HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-01-11 - Orange Coast Pilot' ._
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DAILY PILOT
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON , jANUARY ·11, 1972
' \V~teF " Ny1l1ph?
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Oil Pollute Charge
Disn1issal Blasted
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In Santa Barbara
Governor Seeks End Says ·Land ...
Shoµ}d Stay
. ~
; Relaxing In· the ;urf or a Sidney beach, Australian teleruion beauty
Barliara.Rogers doesn'! seem. l(>O. ~onc~ed,oyer,the storm she stirred
up ·a! Waikiki be~ch . Her bikini was. lianned al !be Honolulu .beach
.. when 'sbe' went s'vimming during a st.opover on her recent visit to
' the U.S.
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Woman's ·Body ·Found ..
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~tu(f ed: .in Freezer . : : .· . ,
t·· '':'l,. ......... I,,.,
\tORONTQ '<APJ . ~io~ ~•tbs 1 children' C.therine. IS, and !lharle's,,21',
h .. i""""1id' Ille sun.jann~ boat 0, ·~ .~ fllo lenlls, 'John Moore,.J9, and '!'Oro~~. min -¥i(fed'in • home ,,. i.iyi,t .iatkson, 18, who had beeh wal4h-
llidd lroo.! ·ot tor.Irey pies. l!nd ~ tbt te!e~lsloo Mrror • movie, one '~ · •• ., · 4-• nd A ' l0 the· ""' 1 oJi aiid M'onday olihl the !>&IY was ~r ,otYO · . stquen:-n "':'·~ 7
111)""1 't; •t i.,st six months. n was l!j<i"J"g tbe dJScoyery of a wom .. ~ oo,ci,
=!11.{ollr youths who~ ll)e, In a ,tnmlt ,-ipatl<eJl .thlir c:uriOl1ty
·alla: -,:~ ~ tlJ ·•l>oiil ~ frtezer<tbat tbt}'had.lteen told .,t,..__, ,,.,.-~ tI.. -~ .t ,r, I
, ~~· . l I • DO ""'open. ,'
•JThe JJ91f)D '" ldtQtulld .u Groce > • 'l!IJ>body was clad lo a lummor ouUJt
lvetyn!l'bdd, 34. lJl!sslng aince July 2'· of shorts, ai>d hiller. ·
Hor 11\>tiblnd, ~ Vfll!nd 10<\d, a. a ,._ ... mon bad been reporltd miss\oi #1ioll driver, hf'""" cbarf!ed wltb llon·. to )>Ollce Dec. 21 by bet mother. a rul-
•pltll murder!. . • dtnl-o( Burlington. P~Ct .. Id ~ believed MrS . Todd' Police said Mrs. Todd lived with ber
-o&bot to death but that a delinlte husband In an apartment In the same ... or death could not be established area be!ore Todd moved Into the Casaldy ilolU;lbe bod,Y 11111 thawed sullkienUy to l townhou ... ~ ··~topay, , Dllrfug the time htr hu band lived In
Pollet .ai.. the freew had been stored the ~n~ police said, he operated
• tho dining room ol a .TmiJloale owoed ., unolfldal drop-In center I n ~ llor\o C.\UldY since .Dec. 1 '!hen Todd ntl&llborhood teenaaen.
.. ...i to the Caaoldy homo iD i~ cllY'• Police said ,that Wbeo ~ \Jfa& unable to aortll'ilest ilde. ' • ....... hit l<a,. 0.C. I, !ht CaUldJ
)!odywu !Olt>d by llrJ. Cusldy's .)'OUll1I ~bl.,... iD ~ lhtm.
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To · Hughes Mystery
CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPI) -Gov.
Mike O'Callagban believes "the time has
arrived" hecauae or recent events !or a
face-to-face meeting between billionaire
Howard Hughes and state officials.
"I believe that the time has arrived
because of the circumstances made evi·
dent during the past month that responsi·
hie respresentatives Of-. the state of
Nevada such as Philip Hannifin and Jack
Diehl should have a meeting with the sole
owner .of this corporation," O'C311aghan
said Monday.
The governor "'as asked if he \YOu1d be
willing to meet with Hughes himself.
"I don't see why l shouldn't meet with
him. · I met wilh several other owners
during the past year," said O'Callaghan.
Hughes, through his corporation, the
llughes Tool Company, owns seven
gambling casinos in Nevada. Hannifin i3
chairman of the state Gaming Control
Board and Diehl ls' chairman of the State
Gaming CommiMion. ' ·
O'Callaghan said this is nothing new
because the state has for some time been
, willing to send representatives to meet
"With •Iugbes· who ls in the .Bi\harpas.
The governor said the circumstances
'lie referr~ to were the book allegedly
wrillOJI by , Hughes, · the "purported
telephone •cori.vcraation". be.tween Hughes
and niembers Of lhe · na:tlorlal press Fri·
day and the oonOicts surrounding
whether the book is legitimate.
~1:eanwhlle., in Las Vegas, publisher H.
Bar Ordered
To Adniit Gals
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TRENTON, N.J. (UPI) -The
Clam Broth House, a ber and
restaurant in Hoboken, N .J .. has
been IOl!nd guilty o! sil dlscrimlna·
tki!1.. .
J1unes Blair, state civil rights
.dltoclor,' ruled Monday that the
btr's ••men only" polJcy violated 1
state law. He ordered the bar to
begin tervlng women.
The~ owners of the place fought
!he coinplalnt by women libera·
tlonlats.
·Tile .ownon said admitting
women would tuln the bar's "•t·
motphere" -lloora ankle-<leep In
11wdust aod mply clam shells.
and typical """'' bar-toom con· ftl'lllloo.
M. Greenspun of the Las Vegas Sun sug-
gested thal whether Hu-ghes Or an Im-
personator was interviewed Friday is not
the most important issue.
He said that if the McGraw-Hiii
documents were fraudulent then the en·
tire Nevada representation by the
mystery billionaire "is a tremendous
hoax."
Greenspun said a IO-page letter bearing
Hughes' signature and the endorsement
of the check acknowledging down pay·
ment from McGraw·Hill was in the same
(S.. NEVADA, Page i)
* * * Huglies Memoir
Writer Feels
Newsmeri 'Duped'
By JAMES R. NORMAN
NEW YORK (AP ) -The controversy
surrounding the forthcoming
"aUtoblogr.aphy" of Howard Hughes ' has
'tliicken,d ~Ith the Insistence ' of the man
named as the collaborator that seven
reporters who 'believed they had spoken
with the• billionaire recluse were duped.
"That w4s not Howard Hughes,"
asserted Oifford Irving, the ~l·yeaMIJd
novelist who publisher McGraw·Hill says
spent close to 100 taping sessions with
Hughes in preparing the memoir•, set for
publication ft.larch 27.
The seven reporters who apent 2'ii
hours Friday night speaking with a voice
emanating l'rom a small box in a Los
Angeles banquet room agreed the voice
was indeed that of Hughes, who has not
been seen l"Jbllcly since 1957. Two voice
prin\ experiJ concurred.
The voice told the seven mtn that lhe
book being printed by McGraw-IUll Is a
fraud, that he nevu met with Irving and
thal,he ne.vtr e~~ ~.o,C h\111 '.'i\nlll ~ matter ·or days ago.~ '
Publisher Harold McGraw Jr.. head of
the .firm . thal !Ja• ,pai~ 10oney in six
!lgure.t for the righls to what U lnsls\s Is
: a leglllmate autoblocrapb)', appears.,.W·
illC lo accepl that tbe man who 1poke on
tl>i! talep~ls Hughes.
"My only thought Is that he spoke too
openly" In the autA>bloir•PhY. McGraw
told lleWlmen Monday. "Some ad\llam mun have lclflsod hlm on tlle damaslni
aspecll of 'the lnlormatton fl far u 1111
• (WllUGllES, Pace I)
'U,IT........,,
Academy De•d>
Vice Adm. William P. Mack,
commander· of the Seventh
F1eet, has been picked by Presi-
dent Nixon for the prestigious
post of superint~dent of the
U.S. Na•al Academy.
Pollution Case
Qisiniss~s Irk
Oil Prosecutor
SANTA BARBARA (UPI) -District
Attorney David 'Minier described ••
"outrageous" Monday a Judge.'& dismissal
of 342 counts of crimlnal pollution agains\
four major oil ' comP.1nita· held responsi· . . . .
ble JOI'. the 1969 oil disaster here.
Minier said his oU!co bas •!ready med
811 appeal of the' municipal court's
decision l\l'onday. ·
In IJ>iece
By BARBARA KllEIB!CH
Of "" 0-tl!Y ..... , Sl•ff
Joan Irvine Smith turned down an offu
of $100 million cash for her stock ln Uie
Irvine Company about five years ago, dlit
heiress revealed during a press con.
ference at he.r Emerald Bay home Mon-
dJly.
She refused the cUer. made by .•
representative. of a New York cot-
paration. Mr's. Smith. said, becrise 119
relt it would lead to the breaklnf UP' Of
her grandfither's giant Orange COunty
ranch holdings. "I'd rather see it kept in
one piece and see something good done
with it,11 she said . "I worked hard to have
the university brought btre and I have
some feeling about the property. I'd like
to see it developed right, following the
original Pereira plan for the un1versily
town ."
Mrs. Smith appare:nU y made the
disclosure to emphasize her insistence
that , "Jf I were only Interested in money
I wouldn't be doing all this,"
She referred to her long·standing fight
to break the James Irvine Foundation's
control or the Irvine Company and her
recent attemots to block what she tenned
(SWPOUNDATION, P!'P I)
Orange
Weather
More patchy, deoae fog Is 1.r.. I
cast for Wednesday~ with hazy sun.
shine in the allemoon. !JtUe tel)lp-
erature change prtdkted, wiUt
highs •long the coast at 58 rising
to 61 Inland. Lows tonight ~.
INSIDE TODAY
Jiicfge 'Morion 't. Biker aefi:nded hI<
declsloo contending the oil llrms bad
been ordertd t9 ~v scores of civil
Judgments aod that they had "sufli;red
,auf~y.J'.: "'~t 't .. ~...,,..,-, > :.:J ,~~"·I
Union, Mob!~ Te~aco aod Gull uu ~·
panles each pleaded guilty to 1 IJDrtle
C01mt of po~ullon and w~ fioed 1600 for
their part 1n the olfshore oil rta dlsuter
which sllcbnecl'lbo.channel and 40 mUes
ol beacht>.
The Cost of-Z.it:ing CourtCU
sa11s it will stMt di.sc:tosfng &hi
tta1nes of violator1 of WOQt·prfce
conirols, a1wt hinttd UIOt rerults
-af .. <U1>1$ l'o••sligcrfOtQ> ~ b•
giVf'n to ~r10111 filing com·
plottiu agoitl8t violator.1. Sit
story Pogt 5.
on Jan. ft, 11a 11nlon 011"0>. pal·
fonn five miles ofrlhore. an oil lease
shared by """ llrma, sull-.. ....
denrater .,,..i1 biq1'Qllt aod nearly !30,000
gallons of petioleum cuthtd to the
M!act. '!be main leak waa capped a!ttr
12 clays."
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~ CAIL v PILOT • 'T1.1esdaJ, Jin1,11ry 11, 19/l
Defe nse Warning
.. System Attacked
•' By GENE BERNHARDT
' WASIUNGTON (UPU -CoD&rwiDn•I
Investigators aald today lhe continental
U.S. 1ir d"efense ia virtually useltss and
·p.ny hich priority targ't in the heart of
the COW'Jt.ry could bt hit from the South
Coast Coulitiort
Against Freeway
Sought by Group
with little risk of advance detection.
The House armed aerv Ices Irr
vestlgating subcommittee made the
claim as a result of hearings It held Info
how a Cuban airliner mana,!led to land at
New Orleans in October with no advance
warning.
The plane carried 21 Cubans who
wanted to attend an international sugar
conference. They were detained at New
Orltiilns', Moisant International Airport
until the conference was over because th!!
State Department rejected thell' visa ap-
plications.
The 1ubcommittee, wtllch held hearings
ln November ind nec,mbtr, said U.S. of·
flcials did nor know of the Cuban
airliner's approach until it was 25 miles
from the New Orleans airport, r'Questing
landing lnstructlons.
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f'rom Pare J
FOUNDATION •
premature incorporation of the city ol
Jrvine .
Asked why she thought the unidentified
company would want to offtr such a 1um
tor her II percent of lrv1ne Company
stock, which she haa complained pays on·
1y 1.6 percent dividends because of what
she labels company mismanaitement, the
heiress replied, "I don't know why. I
gue,. they thought they could 11,hl
harder than 1 dld."
Her desire lo see the property kept i,,.
tact, she added, also has kept her from
availing herself of a California law that
would permil her, as a minority
stockholder, to petition for dissolution of
the company, A 1965 amendment to !he
states Corpcrate Secur ities Act, Mrs.
Smith's attorney Lyndel Young ei·
plained , permits sucb an action by a
&tockh<llder owning at lcast,3(1 percent of
&tock other than that on which the com·
plaint Is being made.
The James Irvine Foundation owns 53.7
percent of total Irvine Company stock
an~ Jrvine family members own tl}' rt•
rnainder, but of these Mrs. Smith is the
pr!neipal individual stockholder.
A N.ewport Stach anti·freeway group
rants to form a coa!tal 1lllan~e agai.nst
the Pacific Coast Freeway and is seeking
!he help of cities and towns' from Long
&ach to San Juan Capistrano.
''How could this have happened?" the
report asked, concluding that "the ex·
isling United States air defense is
virtually useless -lt ls more of a con-
cept than an actuality."
Tornado's T1·affic Jatn Although the heiress said the $100
million offer for her stock had been made
and rejected verbally. with no written
commltments, newsmen noted that it
wouJc:t •)nd.ICate a valuation of the shares
at $55. rather than the $25 paid in th' last
The Citizens C.00rdinatin1 Committee
will writt city officials 1 and a 11
ts<>meowntr1' groups up and down the
Ortnge Coast in an attempt lO fight the
Foposed rreeway,. Newport Beach Vice
Mayer Ho)"ard Rogers said Monda)'.
"We are trying to 1et a coordinated
_aroup representing all aff~ted ar'~'·"
Rogers 1a1d notinl the growing oppoattlon
to the freeway route.
The CCC. an offspring of th' Harbor
Area Freeway Fighters. forced an in·
1tiative el,ction In Newport Beach last
March that resulted in the city's can-
cellation of th' route agreem,nt with the
State Division of Highways.
"This attitude toward the freeway Is
;1aining momentum," Ro11:,r11 aald this
<tnorning saying he thought the coastal
1'11iance "ls an interestina way to go."
., Rogers noted that groups opposing the
1reeway ha v e already. turf aced in a
;number of towns . lncludin& Laguna
Beach, Huntington Beach and Seal
Beach.
\.>He said it lher' ls enough inter,st
shown the CCC will try to schedule a
meeting of coastal citizens early in
February.
Re1ers aaid the lelttr will bt mailed
later this week.
"I don't know the exact wording," he
s&id, "be.Cause they're still puttlng-the
final touches on it. But basically tt says if
-there ls enough respoftse we wil! ''t up
the met"tin1 to aee what we can do with a
united force.''
Fron1 Pagel
JIUGHES ...
-busipe11 and peraOnal life Is concerned."
., McGraw said the publisher h11 "full
confidence" in Irving and that the
publish I n g company remained
"abaolutely convinced of the authenticity
of this book and that the docum,ntatlon
we have contains the signature of
Howard Hughes."
Irving told three reporters In an in-
t,rview Monda y in the offices o(
McGraw·Hill that the voice h' heard in
excerpts of last week's news conference,
aireil on television Sunday night, "was an
excellent forgery of what Mr. Hughes
must have sounded like some four years
ago." ·
RemJnded that th' two Independent
voice experts said tapes of the voice on
the telephone matched older recording•
known to have been made by Hughes.
Irving asked : "How valid cou1d they be ir
they were compared with a recordin~ 25
years old?" He did not elaborate on what
migbt have 111tered Hughes ' voice in re-
cent years.
lrvinit displayed photostatic copies of
the endorsement!! on two checks. f,oth
were signed H. R. Hughes and carried
the notation that the originals were
deposited in the Swiss Credit Bank in
Zurich. The ch,ck backs bore the words
1'Chue Manhattan Bank, N.A.·Endorse·
ment Guaranteed."
OU.H61 C:OAIT
DAllY PILOT ............
l.etlH lff4ti c.tr. .. _
H .. l'llffNIMctl ....... , .. ..,.
s.. C:i-..tl•
OIV.HGI COAST 'Vtl.ISHIMG COM,ANY
lto~trt N. Wt•'
'r1110fl\1 tllll P~llMr
Rep. F." Edward Hebert (D.LaJ,
chairman or the aubcommlltee as well as
of the full House Armed Servlcu Com·
mittee, said "since our potential enemies
know of the gaping holes in our air
defense. I think It is high time that the
American people were let in on this
secret.
"They should know, for example, that
there is a 1,SOO.mlle open str,tch from
Florida to California virtually devoid of
military surveillance and air defense
command and control," Hebert said.
The report recalled that on Oct. 5, 1969,
an armed. Soviet·bullt MIGJ7 fighter new
undetected from Havana and landed at
Homestead Air Force Base in Florida.
when It.\ Cuban Alr Force pilot defected
to the United States.
President Nixon uses the Homestead
facility on his trips in and out of Florida.
The two incidents, the subcommittee
said. "demonstrate that any foreign
power can. at will. vio!ale the southern
U.S. air space wilhout detection or in·
lE'reeption.
"More importantly," it added. ''the
Cuban flight demonstrated that a n y
potential enemy possessing the capabili-
ly, could make a strike through our
50Ulhem border to a high priority tarJ:et
in the heart of the country with little risk
of belng detected in advance."
The report blamed Pentagon budget
cutting moves, <Jriginaled by former
Defense Secretary R<lbert S. McNamara
in 1963, for "the degeneration of our air
delense system." The decision was made
at that time, the report said, to use
s.vailable money to concentrate air
defenses in the north at the expense of
the defense of the sQoth'rn border.
The panel ree<>mmended a $5.7 million
s1ip-gap system to "plug the hole in our
southern perimeter d,fense detection
capability" through use or "over the
horizon backscatter" (OTH-B) radar
units dev,loped in the late 1940's, until a
more sophisticated defense system can
be installed.
"Estimates provided by Ind u s try
witnesses indicated that cov,rage of the
1:.lorida !!traits and pracUc.ally Lhe entire
Gulf of Mexico by the existing OTH·B
radar can &e achieved in six months,·•
the report said.
From Page l
NEVADA ...
handwriting a!I letters which Hughes'
lawyers presented in Nevada courts as
authentic during the battle over the firing
of top Hughes aide Robert Maheu.
"You can't have it both ways," said
Greenspun. "If McGraw·Hlll documents
are fraudulent then th' entire Nevada
representation Is a tremendous hoax.
"There is no beli,vability in what the
Hughes organization is doing," 1aid
Greenspun.
Don Digilio. editor of the Las Vegas
Revi,w-Journal , who was invited to be an
observer during the Interview involving
lhe seven ne\vsmen, said in the first of a
series J\1onda y. I
"One thing I'm 1ure of -he (Hughes)
is alive.·•
These brand new cars were stacked like toys by
tornado winds in Atlanta1 Ga ., injuring at least seven
persons. The tornado touched down in this new car
storage lot, completely destroying about 70 cars.
"It just pitched them one on top of an<>ther like
matchboxes/' a witness said.
TV Suspected
In Boy's Death
KANSAS CITY IAP I -A I:>
year-old OOy has been found hanged
in the basement of his home. Police
said family members told them the
boy had been home alone watching
a Western movie, "The Hanging
Tree," on tele vision.
Police Chief Robert T. \Villiams
said the death of Charles n. Sims
was ruled a probable accident
because the boy had not been
depressed and left no note.
Pat Nixon Book
Postponed; Aide
Cites Schedule
WASHINGTON (UPI ! -First Lady
Pat Nixon has poslponed indefinitely an
authorized biography to ~ave been
published this year.
Connie Stuart, the First Lady's press
secretary, said f\.1rs. Nixon decided she
woula not have:tim' to war\ on lht mat-
ter because ,of the busy year wlth the
visits to Peking, Moscow and campaign
trips on her schedule.
The biography was being written by
Gloria Seelye, a former Los Angeles
Herald-Examiner woman's editor and
now a public relations executive.
Her husband, Howard, is a political
reporter in Orange County for the Los
Angeles Times and was White House
counselor Bob Finch's press secretary
when he ran for lieutenant governor of
California in 1966.
Mrs. Seel.Ye began work on the book in
January 1971 and Prentice-Hall. the
publisher, had anticipated having the
book ready for sale this spring.
Mrs. Stuart e.i:pl.ained that because it
was an "authorized'' book it would have
required Mrs. Nixon to look at it page by
page and to spend many hours in in-
terviews.
But Mrs. Stuart said the book has not
been cancelled. .
"Its just that we don't anticipate a
publication date at this time."
Pig Attacks Lawman
DETROIT fUPI) -An attack by a pig
has left Police Commissioner John
Nichols limping.
Nichols said Monday he was attacked
by a 45(}.pound porker oamed Sheila
during a visit to a Utica·arei fann S&tur·
day.
Nichols said he went to the farm to
visit Sheila and was acCG~ when h.e
sttpped into the pig's-pen. lll mariage<ho
get one leg out of {he way before beinA:
bowled over by the porker. ·
Battle Forms Up
For Battin
By JACK BROBACK
Of flll Dt fl'f l"lltl Steff
First District superviSorial candidates
are popping out like spring buds in
Orange C.ounty. Three have or will make
a forma.I announcemen~ this week for the
June 6 primary election.
M'orxflly, Wallace R. 1'Wally" DaviJ, 36.
a Santa Ana attorney and a resident o'f
Fountain Vall,y, joined John W. "Bill"
Hill, Santa Ana clothier, in announcing
he would attempt to unseat Supervisor
Robert W. Ballin. Santa Ana -attorney
and a resident of Garden Grove.
Attorney William Wenke of Santa Ana
Is expected to make his announcement
\Yednesday. He has scheduled a 2 p.m.
press conference in the old county
courthouse pressroom .
Last week, Paul I. Balch, a former aide
to Rep. John G. Schmitz (R·Tuslin) made
an informal announcement that he would
enter the same race.
Hill, member of a pioneer Santa Ana
family and Wenke moved their places of
residence late last year when they were
g'rrymandered out of the First District
in the new supervisorial district realign·
ment adopted by the Board o f
Supervisors.
Davis, a Democrat, has announ ced he
will formally place his name on the list
Friday. He lives ·at 9912 Astor Circle,
fountain Valley.
He was not gerrymandered out of the
district as was Ed Just, Fountain Valley
mayor and another potential candidate.
Just decided not to move from the Fifth
District in which his home is now
located.
Davis said today that he btlieves the
county deserves a great improvement in
leadership. "Methods of handLing business
and procedures cause a lot of the prob-
lems the Board Of Supervisors has t().
day," the Mexican-American attorney
stated. "You can disagree without calling
names. you can argue without getting
personal, and you do not have to demand
political contributions before giving &C·
Hon." Davis said .
The ntw candidate ls a native of
Orange County, born in 8anta Ana,
March 21, 1935. He was raised by his
grandmother, Candldo Serrano, from ear·
ly childhood after his mother died and
\vhile his father was serving in the U.S.
Navy.
Davis spoke only Spanish until he w1s
Seat
seven. He attended grammar 1chool In
Santa Ana and high 1ehool in Garden
Grove, working 1fter school and nights as
a field hand and later in a shoe factory
since he was 12 years old.
The attorney attended CaUfornia State
C<Jllege Long Beach while working as a
janitor at Garden Grove High School
receiving a bachelor's degree in po litical
science in 1960. He attended 'UCLA Law
School while managing apartments,
playing in an orchestra and worldng in a
Santa Ana law office. He received his
Doctor ol Laws degree in 1963.
Davis became a full partner In the
Walker and Davis Jaw firm Santa Ana in
1965"
He Is one of the original organizers of
Banco d,J Pueblo commercial bank, a
Santa Ana financial Institution, owned by
more than 1,300 local 1hartholders. He
suggested the name which means bani: of
the city or of the people.
Seven q'on •Haw:
Of Marijuana
Held at Border
: .
TIJUANA, Mexico (UPI) -Three
persons were arrellted and seven tont of
marijuana, apparently destined for lhe
United States, was seized in Tijuana dur·
lng the weekend, it was announced Mon·
da y.
Slate Judicial Police said six tom ot
marijuana and a press for making
another ton was stored at another
residence.
The .seizure, estimated to be worth $2.5
milli<ln at street prices, topped· the big-
gest raid in the United States -five toM
uncovered last year in San Francisco.
Attorney General John N. Mitchell MJd
In Washlngton that the seizure wu a
result of a joint U.S.-Mexlcan in·
vestigatlon. He called it one of the largest
caches on reCord.
Police said they trailed a truck and
round 34 kilos of the drug inside. The
driver led them to the rest of the mari·
Juana, and th' three suspects, all Tijuana
residents, w're arrested.
PASSWORD ---•
· recojded stock sale In 1968.
The figure is signiflaant because, under
the Tu Reform Act of 1969, for whJch
Mrs . Smith lobbied vtgorously l n
Washingtop, the James Jrvlne Foundation
must, beJlnning this year, substantlilly
increase Its payouts to charity.
The heiress bas maintained that the
foundation will not be able to com'j)ly wilh
the new payout requirementa unless it
rtlinquishes control of the Irvine Com-
pany or forces the company into a
wholesale dispersal of land holdings to
provide the necessary cash.
The Tai Reform Act will require the
foundation ta make a 4~ percent payout
to charity in 1972, increasing half Of one
percent annually to a payout of six per·
cent, based on an Internal Revenue-
Servlce appral&al of lla assets. This ap-
praisal is due by March 31.
The Tax Reform Act also provides that
no foundation is permitted to hold more
than 20 percent of any one corporation.
Based on the 1968 stock sale, the foun-
dation's Irvine Company stock woul d be
valued at $114 million. This would require
a payout in excess of $5 million in 1972. A
more accurate appraisal, said Mrs.
Smith, would require a payout many
times larger. A recent foundation report
showed income of $2.5 million for the past
year.
The report also listed assets of $10
million apart from the Irvine Company
stock. Foundation attorney Howartl J.
Privett has :stated the foundation will be
able to meet its payout obligations from
t.h~e other 1e1ourc~. t
Mrs . Smith pointed out during the news
conf,rence that Congres1man Wright
Patman's House Commltt'e on Banking
and Finance is 'io~uguratina In in·
vestlgatlon of aUempts by foundations to
.side-step the payout requirements of the
Tax Reform Act.
Her attorney suggested that an attempt
by the foundation to meet the obligation
by selling the $10 mltllon In ''other
assets," now earning six percent and pro-
vidini a $600,000 paymeat to ch&rity,
would constitute a "definite evasion."
Discusalng so-called mismanagement of
the Irvine C o m p a n y which results in
minimum earnings, Young cited a $1.2
million loan from P1eific Mutual. on
which the company has obligated itself to
9.9 percent interest payments for 25
years.
The company, Mrs. Smith asserted, Is
sorely in need of "really top men" ln its
management, in the areas of finance,
planning, real estate and aa;riculture.
Al Goodman Dies
NEW YORK (UPI) -Al Goodman, an
orchestra leader who conducted for both
stage and radio, died Monday alter • loag
tllness. He was 81.
J 1c~ ~. Cu1ft y
Vk1 P'rtJl<illllt M:I O.,..r1r M.,.._,•
T1!019111 k11vil
1!11111' Coast Drivers Hurt
A good word pt11od around 1bout •
busin111 is involu1blo. A bad word can bo
unfortun1t•.
lk•"''' A. ~urp~i111
, MMI .. ~ (llll&f
C•11l11 M. l101 Ric.i..1tcl ~. Nill
.t.ultltll/ M-,1111 l•l*'I
0 .....
C•tt M~: SJe W•t 111 llr'llrf f'twpe<t lttch· WI H._r l ou'"'ttC
~'9""1 l11C11 ; m ,.., .. , Av"'ut
MUii!•"'"" lt1ch1 11''5 lf1ci. l bltltvl"'
1111 C~t1. a.I Htr"' 11 Ctmitlt t.111
•
By Zero Visibility
Drip. Drip . Drip . , .
This is what Orange Co11st resldent3
will be hearing aga in tonight and through
Wednesd11y morning , as more p( the
soupy fog encountered toda y plops down
like a bli, w•t. gray blanket.
Ztro visibility conditions Wt>re reported
ln many areas this morning -until the
' fog began lifting as th' sun rose -but
some closed airport.s ope.ned up .11galn
shortly after dawn.
Orange County Airport began allowing
Incoming Olghts to land about 8:30 a.m.,
alter a l'h hour closure.
Los An4eles and San Francisco in-
ternaUonaJ airports were c I o 1 t d
overnight, with scores of flights diverted
lo Onlarlo, Van Nu~• and Lu Veps
airports.
Or1n1e County California H!ihway
P1trol orflctfl uld the 101 was a real
tr1lflc-1lowor durln1 early mornJn& l1our1
but ,. .. llRin1 nicely by mld1110t11ln1.
The blanket evidently lnspirtd caution
ln many motorists and no major ac-
cidents resulted.
Tht same situation resulted in Newport
Harbor, where boaters remained moored
In the eerie gray shroud.
"lt11 holding everybody In," saJd a
1poke11man for the Harbor P1trol.
Haz:y BU11Sh.ine was forecast for af-
ternoon hours. returnihg to glotimy,
murky skies by thJs evening generally
along the enUre Souihem California
coast.
Heavy fog was re¢.rted between
Malibu and Oxnard, extending seaward to
tile Channel lslands.
Patch .. ol the thick log as lar north ••
Slcramt.nlo clostd m~ airport.I to In·
coming !ilghts, whUe rain was !ailing in
nortllern Call!ornlt.
·'Rle weather man Pl'tdlcted high
temperatum up to II IOI" tbe Orange
Cout Wednesday, with lemperallll'U cllp-Ptnc Into tile mid 40r-crvernJib1.
'
Our growing sucoss in the past 14 yHrs
has been duo to tho "good . words" •nd
referr1ls sent to us by our c:ustomers,
No 1mount of 1dverfoing c•n replace 1
personal rtc:ommendetion.
Wo 1ro not infallibl1, but wo Ari working
towards thot goal by giving our customers tho
best iorvico and quality possible,
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 fllac1ntla Av1.
COnA MESA
646o413B
HOURS: Men. """ 'Mlurt., t lw 1:10 -,,1. t tw t -Sotot flJO 16 S .
------
•
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' "' I
Laguna
By PATRICK BOYLE
CU ll>t 0.11¥ Plitt Slflff
Laguna Beach school trustees. wilJ get
.an early start on a momumemial task
tonight at 7:30 o'clock when they
hold the first working session OD the 1972·
73 school budge~
Th~ preliminary spending docwnent.
showing a deficit of $109,000, wa:f
prepared by Busineu Superintendent
Charles Hess and his staU over the
Christmas holidays.
Despite i the deficit. Dr. Hess said
Thursday that the proposed budget
reflected an educational and maintenance
Weapons Search
·.
School .
program sin\llar to tile 1971-72 program.
Re nolEd that the budget doe.! not allow
ror new peraonnel to be hired during im
TS, e.Jther for ttaching, cleric.11 duties or
maintenance.
Dr. Hea predicted !hat, as In the past
school year, all Increases In student
enrollment would be absorbed by the ex.
isUng teechera. He, noted that tbe district
In tSU-70 ellmloat.d tbret ltaching posi-
tions and that they have never been
replaced.
"\\le have just been absorbing the in·
creases that should have been staffed
·-. •
T 11e~d.,y, J1nuary 11. 1972 0-'ILY mo; :J
Eye Fiscal B-qdget
with more teachers," He.as noted. The ad·
mlnbtrator explained that auch abool')>-
tion policlts were easier to Implement In
the noo-(rlded dtmenlary schoob than
Bl the hfgh school,
.. What the high IChoo! has been able to
do," he uplalned. "lt·alloorb the !Iida in-~
10 the basic courses wtlbout aJJmtnaung
the eledlv ... I don1 tblnll they wW be
able to do that much Jonier." Hea &aid
that if ~ teaching staff 11 not increased,
elective course teacbe?'! could be replac-
ed with a faculty member who could
!each a basic class such as mathematics
or English.
The major lncttuts In the cost Qf In·
sttuctlon In the proposed $3.$ mllllon
budill would be for ltacher IDCN!menl
pay raises and pa,yments into lbe
employet' retlreme:n& fund. T h e
prellnilnary budgel b up niugbly us.ooo
over t)le:.-prtten&-year.. ·
Dr. H.,. not.d that maintenance and
upkt0p at district facUltles would he
made lo suffer qaln ne:rt year from a
lad! ol perto1111<L He noted that the high
school clamooma are now only cleaned
every other d., and that a similar
schedule might have to be adopted for
the other schools . ·
Sixth Graders
',j Ready for Big
Ul'I Ttlttl,,.._
Mountain Trip
Aliso Elemenwiry School principal Lyle
Proctor quipped lo Laguna Beach school
1rustees recently that his knee was
aching and. by golly, it was going lo snO\lf
this time.
And that was a pleasing prediction for
about 70 sixth graders at the South
Laguna school who have been waiting
since lhe first grade ror the snow trip to
Big Bear.
The two-day activity, origin a 11 y
scheduled for early December, bad to be
cancelled when 51JOW failed to fall on the
mountain resort.
"They have quite a bit of snow on the
ground there now," Proctor said today,
''and if they run out, they can make some
more before our trip."
School trustees rescheduled the activity
for Jan. 26 and 27. Proctor said the
··snow party" is held each year and
serves as sort or a reward to sixth
gradel's for having almost finished
elementary sch®!.
"The youngsters really look forward to
It," he noted, "and they work hard for
it."
Students eoine on tht trip, the principal
1ald, have demonstrated through their
academic and social behavior that they
are trying as hard as they can.
He noted that even poor students and
problem youngsters make the trip, pro-
vided they are working to eliminate their
academic or behavioral deficiencies.
The maintenance projects at 1the t he ~id. "Rtcbt now, tbe people wt bavt
schools are now l.leing areompllshed are doinc the bes~ they can.''
behind schedUle due to a lack ot men to M •n example of a per110MCI ahortage.
perform the jobs, he said. he sald the district tw only five men to
"We ~ve just finished several projects take care or the landscaping and outdoor
that shouJd have been done last sum. rea-eatlonll taclllUes at all of the
mer." he noted. schools. . •
that the two new schools In the An expenditure proJecUon prepared by Dr. Hess In November showed a $400.00G
d Th.urston ~nd Top of the World, deficit. He said that projectlon reflected w~ reaching a point where an lhCreascd a fl\'e percent salary Increase ror
maintenance program would be needed. teachers . nev.• maintenance personnel aqd
"\\'e are coming into a period novl tht' hiring of several additional teachers
where if \IC don 't have tbe people ta do 11, -all of \llhich have been eliminated from
these schools \\'ill gradually deteriorate ," the present working budget.
Ul'I T...,_,.
Pretend Pt•isoner
Baton Rouge police hold machine guns at the
throats of t\\'O suspects following the confrontation
in a black neighborhood in the Louisiana capital.
Militant blacks. using autos \Vith Illinois license
plates. blockaded a street and were speaking to a
crowd \Vhen police arrived. (See story Page 5).
The group will leave Laguna Beach by
bus in the company or Proctor, four other
school staff membe:rs and about six
parents.
A small boy puts his hands on his head, POW-style as Louisiana State
Police move families out of their homes to a safer area after shooting
erupted in Baton Rouge. The rest of the boy's family did not cover
their heads in game of "pretend".
'·The area Is really an outdoor
classroom in the mountains," he said ,
notlog that the students \Yill study the
plant life of the area. take nature hikes
and compare the irea in general with
their home environment in Laguna
Moslems to Mecca
~Test Tube Baby' Nearing
' First Major Breakthrougl1
NE\V YOHK (AP) -The day appears
to be nearing when scientists will an·
nounce either the implantation, or
perhaps e\'en the birth. or a "test tube
baby.''
Such a dramatic and contro\·ersial
e:vent \¥oold emphasize to the world ·the
developing genetic and biologic revolu·
tion, with scientists working to bring man
closer to new controls over human life.
And it cyuld spur an international
dc:Jate on control or the birth process.
A test tube baby would be conceived
outside the human body -literally in the
laboratory -with sclenUsts fertilizing
the wonian's egg with the man's spenn in
a test tube.
The fertilized egg would then grow and
divide in the test tube until it developed
sufficiently. Ttv.m it would be implanted
in the: woman's uterus te continue grow-
ing until a normal birth could take place.
The object is to he.Ip women have
children despite a blockage of their fallo-
pian tubes, through which the fertilized
egg must normally pass.
Statements about plans to create a test
tube baby have come recently from
scientists in England. with simi lar work
reported under way in Belgium and
Japan.
I• England, Dr. Douglas Bevis. a
researcher at Jessop llospltal i11 Shef-
field. said early in January he is ready to
implant an artificially impregnated em-
bryo in the womb of a volunteer.
''When I find her. 1 am in a position to
go ahead," he told a British newspaper.
"It could be as soon as next week or
much longer."
Bevis said he would not announce lht
implantation.
Also in Britain. Or. Robert G. Edwards
of Cambridge University and Or. P. C.
Steptoe at General Hospital in Oldham
said that last October they successfully
took an egg from a woman. fert ilized it in
the laboratory with her husband's sperm
e1nd grew it until it was ready for im-
plantation. But they did not take the final
step.
This kind of research also could lead to
determining the sex of the fetus in !he
test tube stage.
The complications that could develop
seem vast. \Vould a woman hire another
woman to ca rry a fetus creatt'.!d with her
own egg and husband's sperm~ Whose
baby would tpe baby be?
On the beneficial side, this work might
lead lo the ability to correct genetic
defects before implantation . th u s
eliminating some diseases.
In discussing controls over life. Dr.
Charles Townes, a University o f
California physicist and Nobel Laureate.
says "substantial new controls over llfe
will come along in a decade or so.
''We should start thinking hard no"'
about these various possibilities, before
lhe questions face us," he added . "\Ve
need a backlog of reasooably well thought
out views and public opinion."
San Joaquin District
Adds 144 Over Holiday
The San Joaquin Elementary School
District-believed to be the fasteat ·grow-
ing diStrict ill the state-admitted 144
new students over Christmas vacation.
School district officials reported that
total enrollment rnnv Is up to l11lfJ
sludents. •
The largest growth occu1Ttd In the. se-
cond srade where 30 additional atuden)ll
enrolled. Intermediate IChool cblldren In-
creased by 19 and kindergarten and first
grade students lncrtased by 181 Jif each
aiade.
'l'lie lowest Increase for all grades was
tho fifth srade with only nine atudtnll.
The fourth grade grew by 12; the sixth
ll'llde by 1;, and the Jhird l"de by 23.
Schools with the largest increase were
EJ Toro Marine SchOol, lrvtne. Elemen·
tary School In Eul Irvine and Ollvewood
I'll mentary School In El T\>ro.
mie dJstriel.upeclJ an.tnctu.d of 1,000
students lhis year. It presently has two
intennediate schools under COMtructlon
at University Park (Rancho San Joa·
quin), and El Toro (Los Alisos). By
February 15 additional new schools will
be in.some stage of planning or construc-
tion..
Scllodl dlatrlct official• report the
dlJtrtd hi facing a potenUal cri•l5 If th<
lu omride asking for an additional 77
cents faH1 on Feb. 1.
The district lljltllds $175,000 a year for
the ·1~or M portable claS11rooms.
'n,ese rt wm made avalleble through
a tax ov de approved in 1969. That ex-
plm June 30.
Even with these portabl" !he dl>lrlct
already hlJ .. veral schoolt on double
sessions and the failure or the tax over-
ride would c;r<Ale ,.,.,.. cutbacks lo the
wd(et aod the possible loss of .. m.
portableo, dlJlrlcl aidtl oay.
'
Dean lo Retire
\Vhile at the mountain resort. the
students will be the guests of the Big
Bear Parent-Teachers · Assocfation and
will eat their meals at the Big Bear Mid·
die School
JERUSALEr.j (AP) -¥•re than 1,1100
Moslems from the· 1ar111l<>ccupled ter,-
ritoriea have leltduring tile~ ~ai>
the holy pll&rtmage to· · Mecca, ~
spokuman lor lilt• mlUta.,.,11> ... ilm!nl
said Sllnday. He nld another 1,000 Aralfll
were expected to join the pil&rlina' hi lllo
SAN DIEGO (APl -Dr. Manfred R. Although time will be d~voted .to sled·
ding and other snow-oriented recrealion1\
activities, the pri,nolpal noted that the
trip is also designed to be a learning ex-
perience.
Beech. .~ Schrupp says he'll slep down in June
after 18 years as dean of education at San
Diego State College. He plans to return to
teaching.
The cost ol lhe trlp will be paid by the
parents of each student, with round trip
transportation, meals and lodging costing
only $10 per pupil. next 10 days. i
...
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
'Better Ideas Make Better Cars'
COUGAR
for '72
Pound fol' pound and dollar for dollar
America's best equipped sport car. \Vhat others
call ex1ras are just standard on lhe !leek cat called Cougar.
Take this beautiFul Umc Metalic 2 dr, tlardtop for example. Al this
attractive price \ve're including ... Sel. 1hlft trans .. wsw tires,
Power Steering. Power front diac brakes, tinted glass, deluxe wheel
covers. dual racing-mirrors. App. protection group, R11.dio and AIR CONDmONING
-=2F9IH510142 .
...... -----------$3775.00
MERCURY
for '72
A new world or driving pleasure await.A behind lhe wbttl ct
?ifcrcur:{s Monterey for 1972. A ride as smoo th as the llrn!s ot the
c11.r itself. Amcri~'s big car, h<'11t buy • , • Look what you get tor
this low price , .•• Custom 2 dr. Hardtop, Med. gtttn metallic. all
vinyl interior, wsw tires, complete tinted glass, remote control
mirror, duaJ rear seal spca.kers, (ender skirta,
Deluxe radio and AIR CON'Dm1"NI:Nc .• , •
~S550tl!O $4226.00--------------
NOTICE • • • NO MORE 7% EXCISE TAX!
"Orange Cou1lty'1 family of Pint Care"
ohnson&son
l lf\J! !ll ,.~
{.{ itJll ;,fl
21121 HARBOR llLVD., COSTA MESA • 640-6630
•
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I
\
f IWLV PILOT
News
Chips
Drear, Dark
Days of Fog
By THOMAS MURPHINE
Of ... CNiltf f'li.t ll•ff
ORANGE COAST, Wll.O COAST:
NothiQg makes you quite appreciate
1prina and aummer along this best ()( all
poss.tblt coasts like winter. when fog roll!
ln on Icy fineer1 and covers your plact ln
the IWl.
Foe eata up your favorite landmark!.
Foa: make.: piers lld lightJ disappear.
Foe turns on automatic foghorns and
makes them wail in the gloom like lost
bl:nahees. It transmits sound so that the
hi&bway truck oeema lo be roaring thtouch your living room and you can
he•r folb having • famUy light tbrea bJocka away.
FOO IS bad stuff, I find little to recom-
mend It unless you are watching It roll in
from hi&h on a hill when you are behind a
picture window; aomebody you Jove at
your lboulder, a crackling hot lire at
your feet and 1e>metbln1 cold in your
glaaa.
But for the moat part, fog caUS<J
rurfen lo grumble, boat llkippers lo
curse and b.J&hw•y commutera to quake
lo J1111111ed far and dlamay.
The rad.lo weatherman, bless him,
always dUm.luel fog 1n the 1ame glib
way, a o~ue allerthought that
followa 1 detailed analyals ot what the
froat la doing lo aprlcola In Lower Lomon
Height..
"And night and morning fog ii ei·
pected aJong the coast," he addl, in clot-
log.
We'v• ~d aome of that lately.
THE WEATHERMAN might get • bit
more netted 'about it U he were driving
through the stuff every morning.
Fog along our coast can at times cover
Huntington Beach like a white sheet;
geek out deadly low spots on MacArthur
Boulevard and in Irvine and along the
San Diego Freeway; suck into Upper
Newport Bay like it was a vacuum tube:
roll over San Clemente like a wet
blanket; or dance in and out of canyons
and draws between Laguna and Corona
del Mar like a deadJy prankster.
Amid all this. the commuter must drive
bia ~pPolnted round!. The wet stuff on his
steering wheel lm't fog. It comes from
the palms ol bls bands.
FOGBOUND COMMUTERS ch1111e
their penonalitie1. The botroddtr of
bright and atmDy d1y1 abruptly betomes
the Creeper -t}\t guy puzzling his way
tbroQJb the gloom al live mu .. per hour tn the center lane.
There fttrthe Nature Lover. He always
liked the tctnery. So lo foggy times, he
drives on the lhou1der to preserve hia
view. ·
,Yau may meet The Quarterback. He is
an upert en passing in the fog. He
~ you until he find! out how sticky it
·15' oat fronl Then be le la you pw·hlm.
Thtll ...
YOU'LL SEE the Railroad Engineer.
No wlnd!hieJd Wipers or defroster. He
drives the fog wJtb his head out the side
window. 'lbere 11 t.be Secret Agent -you
roll up beblnd bhn and find he baa no
liabb. Or the Overshooter -always
figuret every signal II green until he gets
balfw., into the interted.ion.
And the most feared ls Radar Con-
trolled. He has ultra-vision, allowing him
to 181 through fog and dri ve past you at
75 m.p.h.
Thul it is when foggy days come to our
coot and you shiver in anticipation of
brtgbter day1.
Ah, for spring.
Educator Succumbs
ORMOND BEACH. Fla. (AP) -Dr.
James Frederick Mason, 92, a longtime
American educator, dled Sunday. Mason
started teaching at CorneU Unlvmlty In
1909 and Mired tn 1M5 as a profeasor
emeritul ol French Literature.
•
Death of Ship U.l. Nin PfllM VII Ul"I
Former troop transport General M. C. Meigs is
severed amidships of! the Washington Coa&t after
the tow cable parted during operations to take the
mothballed ship from Puget Sound to San Francisco
scrap yard.
Arson Disputed
By Fire Chief
In Liner Fire
HONG KONG (AP) -Suspiclo111 of
1abotage in the Queen Elizabeth fire
mounted today, but Hong Kong11 fire
chief said he had no evidence to iupport
the speculation.
The South China Morning Pmt uid an
official of the company that owned the
former luxury liner reported .the fire
broke out simultaneously Sunday in four
different locat1ons. The official, W. S.
Pau, marine superintendent for shipping
magnate, C. Y. Tung's Island Navigation
Corp., could not be reached for con-
firmation of the report, and another com-
pany officer, C. S. Wang, denied It, The
ship was being converted into a floating
campus called Seawlse University for
Olapman College.
The Elizabetb'a lut British muter,
Commodore Geof£rey Marr, said in Lon·
don on Monday that the names tpread
too quickly to have started accldental1y1 "it must have been sabotage."
nie Hong Kong fire service! chief,
Harry Wood, told a news conference he
had no evidence to support speculation
the fire was started deliberately and he
had "no idea wbere or how the fire
atarted."
The fire chief said he was surprised at
the intensity of the fire when fireme11
were called in. But he added that he had
never known a big passenger liner to be
saved after Jire gained a firm hold.
Wood said firemen who were able to
board the ship for a short time were con·
fined to a small area . He said he did not
know if the fireproof doors were closed,
but a sprinkler system Jn the area waa
not working.
The 83,000-ton ship rolled over on her
starboard side Monday in 50 feet of water
near Tsing YI Island, at the western
outskirts of Hong Kong harbor. Ap.
proximately half the ship was above the
surface, and the fire still burned Inside
the hull.
Pat's Gift Apropos
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pat Nixon had
polltics in mind when she selected a gift
for the President's 59th birthday. Stop.
ping on her African tour, she bought gold
cufflinks in the shape of an elephant -
symbol of the.Republican party.
Nixon celebrated his birthday at a
family gathering at the White Hoose Sun-
day night. Mrs. Nixon a1ao purchased her
husband a khaki oaf art jacket on her trip
to Africa.
A Legend Dies
Gulbenkian Flamboyant, Wealthy
CANNES, France (AP) -Nubar
Gulbenkian, the Oamboyant and legen-
dary oil millionaire, died Monday night
Jt a Caanes h~pital. He was 7S.
Gulbenkian, son or the independent oil
operator Calouste Gulbenkian, was one of
British society's more colorful figures. A
tireless socialite and party giver, a gour.
met and a man of extravagant habits,
he was rarely seen without an orchid in
his buttonhole,
The cause of death was not announced,
but he had suffered Crom a heart ailment
for several years and had been hospitaliz...
ed several times in recent months.
Gulbenkian was born in Kadi Keui, an
Armenian town under Turkish domina-
tion, on June 2, 1896. The family fled to
England to escape tbe T u r k i 1 h
massacres, and Nubat was educated. at
Harrow. While his miserly father piled up
a vast-fortune in oil iDvesl.menta, he
employed his son without salary and gave
him only occasional sum11 for pocket
money. But Nubar invested in oil himself
and made a large fortune of bis own.
Calouste Gulbenkian died in 1955 and
left most of his fortune to a foundation he
set up in Portuga1, where he lived the
last years of his life in seclusion.
A gregarious extrovert, Nubar was the
complete opposite ol his father. He had
orchids for his buttonhole shipped
wherever he travelled in the world, im·
ported a troupe or belly dancers from
Turkey for one party in London, rode in a
yello wand black Rolls-Royce built like a
taxi so it could make U-turns easily and
took a $150 picnic lunch from a Mayfair
restaurant when he had to attend a case
at London's High Court
In his autobiography he '"''rote : "I cer-
tainly get more pleasure from working
out a menu, discussing the pros and cons
of each dish with a chef who knows his
business, than I do from 1istenin¥ to the
best of Beethoven's symphonies.'
Although he acquired I r a n i a n
citizenship, Culbenk.ian Jived in England
until several years ago, when he retired
to 1 palatial Riviera estate near Grasse.
Gulbenkian married three times but
had no children. His third wife, the
daughter of French champagne magnate
Louis d'Ayala, said her husband was a
"very difficult man to live with, but it's
worth while. All the most amusing and
intelligent men are difficult to live with .. ,
Jack Anderson Reports
Cambodia Drive By U.S.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Syndicated
columnist Jack Anderson reported Mon-
day that secret State Department cables
show the Nixon Administration has taken
a hand In raising funds for the Lon Nol
government of Cambodia -despite
disclaimers to Congress of any in·
volvement.
In a copyrighted column prepared for
publication Tuesday, Anderson said the
cables from the state Department to U.S.
officials in Cambodi~ntained a draft
letter for Lon Nol to: circulate to several
governments in a quest for flnancial aid.
At the same time the cables promised
diplomatic efforts by U.S. officials to get
the recipient government. 14 supply the
aid, Anderson reported.
The columnist backed up bis report
~
with what he Identified as quotations
fr om the cables, including one that told
U.S. officials in Cambodia: "Department
believes high-level political appeal needed
to improve chances for success. Letter
from Lon Nol to heads of prospective
donor governments could help nail down
contributions."
Anderson s2id the solicitations were to
be sent to the United St.ates, Japan,
Australia, Britain, New Zealand ,
Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand,
and the Philippines. The amounts sought
would range from $12.~ million from the
United States, to $250,000 for 1everal of
the less developed nations such as
Thailand, he said.
Floods Threaten Georgia
The column was the latest ln a series
by AndersOn based on secret State
Department and White House papers
made available to him under undisclosed
circumstances. Previous columns dealt
with lnternaJ debate by U.S. offJcials over
how best to make clear the ad·
ministration's displeasure with India dur~
Ing the India-Pakistan war. Blizzard-like Storm Plagues Ce11tral Rockies
lllPI wtmn rDTOWtt>
Sun, MH11. l'lh•
fVltM'f
'4-Dond tittt. ..... -.. 7l-Cr•Jlfl. '-'
haw! '" ' • 11"' '""' ' .. WllftllM'f' ,
''"' t1i.. .............. •:" l.M. ... ''11LllN ........... 1i»' ~ tJ .... fit • • ... t.it,-...i. u
hll .... , .• '""· .... l:lf '·"'· .v.-1t1111 l:ll..,.., .... U1a.a "'"''
Sinking Victims
'Had No Chance'
VICTORIA, B.C. (UPI) -The 41
persons 1board the freighter Dona Anita
which pnk Sunday In pounding seas off
the coast of Vancouvu Island may have ·
survived half an hour ''if they managed
lo get lnlo their liferafls -which Ibey
probably didn 't do," a rncuer &aid Mot~
da y.
An oil slick 40 miles Jong and one mile
wide located a few miles south of the last
known position of the 7,62Mon African
frelghler marked the probable arave of
the 40-men crew and the captain'• wife.
"We esumate they would probably
have 1urvlved one ha1f hour out there if
they manased to get l'nto their llfuafls -
which Ibey probably didn't do," Pid Ma·
jor Vic Keating, the armed forcts
reJllonal lnfonnalion officer.
If the crew had succeeded In boardlnr
the lifeboats. they would hfYf hld to con-
tend with 40-50 foot swells, frtq\lll\t line
1quall1 and 1111• winds of -mile! pet
hour, with su•ta up 14 70 m.p.h .
Jtlno Mounu
High Red' China
Minister Dies
T 0 K Y 0 (AP) -ChineH Foreign
Min1$1er Chen YI baa died of cancer and
Mao Tae-tu.ng Jed the mourners deapite
reports Chen was purged during the
CUJtural Revolution.
East Germany
Recognizes
Bangladesh
NEW DELHI (UPI) -East Gennany's
foreign minister informed represen.
tatives of the Bangladesh government to-
day his nation was extending formaJ
diplomatic recognition to the new nation.
Indian officials were preparing to an-
nounce substantial economic assistance.
Dr. Otto Winzer, the East German
foreign minister, handed a note to the
chief of the Bangladesh mission here to
'be transmitted to Sheikh Mujibur
Rahman, president ol the new govern-
ment, Worming hint of diplomatic
recogn ition.
The note was from East German bead
of state Walter Ulbricht and Prime
Minister Willy Stoph, diplomatic IOurctS
1aid. They said Winzer told Bangladesh
mission ~hief Humayun R a d bi d
Choudhury that the move was in response
to the sheikh's appeal for recognltion by
the international commWlity. ~
In Karachi. retired Air Marshal Asghar
Khan said Pakistan should also recognize
Bangladesh as one way "we can win the
hearts and minds of the E a s t
Pakistanis.''
East Germany is the third nation to
recognize the Bangladesh government,
following India and the small Himalayan
kingdom of Bhutan on India's northern
border. There have been indications of lm·
pending recognition by Soviet·bloc nations
in the last two weeks.
\Vinzer arrived in New Delhi on Sunday
and met with Abdul Samad Azad , the
Bangladesh foreign minister, who was on
an official visit here. According to some
reports the East German foreign
minister was planning to visit Dacca
before his return home.
The Indian government, meanwhile,
was getting ready to announce a substan-
tial program of economic assistance to
help get the new nation on its feet follow·
ing its ninemonth struggle for in·
dependence.
Wfeks
SEi 'RE.1'
T(lr SECRET
TOP SECRET ··------
TOP SECRET ----
Th• o!ficiJI New China Naw1 Agency
1aid Chen, who was 70, died last Thun·
day, and that more than 1,500 peraons at-
tended a memorial service Monday at tha
Pa Pao Sha11 Re_vcHuUonary Cemetery
HaU Ill Peking.
Mi!8fng from the list of mourners was
Oefenst Minister Lin Piao. Chairman
Mao's designated heir who dropped from
dght last June and appan!nUy hat rellen
from power. There was no mention that
he even sent a wreath, as did other of·
ficlals: who were absent.
Several members of .the Chinese Polit·
buro Who have been linked to Un also
were not reported present. They included
Lin's wife, Yeh Chung; Huang Yung-
sheng, chief of. the anny's general staff,
and Wu Fu-h.sien, commander of the air
force.
Chen Y1, who was also diina 's deputy
premier and Mao'a former .secretary,
was a~ of being a rightist during the
cultural purge carried out by Mao in 1965-
69. He dropped lnlo obscurity in 1969 and
Western reports said he had been purged
and was undergoing "re-education."
He reappeared brieny in Peking at a
May Day celebration last year, but his
ab.!ence from his government post.s
was never explained publicly.
The New China News Agency uld Chen
received a 1pecial tribute from Mao,
whose la.st public appearance "u on
Nov. 22.
others who attetded included Prtmler
Chou En-lai; Mn. Sun Yat--sen, one of
China's two vice presidents, and Mao'•
wife, Chiang Ching. China's other vice
president, Tung Pi·wu, 85, was absent but
sent a wreath.
Chou eulogized Chen as an "outstan-
ding member or the Communist party of
China and a staunch fighter of the
Chinese people." He told the Chinese to
learn from Chen's "revolutionary spirit
and transfonn our grief Into strength."
Peking said Chen had been suffering
from intestinal cancer and had been
undergoing trtatment at a Peking
hospital.
He was bom In 1901 in Szechuan
Province 1n western China, and went to
France as a student in 1918 on a go\:'ern-
ment scholarship. There he joined the
Chinese Socialist Youth League in 1921
'and was expelled that October for taking
part in de-monstrations against a Chinese-
French loan agrtement and in radlcaJ
movemen~.
He joined the Chinese Communist party
in 1922 and three years later was lilted 11
a wanted man for partlclpat.lna: In an.
tigovernment demonstrations.
. ' Denmark King's
Health Worsens
COPENHAGEN (UPI) -The condlllon
of 1Gng Frederik IX of Denmark
deteriorated today, a royal court bulletin
aMounced.
The bulletin, Issued at noon from
Amalienborg Palace, aald:
"After a couple of days with Mrmal
temperature and satisfactory heart func.
tion, the condition of his majesty the king
deteriorated this morning. The tern·
perature was 39.4 C (102.9). His majesty
is very tired and dozing.''
The last bulletin was issued Sunday
morning and described the in.year-old
monarch's condition as normal. The court
1aid the general improvement hid con-
tinued and new bulletins would only bt
issued in case of a deterioration.
King Frederik suffered an acute heart
attack and was taken to the nearby Kom·
munebospital on Jan. 3. The attack
followed on top of 1 heavy bout of in·
Duenu and I touch or pnewnonla.
loi1as 'Sports Greats'
Bonehead Club Honors
Nixon-Picked Redskins
DALLAS (UPI) -The D a 11 a •
Bonehead Club, which has previously
honored such dignitaries as Jimmy "The
Greek" Snyder 1 NBC and J I m
"Wrongway" Marsha11, has named Presi-
dent Nixon as "Bonehead of the Year''
for h.is recent involvement in profe11lonal
fool ball.
The club inf'orme-d Nixon by telegram
Monday inviting him to' presentation
ceremonies Jan. 14.
The President was assured hJ1 name
.. along with other sports greats" would
be pennanenUy enshrined upon the
walnut and silver trophy adorned with a
ereat silver nut.
Ni1on 1pparmtly won the award by
r.rst picking Iba Washington Rodsklns lo
defeat the Dallas Cowboys dll1'1nc •
regular ,...... ram• thal decided tllo
Eutem Conference champlonahlp.
He also 1ugguled by phone lo Miami
Coach Don Shula a play "" thouiht would work qalnst the Cowbo)'I In the Suptr
Bowl. He 1111 yel lo caU lh• Dallas coacb-
11111l1U. "You . f,U. Prtsldent,11 the telegram
11Jd, "as America's No. l football fan,
understandably coulct nol contr<>l your
emotions. Whereas, wlthoul considering
lhe opllons, you let your heart rula your
belier Jud&rntnt w ·re m~ m be r i •I
CU•ler, picked the Redskln1 lo whip. \he
Cowboys. Still 1l!l4ianted, yoO set out lo
become a coacb for tllo Milml IJolphlnL
Hfhe award which we bestow upon you
at this time is not k> laugh at you, but to
let the world know that you have learned
to laugh with us," it read. "May you
always have the ability to stir the
sporting public's emotlona, eod we will
always recogniu you u Amtrlca's No. l
sports ran."
The club said the trophy Is presented
each year to "the penon or lnstltuUon
th.at has tndeartd themselves to the
sporls·mlnded public by their desire 14
participate and lose.
"There are many tropble1 awarded
each year to persons who have won, but
oun Is the only trophy dedicated 'lo
honorlog those who fall by the wayside;"
• a club spokesman said.
Marshall, "°" of the Mlnnuoll Vlk· logs, rec:eJved the trophy lo ltlfll lor ptc1t.
Ing up a fumble and running ntarly the
llD(lh of the field In !he wrooa direction
to score a safety for his opponents.
NBC Wll given the award the nm
year for attempting to televise a foolbtll
1ame and a apace flight 1imullaneoo~
oo 1plil ICJ'teft and foullng up both ol
lhem. ...,
Snyder won in 1111 afltr a part1cu1~1
Inaccurate year of 1porll predlclid!ia
beglnninf wl=ltklnc tho Ba!Umora Colla 11 ov favorites qaiji;I
thl New Yor'r J Ill SCl(ltt'llOWI
rear. '!be Jell won 11-1. •
_Big Haul
In Heroin
Captured
MIAMI (UPI) -Federal
narcotics agent1 c r 1 b b e--d
three duffle bags full of heroin
at an empty Miami apartment
Monday n I g h I. completing
what one official called the
blgg .. t heroin haul In history.
The three dulfle hags beld
147 ;>ouncb of high • grada
French heroin, which together
with tile 131 pound! seiied bere
Jast week in the same case
totaled 385 pound, ol lhe nar-
cotic with an eaUmated street
1ale value when diluted of
171 million.
"This is the largest aeiiure
of heroin in the history of the
world," said Thomas Hurney,
deputy regional director for
Miami of the Bureau of
Narcotics and Dangeroua
Drugs.
_,, -.-. . -. '
Hurney said the Monday u,1 T.._...
night raid was made on the
basis of Information obtained MUSLIM MOVED TO POLICE VAN AFTER SHOOTING
since the seizure of the Initial 2 Deputies, 2 Blacks Kiiied In a.ton Rougt
part of the same batch of
heroin last week, when nine
persons were arruted. Suf-
ficient facts were put together
during the week to get a
search warrant for the apart-
ment m Flagler Street, west or
downtown Miami, H u r n e y
aaid.
'Critical'
McCarthy to Leave
Democratic Party?
•
The apartment was rented
by Allredo Jose Maua, 40, an
Argentine cJUzen, one of the
nine persons arrested last
week, Hurney said. Officials By United Press International didacy at Philadelphia. He
then flew to Florida where he said at the time of his arrest
that Mazza might be the
group's leader.
No one was at the apart-
ment Monday night and no
further arrests were made,
Hurney said. The duffle bags
were found under a bed, with
the heroin contained ~ plastic
hag• Inside.
"This is high grade Euro-
pean French heroin, which we
believe came in through South
America," Hurney said. He
said it was not known how the
heroin -ved In Miami.
Boy Grabs
Valuable
Securities
Former Sen. E u g en e will confront his 1968 running
McCarthy, who ran strongly in mate, Sen. Edmund Muskie of
primaries in 1968 but failed to Maine, in a March 14 primary.
get the presidential nomina-Muskie is rated the front
tJon, said Monday be may bolt ruooer for the Democratic
the Democratic party unless nomination In a field that
the political climate improves already includes nine entriea
thL! year. and is expected to grow to 10
McCarthy said in Chicago it later this week with the an-
was ~"quite evident" to him nouncement of Alabama Gov.
that the 1972 Democratic George Wallace, who received
presidential nominating con-13.5 percent of the vote as the
vention will be controlled by candidate of the American
the same party leaders in Independent Party in 19S8.
charge during the 1968 con-Wallace is expected to run u
vention in Chicago. That con-a Democrat in the Florida
vent ion overwhelmlngly primary.
nominated Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey criticized N"wm
Humphrey, who had not cam-Monday for falling to end the
palgned in any primaries. Vietnam war. He said tf be
Humphrey went on to Jose to had been elected in 1968, the
Republican Richard Nl:z:on. war now would be over.
McCarthy said the question Hwnphrey also p 1 e d g 1 d
of whether this year's con-himself to "revitalize" the oa-
venti.on ii an .. open one" tion's economy. ·
depend! upon ·bow party Mmkle took hill campllgn
NEW YORK (AP) -FBI laaden react lo Iha rtllUlll of Monday lo Wl!consln and
ageritl, police 'and 'truant o(. the IX'imaries. rectlved a band-playing, Main
ficera: today hunted a sticky-•1u the situation is com-street welcome from a crowd
parable to 1968, I think there estimated at more than 1,000 fingered, sneaker-fooled boy would be a f<Jl!l11! polilleal al Marathon City, a town of
thief who 1natcbed an en-party, and I would be com· l 214 penoDJ
velope containing . $4.! mtllion mltted to serve it," the fonner 'Another Democratic can-
ln negotiable securlUes from a Minnesota senator said. dldate, Sen. Vance Hartke of
Wall street messenger. Earlier Monday, Humphrey Indiana, aaid at Atlanta Mon-
nie boy, deaerlbed aa about formally entered lbe 11172 day Iha! be would ent.r the
14 years old, made the grab at race, armouncing hi! can-Flor1da primary today.
a crowded street corner in the-------------------•! financial di!lricl M o n d a y
morning and escaped in a
waiting getaway car driven by
a man.
Ernest Staill, 6 ! , a
messenger for the United
Stalel Trust Co. of New York.
had picked up the blue manila
envelope at the f e d e r a I
re.erve bank on Liberty Street
and was walking the three
blocb lo hi• office.
Police aaid the boy •J>-
parently followed Staitl frJr a
block or so, then sprinted up
behind him, matched the
packet and jumped Into the
nearby ear which vanished In
heavy traffic.
Detectives said the loot con-
sisted of $3 million in U.S.
Treuury not", $498,000 In
,..glstered boncb, a 110,000
New York City check and the
balance in other bond.11.
The registered booda woold
be difficult to 1ell , llnce they
are made out to a person, but
the notes are "bearer" bonds
that can be caahed by whoe•er
baa them, the detectives said.
President's
Portrait
Authorized
' CHADDS FORD, Pa. (UPI)
-Al !be roquest of Pal Nixon,
'hated An}erican p a I n t e r
Andrew ll'yeth hu agreed lo
paint the olflclal portrait ·of
Pmldenl Nl10n.
''Sbe pel'!OOally .. ked me to
paint her hu@and's portrait
and I .,....i," aid Wyeth ,
who was aulhorlzed by Ille
While Rouae Hl•torleal
Auoclallon lo mal<a the an-
· nounoemenl Monday night.
Wyeth .. Id the portrait
would not bqln unUI be and
M1on can get l()lether "for
1 the Jong houn and the quiet
· Mt of eontemplatlon needed."
1Jle Aid ii WU the Praldenl'I
wbh that no portrait "be
llarted dla!na bll pn!Rlll term of office.
• "Maybe be can come to the
N a111e N a111es
Cost Unit Eyes Stores
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The government has decided
to start naming names so that the public will know which
retail stores are vJolaUng the price controls.
The Cost of Living Council, which administers the over.
all economic control machinery, announced the new policy
Monday, saying it abo would disclose lnfonnation on the
people who work for it 80 that the public wlll be guarded
against conflicts of interest.
Ever since the wage-price.rent freeze ended, the ooun.
cil has tried to negotiate in private with firms found in
violaUon of wage or price ru1es. Names have been made
public <Illy lf the Jlllliee Depanmenl had to lake the ea•e
Involved to court -oome!hlng lt ha! done against three
landlords and one tran.sit company.
"Names of violators will now be disclosed in a number
ol. circumstancea and ••• results of an lnvesUgaUon may
aJao be reported lo a complalnan~" the council .. id. A
spokesman added . 11we are talking about retail storts."
The council aJao said lt would lllUlOU!lce proeedur.. on 0 publlc Information on access to recordi and measures to
guard against amlliela of lnlereal on the part of stablilza·
Uon program employea."
In another economJc development, the Price Commls..
alon i!sued regulations covering the Insurance industry
which it said would cut anticipated increase In premium
payment. by 35 percent lo 40 percent.
The rules are complicated beca4Se of the methods in-
surance firms use to compute their rates and because costs
vary with eaeh policy. But H an .. ample, II uld that a
premium Iha! would have gme up from $115 to f223 thl•
year will rise to $210 lnsi.ad.
The "typical" policy on whleb lhoaa flgum were ha!ed
waa for a IJ!'l"lll8I motorist In a typical county holdlng in.
surance coverage of $15,000 with $31),000 liability; 35 000
prop<rly; 11,000 m<dical; lull comprehenllve and flllO ,d&-
duetlble for eolU!lonL
The eommlssJon ruled that the amount of Insurance
premium lncrwe doe lo lnllallon woold be llntlled lo n ....
elght. of wbal the lncreues normally would bave bttn. II aloo Ald that premium lnerea!ei made because of COJl>-
pan;y conlroUed """" would be llmlted to U peroenl -and the same llmlt would be placed on lncreasea In the actual
dollar amount of the profit porilon of the premium.
Slate lmuronce departmenla will ove-the new reg.
ulaUoo1 and Insurance flrml llfftlng rate 1ncrea.., wtU
bave to oj>laln approval fn>m the department In their lllate.
The Houao Banting Comm!U.. meanwhile told both the
Price Commlalon and the Pay Board Iha! ft will hold an
lnvullgaUon U ft Ir not aaUsfled the two panel• are proper-
ly cai:ry!ng out the law whleb created them.
Chairman Wright Patman ([).Ttt.), aaked the Pay
Board for a nmdown on the rules and proeedurel JI hu
adopted to COlllPlJ with the law's requlmnenl for public
hw1ng1 on dedalons that bave a "1lgnlfleanUy la'l' !JD.
pact on Ibo Dtllonal economy."
Re uked. the same lhlna Of the Price Commbllon. plU1
delaU! of lb ru1 .. and pl'O<Odat1i under --ma1 1Ut lor lrtpJe dlmap lor ~ riolalbit.
; ". • •
Tutsday, hnuary 11, tm
City Tak~ov er Cited • Ill Shootout
...
BATON ROUGE, LL (UPO
-Clly leaden a1d tocay' a
ahootoul between blacks and
police that killed four penons
and Injured 34 others Monday
was an outgrowth of a plot by
Blaa Musllms to lab over
Baton Rouge.
"If they "thlnl: U\ey are going
to lake over the city, Ibey art
badly miolalen," said W-·
row Dumas.
"We're rucly and loaded f..-
bear."
Monday. 'l1ley missed . The
aunbolllo -lier killed two
$berUP1 depuUes 8.nd two
Negro demonstrator!!.
The dlrtud>ance grew out of
a demonslralloh by about 1,000
blal:b M~nday mo~ n Ing.
PGUee 'converged on t b e1
damonstrallon lo wist three
white newsmen who were at.
iaeted while com1ng the 11"9-
test. One of the newsmen wls
bealen -and orillcail)l Injured.
A alngle shot was , fired,
followed by a fuslllado from
both aides. l'Olice uy Ibo first
shot w;, fired by 1 Negn). The
blacks claim Police fired first.
•
"The city fint go! word
from our undercover agents
there was going lo be trouble
about three weeks ago when
we arrested three men for
aolicJting funds without a
permJt,'1 Bauer tald.
''They had been trying lo
enroll people in the Black
Muslims. Thi.s gathering Mon-
day stemmed from a meeting
Friday night. They were ask-
ing for volunteers to meet
with them. The only thing
we 've been able to come up
with was that they were going
to take over Wednesday morn-
tng."
meat." said Bauer. ''Thar,.
lh6 only mumptJon we coulill;
come to." :
The mayor's: admlnistratlv&
assistant, Gene Worley, al~
indicated d'=Y officials werl(
aware ol some form of trou•,
ble.
"We heard from our fn..
telligence :JOUrees that these
outside people from Chicago
were comirti in to take over
the city," Worley said. "W' do
not intend for this to happen. The cily was under an aJ1..
night curlew and 800 Notional
Guardsmen patr olled
downtown streets. Dozem of
curfew violators were jailed
and some shots were fired at
police cars about 7:30 p.m.
Police Chief E. 0. Bauer
ll8id he knew la adva~ lhal "outalde agitators" were going
to cause trouble, but the lrou·
b1e was expecled Wednesday,
not Monday.
Bauer was asked what the
eroup was going to take over.
"We figured the city govern-
"A meeting of these ootslda.
agilalors and loca l hoodlums
was called last weekend, and a
group of people bad met last
Friday night also to make
plans to take over the city of
Ba.ton Rouge."
, ,
If you buy this Plymouth Fury,
FflE'E REMOT! CONTROL UJRROR 1
FllEE WHITEW.\U.I
we'll put four things on it. Free.
This Is our 1972 Plymouth Fury. It's a big, six-passenger
car. With the kind of power, comfort and ride you'd ex-
pect of a big car.
We'd like you to buy one. So we've tried to make It
more attractive than ever.
We're doing It by not charging our dealers for certain
options on our specially-equipped Fury. So when you
buy a Fury with air c_ondltlonlng, AM/FM radio, power
front disc brakes, llnted glass and otherapecllledoptlone,
your dealer can give you lour optlona free of charge.
Free whitewalls, wheel covers, remote control mirror
and vinyl roof. ,
See your Chrysler-Plymouth Dealer today.
Tell him you want his speclally-equlpped"Furywlth 1111
the free things on It.
Let's put It together. Together.
Coming through with the kind of car America wants.
,
'
I
, • mlll," a1d Wyeth. re!mln& lo
hton'• Mill bere, where Ila
·u ... anc1-u. ----------------"-----------------------------------------
( •
•
II
•
DAD,Y PILOT EDJ'l'ORIA.f; PAGE
A 200-Day
Anembly Minority Leader Bob Monaaan hu chang-
ed hil mind about the desirabilitr of cOJ11plete lefiala·
Uve independen<e in setUng meeting schedules lnd the
lengtb of sessions ..
As a result of the lack of accomplishment and Iha
procrutlnation, waste and chaos resultJnj hom the ex-
ercise of such independence on the part ol the 1971
Legislature, Monagan moved last week to introduce an
element of discipline. He submitted a consUtutional
amendment to limit sessions to 200 days per year.
The measure would also pennit bills to be considered
for two;ears, concurrent with Assembly terms of of·
fice. An the annual "veto session," widely criticized 11
• wute of time and moner. would be abolished.
Tbe amendment carrJes i provision for open meet-
ings, something the legislators bave imposed on county
and city government but not upon themselves. Apparent·
ly to give this feature a better chance of passing, Mona-
gan has watered it down by providlng that the Legisla·
lure may establish exceptions by statute.
Monagan believes -we think rlgbUy -that ii
legislators know they must work within the framework
of 200 days, pres.sures to handle businesS ·in a more or-
derly and efficient manner wW be much gre.ater. Cer·
tainly there would b•<' greater incentive to weed out
trivia and maximize coliimittee effectiveness ..
llJ. providing for two-year sessions, bills introduced
In odd·numberod years (lhooe following .Assembly elec-
tions) could stay alive until adjournment the following
year.
By removing pressure to meet an annual adjourn·
ment deadline, bills that may be Important but not ur·
gent, and which may be poorly written and lltUe .under·
stood, could be carried over and kepi alive for further
study.
Apart from this, many thousands of dollars would
be aaved by avoiding relntri>duction and reprinting of
Limitation
bills which dled al the end of the flrrt atHion.
The two-year provWon hu a bonus In lt for those
wbo are tfred of the tynleal polltlcal business of rein·
troducing the aamo bill every year, knowing It will never
get out of committee, much 1 .. s be<Ome law. Ending
aMual rolntroducUons 1bould tend to di!<ourage this
''annual turkey syndrome/' u th& lawmakers call it.
One thing is certain: The 1971 marathon in Sacra·
mento wa.s a disgraceful performance. U Monagan'•
amendment will help prevent a repetition, u it appears
ii would, then It should be pll!Sed by the Legislature
and the votus.
Pain in the Paycheck
Those who received paychecks last week couldn't
be blamed for hollering "Ouch!"
And if they recalled Governor Reagan's "feet In
concrete• oppos!Uon to 1 state withholdlng tax on
grounds "tues should hurl/' that would bt under-
standable, too.
Digging deep (or borrowinc at the bank)· to pai i!>·
come taxes in 1 single lump sum was painful, all r1ght.
But it seemed just as painful last week when federal
and state withboldlng and Social Security, unemploy·
ment and other deductions took a bigger-than-ever bite
out of the paycheck.
A breadwinner earning '200 a week, with a wife
and two children, pays '21.30 in federll tues and an·
other $1.60 nick for state Income taxes before ho sees
his check. And he'll be paying Social Security for more
week! this year.
If anything will heighten tho wage earner's interest
in better government, the weekly paycheck pain should
do it.
.. ' T ~ •
uFrom now on it'll be skimmed."
Candidates Leave Many Holding Bag Cigarette
Politicians Shrug ,Off Bills Sales Unhurt
By TV Ban
Youth Ignores
Lessons of Past WASHING'fON -Im has finally
arrived with Ille politl<al wrltm and
aJtlllll<Olal<>n already In a slate of
exbausUoa. More candidates are getun&
into the p~ldentiat
racit than are cur -
rently 1eWng out
but thal could quick· Ir change.
Thia will 10 down
.. tbe loogest pres-
idenUaJ campaign
in history. It begu
the day PresJdent
Nixon was inaug-
urated and lhoo.Jd be a lesson for aJI
time ln how not to o~ate the American
polltlcal system. ·
A great deal of the faUlt lies with the
proliferation ot political writers and
commentators in Washington. A
~ may have a dozen men and/or
women feeling a compelling need to wrilt
aix.at politicians in presidential terms.
Another fault Jies with the evidently
Interminable list of well-heeled citizens
who for material or spiritual reasons are wllJ.inl to bankroll their I a v o r i t e
polUlc:lans.
BUI' BEYOND AIL that is the strange
pe:ycholoa wblch bas developed among
mphitioul or pnttDUous politicians who
CObslder themlelves to be of presidential
caliha'.
In um: new state or consciousness the
' " ' ' ;
'.* ,!
right to run for President is one which
the body politic is required to tndow. The
presidential candidates exercise the new·
found right to sponge on hotel keepers.
telephone companies, p r J n t e r 1 ,
broadcasting companies, airlines and n.in
up amarages mounting into the millions
of dollan without 1 serious thoqht of
paying up In full.
The Democratic,,Nalional . ComJ1lil\ee ..
•hl'ugs •it• shoulders ove• long unpold
bill• running uplol$9 million. Individual
candidal'" thinlc ~ d. b&viJig been
the cause of. defaulted debts of aever,J
hundred tl!ouSAnd dollars.
ALL OVER TUE country flying
serviC1!5, hotels. and phone services are
holding bags full of unpaid bills incurred
in the names of electing as President
men who did nof. lrom !he beginning have
'tb~ slilbtest ~chance of succeeding.
Tawdry affairs att held under the
auspices of ricb qels to abake down
pretenUous Jl:eOPle for funds to pay off
the deftcits. But the funds thus collected
are seldom enough and the bills still go
unpaid. Even !he Kormedy campaigna
scattered unpaid chits acl'OSf Ui. country
In a snow storm of default.
But the candidates merely grimace ind
wail over the high cost of campaigning
and end up by demanding the biggest
Political handout in history from the
tarpayers to subsidize their own
ambitions. All they want is $50 million to
finance their campaigns.
JUDGING BY THE record, th1
taipayers as a whole would thus be
added to the long list of suckers who have
been taken, but good, by candidates
whose high political P!i!lciplOJ have nol
been m.at<:hed by !heir credit ntlnp: If
there was federaJ Ci8Jh available~ and it
was exceeded as it ~ fto'ald.
be, a nice .lit.tle,deflcieocY apptoPztatloR
would mt-everybody otr the hook,
indud;,ig 'i!ie hotelJ ind airlines which
don't bave1bluch luck collecting in court.
These luckless creditors have been
gulled"<1r• intimidated by the possibility
that Ibey 1!1ight awake the d1y alter
election to ·discover they had denied
credit to leading partisans of tbe new
President of the-United States.
A coast-to.coast-airline or a national
hotel chain could find-tbat---to be very
~m}?an"assing. So these bills go hi.to U.
accounting system unpaid and ·virtually
uncollectible and the loss is spread into
general costs which ultimately mu.st find
their way onto the bills or unsuspecting
and DOn·Political travelers.
Russia Has a Lethal Missile
WASlllNGTON -Latest ominous
development in Russia's 1urgin1
e1p1nslon of ifs miUtary m i g h t ,
part.icul1rly naval. is the Impending
deployment of a new
Jong range nuclear.
tipped IWl14rine mis.
sile.
Dubbed '"Sawfly"
by Wea tern au-
ll>orilles1, the m1 .. ue
apparenuy is th e
moat lethal ot it.s
kind in range and
carrying capaeily.
1'h1I new Soviet naval weapon has 1
range of more than 3,500 miles -about
twice lhe distance of the Reds' next best
submarine miaaile.
Equally sinister ls that the "Sawfly's"
t1per1Uanal range j1 at least 500 miles
greater than !he Poseidon, this countzy • s
moat powerful submarine mJISile wit.Ii a
m11Jmum rana:e of 3,IOO miles. Ranie of
tbt much older Polaris is around 2,000
milts.
Te meet UU. latest Soviet threat , the
N'.Jivy last month eavt 1 contr1ct lo
OIANOI C.OAST
DAILY PILOT
1
Lockheed Alrcrall Corp. to prodUC>! I
new submarine mluile wltb a range of
4,000to1,000.mlle!.
IT HAS BEEN 1scertained that Russia
is installing the new "Sawfly'" missile on
its »called Y-class nuclear-powered
sub,,, A few -smaller H-class: nqcleal"" ltlba
also are lo be equipped with Lhe missile.
Presently they are anned with three 600-
mUe missiles with atom.le warheads.
While the "Sawfly" Is being deployed in
H· and Y-class craft, that is temporary
pending the development of a new and
larger submarine designed largely for
"Sawfly;• and passibly even longer range
missiles.
The U.S.S.R. now hu 4~ Y-clasr
aubmari.nes in cornmjssion or in various
stages or construcUon. About a dozen H-
clw subs are known to be in operation.
The Y-dass hu been armed with ti
SSN-11. missiles carrying devutallng
nuclear warheads of orw and two
megatons. A megaton is Ult odeatructive
equivalent or one mllUon tons of TNT.
The "Sawfly" warhead is tatlmated by
Wutern experts as "con:sldenbly more
powerful" than the SSN.._ That means II
could be u mucb u three or four
megatons.
TllEllE IS STILL another type Russian
submarine eqUIP!Jed with 1 o. c a II • d
"crulae" m.lssi.la, There are around 40 of
tl\ese ct'lll. with • the prioclpal l\lnction
of opualln( 1plnst surface vessels.
They are Inned wtth eight ucndae"
ml..uet wttll a ""IP of -mil .
OI the ti ilildear subnwina the U.S.
baa in openUoo, about IO "" bein(
convel1ed to the 1,lll»lnUe Poleldon -This fUllY-i..t<d -CllTla a *-klloton warhead. A kiloton to eqm~
to 1,000 ton1 of TNT. n.. ,..-
repla~ the aborter r~ Polar!& with a
-0ne·megaton warhead. Each sub will be
armed wllb II missiles.
In addilion to !he deploying of the 3,500
mile "Sawfly," of equal importance is the
Soviet Union's known doubling or its
submarine construction facilities at
Severodvinsk, cin the White Sea. 'Thia
huge establishment is !he lle<is' main
1ul>building base, and ils lremendolu
expansleb is a foreboding omen of the
future.
' UNDER THE URGl!NT spurring of
..Adm. Hyman Rickover, ''father" of the .
nuclear submarine, tbe recent Con(rells
aulhorized the coo.struclion of several
"killer" type submerin& Theoe are lo ba
very speedy, sllen~ llMI poworful craft
with the main milSion Of warriJJ&: on
enemy subs.
Adm. Rickover bu long 1dvocated
developing such ~arlnes lo meet the
zooming Soviet naval tlirtat.
U.S. milltary lor<es are lteadily
diminishing, with the Anny taking the
brunt of tl;e curlailmen~
Current •umbet In uniform Is u
million .,.against 1.5 millilli In. !Ill at
Ille hdgl\I of Vlebli'm openllooa.1ly July
of thliyeat total llreaglh· of U.S. armed
forces Is slated to be down to U million.
The Army will comprlle IS dM~ons
instead or 11 four year• 110.
Dear
' ~Gloomy
Gus
People wbo slam doo<s al oil houn
of the day and nlghl are nolae pol-
lutert. too.
-B. J. L.
™' ............................. ......... .,.. . .... .............. __. ... ..., ....
;
"
• ~ "!$.).,,
.i..,-+\
Edito .• af"'10
Reseatcli o; ...
A year ago, the tobacco Industry was
devoting 75 percent of its advertising
budget -or over $200 million a year -
to cigarette broadcast commercials. Then
came the ban oo radio and television
cigarette ads, and forecasts ol declining
... aJes. 'n!e gloom is all ·but gooe now.
Consumption in 197t is expecjed to be up
2.3 percent to 536 billion cigarettes.
Platri .00 mentholated filter brands are .
up I percent. John Southard, vice presi·
dent for marketing or Liggett & Myers,
recently gloated: "We found out, to our"
delight, we could gel along Without
television."
Since the ban, cigarette companies
have been selling more and spending less.
William Kloepfer of the Tobacco Institute
claims that ''The best estimate is that
the industry w1ll spend about $200 1rul!ion
on advertising and promotion in 1971.
That's only two--thirds of the Jndustry's
e1penditures on advertising last year."
Various reasons have bef!n put forth for
thUx:rtase in cigarette sales. They in-
clude an increase in the smoking J>OPUla4
tion, a. decrease in the number of anti·
smoking commercials, and greater over·
all tensions. Curtis H. Judge. president or
Lorillard Corp., which claims a 15 ~ per
cent jump in cigarette 'sa1es this year.
says that people bought more cigarettes
because "they 're fed up with being pro-
tected from the womb lo the tomb.··
CIGARETTE SALES in EurGpean
countries where broadcast bans have
been in effect for several rears show
simihll' gains. In GT'fat Brit.aiq;, radio and
television clprette advertising wu. pro-
hibited In 1965. Since lllen, sales have· in·
creased 2.7 percent a year. Following a
1962 ban in Italy, sales have risen more
Young people are right in demanding
that their studi es be "relevant." What
they don't understand, however, ls rele-
vant to "what" Nothing can be relevant
to itself; the word
needs a proper ob-
ject.
My 16-year-old son
Informs me that
many ol bis class-
mates ba.ve no inter.
est ia studying about
Na:zHsm a n d the
causes and conse-
quences oJ World
War II. To them , the I930s·mJght as well
be the 1630s; the past has no perspective
for them ; only the present has meaning.
WHILE PROFESSING "humanism,"
these young people are practicing
barbarism. The barbarian doesn 't care
about the past, and therefore be feels
free to violate the presenf. He is in·
terested in a world of brute fact. not of
values, and concentration on brute facts
is the surest way to brutalize ourselves.
Young people today think they care
about vaJues. and mean to. They are full
of noble words like peace and" love and
cooperation and environment and justice
-but they have no real idfa of what
these mean or how they can work out or
why they failed to work out with previous
generations who used the same noble
words.
But good intention built on ignorance is
the surest way lo turn idealism into
cynicism: as the Romans knew, and said,
the worst ls a corruption of the best.
MANY MILrfANT youngsters, for in-
stance, have a habit of calling anyone
than 3.5 percent annually. By ELIZABE'111 M. MANNING
Ogarette advertising on Canadian F.dftor-l~ef,
radiQ _and television ceased this Jan. 1. Finance MagUlne .
Unll-. !he .United Slates, where tobacco
cqDlJ211pie1, have greatly expanded their For the first Chri!tmas-Ne~ Yiflr
bi111ialno, newspaper and billboar!f oeason fince most of us can relllember,
advertising, cauada will freeie cfgmtte we are looking forwal'.d, io world peace.
.adVertlsing iD other media at 1971 le¥els 1 For Jepetationsi. peacd ' On earth, good
.and end all 'JIC'ize promotions and wilt toward men has be&i a dream In our
glveaw·ay1. These actions were tak~ hearts, a carol in the~ churches, but a
•9hmt1rlly by the Canadian Tobac<o reaUly, not really. If )Ve do nol believe
Manufacturers Council and lre similar to this is possible now, then we may have to
the provisions iii a bill now bel0rt Pmla· buy the Communist propaganda that
..ment. America needs war to make the country
BLACKl!l,Olf?: ON TV, U.S. tobocco goThe. ' ho' .! •• '~}>lnles !lave. been spending more on w ·•e country ·-been up in arms other types ol advenlsing. A recent study lo gel out of war, lo cut CJefen!O ex.
for the !Jrsl sb: montha of im by penditurea lo the bone, lo get other cowr
LeadiJ!I National Advertlaen, 1nc., show· tries to agree to co-exist with differe•t
ed upendltures for cJianlte Jt<1.o m $)'Siems and to e<>olnllalJlt the earth· wilh
m111azmea more than cloublid Jo. $56.1 al lust tolerance of~ other u people.
million, up from $14.8 million _, )'<lllJ' With 1971 comhig lo ~ calamitous clo4e,
earlier. Quring this period, billboatd !he signs and •Y!Dp6,lm of peace <re like
advertisinf -f!QID $1.1 mllllqo to stars lo the winter sky, far 11•ay, but
fl!.7 m1111ett and ..,.apoper .i~ shining brJchtlv will\ tbt_promtse or aood
lnauttCI from $4 mlllioo to $8 mlllion. will In !he worl4 'l,('lµloW.
The ~ laraett pt«nollooil ~ ·-· campatant lJliil ore 1porllng evmls -B\11' FOR. ~CANS, ~~'1,
auto, horse and at n<.inf, temll and puco to enjoy!d onlJ •Ith-· ty. ·
bo'Wllll( champlonlbipt lllld rodeol. Ucl4 And prospll'tty mllA ~ ICCOtnpanled.J>y
c!prollet &poDJOrl a bolloon ~ Many a hoOdle on in!1itJoo ,.. the country to JI
~ ore ollerlrr( trading atampl once tmilled that pd• times an Ud spedal dllcount -. Buyers ot-• lranslent ond that ha!d Umes are iU;St earwn 4' l\iJclla can ~ an II.foot -around the cornir, · ·
aallbool, valued at lbout '120,Jor $ll Why, !hen. are "' no Tead)o to Uve ill'
Whl1o U. U.S. ....ut blll IP' · Iba bell of all potslhl~ 'fi'l'ldlt ~ doel"
-,.:. bu done UW. b1cin lo-the Wall Sir.et te.I ,,,..,,,, ir Jtaall. and
clc• 1m1ua1ry .. tar. it may yet pro-mu,. to respond to ~ other, thin
ve detrlmental In two areas. 00. la the • .1ns1an~ apactaailar ~eryt Wiiy, then
1ntrot1uc:t1oo of ..., bnbds. ,'Jllo -do ,.. not cndlt·• er-Jdtlll who bas
and more lotlc·nnc• ~ II u. ved bimlolf a pro rill 'll&loo, .,,.,...,
youth martcet. Wbelller todat• ·dllldren and _...,... IJajbUllJ lit deollng with
will JllW Into tomonuw 'r amotm Is a Jll'Ol>loiiii a( suok.ICC!pO thflt they~
querlloft that will 'lfO'r/ lobatlCIO ID-iJie mind. Do ... demand ~ In all
duallJ lD tht 7eor1 to come. thblcl, even to ...,...__r Do we
who disagrees with them a t•Falcist":
just as their opposite numbers are so
fond of calling their opponents .. Corrr
munists." But a Fasci.st i.s not the same
as a conservaUve, or even a reactionary:
just as a Communist is not the same as a
liberal, fl'· -.en ~ r1\4lc~
Unless we underst&n<i 50mething ot
history, unless we have absorbed and
analyzed the past, we cannot make ra·
tional judgments about the present -it
is as futile as-expecting a self-styled
"doctor" to diagnose a patient without
ever having studied medicine. No matter
how much common sense. good will and
natural aptitude he may have, he is not
equipped to distlngul.oh among ailments
or prescribe for health.
"THOSE WHO DO NOT understand !he
past are condemned to repeat it, 11 San·
tayana once warned: and radicals are as
prone to this misconCeptlon of history as
anyone else --perhaps more so today,
when we knOw that all the old formulas
won't work but are sWI in the dark as to
wb&t ~ill work.
"Relevant'' studies should mean rele-
vant to the whole human condition, to
man as a totality, in his work, hi& play.
his love. his feelings, as much as of hit
economic and social arrangements.
Relevance partakes of the past as much
as it projects into the future: "what's
past is prologue," said Shatespeatt, ia
the truest line he ever wrote.
criticize like cranks? Do we become
hoatile with self interest? Do we lack ap-
preciation for hanl work, the terrible
Jong hours, the constant searching for the
amwers to questions that have plagued
mankind from the begiMing of time?
WE APPEAR TO be CW'sed with a
dee1>-seated psychological m 1 I a i 1 e
evidenced by the bastard belle! thai
American is slipping backwards. We ig·
nore the progress, the Improvements the
revolutionary changes. We ba.rp on' the
hurtful things and we carp on the crazy
things of our times,
People once counted their blessings.
The words seem outmoded, 1 piece of the
past. It is a philosophy which to noeded
for !he oeace of the Mure.
May the Near Year bring us !he
capacity to reflect, to remember, to ap-
preclalc. and to .. Joy what we have
going for us now. Peoce and proapertty ta
not only possible, We are on olU' WI)'.
a,, Ge'Orfe "'---. . . .
' Dear George: ·
l have 11rltltn yOll lour ·llrnea,
each time enclosing 1 stamp lot a
reply1 I ha .. ·nel-.hwd from
:you noi can I ..........,.. what my ~ • Whal 11111
W. E. llWW~. .,~ ·Iha! )'Oii warlo
' !Domtsllc prolllelill
qulctly. !nlcrnallonal ::i~:.i.J>Plhlf'°' ftSJ
101 Yed
Jllllbl<nlJ
d. the
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Any Volunteer
I
' Moth~r Robins?
"Aod '11me, a IDUlac 1catttt1D1 cluat ... ,n'
Ttuyaon
NO, MR. TENNYSON'S forqoing observatiol'I Js too
cynical But with which of these two men -Benjamin
Franklin and Henry Davld''l'bortau -do you flnd )'ourself
moat in agreement? Franklin said, .. Time b money."
Thoreau replied, ''Not so, Time-is a
slrcam, iJ\ which I go fishing." Prefer
Thore.a}I, penonally.
' THAT WOMAN who iJ most adept
at soliciting a marriage proposal from
an elig~ble bachelor is the 17-year-old
high sc\>001 dropout. The woman most
capable of enticing such a proposal
\ frOm some other woman's husband Is
the 32-year-old divorcee. And the
:Woman moat probably able to get said
proposal from a ower is the 43-year-old widow. Or so
one Pittlburgh ar concludes from a study of the
statistice.
L .\ QUERIES -Q. H'Ynat's the best thing I can do for a
rledgllng robin I fowid flop~g helplmly on our lawn?"
A. U you're nol'rqdy to feed ii on regurgitated worms
every 20 rnimrtea: from dawn tdusk, better leave it be. If
you are ready to io that far, wever, please send a snap-
shot of yourself.
Q. 11WBAT'S the difference \letween verse"l.Dd poetry?"
A. It'• vene, ii ii slowly wvms you. 1r1 poetry, ii it
ruddenly cbtlb you. I
ASB: ANY quartet of citfuns on the •tree! to ident~y
Martha Mitchell, and only one of the four will say, HMartha
who?" Pollsters found that out.
WHAT A carol is, everybody knows. A Christmas song.
What it used to be, though, is less widely known. A French
rain dance.
HORS~ -What's needed aro1.md here these days is
1 little more imagination in file naming of race horses.
How about L. B. Mayer's suggested stable : "Whoa ," a
filly out of "Stop Sign." Or "Complacency," a filly put of
"Smirk." Or "Forever After," a colt out of "Happy End·
ing." Or "In Our Time," a filly out of "Appeasement."
JN TB~E few seconds between the moment you dia1
a local phone number and the time you hear it ring, just
about 1,300 electric circuits, at least, either have opened or
closed. Remarkable, no?
ONE OUT of every eight night school students is
divorced, widowed or separated. And more than four out of
every eight are otherwise unattached. Remember that , ii
y<Mi're looking for a matrimonial mate.
WAKE UP -How do you wake your late-sleeping,
overnight house guesU?-.Otto von Bimlarek. the onetime
Irpn Chancellor of Germany, went out in the front yard
and fired plstol shots through the windows ioto the ceilings
of his ,.,est's bedrooms. Might try tlilil· ·,
:.I..•~ . • j
Addrur ma!! to L. M. BOJ1d, !l.O. ll<n;J.175, Neu>-
port Btdtli, Calif. 92660. ' V ~ l\ ~ •
Male Bald Eagle Gets
Bids Called
For Freeway
SACRAMENTO (UPI)
The State Public W o r k 3
Department bas called for
bidJ on • $18.66 million project
to widen the San Bernardino
Freeway from six to eight
Janes from Puente Avenue in
Baldwin Parle to a hall mile
ta.st of Via Verde in San
Dimao. BlclJ will be opened
March II il1 Los Angeles .
jewels by joseph
se1rchos for jewels
e.wrt ........ ......., ........ ... Ula., ... ".-..,,. ....... twas I• .. • ....,t!M. tlflll ,_._..,,, ...... "' .......... "''-'-.... ...,. ............ .... ....... _ .. __ ............ ,....,... ...... -=--~•Mr.Hlllt ..
1-~~~~I
Link Eyed ,
To Cancei:,
Fertilizer
• -~..... ... . . •· ., ----..
. .
futjday, J111uary 11, 1972 IWLY '!LOT 7
.FootJaiU Developments
Pollution Eff eels Increase
By l>AVID JENSEN In Northern Calllornla, the
report declared that 1 f
development conUnuu o f
70,000 acru ID the Truckee
area, •1.c1eer mtgratton routes
will be blocbd" and this will
have a drastic impact on the
intr:rst.att deer, herd.
...Slment and l1ood damage to
property.''
1'
FREE
ORGAN LESSONS
FOR BEGINNERS
You do not have to own en instnimt.nt.
Free practice Time Available.
• Start 'Nesday, January 18th at 7 P.M.,
Six Weeks.
REGISTER NOW!
SACRAMENTO (UPI)
Califomla'1 f 00thi11 .IU~
divisjons carved up more than
500,000 aqres between 1950 and
1970, . le••,tii& beJllnd· r;oollµ\ed
Stre8J1111 and e.n::lded)earth, a
Reagan admin.l.strafjon report
says. .
The harmful effects of Im·
proper development r a n I e
throughout the state, ac-
cording to the 71>-poge sWdy
by the Division of Soil
Conservation.
The 111\ldy warned, "The iln-
pact of people's activities b
creating cooditio!ll that are
destroying the values that peo-
ple ~ seeking."
The study, entitled
~·Environmental Impact of
Urbanization on the Foolhl~
and Mountainous Lando of
CaJUornla," WU accompanied
by photographs of deep gullies
left by erosion in subdivisions
and burned over foot h 111
residential areas in Lo s
Mieles.
e Also. Intermediate class Tuesday January 18th
at 8 P.M., Six Weeks $12 + Material.
"'It said the ucrtatest source
of flro&k>n and sedimentation
in steams Is from road con-
structlon11 in .. ubdivisions, ad·
ding that exposur< of soil dur-
lng comtructkm can increase
rate of erosion from 10 limes
the nonnal rate for cu!Uvated
land to Z,000 Umea that for
forest land.
FUN • ENTERTAINING · KllOWLEDGEABU
In Southern California, it
said the threat of disastrous
wildfires has increased
because of the proximity of
residential areas to chaparral-
covered hills.
lt said that careless
develOpment has c a u s e d
1 • significant environmental
problems such as w a t e r
pallutlon. loss of fish md
wildlife habitat, damage to
water courses, lakes and
reservoirs, impairment o f
recreationa1 opportunlUes, ·and
Rent OfCJClnS
Available
Dllrill4) Term
of Coane.
Regi1ter NOWI Inquire for details
Hamm on d Orga n Studios GERHARD LANG'S
SAUSAGE HAUS 2154 E. COlst Highw1y, Coron.11 del Mar
~930 .
Can't you just taste it?
,.. lt's the taste ·or ~omethmg·liot
and <delicious from a big old cup
with craCks in the glaze.
' . '
----.And a lteatty breakfast en a
cold momi tl g. -
. Down Home'Illste. Something .
to spend a .little time with.
Simple and pleasurable .
Like lighting up a Winst.on . . .
and enjoying the taste of Filt.er-Blend™tobaccos.
Real and rich and down home good . . ~ . . .
Can't.you just taste it?
Winsfgn
rlLT:llt • CIO&UTT:IS
.Htl l.•1-M ltlott*"•H~!.••~UO~ l•n-.• t,,
llNG.19 lllf. .,,,... 13 mg'.'tlicotint. suPEir~n/6, 2a m~ ~M'. 1.J 1111-n;colinpv.pcr cig11111t FTC Rtpeot AUG.7L'
t., ·' •
•
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• DAILY PILOT Tutsday, Jan11"Y 11, 19i l
• QU!ENJE By Phil lnterlOlldl
"It loob like they're doing evel')'thing Utey can lo give
buslneu Ute breaks."
Clouds Expelled,
Big Sun Explosion
Caught by Cameras
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
Scientists have disclosed that
a recent explosion on the sun,
fir11t of its kind e v e r
photographed, hurled i n to
space massive clouds of hot
material 20 to 40 times the
size of the earth.
They were blasted Crom the
sun's atmosphere at speeds of
kinetic motion energy was
equivalent to the power"that
would be required to supply
U.S. electrical needs, at cur
rent consumption rates, for
more than a million years.
This amount of energy, ex-
pressed another way, is com.
parable to that of 100 million
~megaton H-bombs.
Luckily for the earth, the
eruption occurred on the sun's
far side. Had , the clouds been
hurled directly at this planet,
Soldiers
Can Now
Soldier
HEIDELBERG, Gennany
(UPI) -To get soldiers back
to soldieri_!!g1 the American
army in Europe (USAREUR)
has announced it will hire
about 1,000 civilians to take
over "Mickey Mouse jobs"
now required of c o m b a t
soldiers in 40 infantry, armor
and artillery battalions scat-
tered throughout Europe.
"We plan to divert troops
who are now tied up in Mickey
Mouse jobs back to primary
duties, and to replace ihem
with low-grade c iv l Ii ans-
mostly local nationals," a
USAR?UR spokesman said.
they would have triggered
magnetic storms, blacked out
Jong range communications,
disrupted navigation systems,
and generated brilliant auroral
displays.
So massive were the clouds,
each containing about a billion
tons of matter, that they
might even have had a slight
effect on Earth'a rotation
period.
Scientista believe that such
explosive expulsions of matter
from the sun are not un-
common. But this one, which
occurred Dec. 13, Is the first
ever directly observed by
visual means.
Jt was photographed by a
sensitive television tube
aboard an Orbiting Solar
Observatory (OS0-7) launched
by the National Aeronautics
and S p a c e Administration
(NASA) Sept. 29.
The photograph was made
possible by a "white light cor·
onagraph,'' 111 device which
simulates a solar eclipse and
makes visible events which
otherwise would be drowned in
the overall brilllance of the
sun. , . The coronagraph was dev1J-
ed by the Naval Research
Laboratory NRL to blot out
the overwhelming light from
the sun's central disc. It
enables OS0-7 to study more
explo.sions in the sun's corona,
or atmosphere, in a matter of
months t h a n astronomers
have been able to see during
solar eclipses since the begin-
ning of history.
Vast streamers of energited,
million-degree gas c a I I e d
plasma were seen pouring
from the sun by QS0.'1 on Dec.
13. These streamers, U·
tending up to four million
miles from the solar surface,
apparently exploded into the
gigantic clouds blasted into
space. The program will cost about
$2 million for the balance of
this fiscal year. Most "Mikcey
Mouse jobs" will pay about
$1.60 per hour, and include
Positions as gym attendants,
in special services and youth
activities. as boiler firemen
and janitors, in sales com·
misaries, a's v eh i c I e in·
spectors, drivers and driving
testers, and as hospita l ward
attendants.
NRL scientists said at a
news conference that although
the clouds wer.e aimed away
from the Earth, some of their
charged particles did s w i r I
around and arrive in our
neighborhood three and half
days later.
Their arrival was recorded
by ground observatories in
Australia . the Soviet Union,
and the Philippines.
MEDICARE AND WELFARE RECIPIENTS
DON'T .·IUY A
HEARING AID!! .. ""'"' . ,., ,,.
"""" ....... ...... ... .... -.. _
... -
IZ. nantt .W. li'El1'CI &D
Hilll'T•~ u m
'll>MOIU. COST,
fJ. llCtmU w.
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FO•.Flll LfTllATUll
CALL IJO.JJJJ 01 MAIL COUPON
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t ll•D COU'°" TO: YAMCO tc•A,.INI AID flNTI• J
: Dd.-, .... M -. ..... '""'· C..I• M ... c.11, ruu i
f lfAMI ............... ,............... . ............................. 1
: CITT ,., • .,,,.,,.,,,.,.,,, ___ , ,.NOfltl ••••• , .. ., .,,,,,,,.,,,, .. ,
: I ! lONIU ···•···~··'"'''''""'''"''''' ........................... , .................................................... ----!
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•
JANUARY storewide .savings for the New Yeat in every depaf'tr!'lent at all, 18 ,stores
men's clothing sale
save on sport coats, slacks
knits and woven fabrics • rn
Great looking coats with wide lapels, flap pockels, d~p
center vents. You can choose from many colors In pure
polyester knits, wool and polyester wovens or i>ure wool.
A big selection. All splendid values. Come take ~r pick.
regularly 20.00 double knit slacks, 32 to40 17.99
regularly 70.00 to 75.00 sport coat group 57.00
reg. $55 to $65
n-.en 's spcrtswear 45-atf 1~ stores
one-pant and two-pant suits
all wool · from Maybrooke • 1n
Wool is af\vays a super v~lue. It wears long, and It wears .
well. The perfect transeal(\rial fabric for men in California;
So, when you can save thrsmuch on a wool suit with all the
newest fashion details, y00've got a. good thing going for
you. Pick from a big choi¢e of patterns. Sizes ,38 .to. 46.
Regular, short and long .. oOn't miss .these great savings.
reg. 585-$95
men's sulls 21-111 rs stores
may co, IOUth cout plUI, un dllfO fwy. ti brlllol, ... ,. mou; 546.9321
shop mondty lhru frlclly 10 •.m. to 9:30 p.m., uturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.
aunday -.. 'Ill S p.m.
.,
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3-montli
Undersea
Probe Set
I
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
1overnment's longest an p
most ambitious u~ersea lri-
vestigatlon wlll begin Jan. 2'11 o.ff the Florida coast near
Miami , the Commerce Depart-
ment reports. ·
. The department's National
Oceanic a n d Almospberlc
Administration will send a
three -man undersea
laboratory. The mar in~
research project will last
three months ~nd include eight
acientific projects.
Called FLARE for Florida
~quanaut Research ExpecU·
tion, the project wilt study
coral reers, fish behavior,
chemical composition of sea
wat~r. geology of the reefs,
marine ~Jants and plant-
eaters, seaweed, the effects of
pollutants on coral formation
and the efficiency of artifical
reefs in attracting marine life.
One of the scientiric teams
ls composed of two women
and another is a husband and
wife combination. Teams of
two or three marine explorers
will rotate in diving.
Taking part in the probe are
univenities, three museums, a
junior college and several
clivisioll! of NOAA.
Baja Sees
Big Boom
For{;iops
MEXICALI. MeXico (AP) -
Baja California's agricultural
industry . stands to benefit
greatly by !he Uhitea States
abolishing Ila 10 percent im-
port surtu:, the state director
of e c o n o m I c development
pys.
"We are expecting about 1
SO percent increase i n
agricultural product income
over the next crop sea.son,"
Juan Anlana says.
Ending the surtax "will also
be an incentive for more
fore ign financed f a r m i n g
operations being developed in
Baja," he said. "We have
10me of these agricultural
operations MW and we are
trying to open up more.
Santana said Baja presently
bas yearly agricultural pro-
duction of about $53 million,
wittr major el'port crops prior
to the surtax including
asparagus, chili p e p p e r s ,
tomatoes and onions.
So far there has been mixed
reaction on the U.S. side of the
border as to how much impact
the Mexican Imports will have
on californla agricultural pro-
ducers.
Hotel to Be
• Auctioned
TUCSON (AP) -Th
Westerner hotel here wi11 go
on the auction block Jan. 18.
Charles Crowe, the broker
for the pending sale, said bid-
ding will start al $400,llOO. He
said the sale ls not a "distress
1ale" but the owner.!I ire am·
Jous lo dispose ol the property
gulcltly.
The owner of the hotel i.!I
Bud AnUe, Inc., one of the
world's largest trader• in
fresh fruits and vegetables.
WbyRent?
The mon•1 JOU
opencl Oil Bentai
-"-coulcl !!!!l •
Sem Water Softew
PB.Bl .....
au.l:r*
Call Yeur Neare.•I
Sean S11>r.
.... 1'*'-Wl•••"''-...,,."'" ........ m
,
••
b. Milliken Monaco towels.
Azure blue, bronze green, an·
tique gold, Persian pink, cham·
pagnewhite, peacock blue.
2.49 reg.3.50bolthtowel
hand towel reg. 2.30 1.79
wash cloth reg. 80c b9c
robe~white, pink,
uure reg. $30 22.99
f, Sprlngmaid Muicali collon
velour towels. Festive j~c·
quard design in celery, chest·
nut, gold or turquoise.
2. 99 reg. 4.00 bath towel
hand towel reg. 2.40 1.89
wa!h cloth reg. 90c 69c
I
• --
• ANUARY
· c. Surety Deluxe sol id cofor
towels in absorbent cotton ter·
ry. Pink, spring green, white,
forsythia yellow, blue, sunset
orange, antique gold. Stock up.
1. 9 9 reg. 2.50 24x48" bath
16x28" hand towel reg, 1.60 1.39
13x13ff wash cloth reg. 80c t>9c
g. s·pnngmaid Bill Blass Coun-
lry Flowers towels. Soft
sheared cotton floral on white.
3. 4 9 reg. 4.50 bath towel
hand towel reg. 2.50 1.99
wash cloth reg. 90c 69c ,
fingertip reg. 1.25 99~
1hower curtains/drapes
reg. 16.SO 14. 99
luxurious
famous maker
fashion towels
a. Fieldcrest Pattern Stripe tO\\'els des igned by
Yves St. Laurent. Cotto n jacquard velour.
Chianti/pimento/ cognac, ebony /Spanish
Straw/sable, marina blue/tropic/deep purple,
sable/olive/Spanish straw. No\V at white sale
savings.
3.99 reg. 5.00 bith towel
hand towel reg. 2.50 2.19
'vash cloth reg. 1.00 89c
bath sheet reg. 12.00 10.49
I ,,··~ , . •
d:springin.1id Gala towels ag;
low with bright blossoms. soft
cotton velour reverses to con ..
ventional terry for a hearty rulr
down. Orange, pink, blue.
1.59 reg. 2.so bath towel
hand !oWel reg. 1.60 1.19
wash cloth reg. ~Oc 69c
h, Springmaid Bill Blass
lweed towels in rich choco-
late brown. Sheared cotton tcr·
ry reverses to cotton terry.
3, 4 9 reg. 4.50 bith towel
hand towel reg. 2.50 1.99
wash cloth reg. 90c 69c
shower curtain reg., 10.00 8.99
window drapes reg. 10.00 8.99
•
e. Springmaid Radiance solid
color cotton velour towels.
Peacock, green, orange, papri·
ka, plum, pink, red, gold, lime,
ginger, black, forsylhia.
2. 99 reg. 4.00 l5x50" bath towel
16,.:30" hand towel reg. 2.30 1.89
13:i<l 3" wash cloth reg. '90C 69c
J. Sprlngmaid Bill Blass Pais-
ley towels. Sheared cotton ter·
ry in parrot green, fresh blue,
pink.
3 , 4 9 reg. 4.50 both towel
hand towel reg. 2.50 199
\vash clolh reg. 90C 69c
fingertip reg. 1 .25 '99c
shower curtain/drapes
reg. 10.00 8. 99
towels 30
"'8Y co .• touth coast plou, 11n dlego fwy. et brlstof, c0tla ,,,...; 5-46-9321
~ mon<lay thru frlday 10 a.m. to 9:30 p.m., 11turd1y 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
oundly noon 'tfl S p.m •
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DAil ... 1111.0T I
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~LY J>ll.l)T.
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Reaga1a Critici%ed.
Tormenting Rectal Itch
Of Hemorrhoidal Tissues
Promptly ~lieved
,
Split Budget Bid Protested
Q1urlified P1·of?
Dr. Glenn T, Seaborg (left) explains a chemical equation to a some\vhat uniin -
press freshman at the University of Califor nia at Berkeley. The youngster rnight
pay better attention of he kne\v Dr. Seaborg is a Nobel Laureate, for1ner: Atomic
Energy Co1nmission chairman. and \Vas for1ner chancellor of the Berkeley
campus. I le is also being appointed Universi ty Professor of Chemistry -a high·
ly distinguished for1n of rrofesso rship.
~----------
State Legislators Seeking
More Fu11{ls for School Aid
SACRAMENTO !UPI 1
Armed with a report which
shows Ca lifornia has slipped in
its average spending on each
child. Democratic legislators
said today they \Viii seek far
more than the $6.~ million in
new school aid proposed b~·
Gov. Ronald Reagan.
··This is a farce." said
Assemblyman Leroy F.
(;re en e 1 D-Sacramento 1,
chairman of the Assembly
Educalion Committee. · · J t
Mars Clears, Bares
Gigantic Canyons
PASADENA 1AP1 -The
haze that has hidden ~tars
since late September and
threatened h-1ariner 9 \\'ilh
failure is rapidly clearing.
Scientists say the orbiting
spacecraft's lele vision
cameras are returning strik-
ing photographs !hat sho1\'
strange. unexplained featurt>s.
Militarv
•
Welfare
Case Set
WASHINGTON <UPl 1
The Supreme Court has agreed
~hear ~ appeal ~
California authorities from a
federal court order barring
the state from automatically
denying welfare benefits to the
dependents of men a\vay on
military service.
The Court v.1ill h e a r
arguments in the case later
this term and follow 1\•Hh a
written opinion.
The case involves an appeal
by Director Hobert C _
Carleson ol' the California
Department of Social \Velfare
from a court order granting
welfare benefits to Naocy
Ilemillard and her t1vo-year-
old daughter.
· State \vel!are o f f i (' i a 1 s
denied benefits undel' the
federal Aid Lo Families with
Dependent Children 1 AFDC)
program to ~1rs. Remillard
because slate regulations bar
such assistance in cases where
parental absence is due lo
military se rvice.
The U.S. Dist rict Court ill
San rrancisco held March 31,
1971. that the blanket. ex-
clusion or the families of
servicemen rrom w e I r a r t>
benefits violated the equal
protection clause or the 14th
Amendment to !he Constitu-
tion.
Radicals l:all
Stanford H.ally
··rhe photographs are shO\\'-
ing us a f<Jntastlr range of
brand 11e1\' phe1101nena that no
one ev~r suspected existed on
.\1ars. r:1·ery day son1ething
new is turning up in the
photographs." Dr. Carl Sagan,
an astrono1ner from Cornell
Universily working on the
Marirer 9 project. said ,\1on.
day.
The photographs have sho wn
towering ridges and canyons
"grander tha111 the Grand Can-
yon.'' One such canyon a~
pears to be 6 to 12 miles
across and perhaps more than
a mile deep. the scientists
report.
There are pictures of great
cr aters, one aOOut 70 miles
across that closely resemble
earth features evolved through
volcanic activity.
And one picture shO\\'S a
7,000-foot high plateau so rid·
died with cracks that its ap-
pearance has been Jinked to
;in elephant's wrinkled skin.
Pollution
Clic1rges
Disuiissed
SANTA BARBARA (APl -
A judge has dismissed 342
counts of criminal pollution in
the 1969 oil well blowout in the
Santa Barbara Channel after
four oil companies pleaded
guilty lo one count each.
Judge Morton L. Barker
said Monday that Union.
f\fobil. Texaco and Gulf Oil
companies had •·suffered suf-
ficiently" because of many
civil damage judgments in the
case "'hich havt cost the four
t'Ompanies tens of thousands
of dollars. He fined each com-
pany $50.
Dist. Alty. David Minier
<:ailed the decjsion outrageous
and said he v,.ould appeal.
means !hat schools will ac -
tually ha\'e less money than
last year.·•
Reagan's n1oney proposal
for schools wa~ !he most con-
troversial element of the $4.!I
billion local assistance budget
he submitted to the legislature
~1onday.
There was divided reaction
about the way he submitted JI .
For the first time. the budget
was divided into two parts -
one for local assistance and a
second for state operations.
which \Vilt be sent t h e
legislature \Vednesd:iy.
"This is nonsense." said
Assembly \Vays and Means
Chairman Willie L. Brown Jr.
(!)..San Francisco 1. \Y hose
com1nittee ~·ill consider the
budget.
"The governor c:in publicize.
the. budget any \Vay he wishes.
but it will be considered as
one document.··
Brown's counterpart in the
Senate, veteran De mo c rat
Randolph Collier of Yreka ,
also said his Finance Com·
mittee will co nsider t h e
budget as one document." But ,
like Republicans and unlike.
Brawn, he praised Reagan for
presenting it in two in-
sUillments.
"I ·think il's an excellent
idea." Collier said. "It gives
us a chance to show loca l
government that they get two-
lhirds of the state's money."
Indio Hit
By Series
Of Quakes
INDfO IAPl -A series of
light earthquakes rip p I e d
through the Coachella Valley
over a four-hour p e r i o d
starlliftg some residents but
apparently c a us i n g no
dnmage. authorities say.
The shocks began about S: IS
p.m. l\1onday and measured
3.2 on the Richter scale at 6: 17
p.m. and 3.8 at 8:22 p.m .. said
Dr. Clarence Allen of the
California Institute of
Technology s e ism o Io g y
laboratory in Pasadena.
He said the earthquakes
were centered near Thousand
Palms. aboul 10 miles north of
here and 120 miles southeast
of Los Angeles.
Sheriff's deputies and Indio
police said they received about
JO calls from concerned
citizens, but no reports or
damage.
STANFORD ! UPI 1 -Stan-WHAT FUNERAL BENEFITS ARE AVAILABLE
TO VETERANS?
SACRAA\ENTO (AP' -A
$7 billion battle <1f the budget
raged today bttween GO\'.
lleagan and opposition
Democrats even before key
parts or the Reagan budget
were sent lo the legislature.
Democratic leaders accused
Jteagan of trying to <.'Onfuse
the public with a ne\\· two-part
budget forn1al.
Reagan released the S5
billion local assistance section
.\londay. sho1v1ng a S 5 7 O
rnilhon increa se in various
stair progra1ns aiding local
goverrunent and local sc hools ..
Republicans defended I h c
GOP governor, arguing ii
... .-ould make the budget more
understandable lo the ta.1-
payers.
The governor held back until
\Vednesday the bulk of the
budget docun1ent cover i n g
genera l state operations. e.1-
pected to range from $2 billion
to $2.5 billion. This \Viii include
such I r a d i t i o n a I I y CQn-
troversial items as higher ·
education and mental he;:illh. I
'fhe increase over IBst year
in the local assistance budget ,
most of it spending set by
formula written into slate law,
was 13.2 percent A source
close to the administration
said Phase 11. the state opera-
tions budget, would be held to
a very small percentage In-
crease.
Reagan claimed in his
Phase I budget message that
the: slate merely acts as tax
collector for much of the
money in the budget. sending
it back to local government
ror spending.
At the: same time. he took
credit for "011e of the largest
Ecttador
Seizes 2
Tunahoats
SAN DIEGO <AP 1
Ecuador has made its fir;I
seizures of Americanl
tunaboats this year in the con-J
tinuing dispute over offshore
territorial fishing rights. the '
American Tunaboat Associa.
tion says. l
The association said the
1,100-lon Anna Marie. based in
San Diego. was forced into the
port of Manta f.1onday by an·
Ecuadorian gunboat
Another vessel, the \Yestern
King, from San Pedro. was
captured and taken into port
Saturday. the association said.
"The seizures were
peaceful, so far as we kno\Y,
and no shots y,•ere fired or
anyone injured." said Ed
Silva. vice president or the
boat owneri' association.
Ecuador claims a 2QO.mile
offshore fishing boundary but
the United States recognizes
only a l2·mile limit. Fifty-two
foreign vessels. mos t I y
American, were seized by the
South American country last
year and fined a total of about
$2 million. I
U.S. boat owners eventually I
are reimbursed by con-
gressional appropriations ror
the fines Ibey pay.
TEEN BEER
OK URGED
SACRAMENTO ( API A'
measure introduced in the
Assembly would allow persong
aged IS to 21 to drink beer and
wine. but not hard liquor.
The constitutional amend-
ment proposed Monday by
Assemblyman Alex Garcia ( [)..
Los Angeles>. needs at least M
votes in the 80-seat Assembly
and 27 votes in the 4-0-man
Senate to gel on the ballot.
A propo8al to legalize all
alcoholic beverages for 18-t<>-
21-year-<>lds was killed last
year in the Senate.
Garcia'! measure is ACA 12.
ford Uni\·ersify radicals. at-
tempting to keep alive the
issue of the recom1nended fir·
ing of tenured profe5sor B.
Bruce Jo"ranklin, called for
another rally today in lhe
by EUGENE 0 . BERGERON
campus plaza.
A small group
demonstrators protesting the
university's move to oust the
Marxlst·Maoist prores,,or has
.. occupied" the St & n ford
Memorial Church and Issued
an ultimatum to re bi re
Fraoltlln by noon today.
However. it was u:olikel y
that the SW>lord 8olrd of
'l'rusttes, who must malct lhe
final decision, would lllltLon
the matlor ol Fnnklln'•
An hoffr•Wy dlM~ Wtefn •f •riy .__. •r •' tll• Kor"" Ce1tfllst, ., tlMt fltta•
Ire I• ptltlff t9 tM t.n•wa., f"M91 Met• ~1teflh;
1. l1rte1 .u ..... .t sne.oo.
2. TrCMft.mitl .. re ttle , ... -1 l1Nt111e11t, If tle.t• 1tcc1r. l1t e ftfltf9n' l•clllty.
l . Flatt t• drepe tk c.tl•t.
4. .,..,..,.. 1 ... "' ...... c......,,..
S. s.._ ttew• MMlltf ~ ~ .... pl94w t.r ,s..,.....t eltllM I• • ,,1.,.,.. « ....... Cit,,..,....,,
a....fttl I• ttle Atlt k•,... ,.nH ffHI ,,_,,_, JI, ltll 111ttU tile 1Mitl11•f"f .t tM
Ylet N ... •lre A1tUtt S, 1 tM .. Mt lltd .. t1M UU.00 ll11tlal .......... .
If Y•ll Mm • .......... et.eitt h•r•I S.,.,k•, ,..... writ. •• c .. I. W....,_.., ,••lilt., ~w•ri•• wlll be ..... ,.., 111 filk c•l111M.
Balt%•Bergero1a fi'utaeral Bo11ae
COSTA MESA 2 LOCATIONS COIONA dtl MAI 646-2424 '7l·M50
dlsmisral unlil late , thll ~!:l?t:[!~!!~~~!!D!!!!
monlh. '
I
budge I e d year-lo-year In·
creases for the liUpport or
local schoois in California's
history.''
power over the Io ca 1 In many coses Preparation ll dttds oC patients showed trua'
assistance expenditures. givesprompt.tempomryrelieC to be true in many cuee. In.
"In reality. he has full from such pain and itching tact, mal\Y doctors, them•'
authority to modify these tX· and actually helps ahrink selves, uae Prtparalion,.,. Of'
penditure.s by s u g g e s t l n g swellinJ of hemorrhoidal tia-recommend it for their tun~
ameodments to the law alld by l\lfJI caused by inflammation. il.ies. Preparation H ointment
supporting these suggestions T•ta by docton on h\Dl· or suppositorjea..
This comment, referring to
a S224 million boost in scilool
aid, to nearly $1.9 billion, trig-
gered some critielsn1 fron1
Democrats. in the legislature:• Mort1tti ---------------------said.
Jn attacking the new budget
forn1at . Oemocr·a tic Assembly
Speaker Bob r\1oretti ol Van
Nuys said. "By dividlng slate
operations from local assist·
ance, !he governor seems to be
indicati1g lhat he has no
Sen. George ~loseone (D·San
Francisco), the upper house
1najority leader. said, "The
splitting of the budget •.. ig-
nores the fundamfntal reality
thal very few o these pro-
grams are separate."
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
There have al\vays been a lot. of good reasons to pi('k Sylvania. Features
like Color Bright 100 '1\1 J1i('Lure tube fort.he sharpest picture available.
'fhe .solid-state Gibralt<ir 1 \t 1·hassis wilh plug-in, pull-out transistors fo r
reliable, long-life perforn1ancf>. Perma-Tint for pleasing flesh tones •• ,
auton1aLically .. Instant Color 1'1 for perrect color picture jn seconds. No\v
there's a really big reason. Right no\Y you can save up Lo $150 on a
1972 model color 'fV during our Sylvania Once-A-Year Special Sall'.
And there are comparable values on many other Sylvania teleVision$,
.stereo's, radios and tapes. So pardon us if we seem a little pu!iliy. But
now·s the time to buy your Sylvania.
SYLVAN IA CONSOLE COLOR
TV MODEL CLl 253 in E<Hly
American style wilh 25" ldiag. meas.)
:.creen, Gibraltar 851 \t chassis and
Jnslant Color 1 \I.
SYLVANIA CONSOLE COLOR
TV MODEL CL1467 in Modil"-
ranean style with gi1nt 25" (diag.
meas.) screen and Gibraltar 1001 ~
chassis with Jost.ant Push-button
Tuning.
SYLVANIA CONSOLE COLOR
TV MODEL CL14681n a ... icotyl•
has giant 25" (diag. meas.) screen,
Gibraltar lOOTM ch~is with Instant
Push-button Tuning aod Perma-Tint
controL
SAVE $100
Now Only $569.95
SYLVANIA COLOR TV MODEL
CLl 211 in Contempor.11ry style. Has
riant 25" (diag. meas.) screen and the
Gibraltar 85'1''1 chassis witb Penna-Tint
contiol. Stand included.
Only $519.95
SAVE $150
Now Only $845
SYLVANIA CONSOLE COLOR
TV MODEL CE1197 in Moditer·
raneanat~e. Has bi( 21 "(diag.mea~.)
screen andUibraltar 85'rM chassis.
Only $469.95
SAVE $150
Now Only $845
SYLVANIA CONSOLE COLOR
TV MODEL CL1257 in Mediter-
ranean style features giant 25" (diag.
me~.) screen, Gibraltar 85 ·m chassis
and Penna-Tint control.
SAVE $100
Now Only $569.95
Hurry! Limited quantities at these Special Sale prices.
l11tegrlt11 and Depe11dal>llltt1 slnee 1947 • • ~~ .. ~-~~~~.~~~.~~~-·.• .... ~
QUALITY SBiYJCE
• •
•, .. .. ..
" •' " .• -· ~
• • • ' l
• '
" .· .. ·' ·' 1 • •
• . •
•
' ,
' . ' ..
' . ' .
. ' '
' '
Fo1· The
Record
:~Dissolutions
~ 81 Marriage
" '
. : . Denth Notices
ARBU~&SON
WES'l'ClJtF MORTUARY
m E. 17111 St.. Cost<• Mesa
'411111 • BAL'I'I: llERGERON
, , FUNERAL HOME
. ~Coro .. dtl Mar 11i.t11t
: • Co1l1 Meaa ..._UU
' .
• BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadw1y, Costa M,11
IJ 1-14:11 • McCORMICK l.AGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1195 Llguna CenyOI Jld.
ftl-9111 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PAIUC
• Cemetery Mortuary
' Ch•ptl '
"" -S$OO Pacific 'View Drive
Newport Beach. Callfornl1
~1700 • PEElt FAMILY
COLONIAL FIJNEJl,AL
HOME
1111 Bol11 AYl1
WatDtlJllttr Q3.UU • •· • SMrrBS' MOBru.JIT t en Mall 111.
'• R-,W. S..dl l .... •
I
Physician
Takes Post
In Count}' ..
SANTA ANA-Dr. Ma"'1all
P. Stonestreet, a aurgeon h'ooi
Anaheim, will be in.stalled Jin.
29 as the Mtb president of the
Orange County Medical Asso-
ciation.
He succeeds Dr. Fred M.
Kay, 1n obstetr ici an·
gynecologis t from Fullerton.
Also scheduled lo be ln-
~stalled during ceremonies at
the Santa Ana Country Club is
Dr. John F, Farrer, a
TAKES POSITION
Or. StonestrHt
. , .. ... . .. , ... -....... ~
DAILY "I.Of JJ
Pollee Slaying
County Lawmen
rtenttOUI •utOtlU "'C'f:tTHMIS llJSHIU:I IMtK• ft C.IPIT ~ IT,,J'IMINT M~I ftA'TSMUT IUltl.•IOI CIMlaT O" 'hll!
,,.._...,......,.....,.... 11 _,.. Ml~ 1"" ~ ,_,_,.Iii <MIM t.1111-. lfATI ti ULll'OltflA '°a
et! .. , • THI C04nlTY OJ' OllAHll MlllitAGIPUIL~HINOCO .. lllW. t~Nf"-INJ~i~J ~ ltett rl ~A.*:rr ~ ....,.._ """9t ~·di. C.llt. ........ IWdl. t.lllWN• rrJ •• r. ~ IGA IMCNIN .. .= ~~.' I w. c-1 HWY-""""" c..r.r~-. • C•llWJilr "" frrfOTlCI IS Hlll!IV O•VIN ~ lllf
Ttilt MIMllt 11 ~~ c~ 1W ~ ,_llltrlo )U .... Mltllet OrfW, .....,,.,, t,...hrt tf 11M •Mw M_. .....,.,
lf!ll{WICllML I~, (1llttrl'lffi !ht! 111 -Nlvlllf Ci.ill'lt Hlllllt ~ ~'d L ~ Tith ""-lntl4 II llllnt ~IKMlll llW I Mid ftC.-.nt 1r1 '°""lrM .. fOe ni-.
1lllt INtMlt!W "*' with !tie Cau"ty cw ... 11!1t11. Wltll ,.... flllC ... WY ....... n. "" the .rtt<• ~ flt ~91\ft ~::'I:..,.; c.c. •· 1'1f. _...,. '-C.W-IM. tf 1M cltrt. .. ._ • ...,. tt1t!llM ~ • ., J'f h~ J. O.,Uty CW!llr ~rtllttfll It ""'..,it ltlfm, W'MI "'• ....... ,.,
Watch New Bill
SACRAMENTO -Orange
County law enforcement or·
ficers are watching with
strong Interest for a piece of
legislation in the 1972 session
ol the Callfornia Legislature.
Jf they C<luld trade places
with lawmakers tor 10
minutes, It would pass
unanlmowly.
The propcoed legislation
Cit,_ • 1111-tlt'-tt"I tlltd Vfitt. 1tll (11;/\fy ~ .. It frlt' .,....,..,._ jt 1f1t tf'flu ' ''*" Cfttl! ~ °''T. Ct1t1111V .ri: Ole. U. 1'1f. ~ ''*' tt!Of,...1, ~·· Wit••""*" 1M ltuM!tNd Ott,.._ c .... 1 DtllY ~lttf. ~ ttnttr • MtMi:; ~tv CMltr lat'"*"' Mt S...,~ OIJ'<ot ..... &.itt. murder to kJll 1 policeman ln JfMlt'Y •, 11. 11. n. 1tn ~1 c t. '''"' ueo. u. A.Mtlft, .c11uw111• •1 .. wtikll
I 11 nit JOitc:t of lllJ.iNt• et f!lt .. .....,., ... the line or duty_ .LEGAL NOTICE ~Wllllltltid Of'tflff ~at Oall'I ,1 .. t. ." •11 ~.,.. Hrl•l"'f!e -..... ._ ....
Durlnf his o~nlng da•'---:::-::=-:::=-=====---IDtamlltr .If. ••n •1111 J.t"".,., ~ u, JC."" feetcltl'll. wlll'lkl tMW .......,,, ....., ,,~ ~ 1 ltn »tJ.71 .,.. flr11 ""blltt11911 ., tt1i. "*"'.. r .. -•~ech, Gov. Ronald Reagan '1cr1T1ou1 aut1N1u o.1M J•""'u'v IL 1m -ltAMI tTATIMIHT' T McC Oi11f1 le supported the bill authored by '"'-f611owt,. ,.,_ 11 tt1"' wa1,.... LEGAL Nanez L::" o:ut11r:lll'I '
Sen. JI. L. Richardson (R· .. : 111 £, c AL , a 11 0 •0 •1 •, l!wtevtw•., lhl wlu
I fl lhol t0.Yt lltlfttld ... ...., Arcadia ) but it has not ·yet AUOCtA'flS, ""' w.y ......... "·"· tUJ'llll Oil C.UllT 0, THI •u•Utl. WILLl.\MI AlfD SOlllWIOlll
bee ' ... U~4. S111t1 Alll, (•!11 .. l>!t nm tTATI 0, CALIPOllMIA ,o. •"-•II u... n introduced . WllU•m "· ltoe•O.nl, om Way"" THI COUNTY Of O*AM•• Mt ...... OIN1 ltn.{. lt;lll ••
A carbon copy passed the ~~ .. =· 1:11;.1;;1~=.:n:Y 11'1 oaoi• ,0~·H~'~.1.us• .,0• LM AflfflN. c111'-1t ""' Senate last year, only to be 111C11v1e1u1L cMANll o• 111.t..1i11 t•i. uni •w111 Ati. .... r1 fw il,)IKt;i.t• killed in the A 5 s em b I y wuii.m "· •rt1~~1 111 "'-Mtntr e1 1"' ""'ll<111°"., lll<k "'utol!W!ttl O•tllff Cot1f 0.11.-,flit•
urologist from Newport -----------
Beach, who will assume duties
would make It first degree T>lk ll•ltn1..,I !UH whn 11'141 CllU!lt'r Otlt S11v.,.1 111111 DMtfll'I lttvtru. Ftt Jtl'ltll'Y 11 lt. ts trwl ,.., .. ,., 1 ltri Criminal Justice Committee. c11rt ., O••llM c111,1n1-,. °"' Dtc. 11. ,,,1. ,,.._ o1 NW'\t. • • , .. ,.
Th A d. I · I t h lh Arlllur I!. ICt ... r, °'""'"' C111111ty l1'141 1Nlktl1111 ., Ille:-Dllt-5-M e rca 11 eg1s a or as c1tr-. NICI o.t1ot111 .s11Y•111 IOI' CNll'IM .i ""'"'·
vowed to push harder for ,1 .. n "•"'"' ..,. ru.,. i11 _,,,, .1111 n -1----,:-:: •"a~AL,.,.~N::-::o=TJ::::CE=----of presidtnt.f:lect of t h e
association,
Dr. Philip H. McFarland, an
orthopedic surgeon I r o m
Fullerton, will be fnalalled u
s e c r e t a ry-treasurer and
Dr. Carl J. Paul will be re.in-
stalled as eslitor cf the
41sooiation's monthly journal,
•'"The Bu!Jetin."
Newly elected to !.he CX:MA 's
Board of Directors are
Doctors Norman Arnett or
•Fullerton ••d w. Fredertck
O'Connell of Tustin. Con·
linuing board members are
Doctors Alan V. Andrews of
Newport Beach, John D. Ball,
Jr. of Santa Ana, George H.
Berry of Huntington Beach,
G-ON:lon W. Hodges of Newport
Beach. Charles Plows of
Anaheim, Harry Siemonsma
of Orange and Kay.
Delegates to the California
?w1edical Association (CMA)
include Doctors Richard F.
Altman of Newport Beach,
Andrews, Ball, Vincent P.
Carroll of Laguna Beach, A.
Norton Donaldson of Santa
Ana, David Gtddes of Santa
Ana. Wallace A. Gerrie of
Newport Beach, Ralph E.
Graham of Orange, Kay,
Laurence A. Mosier of Garden
Grove. Paul, Plows, Shirley
M. Schneider of Orange,
Stonestreet and Arthur F.
Thompson of Newport Beach.
Serving as alternate
delegates to the CMA will be
Doctors Warren Bostick of
Irvine, McLemore Bouchelle
of Anaheim, C. William Burrill
of Westminster. James R.
Doyle of Tustin. Thomas
Dorsey of Santa Ana. Farrer,
Martin J . Gavin of Anaheim,
Harvey L. Higger of Anaheim,
Gene Llewellyn of San
Clemente. McFarland, Robert
Neu of Garden Grove, Tom
Robinson of Newport Beach,
Melville Singer of Garden
Grove, Ardath Wightman of
Fullerton and Lyle Voge of
Orange.
Delhi Canal '
lmprp~g
Completed
SANTA ANA -A UIOO·foot
section of the santa Ana-Delhi
Flood Control channel ha~
been improved at a cost of
Sl89,5&6, the Orange County
Flood Control District an·
nounced today.
The channel extends from
Warner Avenue in south Santa
Ana to Upper Newport Bay.
The improved sect i o n
between Dyer Road and the
Southern Pacific t r a c k s
replaces the pr~lously ex·
Is ti n g "hydraulically in·
adequate and ·higb"ly trodib\e
earthen drainage facility." the
district explained.' t
'1Greatly i.m p io1v e d pro-
ttctlon and reduced m•in·
tenance costs wW result," a
~spokesman said.
Contractor on tbe ·riob Was
Slllly-Miller Contractthg C>m·
pany of Orange. This work was
completed in six months
beginning last July 1.
The job involved 1,000 feet
of reinforced concrete· channel
and 89 feet of a double con-
crete culvert atructure under
Dyer Road.
Books Donated
Education Expert Urges
Practical Experience
. "ubH.ntd 0.•lltt Cotll OtltY l"Hot, -llllt 1 • ...,,, ••I• tHlkalloll '""' , ... .,. 14.1 . passage of the measure tins 0teM1Mr 21. .. ''" .,.,. J,,...,,,y '· 11, "'"' ni.,.. '" •P1t1t111oi> .,,._tlfi1 '"''1-------------year pointing out factors in· ltn l:ut-n !Mir"'""' o. U11111" 10 111:1ct 0.11 k•r-••*I • ,.,. 1"4 Oflwtll t(1rrt11. NOTICI Olt INTIMOIO volved in the slaying of LEGAL NOTICE Now, tt,.,,,,,,, n 1t 1'141•HY or,.,.,.•"' TtllANl'lll .t.Ho LIAlllACK
la wmen dl<Kltd, lhtl 111 ""°"' lll.,ffl1fd In NOllC• h lllrlltly •l~lll ,1111 JOl'ln l . 11!d 111111•• 6o ••Ht< ~tore !ht Court 111 FIM:l'llf' MD lr11111 .. ., ot 1u1 ••~• During 1971 the California ,ICTITIOUt IU•ll•ISS 0tp1r1m•n1 l on !ht :Nth d•Y ot J111, S•r"t (1,,· ii CMlt ,,,.,,~ Ct!ltor1111 ~ ' NAMI ITATIMINT tt)7, ti t ;>O o'U«-A.M,, 01 11ld dlV to ' • • '11 toll W3S 14 Officers killed. Tiit lotl0Wi11t "I.Oii 11 dGIO'lf bv1lntn lhOW ctuu Why IUCh aoolicUlon tor ~i;~11 lop:::~.tfo!.'\11 "~'':::~~Pr("'',"' ~I'
D ' th t 12 th ti: {h1n1t ol n1mt1 1h01<td llOI bl 1•1nttld, ' 1 1 on"' •· ur1ng e pas years, e NA'flON.O.L SEWING CENTER OF II 11 '"""" Cf/J,•ed 11\11. ("'' ~t thl1 Jn"'"""' 'fr1111••••• ILtnO<l. ol 11Jl College! and unlver1ities
should encourage student.a to
take time off before obtaining
a college degree as one
method ot obtaining a better
education, Frank Newman,
chairman or the U.S. Health
Education and Welfare Task
Force on Higher education
said Monday.
Newman, spoke before an
audience of more than .100
members of College Entrance
Examination Board (CEEB I
at the Newporter Inn.
Newman's topic was ,
"Realism with Resources:
Forcing Education to Face !he
J>robJems Which Won't Stay
Under the Rug ."
He emphasized that one of
those problems is t h a t
educators can °no longer
argue that going lo college and
getting a · degree w i 11
guarantee a good-paying job,"
Newman urged the
educators, and many or them
admissions officers, to think of
~ollege u "general education,
preparation for I i f e -n o t
preparation for a career."
He pointed to economic facts
that of the five top growth
jobs, market~lerical. sales,
skilled craftsmen, mana~ers
and other b I u e ·co 11 a r
workers-only a few might re--
quire a college degree.
He asked educators to open
the question of wise fundine to
debate.
"We cannot ask for more
and more money for higher
education if we continue to
spend it as we have in the
past," he said, speaking
specifically of Ph.D. programt
in English and history, which
although in low demand on the
Job 'market, are in oversupply
in CCllleges.
Newman sald that past bar--
rlera to entering college have
Assessment
Approved
MIDWAY CITY An
assessment district to improve
portions of Bishop Avenue and
Jackson Street in Midway Ci-
ty, an unincorporated area
surrounded by Westminster
and just north of lluntington
Beach, has been approved by
the Orange County Board of
Supervisor~.
The county Road Depart·
ment has been directed to do
p(~llminary engineering
studies and prepare an assess.
ment petition for property
ownerst si,.natures.
The roa<Jways proposed tor
lmproyement extend betlfeen
Beach Boulevard and Bi3hop
Avenue two blocks to the east
and between Bishop and
Roosevelt Avenue.
Fire Truck
Buys OK'd
rate WaS 100 lawmen slain COSTA MESA, J7~ Suitt HI, Htrbot Or/Jtr To 5Ntw Ctlllt ti. pua1!1htd ln !l'lt South Fifth Str"'· Coty of Sorln1ll•1a, been lack Of n10ney and poor ' 81Yd., (O>tl M11•, (1111, IH1' D ... ll y PILOT 1 new•P•l>f< of t•ntttl lllu,011 tl\d lh•t llld lnltndH Tr1n1lt••~ early grades, but that these The C(lUrts may n 0 W Montoomerr w,1,,1, 2100 Pt11r1on. clrcu1111on. 0,.nttld In 111o uiuniv. 1t 11111 IL•••o•l, Flru Prot1u1on11 L111lno Co.
h "'--· designate--Oe,....nding u p 0 0 Cn•t• Mfll. c1111. 9262' one• ••en wt•k ,0, tou• 1u<<tn1•• wt••• tnttn•h 10 1 .. 1.-ti•c• 10 •~id John L ave ut:t:n Virtually eliminated . t"'• . Th!I b!/1l114u 11 0.lno CO<tlJllCte.:l by tn prier 10 !ht div 01 II•<! ttoitlne. Fl1cllll!•, M.0., Trt nl!OfCf 'l•u~t), tht with open admission and circumstances-first to second 1n<11vld\l•I, 0111d th11 ore. 1•, 1111 1110 o••M1111I ••01>1nv • a•n•r•1 o, • deg r 0 e m Ur de 0 r Monloomtri Welo rl HARMON C. SCOVILL! •crh>tion ~ wfl!<l'I 11 11 lollo,.,-t, lo-wd finanCJa) aid, r 'f~ll 11•ttmtnt lolld with I/It Ce<mtv .JUGll' cl 1110 Suotnor Cturt Mtfllr.11 1!<1ulpm1nt. Furnllur1 Ind F .... , Th b I manslaughter. C!•rk o4 OrtflM C111,1111-,. on 1 Dec JO, 1t11. Otbera~ '"" tlllck 111v1111 !u•••. •nd toc11...i 11 1!•1 11 .. ~,, 51,,,, • e arr er OUght to be "0ve h Jf Of the !U ts IY lt~trlr J, Mlddu, 0.0\lty C:ounh Ult M1c.o.r1~~r ltvl., A", Nt. n C•tv 01 Cotlt M~1•. c1111ornlf 1n<! 1tt•! motivation,'' he said in pro-r a spec c11rk. 111111 A111, c11u. 1a1d ••I• '"" 1111rNck 1r1n111<11on 11 ,,
t. G l B'\l f d' come from an experienced . " no'4 'f11•: ss1-t1•J ~· con•~mm111111 on '"' 111h 111• 01 J~~ mo 1ng a . . 1 ·type un 1ng . Pu1111,~.1d ora11t• Co111 0111v Pilot, '" ~·•·•• ~.,...,, ~.,.,.. un. 11 10 • m. 11 1h1 .i11c1 ei of a community service.prac· criminal group where over SO J•l'lua,..,. ,, 11, 11. ,,, 1t1t 14\S 11 Pub11111~ 0•111tt '"''t 01r1v Poiot, 11r11 Pro,..1,1-1 L•••ln• co, •t 11i1 ti.cal educati'on. ,..,,.rcent of the sus......,.ts had 01c1m1>1r 11. 11, 1t71 •"" Jtnu•rv '· 11, s.,111 111111 StrMt, cu, el S•rlnt1111c. ,.... r---LEGAL NOTICE 1t12 ll-<1·11 u11na11.
Under his program. a stu· prior records for assault, Sen. J1r11 1"1ot1u1a ... 1 L111.n1
Rlchardson said. ,ICTITIOUS IUSINISS c-.."y dent could wait after high LEGAL NOTICE Ltrrv L CC1"11. IK•11a•Y School graduatl.0n befor enter· "Only 15 percent of those NAM• STAT•MENT ,1,.1 ,.,,1 .. ,..,..1 L..,,1111 ci.
h ed · h k'\j' \' f 'fhe foltowl11t otrlO/ll trt doono P.O. It• ll4* ing college or leave college for c arg wll 1 1ng po ice o · but1n111 '" su,1111011 cou•T o, THI s •• 1~1,111111, llifftt,tt ,21 .. fi cers had no prior criminal TAXNIA~ L 'fO .. llJlA 0011 c .. c11, ITATI 0, CALll"OllNI ... 'Oil Pub lld1M Or111 .. Cotti O.ltr a period of time and ~·ork for Huntl~lllfl Bttch, Ctlll TH I COUNTY 01" OllANOI J111~·~ "· lt12 p ·.,
~,, an approved communi'ty proi·· arrest history," he added. C1rm1~ '· Gullo, 119'3 Ottr s1.. NO, A-n.u
Th I · J t 'd tb'rd FO)>Unllln VIII•-,., Call! NOTlCI 01" HIAlllNO 01" ~ll'flTtON I e eg1s a or Sal II I Robel! o. °"''"· 1Ht2 Rtnt1or, Hun· l"OR ~110&.t.TI ., WILL ANO LfT .1---cLo-==oAcLccN·,-OTJ=-ccE---ec · point underSC(lres urgency of t11191on e11ch. c1111 T111s TIST.t.MINT..,11v •u "Practical experience im-t'ff · k .. 1 I. to Jame1 R. Sltltr. 1111 .., O••I Cl•(le. E11111 01 FlORENCE H. P1c1tE111NG, -------------ed t' ., N S I en1ng C 0 p · I I TI g Hun1lnt1on Btlth, Ctlil D-ct••ffi L•OAL NOTICI proves uca !On, ewman establish either death or life in Thll bvtllltU 11 beln1 colldutltd b• I NOTICE 15 HEREBV GIVEN tha! 1~1h Nl.W~OllT-MllA UHl,110 ICHOOL Said. . Gtl'llrtl Ptrtntr1hlp. ~lc~trl111 htt tll~ htrtln 1 Ptlotl°" tor DIS'flllCT He added this is only one or pr1.son as the penally. Ctrm111 F. Gullo orObtlt ol will .,.,, l11uanc:• ol llt!ttl Noltle• lllYlll ......
the th'.ngs that could be done He said many such Jtot>trt o. o,ue•11 'ft1t1me"''" to ~.1111-r r1,11r•nc:• to NO'flCf is Hl!"lllll'Y G1vl!N tMt tfl• . , , J1mt1 lit. S 1ltr w11lch 11 midi '°"' lurthtr Plrl eul1r1, Ind 80tnl fl llklc1!1011 Ill 1"t NtwN11•MHI to insure that those who at· hom1c1des involved suspecL!I Th l1 t1111m1nt 111..i w1111 1111 c"""'"' 11111 th• t+mt •rtO Piie• of h1arln1 th• Unll!td knM• Oltlrtct ti 0,.11 .. c.,..,,.,. unde so t of I I Cltrk of O•lhll Cou"ty o"~ 01ctmbtr ):), ••mt htl Mt/I, •• fo• J'""''Y ,5. 1tn .• , Ctlltornl•. wit! rKtlYt Mtltd •Id• ~ ,.; tended college would benelit r ~me r ~ga 1r11. 8Y e1v1r!r J . M1dda•, 0111111Y t::le! 1.m., In 1111 coor!room 01 D•o•r•-1i:oa A.M, ., "'' JO/II d•.,. 11'1 Jtn"''"' most from it programs. supervision such as prison covnl'f Cltrk. m1n1 No l ot ,.1, cour1. •1 100 c1v1( 1111 '' "" o111c1 o1 ttld SthonJ Olt•r lct
I ·' 'j b I' f '11&4' Ctn!t< Drlvt w111, In !hi CllV OI S1nta l.C•ltd ti 1151 Pltctnllt ..,.....,..,. Coi•~ CEEB is meeting al the paro e or JS! pro a ion, rom Pu1111111td °''"" C01t1t 0111y Plro1. An•, c1111orn1t M•it. ,,111 • .,1,, 11 whkh tlm• 1;1, bldi
Newporter Inn th r 0 u g h,...".P:r1='o:r..;cr~i~m~i~n;•:lca~c~t~s.~:----1-'-'"-'-'-"-'1';';:";;'-,":r'~··,';;":;';;;;;;;--'-''-'·-11 011..:! J1ny1rv 7, 1t11 will bt llUb!lcly ~ 1n11 •••II tor: W. £, $1 JOHN Ntw' '-""'l11m1nt ltr 'f1Wlllklt Wednesday. LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE county c;t••~ kt1oo1 s .. wl(t•
I ---.;:;;~;;:.;;;;;:,...--.1------.;:;:;-,...------IUtllTOH, GAULOUI', All blcll tr. lo 0. Ill iccor.Wnct W•I~ l j" a.All U1' THOM,.SOH tllll NILSON Cl)ftdll!OIU lt1Hrlldlon1 ind S"clflctllon• l"IC'flTIOUS IUSINE51 ,IC'flTIOUI IUStNISS 11l4 s...,th Ptl11tw AYllllll wl>lch tre llOW on ni. In trtt off!ca el t~•
Press Club
Scholarsliips
Awarded
NAMI! ITATEMt:NT NAMI ITATIMllNT W~llllff, c111i.r11la Mttll rurcl'l1ll1111 ..... nt ol Wld SCl'lool OlilflCI Tiit lollowong Pl~n It dtl"" bu1lnes1 Tiit lolltwl"I otrlOlll 1,1 Oalnt !•,11: Ctlll .~' ... 1,u,1.._. IUI P!tCll'tllt Avtm1t, CO.It Mtii'. II' llulll'll•S II ' "' o,,,.,,. • ....-t m-r Ctlll0f'nt1 THE GUtOE. 1111 Crt1lvlew Drive, SOJIT~lLE CO .. 11,.2 Wtlltrl'I PuDl!lllt<I Or1nte CNJI Otllv '11(11. Etc.II b!fdw mull iul:lmll • bid tl'Mi•! Lll•'"1 lttch. c1nf tt~I Avr111H1, U"!t 17, Stt11I011, Ctllfornl• J1nutrr 11, n. 11· 1971 11·'1 In I/It IOf'm .i 1 t1rn11.ii or c•lllltr•1 LtrrY Wttntr, )Ill Crtllv[fW' Drl\'t, Clltrlt1 L. Wood, 6l:l2 Br"ltnolt OrlYt, chKlo or 1 bid bond Mll tl lo flvf H<ctnl LatUllt Bttch, Cillf. Hunt1nolf'n 811c ... C•lll, f!IJ of rht ...,Ol<nl of th• bit, mt111 Tl'll1 butl"tu i1 be!llt t0<1duclt<1 bY tn Ntllle •· Wooo:t. 4o172 lr"ltllll Drlvt, LEGAL NOTICE 111~1Dlt IO ll'lt orlltr •I 1111 NtwHl't-M111 lr.dlvldutl, Hu~llntlcn 8rtci'I, Cillf. ---Unllltd klloOl Olllr!cl A, P1rlorm1n<~ L•trv Wllh•r T~I• bullntst 11 bllllt COlldVC:ltd by • LIGAL NO'flCf: 8-m1-,. .,. rpqul•Pd ., .,.. lllW.••t!"" ct ~lrl11tnJ'll11. NOTIC! 15 HEREBY GIVEN tntt 11•1 lht Oltlrlct. 111 lhl tYlnl o1 !ollurt 1'1 Thll llt!tmtnl flltd with tht Coulltv /l/Ch1rt11 L. Wood. lellowlne llimt"' found or 11vo<! P•ootrtv t nttt Into WCft contrtcl, t/lt tu!I 1um Cl•r-cl Or1ng1 Countv on: DK. 23, lftl 1 , 11 8 I J d De C /1/Ntltl1 I, Wtto4 l'l1v1 ~n h•ld bv lht POilet D1p1rtm1nl htrto w I 0. torftlllHI to atld ~c.1\001 '(; ,~ tvtr y " Mad o~ puty ounty lhll 1tt1•m~I ltltd will\ !ht Cou11ty ol !ttt City al (Dtl l M111 llH' 1 ~rlod In Dl1l•lcl ~ Ortn11 COVlllV.
SANTA N Sch I h. 1 · oil Cltfk ol Oran11 CCl'JnlV en · DK . n. lt". t•Cln ol nlnttv !'Ill 111-,.1: No bidder mtY wlll'ldrtw hl1 bit t0< t A A -0 ars lpS Publlll\!'11 Ortnlff' Coast Otll•F·IP~lol BY Btvtrly J, MaoHDx. Dtsiuty c .... n..., Ont •t<I bllit, two Dlut b•-''· 1-tOlll orrlod ot forty .Jive (ol.I) GIYI tlltr !ht worth Sl 125 have been award· Otcembtr 11 1,71 i nd Jinuerr , 11 11 Clt•k. blk11. o,,. ,, .. n bl-t, 1nr11 pur111 bl-•1 O•ll ttt ,.,,. tft• -1111 ltllrl'Of.
d · ' . tn ' ' ' 1• OAVIO I. TINOLll, NOT ICE IS FUJITHER GIVEN 11111 II 'f~t loard at Edutlllon at 1N1 Ntw-!· e to nine Orange County high l 3m-1 ATTOllNIY AT' LAW "" OW~tr IOOllfl •nd P•OY•t r.11 ,,,.,,. U111fl1t IUIMl Ol11tl(I ,....,,,." lh• school junior college and col· LEGAL NOTICE • NtwP111 Ctnt1• or1v1, •1111, '2t _,,...Ut11 "' tne "'~'''.,. w1ttt1n ••••n rl•hl to rtltc:t •11.,. ., •11 111c1t, •l'lll "°' . ' . .,. _ _, lltc:h, C•llforlll• nut (I) dlYI lcllawln1 lht PuD llttllon ot !hl1 llltltttrlJy KC .. l lllt !Owffl bid, tft11 ft lege JOUrnahsts by the Counfy Tlltt111t111: '44-J.UI Notlc•, 1n1 11111 lll•••!o 111t11 "'" In ttt• w•tv1 •11.,. lllfwrt1•1!iy or lrr1911J•rlty 111 Press Club J'ICTITIOUS BUSINlll ,1.a11 flnoMr, II th•r• 11e -· or 111 tllt cu.,. 01 1nf bid f9Ct1Ytd. . ' . . NAMI STATIM•NT l'ublllhld O••n11 Cots! DtllY ~Hot, tctlt Mela. In which Ulil lhf .WOJ>trly 0111111 Jt11uarr II. lt11 The nine Winners SUrv1ve~ a Tiit fclfowlnt perton 11 dol'll blf11ne11 O@ctmbtr 21, a, 1'11 allll J1n111ry 4, 11, 111111 O. told •I 111>bl!e 1ut1l011 at t 11m1 NIW,OllT<Ml!!S.t UNl,llO
month-long competition among 11: ''12 3US-n and d11• '" tM 111nau11t..i. SCHOOL 01sT1t1CT , WONDERFLAME LOGS. l • 7 TI OATEO: J1nu•rY 10, !112 of Orthtt (oull'iy. Ctllfornlt 33 students. The awards were Mon1c111r L•n•, Hunt lhttM 811c11, LEGAL NOTICE 11. e. NETH DwothY M1r\llt'I' lllt111r the 16th yearly honors pro-C.lllorn!1 nu1, CHIEF OF POLICE '11•cha1l111 AHllt S'fONE Atll'fS. !NC., 1611! Mon!tltlr "ubllthtO Or1n1e Co11t DtilY Piiot. •4-llM v!ded by the Press CJUb to aJd L1n1, H11111Jn1ton leKto, C1tlfornl• Hj)TIC• T:':a101T0tllS JtnutrY ll, 1112 12·1t Publ!lhed Ol'tlllt COAlt OtllY ,llol, the future education of the '™1· su~••101t cou•T o, TH• J•11u••Y 11 •llf J1t1Uary ''· ,,,. c.n Th\s bu1!111u II tolldue!M bY • COi'• STAT• OJI CALl,OJINIA LEGAL NOTICE students. -•H11n. l"Oll THI COUNTY 0' Oll&lfO• AJ:ike Ntephe . .a Nigerian Donald L. l-ltnrv. Ne. A·n•1• HOt1c1 o, oitlOLUTJON LEGAL NOTICE Prt1ldtn1 E1l1t• ot l-llHtllV 8EN'fON JAMES, O, PAllTNllllMI~ student at Fullerton Junior n°11 '"'""'n' wts 111~ wnh tht C1111"· 0tc11m. """llt N>llc• 11 M••bY 11v1n 11111 ~AUL LIO.AL NOTICI College, was given an· ad· ly Cl•rt ol Oran11 COUlllY on ~blf NOTICE u HEREIY OIVliN le 1111 L, Tll~VLOtll, Gt11trtl Plr!l'ltf, Ind NllWP'OtllT-M•IA UNIJ'llO 2l, 1fll . tredlton ol lllt tba\lt n.lmtd dtctd~nl CHARLES S~IP..LMAN, Llmllf'd F'•rtntr. tCNOOL OllT•ICT ditional $250 award, honoring CAAllL • •ois, •ttvi. 111•1 .n Pl•Mll'll navin. c111m1 11tl1111 111t 111r11oior. dol11t 11vtl11tt1 111\dfr 1/11 fl<· ltttlc• ln'ritl"' ''''
the late Carr j e Lou r:1,0~. -:;',1~:: ~:i':.r"I• M6lt ll1ltJ dl<ll'Gtlll 1r1 rr.ulrltCI to n11 11'11111, tltlDlll llrm 111m1 Ind ll"f'lt ti 'flltl!NOCO NOTICf IS HEREl'Y GIVl!H Illa! 1~1 S th 1 d f A h . 1...,. ' W Ill 11\t 111c.1t1ry "'llUCl'lt", 111 W.. tfflct ,lllOOUCTS COMl"ANV, f'I 2 J 0' IOlnl at lfllic•ll•n of 1111 N,...110,,·Mt11 U er an , ormer na eun tM-..... p 1,, 1 ltf tht cl1r~ of !ht lbOve tntltltd c111rt, or Ll.,.lllwH L1111, CllY 11 Clll'-Ml Mir. U"lll..:1 kllool OlllrlCI o1 Ortn .. Clllln" Bulletin society editor · ' 10 P•tllnl tlltm, w1111 1111 111c:•1ll,..,. Cou"t.,. ., 0r1n-tt. s1111 ot c,1110,.,1., oit c11aor11r1, will rtc1lv• Mttld llltli up ,. · ~ubtl"'"' Ort~a• COit! OtltY Piiot voucMrt. to lh• undertl1nM ti 11'11 tfflct "'11'1• 111 fltY ot J11111try, un, bY mutu11 n·oo A.M. on 1~1 2'1h div of Jtllllt r-,. Ntephe plans to return to 0~mbtr a , 1'71 '"" Jam1arv 4• n, If; of n1r 1tt.wn1Pt. GRAHAM &-JAMIS, ''-' contt11•. dl•IOl\lt lllt 111111 11mrr...i 1t12 tr ll'tt offlct .i wld Stl'lool Ol"•kl,
Nineria to start an American-1'72 3:Jt'" weu Ck••11 Boul•v•rd, sune nr, L-""".,"''' •1141 1•rmlt1t11 111t1r ,,111111n1 lt<tttd a! 11J1 ~11t111111 Avt11vt Ci»'•
I" 8t8Ch, Cl!lfMlllt '*'· llflllc~ 11"" 1lat1 ,, 11rt111r1 111tr1l11. Meta, Ctllfor11l1 ti w!llCll llmt t.lf llkh style newspaper, ICC(lrding to LEGAL NOTICE o1 bu11,,.,. ti ~ urw11n11n1111 r" •II mil· Saltl tu11111u 111 "'-tul\11'1 will be t'"'· will t11 1111btlc1y Olltlltd ,1141 rNd Sch la sh. h 1'rman M 1tr1 Ptrltlllllll to,,,. ttl•I• DI ttltl d•c .. ciuc•td "' PAUL L. TtllAYLOR, Wiii wilt for : 0 r lp C0-C a ft, dtnl, W!lllln four lnOlllht Iliff 1111 flrll oo~ 11111 tll<hl•tt 111 UtllllltltJ 11\11 debts •UT•"'TIC Vi Smith. '~Z~~O~/.:~:,.~",..E:• llUbllclllon ol 11111 110llc1. "'' 1.,. firm '"" r~Yt 111 mOl'l lti"' ""'" ·~~~;~~MUNICATIONS
1971 winners are: H"gh 'f~e to!lowlno Pt•Mlr"lt ''' deln1 DttM Dtcembtr 2'· ltn. Pay1Dlt le Ill• firm. HAJllOrt Vtl!W SCHOOL 1 blillneu 1., Mary Etllft Jtl'lllt Furllltr 11elltt It l>l•tbY 11~111 !l'ltt l!'tt All bldt 1,1 lo 0. In ..:cordinc:t wl!'ll School-Carol Clio~. Sunny s & R LE ... SING COMPANY 1tn EllKU!rlll " IM Wlll .. undtflltned will ""' bl flSJ!Ollllble. l•om Co1W1rtl11111. Int Ir II c 11111 1. .,,.,
Hills, $175; Mike Fairchild, Sw111 Drlvt, C<ata Mew, C1lllorn!1 OtllAHA:.•.•~.,.~.~M dtc.MtRI !I'll• d•Y o" '"' s""V ,"!,l~o~Ufl ~;'turrH Sll9Cll!(tl'°"1, w111t11 trt "-Oii 1111 1"
h 'd\ '1611 1 • Tillll'ltl A VYlt lly CHARLE! PEL.__ n 1 twn tl\1 offlct ol 1111 l"urt11t1l111 Altnl o1 tllll Western, S75; Jo n D1 on, Rk111rd H. s111ve1v. 1'11 swen D•l.,.t, '1.,_· W•<t oc .. ~ •fvt1 "'''' n, n•m• or In ~· ~rrr;• f fhtcll17i;· 1 thl SclloOl 0111r1e1, llJJ ~l•c•"111 Anllut, Western, $50: Denise May, co1t1 M11a, C•lllarni1 '7616 Leni INc~ Ctl!ll,..;i. ta•t DAT!D A w ml'ltle!l, • r11 a, • Co1t1 M•••· Ca!llornl•.
Senora and Debra Anderson' P1~I G. R1n<!rll, IJlll 8•odo; "'vt .. Til· (JU) 4jS .. QJ hi dlY ol J•nu•,•Y· 1.tn. Itch bldffr lrnill lubmlt 1 ~f bell6 P~rtmou111, C1lllornl11 tnn2 Att0r11en lor l••<utrlt 11•u1 L. ,,.,. r Ml~I to llvt "' c•111 (II) o1 tl\t tmOlllll Garden Grove, b on or a b I e Thlt b\/11 ... n 11 IHlln1 condvcted bY • Publllhed Or•n1• ca111 oa!tv ,11a1 ~111111111td °''""' C.oett DlllY 1111o1. at tl'tt bid, m1H ,otytbl• lo ttw llnl•r ~1
mentl·on. P1•ll!IP'1hlo. Otctmbtr 21, lt71 Incl J111111rv '· 11, 11. Jtnu1ry 11, lf7t n-l't lllt N~·M••• Ullltled ICl'!Otl Ohtrlct. 111cr.1•d H. SMvely 1,,1 nu.n "' P•rlDl'm~nc1 IO!ld m1y bl r1111F•ld 11 Junior C.Ollege, Ma r c i P1u1 o. Rtndr11 LEGAL NOTICE •ht dttcrtt lon 01 111, 0111r1c1. 1n 1111 • .,.,11, 'fr.!1 tl•lfmtnl llltd with 1111 Cou11ty al llllllrf lo '"''r lnta well c-••d, the Dodson. CY pre I ~ , $250: Clerk OI O•tnt• Coul'I,.,. Oii OK. LEGAL NOTICE lfOTICI ,0 c111:101To•1 ••11U1cu., 1111 chack w111 iwo hl•ltlttcr, or
Barbara Lohman Fullerton 30• nn. av 11"1r1y J. M•ddo•. OePutY 1u~••10• cou11T oP THI 111 c• .. " • bonll. ,,,. 11111 ""'" th1rtn1 ' ' County Ci.r-. ITATI 0' CALl,OllNI& llOll win M forftltK lo ltld 5ChMI Oltrrl(l of $125; Steve Bryan, Cyprtss, ,1Sl)0 NOTICI TO Ctlll.OITOJll TH• COUNTY 0' OllANfl O•~llO• Cou11ly, $50, and Michael Kataoka, Publ.l1hed o ....... Co.Ill 0111\' Pilot, SUl"lllllOll COU•T Oil TNI NI .... ,,,. No btddtr m1y Wlllldr1w hit bid ,,, I J~n~ftrl •· ll, 11, 15, 1'11 3.olll ·11 STAT• 0, CALl,Otl:NIA 'Oil Jtlt,.. ~ ·~ALOING aAk'-1 EAST· "'lod tf fer ly-tlvt (6 ) dtYJ tltlt' l~t Cypreq, honorable mention. THI COUNTY 0, ,OllAHll MAN. •k• iPALDING •. USTMAN, o:1 .. d•t• Ml for 1111 .ot11ln1 IMrtol.
C II A 1 h Ech t LEGAL NOTICE Ne .. A·1'Sl1 c ttd Tf\t aoard ti !l11t1llM oc trot N-..cn-0 egc--..io n eves e, !1ltlf at ALLENI l!SllLLI VOUNO, ':0Tic1 II MEllflY GIVEN lo !tit Mtta UlllllM Scholl 0t1lrlC1 .... ,..,.. "'' $250; Michael Bower and Lin· 1'1cr1T1ous 1ut1N•ss l)e(lflted. c,1e1111111 ti 11,, •t>ovt "'mttl dKl!Hnl "'"' to r111c:1 •"Y e1 •II bldt. tlld llDI
da B••••, $15 each ·, Tom NAMI ITATIM•NT NOTICE ts HEll.EIY GIVIN ,, Tiii llltl tll WMl\t h•'fflll cttlmt 1111"''"" lltCt ... ru,, •cctet , ... ,_, •If. •!Id I• ........ 'f~• fellowlnt 111r10111 ''' 11111111 ~edlllll'I ~ tt't• •llcwe l\llMllll lfteldtlll 11141 dlUdlftl tr• ,....,lrH It Ill• Nm. ••1"' 'n~ l"'Otll'lttlr-,. er lrrHuMl,lty In Gorman. honorable mention. butlnt•• ••: t1111 111 Ptrs0111 ll•wlne c11rmt t1t111,1 11\.t wllll ,... ""'"'l'Y \llUCl!tr1, 111 1'lt tlllct "'.,. ~ rKlllYH,
1 d t C l'f " 8 .. M COMP A.NV, »l3 Wt1I Cetil Mid dKtdtl'tl lf't r•ulrtd Je ft!t """1, tol' 1111 cl1tll" .. "" ,...,. '""ti.. q.un. w Cttld Jt_,, 11, ltn Al are stu ents a a I Omli Hllfl••Y No "°' NrwPOrl IHtl'I Cllll will! tt'tl "K''"'' """""9••· In "" Piiie• to ,, ... 111 1111!'11 Wllll "" ""'"''Y M!WP'Olt:ToMISA UNl,110 State College, Fullerton. Jade H. i111r.f11. 2101 A••ll• 's1r1e1: ~,... cltrk °'"" tllcrrt .iil!lled ctt;rl. Ill' .-oucMr1. IO~ u••ltMcl 11 ""ltflttt .SCHOOL OISTltlCT ti
S h N•wtorl ltt(h, (a!llorlll t to Prtltlll ll'llm. wllll 1111 '*"UIFY 'Ill UNION IANIC, •ti W 11 th I 1 • Or111tt Coullly. C1 lller11lt Co-Chairman Don ml t L~Ell• l'Mw 1,1111111, !!Ol Arallt vouc111r1 lo 11\t 111\dt"llfltd tt 11\it 'fl11tt leultv•••· Loa Art11ln, Calll•l'll• mu. Dorollly Htr\'ff ll'ltlltr said there were only two Sirtt'I. Htwport 811<11, c1111. !If thtlr Attw111'· ColtMI H•rrlr11 lotlfm which 11 t111 ,.,c1 ., bUtlllttt 11 ''"' ,urch111111 .t.11111 Wl1111m J. M1r1lnl, t471 L11111 (lrcl1, l'rillk llll. 101 l•ll ltlll Slr1tl, Co.ti unlllflllnM In 111 ma111r1 111r11lnl,.. ta '-'l.!-llO!I Oranec Coast students en!Pred HunllnDIOll •••en, Ctlll. Mtll. Cllllor11lt """' ... dlrtct lo 1eci'I 1111 .... ,.. .. laid •tc:to:i.nt, wltlll!'I lout ~lllotllhtd Or t"" CMll DtllY ~Ii.I. in the contest-one from Thi• bu1lnnt I• 0.1111 coMuctH 11y 1 Co-ExKutOJr•, R•Ymelld O. ''""'1111111, 1111 m&nllli 1tttr 111t flr•t IM.lllkttlWI t1 1M1 Je111,11ry 11 11111 J•~u•,., 11. 1t'1 t:J.12 CO•tlrlttlrtl'llp Klllts lltotd, NtwpOrl lt1cfl, Ctlllllll'llll, lllllle• Newport Harbor High and one Jae:• H. B•n11tl! or H•ro10 0.11111, 1"'J wooer. Drlvt. Lo• 0,,., o.c""bt' n, Hn fr E.t.n . Anttltt. C1lllllf'11I• .. wll ltl'I 11 1111 tlKt ~ UNION IANIC om c1a. ' Thlt tltlll'l'lflll tl!td Wiii\ tht County bu1l .... 1 of lllt Ulllltfllflllfl In •II mlllt<I IYI JOHH •. .Mc1LllOY LEGAL NOTICE
There were no entries from Cltrk 01 0,'"'' c°""'.,. ..,, Otc. n. nn. Pfrlllnlnt 10 1111 '''"~ ot 111a 111c:1111"'· Truti ottlc.,
SANTA. ANA Th • Golden West Saddleback and !Ir 81ve•IY J. Mldllox OtltlltY Courrtv Wlllll~ '""' ll'IOllll'IJ tntr tll• llr1t ltUbllCI• f.11cuter ol 111• Wiit NOTICI 0, THI TIMI AltO 'LACI QI' ' Cler~ ll"'-of lll!t ...i!ct. of 11\t ibOYt llfmtd dtctdini HIAtll!NI 0' TNI LOCAL AtllfCV p11rehase of four new lire Oranite Coast colleges. he . . 1"·14•'2 Dflld 0«.1mbtr 20, lt'1 HAllWOOO, IOOIN • AOl(INHN POJIMATION ( 0 MM I •• I 0 H 01'
tat d Pulll!lhtd 01lnff (0111 Dally l"'llol Jl•ym!lf'ld 0. l"-1'1~111 SM frttwHl'I (t11tr Dtl•t OJIANOI C 0 UN TY , CAll'O•NIA. engines and an aerial ladder s e · DettmDer 71, "" •M Jinuarv "-ll. 11, '"" H1rold oa11111 Pt1t OHie• 1111 '"' WNIH A 111101>0,10 ANNllCATION truck for a total of $219,677, !tn Jmn Co-!•tc:ulort II lllt N ..... IMdl. CA NU TO THI (ITV 0, (OITA Ml'IA 0, will ot tllt "4ol2ll OllAHO• COUNTY, AND OIJICTIOHI hes been approved by the LEGAL NOTICE •boY• "'""Id dte.0•111 Att.rl!eY• .., ••-tw 011 '"0T1tn TH•••'~· w1LL ••
Orange County Board of 3 u CI women ~.~:~:~.:·~~~7· llLIM ,.AlllKLIN P11till1P11d Orll'lf' (1>111 Olllv Pllll'I. =~:~1,N~:0H:::.~·~~v~~· tl\11 t" JRVINE -Mrs. F'. E. Supervisors. l---:.coc,clColc-:Tco-c=•=•=o0,c,co=uo---Jc,.1, M•\I . t•llltf'lll• "'" J•"u•rv '· 11. I• u. itn J.t).&..n a11111c111.,. 1111 bttll 111tt1 w1111 111e Ltt•I Coulter of santa Ana, former Th I' 1· h . . l IU,IAIOll COUllT 01' THI T•h <n•) Ml-ttll .... f!CY FOl'mtlltrt Cwnmlallofl " ""' Bo e ire 1g ting equ1pmen Get Dean Posts ttAtt o, CALIF011N1A 'o• ... tt-.., , ... c•••1c:•ten LEGAL NOTICE C•un•.,. Of Or •-· ,,,,. ., cau11n11 ..... curator of wers Museum, was requested by the Orange THI cou111ty op 01tA11101 Pub11tto.r °'•llft c~1 0,1.,. Pncrt. •111111111 '"" wld Cl!'l'lf'l\l11h111 """""'
h" given the UC Jrvine County Fire De p 8 rt m en t H .. ,,,.,,,. D•t•mNr 11, 11. 1t11 •nd J•-no 4, n. IUl'lllt&ll cou1T o, cA1.1•o•Nt.\. 111t ,.oootec1 •11111••11.., d11J1"•'" •• l!.1t11!1 ol JAMES D 0 NA L 0 1t12 llJ.J.71 CfUMTY 01' Oll&Nll llttd MIU A11111•1I ........ 1 ~ tt.• (lty II Ubrary 8 collection of rare under the legal Utle ot the Three women members or 111.Aol!SON. 11 .. t-11 JAM&s o. ,. c1v1c c111t ... Drl\11 *"I. c"'' M•t• o1 °''"" '""'""'· c.u1w"1 •. books on the history of h d ff . ff t UC 111Ac1soN. 0«t1lld. LEGAL NOTICI!: 111111 ..... , c.. '"• •ro.M11 ~·•1' ""' 1o111w111t1 Oran~e County Fire Protec-t e stu ent R rurs Ila 1 NOTtCf. 1s HE1te1v 01v1N to "" c"' Nlfll!Mr OM)61 111'1111HY d•1crlbld ''" Wlll<fl 11 ""°'' C.llforni• and Orange County, tion District. The expenditure Irvine have been promoted to ur11111n 11t "" •llov• n1mr11 <1Kfdtn1 IUMMOf\11 IMtM•••I •••11eu1,r1, d•ter1"4t n • t...i ._,,p.
11le collection I n c I u des . 11111 '" 114't0ftt 111-1111 c1•1"'1 11111111 ""' .... NtJ '" ,.. "" .., ... 1 •• , ,, '""t-•: llNA ""' 111 1111 """' 1111 ctmm111i.11: is covered tn the lj71-72 coon· the rank of ISStstant dean of llld do'Cf'llHll .,. rf'l!Vl"fd te lilt """'· NOTl(I! Tl\ CtllllDITOll OIANI! Hl"Hl'Y •nd ltttlOl'ldtllH S•ld lftllt•Ul111 ( t 111 . I ft I ... JeYeral bookl published by the ty budgeL students it was announced lo-with "'' '*"'''" -.cl'llrt, 111 11>1 o111,. •u~1•1•• COURT 0, TM• .,THU• Ll!llOY l'll!ANl!V ... 1xlm1ff!Y ,,, KrH IMI 1t lt<tlld .., 1"I A~-Pm artlcl It ' "'111t c1trt 01 t11t ~ •111111N1 c111,1r1, or l'f.t.'ff o, c.t.Ll,ORHtA l"Dfl '' 1111 •nHM1111: AllTHU• LlllOY 1111 1t11111,111111-,. •Ill• e1 llld NIH ne ,._ s, es wr • Th~ four englnes will be day by John C, Hoy, vice ,, ..-wi• ttwn. w1t11 "" 11t<•1u,., TMI COUNTY o-OtllANOI HEANEY ..,.,,. .... •"41 Ol'I ,,.. nor1-11•rf\I .1 .. n1
ten by Oranae County r.fcha&ed rrom p, E. Van chancellor ror student •flairs 'foudltrt. to 111t ~11nec1 •' "'' <t1tk• N•. •-rn11 Th• .. 111'-' "'' 111" , 11t1111'1 c.flo fll• 0••111• ~,.,.,. .t.ll'IOf'f "'-" hJsto~ ~ St h d . tt JAMIS L. 'Ullt.. Jiii , AllotMV tt ltht1 al RUSSELL JOI EIH LO ttfnllll Yllll< m1rr!1 ... You !'PllP Ill I "•lltlHI~ tllo ... 11111 1111 Sin OIHI . OS°" "trry ep,.enson ll Inc. tor S37.Sl4.40 each. ~ 'J'he new wlstant eans 11re '-' .... 14» v11 o.t14. Ntwoert •••"'· CAsc10, Dtct1otc11 .. r1111n r~tt ..it1t111 l'llnr t•Y1 t1"" Fr ..... ,.,., 1., 1111 _...,,.,11 Cottt M• .. ID( 1. "• E. Pleuaats and The ~Jal ladder t-• .. '-•Ill '"""-i-~ 1-Jen'"in• M-'a11~ tH6ttl Wf\ldt i. 111• ti..:• or No11cE is Hl11Eev GivEN tt th• ,.,11 111a1 t11L• :.f.....,. 1, ,.,...1111 1111 ~. • .. . ,_ f •• -.l. f th ...,. 1 on.:• ..,.fUC1! U , ~ ' ' ';,, lllllJl'llH ot llll 11l'tlll,rtl1nl'd I" Ill mttttrt tr1cHIO(I ol W... ttlevt n1rned lltctdt"I 11 ....,.. Pt/I 11 Ht • wrlttco11 llH>Of\lt A.I 1111 llm• Of Ill<! l'lt1r1,.,. l'lttlctd ,.... .. p e ... ntwa co•e:rag"' o e purd>Ufd lrom Crown Coaeb .Ernestine Ransom and Mrs. ,..1,1111110 '• 1111 "'•'• oi ''" ~M.nt, '""' •If --11tv1"' n111n1 1011M1 "'• ,..1111111 tr.1th 11 , you• d1111111 1111.,. .. 11tr11" 11111 11eurw1 •• 1,, "''.,. o. ~11" 1913 Boy: Scout Jamboree on I "'-nllbll for itet,620. Jo Anne Stmo wi111111 tour l'nO'lt111 1t11r '"' 11rtl rw11 11u-wld aectdtnt .,. ,...ulrt'I 10 111t ""'""· 111._,td •"II t111 '°"''' m•• ..,~ • l\ldt· by 111. 1itdl•'00t .,, 011,,.r 1.,rltft'Y ltt tlll lrvl..;., RlDclL .....,., ..... ~ , Q. !!ell •f 11111 llOt!t•. wllll .... _ .. ,..,. \llUClllf'I, Ill Ille tflltt mMI C.Ollllllll,.. lnh1t1Cll~I "1 ollltr et'dtrl YICl11ltv ti 111<1 ....... 1. '!~ .... !!!~~~!:.,,.-----uro•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;_____ (tl GLOlllA IOITH lllo\Ol•ON "'"" Clfrll et 1111 tllOWI 1111111 .. c.,on. " ,_,lllM tl•ltkltt ot ·'-'"'· "'°"''" NOTICE " FUJl'fHllt GIVIH, lll•f r° (atc:Ultla tf !flt ltt1t1 91 I• 1rnent l!ltll'I, wltl\ tt'tt lltCttlf<Y •llDM'1 Ch11d CUtlMy chllcl IU._.I II• •~II CemmtttlOll hll llwtd WMllMftV lllt ,
Denture Invention SINGLE ADULTS * Seloct • C°""*'loo • ·r
From lho F010 DA TE.
Monica ••y• If you tr•
tvelltbl1 for dttlng tnd
you lllr1 m11tin9 inter•tf·
ing, int1lli91nt, p 1 op I e,
you should ull 1110
135-2220 or (21J)
4 2 6 • 1 1 2 2 .nd hHr
the 24 hoiir r1cord1d m••·
lht ~bOvt 114mld llKtdfnl 'teUClltrl, IO 11\t U...,.•Jl•""'ll •I 1111 •llltl lwlll"'' feet tMll .~ IUC!I otlll' ;tll•f Hiii f« 61 Jt-t'P, ltn ti 11\t fl"'r tf J•Mll L. au11L.. Jll. ot""' •ITll"nf'ltl J rtl!l!O Y. SCHiil. INC, It ll'llY bt .~t11tt11 '1o, 1111 ceurr. 1.00 0 CICIO ~.M .•• ••Id • ..,., ti -Alllfl'NY ti l.tw f8y: ALA.N M. ltl!DV). '" N~wciort II tM wit!! It IHI! !Ill tlfwlc• ti tll 11· I\ 11ld mtl!or tlll bf hf'll°il 111 II-ltl >QI Vlt o--!t C•rrttr Drf:,,, S11fft UI. N""""°'I .. tch, 11-nitT 111 INI niattw .,.t; tllltllill • it 111 tttt Ott11et C111111ly .-,lrfllt't!lf,ttt~ N ..... l'I •••di, Ct "'* Callfot11I• 11..0, ""1Ch It !ht lllC:f of ~., • ' II l uUtllllf, JIS Noni\ ln;tnl&rt '''"'· ''"" T11t1M!tftl1 (1141 •D·4'" butl"M» of 1111 lfllftftl111td In 111 "'•"''' ~-·"' .. ·-. .. .. r Wrl ltfl ,..,...,, II ·~·· (l!lflf'"''· ti !IHI llmt tllll l lOW)I ,.,. '""''with Uppen'' and •1LoWtr1'' X atWt dllft' to ha.,ill1 JCNr ~ t«th iii POlmbll M1r •ith • f!Ntlt a.m ditco\-..,. dl•l lt.lU--
•llJ bold• botll "uppsr1" ~nd .,°" ....... f\t\W befOra Potllble. lt'11dbcrmye1WFn:~
kr ~1111 home u.t• (.U.S. PaL p.oo.s.th) incl IL ll11 Nt'OIU· ___ ,,_ .. , ..
Alttflo•' lor l•Mlll,I• "11•111!"' to 1111 1111~11 ot 1.•ld llt.:H•nl, •IY· ""'' ..,. 1"6 lft trme. IWf !ht lllt•l11t o1 ••• ........ ,, loettlhff ltu0!1""4 Orlllft Cffil DILiy J'Ull, Wl11il11 IM1r ll'llll'ltttt lll1r lllt llftl "'~tu-O~lH JI"' '· lt?t .. 1111 t'I •r~tt·'> fllll ... If""'''"' fht,.. .. Oac1mlltr,., 1tn •nf Jtllllf•'f 4. 11. 11, llt111 ti fl'lt Mlk•. (0,,ICIAL l!. ... L1 w~IC'll 1'1W1 lit IHH IM •• wllltll"""' t1WI 1m »tl-Tl 0.ttd Otttmo.r "· 1n1 , W!LLIA.M •. II JOHN tltCI ti! MrlOlll Ill"'"'" ~ ,...., M.t.01!L1NI ul•ULA t.O CASCIO Cltl'lt ll""'ftr 1,111 bl ht•,. l•IClllll• ol ,,,. Will of ... ,11•0 I Gut-,.•••· 011"1 Jtltl'"Y J. 1tn
!ti. 11\oYt "',.."'(! •Ktdtrlt 0.w!Y IY O•Olll Oft THI LOCAi. AOIN<Y •110T I KMl!JI, tHC. TltOMAI W, HlllOlllOM, Ill. •"'-"' ''"ttl\•• (',...,,.,.,ION O' OllANOI IY 1 AUtl M. •llOY "''"""' II l.tw COUHT-1, ULl,OllHIA dt N""llftrl (tflltr DI . llltt I• de I, lJltl tt., SCJI"' Ill lllCKAllO t TUlNU ....,..,, ll1t0t, Ctl4. n... Cttft Mti"f, C•, ml1 l•ltlltlve Offtuf
T A k & -d T•h ........ fntt ...,_,,,. Lettt A~ ''"""lief!
Kids Like
0 8 ra.ll y ·~-~;-c...t 0.HY Plill A1:"-: :::wc.i" 0-tllY "1itt ~=·~.:.: ..... ~ti, 19" W ~ ~ 11 11. Jtl'llolllre 1\, l L M ..W ~ 1, 1tn ~I ..... ~lfllt tNlf Oellf Pl ... ilor----'•'---------------------• .. ________________________ _.,, _____________ . ttort --~n "'" JltlMr. II. 1tn 1t11
"
I
•
Tutsday, Jan11ary ll, 1971
'
•
Missouri
Won't Act
On Finch.
•
Judge Orders· Consolidation Eel River .
,., Daro, Foes:
.?£Racially Divided Schools Backed :~.:'.
•JUCllMOND, 'Wa.' <AP) -A north and Chesterfield lo \he about 2il,OOO from Ches terfield. I ' ~ ·
JEFFERSON CIT)', I Mo, 'µ,/i . lllttrlcl eturt )IJdge has south. A nine member board wou ld ' SACRAMENTO (AP\ ::-
(AP 1 -The Missouri'Board or· oNlere<t the ponsoLidation of ·At present, the Riehinond be established with ! o u r f Constru~IOn of a massive ~Y
Healing i\rts has v 0 t •d the ,JllOstly black Richn\ond ~Y*m is 60 percent black. members J.rom ftjchmond. dam on tpe free-Oowing ;Eel
• L •. "'1 1C~J .... , 1)'1fe.rn• with t be The suburban countiea' echoct three. from Henrie~ and two-1,.Rivcr COUld cause serious 'Jnd
unanimously to ta11e no ~~»p~ihtly ~whlte system1 . systems are more than 90 per4 from Cbester£ield. Thus, f-Oe 1,as\iof~ to the aoiJ:!1al1llfe
In the case of Dr.' ~natd -t:1f two ·ne.1ghboring counties cent white. counties would have control ln · fn tht ·r~, a California ~I.sh
Ji'!ntjl, the convicted Call'ornlp ~ netl: September. -The plan Involves the cross-Polioy matters t.Mt didn't con-and Ga!pe Department rtf0r1
wife slayer who was rtcentJy J d R bert R M h' J -..... f flict with cout·t find ings. has disclosed. ~
Paroled. . , U ge o , er 1ge· r. &N.1lng o some 71,000 pupils -u .. ~~n ~~-i sa1d Monda that the C tit 10 000 h s· bd' . . . Id b The reporl says i.ue ~ Finch is reportedly working ( y . ons . u-' nlort t an are ix . su 1v1s1ons wou e high earthfill dam proposed by
as a medical technician at the tioh -~ear y required ~re~kt~g transported now. es!a~hsh~ to keep the ad-the U.S. Bureau of Rectah\a-
Eldorado s pr i n 1 s ,. Mo.. t!1e lines of .separate 1unsd1c-The school-board 's propo~l. m1n1stra1Jon close to. local con-lion at Engli!:h Ridge in Mm-
hospital. lions ·to bring about mean-opposed by the Richmond City cems: and all bu~ tr1~ needed docino County near Wijlitlf
John Hailey, e 1 e c ut 1 v e ingful int~gr~tion, \Vhi~h ~e Council and the· counties. to _shift the pupils f1orn one \\•ould innundate ll,800 afres
secret ary of the board, sa id it called .essene1al to quallty 1n would place virtually all Negro reStdeoce zone to anoU1er of wildlife habitat.
voled unanimously at 3 ed,i,1cahon. . . . pupils ih schools from 20 to 40 would ~ un~er an ~~µr. It would require a $3 mi~ion
weekend meeting to take no If ~her~ 1s to be pubh c percent black. Mer.hiiz_e ~aid that state and hatchery to overcome . the
action at this time because educa.t1~ ..lt must. under the The counties argued before local off1c1als have clung to bloc ka ge for ocean-migra,tl~
there is nothing before the Coost1tut1on. be a!fo,~ded to .au ~1erhige at bearing!! that ran the ways of the past In an ef-salmon aod steelhead, said.
board. Finch has not applied on. an. equal basis. Me~h!ge through most of last A11gust fort to keep the races apart in George n. Nokes assocl1it~
for a license to practice in said· _in a 325-pa~e ?p1n1on that they were complying with, one of ' the most important fishery l>lolog~ 1 for t ~;
Missouri. granting the cqnsohdahon re-constitutional requir~m·ents fllnCtfous ef government-the depart~nt, : ... -:
Hailey brought the case to quest of ·the Richmond City and were being called on to· education, of our children ... '' ''All t>;g .game • .moil uPWll ~. the board 's attention at the re-School Board. bail out Richmond rrom· its The coµrt's consolidating game apd fUr animals ~
i, , qµest of .Rep. Robert E. The court's decision creates urban difficulties. : .. decision 8:'-ts a preced~ht, quu'ly, ofi.'th~. Wfi~fowl ~ ~ .r. Young., {R·'Carthage ), v.•ho a 104.~pupiJ metropolitan About half·: ot the since ~ VIIJ:inla the countfes oo~e.spec.~es.~tpe~e~
f'ollow the · Sun
The less-hectic-winter months make Laguna's M8ln BeaCb; a greit P.lace to es-asked last week what the school 4!,y_ision. ! n c I u d I n g i;netr<!J>Oli~, §c~· di vis.ion's and _Cit!ef-¥e ioewrate, With Jhjs .ha~~t.lfU~ ~ .. dis~J~{I! c~pe for solitude acc_oi:npanied only by, one's favorite :;pet:$ A .slowly 'setting sun . board's views were on the 'Ric~mond and t~e adjacent pupils wou ·come from Rich-, no overlap_ptng layers of ·,Md ultnnately lost, said ~
glints off the water g1v1ng the scene a relaxed mood. : . · · ..., -~ Jl}atter. coun.tles of ·Henrico to the n;iond, 34,000 p;om Henrico .~.9d . gove'rmn'ent e~cept the sta~. 1 ~r.eport. . t• .-·
C(lSh Does Wonders
For Old Sea Quee~
rn,1l~~;1filit(ll-·lffi•Iil\lijW••J\i<•JlllJlll!l1lf'I(•JifliiU,.1~91•ll'fJ.•Jillilf!!11]~1(eJ.tJ1il~it1~1·1~«·I•Ru
.-LOW SH.ELF 'PRICE'·S·'.<P_L·US 10<1o ··
LONG BEACH-(.AP ) -The
Queen Mary, a tired 1ady with
port here f~r -years ago. is
rejuvenated, dressed up and
launched on ~ new life, which
proves $50 · milliOn can do
wonders for a ,girl
That's wha,l it }la:i: cost so
far to get the 38-year-cld ship
in shape for 'her prima donna
role as this city 's reigning
tourist attraction . And city of·
fieiaJs estimate that develop.
ment of the Queen's full poten-
tial may take .another four
years.
Plans ahead include
development of a 400-roon1
hotel on board, a "theater of
the sea" adjacent to the sh.ip.
and an "English Villa1!e" of
shops beside the vessel. The
ship's museum. its main
tourist feature. is only one-
third completed.
"Things will be constantly
changing over the next three
to four year period.'' says
Harry Fulton, special assis-
tant to the city manager.
The money pumped into the
ship ·s initial refurbishing in-
cluded some $43 million io
state tideland funds usuallv
designated for improvement Or
waterfront areas. A state
legislative committee sharply
criticized the spending, and of;
ficJals now hope future proj-
ects . will be paid for by
priv_ate. concessiohaires.
Th8 .hotel, .with construction
set to start in April. is being
built · by Pacific Southwest
Aidines, Inc .. and the English
•Village is a •planned project of
Specialty Restaurant5, Inc ..
Whfch has restaurant facilities
aboard the ship, The "theater
of the sea" project is a plan <lf
Jacques Cousteau, the un:-
dersea exPlorer ,..,ho has
already installed his own "liv-
ing sea'' museum aboard the
Queen .
Tourists \.\'ho pay the $3.25
adult or $1.25 children 's fee to
tour the ship can see the
Cousteau exhibit. the un-""
finished museum wilh relics of
the Queen's history, and por·
tions of the 12-deck, 81,237-ton.
1.019 foot-Joni{ shio. There are
also 48 specialty shops aboard'.
"Peo1Jle are reallv im·
pres~ \\'ith the mas.'i1veness
of the \Yhole thing" says
F'ulton who anticipates that
the ship, whi ch opened last
Mav, will have its one
millionth visitor by the end of
this month.
Additionally. thousands have
used the shio's facilities, at-
tending political fund raisin~
dinners and galas sponsored
by clubs including the British-
American Organization and
the Queen Mary Club which
was formed by passen~ers
who took the Queen's last
cruise.
Long Beach bought the
Queen Mary from the British
Cunard Line in 1967 with plans
of ·turning her into a dockside
maritime museum at a total
co.11t or $8.75 million.
The cost soared as the scope
of the project expanded and
the problems of renovating the
CJgaint:: aueen of th~ sea.o:
mounted. Its aim was chan.11:ed
from modest museum to a full
scale tourist and convention
center.
1,000 in 3 Years
· . Civilian Firms Attract
Top Military · Officers .. W>:SHINGTON (AP)
Nearly 1,000 high ranking
1milltary officers left the arm-
ed forces in the last three
·years to joiri the Jaregst
d~ense contractors dealing
'With the Pentagon, a new
sUrvey shows.
Sen. William Proxmire. (D-
Wis.), said the figures in-
, dicated that the "incestuous"
i:elati<lnship he often has
criticized between defense ex·
ecutives and their mllitaty
counterparts still exists.
The survey shows 993 o(-
ficers above the fank of major
taking defen!e contractor jobs
in the last, three fiscal years.
The survey, made by the
Pentagon according to a new
law , also shows that 2.12
fonner defense industry ex·
rcutives accepted civilian jobs
with the Department o f
Defense and Iha! 108 high
Jevel Pentagon c i v i I i a n
employes moved into defense
IQduslry jobs.
' At the urging or Proxmire.
Congreas approved the re-
qo!rement for the survey in
00.
froxmire said in an in·
terview · he befteves the ney,• Jliures are algnificant in
showing hiring jrends in the
mJlitary. Jndultrlal complex.
esl1eclall1 In a J!<l'lod when
l>olh the • Penl«gon and eon-
tra~lorl w..... blring far fewor
peraons than Jn previous
)'Uri.
Prolmlre said the new
survey, however, is not com-
parlble with those conducted
in the · past by ·hJs •office and
that of former Sen. Paul
Douglas, (J>.1itl.
Pro:tm.i.re's last Chtck in
1969 showed 2,122 former top
military olfi"'rs ..,. Q,[Jlie ranli
or colonel or ?'~VJ captein and
above -wer9:.then employed
in the def~n.s.e :~ustry.
The new '18w i'~uires the
Pentagon tq 'J~e 4 yearl y.
censua: naUiJdg,-tl]e COmpanies
forlll.er officets work for and
the ll;llure Cl~ir-job~
The cenJius ·applie; only lo
retired"orncers wotKtni for in·
dustries With $10' million or
more of ntgotiited contracts
with the mililfnr .Jn tilt year
the former ofllctt left the service. •.
In Proxmire;s laS:t sUfvey,·
based on the l<Sp 100 defense
conllllctofs,_in induslry-by-iR-
dusJry· breikdow~ shojied the
leadlng emi>Joyl!l'I o( former
officers were · Lo Q..k"h e e d
Aircraft COrp, with ..2 I O,
Boeing Co. !&II; McP<innell
Douglas,. 141; Gener a I ·
ll)'namics Corp.. 11;; and
North American Rockwell ,
104.
Although not strictly com·
patible, wilh the earlier unof·
ficial survey, the new tally.
aho\\-s that afnce J • e 9
Lockheed hired ff more of·
ficers of lhC rank <>f major
and higher, Boeln,ci 77, McDon-
nell Doug\H 62, General
Dynamics 23 and Nor t b
American 32.
Kids Like to Ask Andy
I -,
RATH'S SLICED
':RA-CORN BACON
c
lb
CHUCK
POT ROAST
BONELESS
SWEET
JUICY
U.S. NO. 1
10 LB.
CELLO BAG
' .
. '
.Q.BONE
ROAST .. '.
lb
CENTRAL
AMERICAN
. TANGERINES 1 c
lb
RUSSET
POJATOf S BANANAS ··C c
lb
.,,!.,•-;. ~ , . ~ ' . '
Now you too can become a professional sllOfiper a~d '.~e:'hundrecls of dqllars per ye~~ on your CJrtcery bill. No need to
run all ovfr town huntin9 for bar9ains .. ~".loll, cail;;'be:'asi!!~~d that when yo~ shop at Tq~.vatu, yo~·are buyin9 at the I.ow·
est prices in town. Naturally.' we carry all :~f the fa'!lous::W~ds ••• Top (j)uallty Meatsi.anCI Garden ·Fresh Produce.
WHICH IS MORE
IMPORTANT -TO
YOU? BEST SERVICE
".· OR • LOWEST
.. RICES ·NO
MARKO CAN GIVE
YOU BOTH· WE
GIVE PRICE
STORE HOURS
10 AM YO 7 PM
5 DAYS A WEEK
CLOSED SUNDAYS
AND WEDNESDAYS
SHOP IN A WARrHOJISE ~--~l!"E' EVERYTHING IS MARK~D
9UAL1TY FOODS AT ·s:1s· w. 1Jt'l..sy~ l Sh If p · ..
AT HARBOR. COSTA "'ES". rl' ~· ow e .. rices
N'T TAKE A LOT.OF. NERVE ~Q ~~~1 •
ONLY STORE IN TOWN rHAT DIS., . th .. ttie Cheohr Adds JUll 10%. To
COUNTS THE DISCOUNTERS; " ~· / 'A11lve at whit you pay. So If yov wound
.. ·~·,; ""P with $10.00 Worth, you'd simply pay WHAT IT TAKES· I•· '-that, plus 10•,t,; or $11 .00. . •l""'. . THOUSANDS OF· ' : •THIS Goa FCa m~nHING uc1" THI
LOWER PRlllE$I'' · "' FIW·ITIMI Ll~ALCT CONTIOLLID
' _, • Lfl(I MILi AflO lf9UOI.
·we welcome.
• ·' FOOD
st~~~
SHO)Pl!IS
•: •
''
,
'
WE .CHALLENGE
ANY· MAil(ET
TO MATCH THE
TOrAL SAVINGS!
STORE HOURS: 10 AM TO 7 PM
5 DAYS A WEEK
Closed Sullda~s and
Wednesdays •
• ' • •
•
. ' . .. .... ' .. . -. ... .
•
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
T111t111r1 .IMVall' II, lJ11 ,.,. ll
•
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Ann Landers
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Ideas Co.nceived
'pEAR Afm'1LANDERS : A group of 113
were 41.~ussing.a new book written by a
young mal+lta couple which presents a
strong case -against having children.
Ats a mother who has had a lot of trou-
ble witb two teenagers I kept quiet, but I
agreecJ, with t;ie young authors. Since I
am not signing this letter I can tell you
that if it weren't for oUr klOs my bll5band
and I "WOUid hove hod a beautuul lile
•-ether. 'r'" . '
• The book inslats Uuit motberhopd is. not
~ l.ostlnct.ive, but an act of selfishneu -
\. that most parents haVt'Children because
: they want the kids~ dq ,somelhillg for
• TlfEM, and not because lhLey want to do
l something for the kids.
~ . f .. -.-
•
• -eapttially for womea wbo threw -up! a
lot. Althoagh l haven:t. rea~ the book, I
.beit.ve . .jo>"P,lel';wbo de<lde NOT lo bve
cb.lldrin'. f~ "Whatever reason, owe no
apologies and DO explanatlo'ln W anyone.
It's tbelr business.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am a twice-
divorced ·woman of 33, with a &-year-old
child. I am attractive, college-trained and
have .. Worked in my profes,,lon f~r 11
years.
My secood divorce JiAS in 1968, I decid-
ed l would never marry again. since I had
made the same mistake twice -mama's
boys, ~eak, immature_, afraid o f
restxinsibJlity: Then · I met a hi.rid.some,
l!Uccessful 411-y,esr-old wbo h"1 \Jl\Vei been
married. Within three months he asked
m.e to stop dating others because he
wanted to marry me. I was flattered and
thrilled.·
•
• EAR WUll: H yoa wul to 10 lrilll a
ref for Ille mt el 1-IUe, ~ 111..i 1'111
c•o•IDllJ .Wlp. H"" -to pl ..ir.
................ -1111 doo'I -..,
..... lit ............ <ol!4 .... -,...__~ ...... .
-• •
Style Snow alls
' . . Bright colors give a lift to ski wear
Uiis winter season.
' Skiers will bit ·the slopes in classic ,
, clothes .colored O.J., Sundance, Fireball
Red, Greengo, Vino · Tinto and PrunO-
graphy.
Much in demand for snow lovers are
•~ classic stretch pants in a variety of ovet-
.... be-boot designs. Downhill racers can
.. • est the ·~wder in knickers this winter,
• , With matcllirig stretch socks attached. , .,,,. ""• ' . . . "Th,rmo threads" keep sk1ers snug m
pants like the "animal tracks" Oeft)"with
a colorful Lion applique. Other appliques
l-are whimsical or art nouveau. •
, ;CRAZY QUILT
~~ There are not·so-erazy quilt thermal
' capris and splashy polka dot prints.
. '.Park~ come With whirling, swirling
prints like one (above) called Perpetual
. • Motion.; A shap!'!'ito-th .. body look pre-. ·~~·· ~' vails Wi!l>i~li!<=i':de'ltl!~)lln<i .ac\iOn' ~oulders featured. ·• ""' ~-·r ·, • Racing stripes trim classic parkas.
Taking skiing fashion to all lengths is
'
a midi parka (right) that is right on and
off the slopes. Top stitching is featured
\Vith a f.ull-length two-way zipper.
Warmth without bulk is the byword
for ski wear-this year. A special alumin-
ized layer betw6en two·· layers of poly·
ester fabric reflects and retains the ski-
er's body beat in the new "thermo
threads." Ever~g is stain-and-water·
proofed .
DOUBLE KNITS • Knit shirts have been designed for
under ski parka$ on the slopes, and to be
worn plain in front of the fire .
Skinny ribs are prime on the sweater
scene. Rollnecks and turtlenecks head
the list of winter warmers. Print sweat·
ers take on mountain , circle and Indian
motifs. ..
Knit pants and sweaters team up for
\Vomen's sweater suits .
For carrying essElntials, a suede pouch
bag th'itlhO<l'ks <>lit~ a· .. uede belt is e•·
sential, iaogglfs 1111<1 gloveo; belts and
boots are all color-coordinated to m3ke a
color splash in the snow .
Se a rates Swing
' ' .
By MARIAN CHRISTY
NEW YORK -Italian designer Valen-
tino, to whom Jackie is true In her
fashion, has finally met Aristotle Onassis
-the man ·who pays Jackie's gigantic . ' couture bills. "'
Not IO!jg ago Daddy-0 had the Christina
te111porarµy-docked In the waters off
Cllj'l'i 'here ·tall, dark ~ ~dsome
Vajentlno bas one of those diozzliog·
$95Q,ll\)O palazzos which is his escape
hatch when Rome, London and New York
become "Impossible."
In the best of Italian tradition, Valen-
tino had a boUquet and affectionate note
delivered to Jackie on board. Meanwhile,
Jackie had. seen Valentino's glamoruos
Jle'll' hideaway photographed In House and
Gardeb and came ashore for a l~minute
&lliri)>se of her de3igner's sllowplace.
Mr. Onassis ..:,., sent an errijssary
ashore to escort .iackie back.to the yacht,
and slmultaneously invite ValenUno to
come abiJard for a drink or two .. Valeo-•
lino unhesllatlngty accepted the spur-of·
the moment enticement.
Today the memory lingers o n
auperlaUvely:
"Ml". Onassis is a thoroughly
fascinating man," exudes Valentino. "He
projects immense power and towering
strength. But you 've got to see hint In
person to catch the electricity. And, in an
·instant, he switches languages. Whatever
the tongue, the 1,.'0nv~rsaUOn is brilliant.''
Valentino's color signature is basic -
brown, navy, black dramatized by a slash
of white. ntese are the colors Jackie
ordered. Elctpt tor two evening gowns in
Kelly oreen and marigold.
for
"Belie shl\des for day are motf nat-
t>rtng •for cOjltemp!(ary women .mo..
life style Is tO move fast," say~ Valen-
tino, obviously refemng to his ;rofofype
cUent who mustn't be overpowered by
drunallc clothe .. "Bui at night ttis better
to br .. k away from the ctas•lcs and
bloom like a be uUful flower In riotous
colon."
~ will be hlas-cut to swlllg and
rnJ. "Mo-ring lkirts'VO ftductlve~'
Waistlines will be defined. "Wha t
woman doesn't want a 1hape?''
Eveninf clolhes wtl! be in fabrics men
love to touch: 1o1•m UAU1g lots Of geor-
l'tt•, <hlltoo, sD k lace. Fabrics that 1 ..
•
. .
Sp ·ring
Valentino sketches spring
sepera.tes look , 11•~ I -~'
cashmere sweete ·end skirt.
vite a man to can:11 a woman."
Shoe4 wtU heft blab .betll. Stoc•qo
will be sheer daru instead of buS1 pa\.
tcrns ; ••t,qs lhwld a1.,._,, be dn111•
lf'.lily."
•
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• T111~'1Y. J.1nuary 11. 19 1 l
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
I • ~ • .
' ' 1 • Cancer: Paper Work Beckons
..
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t~ !• ,f .. \1t' •17.1"""' . ' !~~ i•
::•SKILLED TE ... CHIR -Learning the art of Oriental
: ;-Cookery from an experienced instructor, Miss Kay
: ·Matsuyama (right). is Miss Carol Heinz who will in
: turn teach 1 class in Chinese cuisine ·1n five coastal
i • ' .
locations. Sponsoring the one-session classes. which
be~in \Vednesday, Jan. 12, is' the Southern California
Edison Co.
' -'
Ground
::~Gained
' '
Economists Stirring Up
Chinese Cuisine Course
: Women's Lib wa1 1et back
: for the &econd year by Phi
; Delta Kappa, nttlonal educ1·
. !ion society, which voted again
; to bar women.
: But the women are galning
: ground. A year ago the vote
: against them was 840 lo 22. At
: the society's convention at the 1
1Jniversity of Illinois this
time it was 321 to 95.
• "We would have to change
, our constitution to give women
:ruei\ibership," said rifoseby
·Lebarron, a delegate from
Har,, a rd.
• "As it is, bylaws are being
·ignored by seven of our
chapters. Those al Harvard.
Hofslra, Columbia, New York
'University, North Carolina,
, Stanford and Michigan give
them membership.
, it:'Mainly, the feeling against
:'"{'em ii this: Wives would be
.~ttimplalning that the i r
,-husbands were staying out late ~11t meeUngs with women at·
tending. It could cause quite a
hassle."
The Chinese art of blending
taste, aroma, texture and col·
or In cooking will be taught by
Southern California Edison Co.
home economists d u r i n g
sessions in five coastal loca·
tions beginning Wednesday,
Jan . 12.
Included will be instruction
in stir-fry and red cooking,
folding wantons and using
chopsticks.
Recipes will be given for
Wanton Appetizers, Cr i s p
Fried Shrimp, Eggs Foo Yung,
Beef and Snow Peas. Sweet
and Pungent Pork and Sesame
Cookies.
Free recipe booklets will be
given to each person at-
tending, and the home
economists will present slidei;
and discuss the most efficient
ways to use appliances in food
preparation and serving.
Chinese cooking is a healthy
cuisine, low in calories and fat
content. the home economists
said . It is termed by many
dieticians as "the best balanc·
ed diet in the world."
"Chinese cooking can adapt
itself to every purse. from the
poorest to that of the richest
epicure . Chinese c o o k i n g ,
rather than French. is now the
truly international cuisine."
say~ the Time-Life book,
''Chinese Cooking.".
One of the recipes to be:
presented is crisp -fried
shrimp:
CR ISP FRIED SHRIMP
1 pound uncooked shrimp
1,~ cup flour
11, cup cornstarch
1 teaspoon baking powder
1h teaspoon sail
1 tablespoon oil
1h cup cold water
Peanut oil for frying
Shell the shrimp, leaving tail
attached. Oevein and wash. To
"bullerfly," hold shrimp with
small curve down and cut
three-quarters of the way
through the back and about
two-thirds of the length. then
flatten .
Combine dry ingredients.
Add oil and cold water. Stir
only enough to mix. Heat 1
inch of oil in electric frypan to
400 degrees. Dip shrimp in
batter, then fry until brown
and crisp. about 3 to 4
minutes. Serve!! 4.
Programs will take place in
the We!!ilminster Community
Service Building at 7:30 p.m.
\Vednesday, Jan . 12, and 10 :30
a.m. Thursda y, Jan. 13, and in
the community room of Great
\Vestern Savings. Seal Beach ,
7:30 p.m. 1'-1onday, Jan. 17,
and 10:30 a.m. Tuesday and
Wednesday, Jan. 18 and 19.
Newport program!! will be in
the Island House, fashion
Island. at 7:30 p.m. Monday,
Jan. 24, and 10:30 a.m. and
1:30 p.m. Tuesday, Jan. 25. El
Toro, in the Edison Co. office,
7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 26,
and 10 :30 a.m. Thursday, Jan.
27.
Concluding will be: fou,nlain
Valley, in the Community
Center. 7:30 p.m. Monday,
Jan. 31, and 10:30 a.m. Tues-
day, Feb. I.
WEDNESDAY
JANUARY 12
By SYDNEY OMARR
An attrologlcal map appears
on t.he tomb of Rameau VJ
(1111$-!200 BC). From this
map, 1t was possible to read
the culminations of the stars
for . each hour of the night
throu1hout the year.
ARIES (March ll·AprU II):
Hold off on decision• con·
cerning travel . Fam 11 y
member may need you at
home. Be: sure promises are in
writing. Journey, with!'lut pro-
per preparation. would be a
coatly waste ()f tlme, energy.
Ladies Credited
With -Job Fi rs ts
From The Wire Services
Women have made in-
ternational in-roads into the:
fields or government, business
and law. Young male doctors
havf: auggested that female
doctors of medicine also share
the burden "f military service.
In Los Angeles, Mrs. Ida
Porter stepped Crom a job as a
State: Rehabilitation Depart-
ment counselor to a post as
the city's first woman fire
commissioner.
Mayor Sam Yorty cited the
appointment of Mrs. Porter, a
black , as an example of his
policy to select more women
and members of minority
gr!'lups for municipal posts.
Mrs. Porter, 49, is the wife
of Superior Co u rt Com-
missioner Everette M. Porter.
She replaces the Rev. Edward
V. Hill who has been named to
the Board of Planning Com-
missioners.
BUSINESS WOMAN
Cathy Young, 23, o f
Hamden, Conn .. recent I y
became the: first W()man to
work as a broker with 100 men
who work the floor of the
Boston Stock E1change.
The: all-male domain held
for 139 years. Miss Young is
employed by A. Goldberg and
Co., a Boston securities firm.
She is a graduate of Manhat-
tanville College.
In London's famed Old
Bailey court the judge was ad·
dressed ''My Lady " for tht
first time in the history of
central criminal courts.
The judge was Miss Rose
Heilbron who entered the
court wearing a barristtr's
wig and carrying a black
handbag. She i11 one of 47
lawyers sworn in as criminal
judges in the reorganized
system of crown courts.
Corona doctor, Michael G.
Bower, has uked tht courts to
erempl him from active duty
in the Army and draft woman
doctors in.stead.
Bower's suJt stated that In
the Army there is ()M doctor
for each 1,000 paUents. In
Corona the ratio Is one doctor
to 5,000 patient.a. ·
"There Is no rational basis
to exempt female health
specialists from responslbUJ-
ities and privilege of being
inducted to serve as medical
officers." Bower aald.
"Along with the benefita of
equal pay, erercise of the
franchise and opportunity for
personal fulfillment 1hould
flow the burden of sharing In
the care of Armed F"rces
personnel by femal e doctor• of
medicine ."
Hopper
Saluted
Fillee:n painting& by Edward
Hopper have been u H mbled
for an e1hlbllion in the
Newport Harbor Art Museum
opening tomorrow and con-
tinuing through Feb. 24.
Hopper is regarded as
America's foremost realist
painter, 1 a Id Thomas H.
Garver, muuum director. Hla
unde rstandln1 of man's Isola·
ti!'ln has been a major theme
in his paintings.
Museum hours are Tuesday
through Sunday, noon to t
p.m. Guided tours ar e
available Thursdays at 2 p.nt
or by advance registration.
FIRST JUDGE MF -'"""·•'·''"'""'"'~"''J'"Won"""'""'"'Mii'""
She became the country's
first female criminal jud1e in
1956 and the first woman to sit
as commissioner in the old
courts of assize. She is 57.
In San Francisco, a young
Peering
Around
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ):
Money p r e s s u r e indicat6d.
Pay tor -and receive -
quality products. Those who
offtr rubstltutes may be work-
ln1 for their own benefit.
Know this and proceed with
caution . Review facts and
fi1ures.
GEMINI (Ma y 21-June 20):
Lie low ; do more listening
than asserting . Fulfill obliga-
tions in quitt, efficient man·
ner . Then you earn respect of
one in position or authority.
Pic1s per'30fl filUJ'&s pro-
minently. Be realistic.
CANCER (June 21-July 22 ):
Health requirements, policies,
agreements connected with in·
surance need atttriUon. Obtain
hint from Gemini message.
Flnl&h project. Seek e1pert
opinions. Avoid jumping to
conclusions. Milntain steady
pace.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Avoid the sensational. Listen
to friends, but it Is not
necess a fy to believe:
everything you hear. You can
find out how to do things in
new, elticlent ways. Youn11ter
could confide problem.
Vm GO (Au1. 23·Sept. 221:
Domestic surroundings cap-
ture attention. One who should
know better takes rash action.
Be patient, but take steps to
corTttt error. Be sure safety
haurd has been eliminated.
Check electrical outlets.
LIBRA !Sept. 23·0CI . 22 1:
Dee. 21): You tend now ta
wtar rose-colored g I a 1 s e 1 •
Those who test or oppose are
more: practlcal . Your lunar cy·
cle la high -you come out on
top. But sav41; tlme, money by
facing facts early -and nc•
ting in adult manner.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Low key is what your&-
quire -for greatest benefits.
h1any round you are sensitive.
Know this and use soft-sell 1p-
proach. T1urus, Libra persons
figure prominently. Hospital
visit could be featured.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18J : What you feel might brint
joy could be evasive .and a ·
pensive. Study C 1 p r I c 1 r 11
message. Reach for what you
have earned. Bypass 1et·rlch·
quick schemes . You will
comprehend. Don't f o r c e
issues.
PISCES (Feb. !~March 20):
Practical matters dominate.
Know that you will get e1adly
nothing for nothing. Then act
acC<lrdlngly. Environment is
empha11ized . You may have
closed-in feelin1 . This is but
temporary.
FF TODAY PS YOU R
BIBTHDAV you have 11eat
sense of humor. If sln1le,
marriage la on horizon. Yeur
most significant months thls
year are indicated u March
and December. You a r t
creative. artistic and wben
you walk int!'l 1 room _ •. peo-
ple are aware of you r
'Presence.
Obtain valid hint from Arie•
meua1e. Postpone journey If
possible. Avoid writing letters
wh.ile angry. Bring forth abili-
t t I h t f I To find ou! wllow,• IUdi:I' I"' YOU 1" Y o aug a own oib es. mco~1v 1nc1 ICY•. or ,, •~dMI' Om•"'!
Embarrassing situation i s $7°~ r,,.,, "l1/.'"111" 1n1:1, 1~ M7";' 'n"1 averted if you are mature. to°8'm1rr 1rr!1ot~ 'rtcrtt1."3.1 olfl~ PILOT, ~ .. lo• .n.e, Grt.nd Clft!rll
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): ;=";::":.:'';::"·;::";::'"=YM;::';::;:: "'::.··v ::.· ':.:";:::";:::· =;:;;
Deception couJd involve col-
Ject.ions ln generaJ and money
In p1rUcular. Be alert; check
det1ils. What appears minor
will assume major proportions
it ae:glected . De lays indicated.
Find out why.
KIDS ~OVE
UNCLE LEN
Saturday• in
The DAILY PILOT SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-~======
#
To avoid di11pjloultment, proapectiv•
brides are reminded to have their weddinr
sto ries with black and white Rlossy rhoto-
Rraphs to the DAILY PILOT Wom•n s D•
apartment one week before the wedding.
Pictures received after that time will not
be used.
For engagement announcemenfs it ts
imperative !hat the story, also accompanied
by. a bla.ck and white glossy picture, be sub-
nutted six weeks or more before the weddinc
date. If deadline is oot met, only a story will
be used.
Couples Link~
In Winter Rites
To help fill requirements on both wed· din~ and engagement stories, forms are
avrulable in all of the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further ouestions will be answered by
SUNNING themselves under Women's Section staff members at 642-4321.
the Caribbeao 8un will be Mr. -====================:' and Mrs, Al Smith of
HOFFMAN-KN UTSEN
Newport Harbor Lutheran
Church was the setting for the
nuptials linkin& K r I at i n e
Knutsen and Rodney 0 .
Hoffman.
Their parents are Mr. and
h1rs. Robert W. Knutsen of
Balboa Island and Mr. and
Mrs. Floyd Hoffman of
Visalia.
Miss Judy Suiter served as
maid of honor. w hi I e
bridesmaids were Miss Laura
Lenz, Mrs. Teresa Riggs. Miss
Robin Opheim, Mrs. Lynne
Gates and i\1iss Susan Bauer.
Wendy Wanbaugh was the
flower girl.
Ross Hoffman was the best
man, and ushers w!:re Grover
tr.ask, Steve Smith, Tom
Stickel, Larry Knutsen and
~im Jackson.
• The bride will graduate
Jrom San Diego University
fnd is affiliated with Kapin
.Alpha Theta. ~ Her husband attended the
tollege of the Sequoias and Is
ltudylng at SDSU \\•here he: ls a member or Sigma Alpha
EP'ilon.
~ VAN TUYLE-TOSTI
~.Patricia Ann Tosti became
Jne brtde or Richard Arthur
N-n Tµyle during rites read in
Marine Corps Air Statton
pel, El Toro, by the Rev .
mood S..pU..
arents of the couple tre:
1'Jr Force Col. (,..t.I •nd Mrs.
cirlo R. To•tl of N'ewport
heh and Mr. and Mrt. Keith k Van Tuylo of FuUuton.
: Ml.W An(tl.t Toatt "" maid
bl honor and brldam1lda "ere
Mlsa lllrblrl Tolll, Mro.
Grqory Walklr Ind Mr1.
Mleblel ~Ille.
Tilt bfldelroom'• fllher
' '
was best man and ushers were
James Van Tuyle . Jon
Chrlsten11en, Gregory Giemo nt
and Joseph Tosti.
The newlyweds, who will
reside in San Francisco, are
graduates of California State
College at Fullerton where the:
bride Is comple:Ung her MA In
anthropology.
BAIL EY-RA NCOURT
Lyn Helen Rancourt became
the bride of Phillip Balley dur-
ing rites read in St. Bonaven-
ture Catholic Church, Hun-
tington Beach by the Rev.
Robert Vidal.
Their parenU-are Mr. and
Mrs. Norman J . Rancourt of
Huntington Beach and Mr . and
Mrs. Robert S. Balley of Palos
-Verdes Estates.
Miss Sue Rancourt was
maid of honor and
brmesmaids were the Misses
Deborah Pratt, C a r o I y n
Vrolyk 1nd Beth Barber.
Ronald Daigh Hrved as best
man and ushers were Rusty
Lew, fifike Seagraves and Bob
~foore.
The new Mrs. Bailey is a
graduate: of M a r l n a High
School and attends Cllifornia
State College at Long Beach
where she is president of Zeta
Tau Alpha sorority.
Her husband is an alumnus
o) Rolling Hills High School
and attended CSCLB where he
was affiliated with Theta Chi
fraternity.
They are maklng the.Ir hon1e
in L-Ong Beach.
CURTIS-REDDING
Nichols· Hilla U n I to d
Methodlot O!urcll. Oklohom1
City wu the aetllng for tho
Mar ried in Hawaii
Laguna Beach fashion designer, Kay Cantonwine became the bride of Robert A.
Berry. president of Jo•eph Msgnin Co. durin~ a ceremony In Honolulu's h!Jtoric
Ka wai• Church. After honeymooning pn Maw, the newlyweds will reolde In Sili
Francisco. The bride is the daughter of the Howard C1ntonwines of Llg1111a
Beach.
nuptials linking Jewel Dee
Redding of Newport Beach
and Richard Wayne Curtis,
The Rev. RJchard J. Gib-
bons directed the vow ex·
change for lhe daughter or Mr.
ond Mrs. J. D. Redding of
Newport Beach and the son of
Mr. aod Mr111. E. Wayne Curtis
of Oklahoma Clly.
~ FRANCIS.
'\,,ORR el
The bride la 1 1r1du1te of
San Die10 State College and
was a graduate art student ·~
Clllfornla State Colle1• at
Lo111 BeoC!h. Her husband la
an alumnus of Lhe University of Colorsdo. FINE STATIONERY
Tht newlyweds wlll realde In HALF PRICE
Oklahoma City and w!U be SA LE
honored Rt. reception Jan. 21 SILICTID ITIM I
to be jiven by the brldt'I llU t taAU ., .. ,, '''·Nit
Bayshores. They are le1ving
Saturd8y, Jan. 15, for a 10-day
vacation in Montego Bay,
Jamaica.
The holiday followi Smith'•
installation 18 vice president
of the: Monrovia Ch1mber of
Commerce.
Designs
Packaged
NEW YORK (UPf) -The
changing space 11e soeiety
with its new Ille stylea I• con·
tributing to a new concept in
home furnishings, says a
survey by the Latex roam
Rubber Council.
New trend1 : ''Total en·
vironment," a complete design
package of furniture, fabrics,
wall covering, li1hting and
<1lher furnls hlna nteds ; "ln1·
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just about everythln1 from
1torage tpat:e to des k Ul aterto
to bed.
Th~ fil'lf!llt clothes for
chUdrtn--irom tht
bftst Amerlcan arid
European des1,ne:ra
H .. tlqtol Bll'llour
(7141 Mf.IMI ,
Toni CoaolrJ' (71:n:::.. Attendanta wt1rt1 Mlq Robin
Reddin& ind H1rry
Cbutwood. parent.t ln their Ne"Jk)rt ,, ••• ,IR••• ·t•••lllfll , .... ,.s Beach home. .._ ____ _.I ~======~
cold wave special
$16 75 f~r alim ited • time o nly
This body-buildingwavo ls a rea l
c~rl-keeper ... gre•t for helping
any type of h1irto hold the li"8 l
Includes• preview of your
new self in our exclusive
Maile Mirror." style cut
and set, $16.75 compl ete
@)
MagicMirrorBeautySalons
0"8 "'""'' .,..... .....
, ..... , " "''""'' l ftl!Mtl 'lltllt~"' • '""""'"*'-! ........
1 lte New MMArtti1r llM. •
Htfter Ya.. Sii.,,... c......,
lfll Jnw .. Miit ••· tt H .. ~
NIWPORT liACH
,, •
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DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
. . .
GIT MER INTO TME 1 CAB BEFORE (.
SME l<lUS ME! ( .. ' 0 0 , , • • '
By Tom K. Ryan
"'0>16! ~J II/// p
.(:! ... f:l.
{I l/l!jl\~ ~
··~~-... ··
Ll'L ABNER
~Tl.ES6 M. lllN5MOl<E JW0 HIS
l1'USTlil> U'L -"MO<:E CJ<ll£P" AM.JN POSfOON!.'-AC'TIOH!!
c•MEAA!!
SALLY BANANAS
--·-....... ~ ..
DAll.Y PILOT 15
By Al Capp
By Charles Barsotti
J.11 L---------~---
MUTT AND JEFF
SOYOU'Re
~!
FIGMENTS
PLAIN JANE
DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER
AC~OSS
l Physical
voh.lll'lt of,.
solid body
5 Movtd with
I Irv!!'
10 Pcnh"11t made
frOf'lll COlnt
hominy
14 Over 191in
15 Fttnee's
longest rivtr
16 Kind or
tnUSlccl
composition
17 Te•
19 Hockey
SLllflCt
10 °" '""' right way
21 Plact In I
urtaln spot
23 Personal
opinions
26 Ftl'ftllh with ........
27 Having two
plants
30 ~tvljtd
~ Minor p-ophe t
JS ~IXflslbllity
fOI' an offense
37 Prnident~I
nickn1mt
JI Find lwtt
constantly
ll L"9'
quantities ol
ll<NY: Sl1119
•1 Brarlllan _ ...
42 Twtlsh tltlr
43 Sllidtn
'"""' lllOYfflltnl
44 Bitter
45 Banacuda
47 Trnstntss
50 lnswancr:
Abb<.
51 Clt1 of Jndia
5Z SWstltutt
56 City ol N"'
York State
60 Oistal'ltr: 1111n2
Prffix 8 G1ttk god Jl Acts
&1 Otnial of a q Quntionabfr 30 -Diablr:
ltgal demand 10 Plays a guitar Orvil's Island
04 Dirtclhn 11 Melody 3q Mix tog.ther
&5 Inner: Ant. 12 Jelly used 40 Pmon
&6 Season of with lamb rxcluded from
penitence U Stir a fire a trGUP
&7 Artifice with a stick 44 insects' tlomr
68 Ascfftllns 18 ~tn poller 46 Fcu sccrr
tM lntent of Invasion and ten
,, WW·ll VH:iitll: 22 Rlttl for 48 Ctoss-
Abtr. crrllin horsts txamlnrs
24 Kind of auto; 4, lnt'I Air
DOWN lnfom111 Transport
2S Muddy Assn.: Abbr.
I-· fidt: deposits 52 ..... on tt:
tn bi'd fa ith 27 Amer. Spttd up :
2 Gtnus l1wyer·s1i10f lnfor11111f
of duck s and his father 53 Shade of
) Schism<11tic 28 Optically ;rttn
religi<M body fonntd 54 In &dd1tioi1
.\ Ttl'ns aside dupUcatr SS Expos, e.g.
5 Partlcl~l 29 Navaho 57 Slng« Ed ·-
111 1 gaM dwell Ing 58 Penny
'"81lderdashl" 31 Flavorful 59 Skills
7 Luc:ty~ rtllsh serwd 62statiocay:
Ronan on food Abbt.
. llUIMl'&ls Jt lsla11ic dn-11 63 111-trtd person
i .
P.EANUTS
JUDGE PARKER
&UT I KNOW Eilt! ME'S
6ENTLE ANO KIND •• ANP
6000! ME GOULP'N'T
M"VE kaLLEP ANYONE!
MISS PEACH
PERKINS
B Al Smith
n= WI DOGS HAD PUPS
11-l TflE CHll-lA CLOSET
You WOULDN"T CAU..
THEM SOUP Pl.ATES.
WOUl.D 'YoU?
By Dale Hale
By Frank Baginski
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
Oii, 80Y··'THJS IS
Ol<E OF I/If ~1.Y
D.4YS·· l CAN'T
STOP , YAWN~.
ANIMAL CRACKERS
•
>''20M MAY -ro /JJECf:,M8Ef2
15 .51'/. f MoNTUS.
• ,
By Gus Arriola
" !5<JT · -FIWM -A>Jr? me . ll PECIEM~ ) OAVS /1 ' 7D MA bW!NOU:;t f1'1S ONJ..'( OOWN·· l'OllFt!
By Roger Bollen
400 l(1)(MJ Wf!AI 1flE
ll<t:xl8le 15 WOA!J; !:\'.¥)()?.. EVeRqooc M/\l<eS 1'00
M/.llll ~p Pell.Slal 5.
I'M. cetTAJN 'THAT STANLEY WOMSATM
WOil(E() ror ~ .. THAT FOR scw.e
REA50t4 ™EY ~ PtSPlEAsa:> WITH
HIM. AMP W.t.NGEO MIS DEA.TM •• THA.T
™EY '-LSO A.RRA.NGEP FOR me TO ae
lNE t..AST SEEM wmc WOMIATH!
TIMI! .TO 60 -· CMILOR!~!
PUT ON YOU~
BOOTS!
lllHAT,
l<ILe?
. By Harold Le Dou~
SM\ WE MUST tM SURE ME IS •• &llT
Fl'f' TO NEW Yon! ERIC A.NP APPLETON
E~C fl.AV NOW PtP NOT LEAVE s;c>t
IE Ye PAN6ER! WEW YORK THIS.
AFTCRNOON!
By Mea
~-611-i PO, , ... 111Y MOT-t'M
....... _ ,.,...,. ,.,, ... ,......,..... .
,..,,.. AHO wll.L
....0 UV~ lH A 'U
Of IOOU-.
By John Miles
;
THE GIRLS
-~-.. ir;tY1<'f1'" 1-u
.
' • •
,,
. -·
.,
"
"J\-1y problem iii no matter bow mudl I do to lll)'stlf, I 11
alway1' come out lookln1 'Before'." 1 1
DENNIS THE MENACE :
•
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II ll.lll.Y PILOT Tut54.,, J•~'"' '"' 1'71 . •
Wooden Opp Oses : Frosh RUie
ANGELES (AP) -Freshmen on
op.ranked UCLA Bruin basketb11l
ii?
ce in recent years it could have
Jw>sened. If rules had permitted,., say1
&iC:b. John WOOden. But he aay1 he's
•cnst it. · .
The subjeCt arose at Monday's meeting
.r.ith< SO.them calllornfa B8'ketball
Mfpciation, where Wooden aaid he disap..
proves of the NCAA decision to allow
w.Jer~OC<S to permit buketblil and
Mtitba1J frosh play if officials wish.
oJ:'!l 'm very much against It," declared
Wolden, who a few years back aaw hill
t"'""'Y embarrassed by an exhlbJtion lou
" .
~"
to a {rosh team. The fr<l&h oenttr1 was
nmed Lew Alclndor.
Wooden allows that aoolher bi& Center
could have made the collegf team e.llO -
. current soph II~ ator BUI Walton.,
"I simply thlnkll l&liet a boy a yHr lo
get uaed to the,.,adJuslmenl. and oriel\-
tation ol college .We," Woodeo says of l\is
reasons for opposition. But he admils
"not many people agree with me" about
keeping fre&hmen out.
"I believe the IS.year-old vote did
something for the c!Jmate of the whole
thine," say& J,. D, Morgan, UCLA athletic
director. "If you 're old enough to vote,·
LA Open Play off
i~r:-.
~aron's Prophecy
I. '• .
iProves Accurate . . ,_ •...
lDS ANGELES '(AP) -"You know,"
'l\Mruny Aaron mused i n charac·
Qstic:ally th11111htlul, • o It · •po k en
C!!;flion, "it.'s_ almost i~PQ!sible for
Gfbtle Archer to make a bogey."
Tommy was standing in the fifth
fairway whije Ar~ef was Dailing away
in the woods in their Ill-hole playoff with Dave Hill for the title in the Los Angeles
Open golf tournament.
He was right.
Arther, 8 6-foot-a former ranch hand
from Gilroy, Calif., made a miracle par
Cll!lhe fifth, then clinched it all with a
fa!ltastic chip shot that saved par on the
• }7)1:( hole and went on to a two-stroke vie· tSY .in tht fight for the '25,000 first pri~
tli\rcher shot a five-under-par 66 in the • ,,. .. i
..
playoff round whlle Aaron and Hill each
had.-68 in the mud, llunny "eather that .
bathtd tbe 6,823-yard ·Rancho Park Golf
Course and tbe·eltra-day crowd of about
4,000 who came out to see the three tour·
tested veterans.
Aaro~ ~nd 11111, ea_ch 34 ~and each a
dozen ot more· years cin the pro tour, took
home $11,575 apiece from the total purse
of $125,000 in the traditional openfng
event on the loog prO tour -but · it was
big George all the way.
He and Hill both hit it stiff on the first
hole and b,irdied, but G~rge took the
lead when the slim, intense Hill bogey~d
1 the second ~9le. a11d Archer led th~ rest
o( the way. . . _
Aaron and Hill each had a shot at him,
but Aaron was betrayed by four short
putts. that wouldn't. drop and Dave
couldn't keep it all together, finishing
with .six btrdiet, and lhree bogies.
• you're old enough to play baakttbaU 'or
football on the varsity Jevet.'A h
Moraan like Wooden ·doeso't like the
frosbddea. lie opposed it' when NCAA·of-
ficials agreed to make · il lDpUonal in a
f1orldi meeting last week.
At least one Southern California coach
likes lhe Idea. Coach Bob' Miller of •Los
Angeles State said "we're gtad the rule is
in" and only . wished it would have been
adopted in time for optstanding frosh
casaba guard Raymond U:wi!, whom
he'd like on the varsityr -
·Bob Boyd of the No." 10.-ranked USC
Trojans said freihmen would have helped
his somewhat weak bench but added "I
don't tbtnk 1ny of our lreahmen could
hive ,tarted for 'tht 1varaity and I'd be
surpilsed if thil bl!P~ very · in•ny
times .at many schooll." J
, -.Coach Jerry Tarkanian of C8.l State
( l<>ng .Beach) 1114' he doul>\s "moN! than
JO to 16<1 nationtUy1• amoog fre.s.hmen
could make top varsity ·teams, adding
"our· own program is not built ' on
freshmen but on junior college players..,
Wooden thought frosh eligibility would
hurt two.year colleges and many frosh
would shoot for four-year colleges instead
of JC and wind up not making it at the
college level and· hence playing little.
Shootout
Wipes Out
Cage Clasl1
I
BA"J'ON ROUGE, La. The
Southeastern Con'ft:rence basketball gatne
between Louisiana State and Alablma
scheduled for Monday night was called-
off because of the shootout between
police and b1ackS in a N e gr o
neighborh'ood. •
Th.e .g~e has beeii rescheduled toi\ight
at LSU. •
NEW YORK -··Bill Shannan of the Los
Angeles Lakers and Tom Heinsohn of the
Boston Celtics were named today as
coaclies for the National Basketball
Association's 22nd All.Star Game at Los Angel~s ~an. 18. · ,
Sharinan will coach the West and
Heinsohn the East. •
EUGENE, Ore. -Former Corona del
1'-far High and Gold~n · West College
basketball star Chris Thompson, now
•
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DAILY PILOT Pi.It ... Pttrklt O'Otflll .. figers May
G;~t McLain
"I just didn't feel comfortable over a
p4tt all day," sa.id Hi,11, who barged into
the play~ff with a dramatic 3(}.foot birdie
putt· on the 72nd hole in Sunday's final
round .
· playiiig for the Universjty of Oregon, has
been sidelined with.'~ !land i(ljury. UCJ 'S PHIL MATHEWS FAKES OUT TRES HODGE FOR AN EASY SHOT.
J f.,;
Back in Fold , ...
~~OIT (AP) -EvCn after all Lbe p~;;s he caused them and after all
the relief at seeing him leave for the
Washington Senators, Denny McLain may
•@;Ch. for the Detroit Tigers a·gain.
~ tt'icers · general manager J a m es
(:lzripbell said Monday he would be will· ~ \0 take back the problem child who Wiched Detroit to a pennant in 1968, blit
ffly·if the price is right. ·
~.!"'The lmJ)ort~t thing is to win and I
Denny ·can still pitch," said
JI. "I'd Uke to have him back 1 but r!!l not going to give up any of our front-~ ballplayers for him." . ,;~&.ain, twice a recipient· of the Cy
bung Award and a former 31-game win-
A~r.~~as fallen a long .way "since he left
~troit af~ being susperided three times
970 -once by commissioner Bowie
I\ for gambling connections.
t became the losingest pitcher in
ba.seball last year, postjng ~ 10.22 record tor' the Senators, now the· Texas Rangers.
! ;D~pite McLain's disru ptive influ6flce ~p tl;re Tigers while in Detroit, Campbel l
)•id:manager Billy Martin and other key,
1}g~s would favor the deal.·
:• "Bflly said he coul(I handle him,"
t'Ompbell said. The Tiger GM also
fl. d the matter with star pitcher . -r Lolich. who had n~ love lost for
!JI, and catcher Bill Freehan, whose
revealed the reJentment McLain i
"J had spme chances, particularly on
the 17th; but I got careless on some short
putts," S?.id Aaron , a softly drawling ·
Georgian who held a three-stroke Jead
going into the final round,·shot a 69 .and
still got tie~.
"I'd kind of hoped that George and
Dave had made their big moves, had
· theiriQi~.rqupds on Sunday. ·But George
'caip'I fi1•rb&ck'1.>ith another ~.·1-Aaron
said.
Aaron missed four times from four feet
or less, once from 12 tnches.
· "TonUTiy-just didn"t make a pott all
day," said Archer, who picked up his
ninth tour title.
Chrl1 Bkx:ktr
H"•I• lrwi11
BOil Ao•bvrg
Tom We!tkepl' f'orreet F•Jler Cur1l1 Slllord
BD-b E. Si'nl!I\
Jol'l~ny Miiier J. C. SnNd
Biiiy Ca1per
P~u! Har.,ey
Jtrry Abbot George JOl'lnJOll
G•v 8rew1r Orl•r Jon1t
Ktn Still A1y Floyd
M•( Mtleridon
pon J•n.,.rv Jim H1nly
MlllW' a"tier'· Arnotd P1!mer
Jlrnmv O. Paw.II H~I• .W.nton
Herb Hooper
O.lt Oou'il11S
Cl'!utk C01JrTn1y,
Lou Gr1~•m C~ut~ TharPt
JMI Goleltttlricl
Gene Lltl!er
11.od Fun1t11'1 LH Trtv1no
S5.ISO ff·71 '4iS-70-17S s~.112 u.1+aa-21•
,, ... , 714-71""-214
S-tOOO M41-11·70-277 $l.U5 69·72·72"6J-211·
13>26$ 66.61·11·7)-271
ll,U.S "·TW7·1'l-271
IJ,US 69-611·71>11-211 12,1(2 69·71M9·1l-71•
$1,!(2 71·10-61·71-279
12,1(2 j •..it·11""-219 ; 12,1 '2 2,11~,_,,_,,,
$2.1 42 7'"49..!9-'1-279
12,1'7 11·10..!9..!1-119
12,1'2 7Uf.11""-l1't
ll,4J1 69·11·7l·6t-UO
11,07 71).1J.1o.it-'80
Sl,437 71..,__1U1-11G
Sl,,J7 • •ff.,jl.71).7)-11(1 •
11,0!1 49.70-72.J0-'8!
S1,C12 12·'1-'t,'4if.-711 St,012 fJ.1\.11.ro-'81
$1,0!2 7l•t-"71).713--"21l
SJ.Oil ·71.ff-7$.11 ... 211 Sl.012 71).1'Mf·71--211
$1,012 6'"'-72-7 ... 211 1102 1u1.11-11-ni
$102 ''·12-11·10-,1'1
$102 11·10-11·10--1"
1102 at.11>7'"6'-782'
1702 ' '8>11·7(.,f.-fU
SIO! Jl).1J.JUl-Jh, c
1102 7 .. f.1Mt-m
1702 11).1).11Mt-2'2
1102 tt-11.]0.n-212
fated among the Tigers. ,, (.
01vt SlocktOl'I
Orv!lle Mf/O/dy
JD~~ M•l'llllty
L1rry M•wry · im '4-n-li,.1S--1•2
110l 7! ... ..!l-7S-21l .
1 alla S>' ~riesome Cowboy .
GEORGE ARCHER WIJ'IS. JT
Wicl~s, Hayes .
' . . '
Added to West
All-star Team
.. NEW YORK (AP) ....: Commissioner
W!!ltfr Kennedy announced the re·
mainder oi"the East and West squadS, ~s
chosen by Uie league's coaches, for the
National Basketball ASsociation All-!tar
game Jan: 18 'at Los Angeles'. . .. . .
Ghosen for the East All-stars in ad-
.di.ti~n to the eight players selected ear-
lier · were : l
Jack Marin and Arthie Clatk of
• I . . Baltimore, John Johnson and Butch
Beard of Cleveland, Tom' V~n Ar~dal~ ~f
Cincinnati and Bob Kauffman of Buffalo.
~e is expected tc,, be Rut for the next 10
da ys. · ,
Thompson slashed .. his left hand W1iile
chopping wood. ~ ifhe' 6·2 junior is
righthanded. . ' • ~
Thompson has been a starting, guard
for the Ducks until· this past weekend. He
scored 11 points in a Pacific-8 setback to
UCLA Saturday night. ·
• • . ~ --
LI'ITLE ROCK -Arkansas ·coach
Frank Broyles said M~y night he was
vefy happy, in his present position,
dispelllng rumors that he might acc.ept .
the head coaching position at ,Georgia
Tech. · ·
Bud Carson, who '#as' hired for the
head job at Georgia Tech five )'tars· ago,
w11s fi~d Saturday. Broyles was among
tl1o.se . mentioned for the same position
five years ago. •
SAN -DIEGO -·Former Los Angeles
·Rams halfback Ron Waller is one of five
assistant coaches named by the San
Diego Chargers Monday to aid head
coach Harland Svare during the 1972
seaSon.
O!herS ' iricluded Bob Schnelker, wi~
Green Brly sinCe '1964; George Dickson of
the Houston Oilers; Walt Y.owafsky who
playfd w_ith Syare and Schne~er; 'and
.Rick JJ,~dman, a seven-year Charger
veteran who wit)'serve as player-coach.
Sfhnelker is head o£fensive coach,
Yowar$y the def~n'.sive lioe mentor and
Wa.Jlef Js in charge .of special tea.ms. T'Wo
other a~sistanf.$ will be named in the
near 1µture. ' ••
Can Do It Friday
UCI Nt:aring Record
, For Co11$ecutive Will)
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Ot "1• O•llY ,.not ,,.,,
UGI Irvine's well-oiled ·basketball ma.
chine eased to a school record-tying
eighth straight victory over visiUnli!' QJi.
vet Nazarene College of Illinois Monday
night in Crawford Hall, 99-81. with a
blistering fast break and excellent shoot-
ing.
Friday night the Alteaters Will· go for
a new standard with Chapman College
of Orange furnishin~ the opJ>OSitioo at , a o'clock. ·
After Olivet opened in front with a.pair
of free throws and a field goal by fresh-
man sensation Tres .Hodge, Bill Moore
went to work with thr~ straight baskel$
off the fast break to put UCI in front, S-4.
The visitors knotted the,count at.six, then
watched as the machine rolled S:lflOOthly
to a 16-point haUtime ~ge. . ,
"I thought our passing game. in terms
of attackirig their pressing defense and
executin2 the fast break, was excellent."
coach Tim Tift said followirig the en-
counter.
hie figures for the Anteaters with MGOrt
top man with 24. ·
The first half blitz by. the Anteaten
found the passing game setting up nu4
merous fast break oppartunlties with
Rhyne, Burlingham and Phil Mathews
taking turns1passing 1o teammates 1n the
clear under the bisket.
Burlingham , the unsung hero o( the et.
tack, stO!e the ball three times i1 the
first half and Mathews added another as
UCI forced I 1 Olivet turnovers.
After Tift had cleared the bench l!te
in the game, Olivet did a stranae thing
in the final 45 seconds of play.
Garrick Barr scored the 99th UCI Point
with .2:44 left to play to make it 99-73.
The Tigers hit eight straight to bring the
count to 99-81 with 1:1 1 left and then de-
cided to stave off a 100,.point tally acainst
them by holding the ball near rnidcourt
with a pass~g game and nG shots.
"We have been shooting well ·most of
the time it home and toiilght we did
very wen· again."
·• LOS ANGELES ·-Tlie previcw.ly an· The Anteaters hit 42 of 75 from the Mutll'td '11twiii 2bfJt1 'auto 'racing event at , floor for 56 percent, giving them seven
OnlariO'Motor SpeedwaY April 9 has been of eight games over the 50 pefcent mark
Added to the West t;ter1 ~1!;l'e: canceled, raceway officials report. on the current home stan<f. ·
Connie Hawkins and Paul Silas of The Bfficials said after a board cf Moore and Phil Rhyne did· the' major
Sharman Won't
Be Dismayed
By Reversal
Phoe~ix, Sidney Wicks Ql..Portland. Elvin directors' meeting 'Mondlf here that the portion Of the scoring damage to ·ouvet
P • f H 'I' Hay<S of u..!.s"'n mid 1 »ob "·-i·er and Ciinc~·nation Was because of a policy to in the first haJf,,Jtitlin.e: 32 point! 'between DETROIT (AP) --"I don't think we t. t ry nuu w lil ""'" • 1 ' n1· ·1·. st •1·-· · :...._i:. -them. ln the second halt it was Dave h · 1 · too h bo • le Ure .. 0 . OS } 1, . Jimmy Walker of Detroit. st.age .. o Y. II' -r, e, races ·~· as . Baker, Ed Burlingham and Troy Rolph ave o worry mu~ a ut gelling In Ontario's Califomta 500 nett Sept. 3. a si"mp" sa1'd Bill Shar an sl · · · · TJie Wes~ which ttp,ils ·rn \hp series 14. · taking up the slack. • • · · m ' wnp,ing in _)°!i· 7·, won last year in San Diego, 108·107. • - . e • : ' AJJ .five s~s once again hit Jn dou. a padded folding . .chair in Cobo Arena
WK\V ORLEANS (APJ -The Dallas : dream of· moving to NeW 'zealand,''' . Ttt~ starting· team' for the Eas't· iricludes
1
DURBAN, So\llb 'AtricA ·-TOp ·seed ut rrvtiw :."};·,, ,., 01Mtt•1v· 11 p1 111 after his reserves concluded an hour
boys romped and chatted in t.helr bi-another said. guards Walt Frazier Of New York and , 89b HeWjtt 0~ Squth.Afi'icp gained ~ se-ithYM f ' ' 1' sc~m•lf•t•r 10 ' 1 'J practice Monday.
tion to New Orie.ans Monday for Ne response. ·Lou Hudson ·of Atlanta1 .center Di:tVe ;con·d round of the suaar tennts_1 twu'fta-~.~~~,.. l'~ '?, ~ ~: ~!r.'11 ! ! ; 1~ ''If we IOst fout of five qr something
"5unday's Super Bowl game against Minutes passed. No questio11S. No.reac-Cowens of' Boston .and forwards Billy . _ ment Monday . witp ,a .6-2t 6-1 .'wip over =~~~~,,, ~ il ~ ~! ~;:::-~ ~ : ! n-I'd ~orry.1' . '
i. but Dusne Thomas just sat and . lion from Thoma~. Cunningham of PhHadelphia ind John Leonard Goldwater. of south.Africa. _ M••~•--~ o 1 ' Atmoie ' 1 o ' Actually,,his Los ¥&eles La\ers art In
ed. , He looked at the sky. He looked the • Ha,.licek of the Celtics. The other three Second ·seed Juan Glsbirt of .$~~· . :~et-t :r ~; ~'::~r ·f ·~ : ~ a slump, and coach Sharmao doe1n't
ve me alone -J don't want to lalk reporters in the eye. His lips twitchett .. He players are Jo Jo White of Boston, .Dave trounced John 1:1:,..za.·s of Sonth Afri.c_a, , ' Haw111~1 o o· 1 o L181M(ls o o l o realize It. They .have lost one fn 8 row • DeB h I N y k d w· . ..,,,, "\: h . Tell!• 41523" Toltll >On'14U J. • • .. ybody," .the powerful running back said nothing. · ussc ere 0 ew or an es 6--2 in another 1in:t rouod rn.atc . . . H•1n1mt: uc 1rv1ne ss. orivf! 2t. ·a11d one in a row is a losing str-eak tor
' West Texas State said as he· £'Wally, he as~ed: Unseld Qf Baltimore. In first round woments ·singles, Patti . uci """" u~> $•utftwtlt LA 1tn this season's takers.
ed his 8-l, 220-pound chassis "What time is it?" 'Phe \yest starting 'five cbr)sist~ or Jerry Hogan of La Jolla defetted Jean Payne ot ft'' Jf '' '' n l'f ~ They were to try halting that 11kid ;~s a' plan~ seat in the·end mne of the ~'{t'1 1 11:.10\'" somebody repUect. ·'Ol~t West arid Gail Goodrich of Los Angeles at South Africa S..1, &--0 ilnd Sharon WAl1h of ~t~!~~. 1: 1} : ~~ i~~~~~' J:··~ : f, tonight against the Detroit Pi1lons, WhG
N!Jr:Orleans Saints' practice field. was it. The reporters drifted away to guard, ~areem Jab).lar of MUWaukee at . Sait Rafael,. ~efeated , .South .AfriCan 1 Horott : ~ ·~ ,! ~1ij.~ · t : : '~ have , won 22 games less and I011t 23
I, · aaav beard n!lve him the a~ mere 9'.odUctWei areas. 'fhomu COIKio-.center llrld Spencer Haywood of Seattle ·: Christine Marais(,¥• 6;4; &.l. , ~; .· ~,::~~":: ,. 1 J is May. · • • 1 2 7: f games more than LA. . . ~ -r eud'tO sit, &lone. and gloWer. , 1intt 13<4: Love of ChlCBg'o it .the 'orward In the men's second rQU?d single~ Alan r=111 • % i ~ 1~ :Zr1::ims : : " : A near-capaci~ c•r-o w d of more
ce of a movie \rillain. His eyes He js Jhe ~wboys' problem pllli)l~.r ~ sPots. W_IJ~ ~hamberlain ,of ~. Lakei:s. Fox of Los Angeles 'defeatea nobert L1ui. s • ' ti than 11,000 was expected. A team
cold and menacing. The muscles in the· ~·1·1"ant to be alone" Gatbo tif. U\e Oscar Robertson of Milwaukee and Schwegman of South Africa, 6-31 6-2, •nd ~~~ : : ; : spokesman said : · w,',~fihyletonecod ma'munme·w,atsm0ewni.thsohui~mh~ tieim. He la: th~ only member of the Cazzie ift:ussell of Golden State were pidt· · M~e Kreiss ol. Bel Air took Jlob Johnson t 1 1 u ).I u iin s~i'::ii ~ 1~ ~ .~ "Thfl" have been.~~ to buy ticket.I
· aQu•d who room• by tumselC. ed earUe"r ai· reserves.. -QJ_ ~uth Africa; 6-7, 6-2, 6:-1.:, '" ~:1~rml: uc1 PreM 41 Sovttl"*'t t..A M. tod1y,· and that d°"f't .. .happen very i Dll;W~, little kno~S Of reporters !': • . . • :~ ' • · r • • J ' · ~ 1, • , 1, !, ' :-·~ • Often.!_' I • -'.
11t1i4n!d aroupd thew h•1 I e ·sh Ir t e d ,. :lt ! • .' I "'; ' · I. ., ""' , , • _, I. -' ·•It' · Pave Bing Rnd Bob Lanie!-ware ex-~'\o •cttlered informal press con-\I., ' Qt· I l , l ·'~ w • K •d s t 0, ,Ut peeled to play for O.trnil. Bin(, recently ... ·,·, .. > \' ;. . ·~· . 11 Q ' ..... "&T .... "'"' I !Iii:! u returned from the Injured list aner
lb ·• Th ·' u ed lo · ~, I Y .:;;; ~' ~ • I undergotn•,,eye surg~. suflerod 1 bnli.,. lfl'Oll· e"ay, otnas1.vnnu · ~;i ' .. ' •" "-· · ··-· · ~-· " · . :•,:. ~, "';/ tlJt wooden stands. the hum be r ·• · · ·"'< , \ti · • ' · · · · M' • ., ·•. et left Joo)· in ~atur~•Y'•• game H I
\.i.ndln(,out on his white /•rsey. »w ORLEANS (API -Miami .;./aclJ families won't come down until Saturday he has achteyO!d fo/ tuf!l[ni the upanaioo about, but JOU have to give Ille Jeta some Mllw1uk.,., •nd,~nler, J'U hit io th•
...nethlnf buggll1g you? Why don't Don Shul1;>the victim of a carni\¥ this tinle." .. '. .. " Dolphinl tnlO 1.SUper Bo"!i IUD!' In Jul! credit." . . face·<luring ~una1y'1 came aaal!IJt Buf. ! lo tal)"t" a .wr!ttr asked him. qi~ thft 4"Jrol"!d ; hi~ l _' Sl>ula's Coils 1081 to the New York Jets .. two yurs. ', , . · , · Shull also It (iVinl'lhe CoWbo)'I aredlt fa lo and developtd a blOOd clot to Iha
• c6innWll. )t .111d sourly. ~~-. ~ ,,.,., )JIU! JO" , 18-7 m &uier Bowl Jll; Ille .tJrst Ume~ • "That wintef'W ... 1 I~• wlnler for -for Wnc the favorites: rftlh~ of his rJgHt .. ye. • • • 'llllel" ·iri!tOts. notebooks to han<I,. &Ip.;< BOwf Monday )!'lib hJS ~· -. NaUonal .,·ootbaU Leque.,leam WI.\~ • ,, . . .,. , -.~ _,._ "We're a )'Ollni team lnd,thty'v• been Mllwaulrei annPl>ed the· 1.1\era' Na· ' ; atound tbO.nc;alcitrant lthltlt • and without their wl~s'1Jid ldlep. :· feated I~ pro footbaH's ·ye.knd · me, Shula 111d, rte1llinr;ev .... loll.,.. a great !tam over 11111111.b<r of year•," Ulib1f Bukotball' Alsoclillon whmlnc ~llfcp~ qililltio~s. "We b®e to be more • •11-llke lacular 1»1 ·• team tzcn4he Amer . • ·int tho loH If.Ibo Jeto,: !'\Ve wqe heavily he. upl1"1~· '"'1<Y'fe so m~ mort .. •· • lll'tak at 3a by downln& ui.m IJ!).104.au,,; ..._-""••~od his dllcOll\ltir\ but aat here," 111a Shula prior l~ lJie j)plpl!in" LeailJt, , , J1)'0l'td and"' d!dq t "111. And It was perJtncoif iliao•we ara:1'4on'lpay·muclh · d•y. , , 1 1 • 1.='~ oeca.il..l)bl .. ndJna 1 stlletto first workout for SQnday s Sujie,: Jlowj The Jl"esence of Wli!a and clll)dren·• '.tOllaldcred llkt a 11ri l<f lit ~at by tha aljenll(l!I 14 odds, but they certainly · Detroit ls last i)j the ·Midw l Ditlllaa
1 al lht 'wltllsll4!'. · ; • . •&•Inst tjle Dallas Cowboy!: "Wf'V~ or-'' an~ Shll/i's !allure to ~~elleJ' bf{pi,yer~ .. J~ls1 It wu lh,e'fittt loss to the AFL and should be tbe favo~!e•-'' "I, • · · with a 1747 mark. ..,
y ..... lllbtt '. Janlled it where the player, Will hlve from outside int~llorr· lm!ri otheti ' we nod to live with .Jt. ... Bui, as S~ula pointed °"~ 111• Dolphins • •1 ngiiRcf ft11e.d lo""' somttlme, ..,.
OU tl'l111 '; M •:.,a:;; llYO ~ ~ pJelfy of lime to think .footli.1tt' n • quarters,( Including ttJt, massive eresi "The nerl . .JIHr it 'aoflened I H!Ue bit ara goin( lo be mot;t ~ln~·lih ~f~ l'd rather-ha~ J~enll igalnst Mllw&ulff -71!'.,. --"11"-. w ~·. -''Tllere wa1 too mutlLCilnfllslon tbrle, COfps !hit covers .U.e 11m•,.lll1 beenl when Jtanus i:1ty Iieat .Mlhnt!bla. an4 ·. his Colla w~d ••ar•• Jusl '1116 r•4·, t.l)an agilnst 1 tffm '"at wlllJ'I doinf 90 .....,, , ' yean ago. We brought 'the wives down • acknowltilged at m6 of the' principal. •everybody found OU! the Cblt!r h~4 • • son-Jiis on,.w)Jb .wllil\llll ~·one • U.'' Sliarmli!l iild"Ot tbutrult. '1\Y•
No nply, earlier and some of tbe. cljlldren . .iv-. '~}91Jr1orthe Colts' jnelf~tlVl!ners. I• 'pretiy a90d tea111. !Oo. l'd like lo be'sblt ~l-JllM!ll'ar.-'I • . ; ". :Ji"11n•t d lo in. u ployed lrell
'I remember J'OU OllCll llld )'Oii UMil 14 wer~ la • hotel on lbe &Uch n Florfd1 The defeat h•• le!f a tu~ o/ billers lo blami what happened' to the, Col ta on ' Mi whele ltl'I. ',,Shula etj>lalneo, It •~d loat~~ld h'.vo ~e ........ " 11 on the bod! In P'orl Laudal«ale ,.,d and tO.re .,., 1 lot ol ali!Jvtty there. Tbe on ~ia'a tongue, duplte tha acclaim ill that alll)OSphert everybodys tall<od to 1et.back lo .llOO.
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DAii. Y ,ILOT J?
(;-WC Moves to South Coast Circuit Anteaters,
'
Cre•tvlew Aetlen
Diablos, ·Triwns
B7 CIWG Sl!EJl'l' In the Soulh Coaal ~ Ml
,Of * DttW •UM "'"' SAC lfOU]d move to the
A Soulhero Ca!JI..,,.. junior Metropolitan CQnlerence In
eoll!lle nlequlng committee place of Santa Monlct IJ1d Ibo ..._. -.nencled th a I i.u.. ICbool would move Into
Goldtn Wet! Colloge b e lhe Southern CIJ Conference.
1wltcbed lrom Iha Soulhem •At a similar m .. tlng in
Calllotnlt . Conferenct to the November, 5aqta t.lonlca bad
&\Ulh eo..t clrtult, effective 11ked Iha relearulna ...,..
Seple\lber of lhll yw. mlttee 'lo be •llliaed lo
The • actlM came Mooday 1110lhar con1.....,.,._ Wi!U:~. a meeting at Goldea The rolealllini , eommlttee .,.,. recommtndetl .-ihort tlnie
The .,.,..mm•ndaUon II part Illar Jhat &l!la Monlee be
of I Jhree-scbeoJ, Jhrte.<on. all~ to join Jhe Southern
fO(tn<a packap. · CalJlornl1 Conlerelfc:e, makJnc
It approved by lhe slate •it ID olghHeain setup forloot-
allllet(c ' committee In two litll. (LA Soulhwut wtlJ com-w..U, Golden Wen would pell In football In the con-
Jhaa replace Mt. Sio Antonio lerence In Septeml!er).
The recomJMndalion WU unanlmouoJy. , ~ 11114 Slnta"'°" aJonc
thta puaed on to lhe etato "We rully feel good 1bout 'lrllh -~ Cenlloo IJ1d
board, but Ibo lttm wu moving to Ibo Soulh Cout tft SID DllJO 1Cbeo1-M ...
tabled. CoefertllCI. W• )ult have DOI aod City Collece .
Monday'• recommeodatloo bad lhe n ..... 1a1 .1<turno lo But Onna !Jcw'eJ tllal Jhal
wu Wlllllmoully OJ>proVed by Ibo Soulhenl C a 111 o r n I a 1tlup m!(bt °"1)< Uvt for two
the ll members of lhe Cooforonco Jhat we would yean al Ille moat.
relequJn& committee In . at-have In Ibo Soulh Cout. We're "W~ 'aollclpate tlmt Jhere
tend11Ct. bound lo have • better l•le wtlJ be ..,.. movee nel\,JUI'.
And becallH of I b a t P1-l'Jnc qollllt ICboola eucb !leg Diefo City . w1nto out IDd
u..-approval Golden .. Fullerton, Ce<rHl>e IDd Jhere .,.. oJher scbeob Jhat
West athletic director Fred Santa Aol. went' a cban(e."
OWtna -oot feel the "And Ihm wlll be a (ml Golden· Wosl has , been 1
recommendiotlon wlll hive 1ny deal more lntuest. It'll be member of the Soulhero CIJ
problem poaslna the 1tate more competlUve p I a y I n r clrtlllt for Ibo past lhree yoan
athlet.lc committee. · agalnlt tcbooll in the county," and prior to that wu part ol
"We thlnk it'• a Im 0 It MYS Owens. tbe old Eutetn ConltrtDCt
automatic," 11y1 0 " e n 1 • The new setup will feature which allo lnchuted 'OrlJlle
"hre wu no 1erious op-four Orange County jaycees -Cout, FUilerton and Santa
position IJ1d It wao accepted Golden Wm, Oraege Coast, Ana.
Alums Mix
In Opener
UC Irvine 11 bock In JJ1e
Anll>elm collOliole -ball
-for the ·third llrl1*ht year IJ1d wtlJ play a
total of l1 l't(Ular ....
c11n11 begtMlna wllll an
alumni ciaah on Ibo Anteater
ctmpua flald 5atimlay, Feb. 6
arid NMlna Jhroop May 10.
coach Gary AdlDll revealed
lhll wetlc.
The lmpr111lve UCI
ICbedUle I ' h 0 W I home-an<f..
home 1amu with the UCLA
Bruins IDd a tingle contest
wllh the USC Trojans at
Bovard Field alon( wllh action
Battl.e Loop F oe,S;
san ciemen11•a Trltona IJ1d
the Mllslfto Viejo Dlabloo,
bollt M In cr.etvlew Leque
bukelbaJJ holttt!ttea, are al
home in clreult cage action
tonight.
The Tritona wlll try lo burst
the bubble of unbeaten
Poolhlll'a Knlghta (H) while
coach Pit Robttts' Diablos
take on the challenge of the in·
vad!O( Tustin Tiilers (l·I ).
_,
bome court advant.a&~
1eaerally ploYJna • bli role, !I.
Crestview fortunes.
Mike llowlJnc has been' Sa~
Clemente's ~nt ~'
1COrer most of the season. :
He baa, however, receivfll
pleasant help in the inilial two
loop eonfrontatiom f r • rtt
rorward ma&e Dan Nau, who 11
avtragin& 11.5 In lt1gue1 as
compared lo Dowling's 17 .0
norm.
Coaches'
Reactions
To Switch
Artists Seek 3rd in Row If~ S'tanford, UC
Berkeley, san Jose State, san-
ta · Clara, Brigham Young, Oreroo Stai., Colora~o. Cal
Slate (Lone Beach) IDd a 00..t
of olhera.
Other contest! around the
loop find wlnleu Villa Park (I).
2) bosllnr El Modena (I-ti
and , 1'inleas Orange (~2) ac-
cepting lhe next task in trytnr
to derail visiting defending
champion Katella (2..i).
If the Trttoru; art to upturn
the Knight'1, then they must
get ample rebowxling from W
center Bill Kenney aDd the
fast break must click witli H
Pete Sellen at the controla. In Orange Leag~ Race Ttiere are eleven
doubleheadero tilted durin(
the spring,· most of them on
5aturday. UC! will face lhe
Unlvtrtlty of Nevada (Las
Vegae) in five games in-
cludin( a pair of bome'and·
bomt doublebe.cten.
AU games are on tap for 7
o'clock wilh 5:30 junior vars-
ity prellmlnartes penciled in on
all fronts.
For the two area Crestview
contingents -San Clemente
and Mission Viejo both are
on the beel.s of. victories 1fter
each dropped lta 1 e a a: u •
Meanwhile, up the freeway ~
few miles at Mis:don Viej'.
the Diablot have the lea.cue'•
top !'ICQf'U lo 6-1 Gil Norman--
di• (25.t) IDd the loop'• ftflh
best point producer In l-0 Mike
Bowen (11.0).
Members of lhe Golden
Well Collere coaclllna atafJ
were in accord when informed
o[ the school's nitch to the
South Coa1t Conf~ Mon-
dey....U were deJiihted about
It.
Here are the reactions of
members of the Rustler staff:
Ray Sbacklefonl, football
eoacll -11We're glad to be
back la iL We really never
wanted out (ol lhe old
Eastern Conference). We had
no problems in the Southern
California Conference
whatsoever. We enjoyed the
three years we were in it. But
it mates a lot more sense for
WI lo be in Jhe SouJh Coast.
"And I know the k1ds are
real happy 1bout It. It'll be 1
lot more meaningful for the
kids lo play againll people
Ibey know IDd read about.
"I really don't think the
South Coast Conference ii any
tougher in football. T h e
Soulhern Cal Conference II a
liWe more physical and if
anything we'll now be facing
squads with a litUe more
depth. But there's not that
much difference in the two
leagues." •
Fred Hoover, baseball eoadri
-"It's great to be bact in a
league with the rest of the
county achoola. It's more fun
to play against lhe acbeoll you
recruit a~lul I'm feally liclded' lo . • • •
"I don't nJc the South c.oast C<lnferenct is a n y
tougher In basebell. We'll be
getting away from L o s
Ao(eles City College~ we'll
be gaining Cerritos. J!ACC end
Rio Hondo (member• of the
SoCal circuit) have w•ll·
coached teams and we think
we have a good baseball ~
gram. But there are two or
three real strong teams in the
other conference, too. There'll
be more rlvalrie! now. We
lhould have been In the South
Coast Ct>nfermce from the
start, anyhow."
Tom Bermstad, aqaatlel
coac!I -"It 10unds good to
me if for no other reason than
it eliminates the traveJ. We're
undoubtedly steppin( into a
tougher conference (in water
polo and 1wlmmlng), but we'll
llll"Vive. We're kind of looking
forward lo It.
"The Soulh Coast Con-
ference is the best in the state
In water polo and it'1 very
1trong in swimming, also. If
1nylhln( we'll make I t
tougher."
Tom Noon, tract and field
coaeb -"I am looking
lorward t o r.....tabUablil(
aomt of the ofd rivalries we
had before we went Into the
• SouthernCallfornlaCon-
!erenco. I really lll<ed Jhe
Southern CIJ Conference. OUr
relaliomhlp wllh olher ICbooll
and coaches hu been on lhe
highest level.
11Crou country ii obvioualy
tougher In Jhe South Cout
with te1m1 11.ke Fullerton IDd
5anta ADI. In track it'll ~ a
pretty ovon league wllh Mt.
SAC moving out. -
Dick Slrlctdlo, bllkelball
toadl -"I lhlnk lt'e good.
The meln lhin( iJ we'll be
plftyinl l(alnat local com-
peJJUon. It'll be<IOtl of an all-
r county conference. Mon of the
conlerenct ICbeola wlll have
1 101Dethina in commoa."
La1111111 B .. ch High '1 Arlisto
are eettdn( Jhelr t h I r d
atralght Orange L e 11 u •
basketball victory t o n I g b I
when Ibey l1osl V alencla '1 S.O
Tigers In 1 circuit crucial.
Tipoff la alated for 7 o'clock
and not since the 19".45 cam·
palgn has an Artist qu!Dt<t
beeo in the position of takln(
over 90}e leadtrthlp of the
Orange loop with a 3-0 mark.
And that team went on to
record five stral(bl wine and
eventually wound up Jn the
CIF pleyofla.
The other loop encounter in-
volving an Orange Coast arta
team takes place •t SOnora
where coach John Drlscoll'a
University Trojans are looldn(
for their initial clrcuJt win 1t
3: 15.
El Dorado's Golde• Hawkl
wlll be trying for a S.O mark
et Saddlebaclt wblle Brea Ir at
Santiago in a non-lugue tM.
Coach Jerry Fair's Laguna
Beach contingent has put
together ba<k•Jo.baclt Orange
League wins wllh • balanced
scoring attack.
It's been the combination of
outs1de abooUng from Chuct
Corwin (lt.0), Jay Nellon
(9.5) and Nick Gillespie (8.0)
along with the inside attack of
Vince McCalla (tl.0) IDd
Norm Bedell (I.OJ Iha! baa
proven succeulul for Fair.
But Fair'• major concern II
Ill handling lhe Tlgera' prea-
in( lacUca.
"We have to beat their
prus, there's no question
about tbi.t," uys Fair, "they
bave one of lhe bf!! .,.......
around.
"Valencia lites to me a l·J..
1-1 zone but they'll zone on you
Mesa Mat Tourney
Slated for Saturday
The wrestling get-together
formerly known as the Orange
Cout College lnvltatlonal will
get Ila Initial run Saturday
under Its new handle -the
Costa Mesa Inv it a tlon 1 l
wrestli.na: tournament.
•U~ Iba 11\Ujlanct QI ~ r.f,.. Hlrh riilt mentor Jobn
Sweazy, lhe aD-<iay tourney ii
slated for Mesa High'• boyt
gymnasium with 1 starting
time of 10 a.m.
Consolation finalJ are pen-
ciled In for 7 p.m. wllh cham-
pionship I i n a I 1 tentatively
slated for an hour later.
Nine Orange Cout area
ICbeoll wlll be Included In Jhe
18-team fitld and four of them
-Corona deJ Mar, Fountain
Valley, Hunlinglon Beach and
WtJtmlnster -are expected
to batUe it out for team
honors with Bol.sa Grande.
The other area schools
entertd are host M e 1 a ,
Ediaon, Estancia, Marina Md
Newport Harbor.
In addillon lo Jhe lint team
slate, there'• a standout group
of indivklual performers
acbeduled lo compel<.
Perhlps the toughe.t sin(le
weight caterory could be tH
pounds, where some ol Jhe top
oontestanll include Fountain
Valley 'a Les Becher IDd
E1tancl1'1 Vince 111"1; along
wllh lh• lop two flnlsherl lo
list Y•ll''I tourney finals -
MiU J. Brown of Newport and
Tim Mack of Westminster.
The 136 I ii alao eipected
lo be bofy i:onteated, with
Corona'• John Blanpied, last
yur's 130 winner, entered
wilh Jim Sweeney of Edllon,
third placer last yur.
·Some of the other blue chip
area rrapplen on the entry
lilt include Mesa '1 Wayne
Jones (106), Corona'• Gary
Casey (118 ), Estancll'• Cbuck
Kehler (106), Fountain
Valley'• Joe Moore (106) and
Preston Mlltter (171) IDd
Marina'• Sieve Eredia (115).
C"fle Tickets
Tickets for the Angelus
League. basketball o p e n e r
between Mater Dei'1
Monarchs and the Servile
Friars Friday night at Mater
Del wlll be aold on 1 pre-sale
blSll only.
No tickets wlll be sold at lhe
door the night of the game.
Ducats are priced at $1.50
ror adults and 75 for studenta
and m on sale all this weet
at the athletic departments of
bolh acbeoll.
Game time is I o'clock with
a junior varsity prellmlnary
slated at 1:30. Only people
wilh pr,.sale ticketo will be
admitted.
Aussies Fall
Junior bowlera toot over the
spotllght at Kona Lan" Jut
week when a pair o f
Australian tea.ma, on a
goodwlll tour of bolh Northern
and Soulhern Ca!Uornla, bat·
Ued two local qulnt<ts.
The vllitora loll alighUy
abort on the acoring end. The
Soulhlud .glrll, alter losing
the openin( ram• by Jhree.
plna, came back In lhe next
two lo capture e --verdict.
Sue Jacbon, Judy Pawula,
Gtorgette Stacey, Candy Gib-
bons and Kathy Francis car-
ried the honor1 for Kon1.
Daphne Baker, Lo r r a l n e
Kneller, Roslyn Munt, 5aedra
Stacey IJ1d Mary Corbett
represented the Auatrallana:,
along with litUt Glenda ElJlJ.
The AUMle boya went 'down
to the wire wilh the local five.
but a bllsterln( final frame by
Alan Fontes, Uwe Mayer,
Lana Grado, Torry Johnsop
IJ1d Scott Slotkin broulbl the
win to Jhe Oran.It County con-
IJncenl, -ISSl.
. HB 5th, CdM 10th
HunUnrton Btadl Hiib'• oo ... nmaln In llltb Place In
• Jhe C1F MM butetball poll
11 Kiec:led by Southern " California sportawrlferl.
, Undefeated Vtrbom Del
• leads Iha top 10 with au 17
• finl place votee.
Paaad<tll a nlnt110int wln-
1111' over five Uma beeten wonrovla. ta aeoonc1.
I Unbeaten and untealed
~+J\l!llOllA has liken -.. -"loo ol third place IJ1d la Hain'• JM HllMandon ' are fourth.
Corona de! Mar'a Irvine
Learue 1-. -. into Ibo
ltleot c:lr<le with 14 Ci.~ good for 10th ploco
C>rang:e Cowlty'1 other eatrf,
s.e,fte.
Katella'• 114 Krllllbtl ...
fourth In AM circlee. Tho
ltnlgbla ~ lhe """ Orona•
County qutntet to """" """ -El Dorado la low1h In the
"" poll. Ke, dullel lo lhe MM
tbll -Include Jtamona'• 11111 at tltvenlh rot.I r..taJll
~. Mornln11ld1 el
•
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..
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depending on when you are -
they're very flexible . 11
Fair say1 his team can beat
Valencia's tactics wllh lhe
proper diagonal cull but an
even bigger item In defeating
lhe preas 11 maintaining
the proper poise.
opener. ·
Coach John Baker's fast-
breating Tritons have been up
and down thi1 winter, 11 at-
tested by their 6-7 overall
record . But they may have
Foothill's number, with the
ClllTYllW &.IAIUI SCOR.I,..
.. ,., •• SC-.. • ff' ·~
1 M'orlNrwnt, ""· vi.10 I • "" 2. '~· !Ut.ii. "' n.•· >. 1111) =Wiii, "'°"'11111 I " Ill 1. 1(1~11 41 • J. lowtr1, u Vlt lo JI .O•
"You can ofbet their Prf.11
for lhr" quartera of lhe pme
but H you let them rattle you
and lose your poiae for one
quarter It'll 'Dlake Jhe dH·
ference,0 llYI Fair.
Fair 11y1 ball bandliO(,
quickness and poite are what
he Deeds lrom · hla lllarllng
five . He'• a1Jo got John
Hll'bold IDd Dave Kieaselbacll
ready for duty.
•JERRY HULBERT
UCI Aide
Olherwile, Ibey play three
gamu with most teams, a
doubleheader on 5aturday at
one fieJd and a aingle game
cJurin( lhe week at lhe home
field. of the other squad.
Against Cal Slate (Fullertoo ),
however, the Anteaters have
three single g'amea listed.
Two trfps abow on the
schedule thb aeiaQn. The first
wtlJ be to Lao Vegas, April t4-
1S for a thue-1ame set. The
1econd wlll be lo Norlbero
Calilomll' May 1-1 to face San
JOle State,· Santa Clar a,
Berkeley and.Stanford on con·
~tJve datf:I!.
Rustlers' Anderson
Tops Jaycee Scorers ,
I,,!}
Drbcoll'1 University quintet
dropped a one-point d!cislon to
Valencia IJ1d lhe Troj,..
mentor say1 hill five can whip
Sonora providing It can come
back wtlh an equal effort to
Jhe Valencia c!Ull.
Ticketed
For CSF?
With UCl'1· differences
reeolved wllh lhe CCM, the
Antbaten were invited to
partl....sJP!te .ln the_Aoabelm toUi1iiY once again aloni with
e<>-)lj)ato Funerto.n IJ1d Chap-
man.
Golden Well Collegt'a Jim the tqp .1verqe (II.I). Htll>
AndeDOn Is the top acorer acored 171 poJnta in JS 11m~
among the three area junior Anderson leads the area Jl.J"
college basketball teama, 1c· cees in flekl a:oals (llO) whU.
cording lo statistics complled teammate Gary IJr&lll and
by lhe DAILY PILOT. Wllliame are l!ed for lhe tr ..
Aiiderson, a S:51iij)homore. Uffijiw te.-ctwn?ra-eaeb:
"We've got to rebound ansl
ahoot better. Bui OW' kida have '
realized we weren't producl.ng
u wen u we're capable prior
to the Valencia game," 1.1y1
Driacoll
la, UC Irvine froth and ~
tant baakelhell coach' Jerry .
HUlbeft ... aded .for Cal . Slala
<Fullerl"!'J 11 lhe nm car•
mentor for· the Titans? ·
u·the same format ls f0Uow-
Od u Jut ;..,, UC! will face
BVU, Ortgob Slate, Colorado
and either Loyola or Cal State
(!All Aogelet) In tis first four
,.,,,... Aft« Iha! It will d ..
pend on the wbn-lost record to
determine Friday IJ1d satur-
day f ....
has scored 373 J>Ointo In the Saddlel>eck's lone play'!'
Rustlen' 19 games for a 19.& aven~ tn double filurtl '9:
avenge. freshmah Don Swaim. He'• bfi..
Teammate Jeff St. Clair l.!1 ting at an 11.5 clip.
second in scorin1 with 317 Golden Weat ii fhe onlyw1
points -an a\terage of 16.7 1ehool 'with a wlnnin1
per outing. • The Ru1Uen hsve won O (i
Ol:AN08 LIAeUt ICOllNO ~--~ .,., .....
1. ~"1.e:1 o-ao. I 21 21:1 2. itlt) Mlm. Unh'tittltr i5 17
lt'a poaaible Jhal Jhe former
Troy Hl(h mentOr will rduni
to lb• ,bl( .;:i...1 ~ the
street , from his f o r 1J1 e r emp)oy~: .. to direct Ibo CSF
Orange Coasl'a Skip WI!· 19 games. OCC baa a ~It
llama, a 1-7 eophomon, has mark IJ1d Saddleback la W,S)
Goldtn Wu! allo has U
t ~1::.-i~W~ltlldl I I ill
La-Habra,
HB· Share
'
UCI poated • 3J.l~I rerulli'
aeaspn record a year ago and
Plrllclpatecl In lhe Western
bultelhall r-Wilh lhe lleiaonai NCAA tournament it anrwmcecl'rai~ ol Alu .san Fernando. Valley . Stale
onialev at '...Ctusliio of ·the '-"Mge lor the second llra]pt
• I tf:UOll,
current season. . other ltlDll Included on the
Bui nolhln( II definite at the UCI schedule are Chapman
present and Hulbert II lhe College, Sin 'D!ero State, UC
fr-' lo adJni' it. Santa Barbar'a, UC Hlvmjde,
.... ' Sad Franclaoo Slate -. l •• • ''Yes, I have written 1 letttr Top Spot
, tc>lhem ml talked to alhletlc Slate, .. LdyOJa, Redlands and Sou~ u~·sia1e. Huntington Beach H11h•1 dtreclor Jolla ·Catoe on· Ibo ' 01J .t.~ a.11 11'0. I -UCI A"'""" (!). rampagmg en uave movClll phone bJt t..._ haven't made ~•. 1 _ Uc:u ,t:•i. Into a U• for first wilh un--,
defeated La Habra in the of-any decl!ion on the matter'" u.~:t ' -'' cit• ''''' fl'\lllwttf11
ficlal Orange County Tqp JO Hulbert told lhe ' D .\I LY ~ " -..,,,,;,,, <•"" °"
prep basketblll poll as PILOT today. < ,..,'·,J -"s111 Oltff ,,,,.-c;:»i.
selected. by the D A I L Y Prior to his atJ.nt at 'UCI, fl.ti. 1, _ u. ., 1,11 oi... OH PILOT. Hulbert coached al Tr0y lllgh ,_,_ -
<:oacll Elmer Combs' Hun-iJJ. Fullerton (across state ,..._ 21 -uc .a.,.t• .....,. DH nt.
Cardinals
Chalk Up ·
Twin Win
Now 12-4-1 on the aeuon, the
Golden Well Cardinals of the
Southern California Mlmlclpal
Bueball Aa>clailon continue
play nal Supday at I p.m. at
Costa Mesa'• TeWlntle Part
.aaainst~.
19.1 scoring averqe per
iame, followed b)' On~e
Coast· ('II.fl and.'Siddlelltick
(15.~). ' ''~
...... ""'OMl ·1d'
F · 1: ~ .. i "', .. ". 0, '\"·• . .! ~~;.;= ; l '1· ~) ~ 1 .? ,:~ ! , ~lu
w.1:.., I : j ;a
r.ml"' -l!,.#1,.'1>~" .. '
... lll ~, ' ; l:J<
:r. ,. e, .. I . ..I , ~ C'°'ll~ 1, tinglon quintet moved up one College bou1-vard from the "'"'· D -c.i sttotw ILt1t1 ~ -(t:•I. • notch after two overwhelmina CSF ~pus) f<r four )'Un. ,..,, "' -..,, ll'r1Mha ,,,,. DH
The Cardi 1wept a
doubleheader lrom lhe Buena
Pll'k Btarcall Jut Sonday et
Bnena Park 1Jocl11U011 Park
by ~J IDd 74~· ....... .........,. ~I '---"'-• "' n ,. .... "',,..,..._ ""' ege u~w11an ,.,,;.. ,, ti r, 1~ YI Sunset League vict9ries. . others known to, . be fn.. Cl'IOOllJ. '
La Habra'• Highlanders (U. terested in tbe CSF coaching: ,.., • -•t uac ltt.,.
0) were forced to come from qtignment ioclud1 ' M D.e """~ 1 -SOl'ldNi 11aw ltia >.
bebtnd'igainil'Troy 5aturday, --itaooVlCll or·Fullerton • JUnlor .~ ' -" °""""-°""" ""
finally e.scapl.ng with a 74-a O>Uege: Stan M~ ih DH~~rr 1 -u. " NtvM• o .... Y••1 victory. ailistant at Ilse; . and.' Jerry Corona del Mar'• Sea Klnp PliDm, an.autstant at Utah., .:::z"DJ' 1~:* coi ,,,,. Cl.Mii
tni:=~!:::~U!l ifi.7 i,',i:,j; 1· jl'·-·,·'
four 'lllll bt nine plate tripe, lim ... ~.:·_ lncl~>11-doublt-ln ..... ead
of 1be twin bllt. 11
Bruee Win(•rd 'ooclted 1'aolo J' ' ... 1. '
home' run and' Cardi nlate Ray ,-==---"-==~iol
conUnueJn third place follow-R.adoVlch wcceeded CUfllDl llWltl •» -: ...........,. TM'*"'"'
Ing a' pair ol ·~-Le••ua CSF coach· Omalev at .Fuller· cavu. 0r-•ttfe, LO\'t&t, ca1 .111te U YIUC _.... ( ..... ..._...,/ c.ior.-. (hffrMft, "'
victories, one a 50-49 aqueaker too Jwilor College wh11I Pimm "''' ,,.111~. uc '"""'"· over No. 7 Loa AJamitoe:. played for the euttent Titan ~ :tt -... •t . u .. ., ..,., oi...
EcltJes accounted for a pair of
two ba(lm In lhe nlgbteap.
Hlghlhanden Paul Peli IJ1d
Mike Hickman were the wtn-
ntng pltchera Iii each contut. Marina's VWnas I aJ n e d coach lh~ Junior college Wore ct!!~· ,, _ ,, t•• 1,.,.. c~
pr es t t g e I n r ~ i ng matrlculatfug to USC. "'*'"' 11A. ..._ •• 111
Vance.cl to filth place behind ...... 111-tf UJll't. 11.atdlt!WI y1.
•-rv1'te, Ar p •n • -SM ~ ,,... DH I ~ ea ren !l'IOOfl), I I Huntington'• poaition will be .r; .., .. n -c.1s1110.1111111tttt111 11>. • ... chall~ed by No. 10 " ~u 14 -tt u. et N ... a <Lt• =·11.cl• w-~-·-~-w-·--~-... ul "•"' 121101. ~1:.ir" ..... lW,..IUa-ICI01~1 WUl,le Cage Res •'n Mrl• ,. -" u. " ,,......, (Litt ,.,, rf
the latter ii' bact in the fire ~ v .... 1 DH en 1. ,,t.;. · -
again Friday against No. t "-" 1 1-• uc stl'I °''" 111. o"-w... "f..! f't ......, , , Western. JV IAlunALL • '...,,.11t...., •t UCL.A lt:•J. I . "· .. rctb l• tit ._1 , ,
ORANGE COVNTY TOP tt ~~ 1"':. c• ~1 tt~11o: ,.;.,.~.'' 11
'
19 co.ni'*"' ...... •• in, • "' Place 'Te11D P•tt Hofflnll'I IHI ,. J.I,.._ 11n 'Alorll 21-,,. UC ltvtrthM lt1ao1. .-, ..
J.· (tie'l La Habra (12-0) 47 s-r11"1 ~ == '~~ ~II • -· " UC hrlf• ....... n•r, le t
Huntington Beach (1.J.1) 47 nl 111 ,_.. ~ ....,;:nlfM 11,, <t~ii "~ ~ Utlfl •1•1t Ot4 ·:-..i._. •.cf
3. Corona del Mar (11·1) 40 . ..,. c..,_tt 11 12 12 12 1....., c-1. c'\Uit. '*rl i
4. Servtte (14-J) SS 11 MMM tt '' 17 II ,......, MaY 1 -CMomtn·c...._ Ct). =:.. c;: 1
5. Marina (7-4) 29 ... Ci.tlltt ,,., ,.., on. Ml>Y • -.... ,. J ... '"" !TIA). flt!~· rt
•. Katella (11·#) 25 YOdtl' O•l , IC,.,,.. (I) .,,._., _"' Ul'l/Y, "·""'' c11r1 (\), "'~,., • 1
7 Loa Alam!·-("') -~ .. (IS) , ,,..,.... 041 • Mty ·-.. ye .. ......., Ct:aJ. • ... .,. I
• --~ ,.,...,.. .. In c Ol•teW (SJ • Moy' -" .. .,.,.,. 1t:•1. a-... w• ... :111 .. _, 1• • I. Garden Grove (W) 7 wi""' in • Jtt'lfl 1a MflY 11 :.. c.1 ,,,., c~vi""*"I n1. '·'· IMIUtt 1• • ...., ' • t. Wutem (M) I " .... 1111. htN :.. ...,,... MltW 1• 1r;;iiii;iii;;;;;i;;~;ii;ii;ii;;i;i~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
• •
10;,.'!~Edler (M) 6 ~--lL'l .::· 1::: DA' v· E' R...i.ss PON .. IAC \l\.ll!llQ: IOft (f..5) and S.11 Cl-'1 ltel'I"' Mllll HW1t 1. \I f" Troy (7.J) 4 each. El [)Qrado Ctltwlf ,, Klr11 " H~r. t. 1 I . ' I •
<io.il IJ1d Foolhlu <s.s) r ......... ._ Lease · or Buy AU M,cle~ ••• each. • ... c,., 1t11 _ .... W-"'ro un r ,., p: ......
o.lU<• USI F OJ W"hMPllnl Trw:tll (1JI C flS) hcfltt
P'lftr l•I 0 (I) --
ID CIF ,trfttll. 111 a c11 = klorWw 9*: ld!wl -Ii'(
.. ~,... '· MIWtf 11 • ....,,. ---·· Htlr!llM: ,-..., '7·21. ' ' ' ·-~ t•J 141)'......,_ .....
~ f•I " f'I T1fllt MA ICI'"'"""'"~ (r! , ,1141 CWlt '· eww. n4-n ,. .. Id:.,. .. 1111 c ft) OMIMlfl
I '
L c..Mrlnt Ol·U 1• """' ft) • If) TIW ~ "1 • Ill T.,,.. L W ... C.Vlrl9 llNJ 115 '°"'"' Mii: """'-' -.......,.. ... 1e-. ...... 01.J) la ..... t. .......... t. I. ... ltllww 11WI H ... lmJMI .....,, •17.
6. .....,_ Hlft f114J .,., i';;;;;~i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 1. llolllnt H••• llWI #!I .. Jll9l*fl (1141 • H It.. L-... __ :,. ,
"·-CIMI • " Call ... ....... DAYE ROSS 11. CMnt tNI 14 It .. L '
-., ..... , .. n•n ... -y .. pt101t• w• PONTIAC ,,.., .....,Mltlll IMJ 'IMft. c~
"""' UN), ....... ( .... I I llCfl. Olfo 1*111ft do It ~ IN" Ultlilll (NI, ... AtrMN ...... lb, .' 1n•> • .o.. ,lfollflkNlf' nt .. 1 J. "'" l'f• HAUOl ILYI. • Mrt •m = IM. ......,,. P•I, ...,..,... COftA lllSA -
,...,,, -· '"' t -.. ,.. ~. "'4' •"11 en• L .. n ~, ...u • ...., .... . .. t, _....., 1,.,,1 t. ,........._ 0, Ttl40 1 Lau ... ......., ., .. , ............ ., ... tottitt'JL .... -
•• 1 --1..., •" '835 -7717 _.,,n .... wr• · 111:1111 _
Dlrtilt I,..., ~ T~ ....... ff.ft. .................... , ........................................... ~~~~-~-,,~~°"'."~· ._..... ..... ,. ..
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Jf DAILY PllOT s Tutsa.y, J•nlllf")' 11, 1971
Yourlflone11
Investing Stock
Like Millionaire
By SYLVIA PORTER
Wbat'J an '"kleal 1tock'"!'
Jt'1 a 1tock with a
"dominant poalUon in il$
Industry, a unlque product idea
and/or mari:eOq: develop-
ment, quality management in
depth and adlini 1t 1 low
price 111 comporlaon lo ill
eamingl," answen H a r r y
Fowler, chairman and chief
exea1Uve cffieer of Fiduciary
Trust C.O. of New York.
"It llao ngu!Jriy Pl>" a
dividend of t percent a year
and annually goes up 10 per·
~t ln price."
Before you do a doubi .. take
Oil that one, let me assure you
~I lhb Ideal llock dces not
exllt. Let me usure you, too.
that Fowltr deliberately gave
me JUch a ridlculou1ly
11111·t1illtic definition 111 order
to send on th! mwage to you
not even lo try lo !Incl a llock
like thi...
In fact, he went on to uy,
HScaJe your drtams t o
r .. lisllc size. The ideal 1lock
II only 1 glitler in the anai)'3t '1
eye, always just beyond reach,
mlsty and tantalizing."
Fiduciary Trust llUUUlges
more than '2 bllllon or in-
vestment fuoda for lnd!ViduaJs
and lnstitutions -putting it in
tJfe top dozen New York banks
111 total or !undJ managed. Sin-
ce the minimum account It
wjll aa:ept .. '400,000, lt ol>-
vjowly ln•esta !undl !or many
Individuals who are
ml!llonalru and m u II i -
mlillonalre1. Whit rules doel
Fiduciary follow In investing
,., -mllllonaire 1ceounls?
What rules migbt be Just u
aptly applied eo you? Here are
aeveral of F o" I er• 1 tug·
gntlona :
• U )'OU ln1l1t on
spoculatlnJ or trading, put
aafde a mall amount of your
total for thil purpose alone
and Invest tbe big balance IC•
Clll'dlng lo tbe buic con-
aervatfve ruin. "Don't con-
fljle apeculatlng wtth in-verttnc." 11ys be. Simple but
LEASE or BUY • • •
1m CONTININTAL 01 MPCUIT -, .... ,... ............ ~
1M II '9Mtlhlt -L..._. W
MtfWl"J" If ywr cllelct. W• •rt ellle
"....,.,...., flllt rnt!lll .......... .,..,... .....,.. .. .,.... --' -FREE BOOKLET
..... "' "" _,... ,. rM..t" ""'' .,.. ..... ·--•JI .,.., .... : ; -"f'f'fiftl .......... 1111femMlle. :
' ' 'l ttAMa •••.•• _ •••••.••••••••••••••.••. ~-·-····-............... __ ....... C
l ADOlaU ••••••••••••••...••...••••••••••.•••••••.••••••••••••• -••• , ... _ C
' ' ~ CrTY ............................................... MON• .................. • ·-·--············· ......
••
ON1111t C•••'1'1 'F4•il1 tf Fi•1 C411•
ohnson&son
1~=-1 .
2l2t HAR90R ILVO.. COSTA MESA • 541>-!1»
Should you IN18 or buy?
We're transportation analy£ · ) I
Rll lOAN WI IJID UO:lll. DISCDU!tn DI 1m NtlDllJ
'1J CHMOlt'! '72 FOID l!D '12 llUiCI """1 Wiii COUIO'IYIQUllE IWllA
Aato~aHc tr111. JO Pm. Sb. w,.. Powu WladotfJ. 1'11...., Jt11r111r. on. fill! power, 1ir1 llO'llf IMb, lfr, ~ralu1 _tlnlld 1<1111111"'~""111 ..... It. .,..., ..,.. 6 sliow1ll~ et~ 111111-111, olll. ........ .. __ ..... 14---~~Sll.4.!0-Sl14.SO-
1-d/IN OMNtr/ on IQ72 C.dH/tca. W• buyyout-\W,
SERVICE
LEASING
CORP.
.OVER THE COUNTER
.............. fllll .. • .. ...... ....., ..... ,,_ ttAID.. ....................... ...,.._ ..... .,_ ....
NASD Llatln .. fer Monday, Ja"uory 10, 1971
High Court
Nixes GM
FUNDS
,
·-I' •"fl'T .T
Complete-New York Stock List
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1972 o.mv Pn.or
Monday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
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JI DAILY LOG
Tuesday
Evening
JANUARY 11
o oooo m-........ .,
{C) (90) "JM flli&il StllW' (Suto
ptnst) '71-Damn McCtvi11, Carol
Ly11lty, Simon Otkltnd, R11pli MMk·
fl, Cl1ud1 Akins. 8eliwl111 l.J•
Ye1ts k btinc t1riCMil1d 11, j v1m-
pir•. 1 down-on·h'1·1uek MWl/Tltll
tries lo owrcotM untoultlp by his
l>Gls incl the police.
QI 01'1'111 Ffttt SllOw Gueilt In-
clude the clst et lilt oll·8rotdw1y
musical ''God'9flt,~ Hu(h Downs,
ind slu11t pilot frank T1Um111.
EI) (Jj) T • t Adwtelte1 "Sho11ld
Coutts Bt Ablt lo Admit [Yidtnu
Police H•YI Sellejj llle111lyr'
~IOU-"" -81.Ma< o _, (CJ (10) """ "'""' '"' m" "" fi111 ......... CollC!vilol (com· . m "' lllm ,., Mi HJ) '61 -Don Koons,. S.1Ur1
tllotdn. lid.le CoocJ11, Dolllltl
lfflY, 111111 Mc~
(J)Qi -. ...,. __
m111c..,-
1111 ,_ -""" """" ...
ID .... lut ''Thi Winds of W1r"
bJ H111111n ¥touk.
mw..i111ut
lllJlrM• Atru Im VMIM tfortliu111 •
7"'1>CilD!D•..,
(j) T111tll If C..Mtlutl!US
([1Dr11Mt
CiJ ""'' ., lhol a-......
m > """"' m I Dftq If Jun1ll1 ID> n. Ct11n1 If Ovr TI mes ID.._• CELI'""'
Qll ... ~-lflMMn,
'"" I> CANNON·EXCITEMENTI * Mystery and Suspense!
8 CIJ C&1N1 GU.-T1b Hv1ter
pllJS • retired rtct 4rivtr who Ill·
eoma tftt prhnt SU$pecl In Ille d•t·
1111 ttltfl of $CMTlt nlu1blt reties
from 1 Bila C.lifonill mlssiol'I. Alt·
l•ndro Rey •bo (lltsls 11 f1thtr
Jo&eJH!. 0 ifQl m 1111111 C1rntr Ai Nldlots
"l1ch1rld1" Nlehob tttemprs to
kee p lhl ptlCI when his l1rcenou,
unclt comtS to town 'll'illr 1 sm1ll
fortune Ind two tX·convirb hot on
his hetls. Guest lncludt S1rot~er
M1f1in, 8111y ~hilt, 11\d M1rll
llWYlllU.
O luttr Ward News
ID ti T1kn: a Thief
@) tBJ ll1d: Jturul '1he Searcll
fCN" fred1rick Dou&11u'"
Qt T1 11 M1111M*1
t~ooom•m 0 (]) (Jl aJ M1n111 Wt I by, M.D.
7:• '1ht Basie Moment" Conclusiol'I.
II GLEN CAMPBELL'S Compficltions thre1ten th1 11V!s of * COUNTRY SPECTACULAR Dr. WeMl)''s d•u1111er ind tier bib'
Johnny Cash/Buck Owen Jollowinc iU birth. Christlne Belfor4
1nd Ridl1rd V111 Vite! tlleSL Merle Hauard & More! Mldlll• u. b seen as K!tie Wells.
II a lltll C&111btll Ceuntr, Mu· B Morit: (C) (lhr 52111) "Com·
sic 'si&ri ~MY Cl1h, Jun1 C.rt1r 11eht (1dwenture) '56 -~n1 An·
M1rlt ff1a1rd, 811ek Owtns, Minni• drews, Und1 Cristal.
h ut. Hr,y Reid, F11ddlt H11t ind eD FREE "SILENT YEARS"
M•l Tiiiis.provide a medtty of their * PHOTO ALBUM AT ALL hit"""· OFFICES OF GREAT
Dl!lll!lllllf "''"''" '"'' WESTERN SAVINGS W1nttd to Bt 1 Cop" Bitter owr fJD (fj) Tiie Sllfilt Y1111 "The Cen·
kll f1llur1 to m1et the police dt· et1r' In this 1927 film, Busttr Keat·
'9ltmtllt't physlell rtqulrt1111nb, • o~ b 1n111ed in Civil W1r esolon•p..
JOIHll min n1unb lfll l1w 1nd tnds (()TIP Tip
11p KCUMd of murd1r. OtJ ltoH11 C1Mt
0 Cl) (i) (iD TM Mo4 S41uM m f1stit1I Mu.ic1n1
"Deir With the Devil" Vikki Can .
m1ku h•' fr1m1tlc d1bul n lht 10:30 1J GI Tiit 5ol6d1g1r1 (RJ
fi1net1 of 1 Vllln•m war cor-~rr 1ues!s.
rupondent who Is in'o'Ofved In th• 0 Monty NtU!
tirur 1e1111. Lnlii Niel»n also (i) Al IU1111
l11Ub. IQ Nfwt B!ll Johns ll)MonMnW1 (])I Drtt• ti Jllanlt i?:) C.I ti tflt West
G MllllM $ MM: (nr) ''CM·
·-" -.· ("'•""> ·13 -u.oo u a m ®I m m .... Sophi• Lor111, Mu.lmitlla Scbel~ 0 Mwirl: "Tiii Accustd" (myslety)
fred1ic Marth. '411 -L0<ttt• Younr, Rotltrt Cum-
ID Hlpll'• HltMS minis.
18 Draptt CiJ M1rWI Dilltn
o"""" ·11 o rn m .... m Cllrrllll bub GI T1 tin"' lrut/I
ti) 1M 1Mf1J 111 P1t1IYllll (D M1ntrap
1:00 8 Mwlt: (C) (lM) "lht PrlnctU 11:30 IJ (J) Merv Cliffln
ind lltt Pit1k'" (COmtdy) '4f>-Bob · 0 @I m .lollnnr C1r1011
Hope, W11t11 Sl111k, Vir1lnl1 M1)'0. U (]) (jJ ED Dick C.vett
())nil b Yllll' Litt m Mowlt! .. }0/111nlt Comt l1t1ly" ai Tnn. « Ctn•qu111C11 (dr1m1) '43 -Grice Geor1e, J1me1
.., Th Ykli~iln Cti11e~. m Movie: "Pri¥1!•'1 Pro1reu" Cll IA C.11 Jl&lJ•d• (comed)') '55 -Rich1rd Atten-
ll'l) lfl111 boroua:h, Dennii P1ict.
l!)O II (f) Rawail nv.o Din• Wrnt1r a ,., Adirtta °""
runts II Utt &lrlfrienlf of I Ooublt ll:U 0 MD: "'Clpt C&ntwr1I MOfl.
qent Who b lrr¥o1Ttd In 1llbont1 ""1" (ici·fi) '52 _, Seott P•lttS.
acll•mt br 1 powtffuf unknown Linda ~nnelt
11111rct to l11mt McGtrrett In tht
first ,.rt of I IWO·p1rttr.
BQlmttflCIXLIS1rl1r IN
UIUI Cllildl'ltl Documenl•IJ •xPlor-1n, fhl l ffttb Oft thildftn of !he
l :DO 6 Mtwit: "81n1111"' (1dventure)
'55 -Richard Carlson, Riclll1d
Conlt.
m ou rn~""
violtnct between C1111&1ics 1nd 1:30 GI All·Nl1ht Shor. "Th• Silent
Prolrstants In Northern lrel1nd. R1Jdt11," "Copptr Sky," "Dint'"
O (C) "Thi Story o' M1n~ind" Wednesday (drama) '57 -Ron1ld Colm1n, m "All1ir Wllh 1 Str1na1r" (drt· DAYTIME MOVIES ma) '54 -Jean Simmons. Victor Matu11.
t :OD m "ltl111d ll1K111" (corntdy) '52 2:00 Ii) "Roo11 in lilt Houst'' (dr1m1)
--Olynil JohM. D1vid flivfn. '56 -P1trick 811r, M1rjGri1
9:30 u "YH Only Utt OllCI" (d11m1) Rhodes.
'37 -H1nry Fonda, S,lwia Siclnl)'. l :CD Cil "'l\t Court Jester" Conclusion
10:00 (l) "lo!Otr ltiwr'" (Westin!) '54-{comed~) 'Sl-Dfnny KJyt.
Joel Metre•, Yvonni DtCarlo. 9' ''Ctrpous Hl!UJ" Ccham1) 'J6
-Join Crawfofd. Frant.~.<'' Tone.
1:00 0 '1&111 t1i1 C.aqllfria1 Htrt" 4:t0 6 (C) "'111Ct WIOow~ (,:.apenst)
(colrlldy) '« -Eddi• l rkktn. Ell• 'S4 -liin1er P.e1,1i. Vtn Htnln.
Rtlna. , 4:30 (l) S.. ts lOAM Altmt
STARTS TOMORROW
1 Week Only
'
IOUTM COAST nA1A I .............. -..
.. ... 1111
HAROLD
and
MAUDE
GP Color by T1<hnicolot' ... 1
Plus -Kirk Oouglos In ,, ,,
HELD OVIA -LAST WEEK
All WAlT DISNEY SHOW
WAL1 DISlllEY'S
~ c;-;>. .....
l.li'.I ii{})
l!!l--=------' Al10. Sondv Ounron 1.,
"MILLION DOLlAt DUCK"
•N MISSION VILIO
IDWAIDS CINIMA VllJO
... 830-6990 ...
"ftfNCH CONNECTION"
pl111 'TMS LAST RU~"
wlrh OMrgt C:. Still
'" Ah•· THI f 1 SONG FIOM
THI I 1 FILM (I )
"SHAFT"
•
Superb Replace1tient in Lagtana
Girl V1iolinist Gives Top Reci~I
By TOM BARLEY
Of tM O.Ur P'01t St11f
It spew volumes lot Ille
dedication and determination
of the Laguna Beach Com-
munity Concerts Association
that they ref~ to Jet a 1,st
minute lnjufy to''their schedul-
ed artlst halt their plans for
what turned 9ut to be a
memorable concert F'riday in
the high school auditorium.
D major and Saint-Saen1' MW Chase received from She had, we were t.old,•llquaUy
swirling, passionate Rondo pianist Jean Barr. delighted a Bi:shoP. aud)epoe at
Capriccioso. Miss Barr's solid backing a concert In which 1he had
Both were g Io r Io us I y was most evident in the again replaced ~ tiling MlU
delivered in per(ornlances that Paganini and Saint-Saens of-Kyung, • •
served to stress what r rering and that, pf course, is And while we muslc lover3
thought was this' gifted young where it was most needed. revel 1n the happy kf\OWledge
lady's greatest asset -htr Concert audienees tend to that we have again betln
t rem end o us interpretive overlook the role of the ac-privile~ed io sit ln the
po\\-'ers. She showed · them companist but the onlookers presence of ti:enlus Jet UI spare
again in the masterful C sharp who clapped Miss Chase to the a thought aod a pray'tr for the
minor nocturne by Chopin and echo Friday night can be young lady who had intended
in the charming Fritz Krei.Ster assured that she was well to be with us Friday niJbt.
work that was offered as a aware of her great debt to a A sprained finger to I
bonus for the audience thot fine accompanist. violinist is tragedy of the first
Th~ news that gifted
violinist Kyung Wha Chun had
sprained a finger in London
and could not make the trip to
Callfornia would have been
enough lo have any average
concert organization throwing
its collecllve hands in the air
and telling subscribers that
the stage would be dark that
night.
refused to let her go. And so this channing and order. Join me in the hope
And before we go any thoroughly wispoiled young that the injury la not serious
at best a re8!00able stop gap further Jet us not overlook student from the Juilliard and can be quickly and com-
perfonnance by a 14-year--0ld another key factor in one of School of Pt1usic got her second pletely healed.
{only 14?) substitute. the most briUiant recitals to• ..''~l~and'."!'.in"lg~o~v~a~tio~n~in~l~hr~ee~d~a~ys~.1. r=='=========; What we got Friday night come the way of this critic onl-
will be talked about 'for a long the community concert circuit
time to come by those of US: -the splendid support that A Rocliinq Chair Th eater
They don't do 1t that \\-'aY in
Laguna. Columbia A rt is ts
were told , and in no untertain
terms, that the Art Colony
group wanted a replacement
ol comparable caliber and that
is a rather large order when
you are talking of soloists ol
the stature of Kyung Wha
Chun.
who were privileged to watch1 __________ _
and hear 8 d a Z4 l j n 'g llOllll'l'I PACWIC COAIT"""""'. """·
performance by this ~-..,.. astonishingly mature
schoolgirl from New York Ci-A
ty.
BALBOA
Ba)b.,,1 6/vd ·'' M.:a•n
Phonu l·fl·4ll 411 Op .. n 6 45
Romanticism was the hard ~ tr.1 0Tn
core of this brilliant recital ~ LLU LJ~ i HELD OYER
3rd WEEK and Miss Chase drove her flo"fl~ 1
point home with magnificent ~ I Cll11t Eostwoo4
interpretaUons or what this Along came Stephanie Chase
and n1ore than one doubting
Thomas in that near capacity
audience settled back for what
they firmly thought would be
critic thought were the two ~s·~• ~:gJll "PLAY MISTY
FOR ME" key works in her thoroughly
representative pro gr a m :
Paganini's Violin Concerto in
The little black book that
became a national best-seller.
•" ·~ ~ CANNON JAMES COCO A:JINFER O'NEll
KEN ~RO NI"*' FOCH LAURENCE LUCKINBIU ..
LOUISE. LASSER 1• "'···v BURGESS MEREDITH 1• ·, •· ~
" O.C.SMITH SINGING 'SUOOENlY IT'S AU TOMC'lmlOt'I .
' ·~'ll••t• '••<"•' t· < ....... .,. ,, -•
ESTHER ™LE DfrWIO SHA8ER LOIS GOUlD
... •> • ¥ 1 ....
TH0MA.S Z. ffFMRO ROUBEN TER·ARUTUNlAN
~r .. 5c"" MCM•LA• ;,....,,OONI ,n
·~-l·•'t< OTTO PREMINGER
l --·
EXCLUSIVE RUN
STARTS WEDNESDAY
JANUARY 12
CANCELLATION
A SPECIAL SHOWING
OF
''TOGETHER''
RATED (X)
ON WEDNESDAY, JAN. 12th
10 A.M.
at SOUTH COAST PLAZA II
WIL,L NOT BE SHOWN
AS H·AS BEE.N
•
PREVIOUSLY
\
"" ~ ~ Hitthnc:k Tr1dltie11
Th• ar11 Tllrllltr $IM1 "l"SYCHOu
••flte llrd Wltll nt.
Crysr.I rlunUHJO"
IHI 6&Mi 111.U (OIJIDNT
IHOOll........,..~
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
GREAT TRIPLE SHOWI
"PLANET OF THE APES" IGPJ
"BENEATH THE PLANET OF
THE APES" CGPJ
"ESCAPE FROM THE PL.:ANET
OF THE APES" (GP)
.SHOW
7:IO P'.M.
IA.CK AGAIN GoEO•GE c. seon
"DR. ZHIVAGO" PLUS "THE LAST RUN"
"Or. V,1¥110" 1 PM OnlW
--• -~-11 S 1110/UM , I :,.'
-.~~.Y~ ---..... $1110/UM . 2 '.':
... _..l/~--Yl ·-"----... $1110/UM •3 · ... ~,. ..... ,-----~· SlllOIUM 4 .. --:...··.s ·~~
''LUI flun" lO :JO PM
DUSTIN HOf",.MA'N 'Ill
".Strlw oott" ~TIHln, 7:1f.f:tt
~rt 7:Jt & ,,. ~I & 11111 I:•, J:•,
Jiii, l:JI, t :• -Ml ,_,.., ... SNh
Hied-Min & •r.rnMICb"
M ...... rl 1: .. A t :lJ Sit & S1111 11:• 1:45, ,, •• 1;1!, t :)f ..... ,.,,.,...
Mii's,
C•n'lll KMW ..... 111f
M"' WIW HM! 1"1-0¥1r W1m• ffl)
S11Wy Dlllltlfl Ill
"Stir ~""''" Olrl" flW LH Mll"rill Ill
"P'1lflt YMr' W""""
°' OF T.V. PAME
UNIQUI -MYSTICAL
Piano and Organ • •
Concert ·
WED. JAN. 12, 8:00 PM
W~.~,!~·!
~ CO•ONA OIL MA~
James Garr1c1
l:.t:.
Lou Gossett
Susan Clark
Aloo 11f ml!!'
Michael York =-Elke Sommer ::i;:;-..=
Jm11. 5 ttirll Ju, 11
BACK AGAIN!
WH11e1cley & TlunM9J-I ,,,..
THE MOST .IOY,UL, LIYILY,
INTE•TAININ• .•• IMel fllH.
M ••pet'lnc• 11 IMfHIY· -LA TIMES
in
"KOTCH"
Also °"" Mtn:tl• "SOMETHING BIG~ -----~---Starts Wedntsd•y
llchotd H11rtl•
"A MAN IN THE
WILDERNESS" ••• CIHtr~•• Hnto•
"THE OMEGA MAN"
BARGAIN MATINEE
Every Wed119scliy,-l'p.m.
F•ll ll,.Rl'5tfMINn
~~ADULTS S~l~.O~O~· ~~~
~~~.'~·.~I
11th Smash Week !
IN-THI GIU.T TIADITION
0, AMlllCfl_!f TH•ILLll~
lbeD Cl1bhoY1e, 625 l'r .. dt SI, S..te Ana ~ T1chts •I ~ 094 G .. w Monie, Co, J045 Malw S/. *'• ..... D •••"'.JI
' ~ . ff1rn1rt4.,,, ... ilwMmtUfeC fw.' ·
ADVERTISED
IL..~~~~~~~~~~~,························~··~·····
•
• ..
... •• -I< ,. ... ..
j( ,. • ;
. ' ,
J I Tuo.!11, "'"'"' ll. 1972
Everyone H~s
Somethin9 That
Someooe Else Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
_,.. .. --s.
The Big~est Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 64'2-5678 for Fast Results
G~o~n~o~r~1l~~~~~::~G~o~n~or~1~1:::::::::::::::~~~~~~~~ ,;--;;;;;;====;;;;.======~,I _, ....
IAYSIDE DRIVE WATERFRONT ·
• •
•
. '
DAILY PILQT il
You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trade It
With a Want Ad
_ ... s.
Linda & Harbar Island View ! General Gentril Genera• 'General ___ ..,....... ___ I iiiiijiiii
From this lovoly 4 bdrm., 4 bath home. On "PENNY PINCHER''
1::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::=1 ~~-~~-
..........,,.,co=NN=EcT=1cUT:-::::-* * * * * * 1 59' lot, with pier & float. Custom drap-I
eries & paneling. $139,500. AS LITTLE AS
BIU GRUNDY, REALTOR $140 MO.
l1la,.der1 Bldg. at Linda Isle I A penny saved is a penny
FARM HOUSE TAYLOR co.
341 Bayside Dr .•. Suite I, N.B. 675-6161 · eal"Md, but heller ye1 It f~""'""'~!!!l!!l!!!I!,.;,,..""!""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""" 1 could be many SU. JUJt Gen1r1f General take over payments • in-
NEW!
SPECIAL TOUR OF
cludes taxes. NO QUALIFY-
ING. 3 queen alze bedrooms,
Step saver kitchen. Many
I extras includin& _ close lo
·schools and shopping. Set'ms
\ impC>&lilble for onJy m.soo.
2 STORY-NEWER
JUST LJSTU): Gorgeous
"New England" charm
Towering stal.n:a.st to unique
lo11 styli' balcony. Cathedral
beant ceilings. Crackeling
fireplace. Pub 1a,.,em kitch.
en. "Bonus" famll,y I u n
room. Huge master suite
ovel'looking extra large pri.
vate back yard. \Von't 111~1
at oril,v $34.500. See ,today.
HARBOR VIEW HOMES -$68,SOO
New Offering! Fabulous near ne\\' 4 BR .
home on beautiful corner site. Fam. rn1 \~ tlh
fireplace. dining rm. & 3 baths. Expensive
Karastan cptng. & custon1 drapes. !\lany
extra features. The land is included.
MESA VERDE
, "Our 26th Year"
~.P theiie "Be11 Buys" ln I
one ofOra'l(e Cc:11,1nly's 111011
desirable rtsidentia/ areas.
• Better call today •
645-0303
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
DELUXE DUPLEX
2111 San Joaquin Hills Road •
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
I
Unde'r S30 'Thousand and a j , . . BEST LISTINGS
beauty. 3 'Bedrooms, r1\cely , . . BEST AREAS '
IOlll SI L OLSO,,
'" k(A! TORS
landscaped, \Ve1/ eared for .
All to<m, .. buy It ooywoy U~l()UI: ti()Ml:S NEWPORT BEACH
you like. IN l\IESA VERDE.: COUNTY COOR'IDOR I A '4 Bedroom. Wlrl(ling clink-
Ver-y anxious seller 1v11h one er brick 1vatk leads to arch-OWNER TRANSFEHRED.
ol the nlcnt horn~ for !he I ed en1ry 1,1,·ay. It's cute, yet Custon1 buil.l _4 BR 3 _BA II
money in the-area. ~ Bed-big and practical! Thii; t1,1,·o I horn!', hl.6ge liv rn1 w/v1ew
roams, nice Family Room. s1ory home has 8 Spanish + lrg fan1. ~Jn. "'onderful
Lovely kitchen. Could "s· i flavor and inside ifs OPEN! . for ienterta1n1ng,
1umie al 51 ;~{, Siee thi.5 one. f>~onnal dining under a mas· 1 Cor Sanla Isabel & Rerlla~!I I sive chandelier, loft type oH· 2399 R~ands Open daily
4_ Nice bedrooms, and Fam-j ice o~f master suit.e a~~ a HAVE CLIENT
ily Roon1 or :1 bedroon1s. massJ\'e rloor to Cf'1hng \.\•ith 4 bedrm 2 brith hon1e
Den a.nd a Familv ~n1. I adobt> brick tirepla~. A 3 in Mission vie;o. \VIII tradt I
rtady 10 'fJt your [an11ly. car garage to boot'. , for M~ Verdt' area.
Lots o( chamring shuHers, PRESF.NTE.l> AT $4~.9::~ I CALL l\fARION PEARCE I
Roman tub in barh, large TELEPHONE ~,j,99(1 ·
ON BALBOA ISLAND
Custom built 4 bedroom~ 3 bath, 2 fireplaces,
deep shag carpeting, kitchen \vith all the
builtins, glass \Va ll staircase PLUS 2 bed-
room RENTAL UNIT. A real buy at $99,500.
LOOKING FOR A FLOAT?
FOR YOUR BOAT
Right on the WATER. in this 2 bedroom,
2 bath, builtin kitchen. FIREPLACE, car-
pets and drapes, wit h your own PIER AND
FLOAT. Only ................... $72,000.
SOUNDS GOOD & IS GOOD
THIS ONE
1ot \\'ilh boat or trailer .stor-
age_ "O" move ln. Lachenmyer ,
A 1'RIUM TYPE ENTRY. Charming opened,
spacious Jiving room with fireplace & VIE\V.
3 large bedrooms, 2 baths, carpets & drapes
tr-.• MESA VERDE: and all lhe bu ilt-ins. ONLY 2 years old.
A Spacioull' 4 Bedroom. lt's · · · · · · · · · · · · · ' · · · · · · · · · · · $59,500.
Realtor ' Beautiful! ·Atriun\ home. \.\'i1h a golf courst f'stare on a ( WE DOOD fT!
beam et>ilings, 4 bedroom~. hillsid~ overloolcing the l~kes 1 l!liO Newport Blvd. C.M. 1
!'am•y ,Room and Den. Up-I and "'"" of U>e baok nrn<'. CaU 646-3928 Ev" ·.,2.2237 I WITl:I THIS TOWNHOUSE
stail'!I playroom, 3 bath!!. Panoramicv-.e"·sfror:~e.ig~t i_ ----· . -1 fN BACK ·B • .o\Y area. 3 Bedroom, 3 bath,
ShaU . roof. Spacious and I rooms and d~p shag carpel I UP FOR ADOPTION builtin kitchen, community pool and recrea·
&Tacious living. Comparable in ~ve.ry room: Three c_ar An ideal star1cr ·oon1e for a I tion area with se\ving room, billiar d s and
homes selling for much garage and ~tornaled main. young L'Ouple. NO 00\rN 1 card room. Pick your own DRAPES & CAR·
645-0303
IORfSI E Ol.~O\ . " l?C A L.-OP<:
EASI'SIDE •
NEED LARGE
LOT?
\\'e have 2 to c~ from
~ BR. with 54':tli8' corner
101, -$19,250.
3 BR \\'ith firepl. on fi0':'!139'
11·/alley access. -S:?4,9.JO.
NAl\fE YOUR TER~fS!
Newport
•I
F•irvi•w
646-8811
l•nytlmo)
YOU
NAME IT more. See for yourself. I tenancr for I/J..atte ](It. ,,...,...,,, OR Lo IV f'H,I rn• PETS •25 250 Rt'nt. lease or option on this Thi! property is \·aciint ~nd TER'.\IS. Thr-ee bdrm. and 1 · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ~ · · · ·" ' · 3 bedroom plus pool rown-
CALL 6-l'.'">-0303 ~O\\', '.\IAKF: I ha!I numerous outstanding den home "'hh hard11"ood ! $$ DOLLARS MAKE SENSE $$ house! It's vacant and fea-
General
brand new
bic;i canyon
home •••
' 11
five bedrooms,
3 baths,
family room,
I l car garage,
l bt•utiful ~ corner lot ~ I
~ herrnitage lam-at
royal li1. i:!'Ol'gr road,
this home is IX'1ni::
.finished 11011 11nrt
should be ava1labJ,
in mld-february.
4.i: drive by ant.I ~!'r u,
l u~n call 011'ner 11 1 ...
644-1140 AN APPOINT'.\1F.NT FOR I fettl~~· T floors. Good Ea11tside Costa tures v.·asher, dryer. rt'!rig,
YOUR O\\"N PERSO:'-/AL .. PRF.. ·~-T'F.D AT ,~;~-l\'lesa location. Large yard WITH THIS TRADE builtins. crpts t... drapes. 2'1;;==;;;;;;;;;;;;m;;;;;;;;;;;=
M!SA VERDE TOUR TO. T LEP1JO:'\f .. i~n·.1990 for the kids -nPar schools 3-4 PLEXES ... all in a row. Units have 2-3 balh an"as. patio and rec-FIT FOR A KING
DAY. lJp!riijl(.)(J~ 11().-..f.S and shopping. Priced 10 iCll bedroom, 2 bath, 1-2 bedroom, 1·1 bedroom. reation facilities. Full price IN SURFSIDE!
'4>0303 !:-.' CORONA DEL ~IAR al only $26,000. SPACIOUS and close to shopping. in SUPER $ZJ..IKNJ. All tf"rms. Ca I I OCEANFRONT ho111(' 2
67,._ RENTAL AREA $65 500 ~7-l2'l1 yr~ ""''ng. Built of ,,,· k. ~ ......... · .. " " · • · SEYMOUR REALTY, J7t41 ° , ••
1 2443 E, Coast H\\·y. Beach Blvd., Hunt. Bch. tilf" & red\\-'OOd. Exo11c
1 ~-~-··· •. IN COSTA MESA ..Lfy:!!'.'.-_ ~ -· ,_./ $31,500! ;ng, pvt. beooh, Sool
546-5990 ;'Ta.v~ -"""1i#'e HOOE ROOMS &ach Elem.'School -one
'I ~V£·R·S-... , -2800 Me-...ver0e. ~· ...... Great ta..ie family home v.ith of the best. 15 minu1e11111
· rg Nf"wport: 15 mlnu1es to
\Ve 've built In a dog run !or j · . ANO ASsoclAUS 4 bedrooms:, 2 baths, huge Santa Ana; 20 minutes 10 your hound!!! Ea.stsirlr Ana· NEWI N[WI NEWl _Evenings Call ~-700.1 family room . with inviting Anah€'lm·. 7 minut•• to
helm location . j~~ ASS0f;1.
1
• • • REALTORS a.replace, built ln dn:am Loog Beach; 35 mi~ule!I
ABLE 1'""'HA LOAN. f'our bd-BANK SAYS SELL SUPER FAMILY knchen. Plu sh ca_rpeUng, tO dntown L.Al!I Angeles.
EAST SIDE
COSTA MESA
Cranny t·an hop. skip,'(. JUITip
10 \\'t'~trlift shopping: Ji .
11dlk~ rn school; ll!<'l't'.:111011
a! ho1ne. J1X3'1 htd, &· lih'd.
pool. '.! bclnn. l: rl<'n plus
g:u.·,t house : in 1n1111<l<'
'~1n,1. \\'on'\ Jas1 lon.1: 111
S:::l .·oo. You can assunie
l"i"b'l' ~"HA loan•
CORBIN-
MAR·TIN
REAL TORS 644-7662 1
Get Ready • ,
I For Compliments I
\\'ht•n }Ou self"('t this 101·4·)~·
.1 lldr hon1e ln !op-notch
ls!und location, D1s11n{'li\"I'
dl's1i.:n, eus1on1 buill 11·ith
11r111~d glas.~. i'f'n!n1! au· <.'On-I
<111111ng and huge B ·I sror-
Rgr ·rhis is R-:l propt>tty
1tlld t'\'~n st ressr<I for an cx-
!r..i 111111. SUrpri!lingly pricecl
ar only $71 .500, Ca.ti 613-8550
Macnab-Irvine
Rf'ally Compan}
I
Connoisseur's Dream
Large ~ergrQUnd wme cell·
ar & entertafnment area in
this rx.>ean view 4 BR., 3
bath. f'".R. homt'. Pool &
1\-'atrrfall. 644-6200
Macnab-Irvine rms., 2 bath, U' x 2f co1·-I FOR ONL y 527 650 HOME . 644_7270 4rape1, prel!y curtains. f?<· CALL DENNY 12131 592-5376
ertd patio Fenced y11.rd -IN . th· ' . , Need large fan\il.)', gan1e or Ira large secluded rear Irv-or 642_.235 f . I -. Cl k • 1 ever again at IS pnce. f "•d • Thi ;ng room. Separale ma!ller rwt reee.' 08C to ~r QUALITY CONSTRUCTION rumpus room or,... s . s BELi\10NT REALTY ;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;:;;
I
644-6200 i
c ____ ---school.!!. ONL"Y $29,9;il1 IS OBVIOUS Laih & plas-1 sharp home h~ .11. + 4 Bed-i "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I suite. Pa!io. 540-1720 12131 598-IJ26 f
. · . rooms sep. dining 2 ba1h1 ;G I • 1 316 Mari~ Dr .. Seal Beach I I -ter. C~st ~ron sings It tUb!. and dbi gar. Good 'nbrhoocl.' enere uo•Mra EASTSIDE C~ram1c tile. :op brand ap. I clo~ 10 schools & shopping.1---::T"DQ,..,....,B"l"'G___ TRIPLEX 1
PRO PERTIES.INC. •"""" & fixtures. FuUy I ALL TERMS• FULL PRICE IS 2956 Har'bor. Coota M.,. SUNSHINE HOME Older, aurhenric S p • " i' h
ca.,,.tod. Fully landsoaped, I . $21 500 1--------rSUNSHINE PRICE unlis.Xlnt. tocationnrshop. Jo•M" 1,· l >\! !f0•• pf
:!20 E . 1 lth St , C.M.
Call 646-0555
sprinklers. Concrete drive-Newport MUST SELL • MISTER ping. High iocomt', Io 11·
"'"'ay. LEASE OPTION -OK! 6 BDRM l BA Ncr down to GI Buyers and for this EOrieous 3 bedroom maintenance, Pricffi only
Eveninr:s Call 548-3265
Ba.nk say MAKE OFFER •t ( "' mini.mum down to f<tlA .. In TOUGH BUYER home in Co.ta l\1esa. Heavy -...._,.
\Vl''rt rea~y to deal. & firs; 1
1 F•irview ! Just list~! 6 giant bdrm'ii fact. e
3
ve('l'Olle quahbes. Do ·-· demand plenty. for shag carpels wilh ma1ching Call 546-;·~~n Eves. 1
CaJI 1 &: massive df"n with 2nd ~ bedroom dre~mer you;~ney! Then Set" this drapes. Hu&e modern kitch-FAt,JI~ Y 645-0303 I ~6-8811 I n_re_placl'. Gracious lonnal with open beam ceilings, three bedroom home. This en, 2 full baths, lmmaculalc
EXPANDING?? (inytime) dining rm. ~ deluxe ba~h.!i. near new carP,eta: '-draJ)efl . al h f f" enclosed yard. All this with
Gourmet kitchen, bit-ins. 'd I l Oori G f ed gem ha.'1 a ~ I O ine an Jo1lA k>ft.o of S20,500 and
Then be 'aurie and see I his 5 Lush ca-ls & drape5
1 ead Toe•, 1 .: re..t •ncl appointments. You'll agree TOTAL payments of $214 per • ,,... . yar . o a payment as 01.,. ·1· ml hl weet buy Bedn:iom 2 story -home in j . LET YOUR Soaring slaircasP . to living as $168 per month. ~hy renl, 1 s. a g 1Y .:IQ · monU1. Everyont!' qualifies,
choice Eailblll.H area. Has elegance. Romanllc master I catl! 84 -w so call
outstanding stlparatc f&.mily I KlDDIES ROAM sui!~. Pri~ thou!andi; be-w lk & L Walker & Lee
roorri. Rich l:. 1varm decor-;;-------;; Jn thl!I spacious 4 bedroom low mkt, Ior fast sale. See 1 a er ee
atlng lbruout • Quality cpts I NEED FAST l\fesa Verde homr with thr today. Call Realtors l drapes. Built ln kltoller · ..... 64.S.0303 Realtor!! • • .11 great added feature of a "'" ........, Harbo• Blvd. at Adam• 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams Call today, tht' pr1ct· "'I ACTION' ''"" • .. U • $75 000 surnJise you. GlJ-Sj,5(). • 1.4) BonUs roo1n. Ex0rr~ clca .. ~ 545-0-16S Open 'til 9 PM "' nits - P •, 545-9491 Open 'Iii fl PM
\0 T HE REAL
\""-CSTATERS
.• I ALL TERMSOF'F'£RED. on " lotg or trees. n1y 10 ,, Peninsula 01nt smLE DOWN
thi!I gorgeous 3 bedroom dov.•n. $36.900. 546-2313 VA REPO 3 l-Bdrms., 1 2-Bdrm. Rent-
1 ho1nf'· !hat's CL f; AN, cd month 10 month. Close And rela'x in thig cheerfol 4
• , •, t I , •. ,
... :r::~
OWNER'S bUt y;ew home. I
Y"r. old 4 Br., Farn. Rm.,
Pool, j a c u :i: z l, $51.000.
833-0720. I Balboa Peninsula
BA, YFRONT, pier; 5 Br .. 4
ha., DIR, Jg, !iv. rn1
S1,J9,000. Realtor 67:,.....tfiOO.
Balboa Island
*
CLEAN, CLEAN! Every-3 Bedroom fiver Upper bar-to bay & beach. Loi 35x100. bdrm., 2 bath great family
thing sparkles! Seller ,has gain. ExceJJent North Costa WE tl/tVE ~'TALS home near Newport H111, ,.,
"It • bought new homt', WK.I give Priced soo/o Below i\fesa location. Full price Call; 673-3663 642-2'253 just a few steJ>!I from a JQ\•e. Solis bury Bob. O.C1rolis posses.•iion in early Feb· BELIEVE ME . . S?3.JOO. Anyone can buy ly ~rk. KIJchen bhns. FA 3151/J Ruby rua Ifs a one owner ' 1980 a.slung price -2-slory with paymenlll: It!! than heatuig, tt~ carpe-ts, larve
Balboa Island horn';" thal offers a MESA s 16,500 PRICE! Doyle & Shields . prestige s~. per month incl taxes fenced yard! $29.900.
'fou att. the winner ot VERDE LOCATION. HUlt· "'-~·-home cottag with 7 home. 4 Queen.-8~~ bed· I: ins. Hurry ~ Vacant · CALL '=" '46·2414 • $29 .,,_.., Y e rooms. Ne-.1· paint 1ns1dt!' k w 't I 1 I 9 ~ ~ .
2 tickets to the : RY ~ HURRY! Onl.y .9"'alJ. King-size bedroom~ with lots out. Nf")I' shag carpels, flood c~7 5-46~588D 00(~pen eves.l ~ ......... spam, V1c1tieift COATS I of closets. LuxU.rlOUs J)\IJI-lighted 1and$Capi,n&. ~· r . ' REALTY
& RKr11tional /3> • man bath, h~ge kitchen. You like· ne'W, Hurry~! Hurry!! I~ l SJ O 950 Ne•r Nt•p•rt P••I orrlt•
Vthicle Show -" can 1nake 1t your dream w I k & L, HfltTAGE ~ 1 •
at the w WALLACE I homo. Sul>m;t IO I°• down, a er ee ' """"" IS THE· PRICE lnjay The Security
ANAHEIM REALTORS owner will carry balance. 10 , ror this very lovely 3 bed-ot this allractive home. In 1
CONVENTION -546-4141-I Walke' r & Lee Realtor~ ---room, 2 bath home. The most desirabl~ area, in '
CENTER (Open Evenings) 540-5ol40 Ml.NI RANCH loan is high enough that you Hunt. Be1tch. "'" classify
Now thr;i JA.nuary 16th ~ Realtoi'S C.R.V~ SALE MAXI FUN c11.n a,sl!Ume With paym~nls lhis property as real sharp.
Rl'.1l 1y
BAYFRONT
4 Bdnn1 .. .C baths. on ~j fl. I
101. with privare pier. Price
just redUced • will tl'ade
cqul(y for nice Jargl.', inslde
Balboa l!.land hume. $150,000
Salisbury
ReJlty P1"f'«!e ·et11 tH~8, eKt 314 2 S H 2790 Harbor Blvd. al Adams A \Vindsor Green VaJue • .( , of $160 per month which in· Priced al $27,200. 8-47-6010
bet\Yee1l 91ai>d 5 pm to da.im • tory ome 54"'~9491 Open 'Ill 9 P~I 'Br .• FR and Sunset Pool Oiarmlng cus lom home, 2 clude11 all. Modern bu/Jt.\ns, 31.~ MARINE AVE .. 673-6900 I
your tlclfe11. lNorth S:u;,~ I With Everything ''FUiiy Automatic'' in .. .\1ove In" condition. ~ri°°Y ~q:,:bi!. :a~,; :rchi~~e d~~';,.'.'· ~~~ B~LBOA ISLAND toll-free · numb(·r Is ~ bedroom tamll room 21'.XXl Gov't e.ppra.isal ls $28.500. call CorOna def Mar * . :/I' · · , * · • Y • was ana 1lill Is a model Owner will pay 3~ pointJ. stalls &.lid cement block 1ack garage to boot?
' ""· ft . """ I brand n<W borne. 3 bedroom, Iii bath C"1f 546-2313 for"'"' VatU<! room. sc;ng o" the CO•" Walker & Lee FINDERS.KEEPEl!S
· • heated It: tilftred pool. Full borne tn Huntlna:ton Beach bo)'s. Great clOl!!e·in loo. Beamed CtillngJ '3 +. Lanai , ........ , S'J9,1.l0. f. 'Price $32,fSO. Be3t Huntin&-for only S2"1.49!1. C&11 $40-1151 (Open Evesl Realtors Add fcellna to beauuful 314 ·BR.,,, •. ,.,, ••••••• $33.~.
9 Wel9hln9 Valuu? ton !leaoh location. -mo Harbor-Blvd at Adam• !Klrm .. lli bath Lusk bu ilt 2 BR, 2 BA ........ $42.500.
Loolctnr for your Money• Walker & Lee 1 1~~:=1 54~ Open ;Iii 9 PM ~= ~::;.bo~.~~· wllh DuplOu ,·.~ .............. w,.,·~· 1
..
~~Hf'~:!~:~; Rt!'altors I Duplexes· Dupl1x11 ~ ~-. ''VET BUYERS l ™~Pl;;·:::::::::::: m:;>:
decora•od w;th m.ny "'""' j ~40
1 f'OR FAMILY • i N:,w,h. 300""'11u1~':'m -,2.!!1',h.,e•"!' $25 990 SPANISH WELCOME!" --t
4 :o'R~AN · REA1l~:i" 1
.. bedrooms, 2 bllh&. a•r-I ..... J•.~.. • ' Suptr sharp 3 bedroon1~ l'Ad Coldwell Banker 67' H•2 67' u59 I den'kltchen-wllheatircart1 £ASTS(D£ · WA'NTING GODO AREA vacant S72500 A Spanish 3~mom haclfon-, .,,..._.. ~ I
• , ... , as • pin S..t of I IMMEDNEW~A~g01 PETE BARRETI tla haa to" of appeal wtrh ::.::'."~~t:'~::'al~ 1;,: ~EALT.o,a~ 1 -Who's ho,;;;-h tho!? -
tef!n• • No dOWn O.l, or 3 Bdlroom dih1"• 2 bath cUl«IHAc IOClll'*t. 1"'1t lamlly homr. Prittd at ~ I pt'Ople often •~. WtU, lls
'"f u...wn rn .' ll'll d; builtiUll. "fueptace, big lot. .... 1.1 • ._ u.,.. .. · •"C"" $29,950, .11 \l.'On't I as I . 133--0700 644-2430 the btst & a.las they mu~t ...
i;..; ~--·A ~-nsfe~ , -.. • ~,.! B101R·2" Bo, lrg. tun/din. REALTY J "vi-room with·~~ 11-
~""' very 0009el'l ' very very o1ean Askin& c ...... ...-3 BR. 2•t BA l pl.act, family room, 2 baths, 8'12-2.U>. j niow, 3 br, 2 bA, &"ff'&test '32,~. CAU. ~-$27.'15o. Zoned"f.ot~aunit. ~a;fd\n"'~. "11 • • l"I 1605 w:::rcLIFF pl.us 1hl.1 c1.rpeling and eus-master cutte 1n 1own, ONLY "" ~'CO.I Call ~= (()pen • ...,. I NIWPORT lllACH' ' tom d-•· Lor. °'· ..,_ UNUSUAL 1'9,950.
: . .,ET@•<; .• (~~ ~I 400E.174';'0RA™ M2-S2GO • :~~~1~'i313DoD\m,.. N;:,,:~hc;~~'~m~I~,' 3001U~1~ ... ~~Rt1~10 ~ ~~ .. ~~~!a.?! . I =--'c.~ I LANDLQRDS! ~1i1·~iw $25 540-o'PNRM.D ="tl·,,:::~'~,,;·:i:.1:; Bd~~""';,.3,BRi;t;roc;n~ .. 1111 ·-.~T .. 'bum for • • . We Special .... In N......, • P' zil . . . 0 own bedt<llllll for""""'"• ••II· wlop<D ... ;., '''"'"'·South ~ _,.,_ lteojt~ end t,ospl. 1 • d V I 1 -JUST L-ISTED ~~~~·.~':! ~~::.•o.,~ e EXCH'ANGE • l bathe, beautilul 1h1g car-Wd<. Nly .. .,,.,,. 1nd 111 1 ol Highway.~. 111-tall()', 4-bedrooin pl\lt den MIR G II•• .._. . ~ ._ peUng drapt1. lUchly PID-modfom convenlencu. Unbe-1 u§i( 2 lo 1 b • bi. 3 -ti With ~la~, Ott 1detl 1132'x300' -1\-2 loi. 2 Older t.&Jtt ft..2 IOt. Ott H~ ~=~al Servttle 11 FRc.L to I.JAVE 5 •crtt In Dttttl Jtot rltd ilvlns room, buUt-ln lh!va.t>le vatut at S36.9'!!0. Lt l ~I ~· Uo f 1dt~ for MQm. St!'ller Is hou8t!'J.Driveb)'2447.t2449 ~le::~·~riJ :xi mo. i::1 NU.·VIEW RENTALS ~;f~"~~-'"t ~~~l~lt.~noP•lio. C.l17''241~ne\·et.l I ~'!ient.~.r~. n, tt +. mollva\M, can lj1«)10. Eld"'IA•~ .. C.M., tlten ..U, •· 7,, ,. 67Wi30 01 •lllfl ·-,--iii::,--~=-=-::::::
'!'Ii'. P.J'AL 0 . "'' .. ''S
~ 20 unt r-'l'''"' , ~...i ~. old< C.M. or N"'1>0l:I. I""' • lttt• .. _ 111 ,.....1 $$5,900 · I Goorgo Willl1m1on Lib to Ind<! flllr n.ld1 ROY J, WARD 111.'ms Lovto • "41 -.. ..w..
'"'-i. J t 1 ~ I\ PEIU\O,'I REALTY 1\12.1111 REAL TOR anrdltl collllllll II fQr ,...r 1641 W..tolllf Dr. 11.B. lor "buclar", ca.u O."'flod j
l'1!ll <>ra,.. Ave., C.lrf. J4M570 645-1544 6 u ... , S ~ lor S bodrl. -:it;; ""1oar, Oroll -.612-:.;.;;.;l67S.='-----
J
1 •
MESA YERDE
MODEL HOME
lif'autirul
\1·!1 h family roo111 aitu·
RIL'<i in !hr ('~'Oler O!
:'llesa Vrorde. EnJuy an-
kle df'ep shlll-! c111'pf'tin1,
I 1t v \sh I\ allpaperinJ:,
painted lns1df' 11nd out,
g u r i.'. e u u ~ n1anh:ured
)ards. 1\l'O fireplaces,
l'Xpansi vr huill ·In kitch-
en. All tt·rnis. 01vnrr
transferred. Asking $31 ,·
900. S<'f' ll nnw! -
546-8640.
3 BEDROOM CUTIE
$25,450
No do1v11 lo vel:i. Al th!JI
p1•ice )OIL h8\'r to 1ee
it. Nr11 df'lu:ict" hi-low
carpetlru: throui:hout.
Complrh·ly r<'rnodrled
k\lch<'n 11· it h built-In
range-and t.lvublt' oven,
fanlaslie pa1io 1·ornplt'te
with buil1 -1n bnl'k bar·
b+q, 2 quC'<!u i;l1.f" baths,
double i;:arai;:e. •le, etc,
etc. Hurry It 'von't last.
546 ......
EASTSIDE BAR~AIN
Trees, Trees, Trees
Want country llvlna:!
Here It is on a corner
lot 111 Eai;t~idr Costa
A1esa. l l1dden by forest
of to11·er1nK 1rrts. This
111 a 3 bcdroon1, 2 bath
ranch stylf' 11•lth in•~
slve brick floor to <'t'il·
inr firc11lace. modern
built-in kitchen all for
$26, 750. ~· a m e your
terms. o. ... ner-anxloua.
can "°"'' for appoint-
ment. 546-86<10.
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
Income Producer
3 bt>d1·r~~n1 -1 2 rental
units. All on one big lot
In NC'1\'Jl0rt l-feii;tht11 -
one or a kind 3 bed·
room, 2 bAth home.
Charming 11arly Ameri-
can split l<'V<'I with firl'·
place and 1800 1q. ft.
or comfort, Add 2 Ont
bedroom unih1 In the
rear and you hwve the
m&.k!nJ.!i of 11 j!'l'eal ln-
Vl'Stmt'nt. Act NOit'. lt
~on·t last. M6-~0.
DARE TD BE
DIFFERENT?
()ccoan vlev.•. Newport
Hela:ht1. Old rambJlnc
3 story Swlu Cttalet.
_sf..pe.raht molhcr·ln·law
quartent fir you llkf
your mother-fn.Ja,w!!T)
completf' with Jdtc:htn,
bath and Cln!plate and
prlvAle entrance, 11M
hotnt - 3 bPdroocn, ~
bath!!. fonn11I dining
room, hu2't' 2 car garace
with bonu' room above.
'ralk "bout unlqur.. ~
It! 546-8640.
.,
'
~ILV PILOT T~sdaJ, J.utuary 11, 1971 _,., .... l~,.__I -_ ....... ~!~ I I~ I lril ._I ~_-____;l[jj.__I ~-~"__,!~[ _,,,_ I~ I -·-I~ ----~~I l~I
BUILDER'S
CLOSE-OUT
NEW VA PROGRAM · f bedroom Spb.nlsh S!yl~
'homta with 2 bAtha. No down I
Ct ~rs and mlnlmum
down fl-[A! Priced t r o m
$30,850. Price Includes land-
, acapina, sptinlders and buy-
er chooecs color on CllJ1le ts.
Cloee to So. C.oast Plaza and
new scboolJf. ?\fod~ls open.
Call. U you U.!ed you hen.CI
bnieflt.1 before, c11\I anyway.
Walker & Lee
!teal ton
f790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
lrvln• Irvine
TURTLE ROCK HILLS
We currenUy have several 3 & 4 bedroom
~sales in this prestigious area for your se.
lecUon. Most with VIEW & priced from
$51,500 lo $74.900. II you deeire TOP QUALi·
TY in a beautiful community -don't fail to
see these! Proudly shown at your conveni-
ence. Please call for appointment.
"f'! 1 ··11 . 11 1 Pi li !,
··1 i I ---I.I'll !11r
"SINCE 1946"
l1l Wt'St~ Bank Bldg,
Unlvtrslly Park, Irvine
D•ys '33-0101 , Nights
5'5-9191 ()pm 'Iii 9 PM 1 -:;::::::i:::::::::-S:::O:::--""'l~~~l"!'""I"" __ _
BY Owner-aBR-28.A. Shake I Huntington Cech Gauna Lich
166 Income p,_rty 16'
9 GARDEN TYPE BUNGALOW APTS.
4 separate buildings. Shake roofs. Private
patios. No stairs. All 1 story bungalows. 2 &
3 bedrooms. Some have f.ireplaces. The type
of buildings tbat attract and hold good ten-
ants. Income $16,741) yr. $145,000. Excellent
financing.
''Our 26th Y••r''
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Rialtol'5
2111 Sen Joequln Hills Ro•d
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
170 Buslnou i,Hou,....._,._s_u_ntu_r_•·--30.S-HoUlll Unfum.
--------,_O"'ppo""'"'-rtu-nlty..o..--.;;200~ Goner•l
Loft for S1 l• 305
fOEAT. FOR INr"OMF.• 1-Co•t• Meu
R-2 LOT $10,500. e MAOIJN!:RY SALES e
lluni o~ ' UJ 1 <New listJrw' • 0<,:11. comer! vi t es H II ncl B and sewe~! O • UI. S.le1
HAFFDAL REAL TY "Th. Brok" wllh £mpathy" ~ Evn: 5U~:Mt6 ~~ Oran&e Ave .• C.M.
FOR sale: Triplex lot in San Ev-es. MG-0608
Clemente. Ocean &: Hillside Investment
v!ewa. f12.~. 642.-7216. Opportunity
CdM 85' Hiib~"&Y trontqe, * * *
Cl znnlng. Welt.r M. Schnoor
Agent 67S--"122S.. 3119 killarney l•M
WANTED
One family that v.oold .W
this l<1vely -4 BR, l BA home
w/ frplc Ii: Pool. Gf'f.'lt loc.
CJ05e to ma.Jot shopping.
1325./mo.
Call M'>SU4 (()pea •-l
\outh (. oast --Mountain, Daurt, Costa M•••
I Acr••lil• for ule 150 Resort 174 You. a.rt the winner et I ~ 2 1 3·Btdrm. -~ ~/~1'":1.,:!,.m~'.;,"'Ki --------Spo;t~~~~.~j.., 546-8660 Eashlcle -""-:.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim:;mii OVER $29. MO. 968--0047. ** BIG BEAR LAKE & Recroetlon1I Open 1 PM Tll 8:30 PM (SINGLES
Newport BHch Cemotery WOULD YOU BELIEVE· Vehicle Show RENTAL SERVICE WELCOME)
Lots/Crypts 156 AN ORIGIN~,..,~ CABIN? A at The Servin&' Newport-Costa Men. l bUc. to Ntwpt. Builtln kllcb· DOVER SHORES I :oCO"'~_;.:.....--~:.. °" approx. M~• •• ,,,,. 01 NAHEIM ,,.. •. Ov" 2<XJ "ntaluvaU. en, "'""' enclooed yard, 1'>0l. Din. rm. Bkh\ ..... __ ..;;. _____ I ::'.'.~~=----
Bll·lm. Mus1vt brlcldrpk. VA NO DOWN NEW l BR. 2 BA hilllop
Cpts/drps. Hardwd fin. 1211000 ocean view home. Frpl,
FOR SALE: Harbor Rest land ln the-plnes, with a CONVENTION able NOW! ELEGANCE Mem<lrial Park. (Morman lake llie-w. Only $5,!6'.I, E-Z CENTER \Ve '1J&ranl~ service and Jt~ci1~,tr~o. M6-Ull
$115,000 section! Sp No. Alr.B plot terms. Now thru January 16th results. Our fee is $15.00. U °"'"""-"""-"=-....::::..::~; Boal rate, $Z7.~ $3IJtlO dn. • • full price. 4 BR.~ BA, beam ceil e't b bit I -1-!Iv "" •-• w/w ,........ ·• w ar, • ns, "--"& ' ..... ...,.... • ...... "''-5348 d bl ' c p t .. dJ'lll. f PDl'ft! yd.
21~ Magnolia &eeUOn fully OR MOWNINI ~~WN Pl.ease call 642-5678, VII 314 we can't !ind you \vhal )'OU e l.OVElt'S l&ir-Cozy l Br, Everything you have ever -"VlU'...'.)l cpl/dri>s, encl gar, $110. wanted in Uris 4 bedroom developed $51Xl. For in-Bea tiluJ be~n 9 and 5 pm to claim want, you don't pay! Fair'? ALA R t I e 64,3900 1 • rps, tJn elect range. di11h-$39,950. 494-s:m, 646-7562. £ASTSIDE Very dwmtng \i.'Shr, <1ven, FA ht, lrg bed-
1.w/2 bdnns. natural paneling rrn11, plenty ot clcleetl, OYet· PROPERT'I: for sale, 29 N.
1'A beam den, frpl(', lrg R-2 1;:lzed dt4. gar, patio, fenced, La Senda, L:lwer Tht'!!e
lot w/eav patio & cltru• ld!CP<I. Arch Jle¥ ... Call James Coen,
Ivan Wells Atrium model formation (%13) 438-4754. S21~ Te.';:1ed~orwont; your tickets. (North County Call .oow. •n • I ~ •-· Condominiums · · on toU-fre.e number ii 540-12'.K)) For example: e l'IEWPOR:T ~, 2 Br """""· Family room, fonnal la.st -Cail us immediately! * * __.. 3 .-....... ..,. • dining room, custom swim· f~r tale 160 Cell Ross (714) 536-1738 or loc=-.,..--....:.-~_....'.'..,..I BEDROOM HOUSE, f /yl"CI, encl 1ar, ldds/t>et.
ming pool wHtl jacmzi and write: SpencE'r Real Estate OUR lnveslment Div, \11oold $155.00 a month, yard, Costa. NICE. $100. i tre-et. By owner 167 Broad-If 499-3429 •tt.flet 5 pm.
l,my 518-7939. MONARCH BAY
FREEWAY & Fa I rvl ew 162-4471 ( =) 546-1103 A Charming 3 tit&: lge den r area. 1128 Canon. Lovely 3 custm borne. w/ pool. Ea r m
BR & nml.IJl!S, sunken llv, SELLING ope"' to dttk w/ oceanvu.
rm. 131,500. Owner. Accen YOUR HOME? 1100.~ * OWNER <99-2914
torearfd. ~ Lid 11 "~ &ppnlsa!, , , We buy o I e
1 OPEN SAT a: SUN 1·5 equities, Persona! attention. if owner, '3 BR, 2 BA, ~ 25 yrs. eXptr. 962-5523
;,i.og ti>4 drpo. paint. Huge COLLINS & WATTS
,)'aro. O>llege Park. 131, 100. -REAL TY -
!?9'S <Jolloge Dr. 5'().9'93 C. & W •
DOWNTOWN
CUSTOM BUILT 5 BR, 21A
Lawson
Always a good Rlection ot
tine Lido Isle homn. CUr·
rent listings from •
$48,000
0. ......... $24,000,
tin. lrplc,-, BA. m Loren, Baku a:
rFalrvtew,Ownr. BA,, panl'd, tam ""· &fone bowaR!> laweon ja.
lpl, lovely apta: A drps, AC01W.
bltln RIO, hrdwd 1ln:. App 3416 Via Lido 675-4562
XXXl 1q ft. 3 car car w/alley :.:.::...:.=c='----"C:...::::
a view ot the entire Upper Cott• Met• P.O. Box 2828, Big Bear ' like to provlde. at no cost Mesa. Children o,k, ALA Rent•l1 e Ms.3900
Newport Bay, For an ap-LEISURE Living! 2 ,1ory. 2 Lake, California. to ?'ou, an up.~ate ap-~t9S.~E~!c:;~, ~?Y!;: 3 Brt luE'". llv rm den din
po.!ntment to see call 646-7171 BR I I\ Ba Cp , SNOW SKIING FUN B' pra1S&l and analysis-by rom-t' h'ld d •· I rm & kit, bltna, ~lose ~la , • ts, drps, , , . ig puter of }'OUI' properly ion, c 1 ren an peu we •
bit-ins, frplc. Private patio. Bear 3 BR mntn. hon1e. Pieaae call 546-t600 · rome. Unfurnished, & 'h<IP'i· "'/W cpts. P50
Bayfront lot $15(1,000
TED HUBERT & ASSOC.
Mn Via Lldcl 675-8500
Newport Helghts --BY OWNER
Sharp 2 BR, home 1 bath
fireplace, crpta, MPs. blt-l~
range & oven. Huge lot with
room for · boat, trailer or
What have you. Call after
6' PM, 675-3589.
Large pool. L:lry facUilies. Rent day <1r week, Sips 7. +. l nvertment Division 2 BEDROOM, $135.00 a mo. Also furnitllt!: for sale.
Sy Owner. 549-0674 alt 5 673-6756. month., built-in kitchen, Cos-687 W. ·Wil.IOll. 64frl266.,
PM. Rt•I Est•tt W•nted 184 ta Mesa. 548-1227. $100.00 A MONTH FUR-VACANT. Some lucky penon
Duplexes/Units
tale 162 PRIVATE party "''ould like NISJlED. 1 bedroom bache-is really going to enjoy !his
to buy homl! or untu, any'I~~~~~~~~~~ lor , Balboa Island, carpets, lovely 4 bedroom 2 bath rend .. from i n d i v i d u a I . drapes, rehigerator and pa-home with rum~·-r o o m
545--l094. I hYncial I!• l f°BEDROOM HOUSE, pri-and pool! Gre;t location and close by major ahop-;~~:;1 ~va~to, w.~·th~""'~· $!20~.oo~tur-ping, $325. "'°· can 545--8424 If •l nished. (Open eve11.) SO UTH
Money to Loon 240 COAST REALTORS.
I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;:;~ -5;,;,;; M-,-9-. -C-o-. -RENTAL FINDERS • QlJIET R<tteal·Sep Bach
Bu1infft 336 E. 11TH STREET 411 w.1,., COSTA llllJA cottage, furn , utll inc $80.
,.,._
iY OWNER, nr hvine &:
~ 3 bl", 2 ba, lrl yrd
J"/beaut. tree•, frplc, hwd
~. $36,000. 61l.-7892. acceas. Choice loca.tton •
Aft ttT:m1. 842-4466 4 BR. 3 ha, 60x90 $77,500 San Juan Capistrano PE:<IN'SULA Opportonlty 200 C h f TD' · H *A ALA Rentel1 • 64S.3900 BAU!OA, CY'PRESS AVE., ______ as or s GUSH pis.
NEATdl1Plex 2br eachunit. DIST. F" I lj;;;J~*:. 645-0111 * eB FAMlLtv/~i Budki~~t Sak ~~2 Coovenient to bay &: beach, WHOLESALE 1r1 & Second 11 Free to l.andlonla r 5 g, ..... o ........
3 BR. 2 be. 42x88 $79,SOO
-4 BR. 3 ba. 70x88 $12'5,000 Reduction, Save ljORSJ;: COUNTRY
LIDO REAL TY INC. Prtce only $40,000. -TO Loans _ ALA Rent•lt e 645-3900 :P>mm. buy direct from
jf1"mer. Gorreoua 4 br M'¥
m:1e home. Leaving atat~. ,..---
• avail. Xtru. 546-S9M. ,
3377 VIA LIDO
673-7300
n ii.s beautiful estate home Is
one of the few left in San
Juan Capl!:trano. Built just
S years ago. Living areas
are up,tatrs, to enjoy the
lovely view across the
Orange trees lo the sea. lh
675·3000 Loweot Rates Oranre eo. -FURNl9HED -COSTA MESA
Zl07 E, c,,..t H"O'. DISTRIBUTORSHIP 642•2171 54s.o611 $80-UNBELIEVEABLE! Sep 3 bedroom with 2 bathr, Serving Harbor atte 21 ft'.!. Cottage, doUhouse, over-double garage, fenced yard,
PART OR FUU. TIME $25,000 looki .garden, util pd, Fttsh-carpeting, painted. For reni VACANT 3 BR REPO Yoo can~ 0
home for Newport Beach
uge custom trplc, l~ Ba on1y 5% down. 4"-o RCOnd BAY & BEACJ.l '23.000. B k r. 546-Tm: For mo,. · .• call Family Expandin9?
'45-3412. 893-8533. t 5 Bdrm.. 3 Ba., Family REALTY 1~c
\Ve distribute natl<1nally Private money for real estate ly painted. Hurry! l or leaae at $190 per mo. Call
known neet>ssity products loan. Mr. Ad&nlll Bkr 714/ -WAIJ<ER &: LEE Realton,
Ht Bluff
•*THE BLUFFS* $43,500
I Bdrm., 21iii ba., formal din., :rn.. family area. 9 Mm. t)'CUnl· Greenbelt v J e w.
\Owner tnlml. I: holding
_tEJane ticket. Call:
J'ASTBLUFF REAL TY ii 644-1133 Anytime
!EastblUff-Open-Hou11
view hm by owner.
Mon.Fr!, 11-5pm Sat
n.
, Catalpa S1., N.B.
)1 844-5510 dt 6 6Y Owner Newport Bcb oon-;do. 3 BR, 2 BA, l level, 2
1 patloc, nr pool. Lowest
auoc. dues. Asking $32,950.
; Ill carry 2nd. 2411 Vista
jHorar. 61f-5193.
Founteln VelloY
'
GORGEOUS
FAMILY ROOM
witb Wet bar, beautiful wal-
nut paneling, sliding gtaa
door to latice COW"red patio.
,Beautifully landscaped yvd,
brick B·B-Q and quaint wish-
ing Wi!ll make your dreama
'come true in '72,
Sperow Riiy 842-1474
"A nest for every bird"
LUX -4 BR, 2% BA, xtra Ige
family nn, bltns, cpl!!,
covered patio. Nr sclx>oI.
Owner, 842-5676
Huntington Buch
FULL PRICE IS
$21,500
1 Re.at F.atate_ bv Room with F i r e p I a c e •
1 McVAY 545-0458 Complete new kitchen
$ INSTANT CASH $-makes this 1100 sq. tt. home
kJI' the equit,y Jn your home. idealy situa ted on a corner
We pay aU costs. In fore-l<1t in Newport Beach. A
clowre ok. Jtut call .. 24 rare find and asking only
boun • dO)'. "'~ $51.050.
3 Br, 2 ba, tam rm,
cW,...de-.sac, AJ.lly ·c'r pt d ,
garden kit $31,900. 962-4892.
R. E. SALES
l'M LOOKING FOR
PROFESSIONAL
SALESMEN
RED CARPET
REALTOR
2740 Camcno Ca!)istrano
San Clemente
492-9700
WARM & RICH
Prime Harbor Highla.nd1
area. Like new warm & rich
home. 4' llflaciou1 bdrm!. &
family rm., 21,i baths. Liv-
ing rm. sliding gJasg wall
overlooks a sparkling pool.
Everything for gracious J!v.
tng. $43,000.
Acres give you plenty of ' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
space to pasture hor.scs, etc.
Four bedroon1s, 3 baths,
made inl<1 <1ne of the most
unui;ual anrl charming!
homes we have seE'tl. Call
today tor an appointment.
CAPJSTRA.i'lO VALLEY
REALTY 493-1124
San Clement•
_,_
RESIDENTIAL
UNITS
EASTSIDE, COSTA
169.500. WITH TERM
Roy McC•rdle Real r
lBlO Newport Blvd.,
548-7n9
BRAND new ocean vie·"'· 3 Income Property 166
Br., 2 Ba .. fam. rm .. ll"pl.
All blt·lns, Wall to woll 10 UNITS
crpts thru.out. $32,SOO. B,y ' ~e Costa Mesa t ~-(7141 6'15-J593. ttnt&l a.rea. Sewn' 3~-
Santa Ana Helght1 rooms and three 2-bedroorn11.
All separate units with lots
of space. Shows a fantastic
return with income at $1,400
per mo. Submit <1n down or
trade to -
FOR Sa.le or Trad!!', 1,2 Acre
w/3 houses. 1, 2 &: 3 BR,
comds for ~. $48,950.
Sy owner, 545-7&15.
Santo Ano Walker & Lee
consisting of PEPSODENT 499-Zl3o ' ' $8l-STUDEN'I' Fine -Priv 545-0465
TOOTHPASTE, TOOTii-. room &: bath. kltch privil. =="""'.,.--~~~--BRUSHES, MENNEN Nr, OC'C, EASY l.Jving! 3 BR, 21Ai BA
SEPH'S ASPRIN. AQUA I I~ -Tw~h&e. P ool, rec. cf'ntu,
VELVA, GILLETTE Howaa forfWll ie-$100..ST'EPS to Beach. Bache--rrwnten. tree. Great school
BLADES AND RAZORS, · . lor pad & kitch, al]. uti1 pW. d~trict, N.B. artt.. $28S.
ELECrRIC SHAVE, DEOO. Tot/pet ok. _ .. _,=2385.==-~---I
0 R A N T S, PLAYING HoUHI Furnished 300 * NEW 2 BR. l Ba TOW'?lhle
CARDS, ALKA SELTZER -UNFURNISHED -1 w/pool. Meaa Verde. Bltns,
And many MORE. Balboa Island $95-PRIV 1 ~R & Slp'g ~h, cpl&, drpl, pe.tio, 1ar.
We merchandise these prod-stove, refri&', cpt/drps.l'Nr. $200-to $225. Nr. IChls.
ucts in major motels and ro-t BR. 3 ~-· borne w/pltt &: town. ~T-MOO.
tels through SClphisticated beaut. view of ~ _ ~--"'"'--~-----""
coin operated equipment. boats. $450 month. fl~HARD To Find-3 BR, 2 BDRMS.. cpts, d r pa•
Reliable pen.ens will be se-WINTON, Realtor 675-3J31 kid.!/pets ok. Gar. FDCd yrd. prap, No pets. 2 aml
lected in this area to own LITI' Bal I11 altr furn hse rr -dilldren <1k. $145. ~
and operate routes of these wtr, patii> (oov'd fiic'd)-3 SlE&DOG ~! Can breed ; ,...w~alla~ce.,..... ~A=-•'-·-'·~"'' ___ 1
fa.st moving products. br, 2 ba. op, frpl. 6~267. dop:. 2 BR. Gar. Kids/peb' 3 BR. in Santa Ana. Hgbtl,
Our ten year <1ld company ok. Lee ya.rd k fruit trees. pets pennitted, new paint &:
arranges for and physically Corona del Mar drps. $240. 54()...1096 or .
places all equipment on lo-BEAUTIFUL Ba $235-HORSE Property! 2 BR. ~nn uk for Betty, mer.
cation and we provide com-4 ba comp! 1 Jy,_,!umt >Wbu''i F'rplc. Kids/pet. ok. Gar.
Plete train! · II • e e · ~cious1
ng ~ermg a lease until June 11th. $450 BEACON "'Ji 645-0111
phases of _operation ~re-me. + util's.
2 BR, frple, beam ceU, W/W,
patio. Adultt only, no pm.
$152/mo. Yrly. 6D-853).
BE YOUR OWN BO$
CAt.,L ED 847-9604
KASABIAN
REAL ESTATE
GOOD BUY! 3 BR, 2 BA.
fam. rm, quality cptz &
drpa;, frplc, patio1 sprinklers
&: p!anten. Near schools &
beach. $29,SOO. 0 w n er .
528-3567 after 6.
CALL Ci) ,_..,_2,1.t
IA~A~ IN ·-::-00-0.-H-':_-,.--~----:.-m-.:
Ne•r N•wp•rl P••t orrtee usume GI 7%. Spanish 3
Sit'n on a Suitcase hr,. 2 bo. apt, dri><. irpi,
~re no selling or expenenee Winton Re.11 Est.1ti $!.25. Pvt home on 3 acres.
Realton l5 neet>s.sary. There are no 675-3331 Kid.Vpets/hones OK.
2700 Harbor Blvd. at Adams franchise fee.! or royalties. $124 2 BR pvt home vacant
915-9491 Open 'tll 9 PM E\'ery dollar invested goes 2 BR me>-te>-mo S250. 603 & ready C.M. '
t BR, 1am rm., Uv rm
w/frplc, ioYe1y home .
aYailable. Le.ue. 847-7136
MESA Verdo • 4 Br., Olnlnc
rm., den, 11$ bL I.eue op-
tion. $295. per mo. 5'5--090&.
2 BR, range, lazp ,...
fenced, lltn. clean. C&Ji>el&.
$200/mo. 574 Victoria C.M. Irvine
TASTEFULLY DONE
This 4 &inn., 2 ba. home bu.
lovely ca.Jl)eting, draPf!S'
and wallpapers. Covered
paUo, beautiful landscaping
and a choice location. All
tor only $37,900.
Owner pa~ and ready to
go. Great fl~ ~room fam-
ily home in Unl~lty
Parle near 5IChoo1s and pool!.
Newly decorated. Master i.!
huge and dmvn.stairs -kids
\Ip. corner lot fenced for
Fido. Owner uklng $36.~
but ttally wan1s ool! SUb-
mit otter. Call IWS-TlTI but
_hurry!
10 UNITS
sprinklers, patio. 557-5918.
Mobile Homu
For Sile ,
RESALES
125
in Greenleat Mobil~ Home
Park. Descrlptiona &: pri~
posted at the office 1750
Whittler Ave., C.M. •
IMMEDIATE occup. Family
Parle H.B. 3 Br., l!Xpando
$4,000. 842-6318 alt 5 ..
wlmm.
Hll.J.CREST roX56 2 BR 2
BA, Lovely sit~, Irvine
Ranct>. Pvt ply. 714/544-0157
* INVESTORS* into your own business. o_r chi d A v e. c d M. $145 2 BR Pvt hcnn~. Crpts,
16 Attractive, wen built units. This is a totallr NON-COM· Kids/pets <lk. 675-2087 drps, gar, Klds/pet& OK,
!!'land view loc., near Fash-PETITIVE bu.siness and one Costa Mesa HB
ion Island. 32 Covered car-of the finest <1pportunities '$1$ 3 bednn f~ for 1dd.!
Jl0?15. cmnmunity pool close being ottered today with no FURNISHED 1 Br., cottage C.M. '
by. $'50,000 Annual~. M· bl~e k sky a nd no get r ich in rear. prlv patio, $ll)/1Tl(l $160 5 BR 2 story oldf'!'
sume present loan at B7' %. qu1c schemes. util. paid. lat .l last ITl(l's Mme kids & peta OK
100% Depreciation gives xlnt U: ?'°u ~ reliable and am-rent + ,security charge. TIG-n:io AGENT Fountain Valley
tax lbelte Aa:tri .. ~000 bilious with a strong desire Older male only. No peu.l---'-----'=='-
r. ng .,.,,.,, · to succeed in an honest, 1925\1 Anah•'-A·-CM
Try $15,000 or pan excl>ango I · "" "" ' LANDLORDS! down. ~ kt business of your 0\'111 * NEW 2 B 1 •
To &ee call: 644-6111 with tremendou~ growth~ Townhouse w I ~I. M!: Out Rent.al Service is FREE
The Irwin Co., Realtors tentlal and can invest a _mi n· Verde. Bltns c ta d to You. Try Nu-View. We
lmum of $2975 sec.) wnte to tio ' P ' rps, advertise &: screen. • SPECIAL • "' !or furthor d•tail• and pa 'gor, 1225 to $2r>O. Nr NU-VIEW RENTALS
NEWLY decorated, new cpta
&: drpa. 3 BR, 2 BA, den +
bonus rm., sewing rm.,
trplc, bltrui. Acrou from
school. $275 mo I.e. (213)
425-3535.
PRINCIPALS ONLY Interview, include phone oo. schls. 557-Moo. 673 .!Mn 4tu .,..,A• PRODUCTS DISTRIBUTING $145 COUPLE Only. 2 BR, _,.:JU or ....-.-oo Huntington Beadt
3 H:~~-e lot CO., 2700 N. MAIN ST., gar .. fnccl yrd., no pet. Nr.l""':i."s"e"R,...,=,...,.,....-=c-__________ ,
....,a SUITE 720, SANTA ANA. 17th & Santa Ana A·-. -pool -view· $450. FOR RENT 23.16 Elden, Co.ta f.1esa. Y" 3 BR large ard $225 Noor Beck Bey CALIF. 92701 54&-3530. -Y • · Beautiful 2 BR w/add-on, on 1~~~~~-~--2 BR -bltns ·CID • $225. lrg fe Ofe, 642-1121 Eves 646-5302 GIFT Shop -Bath -Botique 2 BR traUer. Completely 1 BR _ bltns • c./d _ $16S. comer -need lot. nice-
EXCHANGE-0-NL_Y_ on Balboa Isl. Sm. invest. turn. Adult park. Double ......... -$25. mo. ly klacpd, w/frult trees. FA
Eutside Costa Mesa, great
REALTY rental area. Seven 3-bed-
Univ. Park Center, Jtvine room• and three 2-bedrooms. ! Rul E11t.1-, 1 rAJ
ired hill
Call Anytime, 833-0820 All separate unitJ with lots Gener.. ~ l""""'""'~""!""'""'""'"" / of space, Shaws a fantutic 1,".-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-.-• ..J••• Laguna Be1ch return with lrirome of $1,400 I'
per mo. SUbm.Jt on down or Acreage for 1al1 150
~ ottg ooo _,, ** 61, -· ** " .... -~ Jit, elect bltinl, dbl~•, up-$14,000 Equity in 6 unilll .,,.,.,.._. or ~. ..-=r•-. Trailer or boat space $20. graded crpts, new~-$210
$20,000 cash to exchange for ENERGETIC auto mechanic Laguna Beach Call bet 6-9 pm ONLY J udy per mo. Ask for l'mltal
12 to 2J bread & butter units wlth valid Class A license. SuMk Owner/Agt 646-n73 agent. 962-44n
No down to GI Buyel'.! and
minimum down to Fl!A. In
fact. l!Vt'ryone OUallflea.
Sharp 3 bedroom dreamu
with open beam ceilings,
near new cerpet3 .l dnapes,
ideal location. Great tenoed
yard. Total payment as low as $168 per month. Why rent,
call~
LOCATION + trade to -
Walker & Lee
CALL: 644-filll We have facility, y 0 u 2 BR. Prtly furn. Just B k B
A LOW COST ACREAGE The Irwin Co. Realtoni furnish know-bow 8 p11 t remodelt.'d. Fireplace. La.1,..•,,,c<:"""'.""'ay;....____ e INSTANT Home! Spac 1
INVESTMENT THAT MUsr geJt home &: income labor & parts. Huntington yd. View $235. 497-1346. 3 BR, 2i,fi Ba., tam. rm., BR, walk in dotet, uU! Inc
REAILY MAKES SOME $26,CO'.l, 3 br. crpts, drpts, Beach to cation. Call LAGUN'A Channer, picture-newly cptd & decor. $325 l~ Rent.1lt • '4.S..!900 shingle&, g I ass. privacy,
charm & value are <1nly a R a!
few words that deserlbe this I ,_,,. e t<ll'I l hr wlthl con•-m'bl d 2 ••= Harbor Blvd. at Adams .,, . e en, 545-9491 Open 'Iii 9 PM
Walker & Lee be. home overlook1::g \Voodi; -----
Cove. Huge master br 30'-BEACH SPECIALS
Realtors
2190 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
_!15-00iS Open 'ti! 9 P~1
Hv'ing nn, bltn ki~hen.' a.re * 2 Story. 3 BR, A-frame.
typicaJ ot the many attrac-1 steps to best beach .• $34,900
tlv features to compaJ'e' at * l Story, 3 BR, A·rrame.
$43,511), " ........... " ....... $:11 .500
SPANISH DESIGNED
3 BR. + RUMPUS ROOM
NOW $26,000. A-Olan
REAL ESTATE It's reduced again , •. it's
vacant, and owner. In Gt-r. 1190 Glenneyre St.
CAYWOOD REAL TY
6300 W. CoMt HW, .• N.B.
5'13-1290
Baycrest Lot
80xUO. Pr1ctd Al 1ust $18,500.
Out-of-slllte owner neictbl~
on termsi Cali &16+n71 tor
details.
many say "SEIL"! Encl0&-494.9473 549-0316
«I courty•nl. 2 both.,...,, -TOP OF-THE WORLD-
ttre,Xac.e, w/w crpts &: drps, 3 Brs, 2 ba, beamed et>ihngs.
R&:O, dtshwutier. xtra large I Double t1ttplace. Large
cukle-sac Jot! A 11 lerms ya.rd. Room for pool, Good
available! Call 847.1221 SEYMOUR REALTY, 1n41 neighborhood. c Io s e to;.::;;==;=====
l!eoch B!YdV., AH~t. &h. Jj0~-~""ih>l"""lF!n""''(/· W•terfront Duplex Private pier &: float, modern
It Uvabte. walk to ocnn, )'OU
REPOSSESSION own the la.nd. Only $65,IXXI. ...,......__ 3 Bd:nnJ, 2 -Baths, Near -.-........ o..w F.J. HORVATH, Ret.Itor Ask tor Dave-
oettn. Lii famlly nn. \llAJk. *.SEU~ OR LEASE* 67>1.m CI08ed SUn. 6TS.7497
tn ciopca-..,~!· 821"' ""'" 22tlJ Sq Ft 3 BR. 211 BA SPACIOUS Ii ovtJL •• ...,. m old. · • · Go'l"t ~ dorlnr ""' r... fem. nn .• din, rm, lrpl. VIBRANT
rrt.'SfJ. OaU l&l.f441 ' Cpl " drapeo. bltlm. w.t LUXURIOUS ,..EST REALTY bar. ek. Immoc. $47,9!IO. "*"' Full pr1ct, • BA YCR.ESr 3 BR. ~ It,
$ P•yo ,All I MISSION REALTY 494.o73J . lov_•_11_· ""-~£,.:.._·9!IO_._
II )'OU -exlltlrw 5ll1' 4 Bii ,.. Fam. Rm., 3 bo,
F,H..1. Jooa" 01 Ihle. s1arp loc:lttd oo la., pool 1be lot l6JO W. c.e.t Hwy., N.B. ~ 0onanon111 w I ....,,.., ,,;...._ IJvJ,,. REAL 'IURS 612-G
t~ « bu:r Cll nLV mom •/open beam ctUmg SELL, Trade, Rent • 3 Br ..
VA -Vocont A l1141. ~ -blUn kil Low 216 bo., P'.R., 2 IJ'plc, view. "'11 ,.i.. SJUlll. ilawn 6 VA tlno-nclnf $31,000 GI Loon. $333 P~
l'ULLlll llUL TV •~. 13Ul0. Owntr, All. -""' B1 aw-.
I j ~ _ .. '--.-'------, __ 1e_011.;.;.. ---· _ _._
J
,
SENSE. 2!h Ac. 90 min. displ, f/a heat, frplc, gar 526-1343 alter 1 pm. book small house. view, Jge Mo. Bryant Wiest 675-2723
from N.B .. paved frontage. •hop + $210. mo. Owner BEER TAVERN for SALE patio. $1'l'l. 494-3533 B•lbo.1 Penln1ul• 8 H·ARD to Beat! 2 Br, fncd
yrd for kids & pet. $150. all util .. less than s min. to 1lS N. 3rd Manning, Calif CapiS"trMo Beach. Good Newport S.•ch
new high· rise complex. F /P ;":;<::---:07Jc.:;4-84""1"""::..;,:c:03=....,~= ~'~'"'~·:...H~om~o:_g;ph'!:·..'.496-~2006~~· _/;;;:;:~:;:;;;;;;;--;-;;::-;:
of <Inly $7900, w/tenna, FOR sale 2 trailers. Nt $95. COIN Op. Laundry, Costa OCEANFRONT • 4 Br., lge
detlnitely qualifies this a.s a mo. Newp:>rt $2200. Cutt Mesa area. MWit SE'!) due to WR. D/R. trple, bltna,
''Best Buy''. Bia. 644-4670. 673-5749 aft :1:30. job transfer 545--0611 d l s p I , r e f r I g, tu I ly
.:....--'--· ' cptd/drpd. $315 m<>. 'til June
30. Refs. 830-87Tl.
S@\\oU\1\-~t.tfS"
The Punle with the Bui/I-In Chuclcfe
•
OCEANFRONT 1 BR. Comp!
furn. Frptc. $200 I mo. 'tn
June. No pela. 2408 Ocean-
front 675-2962
* * ALA Re~l1i1 e 64S.3900
TEMPORAllY e RENTALS e
1 to 6 Mon tM
l•rwln' .r .. lty, ll\C.
2lSJ Brookhurst, Hntgn Bdt ,
546-5411 1nytlme
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SHERWOOD REALTY ,
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Unfum. :1C5 Apts. Fum. MO Apt1. Furn. J6I Apt, Unfum, J'5 Apt. Un!Vm. Ml Apt. Unfum.
Huntl"flon Beoch B•ll•o• Ponln1ul• ~u:gu~=na=~a.::ac:h:::::: 1--------lc --°'-''..,,,Mou,,,..,,..,.,=,,,,..-· I Huntington Beech -CHI• Mou -.. ~ GABLES"' Qualnt I BR. SIS5 ..._ "~ I BR., I BA, epll, clrp1, e 125 WK A UJ>-On 0.... e 4M-l'95 le l Br w/prt pr, Adlts, I a S BR. 1140 up. l'Oot.
d&hwahr. Quiet eid-cfe.ac Love!)' &cb-1 Br--Rooml e pt ( d r p, bl t 11 a , Chlldrens bonua. Mon Ka.I .._1.1225/..._ m.mo. Maid Rrvle.-Pool-Ul!l pd lido Isle WHATS IN '"'""fprooled. l'ncd yrd Apll,lB881MorslWLn.ll
4BR,,ll,Ba.,bltm.Crpt1 a •Callm-1'140 e 1 BR. rum. Ul!l paid. A NAME7 w /pa ll o. Wtr pd . blkE.otBeach.~
Drpa. N.., all ICboots. $240 Corona del Mer Canp. I Bachelor,,.. pell.' Pl 1Y bthJnd ...,. -\y Ga:dtner/mohrt. Call btwn 11!!0 NU 2 Br., ep"-drpo .. mo.~. $18$Jmo. ~7 1wa. en · tion 1&:5, 6.3&-4120 , Pfltlo, rec. rm., 11542 Jet-i"it, s ba condo w/bJtnL 1 BR. Furnbbe:I House 1rt Newport BMd'I ~~~ •r-2437 Oranee Aw "G' ••• SJ!i5 t•r•on Laae. l1lf9 per mo. 1122 DoorlleJd CdM. 1111l/rno Year Le.... .,,. JM.., lfl&C J BR opts. BESf Area. l<lw. 2 Br., IU-6441/SG-:1834. Dr, H.8. !illl m.tl!S. Call m, m.ist.S. 2 BR. ......,. dacora1'd, :100 ' bllN. nlrla.. rpll, drpo, SUPER Delun J Br. l bo,
Huftilngtan """°"' Atb>ct!ve Bachdo< apt ltuut"""'. ,_ .. ~·.,mi 1M.~C.~ SAY VENDOME • patio. No pell. l'ft.<cboola-near Hunt. Har~o•r .
• $100 w/ullL -~-· ~ ~~ S "V h d •• ok. 1150/mo. 5 41. 2 7 &S ' O'pt/d.,.., Di>l• d.w. dlll N.B. ey ti n· ome ~. .,.r, """'c •.u .....:_ ' I.SE Hun!. Harbour (ott. Spou.a. Quiet. ~ .---
water) charming 3 Br, 2 Cotti Men 3 BDRM., 2 BA, bltna, ocean our name -remin~nt ot $170 • 2 Br., J Ba.. Studio, 2 BR. cpts, drp!, nrip. No I
Ba. tam ~ !mmtd. occup. view, •baa: cpta., beam tM ~egance of Paru, d'ie adj. shops, cpl, drpl, patio,. peta. 1 child OK. $1.Z mo.
-1652 Casa del Oro clnga, % blk .. bHcll. 1 .... n " the n-ench Colll>-.... Chll-w •I c. m • . 142"""
min. walk to 2 mktl, dNr tryslde, 548-8301 aft 5: 213;592-m'l ---· ---· ----lrvl.... .w. tmLITlES PAID ,..,. a tawx1ty. im per SA y VENDOME FOR coUoc!. BEACHBLUFF APTs.
Comp&re befor. YolJ ttnt . mo. winter. C&ll 67l-Q70. **IMMACi QUIET 2 BR. Sp.ac 2 Br, 2 B.t. Pool. Pado.
I Bdnno., 2 balha, fam Uy Co.tom dfflgnt<I, fttturing' NEW Oceanfront • Yriy or QUALITY LIVING Cpll. ~. b11lll.' tth1f. DIW. tml EWs W.*'.
rm.; Turtle Rock•••• S3lO • ~ctaus kitcheri with in-Winter. 3 BR. 2 BA., Ir Just a few apts .. tr $200 mo Child OK. No pets. $150. Irvine S BR, 2 b1 , atrium •••• $325 dlftCt Ugtittng r--------J BR, 2'Ai b&., fam •••• $325 • Separate din'& UN. trplc. patio, pr. 646-5135, H E DOME 1974 Walla~. &U-2843.
j BR. 211 ba .. tam •••. $350 e !fom•-llke ,.,r.,. M&-!1952. T E V N ***MESA Vtnle 2 Br.
WE HAVE O'nlERS e Private patios ATTRACTIVE 1 Br. 1 blk 1845 Anaheim 642-2824 upper, newty chcor bttn.s, PARK WEST
APARTMENTS e CIORd &&rage w/atofaa'e from ocean. $150 ind util. 2 blka otl Nwpt ~wt. at l9tb crpts drplll, aduttt:, ro pell.
• Full length marble pull-Winter l'f'htal. 6'1S-U45. 548-5227 5f0.7fi62 5150.
man ** OCEANFRONT: 1-2-3 DELUXE 2 BR w car, $140. Cpt, tnd
• Klng-n Bdrm• BR'• Wintt:r. Adults only, APARTMENTS . yrd w/pe.tlo, wtr pd. 2.%lS-C e Poot -Barbequt'f -aur-no pell. 67J..8088. Air Cond -Frplc's -3 Swim· Santa Ana Ave. Ca.II btwn l
I Bdrm. From $160
2 Bdrm., 2 Be.
rounded with plush land· 1 BR tr&Uer, SllO per ming P0011 • Het.lth Spa -& 5, 636-412>.
From $195
3883 Parkvie\Y Lane
Irvine. (Jus1 oft
"SINCE 1946" scaping TeMia Crtl • Ge.me I: Bil· 3 BR. 2,'-Ba. .... clouJ lit Wetlern Bank Bld&. Adult living at \ts beat mo. Partly rum. Avail liard Room. ,.. , ·r-d ~--~~---
Univenlfy Parle Irvine Large 1 BR $175 rmw. 6Ta.-5l49 aft 5:30 1 BEDROOM studio. Shq, wuher/ ryr Ltgune h1ch
San DitKO Fwy at Culwr Rd)
D •-•101 ' NI ht UTILmES FREE Newport Heighb FROM m6 oon~pre~m~t,.~•;,.· l:IOO~'.;,· -:::.;;::11~!11.;:.1;;;:;rn;'W'.T;;;:"-;;;;;;:'"t;;;;;: •Y• ..... a ' 365 w. w;i..., 64t-1m MEDITERRANEAN SHARP • 1 Br. ia. clootJJ, UNUSUAL 2 Br., pan, lurtl.
ugune Beoch * $30 WK. & UP * ~ 1 ;:, 2 ~11~ VILLAGE M..;..v:~. ~-~ . atta•. 1250 mo lod. utll. -~ N -Ad·"'ts 1834 Ocean view, Lee. pidtn
·.-;;;;:;--~ Tl Cotta&-• Studio A I BR. Apta pe , g. . ,.,:... "-'M H ho Bl d CM 'ltiat~ adlt. only, 494-t653. u~•.c.! ny e e Room $15 WK Ar Up. E. 16th St., NB. 646-.MrJj.. .-wu ar r v ., · • AVAIL now, frtoshly painted
tuckt'd away nr heh. flOO. e 1V I: Maid Service Avail Apt. Unfum, U) (714) 5.57-8020 2 BR. Bltna, dshwsr, encl 1 BR Garden apt, nr. bead!. ALA Renttl1 • 645-3900 e Phone Service. UHi Pd RENTAL OFTICE garage, No peta. 54&-fJOBl no klds, pelt. Util. p:I, l/15
OPEN 10 AJo.i TO 6 P1ti 1100 mo 494--8362. e SPARKLING Vlrw -Le 1 e An major credit cards Gener1I 2 BR. Bltns, drpt, 1ge patio. I..!::::.::::·.,.::.-c.:;=;,:-,,_,,,,.
Br ttv/refrle ld.ck/iml pet 2376 N~ort Blvd. 5'8-9755 .. ..._ULTS Sml pe t ok. 2214 Ruteen OCEAN front 2 BR, 2 BA., 1S15o ' Thi1 Ad Worth $5 on Rent 3 BEDROOM, 2 b a th , AU Dr. 646-6919 or &U-0«9. for lease, reuonable rent. ALA Rtnti1la e 645-3900 Children It Pet Section carpets, dra.pes, built-lns. Brand new apartment 1,. n. .530::::..:0=lrfc..:Dr~-----u L-11 bl D-If I Do •·tn I with tio with c·-·. dra-' BDRM.. ~ -· ........ ~ 1 BR frp! ocean view lge n"9 wa Y uwi1ut u wns..,. •P ·, pa · andt;;llt.ll'l8 r-.. $175. J>E!'t' mo. L1gune HiR1
tncl., pali~. util. pd., $185. VAL D' !SERE Garden AptJI. 91)2...5773 after 6 pm. encloted ga.rare 979-1590 or 644-8867 --------
Gar. avail. 499-21.11. Adults • no prtr. Flowers S.lboa l1land pool, Jan....i ..... room ADULT CONDO. 1,.;::._=,..,.cc:._..,.c:---l "vel'l'Whert. Stream & ....,..,,.; **Deluxe 2 Br, 2 Ba. "New Warid" 3 Br, 2 Ba,
Newport B11ch Waterfall, 45' pool Rec. Rm, $400 Yearly. 337 E. Bayfnmt. fn'.i m ~;~~~~th Nr. S. Cst. Pilla 545-2321 ftfrta". washr/dry, alr/cond.
Sauna, Sgll 1·2 Bdrm, Furn. 2BR., 2 ba., dbl. 1ar. CALL•. ,..5780 *LGE 2 Br. nr abopl, adult. Dys 8»5150, evn/wlmd •NEW 3 BR, DR, FR. Unfum. trom $135. SEE IT: Winton Real Eltale 615-3331 ~ over 35. St.25. GAS/WTR 800-7937,
Harbor View Home•, -p ~~"-8670 ,==:.::..=-:---Incl. .~ ~ anons, -· **2 BR's. Flroplace, Cptd. d 2 la PD. 548-240!. L Nl•utl ~i:· IM~•ncr. * SUPER I BR. uw Paid. 3 B rm * th * roOi. * _.,_._._·--·---=-
. Lovely lumltutt. Frtsidaltt 211,:m.n«> Llvlns "'°"' with cathedral 1 Bdrm, 1125./2 Bdm!, 1140. LAGUNA NIGUEL
NEAR beach • &aut.
3
BR, appl's trost -free refrl& LGE 2 BR, 2 BA. Ba.ytront. celling A trplc. Sepvatt 325 E. 17th Place. APARTMENTS
crpta, drpi, patio, aundeck. qu!'en' u bed, cpt/drp'. Frplc, beam ceU. Bltna. laundry area. End patl?. LRG. 2 Br., crpt., drpi, 1 BR, 1 BA * 2 BR, 2 BA ~. Ph. eoll~t %13-8ll-405
2
$150/month. Adultl. 2220 El· $350/mo. Yearly. 675-4048. Swimmin, pool .i childrmi I bltru, l-2 chlldttn ok. Nr. fully earpeted & draped
or (213) 833-8462. den. 646-6378. ~. pJO. Schla It shP&. $140. 962-™5. From $175
UPPER du plex, all v.'OOd LOVELY 2 BR. tum. apt., 81lbCMI Pentn1ul1 HARBOR GREENS LARGE 2 Br 1% Ba Studio inct 1u, TV cablt.. waft!',
pa.ne1lng, elect kit. 2 Br., &hag: crpll, pool, cl09e to 3 BR, 2 Ba., 2 declcl, dswahr, 546-43$3 A N 'ta. $13S
726
all kit bllnt, lndry .,...,
$175. 67J....8Cl65 aft 6 pm. storet. Adulta, m pets. $160 atove, retrig., cpl•, drps, Pirk-llke Surrounding J pt. s~ • 'M&,.1.SM · bld rNim pool BBQ'a. priv
2 BR, 2 BA , 2 car pr., frplc, per mo. 1941 Pomona. Costa prlv. ga.r. ~ blk ~an A QUIET _ DELUXE oann · patios A: balConies. Optn
W/D. block to bay & beach. Mesa. Bay. $.100/mo. lM. No peta. 1.2 Ir 3 BR APTS 2 BR. untum, $1.XI. Infant OK 10 AM to 9 PM * a-4272
NICE! $al. 613-2937. NEWLY dttOr fum 2 Br 675-5034. PJ"y patios * Htd Poolt no pets. Jo Ann St C011ta 499-2277 * 20041 A1oma
University P1rk triplex, pool, pr, bltna, Coron• del Mllr Nr t"hop'c * Adults only Mesa 549-34l7. ott Crown Valley Prkwy
1----------r very quJet.1145/mo. sd-5376 Martinique Apts. E•st Bluff M11• V•nl•
S BR. dbl. pr .• Cambrtd .. Furn. B•clt. & I Br'1. 1m Santa Ana Avl., CM NEWPORT BEACH mod I -nbel• • ...,
1
-** NEW sn.IOJO, 2 br, e on •·~~ .. ..-i E1peclelly nice, $130 1[;,., --V Mgr. Apt 113 646-5542 VIiia Gr•ned1 Apt1. elec. hltnl, rold ah.q crpt.
Month. 133-!!160. up. 2110 Newport Blvd. ~-· eBEAtmroL GROUNDSe Four bodrooms with balcon-drpa, patio, pooL $195. Coud~mlnlum1 320 CM. ( -,,... SPANISH DEO>R Its above&: below. Grack>us .546--0'm:;:;.,:;::;;..· -,...,,-,.-::,.-,,...,,-
n urn. ,/ PERFECT !or quiet peo-ON TEN ACRES Air/cond. Gu, wtr. p:I. llvlng &: quiet curroundll'll fiELUXE 2 A 3 BR. 2 Ba,
pie. 1 BR. Mil-fun!. No 2 R. Furn Untum. Garagt>, Pool, Rec. mi., tor family with children. RA! ta1 E_o_•_l•_M_•_••-----1 children or peta Gar SIJS. 1 !-1~--~ ti--laundry 1 BR $140 2 BR Near Corona de! Mar High encl rar $150 up. n
... " " ,.. .. ~ I r-•s, Pl ...., · · School. Fittplace, wet bar Ir Ofc, 3095 Mace Av• • 3 BR. 2 Ba, crpt1, drapes, &17-9517 Pools TeMiJ Contnt1 BJdlt. f Ui0-$'165-$1"15. built-In kitchen appliances. 546-1034
bltl ins, d/w, 2 pools, cJb. * LGE 1 BR. apt, ~ A: 900 Sea IAne. CdM 844-2611 Had~~a de Mesa Apts 83,j AMIGOS WAY 644·2991
H 0 u 1 e, $2.15, 545-5270 lndry, furn . $ l l 51 m 0 • fMaeArtbur nr Col\.st Hwyl 160 W, Wilson, See Mgr. No. 1 Coldwell. Banker A Co. Mldwey City
833-3540 Womtn p..t'd. 1922-B Wal. BAY MEADOW APTS. Man-Agent
Dupl1x11 Unlurn. 350 lac.. C.M. 548-El!, 838--0IXl8. NEW Beom otillitp, panellns. e NEW DELUXE e MODERN 2 BR, bllnl, crpts,
drpt. pool, carpon, laundry
facU. $135. Couple or 1
small chlld OK. No pttl.
1 BR $m laJ'a'e. Ideal for 2 BR., 2 bathl; upstatn.. Car. pr1v pa..&s. recreation fa. 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for Jeue. ~untlngton Batch bachelor, awlm pool, adlta }ltted • drapK. Enel. pr-dlltiel. All adults, no pets. lncid rpac. muter 11\llte, din * DELUXE 3 BR. 1% BA, o n I y, 1993 Church Sl, ap. Comp. bltna. Private e 2 BR'• FROM AS LOW nn &. dbl garqt; auto door
cpts, drps. bltns, d b 1 5'S--9633. pa do. 705% Ord!Jd. $250 Per J.; $159/mo. opener avail. Pool & Recre-Call --5:30 pm.
Newport h•ch _......,rt patio fenced yd. * WINTER RATES * mooth. yearly. S8'i W. S., St., CM. ation ana. --~ ' ' · ~" •~ -e -e e WATERFRONT delt)"8 (1) 53&-2651 Attrac rum Studios 1115. 1 _ _ 1-•0·50 0 ~ ~·· , . .,
_ _ '~ 865 Am~-W•v NB 2 Br, 2 Ba tioose, IU' A: • ~-.1n1 Beech Bn SUS. Adu.Ill, no pets. 1 BR. Furn. 2 lge ~ts. ..,. _,,,, deck, aide tie avail. ~:.;;:--:-:-:::-::;:::;--::;;;-~:::;:: 1~:11~35~Elde~~n.;_Msr~';_· ~A~P!.:,I!:·,.... -"rit I..... que.en size~. priv dressing ~~~ ro. e (2) NEW 3 Br, den, ! Ba
2 BR., gar, view, utll. Yearly. LGE 1 BR apt in 4--plex, rm, xtra l&:e rooma, encl -"'==:..-.~'-'..,--pier &: 1llp avail. All cpt'd,
$250, 1.st I: last. Reh. 263 quiet E4ide arta, nr Nwpt LUXURIOUS French Rep~ rar w/ •torare. Adults only, Huntington 8Hdl drp'd, 0/W, sic own.
Grandview. ~94-2815. ""--·•v, ~•. ~~. •••1517 ey, l bedroom, 2'4 bath, no Df'ls. S150/mo. Y•·•· •-,.~~ •-·--Fireplace, Dlnina Room, 2035 F II rt C M other extru. ~v ~-Newport Beech 1 BR. Furn. Trailer. $75. Utll laundry. $400. A.gt. '75-4930. u 1 on, ' • ON BEACH I or will sell. S507 Finley,
•NEWPORT HEIGHTS * pe.J.d. Mature adult only. No Adult. only. SPAC. 2 I: 3 Br. Apt Sl;40 up • cm-8249::::..=::.· =~=~~
N'ew ! Br., 2 Ba .. bltn. elec. pet.I. Ms-om. MOD. 1 Br. Garaie Apt. nr. Pool:, cpl/drp., bl.tnl, Kidr ok 2 BR UnfUrn J'r. $230/mo. e NOW OPEN e
kllch., d ishwasher, w/w le WELL turn 2 Br in triplex. Albertsons Mkt. Yrly $160 = ~e:~:o3 S :2°~ 1\lrrlltlb AvallabJe BRAND NEW 1 &: 2 Br From
dnpes. Includes 1ardentt, Adults, no pets. $165. 768 mo • .Adulta onJy. 6'13-8936 · Carpetl-dn.pe~llhwuber $148. Priv. patio, billiard
$350 Lease "C" 'J'bomu, Scott Pl. CM. &16-2323. e COROLIDO Apt 1 • New LOVELY, lge 2 BR in quiet heated pool-sa.ttnU-tennis rm, heated pool w/ jacuni,.
.Realto; 548-5527 ONE Bednn. Adult.I, no peta. Owner/Ma:ment. 2 Br, bl.tn, "adults only" ld1. Garages, ttc room-ocean vtew1 huge closet., deep Pile C&flo * LARGE apt. 1 Blk from Pool It Utllitfes tncl.uded. frplca, 2 carports. pool, nr bltm, laundry, m pets. Nr pado&-am.ple pu'ktne ~~!~~ ~~ ~'1::
Ocean Newly d!tOn.ted. $145-nso. 548-7689. ocean. 673-4447 Wntclltt. $14S. 648-5355. Security cuarda. of Palisades. 21102 Birth st., ChU~n ok. R<uonabltl 1 BR. TraUer w/ den, 1135, OCEAN vt•w. el•i&nl 3 1 BR. Carport. Prlv patio. HUNTINGTON Nowport Btach. !15T-<2<5.
968-TG'll alt 6. "-I BR. Bachelor trailer, 2 ..... t•-•· Cpll, drpa, all eloe, ""P· PACIFIC
IUaU bedroom, .... • ..... ., ... ce, adults only. No children or """' BRAND NEW fJlll BEACH TOWNHOUSE 1115+. 646-1!09. -room. Adulta only. pet. ll25/mo. 548-1322. TU OCEAN AVE .• H.11. :i>m Santa Ana Aw !A=u
2 BR + Den/Off.ice. Frpl, pa-1 OR 2 Br, lg rma, pool, nr $500 per mo. Art. 67S-4930. cn4) 5.16-107 from S.A. Country Cub)
tio, tile deck. S275. ~ 1~p1, util pd. Adu1t5. 1884 3 BlQ to ocean or bay. new • REAL Value! Cpts, drps, Ofc open 10 am-I pm DaU1 Spacloua 1 I: 2 BR trom
N.wport H.l•h-Monrovia, CM. 548--0336. deluxe 2 br 2 be. bltns dshwhr, pool, 2 BR. Sl30. WlLLIAM WALTER! <X>. $lSO & $185. FIREPLACES..
• •• ' ' ' ' Mature adults. No peta.1 ""'"'!'"'!~~~~!"• Good loca •$139 DELUXE 1 Br., pool, frplc, beamed ttllln&. $300 Qulet 2295 Paeific Ave 1.. Prlv patiot, loads cf doeeta. 1 .BDRM. unlum. • cpta, drpc, bllN, 145 E. l!th lie. 613-3171. ,...&n or 1<2-1429. . * FRESH AIR Hoaled Pool. AdultL ~
tiOn.. Sl.'5. mo., incl. util. SI Apt 10. 645-5'29. 2 BR.. bltna. Walk ti& beach. Walk • l.fL.-.... Buch! ager 97!~l2G8. -==
548-1164. '• • . llNFURN 1"" 1 BR. Stov• • ------=w OR_T_ l;::=;:.:::..-,,=:=----,350w;i• Avt now 1 a 2 Br tum, $190. 0ranp Cout !!<al · . 41e 3 BR Apt, newly decor. PARK NE P
Duplue1 Unfum. pool, roe rm, id 1oc. No Estate. Call: S44-<843. 61'5 "1 ""•m:~: ~"t'Y6· Dbl attached pr, lrplc:, Ill APARTMENTS •~ ·~· fu CdM S mo. en P · ' Ba; bl.ma, except ftfrl&. Bachelor, 1 or 2 Bedrooms. 2 BR 1~ BA. pr, drps ,shag cl\lldren or pets. ~· 1 BR un rn •pt, CM. $225, No '1\11.t, no peta. Townhl:>ulf Sp pooh
crpt, bltins, Sharp! Quiet! Sh1rp Beautiful 2 BR $1'75 ** m.572G 2 BR. elec kitchen, cpta, 5.16-lnt. ~ls. From ~7o . .:C... '
$19J/mo. 612-2951 Agt. Pool. Adults. No pet&. (1 teen 2 BR Deluxe, walk to beach. dl'pl, pool. Overlookl Back e MOVE IN TODAY e trom Fashion Island at Jam-
OKJ. $160. 642-953:> Adultl, $200. 5f6-4'l1 eYH. Bay. $1691Mo. 673-6234. Kids It pm: welmm•. 2 BR. bol'f'e I: ~n Joa.quin Hilla lftl 1 BR w/cpta, drpl, ms mo., 833-t•n days New 1dvlt gerden Apt1. $139 & $159. AU o:tru. Pool, Road!I. <714> "4-l900. I ~ftrfllnt "" incl. uW. Adults, no pell. * GREAT VIEW-.2 Br, frpl, $180. gar, pado. Furniture av..U. EXECUTIVES l Br .. 2% BL
· 532 ~nter St., 646-7926. bltns. sundeckl, 'JM)OI. ~ 2 Bedroom• _ 1" Batta 173U-A Keel110n Lil H.B. condo. Frplc, pool, bltnl.
1 BR, Furn. apt. Qu.iitt up. au..6344. ~»I. $255. 968-7510 or BU-6235. car. $300 mo; 2 Br twnhle r.;i::'':;·.;F;..u;.;r;;.n;..• ___ m_1 adulll. no pets. 681 VlelX>ritl UNIQUE, artlltlc.1 Br., apt. 3 Bedrooms • 2 Balha e a<EZ ORO APTS. e 1195. 646-1231, M5-0030.
C.M. Apt.' 1148-6138. !!<fr!&. ·-a ullL Inc. (M3) AVAIL. FURN.\ 82Sf AUanlL l-l-3 Br'a. Pool. *BLUFFS Condominium On
i iiiiiiijii -*' BR. tum. 1110 mo. $225. ~er 49Mll7. 151 E. 2ht. 646 8!166 p rh•a t • doted pr. Bay. 3. Don, Dint..,, S a.•1.
A Adults, ,.. p<11. 820 C.oter Cost• Mou WHtb•y 21 Aportmtnll Wuber/Dt>er. S!M33S. 51hl6 dtck. Short 1m11
Sl,C.M.61J.1848 l BR. Unfum. $130 6 UP.OCEANFRONT vi.,., r.nt.J.499-:!m. Bold New Concept EAGER ........ you, 1-:1-S • LOWER * UID. tndd, N"'1y dee. -bch, ncw.r dolun THE BLUFFS, ' bd, 2 ....
Br'a, 2 Ba Fum It Uni. Uke All tltctric 2 BR, cpb, drp!I, Btaut. earden. pcol, n!'C. 2 br., blms, CTPtl, drpt, bltns, t.rpb, dips, $385. incl
ENTAL 1ar, patio. Nr. bua I: thea-Adults, no pets. 19519 Maple laund I: pr. Nr ahaps" ,a. ftler &M-'1629. fURNIJUR£ R new.
1140
Up. 615-5531). In!. Adults. no pell. 1155 mo. Aw., C.M. Mlf. No. 5. Alao pier 11'15 yrly. Adulll, baby l>ELVX. N"' c:rpt, drpa. 1
Huntington ile1ch 645-3515, 542-6499. prap1 tor rent. ok. ~%131. bUc: ocean, bay. Split levtt 2 • l\lonlb IO Month II~ 1 BR. tn 2 llldp. NEW 2 BR Studio Condo. NEW d<J"'"' "'-· 2 BEACHWOOD APTS. BR dupln. F'r>lc, cbhwwr, : = =!'i:: °*' Pool, "''"' cpl, drtil. nc. ~~~.~. = v~:.: Br. I Ba., ~tns. dlahwlhr, Brand MW 1-2-l BR. ~: blk ,. yrly. No pet.I 612-1924
StyJe.-Oo1on rm. Adull1. -219 OllJd/ t ok. l1Z .,. carp, drapei. -· patio, to BEAO<! Cpll, 4rpa, bltns, 2 BR 2 BA l:IOO. Wlltdltt * JI Hoor o.u_,. 15th St: 5!Hm. D> 121b ~ er M&-19115 alt pool. M•• Verdi -lrpla. 115 11111 SI., HB. eaprl Apbo. 1138 WHtdlll
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SL S !El· par~95 Month 1145-1911 847...1951 Dr. 642-Q74 lriZ~~-l~l~~~!!:J1 11 SR. r ••• 1140 I -FAMILY Slla•, BR, 2l(i BA. 1 B· bit IUWllV. 1. 2 Br. 2 Br:~ WESTCLIFF ..... l ~ ~ £ ~ Ovmoo1t1nr 1-tL pnltn 0CC. r.-l')dry LARGE ~ n I• Ba. In luxurioul bldf. W-Bedroom I bal!I. Atktlll on-
pallo • pool. Adtllts. No .... -~, dlhwahr, drpo. llhac <11"-lo bell. Clott to pf. Multa. \y l2'7S A1U'IM930 pets. 1035 12th St. Acrou faeO. $.JOO. No P' l • • laud. taco. Dbl pr. Adultt, 5)9..IM9J n> w It : · · ·
T W 19111, C11 511-S411 """'t.Ua PaJ1t. 531-2192. 114MS94. m pall. 1145/mo. 1411-a35 536-1244' 219 151!1 St. , * 2 A 3 BR Studlol, 111 Ba,
• SA ~r-1 VA~·-I BR. 1" BA •• • all floe, -· 'Wbr/6',' 275f N. Main .,.. -wl BAOIELOR Apt., 1 mile ...,.,., l 711 A. a1-i "'· 3 BR luxuJ'y apt am. mo. hookup I: pr. Nr. Hoq
lalbo• lal•nd from Beath. G~ a Water =~~:t, 1:;.,u:r :'hoot e wtlSON Evtrythlnit love!y tncludln1 Ho11p. $185 A $250. ~ =~-;;:::;::;::~:;:-::;:IJ .. ~ld;·~l~llll~/~mo.~m;;,:,.!!111:1-~lt;;:rll· a 111oppi..,. 30111 Fillmore GAltDENS e "'1'Y "repl•"'· CALL " GOLD Medallion 2 Br. l
SMAIL Bachelor 1YP& ~~ CITl'E I-bdrm. dllpltx. N..,_ Wa,,. ~ •· 1100 mo. i!,R, 1~ 8;4o_-= ~ Esta .. by 111~~&02 s.. cpl/drp. bllN. encl
No oooktna laclllttu. -l:f ........ Small 7Ud. IHl1. M&-:ml. 1IO " pr. AduJ11. 1175. 54&-370!.
1'15-1231. 5.1!-l900 • 2 WEEKS FRl!E I • SM·I Br. dllplex, patio, DELUXE I br. llfl bo. nt 2 BR 2 BA. 4-PJ pt nr B lllN ,. In I boams, D!>I, DD pats. 1 adll. bch p•w. ba<:lt yrd. pr, . °" • • e en au • L•tUM llHdt Dopl<Mn _, • 10 ntOYt In Yt17. 11!5. aUI pd. 64Ul!IO. tsu.:.. no. C.U 531-nllll stl g Hoaa Hosp. Adulll. IJTO A ms WI ... ll50 Yeot17 I -$1JO • I an $U5 $190/MO. M:l-j.WI ....
•·-~. ' 00 bay, "* 1115/mo. $40 "" .,. Bodi. I BR 1140 e POOL LllG 1 BR. 2 BA. '"' pata. pm. -tw that !Wm '""' $S1. -•· _, ....: ctr1Vtltl"" ei....:iia., can 11n,. vay iow .,.,. Cllfldm Otr. lfr ochlt a ror 111a1 ---..... __ ~: m."°;;: ~, 11<b ~QI i( 0.. ... 2SGI dtld/•L -nn. m4!DI !lw· 11111. -145 •I try tht ~ try lht ,....,
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DAll.Y '11.0T
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JOIN THE
'SELLERS CIRCLE'
WE'RE
SAVING
SPACE
FOR
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If you 1ell a 1ervlce anil ilon't advertise in the
DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing
bu1ineu the hard way. The Service Directory
( cle11ification1 600-699 in th.e clauified ad
section daily I gives you an advantage you get
through no other advertising medium. It reach.
es customeri who are reaay to buy. Be there
when your prospects come into the market
looking for the 1ervice1 you have to sell. If
your service isn 't listed, we'll atart a category
just for you .
Pick up the phone right now end reserve your
spec• in the "Sell•r1 Circle" •••
Your Direct Line to
Directory Results
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DAILY PILOT -1
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CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT
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DAILY PILOT TUHde, Jan111t1 11, 1911
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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. Stove 29. Blcyclo 57. Eloctrlc Train
2. Gultor 30. Typowrltor 51. Kiiton
3. S.by Crib 31. Bar Stools 59. CIHllc A'!fO
4. E1oetrlc Sow 32. Encyclopodlo 60. CciffM Toblo
5. Camera 33. Vacuum Cla1ntr 61. Motorcyclo
6. WHher 34. Tropical Fish 62. Accordlon
7. Outboard Motor 35. Hot Rod Equlpm't 63. Skis
I. Storoo Sot 36. Fiio Coblnot 64. TV Sot
9. Couch 37. Golf Clubs 65. Workbench
10. Clorlnot u. s1or11,.. snvwr 66. Dlomoftd Watch
11. Rofrlgorotor 39. Victorian Mirror 67. Go-Kort
12. Pickup Truck 40. Bedroom Stt 61. Ironer
13. Stwlng Machine 41. Slldo Profoctor 69. Comping Troller
14. Surfboard 42. Lown Mower 70. Antique Fumlture
15. Machine Tools 43. Pool Tobfo 71 . Topo Recorder
16. Dl1hwHhor 44. TlrH 72. Sollboot
17. Puppy 45. Plano 73. Spor!• Cor
II. Cabin Crul11r 46. Fur Coot 74. Mottrffl Box Spg1
19. Golf Cort 47. Drop.. 75. Inboard Spoodboat
20. Barometer 48. Linens 76. Shotgun
21. Stomp Colloctlon 49. Hor11 n. Soddlo
22. Dlnotto Sot SO. Alrpl1no 71. Dort G1mo
23. Ploy Pon 51. Org1n 79. Punching lot
24. Bowllng Boll 52. Exorcyclo 10. Baby Corrlogo 25. Wotor Skis 53. Rare Boolcl II. Drums 26. FrHnr 54. Ski Boots 12. Rlllo 27. Sultco11 55. High Choir 13. Dolle 21. Clock 56. Coins 14. SCUBA Goar
These or any other extra, things around the house
can be turned Into caslt with a
DAILY PILOT WANT-AD
so
Don't Just Sit There!
DIAL DIRECT
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.642~5678
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IH·ST
1•1sr Apt. Unfum. W Apt1.,
So-nt-.-An-,-----I 'um. or Unlurn.
.... ' . .
-l~I -
Office Ront11 4411 Porsonol1 ~
370 = . . 1-------'"'
t~=
c
3 Heattd Pooll
t.r&• Oubhoule etc, BBQ
Child Cart C.ntn
Great new 1 2 ·• a Bdrml From $149
SOUTH COAST
. · VILLAS ·
llOl Ma:eArthur 'Blvd.
5<6-182$·
l)ttAJU.i tum. ofc •pace -ln UISCOVER DI~
N•0-wpo--r-I -Bo-.-.-.--~ P"'tlst ddwto bf<lr. i..,. Find yOlJRSELF to ..._.
1iifl "'°'Ptloa Ole A pvt Qfe, ElR -·----·~·· -VISTA DEL MESA
Apartments
1 4: 2 Bit. Furn. A: Unt, Dlab-
WUher -Stove I Rlfi1&' • Sbla" crpt'&·Lrr Rtt center.
RENT Startt ti rti
Tustin & Mo .. Drive
w/view. All servicn, ampl Call now -No oblJp.Uoa I
prk'1. l.quna H 1111. (nl) -(213) 317-1393
830-1l3Q, NATIONAu.Y
DESK ._ availablo $M RECOGNIZED
mo. Wll1 l'loYlde iumltu.. FULLY UCENSED
at Ill mo. Answertnr lmllce Roknownod Hlnclu Sp!ritllll-
1vallabl1. 11115 Be~ch Blvd. "''· Splrltu&I ioadln& al'/Oll
Run-Beach. 64M3%I dally 10 am·IO pm. Advlca
DESK .P.ct ava11a61e SSO on an roatten ot llt.. !ll N .
mo. MU proVtde tunlltutt 'El Camino Re•J.. San Cl~
at $5 ~ ~ aervtce mente. 492·!136 or $903«.
available. 222 Torest 4vt, ALCOHOWCS AnonymoUI.
L&guna'Beaeh.at9t61 Phor\e 542-7217 or .write
NEW Ira oUlce, Air cond, P .O. Box 1223, Costa Maa.
heat'g. Utititi« pa.id. 1914 PROBLEM J>reinaney • ~
Me)"er Piece, C.M. Days: tldential, l)'mp&tbetic Jlftl"·
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6
4
2
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5
6
7
8
SAYB
£ASH!
Apts., . * .145 4155 • * • Fum. or Unfutn. m OAKWOOD GARDEN
"c"'oo"'t-.-Mo-.. -----Apartment•
CReaort Uvlnc for S1n,a1e A:
Married Adulta)
Newport Beach
16th al lrvine * BRAND NEW * -or 642-8110
LA COSTA APTS.
2 Bedroom Avoll.
• Built-U. e SWimming
Pool e Lanai e Bar-B-Ques
•Gara".,
AIL UrnmES PAID
ADULTS, NO PETS
354 Avocado St .. C.M.
642.970I
HACIENDA
HARBOR
241 AVOCAOO STREET
Intan11 OK. up to 3 yn ot age
No peb1
Detuxe 1 & 2 f3R. Pool
Ga.rap. Dia'hwshr. Paid utit.
FROM $150. 64&-1204
BRAND NEW
From $145. DlsbwasMr, shag
carpeting, walk-In dosets.
Forced air heat, extra large
rooms. Beautiful game room,
heated PQOl, BBQ's, enclog.
ed garages, quiet surround-
ings & c105e-to shoppinJ".
Adult llvlng. no pets.
EL CORDOVA APTS.
2077 Charle St. 6424470
Near Harbor &: HAmilton St.
e SPACIOUS e
Well-Designed Apts
• 1 BR. .. Pool. .. Block to
Ocean. Yearly, $135/mo.
675--2115, M6-269S evies.
548--0259, EVH: 645-0263. nancy counaelm.. Abortion
Sl'ORE: 600 .:,. It. OF· & Adoption re1ernl AP-
FICES: 300 .It 600 sq. ft. CARE. 542-4436.
Costa Mesa. Call 6t6-21J).
PRIVATE oU. .Wtabl• !or Socio! Clubs
amalt Int.. tu or R.E. DATE
opontlon. 645-0719. FOTO
400 3345 Newport Blvd. NB 'Sele<! your c:ompanlon floorll
---------Acro111/Cit:y Hall. 675-1601 100'1 of photo reternl1 tW :~D~Pa:!n~~ ButlMss Rental 44S ~~.to you, NO C'ON·
Rooms
share lovely Corona del Mar MUSf •ub-lea.se bnmed. 2 24 hr. tt<.'Qr'ded 'm_.,•
home, ~ companion with rm oUice suite near O.C. 11f/83S-2ZIQ, 21.V428-ll22
same. $65 per mo. P ,0 . Box Ai'rport .. d Iii I 72 ; cp ... , rps, u • 4• Cd¥, 92625. janitorial services, parking I • ![SJ
WORKING pl only. Will be provided. 400 tq. ft. at $225 Liit nl f'OUlld .
anua u a buJ: in this mo. Call 833--0866. I ~-----;:-~;1 Ul>ltairs itud)o room in pri. CHOICE rentals -ottice• I: I
home w/poot $85. mo. Call l!lhopl. Nominal rate 1 ,
546-6740. Newport & 17th St. loca.Uon.
PVT Entrance, ha, kit.
privil. & patlo for male
student. Laguna Bch. $90
mo. 497-1838.
642-0066 before 10 am~I S
pm.
SHOWROOM, mgi'. & oUice
•pace. Cose ln Laguna Joe.
Poul)d tlrM 1ds I
FOUND: Small whl~ male
poodle w/gtten rbh8tone
collar near Bwbard A tn-
dlanapolla. H.B. !l&Z-2254.
ROOMS.SlS wt Up w/lrit. $100. To $390 Mo. 494-4653 WOMEN'S watch found nr.
$30 wk Up Apb. 2376 FOR Rent: Deluxe omen, Colt Le 1 • Imports in
Newport BI v d . , CM. Industrial area. New bldg Laguna Beach. 49f..2801.
548-9755 nr. San Thero Frwy I: ldentlty &: Calm.
FURN room H.B. I: C.M. Crown Valley par k w a y , FOUND: blk maJe cock-e.iJOC)
Util. Ideal for •tudent. 1 831-1400. med •iie. t.nm nr Mar-
Adult. $65/mo. Ir $75/mo. DELUXE 650 sq. ft. olllce nolia It Adams H.B. 9C-XNIO
~. suite • Corona del Mar. FOUND Balton BuH Tftrler
1 Br lul ha lg closet pvt ent Near post office • Snack H.B. atta. 842~7389.
patio, 3 blks to bch/bay. Shop. Prlv. park., air cond. FND. Chihuahua. PI eaat
673-1023 9 am-10 pm. Re8.J.onomlcs, Bkr. 675-6700 Identify. C.M. 646-6089.
Guest Home 415 Industrial Rental. 450 FOUND Samoyed, vtdntf1,
--------Paularino Avt'nt.le, 0.11, PRIVATE room for am· 4 000 5n FT M Call and 1den bulalO..,. lady In llc•m•od • T• • .... !Uy.
Sprinkled • Good location. _64:_:!'>-:..::1609=· ------home. M6-339l SM
Vacatron Rentals 425 $450. ptT month..-A1L White lhauY male
l &. 2 BR. w/ Terraces.
From $1'1() • S11>/mo * * * 5,000 SQ. FT.
Shag t"PU, drps, saunas, Sherry Miner Like ntw, high ceilings. Lrg.
dog. Found downtown Hunt
Bch. ~7900.
FOUND • Vic. BaktT A-
Harbor, S mos. male ce.t,
dark iraY &: white w /fte&
collar 545-4516 aft II pm.
pool, jacuui, encl gar. 3235 East P•lmorl• i,s acre lot, fenced. $650.
Ouiet Ait·rt i : •. ;..... Orange per month.
MERRIMAC WOODS Yoo an the winnor o! Roy McCardlo RHllor
4Z> P.ferrimac \Va"._._CM__ l tickets to the UlO Newport BJvd., C.M. * *
THE :F:XCTI1'lf'! Sports. Vacation SQ..7729 I Mervin Bltb.r
PALM MESA APTS. & Rocrootlonal I !!!!!!!!!""'""''""'"'"""'""'~ 17691 Sin Morino Cir.,
MINtn'ES TO NWPT. BCH . V-1\icle Show IRV~E INDUS TR l AL Fount•in Valley
FURN. OR UNFURN. at the AREA. From 4,000 Sq. Ft. You a.re the winner of
Unbelievably large apt.I, huge ANAHEIM &: up. Warehouw Ii It. mfg. 2 ticketa to the
pool, Jaami, elect bltins, CONVENTION C.Ontact: Richard Fomry, & Recreatlonel ,
shag opts, drps, aauna, CENTER Broker 646--058.S Vahlcl• Show
etc. Adults, no pets. Now thru Janua..., 16th 460 1 at "-SINGLES F $135 ·~ Rentals W1nttd u~ I •·•••• rom Please call 642-5678, ext JJ.t ANAHEIM
1 BEDRM •••••• From Sl40 ~tween 9 and 5 pm to clalm S I
2 BEDRM ••••.• From $160 your ticket!. (North County WANT -2 cU garaae for ports, V•c•t on
You're right, they'tt under-toll-free number Is 540-U'lO) storage. N, Huntington Bch. CONVENTION
priced! 1561 Mesa Dr. * * * a.rea pref. 846-2535. CEN,TER
(5 bl.ks from Newport Blvd.) MODERN desert 1 bdrm HOUSE by reliable family, 3 ~ow thru January l6tb
5'16-91l6() 4 bdrm be! F b I Plea. can 6C.5671. ext !It homo "' ~ath Valley 2• or ., ore e . . ...__ * 2 BEDROOM * """' · " 892-7868 or 962-6651. · -tween 9 and 5 pm to claim l'h Ba Townhouse concept. hr. free mineral bathl. your ticktbl. (North Count;,
Beam eeilinga. extra lrg EJec. •love. refrlr., panel toU·tree numbtt ls 540-lD'.I)
heat, air cood., piano. $285. If ijif) * * * bedrmJ, encl i itio, rectta· "°"' _.._ (213) •--
ba per mo . ..,... per "'11• ..... _ _,_.,.. SM•" Bl ·• l --•-~•· tion nn. sauna. tha, etc. 691-5545. ~ a!,;jl. enMUOE ,............
Adults. Our Sunday after-mixed. White lpX on tall,
noon B-B.Q'• & Free Art _R_o.,.nt .. •_l_1_1o_Sh_•_ro __ 43ll_ red collaJ'. Vk:init;y Tustin A
Le:uona $rting !IOOn. * GIRL Wanted to lhare at· , _A_u_r_o_t_r_•_•_•po_rt_•_t_1°" __ 525 · 18th, Cotta MeM. Inquire HARBOR GREENS ,. 217' Tustin Aw., C..ta ~5025 trac 2 BR. All extru. Pool. WANTED ride from ~e Meu .
1 child ok. From $70. a: Cabrillo, Costa Meaa to =7:;=-=-,---,=-,,.,..-$100 -MOVE IN Allowance 963-7510 or 842-6235 Hntc Red Hill, l blks put SIAMESE Cat • F.utblutt.
Shady Elms-Lawn-Pool Be. MacArthur Blvd. 5 daya wk. 6'4-4447 •
Childreit's Section ====-,-.--=,.,--=I l ==~------Furn. &: Unfum l It 2 Br. SfRAIGHT bachelor XI to SO .Afttt 5. 548-4257. FOUND Duck vicinity 11th
From $l35/mo, Up intere1ted In 1alline or ~~~~~~~=~ and Monrovia, Coata Md&,
177 E. 22nd St. e 642-3645 be'ach to lhare 2 BR apt. r I ;;;54&-2569""7..,· ,.--,.-,---I
V" DRIVE-BY-673-3508 att 7:30 p.m. I Ptrson.i1 If •J BP~PPY~.3:::,o~~~c: 1::
147 Flower' St. 1 BR. Fum SISl'ER, age 19-25, •here l 'iiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~· ~~ or Unturn. Best .location Jn funky 3 Br. hou.8e, 2 blka to Ana Htl. MG-090f aft 5 pm.
CM. &f6.0020, 64S-38lS bch. $80 mo.
24
fl67 Catalina, P•r&on•la 530 or before 5, 833-8900.
' '""'na. 773-45 . ·---·-----SML blk mal• poodl• ·•· 2 BR near ahops, adults only. I ---,=.·~~----= · ·~· nso incl util"s. 646-2039 or * Male, Brand new priv. BR NEED a vacation'!' Or a day 18th A Orange. Vtty wtD
I ApMllMnll fot Rent
2627 nr OC'C -SD Frwy. $26432 or two oH? Will manaie trained. 54S-8220. I~ 646:-· · wk. or by mo. 557-8400. variow types of bwineues FOUND Female Wetmaruer 9 _H_unt_l_ngt;;..on;...._Be_e_di __ .;... GIRL to share 3 BR housf, on a part time baaU with 1 eye mlntna: vicinity · La Q • H Costa Mesa with u.me. Laguna-Se.ddieback are a · Fa.lrvlew It Baker, a.ta . Uinta ermosa 645-384! Wril• Clauitiod No. 321, M-. ~1971 attor g pm.
Apt. Unfurn. 365 WORKING Jir1 to Ihm!' 2 Dally Pilot, Box. IS60, Coat.a ADULT ma.le Siamese
SPANISH COUNI'RY ES-Mesa, 9262&. w/cotlar, vie. Via r , .....
Nowport Heights TATE living &: 91>4dous l BR home w/ume In CM. ......,
apts. Tura«d pool, SUnken S70 mo. 548-4llO or 543-4683.1.Wj•i'lliiiholiipi)IOUiiii""'iiiiii! iW-5611iiliii.iiNordiii'i Ni.i"i· mciiill.!6ii.iiiilll •NICE 2 BR. Pool. Encl.
pr. Cpta I cbi>o. ADULTS.
No pets. $155/rno. 642-8001.
gas BBQ. Girt to share ~ach apt. I
Unb<Hovablo llvlng !or ONLY * 67).6171 * * * * * * * S.n Clomonto
1 &Inn. Unlurn $150,G ~~.~,."',-0-,~fo~r""'=R~ont-"~435=
Furn SJ.75. r----------------... 1 2 &Inn unlum. $175. GARAGE for ""~ E,old• DISI'INCTIVE adult llvtna
Just completed i u x u r y
apartmenta, on lamou11 San
Clemente estate •lte. Whltf!'
watl!:r view le sound, ph11
tweeping ocean v I e w .
Spa.cW>Us 2 le 3 BR &pt• with
private balco'nit1. Su~
terranean park.inr w i t h
elevaton to all 5 floon.
Pool, cprs, dtps, bltlns Ir
Furn. $210 Costa Mesa.
ALL'tJm.mES INCLUDED * 64:1-0!S * ADULTS NO PETs =~=~~--= V!srr OUR MODELS GARAGE Warehouse, 2436
Trader's Paradise . .
l 62ll PARKSIDE LN. No. B Newport Blvd, C.M.
!n•l 8<7?441 *6. 1q. It. 15()/~. 518-1322.
t BlJtl. So. of San Diego GARAGE for ttorqe, Slfllle
Frwy. on Beach, l blk W. on $25/mo. Double $40/010.
Holt to Paritakle. · 557-2360 evc1 ,be1L
LoguM Beach Office Rontol
trplc -from $275. La MODERN deluxe 2--1tory.
Cft!scenta Apartments, 411 view, 2 BR. l'ii BA. aun..
Granlda, •sc. For I~ decb, 1 blk to heh, &hops.
formatlon call· m-ruo Mon t.eW, adWta:. reh. $265.
thru Fri. 8;ll !0•4, Sat • ·-·
Sun -. '"N-owport--,-.,Be=-1_,ch,----
S.nt1 Alli
FAMILIES
•
, WELCOME!.
SJNGt:i STORY
Sooth Jl<A Atm-
t BDIUU BATH
Carpets """ °""" Air Condl,_
PrtY'aie PaUO.
HEATED POOL canoon• .... Nr, SO. Ooul l'lazl
HIDDEN VILLAOI
1IOll """' Solla
--• 511-JSll
AVAILABL! NOW
.Ponlnsulo Point
2 mt. ,lum. ,.ar1y ...... $185
2 BR. uni., yeoriy ...... $2;0
l BR. 1111., ,.....Sy ...... $115
: BR. uni., )>tOl'ly ...... $200
Call: m.i6&l 5l8o07l5 Eve.
associated
llR t'!I\! R.~-"if/\L TQ"S
ici; w ~g1t1'~ ~· l·l••J
For tlllt """' -llO.
lr7 tllo l'emll' -
MUmNowl
•
e AVAIL· UDO BLDG.
1 omce on amcf. floor
1 su.itl! Ir 1 ofc. 2nd fir.
ore or .ulte on Snl flr. ocEAN rncwr DtJP.LEX.. Jonea Rttlt)' Stn1~ (on
I ) MU Vil Lldo Ptloi $83,500. fn.000 equll)'.
P...,. .., -' '°'" .Newpt loo:, Wi1 trade N.8. m.J17L !<* OtUp ec.mly' unltL
EXECU'l'lVE OFFICES Balboo U.,. Prop. 66701
PRJME Al!U'ORT w ... UlCAT!ON ANT Apple V-ey ~ 11\dr lo< for .,gv.fly .... _
MACARTHUR BLVD.. new tttc'ltlve homt:, W/w
N.B. ADDRESS <Ptl. "'-· ...... dr _.
FURN., AVAJ!-!M0-1005 er. °"'*/811r 55'1~.
CORONA DEL MAR Ha.. conlm<l'clol ....,.,
o.tuxe Bus. otnco. l7l-4m lolta M•-. $411,000 equll)'.
TIME .FOi
QUICK CASH
THROUGH' A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
'42'0 5671
W..t 4\lpl<'I, Newport ..,
~ dU Mar. Call Mn.
MUlltr. broktr. 673-7C>,
Ha .. ~ TD, will tr,.i.
up ,., 3 .. ' umll, coutal
.,.._ Call Art Gio.tn.ttl, -
* * *
lines
times
dollars
'91 DODGE °'"-! · ·-' -w. PIS, P IB, Lindau !Op, at"'
.. ,.,, .. Tl>lda for late -
ck! campu "'1l7 ~
m6a .. 139-0lOl
WIU. -~WU.. Ulotlmi
""""-· .to Tuotta "' duclhs ,.. tor ... "'
C)'C)< or I!
Ml·2lll!
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THE EDUCATIONAL
READINESS CENTRE
2070 Maple Ave., Coste Mesa
646-4334 ~2 ..
-·---
NEWPORT -MESA
PRE-SCHOOL
140 E. 22nd ST., COSTA MESA
645-2323
ENROLL NOW
Kindergarten Readiness
Art& & Crafts
Music & Rhythm
Phxsical Fitness
Phonics
Colors & Numbers
Educational Field Trips
Hot Lunches
Basic Bible Stories
. , ,. '' ·rot AL CHILD
DEVELOPMENT
Al·RLINE _____ ·
AND TRAVEL
CAREERS
FOR MEN AND WOMEN
• Travel Agent • ·Reservations
• Tlckot Salos •·Air Freight (argo
• Commuhlc•tion1 • Operation• Agent
''DAY AND NIGHT CLASSES"
ACCHDCTID1 N1tio111I Auoc:i1tio11 Trail• A T1c:h11i·
~ti School1 • App rov•cl for V•l•ra111. Eli9lltl• tndit11•
tion 1111cl•r th • hcl1r11ly huur1c:I Stud•11t Lo111 Protram.
Airli~~· Schools Pacific
610 East 17th St., Santa Ana
714·543·6$9.6
" . The R-ea4ing ·Room
•
Reading
Improvement
· Instruction
',. 14111c htttkt I C•fllo ·),,..._,*' c .. ,_ Alie,
Enrollment limited. Cerllfled teacher.·
Call For T11tblg Appointment.
Offl<OI 5414203
Homt: 64U9St
474 E. 17th StrMI
Coot• MoM, Coll!.
·--
'
Schools and
Instructions . .
This variety of fine 1Jchool1
could introduce
you to a new tomorrow •
for further 1,form•llo" ro91rdl"9 tho ~Uy· Pil&t
Schools •nd ln1tructlori Dlr•ctory
CALL 642·5678, EXT. 325°
( Lalond-
Found (frae od1)
GOLDEN Retrlattt,
l 7th St A Superior, C.M,
"'"'· ~ yn, old m-4419. j
Lqot
,
IT'.S A NEW YEAR, DO YOGAI
A tfelhod For L1vin~? There IS A Scientific St<'p-
By-Step Proc..'ftiure f or Experienclng Crest Vitality.
More Will Po"'<'r & Jnnrr Peace. Bharati (left ) &
Kalidas Teach YOG A Posturrs & Mrditation. Poople
Fron1 12 to 72 Take Otu· Classes. Why Don't You?
{475 Students This yPar? t.
FREE DEl\10NSTRATlON ToniJ!;ht At 8 P.1\1.-Hear
About The 1.la1n Kinds of YOGA & Learn A Brtath·
Ing TechniquP That Will Benefit You The Rest Of
Your Life. 1\irsday r.1orning & Night Classes Start
Jan. 18th At 9:30 A.l\1. & 7 P.~1. GET THE BENE·
FITS NO\V' Come Toni1:h1 '.
445 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
. . ..
lJBEJW., REW ARD • I
.I'~ tJllormatlon leidint fo .
""°very of Yorkshire Tef..
rler, Sllv•r blue silky oo&I.
tan ' ... d h..... t.aco I lo ~. poin~ un, -+1f
tail, male, amall q , ~
moa. approx 4 lbl., ~
nttd.111 p~venlive 1 ho tii.
Youll& daughter ~·
Call colled 1714) 646-01!!5 m.
545-2991 8'4-1336.
IN hil1I; .abo\-e Thalia. 3
Bch. Luse re...,·ard
return o(10 mo. old
Gumlll1 $he'Pherd, blk, Wi
It ~·b.. ~r v.·h. spot on r.
side, ''Hannlbal." He is sick
and needt 1tl'atmen1. Pie~
call fM.JmS.
*LOST SUN 1 /tf
Pllrt German Shepherd ''f;
Ul.b mix, golden c.'Olor, male.
Vic Mlnion Viejo, ''SevilJf:
tr8.Cl". Call 8.TI-5003 alt 6prrl.
2 REG. quarter horM"S V\e.
San J uan Capo, Del Ob la-po
& J.auacate. 1 • o rT t l
geldins, 1 brn geldif$,
j~
LOST: Bl& Red Irilh Settfli.,
needs tmmed. medication.
/ 968--00&.1, • )
SMALL white dot< lost neat
1'albert • Ma 1 n ol i a.i.
Reward. 963-00n.
LOST: Boxer pup!>)', 3
bnl w/blk striper. Re
,,,,....,,,., 96&-3811.
Our school. Early Achievement Center.
Unlike most prHchools, we· do more than
LOSI' 112/72 • B l r. ,~
Red Irish Setter, ''Ell
J.1uch loved. Pl1o
Reward.~. keep little hands busy. .
We keep little minds busy.
With science. Math. Language. Art.
Social Studies. Things like thotr-
lmpressed? Don't be.
It's not what we teach that's so special.
• l!IMrttllC'I' MMllc•I
l'9f.l'llllt l.tll • •KO T9f.hnlcl•11
e Mlllk •I ltectpli.tll1t
LOST Red Lab.
Mlulon Viejo area.
to Tim. Reward. 837--3927.
COWE female, full
Vicinity Rancho Vt e
School, H B. 842.-3517. :•
LOST: lrilh Setter 4 It's the special way we teach. ,.
We encourage children to disc.USS things.
ly a rectOt acquisition of Newport luslntu
Scliool. Cellfonllo ProfOS1lonal Col[19e now
off en: ate& 395~ Costa Mesa
REWARD. 642--1613. • .,.,,,"' • l11ld111'1"9 Touch things. Acf out things.
So they will better know their capabilities.
And themsel~I'.'.
Sunflower Early Achievement Center
.2515 West Suoflower Avenue
Santa Ana, Californ ia 92704
• sllerfllHll • 1..,•1 S9f.r•l•ry Tr•llllrll
DAY AND EVENINCO CLASSES
Enroll Now For
February 7th A ~ernoon Classes
YORKSHIRE Ttnier, b
w/tan face at feet.
name "Poco". 11 rno'1
:Vic: 0.ta Mesa Puk,
(Which Is just about the greatest
lesson of all.) 714/540-4750
A: Placentia. Re w 1. r Ok, like to discover more about us?
. Call or write for our free brochure. Or drop by
our Sunflower school. CALIFORNIA
PROFESSIONAL
COLLEGE
646--0155.
lf<l REWARD, ""' We're open year 'round.
. So parents can come In anytime. And
children can be enrolled anytime.
FREE
ORGAN LESSONS
FOR BEGINNERS
You do not have to own an instrument.
Free practice Time Available. ·
• St1rt Tuesday, J•n. 18th at 1 p.m.,
Six Wtok1.
REGISTER NOW!
• Also, intermediate class Tuesday,
Jon. 19th at I P.M., Six WHkl,
$12 + Material
FUN • ENTERTAINING • KNOWLEDGEABLE
Rent Organs
Available
Durin9 Term
of Coune.
' '-~--.. -, --~ I
~~· i ., /i
~ ... , •.. ·~ .. ·:
R09l1ter NOW! Inquire for detoi11
Hammond Organ Studios
~·
Newport Air Associates
Flight Sthool : & Flying Club
.LIARN ; TO FLY s•oo.
1101 "..,." 11wc1 .. e .. ,. M ... e.111.
. 714/641-JtlJ
$lijffnt "'""'"" P'l•n.....OrNU••• l"t.c-1 .l11JJl•llU1 OWllMll & ow11M11 .., Mtnilltn If th• Prtfftllfll
C•U Ir Wrlh t.r ''" C•l1"'9
HUNTINGTON -MESA
. .
PRE-SCHOOL
mix, tan/blk, male,
left rear hip, BARON •
mo., Palisad•• a. r • ••2239.
BAa<. IN BUSINESS! to.ta Mesa L&wn Mawei
Shop. 481 Beroaro SL · 11
o.t& Me&&. 646-3735. •
'!1IINGS by Moooe, ti1
.ttct., p1umb, fence, ~
Wllnl, carpentry, paint e~ ~. :,
CAllPENTRY, polnU,,..
m~ Bml, jobo 0. Botr . g;
B•bytlttlnv * FAA APPROVED * 2109 Valley Rd ., Costa Mesa. (On the border COLLEGE 1~1 wm bob · between Hunt. Bch. & Costa Mesa, off Vic· tot Women who '
Ceu1H >lncludt1: lor!a St.) night., Vtrjr 1ood
.35 Houri flight t im• 'in Cessn• IS.O's ,with . chlklf9n.exper i e nce
20 hours du1l instruction. Club membership. e Two ¥.a Day Sessions, 9 A.M .·11 : 30 & t R ~ 11 & b le • Call
3 Month'• f,..e• dues. lndividu1/ initruction, P .M.-3 :30 P.M. e Acade1l')ic Kinder1arten Mt-3885.
l•ilo•od to YOUR obilay. Readiness Program e Children Ages 3 Years EXPERIENCED moth61'
10 A!RC!IAPT AVAILABLE AT 9 mo's to School Age e New & Attractive babysit m h<r home $12.
LOWEST RATES IN OllANCOE COUNty · Facilities. per wk. Indiul" hot luncl/
Le1rn to fly now ..:__ •nd heve fun I fencff.-yard, sood ~ * Fly Moxlco & C•n•d• .......... 961-00.l. ;ii * Specl•I Rotoo for Commorclol or Coll Us For ~n Appointment LIC'D o,.y O:.re, T am.s:Ji
Instrument Students. Or ln.orm•tlon pm. Hot meal&. XIm ~ tt•i! 4776'' Hafbor/Ba.ker areC.:
For Compl•!t Detolls Coll NOW -MQ• -ms. t.'.
2854 E. Co11t Highway, Corona del Mar
6+.·lf30 Dpe11 MoHoy &: Frld"Y IMI.
=====-
&73 • 0313 1WIYSITl1NG In my bJiil
: I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ 11~~--i-:i-i*i'"'.'i+:ei::+i-i.,.i--i .... iii-i•i-=-i-:i-i_i_i-:i=::+i-i-: ... ii ~:. ~:nt!~ter Ha1
K TffRU 8 h GRADE playmate. Lara:e fence'
• t , . . ~.~:~LD CARE • lntr:oducing
Frog .Lovers
To Chopin
Parents, don't wait unW
your child is out of the Frog
Lovers Age before you give
them the gilt of mus ic -
You wait and it may be too
late ! Children In the Frog
Loviilg stage ('8). are the
perlect age for learning
music.
Yam,ba, after years ol research, designed
the Yamaha Music Course to a55ure that all
childr~ can learn music ..
You do nof bave to buy an Instrument, there
is no horn• study -jUl~loll.of !1111.for your
children while they leani music. · •
Classes ar.e now enrolllnt ;._ l!!di't yilu
nleaso give us a call an~ let os .•how yyu the
whole story o! the Yamaha Music Course!
i:our' olR~ reward will be when your'
frog lover looks up at you and tells )'<)U •••
'1I gave my frog a new name, Beethoven."
Yamaha Music School
IN COSTA· MlSA 642-1~
· ..
SEW ·-KNITS
SPECIALIZING IN ~TRETCH l KNIT FABRICS
.,d LINGERIE
All Brond1 Stretch Potltrn•
Vogue &. Butttrlck P1tt1rn1
Original Knit Fabric Slore
In The Harbor Area
With Firiast Selection or Knit Fibrlcs On
Orange Coast.
STRETCH
SEWING
CLASSES
Mornlnt-Altemoon
and Evening
2199 FAIRVl!W ROAD
' COSTA MESA 540°3268
. JNDIYIDU,Ai,l~ED
· INSTRUCTION
• Correlated Prog_~am • Emphasis On
Academics • Smai,i ·Classes • Qu.llfied Teecheni • Full Day Program .. Extended
Day Care.
Call 548-2840
.. OR . 548-1733 ---NEUMANN
CHRISTIAN SCHOOL
(Cornor S.nt• An• Ave.)
301 Magnolia Ave11ue
-Costo M -•
Harbor J: Baker, C.M. I
exp. Refl. 5't5--21M! •
BABYSITl'ING m my -blCd yrd. By th& wk. or
hr. Colt& Mesa. M).(1129. •
Coblnotmoklnv
CABINET WORK ·:
Clot. boat ...... _,
Corpot Sorvlco •
JOHN'S Carpet A Upl..i.t
Oeanen. Extra Drl-Shlmt
PoO m. Scotc:hguud cSd
111~111. o......,.n
au eolot tJrlir;btenen "
mlnut4!' ble•ch. for wl'tite
carpets. Save your monet
by u.vin& me ~xtn. trlPlf
Will cloln llW\I nn., dinlq
rm. lo htll US. ArvJ nn.
IT .!O. couch 110, d>&lr $5. ll
yrs., op ii wbt.t counts, fW)(
moll>od. I do -· ~. Good rel. Ml-4101.
l!orpent•r
LARGE OR SMALL •
All -· -": Oot ":~ p a n • L abintta. ~
-roptln etc. .,.
~ ... -.,.,.,
,
\
l
I
,
~.i DAILY PILOT
FREE PASSES • Find Your Name
You Coald Be One of Today's Winnen
10 Pain of $1.95 Tickets Given Daily
If your name It llsttd fn a 1pecl1t ad -It could •PP9•r under any
clualflcatlon, 10 look at them oil -phone 642·5671, Extonalon 314, bo-
tw"n 9 1.m. and 1 p.m. to mike 1rran9.,,,ent1 to pick up your 2 frM
show ticket• at any convenient DAil Y PILOT office.
FOR THE YEAR'S BIGGEST 'RliCREATION' SHOW Be The Guest of the DAILY PILOT
I -~-1[51 [ -~-J~ ~! _r. ... _, ... ,~]ii;,.[fl I [L_r....., __ ,_·--·--
Cement, Concrete Income Tax Job Wanted .. Ftmale 702 ' 1--.;_----1 WINTER Rates! Concrete DIGNIFIED Pvt. preparation NEED HELP AT HOME? '
tloors, patios, dr i vr.11, nf your return. ACCU-Tax, e we have Convalescent
lidewalb. Don, 64.2-8514. 314 N. NeWpt. N.B. &l!H!Tl9. Aldes • Nu r 5 e 1 •
PATIOS, walka. drive, install Masonry Hou.sekeepers • Com-
new lawns, sa'''· break, 1----'-------panion..
Help Wonted, M & F 710 Halp Wonted, M & F 710 Help Wonted, M & F 710
re~. 548.-8668 for Ht. BRICK, Block & Stone \Vork, H 0 M EM.AKERS/UP JOHN· 1
. Call : CEMENT WORK, no JOb too 540-0929 or 646--0!M5 547~1
sm&U, rtuooable. Free -----"'--'---'-:..C:.-:-::====-,-,--==--Estlm. H. Stufl!ck, 548-861.5, Painting & ATI'RACTtvE exper. 26 yr.
FIELD
REPRESENTATIVE
Housekttper, complete home
maintena nca & cooklng. $285
ni,onth. Room & bath. 5 day
y.•eek. 646-3103.
Positlott1 available in our In· HOU~EKEEPER., 5 days,
stal.bnent credit collection family ot 4. N Pl. lk~ch
department Bank or finance a:ea. 0....'ll tran5p0rtation,
eX)J('rit"JJCe requlred. $50 week plus ft x I r" s.
641-1403.
JtfEotANlC mUJJt have e)(JWr
own 10011, neat ~ lrle~.
calJ 673-9483 btwn U p.n1 .
Mgmt Trne
(2 yn college)
Acct'e: Oerk 10 l4i8'f
(Payabll'!ll & Vouchera:)
Recept. TnlP
(Lilf' Sl-1/Typing) Contractor Paperhanging old bkpr. 6Ct'ks p I time empl. 25.30 hr. per wk.
Finishing college education.
Please reply to DAILY ,
PlLOT Ad No. 314, P.0 ,
Box 1560, Costa l\.fesa, Calit.
EXPERIENCED book-
k~per, lhru gpneral ledger.
Tax ttport11 and general of.
!ice. Wishes part or full
time work. 494-QiGI.
-UNITED-
CALIFORNIA BANK
J10USEKEEPER \Van I e d P/Time Gen'! Ofc S:Z lir
ROOM Additions, Estimatex, r\o \\'asnng
plans & layout, single~r 2 * WALLPAPER * Thurs only, 1-lou.n 9-4. Ov.'ll Cull Lon-aint
trans. Ref's pref'd. 646-984.i. WESTCLIFF
story, L. T. Construction, \Vhen )'OIJ call "l't!ac"
847-lSll. 548-1~44 &l6-lnl
AD~A·ROOM or 2nd story 30 DAY Special. Inter/Exler
Remodel kitchen or bath painting. Local refs. 3(1 yrs
CENTER LINE Con.st. Co. exp. Free est. Call Qi.uck,
JAN.7·18 I
61)) So. Spring St
Perso~l Dept, 12th floor
.IA:; Angeles
HSKPRS Emplyr pays lee.• Personnel Agency
'George Allen Byland Agen-21>13 \\1~~0Dr .. NB
PRICES
ADUL1S$1.95
~IDS $1.00
Vi1·ginia Gonzales
(213) 624-01ll, ext 1216
cy 106-B E. 16th S.A. ·~""""""""'""'""'""'!!! 547-()395. MEN 18 & over, tun or
Ftte E&tnnates 833-8833. 64>-0809.
MY Way, quality home 1 'F'°R'°'E'°E~,~E-st-im_a_t_'8_.-P~"1-nt~ing
rtmod. Walls, c e 11 in g, Specialliit. Ext.-Jnt. Licens-
floors, etc. No job too mnall. ed, Bonded, Insured. Call
547-0036, 24 hr ans. seiv. Doug, 832-8934 (Tustin).
MA TIJRE lady will live in & I
care for elderly lady. Exp.
Refs. 54fr3658.
Additions * Remodeling p AINTING/Papermg. l8 yrs GENERAL office v.'Ork, part
Gerwiclr & Son, Lie. fn Harbor area. Lie & bond· tinu•, typing 65. SH 00. 15
6'13-6()41 * 549-2170 ed. Ref':\' turn. 642-2356. Yt'ars experlenee. 962-4814.
Etectrlc•I PROF. painting-inter/l'Xter. l r-.1ATIJRE lady will live in &
· Hone1it work. L f c I In 1 , · care for elderly lady, Exp. '~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;~~~~~ri~~~~~~~~~~ ELECI'RICAL. RHldential, 5<18-2759. 54()..1444. Refs. :HG-3658. ~
eomm'l, IndullltW. Also,,.. PAINTING -Guaranteed Jobs Wanted, M & F 704 l[Il]" J !iiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiit -~~ L _____ _,Jl 1" JI
lamod<!lngtions 8•1 "'P<1small" & ""'L· •.fd. work at I.air prices. Lic'd & ~ f.lrc:iio>11•nt •• 1c CHEF Manager & \\'ife team · g • . · . Ins. 6T:>-5740. &: ins. Free eat. Fall' pnces. !or Steak House? Parties
546-02l1. PAINTING, prot. All "'ork specialities. Write C. M. Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710
guam. Colors p e c i a I is t F1oyd, 1913 Federal, CM.· Help Wanted, M & F 710 Electronics 842-4386, 547·144!, 92627.
PRINTED cin:uit boards, COMPLETE exter. $200 & ~H~el~p~W~.-n-tod~,~M~&~F~7~10
design It fabrications, short up. Ayt. rm.. $20. Neal _.._...,
l"llD .apecla.liltg, l or 100, work; Refs. Roy, 847-1358. e • • • •
Keene Enterpri.!t>s, 962-1759 PAINTING, prof. All work Acctg. Ok.free $-13>
ATTRACTIVE fcmalr, miri-
twenties, for full·timc po~i·
tion as reeeptionist.typist.
Also involves as s i s t i n g
editor in producin)'.{ monthly
magazine. 499-tSn .
CLERK Typist , 1 ~ timf:'
afternoons. Alust kno\V JBr-.1
Exec. Typey.riter & be ahle
to work v• /min.
xupcrvision. 833-2670 ;\lrs.
Tinklrr. Fibergl••• guarn. Color s p e c i a I I 1 t ; A(Payab~..fre.e $455
842-4386, 547-14-11. Ftle-!Type-Free $350/$400 AUTO-PARTS MAN-CLEH.K I typist/rt'Cl"p!lon1st.
CUMP. mobile facilities for Gen1 olc, type·fee $-100 Expanding !oc:al fi.i·rn has op-S1"<1rt, S.1!JO. 8:30 to 5, ~1-F.
h:me/indusrry, lite manu., FOR clean & neat painting, Trnf'e.type 40-fet! $300 portuni !y for the man who P .O. Box 2062, J\"l'\\'JJOr!
'b6a.t/auto ........ ir. New-pro. interior or exterier & rea.s. e--·y--~-!-"50 "-••h . • .._,,... ~ ,,., '"' .._,.. .,., likes autos. Start $,1. l>" ' ~duct deve.lopm't, 557·1S79 rates, Call Dick, 968-406.'i. l.ocaJ Job Qix-ntngs Call Don Beru;on, ~·'" rn;~
J P . ..Hl,l-00....., COD messengrri;, ow 11 urniture YOU supply the pa Int . .R. ierce Coasta! Age"<Y · .• 1 1 __, " transJX1rtat1on, fw or part
EXP'D &.ssf'mblen r or
can1per factory, Apply Ma·
jon vay. 869 \Vest 18th. C.:\1.
EXEC. SEC'Y $650
fl'l" Paid. Attractive, person·
able individual desirOO to
play a dual rolt>. 6(' righ t
arm to controlter & V.P. of
sales marketing. All co,
paid benefih;, Cail Ann Fox.
833-2700. Also Fee Jobs. Den-
Equal Oppor, Employt'r
F1JLL charge bkkpr., exp.
w/Medical Medicare bill·
ing. Contact Ken Ryder at
642-2410.
Gen'I Office $400
Rusty SH . Xln'I H.B. co.
\V/great ad va ncem en!
potential. Lovely ofcs. &
--------.--1 Rooms painted no e-a. A!l!IO ~iates Agency, Inc. 2790 Harbor B! at Adams · 221 h S S SPECIAL! Avg. chair or exterior. Call S40-7046. 1885 Newport. CM 642-6720 lime. St t.. u1le A, nis &. Dennls Pe~nne! 'p"'m~·~~--~,----,,--i
rocker ~ped $5. Gluing, e PAPERING e BABYSIITER \Van t e d, Huntington Beach. Agrncy, 208'2·M~lson Dr., GAL FTiday need phol"J(", l)•p-
bnus polished. &tS-<1866. . . Accnt/FC Bkkpr $800 Peninsula aN!a. Thur!'!· COMPANION -Cook Jor ;;!J;;;vine;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ing/bk:kping expt"r. \Vagt Custom papering, licensed, rv-o s-· Cons•-~i::.;n morn 9·"" It· 30 Occas eld••I l dy L' " '" n.-.t I G•rdeftlng Ins. Ca11 Harrill 642-45.58. r\.. nnt1• .. ~ • ·oN" ·• • • ~· Y a · ive-.n. '~o I open. 645-1313'""or °t't""Y at
Sec'y,RE!:it'd $."\)() aftn.&eve>S.67?.-4678. heavyhousecleaning . EXECUTIVE
1
SteamMaster.1740Superior
AL'S GARDENING PAPER HUNG $30 ~·y, L.A. $325 BABYSIITER. my home 548-5172. Personnel Agency Ave., c .r-.1.
tor gardening It. gm a 1) A'!ty nn. + paper. 646-2449 'y, Santa Ana $'500 d~. Wilson A1,:e area, C.tlf. ct>UN'T'ER Girl, z; or ovC'r. u -"G-'-'1-R:...LS'-c~T~R~A~V~E~L-
landscaping se:rvice:o1, ca 11 ENGLISH Paper Hanger & AIP Clerk S450 I 2 babiH. 548-2378. AM·ll A.'1. Apply in person, NCR 395
540-5198. Serving Newport, Painter. 30 yrs. exper. Call NEWPORT BEAUTY Operator, some 9089 Adams Ave., Jfunt. 2 Yrs exper. \1•/accf'g znach. Too young for airlill{'f;, nt«I
·CdM, C.Osta !'fell8, Dover Ed. 968-7461. -Per50nnel Agency following preferred for C.M. Beach. Familiar w!keypunch, 1() 5 girls 18-Zl lo travel Flor·
·Shorew, Westcl1ff. ' 833 Dover Or., N .B. ho "2-83lG kry, li!e typing. ida&easternresorts.Trans· ~ROFESSJONAL Garde~r. Plumbing 642-3870 s p. vi • COSMETIC sales\\·on1an for 410 \V. Coast Hu')' .. NB portatlotl paid. Abovr avf'r·
-::..· . k. . BE AN AVON exclusive beach area SUlte H &r.J-Z716 age eamin~s. Sre i\1r. r.tc-
I~ PER50NNEL
SERYICES•KDC'(
INVEST IN
YOUR FUTURE
BE YOUR OWN BOSSI
Men or Women
Le•se A 'Yellow
Taxi Cob
Call for Appt
546-1311 ; .... = wor pruning , $8HR.Plumbing& ANL\iAL SHEL1E.R-REPRESENTATIVE pharmacy.\Villbeheadot .. ..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,,. Lant' Sheridan Beach1nn,
•sprinklers,. clean-up jobs. Dectrical Repair. OFFICER I Le. '·me show yoo how easy department Must be e;...'JX'r. EXPER F"loral Desixner Zltrz' Pacific Coasl Hu1•., ASk tor Hennan 11 a'n d s cap in g. Ga>rge, '"2·2755 -""l~ Apply ·,. pc-·o B"•ha•d'' INSU '646-5893. · "" v• vs_. ::::J:. For animal shelter. Over 2J 11 is to make money & have " ''""' • ·' ' "'an!e<l. }fours open. Sui!t> 116, H.B. RANCE: Top notch
· PLUMBING REPAIR yn. old. Permanent tmi· fun in your free hn. For a Pharmacy, 2.14 Fon'St A\'e., 1 ••• 49'2·71Z? eee GIRL to \\'Ork behind ti:sh comm'J lines gal needed due
· 'i Landscaping. Tree No job t.oo small tion. Good fringe benefits. personal interview, cal I . Laguna Bch. ';;;;;i;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I counter. i.tust be able to to agency expe.M]on. ?i-t~t
., removal Yard remodding. * 642-3128 * Must have good driving 54().-7041. DISHWASHER, t.i on. f' r 1. EXPERIENCED k ,_, .,. IO"o be able to work 1n-' Tra.ah ba~11--lot cleanup
1
~-or '"''"'"''s ..... r ""· "-ndenUy. •·•·-· -n. ~>5· • COLE PLUMBING rw:ird. Apply at 20612 BOOKKEEPER, Ins. Agency 6:30-3 A.~1 i>hift. Baptlst ""'I"'-..,.._,._, --
Reptl:r spnnk1ers. 6'73-ll66. 24 hr. se!'Vice. &15-ll61 Laguna Canyon Rd., Laguna exper. re<fd. Call Mrs. Conv. Hosp., 661 CE'nter St., COMMERCIAL * * * Call Mn. S""nmi: 833-95'i0.
EXP. Hawaiian Gardener. R i Beach. Sims, 833-9550. C.M. 548-5585. TELLER S. ChebithH INSOMNIACS for research
Complete gardening Bet"V. Remodel & epa r ATI'ENDANT at Chevron BOYS l0..l4 DENTAL Assistanl. financial I 800 S. Bayfront project on :sleep diarders.
Kamalanl, 64&-4676. SP E c I AL t z ED House Station & Hertz Rf!nl·A..Car to de.liver papers in the San sec'y, Ex per. only. Preven· 1 _ UNITED _ Balboa ltl•nd ZI·~ fr§. Good pay for 5
GARDENING SERVICE Repair. Carpentry, painting:, in Laguna Bch. College slu· Oemente, San Juan Capis-live practice. Autonomy &-CALIFORNIA BANK You art' !he 1,1·inn<'r or wits $1.udy. 633-9393, ext 158.
securtd Ior fast sales.
Pl Ti inc . AppolntmPnls
1'<'CUred · for f.ast ~.
Above avg earnings,
Intervws. 9:30-5 646-3277.
MEN over 21, P!Time n'en.
ings, 5 o'clock on. Apply in
person, Me-N·Ecb Pina
Parlour, 410 E. 17th St ..
C.OSta Mt'Sa.
MOTEL Maid, mature. Part
time. Must have own tram.
& phone. For appt,:
893-2475.
N EEO ED NO\V! A~
polntment Makers, girl111 18
& over. Above avi. eam-
1 n gs. Transp. furn .
JnfC'l'V"A'S. 9:30 am.$ pm.
646-32i7.
NEED 2 good clean cu1
Salesmen to beiln wOJ'k tm-
nted. Top $$ C"all be earned.
Contact Bob Neal. 496-23&3
or stop by office 2f6'l1 Del
Prado, Dana Point.
NEED single guitar mttt.
tainer that can draw the
In-set Alley We:i1t Restaur-
ant 675.lnt N.B.
NEED to pay some
Christmu bill1'!' Show
Sarah Covtntry Jewelry.
~lin. age 20. 540-0014.
NE\V, fut gt"O'Aing Calil
COl"fl. has need for manage.
ment in top penonnel. F
tnterv1ew C'&Il, 962.-6096.
NURSES, pvt. duty,
!ypl!S, all abilts. IMCOUll<
Nurses Re1l s t r y, S51
Itospttal Rd., N.B.
CLEAN-UP. TRIM etc. Call Dick, 642-4722. den!, over 18. perm. 20 hrs. trano and Capistrano Beach interoffice repore prest"llt. 2 tickets to tllf• 5-6PM wkdys.
• 646-5469 • Roofing wkly. No Jon"{ hair. 494-9003. !Ille.. 962-3222. •ti Monarch Bay Plaza Sports, Va~atio1n INSURANCE Clerk: ~1edi· -$100-REWARD-* 549·2015 AUTO SALESMAN DAILY P ILOT DENTAL ASSISTANT South Laguna & Recreationa Care exper. Days, f/time. For information leading to
642-9!>3:> <>t 54().-9$4
l ntervieY.'11 9-5 M/'F
21 yra exp •• Frtt est. • T. Guy Rooting, ~ 1 Excellent pay and bonus plan, 492-4420 Chairsidl" & Desk. Vehicle Show Pcl'&)nnel Dept., Ho a g and the appointment of
LAWN Maint. Hauling, new Direct. I do my own work. lnsurance, demo. free c]Ol';· BUSBOY 642-8814 496·1273 at the 1"'H~"',;,P~ .. ~N~.B~.~~---people interested in havb11'.
lawrui, clean-up, pruning. 645-ZiBO, 548-9590. ing he-Ip. Import or ~rfs DENTAL chairside assist, ct::~:..:~N INSURANCE Bkkpr: Agency ~r ~~=i~
Free Est. Call 54fr7379. REPAIR, recover any roof car experience preferred. Fun Time, Permanent N.B./C.P.f. area. Gd . !alary, Equal Oppor. Employer 1 CENTER exper. req'd. Call Mrs. . 516-l83S
Exper -J~panese Gardener problems. Weneda Roofing. Contact saies mana~r. B.J . Neat & Dependable fringt" ben. ~tc. 2 yrs. exp. Sims, 833-9550. m.e"DC!I, • • 'Complet~ ·yd Jel'Vice. Neat Free est. 645-1691. =-~.~ir=. Ap~fy ~ c:;e~n min. 548-6638 bet 24 pm. EXPERTENCED housekeep-Now thru January 16th 31 JANITOR Work • Retired ot Opa~: T:o~;;,lyAllAd Com.y In
6 Rells.. Free ert. ~. Sewlng/Alterai'ions 1 1 mi. S. of San Diego Fwy. After 3 PM DONUT Shop \Vork, early ers for conv hosp. in N.B. Pl.ease call 64"2-$7S, ext . 4 dependable man needed 7
H II ---• -.... , -----(N ~-Call 1 AM shift. 2.l-45. Apply P.1.r. Contact K~n Ryder at betwee.n 9 and !"i pm to claim days a wk. Ste Mgr. aft. 6 Good Health. Lite Mwork.
au ng Alterat'oona _ 642·5845 AUTO LOT MAN 1 0 ruvne s Do 1-"2-2410. your tickeu. ·fNon:. h_Coonty pm. Port Th-t-., CdM. no cooking. Adult family, Al Th. Fl've Crowns nut, 13.l E . .th SI., C.tlf. "" I o•o 1-1 .. ><
N -ternoons . toll+fr~ numi>M" is .,.. · t.JN 67,9837 live in 01' ouL Day! oU .... YARD/garage, cleanups. Re-eat, aCCt1ratc. JN years exp. Restaurant DRAP"ERY -CARP ET EXPER. Food \Va 1 I r e s.o: .
1
* • *I-''-'~-"''=='==-.,..,=--ranged. (213) 592-5108 Job
move trees. dirt, i84~ ~p-Television Repair ~ ~ 3801 E. Pacific Coa<lt JI11.y., SA LE S. Expcr-decorafor Local refs. Apply in person. HOME p rt Plan need11: 4 KENNEL ~lA.N in. Hunf. Bch.
kiader, backhoe. -~. Corona del J\far. No ph, calls. lyJ* JX"l'SOn. :vtust ' bf' lop Roon Docks. 3333 \V. Coast f j • a Y · Pt'nn, pois. 8 hn; daily ~~~==-----1
TRASH & Garage clean-up. * BLAINE'S TV * 2100 Harbor Blvd. 645-0466 BUILDER -ls .... 'y·/bk. notch. S101·e Jrads. Excel Jh1"\'. N.B. \\"Om~n to Y.'Ork full or part 6 da)'11 wk.,5464163 0 p ERATO~ experie
Servi I All B nd ''""'' "'""" • · time. No ! n v es Im~ n t . net'tlle, s-.v1m '<'<IHI'. 3760 days. Free est. Anytl,mc. c ng ra 5 ASSISl'ANT RECEPTION. kpr. lor one girl ofc. at r!ra\I' + comm. San FASHION stylist for lk'eline <leliv<'rit>s nr rolleeling. For LAUND~ESS, \ve f' ken d 8. Campus, N.R.
548-5031. Authorized Magnavox IS!' for optometrist, age Orange Co. A '•po~ I-. Clementi" area. 492-n.4. 11 · 1 · Apply n l'!IOn H B Co Kno fu ho ty 54(}..431J .. '' "" no delv., co eel., no HlVf"S .. appf., call S.1:r4445 bety.•n 8 ' pe '. · · nv. OVERLOCK ()pr nt WANTED! Messy trees, wn r nes 40+, attract., aJert, must Must have gd. ski ll s. ELDERLY \\'Oman in CdM will train. ,vork own hrs. tolOa.m.&3 to6pm. Hosp.18811Flonda, H.B. ~ .. ganne
yards A: garages -moving & Tree Service type & 1 a k e diet. & Industry exper. no! ncc. \vants elrirrly hou s e k pr Cali l\-1arcy 827-6()43, 892-5-197. LADIES _ Sell Nevada vaea· mgr. Ste"ady work. Pd, we.
hauling. $7.50 per hr. +odd -live In aJ"("a. At least 5·4·· 557-1250. 'vicar. Lite hswrk, prepare Help Wanted, M & F 710 ·Help Wanted, M & F 710 tion from my ofDce, full or 1580 Monrovia, N • B •
johs, 543-5863. GENERAL Tree Serv. Yard tall, proper weight, !'il'lf --PIST $ 1 mt>a l, Mon lhru F'ri. ll ....... time. Guar. salary + 642-3472. ~::::..=:.==-----! clean-up, hauling, <Prinkler starter. Good \\'/hands & CLERK TY 450 am-3 pm. 6~ <279. ~' -Pol1't1'on C1'rculators H IHnl'nft J * FEE REIMBURSED * '.)-" commission. 224 5th SL, ousec ., 1-epaira. Reas. 646-5848. people, able to earn quick· NHded I edl tel
.;.;. ____ .;... ____ I ly. Call for appt: Dr. Le"''is, Fee/Free Positions ESCRO\V SECRETARY: CTRO MECHANICAL Suite~· Huntington Beach. mm a y
GENERAL c 1 e f n in It & Tile . "'S--055." C !\! Good office !kills, high S T A RT IMMEDIATELY. ELE • LNE-In Hskpr-Babylitt.r, Reg~tered vn!eri on J y. ~rpets, "'-iden!, apt., . mominf?!!, ON ;), .i • h 1 th & h 'stry Guarant-" --••<h valid ..._.. ~ --00 c em1 \rork in lovely office f(lt ---ha xJ • f Sal ~ ~ commercial Carpet man CER.Ai\flC We new &: Auto Salesman Used ~c ma · · PN?<. C:i!l GraC1? for con-"'""' Ve n 1 res, ary ~lgnature. Call 83&1843
l'A:: """'"· rrmod<.'1 . Free ~t. Small helpful. Exccptil:'>nal I' o . FIELD SERVICE open. 67~. CdP.t 9 ~~-~ beneli!.~. Beach a ti' a . fir!Pn1t"! int•'IV\V,. Rt>-1 0~0. ~·~·~m_.-Gc.::p._.m_. _____ 1 jobs u·elrome 536-2426 LYN or RN needed by N.B. _-CALL Us A=in, Dutch '-1ain· ' . UNKEL AGENCY, 14 9 ACME PERSONNEL pf.EASANT small ofc. in .. ~ m@dlc.al ofc. ,30.45 yn. 1\-fon-
lenance Service tor carpet. 2100 Harbor Blvd. 6-l:>-0-166 Rivf'rsidf'" Ave., N. B. TUSTIN AGENCY The Service Division of GTE Information Fri. 9 am~ pm. Submit N.B. need~ an ex.per, Oerk ~.·m"ate&s. o·3w71_·~~.·s. f'rt"e [ JI if) A good want ad is a good I 645-3700. Fa.st rei;ults are JUsl a pJ1one Systems. a world wide lead. er .in seryicing rei;ume, Cl~ified ad no. Typist. P..fnst ~ fast. •CCU{• ..,,,L J. J..JV\) Employment D L' -'I "2-~18 t x il I lypitll on elt"c. &. <:11.pable of investment \Vh ite Elephant 1me·A· nlt' "a.I a .... ·ay -,,., ,.., commercial dala communtca ions, 1s . e -313, Dally P ot. P.O. Box
JAPANESE Lad 'i for panding rapidly & has immediate openings 1!"'60, Cos!a Mesa, Ca. 92626. working w/numben. Penn, housework . RNf\lite!I posilion. Xlnt \\'o rklng
&t2-89SS 1n U1is area. MATURE Lady beautician. conds. Call bf"hvn lo tran."f)Ortat'ion. · Job Wanted, Male 700 Mwt know pin curls A · 642 ea::.=~=~ ~:c:tc SCR·M L __ r_T .. S Cji sm ""R G ...... ER'~~ ~fu;~~:i~~~! ~~;~r:~ :i\~·;i~it~~o~~~~ :::•rwo:r ~~;; p~~=NAL.-phone ~id. & Commc1
'1. 548-4111' If • ~ ~) '.L.!'1 J;S..IU '1' electro--mecbanical devices such as cryJ>-em tng. • 11ollcltor ·Dana Point, San.
DEDICATED CLEANING ANSWERS I ~=="-.,;---Bra.AYJ.POLIAN tographics equ.ipment on.mechanical data pm. O=ent., C•pl<Jnno.,..., M YtMDolly.AdivffyGuide W . h al d ces MAID. exper. fot' motel, Work in )'O\ll' own home. * We Do E verything * Y A«0rding fo 11te Sia,... V processmg pertp er. evi · f/time. Apply N.B. Travel ~ deal tn aru. Phone
_..;24::....:h::.r._C:c•::."_6_7_:l-I012 ___ 1 Rancor _ Sie~ _ Woven_ To'dewlcp messoge for Wednesday, IBM Selectric typewriter experience is LodrP, 6208 w. Coast Hwy. 835-1465 betv.<ten 9:00 ;i..m.
Income Tax }fBJ\Pil' -PENSION :OOyoot'~:r=:torurtiers highly preferred -p1us an electronic back· N.B. _anc1=.,noon~=·=~=~-
1---------1 \\'("talk a lot about rquality 1 Ketp JI Mol«I 'I YIJAI' grotmd. -MANAGEMENT-PURCHASING * * * nf ioext>s, hut 'vho ever heard 2 l.llol\' 32Sorn. 62Sixio1 TRNE AGENT
L. W. Richie of a hollsc\iife going on a 3r~ JlDl:Jr,on ::?~, If you qualify, this is your ~hance to enj.oy 7 )"ra Colle~e. $5.30 ~Ca.miropporyunlcy\i:/ourJl
2345 Notred•me Pt-~SION"? t~~ 5;~ 'ti5All an excellent salary, security, opportunity Call Mrs. SC"linildi yr old <.'O, specta.Uiins 111 Costa M11• ,~.,~.G~. "n.:.>a-.n_i_J._e_xp-.-,-,..,-k GIMIHI '"w 36YQUr ~~tokn {or advancement. & many worthwhile com· \V'ES'J'CUFF pre-ct3k>n, <."Ull'!om molcting
'):'ou an the winner of some CtJmtruct.. misc other. CfeJo!A1 j 1 ~C"Mi,,.., ~~~"' ~Lit. pany paid benefits. Pttaoi•ld Agtncy of com'J product.,. R~
S '~clsVatoc•'hetlon °"~1rts ruu 1in1e \\·ork. Y'e,fJu~t10 tX~ ~~ ~Z 2043 Wntd~Dr .. N.8. ~.~1tntm,.urn...!'..1.r"L ..., tn po.,., Costn t.tesa area. Start Im· ~ ti vo.111 ... 1 Ott.rs 71 lvrd For An Interview 61.S-: .... v .,..,,. tta ~ ng. &b. & Recreational m~. Reliable! HARD-¢: 60-73-75 12You'N Al.Slow 72Ctalft MANAGEMENT, npidly P.lf· rnit rmrme in ~,
Vohlclo Show WORKER. 5'8·18'!1 . CA>tC•• j"' ..,..,. ~l:i:... Call Mr. John Coutlee At -M•-~-°' 10: Mnar. Plan 2, . 4YJI .URoH!of 7Sc.otlt«ll ._. ... ~ co. ·~ peo e CAI.JFORNJA INJl.'CrION AN~H~IM INDU'1l'RJOUS "1Ung mM w:~: 1!:1.1"" ~~ 76Effl<""" (714) 521-2291 "/ ...,,.rvbory poi.n1W MOLDING co.
CONVENTION ~xpe1 rien~ In painting, ,H1 117•.......,•·~ ~!~ n~ FUil or p/tlmt. WW traJn. lrvl.nt Indutt:rl.tt Corn""'-
"p. matnten&nct1 & pool . '° ........ 1,.•w., E al O rtunlt Employer 96li-8633.. -... 011-A cM1-c.ENTER ~ •1.1• 1'W"" "'!'-""-, ,.,., qu ppo Y --• ...... clet1.ning ooeds full time Job. :v; .1 .,. 21>~ 50.....,..,., 80°'9tt MAINTENANCE Man for
Now UlnJ 11nu.ry 16th can G~ 642-0022. uo 12' DM't 3J PICl'l\PI 81 Etp«:Jofty small · nuni,. home. Call R"TER
-call &a.!1618, .. , 314 J.2l JUL111 22AN ,,,,.,, """'"' G T E PERSONAL LINES be ii.em 9 and 5 pm to claim Job Wanted, Fern•le 702 ~AU~. ,1 j ~ ~· ~ ?c:" ~ ~ (tt.f) 494-1)75 for app1 to in-PollUo:n tn ffunL Ben, ot\:! tar
)'OQJ" tlcbt.c. (Norttl Cbl.mty 2-•1 125.,.,._.. 55o..tt as~ . STEMS teniiew. exper. pMWon.ll Urw. .,,.,
-oambrr Is 6«].IZI)) EXPER. boo~. D<pen-..... ~~,_~=-~r."-. INFORMATION SY MANAGER -N•w 10 Unt1 riltt. Xln't -.. ' .... If • * dabie. Wanta pt-time work. 1'.AMt.lJ I 21G.t Ml,h!wanfed NWl!tl Apt. O>uplt, chlldn!l"I OK. par. for IWIVl'l'ICftment,
Put • uw. "1•01' ., )'OOl' NB ..... '1J."1D! 11"' 2 ~..,;, .~=. ®u-~~ ::=, Serv"1ce D1'v1's1'on c.u -""""1
pm. P:.~11s""1' tma • sti1 -boublea for pm. . l4S O~-• ~ MECHANTC' "'"' hive ... ..,.. • ._... C&ll Quolllod''SoD'"""lhe=-old=atu=uo---u:n IOI'®'._ pl!r. ~ tools. Top Poyl Otll UNIGARD INS,
-U.,.Cbe-lltlll ffl..3ID5. GRQ(IP
•• • I
•
i
OAllY l'f\.Of ..,
( I~! 1§1 [ !§] ...__[ ~_ ..... _""__,'~
'70
"..., ·•• · 1rm ==I ·-'--1·-~l;;[Il] I . ......... I~ ___ [ _ ...... _ ... ·~ll§ll '--~,,.. ·-=-=-· v..___,I~ I , .... -----I ~ 3 LI ... , 2 Tlmu, $2.00
Help W1n lM, Mo& f 710 Hll, Wa nlw<I, M & F 710 I Furnltu•• &10 M ualcal lnatrvmanta m lloata, S.11 909 Trucka ff2 Auto L .. al"t ff4 Aulo1, l m porlw<I
POWER .. wlni: m1<bl,,. SMALi. mlxod -· 1 ,,1 .;.,6' __ .;.;.;.;.;.;ca __ B_rand __ :--------1--------
.. 1--SINGLE MAN W"' • -·-"'"'""'tna -· 1 •·•~ER 8 ---vial. w/adj. old, aood wi th ctilldten. , e t, """'" ''CORNllNDER" LEASING? optrt rt. ovtr~ktd txper """"' ........ ...v...., JVW "-"V1"' aa.. n, yel., "1.· t.a.11.s Many ,
00
P U ~.
1 pre I'd . Dave c .. r, 0 11 NEE DS bu,y In lh1I coJ.umii • tl)Ott, I br. sm. Ftlldtrbau a.mp. fiU..3l9.l xtra1 w/!rlr, i 110 0 . '' lnte rn•t. 12 •• , _our lease vcpertJ or I
S&Umakttt, C.M. 643-4730. HOUSEK EE PER 5.16--164'. I $200. Hd.·made Cuioerius 'TKITTENS 1 WK-S~ 5«)...2i.tt Ot 675-UM v..a, Automatic, power l(ffr-SaVlr\p .. SatlafacUon . Str-
Eldt..rly, hea.l!hy ain,!e man COMPLEl'E houtehold! Llv. 1tyle vlolln, $300. 543-1066. ~It.I 5*1308 , , Ing, power brakes, alr <"Jtl-vi~. ,
I netds ~keeper. Live.in l'.l Trimaran nil a\\·ay dlllonlni Ext. Bumper dual WE LEASE ALL POPUL..AR Coupe t sJ)ffd tran&mllllon
JAGUAR
1970 JAGUAR XKE
a days, mutt have ear. Mu11 "11, bdnn ' dlnina: rm. 18 FENDER Ba.ndmuter Re· in top shaPf'. $3000 or nnrrora,, htaVy duty ro~ Bia 19T2 MAKES AT COMPETI. facion. air, w1~ whttl.1:
bf. betwe-en 55 & ffi yrs old. c:u 11 retrla:. Mfi...l 25& vtrb amp. g mo'a old w 'l I • ll"LJ l be-st t1ffe.r, 71.S 638-503S c:itmpl'r with $400 honr ovPr• TIVE RATES. . AM-F~f rad io, leathfr inrtr-
Soul)s t.a,una ma. Write DOUBLE bed, l'Ompl<ett; new Emlnanee 12'' fPffkcni. ht1 tnd....,.... r. Boats, Sllpa/Oocks 910 drive for 1lult "ddcd 1u Ca.Ii M•lcotm Rrtd Ior !or. Absolul~)' nawleu.
complete dttalli clasilntd firm mattrea1. Very &ood P(rf. cond. $320. 648-0lt3C. I ~------~~~ mlllqe. Li .. _ t!W6D furthtr detallli. <733BLQi
now lntervJe~I~ for ad •P.269, Dally Piiot, condition. UO. 546--0895. Office Furniture/ 11 SIDE tits avail., up to 25.. $279S TH EODORE $4555 ~;?ii.8o~:MO, CO.to "" .. QN. "· bed w/walout h .. d Equip. 124 Cata u 2 $50 per mo, Al.. ricy Mike McCarthy ~B~~~~~~ Nab•r s Cadillac DAY
HOSTESS
, """'°'""~:---.,.---brd. $CS. l.A>wly Med. 11yte ---------1----------s!oraae " launching t•c. Cosl.a Mesa. 6-12.00lO A'~'ORl7.EO DEAL~· suPPLEMENT YoUr Income end this. J300 value lllXI. IBM typewrit.trw, factory DARLING Sia.meM: khtet11, Ne1rport r.tarin&, 20th St., OMC u •n ~
nttd 1omeorw 10 u.t:t me 111 l.,.ou.;.:.:_.::11::"1:....,;-:----.,... ruond!liontd wy/warnnty. $2S. eaeh. 83~2281 Rttreauonal VPhiclt Crnter Autos Wanted' 961 ~!,!RBA ?,RESBAL., mv fast ........,, bu · G S I 112 Franchise dtaltr. !\faattr ~5--.wM ._ V.J' ,,
. ,_.~~ r'll" llnHt. era9a a e Bl " • 011· Su 1 F REE BOAT SLIP cor. S,.11oeh '° !\lcFaddrn .•IO-!tl"" o-n Sundau l hrs, a day $~. tor lnlf'r· Uf:'J>• ,nt • 1~ PP y. ••~ \V t t ' WE PAY TOP "' " '
Apply in P•rlOO
Be tween 3pm A ~m
!>40-9373. Dogs .rt * * * 6C2-6tli? * * * !:I mans f' I -,53-JAG. SK 120 :'w: ::9 :~~~· c:·~16:!: DINING rm i ui1e w f 6 ADDING Machint1 and cash I ~---------CENTER Slip 45' or under 894-1 336 .531·2450 CASH CLASSIC
3 p.m. ch&i.n;dcout ch A cilalr,hbr. n(isltrs. SU & up. LAB puppy. Ftm. U mo. $2.25 a ft. For Sail or p11.'r. FACTORY YAN ~\'1rr i1·h,.,.ls. ti<", t nttn!ly 1ull, b, bed; o I tr 1hot1, AKC, houU'broktn, A 233 J91h St N C NB T•n nR '"~,5.-0;;95 ., O. • · · oni.:1nal ltu'uou !. l>lerhanie. "-"-'.N hoiuthold itt-m1; Ch i n a I =~~--~~-~-lovely little 1irl !143-2001 a.It 2113 No. llro•dway
Si1nta Ana Salary or Oommluloo c:.o ,....., 2 675--0236. CAMPER tor wed can ,1; trucks, jwt nlly perfl'CI throout. H(:.d hutch . .,,........,.,,_ IBM ~ltttrle typewriter, 5 pm.
1
I I Id
1 Phone 67~ ·==~,..,.,,,._~-,-.,..-BOAT SI.JP, NEAR. UDO. 20 eaU l1I l<A' free e-stlmates. 1;.: 1ts a one \\OU \'Oii ovrr TAX p RE p ARE R Mochlnary Iii ~~ o,,'~·1J601BM•• ""',,.""mtai,oed. "PICK of Ult"" male "'"' IO <O ft. boot. '68 DODGE GROTH CHEVROLET ~"" '' "•''"· Pho n e DJual Oppor. Employer ex-'"""· ~ ~ · Schnauur, 3 mo champ * • 67' "~u. * * 893-2544 rlay1, rvr~ 531-50.l.1. perienced le ttliableo to~ new 126 ~~ oUi ELECTRIC TOOLS, Electric P l•no1/0rg1n1 j •lttd. R.q:. Exe ep tl,
1
197[ JAGUAR 42 :\'KE Cp.
ce. N.B. arta. &4~9. screwdrivll!r & "·• electric "';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;= 1 54<>-1761. 1 v" , A&k for Sale.1 ~fanaaPr \\'lute w/l)lk Jrathrr Int. R.E. SIJ•1 • New lie. OK! T yp 1 ST /R#~ptklniit 3 " •
11 1
• ""· auto Iran!!., (pop top . l821.l 8 h Bl d
Hone1tly .willing r11 lf!arn I rlays ~, wk. Ac,· 1, 1 drill. 8C6-()197. FREE BLACK Lab Pup, 8 mo's, to TrtMportilion rh AC & DC t?fr1grra1nr, Roll -. t>ac v · C-hr l'1 "' f" "'1rr w h ls.
B 0 I H It ''M ~~.-~1~1 -----~l"°'ll gd home w/children ovl'r 5 .. away double bM _ Just like liununrton Stach t'i\t/C\\'/Ai'1' radio, air, lo "' P
1' 0 ••d, bao•-uod "•lplul. Nita PICO anoous ORGAN LESSONS · · 11760fl7 Kl9333l I I d "• '170 ~· • ~--------oot.v. Need!! lo!!~ of love & nr11', $289:"1, or hrs! oHf'r. · · 1111 e ~ , J\ 11 I n 1 I\ 1 n r
'"......-t . Myer, !>4!).-03TI. ;. * * FOR BEGINNERS attention. 64&-3798. 646-2698 day.11 or 5ST·4~0 WANTED 11/trndl'r, ]l'!\'ln~ care. RELIEF man, 1 day wkly, 12 WAITRESS MM t I , Ralel"h Nicklt1 C•m-•• S•lo/Rent 920 fVes 611-1807. hrs. Palma Ho!el 250 Clift lunch. Joli~ 0:;: ~l9l C~boi 625 French St, You do not have to own an AKC reg. GPrman Sh<"J>hf!rd, r-' 1..:-..:.:.:.· --------1
Dr. Lag B. 4'4-™7. Rd SD F Lap illfJtrument. f"rtt practice male, 111 yrs. Champ. blood T S •
., · · wy., ai turn S•nl• An• time 11.vailable. line, x l n I temperament. * SHELL OP * IH.
Rt11taurant!Coftee Shop 1 off. You are the winTll'r of Start Tuffday, January L8!h ! Love• children. M9-l2!l6. EL CAMINO * RANCllt.RO •Hoa~ or Hoste1s 2 ticketJi 101the DATSUN Pick Ups
•Waltresse1 & Busboy1 WA IT RESS ES wan!ed . Srrts, V•c•tion at 7PM-5 Weeks. ST. BERNARD, l yr old, B & J SALES Inttornatlonal Hfl.t\·ester
e olnina Rm-Ho1teu Evening ttlllt only. Food Ir Recre•tlonal REGISTER NOW1 male, S40. Alw Bas~et 1030 s. Harbor, SA 839-Z>l5 RECREATION CENTER
•Cocktllil le Feed Waltrt1M1 cacktaila. Full or part tim1-. Vahlc lt Show AJ.,, intermediate clu,~ Hound,7male, 1 yr old. S20. '62 INTERN AT Io NA L ROY CARVER, Inc.
Apply ln penbn
47>205
1. a t the ~~~w;::s~ary lSth 644-TIS ·_ _ _ Harveatt'r Van, camper 2925 Harbor Blvd.
MOIO'S VOLCANO HOUSE -WANTED-X4 0 1'S-CONVENTION $12 + m•tarlal 1 German Sh1pherd Pups l equip. $750, Make> oiler. Cotta 1tftsa 5464444
1400 P1llu.de1 For Non-Union War Film. CENTER • p b-• 6 k Id I'" 54• '"' -Co1ta Mtaa· Film production co. now I ""' ,,,,,,,,,, ...,... I • Flln·Eof .. l•lnina • "" ·~. "' • 0 . ~. ~~ ATTENTION ANAHEIM I Knowledgeable '"11"'1<1•~ aft 3 C lk RN •• 1 .. 1 •-· C cuting. ycles, B es,
· n.. "' · 04ptat onv. Ca::ll 1213) .f61.)X;J Now thru January lfith 1 • Rent Organs Available: YORKSHIRE Tl':rrier Pup-Scooter•
Hosp., fi61 Ctnter St., C.M. Plea1e c~I 642-5e78, ext 314 During Tenn 0t Couriw!:. pies, AKC, 1hols, 8 wkz. old, ~5M5. WAJ\'TED, nunery t!tlivery between 9 ands pm to claim lnquitt For Detailii; show quality, 673-7843.
RN tull11me nir ht ihift 11-7, boy, attei:noonz. Apply in your tickers. fNor!h County HAMMOND ORGAN 2 • 9 WEEK OLD PUPS
I 't ~1n b fl •-I ~rson dally t>xcept Thur1. toll l••t num'-• ,., ... l~) STUDIOS x n 1r ge n I. ""'vu Y r 'o d' N -·• N · ~ ......,. ''u Part Shellie, 1m1.ll brffd $7 M C B 1 ..., Y s ursery, Ai.>O ew· * * * 21" E Co• t H 1 anor. apo ea ch, 1 port BJ d c M ~ • 1 wy, I 642-4818, 534-3885
496-5786. 1 v ·• · · PORT. Denne rt breathing Corona dtl M•r SILKY Terril!r Pup P ies.
RN', full time nigh1 •hifl
11-7, RN, pt' time rellet
U·T, xlnt lrinae bntfs.
BeVf'rly Manor, Ctpo
Beach, 498·S78&.
\VOMEN p/time 11.·orking machine. Ne'W co n d, 644-1930
from home. Good 1elephonf! HaU-nricl!. 67~21~~. n..-•-F AKC, 1 male adult. Rea.s.
,.. .r .n v""'n Mon . ., ri. Evea:, Terms, 11 desirf'd . 5.~7-358!'!. pertonallty. No telling. Exp. GO t NG OUT FOR
unec. Will train. Ph. : BUSINESS _ AM/FM aterro WURLITZER PIANOS IRISH SPttl!'r Pupplez, 8 wkz,
925
'69 Triumph 650
Only 10.000 miles.
$677
DUNTON FORD
5 .. 7070
2240 So. Main at Warner
Santa Ana
TRUCK BUYERS
'72 GMC 'I• TON P .U.
CAMPER SPE"l"lill au!nm 11.t1l',
rad io, hea ter, · 1tabll11.rr,
heavy duty 1prlngs, radio,
tinttd (iA!1<1. 50.1-132.
$1195
Mike McCarthy
Clt41n Ua1d Cars
SE:E US FIRSr
CREVI ER MOTORS
208 \\'. lst Si., Santa Ana
135-3171
\VE PAY TOP 001.UR
FOR TOP USED CARS
II your car ls extra clffll,
let' us f'.nt.
BAUER BUICK
231 E. 17th St.
Costa MPS& 548-n~
IMPORTS WANTED
ONlnge Collnt\ps 642-40M for lntervw. recelvl!r, 35 waltJ, pm-I Nii!w 10 yr. Warranty AKC rt&. Shots. '70 Hondo CL 450
WOMEN part time 9-2, wk fessional Garrard turn Save S300. 84 2--1135 GMC TOP ; BUYER
cab' N I Must tell this Wl!ek • Make days for rel.ail work in table, I-track tape de ck, 2 e • e son GREAT Dane Pup p I e 1 .
Costa t.fl!Sa. 522-2819. I t bl t Jc J '41" Console! Champion Sin!tl. Ready to offer. (#72'J8)
WI. nu ca ne ipea ers. 11095. List, While Marquis Mo· '-rs YOUNG Widower, 2 childrtn Sold for S240. Pay off Go~ Call 83()..3653. rv .
nttda llve-in Nana. 54M723 balance o! $149.95 ar pa ymlJI ' They Last. S795. s TAN o AR o Schnamer5, 900 S. Coast Highway
or 543-0833 Reta. of Sf.69 I GOULD MUSIC CO. champ. sired. AKC reg. Laguna Beach ~3100 ~~~~~~~~=~ Q U AD RA S 0 NI C Sin« l9ll 645--0574 '70 Honda 90 Trail Bike, Good Standard S Door with p11s·
Recreational Vl'hiclf' Ct'n1f'r BILL t.1AXEY TOYOTA
cor. Beach &. Mcf'addf'n 18881 Beach Blvd.
WutminstPr H. Beach, P"i. 847·8~
194-1 336 531-2450. Autos, lmportod--970
'67 CHEVY VAN
RN'S
AUSTIN
Ell:per. Sura:ical
lPM 'tU llPM Shirt
NCR OPERATOR
Horpiltl Experience
. SY'STEMS • !Cari ! t•a•k 2045 No. Main, S.A. I=~~·--.,----,-,-,-ruMing• 1200/t..,.de fo I 1129-IQ1°'"'1
Sl50. Malelll &. females. good trans. car 548-0Sl2 alt CORT FOX J e net Quillian •
SPM 'tU 1:30AM
Exttllent workln1 condiH0111
A !rinse be.nttltt .••
MISSION
COMMUNITY
HOSPITAL
II ~] tape deck, four ipeak~. * 5474)81 * AKC Malamute p u p p I es , · r senger flea . J. · ""'J * •
'"'' ""''"· I"" com-· * SALE SALE * 968-1110 ' 4352 w· w ~mmmmmm;;·;;; I H · Auto & Truck Leasing 1ntersw1et ey pt>te .. I omel AM/FM !PIANOS**ORGANS 1964 YAMAHA 80 c Ex --N •• I • receiwr, 4 speakers, quad AKC Minialure Schnauzer . ' c. • 6JlglQ rwJ>Ort, C.M. ~:;.3fi61 rv1ne
IOO adapter, Sl09.95. Kawai. Stein~ay, Lowrey, pupples. Reaeonahll!. paru11on .Chamber, h 1 rh -TRUCK-LEASING-You are the \11nner ot Antiques
27B02 Puerta Real Hwy.,
Mlaslon Vill!jo, Calif.
, (!:. on San Oll!gu Frwy. I
Crown Valley Parkwl.)')
P.HONE
(714) 495-4400
(714) 130.7700
U.S.A. Slereo Equipmt-nt Allen, Baldwm, t>IC. From 847_8929 Alter 6 pm compreSJ110n head, Good 2 tickets to the
W11.rehou&e, 179 E. 17th SI., $295 up, RENT~LS SlO up. * POODLES * Condition. $125. Firm. Call Soort1, Vacation
Mon & Fn 10.9 531-5607. ALL MAKES A MODELS & Recreational Cotta Mega 645-2442. . * * 646-4665 * * lit shipment trom Chin1. Daily 10-6 Sun 12-5 PEUGOOT PA IOE Bleycll', Vahlcle Show
An tique jade1, ancient art, • BRAND new automatic Fl ELD'S PIANO CO. 1WO Poodll! puppies, 1 male, wht w/blk trim. XJni corn!. at the
fine porcelail'll, ivoriet &. gai he11.ler, Dayton 65000 1833 Newport Blvd. 1 female, age' 1 wel!k.~. S99.95, 646-2933 Ask for ANAHEIM
jewelf'Y. B.T.U. Radiant& & 1la1, in-Costa Mrsa. 714/645-3250 Phone 894-3564 afll'r 6 P.M. G•..v. , . CONVENTION clu~. NP ver UM!d. f170. -.r
Hour!I 10·~ Yapkf.!J." Ptdr:ller Call 5f9-l88'1 fSan!a Arn11 ). USED ORGAN BRINDLE Afghan Pup, '70 YAMAHA DT·l Endure, CENTER
ANNOUNCING
2134 Newport Blvd., C.M. POOL TABLES Warl!'house HEADQUARTERS papel"l'd, 6 mo!!. old. Call 250 cc. 1500 mllea, adult rid-C l F Now thru January 19th
ANTI QUE Bdrm aet, twin Orange County 64~2390 alt 6 pm. den. $490. 833-8173. Or OX Plea~ call 642-5678, .ext 314 11'~"'!"~'!"'!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!1!~ j bed1. Oak drtsstr. 5 dwr. Salt. Freight damaaed $49 All MakP1 & Price• • Good 156 • 2586 NEWPORT BLVD between 9 and 5 pm to claim
SALESMAN l'f'CrtaUonal brats pulls. CUt tlUa. (2131 to Sl99. New ilate factory choice, Also, Ntw Ham-Horus 1968 YAMAHA DTl.·250 cc. M· • your ticket! (North County
vehiclea A mobile home 691-5545. cratl!d, $195 to $ 3 9 5 . mond, Kimballa ,I; Conn. ---o-----Dirt bikl! arreet ace11s. cr>STA MESA :>-3661 1 11 fre ~be . 540 122,H
"•"t1. So c ·•1·f. •-a.· to -~~-----...,_, 639'-8623 52'-8468 5 YR O~d Quarter •10.rseo. Many )(tr._;, $390. 494-7081 . -"CHEVY-TRUCK''-o . e nu *r is . * ~ ~ -· A~ I' 102 ' . PtMy Owsley Co., 1714) V f ndl •-Ir 1 d 1t
ori1. equip. manufaclurer PP ••nctl OCTAGON maple din i n 1 892-3314. 11352 Stach Blvd. ~ 0:1e be~ ~ffe~~ 1ceali 750 HONDA, 1970 Cahn '64 Big Six Pie~ Up 1----=B"'M~W.,.,_---
Electric&.I, radio, or eltc----------!able w/6 chair-a:, (2 cap!. It. fNl!ar Katetla). 53ft..Oll3 aft 5. Sal k. Sun j paintt'd black. Perfect cond. 8 foot !>I'd, new paint, Lie. ___ "'°" ____ _
trnnlc bkgrd pref'd. Mail KENMORE t lec. Dryer, 1 c mates) S27S. EX'l!rcyclP, WOULD YOU anytimt'. · ' Orig. o"'nPr, Sl050. 557-3896. L26103. Full 'lrirll!. Automodv* Ex-celltl\Ce
;l,,I\ MARK II '62. Unu5u11l
Classic car. \\'ire \vherls;
li\r-cond. SeP & rlrl\'" IO ap..
prel'late. Sl~. fi42--7000.
JENSEN
JENSEN
AlmlORIZED
SALES • SERVICE
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
llOO W. Coast HW)'.
Newport Beach
KARMANN GHIA
iOOo Karmann Ghia,
corid, Makro nffer.
8J3..{lj\ 7
LOTUS
LOTUS
AtmlORIZED
SALES k SERVIC::
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 \V. Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach
MAZDA
:Zia SL 197r Choe. brown. Im·
mac. By owner. $7750. 331
E. Bayfront ' Bal. 1I 1 l .
ruume1 ' &alary exflttltd yr. old kS.OO or trade lor $75. Comp!. scuba dlvina: -BELIEVE •70 HONDA Sl..t7S Scramb-• $695 & ~~~coee~di~CaJBJ.x~ ~er of ~al value. E'Qu ip, stoo. SCHios ~-REE ORGAN LE~Ns ~-:~pe~~· tr!u. Y~·n11:::! 11•,•.·,.,.P:;t~ct. "~~ss. treet t6 Miki McCarthy ,
'60 CHEV Wqon V-1, 11.uto, as long as you like! No reg-ribbon winner. Ideal for _..,.,, _...,.,..
SECRETARY . Girl Friday GE refrit, top frttur, COP-ne@da tOme work , noo: istration. No obllption. Ju11 beginner. Sac! S300. 832-4033 BOYS Schwinn Stingray, 3 GMC 'e9 MERCEDES %IO Die.el.
to manage office for femalP per. Good cond., SS7-Cl603 F ri.,'dalre refr'f· /lrftier, Com Mondays 7·30 pm d ood nd ' · -v--·.,__ f v hid C It Xlnt cond. 1 owner, $3Dl.
inte-rlor de&il'Mf. Part tlmr. alters pm. ooppertane, S75; aofa·bed" CoAST MtiSIC • 544-64!4. :r:24·75~ co 1110"· ~-· ·~r~B;~ AeMd-ad:n r ROY CARYIR, Inc. (Il4) Cf$..3018
675-<04ti.
9 to 1. Attnctlve, Wll!ll· 18 Cu. fl I SIS refrig. chair, SSO. 963-6187. 642-2851 \Vetlmlnat1-r 2925 Harbor Blvd. MG
a:roomf'd wtim&n over 35 fftt1:. comb. SSl. Sold new Movina. tverything in house WURLITZER piano. Xlnt I jr.Je'l 'fi6 BULTACO, dirt, 1XJ cc. 8f4.t3U 531~2450 O>lta Mesa 546""""
pref'd. Typing, lite SH, $600. Gd. cond . G4J-IOQ. from furn . to cookwatt cond. Asking $495. 109 Apt Mar::'~~~t~ Bargain $~732 -''FLATBED'' DATSUN -·---,M=G----I
rtn'I offict ' bkkpJ. thnl C • mu1t be told. 8C7--ll365. A Clea brook L CM ';i;i;i;;;i;~~; """"=====-=--' GMC T Alm:IORIZED trial b a I an c e req'd. •meres •11.• Ph 54~2 n., ' . I '69 BRIDGESTONE ITS cc, 61 2 on V-6 IALES ERVJ,...
Interviewlnc lf).1.2 Mon-Fri. Equipment _. KANEKALON • wigs, •xtra 1 ~=' ~--·~-~~~ General 900 l ood cond. Tilt Cab, 4 1pttd, 2 1peed, NEW •n PICKUP I: S ... ~
!"•·no· Sy Linda ..... Iona Brunette -. short PIANO tuner has all kind& ~•,. ~-2 new 16 foot flat bed, 900x20, 4 spd. dlr, dlx. Bumper. Ra· "" rs . ' '.>'t\I VMTAR 135 mm, J.5 F J>r+.. . .., ,...., ~.JlllJ di M'--PL7~·-Ta'--~--u ~ Sui le JO! frostt"d $20. Blonde fall $8, of pianos, Vay, Very I Marin• Consultant ,..,--,--..,.,.::.c.:_:=--="l 10 ply ttm, rtaJlY ready to o. u·n•n•. "4UV· -
'-Alnp s u.-., ' Set wrr mount CSRT 101 and blonde tres1 $5. Like Reasonable? 523-9711. • INDEPENDENT Motor Homes 940 io to work. Call 1oda,y, Good arnaU down or trade. 494~11 Newport Beach, Ca., S40-472S Adapter included) New in ntw 988-7210. ll!rm11. Lie. W5193.1 attr 10 546-8736. ··~~An"S ••~ 1 Sporting Goods llO • Purchet lng-=.,~• ' -•• , .. box. $325 •• make 0. M'rke McCarthy 1970 DATSU.N pl•kup 11··.s • • F•E PAID * HAM Radio, Citizen Band Counselirw on purcha1in1 .__ '"
.:. fer. 6C2-l297 or 64~2Cl0. 1rin1Cfiver. t complete SKI bootli, brand new, ladie1 boats A equipmll!n t. gd. cond., 72 license paid, 1100 W, Cout Hwy.
Alw Fre Jobs 110 H · · 7 Sa "~~ 962-6864 after l p.m. Pvt. Nl!wport &act. * Sharp &al w/gd skills for Furniture • _ twin ll!na ref!~ camera. um1.n1c, a1ze · c. _.,. e M1rlne Sllrveyor GMC
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
VP S42-297C. S57--0C33 aft 6. 646-2977 Recrt'ational V•hlcie Ce•i•• party. '59 MCA Hrdtp, Good cond . exec. · · I 21 PC. KING SIZE " *BI L. ~·at ' I & STl:RE O un la1 ed WINCHESTER 94 32 Sp\ 18' LAPSTRAKE Cor, 81'.!ach It McFad11!n 240 Z 'TO, xlnt cond, fully ' 811!. offer ovl'r $175. 349 N . • in~ .. Rtty w Av . BIOROOM GROUP I ' c m • • . , 1re y 1 01' 0
skill.1, $550, 1~ relmb.1 layaway 1972 model G11r-.l Kil . $65. 349 N. Olive, No. I marinf" &: trailer. Valur \Vf.!Btm inal<"' loaded, air, mags, must 1ve Nn. C, rsngt'.
htach area rant C.1pd changrr, lu ll C. Orangt". $1400. $795. takes it. 12' •lri 194-1336 531·2450 .ell1 642.-4772, 64s..3633. MGB UNKEL A. GENCY l I O I YOUR choice Spania.b ~k. I · I bo I 4' k' boa 1••·1 H rb G ~ G --1 , maple, walnut, or wtu te range a r s u •P en• 1 on Sto,., Reati1ur•m, at, g 11.~s. S45. l " 1 t. .>0. t a or. a1uen rove '70 f'ORD Ranger%. ton a..it. FERRARI
River1lde A vt · 1 NB. finish. kins tiu, headboard. 1 Pe a k "l"!I w/cros11-over B•r 132 o.b. $195. Trailer tree. l Blk, So. o! G.G. FN')', Camp. Auto., P.S., VI, 5,800 ----==.,..,,.,..--
MS-3700. g door drHiw!:r Ir. mirror, 2 tY1t11!m. AM I F MI MP X 645--0295 altt'r 2 pm. 6.16-2333 ml. Coldenwen lO'h' cab-FERRARI
S!:CJt.ETAR.Y bed-alde atands, 10 year radio .l tape player. Still USED Jee-M. ch i ne ' ~7· Fbgl1 hull, 16'7" beam. * Marvr'n Pearce* over camper, fully equjpped, AtrmORlZED
BOOKKEEPER ruaranttt. Ortbo Re11t Box brand new. Sold !or $309.95, Scotsman Flaker-500 lb., 350 &! i~. Pi!ake offer. Sff at (lHllHJ SALEs .\ SERVICE
Begin ll7l \\'Ith a (Tel.I job. •Prine•. ' mattreu tramt .. balance duf! $1 10. Cash nr lb. capacily, 633-3507 dy1. 1690 Supl':rior, C.M. S46-6IOO $5200
Start al $600 for a local co~ Top lheet, battom rbttt, small pymnt.. a-edit Dept., Eves. 54.:-&ill. or 5«-9138 Motor Homes DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
struclion co. Call Grace, mattrtt11 pad , blanket. Pil· 714/893--0501. TV, R•dio; H IF I, "'"''7-;-:-i--,-----~Harbor Blvd. at Fair Dr. NEWPORT
IMPORTS m-1ii0. tow1, • pillow gfiJ>S, quJJted * AUCTION * S ~ 136 Bo•t•/ Marine Sales • Rentals COiia """ 5tf.ltllt
ACME PERSONNEL b.d IP"''· te•eo · Equip. 904 1968 CHEV. 6 <yt \! too pick
Ney Fine Furniture '71 zENi'Jit ~rorT':acolor 1--.:.....:....------558 3222 TUSTIN AGI! , A p1· , GRAND Baok1 oew CAV 6 • up wlh .. vy dUly 9 hp com· !JOO W, C.O..t Hwy, All FOR $297 "' P iance. combination w-J1h remote SECRETARY Auc!Jons Friday, 7:30 p.m. control. Pecan M!'dlterran-cyl. lnj. pump + 2 starters 1411 S. VUlage \Vay, S.A. pNl1110r, ladder r1ckl, e ll'. Newport Beacb
For N~wpnrt Beteh Ad Artn· TERMS LAY·A·WAY · Wind y's Au ction Barn ,.a_n with •liding doon. ~ SO'/-:. nrt S45-60'2t Tr•ilera, Tr avel -945 ~C:een~~-
5
. n4 6'5-00SOl----FIAT
-. "! sidfls lnclud ln• SJf. PLAN 2'75% Newport, CM 646-8686 watt stereo, Moor model now Boata, Power' "6 27• Sh 1 'TO If 1 SI
"'.r "' .., ri d cl Sa $350 8~ a ' If! ".°n. ps ·n Dodgl! Van 300 Sf'ries. '61! 1',IAT 850 Sporl C.Oupe, "Sharp look11, Jone hours, Behind Tony'1 Bldg: Mal'I P ce IO ear. ve ' J.11' CHRIS. Tr [.cabin 4. caoopy, !act a1r, water V-8 autn ihlt! rafiln heat· R&'f ·"
1 1
" & b k '_...... .... 133 1570 TRADE JtS r C M 1 on lhls year-end clearance, . .1. R h'I h , . . , new cu c11 ra ea. .......... r-Y· • · SACRT I Et I ' art e ABC Color 'TV, 9071 Atlanta, Cons.tcllaflon. 1963. Loaded p~r1 ier. Pese 1 c
2 7
Ko t'r. Tan PX'lcrlnr. i;i()O m!ll!s. t..ooct' ruhher. Clean & Xlnt
tE AMS TR Es S, ~xper. FUltNITUlltl H I FI / 1 t tr e o, Spani11i Hun !ington Beach. !168·3.129. & L1k@ new. S~.IXXl. D11ya \vi th. S38Ql. Pvt ply. 64 4 03 S.1150 full price. Phone NJnd. $8.SO or b ts
1
ot!rr. ~Prtt'd. Apply Johan.en A 202 N. lroedway, S.A. c1b!net, bJt.\n 1a11nd syatem 1972 ZEN Col I 213: 6.'JfHj757 or evrs 213: Auto Serv ice, P•rts 949 5:25-4756 IF'ullenonl. 6TJol:w5 t've~. ~Chriltenaen, 898 W. 16th l f3S.131l> Open 1 d-.y1 li(htl ~ bar. Must Re to mt or 1'V year 333-3438.
NS ! • •• I t •~ •· I f end clearanai Prices lower USED 11-s i•-e oelectloo '68 CHEV ll{ ton Sl'ries 20 HONDA • · . am ... :.,., pm. 9' SOFA, btaut. cruahed apprte at oflMI or ""1 0 • • I GRAND ~ k b net " -• k VS h k
f Aflt 5 t 980 than the di!countl!ra, All .,an 1, ra n e w $4. $6. and S8. FIRESTONE ala c, , auto, pwr ra ea, ----.,--....,--::-3 !ttvlet: Station a&le1me.n. velvet, l'lfVtr ti.ltd $150. ~r. Plr C pm a ' modt'ls in slock. 3 yr. pie-Cl' tw ~n. Loaded Rt!ftdy to STORE 475 E. 17th St., C.M. hvy duty ~ulp. tinted 1tla11 1971 HONDA car. Lo mites,
Must have lube bl)' txper. Matchin1 Io v e •ea I $100, ndf'n ·• .M. lurP: tubt, 1 yr. part•, 1 yr go. Private pty. Mtr3855 or 646-2444. & ol.''ltr xlr11. By owner. A-l cond. Newly pain-
' ?tJ1.11t be neat. Tlme + Time 53&-62al. REED A Barton Ster!. Spen. ll'rvlce, dtliver •· ut·up. 54;H024. Sl.C9J. 7130 Cln)'On Dr., led $200 T
0
p S43-09U
, 'it. Apply ln pe~n. Boyd'• i\ErntG, new Sl20. Formica Baroque 60 pee Mir'\/ fQf' 12 ABC O>lor TV, Oranae '!~2.-Cl=tR~J"s,-"en-.ft,.., ~Su,.-,per * * SPECIAL * • C.M. ~9990 · · · · ·
Area. ~90 E. 17tP1 St .. CM. tble. I: chn. $25. Sofa S~. excel. cond cat $900. $42S. or County'• lu1e1t Z e' n It h clt"an, xlral', mwT'!I, !~in Tune-~p!I, brkJ & heaters * 1951 OMC 'II too Pldc Up JAGUAR
CC d Irvine) 4 6 8 ff Luxf' R.anc-h rl!pa lred. fnr ~xi, 543-0714 . •
l"OW'OI, • • End tbl $25. Mlac. M5-5.109. a•. ' . rv. 1700 II Dealer. ~l A!lanta. Hu~ eng. Slfi,500. Pvt. ply. l61T Su-rlor. C.l\f , Ccoomndp. le~~ •• ~"bu.:!. .• Xl,.e",'1 --,-A-U-E"'R,....."a"'u"'1""c~K,_ I SY.JtvtC£ StaUon atttndtnl e SACRlflCE mink •tole, cat · w. tlnrton Beach 968-3329. 64.S-1313 Ted. ..-ua 1111'"'"""""'
Exp. f/tJmt . AmburteY FantuUc buy, electric twin SlOO. M+-U7S . ' PROF. buill 21' F.G. b&r §] 8.'U-1590. The Harbor A1eu
. C.M. BED, full •iiit. Ind. all dtllvt~l~ =· ,.,.. to You • i\takr xlnt ocean boat. Eve1. . ··• JAGUAR DEALER
"67 MGB, wire whl1, Plr!!ll!a
ndial1, AM/FM, overdrive.
duel pxhaurt , $1005,
l35-3058.
'87 MGB-GT. Gd . mnd. Take
imported led. In trade ar
ma.kt offer, 5'8-1235 1-ve.
Ol'EL
BRIGHT yellow '70 Opel
Kadette. l!IOO tl'll[, Sttreo &
txtru. Exctllenl. $1600.
Call Mlchael ~3797 alt 5.
1969 OPEL Kadette, 33.000
milts. 1 owner .
64:1,.'172S
PORSCHE
OVER 25
C it .In, Recond it ioned,
& Gui1r•ntH d.
PO RS CHES
t l l '1 • 9t2's ~ ,, •• ,
1157 to 1'71
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
Texaco. 2252 Harbor Blvd. bed. s.50, flS-70&3. •• FIREWOOD tor Sale [ ]~ hull. Bl'al ofler over $625. Auto• for Slit I Auto Lei•I-
964
Only Aulhottud
8.ERVIC!: tstab. Fu 1 l tr llntnt I: Medlt headboard. . • 673-f>L'i9. 'iiiiiiiiiiiii Al~'lY• baa an exc:1Uan1 ,..
. Bntah CU1tomon. c .M. u~ Excel oond. 11tl-9&12. YACHT Club memltenhlp " 3 Llnu, 2 T lmN, $2.00 I ~1,:0:. '=r °".Gc-. "g,c-,-;H"•-wtt""c'.c,... •s.•s. Duna Buvgl11 '56 1972 Mork IV ~ of botlt Ntw • Uatd ~.~~:,!"'"
\to 1180 will)' to IW't LMNG room rum A dln£nc I.ii '°11ln& inlttillon fff. hd ., !win 15 Mtrca. Elec. 11. '71 DUNEBUGGY -w •·-bo S!:_reQdeTdape,.;,!"'EOliyMlEqulpped, ~ '4f..MOS
fA2,-0US. tet. All in xlnt cond. "73-70 ' FREE to rtaht bomt ma.le Conl'I trlr $1500 or oUer .... ,... LAM IN/>
l SEivrCE st.aUon at1tn6In1. 5'4-472& after~ pm. ABOUT to junk '62 Ford black shaggy dog, Loveblt 54!)...254T. charat Corvair. U!ogs than l m mtcflat1 Otllv1ry 1971 JAGUAR V12 PDRSQfE ~ 9ll/4, A/C,
f md FUJI • part F fri... M mt n 0 :-:C'-:--..-:==== 600 mt. Xlot <'Cod. 835-1996. l ., &S• NOW Alr <ondllltmlll(, at11Mladc. New radlafs, AU x lru. txp. prt
1
· S " •M •·nch Tea .......... 1 ' any rT-;;,::.h•;,:P;P;;,Y·~ll33-;:,;:89!17::::..~~-Boats, Rent/Chi1 rYr tOI • • "5.fill ~ • • On1" &-mUes <i210MN') AM/FM ta I ! O 00 time ablfta avail. Apply al ~ ai:: • ....,. .. , parU. Llk1 new. WIU 1ell T ruckt 962 v •Wll . • 1 Pf, ·
lhtll, !Tth I: Irvtna, N.B. dLatn.,lrc ... ""u··~ .. ~ Gam.w. _ta-J!.e, cheap. Call MUce. 531..JIS5. BEAUTirUL l yr. oJd fem. CATALINA 27' S LOOP for 24 mo. 11 QlO.Ql Pit mo $129$ l/688-6C8S.
,.. ··~~~ Purf!bred Gtrmft n SEE lo belle'\lf! '116 Chev)' ph.11 Tu. U +
2
---.~.~11~9~fl~.T~e--
llCUBA Jnsirucion. Seod • HERC!JLON iol• A lllve,..t, ELECTIUC 1toopt111 bed, '71 Sher""nl. io .. , chUd .. o. Braoo "'"'boot, Awe. oo•·er, Pi<k·uo Cslm m•O.. ''" N £.o;.';10rt National 1970 JAO AR 2 l\1ot O>nd * M'ako Oller
• ltrlr.f ttlllmt, 5CM Mi.In St., 3 mo't old. aacrlfict. model. Never uffd, 557..1032. Jllttps six, SIS rtdlo, Of', dk. mags, brand nu H11:er Le .r C .AUIOmlUC. flcJory a.Ir C!O~ * * li< -**
u t Sn h 14f.4197 ,-----.,---~-.-AM/FM tuner, cample~ aa1n1J 0. ditloni fl&tBQD) .....--,\'111:1 . c . ** &45-1101 ** I Mo 1eo11-ftrnAlt. Septrd r-"••. S'2" headroom, full paw1 '+' a.et oJ lt)(lle SOO't. n1. • O•~ lo • IP Ml 11•.....,a ~ ' ~ ' Xlnt -nd. '" --1 -. Dlvltlon of •-. C•ilf. $31"' 'f<I l'ORSCHE Super lfl. lllnl SINCL!: •• "1
• E ~oN", -nlbl .. ·, HI "'f'--xlnt •I cldldten, &ll ahotl. ,.I•'"-··. convenfl!nl New. .... .,.._,,, 111• ~· •"ll,I • s~·IJ I 1 ~·-" ,, f b I • ._.," """' ...... '"' W ted l20 'J .~.. 1111 NaltoMI Bank ' .,.,._.._ l 1W n "flMLl.ll,, • mnd I: Mw Orts. SlQO. w/bpere.Uon O w ne11. ,., If lana, uctl COC'll. $1)11, In 5.1&-4S18 tvet_
1
port 1Up w/plrnty ot park· Vacander COil money! Rtnl 2J22 Bu.Ir--, r'""''-r. lrv1n' IAUER fi13..(;T45 or fll'$-St01 allill miulrtd bul w,., '4Hlll ,,,.,...,,.,,,,..-_,,Ooed_,.--t,-.,d =s.°"11~~""'"'""'••"' .. ---!-,Ca!l"°' llll. Fntot WI...,. ,. .. brio ~·• -•Pl ~.... I
•I 11 umll•r1 • tull • ' WAHTEJ>: ,..,.. -.11a1
111 MM"IJI Nowl call M7·90tl ar1 S:~. bktl' .. eic. th.:U 1 ~ily PUot llJ.-1620 Bulclc.0ptl.Ja1u•r '61 PORSCH.£ 10. tantuHc
J I/ti.mt. Nt. JOch It,. N.8. &Et> • Klnt ~. 1 mo. okL DI Wall 1.11 .--
11"' ..:..u the Old itufl JTum IMNltd lltma 11110 quick 23' E. JlUI Sr.. 11 o o k In I . Xlnt coed.. ~~· ..... ---·-.. _ ... I -il'll, ..u SllO. I w/a{'(-~ Alae '"'"" F.. thal lltm ..... ISO. I A laod ..... ad •• pd _ .. , ... ~ ~ M uo77H r•-··ho<t• --_.. t. m.•-•-• -..ottf try lbe h"'1)' Pfthtr ln\'Wlbneftl 8u)' tht new ltuft c:uh, ~ Q'I-•• -.-la • fit ,,_.. tw •w""<I •-f A I, UfT, ===-----'.
I
l
•
•
28 OAll.V !'llOT /
• I~ I .__I .. _ .......... -.--'. ]§] 1 t --.. m Au tos, lmponed 1
l;;; ;;;;_;;;,,, .. ~l;;;§J 1 I . .:........... l§J I ---l§J /'==! ~ ..... ,,,;;;; .... ~l~§].-.:1~' ~-~-.. ";;;;'~]§]~1~' ..:.""'";im"' .. ~
970 ::::".,., Uted 990 Autos, UM<I 990 Autos, UM<I 990 __ __,~....,.=':-"-r Autos,' Imported 970 ' Auto1, fmportoct • 970 -Autoo, Imparted 970
. PORSCHE 1 :·· :r~rK . v~µcswAG~N
1968 tu. ~ 111<!· nil w/bl>elc • 'l0 CoiilliJSPRIHf I "•71 ":.Y C~ i" hit. AM/,1'M. St~ tape. • • . . , 'ff . ~
Good cond. $2000. ,6*-11J6. Slly .slut •oOUP, wttJi blacll \l'~t":-"';""i, lice new. ''° l'orsch<, xlnt m«h. leawr b>terlor • .U,ood ae\u>l 53250 rund., J)Oed1 bo4)' Yt'Ork) mlJe,. llf9S. 'C531BNS) •
$800. .,..-M~s titdtars · MacHoward PEUG~T sci>.t:~ilt'~ . 1-.,.......,_..__,_..,...'~M •'.:>.MO-l!OO &1U600 er • m.-
'fr P< ... o, <OS. md or.._, SANT~ ANA • c.ro.~ ht··-. ~.,. ~"=··ar. . 'l'OYP1A : , . ·~ ;Uf~EsACK
TOYOT'a s.rvk< dept, .... T:!O am 1
"' '" 9 pm "'"""" -·Fri-day NEW ENGINE undtt war.
'68 Crown
Wagon
640-9.103
PHONE 540-2.Sl2 rao~. . Automa~c. on•
OWfij!r, Ju.t llke "'w. Sacri-41' W. Warner, Santa An& JI~ to best otter. 646-269S
'71 Corona Sedan day, or so1-4540 ev ...
1Si6 Harbor, CoAta Mesa 1964 TJ\-4· lSpitfitt'
Autos, tmport.o
VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN -w-e-Pa-y-1--C-A~Dl-LL._A_C_·l-,-FO-RD---. _P_LY .... M_o_UTH __ ~ iiil . Y~tas .. ·:,.r,w.~ ;,~· :0'7~ Top Dollar 1970 FLEETWOOD '69FORDL1'Dep..naupow. a. ;h.., •
· 6n-1A$9. er, fact. air, landau top. 511 Jasmine Ave.,
'70 vo!iciWAGEN Camper. For Cl•an U•ed Cars BROUGHAM, (XTJOlo) $2399 Coro11• d•I M••
Authorized ~n\lt SenrJct
328S2 ,Valit ,Rjl., ·
San Juan C.Plab·am
83MIOOi<9345Ul<99-Z161
'62 YW Window Yan '
Ren.t ot · ~. $31 '))tt
month. No Down ~ Ap.
proved ~it. (22'1CEKJ
CORJINEHTAL
MOTORS
847-3842
:!~:4~~ """"· $2800. Garden Grove 10.000 Ml~Es DAVE Ross PoNnAc You2 -;c1r~ :o.:r °'
---i'u:U power, .factory a.tr, tilt 2'80 Harbor:lllVd. at J"ah' Dr. Srrftl Vacation ".·: ?0 8~.~1500• Lincoln-Mercury Wheel, AM-FM,,,...., radlo, Cco\a M .. I\ ~7 Rtcrutlon•I
tapeslt)' I: leather interior, .,. · ' V hi 'I St.oW · 'Ill SEDAN, 'Ill 1600 Enrioe, Garderr Gi.ve at Brookbunl vinyl top. Local one owner / UNCOLJ'f' 0 • 0 1'
'68 1n11r1or. Many extrul 636-2980 car sold • aervlced bf ua. I ANA~;iM > ~. 5'5-6l06 !152318) ' ESTATE..SALE CONVEN'NON ·rr vw ~utbaclr, rblt •n&.. AMERICAN Nabers Cadillac "12.LlnOom Cont. 4 dr ...i.. CENTER
ne tttts aood Int -AU'IHORlZED DEALER 4t:rlc a:retJt, (UU pwr,. leas ~stered' for '72. S700'. * Ambassador * l6<» HARBOR BL., ~=:· :;,:~ Pl:.:::~~= ~~th 114 :~ ~ 6. or see at ' * Gremlin * 540-9100 COSTA e Sunday Paaici• 10ltu, S.CF.N.B., ~tween 9 and 5 pm to claim
!;I . .,Bcb. * H .J... P.O. -1608, ""--your delreb. INdl'ill County '611 ' vw Futback,. New omet >< l,ARGEST Beaeh, )11661>, 642-.llll .xi toll-tree ...... r " 540-ml)
..i-•l'1ni cot>d .. $195 or * AMX * SELECTION OF 296. * • * ~~"'· &16-
2698
' Ev" * Javelin * o~t~~'i~'iit~~ l"""'-M.,..ER..,., -C-U-'=R:,.,Y.,...--''69 Valiant .
l!ii Vw Fastback, 33.ooo ac-* Matador * SALES.LEASING ,69 M HT ~ .. -~. Blue '""' "1>11J tu&l mile&. 1 oy.~r. Good AUTHORIZED MERC. arquiJ 4 dr. · · .....,.,. •""" -·"ndef
rond. 11,lOO. 8'7-7655. '"" LARGE SELECJIOU SERVICE Fiil! power, facl. air. (YON vinyl lop. 2 Door. 6 •r• , 11 N b. c d"n S16J mu. eoo• pr1c, $2990. automauc, radio, 11ea1e~ , or ""'"kenda. Q en G I QC . ' $2799. fYBA'P.14) ' -.. , '
Finest of 2600 HARBOR BL., D'lVE ROSS PONTIAC Usod c ••. Mgr. Spocli
540.9100 Open Sund13 e.osta Mesa, ~' .tH· UNTINl'TON1 • m ~ Guaranteed COSTA MESA •<$OH., .. ~ a11«1t,p,;. ... > ;, $1its '~":
Used Can '70 BLUE Cad Sedan de 1971 MERCl.IRY 11 . : • L••1• Soioctlon For "HOME OF VU!e, Full> .. uip'd, 14500· STATION WAGONS Chr11lor-Plymouth . ~: •
CONVENIENT Call weekd•y" S.5: 673-Jl.10 HER1:t CORP, 161111 "'"'"Hun '""'"" 1'cl,:' mmediate l'AYMENTS" . '69 ELDORADO -Loaded, 221 w. Kalella, Anahoim '42"°631 -540-51'4: ! De.livery perlee1eelid.14200. Pri par. (714) 77M050 · -_ _._ H~
Big ~avl•ll1 on CALL FOR FREE ty. cai1 ew1, 494-5286. ,67 MONT"LAIR '67 Belv .... re ·~.·
Remaining CgEDIT CHECK '68 Sed. DeVUle, Vinyl top, ~ Beauti!UI condition, one~
'71 VOLVOS 1 Servi De t 0 l\f da Leather inter, loaded. $2450. 2 Door H.T. D!r. V.~ .• Air er, low locaJ. miles. l\fust
I ~ P · pen on Y 675-1134. Cond. AM/FM, Leaded. Llt-aell this week. 1.lake ottet! 7:30 am. 'till 9 p.m. b ,_ VO '
"
L tie old an-rs car. ( B· (X'rE:nl) ~"'· ··Y~OLYO •• ..:. '59 CAD. Good traM. "" 0!9) Call 546-8736 all JO • WA ...,., Good tires, molar, •!<. 1125. ••Hsu. Marquis Motors::
548-6143. 1 llCQ S. Coast Highway ~. Harbor American
646-0261 --=-::-=-::--,..--l'b.l MERC. Sta Wag. R&H, Laguna Beach 540-ll~ CHEVELLE V..!, PIS, P/B. good tires. "'69~H=E~M~I =R~o-a~d~r-u_n_n_•_I'.
BUICK l"'.':0"""===......,..,,.,,=-1 Runa a.ad. $3'5 I best. H"dm., m.,~ 4 spd ~ --....... -------1970 Cl!EVELLE MALlBU 1;:;;673-8285-,=·,-,=-:=--:-;. xlru. l2200. -149.'I alitt '64 . R·1'v1'era Air Colid;lloned, All power ·n Capri 2000, aulo, air 6,30 pm ::
ee 495--0476 * * cond., radio. ~95. 1968 PLYMOUTH fury IU.
H * 832:9JSS after tL * ... u. Full powor, fa<lory •Ir con· C EVROLET Radio, heater, PS, PB, ''>"'
d;uong, IPWN606) .,...,.....,.=,....-.......,---MUSTANG below w~ blue book
Usod C•r Mgr. Spacial '63 .Cl!EVY WAGON, Auro., ·--,._..,...____ !800. MS-26lS. '
1969 HARBOR COSTA MESA 646-9303
1946 ~. Costa flfeu
'68 VOLVO 142S
•n C:-O~qN-!\ 2 Dr., iifd~p.. vtrtfbJe:;;. rad»; l' :1, u fit
1800 mt .• Pv). pty. S200. un-e~. t!lw tranimisslop. d~ blut bk. S~. ~T. · one, o\lontr, $715. Ca 11 DAI~Y I'll.OT for action! 1491-!1622 ·after 6 pm. or
Call 6G-:i6T8 &"'Sa\'f! fettkends. , We'll help you sell! 6(2..5678
Forest ~een with natural
Jea'theft'tle lftterior. Radia1
tires., AMIFM, 4 speed +
l'U&rallltt. <XAV418J $1695.
Marquis Moton
90o s. Cout Hlgh\V.lly
Laguna Beach 54(}.3100
$695 * '71 CHEVY's * '67 MUST>ING. Tbit ;, a ·n CRICKET, 4 dr, decor. HUNTINGTON BEACH lMPA~A:ARc::rELLFs ·,·=1"bibu,y" aulomobllc. Xint eend. Must ..U •
Motor Homes 940 Mot~r Hom••
THI INCOMPARAILI UTE LIHIR
JI P.et t• 21 ffft
JHI '1\IULOV'S PACl·ARJOW
11'.JO'..JJ' l 24' M.,.._
PrkH ,,._ l6tt5 + TAX LIC.
'
940 Motor Hom••
•
Dratted. 714: 833-.3402. · ' '40 Motor Homos 940 Motor ·Homes 940 HERTZ CORP. $7" 1--=-=c--=---"
Chryalor-Plymoufh 221 w. Ka!elh An•helm DAVE ROSS PONTIAC '116 fj.YM. FUcy, J
E
A ·new concept In the purch••• & rent•I of
le11dlng motor homes ••••••
-Ir FREE INDOOR STORAGE
With Yovr 'wtc~•f• -LIMitM limo Off or
* RENT BACK PROGRAM
* FREE MOTOR'HOME SHOW . ' . ForY.ur C.mrort a Co11v1nlon,ao AU Mator Hom11
All! ON DIS!tLAY INDOORS
ii-WE DEAL ONLY l,N MOTOR HOMES
lit u1 ~•Ip v•u with veur MOTbt HOME 11eed1 • , •
If yo11r 1t••d1 ''' for p.r101t•I plN1vr•, l11vetlrne11t,
'' lor fez ll1•1t•r, we ''• pro,.,1r14 f, 9fve 'fh• pr•·
fo11i•11til od...ico you ••poet,
A Mo+or Home
is a Great Investment.
e ~N TO•ETHtlNESS -A voc:otlo11 ~mo t11 wh,,f,
~ lht •••, 111 tti·• MeuM,!111, 4•1•rt er •nvwh•r•
e AS A IU~INISS -t1:•11t U tut •• , w•'lt help
'f•ll with the 4•t1ll1
e AS A MOTOl HOME CLUI with 111tcl1f11
We .tho lfNT MOTOl HOMES -luort• yours
NOW f,, Sprl1t 0114 lu1t11t1tt -Y•c•tlo11 ••• 1l••pt
•1HI feed1 •·10 11.omfo1f1!,ly, Anybotly c•n J,1,, en•.
IOIJWOlll
1411 SOUT!l VILLAGI WAY •
I
16831 Beerti, Jiun ~ ,,., '1ch. (714) 77Moso 248() Harbor Blvd. at Fair Dr. ~~to$r~
842-11631 -540.5164 c .. 1a Me,. S46-8017 ------'£9 EL CAMINO CUstom F\tU '-'--~~"""'=="'='-'TI Electra 225 Ltd. 4--dr hd J>O'\'er, factory air ~xcel-1971 MUSTANGS PONTIAC
. .·
) top, dark~·.,,. ... vinyl lent rondU!oo. 1...SSC1 HERTZ CORP.
top, ~n mi, u!Umatoiy DAVE ROSS .PONTIAC 221 w Kat u An helm '71 Firebird Esprf"
"(Uipped, 9000 ,ru. Wied 2'80 Harbor Blvd. "Fair 0.. (ll4) T~O 4 Sl.aa.I .
$7800, saer:lflce ~ firm. Costa Mesa-546-8011 ,..,,,,,_.:=""".,.,,.-...;;,,:__ ,......
Pvt pty. 494-C892. ,56 Che 2 d .. , *'66 MUSTANG, V-1, auto. Alr, vinyl roof, loade!;f. 132-! ;,;;--;~=-.:=.,..·..,.,,:::-vy r nagon · ACD' Red"--' cl • '67 BUICK c:--ial 4-Dr I · and .__ trans., PIS. R/H, pwr. disc · ""'""'l to ear.
t "'I"""' ., es1 engine u .... ~ b ks be du "--" $32'95 sedao, P/S, P/B, A/C. 1100 Finn• 557-9305 ' ' avy ty •·~•.
Very good cond 675-1849 · Loaded w/extru. SlOO>./bst
' . . . '70 CHEVY Nova 3 spd. Stick ofter. 675-7746 until 9 pm, MacHowar" 61 Bwck Le Sabre 2 dr. good shUI. Dbc brakri; .,,..., ''6 MUSTANG, economical 6 "f
transp, $125. 64"'847 1139-9600 or ~l.q;oil
&f6.]7ll · cyl. R/h, w-w. '72 Lie. Well Corner lst A ~ , •69 El """' '55 CHEV. 6 Van maintained, $725. Pvt pt)'. ectra ~ custom. 4 dr. Santa Ana
hd Llmiied . 1 II * Good Shape! * 540-17'9'1. -.,.,-:-'="'=~=-·I tp. trim, u 549-3735 or 558-0535 '68 FIREBIRD powr, A/C. immac rond, '67 MUSTANG, xlnt eend,
$2875 492-0404 aft 6 pm. * 1970 CHEVY, P/S, disc &Qld. Lo mi's, RIH, PS,
1963 'BUICK Riveria full brakes, air cond, LOADED! autD. $1100. tm-.3589.
power, xlnt me't:!h. cond. Cali 57-8443. Rich, T12·5151, .a; 'M"Ul'tanr. 'Ru~ IOO(I,
Sharp! $600. 6 7 5-4 o s 4 ; , ext 263· . new tltts Ii: trat11: Must ell.
675-4016. 67 CAPRICE, R&:ll, air, full 968-7360.
CADILLAC i°'.'a4:_::· !lloo. Pr!. par-l--0-L_D_S_M_O_B_ILE--
1971 EL DORADO _c_H_RY_S_LER __ 1969 OlDS ORTA 88
Grenoble silver with vinyl '60 Chrysler
top and leather interior. Full 2 Door. V8 engine, automa-
power, factory air, po1ver tic, rncl 1o, !1,,~ter. tQZA14'1l
door Jocks, till steering Uted C•r Mgr. Specl•I
wheel, AM·FM '""'° rad;o, $3~5 &Old & serviced here. Loca1
one owner. (<rn.300) HUNTINGTON BEACH
Nabers Cadillac
Hardipp Oool;>o. F~ciOf)< air,
power s~ring. pov.;tT ~
es, radio, beater, white 1ide
wall tires, etc. OCNL814)
$2111
Naben Cadillac
AU'll!ORIZED DEALER
2600 HARBOR Bl.,
AU'lllORl:mJ DEALER Chrysler-Plymouth COSTA MESA '
a;oo HARBOR BL.. lSC.J Be11rh, 1-lunn., .. ,,.., Pch. 509100 ' <>Pen Sunday
a>STA 'MESA 842<0631. -540.5~ ·rr OLDS c.u .... · !'Ill! pow-
540-9100 Open Suliday CORVETTE ... '"'· air, low mu ...
-f968 CADILLAC-'62 CONVERT & HT, wh/blk ;~1 Blue Book prke
Int., 3 spd, like new, mags. $13'9
Convertible. Full power, fac-$1400. 547~18. Pvt. pty. DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
tor)' air, leather inleMor, ------'---2480 Harf>or BIYd. at Fair Pr.
lilt •1-ng Wheel, AM·FM DODGE llotta "''" ~7 stereo. High n)ile!. (VZD300) . $2222 1----,,6:::3:-DO==Dc.::6.E=---1·10 'l'ORONADO Cu>tom. Full power, fact. air, AM-FM Naben Cadillac ,......,, vinyl "'•· etc. 1001.
AU'll!ORIZED DEALER STA TIQN WAGON APY) Bluo ~price $4.185. ~~~i., DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
2 Door H.T. Dir, Loaded,
low ml, 39,000. CVIS138) •
Talre amali clown. Wilt' lin
pvt ply, Call 5'6-8'138 aft ll
491-<8U.
'68 CATALINA 2 Dr. Hdtp.
P/B, P/S, Air rond. 1
Owner. IU!JO. 61&-91'15
PONTIAC '86 Le ldan<, $195.
2-0r .. R/H. Auk>. Pvt. pry:
ll<:i-'16l!I.
'69 PON'llAC Grand Prix.
Full power, air, AM/fltt.
Cruiae CORtrol, $3100. 548-5725
RAMBLER
'61 RAMBU:R 2 DR.
6 cyl. Auto. $150. It run1
• 55'1-9300 •
'0 'Rambler Sia. Good ~
$ll3. 213 29th SL Front Apt.
N.B. I
I
Rent or Purch.ue. $2'7.70 P'f
month. Full Power, Ne'1 fjngine. (M0RB86) •
CONTINENTAL I
MOTORS 546-9100 Ope SUnd Rent or p.it'clialfll!. $71.30 2480Hafbor-BJvd.atFalr..Dr.
n ay per mo, INAB&i7l . C..ta -r.r.,. .• , !Mf.8017 847-3842 De Ville . CONTINENTAL ·.~~(88 ~ix::.-~ .. ~ faitett <Ira• 1n thew..; '65
Coo!)f'. Full fo.ctory power,
factocy air· conditioning,
J)O'\~r wtndo'""· (P"':P!J"'l
Usod C•r Mgr, Spoclal
MOTORS muliliook $860. 6*-1451 ' .. , a O.lly Pilot Clu•ified ----~·'----Ad!~ . •
847-3842
$~95 1 --~.~~Co;;:::x.7ne71~500o;-~
HUNTINGTON BEACH 2 th~•="t~~ 0~
646-2898 days, 557-4Mo eves.
Chrysler-Plymouth '69 DODGE 2 dr H.T. Gui.y
16861 Be~"hi Hun" .. -...... ch. &: Sporty. SUper ~or student
842-4631 -540-51'4 or owinget'. $1l(ll5, 846-2590.
t91fSedan DeYille FORD
Full '°"'"· laetory air, vtnyi '70 Ford Ranchet'O' tQP, doth Ir leather inter-, •
k>r, AM-FM radio, p:iwer VB, alr, power 1teerfne, vln)'t
door locks Vogue ure1. Lo. root. 9llim.
cal one o-car. (102409) $2495
$5777
Nabers CadlDac MacHoward
AUTHOitizEO DEALER 1!9-ml or Sll-0608
2600 ilAlUIOR Bl., Col)ltt ht ~ lla-
1 00SJ:A MESA ' Santa AM
~!Ill Open Sunday * '71 FORDS *
•11) <XlUPE ilo VWe. Full GAt.AlaEs e ~STANGi ~~'\ii:_"·:,r ~ .. ER;INO~iP. ,
1:13oo:, $459' 221 w. Kalflill, Ana1>e11f
DAV~ ROSS PONTIAC «7IO nMOSO ·
2480 Harbor Blvd. al Fair Dr. '67 TORI> T·B1'4 l'UU pow·
Cos'a Mesa 5d6-8!l17 tr, lac(.. I.Ir. Blueftook.Pr!ce 11480. (UQ~·~1 '
TIME F~n $699 ~"l"'rc c A <"H DAVE R(I. s PONTIAC "U ~ /';... 24&'.I HU'bor Blvd. at .taJr Or,
"° A!i11>•• 1l
. s71 CHEV ·-· '"-'"· ••· ••491 . . • ,,t., 1)11( ll'tfl ... "~ "6
) , "'"""· I fe,dlMM ll'Ml. , 1 'l'"' CHEV "'"' .... .._ •.•• S24'6 U,. I P,S.. f".I ., Ak', MldW~ •
; • Tlr-.1 (Ml /4VAJ . ·1q CHEY II C.MMo. A.T ..... YI, $2496 .t._ °"" ... -(14'1tlJ ' . . . s. CHRYJS -T ........... $2411 . , .... ,_.,. ..... ,._...,,
, Ytlrl ltif, l'Ht. WI,.
,. , ' t•fY, ,(Tg> 1MI. ,
'89 BUICI ~~~~ -$2716
'
s70MARK111 ·~ ~ .... 1189&
OR THnOUGM A eo.i. M•.. ~1
DAii. Y Pll-!lT ·n FORD Lro B1'fhm 2 Dr. Cor.r ht I H• .......
Soni• AM ANT A LOADED. ~· JPS!,
W D ** M._1011 ••
"Tlll-MYO,to lllOTOll "°"r "' 11 "· 11_ ,_ .,.._ IAlltA '\!IA. C:.UWO.NIA mn I .._ ______________________ . ______________ ·--------~
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Today's Flaal . -
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ORANGE CQUNTY, CALIFORt~IA Tt.IESOAY, JANUARY II, 1972 TEN CENTS
·pos~~ Huge Mobile Home Park
' . •. ~ber crillca have er~ tbe plon as Capistnno,'I was OQe or·~top-prlorlty
·well, cbarging·that wtthoqt a fOrg:µtl park '~ts •by the homeowiler~s alliance
structure, controls <J!iei' ibe dtve!dpinent Alblida)•: ' • · ·
wou\d bf!' lmpoSSl"ble', '1 4 AttltOugtv the council ' action was
'lbl'J: tiact date 'fthd ... 1J.me, ,fdr .. the unatiJmous,•councilrnan Bill Bathgate did
supervi$o!'a' meetill(w~ UM!·;~~I 'e«~ 3l)Otl1er point or view, by stress·
COJI\'8 qp ~ .,not ~ ..knOwo, ~)>lit Cty . ing1 th8t ·perhaps: the proposed' Use migftt
Manager Don Wldzi"l-sa'!l tbls,Q>Orillng. be'bet~ th8n 'tbe R-11 slngle-la!J)ily lam! '\II>! ·the da\e .,wlll ' lje either'• tale in uAe ·One•' propesid for 'the steep,. hill~
JaJiU&l'Y' or in early F:'ebruary. · ' · a.et'eage. , ' ' · ' ·
.s.ndJng ""iolliciai.·delegate to-oppose II the land 1'ere develoj>od 1or reJP!lar ~ ~evelopme,nt~ l~bel~. ••Ra 'n c b o ·.houses, ·he SDi!d, an -e~tirrta~ .. 2\.rnlllio.n
J.
.. , . . . ' .
. •· • • • .
cubic yprd.s of earth \VOuld ha\'t to be
1noved and compacted to make the land
more stable.
''That's a lot 1nore earth moving than even wen~ on 'inlfie southerly part of the
c.1ty," he said.
The .southerly portWn has been sub-
j~ ·to large grading projects which
left dienuded hillsides when the developer
~nl bankrupt
-~poltesmen for the developer have ·told
CQuQdbnen that because or. unstable soil •
.. · -1-·:x· · · :: e·-· :s ......
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conditions. the only feasi ble use for the
1.000 acres is for a mobile home sub-
division.
Standard grading f9r foundations and
dwellings \VOU!d require so much grading
that costs would make the land values
prohibitive for purchasers. they said.
The mobile home subdivision \vould be
the county's first.,
County planning comm ls s io ner ~
already have stamped the controversial
proposal Y.'ith their appro\'al.
' . . . ..
Joan .Wants
Irvine Area
.
'In I Piece' ..
By BARBARA KREIBICll
Of IMI i1MHJ ,, ... lttft
Joan Irvine Smllb turned down an offer
of $100 million cash for ~ stock ln tht
Irvine Company about five years aao, the
heiress revealed during a press con-
ference at her Emerald Bay home Mon-
day. , , •
She refu&ed ''Ille ·!>l(et'. ~mlf)e, by a
representative of 'a, New ryork: cor-
porallon, Mrs. smith said, tie£11Ule abe
.. "felt -it would J!"d ,to tl1e, fir~ llJl'of
'i ;1!1f' atanil(alljer'~ l)a1It ar.e ~11 ~ ~·-t:i".l ra~ ... '}f,:S 1 ·cne-·p1eCe'anc1 see~-
'with tt~· sfle said. '1'\fOrWJlli'i(tli_
.tho uiu.v•TlllJ ·~ , !' 1't _
"""e leelini 1)1ou1 °:~. I'd lite to see it develilpe4 , following the
original Pertltal pJan or the university
town."
Mrs. Smith '•J>parenily made the
disclosure to,,emj)hastze her insistence
tbat, "If I were only J,nterested in money
I wouldn't~ doing all thil."
. She referred to her long-standing light
to break the James Irvine Foundation's
control of the Irvine Company and her
recent attempta.to block what she termed
premature incorporaUOn of the city of
Irvll)e. , .• · .
. Alked why abe.lhought the unidentified
. company would want to oUer~aueh & l\Jlll
for her 21 WCtllt of Irvine. COmpany
'alock, whlol\'!be baa complained pays on·
ly· u perc.nt dlvldends because or wbat
she, labtl1 company mlllD~, tho
heiress replied, "! don't know why. l
gue11 they thought they could light
harder than I did."
Her deslie,to 1ee the property kept In-
tact, she added, aJso has kept her from
availing heraelt of a calliomla )Jlw that
would permit her, as a minority
stockholder, to petition for dlisotulion of
tbe. company. A 1965 amendment to th•
states Corporate-Securities Act, l\.1rs.
Smith's· altotiley . Lyndov Young es·
plained, pennit.J iuch an . action by a
stockholder owning at least 30 percent of
stock other tban that oo which lhe com-
pla)nt Is being made.
• The Jamel JJlvinl.Foundation owns 53.7
pe-1 or fotal Irvine Company stock
and Irvil1e /"11llY JD<mbtrS own tbe re-
mainder, but ol ~ Mts. Smith Is tbe
(Seo FOUND-'TI~, Pqe !I
~ ' .. OrU••
Wea tiler
Mor• patchy, d"11!e fog Is !oro-
cast !or Wednetday, wit!> hlly ""'"
shine ln the alien-. Utt1 .. teinp-
erature change predktod, with
hlgha along tho eoast -t II ri11n1
to 68 inland. Lowa tonight H .
, ~SmE TfP A'f ·
• Th< c .. 1 of 'l»i!lll Cb~I
'soyr It will sCorl i!ilelOlllOQ •llle
,,.,,.., of violators.of WGQe-J>Ml:e
contf'Qll, oud hinted tllGl l'<IU!ls
of cou11cll 1n .. 1!1gatl...,~ II<
gioe11 to _,ons JIU~ com·
plalnu ogal111t violators. S••
11orv Page 5.
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I
I .. i f DAIL 'f l>ILOT sc ____ T_Ut"'1_..._""""'7_._11,._, __ -•
Resolution Gets Study
itizens' Presentation Sparks Interest
A many-ractt!M resolullon by U1e m
plu. members or San Juan Capistrano's
new Alliance of Homeowner Associations
-dwelling at length on ma ny points of
land use, plannini;: and philosophy -won
ne.arly an hour of attention by city coun·
• ·cUmtn Mondey and a pron1ise of a ma jor
• meetin& next wetk.
The resolution sparked I e n g t h y
, dlacu11ion that quickly developed a co un·
ell constn1us -that UM!: San Juan
• • 1-.i plan -Milt ravlow IJld poulble updau.,,.
In tht meantime, presldenls of all the
asJ11ociatk>ns which are members ot the
formidable alliance , will meet with the
council Wednesday night of next wee.k to
hammer out 501ution~ to problems. The
meeting will start at 7:30 p.m, in council
ch.amberi1.
The homeownerll 11ll iance'1 bas ic
format assert& thtt growth has become
rt111paat In tJie city and It lhrtatealna
tht eatablllhed 10111 of the ~community
as a Ken ic, tourist-oriented res ldtnt!ol
community with an abundance of ope.n
space.
Aside from the resolution , all iance
president Robert McCollum asked !or
three more actions from councilmen:
-A metllng wit h the council and
all iance presidents to dll'cuss the 101ls
and objectives of the alliance 1nd the
council.
Coastal Alliance Sought -The selection of a delegate to fight
the proposed S,000-unit mobile home sub-
division proposed northerly of the city.
-The rescinding of the reeent approval
of proposals by the Pacesetter develop-
ment firm for 500 houses on acreage
along Orte1a Highway, an example,
P.icCollum asstrted of "ind iscriminate"
development of the city'1 valuable open
11pace.
AgainstFreeway Planning
: A Newport Beach anti.freeway group
: wantJ to form a coastal aJ liance a1ainst
tht Pacific Coast Freeway and Is seeking
the help of cities and towns from Long
From Page 1
FOUNDATION .
principal individual stockholder.
AJthoogh the heiress said the $100
million offer for her stock had been made
'and rejected verbally, with no written
: commitments, newsmen noted that it
· woold indicate a valuation or the shares
at SSS. rather than the $25 paid in the last
recorded stock 1ale In 1968,
The tla:ure is slgnUicanl ~ause, under
the Tu Refonn Act of 1969, for whkh
. Mrs . Smith lobbied vigorously in
·Washington, the James Irvine Foundation
must. beginning this year, substantially
increue its payouts to charity.
~ The heiress has maintained that the
~ foundation will not be able to comply with
· the new payout requirements unless it
relinquishes control of the Irvine Com-
. pany or forces the company into a
wholesale dispersal of land holdings to
provide the necessary ca sh ..
The Tax Reform Act will require the
foundation la make a 41h percent payout to charity in lt72, increasing half of one
percent annually to a payout of slx per-
cent. based on an Internal Revenue
Strvice appraisal of its assets. This ap-
praJs1l is due by March 31.
The Tix Reform Act also provides that
no foundation Is permitted to hold more
than 20 percent of any one corporation.
Based on the 1968 1tock sale, the foun-
d1Uon'1 Irvine Company stock would be
valued at $114 million. This would require
1 p1yout in excess of S5 million in 10'12. A
·more accurate appraisal, said Mrs.
Smith, would require a payout many
· times larger. A reeent /oundallon report
·showed income of $2.S million /or the past
year.
· The repart also listed assets of $10
rnllUo~ apart from the Irvine Company
1tock. Found11ion attorney Howard J.
Privett has 1tated the foundation will be
able to meet its payout obllgations from
these other resources.
Mrs. Smith painted out during the news
conference that Congressman Wright
Palman's House Committee on Banking
and Finance is inaugurating an jn-
vesu'gation of attempts by foundations to
1ide-step the payout requirements of the
Tax Reform Act.
Her attorney suggested that an attempt
by the foundation lo Jiletl the obli.ation
by selling the SIO '1iillion in 'other
assets," now earning six percent and pro-
viding I $fi00,000 payment to Charity,
would constitute a "definite evasion."
Discussing so-called mismanagement of
the Irvine Com pan y which results in
minimum earnings , Young cited a $1.2
million loan from Pacific Mutual. on
which the company has obligated itself to
9.9 percent interest payments for 25
years.
The company. Mrs. Smith asserted, is
sorely in need of "rea lly top men " in its
managemen t. in the areas of finance,
planning, real estate and ,griculture.
OIAHlll COAST
DAllY PllOT
OMHGf toA.lf PUILllHIHQ COMPAW't
••'ti•'t N. Woe4 f"T&tllllrtl Md , ... l&IW
J1di: •-c ... 1.., Ykf PntklMT MCI ci.tttl "--
lJio,,. tt k'11.,iJ
lt•lor
Th;""' A. M urpllTn•
Mll\eill!Q ftlllr
CJi.uln 1-f. to•• Jlicli1N P. N1tt ,...,r,..,, MM!lelnsl Eall/ort
IAltil• IMdi Offk•
212 For11t Aw11111• .M1lli~t •ddr111:.r .o . l ot•••. tl•sz
S• Cle-t1 Offk•
JG$ N1rtll El C11111N R1•il, tZ,71
.,....om-
Cllt9 Moo41· ,. w .. 1 •" ,..,.... N-1 ln<11~ Wl HI-hu...,_..., .__.9-!UWJaw.a.....,..
Beach to Slln Juan Capistrano.
The Citizens Coordinating Committee
will write city officials and a I I
homeowners' groups up and down th11
Orange Coast in an attempt to fight the
proposed freeway, Newport Beach Vice
Mayor Howard Rogers sa id Monday.
''We are trying to gel a coordinated
group representing all affected areas,"
Rogers said notlng the grow ing opposition
to the freeway route.
The CCC, an offspring of the Harbor
Area Freeway Fighters, forced an in·
iliative election in Newport Beach last
March that resulted in the city's can-
cellation of the route agrceinent with the
State Division of Hi1hways.
"Thi.! attitude toward the freeway is
gaining momentum," Rogers said this
morning saying he thought the coastal
alliance ''is an interesting way to go."
Rogers noted that groups opposing the
freeway h a v e already surfaced In a
number of town! Including Laguna
Beach, Huntington Be1ch and Seal
Beach .
He said It there is enough interest
shown the CCC will try to schedule a
meeting of coast1I cilluns early in February.
Rogers said the letter will be mailed
later this week.
"J don't know the exact wording," he
said , "because they're 11111 pulling the
final toucht-! on It. But basically It 1ays if
there ill enough rt3ponse we wil'. 1et up
the meeting to aee what we c1n do with a
united force.·•
From Pagel
NEVADA ..•
personatar w1s interviewed Friday is not
the moat import1nt Issue.
Besides thou three new poinlll, the
alli an ce is pressing for a freez.e on wne
changes -a compromise among it~
ranks of 'earlier propo1als for a total
h11lt for a period of new development in
the city .
Councilmen swiftly agreed to opposing
the mobile home! and lo schedule the
meeting, but agreed ttiat the Pacesetter
matter was •·too far gone."
"New sentiment and direction is need·
ed." McColtum said.
"This city had a population of 1,100 in
1960 and has grown to more than ~,000
residents since then."
He stresstd that the city must preserve
ils charm, its hills and open 1pace.
He flayed asserted "indiscriminate
development in the past," a n d
specifically pointed out the recent city
.approval of the major development along
Ortega Highway.
On the free1e in :zone changes,
McCollum said the group prefer1 a 1ix-
month moratorlum to allow the city to
take a breather and long look at the
!urge in growth.
Councilmen Ed Chermak, in customary
strong language, stressed that aside from
airing gripes and complaints at next
week's meeting, he hopes th1t the
homeowner presidents 1lso can come
equJpped with solutioru to the dozen• of
poignant questions raised at Monday's
discussion.
"I want answers ... I w1nt you to
help me find them," he uid.
Second Language
Teacher Training
Course Slated
He aaid that If the McGraw-Hilt
documents were fraudulent than Lhe en.r "
Ure Nevada reprellentation by the
mystery bllilonaire "is a tremendoUJ
hoax."
A new JO-week training course for
volunteer teachers in the South Coast
Literacy Council's "English 11 a second
languaa:e" program will bqin Jao. 24 in
Capistrano Beach.
The training session! In the Laubach
method of language teaching will be held
weekly from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. in St.
Edward C1tholic Church, Sepulveda ind
Domingo Avenues.
Greenspun fl.id a IO-page letter bearing
Hughes' algnafure and the endorsement
of the check acknowledgin1 down pay·
ment from McGraw-Hill was in the same
handwriting as letters which Hughes'
lawyers presented In Nevada courts as
authentic during the battle over the firing
ol top Hughes aide Robert Maheu.
''You can 't have it both ways," said
Greenspun. "lf McGraw·Hill document..
are fraudulent then the entire Neva4a
representation is a tremendous hoax.
"There is no believability in what the
Hughes organiz.ation is doing," 18Jd
Greenspun.
The South Coast Literacy Council now
conducts center! at Capistrano Be11ch,
Dana Point and San Clemente, according
to president Dorothy Jackson of Miuion
Viejo.
The centers .o;erve students of many
r~cial backgrounds. including Indian,
German. Mexican, Japanese and Puerto
Rican. Classes are geared for adults who
wish to acquire or improve their fluency
in reading, writing and speaking English.
Further information regarding the
tutor training classes may be obtained by
calling 497·113! or 830-5678.
'Anglo' Audience Gets
Chicano Culture Lesson
By CANDACE PEARSON
01 "'' 011,., ,1111 ll•ff
The man in the aud ience spoke Spanish
for almost tlve minutes and the panel of
four Chicano tea chers and counselors
listened Intently.
Half of the audience -the ''Anglos" -
stra ined to understand the different
language. Most failed.
"When he first started to speak Spanish
-1 was going to stop him because 1
thought it was unfair to the rest or you,"
another Chicano man in the audience
said. "But then I realized this would be
the perfect way for you to see our side.
"You who didn't understan , were just
like the child from a Spanlsh·speaking
home who goes to English class in the
first grade and can't understand the
word11, 10 is ofttn classified mentally
re tarded.''
The exchange In Span ish was 1 high-
point of the session, "College and the
Chicano," a disclJ!Slon of the barriers 10
higher education for Mexican-American~.
which took place Monday 11l the con-
vention of members of College Entrance
Examinalion Board (CEEB) at the
Newporler Inn in NewpoM Beach.
CEEB is a non-profit 1saocl1tlon of
about 2,000 college11 1eeond1ry l(':hoofs
and school 1ystems. Moat of the more
than 300 westun region members 11t-
tending the thrfJM!ay conference ending
Wednesday In Newport are 1dml11ions
oUi~ra. tln1ne:lal ald p e r 1 o n n e 1,
t'Ollnttlon, admlnl,tratora and teachers.
About IO people allended the "Ollcano"
diK'ussion, In which the school system,
•n "AnclHnl•rca!" 11<11 ol .. u..,.ncept,
Wliuqe probluna and an lllHnalU n
white attitude were named 11 barriers to
the Chicanos • access to colle1e.
The panel was comprised of Roy
Lucero, assistant professor, rounseling
center, California Stale College, Los
Angeles : Ricardo A. Marin Martlnei,
graduate student in education, Sl1nford
University : Rudy Ortega, counselor,
Ca brillo College and Raul Rodriquez,
graduate student in counseling, Cal State
LA.
All criticiied the schools for "teaching
Chicano children that our Spanish
language and culture are bad" -and for
even punishing the use ol the language or
display of cu11toms.
Lucero said the Chicanos are faced
with a paradox "when you tell them in
the first grade that their language Is
wrong and then they eo to hlih school
and find they have to take Spanish or
French to graduate."
Ootega blamed "igornance and in-
sensitivity" on the part cf caucalli1n1 for
the down·1rading of Chicano culture.
He su1gested lh1t teachers and all
classified personnel -including ad-
mi ssions offletrs -be required to take
"crash'' courses in u n d er1 ta nd in I
Chicano history and culturt.
The 11chools' main fault lies tn makin1,
the Chicano feel he "can't make It, ao he
fl1ures -why" try,'' Rodrlquei aald.
Moderal<>r lllchar~ Jonaen ol CEEB
pointed out th1t by lll1h achoo! gradu•·
tion, only 80 percent of Chicano• who
entered elemtntary achool are •Ull
rnrollecf. Panel!JIJ support<d mon coll11•
r«rultmenl prafl'aml. but aald a hiller
appncllU.0 of Spanlah cultw. and w... ... will -~ to ..... alao.
•
D,lll'I' "ILOT Sl•ll l"htlt DOHENY VOLUNTEER FIRE DEPARTMENT ELECTS OFFICERS
Mel Pierce, New Fire Chief and Don Croucher, President
D·oI1eny Fire111en Select
Mel Pierce New Chief
Members of the Doheny Volunteer Fire
Department have chosen Dana Point
businessman Mel Pierce as their chief for
the coming year. Capistrano Beach
Palisades resident Don Croucher will
serve as the squad's president for 197%.
Those choices and other officers were
selected last \\'eekend as the firefighters
and their wives gathered at an annual
banquet at the Margarita Inn.
The banquet also served as a celebra-
tion or the arrival of the department's
new, unique rescue truck which wa1 built
with. money collected from local con-
tributions and a donation by the County
of Orange.
The truck arrived over the weekend for
preliminary inspection then will return
soon to the factory for painting . and fit·
ting of extensive st ocks of rescue gear.
The truc k is capable of carrying a
rescue squad and all necessary lights and
equ ipment.
It also can be used as an ambulance for
carryi ng several victims at a time to
hospitals.
Other officers on the v o 1 u n t e e r
organization for the coming year are Al
Ortega, first assistant chief; Everett
Baggs, second as sistant chief; Monty
Burrows, first captain ; Gene Ward, se.
cond captain ; Leo .Buck (outgoing presi·
dent ) vice president : Ra y Middaugh,
secretary; Mel Pierce, treasurer, and
Phil Yessian, master at arms.
Bidding Opens for Dana
Harbor Boat Sales Yard
County officials have Issued their
formal invitaUon to business in'ttrests for
bids on the lease of the only business
available at Dana Harbor at present -
the marin1's boat sales and repair yard.
Award of the contract--depfnding on
the showing of bidders-will be about
May 1, acrording to 1 lengthy brochure
issued by the County of Orange recenUy.
The sales and repair business would be
located on about 450 feet of bay frontage
near the existing dry boat storage and
launching area.
Once the business begins operating,
yachtsmen with vessels in the merina no
longer will have to sail upeoast for
service! in Newport Harbor.
No ~aul-0ut facilities exist at present
for larit:e craft. Small vessels can be
t11ken from the "'aler with a crane,
however.
The terms for bidders is a one-year op-
tion to lease with a 30-year lease agree-
ment commencing al any time during the
option period.
Minimum annual rentals already have
been specified.
The county's rent for the boat yard will
be $2,700 the first year; "3.500 the
second ; $4.200 the third, graduating
finally to S&,600 for the sixth through
tenth years.
Percentages of gross Incomes for
various sales and services also are part
of the lease agreements, according to the
invitation .
The min imum bid for the parcel Is
15.000.
Thus far seven seParate business en--
tities hold leases on nine psrcels in the
harbor's east basin. Sevetal lots in the
area remain unleased pending decisions
on specific uses .
A marine-oriented shopping center and
landscaping are next on the projects Ilst
and officials hope that both will be ready
by summer.
Ex-executive Dead
CLEVELAND. Ohio (AP \ -Walter M.
Halle, 66, who retired last April as board
chairman an<:{ chief executive of the Halle
Bros. Co., died Monday. His retirement
ended a SJ.year career with Halle's,
which is now part of the Marshall Field
and Co. department store operation.
PASSWORD • • •
A gootl word p11sed orounCI 1l:iout •
businou is inv1lu1ble. A bid word c1n be
unfortunate.
'
2 Trustees
0 Renu;ip
'Committee
Tustin Union High School District
trustees Chester Briner and Robert
Bartholomew Monday were appointed to
a Saddleback Community College District
remapplng committee, thus round ing out
the memberahip ol lhe advlaory 1roup.
The committee Is to study a plan ol
redistri c ting thfl area served by
Saddleback Colle1e and make a recom·
mendation to (.'()liege trustees. The grou p
Is also expected to di scu ss whether the
method or electing trulltees to the college
board should be changed.
Two lru!teu from each Of the thr'e
unified or hiit:h school districts Jn the
Saddleb1 ck College area have been selec·
led to serve on the committee.
In additlon to Briner or Mlsslo" Viejo,
and Bartholomew, of Tustin, !hey are
Gerald Linke And Patrlci1 GJllette, both
of Laguna Beach. appoh1ted fr001 the
Laguna Beach Unified School District 11nd
Fred Newhart, or San Juan Caolstrano,
and Robert Beasley, of San Clemente,
both appointed from the Capistrano Uni-
fier! School Dlstrlrt.
While the two Capistrano members c(
the committee have indicated a
dissatisfaction with the status quo, other
committee members have spoken of a
de sire to mainta in the present governing
rules of the district.
The Capistrano members. and the
distrct's entire school board, have gone
en record as saying that the method of
electing trustees to serve on the college
board should be changed.
The Saddleback board me m her s ,
although ea ch lives in one of five trustee
areas of the district. are elected at large
by voters of the entire community college
district. Newhart and Beasley have said
they would llke to change this to having
each trustee elected only by the voters of
hill own district.
The other four committee members -
and the present college trustees -have
spoken in favor of keeping the present at·
large method ol electioo.
The advisory committee will also
discuss expanding the college bollrd from
five to seven member.o; by cutting the
Saddleback Valley into three trustee
areas, instead of the present one. Thi!
expansion must be approved by voters in
the college district and college trustee!
must make a final decision on whether tQ
expand prior to Feb. 22 in order to put
the matter before the voters at the June
6 primary election .
If voters approve expansion, college of-
ficials have said that the two new
trustees would be appointed by the
present governing board of the college.
Vandalism Wave
Gets Close Eye
In South County
Orange County 1her1ff'1 officers a r e
investigating 1 wave of vandalism that
has played havoc with operations at three
construction sites in the south county
area.
Hardest hit was the Salt Creek Beach
ttlnstruction site ~alt Creek Road and
Pacific Coast High"'1y near Dana Point
where intruders believed to be juveniles
poured sand ir.to the hydraulic systems of
construction vehicles.
Ray V. McBride of the McBride Truck-
ing Company told deputies that the
damage to his firm 's equipment could run
as high as $2,500.
Gauges, windllhields and headlights of
tractors parked overnight at the Laguna
Niguel golf course were smashed in
damage that is expected to cost the
Ebe-nllteiner-Fullmer Co~pany at I ea s l
11,500.
Again, deputies belleve, the de1tructlon
was the work or juveniles.
Our growing suc111 in the past 14 yous
h11 beon due to tho "good words" ind
r1ferr1l1 11nt to us by our cu1tom1rs • ALDEN'S
No 1mount of odvertisin9 con repl1c• •
personel recommendation.
Wo 1ro not inf1llible, but we 1ro working
towords that go1I by giving our customers tho
bHt service ind ,quolity poulbl1. ,
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
' COSTA MESA
646-4131
HOUIU: Mon. thrv Thurt., f i. S1>0 -'''• 9 i. f -Sat., 9:JO ,. 5
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Jf DAILY PILOT
OVER THE ·COUNTER Yourltf~
Investing Stock ..... ~=-= .. _, ... , ............... ,,.. • • ...,._, ....... .. i.11a.
NASD I.Iott"" M ,..,.y, hnuary 10, 1972
.
Like Millionaire -~ w.~.J~t=",.• ~.,...t.. ~~~ II::'"'' ~ .t:; A'.rw,. tri~ to obey 111 my life -and l~a..• lnM< ~ lf By SYLVIA PORTER
Whlt'J aft UJdul stock"!
It's a 1tock with a
"dominant position tn its
lnduslr)', a unique product idea
Ind/or marketing develop-
ment, qulllty managmenl In
deptb and aelllng at • low
price in comParlson to its
tamlnp,.. ln!WUI H I r r y
Fowler, chainrwl Ind chief
execuUve officer of Fiduciary
Trust C.o. of New York.
"It IUo ttgulariy Pl)'I a
dlvldend of I percent a year
and IMUally goes up 10 per·
eent in price."
Belort you do • doubl .. lake
bn that one, hit me QSUn: you
that thla f!!eal stock doe1 not
u:llt. Let me 11sure you, too,
that Fowler dellbtretely gave
me such a rldlculously
unrtall51lc definition In or<ler
to send on the muAlt to you
not even to try to find • llock
lll<e this.
ln fact, he went on to say,
"Scale your dreams to
realistic alu. The Ideal stock
18 m!y a gUtter In the 1111!yst'a
eye, always just be)'1Jnd reach,
misty and tantalizing."
Fiduciary Trust manages
more than la billion of ln-
vestmtnt funds for lndJvldualJ
and iruitltutlons -putting it in
the top dozen New York banks
in total of fUndJ managed. Sin-
ce the minimum account it
wrn accept is $400,000, Jt ob-
vioUJly lnveltl funda for many
tndlvtduaJ1 who are
mllllnnaltts and m u 11 i .
mllllonaltta. What rules does
Flducl&rJ follow In Investing
for theae millionaire accounts?
What ru1 .. might be just ..
aptly applied eo you'! Here are
HVeraJ ol Fowler'• sug-
gesUona:
• U YoU ln1l1t on
apecullllng or trading, put
ulde a small amount of your
total for thb purpose alone
and lnvut the big balance ac-
cord.Ing to the buie con-
aervaUve rulu. ..Don't con-
lult speculating wllh In·
vesting," 1&)'1 he. Slmple but
fundamental.
• Always teep some liquid
funds on hand. You might, for
Instance, need cash for an
emergency at a time when the
aecurltie1 markets are ad·
veree and you 1l!Ould ICM by
being forced to seU. Or you
mliht want cash for an W\l:n-
tlclpated great opportunity
and not want to sell securities
you own to raise the money.
. •Invest only in quality
. securities, no matter what the
area in which you are in·
vesting. This b one rule J have
l'U conleH tbe onlY tlJnt I've ti'"" ' • • 'EJ been badly burned ln tbe • ~ .J-'
marketl ii when I've atra,H 4 ,.. ,._:le
tvtlD a bil You may arcue • ~ h r"' ~
th•t buylnc an1y tOJ>ilted •• "r~ "" • ~'
secur1u .. 11 dull, bql you .,. ~~ r... ~·
wrona; many of tbe biae•t !t~i ~ •
winnen tn recent years bave 1· ':Mr
-the mi. <1U1111y -·a w
'The stocks don't have to carry : 1 111
world·famo111 name1 or be In-"' ~ A K eluded lo tbtt Dow-Jones "' • 11
average lo be of top q"'1117, • ~
)'OU know. A t1 r:
• E1t 1bll1h1 policy of ~I:!.~~ meamn,tut but not uceulve -.,1 adf , 1
dlver11ficaUon. Too m a n y ~ fr~-,
aeparate iuuu, aaya Fowler, :1:1'1l 'Ls
can dlm.lnilh what ii ceneraU.y """ G'""
a very sound portfolio. lf1.1 ~ ,
gulde: ",,. • normal practice, ~.Yr:"
the orltinal coat of a
particular lnvatment lhould
never be le11 thin 6 percent of
your total portfollo.1
• Never feel Jocked into a
porticular llock 1>«:1uae of th•
prlce you paid or your own
ego. Thil ii not 11 euy to do
11 Fowler'• a:llb wordl aug·
cest, but tt 11 another fun-
damental. If you have put
your money Into a lemon, if
the stock you have bought is
doing the oppo1ite of what you
•xpected, 11!\ out. The Wall
Street lingo for thlJ, 11 I hive
always heard It it, "CUt )'Our
losses abort, Jet your profits
run."
· • The other tide of the
preceding rule ii, ln Fowler's
words, "Remember, the rt
comes a time when even the
best atock can be fully priced
and ought lo be sold. lvatch
th• price/eamlnp multiples
(the relation or the atock's
price lo Its earnings). Wben
they a•t loo far out of whack
for a speclflc Industry, It's
time to sell." You can't, in
aum, put even the beat of
atocU away and forget them.
You have to keep watch.
• Recognhe the degrte of
risk you can afford to take.
At this point, I would go
further and urge you to con-
sider whethe~ you want to
take on lbe rilb of the D)lf·
keta altogether-In view of the
fact that it's a cinch for you to
get f percent a year in uvings
certificates at any financlal
Institution on the oomer. And
you can get 7lf.& to 71h: percent
lnterat Oii -hig)l.JITlde
bondl In the O!>tll market. In
the bonds, you'll aurely get
greater protection a g a I n s t
price eroslon than in most
ltockl. And In 11 v Ing I
certlOealH In 1 full·mvlce
bank. uvlngs bank or a aav-
lnp and loan U10C!atlon, you
need not worry about price
fluctuationa at all.
LEASE or BUY • • •
---1 '72 CONTININTAL 01 MRCVIT -
, ...... -~ tJll fffn ......
""' ., .._ff•I ....,. Llfftllt .,.
MWftll'f'I " ""'' cfllllta. w. ,,.. .... 11t ..-.,. YM .... NII 1Nillfllllflg ..... ,,..,.1111 "'..,.. .. ,,_. ......... -FREE BOOKl.ET
...... "' Wit Cff,... .. ,. .... """ ''" Ntllllf ......... '" .,.., .... t : .... ,...,.. llMflll ff ......,..,i., t • • : •AM•······-······-·· .. ••-···· .. ·"·-.. --··--··••·· .. ····-----;, • • • ADOll1t ........................... ,_,,,,,,_,.,,, .• , ............ _ ... , .. t • •
I• C'" ............................................... PNOMa .................. i
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Should JOU IHH OP buJ? '
We',_ tNnspoPtatlon ......,...
111111111C11S•9lalL 1nmm • 1m -.is
'llcimem • .AlllllD '12 lllltlC mmc.w..t Yl4UllE ~ -.1n1111c 11 ... 10 -&to. w:t. Pow1rwl1f1~ *· -·"•r.-t ·-.M1~1r, a:~~ brokt:i, tl' I = 1111ita liat~ ftt ~· ' I 'm"':.-.i.. ,. ~ -~c.,_. ~11 Mir,
C.... Met.t. MiWpetf h1cfl. Settt Au.,., ... • ........ . ............ .... -... • OUMM oouom • ............ •n•.aa-$114.SO-. •JAt.!Ja-IA-NI IBWICl,INC.
• /mmtdiat.o.t1t1wyon1me;,d1111 ... w.,.,,,,_.-w, IJS.S305
SERVICE llO.HOU-Cl.\LW. • 4120~11.WO.
I E~ING CJll~ .. •
CORR ... _..
CMJfQltM Wilt _, M
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MUTUAL
FUNDS
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Complete .. New York Stock List
=~ -i ~ .-. ..
+1.ti ~ " £1 ... _,. ...... ...... ::, .. -.,. .!'tt t
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T"""1, J_, 11, 1'!72 DAILY PILOT J1,
GWC Moves to South C.oast Circuit Anr~ters, Crestv·lew A .. oa
Dfi!hlos,· Tritom
BJ CllAIG SllD'F
Of "" .......... .
· A Soutilml Calllonll1 junior
eoDec• 11lequtna committee
.bat ncommended I b I t
~dtn Wes! ColJtCe b e
nrlt(bod t'rom the Southern
CaUfornta Conlereuce lo the
South Ooall circuit, e11ec11 ..
September of thlt year.
2'bl 'action came Mood1y
durlnc 1 metling al Golden
Weal
The roeonunondatlon !J part
ol a thre<-tchool, tbree<011-
lereoce package.
If 1pproved by the state
athleUc commJttee In two
w.W. Golden West would
then replace Mt. San Anlonio
Coaehes'
Reactions
To Switch
Membfrs of tht Golden
West College coaching stall
w~ In accord when informed
of the school'• switch to the
South Coast Conference Mon-
day-all were delighted about
it.
Here art the ructions of
members of the RusUer staff :
R.,, · Slladddord, lootbllll
coacll -"We're glad to be
back In Jt. We really never
wanted out (ol tbe old
Eastern Conference). We had
no ·problems in the Southern
California Conference
whatsoever. We enjoyed the
three years we were 1n iL But
It makes a Jot more sense tor
UI lo be in the South Coast.
"And l know the kids are
real happy about It. It'll be a
lo~ inore meaningful for the
kid.! lo play against people
they know and read about.
ll[ rully don't think the
South Coast Conferef'ICfl is any
tougher in football Tb e
Southern Cal Conference is 1
little more physical and if
anything we'U now be facing
equada wltb a little more
depth. But there's not that
much difference .in t.bt two
JeN\les." .. l\>~Jloo .. ,ll>ueqJL.<oat)· --~'lJ".I· &nat. to. be. 'biFk·~.a
leap Wltli"llie.-(·r.,t •of •the '
county JChools. I 's more fun
to play against the schools you
recrult asainst. I'm really
llciled lo d .. th.
"1 don't think the South
Coast Conference is a n y tougher in basaball. We'll be
ge.ttlng away from L o s
Angel,. City College but we'll
be 1alnlng C.rriloa. LACC and
Rio Hondo (members of the
SoCal circuit) have well·
coached teams and we think
we have a good baseball pnr
gram . But there are two or
three real strong teams in tbe
other conlerence, too. There'll
be more rivalries now. We
should have been in the South
Coast Conference from the
start, anyhow."
Tom Bum1tld, aquatics
coaclll -"It aounds good to
me if for no other reason than
it eliminates the travel. We're
undoubtedly slepping into a
tougher conference (in water
polo and swimming), but we'll
survive. We're kind of looking
forward to lt.
"The South Coa!I Con-
ference is the best in the state
In water polo and it's very
strong in swimming, also. If
anything we 'll make it
tougher.''
Tom Nooa, track and fleld
roacll -"I am looking
forward t o re-establishing
some or the old rivalries we
had before we went into the
Southern Ca I If orn i a Con·
lerence. I really liked the
Southern Cal Conference. Our
relalionship with other schools
•nd coaches has been on the
highest level.
"Croa eountry iJ obviously
tougher in the South Coast
with tearru: like Fullerton and
Santa Ana. In track it'll be a
pretty even league with Mt.
SAC moving out.
Dick Stricklin, basketball
coacti -"I think it's good.
The main thing is we'll be
playing again!t local com·
petition. ll'IJ be sort or an •II·
county oonference. Most of the
conference acbools will have
something in commo11."
In lhe Sooth CoHI ctn:uit. Ml.
SAC would move lo the
MotropoUtan Conlerenct In
r.lace of Santa Monica and Ute
atter school would move into
the Southern Cal Conference.
At 1 sll:nllar meettna 1n
November, Santa Monica had
uked the releaguing com·
mltie. to be assigned to
another confereoct.
The releaguing committee
recommended a short Ume
later that Santa Monka be
allowed to join lhe Southern
California Conlerence, making
ii an eight-team setup for foot·
ball. (LA Southwest will com·
pete in football in the con-
ference in September}.
1be rt(OQltnend•tion WU
thtn pa1aed on to the ltate
boanl, but the Item WU
la bled.
Monday'• recommendation
WU unanimowly lpproVed by
the 12 members or the
rel•asulnc commltlee tn at·
lendlllC<.
And because of t h a t
uoanlmous approval Go1dtn
We.st athletic director Fred
Owens doel not let! the
recommtndation will have any
problem peulng the state
athletic comnuttee.
"We think it's a Imo 1 Y.
automatic," aay1 ·o w e n s .
"There was no serk>us op-
position and lt was accepted
unanlmously.
"We really feel 1ood abool
moving lo the South Coast
Conference. We JUll hive not
bad the flnlnc:lal retuma In
the Southern C1llfornl1
c.onfertoet that we would
have ln the South Coast. We'rie
bou{ld to bave 1 better am
playing against ochoolt auch
as Fullerton, Ctrrlloa and
Santa Ana.
"And there wW be • 1rt1t
deal mon lnttrut. It'll be
more competitive p I a 'f i n C
1galnst 1Chools in tbt county,"
sa ys Owens.
The ne~ setup will feature
four Orange County J•yceea -
Golden Wtst, Orange Coast,
Alums Mix ..
Nli!looAilil Santa-.W-ak.nc
.
Batt"le Loop Foes ~~~= In OnPner ~.pg,... · · u.:i !hat r,... ,
Y~~!. "'•tllbl . Uvt .'"' I"" Uc lrYtnt .. 'boci la Ibo -lbt ._ Anfbelm a>Uqlata -l>al'
"W1 'antl&fpale 'lbal Ibero tountameot> for the. third San Clem,oate'• T\'ltono and
"ill be more mova ~'yeir. atr•llbt yur and llill' play t the !olllslon ~!<Jo Dl~hloa
San Ditao Clly Wlllll 'Olll ud ~ ol $1 "'1!1ar ' -both J.I l• ~ ... Lea~
there are ~ Jchoola tbot pqies bulrmlliir with ••· bubtball boltWtl01, art at
want a chall(t. alumni clailt •00. iht Al>ltater l!<>me in cln:ult cqe action
Golden w .. 1 bas been •. campu1 ~d Saluld.,. ll'eb. J ~t. ,
member of the Southem Cal · and ntMlnl tbrouih 'Mlly 10. ·• '!be TrltOaa ,.w try lo bunt
clrCull far the past three yom cot!'l> Gazy .\4&1111 nvellled the .bubble or u n be 1 ten
and prior lo that w~ put ol thll wee~ , Foothill'• Khlihll (U) whlle
the o.ld Elatern ~!""'"' Tbe I m·J>••11 Iv t UC! coodl Pat Roberll' Dlablos
which also Included Orange schedule 1.lo.1 w 1 11om.,..;.i. !Ut on tbe cballenre of the Jn·
Col!!, Fullerton and Santa home ,..,.., with the Ila.A vadinJI Tu,un Tillen (1·1).
Ana. Bruinl and. a ain(lt ,.,,ntat . Ot11er coritcala. around the
•
lkime court. advantage
leoerally pl1yill( I bJi role in
Ctellvi<w fortUDOI. ·
Miu Dowlinl hu been San
Cl~~t~·,. consiateot blgb
ICOm' moat of the ae1son.
. lfe bu, howev.111 r'ectived
pleasant belp In the lniU .. two
loop confrontations f r o m
forward mate Dal) Nau, who ls
1vei:a.gtng 18.5 ID · league, I!
compved to Dowlin1'1 17.o
norm.
Artists Seek 3rd in Row
with the USC TroJam at loop find wlnleaa'Vlll1 P~rk (!).
Bovard Field along wltli action l)·•tioltlng El Modena (l-1)
against S ta n I o.r d .. UC alxl winlfta• Orange (0.1)• 10-
Berteley, ~ J ... State, ~ cepting the non tut In trying
la Clara, Brigba!D YOW!i. to, derllt · •Jaltlhg defending
Oregon State .. Colorado, CCI champion Katclla (l-0).
If the TritOllJ are lo •Ptum
the ~'•, then theJ mast
fel amplt rebocmdinc from ·ll>S
Center Bill Kenney Uid tha
Jut break mual clldt w\lh M
I Slate (Long Beach) ud'a hoat AU gam .. are on tap f0< 7
In Orange League Race
of ot.ber1. o:clOck with 5:31 junior v..,.
There are e I even ity ·preUminaries'penciled tn on
do\lblebead,m listed durinl lit !rants.
the spring, most of them on For the two art• Crestview
Saturday. UCI will lace the contingents --" San Clemente
University of Nevada (Las and Mia:Jon Viejo both are
. . ' Pete s.nm 11 the controll.
Meanwhile, u~ the tm-..a~ a
few mUa at· Mllflon· Viejo,
tho. Dlabloa bave the league'•
lop acorer in 11>1 GU Norman-
die (21.1) and the loop's fifth
be!l ,polnl prodotu In M Mike
Bowen (lt.O).
Laguna Beach Hlgb's Artista
are seeking their l h I r d
straight Orange L e a g u e
basketball victory t o n I g b t
when they host Valencia'• 2-0
Tigen ln a circult crucial.
Tipoff is slated for 1 o'clock
and not since the 1984-45 <:am·
pa1gh bu an Artist quintet
been in the position of taking
over sole leadenhip of the
Orange loop with a 3-0 mark.
And that team went on to
record five straight wirll and
eventually WOWld up ln the
CIF playoffs.
The other loop encounter in·
volvlng an Oranee Coast area
team takes place at Sonora
where coach John Driscoll's
University Trojans are looking
for thelr inltial circuit win at
3,1~.
El Dorado's Golden Hawka
will be trying !or a 2-0 mark
at Sadd!eback while Brea is at
Santiaao in a non-league test.
CoacD Jerry Fair's Laguna
Beach contingent has put
together back-to-back Orange
League wins with a balanced
scoring attack.
It's been the combination of
outside shooting from Chuck
Corwin (11.0 ), Jay Nel.90n
(9.5) and Nick Gillespi• (8.0)
along with the irulide attack of
Vince McCalla (ll.O) and
Norm Bedell (9.0) that has
proven successful for Fair.
But Falr's major concern is
in handJlng the Tigen' press-
ing tactics.
"We have to beat their
presa, there's no question
about that," says Fair, "they
have one of the best prusea
around.
"Valencia likes to UU: a 1-~
1-1 zone but they'll woe on you
Mesa Mat Tourney
Slated for Saturday
The wrestling get-together
forrperll! ~n as tht Orange eqa;t :C6n!!l1~1nvJtat1oo_a1 ·ww g,,~:ita . 'lnflljll: r-op"~t•(li'llY
uriaer '1l!i 1ntw·:hiMle -the
Coata Mesa! n vita t Ion a I
wrestling tournament.
Under the guidance of Costa
Meaa High m1r mentor John
Sweazy, the all-0.ay tourney ls
slated for Mesa High's boys
gymnasium with a starting
lime of IO a.m.
CoMOlaUon finals are pm.
cited in for 7 p.m. with cham·
picnshlp f In a I s tentatively
slated for an hour later.
Nine Orange Coast area
schools will be included in the
l&-team field and four of them
-Corona de! Mar, Fountain
VaUey, Huntington Beach and
Westminster -are expected
to battle it out for team
honors with Bolsa Grande.
The olher area schools
entered are host M e 1 a ,
Edi.son, Estancia, Marina and
Newport Harbor.
ln addition to the fine team
slate. there's a standout group
ot individual performers
scheduled to compete.
Perhaps the toughest single
weight category could be l!H
pounds, where some of the top
contestanl!i include Fountain
Valley's Les Becher and
E.stanc.ia's Vince Klees. along
with the top two finishers in
last year's tourney finals -
Mike J. Brown of Newport and
Tim Mack of Westminster.
The 136 spot is also expected
to be hotly contested, with
Corona's John Blanpied, last
year's 130 winner, entered
With Jim Sweeney of Edison.
third placer last year.
Some of the other blue chip
area grapplers on t.bt entry
Cage Scores
list include Mesa's Wayne
Jo!"'•, (U\6J;".eo$•'•. ·Gm>;
Calfy:(W), Esla11<Ja'1'Cl!\i<t
Kthl$'''' (1d6r, · F p.U:irt 1.1 n
Valley's Joe Moore (108) and
Preston Millier (178) and
Marina's Steve Eredia (115).
Cage Tickets
Tickets for the Angel\u
League basketball op e n e r
bet wee n Mater Dei'•
Monarchs and the Servite
Friars Friday night at Mater
Dei will be told on a pre-sale
basi.s only.
No tickets will be sold at the
door the night of the 8.ame.
Duca~ are priced at St.SO
for adults and 75 for students
and are on sale all this week
at the athletic departments of
both S<bools.
Game time is B o'clock with
a junlor varsity preliminary
slated at 15 :30. Only people
with pre-sale tickets will be
admitted.
Aussies Fall
Junior bowlers took over the
spctligbt at Kona Lanes last
week when a pair o f
Australian teams, on a
goodwill tour of both Northern
and Southern California, bat·
tied two local quintets.
The visitors fell slightly
short on the scoring end. The
Southland girls, after losing
the opening game by three-
pins, came back in the next
two to capture a 2240-2060
verdict.
Sue Jacbon, Judy Pawu1a,
Georgette Stacey, Candy Gib-
bons and Kathy Francis car·
ried the honors f or Kona.
Daphne Baker, L o r r a l n e
Kneller, Roalyn Munt, Sandra
Stacey and Mary Corbett
represented the Australlani,
along with little Glenda EUia.
The Aussie boys went down
to the wire with the local fiye,
but a blialtting final frtme by
Alan Fonte.a, Uwe MaE,
Lane Grado, Terry Joh
and Scott Slotkin brought
win to the Orange County
tlngent. 2630-2.151. ·
depending on where you art -Vega11) in five g~~ in-00 the heels of victories atter
they're V'1f flexible." duding a pelr ot, hOMNOO. each -dropped its I e a g u e
Fair says bis team can beat home doublebeaden, opener
Valencla'1 tacUcs with the Otherwise, tbty play three eoach John Baker's fast ..
proper dJagonal cub but' an games with most , te.ams, 1 breaking Toritona ha Ye betn up
even bigger item in defeating doub1~beadel' an Situr:day at and down this winter, as at· Ctt•h"Vtn LIAIUI ICOllNI ~·~ kllftl e Tl" /6'19. I. ,._flllnllll., M. Vlrio j 11 U.S. • 2. s~. 1C11t11o1 .w t1t
tbt' press is maintaining one field and a Jingle game teated by their 1-7 overall
tbe proper poise. during the .....t at the ~ ll>me record. But they may bave
"You can offset their press field of the o~r mquad. Foothill's number with the for three quarters of the game Against Cal State (Fullerton), •
J. Ctt.J W"llll~ 'oorl!ll9 l '1 ~l '
• s,., .. ,, K•ltllt Al ·I . a-. MIHIWI lllel1 a t.
but U you let them rattle you hoftver, tbe , Anteaters. have
and lose your poise for one three Jingle aam.es lilted. '
quarter It'll make the dlf.. · Two trips· show On the
ference," saya Fair. iERRY HULBERT schedule tb!J aaason. Tb' first
Fair says ball handling, wui be to Li1 Vegar, April 14-
quicknw and poise art what 15 for 1 three-game ·aet. The
he need.! from b!J lllartlng second will be lo Ncirthern
live. He's a!Jn got John UCJ Ai""..le ~lilornia May II>! lo lace San
Harbold and Dave Klesselbacb U Joee State, Santa C 1 a r a ,
ready for duty. Berkeley and stanford on coo-
Drtscoll's University quintet Ti•cketed secutlve dates. dropped • one-polnt decision to With UCI'• differences
Valencia and the Trojans , reaolved with the CCAA. tbe
mentor says hls five can whip Anteaters were invited to
Sonora providing it can come F CSF? J)&l:tidpate in the Anaheim back with an equal effort lo or • tourney one. •gain lllong with
the Valencia clash. co-boats Fullerton and Chap-
''We've got to rebound and man.
shoot better. But our kids have 11 UC Irvine frosh and assis-U the woe format ii follow-
realized we weren't producing tant basketball coach Jtrty ecl'aa ,last year, UCI will face
aa well u we're capable prior Hulbert headed (« Cal· State BVU, Oregoli state, COiorado
to the ValeDcia game," says (Fullerton) u the next cagt and either Loyola or Cal state Driscoll. (Coa Angelea) in 111 fm lour
OU.NOi LIAllJI ICOltlMG mentor for the 'ntanst . games. Aft~ that it wilJ cfe.
,...., ... ,"""' • Tl" Aw>S. It'S nn•urible that the former pend on the won-lost record to 1. ~v, El Dot.. I 21 f1.D ,....._. d ' ' :r. cfl•> Mice. u111._.111.,. 2 :u 1.s Troy· H~..mentor .wrn retµm · ('terrnlne ~Y· and Satur· . ~ '·!'.\lri·.$1:ci1t¥ckr.1 ·.!.'I~ .,. ·.: .,~ ...... ,./ .. 1\.t_· daf"foei '''' " • ·
t .. lr.1::.1.~ .. :.':~ ~ .. · ·,t·. •·,:Jr4'; :!Zti! ,, '.~:~a~~'f!Ci · ·:. · ycr,,dttett• ar3l~~~i1rttu!~r '. , • . .. . ..}. f'PCl l: ~ . .(o"r.:ifi$r • ., ... ,.. .....,.,a,year ag1>.and
La Hab, employer to <firect ·the,.'CSF pafticipated in the Western rn. baatetball fortunea with the Relgonal NCM tournament at
-, aMoWit?td re:signatiori 'of. AJe1: S.n. ·Fern~· Valley ·,~alt
Omalev at conclusion o1 ·the College fOl"'the second llt11ght HB Share curre~t, ..... n. ..~team. lpcluded •nth•
But !lOlbing ii definite at the . UC! , ached.ule are Chapman
pmeni and Hulbert ia the Colltat, ·s.n Diego State, UC
T S t fir!! lo admit it. Sanla Barbt,r#. UC Riverside, Op po . . San Fnnc:UCo State, Sonoma "Yes, I have written a lettlr Sla.te, ·Loy.Dll, Rl:dJ~. and
Huntington Beach Higb's
rampaging Oilers have moved
into a tie for first wltb ~
defeated La Habra in the of#
ficlaJ Orange County Tqp 10
prep buketball · poll as
selected by the D A f L Y
PILOT.
Qiach Elmer Combs' Hun-
tington quintet moved up OQe
notch after two overwhelming
Sunset League victories.
La Habra's Highlanders (U.
O) were forced to come from
behind against Troy Saturday,
finally escaping with a 74-68
victory.
Corona del Mar's Sea Kings
continue in third place follow.
ing a pair of Irvine League
victories, one a 50-49 sqtieaker
over No. 7 Los Alamitos.
Marina's Vikings g 1 In e ci
prestige in ripping
Westminster by 21 and ad·
vanced lo fifth place behind
Servile.
Huntington's position will be
chaflenged by No. 10
Westminster Wedne.sday while
the latter la back in the fire
again Friday against No. t
Western.
ORANGE COUNTY TOP 1'
Place Team Points
l. (tie) La Habra (IJ-0) 47
Huntington Beach (12-1) 41
3. Corona del Mar (IJ.I) 40
4. Servtt. (144) SI
5. Marina (H) 29
I. Katella (IJ.2) 25
1. Loa Alamiloa (1-51 20
I. Garden Grove (9-1) 1
9. Westttn (H) I
10. Wutmiost<r IHl 5
Otherl, Edlaon (t-1) ~
Troy (7'1) i each, El Dorado
(111-i) and Foothill (&-3) I
each.
lo tllem' and 'talked lo athletic Sou)bem ui.h State.
directOr Jahn Caine no the
pllone but they haven't !Md•
lriy ·decisioP on the. matter,"
HUJbert ·lold' ·the DA TL Y
PILOT tciday.
Prior to· hi1 stint· it UCI,
Hulbert coached at ~ Hlgb
in Fullerton (a.,...· 'Stilt
Collage bl:>ul.Vard from, the
.CSF campui) for lour yJ'an.
• Other• known lo • .be . V>-
terested In tho CSF . ~~S
a5"i~t, tncludt . Mo e
Radovich of Fullerton Junior
C.U.ge: sian Mormon. ID
llllstant at · ~: and '~erry
Pbnm, an.asslatant at Ulih.
Radovich SUC~ed Clll'HDt
O>F coach ·Ornilev at Fuller·
too.Juiilor'(blle1• wblle l'if!lll'
played for the <:Um!li Tl~
coach in junior ·C<lPege before
m1tricUlating lo use.
Area Prep
cage. :R~uitS
..... S -UCI A"'""'I (1),
f'.it. I -UCLA (t:»l.
lftto. t -ft C.I Sl1lw (lfllllfrilirl) ll:lO).
.... 11 -Wll\tfler c.;1... OH '"'-'·. .
,1111. lJ -tt S.,...O'-Slt'9 (J:XIJ.
~II. It -U. ef '-" Dlew OH 1-1.
,_, 21 -\.IC S11Q ..,,;.r, D1'4 OJ.
l'M. n -CtL St1i. (L.,_ lttdl) U;lOJ.
'1'111. " -•I UK U:JD).
Mauti I -Sorwna SllM U;•l.
M1rdl • -11 Ol•Plml" Ctl .... DH c-1.
Rustlers' Anderson
Tops Jaycee Scorers
Golden , West College'• Jim
Anderscin. i! the lop scorer
amOl.lJ tbe ,three area junior
college basketball teams, at·
cordinc lo !latbtlcs compiled
by the DAILY PILOT.
Anderson, a 1-5 sophomore,
hu acored 173 Poinb In the
Rustlers' 19 games for a 19.15
average.
T~ate Jeff St. Clair Is
...ond In scoring with 117
polnta: -an •'{erage of 115.7
per· outing.
Orange Coasl'1 Skip WiJ..
llama, 1 6-7 10phomore, has
I t . I
C ... ~~:.1~ · arwuius·
Chalk Up
Twin Win
the top average (2t.5). He'1
acor,ed 271 points In tJ games.
Anderson leada lbe aru jay ..
cees In field goals (tt!O) while
teammate Gary Orgill and
Williams art tied for the free
throw lead wilh 13 eacli. ' ·
Saddiebtct'a lone player'
averaging In double Olures is
freshman Don Swaim. ile'• bi\...~
ting at an U.5 clip. '
Golden West ii the only area •
achool with a winning record
The Rustlers have won 10 of .
19 games. 0CC bu I Soll :
mark anCI . Saddleback Is 2-IS. •
Golilert West -lllao bu ID
D.IS'' acoting •. ."areflllt•1P.er
R~. · loµo~...,b~~·
c:Qiii.· (T2,t): -.· -
(65.5).
......... Cl .. )
·Pl Tl" ..... ..,,,...,_ ,, ,.. u m ''·'
ir. Clelr 1t 1-32 SI 117 16 7 ~ lt 1111 !t ,,. ,~.~ o.o,:, It 71 Ill .t.t WU· lJ » 111 t .I
' 1' tt »· ~ s.1 'ff7.M3.• i . Ii 'I Ill 11:1
':..,. , ~ ,, '1 "r: ~~ II~' ' . I S.S
N"" •"] on ~""-.... -n .. ~ Lll'ttrY t t I 1 J·'
UT Wf'C ,__,.., Ute G~tm. ~ ~ ~ ''1 t:l
Golden West cardinals ol the ~=-,: .J 34/1,101 ·~:I Southern California Municipal er.... Ctrlrlf C).!l)
Baseball 'Alsocialion continue ~ !! • ~ 'l'·
play next Sunday at l .p.m. at ~ ll 1f] ~.~rtJ:J
Colla Mesa'•· TeWinkle Part c.,..~ li i H ·'ll f:t
against Weatrni.mter. ~=~ad 1J1· u" fi ;} Ji
'Dle ~ • w e pt a fit' 'f, zr. lll II ·~·f· doubleheader from the Buena mr. ~ I , i
Park Bearcats. lut SUnday at ' rr~ J I '
Buena Part RecreaUon Park ~r. '••••'•dl."1..IN-'.cal , ~ by 5-.t &bi 1~. scoru. eypr... College tresbm.;i
Ron' Saluar hid the .big ~
for·tbe wiJme,rl as he collected
lour 'hlta In nine plate tripo.
Including a do\lhla In each end
of U. twin bill.
. ... " ,., .... 11 11 11 1H 11.S
11 " 21' 1•. 10:
11 41 • ,~ ,~
If · , , 1• t ll" a
11: I~~~
,, QJ Dt 1,111. 6S.S Bruce Winj!erd.90Cked 1 aolo
home nm arid"Cards mate Ray~--------
Eckles aCcounted for a pair of two b&ggeri' lit the· nightcap. ·
Rlgbtbander1 Paul Pelz and
Miie mckman were the win-
rilng pitd1ers bi each conteat.
Hll 5th, CdM 10th • Ill ~ CIF
Huntlnilon llw:h Hlgb'1
Ollen remain In fifth place In
the CIF MAA bask•tball poll
u aelected by Southern
Calillnla. lportlwrllera.
Ulldelt.ated Vttbwn De I Ja4. tho lop 10 "ith 10 17
llnt~,.U..
P111deoa, a nil)t.1>oint •lit-..,· -av. Units beala ....,_, .. ._ ..
U-1111 lllld oote1t1d 8-........... ....
....... ti ... --La Haln'a BlPlaoden ,,. ......
Corona do! M1r'1 lrvine
League leaden broke inlo the
aelect drclo with 14 polnla.
good for 10th place behind
orange County's other entry.
s.rvlte.
Kai.Jla'a ll-1 Knlghla are
fourth In """ drelet. The
Knl(Jltl are the lone Ortnc•
CoUnty qullllel to -""" -El llondo II 1""'111 In 1bt ""poll. Key ~ la tho MAA
11111 --lndotlt -·· ttll.at -rated,_ "'*'· lloraln111d1 ot r
•
,._ondi11. J..nuat1 10. 1'72 SC DAILY "LDT ,,
Tuesday's Closing Prices Complete New York Stock Exchange List
r
I I
l I
...
%0 DAil V PllOT Tueseiiy, Jinuary 11 ,
DAILY LOG
Tuesday
Evening
JANUARY 11
l:t08 ···-......... i,., ... _
l fEf..";; .. . .,,,..,__
....... tflll1111dt Ill .... Sfttldll __ .... .
111 ........... .
0 ()) CII Ill """ ..... WMI: (C) (90) "Im ltdll StalW' ($115-
pertse) '71-lhintn McQfvin, C.fDI
L1111ty, Slll'IOll Olkllllll, lt1lph Mttk-
1r, Clalldt .Wm. ltlieolln1 l.11
Ve1ts Is belft1 ttrrotlltd by • v1m-
p(11, I dO'lm·Oll.fth·llltk MWSl!llll
ttlts to overton1• ctnlOM!p bJ his
bots ind the Pollet. fD DnW FJMI si... Cunts Ill·
clllclt the c11t Of tilt Ofl ·8rotdw17
musictl "Codfl)ell,''. Hurl! Down1, '™' sh1lll pilot fr111k r1tlm111.
ED III! T ~ • Ad....t11 "Should
Courts 8t Able ff Admit £Yldt11Ct
Pollet Hm Stiled ll1t111)yr'
l:IO e -""' -at<-. 0 -{C) ilOl "l>o ... lld t:OOl!J i. .... a. " a. Wnt" eoftdlllioft (cont· . • m "' U«tt ,., Mi tifJJ 'H. -Dori batts, 1t1hr1
.,_.,. J1ciie Coo1111. Danalfl
llfrJ, ltltll McOIYttt. IJJl!il-. ., ""' ...,,. .... ........... all-,_, .... Coot.,
MH
·mW II.ti "Th• Wl11dS ff Waf'
bf litmll.R Wouk.. mw-a1, ... Autt
'1:J Ylffma HOl'tiflllfl
7:t0 1J (J)Oli!!l•..,
(J)'TfWUI • C.-,11tll(;tl (() °'*'"" flJ Wllln My UM?
al HtllJwiliM S.1111'• .,, .... '"' 11)1 .... tfJeonll
tJ1) n. C... If Ovr TI111t1 fl!-· ert.. l1lru1t 1111_ ....
Ill"""''
1:30 .
0 CANNON·EXCITEMENT! * Mystery .11nd Suspense!
f) CJ) C.111111 Guest lib H11111er
plfYS • retbed net drittr wllo M-
()Offl• tlle prime ILl$ped: h11 tht dtr·
lnr theft ttf IDf!ll v1lu1bl1 reties
ffom • 81;.t Cllifornl1 minion. Alt·
Jandro Re:y 1tu auma 1s r1th1r
Jose pit
CJ ~ m Ji11tn 51fMr Al lflthtll
"Z1ehl1i1h" Hldiols 11t1mpts to
keep the Ptact when hl1 l1rcenous
uncl1 comes to town with 1 1m1ll
lort1101 ind two tx·ct1nvlct1 hDt on
his heeb. Guest include Strother
Mtrtin, B1rry Cahill, Ind M11k
L1wr1nu .
fJ luttr W11• Ntws
(D It Ttbs 1 Thid
fl) lfi1 ltttt Jeur111I '1ht Sei!tll
101 f1ecleiick Ooua11ss"
Q)TI It AllMUM*!
rt.ooom• ... 0 (}) CIJ (I) Narc111 WtlbJ, M.D.
7:31 "Tht Btsit Moment" Conclusion.
IJ GLEN CAMPBELL'S Cbmplitltions thr111en 111e tiv!s of * COUNTRY SPECTACULAR Or. Welby's dtualiltr 11\d her btbJ Joh·nny clih/Buck Owens followina irs birth. Chrht;ne Belfor• •nd . Rlch11d Vtn V1eet IUtsl.
Marie H1eprd " More! Micl'ltle Let is •en •s Katie l'lt!ls.
8 81111 Cl•INll Country Mu· IJ Merit: (C) (lltr 52111) ''Co111•
sic: ,Sll)l 'Jollnny C.sh, June C.111r 1ndle (ldvtnture) '56 -Dana An··
Medl1l1111rd, luck OWens. Mlnnlt dfews. Lindt Cristal.
P.Mfl. ""' Rlld, f1tddie tl•rt ind f.D FREE "SILENT YEARS"
M1(TM1i1proyic11 1 rntc1l1J of their *PHOTO ALBUM AT All hit"""' OFFICES OF GREAT o al m"''' .. ,,.,,,,, '"" WESTERN SAVINGS
W•ntld to 11 1 Cop" Bllttr ov11 EID ()j) Ttte Siltnt f1111 "Th• Gtn·
hit ftlluro to mttf tht pallet di· 1rar' 111 tltls 1827 film, Busltt Kett·
-.rtmtnr1 pl'lyslc~I r911Llirtmtnts, • on.ls 1n11aff in CiYil War esplon111. JOUnt 111111 fleunb tht law 1116 t114S f1J TNt Ttr
., accus1d tf murdtr. ~loller Ctmt
0 (J)!m TIM llW S.11M Cli) F1sti¥1I Maict11t
"DNI the DtiAI" Yl~I Ctn maku: •r11T11llc ••but 1s lfll lO:JO IJ 8 Tlll Ctl45llllg1r1 (R) Vikkil
filneto or 1 Vi1tn1m w1r ctr· C.u ruets.
rtsporwltllt who It involwd i11 the ~ ~ISll
!:ts.JClllO. Lts lit Nillten tbo ID Ntn lid Johni
. OlJ Al••11tH1 rn 1 Dr•••" S1N1111 m c.n ., tbt w1.i: CJ Minllfl $ M,M: (Vlr) "Cff.
•-" ....,. !••mo> '" -11:00 Q 0 ID®! Ill m •en
Sophl1 Lonn,. MuirDllll• Sctltll, 8 Mtrit: '1)f AwtMd" (m)'Sl1ry)
Fredric Mtfdl. 'U -Lorelli Younr. Roblllt Cum·
ID llopt't HWNI min1s. ~
GJ .,11111 00 Mmllaf Dilltn
tlJ) SdllCt '71 0 Cl) E!) N1w1
fJ:I Cun111I &tnb m To Ttll HM Tlllttr
cm w """' •• '"'1v1i1o m Minn,
1:0011 M.W. (C) (21u) '1llo PriKtU ll:JO fJ (I) M1l"f Criffln
tnd hi l'lr11t" (comedy) '45-Bob B ®' m Jtbnnr C1mn
ffOPt. Wllttr Sltztk. Vi11in!1 Mtyo. 0 (])(I) (I) Diel Ctv1tt
CIJ Tllli Is Ytw lift m MMe: "Johnnie Ccl111 l1!1IJ"
m.T~ v CtMHIUHICll (dr1rri1) '43 -Grtte G1or1e. Jtmel
CD De Vlr&lni11 C•tnlf. QI Movit: "Pr!vatt'I "aanss"
1811 c:... •1111H• (comedy) 'SS -Rich11d AlleR-m fti110 borouah. Dennis P1icr.
1:30 II()) Kowtlf fJft.O 1>1111 Wynter Qi ftr Ad111b Only
auab ••the al11fnend ol • dollblt 11:52 D Mowit: "C1pe C1n1wtftl ..._;
1191\t Wflo ii ln\IOIMd In ellbortlt sttn" (tci·fi) 'S2 -Scott P1t1rs,
xh11M lly 1 powerful unkaown Lindt C.nnell.
IOlllCI tG frame McGirntt In the
lifll: pert of I Two·pllftr.
B O!mtl6C1Al!S1lf1r ~
Lita. CltlldrM Document11y uplt1t·
in1 tbo tfftcts on children of 1111
1:00 8 Mwit: "l1n1azi" (1dventu1t)
'SS -Richtrd t1rlson, ftich1rd
Conte.
Cil OO llJ®l•..,
viollllCI bttwten C.tllolics 1nd 1:30 m All·Niaht Sh1w: "Tiit Siltnt
Protest1nb In Northtrn lrtltnd, Raldtn.," ''topptr Sky," "Dino"
d 0 (C) ''Tht Story 11 M1nklricl" We nesday (dram1) '57 -Rontld Colman. m .,Alftir With I S11tntU" (drt· bAffiME' MOVIES mi) '54 -Jtan Simmons. Victor
M1!u1t.
9:00 m .,blind Rtscut" (corned)') '52 2:00 Q) "RHlll i• tbe Houst" (dr1m1)
-'!Yflil Johns, Dnld NIYtn. '56 -P1!rick 81r1. M1rjoti1
9:30 0 ''Ttu Chlly U... OllCI" (dr1m1) Rtiodes.
'37 -Htnry f1>111Hi, Sylvia Sidnt)'. l:llO (I) "T\o Ceurt Jullr" toncl~sion
10:00 (I) "lonltt rlYlf" (WtS!trft) ·~ (comedy) 'S3--01nny Kf~f.
Jori McCrea, YWlllnt DtCtrfo. ®) "Clrt1e1t1 Hnay" ld11m1) '36 -Joan Crawford. Fr1nct.(I' Tone.
1:00 0 "ttlil tlM Conq•rina Hert" 4:00 f) (CJ "11'd W!clo•" (l::.pense)
(ct1meclyJ '44 -·Eddit "1c~1n, Ulf, ·~ -G;nar. P.r.1e11, Vin H1n1n.
RtrM$. : 4:30 (1) SIM 11 IMM lbt1nr
· .• --•*ilff t.aw ... • • ~ .. tM_s_,,,35,..,,,,,_..,s ... •
·-= ~--attd -• •h•rk fins ....,~ •• etlffing tlw ,..., ... •
·~ ~ ·-·TI+Ofl KE'YDllo.utl
V. ..,... aH RA.f A., mtounding -·""-'°'"'"--·· STARTS TOMORROW
l 'Week Only
IOVTlt COAST ruZA I
s. ......... "' """4 ....,,II -
Kids Like to .Ask Andy
. ..
LAST Wtlk · INDHU!S, ........
RUTH GORDON
Bl.DCORT ,.,_. l'lctl.t.1 ,,. • ..,...
HAROLD
and
MAUDE
.GP Color liy Technocolor' .Ao \
Plu1 -Kirk Douglas In ..
HELD OVIR · lAST WE!k
All WAlT DISNEY SHOW
IN MISSION VlfJO
IDWAIPS CINIMA YUJO
... 830·6990 ...
"fllNCH COHH£CTION"
plu1 'THE LAST JIUH"
with 0.Wt• C. Scitt'
<462
WIUllJll.HI • GOl.Hll •n . H l.._.,1 n•t1• ''""'" ''O'd • '"" t llH '"n.
Now.1ogr 1hl"I' -f ir11 Time!
~/·:• ~c~~
--~ ,_,,...._.GooOrill
""'Mof<tMd--· l'.lnll-.. {IJ
Alo•· THI # 1 lqNG llOM
THI # HllM , (R)
"SHAFT"
Superb Replacenaent in Lagtana
Girl Violinist Gives Top R f cital
By TOM BARLEY
Of ,... O.llw ,. ... , lttft
It speala volume• for the
dedication and determination
of the Laguna Beach Com·
munity Concerts Association
that they refused to let a last
minute injury to their schedu).
ed artlst halt their plans for
what turned out to be a
memorable cancert Friday in
the high school auditorium.
The news that gifted
violinist Kyung Wba Chun had
sprained a finger in London
and could. not mate the trip to
California would have been
ellQugh to have any average
concert organization throwing
its collective hands in the air
and telling subscribers that
the stage would be dart that
night.
They don't do it that way In
Laguna. Columbia A r t i s t s
were told, and 1n no uncertain
terms, , that the Art Colony
gioup wanted a· replacement
of comparable caliber and that
is a rather large order when
you are talking of soloists of
the stature of Kyung Wha
Chun.
Along came Stephanie Chase
and more than one doubting
Thomas in that near capacity
aui:tience settled back for what
they firmly thought would be
. -· ---• • 'it-·~· . .,. ....
The .little black book that
became a national best-seller.
AN OlTO PR.f!JV\ING~ ,.llM °"" CN«>N J.4MESCOCO »NERO'~ll
kl:N HOWARD """""''OCH LAURENCE WO<INBi.J.
. ,,
O.C.SMITH SINGING "SUOOENLY IT'SALL lOMORRON'
~ '"""'" ~-\13.co•·o t. .. .... .,.. ·••.'!,.,.• r.
ESTHER Q.4LE ~ SHABER LOIS GOLlD
.... ~ ·-THOMAS Z. HB-IRO
C .. lt ..... H .......,_ k1t • --f MAC•• .. •tHO
EXCLUSIVE RUN
SJ ARTS WEDNESDAY
JANUARY 12
CANCELLATIOM
A SPECIAL SHOWING
or
''TOGETHER''
RATED (X)
ON WEDNESDAY, JAN •. 12th
10 A.M.
at SOUY,H COAST PLAZA II
WILL NOT BE ·SHOWN
AS .HAS BEEN
• PREVIOUSLY
ADVERTISED
O major and Saint·Sae03' Miss Chase received from Sh~ad, we. we.re told. equally
swirling, pa.Mionate Roodo pianitt Jean Barr. deli ted a Bbbop aµdiepce al
C.prlccioso. Miss Barr's solid backUlg a cert J~ which .ah< had
Both were g I o r l o u s· l y was most evident In ~ agal replaced the ailing MlM
1 delivered in performances lhat Paganini and Saint.Saens <if· Kyu.. '
served to streu what J fering and that, ol ~rse, is An~ while we 1nusit: 1over1
thought was this gifted young where It was most needed. revel Jn the ha{'PY kllJwledge
lady's greatest asset -her Concert audiences tend to that ;we have again been
l r e~m end o us interpretive overlook the. role of the ac-privil!ljil:ed to ~t' ln the
powers. She showed lhem companist but the onlookers prese~ of gt.mus I~ ~ spare
again in the masterful C sharp who clapped Miss Chase to the a tho~ht. ind a prayer for the
minor nocturne by Chopin and ec(lo Friday nigbt can be youn lady wtia;had intended
in the charming Fritz Kreisler assured that she was well to be 'th ut 'Friday night.
work that was offered as 1 aware of her great debt to a A ipr1i~ finger to a
bonus for the audience that fine accompanist. viol~ IJ tragedy of the first
refused to let her go. And !iO this charming and order~1 Join me in the hope
And before we g:o any thoroughly unspoiled yowig that me injury Ls not serious
further let us not overlook student from the . Juilliard and ~n be quickly and com-
another key fador In one of School of Music got her second pleteit healed.
the most brilliant recitals to:i-!'t~andi~·~rtg~o~va~t~io~n2ln"._l!thr~ee~d1~ys~.l If~;;;-::-====::;::=::::;:::;::=;
come the way of this critic on
the e-0mmunlty concert clrcuit
-the splendid support that
HELD OVER
3rd WEEK
Cll"t leHot>off
"PLAY MISlY
FOR ME"
"~ In Ifie Hlt(ll(Mll Tr••ltltll
TIM 1111 Tl11iliff SlllCt
"PSYCHO"'
"TM lktl Wltll TM
Crptel Phu"Oft!"
_ ....... ~·-·----.. ~·---·-.,...,... .. _..,._ . ....._.,_,,,,.,.,..._ ............... ~··-·--Ml•··--.... _ ..... Cl>l&Cl"1-••,_-.. --... _ ..... c;p-....... -.iitDWiiK ---.
CO·HIT ZIG ZAG (GP)
.NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES
GREAT TRIPLE SHOW!
"PLANET OF THE APES" !GP)
' "BENEATH THE PLANET OF
THE APES" (GP>
"ESCAPE FROM THE PLANET
OF THE APES" IGPJ
SHOW
7:11 PM,
U.Ctl A.GAIN GIOIGI C. SCOTT
"OR. ZHIVAGO" PLUS ''THE LAST RUN "
"Or. Vol"lllfl" 7 PM Onl~
---CtNEOOME JO ,\. .. ~~~ --CtNIODMF ll .''
, ... ~..:'In ----;, StAOIUM ·/ .
"'~ T".11"'1'1_-;'"""_
- - -c, $ft101UM l ·
' _. .. '!11 Y ' " ----,, $!1101/J.tf ·J
'--· '"!'IW ·-----,, $!110/UM J
' -·-....... -··-
"Lt'! ll:un" 10:30 PM
DUSTIN MOl'PM.Ull itt ·
"Sir ... °"ft'" ~Tllen;. 7: ... t:M l'rt 1:)1 & t:Jt Slit • s .. ,, .. i:ae.
J: .. 7:•, t:• -M• """" .. SMb
......... lnotlltttkb"
~Ii 7:tf I t :IJ Sit I S. ltiJI.
2o4S, J:ll, 7~15, t :Jt. N• rfttl'YH _ ... __ _
' ,.,... 'K ....... -•
Mfft Wll• MH P'lwtr OYll' W~(fll
''"! bvitc111 In "Sllf '"'IM Olli"
•!If "'• "''"'""' "Pallll Tfl'l'r Wlflftl"
b**'*.******* t KOR.LA PANDIT
0. T.V. FAME
UHIQUI -MYSTICAL
Ptano and Organ
' Concert
WED . JAN. 1 Z, 8:00' ,M .
,.. .... C.1,11 .........
.,,~;;:l COrU,'IHA D•l MAit
James ~arr 101 r ,, mpe·
Lou Goss'ett
.. su8an Clark zEPNa.~ ......
Michael York = Elle Sommer :ir=--
Jtiitl. I tflr• "-•· '1 I '
·BACK AGAIN!
W.._., ' Tllwl'l4~ P·•·
THE MOST JOYFUL. LIYILY,
IHTOTAININS ..• 1.W .....
"• •• ,.,.i ... o '" .. -,1:r. -LA-llMES
SOUTHLAND I IA.SON'S
SMASH MUSICAL HIT.
-PRESS TEL'E&UM
WILL l'IOIAILY" WtN ·~ AS
lllNG-1m11 THA~~.J~fyy
·SCR's
... 9~~ Q,,.
in
"KOTCH" ••• CCJJIJ o..,. Mmi1t ·
"SOMETHING BIG"
Starts Wedneld1y
IUchard Harrl1
"A MAN IN THE
WILDERNESS"
••llf
Clldl-let•Jt Hftt9tl
"THE OMEGA MAN"
BARGAIN MA'l'INEE
Every ·Wedn~1y; 1" p.m.
fJIE llFll5HMIHTI
ADULTS $1 .0I' ·
EHi ClooblroUt•. 625 ... _. St .. -"""
Tickets .i ...., •d Gotol4 Miiiie c. .. 2045 Malo ;St~ .. 't;;~~==
'..¥...¥...¥...¥...¥...¥...-:.i:. ... ~·j·~ ... '.¥:"'~ .... ~~A>:•j"'~ .. -..iUfo~~.!....~~.Jf..lljl..¥-·¥-¥-¥-·¥-~~ IL.. __________________ __,, ••••••••••••••
)
'·
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t
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'
I • n • • •
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I ,
(
8 DAILY PILOT * Tutsd.ly, Janu.y ll,'~,
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlcmdl
"It looks like tbey'no doing evel')'thing they can to give
business the breaks.''
Clouds Expelled
Big Sun Explosion
Caught by Cameras
WASHINGTON !UPll -
Scientists have disclosed that
a recent explosion on the sun,
first of its kind e v e r
photographed, hurled i n t o
space massive clouds of hot
material 20 to 40 times the
size of the earth.
They were blasted from the
sun's atmosphere at speeds of
kinclic moti on energy was
equivalent to the power th11t
would be required to supply
U.S. electrical needs, at cur
rent consumption rates, for
more than a million years.
This amount of energy, ex·
pressed another way , is. com-
parable to that of 100 million
21}megaton H-bombs.
Luckily for the earth, the
eruption occurred on the sun's
far side. Had the clouds been
hurled directly at this planet,
Soldiers
Can No'v
Soldier
HEIDELBERG, Gennany
(UPI) -To get &Oldlers back
to soldiering. the American
army in Europe ( USAREUR l
has announced it will hire
about l ,000 civilians to take
over "Mickey Mouse jobs''
now required of c o m b a t
soldier1 In 40 infantry, armor
and artillery battalions scat.
tered lhrouahout Europe.
"We plan to divert troops
who are now tied up In Mickey
Mouse jobs back to primary
duties, and to replace them
with low·grade ct v 11 i ans·
mostly local nationals," a
USAREUR spokesman said.
The program will cost about
$2 million for the balance or
this fiscal year. Most "Mikcey
Mouse jobs" will pay about
$1.60 per hour. and include
posi tions as gym attendants,
in special services and youth
activities, as boiler firemen
and janitors, in sales com·
misaries, as v e h i c I e in·
specton:, drivers and dri ving
testers, and as hospital ward
attendants.
they would have triggered
magnetic storms, blacked out
long range communications,
disrupted navigation 11ystems,
and generated brilliant auroral
displays.
So massive were the cloud!,
each containing about a billion
tons of matter, that they
might even have had a alight
effect on Earth'• rotaUon
period.
Scientists believe that such
etploslve upullions of matter
from the sun are not un-
common. But this one, which
occurred Dec. 13. 11 the lint
ever directly observed by
visual means.
It was photographed by a
sensitive television t u b e
aboard an Orbiting Solar
Observatory (050-7) launched
by the National Aeronautic11
and Sp ace Administration
(NASA) Sepl. 29.
The photograph was made
possible by a "while light cor·
onagraph,.. a device which
11lmulates a solar eclipse and
makes visible events which
of)Jerwise would be drowned tn
the overall brilliance of the
sun .
The coronagraph was devil-
ed by the Naval Research
Laboratory NRL to blot out
the overwhelming light from
the sun's central disc. Jt
enables OS0-7 to study more
explosions in the sun's corona,
or atmosphere. in a matter of
months t h a n astronomen:
have been able to see during
solar eclipses since the begin-
ning of history.
Vast streamers of energized,
million-degree gas c a 11 e d
plasma were seen pouring
from the sun by QS0.7 on Dec.
13. These streamers, ex·
tending up to four million
miles from the aolltr surface,
apparenUy exploded into the
gigantic clouds blasted into
apace.
NRL scientists said at a
news conference that although
the clouds were aimed away
from the Earth, some of their
charged particles did s w i r I
around and arrive ln our
neighborhood thrte and haU
days later.
Their anival was recorded
by ground observatoriea ln
Austra1 ia. the Soviet Unlon,
and the Philippines.
MIDICAll AND WEl»ill UCIPIENTS
•
DON~T BUY A
HEAtllNG ~ID!! .. _,.. IL norm 6U. ml'fl:I ,. .... ,.. lt.~m:D•t • ....... 4ZlrJTI!WL cwt.
Ima .. ............ ...... """"" ... ... --.,,.
f I. I I -... ""---........... .... _ ...... --... -.... _
''" ...... --l'OI ,Ill LlTllA TVll
CALL H0411J 01 MAI~ COUl'ON
l • •AM• , .. -............... ,, ... ,,,,., ........................... -.... i
........................... l'HOfill ........ -.••••••••.••••••• !
: &O~ ................................... , ................... -... : '·. . . . . . . . . ................................... -.... -
I ..
May Co thinks so too, and we've brought one back,
the same shirt you used to pay $6.00 to take home
It's the short sleeved Decton Plainsman, everybody 's favorile shirt. Deservedly so, because it's the shirt ·
with everylhing. Dacron"' polyester and cotton for comfort and all the easy-care advantages of Arrow
Perma-lron•. It's Sanforized-Plus-2• for lasting fit and lasting good looks. Notice all the fashion featum:
dual pockets, longer point collar. Comes in four colors: blue, brown, gold and tan ••• plus white too •
It's an Arrow, so you know you can depend on it. Available in sizes medium, large and extra large •
may co men's sportswear fu rnishings 8•-all 18 stores
m•y co. south coHI pl•aa, un dlogo fwy. •I ~rl&tot, co•I• ,.....1546-9321
•hop mond1y thru frldoy 10 a.m. to 9:30p.m.,uturdoy101.m. 196 p.m.
1und1y noon 'til 5 p.rp:-
'
ord<!r by mail "'phone MA 6-3535
•
MAVCO
L. M. Boyd
Any Voluntee1·
•
Mother Robins?
t<And Time, a maniac 1e1tterlng dust ••. "
, Teany10t1
NO, MR. TENNYSON'S roregoing observation is too
cynlcal. But with which of these two men -Benjamin
Fr&nklin ")nd .Henry David Thoreau -do you find yourself
most in Q:reement? Franklin said, ''Time is money."
lboreau replied, "Not so. Time is a
stream in which I go fishing." Prefer
Thoreau, personally.
THAT WOMAN who is most adept
at soliciting a marriage proposal from
an eligible bachelor is tht 17-year-old
high school dropout. The woman most
capable of enticing such a proposal
from some other womtm's husband is
lhe 32-year-old divorcee . And the
woman most probably able to get Wd
proposal from a widower is the 43-year-old widow. Or so
one Plttsbur&h scholar concludes from a study of the
statistics.
QUERIE.§ -Q. "What's the best thing I can do for a
nedgllng robin I found flopping helplessly on our lawn'!"
A. If you're not ready to feed it on regurgitated worms
every 20 minutes from dawn to dusk, better leave it be. Jf
you are ready to go that far, however, please send a snap-
shot of yourself.
Q. "WHAT'S the difference between verse and poetry?"
A. It's verse, if it slowly warms you. Jt's poetry, if it
suddenly chills you.
ASK ANY quartet of citizens on the street to identify
Martha Mitchell, and only one of the four will say, "Martha
who?" Pollsters found that out.
WHAT A carol is, everybody knows. A Christmas soog.
What it wied to be, though, is less widely known. A French
rain dance.
HORSES -What's needed around here these days is
1 little more imagination in the naming of race horses.
How about L. 8. Mayer's suggested stable : "Whoa," a
filly out of "Stop Sign." Or "Complacency," a filly out of
"Smirk." Or "Forever After," a colt out of "Happy End-
ing." Or "In Our Time." a filly out or "Appeasement."
IN THOSE few seconds between the moment you dial
a local phone number and the time you hear it ring, just
about 1,800 electric circuits, at least, either have opened or
closed. Remarkable, no?
ONE Otrl' of every eight night school student.II is
d1vorctd, widowed or separated. And more than four out of
every eight are otherwl.se mattached. Remember that, if
you're looking for a matrlmonlal mate.
WAKE UP -How do you ?'ake your late-sleeping,
ovem.lght house guests? Otto von Bbmarck, the onetime
Iron Chancellor of Germln)', went out in the lront yard
and fired pistol shol!i through the windows into the ceilings
of his guest's b<drooms. MJgbt try that.
Address mail to L. M. Beyd, P. 0 . Boz 1875, Ntw-
part Beach, Calif. 92660.
Male Bald Eagle Gets
Help for Egg-sitting
MELBOURNE, 'Fla.· (AP) -
The Audubon Society b,a.s ~
ped airlilting food to a bald
eagle forced to sit on hls eggs .
by himse.lf after M mate was
wounded by a hunter. He bas
found a new female to share
the egg·sitting chores while be
brings home the bacon-or-fish.
Audubon Society members
1ay the male bird apparently
called in another female after
spendlng some time alone car·
ing for the eggs.
on the way, they gave him lit·
tie chance of saving the brood.
It's against the law to shoot
eagles, but ·this didn't save
Hallie from receiving a bullet
through the wing that shat-
tered the bone. She has had a
steel pin inserted to hold the bone together and ii will be
aeveral-weeb before the pin is
removed. Mrs. Mager is not
sure. Hallie will be able to fly
again.
With the help of the other
obliging !emare, the eggs are
expected to hatch within 8-10
days, conservation officials
say.
l """1, ""'""' ll. 1972 DAILY PILOT 7
(aR.AfflT[ . PootlaiU Developments
~ .. ~~~·"'. .......... ,
..
FREE
DRCAll llSSOtiS
FOR BEGINllERS
20
·
0 1
·"'"·'·"·","· Pollution Effects Increase
Li.1ik Eyed
To Cancer,
Fertilizer
CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP)
By DA.VID JENSEN
SACRAMENTO (UPI)
CalUomia's foot h 111 sub-
divisions carved up more lhan
500,000 acres between 1960 and
1970, leavlng behind polluted
streams and eroded earth, a
Reagan admlnistratlon report
1ays.
The harmful effects of im·
proper development r a n g e
throughout the state, ac-
cording to the 70.page study
by the Division of Soil
Conservation.
In Southern Callfornia. It
said the threat of disastrous
wildfires has i n c r e a 1 e d
because of the proximity of
residential area! to chaparral·
covered hills.
In Northern CallfornJa, the
report declared that t f
development conUnun o f
70,000 acres in the Truckee
area, 40dter migration routes
will be blQcked" and thls will
have a drastic impact on the
in terstat• deer be:rd.
The 11t\ldy warned, 1'Tbe im·
pact of people's activities is
creating conditions that are
deJtroylng the Value! that peo.
pie are seeking."
It s:a.id that careless
development has c a u a e d
' • slgni.ficant environmental
problems such as w a t e r
pollution, loss of fish a>d
wildlife habitat, damage to
water courses, lakes and
reservoirs, impairment o f
recreational opportunities, and
sediment and flood damage to
proputy,"
The otudy, en 11 t I ed
''Environmental Impact of
Urbanization on the Foothill
and Mountainous Lands of
California.'' wu accompanied
by photographs of deep gullies
Jeft by erosion in 1ubdlvl1'°'11
and. burned over foot h 111
residential areas Jn Lo 1
Angelea.
It said the "&realest IOUl'Ce
or erosion and sedlmentaUon
in steams is from road con-
1tructioo" 1n subdivisions, ad-
ding that exposure of aoll d'!I'
ing construction can lncreue
rate of erosion from 10 times
the normal rate for culilvated
land to 2,000 times that for
forest land.
GERHARD LANG'S
SAUSAGE HAUS
1'ou ~not have to own.an Instrument.
J'ree1'1'8c:llce T!Ine Available.
• Start Tuesd.ay, January 18\hat 7 P.M.,
Six. Weeks.
REGISTER NOW!
• ..... o._ lntu)nedlate class TUuday January 18th
at8.-.M., Six Weeks $12 +Material.
. FUN · OOERTAINING • KllOWl.£DGUBll
Rtllt Ol'IJCllll
Awallable
hilicJ Term
of C-.
...I-NOW! Inqu ire for dote l11
HammOR4 Organ . Studios
2154 .E. .c-. Hlghwr;. c°""" dol Mor
644-1930 .
-Some chemicals found in How · · · "-"" mNe, 11ktr...,. -11.• ....._. • ftlkllft ,,.. ... ..,..._ ,.,, 111r ,, ........ .._. .,... hn• ..... t111t11. 0111Y the '"'*'' lllt,..,lelltt •IMll 11m11 food i""'iudlng one lound in ttttM 01111 W.rN & Mlh•t•llk" red,.a •rt , .... ,., ~" L11111 111 IMllllll -"" .. uwi• .. rttiy If itt•ndln.t next -. • t111Kt1I .. "'-r ••k" "'"" 011r ..... F Ad • • • SOme nitrogen fertilizers -•IYI ltltt.Htll lllclWI" _.,.. l>f 0-, Hlllh, lllllal a l"llltll l fll' II or ' vert· "', ng, •Jt ••lltlell H-r l•k.. M11M MW '"ht"' c•ltl c11t1 Mt! luMllMll ,....,. fllo llO• II can be combined into a com-•IUllllll aw r..,r 11verttn, lr9M tn. 111tc.tiM1 11 01r111r11 U llf.
pound which causes cancer in -HAM -Out 'N' About
rats, food scientists at Mas-
sachusetl!i Institute of llTAILSTOllS Ph N ··s&-:_1
Technology say. ,,::~~ ~,!.°:'!.~. One Orm uuuey
In an artiele in the current C.reH •• M• -67J.toot
issue of Science magazine, the IJl·2411 6424321. ·
researchers said they h~ve 001~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~------~=-==-.=.:.:::..:::_ _____ _ evidence that the compound.I~
they produced actually doe!
occur iD the envlromnenl
Hit remains to be determln·
ed," they said, "whether these
reactions actually take place
Jn foods or the mammalian
stomach, and to evaluate fheir
significance in the incidence of
human cancer."
The research is part of a
larger departmental effort
supported by the National
Institute of Environmental
Health Sciences and other
sources to determine whether
any biological effecb can be
attributed to tiny traces of
various classes of chemicals
found ln.lood!.
The compound that produces
cancer in rat.II ia known as N·
nitrososarcosine. Other ex·
rerimenters have demonstrat-
ed that this produces a form
ol cancer of the esophagus fed
to rats over a long period of
time.
The MIT researchers began
with creatine and creatinine -
nitrogen compounds normal\}'
found in muscle tissues, milk,
blood, vegetables and certain
fishes, and associated with
muscle contraction _.. and
with nitrite. a chem i cal
substance that easily reacts
with other compounds.
Nitrates and nitrites are
found naturally in food, and
are al!IO often used a s
preservatives and to fix colors
in processed foods.
Wide use of nitrates tn
fertilizers can produce hlgh
nitrite levels in plants and
water supplies, the
researchers said. And, they
added, certain bacteria oc-
curing naturally can convert
nitrates into the more reactive
nitrites.
The researcher1 included
Prof. Steven Tannenbaum of
the MIT Department of Nutri-
tion and Food Sclence, and
three members of h i s
laboratory staff.
Can't you just taste it?
It's the taSte of'something hot
and delicious from .a .big old ~P
with cracks m tlieglaze.
I '
And a hearty'breakfast on a
cold morning~
'Down Home'Thste. SOmething
to spend a little time with.
Simple an _d pleasurable. His wounded companion -
named "Hallie" by her
benefactors -was found by a
surveyor last week on the banks of the upper St. Johns l-----------------------1 Like lighting up a Winston
River. She was brought out of
the wilderness and is being
cared for by Doris Mager of
Apopka.
Members of the society has
been airlifting fish Into the
lone eagle, knowing h e
wouldn't leave the nest for
food. And with colder nights
Bids Called
For Freeway
SACRAMENTO (UPI)
The Sl11te Public Works
Department has called for
bids on a $18.66 million project
to widen the San Bernardino
Freeway from six to eight
lanes from Puente A venae in
Baldwin Park to a half mile
east or Via Verde in San
Dimas. Bids will be opened
March 16 in Los Angeles.·
jewels by joseph
Horches for jewels
Clll'IWt ......... ,_...,. ,. lllWIM&
l'ft calfl 'J Mii " I flffll """"' llMWMI• tutrtlM, •M lft! .. rtty
-,. ,.,.... tw•INllM ..... ..,. ......... ....
.. .... lie ....... .. '""""' ,..., ................. ,.._, ....., ..... -.. -.......Mt.,... ....
~CU1t '1 ....
•1tt.t 1t .... Dl1t• ,.,.,.
c..t. M••
WUIWAAD HD Mam -WORLD'S WC!ST -1,llOO ROOMS I 0• 1h ~ Nil! lo stnu~ Circa Circa l R~~" l . I
!SLASBBD!
I A••I.,.,..., Spec.lei -Off 7tti lft ,..,, W• Le.-Y••I I
Mldweff ($11. tlir9 Ttiirs.1 J•. 2,tflr•111• Jo•. ll, 1t 72
1.TELLUSWHATYOUWANTTOPAY: I
: •J!!; •&!.!.•l.O~~ ........ • M l'taM 2 Pl"11 2 PI OPLI
I ·De1 ... 2w,. .. A~s.,._,,, ... ,~,.i.1.••· 1
I On ·Fri., S.t. & Holldoy1. Add $2.00. I
and enjoying the taste of Filter-Blend™tiObaccos.
Real and rich and down home good.
'
Can't·youjust taste. it?
·:Wi .. ·n·.
like a cigarette siult ·
nHome •
e 1n11 ... frt111titfti•d.CHNll, .. i"1&ffl·tkt\t.•.c1,
KIN~ 19 mg. "lj('.13 mg.nioolinl SUPER ~NG,ZD.mg. "tal".1.3 mg.~IY.per tig•tlll fTC J',lflOlt AUG. ?l'
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3-month
Undersea
Probe Set
WASHINGTON (AP) -The
government'• longest a n d
most 1mbltlou1 undersea in-
veftigatlon wlll begin Jan. 27
ofC the Florida coast near
Miami , the Commerce Depart-
ment reports.
The department's National
Oceanic a n d Atmospheric
Administration will send a
three -man undersea
laboratory. The m a r i n e
re!earch project will last
three months and include eight
acientific projects.
Called FLARE for Florida
Aquanaut Research Expedi-
tion, the project will study
coral reefs, fish behavior,
chemical composition of sea
water, geology of the reefs,
marine ~!ants and plant-
eaters, seaweed, the effects of
pollutants on coral formation
and the efficiency of artifical
reefs in attracting marine life.
One of the scientific teams
Is composed of two women
and another is a husband and
wire combination. Teams of
two or three marine explorers
will rotate in diving.
Taking part in the probe are
unlversitle!, three mw:eums, 1
junior college and several
dlviaions of NOAA.
Baja Sees
Big Boom
For Crops
MEXICALI, Mexico (AP) -
Baja Callfofnia's agricultural
lndu1try 1tand1 lo benel!I
greaUy by the United Stataa
1bol!Jhlng Its 10 percent Im.
port IW1ax, the 1tate dJrector
of e c o n o m I c development
18)'1.
"We are expecting about 1
30 percent increase i n
agricultural product income
over the next crop aeuon, ''
Juan Antana 11y1.
Ending the surtax "will alto
be an incentive for more
foreign financed f a r m i n g
operations being developed in
Baja," he said. "We have
BOme of these agricultural
operations now and we are
trying to open up more.
Santana said Baja presently
has yearly agricultural pro-
duction of about $53 millJon,
with major export crop11 prior
to the aurtax including
asparagua, chill p e p p e r 1 ,
tomatoe1 and onion.II.
So far there has been mlxed
reaction on the U.S. side of the
border 11 to how much impact
the Mexican lmporll wW have
on C..Ulorni1 •ll'lcultunl pro-
ducers .
Hotel to Be
Auctioned .
TUCSON CAP) -The
Westerner hotel here will go
on the auction block Jan. IS.
Charles Crowe, the broker
for the pend.ing sale, sald bid-
ding will start al '400,000. He
uld the sale Is not a "dia\ress
sale" but the owner• ire anx-
ious lo dlspoae of the property
qulcllly.
The owner of the hotel ls
Bud Antle, Inc., one of the
world's largest trader• 1n
fresh fruits ind vegetabtu.
Call Your Nure11
S.1n5*'e
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I
DAILY >ILDT I
J AN u A RY storewide .savings for the New Year in every department' at all 18 stores
men's c lothiiig sale
save on sport coats, slacks
knits and woven fabrics • rn
Great looking coats with wide lapels, flap pockets, deep
center vents. You can choose from many colors in pure
polyester knits, wool and polyester wovens or pure wool.
A big selection. All splendid values. Come take your pick.
regularly 20.00 double knit slacks, 32 to40 17.99
regularly 70.00 to 75.00 sport coat group 57.00
$ 4 7 reg. $55 to $65
men's aportswear 45-1111~ stores
I
one-pant and two-pant suits
al I wool from Maybrooke • 1n
Wool is alwa ys a super value. It wears long, and it wea rs
well. The perfect lranseasond l fabric for men in California.
So, when you can save this much on a wool suit with all the
newest fashion details, you've got a good thing going for
you. Pick from a big choice of pallerns. Sizes .38 .to 46.
Regular, short and long. Don't miss these great savings.
reg. $85-$95
men's suits 21-•ll 18 store
m•y co. eouth co.,1 pl1q, un di ... fwy. 11 brlotol, co1t1 mU1; 546-9321
•hop mond1y thru frlolly 101.m. to f :30 p.m., Mlurdoy 10 1.m. to 6 p.m.
iund1y noon 'Ill ' p.m.
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Rea9a11 Critiei%ed.
Tormenting Rectal Itch
Of Hemorrhoid.al Tissue.s
Promptly Reli&ved Split Budget Bid Protested
b u d g r t e cJ year·lo-year in-
l'feases for the :support or
local schools in California'~
history "
po~u ove r lht' 10 ca I ln many cases Preparation H theda of pailentathowed thLi
asslStance expenditures. giveeprornpt,tf'mporaryrel.Hf to be true m. many ea.w. Ia
SAC.:R/\1\1ENTO I AP' -A
$7 billion battlt or the budg~I
raged today bet'llo·een Go1
Reagan and opp o s I ti o n
Democrat.~ even before kr~
parls of the Rea gan budget
were sent Lo the legislature .
Uemocratir.: leaders acr.:use<l
Reagan of trying to r.:oufu se
!he public v.1ith a llt'\\I tv.·o-part
budget format.
This com1nent . referring to
a $224 million boost in school
. aid. to nearly $1.9 billion , trig-
gered son1e criticism lroin
l)emocrats.
··in reality, he has fuU from 1ueh pain and itching fact, mill,)' doclon, them•
authority to modiiy these ex· and actually helps shrink lelvl8, UM P,.porotion H9ot
penditures by s u g g e s t i n g awelJing o( hemorrhoidal U. reoommmd it for their tam~
amendments to the law a~ by eue& caused by inflammation. ilia Preparation H ointment
supporting these suggestions 1 Teata by doctors on bun-or tUPPQrlitoriel.
in the legislature," f\.1oretti'/''---------------------
said.
!J,.I Ttltpnoto
Reagan released the ~5
billion local assistaner St'C\1011
Monday. showing a S 5 7 O
n1illion increase ln various
state progrants aiding local
governn1ent and local school.~.
Republicans defended t he
GOP go vernor, arguing it
\\•ould make the budget rnore
understandablr lo the tax-
payers.
Qualified P1•of? The governor held back unti l
\Vednesday the bulk ()f the
budget document e o v e r i n g
general stair operations. e;o;-
pected to range from $2 billion
to $2.5 billion. This will include
such Ir ad i l i on a 11 y con-1 troversial iten1s as higher i
educaUon and mental health. I
Dr. Glenn T. Seaborg (left) expl:iins a t hemical equation to a some\\•hat unim· 1 press freshman at the University of Califontia at Berkeley. The youngster might
pay better atrention of h'e kne\v'Dr. Seaborg is a Nobel Laureate, former Atomit·
Energy Co1nmission chairman. and was former chancellor of the Berkeley
ca1npus. ffe is also being appoipted University J'rofessor of Chentistry -a high-
ly distinguished form of professorship. , The increast ovrr last year
in the local assistance budget,
rnost of it spending set by
formula written into state lav.'.
\.\'35 13.2 percent. A source
tlose to the administration
said Phase IL the state opera·
lions budget. would be held to
a very small percentage in-
crease.
State Legislators . Seeking
More Fu11ds for School Aid Reagan 1:lain1ed in his
Phase I budget message that
the state merely acts as tax
collector for much of the
money in the budget. sending
ii back to local government
for spending.
SACRAMENTO IUPI\ -
Armed with a report which
shows California has slipped in
its average spending on each
child, Democratic legislators
11aid today they will seek far
more than the $65 million in
new school aid · proposed bs
Gov. Ronald Reagan.
'1This is a farce!' said
Assemblyman L e r o y r.
G r e e n e ! 0-Sacramento 1,
chairman of the As!embly
Education Committee . ' ' It
means that schools will ac·
tually have Tess money than
last year."
At the same tlme. he look
credit for "one or the .largest
Mars Clears, Bares
Gigantic Canyons
Reagan's money proposal
for schools \l.'a!I the most con-
troversial element or the $4.9
billion local assistance budget
he submitted to the legislature
Monday .
There was divided reaction
about the way he submitted it.
For lhe first time. the budget
was divided. into two parts -
one for local assistance and a
second for state operations.
which wi!I be sent t h e
legislature Wednesday,.
Ecuador
Seizes 2
Tu11aboat~
PASADENA 1AP1 -The
haze thal ilag hidden Mars
si nce late September and
threatened Mariner 9 with
failure is rapidly clearing.
Scientists say the orbiting
spacecraft's t e I e vision
cameras are returning strik-
ing photographs that show
strange, unexplained features.
Military
Welfare
Case Set
WASHJNGTON 1 UPI I
The Supreme Court has agreed
~hear an appeal ~
California authorities from a
federal court order barring
lhe state from automatically
denying welfare benefits to the
dependents of men 3\vay on
military service.
The Court \Vil\ h e a r
arguments in the case later
this term and follow u•ith a
written opinion.
Tbe case involves an appeal
by Director Robert C .
carleson of the California
Department of Social \Velfare
from a court order granting
welfare benefits lo Nancy
Remillard and her two-year-
old daughter.
State welfare off i c i a I~
denied benefits under the
federal Aid to Families v.•ith
Dependent Children ~AFDC)
program to ~lrs. Remillard
because state regulations bar
such assistance in cases where
parental absence ls dut lo
military service.
The U.S. District Court in
San l"rancisco held l\1arch 31,
1971 , tha1 !he blanket tX·
cluslon or the families of
l'!ervice1nen fron1 v.· e I f a r e
benerils violated !hr equal
protecHon cl<tuse of the 14th
Amendment to thf' C'onstitu-
tion .
Radical ~ lall
Stanfo1·1l Hally
STANFORD 1L:PI1 -Stan·
ford University radical s. al-
tempting to keep ali\'e the
issue of the rec:ommended tir-
ing or tqnured professor B.
Bruce Franklin. called for
aootber rally tOOay in the
campus plnza.
A smnll gr o u µ
demonstrators protesting lhe
univeraity's move to oust tbe
Marxlst>Maolst prof•-has
'"ocoUpitd'' the S t a n ford
Memorial Church and issued
an ulUmatum to rehire
Franktln by ooon today.
However. lt. was unlikely llull lbt Stanford Board of
'l'rusf<eS, who must mab the
final cletilloa, would meet ..
the 111111« ol Fraitklln'•
dllrnlml unlll 1 lf<r · 111,1o
moolh.
"The pbolograpp.s a~ shO\\I·
ing us a lan~astic range of
brand new phe.nomena that no
<lDe ever suspected exi&tei::I on
Mars. Every df'Y soi:;nething
new is turning up ln the
photogr.aphs. •· Dr. Car.I Sagan,
an astronomer fro1n ' COrnell
University working on the
Marir:.er 9 project, ~aid Mon -
day.
The photograi}h~ have shown
towering ridges and canyons
·•grander thaa 'l·he Grand Can~
yoo. •• One such c3nyon a~
pears to be .6 · to 12 mile~
acros!I aod perhaps more than
a mile deep, the scientists
report .
There are pictures or great
craters, one about 70 miles
across that closely resemblr
earth futures evolved through
volcanic activity.
And one picture sllo\\IS a
7 ,000-foot high plateau so rid-
dled with cracks that its ap-
pearance has been linked to
an elephant's wrinkled skin.
Pollution
Cliarges ,
Dis1nissecl
"This is nonsense." said
Assembly Ways and ti.1eans
Chairman Willie L. Brown Jr.
10-San l''ranciscol. who se
t.'Ommittee will consider the
budget.
"The governor can publicize
the budget any way he wishes.
but it will be considered as
one document."
Brown's counterpart in the
Senate. veteran D e m o c r a t
Jlandolph Collier of Yreka,
also said his Finance Com-
miUee will consider t h e
budget as one document. Bui.
like Republicans and unlike
Brown. he praised Reagan for
presenting it in l\\'O in-
stallments.
"I think it's an excellent
idea." Collier said . "It gives
us a chance to show local
government that they get two-
thirds of the state's money."
Indio Hit
By Series
•
Of Quakes
INDIO i.AP) -A series or
light earthquakes r i pp I e d
1.hrough the Coachella Valle:,
over a four·hour p e r i o d
SANTA BARBARA (AP) _ startliag some residents bu1 apparently c a u s i n g no
A judge has dismissed 342 damage. authorities say.
counts of criminal pollution in The shocks began about s: 15
the 1969 oil \\o'eJI blowout in the p.m. Monday and measured
Santa Barbara ChaMel after J.2 on the Richter scale at 6: 17
four oil companle& pl'eaded nd
guilty to one coun't ... "h. p.m. a 3.8 at 8:22 p.m .• said """ Dr. Clarence Allen of thr
Judge Morton ! L. Barker California Jn st it u t e of
said Monday that Union. Technology s e i !I mo Io g y
A1obil, Texaco and Gulf OH laboratory in Pasadena.
companies had ,;suffered sur-He said the earthquakes
ficiently" beCause-or' many were centered near Thousand
civil damage jbdgmen,ts in the Palms. about 10 miles nortll of
ca,se .w~ich ha~e' cOst tlt°'e four here and 120 miles southeast
L'Ompanies tens. of thotisand.'5 or Los Angeles.
-0f dollai.s. He. fined ea~h com-Sheriff's deputies and Indio
pany $50. . • • police said they received about
. Qist. Atty., David ¥inier .10 calls from conce.r.ned
called the deoisidn 'dutrlgeolis citizens, but no rtport-'1 of
SAN DIEGO (AP1 -1 Ecuador has made Hs firsl
seizures of Ameri ca n
tunaboats th is year In the con·
tinuing di spute over offshore !
territorial fishing rights. !he
American Tunaboat Associa-
tion says.
The association said the i
1.100.ton Anna l\1arie. based in
San Diego, was forced into the
port of Manta ti.1onday by an
Ecuadorian gunboat.
Another vessel. the \\festern
King, from San Pedro, was
captured and taken into port
Saturday. the association said.
·'The s e i 1. ure s \vere
peaceful. so far as we kno"'·
and no shots were fired or
anyone injured ." said Ed
Silva, vice president of the 1
boat O\vners' association.
'Ecuador clain1s a 2()().mile
offshore fishing boundary but
the United States recognizes
only a 12-mile limit. fifty-tv;:o I
foreign vessels. most I yl
American. were seized by the
South American country last j
year and fined a total of about
S2 million. ,
U.S. boat owners evenlually 1
are reimbursed b y con-
gressi0;nal appropriations for
the fines they pay.
TEEN BEER
OK URGED
SACRAi\1ENTO (AP 1 -Al
measure introduced in the
Assembly would allow persons
aged 18 to 21 to drin k beer and '
wine, but not hard liquor .
The constitutional amend-
ment proposed ti,1onday by
Assembly1nan Alex Garcia (0-
1.os Angeles). needs at least 54
votes in the SG-sea~ Assembly
and 27 votes in the 40-man
Senate to get on the ballot.
A proposal to legalize all
alcoholil'! be.vi?rages for 18-to-
21-year-olds \\'3S killed last
year in the Senate.
Garcia's measure. ls ACA 12.
~•n_d_··~~-w_h_•_w~9u~IP_:~•e~pe~·m_.~··~:~_d_•~mag!•~·~~~~~~-===================
WHAT FUNERAL BENEFITS ARE AVAILABLE
TO VErERA.NS 1
by EUGENE 0. BERGERON
A~ •eHNllt)f llllscltwtH ,..,., .. 9f 9ft.y w., •f •f .th• k•r .. • Ce1dlkt, •r ._ Viet ...
lfe Is eflltltlM t. * ftitlti.,,.. fe4fftll ..,. liieffflt'l:
1. • .. , .......... ., $251.00.
2. r,..,..,..,, •• t• tM pl11U •• l11tenMt1,, If , ... i. m .. ,, ht• ,Met•M' foclllty.
J. ·Fl .. t9 ~,,_ tM c.11.t.
4 •. ~ .... I•• ••tkll•I ~· I. SNN tr•lllWkef Al llr.u• pl•'!lite fH pl••M•t tUher II•• pr&, ... ..... '°"'..-. . . a...flt1 I• the P.-«'•rHA ,_,._.. f,... J•IMltNY JI, lttl ¥11tll ttlt Hfl11111l11t ef ttM
Y&.t H•'" h A11t11tt '· ltM Ill• Ht hM,_. * UM.00 .,,.,kll elleWHCe.
If Y•• lrtftt • '!IMiitfM ...... ,.,..,el s.rriu, ,.... Wtlte ., c•ll. W......_, l'••IW.,
11Mlfleb wUI M _..,.. '-tMI ct .. ••· r. . Balt%-Bergero1i Fu1ae1•al Bo11ae
COSTA 1MESA 2 LOCATIONS CORONA 411 MAR • 644-%424 67-J•HSO
In attacking the neW budget
format, Democratic Assembly
Speaker Bob ll.1.oretti of Van
Nuys said, "By dividing state
operations !rrun local assist-
ance, the governor seems to be
indlcatiJ1g: that he has no
Sen. George P..1oscone 10.San
r~ranciscoJ. the upper house
1najorlty leader. said, '~The
splitting of the budget .•. Ig-
nores the fundamental •reality
that very few of these pro·
grams are separate.''
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
'l'h('re have al\vays been a lot o( good teasons to pick Sylvania. 1''eaLurP.s
like Color Bright. 1oo·i 11 picture tube for the sharpest picture availablf'.
'J'he solid-st.ate Gibraltar i .\I chassis with plug-in, pull-out transistors for
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automatically. Jnstant ColorT~1 for perfect color picture i11 seconds. Now
thPre's a really big reason. Right now you can save up to $150 on a
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~lf'reos, radios and taprs. So pardon uirif ~·e seem a littlf' push)•. But
no,v"s the time t.o buy your Sylvania.
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_Iaguna .Beaeh Today's Flnal
~ -EDIT ION
V-OL b5, ·NO: 9; 2 °SECTtONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA JUESQAY, JANUARY It " 1972 TEN CENTS
• . "
Lag ll na Future Population Shown at 22,350
.
By FRl!DEIUClt SCllOEMl!HL
ot *' o.itr ,l'l)lj s1•n · A, staff. 'hldy l"fHnled to l,aguna Bt•i:h plan'nlng comml!floners Monday !Jii)ii ltiows the city,. d allowed to develop C.mple~yliiildet presenl ,ZOl\IJI&. would
. reach ,a · l!l~Dlum population ' of 22,350
~& ~~.~;.utn~ Stag~, 0
tht rftiort·c\inetu~ei lbat .thtn!~ ·a .JIOS6ibili-
tJ!fbr 4Jl 'i@ftfbnil S;272 unitl On 110W•V8·
can\ jfarCel! of •land ,within the city ll'tnltJ. ' ( ' . .
By mulilp!iJng' lbat number by, 2.3
••
persons per unit -the average · per
household acwrding to cenaus figures -
tlM' (ltesenl population di 11,ISO peHOlll
could Increase by 7 ,500 peno.,, said
Wayne Moodf, director of plll\JllJ\s and
development. ·
Moody's. rfport )! In re.sponJe to I rt·
quest from Mayor l\jchard • Goldberg ·to
detail just ·What the poptllatron. ""1111 ol
the city would ~. II devetoj>ed ' to
capat'Jty. .
The mayor's request was ~e at' the
Dec. l~ city council meetlhg duriog a
heated exchange over. Including 20,000 ~ns as lbe mulmum city population
ln the land use element of the genera l
plan. .
The controveraial .element will come up
for public hearing ~fore the cl(y council Jan. 11.
Moody's sl\ldy shows lbat 2,100 unll!
could be constructed 'on vacant, sub-
. dlvlded lots now In the city; 1,940 units on
vacant. umtibdJvided lots on less than SO
percent slopes ; 350 units on vacant,
UMubdivlded Jots on greater than 50 per-
cent slopes. and 425 units In oomm=lal
•
zones - a total increase. or 4,81$ units.
He has subtracted from that figure
what ls termed "the diminutive effect" -
untts which are now illegal and will be
removed from use by active city en-
forcement of zonlng codes.
He estimated 1,JSO of the 7,700 units
now in res1clent1al r.ones are of a
"booUeg" natuie. Moody also figured
~· are 2!0 noh-«>nf~rmlng residential •
uaes In the cbtntnerci~ zones and 143
non!Ollnfor111ing residenUal uses in the
light manufacturing 10nes -for a total
· of l,M:J. llJegat dwelling unit!.
e1re·ss 1xes
• .,
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Oceanfront
Unit Plnns
To Get Eye
A request for both a r.one change and
variance to a.Qow conslruct.ion of a ~unit
condominium a>mple:s:: along Laguna's
oceanfront between Sleepy Hollow Drive
and Laguna Av~u< will )je presented to
tbe plannlng,d~nt. Within the next
tyio wodol· • ' •
. U.~ condominl~ , i'""1'roied ~ W.a 1
m•••l•<LlQI~ .. to lbe . pla!Jllll!& ·~ Dii!: 1111 llir tlD!and ~
'.J a J~ qi, llni'ciii l'lclflc --which
Olf1lS a nunitier 61 11uce!J or llnd ·along
the ·beachfront.
''We will definitely.'have a formal plan,
with all the requests, for r.oning and
variances, into tbe planning department
wilbin lbe next ,couple of weeks," aald
Francis Abearii, aJ4lslant •ice .presidart
of .swan Constructors, whlch i s
coordinating tbe project wllb Upland.
Abearii not.<! lbal bis staff is p-ntly
restudying lbe posalbility of including
commercial development Wllb. lbe c:oo-
dominiurns -a auggestlon mode by
several persons atteodlng lbe Dec. 20
pre.entalion.
"'We are looking at some small vWage-
orieQtecl shops which would face·the front
of the propertie!,'' Ahearn said.
A representaUve. of the firm , he added ,
, • has been in Lag\INl for the past few days ..:.11.. . ': -. . . . . . . otudying possibilities for commercial :a:n~" at a Time ' . ; I . . . : .. -.t_; . uses. "We11 wait .unlll we get the figures
· ... tt c • • · --· · · , in and then mate a deci.elon," Abeam
"I'm pleasantly surprised that our
figu re of 20,000 Ls Just 10 percent lower
than this figure of 22,350," commented
Commissioner John McDowell . "I think
you've done a fine job <in this study."
"It's not tbe shock I lhought it might
be," McDowell added .
Commissk>ner Roger Lanphe ar sug-
gested that Moody remove the 520-acre
Sycamore Hills parcel in Laguna Canyop
from the computations in the study.
"I thlnk it's our hope that Sycamore
Hills will rema in as open space. If we
don't pull it out, it looks like we're saying
• l.trs';:l\l>\>Ort ·~yres,gwe.birtb to lrlpletS Saturday at Hqag Memorial . said.
,Ho:;pit,al 'in. Ne;vp0rt-Be~ch. ,They are all .boys -Michael, Stephen A total or 375 feet of oceanfront land is
lilld'llichanl; named lot· altending physicians. I~ was only the second planned for development. One parcel Is
·sel;-Of ·lrlplets.bom at,Ho~g.;n the I? y.Jrs\!>abies -ha~e tieen delivered · m feet wide, a second is 100 feet wide
Three Face Court ·Da te
there. The Ayres bave two other boys, Ro~.,5, and Billy, 4. and a lblrd. 50 feet wide. Laad held by
other property owners falls in between
Planners Receptive tQ Bid
lbe Upland parcels.
The 9$ OWD-your-<IWQ lHl.ils would be
terraced down lbe tall bluffs to the sandy
(See PACKAGE, Page !I
In Hashish Smuggling
r • ' ' . . '
for Study of Woodland I rvine Finn Tru.cker
Killed in Accident
Three persons arrested In Laguna
Beach and accused of involvement ip an
international smuggling ring that special-
ized in hashi!}\ oil were ordered Monday
to face a prellmthary •bearing 11rursday
in Santa Ana municipal court.
Judge J9hn Flynn set the bea~ date
for David Kulik , 18, of Carlsbad, Deborah
Gibson,' 20, of Oceanside . and Mlchael
Paul Theodor,. 25, of Elsinol'et While the
pfllllecutlon COl!tlnued ll> negotittle with
Afghaniltan authorities for the extradi-
tion of Kullk's elder· brofher,.Alexander,
, Laruiµa Bea'ch. J>lann!llg commissioners. Monday night aave .a sympathetic ear to
•· requl!t!t to, study re.Zoning of the
·Woodland Drlve area · to R-1 (single
family) tniM lbe present M·tA (light in.
clustrlal) mne.
' The problem, explained artist Andy
Wing, 1144 Victory Watlr, I• that because
Woodland falls in a manufacturing zone,
It ls Impossible for peroo"' with homes to
.r:,;...,~~.,... any 11¢etantlll
Wint flddtd )lu.t (he ares IJ entirely
residenUel and that a xeSldentlal zone ••med mortloClcal l)lan lbe M·IA.
"It certain y Aetms more appropriate
than councll~nrd) •IArr'• sug-
cest!Qrl to d he bulldtnp l ha t
are not "!' ta ataad"11!," 11id WlillJ. Lorr
· lllftelled lbe ,di'/ albl!lder.u ordl!IJllCI
to .allow 191' . dea\olltlon 0( --~ .. ~. dUr!nl the~ Jiou11114 lmpoC(lan of the Woodland ma.
• ..,,,. """"" lnltllle -lo lab a loot at lbe 11i111nJ ol tllll wllcile canyon
ectrall<'O to \he dly," •e!led Com-
mlsaloner Jolm McDowell.
PT Boat uader Djes
11ATERTOWN, N,Y, (A'P) -George
B. 0>x Jr• SI, -mander ol lbe PT boa! that carritd Oen. Doug I a 1
MacArillur from Corruldor to tbe safety
of MlndalllO during ijje WlJ days ol •
·o~d Wit II, died Slmday.
,
Chairman Carl Johnaon dlsagreed,
ooUng, "I thln1t we'd get qulte • i>rotetl lr
we tried to rerone~the en~ area.t I'd
ralber stick with dealir,_ wilb .lbts group
of homeowners in tJie w00d18.nd are&:."
Commissioners informally agreed to in-
struct the city stall ta look Into lbe
various methods of rezoning the area and
told Wing to continue hlJ ..Ort on seeking
support for such a mqve in the cl'nyon
community.
Henry E. Avila. St-year-old Irvine
Company truck driver, was killed Mon-
day when the vehicle he was driving
overturned aod cru.shed him after a col-
lision. with a·car at Pacific Avenue and
3rd ~!feet Iii Santa Ana.
The Orange Count>_:. Coroner's Office
said Avila of llOll·W. 2nd St .. · Santa Ana ,
was dead at the scene. from bead and ln-
temal injuries.
8icky W: Div id, 21: of Orange, driver
of the car, was not injured. Pol~ releas-
ed him .alter queatloning.
20. .
The arrest of the elder Kulik In Kabul ,
Afghanistan, last week sparked an inves-
tigation that Jed to lhe arrests In the. art
colony or the trlQ held'by Judge F1ynn.
Ball for each of the two men ii aet at
$125,000 and for Miss Gibson at $&2;500.
·Anti-route Alliance Asked . . . .
Ne wport .Gi:oup ~eeks Coalition of .CQastal Cities
' . •• .f. Newport Beach anll-~1 """J'
WIJl1' to form a coaata! ai1Jance agalnil
lhe Pacific Coall Freew~ and ts seekJnc
the 'l!elP of clUes and to.ms from Long Beach to S.n Juan Capistrano.
~ ctttms Coordlnlthli Commltlle
wJll wrlla city o!Oclals and a 11
homoownon' groups up arld down lbe
Orange Coast In an atlem to flahl ~
propoaed lteeway, Newport Beach Vice
May0r Howard Rogers said -.y.
"Wt art trying to gel a coordinated
.,.Up npn-111( all alrecled ariu,"
Rogers aald noting lbe VoWins opposttlon
. , • • ' to tlie frffw1y route.
·'lbe occ,-an offfprlrli of the Harbor
Area 'F'reeway Fighters, forced an In·
iUatlve election ·in Newport Beach Jaat
MarCh lbat reoulted In the city's -.n-
cclt~tlon of Iha route agreement wltll the
state Dlv!Jlon of Highway1.
"Thia 1111\ude toward lbe freeway Is
gatnJng momentum," Rogers uld fhi.t
morninc saying be !bought lhe coaotal
alliance "II an lnterelllnc way to go."
~ nolad that P'CIUJll ._ ... tbe
fneWay h a • • a1rudJ IW'factd In •
number of towns lnclUdlnc Laguna
Bead>, Huntington Beoch and Seal
Beacli. '
Rt old II '1liere is enough Interest
shown lbe CCC will try to sehedule a
meeting or coasts! citizens eirly in
February:
Rogm said lbe letter will be malled
• lattr Ibis weeJt.. -• "'l don't know lbe exact wordln1," be
said, ''because they're still lllltlins lbe
-11na1 teucheson ti, But basi<aUy it say11£ ll¥:n IJ enough retponse we ...u! set up
Ille meeting to oee what we can do wllb a
11nite1 /orce."
'J' ..
Laguna Beoch Investigators aald at Ute
time or lbe arrest lliat the alteged'\m.
covering of the hash!Jh oil outlet ts 'tlio
first such dtscovery of the highly pot"l)t
narcotic outside· Afghanlstan1
Investigators are ltlll working on the
theory that a 'LaJUn• }leach man indicted
1as,i· month' by thi prange County G~
Jury 'on multiple~ Charges which ln-
Cldded the. poSseaa\on. of hasblsh oO mar
have been linked to lbe ring.
Donald Alexander Harii.barlan, 21, of
1183 Miramar St., was arrested at his
home Dec. t5 In a raid organized by state
narcotic officers , Laguna Beach police
aad the Orange County D!1>c and Narto-
ttc Tu k r~orce.
Investigators said I.bey found several
flasks of hashllh oil. 3.6,000 LSD tablets.
marijuana, me!C8llne, peypte and other
dangerous drup In the llanll>lrlan horn,.
Officers pu t the street sale value ot. the
conflacated drui• ·al $150;000.
Newport Besch JIOllce moved In to ar.
rest James Coot CoWle, 13, 4f".I02 Oub-
house Drive, shortly ofler,lbo 8ambartan
arrest and the conotn.ctioir -has
been llnk!d by lnvea~ll> ~Ibey
say WU an art colOO)I dtui I~ Jn
wblch the pal)' played a 'major role. Rambartan aad Oowlt have been or·
d<r!d to fact trt1l Mlll,'Ch I In Orange
Cowtty .Superior c;oart,, Cowie faces a
r.retrta!'hearlllfl Jan .· 14 while H•mbar-
an'r pretrlal ...,Ion lo.et for Feb. 11 .
Both men are beld In Ueu or tm ,ooo
lloH.
Tnvestig1ton have el'])lalned tMt•fiash.
I h oil Is lbe liquid refinement ol haahlj!i
which Is Itself 1 mlnmlen\ or marl-Juana . 1t lak..-..,. pound o! basblsll to
"1)dnce ono ounce ol (\ashl!lt oU. 'l1>e
oU is placid ~ an ordlWy l;iPrtt-
development Is inevitable out there,,.
Lanphear commented.
Lanphear noted that if Sycamore Hills
was deleted, Moody's figu re "-ould pro-
bably be reduced to 20,000 persons.
~1oody said he would include In hi!
report to the councU what the maximum
popul ation figure would be if Sycamore
~!ills was left as open space, as well as a
fi gure if it were developed.
He added the preliminary figu res wi ll
be sharpened up and presented to the
council for discussion at its Jan. 19
meeting.
Joan Wants
Irvine Area
'In 1 Piece'
By BARBARA KREJBJCR
Of t11t Otltr Plltt Stt n
Joan Irvine Smlth turned down an offer
of SlOO million cash for her stock in the
Jrvine Company about five years ago, the
heiress revealed dµrlng a press con-
ference at her Emerald Bay homt Mon-
day.
She refused the offer, made by a
representative of a New York cor-
poration, Mr1. Smllb 1ald, becluae she
felt it would !~ad torljle hrelklng up or
Mr llfllDCll...... alaDI Dr-. Cow>ly ranch ·Jioldlni•· "I'd rather sae It ktpt tn
one piece and sae IOIMlhi!1( lood •
'.with It," ahe said. '11 worked hard to Mve
lbe unlveratty brOugbt hert and I have
some feeling about lbe property. l'd Ilka
to see ti deteloped tll!hl, ·.liUowlng 'Ibo
original Pereira plan for lbe unlverslty
town ."
Mrs. Smith · aJlparenUy made the
disclo1ure to emphasize her insistence
lbat, "If I were only l!lterest!d in money
I wouldn't be dolnll all Ibis ."
She referrad to lier long.standing fight
to b~a!t the J..,,,, Irv)lle -Foundatloo's
control of lbe Irvine company and ber
recent attempta to 'block what ahe termed
premature Incorporation of the city of
Irvine.
Asked why she thought the unldenllited
company would want to offer such a &um
for her 21 percedt of Irvine Company
·stock, which she.has complained pays on·
Jy 1.6 percent dividends because of wbal
•be labels companx mismanagement, lb)
·heiress replled, ''1 don't know , why. I
'guess they thought Ibey could fl1ht
harder than I ell~."
Her desire to see the property kept In·
tact, she added, also has kep~ her from
availing herSllf of a C&Ufornia law that
would pennlt her, as a minority
stockholder, to petition for dissolution ol
the company. A 1915 amendment to the
states Corporate Securities Act, Mrs.
Smllb'• attorney Lyndol Young eJ.-
plAlned, pennita such tn action by a
stockholder owliing al least 311 percent of
stock other tban that on which the com;
plaint is being made.
The James Irvine Foundation owns 51.7
percent of total· Irvine Company stock
and Irvine' family member• own the re-
mainder, bu> of Ille" Mrs. Smith Is Utt
. (llee Jl'C!UNDATJON, pqe;I)
Oraafe
Weatlter
A-1ore patchy, dense, fo1 la fore-.
cut for Wedoesday, wllb haay sun.
shine io lbe arternoon. Lltut temp-
erature change )ll'edlcted, wltll
highs along the coast al !I rising
to SI Inland. Lows tonight 35-45.
INSmE TODA 'Y .
rhe C~ of Living Council
ray1 it wlU 1tart d!Jcloling the
ncmu of "1oloton of w gc·price
controlJ, end hinud I/lat rc111lfs
of co•ncil lnV<lligotio111 may lie
givo to p<r1<>111 filing com-
plaints og0t111t vtofctors. See
rtol')/ Pag 6.
L M • ..,. l ,. ... -~ -" "'''""" C•5tt aJ -" °""' N91&c. " Ht.Ml ..... & .......... .. ...... .... ..
,., .......... 11 ......... " Am~ 11
; 2 IWL Y •ILOT Ls 'l'\ldCO, a~uary 11,
' Fro,. Pqe J
-.FOUNDATION ... · ..
principal lndMdual 1tockholder.
AlthoU&h the helresi said the 1100
... mlllltft olltt for htl" stock bad been ma8e
and rejec:ted verb&Jt,. with no written
• caaunltmerrt.r, newsmen noted that It
,.:wouJd lndlClte a valuation of 'tht stare!
.. at $!5. rather than the m paid in the last
; .. recorded stock sale irl 19611.
'lbe fl&ure is significant because, under
the Tu Refonn Act of 1969, tor which ~'.,Mr1. Smith lobbied vigorously in
;' Washington, the Jame5 lr¥ine Foundation
• must. beg'inning this year, substantially
~ Increase its payouts to charlty.
' The heiress has maintained that the
';loundation wUJ not be able to comply with
' the new payout requirements unless it
rt1inquishes control of the Irvine Com-
pany or forces the company into a
wholesale dispersal of land holdings to
provide the necessary cash.
The Tax Reform Act will require the
foundation l& make a 4V. percent payout
to charJty in 1972, lncreuing hair ol one
percent IMualJy to a payout or 11.J per·
cent. blltd on an Internal Revenue
Se.rvlct appralsal of its assets. This a~
pralw la due by March 31.
: Open Space Plan
)Next Big Issue
•
.For Laguna Unit
Barely finished with the General Plan
land use element, Lleuna Beach planning
commlsaionera Monday night began con-
slderaUon of the open apace element of
. tht plan.
· Commissioners were shown a map by
city community designer T h o m a s
Howard which det.aJled all of the unoc·
cupled lands now ln the city.
A 1ubstanila1 portion of the un·
developed property ls located on hillsides
which in past studies have been con-
sidered geologically unstable, too steep
. for development or areas w h er e
: land!Udes have occurred, said Wayne
, Moody, director of planning and develo~
ment.
Moody said "there are all kinds or
~ zones for open space," including f1ood
plain, fire protection, resort a n d
agricultural zones.
"But I think agricultural zones are out
of the question," said Moody, noting such
a zone wou1d allow only one unit for
every 20 acres.
William Leak, 500 Broadway, suggested
.the city look into purchasing "scenic
easements" from landowners. Under
such a set up, he said, the owner may re-
tain the right to use the land for
acriculture or private recreation .purpoeta.
.: Trustees Slate
Badham Reading
Scores Meeting
Laguna Beach school trustees have
agreed to set up a r ea ding .11core
discussion .11ession between themselves,
Newport.Mesa school trustees and state
Aslemb\yman Robert Badhem (R-New-
port Beach).
Tbe decision to hold the metting grew
out of a recent Jetter published in local
newspapers in which Badham was
crltical or state achievement test scores.
At the December school board meeting,
Laguna Beach trustees discussed the Jet-
ter and alleged that Badham apparently
was not awart of the high scores achiev·
ed on the tMla by 1tudents within his own
as1embly district. Laguna Beach and
Newport-Mesa school dJslrict youngsters
1enerally scored high on the exams.
"If he is going to represent us on
educational matters." trustee · Norm<1n
Browne said recently, "then it is
important for him to know how we feel.''
School Superintendent Willlam Ullom
said be would take the steps necessary to
set up the joint meeting between the
school boards and the legislator.
OIAHGI COAIT
DAILY PILOT
ORAHOB CO.UT PUILUHIHO (ONl>JtJ("(
ll:oMrt N. Wool
Pt1t11Mn1 Wiil Pllblklltt
Jot\: II:. Curl.., Vim P'rn .. and 0-11 ....,
n-·• ic.,,a Editor
The Tax JWonn Act allO provides thlt
oo foundaUon is punutted to hold more
than JO percent of any one corporation .
Baud on tht 1161 atoet aale, the fou~
daUon'a Jrvln1 C.Omp&ny stock would be
valued al 1111 million. Thi• would r~ulre
a payout ln excess of $$ mllllon In 117'!. A
more accurate appralPI, aald Mrs.
Smith, would require a payout many
limes laraer. A recent !oondation report
showtd Income of ,2.5 million for the past
year.
The report also llsted assets of $10
million apart from the Irvine Company
stock. Foundation attorney Howard J.
Privett has stated the foundation will be
able to meet Its payout obligations from
lhese other resources.
fl1rs . Smith pointed out during the news
conference lhat Congressman Wright
Patman's House Committee on Banking
and Finance Is inaugurating an in-
vestigation of attempts by foundations to
side-step the payout requirements of the
Tax Reform Act.
Her attorney suggested that an attempt
by the foundation to meet the obllgation
by selling the $10 million in "other
assets," now earning six percent and pro-
viding a $600,000 payment to charity,
would constitute a "definite evasion."
Discussing so-called mismanagement of
the Irvine Company which results Jn
minimum earnings. Young cited a $1.2
million loan from Pacific Mutual, on
which the company has obligated Jtself to
9-9 percent interest payments for 25
years.
The company , Mrs. Smith a.sserted, is
sorely in need of "really. top men" in its
management, in the areas of finance,
planning, real estate and agriculture.
Laguna Outreach
Sets Color Film
By Billy Graham
A one-wee.k run of the new Billy
Graham film, "For Pete's Sake," will
open at the South Coast Theater in La.
guna Beach Wedneaday night, under the
sponsorship of Laguna Outreach.
The Art Colony youth assistance
organization will take over the theater
for the premlere Sout.h County presen·
tatlon ot tbe film, starring Robert
Sampson and Pippa Scott.
Produced in color and set in Denver,
against the backdrop of the Rock ies, the
comedy-drama examines the dilemma Of today's youth.
Screenings will be nightly at 7 p.m. and
9: 15 p.m., with 1:30 p.m. matinees Satur·
d>y and Sunday.
Single tickets are '2.lS and groups may
obtain books of 10 tickels for $.lO through
the OUtrucll oUlce al the Laguna Buch
Boy1' Club, phooe 494--0115 or 191-TALK.
George Loggi1is
Rites Wednesday
Services will be held at 2 p.m. Wed.
nesday in Waverly Chapel, Fairhaven
Memorial Park, Santa Ana, for George
M. Loggins, 474 Hilledge Drive, Laguna
Beach, who died Friday at the age of 92.
A naUve of Kansas, Mr. Loggins had
been an Orange County resident for 80
years and, for 35 yea rs, was a walnut
buyer for the Guggenheim Packing House
ln Orange. A Laguna Beach visitor since
childhood, he had made his home here for
the past seven years.
He is survived by a daughter, Mrs.
Lucille McCoy of El Toro: two grand-
daughters, Mrs. lryss M. McDonnell of
Laguna Beach and Mrs. Patricia Watkins
of Anaheim ; five great-grandchildren and
two great-great-grandchildren.
The Rev. Baird Coffin will officiate At
the Wednesday service, for which
McCormick Laguna Beach Mortuary are
directors.
Pig Attacks Lawman
DETROIT (UPI/ -An attack by a pig
has left Police Commissioner John
Nichols limping.
Nichols said Monday he was attacked
by a 45G-pound porker named Sheila
during a visit to a Utica·area farm Satur·
day.
Nichols said he went to the farm lo
visit Sheila and was accosted wht.n he
stepped into the pig's pen. He managed to
get one leg out of the way before bting
bowled over by the porker.
It Was Once a Libra1·y
Workmen are sho\vn among the timbers and debris
that formerly housed the Laguna Beach Library
at Park Avenue and Glenneyre. The old structure
has been razed to make room for an expanded fa-
cility for whi@. lhe county is paying $280,000. The
new building it scheduled for completion sometime
in September.
Zero Visibility Recorded
In Manv Coastline Areas .,
Drip. Drip. Drip •..
This Is wh.at Orange Coast residents
will be hearing again tonight and through
Wednesday morning, as more of the
soupy fog encountered today plops down
Hke a big, wet, gray blanket.
Zero visibility conditions were reported
in many areas this morning -until the
fog began lifting as the 15un rose -but
some .:!losed airports opened up again
shortly after dawn.
Orange County Airport began allowing
incoming flights to land about 8:30 a.m.,
after a 1~ hour closurtl '~·(.' .. ~ 1
Los Angeles and San Francisco in-
ternational airports were c I o s e d
overnight, with scores pf flig1Jf¥ diverted to Ontario, Van Niiys ·and 'Las Vegas
airports.
Orange County California Highway
Patrol officers said the fog was a real
traffic-slower during early morning hours
but was llltlng nicely by mid-morning.
The blanket evidently inspired caution
in many motorists and no major ac-
.
Fitness Classes
Again Offered
In South Laguna
Another series of classes in the South
Coast YMCA's popular Outdoor Fitness
Program began today.
Emphasis is on body fitness during the
three-month session, With c 1 a s s es
meeting on Tuesdays and Thursdays
from 9:30 a.m. to 10:30 a.m. at the Y
Camp Dolph, located behind the Laguna
Beach Country Club. 31106 Co a s t
Highway, South Laguna.·
Participants are tested for heart rate.
blood pressure, oxygen consumption and
mobility before and after the session.
cidents resulted.
The same situation resulted in Newport
Harbor, where boaters remained moored
in the eerie gray shroud.
Y outl1 Services
Request Hits
Legali~y 'Snag'
The request of an evangelist seeking
permission lo conduct youth services in
the Lag\Jna Beach Recreation Depart·
ment building, 175 N. Coast Highway, ran
into a possible legal snag recently when
councilmen questioned their authority to
permit the use of a public building ror
religious purposes.
The Rev. Carlos Abernathy of Orange.
in 11 letter to the council, said he has been
ministering to youth ln the Cleo Street
arefl of the Art Colony for the past year,
working around the Taco Bell, where
local and transient young people gather.
Stating that he has been instrumental
in converting more than 400 young pe<iple
to . Chrtstianity, ,Abernathy asked
permission to use the Recreation Depart-
ment meeting room for Sunday i;ervices,
promising to be responsible for main-
taining order and taking care of janitorial
service.
Major Richard Goldberg said he had
talked to the minister and told him he
was not sure if this would be a permissl·
hie use of the building. ·
City attorney Tully Seymour said there
would be "a serious question" as to
whether the counci l could make the
building available for religious services.
The council agreed to defer action until
its next meeting, pending a formal opi·
nion from legal counsel.
Laguna Teenager
Hurt in Crash;
Bike Hits Car
A Laguna Beach teenager 11ustalned
minor injuries Monday-afternoon when
his bicycle slammed into the aide of an
auto which had turned in front of him.
Police said Peter Glenn Gain, 17, of 280
Highland Road, wa! taken to South Coast
Co~munity Hospital by ambualnce
following the 12:30 p.m. mishap. Physi·
cians at the hospital treated the youth for
a severe laceration on his leg and releas-
ed him.
According to police reparts, Gain was
northbound .on Coast Highway when a
southbound auto driven by Timothy Mat·
thews Hanson, 16, of 46 ~merald Bay,
pull'1 In ftont of him w1'le torning mto
Laguna ~venue. Driver Hanson swerved
in, an.. attempt to avoid the oncoming
blc{cllst, officers said, and struck .. vehi·
cle coming down Laguna Avenue driven
by Richard Maggard of Santa Ana.
Ha"son and his passenger sustained
minor cuts and bruise1 as a result of the
collision with the auto, investigators
noted.
The mishap is still under investigatipn.
l'rona Page 1
PACKAGE ...
beach below. CoW'tyards would be Jn.
eluded for the use of the re1ident.s.
The structures would comply with the
36-fool height limit.
The condominium project by Upland
replaces an earller plan for a twin tower
hotel complex which was dumped
because of the height limit and refusal by
several property owners to sell to the
firm.
Ahearn said that after plans are sub-
mitted to the city, three weeks may
elapse before the requests come before
the planning commission in a public
meeting. The three-week period, he 1ald .
is needed to give the city staff time to
study the proposal.
Each class hour includes warm·up
calisthenics, jog·walk interv&ls and Yoga
type exercises, under the guidance of a
qualified instructor. PASSWORD ---Fee for the course is $35 for new
members and $25 for pr e v I o 11 s
participants. Residents of the South Coast
area may sign up now at the YMCA 465'
Forest Ave., Laguna Be~hJ oi cWl @4.-
9431, for further informalk>n. • . '
2 Trust.Bes
On Remap
•
Commitwe
TusUn Union High School Dlstrlcl
trustees Chester Briner and Robert
Bartholomew Monday were appointed to
a Saddleback Community College District
rem apping committee, thus rounding out
the membership of the advisory group.
The committee is to study a plan of
red istricting the area 1erved by
Saddleback College and make a recom·
mendalion to college trustees. The group
Is also expected to discuss whether the
method of electing trustees to the college
board shoold be changed.
Two trustees from each, of the three
un ified or high schOo! diatrlcta in the
Saddleback College area have been 1elec·
fed to serve on the committee-.
In addllion to Briner of Mission Viejo,
and Bprtholomew, of Tustin, ~hey are
Gerald Linke and Patricia Gillette, both
ol Laguna Beach, appointed fro1n the
Laguna Beach Unified School Dl1trlct and
Fred Newba;'t. or San Juan C,.plstrano,
and Robert Beasley, or San Clemente,
both appointed from the Capistrano Uni-
fied School District.
While the two Capistrano members of
the committee have indicated a
dissatisfaction with the status quo, other
committee members have spoken of a
desire to maintain the present governing
rules or the district.
The Capistrano members, and the
distrct's entire school board, have gone
on record as saying that the method of
electing trustees to serve on the college
board should be changed.
The Saddleback board m e m be r s ,
although each lives in one of five trustee
areas of the district. are elected at large
by voters Of the entire community college
distrlc;l Newhart and Beasle): have said
they would like to change thl1 to having
each trustee elected only by the voters of
his own di.Strict.
The other four committee membtra -
and the prrsent colleae trustees -have
spoken in favor of keeping the present at·
large method of elecUon.
The advisory· committee will also
discuss expanding the college board from
five to seven members by cutting the
Saddleback Valley into three tnistee
areas, instead of the present one. This
expansion must be approved by voters in
the college district and college trustees
must make a flnal decision on whether to
expand prior to Feb. 22 In order to put
the matter befort the voters at the June
6 primary election.
If voters approve expansion, college of·
ficials have said that the two new
tq11lees would bl appointed 1zy ths
pa'tsenl goV•l'Jli!'I &oard ,of Ute colliege. • • :1 1 f "t ...
Masonic Rites Held
For James A. Byers
Masonic services were held Sunday in
Pacific View Chapel for James Arthur
Byers, 804Q Ronda Mendoza, Laguna
Hills, who died Friday at the a~e of 75.
Mr. Byers, who ii iurvlved by his
#idow, Len8., was a retired traffic control
manager for the Ford Motor Company. A
native of PeMJylvanla, be had lived in
Orange County for the pa!l eight years.
Entombment in Pacific View Memorial
Park followed the Sunday aervlce,
Palms Supported
LOS ANGELES (AP) -More then 100
persons ha ve established a picket line
because they say the city has decided to
fell palm trees and replace them with
macadam. A group called the Committee
to Save Palm Trees said Monday the city
wanted to cut down trees paid for by
residents to make room for left turl'.I
Janes on Highland Avenue in the Hancock
Park area.
ThU.11 A. M1~h1e
Meflf9int Edl!llr
Cli1rT•1 H. leor "1""'' '· Nin AUl.lla11I MIJllO!ng Ect11ors Laguna Rec Unit Starts
A good word . paned oround 1bout •
business is invelu1ble. A bad word can be
unfortunate.
L
Lep .. .._. Offke
22Z Forti! Avtnwt
Mtiling 1ddr111: l'.0, l o( 666, 92651
S. Ci....teOHke
JOS Ntrl~ El C1'"iR• Rtol, 92671
.,.... Cffk" a.ti M ... • llO WMI II? ltrwt
N"""'' l..c11: :uJJ "''"""""" ku1tw11'f ...... ...., ws ..,. 1"1io.ttt'.
C11ltural-Social Programs
Classes ln gujt.ar, ballet. embroidery
and painting will take the spotlight as the
Laguna Beach Recreation Department
launches the cultural-social phases of its
winter program. ,-
A new cla!s in beginning guitar will be
held Thursday evenings at 8 p.m., com-
mencing Jan. 17, with an intermediate
class on the same evening at 7 p.m. at
lht Recreation Department, 175 N. Coast
Highway. UC Irvine student Melanie
Panush is the instructor and the fee ls $5
for five weeb.
Ballet classes for beginning students
will start at 10:30 a.m. on Saturday Jan.
22, preceded by an lntermedl1lo cl111 at
9:30 1.m .. also it tile RecrteUon Depar!·
ment, with instructor Jill Sweet of tbe
La&una Buch Civic Ballet. Fee la 15 for
etghtclw... ·
A ct... In creative danc. for tmall
cllll<fyen, tauiht by Mn. Swett, alto wtll ""1iic 1111 J111. 2%, at 11:30 a.m., wllb 1 " r .. for elsbl cllsaee.
Connie Rosl will start a new class In
crewel embroide'ry at 7:SO p.m. Monday
.11t the Recreation Department. Fee ls $15
for six classes.
A Monday afternoon class in landscape
pointing, taught by Leooard Scheu, wlll
begin Monday, using the Recreation
Department ~s headquarters and for
studio .,.·ork during inclement weather.
FC< is l20 for 10 cla ..... with .. rly reser.
vations recommended.. 1
An all-media ciaos I.iii both beginning
and «dvanced atudents--will be conducted
by Scheu on Tlltsday erenlngs at Top of
th• World tlementaty .SChool, with a l20
fee for 10 cluse!.
Beginning and lnlemtedlelo ltnr.la
classe also get und~r "Wl.y on the Irvine
Bowl cOWt. thla montll wllll a 16 ree ror
tight clelm.
Further· Information regarding the
winter o(lering1 may be obtalntd call·
Ing lht Recreation D<partmtnl, 1121,
Ell II, ,
Our growing suct11 in th1 past I 4 y••r•
hes been due to the "good words" and
referrals sent to us by our customers .
No amount of 1dveriising can rtpl1ce 1
p1rson1I recommendation.
Wo are not inf1llibl1, but WI lrt working
towards that go1I by giving our customers tho
best service and querity posslbl1.
I
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e ·DRAPES
1663 Plac•ntla Ave.
COSTA MHA
646-4131
HOURS: Mon. thru Thurs. f to 5:30 -'''• f to f -S.t. 9t30 to S
• I
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f
f
j
I
I
I
I
•
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Sitddletiaeli '·
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Tod y's Fin••
N.Y. Steeks
" . . ' l;' . '"' ~"i
\19L .65, N~ •• 9, 2 .SECTIONS, 28 PAGES . . , O~JllGE. COUNTY1· CALIFORNIA • •
' TUESDAY, JANUARY II, 1972 TEN .CENTS
' . " . " .. ..
Tells al .. )leje~·ting Stock Oller
' ' By cllARBAJlA KllEIBICH
•• ' , ~,,_. 011~ ... , ... ~
Joan Irvine Smitlrturned down an olfer
cit.•100 '1\M cal!J•fot her stock la the t....,. C::Olnpah)r aboul live yeara<1go, the
he)ress re.veaJed :dtf.clng a press coo--
re,.,.,. al lier Emerald Bay home · Mon-
day. · -· • "
She r<!ii~ed the ofl<r, made by a
representative of a New York cor-~~tton, ?.1r~. Smith 'laid,. becau&e she
felt it would"lead to Ille breaking 'up of . . •
ber grandfather's giant Orange County
ranch boldlngs. "I'd rather see ii kept in
one piece and see something good done
with it," she said. "I worked hard to have
the university brought here and 1 have
some feeling about the property. I'd like
to· see it develo)led right, following the
original Pereira plan for the university
town."· •
~fr~. Smith apparent~y made the
disclosure to ·emphasir.e her insistence
that,. ·:u I were orily Ulterested in money
e1re·s·s
'
~· Pr~par.ed
.To Become
lrVine Aides
Two 'young men, one of whom ran for
the lrvlne City Council, told coilecllmen
la.st week they would be jnterested in
seMng: as a temporary administrative
assistant.
Stephen DeLapp, 22, of 17942 Cedar
~ Lane, Uni\•ersity PaJ1k offered to
Wf.C"k afternoons for , the new ·city, and
a.cry Loomla, 28 of· 14751 .Sweelan offered flilf ume .. fvlce all<!' giving llro weeks
oo!ife to 'the ~·Ang<1es.Po!lce:Depart
~ where he Is employed . ., an ad-
dilnl!ttaUve. assist.ant. '
The council · ..,,. not formally co1'-
sldeflng administrative assl!tants, but
beard the two applkanta following ln-
t...iews of l,I persona seeking ap-
pdlntmeiit lut Satjlda)l'I to Ult ad-
mlnlltrative consultlllt opening with the new city. ' l
Coundbnan E. Ray ~lgley Jr. in-
dlcated Jn . a Jne!l!O"l'ndum to the cooncil
~ JUiJb1 consider blr!ng an assistaol and
.. ~etary first. Tlie t'OllllCU aareed lt' would continue Ute 11<MrJr1or'the ·interim city manager-
QO!isultant, bOwe'v'!I'. .
, ~Lapp who ndtell be malatained a 4.0. ma~ht ·A average at ·saddleback OJU.~e
wblle he ran for the clty"Cow!cll; offered
t0 work part t1roe fot the city far $SOO I
monlh. · ·
I Mayor · W1111am Fllcbbacb no l e d
DtLapp ran .a .. notable-and decent .cam·
palgn" and ,was a v.eteran of service 1n
Vletnam.. . . ,
&th men Indicated a "UllngJlw· to ~le the "nub and ' boll!" ad·
mJ!t!slrtUon details tJ\il most' of Jhe con-
!'Ji.!&nl 8Pllll~&nl~lndical<!f Uiey were not
tee! )n1 handllng.. . 1~ s31d he ls not Interested in
rl\ry ~ili"n, asked' 1 salory of 9'f to liOO ,per .J110l)lh for .lulltime ~ci :.l'bal anjpual•ls,oiiJU)ar to .what
is eirnlng with the UPD: he uld.
· ~.and his .wife,. JW., have lived 1n
for .aevtn montM and. baVe two
ughters.
0"9W1Cibnan Ray Qujg!ey noted a
nat". association with Loomi.! who
lt said wu working on a rnl!ten degree
J>Ublic admlnlstrafion.
nwbll,,, the councl1 will consider
fj e' conmtant applicants at a public
· caJled !or 7:30 p.m. Wednesday
in!.. !he city p(flcos, room 238, Town ~tr, 421>1 C)liupus Drl~e. lmne.
'liepen<!iJ>g on . the city M&)lageN:Oll-~t clioloe, J~ ls po..tble die council
"!'!': declae to emplpy an admlt\lstrative
aj1181anL.
41J1lly one. of llie consullarit apyllcants,
Darrtll Essex and Aasoclatea, has iD-d~. tt woulH 'not need such an aide. 'nil.l ~am locludes a clty manager-eon·
"lll"t a 11111 Ume administrative aso1s-
tariNJ1d .a·st .... <OCOrds adv!Oer.
4'be-other lour persoO.' be con-
l!dered by .lhe counc:ll .. , Jo w.
lliweer; sz dlY manager of COrrlt01:
.. nl~C.Mcn.~d.11:,,U~•ersl~of 11¥!anda olllclal, !rvm !\ift, ~:
'l)i9nw E. Selman, 47, cify manager of
•· and WDllain W'oolletl Jr., 43, a land ~'<lopment cqnsu1tan1 Irv!" ~
J!¥)jora. • •
1cyine Firm Trucker
)'llied in A~nt
Henry E .• Avila, lt-JMMld lntn.
pany truck driver; ,,,,. <killed Mon-
when tht vtl\ltle II< wu driving
ovortumed and cniabed blm aher a QOl-
U1iQn with a car al Pacific .Avenlie and
Jr<lrStretl ln Santa Ana. ~'MIO Orange County Qirontr/s Oliite
..W.AtUa of 1405 W. 2nd St,s.nta Ana,
--tt Iba octne Jtom qead and ln-tmial Jnjurlto,
R1cky W. David, it, of OrinP..drlv.er
el tbe ..,._,,,., nol lnjuncL.Police ftlw·
e<I lllm all<r que11fmilns.
Tim> Morgpn, c;.pp • R~cords '
,recordiJJ'g star 1 WW. lservet .as1•
Mission Viejo chairman of next
month's National Fn\mdatlnn-
March ol Dimes fund-raising
driVe. He resides in Mission
Viejo w.ith wife a~d three chil-.
dren, and has been entertain· ·
irig at Dry Doc!• in Newport :
.B;eacb .
lrrine CitiZens ..
Group to ·Meet . . .
Irvine Tomorrow, the environmental
action and citizen's forum org~jzat1on,
plans lts a·nnual meeting · ror '7:30 p.i/i.
Thursaay In the Colony C!ubhoUle,' $U
South Mall, in the COiony Homes deilelop.
ment.-
Membera who have paid' their $1· dues
will be eligible to vote for officers who
will se.nte for the year. In order to,vote,
members must have joined prior to Jan.
1.
Mrs. Nina E. West, vice chairman, said ne" members .may join' but wW not be
eligible tO vcite for the U·mtmbtr board
of directors.
Justice's Kin Dies
PORTLAND. Ore. iUPll -Curtis V.
Heffernan, father·in-law. Of U.S. Supreme
Court · Juatice William O. Douglas, .died
Monday at the age ol 11> of aon\plfcallolls
from pneumonia and emphysema.' Htf.
feman, of Portland. was affillated with
the Burlington-Northern· Railroad !or 35
years. His daughter, Cathy, married
Douglas in Sherman Oaks, C8Uf:, in1July
of 1966 ..
Took Two Years
Uni
Unit two years alter the llral ground
~akini ceremony. construction. 'of pr.jv".°'1ty Hlgb School in Jnrlne la com· ~o<;ialo or the Tllstln Union High
SCboOl District an schedttled to make the
rmal lnspectlon of the r•clllty Wednesday
DIOl'ning.
The. school, located 11 the Intersection
of Culver Road and Campus Drtvt, was
buUI ln two ph..., with C0111tructlon
beginning 1n January of !Jml. Cl>IUng '5.5
mDllon, tho bigh acbool bu a capadty or
I,850 1tudeftt1._
Btcaose the area smied by tbe achoo!
llas been ropidlJ' d.,eloped ..,..lmeol
I wouldn't be doing all thls."
She referred to her ,IOnj·•tanding fight
to break the James Irvine FoWldatlon's
control of the Irvine C.Ompany and her
recent attempts to block what she termed
premature incoJ1>0raUon of the city ol
lrvine.
Asked why she thought the unidentified
company would want to offer such a sum
for bier 21 percent of Jr"line Company
stock, which she has oompJained pays on·
ly 1.6 per.cent divide~s because of what
ees
2 Trustees
On Remap
Committee
Tustin Union High School District
trustees Chester Bfiner and Robert
Bartholomew Monday were appointed to
a Saddleback Community College District
remapping committee, thus rowldtng out
the membership of the advisory group.
The committee 15 to study a plan or
red is t r .j c.t in g the area se.rVea by
Saddleback College. and ·make • recom-·
mendatioo to college tnistees. The group
ls also expe~ to c!lscuss whet••r ,t!Ho
method of el~·~· '' lbl~
board' d bf ·cha!i .
TwO ~;..., "llom 1 ch or the
Unified Ol""ldgh ICJIOOl dfMctr lh ~
saditleba:ct CoJJege area have beeo·!elec· ~'to .. ..,.. qlt tl!e eomoolttee. ,, .
Iii addluon to Briner1or MiniOll Viejo.
and Bartholomew, of Tustin. ~y are
Gerald Linke. and Patricia <llllell<, both
of La~a Beach; appoiated from ·the
Laguna.Beacli Unilied School Distrid and
Fred Newliart, o1 San Juan cilpistrano,
and Robert Beadey, of San aemente,
bo(h. appointed from the Capistrano Uni·
lied Sch09! District.
While the t,wo capistrano members or
the committee _ have indicated a
dlssatis£acti0n. wt1b tbt~tus quo, other
coinmittee members ba~e spoken of a
. desire to maintain the Jj1esent gove.roing
rules ot the.dlsb:iCI.
nie · Ciplstrano memtiers, alld the
dl strct's .entire tcbool board, have· gone
on record as &aying' that the method or
electing trustees to s~e on the college
board should be changed.
The Saddle~ack,. ~d me m b e,r t ,
, aJtbougb. each lives in one of five trustt:e
areas of the .~!strict,. are eJected at large
by voters of the ~ntire cpmmunity college
district. Newhart and Beasley have said
they would like to change this to having
(S.,•SADDLEBACK, Page !J
School . Slid~ Tour
Set on Cal,>levision
A slide and picture tour of University
Park Elementary School in Irvine will be
the subject of "Learning '72" stries of
cableviskin programs bowing at 7 o'clock
tonight on chaimel 3.
Principal stu Cunningham will be In-
terviewed by Ken Lewis. San Joaquin
Elementary District public relations of·
ficer:
Mrs. Joan Boulanger will host the
special cablevi!lon program which in·
eludes a discussion or the reading
labora)Ory program sWfed by Mary-Koy
MichelJeh. . .
.
bu ilre•d,l'. reached l,775 student.I.
School oHiClals pr"1!<\ that tbe new
li<Dlty will be overcrowded 1n the 1m1s
!tChool yur with an enrollment of 2,100
students.
Students £rom the Irvine area, after a
semester of double 1essions at Mission
Viejo HJgh School, bqan attending
classes at partially-completed Unlver11ty
!Ugh 1n January of 1971.
Tho llnal pbue of construction Included
an admlnlstratlon building, 1 gynma1hlm,
restroom bulldin1s and laciUtles to baure
ll'Ulic 1114 practlcal arta cluses.
Preceding Friday night's baskelball
pme, Ute .... pm w!U be dedluttd ..
sbi labels company misi:nanagernent, the
heiress replled, "I don 't 'know why. I
guHs they thooght th<y • routd fight
harder than I did."
l:fer desire to ~e the property kept in·
tact. she added, also has kept her from
avE&llln,g herae.lf of a California-.law that w~ld: permit her, as •a minority
s~holder, to petition for dissolution of
the company. A, 1965 amendment to the
sl4_tes Corporate Securities Act, ~trs.
Smli)l 's attorney Lyodol Young ex·
.. .. -
plained, permits such an action by a
stockMl.der owning at least 30 percent of
stock other than that on which the com-
plaint js being made .
The James Irvine Jo"'oundation owns ~.7
percent of total Irvine Company stock
and Irvine family members own the re·
malnder, but of these Mrs. Smith is the
principal individual stockholder,
Allhough the heiress said the $100
million offe r for her stock had been made
and r~>r ... ted ,·c: .. •c11y. with no wrJtlen
commitments, newsmen noted th1t It
\V6ll]d indicate a valuation of !he mar~
at $55. rather than the $25 paid in the last
recorded stock sale in 1968.
The figure is significant becau.st, under
the Tax Reform Act of 1969, for which
J\.lrs. Smith lobbied vigorously i n
\Vashington, the James Irvine Foundation
must, beginning this year. substantially
increa se its payouts to charily .
The heiress has maintained that the
(Ste FOUNDA~ON, Page 2)
• Ill
Curbs Eyefl
On Irvine
Developing
By GEORGE LEIDAL
01 IM Deltt 'llllt Stiff
The granddaughter of James Irvine
senses the majority' of the new Irvine C\.
ty Council sharea her concerns about
development of the ranch and \YIU block
overdevelopment.
Mrs. Joan Irvine Smith, ma)OritJ
s1ockholder in the Irvine Company, ~ton.
day became the first hl&hly placed
person in the land development company
to indicate the new City Council JQl.gbt
oppose the lniln• ComNny.
,,., · Mrs. Smith · fbld '• · pthenni' ol
newsmen In her Eme>ald Bay boma )\lo!J· . m...;;r:• . Bay~ Jr .. andJObn ~to ba
endjy to cot!>l'&D.Y jrileruU. "T~ wm strictly I par! Of~ ~ Slate, ' atie sald. 1 • , • ,. •
"The salvation' IOl"tlle-city 11u lbat a
'company slate! was not elected. B'tause
the council majority who were elected
from the IrvJ.ne Tomotr0w organization
swn to be interested In the original
William Pere.Ira master plan for develop.
ment, I don't tblnk the company's 53,000
ecre city will happen now," Mrs. Smith
Hid.
, • • .-. , • •• , DAtLf'llM).OT &lift,._ "I£ these people keep their independent
• , ~ ·~ 1 ~ • • stature, 1 believe the lrvtne Foundatlorr ls
'' ~lrlt T!1~~-ir'-IJQ~$1P!1 MILLION·STQ<\K Of,FER . • .jn big trouble." "", ,, ~ l '~'Y'l"!'t 6"'.I:'..1itµ"ll ,l0>Joan ~(.'!r,..,smrtt" " .J ' .Pr/of to. the cltybood election lut Dec.
' !. . "' ( ' ~'a.: .. £ . ! ~ <:t.! ttu-' ln1ne beireu rnwed votera to turn ~ J! •f ~ .,... 11( :i-"! r-, -a . . • · : ;, ®""! fncorporitlorr In two pre.balloting ' . . ' ·' ........ _ -.•J ~~. Z .' v· • !L!l!t D . .;J 'd1
I• Monday, she indicated she would view ero ' ISW:IU. Y :.1\~~orve '~.~. ~rdolthe"'!WCltycouncllwithin-
'# • • • • •• ~ • • ' • • "I ·plan to attend Wedne8day11 council
· · ' meeting aa an interested 'obatrver /' Mrs. In M . . . c ' 1 •· ~ Smith said. That aeulon has been called . anv· oast. me eas · for 7:30 p.m. Wednesday Jn the city of-. fices, room 2SI, Town Center, 4201 Cam·
ti pua Drive, aCl'Ols from UC Irvine.
Drip. Drip. Drip ... •· ' • Mrs. Smith aald the temparary city hall
traffic.slower during early momlng bo\n:s location pleased.her since that was one of
This is what Orange coast residents
will 'be hearing again tonight and tllrough
Wedoesdiy morning; as Jriore of the
soup.Y fog encountered today plops down
' but was lifting okely by mid·morning. the recommendation! made by Pereira in
The blanket evidently inspired caution his lHO general plan for an eventual city
In many motorists and no major aC· of 10,000 acres to surround the university.
cldet1tl resulted. It was· Mrs. Smith who convinced the
like a blg, .. wet, gra~ btanbt. ·
Zero VislbUity condilions were reported
in .many areas this mpming -u.ntjl the
fog begin ilfting 'as the sun rose -b\Jt
some closed ~rts ·opened ilp again
shOrtly affe.r dawn. -
The aame aituitkm resulted in Newport Irvine Compal'()' JJoprd to donate 1,000
. Harbor, where ~ten relnained mbortd acres for the campus.
in the eerie aray ahroud. . While most of her remarb !\tonday
"lt'a holding eVenrli><>dY In," said ·a centered on her contlnuin1 struggle with
spokesman for th! Harbor PaIJ;<>I. the lniine Founcl<tion over control or the
}[Uy SUi'lshine was forec11St for af· land development llrm, Mrs . Smith
Oral!g• COl\D!Y Air}iort began allowing
incoming Oighta to land about-8:30 a.m.,
after.a ~II hour dos~.
t~ft hoqr,, retuptln1 to gloomf, neveretheleaa offered her views of 'tome
· murky •sklos by !b!I evening generally Iii<• HEIRESS, Pare II
Los Angeles and San Frailcl.sco in-
ternational airPorts were c I o s e d
oventlg~t; wl)l) scores .of flights .dlverted
to , O'tltario, Van Nuys and Las Veps
airpbrl.s.
Orange County California Highway
P.i.tfol officers said the fog was a real
along the entlr•" Souther.n Calllomta
' coast. • · '
Heavy !og' was repot;ted b"etwffn
MaUbu and Oxnard, exten41ng's"wtord to
the ChaMel I1lands.
Patches of the thlck log 11 far nortlus
SaC1'8rnento closed mo11t· airports to tn.
coming IUghls, whUe rain was falling in
northern CalUorn1,. .
The weather man Pfedlcted high
temperalurtS up to 68 for the Orange
Coast Wednesday, with temperal\U'es dip-
ping Into Ille mid 40s overnight. ·
Uni High to Receive
Key Club Charter
the Donald W. CUUe Memorjal Gym-The Klwans Club ol lrYlne, apooaor·ol
nashmt, Mr ' Casile urved 11 principal or the Unlvmily High Schoot Key Club, wUJ
the school until hls death at Ute age ol 16 present the stude$ group charter al a
on Nov. 22, 1970, Before "'::t;•med dinner se\ for 7 p.m. Wedneaday In the
prlnclpal ol Un1ventt1 H!ih, he serv-Saddleback Inn, Santa Ana. , '
ed as principal of,Tµ11)n llJih.SCl\901. Key Club oil.leers w!D recllve . the
'!'be present principal ol University charter from 11 eJi Br ad.le y , youth lflg~ SCi1901 ls Victor Sherreitt. service• chairman of tile Irvine Klwanl• ~tbouab building ronstruotloo, at tbe ·Club dlapler whldl 11$tl( w,. c~
scbctol ls cornplel<, cooslruol!On ot an only last May. 1 ,
•Cf!latic .!~dilly .is .• ~• to begin Key club offic:en are: Jeff Tbompron, IOO~. --• " .. -1dan(;•l!lll llh1dle, ·~·presljleill, Ed School district llUJleel Monday award-• Rlebl, .aeoretary, Randy , l)e .Ltpp,
ed 1 Sll6.700 rontraet lor <Ollalrit¢Uoo of trell\ln!r and Dave :Jo Lapp, serl'anl at
the 2$ meter swlmmlnc PoOlcand reloled -arms..Jnltructor Brian Qu1iin II .the tfub
!acWlles lo Nldar, Int., of La Puente. advisor.
• • • . . . .. .. ' ...... ,.,~ .. -..
0r .. ,. Ce•a
we.~er
"tore patchy, denae fog Is fore.,
caat for Wednuday, with hazy stzn.
shine in the a!temol>n. Little temp-
erature chan,p predkted, with
hlgba a1q the. coaal at M rising
to !I Inland. Lows tonight IMS.
INSWE TODAY
The Coll of LlvirtQ Council
saui it will ~rt dUclosing the
.. m., of violatori of woa<-c>rl«
control•, and hinUd thot rt1utts:
of council inve1tiQatfon1 mar be
given to ~r.soni filing com·
ptafntt aaaln1& violotor1. Set
110711 Pag< 5.
_.. \t
Mwt'Mt ,_.. 1e • ........ Mt•• ... .. _ '""' " ·~· ,.,.., 11 ... , .. ,,
llildl M8ftMft , .. ,. q
......... l>\t ·-..
2 DAILY PILOT SB
Lau11ching a New City
Has Its Disadvantages
By GEOROB LEIDAL
ot 111• Ot11Y 101i.1 llt!I
LAUNCHING A NEW city ia not nearly so nl':it a venlure as \.!lunching 1
ship. Firat off, it's tough to find the pla ce where you strike lhf! bottle of
cblmpecne before 11lppln1 her into the sea:
The pill ltw week• hive revealed some moments when the difflcullle11
of launching the ship of st.tie have been shown mo•t
clearly.
fo'or elample, ()nly 1111 week 1 columnl1t for an
Orange County daily became Ml frustrated over re1chlng
the city clerll, Mrs. Norl11111 Brandt, ht publlahed a not.I
In his column to have her call him .
Arr1ngements for a city telephone 111re 11 yet Incom-
plete. However , in split of the women'• lib tone or re.
m1rk1 made by Councilm1n Gaby Pryor. the city now en·
joys a temporary home Jn Town Center. on belnt: assigned
to find and furnish the city hall, Mrs. Pryor was led to
remark:
"[KNEW IT. I ju1t KNEW IT," she exclaimed. "A woman Is elected to
the City Council and right away she'1 aot to go out and buy the paper cllps.''
Although unuld, perh1ps the ma.le CQuncilme.n felt 1 woman'• touth was
In order. After all , the "mother of Irvine" they ml1ht hive reasoned, would
be best equipped to pick out a neat for the city. Late word lndle1lts Mrs. Pryor
delegated her paper clip featherln& dttall to Mayor rtachbach'a Wife. '
T~B FACJ' IS, tomeone haa t.o handle the picky details that come with
the elevtted stalus of cityhood .
For the aecond council meeting of record. actually an adjourned second
sl..!Jb at the council's first ()rganizational meeting. hir.zOner the mayor and
mother Irvine were !lttfl strolling in the chill dark on the UCf campus.
Draped over the mayor's shoulder w11 an American Oar on a ataft. ~ Mother Irvine, we guested. clutched a base for th• 1tand1rd •• the palr he1ded
for the ~lenet L«ture Hall. Later discuukln during that meetlnc conllrmtd
suspicions. One question asked aspiring city m1n11er c1ndld1te1 Wll, "would
you be wiUin1 to handle details such as . , . m1kln1 1ur1 therfi 11 1 011 at
council meetings?"
CAftR\'lNO A FLAG to meetings is not the only Inconvenience hl1zontr
: bas ft1.cM . Some 200 or ~ cfl·y watchers crowded Unlver11ty Park tl1mentary
~ School tor the council '• first regularly scheduled meeting thl1 week.
., A lengthy agenda faced the council. Thrtt and a half houn Into the meet.
ln1, M1yor Fischbach called a recess -five mlnute1 while tht recorder w11 to 1et 1 freah 1upply of tape. .
Everyone's first Impulse WI! to remove tired fannies from the eculpted
metal seats or folding chairs. Once derrtre1 re11umed human form, another
thought entered people's minds.
Covey1 of males ind females alike 1eoured the outdoor reaches of the
school. A locked door merked "girls '' thwarted the city cltrk for a time. Some-
ooe directed • trio or men to try another door . It wa1 unlocked.
THE FIRST umpler determined the public fa~lllty waa what country
folk rt.fer to 11 • one-holer.
Jn A few minutes, a line had formed. t.1t In lint WI& hlu.oner,
Twenty minutes later. the five minute rtcea1 ended.
But the ultimate ln1dequ1cy of the elementary achool meeuna pl1ce bt-
came evident in the wee hours of the mom1n1. Al l:IS a.m. the ccuncll ad·
j(lw-ned to executive se11lon to dl1eus1 a permnel matter.
EXECUTIVE lN California Jetal parl1nce mtan1 private. Council mem·
bers and staff only.
f Simply transl1ted It 1\so mearu public and prt:aa eltunt. Amacray.
Vanish. Go.
All lert. Onl)' the following moming did reportera Item It wa1 n de1ree1 outaldt
lh Irvlne 11 we stood 1w1ltlng the final decision. Tht public decided they'd
rathar read Jt In theJr newapapers than flfl'ht thl chUJ. ,
Fortunately, 1 ktndly San Joaquin Ql1trlct malnttnuce man dJrected us
to 1 back door that Jed to 1 kitchen . That kitchen , unht.1ted thou1h It wa1, •f·
forded the councll llft privacy and reporters 1 modicum of re1plte from the!
cold. A dime or two on a tray, afforded even more comfort, a h11tll y brewed
cup of coffee . W11.rmly received It was. l 1111ure you.
ONE REPORTER-edilor for a prominent Irvine weekly who shall remain
forever nameless, unashamedly returned for Lhe fln•l 111?1 of the public meet·
lng, coffee cup In hand .
A coun<:llm1n, rumpled. bleary-eyed ind obviously In need of • jolt or
jav•. nearly cried when he 11w the lone rem1lnlng cup.
I 1u1pect the motion of th1t we.1Jry 2:30 a.m. moment wtl\ letd lo pro-
visiOn of coffee 1t future council aessions.
How's your coffee brewln1, Mother li;vlnef
'Anglo' Audience Gets
Chicano Culture Lesson
By CANDACE PEARSON
01 trtt 01Uf 11'1111 11111 '
The min In the 1udlence •poke Spanish
for 1lmost five mlnute1 ind the panel of
four Qilc1no te1cher1 ind counselors
listened intently.
OllANll COAST
DAllY PllOT
N.-,.rt a...ti
let1H kMll ,.,,, *'•••
()11.AAOli co•ST ll'Vt l.ltHIHQ COM,llAHY
'-•b•rl N, Wetl
r ru..ie"! tOll 11'\/0llli'ltl'
J.1\ ~-C~rlt'I
Vk1 l'rts"'""' 11'11 G-••l Ml"fOV
T~'"''' K1•¥ll liifl!t,
Th11¥111 A. M~ip~i~•
Mt"ttl"I t•,1111'
Ch1rl11 H l11111 .,,~,,... '· ~.11
All~ltfll M ..... lfll Ellltr6
f
Half or the 1udlenct -the "Anglo5 '' -
str1lned to undtr.!ltand the different
language. Most failed .
"When he first started to speak Spanish
-I w11~ going to stop him bec11use I
thought It w1s unralr to the rest of you.''
another Chicano m11n In the 11udlence
said. "But then T reallied this would be
the perfect way for you lo see our side.
"You Yl'ho didn 't unders!Rn. were ju:\t
like the child rrom 1 Sp11nl1h·speak tn11:
home who goes to English cla~s ln the
first gr11de 11nd c1n'l understllnd the
words. so is often class!tled mentally
retarded .''
The exchange in Spanish was a high·
point of the session, "CoHe1e 1nd the
Chicano," a discussion of the barriers to
hll(her educ1tion for Mexlcan·AmericAns,
which took ph1ce Monday 11t the con·
vention of mt!:mbers of Colltji;e Entrance
Examln•llort Bo1rd !CEE Bt at the
Newporter Inn in Newport Beach.
CEEB Is a non-prof it 111oc\1tlon of
11bout 2.000 colleges, secondary schools
and school S)'stem1. Most of the more
than 300 western region membt.rs •I·
tending tht thret-d1y conference ending
\Vednesdty In Newport are 1dml11\nns
officers . finan ch1I aid per son n e I,
counselors, 1dministrators and teachers.
AbOut Ml pt0ple attended the "Chicano''
discussion, in which the 1chool system,
an "Anglo-enforc~" lick ot &elf-coocept.
l1ngu1ge problems and an insensitive
white attitude were named 11 barriers to
the Chicanos' acress to colle1e.
The paMl was comprised of Roy
Luctro. 1sslst1nt proftuor. coun1ellng
center. Callfoml1 Stilt QllleAe, Lo~
Angele•: Ricardo A. Marin Martlnrz.
1r1du1.te 1tudent In education. Stanford
University; Rudy Orte1•. counHJor,
CAbrlllo Collfgt and R•ul Rodrlquu,
gndualt atudent ln counsellnJ, Ctl Sitto
LA.
AD ertll<!Ud Ult klloola ror "IH<llln«
Ollcano chlldttn lhat Oilr 8P1nl1b
l•n&•ll• •nd culture &re bod" -•lid lor ••en punlahln& Ibo ... ol tho l&nauqt at
dlJplay cl cuatonu.
" -
l(esolution Get ·s Study Foes Seel{
f • • •
Alliance Citizens' Presentation Sparks Interest
On Freeway A 111111y4actltd rNOlutlon ~Y Ult !GI).
plu1 momb<rl of ll&n Juan CaplJtrani>'a
ntw All ia nce of Homeowner AMociatlons
-dwelling at length on man)' polnta of
land use, planning and phllosoph)' -woh
nearly an hour of attention by city roun·
cilmen Monday and a promise of a major
meeting ne1t week.
The ruolution IJMlrked I t n & t h y
discuu.loo that quickly developed 1 MUD·
cil consensus -that the San Juan
gener1l pl1n needed strong review and
possible updating.
In the meantime, preside111ts of all the
IU()('l1tlol'\I which art mtmbers (If the
formldabli aUlAnce, will meet with the
council Wtdnietdl)' nlcht of next wetll lO
hanuntt out IOluUorui to problem.1 . The
meeting will 1lart at 7:30 p.m. in L'Ouncll
chtmbtr1.
The homeowners alllance'a bas I c
format a11serts that 1rowth has become
rampant In the city tnd is threatening
.the establlahtd 101111 of the community
11 • acenlc, tourlst~rlentM residential
communJty '#ltb 11'1 abunda.nct of ()pto.
space.
A11lde from the resolution. alliance
president Robtrt McCollum 11isked for
three more actloru from councllmen:
-A meeting with tht council and
alll&nce ptetldtnll 14 diJcuU lb• 10111
and objectives of the alliance and tbt
councll.
-The selection of I delegate to fight
the proposed 5,000-unit mobJle home 1utr
division proposed norlhi!':rly of the city.
-The rescinding of the rtcent approv111
of propo!!•ls by the Pacesetter develop.
ment flr111 tor 500 hou1e1 on acreai.:e
1lon1 Ortega Hl&hway, an example,
McCollum auerttd of ''lndlacrirninate''
dev1lopmtnt of the clty1s v1lu1ble open
space.
Btslde! those three nel'.' point~, the
alliance is prtsslnt for • freeie on r.one
changes -a Ci>mpromlst among Its
r1nll1 or e1rller ropos1J1 for a total
halt tor a period o new development In lh• <lly.
A NewpOrt Beach 11ntl-tr~way group
want!! to form 1 cotstil alllance against
the Pacific Coast Fr,ew1y and is seeking
the help or cities and lOwns from Lon8
Beach to !an Juan. C1platr1no.
The Cifltens C.OOrdlnatlng Committee
will "''rite city officials and 1 l l
homeowners' groups up and down the
Orange Coast ln an aUempl to U&ht the
proposed freeway, Newport Betcb. Vice
Mayor Howard Ro1er1 11id Monday..
,F,.om Pagel Councilmen awiftly agreed to oppo.alng
the mobile hornet and to schedule the
meeting, but 11fltd that the Pactatlter
milter was "too tar gone."
•·we art tryinti: to. aet a coordinated
aroup repruentin& llll afftcttd area•.''
ltoa:er1 1aid noUna the growlna opposition
to the freeway route. FOUNDATION ... The CCC, an offspring of the Harbor
Area Freewa y flghttts, furctd an In·
ltlatlve !leclion In 'Newport Be111eh last
March that reaulted Jn lht ctty1s can·
cellatit1n of the route agreement with the
State Division of Highwayft.
roundatl()n will not be able to comply with
the new payout requirement,\ unle1111 It
rel inqul1he11 control ot the Irvine Cnm·
pany or forces the company inlo a
wholesale dispersal of land holdings to
provide the necessary tash.
The Tai Reform Act w!ll require the
found1Uo11 ta malle a t~ percent ptlyOUt
to charity in 1912, increasing half of one
U.S. Won't Act
Iii Isla Vista
Riot Complaints
SANTA BARBARA (API -Th• U.S.
Justice Department 11y1 It will take no
action a11ln1t law enforcement officers
accused by cltluns of misconduct during
the June 1170 riots at Isl• Vl1t1.
David L. Norman, 111lst1nt 1ttomey
1entral, said Jn a letter lo a f1culty
member who helped gather 4 J l
1tatement1 11leglng pollce brut111ty In the
unlvertlty community that tht federal
1ovemment has left t.h~ matter to local
1uthorltle1.
Norm1n noted the JusUce Dep1rlment
h11 tu.med over t.o local authorities the
re«1rd of 1 federaJ grand jury In·
vest111t1on into the m•tter. The Jury did
not return lndlctme.nt1.
He aald ln tht lettfr to James J.
SuUJvan, 111!1t.ant pro I e 1 1 or o(
econom ics. "Tht Department of Juatlce
h11 met Its re1pontlbUIUe1 In hli matter
th~ugh Ill cooptrotloo with Jocal ltw tn·
lorc1ment Qfflclalt.''
Mission Viejo
Art Association
Meets Thursday
A dl1cusllon or batik and tie dyln1 will
be held at lhe Thurtday meeting ot the
Mil1\on Viejo Auoclatlon of Artists and
Cr1fllmen.
M1nju Adhvaryu wlll addreu the meet-
ing at 7:30 p.m. in Linda Vlat1 Elemen·
tary School.
Mr1. Adhvaryu is a n1tive of lndia and
received her education in her homeland
~fore comin11 to the United States. She
has written a book called ''Batiks and Tie
Dying" which will be released in craft
1tore1 at the end of lhe month.
Members of the assoclaUon are ex-
hibi ting In several plactl in the Sid·
dleback Valley this month.
E1hibiting at the Mission Viejo Library
I~ Joan Steed of El Toro who speci11llzes
Jn portraits.
Exhiblllng oils 11.nd water color• 1t Lll
P11z Realty ·11 Betty Denson . Other
members are showing their work at
Wall Paper Decor.
F,.0111 Page l
SADDLEBACK •..
tich trustet elected on1y by I.ht voler1 Of
hi! own dl!trict. .
The othtr lour committee meQ'lber1 -
and the present collegt truattb -~ave
11poken In favor ot keepln& the prtttnt al·
l11r1e method ol election.
The advisor'1 oonlmttlle will 1J90
discuss expanding the t0Ue11 board trom
five tn seven memben 'by cutting the
S11ddleback Valley Into three tntstte
arras. instead of the pre1ent one. Thi.!>
expansion must be approved by voters In
the colle1e district and colles:e trustees
must make A final decision on whether to
t'xpand prior to Feb. 2! in order to put
the matter before the voters at the June
6 primary election.
Ir voters approve e1pansion, college of.
ficials have said that the two new
truatees would be 1ppolnted by the
preaenl 1•••rnln1 beard of Ille oon., •.
Irvine Home Looted
Of Hi Fi Equipment
Sl•reo llp<!I and bl fi .. ulpmtlll valued
•I more than l!(JO Wttl tiktn Monday
nigh& by lntrudare 111\o broka Into an
Jrvlne homt. °''"'' CoUJ1ty ahettlf'I 0111 .. re old tilt oqulrm•nt waa removad f~m the homa o lloblrl Alllil Full1r, llOO
Parkvlew Lane, ~pl. 11 I, dlll'inl tht
DWntt'I aJlRO<l!,
liltrlll'I blYutllllort Nfd Mlroo
upea, -...i an .,,.. o1111 n eq.1"'
llltOI llav• batll jlOfUlar 1Atatt1 lor IMll111rt la llrtl IWo ,... ol im.
,
per~ent annu1lly to 1 r,•reut of lit per-
cent, based on 1n ntttnal Revenue
service appraisal 11 Its a!sett. This a~
praisal is due by March 31,
The Tai Reform Act also provides that
no foundation is permitted to hold more
than 20 percent of any one corporation.
Based on the 1968 atock salt, the foun·
dalion's Irvine Company stock 'tfOUld bt
valued at ttt4 million. Tb.11 would requlre
a pa yout In e1cesa ot $5 ml\Uon in 1172. A
more accurate appraisal, 11ld Mrs.
Smith, would require a payout many
limes larger. A recent foundation report
showed income of $2.5 million for the past
year.
The report also listed assets of $10
million apart from the Jrvine Company
stock. Foundation attorney Howard J.
Privett h11 st•ted tM found11Uon wlll be
able to meet Ill payout obUgaUons from
these other resources.
''New sentiment and direction Ls netd·
ed1" McCol\um aald.
''This city had 1 popul1Uon of t,100 In
1980 and has grown to more than 5,000
residents since then."
He stressed that the city must preserve
lta charm, its hills and open space.
He nayed asserted "indiscriminate
development in the put," and
apeciflcally pointed out the rtcent city
approval or the mAjor develOpment along
Ortega Highway.
On the freeze In zone ohangu,
McCollum said the group prefers a Six-
month moratorium to allow the city to
take a breather and long look at the
surge in arowth.
Councilmen Ed Chermak, in customary
strong language, stressed that aside from
alrlna 1rlpe.1 and complalnta at nt•t
week'• meetln1, he hopei th1t the
homeowner prealdentl alto can come
equipped with 10luUons to the do11n1 of
pol9n1nt qu~1tlort.1 rilled at Monday's
dlscu1alon.
"I w1nt answer• • , . J want )'QU to
help m1 find them," he aald.
"This attitude toward the freeway ia
gaining tnomentum," Rogers said th is
morning saying he thought tht co11tal
•lllatlC. 7is an inttrfftlng way to go."
Rogets noted that croups opposing the
freew1y \h ave already sut(aced ln a
number of towns Including La,una
Beach, Hunting ton' Beach and Seal
Beach.
He said if there is enou_f!, Interest
shown the CCC \\'ill lry to schedule a
meeting of coastal citiz.ens early in
f,bruary.
Roa:e~ 1aid the letter will be malled
later this peek.
"I don't know the exact wording'' he s~icf. "because: .they're still puttlnR: the
final touches on 1t. But basically it says if
there is. eoough responst Wt wU' set up
the mt!l!nc to att: what we can do with a
united ftlrce."
Mrs. Smith pointed out during the news
conference that Conarenman Wrltht
Patm1n's Hou1e Committee on Ba.nklti.g
and Finance 11 ln1ugur1tint an ln--
vesti1ation of attempts by foundations to
!5ide-step the payout requirements or the
Tax Reform Act.
Her attorney su1ae1ted that an 1tlempt
by the foundation to meet the oblltatioh
by selling the $10 million in "other
assets," now earning six percent and pro-
viding a $600,000 payment to charity,
would constitute a "definite evasion.''
French Race Slcipper Nam·ed
Discussing so-called mismanagement of
!he frvlne Com p • n y which rtsults In
minimum e1rnlnt1s. Young cited 1 $1.2
million Joan from Pacific Mutual, oo
which the company has obllaated ltselt to
9.9 perteat lnterut payments for 25
years.
The company. Mrs . Smllh asserted, is
sorely in need of "really top men" in Its
management. in the areas ot finance,
plannln1. real estate and •trlcu1ture.
NEW YORK (AP) -Paul El'llrom of
Denmark hat been n1med aklpper ()f one
ol lht t•o yacht1 being &ponsortd by
Frtnch or11nlutlons for the 1974
Amtrlca'1 Cup ch1\lenge 1erle1.
Ev1trom, 42, waa aelected by Baron
Bruno Blch 11 helmsman for a new tZ-
meter 1lumlnum 11llln1 vessel n<>w betng
de1l1ned by Andre M1urlc.
Bruno B!ch, the baron's son, 11ld
Elvatrom was select.ed for the com-
petition becau&e "ht Is the be1t aallor
Ihm la." The yachl will bt aponoortd by
,F,.om Poge l .
HEIRESS SEES CITY BAO{ING •••
l11ue1 that affect lht new city.
Toplc11 she covered included :
Tatel: "l hopt the. new City Council
dots oot allow t11es on properly to
become confiscatory."
5chools: "School problems 1hould be
solved before any new building Is allow-
ed. The overcrowding of schools In Irvine
is just one e1ample of why the company's
new plan has 50 many naws In It and
should be reworked. ·
"This was the crux of my Ct'.lnetrn over
the original incorporation," Mrs. Smith
said.
Land liquidation: "If It ill possible to
hold the lrvlnt land intact it is possible
t(lme da y we can have 90mthlng good
here [ think it will ht tswo ye1rs before
the foundati on II forced to bt&ln Ji.
quld1Hlng !ind to meet provlaiooa of the
T11 Reform Act," 1he 11ld.
But she added the ominous note th11t if
the found1tlon be1ln1 1eJ:lng tu Mn·
Irvine 1tock holdln1s that prt1ently earn
tht required six percent Interest, a con-
gresslonal p1ntl might "take them (the
foundation ) on as a 1peci1I case."
Master pl1n : Mrs. Smith indicated
she would work toward dl':velopment of a
"proper master plan " one that would
''not overload the land" as dots the
430,000 person city anoounced by the
Irvine Company last spring.
She sees such a plan as an expansion of
the Pereir• plan with "farm type
development p11rtlcu\arly In the ranch
hills." and extensive greenbelts .
C:0.1tal •tclor: Mrs. Smith Is not
enthusiastic 1bout the coan1l sector plan
recently completed by the Irvine Com-
pany. She 11ld 1he does not believe that
property necessarily ahould be a part of
the new city of Irvine, either.
Comp.any control: lf Mrs. Smith
were to force public sale of Irvine stock
she Indicated sht: would not purch1se any
more 1hares . "My holdlnas would mike
me the largest 1tockholder, why would I
PASSWORD • • •
A 9ooil word pe11ed around about t
business 11 lnvaluablt. A bad word un be
unfortunate.
the Cercle de It VoUe de P1ris tn con·
nectlon with the French Al&ocl1tlon for
the America's Cup. the 1ame or8an lza.
lion which backed the fre:nch entry ln th•
1970 challenge series.
The aecond French entry la belnJ(
11pon1ored by the SOciete Nautique dfl
Marseille.
Elvstrom currently is Europe11n 11itin1
c~ampion and 1971 pre-Ol)'mplc ch11.m·
pion. He has been world sailing champion
11 times, and hai held lltle In the Snipt1
Star. ~.5 meter, 50l. Flying Dutchman,
Soling and Fina cla1ies.
need to buy more?" &he a1ked.
' ' •
"I'm not against dividends,'' 1h& said
notir1i h.er intere&t In cont In u e d
ownership of Irvine stock.
"If money was the onl)' thing," die
begin, shifting her train of thought. "But.
having be1un In 1959 the first m11ter
plan and having arranged for the
university to come here, I have 1 feelihg
- a nostalgia about the property.
"With proper man11gement we could
have not only a supl!trb m1eter plan that
would be the envy of others, but 1 coUld
make some money," Mrs. Smith con·
eluded. ·"
Com pan y M1n11ement: 1 ' My
positlon ls slmply that t want enough ·siy
In the Irvine compeny to bring In nh
management. starting wlth fl good top
marl," Mrs. Smith said. She !lated fl\i'e
other areas In which she wo11ld pl1ce
''top -people": finance, personnel, real
estate, planning •nd agriculture. '"
"
•
Our growing 1uct11 in tht ptal 14 yoara
has betn duo to tht "good words" and
referrals ient to us by our customers. ALDEN'S •• . '
No amount of advtrtiting Cln rtplaco e
ptraonal rtcomtntnGtlion.
Wt aro not inf1lliblo, but wo tro working
towards thot gotl by tivlng our cuatomers !ht
beat atrvlct and quality poulblt.
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Ploatntia Ave.
CO.TA MISA
MMIJI
HOURl1 Moil. lhru T1111tt. t It J:ao -Prl, t It t -.. t .. f!IO lo I
l • ..
'" ,,,,, ,,
r.,. ... . ..
~
" " '
I
'
I
'
non~gt~n aeh
, ,
·~Fquntain Valley
• I
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
'·· -*
VOL 65, NO. ,9, 2 SECTION$. 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY II, 19n
Superintendents to Monitor Board Meeting
SUperln"ndentl from . tbr,. scl>lO!
dlalricll lilvOlved In '1be b'l!tl• -OVtr
Untfk:allon qi ochoo\I ·Iii lbe AunUngton
Beach a~a ,a;,,·plaonJn8 a lwo-&y trip to
Saeramento Jhil W,U.
/l'hoy' plan lo'lDOllltor t)>e stale Board of
&tucation, .whl~h 'fill be in. e e t i n,'1
Wedne3day and TbUfaday, and.meel wilh
stale· educatjon iifmiDJ&traiors.
• 'lihe gj'oJijl m~ lbe trip conaisfl, ot
Ibo~ "'Pl"'i'lln& lbe faur.way plan for
Wlillcaf16n· OI the HwiUngtOn . Beach .. '
llense Fog
Dis sipates;
NoD~mage
'Dense fog -of the pet-.Oup var\ef)' -
blanketed Wea! Orange Couoly com-
munities flUs morning but apparently
citlled no serious hann to commuting
m'otoriats.
Although visibHlty was at times reduc-
ed to less than 200 feet. police
departments In Huntington Beach, Fou,,..
taln Valley, Sul Beach and Westminster
reported no wioua ·a<:cidenl• during the
morning hours.
The tally 'of fender-bana;ers was two for
Huntington Beach, three for Westminster apd Qne tor Fomn.aJn Valley. Tbf!'re were
no early morning accidents in Seal Beaeh.
. ScboOl aul)'9rl~ea Iii the loor-eity area.
MWever, said th.It the heavy· mist cauaed
bbilts ·to rO:d beliind sctiedule ln-l!Ome in-·~ ... 11.kit 2;8llO .;1w10nt. from the oeven
c,Jl!pp.jel 9f .I~ HUDllog/on Beach Cll)I
(elementary) SchoqJ ·District mlved al
!bolt c1-. ~;lliiriJ lali ...... ofth8'"redllctd~ttiiJbfltty. v.:\. '".1 1
"CNr~ ~-J!Ji*9 t • 1.m .. " aid Cllaliell Palliler, dopc!ty
dlstricl ouporln,lef"!enl. ''To put the ~
on'the rDlll wben tbe visibility Is aboul·IO reet ii ridicutobs.~· · ·
Pal'o>er addJd lhat his dl<trlel's 14
busea are· prevt\Hed froni leavlrig llle
barn· if the transportatKin 1Upervisor
judges the visibility to be !en than 200 feet., . .. •. :
Partnta were .aotffied. of Ibo delayed
achodule 1hml4h broadcaato by two
Orange County radio stationa, according
to Palmer. 1 •
Some olher llisO! from the HuoUngton
B<aoh Un loo Hjgh .f!!:hool'llislriet, Ocean
View SeboolDlsttict; Westminster School
Di•lrict and Seal Beach School· District
were said to be! only about ~10 minutes
behind schedule.
Casper, Reveals
Board . Members'·
••
4 Pt><Jint.n(ients /
Orange Count.• Board .of SUpervisors ~an Ronald W. C.ioqs of Newport
Beach today annowic<d his appoinlmenl or ·fellow board members to committee
an!f commission mtmbersbips.
fffs recommendRtions met w i t h
1Jn&nimoui approval of the board. They
"tbert W. Battlil, First Oistnct -
llelpnointment to South d>11t Air Basin
Co)lrdlnallng Oiuncil; Heallll Planning
Coimclt and lbe vtlol Local Agency
F01111a~DO CornmiMl!ln.
l!atUn wa1. aloo named alternale.dlrec-
totff sanltalion dlstrlet.s ooe arid three.
Is, Caspers .. ald was in response to <:rl lcism of Ibo-chairman of.the boenl
...,,in gaa dir<ctor of all aeven oanltaUon dl~riet• arid leeel•lilg lees of !700 a
monlll). .
Oa•ld L. Baker, Second D!slrict -
Reappointmeol · to the ocean a n d ~line 1'1•,,.iiis ~ ;C:oinmlttee 1Jf tho 'Southtrn Calitoaltl ,A1SDelallon
bf Oovernmelili (stAO . ~ • , .
-Allemato direclo\o ol sanilatlon district
j and allemate. ~ ol. tl)e Local
ency Fonn.ion,comwslion <WC).
llllolil PhliUpr, 'nlltd Qis\ti<t, -Jlta~lmenl lo lbe SOUi.bun Call!llrnla '."l'!l•~ COUndl, lll&'Ja11 librll)Llload of
11\Ulael ahd •Pl>olilio-t ... ~ dJte&( lo ...... ~ cffalilct hill.
J>hilllpo :;,.~1=•:"*1.r to the ~al liiancr.Fo ~ulon replado( ~perl, I p!ll,iljoa be hold.lit 1'1t.l>n>rt
JillnC replaced by ---.Bit• 1111.
1\alPI> Clark, F...U.: !llltilcl -Reap-
ptlnttbed to Ille Orange Ciount.Y "l'ransll
Qlalriot Board orllriat hl&11•M 'flnan.. qa; CICllllllitlee, meo!al bt,itll ~!!tili'J libOid. erlinlnal jusllce cooncll, In<! coun-
lr .... p1_ mlttmtfll.boart:.Clflt Wll
Mmoci au.mate dlrclor \Oto. unl~llon fltirlcl ...... •
Cl&l"'I, Fl!Ut Olitrlcl ttWoed his
pttion 41 I dlre<lor ol ~ ~
1Y '\'fWll Platzicl alld a -Of u.. CfeO IOAllD, 1'1&11 ti
)
I
lfnloo !lliJrSchool Otstrjet, ill< proposai. menager David Scott of the Los Alamitos
tbal <1u rocommendlfd by the County lljstrk:~ 'which back llle Huntington
comip!lfee on SchOol-ntstrlel Organita--seaeh City District'• proposal are plan.
tli>n biil ~ by four olher schQol nlrig to Oy to Sacramento Wednt>daY·
dlotriefa. 'Ibo proposals for unlneaUonof the
Superlnlendeol Al Moffett a!)d Deputy HunUngton Beach .union High School SIQ>er.lnlt~ ~ PalmeT, ol Ibo Pbtrict will no\ be COIJ.'[derf\I by qi.
HWll!ngton B<adl GJty Celerilenlllrf) :-state.l>oard1his.week but will be lU~ up
Dlstrld, Wllfcli prtaelllOi! the four-.wi)I • Jn htarlilg$.dther Feb. 10 or U, One of
plan, Suliertnttndenl 1o1.-..~Jer. lJ(. ljl6 fieaflnga the West Orange County pl.-
the. ,saf>Btlch ·Olalrl<!t. arid -'Superjn-Dcltls •Will inonit.>r this week, 'bowevee,
tendent {l~rce PlumT"elgh,•1"' ·bu.inf!.· will be_a !!'Sl!esl· for uoifleati'!'!~~ _the
• •
Tustin High School Districl.
We are going to observe how they
come out," Paimer commented, who
pointed out that the opponents or the
rour-way plan made a similar trip to
Sacramento Dec. 17. "But we'll probably
e;et castigated for spending taxpayers' money.' .. ·
Palmer noted that the Tustin proposal
is for tri-wlification 'vhile the HuntingMJn
Beach City School District proposal is for
a four-way split. "We simply want to see
In Seal Beach
lhe state board's reaction."
Dec. 17 superintendent5 representing
the Fountain Valley, Westminster and
Ocean View elementary districts and the
~unllngton Boaeh Union High School
District and deputy county counsel John
Powell, who is representing them in the
legal battle, went to Sacramento to meet
with state education adm.inbtrators.
According to Michael B r i c k , ·
superintendent of the Fountain Valley
District, they spent the morning in
Sacramento. ''The purpo se was to
present our material to lhem. dlstussing
the financial and legal implications of the
proposals and ask for permission to
present our plan at lbe slate board hear-
ing," Brick said .
Brick said that they did not attend any
stale board hearings ... I would ilnaginc
the others are trying to speculate on the
behavior of the board." lfrick com-
mented. "\Ve'll stay \Vith the facts.
ISee UNIFY, Page !)
College Parl{ East Set
For DA Investigation
I >; I , ,
Thr'ee at a Time
··Aiii Robert Ayres gave birth to ·trlplets Salurday at Hoag Memorial
Hoopi~ in Ne.wport Beach. T~ey are all boys -Mic~ael, Stephen
and Richard, named !or allending physicians. It' was only the second
set 0t' triplets born at Hoag in the 19 years babies have been delivered
there. The Ayres have two other boys, Robert, 5. and Billy, 4.
Woman's Body Fourid
StUffed ·.in ·:Freezer
-'l'ORONTO (AP J Curious youllls·
bave found' -tJie. sun-tanned body of a
Toron'to woman stulfed in a home free~r
amid packages of turkey pies and
\·egetable,s. '1•
Police sald~onday night the body was
frozen for at least sir months. ·It was
f"'""! iJY. four youths wf>o opened the
freezer afthr watching a horror .movie on
television .
'Ibe victim was identified as Grace
Evelyo Todd, 34, missing slilee July 29.
Her husband, David Wilfred Todd, 311, a
truck driver,_ has been charged with non·
ca~tJ] murder.
l'ollee uld they btlleved Mri. Todd
was sho't to · dealh but 1hal' ' del¥.llte
caule of :<fealh could nol be establlshed
until Ibo body had thawed' •al!lcienUy to
allow an -autopsy .
Police said the freeur had betn stor<d
in the dlliln& room of. a Townhoule owned
bY M~ J;usid9 1ince'Dec:. l whtn Todd
m~ IQ, ~CMoid~ homo m· the city'• no 1'e~ llae. · i 1
• • bOq~\'11!18 round by ·Mrs. ~ssidy·s
""'.))-'""' .
cbildren, Catherine. 15, and Charles, 21 .
and two friends, John Moore, It, and
Layne Jackson, 18, who had been watch-
ing the television horror movie, One
Step Beyond. A sequence in the movie -
showing the discovery of a woman 's body
in a trunk -i sparked their curiosity
about the freezer that they had been told
not to open.
The body Was clad tit a surrtmt!!r out[it
of shorts and halter.
The woman had been reported missing
to police Dec. 21 by her mother, a resi--
dent of Burllngtan.
Police said Mrs. Todd lived will> her
busbau~ in ~ apartll)ent. in the same ' ~rea hefQre Todd moved inlll the Cassidy
toW.house. '' : · ·
During the time her husband ,lived In
the apar1rilent, poUce said, he -operated
ar, unofficial dro~in center f o r
netghborbood lt•nagero.
Police saJd that whtn he was unable to
renew ;his ·Jea.se Dec. I, the •Cassidy
youths .suggested he move in witfl them.
Seal Beach city councilmen Monday an investigation was reached unanimous-
ordered city files on the College ' Park Jy following a closed'4oor huddle with ci~
East residential,development turned over ty legal adv isors Monday night. There to the Orange County District Attorney's Office for investigation into what ?.1ayor was no immediate reaction from the
Harold Holden described as "a whale of a District Attorney's Ofrice.
good deal " ror the tra.~t's builders. Still unresolved are problems raced by
The action followed the discovery by ci-homeowners whose dwellings are In t:r aides that the S and S Construction violation of municipal zoning regulations.
Company of Long Beach and Beverly City aides reported that about 360
Hills apparently built 20 percent of the homes in College Park East, including
homes in the tract in violation of city some that are still unoccupied, violate
ordinances. zoning ordinances in that they cover from
A spokesman for the finn, Bernard 47 to t9 percent of their lots when city
McCune, has denied any \li'..lVfl.Kdoing on ordinances set to percent as the max·~
the part of his company, saymg, "If there imum allowable lot coverage for single
was a mistake, it was the city's mistake family dwelllncs.
... we were given a clean bill of health . In addition, city aides alleged, an
by lbe ,cl!J'::·. . · unspeeUied number of lbe 360 homes . • ~ -~ •• :NJIWll-"F""l"l~ ~J t Fii~
. -~ Witliesses .: . e$1i y -
. -'
Repair Practices Bad
By TO:!! BARLEY
Of rhi Dllho 'lift Stiff
A Costa· Mesa englileer who said he
found the tires on his wjfe's car to be
perfectly sound and a retired ln!Ura'nce
executive who scornfully rtjected the
suggestion lhal Ille shock abeorbirs on
his C3dillac were leakirig today bfought
to 20 the number of witnesses who have
testified against · nine merilbers of a
service station chain.
Al Mo.siey of 32tl2 Montana Ave., Costa
Mesa, told an · Orange County SUperlor
Court Jury that be found nothine wrong
with the tires on his wife's car despite
\he claims of attendant!: at a local
service station Hnked to the defendants
that a front tire was defecti ve.
Prosecutor Richard Stenton Identifies
that station as the Harbor-Gisler Mobil.
3195 Harbor Boulevard. He has earlier
ebtained almost identical testimony from
Mosley's wife, Lydia.
Mosley said the family car was driven
for "six or seven months" after the
report that the tire was defective and the
tire gave 1100 trouble at all" during that
pefiod.
New Industry Topic
Of Huntington CofC
Prospeet.s for new Industry Jn Hun-
tington Beach will be· d.laawed at a
luncheon meeting of the chamber of com-
merce Jan. 19. John Lusk;, president of
the Huntington Beach Industria l Park ,
will be lhe. featured speaker.
The meeting will be held.at noon at the
Golden Anchor Restaurant, 15070 Graham
St., Huntington Beach.
Tickets are priced at $3.50.
He was followed oo lhe wltnw stand
lhi• mornlilg bY Robert Lawhead, a
retired insurance . executive fr om
Coronado wbo teaU!le!I thal , ht WU
en route home from Ibo J'.llmeylaD<l Hotel on Jane s, 1970, wbfn be stopPed for gu
al the !Catella and Wool SheU otallon In
Anaheim -one of ll 1tatJona llld to be
involved In the .U,ged auto repair
racllet.
Lawhead uld he wa• told that ooe of
his tires was low and attendants Jm-
medialety hoisted the C.dilJac on the
rack.
. He said he waa 1hec told thal a shock
ablorbet was leak!ni and was shown GI
~ripping from tbe part. Lawhead said he
relused to bavt the part replaced on a
Cadillac that had only 10,000 miles on llle
ck>ck and drove home to Coronado.
"Did you drive on the freeway? Sten-
ton aJked.
"Certainly," Lawhead said.
"At what speed?" Stenton asked.
1'My uslµll speed -~10,'' Lawhead
replied.
Lawhead said he sold his Cadillac later
in the year with the shock a6aor~rs still
unchanged . And he made U cle&r in cross
examination that he knew the ·Subsequent
purchaser of the car and the abocka were
atill there when the auto was resold.
Earlier wlinelsea -both former
employea and customer• of the cfialn that
ranged from ·Seal Beach lo Sall l:iemente
-had teslifled lhat perfectly sound lires
were ·represented to ,be defective and
shock abosrbers were d e 11 b e r a i e I y
sprayed with oil to give 1be impression
llley leaked and should bt replaced. ·
It has also been ttsUfied that
(See REPAIR, Page %)
·Anti~route .AI:liance Asked . . '
Candidates Face
Feb .. 3 Deadline
•• •
'Newport Group ·Seeks ·Coalition of Coastal .Citie s
Thursday Is lhe flnl day candidates
for the Westminster City Council election
April l l ·can obfalil nomlilatlon papers
lrmn City !Ult. • City .(llMk Kay Harper aonounced that
candidate! will 'havo 1111UI :IOOQ ·Feb. a
to file the pt.pen •II~ l~tlgnal1Jt"' of
al loul al•. bul nol more thaii l~. real>
" ' ·:-J',.
•
to the freeway route .
ThC CCC. an oUspring oC the Harbor
Area Freewty Fliht•n. forced an i~·
lllallve election ~ Newport Booch laal
March lllal reaulled in the cily's ca•
celJaUoo or the roull •JITtemonl will> the
State Division of Hl&hwayi.
''TbiJ attitude towanl the freeway ls
gaining moll\<lrtlim," Rolen -uld this
momlna Jiylilg be thouglil !ht coalllll
alllanea "Is an lntmtlinl wa=lo . " Rocm nolld lllal ll""'pl "' the freoWI)' h • v e a11ad1 in l
Nllllbtr ol. towna lndudlnc La&uno
'
Beach, )lunlJil&ton Beach and Seat
Beacl!.
He oald if lhtre l• troOUp lnleTesl
ahoWn the 1:CC will try to achedule a
moetl"i of couta1 cltlzens early in
February.
R.,.... said, jhe loller will be mailed
ta r thia .... t.
"l diln, -tlit enct -.rloe,. he
uld, "btcauoe tbtY're still pultlnc lhe
firJal loud!N on jt. llOt baolcally II oa!'l i!
.tilt,. ls "'°"gll "'-WO w1J: .. t Ill) ~ meel~.to.,. whtl we can do with a
united force."
lered v°"'"· •
Tho eloellon I• for tho ... i. presenUy
held bf ~n,or Oertk C. McWhlnoev and
cpuncllmen Fr111k Fry aod Joy Neug ..
)>al1er.
Tbls )'W, eandkfates mly have their
ataltment ol quallllcalkw prlntod in
.SJ'llllb K tf"'1 wllh to 'Pl!' fiw tbt 1....,..
lilloo and {lrlnfflli. lilt dly dtrlr ....
IJO(lod. ni. atatem.n1 ol qpalWcatloos
wvilld he oenl out with tlio -~bal· lQIA. lllll 1116 clut llotell thal COii
of prlnt!JI& the statemeol In ·or
Spanish er both 11 llernt by tJle candidate.
()
and the developer to the effect that all
homes be located at least 15 feet from
!he backyard property line. Some or th•
homes are within 10 feet of the line, ac·
cording to a city report.
'·\Vith the large number of homes in-
volved, I can understand how the city
might have failed to catch these errors,·•
sais counci'tma n Tom Barnes. "But I can-
not concede that a builder or the reputa·
lion of S&S Construction could have made
an error or such magnitude nnd not have
been aware of It."
The College Park East ltomeo\lo•ners'
Association wants to force the S&S
Construction Company to buy more land
adjacent to the tract and build a park
equivalent In size to the amount by which
the company overbuilt in th& tract, said
earl Poyner. president of that 1roup. . ' .
Irville Heiress
Rejected Offer
Of $100 Million
By BAllBAltA KREIBICll
Of .. ~llT ,1191 ll11f
Joan Jrvine Smith turned down an offer
of $100 million cash ror her stock in th e
Irvine Company about five years ago, the
heiress revealed during a press con-
ference at her Emerald Bay home ~ton
day.
She refused the offer, made by a
representative of a New York cor-
poration, Mrs. Smith said, because she
felt it would lead to the breaking up of
her grandfather's giant Orange County
ranch boldlna:s. 0 I'd rather see it kept in
one piece and see somethlog good done
with It, 11 she said. 41[ worked ha'rd to have
the untverslty brought here and I have
some feeling about the property. I'd like
to set it developed right, following tile
original Pereira plan for the university
town.''
Mrs. Smith apparently made the
disclosure to emphasize her insistence
ttiat. "If I were only Interested In money
I wouldn't be doing all this.''
She referred to her long-standing £ight
to break the James Irvine Foundation's
control of tbe Irvine Company and her
recent attempts to block what she termed
premature Incorporation of the city o[
Irvine.
Asked why sh• lhoughl the unldentUied
c:ompany would want tO offer such a sum
!or her 21 percent of lM'lne Company
CS.. FOUNDATION, Page %1
Oruge Coalt
Weatler
More patchy, dense fog b foie-
cast for Wedneaday, wtlh hl.y llJit·
shine in tlie aftemoon. UlUe lemp.
~ture chaoge predlcltd. with
h!ehs aloog the ooast at 58 rising
lo 118 inland. Lows tonighl SM.I.
INSmE T ODAY
The COit of Livj'ng Council
sa111 it. wUJ star& dlJoloiUtg tM
Mml'.I Of vfolators Of WCIQt-prlce
control.a, dt1d h1nttd &hat rc1ulu oJ oauncU inoe1tigati011& matt be
given to perto11s JiJbtg com·
plaints aQoinst vloJators. Set
story Page 5.
L M. '"11 t MftfM :It
ClllMtftll It Mslul hHa 11
C~ U·tt N•ie.1 ..... ...
Cll!tit\ 11 Of .... Ctlftlt7 '' '""~ 1J S\'Mt .......,. ..
...,. ...,_ n ..,_ '"'' .... $! .... • lltdt ...... ,. ......... ~ . 111--. 1 .. 1. ftMM • ........... ,, ........ .
•111 r; 1• .....,. ,...... t,.\t ............. ,. ,,... ......
(
..
DAILY 'ILOT Sltrl l"l>t"
A VIETNAM LAND MINE EXPLOSION WAS ONLY THE START
Randy Pinney Oe1pe r1tely Fight1 Red Tape
From Page 1
REPAIR ...
customers were pressured into having
front end work performed on their auto11
in the belief that they risked injury and
accident by driving a defective car on the
freeways .
Other witnesses ha ve testified that
hoses were slashed and radiator caps and
aeala deliberately damaged by atteDdants
who got the cara on the racks and often
inflicted damage while the owners were
in the office or the restroom.
Tabbed by Stenton as the three prln-
dpa.I detendants are: Jerry Kend&ll, 35,
of Me Sonora Road, and St.anley Davis,
U, ol 1086 San Pablo Circle, both of Costa Mesa, and Ee' ward Carney, 27, of 20862
Shell Harbor Drive, Huntington Beach.
·The prosecutor claims they mastermin,
ded the alleged auto repair racket in 11
atatiom that dispensed Arco, Mobile,
Shell and Ttxaco gasolines.
It is also alleged that the trio was prin-
clpa.Jly involved in a Garden Grove
Hacbool" which Ieatured lectures to
etnployea on how to effectively inflict
damage to custon;iers' cara.
.Stllll<>n clilll" th•I the Oood ol )!Ill'!!
requJred by the defendants' alleged ac-
tJyJties was 1uppijed 11\~-·a GardM
G.rove warehoun which iwas controlled
aod operated by several of the defen-
d,nl!.
Several of the service stations allegedly
invalved in the auto repair racket are
now under new management.
AllO on trial in Judge James Turner's
courtroom are: Roger Mendenhall , 28, of
26095 Avenida de Seo, Mission Viejo ;
Ralph Carney, 29. of 32852 Calle San
Marcos, San Juan Capistrano : and David
Canchola, 22, of 6000 Garden Grove Blvd.,
From Page 1
BOARD .•.
Ocean and Short.line Planning Steering
Committee.
He will serve as an alternate to Ballin
on the South Coast Air 8 as in
Coordinating Council and be the new
chairman of the legislative planning com·
mittee. He will also be a directo r or
sanitation districts six, five and eight. in
contrast to directorship or all seven
districts which Ballin held.
Ballin suggested the reappointmenl of
Santa Ana attorney Frank Manzo as a
director of the county law library board
upon which he has served for several
years. The suggestion was approved .
OIANll c;OAIT
DAILY PILDT
West..m.imter.
AJso accused of conspiracy to cheat and
defraud Orange County motorists are:
Christopher Enriquez. 25. of 7~92 Volga
Drive, and Henry Castonguay, 21 , of 7661
Commodore Dri ve, both of Huntington
Beach, and R. C. Weisner, 28, of Santa
Ana.
From Pagel
UNIFY ..•
somewhere the political manipulations
have to stop."
The Los Alamitos school board already
has authorized the trip. Authorization for
the trip is to be: considered by the boards
of tbe Huntington Beach City District and
Seal Beach District at meetings tonight.
The Huntington Beach City District
proposal envisions joining the Fountain
Valley and Ocean View districts into one
school system serving students from
klndeJ'Rarten through 12th g z-a d e :
.similarly joining the Seal Beach and Los
Al!lP.1)lD' dfflrlctJ and IJlllfJ)og the Hun-tip«t'Oq lieach City¥'1"and Westmins(er
districts along their owti boundaries.
Opponents fa vor a. thre~way proposal
which would combine the Seal Beach and
Westminster districts and cut up the
Hunlington Beach City District into the
existing Fountaln Valley and Ocean View
districts.
The opponents have attempted to
overtu~n the county committee's adoption
or the four-way ptin in the courts but
their suits ha ve been rejected by the
Superior Court and the District Court of
Appeal. They have petitioned the state
SUprerne Court to intervene and a
d_ecislon on this petition is pending.
Kialoa Fighting
For Finish Lead
AUCKLAND. New Zealand !AP) -
Two 73.footers, one Amer ican and one
New Zealander, were in a tense finish in
the 1,57().mile Tasman yacht race today.
The Ameri can yawl Kialoa II out of
!\ewport Harbor lost her 50.mile lead on
New Zealand's Buccaneer II and Tuesday
ni ght they were striving almost abreast
down the east coast of New Zealand 's
North Island.
The rest of the neet was strung out
hundreds of miles behind them. The ra ce
began Jan. 4 at Hobart. Tasmania, and
the first boats shou1d finish at Auckland
Wednesday.
W Ot'$ Mount ·-
For Disabled
Coast-Vet
lly YllED!RICK ICHOEMEBL
Of tlle 0.llY 'l•t ltlff
A gnawing depression has crept
through Randy Pinney since that day a
year and a half ago when his left leg was
severely iniured by a land mine near
Da Nang Alrbt&e in Vietnam .
· He's been able to control ll for a long
time. In the hospital. Working part time.
Going to school.
But now, Pinney ts down, out and
hurting. The leg. it's muscles . tendons
and ligaments weak and torn. hurts con·
stanlly.
There's a deeper pain , too. The kind of
pa in knowing the $250 a month from the
welfare department and the Marine
Corps is not going to pay for the rent, the
food , the baby's clothes and utilities.
The bills already are beginning to pile
up.
Pinney is only 22, but the tragedy of his
life has made him look older and added it;
drawn look to his young fa ce.
For one who got out o( high sct\ool,
joined the Marine Corps to become a
career man and married, the way things
have turned out has been less than
heartening.
DAll.Y io1t.OT Stitt r~tlt
"I'm not sure what I'm going to do -
or what I can do," PiMey said in 1 slow
voice. ''I've talked ta everybody and no
one wants ta do anything ."
Things weren't so bad until a few
months ago. Follo~·ing the injury in
October 1i69, Pinney was evacuated from
the war zone and spent.nearly 11 Jll-Onths
in hospitals in Japan, at Travis Air Force
Base and the Long Beach Navy Yard.
HEIRESS TURNED DOWN $100 MILLION STOCK OFFER
Money Isn't !verythln1 to Joan Irvine Smith
He was retired from the Marine Corps
In Nov. 1970.
"My leg was halfway decent , so I went
back to school and was working part
time," Pinney recalled.
He was working on an undergraduate
degree with plans to enter law school.
He was recefving VA benefits for
several months, but suddenly they stop-
~ -for reasons unknown -reducing
his monthly income to only $250.
His leg began hurting a g a in ,
necessitating a three-month stay in Long
Beach Veterans Hospital from May to Ju-
ly of last year. He was forced ~o drop o~t
of school, lose his course credits and his
job.
Since he ha s been out of the hospital,
Pinney has been required to use crutches
and sometimes a wheelchair.
His wife went to work for a while at the
El Toro Marine Station, but her earnings
barely covered expenses of gasoline for
I.he car and babysitters' fees.
111' llJte' "November, Pinne)"s 1965 car
threw a rod1 It' now sits In a parking lot
behind their Laguna Hllls apartment
because there's no money to get lt fixed.
The Pinney's have had lo rely on
relatives -and occasionally hitchhiking
-tc get arowid.
It's been rough on Pinney's leg because
he 's supposed to receive physical therapy
.severa l times a week. Without the car,
there's no way to aet to ·the Veterans
Hospital.
In about two weeks, Pinney is schedul-
ed to undergo muscle transplant surgery
to strengtheii the leg, but without a car,
there's no way his wife and three-year-
old son, Randy Jr., can visit him. "Jt's
gonna be: hard on them and hard on me,"
!aid Pinney.
Alter a total of 14 months in the
hospilal, the thought of another stay -
possibly several months in length -is
not appealling no matter "how great the
treatment there has been "
Pinney has pleaded with the .VA for the
benefits to which he feels he is entitled.
Results are yet lacking. Social security
officials ended up losing his file for three
months, he said,
In desperation, he contacted Rep.
Richard Hanna (0.-Anaheim) and then
Rep. John G. Schmitz (R·Tustin), ex-
plained his plight and solicited their help.
No word has been received from either of
the advocates.
''Everything, it seems, ha~ been Jost in
paperwork," PiMey sighed 11 he sat on
the couch of his apartment at 2.15l'.l5 Loa
Grandes.
From Page l
FOUNDATION •..
stock, which she has complained pa ys on,
ly 1.6 percent dividends because of what
she labels company mismanagement, the
heiress replled, "! don't know why. I
guess they thought they could fight
harder than I did."
Her desire to see the property kept in-
tact. she added, also has kept her from
availing herself of a California law that
would permit her, as a minority
stockholder, to petition for dissolution of
the company. A 1965 amendment to the
stales Corporate Securities Act, Mrs.
Smith's attorney Lyndol Young ex-
plained, permits such an action by a
stockholder owning at least 3(1 percent of
stock other than that on which the com-
plaint is being made.
The James Irvine Foundation owns 53.7
percent of tot.al Irvine C.Ompany stock
and Irvine family members own the re-
mainder, but of these Mrs. Smith is the
pr~ncipal ,i.ndlyidual stockholder.
Allhough t~e ' heiress said tbe 1100
million offer for her stock had been made
and rejected verbally, with no written
commitments, newsmen noted that it
would indicate a valuation of the shares
at $55, rather than the $25 paid in the last
recorded stock sale In 1968.
The figure is significant because, under
the Tax Reform Act of 1969, for which
Mrs. Smith lobbied vigorously in
Washington , the James Irvine Foundation
must, beginning this year, substantially
increase its payouts to charity.
The heiress has maintained that the
foundation will not be able to compiy with
the new payout requirements unless it
relinquishes control of the Irvine Com-
pany or forces the company into a
wholesale dispersal of land holdings to
provide the necessary cash.
The Tax Reform Act will require the
foundation ta make a 41h percent payout
to charity in 1972, increasing half of one
percent annually to a payout of six per·
cent, based on an Internal Revenue
Service appraisal of its assets. This ap-
praisal is due by March 31.
The Tax Reform Act also provides that
no foundation is permitted to hold more
than 20 percent of any one corporation.
Based on the 1968 stock sale, the foun-
dation'& Irvine Company litock wou1d be
valued at $114 million. This would require
a payout In excess of $5 million in 1972. A
more accurate appraisal, said Mrs.
Smith, would require a payout many
times larger. A recent foundation report
showed income of $2.5 million for the past
year.
The report also li sted assets ol $10
million apart from the Irvine Company
stock. Foundation attorney Howard J.
Privett has stated the foundation will be
able to meet Its payout obligations from
these other resources.
A-trs. Smith pointed out during the news
conference that Congressman Wright
Patman's House Committee on Banking
and Finance is inaugurating an in-
vestigation of attempts by foundations to
side-step the payout requirements of the
Tax Reto"rm Act. '
Her attorney suggested that an attempt
by the foundatlon to JrieeC the .obli§.aUon
by selling the $10 ·million in other
assets," now earning six percent and pro-
viding a $600,000 payment to charity,
would constitute a "definite evasion."
Discussing sCK:alled mismanageml!ftt ot
the Irvine Com pan y which results in
minimum earnings . Young cited a $1.2
millioR Joan from Pacific Mutual, on
which the company has obligated itself to
9.9 perce11t interest payments for 25
years.
The company, Mrs. Smith asserted, is
sorely in need of "really top men" in its
management. in the areas or finance,
planning, real estate and agriculture.
Pig Attacks Lawman
DETROIT (UPI ) -An attack by1 a pig
has left Pol ice Commissioner John
Nichols limping.
Nichols said Monday he was attacked
by a 450-pound porker named Sheila
during a visit to a Utica-area farm Satur-
day.
Nichols sa.id he went to the farm to
visit Sheila and was accosted when he
stepped into the pig's pen. He managed to
get one leg out of the way before being
bowled over by the porker.
PASSWORD • • •
OIWll9 COAST 'uaL.ISHINO C'OMl"AJI\'
lolioort N, W.,4
Pr-*'11 aM l'wMi.w
J1tk R. C1rl1•
Yb ""'*"' llllCI 0-1 .....
'Anglo' Audience Gel.$
Tlaom•' Kt1.CI Editor
Tho"''' A, Mu'l!hfn• 111111111"1 Edllflt
.A.!111 D:r•i11
Wtt1 or.._.. c-tv rmw
H1...illfhMI .._. Offke
11a16 •••th ltul1.,1rcl
"
Chicano Culture Lesson
By CANDACE PEARSON
01 ffl• 01lh' f'llel "'"
Newporter Inn ln Newport Beach.
A gooil word pissed around •l:iout a
business is invaluable. A bid word can bo
unfortunote.
Mechanics
Send Bids
' : ~ To Mediator
r Prom Wlri Senrict.1 ~ Hu1he1 Alrwest mechanlcs
wh<l'ili•e hilted all Alrwe1t nlghta from o~· e County and most other airports,
a Mond•y to submit tbelr proposal•
to idJni ar.bitralion. .,. A union attcrney laid the mecl)anlcs
wo1l.ld put all unresofved l11ues in their
contracl dispute Ntore a federal
mediator. The airline decllned comme1t.
Attorney James R. Tormey Jr. 1n·
noun~ th1t 0 . V. DelleFemlne, national
director oJ the Alrcraft Mechanlt'.s
Fntemal A1socl1Uon, had sent a letter
to federal mediator K'nneth Quinn in
WashJngton agreeing to arbitration.
Some 570 mecbanl"l wallced olf the job
Dec. 15, shutting . ~'IYn' tbe teglonal
airline for fiye d1y1. It has ·been
operating 1 limited acbtdui~ of all round
trip fllgbtJ daU7 alnct,(lie 0.0.mber.'No
flights, h6wever, hava lelt Orange Count)'
Airport.
Alrwest normally serves eight western
states and parts of Canada and Mexico,
Spokesman Lee Pitt said at Alrwest
headquarters In San Mateo: "We're not
aware of the letter. Hughes Alrwest will
not comment on this white this is under
mediation in Washington. Mr. Tormey is
out of order for taking the procedure he
has taken -and that is bringing In the
press."
Negotiators for both sides have been
meeting in Washington with Qu inn.
Tormey said "these negotiations really
haven't bun moving :very well and over
the weekend there was informal dlsc~
1ion about arbitration."
lo the letter delivered to Quinn,
Tormey quoted »eJ}e Femine u saying:
"The association is wilting to arbitrate
with the sUpul1tion that all employes of
the carrier return to work immediately
without prejudice, loss of benefits.
seniority and privileges, thereby insuring
the restoration of Hughes Airwe.st routes
and return of the carrier to its potential.
"Although Hughes Airwest refu!ed
arbitraUon on Oct. 8, 1971. the association
.sincerly be:lieve.s ehat it i.s ln the best in~
terest of the membership, Hughes
Airwest employes, the flying public in
those states that are without adequate air
Set\'ice, to bring this dispute lo a speedy
conclusion," he said.
The mechanics seek a 30.4 perce.nt pay
boost plus fringe benefits and worl rult
changes, which would increase the
present $5.06 an hour base pay to se.so in
Sep~mber 1972.
The airline said it offered a two-year
contract which wou(d provl~• $8.37 In
September 1972 plus various' fringe
benefit<. , . ' \ ,,..,
Unvented Heater
Sales Regulated
Under New Law
The aale or resale of unvented 1as
heaters, with the exception of approved
decorative fireplace logs, is now illegal ln
the city of Fountain Valley.
Duane Emminger, the city's director or
building and safety, branded the devices
as fire hazards and uid they are pn>-
hibited to be: resold under a new at.ate
Jaw.
"Unlike the modem, vented 1as heatin1
equipment in a large number of todly'a
Southern California homes, tbeae unltl
are definitely unsafe," said Emmlnger.
"Since they lack an exhaust syst.tm,
these heaters are potential producers or
carbon monoxide. This Is an odorless,
colorless. tasteles.s and often deadly gas
produced when an unvented gas heater I.I
operated In a room without cufflcent 01-
ygen," he added .
M•ltfllf Adirtni P.O. 111 790, 92641
°"" -· Ullllt a..ttr.: m P"«•t ._...,....
C.'8 ""-t: DI W•t .. , Slrtlt ......,..,, ·-Ill U1' ,,...,..., lltulwlff
The man in the audience spoke Spanish
tor almost five minutes and the panel of
four Chicano teachers and counselors
listened intently.
CEEB is a non-profit association of
about 2.000 colleges, secondary schools
and school systems. Most ol the more
than 300 western region members at-
tending the three-day ronference ending
\Vednesday in Newport are admissions
officers, financial aid person n e I,
counselors, administrators and teachers.
Our growing sucess Jn !ht pa1t 14 yttrs
his been due to the 11good words11 and
referrals sent to us by cur customers. ALDEN'S
-~---~CM*..., Halt or the audience -the ''Anglos" -
slrained to understand the different
language. A-1ost failed .
"When he first started to speak Spanish
-I was going to lilop him because I
thought it was unfair to the rest of you,"
1nother Chi cano mAn in the audience
said. "But then I"'reallud this would be
the pe.rfttl way for you to see our side.
'"You who dldn't understan, were Just
like. the child from a Spanlsh-ij>eaklng
home who goes W Engllsh class in the
first grade and can't understand the
words, so is often classUled mentelly
retarded.''
The ucha.nge Jn Spanish waa a hlcJt.
polot of .. the ses1lan,~"Colleg1 and tht
Chicano,'• a dilcttlolon ol Ille bani.,. to
hl1her educ11lon for Mc>ican-.AmttlctDI.
which took plllCI Mondi~ at t1lt con-
vention of memben of =• l!:otranct Eumlnalloo Board ( ) tt the
About 60 people attended the ''Chicano"
discussion, in which the school system,
an "Anglo-enforced" lack of seU-eoncept,
language problems and an insensitive
white attitude were named as barriers to
the Chicanos' access to college.
The panel was comprised of Roy
Lucero, assi1tant profea'Sor, counseling
center, Calllomla Sta ft College, Los
Angeles ; Ricardo A. ~arln Martinez,
graduate student ln eduClltion, Stanford
University; Rudy Ortega, counselor,
Cobrlllo C.11•1• •nd Jloul Rodriquez.
groduatt student In cotuuellnf, Cal Stile LA. •
All crlUclud the schooli for '"leaching
Chlcono children thtl OUJL Spanish
llJllU•J• and culture 11t bod" -and for
even pwiilhlnr the 111a ol lbe lan11111• or
dil)lll1 ol CllltomJ.
No amount of advtrli1ing can repltc• •
ptrson•I rtcommend1tion.
We tr• not inf•lhblt, liut wt are working
toward1 that goal by giving our cu1tomtrs the
but 11rvict and qu•lity possibl1.
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Plaeentl• Ave .'
COSTA MISA
646-4138
HOUU: Moll. thru Thu,.,, 9 tt !1to -Prl. 9 It 9 -Sat. 9!30 It I
I
•
I
l
Weapons Search
•
TueW1, J1nuar1 11. 1972 H
'Reporters Duped'
DAILY "l.Ol a ,
Hughes Plot Thickens
By JAMES R. NORMAN
NEW YORK (API -The controversy
surround Ins ' the forthcoming
"aui.hlography" of Howanl Hugjios hos
thickened with the Insistence of the man
named as the collaborator that seven
reporters wbo believed they had spoken
"'ith the billionaire recluse were duped.
•·That was not Howard Hughes,"
asserted Clifford lrving, the 4l-year--0ld
novelist who publisher McGraw-Hill says
spent close Lo 100 taping sessions with
Hughes in preparing lhe memoirs. M!I for
publication March Tl .
The seven n!porters who spent 2lii
hours Friday night speaking with a voice
emanating from a small box in a Los
Angeles banquet room agreed the voice
was indeed that or Hughes. who has not
been seen publicly since 1957. Two voice
print experts concurred .
The voice told the seven men that the
book being printed by McGraw·Hill is a
fraud, that he never met with Irving and
that he never even heard of him •·until a
matter of days ago."
Publisher Harold McGraw Jr., head or
the flJ'm that has paid money in six
fl;:uno for the rl(h11 to whit It lllllall Is depo11lted In Ille s..ias a-tdll Bact In
a leg1tlmate autohlognpby, 1ppean wlJI. Zurich. The check bocks bor• Ille ,,.n1a
Ing to accept that the man who spoke on .. Chase Manhattan Bank, N.A.·ED119t1 ..
tht telephone is Hughes. meht Guannteed. •• ·
"My only thought is that he spoke too Re also . 1t¥>"wed the newsmtn a
openly" in the autobiography, McGraw photostatic copy of what he said was the
told newsmen f\1onday. "Some advisers first Jetter sent to hlm by Hughes.
must hive aijvlsed him on th< .dlmaglng Jlocelved by Irving In December JfJO, lhe u~ of the information 11 far as bis letter Was scrawltd In black ink on llned
bus1neas and personal life is concerned." yellow legal paper. It said, in part, that
McGraw said the publisher hu "full Hughes was "dee~y interested" in
confidence'' In Jrvlng and that the Elmyr de Hory. a Hungarian art forger
Pub Ii sh In I company remained who was the subject or a biography writ·
"absolutely convincfd of the authenUcity ttn by Irv ing. "Fake!"
of this boot and that the documentation '"I would hate to think v.•hat other
\\'e have contains the .signature of biographers might have done to .him, but
Howard Hughes." it seems to me that you hare portrayed
Irving told three reporters in an in-your man with great consideration and
tervlew Monday In the off1ces of ~ sy mpathy. when it would hRve been
McGraw-Hill that the voice he heard in tempting lo do otherwise,'' the scilpt
excerpts of last v.·eek's news conference, said. "For reasons you may readily
aired on television Sunday night, "wu an understand . this has impressed me."
excellent forgery or what Mr. Hugbts The letter was signed "H. R. Hughes.''
must have sounded like so me four years Some later correspondence was signed
ago." "Howard Hughes." Irving said all the
Reminded that the l\YO independent handwritten evidence, including a nine·
voice experts said tapes of the voice on page handwritten Jetter to l\1cGraw at·
the. telephone matched older recordings testing to the authenUcity or the book a~
known to have been made by Hugbts, well as comments and 11terations penned
Irving asked: ''How valid could they be if in the margins of the 9 9 9 -page
they were,compared with a recording 25 manuscript, had betn authenticated by
years old?" He did not elaborate on what handwriting u:perts.
Baton Rouge police hold . machine guns at the
throats of two suspects folloWing the confrontation
in a black neighborhood in the Louisiana capital.
Militant blacks. using autos with Illinois license
plates, blockaderl a street and \\'ere speaking to a
cro,vd \rhen poli1.:e arrived. (See story Page 5). Triple Slayer
Probably Facing
Life i11 Prison
might b11vc nltered Hughes' voice in re· ln Los Angeles. a IJ)Okesman for the
cent years. llughts Tool Co., whk:h Hughes ownr.
Irving displayed photostatic copies ot noted the insistence by McGraw-Hill that
the e~rsements on two checks. ~th the book ilgenuine and said : "We really
Battle Forms Up
Seat For Battin
By JACK BROBACK
Of lfl1 O.ltr f"I• Sllff
First District supervisorial candidates
are popping out like spring bud! in
orange County. Three have or will make
a formal announcement this week for the
• Jurle 6 primary election.
Monday. Wallace R. "Wally " Davis, 36.
a Santa Ana attorney and a resident of
Fountain Valley, joined John \V. "Bill"
Hjll. Santa Ana clothier. in announcing
he would attempt to unseat Supervisor
Robert W. Battin. Santa Ana attornty
and a resident er Garden Grove .
Attor_ney William Wenke of Santa Ana
Is expected to make his announcemen l
\Vednesday. He has scheduled a 2 p.m.
presl conference in the old county
courthQuse presaroom.
LlSt week. Paul I. Balch. a former aide
i. Rep. John G. Schmlu (R-Tu!tliti made
an informal announcement that he would
enter the sa,ne race.
Hill. member or a pioneer Santa Ana
family and Wenke moved their places of
residence late last year when they were
gerrymandered out of the First District
in the new supervisorial di.strict realign-
ment adopted by the Board o f
Supervisors.
Davi!, a Democrat. has announced 'he
"ill formally place his name on the list
Friday. He lives at i912 Astor Circle,
Fountain Valley.
He was not gerrymandered out o( the
district as wa·s Ed Just, Fountain Valley
mayor and another potential Candidate.
Just decided not to move from the Fifth
Di~ict , in which his home is · now
located.
Davis saili .today that he believes the
countf deaerVq a gteat improvement in
le'adetsttip. ••Methods or handling business
and pr~utcause a lot of the prob-
ltm1-tht.. · Board of Supervisors tw to-
dl)'/' the Mexican.American attorney
1tai.d ..
''You . can disagree without calling
names, you ,can argue without . getting
personal, and you do not have to demand
politlcaJ contributions before giving ac-
tion," Dav~ -Said.
The new candidale Is a native or
Orange County, born in Sant.a Ana .
ri.tarch 21. 1935. He was raised by his
grandmother, Candido Serrano, from ear-
ly childhood after his mother died and
while his father v.·as serving in the U S.
Navy.
Davis spoke only Span ish until he \Vas
seven . He attended grammar school in
Santa Ana and high school in Garden
Grove. working after school and nights as
a field hand and later in a shoe factor~
since he \vas 12 years old.
The attorney attended California State
College Long Beach \\'hile \11orking as a
janitor at Garden Cirove High School
receiving a bachelor's degree in political
science in 1960. He attended UCLA La\V
School "·bile managing apartments 1 playing in an orcbestra and working in a
Sania Ana .law. ofOce. He received his
DbCtor of Laws degree in 1963.
Davis be<:ame a full partner in the
Walker and Davis la..,., firm Santa Ana in
1965.
He is one of the original organizers of
Banco del Pueblo commercial bank , a
Santa Ana financial institution, owned by
more than l,300 local shareholders. He
suggested the name which means bank of
the city or of the people.
Bill Would Aicl
POW Relatives
SACRAMENTO (AP) -Children or
servicemen killed in Vietnam or held
prisoner by Hanoi would pay no tuition or
incidental fees at state colleges and the
University or California through a bill by
AYemblyman Wadle Decldeh ( O.Chula
Vista ).
Introduced Monday. the 1neasure
duplicates 11 bill proposed earlier by Sen.
Clair Burgener IR-San Diego 1.
The proposals also apply to children of
persons listed as missing in action.
"Test Tube Baby ' N eari11g
First Major Breakthrougl1
NEW YORK .(AP) -The d~y appears
to be nearing when scientlsts will an·
nounce either the implailt8tiiin . or
perhaps even the. birth, o( a "test tube
baby." . '
ev~~~h w~~dd::p:~z:~:. t:n~~;l~sti:!
developing g~netlc and biolOa;lc revolu-
tion, with scl~ntista Workirig to bring man
closer to new C911trols over hlimln life.
· And It co~d spur ·an , int'i"latlonal
debate on control of the birth proctss.
A test tObe' baby~ Jo~d 'ht' cbiicei'ved
outside, the human body -ltiroify ip1the l~b6ratory -with scientists • teMlllzing
the woman's egg with the. m'1n'1 sperm In
a test tube.
, The 1eitiliud eJir. would1lien ~·,nd
dlvkk tn the t••t fµbe uotU ti loj>Od
sulfltienUy. 'l'hen II md>'1i!_ linj>fanle<I
In the w1m11n!l \itrriis (,i Con\lnut arow·
Ing until • oonnal bjrlh colild tall ptacie.
The object II to •lftlJ>·..,... hive
cllil<lr<n delplli.l.liloolUt of1111lr lallo-
pt,in ·1ubtl, lllrollc'h "hl€1. llie :ttrlillud
egg mull oormally pass.
Statements about pl1n1 to crulf a lest s:bllby hive oomo r6""6tly'.•(rom
11111 In England. with 1lmU1r wotk
re .-r way In llflaljlm •nd
Japan, I
11 EnaJand, Dr. Douglu Bev1s •
r_,cber 11 Juoop HoapllAI In iiber-
n.1c1, .. Id .. rly In JMlllt)' he la 1'11111 lo lmp\int ID artlflcl1lly Jmprqnotad em-
bf}O In U.. womb of•-·
l
"When I find her. 1 am in a position to
go ahead," he told a Brit.ish newspaper .
"lt could be as &OOn as next w~k or
much longer."
Bpvis said he would not announce the
lmplkntatiOn.. ·
Also 1ri Britain, Dr. Robtrt G. Edwards-
of .CanJbridge University and Or. P. C.
SteplQe: at General Hospital in Oldham
saJd, that last Qctober they successfully
tOOk an tgg from a woman, fertilized it in
the laboratory with her husband"s sperm
and grew it. until it was ready for im·
plantation. But they did not take the final
' step.
This kind of research also could lead to
detennining the sex of the fetus .in the
te1t1tu~ stage.
• .1'ht. complications that could develop
S6el1l vast. Would a woman hire another
· W<1mll~ to.carr,-a· fttuS ere.alee! with her
' 0"'1 efl and husband's sperm? Who6e
·baby .... 1c1 the baby be?
~ . On the beneficial side. this work might
. lead to the abi1ity to correct genetic
dtfects before lmplantallon. th u s
e1imlnatlDg some dJseases.
•
Jn dllcuss.lng controls over Ille. Or.
Ch.Aries Townes. a University o C
Calilornla physicist and Nobel Laurute .
11y1 ·•iubltantial new controls over life
will come alone in a decade or 10.
"we shollld start thinking h•nl now
about lhese various po11lblllU.1. before
tM quelllons flCe us," he added. "We
...._.. , blckloS o1 ....... hly ••U thoucht
out •lew1 ind pllblJ: opinion."
Pollutio11 Case
Dismissals Irk
Oil Prosec utor
SANTA BARBARA (U Pil -District
Attorney David Minier described as
'"ou trageous" Monday a judge's dismissal
of 342 counts of criminal pollution agalnsl
four major oil companies held responsi-
ble for the 1969 oil disaster here.
ri.1in1er said his office has already filed
an appeal of the municipal court's
decision Monday.
Judge Morton L. Baker defended his
derision contending the oil firms had
been ordered to pay scores of civil
judgments and that they had "suffered sufficiently .'·
Union. Mobil. Texaco and Gu1f Oil com·
panies each pleaded guilly to a single
count of pollution and were fined $500 for
lheir part in the offshore oil rig disaster
which slickened the channel and 40 miles
of beaches.
On Jan. 28. 1969 a Union Oil Co. plat-
fo,nn five ·miles olflhore, •".'., oij luae
sliared by four flrms, sufferid An un-
derwater weH blowout and nearly 230,000
ga llons of petroleum gushed to the
surface. The main leak was capped alter
22 days.
A Los Angeles truck driver with a
record of a!!lault:s and sex offenses will
probably 1pend lite . in prison for a
Memorial Day triple-murder and robbery
spree, including one victim from La
Habra.
John P. Hendrix , 35, who still had the
La Habra man's bullet-riddled body in
the trunk of his car \'i'hen arrested . v1ill be
returned to Los Angeles Superior Court
Jan. 31 for sentencing.
Police found Eugene Bealer's body
when they went to arrest Hendrix on a
totally different assault and rape case .
A search of his home yielded personal
belongings linked to two other men slain
under similar circumstances, one a truck
driver and the other. like Bealer. a
security guard.
Or<I Johnson. 18, and Leland Webb. 35,
were both round -snot to ~eath ind 1ban·
d..,.. In lllelr porhd ,.,...!ol'li*l 11•111>-
~al Loi Angeles that weeke!l'I.
The eight-man, four-woman j u r y
deliberated for eight hours on Hendrix'
recommended fate , after convictil)g him
in equally short time.
were signed H R. Hughes and carried don't know what if any legal action v.·i!I
the notation !hat the origlnals were be taken ."
.
· 1-:' ';..,!'
Governor Seeks End
To Hughes Mystery
CARSON CITY, Nev. !UPI) -Gov.
~1ike O'Callaghan believes "the Ume his
arrived" because of recent events for a
face-to-face meeting between blllionalre
Howard Hughes and state officials.
"T believe that the time has arrived
because of the circumstances made evi·
dent during the past month tha( reaponsi ·
ble rt!preaentatives of the state of
-Nevada such as Philip llannilin and Jack
Diehl should have a meeting with the sole
owner of Utis corporation," O'Callaghan
said 1'.londay.
Ttie governor Wa! asked if he \vould be
willing to meet with Hughes himself.
''[.don 't see whr I •ahouldn'I mett wUh
~' Wl!l\ severA.« • pUt ..... :'Mlll
g ' throUgl\ !iii CG I I , Hoghes Tool Company. Ol'l\I seven
· gamblin& casinos bl Nevada. Hannifin i~
chairman of the state' Gaming Control
Board ind Diehl ii chalrm,an of the State
Gaming Commlalon.
O'CaUaghln aid lhia Is nothinc new
t>e<:ause the state hu for 10me time been
willing to send ttpreaentaUvu to meet
with Hughes who Is tn the Bahlmu.
The governor 1akl the clrcumstanct1
he referred i. wm the hook ollegedly
written by Hllgba, the "purported
telephone converaatlon" between Hughes
and members of the national pnu Fri-
day and the conOict! surround.ln1
whether the book la JeglUmate.
Meanwhile, In Lu Veg.,, pub)~ H.
M. Greenspun of lltO Lis Yeau ~ 1111•
luted that ~ • R ...... Of.',*! Im•
perlOlll!or ..,~~Frida' la-* Iii ' ~" I . -~, H~ thlt · It tlli' McG~:
documtnta were froudlllenl !hell ·Ibo ..,.
tire Nevada ,,.prtOtnlallon "7 , °"-~
my1tery hWlonaln ")I a tmnlpdoUI•
hoa " I . . . . 1_ 1 r ,
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Take this; beautiful Lime Metalic 2 dr. Hardtop for example. At this
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=2F91H510142'
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A new WOTld of dr1vtitg Pleasure awa.lb behind the whMJ bf
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car itself. America's bl& car, best buy •.• Look what you t@t tot
this low prlcf.,.,. C~tom 2 dr. fla.rd'top,.Med. c:rten met&We. &ll
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Deluxe radio and AIR CONDMONING ••• '
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2112S HARBOR BLVD, COSTA MESA • 5401111)
•
I
•
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'
,
• ...
f DAii. V PILOT
News
Chips
Drear, Dark
Days of Fog
By THOMAS MURPHJNE or .. OlllY Pllft 11.tt
OllANGB COAST, WILD COAST:
Nothing makes you quJte appreciate
sprina: and 1ummtr along this best of all
poulble coasta like winter, when fog rollJ
in on icy flngen and covers your place ln
!ht IUD.
FoJ eata up yoor favorite landmarks.
Fo1 makei pler1 111d lights diuppear.
Fog turns en automatic foghorns and
makes them wall in the 1loom like lost
bansheu. It transmits sound ao that the
highway truck ... 1111 to be roaring
tbroueh your living room and you can
bear folks hiving a family flght three
blocU away.
FOG IS bad stulr. I find lil~e to re«>m-
mend it unleu you are watching It roll In
fJ'(lftl high on a hill when you are behind a
picture window; somebody you love at
your shoulder, a crackling hot fire at
your feet and something cold in your
glass.
But fur lhe most part, log causes
surfers to grumble, boat skippers to
cur11e and hi&bway commuters to quake
In jusllfled i.,r and dismay.
The radio weatherman, bless him,
always dlamisses fog in the aame glib
way, a one-phrase afterthought · that
follows a detailed analysis of what the
frost la doing to apricot.I in Lower Lemon
Heights.
"And night and morning fog ii ex·
peeled along th e coast," he addJ, in clos-
ing.
We've had some of tbat lately.
THE WEA T11ERMAN mlght get a bit
more u:clted about It If he were driving
through the atu.ft every morning.
Fog along our coast can at times cover
Huntington Beach lllte a white sheet;
&eek out deadly low spots on MacArthur
Boulevard and In Irvine and along the
San Diego Freeway: suck Into Upper
Newport Bay like it was a vacuum tube ;
roll over San Clemente like a wet
blanket; or dance ln and out of canyorui
and draws between Laguna and Corona
dtl Mor like a deadly prankster.
Am1d all thll, the commuter must drive
hil •p~lnted rounds. Tbt wet stuff on. h1I
•teer~ wheel Jln't 101. lt come1 lrom
Ille palll1I of hll band1.
FOGBOUND COMMUTERS chaoge
thtlr personalities. The hotroddtr of
bright and sunny daya abruptly becomes
the Creeper -the guy puzzling his way
through the gloom 1t five miles per hour
ln the center lane.
There is the Nature Lover. He alwa ys
liked the scenery. So in foggy times, he
drive. on the ahouldtr to preserve h1a
view.
You may meet The Quarterback. He is
an upert on passing In the fog. He
paue1 you until he finds out how sticky it
ls out front. Then he lets you pan him.
Then .•.
VOIJ'u. SEE the Railro3d Engineer.
No Windshield Wipers or defroster. He
drives the fog with his head out the 1ide
window. There Is the Secret Agent -you
roll up behind him and find he has no
lighta. Or the Overshooter -always
figurU every r;ignal b green until he gets
halfway Into the intersection.
And the most feared Is Radar Con·
trolled. 1fe has ultra-vision, allowing him
to see through fog 1nd dri ve past you at
75 111.p.b.
Thua It Is when foggy days come to our
CGast and you r;hiver ln anticipation of
brfgbter days.
Ah, ror 1pring.
Educator Succumbs
ORMOND BEACH, Fla . (AP) -Dr.
James Frederick Mason, 92, a longtime
American. educator, died Sunday. MIMln
&tarted teaching at Cornell University In
190t and retired In 1945 as a professor
emeritus ol French Literature.
TUHdlJ, January 11,
U.S. H•VJ P""9 vi• UPI
Death of Ship
Former troop transport General !1-1. C. Meigs i5
aevered amidships off the Washington Coast after
the tow cable parted during operations to take the
mothballed •hip from Puget Sound to San Francisco
•crap yard.
Arson Disputed
By Fire Chief
In Liner Fire
HONG KONG (AP) -Suspicions of
sabotage in the Queen Elizabeth fire
;nounted today, but Hong Kong's fire
chief said he had no evidence to support
the speculation.
The South China Morning Post said an
official of the company that owned the
fonner luxury liner reported the fire
broke out simultaneously Sunday in four
different locations. The official, W. S.
Pau, marine superintendent for shipping
magnate, C. Y. Tung's Island Navigation
Corp., could not be reached for corr
finnation of the report, and another com·
pany officer, C. S. Wang, denied lt. The
ship was being converted into a noating
campus called Seawise University for
Chapman College. '.!'ho lilJl•ptli's lasl Britlsh inutor,
commodore Geollroy Morr, uld Jn Lon·
don on Monday that lhe names spread
too quickly to have started accidentally,
11Jt must have been sabotage."
'The Hong Kong fire services chief,
Harry Wood, told a news conference he
had no . evidence to support speculation
the fire was started deliberately and he
had "no idea where or how the fire
atarted."
The fire chief said he was surprised at
the intensity of the fire when firemen
were called in. But he added that he had
never known a big passenger liner to be
saved after fire gained a firm hold.
Wood said firemen who were able to
board the ship for a short time were con-
fined to a small area. He said he did not
know if the fireproof doors were closed,
but a sprinkler system ln the area was
not working.
The 83,000.ton ship rolled over on her
starboard side Monday in 50 feet of water
near Tsing Yi lslapd , at the western
outskirts of Hong Kong harbor. Ap-
proximately half the ship was above the
surface, and the fire still burned inside
the hull .
Pat's Gift Apropos
WASHINGTON (UPJ) -Pat Nixon had
poUtics in mind when she selected a gift
for the President's 59th birthday. Stop-
ping on her African tour, she bought gold
cufflinks in the shape of an elephant -
symbol of the Republican party.
Nixon celebrated his birthday at a
family gathering at the White House· Sun·
day night. Mrs. Nixon also purchased her
husband a khaki safari jacket on her trip
to Africa.
A Legend Dies
Gulbenkian Flamboyant, Wealthy
CANNES, France (AP) -Nubar
Gulbenkian, the flamboyant and Jegen·
dary oil millionaire, died Monday night
at a Cannes hospital. He was 75.
Gulbenkian, son of the independent oil
operator Calouste Gulbenkian, was one of
British society's more colorful figure!. A
tireless socialite and party giver, a gour.
met and a man of extravagant habits,
he was rarely seen without an orchid in
his buttonhole.
The cause of death was not announced.
but he had suffered from a heart ailment
for several years and had bttn hospitaliz·
ed several times in recent months.
Gulbenkian was born in Kadi Keui, an
Armenian town und·er Turkish domina-
tion, on June 2, 1896. The family fled to
England to escape the T u r k i s h
ma&11cn:11 and Nub1r was edllcated al
Harrow. While bi! miserly father piltd up
a vast fortune In oil investment.!, he
employed his son without salary and gave
him only occasional sums for pocket
money. But Nubar invested in oil himself
and made a large fortune of his own.
Calouste Gulbenkian died in 1955 and
left most of his fortune to a foundation he
set up in Portugal, where he lived the
last years of his life in gecJusion.
A gregarious extrovert, Nubar was the
complete opposite of his father. He had
orchids for his buttonhole shipped
wherever he travelled in the world, im·
ported a troupe of belly dancers from
Turkey for one party in London, rode in a
yello wand black Rolls-Royce built like a
taxi so it could make U-turns easily and
look a $150 picnic lunch from a Mayfair
restaurant when he had to attend a case
at London·s High Court.
In his autobiography he wrote: "I cer·
tainly get more pleasure from working
out a menu, discussing the pros and cons
of each dish with a chef who knows his
business, than I do from Ustenin~ to the
best of Beethoven 's 11ymphon.ies.'
Although he acquired I r a n i a n
citizenship, Gulbenkfan lived in England
until several years ago, when he reUred
to a palatial Riviera estate near Grasse.
Gulbenkian married three times but
had no children. His third wife, the
daughter of French champagne magnate
Louis d'Ayala, said her husband was a
"very difficult man to live with, but it's
worth while. All the most amusing and
intelligent men are difficult to live with.·•
Jack Anderson Reports
Cambodia Drive By U.S.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Syndicated
columnist Jack Anderson reported Mon·
day that secret State Department cables
show the Nixon Admin istration has taken
a hand in raising funds for the Lon Nol
government of Cambodia -despite
disclaimers to C:Ongress of any in·
volvement.
In a copyrighted column prepared for
publication Tuesday, Anderson said the
cables from the State Department to U.S.
officials in Cambodia contained a draft
letter for Lon Nol to circulate to several
governments in a quest for financial aid.
At the r;ame time the cables promised
diplomatic efforts by U.S. officials to get
the recipient governments to supply the
aid, Anderson reported.
.The colwnnlst backed up his report
..
with what he identified as quotations
from the cables, including one that told
U.S. officials in Cambodia: "Department
believes hlgh-le~el political appeal needed
to improve ·chances for success. Letter
rrom Lon Nol to heads of prospective
donor governments could help nail down
contributions."
Anderson l!lid the solicitations were to
be sent to the United State!, Japan,
Australia, Britain, New Z e a I a n d ,
Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand,
and the Philippines. The amounts r;ought
would range from '12.5 million from the
United States, to $2.50,000 for several of
the less developed nations such as
Thailand, be said.
Floods Threaten Georgia
The column was the latest in a series
by Anderson based on secret State
Department and White House papers
made available to him under undlsclo~
circumstances. Previous columns dealt
with internal debate by U.S. officials over
how best to make clear the ad·
ministration'• displeasure with India dur·
ing the India-Pakistan war. c
Blizzard-like Storm Plagues Ce11tral Ro~kies
llt'fllWOfllOU 11l1'10llAL WUTll!UUVICUO J!llA.M. UT I • .,..,.
Mtl!Tl(ll . \,,,,,. _ ..
lj~~~r,COlD
v.s. Summarv
Sinking Victims
'Had N°"Chance'
VICTORIA, B.C. (UPI) -The 41
persons aboard the freighter Dooa Anita
which sank Sunday in pounding aeas off
the coast of Vancouvu Island may hive
survived half an hour 111l they managed
to get Into their lllerafts -which •they
probably didn't do," a rescuer u.ld MOlto
aay.
Ao oil slick 40 mil .. loog and one mile
wide located a lew miles sooth ol !ht lut
known poaitlon of !ht 7,629-too African
freighter marked !ht probable grave of
the 40-man crew and the captain'• wlft.
"We estimate thty would probably
hove survived ooe half hour out thert ll
they DW>liod to g•l Into their UluafU -
which thty probably didn"t do," uld Ma·
jor Vic Ke1Ung, !ht armed forceo
rel)ooal lnfonn1Unn o/ll<er.
II !ht crew had s~ Jn boarding
tho llleboata. thty WO!l1d have had to ...,.
lend wHll 4MO foal netta. freqllent tlne
oq..U1 andj,Je wlndl ol tH5 mllel per
hour. wtlh atN up to " m.p.b.
Mao Mourn•
High Red China
Mi 'nister· Dies
.
TOK Y 0 (AP) -Chinese Forelp
Mlnlater Chen VI hu died or cancor ~
Mao T1 .. llflli led th• mourners d11plte
reporll Chen wu purred dlll'lnl lht
Cultural Revolution.
East Germany
Recognizes
Banglndesh
NEW DELHI (UPJ) -.East Gennany's
foreign mlrilster informed represen-·
tatives of the Bangladesh government to-
day his nltion was extend.Ing formal
diplomatic recognition to the new nation.
Indian officials were preparing to an.·
nounce substantial economic assistance.
Dr. Otto Winzer, the East German
foreign minister, handed a note to the
chief of the Bangladesh mission here to
be transmitted to Sheikh Mujlbur
Rahman, president ot the new govern-
ment, informing him of diplomatic
recognition.
The note was from East German h'ad
of state Walter Ulbricht and Prime
Minister \Yilly Staph, diplomatic sources
said. They said Winzer told Bangladesh
mission chief Huma yun Rad hid
Choudhury that the move was in response
to the sheikh's appeal for recognition by
the international community.
In Karachi, retired Air Mar shal Asghar
Khan said Pakistan should also recognize
Bangladesh as one way ''we can win the
hearts and minds of the E a 1 t
Pakistanis."
East Germany is the third nation to
recognize the Bangladesh government,
following India and the small Himalayan
kingdom of Bhutan on India's northern
border. There have been Indications of im·
pending recognition by Soviet-bloc nstions
in the last two weeks.
Winzer arrived in New Delhi on Sunday
and met with Abdul Samad Azad, the
Bangladesh foreign minister, who was on
an ofricial visit here. According to some
reports the East Gennan foreign
minister was planning to visit Dacca
before his return home. •
The Indian government, meanwhile,
was getting ready to announce a substan-
tial program ol. economic assi!tance to
help get the new naUoo on itl·feet follow·
ing its nlnemonth struggle for in·
dependence.
Wicks
S.Ei '/?£)
Tor SECRET
TOP SECRET
TOI' SECRET ----
Thi o!!lclal New China New1 A1ency
111d Chen, who was 10, died tut Thur ...
day, and Iha~ more than l,llOO peroo111 al·
tended a nwnortal 1ervlce Moodoy at tho
Pa Pao Shan ltevolullofllcy Cemetery
Hall In Peking.
Mlasinj from the list of mourners was
Defeose Mlnbter Lin Piao, Chalnrtan
Mao'1 desfgooted heir wbo dropped from
sight Jut June and apparently has fallen
from powtr. There was no menUon that
be evtn aent a wreath, a1 did other of·
ficlals who were absent
Several members of the Cb1nae Polit-
buro who have been Unked to Lln also
were not reported present. They included
Lln'a wife, Yeh Chun,; Huang Yung·
ahtng, chief ol the army's genetal staff,
and Wu Fu-hslen, commander ol the air
force.
Chen YI, who was also Chlna'1 deputy
premier and Mao's rormer secretary,
was accused oI being a rightlst during tht
cultural purge carried out by Mao In 19Mo
69. He dropped into obscurity in 1969 and
Western reports said he bad been purged
and was undergoing "re-education."
He reappeared briefly in Peking at a
May Day celebration last year, but ' his
absence from his government posts
was never explained publicly.
The New China News Agency said Chen
received a special tribute from Mao,
whose last public appearance wu on
Nov. 22.
Others who attended included Premier
Chou En-lai; Mrs. Sun Vat-sen, one of
China's two vice presidents, and Mao's
wife, Chiang Ching. China's other vice
president, Tung Pi-wu, 85, was absent but
sent a wreath.
Chou eulogized Chen as an 11outstan-
ding member of the C:Ommunist party of
China and a staunch fi ghter-of the
Chinese people!' He told the Chinese to
learn from Chen's "revolutionary apirlt
and transfornt our grief Into strength."
Peking said Chen had been suffering
from intestinal cancer and had betn
undergoing treatment at a Pekin&
hospital.
He was born in 1901 in Szechuan
Province in western China, and went to
France as a student In 1918 on a govern-
ment scholarship. There he joined the
Chinese Socialist Youth League in 1911
and was expelled that October for taking
part In demonstrations against a Ollnese..
French loan agreement and in radical
movements.
He joined the Chinese Communist party
in 1922 and three years later was llsted as
a wanted man for pll'tlclpaUng 1n an-
ti.government demonstrations.
Denmark King's
Health Worsens
COPENHAGEN (UPI) -The condition
of King Frederik IX of Denmark
d'teriorated today, a royal court bulleUn
announced.
The bulletin, Issued at nOO!'I from
Amalienborg Palace, Wd:
"After a couple of days with normal
temperature and sati5factory heart fuoc.
tion, the condition of his majesty the king
deteriorated this morning. The tem~
perature was 39.4 C (102.1). His majesty
Ji very tired and doeina:."
The last bulletin was l.asued Sunday
morning and described the 72-year-old
monarch'! condition as nonnal. The court
said the general improvement had coo~
Unued and new bulleti.nll would only be
issued in case of a deterloraUon.
King Frederik 1uflered an acute heart
attack and wu taken to the nearby Kom~
munehospltal on Jan. 3. The attatk
followed on top of a he11.vy bout of in-
fluenza and a touch of pneumonia.
•
.Joitas 'Sports Greats'
Bonehead Ouh Honors
Nixon-Picked Redskins
DALLAS (UPI) -The D a It a •
Bonehead Club, which ho previously
honored such dlgnltariea as Jimmy "The
Greek'' Snyder, NBC and JI m
"Wrongway" Marshall, baa named Presl·
dent Nixon as "Bonehead of the Yesr"
for his recent Involvement In profes1lonal
football. .
The club tnronned Nixon by tilegnm
Monday Inviting hhn to 'presentation
ceremonle1 Jan. 14.
The President w11 a11ured bis name
•1a1ong with othf:r sports aruts" would
tie pennaoenlly enshrined upon !ht
wolnut and 1llver trophy adorned with a
srut 1Uver nut.
Nixon apparenU, WOii !ht award by
first ptcktnc tbe Washington Red1klnl to
defeat the lltllu C.Wboy1 durln( • rtsuJar ,.ason game that decided !ht
E.utern Conference champlooshlp.
He also 1uue1ted by pbona to Miami
Coach Don Shul1 a play he thotllhl would
work against the Cowbo)'I In tbe Super
Bowl. He bal yet to caU Ibo Dallu coach·
tng oteU. ·~YdU Mtt Pre1kLanL,0 Cha tf.le&ram_
said, "as America '• No. 1 football fan,
understandably could nol control your
emolJanl, Wllenal, wlthoUt corulderln(
the oplloos, you lit your hurt nil• your
betttr judpelll and r a m • m b • r In I o .. w. plcUd the 8'dlkln• to wlllp tho = .. Still uncl1tmt.d, )'OU set out to
• caodl for tho Miami Dotpblnl.
''The award which we bestow upon you
at this time Is not to laugh at you, but to
let the world know thaL.you have learned
to laugh with u1," Jt read. "May yul.I
1Jway1 have the ability to sUr the
sporting public'• emotlol)I, and we will
alw1y1 recognize you 11 America '• No. 1
sport.I fa n." ,
The club said !ht trophy II preaeoted
each yur to "the person or ln1tltuUon
that has endeared themselves to the
1portJ.mlnded public "by their dulro to
participate and lose.
''There are many trophies .,.arded
each year to ptrlOlll who have won. but
our1 II the only lropb1 dedicated !O
honoring Ibo,. who !all by !ht woy1lde,"
• club 1polwmon utd.
Monhall, now ol tl!O Minnesota Vlk·
Jng1, zecel•ed the troplly In 11116 fur pick·
Inf up 1 fumble 1nd running ourly tho
length of the field In the Wn>fll dlreellon
to StGrt a safety f9J' ~11 opponents.
NBC ~ wa1 given tht award the nm:t
year !or altempllnf to televt,. a footbaft
Jllllt 1nd I !J!!IC< filaJtl !multaneo\1411
on opttt screen ud foullna up bolb ol
them.
Snyder won In Jiit Illar 1 putlcularl1
Inaccurate yur ol 1porll predlctlonl
bq)nn]nt~-th !ht Baltlmono Coils .. -, fa ... ttu iplnlt
tho N ... York Jell In Supar Bowl Ulll
,.,.. 'l'be Jell """ 111-7. (
I I
t
I
•range Coa·st
EDJil O N
Today's Final I
; N.l:'. tocks-
' .
VOL 65, NO. 9, 2 .secr10 Ns. 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA . TUESDAY, JANUARY II" 1972 N TEN CENTS
Presents 'State of County' Report
B• JACK BROBACK
Of t11t qe1rt Pitt! Sllff
Chairman Ronald w. Ciypera of. the
Orange County Board o! Supervisors io.
da_y read his "state of the couoty''. report
to a packed hearing room audJence of
~1'8.rtmenl heada, employea, studenl!
anti Interested citl!.ens.1
Titled "Sj,hung in on 72" the report
covered a broad field including en-
vironment, t"Pmmunity safety and justice
(Jl!l"lessness, drugs, alcoholism}, health, •
efllcltncy in government (economlc pro-
p-eu; unemployment, taw)!o county
re~tion in sacramen a n d
W8shlnato11. D.C. and rapid lnnllL
The -boar<! chairman prefaced blJ
remarks with, "having only jull
graduated Jrom aupervisor one to
supervisor two, I must confeas to being a
norjce ih many o( the 11reas Jn whlch we
operate."
Ca>pen then outlined his program and
preferred policies :
-Environment. Chairman Alton Allen
two years ago prefaced the County
Progress Report and said that the
''formerly acceptable standards related to prlJil'W and the good Ille" nameQ<
quantity, were no longer adequate and
that quality would be the keynote of the
future. • .I couldn't agree more, however we
must go a step !urther and define what
level or quality b desirable and .at-
tainable. •
Heiress Wouldn't
Luck has a lot to do with the eYents of time and time is something you can 't
control. It just happens. It just so hap..
pens that also now Ls heie,
-Communlly safety and jusUct. This
subject must receive our rt=newed com-
mitmerit to guarantee all our citizens a
.safe society, fr.ee of feJr f r o m
lawlessness. We should continue to sup-
port the agencies and courts charged
with this difficult task but be 11' search of
more productive, e£ficienl methods for
Sell
Joan Rejected Huge Offer; Kept Ranch Together
By BARBARA KREIBICH
01 llM DIHY ,lltl 111ff
Joan Irvine Smith turned down an offer
of $Ul0 million cash· for .her. &tock in the
Irvine Company about five years ago, the
heiress revealed during a press ·con-
ftteftce at her Emetald Bay home Mon-
day .
She refased the offer, made by a
re-presentatlve of a New York cor-
poration. Mrs. Smith said, because ahe
felt it would lead to the breaking up of
Police Station
Vote Delayed;
Study Ordered
Newport Beach· councUm<n Monday
ag.ain pootponed,il 'vote QI! the site for •
new polico lla1lon ·to · atJOiv Wile to stud¥
iull(io!M ~oJ)DlfJll ot Ille Old NtW-
port area -even though one cOlD'lcilman
labeled the renewal plan a smokesf.'reen.
"l took at this as a smokescreen -the
question Is are we going lo build a police
station," said Councilman Milan Do.!tal
of the plan advanced by Councilman Carl
K)'lllla .
"There Is no connection with the police
facilities and that Wue -they .are sep.
arate and apart," Dostal said of the
K)'lllla propooaJ to ,.. what the city can
do to upgrade the area east Of the pres-
ent citv conw.lex on Newport Boulevard.
Kymta maintained his proposal was
tot Intended 1 to delay anything.
0 1 had no Intention for this to be a
political smokescreen or a poliUcaJ man-
tl!ver," i<:;ymla said .
"It's anything but a smokescreen.''
a~dad Counclin\an Donald Mclnnl•. one
of two councilmen who has stronglv sup-
ported. building a new police headquar-
ter!! on the pruent site.
·~ The council has been split over where
to J)ut the pOllce station -which they
unanimOU!ly agree must be built, de-
$pite voter rejecUon of a $6.9 million bond
issue for a ctvic center last October -
and two week., ago vowed they would vote
on the issue Monday. 1
Kymla sought the delay to Rive City
~nager .Robert L. Wynn time to find
out if th(Te might be any federal or state
fands available to help "rejuvenate" the
area. Kymla unveUed his renewal plan Mon-
day afternoon, saylnp; he had no specific
do>lgn plan but felt the city is obUgalad
to help the area since it created other
commerclal districts over the years that
have taken customers away.
In voting, unanimously, for the two.
week delay on the vote, the council also
aaJd it wlU obtain opinions from the New·
port Harbor Chamber of Commerce Arch-
itectural committee on the alulabillty of
construction at both the present site and
the properly adjacent to the new fire
&adquarters on Jamboree Road.
They ar.o dlrectad the ala!! to report
back on recommendaUons for temporary
facUltiea to l!ouse ..,. polk:e communr.
catloni equiwnenf..
• •
her grandfather's giant Oraoge 'C:Ounty
ranch holdings. "I'd rather see It kept ln
one piece and· see something good done
with It," &be sajj~ "l worked hard to have
the unlversnyD'Qught here and I have
some feeling about the property. I'd 11ke
to see ft developed right, following the 1
original Pereira plan for the university
town .''
Mrs. Smith apparently made the
disclosure to emphasize her insistence
U1at, "If I were only interested in monty
I wouldn't be doing all this."
She referred to her long-slanding fight
to break the James Irvine Foundation's
control of the Irvine Company and her
recent attempts to block what she termed
premature incorporation of the city of
Irvine .
Asked why she thought the unidentified
C11mpany would want to offer such a sum
for her 21 percent of Irvine Company
stock, which she ha s complained pays on·
ly 1.6 percent dividends because of what
Ryckoff Tola Mandate
Needed to Seek Office
A pot<otlal challenger-to. Mayor E4 Hift~'s Filth District. seat P11.tlieiie~ Btatti fy i:i>ilndJ WU lofd'ifOllda
will blVe to ro Jo court to gel
~ .. .-.
Paul a~. 1200 Soll!h Baytront,
Balboa Island. does not meet the -city's
three-year residency requirement and
councilmen Voted 5-0-1 to uphold the pro-
vision even though courts have . stricken
-slrnllar requirements elsewhere because
they are too. restrictive,
Ryckoff, who announced his challenge
Monday, has lived here three years, but
had retained his voting address in Oxnard
unW boo· years ago.
Ryckoff ·said this morning he will con-
sult an attomey before deciding whether
he will seelr a writ of manda te tO force
the city to let him run.
City Attorney Dennis O'Neil, citing re-
cent court rulings, had told City Clerk
Laura IA.gios to ignore the three-year
charter provision and instead. require on-
ly one-year residency.
"I am sworn to uphold ~ charter,"
viewed Vlce Mayor Howard Rogera after
Councilman Milan Dostal had ral&<d Ille
issue, noting "there is a charter provision
until it ii held invalid by the courts."
"There is an avenue for legal relief.'•
Councilman Donald Mcinnis point~ out.
Mcltmls, the only announced incumbent
candidate for the April ll city election,
abstained when the vote was taken.
Ryckoff, when informed of the action
by the council reversing O'Neil's in·
structk>ns this morning, Jiaid be couldn't
say immediately what he'll do.
"It'll give me something to think
about." he said.
A political unknown in Newport Beach,
Ryckoff has received the endorsement ot
the Freeway Fighters' Citizens'
Coordinating Committee to oppose the
mayor in the upcoming election.
Cuff Links for .Ni.Xon
W ASl!INGTON CUPll -The First
Lady brought President Ntzon a birthday
gift from Africa -gold cuff links in the
shape of a elephant. Nlxon·!umed 59 Sun·
day night and marked. tbe' occasion at a
family gathering in the While House after
Mia. Nllon returnad from h<r trip.
0_.,ILY PILOT Sl•ff .......
FACES COURT TEST
Candidate Ryckoff
Kialoa Fi ghti1ig
For Finish Lead
AUCKLAND, New Zealand (AP)
Two 73-footers, one American and one
New Zealand er, were in a tense finish in
the 1,570-mile Tasman yacht ract today.
The American yawl Kialoa II out of
Newport Harb!>r lost her 5()..mile lead' on
New Zealand's Buccaneer II and Tuesday
night they were striving almost abreast
down the east coast of New Zealand's
North Island.
The rest of the fleet was strung out
h\ffidreds of miles behind them. The race
began Jan. 4 at Hobart , Tasmania, and
the first boats should fmish at Auckland
Wednesday.
Ariti~route Alliance Asked
Ne-ivport G;oup Seeks Coalition of Coasrol Cities . . .
A Ne"POll W antl-ll'ee,,.y -
nnll to form a coatlal am.nee q alnat
the Padfic.CO.flt rre.way and b •Hkinl
the help ol dtloo and lmml !rvm Long
<Beach to San Juan Clplltrano.
The CIUztns CoordlnaUng Commtttee
..in write city ollldab and a t l
homeolf!lttl' f"O"PI up and down the
Orange Colll tn an aU.mpl to filht tho
poseil iij, Ni wpolt -· Vite ayor Howml Hogen aald MOllN7.
•we art trylnc to . &el a ooordlnaled pp repreoentlng an •rr.cted aAll,"
Rogen .. id notin& the O'OWkta oppo1lUon
•
to the !Meway route.
Tho CCC, an offlprlng of the Harbor
Alf'I Freeway Ftahtera, forced an in-
ltlallvt eleclion ln Newport Beach 1111
March that resulted hi ~ city'• tll>
cellatloo of the niuto agroemtat With the
stale DM1lon of Highways.
"Thb altltude toward the freeway II
galnl'!I ~entum, • lloiera aid lhil
morn nc !ll'ill& n. thouclii the coutar-
atlbnce "II an intemtin& way~·" Rocm noted Iha! srouPS •P !ht rr.ew_, b a v a alruey aurfa«d a
lllll!lbet of IDWDS lncludin& LliUna
.Beach, Huntington Bea,ch and Sul
Blach.
He aald If there is enough blterett
1hown the CCC wlll try lo achad ule 'a
meeting of coa.stal citizens early lo
February.
Rogers aald the teller wUl ho mailed
taler this week.
"I don't linow tho euct..wording," he rilcl. "bocauoe they'i'e stlll j)Ultq the
final loucl .... 1 on II. But basically it 11y1 U
there II enou&h rtaponae we wll' ael up
the meetin& to ... wbai we """ do with a
unlled I~"
...
she labels C<>mpany mismanagement, the
heiress replied, "I don't know why. l
guess they thought they could figh t
harder than I did ."
Her desire to see the property kept in·
tact, she added, also bas kept her from
availing herself of a California law that
would permit her. as a minority
stockholder, to petition for dissolution o(
the company. A 1965 amendment to the
states Corporate Securities Act. Mrs.
(See FOUNDATION, Page %)
Council OKs
End to Use
Of Heliport
~~ft. .. ::•~ . . ' . ·lit-i,. -be ... the can-be ,enfargtd
night the council said yes -the soontt
the better.
"I, too, want to see that aUen'cect ln·
definitely," voiced Councilman fl.1ilan
Dostal.
Councilmen direcJ,ed City Attorney
Dennis O'Neil to firfd the rfsht way to
terminate the use permit ror the facility.
wh ich hasn 't been used commercia1ly
since L.A. Airways went out or business
two y,ears ago. ·
Terrence Wefcll, Irvine C:Ompany direc·
tor of commercial development, disclosed
this morning he had asked ' for the
termination · so 'the Newporter can ef-
fectively complete expansion plans. '
There was no mention that the com·
pany had instigated the request at the
council meeting' Monday nlght.
Councilman Carl Kymla raised the
Issue, saying only he feels "It is not in the
best Interests of Newport Beach to have
the heliport at that location."
Kymla said he would be .. diametrically
opposed to expansion or continued use"
or the facil ity.
Welch this morning said there are no
specific plans for an addition to the
Newporter , but he indicated the heliport
area would likely be used (or parking
under any plan that is devised,
Pat Nixon Book
Postponed; Aide
Cites Schedule
WASHINGTON (UPI) -First Lady
Pat Nixon has postponed indefinitely an
authorized biography to have been
published this year.
C:Onnie Stuart, the First Lady's press
secretary, said Mrs. Nixon decided ahe
\vould not have time to work on the mat-
ter because of the busy year with the
visits to Peking. Moscow and campaign
trips on her schedule.
The biography w11is being wr itten by
Glorla Seelye. a fonner Los Angeles
Herald-Examiner woman's editor and
now a public relations executive.
Her husband, Howard, is a palitlcaJ
reporter in Orange County for the IAa
Angeles Timtl and was White House
counselor Bob Finch'• preu sacretary
when he rah for lieutenant eovemor or
California In 1968.
l\ln. Seelye began work on the book In
Jaouary 1971 and p,...uce-Hall, the
publisher. had anticipated having the
book ready !or sale this sprtnr.
Mn. S~ e11plalned that because It
wa1 an °authoriied" book: It would have
requlrad Mrs . Nixon to look a! It page by
1'•1• and to spend many hours in in-
1ervlew&. • But 1,lrs. Stuarj 1ald the book his oot
'been cancelled ..
"Jll Jusl that we don'! antlclpall! a
pubU'catlon date at this time."
'
preventing crime, trying cases, and
refonnlng violators.
The most viSlble problem area becau5e
it has agonized so many personally is
tho confioolnc drug problem. Last )!ear
the county made a strong entry into the
drµg abuse lleld, but the job h,. only
~n and I am dbappointed to predict
an tncrease in hard drug arrests this
year. even though, at least marijuana of·
r~ seemed to have leveled off.
Law enforcemen\ musl continue its
huge task of control. but In addition the
medic.a l approach mu.st be expanded and
most or all educating our youth and
ourselves not to withdraw from realitv or
lry lo become somebody else every tim e
the going gets Lough.
A! an example , I can foresee conver-
sion of the drug fad to an increase of a
still worse problem, alcohol .
In ot her words, If tbe pathead merel v
becomes a jugheaa because it's legal and
!See CASPERS, Page %J
HEIRESS TURN!D DOWN $100 MILLION STOCK OFFER
Mqnl;'( l•n'I EYorythlng to Jo•n Irvine Smith
Heiress ~elieves City
•
May Curb Development
' ' I ~ ,t f' '
~ ... , 'By GEOROE t:EJDU.
, r • • Of, tf1t Dllftl Pdef111~ · t
: The grapdd,ijurhter of Jam~ l!Ytiie
senses the ma~fty ol !he new 1rvlhe .ct·
ty Councif 'shires her concetfts about
develo,P~ent or the ranch and. will block
overdevelopmeot. , . ,
'-1rs. Joan Irvine Smith. majority
stc.ic.kholder-in the Irvine Company, Moir
,day .became the llrsl highly placed
perso·n.10 the land d~velopment company
to lhdicate t be new City CowlcU mlgbt
oppose the Irvine Cj>qipany.
Mra. Smith tpld a gathering of
. newsmen in he'r Emerald Bay home Moo· daf. afternoon, ·she , vJe.ws councilmen
E. Ray Quirley Jr. and Jol)n Burton to be
lrtendly to company . lntereal!. '"l'ney
were strictly a part of a company slatt~'
she said. ,
"ni. aalvatlon tor tbe clly wu .tfial a
. 'compallJ slate'_ WU Dot eJecj«I. ~U&e
tile council major~y wjlo ,;~ e~
from the Irvine To"'l'rrow ~.flanlZIUon
seem 'Iii 'be interested in 1ne orl~I
William Pereira maste1' pla/l lor devetoP.
rnent, I don't think tbe company'• 53;000
acre city will happen ~,"'Mrs. Smlth
,.Id.
"II these people ketp their llldependenl
11alure, I bellev~ tbe Irvine F,9"ndatlon la
in big trouble ." .
Prior to the cttyho9'1 election last Dec.
2t, the Irvine heiress urgad voters to tum
down incorporallon in two pr .. ballottna
speeches.
Monday. ~ Indicated ahe wquld >'l~w t~rec<>id of the new'clfy council )'Ith IJI.
terest 1
"I plan to attend WadheadaY'• cbuncil
tnHtlng aa an lnlerellod obteryer.'"Mrl.
Smith said. Thal -on ha• been call«!
for 7:!0 e.m. Wedneoday in the cll7 ol·
!tees • ..Om UI. Town Centor, 4201 Cini·
pus Drive, •croll from UO lrV!ne.
Mn. Smith said Ibo temporary' cttr hall
locatloo pleased her linoe that WU one Of
the ..... mmeodatk>111 madf"~y Pen!lra Jn
hla JllO'goneral plan fo' an evenl'!ll dty
of 10,000 aCl'tl to surrollnd !he untve!'llly.
It was Mra. Smltb who convinced Iba
'"lne Company board to donate 1,000
.,.,.. for the camJl<tl.
WbUe moat of her ...... r1ai Mollday
centered on htr continuing atruggle with
tilt Irvine P'oundatloo over conlrol or Iha
land dtvtlopment llm'. Mn. Smith nevcrethelea t!lered lier .i.wa ol ...,,.
lsaue1 that 1Uect the new city.
Topics she covered inc)uded: ·
, Tu 01: "I 'hop, fhe.new<i:\1Y •J;:Qtmcil
does not allow taxes on property to
-become conflacatory ."
Schools: 11School problems should be
'solved before ariy new building is allow-
ed. The overcrowaing of schools in Irvine
ls just one example of why the company's
new plan has so many flaws in it and
ahould be reworked.
"This was the crux of my concern over
the original incorporation," Mrs. Smith
aald .
Land liquidation : 11Jf It ll possi ble to
hold the Irvine land inlact It ls possible
some day, we can h.ave aomthing good
here I thllllt It Will be llwo yean before
the loundplk>n la forcOcl to begin II·
quidating land to meet provisions of the
I , (Set llEIRESB, P111~ 'J ,
o .... ,. C.ut •
Weadier
More paldty, -log la lore-
c1ll lor Wedneaday, wjtb buy 1un-
shlne in the altemoon. Ll!Ue temp-
erature Chana• p..ctlcted, With
highs along ll>o cout al II risinJ
to 68 inland. l.owa lotlJaht 3M5.
INSWE TODAY
Th< Coil of Liolng ,Coundl
sa~1 It wfll 11<1rl dtscloatng the
namer of violator.s of wooe·pri~e
conh'ola, olld hinted that "'tvll>
of counal ln .. atlgoUon• mo~ 'be
glvtn to J>frlOns ffUng COJll•
pl4mlf agointl vlolatori. Su
sto'll Pll/ll 5.
l
1' DAlLY PILOT N
Newport Orders
Audit of Balboa
Bay Club Books
NalfJCll'I Bt1ch 00W10llm.. Monday
• ftlahl: or~ered an aadlt or tht books of the
• lilboa &ay Club -but first they want to
know how much the examination wUI cost
them.
Councilman Carl Kym\a askt.d for the
; audit. nolini it i:-established city policy
to do so with all firms operating on pro-
jMrty leased from the city.
'
Kymla made the suggestion after
rcvlewlng An opinion by City Attorney
Dtnnis O'Neil that said the city had no
authority to approve tht sale of the club.
The wtll-known spa was purchased l•~t
month by William 0. Ra y. a Newport
Beach financier , from Jack D. \\'rather
Associates.
The council ordered the staff to gtt '"
estimate of the cost or the audit after
Councilman Lindsley Parir.ons noted, "it
mi•ht ht very expensive."
"Well. it might bt very profitable , too,''
added Vice Mayor Howard Rogers .
The 81y Club 's rent, about $130,000 an ·
nually, is bastd on a perCflntage of Its in·
come.
Jtay this marning said he would
"welcome'' the audit 1nd offered his "full
cooper1Uon."
,. From PflfJe I
-HEIRESS ...
Tu Reform Act," she uld.
. lul she added the omlMu1 nott that if
the foundation begins 111:1n1 Its nol'l-
lrvine stock holdln11 that prutntly earn
lht required aix percent Interest, a con-
sre&sional panel mi1ht "take them (the
feuftllatlon ) on 11 a apeclal c1se."
Mu'tu plan: Mrs. Smith indJcated
1ht would .work toward development of a
''prope.r mister plan" one that would
"not overload the land " 11 ~a the
4.10,000 person cUy announcN b)' the
Irvine C.Ompiny Jast spring. ·
She 1eei1 auch a plan as an expansion of
the Pereira plan with "farm type
Mv1lopment particularly Jn the ranch
bills," ind extensive greenbelts.
.. c.istal aeetor: Mrs. Smith · is not
... ethualaaUc about the coastal aector plan
-:recenUy completed by the Irvine C.Om·
J)IDy.,She said she doea not believe thJt
~Y nece11arlly 1hould be a part of
the.new clty ot Irvlofl, either.
.. Complliy coetni: 1! Mrs. Smith
: wen to fttrce public sale of Irvine stock
aha Ind.lated 1he would not purchase any
;more shares. "My holdings would make
me the laret•t 1tockholder, why would I
nHd to buy more!" ahe uked.
J "I>m not .a11inst dividends," sht sa id
·notlns her Interest In c o n t l n u t d ......,..,.p or JMoe •loci.
"Jf money Wai the only thing," she '"-fan.,•hJ/Ung her trlln ol thougbl. ".But,
'haWnr tftiieiun '*', lft &h1 first master
"'plan and having arranged for 'the 1unlYeraity to come here, J have a feeling
- a riostalgla about the property.
''With proper management we could
have not only a superb master plan that
... would ~ the envy of others, but I could
make some money ,'' Mrs. Smith con-
cluded.
Com pa n. y Management: • ' M y
position is simply that I want enough say
in tht Irvine company lo bring in new
management, 1ta.rting with a good top
man,'' Mrs. Smith said. She U1ted five
other areas in wh ich she would place
"top people'': finance, person nel , real
estatt, plannin1 and agriculture.
Pig Attacks Lawman
DETROIT IU PIJ -An attack by a pig
has left Police co mmissioner John
Nichols limping.
Nichols ~aid Monday he was attacked
by a 4SO-pound porker named Sheila
during a visit to a Utica-area farm Satur·
day.
Nichols said he went to the farm to
visit Sheila and was accosted when he
1tepped Into the pig's pen. He managed to
get one Je1 out of th!! way before being
bowled over by the porker.
OIAN61 COAST
DAILY PILOT
tultOI COAST rv.LlltOltO _,..ury
l•'Mrt N. W,,.J ,.,.*' .... , .... ...,
Jt,\: •· Ce?1"
Y)Ot """*" 111111 0.-tl aa_.
n°"'" r • ..u .....
1\Mn A. MOfJ\1H _. .......
L P•tt' K•i•t • ...., ._. (J,,. ld!tw ---lJJJ N•w,•rt l•vl•••nl ... m .. Aflir•U: P.O .... 1111, ,J,,J
~-(Mt. u.u.~ lll w.t ..... ........
....,._ •..c1t~ m "*""'' ... _ ~ ....,.,.: 17'7J hkfl .......... ... ~---~c;..-....
Parking · Sticker
Fee Not Enough?
The '2IO Iha clly propow lo charae
busine:umen for each beach parking
1ticier they tl~I to boy to 11tisfy CUI·
tomer parkin5 requirement.! may not be
tnt>Ugh, Newport Beach city councilmen
indicated Monday.
Caspers Reveals
Board Me1nbers'
Appoi1tt1nents
Oranae County Board of Supervisors
Chairman Ronald W. Caspers of Newport
Beach today announced his appointment
of fellow board members to committee
and commission memberships.
His· recommendations met w l t h
unanimous approval of the board . They
art:
Robert W. Battin, First District -
Reappo intment to South Coast Air Basin
CooNllnating C'.ouncil; Health Planning
COunctl and the vital Local Agency
Formation Commission.
Battin was also named alternate dlrec--
ttn' fl f 1anitation dislrlcts flne and three.
*
They poolponed action on Ille t!Arl pro-
po.sal lo hike the charge 1500 percent
from the $15 -until they find out exactly
how mar\Y businesses would be affected.
CoWlcilman Lindsley Parsons originally
requested consideration of the increase,
pointing out that taxpayers are, In effect,
subsidizing certain businessmen by allow-
ing them to buy the inexpensive parkln&
sticker.
A staff report showed It would cmt al
least $:1.000 per space to put in parking,
a <'OSI lhal would be: amortized to about
$300 a year.
Community Development D ire(' tor
Richard Hogan noted that the 11liff hike
y.·ould be costly lo many businesses that
mwt buy several stickers.
He said the Balboa Inn buys 65 of them
e~ch year.
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers suggested
the $250 fee m1y not be enough to serve
as an inducement to have property 011.11·
ers join together to find their own private
parking.
Rogers said with ! Ile proper incentives,
they likely would conper11te, somethin~.
he noted. they just have refused to do
in the past.
He sa id the fee should be large enough
"to make businessmen lake 11 jil'ood, long
hard look to find his 0~11 parking.''
Parsons said a major increase might
result In isomt of tht older. marjil'inal
buildings being torn down for parking
lots.
From Page I
CASPERS. REPORT • • •
because the TV commercials now pro..
claim the joys of becoming a wino while
picknlcking In our beautiful countryside,
what have we accomplished ?
(To dlareu for a moment, we always
hear crlticlm about lack of C<lm·
munlcatlon. I don't quite agree. After all,
we read local, national and world news
only minutes or hours after its making ;
have discussions with many people every
d1y, go to meetings and lectures in the
evening and watch the 11 o'clock TV
news ii we have: the courage. Actually we
are communicating all over the place,
We're just not .nyina the right things).
-Health. Meeting the health netds of
our people a dignified economic way is of
vital interest to this board and we are
bopinlt'. tor aome answers when the cur.
rent health study is completed in June.
When I was 1n Denmark last spring, a
lady with our group broke her ankle. It
was immediately X-rayed and set in a
cast. Tbt bill WIS fl.
One of my youngsters broke her arm
ploy)«f:/"~ rqotlJ!jaod-"eot to
lour ~dOC r a a ceet-flf f200 before we
were thn>uih.
The debate on socialized med icine can
go on and on, and I'm not forgetting that
Denmark has a lS percent sales tax
which buys a lot of soclal service.
I only point this out because we mus t
ht aware that there are better ways to do
things. Incidentally, the Danes also burn
their trash, a real no no here, and heat
the entire city of Qipenhagen without
smoke emission.
(To diJtess, while we are on the sub-
ject of a better way there will probably
never he a better way than this to offer
some of my provocative theories. I have
found that Americans are very reluctant
to accept the fact that someone else can
do somethina better, or even as well aa
W,),
This I! a great competitive spirit which
has caused us to excel and 11uccessfully
meet so many challenges. However, let
us say that I was to relate to you that on
my visit to Russia last year I observed
features superior to our own in this coun·
try.
A multi-model transit system serving
the needs of seven million people for a
minute charge, including a subway
system which doubles as a handy bomb
shelter. Cleaner air, less noise, higher
class TV programming, better basic
medical are for the masses and hold your
seats -better patriotism and dedication
to their emerging nation.
I can hear thl!m saying right now if you
feel that way why don't you go live
there." the board chairman smiled.
This may seem a little funny, but just
for the fun of it I would like to make an
offer to all county employe.s to send,
fither directly to my office or through
their department head s any ideas major
or minor on how we can perhaps perform
some task better or not at all, If that be
the case.
For each of the next 12 monlh!i, the
best ideas will receive a $25 credit al one
of the county's better dining places or $25
in a savings account at an unnamed sav·
lngs and loan.
(Caspers own!i the Ha' Penny
Re!itaurant in Westn1inster and the
Keystont Savings and Loan Association
with offic~ in Anaheim and
Westminster.I
-Efficiency. This can best be con·
den.sed by asking yourselJ from time to
time. "why am I or we doing this?" If
you can come up with a good Ide• let's
hear about it. Along those line1. &b
Thflmas (County Administrative OfUcer)
and I believe the budget hearing process
can be greatly reduced and yet still com·
ply with the law.
Co\lnty tmployment must support
President Nixon's fight on lnf11Uon
vlgoromly and r e:cho J. Paul Getty whtn
ht said, "show me the man who ca.n do U
for leas and that's my man."
-EcflDOmlc proare11. This means to
me whal lbe final bollom line will show Ir
and when flur clvili11Uoo's booka come
In. WJll we have bulh real vt.Jue or was
tht ventUA • loau1 Though Yl!lly (mprovod over r.,1
)'ear's unemployment r•te of 7 .I percent
lod1y'1 1.4 parcenl 11 lllll far· beyond lhe
acceptable. I be lieve, the constant ad·
dition of desirable industry 1uch as the
Western International, Sheraton, Hilton
and Marriott hotels and the well
diversified Irvine Industrial Complex
when co mbined with a lessening im·
migration and birth rate for the county
will alleviate the unemployment rate and
its related Ills.
Carving up of 500.000 acres of prime
foothill land by developers in Calirornia
during the 196-0s is not a wise policy for
us to continue. The almost religious at·
tachment local officials have for an in·
creesingly assessed valuation is totally
irrational and even contradictory in the
preservation of open sJ?ace.
If the proposal were made to me tG
leave my entire district, representing
about one half of the county, in its
present state for farming, grazing,
recreation and wilderness, imm une from
property taxes, l'd snap at the op-
portunity.
You may ask what 1 would do with tax
revenues and where would the new hous--
Jng be1 tJi.1aaest ~we look oVfll Our
shouldera-,t'the older communitieS"I
We must if we are to avoid the con·
tinual evacuation by affluent whites fr om
these areas, spend the greater part of our
resources and ener£ies in mak ing them
as attractive as the new communities
emerging in the south county area,
These areas need housing replaced,
ischools rebuilt, streets rep~ired, new
street lights, parks and all the amenitil!s
to rl!tain their dignity and attractiveness
or we may play leap frog right off the
map.
Caspers summarized : "We must sight
on these targets even though thl!y are all
moving ones and government in a cha.rig·
ing society must be flexible .
"We truly fi.nd ourselves in a most
promising time for l believe far greater
reliance will be placed on local govern·
ment to manage en a local and regional
basis,
When I think of management of human
and natura l resou rces, there are tv.·o
equations to choose from: A land of plen·
ly plus waste equals shortage. ex·
haustion, dependence, failurl! or if you
prefer, as I am sure you do, a la nd of
plenty plus conservation, plus sound
development should equal an ample sup-
ply and true independence."
Caspers then suggested that the Board
of Supervisors make it one of their major
policies to educate everyone on the merit
and \vays of conserving fuel by less high-
powered ve hicles. ca r pools, buses
bicycles; saving electricity by turning off
lights, less reliance on electrical s~
pliances, fewer commercial electrical
signs;
Recycling water and using it more
sparingly and at the same time en·
courag ing innovative discoveries such a11
salt water conversion, ,,uclear and
therm.8.1 power .and use of liquified
natural gas.
We must stimulate all Oranae Coun-
tians for hopefully positi.ve idea.s, there is
too 1nuch negativism today.
La~t week. President Nixon said that he
believes the politician, if he is to ac·
comp\ish an ything during his tenure,
must be by nature a Vl!ry dissalisfied in·
dlvidual. rm not certain of the other
qualifications but this trait I po!isess and
would far prefer to say we have the
lousiest system than lo say we have the
be!'lt, whether it's the condition of New·
port harbor or the refuse disJ>05al system .
Caspers then announced that he wanted
to with board approval, establish a
pennanent. full time office In Sacramen·
to with board 1 ppr o v a I, establish a
Washington. D.C. to best accomplish vital
Orange eou·nty needs.
All in all, 'it promllu to be 11 most
chall!!nging year and , one of optimlsm
e.ven though I must rullatlcally believe
some· items 1uch u pollution and drug
abuse wHI gtt worse before thty set bet· ter.
I \..·ou ld lllce to remind you that this
board i.. nol • bu~. or 1o .. 111uc1
bure1ucr11tt: oor • Board To Eternity ·11
our nelgbbor1 lo lhe north (Lot Angelee)
were recen tly described, but a board of
action dOloC Ila be>l lo live yO<I a dlrte·
tlon to we can m1kt all OJ\na• County
&o forward to1et.ber.
"Lei'• do a ban( up job, lo(elhor," lhe
board chairman concluded.
'
OAt~'t' l'ILOT 5t•ll l'llOlt
New Gym Opens
Topher Cramm Oefl) and Mike Livsey vie for initial tip--0([ in brand
new gym at Upper Bay Branch of Jiarbor Area Boys Club. Gym was
dedicated Su nday, with Newport Beach GOP Assemblyman Robert
Badham (visible between the two boys) tossing up the first ball. City
of Costa Mesa provided site for new gym, which will be used jointly
by Boys Club and Newport-Mesa Unified School District.
'Anglo' Audience Gets
Chicano Culture Lesson
By CANDACE PEARSON
01 1'111 0111¥' 1'1111 Stiff
The man in the audience spoke Spanish
for almost five minutes and the panel of
four Chicano teachers and counselors
listened intently .
Half of the audience -the "Anglos" -
atrained to understand the different
language. MOit failed.
"When he first started to speak Spanish
-I was going to stop him because I
thought it was unfair to the rest of yo u,"
another Chicano man in the audience
said. "But then I realized this would be
the perfect way for you to see our side.
"You who didn't understand , were just
like the child from a Spanish-speaking
home who goes to English class in the
first grade and can't understand the
words, so is often classified mentally
retarded."
The exchange in Spanish was a hig h-
point of the session, "College and the
Chicano,'' a discussion of the barriers: to
higher education for Mexican-Americans,
which took place Monday at the con-
vention of members ot College Entrance
Examination Board (CEEB) at the
Newporter Inn in Newporl Beach.
CEE B is a non-profit association of
about 2,000 colleges, secondary schools
and school systems. Most of the more
than 300 western region members al·
tending the three-day conference ending
Wednesday in Newport are admissions
officers, financial aid per son n e I,
counselors, administrators and teachers.
Aboul 60 people attended the "Chicano"
discussion, in which the school system,
an "Anglo-enfor~" 1ack of self-concept.
l!Ilguage problems and an insensitive
wh.ite atUtµde we:re ner'i;ed1 ~, b'lrriers to
lhe Chicanos'.' access to college.
The panel was comprised of Roy
Lucero, assistant professor, counseling
center, California State College, Los
Angeles; Ricardo A. Marin Martinez,
graduate student in education, Stanford
University; Rudy Ortega, counselor,
Cabrillo C<lllege and Raul Rodriquez,
graduate st·Jdent in counseling, Cal State:
LA.
All criticized the schools for "teaching
Chicano children that our Spanish
language and culturl! are bad" -and for
even punishing the use: of the language or
display of customs. 1
Mesan Hangs Self '
A longtime Hawaii rest a ur a t e u r
brought to the mainland to manage
Roberta Linn's Inn Place night club in
Corona del Mar l 1i) years ago was found
hanged In his Costa Me sa garage Mon·
day.
Orio L. Farlow, 48, of 298 Monte Vista
Ave., was found by his wife , according to
police who said the victim left a note tell·
ir1g of personal problems.
PASSWORD • • •
A goo<! word p1111d oroun<I •liout 1
businou is inv1lu1blo. A bad word can bo
unfortunate.
From Pu• J
FOUND TJON
Smllh's allomey Lfndol Youn1 e.t·
plal~ permits 1ue:b •n action by a
•~k1¥'1dcuwllltl& otJwl 111.pW:llll or
1ioct othet llitn that <ii which Iha com·
plalllt It belnr made. n, Jarnes Irvine Foundatlon owns 53.7
percenl ol Iola! lrvlne Company stock
and ~ &mily members own the re·
malndtr1 blil of these Mrs. Smith Is the
principal tndlvidual 1tocltholder.
Although the heiress said the $100
million ofter for her stock had been made
and ~ejected vtrbAlly, wltb no wrllttn
commJtmuLs, ne'wtmea noted that It
woold indicate a valuation bl the tbarts
at $M, nther than the $25 paid in the last
recorded stock sale in 1968.
The figure Is significant betause, under
the Tai ~form Act of ltft9, for which
Mrs. Smith lobbied vigorously ! n
\ rWashlngtop, tbe James Irvine Foundation
must, bet1;lr:ining thls yelf, substantially
increue its payouts \o chartty. the heiress has matnta\ned that the
roundatlon will not be able lo~piY with
the new payout requt?eme.nts unless it
relinqUlshes control of th& Irvlne1 com-
pany or forces the company Into a
wholesale dispersal of land holdings to
provide the necessary cash.
The Tax Reform Act will require the
!oundatio11 ta make a 41h percent payout
to charity in 1972, increasing hall of one
percent annually to a payout of six per·
cent . based on an Internal Revenue
Service appraisal of its assets. This ap-
praisal is due by March 31.
The Tax Refor m Act also provides that
no foundation is permitted In hold more
than 20 percent of any one corporation.
Based on the 1968 stock sale, the foun·
dalion's Irvine Company stock would ba
\'alued at $114 million. This would require
a payout in excess of $5 million in 1972. A
more accurate appraisal , said Mrs.
Smith, would require a payout many
times larger. A recent foundation report
showed income of $2.S million for the past
yl!ar.
The report also listed assets of 110
million apart from the lrvine Co mp&n y
istock. Foundation attorney Howard J.
Privett has stated the foundation will be
able to meet its payout obligations from
th ese other resources. ·
Mrs. Smith pointed out during the news
conference that C<lngressman Wright
Patman's House Committee on Banking
and Finance ls Inaugurating an in-
vestigation of attempts by foundations to
side-step the payout requirements of the
Tax Refonn Act.
Her attorney suggested that an attempt
by the founda tion lo meet the obligation
by selling the $10 million in "other
assets," now earning six percent and pro-
viding a $600,000 payment to charity,
would constitute a "definite evasion."
piscussing so-called mismaoagement of
the Irvine C o m p ~ p y wh ich results in
minimum ~~Wi~· Your:ig ci'1d , a $1.2
ml!Hon 18~n !nl!\i l .. cilfc 'lifil!tial, on
wh ich the company has o~lfgated ltselt h>
9.9 peree11t interest payment, for 25
years.
The company, Mrs. Smith asserted . Is
sorely In need of "really top men" in Jts
management, in the are!s of finance,
planning, r!!al estate and agriculture.
Navy Affected,
Says Air Panel
LONG BEACH (UPI) -County pollu-
lion officials have aaid in court that the
U.S. Navy has to adhere to local an-
tismog rules even though it is a federal
agency.
The Air Pollulion Control District
sought an injunction fr om Superior Court
against further alleged violations by
Navy facilities in the harbor area.
The suit specifically mentioned the
commanding officers of the Naval Air
Station, the Naval Supply Center and the
shipyard facilities with declining to ob-
tain permits lo release Cflntaminants into
the air.
Our growing sucess in tho put I~ yHrt
has been due to tho "good words" ond
referrals sent to us by our customers. ALDEN'S
No •mount of advertising con ropl1•• •
personal recommtndetion.
We are not infallible, but we ore working
towards that goal by giving our •uslomers tho
best 11rvi•• •nd quality ·,..,ssiblo,
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Ploc•ntla Avt.
COITA MISA
646-4138
HOU•S: Mon. thru Thun. 9 to 5:30 -,,1. 9 n 9 -Sat. 9:30 n S
-VOL 65, NO. 9, 2 SECTIONS, 28 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, JANUARY 11, 1972 · c TEN CENTS .. .
Caspers Presents 'State of County' Report
By JACK BROBACK
Of 111t 119rrr "'' ,,..,.
Chairman Ronald W. Caspers of the
Orange County Board of Supervisor• to-
day read hil "state of the coutity" report
to a packed hearing room audience of
department beads, employes, students
ahd lnttrut.d clttuna.
Titled "Si&lillni In on '72" tbe report
covtrtld a broad Oeld Including en-
vironment, community safety and justice
(lawle1sness, drugs, alcoholbmJ, health,
Heiress
Reject,ed
Stock Sale
By BARBARA KREIBICH
01 tlla D•llY Pli.t St.ff
Joan Irvine Smilh turned down an offer
or $100 million cash for her stock in the
Irvine Company about five years ago, the
heiress revealed during a press COfl.o
ference at her Emerald Bay home Mon-
day.
She refused the offer, made by a
representaUve of a New York cor4
Poratlon, ~frs . Smith said, because she
felt it would lead t.o the breaking up of
btr grandfather's giant Orange County
ranch holdings. "I'd rather see it kept in
one piece and see something good done
wilh it," site said. "I worked hard to have
the university brought here and I have
some feelin1 about the property. I'd Uke
to see it developed right, following the
oricinal Pereira plan for the university
town."
Mrs. Smith apparently made the
disclosure to emphasize ·her insistence
that, "If .J were only interested in money
I wouldn't be dbina all UU..'! , .
Sbe referred 'lo btr long-standing fight
to break the Japies Irvine FowW8tloo's
control of lbe'lrvlne Company and Her
receot attempts to bl.Ck what she lerliied
prem~ture . lnc.orpor1f.)on of the city or
Irvine. .
Asked why she th!>ught the unidentUied
1 company would Want to offer such a sum
for her 21. per~ent of Irvine Company
stock, whfch she has complained pays on~
fy Le percent dJvideods because of what
she labels company mismanagement, the
heiress replied, "I don1t know why. (
guess they thought they could fight
harder than t did." .
Her desire to see the property kept ffi..
tact. she added, also has kept her from
avaJling herseU or I California law that
would permit her, as a minority
stockholdU, to petition for dissolution of
the company. A 1965 amendment to the
states Corporate SeeuriUes Act, Mrs.
Smith's attorney Lyndol Young ex·
plained, permits such an action by a
stockholder ownlilg at least 36 percent of
rtock other than. that on which the com-
plaint Is being made.
The James Irvine Foundation owns 53. 7
percent of total Irvine Company stock
and Irvine family members own the re·
malnder, Put of these Mrs. Smith ls the
principal lndlvlduai stockholder.
Although the heiress said the StOO
million o(fer for her 1toci: had been made
and rejected verbally. with no Y.Titten
commitments, newsmen noted that lt
would indicate a valuation of the shares
1t 155. rather than the $25 paid In the last
recorded stock sale In 1968.
'I'b4! figure ls significant because, under
the Ta1. Reform Act of 1969, for which
?t.frs. Smith lobbied 'Vigorously in
Washington, the James lrvlne Foundation
must, beginning this year, substantially
increase Its payouts to charity.
The heiress: has malntalned that the
foundation will not be able to compi)' with
the new payout requirements unless it
relinquishes control of the Irvine Com·
pany or forces the comp.any Into a
wholesale Jllapersal of land holdings to
provide tbe necesaMy cub.
The Tax Refonn Act W'ID require lhe
(Set FOUNDATION, Paa• Z}
efllcltncy In government (tcOllOllll< pro.
iress. unemployment, taxes), county
repreoentatJoo in Sacramonto and
Wa>hlngtoo. D.C. and rapid lrlnoit.
The new board cliairmao _prefaced hi!
remiris "Ith. "havlnr -only just · gradu1ted , from supervisor one to
supervisor two. I must con!,.. to being a
mvJce in many of the areu ln which we
operate." . .
Caspers then outlined his program 1nd
preferred -p{ilicies:
Three at a Ti.,.e
-EnvinlnmeDI. Chairman Alton Allen
two years ago prefaced the County
Progre<s Report and aaid that the
"formerly acceptable standards related
to progress and the good life" namely
quantity , were oo longer adequate •nd
that quality would be the keynote of the
ruture.
1 couldn't agree more, however we
must gb a step further and define what
level of quality is desirable and at·
tainable.
Mrs. _Robert Ayres gave 'birth to tripfets Saturday at Hoag Memorial
Hospttal tn Newport Beach. They are all boys -Michael, Stephen
and Richard, named fOr attending physicians. It was only the second
~t of triplets born at Hoag in the 19 yeirs babies have been delivered
there. The Ayres have two other boys, Robert, 5, and Billy, 4.
Woman's Body Found
Stuffed • 1.n Freezer
TORONTO (AP) -Curious youths •
have found the sun-tanned body of · a
Toronto woman stuffed in a home freezer
amid · packages of ·turkey pies aitd
\oegetables.
Police said Monday night the bod.v was
frozen for at least six months. It was
found by lour youths who c.pened the
freezer .aq.er watching a horror movie on
television.
The victim was identified as; Grace
Evelyn Todd, 34, missing since July 29.
Her husband, David Wilfred Todd, 31, a
truck driver. has been charged with non-
capital murder.
PoUce nid they believed Mrs. Todd
was shot to death but ,that. a 4eliolte
cause or death could not be established .
until the body had thawed sufficiently to
allow an autopsy. '
Police said the freezer bad been stored
in the dining room of a Townhouse owned
by Marv Cassidy since Dec. I when Todd
moved to the Cassidy home ini the city's
northwest side. • ,
· ~ body was found by Mrs. Casstdy'a
children, catherine. 15, and Charles, 21,
nnd two friends, John Moore .. 19, and
Layne Jackson,. 18, who had been watch-
Jng the television horror movie, One
Step BeyQnd. A sequence in the movie -
showing the discovery of a woman 's body
in a trunk -sparked their curiosity
about the freezer that they had be!n told
not to open ...
The OOdy was clad in a summer outfit
of shorts and halter.
The woman had been reported missing
to police Dec. 21 by her mother, a resi-
dent of Burlington.
Police said Mr s. Todd lived with her
husband in an apartment in the same
area before Todd n:ioved into the Cassidy
townhouse.
During the time her husband lived in
the apartment, police said , he operated
ar. unofficial dro~in center f o r
neighborhood teenagers.
Police said that When he was unable to
renew his fease Dec. 1, tbe Cassidy
yo11tbs suggested he move in wilh them.
Anti~route Alliance Asked
Newport Group Seeks Coalition -of ·Coastal Cities . I . . . . .
A Newport BtlCh 1ntl-fl'eow1y group
wont. to form 1 coutal alliance againlt
tile P1ctllc Collt l"neway and II ..utng
tile http ol ctUO. and 1own1 from Lone
Beach to 800 J .. n C.plllr1DO.
Tbe CIUZena Coordln1Ung Co!nmltlet
will write cl\y offlcfall and a 11
homeowntrl' lfOUPI up and clown tho
"Orange Cout In an attempt to llaht the
-proposed freewl)I, Newport Baell VICI
Mayor Howard Roger• 11 d Mcinday;:
"We In trying ID aet I _..tinaltd ·
poup repruenllnc all allecled ore0,"
Ro(en llfd ootinc tho crowinl -illiotl
to lht free.way roule.
J'be CCC, an ollspring of tho Hubor
Am Freeway Fighter•. forctd 1n ln-
IU1Uve tltc!lon In Newport Beach last
Maroh th>t reiulted In the city's can·
cdlatloo of lhe route agroement with the
Stale Dlvllloo of Highways.
"Thi• atUtude to"ard the fi'ttway Is
galnfllfl m0"1entUm!' ltoger1 llfd this
momln& o.YlntI he lhotl&ht Ibo eoastal
al\fanct "taan ln!oratln( my to J.P.:'
Rpgen ~ l&a1 l"'IPI -Ins ~
freow111 ha 'I e •ltead1 IUrlae.d In a
number al . town1 ~ LIClllll
Beach, Huntington Beach and Seal
Bea Ch. ·
He said if there ls enough Interest
shown the CCC wUI try to schedule 11
mcellng of coastal cltluna early In
, February.
Rogers said the letter wJll bo malled
later this week.
"1 don't know the exact wording." he
llld, "becaU!e they"re stlll putttn& the
Jinal touches on ILBut basically It llY• If
there itri enou&b responte we wiJ' set up
the meeting to ,.. .,bat wt can do with a
..uniled force."
Luck has a lot to do with the event.& or
time and time is somethini you can 't
control. It just happens. It jusl llO hap.
pens that al.so now is here.
-Community safety and justice. This
subject must receive our rtmewed com·
mitment to guarantee au our citizens a
safe society, free of fear f r o m
lawlessness. We should continue to sup-
port the agencies; and courts charged
with this dllflcu1t task but be in search of
more productive, efficient methods for
preventln( crime, trylna ..,.,, and
refonnln& viol1tor1.
The moat viatble prOhlem aru. because
It hi.! qontled so many personally is
the contlnuing drug probltm. Last year
the county made a strong entry into the
drug abuse-field, b<Jt the job baa only
begun aod I am disappointed to predict
an increase In hard drug arrests this
year, even tbouih, 1t least marijuana of·
fel\SeS teemed to have leveled off.
Law enforcement must continue iU
huae task of C011trol. but In addJUon the
medical approach must be e.1panded and
most of all edue11Ung our youth and
ourselves not to withdnw Crom reality or
try to become somebody else e\'ery time
the going get. tough.
As an example, I can fore.au conver-
sion of the drug fad to an increase ol it still worse problem, 1lcohol.
In other word!, If the pothead meretv
becomes a jughead because It's legal and
(See CASPERS, P•a• I)
Mesa Future Eyed
Project Sees Marina, Rapw Transit
Costa ~fess 's chief crystal ball gazers,
members or the Project 80 Committee,
foresee a future for the town that in-
cludes an ocean marina, a 300-acre park
and a rapid transit system.
These and other future topiCll are
covered in a report made this week to
Mayor Robert Wilson.
ln a fiv~page outline -Of their study
plans, committee members list five ma~
jor concernl! in the planning of Costa
Mesa's future -all the way to 2020.
The rtport lists population, recreation,
transportation, civic and special study
areu which will be covered by the com-
mittee durtna 1972.
Committee members expect to' develop
a graph ihowlni tile cUY'• po~ton
from 1950 through :IOlO In ttrllll al IJ>ll"t-
ment dwellers and home owners. Graphs
will also.show lhe pa1t and future values
of commercial and industrial property.
"It J.i 'easentlal that we Inventory our
wet. and thoir growth In the put, In
relation to oor future needs or holding:
capacity," the rtpoi't says.
Project 80 h., d~flned the proposed :JOO.
acre Fairview Park as one of the city's
prlml(Y needl, u well u J>ll:k
developments ·neu the west end oL VIC:
forl1 Street and the Fairview Rold-Bear
Street ma north of the San · Dle10
Freeway.
other suggested ·recreatlonal needs In~
elude, a sportl Cenltr and an all-~
(Set FUTURE, Pa1e I}
2 Witnesses
In Car Fraud
.Eeology Club Idea
Estancia High Students
Case Testify Present Pinn for Park
By TOM. BARLEY
OJ tll9 Ge1tr '"" ,,~•
<Ilg lfJd be .)J 1'1<RT found~ 11res ,.. .#'i;i' ..,. ... -~-. .. .. !!!!L.:f Retl~ ,.uDil. ind a ,._
encuUve who acomfulfy ~ t;hl
suggestion th>t the shock abeorben on P -·rib"vi.W
bis Cadill,ac were leaking today !>"iught Pork. • •: , ,. · to 20 the number of witnesses wlio have Mt..:. .l!. .. testified . against nine members of a ,..,y. mired mo,,...,mm, 1Udft ind
service station chain. tpeeCbu to brlna' ICr'Oll tbelr .point that Costa ,Meia ....Ia 1 wllderaeu Itta, a Al Mosley of 3202 Montana Ave., Cotti place to ucape lr<liD!alftht concretl.·
Mesa. told an Orange County ·SUpeO<>r An alldlence of more thin• ,...... -
Court Jury that he found nothing wrona lncludlnc hi<> cll~·•-IChool with the tires on h1s wife's car delpJte l>oa.rd · tni~ 'ltid"' -tev.efal · ·._
the claims of attendants at a local Ua~td and' ~ • •• the· youpr
service station linked to the defendants ocolof]aU argued ip!ns!~ ~
that a front tire was defective. and paved toads. .,
Prosecutor Richard Stenton ldenUfi" They propoied ~..three arw o I
that station as the Harbor-Gisler MObil, development: wlldtrnlu. -plcnk . and
3195 Harbor Boulevard. He DU earlier cultural ·leCUonl. ~ ..
obtained almost identical testimony trvm · Tbt wJlderneu -wpuld · rbO the
Mosley"s wife. Lydia. largell MCtlon, stnlehln& alo!ll the ~
Mosley said the family car was driven ta Ana River. It wauJd Include I. llMlJ
for "six or seven month!" after the equestrian' obtltlr lot' 'rictm 'i!Dllc tile ·
report thal the tire was defective and the rt1er and I llDl~campltjg~..,. ...
tire gave "no trouble at all" during that 111t ..OU.Id bl: to •,thl aataral porlncl. beauty ol pllhts 1 · 1nlmal(..Uv1 to
•re was followed on the witness stand Soutbem California and orange County,''
this morning by Robert Lawhead, a explained ~rtn Benton,• an ecoIOa 'ifu.
retired insurance executive from dent. · · · ' ,
Coronado who testified that lie was Paved roads and well maintained
en route home from the Disneyland Hotel development would be taboo.-in the
on June 5, 1970, when be stopped for 1as
at the Katella and West Shell station in
Anaheim -one of II stations said to be
involved in the alleged auto repair
racket.
Lawhead said he wu told that one or
hi.s tires was low and attendants im·
mediately hoisted the Cadillac on the
rack.
He said he was then told tJiat a &hock
absorber was~leaking and was Jbown cil
drippJng from the part. Lawhead said he
refused to have the part replaced on a
Cadillac that had only 10,000 miles on the
clock and drove home to Coronado.
"Did ·you drlve on the freeway~ Ste~
ton asked.
"Certainly," Lawhead said.
"At what speed?~ Stenton asked .
"My usual speed -65-70," Lawhead
repll<d.
Lawhead said he sold his Cadillac later
In the year with the shock absorbers still
unchanged . And be made it clear in cross
e1amlnation that he knew the 1Ubeequtnt
purchaser of the car and the shocb were
still there when the auto wu rttOld.
Earlier wltnwes -both former
employes and customm of lhe chaln that
ranged from Seal Beach to San tlomente
-had testified thal perlecUy IOWld tlrtJ
were represented to be detective and
shock abosrben were deli bera tel y
sprayed with oil to give the lmpreulon
ther leaked and lhould be replaced.
I has also hetn testliled that
C\IStom'ers were preuurtd lnto having
front end work performed on their autos
In the bollef that they r~ked Injury and
accident by ·drivlne a defective car on the.
freeways.
Other wit..,... have t01Ufled that
holes were 11'1.shed ahd radiltor e1ps and
,..Is dtllberaltly damaged by •tt.nd1nta
who aot the care Qn tbe racu incl on.n
lnfllcted damage while the oWjltra wm
In the office or the restroom .
Tabbed by Sttnton u the thrtt prln-
(Scc REl'Alll, he< I}
•
'
* * * 2 School Sites
Sit in Middle
Of Park Locale
Two future achoo! · llttt tola1!nt IO
acres 1lt lo the middle of Costa Meaa't
propoaed. lOO-acre F11"iew Plfk.
Offlclal1 of the Newport-MUI Unm.d
llchool Dlslrlct confirmed today lhlt tile
district owns an lntennedlite achOol 1itl
and an elemen)ary ocliool 1lte on )be !ind
near the Santa Ana .Rtver.
District Trustee Don Sm11lwood warn:
eel E1tarl<la Hlgb S.bool ecoIO(Y atudellt1
Monday night tb1t t!Mlr wlldtme11 pork
plans had tcnored the i"chaol 11lt1.
'l'1\e student• ta\d they we.re not aware
or the 1ite1.
A dlstrlcf official today up.t11ned that
the sites wm bouiht In 11113 11 1 bed&•
1galn1t future ruldelltlal 11"111 of tho
lrtl. : Tiie •pol<t1man aIIO saW that 11 homt1
or apertrntnt1 ire not bull! on the nearly
300 ocrea DI 1t1to land, tho achool 11te1
would probably not bl llttded.
D11trlct olficl1l1 paid the slltl •bout
'435,000 '" the ao 11crtt. 'Ille pr1c1 "u $14,500 1n llCrt, con11dorabl7 under tho
cumnt muktt price for tho land. .
'l'he tnl<rmtdlai. llt•: ao• ....... 11 on
the wt •Ide of E•tanctl Drive, ~far
from Estancl1 HfCb School. The tlente11-
tary 1lto, 10 acnl, II out to Elland&
Drive and tho Qood conllol channtl, north
of tho blflh achoo!. ,
The achoo! district 1pohan111 llfd It
"ould be up to the bo1rd M!>'UStlea hoW
tile llnd would be sold 1nd ror hoW mucll,
II tho 1re1 btcome1 a pork.
'1
•
.
~"'1Jw. It oould bt ........... wltli Jlll:lliftralll . ..,,.,~ alte.1"1111
!'"!"'~,a( tflo .,.,_, ~·,..,...&M~ It ind ......
Drive would bt. • Jarp, ro1J111i "' 1pooe ~ deve~ llmllA• to tDClll ol Ute current city por... · 1
"It'• !or plenlcl, pl111rollnd1, perbape
a small pond, , wlth be~he1 and
playground ll(Uipment and Iota of ·op<•
grau," said Robln Huffine, another ltu·
dent.
A1afn, no roridl or concttte would be
allowed.
Shilling ocroa E•tancla Drlv.t, to the
east &Jde, the ltudenta allowed an arta
for devtlopmtnt of b<Jlldlngs. In tlU. aec-
tlon they d""1ibed two Iara• poriln1
Iota. an aodltorlum, art muaeum.
orcbtolog!cal mllHtlm, 1ncl 1 botanlcaJ
llfdtQ. I
jjl:lowever, .. Aid student Kim Blanlf.
.''II funda ba~e to bo cul In the J>ll'i. this
lhould be tho flrlt to go."
Student pl111t called for conatructlon of
overpuaea or underpuaea to get ICl"Oai
Estancl1 Drive. . . •
To ... .,., criticism .ibou~ J>ll'iln&
helnf .llmlted ,lo one tight area, ltobfp
Huffine said: ' Cars. brll1.( lazy people •riil
Iuy people brln( trash. People who
.rtally want a naWtal p1rk will be wllllnl
'9 walk." .
Estancia studtnts . also p r o p o 1 e d
melhoda to WP• the "°"t of the pork
lower. They auue.sted the use ol 1tudent
help to maintain the pork. They 1lso con-
tend th1t !ht lick of roads, and leavlnl
the area "n1tural11 will cut costs.
Ont atudclt, Stlv• 8'rry. propoled &JV·
loge student. coune c:redlt for worilnr I•
'!ht botlnical rlrdens. .
A spokesman tor the Mesa Verde Home
Owners Alaoc\atlon pledged the assocfa.
(Ste l!lCOLOOY, Pip I}.
Weadler •
More J>lldty, cknle toe II for ..
cast for W-y. with hazy aun-
ohlne In !lie aflemoon. UIU. temp.
ei"lture clwt&• predfcWd, with
hliba •tons the cout 11 11 rtstna
lO II Inland: Low1 tonJibt IMS,
• INSmETODAY
Th• Cott of !living Counnl '°"' U tuUl .start diaclofing the
nome1 of violator1 of waot-pricc
conCToll,· and hinttd tluu rc1klt1
of covndl mve1«gotionl mar b•
Ql..,. to l'frlO•s filing COnl•
plplnU agot"'t violators, s ..
1to~ P4g1 S. _,. . --.. P'lt~"': ~ -" ·--" ...... , .. ,,
lflct MllUll 1'>1f ' ;::::-: :=; ...... ,: --..
% D~ILY ~!LOT c
f'ro111 f'qe J '.
CASPERS REPORT ...
' bealuae lhe TV eommtrrials now pr4>-c~aim: lht joya of becomlnR: 1 wino while
Jlle.krt!Ckir!C In our breaullful couotrys1dt,
wblt Mw •• accompllshed~
, \Tl•tl,r111 for 1 1!10lll1J1l, wt llw1y1
11Mt ttUJC&m 1bout lack of coi:n·
munie1Uon. 1 don't qu1tt aarM!. AJtrr all,
.wt fUd local. national and world ntl'S
<Udy minutes or hours afttr its making:
havt dlscul.!ions wlth many pl"Op!t ('\'try
-;day, to to mee t..ings and le-clurrs Jn tht.
evtnlni and watch the 11 o'c:Jork TV
news it wt have the cour&,ll!'-Actu11llv 'AC
..irt com1nunicatlng all over rhe pl3ct,
.we're JUJI not saying the right tblnA~J.
system whk::h doubles as a handy bomb
ahelttr. Cleaner a1r. less noise. h1gbtr
cl1ss TV programming. bttter b.a.sla
mtdlcal art for lhe masses ~nd hold your
.auta -btUu p11rk>tlsm and dedlr11ion
to their f!mer1ln1 nation.
I c1n heir them uylng rl&ht now II you
feel that way why don't you go Jive
there." lht boArd ,,,·hAirm11n ~m1led.
, -HeaJlb. Metting the health needs or
.our people • dl1nlried economic way Is of
vii.I Interest to this board 11nd we are
hoplna for .uime answer!! when 1~ cur-
rent he~lth study 1:s complettd in Junt.
When I 'A'IS 1n Dtnmark last sprin~. a
lady with our Rroup broke her ankle. It
)t'as Jmmedlately X-rayed ind stt in a
.Ust. The bill was $7.
"l'h(s may Sf'em ,11 ltnle funny . but Just
fnr the fun of 11 I would like to make An
offer to all county en1ployes lo send,
f'ither du·e.('l]y to 1ny ofllce or throu~h
the-Ir department ht;ids any 1d£'as 1n<1J11r
nr minor on how"' can perhaps perforrn
some task bttter or not at all, if that be
the case.
For tach nf lhe next 12 rnnnth~. the
hrs! idea~ will reeei\"e a $25 credit ill onr
of the coun1y·s brtter d1n1n~ p!arrs Qr S25
1n a sa\·1n~~ account at an unnamed sav-
ings and loan POLI CEMAN OF THE MONTH
P1trol Sgt. Cordeiro
One of my youngsters brokt her arm
pl1yin1 ballketball recently and went lo
four d~tors al a cmt of $200 before we
wen throuih.
1Caspers 1Jv.ns !ht JI a' re n n v
Restaurant 1n \\'estminster 11nd lhc
Kevstone SR\•ings and Loan As.soc1at1nn
"'ith oft1ces in Anaheim a n d
Ylesl minster.1
-EFflclency. This tan best bt> con-
densed by asking youri:elf from llmr 1o
time, "why am I or "'e doing this'.'" If
you can come up l'i'i!h a good idea let'<1
hear 11bout it Along lhosr line~. R~h
Thoma~ (County Adm1n1stralive Officeri
and I bel1e11e the budget hearing proce.~s
can bt greatly reduced and yet still com-
Pl.v v.•1!h !ht law .
Sgt. Cordeiro
Se lected Mesa 's
Officer of Month
The deb1te on soc11hzed mtdi('lnt can
go on and on, and I'm not forgtll1ng tlu1t
Denmark has a I~ percent 1111les tax
"whlch buys a lol of social service.
I only point this out because wt must
ht aware th11t thert are brtter wa ys to do
things. Incidentally, the Danei; 11lso burn
!heir trash, a real no no hert, and heat
the entire city or Copenhagen Without
amoke emission.
(To digress, wh ile we are on the sub-
ject of a better way there will probably
-never be • better way than this to offer
~me of my provocative lheorits. I have
found that Americans are very reluctant
to accept the fa ct that someone else can
do JOmething better, or even as well as
we l.
T1W Is a great competitive spirit which
has caused us to excel and successfully
meet IO many challenges. However, let
ua u y that I was to relate to you that on
my visit t& Russia last year I observed
futures superklr to our own in this coun-
try.
A multi-model transit Aystem serving
tl!e nttd.1 of •even million people for a
minute charre. Including a 11ubway
Fog w Shroud ,
Coast Tonight
A11d Wednesday
Drip. Drip. Drip ' ..
... Thia ~ what Orange Coast resid ent&
fA'ill be hearing again tonight and through
Wednesday morning, as more of the
19upy fog eocountered today plops down
lµi;e a bi&, wet, gray bl1nket.
• Z&ro visibility conditions were reported
in many areas this morning -until lhe
fol ,bea:an Jiftln& as the sun rose -but
JOmt clo!ed airports opened µp agaJn
shortly after dawn. · ._ Orw• Cooney .Airport ti.ran allowing
1nccmJ111 flights to land about 8:30 a.m.,
after a I\"'-hour closure.
Los Angeles and San F"ranclsco in-
ternational airports were c 1 o 1 e d
overnight. with scores of flights divert'd
to Ontario, Van Nuys and Las Vegas
airpcrts.
Orange County CalUornia Highway
Patrnl officers said the fog Was a rea l
traffic-slower during early morning hours
but was lifting nicely by mid-morning.
The blanket evidently inspired caution
In many motorists and no major ac-
cidents re.suited.
The same situation resulted in Ne"·port
Harbor, where boaters remaintd moored
in the eerie gray 1hroud.
"It's holdi ng everybody in," 11id a
IJ)Okum1 n for tfie Hafbor Patrol.
Ha:ty sunshine was forecast for af-
ternoon hours, returning to gloomy,
murky skies by thi111 evening generally
alona: the entire Southern California
coast.
Heavy fog was reported between
Malibu and 01nard, extending seawiird to
the Channel Island~.
Patches of the thick fn1 RIJ f11r north a:oi
Sacramento closed most airports to in-
coming fiight~, 'While rain was falling in
northern California .
DAILY PILOT
OUMGI COAST PUILISMING CCMPAXY
••Mtt N. w • .,~ ,,....,, .. ~
J,,f I. C11rl1y
Y1A ,,_......., -" '°**•I ,.,.. ....
Tito11111 K•t.,JI
E••tor
lho..,11 A ... u,,~;llt
~~ ll!lllllr
Cltttltt H. L••• 11,~1•d '· NaQ
H.1111Mtt #""""" l d<lllofl
c ......... Office
]JO W.,.1 l•y $tr11t
M11n119 A44,.•: ,.0. a., 11,0, t2•2& --.._, '-"': an ........., ...,...,.,.. ~'-dl:m,-.,.......,...,.,.
"""' ....... '-<•: 1l'll11 ..............
.. ~. Mnlll l,IC..., ....
... n.Y Ptl.OT, wr9o •ldt tt ~"" ~-·""''' II ..... lt!IH Q ll, _ _, S-. ~"' ill ....... -l~ .., l.Mool• l..c.1'1, N......., ~. C.tt ~'-,......,. ........ -.o ............... 1..,., ... < ...... , ~ltlr-.,... ~*ltokd, '*" ., ... -.......... '"""" "'1"'••• "'1fl"'°I ,...... • .i -* w.r .. y Sll'"•I. c-i. ...._
Tel1i-••• t7141 M2-4l11
Cl JM Mw•lllt .. 9 '4.J: ... 71 =-. ''"· ~ <-' .. ........ . ... ~ ..•. ·~ .. .,._ ..... ..,.,,_.., .... ....,. ........................... ,..
~--.,...,..., ....... . ...................... .._..~
' 11"'111 °""'9 ..... Cl...... .....,,....,.,. .,.. .,.,. ... _...::,...., -11 .. rs
_..,..~ .... -~·""~·
I
County employment must :-,upport
Pre:oiident Nixon's fight on inf!allon
vigorously and I echo J. Paul Getty when
ht said, '"show n1e the man who can do it
for less and that's my man"
-Economic progre ss. Thi~ 1nc<tns to
me what the final bottom line v.•111 show if
and when our civilization's books com,.
in. Will we bave built real value or was
the venture a loser?
Though \'astly improved over last
yrar's unemployment ralt of 7 a percent
today's 6.4 percent is still far beyond the
acceptable, I believe, the constant ad-
dition of desirable industry such as the
\\1eslern lnterna!lonal, Sheraton. Hilton
and Marriott ·hotels and the well
diversified Irvine Industrial Complex
when combined with a lessening im-
migra tion and birth rate for the county
will alleviate the unemployment rate and
il! related ills.
Carving up of 500,000 acres of prime
foothill land by developers in California
during the 1960s is not a 1-1•ise policy for
us lo continue. The almost reliRiOU'.'; al·
tachment local officials have for an in-
creasingly ai;!essed valua!ion is totally
irrational and even contradictory in the
preservation of open space.
If tht proposal were made to me to
leave my entire district, representing
about one half of the county, 1n its
present state for farming, ~razin~.
recreation and wilderness. immune from
property taxes, l"d snap at the op-
portunity.
You may ask what 1 1-1·ould do with tax
revenues and where would the new hous-
ing be. 1 suggest we look 011er our
shoulders at the older communilies.
We must JI we are to avoid the con-
ll11uaf ev.icuatfon by arnuent white! from
these areas, spend the greater part of our
resour<:cs and energies in making them
as attractive as the new con1mun1tJes
tmerging !n the south county area.
These areas need housing replaced,
schools rebuilt, streets rep;iired, new
1treet lights. parks and all the amenities
to retain their dignity and attractiveness
or we may play leap frog right off the
map.
Caspers 111ummarized : "\'le must sight
on thest targets even though they are all
moving ones and government in a chang-
ing society must be flexible.
"\Ve truly find oursrlves in a most
promising time for I believe far greater
reliance will be placed on local govern·
ment to mAnage on a local and regional
basis.
When I think of managcrncn t of human
and natural resources, there are two
equations to choose from: A land nf plen-
ty plus v.·aste equals shortage. ex-
haustion, dependence, failure or 1f you
prefer, es I am sure you do. a land of
plenty plus con~ervat1un. plu s sou nd
development should equ;il en ample sup-
ply end true independence .·•
Caspers then su~gested lh11l the Board
or Supervisors make it one or thrir n1ajor
policies to educate ever.\'one on the merit
;i.nd 1-1·ays of conserv1n11: fuel by less hii;h-
powered vrhiclrs. car pools, buses
bicycles: savin11: electr1c1ly b)' 1urning nrr
lights. less relian ce on l'lt'Clrical 11p-
plian ces. fewer comn1erc1al electrical
signs:
Recycling \\'aler and using it more
i;paringly and et the same lime en·
couraging innovali\ e discoveries such as
salt water con\ ers1on, nuclear and
tbermal power and use or. liquified
natural gas
\Ve niusl stimulate all Orange Coun-
lians for hopefully positive ideas. there is
too 111ul·h negat ivism tocl;iy.
La11l week. President f'.'i.11on said th;it he
believes the politician, 1f he is lo ac-
complish anything during his tenure,
must be by nature a very d1ssatis(ied in·
dividual. I'm not cerlain of the other
qualifications but this trail I possess and
would far prefer to say we hove the
lou.o1iest 5ystem lhan to say "·e have the
be.'11, whether it's thr condition or Ne"'·
porl horbor or the refuse disposal syst,.m
Caspers then announced thet he '"'Rn!rd
lo with board approval. e stabli~h a
prrmanent. full time offlre in Sarramen-
lo with board a p p r o v ;i L est;iblish R
\V,.shington. D.C. to best 11ccomphsh 1·1\al
Orange County needs
All in all, it prom ist s to bt 11 mn!iil
chftllenging ye11r 1111d flne of optimism
,.ven though I must reahstirAlly bel1evr
50me item8 such II! pollution 11nd dru11
"OOse will gel worse before !hey get btt-
lrr .
I would like tn rrmlnd you that thi.~
board ia not 1 bunrh of fo~sili:ted
bure1ucral! nor • Bo1rd To Eternilv as
our Mlghbora to the norlh !Los Angf!esl
we.re recently described. bul 1 bo11rd of
action .doing Its btsl to glvt you 1 dlrlJ:·
lion so 1't can m11lce all Orangl Coonfy
10 forward l<lðer.
"Let'• d<t 1 bang up job, toae.tht.r," the
board cha1rm1a concluded.
'l'he Costa :\.lesa Crime Preventio n
C"ornn1Htre·s pick for its Policrrnan for
the Month of Janu;iry has a special in-
terest in maintaining local law and order.
r.1trol Sgt. Sam Cordeiro. 33, \\'as born
and raised here.
Being singled out for special honors i~
hardly ne\v to Sgt. Cordeiro. \11ho is one of
1he department's reserve officer prograrn
coordinators.
He v.·as natncd Policeman of the Year
ir1 1967 under the Exchange Club"! annual
program.
And he was nominated as 1967 Man of
!ht Year by the local Jaycees chapter.
.Joining the force 121"l years ago. Sgl.
Cordeiro began as a patrolman and has
been a traffic officer, warrant detecl1ve,
and special investigator.
He has taught in both the Orange Coast
("ollei::e Police Science department and al
the Orange County Peace Officers·
Academy in Orange.
Married 14 years ;igo, Sgt. Cordeiro
<ind his wife. Marge, have three children,
Craig. Jeff and Cindy. <111 of whom share
enthusiasm for boating, water skiing,
c<1mping and other sports.
He receives not only a citalion "'ilh hi~
selection. but a coffee cup personalized
v.•llh name and badgt number. from the
Mug Shop in Corona del Mar.
Frotn 1•age 1
REPAIR ...
tipal defendants are: Jerry Kendall. 35.
of 969 Sonora Road, and Stanley Davis,
32. of 1086 San Pablo Circle, both of C-Osta
Mesa, and &!ward Carney, 27, of 20862
Shell' Harbor Drive. Huntington Beach.
1lfte prosecutor claims they mastermin-
ded the alleged auto repair racket in 11
!ftations that dispensed Arco, Mobile,
Shell and Texaco gasolines.
It is also alleged that the trio was prin-
cipally invo!\'ed in a c:arden Grove
"school" which featured lectures to
employes on how to effectively inflict
damage to customers' cars.
Stent.on claims that the nood or parts
required by the defendants' alleged ac-
tivities was supplied from a Garden
Grove \~·arehouse 1-1·hich was controlled
and operated by several of the defen-
dants.
Sever;:il of the service stations al!ei;tedly
involved in the auto repair racke t are
now under new n1anagemenl.
Also on trial in Judge .James Turner's
courtroom are: Roger Mendenhall. 28. of
26095 Avenida de Seo, l\1ission Viejo;
Ralph Carney, 29, of 32852 Cal!e San
?-.iarcos, San Juan Capistrano: and David
Conchola. 22, of 6000 Garden Grove Blvd.,
\Vcstn1inster.
Also accused of conspiracy to cheat and
defraud Orange County motorists are:
Christopher Enriquez, 25. of 7592 Volga
Dri ve. and Henry Castonguay, 21, of 7661
Commodore Drive, both of Huntington
Beach, and R. C. Weisner, 28 , of Santa
Ana .
Frotn Page 1
ECOLOGY ...
lion's support and help to the students.
One critic, Margaret Settarholm, pttsl-
dent of Students for Environmental Ac·
lion at Corona del Mar !Iip;h School. o~
posed the creation of building~ and a
pond .
"Buildings ;iren"l natural, and neither
is a f;ikc pond . It would become a ce.~.~
Pflnl." shr said . "Let thc whole park be
natural. Just Jet it be ."
"l!'s great to be idealistic," ~cplird
Mike l.andlno. 11dvisor to the F.stanc1a
ecology club. "But we know we're in the
n1inority and to get something. we have
lo com promise."
Other Estanci11 students pointed out
that a lake v.•ould certainly be n11turitl.
since the whole area wit~ once under
water as part of the Santa Ana River
bed .
Costa ~1esa ~1ayor Robert Wilson and
Councilman \Villiam St. Clair both pr111~·
ed the Estancia students for their tffort.
l)nn Smallwood, trusttt of the Newport·
J\lesa Unified School Oistnct. and • Mesa
Verde resident, added hia 1upport.
Students promised to supply !he city
with a full, written rePort on their park
pl11n1.
Berkeley Prof Dead
BERKELEY I UPI! -O..ra• c. Kyle,
profeisor emeritus or edUcallon tl UC
Berkeley and a noted educaUOnal con·
aultant for school syrtm11 1cro11 the
counll')', dled in hll home but Monday •
•
Board Chief
Announces
Committees
Orange County Board of Supervisors
Chairman Ronald W. Caspers or Newport
Br11ch today announced his appointment
or fellow boilrd membt.rs to committee
and commission memberships.
His recommendations met w Ith
unarumous approvil or the board, They
art:
Jlobert \\'. Battin. First District -
Reappointment to South Coast Air Basin
Coordinating Council: Health Planning
Council and the vital Local Agency
Formation Commission.
Battin was also namtd altemate direo-
tor of sanlt~llon districts one and three.
1 This, C11sper~ said w11s in respon~e to
criticism of the chatrman of the bo1rd
.o1ervin gas direclor of all seven sanitation
districts and receiving fees of 1700 a
month\.
D;ivid L. Baker, Second District -
Rr11ppointmcnt to the Ocean a n d
Shoreline Planning Steering Committee
and the Southern Callfornia Association
of Governments (SCAG).
Alternate director of sanitation district
11 and alternate member of the Local
Agency Formation Commission (LAf'CJ.
\Vil\iam Phillips, Third District -
Reappointment to the Southern California
Aviation Council, the law library board of
trustees and appointment as alternate
director to sanitation district two.
HEIRESS TURNED DOWN $100 MILLION STOCK OFFER
Money Isn't Everyth ing to Join Irvine Smith
Phlilips also was named to the Local
Agtncy Formation Commission replacing
Caspers. a position he held in 1970 before
being replaced by former chairman Bat-
tin .
Frotn Page 1
FOUNDATION ...
Ralph Clark, Fourth District -Reap-
po1ntn1ent to the Orange County Transit
District Board arterial highw11y finan-
eing commillf'e, mcnt;il heallh ad visory
board. criminal justice council, and coun-
ty employes retirement board. Clark was
nan1ed alternate director of sanitation
distr!cl seven.
Caspers, Firth Distrirl retained his
position as a director of the Orange Coun-
ty Tr11nsit District and a member of the
Ocean and Shoreline Planning Steering
Committee.
He will serve as an alternate to Battin
on the South Coast Air B a s i n
Coordinating Council and be the new
chairman of the legislative planning com-
mittee. He will al.so be a director of
sanitation districts six. five and eight. in
contrast to directorship of all seven
districts which Battin held.
Battin suggested the reappointment of Sanl Ana attorney Frank Manzo as a
dire or of the county law library board
upo which he has served for several
yea 1. The suggestion was approved.
Pat Nixon Book
Postponed
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Firil Lady
Pat Nixon has postponed indtfinitely an
authorized biogrftphy to have bten
published this year.
Connie Stu.11rt, the First Lady's press
secretary. said ~1rs. Nixon de('ided she
\l'ould not have timf' to v.·ork on the mat-
Irr because of the busy yea r "'ith the
\'is1ts to Peking, Moscow and campaign
trips on her schedule.
The biography w;is being written by
(;toria Sc-elyr, a former Los Angeles
~Jerald-Examiner woman's editor and
now a public relations executive.
Her husband, Howard, is a political
reporter in Orange County fl'.lr the Los
Angeles Times and was White House
counselor Bob F1nch"s pres~ secretary
when he ran for lieutenant governor of
California in 1966.
foundation 10 make a 4 1 ~ perce11l payout-
to charily in 1972. increasing half of one
percent annually to a payout of six per-
cent. hased on an Internal Hevenue
Service appra!sal of its assets. 1'his ap-
praisal ls due by March 31.
The Tax Reforn1 Act lllso provides that
no foundation is permi!led to hold more
than 20 percent of any one corporation.
Based on the 1968 stock sale, the foun·
dation's Irvine Company ~lock would be
valued at $114 million. This would require
a payout in excess of $5 milllon 1n 1972. A
more accurate appraisal, said Mrs .
Smith, would require a payout many
limes larger. A recent foundation report
showed income of $2.5 million for the past
year.
The report also listed a.c;sets of $10
million apart from the Irvine Company
stock. Foundation altorne y Howard J .
Privett has stated the foundation will be
able to meet its payout obligations from
these other resources.
,.1rs . Smith pointed out during the news
conference that Congre!sm11n Wri'11t
Patman's House Committee on Banking
and Finance is inaugurating an in·
vestigation of attempts by foundations to
side-step the payout requiren1ents of the
Tax Reronn Act.
Her attorney suggested that an attempt
by the foundation to meet the obligation
by selling the $10 million in "other
assets,·• now earning six percent and pro-
viding a $600,000 payment to charity,
would constitute a "definite evasion."
Discussi ng so-called misn1anagc1nent of
the Irvine Co m pa n y "'hich rr'sulls in
minimum earnings. Young cited a $!.2
million loan from Pacific ~lutuat. on
which the company has obligated itself to
Ex-cxeculi\'e Dead
CLEVELAND. Ohio (1\P) -\Valte.r M.
Halle, 66. who retired last April as bnard
chairman and ehicf executive of !he J·lalle
Bros . Co., died i'.1ondav. Ills rellrement
ended a 53-year carCcr with H;;il!e's,
which is now part of the Marshall Field
and Co. department store opcratinn.
PASSWORD ---.,.
A good word pused oround •bout •
busin ess is invol ua ble. A b•d word can be
unfortunate.
~ ~ percent intrrest pa yments for 25
Yt'<1r~.
The company, i'i'lrs. ~ml\h asserted, is
sorely in need of '"really top men" in it s
management. in !he area5 of finance,
plannlng, real estate 11nd agriculture.
f 'rom l'age 1
FUTURE. • •
stadium for footholl, soccer. rodeo, puhlic
meetings and oth£'r uses. and annexation
or the S.1nta Ana Country Club.
Commil!ee members believe a 1oca1
public transportation system is essential
to the to"·n's futu re.
Such 3 !ucal system could hrcome the
huh nf a couotyv.•ide 1nonori1il i;yslem, the
report suggests.
Project BO members suggest a re--
eva\ufttion of the civic center needs fer
the future. in case some updatin11 ls need-
ed. They <tlso propose ('On!ilruclinn of a
city cultural center, including a \'eterans
memorial.
Exp;insion nl the lihrary system to lour
branches, fire stations to .o1even, and
revision of emergency systems, are
predicted as necessary.
In its consideration of special ;ireas-,
the report commends plan~ for develop.
the reporl commend.~ plans for dcvelop-
n1ent of the downtov.·n. and urges im·
plementation of already established
plans.
Committee members also suggest a
review of the older east.side and westside
ne ighborhoods of Costa 1.-fesa to see what
can be done for them.
The commillee also reminds the city to
keep open i!s hope for a marina develop-
rnent \vith ocean access near the Santa
Ana River.
Studying the feasibility of each of these
proposals 1s the job nf the Project 80
Committee. Jal·k Ch11pman is chairman
of the committee. Other members ;ir1
Jim AJ;!rusa, Bill Bandaruk, Bruce Howie,
and John Woodward. All were 11:ppoinled
to !he study group by Ma}or Wilson.
Our growing suce1s in the p•St 1-4 years
hu been duo lo tho "good words " and
re ferr•ls sent to us by our customers. ALDEN'S
No amount of advertisi ng can repl1ce e
person•I r1commendotion.
Wo aro not infalliblo, but w1 ar1 working
towards th•I 90•1 by giving our cu•lomeri the
best •e rvico •nd ~u•llly possible .
• CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placentia Avt.
COStA MISA
646-4838 . HOU•S: Mon. thru Thurt., 9 le 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -Sit, 9:30 to S
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