walked two more miles down
the snowy road, drlwrs Ignored her
outslretched tllumb.
Six bourt ahd narly 1!1 ~es afttr 1he
ltarled, Mrs-Culver ~ached 1
reataurant aftd. calltd tllo( toeal deputy
1herftr. Tht deputt "u jll>ne -on duty
at the Rose Parade in Pasaden1 -but
his wife drove ¥rs. O.dve.r to a relative.•1
hol1$e in Gorman. Nobody ,.., home, but
• nelgbbora lei ~er In.
"I turned on tht heat, made myself
&0me dinner, Md went to bed, tllankful It
was all over.''
A lherlU'a party brought oul CU\Vor'1
bQdy.
Mn. CUiver 1ald Suoday ehe hu made
no plans for tho !Uneral or for hor ruturo.
"But," &be .-Id, "I kno\\' 1'11 havt to
move Ille trailer out ol tho m4antatn.. I'll
UVI Jo. ~91 QloM lf Olh!il> pooplo, In
.... I ""'1 bolj>."