HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-02-01 - Orange Coast Pilot7
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Swiss 01·der Leary Spe~ta~nlar Saga
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To Take a Trip·· Of Howard Hughes
Bared Out of Country •
• ID Series
DAILY PILOT
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY l , 1972
• ID Family All
UPI 'l'lt~tl011
Rabbi .and i trs. Jacob Twc rski of Milv.1aukee celebrated their 50th
\Vedding anniversary recently surrounded by four of their five sons
\~·ho are also rabbis. Beh in d the ir par ents stand , fron1 left . Rabbis
Aaron. Pittsburgh; Michael , ~1ilwaukce; Shloirn<', Denver and .l\1 otel,
New York. No t in the picture \\'as so n Shea, of JJittsburgh. -~
WASHI NGTON (UP I) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan today criticized Presidenl Nix-
on's Family Assistance Pla n as "a giant
step toward a welfare state" and offered
major amendments . -including tax
breaks for the workin g poor and removal
of military dependents from.relief. .
He also suggested requiring ab.le-bodied
reci pien~ to work on community service
projects and den ying welfare to strikers.
•Reagan, the-reading Republican -erlUc4
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Twelve A&oss
. Spells 'Oops'·
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Tim Leary Ufe Outlined
l\Iu st Leave
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Howard Hughes Story
American
Officials
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Switze1~Ia11d Told in 4-partSeries . _.Mull Quiz/
F'ro1n \~'ire Serviets
SJON. S1.,.Hzcr!and -The n1odern-day
!\.Ian \Vilhout a \ountry. Dr. Timothy
Lcarv. hns l:lr cn Jorn13Jly told to hit the
road.by S11Jss authorities \Vho"won"l give
hin1 political a~ylum but won't give hin1
lo the U.S. C'it'rn:r.
Police Chief Arthur BC'ndcr called <l
news confrrcnc:c here tl londay night to
announce that the 51-year-old in-
lcrnational fugitive mu.~t lea\"e U1e ca nton
-or S\1·1ss statct-of Vala1 s.
Edilor's uute: lt began ntodestty
enougli in f louston, Texas. with a
'1c1v ki11d of oil u;ell drilling bit. Bul
11utv I.he Tl ur;//es Tool C:o. 'is a nurny
splrnc/ore<f b.11siness t:anglonierate.
11 irf111es. ga111bli11a casino.<;. 111ines -
11011 11nnze it. ll nd 1t is rule<l by a 111u1t
1nl1n l1as not. hcen see11 IJL public: in
n/1nost 20 yen rs. 1''oflnwi11g i.~ the f irsi
nf four articles 011 flie 1nany faces oj
/!011;ard ll11ol1cs.
..., C B.v JACK LEFLER
LOS ANC.£LES -H 1ci1cs Tool C(J., the
corne rstone of :i $2 billion business C'n-
l£rprisc. is as si:ectacularly visible as its
c;cnc r.:illv. no such s1.,.iss state wil l at'-. sole O\\'ncr. H~ward Hughes , is
cepl a for.eignrr expelled from another' nl_vstcriously invisible.
one. . Its success, foundccl ... .., ., ~,, ... 1,,.;""'"rv ·nic onetim<' l la~rd psychology pr o-';-
fessor. convicled 'i:f1 Orange Coup!y
Superior Court nearly tv10 years ego 01'1 a
. Lagun a Beach mar ijuana possessio n
chnrgC'. is now living i n Crans. Y.Titing a ~
book on psychology. Assets R.ise
F,om $650,000
To $J ~illlon l-le escaprd the 1,.os P adres ~ .. ten's
Colony at San Lu is 'C1Hispo Sept. 12. 1970
and fled to Ali;?:iers where he was a guest
of Black Panther Party leader Eldr idge
Cleaver's gove rnmenl-i n-exile.
!·le had rirst globe-hopped around the
Mideast be fore being given sanctuary by
, -the Panthers, who ejected him from Al-
giers later ove r differing vi ews on drug
use as a too1 ol revolution.
--Leary a nd hiS colWicted l ,w i f e
~ary, who fl ed ·,u .. ~. to j&1n him
and ffiu s violated pfoH io~· · po.!led by
Or ange County authoriti l. ed up in
·Switzerland late last yea r. ·
He was arrested and release n $5.000
· b · · ding decisiqn ~· SWiss fici als on
· · est ~ .. rel!l1'in tn~e icturesque ~ · !Se't"'l!EARY e
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oil · wen drilling bit. has made it s
reclusive owner one of the world's richest
n1f'n.
The fu ror ov'er th'3l\thenticity of an
11 ut obioy aphy of Huglle.s, w h i c h
McG raW-Pllll Publishing Co. originally
planned to publ ish in f\.1a rch. ha s focused
ptlblic attention on the corporate kingdom
over which Hughes rules from his secret
hideouts.
Hu_ghes Toot0(Too!C<J) and its oil toot
division are based in Houston, Tex. Its
other major properties include a
helicopter manufa cturlng division in
California; an airline . ltughes Airwest. in
Wes tern States; hotels. gnmbllng ca sinos,
mining cl.'lims and other properties in
Nfvad1J ;•Hughes Televii;ion Network, and
huge rea l estate holdings in Arizona and
Cat iforn,111 . "'
The ,_.a!il operations have been com·
manded by haghes, 66 , in imperious
m3nne r, usuall y by telephnnc. Some uf
his top execUU\~S-ha ve n:\l.r .s.c~n J1\1n, ~le hasn't made a puphc..9\ppearance
s.ince J9j.1. .
La!i t' J an. 7, a man ld f'ntiricd by
Hughes' publ!~lations spokesman as
ljic bllti onairc · dustrialist. held a
te!r:phonC! news ('() fe rencc with ~even
news reporters tn deny the authe nticity of
( the McGraw ·lfill mnnus<:rlpt. The
. wsmcn , who were assembltd here. !i:iid
t . were convincrrf the v11ice on the
telc t was that or llughcs. ,
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l~ughes holds no title wit h Toolco ex·
ccpt th<il of owner. Operations arc hand!·
cd by Execulive Vice President Raymond
i\f. Jfolliday and Senior Vice Presidents
Frank W. Gay and James R. Lesch.
\\'hat was to beco1ne a fabulous en·
lcrprise was born in 1909 at Goose Creek,
·rcx. when I-Inward J~ughes Sr. sue·
cessfully testffi the rotary rock drill bit
hr invented. The bit consisted of 166
conical cutters of milled teelh <y,•hic h
chiseled and cn1shed rock so it could be
brought up through !he drill stem fron1
lhe bottom of the dril ling hole. lt solved
1hr problem of drilling through rock.
It's estimated that 75 percent of 1:1e oj/
\'le!ls in non-Communist cOuntrics have
been drilled with }lughes bits.
Young llugh es' parents willed him 60
percent inte rest in the tool con1pany and,
newly orphaned, he took over its opera·
tion in 1923 when he was 19. He later.
bought the other 40 percent interest fron1
relatives.
Value of the company at the ti me of the
(See HUGHES, Page %)
'Value-Added''
Tax Gets Stud)·
To Aid Scliools'
\VA SHING TON (UPI) -The Nixon
Administration is Cilnsiderlng a "value.
added tax" of about $16 billion to reli eve
property taxpayers or some of the cost or
school finance; the White House said lo-' . day.
Rona ld L. Ziegler, P resident Nixon'!
press secretary, said no decision had
been made yet on fina ncing a "revolu·
tionary" proptrrty tax plan that Nixon
promised in his State of the Union
rnessage Jan. 2Q.
But Zlegler told reporters, ''We hol d a
positive attitude abou t a value-added
tax ."
The 11value-added' tax," often referred
to.as a national sat'!! tu, 18.impostd at
each stage of production or a product and
normall9 is passed aJong to t~e ultimate
c<>nsumer.
The Treasury has '" stutlfing the ta:< · -widely used In E epe -for scvernl
years.
AdvocAtes or the· plan argue thnt the
tax can be imposed on imports ilnd re-
funded on export&. thus lmprovinJe the
cotnpetllive ~1tlo.n of Ame.ric11n aoods
both at ho1'e and abroad.
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NE\V YORK (UPJJ -The inqui ry into
possible fraud i n v o I v in g the
"au tobiography" of lloward Jlughes
spa nned !he Atlantic today \Vith ar rest
warrants for author Clifford f rving issued
in Sv.•itzerland and the pron1 ise of an of·
fic ial inves tigation made Jn !he L'nlted
Stales.
In Zurich lhe situation \'l<IS niore
ser ious for Irving, an An1crican citizen,
and his Sv.•iss-born wife, Edith, 36.
Officials there issued arrest warrants
for , the couple on "urgent suspicion or
fraud, falsi fication of officia l documents,
and investigation of these eri n1es .,
In this country "'"here Ilic couple ar·
rive d Thu~ay, U.S. Attorney 'Vhi tney
North Seymour an d New York County
District Attorney Frank S. Hogan con.
ferred on possible fed eral charges of wiro
and mail framf and state cha rges or
fraud and purjury against Irving.
Zurich District Attorney Peter Ve!eff
said today that although they have issued
the arrest warrants they nred the
cooperation of U.S. police to solve the
''autobiograp hy mystery.''
"Since part of the suspeeted crime wa3
carried out In Zurich, but the effects -
the actua l dama!(es -occurred in the
(See IRVING, Page %)
Orange Coast
Weather
Variable high clouds are expect-
ed along th e Orange Coast Wtd·
ne&day, with a possib ility o(
sprinkles. Gusty •·inds are also
expected brlnging teniperatures
down to the low 60'!. Toni~ht's low
wi t! be around 42 degrees.
INSIDE TODAY
Arletle Lum, a llonolulu re·
porier, is liirha)Js the /i r~t
Cllinesl'·A·nwrican journalist to
enter ma1nfancl China sb1 ce
1948". 'Iler 'i mpression! appeC1r
on Pnne R.
\.. M. &1yll 1
C•lllo>'lll• t
C1n 11~ n u
Comic• I I c .. u-• " o.~·11 Nttfcn lf
l"O!lt•.,.i "''' ' •n11r11111n11111 lt 'm•m• xi.21 ,,,, ,,,, •t<o<ll 1t
Hert t<fl'I U
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Or lflff Cft.l~IY It
1111111 '•rt.or H $,,Of1t 16.lt s·oc11 M1rtcft1 J
1'1LW1t'1" It ,.hc•t•t• '' W1l ther •
Wt"""' t H.-1•1• Wlf'foll H.-. W
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'rhc Jlcp1or !i('C'tlSC or J\1nry's, !hC' ~l oried 111 Cll·Ol11_v haunl J11r genera·
t1ons of Ya!c st\l<lcnts, \\'a!i revoked Monday fnr c11 .~cri1ninrt1111g again.~t
\vorncn . Mory's J\ssoc1alinn, Inc., \Vhich has upheld !II{! n1rn 1iril.v tradi-
tion for 110 j'CRr~. has 10 days in which to appeal bcfo1«.• the Ne vi
lfavc n rcvocallon bccon1cs effective.
Fl'ona Page 1
HUGHE S' CAJ{EEH . • •
falh<!r"s death \\!As variou-;lv rslin1a!rd Rt
SIO million or more but lhighes sRid !he
governmrn.\ appraised it Rt $6.'l0.000.
\Vhi.Je HuRhcs is rcriuted not to have
been seen in Too1 co's llous\on Qffirr s
since 1926. the con1pnny rlourished under
his direction nnd 1hf' OJK'ra\1ons of his
)Hind-picked <'X<'cutives.
The ull tool bu s1ncs." i.:rcw u11!il It n~w
employs abou! 4.000 nt I lnus!on and h<1s
other r11a11ufn c!u r1n g pl;111ts in En.c:l<111d,
Ireland. Cnnadn. \\'rst c ;rrrn~nv, 11:11\-.
Ari::c111ina Hnd Hr:izil. Tht• tool d11·i.~ion's
;u1nua1 revenues h.1vr ht•t•n cs111nnlf'<l at
$75 million. Bcc;111se il is pri\'a(rly 011·11·
ed. Toolco issues no reports on sales and
earnings.
Hughes, 11·hn ll'lnC: hHd ~rn intcrr$1f'rl
In airplAncs. !f'fl T('xas for C11lifnrnla in
the 1920s and hl'enme SI le,i::endr1rv !11.:urr
In ,q1·jatio11. I Ir sel mS111,1· 11·orld Sp<'t'<I
rt'<'Ords and d('sii;:ned airl'raft.
lie :ilso t>ec:in1e ('llChHn!f'd 11·ith rnolinn
pictures. Hnd ;:iclrC'sses ;is ~·ell . lie pro-
ciurrd a nurnbrr of rllOl"if's. ;in1nni,: thrrn
'"llell"!! Ani::cls" nncl '"The 011ll<111 :· <111d
for a whi le 011·n«I HKO .~turlios .
Noah Dir!nch. ll ughcs· ('hief <'Xf't'11tivc
fmn1 192S until they split in 195."!, !Rkr.~
Ls~ur 11·t1h tho~e \11tlo gi\·r llui.:hcs the
lion 's sh:irr of c"°it fflr buildtni.: Tr<1]C(I.
"Ile c;uft c.xp18in thC ~rQ\vth 11f his f'nl·
pirr ·· l)ir1rirh i-;i!d in a11 · 111trrv1t'\\'
·rcct>nlly. '"!le ]('ft th.-i! p.1 r1 of the
busines~ \i) n1r.
"In rhn~c rlav.c. h1 ~ 111:1in intcrrst~ 1rr'rc
ron1.1nrr. a\rplnn<'s ;ind 1no1ion p1r1urcs.
No11r of rhos" prf"lrlurl'c1 ;iny profits"'
Thr firs! hii:: dhf'r.~1'1rat1nn lllfl\"t' 1111d1r
fhf' bnnnl'r nf Tn11lr<1 11·:is 1hr ffl11nrt1ni: of
JlU,!!h('~ J\1rcrafl l'o l Ill l'Hht•r ('ill" In
19.11
The n1nst spect<1cula r c!e;:il~ in v.·hich
Hughrs invnlvrd Too!l"o were majorit.v
O"'ncrship of Trans.\\'orld Aitlin<'li. and
resulting legal ha ss!l'S: and nwn('rsh1p of
Nevada Holl•ls. casinos 1-1nd other pro-
perlir~. and rr!'ul!ing legal ha sslcs.
Hug hrs st<lrtrd buy in)! into T\\' A in Hl:l~
;:ind tonk co11 trll! 1vllh 77 rwrcent of the
stork i11 1947.
Aflrr !hf' f·nn11nrrcial jct :igr da\\'ncd,
l/11~l1e.~1 1v11h his c11s tn1n:ir.v rlel1hcrnli11n ,
1v;.i1trd fivr ·''":1rs lirfnrr ord1·r1nl.(
jrl liner.~ a1nl ~\lh1·r Pq111p1nt'n! t'11~l1n~
$497 n1 illion. l'artly hf'f':1us1' of !ht• lJ!e
starts in ,if'1s. T\\':\ lo~! hugl' :in1ou11!~ nf
n1one~·. :ind financi:il 1nslitul1011s whiC'h
lo:incd 111nney for the a1rrraf! purchases
lx't·ainr 1·011<'(•rned.
TMlt·o lns1 l'nntrnl of T\\'A 1n 1%0 \\'h<'n
ered1tors lnrrrd ilU.1.!hrs 10 pl.H'C his
!'lock 111 a un111ot1ng lrusl. 1'\\"A !'1:ina,1?.C"
1nen1 !lucd Hughes. alleging n11s1nanagr·
ml'nL Clai111s and cu 11 n t f' r c I a 1 m ~
;11nounterl to S481 1n1lhon. A Jt1dg111enl nf
$1.17 n11ll1on \l':t'i \1·nn ;lg:un~t llug hc!i. but
it is .\'l"I tn Ix-{'t1llr1·trd.
l!up;hc!i pulled nut 11f 'r\\'A in gr:1nrl
ra~h1nn b.1· ~clJ1ng his ~11x·k fo )r $.'N{i
ni.itl111n in'l'Jl\1i.
Arnird 111th n1orr th;111 $41111 llllllinn rt•-
111a111u1g a!lt•r t".1p1t.~1 g>'ll\," \;txr~ (Ill the
s1(\rk .~;ilc. lh~i::tH·s . 1H1l'1•d "i..t'('1'tlly 1111·1
1.;1~ \ t•g:i~. \C\ , 1n !!lfi6 ;1nrl s1:11'1t'!\
hu \111g JUSI 11hout f\'rr~thu1g 111 ~ight \n
1hi• nan1e of ll111o1.hes Ho,lrl l'roprrti('s.
11·t11('h had bt·c·n .'t'I up il ~ ;1 <ll\·i~1on of
1'no1h•o
\r11j1 fl noo rn1plfl.\"1'.~. llu!!hrs llo1el
l'rnp1·rt1f', b<'c-;1111e :\cl"ad;:i s b1gg~·st
l'rnplo.1 er.
II 11,1 .. e~1i111;l11'1i thr '\1•1:i1t111rflfl{'r!1"~
r11,t S2.i0 11nll1nn ;u1tl 11\•rc 1111r!h S.100 ~·i1 h thr hurgN'nulJ.: (If 1'11n11ncrci::il rn11l1'1n n·h1•11 Hui,:hr~ "Jipprd PU! nf 1n~·n
111·1a11nn ond tlJf' appn,arh of \\iirld \\:ir n11 Thanksj::1\"1ni: E1r !970. rf'put«lly
11. Hughrs 1\1rcr.1fl q111ch!y hrr:unr a _l!(lll\C to !hf' R:th.lll\;I ~.
p;ianl In 1ls f1f'ld Ir 11:1 ~ onr "f 1h15 rnuo-Tc·olco ,·011!1nt1es 111 h.11e 11~ e1c<; on the lr~"s 111a1or \i,1rt1111e ~urpliC'r~ of ;:icrial f11111n>. Hrrcn!h 11 l:nr11rhcci .1J ~an
i'l'raponr~ Oirgo. ;:i '.\24 fr1<1tlnne: h:\rcr for thc dr!'p-
ln 1Ul.'i~. llui:::hr~ lurnt'rl •11 <r ll1t' ~c:i 1111111111.: ,,, r1Ll'll,1:1t 't in th1· /':1,.1f1<'
:l1rcralr 1·11n1p·1111 1•' 1hc H111:t1c~ \frrl1r.1 I c\·,';.i n Thi• ii1<iir ,1;1, \'r11, 'aiLll'rl \•\ 1r ..
lns!l!U11'. \1h1t·h 111' f11rn11•rl :~" p9t1:i11-1·n111p.JO\ ,;I• ·!ht' h1rth ,,f SI !l• ,\ 1n-
lhn1 p11·:1l 1•r,c:11111:1t1011. to1 t'.lt r~ ••ll du~\1'\
n11'<li1·:il rr"i':n·"b .\ll (If 11' pr11f1 t ~ ,co 'o .\ r;?' Tl (· /,. , , , ,.r! i , , , ~.
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H11):!l<'' \1rc-r:lft 11h 1•h 11:1' brC'•l . [',-J''(,
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lr1 in~ ·i-a1d ~hr •i1rt .. ,1 ·~ i n~1r11, 11!'n<;
frl\111 !hf' hll!1n11.11rr rf't'lus('. \\ 11n ... h0111
hc ll\~• .... ::i1ti hc cl\l\:11xlr;.1M in 1•r111n~ the
h."l"'li !i("I"('\ rr . J!uchP~ ~as 1s~uf'd
ornia !~ t\f lrti.~~·$ $l<ltf'!1H'nl.!i.
lrri11a to /'::' Studv •
Plioto.~ of .4idrs
\t:\r '~'Hl\ !-\!' -rrorral anri
~lanh.alla:i pt'f"IS('('lllor~ ha\'t' pul :ni;:r.tht-r
::i rh<·to~r•f"h ::i oom of rrf'"("nl and
f,,r'tlcr ::i1de.~ 10 H!'l ... ard llucl"ws
Thr .aulhontiP~ "1!1 .1st Clifford lriinJ:?
In try 1" 1df'n1 1f~ t1~ (\r lhtm a~ Ulf'
' r .Mrt;t-f~tdoi"i }f(lJmr$" hr claims
H-r\ rd as a f;(l-rhr t .... ·N"n ~ tht.
... nllni or an 11llf'~td H ugh r. s
.autablOf;:raph'·. it •'"as lt~rned toda'
On,. fflrmr1 lh1_ght-s .aidr, Jahn 'MrN'.:'",
hi\~ lllrr~'." df-, td tt.?1'•11.5. Wt bt -..:as
1ht man •'ho dt..a.lt "'1th Jr.trig
· Thllt's rxhn 1lous ··~Mi l\f.el'C'T. na.-a
'anchd.ate f(lr the f'icnwrat1c senat.on•I
MmtMlJt'tn tn \r..., Mr~K"O. ··1 nt\'tr met
u,e. ln.u'I "
•
'
\......
Newsinan Te·stifies on Probe
CBS Correspondent Cites Ad111iriistrcitio11's 'Hostility'
\\'J\Slll;-.;(.Tfl:\' 1ll'l1 -CBS l'nr·
r c-!ir:i.JnUt•n1 1J;u1iel S<-hurr said lo'lll.V lhal
;1 ~\'li1!1• f!r.u~i:·ord1·r1·d Ff\/ 1n\t'.\!ll,;it!l11r1
flf hun la st summt·r reflerti·d "the
(·l1n1:itc ol .susp1l·1un. ho st1l 1ry <ind
nrrvuu~ne~s" lhil1 he s<11d lhl' ,r-...11xu11 ad-
n11111.~trat1ori hrtped generate ahiiuL news
11\t'rl 1:1
Si·l1urr. in his rir~t puhlif' l"f'l'JL'll nl the
l!l("1der1t . said th;:it thr pressures and pro-
!tl1•n):; (·reated by thf' VBr probe '"per!i1st
11nr1! Lr)(!:1y," bnth f.,r h1n1 <1nd his
Ju·twork.
Sl·hforr l1·~tifitd hefnrt· !hi· Scn111e
('11nst1tu\Jhf1<JI H1ghts Suh1.•urr1n11t1rr
'l"hi' \\'h1tc llou~e sa11l t•1da1 rh,11 Si·hnrr
.,., as h('inJ: consirlered for a Jnh ;1~ il~s1s~
t.111t lo the 1 ha1rman of th<' ('ouncil on
1':11\'ironrnental Quallly wht'n he \\aS sub-
Suspect J-1 el<l
l n Sla yi11 g
\lF.HC'l·:o i Uf'!l -A SC'rvice
sl;1t11H1 nttenda11l wa~ beaten 11nd
.~tabbed to death w!lh tire tools
hrl"r rnday and a suspt•ct w;1 s car·
Lured dri1··1ng the viet1n1's car in
Bak1•rsl1eld -some 150 1111les to
thl' south, ;.iu1horities rcportrd.
1\1erced police said offic.:ers nolic··
eel thf'rc were no lights al ;.i 1\1obil
strvic.:t• station neilr U.S. 99 and
after che<·k1ng the ;ill.night stal1nn
found the body of the victin1 in a
Juhril'ation room.
1·he m<1n. identified as \.·Villia m
}'"ester Buckley. 47, had been
sPverely beaten in tile head with a
lire iron and been stabbed 10 limes
in the chest with a tire toot, poHce
said.
Fro111 Page 1
WELf'ARE ...
Soci;:i\ Security ~axes. inc!udtni; the
emplo~·ers' contributions.
He did not say how lo"' the f;:im ily's in·
come would have lo be to qualify.
"IL doesn't seem righL" Reag;:in ~aid.
"lo reduce a man's take-home p;:iy with
taxes and then send him a governn1ent
dole \\"hich rnbs•him of the feeling of ilC·
cnmplishment and dignity which conies
from providing for his family by his 0"'n
efforts."
In al!. Rragan offer('d 23 propos;:il s.
1n;u1.v of then) en1bodied in "reform!'"
enacted last year by the California
Lrgislature and implen1ented by his ad-
n1111istration.
l!c said the n11mhe r of Californians on
11·e!fare has declined bv 176.000 since last
]11;irrh because of the i-cforrns.
'fhe Governor suggC'sted a community
\\Ork program for able-bodied ,
11ne1nployed recipients nol engaged in
rrtr;:iining.
lie has asked the federal (.:o\·ernmrnL
In au1horize surh an cxpvr1m('fllal pro-
gr:1n1 1n 35 of Callfornia·s 58 coun!i<'S.
"\\"t> tlon'l suggest I his in any punitive
\\'a~· nor are \1'e arl\·ocaling 1,se!ess 1nake-
11ork chores." Reagan said. '":-Jot only
\\·111 the indil idual henefit f r n n'
par!ic1p.:111ng in useful ~·ork. bul also
ltt<)Se v,·ho fool lhe bill \\"ill be more apt to
:1ppro\'e if they ~ee communily services
bt•1n~ pPrformNI ."
llr said onP ch(lre might bf' ser\'ing as
"' n1,ght "atchn1an ;:it s.·hnoli>.
RP:1gan proposf'd ehn11n<1!1n!'.'. thP "1nef.
!1, 11'n\ and 1n.-ippropr1<11r 1nctusi11n flf
f;:irnil1t'S of n11!1tar~ per.-,rinneJ an1nng
thn~p PliJ:1ble fnr publtr a"sist;:ince
· Th("lll~<1nds of dt')l('nden!s f!f rnil1!;:iry
prrsol!lllC'i arr t'l1c1hlr fr,,. p II h 1 Ir
tlSSl~lillll'('. forcing st.'llt' t1nd r 0 ca I ta:\·
pa1crs !u suhs1d11r 11h.1l 1s essen11ally a
fl'.'rl('r.~l proi;:r:itn. ·· tl1e l~01 ernnr said.
Hr 1n~1:-trd The !"'>cfen.~r ik'partn1en4.,
!'hn11lc1 c;:irr f11r · the need!' of al! h(lna
Jtrlr deprnrlrnts flf r111h1ar\ JWrSflnnrl"'
He said strikers also $hould be den ied
\1('1f11re:
Indians Seeking
Stanf o~d Scalp,
Blast Nickuan1c
STA~FORD ll"T'J l -The ?\atl\e
.-\n1rr1r:in ~turleni~· ~f(IUp ha~ de manded
lh?.I Sl.~nford l'n\\·er~ity stop calhng its
a1hlr11C le:im~ '"the lndit1ns"' and al!lO
1hat 1l1r srhtY'll stop using a co5tumed In·
dl:i n as offlc111I m~~-
Tht ~roup spokesn1en sa id 1'tonday
lhr1 <ire ('1rt"'ulatln~ pe11t)Ons dem::indin g
the end of a prartict that has been going
fl n ~ I OC"f' I ht 1 931).; •
Thry s.aid 1t ls demeaning and "a gross
m1sronception of the Indians "
The ~roup s.a id thr demand ",JI bt sub--
TTAIC'd lo tht school's adm 1n1~tratK1n Uus
ll'ttk throu~h OmbudSW"oman Lo i 1
Amsterd&m.
Tom ~f'v.-e\1. Stt.retary of tht .-\lumnl
A.~'l\XIAIK'ln. "id ... if tbt: cha.ngr 1! made
a si~1flc-arrt numbtr of older •lums WJU
br saddened. dir.appoint.ed but not {'tty
u~t." '
~ ,·oong. athrig •thletir dirtttor.
F-aKi. --1·vt. ~\·er bc«i too stroag aa it
~ •1.ty or af)()(.htt I rt.aliJt. 1.btte·s 1
m1nonty problem tnvotV<d..
"\\' t plan. to ~ lritb the varlous in-
~Lt.:' ~Mi actlng dea1J of ~
Roben F'rtelan. "a.nd.stt ii wt' an eet
Lhr problem aoi\'fd:'
Tht ~ati\1f" Amencan students uMI
o,., .,.. pursuing Ibo same coals '°"'bl
.,. other Ind ... -·
• ' '
Ject to the FBI in\estig11!u111
Press St>cretary ftonald L . Ziegler !ifll<I
SC'.'horr was n" !ongt·r in Ille runn111i;: l11r
the post, hut the udrn1r11strat1un still plan·
ned to fill lhP job.
Ziegler added that the Job intended for
Schorr woul d h111"e been centered on
educating the public on the need for t'O!l·
~ervation
Schorr told the Senate hearing : "lt is
our employers who fe£·l the real prcsstJre
-c>.~pec1ally 1n the regulated bro;:idcast
Jndusrr.\, where net~·orks can be sub-
jel·ted to pressure in n1any direct "'a)s,
<1nd 10 incl1rcct ways throu.1;:/r'thc <ii·
f1 l1riles which give !he network eA·
isleOl'l' ''
'!'he \.Vhite I lollse acknowledged order·
ing the inquiry, but said 1t was merely a
' b:u·hgr111111d l"ht·~·k"' hf't·;1use S('horr \\a"
llt!ir1g l'fL~1d1·rc<I fi)r :1 111p !::Cl\ ern1nent JOb
u1 1!1l· t·111 ir·nnn•cnta! flt·ld ..
S<·horr ~atd he \\<IS 11e\er sounded Ollt
11houl surli a Jllb at ;u1y lirnr.
'"Thr. pr1111cu·y iSSlle 111 the FBI in4
\l'S\1g:1t1011 is no! whr!her or not 11 pnss14
1111~ J(lh olltr !;1v brhu1d it .'' Si.'hurr ~<lid.
· .Joli ur n<J intJ . the J;uu1c·lu11g of .~u("h :111
i 11ve s t11: at ion 1\1tl1out const·rit
(tf'r11nn~tr;1!l'S an 111~(·11s1t1\ 1t_y lo personal
r 111,h1~ ,.\11 VJ~I 111ve~ui.:al1on is not a
01 u!r.1! 1n:1!t1•r, It h:i ~ ;111 unp:ir! on one's
lifl', 1111 n ·l;1!11n1~ ~11h t'lllj.lt>}ers. 11e1gh-
bnrs ;111cl fnt'uds . , . "
"1\11v Jlrlf' tun1·rn1t'<I :1!M1ul lhe fre<'dc ttn
of the ·prr~~ n1t1:-t ht'> ('oorC'rned about 1he
clunale or susp11·1u11, ho!iL1!1ty a11d ner·
1nusuess liiat t!Jc adn11n 1strat1on has
h1·lpi.'d tn \'fl'<ilt' " he ~aid
A~ t/1(' !i>Uhco111rnutre resumed he.1rlngs
into pr1'!>'\ frf•rdo111. l"ha11·n1an S;in1 .J,
~;1 1111 ( ll ·;~ l • 1, nuted th11t two Whil e
Jl (a1se <11de" ;illt•gedly i11volved in the
S1 ·h!)!T Hll ldl'nt, ('!i;irl<'s Colson Rnd
l"n·deri1· ~l;il•·k. ch·t"lillt'd inv1tiit1on~ lo
:1pp1·;11· ~111d t1·\I \hl'I!" side flf the story.
"Yuu\r gut !u 1traw une uf !wn con·
<'his1011s."' Er11n :-:11d ;1fter l1sten1ni:: ti'\
S1·h(Jrr. '"l-'.11!1C'r !hr~· rettlty had you
unJer· t·11ns1d •·r.itinn for a high ~nvero·
ntf'IH pu.-,11Jun or tht•}' 1vcre lry1n~ 10 Jn•
11u11d:11f' 11111. h:1ra~~ 1011 ...
.. r ha tr ru rn aki.' a 1·ho1ee between
11ht'lhrr 11 1\as stup1d11v or duphclly, But
unfor1unat('t~ th ose are the only two
t·ho1ces I see." he s;:iid.
esa Service Stations l'rom l'age 1
LEARY • • •
ry to l1np1·ove Image alpine cou11try to avoid U.S. prison
:sentences.
Swiss offir1al ~ frustrnted ~.Yifornia anrl
t· S. nuthoritics by rul ing I~ extradition
pnpers subrni!ted to the A~11 government
were not in order. saving Leary from a
ret urn to /11s nal1ve land.
Chrvron, Shel!. Texaco. Arco
P hillips and ]l.!obil service station owners
in Costa Mesa arr rnobi11zing to polish up
an industry imagC' s meared~ bv out·
of business eyesores and ;:i!legatlons of
unla11·fu! practices. -,
Org;:inizcrs of the nrw Cost;:i ~lf'~a/
Service Slation Cornmittee ha\"e hcert
planning the 1nove for sev('ral mont~s
"'ilh Chan1ber of Con1merce aid.
Chairman Phil ~an s. operator of
Evans' && Service. ays the idea dates
back really to ;:i 1969 ity study of the in·
dustry as it exists in Costa ?o.1esa.
He candidly adn1its crin1ioal pro-
Se<:lltion of a chain of county stntions
allegedly involved in consu1ner fra ud t;:ic-
tics i;uch as made-to-order mech;:inic;:il
defects ls another concern.
·rrial of a seri es of attendants \vh11
allc~edly punctured 1ires, SI ash c d
radiH lor hoses ;ind ;:irranged other pro-
bl ems lo profitably pick customers'
pot'kets goes lo the jury this week.
... rhe publieitv rcneets bad!v on all of
us." says E~·a ns, noting
0
legit ima!e
opcr;:itors suffer through guilt by ;:i ssoc1a·
l1<1n. 1\•hcther colleagues getting the oews
co\·er;:ige ;:ire convicted or not.
Their first order of businffi is
establishing goals and priorities lo be
dealt \\"ith in 1nonthly meetings ;:it the
C'os !a f.1esa Chamber of Commerce of·
f l{"f'.
'"In the future. yes. 1,1·e hope' to \1·ork
v.·\thin our group to deaf with those who
;:ire doing "''roing-." explains E\"aos.
He is head ol thr group which ;nclllded
111ne 1nen al its first session la st Thurs-da ~· bul ultimately hopes to include a ma-
jority of the city's 74 licensed. serv1ce·sta·
t1on n\\·ners.
By licensed. E\"an.s points out. he ttiinks
1here are abollt eight ser.·ice stations in
C.Osta Mesa tflal ;u-e currently in·
Opl'r<1tive, old and decrepit Orne~' \\"lfh a
<.'O~tly ovcrh!'ad.
Beaul if1rt1tion of existing slal!ons
""hich fail to meet city policy ~tandards
adopted a year ago -.,.,·bich \\·ould offer
ma:cimumtser\·1ce but minimum mess -
is definitely high on the con1m1trrc·s
ai:enda.
'"\\'e started among oursehes to SC!' 1f
""" can·t try t('[ do some flf the things the
Hu ss Anny (hicf Dies
.\\OSCO\\" 1APl -:-0.lars hal \lat\r1
Z<ikharo\", 73. much-decorated fornl<'r
chief of $t;:iff of the &l\'Jel armed forrr•.
died !'o1onda;•. 1he So\·1rt "\e11·s Ai::rncy
Tass reported. Zakhaml". a post1,1·ar ron1·
mandrr of Sn1·1et occupation roref's 111
t :C'rnian~, \\a~ \1·1dely regarded in !he
'\'{~! as ::i 1·n1ce of moderation ;:inv1n'1:
S<\11et m1hlar.I" n1eo.
city wants." Evans continuel{.
He sprrifically <'1lcd lhe J91i9 proposed
service station ordinnnee considered by
the coune1!, which ordered it re\•ised and
lhen chose to adopt the final draft as
policy only in stead of law ,
A toughly-worded documenl, I h e
original study singled out various sta-
lions. cl,1ssifying appc;:irance lrom poor
to c:cc<'llrnt Hnd noting the degree of
auloinobile maintenance or repairs of·
fered.
Sonic .,.,·ere crit icized fo r dispensing
evcrythinj:! frorn free soda r,np for a
n11n1murn purch<'lsl.' to srts of glasses for
drinking it <1nd ~cl\ing cut-rate stCer
111anurc for lawn ferttlr.:er.
S1·vrrnl l'ILl:anl scr\•ice stations localt-d
;:iround thr l"ily t·<1uld be torn down by the
city as public nuisances and the 011 com·
pan.v or landowner involved billed if the
original 1969 stud v bcc;:irnc an ord inance.
"That's wh y I"d. like to be elected to the
Cty Council.'' ren1arks !-~vans, a can-
didate in the April I J election.
"'They need a ser\·ice station man," he
adds, pointing out he is able tq apprelliate
and undrrstand the special problems en-
<'otu1ter<'d Jn tha! industrv
All serl'fre st <1!1nn 0\11~~rs in the cilv
:\re bring contacted by letter and urged
to J0111 the new organization wh ich \\'ill
meet the fourth Thursday of each month.
"Our goal will be lo have harrnonv in
our competlti\•e business. more sati!i°fied
custoiners." lhe note explains.
Besides \he J(l.year term in Ca lifornia
that he had barely begun . Dr. Leary
faces an identical federal prison term in
'fexas for a ma riJuana smug_glin g con-
viction he once won, then lost again on
appeal.
The zany onetime i;:uru of .. the
psychedelic drug movement was frr ed
from his i/;:irvard f}Ost in 1963 for LSD
experimentation, and became one of th e
si xties' most revered and rCvilcd figures.
He and his \l'ife and son. J ohn, now 22
anrl scrvfng a probation terrn 1n the San
Francisco area, 11•rr(' il rrested Dec. '29,
1968 in L<1gllri<1 Beach "'hile parked on
\\'oodl an d Dri ve.
t-.;ow-SgL Nell Purecll of the Laguna
Reach Polire Drpartmcnl na rcotics
squad eot1f1si.'atcd rnariJuana and
. suspicious pills in arrrsting the l..e arys
and iriwollnding !he1 fs\ation wagon.
The conti-oversia! Leary .wis then fre·
quen ting the Orange Coast and cam·
paigning for the Californi a governorship,
while contending he was being harass:td
for his poiltical views, not drug cO'nc~pts.
Orange Counly Sllperior Court J udge
Byron K. r-.1c~11llan c~~-teary a
'menace to soc~fy in .~residing over lhe
sensHtiona! marijuana~-and refused
to all.ow his release on I We2'ed bail.
Swiss authoritie~ hall now -if indeed
he 1s such <\;menace lo tdy -forced
Dr, L<'ary to find a new soc1e~t will
give him another chance. 1
Reports_ to -tl1e C9ntrary,
It Did Rain ~11 Jru1uary
lt didn't rain much
during January but
1neasurable mo1slllte,
the contrary.
in Orange Collnl.y
there 11·as some
despite reJ)Qrts to
The confllsto11 results from the fact that
there 11·as no measurable rainf~ll record·
ed by the coun1v flood control distril'l"S
rain ~au~e o.h ·the rOOf of the
F:ng1nrer1n,1!:·Fin<1ncia l Bu i.l din~ ar
Rroad11ay:-and Cl\ LC Cen~er Dr11e \\'esl In·
S.1nta Ana . '
Flr.00 eontrf<l d1~1r1<t r!'rord~ dat1n;-:
b;itk \(l 190i·f\ll ~ho11. ho" o•\ i'r, \hat there
\1rre \\1£1 Janu<iY'ys in the past. \96J and
19.\8. 11 hr·n nn mea,ur:iole rainfall was
rrl·nrded in the Cflll~ty i:cot.
Ru! ~et11ng bar k to !<1st n1nnth. rai n did
fa'l in other p<1r1~ •1! !hf' counly
· Thrrc 11rrr 1r.1rr'i of rain 1n Sani;i
:\'1i1 but no! ..... PnQU~h In he ('(11\ed
n1ra,urable." ~.11d J11hn f.i 1e12en. counts
hydrologist. lie said he lost a $10 bet with
a fellow wor ker .. i·1 was sur~ that it
"'Ollld rain here during the month," he
said drily.
Gietzen also i;.aid that a check or • r.toulton.:\igucl Ra nch figures datlni;:
back to JSn-78 sho~·ed ~me rain J~t
month but nOne in 1963 and J!H8.
That "·et sluff thar fell on \"Ollr hqusc
during the month "'"S realiy rain in
JlH~a~u rat,le 11uant1 ties, (;1etun
reassurtd
"I ll1e in Coo;!;:i ~le<;<i ;:ind it rained
rreny hard !here ll()('e or 1~·1cr." he said.
Ra in 11 as al SQ reported tn CorOna del
r.rar, Laguna BeatJi and San Clemente.
f>range Cuunt~"s ~·etlest January "'al
J'illl ~'h ('n 11 IR 1n!'hr~ of rain ""a.">
rrported and 1n ser·Qnd place \l·as a more
rccr.nt year 1969 \!.'hen 10 29 inches fell .
WHAT IS
(NOT NECESSARIL Yl
·W-HAT
'
YOU GET!
Tedinological a-dvances in carpet manufacturing have r.,..
suited in lower pric es today than 30 years ago.
The tufting mac hines make carpet 70 times faster than Ax·
min ister and Wilton loo ms . Th ese machines w ill make up to .
12 lineal feet of carpeting per minute, -either twelve or
fifteen feet wide. The relative ease of this mtonufaclurin9
",;,ethod has hacrone negative aspect. Instead of ,,bout ten
respected , rel iable mills , today there are more than 300 milk,
many of questionable integrity. It is not difficult for a clever
carpet designer to make a carpet look far better than it is.
The answer to the cornumer is clear: Either know your manu-
factul'er -or relr .• on " reputable retailer. (Alden 's, of
course.) (
'
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 l'loc..,. Aft.
COSTA MESA
646-4138
r.
"
., ..
'
\
l
I
-..... ~, . .,._._ .... ~,.._ ... < ........ --........ • • .. .;.,1. ..-....
Jucl ge Nixes
Devil Cult
Yoi1tl1 's Plea
An Oregon yoLilh 's plea Lhat he wRs 17
al the time of hts arrest and can nol be
lawfully tried as an adult for his alleged
role in !he .. devil rult" killing of Mission •
V1eJ11 teachf'r Florence Nant'y Brown wa .!I
r!'Jl'l'lcd ~t onday in Orange County
St1pcr1or l'our!.
./udgc \V11!1:irn Murray tumed down the:
plt·a of Chr1stopl1er "Gypsy" Gibboney,
now 18. and ordered the youngest
n1crnbcr of the gang rounded up af!er lhe
s:aying of J\ilrs. Urown , 31, of El Toro, lo
facl' trial ~turch 27.
It i~ al!rgccl that f;1bboney v.·as onr of
three drug-usin~ drifters who pulled Mr s.
Rru\\'11 fron1 her car on ,lune 2, 1970 . .e:o.
she left the Sa n !)icgo Freeway al Sand
f;111y1n1 !load.
ll is also •tl!egcd that he was present
\1·hrn Mrs. Brown was dragged into an
Jrv1ne orange grove and butchered in ti
rilual sl ayi ng that fea1ured what lawmen
said wrre S;1ta n-worshiping observances.
lier ren1nins were later buried in a
shallow gra vc·ncar the Ortega •Ughway.
Cibboney's trial will close the pro·
secution·s file on the rive persons rounded
up In the vn1k.c of tv.'O killings irt less than
2~ h<\urs. ·.
Gan"g leader Steven Craig Hurrl , 20,
linkf.r! to the n1urdcrs or Mrs. Brown and
service station attendant Jerry Wa yne
Carlin. was round to be in sane and was
comrnllted lo Atascadero State l lospilal.
, Arthur Craig ''Moose" •lulsc, 18, or
Gartlen Grove was successfully pro-
secutCd as the gang member who axed
C-arlin to death in the Santa Ana service
station and sentenced to life in state
pr ison.
That senlcnce included his conviction
on ch arge.<; 1hat he acted as an ac-
con1pltce in the murder of Mrs. Brown.
~fc!an1e ~1ae J)an1cJ.o;, 31, the gang "s
par<tnour, plCadrd gu illy lo com pli c11y
charges and dru~ offenses and is serving
a one to ten-year lem in state prison.
Codcfcndant Herman l{endrick Taylor,
a J!}.year-old transient , drew a Jong pro-
bat ion term after serying as a pro.-
secution witness in the tria ls of Hurd and
\ Hulse.
) ) The prosecution has staled that it will
~ __/ again use Taylor in the upcoming trial of
Gibboney. -
__,
Texas School's
l\1arriage RuJ es
Termed Illegal
~IOCSTfJ:-o' <U PI 1 -A rule of the
suburban Cha nnelv1ew School Distnc:t
b<..rr1ng married or divorced students
from ('Xt racurri cular activities is un·
constilut1onal, a federal judge has ruled .
. The ca se v.·as brought by Soni Romans,
16 . who .,.,·as married briefly and divorced
)a~t \'car aftrr i;:iv ing birth. She com-
p!il_n€d that it 1s unfair thal she was not
ellowed to sing in the school choir.
especially in view of the £act she made
top grad£'s.
The sch<JOl board tumed her down in a
4-2 \·ote. The board argued that if mar-
ried and divorced students are allowed to
mingle with other students in ex -
tracur ricular acliv1ties, the y might " d i.~tuss their sex Jives
But US. Di strict Judge Allen B Han-
n<'\' ruled f\1onda y th<it an y students v.·1th
an · unhealthy tnlerest 1n .sex ·· could get
ell the 1nfDnnat1on on the subje<:l they
v.ant "at t-he corner drugstore .·
tleaths of Birds
B lanied on Poison
;\fJA.\11 IL'PJ 1 -~Audubon Society
has tentatively blamed insecticide for the
c;leath.5 of an estimated 10.00) migratory
•rds -many of them robins -found
:near potalO fields in south Dade County.
Audubon members &aid Sunday ni.ght
they found empty boxes and cans of the
chenucal az.odr1n in the area of the de.ad
.w ds.
But they !.aid they cannot be absolutely
sure the 1nsect1clde caused the deaths Wl-
t1! t~s are complett:d.
Az.odr1n 11 used 1o kill aphid!i , tiny io-
. ~ which plague potato planU.
.
' -----~-,
•
• North l'iet's Plu11s
f->ress spokesman Nguyen 'J'hanh Lr. of the North Vietnan1csc dele-
gation to th e f'arls peace talks, reveals llanu1 's O\Vll secret ninc·point
peace plans at a press l'Onfcrenrc in flar1s ti·londay. Le acruscd Presi-
dent Nixon of dupllci l.y in di.~closing details la st week of the sccrcl
l1anoi-Washington negotiations.
County Pasto1· Tells Q!JJ
Fo1~ Worl(l Ecology Meet
()ne of the most !-.i J.:nd1canl ;ispecls of
the world environmental eonference p!;1n·
ned for June in-Stockholm is that tl t.~
even. being held, accordlnR lo South
Laguna participant the Rev, Gary
Herbertson.
''There ht something powerful and
hopeful ilbout the nations of the world
even attempting this co n f e re n c r , ' '
tlcrhf.rtson, pastor of the U n 1 t~rf
Methodist Church, said recently al 11
Lagunlil Bea<!h meeting o{ Pro.en-
\'lron1nent People.
"There has never been a mcetini.; of all
the governments or the world In look at
the world ," he e.;tplained, "and evaluatf'
its physical properties in trrws ol
priorilie.~. -~
•· r think that something creative
already has come out of the conference
becau~ it has been called."
Rev . Herbert.son retu rned from Sweden
in Dece rnber after ha ving worked wilh
lour other Americans to organiu the nnn-
govern mental portion of the conference.
Sonic 400 \wiirld nr,ll<ill11.at111n.~. plus J2fl
world Auvernmcnt.~. will partic1p;1te 111
the r.vcnt .Jun~ 5-16 ..
"ll i!I really go1!1g lo bf'.,!'!Orl of a fr<"r.-
for-aJJ," the niinist<'r adniiltcd, not1n~
that the s_wedish government was inviting
grou ps representing di verse opinions
;1bout the world r.nvlronmenl. llowever,
he said he d6uhted If many indu.~lrif's
would srnd representatives to the 11ffil1r.
He Sflld "scver;1I pre:oisure 1-:roup!i" ht1d
already tried lo ' keep environn1cntal
organlwtions such as the Sicrrfl ('Juh
'fron1 part1cipal1ng in lhe 1;onfcrcnce, but
hP did ncit make any specific accusations.
llerbcrtli'ln.J..as elected to the llleering
c11mm1ltee by representative., of the 400
rttJn-government.al nrganiiation11 attending
the co nference. Tht United Methodist
Church is one of the~e organiza\Jons.
U 11d e1·,vate1·
Mou11tt1ii1
P1·obc Set
ti y 1·11~1 t'AL,\IEll
Of l~t D••I• 1"1i.1 ,,.u
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was knuwu H.~ thr ( '11us1 H1ld ( ;1•od1·t11·
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Ttir i.11rvey ht>~nn olf 1111· l\·l!'Xll".111
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In l'u1nt VH'<'lllt ', 11t'!'llrth11g lo prt '"'lll
11l11ns. Fl'rr111111Jes :.aul lt11· .~l11p \v111tld h1•
In 1hf' Su11t11 t'at1'1lln11 llf<'ll for 11boul \w11
111nnlhs.
The ll11nlcr will 11tlctnpl In df'flru· Ilic
exacl n1e1H111r1·n1enl.~ of !he r11h11n1111r(
v.•hilc !UlHtller Jaunrhr.~ will cl1111'L sl1111"«
and harhor ttrr11.~. The IR.~t survry nf llu·
l'.O<Hil, F1•rnandrs :.111d, wtt ~ 1n111h• 111 lh1•
early l!IJO~.
!tr ~ai d lh<' 1-rt·w 111~.o wnultl 111 v1•,ql(~1il•·
rr·por1s rct'rlVl"rt 1111 110Ms1b!e d:1 ng1·r~ hi
v1·s.scl!I 11luni.i thP. r·na'il Ah<u11 \~, "u·l1
rl'porl!I wrr1· filrd w1lh thr 1!('p11r!111r11t 1n
1971 rrgardu1i;i the i.:ulf nr1'a.
A1•r111 I pho1.ogrlipl1y will h1· d1n11• 111 i '"!l-
nrettnn w1U1 lhe shnrr-rr111pp1nM 11pt•111
Unnli. 'l'h1! ;1rr11 fr nrn Sral H11;i1·t1 111
l'olnt VJtenlP w1H hf> phol11grilpl1rrl , ,,'\
will S11n1a Catalina, Sunt11 D11rhar;1 :irid
San Nrc11la.'i 1sl:indli. ..
La suPn wt1 s d1~(·11v1·n·d in llu· 1~:i11~ 11
Is 01bout halfway ht·twe<'n Sa11 1 .l1·J111·1il 1·
and Santa C.:al11l111;i , wh(·1·1· 1111· 111·1·:111
flonr 'li depth i~ approxt n111trly 2,4f)(J fti>I
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1>11r!C1c1·
<;harl1ng n(>f'r11tu11111 are 1·r1rnplrl1· ''"
far north a1 Ut·l!.t1n111d1". 1'hcy 4:ovrr 1111
ar,.,a extending 20 m1Jr.1 rro111 the t·oasl
F'r·rnanflcs .~aid tldr n1P.a~ur<>rr1r nl \
would be includr.d in the. doll:. Lluit 1:1
be1nK gaU1er1~d.
lie added 1h1t loni;<·rllnge pl1t111i f<)r tlw
llUfVCY Pllll,hl Include 11.JI of !hr. lirltlt•d
Stall'!t cna!lt llH far n11rth aH Scalllr·.
• \~I I.. -•
DllLV •lLO':_ t
DANNY DAVEY DISTR IBUTES CA PS TO INDIAN CHILDREN
fr"ee Flln1 Scheduled A• Thank•to Co uniy Donora
/\ 111Hl·lf111 p11 1111 ,. 111.•il•· "n \J.i~.q" :uu l
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f•'1·l1 4
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a11prt•r•l;111·d ,'' h .. xay.,,
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tirnr. thr•1u1</111ut lhl' yrur tu 1·111!,.rUng
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Ni xon w1111l<I rt'1'f'lvr 43 pnrc1111t nf \hQ
1111,:1., !>"'" M11tj kJl''11 42 per1!erll lll (jov.
W11ll.1• 1•'11 ii 1K:n ·ent If un 11\11rUnr1 were
h1·ld lh111 1111Jnt'1 . the G11Uup Poll rsport.ed
Stu1cli.y.
'l'ILe ~lir·vcy (if l,W.11 re"J1tered vnter1 In
, :11 ly J;11111 fj ry 1h11wt!d Mu11kle mah,.
Htl!llll~ U11• 11.evtrl pnlnt jfl('ft:IU!U! lh8t
~1ir1w1·d 1111 tH'tWCltrl t.11rl y <lctllher anlf
!11\1· N11v1·1nllt'r
Masked Tliieves
Break l11Lo Horn e,
Kill Wonian, 100
ohnson son -
WALLA ND. Tenn IAP 1 -Tw1J ma ~k
ed me111 brf"Jke int o the home of a 100.ye:ir·
old Bhwnt C.tJunty v.·idow, suffocaterl hrr
and ned with money . Jewelry and an an -
tique JlUn f·ollect1on ·
"Y.'hat makes ll )'•,bad 1~ th;it 1h1.\ l;idy
was helpless ... th1~ 100.ycar-t",ld !od} '
said Rt.ly White . cvunty coroner.
"They pven t1t'd brr' in bed . and th,.n
the:y threw ~elhin,g over her head and
&ulfocaled her," he said.
The ''ictim was identified by Sherif f
Robert Carroll as ~,rs. Martha Hughes of
)¥alland, who last November turned JOO.
Mni:. J1ughes. her housekeeper and a
l!Tsler were 1n the rural home in the Ea~t •
,.1lller Cove community when at least 1wo
masked men broke into the res1denc,.,
iiooday n1ghl . White 'aid.
"_The y got Mughly $100. 5ome 50 an·
tique guns and Mlmc old jtwelr;," the
coroner said.
The robbers houOO and gagged ll'lt
housekeeper and Mr1~ Hughe 5' •ii1ter.
then co;'ered both w1ttJ a blanket in the
kitchen.
The hou&ekeeper, Mrs. Magg~ ."'forgan.
.. as •ble to free heridl and alert
a.ut.00r1t1e's.
•
,.
ANNOUNCES the new ear .
"Go to II
\
Take Your Pi~k
Effective Immediately, every new l.incofn o.r ).1ercury ptQ·
d uct M:ild at Johnson and Son w1JJ receive tM uni11u •·, ntw4
,and exc1t1ng ''Golden Tauch '' treatment created ,;pe<:1 f1r al!y
to offer you a new <:Jr aJ poi11t1vely trouble-free ..ii hurpanly
po5sible . Sta rting from the mOment a new c•r en ~rs (J~Jr
•·get ready" department right through every 1Ltp ln \in·i ng\
poli5hing, adjw:t1ng, irupect.ion and our exclusive 21J Mll.Y.
ROAD TEST, the "G<Jld<n Touch ' program "' Jn effect.
V,.'hPn y,.,u ~e lhe PA:a1 be•rln,w the G<1ld1:fl 'fouf'h e-mbJem
r;i11 !hf!. v.Jn dl'>hud r1 , y111i 'JI knuw !hat th1z ntw i.;ar h~i met jjlJ
lb,. rJ~Jd re<1u1r~mtnts we dem1nd fr1r -0.l!llver y. Coo1g In
t.t>1J1y •nd bee f11r your~elf how this "C.ioJ.d~ri "J'11urh '' pr,.,..
'groin wllJ pr1ividt th~ ''trouble free" drJvUlg ple8 ~urt you 've
aJwciys wanted. Baby's Sex Ca.n Be Chosen-Doctor
WARSA If (UPI I -Dr. Pranciluk
Benendo says be h.u diloovered a Jimple.
-•nd porfeclly .. ,, -"1 whid!
• parenta an dklOR: the sex ol their
children befcn they are born.
"I b8'"·e on flle the names of J$1 t'IW'·
'. ri<d c:ooplel J'ith whom my method bu
• worited," I/le radioJogilt Pid Wday In J
k:lepb:me: ~ from P~k.. 4S miles
north of Warvw, "bert he 'worU in a ·
···-ll~<hcal center.
Dr . Bmmdo. '5. outJ~ a method ffJI'
pareu wtr:> -wmt to dmr.t either ' bOy
or a pi. It doel .not require t\'en the
um"t.anct of 11 doct.or'.
"I bave devoted aarl)' aJI Q( my We. to
t})t' invniac••ioo of um~." De
Aid. "'I came t.o the c:oncluUon that 1«
ii 6ecided by th& lllOlnf'nt 11 w1ud> te:EU•I
U1le'COUrle iu.. pi.,. ill relatloo lo
"iMI~ irl tht ora.asm of 1 'lroman ..
The dodor SJld ht queglloned IO 000
.. omen during a period ot 30 ye.a.rs Lestinl hit hypothes1•.
"Obllenatioo ihow1 that if imtrcoune
took ~ three t.o five diy1 bdore
..W.tiori, I),.., Ci per-ol !hr ..-.rly
born ire gsrU.
"U intertnur1e •·as on the dly of
ovulatl8n , or up t.o two days afterwards.
thm Jn r7 percent of !tit' cues tx.iya wae bom .• ,
It iii clur frvm hi1 ob&ervatJoot that
In. method II no! foolproof 0.-Jlenwlo -"Ont cannot e.xclude JM J)Ql.5Jbillly °"'' desp"' 1bll calendar-•atdllnc • "" lnlll...t ol a boy WI eome '™' lbt world.
''B\11 the dw>C< ol """Wlli "" por..,..· wt.beo b hid> ""'1 Jbere ~ no
risl ·-ht oddod,
Official& af "" -al )l'__.l)tJI declmed \o comment oo Or ~nend9 •
<:OllClum"'
•tno~t Coun tVs FamUv "' ''"' J:,,r_.
ohnson & son
I ' • r. {}I r •
• ' f ,' I I' t
28218 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MUA • ~-al30 \
' I
l
..
~
f DAIL V PILOT
\
\ I
~ps
Water, Water
Not From Air
By 11101\IAS MURJ)llJNE
Of "'-01Uy ,.1191 Sl•l1 • HOW DRY WE ARE: The other night
shortly before midnight l v.•as out in the
front yard spray pa inting som e
automobile parts and they got rained on.
This Js not a yarn about v.'hy I paint
auto parts at midnight In my front yard.
EverybOdy knows why t do that. lt is in
order lo avoid those stares from the folks
next door. They point and giggle and
whisper to each other. '"!'here's the
neighborhood nut -at it again."
Besides avoiding glares of t he
neighborhood at midnight, I miss getting
gnats stuck in the fresh paint.
Anyway, 1 did the midnight paint job on
this car piece and went inside the.house
for a minute. When I returned to inspect
the job, little beads of water had col·
lected on the new paint. It was raining.
Drat. Just my luck. Avoid the neighbors
and gnats and run direcUy into precipita·
tlon from the skies.
SO THAT'S WHAT this ts really all
about. The tact that right there toward
the end of January, It seemed to have
rained at my place.
This ls particularly n e w 1 w o r t h y
because today Is February the fst and all
the rain reports for January are now in
and official.
And those reports will tell you that we
had ~lsely iero measurable rain in
Orange County during January.
'Ibat stuff that fell on my painted car
pieces couldn't have been rain. It was
dew from the eucal}'ptus tree. Fallout
Crom ocean surf. Elixir ()f the gods.
Whatever, It wasn't rain.
As a matter of fact. January of 1972
now goes into the record books as the
driest month 1n Orange County history.
That goes back.to 1877 when they started
k~ping track of how much wet stuff tell
out near El Toro on the Moulton RB ncb.
PRIOR TO LAST month, January of
194& held the record for being dry when
only .01 of an inch of rain was recorded
for the 31 days.
Our current parched condition is con#
firmed by moguls of the Muni~ipal Water
District of Orange County, They supply a
Jot of water used for agricultural ir·
rigatJon wht'rt , in between housing
t racts, some Orange C'.ountians s till grow
thin:-s.
THESE NEARLY extinct-type folks,
known as growers or citrus ranchers, us-
ed more than double the an1ount of im·
ported waler in 1971 than they did Jn 1970.
Wisely, the Farm Bureau peQp!e in-
terpret this to mean there y,•asn'I. very
m uch free wnter rnlling from the sky.
\Ve may not have n1 any ranchers nr
citrwi growers left, but rest assured
those who are still around are crafty ..,,,ith
a ckillar. They do not buy water when
they can get it free from the good Lord.
Anyway, He who gaveth ln 1970 tooketh
away in 1971 and also in January of 1972.
And things don't look much better in the
wetness department for February.
t can see only a couple of possi ble solu·
tions to this whole r ain problem.
I must go vut into the front yard one or
these first midnights nnd paint a y,•hole
.bunch of auto p.'lrls.
1'11 get my car washed for good
measure.
111nd~1. Ftbru.vy t , tm
U.S. Orders
Screenings
By Airlines
WASlllNGTON !AP) -The federal
government has ordered the· nation's
l!Cheduled 11irl ines t.o scree11 a 11
pa.ssenge.rs and baggage in an effor ! to
stol> hijackings and sabotage.
Maj"r airlines have used the securily
measureG, at lea~t on a part.time basis,
for the past f\VG ycar11.
The Federal A~·iation Administratio n,
In making scretning rules public hfonday,
alset disclosed It seeks to halt Illegal
publication of police and airplane radio
conversati ons during Oight emergencies.
The FAA ordered the new rules into ef·
feet immediately, waiving the usual 30-
day preliminary notice on grounds that
the wave of hijackings has created ·a
threat to public safety of an emergency
nature.
The regulations must be met no later
than three days after they arc published
ln the Federal Register, probably toda y
or Wednesday. 1'he new equip1nent and
procedures, therefore, wlll have to be
operating at all U.S. airports served by
scheduled airlines no later lhan Saturday.
The FAA said it wiU accept four
~~reening systems, used alone or in coin-
bination: the thoroughly tested and
proven hijacker -behavioral profile,
magne!on1eters or similar metal-detel'.·.
ting devices, ldentification systcn1s, and
search of passengers and baggage.
The ordffi· will not apply to foreign
airlines, air.taxi operators of small
planes. or-supplemental a i r I i n e s
specializing in charter service.
The FAA said Administrator J ohn H.
Shaffer asked the F e d er a I Com-
munications Commission Mondny to in-
vestigate suspected illegal news-media
interception of police radio conversations
during hijack emergencies.
Shaffer told FCC Chairman Dean
Burch there are reasons to believe some
individuals had violated that section of
the Federal Communlcalions Act forbid-
ding unauthorized persons from in-
tercepting ad divulging the contents of
radio transmissions.
•
Ul'I TeltPl'lf!t
lle lirit1g
Sgt. Ji.1ajor \Villiam 0 . Woo l·
d ridge, once the Army's high·
est ranked enlisted man, will
be ~llO\Ved tO retire withotit
bl'ing court-111artia led in a
\videspread scandal over op-
eration of enlisted men's clubs,
the Pentago n has announced.
Jle \Vilt .receive fuJJ pensio n
and benefits even if convicted.
Cougl1-and-cold
Remedy Makers
Must Give Proof
\VA Sl·flNGTON (AP) -The Federal
1'radc Commission has asked for
docwncnt:ition of advertising claims
made by the nation's major cough·and-
cold remedy makers.
Sixteen manufacturers were ordered to
show their claims were proven. They
have 60 days in which to comply.
The action ls the latest in a recent
series of FTC demands that advertisers
authenticate the claims they make fo r
their products.
Car makers, air-conditioner manufac-
turers and maker s of toothpaste and den-
ture cleaner have been among the
previous manufacturers ordered to show
their claims were true.
HHH Urges War on Drugs;
Muskie Asks Elderly Aid
By A"oclaled Pl'<n
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey says the
United States shoul d put its Central
Intelligence Agency to work hunting down
fleroin .smugglers.
"It is tin1e \Ve made known to our
friends around the world," t h e
Deniocratic presidential candidate said,
''that we will not pertnit the cultivation
and export of a poison that destroys the
Ilves of hundreds of thousands of
Ame ricans and which is responsible for a
substantial portion of American crime,"
The Minnesota senator discussed the
drug problem Monday in a speech I CAMPAIGN'72'
prepared for delivery at a drl' ·-treatment
center in ~1 iami where h1: was cam·
paigning in the Florida presidential
primary,
Three other Democratic presidential
hopefuls unvriled proposals for new
don1csUc aid programs Monday.
Sen. Ednu1ncl S. f\1uskic of 1'.1aine,
speaking in St. Petersburg. Fla .. \\'hich
has a hlgh proportion of retired citizens,
sairl the government should es!ablish a $l
billion program glving direct fed eral aid
lo the elderly.
"\Ve must bring relief and reform to
our property tax systein," Muskie said.
But he criticized President Nixon's pro-
posed value-added tax as a national sales
tax "that will make you pay more mOney
every day so that you can pa'y a little les.s
money at the end of the year."
Sen. Ge<Jrge McGovern of South Dakota
told a news conference in Boston the
federa l government should underwrite a
third of the-cost of public school educa-
tion through direct grants to states on the
basis or their needs and ability to raise
revenue for education.
Sen. Henry M, Jackson of Washington
l'laid .j.rJ Atlanta, Ga .. the federal govern·
ment should provide funds to state
judicial systems to permit them to hire
more judges, prosecutors and puhlic
defenders as a means of speeding up the
judicial process .. the grants. he said,
would be confirigen( on adoption of state
legis lation requiring that people charged
with felonies be tried wilhin 60 days.
~layor ,John V, Lindsay (If New York.
campaigning in the \Visco n s i n
Democratic presidential primary, lo!d
about 1.400 students at the University of
\Visconsin at \Vhite\valer that youths ..,,,ho
left the countrv to avoid !he draft shotild
be given conditional an1nesty.
Returnees shouJd not be prosecuted -
as they would be under present la"' -
Lindsay said, but they should be re-quired
to serve for a specified f1me "in our
neighborhoods and our hospitals and in
our drug centers and teaching in our
schools and street academies with pay."
Some Fair Skies Return
\
Law yer Group Blasted
.,
No-fauli Tactics Attacked by Nixon Aide
\\IASl-llNGTON (UPI ) -\Vhile HOUSf'
;i'ida VJrginia H. Knauer accused t11e
American 'l'rlal Lawvers Association
(ATLA) today of "dcVious,,mis!cading
<ind blalantly self-serving" tactics in op-
posing oo-fa ult auto insurance.
Mrs. Knauer, President Nixon's con·
:;umer affairs adviser, urged the
American Bar Association (ASAI to in-
vestigate whether the trial lawyers v.·cre
violating the lawyers' code of ethics and,
if so, to crack down on then1.
No-fault is an insurance system undt r
which each insurance firm pa}'i for in·
Juries to its own client, no matter who
c-.iused the accident.
It is designed to eliminate costly court
fi~hts over wh ose fault the accidcnl y,·as.
Proponents o( the plan !'nntcnd that
lawyers currently pocket 75 cents or
1nore of every auto insurance dol lar, and
that premiu1n would be much lo\1•er
under no-fault.
A Transportation Department stud y"'
concluded last year that one--fiilh of all
the money earned by l::twye rs cor1es
from auto accident cases. The ATLA
i:;t rongly has opposed na..fau!t. which has
been adopted by a fe \v states and \::
under eonsideration by Congress <lnd
many stnte legislatures.
fl1rs. Knauer's st.rongly wordt-'d c0<n-
p\aint came in a letter to ABA President
Leon Jaworski of Chicago. She cilcd a
speech by ATLA Presldent Marvin E.
J,e\vis, newspaper ads against no.fault,
A'fLA pa'mphlets and an attempt to
"1nlsrepresent the issue of no-faulr' to
ne\.'.'smen. ..,
"The methods being employed by the
leadership of the ATLA in its efforts to
defeat federal and state no.fault legisla#
tion . . . appear to be so devious,
,
only
~ . n1isleading, and blatantly stlf·se.r."111g as
to cast a long shadow over the integrity
oi the eA\lre legal profession," Mrs.
Knnuer wrott'.
"I would like to know whether such
tJctics violate the lawyers' code of pro.
fessionul t'lhil·s," Mrs . Knauer asked
Jaworski. "1£ they do, I wonder if you
could infGnn me what action ~he, ADA or
its rnembr state bar assoctations are
plannin~ to bring these ta~ics .to a halt.."
In Si:ln FranelsN, Lewis said that hiJ
organiz.ation has n~t . 1nisrepresented .. t~e
t'ase in its adverti sing. He added I II
never cringe. an.<1 win co ntinue speak 0:
anything of public mterest and concern.
'Major Breakthrough'
Black Denver Schools
Integrate With Busing
EIENVER, Colo. (AP) -Denver has
integra ted tv;o of its seven predominantly
b\~ck public grade schools, the first ma-
jor breakthrough in creating racial bal-
ance in the classrooms here in more than
a year.
Until buses shufned pupils Monday,
on!v three or 1he seven schools had Jess
tha·n 90 percent Neg rG enrollments, and
thl'ce had increased the percentage of
black students during the previous l&-
n1onth period.
The city's struggle with desegregation
has bounCed ihrough the courts for three
years. 1'here had been Hille, if any, im·
pact on the minority distribution of
pupils.
Now the problem has reached the U.S.
Supreme Court.
The high court has agreed to hear the
Denver case. and a ruling is expected
before J uly.
Monday's integration or 1-fallett and
Stedrnan elementary schools was CQm·
pleted quietly, although a group of
parents opposing the plan struggled for
rnonths to prevent it.
1'he transfers. accon1plished through
mandatory busing, were ordered by the
10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
A tot al of 380 black pupils were moved
from Stedman. which has a total enroll·
n1ent of about 590. to three predominantly
white schools. Stedman's enrollment had
been 94.7 percnt Negro, but with the ado
dition of 350 white pu pils the enrollment
climbed 8bove the court·mandated 55 .S
percent white to about 62 percent white.
The transfer of 180 black pupils from
lfallett to four other schools, and the ad·
ditlon of 180 whites dropped l·lallett'a
black enrollment from 64.8 percenl Negro
to less th.'ln 44.5 percent.
giant
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Irish Catholics Rampage
Britisli Seek to Restore Cal11i by Orderi1ig Inquir y
R~~L.fAST. Northern Ireland (AP) -
The Br111sh govern 1nent sought 10 calm
lhe Irish Cathohl's loduy by seltine: up a
<.:011rt ol u1qu1ry into the killings of 1:1
c1v1hans 1n a battle with Br1t1sh
paratroopers in Londonderry Sunday .
The Catholirs strurk mack "'ilh bomb
blasts. !Jres. strikes. dernonstrat1ons and
torrents of abuse.
Barricadrs 1nade-or hi1nckcd vehicle~
blazed in Belfast. and cloud~ of srnoke
rose frorn a burning brcll'cry and saloon.
l\lobs tritd unsuccrssfully 1hree titne~
to burn do1vn the Br1ush Einbassy 1n
Dubl1~. cap1toi ~ or the Irish Hepubl 1c
i\'la1nte1111nce rnen at Shannon. Jrel;111d 's
n1ajor int ernnt1on<1! airporl, refusl'd \o
SC'rvice any British a1rcr:ifl
British Prune t\lintSll'r Ld11ard i!C'ath
announced hl' 11ould ;1sk Parha1nenl 10
f'Slabtis h a special 1nt111nal 11Hh 1ud1cioil
p;.i11·ers to l111"esl1g1.Hc Lundnnderrv 's
Hloody Sunday. Bu! .~µokesn1en i·or
Nor!hern lrela11d's Catholic 1ninori1y
thrc:itened not to cooperate 111th any
comrnlssiou set op by a govcrnn1enl
11·hich they believe ts out fJ.o bolster
Protes!Hnt rule in the province. PHYSIC AL ASSAULT
Bernadette Devlin
UP'I Ttl•""•lt• TARGET OF ATTACK
Reginald Maudling
Tutsdi\1, f't biu•ry l 1972
Stoot1 V p
By Yt111ks. . , Hit No1·tl1 Ha1·£l
Rells Slt)r
WASlll ;o.;CTO:'-J 1.\/11
North Vie tnt11n ese docu111t'J1l!I
indil·11 t,r llano! offrred to'send
/'.11n1ste r Xuan 1'huy 10 ,.. set··
rct P;ir1s 1necting 1-1·1th !lt•nry
A. Kiss inger last No1' 20. but
the Unite-d Stall"!' deehnl'd,
holding out fur a higher-r;tnk-
ing Con1n1un1st represcnlarive.
"No p!)lnt \\'UUld be ser\•ed
by 11 me~llng," \\';1.sh1n~ton is
s:1id to hR1't' repl 1~ :•ftcr a
srhed11lrd S('ssion h t' I I'>' I." e 11
Ki!'sin~er and ll ilno1·~ !'J><'t'litl
adviser. Le l )u~· '!'hu, 11'!1
through l> e 1· fl u ~ t' '\ hu \\.is
i<tken ill .
The North \'1t•l11<11nt'st' <1L'-
co11nt of the <'a nrelPd s1·s::i1on
differs rnClrkedl y fnun on(' of.
fered by Prrsident Nixon in R
nationally broadl'<is l fHldress
on the Pt1 ris peace talks J an.
25.
' SAlt.:ON i1\l'1 -\J S plane!
n1nde the ir hr,111est allack nn
North \'1ctn;11n ll'>ll.1y ;111d
r..tond;i y stitt:t tht· 11t'l', 'lli·3U
air ulfen.~11t•. 'l'ht' l' S. C1u11 ·
rnnod re1)()rtt•d Sl'l't•n "prolrr-
l i\'c •~Action " :-1 r1kr!' iA {l\(1
llays
'!'he f1ghte1· ho1nbcrs 1nade
f11·(' <1tt11cks r..1u11day nnd !\\'n
1nore today a~u111!:t ~urfare-t11-
;Hr rn iss ile -St\1'1 -sJtl'<:. 1111 ·
t1n1rl'raft artdlt'ry U;il\l'rirs
<tlld radur !11•h•nses fro1n thf'
nnrthf'rn r-<lgt' 111 I h 1·
den1ilitarizrd zunt· tu H po111~
50 nilll•S to tht:' 111.1rth
Thl' eo1nn1;11\d s11 td !hi•
North V1elna111r:-1• fired thrc:t·
St\:'11 n11:-s1\es a11d a b<11'raJ,:C' n(
;111llll11Traft ar!il lt•ry sht•lls "11
ll II ;I I' Ill Cd t"l'l'!llllllllSSUlll"C
plane:;, bon1bl•r:'\ a!\;:i('k1ng !111·
llo L'lu ~11nh tr:ul 111 nr 1i.:hh111
inl: Laos . a111I llit• !1 ghtrr'
cseorting thr111
Thi' com111a11d .o1 aid ;ill ,1r
!ht· An1{'1"1l';ln pla1u•s n•t111'tl!'d
In lhe11· h;i srs s;1lt'ly , ;uid 1 Ila\ ----
•
!hr r('~ulls n( !ht Tf'IA1Julory
.1t l:'l('k~ 1rrrr not kflQ\\ n.
l)!hl!r L S 111111\ary )OlLTl't'"'
~llid the t\11u.•r1cll1l air ~·11111-
11111,.:11 111 lllunt !ht.> Nu1·th \'irt-
11i1111ese offensive PX)'lf'Cled
l!us monlh f\1orlll, thr l)MZ and
111 South V1('fnt11n '.~ C'tnlrAI
hl ~hl:111ct~ ln.i.:~rred 1hr rnt·111y
111r1'rflfl a!\11C'k~
"'l'hf'rt wn~ H tu•ll of 11 1 ... 1 .,f
act11·i1~·." sn1d 011e !-11\Ufl"t ··1
JU:-l <1ss11111t· our 1· r t •• r t ,
~lo!ainst lht' Ho ('hi l\linh :-uµ
pt>' 111•111ork 1" tnu1111g 1h1·111
:ind thty ;H t r1•tH'!111g 10 our
t'Onlinucd [)l>tnhu11-1 ot \! 11rlo.~.
Tiii'~ '1 1• tr1111g S(ll!\t'h(111• 111
.'ilup 1l ·•
:-itut•h of the ;1t·t1<111n!·i·uri 1·d
:in111ud 11111 l11·:1111!y rll'l 1·111ti·d
111111111!;11n pl ~~1·" 1ha1 l1-;1d
!1·11111 N11l'th 'a•t11!11n 111tu 1111•
llu ("l1i .\II h lrall, 11.uuu '~
\ll)lil!\ !ill!' :-111111111<II1! '!'hi·~r
:ll"I' ihl' l\t'll l\;\f;H pa\S, l•
1nll1"~ north 11( thf' O"IZ, a11d
lhr ll;u1 ll ;1v\111: pn ~~. 15 1111!~"
1111111\ of Un• IJJ\l i',. -. --
.Uonnrrh DPlltf
King l\l:1 hc11rt1·;1 o! :"-1·
p:1t, 11 ho died of .1
l\(•arl atlac:k. ~li 11 11L1 1,
ll.1 -. IJt'l'll crcn1!l\l'<I :11
~hni.,: to~ll indu l1 .1d1
lt1HI lie I' :>Il l <'' I• 1"ii
hy :-1111 Hirt'nrtra, :!fl. As
~111h. ~l.th1·nd1 .1 11 u·1 t
to lu 1ni.; NL•pal 11t1L 11t
frudal p3sl a111 I ttlll)
(\\t'l\\n•ttl t'Cllllll"I'. .\lo <H:lion v:as expected against Ber·
nai 1•tte-Devlin for he r assault on Hoinc
S\:'L'l'f'tary Reginald M11udhng in lht'
Jl ousc or Commons ri.1onday, although
nonnally she 11ou!d have to apologize or
lace suspension. Infuriated because
Speaker SeJw.1•n Lloyd 111ould not leL her
queslion r..1audhng about the killings, the
24·ycar-old Carholic dt-putv fro in
Northern Ireland called rhe ·f>4 .ye;1r-old
home secretary a · · n1 u rd e r i n g
hypocrite," then charged across the floor
of the house. hit him in lh e face, pulled
v\sional al\tl official 1\·ings of the lRA
have said they i1·ill each kill 1.1
paratroops in ve11gca11ce for those who
died on Sunduy ."
Prime ~tin1stl'r .J:iek Lync h of the Irish------------------
Republic cliargcd the sol dief' """ .. ,,. A Tr1QCM ste:....eo .. j03FM
<lclibcnltc '"" , . .,IC<t l"tcd assault o" ~ :.&. .IJ
!\liss Devlin va1s 111 !he cro11·d at Lon·
dondcrry \1•hcn the fir ing bro ke out.
1·1vi l1 aus 11'ho \\'l'l"C taking po.1rt in a
demonstration for ,.,,ii rights." lie the sounds of the harbor
1'he <l1'nly insisted the paratroopers
opened fire only after snipers fired on
!hem. But Catholic leaders acc used thctn
of 1vilful murder by f i r i n g i11-
d1scr iminately at the lT011'd protesting
the in1en11ncnt of IRA suspCt'ls 11·Hhout
trial.
recalled lu~ a1nbassador fron1 London for
;:111 indefinite pt'riod. proclairned a na-2 J, 114>lll'S a (la y
!ionnJ d;1y of n1ot1niing \Vcdnesd::iy, 11•hcn
the Londonderry d1~ad 11•1!1 be buried, and
said he 11'as sending Foreign Atinisler
Patric k Hillerv abroad to ask other na-
tions to help Catholics ir Ulster ach ieve
their "ic"tlimate aspirations."
his hair and clawed him.
Dragged out of the Con1n1oi1s chan1ber.
she told nc\1'stncn.""l'm sorry I didn 't gel
at his throat." She added· "Both the pro-
Fou1· Californici Fa1nilies
Evicted at Jl1exico Resort
CAMPO LOPEZ, Mexico
(UPI) -Southern California
families have been conSulling
attorneys ·on both sides of the
border after at least four were
evic:ted lroin their homes ::it
this coastal retreat over the
\\'ee kend.
A Mexican Supreme Court
decision g a v e 011·nersh1p of
lhe 12-acre parcel. 1\•herc 190
Americt1n families hold leases.
lo heirs of the Enrique
Machado family of Tijuana.
Francisco Lopez. 74, had
operated !he seasidt: resort 38
miles south or TijuAna for
more than 20 vears and had
Jived on the Property since
1927 . Leases he negotiated
with the Americans were not
honored by lhe new owners.
Americans 11•ho refused to
sign ne1v agreements watched
as bands or men broke into
their hom es and l!)SSed out
their possessions. Lopez and
aboul 50 me1nbt>rs of his fa1ni·
ly al so \11ere evicted from the
land.
Some Americans here said
they .knew the properly \\'as
the subject of a court suit.
They expressed surprise at the
8 Dacca
Reporters
Disa ppear
ZURlCH (AP I -Eight pro-
m inent J)acca journalists were
bel ie ved killed 1n t h c
massacre of B e n g a I i in·
tellectuals before the :-;ur·
render or the Pakistani forces
in December, the International
Press tn.~titutr -IPI -
reported toda y.
The IP! rf'J)Orl said thr
')ournalisls were arrested in
their home~ by razakars.
locally recruited m i I i l i a ,
belt\'een Dec. I l aod Dec . !4,
and driven away in jeeps,
They have not been seen alive
IHICe. 1ht report also quoted lhe
BanglJ!desh pr ime mlnisttr.
Sheik Mujibur Rahman as tell·
ing IPI represet1tatlve1 that
some of the journalists had
their ha nds or fingers chopped
off before they were killed.
IPI director Ernest f\.1eyer
said "ii seems clear they y,·ere
killed simply becaust they
we're joumansu. I can o n I y
exprelo!I deepe!L abhorrence at
the ulterly seh!eless. tragic
killing or these journalist&.,,
~ IPI also sald Ulal at least
sudden turn of evenl!I.
"That squad ca1ne throu gh
our house. lore do11·n our door,
ripped oul our water heater,
stove, refrigerutur. cupboards
and evt-n some wall s,·• said
.Jack 1lill. 18. Carlsbad.
"The y also looted our plaC('.
They took ou r blankels. radio.
clock and a Joi of liquor."
In Tijuana, a U.S. consula te
spokesrnan said under Mex-
ican law the new property
o"'ner'i v.•ere \l'ilhin their l e~al
r ights to evict the resident$.
11e said the only legal recourse
lhe A1ner1cans have is to seek
redress from the Lopez fa1nily
for damages.
Property 011.·ner~ here had
in1•ested up to 14 .000 in !heir
hon1es. Under Lopez , land was
leased for up to IO years at
rates ranging from $75 to $158
a year. The ri.Iachado heirs
have asked $75 a n1onth.
A. 1neeting has been schedul -
ed Saturday \.\'ilh the lessees
lo discus-; the sil uation, the
heirs said
The Surr('me Court gave the
land to the 'f1juana ns last Ju-
ly. They v.•aite<l six monlhs to
evict Lopez. who apparently
did nol notify the Ameri cans
of the possible consequences.
Lopez claimed he O\\·ned the
l an d under Mexican
homestead rights, but the
court denied hi s claim and rul-
ed for the heirs. ----------------
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Services
You'll find out
qu ickly how much
cash you may gel.
And you'll get
te\leral payment
•izes to choose
from. Call Today.
.Al~ . .
W!~in)W-
Lo1n1 -Over $5,000 on Real Estate
1nd Personal Property.
lSO I. EucUd St., Anaheim
617 W. 17th St .. l•nta Ana
•
• SJS-2116
776-SlH
'41·3414
~7-4421
Mf.ll61
three other neWsme.n were
.reported killed .i.ll,...1he former ---
;East Pakistan last year
."!\tany other }ournalisl!I nar·
rowly escaped death during
the i-oundup or Dacca pro-
feuk>nel men and women."
the i11$titute dispatch apde<l .
The report wa1 pUbhshed
here on the...J>asis pf in-
formJtion from IPJ's lpecial
rcorrsentative Derek Rol,ind,
.... 00 went to Ditti tl the re-
. que5l of the orgl'nization'1
Pakistan National Commitltt.
The hutlllrte haJ more th.an
, 1,700 pubH&hert and edllorit in
For Advertisi1ig i1t
Out 'N' About
Phone Nor1n\Stanley
\ 642-4321
• ~ coun~es pledged to defend
preS!freedom. -'----~~------~---~~-~
AGED TO BROIL
CHUCK
STEAKS
BONELESS
I
I FARMER JOHN'S
c!SMOKED
lb PICNICS
FRESH· LEAN
EVERYTHING. IS MARKED WITH OUR
LOW SHELF PRICIS. Then the ch•tktf
odds jus.t 10°/e to arrive at W'hot yo11
pay. So If you wound up with $10.00
worth you'd simply pay that. plus 10°/e
or $11 .00 total.
l hot 1•n ''' •••r~ll•lllf ••<•Pl lht ltw lltrl'lt 1tt•111
<t•t.-Hff ti~• '"II~ •n~ ll•111r.
WE MAKE DISCOUNT
HOUSES LOOK EXPENSIVE!
I• an ••pert home manaq.r and sciwe huftdrH1 of
dollars per year on your food bill. Don't ruft oll over
town looklnqi for bar9aln1 • • • You ca11 lte •sured
when yo• buy ot TOP YALU you •• buyln9 tit the
LOW P'lco1, WE CARRY ALL OF THE FAMOUS
IRANDS. TOP QUALITY MEATS on4 GARDIN
FRESH PRODUCE! .
U.S. Gov't Inspected Whole Body
c FRESH
lb FRYERS
Roth's RA-CORN
FAMILY
. STEAKS
c:GROUND
1b1BIEF ALL
SIZE
PKGS.
c!SLICED
1b!BACON
-
I
,_NA-VE-L ORA-NGE-S _G_ft_AP-EF-RUIT---'---C-A1UAGE
LARGE
SIZE
8 Lb. SOLID
HEAD Cello la9
12~ 59c 7~
r.
NOT JUST A FEW SPECIALS i NO ONE SELLS FOR LESS
I
IY SHOrPING. IN OU~ WAREHOUSE OF QUALITY WE CHALLINGI ANY MARKET TO MATCH THI
FOOD YOU SAVE ON E~HYTHING.. ~TOTAL SAYINGS. --........
A NEW CONC~PT
THAT'S DIFFERENT IY TOD,t,Y'S MARKETING
STANDARDS IUT YOU WILL KNOW THI DIHIR·
1NC£.
CLOSED SUN. & WED.
IY lllNG CLOSiD Z .DAYS A WUK .t.ND MIN
'tROM 10,A.M. TO 7 P.M. THI OTHO S DAYS,
I S.t.YI ON PAYROLL COST. .
A WEE~
I
STORE .HOURS: •
10 A.M.-7 P.M.
•
• .\
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•
..
•
•
..
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I
I
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• DARV PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE
Longest and Costliest
While Californ ians can be proud that their Ll'gisJa.
lure wa& given an overall rank of No. l 1n t.he nation a!
or mid·l970, they also have a right to wonder whether
that rank still holds.
As of 18 months ago, a Jegh,lalive evaluation study
by the ("1tizens Confcrcn C'e <Jn .Sta.le 1...cgisl.atur.es ra!1k·
ed Califorrua fi rst in being funcl1 onat, th ird tn bein g
accountable, second in being jnformed. third in being
independent and seco nd in being representative.
But the 1971 U g1slature "'as the most inefficient
in the 1tate's history, as well as lhe longe!it. It cost $23,·
759,64 3. Sta te Cont roller Jlouston I. Flournoy predicts
the current fiscal year budget "''ill have to be augmented
to co ver th at cost.
Jtcrns; I.egislalor . .;; averaged about $28 .500 in salories,
per d1en1s and expenses for a total of $3.4 million. Con·
lracts and ou tside consultants cost another $983,919. The
As~embly spent 3364.408 on district offices. The Senale
spent $3.12.469 for !hi<.
Probably the Legislature's best investment was in
Its staff of 1.400 costing Sl3.1 million. The high "run e~
t.ional" ranking can be attributed to that staff.
The real quest.ion remains -are we getting our
money's worth? Obviously we didn't in 1971.
F1·ankli11 and Bukovsky
The analogy is not precise, but It i~ close enough.
Th e right of free SJ?eecb does: no4 include the pre-
r ogative to shout "Fire!' in a crowd1 d theater.
And the carefully cherished ri.thl of fr~dom of
expression by college professors d0t-.s not incl ude the
privilege of encouraging violence a1~d destruction o!
property.
dent.
Campus dissenters and followers of l"rank!ln's
revolutionary acuons protested that he was the fir st
ten ured professor of a major university lo be dismissed
in dec ad es. They said lhe dismissal action v.·tll pave the
way fo r removal o! any controversial faculty member.
Bul tbal isn't the real pOinl of bis dismissal. frank·
Jin wa.~n 't dismissed because he was a loud and dcd1·
cated Ataoisl revolutionary. or even because of his dut·
spoken vocali£Jng against America.
Simply, he was fired because he was instrumental
in enfouragi11g fou r days of flre·bombings. fighting,
maJor damage to ca mpus property and take.over of a
Slanford computer facility.
1'hat's somewhat beyond the bounds of free ex·
pression, eVen the free expression which college faculty
rnen11lers -rightly -hol d so dear.
'f hose who std! feel f'rankJin was dealt an injustice
might look to one of his counterparts, who also is an
outspokenly angry re1Jolutionary. !le is Vladimir Bukov·
s.ky, a Russian \\'r1ter who \''as deemed guilty of "'activi-
ties aJmed at u ndc~m i n 1n g and weakening Soviet power"
on exactl y !he san1e day !he Stanford f.;;cuJty recon1·
mended disn)L'>sal of Franklin.
Bukovsky, about the same age as F ranh!in, is nO\V
in a ~loscow cell , servi ng a seven-year sen tence. after
\1h1 ch tie must spend six years in exile. 1-lis activities did
not lead to violence, nor did he incite others to riot.
\Vhat he did was indulge in some government criticism
ill a manner deemed unpatriotic by the Kremlin.
. f''rankhn's hearing was out in the open. It ran for
six '"'eeks. six days a Y.'eek. One mil li on \vords of tcsh~
mony were taken from 100 v.·itnesses. It was open to
the publ ic and pres~. It was broadcast over the campus
radio station. ~le held a press r onference afte r the hear·
1ng, vo"·1ng, "There bas to be counter·revolutionary
violenrP."
" .. ' ,.
.,1
' . . '
i: •. '. ' \
' '
That's why ll. Bruce Jo'ranklin. a te:iured Stainforrl
professor, was fired last week by the un1v\'.rsily'1 ~
of trustees. The action was recommended or .• ~2 vole
by a faculty tribunal and supported by su1,fonl'1 pttsi-
Bukovsky did not bold 1 press fri:-,:c1 e1i:!' al thlll'
tnd or his one-day lriaJ.
JJe was: reported lo have said, ''I d1~ so little." ''I THINK WHAT l'M TRYING TO >AY IS. 'HElP/"'
·~~~~-~~~~~~~--~~~~--~
Peace Advocates Submitted Proposal in 196~
He Did Wmrl They .t\sked
: WASHING'tON -President Nixon's
pea1;e plan, scorned by the Communist
side. bean a 11tartling resemblnnce in its
mmt lmportanl as-
pects to a proposal
by leading peace ad-
vocateJ submitted to
t b e President on
J une 30, 1969.
Those advocates in·
eluded Prof. Hana J.
Morgenthau, Mrs.
Martin Luther King,
Jr., Rep. Paul N.
McCloskey. Jr .• Pror. Edwin 0 . Rel-
echauer, form er Amba ssador to Japan,
various church offi cials, congressmen
anrl othen who could be considered well·
ml!!anlng and sincere In their convlclion
that Nlxon was not doing enough to end
the. war.
They listed !our main points in addition
to the troop withdrawals the President
had begun. In every respect, including a
troop withdrawal date, these points: cor-
respond to what Nixon actually began to
explore ln the 13 secret missions to Paris
Dn which he dispatched Dr. Henry A.
Kissinger beginning In August, 1969.
WHITE HOUSE OFFICIALS dug out
this proposal froJ» the President's flies to
support lh\11 contention that he has
already proposed what sincere peace ad·
voca tes urged, and more. They asked
l'f;duclion of the scale of the fightinF: in
every possible way. J1e has done that.
They asked creation of an interim body
to create a ne:'' broadly representative
eovernment in Vietnam. He has done:
Idleness;
First the good news: !\tr. Nixon's Full
Employment Budget Js going to wind up
in ba!3.nef: during fiscal J9'n!
And now the bad news: This means U1e
government'! going ·
another $3S to $40
billion in the r td ~
the biggest actual
budget deficit !iince
World War 11.
Bul don't worry
about IL As Com·
m er c: e Secret11ry
Maurice Stans nnd
Cll her adminislr.'lllon
offi<'ia ls expl ain it, il 's perfectly all right
to go that much ln th~ hole because:, for·
tunately, the:re arc a lot of people out of
work.
You set. u Mr. Stans txphlins It, if
qµr ti mll\!on unemployed h~d j<Jtx!, they
would be paying taxes and spendin.1t
wht1t's left ovtr. So there wouldn 't be
any derlclt.
IN FACT, tF unemployntent ioars
between now and the end of the llsca.l
Thomo.s Ke~, Editor
Alb1tt W, BaU.s
Editorial Page Editor
Tho '"11""'"1 .... "' lh• Dally
Pli(1t 1ttks ~onn find atlmu• late rsdtta . prcRnlin1 \h~
~PlPI'!"• llnd eomt. menlat'y on. topk:t of 1nti:tt.11t anCf
algnlficanct!. W proyldinr;:: a forum for tht' ~Ion ot ·our He.den'
opin\onl. and b7 ~tine the
cll\'ttlt vlrwpolntJ or lnfernnrd et>-
~~ ...... -"" -day.
Tuesday, February I, H7l
,,--·.,rt . ..-----· ' • I . I ..,, +
1 Richard Wilsoii' ·· · . '
lhal. They asked for a specific date for
withdrawal. He proposed that. They ask·
eel for a 11tandstlll ceasefire. lie has pro-
posed that.
Slill the , Viel Cong and lhe North Viet·
namese say no. and this .should be enough
to expose further the crue l deception of
those who have Insisted lhat all lhe
Pres ident ne:ed do is se:l a fina l
wlthdrtnval date so that prisoners of wa r
can come home and the war will -be end~
ed.
Now lhal this fiction has been exploded
the real Intent of the most edvanctd
peace advocates becomes more apparent.
Thi! amounts to complete: abandonment
of the government of South Vietnam -
"lock stock and barrel,'' as they say.
THE INTERESTING new development
is that leading presidentiaJ canWdates
shy away from that position. Neither Sen.
Edmund S. Muskie, nor Sen. Hubert H.
~rumphrey, to say nothing flf Sen. Henry
M. Jackson, wish to become irrevocably
pledged tG an instant uni J a t er a I
wlthdrawal by the Unlted States. Why
no!? They must certainly fear that Presi-
dent Nixon. having revealed his secret ef-
fort s which so nearly corresponds to that
urged by sincere peace advocates, can
comn1and majority support for having
done as much as humanly could be done
to end the war w1lh a complete American
wilhdrawal.
Few are \l.'illing to lake th e
responsibility for v"hat would happen in
Vietnam if all American support is
\~1ithd ra wn. Vie1namization is abandoned
and the Communists are permitted to
take 01Jer.
That ill the hard alternative Nixon
leaves with those who, not knowing y,·hal
he was doing, insisted that he was not.
doing enough . They are forced now into
lhe position of Senator Fulbright as ac-
cepting the inev itability of a Communist
takeover.
IN LONGER PERSPEC'ITVE the Com-
munist rejection of President Nixon's
peace plan could quite: likely mean that a
residual American force will re:ma in in
VJetnam and renewed bombing will be a
const ant threat th rough the presidential
election.
ll would be a bad mistake on the part
of North Vietnam to perm it that con-
dition to develop. If the men in Hanoi
understand America as well as they lhink
they do. they should at once perceive that
their best chance lies in a settlement
before rather than after the presidential
election.
By not exploiting th is chance. lhey
lak:e lwo large risks. The reelection of
President Nixon would confirm his policy
and ease the pressure for further con-
cessions. His defeat would not , it now .ap-
pears, necessarily assure a complete un~
conditional withdrawal of all troops and
all sup Jor the present government of
am.
Prosperity's Key
I
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• •
year in June, we may even have a Full
Employment Budget surplus! But let '!
not be 01Jerly optimistic.
In any event, the administration'ii ex-
citing fiscal concept not only c:heers us
all , but it's done wonder! for the jobless.
Take my fri end, Kenneth AJexander, an
unemployed ~I pepper stu~fer.
No sooner h d Mr. Alexander rtad ~1r.
Stans' explan lion than he went out and
charged a ma d pair ol water skis.
1'-fr. Ale:xan r 's wire, Jone, ei:prewd
surprise at his acUon. ("Now what have
you done. you mealh~Ad?" y,·as tile way
she e.xpre/ised it.) But onC'e he ex plained
the concept and assured her it had the
President's personal approval, she
relented.
"YOU l\tEAN BEC.-\PS£ you aren't
ma.king $212 a week 11tufring bell pe
you can afford new water skis?" e said
su.splciously.
"Right!" htt: said. "Th re: no strain at
all on my Full Employment Budget."
'.'What 1boul mt?'' she sald, getting
enthused. ''If I were fully employed at
my old job u a gandy dancer, I'd be
bringing home another Slll6 a wttk.''
"By golly!" be said, whipping out 1
Jl'f'ncil. "That's a total of $398. We can a!·
lord the paymenl!l on a rn11tched Sl·(oot
Chris Craft to match oor water 1kJs."
"Not to mention a matched ft)OUlon
olol•," Ibo sald. "And don't '°'1tt our
five kids, none of whom ls Cuny -or
even partially -employed, thank
goodnoss. Think of the talcHlom< poy
they're not taking home."
"Good thinking \ Let's see, l~ytaN>ld
Pbllbtn could make $100 a week 11 a hot
chestnut rletrrN:n while sit-months-old Philomen should bring in al least 20
~I.II an u a door stop ... .''
IN l\"O rn1E A.T ALL. the Alexander
family wasn't making a fabulous $33,280
a ye:ar, On an income like th is they coul d
easily afford their new 5\1,-bathroom
home, their condominium ln Aspen and
their Mercedes-Benz camper.
The four older children enjoyed the IS.
spero bike~ they'd not earned-for
themselves. n·hile lit tle Philomena cooed
happily in her ten:~peed baby carriage.
They were a little dlseppointcd when
Uiey discovered they dicln 't have the
money for a Grand Tour of Europe. They
did n't, that is, until Mr. Alexander
cleverly qu it not stuffing bell peppers and
became an unemployed plumber inslead
-thus tripling the galary he wasn 'L get-
ting overnlghL
AND, OBVIOUSLY, anybody with 11
FUii Employmept Income of SSS.328 a
year can ~fford a GrAnd Tour of Europe.
At least tftat's Whal 1'1r. Alexander's at·
lome:y tolrl the judge.
But as htr. Alexander said glumly to
f.~exander on visiting day: "It
seems a guy who r.an believe In R concl'!pl
like that alwa ys winds up in the White
I-louse or In jail."
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
If motorist. ore lo bt d ttd for
driving in 'bike lanes, then cyclisU
should be fined for riding in auto
lanes, running 1top ltgns and
UghU:, crosswalks, etc. ,
-DiogenoJ '7l
TM• ...... nf'IMft ,....,. ....._ ..
-nrY ,.._ ., ........ --. l...r
,..... ........... ..., .... INlllY ,......
'
OCWDCited
For Aiding
Recreatio1i .
~·
' I Guest Report
t:.t ......
By MIKE AB!!AM';ON
Far too ofte:n these days it :;eems that
various public agencies charged with prcr.
vidlng the amenities "'hich make up the
v11unted California life style: come under
allack because in the minds of some their
activities conflict with the en1Jironment.
\Valer development projects on both
the state and local: ~~vels. Jor example.
are ge:lting mercilessly kicked around
notwi thstanding the importance of wat er
to that lotal life style.
It's refreshing then y,·hen some of those
conc('rnc1 \l'ith the environment give
recognition to th e efforts of professional
administrators and their cili 7.cn directors
to truly provide a facilily able to balance
use of its y.·ater resource.
Tlt rS JS THE CASE with the Orange
County Water Districl which recently
drew editorial plaudits from Westem
Outdoor News. a specialized weekly
newspaper serving outdoor recreaLionisls
in the state.
"l\l any government al agencies, in-
terv.·oven vt'ilh their bureaucratic ball of
reel tape and their son1etim es delccl.able
rlesire lo serve the \r0vernmental
J\lachine rather than the people, couldn 't
care Jess about including recreation in
the ir operationa l schemes.'' \VON com·
111ented. ··Not so with the Orange County
W11ter District.,.
The publication specially praised the
OC\VD"s development of Anaheim Lake
as a trout fishing facility as an adjunct lo
il s pr ime function as a flood control basi n
BJld or water perColation p11r1>0scs. anfl
for development flf a 1,000-acre pheasant
hunting preserve on district lands.
IN ADDmON TO these i.nno'-'ative pro-
grams which must gladden the hearts of
veteran sportsmen • conservation ists
who hammered away in lhe 1950s at Jaws
then restricting such multiple use con-
cepts by most water agencies, the OC \\'D
has undertaken a fullblown program of
imaginative environmental enhancement
.and recreational development ..
Principal among these is the district's
new "Water Factory 21," an advanced
wastewater reclamaUon plant and
seawater desalting plant now under con·
SlnJC!ion. Costing $23 million !he nel'l
facility-which basically dev ops a
water resource whfch o · wou ld be
lost once y wash on a beach
-will have an ultimate capacily of
30,000 acre feet or water per year. enough
to meet lhc needs of 150,000 people.
AN ''ENVIRONMENTA i. Enhanr·
e:ment Plan" has been approved to pro-
vide parks and other recreatiooal
facilllle.!1 on the district 's Santa Ana
River properties, a new beach-picnic area
and even a golf driving range utilizing
lloatlng golr balls on one of lhe district's
WBter spreading Wins are also part of
the program. ·
As WON put ii :
"The OCWD, a progres.~h·e thinking
orgBniZRl.ion of employes who own and
man11ge much prime Orange Counly
pot.enU1l recreational land, has taken
gi1nt strides toward servln& Southern
California Spl)C"lsmen.
"The OCWO has drtamers, but more
Jmport.JnUy the dreamers art doers ... "
, Calli..,. Feature Suvlce
Quotes ·
Rott llllllP, Doly Qty -"Wt:.re bt<n
m•rrted ts )'ttrt ani:1 my hu!band still
notice! the girls. t think a man ls old
•hen hi stops looklnl;'
Ori'-!in of 'Mind
CJ
Your--Ps and Qs'
A reader in Fort Pierce. f'lor1da, takes
lssue with one or my answers in a recent
word.quiz t·olumn. The quei;tion dealt
with the origin of the phrase "'mind your
Ps and Qs."
The ans"·er l gave n·as: ''Tavern
owners, in old Engli sh alehouses, warned
reckless drinkers to
mind the pinls and
quarts being scored
do1vn 10 their ac-
counts." Th is is the
derivation !Suggested
in most etymology
'~·orks.
l\·1y reader :i;ug-
gesls that the phr.11se
actually comes from
the printing pr ofession, tvhen apprent icr4
cornposltors, \\'ho distributed handsrt
lvpc forms back into the cases. 1,·rre
admonished by their foremen to put the
"p" back into the P-<'.!!Se, and the "CJ"
b~ck into the CJ·rase becau:;c viP\\'ed up-
side do1~·n and h<H:k1rards, they look alike
to !he novice.
This is cerUunly a plausible source of
origin , bul the fart remains that in the
matter of "popular etymo lor:iPs" ~urh .1~
thi s, no one is certain. For in stanCt'.
Edwin Radford's book, •·unusual \Vords''
(Philosophical Library, 1946 ~ ~il'es (\vo
JYlssib!e deriva tions for "Ps and Qs".
TllE FIRST, and mos~ accepted bv
scholars. is the one I cited f\Vhic:h is alsO
lo be found in most rcferrnce l'•nrks. l
But th e seco nd. whic:h I had never heard
hcfore, has nothi ng lo do 11·1lh either
taverns or typesell1ng.
Rad fc:rrd traces its possible origin to the
Lnu is XIV period of huge wi l?s an d dCP)l
curtseys. The formal curtseys, he ex·
plains. required a "step" y,•ith the feet
and a deep, low bend of the body, in the
c·ourse fif' v.·hich the v.·1g might bcco1ne
deranged.
FRl::NCJI DANCl1\'G ni a s t e rs ,
therefore. c<1uliDned their Court pt1pil!!
\vith ··r.!ind your Picd s /feet ) 11nd QueueJ
(wigs!." If this sounds son1ev.hat far-
fctched and highf<1lulin , it is worlh keep-
ing in mind that rnany l::ng lish ex-
prpss1ons and phrases <tre corruptio ns
fr rin1 lhc French.
For instant('. one of the mn~t pnputa r
and persisten t ft1/se etymo!('lg1es i:; that nf
•·.~i rloin." The sto ry goc~ !hat a
p:irticu\;ir\y t'ho1cc l 'lll of mt at sn ap-
pcalc·d lo l\ing il t'nry VII of IO:ngtand la
noted lrc·nrhcrn1nn1 1h:it hC' onf'e placf'<I
his S\\'Ord on his plat<', \11uchrd the meat,
and proclaimed, ··1 dub lhl'e Sir Loil'!."
Tlll:-i IS f\!\TIABLE nonsense. of
course. The l't'1lrd "'s irloin" is ac (ua llv an
;rdaptatlon fif the old French "surli·n·gP."
fnrmed from s11r. n1ran ing "ahov~" and
lonAc. meaning •·loin." It 1s the p;irt fl[
th£ ln1n ;1txivf'. or in front of. thf' run1p ,
:i nd h.1:; br.f'n 11111~ knn"'·n in Fr:inrr fr1r
f'('n1u rtcs, l1)ng !~fore Henry VII <'Xistrcl.
As [or ··:i.1111d )'our Jls and Q~.'' \llU
ha'r rr•ur t:h•lll'C a111011g lhP t:1l'r·m. 0lhe
I~ pc ~c\\1ni::. or ! he danc1ng·rnasti'r
lh1·11ru·~. Frir :di we knnw, somf' t1pplc·r
lripprrl ov(!r A case of l.1·pc \1 h1le tr;iu1i;
to ct1 rt sey.
Formidable on Paper
'
\VA SHINGTON -President Nixon has
thrown together some: secret statistics rin
South Vietnam 's new combat ~eadiness.
rle will use these, presumably, to quir.t
the hawks who claim his profcrred
pul!out would leave
Vietnam vulnerable.
On paper at least.
So uth Vietnam's
armed forces ha1Je
never lookcit more
formidable. T o t a I
strength has jumped
l~9m 646,900 in Ja~u
ary I~. to 1,052,500.
Another 643.000 mili·
tian1en arc organized il1to regional and
popu lar fCM"ces on the local le1Jel. .1 ~
The South Vietnamese now h.andle all
ground con1bal, leaving the America ns
merely to defend themseJves from at·
tack. Saigon has put Jt new maneuver
battalions and l l artillecy battalions into
the !leld since 1969. This brings their
C{lmbat st rength to 189 maneuver bat-
Ulffin s, 47 field artillery battalions.
SOl\,t: UNITS HAVE fought fuoc.iously
under fire : others art unreliable.· In.the
~st. they have been able lo call for U.S.
supPort wht n they got In trouble. The
re:al test wUI come when they face a
showdown on tht battlefield and can no
longer count upon the Ameri cans to
rescve them.
Soalh Vietnamese pilots. wtlo Rre more
daring i l less skilled than their Ameriean
C()unterp1rts. h11ve 11lso stepped up thcir
air atlacks. They are now flyln~ ~OOul
7,000 sorties a month , compared to 4.oOO
during .January of 1969. Ital( o( their Air
strikes art ~galnst Communist troops
-----·----. ---·--~ ' I· ., , \
' ' r • jJack Anderson ·. ·! .,-. • ,_ . .)
iind. !IUpplic!\ in ne ighbo ring Laos, Cam·
bod1 a and North Vietnam. •
:;iOUTH VlETNAl\1 now ha:; a clozcft
fig hter.attack squ adr ons. wit h close lo
2!1(1 aircraft, compared to e i g h t
squadrons and 140 planes in July 19ti9.
:r11e number o! helicopter sqaadrons haJ
t~crcascd du.ring the same pe.riod from
five lo 15, \\'llh an even more isignificanl
Ju mp rrom 115 to 46) helicopters.
On the sea . the number or South
Vlelname:se O!)(rat1ng :;hips has more
than doubled, from 550 to· 1 125 since the
beginning of 1969. '
Statistically. Presid..ent Nixon 's
strategy o{ building South Vielname!\e
slrength in stride with the American w~ilra wal appears successful . But the
military tesl is yet to come.
B11 George --~
Dear George:
Thanks for your pamphlet, "ffo1¥
to Ask the Boss r or A Ral~ ... Jt
ga"e me Jrvaluab\e advlce.t I
w'ou ldh"t hAoJe knowif how tn go
Aboul this other'Arise, but, as it
devclope<:I , .my boss gave me 11
whopping raise! Thanks!
·DELIGHTED t'AN
De11 r Delighted ·
l{e DID ? Gee . t wouldn 't ever
ha ve the nerve to lrj that duff.
,1 c
•
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~·Jlli1 !' I t '·
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• •
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I 1 I 1 JI !111 r
I"· I 1! 11u·
'If f II 'I ,11·1
QUEE NIE By Phil lnterlandi
/
I d(/n.l lr.no\v \\'ha t to say, but I think we just passed
t!ll' ]1tt!f.(l'."
-~~~~~~~~~~~~-
lVlcC losl{ey 'Seel{s
frt 111 d Disclosure
1 11~10'\ 1l 'P l l n cp.
l':iul "-:. 1\lc<·rf"t';key (R-Cal1f.t,
h;1s C;tllcd un I 'resident Nixon
!•1 rnakc ;1 full disclosure of
1·111.!•·11Julions rcceivrd for his
Jt·!'l(•<Ju>n carnpaign thi s
~ ( : I'.
·I !li 111\.. 1hc l'rl'sidcnt has
:111 uhl if':.J iu11 ·tn clisclnse his
1·rir1! ·1 1i11t 1 1111~. 1•:-;pe('ial!y those
1 ' ., •"! Jt:~1 lrl·fnre nnd ju:;t
. 111·1· (·1 ·1!:•111 1·11111p;inies 1vcrc
:111.il',('d 111 1111'.TC:L~C t heir
j li'l•·I"~." he S:lid_
Tl1r 1\c:publiran
i·,1,,. t'~~,:1:in. \\·ll11 Is challcng-
1"' \1\1111 111 !hP Jll:ir('h 7 Ne1v
!I •"1p 111rt· pre~ i etc nt i a!
1 1 "1 1·~. ;.iJ.o.;o <•·itic·iz!'d the
.,, l''.11.·1t1on ,,f :'cerctarv of
1'11'·'1t'1 o·r J\1;1uricc A. Stans
', I> "•"11'' '\i-.;nn".•: thief fund-
r 1 r lur tht• l!l'l'.l campaign-
. ,·,,,, ult·:1 nr l1~1viru: Stans
n · '' In Ill' Nixon rhicf fund
r. • ,r io.; 1·1•"f:i1nly ·nnl in kePp-
1• \1•!h hunt•st f.:O'>ernmcnt,''
·11·!
'.I,·( '!oshpy ~:ial if Nixon's
f111·rtr:11 ;inf.! c:inrrr;iign i s
1111er:1!1 11~ :1ho1'c-bo;.1rd. "there
i . <t·r1 :1111l.1· nn rcasnn \.l'h~
11 11•y !'1io11ld11't bl' 1villing lo
~11 .1,1,C' lhc f[tCls ."' 'I · f'lns krv sairl S 1 11 n s "
1• "11ltl hf' r:11sing rnnncy '·from
11 ,.. 1<·1·v j)f'•iplc he':; been dcal-
11~« 11i1J1 f11r !he past four
\f':1rs ;ind c(Hild b e dealing
'" "1 fnr !hr· nex t fr1·~ir."
11 1r.11:1!1n~: Star ~ ao.: lhl'
1 1 ·I' !1111dr:11 s!'r. lie s:iicl. is
I : ,, h·1 1 ir1 ~ a fnx in .charge of
i 11 11 :11 ;1 ehiC'kcn. cnnp.
\I 1 11,.11 .<> ro11f('r1•nrc prior
1 • "·" 1 rl ;i \'i; of rarnp;i igni ng in
'• ·1 !J:1111'l<:hir<'. Tif,£'Closkey
•• c· r r Ii<' f'ndorscr11cnt of
'1 ~-.:1rh11,1·t1s Young Caucus.
)'orlv Off
Jo h ;{7%
()r Ti n1c
1.11-: ,\\Lt·:L r·:s 11\P)
'.1 •·1 ~:1 111 Ynrly. tr)·Jng f11r
1111· I l1'Jll<1tT:1t 1e Preli il:lcntial
nrn11 11111n11. 11~s out of thf' ci-
1 ·.; I p1 rccn1 of the l'mrking
d • dunng the f;1<>t half of
l'•i l. 1·1 1~ rt·curds say.
\ rl1·ords t:heck disclosed
'' ·:1 11:1s :ibscnt 46 of 124
1\• I ·11~ J:1ys lil'111·ccn July I
;uul IJC'l'. :11. l\1ost of his ab-
. 1 tr!( \·1~111 11·ac; taken UP' by a
'' •!:iy round-thr--v.·orld trip in
.11:1\' and Augu~t.
Tf> .. rn;n n1 al>:n spent .some
fi 111 ,.. Ptin1 paigning fo r the
J Jc 111 o c r a ti c presid•~ntia l
ll<in1i11:1tin11. :iltcr scvcraT out-
nf'~ 1;i1r tri ps to test his J1up-
r11 t I Ir ;1Jso spe nt a wc1~k in
>c'f't•n1hf•r on vacation in
1·;H1ulco.
1'hc leader of the youth
caucus, is Michael Harrett 1~
Cambridge, said the organiza-
·-•
I ' ! • ' I
[
l·
l
DO I [,\ VL Ti) " . . I I, I INCOME TAX
ON Tl IC LL:: 1:.'~.','. ·~,:I .. CCt.ED S I RECEIV ED
RECEl"TL ! ?
1 t.. -::..11: 0. BERGERON
Vciy p•obol"', t!.,. ci ''" ,.., -v l i~ l'" ..,pt fr:im Fc-deuil h1c:om• Ta1irtlo11.
lnsura ,ltl" ~,,. c: • , ~ o / ., ' :1 I 1,, ·eliti"f "' fo1 the pVrpoi.e of p1o•ldl1ttJ
hi"di offt• tl·:: c.f".,.1, 111 f t t 1 :· .. ev:·•. if t~e in1u ra11c:e money wen poid to yo•
in 1.et•1foc:tlo" of 11 c> ..• :. c.r f~r ' r c:r •cr lucrDIP c:on1iC~otio11, tit.11 all or a partlo11
of tlle r " •·y ro-'" l•e t•t .l'll '" ~ ., r·s lncrore for fcdcroll lnco,.,. Tar purpoH"i.
Thii opplu:i. 11.\11 to d ~·o;~ b' • .,\\ ~··"' ~ .... nr oc ~·d .. nt.
1
11,.d heohh in1•ron1c:~ polici.-s.
A~ 0 qcn< 1 ! rul'?', \'• "' • ·. I .. 1 "~ I ·~ le.• I"-..,;>! I you orl' the iU l"I '111t9. spouu or
0 rel.I ,,. c,I th · f, r' I""' i • • • t ,.,,., "'c•e po!d-l1t o l111J'p """lo yo•"
the bei.-1,iclfy rf t' · r I' 1· '1 .,. 1 •r·~ I o> lo I~'" opplkotion ol the rule
ifl your r:~ic, '' w. •.; b ~. 1: l cl ~'J l•o-i o tot to"'11ltt1n l -before fl1l1t9
tl-e toi rctu•f!.
11 ve11 ho •r o <l ,.. ' ' o~ 1
q~l1t i11n1w 11 h" o ~· ·I 11 I
., r, pJ,.osc write .or eoll. WheMVl'r posMble,
E~gc~t:n / l't·;;.
------DAIL 'f PILOT £
A~I NF:S TY
OPPOSED
Ps ychiatrist S ltys Prt~ss,
Police Help ~kyjltcke rs \ CULU ililBliS. llhtu (AP) -
'111(' National Co1nnu1l'Klrr of
1 he An1erica11 Lt'g1011 sa)'I
the v f' l r r 11 n s 'organizaliOI
s!rongly op\lO.~rs 1111111t'Slv for
\'1e uu11u 1!1·St·r1rrs 11.hu ·have
fll'd to C;~11.11t.i or S11.·c-dt:n.
DALL.A.$, (l lP!l A
psychiatrist \\'ho has studiC'd
airplane h1jarkers !':ilyi; th.-
press and certain la1\' officer.~
actually have helped :-;k~ ·
J?Ckrrs by arcom1nodating
lhcir wishes for publ ici ty ;ind
.sc-lf destruction.
.. The n1edia have bt·traycd
this nntion·s skyjacking de1rr·
rrnce systems,'' said llr.
David G. llubbard, y,·ho has
created a .sprclal center lo
trl'llt nir piratf's anti has \1T1t-
ll'n a book on the subj('{'!.
I le said nc-v.·spaper co verage._
of hijackings in progress bas
•·st1n1ulall'd their sick need for
notoril'IY and ha\1e 1·11111-
munica ted skyjacker te<·luu-
ques like Typhoid !\lary tu a
nursery.·•
1-lis con1n1f'nt s c:o1n11• af!f'r a
hij11c k1ng alll'Tnpt Saturd:t~' i11
\1•hieh !!:11Jb:1rd spukt> tlu·ough
a t111·re-11";1~· 1elcphont• h('l(lkup
\\'i1h the :llr pir:1lc ;ind T\\':\
officia ls in Nl'I'' York.
'l'he skyjacker, l ;arrctl B.
Trapnell. who d e 111 a 11 cl e d
ransoni and a fl ight to Dallas
and Europe in th at order , \1-;1s
shot. wounded and captun•d.
I lttbbard dc-c\ined to reveal l11 s
role in the atte1npt, s;iying 1t
1\:0Uld violate his reeon1-
mcndations for 11e11·s 1ncd1;i
coverage.
Hubbard a I s o criticized
policemen who th in k the solu-
lt{l!l i~ to .~hc111t ~k1J.11 ]..,•rs r•r
m:1I-.~· Slll'C !ht• tl!11·~ l'<1ugh1 grt
1!1» 1\o>,101 t:M:'n-~111
"ll's a ~n·;11 tll'al lil.t• !1•11111~~
;1 l'htld, '!! )\Ill J! ht• h;1d. I II
j.!111' ~l)ll \';)11d1 '" )11• ~JJd, II\·
d1eating rnu~r !11J:icl-.1T~ t ·.11'!'~ I
a 11 1~h ,fnr th l'll' ti1111 dt·:tlh~
I lubb:ird r('l'I 1111)J H'll!!t·d ! I I l'
l'h:HlJ.:l'S !hl' pr1·'~ ~h11uld l:lh.t·I
tu ;1l\!•1 1:ll1' !ht· pr11h\,•1n I
-El11nu1:it1· ~11111Lll.u11'1\t1 SI
CO\'l'.'J":l~l' tlf a h1J.i1·h.11 11:. :
-El11111nntt> 111un1l on 11I 1·u11 1 \'('rs;111111\S lx·I II ('1'11 1 ht' :-.k \
jacker .an1! offle1.1ts --.111111• "''
~1hic:h Huhhant ~:1 1d \1i·1·l
hro<t<.IC'a~t h1·1· 01 1'r :i \'1'11
\\irk t'11y llad10 ~t1!u111 S.tlur-
d;1v.
:.__Bury l\l'll'~p:111rr rf')l(1r1 ..; tlf
hij:1ckin1:s 011 p:11't• I tor
1l t't'Jlt'I', 111sh•ad o! r 11 !II" !ht•' st~r~· lro11l paj.!l' ll'l '.d1nt 111 I
-\\'i!h!111kl spt'<',11\'S ,l[ !l\••1 sk~i;trkt•rs 1111·tli••d·· ;11 1c f
\\'1!!1l1<ild 1li·l.11ls .i f li.•11
lht~ l11ja('ki'r 11 :1s ;q •p11•lw11d1'd
tir .~tnpp1•d. '
lluhl.i:trd said h:1s11·;1\I~. t l1!' I
prt'~s 111u~t use 111 fl 1· f'
res1raint. I
"Tl11•v 110 thi:; in riol s. Thi-; I
is t'\:11·tl.v lht• ~:11111·. JI is ru11
l't'nsor:-l11p.·• hr :;;1al.
I It• :-;;11ti II hl'll
t'<ll't•sdrtip <lfl l'"llli'I' .1!1••1\';
ht1!11r1~n :-.kyja1·t,·r-. ;in 11 1 ;1utl1ur1t1es, it is p:1rlJt"ularl~ I
haza rduu>: .
•·Tht' ~1 strrn of nlonitoring
air!int• cn1n1nun1cation <"h<1n-
!!t·!<1 dur:1!g h1j:ii·k1n;::s l\':tS
: t:irll'd 111 l):il!a .... pract11·Ml 111
t'htcagu ·;1n1t pt'l'll'l'h'd 1n NC-\1'
Yurt..," ht• :..nd .
Thr l'h•rt't' 1'rruw wa!'I
pt1r1·h11.~rcl li~ Hub l!r11ok1ni.:.,ot
\'1slu. 11 ho alsn ho11gl1t 11 1910
I luprnobil1· fo r $6.200
••'fl1f• (lrf•f1t -Grf!ftt .'tl1111r !!''
FABU LOUS ENTERTAINMENT
HELD OVER
ONE EXTRA WEEK -THRU SAT. ONl Y
Sensational Sounds of Yesterday and Today
MIKE & LENI
AND THE AREA 'S ZA NIEST ENTERTAINER
ROSCOE HOLLAND
Now i11 h is 9th year at Kona
OUTRIGGER ROOM
KONA ··LANES
2699 HARBOR BLVD .
COSTA MESA
\.
'
CC'.;TA l l "~I\
61\..i<i i
CORONA d•I MAR
673-94 50 19 mg.·"tar".1.3 mg.~ctttite av. p~ C'P'~te.fTC Repon AUG:71.
..
'·
•
•
•
\'
II OAltY PILOT -------
China: Pride as a J;>eople
Visitor Sees Fruits uf 'Chinese-only' Polic:r__
!ii i?.! t111n , 2.'I , t'rl11N1lio11
rrportl'r fo r thr //1n1 0J ulit
Star-B11 llt'ln1. 11isi1etl 1110111·
la11d Chn10 Au{/ 23 rli ro1111l1.
Se pt. 25 . .Shi' rs 1Jelie1•fd
t he f irst (.'/1n1esr .An1l'rH'1111
journall5! to tuter China
.~i11cr 19.~8 I/ere fl l i' her
1 111prl'.~\111 ·
U~ ARLEN I-: LU~1
!f you ask a Chinf'St' citizen
"''hat he think<: about the com-
ing \'lSJl of President Nixon,
lhe response 1~·ill almost in·
vRriably he i1 tri un1phanl grin
orgood-oatured laughter.
Or. as 0111· oflit\a\ in Canion
!old 111r. ··He ,.,.rint~ to ron1e.
sit duv•n ;i nd talk. If he didn't
y.·:111! to cotnc. we would not
ha1•e 111 vited hirn . I-le asked to
be in vited to 8it down al the
table. We are 1vilti11g."
Pos ters. radio broadcasts.
11e1\·spaper stories and oHlcial
rh<·!11ri~. -l'CV!le ··u.s, iin·
pe rii:l!rsts". but the Chinese
( S1•1·11nd t11 a
.'ieriea)
v.·ill add, almost in the, same
br eath. that they consider the
people · of the United States
tMir friends.
The "imperialists." in the
Chinese Lexicon, arc the
American leaders.
But tnt'l tbouCll Nixon
mlgbt be ,......,. n the chlef
~ .. •ltllud• _ ....... ~lo
llltan ... IO!l.
Piii ti lllo -..iotioo .,. ._ h tr•1ttrts
-.. CW.111 ** .. thfir _,, ......... 11111 Ila& ~:~ ...... .
Chinl'I potjtioft IS I Third
Workl Juder.
Indeed, this waa one of the
major lmprealOns I got dur-. inl mY tr1vel1 ln China : the
Week for Bikes
' • ···~··
. , (
U,.I 11~
GIANT CHARACTERS ON SIGNBOARDS REPRESENT MAO'S DICTUM
Message Says 'Unite to Win Stilt Gre1ter Victories'
pnde or a people who l1 ave
bull\ a ne\v nation in 22 years.
China could be eh;1r;1e-
tcrized as B naUon of slo~ans
artcr the fashion or "'Quolil·
lions fron1 Chainnan ?\tao .,
One in par1icular !ieeins to
capture the spirit of the coun·
try: "'Further the policy o{
'mt1intaining independt:n<·c. t<'k·
ing the inilia!lve in our 01vn
hands and relying on our own
self-efforts."
By applying this dictum of
Mao Tse-tung. the Chinese
have accomplished significant
successes since the Com-
munist takeover in 1949.
Moreover, the Chinese I met
al-delJglUd In polntlnf In ...,,,..... adlloved .._ 111111
-flovtet -Jolt Ind
tcdlnktlns PACkM their bqs
arlll. kit Chi.na for homo.
TelUf. a Cllilon ofliclll
potnU to • trifae built In
'"rt®td time when tvtrybody
said voe could not."
A Shanghai worker proud ly
' -·
explains the function of a
n111chine <J c s i g n e d and
assemhled 111 the watch fac-
tory "'hf·re he 1vorks.
A pc;isunt tells how crop
yields have increased and how
a 1>!01 of sandy soil has been
turned into production.
A Peking doctor tells how
millions tnore pe<iple now have
n1edical care.
A Shanghai officia l det ails
ho\v many 1norc children go to
school.
i\1ore often than not lhe
people I met said such ac-
complishments were acllleved
by "Chinese only." without
economic or tethnlcal help
from ether n1tioM.
E\·etphtre f went, I llW
pride In 1elil~vlng what
wastetnlfl wopld consider
neaB&fMt 1ucce11e1 such as
the devtlo,wnent of mach ines
progrll'h,,.M by computers to
do tool lying or roll fin e alp.
per filament.
On communes, peas a a ts
N i xo n T eam Off
proudly show kni ves. tractors
and pumps made with their O"''" hands in shed-like fac-
tories.
China toda y ca nnot be coin·
pared \vith advanc t d
technological nations in the
'vorld. Chin a today can only be
compared v.·ilh China o f
yester-year·the emerging in·
dustrial nil lion with a
ba ckward past. '
Still . the Chinese recognize ,
the neeO. as one Canton of-
ficial put it. to "!earn many
things from capitalist C<lUTI·
tries" in technical fields.
At every com mW'lf, factory
and school I •lllt.d, 101M01M
would uou1ll1 Ill' -hint
llkt, "We ha.. l!lldt falnl,
but we art •Ull betkward. We
have mucli to "6. We invttt
y<.iur crltlcltm1."
But coMlder the life of one
pea11ht, Q.year-old, toothlell
Liu Qua111-ctii whom I l11lt fn
his home on the Chin
Hut1gary Peoples' Frlendsh)p
commune outside Peking.
Twenty.five years ago, he
had little-mthing mo re than
shelter in a stable shared with
the !a ndlord"s ho r a es ,
backbrea king work with not
tnoug h to eat and painful
memories of .1 mother 1nd
grandparents who died of
starvation .
For greatest gro\vtl1 greatest salecy !
Plan a .pros_p!'rous fuhire Jor ')'Ourself by picking one or n1orc fast-gl"O\Vingl GUARANTEED
INCOME certificate accot1rrts at Laguna J:Nfcral ,,·hil(' th{'sc all-tin1c.-l1igh interest rates pre-
vail. Interest on all accol1ots i::; rompoundcd dailr. paid quar!(·rl~·.
•gQ da)' intc rc~l forfriturc ror car!y \\"ithdr3.\\':t1.
LAGUNA NlC UEL RHANCH
3 Monarch B.11· P];izn
South Lqi.u1a . c.;1,r. 92677
Telephone; <196-1~01
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
110\lf. OFr tC-E
~{)I) (J1r;111 :\1r 11•1<"
L.1J:11na HC'.tt h, C:.ilif. 'L'Gj~
"Jck·phuuc: ·HJ l.";jll
•
\
~-' '\ f'LE\IENTE DR.-\1\"Cll r.o r \:urcJ, El C:;1n1ino Rt-~!
s.11! llrn1entr. (;:i lif. 9267.:!
·r~·l1·p!1one: ·19~·1l9:J
WASHINGTON 1AP l -The
week of M1y t will be Nalional
Blke«>logy w .. k.
Rep5. Seymour ilalptrn ! R-
N.Y. ) Edward Koch, (0-N.Y I
and Jerome Waldie, (0.Calif.)
bl~ introduced 1 reaoluUon
calling for the Blkecology
designaUon. They said In 1
Jo$nt statement bicycle riding
ts healthy exercise and a
means of curbing air pollution.
WASHINGTON 1AP) -An advance team of techni·
cians and experts paving the way for President Nixon 's
forthcoming China vis it was reported in Guam P\-1onday
and due to arrive in Peking today. Today. Liu has his ownl-----------------------------------------
President Nixon. meanwhile, was descMbed by the
White House as "doing a good deal of reading" in prepara-
tion for hi11 forthcoming trip, but not attempting to learn
the Chinese language.
"Thtrt will be lnterprttert to takt c1re of that ," said
press secretary Ronald L. Zltaler.
' "tit· ·•~sh ::
home of four rooms, a rood-
sized courtyard garden, a cou-
ple 0£ pJgs, goat! I n d
chlcken9, his own
\\"ell, enough clothing a n d
food , children who have been
educated and a grandson
whose future looks bright
For Top Sports Coverage
Read the DAILY PILOT
• All THE GOOD SONGS I Y All THE SUPIRSTARS eKWIZ 1480 AM llADIO e All THE GOOD SONGS IY AU TllE SUPERSTAltS • KWIZ 1480 Alll ~ADIO •• • All THE GOOD SONGS BY All THE SUPERSTARS • All THE GOOO • > ::: > :::
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Uf'I TtltPhllt
FANIA DA\<15 JORDAN HUSTLED AWAY BY POLICE
In San Jon·, Angel1'1 Sister Vows More Protest
Angela, Davis Sister
Jailed Over Protest
SAN JOSE (UPI) -Angela
Davis' sister, arrested with 17
others • outside a heavily·
guarded courthouse. said she
wOuld conlinue demonstrating
to get "justice'' for tHc jailed
black militant.
Fania Davis Jordan and the
others were taken into custody
Monday under tough regula-
tions set down for Miss Davis'
murder, kidnap, conspiracy
1 Arrested
In l<'atal
Auto Blast
OAKLAND (AP I -Police
arrested a 25·ye11r-0ld woman
pharmacist in the bomb ex-
plosion which destroyed her
car and kil!ed a man inside,
Tom DavenpOrt.
Booked l\lnnday for in·
vestigalion of murder and
possession of transportation of
dangerous explosives was
Stephanie Kline of San Fran-
ci;co.
A car reglslered in her
name was destroyed in the
blast early Sunday in the
payking lot of <1n all-night
restaurant. Davenport. 22, was
blown to pieces.
Police said that after they
named her as the car owner
she called Sundav and pro-
mised to come in. Monda y to
answer questions. She ap-
peared with her attorney, Paul
Harris, and after an hour and
a half of questioning was ar·
rested.
"She "'as not in that car.
She docs not kn0\1' that
person." J~arris told reporters,
refe rring lo Davenport.
Pollce sai<I Davenport ;ip-
parenlly was holding a
pov;erful fra!:mentation bomb
in his lap as he sat Jn the ca r
when the explosion took place.
A 9 mm . automatic w1lh cli p
and ammunition was found in
the ruins of the burned ca r,
they said.
Police sa \d Sunday th at
Davenrort, ..,,·ho lived i n
Berkeley, had no k n o \\' n
radical connections. But on
Monday officers said he may
have been a member of !he
Black Panther Party in 1968.
Steel Pla1it
On Strike
f1t Fontana
" FONTANA (AP ) -\\'orkers
struck the Kaiser Steel Corp.
plant here, largest steel mill
west Qf the Mississippi. after
rejecting a sha ring plan of-
fered by Kaiser as a substitute
~or incentive _pa v.
The strike cwas called arter
nearly 70 percent of the eli gi-
ble v•orkeq at t!J.e plant voted
2.446 to 2,179 against lhe shar-
ing plait, a ~par at~ i ! 'u e
negotiated after t h e na-
tionwide steel ·contract last
faU . The strike. first since a
1965 wildcat walkout , will af-
fect about 6.800 workers.
Union officials said it has the
•pproval of 1. W. Abel , presi-
dent, Uni~ Steelwork ers of
Atnerica, AF L-C IO, and Fran)!:
I
trial . They .... ·ere released after
a b:iil hearing, most of them
od their own recognizance.
Defense Attorney Leo Bran-
ton, the newest lawyer to jciin
Miiss Davis' case, argued the
action was "blatantly un-
constitutional'' and asked the
judge to prohibit rurther ar·
rests during pea e e f u I
demonstrations outsi de the
courthouse.
Branton also asked for the
trial site to be moved a second
ti m e . a r g u in g that the
elaborate securlty measures
t.'l ken 'vould make jurors think
Miss navis "must be some
kind or \\'i!d , demented
animaL"
Superior Court J u d g e
Richard E. Arnnson took the
requests and several others
under advisement and recess·
ed the hearing until Wed-
nesday.
The demonst ralion out<;ide
the building began while fina l
pr e-tria l defense motions \l:ere
being argued for the first time
in an extensively relhodeled
60-seat courtroom. jail and
courthouse in San Jose.
Santa Clara County sheriff's
cleputies arrested t I women
end seven men under a new
California law for picketing
outside the courthouse in an
area designated as restricted
by the presiding judge.
"I'm going to continue to ex-
ercise my r ig h t s to
demonstrate," Mrs. Jordan
said at a Municipal Court
hearing.
Europea1i
Craft Orbits
V:\r;"OENBERG AFB (UPI)
-NASA ~has fired a IS.sided
European satellite into a Jong.
lopsi ded orbit.
for a price of $6.S mil!ion.
NASA i\tonday put into space
on a three-stage Delta rocket
a satellite belonging to the
European Space Re s e a r c h
Organization.
The vehicle, olfic1a1ly known
<1s the Highlv Eccentric Orbit
Sale.!ll!e ~llEOS-a2 1, wa s
designed to study l he
magnetosphere, l'l teardrop-
shaped magnetic envelope sur-
rounding the Earth and form·
ed by the solar wind blowing
on the Earth's magnetic field .
NASA said .
The satelLite 's orbit is 253
miles by 151.995 miles. lt will
be monitored by the European
Space Operations Center at
Dannstadt, West Germany
.. , ·----·-.. ... ~ -. . .. . •, --........
Tut\d1y , rtbru&fY 1, lCJ72 DAILY PILOT It -------
Settlement Seen Gr·o11p Disavow s Race lcl ea
Longslwre Strike SAN FRANCISCO f AP) -!IOCial ra("tors which C'llU$e
The An1erlcan Physkal Socle· blaeks lo have rnOre c,q~dren
~rber. ll prnfeSM>r or physict
at Columbia University. fou.iht
unsuccessfully h1 rule the
resolutlo n out tif ardtr, ~ayln~
1t wa11. not rt'!t.vanl to the
~oclety 's purpose He ..,,. a s Talks Resuming
' . vo led dov•n.
than whites might ~ fl ty has lrntatlv ely di..savowed pool l)f undeslrabli.,tsgP in
support for Nobel Prize-~·1n-the black population. •
ning phys lclSt W i I I I a m Reached at his hon1e for
Shockley and his theories that coinment, Shockley s a .Id tif.
bl:u:ks are l.?.t'netlcollv in ferior hlld (·onfidenee the APS 1·uun-1'•·-----------. and less intelligent l 11 ll n cil would not approve thr
SAN FRANCISCO (UPl ) -the strike will ht ended by ·whites. resolution,
Both si des in the ll~ay old negoUations and that a volun-The vole came during the "I have enough fa ith In thr
West Coast !ongshoremen's tary agreement will be reach· dinner hour Monday W1he1
11 elective proces!! and general fewer than 100 members o l 1l" "ooci i·udgment of the 1~pula· walkout agr~ to meet again ed before Congress can act . · 1 pr seiit M 0 r, • soc1e Y were e · ' li on to fee l it 1s most u lkely
today am id some speculation than 1.0CKI physicists nre here that such 3 position so.. far
that ttl l Id .. _ for a \\'Pek or scicnliftl' a se emen cou ~ s H I E removed frorn the purposes of
reached before the govern-en. 3J'l <e to nte1• sessions. Shockley, an APS the APS wlll ~ appro\'ed hy '1 . "' member, did not attend l\ton-lhat Dodi«" said Shock!f:')'. ment is again forced to tn-day·s 1neetlnJ.(. .1 1 ed
tervene. The resolution called on the The counci 5 expect 10
Reprrse ntatives of th e California's P1·im_ ary society 'ro ~ubli,cly disav~w ~:~~-the 1T1aller up later this I
IS,000-member Internationa l "anv pro essiona sµpport or TI1e vote to approve th"
Long s horemen' s and \Villiam Shockley in the pro-resolution introduced by Steve 1
SACRAMENTO (AP) sucress:• m4lgatlon of his r a c i 5 1 Newman of Con1pton. Calif , Warehousemen's Union and _ _, f th · '' "' f I I c 1· n 11 y
jewels by joseph
'liearc:hes for jewels
c..-i .. 111 vnw1111t111 t...,.,,~ '* ''"'""~
1t1 c111'1 *'' •••• 11 1 llrrn .. ,.. ..
1t111wt.llt•• ·~~'1111, ""'• ~"' .. '"~ euwrt '"" {lr.iwl t v11vt1i.911 11 ...
11y1 m1rlitl •llut.
\¥1 W•ll Ill .U•1M k t •lrnllll Y-
.. ,." t.W .. ,,11, rt111r<ll114 lb1lt I U> .. M,
C•ll Mr, J•••twl •t Mt. l'tl'tl •I .... -
Polilical endorsements don't "'fhe eiruorsement O so-eories. 10 0 dre\I' :tboul a doz.en opponents the Pacific J1,1aritime Associa-called prominent f i ~ 11 res rcpre~ent the position of the alter "lniost an 1,,,11, of 1,-'==== \\:in presidential contests, says h" h r th " tion n1et ~1onday for more means he'll gel his \nle and society, lo "' IC ITIOSl 0 c somelirnts en1otional debate South Co 1tt Pl11•
than an hour in the first Sen. Vance 1-lartke in declar-niaybe his \\'1fe's vote, if they natirin·s physicists belong, the nrtended by a haU-dozen black s,i1tol •' th• 5111 Oi190 Fw y
ing he 's in the California .are gettin~ aloni;:," s a 1 d resolution mu st be approved Af'S members. I C o1t1 M•1• S40-90b6
bargaining session since the d · 1 II tk b the s001·ety"s go1•cr11l11"[ _ _:c><:1'~.!".'._'i~~~~~_'._l_ll:.;;;;~~~~~;;;~;;;;;;~ De mo c r at i c presl entia nr e. Y "'-" Society president nr Robert strike resumed Jan. 17. No primary for sure. "l'ni irrc\'OCably committed council, composed of about 20 _ --
progress wus reported. Hartke (D-lnd .), said Mon-to 1naking this rare." said elected members.
'fh e union currently is at-day endorsement of "so-called Hartke [n ;111nouncing his pla ns Officials of the society said
tempting to plug leaks in the prominent fi gures" can mean to enter lhe C a J i f o r n i a thev believed it was the first
strike by halting cargo coming little in California _ although prin1ary. lie said he v.•ill soon suc'h action ever taken against
into the Uni!'ed States froin he would •welcome the en· niln1e four leaders of his ~ :iociety 1nember, especially
ships diverted to the ports of dorsement of any high-ranking Cali fornia can1paign, \~·Ith a one as prominent as a Nobel
Ad11r1111mt~I
Vancouver. B.C., and California Democrats. chairman and vice·chairman l'rize "'ianer.
Ensenada. Mexico. Shippers. Although n1a,ior California in both Northern and Southern Shockley. 61. is professor Artificial Teeth Never Felt
Now ... Plastic Cream
Invention For Artificial Teeth
tto\\1ever, have expressed their Democratic officeholders have Califo rn ia . physics at Stanford Universi ty So Natural Before
thut ha• rcvolut1on1ztd denture
wrnr1111.
li!spleasure over such tactics. committed themselves to sup· J~is national camp a i g n in nearby Palo Alto and won
th C f·r ' h N 11 956 1'•11' lorthefirstt1mt.~1t11ctolTl'TS:I ''This is Canada, not e porting Sen. Edmund Muskie manager is a a 1 orn1an. t e obe n l · 111.11ltic cream th1tho!d,oJentur.:1aw
It Ir!~ yo11 bite haultr. rhew ht.I·
tfr. t lll more naturally. t'1ll.or11<:NT
li1st1 tor houn. lit1i1t1 moi•turc,
J ~n lurr11 th11t fil 11.rc cMrnllal to
hraHh. ~your dcnti11 rr1ul1rly.
C.ct raay·t<>-usc F1xoor.NT Ocntur•
Adhtai\'e Cream.
United States," a shippers of ~1aine in his run for the Gerald N. Hill, San FFaocisco ~le c 1 a ims blacks are nevrr1~rorr-lorm~anclast1c mrm ·
spokesman said in Vancouver presidency, flartke told a attorney and former pre sident genetically inferior fl) whites brane th1t lu/f,. hold lhtm 10 "" no/"'"' h"urs flf JOI" m111.1lh. It'• a Monday. "We here in Canada new~ conference ''T do not of the Ca\lfornia Democratic an<i as a re-suit. less in-unique tliM:overycallt<! Fixoo~.1•/l.,
cannot sit idly by and accept 1 _.::thi.::'::nk:_::th:::•.:.'.::i•::•::":._'::'n.:d.::ex:..:.or_r.:_u.:.tu_r.:.•_C:._.::o.:_u_n.:.c.:...i _l. ________ te.:.l_li::g•_n_t._H_e_sa_i_d_h_e_r,_a_c_s_th_a_t _____________________ _
the proposition that our portsi·
can be Utrottled for the con-
"enience or the international
longshore union in the U.S."
U.S. shippers have indicated
they hope Congress v.·ould att
on President Nixon 's request
for compulsory a rbitration. A
union leader said t h e
maneuvering by legislators
would dela y a quick set-
tlement because the PMA
n1i ght be reluctant to bargain
jf there was hope for govern-
ment action.
However in Los Angeles,
John ?-.1acEvoy , regional direc-
tor of the Pt-.1A, said he thinks
Lost Scouts
Uuder Fire,
Leader Says
SAN DJMAS (UPI) - A Boy
Scout Jeade-r said Monday he
exchanged shots with gunmen
in the. San Gabriel mountains
where he and 10 boys were
lost during the weekend.
Robert W. lloffman, 30. and
scouts from Troop lll of Long
Beach , aged JO to 13, lost their
way Sunday whil e hiking north
of the East Fork Ranger Sta·
lion above Azusa.
Jloffman. the troop's scoul-
master, told sheriffs deputies
who rescued the group by
helicopter Monday that shots
~·ere fired at the troop, strike-
ing \1'ithin 30 feet of them. The
scouts had some "nerve
.... ·ri'Jcking moments ,'' Hoffman
said .
Hoffman said the shooting
stopped after he began firing
back. lie. ca rries a gun TIO\\'
because he has been attacked
t14•ice in the past six weeks
,~1hile on outings in the
Pasadena area with his scou ts .
llofrman said.
Sheriff's deputies confirmed
that shots had been fired in
the area Sunday. The shooting
was be ing investigated and
suspects ~·ould be questioned ,
but the re was no indication the
gunmen were shooting at the
scouts, deputies said,
The scoutmaster and boys
spent Sunday night In their
11\eeping bags on the moun-
tainside and signalled an SOS
message with fla shlights that
brought the he\lcopter to fetch
them.
I~
not
.. •
1956*
Toyota Corolla 1200 $1956*
Toyota Corolla 1600 $2ll0**
•
•
(Mort ~and ncn more fatwa thm tbr Cbrof1.t rDJt
Our standard equipment list:
I. Front disc brakes.
2. 4-speed all synchromesh
tt~ns~sion . !'
3. ll!!ck,. wall-tci'wal) n ylon
,i;arpetmg.
4. F1')1y reclining1>adiu s1.1ble
bucket scats.
5. Vinyl interior.
6. Trip odometer.
7. Cigarette Jigllter.
8. Glove box.
9. Package tray.
\
'
10. Fl<>-thru ventilation.
11 . Tinted windows.
12. Whitewall tires.
13. DelW<e wheel covers.
14. Bumper guards.
15. Chrome ttlln.'
16. Lined ,c:fµnk_
17,, Recessed, covered spare tire.
IS. Tool kit.
19. Can of touch-up paint.
20. Swing-<iut side rear windows.
21. Curved side windows.
22. Unit body cons!ruction.
23. See-thru brake fluid reservoir.
24. Five_ main-bea_ring craiifs}!itlt.
25. Ann·frcczc.
26. Scat belt retractors.
28. Front and =r ashttays. ·
29. Jnside hood relu.c.
30. Fresh air heater and ventilator.
31. Passengerassi..t grip.
32 .. Coat hooks. aa. 3-position dome light.
34. Reversible keys .
35. Dual h01ru.
Pl us these standard safety
equipment items.
36. 3-point safety belts in rn;..L
37. Stceringcol.wnn ltiek.
38. Electric windshield washer"
· 3'-Padded dash)
-.
S. M c K c e n . international
district 38 director. c=..~=.:U~
Under an ag reement with ............ ,. .... .,..1 , ' 27. Armrests, front and rear.
TOYOTA
Jlliser. the union allowed a • ·f.
I I ~··t .1..... Free demonstration can add 10 yters to llfel 1ke eton crew o euvu """! I workers to CTO!l3 picket lines Ame1lng opportunity at yoga center
lo h l do th I nl SO the Yog, ,, 111<'11 "° ,h,oeltnh '°'* ovr l•wll:, fie\lf'\• IA$I .,.. •• Alt• Mr 11 .... t s II wn e p" lttJ.OI\. M.B . A(«l'\lfll~-·t 8••<1i ••Id. "Tl'llt .... ,,.. "''' ti~ 1'~t machinery Isn't damaged. i)fffl •bl• IG rtlt• In ,,, .. P,L ' n(l t«ll OV1lneti1 WOll'l&n In ~•nlf Ml;
k ·d "MV m1"4 " '° ttlm !NI mv lntul!IOn t\11 lmpro.,M 10,llOO'llo. I CtO r.iv O" A company 11:po esman s1u .,1 111 11,. ,r..,,, .. H.o ., 1'1191""'· LAcu"• ,,,,,,, , • .,. ... , .i .. 11 """' '-" the Aharj,ng pion, allowing 1ru •<Id ,1...,, °'It••" "Me11 -•ur. I'm ntwr llrld now, 11111 (Dfl(..il••·
h . ,,.,... 11 """,, lmprv.t.O," U¥1 J Ill . boa! de•._, l<ltwllfl"I a..cn. unio n, memberA to s ~re In Fll'E'E OEMOHSTllATIOHll W•DN[SOA'f Ar 11 AM, •H. ,.,M.
.. vinas made in cn.~t f!f pro /Lt-"'" rti• Tru1n •bDvT Yoo• -TM B•,~t,, ot LU• -""" Mo••ll "!o ......... Lilt~ 11•" f'lttl Wt(!, Ftll t ti t )0 em t<ld 1 00 P·IJ'I.
ductlon. b unlqur. In lndu !"try TOG.t. CIHTll. 445 I. 17t\ St., •
and not avail:l hle at other) tOST.t. MISA c ... A-'" Ar.I ••~?11 -------------------------------------------------------------Ka!Kr plant& ln the CQUntry . , ___ ...;,;.;.-____ ..;. __________ -'
\
•
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See your nearby Toyota d~ler. Getwnrbands on a Thyota. You'll never let go.
.tMfn. 11111C51oed rn•tl pticn for the Al• 1200 •od 1'°' l d1 .Stm. l"rdJht, b;al taut., &.tn fft"P •ntl optk•'" ""'·
f
'
-
'
Fo1· Tl1e
Recor cl
• -· ....
Dissolutio1is
Of ltlarri11ge
l'!!NI J1nw•rv 11 lillwf, [•not "fl vd• 1nd [llno P1ulrn• Fredl<IC~> Isl., N>••• 111<1 11om•• P/\lll<o HoJComb. P1t•lt11 Jo•nn t "CI (n1•••• °"""'"' ~lllno, .lnll'IOl1V "'"'"'" 1nd Ju•"" Jtl n,,.,
An1;t~°n~.,,~-, (l rl """ N~l,Uf
lflllo•I 0.tr•ll Ho"'" 1r>d B•ll• Je1n Amb• 1. P1,.!cl1 .t.nn •na Mon"''
""'"""""'
I
Bo11rd•sp~tutored
~tate Te11-poi11t
_P1·ogram Adopted-
SANTA ANA -A lfl·poinl
state Jeg1sl<1Uve program for
1972 was adopted by thr
Orilnge <:oun1y Bu<ird of
Superv1i;ori; today. IL ir1·
eludes J)rupusals un \velf:ir<',
licensing OOsp1tals and nursing
hornes, and n1enral heal!h
funds.
the state to give loca l welfare
adn11111stration at Jr:ast 90 days
lead lime to 1 m p I e in e n t
s1gn1rlcant changes in major
relJef programs. Peopl es also
want.~ protection for errors
~rowing out of required 1m-
ple1nentation of m a j or
changes without a d e q IJ a t e
nut ice.
-A request by C' o u n t y
Health Officer l)r. Jut111 Philp
SEEKING FUNDS
Drive Le•der Shine
Jewish welfare
b
Unit Seeks Aid
''The first day I wa!I in
Israel 350 refugees tame 1n on
l Collegiate
'Exodu s'
Studied
•
By TERRY COVlLL..E
Of l'l'I• O•llr Plltf Iliff two jets. Of tho se 350, there SANTA ANA _ A seemint:
were 275 who could nol pay f h Israeli government official s their exlt fee . l'hat was e>.odus ur students rom t a
expect 100,000 Jeri-ish refugees $275 .000 out.side agencies had newly created Rancho San-
to flee Russia ,for Israel this 10 put up." tlago Cornrnunity Co t I e;: •
Year accord1·ng to L-nard district to ncirihborin:! lwtr ' "" "Russian SJXlkes1nen have " '" .Shane, chairman for the 1972 stated publicly !hey feel the year colleges has caused
United Jewish Welfare Fund refugees will break the back d1~t1·1el trustees lo turn lo
Campa ign in Orange County. of Israel. because of costs... Sacra mento fo r help.
''Most of thil!I is kept Shane said. "Frankly, we're Ass lstr1ni Su pe ru1tcndl'nl
secret." Shane . president of collecting money to keep TreUSl1.rer Ernie Norton s<lid I . l 4 o
Mercury Sa vines and Lolin As· Israel from going under." .. students h;1 ve askep to ";iHend
sociation. explained. "'Russia Il e said the Israeli govern-other districts this semester
"101111 B111v je~n t nd l'ltr!
P/\llllo•. ""'"•·• Lt1V•11 t "ll 111•on Allen
Curo. !iv1v11 "'"' 111!1 L NI Poul
The progra1n "'as offen:.d by
lhe county's Legislature Plan·
ning Cor11n11ttee headed bv
Supervisor Hona td Cos1}(<rs of
Nev.·port Beach.
!hat would permit counties of -------------
one m1lhon populatlon or
1:ii not seeking a lot of publicity ment reduced its defense Get~ Award coinpared to only 300 applying
on it ." budget by 25 percent this ye<ir for f'!n!rance . The district
The new campaign to transfer funds to !he 1nust pny $1.000 for each stu· ANAHElfll -Mrs. Nancy 11 · h C~1oln. Gtoroe WuJ.y Ind J~n l l1t1 .
!if Pier.it. 0o .. i11w J. 1nd li•ltlv• J
H1/\11 Wt r>dt ll A.i/\ur I nd Ml fGUrl<ll Mt r• Rt~·/l)<d. W1"41 ltVOf' I nd T~~or t L1 .. ,.
W1l1r.,ort/\ M1rlt nt l nll W11!11m l(e!lv. Vlrf:ll ll;OM t r>d R1vrnond E
Ptotr. J 1• O 1nd M1ro.;1 ,lnt1
111111n. Geor1,1;;"J,~=~•• "'IT'' E.
Howard 1nd Raobeo J
fl, lllr1Mr1 I nd ArH"'' A
na. P1r1v Ann MIO Mlc/\6•1 Lt• 01 1 I, Eleonor Jeen •"" P•ul w 8Alawln, Johnny M.trvln 1na J•nel '
('"'· M•ro•,.I •na 1101•lln<1 N"""' HQll~. 81fb.lr• Ann t nd D•1oill l Miiis. llobln J3m., ~nll C••olt lere•,• w~~~·~-· L•ur• Ell!• """ Jo1evn
Tur~1. J•M!t" l •nd J e1'11 L.9no. J1n1 S. '"" Ooneld Ml\lrlt t . Glll•nn. v., ... •nd llim1Td HMDld. Artmtn. 0 1vlll W I nd l(t Y lvnn H1rr la1n, C••olvn Jlt'I 1ncr Otnnl1 Mlch11/ MeJ11'1. G1r1ld llOn 1nll fl•T•lc/1 JOl'cl. Wl>Od, 8,,...,lt Coll~tn 1n11 111c,.1•d Oelt Sr,
fllll'd J1nuu ·1 ll
?lnCk, Elltn 11111 •<Id 01nl1I Mtndrll
Wrl•"· Ell•r n A. 11111 M•r~ Fawlis, C•l"-•lnt J. 11111 Wl!!11m .
Brown, 1"1trlclt E. I nd Gordon w.
Schill, Dtbatt h l vnn '"" G1r11d llobfrt
Collon, llultl Jo Ann• •ncl l 1wrent• 8.
llnthlrOfTI, Thtt••1 J. 11111 WIUl1m H
llolllon, Mtrllv"I Jtln 1...i llOl)ert
Gtorot
Pl'd .. 11, llon1ld G. 1"<1 lln<11 K•Y.
Wiff, El1ln, ~. 11111 Cl•r r,... 11.
J uvenUt , Ell1tbelh Annt end Frollt t!tk Wtlls
ll<>'Tll ro. lro.,. J11nnt 11'<1 M1nu11
LIW!~"tt. ~·
C•rm!ch1el, G••Y Rober! ,,,.. (1rol
'~.~ McCu•dv. Cetherlnt Ann 111.d ll~rr
8nk••·
M11rr•v. M1rv1nn """ 8t1•I E. F lit~ J1nu1rv u C1ve1. Mtlt>d>' M1ronrtt &r.11 11\om•~ Ford. Eanev. Andren C•ro! t nd Ll tr>' W1•n•. v a.,ohtn. Judl!ll A •nd Jow•n T Rt•~•. Rle"••d l , t nll Je&n Ellen M~~te... Lindi Jrnn •nd llobtd Kttnfn
Primm, lllCll1rd ond l oro1n J
PNro. Sur1nn1 Cl•r, •nd 01vl11 '°'lien.
8 111trt. Rtvmond tnd Ctrol E 1<11n1r, 8•rl)ll'I G. •nd Dcnald Rtt,
Mnr~. A"drew O 1M Nenev "I""· B••ll••• Jtl n •n'd G••• V.onct , J1n11n. V111r11 Joi n •nd M•rl< Al1n Sml!h. K1!,.l•rn Jov i nd !\JOtnt P•ul. P'llMI JUHlll'l' 11
Norton, Lindi Ann et11 •nd Rtloh StYmour Wei-tr . M•rlon J. 1n11 Glvnn L S1nder1, Cnllffn Ind 1(1"1 Farrell H1rvtv, Chtrvr Jtln 1nd Jo.eoll A. l owell. Gtll W. •'Id J. RnY
(llt1!1ln. M•rv 511• •nil llov E""""' Mo•tn. C"t•lo tre Lin • •nd Tllomn• Lnwr•"tt. J •hlonoltl, 8nrb1r1 E on<! Ch•"~' I(
!'<11..,.., Bonni• An,. inn Jo-.eoll P•tt • Sl"Olt lorv. 1<1tll•rln1 Pel•lclt I nd Jim· mlt ~vrr! McVt lQll, lloberh l . 1r>d 01nltl r
""''· Con•l•n<t T •~<I Gordon v Holll•ld. ltrrv (lt lborn1 •nil LlnO• '~· 81111om!!'ltr. Wtltt r Lt• 1nO Julll!n
l<IY'I.
M0<11tn, ltvnort A •tw:I Timothy W F.dWlrd•. Shtrrv Ehen Intl Altn 1.•r. f•unn. Pt1rlcl1 Ann Ind Wllllr Gt blr, 811cM olr. Mtc!ln II. t nd Lt W•tMt A.
"'''.,..'· O.l0<t s A t nll Trov L Ct klwt ll. llObert C t nd Alt1111 M
Atk inson. 11-rlt Ann tncl Oon•IO },
l<r•llc:k, luen"" B1rnk 1 I nd Edwtrd
Dont ld.
Abllt mantfl, llev1rl¥ A<1<1t 11>1f ?I•.
Hk~m~~. GlO<I• J ft'I l nll Di v•<'! R0<11l11
l<t1oerl. Jlllllth J t nd llonalll O
5Jmmono, Jo•t"" HJ1l1y I nd M1rotrv
M"
l ee. L•rrv W•vnt •nd Mtrv Ev1i.t1
Gt,.rl•I, l'ftmel• K1l!'lrvn I nd ll lth,.rd
Arthur
Gernt r. T-.ldv M•i •r>d M1rv O..wn.
H1v1. r11nm 11 Atrl """ Go11111.
M lch1,11. J•n"' C 1n11 J •c~
8tll1vl1. AnneTI• M •r>ll Jot•
Klonl•ch;I, Ja• Ann~ •nll J<"H.
E1trton. J1cl Ol!n1ld •"<I llobbv• G•~.
llrawn, Vicki lv•n 1nd J,.mt J Chri•.
Gtrofant. O••l~n• •nd J(ll'n Thnm11.
D1nnl1, 8tl!Y l 1nd Ru•btn H
Dul!lor.••, ll•vnold •nd Sheron L
Tvltr. El!nnr M1rl1 i nd J1mr1 M!llO'I.
Wfthon. Cht rlotr• I nn •nd Terrv
w ......
G,~•a•, Vt-•"<ln l'1r:1. •r>d (•!ht ll1
'"" Par~••. K~!Mffn ,Ann •.-.cl l r rrv l•nn,
Grtt "I. Donni •n<I J!mm•.
Hollis 8"'' 1n11 8•11v
W!llltm•. (1ro1 J 1na c;.,old r
The board voted to srfonsor
the 10 suggestions and refer
them t(I county 1obby1st T ~d
Craig and th(' co u n l y '.~
legislative delegation or state
senators and assemblyman.
Leading the llst 1s a prn·
posrd la"' lo aid HI the .ic·
c1uls1l1on of Fa1rv1cw Stale
lfospi tal surplus land at a d is·
(.'ount up to 100 percent
Other suggestions include:
-New legislation recom·
mended by t'ounty Treasurer
Ivan Swanger lo increase the
cxiunty's in heritance tax col·
lection fees from $20,000 to
$50.000 annually, the same as
is granted San Diego County.
-Increased cou rt filing fee s.
which have oot been raised
since 1967. to provide about
$200.000 a yea r in additional
revenue.
-A suggestion by county
We ! r a re Director Granville
Peoples which ~·ould require
1nore. rather than the present
si,x 1n1Jl ion or more. to be
given the respons1bdity for in-
spection and enforcemt nl of
slate la ws regarding the
licensing of hospitals and nurs·
ing homes. Al presen t only
l.-0s Angeles Coun ty has that
power
-Proposed I eg isl at iv n
sought by Dr. Ernest Klatte,
men tal health services direc-
tor, which would require that
stCl le funds for mental health
services be distributed to
counties on a formula based
on the population to be served.
Dr. Klatte said the county is
now In a "most unequal posi-
•ion'' in this rega rd .
-Dr. Klatt.e also proposed
\eg1slalion to change the Short-
Doyte Act regarding the com ·
position of the Conference of
Local Mental l·lealth Directors
lo assure equal representation
of all citizens of the state.
Welfare Recipie11ts
To Get Adjustrne1its
SANT A ANA -Monlhly
payments to Orange County
welfare recipients are being
surveyed by the staff of
Welfare Director Granville
Peoples to determine adjusted
benefits to be pa id beginning
Apr il I.
Peoples said Monday about
7.000 cou nty fami lies ~·ilh no
outside income will be paid an
additional $1.26 mill ion during
the current fi scal year ending
June 30. The allotments are
retroactive to last Ckt. I. \\'h('n
the sta te's Welfare Re form
Act became law.
Read justmf'!nl of payn1ents
has been delayed for several
Speaker List
GivenbyCSF
mon ths pending outcome of
court lillgation ~ponsored by1
welfare rights Organizations.
Peoples said the $ 1 . 2 6
million additional will not re·
quire more county funding.
This comes about beca use of
a i'e\'cl ing of( of Aid to
Families With Dependent
Children (ADFC) since Jastl
July, he said.
Peopl('s last fall pred icated
the drop in ADF'C payments
"•hich he attributed to im-
prov ing economic condilions.
Jl e said welfare program1
payments usual precede ac·r
tual surfacing of improved
busi ness stat istics by about !ix
months.
The count y ADFC caseload
has dropped from a high of
16,000 to about 14,000, he
revealed.
"There is plenty of money in
the 1971·72 budget \$43 million
largely supplied by the litate)
FULLERTON Earth· to cover the inc re as es ,
quakes, consumer protection. Peoples added .
women's liberation, prison The 7,000 families without
reforn1 and the 18-year-old ou tside incomes, about one
vote are among subjec ts of.. half of the cu rrent caseload
fered in a new faculty 111·ill get boosts in mcinthly
spea kers' bulletin Issued by payment s ave raging 9 percent.
Cal State Fullerton. Peoples said an AFDC fami ·
President L. Donald Shields ly of four can expect to
announced that the U.page receive a hike in maximum
bulletin is· available al no benefit from $261 to $280 a
charge to co m m u n i t y month. Forty.five percent of
nri::anizations \\•hich desire to the families on relief will get
DAVI~ ~checlulc speakrrs. It lists 96 !hr $3me amount as last year f'>•n~tA~ l C'l••ll •ot i. ot 10190 ~Al~~~ k-J,.y~, Foo"'"'" VAllt~ OATr of .ir.111. proressori; and 356 tal ks. u~:c:1use they ha ve significant (.;.~1',':;; •3~d ~9:Jr1 5Q'~~:~•dbr~i~e~.,j~~·~ J\1any 0f the ~pr;ikcr~ <lo nnt 0111..c;ide lnCornc, he said.
: .• ,,~~~\h.,.,.';:~~p 1.~·.:;~~~ .?, No;;~~. <'har.ce for thl'lr sr.rv1cr". State \l,"e!fare D ir ec tor
'"'" v.u.. a••••·Q•tM 0'•n~"'"'h•r . Sh ld d Hober! Carleson r cc en I I'-', C:.~n.,~~:' ,sc~1~'?i .. 1o~~i':~d J~l~~~~i . 1c s po1nte ou!. and thf' ;
chv<eh. H~~!lngton 6••c~ 1n1e .. ..,rn1, oih&rs usually rrqu1rf' n11ly a c:;t1n1n!cd that lwo-third,s of
w"e"11•nd c~""1~·~-0••11••· 1•••• ~.111all l1nnorar1un1 and tra1·cl the "'DC "-nc11·c·1ar·res 1·n' "•mll~ IUQQt,11 l~Oil wi\~fng lo m~l.P .~ l\r m: mtmll'ltl conl•lbu•,on• "'-••• cnnt•lb11ft expense~. Cali(ornia would get th e l to Etrl """ Lo'toint Miiie• (lllld,en• ~~f~~''M~~~.~1·~·1·.' ... ~;,"; LcnQ B~c~. nequests for ~peakers are average 9 percent increase,/
KLEIN handled h~1 ?lfrs ,\.f ildred \Vyn· but Peoples said the 50 per· ltOO.,•! J 1':1••"· Jr I>•• 11 "' m l'lowl 1na c;'l'i'" 0.1., co"• M••• o ... o• nc. co I l e g e rcl"eption1st, t'Cnl figure is closer to tt-e1 ~···~ ; ... ,, .... ~ 1'1' ~ .. ,~., . ..., ~. ...... l I h 87 2 S•e•1•. d•11llf>••·· M•1 F. ttt w~1wo•1~. e ep one ()-417. eounly picture.
(o•I• Mt<f O•o!~tr (rowl1• io;1e1n, 1--------------------------·ll '"'"' M" A.nn1 Wt1 Qvlnn, bolh of R och ••1 r r . New YQ•k. t~rff Qttndcllold•tn. lla"'rl. J•mf> nnll Cvnlhlt
Wn1>1""(1rth, '"'" a•tll 9r•norh•ld•"" Ll~t •"<I John P W•d1wo•tll Jr Pr1vP• •e•vlc• W"<lnndt • 7 PM B•l'1 ll"•utr"" l'unt ••! Hnm" (O•'• Meu worn ~•
lllomt< """"" l!f!•Cl.t!•na lntprment, •"<h••tpr N•., \OM ' 11•1•• l'l••<>ttO!I r~...,~1 f<ome. co1r. M~s•, o".""''·
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF !\10RTUARV
4!7 E. 171h St.. Cost\' l\ftsa
M<-4888 • BAl.TZ RERGl:.RON
FUNERA i, HO.\fE
Corona dt l !\far 673.1450
Costa l\frsa S.t6·l':•t4 • BEl .. L RROADW A Y
l\fORTUARY
110 Bn•dway, Cost• l\fts•
LI ·1 .. 3432 • l\frCORAflCK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1715 Lapn1 Canyon Rd.
-I~ • PACinC l'JEW
MEMORIAL PAR.It
C.m....,. Mor1.,.ry
Cbpel
Ult Paclflc Vkw Drf•e
N.,._ ll<o<•. Calllonlo
~-• PEEK fAMILY
COL0~1AL fUNERAl.
DOME
'nOI &lu A"-e.
Westmills.ter m.ms • i™ITlll» MORTUARY
117 ~tala SL
Hu::ntla,gtoa Be1<:• -
f
FIRST NA'flONAL 84NK
HAS MORE TIME FOR YOU
WQ're op·en till 5:00 P.M.
Mon, through Thurs.,
'I ii 6:00 P.M. on Fridays,
P.S. And for ea1ly risers our drive-up
windows open at 8:45 A.M .
First National Bank
OF ORANG< COUNlY
~ 1gi
Santa Ana
Landlord
chairman jusl returned to refugee cause. ··Israeli plead.. dent 111·ho enro s in ano t er
Huntington Beach this week ed with Ru ssia to allow the Reagan will be in Orange dis trict
from a nine-<lay tour ol lsrael. Jews to lea ve. now she can't County F'eb. 10 lo present the Hy 1973, college officials
"We greeted several Rus.. turn her back on the "Won1an of the Year" a111·ard estirnate , the new twi>-year
sian refugees,'' Shane said . "It refugees,'' Shane said . lo California State Tre asurf'r tullege district which includes
wa ~ a tremendous emotional The Orange County chapter I vy Baker Priest at a Lincoln !he Oran~t and santa Ana
Gets, Fine
experience." of the United Jewish Welfare Day lunchron organized by the Unified Sthool Districtl, will
As Orange County campaign fund wilt launch its 1972 cam-Orange Co unty Federation of be payi11i.: out sorne $800,
chairman. Shane 11i·ill see k paign with a l2·hour con· Republi can \\lomen. ('re:l1111J: the problem,
funds to help offset the costs vocation at the Grand Hotel in Cali forn ia's first lady \1•ill spu ke srnan s~url, <1rc LOS ANGELES -A Sanla
Ana landlord has been fined
$500 for refusing to rent an
apartment to a Negro woman .
to Israel of helping these Anaheim, Sunday. preside over a program that students whn began
refugees freed through the ef· Senator Alan Cranston ( D· inclu des Los Angeles attorney stu ches i11 uth('r districts prior
rorts of Jewish com muniti es Califo rnia) is the keynoter Charles Earl Lloyd as guest to the f(Jrn1ation o[ the new
Fair Employment Practices
Commissioner Stella Sandoval
imposed the rine on apartment
house owner Harold Sipe after
hearing evidence at a Los
Angeles pu blic h.earing that
Sipe admitted to an FEPC in-
vestigator that he denied Mrs.
Doris Ennis an apartment
because of her race.
throughout the world. speaker for the convocation. speaker. dist rict last year.
"Our goal in the United lr;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"""
Sipe was also ordered by th&
commission "to cease and
desist in acts of discrimination
against all members or the
Negro race." He wall warned
!hat a heavier penalty will ~
imposed for anr future con·
viction on idenllcal charges.
ANIMAi. CJlACS:D&•
Slates is to raise $1 billion,"
he said. "It takes a lot of
fuods lo provide food, clothing
aod' home~ for t h o s e
refugees."
Shane said it costs a con·
siderable amount just to get
the refugees out of Russia.
"They .are often given just a
few days noti ce. to leave the
cou ntry. And each refugee
over 16 must pay a $1,000 ex it
fee.''
Shane said that for refugees
lvho could not pay the exit fee ,
the United Jewish Agency is
paying the $1 ,000 lo the Rus·
sian gove.rnment.
. ,
'.I wrore A <El'fl!fl 10
1Mf EDITOll .l<BOUT 11'.iE
.• l: 10LD 'f•EM1 llJ AlO
UAl<:EltfAIN TER;us,
1H4T 1\<E. 'AYE#:A6~
J'Of' .,i.A.5 NO VOICE.,
AN<> '!"~AT FiEEOON
OF 'f°HE Pl<ESS 1::r
ABl<i<JOl<E !
WAY IJEliJ!IPAPERS
ALCOW 1!1E 4'0Y!f11.)JoiENf
10 COITTllOc AND sl)-
Pl1E5s; (HE f'tl'111E.D w~o-
HAMS
" . . So Good It Will
Haunt You 'Til It's Gone"
Our ht m• ''' lht lone11 co•n "d low•_l»'klt1 -Ou• •low ory
tur!no ~t!'lod. •••I W01con1fn "'~"° IPPltWllDll 1mokl<>g 1nO
JC,-nour O\Oen t>.oking honey 'n spice gl111 '"' un111u1 •n •H Ille
work!. So llll!ClDlll t t\11 1ppell1lng Wt 11111 wauldn'! know how ta
lmarov1 thi• pro<:h1C1 Wf've been m1~1ng !or l l v•~ .. 5P•rtl 11.red
too, h om top to bortom 10 tll1t ••c" d•IKltble unotorm slke c•n
bt r1mo\lell elfor!le.,ly (Omplllt ly ""koll t nd retdy to 111vt, Or·
<ltr your Honey Btkoll Ham lollnv, t n 1avrn1ur1 "' htm•1D~mw1
you'll ntvtr lorgt r.
RETAIL STORES
l7DO I:. Cotnt Hlqhway, Co1ono d1t Mar -67).9000
1222 S. l rookhwr11. A1111h1i"' 6lS·246 I
li..C. ,,,., .. ,~, •• ,_..
. ..
... THEY
PKfNTED
IT/
I I " .
Freedo1n Of The Press Is No Joke At The Daily Pilot
•
. -
•
Yes, the DAILY PILOT prints nearly all
(up to 100 a week).
the letters it . receives
Freedom of
a voice. It's
If you feel
the p ress • there on
extended .
IS
the editorial
to ou r readers,
page of the
do
DAILY PILOT.
You have
strongly an about . issue, write to Ma ilbox .
Our Policy
letters should normally convey their me n age tn 300
words or less. The right to condense letters lo fit space
is reserved.
Eech letter must include signature and f!!ailing address,
but ntme m•y be withheld on request if sufficient reason
-'is app•rent (emb.rrassment or htrassm~nt ot the wrfter,
for nomple).
, . .
Poetry, letter1 in !"'°' !Hie in<! libelous Of unsigned let •
leri, of coul"'1 , wil not be published. •
MAILBOX
'
Ori,,.. C011! DAILY PILOT
-P.O. 11 .. 1560 ".
Coote Me .. , Co. '2'26
..
•
~\
\
•
•
I • , .• ' . -~' . ~ . ·-_.._.
FAJllLY CIRCVS b11 Bil Keane
11Why do we hove to toke another mp Grandma?
I'm not tired. 11 '
Racial Mal{et1p-0f U.S.
Food Recipients Eyed
WASHINGTON (AP ) -The
Agriculture Depart1nent is
loo king at 14 niillion faces and
fan1ily names to see if people
v.·ho get government food
benefits are black, brown, red,
yellow or white.
1.1illions of others, who sha~
KKK Rally
Attended
By Blacks
MONROE. N. C. IUPI\
'i'ears zigo black:11 hid behind
their locked doors v.·hen the
Klu Klux Klan I m a r c he d
through the stretts of southern
towns.
Several hundred blacks
turned out to watch a rare
Klan parade over the
weekend, and it was such an
oddity one black youth brought
alon~ his camera.
What they saw was Virgil
Lee Griffin. 28. a thin-faced
r;aston County textile worker
•Nith long s.ideburns. walk
along the sidewalk in a green
satin robe with purple and red
t rim.
Griffin. v.•ho says he i!i
Ji!rand dragon of the North
Carolina Knights of the Ku
Klux Klan, was !he only robed
ldansman to show up, although
he was surrounded by seven
men handing out Klan
liter&ture.
Young blacks sh o u t e d
"superman," at Griffin, and at
one intersection, a group
chanted. "'Is thal all there Is ?''
It was the flrst Klan march
In this town in about 50 years.
in USDA benefits ranging
from farm subsidies lo federal
jobs. also are being classified
and their names fed \ii;ito corn-
p1.llers as Rrisl (or the
government's civil-righ\s mill.
i\1uch information has been
gathered since mid-197!, but a
full report is not expected un-
til July. Meantime, the biggest
job involves the food-stamp
8(11 d commodity-distribution
program.
A report on the racial
makeup 0 r federal-food·
assistance recipients is being
processed and is expected to
be ready in a week or two, ac-
cording lo department of-
ficials.
Besides t 1 million persons in
the food-stamp program and
another three million who get
commodity donations. t h e
racial survey also will include
25 million children in the
school-l unch program.
The study of program
participation by racial groups
is an outgrowth of a study
started several years ago to
evaluate USDA minority hir-
ing and employment practices,
Frank B. Elliott, assistant
secretary of agriculture for
terviewer the study then was
f'X:panded to the department's
individual agencies and pro-
grams to see how those
measured up.
"'All we'v" been doing is ac-
cruing statistics, partly lo
satisfy the Civil Rights Com-
mission and partly lo measure
our ow n accomplishments
against what we 're meant to
do." Elliott said.
Asked lo comment o n
evidence so far. Elliott said :
"It shows an unevenness in
some areas and ... that we
can do better."
Gov. Reagan's Wife
Will Write Column
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -The wife of Gov. Ronalcl Rea-
gan . with a joking assurance that her husband woul dn't be
ccltting her remarks, has agreed lo take a try at being a
ney,·sp aper columnist.
She wiH write a y,•eekly question-and-answer column be·
ginning Sunday in the Sacramento Union. y,•hich said Mrs.
Reagan's remarks v.·ould be made available to other nev;g..
papers owned by Copley Press. Inc .
Jn announcing the column in a half page ad in last Sun·
day·s editions, !he Union <f;aid the state's fi rst l;1dy would
11nswer questions concerning "her family. ht:r role as the
wife of California's governor and her personal view on cur-
rent issues ... " ·
"Al first I said no," Mrs . Reagan said of the column-
writing suggestion. But she changed her mind because the
fee she receives will go directly to a "very special cause"
-the National League o,f Families of American Prisoners
and missing in Southeast Asia.
"Perhaps peop!t: will ask me questions they wouldn't
ask my husband." !he petite former actress said. adding
"'ith a laugh that her husband wouldn 't be editing her re-
marks "because he 's not !hat kind of husband."
Discussing the women's lib movement, Mrs·. Reagan said
she had diHiculty identirying with it beyond "equal pay for
equa l work and equal opportunity for everybcxly ."
"I don't understand," she said of the movement. ''I love
being a woman . t don't want to be governor -I want my
husband to be governor .·'
I See by Today s
Want Ads
e PLENTI' Of' DRA"'ER
SPACE, In lhht 6 fool
dr,.1Jlf'r chfJllll. Jt ha11 9
drl'llwt"nt and !I'll \\'hilt'.
Likt' new for only $25!
I e VERY SHARP! That"1
lhhi: '67 Old1 CullUI SU·
prl"me. lt'R lan and whilt",
romf'1 fully powrN'd and
hA.., air conditioning. 11W'
ro~ · S800. A diacnostic
n>port ii availi.ble.
e LTKE VOU<SWAGONS~
Thrn you'll l!kf' this ·70
5t-f1An. Jt'1 heigt" and
rom~• with 1urh extras
a• • ndkl •.nd II tr11 rk.
Jn txcel\enl Ctindihon.
Sl 4~
Cigarette Ads to Get Bla~k Borders
\\'ASl!l~GT()N IL'PI )
C1ge1relle nlakers have agreed
to print pro1ninenl black-
OOrdered health warnings 1n
all t h e 1 r advertisf'ments,
climaxing ap eight -year battle
v.·1th government antismokin~
Jorces.
The Federal ·rrade conl-
1n1ss1on (FTC 1 announced the
;igreen1cn t y,•ith six firm.'>
that account for 99 percent nf
US cigarette output. The 81'·
rord settled an f"TC J;Utt
clairnlng that ('igarette ;ids
y,·ere de<.·ept1ve because lht•v
failed ti\ y,•arn that cigart'tte
smoking harms hun1an health .
In a srparate actinn, the
FTl' ordered !6 drug ftrrns to
docurnent advertising clauns
for all 35 nationally advl"{tised
cough anrt colcl remC'<11es~
The order req uires be1 ckup
data for .some of television's
nlQ8i f1't1,1llltr 1-on1n1crc-i11l:1
Th( F'TC said it y,·uuld release
C'Qmpany replies to the public
The c/~arette BCl1on "·ould
rt>quire 1n ;ill ad~ t h i !i
n1essagr , 11lrt11dy re<Ju1red h.v
la"' on e1garrtte pMc~<1ges ·
"\l,'ar111ng The Su r g e o n
c:eneral llas Determ1ncd Th111
Cigarette S mo ~ i n R is
Dangerous To Your ll rallh."
''Thr st.aten1ent n1u~t ~
printed in two Jines of type,
parallel to !ht bol!om n1argin or the advert1sttment. and
('nclnsed within a b 1 a ck -
bordered re<"tangle ," the F'TC
sn1d
·rht· Sile flf the \varn1ng
"~iuld 1ncreasr "'llh lhe Ad 's
!1 11.<' Robert P1tofsk\', dl[eetor
nf !hi-FTC's bure11u nf ron-
:sun1er protection, said the ~oal
was to makt surr a casual
reitder scanning the ad or
billboard not1ct<l the "'arnlng
y,•hethf'r he \Yllrlted to or no!
"These BRrttnients rf'solve
the last outstancllng issur
hctwrcn !ht> i.:overn1nent and
the tobacco 1nduslrv in re~ard
tn r i f:: are 1 I" advt"rllsing,"
ll oranf'r R. Knrnrf::BY. pre~i·
drn! of Thr l 'ob Arco lnstilute.
said 1n it ~taten1enL
Plto f1ky dlsa1reed. Ke uid
the FTC would closely mon!tor
rigarette ads and run con-
su1ner surv!:ys lo determln•
"'hf'thtr consumer! rot thft
health message. Pltofslty said
ht l' .... rc had the authorlty tn
ban all ci~arette advertlslni;t
bul had no plan11 to do Sfl.
Congrrs11 banned cig1rt tl ft
advertising nn radio ind
trlevlslon in January, 1971.
Now there!s some special
in your neighborliood.
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Today, there are over 440 branches of
Security Pacific Bank in Califo:r:nia.
So whether you live on Pizzo Ranch Road,
Heliotrope Avenue or Croesus Boulevard,
you'vegot somethingspecial going for you,.
"Oh, really?" you say. "Really;'~·
say. When you open a checking account at
Security Pacific Bank1 we offer you much
more than just a checking account. We
offer you a unique package of personal
bank services, starting with Automat-
ic Savings. (Tull us how much and wl\en,
andy.re'll transfer money from your check•
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ing account to your savings account.
Automatically.)
Then there's Master Charge.
., Wlitch gets you Ready ReservAccount.
Which gets you Check Guarantee. And
there's Ready AutoFinance. And ... well,
you get the idea. The idea is that where-
everyouliveand work in California, you've
got something .special when you open a
checking account at Security Pacific Bank.
VOllVEGOT
SOMEIHING
SPECIAL
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DAILY PILOT
Boacdini Eclipsed ...
Oeo!Crey Hanson, an 18-year-old escape artist who bUls him se lf as '"fhe Fabul-
ous Geoffrey," jumps into San Francisco Bay in an effort to break an escape
record set in J 907 by the Great Harry Houdini in the same spot. Laden with 48
paunds of chain and locks, l-Ian son emerged from th e icy 48-degrec water in
1ust 20 seconds, beating 1-Ioudini's record by 37 seconds.
Illinois Gove1'1101· Linl\:ed •
To 1968 Campaign Scheme
CHICAGO !AP) -Two
newspapers say at I e a s t
$50,000 in contrlbullons for the
successful 1968 compalgn of
Gov. Ri chard B. Oglivie was
rolsed through an illegal stock
scheme .
The Chicago Sun-Times and
the St. Louis Post Dispatch
carried the stories.
Ogilvie, at a news con-
feren ce ln Chicago, said. "It is
a2porent that many innocent
J'flople, including me, were
victims or • sch9me ...
One Investor dtnled that he
signed a statement the papers
said had been filed with the
Illinois Securities Com1nission
linking the R e p u b I i ca n
11:overnor to the deal.
The Dispatch and Sun-Times
said stock promoters in the
summer of 1968 told pros-
pective Investors in Mobile-
Master of America. Inc .• a
cleaning equipment firm , they
had to contribute $1.000 to the
Oglivie campaign for earh
$100 of stock they purchased in
the firm .
The newspaper!! reported
that the promoters !laid th e
state would purchase cleaning
trucks fr om the firm if Oglivie
\~ere elected , giving investors
a "'indfatJ profit. A check
!>howed no such purchases, the
Dispatch and Sun-Times said .
The newspaper reports said
si x investors in the finn filed
sig ned affidavits in 1970 with
1'homas J. •lawekotta of the
Ill inois Securit ies Commission
and his assistunts detaili ng the
sche me.
Jl awckot te told the
nc1vspapers he was ordered by
his superior, the I a t e
Secrelary or Slate Pa u I
Powell, a Dcmocrnt, to halt a
probe or the scheme.
$8 Miiiion Fraud The ne\vspapers said the af-
fidavits contended that Oglivie
appeorcd at a promotional
meetin}! for Mobile-1\lasler in
.July 1968. influencing many in-
vestors to purchase stock in
the firm . Jailed B usiness1na11
Collects Interest Th e allegaUon was denied
by Roy I. Dorn or Belvidere,
one or the investors quoted In
newspaper accounts.
ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UP!) -
Andrew Stone, a St. Louis
businessman who defrauded
the government or more than
$6 ml lllon, hns put the nloney
in a St. Lowis ban k 11 nd ap-
parently Is colleet!ng $350.000
annual Int ere st on it while
serving a tS-yeor prison term,
the SL Louis Post Dispatch
hos reported.
The paper quoted o n e
govunment source as saying
Sto~ had bcrn giving a"'ny
the interest enrnei:I on the
mont'y to friends I! n d
relative!.
Shortly afltr h i 1 com-
mitment to the fed er R I
pcnitenliar)' al Lt""''isburi.:.
Pn ., the Post Dispalch said,
lhc govcrnn1ent And Stone
made an ogret'ment to let thf'
SI. l..-0uis lnsl.ilulion hold tilt'
T ee ua ger' s
Co 11,,'i c i.e 11 ce
stolen money pending outCQme
of legal proceedings by the
government to .reCQvcr it.
Stone, his secretary, l\lrs.
Evel yn R. Price nnd a
Washing1on Lawyer. Fr;i.ncis
N. Rosenbaum. pleRded quilly
in February, 1970 of con·
1piracy to defraud the gov,rn·
ment through kickba c k s,
phony invoices and setret
arms shipments.
The Dispatch and Sun·Tlrnes
stock after the gove rnor ap-
peared at the meeting. llis ap-
pearance innuenced me to
believe that the company
would be able to do much
bus iness \vilh the slate if
O!il:!lvie were e l ecte d
governor.''
Archeol ogists
Strike Back
The Department of Justice
ackno\vledged the existence of
an escrow agreem,nt with the
forn1er president of Chro1n·
crafts of St. Louis. llowever. LONGON (UPI\ -British
the Post dispatch said, it arrheologisls armed w it h
refused to give details. sarks of tacks and nails have
"The go\'ernment is not gr!· started strikin g back a t tre.1surr hunters \\·ho comb ling any financit1I benefit from si lrll \\•ith met<1l detectors. the 1nnney -other thnn kno"·-ing "'here it is and that it is Cla iminR that the use of the
not being dissipatNI." 5,1id L. clrf('('lors may destroy a con-
Stanley Paige, chief of the sidcrnble amount of local
frnuds sec!ion of the .Justice hislClry, the archrologists ha\'e
lJepartr11enl. spre::id the lacks and nails at
The paper soid S!\1ne. 55. Hadleigh Castle. Essex. and in
ne\·er reportr<I the funds as in-l'ortsn1outh lo "'jam" the
corne. nnd the I n t t r n a 1 1nrtal detec.lors.
Rr,·enue ServiC'e has taken no The British Archeological
siclion lo attach or 0U1erwise Trust said the experiment had
W • D encun1ber the money or the in· so far had "a very great ef-
f.Jl,S ay ter('St. fect" On trellSllrC hunters.
\'AN NU\"S (API -\\1hen 1~~~~
Robin"'" Russ•ll. 15. saw thel r 1 0 0 0
"'allel lyini;: on I.ht: ground fill· ORDER '".'.".·./ · rd "'ith monev. ht \I-as in the ···'1
riJ;h l pla('C' tO ~si9' tempht-! ~' 'eaatiful
tion -lhe park.ins: lo! of St.j ,. ';r Stick-on Charif'~ J-:pisropal Church . YOURS ., t
Tho wollrt ronl•iool Sl53· \ LABELS
and 17,000 Jnp:u1tse )'en.
\\"Orth :1!)1111 $~i. Thert was no
ldenl\f1rat ion. i:r.nd Robinson. ,,.ho (l\\"t'S a ht"fly car in-
11ur111K't tnll. ~iys ht-im-
n1t•chntl'l.\' l!k'llJ:hL ' · Go d •
lh:lt"~ 2(10 burks. I t·an do ll :ot
\l,'l1 h lh:ll."
Rut l.htn hi~ l'On~cienct too\..
o\·f'r. ~.iid lhf' t'l111rrh-i:otnt;
youth 1ltrr \\1rn\n,i:: thf' mOflf'y ;
Ol"t'r l('I l"''hC'f' ~Und:l~·.
"I f11=un'<I. '1rll. I h:n·e 1
good hon1e :ux1 j::l'll."1 p.i.renU
and somf'txx!y el~e probllbly
nt'f'd~ 11 n'lnf'I.' !h11n t do." tW'
said. PoliN" 1•rrr ~l.1ng•Jht
wll\lers o"·"lr r [
Coru Rli !!hl
' .
Suit Fil ed
.,
TODAY! r:
n
Order For YourHlf or a ~r~encf
I Mty be us.d o" e nvelopes •• refum •ddres'
l•bels. Also 'lf•ry h•ncfy •• id•ntificitio"
l•b•ls for metking p•rsonel it•ms •uch es
booh. records, photos, etc. labels stick on
9la1s. •nd m•y be &ts.d for mar•in9 ho;;.
c.•nn.d foed it•m•. An l•btls •re print.cl
with •tyfish VCM1\lt fypt Oft fJn • quefity whit•
gummed' p•p•r.
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Warn i ng
Fro m Sky
Saves 3
&RAF'Fitr U \ •wn __ _
' • Barry Blasts Waste
Defense Nominee -H ears Goldwater I deas
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
"Wake up, wake up, your
houm? i.! on fire !'' boomed the
\'Oice from the sky.
But de!lpite the warnifll!:S
btJlowed fr om a sheriff's
helicopter above a home in
!!uburban Whitt ier, the family
failr<I to respond.
So the d'puties changed tac·
tics.
Al they hovered above the
house, their Io ud spea k, r
declared :
''Attention in the
neighborhood below. there is a
fire in the house below me.
JJ]ea se arouse the occupants."
Neighbo rs quickly wok' up
Richard Stewart, his wife and
daughter, 16, and put out a
fire in the garage, deputies
said.
Candidacy Set
ELK, Mendocino County
I UP I) -Barry Keene , a 33-
year-old Santa Rosa attorn~y.
has announced his candidacy
for the 2nd District Assembly
seat, "''hich he almost won in
1970 from veteran Republican
legislator Frank Belotti.
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~ WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. i Barry Goldwater, a longtime
, ally of the Pentagon, told a top
\:.
Mars Lo gs
La11dslides
PASADENA (UPI ) -Mars,
which some scientists were
surprised to learn h ad
volcanos, apparently also has
landslides.
The Jet Propul·S''io n'
Laboratory. which monitors
the U.S. ~1ariner 9 satellite
orbiting Mars, made pu))!ic a
new photo Sunday showing a
jurnble of debris in the OOttom
of a surface depression.
The hun1mocks apparently
\\'ere caused by avalanches
down the smoother sides of
the depression,
.·
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Defense Department appointee
that d e r e n 5 e procurement
needs a head-roll ing overhaul
to halt "godawful waste" in
money, manpower at* time.
The Arizona Republican,
once a presidential nominee
and a retired major ger~ral in
the Air Force Reserve, com-
mented as lhe Senate Armed 1 Services Committe' met to
consider J>resident Nixon's
nomination of Kenneth Rush.
currently U.S. ambassador to
West Germany, to be depul{
secretary of Defense.
Goldwater complained of the
pentagon's •' s e em i n g in·
ability" to produce n e w
weapons and added:
"I think it is a disgrace that
the g re ates t technologica l
country in the world takes si x
or seven yenrs to do \vhat the
Soviet Union docs in three.''
Rush a!l'l\\'e rcd in the nr-
firmnlive when (ioldw11!cr
asked :
"Would you be \vilting lo
oversee a 1najor overhaul of
procurement to the end where
we can provide our fightin~
'GODAWF\JL WASTE '
Ba rry Goldwater
men with adequate weapons .''
Goldwater said he fears that
Hush might "decide like
tout.c:oing Deputy Secretary
f):i\'id 1 Packard, "\vhat the
h~l'." 11·e can 't do anyth ing
aboul it."
.. I hope that by the time you
get your hat and coat off over
there you'll have some fur
! . ·i
flyin& and I don't care if the.rt
are some heads mixed up in
it."
Rush aaid he believes the
gov,rnment should have the
right to inspect p r i v a t e
records of contractors in -
volved in the production of
weapons systems.
Sen. Stuart Symington (0-
Mo.) agreeing with Goldwater,
told Rush: "What worries me
is the amount of money we put
into weapons systems develop-
ment as against what we get
out of it."
He said the Un ited States
for all purposes has had no
new fi ghters or l rs since
1954 whil' the s "have
had a good many
The comm ee by
unanimous voice \'Ote ap-
proved the non1inatio11 of Rush
and 0£ Eberhardt Rechtin to
be an assistant secretary or
Defense. But it said the names
will not be sub mitted to the
Senate until Wednesday of
next week.
Rush, former pres ident of
the Union Carbide Corp., in
response to other questions,
said he believes present troop
strength in Europe i.s at a
minlmum level and that any
cuts would not be desirable.
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• -• 1 ~-o 1n1PERIR SAV1i1GS
Exaani..' OCljce: iJ366 Via uOO: N~ a.ch, (714) ~1'Jo ~nd J&!' ~SOC~tion
Main Olllce:"81 South Lake ~ven<1e, --(213) 795-&W1 · I
Newpott Cilnter OHice: 550 Newport Center Drive: Newport Beach, (7.14) 64-4-1•:.'<',-....
' East Pasadena Office: S870 East Foot~ill Boulevard, Pasadena, (213) 795-04-47 · ·
Glendon! Oflice: 184 North Glend!lta A\/l>nue, Glendora, (Z13) 335~3
Woodland Hills Ollice: 19SOO Ventulll Blvd •• Woodland Hills. Gali! .. (213} 346'3920
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A WHOLLY o w NEo su·ss101ARY oF 1.a ~ILLION DOLLAR IMPERIAL co1=1Po RAi:10N Of AMERICA om
• • • .... _____ -' . .
INDIANAPOLI~. Ind tAP'
-A cla..u tctltln su11 nn brhnlf
of tit the nation 's f.\rn'W'r!> "ho
used T -hy'brkl 5ttd rom 111
lt?O. alltgtdly Ws:t"tptiblt • to
the Soulbtm Corn l.taf BliJ:ht
lw botn m..i In Glb!oon. Ind -i
Clrcvlt Cow't aj!ains.1 ma tor
Siefd <'Omplft\es, ha\lln& u.lt'.$
iae.xt:es1ol SSOO.CIOO. j-...., ...... ,..~•~•~•~•~•~••,...,..,_.,.,._~..,.~.., ...... ~~~~-~~~-~•~-.. ••-•-.-•~•~-~-~·~•~•~•~• ..... ~'1-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-:--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ •
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ANCHORS A WEIGH
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Peacocks
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Primping
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Spring 1972 launches the nautl·
cal look.
The signs of the fashion are sail·
or collars, ties and officers' braid
along with naval motifs like an-
chors, boats and flags. You 'll see
them applied as applique, embroid-
ery, braid, chevrons and patches.
They'll detail peacoats, blazers and
fisherman sweaters.
As jewelry, the designs will be
forged into funky pins, used in
multiples down a lapel or across a
cap brim.
A whole line of outerwear is set
to take a sea change. Thirteen but-
ton flap pants will carry sealegs
well. Also on deck will be oxford
bags, (deep-cuffed, wide·l egged
trousers) and hats, such as close·
fitting cloches.
It will aU be done in everything
from fish erman'i canvas to the
...
By MARIAN CHRISTY
NEW YORK -Ht!ar Utis,
fa1hiorHniented genllemen !
Designen have concluded that
Im ta the beginning al a "po•l-
.. peacock" period of calm-sensible-
unobtrusive clothes erased of any
semblance or flamboyancy.
They say irs what you want.
Ken 01Ceere, fashion directnr of
the powerful Men 's Y 2111 h j on
Association -offw:ial organi1..alion
of the $20 biJHon men·s.wear in-
duJtry -plans to tf!ll the 11pring·
summer, tm, meeting opening in
Houston , tomorTow that:
••sure, the outrageou• costume
party is O'llt:r. No man really want•
lo look freaky. But .chi-chi
de5igntt:1 wt.> nk.'h all tbtir eo:I·
leaguei crealiag eu:i:Ung clothes
imagine Uw:ir own impact ii
watered down.
"And. in tbr ambition to remain
1 standout, they shnply bile tbe
'e\itrything'Hials\e' routf! to
atilfy thtir own dtslret to be 'dU-
ftrent.' ·:
O'Kttfe~ "I.d's face it, I've ytt
ti.I meet a man who ••• fired lor
wearing nciting cJotht1 on--tbt-job.
Y Uhion iJ I 1ign of the ln-
di\'id:u.alisl. lt'1 a at.atnnent th11l
tbt man iJ not one of thf! 1herp.
And u.. peacock , .. otution, tamed
down. ia alive and well."
The lljicomiog Houlton pttH
. prtvi..r ii a•md lo prove lhal
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ubiquitous knits.
Jiooray for red, white and blue.
You can dress nautically just by
wearing the colors. Like a tlas.o;ic
little navy blue dress splashed \vilh
white or the traditional red, while
and blue combo.
For entertaining by land or sea,
try the anchor appliqucd hosll!S:'l
dress (le£t). Available in red and
Wl'l itc gingharn, the gown is made
of easy-Care polyester.
Anchors. Stars. Chevrons. They
all flock a blaz~r 1nadc in Jincny
1<1oking rayo n/cotton blend <above).
'fhe white flocked fi,t:ures match
up with the v.1idc-cuffcd pant:ii or
an invertcd-plc;it skirt.
Wcl co1ni ng a new wave in fa ~h
fQn <1re the spry i:;aifo rs at left.
C;uffcd knit trou.'icrs arc V.'Orn with
navy influenced tops. Some of theRc
fashi ons are available at the May
Co ., South Coa.~l r'laza.
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men are just beginning to get in the
Pf!aox:k fa shion mood after having
acetpted longer hair, CrJ!ored shirtJ
and wide ties.
O'Kee!e bullt1 even Wall Sttttt'1
top.management bo1u1 are becom·
Ing Itta uptight about fa11hion
becauH:
-'Ibey've been e1p'lsed to e.c-
aggeraled way-«rt clothe1 by the
hippies: whou: 11kock and pared·
down "f'tl shion " isn 't so Wl-
palatablt.
-It's getting lncrea1ingly hard to
recruit oolltglate1 to b e c o m e
• stockbroker• -or, indeed. to nn
many ~other ''prot oty pe ''
E•tabllihm<nt job•.
''Thinking OOsat• would much
rather have an eyer.ore Jn tbt ot'll«
if ht'• a crack IWCkbroker than 1Y1
one at all," MIYI O'Keeft'.
Look for a ba1T1Re of madr2'~.
P'WdJ, &oo. lt'1 aJI part of the
~\cal ttau. Both are linl(ed to
aut1J'y wear. And, in turn, the
"counuy" it fYIPlyrllOUI wllh
frdh air, klt1 of !olr. .a 1unny,
relaxed aUl~. De11Wlf:r1 uy the
fe.JCfnatJon with pat~m 11 b:taed on
• psychic witMrawal frrnn drab
dUn which are tltt\-(l.a1«e.in-
c:tete jlJD31t1 wbtre everyUnng IJ
woefully gray.
"No Ont: w:mtl to •t<tr 5:rey in ~
KJ't'Y world," uya O'Kttft-. "Vi ~y
add further wnbrag.e? I uy add a
llttlt fl20 Id your Wt, try pat"'m
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BEA ANDERSON, Editor
1"tMt~, Pt~t\,lllf I, lfll Pe11 tf
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and color -preferabl y together."'
Even acce11&0rie1 take on 11cw
Impact.
Hll(h·heelt.d 1hoet for men Mve
caught on. Men, ln a peacock fra me
of mind, want to ht taller than
nature Intended. The trend , whlc·h
1tarted out a1 hil~h-heelcd boot1, 11
cat.chin~ on even more in r.hoe1
which havf! up to four·inrl'l tw·l1.
llt1ndbai1111 altMugh erro~iu,..Jy
named , 3re ~Inning to be thf.-
young man'• 1n1wrr V> the brk:f
C8114':.
Thcrt'• 1l10 1 refocu1 on mr.n'1
J<w•lry.
Men 8re we:tr111( f.Odlac rlnl(•. '
ld<r>llfl<:alkm brocti<h ind, lhanb
to the Cl'llntst Influence In fashion,
ev,.n Oriental nedl:lact1. Jewelry
collectirms wlJI be 1b-1wn "111001ttm
-both phony and real I a p I 1,
ruby, roraJ. jadt.
"Mm have 1Uver on ~ tulilc
•nd 11old ln t~r ~·,, 111y1
O'Kttfe. "1'101* they really want
color" -
Hpring 001111 wlJI be kin~, 1Um ,
belted 1..tatbr:r and pale wool1 will
<»mpet< for lhe top spot. Hrltnmed
h.lll, borrowl"d frum Europe-an
.fa1hV-JR collec1iooa, will be •howo.
rakishly oocked ovtt ~ eye
()'Keefe fet"la bt.<.1t1 . ha v •
br•..ugbl the lt"AIJl-eQat.-and-drarn.titlc;.-
Nt O'JfJlbiMtlfJn Jnt.o pruml~
"Black• havf' in~tt freieMrn In
krm1 of pc'ft(Hlll a:prdfkJn," "''
' .
O'Keerc. Many det l6j:Mr1 •'lrtt au\d
MltY thbt IUJ1Prf!IJled blackl diJpl1y
;t 1trong ~nllf! of conlciool fe ihinn
Kupt<rl1Jrlty t>r1m or • ~H of In·
fcr1<1r1ly.
··nie black lnOuence 11 •Mually
1tronv.e r thun the MmoRXUll ln-
nuc.-ooit, whlch u1e<t to l(!t t111hlon
treNl1,'' 1:1y1 O'K.ttfe . "Toda)''•
ht1mfl1u·xual 111 wtarlng 'cla'111c•
ul1Jth"• that ar.I! le11 fty thin the
black.It. No one 0(1tlce11 him any
Thert'• 1115<.i a dtf)rUt.e fashion
trend that JlnkJ men'• wear and
wom~n '• wear. IJJ0k1 1rt fu1ill1.
NO\ unlM1 ~actly -but mort in
t~ concept of clothes. ·
Jr1orf! 111nd more women 1rt wnr·
~ panl":'lll -nrA only beeal.15' It
11f{~r• phyakal Ubtr.aUon, bu1
becaua.e 1t'1 prac:1~. Wt.mtn 11•
wl"ar1ni lon1t 00.lllll. So arr rntn.
P..ot h mtn and WQ'""1 want
bt3VKll.elt t•!ftlht:I bet.I.UM the
tJu1lrlel1 of 11\'lnv, 11 oompUc11ed
and fuhlon tL;,1 \11 be almplHIC'd.
ld4!u art l"hanstln~. The pr.IC(l(t
rev,.tluwm 11 really t:..k!ng bold
-bet•auu there '• IJttle or no
"ail:,rrwf ' attat-tlf'tt ti1 btmit a
fa».hwn11blt m.311 lAan '• ptycWO ht•
come arVUfld tn tht p...int wlJ.Pr•
'"'•hlrm 11 ltO"f,te<l ._. a p!ua -rd
.11 111inu1.
< 1·y.,.,,r,.. ... ~ v,uy -.t>-• dr1twi't
r :'lr .. itkoul t•&hJ'Kl la 1 1'1"7' and, Jn
m•.1il c.111tt1, ~ .aili,,Aute br..11e."
..
•
=----··=----
Games Adults Play Show Children's Apprehension
By JO QI.SO'\
or .... Dellf "Ufl UUI
lfow don • child react when
ht is afraid. embarras.sed . in·
5e<:Url!' fJr l!lnXIOU.'3 ")
Parents ln'>t :-.1ght 1,f lhc:-.c
fetlin~s Ill ;1 fa1111J )' !!lUi.Htnn,
(Jr IO:lrwra Schrn;1deJ l11Jd tht'
audience ill the ~<'(''lnd p<.ircllt
t'ducallon ]C('!ur1· ~P"n'>r'•rt'd 11.)
El Mnrrn Scho<1/ l'TA
To illustrate hrr pr11nl, ~11c
called 12 parcnt'i nut ,,f th+> :tu
d1en<'I' ;ind a~·1i:nf'1 I lhtm
stand1ni: J,()~1 t1r1n'> 111 Iron\ nf
!ht i::roup
Six v.r1r plai ·c1l on l1f11> ~11lc
1n a line and .,rvfr:il 111•1r t11ld
lo hrild hand~. Thr 1rmau11ng
six wcr~ pl<1cctJ nn lhc olhl'r
·Ann Landers
&Jde 1n l1,1·f1 rows nf threr
Dr &h1nadtl callf'd r1nf'
man :ind f!nt wr.mt1n frorn Thr
driub!r rr.w t111d had !) t·
w•nrutn ~!artd 1r: front cf H!r•
mar1, t'lnsr h1·r PVC~ and f.dl
h:H•kv.:.il'd'.!i 1111i1 th i• 1:1rn1 ,,f
the man
Sh~ ri ~ked lhc v.111r1;1r+ "'11111
"he felt aritJ h1·r iHl\l'.cr .,.,,,,
fl';1r
1101.IJl '\I; Ii i\ \'I 1.")
Th<' !)\y1·hr.l1,~1~t lurnrrJ tn
the niw ,,r "Ix r<>•iple ;u1rt
f11unrl th;.it !h1·1 v.c·1f> :ill
l111ltl1ni;: h<1nd'. 1n~tr;id 11f Jll~l
th·· f1·v.· ~h•· h;,I) 1 11.~lf'lll'll•d t•i
Their r1,,,1·11•1r1., 111 rl1r \Hu;,
liun 11f'ff• v.1•:11:. b.1t11~-.
t'Ufl!t\ll\ 1·\/ lll·t111•t1! :ind .1
fc1•J111i.: ~.r t.1·111!: t111.,,.,1·d ;1r .. +1nd
11r Ill•· !1111r r e rri :. t n 1 n ~
/'.
Break These Rules
\1iluntt·cr!I, tv.r, .,.ere told ta
r11rn th1:1r bdcks 10 lbe au-
rh f'nct :tnd put the •r f1ngers Ill
tt11·1r cars. 'and the (Iii.Lr two
\'.'rrr excused tri thc:r ~:c:it ..
'I hl' p<11r1t of th is ""'*s that
!he tv.11 .,.,ho wetc de.:.erted in·
dit·atr-d hy thf'1r oC'tions that
tl11 y nf'PrlerJ .,1·('ur1ty.
"\Vl1;1L /iappt'ned 1n this
r11<Jrr1 "" l)r. 5'·1Hn<Hitl asktd
nr 1h1• r·<;nc·lus10n rif her ii·
lu~tr;1t1on
"I .,.,;1n tcd you lo be aware
nr the \r.·ns1on Jn the audience.
All ''' )<1u hcc<i1ne un-
1 •irnfor1.1hl r ·• sh<' said, 'You
I••">!' 111u1 h 1,f the tension tn
f .. 11111 .. ·'ILU<•llf•ll' ... hen }OU.
J!.ilfl thf' order~ "
t .JJ:>i'r.S S<>.\I ETllJ.\'(;
JJr Si·hmadc! said it is im·
-I
poss ible fr1r children to ma!n-
la1n a defensive role ...-.•11hout
experiencing anxiety. "When
}<lur children defy }OU it costs
thrm something ." she ex.·
pl;nned
J)r &·hn1adel 's focus during
the lt>Clure was on how to
111ri ke children secure enough
to meet lhe cont1ngenc1es of
life -the experiences 1n life
none of us c·un .a1 01d. T)1ese 1n·
el ude death, d e ! er t 1 on ,
d1\orce. attack and perhaps
being r:aught 1n theft.
"If 1-.e want children to he
secure. v.e have to care about
14'hat they are," she said.
"The 1nother provides 90
perce nt nf the contact with an
1nf<1nl and will co mmunicate
acceplilnce or rejection."
Parents offer themselves as
models (with imperfections i
""hich in turn offers security
to their children , she .added
\'.'hat shuuld a parent do
...-.·hen there is a crisi s~ "~·1a1n
ta1n you r identity a'> an
adult." Dr. Sch made I said.
ADULTS AVAILAB LE
"Children v.·ant to increase
their sense of se!f-<;uffic1ency
but al the .same tin1e they
need to know thc.fe are mature
adults available all !he lime
for support "
Children look to adults for
prote-:::1on in all are.as. she
s1:11d "Kids th ink that,..-t1H
adults lake care of kids."
This is v.·hy an adult sex of-
fender is so hard for children
to accept, she Bdded. !l1s of-
Advice for Parents
/
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Several years
110 you printed a l'tler signed "Star Wit-
ness." It was a list or rule! that you
gua ranteed would· break up a marriage.
Wh'n I reed the column I thought it was
amusing. I didn't realize that my own
marriage would one day be destroyed by
ln·laws. I would be very appreciative if
you 'd reprint tha t column -thi s ti me
with a suggestion that all parents who
hav' sons and daughters or near-mar·
rlageable ag' clip it out and keep lt for
fu ture ref'r'nce. Thank you. -COR-
VALLIS , OREGON SADNESS
DEAR CORVALLIS: Sev,ral otber1
ll1ve requested 1 rt-run. lier' It Is:
1. When a son or d&up;hl'r Iris you
know tbf:y plan to be' marrl,d, show open
bostWty to the ptrson of bis cbolc,. Aft'r
all, marrta1e me1ns l'1s lov' and at-
tPlioa for par'-111.t ind th'Y htL\'t a right
1f rtteat u.
:z Eqect y:iur married chlldr'n to
~ every Su11d1y and holiday at yo ur liae. Ad '811 If lbey have olh'r plau.
:a. U 1oar married children have pro·
hlem1 wltb tbelr mates, 'ncourage tbem
ti come Mme to you. Let them know
)'Our bome Is 1tUI their home, no matter
'lfbt. l.Ja&ea 1UeDtlvely to all complalnta
and poinl oul additional fa ults whi ch may
hav' J:one unobserved.· Reme mbe r, a
drop of wal'r at B tlm' can "''ear away a
rock -U you keep at it lon,e; enough .
-4 . ff your married children are having
fin ancial problems, ru sh in wl!h the
ch,ckbook. If you art' having finan cial
problems yourself, borrow, If necessary,
hut let them kDOw th ey 'll never have to
do "'lthout Anything so lon11: as yo u are
11round.
~. If a married child has a drinking
pr oblem. keep te lllng him his mute dro ve
him to It. It wlll mak' him feel better.
E"eryon' needs someone lo blame.
6. If yo ur married child gets an op-
portunity for advancement which lakes
him lo another city, ttll him famll y Is
more Important th an money and if he
leaves, God wlll punish him fnr not obey·
Ing lhe commandm ent, "}lonor thy
father and thy mother."
1. If there are grandchildren, smot her
th'm wilh gifts. ff the parents object, tell
them to krep out of It. After All ,
J!:randch lldren ar' to spoiL Sneak money
to th e kids secretly, If you ha\'e to.
They'll love you for it.
8. I( your married child has a dlf·
ferenet of opinion v.'ilh his mate, ge l Into
th' act and ran th' fla me. Family loyalty
ll a beautiful thing. Maybe you can lurn
a minor argum,nt Into a major hassle
and break up lhe marriage. Sign me
-STAR WITN ESS \\'HO SAW IT HAP·
PE N •
DEAR STAR : BeautlluJ. Just beautiful.
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
\. ~ ~·· '
..
'Marching Saints'
Out Lady Queen of Angels parish members will take an imaginary trip to Old
New Orleans via a riverboat ride on the Pavilion Queen for cocktails at 7:30, .
Friday, f'eb. 4, fol lo\vcd by Dixieland music, dining and dancing in the Pavilion.
Getting in tune are (left to right) Ed Rabalais, Bill Donovan and 11rs. Donovan.
Sagittarius: Professional Advancement Due
fense shatters the1r illu:sJ-On
about adult pro tect.an.
ch ildren in the same 5Chool.
Dr. Schmadel said that when
grief comes to a family, the
children should be allowed to
experience it without being ap--
prehens11·e.
\\'hen a chi ld r'aches a ctr·
ta1n age, the ps ychologist con·
eluded. you're grnng to hav' to
trust hnn or he'll escape and
this rupture -n·ill be a difficult
one 10 rrpa1r.
In rleii!h. she said. adult'.'!
must prov ide the loving that
belongs to life for the lh•ing.
"Don't ask a child to take
death as a man because he
isn't a man. Until grief ls ex-
perient'ed 1t goes on and on.
Don't let children think they
caused the death."
t.
"\\'h:1t we do with the con-
tlnger11.:1es delern1ulCs what
~ind of person v.•e 1'"111 be .'' she
~31d
"You h:1vc to provide an ef-~·i·,· feel un the }Ou r~sler's v.·orld
by prov1dt11g .:.up'fXlrl The only
wav to deal 1111h children is tn
nffer your total 1ntegr11y 11nd
honesty " ~ SA~tl:: HOUSE
In divorce Dr. Sc:hmadel
said. continuity nlUSl be ma1n-
ta1ncd. The pa rent keeping the
ch ildren should try to stay 1n
the same house and keep thei r
Thi.' final lectu re v.·111 !.ake \;
place at i JO p 111. \\'ednesday , ;:J
Feb. 2, in El J\lorro School. ~
Laguna Bea(·h. There is 11 50 (j
cent t1dm1 ss1on fee. ~
• ~~~~ .. -·~ -::..-~'-''!! '~
Clubs Gather
Study Mapp.ed
Syn1 posiurns and a cz_<1n-
ference head activities for
Orange Co.ast v.·omcn for the
next fe w days.
SC Juniors
South Coast Junio r \Vernen
of fo'ountain Valley will take
part in a youth conference,
sponsored by Los Cerritos
District at 9 a.m. Saturday,
Feb. 5.
Representing the club at the
event in Los Angeles v.·ill be
the Mmes. Frank Fleck, Dan
\r0rdon, Mike Brusseau and
Robert Marten.
Dinner Dance
Holy Family Ado pt i on
Service will benefit from pro-
ceeds realized from .a dinner
dance. planned by the Holy
Family·s Adoptive Parents.
The Castaway restaurant,
Burbank will be the setting for
the gala Saturday, Feb. 5.
Short Course
A short course on Law for
Women will be conducted on
four consecutive Thursdays,
beginning Feb. JO. at 9:30 a.m.
In Island House. Fashion
Island.
Sponsored by Orange Coast
College, the series will explore
Feminine View of Laws, Your
Family and the Law, Your
Home and t.he Law and Your
Car and the Law.
Conducting the course vo'ill
be attorney Betty F.arrell.
Nurses
Human Re lations in a
Changing Society will theme
the Tri-Association Sym·
posi um of Industrial Nurses,
prrss1ons. The Pay-0 ff ln
ftelating lo !he \\'hole Person.
\\lho Listens~ and Posith'e
Institutional Cha ng' for All
People.
HB Juniors
l luntington Beach Junio r
\\/omen will spons6r a series
of self-improvement classes.
The woman's clubhouse will
be !he setting fdr th' two
sessions to take place at 9:30
a.m. S.aturday, F,b. S, and
Saturd.ay. Feb. 12.
The free classes are geared
to girls, age IJ.18, with a li mit
of 50 attending. Advance
registration is encouraged and
further informs t io n is
a vail able by calling Mrs. Ben
Phipps.
Eastern Star
Members of Laguna Beach
Chapter, Order of Eatern Star
will travel by bus Saturday,
Feb. 5, to visit the chapter in
Tijua na.
MG 'Auxiliary
A contill8ent of Orange
County members of t h e
Myasthenia Gravis Auxiliary
.are expttted to attend the
foundation's an nua l
humanitarian sward dinner
Saturd11y, Feb. 5, tn the B'ver-
ly Hills Hotel.
The black-tie event ~·ill
hono r Eugene H. DeKoven,
administrator of Be I I w ood
General and Lakew o o d
General hospitals. in recogni-
llon of his dedicated service in
helping in the struggle to find
the cause or and cure for
myasthenia gravis, a aerious
neuromuscular diseas,. to take place at 9 a.m. Satur-
1
p; _________ ..,,
day, Feb. 5, in the Los Angeles
Convention Center.
Members of the Harbor
Area association will join
DINNER FOR TWO!
Frote 01~ ..... A...t
Colo• Tr1v.l0g.,.
lor Me rrltt:r Couplff,
WEDNE SDAY
FEBRUARY 2
(·hange of sc't'nery . Clul1!rr11
nrr 1·rry niurh in picturr F1nrl
111n1-r lin1(' for f) l e ll s u r " ,
recrcat1on. l.C';11't' nl 1 n ri r
tlct;:uls to others. !\'red !' fnr
st• l f ·r x prt·ss 1• in.
J.E(l (.luly 23·AU~. 22 1:
~1 ulll'Y pn~1tion is brighter.
\\ h:i! ;)f)IH'n rs a mere !.:ix
~111,l h·r 1·nuld :-.hn11• signs of
lifi·. \\'t•l<"onH' t' on I a r 1 s .
1·l1n 11ge.'\ ;ind 1·hallrngcs. 1'nkf'
111\f'lllur\'. l'r11lrct V;'lluahles
-1nt'l11ti111g your rl.'putatio11 .
Some of your hopes. wishes
are fulfll!ed. Wha l has been a
rf'Strict111g force is rcn1oved.
Disc·1p\ine is fl necessity. but 1l
mu >;t be of the self 't1r1rly.
"alues, not s u r f ace in-groups from Orange County
BIRTltDAY you are sensitive, and Southern California to C1M 'U.)U7 tn<I H .. r T"-
26.Htur •..ct,... ,,.,....,,
By SYDNEY 0!\1ARR
F(lr me, a sense of hun1or is
1>erhaps the greatest asset 0nt·
can possess. And 1 hn vr fnunrl
that ir1di\'1dunls born unrlC'r
c;e111ini hllV(' Iha! ('OfllllH)(ht~'
often in abundance. NR!JVl.'S nf
Ib is zodiac<il sii:;n Rre nhlr lo
laugh at the111sch·cs. This 1"
proved during my lrl'111rl'.~
when . "·ith fl straight fa<'r. I
111nnounced Lhat. · ' M n r ,.
persons ho rn under ! ;ernini
Rre in Jllil than nny (1\hrr
iodiacal si,1tn." If nny Cc-rnini
natives a rc present. lhf'y in·
\'11rinbly laugh the loudest.
ARI ES 1March 21·Aprtl 19 l:
Pe ts and prople v.·ho rely (111
Ynu d('mand more attention.
k cv· is to seek har1nonv
"'1lhout spread ing yourself toO
thin. Stick close to horn' basf'.
c.;t;;\11!\'T ~r.1 ay 21-.lutl(' 2n 1·
i'ou gr! farts. rrsults l 11
pf'r.~011.11 :1re:1, .\nu find \1hrrc
\Oll s!a11d \11th nir111h1.•r ot 11p-i~1~11,. !'1·~ If :-111~lr. n1:11·n:ig1•
q111 '.•!1nn ;.lr1sl'S. II nl,llTll'rl.
add1l1\111a! rcs]hlnsibil11y 1:-1n
dicalt>d .
CANCl:'.R (June 21 .Ju lv 221
,.(1u 1110\·e al)l)U!. 1it'l'f'lr11 1
ldens and complete tn111:-ar-
t1nns. ;vlorc persons hrl'ornr
;i"·rire of your pr('sen rr. 1\rir~
u1d11·idual C'an <iirl ~!op e:1r-
ry1n~ burden 1\·h1ch 1s 1111l
r1fi:h!l~· ~·our 01rn. \'ou h,1,·e
right to happtnrss.
\'ll!fl{) (Aug. 2.1·Scp! 22!:
l '1·r~11n,1I r11:1gn1·t1S;n1 1.~ on
r1 .. e. 1011 rccC'11e n1ea111n,e::fu l
<·11111pl;n1cn1 ~ lt1·;.pnnrt 1 n
p11s11ive 1n:1nncr. I"o kirking nf
toe 1n gr111111d . 11r 1·onfidl'111.
·r:ikr sh'ps for1vard. (; o
pl;.ices. n1erl find ,e::rcf'I prop!r.
l.IHHA (Sep!. 23-0ct. 22 1:
\Vork behind scenes. You r:in
!)(' pov.·cr tlu1t pu lls strings.
Find right clirf'elion. Slop
tnO\'lng: Iii auuless circles.
Lau,e::h Rt pa::l foible s. Get
rrady now for successful
ass;iult on fut ure.
SCOR.PIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 \·
dications. Creali\'e processes·
are at 1\·ork Don't block !hem.
Give yourself a chance to
Find out whal ynu nrcd . Then grov.'. Pi sces person can play
~nu ,1•111 receive ii. imporlrtnt role. J\toney qucs·
SAG l1~rA llrUS !'Jov. 22-tinn will he setlled.
ner. 21 ): Preslige Is on line. PISCES (f'eb. !9-J\1 arch 20):
Si101v Ll1i1! ynu can 1110\'e 11·1th Coo pera1r 111ilh one horn under
t1tnl'S \'cri!';il h::irr:1gc n111y Aquariu :;. Lcgnl n1aneu"'(! is
f'111nc fn.in1 one \Vho 1s envious. in picture. St!ck >1·1th one 1.\•ho
fr11!'tr;1t{'d. Take lt 111 st ride. has expcri<'nc<'. Eschen' sc~'s;:i-
able lo perceive 1noods of _h~e~a~r_'.t~al~k~s--"o~n__::M~i~no~r~i~ty~E~x·~~~~~~~~~~~~~
othf'rS. Recent linles hrtve nut 1-
becn too happy . but this will
change. And change v.·11! be
beneficial. lf single. you could
1narry. If married. there could
be an ;iddition lo family.
There v.•11!, in upcoming
n1onths, br ne w vital op-
portunities for succc.~s.
To Hnd out rnorf about vour"I' and l'n1fcss 1on;1l .~up('rfflr plans !(1 t1onal n1cthods. Str<idy pace ••lroioov. o•d" 5•do•Y 0ni1rr ·~ so.
n1;:ikC' room for \.'{HJ :it top 11e!s you to goal. K.no\v 1his P"Qr 1>oo~1••. Tnr T•uth Abeur ~ Asl•nlrJQy, Send b"!hd1lr and I! <•"I' CAPRl(OllN (Occ. 22·.Jan . and act accordingly. lo Orn~" Soo>.!f!. r~· OAILY PILOT.
19 1: Philosophical concepts I" TODAY IS ,. 0 u R 8Q~ J1'1l. Gr~n(! Ce"'''I Si.1 100. N•w r Yo•~, N v . 10011.
are emphasized. You be,1tin ----··-•iiillli .. liiiiilili-tilili~•tiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilii 110\v to hear sound of your 0111h ,.
voice. Key is lo take yourself V fl
seriously. r.1cans slltl\'e off any
hint of in feriority. You are
worthy. Kno14' it.
AQ UARI US 1Jan. 20-Feb.
18 •: Be ronccrned v.·ith ac!ual -------
I. A void extremes. T1urus Rnd
l.ibr• persons figurr pro-
mi ntntly.
Crepes
Clinging
Thi' rrr.p~·s ;ire b,11ck In
r.~~h1on. \1·hi('h rnl'a ns ~on1c
extrn r;:irr i:: necessary in
•· cold wave special
$16.75 ~·~ .... I TA LI HliS ! April 20·~1 11y 201
Bring · forth r rt> a l 1 1· r
resources. Be ' rtAdy f o r
Chinese Lines
1\·ardrobr~
Alh11\' ple1i1~ nl 1111,r tn prr~s
a crepe dress hrfort 11·r11ri n~.
ud\'1sc~ tl1C' l'r11\'ersny of
Nebrask~ -1.11\coln Extension
Str,·ice. Lise n v.·ool pressing
clolh coverl'd w 1 f h a
Inspired by the mysterious llght1velght l-qllon cloth that is
' Orif'nl. d'sii;:ner Kenn'lh Lane dan'p bul tl(lt 11·e1. t takes the mythic11l M:rptntinc It 's better In u~c a n1inim11m I dr11i.:on ind f1.shinn! tmport11nt of moisturt' :ind rCpr::it th('
bib-hk(' neck.laces. rarrinas careful presslap. tv.'O or l;hrec
ind c,r,·rd jade brll~lc~. limes. l ~~~l~~I
FRANCIS-
\. ORR o.I
•
'·
FINE STATIONEl!Y ...
VALENTINE S
C•t•' e Slh1 • C1 .. dl••
till I 11111 •(h'I! l 'I 1111 tu••-111 111 ctt11u111 '••ti •t . '
WONIS M'S Wl•ll ,,, .. ' ....
u n •. Ct.ttt H•,.-
co .. 11• ••• "'" U).ttft
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JUDGE PARKER
HOW PO VOtl WA.HT
YOU~ P~IWK , ~-"~
STEDM~?
f,41SS PEACH
PERKINS
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LIAllY l'll Ol I .";
By Chester Gould ll'l ABNER By Al Capp
w1;-'1-t AT LAST. C.OINC. 'TC
A SNOW -t>()AOL • -
PLOW!
By Tom K. Ryan
By Al Smith
-How's-n-lAT,
'5Y131L.?
By Dale Hale
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ADVANTi>Go·:>
OF A
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By Gus Arriola
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By Ferd Johnson
I' '"'"OTHER I /,"7-sroc1o:· i BouGHTi
TR£MeNOOUSLY
DISAPPOINTIN<i
( " •• , > ~ 1·!.A-:;. Ft~eN
By Frank Baginski
ANIMAL CRACKERS By Roger Bollen
I'
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x ;:;usr DOil'\ llllDl:R·
'Sf/>J.lO lfi DC()()~ IF
Tt1ERE REAµ.<J l'5
llJTe.~ UFe oor
THERE Ill SPACE ,
LI l'l: 400 S/4) .•
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T~!? 'l'O 6Ef IN
100Ctl llltm os 'f
By Charle5 M. Schulz
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P\.AY&O'f WMO tns' PNC>
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CMASIS StCIUTAR•tS'
AaOIJMD 1141 OJFICI
AN'!> e>n'fRTA!M
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RISTAUl1NITS ••
ACCOltOfN .. TO
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By John Mile5
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THE GIRLS
'"ll l)w mu ch IA thl1 lamp'..'"
DENNIS THE MENACE
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Anteaters Bid to Upset Long Beach Tonight
While some of tile tarnt~h hall bten
t8ken of( of 11by11l~$,~ fnr h'llh ~1dr!'i la'l
weekend . ton11i:ht'.11 8 o c)M k ballle
b@twef'n the powt•rful C.:nl ~1<ile 1 Loni.:
Bfal'ht 4!'1C'rs ;tnrl 1 t l1\l11P '.) 1\n11•;11 1 ·r ~
i~ txper·trrl to fill !h•· nio rf' 1)111n 7 111111
r;eatii a! Anahr 1rn c·r.n1·1·n 111•n ('r111t·r
Ratr<I th1rrl or fo11r tll 1n n1,.~1 nr1t1nn:1I
r ol!r,i.;1ate ha ske1h:ill [Mill,~ pi 1or 1o !ric
""ekend, ('fl:Jch .J(·rrv T;1r kri11i:1 n·~ 41l1·rs
are F.1Tillrt1ni.: fr•1rn • 11 11)4..llfl lhu rnp1ni.:
"'hich !h1·y t1r1k r1n thr t'hln Sund:t \
aga1n.'il f'a<'if1c l'r111st Athlrtu· A<i<it)('1;1!1on
foe 1Jn1 ver!'iitv of l':H'1f1•
Real1.st1c·ally, thnu.ii:h. thr .,c·;i lt~ w.·1~h
hr~v1lv In fa 1·or of the !...Jing Reach
qu1nt,.t. 1\h1ch scared UCLA la5t ~prin;:
in thf' .-.:CAA \\'f•tern Re g1nnal\ bf-fr.re
f11ll1011 ~7 ).~
Lndrr th<' l utc la ~t' 11f Hunt1n.:ton
Harhl1ur ft'Sldcnl T;u kanlan thr 'i91'r•
ha\1• ltln,.,.,tJmr><I 111!11 ;1 gi>n111ne i·:i i.:1·
J)liY.1·r .,,, 1th !hl'1r 1111lv <•tlif·t lo \.1, of rhr•
<\('ll'-Hrl 1•11n11ng 1n {·llrly f)t•c·1·1r1h('1 ;i~,1 lri•l
rug gt'<I Sr1u!h"""t1·rn [,1J111~1:1r\a \1118.1 at
!hr baynu l'OtH1t r1 ~1·h<ifll
L('I t'IJlll'h 1'1 111 '/'1ft flgUJ l'\ U1e 4ilrr•
1,·11 1 hf' r<·:1dy tri i.(o all uul aga1n\l h 1~
Ant1·11tP 1 ~ 1n ~~ire "' thC'ir up.!.ct lt1~'> 111
JJ:i<"if I!'
Setti11g Seat A1iclio1•s
J{e af1 1rm~. ''l lbink !hey v.·ould\•t been
rf'a dy 111 plav u~ anywa y But aftPr r l\m·
JnK off lh11t los'. th~y'll be re11d y tn plti v
an~ Md)
·'!'hen w11h (;ray playing !6 II L(•onard
1;r;iv. ;:i pri1.e snphomnrt tran.<;fpr lrom
t\;in.~a~ \\h!1 °li sla ted lo see his first-e\er
iH (.Hr\ ii'> ii ~!l!'r I <irld 111 frnnt Of !hat '1.(•0d
1 ri111rl ,11 the Cunvenl10n Center, they
~hl•tilrl pl:i_1 l'.C.!I.
"\\l\1•lh/•f th1· r;"l('! WI' rl 1dn '[ pJa_v wtl!
Su1urrl:11· n11:ht 11·1!! havt any ttlling
eff'('!~ 1111 u~ J fll.~! don't kno11·
A 1n;in of ma n.\' word s and m;:iny nptn -
irir•'i, J,iing Be:ich's Tarkan111n 1s t laltd
UPI Ttltpholt
\Vorkers are bu si ly engaged installing <1n rhor<; for
seats in Kan sas City's f\Vin·stadium Ha rry S. Tru·
man Sports Complex. This is the haseball slad1um
lhat accounts for a part of the
largest single order in history.
117,000 seals -
S ports Clippecl Short
• Olympic Hassle Continues
SAPPORO. Japan -1'hc lop officials
tlf the Austrian Olym ['ic ski team an-
nnunced toda y they were withdrawing the
Alpine and Norclic.· ski te;:im.~ from the
1972 Sapporo <:amcs -but they "ho~rl
fllld trusted" lhal iH!e skier Karl Sch ra nz
11·,~!c1 urge his ll'ilrnrnali·s to slay.
Thi~ ;1ppc:1rrd lo ht• <1 df'vice thnl 1voulrt
prrn11t !hr i\u ~t rians lo live Uf' to the ir
earl ier lhrcat to w1lhdrAw thtir skiers if
1111r v.·rrr ban ned from the \V1nter Cami's
and at the same time permit them to
6t<1y Rnd compete.
No Jlle11 Allowed
Schranz was ordered banished from the
\Vinter GarTies Monday by the Interna-
tional Olympic Commillee because he
has sold his nam!' and picturr to ad-
vertise ski equipment.
•
ST. LOUIS -'l'ht' St. Louis foothall
Ca rd inals, in a four-/)Ja1·er 1r.1rle .\1onda v
11·ith San Diego, i.::ive ·up 11·1dP rPrr11·r·r
D~l'e \\'illiams and running back Cid
Edv.·ards. They got Leon Burns, a run-
Gals' Ol y 11 ipic Village
-1 t Resembles Prison
•
SArroR n r AP \ -ThP wnn1en 's Olym-
p1r v1 llrt,'1e 1~ About llS ea'y to lnl'arle, anrl
A• 1n1 J11n,1:. A~ R 11ecrel itovrrnmenl 1n-
F1all ri t1on .
111 the trur St'n.,r , it 'i; not ll v1!1ajilr at
:di hu! A 1·on11l011nrt ht-hind barbed v.·1re .
11 .~ rntr:tn('r hh1ckr<t b~· J[ray·clad
,l;;p,111t•,,r l!Uillcl~ Fron1 a !J n1 l'f'llow
hoo1h 1h:11 pro!r<."ts thrn1 fi-or~ thr
rl1·rnr111i;. !111·~· pro1rf'1 .~nme 300 female
nthlrtrs lr orn 1n1r·udPr~
Thr1r 1111!1· "r:t1)0n, \\'ll1t h thev v;ield ef-
frl't1 vrly, 1.~ politt' firn1ncs~. ·\\'hill' l'ln
uiwn rlo11r pollcy rx1~1.~ 111 !he men 's
11lla'1.e. e1·rn a cnn1pe!lt nr's nint'1er and
v.·cunl'n r1•1,.,1rtrrs 11 i1h thr prn1>cr l'rerlrn·
!inl~ ;;irr hnrr·rd fn11n 1he 11·on11'n's
qunrll'I'-" 11t1ll'.~.~ 1·~1'<1r!rd h.1 R r(·~ulrn\
athlrt1•. A1111 th1 •rr 1s ~1 1 11 rndlrs,.; "'a1t1ng
Rnrl chrck111jil and rf·rhet·k1ng hv thf' t>ver·
!!n1 1l 1n11. t'\er·pol1le. r vrr 1rOn \1'illed
guards.
girls . thrre tu 11 su1t r . 11re tine! laugh ,
l.'om1ng And lo!n1n g hrt11•een practice
sessions Rnrl ,<;;1gh1 srf'1n.1: !rips.
Jn Jojo's ~u11r <ire t1rn othrr ·u~s.
Olympic sk<1tcr,<;; -.l.1nct 1.ynn , nl
Rockford, l !I . !hf' uat 1onal 11·01ncn 's
chan1pion. a111I B;1rh:1ra Rro.,.,·n nf
Dt>nvr r, nne of lhl' p;o r!" t•ornprt 1tors.
r\rxl iloor ;1 r l' rh" nthrr An1erican
skattrs .Juhl' llnlrne,<;;. 1'\orth
Jln1t~·11•01"11I, 1vh11 11·on ;i i;ol<f n1e1\al 1n the
pre·Ol~tnpics here la.~1 vrar. Suna Mur-
ray of South Oranl!l', ~.I., nnd ~1el1ss11
~f ilitano of llix 11111.~. N.V.
E11ch of the girls' n~irns l'011t;1i n.~ l'l
single bed ind nigh! ta hie 111 v.·aln11t-fini!"h
plastic. a small 11•ar1lrnbf' 1rllh four
hanger.!i and persona l f'ffl'ets -til pC
recorders, r11dios , Ch;1rlev Hrnwn to11·eJs
nnd !he usual clulter of ;i "rollrgc dnnn ,
"Coin(' look out Bat·bar.~·s 11·1ncto11""
hrckoncd .J ojo. "Jsn·1 1l grral'? I I'.~ JU:-t
like hon1c."
The view v.•as of a Colonel Soi11<lcrs
Kentucky Fried Chicken eatery 1rith
Japa nPse translafions for just About
e"erything except "flng er lickin' good "
ning back and · \\lalker Gillette . • receiver.
Gillette wa.!i the Chargers' top draft
choice in 197! and Burns v.•as the top
chnice in 1970.
\\'illian1s cauRht 56 pa sses For 702 yards
in the 1969 .~c;:ison . but 11•as unable to
1·01ne ur;ir !hat per fo rmance in the
fo llow1n,[! \11·0 .~ra son s.
Ed\\·ards p!;:i yl'd four sr;t sons with !he
Cardina l5. havinR his btst ye;i r in 1969
1\ hen he ru shed for ~04 yard~ in 107 car·
•
l\'J.;\\' YtJ RJ-.: -'fhe i\C\\' York G i an t.~
lr;:ided rlefrnsi1·p r nrl FrPd Dryer tn ti\r
.\'e11· En ,!:!land Pa1 rints today for th ree
draft \h01c r •. including 11 f1rst-rn und
.seler t1nn 1n this ~ea r·s :\at1onal F~tb~I!
Leagur dr:if t. \ •
l.\GL E\\'()()I) -Thr IA1s Anµele<;
l\111g~ got fl chance at cli mbing out of the
~atinn;:iJ Hoc key l.eagu!'·s \\'ester n
D11·1s1on cellar tonight Rut ir 's a lnng
shot
The Kings. undrfralrd in lhrir la st
1hree R~mes, host the powerful Chic11.go
Black Ha"'ks 111ho le11.d lhP divi.5ion by I l
points and have knocked them off in all
four of their meet in1rts this season .
•
PHOENIX -Five race horses were
killed 11nd tv.·o others were badly burned
:\tond.11y when fi re engulfed part of a
la rge. \\'ooden barn at Turf Paradise .
Firemen said the blaze started before
dnwn at the north end or the barn and
f!Amr~ q111ck!y raced to several ne1rby
:-:!a ll" "'here horse.!i 1\·ere being kept dur·
i11~ lhf' \\'In ter racing season.
•
Bf~i'-.11'0N', Tenn . Steve Kiner,
linebacker for the New England Patriots
of the National Football League. has been
i·Jrared of charge~ of p o s s t s s i n g
narcotics and legend drugs and signed his
nu!ogr<1ph for one of the arrfsting or-
ficC'rs.
Kiner was cleared on tht c:h1rges Mon-
day~.afler pleading innocent.
'
.
to fin ally have <:ray a.s 1.n off 1rJa}
member of hi.5 cont inge nt.
fetls lo be !urned back from lht> 1-1·in col·
umn .
.. \\'e '4'ant to be at UCI badly, but our
b1ggt5t concern no w !!. v.•1nnlng our con-
ference " Of lht formtr high school All-American
fl"l'r"'·ard. Tarkan1an notes. "There'1 no
doubt about Leonard's ability. Before
ht s throligh , he eould be tht finr:.~l big
man l!1·er to play at Long Reach ... you
lflfJM; al Leonard in practice and marvel.
H1H you 've gol to remember he 's JUS! a
so phnmnrt and has never played 1n a cnl-
lt,i!t gaml'."
,\'01 too acc ustnmed lo lt151n~. 111·11h a
87-1 5 overall rrcord 1n a four·ytar span a!
l..on,\l Beacn, Tarkan1an was asked bow it
HP retorted· "we 're woundtd mentally
hu t WP Know UCI will be good and that
thrv'll be po1ntin1: at us .
"I'm not making any l'x cuses, but
l'.P re not ne eess<iril y po1nl1ng tnwartis
them . It 's because we 're verv concerr1rrl
about our L·o nference, espeCi al!y a!t rr
th at loss Sunda1-.
"\V e've unl y senously ~t'HUtl'fi UC! on~·t.
t1nd they loriked like a ve ry fine clu b in
!na1 one Ian 8.l • 77 win over PCAA
mr mbf'r ~an Diego State . a team whit.'l
Long Beach drnpped, 89-75J.
E:d Ratletl ;i b-ti Junnir gunrd for L•1r1g
Beach "ho poured 1n 43 point s in Sun·
da~ 's luss. ('OUl d 111ake !he eventual dil·
tcrenc;e, fl llh11ugh UCI n1entor Tift .o;a;.s,
"Lnng HC'ath 1~ a ~Upf'r t<'a n1 .,,,1th sc1c11
or t'tght cxt·c!len l ·pla)ers"
.\! 11ny rt1tr Tift S<I\~ h1~ lrnr11 11dl h;<1 e
ti tu rn 111 a ~upre mr nffr nc,11·r eflort
111i;a1n\I nver 1\h,.JmJn~ nrld~ 1,hJlr hopin g
rri offse t a tremendous d1sad1·an t.1ge oa
lhe boards.
Notre Dame Defensive Ace
Selected No. 1 in NFL Draft
Patulski Goes
'fo Lowly Bills;
Bertelsen to Rams
NE W YORK IAP 1 -\Valt Patulski . .11
260-pound-and·i rowing deftnsive t n d
from Notre Dame who is compared
favorable by hi~ college co.11ch with pro
great Al.11n Page. wa s Sl'lected by the
Buffalo Bills today as tht> National Fool·
ball League's No. 1 draft pick.
1'he Los Angeles Rams, with a pick
ac·quired From the San Diego Chargers.
who in I urn ;:icqu ired it from Denve r,
tapped 1'exas running back Jim Bertelsen
as thp second round began.
The &-foot-6 Patulski. '>l'ho comes froin
the upstate New York town of Liverpool,
a .~uburb or Syracuse, was In on 74
tackles for Notre Dame des pite a l;:ite-
season knee in jury th at kt>pt him out of
one game l'tnd p11 rt of anotht>r.
'l'he Cincinnati Bengals. picking seconcP:
C"<'luspr1 somewhat of a surprise by going
for another defensive end, z.50.pound
Shrrman \V hite of Cal ifornia who ltd thi!!
le.!lm with i5 \ackll's. The Bengals had
h<-rn txpecte<I to draft Oregon's Bobby
j\·loore, a runnin11: back-wide receil'er.
Thi' Chicago Bears. selecling third "'ith
I choice acquired rrom the Ne1v '"ork
Giants, look Lionel Antoine. an offensi,·e
t~ckle-tight end-defensive end fron1
Southern Illinois .
The St. Louis Cardinal s p i c k e d
Orei:ton·s Bobby Moore , A running bRck-
.,.,.ide rt"ceivrr "'horn the pros rovet most
at the latter posl!1on.
Thr Denver Rroncos, thought to bt
seek1n,1: ~ wide receiver. went instr:<'!d for
Riley Odom s. ;:i 6-4, 2..16-pound tight tnd
from the Universitv of Houston who
caught .ffl passes for.730 y11rd~ and eight
·touchdo"'ns
'['he Houston Oilers. picking sixth, tonk
still a third defensive end, 25.)-pound
(;reg San1psnn or Stanford v.·ho is
drscribed as ha ving p!!rhaps more poten-
!ial !han any other defensive lineman in
Sl l'tnford history.
The <:rl'en Bay Packers chost> corner
ba ck "'illie Buchanan o( Sa11 Diego Stale .
Stanford becaml' !ht first team !o have
l>.1•0 players drafted \\'hen the J.1 innPsota
\/1 kin.e;s. e1ercising a choice obtained
from New England in th!' .Joe l\;:ipp deal.
look middle linebacker Jeff Siernnn. a
22.'i-poundrr who paced !he P;:ic1fic-8 and
ltose Bowl cha mps with 112 tackles. He
was moved from def!'n sive end to
l111J1t1 b;:it kt>r in 1970.
At 1he S!l'trt of !he sr<1.son. Ralston call-
ed Siemon "Jlist whal the pros .are lonk-
ini for in a middle linebacker. Hr: must
be rated with Dick Butkus and Tommy
Nobis when the y were collegians."
The New York Giants took Eldridge
Smalt. a wide recei ver from Texas Ak i
and Cleveland picked Tom Darden. a
safety from Michi gan . San Franci!!Co
selected wide receivtr Terry Beasley
from Auburn.
The C.reen Bay Packl'rs, using a pick
acquired from San Diego for Kevin
H11rdy, rhos~ quarterback Jerry T11ggt of
Nebraska. The Dlicago Bears used lht ir
own pkk to draft dt>ftnsivr: back Cra ig
Clemmons of 16wa.
The Pittsbu rgh Steelt>rs se\ecte<I run·
ning bar k Franco Harris of Penn State,
Philadelphia chose quarterback John
Heaves of Florid11. Atlanta took defensive
back Cltirence Ellis of Notre Dame and
the Detroit Lions went for dtfensil'e
li neman l1 erb Orvis or Colorado.
The New Orleans Sain ts took 2.fO-pouncf •
offensive guard Royce Smith of Georgia,
an outstand ing blocker.
The New York Jel! picked linebacker
Mike Taylor (Michigan ), 0ak1 an d
selected wide receiver Mike Si11ni of
Villanov1 and Ba ltimore too~ tack.Ir: Tom
Drou1a1 from Or1gcn.
Ul"I Ttl1pho11
BUFFALO PICKS NOTRE DAME'S WALT PATULSKI FIRST IN DRAFT.
ltl1111i z No ltlHtclr
Just cl Good W 01·l\:out
For Old Ma11 Griffith
~early 3.1 years olrl . Emde Griffiih
da nced around his dressing room minutes
after thrashing Armando Muniz, nine
years his younger.
Griffith, a former v.•orld \\•elterv.·cight
and middleweight chan1pion, shouted,
''How 's that for an olct man?''
He didn't worry about an answer.
Griffith won nearly e1·rry round r-.·lon-
day night at the i\nahein1 Convention
Cen!er in capturing the IO·round non·tit!e
fight from the previously unbt'aten Muniz
in a unanin1ous decision.
He said h.is n1anagers tol d him before
lhe fight "that this was a rough kid. but
it would be n1orc like a good workout in
the gym. I went intq the ring \\'i!h that in
my head but also wanting to do a little
better than 1 workout and try a fe w
things." -
:. Griffith, 154, of New York, Jr.ft Muniz,
152. of Los Angeles, with one eye bleeding
and 1lm~t pounded shut. but there were
no knock.downs.
r-.1un iz •·really took some punches,''
said Griffith \1•ho ;icknowledged the
youngster put hun back on his heels wit h
a series of so lid shflts in the third,
1'.lun1z·s best round.
After th~t the old pro too~ over com·
pletely, running his recnrd t1J n victories.
13 losses :ind one no dec1s1orr' in a ring
career that started in 19511.
~1uniz is nov.· 17-1·1 w11h 12 knockouts.
A near capacity crov.·d of 8.100 paid
$6t '.047 to sec the fight.
Griffith <ind his managers left town
\\'ithout $200 or rhr1r $11.000 guarantee
because he came 1n al about tv.·o pounds
ovrr the sprci f1cd 152 Rnd \\'as docked the
money tJnder an a11!01natic California
penally .
Griffith's managers, Gil Clancy and
t,i'oward Albert, said they ha ve a len-
tatil'e fight upco ming in Paris v.·ith
Jacques Kerchlchlan.
Promoter Dvn Frazier said he is or-
fering Griffith lind Emir: ''Indian Red"
~z $25,000 ~piece to fight in the
Forum in 1nglewood this month.
No lll<'O art' ttll1 f11·ed 111 lrc:id the
ha l1011·cd h11!l.s of 1he t~·o forbiddin11
brown ,.;tructurl'S lhAt tov.·rr 11 stories
oi•tr !he Olyh1p1r \'11\;:ijl,e complex But
the girls. in an ;ige of to-t'<lucational col·
le~e rlorm1tont>s ;inrl free Jo1·e, profess no
an~er.
"l!'s hke tlus 11 hrrcvrr "e 110," s;:i1rt
Joio S1arbuck, 22·1 r111r-old d 1 s 111 f f
membt-r Clf lhe I' S. nAtion;il flRure
~k1Jtln11. r han1plon p:ur tr um J)(l11 nry
Starr Says He'll Retire After '72 Muniz sufrered a cul over hlJ !ell eye
early in the sixth round. which the rt11c 1
doctor ~id was a reoptning of the cul
originally inflicted by Clyde Gr1y, the
last opponent Muni:i f11ced . "Wt t'An ,1to Into lhr nu•n'.~ q11:u·1rrs but
thty r11n't come 111 hrtl'. 1 ~uf'i;~ th11t
mtlln!! v.·e'r1· the unrl' "'ho rRn hr selec·
lil't," .!ihe said laugh1n~
Pttt'1he ,i:r~rn b11rl.ltd "'1rr 1.~ il11n11lc r
wamJnj! to out."l1derl'. A h11i;:C' si~n on the
outer door pr~l;i1n1~ 111 .l11pnne.o;r,
English and Frtn<'h :
"To all pre'5men: ''ou an' no1 nllO\\'Cd
co enter lht dormllorv withnut thr
permlJSion by 1he ch1er or mission.
because it is off l1n11t .!i ·•.
But o~ in~1de, Ufr \'llr m1h ('If tn·
tr:m1tlon1I frlend~hlp \I inrer gitmes
art me.a nl lo fosh!r r' Adt s 1nd the
' . I .
'
l'\ASllVILL.E. 1'@nn. i AP 1 -Hart
St.arr. lht prollflc plA~"fAllrr of lh1• Corren
Bay Packers, says ht \\'111 call It quils
nftC'r the coming s"eason . but anly 11 he is
phy $.ic;illy 11ble to play during the yc11r.
' 111 an lntcrvlrw M<tndny niJtht with The
A~SOl'.:1atcd Press, Stllrr. l8, said Ille
limr had rome for hin1 to riee ldc ricl1n1tr-
l.v his future as a profe.!is 1onA1 footb11ll
plA,Vtr .
11 11·a5 lhe fir~l l1n1e th.'1\ Starr, thr
~1ftf'd Packer \'el.t r.a n "ho w:u1df'd the :\a·
11011.1 1 football Lea,!!Ut te1m to t1o1 0
Sur)('r Bowl a ·1or1es in 1967 ~nd 19i0,
had f1nR l!.v arknow!edged · ht v.•ould re-
nr(' 11.ffer the 1972 season.
"/l 's rime to make that part icu l11r
deci sion.'' he said , strtss ing thtit his
, brJ!hanl career would end only 11 his
'henllh hold5 up and ,he is able to play
durin~ rfit comin,1t st111son.
St11rr di~rlo~ed tht ntw5 wh11, in
~A ~hvillt. Tc.on . for I speakJnR r:nglil&&-
rrrn!
"Thtre are ~rvt r ;:il teifsons I "';int !()
retire but I really don't y,·ant to a:o into
,.
them right now ," St.arr i;aid.
The Packer Quarterb3ck h15 been
plagued by an ailing riaht shoulder ~Ince
the 1967 se1son. He first joined the
P11ckers i.i 1951.
l{e said. howe\7er. that his shoulder ha s
Improve<.! since surgery sidelined him la st
seaMn and th1t he intends to give ii a
n1i::1rted le~\ in April.
"I plan tn spend 1 Wf!ek in Alabama in
April "'nd give my arm e.xtensive ttsts."
ht s11id
"That ·u be the crucial ll!Tle for me.
,
There is still pain In the dttf)f'Sl part or
the tendon in my blck nea r the 1houlder
area. ..
Qf his retirement. Starr said : "l don't
see there's tbat much to be "'!•de of II . .''
noting that he h·as hinted on several OC·
casions lhat tht li72 season would be h'is
le st a5 a pro. But he: added, "f gue5s.
perhaps. I had not m1dr: any mention of
fl before nov.· "
"I don't v.·anl 10 QO out on 1 stretchtr."
hf ~t1id. "I want to Jet out v.•hen if& time.
and I 1h1nk it 's tune to make that
dec1&t0n."
Cage Ratings
If AS.OC:IA.TID ••Ill
T .. 11t wot ftt1, r .. "' •·• ''" I Vtl.t. (4'1 164 lllCl 11. Marsl\111 tJ.7 !O
, M•rftut!!• 1, .. '" ''· l'la•ld• !I. "·l ,a J Leu!1v1llt !S-1 "' I) 'w Loul1ft 11• 1a..1 12
4 N C1rallna U-2 Yf 14 Htwt H 11•1 I
J (;11 $! !Lt l 1&-1 Jlt IS. MIJ1ovrl 1 .. 1 ~
, ""~" 1,.1 lit ,, .. .,, ... 1.,.,,ct J).1 ..
I v1,,1,.l• l~I •2 11. J.oc:~-"lf.le ll-1 •
I ' Ct•all~t U l MO 11 U$C II t Ja, I 0"~$!•11 1,J 271 1 1.M~IOll II • ft
10 t~(f YOllllC It.) 1S4 ?II Ml<l'l1"" t&-• 11
('ll!>t • '~'""' rtc•iYl"'J ... !fl, U1IHI 111 ,,..,,. ~"t tl ordt" 0...:.UM.,., 1"1•!:111•"'· I-Ill.I~!°"'· r:•<tl
lll!Y•. M ... fl•• .. , ~fir• 111""'-· Or.i •ti)'""•
Pr·•t•'"" IV•IC\I'\•, '•""'•'• Tll'•tslH. l rr•I El
1"1"9. ftlflll, f lCll•t. Voll• ..... YI
.
r
l
1-
Top Catch for Costa ltlesans
r ecentl y.
pounds.
•
The marlin \Veighcd fro1n 120 to 170
' . . . . .~ • .-.. ;. .. ,
MV Tangles With Till ers ;
San Cleinente, f(niglits Mix
-~---~--
DAIL V PI LO T f7
--1
Gau(•ht)S
S..1rldlt•hrrck Co 1 t I:' ~ t: • t
b.~sebr1lf 1t·11111 j.!l'I~ 11 ht'ad
starl un lhf' rt'~t or thl' Orant!•
W1lh a pair of weekend vii•· Baker'.'! Tritons wtre Also llt1krr .s.1ys murh n( ht!> Coa~l are.i Sl'h0ti!s \\'C'dnesdaf
tor1es In their possession and v1ttinuzed by their opponent tc11m 's rt>cent success hn s iihfn th(' (;,uu liu~ LiunC'h the
ihe distinct poss1b1hty Qf CIF in hrst round play as Foothill b<'en v.·11h h1:-bt11c!1 v.·h1l·h ha" l~fi':! St':i.-.~111 agaio~t vtsitine
AAA basketball playoff corn-rode tht" ri~ht 11rn1 ol j.!ullrd rornr thr1111,i.:h ll'hrn Jl v.·as ;..t t :-;an Jn1.·in\o t"iillt·~t'.
petition dan~ling 11·1t11111 reat:H. !{ob Tuvell to victory. lll'~'t'"S<-r~ It hri.:in" 111 2 ,10 Mi ssion· \'1e10 and San ··\Ve'll \ry a ht!le dilfl'rrnl "~la 1111 111 nin« l'Oll!'>ISl •'tl('\ 1:-11 11 1 I ·1· ,. I Cl L! T I! h t ,.. 1,i.: 1 1,u1(tT 11111 • I' son eniente (!ULntc s return In slr:itegy on uVC' t ts u11C'. Ollr uni' b1~ hopr. 'sa~~ Haket . "ill uµcn 1111 thc iiuiUf\d fiir the
CreS!\'tew League act J 1l n Ht> JUSt killed U$ fn1111 !ht' c~lr-c•r~rvifw Lr Aou• l_fADf~\ ( ;:nli·hn' 11f <'il~1t·h J)ou~ l·'rilt..
torught. ncr flllrl 1! we c an't slt1f1 !11111 P'I••••· i<llo•• o rP .....
Coach Pat Jt11ber1~· srf.'.ond ear!v rnd\'be \\·e'll trv to lurt:e Sadtlll'il.1<"1. lni">!• Ht•\ ll u111!0 • · · 1 'i ul.11. 111 ;i 2 .in tilt and pl<1ce ri.11ss1011 \'te)O l)iablos 1!>-him lo hurry hi~ shOI!>," !'il ~'S !I .t\i•! .. !ii (;olcit'I\ \\c"l Satut"·
3~ arr 111 Tuslln 1Z·fi) \\hllc Baker. cuach John Baker's Tr1\t'lnS 14-d.i\ fo1 ,1 11<~111 g;1111,.,
4 ~ try rooth1ll {4-41 at the Jal-'l'lw 11·:-.\ 1lf llu· 1111('1111 fnr
ter's df'n. L B l F' B' 1 \\1'<!111·,1\,l\'s 11p1•11('1 1n1·h11lt·J
T;port "slated[°' 7 o'dock. agu11·a ear 1 Iv{' I ( ~ ""'"' I ..... , ... ,,,..,. "' 1"" '""'· Robfrts' quint et h,1s storni-:-0.1· .. 11 .loh11n11r.~ ;1t :.ec·ont.l,,
.\lt\.;1• \V ;1rdl11w ~t 1h1rd ;ind: ed to four slra1ghl v.·111s after v 1,,iri .l ;Jl'~Pll al ~hori
;1ppearing to be h e aded Fo1· S1'xth i ··01• it'·tt••·,· ,11·111 .. uutf1t'ld . llou,.: ~1111f'n
nowhere u1 l('ai.:ue circles. LIJ f • 111ll .,1.11t r1t lrfl l\llh S1;11i \,ale
And th(' rn:iJor redson for thr 111 ci'll!t'r 1111ct C:rt•g l\r:o~lf'r in'
lu•na"-ul has h ~e n the """"' I ·• • o • uu lJ\'.' \\'ilh a ('IF' AA playoff bf'rlh rauin~ 11t n· 1 J.:t1111g 1111°1 11gh! Hill /IO!drid~c •. II hr-' t.-uhesiveness and o v e '" a t l still a definite po:-s1bd1t .1·, tod11 y's <1l'l1nn. 11 hu·h ,1],11 111 1!11· 1·.1tvlll'r firepower . I h r lh •-Laguna Beach's Artists c1n-thldf'd aft1•rnoon 1na11'1111p' \e ~011 pilr <'d or f' •°l<ln~ Junior Gil Nqr1n1;indic. !he l'\·r-r11u1c10 V11l!ey S\Hlf' v11rsity
Orange Coast aT"ea 's leading bark on another second round p1ttinJ.: host Valf'n("til i1~<t111.,l last .~f'nsnn nnct figurt'~ to ti(
scorer. h'.'! singed the nets journey tonight in an t)r:111 gt• 1 r n11•cr~l1\' ;ual llri•:i ;1~.11nsl 1/1P f:;.u1c hos' Nu. I hurler. \
conslslenlly in !he 20-poinl Leaguf' ba s k el ha! r 1,011_ 1·:1 ll!ii i (l11 11 ....... range and outside shootin~ I' :1 fron1 Mike Huwcn and Hnb frontation nt Saddleha(•k 'l'herl'f1•1'1'. H l.ag1u1;t 1h'li>r.v,'
, .. '""""" "~""" ' '" . '"
"'""" '''' r '.' , ..•. • "' ..
''•II 1 '""""" " ''·~··"·~ "' ' ' .... ~1~ .. ,.., ~""'""\ • "• ' Hul'C" ..~toll • • , :1 ' '
Ferguson rnak.e it difficult for '!'he Ar\1sls of tonch Jt'ITY C'flUplt•<l \l'llh 11 \'alr1u·1n 11p . .,1•t
th(' opposilion to kry on nny }'air, now 5-Z 1n 1£'agul' pl:iv . lu.~s. \\'uuld pul 1ht• Ar'hsts in
one individual. upcned the second round of sis so le 1:iossf'ss1on of tll1· .. l'c1111dl
1'ust1n 1ran1pled ~·fission gan1cs last Friday night 11•1th slot 1\•1!h fflur gnrnl'S lo gn ,
Vici·o. 75-52, in fi rst round play a 65-59 lr1u n1ph against eellar-o~•NGE lElGUE lElD~R ~ and it represents the 1nost dwelling Brea. ~1•~•·· schoot c; TP "••
points scored on Mission Vie-l.aguna w:is deadlocked for ~-{!~:.~.~~~~';,';,'.',", : :~~ :~ r1 TelephoM: A1t1we1l1tt 111,..•
Jo's defense this yea r -in the second spot 1n the ttrcuit 11,.~ Mf'<l• l-I ~··n~ • 11 11. 835-7777
~ answer."
-... ah
Mil an and Ruth Lea vi tt of Costa Mesa (left), along
with Norn1a and 1-larry Seeley, hooked on to these
four marlin \v hile fishing out of Mazatlan, ri1exico league or olherv;1se. with·Valeneia (El Dorado v.·as "'''~'· V•1 • •.' IJ• •••••••••••••• -----------------------------------___ Dowen. fl ••• ' o.11 IJ~I•
Vike Five
Rated 7th
111 CIF Poll
Half of the top dozen prep
basketball te:ams in the CJF
AAAA poll are from Orange
County as Sunset League
li"ad er Marina and the Irvine
League's Los Alamitos make
their moves.
The Vikings of Marina. with
an eight-game v;inning streak,
are in the top 10 (seventh I f0r
the first lin1e this yea r after a
so-so 5-4 preleague mark.
The Vikes arc rated first in
Orange County while the coun·
ty's No. 2 team, La Habra (17-
11, holds fourth place In the
ClF' as !!!Clected by Southern
California writers.
Corona de\ Mar and f!Un·
tington Beach were handed
setbacks in loop warfare last
week but still maintain eighth
and 10th place in the poll while
Servile's Friars are ninth with
their 18-3 mark.
Los Al amitos. 63-47 victor
over Corona del Mar Friday,
is 12th.
La l·labra appears to have
the roughest road this week
v.·ilh tests at Fullerton Ju'nior
College again~t Troy (tonight)
and Sunny Jlills ffridayl.
-tr -t( ·.~
AAAA
POI Tt1m P'olnt1
v"'c.'m O•• 111'.1-ll 11\
1. l'>•Ha•~ll (1911 161
J. Q•mon" IMl1 11~
L• H•I>'• 111 I\ 11?
(•••<!Miii \111ll•v 116., lOJ
(I Mornong••(!( Ill ll •1
I Mll•lno •11 11 J6
9 Co•on• <I•• Mllf [\~ H )\?
' St1i.1r~ 11 131 '19
10 HUM•n<>lon Btll(l'I I l •·l\ 76
O·n~•\ IJ.dlll;""· Ln• Al11m•lo•. ~ioTro
Oamt. Oo• /"1.tlli)I. 1>1110, Ve•dH, l""<l P.e..,n w,,,on F.,,.Mna, L• ~'"''
fllelt, f<ll'dl'""" S11n M•1<0I. ...
I. (ovine (10 n
1. W••! (Cl••n• (Jl·l l J. K•l•ll1 11/.)1
'· (:UnArollo (11 JI
j 8r!l!IOWP• flS-•!
• P~f!<nq Hiii! <l~·J)
1. S•flt1 Ml•'-(IO-ol /
I "'°n!(\11/, 117 •!
' (h•rt•r o.~ (16ll
\Q. U•t l i;>;gn•rh 11\·•l
Qu1r1t Hiii (l}-1)
,.
'" "' ". 10•'. ,.
p
" , .. '
" " O!~f'I' A.111•101» Vailf y, C•f H;•l'I,
Gerde" Gro.-., O~n1rd, G • r ! ¥ •
Rullidoo~. St. Bt•ntrd, Loi A1101,
M1¥l1,,, aauett. Herl, Mt. C1rmeL
Cage Scores
Marina Takes Over
Top Rati11g in County
Marina High School's Vik·
ings have taken over the No. I
spot in the official Orange
Co unt y top 10 prep basketball
poll following their eighth
straight Sunset League con·
qu est.
Thus coach Jim Stephens'
quintet becomes the fifth dlf-
JC Stars
To Hawaii
Former Saddleback College
stars Toby Whipple. Bryan
Colbert and Doug Rothrock
along with Orange C-Oas t'.l!I
Denriis Walters will play foot-
ball at the University of
Hawaii next season.
Whipple, a JC All-American
running back, and Colbert. a
220-pound offensive lineman,
played for s~ddleback two
seasons ago.
Whipple was scheduled lft
play for the University of
Pacific last season. but in-
stead enrolled at Cal State
I Fullerton I. He broke a leg
prior to FuHerton's first game.
Colbert attended UC
Berkeley last spring, but quit
and spent the last semester ;it
Saddlebac.k.
Walters. a 220-pound tackle,
played ty.•o seasons for Orange
Coast. being nanH~d to the All-
South Coast Conference team
in '71.
Rothrock. a linebacker and
place-kicker. \v11l enroll al
Hawaii in the fall. He "'as ac·
corded all Mission Conference
honors la~t season
Other JC stars £'nrolling at
Hay.·aii include r eceivers
Darold Nogle (Rio 11ondoi and
Don Weir ~Crossmon!),
Easy Wi11
fercnl leader in as many
wee ks as the unpredictable
can,paign continues on its
wav. I~aders prior to 1hc Vikings
have been La Habra, the La
Ha bra-Jfuntington Beach com-
bina!ion, Huntington Beach
and Corona de\ J\.1 ar.
The latter dropped to
sevent h following its l&-point
reversal to Los Alamitos in
Irvine League action Friday.
Los At vaulted to fourth
place in the poll with its
seven th straight win. behind
J~a Habra and Huntington
Beach.
Crucia ls on tap this week in-'
volving ranked fives include
La ~labra's two-game set al
Fullerton J unior Co 11 e g e
against Troy (tonight al 7)
and Sunny Hills (Friday at 8)
and Marina's test wi th in·
vading Western (Wednesday
at 7J.
ORANG E COUNTY TOP 10
Pos. Team Points
1. Marin a (13-4) 50
2. La Habra (1 7-1) 39
3. Huntington Beach ( 1&-3) 36
4. Los Alam itos (15-51 33
5. (tie) Servile !19-3) 29
Katella (17-2) 29
7. Corona del Mar (IS-2 J 27
8. Garden Grove ~ 15-3 ) 13
9. Westminster llZ-6! ll
10. El Dorado (1&-3 J 7
Others: Sunny Hills. Troy (1
!achl,
MD Hosts
s,vordsme11
The Monarchs of Mater Dci
lligh will he auning their
sights ~t CJF AAAA playoff
poss1hi!1tics tonight v.·hcn they
hosi the St. Paul Swordsmen
in a 7 o'clock hasketball test.
T'he Monarchs t2-ZJ are a
game behind the second place
Swordsmen and a victory in
the tiny Mater Dei gymnasium
would put them in solid con-
The Hunllngton B e a c h lcntion for a pl11yoff berth l'L nd/
Unicorns improved t h e i r or a shot at Angelus League
season record in the second leader Servite.
d1visioh tou rnament of the Tardie's quintet depends on
Soulhem Cali fornia Ru gby !he front line of Rick Kniffin,
Football Union to 3-0 with an George ~lerold and Dave
8--0 victory Sunday over the Nanrv.
Los Angeles Rugby Club 's se-Kn iffin is the f..1 onarchs'
cond team. scoring threat from inside, hit-
Tries were scored b y ting in double figures con-
fullback Jim Hewitt and inl!lidc sistently. ~!is best has been 30
center George Posey. There against Loyola and he's
1.H•h s1111 >H, c •111o<11I• 11 were no conversions. averaging 15.5 in loop play .
Denv1t '!· S.OU!ht•" ColO'ldO S!1tt ''li.--------------------------w1 UC $1" 1"10 16. ~-Sl•lr 11 -OrAI Rlobfrn 111. Wiiiiam Jrw..11 t? 0i~':r1~..::::~r ""'" DAVE ROSS PONTIAC ~l'f\ll>CkY 11 A.l•tMlm.t H
CIMl,.,,.111 ~' Wlllltrn •nd M•rv il
'f11!1M 12, Ind!•"' Siii• Id L B All M d I '10Wn1wn Ke"lllCkV 7\, AA>Jtrl'f St1!1 ease or , uy 0 e s
M0o,1IPJ1l Sl11t ,,, c _,11 5f <OTl Mlt Ind 6', North (ltoll .... Sll!I "5 '"' ! Sl•lf IC"" P1n """"lu n U Vl•1ln1• a1, ClrmlOtl 51
J 1<Uolwlll1 tl, F11rrn1" "° St 8-Ylflfllft "I), SoullM'(I FlorkH
" Nla .. r1 ti, 01.,t"" at
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
2411 HAllOI l .. YD. _, PAii DllYI
COSTA MISA
Ph. 546-8017
O~IN, OAYS A'Wl'.llC l tM A.M. TO 11111 ~.M
IVNDAY' 11 A.M. TO t ,.M.
t · ··-l
...
'
.... --
•
ValueCenters
•
ruar
at EncoValueCenters.
Atlas 4-ply Nylon Cord.
s13~~:,,. ...
lot 600•13 !u~•l••I
tol•c~••ll A.ll•1 l.l<l1-P1~ lift ,
• An econom y tire wi1 h lour lull plies
of stu1dy nylon cord.
• Modern wrap-around 1re11d lor
oood conrrol.
"" ~:e:.~:--:. ...-.w ... i •I• '' ...• .... ,., ...
tl.t& -l&.t&. """' '" ...... 14.95 ... .-... ...
'""' t s .es 17.9& '" '""' ...
Atlas Grip-Safe. s219s •!fll ,.,,, .. 1,.
okl111.tS ~id. I'.• T11 to• 10011J111t>tl 111
A Seriea 78 tire-low silhouette !or
modern appearance, wide !or 1U1 b11!1y
!n cornerinQ.
lnlerlock1ng tread lo grip the road.
OH '" ;,. :-t-,~~.,,,·~·"·•;•"-!~~o;-1-1~-
27.71 '"
Atlas Plycroni.,T
s2s'~~:." "' for 700ol:J hlbtllll
lll1ck•&U. Wl'ln ... 111• U .'I "'a<• 1•cl'I.
• Our best-selling Ure.
• Molded 'o wi(hin 3/ 1000 ot •n Inch
ol pertect round tor • amoo\h qutel fide.
• Huaky w1111p·around tread.
--~ ~1!!,0IT 3 1.00 ...
3a.78 I~
The above Prices on tires, batteries and seMces are available
natiooally at stat;orni operated by Humble Oil & Relin;ng Company
located in many metropoU tan areas and communitie!. Prices and
off"" may vary at part;clpating Independent Enco dealers.
_o _
V.1fu eCe11ter
r • • • .... _ .... -.... -__ _,.._.,,., ... _c.-_
•
New Wiper Refills Plus
Washer Service.
• 1ntl!lll new w1oer bli11cle 1ehl\s.
• Check washer aystam and
refill w1ndsh1eld washer
supply.
24-Month Atlas K Battery.
• ,,11.,;,. plates lo•'"""'"";"' s·199s caoaclty.
• Heavy-duty conta+ner resists
damage lrom v1b1ai.on, impact.
hel'L I and cold 101 Atlas
K·23 "
with lrade-ln.
_. ........ "' ... ....... ·---·--·---· __ ........ _ .... ..,. -( ... ,,.....-•-.--~-"! .. --··-.. --......... ~ ....... _ ...... ••'-·-·-...... ,.. ___ ....................... _. ___ .. _
::"' ~·:::::.~::::.::~-:-.:.:::. =:. ·.:::-.:;-;, it. __ ... _ ....... _ ..... -.... ' .
'C•" "' Ul ld Ill '" .... ,''-'· 12 &111(-\I.'· "-ra ~hi•! \l ·I t . )I-It
P'l1"'0Ulll ...... ,'"'"I"••. '&6• r1 Old• \l·I t ,
.......... -__ , .... --·
•
'
'
..
•
..
'
..
•
Tuttdl)', Ftbru..,., 1, lm
• m _..,_.
Sta1·t Your· E1igine s!
Ry Deke Houlgate
~ r• . ...: ·" ": ... -1i.
It i'I ~~nera/Jy btl1rved 1hnt tht £OVt'mment'11 traffic aa!ety
prol{ram and ot.11.11 ra<:ln'1 arr 'txJles apart and moving rapidly
R"itY frr1rn r<i~·/1 f1tht r
/'r1rt1rul;irly v.1ch·~prend a1n11n~ riu:tng ge1llry l.!J the notion
th:1\ ()iug\a~ Tom:-.· Nr1!1on(JI H l~hway Traffic Sa ltly Burtau 18
p11cked with OO...:r!Qdt'tll v.·ho ilrt bent on destroyinJ( tht> aut.omo-
bll,. Industry :ind thr i;prwl ••f racltig v. Ith v,11rious forffi3 or
quackt:ry
'!lit' truth 1~ il1llt llUto r111·1 n~ will work hand in hand v. ii/I
Tum.~· re!l<·llt(')1r111 th1.~ yf'ar 111 a \•a!uat.ilc slutly ol cra11h Jrn-
pllC'll ani their 1·Fft:~·t.• on llt't'u rely 11!rapp.•d in rare driver~.
J•artirlp1t11\'1 w1U hf' f'\'erybody from i\l11rk lKinohue tn th1· wttk-
cnd w1'1rr1ur11 ol thr Spor111 Cnr Club of Amer1t'a.
Don•1huc v.ill (."Urry 1n hi.~ Cnn-1\m Porsche a /1tlle hlack
OOx !tln11lar lo !hf• lttlo(hl recorder.'! familiar to a irlint plliits. ·me
tio.; I! hein& devrl11pet1 by the NJITSA, hoptdully In ht• ready
for the fnlln• C:in -Ani !i:t!HSC)n .
H wil l 1nca11urc cral'lh Jn1pt1ct.~. their intensity, duration,
number, 1nlervuls Oclweeu them, amount of G (gravitnllonnl
rorcc 1neaaurernent I lond lng during them and how each of
theM! fRctOr!I nrf et'.l the vthicle. The driver wlll be wired lo
measure lh~ effects of c.; loads on hls body.
According liJ 'foms, the most ln\porla.nl measuring points
ror a driver during a crush are the (emur, or thigh bone, and
the IJl11r. or hip bone. both of which are large and strong but
which commonly nrr Jammed Into 110methlng during a collision
an"d frequcritly wpar-.te or break.
1•nrt• of Body to Be /Jlonitored
The femur and Iliac will be monitored, a!I "'Ill the' abdomen,
che!il and bead of the drlvft'".
"By u1tn1 rice driver•," Tomi aald, "we will probably get
better lnformallon quicker t'ln whether beallby males can 1ur·
vive accident•. Hut .,..e will do more than tbat. We wlll prob-
ably be able lo lell n1ore about racing cha111~ wllb our ln1tru-
menl1 than t'Or hullders ever ha ve. We "'ill find out whut <;
level• It takl!• lo make 11 car break Joo11e and sllde. We wlll
a11emble pre-<:ro11h daLll for the rlr•I time."
Tht. 1tovernment'11 11ufety research effort will xo heyond
putting mea11urln~ ,11.eur Into racf' cars and wtdtlng for them lo
h11ve accldent11,
One proJ(ram Tum11 bu1 lnllhded Is a survey to delermlnfl
the 11treeL drlvlnR recorcl11 of race drlvtr:i;. Working with SCCA,
the 1eft ly people 11re trying to find ou t how many accldeot1
trained r11ce drlver11 have an the public highways.
The 1111.mt type or 1urvey 11 being ('Onducted by llUCh liChooll
a1 the Bob Honduran! School for llf_gh Performnn<'e J)rivlng.
T~re are about ~ doxen of lhf'm oround the country.
The common criticism of lhls nollon's hl.R;hway safely f.f-
fort ha1 been th11t ftderol bureau,:rat11 havt been :i;pendlng mil.
Uon1 on nuls and bol111 trying 1-0 make car11 .•ofer but have been
dolhl( nothlill( about the so-called nut "hthlnd the wheel.
Thill dM~n't 11ppear lo be the ca!tt.
/HotorrlJC'le llldl11g f :11th11dast
J..('ss than three years llJIO Dou~tas ·William Tom' wos a
<:o\lege professor whose interest Jn highway safety led hin1 to
become active Jn the driver educallon movement. In addition
to being a car buff. he has alllO developed an enthusiasm for
motorcycle riding, which he enjoys as recreation wilh his teen·
tiHe !!On.
Toms ten1ncd with his motorcycle ~pccialist In the Nallonnl
lllghwoy 1'rnffie Safety Adn1inistrnllon. L~w lluchan!ln, 11nd
fini shed SC(.'Ond In cluss (If! ll Kowasuki In lhe Bnja 1000 Inst
November.
"I\ lol or peoplr considered ii incongruous that J, a safety
f1fficl11l , should J.!C'l Involved in racing," 11ald the nation's No. I
hlghw11 y safety n1n11. "I 11nsv.'cr lhen1 hy sayh1g thnt if you iire
lntercsll'd J11 snf<'ly the t>esl plnrc to J{O und study it is in
r11clni.:.
"In nll our pro11r:11ns v.·r \\"i"llch the racing field \"ery carc>-
f111ly, l\l the NllHA \Vlnternationa\s this weekend you wlll see
oo mr of the rnosl cnrtful Refely planning currently being donr .
Ruclng people Dre \\•orrit.'<I c..'011sta11t!y nbout safety and about
perform11ncc. They don"t i.:rt compla<'enl.
"We nn the Nlxon Administration) ha\'e categorically dis-
ni(reed with General ltfot.ors, "·hit•h bt.•licves racing is unsa(e.
Th1t 111, In my jurl!oirnent, b11loney. t:~1 Is turning Its b11ck on an
11ctlvlty thnt C'Qulrl lead them to s:ifcty quic ker than anything
they could do.
"If the aulomobilr con1panies !urn their !Jacks on the spnrL
U1ey 11rl! J!OlnR I.a drive the a verai:e kid u11dl'rground for his
rnclnR."
l11frlg11l11g Commr11I• OH Snff'lfl
l)urlnlt lhe Specially Equlpmmt f\tanlJl11rt11rtor'1 Assn. rnt1-
\'t ntlon In Annhthn, lo degre1.s lrom racing a bil, To111s j:U\'t
Munr lntrl1tulna; <'ommtnts nn tbe ,i;tneral fltld or s:iftl)".
()n lhe propo1td pas~l\'e reatraW r air bAll'. for rar~ af !ht
futurf' -"II offer!I a much beU"irfJ'fternaUve to !it'&t bell~ and h•rnt>~~t~·. \\'hl<'h we haven 't · ~n able lo Jlt'l peooplt lo ust .
It (lnl)' "nrlt!I .,.·hen you rttf'd It, and It ll'tlrlts belltr thnn
harnr~.~f'i>." •
l)n anU-autumobllt 1ttltw!'u In \\'1shtnaton -.. There ar<'
peoplt, <'1111 lht1n f\'IDjtf'll1t1 or ~d\'()Cale!I. In J(overnment who
Yl"OUld like lo do '"''Y with the automobile. Y!'e ba\·e no lnlf'n·
Uun of lhut ~-f' "·on'I do anylhlnK tltal would rf'mO\'e lbt bl~h
performllinre lndustty or ta'llt lhe run out of dr\\·lng:·
l>runk drh·t r• -"Se\·en perttnt of tM PoPUIRtion Is caui;-
lnic morf' thwn ~O pt"rreol of IM f•lal al'Cldf:nls. Tbf' culpril 1~
th e pn1blt1n 1lrlnktr, the ptr~n •·ho lot all lntenl!I and pur·
pole!I 11 Rn alN>hOll<'. Our jtO&I lj to Identify him, and 1et bhn
nrf tht i.:lrf'rl1. Tbe bl• pmhlem l.t tr•lnlng law enforct.ment so
lhls n1nn c•n bt tf'('(IRnlted. If • perMUI 111 stont drunk all thf'
Umr. hf' 11lwar1 behA\"e!l lhe umt ... ·ay, and It 11 dlfO('uU ta ltll
ht 11 drunk.''
I
Y IT "STltAIGHT" OH DOGLEGS
' ,.e!;lii. ~A=A ::::.::::::::;:-.__~
There is always a temptation on dogleg holes to
"shave di!.tance.'1 In rnany in!.ta nces the d istance
saved with even 11 perfect shot fa il s to ease the
'hallenge of the hol e. 1:
In lhe illustration we see a typica l examp)e of
what I mean. Note that Golfer B, who has cu t the
dogleg with his tee shot, still finds himself blocked
from the flagstick by the sand bunker. Gotter A,
who has taken the much safer route away from the
trees, has an open shot to the hole.
Obviously the safe way wa s the best way on th is
hole; it often i!,
COLIING PRACTICE NOW CAN PAY OFF LATER! The Arnold
P1lmer booklet. ''Practice," 1ho¥rS you how to practit11 at home
tor pcrwer pl1y on your lavorl11 cOurse. Send 10$ 11nd • &tamped r1turn 1nv1lop1 to Arnold Palmer, c/o this newsp1per.
Gaucho Spikers
.Rely on Freshmen
Saddleback College's tre1ck
and fie ld team figures to in1-
prove as the season pro-
~res11es -primarily becoiuse
of a great deal of freshn1e11 ou
the Gaucho sc1uad.
New c.·oac h l)u;1nc Cain feels
lh;it the 1972 c:impalgn will
probably be a rebuilding year.
"It'll be a competitive year
nnd we hope to hold our own
for the n1osl part. But there
arc quite n few question
mark.~. I! <lepcnds on how our
fresh1nen cun1e along," says
f'ain who formerly was the
Kennedy 11\gh spike mentor ,
The biggest problen1 fa cing
Cain is a lack of depth.
Sadd!eback figures to hold
it s own in the sprints, but it
cnuld run in!o a lot of !rouble
in the n1 lddll' disl;1 nce and
dlst anc.·c e\"cnls.
And :ilthough there are
so u1e good fie ld event people,
depth could ft lso be a factor.
The best or the sprinters is
snphomore !\like Jackson (9.8.
21.91 y,·ith lettermen Rick Ged~
des 19.9, 22.2) backing him up.
Freshrnen Rick f: or d e r y
(l\1 ission Viejo). Ken Ramirez
(f\1 ission Viejo) and Taylor
Locono (Tustin) are in reserve
in the sprints.
Lct1c nnan .Jirn \.'an Cott
fi~UreS to I.JI' 1he f::tUl'hOS' lop
qu111·1t•r 1111lC'r \vHh Cordery
nl.sn n1nnin~ thr -4 4 0 .
Sophon1ore Brad Wi nton and
frrslunan lt1arv r~raneis are
the top rli~lnnce runners.
\\!inion has run a 4:30 mile
\Vhilc Fr.1 ncis. a freshman
fron1 Tu stin had done 4:21 and
15:03 (thrtt-inile).
Jn the rield events Sad-
dlC"bnt"k hns some la!cnted
1·nul!C'r!'i and jnvelin thro"·ers.
Lt'lt(.'rrnC'n B'1h l\fi lton nnrl
.John Flt•!r hrr nrr tossing the
Javelin nround !ht' 180-fC)(lt
n111rk v.·hile sophon1ore Barry
At>'·ootl t 13-4 1, and fresh1n~n
.J ohn I ;orinan ( 1:1-6) aud Dill
Spn1ul ( \:l-Ri nre nil <'Onsist11nt
1:i.frw1!r r::; in th(' \' .1 ult
1;orn11111 is fro n1 Tustin nnd
Sproul prepped nt Sn n
r1t-n1rn1r.
Af\\'ood 1rill also run the
hurrll r s. alon~ 1\·1th lettern1an
Hoh l\l il!(ln
1:rl'sh1n8il llick K (~yser
(Foolh ltl l is the best of thl'
"'ei~hhncn wilh top efforts of
•
Cycles Race
At El Toro
~-ollo11"in!{ A three-v.•ttk
rr::.pitl' f(lr p:enf'ral repairs and
rll'a!1 up~. l·:I Toro Speedway
ls: h;1rk in oper.1tiOn again.
l "nit<'<.I ~t:itr.s t>.1otorcy(\e
Hnrino: l 'lu b t US~tRC) and
f\111 lrnrk ·r 1T compelllors
rr~11nH' racin.11: this 1''ridAy
ni,ctlt :ind Sunday iii the area
01· a 1
~'rid,q 1· nigh!'~ cRrd beJZ ins
111 7 n"<'lock :ind the Sundav
sl11IC' ~eLs 11nd('r 11·ay at 2:30
pm.
Top eh11;1lrn11:ers to Or8np:e 's
Uruce ~fcDoup.I in the
t 'Sl\IRC TllOIOCf'OSS r:lass Fri-
d11 v ni11ht i~lude 1.agui\a
!fills' '.\1orrls ~lilone. Fountain
\'alf('v's D11ve 8oyd~tun and Nini~ Ansi's Grtg Sfnlt h.
On the-~111ne f'l'ening, 11rta
~llll nGstus Senti Kafer of San
Clemt.nte and ~orm B\.g?low
of LeguM liill~ art lop notch
ride:n in the juni<'lr cla~ whHe
the ,ame bolds lrut for 1'fb·
slon \"ie;c>'J Jeff Viard .tod
c.ast.a Ma.a's r~ V.1oocb In
tJ'w> tchoolbny Cit~·.
QQC:t Gam <lf Fountain
\·.~.11.,-i$ one ti lht better
rodtn hi ~·, 0.t tnrt
T T P'OUP1roP' .
45-0 in the shot pul and 135 in
the'' discus. Letterman fl.-like
Becker backs him up.
In the jun1ping events. \1ern
J\1c(;arry. sophomore .J ohn
i\1rickey and c:orman 1vil! i:ar-
ry the load. Mc(;arry had a
best of 6-J 1,2 at San Clemente
last ye;i r.
Sadd!cbnrk 111ill oprn the
season Fch. 17 hosting Oran~c
Co;:1 st.
St~Ol•b•ck Tr•<k 5,n..,1111 lnv,.. Feb. Ir Oron~' (O••I
[t\om'l. r.i., r,b 7~ -Ml,.,cp C""''''-'nt,
RPI~>• M ( ''"''· Fri., M~r,n l -•I Sftn llf.'•non:iine · Ffi .. M~r(h JO -Gro,1mon1· (name). rtl .. Moren 11 -PAlt>m•« IPo,,,..), Fri.. Mllrcn 14 -Al Hlv•r•ldf.'' Thuf!. M~rch JO Snu!Pf.'rn C•l!lornlo "'''"Y' •! (,olden W•11 Fri, Alll<I I Ch•ll•v· lh<ln>,!. Frl., Au"I i. -•I ~ul~wel!e•n' Ffl ll<>rll 7! -cur.,,· !h1>m'1 F d , A~"I 11 -•I Ml, San Anlenlo Rf'!A•I. l uP\. M•v 7 -Ml11lon (llnl•r•rn;e Ptf.'IP1n1 Al Gr,..,monl
r " , M•V l -Mh!illn (onlfrence lln •lt et Grcumonl Wt<!., Mtr 10 -Soulhtrn Ctl prrllm1 ti Cltr~• Fri., Sot., Ml<• 11-ll -W~t Cotll RtltYI "' Frt1no Si! .• MIY lO -500Jlhern Ctl tl ntll., Cltr u1. S11., MtY 11 -Sltlt mHt el Modt>1C.
Area Prep
Basl\:etbal1
Result s
Junltr V•rlllr Miii.an Vltll (41)
" ' H•rrl• 10 r taron 111 \ G•Nn 11! (. llolley lltl G Mo>lt•" !01
ll•Uof!lltll
(lJ) EIModeM !Id Powen.
4•1 s..""''°" (141 Wh•ln (I! lllol..-111) Wltlltm1
Min.,., v ... 10 •fMI~ tu"": llNnt ?,
Romm~ 1, 1090 7 fl•IN•m• El MOcltro. 14·1'3.
Wt•lm it1U•r C4/l (l4) Mtrit1a
SOOJ!hwk~ {'1 F rn Gref'f>1 H&••llM l ~l F fl•) llct••r
A.'>dr.....n \]\\ C {t i SW&'"I0'1 A.<com•ndo ltl 0 (&l J•~•lnt
l"°'1,.,.,,.1 r61 (.. (1J H•!IM SCUf >f\O 'Ill\'' W.-.Tmln•••r -M•n-•P•u ? M~rin~ -fl<k I<. WilK>n I. W<"OVl l 7
11•11!1""~ M••l.,..,
Coro"• d•I M•t !4 1
Wol""''"' ill F A>M•V \~l F
(l••ti 1111 <I -At! I}• (l c;,.,,.....,, l~I 0
1!·H . 011) LOI Alaml!n
I OI Cool:
(!)) l l\ltV (]) S!o>I!
!11f ~<~it< IOI Pltrct !<o•I~ jul)<• CoYMt df.'I Mir -JJUdn ?. Mo"J•n ?
~(Dr• b~ O\ltt1tn C('IN>M<1•lM•t 7 t 10 ,,_43
lo• .•l•ml"'' !I 1t -u -50 Stf\ Cl...,tft!• !Jll t•I) Or•"••
Yodtt Ill \ F ('1 "'orron He!fm•n 1111 F (6) Kr1tmtr FM...,•n 1n c 1n G\tloo"' w111.0r1 101 G no1 A••n Ha••I lltl G ll) Sl111tN
$.>J., (IPmfn'• KOtl"" tvb• («oil I, Crltwoll 1. tlu!l1 '· W~lle '· W•fltr I. Htllllme . .S•1 (lll'Tltlllt '1, Ore""''
" 1"1!a11rla !).<! Ufl """t•I• Yh'. M.t6d.., JOI F Ill H•lfltld OitVrlfl 01 f" \1l Ml\1111 Plrtlt 111\ C !It! A.r!...,1 ll ul'tU119 (11 G (1) llol!uck Prkt 101 G P7l G,ntllt Snli-1"9 tu M. F«onl1l11 V•lltY -l_.srt111 J. M.1111 I. lf;f"drlcti I E1· 1811(1<1 -EtM•Y •· l"aMJ>ton 1, Klrt>Y '· 1111 ........ ,, H•I"!""" fount•"' v,11, ... ll-7. ~Clll"Om.m ••1~•ltoell CdM (1J) 1n1 M11noll• ltt'llV no1 F !JI C~l~tlOll 6'ttrm.1n 1111 F ()l Wtlltc•
K,o.1""11 <Io C Ul l"""'l>tol'I Eht<l-tt (.i G c•1 cn,1><Ni1
.Ml""Comilrt 11n1 o t!! H11Dt•
(d.~ tCWl"9 'Ubl; E•fl 1. Cl>l!-Y
~ IC....._, f. H1ir1r ....... c~. Jt.14. ~ \ CdM {IJ ) 1 .. 1 Cflft M-lttltw ( rOl ,_ Ctl S..llOI °'"""'" !-" ,. !&! l•r9d9hl Kotm.ala (111) C f!l K"-W 1'11"1" 011 o no C1<1rt
~m.k-!11 q l•i ~ Ct!IM 1<t•fht i;l/M; E1tl 1, .,"I..,
•• (6"...,.1 I, o.Dolwo'9 1, M~....,. l. (041• ,o,w._ Jt<Ollot 1. 11..,._lt I, Htlfll,...: COM. Jf.ll. (llM llll (ff) 111..a.
1tf111 (Ill "' !ll Lew Odo'"""" [ 11) ,. Ill c....-l(Qlfl'IUf l111 C Ill CNW
l!I•~ {ljl 0 f!l ll'd'l:ll Mc<vm!rt !ll 0 fl ll J~
(4'1. t(Ql""'9 tvM! ... 111" s. o.oen. tlO 4. f •tt"Clt · Ill.Mfr 1. ,..._..Ille I. l .. KY f G1lt t, Ht!Ol"lt (ISM. J0.11
M.,.ll!l"•lt" flt) IU) I""• ""' $(t1.,.,~u,1 011 F I•) OO>it.tf" ..... ~I tlfl f ft \ Mte ... ~~IX".,•Y w .. r 1111 r 1$1 ,_ 1"11Qm11 ill G !ll AYlle Con"'-'•• 110) G IOI l.t...o.tr "luntlM""" 1rerlnt tubl: ltrrlnlrff
~ ;.,.,.,, •. ••t. • "" t4111"""-"""11f'lt... I).\) """"'°' .. " VIMt\' CUI l•I I.._ C1rw• Of) F (IOI Wtlltff
.»! ... !01 ,. !•l °"-11<• ,..._ ... "° !"II C Ill! fl'lllllolf
+lt' .. r\L 15! (;, fl) Mr,. ... .._ V .. , ' 11\ 0 101 1r-g~l'I!
°'to.I" .11o \'"1'. t ~ wtlt °"'" w ' • Ee.,.. """"'"'°"' _., '1 ft 2 ,,...,. ..... """ .... ' ~
IV!"' ~ fl:•.
•
ll'ins NO'viee Crown LEGAL N<Jl1CE LEGAL N0'11CE
~IC"YITIOU\-ais·'o=•~.~"c--MAMI! \TAT&Mlil'IT ---~~~=-:--l'ICTITIOUl aut1lllSl MA.Ml SlATIMlill'T Ball)oa Ic e Skater~ .. ""' ...... ". --" ~"' .... ~ ..
C.. A VE I NE LUIYOH-DE \IGNER ••PA ll EL -llOVTICIUE olCI E l2llll '' ,.._,.,._. 8e..ui. C.tUi.<n"
Thol '°'""*''"' -Kin .. «ti,,. ..,&!,,..
tl J & j MJ>NAGE ..... ENT .... Harb<I
I •G. Cotl1 lo'•u., t.~100-rll• c.°'"'n'"'r Dool ... lf'IC Dtlt.-•r• c-..
>.I H•rt.Ot .. ""'. (Mii ~ ..
Ln,'nt l.t,.,.O<I. Tl! O<l'otn Hq ~.
H~"'" Q!Ofl 61KI\, Ct llfot-. I
l~" t.J•.lln> •I C.•"f C""°'-'<1.:1 !IF A (Q<P<lt1!1M
Nu Flasl1 h1 Pa11 I~' 1>~.,,...u a be "' CON:wUIOll Oy t i! ff'(t,y14"utl. LJ.VERHE l "'N'fCt.j
T~1 1 •111rmcnl ll lt"O "'It> ""' COV'""' Cl•ra ~· O<tek (°""'~ O~ Jl~U•'V P .
lf11. llY lll~trl't J MtdQoA. [)orpulY Cow<>·
J•u II Gw11•tr
Prn~..,, Tl\!1 1!•T~tntnl !li.d Will• "'• C~11rt Cltfll o! Ort"ll• (OUntY on F-v•rv I,
It 1 B• llt •H<" J 11\tllDc;. DrP.i ' COii<• ry Clu>
By PHIL ftO SS
01 1"9 Dto!J "l~r S!•ll
lie may h.:tve been lost in
the shuffle t'ecently a1 U1e
United Stales Figure Skating
Charnpion.:ihips in Uing BeaC'h,
But. as sure as corn crops up
HI luv.·a and as sure a.s
sailboats infiltrate Newpo rt
J~ay like flies each y,·eekend,
Halboa Island's 15-year--Ol d
IJav1d Kirby was there at the
l.on'J'. Beach Arena.
Kirby wasn•t evident in his
mere presence alonl', though.
'fhe sophomore fr om Corona
del i\1ar lligh got lo join the
elite in the v.·inner's circle
afterwards as hi' captured the
national championship in the
1nen's novice class.
\\'hi!e it came as a mild, but
pleasant, surprise lo his fami-
ly, young Kirby's mother -
Mrs. Michael Kirby -clnims
the sixth of her eight children'
\Va sn't just ;1nothcr overnig ht
flash in the pan.
Says 1na1na Kir by, "my hus-
band and I being ex-Cana-
dian~. 11•c exposer! all our
children to the il·c very i:ar!y.
•• J ~'<IS sort of !-iUrpnsed
when !.)avid y,·on but he h<is
been 1•:orking very hard to 1\•in
the title."
Son of a pair of former
Canadian singles ice skating
champs (circa 19-10) and a
Chicago native i the family
moved to this area in July Or
1970). David has b c en
fortunate tu ha1·e had an cx-
c.-ellent teachC"r in John '.\"lcks.
\\1ork ing out of !he Jee
Capades ChalL•t in Santa
J\1onica, Nicks had four na-
tio11al championships producl'd
by his protegcs this year, in·
eluding young Kirby and
l)owncy's l\rn Shel]cy, who
w:t'i the 111en's Se!liors and
n1ixed pa irs victor.
(Th(· latter 111il l compete
beginning \Vc<lnesday at the
V.-'\~ter 1>!ymp!cs in Sapporo.
Japan, ;Jnd he's lhe first male
skaltr 111 32 years: to be rep-
resented 1n two d1\•is1ons at
the winter Olympiad.)
In oruer to kt-ep conti nuity
under l'\1cks' tute!age, Kirby
has h<i d to commute daily In
his mother's car to the Santa
~1oni<'a lac1l1!y for practice
sessions.
'' CIJ" P.,bl '1\fd Otl"ll• CW>I 0•df P11<;r.
r 1:ut "''''"'"'"" I, ?. I!. '11 !ti"? ~I·''
0'"''~' C.Odll Call"< Pl~I LEGAL NOTICE
:is. ,,.., Fotelr~•"' 1, 1, ltn l----'-"~~=,------
LEGAL 1'0TICE
flCTlllOUS I UllNl!!SS
111 n eA11 Jn1
'"' .. l"ICTITIOUS IUSIHl!Si NAME lT•lEMENT
!QIM;l"'l~9 perton 11 ocHnt bvllMol
MAM£ STAT£M£HT M.l.RIMA INOUSTlllE5, :1'1'11 ~ .. 'llle to!lg,..ln• 11tr1<H1 I• IHll"'I W1l11Hl H•"•O•~· 5•nT• "'"'· c11,1 II J•mt1 YI, Porlti, ;m A•lton41 1.. ......
JI:. II. 51Et(0 $'!'STEMS, U• Cliff Co.:1 Mt••· Cal+! p,,vt. lotun• 6tb0!, C•l•lo•nl" 1~" bulOMU 11 II.ting ton01.>c:tld bY t!I lllch•rO Armour ''""'· iM Cllll lnal vlouar ,• Ori~J. L•P~n• Belt~. (• !o•nl• J•m•• W Podr• • lnl• bulln'u 11 bt\119 cOl'lducttd by tn l~\1 1t410mtnl lllell •1111 11\e COliMV lnOliOQ~al Clor~ ot O••nwe C<><1nlv 011 Jtn I !. lU~ The youthful <irea skater ll lth•rd A. llf.'tltr B,. B•v'-""'' J. M•aoo• O.pury '°""1'
receives his phvsical education Tllh •t.1vnon1 '""° wit" "" tountv C\er• ••••• • <T'V'4
h• k · Clrrk ot Or•ftOt CoulllV °" Jt...,1'1 11. McOWEN, ~ lTHillS I Ja JS Jee s at1ng nJJ, bv BtYt<I• J. M•OO..,., Ot1>11IY Coun-Anorn•YI •1 L• ... endeavors and he gets in his iv c1.,..._ si.o £. c~•P"l•n Ave. F t5llJ Oron ... C•llf. tJ .... entire class load bet1\•een 7 Publlllwd oran~ Ct1'11 0,.111 p ,1c1. t11: ••·nto ""'"': am. and noon e<ich weekday, Janwr~ 11• 21• and Ftb•\l.!lr, 1' 1•1i:'.~ Put1111M<1 oranat C11t!I 0 111, P11or
Practice is on the age nda J•nv1r 1 n ana Ftilru•ry 1. 1. 11, 1t17
fron1 1-5 p.n1. each day with LEGAL NOTICE ~:
r "rcT1T1ous 11uS!Heis___ E AL NOTICE (1~·0 added hours "ter supper NAM E STATEMENT L G
un Tuesdays and Thursdays. Tl\e 1ollewlng 11tr1011 !1 d04ng bY1inen -------"'' Kirby qua!Jfied first in the ••; Pb•n•'t Fvr~:iure 11,111111~111a, jlJ c l'ICTITIOUS 1usi 111&1s
South14·est and second on the Wflf WlllOn, Cos t• Mtt•. CtUlornl•. "'AME SlATEME"'T Jen Ed.,.•rd Hu1t1d, •Il l sent• Lucia, Thf lallowlne Ptl.l<IITT •rt deinv Pacific Coast prior to garner-Or•nae. c.111orn1a b11s.,,e1• a1:
h • • I ' J.J.B. INUE5lME'°'T COMPANY, 1610 ing his n~lional crown but es ind~:1~11";'1~ ne•• 11 l>e ne con<tucJN by '" camPui or1v,. sulie 10., '°'twJ>Od
hopeful of moving up to men's JOiin Hus1acr B•ach, Catlfori111 91MO Brian A. Bt•1na, 16l0 C•mP'>\ Orlv•,
J'uniOrS next year and alJ the T~ll iiatemet1! !llN! "'1"' the CounlY Svl!e l(M, N'wPOrt Brae~. C1lllcrn ll Cluk ol Or•ngt (wn1 y on J1nva•v 11, 926611 y,·ay up lo men's seniors the nn, l>Y Severi • J, Meoocx, O'Purv Co..n· Joh" A. MdnTall!. 16n llewockl,
following year. Iv Cler k, F !US? Av,1111•, ~•nla An•, C1lllar 11le 9270S
Therefore , the dream which Pubil•h<!<I Ot•rnrr Co••' Da lly Pr1o1. JamH l. Gray, 16il Reynokt~
h ti k Jonu erv JI, 2', t f\d Frbruary !, 1. 1~n. Avf"nuo, San11 Ant . Call!or11la 0'110}
(! h<lrbors or evcntua y n1a • 1?7·12 1n11 bu!lnf"ll ii t>rlng condoclell l>v • · J US ' Ot •---~----~-~----l atnortl per!n,rsl"P· !111-: I 1e IY76 .. 1v1nter ym-1 J.J B. 1nv•11ment Co,
pu: squJd at Denver could turn LEGAL NOTICE Brian A. Br11n•. ---Manag,ng P.,!ntr into reality if Kirby pro-f lCTIT tous 11us1"'ES\ Tnl1 sraiemen• 111t<1 wHh lht Count.,
gr£'sscs at his current rate. ..,, NAME st .. Tl!!MEHT c1.,k of or~na" Cou11!1 on· J•n. 21, 1'12. , lolloY"ng 1>erwn 11 dolnt bu1lnfn KAlMllACH, OtMAJl(O, l(H ... f'I" One thing is for sure, •1· & CHlLLIHGW01lTH
tho .. gl1. c~1·1 Plumbll>Q Co .• 1'14 W, Ult! St ' AnDrntYI ti l.tW .. SDac" No Jt, H~pert B •a ch , SSO Htwport Ctntlr Otl'le He'll hnvc plenty of time to C11>tornia ~-Nrwpcrl eeotn. c111t. n... -I . c;.1vJn H~nrw Oc:~Slltr hOIJ ow11•rJ, TH: UHi '41·1111 squeeze 1n t )()Se precious ex-.,, w. B1h s1, s ... ,., it. N~woor1
tra hours honing his skills ~~~"bu~~~!~~!·b:r~·tOllC'uclt<I bY an J:':i~!1;:ne~ .~·d•n;:b,~~1 1,0:'~s.PJ~,1;
once !he new Ice Capades 1rn11v1dvaL 111-11
Chalet behind Costa t¥1esa:s Thli ~ia1~;..,?~~·~~~d ... 11n lh• county LEGAL NOTICE Kona Lanes; bo\1•ling alley IS Cl••~ ct Dr~n9e Coun1¥ 011 Janvarv 11, _ -·----
CO!llple!ed later this month . 1911' by Btverl~ J . Moddo~. F 11351 IA.II l7t"I
h 'If d ho ( l'ICTITIOUS IU!IHllSS "\\'c're very t rJ e a u Publl1ti 0!<! Oran11e Coa•I Oallw Pllol, NAME ST ... TEME NT
that.•• stales J\1rs. Kiley. Jonc•ary 11' :u. ana Fotirvarv 1· 1'1;:~J7 Tht following ptr1on 11 dolnu busln"~
But she really can't wait un-LEGAL NOTICE ••:SESAME 1Nves1MENT cOMPANY,
ti! May, whe n her son turns 16 ''' _ 4'11'0 l'l•vn~ Roecr, Coren• d•I Ma•, J,.J Californ ia 9762S and is able to get his driver 's sr.t.TEMENT OF .t.llAHDOHMENT DP Jonn "· s""""· 41110 w~v ... 1101d, li C"cnse USI! DF FICTITIOUS llUS!NESS NAM£ Ceron• d'I M1r. Cblllornlo 916?S · The tollowlnu Pfrsons hove ebonao11od Th•• bu"nt11 I• betng ~ondiJ~1e<I bw • ••'fhen," says the mother of"'' u•• of 1ne 1Tc111iou• bu•rne" n"""'· p1r1nor1Mo.
h • J t · k ' MARINA OUTDOO R ADVE RTISING, Jonn R. Sh•w j e area S ates JCe S a(Jt1fl 9'16 Worbltr SlreP!, Fountain V11iey, "l"hh 1ta!•m•n! Ill~ With !ht CountV
phl•nom ''I won't have to C•ll r.,..nla. Ct•rk 01 ora11ge Countv ""'Jan. 11. 1911,
h Jr ' h' d lMe 1;c1ltlou• bu1lntn 111me ,,ferrer! To lly Beverly J. Mtddo•, Oeputv County c au cur 1m aroun any "bovt "'"' Ii~ 1n ora~ve county°" May C.!Prk.
more. 21, 1'11 llEEDY ANO SCHER, INC. Raneld A. MH<M~ll, ••7& W1rblf"r .t.llcr11e11 11 llW
Sl•~t. FounMln Vallt•. c111r. no Ne•11ort C111ttr Drlwt, Sul!• J>t Jame• W. Por!M·. 31'2 A•lrona L•""· "'-POrl 9tlth, C1ll~l1 t261f (Ol!d Me<I, c.r.f. T•ltpltont: 4114) , ...... '°
lh·• b<lslnou "'"' conducrell bv 11 p1r:ne"h•P. J•"le• W. Por1t• McOWEN, GllEEN I SYLVIA
ATTORH£Y~ AT lAW
1'1µ.tJ Pvblhftl'd Orangt Cool! Oe ilv Piiot. Januuy lS tnd Februe,.,. I, f, IS, 1'12 101.n
SJO E. Ch•Pman ATe. Oranrt, c .. 1uornJ1 n ui LEGAL NOTICE
Ttl: 133·51'1 FIN! 'Ul'Elll Oll COUlll OF CAL11'01llt1A,
Publial!l'd O'&nct (ti's! Dally Pllol, COU NTY 01' DRAHOE Jtn~•rv l~ and Fotiruary 1, 1, 15, u n 1IO Clvlt Ctnltr Orlve Wfll, S•nll Ant, Ct. l---~=~~~===~....:"'=c'"1 ' Clll NUmlMr O·S.U .. LEGAL NOTICE SUMMONS (Mlrrl1•t) 111 rt lht m~rr\aot Ill Ptt\tl-t: TINA. FICTITIOUS IOSINESS DIANE HEANEY t nd llt-ndtnl; NAMli STAlEMENT ARTHUR l.EAOV HEANEY Tht fl>!law\nv "rlbns ... dol110 Tl It\• Ahl>On6tn1 ; AAl~Ult LEllO't bu1lntU ••: HEA'°'EY GOLOEN WEST ASSOCIATES, 11il, Tht 11t!lllonrr h•t tiled t Ptil!IO!'I ain.
P~1>:ta Orl~e. M\s>lori Vlrjo, C1\\torn1a 'trnlnv rour marrlage. You m~w !111 1
91615. wrllt~n •r•POnse •llnln 1Mrtr dtY• cl lh• Fronk H. RO!'buck, ?trn P<!!ll!e d•lt that llli• 1ummon1 11 1,r.,.td on You. Drive, Mhslon Vltlo. C•lllornl1. !I YOU f1il 1o 1111 a W•\11en re1P0<1>ll Ruin l.. BMdcr, 4560 Varn1 Avonut. within such 11 ..... your e1011ul t m1v bit Sherman OakJ, (olllornlt. en!er<!<I 1nd lht CQurl m1v en1e• 1 ludg· 'lhh bu1lne1• 11 <Ollduclell by I llmltell men! co1111ln1ng ln)undlvt or olhor o•O"J Ptrtntr•MP. cor>e,rnlno division ol prooerlv, .WOU•ll FrAnk H. llClttluck ~UPPOrl, chlld <ullOCly, cnllr! IUPPOr1. •1· Ruth L. Bender lcrneY'I t~e•, <o"'· ind 1vclt CThtr rtlld Thi1 st1"m•nl w•• lllHI wl!lt "'• Coun-at m•v De t••nl"' bv tht court. IV Cltrk of Oranee CO\lll!Y on Februtry 1. II YOU whh 11 1ffll Ill• tllvlct II efl 11. 1tn . lorntv 111 rhl• m•lltl", 10• 111011111 • •• WUH•m M. 8U11<t, l!1~11lr1 promptly to rh1t ~1>11' wrlllt" "'"""' If Sh"'Ptre, Mu111n, Rlcnttr .' Ht"lPlom 1n1, m11 bt 111..i en """'' ISi South S••lnt S!rtt't·Su1tt •oo O•I~ Jal! , nn Ln A"l .-lti. Ctllfornl• fOtU {OFFICIAL :S!:°ALI PutlllshHI Orange Coast Dallr Piiot Wlll lAM E SI JOH'°' Ftb•Vl•Y 1, •. lS. n. 191"1 161.-1) Cltrk .
LEGAL NOTICE
SUPl!lllOll: COURT OF THI! $TATE OF C,\,ll FORH IA FOil THI! COUNTY OF ORA"'GE Ho. •-nuo
Ar!uro E. Gutvar t, OtPV!Y THOM.t.$ W, Hl!NOIRSOll, Jll. •rrornt' •I l•w lJt E. 17111 SI,. Sullt 111 CDtll Mtla. Ct. '2'11 0141 Sll·71H Atlftrntv klr P'l!ll°"tr NO"T1CE OF HE .. R1NG 01' PETIT10tt FOR ,.ROllATE OF WILL AN O fOR
LETI"ER ~ Tl!STAMENTAllY E1!•Tf cf WILLI AM qA" COB!!, 1100 ~""""n 01 WILLIAM R. (OB ll. •lso ~"'1W'n 01 W. Ii! COBO, a110 ~llOWn "'
Pul>h•hed OrJnqe (OfS! 0~/ly p,10•,
Jon1.1.trY I!, I!. :5 8f\d Ftb'Uf"" I. 19n
Tl>-11
R. W. COl!B. do<M•e'd. LEG Af NOTI CE NOT1CC 15 H[REl!Y GIV EN ""fh•I ~ • 0•11• Ccbb and Rlcl>•rd Carv~I ~1..,1 n"v•f----111<!11 he,...ln t pe-fl!lon 1,,.. o•obUe ol will '°'OTICE TO CREDI TClll S •nd lor luuonre o/ Le11._.,1 Tfi!tmon!lr~ SUPERIOll COU"T 01' THI" !o Pr!lfon•r1. rd,.f'nct tQ whk~ Is m~dr STATE OF CloLIFORNI .. l'Olf
rer further 1>•rt<eul•ri, """ 1no1 me t!mf THE COUfltTY OF ORA NGI!
•n<I PltCf OI he1rong the un1' hoJ DtPn e I I ol ND. A.·70121 1e• /()!'" Fl!bruorv B. 19n, •t 9:31' "m. on s,~" M,\,RGAllET McCAN N II>~ <.<iurt•o<HT> ol (kpot lm•nt No, l c.• .STU llT llrtf"''~ s~•d cour!, Al 700 Civic (fnter Orl•e NOTICE IS HERE BY GIVE N to •I>• Wt•t . In the (lty ol SaMI A.nf, Ct illorni• ctf"O•!C" 01 ll>e &bCYf nom..i dKtdfn! oarw Jan L11rv n, 1f71. 1~~1 •II ~r1Qn1 h1vln~ i1alm1 101ln•t !h•
AREA SK ATING PRODIGY Ilalboa Island's w. E. sr JOH"' '"'0 dect<1•n1 ''' '"'~1r..a 10 111. "''"'· Counrv Cler~ w'1~ In• ht<eu••" """cM•1. in !Pt ofll<e David Kirby, a sophomore at Corona del .l\-Iar High, J.t.MES l. RUB El, Jll , 0• !ht cter~ of lht ll•o~e ,,,,lllM courl, or
h ' · d' · ' t ' J t 'ti l ti JIJJ Vlt Oparl• to rr•••nt lt>tm, •·Th !f!p nKO'S•••~ \VOn l e Olen S nOV\Ce !\"\!;J{)n na 1ona 1 · C a le Npwport BtN;l!, C•llk>r~lt '2U.0 "0'-"'h•rt. IO 1~• 11...,trl iQnea •! !Pt olllc•
recent U.S. Figure Skating ('han1pionshi1)S in I..o ng ltl: (1141 •ll-1117 al 11'1.,t t !lornt•I-81. .. ko. Wdllom1, •"It •nor~ey ,,,,. Plli!•OMr 5Men.an. "" Scull! Ohve Srreet, Sulle Beach. Publls"'-'<:I Ottl'V• cooil D•ll• Pilot, llXl!l. Lll• Anvtltt, Ca!ltornlt .0011, ""'!en --------------------~~------! Ff.'b•u•,.,. 1. 1, 1, 1911 1T1'-11 •• "" ol~<• of bu1!nru of !ho ul\lkrtlvnPd ---~==~~===----l'n •U "''""" Port•llllP!I lo !ht tt1tle of
Golden Wes t Seel\:s
Banner Golf Season
LEGAL NOTICE ••Id d'1:edtn1. w11t11n tour mo11th• 11ttt
1--oc,...;o.""""""""°''°"--J'"e llrs! Pul>flc~l.on ol 1t>l1 notl<t. SUPERI Oll COURT OF THI! 01!!'11 J•~u• .... 10. ttn SlATE OF C.t.l.IFORHIA FOil lt'">e Mc(t n11 Glllhr1• THE COUNTY OF ORANGE l •'>f! Gvfhr!r Ho. A-n •o E~ecvtors ol ""'Wiii NOTICE OF HEARIHG OF ,.ET1T!OH cl lhe 1booo• 11~rn"'CI llfl:tdt"lt FOR "ROIATI! OF WILL "'ND 1"011 llU•l(I!, WIL LIAMS ANO SORENSON l.l!rTEllS Tl!Sf.AMENTAR'r (IOWO Alt11tnt1• 11 I.ii• WAIVED ) Mt Seulll 011.,.t SIYHt. Sitt. lM E1r.ira o>I EllNEST P,\,IGE, Dice•..,,, l .. AftM!tl:, c .. ~. "'14 NOTICE IS HEREBY G!VEH Thal Ttl: !1111 41Mlfl Shtlle Poll111 htl 11\ld """°ln t ptl;tlor! Allonlt\'1 fw ... _,.,,
for prob1lt DI Wiii •nd !or !Uuanct ol Publl!J'lfr! O••~H Co11t Otlly Pilot, Golden 'Vest College's golf rr<, l'l'b 1s -•• tos "'",.1" cc•. Lt1rers r1s11m...,rarv 10 Pt!l!l-r (Bond Ja111.1.trv 11, 11, Jl ind Ftttru8,.,. 1. l t l1 M"", f•I> 19 _ cvo"9U' ll-ome). W1lv.-dl. rrfrrt11et le which ls mtde lor 1,..72 team had an OUtStanding F'l. Mtrc~ l _LA H~rl>Or" !"ome). lurlhtr Ot'11cu1•''· .tnd ll'ltl ""' II""' llldf----~----------
season in 1971, rapturing the MM .. Mtrch 8.-~· Rio Hondo". ol•c~ ol hr1r ln1 '"~ 11me Pt• bftn ..... LEGAL NO'TICE Fr i.. Marc h 10 _ E ~st t•• (hcmtl . fer F~•r'¥' 1S. lfTI:, 11 f:30 t.m., In "'e Southern C a Ji f or n i a CA.in-"''"". Mtrch n _lo• An11tltt cc• a><1r1rcom o1 °"""''"''""' Ho. l ot ttiol -------==------ference-championship. (~omei. C<>U•1· •' 7'00 c1~1c C•~ler D•lv• Wfll, In nt1 _. Ft+,. Mere" 11 _ t1 ('ftl••n'. II\~ Cit'/ of S~nlt "'"~· Ct\lltrn!t. 1VPlllltOll COUllT 01' TM• But 1972 could be even bet{ Mon.'. Match 10 _ 11 L"' H•rt>Or". 011«1 J1"u•rr ''· 19n StA.T• o, caL1,011Nra l'O!t
I R t tr h F ... "'~''" ?4 -!llo Hondo' (-.ie). w. £. SI JOH't THI COUlllTT 0, OllAHO• \'.. er. says ust er go coac Counl'r cim N•. """"1 ".
Ra Sh kl r d Ml;'n, Acrll l -•I Etl! LA.•. , ...,,IN .--N'OTICI!" OF Hl!A•l•G OM •ITOTIOM•,. y ac eor , Fri. Ao•ll 1 _11 i.00 •~i., cc·. ,_,.T AND .. .,1(11As
h th t rt IJ.<>11 .• Aorll lO _ Cyortts' !h""""l-~I Cttrt ·~-. 10 LEA.SI! lll:•L l"RDl"!EltTY • "\Ve ave ree s a ers Fri . ..,.,,11 u _ l.JI. titrbor" (i'lome). L.,• •-· c1111on111 E111tt o• MAiito II:. <o1..1cii::. Otc•••!'d. ; back from lasf year's team. -,.,~, ,..pr11 17 _ ,.1 Akt HonOO', T.r: 11111 .m.im Noilc.r 1' ht•~ ei ... .., "'•' l(.nnt111 L • Ft l A<>rl! 1t _ flt! LA• ("°'"el Altlntln for ,ellllorit!' Glltti, II td"lllll1tr .. or Of ""' tlltll of but two of them m~hl have a J.eit: . ...,,,11 2, _ LO• A"9t'ln c·c· P111>11v.r.1 Ora11t~ c.oaJ't Otltv P11ot Mtrlo II. Gtldl.. -...,..,. "" 111.0 h11o • hard time m81.1 ..... the top six ,~ ... , Fe1trv•.., i, 1. 1. 1•n 2n.ri ... er r1y1ne .. 1111on l>f"'''"' 1or '" orVW • a.u'6 '" •""1..,lrlnt ll'>t IN•lr>t of 11'11 rt1 l .., .. , I hi s s e. as o n , ' ' say s F". "0"1 71 -•1 CYP•n•'· LEGAL NOTICE pPrty ht1t1 .... ~ lklcf>btd: Ind lt!•t •
Sh••klelonl. ffo;~, M•~ 1 -Conler....c:t rnft"I ''1------~~=~-----1Ftt1n11ry 11, nn. 11 ,_., o'tlOc~ AM.., 1,.,. . ...... c~ .... ,11 . IAll JlJI "" .Suot rlor C.-t ., "" ,,.,. r The three returnees an! J im "'"". M11 I -RetlOl'll IOUf'Nmtttt IUfl'EllOI COUil Of THE C•lffor11l1, In llld !or "" (Mmty .. : r " Pt(o)...•. • SfATf 01' CAl.ll'OINIA FOil °""""· °""'''"""'' T ....... tMr"lll "". George, Haro1d Eldridge and M""~ Ma~ tJ -s11i. tour"'"'"'' .i TIIE cou111n o' 01tANGE -.., ~1111e1 •• 11w '""" _, .-i.Q ._..
Tom De:Gue.lle .,nth George "'411''-''"' -. A·nw '-"""' .. 1d Ntll1-.,_ eM ..._. '""· .l "otf'oi"'J SoVlf'>rnl C.Nfl>mll Ctn#H-~ Of' NllAltlltO 0111,,VITIO --mt-lfld in Nld ....... "'"_.• rated the best of the trio'. ""' m."tll. ,.Oft l't:OSATW' °'" Will ......... ,Olt -.... CIOI~ kl .. MW! .... N1411 "'1rloR. , Golden West bas an outstan· t" maJd'l"I tieot11 et 1. urnu n:sTAMEHT•11Y 11~ i. ,..,...,... !Mitt , ... 111 '""-~
ding crop of freshmen, beaded LEGAL NOTICE o!::::..• D0111s DEANE WAGNER. ~ ""' ..... fw::S,i::'~., .. .:...:,~
b)' Steve Ro~n -Ofle o( NOTICE ts HEllE8¥ GIYEH fti.t lelft. ~ 'I; ----LORNA M,,llltlE SOOTS """ .l"O+IN C. S11d r'MI ._,,. .. t.lh,tttH NI "-"'" the top prep go ers in the NCllTIOUJ aUSINESS lflU:llOOT "'"" "*' """"'" • petlllofl (count\'., Ot-. ,, ... .,, ~ ~ Southland last season while at NAMI ITATEMllltf .......... "' ol' W.11 .,.,. fer lUUl!"O'.t of II dncrftltot •• fdGwt.· • aflf. Th• tolie>o•"" .,.....,.., Is tlol"' bull,,.. Lttt.rs ltst""""'ttrY la .ottlli-r.. l..ilof Jt « t,Kt ... : J7t2 lft ltll City ff . Estancia. ••· ,.-.,.lll"Q ._ ""'!(." 1, m-1or .,,,,rw, s.ni, ""-· c.u.., .. 0r-. ,1•1, ., ..
Qt•-t f h t t II PltO l.I NCJlo OATA llSSOCIATn, Mrtl<;vltr ....... ltltl ""'"""Ind plec;, C..lforfl111,""-"""'--lrl-· ut:r Op roS prOSJ>f'<' S !l• ~t !ml!ld cT>hfol '1 ll lATllOl'Ol.1$. It· ol' 11Hr1nt \tit u"" l'!tl "'°"' J9I lar 1'. P!f" »Md U Qf Mite ·,.._,~~ elude Sle\'t Ryan llJ)d 1 .. arry IClr 11roo .. ,1cir.,,l11), ~ C.tN>Ut (Ir! .... , "~'" IS. ltn, II f.lO .,,.. . ·~ ""' ""'-''1'11 of ""'"""""' ,_:.r flf ....... 'I I • •t . J J $.v1·.1o< N•wl'O'll'l•P•~ •7t.61). contT(*l'I., °""'rtment Ntt. l el •'-'II OJlllllY,111\tW"r Ct<tttrw!A.....,..I • "ArJ( 9011 01< ~ nrtnn . • (1111 11 A°" rvrr•n, cG111•••1 Pan rwr f, •on C'911<"1, 11 ~Civic Ct!ntrr Drl~ W"t, ht 01...,. J•nv•rJ 11. lfn • •
,.finkley of CllronA dt'I r,f:i r <• n •n 1~., r .,,~, •.1i.11L 111..1 G•1••r ""'C~ of :S.tntt "'""· CtHrorn11. w. r.. St .IOtfN, ' r t• I OH ..... Nt1'11MI ti••("· "''° 0•1911 Jt ... ln" ,,, H11o-Coo.mtr C'-11 .... c .. and Gary llart (l ~ount:1 n '~" l>+t->l"•U I' bit a rr•..-!Vllf'd by . I) WIL LJM\ E, ST JOHN, .. ""~-e.wt
Valley. 11o,.11"" l'1o11 .. 11 1nc11v1dv11 i (-ty c1"" '' Ji111(1i .-~~ N"' c,,., • ., OUR.Y 1,, (f.1l l'l!NTEJI: I 1.Altl'l•S 0-• • Soptlom-Ores Grrjl \Vtrrr!rl' lni• 11.1 .. mrnr iu .. ; ... 1t11 "'' Ct>ulllw lt 'f: llOOlill A.. OIAILl:J 00\.1 & b.t.u.d' ·,
and Jin1 Rnnkit1 nrr iil~ bid · fl•i• e• •' "'" '"~1 1• ,.., ,. · ... '' i''" fll•tA"""' IM. •r kf•M .,._
f h it·; f.v ""•II•• I, 1111\'t! Dt""l-i (,,_,.,,y r Q .... li'll 1'.0. ... 1"9 ding or sl11rthlR bfrl !I ., c1"' 1'1",_t ••~'~ c1111 ~ "'-"'"' ...... c..r...,.... tMO
o.tWll w .. 1 t\ft!I l( .... Uil ~ •·11-UI Tr! ll"U! 111 ·-Tt'I! UtiJ m·m> MOii '" ll -•I l,\, '1••tll>o' ,-ublll ...... f\•onM Ot_l,y l>!\t>I ~ .... ""!""-'"' A"-" ........................ I" F•tt 1, 11 111 t1.....nt1• l"""""\ J,., ....... u u .• ,,.. ,. ,,,,, r I l•:O: I r~11 ,.,"1 rvt~~-• ' O;t l"' fllle' ""'..,.,.. Or._ C-1 ,C!!'r !!."!: '"'". rff.. u -•t ll•tt LA·. Jll.TI ,,_.,..,,, 1., 1, 1. 1•n "'n J_,,. u..,.. ~v 1 .. ,. ''"""
..
•
. ~ ._._
Tuesday
Evening
fEIRUAftY l
0 "HAROCASE" TONITE * ABC Movie of t he Wtek
6;00 fJ (JJ 0 0 Q) flftw1
Q (1: Wll~ Wiid W11I
l@ "BC flft tn m Thi fllnbton11
CD I lt11111 °' J11n~11
llll ""' EID Hodrt!lld1• Ltd11 m "otlriei. lt
fD DeMl1 ltpal1
18 M11bln'J llfD
':JO 0 Plt111 Do~'t E1t ltlt Dtldts
0 .... It: /Cl (IO) "'lht Vlklnp "
Cond11s1on (allwnturt) ·sa -Ki~
Oou1las, Toir Curtis, [r11ts! BOl'I·
n1n1, lantt lei1h.
(I) CBS llews W1Utr Cron\1!1
~ill NttlCll'ltl li111r1phk m Andy lirllflt~ m N1n17 •Ml ttw ,,oltUOf
[J1I frt11h t hllf "l rlpts 1 \1 Modt"
ED l"tt• tnd lilt Wolf
(!) W1N11f1us1
Cs~ lire111 Aerts
(ID YlrlMt Hort11u1r1
1:00 D CllO m ., ..
O The Rlne m•n
({)Trull Gr tGn11quencts
(j) Dr11r11t
0 Whll'• MJ LiiMI? m1 I.wt luqi m I .. 1111 GI htnnit
(Jll Tiit tourM 91 011r Timti
ED H1lluror•
tJ!) LI llltnis1
O:~IOdTtlk
G) M11tr1p
7:Jd 6 9 t!tn C1mpbtll Buddy Hick·
1\t 1ppe11s rs Benj1min f1anklin,
John Byntr tots 1 mu~iul lmprtS·
sion of Gtoig1 M. Coll in 1in1in1
"Y1nkee Oooll1 01ndy" 1nd Glen
C1mpbdt singi the popul1r "Ameri·
can Triloay" 8' lhey 1U t1k1 1 ll1ht·
hearted look II -.m1rkan hbtory .
0 i]g) m T'9 St1n:ll !or the Nllt
'"Tht Setrtt ffun ta1n" is Pa11 Ill o
I Sil·Plll BOC urlet. Sir ll:ichard
Burton (Kennith Hai&h) i1 enr1gtd
when Spe~e \!ohn Quen1in) ls chM·
•n to m1~e • atcond journey to
A!rlc• lo confim his l>elid Iha! Lak•
Victoria I\ t~e scuice ol tht Nilt.
0 (fl roi CD Ml9it t i lllt WMk:
(C) (90) '11trdc:.IM" (we>ltfn) '}l
-Clinl W1l~er, Sttf1ni1 Powut.
Pt6ro ArmtndMl1 Jr .. .\lei Ktl'lts. A
sold1tr ot lortun1 at !ht turn ol tht
century 11 dttermme4 10 re1aln whit
11 ll!S 1!\ti ~e 11\Mffll to Te~11 to
lind hi1 r1n<:h !.Old i nd his w1!t has
tun off ••111 • Me1ic1n re~olulionary. m T11rtll tr Convq11tMtl
fD 'lJ) Thi AdYoctl•t "Should 1111
U.S .. J1p1ntSt Seturhy l 1t11y Bt
l11min111d1"'
t :OO m D1vid frost Siio• Guests: Ytv•
(tnJ ~evh1\chen~o. Don Mtl11n.
lln'a Hop~1m, Me1cedt1 MtC1m·
b1•dge.
II) LI G1t1
(l':) Mo Uoret poi M+
t:lO
0 CANNON·EXCITEM ENT! * MYSTERY and SUSPENSE! 0 CU Clnnon Guett Ve11 Miles
plays a doctor enga(ed in 1n Im·
port111t mtdica1 research projecl 11
the stile prl!.lln.
Q @) m l1m11 liarntr I I Mlcholt
•·s11iaM of H~~d"' Tht lu1e ol 10\d
provts lrresis!ible to Nichols as h•
becom!s ln~olved with some shady
cha1atters in a gold mine venture.
(! Ntl'l'n11lth
(Ti) lt likes 1 Thitl
0-~ The Vir1ini1n
10:00 0 m l!lew1
0 @Ci) m Mrrcu1 Wt!by, M.D.
'Tm Reilly Tiyina" lht lather o1 1
bey with minimal brain drslunction
1g1r1v1te1 his son's problems whel'I
ht rdu~es !ti tttep! the di11no~!L
Gary Colllns. H1ine Dttrr. St1n
lltlly 1nd Scott G1rrelt 1utst.
C:J Came li1me m FREE "SILENT YEARS " * PHOTO ALBUM AT All
OFFICES OF GREAT
WESTERN SAVINGS ffi @ The Sll1nt Ye1r1 (C) "lht
Thid ol a.1dt<I" In this 1924 lllm,
Dou1l11 F1irban~s Sr. stars 1s •
notorious thief who re1orms alhr
t1llin Q: I~ IO'lt wi!h a beaut1!u! pri"·
cess. m r., 11p
ail F11liv1I Mexicano
James M1scn n11r1tes. ' 10:30 fJ Th~ ColddiUtrs John forsytht
0 Morlt: (21hhr) ''Hur1k1n1" is guest host
(dr1m1) 'J7-0o1othr L1mour, Jon O Monty ft11h '"Tension In 1
Hall. Troubled lol'l'n" When 1 N1!ion1l
0 (fl CJ) !:a lht MH Sqwtd "No Gu1rd Armory ;, loohd. the whi!t
Mort 01k le,..es 101 frnie Holl1nd" ind blac k people o! th1 1own bl1m1
Hanry D1rtow i nd Rol>etl Pint ti:Utsl tith other. •
In !ht slOIJ Cit 1n u 11lo!.i¥t 1hetto m At IUUt
s1!u1t!on Iha! Is iti:niltd bJ 1 d•· O C1ndid Cunert
r1nr1d Vietnam vetu an worklnr 1s rffiJ The Golddiggus Stba5t oin Cabot
• COP. ind BiUy Ball'r gut.st
(f) I Drt1111 cf lt1nnlt @ f(1ws Huph Williams
D Mlllio11 S Mnit: (2h1) "Bitly Ut Al1omentad1
l udd" (d1s1icJ '&2-Teren<t Stamp, ffi Ctll of !ht Wett
Robtl1 Rytn. Peter Uih/IOY. Q!. llolltr liam1
m Ho11n'1 Htrott
m °'''"'' (I) kif!nu '71 '"Qu1h1, af Lift"
11:ooo m mNe•1
O ®l £n1'ft-n 0 Dnt Step k)'orld
00 M111htl Di110111
O (])CDMelll'I
0 Movie: • '1A1nflih" {adv~nlu1e)
·55 -John Bromfield, Lon Chanq. m Truth tr ~niequ1nct1
G:I um:t!iJ [qu .. Juslict Dnltt
lht Ltw Pro111m •~plains constltu·
li!H'lllf richts ind whit lhtJ mean.
Tonlfh 1'1 lllms, "Stop rnd Frisk"'
and "Seuth t n4 Sel1u1 t.~ demon
str1!11 wh1n 1uch procedur11 1rt !awfol. ; @ l udll1 Rivt11
iE) Los Colonot 111:10 (!) Morit: "Lat '4tilf Shikedown~
l:DO (l)Renln' 9'1 llNI Jtivl! (mysttl)'} 'S5 -Dtnni, O'Keele,
(9 Andy Crltfftll Slln Coleen G11y.
(p) Tllt Ylrfinilt mu eo.. 11111•1t1
l l:JO 8 (I) Merr Crillin
ai)Min1
l :JO 6 CIJ Hrwtil rM.C Barry Su1JiV1n
1uests 11 an eccenlrit billion1J11
1
suspected of ~nlin1 cnt of his busi·
MiS 1uoci1te1.
O @J mPr1·oty111pic s,1 ci1 11 Formtr OIJ111p11n1 Ptm Flem!111,
!lilly Kidll. Art Otvlin 1nd Ttrry Mc·
Dermott 01111 1 v111td loo~ 1! O!ym·
p1c sPQfh. 1ppr1ia th• 1971 field
of 1tMt\n t0"1Pttin1. 1nd prts1nll
hlmed hi1hllght1 cl past contests.
WednesQsiy
DAYTIME MOVIES
t:OQ m ".Yaltirtlnt" frornanct) ·~1
[Te.nm Pu~er. Aiilhon., Dt•1tr.
':JO 0 "Tt It tr Not Tt le" (CC!Tll!lty)
't2 -lit~ Btnl!J'. C1role Lomb.Ii.
tO:DO {IJ "T1ll Wtllt .r l•rdld" (1dm·
lurt) ·~ -Y1ttor Malllf'W.
1;t1Q "Ytftetf lilrl" (mu11t1~ 't7 -
Bini CtoslrJ, ~ Kope .
0 @) m Johnl!J Carson Ceor21
Carlin. Liber-.ce 1rld AJ1n Kint (Ytst.
0 Mt'lit: "'Unholy lilf1ltn" fm)'1·
1try) '31-Ronatd Co!m1n. f 1r Wr•J· o rn oo m Did en.:tt cec111•
Se~al ruestt. m Movie: "Re4 Danwllt" (d11m1)
·49 -Ptlu l1w!oul. J1net ltiah,
W1l!1r Pid1eon
l:OD 0 MoYit: "Bride ltt S.lr" (to m.
rdy ) '49 -Robert Young. Cl1udet11
C~bert.
Cll OO IL~Hm
Q (C) '1111 l111lott CotlltlW"
(drama) '5'-Avl Gardner, Humph.
rtY 8lli1'1. m ~.lthnny Apollo" (drtma) "40 -
Tyrone Power, Dorothy Lamour.
l:OO ®"TN lrrtlmr" Cond~1on{ dll·
ma) '62-Michael Call in. Cir!! Rob·
ertson.
®)"lilt l ribf'" (mystery) '49 -
Robtl1 Taylor, ii.VI G1rdnt1
4:00 8 "ti.,,-~" (comedy) '46--
JenMtf Jonts. Cli1ries Boyt•
4:JD (]) s... l'I 10!\M llstilt
r. , IROOKHURST AT lOtNCE:ll • 119·1500 ~
THE LAST PICTURE SHO
IS A MASTERPIECE! It is not
merely the best American movie
of a rather dreary year; it is the
most impressive work by a
young American director
since 'Citizen Kan e'!"
-PAUL D. l lMMERMA.N, NeWSWff
COUJllBIA PCTU?lS
P'rHV'I
' ... """""""' IKE
JMT PILiiP'I mmw
.... r_ •"'\lih-1. ,,..,. ..
··. .. . • C~"' ~ •• II ...... ,.._ ..... •
Newporl l1•d •-'4'·0l&fl
rRIO\lll'Rtc
1.;., G1IGl:"1'll :1,1'/'
George C. Scoll
IN
"THE (GPJ
HOSPITAL"
2ft'. ''"' S1ll1r1 "THE PARTY"
.. • • •••C .. •••<>·AT l •UI • O ••• <:a•O< ....... O .... t>•••O ·-· •.0 7 I•<>•• t<U,.<INOTOH ••AC"
Clint
Eastwood
Dirty Harry ..,. ...... ...,.,_.
. ""'' ,, ... • •--• c-,, c-~"' '"" Plus · Chri~toPher George
ii "THE DELTA FA ''. t •DWA~D• ~ <t•-·z::t ,;1
. TH.AT"• J.
"'"""., •O••'• '0'"• '"'" '"""°''"'''II .. ... ... .... . .. "'" ""''" .............. .
OSITIVEl Y ENOS TUES., FEB. 1
NIL IEl1Rll --·--·=@ , SilRUZIJ .J_J;t i
,; . . ..
... lllfGO ""'·
O~on { Ofll'lQorl • le ronol n O'"°eol
,, ,,, . ; ... ,,., •• ~ (I,~..-.
In "THE GRASSHOPPER"
Jl]•
At.a . OlClt Von [)y\e
hl-.mlADWUMOMlii•
EDWARDS CIMElll YJUO
Mlsalon V1•ie. 130-6990
·111e frt11tb C1111ecti011" 11·
IJo.<i ~--c. kd' ... "THI LASTIUN"
... ,
'htsdl:r, FtbrUMJ 1. lt72
The Music Box
Have Voices,
j Will Travel?
I ' By 1'01'if SARLI-:\'
Of 1111 O•!!w f'li.1 ''•11
It ~houldn 't be: any i;urprlsr to an)'Qnr who I~ in tht>
least bit familiar with the splendid ~·ork or lhe lrvinf'
fl.laster Chorale that t.his Orangt Coai;! organizuttvn i6 in
great demand beyond our county llm1ts.
San Dif'gO wants them and all we r.an add tt'l that i!'I
~hat the ~pie sout.h of our border hA\'e \'ery good taste
indeed. The only proviso is, and I'm ~ure I 1peak for thl!
cliorale's many fan!, that Ma urice Allard's gifted l{roo[)
be returned to us immediately after the perforn1ance.
The San Diego Youth Symphony has su('('fssfully urged
" · ... the chorale lo join them l\1arch 11 in
• concert !'lcheduled for thsit C'tty·s
Opera House-11 \'l'ry impte!llslve 1'udl-
toriu1TI capnbtt of seafini;L \l'P art' told ,
son1r 2.500 p:itrons
can 11ssure
rare treat.
No prizes fnr lho~t· \1·ho gu ess vdlfll
the fea\urrd \~·ork is to bt' nt that ev('.
ning conctrl. "Carmina Burana,'' 11f
course. and fre sh f1·o n1 l11al rnaRnif1.
cent perforn1anre of \ai;l \\'Cekend 111
the Orange Co:ist Colle,qe auditorium I
San Dit>go audirn('t!!i th111 lh<'Y <_irr 1n !or a
I wrote in my rev ie.,..· of !he OCC (•oncer! lh11 \ thr
Irvine group's version of Ca rl Orf/'s Superb scenic cnnt nta
was the best I've hea rd 11nd I fell a little guilty \\'hen I
sa'" that comment in print .
It hall been at the lop or ljils critic's choral li.~t Jor
many vears and I \\'Ondered if r had bf'fl'I !air to son1e of
the EtiropeAn~nsembles that \\'ere fresh in my memory,
After all, time is • greal. healt>r, but ii i!ll also a great
t>radiralor.
1 turned to my record player and :«imt of the earlit>sl
performances 1 rt>membered and happily realized that my
seeming ly high praise of the Allard ensem ble was lhorough.
Jy justified. It is the best "Burana" in my experience and
San Diegans are very fortunnte thnt it i~ headed thei r way
in ~1arch .
These Irvine Master Chorale people are made of 11tur-
dy ~luff. Their San Diego C<J ncert comes lmmedintely prior
to three Brahms Requiem concerts in our o\vn aren and it
has to be borne in mind that they will have lo put in some
rehearsal time wit h the 9Q-1nt mbfr Sr.n Oie~o youth or·
chestr11 .
TI1cy·re a pretty democratic gro up and tt\e question 1v:J."
put to the m very fairly and clearly al ,. recent meetin11;,
'fhcy were, 8!1 usual, solidly behind their beloved A1au ricr
in voting for the San Diego conc'ert. ·
They'll have quite a few enthusiasts from Orangf! Coun-
ty with them in cluding. all being well , this critic. I'm aJ.
ways eager to hear the chorale's "Burana" but I'm alllO
keep to again view that splendid conductor. Lou C11mplglia.
Maestro Campig\ia has been at the helm or tht Youth
Symphony for some six seal\Ons now and ht hns .,..·t ided
the group into a very formidable musical or,qaniznl ion .
Frankly. l'm,agtr to set how he tackle~ "Burana."
Maybe w should hirt a special coach and call it th e
"Burana Bus." Yours tru ly Is not alonf' in Admiri ng the
9.'0rk and, particularly, admirinR !he lrvlne t.1aster Chor-
ale's approach In the Orff canL.1ta
In any event, Irvine t.1aster ChoralP . tongr.atula\10011
and have a good trip. Rut remember onr lhinR -we want
you back the same night.
Irvine Theater Invites
Pilot Award Winners
'·
•• 1.
DAll..Y ,It.OT •t•U l'~IU•
Shall We D11ttt·t•?
Nlchola~ M~se l,iterally ~\VCcps f\l:irilyn l\llJerts1.·t1
o(C her teet tn this scene fro111 lht• l ll11 1t1ni.:to11 l tl'iH'lt
Play~ou.se c~n.1edy "'l'he (;irl i11 tli1· /"r('U(\1an Slip."'
co n11nu1ng F r1d ay and Sutu rtlay rvenlnu.s .
Su.11<l y Du11c<111 's Ey<'
Per'1nuneritly 13litille<l
HOLLY\\'0011 (Al')
A('lr~s~ S;indy Oun<·an now JS
1>rrman~olly hllnd in hrr lelt
l'}'l', b11t !hr l a~\ pt·r~on In fr 1·I
s11rry al'l!Jllf It L~ S:111dy l)Ull
t 'fl/I
··It's no lJtK tlc:il, 11o;1Jly "
"ay~ tht pert, h I u 1· "y 1• d
tcl ev1~iun 1!l;1r '"II 1Ju1•-111't ;1f
fl'<!I a11ylh 1n~ "
(l.1iss Dunc;1 n tHll.lt:rwf•nt 11
10-hou r operr.tion Nov. I 111 lhl'
UCLA Medical Cf'nler 10
remove a beniKn turnor tn1111
bthlnd he r left ey~. Ut1·1111111'
the :;ur$(efy wsi~ thruuwh tlif•
·top of lier head lhcrt 111·(' ,,.,
l'l.~ihll' SClll".~.
B(Jth lar1.:e , h<'llUt llul
rriovc uorrnally. l.'1 lhc
really gone pcrrn~neritly
f'.Vt'.'
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fr11n1
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2fi -was llu· lt>.~.'I 11 l•·rr 1.!11·
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f\1 lh·i htll..,ult· honu•. c 'HS'
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that ;1!!•·c."led by ll," 11he l!lnid .
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Winners of the 1971 DAILY
PIL01' O i1 tinguishe d
Performs.nee awards, along
with the runners-up in each
category, have been Invited lo
be guests of the Irvine Com·
mu nity Theater at Friday's
opening performance of "Tht
Amorous Flea."
Rich11rd Dow, director of !he lhe left one? v1su111
Arthur Miller drama ; Aaron "Ye~. 1l Is," slit Jl<tld M1 ~.~ 11u1u·;111 . ii pr od1l!·I •1f
Three members of the
Irvine theater will bf honored
at Lhe c !O!ll' nl the
performance. all f!if their
achlevernenl'i in J(.»T's "Death
of a Sale sman." They are
'C11arlic'
Tryouts Set
Auditions ha ve been 1n·
nnunced !or "~1y Sw ee l
Charlie,'' the forthcoming pro-
duction of the Sant~ Ana Com·
muni ty Theater, for Thursday
evening.
11erman Boodman wil I
direct the stage version of the
drama which won Patty Duke.
an Emmy iri the 1970-7 1
television season. A ca1t of
fou r men. one of y,·hom mu1t
be 1 Negro. and t'A'O women is
being aougbt.
The readings will bt held at
1 o'clock at the thea te r.~ W.
8th St., Santa Ana. ''My Swm
Charlie" opeOJ March 2.4 for a
tbrff-weekend ron.
matter-0r fll"ti y '! o '' d a ~· Hu· /J;tl!;t~ ~urr11nt1" tl<r·:1ti ·o·.
Fletcher, named best actor for · "" 1
' ' • "They J1;1y, wf!!t nothlriji('S hn· r1•t't•1vetl T1111y f\wilrd 11011111111
his portrayal of Willy Loman. pos~iblt, bu! lhere'!I no !Jun~ f<1r hf'r rolt! 111 1t1e
and Bob Miii!, chostn best medical proof or rPason why it flro:Hlway produl'tion1 of ''Thf:
supporting actor as B j f I should re1 1.1rn" Boy Fr1l'nrl " ilncl "C<1nterLury
Lo
...... _ T;1l1·!1" man 111e opt1e ner vt . sh1• rA
All actor11 and actresseii plains, ~·a~ affected TV 1·11mn1rn ·i11!11 hr I p e d
I _ _ _ hrHIJ.: her two movif'll , "1'he1 11111TI~ all winner~, runn~rs-~p ~~-I ~1 ill1u11·0oll11r f>u1·k" 1111 lfl
or given honortible mcnuon 1n1 ___ "~1;1r·Spnnr,1;.f1 !art."
the !JP a.,..'t1rd 11 Hst who have ' ,,.;,.,_.;..~-------;.;,-I
not bten contacted by tht! • • • · ·
theater n1 Ry catl Carla Dow al "'•'"' Gor"" ~I •'*·•If• ...
544-9470 days to reserve. com-Skin .......
plimentary tickets. •
"The Amorou11 Flea"' v:iH ~ G ~ ':!~.·:: :.·~" .. :;•·
presented in t he Humsnilie! ame ,.~ .. ,,.,. ,,., ..
0 .... 0 R ....... ,. •• ,, .. "' Hllll Playhouse rin the UC
lrvine carTipus . Curtain time ls
8 o"c lock
Grammy'fV·
Show Slated
''•-' .. ,, ... ,· 11;1• i.G!;:l>
'""" w ...... ""'' • ~ '' ., ,.,,,,.~ .. '
P•Rt.MOUllT Pl(.11Jl>(5 P1![S(!lfS
"friends"
~Cit TEONCCX.OR•
MY OLD
MAN'S PIACE
H••C :··· '><'
"~ WILl.fi~ai2
U\t !IDt "'°"")OU
should not Ht ak>ne.
NF.W YO RK (AP \ -Th ili 1 "C•M•·· '11 . II !S CllOR , .... ,. -· .... ~~
ytar'I Jive leJe<:a SI Of the .,l 1..,,....-".'·"---·---";._'·-M--..J C1n1o-1 lw<ICl•w ir..w, I It f' ...
A P ARA~OVHT PICH.Ill{
TIMIS
"l'OllJIDI" I:•' f ,N
Grammy Awards for the ht.st !~~ ,_ ________ ;.._,
recordlnR• of 1971 will origin- -~
ate March 14 from New York ,~~~~~~~~~~!!!!!~~~~~~~ .. York.
Lut yea r's program. tht. first time tilt G ra m m y "The Gan9 That Couldn't
presentations wer·e teJ eviRd, ca me from Loll Angel" Shoot Strai9ht" I GP I
The 90-minute JI r o gr am ,
coruiiBtlng of m velo pt-opening
by vari.ou11 cel tbrities and
entertainmtnt sequencfl:, will
be lffTl on ABC TV.
AIM W• Dkeay'1
"NEVER A DULL
MOMENT''
.. , ... " Matine. 1-, woc1....i.,, 1 p.m.
..... 11M C:WW 1l ,
•It•
".ZIG· .ZAG"
w• o~,, ·-.,., --
·--ClltFOOMF 70
.. ··~-'·" ~:.I·• ·-ClltFOOMF 71 .. ,·· r ,. ,. '•. ---.. $/AO/UM I '-· ..• . --- -.,. $!AU/UM 7 . .. -·.~·· ... -
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"l.MY ....... " ........ ,., ''ll.-.-....... ,.,
Ui 9 C.M
...,... ••.,.O (I "I[_.-l f l -·v_.,,.. ,...,,. r•)
' .. ~ ~· •· .
D•ll Y PILOT f.
Plirnpton
011 Safari
In Afrira
lly fY/'lr"TlllA LllWfl Y
NE\\' YORK (Ar l -C.r...11 ).:tJ
l 'li n1ptt>l'I, \\'ht1 11111krs hi!'! II\•
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111~ with 11111 IU~ fn1u1 It
t1·1 11111"11•t1n1t rlf'phnnt 11nd \I'll•
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uu11111ged to ).:lot .10 111u11y.
111.1111· l1•t•l of "'t•IJ .(lll"ll'if'd 1·ul·
or f11 n1, 1·0111pl1·t11 .... ·1th r x.
("t'l!~·11t t-!tlUIUI l1'flck!ll, of lht!119
1·n t11 ·111 11111n1cnt11':
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'I 111 lloof" will tw h1•ht u1·xt
"i111u l.1~. Frh 1 •. l1v 1lw !11111 •
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th•· :dlrri111011 f n11r l'hll1lr1•n '11
1>1lt·~. \11 lho• 7 ln JI Ml(I'!
hral·kt.l . will I~ auditioned
~1011dn y nt 7 JO p 1n.
The ru111t111~11 wlll he held >it
thl' plnyhOUftf':, 21 10 Mein SL..
IJ 11nll11.1tlo11 Uct1cl1. rurthrr 1n·
111111!11\ion n1r1y be ohl11tned h.'I
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J-c~ HlcllolMll
Co11dl'• &.rfO•
"CARNAL
KNOWLEDGE"
ond
ANTONIONl'S
"ZABRISKIE
POINT"
lotlt Ct l•• e l"'H ··1•
W• W•r• •lfl ltl"f /tl#Ww,"
th• ..,_ ..... ,. J tJ , •• , •bav• u• ·
mor• •fld m or• •ft9J* ""• &Wtirll tii• _,., ...
• • · THOfll Hl.YutOAHl
EXPEDITIONS
. You mutt •ff RA!
An ••·tounding
true · lffe adventure
lo< th• whot• femilyl
ENDS TUESDAY
South Cot1t au f
i... ....,.,..,. .........
•4~·t11'
... •to11t 1 1+W ... 1 •
•W °"'" I,_, f •
'
' 20 D1o.1L y PJtOr s ="----------
Y 011r ltfo11•••1
• :::::::z:c: • .. _, A ·
Do11 't Help F eccl OVER THE COUNTER
11...-.-ttfl,. IA s4ftloot -11i... 111 •Hff •lmlll'' t i "' ,,...., .. A.i0 'tic•• .. llitl' Mel-t•l l I •t "'lt'W.UI ..W ........ It (Offflm Ulofll.
NASO Listings for Monday, January 31 , l972
N ( H "0"' !I ... i tt I d Tr~ l"IL"'"" l>!>o Ii>••
o • •• o~"" • •WIC. lo .... 1 !>o-t1tf f'i\ 01 "
0 •• 1. • ..," < •• .... l
O)' SYI Vli\ I (JR rt R
Sa\l' '201/1 ~l! fl£fl 1f1l H!1 II
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f 1r i.: now )W '1'11lv r :in :-.:'lvf'
211 tr• 2~ ptrt1111 11 nP rl the
!TIO~\ ll.'.l)cns1v1 If 1!1 hOni~
l11111l:sh1ni.:.'l And 1f 1ou arc
1!1lt 1< fui<I an 1l1 n yuu l1kt
""hllh 1s 1*111~ d1!\1t1nt1nut'tt Uy
lln~ mill }hUr "a' r11j:!:s n1:1y
11111 Jn! up to r,o I l f! Ir !
"" ( ~ • "•"' ~ d• ~· • , ..... ,,,., ... I'-" , ' . ...... . ... .. ...
60 •~II I ~ 11 11•• l l 11 Ii• ;I fl"'..,• \(t a ~1!'i'tu iJ~~ :: a,,•i: rui;:x ruJ ii rpo !., l'1 1l! 1 ll
fl\\ l)r11rrtdU!lt"
1ir1 or1en111 r u1 ~ ~ h 1ll1 t I ••
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1l1se n1:irkt1I rf• 1111 I r ;inr u d
C'lf':'lr~n r "i111 r,11 rir1c111 in
tl1~'1nl 111ucd lP111..,
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l...:l~•lr .,, I'>~• no I
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•f ~~1err
Put ltt.:w 1r1 JI " 1-..i '"the AV II > I
Are tht~t "' cm 1nplv I 11 • • "' 1si1n v./1cn Jiu
trislll S JYI j\ ~n :-.l111rk.. 11 t tll 1 p•
(' lf pt\::, tJ \OLI
' ,,
' to-
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tune ~1dc ))\I li ldf 111!1! the. n ,,/ A IJ•• ~ \tr l 1st 1I I II 11!
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.1 1{ I II In Ji I\ Au1 JS! IS 11lu n
1 1u~! 1J1p1rlu1 n1 :.l ''-'" fl!1
lor ~ f'S!l1hl1\lif'd I II~ st )! I ~ I UI!
lur1 r r \Vall tow di n}lon :.,,.~ "~~
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1 nll frt.:c IJt.:t r 1lnr .!.ti \ 1<.:t :?
24 H OUR
TELEPHONE
ANSWERING
$1 J') :;:i f
ti \HU !;:Ill I Jr I h 1 S !.: ,:.~
h1r~11n }f1U II ht(umr !he ~ ... w•111 ""~~ r j I irgct of t 1 )11ss11 b:'l l ind 1 ~ •• 1'
s\\1tih r1i k(\ A111! n1r lhe
SERVICE
~•r• "" -C tu<>n• del M.
Coil• M••• r:Je,.po t !1.ch
.,,d S•nl• An• ••e•t
t 1rpct !1;is t1i rn 1nstnllPd 111
~oll r hnnr lhC'rf wilt he
1bw lu!I !y nuth rig )OU c in clu
Lill U( I(
ORANGE COUNTY
RADIOTELlrHONE
SiRVIC[ INC
835-3305
I-11r inst 1r1rr d ) ou respond
In !hf ubo\c corn t.'nn ior
s( rnet hing hke 1t ! a snlesmun
11 II J1rrivt" at your door :ind
1n1 i1ed11trlv <IOI'. ngr 1de lht\
In Its 2 I st Year-----11
Investment Course
OR AN GE COAST CO LLEGE
No Adm1t11on Charge
An nlioducl 1111 lo the b•1 c fu11d•m•11l8h .,f n•t 1l 119 n Co
po o!• 1tod" Bond, Mulu•I Fundt Go•• nm•nl Bo nd • Bu Id nq
I l11"n All<lt el on lni.,nd.d to q •• p •cl col kno .... l1 d91 of n
ve1!menh t nd .toe~ •~ch•n9 1 op•••• on•
WM L 0 BRYON, Instructor
l e9l1111l119 f1br11a ry 2
Fot I •H•• -W1d11•Hla'1' 7 JO 11 t JO p "'
Oro119e Coa't College
Thi for1111t
04' Thi Comp111
Rl'glst.r al th1 L1ch1r1
LEA SE NOW
19'12 CONTINE NTAi
fnlov t~• prr1t117" ""It !'Jurf 1!•111 ng
p 001u•1 onlv t (on! non •I ,.,, P
11 Ito LN ou 1011• nQ n•n~ot •~ '
o o oorem 1te1 11 led '" v~ur p~ "' "' neod1
1972 STA TION\\ i\GON
• • •
Fu I m11lnt•n11nc~ lo•s ng now 1v11 !
11n r on nor m c~ df•I rd ''"' <>" wngon (IHX"t f om ~~ n gnU t rnl
loo y P~ ~. Mon ~o MtrQu 1 er
Mon ltflV (d tO<l•J
CALL I UD BOWEN 5 4 0-5630
ohnson &son
[.J:W''''"''li'iiii' \ WI 11m9111-
2619 HARBOR BLVD COSTA MESA • 540 56JO
••••••••••• KEYSTONE
SAVINGS ...
An rr~ilJE~~ilm~
Place Tu Save ...
Tlunk of Keystone when you want
the high est msured rnt ere!'t rntc-; allowed
}ly Ja,v for your savu1gs' (Novv 25';~ mote
than most banks!)
,:
' •
"
~ . , ....... ,.
(#, (Mo.A )
I o I ~ II• <:IQ
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'
' ' ' " l , . .. ' . ' " " ' " '
u~1~ ~ " " ' '
MUTUAL
l'UNDS
S o/• s.2s •1.
IN'll~£Sl tOll.,Olllllltll o•nY 1 M0Nt'45 IONDS
I CCOIJIH
5.75%
lllTl•t ST
COM,Olltrlllrtl
CIU\T '' l)OO M tri!Mllflt t fll
Ol,OSIT
6•/o Talk Slated
To Visit ...
l~or pcrso11nl1zC(I st rv1( c come to
J<rvstonc Hnve a n ip o! coffee "'th us and
lake advantage of our
JFnwEJE
ll!oncy Orders •Travelers Checks•
Trust Deed Collcct1on •Safe Dr11os1t IJ-Ox•
ll1onlhly Horoscopes by Sydney Omarr
•\\ h"" n1 n1n1um !tfl\ln~ )>11lnn11' 1I $1000111 i;n1unla1nrd
KEYSTONE SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSQr:IA"rlON
Ror101d W Caspers, Uo1rrnon of !he Boord
•WESTMINSTER •ANAHEI M
1 "40 11 llecxh Bl..t@ 555 N. Eucl"id
Next lo ~ Opposite
Ha' Penny Inn Broad'#'OY~Rob1n \on's
Watch for Opr.run.R of our neuJ Nnopor t BcacJi
Ofl# Ill tMOronge County Atrp<>rl Complex! •••••••••••
In Cy prcsl'l
Complete-New York Stock List
,
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~z OAIL.!_PILOT ---~u~'li-'Y. r,bruary l. l fJl2
IJ.S. Planes Stand Beady lor .. Doo1nsday
WASHINGTON (AP J -The A~
Yon:c '1 Jat Airborne Command and Con·
trol SqUJdron w11lll, ilf It ha1 for 10
)"ttn, for doomaday.
Al any hour, day or night, one of it•
ll'trtt planet stand• fue led ind ready for
laktoff from a runway only 10 mlnult!a by
hellet1pler from the White ilouiie.
\\11lhln mlnule.11 or alrt1 of Impending
nuclea r attack on the United Stl!ltes, the
Prealdtnl and hh1 nlltltary command
i.tafr could be airborne in ()fie o! these
fl ying c0mm1 nd po1t11 .
SophllllC'ated rlet:tronlc1 and coin·
muniutk>n~ equipment 1board the plallf'
wuuld enable the Prtaldenl to dlrtct the
n1tlon'11 dcrcnse and counter1tttlick whlle
cruising more than 40,000 fet!t above the
earth.
1'he Pre1ident would Ut In con11ta.r1t
tooch with US. military command:'!
around the world even if the Whne H11u ~e
or Pentagon v.·pre destroyed 1n the f1r:.t
wave of & llt1rpr lse nuclear attack.
An und erground .11anctuary at F't.
It1tchle , f\.ld ., in the Catoct1n ~1ounta1n'-.
1erve1 a11 an a!temale command po.sl.
Or. the Pres1d,nt could keep his finger on
the nuclear tri~~cr at a ha rd ened un·
dcrground shelt er h1 V\r1tin1n, at the
ht.&dquarter.11 of fhe North Amtrlc.an Air
Driense CAlmrnllnd buried d('Cp lnside
Cheyenne fl1•iun1:i1n, f',oln, or aboard the
flylni: command post or lhc Strategic Ai r
Cvrntnnnd.
t\11 arl' part of <in elaboratt 8yllf11t
d1·~ig11etl to maintain unrnterruplf'd t~Jn·
troJ 1JI US. air, ~rhund Jtl<l ~cu lorccs u11·
Oer all c.ircumstance!i.
Air Force l)ne . the Presidcnt lnl pletne-
used ror normal travels. also Is equipped
with comn1un1c:.itlons gear necessa ry lvr
kerping In luuch hut lacks the cquipmcnl
requirtd for ~upporting a battle staff and
pro5eCutu1~ a war.
''Siller l:Nlla r," the code name for the
thret national emergency airborne com-
n1and plane~ ba•..t:<f at And rew s AFB,
.\Id., marks 11s 10th anniversary of opera·
lion Hus ye<1r ,
Its planes are converted fou r-engine
KC·l35 tankers, derived from the com·
n1t·rc1:1t BOf•ini.: 7ifl Jetliner. which arc
c<ip;1t)le of ~laying aloft for several clays.
Although neve r used In a real ernergen·
<"y. the planl·~ have piled up thousands of
flyu1~ hours in ain1ul ated alerts.
The Pentagon says Lhe planes are get·
ling uld and are too ~mall for the im·
proved e!C:clronics comput ers and com-
rnunic:i llvn t•c1uipn1e11t that h11s come
along in rl!ecnt years. Jt w<1nls them
replaced with a neet of wven bigger and
more costly Bot:lng 747 j\lmbo )eta.
Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird
l1a! asked Congre11 for $113 .8 Jllillioo ~
buy four 7.t7s Immediately. Three more
would be bought next year and the
seventh the following year.
\Vith new and bigger planes, Laird ex ·
plained, "\\'e v.·ill be able to obtain
greater · endurance, more flexibility,
1<1rger battle stairs. 111 largrr group of
\aried experts to support top-lt.·vcl
dreision making, and additional space to
put improved communication a n d
automatic data·processi ng equiprnent as
1t becomes available."
One ol 111< 747• w...W be used for
testing new equipment, Inc_ I u d 1 o I
measures. to protect elecLrical devltts
from d&mages by eiectromagnttic. pulse•
given off by nuclear explosions .
La ird suggested Sovitt weapon I
developments may have madt the t~
isllng fl}jng command posts v11lnerablt
to commun icalions blackouts in a nuc-
lea r attack.
The presldt'nlial command planeB are
n1uch li ke the c:omn1and-post plane!
ope rated by lhe Strategic Air Command
since 1961. Pentagon officials indicate the
SAC fleet also may be replaced with 747s
1n the future.
In Declitie
London Plagued
By Urban Woes
U.S. Sought c
By BRIAN .JF.FfRIE.~
LONDON (AP) -StfJrle1 1.elllng of the
drtt>rioration of life in Amt>rican cities
h:ivc made prime reading for l:.onduncrs
in the lo st few years. Now, they are
tasting !he same medicine .
London's population has dropped more
than S00,000 in 10 year1. Larr:e sections of
the central area are dead at night and on
"'etkends . Traffic ja1ns at peak periods
tire getting worse, crimes of violence
have 1hot up, unemployment Is ln-
creasln.R. the housin~ situation ls ~ettlng
worse, the birthrate Is down and Industry
iS decllnlng.
There are two schools or thought on the
11ituallon.
The rirsl 1ay1 It is necessary to redu ce
_ London'• popul'aUon In a controlled man-
ner to Improve sta ndards for those that
remain.
The sel·ond warns that depopulation !"
going ahead too fast for the good of the
c11pllal. If It conllnuei; at Its present r11te.
the net result wUI be high unemployment
and 1 aplral ()f decay.
L-Ondon'a population hes fallen to 7.3
mllllon from a peak of 9.8 mllllon In 19.19.
The lateat statistics 11u,1u1esl that the
<'npltat Is losing people at the rate of
HI0,000 annually , with 250.000 people mov-
ing In and 350,000 moving out.
Although the mnln !!.\reels sill\ appear
prosperous and the light" o( Piccadilly
shine 11 brightly •s ever. !here 11re
potkets of decay and poverty in
nclRhborhood areas.
Shelter. a British charity specializing In
housln&. estlmate11 1 1ihortag11 of at \cost
200 .000 habltable dwellings In L-Ondon. It
.11ays that tt>e sttuallon is getting worse.
Crimes of violence in London went up
18.7 pertent from 1969 to tV70, with a
fur1 h<'r .t percrnt lncrrnse in the rlrst ~i~
months of 1971.
·nie Gr('ll:l('r L-Ondon Counrll Is thr l{)('tl
government body ulllmatcly retponsible
for the day-to-dn y runn in11 of the cnpital.
Eric ntompson, ll.~ f'xptrt on populnt\on
n1ovt1nent, ~ays : "l'°11don Is not Nrw
\'ork or Chicago. Ours Is a vtry diffcrenl
clly."
For one thlnt. he S:l)'S, there are oo
lnrge ghettos or "'ry poor artas In lhe
he art of London . He 11ttrlbutf'S this lo
munll'lpal redeveluprnC>nt and re bul\dlnA
poUetes which have provided new public
housing.
Brlt11ln'5 nonv.·hlle populatlon I s
cst1m11ll'd lo ha vr r1 srn to ! 11l rn1l11nn in
1970 from somethln~ nve r hnlr 11 million
in 1%6. f\lthou~h in:iny h:;ive srlllt'd in
London. the prop(U'tions nrP still 111nvhf•re
nc:ir thos(' or New Ynr•k or \Vashingtnn,
Thompson &ays.
Dr . D;ivid 1-.:versc!t>v. ch1rf strri1rgi<'
plr1nncr for the C'nuncil sav5 th;it local
and crntral govcrnmrnt in Britnln hns a
fRr rrcntrr deF!ree of control 11vrr plan·
nfnr. thnn its enulvalenls In Amerlcn.
As he scell it, AmerlcanS hcll>Pd kill
lhrir hlg cities bv driving multilane
h\11hw11.y!\ thrnu~h them , by i\l lov.•inn: a
situntion to Hr!5c where onlv !he ponr liv·
ed In !he downtown nre11s: bv leltinJ!
public tr11n sporl sy5le1ns run down and
by 111lowlng downtown shoppint:t areas to
dtcfly with businesses joining thr migr11·
lion of the rich v.·hiles to lhe suburbs.
Th\!1 w:1s not the rn5t' In London,
Everstlcy .~ny~.
nr!t:iin hns lrnrned a gren! <lcal from
the Aineriean s about research techni·
qu es. hr ndds. hut v.·hen ii comri; lo soh•·
Ing the problem11 "The AmtriC'Rns have
to cnmr tn us."
\\'hP.re are the people who are moving
frtun London ~olng In? As f:1r as the
ccuncil c11n esl.1bll .'ih. half are lcnvinfi! thr:
region enlircly and the rest n1ovlng intn
the burgeoning , prosJ)t'rnu.~ i;outheast
com1nu!er ·bell borderln~ London .
'rhC! C'ouncil Is f!nanl'inJ.; new hou sing 111
~O IO\\'ns 1hroughnut En.[!land for tht> \i se
of !hos t who want 10 mo\'P out of l...ondon.
Nobody ls movr-d finlll assurrd or both a
joh ond a house .
1'he rerfuctinn In population is begin~
ning lo be matched by a drift irom Lon-
don of mnnufaclurln ll indu.'ilries. RC·
cording to Thompson . This is In line \\'ilh
thC' (l'ovemment's poliC'y of pcrs u:iding
fac·torles lo mov(' to Areas of high
unrmplo~·menl.
Not everyone' ls In fO\'Or of th is pollcy,
and not e\1C'ryone f~l s Uindon can
esr npe the Amrrlran expe-rienee.
Thr London Chambt'r of Trade and
lnduslry, spokesmAn of the commercial
concerns. rl'Cen!ly warned the govern-
ment lhAt it Is tssenlin l lo halt the drift.
An offlrial said: "Onrl' you gel into A
spiral of decRy It Is very hard lo nrrest
it. Firs!, you grl industry moving out .
then hi gh uncn1ployrnl'llt. then the
st>rv\re industr\{'s start to \use oul.
Proptrly is l:lkrn ovrr by pt'<lple with
no1vhrre elst lo go And soon A \1·hole area
c:in bN.'Ofl1c n 11hnn."
.Marty Barrier~ to Fall
111 Ne1v Market Acco1·d
BRUSSF.~ <AP ) -Beginning next
yt11r. It may be e11sil'r for an ltalinn
h~rbtr t gel a job in London, or a
:year. it 1nay bt easltr for an Jtallan
h:lrbt>r to Rtl a job In London , or a
Danish film dl!!trlbulo r to start optr11·
lions In n,1me.
As Brllaln, Denm11rk. lf'f:land and
No rv.'AY join lht Euro})f'An O:immon
~larket. lhey 1ectpl the 111:rttmt'nl !hat
h11s ,11'.ovemf'd labor rel1tt ions amonit EEC
n1embf.rg FrAnre. lt11\y, West Gennany,
RclRIUtr't, L II l r m b o u r g 11nd the
Nethtrlands !ilnN" 19!''8.
fl provldt'I Ui111t citizen!! of Ont' Com·
n10n ~farktt ('(lW'llry 41.re tntltled In an~'
ntht'r mem ber rounlry lo auton1111lc
re!sldence pennlt11, cqunl Jo b op-
por1unllles, loc11l union mcn1btr!ih1p 111nd
... oci1l se<'11rl1y bt'nefits.
Scli.ool,s to Go
Year-around
SAN Dt EGO iAP I -f\\·t
eltmenlary 9Chool11 will switch to
)'Ml'-l'OUnd optraUon nut )''fir in
1n effort to attamrnodate mor1 Jluden... the San lM<l!O Bo1rd or
iictuca11on says.
'Ille boMI voted rtttnlly to ap-
prove the pilot program ti the tl\"f
achools afltt Supt. Tom Goodman
.. Id Nd! IChooJ pn>bebly could
handle up to a 30 perttft\ lnertast
in enrollment
ri-can r"' rht studenu ot
•ocll -to "' '"'" Into n .. 11"'"11' wttli. tl<b '1"'11> golNt ""
, ... 11oo 11 dlrr...,. u .... o1 the
)'Ml'. •
·rher1~ nrl• J1 Int or rxct>pt111ns· The
frccdoin does no~ yet extend to public
servlcri;, 1"elf-emplo~1ed c r a f 1 ~ m , n .
wholesaler!", retn llrrs ~nd prorC>ssion11I
mPn.
It tnkt'S II lot Qf lin1e lo ~f'I six C'OU!l·
lrlr1 -11nd more for 10 rountr ies -lo
agrtt on v.·hnt the qua\lfications for an
rn~inel'r or an Accountant should bt-
Fttt movement C'lf lnbor was one of the
lasl lsi;urs settled 1n the negolh1!1oni;. Tht>
Dutch fl:nd the Wf.st r.enna.ns Wert Afreid
th11t Brllish subjects frotn the (;Qm-
monwe111th. hit by the high rate of
unrmploymrn! In Britain, ••ould move
~·hert job!' wert n1ore plentiful and social
S<'curtty pllyn1tnts morn {lenerous .
Other eff('('tS of the Common ~lllrkel · s
f{t"flWlh wlll not bt Clb\'lous to most Pt"O"
pit'.
Food prices In Britain wUI be pushed
upwant. some beglnnl!lJl ln I.ht sprlng of
1973. But the movemtnt I& bound to be
grndua/, 111nd some econorni~l• thin\ thfy
would bt itnlng up so much anrtto" lh11l
U'ltl dlfftrenet '1\111 not be notl~able .
In 1973, I.he Br1U11h govcnunent 1'Will
have IO pay a conlribullon of about ff50
milHon rouRhlY S2.!IO ptr subject. Cltl!C!ns
of other new members •·iii pay In pr 1>-
portlon.
Tht tosl lnr Britons ~hould quadruple
by 1178. and ll may go t\i$!her If tht Com·
munit)' ttlends \Is acUvlUe~ btyood
kttplng up farmtn:' illCOmt. But those
J11rllvltlf'S nt~~· bring ln son1e money to
Ult nrw n1l•n1bC'rs -for a!\mple to
de,·elop b.•tt·kwnrd IH't:ts In Scotland.
lrtland and ,,..-r1htrn No~'llY.
F'anntrs will stirt bentfitlng from
hl,f!htr priN"s tn Brit.tin, Ireland and Dttt-
mark' Ir\ the !fuirig of 1913. Norw1.1
llllrtMSy h3S bigb tarm priC'tS.
R11ssia1i s iii A lasl~a
Canadian
Wa1· Rule
OT'fAWA (AP) -The United State!i
wanted to take over su preme command
or Canadian forces once it entered \Vorld
War 11 in 1941, minutes of a meetin.g ()f
the Canad ian Cabinet war committee
reveal.
The minutes and associated documen\8
have been made public at the national
archives by the Privy Council Office.
They still bore the stamp:i secret and top
aecret.
The Canada·U.S. Permanent Joint
Board on Defense prepared a "Basic
Plan 2" which visualized entry a( the
United States into th~ 'var. 1
In April 1941 , the Canadian Ch.iefs of
staff told the war CT1mmittee that the
U.S. section or the board, with approval
()f the U.S. administration. wanled
strategic command of joint Canadian and
American for ces, including Canadian
forces in Canada.
Gen. Harry Crerar, then chief of the
dere nse staff said he v..·as prepared lo ac-
cept U.S. supreme command only in a
desperate situation, such as Britain being
knocked out of the war.
Three Soviet fish in~ flt'£'\ offi cer:-('harged \\'1\h
violating U.S. \raters in tile BC'ring Sc<1 t.:i!k \l'ith
interpreter. '!'he three nH.'n ~frorn ltf1 !. Vl ad in1i r
Arte1nov. connnandcr of the RO·bo.:i t Jlcct; Igo r
Bov tun, n1aster of the. 362·foot fa ctory ship Laniul.
;ind Nikolai Pav\uk. captain of the herring tra1\'\e r
Kolyvan, have pleaded innocent to the charges.
( 'ourt actio n is scheduled lo resume \Vednesday in
.l\nchora~e \\'here the trio is free in lhe cLi1i1ody of
a Sovie t diplomatic official.
The chiefs silid the United States wa~
prepared to allow Canada only tactical
control of Its own forces in a few places.
such as the Gulf of St. Lawrence. the Bay
of Fundy and with in 30 miles of defended
ports such as llalifax. ·
The \\'ar committee decided that it
could accept nu such U.S. control but that
il \\'ould fav or cooperation and con·
suttation with the Uniled Slates.
Salvation Army Gets Help
Earlier that same month -April, l!Ml
- President Franklin D. Roosevelt
bypassed the Joi nt Board of Defense and
told Prime Minister Winston Churchill
directly that he wanted t.o put a battery
or guns ancl squadron of bombers at St.
John's in Ne'ot•foundland, then a British
colony. Ret,iri118· /_,efl tler Sees Big Cltn11ges i.11 51 Years The Ca nad ian Cabine t was nonplussed
becnuse nobody in Canada had even
heard of such a plan. Hy l)IANA P . .\G .. :
Nf:\V 'l0J{t\ \UPI\ -\\'hen Erl\\·ard
CArey joined the S:ilvution i\rn1 y b:ind 111
the early 20's. he le:i rn rd to pl ay hyrnns
on the tron1bonc. ·rhe b.nncls hr /eavC's
bC'hind sre playin,11; roC'k music.
Rock bnnds, clru~ addiC'ts. "f<'C'~'('lrd
JIH1k,'' and ·won1cn's lib arr p;irl ~if 1hr
C"hanginA: v.·orld or thC' S.1!\'atio11 Army
\\'hich retiring C111n1ni~~1011c·r 1·;d11 .1r1/
Ca rl')'. 66. h;is knOl'-n fo1· SJ ~e:ir:-.
('11rcy IC'll\'C'5 hr!' po~! n.~ n:1 !l11n,d ('11rn·
nu1nder-thr l11p :1 •I Ill 1n1:;;tr11 Io r ,
spokl'.~m:in :i1ul p1 1·~1tl1•nt nf :lll :->.1h;1tll•n
Army corpnra11ons 1n !hr \'ni ted
~!:i trs-to his succrs.~or. C11111n1 1~s 11•nrr
f1;111l ,J. CArls11n
''Thrrr i.~ a rr;1 I rrli~n1us fl'\i\al
nmong youn~ ptopl<' 1"h<'.\ 're• !'ll'k 11nd
f\rf'll (lf \\'hat !hr l'U!ture h:is bc'en sn~ 1n ~.
If ll't' could JllSI harness lhe1r idr:i!ls n1. 1!
11·oul d be \\Ondcrf1il for !he c1111n!r~ ."
(:lrry saiO.
Rock bRn<is ar(' just parl nf tl1e S.alva-
1 i1111 Anny's effor ts lo chani;:e 11" image
\\·1th youth from a "lillle Victorian.
c\ogoodcr. not p.1 rtiC'11larHy rc!cv:int
nrganilntion" to on(' of "an opportunity
lo serve nev.· vttlUts." Carey ex plained.
Tht Salvnlion .A.rny sponsors N'ffee
houses such as the one in Grcer11vi ch
Villtig'" "\\•her!" 50ml' 600 lo 800
yourigsltrs have det'lded lo ret11n1 hiime
lo ~ii' p11rent~ ifiq~WHt.n<'s In L<is
Angrles u·here'"tot>fl11~~· anl'I girls Ji\·r •
h•rf'lht>r 11·h1lc lhry try lo kick !he· drug
! I :l !Ji l
'':\ll·nh\1l1sn1 Js slill the tnnior problem
in nuinllers. hul Jru6 addicion. v.·ilh its
l111ks to crirnP. has far n1orc impact,"
l'~rey said.
,·oung people 1~·ho g11 e 11p drugs for
J(•sus 1nay clisro\'er lhe Sa!l·ntion i\nn\·,
"bu! 1hc J<'sus rnovc rnent didn'l disco\·.
f'r che tl Ondcrful l'Xperiencc of con\'f'r·
sii>n ." \<11·cy s;iid. "ll h;ipprned lo n1('
11 h1·11 I 11:is IS "
\\'hril C'nrr~ \1as 15. his fnthcr , a
"l,i1 C'rpvol·!ri.~h" in1migrant \Vho brought
his f:in1il)' frunl r:ng!Hnd lo C11nada and
lhrn to the\. n\led Stales. died. and C:irey
hntl lo dr('lp out or high school to v.·ork.
1\t !ht• 11111(' uf rarf'~··s fathers dtalh In
f'!1·1·!'l:1ncl. a S.1l\'al1on Arrny C'i!plain
f',11nc to offt>r his syn1pathy, :ind thro11gh
hiin. Carey brc11n1c involved \\'ilh Snh·a·
!Ion Army :JC'tn·i ries as he l\'Orkcd and
\1·rnt to nigh1 school.
\\'it h a drgrl.'e from New \'ork
1 'nivcrsity 11nd gn:id1111tion frorn Salvation
Army oHicers training, Carey began a
career Y•ith the Sal ration Anny \rhich
took him t.o Europe. South America,
India, Jepan. Auslralia and New Zealand.
Even after settling into retirement near
l..<1eonia. N. H., Carey plans to go on
"soldiering'' with the local corps.
Carey married Lieutenant Faith Seaver
In 1928 11nd they h11ve lhree child~ snd
eh•,·rn grandchildren.
"!l's J>M1 of our discipline that officers
n1arry ('~h other," Carey said, smiling.
"\Vomen ha\'e served 011 equal terms
Y:ith n1en here long before the v.omen s
liberation moven1ent. ··
Tht> Anny n1arches wilh won1en's lib in
its efforts to start day care centers. The
Salvation Anny also has a project to
I rain licen!\ed n1idwives to fill in for doc·
tors 1vhen possible. and also has a
counse ling service for unmarried parents.
The Salv ation Anny has tried to in-
crease black recruits because'·the blacks
\l'ant their O\\·n lea dershi p and in soo1e
places 1rcre nble to providr it ."
C'arey said. This isn't ne11', at'cording to
t~arey. "There were three blacks in of-
frcers training with me in 1923. ''
Tht Saha Lion Army v.·a~ also one jump
ahe11d of ano ther cause-<:leaing up the
environn1cnt. For years, Salvation Ann y
cen ters ha l'e been ro!lecting and sal-.·ag-
ini:: discarded mnttrial so that a poor
fa1nily can gel "recycled'' clothing and
fumitur('.
Another fact of modem times Carey
n1ay be !!lad to leave behind is economic
pressures. ·with the "squeeze" in relation
to the United Fund and government pro-
grams.
Outside the Army headquarters t"'r>
v.·orkers picketed, seying their union
ltadrrs had bten laid off when they asked
for raises.
"We feel future shock." Carey said
assessing the changes, "but the basic
CT1mmilment to the gospel of JeJus Christ
doesn 'I changtt
Kids Have Point
About Spinacli
ROME fUPJ) -Children who halt
~pinaeh like poison may ha ve gott£n to
thr point fa ster than science did.
A dietary committe'" of the U.N. Food
and Agriculture Organization says In a
report just releastd that the breakdowA
of certain chemicals in spinach can cause
methaemog\obinaemia - a form of blood
poisoning -in infant.<;.
Several delegations to the conference
held in Bonn said spinach should be ban-
ned for bahics less than th ree months old
because nitrates in fresh and qui ck·froien
spinach could break dov.'n 1 o
nitrites-v..·hich could cause the blood
poisoning.
The U.S. delegation noted that the p~
blem does not apply to canned spinach,
which has been v..·idely used for genera-
tions.
The commission turned do\\'TI a
Cansumers Union request that -·amlngs
be printed on the labels of spinach con-
lainers saying !he vegetable w 11
un!llitable for the very young infant.
1 Instead il r ecommended thal spinach
lie eettn immediately after it is cooked,
or after the conlalner is opened, and
unused portions be discarded.
Environment Events ~ot All Black'
By l.OUIS CASSEIS
U"ll .. ,.,..,, l.......,...ff_1
'Thttt·1 so mu<'h bad news 11bout the
polluUon of the ci'ivlroruntnt thal it rom·
es as a refreshing surpriSf lo i;incounter
an OC'OAsicinal bit of ccolo,qical good ne"'S.
H'-re an A few ex8nlplrs 1h11t hi\'e
come to my aUMll\011 lately: ...
• • •
-The lvory·billed v..·oodptek,r. A larJte
and be"utlful 6ird Lhnt omithologtsls
ha\'e feared 'l\·a!i f:Jttiocl. has shown up in
lhe drnse Santee $111111.mp 'of SOoth·
Carolina.
IV()ry·bUls Are Amt.ric11 's ) a r I e St
WOodpeckrn. 'T'bley are bla ck ind whitf
birds large.r than crc•s.. tf\d tht males
• sport 11 1cai::let crt!I.
They are very much v.·orth prtser'\1ng
as P,rt af the btauty of Gocf .s rrcatlon,
buf we.rt dr1\'tn to the Vttf!.,f! of e:\\HlClion
by nithl~ lumbenni operaUons during
lht 1930's wh lcb nearly wiped out their
nnl lYt h11bllats.
"
Their welCOTT)e reappearance In tht
S11ntee Sv1amp Insures a mighty battl(' by
const-'f\'alionists to forestall • propostd
new logging operaOon in that area.
htlndlul of the growing "ecok>@ical
vole," officials alrtady have suspended
th~ logging permit (or a )'t&r to pe.rmlt
"study of the situatl-On." • • •
-f'rom the plant world t'OmtS news
that Spanish moss. the beaaUful pay
~utl that hangs from gi11nt Nk& tn the
c011stal plalm of the Southeast. 11ppear1
10 be nukif\A a comeback.
A bllitht mused by • Jungu.s bqtn to
111t11ck Spe.nlsh moss severat Yt•rs ago.
RM "1cle-~od dlf-of( Wl3 ttpOrled by
botllnlst.s all the war from Mls1U1lppl to
Ncirth Ctlrolina. •
Now. nalurt on ~r own 1ttms to bt
llcklnf: thre mtnact. bf'fQft man has got
arrond I!' fi:ndkn'" a lrc31.mf111
Tiny ,,.... '"' 'ls "' fl'dlll1-C"'lrinl mm;~ l":An bt Jttn .n mt-rtr~ qUlml1ti6 11long the enttrt «11sl;a pl;ain, and m
Florida. "'here the infestation was first
detected. Spanish moss seems lo !\ave
nlade an almost complete rte0very. • • •
-Alligators admittedly are not as
beiutifW as i\J'Of)'·biUed woodpeckers and
Spanish moss. Bui they are fascinating
cre'lturts. and havt as much Mght to ex·
' lstmce as any other species. including
man.
liclals in several states, 11 th.at the
decline in alligator populatk>n has been
f'f:versed. Jn fact , 'gaton are spreading
into new areas .
"We are con!lanUy Ondlng them tn
watet'!beds where they arm't suppoSed to
e:s:ist." says ~fark Bara. a ruearcb
biologist with the South Carollnl WUdJUe
Department. • • •
Because real estale de.velopen: y,·ere so -Although the tbrM prevM>w; ltttttl
1t:alous about draJning the.ewampJ fl"hk:b ~ppeP to ~t from the southeast.
are the main habitat of allia:at.r>n-tM -~loglcal cood nnr1 can be fooDd just u
big-jawed amphibians have bttn !Isled by re Uy in other pu(s or tht worid.
the U,S. Bureau CJf Sport Fisbe.rles and F r tl'tmple..,, the 1bamet Rim' ta
WUdlife " an "endangered species" -. Engl.nd. once s4 fouled by poOuticm ~
m.anlng one lb.II needs proteclloo to birds deJerled Ml bo£ ,be<n claned 11p.
a>'Old be<aming extlnct. Ornllhologiru now~'*" tau of
In the past few )'tlrs. Southe.asttm thousands of duck! -ef 'itater birda
slate.~ hav. been rigorously enforclng tn parts of the. Thames: rythlt have
prottcU\•e Jaws, limtting the kill· of bfen barttn of~ IUe for JO Jf*TI· f'iJ9
1lllgat on for sOOes and handbags and also att reappCanng.
wltbholding pennll• lor land developm .. t "The •bole eslOIQ' Is romlog to ui.
that wo\lld destroy anigator prt.strves. again." SA)'S I~ for the Londom ·
The re..qijl, &ccording to 11riJdlUe of· Natural History Socidy.
'
I
[
'
OAIL Y PILO! _:e3
Everyone Hos
Something Tho! DAILY PILOT CLASSIF.IED ADS Yo u C o n Sell It ,
Find It, Tr edo It
W it h o Wont Ad Someo ne Else Wonts
The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fas Result&,,
COMFY COZY
EASTSIDE
2 BEDROOM
$22,500
An nld1e but a hoodir.
il•'ing i.:orn1dL•tcly re-
l'ninti•d, ready to bf'
lived in. Thls cutlc has
hnri.h1•r111d fl oors, 2 good
slz(' bedr111uns, lnri:;c
11·alk-in r!os1•ts, 1nnny
big tr<'•'S, lnrgf' lol. This
hon1,. is sncf hl'rAUS<' it
ha.~ to spend t>vcry night
nlnne -It's v~cnnt -
Come see it. SC'llcr is
reasonable.
3 BEDROOM,
2 BATH
$24,950 -
$134.00 PAYS ALL
Take ov<'r sub.ir.ct to ex-
i~l inr. 5!l4'"~ FllA !nan.
Beautiful home in Costn
'.\1 es a on trl'r lined
~!rcc l. Vn1i"1J like the
big-sunken r n 111 i I y
rnom, t hf' corner lot.
Hie conl'rnit'nl kitchen
and most of n!I, it's
pricf'd \11 srll fnst. Don't
11'3il !
3 BEDROOM,
2 BATH Yi ACRE
Country lh·in~ In Cos ta
i\l<'sn? OvC'r 1i1 arre of
land surrounds this
1111:unt 3 hl'droom. 1 ~~
bath rt·~Jdl'llCf'. Thi!it iii
privn('y at its lx'st. The
homr is :r;.ma ll bu! so is
the> pricf'. r>on't miss it.
l ......,,,.,... J!ie J ! _ .......
G&nerel G e n e ral
* * * * * * TAYLOR CO.
CORONA DEL MAR INCOME -$61 ,950
T,ive in on~. rent the other. Ideal location. 2
Separate units. 2 BR. frt. unit w/lireplace
and NE\V 3 BR., 2 bath rear unit.
''Our 27th Year"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
21l1 San Joaquin Hills Road ,
NEWPORT CENTER '611+4910
j Gl!'neral G e neral . ·,;;;;,;;;;;;~==~===!
LIDO ISLE WATERFRONT
220 LIDO NORD
Brand new home. 5 bedrooms, 41;,i ba ths,
lovely wallpaper & carpeting. Large water-
front living room with fireplace. 2 stairways.
Deck & Dock. Priced below 5200.000,
Shown by Appointment
1-BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Boyside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-6161
G e nera l
' ; ARE YOU READY
F'OR THIS
Jus t look at this tv.'O story 5
Bdrn1 home plus swimming
pool. Extra large lot, room
for trailer. Plus many more
e:drns. A bargain at $37,950
G.I. or F.JLA. 8-17-6010.
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
New listing on PO\\'eli St. 4
BR. 2 batl\s, JSOO Sq. F t., 2
used brick fiITplaces. Quie t
cttl-dC'-sac street & close to
all 5<':hoo!s. Price<l r ight
$-13,500.
CALL 65-5726
G e n e ral
$23,500 ! ! !
3 +FAMILY + 2
GI OR FHA 0 .K.!!
\Vo1v! Giant value plus 3
klngsize bi'<lrooms + 2
baths. Bright ki!chrn in
front ~ Rangt', oven, dish-
washl'r, new carpets • a ll
over! Fan1ily room lo i;:ianl
covl'red patio -Truly a gi-
gantic value! Call n o w -
645-0303.
. . .
IOR[Sl E 01.SO~ .,.
REAl70RS
LUXURY PLUS
C .stom d{'sign is found here.
Oul-.land1n~ 4 BR home in
lov{'!y Baycrest area. Sho\.\•s
extra lo\ring care and pride.
J-fas 3 baths, large kilch{'n
all electric bit-Ins. 1'.'ew!y
NO 06WN VA-FHA completed cuir;tom hcated
Gener•I G e neral -------------
•• if,-"'., ~i ·1ai.~ ... ~ .. t!f-
LOOKING FOR A FLOAT?
FOR YOUR BOAT
Right on the \·VA1'ER, in th is 2 bedroo m,
2 bath , builtin kitchen. FIREPl ... ACE, car-
pets and d rapes, 'vith yo ur O\vn PIER A ND
F LOAT. Only ................... $72,000.
AMOR DE CASA
IN HARBOR VIEW HOMES
Handy to schools and shopping. This SPAN·
ISH styl e 3 bedroom, 2 baths, dining room,
fireplace, extra large bui\tin modern kitchen,
carpets & drapes, t'''o LEVEL PATIO. See
t his delighUul one year old beauty. $4 8,700.
"SWEET AND LOVELY"
IN POSH IRVINE
ATRI UM type entry, charming-o pen spacious
living room wi th fireplace and VIEW. 3 Large
bedrooms lovely fan1 il y room 2 baths, 2
year old ho1n e. Best -buy in area .. $59,500.
OWNER WANTS TO
"TRADE UP"
3·4 Plexes al l in a rO\V. Un its have 2-3 Bed-
room, 2 bath, 1·2 bedroom 1·1 bedroom. Sl'A·
CIOUS and close to shopping, in SUPF:R·
RENTAL AREA . H's imposs ibl e at $196,500.
YOU'LL SMILE AGAIN
WITH THIS
CUTE BALBOA ISLAN D beach cottage. 2
bedroom, 1 bath, Fl REPLACE, front patio,
on e block to South Bay. Onl y .... $32 ,500.
General Uenerat
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
•
UNl()Um= ti()Mm=§
UNIQUE HAS THE BES T LI STIN GS
............ IN THE BES T AR EAS
IN C 0 R 0 NA DEL MAR: A Duplex
South of the h ighway, sheltered by tr('cs ~HHI
close by a park overlooking the bay. 3 bed-
room 3 bath owner's unit has interior patio,
all electric kitchen and a roomy fcclin~. tJp·
stairs 2 bedroom 2 bath unit has so1nc vic\v
and a neat-as-a-pin tenan t. (;heck thi5 one for
n1 any uniq ue dupl ex features.
PRESENTED AT $74,950. e PH. 675-6000
i ;ll'----
IN THE BACK BAY: A lf.1 Acre Rl'lnchero
Classic circular drive leads to b;i t'n bnartl .
si ngle story home with n1 ::i s!'ive u~cd bric·k
fireplace. There's nothi ng like it in Newport
Beach. Beam ceilings, ram bling floor plri n
and out in the back forty there's a s parkl ing
swimminI! pool. There 's room to roam and
room for vour fix un ideas.
PRESENTED AT $58,000 e PH. 675·6000
Ul'lll()Uf: tl()Mm=S
• FORONA DE L MAR-67S-6000
2443 E1't Co;i.st Mighw;i.y, Coron~ drl M~r
0 MESA VERDE --54 6-599 0
'285 0 V erd e Orivt ,
General General
Gener a l
i LA 1-lACIEN DA-
Ol E!
BEAC H ARE A
3 FC RMAL
DINING 2
l.11,• ,\ J•ll:
G1'.11:1 n.
. ... .... -; ....
l'.ORESf E 'Ol.SON.
' ....
·" RY'A'l roR"s . l
-. .
,j, ~.•. ·~~
! $IO,~l~~xtr~t ~~n11n.,.,
l·:.r; r11r1• yard F1r.-.,.l1h·•·,
U e n e ral
~.,~.,.
1. t[ ........ i; .. -\."\}'
"' .. ' -·""' \
'.'1117 1~. ('""' llwy.
BAY~ BEACJ.1
-> • ·~EALTY "'-
EASTSIDE
GOV'T REPO.
d••• p ~hn1: l'r•rrw!~, :1 llf'd $7 11 ilnwn to nnynnt'. Nt"rtf
r"ntt1,, ::•~ hn•h~. nil ttd!I & ~1, ··•1rnllng, hul check U11·~f'
1J!ft1'" rM '.oOU ! f1'.1111t'NI. :~ h1•rlronn11. l'rnJ MES A VER.DE l1111h1•(';-l(I flour1'1, tir!ck fh-.-··
plnr,.., VI A hrnt, h1111t·lnl\ &
Pool 1;1dr-l1L'\ury. /\ fnh11 lo11!i hrn\'v i;h n!tr ro(l!, rl1•t1H'hf"ll :t h•·droo1 11 ('tJ!''~)l\·117.ED <ln11l1h• 1{11r111:r nn alll'y, ov-
J!fl'.\1 1':. A :-.1••1H ~ ll11i11v 1·r~i'l.1'd lnL Vni'llrl ! & N'Ady
rrn111 111•· r.olf J',1'!'4'11.•, A 1111'· j f•1r y.-111r h11<i11·1·1111n. I lt1TT)'!
111.d dli11111• r.•1111 11ud r.11111 lv 1 (';di !i4fi :.si'!ll !flf"'" Evf'll.)
!'•µ•111 !11•111 111:1hr 1!11~ ;•(;110
sq, II 11f l11>;11r,v n n1u~I "''''' I
~ ~
'.!fl.I:: \\' .. sl• l!ff nr11 ,.
61fi·7TII Cl[l('ll '!11 9 P\T
Palatial Portofino
Assume A Loan!
Tnktt OVf'T' lhlN 7"~ Jo"11A lnfl n
y,•l1 h only S4.390 plus 1·lo1lni:t
c11~t11. A hnr,::11ln rltl('111n·1
1~u 11<' Alnn~: llke lhl# \••·ry
1ifl1•n. 4 llf'•d.....,.,rn"I, :l h:'llh11 ,
l1r,..plnc't', l•il~ nl •''l'lrn hull!·
111 s1nrn1C" "'''"'•·, 1111r1nklrr11,
1 .• 1·~" 1iirr11•r 101 with rnnm
l"r hnnt nr 1rullrr. Q1tlrk
1•>1'N"Mkin. 'l'n!11 I monthly
p:1v111r>111 \vlll llf• $274/monlh.
'l\otnl Pl ICO S:1:J,tl!)O, CA I I
Mti·Z:n :i In 111('. ELEGANT SPLIT
HVEI.
$37,500
~ AHO ASSOCIATU V t h 3 BR 2 BA pool and N1 flO. Thl!I i!J fl I aoan" •rp • ' r · INVESTORS ' In No. Cosla Mesa. \\'alk to must see lit $79,500. Call BLUFFS
l nr:it1r111 \~ t]1r h1·:1di111r• ,,r
n .. ~ hllrn•·. l·:11inv 111,-. p:1rk.
!~•1!>;, ;u ul t'<Htllt1ll01l1' 0•!11 h
11'>11•.1• :on•I Th"TI r,:I') t1•1t'n•• T••
u o;1•:,rr•·lv !iv· <I !11 1 It• 11
1'0'•rll h":111!y 1vilh :":•~ i. .. 111 ~
11 011 21"1'1<1 "'!. fL (If rno1n. l1·I~
of r xtrn hrirk nnd p11tlf\11
k"l'fl yurd mrt!r1trnan('r' In
11 n1·1v f'fl1\··~i1"d '1111" fnr
l!f'lat 11r rn111p .. r. A ll·rrifi,• ' 'hopping & enjoy the"" 673--8550. REALTORS DREAM!
feni:rd cor . !of, frplc & a ll S I
blt·in•. Prked to "" at 644•72"7'.0 "PLAZA" UNIT ! UNITS. $2<J.900. Low monthly pymts. I' UNITS!
BKR 642-0ln . I 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY Lowest Leasehold
hn1nr fnr "1111·rl:dr1inr.:. /\',;,,_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;I
"''"11'':'1 1hrr)I\' lr·.,111 litf, I
f'1+,hll1!1 r,1;,,,,,, "' r nrtillli LOTSA LIVIN'
<ll'I 1\1ar ht·;1,.h•·~. f':dt lor If you nt'<'tl !he Vt'l'y hr1t In
Thi~ honlf• i11 absolutely
immaculntr t h rou~hou L
J_x.!uxe S15.00 sq. yd.
~·arrelinf. 18 . ..:20 family
room \\'J th SJX'ClDclilar
l'fllns Verdi' stnnr firl'·
pllll'C', huge mas!Pr piny·
room suite, 2 nddil innnl
l'IC'dro,,ms, sunny·bright
h111l t-in kltch<'n \\'ith
lireakrast bnr M d patin
srrvicr \.VindO\\'S. A tota l
General General CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. & Maintenance DuH NEAR COASTAL 1 ~~liiliiiiiiiiiiiili~~"~~!i!iA•i 3 B ihm .. l\> ba. P.No UNJT WATERS I ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • Xlnt valur nt $3.1,500. Don't n1is!'I Oils rnl'f' hnr1.:aln General General 4 Bdrm., 2 1~ ba. F:ND UNIT
nppnlnlm('nt Jr, ~,.,.. 11 nrH1'
sr;r.,:ro. ~.4r. 2:11:1.
u fine /'()(JI, 11n ME, r!t'>n'I
11111111 1fi!11 hl~ 4 IM-drr111n1
/1ntn!" v.·lt h r11r" luxurlou11
1·11 r·1M·tln1t nnd t'UNltJtll 1!rttp.
1•rlr11 -1/1.&l llrr elt-c lr lrally
t1J)<•1'lllf!fl! 'rhc hur.:P pool ex-
l 1•ocl~ Into IUI r-oormou1 CQn·
Vl'M.Btite 1•11clu11ure mHkllllJ
lnr yrur round 11wlm1nln1t.
All lhlN llr\fl 1norr for S64.9M.
nf 2100 5(1. ft. of SPRC·
i"us prestige Jivin£". New
nn market. Will S<'ll lo I
first lookC'r. It's 1hat
sharp.
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
OCEAN VIEW
$47 ,900
1 p;i nnrr1.n1 ic vtry,· nf :\ ev•·
1-.or·i H1y frr•nl 1h1s nld
F1~·:li.~h stylr homr . En-
t 1r(' frnnt f'X1f'ri 0r dnn r
in tl.Sl'd brick \1 ilh
L1stl'f11l drsii::n. 2100 sq.
ft. r1ff,~rs .'l n1njrsl1r
bt'drnorns, 2 clrs,:11.n!
lXJth~. hucc rln\1°11 stair~
rrtrrci.tion roon1 and
1 11 hilc recreating, you
can h;:l\·•· A mnrtini Al
th,.. builr-in "'Ct h:ir ..
Bring your scrub buck·
"" 11 ncccl~ R little
help. But prlrt'd r ighl
MESA VERDE
1 ·Yi YEARS OLD
$33,500
Executive Estate!
Beautiful spac io us 4 r1.1m.,&iWili.IW.iliilf bedroom, 3 balh estate, 2600
sq. ff. custom bull! homt'.
Has everything -plus 20x40
healed & filtered pool, ttn-
tral air co nd I Ii on Jn g",
A.\ffF:'ll. 2 fireplaces, e!r('-
Tic gara~e door opener and
much. n1uch more. all set-
ting on a huge double corner
lot . Loan av;iiln.hl{' on pr ice I
n'.'r!uc'1on of s;i.~.S!Xl. rn.ll -
ABANDONED! !
5 + FAMILY +
S33,750. fo~rp!c!'I. & priv. pa·
tlo!J, wa lk to pool, park,
schools & markt'.'t. i\fove·ln
rond.; immed. occupancy.
Exrlusivr y,•i!h •
-1.,,-.1 ll:nants ray your r1·nr!
Vl'l'Y i;pal'IOU!I unil11. CltJ~
fl) ocran. Farm 11rylt:> kflc-h·
ens -fuUy NJUlpf>l'rf • nvrn1t,
r.1ngrs an•! rcfrig.-.rr1lor~1
Dining-f'f)(lm.~~ 2 brrt,.,....im11
pt"r unit. Garrlrn I I k •·
(.'1'1'.lUnrJs. F:xtrcrn,-.Jy nnxuHi,
O\Ynrr JIJST HF.llllT.l t
Plt!CF: TO ONLY S27.!XXI!
Call 11.t once -645·0'.lf[J
F:i111t11ide v11.lu•· • pl1t11 POOL
Jl()MF:. J lll!rm, 2 011t h,
h11 IH·ln k ltrhrn, Jnrvr 11r r· LIDO ISLE -NEW LISTING
Great buy for family home. 50 ' lot w/Jrg. So.
pa tio. Oversize liv. nn .. farn . rm. & 4 lrg.
Br's. Buy now -be ready for summer fun.
$89.500. Mary Harvey.
HARBOR VIEW HILLS
First offering. Lusk built 3 Bdrm. home w/
CarniJy room. Dram ati c beam ceilings. Co r-
ner Joe. $62,000. Ca thr}11 Tennille
FANTASTIC BAY & OCEAN VIEW
Choice 4 Bd rm .. 3 bath. ext ra lrg. family
room. Lovely rose gardens. ~1 ust see!
$69.500. ~1 ary Lou l\.1a rion .
SEEING IS BELIEVING
5 Bdrm's. 31h Ba .. Co rona de! Mar VIEW
hom e. Steps from ocean Blvd .. wet bar,
nicelv furnished with bit-in kitchen. $65,000 .
Harriett Davies.
WESTCLIFF -CUSTOM 4 BR.
A r eally hug e yard with room for a poo l.
boat storage, and then some! Big family
rm.. formal DR., sundcck. cov'd patio.
WOW' Only $65,000. M C. Buie.
SUPER LARGE DUPLEX
In old Co rona de! Ma r. 2-4 BR .. 3 BA. ea.
unit. Cpts., drapes. buil t·ins w/sep. dining
area. 2 car gar .J. 1 port . J\fake o!Cer. Ask~
ing ~77.500. Al F ink.
EMERALD BAY
Oceanside homes are rarely available
especiaUy one · with lonnal dining room,
lar~e family room, 3 plus b e dv o o m s .
$110,000. Fee. Carol Tatum.
DOVER SHORES
Lovely 4 Bdrm., Camilv ho~. on extra large
Jot. Immaculate condition'{ Jntmediale occu-
pancy. $99 .500. Kathryn Raulston.
TWO LIDO ISLE SMALL BEAUTIES
1. Cheerful 2 BR .. conv. den on choice St, to
St.. loc. Fresh. clean. $55 ,000.
I Wal~~~m~s Lee
Z790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
54:>-9'191 0f.'('n .til 9 P~I~
The Reynolds Have
1Finished Their Boat
DINING HELEN B. DOWD
-GOLF COURSE-\\'=' An abondoned A>h<n· Realtor 644-0134
ian Villa ovrrlooking onr of View of UCI &-Hills-
Oran~e Coa~11 ~l'lsl exclul!-Un1r1lle hack b~y. 2 sly.
1vr ~olf .coursr~. From Cor· M me. N 11 1 u r a 1 v.'OOd )
n1th1an tron ~ates tto atn
0
um ralh<'drnl rriling.~ & antique 1 10 lhe massive en ry • f" 1 d . ,
I ' 5 ·. t "-d .. ea cd gla.•!!. Y•ln<IO\\'JJ. 4 uxe g1.1n .,.,-ronm!'I -.,, bd & d & ,_ h I th II I ! + rms. en 'T"T on 1;1 .~. 1u:c am1 y f'Of)m l ,. l l <c rt 1 I
-. ' --.
IORl.\'f E 01.\0~ . ,. , ... ,
R£Al70RS
formal d1ni nP,'. Ktnr: size 20'x Ol'.'f eve · ·IP 1 eve t>n·
lG' !1vint: room. f)rcora!n" !ty. 0f)"n si.iir.iiay 10 llflfJ('r FANTASTIC
Moy we 11hrrw YfJU? v11·,. Jinl"f•h 8nd 12' x 19' pi.n
f'I"'' •h·n. O\•t·r11i1•·d h,..;tl"d I COATS
& lillrr,..d pt'/'11 11 1th drr~~lni;: ~ I.
1"1flrn & f'n l••r1;11nrl'1,..nt h.1 r I
ntit gar1•t;" on HJl,.y, ,.,,,11 1 W WALLACE
plt·1r·!y tilr.<'k v.11ll ft·n•·•·•l I • REALTORS
and n1·ul ttA a pin. An ,-.,_; -54Ml41-
rrlJ,.nt huy flt only S:lt!J:/1 1 (Op1n Evenlntt)
v. 11 11 1'!' ; rlr1v.'n. ........ ,,,_ I LEISURE LIVING
!ouch all ovPr. /':i r k like level With la rge J v~. r('J(lm, f1JN ;i:11mc room v.·l th pool
1-.-mund.-. + DIP.F.C.i COL~-used bnrk Jrpl. J\U r)f'c. tahle & \.\'r•! bfir, huge
CUUH.SE \tf£\V -on I Y ki!., ba th, and din-ovl•rs1~A'd lot on !/Ulct MJI <le
$3'1,500 • A fnntnir;lic value! ing/famlly room wllh pa t:lo &1r 5 bPdr•Jl'ITTI.~, f""1111l
Call now • 61$-0303. door to 12'xl4· deck. Extnl d1n1n;:, Ju~h (·rplg, br:iutlful -J:.:venlngJJ Ca.II fA2· 743)1
Jmnu:1r·ul1.t,. :l llfl 2 Bn, Irie
Jlv rm w/llr1•pl, Pl,..,., t1lfln11 ,
<·()mpl•·lroly r••dr1·•11·.,1.-d, f;n.
1·J. 1111Ht1, 11!1! 5'!11'. /t1•!1ui-rd
lo $11//IO. VAl 'ANT.
Ul't-:N UA ILY I TO 5
f ORl\l l Ol\O\
I~ yard. M8.1un.o trees. Jy d('f'f'Jrarcd 11nd mr:idrm -Covered patio. Clf'l<'" to LICENSED And thry'tt n.'ndy to !.ell c:onv{'n!,..nl kltchrn. B<';1utl-SALESMEN
thcir lovely 3 Bedroom grade achoo! aSndl' 500P1"0~ fully lnd!ll'Jld and lo!Ji of ' .... ,
PeAlTORS home, Immaculate ""'ilh aquatic park. · ' · "''"'>ll WE NEED YOU d . ba k ba B8yvicw lt'tld of ~1c.'la Dr.) llt'1n" v.·rrrl<. Ownrr trnn!ll"l' I
huge yar • 10 c Y •1 ~,99... rrd S.19,9:/l. }"r,r t:1•1r 2nd r"IJJ r11!1tt(' ,,fll•·r l.116Q Nt .. 4'JX)rl Blvd., C.M. 8J'C8 . Th{' only 3 bedroom .,,...,... "'· tl " ' ,., Call ~81.24 IOJ)f'n rvf'1.) on th .... r . r ')!lll'!. t.1f'M. , . Call .,._39211 E:vr1. 646-M4!1
available in · the area & Of)'•nlns;:-JV111n' I ...,....,..,,,__~--..,•I
Prk od to "" at 546.000.00. I • VA • MESA VERDE "' \'IJIJ M·E-SA VERDE
F or informatkm -I $ 7 00 • & I C•ll 646-7171. ' REPOSSESSION 2. ,0 • I . ;~1 .. ··,.·rge/w '"'hU•·1 ·' VA NO DOWN
I SIJpcr North Co!rta 1i1eu Jo. * FHA TEP.,\1S * 1.tu~t h8VI' hl11;h ln1'flT'TI,. . J•J!A _ SllGO lJOWN calion near OCC. ~e_ 3 •V A TERMS __ _ _ r. 1~. h 11 ·lx"rlroom, family and lanai. * 3 BEDP.r>OMS TRUL y ELEGANT • ·0 r':T 3Pfl'Y llUTT'f)uni li"ll Only S:ll,!)00 fnr thl1 lovely 3
• Like re1t. or Mmm. prop. t .. "(jr<,Jm, 2 bath home. 1 full builtin kitchl'n, 1h&ke * BL'f/.T rNS If 11pare Iii y,•h:it you n'¥'t, Tl 1 I -N ,-,~d roof, firt'pla cc. S9".i}, ~ * QUIET STREET thl, a 11: 1-'lvt> liPIJClous ll''N /\ .L !\.1odern buUt..Jn1, F'•nced ewport s an t" anyone JoUll price anly * NE:AR .'iCHOOL.Cj t><"•lrnrims. :1 tull h:llh,, HO f"E GERRIE Rl TY. yard anrl lwO car l!;BT'Ql'.
I
Duplex on thr water. Beaut. Sz.l,9'j(I. , r,!'~. J W1t listed ...... , • flurry: forniaJ dining r 0 tJ m , 645-4400 C11Jl now. , . }~~:tJlJ,
rond. You live in Ont', rent I Call 540-11.51 , (Open Evt!!;.) Cal !i4a-ll51 <Open l'Vl"!J.) v r.ar:11,. pan•·l•"I f.J inlJy $27,950
one out. Keep your boat at roorn .,.,1th eo~y f1r•ril;il"1', 3-COUNTRY GARDEN
I noat by f"!.!•ooodoor. JI bc1-J I ·~· m HllfTAGEI I ·~-·~n -.. .,A,Gl.J car v ar:i',•". ,,11.r.v ··!r!11l 1tn•! "'I !l•lv·;n, Tl'rm11, Mrinlh.!> In ltr buy at ..-:>... · . ... 111•n t ' J II t • ' all !hi f . ru; cu Y '"'"ira '', I 1t.i.llmcn!.& I~" than r r nt: CORBIN . Juxt a f.!f)nt• ~ fhl"'iw fr<'lm f°.xquh.I'" r•·ar yard v.1'h KING • I --ADDED P..rl!f'h. Fl,.xihl" l••rrno, at I fruit & lhnrl,. ,,,.,.,~ gul')rt' 1 You'll llv11 Ilk!': ,,,)I" Jn thl• MARTIN Dupex-SiA.750 Walker & Lee ' ln,.ly <trd•o r-•. ,,,,,1 pl<"h , "" In ""Y<Tffi, Convmth1.1 4 bedroomhomt FAMILY ROOM .. pat i o . Compl~!r>l )f Jtoy11I p.f.,•1t·r.,11li•w/1Unk
REAL TORS ~7662 , lo duplex with ~!uthontln ONL y $22,900 P..e-~J·fJna r•'f!t~11r<f \nJ1r!" b r;111 ~I "" !uh " 11 u K,. mrmtff"d
I approval I..arge ru lot ckitlf Thi& l..cdroomi, 2 h;,•t\11:, tiuilt 111 I v. ar•h11h•·. ~""1rrnt-1 kl!rhl!'n. $27 500 1., gull ""''TY! a~nltt is a rttJ buy and won't I 1'r.X> llarlYir 11ivd , al Adt1m~ ~,ilfl1Jil1r ~lt'll 1Juvl1e1tfJlt11
, r 10;;9 ~'D.. Hurry tu·. 3 be<!room, l'~ bAHu. :,(5..-0.Mij l)Pf'n Ev"!! '11/ 9 P \I It nu rm et k I I" h " n . Tvp \'a/ur HARDWOOD FLOORS ·~171 y., ,,,,: . e&rpl'tJ, drapes 1c much · -d I" h w a ~ h,. r. el'"~·~"'
3 iarg. Bdrm'~ Gr .. t paoo. · m"ch ""'"'· EASTSIDE-I I ,...pt•~. W~/7>1. -GEM-
J ob transfC'r forcrs salC'
of this bC'ltf'r than ne1\·
prl'StH:r homr. The 3
llf'drooms sre lar;:er
1h!1n most nnd thf' ca·
th•·dral C£'iling bo8.5ls
hil'h o[l('n ~-i>Od beam!
'" the family room, 2
baths or course and •
hr i e k fireph1.« adds
\\·annth tro the mood.
Th<' Go 1 d '.1-ledaJllon
built-in kitche n would
mllk{' Oirf Boy-Ar-De-<'
happy. Touch control
foret"d a ir heatin~ kH"J)5
a ronslant ll'm~rtllu~
l\1'ld tht' l11ir1?e 2 cu p.-
rtl.t:" prt'\'Pnts flmlllle
rollio;;lono;; "'hU" l!nterlng
{no off('TISl"'WOml!n lib-
l'TS). Call nOw fer •n
appointmrnt.
2. Chann. 3 BR.. quiet St..S. patio, 11mrdeck.
' . $59,000. E:ugene Vreeland. :,~ .-c:;,·~'{;;' 0on·t Walker & lee I -VACANT TARBELL ";~1.~~,1~~,t llwr.r,~~23
MAIN REALTY 1 "• 1, 3 iw""'"'. """"',..... "'m•. I' 1' t z4 950
JRVINE TERRACE
Bright. cheerful 3 BR., 3 bath borne. Cozy
fireplace. decorator carpeting, draperies.
garden patio. Garage & carport . Reduced to
S53,950. LaVera Bums.
---' Coldwell,Banker IJJ.4700
~
551 .NEWPORT' CENTER DR., N.a .
I -- -r·. & ~ Allry arr~ frlf' Im!, traJJ.' 29!'i'i lhirbor. l .1Jt1a ~f•"\.11 -ii '
6:ltll Ba.lttT, at Bristol. C.M. BUY 1 OR 6 3.l24G-J tt" S24 ,9"JJ. ,.,!A 11r VA,
VA CONDOMlNIU"S . .....,. FHA OR VA Newport I NO DOWN nu.ril:ri at S1'.0f1J. 2 RR Jlli 4 PA~lff)(lm hotM In ~ttal
ID ' THE REAL ·~ ·ESTATERS '-J• • •, ,,.(T'1 ' "I'
•
BA each. tl7tl ~ tt -'8 unit. '°°!Ion. Vtty 1 ha r p
C~U for fw1.hr-r tnfo. I hr o u K h Out. Vlalkiflf( 1 dista.nct" lo fl'l'ach.,No down
Newpb,.t t') \.'r's 1..,. .... ri•M;i to D'Jn vet I
at S.l3. i:~. ~1i..fl.ll0.
.. "THEREAL . 1Rf ESTATERS ._, 'JVI .. uNT! ~PU
•t
F1lrview
64().8811 :
(1nyt ime)
:::11:,, 1~111 1 1,. •IP1im 1 1.111!!1 b
l:'lml!y l'IJ')m lnn1.. ll111+11
rh1 "-rf•J! f1''N/T' I j .1'<1ll'0 ~ 1'J' I' ,
b,.;1u1tful 1n11'1tf·r I''' ~f•1J I
r m t'"P 11•1vlny J.n•.-'-.•'1'1 \\ r1 h
J\ I\ Q S) II.fl) f~ "'II l!,,,rj
V.!llk !" "'h''•I~ L \f,.,.1 ,., ..
rnrv. l!Jl Tli 1 .\IJ. i;j'", ot'• .. 'I
1/U ,.,.,!' ( •1Vf"rt°'1
••• lfl ~d l &l f' J•;o I 1'1 I
,,,,.-: ... ~)1 111 '
.vi 173'J
Tl'r.i!ELL
:>1., 1r11.rt1 1 (._,,, ·~ !>l•·iw ,, . ..,: I /./'. /I I " I 11..
~ I' ' • • • ,,, a•,•p lit.
'l<f DAILY Pl LOT Tr.itW t. FrbrllM1 1, lm
j~I ~( -~, .... ~1~~1 1 ..._,,.,._ I~[ ,_.,...... ]~1 [ -·-j~l l -ww. 1~1 ~[ ~.~~·~:"~J~fiJ 1 ~I ~,.~ ...... ~~ ,----Gener•I Gener.ti
MESA VERDE-
S42,950!
IG9ner•I j Coil• Me•• Huntington S.•ch Lido Isle Santa Ana I Income Property t66 Busln•••
-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. H f h M ..._ • BA Opportu nity 200 • • ome 0 t • onrn 6 Bl k 0 BU y LIKE YFRONT BUY I L.IK~: /)('W 4 BR. 2 BA, !it'W'i: DANA Point • Ne11o duplex. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.I
And wh&I 11 lovely hon\e 11 tk, 1 OC S to c.ean / C'h&rrn1ng bayfront ho111t' roon1, a1r-l'OrKI., 1.:oven>d I 149,500. St!vt-r Lantrrn a t La •
4 + FORMAL
DINING " DEN
BREAKFAST
NOOK!
T"•in ~111111 p11lri1~ 111 t1tr !n.-
p1u·\.; !1kf' i.:rtn1nd., nl !lu«
tcl"f"fll i\1<'•" \'rrtlr 1•11]•1••'
rMm lh•• rJ1•t f'l'Vl 1<1 • r n
lane,. 4 hr droorn ,.,.,1h family 6"11u11Ju1Jy <ll't·orate-d r1rf'l\m P<i rkhkf' .sr r11ng ''" !er lot. patio, lutly lndscpd t.1.any Cresta. \\'ebb-Bkr. &t:z.-loo:>. **BIG BEAR LAKE
rr.(Hn ~ llWlnirning r....,.iJ lvirnr l)n!y 'l yPilr" ol(i v.•11h RENT 1 BH 2 B,\ J:.:-.tra lar)::t' Olht't extra . .s. /mm~hate '><'· !IO~!E & ln<.'QtHf', rooni !<> L!ClL'Oll .'fT'ORE For Sale
Hf'alty Con1p<llly v:ith Jacuizr. W fl 1 k 1 n S:: 1:/111.r111Hl'1 ltreplacr, <.'On-1 t.ioa1 ~lip. SIJ!l.:.-,.t)J. rupa nc·y. SJl,500. l:iy owner. , build 71 ~xCros.s 1 0 r;. 7\t>ts approx. S.il.000. yr.
Beeutlful Sayfront di1>t:tnt1' In g1Jlf cou r:..e ct \,.111t-n! k1!r hPf1. huice patio -....... , KEN BR ITTI NGHAM ~5-2417. ~"'~ Pr nt·ipi!L~ ~!HlOOl 0 1'.'Jlf'r "''11J carry r1na n<'lng.
Duplex -L ittle l •land 0Ct'<1 n. 847...fiOIO. ,., ""d I.in;•· ··•11.1u~h yard far $18,>w FULL PRICE , Realtor Santa Ana Heights · • 1
• Opr orr11nuy ol a JJlf'1Jme' Charmin~ durlt'x Qr 1>1n11;lr i>'"JI adrJ 1t1"n (JnJy $17.950 The-r1' 1:-; ctn 1mn1&•· 2 l:IP..I • 675-0l2J 2 Nel'.'J)On lie1ghl5 u,p\exf'5. Call Rois5 171~1 5.l6-l738 or
f.<11111/y -U11lho11. 111/IHlr!. I I 1 nJ1 C:J "r l'll A trrin.~. Ill-I-))nn1r 11\l"ii l !or nr11 !y 11 1 1!.~ MUST SEE i XJnt rt'lll. By o"' ner . \IT!!t'; ~pencer Rf'a! Est.111e,
ru·r "' nn~I 'laa.ooo. Tu m I !t'!' ~('I" tl11~ hl{)n)' look tn~ for a S!arlrr h"lf1''· .. ')':; 3 Bdrn1, D.R., UM'll br1i·k ~ ... tfi-9695. P.O. Box Zlnll, 811: Bt'ar
Q11,..rn fi.1•1·fi2f')IJ w lk & L XJnt ~·nnrl ln.~nl" 11,, out ,\]<;11 4 RR 3 ha ifNAA .1.a.r.oJ frpl', <ll'llw,;hr, hi.c y<l. Lots for Sale 170 I 1..1.kP, Califon11a
Cu•tom Split Level '------a er ee ini·l, l'I hugr p.nh• !; 2 l'l•f 3 RI: :i i, hii , ram nn, ponl hPatrrl pnol shag I pt,,, tlrp~ , !'iiOR~ i\1ul'l('r -Arf' rou
<>111•0! a k1n1t 1r.'11111111n11\ !~m I DECORATE & SAVE 11:ar. io·, dn 1111yrn1 . !lr!I) rill 11111 rm l!J' 101 S.ll'! iOO rhroou1 13,; cl1ma1r $29,~ serious shout making morr
il v ,,n111 ,.. VJ!'."\\"_,, • ..,. lllnd /\ !it!lr 11&1111 & i-1t ... w ;;rr:i~f' , r:r ;il !tir:o; $169 paynit~ in1·!~ alL LIDO REAL TY INC. 20201 Spru•·<' 545-J77S. j CHOICE inoiir_.,.~ t..t'fllngy ,'-'. hl'alrh
. 1 3 ' -I , I ··1 11•tHr 1n1 ~ \.\11! 1111 1 13!1 z1 ~. ll.1rl •1r /!l\tl 11! Arl arns ::J"i7 \'J,\ l./Dl. R-2 LOT
Macnab-Irvine
IT)' t•1 lhf' h U¥" l1v1ni.: fiVllJI
IO lhr ff)rru.d 1 !111111~ rr~•ln
A h11yer~ r!rr11111' i'Ju.~ 4 1
Sffll'tl<"lm,o; ,1 A;i ~h~ • ... ur
mrl k111·h~n + 1.rr11kfa~t
-111·r" -11111 r,..,.~ -· • -r ,11.,1 <>r-.110 1,,1 I' 673-7300 Mob'tlo Llomes prod11cts. l~xprrt tre"
l"•>f. I-N""l'•l1 11<·•"1•>' < f.11!J rn1 IV 1l1fl rt11, f ';H't'M•1 '1 ' . ' '"11 1 ' ' • 1'. _ _ n 2 " " " • r " .. · F S I 125 nlncks Tn Bl'111·h Sl \f'l'lll tra1111n,i: C7:!-~1 :1.
Hf:. Jill . ffl. J.,,,,.,. p11n l•r r11•~U·I. V;,1 O\l fl f /4 BEDROOMS ,62 •• 71 (-• •• ] SPACIOUS 4 BP. home nn or ae minimum h11I. R1ii nf)l'ning ~ITALI AN P.•,ta---aot . _,, .. ,,·,
l"ll"d "f\l tth11"~t,..rn ~tylr · tr-.. n•t<I •,,,\ilk tn Pot'1a. V1i,t,1 , -''" J ~•·810 prirnf' Nnni f'<lrnrr V.'l\h 2Qx.)7 ~LJ\\U NGO, ';! February !7th, !9i2. I ' -"
n1111rus l'finrn \.'. \irt tia.r I S.· R;1J1,,..nr·. l\T,..~a Vrril1•. /~rrt r N"wport J!t.<1. nn 11\th __ ___ _ la ri;r So. patio. Only SR!).500. 2 hath, ii·ashrr & bri rm · sl'!l. Retiring, .t:.horl hn •
$?'l,!,l)"J I f ~!/Y .t . \\'/1 111) RJ.'J'/{~ St. .111.~1 II. fl'IV ."llrJ·~ frurn ''Short on Cash'' Walker Realty 67•s200 rlryrr. -CITY OF-I Good inrornf". 921-91 15.
k & I ~ rl 1sh1-1·<lst1rr. .Front porch , NEWPORT BEACH Jli l~I \\',..,t,•l1 H fir • }II B. parr ··hi!d n•n playgi-ounrl. A big fJpfMlrlun11y i~ w;,Jt111,e :tt.,.6 Via L1rlo, N.R. .11.nri shrd se!-up \n }o'ami!y 1 lnvesfm e nt
I fi lMJ22.~ 4 Ht ' 2 BA. KJt(·hf"n hlln~ · fror ~r1u. hrrr'$ your rhan('f' 3-R-P. A [I b ! t n s. park Prr O.K. S3.'JOO. 4117 673-2110 Opportunity Mai:nab-lrvine 220
nnok' Z i.:111nr p;1t1•1~ + f1rr
pl! + fl!h tlflllrl t \1'1tl rrl;1 1J
• An1\ mor r' St" 11 now
Call 645-0.?.0.':. 1-----tA hf'al1ni.:. rlf'w 1·a1'111•I, _ , ' . '
1
642-8235 644-6200 BY OWNER l~rgr ft·n('Pd y;u·d $'.l'l.90ll I•) 111·1· l~'!l ('f [nr I•'~~. 1 his \\a~l1rr/Dry1•r Ne"'c ~·rp!, \V. :'llr·V,.ddi'TI, Sr.ace fiOj E xt. 271 BOOf\1/NG II r alt h F00<! ';' -========== I Jn :-.;,r,!;1 1\na ;J Hdnn , 2 rur : !arii~' 4 h1•dn~1111 !n l!un-/1•plc. :!-car i.;;i ragc_ $j.li,OOIJ, K a'' a I 1, S.1n1a Ana, fl larkrl. F,eology I! r o iv 11 -, • , i,:;ir;r,;f' ~ll<tC •'rp1 ~. Yrnn 1 CAI.I. 0 '46 •2-411-41 t1111.;1nn Hl"aeh ha.~ J.R:lJ Al! 6· 497-1076. ;iJl-7:.?<)-t. Cl-fO!Cf_; lot!OO'xl3./-.-H·:l,
COLON. 9! '
I I h hrti. Rr11olutionary 11l"w lax~ Al I ''
-,, ,. •>I li•>'·n••tn< !'.'.•,7-,0 , ~· .. arc. "-!!U:trr f"l"1 anf .vuu can Uy p • v ' d •ll•y 318 ,. • ~, "'' .... _..._ I I ... MOB!LJ-: llonle for nld<'r' · .. ' ' ·· ~·hr!!rr, Arr11 cha1r CattJE" •
Two STORY S\h;! fl"'r rnunrh, \Vil! carry REALTY \ 11 l)rnnr11nn1·~·1 011,·n1u1uno Me5a Verd• i·oupleor 1 person, ...,•aJk 10 JU>rhcslcr Sr , C?<.!. Shorl B:irniis /l('('(!erl . :-.tin. 111_;
I 2nd ;.i.;1;-~.j~ Nui ,,.,0·,, p,,1 0 ,11 ,, t•lo~ini:: 1-ost.~ VA . Hun')' call walk to 17111 SJ ~h'1pp111i.:; ,
I Ol!l.\l E Ill.SO~ "' PE A L rQ/I!)
I 8 2 S!!lrf's, t.n:o;1 a i\1rsa . ~'ul! ,·r~lin••n\ $600. N or riy kf' , 11,.r,..·~ II ~1 .. 1rJy hr1mr wi th -OUTSTANDING-------4 -2J:t'i. • .1 Rr. 2 811 . home, lan1 rm. 1.,270 h cn11·. $21 ,750 673-9:,,0!l. ,
I O\lr'I' :lf.00 .~•/ II Ill IU.'(IJJ",Y . EXECUTIVE i bllns, enrl. flH UO. Nr prk & ~fl!'~ -, ·sc150 y fi4~~;;r. Rall{'h, 436 w. Gth SL ·:
Fr11111nni.: :, ht-droonis. ~ 1 cir:l 1tu pJr)\l'~. 3 Art, l R.'\. RETREAT srhooL tJl,000. By O\l'ner 'pa(e rrn .. · · Mountai;i, Desert, I Tu ... tin. !'>!-t-2.102. '•
lmth ~. lllrnlf1I rt 1n1ng rnnm. .1.~u;r ril~~·.r.~. CJ11 ... r It l:tr,u·h. / /'001. _ 4 Bl'drm, .1 h;i rh. 2 5"16-.14jJ. llTLLCH.EST 20X~6, "/. BR_, 2 Resor t 174 2-lnvrslnn:, 11t_•\•rlnp in-;
LOVE
Can mJJ kr th is 111r n1l'l~t ff111~1J: 1ri;1'.1 nnd ,,~rr,..llf'd \ :S.i2 .no I l"ro"n~ . 111.,..r!acr!'i, liir_;;r fiinilly rni. FIX up & ·~allr' 3 Ar. 2 Ba., BA, , L:ive!y slit', Irvine --I trrnat'I Pf'r.sian k 0r\Pn1al '
l\t'll U11fu! II & l;11111ly rn1 ki!•h<n N(sll1·d l!Hf'ly 1111 1 Georg• Willia m son I liu'ni;il rl1ning. High -(J n . NEAR h BEACH 4()' Jot ' Rani~-Pvt~l)'..:....714/544-01~7 **BIG BEAR LAKE n ug & Ari Co. in N.B. s::ooo .
11rnunrl. l l'lf \'[H·:tn! And .~I) J,1/'i-:t' 1 .. 1 ... .,rr111111t)rd l:iv REAL TOR .. -h1U Sfrn1r l'tr1" ~!l's;t t e ·/ t . $53.JOO, I bui1~;tss_e Sl\'0\VFW \1\F: SPECJAL 1·a.~h Tl"l['d, Brs\ !n("()lllt'-.
<ll'.oiprra!!" for ynur hrlp. You 111u11.11 Ir,..,.,_ \\'11!k 1r, i'ofr\,1 I 548-6570 645-1564 Verdi' ~rea. All tl'r~.<1.' C~I/ :1 BN1rn1. 2 1.~ ha1h. C'Us1nm "' op 1011 nr lr<tr e. · -'· Pull your /if1011• .o;Jrd ur 10 I :i.1.;....~R •.
could t'Atl 11 11. • I VC'c'1!r Cn~inrry C!uh. 01· r U\VN ~:!l ·rr;ins. :I 1\rrlroom~.1 IM:l-4'16G rlrps, rrr1ts. l1kr .nc"· 1"onrl., I Newport Beach A(;!ln~~!~t~. (JIU!J thts sl>('C1at bu y. Cabi~·in. Money to Loan 240 ~
DELUXE FIXER fl"rl'd111$:'l.i,!l00 1.1 2 1.11 finr lfll"lily wA l\TSOftrnf'r. Cnrnl"r lo!,I 1hr -11 nod s, nC'i'ds f1n1sh1 ni::-. ._
1 A ~.,,,... . .....,,,... ( Pf'll .vf'~. k 1 .1 11 Ir 11~ lll'IV thio •k 1 ';.J!TI [:.J-~'1 U l"I rni nr ::i or L' r. wner only $6 6,j(J, F. z trrn1s Jr L . UPPER C ll '"''-'>01> 0 ,. \I l l , 1•1 1~. '1 l ,-~ I hnt ti 0 1 .
Vt th!' lit!!(' \Vlln\ll ll hflVt' 11'.a'i/~~ .... ~111 ;'.11;.;)f"l!ng, p<1rk Jn.\W"M .. tr11nsf('n·rd . All 1rrms. Cal! FULL PRICE IS ,J-On"t last! Call Ross (71·11 1st TD oa ns ..
her OlnR .11 1 1nrrnnr ti"'""'· l ... H£RITAGfl hk<' ~ard, covrrrd Jla lio. _ , 1''12·'1•166 $21 SOO Acreage for sale 150 !~l.-1738 or '\l rne· Spt'n('(>r !
Hlln&:. you II hr i;::llHI ;1-•nu tl1d -IUl .-ran S'24 !).<:A} l11'k C<1ll rl~ or BY owner, 3 BR, 2 BA hou~ 1 ~ I 1 • , , --. Rf'al Estatr P 0 Box 2'?2S 63,1.i t;(, INTEREST ~ hl>cau~" tht' nnly !hln~ ~111all -. n1 .j1 ~10-17'lo Y rn pnn1t> Cosl <1 Mesa area. ~;}-;_llf!J~? ?! 11 No . ito11·11 tn GI Ruyrrs a nd TAKF-OVF_lt PAY1'.1ENTS *R•o*BB'l•Gr_!iB·,kEeACR._,1,L1"A'"K"E · ',,2nd L llhOU! jr I~ th<' fl/'H'I". ;.:i ,' ' I $~ .. j()() 5.17-446!. -•r.:r.~m_:li!!!! I n1111 1n1um doi.vn lo F'lf~ .. ln i:i.o nionthly. 1,~ acre parcel. -TD oans :_.
VA-NO-DOWN--Balbo• Island --------fa ct, r veryone cruahf1C's Joshua Trl'<'. Ben.
L/\RC;E, LARGE 1 hNlmom --..__ Fountain Vaflev $ INSTANT CASH$ Sh11rp 3 bedroom drcan1c; !71•11633-3633 if v,.,., "~"' 11 S'.0 inl. based on N'luity,
honir cf\nvl'n irnt 10 ('Vriy-OPEN HOUSE 1 4 Br. la m rm, 6hag & drps. !n;· !ht-cquily in your ho1:11e. w1lh OP<'n bC'anl cciltng!'., MUST S!!I! 1 ac--Cal il. Pines, * FISHERMAN * Also NEW 95 '"0
1l11nE . llHl'rlwnod noors, for-I SAT. & SUN. 1-• Close to ~chis. $35,000 ap-We PllY all ros1s. In fore. '.1<'ar ne\1' c;u·pt'ts & drapes, grea l for investmnt or lry this bcf1 111lfu1 lake-fr lln1 of 5a!e-price I01'111S ~
111Hl rl1n ing r'!'"'lm . llhl'lke roof, 1 Sr" !his ll}(lay' prais11!. Subn1it I er m s . r losure nk. Ju st ca ll • 24 ul,..al location. Gtrat ft>n('('rl rf'crca. 12995. 645--098.f. honie for only S·\3,500. 01 · Sattler Mtg. Co. ~
firt'p/n i·r, iJi.~h>,1·11,shf'r, t'lc 204-204112 DIAMOND Owr)f'r , 842--63()0. hours a day, S.17-8fi07 yarrl. Tofa! paymcn! as !ow vorce caSf'. M.:ike offrr! 642-2171 545-0611 "' b lh hi k 1 as $168 per month. \\'hy ren!, 4-0 ACRES Rolling meadow Call o~ 1114) 53&1738 or <'-,,.,,·0 " l'•r•-r ,,., 21 ~. • ~ R s, nr rn("(', .'If']')· Lrasl cxnrns1vl" rtur!ex on H 1· B ...1.. '""':. ~.v " ~ ,., '-"'~
Is lh\11 imn11u:ulalt! J hrrl-ar11!r tauno"IJ'Y roon1, Onl.v !sl:1nrl. 'C1iarmin'1: rnt1ac<' un 1nqton eaQ'l <'all! nr national forest. TAKE write: SpenCT'r Rf'a] Es1a 1<', i ~!i'fiij~!i'fiij~~~~~~~I
mom 2 h11th home on A ([(Jlrl $.'M.500. 11•1lh nl"l\'('r apl.~. \"Jlh t!ou hl£' ··sharp-Sharp-UN TlO S TATES TFI IARO Wa Iker & Lee OVER 129· r.ro. 968-0047. P.O. Box 2828, Big Bear '; ~ ~ <'lll·rlf'·~llt ~trPf'I. Alt nr11•ly w lk & L 2 '111 I \_ _, ........ ( Commercial Lake, Calir. KoultifCllRtrrt I~ .. :.
pa1ntrrl ln!rrinr . l.1kf' nrlV a er ee I i:y;~~ri:.,s~~ WINTON Sharp1
' ~ Rt>altors P roperty 1S8 B ,-',G~Be"-'.=,::c.3:_,-ll-,-,-,,-rn-.-vi_e_\\', l-----,.--~-
11·11v f'arprl.<1 lhntour • Tn!l"lro Rea l Estate "[Mk nn furlh<'r lh1.!1 4 17!)11 llarhor Blvd. at Arlams Quiet ar('a, All u1 1I. OF--'
fully rlC'eor11lr1!. lln£l 1t k1h·h· -~;~;:~" 22!1 Murinr. Rn!lio<1 ls!An<l bedroo1n hf'11 ut y \n im-* T\\'O lnlnlacu!t1lr 4 hrd-~l.'i-fHfi.'i Oprn '!1J fl Pill CD\! Hi~hivay fron la"~ .. (_1 F f:>R! tlfyf'r11. 6"i3--67.'i6. I •••••••••••I
"" , .. ,,,, Rll •1.,.,,,.,. 1,1, ,,,, I --=-' 1 1'n<1111 horn<'" 1 n1dr fmm ,--------· "" · 1 Hou••• Furn•'sh-" 300 • '" • , , ... 675-3331 rlllH'lliltr r11nd11ion i~ bri,i.:h! !hr hra(h. Nr1vly 11a1nlf'd HIGHLANDS Jan<l & hlr1~s. Ranches, Farms, ~ ~
Beautlrul ly lanrl11f'•P<'rl 111 TROPICAL as lhe 1norn111_r: sun, This A 67• 7?25 I! 1 R G i·hnlee l::a!ilhlufl arPll . Onl.v ---h 1 rn!rrior 1 harn11ng" l'\!C'rlo ro; t:rn!. :>---• · • roves 180 'General PARADISE Balboa Peninsul• o1TI£' '"" i·hnrn1 galorr . Pnrt>O , in low 40's 11!1 Prune II a r h n r lhgh!and.s I _;:__,:._;;::_ _____ ,;.:: -----------1
S5.5,000 -EZ trr 111s. Call e~ll h><l11y. Th(' pnt·e 11·1!1 are11 Likr nC'\.\, ii·arni & ncome Property 166 CATILE RANCH EASTSIDE
67:1-8550. Rr1trr hurr.v. 4 BEDRMS + BA\'FftONT · B" 1 S il,,~~~ l{'rins. QuiC'k pnssrs.~1nn. . h I , ----------' p1rr: .1 "· • surpri.~<' you. · -41,..,, r1(' ion1{'. 4 spacious hrt-1-
1-01 THE REAL
\'"\{ ESTATERS
'-O lfNU ... rll'•l'NI
--BUY-ELKA'S-
9,,nr.ArN OF' Tllf: tltONTI!
-ONLY SlR.000 ~h11rri 2 Br
hnmr. fully f'Al'f"'lrd &
1lr11~d. J.:lrr!. n r kl!r hr n,
Ohl. J.':RrRJ.::I", llJl"R'"rl lrnr r1l
lot. f>l'rft>rl ~1 Rrlrr J1f!!l1f' •
r111l todo_y.
COLUJELL
PROPERTIES, INC.
lo1m1•r/y luBnrdl' R f
220 E .17th St .• C .M .
Call 646-0555
2 BATHS ha ., Din. \~. l111. r111. CALL 546-541 1 Anytime rn1s. & fi\111i ly nn .. 21 2 SllOPPfNG CENTER RRO Acres plus 32.000 11crl"s COSTA MESA
$28,750 s210.ooo. RraJror 67:-..... 1600. LARWIN halhs. L1v1 ng Mnnl slidin~ NC'\I', atlrH.('., fully ]l'ascrl. him gra~.ing. 350 acrt's . b · nJ 1 d all If ~ ood 11 I n ent al $195 or oprion 1o uy.
No,1v f)'l int 1n 11nd nut, llf'\11 PENINSUl.1\ f'o1nr CaJ)f' Cod 3-PLUS POOL ",·.lass \\'al! O\'rrlnoks a spark-StTategic N. Orange Co. loc. c:~ ;,........., ~·a:nfmal .... u.~i.:: 3 bedroom, 2 bath, double
l'1ai: r11r J)('l, nr1v til r, 11!1 4 Bn. 2 RA , 176.1 1::. Ocean II 1n.c pooL E1•rryth1ni:: for Grossannual incon1e $45,000. l!ish ·-·J ~,., S250000 ·• ,t:"arngt>. ff'nN'd yard, ne\I'
rush hu!!on l'lf1f1)'s! Cll"an Blvd., 67'.l-2:t12 rvC's. Oi.,nrr. $2 l 950 3 lari;r hrrlrn1!'i, fan1ily arra, cn1r1ous living. S43.000. Spendablcs JO"~ on rquity. i::~ 1°~rr;1.rca -C 11 G. • shai; ca.rpi't~, t r e g h I y
& .sh11rp ~ FllA-VA trrm~! 1 • llP"l'1ldf'rl tllruout. Anrxl'f'P· CA.L L 0 "•·2 <14 1 ms - a rorgr . , I C 11 B r •k •r
B B ' T-'·-I ' I o·' ]')3\1\ "'. a " Cn!I R~71 221 eacon ay 3 BEDRMS + 11nnal buy nr th i.~ pnrr. GI 1#.."'"llfC. INVESTOR SPEC t,\L au.-r -n\rsnif"nl 11 · ~•6 "'"' O E "'·'\''10 ll '"" 1600 ,,.. .,,..,,., p£'n _vr~. ,,r, 1 R rl EAf.T'l'. 17141 . 2 BATHS nn 1fn11•n ll"rms C;:il! ~l'IO-w.i!"i1 .'imaJI. niorlrrn rlinnrr ht)USf'. ~
Bl'11cll Hlvrl . llunt. Rrh. 'Capis trano Beach SHERWeeD REALTY R E TY no11' l<'ascfl \1•1th ,,,. '''' C-1 Bi>lboa Is land ln1n1acul1tl r ho111,.., lli!Tly fr!-AL -20611_K_I_' L r A I' I ST R A NO fleaol> !S'6' ll kl 1 I'\' Nr•r N'wpor1 Po1t orrlte for d<'vr lonmf'nt. B>>'Y 1-a-e v1n ane · · so ·ixl~ t°!!'Pp!, •l rH fl{'~. hl11n ., rnn 111r ... , ,, "'-1
h I hi II I 3 1--------lion. Pr!'·f' 113.3.000. Huntington Btac.h rustl'rn ui 1· u innlf', · R 0. n11l1n1. fr,. .. i::niunds Irvine 10 UNITS ...
ID ' THE REAL \~ESTATERS
'-· ( I IN I'. o '.1
4 BR hu111e \1 1lh l,i.:r . pa !io & ...
pier \~·uh h<'a.utiful view I.:
Stnhury 111111! hou1r "1th A Ill{, :I fl A ,vunpl rr11i•c<l. pl u~ lari:r pa r1n: Suhrn11' I I'"'~ ha •>>ll>"'-•""2"\l c,11 S•\').J'"'I E asls1de Cos ta :'lff'sa, J!N'1ll In t of IHldrrl srrc·111I frn-•u.vvu · · """"' .~ · ~~
• '0, ".\',IOLIR ni···.Al.TY. l TI "l IT'S LOVELY n•ntaJ /\rra. Sc1~n J.hcd -BUILDERS/IN VESTOR~ tui·r!'. " & rnnvC'rt1blf' drn. Corona del Mar .... r. ~ l'llllll·in~. shak<' l'OOf. C"n.rpf'!!I Br ni·h fllvrl., llunt . Br h. anrl nn fre \1111r\. 3 ~lrn1s., rooAI nis and thrce"l-hedrooms. 3.5 Acri" 11pt or Condo sitr,
CAMEO SHORES lan1ily room, 2 hn .• bcauti· I S('parnte un i ls with lols panorarnic ()(',an vi('w. Zon-& rln1Pf's, tovt>ly ri11110. Prf'· GOVERNME_N_T -• S fully 1!N"o1"11!rd. \\"ell plan-'" ~Cf' .. how~ a 1a n!;istu· f'rl 4R unit~. a\1 util in. 3.100 t1rnhvl rnr ynur UlSf'll"C'I inn, 0 WNEO nrrl J><1hfl, l11 ntlscar1ni;: anrl rt'fllrn "'ith income of S1.'lflt1 S<j . It. r-ustnn1 hon1r is con-l
SPECIAL Real Estate Wanted 184
WANTED MULTIPLE
RESIDENTIAL LOT
2 t(I 5 acres
So. Rayfront. $450. mo.
\\'inion R.E. 67:>-SJJI
. ..
'
LITT. Bat. Is attr. furn ~-.• ;
hr 11tr., patio (cov'd lnc"d l. ""
3 Br., 2 Ba., op, trpl. ~·
67H267. 1 ' :~
Balboa Penfnsula " " 67~?1~2GAN REA
67
L
5
:
64
Y
59
$92,500 FHA S.· V A rrro~S('ssrrl sr rinklf'rs plus a view. Pric-rr-r n1n. Subn1J1 on d~:r~n nr VC'rlibll' lo club house.
...-oo<t Tn11 nho\J~"!f: & hnn1r~. lJ11\' f'rl al only S~2.WO. , 1rad<' In -CALL: Lee Mohl er
P.vrnlnglt 642-74:\R EASTSIDE I dOl\'n. No po in1.s or F.St'fO\\' ~-d h·11 Wa Iker & Lee 71 ~: 5'1_1-5155 dilys 'l'. , ... ~,',' :::,',""h ;~a,,''°M" -·.COZY 3 room rcttllll:'<'· fC\I' :! '---C=oc-/ 4 Rr 4 R;.i . rnol. S\\'rrrins: f{'r.~. Gnv '! po.vs (·Jos1n• 546 •710 •v,, ... ,~ °" ""-"" "" t I lh 0 -•= A RARE FIND • I " ... ._ . s <'JlS m n1 e Ody. "·'mo. : DUPLEX ' O('f'A!11'tf'll;, :!l<paC'IOU?. ".r· f'fl/lf~. All PTIC'f' rant:<'s. Call re I Rc.l1or, PF.RC\' IL GOOD\\'IN co. Tus!111 ,\I'f'a Uni\/ JUll{' ls!. f\fature •
ls \\'allln' f(ll" ,..on1f" ~1 nn rt " R I . ! ~;:int. /.uxuriou.~ry 11.f'IP! rl. 9!Vl.444 t \\" t E ·" -" I I N ~-'• • ·' I~ .,...rl!n1s.
1
E.\r htsii·c li.c;!ing _ 17!lO !{arbor Bll'rl , <Lt Arl;im ~ ·r1 e: .. ~--E.~C;wf', marr1''' cpe. pre . o ~..,. '•
huyer to t111•11 lh1s rh11rn11n• • 2 ~·,,11 b0 tt•-.. CREST REALTY I · · DUPLEX 3320 \\' M 67'. 1162. .', n ·' Rl::At.T\' 1-·~l.>-9-El! Oprn_:.!.!_I_ 9 P~1 I est l anchcs1e r s1 ~0 ,, .,
hoin1l' plu,_ 1nron11• pn1prrr.v. • r t11sh ,;/u1~ r rp!. I .· \.1'._,. S 7 9 Univ P;:irk Crntrr, lrv1 nf' I Cha nnelfront Home Eac•h unit has 2 hl'droon1s, Jnglc\l'OO{I, Cali f 90305 , '•
Q\·rr r;nn "Cl · !1101 . :1 RR. • ~~'l· )( 140' )(It I • 00 hlt1n R&O, rrp1s. rlrrs. rrr-1 '•
hnn1r 1•·11h Jl'IAny r \trns -fn * Rn111 111·cr~ll I C:: ( • ~ ·: J' { ,f0 A !nvrly 2 RH I Aii hnmr (;ill Anytiinr. R.1..'l-0$20 I On R·:! lo!~ 11·1rh pirr & OoA I. 11mic tilr. firrptacf', J;!aragr, or caU (2\J i 6i8-SJ96 ::
!op <'11rwl ilio11 • llU~I' 11!<f'd VI (,\ \IA T~:Rr.t s ~VAT !.. (,~j,S ,' ', lljf I All "11'11 k1t1h. FA hra!1ng, Sfi."l.llro. For Appn in tn1 rnt F:-7. yl\r<l main!. Gooc1 loca-'•
h'.,,k ,,,.,1,,,,, • v,,,,,,,,, *FULLER REALTY* '---... 2 f'ar cnr. Jr nrr <l y11 r<l $IROO Laguna Be•ch Call. 673·3fi6.'l .'(.36-0Z'il! Evr. 1,00 lJ4 ~ ~ rc11 J1i-fin. Sl76 010·1 ... · 1\'alk • ·''..N· I HEY, WHY LIST ·: &an1 ('('lli11i:. l.i::. ihtuni:; •>46 OS 14 Anvt1n1r " to ROOM TO GROW ' arrn. Rlt-111 k1t(·hrn + . . ............ . '·:-.. shnr ring r('ntrr. SIX YOUR HOUSE :l
d' h 0 CO 2414 \11!<IR Df'I Or"Q I' \\'alk to ,..C'hool~. bC'a"h k RESIDENTIAL I FOR SALE? ., is 11"f1Shr r .. 11·11 pri\"ll tr TI AGE Nr,1 porc BrRrh ~ t~~lui:_:inll~~~-~r ~ .. ~'.~.JI 111; 11 11u1"t "1rrr1rl :l IX'rlroon1. __ 114.:: l:{_:l_AN'Cfl~lF: _ SJJ-SIOO ~t1~"f:~1fiy f~:~1~~~-i~.~~:~ r:A STSJ D~.N~J._;A l\lESi\
1 r~~il~~~"~o'~~ ~t~~~ 1~~~ .
1
:
C11.ll fii:\--S:>-">(J. • :1~:1111~ ... ~11111 A~I h;l(:P ;R•ll W a lk th• World Out ___ ( ::::J 5JJ-58DD flnr•r 1111111 1·11 n br 1·11 .... 10111 S6~.~iX). \\'!TH l'ER.\lS ()r 'iA a ppra1.~<1I. F"nr frM'
I \i i 1 1rrr 11 •·<'.1 Q111rt 2tut rlonr mRslrr !f:uitr ''A Carefu_I liillorrrl intr> 4 t(I fi Bdrn1.s A-FRAME Roy M cCard le Realtor rs t1marr & no obligation ro Nr11 por•J 11 1~ nrl':i. 2 ,ITilrl> I -"' ., 1, 1 · 11 1th \a"""r \1\"HI" l'fl{)n\ & Bra.C'h. ho'""" ~. ,, .. ,,., 0 fl • 11\0l'r ,,< nn s. ~1an 1 s11r B ·.. ... .., " " " lSlO ;.:,,11 iiorl Al I'd .. (" !\1. Y u, ea
n!cl.. .$.'\\l,!l.'11'1 l:i.1111ly 1'00!1\ .c:. lllllC'h, nHt\'h uyers Dream'' "t').1.'lrR!(' f;:tn1 1ly room Corn-' ~1 1'fl~ /.ll\R,\', L1kr 11f'\\' .1 BR ' 548-7729 CAPITAL
PETE BAR REIT 111nrr. (;rr11 1 rln11·n1 011·n Iota· Tl11.~ r \('rp1 1011111 hnnH' 1s r lrl rly frrnTrl, pn1·11!" P'l· j 2 h.1 Only ~~.~1!0. 1 INVESTMENT TIME FOR
REALTY t1Pn. On!~ S~•7,;J()(l, }4··11r i'hHni·(' to• crt ~our t1<">. \rn{!~ l"l\?.lil\ I.: 11·arn1th , CAYWQQO REAL TY --PRIME-UN TS--
1
833-1103 Bk BIG CANYON
Golf Course E1tate University Realty 111•111r\~ \1orth. Ln,·atl'rl in lo nnf' "f Las:un11 's mo~r un : 6.106 \\". r/i'ast lh.-,. ;.: B. I ' r. 1
·''"' r •. \ ,.1 ! 1•1 1·. fii:; fi.'i!O r n1111T!l 1n \'Rll<'.v 1n 11 ""ry ,. ,--.o-\\"C'strltfl ~llopnin"' Cm!er. \\ ANTE:D 1m m11r h o m" T 642-5200 ~""! ,. .... c.• ui.u;:i l "'"1f)t'rf1rc This pmo 5"1290 . srx 7 HR, 2 BA i!pL~. near ,-. ' . I "UICK CASH
---------f"'Pll lnr ar•·~ 11,..,11 .. ~.·ti.,n), l"rt~· cr•11lrln't !~ ("plaC'rd fn.c RY -,. .. I I \I ~ OOO fnn11I~· 1n1111, ~ 1>,,111 ~. •; ,•11r OPEN HO-USE l.l''!\ ~ ,.tnr.1•, S hr. 4 ha. ~I 111,. Sti.11 flOO a.~k!n" pril·r. (J,1 n1Y-Braut1f11l 11"11• ~ !lit-in k1l ct1C"ns. I r p I c' ~, 11 ~ · • in. ·. sq. fl • ~ THROUGH A ii::u'll~f'. :i fl l'l'Plll•'•'~. ~f'f'l'lf-lrplr. S.:l'rf'nh<'lt lfl<"a!~ir1, frr .~. ~hClppinc Takr lld\'llnl.ii.:," ( 1 11 " Rfl. :''~ RA. 2 ~Iv hon1e larcC' Rr , laun<lrv. Seasnfl('rl ·
1
· nr .1 Brlrn1 s Nr .... ·por1 BC'ar·h
HR :\Nl) 11f'11 f1\r lw•rl1Til'n1~.
Hlr Jo!llf'CI !''°Ill , 1·11"11· f'l'ln lr f lnnrl. As:r nt t'~7:??.'1 II! R. l'.'lll .~·l~-:!:"~-::i. !.!'£ 111 . d tn I..· Ian; rn1.~. 2 adult lrnants. r.oor1 return or ~!C's.a Vl'rdC' art'a. l~r1
1 .. 1 Lf'~~ rhnn Sl ~.nro n r11·(" BA YC REST Coit3 M eia ,l/O Ia_· #'I frpl~. 11{'f-har. ma ~ 1 <' r + 111.x sh<'ltrr Sl.15.000 1\"llh I par1y \\'ntf' ('IAsi::1f1~ ad h~· 7ti t!rr11111ai.;r J.11 Al Rr1~u!1fu! ~A H . :1 h.1 . hotnr ~Or,,~ II/ sui!r 1Sx2j' On 01·rrs11N! flex ihl{' tf'rnis. No. 305, Daily P1lol, ro
n1i.1.'ll .":!, l;rf'lrJ,:1" nr1 . Nr11· • 11 r po:1c1l. U>p k>t'A\1(1!\, 12 Near E verything REAL ESIAJE 1·ul--rif'-~ilr lo!. l!C'XI to rmrk Bni.: 1:i61) Costa ~!rs.1, 92621i.
['(•11 Bf'Afh Anrl thr n 1'11 11 ,,, ~1 . .[l'ur.~. \\'rd ~f, Th11!'~. RI"~! f;;i~ti;1rjp f()(" 1 1'tl1_\' I..· ~11·1111 ·~ Jl(>lll. S59.500. boa>O'Jlb loweon JR. y.; AN T ED : F 0 u r p I e x-. fi~·I· 11411. 1 7~1(1 C1011f]('st11·k. :-.··rt. I 2 RI\. hn111r s, ;l ,CArai::r.~. VA $100. on 1190 Glrnnryl"t' SL Ei ~ 4 -4 1 3 2 l 9 3 0 p 0 r l aeoltoe Easts Ide Costa ;\tei::a, gootl
D , D I Brach. Askin~ $7!'1,SOO, J11\\'C'd allry. ~\)Iii'(' fo r t>fial • 4!l4·94T.I Yl9-0.116 Lnc-ksl<'tRh Pl. l':.B. 3416 Vi11 Lirlo 675-"562 cond. l4'.~ or I•-.•'·· W>ll on t • ay CHILT RO I on !hi~ fabulous hor1'<' Ill 1l UUll '-''' BINETT & tr1t1lrr. c1n1y S.16,500. t'nr tnr lni·ii tion r1 rar ri·{'ryl lunR .OCEANFRONT 8 y OWNER 7 HOUSES p11y {'a!h. l\tust have at 1ea5r
C'nrnP<trr nnrl <11.ci'OVf'f lhi~ REAL TOR 644-7958 flp point n1r nr 1•1111 4 '"~' ''""•·••>-., ,,,-,. ,-,,. L:iok111' do11•11 on :!'<Onrly 2 1 ~ n 111 3 BR "nit. Pcmc>-ls 1 $21\ '.00 Tl J hr '" b ,.-,, , " , ~ ory, ·l DR, ,\-fr<1n1C'. S!rps . , .on 2 lot~. do .... ·nto11,1n Cos ta ; " 1~ \&UC' at .• u~. 0-•oCt:Aj';t·RoNT DliPJ.E°X ; j ;\I r~. 1!0pp<'r, \,crnt sn-&"110 i·rrit~ & tlrps ;inrl suj')f'r -hl"11 rh, lc:r .1 BR., 3 ba_ to bf'st hl-arh. Like ne"' ~fesa. Sii7:1. monthly in-I only. RJ&-6774 V.'L!h dcta.ils.
n>nni hfl nlr 111 Nruj)(lr! Lo11 C'~I Pfl<'('.-f prof)('flv nf l l \'V~·..,10 R~--:;....,.1;:it '? BR Khllr r 1'f1n". 1~ .. °'.'~. f·.n h(IJTI£' . .Sf"'IC-tf1U~ rftnin.c: & SJ4.900. 642-1525 rom•.110.~. 00---. fl ---·. Sh(ll"f'~ts pr1<'Nll(l ~f'll11inti f · · ·• ·· .• ., .. , • · " ~,,"" ,. t-~==~-:c;_____ ~ uuu ~ ...... "
I ~pr11 ks for ll s!"IL flo.sr !n I th1< kind 111·1111 (h111rr "Ill I ~-1'1rl<' (.~!. Join~ {'-! C.<111 YUJ-.t'>.'i5 fam. r1n~; r11rf' Yll'11• fl('('k I HARBOR Vir1\' Hon1rs. l\lov-won't last! Only -TIME FOR
l'<'i •h """f • ,,., 1 ~ 'O ... ron~ldf'r rradC' for Or:ini;:-r l'l1tr nnnl plus. :'>\US T SHERWaeo REAL TY & PAl1•1° arr1"·1 .'\pprox1·. J.000 ing East. n1t1sl st'll a\niost $79,500 . (j)UIC4< CASH Jc ,, • .._.~ lll .!U, •. ~. ("I ' .. ~'J•.111\ 1 s>·I L\I G"'>t••.;:_ is=· ,, 0 u~· .. ~· ''''"" I l'n!I 546 2.113. (lll:I ~ 11111 l': ~ ...... ,., I ' .. ' ' .1~~-'·'"""'"'· "'" Bmokhurst r .v. ' -. "'"' ~ . .,.,, p t'f od J E:
I 1 R1\J,S{l,\,BA) _PROf'LRTIES E-."IPF.. .l RI!, ... R • · · ~nuu•k <'In 1hr sand. One of :iw500or~ inn m l' · xtras. PERRON REALTY &17-lm THROUGH A
"2 •o r •• BEAUTIFUL Ille f('\v aYR 1I 111 !hf' 1 '"'Una ' · 4-8831. 17!17 Orange Ave .• C.M. '" -,,, 1 • C'Ul--0('-s.i r !'c-c-Jurlt'rl I'd '"""""" DAILY Pl 0
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
--'""-·'"'1 NEW SHAG W>~~~ •r~=-H.1.R. 8231 f.llis Av.., HB. W!J M. WANT AD I ',,~,,;~~"' od Is a -'I "'"'1. k>»'<'rl. $3S .9;o. POOL :1::=Ftn 1;:'t0~,!'.;,~'"~~~.~~,,' 2 & 3 0;,a;U~l~r •hop'g. L T
CARPET ~~d/ DESPERAT E O\\-,;ER 2 BR M7-3957. 642-5678
._ SO, COAlf lo~ i==""==::::::;::;::::::;::;:::::c'..;;;;:::;::;;;;:::;::;;::::::::;::::::::;:::::::::.:..:;;;:::;::;;;;:::;::;;;;::::::;;;:::::::;::;= .~ SOtJT'i LA~ CM#, +df'n 2'", Ba,lj;'IXld \'ll'W, ~l'i"J-0 s., ,( -f)-C ~s" Ju,, '""'""' lh1< "~"' _,,..__ A•I. 675-7225 II.LR. \:)~ J...'CJ?J }.~). ~ ).:,J(./W Nc11·ty painted in.~Ld<', bC'aut ----·-'=""=· ~""'=---'''----CUT" 2 he, 2 b• 1 _ _,-•-··.-. \S'x.12'. pool l\'llh lo1s of i:. ,,~nuuu.·.-T/Je Purzfe wifh the Bu i/f.fn C~ucklt! rlN'lon~ tor tho~t sumni('t HIGH ON A HILL 1 ~111mm ini:: pool, ftt land.
8 l'll'INT NU.~Bf~£0 ICTTl.RS
IN ~E5 f ~OUAll'[S . 0 UNICO•"'l< 1tmu I . JO I! AN5Wlt
' I I I I
--SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 7QO
~rhrs: &Iler ..... -111 IH"<'t'J>I PanoramiC' \"i<'w fro m lhf':st> 1 ,\gf'n1, 6';..722.l. H.l.R.
no !1fl\i·n GI or \O\\' tlo"·n llf.'1\' l k 4 bdrm custom buill S.n Clement•
rHA (\fl<'r. honi~s. fonn11.I din r n g
Spdrow Rlty 842-4474 rooms. 11oll f'!{'('lr'ic ltitchrn.c,
1\•e1 ban:. plus oversized
"A nC""SI tor l'\'f't)' hint" il:IU1\gt"5. Slar1uig al 152,CO>.
t;OV'T. REPO'S MORGAN REALTY
FlfA-VA 6734642 675-6459 '
147-9604 OCEANFRONT
KASABIAN 2 """' :nxi ,... toot h'"""
REAL ESTATE Smack on the sand. 1..a.rtt
)()!, rpxl fi.nAncing, f"or
SPANISH 4 BR I PArti<'ula~ C'.all :
lmmaf'" ~tC<111.llllln kitrti! * 499-2800 *
r;,'~~~~~pd' f.IOC'ho xtn1 s' • SELL OR LEAS~
HAFFDAL REAL TY 2200 5'f. F't. :J BR.. 21, BA. ~l-440Ci E !l6S""""" I~ fan}. n n .. din-. rm .• trpl. --~---'-'-'-· ~ ('pt I. drllpt"I, bltill5. '\1?1
ANKLE DEEP bar. r1r. Immtc. S47.9SO.
.. -s:-nht AAAR. '",,."a.)' tif'T-. ruu prt(:('
plarf". J hNtnn!.. 2 1:>8ths. ~t\SSION REALT\' 4!H--07l1
BRAND new ~an ~w. 3
Br., 2 Ba .• fam. rm., trpl.
All bit.ins. \l.'&11 to \\'all
crpt!I. tllru-oul. $32.500. By o ..... ~r. 1ilf1 675-3593.
S•n Ju.n C•pistr•no
lfURRY! !
Onty h\"O left' Ukf' ~
hou~ 15gq: ~· fl. Thrt'e •
tour hftdroom. ~u twllh,
FAmily room l f\fodcrn
kitrhfon. Carpets Ir drapes.
EA~ f"HA or VA l,.rm!f:.
F"UU. PRICE S29.500.
CAPl5TRANO V A.ll.EY
KtAL n· m 11J4
•nd .•"~ llfllllt"Ous~ $21 ~ 2 STORY glaM front \'"1ew l ~nt1 An1 RE.AL ESTATE by ho .McVAY l9l-&533 mr. l bdrm. 2 btth .
&Irony In tum IJ,intt::
roon\ ovttioolu. dirurtl f.tn...
2 rlttk.o.. !rn<'f"d y a rd •
ftlY'!'ll&et. 1\'f'lb.r, ('N'J)j'IS.
t!N.pes. bu1ll-\ns.. $3{5(]0
&-..\XIO ar M&-r."61
Like to tnl1t':' Our i'tadt.r's
Par;,diw roh1mn Is fl:tr yoo!
s 11nrv rl"''~ tor ~ l>lk'b..
Turn unu""' It.Jn' lntO qu~
C'ASh. ('&]I 6{2~
_.._ __
BY OWNER
In !'Ania Ana. 3 Bdrm. 2 ear
g&rt.lf'. S"Mi crpts. 1·our
<'hoiC"' ot financing 122.T:JO.
Stfl? prr mol\tl\. \\"ill cam.·
""' .........m
' -
'
Are You Letting Cash
Slip Through Your F.ingers
See If You Have Any
Of These Things A
DAILY PILOT
WANT-AD
Will Sell Fast!
1. StoY• 29. Bicycl• 57. Eltctric Tr•ln
2. Guito1r JO. Typ•wrlt•r 51. Kitttn
3. i1by Crib / J J. Bar Stools 59. Cl•11lc Auto
4. Ele S1 32. Encyclopedii1 60. CoffH Ta~le
5. Ca mer• 33. V1cuum Cl••n•r 61. Motorcycle
6. W•sh•r 34. Tropic•I Fis~ 62. Accorclion
7. Outboo1rd Motor JS. Hot Rod Equipm't 63. Skis
8. Ster eo Set J6. File Cabinet 64 . TV Set
9. Couch 37. Golf Clubs 65 . Wor kb•nch
10. Clo1rintt 38 . Sterling Silver 66. D io1mond Witch
11. Refriger1tor 39. V ictori•n M irror 67. Go·K•rt
12. Pickup Truck 40. Bedroom Set 68 . Ironer
13. Sewing M1chlne 41. Slide Projector 69. C1mping Tr1il•r
14. Surfboard 42. Lawn Mower 70. Antlqu• Furnitur•
1 s. Machine Tool• 43 . Pool Table 71. To1pe R.•cord•r
16. Oilhw o11her 44. T ires 72 . S1ilbo1t
17. Puppy 45. P iano 73. Sports C•r
18. Co1b in Cruistr 46. F u r Coo1t 74. M•ttre11 lox Sp91
19. Golf Cart 47. Dr•pes 75. lnbo•rd SpHdboo1t
20. Barometer 48. Linens 76. Shotgun
21. Sto1mp Collection 49. Horse 77. Saddle
22. Dinette S•t so. A irpl•n• 78. Do1rt G•m•
23. Pl•y P•n 51. O rg1n 79. Punching 1111
24. Bowling Ball 52. Exercycl• 10. Biby Ci1rrli111•
25. W•ttr Skis 53. R•r• Books 11. Drums
26. FrHHr 54. Sk; Boot1 12. Rme
27. Suite••• """ 55. High Chair ll. Deak
21. Clock 56. Coins 14. SCUIA G•ar
These or any other extra tllln91 around th• ... use
can be turned Into cash with a
DAILY PILOT WANT-AD
so
Don't Just Sit There!
DIAL DIRECT
642-5678
,
. . . . __ ..... _ ... _ .... ...._-.-· .... ;/! ~---· -
Tutsd'tt. r tbru""' l. 1frl • DAILY 'JL!n' ff
I ' 1 ~/1 1 ~11 I _ ... _ l~I ............ ....._ rorll:tnt ]~ [ "-'ritt ,., 1119"t ..,,,,~"'" ,., lttlll l[t]
HouMs Furnished 300 Houses Unfurn. lOS Hou1n Unfurn. 305 ·Townhou•• Unfurn. 335 Apt•. 'urn. .MO
Co1ti1 Me1i1
Casa del Ora l.J1k .. ~1n,. r ,ri... 11 ...... J RR .
rrp!t rlrp.,, Air ronrl d/1•
hl1til',' <l\\I ""'IT•ort,' t ni A!.L L"flLITll'.,11\ PAID
I I 1 r"o'ln1(1111r i. ... r,,rf' 1••u "'"'.
* 1 BR. COTTAGE
All 11t1l111,.~ J'll lrl (",r.nti !n.r
~rurft nl.5 l'\r f('IUJ'llr . C1t1 l'\k.
$16~
NU .VIEW RENTALS
67J..~OJO nr 4~4 ·.124~
-Al.'41 -
:t Rr1trm. tm1n,., fll,.tJi \lf"rrlf'.
l hlork 1n ;\!11.rk<"t ~11skf't.
~:.':.cl. ptt M1(1,
SU..9S21 OR S41l-6631
Nichols Real Estate
1•~""· c , . ..,.,.1 ~. l"41r1 r111 .
111 "nrl.. 1nrl rMI .. 1Ak,. C'"u-.tnm df'Jlll'if'rl . h!t.t11nn.1:
' , S'l:il ?l~ ~:z· \~\ l • ~1•r1ou11 k1trh<"n with Ill·
f'I!\ • I '\' I· ,,, <111 .... rr h.tl'll11'o(
lf'rl • VpnrAlf <i 111 i •rl'•
• 11 .. ,..., ... 111..,, •h'r lJt•
• !'1 11 11" p•TH'•
'll11l1 ''l 1i·llil.
-- -'T\1•1dlor
Newport &e•ch
• AOl1t.r<; PR ~;rf"RR t:n • e ('lo,,.ci 1:4r111,, .,.. •lt1r41,.
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l'n1\"l'r~1!y P11rk, lr1111r --• I D I •• U fu Jso Pm! • RArt>f'qu,., • •11r.
D 133-0101 Nlnhti up ex n rn. •ys ,. 1•1;1rirlt rl 1•·11h pl\i•h l~nd
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NORD Rayfront 11·11h fll"r & P''1 Sl l(t, _.___... '.2 Rn Si l-, \,;11r••' l..1rs,:'° 1 R R S\1~
ALA Rentals a ~5-3900 QUIET & SECLUDED li4&:l:l4~ • \.1,;;~1:i.1 1·r11.r11r.ir:: F'RFr. ~lip.'.\ BR, 3 B,\ '1'11 .!111.1, I '7 S700/"-1n. ~ 5 ~16-li'i11 ;,; • II \\'lillnn "'11 l"ITI
\\!Al.KER Rt.:Al.TY fi7:1-~1:xxl • -t R~"J""IRnn:-.is. 2 B11 1-: B~1 It. 11p1. !'I. "11rl l.115;11n,. Huntington 8eo1ch--* $30 WK . & UP .-
"1'!'". hi t lnrrl .\'l'rl, kirts llr/rii:. x, hnr pl~!t f..,n,1r1 Hous•s Unfuro. 305 rrt• J/fVl .,1 I 1 •1 . J lill " 11 J RR 11 R \ e ~nutin .l 1 8/l Ap!1 ., ,.r ~. A·~ J'lf'I. I ,.,,,. 1(1 'I ' • • 1
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I ALA Rento1li • ~5-39<10 ht'~t'h. I rr1\ ~11rd. dbl r•rr-,r1 • T\' f.t ~, 1, <-• General --------~ S \ .,.1,1, < "" ,,.-rv1c .. Ai·aU ;j~@:(§(iJi~it~i f VACA:XT .t· RT<An\' l\'0\\' NU-VIEW RENTAL 1 1111'1 111· ,.,1,~~ i. . .. 1• Ph"'n .. 5rrvi.:,., Utli Pd
,, ITl1 :t nrt 2 RA. hll1n'>. fii1 11UO nr 4'11 1:.:1!l _•l11'p i: \l'.1'1 "::" ·"¥>-.~~ • All m •Jor t'rl"rlll t'll1"11 ..
t1rl'pl, '"nr·it .• •nrrt '.'./p;iT1n ![RGl -BR + Fo1rn R m Lo1guno1 Hi1l1 l .'.~!''~""l1nr1 A hrt :\-1.t !l"T\5
RENTAL flNDERS \1,..1.1 111" UK Rt $2.1.1, ("11.I ! :.: RA n11 11\ .. , l"IU'Pf'I' rt1 llfl 11 !11 • \rl \\'orrh Sl (Ill l'!t'n/
4JSW.lttli,COSf.t.MISA I Ai..:•'111 .1r .... 1111. f ' I .• . I • d ~I .I\ \\l)ft!l)l.111:111\l'I 11111, ('h1lrf1V'n t.· p ,.! ·'"'"'11'111 ---------r~. U t llA~•. j;(lll ,.,.,,,. ~ nrt '2 R \ t ht 1111I ----....-
HOUS•S * Apts. n1·:Al'l'. f11C'rl . rrrl .it. :l HJ\ 1 \11rd. t\ll'P hn11 ~,. f.i \"1r11 · · fl" 1" TrtAIL~:n lnr r,.111 S.\\. s"-..m
h • · · I ,... 1 '"" ~h11 i;: •"fl!' rtrn.•. j"K'>('I! * '45-0111 * B~ ~r. Jrplr. 2 r11.r s.::nr. n •1r•r11n S3()() ' . , · . , iv~·I S?.\ ()rp, fo\ll fil~Z1~7 '•..l:...~ ,·p110,·1• Q'"" m :11>t< NU.VIEW R/TALS '~''."" 111
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II! Fr~e ln Ua11dlorrU Ln N B h G11 nit n . /\vi. ff'h. l.l. fll.i·41J.l/I cw -!l).l .121S ewport ••C HI,, 11·11 1/('r ln1· rr111 i.11.\ l Z!I
:)-IS-:t76J. --CX"F A~ IF\\' -rtrp ttwlm pnnl. ti1.l-'Jl·IT 11 ~·11 RNlSHt:n • -------• '' · * l\"~1\'l'(lRT HF !CHT<;; n ,. 1utl •m.~6-4.U9ll n"'lnll'. s 1 no.nCf'~AN F'RONT B11.rh. \\'' Lnv~:LY J RR , 2 BA. c1>rnrr :i. Rn. l RA. frplr. hl11,, 1<11 ·I . . ' . h ,.
I h I I I IN " 1 1• 1 lux,. 0 ,1\ .1 hrrlrnnm. l •!h. ,-nv 1-. --\ntrhl'n. ,·d,.11.I for l per~on. (l111r, <·rr s, r rr~. p us 1 · c·rp t.\ & orp:<. ·"H·'"· .11 11 lt ,.1,.,.rnr t>l l in.l, rl i.th"'ll.•h,.r • I·.·' l Bn. Jurn. •rt,
uti! prl. f n non rnot.. S290. mo. C11.!l " r ni. i;11>-1nr. I " i\',. rlrllrr-'. mlln .... f"XlrA-' ~hAlf rrp111", f'(W'll. rlo•"" rn
ROOl\.1fl1 ATE \\1111.nl<"ri tn
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SlJ!"..-.NlCE 1 BR apt, f'nt·l .11:11.r.
SfOVI", crpl!l, drp!l, ne11r
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Fountain Vi1lley 1'111 . r rit. rlrri:<. r,.rn~ lrr,.1rr ( l'"r '""· !!Ml r nmf'ln11, Cc;i111
lt,.p1111n.TO \\'. f.xrf'l rnnd ''C'' THOMAS :'\l"•ll .
srm. '.\1 0. J RR. 2 RA , f:1n1il~· r 1io 4!'14174~ R I 1 n11-.-,~.,-"-.-.~,""'1-,.-r~,-.,-.-.,,
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i;:-11 r AS,::f', hlork l'rnm h<"11 rh. Nl'l''""rl Rroi•h .,..1,,. ~'' .. ,~ rm, -Xh'• lfl'! l'N\m.111, "Mt'J Huntington Be•ch 4!]4.r,;172 ' ,. . r . ' . ·,")fl ·' 11:11r 1~·1 1!orat ... Artu1t1 only,
-on fl'"I .•. $100 rllo. e VACAT ION Yr Rnunrl I Lo1guni1 Hills 2035 Jl'ullerton, C.M.
Rr, i·hllrl ~ml prt. NIC ~:. f W'J $1!",0.0 CI<AN Vitii·. 1 hlk lo lJ!il inl'. $1:.!:i. :-.:E\V hr.;1.u tiful J Fin. hnnu1, 2 Ap•rtmtnt1 lor ll:~11t :-i.\IALJ. furnlihr!'1 ~p;11tt;;i,
I h,.;ich. 1 RR Y"Arly rr-n1al. I ALA Rentals e 645-3900 R11l h~. h1m1\y rm, C'Rf~t. •II u11 ll tl""· nn C'h!k!T'f'I'\ N'
lnc!ci"i:: u1)1. l~H·r. · pR 110~. rt w Ah" r . f"'I~. In art ul r mnh!le horn,.
__ 1 • !IARn In RrR1 ' 2 Rr. ln•·rf •'' 1 .~~io n V1,.10 "''""· Apt•. Furn. ·36(1 r11rk. lrlr•I lnr rl'tll'HI
$1flfl·t\'t;\\'PORT Hf'ighl:t·2 RR .1rrl. r nc·l ~11r. 1·h1lci nr1 $140 $'..17:./mo. "'40--Xi11. f'f'l"~on. Sll.\ mn. S.'~ M"rur1·
rinv. r nt111.1::' 11·/ porn .. ~~A Rentals e 645 -3900 Lido Isle 1 Gen•ri1I '" <'nil M6-R4fi1 .
S!nt•I', crpl!!i, rlr~ 81'Ail • nAn.r: 1nr1r ... d-l Br.c·ott~i~ ! .__.. -J JOO . MOV ~-IN.-A~l~lo_w_'_""'_
no11•, nr h"nrh. $!1~. 4 Rn. riEN. '.\ h1tlh \nvf'IY Sh11 rly fo:!mA-l .11 wn.rriot
ALA Rentals e 645-3900 llfllll". Av11 d f',.h. In J uly. Chll11rl'n"• ~rr1on
S19fl·VACA!\T & fl'llrty 3 BP., SliOO mn. ~.11 ·21211. I Bold New Concept F11r11."' l!nh1rn I " 2 Br.
2 R;i. hom r. ri\1111:<", n1~"n, •. llF.AR Thl.~·2 Rr, ~1nvr, M••• d•I M•r ~·roin $1.1:\/mn. ''" o~h11·~hr , !nl'.'rl yrrl. (,ar.' 1rfrii;:. ~·pl Orp.~. nr h1"11rh. FURNITURE RENTAL 177 ~;. 22nd SI • f;.12-J64S
--ALA Rent•ls e 645-3900 !..RrRf' ll'nrrrl ynrrl. FUrn-:-8i1c,;:-&-l-lr'I:"
S1n~lr!! ok. I S120. 4nR. 2RA. f)t)ubl .. 1ararr. I
52<lr'l·R00MY 4 Br, 2 full i'\\"O 111..,ry 3 BR I :140·91 27 1 • i\ll'ltllh tn f\!n nTh E1p1cii1I~ nice, $130/
1111. frncrci fl')r kid5 k rrl.~. I ' · llm rm, -----* lOO'i. P11rr h1.•e Opr in.1 up 2110 ewpo t llvd Dhl ~iir xlnt lnr. 211 h11 1/u:, llpprnx 1900 sq. IL Me1i1 V•rde • \\"1f1 e Sr l,.r !1nn. . r • • I C'hnu..-nf'l,;?h))nrhoocf nrar ~ C.M.
BEACON * 645-0111 1111 !!Chl')l)I~ 1..-~"h ,.; 1 .1 RH, 2 RA, f11 m rm. tt hl , ,<;;tylt -Colnr~ 11 .1. "i~n=n=-.-,-.~ •. -.-,-,,-1-.-,. -I • · • ,,.,,,,_ '"' '101"· .. 'I lln11 r !)rl11 f"ry ' ' S1:10.2 R R,crp1~.~1ov<",g11r .. p1n11;. A\'il ll. I T-°f'h. 1972 rrplr, rl r~J, l')l!n\ R'ftrrlnr -lnrl ry furn. t l .1 ~/mn .
Tnl ,, fl"' QI<;. r .i\1 . I S29'i/monrti. o ... ·nr r. Agrn1. rnrl $271 l •;ll11~1 • rl~p I ;fi~ ~ l\'01T1ll F\ pr .. f'rt . 1 !12]. 9
$1:1'.J. 2 n n pvl horn,., frnt·rl 9'>2-11 1 UI A~'n1 ! :'llnr I Call ~n7-7;i.12 [lL ~ l\'"ll•r", C. M. ~1-41fllA nr
!or kid ~ & prt ~. -5-. ------11krlv~. !fl A:-01 M 2 P \1, ,.ll ~ "9 __': ~:II 00.111.
$140. 2 Rn, ~r0v,., RR!', rrncrl 1 VACANT HOMES 1·rp1 \\r1L
lflr in1 & rrt. H.B. R•nt While You Buy IN-ew'--,t~B-.-.-c~h---SHAR-P BEAUT. 2 BR. S l~. 2 BR W/ f'Yl'ryl h1ng, .1 /i,, 4 Rn hnm .. ~ go m<" po ~17 \V. J'.llh, C~I ~111.11111 ]'1••1. A1hJl!11, "" l'M'hl 11 ll'l!n kirl~ 01\. C.1\1. I •\/)Wll)I:<;. lsl m•i. plu:\ $HXl OPEN SAT, 1-4 27.·il\ N. M11in SA ~7..0~1" nr \n f&nl ok l S15~. f!4l-!!520.
$14:i. 2 Rrt. rrrit~. rlrri~. p~11n. Urp. 41124 surrry nr . SEE & GET BONUS
Q'llr, kid.~ OK. C .\1. I J\l()V J.; IN N()\\I! C'1tmf'fl lllghl11.nd.11 Si1lboi1 l1lo1nd fofuntlnstoft leadt
776-7330 Ag•nt r l'nm SJ!l:; 10 $'215 l)l'r nifl. Hra1111 lul .1 !'lrlrm. l11 m1!y \\IA Tf;nE-·n oN·r 1 A
3 BEDROOM HOME-!!_ob_erts _~-Co. 962-5511 1~ll")tn hnr'l"l~ "'11h R'rr 11 1 nt'ran p11 r10 . .,.,,1nl tr nr .I rl~~··1~~~· E XE'CUTIVI IUJTll
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1 h:irh~. 2·rl!r i;:11.rllgr , carf"l"I· of 3 a nd 4 hrdrMm nnr:n'"~ OON V. FRANK·LIN Bi1/bo• Peniniuli1-721 Yorktown llvd.
I I'd, <lraJ"lf'd, frnr t d, Jllll1n. J tha t r 11 n be lll'lvfrl 1nH1 REAL TOR l~TI l!iP':AC'lf 8 LVO ..
!IUPf'r !1.h11.rp. S2'".ll 11rr month. t 11 lmn.~t lmmr rli•t,.!y on flur e 673-2222 e AT YORKTOWN
W lk & L I RPnl-Opl!o n p l11.n , ~An l B VR !Fl. onh! SPACIOU~ I Rdrm ..... 11 !fl 536--tMll a er ee SHF.:R\l.'OO n RF. AL T y . ;~O\vN'1 1s;:'. l'1r 0.11~i,.' or r~n l ':I 11.'ll fl, !h<"rmfl h<"lll , 111•JY1•11I. STUDIOS FROM $3!
I 54"85SS !2fl5 3 2' I I 2 rt1 ah w11~h,.r. Arf11lt~ nnly r J!f'DROOM" V ftl';il!nrs " · · · · Ar., 1 Ba .. rp r, rr,.frr ~1 ni;i!,. 1Hl11ll. '."n fl"1' " '' A All •• ASL~
&42.44;:1 2 Rf{, rlr i"'t hltin H/0 FA r·ar J.:l!r. r ncl p1T 10. pool fi].1-:b'>.l~I. • f'ull lt!IChf'M
LANDLORDS! hi, <-rp1 ~. rlhl 1t11.r, 60:xl00' priv1I. Nr . Ho1111: !lo.o:p, -• 11,..1,.rt pnnl
lrnrd lri! \love in todil} f;i:l-!11~. • S4'fi WK Jt Up-On Orit.n • e l.1111!)dry '•rilitl••
c• · · ---I Lovely Btich-1 Br-Room• e ~-,....; 11Hl1 11r1 \\1f' Speri ;iJ17~ in f\"""'"Por! SI 1.1 prr mo V/LLJ\GF: THF: 8 1.Uf"f'S. :1 BR. 2 ti.A. M&!rl M'rvi -r' 1-UI J pd e t'r.11 l!Mnt1
R<"1'ch e Coron;irl.-J ,vrar • 1t~:A1.r.:s·rArf; /t'pl. 112~: 3 BR. 211 h11 • • C•ll t f!I no ~
l.As.::i1n11. • & D;in.._ Pnrnt. 962-4471 :'Yl&-11101 ~uprr !"if'IU)(<", 1•1,..,., S''.()11 1 117~1174() • T.V. J, ma 1f'f ••rv. a v4.tl.
Our nPnl11l Serv ice l!i FP.EE k '1 Coron• d•I M•r • Hir·B·QIJ"
I \. ' 3 RR 2 BA, ,.\f'rt hll!n R/O, Mo. Ar,, ir i'i i 4 . 13 3 J ...... e Phorlf! lf'rvir•
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fii-:l-40.''! or .J'IJ.JiMll 101 , rlhJ 11:a r. lrf11rr>-'.· \'ac11 nr. llARROrt V1r ,1 Jlomt 2 Rr. man, urll'J p;11 1rl , rlo11e In. ~ri. Sl!lc'I nio. /lo'n ,,,. ISO
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R.Pnl 11 ! Slll.l or 0ri11on to 962-4-lil ."14'r 1110.1 Jl&rti"n"r /,, pool m'1Tl-
hu). :I ~"'rfr'1('1"1. 2 h111h . Oou. --- --h<-r,hip (,.\.\-4'.l-111 • STUNNTNr. 1-21 Br'• 2 *" r.Q-4-Ut * • hlP i;:.1r11i:r lrnr·rd )iifrl . "Rr, 2 RA , fl'Of'frl }rrf. rrpt~. I · -·"°o;;;;=.-~-=% · ''P' Imm V , J>1·.1.1 .·x1. '·· Rt . l•in. 2-n-: Ar f'ur11 " Unf. Llk,. """' • • AT"TRACTfVF: I !U\. """' 'h:i;.: ··iiry,..1.:. rr .. ~hly . '' · • r :in · ~ .. p:i inl,.!! C~I! B rnk ,. r S21i/mo VI,, "1 \Jo or $~7'.i 1WJ7 r<'lrT (1l.111r l"' r1 $14-0 L:p. &1555.W. $1.0 wllh f)r·,.11 11 y1r w, SJ:l.1/mn. ln·
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Corona def M•r _A1<r nt. _ R ~:Aci i-h'lm,. r~i,.,.~,.. '1p-A1tr;ir· !urn 5turli ot: $1 1~. J r"h. Pool Sl."11. 201 JOlh St ..
llAJ.}" hlk fn,m (d.\1 Reh. 1"\\";<;l!Sf, \\'h r /rlry, !inn tfl huy. ;'!BR. 2 BA. R ~~ S11l. A<lull•, M ~!•. ~:>li-.1n7 5~12112/~"Al:wi.
lmm11 r. 2 Br1rm ' 2 bf:llh I.· I fl'FflRlrns.::. rlrp/rrp1, r_...,1. M l''ly rll'Nlrtll""rl. 100· fMm ~hl f.lrlrn, ~ll'r. Apl, ti. Lagune '••ch
R"U"'-1 h""· Cflupl"' nnly. ~'l rl!1h11<". 1111 Ba . wrr pci .. l Br , l)f"l'AO. $.1:l5. mn. 646 2.1.111. 1-:ASTSrof-;, """''Y rf,.eor -~~-S.177:1 mn, AvRJJ. rn irl ~1~•-'. 2 Br, Slifl, S.lli-1 405, Si1nt• Ana lrr" Iv rm. 2 BP., kJI . .&, ha . S"T'U OJ() Apt, ti 1 v Id t d
:-,111rrh . .11:\6.911.'l.1. r!11.y• or .i.17 .1Jil-4. Siov" /I rrfr1a: -ifllr . i\r11ll1•, h«fronm. 1111 l'i•r1rll", nct""•n fii~Rl711 ,.,..... 1 1 r.n. 2 BA. f~m rm, hll-1ni;. ~ BR 0 / R 2 BA BL TNS , nn J"l"lll, $145. Ref•. Mr1. VI ""''· w•lk ,,, hf>•rl\ •IY!
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1 1 6~5"-'.l6~R · 1r~nrik~rn. hnr·k HiJlhf Ir •MP r . 1702 no Pf'I •, M&-JM'J. I BR. ad11ll• nnly, clOP 11'.l
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11rlr , tncd yrd, k1d11 ~lll. I 1t hool1 .l •hop"i: Orp. Ir '1 RR. l btlh, 1mm.11r\il11t<", W>-:l.l2'.t nrl"lln vi"""· CIOll! to beuh.
I Sll'i rer·•. J22.l. 64.H~7~ .. v .. R lM~ 11r "x tru. 1 bllM'k nrr \'fl""T.· 1 8 T .,_ 17, Call 4!M-1079. · :\.f11 ln & :-.1Ac·Arttr\Jr. J.\.Yl mo · •.c. r , ra1 ... nt, I..
ALA Rento1l1 e '45-3900 TRl·l"v"! '"=<~r. hom1·. ~ FJT~. lr;11v. 5.~7-22\?. $9\ Maturt Miulll. l.ll E. N•wport a.ach
•• BON •"ZA' ! 8 2 B 2 RA , f;im rm., 1::11 rdenrr 16th St. 642-128.t ! v••v 1 ·~· 1 1 "'~ • • r . a . Condominiums -· "" rs ,,.JTIT\ 1, b£k te
1·p1, tnrrt )Trt, e~I 1u . Pnvnl• party. $3."AJ n'l<l Unfurn. 320 •Sllll DELUXr. l Ar .. Jl"'(ll, ""• ,.h , N t "' rr pti , kirl~. S!RS.
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MESA VI LLAGE Apls.
1046 El Ca m ino D r. •A 1
546-7331
ON BEACH' r;oom lll jJJ'\l. h 0 ITI ••. "Primo'', :\lt>W~ y<i'df' n~l','I ,' 'Mlr\('I, l'P!tlOdt>I, l 1n1~.
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• Sl 18 J'rl\'. palJO, b1lhan1 ~ II. Lols ot parlul'\¥. $31.(1 MC1abl1'. l'UJO)" c)u..lt111•n k I ~'81'\!~ 1· ~1' 1 JJJ f1'I ~ BR lJnrurn Fr. S730fmo. rm. h"<il•d jK.ool •,/ J.l\'\IJ.l *BRAND NEW* 1110. rlf'tx, \\'!IJIJJg 10 i.t'f'\'f! R! -:-. . · · · Kll 111' rPpaJrs. u • I 1 l d J .:-'\lAll., Tnbh) k1t1l·n. II hit> hu\;: • ,.,111,.•ntr'v • ~inung •
1-'urniture Av1u..lable iu~,. c~i·t .. , P('jl fll r 'ar· ALSO W.~y.s:llf'r, or P "_r,.on?J :.r<unarli, bl('f\ ,\: gl'"Y 1,.-.finr. l.:1lj -~n-!>.·.;ri. C:u;x-~:s dr:ipe, .. dl~h-x:i~l'.rt" ' fi('/111:!. hJ:..h laur!J.l'ap1n1• 2 l ~Mlll 11!11~·1·-STa prr roo. h··11~v11ll·r ''r "'l'/11 >1tl" pU••I !<.t1'1['('(l hal'k. \'1t·. S-.nl1l --. ---•.
hP:t 111d pca'.ll.~auna.s-tenrus ) ;\dul!.~ :>:r. Airport Ju.•t \I . LA COSTA APTS. ••cu THOMAS zr1 ~ro> llrn,.. !{••!. ll\'11!1 Ar111 /\~'ili-nn 01. Jt1·11-ai"tl /-ALI. hpl':.. ol lll.rJ)l'ntry by
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HUNTINGTON I llr $HilJ l 'nr. $Ji'i fcu·r. e H111l1 .01> e ~\\l1111n1ni:: . f'<illJo.t ll\\'Y 54!1.;..:1~ Box l-aJ, Cosln :\le-!».1, '12(i2ti vir1n1ty. RC'11·ar•I. Cr(•an1 o·nl !·----·-------J'f'll.l • i..'.l11a1 e u ~r B Q"CS f',r·11·r.·r1 Rrar-11 !'.v". c.<<. '"~.', " II -f'1·t~. drp~. })lln~. ~nrb (/1 ~pl . " · · .. ,.... -.,...,.....,.. ---ur nlluf'. :111.111/ln l1r. t.J,i:S. CO\l'HETE 11 <1rk. ~·, ,. ,. PACIFIC I • 1 !'I l • A k • C.:irac,. -M E-D ICAL/DENTAL N<Yr!Cl-.~ To "11 111~ fH1\<'· hlu'· t'\Jl!a1 :0.~7--0if)j (>r l•l<a.<. ''''''''" & .... ,, All I
. ' . 1'-' llC't'O II\ "\''· :.. ,\1,1. 1']'11.IT!f'.',;;· !'1\l!J h h I I. ~,.. 7ll ~A,AV>· {I P, Ull d I c.~ ... " -nf'"<llO\·al1on -7.t"'Dov••I-, flC'lllJ:' AC" 1115 ·1 Ji.;l)..SiS(;. <hliJ"'t'fo'11'1l'l il\'t"l'V, bf.au!. V\-r. · -~ '" '" _: •• lllr lS<YlU_n · -~ """~" ,\J)L'l.T:-:. SO Pl-:N . .,, ' '~ bartem.\1•,..., in ti~ !\'H 1.1'1"1: ---"'
B RAND NEW 2 8 ~ ~71 II .Al6·14S7 I i~~.1 \\. (Jf'l-~A.\'r !t'l;-..1· 1 354 Avocado St ., C .M . J::'.'ll ;;q !!. oH1r" a valL Im-J?!ea.<;f' 1urn u1 Your k"YS tn APHICO'r l'X'karo.. !{·111:V»'. 1011 ;i1 OJ t·<'i•_:_!Jflf'". lj.-1)..~,
FROM $1 55 Of".' (IPf'H 10 ·~rn.(j pn1 IJ;i1ly 1 P.f:. ~l :ll/1nf). ""llrly. 642·9708 111cd OC<..'Uf/lll)I')', •·ui1tom iny apt by ·F.i"b, ti """1 ~p~)' ,!°"' ~-iriruly lt~ri-'-1.~-· CONC11ET~: \\'ORI\. Fa11· ~-\',.ar Jo.bQps, l'rH')(i~o·d ~111 .• \IJl.l.f1\'f l\A/,'f'J.,fiS (l l •
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ON TEN ACRES Si 54'< 0.{Q).1, fi46-7.l(l'l & rn"1" in ;sl!n"·· <'htldn n .tr y1.,,1·h· 6i~~i..:1 P A LM MESA APTS . DESK SPACE--Attf'll11n11 L11U1· l.c·ain1f'rs n1alf', "Chnrlw". 1!•'\\Hril. !'>rnall, i'f':li-0n:1blt'. F r ",.
3 Bd * 2 B h -----,\{l ,\l "'l"k . ...-'!() :\\\'l"I, or'.J J \'lf'(1'l\\fl Vnll.-v It\ 1 ln l I { ' 1· k < ~1< I ··2BR.F11.rn •Unturn. rm at f,l)Jallrv·1~1v•·l(·(l11\r.,'\ .. 11Jy {Hl~.Yf'll,,-_,,:'lfl\f'r·r<'rt'i'-'. _,, '"' AVAILABLE Do \OU nC'f'tl a 6j)(ln~r~? .. );:l,(l\S. t :,..111n. I :-;111 !1r'..)\~,,,,J. • · I ,,. "' ~ r'LTBN. flit Ur\Vl1R.\". C 11 · . n-\l •r 9-l&ll c:a.11 rollf'f'f :!134igl-3J6:i or . . Fireplacts / µriv, pa•los. L1\'1i;w..room with catliedral ,.,.,f,·i'. Sf'rt Air Aµt -: 1'11h•1, ,: .. r. :! hlk:<> lr'i•f'h. U 1 1 1938 H arbor Blvd. a :\Ii · '""'· <'fl'; .,. ,l-. e ve 4~-,e. l. I J'AT!U~. 11· ... !ks, drive, tnslal!
Pools Tennis Qintnl'I Bkf81. celling & frplc. Separate 1 hlk~ rir /ld:iin:< 1•1Jf ll<"fl•'h) Arlul~ .... $1!;0, 1;1~~1 1:1.-.. 11 >o, 1•'\,lhly lrut.!'"' apls, hur:r Cos ta M esa DO DI E. J Ulvf' YQll , Plca.~e • llf·11• ln.11·ns, $<111', hrealc ,
o-" Cd'! ou ~II _,, Apl 6 l'lt •,•,e, ·.•1•·, J"~1I, J.i1'u111, <'lt><.·t bh11 1<:, ''ROll'N II I I 900 .x:a ..... ne, " .,...,.,.., laundry aN:a. r.:nrl patio. J.,;; ''1 · " ·~ -L('f'-·>t' -.,-,,--, ,,-'''"''•'• ('ontacf :-,, it·. S.iun<if'l'"'lll COlll" back !fl nH'. o poor f' 1-1'•"arin~ g() r l't'lllO\ll' .. HS--1\6611 !or PS-I. C H I :~~&-i070 ' .. • i;1·' -a ' > ns, .~h,1;.: 'l"J)I ", ilr'P~. " .,. I d l d 1) C ) [ . l:\111.rArthtir nr M.!11 """ S1\·1 mming pool & children'~ __ -•l1•pL d<:h1••~lrr, ~a r. lndry »!••. ,\dult~. "' P"ls. 642-0212 !Jal. ~ U .{ e Cf! a r , i·ir a 1 r.mia --CEMENT WO.RK
l d "~ * FRESH AIR I flomt>,!:. ,\n.• •, L 11 d", '. p ay~lln . ., . ' h1o11k up I lolk. O("i";!O. •21.\1 SJ:'\t:LE~ ...... .fo'mn1 ~1 :1.·1 Dt-A'iK ~pa.Cf' a \'<illa ble s:iO Social Club' SJS 83 -. . v~" !-:!'-\ 1a~ •. f)lf'.26
NEW !!ARBOR r.Rl!:~S II" lk -Ilk "" I' 17-:i:t,7. { BFDH\J Fr 111 $1111 ~->K!7. -------• ~Btlnn.,:'.halh.rlupl,.x.(':ir· :,_16.435J ',' ,' l ~In i:.lar1 _ _ , : •••••• _.., _ tno. \\'ill provide f1.1m ilure 0 ---·---\\'J~'I'ER f:at,.~· Lon<'l'f'!f'
I d I . •d bll ·l· .. r · ' ' I -----.Lg,-. " Ill. Ap!, tlf'lli,I' df'C 't'-,r I s.nta Ana 2 J,J.,DH'\I ........ )"11 1 'Sl!.11 al $:1 !llO. An~ .... ·f'ring :o:ervia' FOTO DATE L ST BJa,·k Iii'>'~!( [la!\" I' l I ~ c 1r1pi .. ~ p 11 I 1\/1\'hl!P S""I flll , !~sl.: .0.-.1-..: 1>a 1•~~ • 1 1 \'"I . • ,.._' ·, ' -o-= •BEAtn'Jl-'l!J. (;l{OU'-'DS• Ill;J :11!>1(•ht·d gtu', frpl.' r" 'Y111i'ro· r11.:h1. tilt') '11, l!!ldf'I'• ;\\'nilable . 222 }'Ort'~! Ave, ,_,,,., , .. ,,, •"'n'p,•ntOI> /, .. ,,, ·-,. ' patio v1vrr !'f i;tftt•agf' 1 J I 1 1 .. 1 :-,1 f .~· ... ... ·" " R "w ar it '.!l':r:.'12-HHJ, 1 i;1r!r11 :dk~ 11<011. iil.'-.>1 ...
On·h;1I. S3tJ l'f'I' rn~nlli'. , SPA\'1~·1.1 JJF:C.OI! ''.:'.:. J:1l~n:o;, 1'-\ccpr refr1u. FAMILIES ~,r,,..rr , ,~, ', ,..~;\ 11· -, Ln1.•11 na Beach. '1!}1-9-i66 100'1: ~r pllo ln re!en o)~ !ha!
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LUXURIOUS f"rench R<'gen-
cy, 3 bcdroo1n, 2 ~~ bath.
F irl"p!a cl', D ining Room.
laundry. $400. 1\g\, 67'":>-4930.
Adult~ only.
OCEA.~ vi('W, elegant 3
bedroom, 2 bath.~. firepla<'I'!,
dining room. Adults. t'lnly.
$500 f)('r mo. Agt. 6T>-4930.
CLOSE 10 beach, lrg. 2 B r., 2
Ra. f'fl{'ll b<>ams, !rplc,
hl10'S, pr1v. porch, pr iv. g-d r,
330-A M11rgum le. 673--0937. * GREAT V!E\V-2 Br, frrl.
b\tn.o;, i;un1!ecks. pool. S200
up. 641-fi344. 6T.''l-5204 .
J,iundry. 1 HR Sl·lll. 2 RR NR ocranfrn11t, bch, ocrnn P=: m I Dana Point Neal' post offlf'f' . Snark 24 hr. rf'c:onlf'd messag,. I nlo's old. J\OSl\'I' lo "llilbo". FATII EB &·.sons ... ·ork1nr (-()Jl-
Sl60-Sl65-fl7:.. viC'll". :o;1111<1rrk, Jl('11r r cl!x. 2 "3 • 1 Shop. P rl\', park , a ir roncl. 714/835-2'.l20, 213/426-1122 \'ic: 16th anrl Orllllgf', cr.r. tt·art(lr t ram. Desi<•n, C'Rl'·
Hacif'rl<la clC' :\lf'~11. Apt.~ I SINGLE STORY 12 13R .. 112 B1\, tieair d pool, RC'alonomi-< "k-. 6=6._, l 'tra.sC'! 6i'.l·OI ~. "'
160 \\. 11. 1 0_ \l .. 1 Br. h Ins, <'pis, drp~. ln1!r,,, 1 11 1 bo 1 , , u • '"" i"" T I 540 I --11" 11-•a11·ng plun1• • 1 Jo.on, ,-.._·e. · ~r .. ,o, s on1•"' 1ro\\' r.1111 a rave C,\T , fem, bf•,•k, long bii-. I•>· ,~" ·'· """ · ,,.. gar, nr shop:i. & pi,..r. S l~ii-Sduth Sea Atmospher e o<l ~·-Li\HC '-' I 11 · -~ 111". 11·ir 111•· t-1,.., ALTERA·
Pa•l·.-Li'ke Surroundi'ng hnrtirir .i OC'f'an .. , .. r tn •c.. ;ur-<:cinr. o i c e . 1 .1 " , • ~1fi.'), /I.dulls, baby ok. 2 BDH~l-2 BATH .iiiprf'i'\:11<' nt '.2 l'.:1\ Santa l)p;--"fl sha;.: rrts, lovC'ly \VANTF:D! :E:.'Cp. l>f'rson !fl n1 , gold f'yes, name Ger-j Tif)NS a sf)('rialty. 24 ,.~. ~~r3 -8~?E~'(;:.;/ ~16-21.'\l. $17.">l nl(l. Clara /!.\'!',or ph .1~i.1-30:l!l. tlrap<>s. $1:1.i. 1non!h. A~I. sail tQ r-.rntznlan • 2/IOl i2 ~~~'.';,'.r~i~91.'~!\~~r .. ~-t .. 1g. I in ht1:i;inrs:o:. L ie & bonrlcd.
I> . I 2 \\'I-:F:KS fRE:F: nE'.'IT Ca11){'I.~ and Dr:1iws ij l.}-'.~320. ('all i\fr, Rci r~hard. !'H"-2431. ~.'J.>i-:-:;, __ ;c, ~~-~---·I "' pauos * Jrd Pool.~ .11• Cn~1 ·111noc1! Laguna Bea••, LO'" 11 1 --c Ne•v 1 BR'S. \\'aJk to Bcnrh. ' '" ,.,, -CORONA-DE. L MA -' v air ma e l·a r. \\'h1ti' 1'00\I A1l11111011< }'st1111•I•• l\r s llnp'g * Adull.o; only p,,·,·~1~ P•. ,,....._ --------------~.............-. R • · ·-, •· ...... f• I · h"cl' •\'"$!"-" "·-" ,,. CE N VIEW 11·i 1h ti!?er patclW:>. ll:l~ rd. 1 I l 1 I I ., M rt• • A rp r "· dJ Yl'-... ,.,.. ""· 1~ T"D roo O A "'--!•"·~ hu 11· p · 1 (gJ --r aos •· iiyou , s ng e or • a 1n1que pts. ' 1c_.,\ r. ' I. Lit: ....... ll, 0 ice.<:;. Tl\'I\ "I I Q collaJ', ~10. r.,. ll' a rd . 539·l66J or 5.1.-2Jll:I. ! C,irpori & Slorac:i· in !hr ('t'nh·r nf 1111111: ~i<I-balh, Cp!s/<lrp.o;, 67H 7:>7. l ost and found ,,rory . l_.T. ('onsttuction, 'rol~-r; ;;1n~~3/l.na A\'"t,;1f~~2 2 & 3 BH. Sl•IO up. Pool. i\·r. School." I ing J.?l<i~ 10 Ir~ dt':k, :i Rr e OJ."FIC''F'O.,C· ""·"-"'-· ll ________ J :~84~7~·~993~1~· ~~~~~~=. _s_1·_,-~1t.
Cht!drPns bonu.o;, l\lo ra K.it :-\r, ,<.:,-,_ C••,1~1 p+~1.1 I ar 1 J)('IV!\• v:11nh a (_ p!idrps ''"" ' 600 I (' 'I •••••••••••• ,] A c ~ T au I A rtt'--Repair, N
15
e
1
wEa .. d
2
u
1
1
1
t
1
,garde
64
n ~Af!E Apts, lRRRJ Mora 1\al Ln, i,z HIDDEN VILLAGE All t·I~ r ~2r.u ....,,,1
•• c~~-6\&-i~~a a es.1. Found (fru a.ds) 550 r · ]~ rC'n1od .. ,,11t!11. ~'() y~ f'XP.
""'vvvu b!k E . of BC'nch. 962-3991. ~~,on ~u1h ~.1 11a NU.VIEW RENTALS !iisii-..i!iiiiiiii""'iiii~·ii-iiii·jj·~~~ I 1.1,··il . ?II} \\'ay co. 6-12--470.1.
W .Iba 21 A I I < A e ;•01-i-G;:: .. w:-:o r.r ·1f~l<~2·1R 11':-.lti' Or" ur s!orr, niod. , , _ _ e Y par mens e Cllf.;Z ORO APTS, • · n.nra na ·"'" ·' ·' hlcl;.:. -1 :-1 :\ri\p1rt Bi·d, N.B. t-~D. Dog. Part Shf'phr rdf All<\Hu·ins + Rf'n1ocl1·l1ng
2 BR, 1!4 BA $1.11(). 8~ Arlant;i. J-2-:1 Br's, Pool. :: Jlcatt>d Poo\9 Newport Beach 0 !)<'n. SSj nio. fi.IR-:i300. Airedale. _J\lalf'-P.!11rk/\\"hl/ A I' 1;<'n1·i<·k & Son, L1r.
3 BR. 2 BA SZ-J5. P r iva l e <:lO!SPd t:ar. Larg ... Clubhou.~ CIC'. BBQ ..............-·-------..-..---Rroll·n l\'1!h bl:ick flea <'fll· PP l!lnce Repair ti:µJJ.11 • ~9-217t>
(,\LSO AVAIL. t-UTI N.i Wn~her/Dryrr. .",::&-OJ::S. Child care C<"nt('r VISTA DEL MESA 3345 Newport Blvd. NB la1". Approx. J--1 m os. old. & Parts
;\[\\' 2 llf{ Co ndo !;rudio. BEACHWOOD APTS. Great ne\V 1 2 & :i Bdrms I Apartments AC'J.Y1,<:~."('i1y Hall. u;;>--1601 \'11'. \\'t!<;On & J>\acf'nf ia . .,,,.... _________ ; o_r_iv_•_w_a_v_• _____ _
2 BR., h11ns. \Valk 11'1 hC'11ch.
$200. OranRt' Coos! Renl I
Esta1<'. Call: &-1·1---18-18.
N II f ro'n 11'9 I & :'OR. 1-'ur n. ,t; U11f. fl1~h-L \l'.GI'. I ,-nrr,·--. ,,,., c.r-.r. 673-!J.l•IO. Ol<oou ' A I I\ I C'11 r arbor & Sa11 D1<>go Brand nf'1v 1-2-3 Ur. \Valk ., "'-''" ··-------. · 0 PP 1nrh"'f' r pa11· J!C'!'l'i1! and .'\.."\\'e .\lon<'y ?
Fry. Cpts, drp~. $1 R5 tllO. lo hrnrh. Cp!/drps. J-Jl!n~. SOUTH COAST I 'l'.1~her -SHJ\'r & R<'f i·ii:: · f'ntr. Ne11·!y d1w r. $6:> n1Q. FOUNOT--:-21-r·ric1uHy, :ih;'lg· \\ashf'r, Dryf'r, Di:o;h11·a.-:hf'r. Averni::r ~29-$:-.0. Gua r .
VILLAS Sl1a.:: ,".·r.1.·,_·.i •• rg-Rr ",.'."'11IC'r. r 18 -1'..l!)() N p GUARANTI~F.D No TJ('!S or r hi Id r f' n. frpl. 125 161h St. iW7-.\o/.17. l I ,,...; I .;; S -~ -v• • • • ~-gy flllll•• cockapoo. Long ~ · · · * ~>l(o-66fl.I I e 5-15-.J3-17 e
S.l&-60fi8. BEACHBLUFF-APTS~ llOl r.r~~~~~r Blvd. I lrvi~~: & A'.\~~~. D·;ive Business Rental '4S tail, /Jlark roll11.r. Vic:ni!y Babysitting 1' Electrical MODE~N I ,.,_, r.. .rrv-~~·.' I * 54' '855 * 1\rlan1.~ & nus.J1ar<l, 11.B. ---------) '"" ournl. lip!. ._,,r.~. Spac 2 Br. 2 Ba. p...,1 Palio. ~ FOf! Rf'lll,' n.,,,,,_ Olli·-·., ~•~'I 'lrP§ dsh h b l l . D/\V ~1 I s 10 ·0•1 San J a C t o '-"" .... ,,_, ""'""'~"". f'XI' m 1•-Id l k i F.J.I-:CTR ICJ\I~ P.e~1den11al. ·· "'s r . -i n:<>, · 0~-:. El i~ '"'"'""'· ~ u n apis ran O AKWOOD GARDEN-Jn<lustr1al arr.i. Ne11.· hldg.1..:=..:::c:,_, ______ " · o ..... r '1·ou 1 <' 10 .
g11r11,i::f'. l child ok. /\)1 ulil NE\V 1 br :ipl ii /dshi\shr . ] PAIR of <'h1\d'5 pre!<Crtp1 ion <:are fOI' girl~ aj!;~.~ 3.;,, l_.ov. l'On1m'!. indu~trial. Al~. rP· -•. •i51J/mo. JOI Ai·oc•dn, UNf' Capisrr. Con<ln for rf'nl , Apartments rw. San Dif'go F'l'l'Y & 1 11 · 1-·"•Lin" 1 .... ,-... • 1·-·1al
Costa Mesa
YOU NAME IT
we're nrnr it! 1''or rom·r n-
IC'n('f' In !he rhings !11111
count, ('()JYlparf' our 10l"111ion
nf'ar the park. l ihr1-1ry. \\'l-
m en':o: r luh, hoy'~ 1·\11h. girl's
club a nd shopping'
,~ ' , I g&.SSt'S, j;O( '1'!N" rim.<:. ing and ""rson,al 1111r11 1 ~n. "'"-'" "' .-,.... '·'""' "~ ·
9 hlk n bc,11"h. 'l Rrl n11., root. \\'a.~h/dry. 1 1 l :C'~-orr Li1 in"' 1or <~ro11·11 ValJf'.v P ll. r k 1v 11. y. ·~ '" Jill n B n 11 f 'd Ap! . CM. ~lfH>9R·1. fi7Ul 1 .., Found COC'().1.'s P.est.luran!, l!ot rnf'als, fl'nC'f'd var<\ , I ns. ii:= or s1 a . ~u: .~--~ · -1 ll.l\O/rno. 675--216:?. 1\1h11!s Onl~·l IC l-1400. 1711 s c :O.I • D 1 ~ · · .t· in.~. F'i·tt "~r. Vair pr1r es. J RH , rlu/J!C'.X. Shag rp!:o;, 2 B l3() I 'l"l~"'I !Jf' \("I I --------1 • I., ·· · in P'Ct'lYl lf'I'. ( .OOC[ hotllt> 311<1 far111ly ('11-""'-02! I. R, ~ . <'Jl\S, < i11s, :;tnvr . W e stcliff · " v " ·' 1-·011 H"nt: ! lf'luxr v!lirc.-:. 6-12-4fl:'.·I, ..... .., <lrp!->, hl1ns, ,::-ar. Aclult~. 16 f ! · \'!l'Onm('n\ • \\'Cl"k lifl)':<i: onl~· -.·--:----, -------
''I
. ~JI ~ A Nn Pf'!.-;, FC'n('crl. C.'hdd. OK. 1 , ar l'lnnr J nd11~1r1;i[ ri rf'<!. Nr"· bid!-; i"riu· -,0--1,-1.-:,.--1--,-J-::-;('f'/,lcnl .. 1., .. II•! 00 ,, kli 1 ~-!. ~. CTT!J( IA \. !.1·f'nsM, '.i. ~' vri111J:f' I'"· S.17-7()1;.l I Slfij · 2 BR. ept ~/drf•<:, hlln.:. I tJ J,',.n;~·'lfJ or G.f'.::!-.~l'ill -{)' 1• " · -.1r 1na I' ',.1 " '"' --~l~l-2TI1 . -~---------I llf'll.01 ,•,-.jJ. ilf';llf'•! ront. ,; "0\'{·', 1\l.L'. "-',. ,,. r 0' I llr. :-...11; l('i;!O fl\') •\' Vi·· l111nt1n~ton llarbor ~~Oil.~: . . holr\olt'rl. :'m."tl! 1rih«, 1n1t1n1.
* 3 be(lroon1,;, 2 b<llh!<.
+ Pi<"turr -hook ki!1·h('n * Pool, pulling grr1•:1
Irvin& ,,, ,. ,,_ Cnll\'n \ alff') P ii r k "' ,, ~ . 5146-042$ & 1'f'pa1r.o. :~1~:.20:; ~ BR. 0 -pts & drapes. Choice 1 1!'11<'~ a dult:.;:, 110 111' I .'i • T1111'C'J'S, from S::!'..Q. Ba~ ~31-1 100. .c.,_.c____ 81\RYSlTTJ ~(; Olli' hOnl!'.
IOI'. in :'11f'M V•'l'de. Tmn1ed.
1
612--a11. frnnt ., Br ., p .· l0t'k~ ------------~'OUN!) Fri, f'rf'S<"t ip1ion ::t.00 SCI f t, ho! h111C"h, :1.ln't Fencing
., , • -. " • ;a., ' .• · · 'rol,\i\;U FACTliHlN(;, Salt':o;, I 1 1 ·1 -----------1 OCl'll fltinry. $\:ii Pf't' mo. PARK WEST Apts., .. 1.1 \\. CollSt II...,~ . offirC' spa<"r. (;OO<I l .nguna g ~SSPs on oppl'O<l r;,1 lo Lido P ay ar1. Certifin:J !cacher. G-IAIN hnk, ii·ood. ,.re. f'ttf'
And mfln-a1
962-flS!J L APARTMENTS Furn. or Unfurn. 370 71 1 /f~l2-220!. 1 . 1· SlOO !J!Vl hrrrlgf'. J n ca.o;(' 67;:i-7364. Nf'.-:1 to So. Cs!. f'laza. , _,.._ oca 1on. , 10 . ,,,,, m o. !i,")i-i~. est. h<". C'()ntrn('tor, ....,.........,
The Vend o m •
1845 Anahl'1m
I.GI·:. 2 P.H \1'/p:1!10, 11u1et.
C r p I /drps, !'IO\'f'/N>fr1~.
G11ra~f'. Adults, no pet~.
&lf1-27G.'I.
1 Bdrm. From S160 Balboa I 4!.H--4GJ.::. FOUND 'r.1alt' husky, vicn1ily __ _ Ff'nr,. Co., >192-1370.
2 Bdr m ., 2 Ba. Peninsu a
1
lith a nd main, Santa Ana. O~ PENINSULA : Dc>(X'n. · F 'b 1
2 block! olf NE'"''JlOl'f Blvtl.
Call: fi42.Zl('M, !\!Tl(. Phil\ip:o1. 1
1,,.5) CO:'llilll-:RClAL r<"nta l nC'11r c 11 •-h 1 1 erg ass From $195 I a """"'N'n 10 and 5. mot er ha,; lrg hou~e on fltnt~I' t hr C:inflt,1)' in :'\.R. hnmetl-· 2 b I -----------·I ::oi."1 Parki·lr•i• Loult' • * 2 BR. apt 11/garni;:f'. , _______ _, i.nr f'"'lS.'ir.~sion. 67~ ... 17~7 tu .149-10:\ r 1. Salt' pla;.· arrn. F /time ('()'.\IP. tnc>bilr f:t <'ili lif'l; for
Irvinr IJu~t orf \·C'ar rounr! 1'l'ntal in Balboa :'i l·l-.~l '.!l. ~-ouxn 1\h1tE" p o of!!,,, Prf'f'tl. Rc11.~. 673-2R61. hcm1f'f1ndu~1 ry, !111' 1nanu.,
DELUXE
APARTMENTS
* * IlEAUTIFUI. I !., 2 Bit
Con1c m porary r.nrclrn Apl~.
P ulios. !rplc, pool. $l.i0-3 16j,
0 111 .J.ffi-516:1.
s~n DiC'go r\1'Y at ·Cuh·er P.d f j nr Blly. ,cq.11-1R.~7. ! ---------femalf'. Vit. Orani:t> Avr L!C'lJ D<iy C~·~~ 7-an1 .. -•. JO b<iat /nuro t'f'p11ir . /\I'\\' pro.
I Room• 400 DF:LUXJ·: ~ORT·:. HiOO !;lj. '--1' I .• (' II ,, " I I I ,.-,,-, Costa Mesa ,,,_.1\1·c,.n :•l 1 k ::.1th. ''"ta pni. 01 ~a.l s. Xlnt c.1rr. "11 • 1 <'VI' op1n .. ,,,, · .11.
,\ir Cond • ~~rpk"s . :~ Sw1n1-
m in1< Pool.~ • Jlf'alth Spa •
Tcnn111 Cr!.~ • Game & Bil·
liard Roo m.
I fl , on hu<1· E 17th S1. C.\f.
Laguna B•<'iCh · RDO\IS • I I \l'k /k 1 A,..! f·\,. 6,1,.-''"·l''ll \lt"s1t. ~.m-!J.10:1 II 11 r h o r I B akr r 11 rl'a. I Furnitur• · • .1 • llp 11 I • .., • ' v , l't-• -~ 1 -1 • I "'fl I
SJ() \\'k up Aptli. t31G lndustriaf Rental 450 LOVABLf:. n1erl lll.ir, 11h11") ,)ti-.l,;. --· '-----------
l RF:DROO:'lt
F'ROl\I S15:l
MEDITERRANEAN
VILLAGE
2400 l1;1rhor Rlvd., C.:\I.
(11.f'.I 5.17-ROXI
RL"'\'TAI~ OF'F'TCE
OPJ.:N JO Al\1 TO 6 P:'lf
BAY MEADOW APTS.
DLX 1 BR. ga r .. qu iet areft ,. __________ _
!or a1llil1s o nly. No )lf'!s.
$135. J:iO E. 2I~t. 64&-fi016.
* 2 RR. Pool. Adults.
Sl•IO /mn.
J25 f;. l 71h Plarr, 1 .r-.r.
$13.), 2 13R, NP111 r rp!s & d1·p:<>.
Jn1ma,ula f(', ,\cll!s, no pr!s,
:\1C'AA VC'rdr al"f'a. S>H>--.1\Rf,6.
LRI~ 2 br, <'rprs, Orp~. hllns
1-2 ch.ilrll'f'n ok, Nr SC'h!s &
shnp'I!, $1 ·1:-i, 962-1 .-~l.'1, -----• ~ \1 ~:r·:Ks ~,Ht-:~:! *
FOR lea~. -<I hr. fan1 rm, 2
ha. cpl . <:lrp~. r!'frig/ft'f'f'7.f'r,
l,i:;f' patio. T .O.\\'. EX(.."Cl
ronrl. $.'l2fl. S,10-J057.
1 /,-2 DR on quiet ~trf'f't.
Sl6.'l, t!ld. in('I. A'-aih1ble
F rb. i "1.11 ;.ft 7 p.m.
21J :fi21-766,'1 or 9'-14-5717.
Ci!AR!\11 NG l BR, ':i hlk
l:rom lic11ch. \l'l'ltXI lhrunut,
p1'1 p.1110, $1/i.'i nio. 1nrl.
L<trl. 4~1-17•11 or 49-1-71.'t!l.
FOR Leasr: 2 BR, 2 B;i ,
hhn:o;, hf'arh-fronl a p I.
l'\f'11·/)'lr! BJ\·f/, (.'.II .o;haAA'Y d~. \'IC 20th !.:. Cl!!!.[) l:aft-Ill\" hon1r . v .. ·,SPf:CtAL! Avi::. chall' or
5..J&-97:).-;, Edinger-Santa Ana \VallRC'f', Cm:ta ;\l rs a . 'VU~n lf. v 1 r 1 o r 1 a . rocker ~t rippetl -SJ. Gluini;,
642--~ rron1 S14J. D1~h.,.,·11sher, shag r URN . 1w111 1n Cosla ;..i. llri. Ml 1'([. It . unit, Jrg. front i P r "~ e h o o I a1mo~twr... bra ~ pohshal. !>45-0866.
t"llrpeti ng-, \1·alk-1n rloscts. n ice .(. iiuiel homf'. For ~If1N', ~f'(l.r Nr11port f"I'\\')'. SJ\1AL1. blk shn.g~y mate ~l.1\-7947. /Gardening
ForC'C'd a ir l1<"nl, t'!Xlra large iYol'kin~ tnan. ~2-ln.1. 1n So. S.-inra /\na. $2"J(l. per dng. no 10 , ~ml th11.in C'o t-Carpet Service
J"()()ms. Bea uliful ~ll ml' room, ~==-'--------n1n. lf'n.-:r or mo. lo n10. lll r. !'. ('oa.~1 f'la1n .irc;i. '-----------
h,.a!C'd pool BRQ'.o;, t"nclo.~-ROO:\f. Pl'IVlll<' f'll lraocc-& \fals.,.·nrlh Hi"al E~!nte C.r-.t 67:r-071 2 or 673-34i2. .-J·:XP. lla.,.,·a iia11 (;ardener
Pd ga r.lg'('s,· riuif'r i;urroun<I· !~1h. Crn'llna rif'l fl1 ru·. Lady R'\~4210 BLACK pcl rabb1-1-,-.-1,-.hi!e ,J
0
0 HN'S Ca1-,>el & Uphol:<otC'r)' Complf'tc g:i.t'fl ('ninio: st-rvict'
!n"':o; ,t cl-.c 1,, <hnpplog. onl~'. $1i0. 673--7-tro, jiiiiiiiiiiOiiii"-"''"'"'iiiiiiiii;I eaTlE'rS, 1-~.'(!ra Dr1-Shnn1-J\amalanl, 6-16-1676. .. "~ front lf'g. Vic. :.tonllN'l!o 1 Adult livint: !Kl ""!~. Guest Home 415 4 000 SQ FT T I poo ree &otrhg'liard l ~1l c:p•fNKI f-S N I . • '" 1 • • OY:n 1ousPs, C.t.f. nr Q.C.C. H 1 d • 11 1 .• r~ . 1 ew awns.
EL CORDOVA APTS. .\1~1821. e ar anlsl'. DC'~'t"ii sf'r.o; 8.-1 IT't'('s nnd .shru~ rt rt'IO\--N, Y.Jn Chnr!c ~!. 6124170 srorr·:» ., 1 11 Spnnk.led • Good )oc:it1on. .ill color bri:;:ht,.rn.·rs If.· 1o Ror t 11 fi.l''-6.-r
'
. II JI S ,ur.~ o mP . St)(l. pcr monrh. F'No.-;U-1~l~~;:~·-'O;.l-k1tt;;'1 , n1inu:,. hlt'ach fnr 11·hi:r , 01 lnJ<. ~ ~·-1 __
, car arbor & nn:1lton 1. f'rn.·a r.-. o r !'>l'1 n1-pr11·;i 1 .. Roy McCardle Realtor ,.,. 11• , 1 Bl " I ,..., ... , ... , 'IA'''O"
I I ' t'. • i~f'll'f!OJ' _. \'u., r·arpr1.-:. S.1\'P-~011 r 1nnnry '-'""· · •• ~ n • ~ ·' a \'n1 or 11111 ti 1i l a l" r y 1,10 .,,1 •1 d ,. 11 ,-, 21~ · ,. 1 ' ,. 1 \f ·
BRAND NEW
2 Br, bean1 rrilin,c:.-:. priv pa·
lro, rf'r. fnrll . <'k•~rrl ~a r·
a~r, Ga"< hra r. N10k1ng &
11·n !M" 11!1 pt!. All ndull,;, no
pet~. f'mn1 $16:1.
t n n SJ2.l up -2 RT{ Sl<W up
POOL * • fl.12-2181
1' 2 Br. cluplcx ll'/J:':1r11J:1' ,t·
hlr • 111s. 3140 I n1t1. :.165..1
OrnttS:f' 1\\"E', ;\n. II. (''f.
1\duJ1.~. $.100. a.'l&-7111 <'I"'~. •----------L\.E, 2 Br. unlurn. 11 ~ B.1 .
L ido Isle
N' ' I I ~ " "~ ilJ<lr ! .-.v ., ..,,. , ~-1,,.-_~_u . ______ I hy savin:::; 111~ f''\:lr'a trip~. ,;:irrt•n1n;.: ,.,., arr , a1n-
f)('l'Sfln, • 11 l'I ">II$ onr ". 548-7729 --I I f'I '42 113-B L.\Cl\: ma!• C 0 , k, ,. \\",ll ('l<"nn livi11"-m1. <l ining "rlan1'e. ·or . 111rr, c · ,
hr-;1111. ~ u r round 1 n s: lt ·'~ .... ---------~ .. -,7-1!':7. I' • ,t:paniel. \'JC Beach Hh·1I, /;·' rm, & h:.ill $lj. A11,v rn1. f'rn111 "f'l1r1s1n1.1:0: NN'klif'.~"
('os:a :0.1cs11 l\l-1 ror fl('r. :\'lain, 111 Alabama. Ji.B. S7.~.0. rourh .$10, C'hn1r s~ .. 1:, lo outgrown Lc<\·1~ -y011 ca n :'..~7 \I'. B:i.v St., C.~f.
{'1111 fiitli-0073
---.c~= ''GABL ES" ,I',, "SEVILLE"
2 ltr. 11 gar.,. adulls. "PL
tlfT!ll, lillo:o;, lrrd yr cl.
,,,,./pnt1n, 1\tr pd. 111.6-1120.
21;!!\."G" Ornns:r Al'"· S1:1!'1
7f!19-"J" Sa nh1 Ana l\l'f'. $155
NEWLY DECORATED
Charming l un rl11111,.,,_ nf'1v
{'Brp, cln1Jll':'I & p:unt. l,01·,-..
ly g ll r r!" n :i;11rrou11fl1n~s.
!\larun' arlu!I.-: only. S12;'J.
!l4ll-ffi2f\.
e WILSON
GARDENS e
Z BH, I''.: BA, epl ill'Jl"'.
Encl pa!lo, $1-10. fi.12·6.~1
2 Rr. l t 1 H;i Shll!io. f'11('1
pa11n, f'ncl of f'Ul -<lC'-!it-lr. :i.?,'.1
l:•hr1 llo. fr.12-:lfl3.'l.
I Bl>!l:'ll, 11!1 hltn.~. i;hai::
,·111~. clrpi;, rJo:o;f'd i:arat!f' &
pri. pnt10. Clf'lln! :.1n.1901,
Dana P Cli nt
LHG 2 Br, 2 B.ii . !iv rn1. 1hn
r n1. hl l-ln.~. cr111~. rlrp~.
O!'f':l11 1·1rw. $190ftno.
R.'\7-J92i , R.17-:ll i.~.
:\'ICE I BR. rp\~/rl..,-....:, l 1n-
rn<'l'l1.~1r 01'(1.Jp!lllC'y. 312.l
n10. ~!)(;...9211':.
East Bluff 2 BR Cpr1L No P<"!S, 1~1 f.t
b1~1 . C l ·11 n i n g: <if'!).
Sl:il/mo, Util. incl. 13.'i
Albf>rt Pl. 213: 59~136. NEWPORT BEACH
Villa Grenada Apts.
'.\lESA \'f'rdf' 2 BJ?: upp<'r , Four b<"rl rn.in1~ l\'i!h halron-
l\t>.,.,•Jy c!f'{'(lratc<t. hJ1-1n~. It"!! 11bo\'e & be.lo\, .. Graciou~
rp1,; A· drp~. no pet~. I child li\'11111; & qulf't ~111TTI11ncflng
OJ\. i).IS-.121', .J.IO-l.-i!i2 SJj(j. for l11n1lly l\'ith <"hlkllY'n.
LICO ISLE APT.
~Ar. 1~, ha .• 1\1th hayv 1r\\·,
1\1•ailnhl,. no11•. $290. yrly.
Cfl l! 6'1:::-J66J f,i5.f!R.Q6 F.1·f'~.
-associated
IROKEAS--REALTORS
2025 W. lolboa 673·J'6J
Laguna Niguel
LAGUNA NIGUEL
APARTMENTS
_] flH, I B1\ * l !'!{, 1 GA
full)' ('f'r"l(' <'d I 1'rapl'd
From $185
1n<'\ g fls, TV r :ihlr. 11·11.tcr.
all kil bltn:<o, J nd~· '1.l'f'as,
hUI Sl\"1111 p<l(ll, BOQ's, priv
na r in.~ .t h.1leonif':o;. O/lf'11
JO A,\1 10 9 P~I • 49j-4?1'2
4fl9.Z'l77 1' 1!11J.IJ Alon111.
of/ <:rm1·n Vallf'y Prk11)
Mesa Verd•
LO\\"'·n ,.._I I M , II Nf'11 r Corona df'\ Mnr lli~h -----------i:,n, vu I ('"fl 1011 , ,. hnnl o · I h ' DEL"XE 2 •• BR 2 B Jronr. 2 BR. Pnl' r I ;-.r · "tn"fl arf', \\'f'I fi r <'!' u _, .~ • 11, 1"'· nc gnr. I butlt-i n kitchC'n 11 pphllnrc~. ~nrl gar $1.'l() up. R('n11\l
launf!romal. adll.o;, no Pf'!!!. 83,; A;'lfiGOS \\',\Y &l l-199? 0 1,, .'l,(J9.i ~I nt·" A t•c ,
.$155 ~· 6.15-3515. 642-6499 Cold\\'{'\!, Bankf'r & Co. 5-16-lOJ.I
DL\': Z llr. 112 Rll. StO\T, 'rola naginp; A~n ! Newport Beach
<lshl\·hr . 1.:11>15· d~. gar, 0 NEW DELUXE.
-SJj:,, if-.6 \\'. \\"J I~ o 11 • 3 BR. 1 BA Apt for lea~. ,,,_, BRAND NEW V ~HiJ L Jn,ld 11pac. mas!er 11utte, riln 21)132 S.1n1a Ann AV(' (Ar i·oes
LRG. 1 RH 1Juplt'X, fl'fll<'. nn & tl bl gAt1\)?<'; auto door fl'Cun S.J\, Country Cluh)
beam t'f'lllnfO?!I, patio. 1 adult ()p('nf'r 8vail. Pool & Re<:re· · Spaclou.~ I /.: 2 BR from
$150. l'\n Pf'!~. &15--1J17 lll7 iulon .'ln'l'I, .$150 & Sl8J, Fit<.EPLACES,
F.. Zl.!CI S!. .\1:ir.;u::a 11 pt. J. , • SW e Priv pAhns, \Ofld~ nf rlO<;('!~.
NE\YLY R('cl~~sm,-1-0;, si;.~-1\migO!I \\"ay, ;<;B lff'11.ll'd Pool. Adults. '.\lan-
rlJllx. usf'd br ick frpl . .,,fli1iC\1 r:y .!FP"A'R"'K·~2f>N•E. WPORT-I
p11tio: bf-nm!<. I Atl ll , r~ ~ . f \\..AL'I F~H~
P<?I. 1150. uni pri, 64 2,'l.1211. I EASTBLUFF APARTMENTS
SPAC. 2 k ~ Br. Apt. $140 ~ 12 Br, 2 hll Utlllhtir:o: \oir1or ii pL fi11l'hP;nr. I (It' 2 Rrdt'IW'lfn!(
Pool. cpt/drp., bllltl. J\id,( tok C11 rprtM. drarw:'CI. hltn~. 1 anrl To11·nhou.~""'· Sp;.,, pool~,
22(1; CoJJerf! No. :, &12-7\),\'l ::"'.;l"td p.1rldng .o;pnrr~. ~16 !rn1u~. f 'Mnl $170, Ar~
1994 Maplt! No. 3 S-12-JSl.'I D An11gos. SZ'iO n10. frorn l-'l'l~h1t1n lslllnd a' J11m·
)1'Ar ly. hoN"t' & .C-...n Joo1Ju1n l l1ll!
E/SlDE, attnc. 2 BR, cp\J<., Road~. (71.j l &1·1-1900.
1ll"p.'i. bltn&, d8hw~hr , f'ncl !C &TS:.6050 0 S PA C !O tf.<; 'll!a rl y
gar .• no pPIJ;. M8-fi08L ''PENTl lUUSE APT." 2 RR
I Ula "M'M'"J ct .. a S.'rt. l BR dup c:ic \.\'fl1;a,r, & Ocon. A"Rll t(t right f'l\rty
patio. l Adult no ~1. .... Sil:!. 'iuntlngton U.aeh f'('b, 2:'ilh. for only $25()/mo.
g-.1"' !1f'al A: "!"<" Jo.fll\C',
Sifll!/1110 . Siil ilep: Al~l'J
Ln::. Hnrh AJ'I . f11rn , u11I
[111, $1.'[,/n1n. ~·10 dl'p, ~S
1-:1 c, .. 1111-l. • .,..~. 1, ni.
: , jfi--0 l."1 \.
HOARilING f'::llY', Jnundry 127':-;~·. ~ ~. ft. hl<lJ:. 1-"0Ul'\O Sp'"· iz:,-. r.,.c-. ~-;>T~ .• f'xp 1s .,.,·ha1 rounr.o;, not !urn "1rash tu r.1.."'h" in fl
lror !hf' 11rl11·e f'l.\rrh'. 991 \\'.19th St. 612-3190 "" .-J S.J). Frw)·:o:. Call & iilfn!ify, n1e!h,R.1, 1 do .,.,Ylrk 1ny~Pll D,\ILY Pll...OT cla .... silied arl
1-'r1v.11", $1.-:ill: sf'n11. $200. S torage 4SS alt 3:30, li:>:i-J0.16, ~-J81Z. 1;()(>(f re r. 531---01()1. -raH r~12-~ili78 !13\-~rll4. Renta r·-,-1~0-;S~h-.-,-.--c4~3~0.1-----------GOLDEN Rt>tr it'\·cr, \'ic.
S TORAGE ROOM Ji th S1 & Suprrior , C.'.l·t. A!>-*
1 ~~-'c'c'·.-',1001_11_1<_. _'c'·":..c"c"c'_ prox . 2 ~r~. t'l!d 67~8-119. S}i\'Ca.E . f•lrlyi.<;h, t"mpkiyl'd, Renta l s Wanted "D.l~""'~""~~-"-'-'-:.C:-
HACIENOA fH'O!<'ss1t1!W pilol S<'<'kini: ""' F'ND; l-'rn1ale ('0!11". \11r,
HARBOR r.-.-im in pn:I. ho nl "· ll11rhnr & 1'-:tl1n~('r . .113.fJ-ll:'>.'1:1.
:!11 /\ VOCADO ~TR F:f:T C *' n ! IP n1 a nly, sohe:r. TEACI If!' <lr.~11"'~ fJ\l<Un!. l RLUE P11 rakN't \'ic J.>ow r
/\rhilt s nnl.v . Nn f'r1~ :o;nr 1nblr. 1•n;oys <'hll<!t'cn if ?1h111 ;ipt or l10t1::;f' 11·/~Al'. Dr. & 16th . N.R. 673-1727.
!)cluxr 1 & 2 nn. Poo! pr!;.;, \\11l!ing In Sl:-'l''t' ai:: 111 C/UH'1 bt':'tl'h a1·1•;i. liT.rT..o21 Aout-T ,-, .--e-.----r -w..10.J • 1 a u1 ,, 1 a m ,. ,.. P
(;ar;1s:::f'. f)islnl'!'hr P n1rl U111. l~1hys1llrr, or \t i' rs o ll a 1 ~· · · '\'/OOllRr. \'H'. Via Lido
1-·Hnflf SJ:-,o. fi 16-1201 he!i,.oplo'r nr ftlrr lar\I' pilo1 J'n1·a11· ix111y 11i,;IK'!o.10 N(lrd. NJ~. Gi:rll:\6.
1n sp.11·e hn1e. RC'I. a \a1L, trnt clt'lllh!e garns:f' ne11.r
---------I 121JJ ~2-:J.'!08 <'Vl'S. bl\\·n. ;., N1' pt. lk'h. ft('as. 61-ki692 F'OUND: H\ac:k fem.ll.le pa.rt FABULOUS 2 BR Co<-ker Sp.'\nirl v 1 l:. C.'r.T. & I or \1Till" Clat<Si{if'r\ Ad l BP. I .,; :-,r •> ,,_,-JI' h I ; • $150 & $16S Furn/Unf N :l21 D ·1 p·i t p o · 1ou.r, • ·'-'· .11.rea, 1•P'-1g M:lOI . 5-18-96.'l9.
)'011 \\'On'! find a larr:e1', n icrr ~-,· r~:. eo81 r 1111
(}. 92'i26' Ills prcf'd I/ave s nla ll {l('L Lost SSS X JOIJ, S a CAA, l · 6'15-5GJ.4 _,;... _______ _,;;;,:
* * * *
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
*
npl fnr le:-=~. Bf'A ut. ,:;ttrdl'n :1~~~jjjjjjjjj~~~~~~1 · I. qu· d I I \\IJ LL SHARE 4 BR. hon1C' in t.IV, GC'rman ~l ...... rt h,~i .. , nl'f'it, pa 1n~. 1<'1 f'ac -rn( "' " • .~tn.•r1 , ju.o;f S. of Nr\1'porf Nr1,11>0rC1 11~~1!·~·700 thc'l l"-------~1r~.] maJt-, U\'er &. v.:ht. Tll'D Ii!-'"----------------------J Avf'. Adul1 ~. no J'of'IS. 2020 "''il er 8 .,..,.....)..,... Personals ~ Ile ,2'ir ls b1'0ken hearted, ~·ul11•r!on Al'r., C" r.f. (Ju~! * Slf:\RE lo\·ely STUDIO "~:....c.c'c\Sc.c_ _______ Lagu na Niguf'I R-l Int. all ·oo DODGJ.:: Cotoner, auto.
I-:. of Bl\yl 642-Sfi!lO. APT l\/~1rt is-:r •. in Cd:\1.l••••••••••••IPART Colhf', ~ nlO!I . old underground improvrmt>nls-, PI S, PIB. Landau top, ~er-* 1.BEDROOM·~--*~ 1 *._c_.a_l_I _,-_,;--,.._-_•6_9_7. ____ Personals S30 ma!~. Rik cn't'l«i P}'f'I';, Vi<: Trad• $3,500 equily for ""'v f'O r.ipr. Trad"" fur Jat .. mo.
I 1~ Ba To11·nhotL~f' roncepr. G ll~L \\'antt,·110 sharC' furn. 2 Placent1A, Nr \7 i r_ Io r i 11 • or late mode l car. de! C'11n1per fully "quipped.
"-1-.,.,, ~ .. ·• 644-~~' -··or, Il!";t m ttilins.;:;. f'Xll'11 lrg-BR. l 1·h1!.J <rk. s.'!8/mo. YO UNl';STF:P.S" 11·ho ll'f'I'(' .... .>-J:...,, or .)o!R.-.,16.'\. 60 .1·.1-l.'t or 839-0iOI
hcrlrin~. encl J ~li<l_ J'OCrf",1· ~12-t23~1 nr 8-17-::!'1~)-1. born 011 }'('h. ~ \\·hr re Rl't" $100. P.1-:\\'ARO for T'f'lum of 1-'ABUl..OUS ~· T/~ F'.ll, r-.tu!l iplf' z111l<'!l-l<1ffil-&-~
t1nn rn1, AAun.:i ba1hs, e tc. Office Rental '4b you! Jo:$:pecl:ilty l!in.<;f! \l'ho 2 )T olri nmlr boxf'r, f'all·n I Sp. }~b;h. Clear. (Jver $50~1 ~una Ucvelt'lpmenl acrealO' .
Adul rs. Our Sunday afff'r· \\'Ill be 16-fo o p !I) ro!or 1v/11,hi ~ o n chf'!,11. m.11rket val~. J-'or income , $AA~t & $1 33~1 l'{JU!ti~.
noon B-B·Q'11 & Fme Art "'* 1\VAll~·LllX>BLDG. 4-vC'ats--0lcf lhii; r ear or CalJ fi.l2-M-16 11.8k ror Wll,)"l", small bo."I+ or (?l. l'radc 1 or bol h fnr horn!!, ~nn!! ~rarlinJ< ~n. 1 Office on grnd floor younger. Please phone Cami 962-4283 or 642-1931 Apt!=;, or Cr:rn,m. 49-1-4653.
HAR BOR GREENS 1 o .. 1 3 o r wsr, mnle, lri~h Setrr.r & !'>46-~ ,,._, I(' J.• c. 2nd Fir. Moore. Daily P ilot \\'omen's ,;mall f cm 11 1 ~, black Z1 Acrc11 Country 1'.:~late nr \\rtla t do )'Oil have to tl'a~?
· · · Orr or .o..,·ui1C' on 3rd Fir . S<-clion, 642-4321. Cock-a-poo in Seal Bcllch, Pl!lsburgh, Penn. W11.n1 10 J,i1JI i! hC'T'e - in Onin~
MOVE NOWI .JONES REAL T'l' SERVICE -SA-DDi ERACK Se rd ho 598-35n trade for B;\yfront duplrx County',: lar~Ht re.id trad-
Gardf'n . Nf'1v . Dtluxc (nn p1'f'n1rsr $l 33S5 Via LiOO, · • · una " Re\\·a · p ne · J · Co. lne post, 642-:;GiS. I & 2 Bc'lln·>0m:o;. N.B. • 675-3Trl r-.tn~i;:-e. F'm· bC'l ~f'r ~lh COLlJF.IShephrrd pup 5 mo. or hOuM". The nv1n
throui;:h bt>ttcr circulahon. Ill tag? Vic Harbor A Vic· I c8c'"'-10~"'~·...:.644:.c:.t\~l ~ll~.---CllOICE p&T'f'PI in 4\nlelope: \rf'~I Bay F:lrlf'n Apls Orv hl'al, i>1l!h & Mil "IO\I'. lo~·c.•1 . Lll• ---kin•• O\\"ER ··anl• 18.000 •"'A· \' II T 2311 f:lclf'n A\-r., i'\1>.,.,. \\'a1l'·11ront Officel'I · ~ " ·• -" u.-...... •~ ' a ey. rnd,. For ill('OITI~
,. · 1 1 d rrom •360 ~lonth Fcn1al" 1e ch n 1 'i a n '. 548-2129 i::oned rc!idcntial 10';. TD',; pmJ>t'rty llun1 in11:ton &earh .
._nnvcnicnt Y oealc ~ B.n-Sl 11 :t•l ll E:. Q V1pman, 1-----• .:....c..:____ For Eq. in CM 111uclio tri· lr\lljl tlecrl.~ or ???7
1'001 ,\du ll~ Only 1-'run!' Lo<'al1on Oran1tl', 10 A)I t(I 1 Aill. LOST In vie. J91h &:: Oi•t1nge , plrx. As.~um't-S.'l7•000 7t<.i'" !'1&1-lll\6 $155 & l'p :in ll11ysult• Dr. Np!. Bea<.·h C.tll. 11·h1te male l'abbll. __ _
Rr.s. J\l~r. 645-571!0 l Bill Gl'undy ltltr. Q75-616l DISCOV F.n DrScovJo:R\·~ Very fr if'nd!y, &12-677.f. (;(.Prine. onl:i'-S4G·l~-M . 47 a" 1·on•·h.Si1\,;r-,-,,c,-C~yn-.1
-. Sf',\C\OlfS .-_ F'lnd YOUlt.~~l..F in Somrone t.C>ST Red Lab. R.etrie-vl"r Nice 1911 Vlk \njt MobiJi24: 0!"R Co. ln<:ltl~ 11ppm)( !W:X)O
\\'f'll·lkfiitmM Apt.!C DESI\ ~pace a vaila ble S50 El~ . . l\l i.~sion Viejo attL Anl\\-'<'rs x&.i' l(!Jlll cu11torn. R':<20' lWJ fl millf:· l'l/d,-.r hdlg:o:. £'4:·
1 ~ 2 BR. "I T<'rrll~ mo. Will provide turntturt Call l'IO\\· • 1'o obhga11on 1 T ' R . rd 837_3927 11unroom • f'OR Land, TI)'11, l'hg. Sl ~.000 rq for rlf'N'rt
a t SS mo. AM"'«ina service (TI4) 83.~ fZl31 387-3393 ° •m. '"• · · unlhc nt !?? EULlJS h."EN· pmp/f'11 llle ranctt o r ?.
01 r rom St40 -$'2tilmo available, 17875 Beacb Blvd. l"'ATI6NALbY GOLDEN Retrk-w r, approx. Nl~DY 642-9730. Bmkn . ~4-40B. Evtl(. 544-6144. .~ 11\g cpt~. <lrp!i, wuntt.~. ponl, jacor.d, f'nrl ).':l\r. • Hunllngton Beach. 642-4321 RECOGNIZE D 2 yrs. old Fourxl vie. Mf'sa Gold <'Oth.~h. ~c<'llertl m n-llavt': 1~ 11('1"('~ nr rru1nti,
01""' '""It p .. 1',..-PRIVATE store office, M?p. IDEA Tmplf'menlor, inclf'-Verde.~· rt ltlon, Will ll"l'ldC' for gcRr· Nr.1." t-"ree &:-clear, va.luf'
M£RRIMAC WOODS ctoor. major cen!er . Perl, pc'nrlC'nlly ¥.·1•Allhy, nf'N'I· LOST: Ge rman Shorthair, ec\ full sizl"' hlryr.lt!'. l ~I SlR.500. \VRnt: Small tiom~
t!i J\11'rrimar \\In), CL\1 f()r inrome tax, R.E .. f'\<'. ('<'! by l<INl \..c1'1f'r11.lor, ~fr. male-1 yr old. Vic. Adams Alft1f'lo l.A."1", 11.D. &.11\tlc C.'rof. or Np! Reh.
'SM \Y, Bay .St. file ..!!G20. I""""'-------C.111 67:1-l!ll!l.
SI M. 1 JlR, Ulll., '1o\'f' & 2 BR. r)l.iplr :ii:, tlio~Tift11-1'n. \\' E ~TC L T ,.~ f' 11rrn. 2 .,.J,... fuml~he<d. Arlulli , Ml Crpt~. d~. 11m,.,., no~'~-Ikrlmorn, 1 ~llh. Arlult~ on.
""" DRIVE ev--1 Sl$::n ROCll-fUrn if d~n·ro. _!(~ll<·y~73-1260, Cd\1_ Sc'hl-~!1"111 Vt1'rde. 5(5.-J774. 84&194.f .. 'rolyers. 6'iJ.67"-'i ...
1•7 F'hl1\'f'r St. 1 Br. r um or 1 ~-~IR-~ Of: p.~nli)f'l"t'd &· rn11..~ . .;agcd LOm': 2 Ir ish Sf>l1er~. ii* * * * * Unfum, iµ.,;1 tocarion 1ncr.i. D1\TL,. J>JLOT JQr action' b~ :111rnr111·f' ff'1nalr~. n'l';I·~. \::°"'ta ;\teq iu·P11. . * Pf'~· Cllll t;(2-33r.i, fi~1~. $140/n'M'I. !°).16-3:"17. ly, $27.l. A,C:.I 61:-,..,1~\0. f;.16.Q920, 646-.1S15. j Cell 642-.~7K & ~''"' s:\",-ZlOO !\N'tl rT'lf'111N1tion. G-lj...2!l>4. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!
•
c
G•rdenlnt I P•inting &
P1perh1nging
AL'S GARDENING tor gardening & 1 m a 11 PA I NTJNG~ lnter/Exter.
Walla \.\'LShed & minor Jandscaplng seMces, ca 11 rt'pa1rs at pnl't's you c-an aJ.
ford. Non dri11kt-r. J'ree ('st,
Rt-I!. 673-l !66.
~5198. Servtng Newpori,
Cd~f. Costa r.-tl!o., Dover
Shores, Westclilf.
GARDEN t-.!Alnl. Clean-up,, PROTECTof\'our \nvt."\ITI\cnt
rotot1lltng, new 1awn prun-\.\llh paint. Inf-E:\:t. Costs
mg,.prinklers. Oda Garden oo1hlng !or fl"t'f' e s-1.
545-5347. Serv. 531-4446 dys, alt 5,
839-~.
PROFESSIONAL Gardener,
tree work, pr uning,
!.prinklers, clean-up jobs,
I a ndscaping. Geori;;c,
~G-5893.
AL'S Landscaping. Tree
removal. Yard remo<irling.
Trash hauling, lo! cleanup.
Repair i;prtnkJers. 673--1 !66.
* Con1plete l.andsrape Scrv.
&"l"Vin1-: !I.II Orange Co.
J'onnal & natural pruning.
Also, tree M"rv. 557-9379.
•Bob's Lawn Service•
Comp. Lawn il:taintenaru:-c
Home or Comm'! 642-2065 * S49-201S
21 yr.<t exp. -Free est.
Exper J11p11nese Gardener
Completf" yd service. Nf'at
& Rel ia. F'rtt est. 642-4389.
General Services
THINGS by ?1-foose, L!.
elec:t., plurilb, fence, tile,
insUns, carpentry, paint etc.
545-0820.
Hauling J
INTERIOR & exterior pain-
ting. CuarRn 1rotk &
reasonable pri~s. Bi 11
548-2409.
* PAIN'TINC-PAPF;R!NG
Jntt'l'J{)r
Llc. lns.
Call llarrts
Ex!erior
Cuaranleed
6-12'-4s.:iil
PAfNTL\/G -Guarantt'ed
11•ork at lair prlce!I", Llc'd &
lns. fi7:t.-5740 .
PAfNTlNG, prof. Al! \\'Ork
guarn. Color i; pe c 1 al is t
842-43116, :117·1·1·1"1.
PAPER HUNG $30
Any rm. + papPr, &16-2449
SIDING & Faria $129, 2 s!ory
$229. Exte.r only. &12-2755 or
&!2-1403.
YOU supply the pa 1 n l .
Roon1s painted S10 cii. Al.so
exterior. Ca.JI !>40.7046.
PROF'. painling-inrer/<'Xlrr.
J!one.st v.·ork. Lic/ln·s .
!>48--27)9. 540-1444.
Plaster, Parch, Repail"
• PATOI PLASfERING
AJI types. Fr<'e estimates
Call "'°"'825
WANTED: Messy tree A Plumbing
Yards & garages -moving
& he.uling. $7.50 per hr. +
odd jobs. 548·5863.
HAULING, CL E AN -U P ,
locRI moves, exp'rt Colle,i::e
student. Lrg truck, Reas.
534-1846.
--------LE\V TAKAS & Sons P!utn-
bing. Repair, r t' p i p e,
rrmodel. New Cons I,
646-8340.
COLE PLUMBING
24 hr. s('rvicr. 645.1161
y AR D/garagt', cll.'allllps. $111-lR. Plumbing &
Remove treet>, d lr!, ivy. FJec-trical Repair.
Ski p Io a d e r , baekhoe.1 __ ~&~!2~·"'='":,.:°':_..:"'~'~ .. ~!4-0=3 __
8-47-2666. PLUr.mrnc: REPAIR
TRASH & Garage clt>an-up , No job too .&mall
day5. Free est. Anytime. • 642-3128 *
54&-5031. Remodel & R•JMlr
111i T TRUCK. llauling k BONDED general con-
associatt>d 1asks. Co.as!· tractor. Remodeling & n~w
Valley Hauling 495·31711• ronstruct. Residential &
Housecleaning comm. 61~8144
Roofing
.... ' -· . .
~~~~~~~~~,~~~~~~~~T'~·~~'1~·~f~r~~'~M'l~l~,~l9~7~f'~~~~~!!ll'!!!il'!D~LV '!LOT ~
l[fi]I ~ _ ...... _, ..... ~j [IJJ ~, ~ ...... ,~ ..... ~l[Il)~' •1 l,___ ...... ,_ ... ·~][Il] [ ..... _ I~ !,___""-__,I~,_, -iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiil[§]~I
Help Wanteocl, M &. F 710 I Help W1nted, M & F 710 I Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wan1ed, M &. F 710 F_u_r_n_11_u_re _____ 1_1_0,M ._1,_u_1_1._n_..,., __ • ___ 1_1_1
1 •
ARE THERE
ANY LEFT?
llarrl \\l(!rk1ng, Door
l<nock1ng Salrsn1cn.
For This Tyf1£' Of Tl1an
\Vt-Ollf'r
e High CommisSion e Hospitalitetion
• little
Or No Competition e 3 Year Payment e No Interest O r
F inance Charg• e No Credit P apers
To F ill Out e Good Bonus
Program e Profit Sharing e Prestige Selling
For An Interview
644-0212
TV, Rad~, H l ~I~
Ster90
I SECRETARY 21 PC. KING SIZE >"rt.R>:Os H you ace t"'""'"
I HOUSEKEEPER, need rn111. NURSING BEDROOM GROUP Jvr a <'111\.'IQlc Cir i'un1pot)('nt C.f.. 6' ('()tlflOle Sterl!'O,
A.\f '}"l\f, 10 Spt'8.kt'rl , M!Jd
walnu! C1'b. S\50. 54()..7000. dlt' &£e woman. Must love S1ltf! RN. Nursln~ A!ile ~ '>h'rc<l liY~ll'n1, I Rnl ht1ndl· kid.s Full cha.rgi' IJve 111 .f'or NC'11·porl Bt'ach Ad Agrn· · • . 3·11 shtl1 E.~/'H'r Ri'o' !!Cup1• · YOUR C'hoi~ Spani-VJ ()Rk, lflK sinrnc: tM'.lnkrU(H <!ralt"t'5
I fl.fl. lll't'a. 847-5012 C\'CS. JI t Khl!L Pal'lll~·a l fn~r, ry. All i1kilL~ inc·ludlni: Sil n11pll". \\alnul, or "hit" & ln'll;ht 1'lfl.1n1 istrreos th.<tl
H""Plt·· ,, 1 1 ''''·' n.1,.,,., JIB. Sharr looks, Jnng houris. 1 1 ~ ....... !"' ~nip yr JUI_!.<( .,... '> , J::<..>.l\I p/l)'· l\:!3·l670. fi..-::sh, k1ng s:.ir, hParll:1narrl rr.,:!i't 1qun;:tte at rri-men I [ l/ I
George Allen Byh1n<l Ai:en-.S42·0611, C'XI :?:l{i. ----.------9 door drei;.,scr !.;. 1n1rror, 2 tlou~ t.a\,flS:S 11"v<"r t)('f~rc Free I" Vou
<·y 106-B E. 16th S.A, ---'.\URSf:S AIDE I S1t~\1Jt P.e!U'Nf n1e.n I o r bed • side stl\nds, 10 y<'11l' pos.s1bll" fnr 1nrlt\'l<lua.l~ l1kf'
«7-IJ39~ ' 11u'I. \\dr•~ sales, 4 hrs. nf'f t 0 II R t t' ti • l II ' 3 LI .. 2 T ' $2 00 .n ;i, 7,;ni-3prn. .!.toip11sr (' 11 n \'. ,.. j;U<1r11n t't'. r li> ei; ... 1\ )0\11':-<' . ... "'I ll('('rp n , Imes, .
}f(JUS_E_BO_Y_--v·,·1-,-.. -..,-..,-,~,_ Hosp. 661 Center SI, (.' \I d«.'-· Apply 111 Jl<'l'!-0'1· 11 \\' llpr1ngs, &r m111lrrss franlt' ,_n1<11l rnont11Jy fl"\ynlnts. ri~ur. garrlrner. Phone r .. r ~\~-~'.&. '.1 ni.:hl ('o, l26 ROf'heStrr Top sJ1eet, bolton1 :s!11'"1. \lr. \\'ill 1am:o;, 714/~~~f:,01.
1n!ervLCw &12-8j()3. :-Oll'('P!, c· .. \f. Jll/ltlI'CM part, hl1tnkel, IHI· ----S..\!Al.J. n11xed btrect rnele
/}<.1pp~. 10 \•le-; n!d. ~'ree 10
};oorl OOrne. ~2--041'2 -NURSING CARE sr·nv"1r">7", -c---.,-t_,,t-l ln\\'ll, & pillo .... • sJ1ps, qu1\h•d * AUCTION * /IOUSE.\\IOflK. part 11111t', 5 r·or <'idi'r!y lady hlrokc pa-. , slat1011.111 <'l)(lln1 ,
day 1\•eek. Sleady job. Q\\71 ticnt. J?non1 & ho.a rd + $400 , r,.p. fl['('ft'n'f"d. 1-ull & part bed spread.
car. &}.J-734·1 nlO, 67~.7254 ttf! 5 pnL r1n1e shifts avail. Apply a t
}'1ne l-"urn1h1n• ___ -----
~ \pphatl<"'" :? Bl11.-k Lab Ptll"'!i 10 wk,<1 old
---JNSURANC'E Pi\RT C\mf> pnig-ran1 tt1d,
OPENINGS Sl.6~1 JX'r hour, arrr :-.-:-~•n.~.
Transcriber, !rain !Or r.tTST 1·, hr), pt'r \<k Call \1 1~<;
Secy ,t-Cll'ric-1 p0!111 \ons 1 Ruslf'nh<1t'h 6-16-71!\\
1v1!h Home Oflu.:f" of ~t11jur ' PART-1'1n1i' f;Rl• -.-,-,.-,.-,-,-,.
111s11rance l'Ot11Pflny lo•enl1•d 1·cnr11 1 <lf'pl. 1.i !'t' n<;P
1n LA but mov1n~ (n !l{'W rrL'ft'l'l'(I hilt JJ)\ ntt('.~sl!ry,
hu1ld1ni.:_ In Nr""'fJl'.l't Bl'ar h Akr. ~IO.
11\trr 1h1.~ yrar. 1-ff't' (·om-=c--c~~-07"-~-
nitillng by hus 10 1..A 11n1I[ PBX Typl.~f. ~·Rm i I 11t r
move 1s eon1p!e le Low C'OSI
1
11' I TB\1 l'::xr<'. typcwr1!rr
lunches prr'lVldl'd, Goo cl Scilary S400 n10. lrvint' Inrh1i;.
s«lary & fringe bencf!t<;.
1
fU'('a 1133--2670, illr~. T1nkl<'r"
"!'t'e 11a1rl by en1ployrr. FCr '
1ntrrvie\v g, lest locally, e PLASTI CS e
call. . . . I Tnjt'ctinn n1old1ng ript'rRlor~ rf-'. 2112D11 1'1M1t Dr. nr 1rainC'l'S. 811·ingsh1ft. 1 (jirJ, lrviM. IJJ.J29S 1 .!\!us! hi' 11rat ;i,nrf <l"pcnd-
Shell. 17th & ITVll'lf', N.A. ALL FOR $197 Au~tlt)ns r·nda~·. 7 . .'.ill p.m. 1 u1alt· .~ fi'nv1ln L~;i, i\tesa
SERVICl-: SIHl!oo Atlrudanl Windy's A u ction Bar,, ;.>'i.'..:·•lh.'..lf<. _______ _
Apfll 'o' Ul llf'rson, 200 \\ TERMS LAY·A·WAY J:l7:°•'v ,'\'r\vpnr1. c·\r t>--11i~Qi~\'6 I '..' F··ni.11(' t:f'rn111n Shrr pun-
('1~1 ,1 lhiy, NH. PLAN H1'h1n1t ·1011..,"' flld..; \\.,• l r:•·«, Calht>r 1<; pUl'f'f'!r•~
.~==-·• OAK R .R . TIES e l-11,1' f(I guod hon1•'. ~-17·1 '1?7 TIRE CHANGER TRADERS t-h1t-t ti .. '"'P'tl both truck & FURNITURE S.1.~ ":i' 11 ~:fi-~111:.", f't J'!'Y, lrg n1 r~ nl'f'•!" J.:'••1 ----I h"lll " w/lr;: ~11.rd pass1•ngf'r. '!'lip w ll i;,, ti, 202 N . B roadwa S.A Miscellaneous /l'lll"I' h('nt•f1ts, S•· day \\'Ork "~~.i·rns 0 .Y•7 1 • I h1ui-.o·bf'\1kr11 }l·li-R6.S9.
" '11 ,..,.,., ,., f" n 1 nvs W a nted 820 ----·-----
\\k. &l'.,-:,.'0\0 . . ' --·.:.1,-,.._---------
•t·t\\t)t':\!\N t.:1:'\t;s1r:1·: 1,·:t1f'r hi•<l, rn1•r-~Pn!Nt:-·111'(' ri"1<hle hoi· [ ]~ ' :.~. , . va<'a!1Cln op-~ • ' '' ~ . . IJ('S'<,f1;1<l.lu1rra1~llnut1•' siw\11i.:_~ ;111•1 ni •t!T1"ri-.s .1 Pel•11ndSupp4illt por. Mr <'Xper. cn1 f)t'nlf't':!l , NI:'.\\' <.UNDITI01'.'' & , , I
JO a s '' n ,, r s f'!t'ctr1c1an~ ' ' . ·' ) r !-lt'1 l!un1 l1r n1, \'f'r.) t:r,.1.t I 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;·;;;;·; j T k ' I th J..'1l<11't'l.ntN'. Sl1. Bla1·k purl-r<•111l111<111 C.1JJ aflr•r .j I' ~I • .~nip, \\'()t' a.\·~L . I){)\\' ru rlC'rl vinyl baby car Sfh! •lfi-\:0:.7'1.. • '1 p G I aso
J t.irw In lx-J11!1ful Jd!l.'1\ 1J1I S·I 00 flti8--0RlJ I ets, enera
For1:st Can1p J?;rountl. Park QL' Ef;N ~i~e. hi'fl. rinn \\ ,\~Tl·;D \1:.h"~'1 11y hufl<'t. BAB y BUNNI ES
.'nur <.'an1p1:r. tra1l('r f'!<: ,'!: · I:•""! •'<lr11l1111-in 1 •1,..11~e-(;oil •
use lat·Ll 's frf'C'. Appl1('unl \\/hdlx!. likf' nr\v S9.!I: hi'!\. i1ri.1r ~ pn1 &\;H1'9;i_·,, I • * fi.46.Jan • *
nl\1~1 be abli' to read & PX· 111<irr. nJlf'n 1rop (h"h,,·,hr, M-,--11 1 t 822 Cats 852
l'kp '~, .. '''·. ,""• \\'-•/."-< u51ca ns rumen s N 'Ulf• cons1n.zc11on prinl• ,.. • ,.,. ·~• .-...
INSOi\fNIACS for rest>11rch 'a~A ... B~v""s~l~T~T""'f~; R""o~Bal.,.~bo~.· I pmj<'Ct on ~\<'<'fl chsorde'l's.
21-5.) yrs. Good pay for 5 Island 3:3G-7::1.0 pm. \\lkdys " I only, Perm. AJL 6:30 pm. 11•ks <;Judy. 633-9393, ext 1·.
ahle, Female rrt'f('n'f'rl.
J\1us1 he ab!E" to \vork Sal
& Sun.
A11~Jy <ii, 2221 F1un•il'\\' nrL nr Sun. 6-lj-l;lT.1, 501 T11s1111 Nt.\\' RQ,::-cn; ilnuns. 5 rr·) l\iHrn lo ~<l hn~r, alinni.blf"
Cosla \Ir.xi. A1'€'., N1vpt Brh. .~1·t. 12" has('. s:.~ or h<>'I IJlk Jc l:rcy 11i:;f'r mriped -----.• rr .. r. 1 .~i:·: s,111 ,11 Anll A,·r . 1111;Jr. R-17-."l.106, .'47-70.1 ~. TEL1'~PHONE Sales. Top l Sngl bu.IC s.11rin~s + mH!·
675-3787. ~Pi\l ""·k<ly~.
BE AN AVON INVEST IN
REPRESENTATIVE YOUR FUTURE
Let me show you how easy
H is to make money & have
fun in your 1rce hrs. For a
personal inteivic1v. c 11 I l
510.7041,
BOOKKEEPER
ror Furniture S!nre. J..llll
bookkecpinR t'Xf1£'r. necl'Ss.
Pleast"' c11ll bctwn 9 & 10
11m. 642-2050.
BOOKK EEP l::R typist
rt/timt" for 11 CPA in Crl:\1.
Approx. 4 hf'!'. a day. SalR.ty
open. 61:>-'.!070.
BOYS
AJ:e 10.1 4 10 deliVt'r paJll'rS
in the Dana Point, San Cle-
mentr areri~.
DAILY PILOT
·192-4~20 CASHl~E'=R,.--1
BE YOUR OWN BOSSI
Men or Women
lease: A Yellow
Taxi Cab
Call for Ap-pt
546-1311
Ask for lterrnan
~ -·
Apply J::?.O.\l ::m A.\I C\Jlllnl1ssions and bonus. Ap. lr<'SS, 2 fnr S20, SIO "·'-;! {'tlsl.1 1\1,..~n . Dogs tS4
tr OrHng" Coa~r Plast 1cs • ply in person bet11•cpn ~.(Xl 1111ui:; <'hair~ $.'> ra, Sturly 11Art~10~/y· Elertrie gu1!11 r .~ NOV ICE Dog 0 bed i e n
!150 \\'c<;I 11\th SI. and 12:00 n_'llJn at ~AAl Bois« 1l<'~k l \J. f~nd tablf' S'l.:'(). l~alan~:i.1.00 A.nip. S 6 0 ·I ClaS$ r.tartini;: Tues .. F~b~
Co,;;\« J\10sa, Calif. l Avf'nuc, r.1 1d\\'ay City. ~2-STOO. &12-9l,i7, ls!, 7 P.!\1 . illAfiTINC'RESf
, . TYPISI'; Are you lirrd 0f n . Offic• furn1rur•/ KENNELS Presl!gf' 1xi~1t1on for nlalE' lct\I' .salary for your goorl M1sc•llaneous 818 E . 824 • * ~fl **
llAIRSTY.l-lST. ill u~ havf> !yplllg skills:" This financial quip. . '
some cl1en!L'lc. GellC'TOUs corp, rcal1z!'s you have a . Al)l'"l/NC: J\fn t;hi nl'~ and <'<L.Sh :\\UST go~ T11.i'I black toy
romm. Al so. f> x p,. r . !;!lent. l-;rr:i.t bos:<J and goorl 1972 STEREO. GarTard cnn1. r C'gistrrs. $\R r.: up, f"'l(l(JIE'.~. 4 n1oll'. okl. :l ~-I ANlCURIST O('('dt'd. B<Jrh charil"f> to Rdvanc€'". SI. S~. Pon P n t s y s 1 e _m , fil~Qj!\.'l ,·h11mpgne tiny toy poodfe:s.
nia111curjng & p('dieur1n~. • Ail! I FM I Srrroo/il!PX 8· F.16-4665. l -o t~t 1·-P••k Ne .. 1-·1 caH ,Jean BrcJ\vn, 5-HHiOa.'i f!'a<-·k I turntablf', ba ss Pianos/Organs 826 -=c-oc---,.,,.--~,..,--..,.. '· " '" ·" ~" c t I A 'IC \l'ARilf & cuddly n1 lniature
i\p\s. Spa pr1\'il. 644-ST;iO or t :l?X! Ila~~:~ Rl~c~! ~dams rcfl~x speakers, separately P1A.Nos'**. ()RGANs SchnllU7.er puppies, AKC
644-4984 ff>l'<'SL -r rtatlrcl for $409.84, pay off l't'.i;". 1\U shots. Call J 011nne
PROFESSJON/\l, p ho n c
~olicilor • Dan11 Point. San
Clemente, Capistrano A.TI?..,,,
Work in your ov.71 home.
BC"st dra\ ln Rrea. P hone
835-1465 bet\\·een 9:00 .1.m.,
TYPIST f Ree e f1 \10ri1sr, halance Sl99.R7 nr pyn1nts of Kr.i ·ai, S!rinv.'R}', l..oi~l"(',V, aftrr 6 pin. 847-S!l29.
p Iii m t'. Tlrurs/Snt/Sun. S~.50 nio. U.S./\. Stl'rtn A1lrn, D11l<l.1\''.11· rtf'. ~ rnn1
Acctn' hllckground. fron1 • }:qulp. \\'arehou!M', 179 'Jo;, S'.l.l:i up. RtN fALS .$lll ur. TJ•:/\CUP & tor 1lt'>Od!e pups.
g ]7th St c f);11lv Jn.r, .~•111 !2 S 1'rHcup poo01,-.s or Yorkies olcap)X'arance.~\<'saVerde " osta l\t e!l"a, FIELD'S P IANO CO 1 • •1•2too Country Club, 549-0377, Nita &l!}-24•12. 1011 N fll • Ill s 11"' .,.,,.. ·
,,, . c1vport ''d 'AFC.1'1AN PUPS-. -,~'"-,-,~,~lo ;\lyi'r. :'l-10VJNG Wffi. to 11p!. 1\lust Cos!l\ Tl1rsl'l ~I I 1>1· 3250 sell new do"blr •-J" .• ,, 1 ' ~ ,,., OC. F:....:011(· ('Olors ~Uf't'rb and noon. \VAITRESS, over 21, full or u .. ,,,..,, :1 , 0 . t h d" ft. frl'ezer, fridgf' ~1.-J(J, NCI:-: A 'i'l:'.AR TAX pedigTC('. Dy appl. 962-9989. R F..:AL T:'.slat!' Sales. Likf' pflimc, unc or innl'r. <1 Cl FARANCF' SAl E ON ---·---=-co=-
Apply The l\1a tador, 1768 1vashcr i 100, tlryer S4.), · ~ ' . • ' • ~ ~ COLLIJ..: PUPS AKC \\·orking in Laguna B<'ach~ 1 of a k100 florir <lt'm05-
N
'
Bl C \! p;>I1able dsh.,.,•asher .. 7 ~.. Tn's -Males Trnme<liatc opening for 1v.·o cwpor · ·• · " (.'onn.\Vurlhzt'r-Allrn. I qu;i.h fird liccnsrd f)('rsons. \VAITREs.5 \\/ANTED-Days, range i 45· p<>rt. TV ~.li. I<nahe-Sohnll"r -E\'rrrl!-$50. * &l~!t
NDC dill('fte S('l-. SRS. rtd\\'fl()d \l(C B ,.--,--....,,-SJ\ ASTLF..: R<'al Estn!e ov<'r 21. Apply in person C11b!e Nclson.\Vurl11zrr I · 11.Ss<'t !ound. mft.!e,
•NC'1v 01vnrr) ' LOVE'S B-8-Q, 3 0 4 6 iable/benches Sl5, &'\\'lnJ: Pianos. Chan1p\on Sin'd. Sacrifice NEED HELP?
DEDICATED
CLEANING
e ·r. Guy Roofing. Deal A!!rac!ivc frmalr. mid 20's
Dirrct. J rlo my O\\'fl \i•ork. for ft11l timt" position in nc1v
fantaslic ""lf serv serv\cr &15-2780. 548-9590. . I A •1
fcy!NE PERSONNEL
SER.VICES&"AGENCY
494 '~s • I mach. SW, twin bed se t S2.J 1., S'" ~ *** · · u~. ** Rris1ol.C.i11. .c7 Saha!hll tlflrnSichorrl.s "''· ,,........,.,,,1, =======~s~4=so 212 High Dr., l..ag-uflB. ·" c-c=c:-cc:-c-c""",,---R ECEPTIONl ST WANTED All n1rrr·hnnd1sc snl<l with AFGHANS. AKC, 6 111QS, rt'd
Typing 50 w.fl.m. S1vitch-RUSfY, used boat mooring nt'1v w-i1.rr11n1y & d£>l1vrry, or silver. ~tu~t ~ell. CMks, Cockla\! \\'aitressM, ,...._,, 11 " \ I t
* \VE DO EVERYTHING *
24 HR. Pi!ONE 673-4072
WINDO\V S, Carpets ,
Ilse/clean. '\le give Blue
Chip Stamps. R&S Main·
tenanc-r, S.\8-9456. 642-2913
1'-1asll"1' Chrg. Refs.
LADY ..... ants Housecle11.11ing
work. Exper. ciwn tran~.
$3.50 hr. Call all 4 p.m.
R47·36.17
HOUSEWORK. <' .x p. E.x·
cellent r elf'rtiicr. Cnup!e.
• 6jl-l<l92 .
Mesa Cleanlng Service
Carpets. Windo1vs. Floor cte.
Resid. & Comm'J. 548-4W.
Income Tax
I 1>1at1on. App y, ulo-n at,
Sewing/ Altaratio~1--'~'-'h_&_P_t_'~'"-"-'-''~· _c_·'-'~· ~-
European Dressmaking Communications Opr
All e1.1stom fitted. Per!<Ona1 Know Telex & TIVX. Domcs-
Fashion advice. 673-1849. tic & Jn!cma!ional.
Call Lorrainf>
Alterations -642.5845 WESTCLIFF
Neat, 11.ccura1e. 20 years exp. Personnel A~ency
T•levision Repail" '2043 \Vf'stl'lifl Dr .• NB
645-277()
+ BLAINE'S TV ..
Srrvic1ng All Branrl s 1ST COOK·EXPER.
Authorit.f>d Magna1~:f 962-5531
Known ror honesty 540--4313
Tree Servlc•
~.....,..'"'"'"-~-..-,,.R,EMOVAL &: trlmmtng, fire
wood allov.·ance. 642-2755 or
642-1403.
EXECUTIVE
Personnel Agency
E xec. Sec'y To Pr•s.
Good llkill,<;, Good figure
8ptitude. Top ~roomin~.
410 W. Coast llwy .• NB
Suite lI &15-2716
board. ~·ronl or1· epp('ar. '-'"'-' · 'I ma l'r1a · eaf' l COULi! i\-1USIC CO. $125 846--!'i:JGr
Bookkeeper 1o $700 ('all l nrrainl' Disl11~·ash('rs & Busboys. Att link 21l" Joni>!:. ].,~ .. wide . Sint:I' !!lll I -, ;)
Heavy vnlume EDP/typt' \\lf:STCLJ~~F' .l 2831 Bristol St .. C.M. 50c per f t. r.1anne Sur rlu.-. 2()..15 No il1a1n. S.A. I uoxi::r~~UPS A~'?~.
E xec, Secretary to $700 PErtSfJ NNl!'.L AGENCY KING'S CROSS Co., 3307 S. ~lain S.A. * ·..i .. --068! * 11.mp1.on 1ne
Coodski\\s pcr~nab\r 2043 \\'l'strlilf Dr .. NB \VANTED: Handyman for 545-6551. ' *HAM~O~O ORGANS * ?l4· 962-8067
Typist/MTST fo $500 645·2770 :oir1 romplrx must live 1n NUMEROUS · 't al Al<C Gr,..at Dane Pups, I 117 E 22 d SI . · .)11.nl ori equip Largest &: olde11t d<'nle.r in
\\'ill train 70 \\,p.rn typisl REX::EPTIONrsr \VANTED. ~.~1f,,e,,.',· . n incl Advanced l!I'' Con-U.S. All models nf'\ ... ·U!'led. cc."1'1'"64P~0!,~0C. k. 8 wk:a. ;65,
G e neral Office l o $500 "''_,,.... ., v•rt ,. 1 t ~" Con1pl'trnf, p] PA i; in g 11p-~ • ama IC • ear oo s, B<'lo~ you buy • give us a
Sharp. quick & eccurarr , Pt:'ar«nce for N.B. 1a .... · nlc. WAi\'TED, babysit!c r, live-in garden pv.'r & hand tools, try. AKC Standard Poodle
l G irl Office $435 ·ryping, somr-transcribini;?:, on Peninsula , for 2 1~ yr old antiques, s •·quariums, <'flm-PENNY OWSLEY CO 2 yrs. All Champion
Typf' 50, sharp & al!r.<i<"1tv<' }l::J0..5rm. CHll ~O-S.100. , i:'1rl , Ca.l\ 675-2432 alt l pm. ping t>quip. Call < 7 t ;i ) ~714 1 892·3314 1 • 646-466.'i •
PBX Recept. $433 + flN, full Mme night ~h1ft * * WANTED door lo door 892-9724 for long list of 11:152 Beach Blvrt OLD English Shecpdoji: pups.
Vl'ry persbnabte & artra,..rrvr 11-7, xlnt fringe bntrs. sellf"rs, no invf'stment. everything. {So. of Ka!C'l!11) PaJpa!ed, parcnt8 0 FA.
F igure Clerk 10 $400 R"ver!y iltanor, cap 0 6.fl-2814 POPCORN' Booth originally WOULD YOU luzzy tact"s, lovable. 213: TP!ephone co. ofc t'Xpt>r. d t • -"
I Beach, <l96·~i1llil. WAITRESS use a ...... ng Beach Pike. BELIEVE fi:>.>-501 2. F ii• C erk $325 Would k ·""-•-:-7,,__~--,,--,.-Gnod ma!h aptiluclr SALESMEN E."<pr-r. Full or p/time. Nol bar I ma e greal Pll110 ~REE OJlGAN J.F,:SSON:-C.:OLLJE Puppy for M.Je.
Ph , 1 un<lcr 21. NO P 11 0 N E · A .so Vl!l'y clean '60 as Ion .. as you l1kf'! No rf'"'· AKC.' regi•. Female. "-" oto Printer to $1 .50 hl' N~r n1en 11.·ho are ready lo .F' rd 1L t · ku " " ......u Knoiv Pako cquiprnC'nt Jram rile car busint'ss Rnrt CA.LLS. Apply in person, 0 '" on PH' p. ll1ake istration. No oblig!ll1011 .. Just &42-Snti.
p / . . $3 h are willin J: to train. r.1ust Sur! & Sirloin, 5930 W. Coast olfer. l\fust .&ell. 494-4977 C.'ome Mondayl'l 7:'.IO rm. GE!Ut1AN Shorlhair Pointer11
t1m• morning to I" ha\'e ..,..,...i .....,.r<;0nality, IX' Jhvy, Nt>\\'porf Beach. af1er 6PM. COAST MUSIC AKC, 2 ma!•• g w~.
CERA?.11C tile new &
remodel. Free !'st. Small
e J•l Year!'. LQC,\LLY e jobs V."elcome. 536-2426.
Ff'e Schf'dule 1 :-!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!
Smiley Tax Service AC'curate fi gure \yp1sl l>""'' r-2 "" E~XP~E~R~.~Co!"'u~n~l,~,""m~•~o~.~C~i~ty' I Free/F C'f' Positions interested in a futurC', drrss \VAITRESS for roUrP shop, BEAUTll"UL, very clear, 1,4: 64 -2851 ST;i-883."l.
488 E. 17th !at livine) C:\f ! v"rll. "Salcsminrlr <l. Bcnrfits: O\l('r 18, <'xper . Apply in Carat Diamond in Tiff81ly Sewing Machines 828 ~~C~~1-----~-
Auto PRI1, 2066 Placentia, 642•1470 ncmo., group in,;; .• guart1n-prr.;on, !lie.~ Lant-s, 1.703 setting & matchirl&' lady's & AK Ma 8mute Pu PP I• a, Cost.~ :•Iese. '""rt sal<1ry pluo:: rnmmi1;-Superior, C.l\J. man's \~:edding bands. cos1 SINGER Di~l-a-stitch 1n nice 1 Sl50. Male,;; k females.
t.lailrrl On Rf'<'[u,..s.t [ :i_JITTJI W.A. SMILEY, C.P.A. ., ... ,....,, It
641·2121 J\nytlme 646·9666 --
CLARK & TtJrlf'r Tax
Seivice. 24 YEARS e>."J>. in
M ea. Persona! ~<"r'lice In
your homf'. Call for a.ppt.
5-16-77.15, H0"·ard Clark &
. Tohn To11rr.
Harbour Tax Servic•
15 yrs. exp. :sf'n'11·r at your
hcime. For .11ppt., R46·41R7.
DIGNl}'JED rvt. preparation
or your reiurn. ACClJ.Ta.x,
314 N. Ne11.•pL N.B. 645-0779.
TAX Scivice. ledt"ral &
:sl11le, personal at your
home, call !or 11.ppt 546-0125.
Janitorial
APT. Cleaning • CaJ'PC'tlJ
:shampooed, ovens, floors,
v.'inrlows. bathroon1~. cup-
boards, cl06ets c I P a n e cl ,
R.Nl.dy to 111ove into. Free
est. 842-1996.
Job Wanted, Male 700
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
f"l'dora -Jmprl -Petty -
Belong -GET LEIT
Ax1Clm: Girl~ 'vlio do right
often GET LEFT.
Job Wanted, Female 702
NEED help at home? We
havt' Aides • Nurs('s •
Housekeepers • Com-
panions 11oriemakcr5 • Up-
jobn, 547~1.
EXPERIE'.:NCED East Cout
Yachtswoman needs voork.
Officr exp. i;ai! marina pref,
633-9.193 vi:t. 172, 63&-01~.
BOOKKEEPER, 14 yr!'; ex-
per. full or p /tim e .
548--0445.
:«1.-,n1c Llnlin111erl inroml'. i\r>-s:i10. <Have bill or saleL con.roll"', zig -z a I{~, hut· 9611-1170
pl,\/ 1n P"rson UN!V£RSf-Sri! S275. Call 5-16-5710 allt'I' tonho!e.~. mu.st i;e\I S25.!t!l. GERMAN SHEPHERDS EXPER. lleliarc \\'elrf_"_r· fn; t LADY, part timi' nff1ct' .,.,·ork aluo1. mA~1. Applv HO \\'. 1 ~
17th Sf, C.~1-. 1n pro css111n11! orhee. ""Hrs
· · P"r 11·k, all nay Thurs. & Sat TY OLDS:\'IOOILE. 2850 [ ~ndi•• 11 ~ J 6 Pl\t. or All day ·weekcndl'l. ~Ir~ t ch ove.rc.ul·fancy, AKC, ch11mp 11tock, I wkl.
I l<srhor RIVI'!., Cn~ta r.1e~R. V DIV 133·02'JO ... ,,~ ""~1 * .FE.i\lALE salesv.·omcn 25-3;,. l'l m. Do1vn!o1vri Co .... I a AN, end table,;;, eoffc~ ~·~"==·=~~~~~-..-,,....<..),,..
s A I. F. s MAN rf'f'!'('at1ona.I tabll', flrt'a rug, oce. Cha1IS. Kr-:NMORE Zii;:·Zai.t-~\YJni,: Hora•• 156 11.itract. To !it'll Entf'r· ~lt'sR. 54!!-525!7.
vrh1rlcs &: mobile home v.TOUghl iron 5'\'<Lg i:han-mRchinr, 11-; yrs olrl. i\1odcl ---------!a.1nm«tll in OrR.nii;e CCI.
Stra1gil1~ c omm is,;1n n .
67~8400 bh\·n 7 ~ JO rm.
LVN or RN e.1e~r. P!'-1 shift .
Bapll ~l Cnnv. i-lo,;;p. 661
c,-.ntrr St. C\f, ~111-;i;,s.).
p11rls. Sr> Calif. erea, lo Appliance• 802 1leliC'r; drE1pe5': dbl. mat1. &. 12V1, SJOO firm. &lf)...1609. BEAUT Childs \'Vt11tern aad-
FULL or p/hme,
trne, no exp. ~l1!'ml i\1AC:i=iL'liI ST A 1v e. n 1 r <I . n r c.
f ullrr
<or1~. rqu1p. m:oinufac1nr'f'r J hox llprings; TV/S!l!ff'O Sporting Goods l30 dJe S75.
r:lrC'triC'al. radio, or t'lrc-i110VING \\'rd. 10 apt. r.1us1 rornho .. !11.11·n mnv"('J', ere. I Call 644-8676
tron1c hkt.-r<l prcl'd. M.111 . sr!I 11(1\\' dl)ubl<'-door 19 cu. J\2.3--2722 AIL 6 Pl\1. RF.LOADING C"q u 1 p n1 r n 'I
Sal:oi r yf<"omm.
Brush, 002-0416.
F/C BookkN'[JE"r:
Restaur11.nt exPf'r . pN>!'d.
6T:>-1714
GENERAL OFFICE •
now in Full•r1on, mov-
ing to Laguna Niguel
summer '71.
Builders ol!ice. Apartmrnt
l'f'COrds, payroll, !'IC. Req:
Sil & typing. Apply 9 lo 12.
& l to '1, 707 E. Chapman,
Jo"ulletton.
GEN'L PLANT MGR
Knowleclge of fibt'rglas~.
\l.•elding & Spray Painting.
Call 'Mrs. Schmidt
lnli'IVi('\\S \\'r<l lhru Fri. ~ J"f'<;llml'<; & salary i'Xp('l'lf'f1 rt . \V ~Ii I i n g h 0 u <; (' l'OOL TAI!! ES ,,.. ... H.-r!C'rs Pff'~!I". RCBS. Dies r-------"~
r Ir . d 120./\ . • . ,\J'tcnOll~(' ""0 I I tC aml(l2pm.\'oogh!01\'0I ro'.'\fal!eoP.0.Boxl1'16 rr P zPr r1 ge ""'Sale Freightd d Sl9 Jnr "'· 300 why, l\1-1 M.!:"J!.~t
Computer F.qu1r. Corp. 290 Nr11o·porr Beach. Calli. 91.Gal. \\"rs11nghouse \Vasher SIOO, t 1'199 ,. t'mt '<1' t ' ('Rrhine, '243 v.·in 4.J ma't ""'1_"",,..,,
. o .•• ew A a e ac ory • · l ~iiiliiiliiiliiiliiiliiil;;~·~;;;1 Fischrr Avr., Cn;ct(l 1'.~rsa. ---,,""'-~'""~1=,---I ".enmore ~as dry~r $<15, G. crate• 1195 to 1 395 . Ca1'C trimmer, ncas, ,..;ALES \V TIT ~ I1 t I t I h '" P ···•
MAID WANTED ' N G'"\J"NT .. po aJe c1s1was eT' 639-8623 529-8466 Ow••t-r mr11ll11J'f>, m a ny1 G .i1A, A ~, r, S7J, Kcnmnrc r11.n;:r $~5. G . • • · . hullr111• bra~11. fl r I rn ,. r 11 , I eneral 900
MAN
•A•G64E2R-:J()T1l1RA,IN• EE OPPORTUNITY E. portable TV $3."i, Ken--AlRCRAFT ADF S15, hghl much t'quipmrnt. S150. Jor r Marin• Con1ultant
Lmklng for a ]()('Ill t.Alt'llm1t11 more :St'wing machine ;20. pl11.ntg S12, rotary mtJwl'r PvrrythlnR:. 979-1 319. IN DP.P.,.N"l'NT
Titan or 11.'0man needed with for career w!lrg. financial 172 High Dr Laguna SJO. Wisconsin V-4 s 1:il, , '· •/ ·
managerial potential. Our in~titu11on. Su b 11 I an Ii a I ·• · 536-391 2 GUN Col!t'ction Rt-ming!on e Purchasing -
expansion plan rcquir<'S two salary + commL~i;ions !or .11 -..: Sporting p.aintlnji; tor 0 ' pump. 27'1 win Sl lO. Rugf"r Counseling on purchasing
!. 1 3 >'". _,,·-•. M•rr<."d. -t-AA.lc-Gr1'y l·lun!et, n1ounted B L -~g e -rollawRy bf'd ·10122 ,.ar hine, hrand """' honl• & .,,,.,,inmnnt. current icensee~. sa esn1i'r1 ' •" "" " .. ...... S-$1.5 I 212 w """N .. or brokers, 10 he grooml'rl lt"ge grad., 011,ner nf a C.eo!!cman & Dog -RoUinR . ' comp. e c. · SJO, Charle~ Daly Ve r}!ura e Marine Surveyor
for orfice manager in 11.B. hui;incJJ11: prt>f'rl. SJ,'l--711!'1 lll!ls & E&tate, lramed, gill V1ctor111, Cilf Ap t 1, cat. Gni~ U ga.. ~ .. barrcl11 646.29n
or ,\n11heirri. Pli1nned open-•lays • Ask ror B l 11 \vith blnck linen Uner. circa fycornf'r from Statt'.rs. Sn!. Tlhacl'l ~fodel 37 pun1p
ings in March k May. Dr· Edward.!. Eves. ~972 18'10, 54a-529J. LIKE new $800. TV, sell 12 ~a . 30" barrel SlJO.
sire minimum ot t11'0 years ~lween 5:30 & 7 pm. ilt/F. RECOND. Appliances & $400. 2 sets washc!i-& dry~r !.17~1319.
Cl.ASS &a.bot huU . $35. 2044
Sv.'all Dr, Costa Mese,
~1-MTl. cxperie.nce hut will C(lnsir!er, Equal Oppor. Employer. TV '~. Cuar. & Delv'd. $125, & $300. 'l'wln beds S IOO.l'L~E~.FT=~H~a-nd_,.--,~h-o-o-c-l~<~r-..
th b d b't' Ex 5 N Ebth 545-7437 Boats. Mainf./ o eni: ase on a 1 1ty. · Sales Dunlap's, 181 e w port • · · · . Wl'afherhy 300 m ~Kn um Service SPARKLE Janllorisl Wi.n--
dows, fll"ll, crpts-resid. &
comm'I. Freer.st. 962--0672. ~~~~~~~~~~! WESTCLIFr rr&il • PERSONNEL AGENCY lc __ £«_"'°_'_"_,._~'-~lli!J 2043 We:!~0Dr .. NB
('('llent benefits. CRJ I J\lr. , -~dcr lo \Vom"' la•h"'"'· Blvd, C\1. 548--7780. KTNCSIZE bed, hnt"r, pad & Leapold 3x9 variable f\ur,lf'r
Graves ! o r n)nfidcntial .....,., ""' I !ra 5 Id 5 SJ20 oo ----------·I i n I,. r vi r w Rppointmenl. t10\V p:oiyinl{ highet;! overrl<!e • RE p A I RM AN has me, mo, o. . yr. mount&, brand ne "-' . . . BOAT Bottoms clea.nina: 25c
1193_5063 & 697-6194 COLLINS In indu5try 11~ R rtsull of "':'11.llhers/d~ers & dshwhrs. ~uaran!ee $35, Private par. Lt?apold 3x9 varlabl" R11C'lrr 11 rt. Length at w/J, Masonry
BRfCK
BLOCK &-STONE WORK
54()..0929 or ~
Painting &
Pap•rhanglng
p A I NTING: Stml-retired
contractor. Cll'll.n, neat, 1st
cl11ir;s work. I'll beat any
prl«. rrtt Es!, rel. Ken
638-S<OS.
No \Vasnns
* WALLPAPER *
When you call "Mac"
"8-!"4 64&-1711
PAINTING. prof. All WOTk
gt111.rn. Color &pee i altst
84l-4386. 547-1441.
~.
COMPLETE exter. $axl 4
up. Avg. rm. S20. Ni!:at
•'Ork. Rtf•. Roy, 847-1358. ~I
FOR clflAn l neat palnttna.
interior or uterlor l ~u.
n tes, Dick, 968-4065 evtt..
ENGLISH Paper Hanger &
P:oilnter. JO yrs. exper. Call
Ed., 968-7461.
PAINTING I PAPE'RlNC,
11 yn Jn Jftrbor y-ta. Uc a.
boDdecl. Ref'fl tufn. 642--1156.
Help W•nted, M i. F 710
A beautiful Idea. Div. of
Gen'I Foocis OC'eds ,YOU.
Learn & IC1lCh prof. makeup
techl!:. Exec. pos. avail.
842-2664.
Acctng. Clerk-10 Kt>y ,S525
F IC Bkppr Constr S6SO
Sec'y-Engineering $600
Sec'y-Construction ~
Gal Fri·ln•.·Aulo/Home Will
Recept/G. Ofc· TypinJ' S-475 1
Exec. Sec'y·Sfillnton S650
P\11.nt Manager SR00
F.xp. l.ibcrg~. welding. 5pra.y
palntlng & .upe:rvlaing.
Sr . Acr.ountant S141<
3 Ycani CPA exper. P.a.rtner·
lhip pdll'ntial.
NEWPORT
P•rsonnel Agancy
133 Dover Dr., N.B.
641-3870
ACCOUNTING Clerk, J yr.
experief'ICf' A/P or AIR
Co11~\ C11te.1n11r•n Carp.,
33012 Calle Ptrfecto. San
J u•n C...pl:rltano. •9.l-4586.
& WAiTS !NC. 1365 1 Mag-nl"w mana~ement program. < .. uiirn-Delv d 5 4 6-5 218 ; Y. 968-08l3. nlOUnt. $280 .00. 9~1319. .1136-552.l.
nolfl!I , Gardrn Gmvr. r.-ianage m<>nt exp<>rlenct" t1r· 83~7620. J\llSCEl.J..ANEOUS. U Jo:,.. d (;OLF CLUBS. \ell ha1u!, pr{) Boers/ Marine HAlRDRESSER, mall', f'X·
per. Excellent opportunil)',
guarantee. 499-3165
MASSEUSE 11ir11.ble bu1 not nt>ccs!lary. REFRIGERATOR, good con-F'arcct1 Air F\lrnacf!s S25 & !'.laff model. U8C'rl 11 ... 'ce. A Equip. 904
Call for ln!eIVie"-\ 968-5739, dition, Clean. S20. up. Call 548-5531. :ritcal at S95. 645-:U'42. ......~--------·I Attractive. Good hrs.
We lraln HARDWARE stock man 11nrf
delivery. Must be in good Xln'l $ 642-0(50 alt,,JOam
heaJth &< have valid CaJil. MEN & ~:omen ear SS In
drivers liet>fllie. Apply in 5P8re .imc lrom hom('.
!I \" w · h Co Wrl!e Bob lfarrison, 8271 pr11non, · , ••. rig t ..
12GRoches-tetStlftl,C.M. Reilly Dr., Huntington
Beach.
H.ELP! :;N;oE=--,,---,.....-~-I have a new business !,n ED 25 sppt. make~,
town and I nttd yQur help. phoro 6fudio. Jmmed. n.rn-
If a ground floor op-ings. lnterviev.·1 Mon thru
portunity or.Iered by A new 1-~ri 11-4 Pm c.~1. 64.~3848.
company with new ldeaii, NEED lo pay Ao m "
pos•ible earning• In exct-s• Chrll'ltm11s bills ? Show
of S30,000 and more per year 1 Sareh Coventry .lewelry.
Interests you -)'OU Interest Min. 11ge 20. 540--0614.
me! And I ....ould Uke tD NE\\'PORTER Inn t')('f'ds
meet YoUI F"1' personlll in--mkldlf'.' Agl" or older male
lf'rvif"w only, call Mr. ICll.f'df'llt-r tor penn. po~ition.
Bruno. ~9000. No phone: clllls ple&.M'. A~
HOSTESS ply in f'l'l'*ln. Ask for Mr.
P /tlme Wttke:nds Elli! IH<"ad Gardetlfr), 1l07
C11ll Ivan Jambortt Rd., N.B. •
Bob Bum'a Re1t1ura.nt :WURSES. p\'t. <l1Jfy, A.JI
644·'20.'W 1ypcs, 8-11 ~hltl~. Lc1roulic
JlOSTESS -full ti~. ApPly Nu~s Reg I 5 IT)' , 351
ln penon. DeJanry'a :.,e,. HOfi:pltsl Rd., NJl
SNnry, 6JO Lido P11.rl< Dr. 642-!'n55 nr !J'Ja-99:,.1
N.B. : lm""'IM.·11 ~ ;\1Jf
636--4ffi3, ' &16-9721 WALK-in 7x7. ~teat {'ase, 2 Store, Resf1ur1nr, 16 HP JohnAOn outboud enc.
SALES~AN. Neffl aggrr11-O'KEEl-'E & MER RITT at 12 Ii 10' · Slicer. Oven. 56 Bar 132 A fuel tank, 1 Yf', old, S225.
slve hard voorkin.g New Car ra.ngt'. dbl oven. time:r. $40: Cadillac. 54~1250. S.SP'r.1. 1----------673-1066 all 6 pm.
SaleSman, Liberal Demo ~7_1061. GOOD Kenmore w r i n er 18 numinated showcau_, 3
Plan. Monlhly Bonuses & ~ gla.~!I sheiv~s. told anodized Boats, Power
ln!!urance. Experi~ de· GE Refrigerator, 2·dr. X1n l washer SJS, GE upngti1 r•u!ng~ E.1ece1 cond c a 11
:i;ired. ~e Don Crevier at cood, ~. VllCUUm S'Jl. &42-0066. sa;..11i4 or 646-€711. ·
Throdore Robins Ford. 200! *tr 842·7369 * * FIREWOOD for •al r.: · TV Radio HiFi
l6' BO~"TON Wh11.ler. 2 yn:.
old Forward fishing deck,
full lite r11.i\1, llS JlP
Johnson outboard. tu 11
rover. S2650. 673-1066 alt 6
llarbor Blvd .. Costa MeM. Furniture 810 De!lv~ It. stacked. Ster.a ' '
SALES -Why l1:'0 wilhout M0--9887
when yrn1 can rarn up to
.s;,o. wk\y for 3 tvf!'!I: or
momirn;:s. New exciting Rif t
<l i11illion of West Bend.
!lfii..trJSl.
Com'I Loan Secretary
PROVINC!At diniz11t table & BEAU1'. Azurin-. blue, fiil~ 9t'EREOS-lD unclaimt'd 1972 pm.
G uphotslt rcd chain\, 2 o.rm. lei out m ink •tole. $250. Call CQn&olcs. new w~nty, 0.,~.-C~E~N=T~U~R~Y~.-,~~b-,nlu-.
4 11id~. ~709 alt 5. 644-8676. 10me Ai.\f, F"M deluxe audio head, 135 Hp new Qryalm-
"DREXEL" Dani!ih nlOdt'rn WANTED: Double bed, box ll"Y!tll'm~. 4 11pd chanitrrs. inboarrl. 11/!C l'lldkl, bl.It
f>'()C' brtnn aet. Dht bed. 11pring, millltreu and frame. BSR Mcdit~rT8nt'•n jnck11, t11 nk, hRy or occ11 n, txcel
ll~l. Aft 5 pm'. 644-.J005. 546-728.">. &0lrl for S219, 1111i M"il tnr cnnd. SJ,3:,0, 6i3-8059.
BEfl IJIVAN, Herculon, like SLil\1-GY~1 s.59•95· SS/rno. l~pect ~21 \\'ANT to buy 23 10 26' s1u1
new. S~. $25. ~. !lrookhurJt, AMhelm. oft 11hol'f' ~port lllher. F . * 642-t\7t .. S31-72!M ~.,J..(,l"-'91), \ Smith. Rt. I Box 2313 Davis.
U:cellcnt shorthand I: lyp-1912 ZENITH&. RCA Cnlnr & cat . 75J.3.l60. Ing skills f'flqulred . Attr..,,i:· 6' wh1tr dr?sserfche11t, 9 KN~ .~ard '•Dee Pe r 1 ~~-~-,==---,,.-,=
l!vr aalary a-l)encfltll., drawrn;. like tl('w. S25. 'll.'>l2 Vl~\(IJlll • rt111tom handle$. ~:l k tw>l~;ue th': ~11::, Boats, Rent/Charf'r 908
Plea1ie eppl" In -non. , Slllt A1r Cir , ii B. Very good, $50. 67S..l.'!45. j ' ~ j rounti'r<1 w/3 YT rurturl' CATALINA 27' SLOOP Rl_.,A('K VINYi... lllDF .... A· CUSfO~t Whttl11, Iii Forl\ or tul:w'. I yr p11.rt11 & 11erv1C'f' DrRnt1 nt'w bon.r. Aux. powtr,
I BED, GOOD CONO. $7~. Chryi1l,.r or 11d11pt to V\V Cl'llnr 11.nlt>nnill l~lt1ll"f\ frr•' :;.\r('pll 11\x, SIS r11c\\o, ROf', UNION BANK
610 NrwpoTt Centt-r Drhi,
, Nf'wporl 8t"11f'h
i i\n C'C!UAI l)pprirtunlly I f'mployer ----'--'-----
* * A-17-4&13 * * _•_IO._r_o•_•_. 6_7>-_J:W~. "'fllll ctimit>lt"~ thn.i 7 fcb 6'2" hc11droom. convenient
Like to fradr~ Our Trader's \\'ETSUIT,
P.ararlisf' colllmn I~ !or yoll' r...:~llcnt
S \\l'l('s,-~ da_ys for 5 buckJ. 6~13-15.
i
mf'dlum lari;:~. r-.·t) dn1vn rt"quittrl 0 A I Nl'"-'f}Ort 111Jp w/plt-nly ol
condition .. S 2 :i Anr rn1i'ir TV. 9()21 At111nh1. [ll'lrklna:. Club rates. fot' lnfo
lluntlnjlton Beach 968-3.129, call 557-9046 aft 6:30.
I
I
• •
...
•
21 DAIL V PILOT • ]~: lc__...,._"'_-__,J§l 1 ~[ ~ .... , ,~_ .... ~]§]~~ L--[ •_"" '_~ ""___,)§] .___[ '"'-°'"'-""°__;I§] L--[ ""-"'_"""'___,)§] L-[ -._ ... _ ... __,]§J I['--~-""""'__,!§]' [~'"'0';;;;""-~' ~;;;']
96 7 Autoi, Import.a 970 1 Autos, Import.a 970 J Autm. Imported 970 Autos, Used 990 Auto•, Und 990 Autos, U~ 990 Autoi, Used
Jti' Chryaler R.clng Slp. 2<1'
Alun\. 1na~\. Yu.ti rlgg!ll.g 111
t•luJlnu ti'J>i11nakC'r & trlr
y,·ln11,11111J Wh"r\f'h. R1•gl'-,
llc'd ne\~ u.sM. SlYJO or
bi;t <ilr. !f.i62 Er.skill<' 111 1-1.n. ~:,.i11.
16' J{'>b1e Cal, Br.ind nr\I.,
'71, ~c·I .. y,t, .'obUS, !11an)
xlras, v.·/1rlr. S I 8 00.
54-0-2141 or (l';'j-I'.i5ol ---Zti' Tn-m11n1n 1•unr1Jr:r. (;If
('{)nci • .s2:.oo. '/J' Tr1-1narnn
hull, TIC'l'd! l \f>J:I M~ & balil'>
~lakC' offrr. 51rH!l.Al.
HOHll::-Cu1-l6 3.--m-.,--ot-rl,
Lime ~r''"h l111n, yl'IJO\\'
t.ran1po/Hl{'. SI !9:"1. f'hor\"
after G pin 8-12·37:17.
~Sabo!, hht•l'glr\!<,-,-,-\'i-th
trc1 1h•r. :1.'.;00 or :, ( ! I
IK'para!e. 53&-26;>_1_. __ _
23' J.-1A \'A 0113. 8 .sails.
SZOOO. !Jays 6-J.t--~20. eves,
6T:;i-3037.
Boats, Slips/Docks 910
N£\VPORT Slips, from $2.73
fl''r fL Sail or po11 l'f.
;.is-~92, 494-267_1_. ---
SLI P!(lif--12·. Fi r1esr in Npt
Jlarbor. n('s! tacil. Fr<.ie
parkulg. 673-8711 rill lOpm.
..-BOAT Sp nee ~ Lido.
Sirle 11c & glir>. Ac('Om. 20 tt'I
4-0 f1. boot. 67.J.-6.130.
AAT i PORSCHE 1 VOLKSWAGEN BUICK CHEVROLET MUSTANG
BILL BARRY SUPEH "' t\>•>ch<, 1000, I '69 vw BUG -
111."·"' urrs, C'luti·h .\: C"li1>tn1
Jnternariona.J lln.rvts:t~ PONTIAC-GMC-FIAT r..alrl!. $13.'lO. CaU 67l-67•15. I,
HECHE:\'fl(lN Cl·.N1'ER HP..A!\'0 NE\\' Spd, Radio, Jleat"r, good
'56 BuK•k. o"" C1Wl'le1'. SUIO.
\.ooct c..und. Ex. transp. car
rw9-J196.
* CHEVY'S * J.\1PALJ\'$ • hlALUIU'S
l..n mileage
HERTZ CORP.
* MUSTANGS * 'TI llARDTOPS
Lo mil(•age
HERTZ CORP. ROY CARVER, Inc. ( '• .:". >"IAT '"" S>:DA~ • : RENAULT ! ro<>d., mW>t "'"· t\'PM024 1
2925 Jfarbor Blvd. ,. .ii,, ,ar-tory f'1J i.l 1f•/>1'<! Si:ZSJ, I .~ I Jlr.
CADIUAC Lrg st>lt't·tion·Many colon1
171 4) 778A050
Lrg selectzon-~1nny colors
1714) 778-4050 Coi:ta f\lf!'Sa 546_4444 plus 1.1'( & Iii:. + dn.· It·•·. 10 H.t:nault ll-10. 'fh._· btrlt• $850
2000 f.. f 'JHS"r, .S:\,\'TA ANA ) lioi11b lh<it gets to 40 n11!ei. 540-f.X26 DAYS OR '6!:1 ~tUSTANG
_, ~---·------EL DORADOS
t.IARlNJ:: J'arta &. ('quir~
l\iercw-y props & conrroJ!
··ables, :;lr i,; u I r1 e ln-
strumt"nl.!1, conrrols lsin~I,.
lf•\'t'l'I, "'indshu~Jd. Dl•JCk &
t.1cklf'. 549--0;,JO.
'71 l~.od>:e V11n JOO s..~11L-:o1.
V.f!, 1:1\JIO 11h1ft, r:1dh), fu•at
«'T. Tan extcrlcir. T.l)O n11les.
$..l l.50 tul! rr1C(', l)hnne
.J2G.-l756 lfuHer!on).
i%.'i-CH£VY~1 ~ Ton pickup
in f'x<"rl. rond. \\'di tradt~
for l:'.163 or later s!a11on
\1·ugon. Must l:>e in g()t){!
c,;ind. &46-217-1.
'63 .1-'0HD f "alcon \\'HW!•~\\'
van. Nf'll' <"IU!Ch & SIUT'll"f,
ma~ v.'hf'f'ls, good f",1nr1.
S7"iO. 67+-8li1.
=-~,-~~~ '67 Cl!EvY ~ 1011, 3:n, 3 i;!)'l,
xJnr <'Ond, $1700. 'J7 Chr·vy
I T, (luaJ \.\'his. :.111ke bed1 $.~. &12-2-167
'·I~ DODGF: 1',S, T. 12' s!akf',
$J7J. '47Chev.1 1 ~ T. 12' hl·d
\.\'fA.[rame & \\Inch, $·173,
~tlg...SJJl.
19j9 a-tEVY 1 Ton $473. 1700
Si.!perlor, Costa Me s 11.
G-15-1691 .
Auto Leasing 964
5~-1000 I pt•r gallon. •I spd .• R..ftll, ex-557.45411 EVES. ~TO CHOOSE ~~~~ V-3, 4 spd, po1ver, heavy duty ·~ FIAT KiO Sport Coopc, r r·rliun .. 1 c(1ndtti•)n. 1713 ,66 F lb k 1967 TO 1971 V·B, Auto. Trans., Factory suspension, low mileage &
'Tt&l l, oc·\\' clulf·h & braki·"· B.\'H1 $1395. L.:i ugh all the as ac '71 El Dorado Air Cond., Po .... ·cr Stl"ering, \'t'ry sharp. Sl900. Call
'70 IMPALA
... ,,, '" lh" l"""'k J l\1 F'ACTOHY ft<tdio, Heater. !197 APJ J <~91,1, (;,•111 nit.brr. Cleon •"-Xlnl 1 "' ~ ""' · · ' """'"" "' r·ond. <10 m1te."I flf'r gal. SLE:.l(l:\S l\f PORT~. '2201 ! Dark blue !inish. f:xcc>IJcn! AIR CONDITIONING Stl95. dlr. Cliff \Valdrop. Call' I-~~~~~=----
~-:O.L11n, S.A. :i:i7-5242. C()nd1t1on. Ne-.v 2 braHc.s. 4 F'ULL LEAT/!Ell INTERIOR 540-5164 or 842-0631. '68 MUSTANG 6T,__J:>A5 C\'f'S, I 1· VERY LO\V' LOC'L 'II' ~s -'ii9 HPu:111lr !<.-16. Bar~'<lln ol Spece· rat 10· hPalt'r. iSQY· _ -. " " .L.4..· 1963 CHEVY. Needs lots or VS, AutomaliC', Radio, Jltnt·
!lie :>.'l•1\f )'Pt1f , S 79 5. &59 ~ $695. c!Jr. Ch!! \Valdrop Full pow.er, vinyl top, flit & body ivork. Engine 283 is et', (X"'\VZ797) $1095. dlr, Cliff JAGll.11.R
BAU ER BUICK
l!nb1.:!Jc\·ah!". Sc>1• al 22()1 S. ~4 ,~42-06_:11_. ____ , ll•lf'~l"Qpic ste('rlng, Ai\1-F'hl good, tr<i.n5 ., good, good \\lnldrop 540-5Hi4 or 842-0631.
( ,2 '68 VW BUG raid10, door locks, CTULSt'' con-rear C'ncl. Nl'f'd?"; body work ,
'fhr llarbor J\ri•a'
Onl~ Au!horiz1•d
~\fl1n x:--11 ·1 ! DI 1· .1 !rol. Just rlawll's.<; ,,,_ pricC'd only. $125_ Call 549-0530_ 70 ~1USTANC f~astback, -~17-!,712. 12 Or. <Hr. Auton1at1r. (\\'VII-to 5C'l1 loday_ 1439CZII , -----auto, R&l-1. au· rood.
JAGUAR DEALER Rt'.'-iACLT. Sale .~ Sf>r.·1t·e I !l·t3 J OAC ran fin. pvt. pty. '70 El Dorado 6~ Impala ~uper Sport 968-5560
& Parrs. Jli\T SI.Et.IONS w I no money do"·n. ('1:1JI f'ACTO ri'Y 396, 4-.~pd. PI S, New C'lutch l967 '.\iUSfAi'l'G
Always has a n o•xct·!l••nt S<"-1 l>ll'flRT>::. tllll S. i\la1n, 541i-8n6 alt 11 am 4!J4-68Jl. AIR CONDITIONl NG & .. brks, Tape de<'k. !>7,~ Radio & heater.
J1·tt1on or lloth New & UsC'd 5.A. J.'!7-52·12. '6~1 V\V, black I a e q u e I'• Full Jea!h('r interior n11 .s. Good cond, $750. S.17 23+1 $UOO.
Jaguar~. 1.,1, .• ,.d,,al l-·t ,.,1, 892-5966. ~~~~-~--~-ROVER cliro111c Rsli'OS, r11dial fll't'S, " ""' ~ OLDSMOBILE
1971 JAGUAR Vl2
Air rnnrl1t10ning, auton1atu'
Only 8,000 rn1h •<;, l!r.!X[J'.\1NI
Si:.~:)
1970 XKE 2+2
!t • '70 RO\'f'r 2IXXI T.C. Atr,
F\l-r11rt 10, 1 01\•ncr, xln1,
$2'; .0. Call 49+-17:i:1.
SPRITE
c1nu 1\l'. '_'1'11101v wAirh blii<:k i '66 Sp!tflre, .t.11\ Jf. A
"a!ht"r lll 1·rior. utornahr r·las<;t~ .\lu~l r;acr1fi~·e, TI'A
rrunsn1!ss1nn, far•lot-y ;11r .,-1 DI .... ! ,,, . all
t I. . 1 1 I .~• r. ,,o C<'cu<'l c s. ro1u 1 ionUlg, powers l'<"I' ng ~~_52.12 & brakes, J3 hill1ns A ~1-f'l\I· 1
1
_.~,~·~·~~·==~""".,.---
S\\1 1·acho, etc. Just the one SUNBEAM
ynu'vr been looking for.
(26lBQD) '63 T igl'r, high performance,
$52!"!5 new pa int, 1nags, t1rr.s.
''Specialiiing in Quality" $1400, or best offer .
BAUER ~"--·~~"'~'-·~~~-
Buick-Opel-Jaguar TOYOTA
234 E. 17th St.
sel<.:ct-o-d1'0p, )2 v ,.ystc rn, Bcau!iful 1'~ir<'n1ist finiiih. Full '63 CHEV. Van ~or !>l's!
lalc lliOO cngln(', custor'll '""-po"·er, Sl<'rco, lilt & tele-offer, '5,!l Chev. Impala, '6.11----------
liaust. etc. $850. ,lo'irm! scopic steering, door locks, 3?1 eng., 4 sp, 4l1 pos. $550. '65 OLDS F85
&12-1689. ,o;('nllnf'I, cruise control, 962-17W. 4 Dr, Station \Vagon. Po"'E't
'GJ V\V. LIKE NE\\'! fu•hl!
eng. Xlnt 111!. Looks goo:!.
B~vf Of'FER. 968-9559
('V(',
'tiS V\V Pop-Top cn1pr., &nol'.'
htr .. rad. Xlnt mo1or. S600
or 1111. l'l'q'd to Joan.
67:i--002J.
'70 V\V bug, 12,()[() nil. Xlnt
c:vnc!. Alany e"!ras. Must
appreriate vw·s. $1700, or
best offl'r. !J.'16--2194.
'63 VW Xln't Condi
Me1•hanically J>('rfeC'I!
Perfect interior. $550 Finn.
trunk lock, l'f'ar window de-.66 Capzice, 4 dr. hrdtP, Steering, Air Cond, l\1ust see
{Dg-ger, autn light din1mrr. pow"r, a ir. Xln't rond. Orig. 10 app~ec1ate, IZTY 246)
Local lo\V m!lcHge beauty. owner ~700 5-tS--7366 Sale priced al only
<ZVE145l -,. . ' . $699
'67 El Dora do '65 linpala Wagon, fu~t pwr, CREVIER MOTORS
f'ACTORY AC, recent trans, tires &
AIR CONDlTTONlNG brakes. $750. 615-6369. 208 \V.
Full leathl'r interior
Paflded top, full po\\•er. tilt
& telescopic steering, signal
seeking radio, al l dlx. extras
& very low mileage & ~hO\\'S
1st SI., Santa Ana
'11 VAN V~. stick, good =~=8_3_5~-3_1_71_~~
cond. US .\tags. 21.000 miles 1~7 Olds, Custmn Delta.
96&-5'.'!60. Totall·y po1vered.
CONTINENTAL
t he ultimate in care. (TUR-----------
Reawnable mileage, Totally
equip!>i.'d (\VIJI 4971. 'Try it.
you'JJ like it at $UY.JO. ~ at
2Wt So. ?.lain, S.A. 557-5242, 850 1.
NABERS CADILLAC
CONTINENTAL coupe '68.
In Cotillion \Vhite wHh
Boats, Speed & Ski 911
17' FIBERGLASS ski boa!,
Jnbo<1rdloutboll rd Me r c.
cn1lscr; Iii! trlr: canval'is
covPr, $2,695. Also ll.'
f1bcrs:-las~ d inghy, 3 hn
motor. $150. 673-7499 afte:T 5 ,,m .
12 Ft 8o!;ton \V haler 18 I-IP
Johnson, ('{'fl1er stPCring, rC'·
n1otc controls. hoat covci-,
lir:h1s over $1500 1nves1ed,
Sncrif1re ~795. After 6 pm
R.12-3737.
Try our lease expcrt! tor
&ivlngs -Satisfa ction -Sl'l'·
vie!'.
Co,ta Mo'" 543-7765 SANTA ANA
'67 JAG XKF:. Aulo Trans., TOYOTA
Air Cond. Ours 1and 1 11 g
price. Must sacrifice, $'lll5.
!1'Rll-O:l6) Dir. !'-'o dealer
t•all~. 557_.a2.12.
Service depl. opeon 7:30 am
'1i 9 pm 1\Ionday thru Fri-
doy
Ph. 540-3283
'70 SQUAREBACK V \V,
Orangl', Ai\1 & 1·adial tires,
Xtl'a l'lcan, auto. 6i5-6410,
646--2238. 548-6792.
AUTHORIZED 'DEALER
2600 HARBOR BL.,
COSTA 1\1ESA
~-9100 O~n Sunday
grained Black Landau top & '67 Olds CulJass Supreme,
matching black leather in-tan & '\'hite, full Po1\·er, air
terior. i\1ic helin steel belted rond. $800. Di a g no! I i c
"'hite"•alls. Climale confrol rrport available. 494--0251
air. Tilt steering. }'ul! eves or 'vknds.
\VE LEASE ALI .. POPULAR
1972 1\1AKES AT COl\1PETI-
TTVE HATES. PHONE 540-2512
power. l mmaculate. Of· '65 Olds Jetstar 88, PIS, CADILLAC 1970 f{'t'in,g iron1 PRIVATE P/B, R&H. Rebll l>f\R', new
SEDAN DE VILLE PARTY. 557-5242. brnk.,, $250. 557-8658 art"
PLYMOUTH
'69 Valiant
' RUil( good. Blue y,·ith white
\'lnyl top. 2 Door. 6 cylinder
auton1&f1C', rarlio, heater.
l\'BA75-ll $1295. dlr. Clill
\Valdrop 540-5164, 842.ffi'.U .
'66 PLYMOUTH WAGON
V8, automatic, power s!('{'r-
1ng, (RZY130) Don't m iss
IJ11s! Only $695. Call dlr.
Cllff \Valdrop 540-5164 or
842-06.11.
e '67 PLYMOUTH e
.t.lodified tor high
performan1'e and
appearance!
$1000. l\IUSf SEU..!
548-7881
1970 PL Yi\101JTI--l Dust<'r,
automati c transmission,
~r t>leering, bu c k e t
lil'!its. c"Onsole radio &
heatt>r. Lo miles. Sl,750,
!M:l2-3577.
'66 PLY., Satellite ll.T.,
Rcblt V8, PIS. Auto, Nice
shape. $750 or best ofr.
962-40.17.
l!l65 Plyn1outh F'ury Wagon..
Nc1v tires, good condition.
Reasonable, Call 546-3367-
PONTIAC
PONT. '67 GTO Convert.
PIS, P/B, xlnt cond, 45.600
mi, orig ownr. $99 5 .
S.W.16.10.
PONTIAC Star Chiet ·~. Has
everything, real good cond.
Lo mi. $400 cash. 548-6158.
GRAND Prix 1967. Sllck and
t<1leck. Top condition. S99S.
(WBW 2~7 1 Dir. 557-5242
RAMBLER
1:1' ALLEN, y,•ith 40 H.P.
motor & lrailer "'i lh \1•inch.
$3:!0, 531-7294.
Call i'Vlalcolrn Rf'i d for
further dc!;1ils.
THEODORE
ROBINS FORD
2361'.l J-larbor Bh,r!.
e J t\G. '5'.)--:-~n. Perfection
(l\BZ079 I
Sports Car Cenler-;,.17--0764 I
710 E. Jsf S!N'f'! Santa Ana
41'7 \V. \Varner, Snn!a Ana
--WE HAVE 'EM
'G5 V\\' BUS. Need eash llO\\!
Good rond. Sacrllice $700.
96&--43-17.
'65 Con\'C'rt., neo11' top newl,;6~PO"i\1~.c,--co-~-~~-
FACTORY tires, ni<X' cond. $100 under 1~7 Olds, Cus!om Delia .. '70 ~!ORNl:."T SST Hydr'Om.,
AIR CONDITIONING "'holesale book. S42--9067. Totally p o wered. air , new tires. Xlnt rond.
.___r"_'_"'°'_'•_H•_• __,]I elf l
Ca mpe rs, s,,.fe/ Re nt 920
*-SHELL TOPS -* -
EL CAI\1!N0 * H.ANCJJ ..,,tO
DATSUN Pick Ups
B & J ~ALES
1030 S. Harbor, SA B:m-1515
Cycles, Sikes,
Scooters 925
HONDA '69 Cl J.'i{). Xln1
cond. Used fur touring &
3<'hool. S:ilO. 113:1--8:1:12.
'68 1-ionda CL 3.iO
Perfect n1ech CQnd,
$~51). * 673-75.~
SUZUKI 185
!\take Oflt•r
Call 67:\---<\2'1.J! ,____ 7--~
'68 YAi\!Al-iA 2;,Qcc DT-1. A
goocl n1nnin~ dlrt bikt>. s32;1,
545-10.16.
'6.'J BSA 650 l.i~htnini;, 111int
f'()nd, Nl"W eng. \Vorth S1 050
lst $950 takes. 646-7040 eve~.
KAWA9 0-SACRIFICE
$125. ~1-1528
'67 BULTACO LoBi!o l::x.
panston chamhcr new llrf'S.
Runs f)f"l'fM"I. $300. 979-1 :11!1.
'Y1\MAHA 100 tnul
Good cond . SZ2j,
6';'3-7·199 .. rtPr ~. pn1
'71 11nNDA SJ 12.-i nl'Y.' ~'Qrut.
Jn 1111. 7 mos old, make of-
frr ;\"l7-11•1.l.
Motor Homes 940
*Marvin_ Pearce*
Motor Homes
Sales • Rentals
558-3222
Costa l\lesa &1:!-0010
Auto1 Wanted 968
WE PA Y TOP
CASH
ror usPd can A trtJck!, Jtat
cal! U! fcir free "srlm11tes.
GROTH CHEVROLET
Ask !or Sales Manaier
182ll Beach Blvd.
lluntington Beach
847 -6087 KI 9.3331
\VE buy all n1akes of elean
used sports cars. paid for
nr not. Please drive in tor
frf'c appraisal.
, NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 \V. Coast llwy.,
N('1vporl Beach
642-9405
L\1PORTS WANTED
Orange Coun!lcs
TOP l BUYER
BILL fl·IAXEY TOYOTA
18881 Beach B!\'d.
H. Beach. Pli, 847-8555 ---'''E PAY TOP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CARS
If your car b: extra clean,
~ us !~!.
BAUER BUICK :o-: E. 17th St.
Costa !llesa 5-lS-7765
\\ILL Buy ~-our car paid for
"r nn!. Call R:dph l~rdnn
li7J.-{¥.U) -~19-303 1. l!l70
Harbor Bl•·d .. Cn,t;.i i\.lcsa.
Au tos, Imported 970
AUSTIN HEALEY
e All '{if) S1n·1 to· Nr. New tit·
RY 6'i:1)
14Ll S. V1ll<ige \\'ny, S.A.
Motor Home Rental
SPOHTS ('l\R: ('ENTER
~~11--076-1
710 l:. 1st Stree!, Surit a Ana
Rescl'\Pf' your ''a<'alion can1ri·
<'r, n1r1to1· hnn1e or 1ni111 BMW :::::''io~;;::::::~I~~:'.' Call I IMMEOIAT[_O_E_Ll_Y_[RY
MIKE McCARTHY GMC
RECRJ-.:ATTONA!. VEllJCLE
CENTf.R
2002's &
Bavaria's
---'72 LAND CRUISERS '64 V\V IlUg, steel sunroof
011(' 01vncr Xlnt co1.d. $675.
67:1--7178.
Full pcrwer equipment, pad-R bl .1 $1700 or best offer. 5'1~2717.
I I h • I h 'ti:!, CONTINENTAL easona e m1 eagc. Totally f efl top, cot .. eat er in-
ter ior, stereo AM/F'.\I ra-Good ronditio11 $.'iOO. t'f[utpped (\Vil! 49T). Tiy it, T·BIRD
rlio, tilt & tcle!lcopic steer-67S-Z77S * &12-1403 you'll like it at SIO!Xl. See' at
MAZDA
Jrnn1edia!e Delivery • NOW OPEN
1968 V\V CanlJ)C'I', Sundial in-"""t ~ 'I . S • 557 "242 . t (168AS!l (:ORVAIR ~~ ""'· "ain, ·'", -J . •• ,-lllQ • !Prior + other equipn1ent. ing, E' c. "' .. \$ Vecy "'""· 49l-31'7. $4222 1---------1 ''° OLDS 6 cyl., 3 '"""'· '6-1 '.\IONZA _ Nl"l'<ls some X!nt shape, $j5(). '4-0 Olds, 8
1..-<ng. & body .,.,·ork. Orig:.1 _cy;:.:l.~R..:.c""_'..cs1,oo __ ·_,.~,_-1_160_._
O\vllE'r. Bc>st oir takes. 270 PINTO
1 000 S. Coast Jl1gll1v11y Briggs, C.i'vl.
Laguna Beach S.I0-3!00 :1965 BUS, ~'OOd cond. SflOO. 2600 l!ARBOR BL., * PINTO'S * ;llM;;::;:.,o~;.~;;<i~~.J'il~i'~tii!t~'~l!TT,"i --,69 TOYOTA MKll ~;~Is~a~ 54~~~~t. 6 pm, 1540.91oocoSTA ~;~A Sunday ·~o~~~~~.1 ~~n~:w l~n·s, \Vith or "'ilhout air .m:: ii 4A?rr·c~~~.\~~~iio~~~";~;;;~· ·10 V\v eamPt!l'. bright CADILLAC 1968 1---7.~~~==n=v7,~=1;~--HERnilC0RP.
$1899 yello"·· xlnt cond., SZ700. CONVERTIBLE RUNS LIKE NE\V $100. Lrg selection-M11ny colors
. CREVIER MOTORS I * ""-'"' * • >111-<342 • 11u1 118-4050 '69 B All l!'ather interior, full pow-l---~=~~~--
'65 T Bird. Sharp. Top con-
d ilion. Coronation Go ld .
Full equip. Air. Don't miS£
scc_lng this classic. tNOS
640) Inv!'ntory clearance
pri~ at $.9RO, D!r. 2201 S.
l\.lain, S.A. 557-5242.
'70 T-BI RD
Sharp! Totally loaded.
$3295. 644-2950.
The "Yellow Page1:'0
classified • , • 642--5678
dlr.
of
208 \\I, 1st SL, S~nla Ana " ~\V 1
1
15' :;r:.!e c&anipirkig rr, At-1/FTl-1 stereo, till steer-DODGE Autos, Used
835•317) '". u1prnPn . ,,_,.,., ta e ! 1 ,_ 1 1 11 990 Autos, UHCI 990
11-1ERCEDES Benz, 30llSE.
air, auto trans, Like nr,,.,·
leathrr. Th c outstru1ding
motorear or thl' decad~.
Sold nc>1v fur• $11 ,000. in 1961
'l'ry $3000 for immedia1r
tl1-1lvcry 1o<lay. J im Slf'n1ons
1mports, 2'.!01 So. i\Ja111, S.A,
:1:>7-.12·12, Ask Jor Bob
Collin<;.
'6!1 ;\IE:RCEDES 220 Dies<'!.
Xlnt f'flnrl. l 01\·ner. SJZOO.
('i\·11 4!1.1-:1018
MGB
'71 CORONA 2 dr h.t. 4 spd,
radio, htr. Leavi n~ state. Lo
mi. Sl8!1!). 962--3547.
1970 COROLLA W a go n,
22.000 ori-.:. milt's. Pri ply.
t\'o rk phone 847-6032, €:Ve
fl!12-00.1:. -------'69 COR OLLA Sta \';"gu. Xlnt
n1cch. 1·oncl. $$85.
J:i.&-2395
'71 'Toyota Co1'0na 2 dr ht,
lac air, radio, 4 spd stick.
$2,095 or best offer.
RJS-8993.
TRIUMPH
o payn1cn1s. 673--1958. ng \\'hee, .-..:e n u y ap·I ·---------· preeiate. IVZD~OO)
1963 V\V bug, 1 O"'flet
S595 .•
Call 673--33.'">9 a!t 3 pm
* * 4 V\V ASI"RA MAGS, fO'l'
sale. i\lake off<'r.
* 614--8993 *
'69 V\V, Sqhnck, r/h, auto,
pri pa11y, $1430.
675-8680 or 642-7781
'60 V\V BUG, '72 l ie .• goorl
('Onrf. Lvg cn!ry, must sell
irnmf'd. $345. 497-1154
'GS V\V Squareback, atr,
R&lf, lop shape, $1300.
543-3782, 478 E. 20th Ci\1.
'70 V\V Bus. A.\l lF'M, catn-
p ing «]Uip. $2150. Call
67~588i
169 VW, Xlnt Cond.
$2222
NABERS CADILLAC
AUTHORIZED DEALER
2600 I-f ARBOR 8 L.,
COSTA MESA
540-9100 Open Sunday
LARGEST
SELECTION OF
CADILLACS IN
ORANGE COUNTY
SALES-LEASING
AUTHORIZED
·SERVJCE-
Nabers Cadillac
2600 HARBOR BL.,
COSTA MESA
540-9100 Open SUnday
'71 DODGE DEMON
Auto 'T'rans, Power Steering,
Air Cond, low miJeage, (338-
DBA)
$2399
CREVIER MOTORS
208 \V. Jst St .. Santa Ana
83S-ll7J
1969 DODGE Charger Clean,
top {'()nd, Call f>ID-5400 or
49-hU74 (evC'S) ask Ior
Brooke.
'64 DODGE J)ART
Good nJnning condition.
$175 • &16-1072
'63 DODGE ,1i lh rebuilt
engine 1966. Ne1v tires &
hattf!ry. S-125, 6+J-.f.6.t7 aft. 5.
FORD
'71 LTD'S
GALAXI ES & TORTNO'S
going in srrv1rr-mus1 sell~! Coupe. F'ull fa ctory . JX11~·('r, Also '71 Country Serlan \\'gn
S600 hf-st nrff'r 642-:11116. factory atr t·ond1t1onrn~. Lo mileagr
!l{ust isell. 67.1-7237 11ft 6
'66 V\V r·as1back Sunroof; '65 DeVille
po11'f'r "'1ndo1\·s. {PBP9SJ• HERTZ CORP
S995. dlr. Cl irr \\'aklrop •
540-5164, S-,12-063 1. Lrg selection-Many CQlors
VOLVO
e VOLVO 'f~I Pl.~00 Sharp CPF: DVL $70, Ex!r<'mely (714) 778-4050 'ti7 THlU.\JPJI S p 11 f 1re, 10P£86l)
hnr<lt0p r n n v r rt i h I "· 5porls Cnr C<'nter-547--0iM l.-Hv m ll('s, A,\t-F;'I! sttrco. '70 Gafaxie 500
'6:1 YELLOIV Ml.B Ro.1-ct~irr, n1d1olheatrr. };n~Hl<', hoc1y 71 0 E . l s! Stl'f'('t Santa Ana C~sc ;.'Ontrol. ~al ~r in-2 Dr. l-larcHop, V-8, Auto.
\Vire "'hf'f'ls, At\1/F').1'. New 1 & mint f'.'(CT'! ronrl. N~'ds :1959 Volvo, recentl y 17r1or.~llmag n1f 1c e~t Trans .. Fat"lory A~r Cond.,
top. \'r'f')' C'lr:in. , C 11. ~ 1 I interior "ork, :!\111i;t srll this rt<paimt c:ooct conchtion Jo 13.~1 n g 0 Jl('(!. 'V~LI Power Steering, Radio, l-lent-49-~711 ex! 220 lx't"n 8.::0 "·rt>k, first $700 takes. S3501orfc>r 5'18--0412. .sacr1t1ce, Dir (798 AZIJ. No er, Vinyl Roof. (172ABBI
& <. I Phone 6~~17 rla\s. df'aler calls please. 557-5242. $2395. dlr. Cliff \Valdrop.
'f,..\ i\ICB · 1 i;, '63 VOLVO 122S, good ('One.I. A11k for Sandy S6rxler.s. Call 540-5164 or 842-0631. 1 • • 111·1v pa i~l, 0P.• e TR '70 Spilf11-e $l:'i99 i\1ust t<1ell. ~t ofte r, rn~ olhau!. Ai\flf~1. \\Pl)'(' (935BQAI fll2_5865 et! 5 1970 CADILLAC Eldorado, 1969 FORD Cohra 428 e1i ln 1~·h!s. $7!¥.1. 673--8261 Spor!s Car Centt'r-~'47-07&1 '· · f'r pm. Executive car. All extrru;. fastback. 27.000 miles. Xlnt
710 F:. Isl S!rt'et &lnta Ana , Autos, Used 990 Leather int. Vinyl roof. Xlnt cord PIS, PID, air, radial
I• TR--6 '70 Xtra J;ti:arp. cond., low mileage. ~. tires. Executive's 2nd car.
---------C332CTPJ HOT WHEELS! 1624 Antiqua \\lay, N.B. $2100. 1624 Antiqua Way,
'71 Opel 1900 Wagon Sports C1r Centcr-547-0764 e '67 PLYMOUTH e -"='--=--=·~-==~~ l-~N~.B".~64~2-~-=-~--~
Like nc"•! Unrl!'r 8.000 nil. 710 E. lst Street Snntn Ana 1todi[ied tor high '67 DE VILLE '69 FORD LTD Brgm, 4 <lr,
Auto. trans .. n&lf, \VSW. dlr. .... .. ronnM-··d HT _,_ ····-_,, ti-• TR GT6 '69. Local beaut. r~• ...... "" , l:Ul--·~~. ·~.. '"°'· Fi1ust sac! Cnll Vic 5.16-65811 appearance! m~h xlnt $2395, 847--5007
9.5 pni. iZSR943J ~tusr SELL! ~r&io. 4 Door Sedan. Full power, SJ)Or!s Car Center-547--0764 548_7881 ,. tnct air cond. Loaded. (368.. eves.
OPEL
'63
'65
'66
'55
'63
'68
'64
SPECIALS
YW IUS
w/S•1I. l lQZ6S1 I
.. LYMOUTH VALIANT
6 c:y!. Auto. Tr1111. I NRM2 I I>
DODGE YAN
P1 int1d in1id1 I Out.
C l•o1n. IU4l245J
T·llRD
Avlo. Tr•n1., Turquoi1•. 165JCJUI
CADILLAC SEDAN DEVILLE
Nu P1in t, Auto. Tr1n1.,
Nu Uphol1l•ry, !NV8977l
IARRACUDA
Auto. Tr1n1., Pow•r Sl1•rinq,
IWTB705)
FALCON
V-1, Auto, l r•n1., Powo1r Si••rin9,
1 IQJ24 1 l
$845
$499
$1595
$995
$795
$1495
$299
'65 CADILLAC SIDAN DEVILLI $1395 loo1d1d. Air Co11d ili onin9, (NNS719 )
'66 MUSTANG
Auto. lr11>1, Air Corid., C:l1111,
1#94151
$995
Cor. Be.'.lch & ?1'1cF'adden,
\l'c.~I n1 lnslcr
894-1:1::6 or 531-7·150 1--"-
'70 OPEL 710 E. 1st Stl'('('I Santa Ana BXD) $1695. dtr. Cliff WaJ-11"955=°"SJ"L""V"E"R""'G,--re-y"'""'M,--"'1-,--a-.,..
Cnra1·an \\'ngon. AulomaliC' 1968 Triuni ph TR-25(1. Lo AMERICAN drop 540-5164 or 842-0631. V-8, R&H, 3 ~pd., stick
rrans .. :i1r t.11nd .. lugg. rack. k shift Xlnt cond Call after 6 '69 AMIASSADOl $1599
13631 lfnrbor. Garden Grove
1 Dtk. So. of G.G. FN')'.
6JG-2.'ll3 , ___ _
Auto Strvlce, Parti ?49
CREVIER MOTORS
208 \V, J ~r ~t . :-;antu Ana
83S-317l
-A-,-,-0-m-o J\~,-.;--,~-·1=1,----
302 V-8 · }~ord "ngin1>, Ju.~t
...,,""· •zr '""''•.-. • m'""· ROY CARVER, Inc.
pa.Ms. &46--0975 1\ftrr 6. 2925 Harbru' Blvd.
f CUSTO'.\I ;1>1 h~ls -f'1t f'orrl. ~a Mt'Stl 546-4'i44
· or Ch~lcr or adapt fo V\V. '&I Bi\1\V 2002, cl~a n, slcl'f'O
$50 taki'! 11U. 67f1-l3"5. caiu:el1e, llC\V tires. Sl490.
l Trucks 962 Pvt. pty. •194-5014.
'm--iiM\V 2800 CS. 11 l r.
1;unrool. l<'a!her, Al'1/F';\1.
P\I. ply. $6.'i(IO. 546-6020.
DATSUN
{i20!)l..Jl 64.1_2950_ n1ilc~. Ii e 11<'W. \Vire 1970 CADILLAC Coupe -• \\·h~ls. 5~742. A , M OeVtlle. Loaded. Xlnl cone!. pm, 644-2005. PORSCHE
OVER 25
Clean, Reconditioned,
& Guaranteed.
PORSCHES
911's M 912'• -914'•
1957 to 1971
merican otors •59 TR-3 e $150. Pri. porty. $4650. 546-<>562. STATION Wag.. 1 968 ,
or bst. offer. 673-1241 vGremlins vHorneti CAMARO Fairlane 500. Immac. $950. VMatadori J,1'Javelins 6~3126 eves.
'67 TR!Ui1>1PH Spitflrt', Good """Ambaiiador1 '67 FORD, good condit.ion
rood $&JO. Pvt party. Cal. H uge £tock of •n ·s & '72'1 * CAMARO'S * 6~ ~so NB '71 llardto"" * Lo mi'• $450. ·~.. · -Bi11-Bi11 SavinCJS ~ 536-8934 ..,.. '71 TR 6, am/!m, Michelin .,, .,, HERTZ CORP.
111"('s "·teeauty rims. 12,00J Harbor American 1..rg selection-Many colors JEEP
nil. lmmac. 61:.l--4619 eves. Home ot Convenient (714) 77M050
VOLKSWAGEN Payments * ,69 CAMARO VS, sharp '70w•~I cruiser, hardtop. 4 1969 Harbor Blvd. '"""' dri\/f'. Wartt'n bub!, I Costa Meia 646-0261 loaded wfxtras, lo mil. never abused, excellent oor>-1971 SQUAREBACh'., aulo Must sell! $1795. 642--9444. dition. (928 BZU) ~ """'·· A~!':m ,,.,, 01"" BUICK CHEVROLET so1-6242 .
3100 \V. Const 1-lwy. '66 V\V Fastbltck, 1600 TL, " '64 IMPALA A!C, radlo,l ---U~N=c=-o=LN~,---
Newm.rt Beach new tire.s. ~~~a~~300~ . .S.185. '70 Buick Riviera PIS. orig. O\\'tler. Immac. LINCOLN Contillf!fltal 1967.
·, .. NEWPORT ·
. IMPORTS
642·9405 ..,..._ Loaded. (">()Id beauty. 027-$695. 830-0C65 eves, 545-3754 While, 2 door, xlnt cond.
'6.l Po™'he, g1J.ll'f cond. ll('"' '69 V\V Bug. Super Con-l!FX. day. Owner. 494-2339 aft 5..
()4int. \Vh 1te \\'/red Interior. <titian~ $1300. \\load a c-$3695 '66 WAGON, air. ex('('p.l---o-=====--
644-1481 f't'sserll's. 61&-3159. clean. XJnt· m«ti. $875. MERCURY
'65
v.s, 4 Or., All •rlr11,
Mu1t s.,._ 1:94 35) ·-------
AMIASSADOl CLUI COUPI
V-1, lo•d•d, Air CoMI. IWIZl291
'64 INTllNATIONAL CAllYALL
Auto, lro1ns. Nic:t . IMllCSIJI
150 CHM l/r-TON
IKJJ0661
'65 DODGI V•·TON
No1w T1r11, V1ry Cl•trt. fNtlJJ21)
'64 " DODGI PICICUP Lon9 lid. !IC620721
$695
$1095
$199
$1295
$1095 '62 DODGE ~ ~.u. 8' hcrt,
l)ClV t1¥J:, Repo, $ ~ 7 5 · 1
SJl.8)19,
'57 ... 'l'On nathed, &!&kt\ ---~-= ·~J;"' •ire.. 1-too '72 DATSUNPICKUP
'60 Poriche ·71 V\v SQuareback. radial M.acffoward 536-6975. Pri. pry.
'1600 "'""' 6r.t-:tl90 .;,.,,, 16,000 mL Perl "'""· $9600 '.oi 53l.(ll08 '69 OIEVY Impel•, 4 de 1rr. '67 MONTCLAIR
1960 POR5Cil£ 356. 1600~,, S2600, 6#-89!n. 1 Comer 1st I: Harbor " rlh, air cond. P S/l'B. 2 Door Jf.T. Dlr. V.Top., Air MARCUS MOTORS U1G7 DODGE V.n, AM/f?.L I • V ta.pt deck. JNUl.:itt'd & '' ~pd dlr. \ /cl.mpcr, Radin,
k_.d S1!ir50 6ll..s<M6 6 ply !lrrs, o/rao1 ,.nglnt'.
pane. · ' . s~.~. Can fin pvt ply"''
· II'• I brte'n' . .erll your I m m(lrlf')' do"n 01\C. •
I~ wtth NM., use DAILY I 77646S. MG-8736 alt U nm
Pilot dassUJC'd, 64~8. _<H::.:_:.f.8::cl::::L _____ _
t •
• -·
.t.tE'chun pcrf. Very cll'an, m V\V Sedan. radio, 8 track, 1 S/lnl&.. Anll $1!i00. 67!i--0989. Cond. AM/FM. Loaded. Lit.
$1 ,T:iO. 546-8195. beige. xlnt 67~nd. Sl425. ~UICK Rivieni.. 1970. loedcd. '63 U.1PALA, 4-d'r. P/S. tle old bankers CAr. (VOB-
lt's alwa,ys the riRht hnic ,t 833-6348_d~: -~7 cv".:,._ Executive's auto. 80,000 PfB, Runs great, $400. 0ot9) Call 516-8736 aft 10
1 you "'•nt Rl::SU L TS' Call • 675-56?9 * '66 BUICK LE SABRE F'OR sale, '64 Chevy Pl1nlibu '69 MERC Marqui!, while 21 OD HARBOR BL YD., 645-0466 aJ"'A.)1L UMl right place If VW BUS '63 $450 ~· mi'll. $2000. 963-1896. I ** 84&-6221 ** 49-1-6811.
f>.t 2-56iS & place U1a1 ad '64 VW-BEST OFFER e $450 e S.<i. S5(l0. Call befort 4 pm. v.--/blk vinyl top & inl, lacl
l'N!ttyr ~1 Rl(t&, N.B. 645-2016 Call 493-4715 Wl-8093. a lr. excel cond. 837-5426. !••••••••••••••••••
, ,,
--
\
•
)
I
I
·I
~' -
San'· Cle1nente Today's Final
Capistrano EDI TION N.Y. Stocks
VOL 65 , NO. 27, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORt~IA rliESO~Y. FEBRUARY I, 1972 TEN CENTS
U.S. Fund Hopes Higher for Clemente Sewer
The chances for a hefty government
grant of funds to help pay for a massive
~wer main project running the length o(
San Clemente seef\ healthier this week.
For more than a year the project
crucial to the development of San Onofre
Bluffs State Park and residential acreage
in the city had remained. under lo.,.1-
priorlty status.
Cily Manager Ken Carr said the sewer
~roject, calculated to cost more than one
million dollars, bas now made top priori-
ty on a preliminary state list and a public
hearing on that list will be held later this
week in Sacramento.
The state \Valer Re.sources Control
Board administers the grant.s that
primarily are furnished by the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban
Development.
San Clemente's portion of the total pro-
jecL cost would be relatively low.
Carr explained that the percentage
breakdown would be SS percent from the
federal branch, 25 percent from the state
and 20 percent by the city.
Carr speculate<! that one reason for the
sudden shift from low to very high priori-
ty came after the state was assured late
last year that the ~1arine Corps shoreline
and uplands would be leased for 50 years
for development as a state park.
The only entity that could provide
sewage and water service to that large
public recreation area in San Diego Coun-
ty would be San Clemente.
But if the existing main were used the
f>eak flows fro1n !he new state park
would overload the system.
..It's been prove" that if "-'e agree to
handle lhe service for the state, then we
~'Ould need a new wllector," Carr said.
Tht new main would be installed along
the El Camino Real right of way and
could either be built in sections and tied
into the existing main at the end . or com·
pletely installed all the way from the
Irving Woe~ Span Sea
In Hughes Fraud Probe
Two Mo1·e
In Clemente
City Race
Incumbent Stanley Northrup a n d
challenger J ames Moss became the twG
newest fom1'al candidate.s for city-council
in San Clemente late Monday. Now there
4re,f<Nr off.icjally ~ , --~
Northrop seeks a fourth term. Moss, a
ftre department captain who serves in
Los Angeles, has served on advisory
committees to the City of Sao Clemente
on {\re department matters.
others who already are formally in the
running are local iMkeeper Paul Presley
and restaurant owner Courtney AUison .
others have taken out papers and are
expected to return the docwnents in time
for the Thur sday noon deadline.
They are Art Holmes, planning com-
mission chajrrnan; Eric Boucher, local
building designer: Mayor Walter Evans
Jr., who would seek a second term to the
council, and businessman Ra Ip h
Tomlinson .
* * tr Forster Seeking
2nd Capo Term
Mayor Tony Forster took out nomina-
tion papers today to seek a secnnd term
on \he San Juan Capi strano City Council.
With two days left to file. six-can·
didates have indicated their interest in
seeking a seat. Two_ -Mrs. Judy Beggs
and James Weathers -have filed.
Other potential candidates are Davis
Wolf. 19, George Frieoclrlch, Robert W.
Olson, and Dr. Roy Byrnes.
Incumbent Bill Bathgate has not yet
announced a decision on running.
Forster, owner of an auto parts store in
~anta Ana, resides at 31312 Guadalupe.
* * * Life Outlined
•
·swiss, U.S.
Howard Hughes Story Seek Clues
Told in 4-partSeries In Mystery
Editor's note: It began modestly
enougl~ in 1-louston, Tt.ta.s, with a
new kind of oil well drilling bit. But
now the Hughes Tool Co. is a many
spLendored business CO'nglomtrate.
AirliMs, gambling casinos, mint1 -
you name it. And it is ruled by a ma.i&
who has no' been seen in public i11
alm-0st 20 years. Following i.I the fi rst
of four article.s on tM t11any faces of
Howard flughes.
By JACK LEFLER
Auocl•ttd Prtts N'""11 Wrllfr LOS ANGELES -Hughes Tool Co., the
comerslone of a $2 billion business en~
terprise, is as spectacuJarly visible as its
sole owner, Howard Hughes, i s
mysteriously invisible.
Its success, founded on a revolutionary
AsMts RiH
From $650,000
To $2 Billion
oil well drilling bit, has made its
reclusive owner one of the world 's richest
men.
The furor over the authenticity of an
autobiography of Hughes, wh ich
McGraw-Hill Publishing Co. originally
planned to publish in f\-1arch. has focused
public attention on the corporate kingdom
over which Hughes rules from his secret
hideouts.
Hughes Tool (Toolco\ and its oil tool
division are based in Houston, Tex. Its
other major properties include a
helicopter manufacturing division in
California; an airline, Hughes Airwest, in
Western States; hotels, gambling casinos.
mining claims and other properties in
Nevada; Hughes Television Network. and
huge real estate holdlngs in Arizona and
NEW YORK (UPI) -The inquiry into
polllble fraud Inv o Iv in g the
"aotoblography'' or Howard Hughes
spa Med the Atlantic today ·with .arrest California. . war~ 19rfolbor.Clillo¢Inu-The vast operations hav~ been com-in Switzer'faild B:nd the proriitse -Ol an· of ..
manded by hughes, 66, m im~ .. .fidtd-1umiijgation. made in the United manner, usually by telephone. Some of States ·
his top e~ecuttves have n~ver seen him. Jn Zurtch the situation was more ~e hasn t made a public appearance &erious for Irving, an American citizen.
since 1953. . . . and his Swiss-born wife, Edith, 3'.
Last Jan. 7, a man identified by Officials there issued arrest warrants
Hughe~· .pub~ic re_Iations. s~kesman as for the couple on "urgent suspicion 0£
the b1!11ona1re 1ndustr1alist held a fraud, ralsificaLion of official documents,
telephone news conference with seven and investigation ol these crimes."
news reporters to deny the authenticity of Jn this country where the couple ar ..
the McGraw-Hill manuscript. The rived Thursday, U.S. Attorney Whitney
newsmen, who were assembled here, said N?rt~ Seymour and New York COunty
they were convinced the voice on the D1str1ct Attorney Frank S. Hogan con-
telephone was that of Hughes. !erred o~ possible federal charges of wire
H h h ld t'U 'th T 1 and mail fraud and slate charges of ug es o s no I e ~1 00 co ex-fraud and purjury against Irving.
cept that of owner: Operat~ons are handl· Zurich District Attorney Peter Veleff
ed by E~ecutlve Vice .Prest.dent Ra~mond said today that although they have issued
M. Holliday and Senior Vice Presidents the arrest warrants they need the
Frank \V. Gay and James R. Lesch. coope ration of U.S. police to solve the
Wh~t was to ~come a fabulous en· "autobiography mystery."
terpr1se was born in 1909 at Goose Creek, "Since part of the suspected crjme wa."I
Tex. when Howard Hughes Sr. suc-carried out in Zurich but the effects -
cessfully tested the rotary rock drill bit the actual damages ~ occurred in the
he invented. The bit consisted of 166 (See IRVING Page %)
conical cutters of milled teettrv.•hich '
chiseled and crushed rock sG it could be
brought up through the drill stem from
the bottom of the drilling hole. It solved
the problem of drilling through rock.
It's estimated that 75 percent of tile <iii
wells in non.Communist countries ba ve
been drilled with Hughes bits .
Young Hughes' parents willed him 60
percent interest in the tool company and,
newly orphaned, he took over its opera-
tion in 1923 when he was 19. He later
bought the other 40 percent interest from
relatives.
V,alue of the company at the time of the
'· (See HUGHES, Page %)
Teen Near Death
After Car Crasl1
A 16 -year-old San Juan Cap.
istranG girl - a member of a plo~er
valley family -remained near death in
Mission Community Hospital today from
severe injuries suffered last weekend in a
crash: along Ortega Highway.
Capistrano Growth Debated
Louella Oliveras, of 31921 Los Rios
Street, was listed ill critical condition
early today, suffering from severe head
and facial lhjurles and other hurts,
nurses said.
Miss Olivares was a passenger In a car
driven by Zack Loukldas, 17, of 3434 Via
Fortuna, Capistrano Beach.
Highway patrolmen said the auto rolled
over about a mile east of the San Juan ci·
ty limits Friday. City Officials Hold Spirited General Plan Se~sion
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of 1"-Otiltr Pl .. ! Sl•H
Two batUe camps are emerging in San
Juan Capistrano.
·And in the latest sparring match Mon8
day night the battle lines became more
defined J."I planning coITllllWioners, city
councilmen and homeowners s•t in-
formally to debate ·for h6Ur1 the issue of
city growth.
One group wants a new general plan
designed by an outside consultant wing
the lllest planning techniques.
The other wants to keep intact the
city'• old aeneral plan prepared by
San Juan's own professional planning
1tnfr.
Di.tusslng tht general plan, the cur·
rent ban on zoning, and other planning
bsues Monday, m~s of the city
"'council an4 planning commiulon split in-
fo two grd'ups .
B'l\'llXY didn't cloS< the door to com-
promise. •
Defending the city's general plan, Plan-
ning Commission ChaJrman Jerry Gaff-
ney sald he agreed that the plan needed
chonglng, but IOid the 19-monti>old docu-
ment was designed to be flexible.
"I don't lhlnJt totally redoing the plan II
necessary," said Gaffney, "Revision is
going on constantly."
He said he took exception to comments
made by an "expert" produced by the
Alliance or Homeowners Associal.ions at a
recent meeti,ng about the plan and the
qualifications: of city planner Bob Johns.
"His comments were scurrilous and
slanderous. I told the city plaMer to-&eek
legal redress,'' sald Gaffney.
Taking an opposing viewpoint on tht
general plan was Art Lavagnino, vice
chairman of the planning commission.
L.avignlno called for a tot.al revision of
the plan by an outside consultant
cooperating with the city planning staff
and a <.'Ommittee of residents.
"We are ool plannins:; In lhls city," 8aid
Lavagnlno. "We are influenced and guid-
ed bfu developers and we kre only react-
ing their deslr'es, mOBt Of wha ch 11re
met. We are not. serving people who
migrated here ln the belier Utot values
would be preaerved."
All councilmen seemed willing to revise
the general plan using a citizens' com-
mittee to determine Its goaJs.
But whether or not an out.side con~
suit.ant will be used or the city's own
plaMtl'I Wit not declded.
Councilman Bill Bathgate said he didn't
think there was anything drastically
wrong with the plan. But councilman Jim
Thorpe d~agreed.
He said a major mistake b the concept
or high densi ty on the valley floor. "We
shouldn't pack people along the creek
beds," he said.
Ite also disagreed with over-all density
figures and pointed out U.e problem o(
hav!ng too much of one kind of develop.
ment at one time1 and not taking hard
stands against <1evelopment on flood
plains and hillsides.
Thorpe suggestetl that the council has
three things tb do before It goes sny
further: discuss land assessment with
County AsseSsor Andrew Hinshaw; ap-
pro1ch the county planning department
to study Its techni~s. and. !'f'ethod1 : &it
down with the scho61 board and study
how development affects &ehools.
In the meantime, most councllmm
!leem unwilling to cornpletcly halt all
growth.
Councllmnn Ed O,ermak sur.ge.!>tcd
that the city appoint an impact com-
mittee to view the rffect of .. evcry new
IS.. DEBATE, Page l)
The young driver suffered only minor
Injuries in the single-car crpsh.
Twel ve Across
Spells 'Oop~'
To the DAILY PILOT'S cro,.
word puzzle fans :
You win,
A! an experi~t, we began
publishing a smauer -and slmp.
ler -crouword puzzle 1n Jts reg-
ular pasltlon on the comic poge
several week!: ago. The response,
we reckoned, might not be tre.-
mendou! but we thousht it might
be. po31tlve.
It wasn't. After a deluge of·com-
pla lnts, lhreats of cancellalion,
angry tirade. Md threats on the
editor'• IUe, we returned to the
old crouword puz7.le format. 'lou
will find It today on page 15.
And thanQ for letting us kno\t'
you care.
We do, too.
south c11y limns to the new was(e treat·
ment plant.
During the sum1ner period !he existing
main is used to capac1t}, city :udes ha\·e
said.
One other dirC<"l effccl of !he ne"' mai11
would be the ease of devrloprnrnt of tht"
inland areas at the southerly portio n or
the city.
Such land use has bttn stalled for
years because the city's ability to handle
Family Tradition
nio~e se11"age. through !he old be<•chfront
n1:Hn \1·:is poor.
l':::irr si1it\ 1h:i! funds to olf:->rt the r1!v '.s
porti(lt1 ~)f 1hf' :'~',,.,·er mau1 t'O•!s 11<)u!d ·be
a1·alll1blc lhr"o11gh leftover rnoric·v frOO\
l!•e bond 1:i:i11c thut p<11d for the 11e1r
l\'aSIC' !rrnl1nt:>nt pla11I.
If the st.1tc panel ftrrnl y ::ipprove,o; or
lh<' project's priority st:ilus after hear·
1 11~s 1'hursday, the nexl logical step
1vould be the earmarking or funds for the
actual project.
Rabbi and Mrs. Jacob Twerski of MiJ\\1aukec celebrated their 50th
wedding anniversary recently surrounded by four of their five sons:
who are also rabbis. Behind their parents stand, from left, Rabbis
Aaron, Pittsburgh; .Michael, Milwaukee; Shloinle, Denver and Motel,
New York. Not in ·the picture was son Shea, of Pittsburgh.
Service Station Owner
Seeks Bus Service Ol\:ay
J f the state of CaHfornia lends its okay,
San Clemente service station. owner Curt
Pietzger pledges to launch a South Coast
area bus service late this spring.
Pietzger, or 115 San Ditgo, said this
week that he already has applied for
permission from the state Pul>llc Utilities
Commission to operate the bus line that
would charge a minimwn of a quarter for
a bus trip and a maximum of 75 cents.
Pietzger's plans were aired recently
before the United Chambers 0£ Com-
March 31 Slated
For Unveiling
Of Dan,a Bro1i ze
March 31 Is the tentative dale for the
celebration and unveiling at Dana Harbo r
of the nine·foot bronze of the area's
namesake, Richard Henry Dana.
Les Remmers, the leader of the San
Juan Historical Society's successful drive
for $20,000 to buy the statue, snld the art
work cast in Italy wUI rest atop a tht__ee-.
foot , granite base.
111e site for · the 11tatue has been
described by Remmers as perfect for the
art work.
The area is at the midpoint of Dana
Jsland near the end of the Ktrwin bridge.
Configuration of the land at the <e will
mean that occupant.! oC passing vessels in
and out of the harbor would be able to
see the bronze.
The statue presently ts ln a Newport
Btach wsrehOuse after arriving by ship
at Ensenad,a HarbOr several weekl'i ago,
Full details or the unveiling celebration
will be given later, Remmers promised.
Doctor's Rites Set
SfAN~'ORD (UPlJ -Services were
pending for Dr. f.rlc Ogden , heart
research 1pecialist .:ind physiologist. who
dltd Sond;iy at Stanford Medical Center.
He wos 69. Dr. Ogedn was chief of the en-
\'lronmental blology division at the
Ames Spnce Cente.r, Moffett field. and
was a faculty lecturer In aerospace
medicine at the medi cal center.
mercc of the South Coast area.
The San Clemente businessman plarur
tc> obtain surplus military buses and
several other minibuses to round out hi.a
fleet.
1'he routes, he said. \.•1ould stretch from
San Clemente to the Saddleback area.
The initial two-bu s system would offer
travel from San Clemente to Capistrano
Beach to Dana Point and Crown Valley
Parkway, Saddleback College, then back,
via San Juan Capistrano, Grant's Plaza
and San Clemente General Hospital.
Pietzger's plans come after months of
surveying and study by membel"! o( the
United Chambers on the local need and
desire for a bus service.
One notable difference b e t w c e n
Pie tzger'• Ideas and proposals of the
committee is the issue of subsidies.
Pletzger plans to seek no subsidies.
The chamber organization was pro-
posing a plan whereby loca l businesser
that would benefit Crom the serv\ce would
(See BUS SERVICE, Page ZJ
Ol'ange Co•••
\\'eather
Variable high clouds fire expect-
ed along the Ornnge Coa&t Wed·
ncsday , with a possibility or
sprinkles. Gusty winds arc also
expected bringing tem peratures
down to the low 60'!. Tonight's low
will be around ·42 degrees. ·
INSIDE TODAY .
Arlene Lu111, a Honol14.lU rt·
porter, is perlwps tlie first
CJ1intse·Am.er~an jour-naU.,t to
enlcr mairdnnd L'hina sinct
1948. ,./er lmprtssions appear
01t Page 8.
l , M. l•Yll 1
C•lll'ltrril• t c:.1111" H·'' C1tn\e' 11
(f'IU-11 1J
D~··~ Httlc-., It
Ecllf'Qn..l l"ltt f
Rnltrl1ln,,,.ftl 1t
ll'llllllC• -.21
l'fr ll't lltc"111 If Mer.,_t...,, 14
Arill ltMl•ri 14
Ml.n.1 '' Mt:'Ulil f'vMt Jll
Nt'l•~•I Nt"" .... Ot•~tt cw11tl' 11 SvlYlt Pt>r.lf' M
.~ .. ,. , .. ,.__
l ltt~ MlfV'sll IO-ll ,, ~ ..... ,. "
'"'"''" u WNltt!' •
·-·· ..... 11-14 WNlll NIWI ....
·-
..
! OAJLY PH.OT SC
Palisades Advance Zone Bid Facing Hearing
Ci ly coune1ltnen In San C!cmtntt \.\'!JI
&eL a publliC hearin& dart Wednesday
night on the requeat by a San Leandro
businessman for advance zoning or 20
acres or Palisades land \.\ hich hus been
the subject of hornen>\!lCr prutcs t.s of
la Le.
I fessaonal usage.
Residents in lhe county-administered
palisade, nearby have been cr1tlcal of
any high-density usage of lht property.
st-veral four-unit apartment buildings oQ
acreage owned by the Chapman Atanage-
me11t CorporaUon will come JJP for
rrv1ew by the council.
elude·
-The annual reque~t by lilt <'ham her or commerct for the use or Old Plaza
Park a.s the site of the annual carn1l'al,
part of !he Fiesta !.;:1 t'hr1l:illan1ta
c-clebral1011 U1e sr:1.'vpcl \.\'l·t.:k1·nU 111 Ju/\.
-A request for foru 1;1J t·1ty par!1 t·1p:-:i-
l1un 1n !he Prl'S lfll·nt 's J1rOJl't't Ctinnn1tt1·1·
which u; raising $7,500 fnr t)l{· purl'hase of
a bronze I.lust of Prt~it1cn~ NtX(Jf1 \\hu.:h
CVt•ntually \\'Ill IH· 1luo<Jtl'd hi' lol'i.d
t·itizens tv t)1f• ,\'ixuu LH.1r11r.', Sui11lar re. tp1e.~s for uffici al hies.sing -h;:11•t: gr1nc to
the Capistrano Unified Schoul /)iSlr1<:t.
lando" nc:rs 1n the afft:cled area.
-J)iscuslilon i;if the possi ble exchMge
of land at Linda Lane Park 1,1.·here about
3.000 squa re ft't't presently remain in
pr !1·o tt> tu1nd~. 1'he ow11Pr of the pal'cel
h;i\. 111-:1 t·1·d to swaJ) h1 ~ la nd <1t the
lt·11d111~ •·t!g!' or t!1e park fur another
p;1r1'1·I n[ e1Ly u"r11.:d land along \'ia
f.!1'l'ha.
ject has been cons.idered off and on for
the past several years.
-Consideration of an appeal made two
weeks ago by Liontl Burt that the rJt,y
donate the use of cl!y lrut:k after regular
hours to asSJsl in the pr1·kup llf papers
;ind cans fur rceycl1ng . CoU!ll'J!men
already ha\'C agrf'l'd !o ll·nd Burt a
forklift to handle IJ<1les uf news print. E.W. R<1thbun's rt·qu1!~1 f1i r advan("e
zoning to a g1:1 rden ap1Jrlr11cnt usage
already has won lt1c favtJr:ible acc1Jrd of
planning c:ornml s!.10111·r.,
Rathbun pledges to build a high.quality
aparltnent complex.
The ;_1nntxat1on still is in t he
prel1rr111n1ry stages <!!HI as _\'(•f ha~ nnt
btc11 L'Ortsidere1! by the J,01·al Agenry
F11r111at11111 C11nu1 11ss1un
C}J1lltn1~~lonel't'I approved !he lract map
l:i~t ~·etk an<I ~!Utk on JS conditions for
;1pprov;1I
(
01JtH1rlhnen l1av1• 1hf' oplin u tu allow 1he
1 1Ht1t11l:;sion okay lo ren1a1n cir lak£> the
tract 111<11J 11p :1g~1n <H tlie t·ou r1t•1I li·1f'!
Councilmen rlC'."<f nltlSI 1lrc1de if th!'
land should ha ve an ad vantt' zoning !abet
brfore it is forn1ally anncxl'd lo the c:ny.
H1•:1r111gs 011 annex:111on v.111 l.u· hi·ld
before th<i l l·uunty p:inr·I and cit; bodies
as v.·cll
Another la[lrl u.~e ,naller whith h.'ls
be<.P flayed 'on ()("Casinn in thr s111nr
~Crtcri1I \'tC"inity ::ibn wilt come hf'f<irt'
coun c1 ln1en \~'edne:<>day.
H1·~1rlc,111s 1n tht· hc1u~111g lria·ts 111•;1r tt1e
sitr 1111 lhe \ u·1nlly of San ('ll'rncntc
l i1·r1t<r:ll llosp1ta lf questioned the prOJl'('t
at Sfll'ral rnee\1 ng s. Of <:oncern. thcv
i;a1d. \l'il:i 1na1ntenance nf slopes benea th
th,. pn1pt>rty anrl ava11abil1ty of play
:irr::is in the 176-untl pro1eel
Ra1hbum's property surro11nrt... the
Grant's P!a1a .\!hoppini:: <'cnl1·r and at
present JS rn11cn In 1he ('Ollnty at
pr i ma r i I y res1dcnl1al -rc:iidcn11al-prcr A lentalt\e tr<ict 1n:ip au!hor111ng Olh('r items on the council's agenda 1n ·
f'ro111 Page 1 Faniily Aid
Pinn Hit
HUGHE S' C.t\REER ...
father's death wa s \'a riously estimated at
$10 million or more but J~ughes said the
government appraised ii at $6~0.000.
While llughes is reputrd nQt to have
been seen in 'foolco's Houstnn nfflce~
since 1926. the con1pany flour ished under
~u s direction and !11C' operations Qf his
hand-picked executives.
The {Jij tool business .[(rew until it now
employs about 4.000 at Houston and has
<1lher manufacturing plants in England,
lreland, Canada, West Germany, llaly.
Argentina and Brazil. The tool division's
annual revenues Jiave been estimated at
$75 million. Because it is privately own-
ed, Toolco issues no reports on sales and
earnings.
Hughes , who long had been interested
In airplanes. left Texas fo r California in
the 1920s and became a legendary figure
in aviation. He set many world speed
records and designed aircraft.
He· also became enchanted with motion
pictures, and actresses as we!!. He pro-
duced a number of movies, among them
"Hell's Angel s" and "The Outlaw," and
for a while owned RKO studios,
Noah Dietfich, Hughes' chief executive
from 1925 until they split ln 1953, takes
issue with those who give Hughes the
lion's share of credit for building Toolco.
"He can 't explain the growth of his em·
pi re." Dietrich said in an intervi!'.'w
recently. "He left that part of the
business to me.
"Jn those days, hi s main interests wf're
romance. airplanes and motion pictures.
None of those produced any profits."
The first big diversification move under
the banner or Too/co was the founding of
Hughes Aircraft Co. in Culver City in
l9Jt.
With the burgeoning of commercial
aviation and the approach of \Vorld \\1ar
I I, Hughes Aircraft quickly became a
f'ro111 P11ge 1
BUS SE RVICE • •
contribute a percentage of its operating
costs.
Recent n1onths' surveys ha ve sho\vn
that several hundred residents hav e writ·
!en to chambers of commerce stressing
thei r approval or the bus line concept.
The PUC response on the bid for a
license will be known by April, Pietzger
said, and if It 1s favorable, the system
\•:ould begin "·ilhin a n1atter of a few
days.
One plan calls for discount lickcts for
S:iddteback College s!udcnl.~ 11 hn~e fare
without discount 1vould be 75 cents round
trip.
Pietzger said he figures the o~ration
would turn a pr nfi!. "even if it docs 75 per-
cen t of what it looks like on paper "
~iant in its ricld ll was ane nf this roun·
t ry·~ major wart ime su ppliers of l!eriat
weaponry.
In 1954, llughes turned ove r the
aircraft con1pany to th(' lluf!hr s r.1rrl ic:il
lnstifute, which he fvrrned ;:i.~ philan-
lhrop1cal organizalJ011. to f'arry nn
n1 edica! research. All nf its profits go lo
the institute. of which Hughes is the sole
tnistee, and ii no longer is under the t:or-
porate umbrella Qf Toolco.
J·lughes Aircraft. which ha s hccn
estimated to be worth $500 million v.·ilh
annual sales about equal that amount.
manufactures communications satellites.
guided missiles, aircraft annament
systems and other electronics gear.
The most spectacular deals in wh ich
Hughes involved Toolco were majority
ownership of Trans·World Airlines, and
resulting legal hassles: and ownership ot
J'l\evada 1-lotels, casinos and other pro-
perties, and resulting legal hassles.
1-lughes started buying into TWA in 1939
and 1ook control with 77 percent of the
stock in 1947.
After the commercial jct age dawned,
Hughes, with his customary delibcratio11,
waited five years before ordering
jetliners and other equipment co~tini::
$497 million. Partly because of the la!e
starts in jets, TWA lost huge amounts of
n1oney, and finan cia l instilulions i,~1hich
loaned money for the aircraft purchase s
became concerned.
Tool co lost control of TWA in !960 "hen
creditors forced Hughes to place his
stock in a nonvoting trust. TWA Manag(··
mcnt sued Hughes, alleging 1nismanage·
ment. Claims and cou n te re I aim .~
amounted to $481 mlllion. A judgment of
$137 mill lon was won against Hughes, but
it is yet to be collected.
Hughes pulled out of TWA in grand
fa sh ion by selling his stock for $546
Jnil!ion 'in 191i6.
Armed with n1ore than $400 million re-
maining after capital gains taxes nn !he
5tock safe, .Hu ghes moved secrelly int•i
La s Vegas, Nev., in 1966 and st arted
buying just about everything in ~1ghl HI
the na1ne of Hughe s llotel Propcrtie.~.
whi ch had been set up as a division of
Tool co.
\Vith 8,000 cmployc~. llughcs Hotel
Properties became Nt!vada 's biggt!st
employer.
l l was estimated the Nevada propertie s
ens! $250 n1ilhon and were worth $.100
mill inn when Hughes sli ppC'd out or to1vn
on Thanksgiving Eve 1970, reputedly
going lo the Bahama s.
Toolco conttnues to have its eyes nn 1hr
future. R('centl y it launched at San
D1cgn. a :124-fnnt-ll)ng barge for the d('(.'P-
sea m1n1ng of n1anganesc in the Pac1r1c
()c('an. The mov(' "'as proclaimed by the
<'Ompany as "the bi rth of A new Jn·
dus1ry"
Nr:rr · The J-lnllywood Years .
By Reagan
\\'ASHINGTON 1UPl l -c;ov. Ron<il d
Heag:i n today criticized r~rcsident N1X·
on·s Family Assistance Plan as "a giant
step lo11·ard a \Velfare state" ;:ind offered
major an1endmenls -including tax
hreaks for the v.·ork1ng poor and removal
of military dependents from rel ief.
lie also suggested requiring able·bodie<l
recipients lo work on community service
proj ectS'11nd den ying welfare to strikers.
Reagan, the leading Republi can critic
or the Presi dent 's embaUled 1velfare
refnrm bill. presented his lrng1hv
;1 nal.vsis of the proposa l to !he Sena1'i?
J."inanee Committee, where the prl)posal
has been stalled since passing the House
!a:it June.
"I consider the v.·elfare problem the
gravest domestic iss ue our 11at.ion faces.''
s;iid the gov('mor of the nat ion's most
populous state.
Hcagan said he had "very serious
res('f\alions abo ut .several nf !he ap-
pm:iches lo \re!fare reform embod ied 1n
JIH l ~Ni xon's b1lli."
lie strongly OhJected to the Family
i\~s 1s!ance Plan~ FA P l portinn of the hill,
ll'hit h the Nixon administration regards
as its heart.
The F AP "'ould guarantee the work in g
poor an annual income as an incenllve
for unemployed recipients to find jobs.
A family of four would be entitled to
$2.400 if it had no outside income and up
lo '3.920 in a combination or welfare and
earnings.
"It is commonly un derstood that a
government-guaranteed income, not bas·
ed upon individual prnductivity. is a giant
step toward a welfare stale with its
inherent Ins sof individtial identity and
pride," Reagan said in his anal ysis.
"So1ne argue !his bill i.~ nol a
'guaranteed income' because employable
fam ily members must cooperate wit h
\\'Ork and training requirements. This
argument is fal!ac.ious," he contended .
>"r *
IRVING. • •
l "nited Slates to ~·fcGra"•-H tl!, "'e bclleve
that both Zurich and American officials
arc responsi ble for this in \'estiga!ion,"
said Veleff.
!!is announcement followrd pnhce in-
\'est igations \\'hich turner! up $442.000 10
cash and securities in a branch of the
Swiss Bank (.;orporation.
f'roua P11ge 1
'f'he bank, one of S1vitzcrland 's largC'~I.
1~ located across !he street frorn the
S"·i~s Credit aank. 1vhrre lr1'1 11,1(s v.•1ff'
ca shed $650.000 in rhrcks issued f(J
Jfughes. DEBATE ON GROWTH • • • By lrv1ng·s adn1is~ion. his 1v1fe uscft
1hc nanlf' "Hrlga IL llugh es" on ;i.
f;1l.~1fled S"·iss passpo rt as identification
for c<ishing the checks, from the
pubJ1s h1ng finn ~1cG raw.!111I to llughes
for the rights lo his "autobiography."
developmcnl and n1akc rct:ommcn<l atinn-.
ti) the council and plan ning commission
Ov.Hlif C:OAJT
DAILY PILOT
'DR.AJfO'!! WAST PU&L ISHiNG COMl>ANY
Rol:.•rt N. We.d
F'ru.i!MI ~ Publuhel'
J •c\: R. c"1,., Vb P/'Wlkl:lt Md "'-•i ,,.,......,.
Tho'"'' Ktt,iJ Ed1lar
Tb 0'1n11 A. Murplriin•
MIM;ir\!I EdllOr
C!wir1n H. l&ei Ricfi•rd '· Ntt! ~IAllf M0pll¥J f:dllOl'I
lat ....... Offk•
122 f11r•1t Avenu•
Mailirt9 •dd,..t1: P.O. llor 66', 9265.J:
So• C ........ Offlc•
305 No1th El Cimino R11~ 92672 °'"' Offlt tc ' C~t1 Me.1• 'JO Weit 81f1 S'""1t Nr<oport eteui. m J ,.,......,,, .....,1, ... rd
hiwWl1• DMC.b: 11tJ'J &Nf.11 oklllcv.rd
in f'ach i;:peclfic project.
"Fnr !he last C{}Up1e of years people
h;11e been making den1ands and ~aying
that Sa n Juan is a hodgcpodgs,'' he sairl.
''There must have been some reason
\\·hy they came here , since the y think il's
such a hellhole. Now they 're tell ing us
wh,1l poor , Unl'ducatcd dolls "'C nre.
''\\'hat I 1vant to kno\1•, si ncerel y, i:;
wh y do tht>y rema in H the future of San
Juan is sn bleak?''
Irving said she did so on instructions
from the billionaire recluse, with whom
he also said he collaborated in writing the
book. However. 1-lughes has issued
denials of Irving's stalemenls.
Veleff said police investigation here
1.1onrlay showed that 8 won1a n, "who was
probably identical \\1ilh the suspect Edith
lrving, opened an ac<:ount with the Swiss
Bank Corporation on May 27, 197J."
Birdwatchers Give Bird
To Three County Solons
Fresh fro1n a cr1t1que of their ci vil
rights voting records, l"'o Orange County
legislators this week "'ere rapped by an
rn\'ironmental group.
Legislative Birdwatchers, Inc. was giv-
ing the bird to Assemblyn1an Robert S.
Burke t R-lluntington Beach), and Slate
Senator Dennis Carpenter (R-Newport.
Beach). Roth also were crilici1.ed last
week by tlie National Association for the
Advancem!'n l, of Colnrcd People.
Assemblyl'n11n Robert !::. Bad ham 1 ll·
N('11•port Beach) was also criticiied by
the environmcn!a l·group. 1 The lawmakers ench scored les!'I than
40 percent on the Birdwatchers' voting
index which was based on 27 hill s con·
sirlered significant hy nlajor Callforr1111
environmtntal organizalions.
Ourin~ the 1971 session. ~tudent and
house,vUe Yoh1nteers watched Je.gl!!l&Uve
action for more than 1.600 hour~.
Thty counted no votes, fa ilurr lo Yole
:ind absences against a tegisl<e.or because
these are negative actions which do
nothing to further a bill.
Two or three. volunteers usually check-
ed committee votes to insure accuracy.
Ten of lhe 27 bills proposed In 1971 died in
commi ttte.
The group's report -printed on JOO
percent recycled pa per -singled out th!!
Senate Governmental Organization Com-
n1itltt as a "dtalhbed'' for ecology bills.
The Senate approved them only 36 ptr·
cent of the tin1e ; much more damaging
lo proposals lhan the Assembly.
Last wtek. the Nationa l Association for
the /,dvancement of Colored People
(NAACP! said that Burke voted 14 thnes
against bil ls favored by lhe group; niore
ne.i.:aHve votc.s than any~ -<>tht:r
Assemblyman, none of whom rtte:ivcd n
score of 100 percent.
Senator Carpenter voted against iceven
nf the 19 kry n1easures introduced during
the 1971 ses~ion.
·~· ---------
-A request by 20 residents of the
Edgewater Eslates ..:olooy for rhe
lau nrlung of nn underground u1i!11y
1hstr1t't \vh ich \1•oul d lnvnll'e :o;onit· ('lt11·
lr1buuon by the c1ry and par!~p:111on liy
. ' . .
T1·adition Falls
-IJ1st·u~:>ior1 ur r1'n t:il rntcs and use
rl•gti1:1!111n::; Jnr th~· nt•w ion1munily
('h1hli11u~1· ;ind JM>~~tllh.' ;1111woval of tt1c
r ,1p1d purrl1asC' v. 11ho1JL IJ11!~ tor thP 400.
:>t·at ;1uditor1tun . Tht' chairs \vould be
lll'l'tletl lx·fore a lair: February dedication
t.:Oncf'rt.
-J)isrussivn by ('i1y tl1anagcr Ken
(";1rr 1111 pn1pos<1ls for 11npro1 erncnt of the
l'ntrancc <( !he n1un1r1pal pier. The pro-
'l'he liquQr license of f\1or y':;, the :-:loricd n1en·on!y ha unl for J:!Cnera-
t io ns nf )'ale ~tude nts. \~·as rcvokt•d ~l o nday fo r discr1 n1 inat1ng against
l\'Orncn. fo.·lo ry s Assotrat1nn, tnc., \\ lurh ha s uphC'ld the rnen-on!v trad1-
t1011 for 110 years. has 10 days in \\hir h to a ppeal before the I\1e\1'
I !a vcn revocation become s effcc:tivc.
Reports to the Cont1~ary,
It Did Rain i11 Ja11uary
It didn't rain muth In Orange Counl,v
during January but there \vas some
measurable rnoisture. despite reports to
t/1e con!rary.
The confusion resulLc; from the fact that
there was no measurable rainfall record-
ed by the county flood control dis trict's
rain gauge on the roof of !he
Engineering-Financial 8 u i l d i o g at
Broadway and Civic Cent er Dri ve \\'est in
Santa Ana.
Flood control district reC()rds <l <1ting
back lo 1907-08 sho11" ho\\'ever. that !here
11•ere two Januarys in the past, 1%3 <1nd
19~8. v.·hen no inf>asu r<1ble rainf a!l 1vas
rC'Corded in the countv seat.
But getting back to .la.st n1on1h. r<11n did
fall in other parts of lht;_ t;Ounly.
"1'here were traces of rain in Santa
Ana but nnt enough to be called
measu r<1ble," said John c;1ctien. (_·ount y
hyrlro logist. tie said he lost a $10 bet \1·1111
a fell ow worker. "I \\'as sure th at iL
v.·ould rain here during the mon th ," he
said dri)y.
Cic!7cn also said that a check nr
l'\loul!on-Niguel R;1nch figures dating
b<1ck lo !8'ii-7R showed some rain last
mon!h but none in 1963 and 1948.
'rhat v.•ct st uff that fell on your house
during the month v.·as really rain in
measurcible r1 u ant i ti es, Gietzen
re as.sured.
"I live in Costa ].'lesa and it rained
pretty hard !here once or twice.'' he said.
Rain \\'BS also reported in Corona del
l\lar. Laguna Beach and S.ln Clcn1ente.
Orange County"s \l'C'ltest Januarv \1·as
1916 v.hen 1118 lnt'hcs of rai ,; \1·as
reported and in second place ~·as a mqre
Jt•e1:nt year 1969 \1·hen 10 29 inches fell .
Hu slin Cane Jll cgal?
/\'l·:W YOll l\ 1AJ!1 -C11·1I right~ <Jc·
t1 1 1~t. Ba1·ard nus!ln v.·as freed without
b:ul i\1nnd:iy 110 (·hargrs th:it he "'as ca1··
r.1 ing ;1 s1vnrrl 1-.111r in 'l'in1es Squf!re. I le
\'tlill'd the :iff;ur ;1 bi~ rn1s11 nderstandi11g.
l'he t·h;lrgr of illegal po~sessinu or a
fl;u1gt·n1u<; 1\•r:ipnn 1vas referred to the
~1a nhritt;:in gr;ind Jury.
WHAT YOU SEE
(NOT NECESSARIL YJ
~final approval of a forrn<il orthnanre
latJnehing 1•1 ry pan1cipri!i•H1 1n the slate·
e1d1111r11stert·tl l'ulJlic l•'.uiployes Rellre-
1nPnt Systern . Tl1t' ne 1v pe11s1on ~ystem
wou ld affect al! 1JUIJl1c safety workers 111
San <..:lcrnente. AH other votes on the
n1atter have pa sse<l by i!I J-2 margin.
Cuunc1Jn1en Stan Northrup and Tom
O'Keefe consistent ly have oppostd the
pension program,
Refls Send
POWs' Mail
To U.S.
NE\V ':t'ORK (UPI ) -Some 451 letters
from American prisoners of war have
been brought out of North Vietnam and
are being delivered to the servicemen's
fam ilies.
'fhe mail "'as lhe firsl since Dec. 21,
\v hen more than 1,000 letters were receiv-
ed.
The leUers were brnught out of Nortlt
Vietnam by Banning Garrett, a reporte r
for the Pa l'ifir Nev.·s S!'rvicc in San Fran·
ci sco. :1rt·ord1ng !n lhe Committee of
Liaison \V1th Fa1nil1l's of Servicemen De-
tained in 'North Virtnarn.
Since Ilic <:on1111i1l !!e wa s ~formr.d In
1969. a total of 5,276 lcllcrs from POWs in
Norih Victnan1 and 18 from men held bv
the Viet Cong in South Viet na m havC
been forwarded to families.
\Vh ilc in Hanoi, Carrell reportedly
spoke v.•1t h con1mander David \V. Hoff.
man, a Californian Who wa s captured
during the December bombing in NortlJ
'iletnam.
Capo Planners
To E ye Rezone
Of 40 Acres
A pub lic hearing fin the rezone of 4D
Rl'res off t.fie Ortega Highway in SRn .Juan
Capistrano will take place at tonight's 7
p.m. rnee!ing of the planning commi ssion
ln ei!y hall.
The rezone -exempt from the city
council's 28-day ban on all 1.oning in th&
city -ha s been submitted by Paul Goya
who is requesting a change from
un<:lassifietl to business and residential on
his Ganado Road property.
The request asks thal 4.6 acres be zon·
ed for local busi ness; 26 acres be zoned
for two family residences : and 9.S acres
be zoned for multiple family and
apartments.
Assistant l='lanncr Phil Schwartze said
this 1s !he srventh lime the property
nwner has rrcpared lo request a zone
change. One r('Quest. denied by the plan·
n1ng commission. was for a mobile home
development.
Olclcsl Driver Dies
HEDLANOS J UPI) -.lohn Sering, whfl
al age 100 v.·a.~ the oldest holder of •
California dri\'Crs license, will be buried
\Vedncsday . SE!r1ng died Sunday in a con·
valescent home.
IS
WHAT YOU GET!
•
Technological advances in carpet ma.nufaduring have re-
•ulted in lower pric es today th an 30 years ago.
.The tufting machines make carpet 70 times faster than Ax·
minister and Wilton looms. Th ese machines will make up to
·12 li neal feet of carpeting per minute, <:.itlier twelve or
fifteen feet wide. Th e relative ease of this manufacturing
method has had one negative aspect. Instead of about ten
respected, re liabl e mills, today there are mo re than 300 mills,
many of qu estionable integrity. It is not diffic ult for a clever
carpet designer to make a carpet look far better than it i~.
The answer to the consumer is clear: Either know your manu-
f&eturer -or rely on a reputable retailer. (Alden's, of
course. J
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838 •
Tuesday
Evening ,
FEIRUAR'f' l
&:00 II m., D m Mtwi
CJ ({) Wild Wll4 Wat
~Ql MIC Ntfn m Tht fUnt&tlfltt
Q) I OtNll tf Mtrtnlt
aJ) ZMll
Eill Hodftpod .. lldt•
£!) fll ttldtrt 34
m 0nert "''°,, Q) Mtrkr'Y llfD
1:30 0 l'lttM Do11'I Ctl tbr Otlt.its 0 Mh'it; (C) (60) '11!. Yik1np"
Cond111io11 (•dvtntutt) '!>& -Kil-
Dou111a.t. Tell}' Cur!i t. [rnett Boll·
11ln1. Janet lei11h.
(f) CBS New. Wt lier Cronkltt
(1-q) N1ti011tl C101rtphit m An4J Crlttlth
(E NtnlTJ 111d tht Proltuer
(fi) frtnch Chtl '11lpts 1 It Modi~
ED Pcltr 111d tllt Wo!I m Wtndtrlutt
!ffl llretn M:1e1
([:) Yrvi1n1 Horlit11tr1
7:00 f) (}) 8 m Nun
0 Th• R!ll~m•n
(JJ Truth 01 Conse41u1ncr 1
([l 011rn1t 0 Wh1t'1 MJ Unt? m I Ltvt l wcy
I!) I Onlam tf Jiltnnit
(Jj) The Course ti Our Jilllf:s
ft) H1tll1rog1
g}lt lnlruM
IS! kid Tt1k
ll) M1nt11p
•
0 "HARDCASE" TONITE * A.BC Movie of tht Week
0 (I) (Il C£I Mt\llt tf 0!1 WM~
(t) (90) "Ma1dtnl,. (wt~1tfn) '1\
-CUnt W1lk11, St1f1ni1 Pawtri,
Pedro A1mend1til Jt., ,tdt~ Karras A
10ldi•r of lortune •I lht tur n ol th•
ceri11111 11 delrtm!ned to 1e11ln w/111
ls his 1fter lie rttt1rns to T1~1s lo
find hls r.ndl sold 1nd Ills wilt ha•
run oH with 1 Melktn rel'Olu!lon1iy, m Trwth tr'lttftMqDtltCtJ
(D llJ) Th Atftc,lht "SMu!d !ht
U.S .. J1p1ntse Stcurlty Trttty 81
lHmln~tJd?"
,:00 m Darid frost Show Gutsh· Yt~·
1•ny Ytvhmhenko. DOil Mcte1n.
Linda Hopkins, Me1cedes MMm·
bnd~e.
el LI Gilt
(ID Nt lleru por Mi
,:30
f) CANNON-EXCITEMENT! * MYSTERY and SUSPENSE! 6 (I) CIM1011 Guest Ve11 Mftts
pl1ys 1 doctor en1.•red in '" Im·
porl•nl medicil rtJelrth projed I.I
tile $l11e p1\lon.
0 @) €0 Jamu GnMr 11 Nichols
"Sleight ol Ht~d" The lurt or rold
,uovet irres~tib(e to f(ict1ols as II•
becomes involved wlt~ some shady
chu1cter1 in 1 1old mine •tnture.
O Ntwsw1tdl m It Taitt 1 Thiel 9 Th Ylr1inll11
io:oao m"""' fJ (I) 00 a) M1rc1u WtJbJ, 111.D.
'Tm Really Tf)'ln(' The lalhH of t
boy w!tl'I minimal b11in dJ'functlon
11gr1v1les hiJ son't problems whe"
he refuses to accept rhe d!11nosis..
7:30 fJ 9 Cltn C.mpbtH Buddy Htck· Gaf)' Col1il!s. Ela int Del'I)', Sein
ttt 1ppt11rs 11 8enj1min franklin, Kelly and Scott Ctntll rutsl.
Jolln Byner does • mus1c1I imprtS· fl S1m1 ;amt
sion of Georre M. Cohan singln1 m FREE "SILENT YEARS ''
"V1nke1 Doodle Dandy" tnd Glen * PHOTO ALBUM AT •t
Campbel! sin1s tire oooular "Ameri· " l OFFICES OF GREAT c1n Tri!oo " es they 111 llke1 ll1trt· WESTERN SAVINGS
hearted look 11 AmerN:an hlslary . 0 @)ID Thi St1rch for tht Nill ID @ The 5il1nt Vetri (C) ''Tiie
'1ht Stertl fountain" is Par! llf of Thltl •I l1tdld" In lhis 1924 tilm,
I siJ·Pllt BQC st1ift. SI! R\thlfd Doo1l1s f1 irb1nks Sr. s1111 IS 1
Eurton {Kennelh Hti.11h) 11 •nrartd notorious thief who reforms aner
when Spekt (JOOn Quen!in) Js chos· fallin1 i11 love with 1 bt1utlfu! pr!n-
tn to mtkt 1 second journey to cess.
Alric• to confirm his belief lh1I Ltkt gi Tap .Tip .
Vlclllrit is the wurce ot lht Nile, ail '•1tiw1I Me11uno
James Mason narr1tes. 10:30 O Tht Colddluers Ji!hn
0 Mo~it! (21/Jhr) "Hurrictnt~ ls iuest host
ldr1m1) '37-0otolhy Lamour. Jon O Monty "•111 '1ension in 1
Hall. Troubled Town" Wlltn 1 N111onal
fJ m (]) CD Tht Mod Squl4 "Nil Guard Armory B looted, Iha white
Mo11 Oak lt1v11 for [1ni1 Holl1nd" and bla~k p19p\t or \~e town blunt
Henry Dtr1ow ind Robert Pine futsl each otht1
in !ht story ot 1n tl~lasive (hello (1rl Al bw~
si!u1t1on that ls irnited b1 1 dt· O Candid C1me11
11n1ed Vletn1m ve!e11n warkin1 1s @! Tllfe Colddigers Sfb1sli1n Cabot
I cop, and Billy Baxier iue.st.
(I) I 1>111111 al Jt1nnit (!) Jhws Hug!t Willitmt
(J Milll1" S Morie: (2hr) w1ui, ETJ Atromtntldt
l~dlS" {CllSsic) '!i2-Tere11tt Sllmp, m Call ti the 'Wtst
Robe1t Ry1n. Ptttr UJ1irlOY. ~Roller C1m1 m Ho11n'1 H•roes m D111net
(ili k itn« ·11 "Qu1l1!y ef Li!e''
fli) [SJICllL I £qu1I Ju1tict Undtr1
tht law P1ogr1m explains constilu·
lion1I rif'!ts and what !hey mean.
Tonl1hl'1 films. "Stop ind fr isk"
1nd "Se1rth 1nd St i1ur e." demon·
s!rites whtn 1uc~ procedures i re
tawful.
Q) Los Co!01rot
1:00 (f.J ltllin' tn ttlt Rinr
m .llldy Crifflt• Sift m Tiit Yif1inil11
Q) u Cost Jiu11d•
Q!)Nint
1:30 8 (]) Hawt!I nn.o Barf)' Sulliv1n
lutSls as 1n Kttnhic ~il1ionahe
su1pecttd er klllin1 ont of his binl·
IH!!J associaltt.
0 (lg) m Prt-Olympit s p. t I t I
Former Olympl•ns Peggy Fl•minr.
Biily Kidd, Art De~lln 1nd Ttny Mc·
D~rmort ofltr 1 v1rltd !ooli; at Olym·
pie JP<Jrll. 1pp11i:st th1 1912 lltld
ol 1thl1T11 compet\nr. 1n' present
f1lmtd hi1hli1M1 ol pa!! contt51s.
Wednesday
DAYTIME MOVIES
IJ:000 ri)@f)Mew1
A Dl fDJiltn 0 Ont Step lltyond
CJ) Mtrshtl Dillo11
0 CtJ CE Jilen
0 Movit: "M1nlish" (td~en1ure)
'56 -John Bromfield, ton Chantr. m Trllth " Conltflutnus
ID Lucille ltivtn
11:10 m Morl1: "'l.n \'1111 Sh•ktdown"
(mystel)) 'SS -Otnnis O'Ket!t,
Cclarn Grty.
11 :10 B CJ) Mtrw Crll'lln
0 @l m .IGhltllf C.rso11 G""I'
tllflln, liberate 1nd A11n King 1u1~.
0 MO'tir. "Unholy ltrdt~" (mys-
tery) '3J-Ron1ld Colm1n, r1y W11y.
0 m 00 aJ Did: C.vrtt Geo111
S•?tl gu1sts. m Movit: "Red D1nuht" (drama)
'.49 -Peter l1wtord. Janet Lei11h,
Wal!tr Pidpon_
1:00 f) Movlr. "Bridt !tr Slit" (tom·
1dy) 't9 -Robert Yaunr. Cl•udtll•
Colbert.
CD OO C!l®i "'••
D (C) "The l11eltot Cont1w"
(dr1m1) ·~-A\'I Girdne r, Humph·
rtY Boglrt. m "JthrmJ Apollo" (drama) 'tO -
Tyione Power, Dorothr Lamour.
t :OO m "Vtle11tlnt" (romtnct) 'Sl l:OO ® "Jiit lrrttms" C<wlc!usion( dra·
E!11nor P1rk~r. Antho!T)' Otlt1r. m1) '62-Mich1el C1U1n, Clifl Rei..
':JO 0 "Te It.,. Jfol T• It" (corntdy) ert.mn.
• '42 -Jfck Benny. C1rot1 lomb11d. ®) "lk Mbe" (mpt!ry) '4' -
10:00 CI> "Tiit Ye!IJ ti l1(dtd" (1d¥tt1· l!obtrt ftylot, .lvt Gtrdntr.
lufl) ·~ -VittOf M1tu11. 4:00 O "Cl"" lrewl"' (comedy) '4&-
l:flO 0 "'f•ritty Cllf" (musittl') '47 -.lennll'., Jones. Ch1fle1 Bcr,tr.
Blnr Cmsby. Bob Hope. 4!)0II)1t111 n IMM listlllr
I , r. , IROOKHURST AT lOIHGElft · ll9·1500 ~
THE LAST PICTURE SHO
IS A MASTERPIECE! It is not
merely the eest American movie
of a rather dreary year; it is the
mbst impressive work by a
young American director
since 'Citizen Kane'!"
COLUMBIA PICTURES
PtestnlS
A BBS PROOUOTION
-P~Ul D. ZIMMERMAN, NtWSWll
sr..wn .... 1
w.-k l ittt· 1:-...:•
• ' II ..,,_ ...,_ Cltll'OI • •
aDWAllO HARBOR,:rz.l
11"990" •WI. AT •llSOll If.
Ol t.l •IU Mt·
BOl'
fl!l[N
ENG1t G t.'1\f E,\r'f
George C. Scott
IN
"THE (GPl
HOSPITAL"
J11'. Ptltr Sell•••
"THE PARTY"
.. ...... c .. •Lwo.•• I LLIS •• •••.<:o•••...,. ,. ••• o••.., ..-. Ml'···-o t<UOITl,.STOOI SIM:. ..
Of -... .o fWT.
Dyon Coi'l'!On • Jennrl!f O'N~ol
Alt0 -Joc:qlJ"'!t""' 6is1tt
'"''THE GRASSHOPP II
Alto· Dkk Von Dyke
hi ••rv•• A DUll MOMftfT"'
EDWARDS CINEMA YIUO
Mltsion Viejo · 830-6990
''The Fr1nch Connection" (R
Al1t . G-vt C. ~°" 111
"THE LAST IUN"
The Music Box
• Have Voices,
J Will Travel?
• J By TOM BARLEY
0 1 "" D•flY l"l•I 11~!!
It shouldn't be an y surprise to anyone Yiho is In tht
least bit fam iliar with Ule splendid work of the Irvine
~laster Choral• that this Orange Coast organiunion is in
great demand beyond our county limits.
San Diego wants them and all "'e can add to that is
that the people M>Ulh of our border have very good tastf'
indeed. The only proviM 1s, and rm sure I speak for the
chorale's many fans. that ti.1aurice Allard's gifted group
be returned to us inlnledialely after the performance.
The San Diego Youth Symphony has successfully urged e1r ¥~ the chorale lo join them Pilarch 11 in
a concert scheduled for that city's
Opera House-a very impressive audi-
torium capable of seating. \\'e are told.
some 2.500 patrons.
No prizes for those y.·ho guess \1•hat
the featured work is to be at that eve-
ning concert "Carmina Burana," £1f
course. and fresh from that magnifi -
cent perforn1<1n ce of last weekend i11
can assure
rare treat.
w the Orange Coa st C.Olle~e auditorium I
San Diego audiences that they are in for a
r wrote in my rev ie\11 of the OCC concert that the
Irvine group's version or Carl Orff's superb stf:nic cantata
was the best f've heard and l felt a little guilty when I
sew that comment in print.
It has been at the top of this critic's choral list for
many years and J wondered if I had been fair to some of
the European ensembles that were fresh in my memory.
After all. time is a great healer. bu t ii is also a great
eradicator.
f turned to my record player and some of the earliest
performances J remembered and happi ly realized that my
seemingly high praiM' or the Allard ensemble y.•as thorough-
ly justified. It is the best. "Burana ·• in my experience and
San Diegans are very fortunate that it is headed the ir \Vay
in March.
These Irvine fl'faster Chorale people are made of stur-
dy stuff. Their San Diego concert comes immediately prior
to three Brahms Requiem concerls in our O\\.'Jl area and it
has to be borne in mind U1at they will have to put in some
rehearsal time with the ~member San Diego youth or-
chestra.
They're! pretty democratic group and the question \\•as
put to them very fairly and clearly at a recent meeting.
They were. as usual , solidly behind their beloved Maurice
in voling for the San Diego concert.
~hey'll ha".e quit_e a few enthusiasts from Orange Coun-
ty '"'1th them 1nclud1ng, all being well. this critic. rn1 al-
ways ea ger to hear the chorale's "Burana" but rm <1l so
keep to again viey.· thnt splendid conductor. Lou Campiglia .
f.-taestro Campiglia has been at the helm of the Youth
Symphony for son1e six seasons now and he has 111elded
the group into a very formid able musica l organizfllion ..
Frankly. I'm eager to see how he tackles "Bur<1na.''
Maybe we should hire a special coach and call it the
"Buraf\8: Bus." Yours truly is not alone in admiring the
work and. particularly, admiring the Jrvint J\!aSter Chor-
ale 's approach to the Orff cantata.
In any event, Irvine f\.1aster Chorale. congratulations
and have a good trip . But rememher one thing -\ve \\•ant
you back the same nigh!.
lrvi11e Theater Invites
Pilot Award Winners
Winners of the 1971 DAILY
PILOT J)latingui s hed
Performance awards, along
with the runners-up in each
category. have been invited to
be guests of the Trvine Com-
munity Thealer at Friday's
opening performance of "The
Amorous Flea.··
Three members of the
Trvine theater will be honored
at the clo se of t h e
performance, all for their
achievements in IC1"s "Death
of a Salesman." They are
'CJ1arlie'
Tryouts Set
Aud itions have been in-
nounced for "My S \\.' e e t
Charlie," the forthcoming pr~
d.4ction of the Santa Ana Com-
munity Theater, for Thursday
Richard Dow, director of the
Arthur ft1iller drama ; Aaron
Fletcher, named best actor for
his portrayal of Willy. Loman,
and Bob Mills. chosen best
supporting actor
Loman.
A 11 actors and
as B i If
actresses
n11med as winners, runners-up
or given bonort1ble mention in
I.he DP awards list who have
not been Iontacted by the
theater n1aJ call Carla Dow at
S44-9471> days to reserve com-
plimentary ticket s.
"The Amorous Flea" "'ill be
presented in the Humanlties
Hall Playhouse 011 the UC
Irvine t ampus. Curtain lime is
8 o'clock.
Grammy TV
Show Slated
' \ \:
\ ' .. \
\ \
DAii.. Y ,l\..OT SllH P~O!t
' '
DAIL Y •ll 0.'._!~
Plimpton
On Safari
In Africa
JJ)' C\.NTlllA L0\\1RV
~E\Y YORK (APi·-C:eurga
Ptunptun, who nu.1 keg his Jiv ..
ing bun1blln).l a :1: an in~nt
an1 uteur i11 er~H 11[ pro·
ft-ss1onals, on M11nday night
was t ryiu~ to be a n1agazu1,~
p/1t.1tugraphcr Ull !he trail O(
1h1• li1ggest elephant in Africa _
'fh1s t1n1e. in the jungles of
r..('11ya, Phn1pton seemed more
1rr1t:ili\t' thRn 11~11al about h1'{
:-.-..<.1i.,:nnll•n1 Al Onto po1nl,
1111e~µt'c!edly l'•111lro11trd ~·1th
11 hu~(' vythun. ht btta1ne ~
up;;et he ne11rr did ~et a shot
ul the l11g sna ke.
1'lu.~ l'lunptou Hdventure -·
1wuh11h!y Wll!I the n1o:'l in·
1t•r1·sf""1g(in ·\he A Br sei·i es -
1wo1 11lrd 1f'le 1 ie \1·f'r \Y:L~ 111-
h·rr~tcd 1n 11 dd lift· :\
p1•11i•1·fu l n1nount ul incid cn!1d
lllf1Jl'ln H\ion Hhout the 1\l:ll'S of
1111· t•le phant 11as packl'd -into
ll1t· l1iJu r. Plin1pton 's 1>re\·111u~
\\';dl C·r J\1iUy·tyµc exp I o it !I
h:11'e never C'Qnveved murh
111or1• lhnn his 0\1•il anx iclli'!I
;ii.Jou! being fl football pla yer.
\\'1·stl'L'n actor . cir t' u :t
1J{'rfnrn1e r or nightclub co111·
t'di;lll.
Shall We Da11ce?
The viewer. however, was
1e11 \\'il h nagging doubts about
!he \'a lidity or !he shotv. If
P\1111plon \Y<"IS so husi!y esl·a p-
111g \1•Jt h his life fro n1 a
1r111npellng elrph,1nl :uid 11aJ
111 pl'ri l. how con1c they
111<111a,gcd lo get so m:in r ,
111;11l,I' feet of well-fcx:used col·
or film , con1plete wit h ex-
('e11enl so und tracks, or these
lT1tic11l n1on1cnts?
Nichola s Mose literally s\rceps ~t arilyn :\l bert~l'll
off her feet in this scene fro1n the ll untington Beach
Play~ou.se co~edy "The Girl in lhe Freudian Slip, ..
l'Ont1nu1ng Friday and Sa turday evenings.
Sandy Du11caJ1 's Ey·e
Per1n,a11ently Bli1ided
Huntington
"T in Roof'
Au<litioning l·IOLLY\VOOJJ j AP '
Actress Sandy nuncan 110\1· 1"
permanently blind in her \cit
eye, but the last person to fer l
sorry about it is Sandy Dun -
can.
''It's no big <.teal, reu\ly,"
!fa.vs the µerl , b I u e -t' y f' d
television star. "It doesrf1 al-
fect anything.··
~1iss Ounc<1n und crwen1 "
10-hour operation Nov . 1 al !ht·
UCLA Medic:i l Center ru
rem ove a benign tumor fr on1
beh ind her lert eye. Bec;1usr
the surgery 111as throuJ!:h lht>
top of her head there are no
visible scnrs.
Both .Jarge. beautiful eyes
rnove norn1ally. ls the sight
rea!ly gone permanently from
the lef~ one?
"\'es. it is.'' she ~aid
matter-01-racl\y f\.1 o n d a y .
''They say, well nothing's im-
possible. but there's no
medical proof or reason "'hy ii
shoo Id ret urn.··
The oplic nerve.
plains. "'as affecled
sJ1r ex ·
Fur onl' :-.o young -~a11d.1 ·1;
:.!6 -was lhe lo.ss a ll·rr1!11·
blu w·1
"\cit r1·;illy, 111 l>e hUlll'&\ "
l\l htr hiJls1dr hornr. ('BS'
'Fuun.v F'ti ce" stnr 1s rndi:in1 .
liill uf hli· ;u1d 1•11lhu~1.i~1n
Tryouts for the Tennessee
\\'ill1a1ns dra111a "Cat on a Hot
1'in Roof" "'1 11 be held next
S\1111J;1y , ·Feb. ti. by the lion·
1111gton Bt'ttch Playhouse.
I l1rcctor Jea11. Koba will hold
.. l'\t' ht't'11 11e:u·~1~ht1·d 111n~l :1111h11ons for eight men and
or n1y hFt>. you kn u11·. \Iv three women ;it 2 o'clock in
f:t!her says I t':i11 "l't' n1orr !IH• afternoon . Four children'.-.
lhan I can u n de r s t a n cl rn!cs. 1n thf' 7 to 11 llge
a11y\1·:1y_ So I reall y was not brnckel , \Ylll ~ audiU011rd
!h:11 alfccted by it.'' she said. 1\l(l11day a! 7:30 p.m.
· I lcll vou wh 11! \11ould h:1vr The 1·eadlngs \\'111 be held at
<Jffecl.cd 1i1e rnor1·. beir11! in the 1hl' playhouse, 2110 Main St.,
hu siness thut I'm 111 -d ttu• l!u n!ington Bench . .,~urther in·
rnotor area had been darnagcd fo rmolion mny be obtained by
:111d I had !o~t movemt'nl of ('ailing the director at 894-6786.
the eye. You see. the :1p.. "Cal one ~lot Tin Roof" wll l
pearance of the eye 1s rnore open March 27 ror a five-
in1portant, act ually, than the weekend run . following the
vision." playhouse's cu r rent pro-
Miss Duncan . ll prod uet of duction. "The Girl in the
the Da!las summer theater. ~·reudian Slip."
received Tony Award nomina------------
lions fo r her roles in the
Brondway productions of "The
Boy F'riend " and "Canterbury
T:1!C's."
TV commercials h e I p e d
bring her t"'O movies, "The 1-------~I f.-11!1ion-Dollar Duck'' and
· "Star-Spangled Girl.'' ~ .. ~J~1.--==~I
Jarnn Gat"ltt'r ru• •1J.6l••t
Joell Nlc.l1ofh11
,Ca11dlcs ......
Skin ~.,,~.~~~ ...
Game t=S-~ <<>•o~• o•·• M••
....... ...,.,•.\..,,.,,.....,• 1;p1,,p
r""" ....... .,.., B•O• ~ K.r.11~1 C<>"'u·~~
PAP.AMOUNT PICTUF!tS PP.!SfNTS
"friends~'
~-ltC!!MCOlOll' A PARAMQ\JNT PlCTUm:
TIMIS
l..r """'''-" •., ..... ..... " .......... ·1 •-"' ~· .. .
MY OLD
MAN'S PIACE ,.o-o e ... ~· .. ···~~ [Bl -
.. y
WILLlll
the 11111 movll JOU
should not .. alelle.
"CARNAL
KNOWLEDGE"
and
ANTONIONl 'S
"ZABRISKIE
POINT"
loth Cel1r • lattif ....
evening.
Herman Boodman w i ll
''ll'ltlaNOS" 1:• & t :tS <XlOR -.m
NEW YORK (AP) -This "GAMli" 1:11 & 1t:Js J•fl. ,. "'"" "'"· ,
'" ... W9 ~sinking ,..,_. _ •
': .. tit• ••w• w•,.. 35 ffft
.fblWSUS ... -
'" ... mo,. •nd mo,. sh•rlc flrtJ
cutttng tit• w•tw·--direct the: stage version of the
drama which won Pally Duke
an Emmy in the 1970--71
television season. A cast of
four men, one of v.·hom must
be a Negro, and two women is
being sought.
The readings wilt be held at
7 o'clock at the theater, r,oo W.
Ith Sl., Santa Ana . "My Sweet
Charlie" opens March 34 for 1
three--weektnd run.
-.--...... ...... ......... _ .. ....
N-York's
Critic Aw1rd
HELD OVIR AGAIN
TBl: FRENCH CONNECTION ~
l!!l•
CWllBY
II LIDIE"
2oo I _,.ft!
year·s live telecast ot the M•n11n svn111, 1,.0 C•nll"""' 1v"''" s~-. J:ot ""'-
Grammy Award!! for the bestl1-:-=--=--=-~==~---::-:~1~-------..;....;;;.;.;;;,,;;;;;..i
recordings of 1971 will origin-I= --
ate March 14 from New York.
York.
Last year's program. the
first ti me the G ram my
presentations were televised,
came from Los Angeles.
The 90-minute pro g r1 m ,
consisting of envelope-opening
by various celebrities and
enee:rtainment sequences, wlll
be ff:en OD ABC-TV.
Alie Wefr Dl .. "Y ,
"NEVER A CULL
MOMENT"
81r91ln Matin••
Every Wednftday, 1 p.m.
Aftlt1 $1 .• CMW 71
"The Gon9 That Couldn't
Shoot Stroi9ht" I GP I
---Ct!IFOOMI !O ,','.
" .~ .::..L.J•".<!1'".LJ --Ctll!ROMI 21 '
' • •. ·.•.' :.-. r ;:i . --~· ST40/U,tf , I . __.,, . .,. ··--· .. -----., .. SrAotUM ,,2 w . -···"'·-·~·--
---.. SFADIUM ·4 . " --~·.!'• ··--
G ...... (, ktft "MOl,ITAL"
.t.IM Pt:tr •ti...,
I• "TK• ll'A.TT"
.t.H Tl .... Grtl"I
"MT PAlll: LAOY" ...
~ .. , .... IAN'$ ltlUNIOW"
''lllLY JACK" (Cl"I ...
"MOrtTI: WALSH"
"L-ey •11111 11141 Trltl'I,,. 1•! "U ,tfO,IOf Dllt"llH (01
All Ill C1!tr
"tht ,,_,, (Ollftft!ltft" l•l ....
•'lf111M11111r ll'1l11f'" C•I
•
• ·-THO" HIYIJllDAHL
EXPEDITIONS
You must •H RAI
An ••tounding
true· life •dwnture
for the whole f•mllyf
ENDS TUESDAY
Sout~ Co1at Pl111 I
So11 01 .. , Fwy • .-t .. ltt1I
146-2711
S•I. & Sllll.1 l•,..1•t '·"'
•-Dtwt : 1-1.f t.ll'L.
I
\
•
•
•
•
•
•
---
• r
Q DAILY PILOf SC
Y our Mon e y
Don't Help Feed
C\ :>\ L\ I~ I fJHTI I
S:l\ e 20 tn 411 Pf'I c f'l l nn 111
rui::i:; :ind 1 HIX'l'i Sa h n
no11i llr i~ll< rcdull1uns
on or 1en tc1I r ui.:.s { ha1Kc of a
l fe time 1\ll r lerch H
disc rnu1 ked 1!u11 n klr annual
C'leararice Sa\C 5{! percf'nt < u
d1sconl1 nued 1tcn1s
Are these l>ccmlnRl\
lasllL ~a1 u1g~ on rui.;,
tarpets th ll 1ou 'ltt
f 111
111<l
od
\Crl1~e~1 4 ll 111 :<.HJC'i n1 II'
Jcg1l u11 i1e
'cs thl\ ~It !h1r111J: 111C'>t
\\eeks and 111 ru:inv 1 fl.'$f'S
again in Jul\ r..u gus! 1:-; 11hc11
mosl depa1 tn1t"nt stnre~ ind
long established 1111-l store .. rl111
24 HOUR
TELEPHONE
ANSWERING
SERVICE
S1rv1n9 -Co c11•t del Mt
Co,t • M••• Nawport B••ch
•11d Sanla ""n• ••••1
O RANGE COUNTY
AADIOTELIJ'HONE
SERVICE INC
835·3305
For instance 1( you rcsrxind
lo Lhe abo\C come-on ior
something like il l a salesman
will arn1e al your door and
immediately downgrade ihe
In Its 2 1st Year -----•I
Investment Course
O RANG E COAST COLLEGE
No Adm1ss1on Charge
An 11lrodutl on lo tha bat t fun d.mental1 of 1we1! nq n Co
po a+e 1toc~1 Bondi Mutu•I Fund1 GoYe nm enl Bondi Bu Id nq
Jr Lo a11 Auot al on lnlandad lo 9 •t p••fl t •I k11owled9t ol II
v•1im•11i1 •nd 1lod1 •~ch •n9• o par•I on1
WM L 0 BRYON Ins t ructor
.. glnnlnq ftob tuory Z
Fo1 ~ weff.i -W•dnesdov' 7 30 to ' lO p m
Oro1191 Cotti Colleq•
Tllt f orum
On Tht Compus
Re.;ilster ot the L1cti.1r1
LE ~~S E NOW
1972 CONTTNF.1\TAL
Enjoy Ille prt\110• ar>d pure dr • nq
p eo1u e on y • Con! nenlol cen o o.-
v d' L•I our !eotlng m11n•uer t • uo
o o 09 am de) gnl!'d IOr ym;r P<!tiOn•I
nted•
1972 ~T.\TION \VAGON
• • •
Fut mo n •n~nc~ e•~ ng nOVI 11v& !
•De on t • mucn de~~~• on w11gon Cl'll;PO)lt f om me moQn I ctn!
Colony P~rti M()tllll';IO Mo CIU I or
AAOll e ev C• I 1u<lOy
CALL BUD BOWEN 540-5630
ohnson & son
\-11Ll1+*'**%6f1 \ -qu1 11111•-
262'6 HARBOR BLVD COSTA MESA • !>40 5630
••••••••••• KEYSTONE
SAVINGS ...
An TI~illE~~ilillr1'~
Place To Save ...
Think of Keystone when you wan t
the h ighest insured interest rates allowe<I
by Jaw for your savmgs1 (No\~ 25% more
than most banks')
5 °/o
INH•IST
CCMPOU'IOID
Olll Y Oi l IN,
PIT 1)1)1
r1S~liODl
5 .25%
1111!1tlST
COMPOllrtOtt
O~lll J
hl.OMlllS I OMUS
ACCOUNT
5. 75°/o
lllll~i $l
CCM•OUNOfO
Dl lT l lOOO Miiii"'~ A I Y•
ll(POSll
To Visit ...
6 %
INTlnlST
CO MPDUMPlD
OAlll 15 DOD
hl.1111111\llil 2 lit
O[PO!ll
For personali zed service, come to
Keys tone Have a cup of coffee with us and
t ake advantage of our -
IP~~JE
)lope) Order.• T ra,elers Checks•
Trust Deed Collection• Safe Oepo'1 l Box.•
Jllonthly Horoscopes by Svdney Omarr
•\\'hen m1n1mum "av1ng1i btllance of SlOOO 111 m.·unllunr1l -KEYSTONE SAVINGS
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
Rona ld W Co1pers, Chwrmon of the Board
•WESTMINSTER •ANAHEIM
H011 Beach Blvd ~:itijt~ 555 N Eud1d
Next 1o '""" Opposite
Ho' Penny Inn Broadway Robinson's
1 • Watch for Opening of our new Neu port Beach
Oflice in the Orange Count.v A irport Complex! •••••••••••
• •
OYtER ~THE COUNTER
·-1111 ... IJ1t.,-•ltr -lllll"t I I ................. y I 1 "' tr-l'oiAjQ
"''"'' • .. r lo>(! ... ra1a 1 .. ,.. • .ti..., ....,...,.,_" or wmm•-
Tall{ Slated
1 11 Cypress
i\ulornob1lc rr.pa1 rrnen c:ir
dcalcis and <;czv1cc <;tal ion
" ' " " • "
MUTlJAL
FUNDS
1972
Comp lete-New Yori{ Stock List
..
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150.10.10.
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"
' "
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• • •
••
'•
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• ' --------•
J1.11Mj.i1, frbru.vy l. 1972 SC DAILY PILOT ;JJ ·~~-'-''--~~~--~~C.:.:..--'~
'1'uesday·s Clo sin g Prices -Complete Nelv York Stock Exc hange List
M•,_..,. n
Ml •rl•n r !•
"""'CO 1 M.,.... 00
M• co eo
Mt Cllf f>( At M1emn S I ,\1MO l10
Ml O"l b fO ,., . ...... ,,,
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M•t•ulll ~ ,., "1• 0 fMt•O< ,
1111yo 01< I M~Y•JW I"
MIV 10 J 01 t.CA MC:. 611
l,\C(O d I
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NEW YORK
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LOCAL
EDITORIALS
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.,,.. DAILY PI LOT _________ Tut~dAy, rrbru1ry l , 11'1'12 •
ll.S. Planes Stand Beady lor Doonasday
lhreP national t'mergency a1rbom111 com-replaced ~ a fleet ol. seven bigger and One of the 747s would be used for \\'ASHINGTON (Al'I The A~ F~'• l!t Airborne C<>mm>nd and COn-
1.rol1 ,Squadron wilts, as It has for 10
years. for doomsday.
At any hour, day or night, one of lt1
thr~ planes stands fu eled and ready for
takeoff from a runway only 10 minute~ by
helicopter from the While House.
\\'lthin minutes of alert or Impending
nucitar atlick on the United States , !ht
11resident and his milit11 ry com1nand
staff could be airOOrnc in one of ltltse
fly ing command po&t s.
Sophisticated electronlcs and corn·
In Decli1ie
munlcaUons ~ulpment abottrd t,he plane
would enable the President to direct the
nation's d1:!en110 and counterattack while
cru lalng more than 40,000 feet above I.he
earth.
The President would be in const..1nt
touch with U.S. milit,qry ('nmmands
around the world even If the Wh ite llouse
or Pentagon were destroyed in the fir st
wave of a su rprise nuclear allack.
An underground sanctuary at Ft.
Ritchie, Md , ln the Catoc tin Mountains,
serves as an alten1ste command post.
Or. the President could keep his finger (In
the nuclear trigger at a hardened un-
derground shelter in Virginia, at the
London Plagued
By Urban Woes
By BRIAN JEFFRIES
LOND::>N (AP) -Stories telling of the
deterioration or life in American cities
have made prime reading for Londoners
in the last rew yea rs. Now, they are
tas ting the same medicine.
Lond on's population bas dropped more
than 500,000 In 10 years . Large sections or
the central area are dead at night and on
\1•ee kends. Traffic jams at peak periods
art gelling worse, crimes of violence
have shot up, unemployment is in-
creasing, the housi n11: situation Is getting
worse. the birthrate is down and Industry
is declining .
There are two Schools of thought on the
~1 Luation.
The rirst says it is necessary to reduce
London's population In a controlled man·
11er to impro\•e standards for those that
rema in.
The second warns that dep:ipulatlon Is
i;:oing ahead too fast for the good of the
C"a pitaL If it conlinues at its present rate ,
the net result will be hi gh unemployment
and a :spiral <Jf decay.
London's population has fallen to 7.3
million from a peak of 9.6 million in 1939.
The latest statistics suggest tha t the
capital Is losing people at the rate of
100,000 annually, with 250,000 people moV·
ing in and 350 ,000 moving out.
Although the main streets still appea r
prosperous and the lights of Piccad illy
shine as brightly as ever, there are
pockets of deca y and poverty in
neighborhood areas.
Shelter. a British charily specializing in
ho using. estimates a shortage of at lea~t
200.000 habitable dwellings in London. It
savs that the situation is ge tting v.·or se.
Crimes of violence in London v.·ent up
28.7 percent from 1969 to 1970, wit h a
further 4 percent increa se in the first slx
1nonths of 1971.
The Greate r London Council is the local
govtrnment body ultimately responsible
ror the day-to-day running of the capital.
Eric Thompson, Its expert on population
inovement, says : "London ls not New
York or Chi cago. Ours is a very different
~·ity.''
F'or one thing, he says. there are no
large ghettos or very poor areas in the
heart of London. He attributes this to
mun icipal redevelopment and rebuilding
pclicies which havt provided new public
housing .
Britain 's nonwhite populallon i s
estimated lo have rise n to 114 milhon In
197() from something over hall a million
in 19£6. Although many have settl ed in
London , the proportions are sti ll nowhere
near th ose or New York or \Va shington,
Thompson says.
Or. David Eversele~1• chief st rateric
pl l'lnncr for the council says that local
and central government in Britain h:is a
rar Freater de,gree or control over plan·
nin~ than its en uivalcnts in America.
As he secs ii, Americans helper! kill
their big cities bv driving mullilane
highways through them. by allowing 111
situation to arise where onl y the poor liv-
ed in the downtown areas; bv letting
public transport systems run do"'n and
by allowing downt own shopping areas to
decay with businesses joining the migra-
tinn of the rich \l'hites to the suburb s.
This was not the case In London.
Eversel ey says.
Britain has lcamed a ~reat deal from
the Amerirans about research techni·
ques. he adds, but when ii comes lo solv·
in g the problems "The Americans have.
to come to us ...
\Vher e are the people who are moving
from London going to? As far as the
ccuncil can establish, half are leaving the
region entirely and the rest moving into
the burgeonirlg, prosperous southeast
cornmuter helt bordering London.
The council is financing new housing in
30 towns throughout Engl and for the use
or those who want to move out of London.
Nobody is moved until assured of boih a
joh and a house.
1'hc reduction in population is begin·
ning to be matched by a drift from Lon·
don of ITIAnufacturin,g industries. ac·
cord ing to Thompson. This is in line \11ilh
tht government's policy of persuading
factories to move to areas of high
unc1nploy1nent.
Not everyone is in favor of this polic y.
and not everyone feels London can
escape the Amefica n experience.
The London Chamber of Trade and
Industry, sp:ikesman of the commercial
concerns, recently warned the govern·
n1cnt that ii Is essential to halt the drift.
An official said: '.'Once you get into a
splrAI ()f decay it is very hard to arrest
it. First, you get indu stry moving out,
then high unemployment. then the
servi ce industries start to lose out.
Prope rty is taken over by people \Vith
nowhere else to go and soon a v:hole area
can become a slum ...
.Many Barriers to Fall
In Ne1v Market Accord
BR USSELS (AP ) -BegiMing next
)'ear. it may be easier for an Italian
barber t gel a job in London, (Jr a
year. It may be easier for an Italian
b.:irber to gel a job in London, or a
Danish film dis tributor to start opera·
lions in Rome.
As Britain, Denmark. Ireland and
Norv.·ay join t?le European Common
Market, they accept the agreement that
has J:!Overned labor relations among EEC
members France. It aly, West Germany,
Belgi um, Lux e m bou rg and the
Netherlands since 1968.
It provides that cit ize ns of one Com·
mon Market COWltry are entitled In any
other member country to automatic
residence permits, equal j o b op-
p:irtunlUes, local union membership and
80Cill security benefits.
Schools to Go
Year-a.round
SAN DlEGO iAP) -Five
elementary llCbools will switch to
year-roclnd opeiaUon next year ln
an effort to eccommodatt more
students, the San Diego &ard of
Ed11caOon Mys.
The board TOted rectntly to ap-
prov' the pilot program 11t tht five
echools tiler Supt. Tom Cloodm•n
,.id each ocbool probably rould
handle up to a 30 percent lncrt.ue
In enrollment
Plans call ror the rnident1 at
eocl1 !Chool to be split Into five
gniupo Willi each An>Up golrur Ofl
...,.!Ion al dllf<rtnt Umes ol the ,.. ..
1'here are a lot of exceptions: The
freedom docs not yet extend to public
services, self-employed er aft s men ,
1\'holesalers, retailers and professional
men.
It takes 111 lot of lime to get six cwn-
trie.s -and more for 10 eountries -to
agree on u·hat the quallticalions for an
engineer or an accountant should be.
Free mov ement or labor wa s one of the
last Issues settled in the negotiations . The
Dutch and the Wesl-Gennans were afraid
that Briti sh subjects from the Coin·
111onw ealth, hit by the high rate of
un employment Jn Britain, would move
where jobs were more plentiful and social
security payments more generous.
Other effects of the Common Markera
growth will not be: obvious to mer.st peo..
pie.
Food prices in Britain w\U be push~
upward. some beginning in the spring of
1973. But the move.menl is bound to be
gradual, and some eConomists thlnk they
would be going up so much anyhow !hat
the difference will not be. notlce1ble.
. In 1973, the Britlah governmwt will
have· to pay 1 contribution of about $250
million roughly $2.50 per subjt<L CiU!cns
of other new members will pay tn pro-
portion.
Th< cost for Britons should quadruple
by 19711, and ll may go hlghor If tho C<>m·
. munlty utond• Ill actlvltle• beyond
~~f~ng up farmers' income. But those
activities may bring lo some money to
the new members -for example to
develop backward areas In Scotland,
Irel and and nortMm Norway. . .•
Fanners will sttrt bmefJtln,g from
hiKher price• tn Britain, Jffiand and Den·
mark in the spring of 11171. Nonroy
already has blgh farm prices.
-·-
headquarter' of the North American All'
Otfen.se Command buried dee p Inside
Cheyenne M'l urr1ain , Colo , or abo11rd the
flying e<immand post of the Slrateglc AJr
Comm.'.lnd.
All are part of an 1::labora1e systl!tn
de:,;isncd to m11;inta1n uninterrupted cot\·
trol of U.S. air, ground and sea forces un·
der all circu mstnnce5.
Alr Fore t One , the Presidential plane
used tor normal travels, 11lso Is equipped
with communications gear neL·cssary for
keeping In touch but lacks the equipment
requi red for supporting a battle staff and
prosecuting a ~·ar.
''Silver Dollar." the code na1ne for the
mand planes based at Andrews AFB, more costly Boelng 747 jumbo jets. tettlng new equipment. In c I u d I ft I
11d., marks Its 10th annlvt>rsary of npera· Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird nleasures to protect eleclrlcal dtvkts
Uon this year. has asked C.Ongre1s for $113.a million to from damages by electromagnetic pulsei
Its planes are convrrted rour-tnglne buy four 7471 Im mediatel y. Three more given off by nu clear exp\o!ions.
KC.135 tan kers, dt rived lron1 the ~m· would be bought next year and the Laird suggested Soviet wt" 8 po n a
n1crcial Boeing 7o7 jellu1er, which are seventh the following year. developments may have made the ex-
capahle of staying aloft for several days. \\rith new and bigger pl anes, La1rd ex-1sting flying cornmand posts ~ulntrable
Although never used In a real emergen· plained, .. We will be able to obtain to communications blackouts in a nuc·
cy1 the planes have piled up thousands of greater endu rance, more flexibility, lea r attack.
flying hours in sin1ulated alerts. larger battle staffs, a larger group of 1'he presidential comnland planes .111re
The Pentagon says the planes are get· varied expert s to support top-level n1uch like the command-post planes
ting old and ar_e too small for the im-decision making, and additional space to operated by .Jhe Stra~i~ Ai ~ ~mmand
proved el«tron1cs computers and com· put improved communication a n d since 196L Pe.n tagon off1c1als 1nd1~ate the
1nunicat1011 equipn1ent that has come automntic dnta-processing equipm ent as SAC fleet al so n1ay be replaced with 7471
along in recent years. Jt wants thcrn it becomes available," in the future.
U.S. Soiight
Canadian
War Rule
OTTAWA (AP) -The United States
wanted to take over supreme command
of Canadian forces once it entered World
War II ln 1941, minutes of a n1eetiQg of
the Canadian Cabinet war committee
. reveal.
The minutes and associated documents
have been made public at the national
archives by the Privy Council Office.
They still bore the stamps secret and top
gecreL
The Canada-U.S. Permanent Joint
Board on Defense prepared a "Basic
Plan 2" \\'hich visualized entry of the
United States into the war.
In Apr il 1941 , the Canadian chiefs of
staff told th e war con1miltee that the
U.S. section of the board, with approval
of the U.S. administration. wanted
strategic command of joint Canadian and
American forces, including Canadian
forces In Canada,
Gen. Harry Crerar. then chief of the
defen~e staff said he was prepared to ac-
cept U.S. supreme coo1mand only in 1
desperate situation. such as Britain being
knocked out of the war.
R11ssia11s i1i A laslca
The chiefs said the United States wa'
prepared to all ow Canada only tactical
control of its 0111n forces in a few places,
such as the Gulf of St. Lawrence. the Bay
of Fundy and within 30 miles or defended
ports such as llalifax .
T hree Soviet fishing f leet officers <·harged \\•ith
violating U.S . .,...·aters in I.he Bering Sea talk \\•ith
interpreter. The three n1en (fro1n left), \.1adin1ir
Artemov, commander of the BO·boat fle et; Igor
Bovtun. master of lhe 362-fool factory shi p Lan1ut,
and Nikolai Pavluk. captain of the herring tra\\ lcr
Kolyvan. have pleaded innocent to the charges.
Co urt action is scheduled to resume Wednesday in
Anchorage \vhere the trio is free in the custody of
a Soviet d ip lomatic official.
Salvation Army Gets Help
Retiring Lea.der Sees Big Clianges i11 51 Yell rs
By DIANA PAGE
NE\V YORK (UPI) -\I/hen J<:dward
Carey joined the Salvation Army band in
the early 20's, he Je;irncd to play hymns
on the tronlbone. The ba nds he !ea,·es ' behind are pla ying rock 1nusic.
Rock bands, drug addicts, ··recrc!<'d
junk," and \\'omen's llb are part of the
chang ing v.·orld of the Sa!t·atlon Army
\11hich retiring Commissioner Ed ~·ard
Carey, 66, has known for 51 yenrs.
Carey leaves his posl as nnti onal com·
mflnder-the top a d mi n i s l r a t o r ,
spo kesman and president of all S<1lva11on
Army corporations in lht> Ll n i t e d
States-to his successor, Comn1 isslonrr
J>aul J . Carlson
"There is a real religious re' 1\"al
among young people. They 're sick and
tired of what lhe culture has been saying.
If we could just harness !heir idealism, it
would be wonderful for the country,·•
Carey sa id.
Rock bands art just part of the Salva.
tion Arm y's ('fforts to change its image
"'ith youth from a "little Victorian ,
dogooder. not part icutarily relevant
organ iza tion'' to one ot "an opportunity
to serve new values," Carey explained.
The Salvation Amy sponsors coff~
houses such llS the one in Grcen\vich
Village "where some 600 to 800
youngsters ha"e decided to return home
to their parents," and communes in Los
Angeles whe re teenage boys and girls live
to.~cther \1·hile they try to kick the drug
habit.
"Alcoholism is still the major problem
in nun1bcrs. but drug addicion. v.·ith its
links lo crin1e. has far n1ore impoct,"
Carey said.
Young people \\·ho gi\'e up drugs for
.Jesus may d1scovrr the Salvation Arn1y,
'·but the Jesus n1oven1ent didn't discov·
er thl' 11ondt'rful cxperirncc of conver·
s1rn. '' C2rey said. "It happened to me
11 hrn I 11·as 15."
\\"hc.1 Carey \\'as 15. his father, a
"t.1verpool-lrish" 1n1n1igrant who brought
his hunily from England lo Canada and
thrn to the United States. died, and Carey
had to dro p out of high school to \\'Ork.
At thf' lime of Carey's father's death in
Cl rvcland. a S;iJva!ion Army captain
came to offrr his sympathy, 11nd through
him, C:irf'y beca1nc involved with Salva-
tion Arn1y activities as he worked and
wrnt to night ~chool.
\Vith a degree fr om New York
Uni versity and graduation from Salvation
Army officers training, Carey began a
carter "'ith the Salvation Aryn y v.·hich
took him to Europe, South America,
India, Japan, Australia and New 7.ealand.
Even after settling into retirement near
Lacon ia. N. H .. Carey plans to go on
"soldiering" with the local corps.
Carey married Lieutenan t Faith Seavt.r
in 1928 and they have three children and
eleven grandchildren .
"It's part or our discipline that office rs
marry each other," Carey said. smiling.
"\Vomen have served on equal terms
with men here long befor e the women 's
li berat ion movement."
The Army marches "''ith women·s lib in
it s eJforts lo start day care centers. The
Salvation Army also has a project to
train licensed midwi ves to fill in for doc-
tors \\'hen possible , and also has ll
counseling se n·ice for unmarried parents.
The Salvation Anny has tried to Jn.
crease blnck recruits because"the black!
\\<int their own leadership and in some
places \1·ere able to provide ii,"
Carey said. '!'his isn't new, according to
Carey. ''There were three blacks in of·
ficers training with me in 1923."
The Salvation Arm y was also one jump
ahead of another cause~leaing up the
('OVironment. For years. Salvation Army
cenlers have been collecting and salvag.
ing discarded material so thal a poor
tfarnily can get "recycled" clothing and
furniture.
Another fact of modem times Carey
may be glad to leave behind Is economic
pressures, With the "squeeze" in relation
to the United Fund and government pro-
grams.
Outside Uie Anny headquarters two
workers picketed, saying their union
leaders had been laid off "·hen they asked
for rnises ..
''\Ve feel future shock," Carey said
assessing the changes, "but the basic
commitment to the gospel of Jesus Christ
doesn't change.
The war committee decided that it
could accept no such U.S. control but that
it would fa vor coo peration and coo·
sult ation wilh the United States.
Earli er tha t same month -April. t!Ht
-President F'tanklin D. Roosevelt
bypassed the Joint Board of Defense and
told Prime Minister \\'i~ton Churchill
directly that he "·anted to put a battery
of guns· and squadron of bomber' at St.
John's in Newfoundland . then a1 British
colony.
The Canadian Cabinet was nonplussed
because nobody in Canada had even
heard o! such a plan.
Kids Have Point
About S pina.cli
ROl\1E (U PI) -Children who hatt
spinach like poison may have gotten to
the point faster than science did.
A dietary committee of the U.N, Food
and Agriculture Organization says in 1
report just released that the breakdowa
of certain chemicals in spinach can cause
methae.moglobinaemia -a form of blood
poisoning -in infants.
Several del egations to the conference
held in Bonn said spinach should be ban-
ned for babits less than three. months old
because nitrates in fre sh and quick-frozen
spinach could break do"'" to
nitrites-which could cause the blood
poiso ning.
The U.S. delegation noted that the prt>
blem does not apply to canoed spinach,
which has been \Videly used for genera•
lions.
The commission turned down a
Consumers Union request that warning1
be printed on the labels of spinach con·
tainers saying the vegetable w 11
unsuitable for the very young infant.
Instead it recommended that spinach
be eate.n Immediately after It is cooked.
or after the container is opened , and
unused portions be discarded.
Environment Events Not All Black
By LOUIS CASSELS
U11!1f111 '""I lrrlwrMfi..I
There's so much bad news about the
pallution <Jf the environment that It com-
es as a refreshing surprise to encounter
an occasional bit or ccoloRical good news.
Here are 8 few examples lhat have
come to my attention late ly: • • •
-The Ivory-billed woodpecker. a large
and beautiful bircf that ornithologists
have feared was tztinct. has shown up In
the dense Santee Swamp or south
Carolina .
Ivory-bills are America's I a r ~e s t
woodpecke.ra. 'Ibey art bl111ck and while
birds lsrger than crows. and the males
aport 1 &ca.rlet crtst.
They an very much worth preserving
11 part or the beauty or God'& cre•lion,
but were driven to tht verge of extinctkln
by ruthlesa lumbe ring opcralions during
the 1930'1 which nearly wiped out thclr
nallve habitats.
Their welcome reappearance in the
Santee Swam p insures 11 mighty battle by
conservationists to fortstall 1 proposed
new logging operation tn that area.
Mindtul of the growing "ecological
vote," offleials already have suspended
the logging pt:rmit for 1 year to permit
"study of the alttlaUon." • • •
-From the plAnt world comes news
th8t Spanish moss. the beautiful gray
stuff that hangs from giant oeks In the
coastal pl•fns or the Southeast, appears
to be making 1 comeback.
A bll ght <•Used by a fUngua be&an to
ati.clt Spanish moss several years 1go,
and wldt-spreAd dle-<>rf was "'ported by
botan ists all the way from Ml1slsalppi to
North Carolina. ·
Now, nature on her O'llt'tl seems to be
licking the mentce, before .man has cot
around to flndln,: a tre11tment .
Tiny ..-tendril• of lr•sblY·arolrln(
mosft~an be .seen in increasing quantities
aloog tho entire coastal plaill. and In
Florida, where tht infestation was first
detected, Spanish moss seems to have
made an almost eomplct~ rtt0Very. • • •
-AllJgators •dmlttedly are not as
beautiful as Ivory-billed woodpeckers and
SpJ11ish moss . But they are ra sclnating
cre1tures, and have as much right to ex·
ltte:nce •1 any olhtr species, including
man.
Becaust reaJ estate developers were so
iealous about dralnin1 the swrunps which
•re the main habitat of alligators, the
bl(·Jawed amphibians have been listed by
the U.S. Burtau of Sport Flohtrlc• and
Wlld11f~ as 1n "endangered spttles" ~
meaning one that needs prot.ectton to
avoid becoming extinct.
In the Pl't few _)'.ears. Southeastern
stoles hav~ been ilgorously enforcing
protective laws. llmltlng the kill of
1.lllgator1 for shoes and handbags and
-·ithbolding permits fOr land development
that w(luld destroy alligator preserv111s.
The resul~ according lo wlldllfe of.
'
nciats In 1everal al.ates. Is that the
decline In alllgalor population h11 been
reversed. ln fact, •gators are spreading
into new areas.
.. We are constantly rinding them ln.
water1bed1 where lhty aren't supposed to
ex ist," sa)'s Mark Bara, a ttsearcb
biologist with the South C.rollna Wlldllfa
Department. • • •
-Although tbe tllreo previous Items
happen to come from the ooutheut,
e<0lo(lleal 1ood nows can be found ju!l 11
retdlly ln otMr parts or the world. ,...
For eumple, the Thames IUvtr le
England, once so fouled by poll ution thal
birds deserted It, his bttn cleaned up.
O!'nltllologlsl! now ttport •lghtlng tens ol
thousands of ducks and other water bird•
In porll of the Thames fftuary that havt
been bamn or bird life for IO years. Flab
alM> are reappeartnc. ''T!>e ,.hole estuary ls comlns to 11'"
a,g11ln," say1.11pokesman for tht Loniton
Natural Hi.ltory Society.
7
J
I
7
'i
I I
• •
~aguna Beaeh
EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
VOL 65, NO. 27, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE CO UNTY, CALI FORNIA TUESD AY, FE BRUARY I, 1972 TEN CENTS
Drug Dealer Well Organi~ed-Purccll
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
01 t~• 010, ~""' s11tt Today's drug dealer is a sophisticated,
well monied individual; capable cif
mobilizing yachts, airplanes and e:<-
pensive cars to import illicit drugs into
the United States.
'fhis is the assessment or Sgt. Neil
Purcell of the Laguna Beach Police
Department. vt'ho, along with members of
the special Orange County Narcotics
Task Force, has broken three alleged in-
ternational drug rings -each head·
quartered io the art colony -since mid-
December.
·It's not uncommon !hese days to have
smugglers purchase a $9.000 Porsche in
Europe, tear it d('wn . and literally rebuild
it around the illegal drugs, said Purcell.
"Let's face it, if yo u're making a
$400,000 shipment. $9,000 for the car is
pennies," said the 32-year old veteran
narcotics investigator.
Nor is it un common for young drug
dealers to take the time to get a pilot's
license, allov.·ing them to "air freight" il-
licit mari1uana into the Uni ted Stales
from Mexico.
One of the newest trends, Purcell sajd
is for dealers to conNCt new drug
substarices - such as hashish oil some
45 tin1es stronger than marijuana. Often-
times drug laboratories riva l those of
legitimate sci ent ific enterprises.
Since Dec. 15, the task force has
smashed three rings; one dealing in the
hashish oil, another in marijuana and a
thi rd in hashish. Jl,-tore than 25 persons -
a few of them considered kingpins -
have been arrest ed on warrants totalling
nearly $4 million.
t-.1ost have subsequently been charged
with conspiracy, possession a n d
merchandising count s, said Purcell.
The hashish oil was first found in large
quantity Dec. 15, when officers. armed
with a search warrant entered a
fa shionable J\1iramar Street home and
allegedly seized a gallon of the substance
along wit h 30,000 LSD tablets.
following an arrest there. eight other
persons believed to be involved in the
Pay Increase Gets Nod
From
W oma1i E nters
Co uncil R ace
The slo w-moving Lagu na Beach
city coun cll race picked up more
momentum today as a woman at-
torney look out nomination papers
and longtime civic leader Harry
Lawrence revealed he is con-
sidering entering the race.
Papers were taken out by
Frances B. Hall er, 1229 Temple
Hills Drive, an attorney at present
employed by Laguna Feder<1! Sav-
ings and Loan Association.
Lawrence, owner of Warren
Imports, former Chamber of Com-
tnerce president and active in civic
affairs for 20 years, said he has not
yet made up hJg mind about run-
ning ror a council seat but sa id , ''It
Is under consideration .'' However,
he added, "lt's a very seri ous
thing, and nothing has been decided
yet.·•
Deadline for filing for the April
11 election. in which two seats must
be filled, is noon Thursday.
Lag una Attorney
Richard L. Carr
Council Hopeful
Riche.rd L. Carr, 1335 Bluebird Canyon
Drive, a corporate attorney for Control
Data Corporation, has taken out nomina·
tion papers for Laguna Beach's April II
city council election.
Carr, 40, has lived in Laguna since 1969
ii.nd is owner of the Ocean View Motel,
Js.54 S. Coast Highway, which he is
presently upgrading and converting to an
arts and crafts center.
Carr joins incumbents Roy llolm and
Cliarlton Boyd, along with h1rs . Beth
Leeds, in the race for two council seats.
Before coming to Laguna. the attorney
lived in London, England where he serv·
ed as legal advisor to European opera-
tions of the Collins Radio Company .
Carr received bachelors degrees in
both political science and languages from
the University of Wisconsin in 1953 and
won his degree in law in 1955 from the
same institulion.
He has been admitted to practice
before the Bars of the State of Wisconsin,
the Federal District Courts and the Bar
of the U.S. Supreme Court. Carr was
(
(Stt CARR, Page II
Twelve Across
S pells 'Oops'
To the DAILY PILOT'S cross-
word puzzle fans:
You wtn.
As an experiment, we began
pub.llshing a smaller -and simp.
ler -crossword puu.le in it.!i reg-
uJar position on the comic page
stVeral weeks ago. 'I11e response,
we rttkontd, ntigbl not be tre.
mendous but we thoug.hl it might
be posiUve.
Jt wasn't Arter a deluge of com·
plaints, thre8ts of cancellation.
•ngry liraftes Amf .. threaf:& on the
editor's life, we returned to the
old croS5Wo rd puu le format. You
Will find it today on page 16.
And thanks for lo!Unj us know
you care.
We do, loo,
2 Laguna Panels
'
Life Outlined
Ho ward Hughes Story
Told in 4 -partSeries
Editor's note: I t began mode stly
enouuh i11 1/oustou, Texas, with a
new kind of oil 1ve/l drilling bit. But
11010 the J-lugheli Tool Co. is a many
splenclored business ca11g/omera!e.
Airlines, ganiblin g casinos. mi11es -
you name it. And tt is TUled by a man
who has not been seen in public: in
al.most 20 years. Fdllowing is the first
of four articles on the many faces of
1-Iotoard flughes.
B:v JACK LEFLER
A •Mlcllll'd PrlH N1w1 Wrll1r • LOS ANGELES -Hughe s Tool Co., the
cornerstone of a $2 billion business en·
terprise. is as spectacularly vi sible as its
sole owner. Howard Hughes, is
mysteriously invisible.
Its success, founded on a revolutionary
Assets RiHi
From $650,000
To $2 Billion
oil well drilling bit. has made its
reclusive ov.'Tler one of the world's richest
men.
The furor over the authen ticity or an
au~obiography of Hughes, w h l c h
fl.1cGraw-Hill Publishing Co. originally
pl:i:nned ltJ publish in March, has focused
public attention on the corporate kingdom
over which Hughes rules from his secret
hideouts.
Hughes Tool (Toolco) and its oil too l
division are based ln Houston, Tex. Its
other major properties include a
helicopter manufacturing divi sion in
California; an airline, Hughes Airwe st, in
\Vestern States; hotel s, gambling casinos,
mining claims an d other properties in
Nevada; Hughes Television Network, and
huge real estate holding s in Arizona and
California .
The vast operations have been com·
manded by hughes, 66. in imperious
manner, usually by telephone. Some of
his top executives have never seen hi111 .
He hasn't made a public appearance
since 1953.
Last Jan. 7. a man identified by
Hugh es· public relations spokesman as
the billiona ire industrialist held a·
telephone news conference with seven
news reporters to deny the authenti city or
the ~1cGraw-Hill manuscript. The
newsmen, who were assembled here, said
lhey were convinced 1he voice on the
telephone v.·as that of Hughes.
Hughes holds no title with Toolco ex-
cept that of t1wner. Operations are han dl·
cd by Executive Vi ce President Raymond
J\1. Holliday and Senior Vice Presidents
Frank W. Gay and James R. Lesch.
What was to become a fabulous en·
terprlse wa s bom in 1909 at Goose Creek,
'l'ex. when ~loward flughes Sr. sue·
cessfully tested lhe rotary rock drill bit
he invented. The bit consisted of 166
conical cutters of milled teeth v.·hich
chiseled and crushed rock so it could be
brought up through the drill stem from
the bottom of the drilling hole. Jt solved
the problem of drilling through rock.
It's estimated that 75 percent of the oil
wells In non-Communist countries have
been drilled with Hughes bits.
Young ~lughes' parents willed him 60
percent interest in the tool company and,
newly orphane6, he took over its opera·
tion in 1923 wh en he was 19. He later
(Stt HUGHES, Page Z)
Full Board
To Con sider
Proposal
Following eight months of negotiations,
a committee composed of men1bers of
the Laguna Beach Unified District
trustees and representatives of two
teacher groups have agreed on a three
percent pay hike for instructors.
Full board approval of th' ratse wln be
requested at 7:30 p.m. today when
trustees meet at the Education Cent.fr,
550 Blumont St.
During annou ncement of the agreement
at a ooon meeting Monday, Art fisher,
president of the Professional Educators
Council a teacher negotiation group,
pointed out the three-percent raise ~f
fective Feb. l through July J, really
a1nounts to a 1.5 percent increase for the
entire fiscal year.
Fisher also noted that "not all teacher!
will be getting a three percent increase."
The reason, he said, is because the mas-
ter pay scale has been completely revls·
ed. "In essence, we're just adding 1.5 per·
cent to the money allocated in the budget
for teachers' salaries," he said.
Board members Monday receive<I the
y,·aRe increase proposal without com·
me nt.
It is kno~·n th at teachers were asking
for a 5.3 percent increase and that the
board was offering •·no-adjustment"
when negotiations first began in May.
A position statement presented to t he
board by the PEC states. "The PEC,
representing all teachers of the Laguna
Beach School Dis!ricl docs not feel th at
(a ) l.5 percent increase i,. district fund -
ing of salaries is commensurate wi th
"We trust that the sc hool board will use
ils discretion in making the salary ad·
justment already proposed and will
demonstrate a willingness lo make a
more adequate adjustment," the position
noted.
The salary schedule agreed to by the
committee will raise the starting pay for
teachers new to the district with no prior
(Sef: RAISE, Page %)
* * * Lette rs S upport
Education Plari
In Lag u1ia Beacli
Educational 'Priorities'
More than 25 letters In fsvor of the
educational -program In the Laguna
Beach Schools will be presented to
district trustees at tonight's board meet-
Unit _Sought for District
ing. FormaUon of an •'Edu c at lo n at
The Jet~rs we~e written by members Priorities Study O:lmmittee" to review
of the community at the request of the"Laguna Beach Un ified School District
several teachers, reported Superintendent ~ educational program has been recom·
William Ullom. Only one letter was m e n d e d by a trustee-teacher wage
receivM against the exlrti11g programs, negotiating group.
be added. . . The committee would be give n a wide
The meetmg will be held at .the Educa· range of duties and power to request
Uonal Center, S50 Blwnont Drive. school di:strlct staff and members or the
Oll)er matters, included on tonight's community to pr~ent testimony. A pro-
agcnda are: , posal wlll be presented to the full board
-A request from Hal Akim, ditector of tonight for discuukln -and possible ap-
athletlcs at lhe high school, fOr $1.248 to proval.
employ assistant coaches In the track, A statemmt issued (?Y the Profe!5sional
baseb.l.111 and golf programs. Educators O:luncil -~he teacher'• arm
U11om sa~ Akins fetls increased of the negotiating groqp -said that since
participation In these sports warrana.the ectucatlonal philoso~ls tied to program
added personnel. Money for the additions, expenditures sue an Eddc11tional
llowever, Ill not Included In this year's Priorities siody lttee. should be
budget, Ullom said. tteated. '
-A report from Dr. Robert Reeves: on 1be proposal. drawn t1p by board
statewide test results for grades one, two ~preaenlatlves and members of the
thl'ft, six a nd 12, cond ucted during the PEC, sllkl the committee would review
1970.71 school year. · the budget in tums of educatlooal pro-
-Adoption of an admlnL,trativ1 salary gram and district operalion and prcsrnl a
achtdule, reflecting a ~.5 pe:rctnt in-'\ report to the board hy June 1.
crease-, in line with a ralst proposed for A second , final evaluation of the educa-
di.Wlct teacbtrt. tional program, operation ·and reaourcu
would be submitted to the board no later
than July II. Minority reports may also
be submitted.
The proposal outlined a 17-ma n com-
mittee, comJ)OSed of members of the
community, teachers. students, a board
member, representatives of the
California Schools Employes Association
(CSEA), a research analyst and con-
sultants.
Mee.tings are expected to be open to the
public, although power to bola e1ecutlve
suslon1 would bt granted.
Topics suggested for consideration by
the committee include:
-Anal ysis of the d~lrlct oodget In·
eluding income, e1ptndltures, capital
outlay and reserve levels.
-EquaJ allocatlron of re1K1Urcts to the
varit>us schools within the dlrtrlct.
-Special dlltrlct se:rvlce1, such as
educationally handicapped c I asses ,
speech, health and counsellng services
and psychological testing.
-The innovative teaching pro1fram at
Thur1ton lnU:rmediate Schoo a n d
organization of Laguna Beach Hlgh
School.
J
ring have been arrested .
Purctll speculated the hash 1 s h ,
purchased for $75 a pound, 1s bought 1n
Pakistan or Afghani stan, and redttced to
the potent oil in Underground l<ibs . .Stored
in small laboratory nasks -\\"Orth $375
each -the oil is co ncealed and ship1>ed
to this C()Untry.
In the hashish oil case, sai d Purcell, a
laboratory had been set up in the hon1e
and the potent oil produced. "The thing
is. bo"·ever, that hash ish costs $1 ,000 a
pound here. It's cheaper to buy it 1n the
Family .Traditiun
.\llddle r~nsl. prl'i,:ire !ht· uil and ship lt
lll'l'l'," ~H1r11'11r<'t•!I
Ile !111\l•d tl1;1t n!though the 1)pt'rati11n
hn s llC't'11 eu rtfultd the hash oil is ~~ill
turning 111> 111 ~ number uf Sou ther/I
l"111iforn1a t(ltlununitles.
Tl1e second ring ripped apart in\'olvl'd
thrt·e Ornnge County men . nrrc~ted "ht't\
lhl'y 11rr1vcd dockside in l'11r\lcu1d to prrk
111) a \'11lk.,wage11 <'Rfllfl('t' lo<1ded with
1.:130 pounds of l1ash1sh.
Purcell claims one of lht• three, I
tSte DEALERS, P:ige 2)
U'1T ......
Rabbi and Mrs, J acob Twerski of Mi lwaukee celebrated their SOth
wedding anniversary recently s urrounded by four o( their five sons
who are also rabbis. Behind their parents sland, from left, Rabbis
Aa ron, Pittsburgh; Michael, Mil waukee; Shloime. Denver and Motel,
Ne\Y York. Not in the picture was son Shea, ol Pittsburgh .
City Clerk Still Planning
To Se el{ Elective Off ic e
By BARBARA KREJBIC:li
Laguna Beach City Clerk Dorothy
Musfclt, whoge job appea rs to be en·
dangered by a ne w proposal to make the
clerk position appoin tiv e rather than
eleclive. said today she definitely is prcr
cceding with her plan to seek election.
"lf J didn't I'd be labeled an in-
C(lmpetent," said Mrs. Musfelt, noting
she filed her own nomination papers
yesterday. "They of fered my old job back
as senior 5tenographer in the Public
Works Department and told me they
thought the clerk job was too much for
me," she added. "That1s when T definite-
ly decided to run again. I've lkred here
and worked here a long time and l h8\le
to go on Uving and working here. I can't
a£ford to be labeled incompetent when
the difficulty stems not from ln-
Foreig n Students
Need Families
In Laguna Beach
Laguna Beach families who would be
Interested In having a foreign exchan~e
student join their households for the lfn.-
73 school year may make application now
through the-American Fle ld Servke.
PreparaUons art under way to find
sllltable homes for the AFS •ludenta who
will be stlected to attend Laguna Beach
High School in fall ,
Though not a requirement, It is prefer-
rtd that the host family hive a son cir
daughter who is a junior-or 1tnlor tt tbe
hig h •chonl.
Interested families may obtain further
Information by calllllfl Mn, Thomas
Judy, 49t--t-07l, or Mrs. Jack Knowlton,
·~·33311,
"!'hit" yw, N1)WJ1 1Saldllb of Amman,
Jordan, ls llvlnf 1'fth the Thom38
Cutkomp family o South t..Aguna and at·
tending Laguna Bach High SChool with
her Amt rka1t."sistt,rs" Katen and Paige
Cutkomp.
Jose Trucco of Pargamlna. Ar1entlna1
Is the gue1t of the Floyd Parsons f1mll y,
1harln1 hla school expertencu with Craig
ParlOl\S, now r •enior at LBHS.
competence but from lack of support ..
In a ~ent appeal to the city councU
for add! onal help during the pre-election
period, rs. Musfelt said the city
manager lad refused her reque!ts for
support .
Mrs. ~1usfell's nomination papers were
circulated hy Laura C. Ireland and signed
by IO registered voters. most of whom,
she said, ha\le served on election board1.
lier nominators are Katherine Hearle,
Ora B. llennlngg, Violet Lansdell. ~lazel
R. Fulmer. Earl W. Fulmer, Gertrude M.
Whitney, Victor J . 1..asaga. William R.
Ireland . Vern M. Taschner and Clara K.
Taschner. •1
Ironically, Mrs. Musfelt. as city clerk.
was named in Tas:chner's suit to In.
validate the Aug. 3 high rlae initiative
election . Mrs. TascMer has freq uently
served on election boards.
Although Mayor Richard Goldberg in-
dicated Monday that there wa:\ council
unanimity In the question of the clerk
(See CLERK, P•ge Z)
Oraage
"'eatber
Vari:Ible high clouds are expect-
ed along the Orange Coasl Wed-
nesday, with a poB&lblllty o(
sprinkles. Gusty winds are allO
expected brtnging temperatures
down to the low 60's. Tonlghra lo\f
will be around 42 degrees.
INSmE TODAY
Arltnt Lum, a Honolulu f't·
porter, is perhaps the fi-rst
Ch ine.ft-American journali.ft ro
enter ma1nland China 1i ntl!'
1948. fler hnpre,&tons apptor
on Page I,
l. M, ''" , lrM•ll• " C•tll•r11I• • M~f\NI , ..... • ('•••lft.11 2»H "•li.oiti ·~ ••• (Onll(I " ... _ (""""' " (nit•""'"' " 111¥11 l'1rlfl' M .... No'l<n " i ;t rl1 , .. " •1111191'111 '"" • l 'iK• ....... . " •11t1~., ........ , .. ,, ...,,, ... ..
"lr 111t1 .... "'"'~ ..
"'' 1111· •• .,. " W11"""' • MOfMC.-.. ··-·· """ ,,.,. -1..1·~ .. ·--••
.% _ll_AI~ PI LOt __ rn __
Couracil Motiora
Planners Seek
•
Clearer Picture
Laguna 'Bearh plnnning comm1:,'..:,Joncrs
In a study session \lond11y night sought
clartficaflon of a rf'etnt {'ilv t>fHJntll n1"-
l1on u1struct11111 1tie111 tsi h:i.'e 1hc1r
de('isions 011 or1l1n;u11·es t't1rrcntlv in ef·
feet , not on thi> pn1fit1,ed tc"'t id ihe land
u!'c elemrnt uf lh1· J.!C•tt<•r<il p!;1n
The crJunc1I mo11on \Vas nladr by !.:oun-
<·1lm~n PPl('r ()Strander ilnfl pA<;SPd by a
3·2 vote w11h ('n11nc1J111cn r\roy llnlrn .1nd
Charlton Rr1vd 1l 1ssent1 ng 1):-.l randcr :-.n1rt
hl" fell the p!,1nn1ng co1T11n1~~1on wa!I 1end·
11ig to act on hoJ>('d.for rdther lh<1n r;.;.
J!'>l1ng zon1n~ Jriw~ and nrl'drd lhf>
rern1ndf.'r, '"I c:+n't rh1nk .. r ..ir1 111 ... !:111{'e ~ht're "'"'
h;ive 11rit 1lrinP !his ' ~aid (.'11n11niss1one.r
Roger Lanphrar.
f'rom l'ngc I
RAISE ....
f'XpPrien ce to $7,!00 Jrnm 111P prrsrnt
17.000.
Thr top r1f n1e 11rhP1h1le -reacher!
afrer 11 years rJf 1each1ng experience -
\11tl be $12.0RO. up$14U rrom $11 ,940.
Jncreascs r;ini.:1ns.: frorn $1 25 to $605 will
be nuule on other strps 111 the sthcdulr.
The cost to the d1strk:l Uus fiscal year
will be $21 ,190, accorchng to Dr. Charles
Hess, business managrr. The money will
come out of an "adrlitional income'' ac-
count and will not affect reserves or pro·
gram accounts.
The raise will increase the average.
regular classroom teacher s a I a r y
I including extra pay l from $ IJ ,2117 to
111 ,453.
Money for a full three percent raise has
been included Jn a prellmlnary budget for
the 1972-73 fi scal year, wh ich presently
Mlows a $1351000 de!icil.
l'l1111n1ng ( "11rr1m1:-.\11in < hi11rn1.1n I .11 I
.r.1t111son s:i1d hP y,·ould nut d1.~agrer with
thr rnotitin hut did nl1t feet th<' 1·1irn
mission had acted outside the scope ro!
existing laws.
Commis:-.ionrr John ,\<1e0owcll !'>UJ.:·
i:esled that his pcrsontll 1•Jews. <is ex·
pre.'lsed during d1sr-u ss1nn<;. rnigl1l h;11 e
given Ostrander a ITH'\!ead 111g 1n1pre'1:-.uln
regarding the commissio n's prriccdure Jn
arriving at decisions.
"rr something is i)(i!hering 1hree
men1bers of the city counC'!l IVf' ought 10
know what it ls," said Lanphear.
'"!'here's no dnubt we shoulrl fnfluw the
law. Can we ask for a clar1f1c11tior1 '."'
McDowell said he agreed it would he
helpful to know what the council "really
had in mind."
Planning Director Wa yne Moody said
he would listen to the tape of the cnuncil
discussion and, if It did not provide the
necessary information, would ask for
further clarification.
The commissioners also asked Mood y
to seek clarification of written in·
structions from Ma yor Richard Goldberg
for changes in the land use element text ,
particularly a refere11cr-to ''more
coverage," which they found unclear.
~Pagel
~~~~~=r:en~:,(;):E~np~co~ •organizaUoo. In ca~y no
relatives. medica l research. All of its profi1s go to
Value of the company at the time of the the institute. of which Hughes is the sole
father's death was variously estimatr.d at trustee., and it no longe r is under the cor-
$10 million or more. but Hughes said the porate umbrella of Toolro.
gove.r:nment appr~ised it at $650,000. Hughes Aircrilft, which h;i s heen
While Hu ghes IS reputed not to have est.imated to be worth $500 niillion with ~n seen in Toolco's Hous_ton offices aMual sales about equal that amount,
since 1926, the company flou rished undt>r manufactures communications sarcllires.
his dir_cction and ~he. operations of his gu ided missiles. aircraft armament
hand·ptcked executives. systen1s and other electronics gear.
The oil tool business i;l"rew until it now ·The most speclRcular deals in wh ich
employs about 4.~ at Hou s!on and has Hughes involved Toolco "'ere majontv
other manufacturing plants in England, ownership of Trans-World Airlines, and
Ireland,. Canada, \\'.est German~'.. I_tal~· · resulting legal hassles: and ownership of
Argentina and Brazil. The tool _d1v1s1on s NevRda Hotels, casinos and olher pro--
annual ~evenues hav~ ~n ~slimated at ~rties. and resulting legal hassles.
$75 mlllton .. Because _it IS privately own· llughcs started bu~·ing in to TWA in 1939
cd, Too/co issues no 1rports on sales and and took control with 77 percent of the
eamin~s. stock in 1947. ,
Hughes , ~·hn Jon.(?" hnd bcrn intcrr.~led After the cornmer<"ial jet age dawnerl,
ln airplanes, left Texas for C31ifornia in l~ughes, with his customnry deliberalion.
the 1920s and betame a legendary figure \lo·aited five vea rs before ordcr in~
In aviallon. He set n1any "'orld speed jetliners and Other equipment cos1 in~
records and designed aircraft. $497 n11llion. Partly beCa\Jse of the late He 11lso lx-can1e C'nchanted \vith rnotion starts in jets. ·rwA lost huge 11111ou111 s nf pictures, and ac!re~ses ns well. He pro-monc\'. ;ind finnncial inslitutions \vhich
duccd ;:r nurnbcr of rnov1r s. nn1ons.: !hrn1 loaned rnonev for the ;:rircraft purcha ses
''Hell's 1\nge!s" anrl "1'he Outlaw," and bt·came concrrned.
for a \vh1lc owned l!KO studi os. Tonlco lost conlrol of T\VA in 1960 "'he11
Noah Die1n r h, Hughe s' chief executive. creditors force d Hughrs 10 plllce his from 1925 until they split in 1953. takes issue with those ~·ho give Mughcs the !<lock in a nnnvoting !rust T\\'r\ rnnnagc-
1nenl sued Hughrs, alleging 111ism:ir1ngc-lion ·s sharr of crf'd it for b1uld1ng Toolco. inenl. Clainis and c 0 u n 1crcIai 111 s
'"l ie c:in't explain the j?ro~·th nf his t"m-<imounted to s481 million. A Judgment of pire ." Dietrich said in an int erview recen11y. "II~ left that part of the S\37 million "·as won against Hughes. but
business lo ine. it is yet to be collC'elcd .
'".,LQ.thosr da.\ s. h1i; n1a1n 1n!rrrsts wr re
ron111nl·e , airplanes iind 111011on pic.:1u1'f!'.
Nonr of those produrrd <1ny prof11.~"
The first his.: d1vcrstf1c11!1on nulvr undrr
the: b;innrr of 1·1iolro 11as thr founding of
Hughes AJrl"r11ft Co. in l'ull'('r C11y 1n
19.~1
\\'uh 1hr h11rg('11n1n~ of \'tHnmcrri;t f
Rl'i<i!u1n and lhr appronch of 11,-·flrld \\';ir
II. Hu~hr s A1rLrnit CJUH'kly hrcnn1r a
Rlanl in its firld 11 11·;15 nnP of !hi~ <'11lltl•
lry"s n1a1or \1·11rt11n(' suppliers 11f acrinl
"'t'11pc1nr~.
ln 1954, H ui.;ht·~ turnrd n\·rr thr
a1rC'raft con1pany 10 ll1r llui.:hrs ~lrrl1r:i l
Institute, "·h\cb he furn1erl as phil<1n-
OUNG-1 COAST
DAILY PILOT
lle1i•1! I". w.,d
,.lni>:lw\I ~ f'llbhllW
ThDITU\ ti:tlYi.J carror
Jlu)!hes pulled out of 'f\VA in grand
fashion by selling his stock fnr $;llfl
n111\1nn 111 1966.
.A.nnf'rl \Vllh 1norr than S400 1nlll1nn rr-
1nn1n1ng aflrr capital gains taxes fin the
stot'k :-air. Hughr s 1110\'ed st'rrrtlv inro
La~ \"ri;as. Nev .. 1n 1966 and ~ta rted
buying JUS\ nbout rvcry!h1n,:: 111 sight in
th(' name of Hu,1:hes Ho!el Propcrlles.
\rhJrh had been set up as fl d1v1s1nn of
'J'fl(\[('(1.
\V11h P.,000 rniployr'.'i, 1-lughcs llotrl
Prnprr!tc .~ bccan1e N('vsida·.~ higi;:~s t
r1nployrr.
I! \\":1s esli111111rd !hr Nr\'IHl:i prnpcrll!'~
rn:-:t $2;ifl 1111lhnn :ind \Vrrr worth S:l()()
m11!1on l\'hen Hughes slipped out or 10"'rl
on Thanksgiving r:\"c 1970. reputedly
going to the Bahan1a.~.
Tooleo t'Ont1nUl'S to h;:rl"e Hs ryes on the
future. Rec-ently it Jauncht'd at S<1n
Die~o. SI 324-fool -long barjil'.(' f(lr the d('('p--
sea m1nin~ of nianganese tn the Pac1f1c
CX:can. The mO\'e "·as proclaunrd b:--· the
('Olnpany SIS '"the birth or 11 ne1v in·
dustry."'
f\1c:rt: Thr l/nll1111:oorl. J'rors.
Plane Ra1iso1n
Tax Write off
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UPI) -
Northwest Alrllnt!, which gave
'200,000 to a hJJ.acker using the
name "D. B. Cooper," the first of a
8tries of akyjack·for-ransom at-
tempt' and the only succe"rul one,
i.~ "l:un11ng lhe payme11 l as a taJ;
\\r1tt·otr.
''/) B. C(l()pcr'' ptirachu!ed fron1
!lir plane 11ver \'t'a~hin.;:ton stale
ilnd h:i.s not l>l'i·n seen since
A N'orthwest spokesman said the
r.~nsom payment was not insured,
-
Fr1111& l'age J
DEALERS ...
J.11guna H('ach resident, sent the ca mper
to Eurupe th en shipped 1t to Karachi,
l'akrstan. where the hashish wa.s alleged-
1.v !ilken al)()ard .
'"Usuall.11 tl1e guy just goes lo Europe,
huys a new <:ar and loads 1t. wirh the
drugs. 1'hf'y can afford to do it -money
nevt·r seen1s to be il problem with the.se
p<·oplr," s:iid Purcell.
llad the Porll;u1d seizure nol t111ve
taken plate the h:1.~hish would have bcf'n
i;l11pped to Canada. broken int11 sn1all
<1 u•1nl1ties and sent to Southern
Califurnia, said Purce.II.
"There's little doubt all that ha shish
lvnu!d have been sent to this area." the
officer <:Om mented . It is 1nuch easier to
.!.hip drugs over the Ca nadian border, he.
said. but added, ''we hope to change that
soon ."
The most recent slate. of arrests have
surrounded a ring allegedly importing a
substantial portion of marijuana to
Orange County.
A Dana Point man was arrested in
Colorado Jan. 16 and described by
Purcell as the leader or the multi·million
dollar ring,
Purtell al!C'gM the suspect -and
ot/1ers -have good contacts with mari-
juar1a farmers deep in Mexico. The illicit
weed Is harvested and packaged and
fln"·n. driven or shipped out or Mexico.
/)ealcrs with pilot licenses will fly low
over the border t.hus avoiding radar
scans and dump the drugs on the barren
desert floor in the southern part of the
stair, fi:iid Purcell.
Otbers 1vith expensive boa1 s. may stow
the mariju:::na away and head north to
unlo11d the drugs at some sheltered
beach.
~lost of the n1nrijuana s!111 comes
::icross the border by auto. "'ith pretty.
young females often used to distract
agents at the border. said Purcell.
Once into the United States, the mari·
juana usually comes directly into Laguna
!~each , is stored, then parcelled out to
"front people" -individual dealers who
C'ventually sell it to the users themselves,
the officer explained.
"!"JI tell you the kind or dealers we
have lnday are a helluva lot n1ore dis-
creet a,,d clever than the ones we used
Ill see. It just me.ans we have to change
our ways of deali ng Y.·ith them.'' said
Purcell.
Health Services
Slate Meeting
Hea!lh services availabll'! to residents
of Laguna Beach will be reviewed in
detail Thursday night in a program
sponsored by !he Laguna B ea c h
Coordinating Council at 7 30 o'clock in ci-
ty hall council chamber~.
In addition to the scree ning of 11 1\.1arch
11f I.limes film, the program will inC'lude
$pcakcr.~ from tht> Public Hral!h Depar!-
111enL Prt'·School fnr /i1utliple Han·
d1c:1p1X'd Childr£'n, Free Clinic, Curld
Eastrr Seal Society. Hum;:rn Needs
Ad visory Board and Cornmun1ty ~fental
Healrh Clinic.
Free lr!er;:rture ;:rnd ::rn up-t0-<late d1reC'·
tnry of all health faC'ilities wlll be pro-
\'!ded The rn('eting is open to the publi c,
frt'(' of charge.
f 'roHa Page 1
CARR ...
granted his Doctor of Laws <le~ee in
l!lfii. al so from the L.:nive rs1ty of
\\"1scons1n.
Ca rr ~'<iS a Captain in the Army during
fy,·o ~eparate tours of duty.
Carr is also 11 n1ember of lhe Laguna
l3cach Cha mber of Commerce.
no .... , A M uno~in•
MmM9<15 l[cl,fOr
C~1tl1J H. Lein R:d,1rd P. Nin Birdwatchers Give Bird
At•llol'41 M1N9\ng l:.cl11W1
1.,, .. a.oc• Offk•
J~~ Fo111t Av•~~•
M1il ing 1dd1111 : P.O. 1 ... eb6, t2652
So~ ci.-te OHke
lOS N11rtb lJ CU1ia11 R11I. ~2,72
""°' "'""' ~··•"'""'J.lG W!'>t•.t¥Sl""ftt M•WJ>O•• a ... ~. UJl ,,.,_., Bc.olrVl'i'
~al ~ VVJ a-ai ...... ICY&nt
DA'lY "l~OT, W•~ ..... di t• ~ h
"'-""'"· i. ,,_ • .,..., ct••'r •·~• ~ ... .,. ... Ml"r•tt .. ,.....,. l'<>r L.,....• 11 .. t ...
.. ......_. IHc.I\, C°'"'' Mt->" 1'1..,l"'91or\ ~ ~'•"". Vo•-. ~ C*"-l•f ~ ..... -~l~l, •lcin(I Wilfl -,....,...1 ..irt;.... ,.., ...... ...i C10 in1o.,. r' ... "' .. a. Wal .. , ~!(till, C,a11 Meu..
T .. ,,,., C71Cl '42-4JJ1
Cl9Nllle4 Aifffffkl .. '4Z-1.671
S. C....._. All Dt,low• c•ti: T....,.__ 4tJ ... 4H
La>flM a.u An o., • ., 1n·
T1Myk1r 4t .. t4U ..,
~. l'1\ Onri9o Ctt1;t ~lrot <•........... ,.. -......... 111""""-.. M l>er•I -JI« ......... ,,_°' llHt"' ..... ., .. ,_.... ... •™-I ~ ""
•.w.lln ., _,,.,,,,,,.., -·
6o<W it.ti ~ .... ~N M IC...., ~
.... Gftl• "'-· ~. ~ .... -~ c~·-9J U ,._..,,, .., ,...... un
....-q1 llliADlw"y ......... 4t.1:1._,,-.
To Thre~ County Solons
frPsh frnm 11 critique n{ their civil
right.!i \Oling records, two Orange County
legislators thi5 y,·ctk l''tre rapped by an
r n11 ronn1ental grou p.
Ltg1slali\'e 81rd~·atchers. Jnr. "·as gir-
lng tht bird to Assrn1blym an Robert S.
Burke t R-Huntington Bc11 c:h l. ttnd Stale
Senatnr tlcnnis Carptnter tR-1\"l!wporl
Reach I. 'Both al!<> ~·ert cr111ciztd la:-1
~·ttk by lhe !\ation11l A-~M>c111t1on for the
Ad\·anrem~nt of Colored Pl"Ople.
Asse.rnblynian J{obert f.. Badham IR·
~e~·port Br11chl Y.'!I~ al~ crilic1u-d by
the t.n,·ironmental group.
TI1e lawmakf'rs eal•h srored lr-ss thnn
40 ptl\'f'nl on the Birdw11 tchtrs' voting
ind ex which w1.~ basrd on 27 bills con·
s1derf'd s1gn1rlcant by ma1nr Cahfoni ia
environlTM'ntal organlvitions.
During the 1971 SfSJ1on. 11turlent and
houM:""ife ,·oluntet.rs watched ll'g1slatJ\'t
action for morl! lhAn I .liOO houn.
They counled no \Otes. failure lo \'Ot r
and absences aga.Jnst a lcgisl<Cor because:
these are negati,·e actions which do
oothing to rurther a bill_
Two or three ''Olunteers usually ctteck -
rrl committee voles lo insure accuracy.
Ten of the 27 bills proposed in 1971 died in
committe-e.
Tht group's report -priottd on \00
prrcent recycled paper -&ingtecl out the
S!'nnte Go\•ernmental Organi1..11lion Com·
lnllltt as a "deathbed" for ecology bills.
The Senate approved them only 36 ptr-
cent of the Lime: much r.1ore damaging
lo proposals than the Assembly.
1.nst wl'!ek , the Nationa l Association for
the Advancerllent of Colored People
tNAACP\ AAid that Burke voled 14 tim~
against f>ills favored by the group : more
nf'galive \"Otes tban any o l he r
A.i.~mblyman. none of whom rttt:ived 1
11rort nf 100 percent.
Sen3tor Carpenter voted aga.inst u ven
of tht 19 kt!y me11surts intrO<luet'!d durina
thr 1971 session.
Family Aid
Pinn Hit
!Jy Reagan
\\' ASlllNGTON 1UPl1 -c;ov. Honald
Reagrin today criticized Presi dent Nix-
(1n'11 Family A.~s1stance Plan as "a giant
step toward a welfare state" and offered
1naior amendments -includ1n~ t<ix
hreaks for the working poor and r-e111oval
(if n11l1lary dependents from relief.
I le a!so suggested requiring able·bo<Ji .. d
recipients to ~·ork on cornmu111ty ser\'IC"e
pro1ects .and denying welfare lo strikers.
Reagan. the leading ftepubh can ('r'111c
of the President's embattled welfare
reform bill. presented his lengthy
analysis or the propo sal to the Senate
Flnance Committee, where the proposal
has been stalled since passing the House
Ja.~t June.
"I consider the ~·eJfare problem the
gr<!vest domestic issue our nation faces ,"
said !he governor of the nation 's most
populous state.
Heagan said he had ''very ser ious
reserva11ons about several or the ap-
proaches to welfare reform en1bod1ed 1n
~/It I (Nixon's bill),"
He strongly objected to the F;in1ily
Assistance Plan ( F'AP ) portion o! the bill,
which the Nixon administration regards
as its heart.
The FAP would guarantee the working
poor an annual income as an incentive
for unemployed recipients to find jobs.
A family of four would be entilled lo
$2,400 if it had no nutside inrome and up
to $3,920 in a combination of welfare and
earnings.
"It is commonly understood that a
government-guaranteed inrome, not bas-
ed upon individual productivity. is a giant
step to"•ard a welrare state with its
inherent 1os sof i11di111dual identity and
pride," Reagan said in his analysis.
"Some argue this bill is not a
'guaranteed income' because en1ployable
family rnembers must cooperate \Vilh
work and training requ irements. 'fhis
argurnent is falln cious," he contended.
f'rona Pagel
CLERI( ...
position. both Councilmen Roy Holm and
Charlton Boyd said today they fa vor
maintaining the position as elective,
rather rhan appointi\'e.
A misunderstanding might have arisen.
llol m suggested , from an executive
session in which '-1rs. 1'1usfelt's appeal
was dlst·ussed. "\\'e. '~ere unanimous in
a greeing we q:>uld not solve the problen1
right then," he said, "and in authorizing
the mayor to try to solve it. Y.le also
agreed that if Mrs. Musfelt should re.sign
or decide noL to run for election. ~·e
would have ro appoint someone to the
position . However. this did not mean
there was agre€ment, or even d1scus.~ion
at that point, of the question or making
the two positions, city clerk n.nd city
treasurer, appointive rather than elec-
tive. This has been discussed for years
and there are many ramifications.
Anyway, it's rather academic. because it
has to be determined by the people in an
election.·•
Proposals to make the two positions ap-
pointive we.re defeated in two municipal
elections, in 1964 and aga in in 1966.
SF Parade Bornbcr's
Wife Dies Stale .
Ill
SAN MATEO (AP1 -.Josephine Bill·
ing:;, wife of WarTen K. Billings ~·ho 1~·;is
imprisoned with Tom Mooney for the 19\ll
Preparedness Day parade bomb1n.i; in
Sa n Francisco, died at their home Sun-
dn v.
Adling!' said hls 75·year-old w1fe"s body
will be turned over to the UC ~·ledical
Center in San Francisco under a 1955
AJ?reement. She died after a long bout
"'1t h cancer.
I I
I
•
DAILY PILOT Sit rt Pntl'I
Netv llos1)itul Rises
Saddlchack Con1munity Jl"ospital beg1ns to take fnrn1 near El 'foro
J~oad and the San Diego F'ree\\·ay. 'J'hc facility, that is to open \Vi th
150 beds Jn July, 1973, is funded by a government grant, private
ctnnations and a loan. 1\ $3 .5 n1illion fund drive is under ~·ay with
$950.000 con11nittcd and l.\\'O years rrn1aining lo raise the ren1aindcr.
·r11e facility is plt1nnpd eventually to provide 256 beds. It \viii be ad-
ministered by !he 1.utheran J·lospital Society.
Switzerla11{l Gives Leary
Fro1n \\'ire Serl"ices
SJON, Switzerland -'fhe modern-day
fl.1an \Vithout a Count ry, Dr. Timothy
Leary, has beC'n formall y told lo hit the
road b_v S"·1ss authorities "'ho won 't give
hirn poli!ieaJ asyluin but won 'L give him
to lhl' L".S. either.
Police Chief Arlf111r Render called a
n('ws conference here ~·1onday night to
annou nce !hat the 5 I -Ye a r -o 1 d in·
tcrriation11I fugitive n1u~t lt'ave !he canton
-nr S\v1ss state -of Valais.
(;e11erally. no such S"·iss state will ac-
cep! a foreigner expelled from another
one .
'!'he onet1n1e l!ar\"ard psychology pro-
fessor, CClnv icted in Oralige Counl y
Supenor t'uurt nearly two years ago on a
La guna Rea ch marijuana possession
charge. is nn"' liv111g in Crans. writing a
book on 1>syrhology.
Ile escaped the Los Padres hten 's
(·nlony ;:rt San Luis ()bispo Sept. 12 , 1970
;:rnd fled to Algiers wlterr he was a guest
of Alack Panlher Party leader Eldridge
tlt':ivrr ·s gn\·ern1n1·n\-1n-exi!e.
l!e hail first g!nbe·hopped around 1he
\I 1de<1st bt"'forC' hC'UlJ.: given sanctuary by
rhl· P;111th•·r:-, "hri f"Jt'cted him from !\1-
,i::iers later ov('r d1rfrr111;:: l'IC"'S ()n drug
use ai( a 1110! of r1'11nlul!on .
1.e arv and his ronl'1ctrd \\'t fe
Ho.c;c111fir y, l-l'hO ncd the l1 S. lo join him
and thus v1o!t1red prob;ition imposed by
Ort111ge County authorities, turned up in
S1\•1tzerland late la.c;t yea r.
I le \\·as: arrested and rr!eased on $5,000
bail pending dec1s1on by Swiss offici al.~ ori
his request lo remain in the picturesque
;:rJp1ne country lo avoid U.S. priso11
sentences.
S\\•iss off icials fru strated California .And
l.' S. <1uthorit1es by rul in ,i:: the extradition
pnpers submitted lo !he. Bern government
\\'rre nrit 111 order, ~avtng Lc;:rry fron1 a
ret urn to hi s native land.
Besides the IO·Vl"'tlr h'rnl in Cahforn1a
that he had b;i~ely begun, Or. U>ary
faces ;:rn 1dent1cal federal prison term in
·rexas for a marijuana smuggling con-
\'1ttinn he once \\"On, then lost again on
appeal.
The zany onct1111r guru or the
psychedehc drug niovement was fired
from his Harv;r rrl post 1n 1963 for I.SD
C'Xp<'r imentation. and beca111r one of the
sixties· most rc\"Cred and reviled figures.
lie and his wife and snn . .John, now 22
and scr1·1ng a prubal1on trrm 1n th(' San
Fr~nc1Sl.'o area. "'ere arrested Dec. 29,
1968 1n La1,•1H1J Rrach 11·hlle parked on
'Vnodland l1n1e .
Now.Sgt ~l·il Purc·ell of !he l .11,i::11na
Reach Pu!Jee J)e parl rnenL narcotics:
squad eonfisc:,'l ted n1ariJUflna and
susp1cio11s pills 111 arrc•s t1ng the Lcarys
and in1pn11ndin~ lht•1r station wagon_
'J'hc cnntrnversial Le;iry v:as then frc-
quf'nlin~ lhe Orange Coa~r and can1·
paigning for the Cahrorn1a governorship,
y,·hlle cnntend1ng he wa s bf!ing har;:rssed
for his poiltical vicy,·s . no! drug concepts:.
WHAT YOU SEE IS
I
(NOT NECESSARILY)
WHAT YOU GET!
Jedinological advanc es in carpet ma"nufa.cturing liave re•
suited in lower prices today than 30 years ago.
Jhe tufting machines make carpet 70 times faster than Ax-
minister and Wilton loom s. These machines will make up to
12 lineal feet of carpeting per minute, either twelve or
fifteen feet wide. The relative ease of this •manufacturing
method has had one negative aspect. Instead of about ten
res peeled, reliable mills, today there are more than 300 mills,
many of questionable integrity. It is not difficult for a clever
carpet designer lo make a carpet look far better. than it is.
The answer to the cons~r is clear: Either know your manu-
facturer -or rely o' a reputable retailer. (Alden's, of
COUrs<t.)
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
'
Saddleha~k
EDITION
VOL 65, NO. 27, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES
Irvine Planners
More Candidates'
Views Presented
The Irvine City Council Wednesday
night will select seven persons to serve
on the city's planning commission.
Monday the DAILY PIT.OT published
brief statements and background in-
fonnatlon on 18 of the 25 persons who
were interviewed by councilmen on
Saturday during a 10-hour city council
meeting.
Today, the remaining seven who ap-
plied are presented.
* * * Master Plan
For Irvine
Wins Praise
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of lhe 0111r PllOI s11ft
It can be assumed the folk in the Irvine
Company Towers in Newport Center are
pleased about the views of their master
planning efforts r:spoused by 25 ap-
plicants for the Irvine City Planning
Commis!ion. .
"We moved here 1¥cause or the ex·
cellence of plarming and aren't about to
scrap it now" was the recurring sen-
timent expressed by applicants.
Many attached a dollar value in excess
of $1 million to the Irvine Company
General Plan. Others merely hoped city
government could continue to do as well
as the Irvine planners did prior to in-
corporation of the new city last Dec. 28.
Observers of the parade of planning
co1nmissio n applicants ascribed yet
another value to the Irvine firm 's plan.
1f the quality of a community can be
mcci surcd by the people it attracts. Irvine
must be something a cut above the glut
of "slurbs" one applicant suggested ~
pie in Irvine hope to avoid .
Few other cilies. observers noted,
would attract planning commission
hopefuls that include two Phi Beta Kappa
grads, seven applicants with advanced
degrees, 23 with bachelor's degrees in a
wide range of disciplines, and two whose
bearing, presence: of mind under fire in-
dicate a degree for them would be super·
f]u ous. .
A lawyer and a dentist mingled with
a pplicants who had direct planning ex-
perience and a covey of graduate
architects.
One man had direct responsibility for
master planning a city of 26,000 acres
with a range of homes from moderate to
high cost that is similar lo homes. plan-
ned for Irvine. He discounted his ex-
perience planning 100,0CJO acre parcels for
several firms because those plans were
prlmarily for recreational use and not at
(Set m VINE, Page 2)
Twelve Across
Spells 'Oops'
To the DAiJ~Y PILOT'S cross
word puzzle fans :
You win.
As an e~periment, we began
publishing a smaUer -and •Un~
ler -crossword puzzle in It.a reg-
ular position on ~ co¥ page
several weeks ago. The response,
we reckoned, might not be tre-
mendous but we thougbl ll migbl
be positive.
It wasn't. After a deluge of com-
plaints., threat& or canctltatlon,
angry tirades and tlu-eab on the
l!dllor'• lilt, ... returned to the
old cr"OSIW'Ord puzzle format. You
will find It today Oii page IS.
And thanks for ltttlni us tnow
yoo cat<.
We do, too.
1'-fayor William Fischbach will select
nominees for the plamlng commission
from the entire list of 25. The seven
presented today are the remainder of the
list of interviewees and should not be
confused with the seven commissioners
who will be named \Vednesday.
Zachary James Sham, 17942 Aspen
Tree Lane, University Park, is an
architect in private practice and has a
bachelor's degree in architecture from use.
\Yhile he believes the Irvine General
Plan is a good starting point he sees
some "fallacies in il" and wou ld urge a
review by a city planning staff and an
outside consultant if the city can afford
one. He recommends the plan's adoption
with revisions to follow.
He objects to reliance on the
automobile evident in the circulation
elements of the plan, believes location of
low income housing is important and
recommends a hard line stance by the ci·
ty on subitandard development.
Gearge A. Molina, 41, of 4102 Brisbane
Way, University Park, is director of plan-
ning f0& the R. M.. Gall ow<1iy Associates
urban planning firm and 1JSo ii a plan-
ning consultant. He has 1 degree in civil
englneering from tbt University of
Buenos Aires, Argentina.
"Because of the quality 0£ the people
who did it, the Irvine General Plan is
recog nir.ed nationwide," Molina said, "it
is a good docwnent to start with."
Molina said · his experience includes
planning a 25,000-&C'f\!:~FitY near Phoenix
that approximates the quality of Irvine,
his experience as a consultant and a
planning commissioner in other cities
qualllies him for the post.
He explained for councilmen the dif-
ference between a general plan and a
master plan. A general plan is one re-
quired by state law and contains IO
elements such as circulation, housing.
land use. open space and others. A
master plan, he said, is usually a
developer 's plan detailing only land use.
Robert W. Monat, 40, or 18131
Leatherwood Way, University Park, is a
senio r sales specialist for General Elec-
tric Co. and has a bachelor of civil
(See PLANNERS, Page 2)
Viejo Unveils
New Procedures
For Registering
A new registration procedure has been
adopted by Mission Viejo High School -
one aimed at acquainting !tudents with
courses they might ordinarily overlook.
A full week will be taken for the in·
novative registration process. The first
day, Feb. 28, will be for orientation, with
t:iepartment visitations tbe nelt day.
All students will have the opportunity
to see each department in action, to meet
teachers and hear descriptions of classes
and projects. Visiting students will be
grouped according to grade level.
The third day will be spent in counsel-
ing students. Each 11tudent mu1t ha,.·e
teacher and counselor approval to enroll
in a particular class. The evening will be
devoted to an open,}>ouse for parents who
will have 1 chance to become acquainted
with the curriculwn and ataff. ·
The week will be concluded with the
finaliiation of all rqlstratioo for classes
for the urn.'73 school year.
'lbe registration program wu launched
Jaat year and met "1th ~siaam from
stuclenb and tucben, acoordlng to
counselor Mrs. Ruth Mader. 'J'hi. 1ear'1
program has been 11lghUy ...,,lltd so thal
.. ch studenl Is acquslnted with ln-
formaUon needed for gndaaUon, college
entrance, clin prerequltltea and course
content.
For Information on registration pro-
cedures call Mrs. Madtr 1t 837-TTZZ.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY I, 1972
'
a on c
• '·
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• . . '~· ~ . ' "
..
OAtlV PILOT" Ir.II l'llolt MRS. JOHN H. ALBERS OF IRVINE SIGNS TO CAST HER BALLOT IN SCHOOLS ELECTION
From Left Are Mary Wilson, Inspector ; Ray Farrar, Clerk; Marian Ell is, Judge; Mrs. Albers
Life Outlined
Howard Hughes Story
Told in 4-part Series
Editor's note: lt began 1nodestly
enough zn II011ston, Texas, wi th a
11ew kind of oit welt drilling bit. But
?tow t/Je 1-fu.ghes Tool Co. is a many
splendored business can glomero te.
A irlines. gambling casinos. m ines -
you name it. And ft is ruled by a man
1vl!o has not bee n seen .in public in
olniost 20 years. Follo wina is the first
of four nr1 1c/es on the many faces oj
lloward 1-Iughes.
By JA CK LEFLER
LOS ANGELES -tl.iglies Tool Co., the
cornerstone of a $2 billion business en-
terprise. is as spectacularly vi sible as its
sole owner, J·loward Hughes, i s
mysteriously invisible.
Jls success, founded on a revolutionary
Assets R.ise
From $650,000
To $2 Billi on
oil well drilling ·bit, has made ils
reclusive owner one of the world's richest
men.
The furor over the authenticity of an
autobiography of Hu ghes, w h i c h
McGraw-Hill Publishing Co. originally
planned to publish in ~larch, has focus ed
public attention on the corporate kingdom
over which Hughes rules from his 5eeret
hideouts.
Hughes Tool fToolco ) and its oil tool
division are based in Jtouston, Tex. Its
olher major properties include a
helicopter manufacturing division in
California: an airline, Hughes Airwest. In
Western Stales; hotels, gambling casinos,
mining. claims arid other propertie1 In
Nevada; Hughes Television Network, and
huge real estate holdings In Arizona and
Ca!Uornla.
The vast operations have been com·
manded by hughes, 66, in lmperiOUI
manner, .U!UIJJy by telephone. Some of
his top t:1eclitlve1 llave never ~n him.
He hasn't made a public appearance
since 195.1.
L;tst Jan. 7, 11 man idenlirled by
Jlugbe1' public relation s IPokesman 11
the bllUonalre lodu1triallsl held a
lfltpbone news o:mference with seven
news reporters to deny the authenticity of
the 11cCraw-Hill manuscript. 'f he
newsmen. who were assembled here. said
they were convinced the voice on the
telephone \1·as that of Hughes.
Hughes hold.~ no title with Too!co ex-
cept that of owner. Operations are h:inrll-
ed by Executive Vice President Raymond
M. Holliday and Senio r Vice Presidents
Frank \\!. Gay and James R. Lesch.
What was to become a fabul ous en·
terprise was bom in 1909 at Goose Creek,
Tex. when 1-loward tlughes Sr. suc-
cessfully tested the rotary rock drill bit
he invented. The bit consisted of 166
conical cutters of milled teeth v.·hlch
chiseled and cru shed rock so it could be
brought up through the drill stem from
the bottom of the drill ing hole. Tt so lve<.!
the problem of drilling through rock.
ll's es timated that 7S percent of t:1c ri1I
wells in non-Communist countries have
been drilled with Hughes bits.
Young }lughes' parents willed him 60
percent interest in the tool company and ,
newly orphaned, he look over Hs ope ra ·
lion in 1923 when he was 19. He later
bought the other 40 percent interest from
relatives.
Value of the company at the time of the
father's death was variously esti mated at
$10 million or more but Hughes said the
government appraised it at $650,000,
While lfughes is reputed not to have
been seen in Toolco's Houston offices
since 1926, the company flourished under
his directlon and the operations of his
.hand·picked executives.
The oil tool business .R:rew until it now
employs abou t 4,0IXI al Jlouston and hai;
other manufacturing plants in England.
Ireland .. Canada, West Germany, Italy,
Argentina and Brazil. The tool division's
annual revenues have been estimated at
$75 mlllion. Because It is privat.tly own·
ed. Toolco issues oo reports on 1ales and
earnings.
Hughes, who Jon~ had been lntere_sted
In airplanes, lert Texa.t for California in
the IB20s and became a legendary fig ure
In avtaUon. He 1et many world speerl
re.cord• and designed aircraft.
He alto became enchanted with motion
plctures, and aclresse1 as well. lie pro-
duced 4 number o{ movies, among UJtm
"HeU'f Azlgels" tnd "The Qutlaw," and
for a while owned RKO $Wdlo1.
Noah Dietrich, Hughes' chief eucuUve
from 1925 unt il they lplit In 1963. take.5
l$SUe with tho~ who give Jfughe1 the
(Set HU.CHES, Pa(t ZJ
Election, Data
Ready Tonight
Election lnformaUon wUt be
available to the public after 8
o'clock ton ight.
For results of voting for the Sa n
.Joaquin Elementary School District
tax: override, the Tustin Union Hig h
School District tax override, lhe
Tustin bond issue, or the Tusti n
school board seat, call Mission Vie-
jo High School, 837·'1722.
LAFC Approves
Two Annexations
Annexation of two large land develop-
ment areas in south Orange County to
county service areas has been approved
by the Local Agency Formation Com·
mission.
Approximately J ,077 acreR owned by
the Mission Viejo Co. east of Marguerite
Parkway and south of O,o Parkway was
merged Wednesday with County Service
Arca No. 9, and 148 acreii owned by Oc-
cident al Petroleum and tand Develo~
nient Corp. In the northew~t El Toro
area was annexed to County Ser\'lce Area
No 6.
The se rvice areas provide fire pro-
tection, parks and recreation. street
sweeping and similar functions. They
have separate couoty property tax rates
based on the C06t of .services offered .
Court Site Eyed
In Domain Suit
Orange County moved Monday to ac-
qui re the 8.2-acre iiite e11:rmarked as the
location of the new Harbor Judicial
[)i~lrict headquarters by filing an
eminent domain action lJ1 Superior Co urt.
The lawsuit sell the 1tage for the coun-
ty'a taking ovtr of the Jamboree Road·
Campu! Drive location trom the parties
listed as defendant a1 in the complaint -
lessee Collins Rad ie> and the Irvine
lndustrlal Complex, owner1 or the land.
County 1upervltor.5 agreed last week to
file the eminent domeln lawaµJt rui their
Orol Btep In lhe building of a· 1321,000
courthou.te on the v1cant 1He.
Doctor's Ritea: Set
' ' l ~ '
STANFORD IUPJ ) -S....lctl -•
pt/ldlng for Or. Ertc O&den. he,trt
re1earch speclalilt .. nd phyotologilt , who
died Sunday at Stanfonf Medic1l Center.
N.Y. Steeb
Today's Final
TEN CENTS
Ecu·ly Day
T11r11out s
'Average'
Only about five per<'l'nt of !he 50,500
rt'AiSl('ff'd vol trs Jn the entire Tu~lln
LJ1uon llii.:h School Distr1cl had voted at
4.1 precincts in today 's t•ornbincd ove r-
ride, bond issue and special trustee elec-
tion, according to a morning sampllng.
Turnouts in precincts within the Snn
JoRquin f.lt'mentary district which it
:-;eek1ng approva l of A $2.85 tax rate max·
inu1m today appeared sllghlly htnvler
than the overall average. The 27,190
registered voters In tho!le precincts 1lso
vote on the Tustin Issues.
Ten Sflmple precincts rep;>rltd to Of·
fi cl11 ls of the Oranl(e. County Registrar of
Voters At 10 a.m. today. The fo/lowlng list
show.~ voter turnout percentages for
t/.ose precincts.
Irvine &hool, Sand Canyon Avenue:
:1.57 ]lercent of J,342 registered vottrs had
voted .
The Meadows · Tr 111ler f'ark, Jeffrey
!toad io Irvine: 5.34 percent or l ,161 ellgl·
Ole, or 62 person!, hHd vott'd.
University Park, Irvine: fl.43 percent of
1 .5~7 rc,::istered to vole. or 100 vote rs had
ca.~t ba llots.
Del Cerro School, ~1islllon Vle)o: 9.48
perrenl of the 886 re~1stcred, or 8-4 people
h11d voted.
ftesidence On La Paz Road, Mltslon
V1ejn: 7.25 percent of 1,191 reglitterllll, or
87 pt0ple had voted.
Valencia School, Clplatr1no HlahJ,and&.
Laguna Hiiia: 8.9 percent of 885 elllible,
or 77 voters had c.st ballot.I.
A> ol 11 a.m. lodoy. tho ValtDCla
School poll reported ti volorr had lhOwn
up. more than 10 percent of those eUa:i..
hie.
DAll.Y PILOT checks of voting trend1
at l~a Paz lntennedlate School In Mi11\on
Viejo "hawed only 31 of 600 registered
voters had cast ballot! fl.!I of 11 a.m. to-
day.
Voting In El Toro'.s Aliso School w11
heavier with 106 of 1,l4S regi stered votera
turning out by 11 o'clock .
Votlng in precincts in Tu slin, eligible
only to vote on high 11ehool J.aiiuel, wa11
spotty. One large precinct with t,79i
voten attracted only 34 voter•. or 1.88
percent as of 10 a.m.
A Lemon Heights precinct, however,
had attracted 6.42 percent of its 1,494
voter!!, or 96 people, hy the same hour
this morning.
fl igh school Dfstricl officials are count-
lntc on hea vy turnouts in Irvine and
M111sion Vie.lo to pass a $1~ million bond
Issue to allow the district to meet enroll·
ment growth in the next few year1.
High School tn.u1tee11 are also 11klt11
approval of a Sl.99 lolal tax rate max-
imum per SIOO of asseased va luation .
Also. high school district voters today
are selecting a trustee lo replace Mra.
June Smith who moving out of the
district. Jrvlne communi ty group1 are
supporting Mrs. Elizabeth ''Lee" Slcoll
(See. ELECTION, Pace 21
Wea titer
Variable hlgh cloudl are e:rptet..
ed along lhe. Orange Cout Wecf..
nesday, v.·llh a pos1lbl!Jty of
.5prlnkle1. Gusty wlnda are alao
expect.td hringlng temper1ture1
down to the low llO't, Tonlghl'1 low
will.be around 42 degrua.
INSIDE TODAY
Arlt'nt Lum, a 1lonolulu re-
porter, ii perhaps the Jir1t
Chine•e·Am.trican ;ournolU& to
enttr mainland China 1l11c1
1948. Jltr Jmprt•1lo11.1 appear
on Pn(Je S.
L. M . ..,jll ' -..
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D on't F orget t o Vot~; Polls Open Until 8
•
,,
SB
School Fi11ds
Toug1i Ti1ne
Keepirig Even
Growing at the r11te of 2.000 students a
year, the San Joaquin !'.:!emcntary School
District has found II needs n1ore than
cl&.)SrOo1n :ipat·e.
Books, records nnd nthrr educ-a11ona l
mar.erials are also needed al a record
pace -and the district ls having a hard
time keepi.11g up.
Jn an annua l rt'f)Ort prepared hy the
distri ct's I nstruc11ona! ~1ed1a C<'ntrr,
l'rtrs. Marilyn Harris. dire.ctor of educ.a.
tional 3erviccs reported that thl' nu inber
of books obta ined by the supplemental
library jumprd from 400 lo 3,474 in the
last two years.
The total nuo1hf'r or book.~ increased
rron1 JJ.205 to 14.679. 'fh1s means book
expenditures increa sed right !in1es.
1\t school hhrar1cs, the nun1ber ar
books procured and processed for
circulation inc.rcasrd from 6.700 to 11,400.
More than 1,400 :.!ate tt!xtbooks were
receiveci and proce'i~Cd , bringtng the
number lo almost 68.500.
The number of phonograph records in
the district also increased from nine to
111 fro1n !970 to 1972 and rhe number or
books in !he profession;.1 1 teaching library
increased from 146 lo 297,
Voluntary parent aides working Jn the
district media center increa!'crl from 65
in 196!}-'70 lo 83 in 1970-'71. These aides
contribute time to individual schools in
clerical areas and by directly assisting
teachers in the classrooms.
The district communicalion cente r
I print shop) made 1.635 .940 individual
ite1ns for use in the classroom last year.
This is twice as much as the year before.
Costs were up in most cases, according
to the report, because of inflation and
because of newer and more ad vanced
classroom materials and rquipment for
the direct instruction of students.
Total district libra ry expenditures were
$52.000 from district re venues with stale
funds providing an additional $18,000 and
federal funds contributing only $2 ,865.
Total ce ntral library expendlturrs in-
creased from $849 to $7,090.
Replacement costs for books and
materials increased from $195 to $2.248 in
a two.year period. Services to and for
district schools also incrrased during las t
year. Costs included replacement o[
obsolete books as \YCll as those damaged.
Many materials for classroom use are
made by parent aides representing J l
schools. These materials are made in the
teachers' laboratory at the district ad-
mini3tralive annex where models of in·
structional materials are on display.
Audio-visual services were alsn ex·
panded lo meet the increase of students.
Cataloguing, ordering. processing ,end
~ircu!ation of film strips , re("(lrds, and
equipment brought greater chances of in·
dividual instruction lo students.
District library personnel also moved
this year to the administrative annex.
Though the volume of books inrfeased
the additional workload was handled
without additional staff.
Fron• Page I
ELECTION ...
for that seat "·hich is also being sought
by Stephen Fabula and Dougla's Moran.
both o[ Tustin. and Earl Carraway or El
Toro. and Dana Carkey of Mi ssion Viejo.
Polls remain open until 8 p.m. toda y.
The DAILY PILOT will publish complete.
returns in its Wednesday edition.
Drug Store Founder
La st Rites Sla ted
LOS ANGELES tliPJ 1 -Funeral
services v.·rre scheduled tod;iy fnr Milton
F Kreis. drug store chain O\\'nrr.
Krei s died Salurdav al !hr 11gc nf f..1
He owned i'ol I' I\. dru g slores in P;:il n1
Springs. San Francisco, Bc\'rrly llHl s.
San Pedro and San Bernardino, and 10
Buffalo. N.Y., and Da .1.1*. Ohio.
OIAHGI COAST
DAllY PILOT
H~'-c.·
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OAl..MGE COM"f PUlll1HiNG COMPAAl'
ll:ob•rl N. w •• J
Pr .. o:iw •l'ICI P\lbli,.,....
J1c~ I!. Curit.,.
Vlei l"rblOMll ind G-••I IMMOW
Tlrom11 K., ... a
T~o"''' A. Mu•rol.;111
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Cl.1 dt 1 H. lecot R :,~,,J P. Nill
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DAILY l'llCIT, ._lrl! "ltlld' h comt.lttM 9'\t
,,,_.,., • ..,. k C>\lbl"~" llloJy ••t op! ~
.. y ... -'ttlf ~''""'I fC>f L~.iftt INCi\,
N~t •Hell, C"'I ,,,._, H""l""IJf<o' ateclo, ,,_,.\fl ..,,,,...... ~.... c ............ ,
c11tloir,..,. •ncl Sedo-1ur, •IO<'oll "'"" °"'' ttOlcw!I! ... l!len. l't<l'C:•N ! 1t•l~H .... pll<\I 11
,, a W•I ••Y i t•M:, Conlt Mt\t..
T•l•p•••• 1714l 641 ... lll
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CWY",._I, 1111, ~ C•"' Pvb11•111"" c-1. ,.. ..... •*~· m ...... ,..,,,
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-CM" M .. t . Cl!!IONlol , ,...,.-,.,,.,,, " u-~• u.n ,...,."1 11 ...... 1 1115 -lllJ•I llllU~'l' .... l .... t-, 11.1$ ~!~Ir,
H Culti1re's Your Bag,
UC lrvi11e llas Pot1Jou1'1·i
H>' (;t-;onr;r..: L~~,,.,,,,
O! 1n1 0••11 ,.11111 \<•I!
People who J1vt next dr~1 r !ti .1 u111vers1ty for very long tend frc<iuently
to take tor granted it.~ 1·ultur:1I <Jd<;;HJIJg C's.
Eath we~k. UC lr\-1ne pulJl1:-.h1·s ii brlf'f four-page digest of corning al·
lr;u:r11111:; on i '.1111pus. n1any of wtuch are open 10 the
puli!1!'
,Juurna11-.1 -. 1.1ho an' ('harged w1!h following !he
("(IJ))IJ\JS h<ipJ)l'rlirlj.;S pcrus·~ the \Vf'Ckly IJ:c.t in SCilfl'h for
t!t!llS <Jf 111lcr1·st. S!iu1 e WCl'ks l/1cre are lislin!:s which
produce nt:w~ sLor11•s of general interest. Other weeks there
:ire so many techn1t'al!y oriented lectures tt i.<t imposs·
iblc tn translatr tlu~nt into undPrslandable English.
'fh1s y,·eck 's listings provide .11 variety of offering!!
on c;in,pus broader than most \Yeeks, methinks.
. TAKI<~ J\IONOAY FOR example. The week started
of~ with two film offerings "Carnival Jn Flanders'' and "Grizzly" -the latter
bemg screened by the department or population and environmental biology.
. Sex will get a v<1riety of tre;1\mcnts with 1he Gay Students Union plan.
n1ng a rap session on Psychottu~rapy and the <:ay Comm unity, on 1'hur3day.
. On anolher sexu;i/ front, a professor of design from the California In·
~l1tute of l~e Aris a~ \.'aJencia will Jr:1d a seminar _at 4 p.m. Friday on "Sex
in Frre Sv.·1n1miug Copepods." wl1<1ft'Vl'r they are.
. The same day student C'ounselors v.·111 rap v.•ith the ga y community,
Elizabeth Dubin of the counseling center v.·ill inform faculty on the possible
obsolescence of counselors, at noon in !lie facult y club.
ECOLOGY \\'[LL NOT be overlooked at UC! as a Scripps Institute
chemistry prof discourses on "Lead 1n the Environment'' at 4 pm. Friday
Intellectual masochists might be 1ntr1gued by a sampl ing of some of the
more technically inspiring items including a seminar on "The Role .of Mito-
chondrial Cytochrome P-450 in Steroid Biosynthesis" or, "Ribosomal DiscrimL.
nation of Transfer RNA 's" both set for the medical school on Thursday.
l SUSPECT THEY will have limited appeal an1ong the general public
as will another seminar set for Tuesday in Steinhaus Hall. "Structure of the
Angel Layer Aggregates of the Aucuba Strain of TMV and the Handedness
of the Virus l·lelix." And I thought TMV v.·as something they put in gasoline.
Not all the acadcrnic offerings are put forth in humorless tone!, ho~··
ever. flobert Cleland, a University of Washington botan ist. expects to ansv.·er
the question : '"J'he Acid Indigestion Theory of Plant Cell Elongation: \Vill Jt
Hold \Vater?" in anolher Friday seminar.
If none of the above sati sfy. the student filn1 offering F'riday evening is
"Take the Money and Hun.'' lf live theater tickles your fancy, try the Irvine
Community Theater's version of ··The Amorous Flea" the same night.
Fron• Page I
HUGHES' CAREER ...
Jinn's sha re of crl'dit for building Toolco.
"He can't explain the growth of his em-
pire." Dietrich said in an intervil'w
recelltly. "He left that part of the
busi ness lo me.
''In those days. his main interests \\'rre
romance. airplanes and motion picturcll.
None of those produced any profits .''
1'he first big di\'ersification mo\'e unJcr
lhe banner of 1'oolco was the founding of
llughes Airtraft Co. in Culver City in
1931.
\Vit h the burgeoning of commcrrial
aviation and the approach of World \\'ar
IL llughes Aircrafl quickly became a
giant in its field . Il was one of this coun-
try's major warti1ne supplie rs of aerial
WC'aponry.
Jn 1954. l·lughes turned O\•f'r th e
tiircrnft conipany tn the Hughf's ~1rdiraf
Institute, which he formed as philan-
thropa:al organization . to c;irry on
n1edica! research. All of its profits go to
!he institute , of which Hu ghes is the sole
t rustee. and it no longer is under the cor-
porate umbrella of Tool co.
Hughes Aircra ft . which has hern
r stirnalcd lo be \Vnrth S500 milhnn w11h
annual sales about equal that amount,
n1anura ctures comn1unications satellites.
guided missi les. airrra[t arn1a ment
S'.}'StC'tns and other electronics gear.
·rhe mo st .~pCc tacul:1 r deals in \rhirh
llughes involved Toolco ViC're ma1nrity
Q\\·ncn;hip of Trans-\Vorld Airli nrs. and
r esulting !c~;1! ha s~l<'s; and n .... •nrrship of
!'ev:.ida Hntc!s, <.'<i'i1no.;; <1nd other prr..
pcrlies. and rrsultin~ legal hasslrs.
llu.[(hcs started buying into T\VA in 19~!1
.:rnd took control with 77 pt'rcent of !he
slc>4:k in 11H7.
Af1er th e co1n111c rt'1al jct agC' dtl\.\'ned,
llughcs, with his customary delibrratiun.
\1•aitcd five years before ordering
jetliners and other equipment costing
$497 million. Partly because or th e late
starts in jets. T\VA lost huge amounts of
money, and financial institutions "'hich
Reagan Assails
Welfare Progran1
Of President
\\IASl~JNr.TON rU PJ I -Gn\·. Ronald
Reagan today criliclzed President Nix-
on's Fa1nil y Assistance Plan as "a giant
!<l!ep toward a welfare stale" and offered
major amendments -including ta~
breaks for the v.·orking poor and removal
of military de~ndents from re lief.
l~e also suggested requ iring able-bodied
recipients to work on oommunity service
projects and denying welfare to strikers.
Reagan. lhe leading Republican critic
of the Prestdent's rmbaltled \~:elfare
reform bill, presented hi!> lengthy
analysis ol the proposal to tht Senate
Finance Committee. where the. proposal
has been stalled since passi ng the llouse
last June .
"I considl!:r ttie welfare problt:n1 the
gravest domestic issue our nation races,"
said the governor Of l~ nation's most
populous state.
Reagan said he had "very serious
ttservations about !itve:ral of lht ap-
proache:s to welfare reform emboditd in
Ji!\ 1 tNixon ·s bill)."
Me 5trongly object~ 11> the Family
A;)sistanrr Plan {FA Pl porllon of the bill,
t1.•hich the Nixon administration regards
1s its heart.
loaned money !or the aircraft purchases
becan1e concerned.
Tooleo lost control of TWA ln 1960 when
creditors forced l-lughrs to place his
stock in a nonvoting trust. TWA manage·
ment sued Hughes, alleg ing mismanage-
n1en!. Claims and co u n t e r c I a i m s
;:imounled to $481 mill ion. A judgment nf
$137 million was won against Hughes, but
it is yet to be collec ted .
Hu ~hcs pulled out of TWA ln grand
fashion by selling his stock for $5~6
n1il\1on in 1966.
Arn1cd with more than $400 million re·
n1ain ing after capital gains taxes on the
stock sale. llughes mo\'ed seeretly int!)
Las Vegas, Nev ., in 1966 and started
buying just about everything in sight in
the name of Hughes llotel Properties,
which had been set up as a division of
To0lco.
\Vit h 8,000 employes, Hughes Hotel
Properties became Nevada 's biggest
c1npJoyer.
Jt was estimated the Nevada properties
cost S250 million and were worth $JOO
1nillion when 1-lughes slipped out of town
on Thanksgiving Eve 1970, reputedly
going to the Hahamas.
Toolco continues to h<>ve i!s ryes on the
future . Rrccnl!y it launched at San
Diego, a 324-foot-long barge tor the deep.
sea m111ing of rnanganese in the Pacific
Ocean. The move was proclaimrd by the
company as "the birth of a new in-
dus!r~· ··
.r..Jr11 Thr Flo!ly1vood Years .
l'rom Page I
IRVINE ...
Rll si milar to Irv ine. he told councilmen.
i11Ja ny indicated a working knowledge of
the bulky document that is the Irvine
General Plan. One man .admitted he was
taking a course at UC Irvine in which the
111aster plan was the major topic of
study.
An architect said he had frequently ap-
peared before planning commissions
rcprescntinFt: a developer. /\tore often
tha n not. he said. lhe planning com.
111 is~\on did not demand a quality of
rlevelnpment the contractor would have
be('n willing lo offer.
Although not all of the women who are
.~ceking appointment to the planning com-
nitss1on are what you'd describe. as
wom rn ·s libbcrs. lo a woman. the
fcn1inine ·hopefuls displayed qualities and
indlcatrd planning concerns th a t
eminrntly qualify them for consideration.
Potcnlial conflicts of interest limited
1he field somewha t lo 24 active name.s.
possi bly 23. i( Jerry Choyke's affiliation
\.\'ith !he Irvine Ranch W1ter District is In
fa ct deemed to disqualify him. A
Newport Beach planner withdre.w his
name from consideration, roUowing
receip t by the council or a legal opinion
from Rutan and Tucker or Santa An1, lhe
city·s attorneys.
Scn1tiny of the entire Jist of applicants
makes seve ra l things clear:
-The final choice of seven will be a
di!ftcult on~.
-Any st'ven the council scle<:l!i
\\lednesday night will likely provide a
wid<' range or aperlise and viewpoints.
-t.ast. but possibly most Important, is
lhe fa ct that the City of Irvine is likely to
be the first new town anywhere In Ute
\\'Otld 11> demoeralite a .sound baric ma,_.
ter plan-a plan that all appllcant.. en·
d<lrsed to ~ome degree.
PLANNERS . • •
englnetr1ng dqree from Cleveland Stale
University .
lit-bf.l11~ve1 the phtnnlng done by the
lrvlne Compan)' "so far is good " .and
urged ils adoption a1 a skeleton cit}' plan.
He cite1 experiV1Ce as a plaMlng com·
missioner in Lake County, Ohio an area
near Cleveland he said was lhe seco11d
fastest growing area of the U . .S. ranking
just behind Orange <..:ounty.
lie supports low inco1ne housing spread
throughou t the ('ity, provision of a cenlral
c ity which he said would be a "h14.b" and
C'ons1derat1on of transit systems 01her
than those which rely on the autom obile.
ltichard A. Kent, 32, of ll43i Argent
Circle, 'J'he Ranch , is an archil~t in
private practice and attended Ca l Poly,
San Lu is Obispo.
He urged adoption of the 1rvine: Com·
pany c;eneral Plan with a mlnimum nur'n·
ber O[ hearings, bet'aUse the city does not
have a staff adequate to evaluate tho
multi-mi/hon dollar plan .
!·le said he didn't view the Irvine
General Plan as a bad plan and sug.
gested the city take one IG two years
fleshing it out and imprGving weak
elements such as transportation.
lie doesn't see an immediate need for
low incQn1e, federally-subsidized hous·
ing in Irving, belirves the city should im·
mediately establish the unplanned win·
dow areas as a "sphere of influence," and
supports the village concept.
Dennis G. Tyler, 27, of 17921 Cedar
Tree Lane. University Park, is a real
estate attorney practicing with a Los
Angeles firm with offices in Santa Ana.
~le believes the city council should set
standards by which the rezonings in the.
"window areas" could be measured by
the planning commission, and said he
would support "aesthetically pleasi ng"
developments unlike "Harbor Boulevard
in Costa Mesa.''
lie did not see any conflict of interest,
although his firm has as its "largest
client" the Grant Comapny developers.
Joseph Ball, 35, of 5211 Hiram Lane,
1'urtle Rock, is a space navigation
:specialist and has a master of science
degree from UCLA.
lie supports acceptance of the land use
elements of the Irvine General Plan as a
base for other planning elements the city
must adopt. He said fellow specialists at
Jet Propulsion Laboratories in Pasadena
had reviewed the plan and found it lack·
ing in the area of transportation plan·
ning.
Ball supports consideration of a com·
puterized home pick up mini-bus systen1.
a :shared school district bus plan, broad
guidelines prior lo review of lhe five win·
dow area tract rezonings and doesn't .'>t'e
an immediate need for low income hous·
ing programs, other than for University
provided student housing.
Paul Johnson, 36, of 18761 Portofino
Dri\·r, Turtle Rock, is a dentist who
graduated from use.
"It would be a waste of money to throw
the Irvine (Company's) plan out.''
Johnson said. He supported its U3C as at
least an interim zoning base.
He opposed federally subsidized low in-
c1>me housing for Irvine because the clly
doesn't need il and the Pickwir,k Develop--
n1ent program in Pasadena has proven to
be a "total disaster.''
"I don't like the strings that are al-
t.ached," Johnson said. "f[ you're going !o
build low income housing you might just
as well build an unemployment office
right next to it."
Portrait Class
Set at School
A class in portraiture painting \.\'ill be
SJX)nsored by the Mission Viejo Ass oc1a.
tion of Artists and Craftsmen on We d·
nesdays be.g inning \Vednesda y.
The four lo six-week workshop will bC'
l:111ght from 7 !o 9:3-0 p.m. at De l Cerro
Sehool in Aegean I/ills by Marilyn 7.app
Tauriello. "'ho sprcializes in children's
portrait;;.
F'or rcg1~tration information call M L.
t-.l <'~·!l llen tll 837-6!27. The cost is $20.
•
•
., ·-t Y_+ ' . I
*-·· !.i· • • L
I .. ~ -I
DAILY PILOT 511fl P~1!9
New Hospital Rises
Sadd\ebark Con1munity rrospital begins to take form near El Toro
Road an d the San Diego· F'ree\vay. 'fhe facility , lhat is to open 'vith
150 ~eds in July, 1973, is funded by a governn1ent grant, private
donations and a loan. /\ $3.5 n1illion fund drive is under \Vay v. ith
s.950,00q _con:in1ilted and two ycar.s remainin g to raise the rc1nainder.
1 ~e. facil!ty 1s planned eventually to provide 256 bed s. It '1•i!l be ad·
ministered by the Lutheran Hospital Society.
Birdwatc1iers Give Bird
To Three County Solons
f'resh from a critique or their civi l
righls voting records, two Orange County
legislators tttis ~·ee.k were rapped by an
environmental group.
Legisla tive Birdwatchers, Inc. v.·as gjv.
ing the bird to Assen1blyman Jloberl S_
Burke \R-1-iunLingto n Beach ), and State
Senator Oennis Carpenter ~ R·Newport
Beach). Both also were crit ici1..ed la st
u•eek by lhe Nal!onal Associ ation for the
Advance1nent of Colored People .
Assemblyman Robert E. Badham t R-
Newporl Beach) was also criticized by
lhe environmental group.
'rhe lawmakers each scored less thl'ln
40 percent on the Birdwatchers' voting
ind ex ~·hicl'I was based on 27 bills con -
sidered significant by major California
environmental organizations.
During the 1971 session, student and
housewife volunteers "'atched legislative
action for more than 1.600 hours.
'rhey counted no votes. failure to vote
and absences against a legi~l<f.or because
these are negative actions which do
nolhing to further a bilL
Tv.'o or three volunteers usually chC('k-
ed con1mittee votes lo insure accu rac\'.
Ten of the 27 bills proposed in 1971 died in
comn1illC't'.
·rhe grQup's report -printrd on JOO
P<'r cenl ret'yCled paper -s1nglC'd out the
S('nale c;overnmcntal Organization Com-
nut1ee as a "<lealhbcd .. for ecology bill.~
The Senate apprO\'Cd !hem only 36 per-
cent o[ the time; much r.1ore damaging
to proposals than the Assembly.
Last \\'eek, the National Association for
the Advancement of Colo red People
(NAACP ) said that Burke voted 14 limes
agains t bills fa vored by the group: more
negative \ otcs 1 than any o th e r
Assemblyman. none of "'horn received a
st:ore nf JOO percent.
Senator Carpenter voted against seven
or the 19 key measures introduced during
the 1971 .session.
Pla1ie Ra1isoni
T ox W riteoff
t-llNNEAPOLIS, h-1inn fU PJ )
Northwest Airlines. v.:h1ch gave
S200.000 to a hij acker us1n.'! th e
narn e "D B. Cooper." 1hP f1rs1 or a
series of skyjack-for-ransom at·
len1pls :ind the only sucressfut one.
is claimi ng the payment as a tax:
v.•riteoff.
"O, B. Co<ipC'r " parachuted from
the plane <1\'er \\lashington state
and ha!> not beC'n ,!":Cen s1nee.
A Northv.est ~pokesman sairl the
r<insom p<1yment \\'<15 not ins ured,
WHAT YOU SEE IS
(NOT NECESSARIL Yl
WHAT YOU GET!
Teclinological advances in carpet ma·nufacturing liave re-
sulted in lower prices today than 30 year& ago.
.The tutting machines make carpet 70 rimes faster than Ax-
min ister and Wilton looms. These machines will make up to
.12 lineal feet of carpeting per minute, either twelve or
fifteen feet wide. The relative ease of this manufacturing
method has had one negative aspect. Instead of about ten
respected, reliable mills, today there are more than 300-mills.
many of questionable integrity. It is not difficult for a clever
carpet designer to moke a corpet look for better than it is.
The answer to the consumer is clear: Either know your manu-
facturer -or rely on a reputable retailer. I Alden's, of
cocirae.)
ALDEN'S
CARPETS e DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
t
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Huntington Bea~h
Fountain Valley
EDITION
-.
YOL. 65, NO. 27, 3 SECTIONS, ~O PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
Irving
-.-.. -,._ ----r ...... _ .... t wr:--·-
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY I, 1972 TEN CENTS
Warrants Out
Author in Trouble With U.S. and Switzerland
BUSY CIVIC SERVANT
M .. 1. Darline Bauer
'QUIET' HELPER
Store Owner Irvine
Joe Irvine, ~1 rs. Bauer
Honored by Beach CofC
Joe Trvine has been described as a
"quie tly humble man," and Darl ine
Bauer as a woma n who "docs llttle nice
things for people."
They were honored by the Huntington
Beach Chamber of Commerce Monday
night as the Chamber's "Man and
Woman of the Yea r."
Their awards highliJ?htcd the cham-
ber's annual in sta ll ation banquet at the
Sheraton Beach Inn.
Irvine owns and operates his own
grocery store, a beach snack shop and
Hi lltop Liquor Store. He has donated
lime and monex to lhe Boy Scouts. Pyles'
Boys' Club, church gtoups and other
charitable organir.ations.
Noble Waite said of Irvine; "It would
be hard to coun t the people tha t he has
quietly helped ; whether it was a visit to a
sick person in the hos pital. a steak over
the counter to say happ y bir thday to a
senior citizen or flowers for a funeral."
''He has done them and never w:iiled
(or a thank you. He has always shied
away from any than k you's," \Vaite said .
Irv ine served on the f.l untin:;to n Beach
Steering Committee in 1968~9 and the Oil
Committee in 1970. lie is a member of
the VF\V, American Legion. Elks Club
and is a thi rty-second degree f\.1ason.
"\Ve know of no other man in Hun-
tington Beach who thinks of and offers as
much help to its citizens with such qu iet
humbleness as Joe Irvine," Waite said.
The list of civic accomplishments for
Mrs. Bauer seems to have no end. In 1971
she served as city chairman for the
Orange C:Ounty Law Month, served as
chairman of the 197l J ud ging Committee
on the Orange County Council of Women
in Chambers of Com merce, served as
chairma n of th e county com mittee for
the "Salute to Youth" awards.
She also served on !he Bnard of
Truslees of Children's llospital of Orange
County, was on the hostess committee for
openi ng nights at the llunti ngton Beach
Playhou se, and received an honorary life
membershi p to the International Thes.
pian Societ y of Troupe 1700, f.lu ntington
Beach.
And that was only part of the list.
"She has good moral character and is
llked by everyone. She is always doing
little nice things for people," said Hun·
Ungton Beach Mayor Geo rge McCracken.
: "I'm speechless. I couldn't believe it,''
Mrs. Bauer gasped, when presented her
iward.
The Man and Woman or the Year
presentation followed the installation or
Orange Coast
Weather
Variable high clouds are expect-
ed along lhe Orange Coast Wed·
nesday, with a pdssibilily of
wprinkl~. Gusty win~ are also
• expected bringing temperatures
• down to the low lkl's. Tontghrs low
• wiU be around 42 degrees,
INSmE TODA V
Ar lt'nt Lum , a 1-lonolulu re·
porter, f$ .perhaps lhe first
Chineie·Anurlcan ;onrnoli.ft to
tnter mainland China !itirt
1948. J.ler impressions nripcar
on Paoe 8.
L. M. l•1• ' -" C•lll'tnilt • ~1111111 .. \l!I., " Cle11lfltlf "'" N .. i.111t Ht\111 ..
CMnk l " O••"" (IURIY ..
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new offi cers who will guide the chamber
through 1972.
Roger Slates. the new chamber presi-
dent, pledged to mold the chamber into
an orga nization respected by "members,
civic leaders and residents."
In addition to Slates. other new officers
installed J\londay night were: William
Foster, first vic e president ; Jerry Bame,
second vice president , and l)aul Frizzell ,
treasurer. Allen Klingensmith remains on
the board as past-president.
Valley to Honor
Early Settler
In Dedication
'rhe late lsojiro Oka, one of Fountain
Valley's earliest settlers, will be honored
\Vedn esday ni ght du ring the dedica tion o(
lhe new Oka Elementary School.
The scllool. open since November 1970,
will play host to an evening of J apanese
folk songs, dance, poet ry and a tableau of
Oka's life.
Also planned is a demonst ration of the
ancient Japanese martial art karate by
l\1ike Stone. the nationa l karate champ
from Westminster.
The cere111ony is schedul ed to begin at
7 p.m. in the patio area with a concert by
the Fountain Val ley School District Band .
Tea and oriental refreshments will be
served during the performan ce by the
Oka PTO.
One of the evenin.i.(s highlights will be
the introduction or the Oka family and a
presentation by thenl of a portrait or
Oka.
Oka, a na l!ve of Fukuoka. Japan, came
to Fountain Val ley in 1907 and sta rted
v.•ork as a dai ry farmer. In 1917. the
family moved to Bushard and Banning
Streets in l!untlngton Beach and fa rmed
in that area until the evacuation of the
Japanese in 1942.
Farming conti nued to be a way of Life
with Oka unt il he died in 1966 at the age
of 82. During the depression years he
often donated vegetables to hungry
elementary school children.
Oka · was also acti11e in the establish-
ment of the Talbert Language School <ln
Ta lbert Ave nu e and Bushard Street. The
building is now being used by the
Presbyterian Church.
Motlier Loses
Race W itli Storlt;
Officer Fills In
Hwitington Beach policeman Steve
ArebaJo dJdn't even get a chance to race
the stork today after Mr!. Donna Bla.ss.-
ingame rang the police emergency line
at 7;30 a.m.
By the time Arebalo Orri..cl at the
Blassingame OOme at l~· WA Lane
evidence was clear that the ifork would
win any attempted dash to tbe hospital.
So the officer finished helplng in
delivery of f\frs. Bla.sslngame's fourth
child, a seven-pound girl, at the home.
"There wasn't much to It,'' Arebalo
grll1!1ed.
Both the 27-yea r-old mother and
doughter are doing fine today at Hun· tin~lon Interco mmunity llospltal.
Ofrtcer Arebalo doubled as a n
obstetrician once before in 18 when 1
nervous father-to-be ·nagged down his
squad car because the sto rk wu winning
that race, too.
"'I dellver..r !Ml one In th< back seal
of thetr car," Attbalo recalled.
NE\V YORK (UPI ) -The inquiry into
possible fraud i n v o 1 vi n g the
•·aut obiography" <lf Howard Hughes
11panned the Atlantic today with arrest
warrants for author Clifford Irving issued
in Switzerland and the promise of an of·
ficial investigation made in the United
Slates.
Jn Zurich the situation was more
serious for lrving, an American citizen,
4 More Persons
Seeking Valley
Council Seats
Fout more Fountain Valley residents
liave announced they will be candidates
for the city council.
Their declarations raise to 12 the
number or potential candidates who will
be vying for two council seats during the
April 11 election.
The deadline for fil ing of nomination
pape rs is noon Thursday.
Included in the new group of candidates
arc:
-Marvin P. Adler, 8957 La Donna
Court, former two-time president Of the
Fountain Valley Chamber of Commerce.
-Roy D. Richards, 17686 Bay Circle , a
dentist who campaigned for fl uorid ation
of the city's water supply, and ran for
council in the 1969 recall el ection.
-~trs. J an Wilhelm, 16527 Redwood
Clrcle. a member of the chamber of com·
merce Women's Division .
-L.arry L. Severson, 18558 SCl'nt.a Ynu
SL
The seats scheduled to become vacant
belong to Councilmen John D. Harper and
Ron Shenkman. Harper sayg he will run
for re-election bu t Shenkman will not.
Others who have taken out nomination
papers include CJarence B. Casper, 9700
La Capella Ave.: Paul P. Savarino, 10719
El Centro Ave: Bernie P. Svalstad, 9803
El Tulipan Circle : David Tanner, 17678
San Francisco SI.; Frank T. Appell, 10815
La Batista Ave.: Robe rt L. Rexanne ,
10295 Colum bia River Court, and Ernest
T. \.\'inert, 16317 Filbert SL
Scl1ools Appoint
Consulting Finn
The Huntington Beach City (elemen·
tary) Schoo l District has hired an outside
educational consulting firm to help it
qualify for more federal grant money.
Charles Koepke, president of Ed codyne,
spent two days in the district last mont h
and school officials say they are well
pleased with his work . Koepke was hired
for $4~0.
Koepke was asked to make a complete
study of the district's goals over the next
fi ve years and to find wa ys of obta inin g
wh atever federal fu nds are avail ab le to
help meet them.
Doctor's Rites Set
•
STANFORD (UPI ) -Services were
pending .for Dr, Er:ic O~den. heart
research specialist and phys iologist, who
died Sunday at Stanford Medical Center.
and his S"·iss...bom v.•ife, Edit h. 36.
OHic.ials there issued arrest y:arrants
for the couple on "urgent suspicion of
fraud, falsification of official docun1ents,
and jnvestigalion of these crimes.''
In this country where the couple ar·
rived 1'hursday, U.S. Attorney Whitney
North Seymour and New York County
District Attorney Frank S. Hogan con·
!erred on possible federal charges of v.•ire
* * * Life Outlined
and mail fraud and state charges of
fraud and purjury against lr\'ing.
Zurich District Attvmey P<'tC'r \'t'lf'f(
:said today that although they ha vf\ 1 ~st11'd
the arrC'St \\'arr11nts they need thr
cooperation of U.S. police · to soll·e !IH:
"autobiography n1ystery . ''
"Since pa1·t of the suspected crime \"<I S
carr ied ou t 111 Zuri ch, but t he effects ~
the actual damages -occurred in the
United States to !\fcGraw.Jlill, v.•e be!ic1•e
Howard Hughes Story
(
Told in 4-partSeries
'
Edi tor's note: I t bega n modestly
enough in I-Ious 1011. Texas, wi t/1 a
'1ew ki11d of oil welt drilling bit. But
11ow the flughes T ool Co, is a rnan y
fiplendored busiuess canglonie rate.
A irl ines, gambli11g casinos, niiites -
!JOU name it. And tt is r uled by a man
1vho has not been seen in public hi
almost 20 years. Follou•i ng is the first
of fou r articles on the many faces oj
lloward H ughes.
By JACK LEFLER
LOS ANGELES -t!ughes Tool Co., the
cornerstone of a $2 billion business t>n·
terprise, is as spectacularly visible as its
sole owner, Hol't·ard Hughes, i s
mysteriously invisible.
Its success, founded on a revolutionary
Anm RIM
From $650,000
To $2 Billion
oil well drilling bit, has made Its
reclusive owner one of the world's richest
men.
The 'furor over the authenticity of an
autobiography of Hughes, w h i ch
McGraw-Hill Publishing Co. originally
planned to publis h in March, has focused
public attention on the corporate kingdom
over whi ch Hughes rules from his secret
hideouts.
Hughes Tool (Toolco) and its oil tool
division are based in Houston, Tex. Its
other major properties include a
helicopter manufacturing division in
Ca lifornia; an airlin e, Hughes Airwest, in
Western Sta tes; hotels, gambling casinos,
mining claims and other properties in
Nevada ; Hu ghes Television Network , and
huge real estate hol dings in Arizona and
Ca lifornia.
The vast operatio ns have been com-
manded by hughes, 66, in imperious
manner, usually by telephone. Some or
his top executives have never seen hi1n.
fie ha sn't made a public appearance
since 1953.
Last Jan. 7, a man identified by
Hughe s' public r elations spokesman as
the bilUonalre industrialist held a
telephone news ·Conference with seven
news reporters ta'deny the autlienticity of
the McGraw-I-fill manu script.. The
newsmen, who were assembled here, said
th ey were convlnced the voice on the
telephone u·as lhat of l{ughes.
l·lughcs holds no title with Toolco <'K·
cepl that of owner Operations arc h;i nril·
ed by Exec utive Vice President Raymund ir. Holl iday and Senior Vice Presidents
f"rank \V. Gay and James R. Lesch.
What \vas to become a fabul ous en·
terpr ise v.·as born in 1909 at Goos e Creek,
Tex. when l~ov.·ard ll ughes Sr. suc-
cessfull y tested the rotary rock drill bit
·he invented. 111e bit consisted of 166
conical cutters of milled teeth ~·hich
chiseled and crushed rock so it could be
brought up through the drill stem from
the bottom or the drilling hole. tt solved
the problem of drilling through rock.
11'1 eotlmated tllal 71 percent of the oil
wens In non·Communlst countries have
been drilled wlth Hughes bits,
Young Hughes' parents willed him so
percent Jntereat 1n the tooJ company and,
newly orphaned, he took over its opera·
tion in 1923 when he was 19. He later
bought the other 40 percent Interest from
relatives.
Value <lf the company at the time of the
father's death was variously estimated at
$10 million or more but •lughes said the
government appraised it at $650,000.
While Hughes is reputed not to ha ve
been seen in Tool co's Houston offices
since 1926, the company flourished under
hi s direction and the operations or his
hand-picked executi11es.
The oU tool business grew until it now
employs about 4.000 at Houst-On and has
other manufacturing plants in England,
Ireland, Canada , West Germany, Italy,
Argentina and Brazil. The tool division '.!'i
annual revenues have been estimated at
$75 million. Beca use it ls privately own·
ed, Toolco issues no reports on sales and
earnings .
11ughes, who Jon~ had been Interested
In airplanes, left Te xas for California in
the 1920s and became a legendary figure
In aviation. lie set many world speed
records and desig ned aircraft.
lie also became enchanted with motion
pic tures, and actresses as well . He p;o--
duced a number of movies, among them
''Hell 's Angels" and "The Outlaw," and
for a while owned RKO studios.
Noah Dietrich, Hughes' chief executive
from 1925 untU they split In 1953, takes
issue with those who give Hughes the
lion's share of credit for building Toolco.
"He can't explain the growth of hl1 em·
(Sec HUGHF.8, Pase Z)
Repair Fraud Guilt Urged
Prosecutor Says Evidence in Case 'Overwhelming'
By TOM BARLEY
Of tlle Diiiy 1'1191 Sllft
An Orange County Superior Court jury
was urged today to return guilty verdicts
against seven defendants linked to an
alleged auto repair racket <ln Ule Wis of
what the prosecu~r said w a s
.. overwhelming evidence '' of their com·
pUcity.
Deputy Oi.!trict Attorney Richard Sten-
ton told the ptnel In his fmal argument
that nearly 30 prosecution witnesses had
offered highly incriminating testimony
acnin.~t all seven defendants and had
li nked them to alleged crimes carried out
in 11 service stations ranging from Seal
Beach to San Clemente.
And Sttnton reminded the Jury lht1l fhe
Jong inve.stlga(lon sparked by many
customer contplainta h&d led the Orange
County Grand Jury t-0 lndjct all seven
defendants and identity those 11 irtatlons
In its lndlctmtnt.
"We gave sll' of our witnesses Im-
munity from pro$CCUtion." Stenton said .
"'That was because they were equally In·
v~ved in the racket but not to the oltnt
lh•t ... whed 1o prosecu1o them 1or
their infractions."
Stenton told the jury he was satisfied
he had prosecuted the seven most guUty
persons in the conspiracy and he picked
out Stanley Da11ia, 34, of 1086 San Pablo
Circle and Jerry KendaJI, 35, ol 9llO Son-
ora Road, 'both of Costa Mesa, as the
architects of the auto repair conspiracy.
He told the·jury that their five codefen--
dant.s and "many others who have been
named in this trial" are "linked to the
pocket bookt of Davis and Kendall ."
His 30 witnesses, Stenton said, have pro.
vlded .. abundant evidence" that Ores
were deliberately punctured, sh o c ~
ab110rbcr1 and fuel pum1>5 sprayed with
oll to give tm Impression that they leak~
ed and "customers conned Into 11uthoriz..
ing repair jobs that just weren't needed.''
Stenton · said the "service station
seven" were Involved in a highly
luttalive racket that cost Or1tnge County
motorllts m11ny thousands of dollars.
And the prosecutor noted In hl1 Orml
comment§ In the severz..Wtek lrial that
the profits or the combine were
magnlned by the grop's operation o! a
Carden Grove warthoule wblch main-
talned a now of part3 needed by the 11
stations identllied In the indictment.
Defense allorneys Al Stokke, Frank
Moran and George Shibata wiU follow
Stent.on in closing arguments before
Judge James Turner give. his in·
structJons to the jury.
It Is expected that the jury will retlre
to conrlder Its verdict late today or early
WedneJday.
Judge Turner denltd defense motions
£or dlsmlasal ol the fraud charges late
Monday 1horl!J!.~fter the leltlmcmy of the
final driense witness In lhe trial.
He had earlier dismlaed charges
against two of the original nine defen--
danta on the ground., that the prosecution
had failed In Ito pba,. of the trial to
1ub1tantiate ft'aud charges against them .
On trial with Davia and Kendall 11re
Roger Mendenhall , 23, of 26095 Aven ida
De Seo, Mission Viejo, David Conchola,
!2, of 6000 Gardtn Grove Blvd.,
Westminster and Edward Carney, 27, of
20862 Shell Harbour Drive, Christopher
Enriquez. 15, of 7695 Vol ga Drive and
Henry Cuionguay. ll. o! 7661 Com-
modore Drive, all o! Hunllngton Beach.
-
that both Zur1<'h nnll A1 nrric t1n off1rin!'
<l l'•' r~·.;p11ns1hle fur tlus lll\'f'.;!iJ:::illon,'
s;iid \'t•lt>ff,
ll is :i1111uu11cr mcnl fnlh1111·d pnli<·C' ln·
l'('Sl igil!IUI\$ 11h ft h turned lll) $~~2.000 lfl
casll :ind ~1·r11ritics in a llr:111<·h of 1lh'
.Swiss Bank t '1,rpor;1t1t111.
'f'h<' bank , nne of Sw11zt•rtan d -" large.~!.
is lue:1tc1I :1cross the ~tre1'l from th<'
S\viss trrctit Bank, \Vherc Irving 's l't'Jfc
tSee lltVING , Pugc 2J
BICYCLIST KILLED
Oebo .. ah Lynn 01vl1
Deborah Davis,
Accident Victim,
Rites W ed11csday
Funeral services for bi cycle accident
victi m Deborah Lynn Davis have been
S<'l for 2 p.n1. Wednesday at the i'~irst
United Methodist Church of lluntlngton
ch.
Miss Davis, a resident of 10191 Falcon
Ave .• Fountain Vall ey, was killed by an
automobile in Long Beach Sunrtay af-
ternoon. She was 19.
A 1970 t:raduate of ~1 t1rina J-11~h School,
Miss Da vis was enrolled in A nursing pro-
gram at Long Beach C'i1 y Coll ege.
li-1iss f)av1s is survived hy her parents,
William If. and Pearl IJa11is, f'olmtal n
Valley : her brother, Jack R. Da vis and
her sister, Sandra D. Davis, both o! the
home.
1'hc survivrmi a!sn Include he r
grandmother, Mrs. Irene L1chlner, Foun·
tain Valley, and her great· gr e a t.
grandmo!her, Mrs. Jeff Spillers, Dallas,
1'exas.
Members of the fa mily have requested
that memorial cont rib utions he sent to
Earl and Lo rraine f\.1iller. Ch ildren's 1106·
pita!, 2801 Atlantic Ave., Long Beach.
Miss Davis will be bur ied at the
\Vheatland-DeSoto Cemetery, Texas.
Acapulco's Beaches
To Get Protection
ACAPULCO, Mexico {UPI ) -"Plan
Acapul co," a $12 mill Ion government prC>-
ject to keep thiii resort city's beaches
11parkllng, got und er way today.
The plan calls for construction of 11
drainage tunnel to feed rainwater directly
Into the Pacific Ocean rather than letting
It wash through the street..5 of Mexico·~
famous beach resort and spill dJrt and
cont aminants lnt-0 Acapulco Bay.
Twelve Across
Spells 'Oops'
To the DAILY PILOT'S cross-
"'ord puzzle fans :
You win. •
A8 an experiment, we began
publlshlng a smaller -and slmp.
ler -c::rossv.·ord puule In lls rtg~
ular position on the comlc page
several wrekJ ago. The response,
we rtckoned, might not be tre-
mendow(' but we thou a ht Jt might
be Positive. . 1 It wa sn't. Alttr a deluge ·pt C€"1~
pl aints, thrcatS of cancellation,
!lngry tlr1u!e! and threats on tha
editor's life, we returned to the.
old c~word puule format. You
will !Ind II lodny · on page 15.
And thanka for letting us know
you care.
We do. too.
-i 0A1LY PI LOT H
Red s Send
POW s' Mail
To U.S.
NEW YORK (U P!I -.So1ne 4~l lt!lcr~
from Am,r!can prisonrrs flf wiir h11vP
been brou~ht <1Ul of ;\!irlt1 \11cLnan1 ll nd
Rre being delivered \(• lhf! ~C'r\'Jl'C1 nen .§
fam ilies
The n1 r11I was the fir~! su11·r D<'t 21,
"'hen murt than J.000 lctl(•rs Y.·t•r e rt •f .. tV·
•d
111e lr t11•r" \\'!'fl' tunui:,hl •lUl uf ~11rth
\11ctn am bv l\;111n1n~ C: •• r r~·ll. It r1·ponrr
for thr Pa1.:11Ll· New ;;, Srrv1cr 1n S.10 Fra11·
r1Stn, aecord1n~ to !hr C<1nur11th·e uf
Liaison \\'1th F;in11hr~ of Se r\'lt·•·n1cn Ot>·
tairied Jn i\orth V1ctna111.
Since the com1n1tlcc w11s ronned 111
1969, a total of 5,'l7ti letters !rom POWi; ui
North Vietnam and 18 lrom men held hy
the Viet Cong in South Vietnam ha\ e
been forw arded to r:untl\es.
Whlle In Hanoi, Gnrrctl reportrdly
spoke w11h comm::indcr D::1vid \V . Hoff·
. man, a Ca!1fom1an who wa s capLurcd
during the December bon1bing 111 North
Vietnam.
·Today's Sailors
: 'Finest Bunch,'
Says Admiral
The U.S. Navy is the biggest youth club
in the world, says Rear Admiral Carl J.
Seiberlich, and he's not unhappy about
that.
"The youths in loday 1s Navy represent
the flnesl bunch we've ever had." he Lold
members and guests of the Huntington
'Beach Chamber of Commerce Monday
nigh!.
"They 're smarter and able to do more.
The biggest change today is they won't do
something .c;imply be.cause you tell then1
to. They want to know why and that's the
way it should be.," Seiberlich said.
The admiral. now commander of
Antisubmarine Warfare Group Three sta·
tioned at San Diego. said 65 percent of a
·ship's ci:ew is under 'll.
He was commander of the Aircraft
Carrier 1lornet. during the pickup <1f the
Apollo 11 and 12 moon mission crev.'S.
··we had a lot <1f 18 and 19·ye&r-0\ds in
key jobs on those two operations." he
said. ~
Mos t of Admira l Seiberlich's speech , il·
lustrated by slides, dealt with splashdo"·n
• -procedures during the two Apollo
1nissions.
Seiberlich said k('cping the ship a safe
distance from the down('d capsule, and
upwind <Jf it, was his biggest worry .
"We us('d an exotic chen1iral suited to
kill moon germs -Clorox," he qu ipped .
One of the helicopters on lhr Horn et -
designated Number 66 -has picked up 18
astronauts on four splilshdowns . including
the Apollo I I and 12 missions, Seiberlich
said . The helicopter is <lcstined for !he
Smithsonian lnstitution. the admiral not-
..!.
Valley Parks Panel
To Eve New Facilitv
The Fo11nt;1in \':tllcv Pa rks :ind
Re<Tt':itlnn Con11n1~s1on ~·111 n•r"I tonight
In consider ri <tr1 elnp1nent plan fur the
I :J-;ierr Ln C<1p11la park.
Tht> 1natlrr 11·;i~ t·onsitlrred a1 a r('~Ulilr
mrettn~ lri:-.t "t'''k, but \1·as postponed
d11c to t'nn1pl 1r;i11011-. (11·er l1nant·ing and
the lalcne.~s of the hotir .
The mert1ng "·\11 Ile hrld at 7 00 p m. in
the Fountain VAiiey Cit y Hall , 10200
Slater A\·r.
01.AJUil COAST
DAILY PILOT
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H......-a 9-"-CM" -.., "'""'*"'*' •-"' P"_.itlft Vflll'f", S... C......., (•P~"'-.... i..eis~k, ..... wllf\ -
,... .... .ill!-"""" .. ' ... ll'lflre ...... .. »t ...,., .. , w-a. C.• at.a.
T"•••••• (114) '4l-4Jn
ChllalffM "'"''i.. Ml.U11
~t. ""· ,,...,... o..r ~,to .. ~"1· Ht -s...i... ...... ,,.,...., .. ..... --... """'"""-" ""'"" _., -~ wl"'-~ ,..
....... Clf'r'9M --'·
....... <"--,.,. -........ I.ti -°"'.. ~. , ... ....,,11. ~....., Gtn'IW q,n _..,.,...,; w ,....n a ,,
..-.uTI mJU•,., •ntN1...._ SU~ ..-.rf•
•
Tuttd.1y, FrbruMy 1, 197:Z
From Page l
HUGHES' CAREER. • •
plrt ," Dit"lrich
recently. "lie
llusiness lo me.
sakt ln
left that
an lnlerview
part of the
"In those days, bis main lnltre1t1 were
rom11nce. airplane! and motion pictures.
None of those produced any profits."
'!'he fir st big diversi fication move under
!he bannl"r of Toolco u•as the founding of
Hught•s Airtruft Co. Jn Culver City in
193L
\\'1th the burgetining of commercial
av iat ion and th[.' approach of World \\lar
JI, llughes Airc raft quickly became a
giant in its field. It was one <1f this coun·
try's mil)Or wartime suppliers of aerial
W('aponry.
w1 itf!d five ytar5 bclorf' orde.rinf
Jclhners and other f'qu 1pn1f'nt costln~
$497 million. Partly becaust of tht la1 •
starts in jets, TWA Jost huge amounts t:r!
money, and financial institutions whic h
loaned money for the aircraft purchases
b«.·arne conce.n1t!d.
Toolco los t control of T\\'A in 1960 when
creditors lurted Hught•!<l to p\:ice h1~
stock in a nonvoting trust. 'fWA r1 ana~t
tn ent sued J~ughes. a\lt.gnlg 1nisrnanaAf'-
n1ent. Clai1ns and co u n t e r c-l a 1 m s
amounted to s4a1 mtlllun. A JtHlgrnent nf
$!37 million "'as won again st Hughes, but
it 1s yet to be t·ollet·ted.
Hughes pulled ou t <1f '!'\VA in grand
fashion by selling his sltx:k for $5~6
mlll1on in 1%6.
I lunlin.[!ton Rcnrh l\1avor (;corgr ~fl·f'raeken found h1 ~ nevi hon1r 1n Jl uni1ngton llarliour lirrorated u1
this n1a1111cr nver the weekend. 'J'hc dl's1gn, believed
to have been r·rcated by mischievous youngsters.
\1as fashioned from confetti, cornflakes, soapflakes.
and strands of totlet paper.
In 1954, Jiughes turned over the
airrraf l company to the Hugh es fl.1edict1!
institute, which he formed as philan·
lhrop1cal organizati<J n, to carry <Jn
1ned1cal research. All of its profit s go ~o
the insLitute, or whit·h Hughes is the sole
trustee. and it no longer is under the cor·
porate umbrella of Toolco.
Hu ghes Aircraft, which has been
estimated lo be worth $500 million with
annual sale.s about equal that amount,
manufactures communications satellites,
guided missiles, aircraft armament
systems and <1ther electronics gear.
Armed with more than $~00 n1illion rr-
maining after capital gains taxes on th&
stock sale, Hughes moved sec retly int')
Las Vegas, Nev .. in 196& and started
buying just about everythiog in sig ht irt
the name <Jf Hughes Hote l Propertie.<;.
which had been set up as a division of
Toolco.
\Vith 8,000 employe!'I, Hughes Hotel
Prop<'rties became Nevada's biggest
employer.
Y ozt1· T elevisio1i Set
May Be Watching You
By l\IABGARl-.:T GE\"THV
\VAS!ll/\r;1·c)N tAP f -Spies nrmed
\Vlth sophislicated l!stenin~ devll'CS could
in the nOt·too-chstant fu ture lap }our
telev ision set if it's hooked to a lwo--w<1y
cable.
\V ith<iut your kno"•led ge. !hey could
listen lo and record the prograrns yo u
\\'alth, your transactions with depart·
ment stor<'s and banks, even your living
roon1 conversa!ions.
The new dimension 111 electronic
ea vesdropping would become poss ible
"'ilh installation of two--w<1y 1.:ttble
telev ision. a development being !e:;tcd in
.son1e com munities and likely to con1e in·
lo limited use within fi ve year~.
Devices to prevent such .~py·1ng nrr
technically possible , and specialists in·
lerviewed said the t('chnology for t'Oll·
verting television .sets into pcrrash·e
spies has outstripped developn1rnt of
legal safeguards.
Bob Stengel, a staff assistant with !he
NationAI Cable Television Assoc1aOon,
.agreed with lhe tapping possib1 li!y and
predicted limited use of '"'O·"·ay sysl<'ms
\llithin five years and more "'idespread
use after the cost of home terminals LS
reduced.
St('ngel said it is technically possible to
shut out potential ea vesdroppers with
such devices as scramblers or s'A·itchE""
2 Hopefuls File
For Vacant Seat
011 Scl1ool Boa1·il
/\omination papers have been laken out
by two potential candidates for a vacant
scat on the Foun tain Valley School
District's board <1f trustees.
They are Edward Boro1\•icr, 945l
Porlsmouth Dr1Vt'. and David lsrarlsk\',
7698 \\'alnu t SL, both of Fountain Valle"v.
Rorou·ire is an assistant prof('ssor ~{
English and linguistics at Ca l Stale l.ong
Beach. lsraelski wa s a candid<1t<' in 196~
1'un1inatinn papers may be picked up
llnt1l Feb. 17 rrom the County llegistrar
of Votrrs. 11 HI E. Chrstnut ~t . Santa
Ann The deadline ror filing them is 5
fl n1. the Sil!ne da\.
'rhf' 1·a<'allt:y 11 :1~ lTf'n1£>d through the
res 1.i;n~t ion of Trusl!'c HArold Brown whn
n1ovcd In ~an ,Juan (';1pi:-.lrano.
Fnunt;i1n \'alley's trustee t>lt•c:l1011 11·ill
1·11111cide ~·1th the April 11 1nuni cip11I clrt·
11uns 1n ll unlington Beach <1nd Fountain
\ alle).
attached tn a television set blocking nll
rad1ntion from it.
Expansion lo a I wcrway system would
require equ ipping the home TV set "'1lh a
transmission terminal sind addition o[
television receivers in places using two--
\l"ay TV communications.
For example, cable-TV system "''ould
require equipping the home TV set with a
transmission tern1inal and addition of
trlevision receivers in places using two--
way 'fV communications .
For example. cable·TV specialists say
dCjj,IJ:.tmcnt·store and banking lr;insac·
lions could be conducted by television,
pollsters could question citizens via the
!ube. and water and electric mete rs cou ld
b(' read that wa y.
Both public and private cable-·rv agen·
cies vi rtually ha\•e ignored the possibility
flf snoopi ng explalning that other develop-
ments dC"mand n1ore immediate at·
tention.
Sol Schi\dhause. chief of the Fedcr;il
Communications Commission's cable-TV
bureau. said the ta pping possibili ty ··is
<1t1e of the things we'll look into" after ap-
pointrnent of committees on technology
and 011 state and local regulation of cable
systems. _
He said tapping is not discussed \n the
FCC's general cable regulations to be an·
11ounced soo n.
•·\Ve can't de al \l'ith everything in one
day," said ~lenry Geller, special assistant
to F'CC Chairman Dean Burch .
<:eller said two-way systen1s rema in in
a rudimentary stage. Although he agreed
lhev could be 1apped . he said "nobody
woU !d dream of doing it."
'J'hc Anocritan Civil Liberties Union
isn't so sure.
Jerro1e 7'. OppenhC"im. staff counsl'! of
thr 111 in o is ACL U, '''rote in a retent
issue <1f the national <1rganizalion's
ne"·s!etter that cable TV "could be a
scr1<1Us threat to personal privacy.
"Cable-tapping is no less of a thrc:il
than "'iretapping. Imagine a TV camera
in you r home controlled by the FBI ," Op-
penheim \\'role.
The t"·o--"·ay systems involved are an
expansion of 1he one-wa y systems in·
s\n\\rd in a nun1bcr of American cool·
n1unit1es primarily to ~el more chann('lS
inln lhe home than could be r('C<'l1·cd "'lth
only :iir\\•avrs rC'crpl1on.
'fhc lipcl'iahsts 1nl('rvic"·c<\ ~:;iid they
knn1v Qf no ~t<1te or local <1gcncy tha1 re·
quires such sriirgu<irds in fr<inchise
agrrcrnents \l'llh t ;1hlc 11perau1rs_
llr1t1nan said tl11• ACLU 11·1!! enco urage
1\[firinl't rntcr1ng franchi se agreements lo
111·11e in protectire clauses.
'C limate of Suspicion' Put
011 Nixo11 by Newsman
\\'ASlllNGTON !UPll -('RS r<:1r·
respondent nan1rl Schorr said todav that
a \l,'hile. l·louse-0rdcrcd FBI in\"CS!1ga!ion
(lf hin1 la st ~u 1nn1er ren('(·ff'd "lhc
l·lin1a tr nf ~uspirion. hnslili!v :ind nf'1'vnusne.~~ .. lh<it llr s:iid !h(' !\11Xnn :icl·
111111is1ra tion hcl 1>rd ~t'nl'rat(' ;1boul ne11 ~
u1rd1a .
S.·horr. in his fir~! 1>uhllc recital of thC'
inr1denl , s:ii(! 1h1'll the prcs~ures and prfl-
hlrrns rreated by th' l-'BI probe "persist
until toda\\" bolh for him ;i.nd hls
netw ork . ·
Schtirr lestlfied before the Scnatt?
t.:onstitu tiona l Rights Subcommittee.
The \\'hit e Hoose said today I hat Sc horr
"as bting C'On~idered for a job as assis-
ta nt to the chairm3n of the Counci l on
En\'1n1nmf!nlal Quality when he was sub-
Jrtt Ill the f'BI investigation.
Press Secretary Ronald l.. Ziegler sa1d
Schorr "'as no longer in the running for
tfle. rx:ist. but the administration still plan·
nro t.o fill the job.
Ziegler added that the job intended for
ScMrr "'ou\d have been centered on
educating the public on the need for con·
se.r\·ation.
Schorr told the Srnate hearing· "ft i.s
our employtrs who feel lhe real pr1?.s.sure
-especially 11' the regulated broa dcast
induslty. wh,re network'.\ can be ~ub
je<:l.td to pressure In many dirl!'C t w;iys.
and in indirect ways lhrough lhe 11f·
fili ates which gi\'e the netl''Ork t'l·
Jstencr "
'T~ Whitr ~touse acknowltdgt<I order·
in g the inquiry, but s1ud ii was mere.ly a
' '"background check'' because Schorr was
he1ng cosidered for a top government job
in the environn1cntal field ,
Schorr said he was ne"er sounded out
tilinlJI such a jnb al :iny lin1e.
'"Thf' prin1ary i.'>sue in the f'BI in·
1·cs11g;Hion is not 1~·hether nr nol a poss1·
ble job offe r lav behind it," Schorr !Ulid.
",Job nr no job.' the launchin~ <1f such an
i u 1 es t l .'!'.a t i o 11 without consent
drn1on.str11tes an insensitivity to personal
rii,:hts An FJ}T investigation is not a
neutral matter. It has 11n impact Ott one's
life. on relations with emplO)'trS, neigh·
bors end friends •. :•
"Any nne concerned about the frttdom
nf !he press must be. concerned about the
rl1mate of suspicion, hostility a11d ner·
''ousness that the Jdministratlon has
helped to create.," ht said.
As the subcommittee resutned hearings
Jnlo press freedom. chairman Sam J,
f:rvin ([).N.C.). noted t.hlt lwo Wh ite
llouse aides allegedly Involved in the
Seh<Jrr inctdent, Charles Colson and
Frederic ~1alek , declined invitations to
appear and tell their side or the story.
"You've ROl to draw one <1f two <.'On·
chrsions," Ervin said 3ttt.r listening to
Schorr. ''Either they re1tllY h~d you
under consider3tion for a high govern·
mcnt ~ltlon or they were trying to in·
tim1date you. ti11ra~" you • , •
"I hate to mak.t 1 choice between
whether It was stupidity or duplicity. But
unfortunately those are the only two
choices 1 !let," he se id.
Fro1n Page 1
IRVING ...
<'ashed $6:'10.000 in t·hecks
J1 ughe~.
issued to
By Irving's admission, his wife used
the na111e '"llrlga R. ll ughcs" u11 a
Jril siflcd S\1•iss passport as identificatio11
for cashing the thet ks, fr om t\'ie
publishing Firm fl.1c(:raw·H111 to Hughes
for the rights to his '"autobiography."
Irv in g said she did so on instru ction!;
from the bill ionaire recluse, with wh om
he also said he collaborated in wr iting the
book. llo"·evcr, J~ughes has issued
denials of Irving's statements.
Vrleff sa id police invesligalion here
Monda y sho"•ed that a woman. "who WHS
probably ident.i ca l with the suspect E:dilh
Jr\'ing, opened an account "'llh the Swiss
Bank Corpor ation on t.·fay 27. 1971."
·rhis date is t'lose to the tin1c when the
first J\<teCraw-Hill t heck \'.'RS cashed at
the Swiss Credit Bank .
Vel<'ff said he has not decided \\'helhcr
liJ ask for extradition of the Jrvings to
S1vi1zerland.
"J"hc \1-r1ter. who spent the 1veekcnd in
.... eclus1on in Connccti('u\, was to have ap·
pcarrd befort' a grand jury t.1onday for
questioning but u·on postponement of the
interrogation so that he and his nrw
la"·yer. Maurice Nessen, would have
rnore time 10 go over the details of the
case. No new date was set.
Later. Irvi ng and Nessen nlet \\'ith
Seymou r's staff in the office of the U.S.
attornt'y.
They had "no comment" ·when they left
but Seymour and Hogan issued their
slate men t promising ''a joint in·
vestigation into this n1atter, looking into
possible state and federal violations."
Parks Revision
Studied in 'r allcv
~1embers of the Fountain \1alley City
Council "'Lil consider a major revisio n of
the master p!an of parks at their 8
o'clock session tonighL
Involved in the proposal is the de\e1 io n
of Hril r.1ark, relocation of Gisler Park
and the addition of Urbain Plavan park to
lhe master plan.
The proposed He'il Park on Heil A\·enue
near Brookhurst St reet has been rel'om·
mended for elimination by the city staff
since the site has mean"·hile been sold to
a de\'eloper.
Instead the sta ff is recommending that
the p<irk be located at the Urbain P!a1·an
~ChOQl sile near \Va rner Avenue and
Bushard Street.
(;1~l<'r Park . originally plilnnrd in ron·
jun«t1on 11·1th (;isler School sou th f'lf r~1l 1 s
J\\f'f\UI."' and y,·'1rd Street. n1ay he n1oved
lo north of Ellls Avenue 1f lhe change 1s
sidopted tonight.
1'he most spectacular deals in which
Hughes involved Toolco were majority
ownership or Trans-World Airlines. and
resulting legal hassles; and ownership of
Nevada Hotels, ca\lnos and other pro·
pcrlies. and resulting legal hassles.
llughes startrd buying into TWA in 1939
and too k i;ontrol with 77 percent of the
stock in 1947.
After the commercial jct age dawned.
Hughes, with his customary deliberatiC1n,
It was estimated the Nevada propertie<;
cost $250 million and were worth $300
million when Hughes slipped out of town
<Jn Thanksgiving Eve !970, reputed ly
going to the Bahamas.
Toolco continues to have its eyes on the
future. Recently it launched al San
Diego. a 324-foot -long barge for the deep-
sea n1ining <1f manganese in the Pacific
Ocean . The n1ove was proclaimed by the
company as "the birth <1! a new in·
dustry."
Ntzt: The Holl ytoood Years.
Switzerland Gives Learri
Official Walking Papers
From Wire. Services
SION, Switzerland -The. niodern-day
Fv1 ;in \\lithou t /1 Country, Dr. Tirnothy
Ll'ary, ha s been formally told lo hil the
ruild by S\1•iss aut horities who won 't give
h1n1 political asylum but won't give. him
lo 1he U.S. ei!her.
Police Chie f Arthur Bender called a
news t·onfercnce here Monday night to
announce that the 51 .year-old in·
ternal innal fugiti ve must !ea ve the canton
-or Swiss state -of Vala is.
Ccncrally, no such Swiss state wilt ac·
rep! a foreigner expelled from another
OllC'.
'!'he onetime Harvard psychology pro·
fes.sor, convicted in Orange C<Junty
Superior Court nearly two years ago on a
Lagun a Beach 1nari1uana pc1ssession
ch::irg<'. is now living in Crans, writing a
book on psychology.
He escaped the Los Padres Men '!>
C"nlon!' at Sa n Luis Obispo Sept. 12. 1970
and flt'd to Algiers where he was a guest
or Bl ack Panther Party leader Eldridge
C!cavrr·s government-i n-exile.
He had first globe-hopped around the
~lideast before being given sanctuary by
the Panthers, who ejected him from Al·
glcrs la ter nl'cr differing views on drug
use as a tool or revolution.
Leary and his convicted w i re
Rosemary. wh o fled the U.S. to join him
and thus violated probation imposed by
Orang<' County authorities, turned up in
Switzerland late la st year.
He was arrested and released on $5.000
ba il pending decisi<1n by Swis!'I officials on
l11s request to remain in the picturesque
alpine couAlry to avoid t:.S. pr ison
sentences.
S"'is.s officials frustrated California and
Oldest Drh·cr Dies
HJ;;DJ .ANDS rlj f'l ! -.John Sering. who
~t age 100 "'as !he oldest holder of a
('11l1fur111<1 drivers l1cenSl', 111111 be bur ied
\\"ednesda.v . Ser ing died Sunday in a con·
valcscent horn!'.
U.S. Buthorities by ruling the txtradilion
papers submitted to the Bern ,::overnment
"'ere not in order, saving Leary from a
relttrn lo his native land.
Beside"!t-lhe 10..)•car term in California
that he hact'-~arely hegun . Or. Leary
faces an idenlicfl federal priso n term in
Texas for a rearjjuana .c;1nUggJing COO·
viction he once won , then lost again <Jn
appeaL
The zany onetime guru of the
psyc hedelic drug movement wa!; fired
from hLs llarvard post in 1963 for LSD
experimentation, and became <1ne of the
sixties· most reve red and reviled figures.
He and his wife and son, John, now 22
and serving a probation term in the San
Francisco area, were arrested Dec. 29.
1968 in Laguna Beach while parked <1n
Woodland Dr ive.
Now.Sgt. Neil Purcell of the Laguna
Beach Police Department narcotics
squad cORf1 seated marijuana and
suspiciolls pills in arrrsting the Leary!
and impounding their station wagon.
The controversial Learv was then fre-
quenting the Orange COast and cam·
paigning for the CaJilornia governorship,
while contending he was being harassed
for his political views, not drug concepts.
Premiere'5lated
In Htmtington
The Surf 'Theater in downtown Hun-
tington Beach will host the city's first
wor ld premiere mo1•ie Wednesday night
with a special sh<1wing of Jack Smith's
"Seven Wonders of the West.·•
Smith, star of television's "You Asked
for It " series. is expected at the.
premiere al ong with other film stars.
The fi!m will he prl'Viewed at 8 pm.,
\Vednesday by lhe press and other invited
gul's.ts . ll bt-gins its regular run at the
Sur f on Thursday night
'"Sevtn Wonders or the West " !s billed
as the story of a man (S milh J in searcb
or a solution to pollution.
WHAT YOU SEE IS
(NOT NECESSARIL Yl
WHAT YOU GET!
Teclinological advances in carpet ma·nufacturing have re-
sulted in lower prices today than 30 years ago.
The tufting machines make carpet 70 times faster than Ax.
minister and Wilton looms. These machines will make up to
12 lineal feet of carpeting per minute, either twelve or
fifteen feet wide. The relative ease of this manufacturing
method hes had one negative aspect. Instead of about ten
respected, reliable mills, today there' are more than 300 milk,
many of questionable integrity. It is not difficult for a clever
carpet designer to make a carpet look far better than it is.
The answer to the consumer is clear: Either know your manu-
. facturer -or rely on a reputable retailer. I Alden's, of
course.)
ALDEN'S '
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placentia AYe. •
COSTA MESA
646-4838
Underwater
Mountain
P1·obe Set
By TOM PALMER
OI IM 0.Uy Pll•I S!•tt
A National Ocean Survey ship is sailing
today from Seattle to San Diego to begi n
. ~hart1ng dimensi ons of Lasuen, an Un·
dersea mountain that rises l-0 within 350
fe<'I or the ~u rfaee of Santa Catalina Gulf
12 nules off Sa n Clc1nente.
'rhe hydrographic survey is part of a
Department of Coinmerce progra1n
begun ·in 1968 to update n1aritime charts
and both shore and offshore island maps.
The project is expected to take about six
yea rs to co mplete. according to George
Fernandes, assistant projects officer for
the National Ocean Survey.
The Ran ier. a ship from the.
department's National Ocean a nd
Atmospheric Adm inistration, will begin
operations in the gulf early next week,
usi ng electronic sound equipment to
measure depth .
'l'he Natlonal Ocean Su rvey formerly
was kno1~·n as the Coast and Geodetic
Survey.
Fernandes said charting operations
~·ere expected to be completed as far
north as Ne"·port Beach this year .
The survey began off the Mexican
coast border and will continueinorthward
to Polnt Vicente, according o present
plans. Fe rnandes said the ship would be
in the Santa Catalina area for ·about two
n1011ths. ~
The Ra nler will attenlpt to define the
exact measurem ents of the mountain,
while small er launches will chart shore
and harbor areas. The last sur vey of the
coast, Fernandes said, was made in the
early 1930s.
He said the crew also would investigate
reports received on possible dangers to
vessels along the coast. About 15 such
reports were filed with the de partmen t in
1971 regardi ng the gulf area.
Aeri al photography \viii be done in con-
nection with !he shore-mapping opera.
lions. The area from Seat Beach tG
Point Vicente will be photographed, as
V.'111 Santa Catalina, Santa Barbara and
San Nicolas islands.
Lasuen was discovered in the '1930s . It
i:; about halfw ay be tw een San Clemente
and Sa nta Calatina, where the ocean
floor 's depth is approximately 2.400 feet.
Existing nautical charts put the moun·
Iain's peak at 348 feet beneath the
surface,
Charling operations are complete as
far north as Oceanside. They cover an
area extendi ng 20 mil es from the coast.
Fernandes said tide measurements
would be included in the data that is
being ga thered, .; ..A4
He added lhal long-range pla ns for the
·~urvey might incl ude all of the United
States coast as far north as Seattle.
Indians Seeking
Stanford Scalp,
Blast Nickname
STANFORD (UPIJ -The Native
American Students' group has dem anded
that Stanford Uni\'ersity stop call ing its
11lhletic teams "the Indians" and also
that the school stop us\nli( a costumed In·
dian as official mascot.
The group spokesmen said r..ionday
the y are circulati ng petitions demanding
jhe end of a practice that has been going
on since the 1930s.
They sa id it is demeaning and ;,a gross
m1sconcep\1on of the Ind ians."
The group said the demand will be sub-
mitted to the school 's administration this
week through Ombudswoman Lois
Am sterdam.
Tom Newell. secretary of the Alumni
Association, said. "ff the change is mad e
a significant number of older alums will
: be saddened, disappointed but not very
; upset."
• Bob Young, acting athletic director,
~ said, "I've never been too strong on it
: one way or another. J realize th ere's a
: minority problem invt)!ved.
"We. plan to meet with the various in-
terests," said actlng dean of students
Robert Freelan. "and see if we can get
the problem so/\'ed."
The Native American students sa id
they are pursuing the same goals sought
by other Indian groups.
No1•tli Viet's Plans
Press spokesman Nguyen Thanh Le, of the North Vietnamese dele·
ga tion to the Paris peace talks, reveals l-lanoi's O\vn secret n ine·point
peace plans a t a press conCerence in Paris Monday. Le accused Presi·
dent Nixon of duplici ty in disclosing details last \Veek of the secret
Tlanoi-Washington negotiations.
Reports to tl1e Contrary,
It Did Rain in Ja11uary
It didn't rain much in Orange County
during January but there was some
"measurable moisture. despite report s to
the contrary.
1'he confusion results from the fact that
there was no mea surable rainfall record~
ed by the coun ty flood control j istficl's
rain gauge on the roof of the
Engineering-Financial B u i I d i n g at
Broadway and Civic Center Drive West in
Santa Ana.
Flood control district records dating
back to 1907-00 show, however, that there
were two Januarys in the past, 1963 and
1948, whe n no measurable rai11faJI ~·as
recorded in the county seal.
But getting back lo la st month, rain did
fall in other parts or the county .
"There were traces of rain in Santa
Ana but not enough to be called
measurable," said John Gietzen. county
hydrologist. He said he lost a $10 bet with
a fello w ~'orker. "I was sure that it
wou!d rain here during the month ," he
said drily.
measu rable
reassured.
quantities, Gietze n
•·1 live in Costa !vtesa and it ralned
pretty hard there once or twice," he said.•
Rain was a!so reported in Corona de!
Mar, Laguna Beach and San Clemente.
Orange C-Ounty's wettest Janu ary was
1916 when 11.18 inches of rain v.·as
reported and In second place was a more
recent year 1969 when 10.29 inches fell.
Hustin Cane Illegal?
NEW YORK (AP) -Civil rights ac-
tivist Bayard Rustin was freed withou t
ba il r..1onday on charges that he was car·
rying a S\\'Ord cane in Times Squarr. l fe
called tile affair a big misunderstanding.
The charge of illegal possession of a
1Jangerous weapon was refe rred to the
~1anl1attan grand jury.
T~J. ffbn/VJ l , 1972 H
Nixon Aid Idea Rapped
Reagan Criticizes Family Assistance Plan
WASli INGTON 1tJPJ 1 -Gov. Ronald
Reagan today criticized President Nix·
on's family Assistance Plan as "a gia nt
step toward a welfare stile" and off ered
major amendments -including tax
breaks for the working poor and remo\•al
of military dependents from relief.
He also suggesttd requiring able·bodied
recipients to v.ork on communit y strv1ce
projects and denying welfare to ilrikers.
Reagan, the leading Republi can critic
of the Presiden t's einbattled welfare
refor1n bill. presented his lengthy
analysis of the proposal tG the Senate
Finance Committee. where the propo~al
has been stalled si nce pa ssing 1he Hou se
last June
"I consider the y,·elfare problem the
gravest dorr1est1c issue our nation faces,"
said the governor of the nation 's most
populous state.
Reagan said he had "very serious
reservations about se\'eral of the ap·
proaches to \'.(']fare reform en1bodied 1n
JlR I 1N1xon 's b1J/J."
lie strongly objected to the Family
Assistance Plan (FAP1 portion of lhe bill,
which the Nixon adm1nistrallon regards
as its heart.
The FAP woul d guaranlre the y,•or k1ni;.
poor an annual inc;on1e as an ince ntive
for unemployed reeipieuts ln find jobs.
A family of four would be entitled to
$2,400 if it had no outside income and up
to $3,920 in a combinallon of welf<1re and
earnings.
"ll 1s commonly underslood that a
government-guaranteed income, not bas·
ed upon ind ividual productlvi \y, is a gtant
step to ward a welfare state with lLs
inherent los sof individual idenl1ly and
pr ide ," Reagan said in his analysis.
"Some argue this bi ll is riot a
'guaranteed income' because en1ployable
family members must cooperate with
V.'ork and training requi rements. This
argumen t js fallacious," he contended.
As an alternative, Reagan proposed
automatically exempting J o w • w a g e
families from slate and federal income
ta.~es an d providing them with rebates on
Social Security laxes. including the
employers' contributions.
Ile did not say how low the fatnily's in·
come would have to be to qua lify.
"lt doesn't seem right" Reagan said,
''tG reduce a man's lake-home pay with
taxes and then send him a government
dole which robs him of the feeling of ac-
complishment and digni ty ~·hich comes
from providing for his family by his ov.·n
efforts."
In all, Reagan nffcred 23 proposalS.
many of them embod ied in "reforms"
eiiacted lasl yea r by the California
Legislature and implemented by his ad·
ministration.
He said the number of Californians on
y,•eJfare has declined by 176,000 since last
March because of the refor ms.
The Governor suggesjed a community
v.·ork program for able ~ bo d ied .
unemployed recipients not engaged in
retrain ing.
He has asktd the federal government
to authorize such an experimental pro-
gram 1n 35 of Callforrua's 58 counties.
;,\Ve don't suggest this in any punitivl!I
wa~· nor are \\'e advocating useless make-
"or k chores." Rtagan said. "Not only
Y.'111 tilt individual ~nefit { r o 1n
part1ripating 1n useful work, but also
those who foot the bill will be n1ore apl to
apprO\'e 1f lhcy see con1munity srrvices
being perfo rmed ."
lie said one chore might be serving a!;
a night wat chman at schools.
Reag11n proposed eliminating Ute "inef·
School Flna11elng
hcient and inappropriate lnclusion of
families or mtl1tar)" personnel .unong
those eligible ror public assistance.
''Thousands of dependents of mllll ary
personnel are eligible for p u b l i c
ass~stance, for<·ing state and I oe a I t1x·
p:iyers lo subsidize \\'hat 1s essenlially a
federal program ," the Governor said.
lit insisted the. Defense Department
should care fnr "Lhe needs of all bona
/1dl'. deptnclent~ of n11\i~ry peri;onnel.''
lie said strikers also should be drni!'<f
v.·elfare.
Nixon Administration
Eyes 'Value-added Tax'
\VA SlllNGTO:-.Z (U ri) -1'he Ni.~on
Administration l~ <.'onside ring a ".,.alue-
added 1ax·· of ahoul SIG bt!lit'ln to rehe.ve
property t;i xpayrrs of sonle of the C'OSt of
schoo l f1nant r, the \\'lute House said lo·
day.
Rouald t._ Ziegler . Pres1dtnt Nixon's
press secretary, said no decision h.:id
been made yet on financing a •·rpvo\u·
tionary'' property tax p!nn that Nixon
pron11sed in his State of the Unio n
message Jan. 20.
But Ziegler told reporters. "We hold 11
positive attitude 11bout .-i value-added
tax ."
'fhe "value-added tax," orttn referred
to as a national sales: tax, i.! imposed at
Cyclist Killed
111 County Cl1ase
A 1nan who allegedly refused to pay a
SJ.13 bill al a La /·labra coffee shop early
t.1onda y was killed shortly thereafter
when his motorcycle cra~hed into a
pnlro! c;1r in \\1hi!licr , police reported lo·
da y.
each stage of production or a product ~nd
norm<1lly 1'.\'. passed along to the ulhmatl!!
consu1ner.
1'he Trea sury ha s been stud ying the ta x
-\\'tdeJy used in Europe -for sev eral
ytt1rs.
Ad voca tes of the pla n argue tha t the
tax can be imposed on imporl.o: and re·
funded on exports. thus in1provmg the
competitive positiou of Ameri can goodJ:
both at home and abroad.
Ziegler was asked about a report by the
New Yor k Times tha t the White Houi;e
dtveloped A tentative proposal for a $1 &-
bi\\ion-a-year plan of replacinit property
ta:a:es with value-added ta xes.
On Monday, administration officials
told Con~e:is no taic increases were ex·
peeled either th is yeAr or next year. and
;inother official discounted again today
the possibility or a tax boost.
Asked ahout the co n g re s s 1 o n a I
testnn<lny, Ziegler said that what the wit·
ness said ~·as that new taxes ·would not
he ne:eded to finance present progra m'.\'.,
while ool. ruling oul lax re place me nt.
A member or the C-Ouncil of Economic
Advise rs. ~ira Solomon. testified toda y
that higher taxes could depre ss the
economy 11nd cause fl bud~el defi cit eve n
l;irger th~n the $~.5 b!Hion anticipated
for fi scal 1973. Anthony Storey. 40 of Whittier. was
being pursued by lw() La Ha bra police
units arter he 1e1t 111r reslaurant and he Cl · f n·
was fa tatly iniuced when he swer"d his Ru ss Anny ue IC8
cycle into a pat rol car.
Police said Storey had told a waitress ~1 0SCOW (AP) -Marshal Ma lve1
she should feed lwo hitchhikers who were Zakharov. 7J, mu ch-decorated former
without funds. Arter the breakfasts were chief of staff or the Soviet armed forces,
ordered, he became belligerent, the died ti.1onday, the Soviet News Agency
wai tress reported and wu asked to T•s• reported. Z4Jth1rov, a po1lw1r corn•
!eave. He did, withou t plylng the blll , i nd mander of soviet occupltloTI forces 11•
police were notified. Germany. was widely regarded in the
The victim is survivtd by a \\'ife and West as a voice of moderation among
five childreini. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiSoiiviieiti miiitiitiiiary men. iiiiiliiiiiiii-
Gietzen also said that a check or
Moulton-Niguel Ranch figures dating-
back to ian-78 showed some rain last
month but none in 1963 and 1948.
That y,·et stuff that fell on your house
during the month was really ra in in ohnson son
Paulsen Termed
Full-fledged
1972 Candidate
\\'.>\Sfll:-Jr.TON (APt -Comed ian Pat
Paulsen is a !eg1tlmate candida te for
president. the Federal Communica !Hln5
Comm1<:sion says
The r·cc made its ruli ng \1 nnll<lv in
response to a request from Vi'a lt D1snc v
Productions. Inc. ·
Paulsen is scheduled to appear in an
episode of a new Disney tele"ision ser1rs
ca!led ''The Mouse Fact-Ory ." The com·
pany wondered if Paulsen's announce<l
candidacy for the Republican presidentlal
nom ination would obligate stations sho"··
ing the prog ram to prov ide equal time lo
othe r presidential hopefuls because of the
FCC's equal time clause.
The FCC said the regulation would ap-
ply and stations would be obligated to
provide e£1ual time to other candida tes
who dema nded ii.
Paulsen·should be considered a national
candida te because he "has qu alified to be
on the ballot in New Hampshire and is
apparentl y actively campaigning ." the
FCC said.
ANNOUNCES the new uar
II
J
Take Your Pick
Effective immediately, every new Lincoln or Mercury pro-
duct sold a t Johnson and Son will receive the unique. new
and exciting ''Golden Touch'' treatment created specifita Uy
to offer you a new car as positively trouble-free as humanly
possible. Startin g from the moment a new car enter s our
"get ready" department right through ~very step In tuning,
polishing. adjusting, inspection and our exclusive 20 MJLE
ROAD TEST, the "Golden Tou ch" program is in effect.
When you se'e the 11Cal bearing the Golden Touch emble m
on the windshield , you'll know that this new car has met all
the rigid requirem~n ts we de mand for delivery. Come in
today and see for yo urself how thi! "Golden Touch" pro.
gram will provide the "trouble free'' driving pleasure you've
always wanted. Baby's Sex Cari Be Cliosen-Doctor
.· WARSAW (UPI) Dr. f'rancisuk
Benendo says he has discove~ a simple
and perfectly Sile method by which
parent.s can choose the sex of their
•• childreh before they ere born .
"I have on file the names of 351 mar-
ried couples wllh whom my method ha!
worked," the radiologist said today in 1
telephone lnttrvtew from Plonsk. 45 miles
no rth of W11ruw,•whert he worb in 1
medical center.
Or . Benendo, 65, oulllntd a method for-
parenu who wtinl to choose either a boy
flr a girl. It does not require even the
as.,.1stance of a doctor.
"I have devoted Marly all o( my life to
the Investigation of thb phenomenon," he
said . ''1 ca me to the conclusion that &a
It. deeided by tht moment al which seiui::al
Intercourse takes place in rtl.aUon to
ovula tion in the orga!m of a woman."
The doctor u id h< qll<stioned 40.000
women during a period of 30 years
testing hi.! hypothesis.
"Observation shows tha t IE intt rcourse
took place Ufte to fi ve days before
ovulation, then as percent or the newly
born are girls.
"If intercourse was on the day of
ovulation, or up to two da ys afterwards,
then in 87 percent of the cases boys were
born."
ll is clear from his ob.!ervation!!I that
the method is not foolJ)roof. Or. Benendo
.. kt
"One cannot exclude tht possibility
that despite lh\5 calendar-watchi• • girl
ino:tead of a boy can come Into the world.
"But lht chanci! of rea.Litlng the
'parenb' wishts is high and there is no
risk ." he addtd
Offici.31s or the ministry of htaltb
declined to comment on Dr, BtnendC>'1
conclusions .
"Orangt Cou11tu18 ramilu of ''"t Cttr1'" ••
I I ~ . I ( J I .. '
< ()IJ (J/,H •
2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 540-5830
4 DAJL Y PILOT
\
\ •• I ~ps
Water, Water
Not From Air
By 11f0:\1AS l\nJRPHINE
01 th• 0.11,. Pllol Sl•ff
JIOW ORY l\'E ARE: The other night
gb(lrtly before midnight t was out in the
front yard spray painting •om e
•ut,mobile parts and they got rained on.
This Is not a yam about why J paint
auto parts at midnight in my front yard.
Everybody knows why I do that It is in
order to avoid those stares from the folks
next door. They point and giggle and
whisper to each other. "There's the
neighborhood nut -at it again."
Besides avoiding glares cf l h e
neighborhood at midnight, I miss getting
gnats stuck in the fresh paint.
Anyway, I did the midnight paint job on
this car piece and went inside the house
for a minute. When I returned to inspect
the job, little beads of water had col·
Jected on the new paint. It was raining.
Drat. Just my luck. Avoid the neighbors
and gnat. and nm dlrtctly Into precipita·
tlon from the skies.
SO THAT'S WHAT this·ls nally all
1bout. Tbe fact that rigfll there toward
the end of January, It seemed to have
ralned at my place.
This is particularly n e w a w o r l h y
because today is February the Jst and all
the rain reports for January are now in
and official.
And those -reports will tell you that \ve
had precisely zero measurable r ain in
Orange County during J anuary.
That stuff that fell on my painted car
pieces couldn't have been rain. tt was
dew from the eucalyptus tree. Fallout
from ocean surf. Elixir of the gods.
Whatever, lt wasn't rain.
M a matter or fact, January or 1972
now goes into the record books as the
driest month in Orange County history.
'lbat goes back to 1877 when they started
keeping track of OOw much wet stuff fell
out near EJ Toro on the Moulton Ranch.
' PRIOR TO LAST montb, January <i f
1943 held the record for being dry when
only .01 of an inch of rain was recorded
for the 31 days.
Our current parched condition is con4
firmed by moguls of the l-.funicipal Water
District of Orange County. They supply a
Jot of water us~ for agricultural ir·
r:i gation where, in between housing
tracts, some Orange C.Ountians still grow
thin .. s.
THESE NEARLY extinct-type folks,
known as growers or citrus ranchers, us-.
ed. more than double the amount of im-
ported water in 1971 than they did in 1970.
Wisely. the Fann Bureau people in·
terpret this to mean there wasn'l very
much free water falling from the sky.
\Ve may not }lave many ranchers or
citrus growers left, but rest assured
those who are still around are craJty \vith
a dollar. They do OQt bt,1y water when
they can gel it free froni the good Lord.
Anyway. He who gaveth in 1970 tooketh
away In 1971 and 11l so in January of 1972.
And things don't look much better in the
wetness department for l<'ebruary.
I can see only a couple of possible solu-
tions to this whole rain problem.
I must go out into the front yard one o(
these first midnights and paint a whole
bunch of auto parts.
I'll get my car washed for good
measure.
U.S. Orders
Sc1·eenings
By Airlines
WASHINGTON (AP) -The federal
government has ordered the nation's
scheduled airlines to screen a JI
passengers and baggage In an erfort lo
stop hijackings and sabotage.
~1ajor airline.s have used lhe security
measures, at least on a part.tin1c basis,
for the past two years.
The J.~ederal Aviation Adn1inistr3tion,
In making screening rules public Monday,
also disclosed it sec·ks to hillt illegal
publication of police and airplane radio
conversations during flight emergencies.
The FAA ordered the new rules into cf.
feet inunediately, waiving the usual 30·
day preliminary notice on grounds that
the wave or hijackings has created a
threat to public safety of an en1ergcncy
nature.
'The reguJalions mu.st be met no later
than three days after they are published
in the Federal fi('gister, probably today
or Wedne~day. 1'he new equipment and
procedures, therefore, will have to be
operating at all U.S. airports served by
scheduled airlines no later than Saturday.
The FAA said it will accept four
screening systems, used alone or in com-
bination: the thoroughly tested and
proven hijacker .. behavioral profile,
magnetometers or similar metal·detec·
ting devices, identification systems, and
search of passengers and baggage.
The order will not apply to foreign
airlines, air-taxi operators of sma U
planes, or $Upp1ernental air I i n e s
specializing In charter service.
The FAA said Administrator John H.
Shaffer asked the F e d er a I Com·
munications Commission Monday to in·
vestigate suspected illegal news-media
Interception of police radio conversations
during hijack emergencies.
Shaffer told FCC Chairman Dean
Burch there are reasons to believe some
individuals had violated that "Section of
the Federal Communications Act forbid-
ding unauthorized persons from in-
tercepting ad divulging the contents of
radio transmissions.
I .
t
•· ,-,.
Ul'I Ttl~lt
Retiri11g
Sgt. ~1ajor William 0 . Wool·
dridge, once the Army's high-
est ranked enlisted man, will
be aJ1owed to retire without
being court·n1artia1ed in a
widespread scandal over op·
eration of enlisted men's clubs,
the Pentagon has announced.
11e 'vill receive full pension
and benefits even if convicted. -------
Co11gh-and-cold
Remedy Makers
Must Give Proof
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Federal
Trade Commission has asked for
documentation of advertising claims
made by the nation's major cough-and·
cold remedy makers.
Sixteen manufacturers were ordered to
show their claims were proven. Tiley
have 50 days in which to comply.
The action is the latest in a recent
series of FTC demands that advertisers
authenticate the claims they make for
their products.
Car makers, air-conditioner manufac-
turers and makers of toothpaste and den-
ture cleaner have been among the
previous manufacturers ordered to show
their claims we·re true.
HHHUrges.Wa1~onDrugs;
Muskie Asl{s Elderly Aid
By As,.,oclafed Pre11
Sen. Hubert H. Humphrey says the
United States should put its Central
Intelligence Agency to work hunting down
heroin smugglers.
"It is time we made known to our
rriends around the world," the.
Democratic presidential candidate said,
"that \ve v.·ill not permit the cultivation
end export of a po ison that destroys the
lives of hundreds of thousands of
An1ericans and v.•hich is responsi ble for a
substantial portion of An1 er1can crin1c."
The Minnesota senator discussed the
clrug problem rvtonday in a speech I CAMPAIGN'721
prepared for delivery at a drug·treatment
center in Miami \\•here he .... ·as cnm·
paignlng in the Florida presidential
primary.
Three other Dernocratic presidential
hopefuls unveiled proJX>sals for new
don1estic :ild progran1s J\1onday.
Sen. Edn1und S. illuskie of 1'1aine,
speaking in St. Petersburg, Flo., v.hich
has a high proportion o{ retired citizens,
said thr government should e.~t;ihli.~h a $1
billion p:·ogram gi\'ing direct federal aid
t-0 the ('!r\erly.
''\Ve must bring relief and reform to
our property tax system," Muskie said.
But he criticized P resident Nixon's pro-
'JX>Sed value-added tax as a national sale!:
tax "that will make you pay more money
every day so that you can pay a little less
money at the end of the year."
Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota
told a news conference in Boston the
federal government should underwrite a
third of the CX1st of public school educa·
t1on through direct grants to states on the
basis of their needs and ability to raise
r evenue for education.
Sen. Henry M. Jackson of Washington
said in Atlanta, Ga., the federal govern·
nient should provide fu nds to stale
judicial systems lo permit them to hire
more judges, prosecutors and public
defenders as a means of speeding up the
judicial process. The grants, he said,
would be contingent on adoption of state
lr-gis!;1tion requiring that people charged
w1!h felonies be tried within 60 days.
J\t:iyor John V. Lindsay of New York,
campaigning in the Wisc on s in
Democratic presidential primary, told
about J.400 students at the University of
\Visconsln at Whitewater that youths ,~ .. ho
left the countrv to avoid the draft should
be given conditional amnesty.
Returnees should not be prosecuted -
as they \vould be under present Jaw -
Lindsay said, but they should be requ ired
to serve for a specified time "Jn our
neighborhoods and our hospitals and in
our drug centers and teaching in ou r
schools and street academies witll pay."
Some Fair Skies Return
S1iow, Sleet, Cold Linger in West, Nortliern V.S.
" " " " .. !\ it
"' ..
ii " "
T ..
·"
HA110 NAl WfATHfl $f lVICl •OIECAS1t•1AM I $1 2 -2 -,.,
~~ WlAltllt,OlOGA.fl.
Coutal
M0$11Y •Vllfl'I' todfl'f, llfhf Y•ri.f>I•
Wl"lll 11ltht ...,... rl!Of"l'll'IO hol/rl bt<'Om-
lllO Wl\ler!y .S lo IS lo.tw)!• Ill tfttr-l'OOM
fDdfly •P1d Wtal'lltOfly. Hloh !OcWY,
f,lppef JOI, •lld '°'·
CO!l5'81 '""""'''V'" rtll9e lrom lt to <IO. Fn!tlld 1-.tvr" '-t'ff rrorn
4(1 IO '6, W•'"' ~Hlrto •J.l.
Sana, Moon, Tides
TUllOAY
Se<orwt l'l!•h • ,, ,, Jl:OO tt.m. •.S
$t<O!>CI low •. •:.N "·"'· .O..t WIONllDAY
Pl•JI Melt , , IO:H t .m. 5.0
F ll"ll !OW ,, •:U t.m. l.S
SKOl!d 111011 •• ll ::rt•·'"· •,1
lecond '°""' . 4:5f "·""· 0.2 $u'°' •b .. 4•J1 t .11'1. Stl9 .t·'? P,m,
MOOft I J ... t:U P.m. ltl• 7:19 1.m.
,,
"
Lawyer Group Blasted
No_-fault Tactics Attacked by Nixon Aide
WASHINGTON (UPI) -White House
aide Virginia ff. Knauer accused the
American Trial Lawyers Association
(ATLA) today of "devious, misleading
and blatantly self-serving" tactics tn op-
posing ~fault auto insurance.
Mrs. Knauer, President Nixon's con·
sumtr affair3 adviser, urged the
American Bar Association (ABA) to in·
vestigate whether the trial lawyers were
violating the lawyers' cOde of ethics and,
if so, to crack down on them.
No-fault is an insurance system under
which each insu rance firm pays for in·
juries to its own client, no matter \vho
caused the accident.
It is designed to eliminate costly court
lights over whose fault the accident was.
Proponents of the plan contend that
lawyers currently pocket 75 cents or
more of every auto insurance dollar, and
that premium would be much lower
under no-fault.
A Transportation Department study
roocJuded last year that one-fifth of all
the money earned by lawyers comes
from auto accident cases. The ATLA
strongly has opposed no-fault. which has
been adopted by a few states and is
under consideration by Congress and
many state legislatures.
l\1rs. Knauer's strongly y:orded c001-
plaint came in a letter to ABA President
Leon Jaworski of Chicago. She cited a
speech by ATLA President Marvin E.
Lewis, newspaper ads against no-fault.
ATLA pamphlets and an attempt to
"misrepresent the issue or no-fault'' to
newsmen.
"The methods being employed by the
leadership of the ATLA in its efforts to
defeat federal and state no-fault legisla·
tlon -. • appear to be so devious,
only
$469 95
•
misleading, and blatanUy self-serving as
to cast a long shadow over the integrity
or the entire legal JX"Qfession," Mrs.
Knauer wrote.
''I would like to know whether 1ucb
tactics violate the lawyers• code of p~
fessional ethics," Mrs. Knauer asked
Jaworski "If they do, I wonder if you
coold inlorm me what action the ASA or
its membr state bar associations are
planning to bring these tactics to a halt."
II) San Francisco, Lewis said that hi s
organization ha1 not misrepresented the
case in its advertising. He added ''J'IJ
never cringe, and will continue speak 011
anything of public interest and concern."
'Major Breakthrough'
Black Denver Schools
Integrate With Busing
DENVER, Colo. (AP) -Denver has
integrated two of its seven predominantly
black public grade schools. the fir!t ma-
jor breakthrough in creating racial bal-
ance in the classrooms here in n.ore than
a year.
Until buses shuffled pupils Monday,
only three of the seven schools had less
than 90 percent Negro enrollments, and
three had increased the percentage of
black students during the previous 16·
month period.
The city's struggle with desegregation
has bounced through· the courts for three
years. There had been little, if any. im-
pact on the minority distribution of
pupils.
Now the problem has reached the U.S.
Supreme Court.
The high court has agreed to hear the
Denver case, and a ruling is e.xpected
•
before J uly.
Monday's integration of llallett and
Stedman elementary schools was com·
pleted quietly, although a group of
parents opposing the plan struggled for
months to prevent it.
The transfers. ac('omplished through
mandatory busing, were ordered by the
10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
A total of 380 black pupils were moved
from Stedman, which has a total enroll·
mentor about 590, to three predominanll.Y
white schools. Stedman's enrollment had
been 94.7 percnt Negro, but with the ad·
dition of 350 white pupils the enrollment
climbed above the court-mandated 55.5
percent white to about 62 percent white.
The transfer of 180 black pupils from
Hallett to four other schools, and the ad·
diUon of 180 whites dropped Hellett't
black enrollment from 64.8 percent Negro
to less than 44.5 percent.
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RADIO DI SPATCHED FACTORY AUTHORIZED TV & APPLIANCI SERVICE PlfONI 5'18-3437
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Oran.ge. Coasi Today's Flnal
N.Y. Stoek.s
VOL. h5, NO. 27 , 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY I, 1972 N TEN CENTS
'Emotional' Issues ~lay Get Council Airing
By L. PETER KRIEG
OI IM O•llY f'llo! Stall
A special airing o! the emot ional is sues
of Newport Beach development -high
rise. density. tou rism and ann exations -
may be scheduled by city councilmen
prior to adoption of a guidebook ror the
city's new master pJan.
~1ayor Ed llirth ind icated the first
public hearing on the "policy plan" may
be used to disc uss the se, and perhaps
other. cont roversial topics.
And the mayor told about 25 person s
attending a council·planning commission
study session ~londay night that he may
app:iint a councilmanic comm ittee to
thrash out a recommendation on at least
the key high rise question.
That declaration came after criticism
or the planning comm ission 's treatment or high rise ln the policy pla n thal it has
adopted and fo rwarded to councilmen for
approval.
Besides criticizing the high rise ele·
ment, Councilman Carl Kym la said.
"\Ve've been talking about high rise in
Food for the G1ills
Ne~'}>Ort Beach for a Tong time. We've
had CQmml\tee after committee. We have
a responsibility to property owners, as
well as the people to make a decision.
"I wou ld li ke to see us Lake a definite
position on high rise and densities.
"The statement in thi s policy, I'm sor·
ry. I just can 't accept tha t." he said.
'f he recomrnended policy statement
reads . in part :
"The question of whether high rise or
large scale buildings shaU be permitted
in Newpo rt Beach shall be determined
DAILY ~ILOT pl\olll by LM l'•YIM
Mrs. Betty Jensen owns a pastry shop on the Bal·
boa Peninsu la. Every day during the \vin ter she
takes her day-old baked goods to the beach and
distributes them among the ever-hungry seagull s.
She has built up quite a fo ll ov.1ing. Besides. it gives
her a chance to get ou t in the fresh air. She ~oesn't
feed the gulls during the summer because the
tourists do it then.''
School District
Boundary lsstie
Plagues Cotmcil
Fears that the Newporl·Mesa sc hool
di strict may be allowed to dictate the
ultimate boundarie s of Newport Beach
may lead to a major change in proposed
directives for preparation of the city 's
new n1aster plan of development.
A policy state ment that no territory
would be annexed unless it is within the
school district boundaries drew fir t from
Councilma n Milan Dosta l !\.1onday night
as the co uncil reviewed the "policy plan"
for the master plan.
"We need ·coterminous boundaries,''
Dostal said, "but if we have a policy like
this, ~·e'll permit the school district to set
our boundaries and we'll be abrogating
our res ponsibUities put upon us by the
charter."
"I( we had thi s policy a few yea rs ago,
half of Newport Beach wouldn't be here,"
observed Councilman Richard Crou\.
Mayor Ed Birth suggested the city
ahould "strive to have any annexed area
made part of the Newport-Me sa Unified
School District, but we should not prevent
•M.exation or an area not part of the
district."
Councilmen agreed the biggest problem
created by such a poHcy would Involve
the potential inneltatlon of . the unin-
corporated coa!tal lands betwt!en Corona
del Mar and Laguna Beach.
I
Repair Case Evidence
Termed 'Overwhelming'
By TOM BARLEY
01 th• Diiiy Piiot 5!1f1'
An Orange County Superio r Court jury
was urged today to return guilty verdicts
against seven defendants li nked to an
alleged auto repair racket on the basis of
what the proseClJtor said w a s
"overwhelming evidence" of their com·
pliclty.
D~puty District Attorney Richard Stcn-
ton told the panel in his final argument
that nearly 30 prosecution witnesses had
offe red highly incrim inating testimon y
aga inst all seven defendants and had
ll nked them to alleged crimes carried out
in 11 service stations ranging from Seal
Beach to San Clemente.
And Stenton reminded the jury that the
long investigation sparked by many
cus tomer complaints had led the Orange
C-Ounty Grand Jury to indict all seven
defendants and identify those 11 stations
in its indictment.
"We gave si,x or our wjtnesses im-
munity from pr.osecution, •• Stenton 'said.
"That was because they, were equally in-
volVed in the racket bot not to lbe extent
that we wished-lo prosecute them !or
their infractions."
Stenton told the jury he was satisfied
he had prosecuted the seven most guilty
persons in the conspiracy and he pie.keel
out Stanley Davis; 34, of 1086 San Pablo
the profit s of the combine were
magnified by the grop's ope ration of a
Garden Gro!Fe \\'arehouse which main·
tained a now of parts needed by the 11
stations identified in the in dictment.
Defense attorneys Al Slokke, Frank
Moran and George Shibata wiU follow
Slen ton in closing arguments before
J 11dge James Turner give.!j his in·
structions to the jury.
It is ex.peeled that the jury will retire
to consider its verdict late today or early
\Vednesday.
Judge Turner denied defense motions
for dismissal of the fra ud charges late
r..1onday shortly after the testimony of the
final defense witness in tht! trial.
11e had earlier dismissed charges
agai nst two of the original nine defen·
dants on the grounds that the prosecution
had failed in its pha'se of the trial to
substa ntiate fraud charges against them.
On,.trial with Davis and Kendall are
Roger Mendenhall, 28, of 26095 Avenida
De. Seo, Mission Viejo, David Canchola,
22, of 6000 Garden Grove Blvd .,
Westminstf r and Edwar:d Camey, 27, of
20862 Sh~ll Harbou~ Drive, Christopher
Enriquez, 25, of 7695 .Vol ga Drive and
Jlenry Castonguay, 21. of 7661 Com·
modore Drive, all of Huntington Beach.
~
Twelve Across Clrele and Jerry K...tall; 35, Of 9tlO Son-
ora Road,' both of Costa Mesa, as the
3 Candidates
upon completing n{'('essary general plan
studies ."
"ln all fairness l{) the (planning/ com-
mission, they have taken firm positions
on everything except th is ," Kymla said.
He wanted the city's Commun ity
Development Department to throw out its
timetable for general plan studie s so the
high rise and density issues could be
dealt with earlier than J une or July.
··The moratorium (~foot he 1 g ht
freeze) expires In October," Kym!a said.
"If we wait (for st.a.ff reports) unUJ July,
God knows when ~·e 'II get a deeision ''
Counc1bnan Richard Croul prripose-d
that the council co nduct actual debate s
on each "emotional'' issue afte r a
mem ber of the audience, Joseph Rosener.
suggested one meeting to "discuss the
four ma jor is sues -with people on op-
posite sides."
Hirth suggested the committee as a
means of figur ing out how best to pro-
ceed.
Councilmen could give special at tention
to U1e "emotional" issues at Lhe lr fi rst
and t!Ven tht!ir serond sc hedul ed public
hearings. Fe b. 14 and 22 .
A third hea ring is sl11tf'd Fl·b 28. All
are at 7:30 p.nl. in t'i ty hal!
Al Kymla's suggestion . the council may
also direct the planning staff to "tn ke the
plan to the peo ple" by sppearing at
meetings of various communi ty org:iniza·
tions and homeowners' associations .
li e exprt!ssed disappointment at the
turnout ~1onda y night even though it y,·as
greater than that for both planning com·
mis!ilon public hearings.
Bay 'Shield' Urged
Solon to Put Estuary in Rivers Bill
f'rom Wire Services
SACRAMENTO -State Senator Peter
Behr ~R-Tiburon) today said he \vould
add Upper Newport Bay in Newport
Beach to his proposed "wild rivers" bill
whic h is aim ed at protecting scenic val-
ues and wildlife.
Tl will be the first time that a Southern
California \vaterwa y ha s been proposed
for his protection measu re.
Behr indicated he "'as adding the Back
B11y to his proposed legislation in honor·
ing a comn1Hment to the Orange County
Board of Supervisors.
The Tiburon Republican described Ney,·.
port's Upper Bay as an estuary "contain-
ing some of the most important wildlife
h11bitat along the entire Southern Ca li-
fornia coastli ne."
Upper Ne\\ port Bay has long been the
subject of the debate as to its eventual
development. A proposed ex.change of
tidelands and uplands between Orange
Co\jnty .COV"""1t111-and l~-lrvilo *'11"
pany died after tM plan fell out or favor
with \he current Board (lf Supervisors.
Tb& Jrvtne Company owns all of the up-
lendnamllndlng Back Bey "11~ the ex·
ceptlon· or patent lands at the fat nach
of the bay. Both public and private o\vn-
ership claim rights to the so-called patent
!antis.
Irvine Company spokesmen were un·
available at press time to comment on
Behr's measure.
His Inclusion of Upper Bay in the pro-
posal came as he announced that he will
also Include the North Fork of the Ameri-
can River in northern California and part
of the American Riv er itself in his pro-
posed control measure.
"The1e three great waterv.·ays should
be included in anv ";ild rivers leah1Ja.
tion," Behr said. ''They are symbolic of
all J!;rea! rivers or the state which sh91o1ld.
some da y be protec led under a California
"'ild and scenic rivers system."
Behr said a Rl!S<lurces A11;ency report
la st year described the waterways as
"possessini.t: extraordinary scenic and
wildli fe value.:: and in imminent danger of
development."
The Behr legislation. as int roduced, de·
c\ares the Kl amath. Trinity, Smith and
He Limped
Off .Thata.way
Costa Mesa police could be hunt.
ing an elderly burglar with a cut
foot, sore throat, calmed nerves
and freshly cleaned dentures toda y.
Somoone kicked ln lhe glass door
at K-Mac Drugs, 1804 Newport
Boulevard. lt was <tiscovt!red Mon-
day, stealin.it: $26.19 worth or
usorted items.
-Loot included a bottle of Geritol,
1 supply of Banda.Ids, false teeth
cleanser. non-prescription nerve
soothers and a box of throat discs.
Eel rivers in extreme Northern California
as "wild" and bars construction on the
rivers of dams and other structures Im·
peding !be fl ow. Similar leglslalion was
defea ted last year.
A wild rivers bill authored by Behr
that would have pennanently blocked
dams on the Eel, Klamath and Trinity
Life Outlined
Rivers y,•as defeated last year in the Stn·
ale, with the opposition led by Sen. Ran·
dolph C-Olller, who representa areu in·
eluded in the bill.
Collier. ID-Yrek&), ha s introduced his
own wild rivers bill this year, which in·
cluctes most of Behr's 1971 proposal ex-
cept for the Eel.
Howard Hughes Story
Told in 4-part Series
'J note: It 11!10111 !tl<l4flllu
fn Houston, Tr:tc11, wit,. a.
ne hd of oil wtU dr ill1n$J bit. Bvt
1iow the Hugh11 Tool Co. ii a man11
~•ii b"5incu. ~·· Airliner, gambling taJinos, mint.t -
you 11am~ it. And it tr rultd b11 a ma,1
who has not been seen in public iii
almost 20 iiears. Following U the ftrst
of fo ur articlei on the many face1 of
ffoward Hughes.
By JACK LEFLER
,._.,,., ,r .. N ... Wrltw
LOS ANGELES -ff11ghes Toot Co., the
cornerstone of a $2 billion business en-
terprise, Is as spectacuJarly visible as its
11ole owner, Howard Hughes. i'
tnysterlou sly Invisible.
Its success, foUJlded on a revolutionary
..
HUGHES 1"
A1set1 RI••
From $650,000
To $2 Billion
oil well drill ing bit, has made Its
reclusive owner one of the world's riches t
men.
The furor ovrr the authenticity of an
autobiography of Hughes, w h I c h
1-icGraw-Hill Publishing Co. originally
planned to publish in March, has focused
public attention on the corporate kingdom
over which Hughes rules from his secret
hideouts.
Hughes Tool ·(Toolco) and Its oil tool
division are based in Hou1ton, Tex. Its
other major propertltt include 1
helicopter manutacturin( d.l'Viaion In
California; tn alrllne, Hua:hes Alrwect, tn
Western State11; hotels, gambllng casinos,
mining 'claims and other pi'opertits ln
Nevada ; Hughes Television Network, and
huge real eata~ holdings tn Artr.oftl and
Calitorni1.
The vast operaUona have been ttm·
manded by hug~, 68, In imperious
manner, usually by telephone. Some ot
hlt top executlve1 bavt neTtr teen htm.
He ha sn't made a public appearance
since 1953. ·
Last Jan. 7, 1 man Identified by
Hughes' public relations spokesman as
tht! billionaire Industrialist held a
telephone news conference wlth seven
news reporters to deny the authenticity of
the McGraw-HUI manuscript. The
newsmen, who were assembled here, said
they were convinced the voice on the
telephone was that of Hughes.
Hughes holds no title with Toolco ei:·
cept that of owner. Operations are hand!·
ed by Executive Vice President Raymond
M. Holliday and St!nlor Vice Presidents
Frank \V. Gay and James R. Le5C"h.
'\\'hat was to become a fabulous en·
terprise was born In 1909 at Goose Creek,
Tei:. when Howard Hughes Sr. suc-
cessfull y tested the rotary rock drill bit
be Invented. The bit consisted ot 168
conical cutters of milled teeth whlcb
chiseled and crushed rock so It could be
brought up through the drill stem from
the bottom of the drilling hole. It solved
the problem of drilling through roc k.
It's estimated that 75 percent of the oil
wells tri non-Communist countries have
been drilled with Hughes bits.
Young Hughes' parents wJlled him 60
percent Interest in the tool company and,
newly orphaned, he took over Its opera·
lion in 1923 when he was 19. He later
bought the other fO percent interest from
relatives.
Value of the company at the time of the
father's death was variously tsllmated at f~O inlllion or ll)Ore bui Hughes said the
government appralHd It at f850,000.
WbUe Hughei ls reputed not to have
been s~n in Toolco's .Houston oUlcts
(See H\JOHl!S, P111 Z)
Or••Je
Weadler
I . . architects or the auto repair conspiracy.
He told the jury that their five C-Odefen-. .. Sn l',, 'Oops' dants and "many others who h11ve been C'•e . Ul . . : · named. io this trial" are "linked to the
pocket book8 or Davis and Kendall."
To the DAILY P.ILOT'S cross-His 30'witilesses, Stentbri said, have {?ro-
Quiet Council Race Seen Variable high clouds are expect·
eel 1long lhe Orange Coast Wed-
n•fdllJI, with I po .. lbl!lly o(
1prlnklM. Gusty winds are abo
expected bringing temperaturtt
down to the low el>'s. Tonight's low
wUI be around 42 cltgrtts.
Word puzile fan11 : " vlded "abundant evidence" that tues A
You }fin. · were de~lberately punctured. 1 hoc Wj Newport Beach may be ht!Aded for one
k ., experiment, we began absorbers and fuel pumps sprayed with of the quietest city council races In re-
DUhllshfug a mailer -and slmp. oil to give the imprtsalon that they leak· cent history. •
ler -~rd puzzle in Its rtg-td and "customer• oonntd in'? author~: With 1es.s than 48 hours before the
ular poiltion on the comic page ing repair jobt that Just W'lil"tn t needed. deadline for fillno which is noon Tburt-
several wetks ago. 1be responH, Stenton !U!:kl the ,.service station d n1y thr "'~dste ha filed f
we reckoned. mJgbt, not be ttt-seven',' we.re Involved ln a highly i:t~ree vac:tc:eata. ~~;~era ha~: '
mendous but we tllouiht It might tuc;rative racket that c:ost Orange County u ld they 'Will , file and orie other In·
be p0s1UY.e. motorlslll many thousands of dolh1rs. cumbent Seventh District Councliman
·It wasn't. Arter 1 deluae of com-And the proi;ecutor noted Ip· his final Lindsley Parsom. ls still undecided.
plaints, ~reats of cancellation, commeo~ In the aeven-weei: lrlal that Jonas "John'' Store betame the first
angry Urades and threats on the t It ru editor's lift, we returned to the person o actua y . e nominntion papers
D , R' S fo~Parsons' ireat MondAy. old cros!Word puztlf! fonnat. '\ou OClOr 8 Iles et alboa Island realtor •tarvey D. Pease
will find it today on page 15. ha filed for Mayor Ed Hirth's Fifth
And thanks for letting us know STANFORD (UPll -&ervlcea were DI rlct MM and Cou ncilman Donald
you care. pending for Dr. Eric Ogden, heart f\1clnnis ha' filed for re-elecUon Jn Wert
We do. too. research sprclalist and physiologist who Newport 's Seco nct 'Districl
died Sunday at Stanford' Medical Ctnter. Hirth and another man who would op-
••
pose bim. PauJ Ryckoff, have said they
will nin. So haJ former couoctlman Dee
Cook, who hu moved to Corona de! Mar
tO i, eligible In Par..,ns' Dl!trlct.
Par!IOlll lndlcated lhl1 momlna he may
1a after a lhl~ term becauae CQQ.k, a
Jong-time poUUc1l foe, is in the race.
"Boy, that carpetbagger," Parsons
said, "is he re.ally going lo run?"
Cook Jll()Ved last. fall after councilmen
gerrymandered hls old place of residence
into the SlJ:th District where there 11 no
race lhls year,
"Give me 24 houri /' Par80ns 1ak1,
''and I'll have a dt!tision. I would really
like to get tn there aod give Cook a run
for Ult thing.
1 1'Mrybe Store cnn do It," Parsons said,
"but lt'1really1 ,parse seitcUon."
In flllnt: hl• nomination pepers Monday,
Sto;e released • Hst or support.en to be
headed by • four-man uecuuve com-
mittee.
Thal <ommltlff consllto· of A. VI~
Jorgelllen, Jobn KIUefer, M1111111J oUf.
field Ind Robert CUrd, 11! 1ctlve· In Ille
Freew1y Flghttts of the Harbor Aru.
Others on the list •re ·p11nntns eom..
mln loner WUllam Agee, Donald Botton,
BrlRnl Chrtste11>1n. Robert Ctlffonl.
William Dootsen, Ted Finster, former
mayor P,aul Gniber, Walter Koch , John
Par1ter and Isabel Pease.
Also, Cllerles Peyton, John Porttr,
Norman Rahe , Robert Rothwell , Smanne
Rudd . Margo! Skilling .. Jr1 Smith. Mrs. T.
Du ncan ~·Jerry" Stew11rt Rnd Roy B.
Woolsey .
INSWE TODAY
Arlent Lum, 4 Honolulu rt-
porttr, i.s pcrhap1 the fjnt
Chinue·A merican journoli.st io
rnter mainltln.d China 1inc1
1948. Iler imprt1,aions apptar
o·n Pagt 8.
L.M,lff•?
C1Qlllr11le f
Cl111lll9f t).U
c.,,,1c1 11
C,.11WWf U
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f f1111fltl ,... '
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'
-" ,,,~Nal "'""' • N•I'-"" H"" N Ort"" C..,nty l• SWl~ll Pertw • Wern lt-lt
t ltdl Melilttt •n
Ttl"'tl• If
"'"''-lt w •• ,,,.,. •
....... , ....... 1).14 ............
• DAil Y. PILOT H
Red s Se11d
POWs' Mail
To U.S .
NEW YORK (UP!l -Sorn"-451 Jelter~
from Ameritan pri~onrr~ "r v:ar have
been bl'(lught out or l\orth Vietn11 m and
are be ing de livered tu the srrv1<.:l'men :s
families.
The mail was the first i.1ncr Uf'r 21,
when more than 1,000 lf'ttcrs wf're n.:ct'l'•·
ed.
The lrttrrs we re bn1ught nut rif ;-..·or1h
Vietnan1 by Banning (iHrrel l. a rrpur11 •r
for the Pacific News Ser\'!Ce 1n San Fran·
cisco, according to lhe Committee nf
Lia ison With Famllirs of Ser\llcemen De·
tained iJ1 North Vietna m.
Since the com1nittee "'as formed ln
1969. a total of 5,276 letters from PO\Vs in
North Vietnam and 18 from men held by
the Viet C.Ong ln South Vie tnam have
been forwarded to families.
Whtie ' in Hanoi. Garrett reportedly
spoke wl1h com1nander David W. Hoff.
man, a Calrforn1an whn \.\•as cap\l1red
during the Deceml>er bombing in North
Vietnam.
East Bay Area
Bigger Quake
Peril Than SF
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A Univcrsi·
-ty of California professor of structuraJ
des.ign says a major t'arthquake could
. cause more damage, including "subslan·
tial " loss of life, in the East Bay than in
San Francisco.
Karl Steinburgge, who also directs the
earthquake program of the Pacifi c Fire
Rating Bureau, said !'.fonday there are
. two reasons for the greater ha zard.
He cited (I ) the number of earthen
:·dams which could give wa y and cause
.severe flooding and (2) the larger
.... number of utilities such as railroad lines,
gas. oil and water lines and freewa ys
..which 'cross the East Bay's Hayward
Fault com pared to San Francisco·s San
Andreas Faull.
Sleinburgge said a big East Bay quake
could be "a counterpart" of the San
Fernando VaJJey earthquake last year
which killed 65 and destroyed or damaged
-thousands of buildings.
· He added the dangers of fi re probably
would be greater in the East Bay,
particularly if an ea rthquake hit after a
hot dry spell .
He also said there are some new high·
rise buildings in downtown San Francisco
"'that scare the hell out of me.''
Oiff Haven Unit
Elects Officers
The election or a board of directs:irs for
1972 will highlight the annual meeting of
the Cliff Haven Comn1unity Assoclation
tonight at 7:3-0 p.m. in the Ensigl'I Eie·
mentary School multi -purpose room.
Nominated lo lhe 1972 hoard are
Winifred L. Baoon, Sydney E. L<icke.
Carl A. Met!en, Donna A. Gallant. Ronald
L. James. Frank F. Marscellas and
Wllllam L. Frerichs.
City counciln1an Carl Kyml a will at·
tend,
Hcpor!s v.·i!l be made on an f,asl
~ev.·port H eight~ s\orm--Orain projec!,
street lighting and sidewal ks. street
resurfaci ng. a proposed lunch hour open
campus at Ne \vport Ha rbor High Schoo!
and the city's general plan.
OIU.N•I COAST
DAILY PILOT
ORANGE COAST 1'\llLLSHIHG CCIMPQT
~cili•Tf N. W.M ,.,...,_,,t alld Plltlllllw
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Tlio"''' A. Mtrp\t.t ~£cllW
L ''''' l(,;,g ft""""1 --~ <.11y EdltDr
N_,..-..., Offk.
lJll Ntwpoti loult~•ti
M1i!i n9 AdGr .. "= P.O.'" 1175, '2661
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Traditioii Falls
The liquor lieense nf Mory's, the stnried men·only haunt for genera·
tions of Yale studen ts. \Va s revoked Mon day for discr iminating against
\VOm en. J\1ory's Assoriation. Int , \Vh1('h ha s upheld the men·o nl y t radi·
tion for 110 )'ears. ha s JO days u1 \\'hi ch to appeal before the Nev,,
Haven re vocation beco mes effective.
Your T elevisio1i Set
May Be Watching You
By MARGARET GENTRY
WASHI NGTON (AP) -Spies armed
with sophisticated listening devices could
in Lhe not·loo-<lis!ant future tap your
television set if it 's hooked to a two-\vay
cable.
Without your knowledge, they coul d
listen to and re cord the programs you
watc:h. your transactions with depa rt·
ment stores and banks, even your living
room conve rsations .
The new diinrnsion in cler.:I ronic
ea vesdropping would becorne JX)ssib le
with installation of t1~·cr"·ay c:able
television, a development being tested in
son1e <"Ommun ities and lik ely lo ton1e in·
to limited use \\•ill1in fi ve ,vl'ars.
Devices to prevent such spying are
technically possible. and specialists in·
lervie wed said the technology for con·
verting television srts into pervasive
spies has outstripped development of
legal safeguarill!:.
Bob Stengel. a staff ass istan t with the
National Cable Television Association,
Glider Sailers
In 'Geographic'
Last ~fay 2J a group of yo ung ad·
venturers gathered to jump off the side
of a hill above Newport Beach.
They were hang-glider enthusiasts and
the current Fehru<1ry issue of Nali11nal
Geographic Magazine reeounts the ex·
plnits of thCSI' daring young men .'.Ind
women who wenl air saihng al 30 feet
with only the fra gile "'ings or their
strange hom emade con traptions and their
skill In prevenl them from plunging to
1he earth.
The event. celebrating the birthday '1f
Otto Lilienthal. a {;crman glider pioneer.
\Vas al so earned as a phot o essay in the
!'.1ay 24 issue of the l1AILY PILOT.
rv1ore than 1.000 ~pectators showed ur
for lhe event last year.
<1greed with the tapping possibility and
predicted limited use of tw o·way systems
within five years and more widespread
use after !he tosl of home terminals is
reduced.
Stengel said lL is tech nically possible to
sh ut out po tential eavesdroppers with
such dc l'ires as scramblers or S\vilches
att(l ched to a television set blocking all
radia tion from it.
Expanslon to a !wo-way system would
rcqulre equipping the J101ne TV set with a
transmission lern1inal and addition of
lelevision receivers in places using two-
\1•ay TV con1n1unitaUons.
For example. cable-TV system would
require equ ipping Lhe home TV set with a
trans1nission ter1ninal and addition of
television re ceivers in plates using tw<r
"'ay 'fV communications.
f'or example, cable-TV specialists say
department-store and banking transac-
tions could be conducted by telev ision,
pollsters could quest ion citizens via the
tube, and water and electric meters could
be read that wa y.
Both public and private cable--TV agen·
ties vi rtually ha ve ignored the possibility
of snooping explaining that other develop-
ments demand more immediate at·
tent Ion.
Sol Schildhause. chief of the Federal
(;omn1unications Commission's cable·TV
bureau , said lhe tapping possibility "is
one of the things we 'll loo k into" after ap-
pointment of committees on techno!ogy
and on sta le and local regulation of cable
systen1 s.
He said tapping is not discussed in the
FCC's general cable regulations to be an·
nounced soon.
"\Ve can't deal "'ith everything in one
day," said J·!cnry Geller. special assistant
to FCC Chairman Dean Burch.
Cellcr said two-1vay systen1s remain in
a rudln1enlary s1age . Although he agreed
they could be tapped. he said .. nobody
11·ould drea1n of doing it."
Th e American Civil Liberties t:nion
isn't so sure.
'C li1nate of S11spicio11' Put
On Nixo11 by Newsma11
WASHINGTON IU PJ \ -<;ss COT·
respondent Daniel Schorr sald today that
a White House-ordered FBI lnvesligation
of him last summer reflected "the
climate of suspicion . hostilfty and
nervousne ss·• that he said lhe Nixon ad· •.
1ni11istration helped generate about news
n1edia.
Schorr. in his first public recital of the
incident, said that the pressures and pro-
bll"ms created by the FBI probe "persist
unti l toda y," both for hin1 and his
network.
Schorr testified btfore lhc Senate
Constitutiona l Rights SubcomrnJt lce .
The White House said toda v that Schorr
\Vas being considered for a ·job as ass is·
tant to the thairman or the Council on
Environmental Quality when he was sub-
ject to the FBI investigalion .
Press Secretary .Ronald I •. Ziegler said
Schorr was no lon~er in the running for
the post, but the administration still pl an·
ned to fill the job.
Ziegler added that the job-intended for
Sc.borr would have been centered on
educating the public on the need ror con·
servation.
Schorr told lht: Senate hearing: "It ls
our employtrs who feel the real pressure
-·especially in the regulated broadcast
industry, where networks can be su b-
Jccted to pressure in many direct Wflys,
and ln indirect ways through the 11f·
fil iate.'i which gi ve the network tJC·
isteoce. •·
The Whitt House acknowledged order·
ing the Inquiry , but i;aid It w11s merely 1t
"background check" becau!le Schorr was
~Ing co,,idered for A top government Job
in the en vironment.a.I field.
Schorr aald he was never sounded out
abou t such a job at any ti me.
"The pr im ary issue in the FB I in-
vestigation is not whether or not a possi·
hie job offer lay behind if." Schorr said.
".lob or no job. the launching of such an
i n v e s t i g a t 1 on without consent
den1 onslrate$ an in sensitivity to personal
rights. An FBI inve;,tiga tion is not a
neu tral matt er. It has an impact Ol'l one 's
life. on relations with employers. neigh·
bors and friends .. .''
"Any one t oncerned about the freedom
of the press must be concerned abou t the
climate of suspicion. hostility and ner·
\'Ollsness that the administration has
he lped to rreate." he said.
Hirtli 'Adjourns'
In Mid-sessio1t
Newgo rl Beach council men and plan·
ning"'\'6mmissioners were just geared up
for a long night's work Monday night
'4'hen ~1ayor" Ed Hirth abruptly declared
it w11 s time to adjourn .
The group had just finished a lengthy
rcvlPw of proposed guideUnts for a new
master plan but still had the weJghty
topics of noise pollution and service sta•
lion controls ahead of Ulem.
"But ~fr. Mayor. we've got tw o more
m1ttters here." pleaded CQmmunlty
Development Director Richard V. Hogan.
Hirth looked bewildered for a moment,
but seeing his colleagues rising to leave
with him , siald. "[didn 't get an agend11.'1
He picked up his papers and everybody
loft
-
lrvings on S pot i11 'Both U.S. and Switzerland
NEW YORK (UPl) -The inquiry into
po!Sible fraud· i n v o 1 v Ing lhe
"autobiography" of Ho\rard HtJf,;hes
spaRned the AUan tJc today \\'1!h arrest
w;:irrants for author {.'l1 fford lrvu1g issued
in Switzerland and the promise of an of·
ficial investigation n1ade in lhe L'n1Led
States
In Zurich the situation w<1 s m11re
ser ious for Irving, an Arncrican cillzen,
and his Swiss-born wiff', f'.:dith, 36.
Offi cials thf're issued a rrest warrants
for the couplt> on "urgcnr suspicion or
fraud, [a!sification uf uffu.:1al flOCuments,
and inve:o t1ga1ion nf these crur.es."
In th is cuuntry v.·hcre the eouple ar·
rived Thursday, U S. Attorney Whitney
North Si"yn1our and New )'ork County
District Attorney Frank S. Hogan con·
ferred on possible federal charges of wire
and n1ail frilud and slate charges o!
fraud and purjury .against Tr viog .
Zurich Dis tric t Attorney Peter Velcff
said today tha l allhough they have issued
the arrest wa rrants they ner.d the
l'Ooprratio n of U.S. police to solve the
"autobiography myst ery."
"'Since part of the suspecter! crime \\'as
carried out in Zurich, but the eff ects -
1he actual dan1ages -occurred in the
United St ates to McG ra1\ .. H1 ll, l'.'e lx-l1l've
I ha~ both Zurich and Arnerican officials
are responsible for this investigation,"
said Veleff.
His announcement followed police Jn.
l'esligations which tumed up $442,000 in
cash and securities in a branch of the
Swiss Bank Corporation.
The bank, one of Switzerland's largest,
is located across the street from the
Swiss Credit Bank. where ]rving's wife
cashed $650,000 in checks issued to
Hughes.
By Irving's admission, his wife used
the name ''Helga R. Hughes" on a
fals.ified Swiss passpo rt as identification
for cashing the checks. from the
publishing firm McGra w-Hill to Hughes
for the rights to his "autobiography."
Irving said she did so on jnst ructio ns
from th e billionaire recluse, with whom
he also said he collaborated in writing the
book. However, Hughes has issued
denials of Irving's statements.
Veleff said police investigation here
J\ionday showed that a woman, "who was
probably 1t!entlcal with the suspert Edi th
Jrv1ng. opened an account 1v1th the Swiss
Cank l;orporation on tvta y 27. 197!."
'l'h1s date is close 10 the lime when the
l1r:.t J\'c<:ra"'·Hilt <-"heck \\•as cashed al
tJie Swiss Credi l Bank .
Veleff said he has nol de('idcd whethe r
tfl ;1sk f{J r e~tradnion of the Jr vin gs to
Sw1ll(•rland.
1'he writer, wh<I i'JX'n t the weekend in
i;eclus1on in Connec11cu1. was to have ap·
peared before a grand jury Monda y for
-t< i ',{ -.':{
f 'rOJJl
questioning but won postponen1ent of the
interroga tion so that he and his new
!<t\.\'j'er, f.1:'1unce "Nessen, \1•nutr! hJJve
more tirne 10 go over the details of the
case. No new date was set.
Later, Irving and Nessen n1et wit li
Sey1nour's staff in the off ice of the U.S.
al!orne~'.
'['hey had '·no curnrncn\" "·hen they lefl
but Seymnur 1:1nd Mogan 1~sucd their
s Late men l prom ising •·a jolnt in•
vestigation into lhis niatter. lnnk1ng into
possible state and federal violations.''
'i~{
l'age 1
HUGHES' CA REER ...
stnce !921i. the tompany flourished undrr
his direction and the operations of his
hand ·pir ked t'xecutives.
The oil tool bu siness grew until it n'l w
einpluys about 4,000 at Housto n and has
olhrr rnanufa ct uring plants in England,
Ireland, Canada, West Germany. Ital y,
Argentina and Brazil. 'fhe tool tllvisJon 's
annual revenues have been estin1ated at
$75 nlil!ion. Because it is privately own-
ed. Tool co issues no reports on sales and
earnings.
Hughes, who long had been interested
in airplanes, left Texas for California in
the 1920s and became a .legendary figure
In aviation. He set many world speed
records and desig ned airCraft.
He also became enchanted with motion
pic tures, and actresses as well. He pr<r
du ced a number of movies , among them
"Hell 's Angel s" and '"The Outlaw ,'' and
for a while owned RKO studios.
Noah Dietri ch, Hughes' chief executive
fron1 1925 until they split in 1953. lakes
issue with those who give Hughes the
lion 's share of credit for building Toolco .
"He can't explain the growth of his em-
pire,'' Dietrich said in an interview
recently. "He left that part of the
business to me.
"In those days, his main interests were
romance. airplanes and motion pictu res.
None of those produced any profits."
The fir st big diversification move under
the banne r of Toolco was the founding of
1-fughes Aircraft OJ. in Culver City in
1931 .
\Vith the burgeoning or commercial
Rviat1on and the approach of \.\'orld \Var
II, Hughes Aircraft qui ckly becanie It
giant In !ts field . IL ""as one of thi s r:oun·
try·s major wartime suppliers of aerial
weaponry,
In 1954 , Hu.1?;hes turned over lh e
aircraft company to the Hu,1?;hes Merl icfll
Tnstitute, which he formed t Bs phll.8.n·
thropical organization, to ca rry on
medical research. All of its profit s go to
the lnstitule, of ~'hich Hughes is the sol e
trustee. and it no longer is under the cor·
porate umbrella of Toolco.
Hughes Aircraft, whi ch ha s been
estimated to be worth $500 million witl'I
annual sales about equa! that amount,
nlanufactures communications satellites.
guided missiles , aircraft armament
systems and Other electronics gear.
The most spectacular deals in which
Hughes involved Toolco were majority
ownership of Trans·World Airlines, Bnd
resulting legal hassles; and ownership of
Nevada Hotels, casinos and other pro-
perties, and resulting legal hassles.
Hughes started buying into TWA in 1939
a nd took control with 77 percent of the
stoc k in 1947.
Switzerland Gives Leary
After the commercial jet age dawned ,
Hughes, with his customary deliberation.
waited live years before ordering
jetliners and other equipment costing
$497 million. Partly because of the late
starts in jets, TWA lost huge amounts of
money, and financial institutions which
loaned money for the aircraft purchases
became concerned. Official W alki11g Papers
Toolco lost control of TWA in 1960 when
creditors forced Hughes to place his
stock in a nonvoting trust. TWA manage-
ment sued Hughes, alleging mismanage·
ment . Clairn s and co u n t e r c I a i m I
amounted to $481 roillion. A judgment of
$137 milllon was v.·on agains t Hughes. but
it is yet to be collected.
From Wire Serviets
SION, Switzerland -The modern.day
r.tan Without a Country. Dr. Timot hy
1.eary. has been formally told to hit the
road by S\\•iss authorities who 1von't give
li im politica l .asyl um but won't give him
to the U.S. either.
Police Chief Arthur Bender called a
i1ew s <-·onference here Monday night lo
announce that the 5 1 -ye a r -old in·
ternational fug itive must !eave the canton
-or Swiss stat e -of Vala is.
Generally. no such S1v1ss state \.\'ill ac·
cept a foreigner expelled from another
one.
The onetin1 e Harvard psychology pro·
fr.ssor, convicted in Orange County
Superior Court nearl y two years ago on a
La guna Beach . marijuana possession
charge, Is nov.· living in Crans , writing a
book on psychology.
lie escaped the Los Pndrcs ~1e n's
Colony at San Luis Obispo Sept. 12, 1970
and fled to Alg iers where he was a guest
of Black Panther Party leader Eldridge
Cleaver's governmcnt-in·exile .
1 le had first g!obe·hopped around the
Mideast Defore being given sanctuary by
the Panthers. who ejected hi1n from Al·
giers later over differi ng vie\vs on drug
use ilS a tool of rrvolution.
Learv and his convicled w i f e
R-0semiiry, who fled the U.S. to join him
and thus violated probation imposed by
Orange County authorities, turned up in
Swi tzer \<111rl !ale last year.
He \\'as arrestt'd ilnd released on S5,000
bail pending decision b~ Sy,·iss officlals on
his request to remain in the picturesque
alpine cou ntry to avoi d U.S. priso n
sentent'.CS.
Swiss offlcials (rustratcd California and
C.S. authorities by ru ling the extradition
papers submi tted to the Bern gove rnment
\vere nflt ln order. savi ng Leary from a
return to his nat ive land.
Besides the 10-year term in California
thal he had barely begun , Dr. Leary
faces an ldentical federal priso n term in
Texas for a 111arijuana smuggling con·
-victlon he once won, then Jost again on
appeal.
·rhe zanv onetime guru or the
psychedelic· drug n1ovemenl wa s fired
from his Harvard posl in 1963 for LSD
rxpcrimcntation, and became one . of the
sixties' most revered and reviled figures.
Oldest Driver Di es
REOLANDS I UPI l -John Sering, who
:it ag e 100 l'."as the oldest holder or a
Cali fornia dri vers license, 1vil! he huried
\\'ednesday. Se ring died Sunday in a con·
valescent home.
Hughes pull ed out of TWA in grand
fa shion by selling his stock for $;,46
million in 1966.
Armed with more tha n $-400 mill ion re-
maining after capita l gains taxes on the
stock sale, Hughes moved sec retly into
La s Vegas, Nev., in 1966 and sta rted
buying just about everything in sight in
the name of Hughes Hotel Properties.
which had bee n set up as a divis ion of
Too l co.
With 8,000 cmploycs, Hughes Hote l
Properties became Nevada 's bigg~st
employer.
It wa s esti m;ited !he Nevada proper!ic~
cost $250 mill ion and were worth $300
million when Hughes slipped oul of to wn
on Thanksgiving Eve 1970, reputedly
going to the Ba hamas.
Too!co conllnues to have ifs eyes on the
future. Recently it launched at San
Diego, a 324-foot.Jong bargt' for the dee~
sea mining of manganese in the Pacific
Ocean. The move was procl aimed by the
<'Om pa ny as "the birth of a new in-
dust ry."
Nezt: The 1/ollywood Years.
WHAT, YOU SEE IS
•
!NOT NECESSARILY)
WHAT YOU GET!
Jechnological advances in carpet ma"nufac+uring have re-
sulted in lower prices today than 30 years ago.
Jhe tufting mac hines make carpet 70 times fostwr than Ax-
minisler and Wilton looms. These machines will make up to
12 lineal feet of carpeting pe'r minute, either twelve or
f ifteen feet wide. The relative ease of this manufacturing
method has had one negative aspect. Instead of about ten
respected, reliable mills, today there are more than 300 milk,
many of que stionable integrity. It is not difficult for a clever
carpet designer to make a carpet look far better than it is.
The answer to the consumer is clear: Either know your manu-
facturer -or rely on a reputab!.. retailer. (Alden's, of
course.)
ALDEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placentia Aft.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
I
I
f
' 11
·~ .... __ _ I -------
Orange Coast Today's F inal
N.Y. Stocks
...
VOL. 65, NO. 27, 3 SECTIONS, 40 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBR UARY I, 197 2 c TEN CENTS
Roadblocks Hamper Corona del Mar Freeway
Quicksand to be covered by earth fill
and costly relocation of major waterlines
are just two problems which appear to be
bogging down Corona del l\1ar Freeway
construction timetables.
Revised frontage road design requests
involving two-way traffic and requiring
new plans for certain Newport Freeway
on and offramps could further complicate
schedule matters.
1'he disclosures -some certain and
wme J)OS3ible ~ came in a Costa Mesa
City Council study !ession Monday night.
Costs of both freeway projects would
go up. while the 1973 start of major con·
atructioa would fade away toward 1975 or
later, stalling urban redevelopment of
downtown Costa Mesa as well.
By cufrent calculatiorn the combined
factors could impose a two to rour-year
slo"·down, since both freeway projects
will be so closely interlinked.
State and city traffic engineers are
launching a !JG.day study to determine
feasibility of establishing tw~way traffic
on the future Newport Freeway frontage
road.
William K. Hashimoto, assistant
djstrict seven right-of-way engineer for
the State Division of HlghW/lYA, -briefed
council members and buslnes'smen on the
complex picture.
Food for the Gtills
• He warned of complications resulting If
tw~way traffic on the east side of what
is now Newport Boulevard is allowed. It
will be a frontage road above the sub-
surface Route 55 Freeway.
Major design changes to avoid traffic
tangles at the on and offramps would be
required at the outset.
Furthermore, Hashimoto explained,
public hearings on the resulting en-
vironmental impact would be mandatory
at state and federal levels. before final
approval nf the changes Sj_ught.
Merchants most aff~ed -along the
proposed frontage roa\ from Bay Str;et
Mrs. Betty Jensen owns a pastry shop on the Bal-
boa Peninsula. Every day during the winter ishe
takes her day.old baked goods to the beach and
dtstributes them among the ever·hungry seagulls.
She has built up quite a followin g. Besides, it gives
her a chance to get out in the fresh air. She doesn 't
feed the gulls during the summer "because the
tourists do it then."
I . .
Board Seeks 'Free' Park
Su 7Jervis ors Call for 200 Ac res Beli i1icl Ho spi tal
Orange County Supervisors today call-
ed for legislalion in Sacramento that
would allow the state to give the county
more than 200 acres behind Fairview
State Hospital in Costa Mesa-for a park.
The proposal is parl of the 1972
legislative program adopted by the coun·
ty Board of Supervisors. (See related
story, Page JO.)
The proposal, advanced by the county's
Regional Parks Advisory Team. includes
tw o alternate approaches. Under the
first. the state could develop the park site
under its own authnrity.
The second would allow a local agency
to lease the 257-acre surplus parcel on the
Santa Ana River (or a fee of $1 a year.
The proposed plan would give the state
responsibility for appraising development
plans and the right of rejection -to in-
sure Un:: property's use as a park.
Current law allows the state to dispose
of surplus property to a city or county for
Orange Cea1t
1''eatlier
Variable high clouds are expect-
ed along the Orange Coas(.Wed-
nesday. with a possibility of
sprinkles. G1.1sty winds are also •
expected brtnglrfg t'"1peratures
down to the low M's. TonJgbt's low
will be around 42 degrees.
INSIDE TOl»A Y
Arlene Lum, a Honolulu re-
porter, is perhaps tht first
Chinese·Amtrican ;ournalht to
enter mainland Chtna since
1948. lier imprcssiom appear
on Page 8.
l . M, ... ,,
Ctlllor1111
C!••tlflN ,_ .. c,..,_"'
0.l fll Ntlk"
llltflirl4;1 "•" 111i.rt1l-t
l'IMll(I
.... ·-"'"~-1''1""--~ .... ...
,,. • ..
" " ,. , .. ,.
ttc:ll ,_,.,_.. Jt.-U
Tt!Wlalt11 It ·Tiii .. ,., ,,
w .. rlltf • ._ .. """ l>l• Wll'141 N"" +a
50 percent of the appraised value. In the
Fairview case this would be about $4
million. Tbe most recent state appraisal
values the land at $7.99 mill ion.
Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W.
Scl1ool District
Boundary I ss ue
Plagues Co1tncil
Fears that the Newport-Mesa school
district may be allowed to dictate the
ultimate boundaries of Newport Beach
may lead to a major change in propMed
directives for preparation of the city's
new master plan of development.
A policy statement that no territory
would be annexed unless It ls .within the·
schOol district boundaries drew fire from
Councilman Milan Dostal Monday night
as the council reviewed the "policy plan"
for the master plan.
1'We need coterminous boundaries,"
Dostal said, "'but if we have a policy like
this, we'll permit the school district to set
our boundaries and we'll be abrogating
our responsibilities put upon us by the
charter."
"If we had thi.!-pOUcy 1 few years ago,
'hall of Newpiort Beach wouldn't be here,"
observed Councilman Richard Croul.
· May1>r Ed Hirth su111~ the city
should "strive to have any armned area
made part of the Newport•Mesa llnifiod
.School District, bill we sboald not prtvent
annexation of an area not pvt of the
district."
Councilmen agreed the blgtlt problem
created by such a policy WodJd Involve
the potenUal aMexatlon of the unln-
corporattd coastal lands between Corona
dcl Mar and Laguna Beach.
Oldesl Driver Dies
REDLANDS (UPIJ -John Sering, who
at age 100 was the oldest holder of a
Cali fornia drivers llce.nst, will bt burled
Wednuday. Sering died Sund•Y In o con-
valesctnt home.
' •
Caspers of Newport Beach has proposed
that the county investigate the possibility
of att.ajning the valuable property for
park and recreation use.
His suggestion followed one by Costa
Mesa officials that the city try to acquire
the property from the state on the same
basis. City Manager Fred Sorsabal said
the state passed a Jaw (AB 2241) in 1971
allowing the sale at SO percent of the
value.
Sorsaba l said the state has in ves ted
less than $2 million in the property. \~:est
of Fairview State Hospital. \•:hich it
purchased in 1948 from the late George
Capron .
Today's action by county supervi sors
asks that the county's I e g is I a t i v e
representatives push for a law, whi ch the
CQUn ty would draft. to accomplish the
grant.
Doctor's Rites Set
STANFORD (UPI) -Services were
pending for Dr. Eric Ogden, heart
research specialist and physiologist. who
died Sunday at Stanford Medica.1 Center.
T·welve Across
Spells 'Oops'
To the DAILY PILOT'S cross-
word puzzle fans:
You win. .
As an experiment, we began
publishing a smaller -and slmp..
ler -crossword puzzJe in Its reg-
ular positk>n on the comic page
several w,eekl. ago. The response,
we reckoned, might not be tre-
mendous but we thought It might
be postu~ ..
It wasn't. After a deluge of com-
plalnta, . thrtals of cancellation,
angry tirades and threata on the
editor's life, we returned to the
old crossword puzzle format. You
wlll find lt today oc page 15.
And thanks for letung us know
you care.
We do, too .
north -are lobbying strongly £or the
changes.
The business community is relatively
well-developed on the east side, while the
westside including Southern Cahforn1a
College's campus and the Orange County
Fairgrounds is largely vacant.
Despite merchants' desires for tv.•o.way
frontage road traffic. Hashimoto also ex·
pressed doubt it would be of mu('h
benefit.
lie noted - if such revisions beco n1r
reality -Costa ~lesa 's downtov.•11
redevelopment project would be set bal'k
by about the same period of del<1y.
Questioned by Cnuncilrnan Alvin L.
Pinkley on whether this would be a<.:·
l'ep!able. spokesman J C. Humphries
repreSt'rl\111g 0..11h Costa t-.lesa Tomnrrow
and 1111· l>o11.n1own Businessmen's
As:.o('ia tiun ~aid they would go along '>''ith ". The study session "'as tape·recorded
rind G:>uncit1nan Pinkley spec ifically ask-
ed that l-lumphr1es' agrtf:ment to the en-
visioned dc!11y be entrred in written
records.
l'1ly officials noted thal earth fill goug:·
C'd frun1 the subsurface Newport Free\\'3Y
1·11ute 1s Lo be used in building the
clC'vated Corona del Mar f<"reeway .. m<1k·
u1g 01u.~lrucl1un of each c Io s e I y
dependent on the other.
One obstacle lo be encountered is
relocation by the stale of t"·o major
"'alerl1nc~. ont' owned by the Costa fl.1tsa
County \\'ater District and the other by
!hf' !\1elrupuhtan \\'ater D1s1r1cl.
1:eu1n~ tht>:::.e out of the f:Orona del fl.1ar
r·ree\\11) ·s p;,ith 111nd onto new alignment3
l\il! 1·u!'t Ahvul $2 milllnn :i.nd require ad ·
dlt1on:1I r1111c.
Quicksand encountered hea\'il y in the
area ot San Diego Creek which e1nplie:ii:
into L'p1lCr J'\ewport Bay 'viii r£'qu1re ma-
1or earth fill operations atxive the sponsY.
t111111<la!1on.
St11 I experts estin1atc 1l 1nay requirr.
1\1·0 yc;1rs to settle properly. sinking 2t
in ches before making a suitable freeway
foundation.
Repairmen Pinpointed
Pro~ec utio1i Cites Evide1ice iii A u.to Repair Cas e
By T0~1 BARLEY
Of lhl D•llY PllOI Stflt
An Orange Coivity Superior Court jury
wa s urged today to return guilty verdicts
against seven defendants linked to an
alleged auto repair racket on the basis of
whal the prosecutor said w a s
••overwhelm ing evidence" of their com·
plicily.
Deputy District Attorney Ilichard Sten-
lon told the panel 1n his final argument
that nearly 30 prosecution wilnesses had
offered highly incriminating testimony
against all seven defendants and had
linked them to alleged crimes carried out
in 11 service stations ranging from Seal
Beach to San Clemente.
And Stenton rem inded the jury that the
long investigation spa rked by many
customer compl3in!s had !eel the Orange
County Grand Jury to indict all seven
de(endanls and identify those 11 stations
in its Indictment.
"We galle six of our witnesses im-m...il<.L;evur-11!.lo!>.'~-~Win ~ tTif!fWerl!"«l"ftll!rf!r•'
volved in the racket but not to the extent
that we wished to prnsecute them for
their infractions."
Stenton told the jury he was satisfied
he had prosecuted the seven most guilty
persons in the conspiracy and he picked
out Stanley Davis. 34, of 1086 San Pablo
Circle and Jerry Kendall, 35, of 960 Son-
ora Road, both of Costa Mesa, as the
architects of the auto repair conspiracy.
He told the jury that their five codefen·
dants and .. many others who have been
named in this trial" are "linked to the
pocket books of Davis and Kendall ."
}fis 30 witflesses. Stenton said. have prQ..
vided .. abundant evidence" that tires
\•;ere deliberately punctured. sh o c k'.
absorbers and fuel pun1ps sprayed with
oil to give the impression that they leak-
ed and ''customers conned into authoriz-
ing repa ir JObs that just weren•t needed."
Stcnton said the "service station
seven" "'ere involved in a highly
Ju cra1ive racket that cost Orange County
motorists many thousands or dollars.
And the prosecutor noted in )1is llnal
comment!) in the seven·l'•eek trial that
the prot1t s of the combine were
rnagnified by the grop's operation of a
c;arden Grove \varehouse which main·
tained a flow of parl<; needed by the 11
stations identified in the indictment.
Defense at!orneys Al Stokke, 1''rank
Moran and George Shibata "'ill foll ow
Stenton in closing arguments before
Judge James Turner gives his in·
structions to the jury.
It is expected thal the jury will retire
to consider its verdict late today or early
Wednesday.
Judge Turner denied defense motinns
for dismissal Of the fraud charges late
Monday shortly after the testimony of the
final defense witness in the trial. -
lie had earlif'r dismissed charges
against two of the original nine defen-
dants on the grounds that the prosecution
had fa iled in its phase of the trial to
substantiate fraud charges against them.
On trial with Davis and Kendall are
J{ogc r rtlcn<lenhall. 28, of 26095 Avenida
Life Outlined
De Seo, ~1ission Viejo, David C:Onchola,
22, nf 6000 Garden Grove Blvd .•
Westminster and Edward Carney. %7, of
20862 Shell Harbour Drive, Christopher
Enriquez, 25, nf 7695 Vnlga Drive and
Hen ry Castonguay, 21, of 7661 Com-
modore Drive, all of Huntington Beach.
Howard Hughes Story
Told in 4-part Series
Edd or·s note: It bega1t modestly
enouo~ i1t flpu:stqn, T,;aa. with ._
new kind of oil wtU drilling bit. Bue
?:2,~~~"f•r,ool c"'l1 "f;.~. m~am,ling ~nti. m.'lt 4
yott 11ame it. And tt i:s ruled by a ntau
u1ho has not been .'leen in public in
alni.os t 20 year11. Following is the first
of four articles on. the many faces of
Howard Hughes.
By JACK LEFLER
LOS ANGELES -Hug!les Tool Co .• the
cornerstone or a $Z billion business en-
terprise, is as spectacularly visible as its
sole owner, Howard Hughes, is
mysteriously invis ible.
Its success, founded on a revolutionary
HUGHES
Assets RIM
From $650",000
To $2 Billion
oil well drilling bit, has: made Its
reclusive owner one of the world 's richest
1nen.
The furor over the authenticity of an
autobiography of Hughes, which
~1cGraw·Hill Publishing Co. originally
planned to publish in ilo1arch. has focused
public attention on the corporate kingdom
over which Hughes rules from his secret
hideouts.
Hu ghes Tool IToolco) and its oil tool
division are ba sed in Houston, Tex. Its
nther major properties Include a
helicopter manufacturing division In
California; an airline, Hughes Airwest, In
Western Slates; hotels, gambllng casino11,
mininii claims and oth!t proputlt1 ia
Nevada; Hughes Television Network. and =::::. .. 1a1a boldlnt! Jn~
The vast operations havt been tOrn·
manded by hughes, M, In imperious
manner, usually by telephone, some of
his top executives have rie~ seen him.
lfe ha sn't made a public! appearance
since 1953.
Last Jan. 7, a man identified by
Hughes' public relations spokesman as
the billionaire industriallst held a
telephone news conference with seven
news reporters to deny the authenticity of
the ~1cGraw-Hill manuscript. The
newsmen, who were assembled hert, said
they were convinced the vnice on tho
telephone was that of Hughes.
Hughes holds no tille with Toolco ex·
cept that of owner. Operations are handl-
ed by Executive Vice President Raymond
A.f. Holliday and Senior Vice Presidents
Frank W. Gay and James R. Lesch.
What was to becnme a fabu1ou1 m.
terprlse was born in 1909 at Goose Creek,
Tex. when Howard liughes Sr. suc-
cessfully tested the rotary rock drill bit
he invented. The bit consisted of 166
conica l cutters or milled teeth which
chi seled and crushed rock so it could be
brought up through the drill stem from
the bottom of the drilling hole. It solved
the problem of drUling through rock.
It11 estimated that 75 percent ot the oiJ
wells In non-Communist countries have
been drilled with Hughes bits.
Young Hughes' parents willed htm 61
percent interest in the tool company and,
newly orphaned, he took over its opera·
lion in 192.1 "hen he was 19. He later
bought the other 40 percent interest from
relatives.
VaJue of the comp111ny 1t the time of the
(See HUGHES, Pose Z)
Upper Bay Eyed • Ill BiII ·
'Wild Rivers' Author lo In clude Wciterwa y · in Plan
From Wire Servk:e1
SACRAMENTO -State Senator Peter
Behr (R-'11buron) today said he would
add Upper Newport Bay in Ne'fporl
Beach to his proposed "wild river!" bill
which is aimed st protectlng scenic val-
ues and wUdlUe.
It wlll be the first time that a Southern
caJlrornla waterway has been proposed
~for hit protection measure.
Behr Indicated he was adding lhe Back
BAy to hls proposed legislation in honor-
ing a commitment to the Orange County
Board of Supervisors.
The Tiburon Republican described Ne"''-
porl'll Upper Bb.y 11s an estuary "contain-
lnq Mme of the most Important wildlife
nabltat al ong the entire Southern CaU·
fornia coastllne."
Upper Newport RAy has long been the
1uhject of the debate as to its eventual
development. A proposed e!lchringe of
Udel.ancb aod uplands between Or&nge
County government and the Irvine Com·
pany died after the plan fell out of favnr
with the r.urrent Board of Supervisors.
The Irvine Company owns all of the up-
lands surrounding Back Bay with the ex·
ceptlon of patent londs at the far reach
of the bay. Both public and private own·
ership claim righl3 to !he so-called patent
land's.·
Irvine Company 11pokesmen were un·
11vailable at presa time to ~01nment on
Bchr':ii mea:iiure.
Ills lnclu:iilon of tipper Bay In thf pro-
posal came 11s he annotmced 1h11t he will
also Inc lude the North Fork of the Amerl·
can fiiver In northern Ca!Uomia and part
of the Amt'!rlc:an River Itself Jn his pr~
pose:<! control meali11re.
"These three great w111~rways should
he included in anv "'lid rivers leglsla·
lion ," Behr said. ,;They are 11ymbollc ot
All ~re:al rlvers of lhe ~111te which should
some day de proterted under a C..Wornla
I
wild and scenic rivers system."
Behr 1ald 1 Resourcu Afency repc(t
l&st year dcacrlbed the waterways •
"possesslng eir:tr1ordlnary acen&c anid
wlldlife values end in Imminent danger cir:
development ." ---,
The Behr legislation, u Introduced, .ie;
clares the Klamath, Trtnlty, 6mltb onif
Eel rlve:r1 In extreme Northern Callfomla
as "wild" and bars con!ltrucllon an tbe-
rlvtrs of dams and other slructW'tl J.m.
peding the now. Similar Jegl.llation WU
defeat~ last year.
A wild rtver1 bill authorrd by Behr
that would have permane'ntly blocked
dams on lhe Eel, Klamath and Trinity
Rivers w11.s defeated last y!:ar tn the Sen·
ate, with the opposlUon led hy Stn. Jl;in·
dol ph Collier, who represenl3 areas In•
eluded in the bill.
Coll ier (fl.Yr~k•), has lntrOOuetd h\1
own wild rivers bill this year, which In·
eludes most of Behr'• 1f11 proposaJ e.>
cept far the Ee!.
\
z DAJL\' PJUll c
~ Plane R<0iso111
Tax W ri teof f
MINNE:APOl.I S. \t1nn rU PI ! -
~ Alrhnu. which gave
DID,D to • hljacier uainc the
n1me "D. B, Cov~ .. thr firsl of A
aerl~s of skyjack.fur-r;in,vun at·
lcmpl.!i and the 011ly ~I.I• t t~~lul onP,
L\ tlalmini the 1>a y1111 •11 "" a t.a):
wrlteoff.
··o. 8. Cooper" par;11 hutfd from
the plane over \Va~h111;~h,o ~111te
end ha:i1 not been s1'C11 ~uH c
A Northwest spohr~inr.11 ,aid tl1t.'
ran.!IOm payment wa s not insured.
Letters Rel<1 yed
•
From Prisoners
In N. Yietn£utt
NEW YORK rUPI I -Some 451 lrltcr~
from American prisoners of war have
bun brought out of North Vietn am and
are being delivered to lhc servicemen's
families.
The mail was the first since Dec. 2r,
when more than J,000 letters were receiv-
ed .
Th'e letters were broughl out nf North
Viet nam by Banning G<lrrelt, a rerxir1f'r
for the Pacific News Service In San Fran·
cisco. according t.o the Comm1lte<' or
Y~lallOll Wilb Families of Sen.'ic:emen De-
ta.lned ill North Vietnam.
~__,,,· Slnce tile committee was formed in
1969. a total of 5,276 letters from POWs in
North Vietnam and 18 from men held by
lhe Viet Cong In South Vietnam have
been (OTWarlled to (amilles.
While In Hanoi. Garrett reportedly
1poil:e with commander David W. Hoff.
m1JJ, • C1Jlfomlan who was capturtd
during the December bombing in North
Vietnam.
. Mother Loses
Race With Storie;
Officer Fills In
Tim Leary
Must Leave
Switzerland
From Wire Servi~•
Sl ON. Sw1lzerl11nd ~'!'he moclern °day
f.lan ~'ithout a Coun1ry , !)r. Timothy
J.f'<iry, has been formally told to hit the
ro;id by Swiss authorities who won 't give
him politica l asylum but won't give him
to 1he US. f'llher.
f'ol1ce ('h1ef Arthur Bender rallc<l a
nt\\'I\ tonfer rnce here Mond11y night lo
annO\Jl\t"f' that the 5 I -ye a r -o J d 1n·
ternat1onal fuRit1ve must leave the canton
-fir S w1s~ .stale -of Valai.s .
t_;f'nerally. no such Swiss ~tale will ac-
1·ep l 11 foreigner expelled from another
one
'rhe onelLme Hitrvard psychology prrr
fts.o.or, convicted in Orange County
Superior Court nearly two years ago on a
La~una Beach marijuana possession
<'hargr, is no.v Jiving in Crans. writing a
book on psycholo11:y .
He escaped the l.-0s P:idrcs Men's
Colony et San Lui~ Obispo Sept. 12, ·1970
and fled to Algiers where he wa:i1 11 guest
of Blaek Panther Parly leader Eldridge
Cleaver's government-in-exile .
HP had fir st globe-hopped around the
~1ideasl before being given ~;inc:!uary hy
!he Panthers, who ejected h1n1 from Al·
gil'rs later over difft>r ing 1•1cws on dr ug
use as a tool of re volution.
Leary and hi~ convicted w; f e
Rosemary, "·ho ned 1he l".S. to join him
.1irl thu5 violattd probation imposed hy
Orange County authoril1 t'c , turned up in
Switzerland late la.~t )C<ir.
He was arrested ;ind released on $5.000
ba il pending derision by Swiss officials on
his request to remain in the picturesque
a!pirlfl. country to avoid U.S. prison
sentences.
Swiss officials frustratrd California and
U.S. authorities by ruling the extradition
papers submitted to the Bern governn1ent
"'ere not in order, saving Leary from a
return to -his native land.
Besides the 10-yca r lcrn1 in California
tliat he had barely begun. llr Leary
fa t es an identical federal prison term in
·rexas for a m11rijuana smuggling con·
viction he once won , then Jost again on
appeal.
The zany onetime guru or the
psychedelic drug movement was fired
Huntington Beach policeman Steve from his Harv11rd post in 1963 fnr I.Sil
Arebalo didn 't even get a chance lo race experimentation. and becarne one of the
the stork toda y after Mrs. Donna Blass· sixties' most reverl'd and reviled figures.
Jngame rang the police emergency line He and his wife and son. John , now 22
at 7:30 a.m. and serving a probation term in the San
By the time Arebalo arrived at the Francisco area, were 11rreslcd Dec. 29.
Blassingame home at 182.'.12 Lisa Lane. 1968 in Laguna Bl'ach while parked on
evkleoce was cle1r that the stork would Woodland Drive.
win any attempted dash to the hospital Now-Sgt. Neil Purcell of the Laguna
So th! officer finished helping 1n Beach Polic_e Departme~~ narcotics
delivery of Mrs. Blasslngame 's fourth squad c0Rf1scated marijuana and ·~ •JeV"J"~.Mlrl •& ~«.. , auspicious pills in arreatipa: the Leary• -~ue wasn't m11Cll''to it." Afebalo 'ttnilf..lm~iff tMti" 11t1l10n .... p . •
grinned.
Both the 27-year-old mother e11d
doughier are doing fine today at Hun-
tington lnterCfllllmunity Hospital.
Officer Arebalo doubled as: a n
obstclrician once before in 1968 when a
nervous J11lher·l~be flagged down his
squad car because the stork was winning
that race , too.
"I delivered that one Jn the back seat
of thelr car," Areba lo recalled.
Mesa Fire Call
Just 'Hotliead'
Linda l\fill er .Rites
Toniµ:h1 , Wednesd av
Catholic funf'ral s('rvices will he held
tonight And \\'ednesday for Linda l.k!r;i
Miller, 2.517 Santa Ana Ave .. Apt. C,
Costa Mesa . who died in an aut omobile
accident Saturday in Artesia . She "'as 23.
Rosary will be 7;30 o'clock tonight at
Peek Family Colonial Funeral l·lome and
requiem mas~ will be held 9:30 p.111.
\Vednl'sday al St. Simon and Jude
Calholic Church .
She is survived by her hu sband Da vid :
son, Timothy. and parents f\1r. and Mr s.
Daniel Salazar of Fountain Valley.
.. -l •
Gets •\t1i119s'
Axel Kuntz, 14, has received
his Eagle Scout a\vard, as a
mcn1ber of 'l'roop 339, sponsor·
ed by the 222nd /\1r .N..11.Jona l
Guard in Cosla fl.1esa. I !d'is the
so n of Mr. and Mrs. Dieter
Kuntz of C'osta Mesa. Axel
worked as a volunteer al Fair·
vie\v Slate l·ln.<ipit al as part of
his service project.
Y outl1 Charged;
Girl, 10, Tied
To Tree, Slain
ST. ALBANS, r..1aine (UPI) -An lR·
ycar·old youth was charged with murder
1n the death of a 10-year-old girl whose
body was found lied to a tree, her hands
bound .
A stale police spokesman in Augusta
s<11d ~·londay night that Mith<tel D.
St<ickpole of Corrina was arrested near
\vhcre !v;o snowrnobilers several hours
earlier found the body of Roxanne Gilkey
of St. Albans.
1'he murder scene is near a snowmobile
!rail, about one mite from the nearest
raod.
An autopsy v.·as scheduled today.
Stackpole was takeR lo Somerset
County Jail in ·Skowhegan to await ar·
raignm ent.
Police said the girl had been missin,IO!
since the afternoon and reportedly had
been seen riding a snowmobile with
Stackpole.
Another Film . " ''" . .,, ~~;. .
Depot Robbed
A young bandit "·ho, police theorize,
may be financing a drug habit, held up
anolher Costa Mesa film processing
depot Monday in a carbon copy of a
Saturday caper.
I le n1ade off with $80 handed over hy
Fotomat emp!oye Elayne f\.farman at 201
E. 17th St., neeing on foot into a nearby
aparlment complex.
Police called to the scene searched the
area with shotguns at the ready. but
found no trace of the bandit who cl aims
lo have a gun but never shows it.
He is believed to be the same one who
hit a fotomat at 2200 Harbor 81\'d ,
Saturday. taking $280, Detect ive Sgt.
John Regan said today. Dispatched to Canyon Elementary
School on an <1rsnn casr. Cosla Mesa
police arrived Monday to find the campui;
wasn't exactly reduced to smoking rub-
ble.
Officer Phil f.fc(.nrmick ~aid the arson
involved a heat£-d nan1e-r111\i ng spree
among young liotheads
Mesa Service Stations
One of the1n, HI, AAid annlhl'r, 12,
finally whipped out It book of matcheJ
and set fire lo hi11 woolen ski <'Hp.
He yanked It off before 11nything \'ill'I
"'a5 singed.
OIAlt61 CG.A.IT
DAILY PILOT
_..,.. mAIT PUWSKPtG aapAl"r
l •li•tt N. WtH ,.,.!Mf'IC lkllll P"*l.!Allr
Jtcl:-R. Citrin
Vtc9 ,,..~ llM "-•• Ml1'l90tl
n.,,, •• .c ..... 11 ......
n-•t A. M•r11"'i11• M~lql f:OllOr
O.rf•1 H. t..,, R.i1li1td I'. NtO
A11•"'"' M1n19111Q E•llO<•
c ........ Offk•
SJQ W•1t l1y $te1•t
.... m., M4Nm P.O. ko: lt•CI. flll6 ............. .......,.._....,....,.._ .....
~•.0.1m,__, ... _ c:;e ._.f '"'' ..... .._.. --s ·•--~C-....ltMt
Try to l11ipro ve lniage
Che\'ron. Shell. Tl.'Kaco, Ar co
Phillips and l'olobll srrvicc stJ1tion owners
in Costa i\1esa arr mobilizing to polish up
an indust ry image smrarrd by oU!·
or bu,.;1nes~ ryrsores and allegalions of
unla"·ful practirrs.
Organizers of the nrw \(o!!la i\lesa
Se~\'l<'t Station Con1mittee h«ve been
pl;inn1ng the: move for sev tral months
"'i th Chamber of Con1merce aid.
rh.iinnan Ph il E\'Ans . opcr11tor of
J-;r;<ns' Pli Srr\·1cc, savs the idea dates
b;iek rr:illy to 11 1969 city stud~· of thr !n·
du slr,r :is it l'Xists in Costa f.tesa.
Hr c:inrlidly admits criminal pro-
~eru11rin of <1 ch11in of <'Ottntv station!!
:i llct;rdl\' 1n\"ol\('d In tons11mrr"fra11d t:i c·
th" suc h :is made-tn--ordcr 1nct h:inic3 I
d('f('r ls is anot hrr t•onccrn,
7riat of a series of attendants .,.,.ho
11 Uci;f'dh punctured tires. s I a ~ hr d
rAd iator hosrs and arr8ni;ed other pro--
bltm ~ to profitAhl y pick customers'
pockrls ~ot~ lo !he jury till! .,.,·eek.
' The publ1t,1tv rene<'ts badly on all of
u ~:· ~ays E\•11ns. noting legitimate
operators suffer through guilt by associA·
lion . whethrr collr;i,1;ues getting the news
CO\'erage are con\·1rted or not .
Their fi rst ordrr of business is
establishing £04l ls and priorities to be
dealt with in monthly mettlnRS Ill thl!:
Costa ~ftsa Chambi;>r o( Commerce rJ. lice.
"In lhe future, yes, we hope to work
within our group to de11I with lhose who
are doln~ wroing," t.rp!ains Evans.
He. Is head of ~ lnclud!d
nine mernn-1TS1irs"i seS..'iion lsst Thur.Ii·
dey bu! ultimattJy hoJ>('s to lnclude a m.a·
jorJty or~ city:.S 74 lletnsed se.nr1ct 111·
tion owners . •
By licensed. Evan& point.s out he thlnk1
thtP •~ about fight aervl«i 1t1tionJ in
Costa ~fts• I.Mt •re t'UJTtflll1 in-
.. \
operative, old and decrepit or new v.·ith a
cosily overhead.
Beautification of existing stations
\\•hich fail to meet city policy standards
adopted a year ago -wh.ich would offer
maximum service but minimum mess -
is definitely high on !he committee"s
agenda.
"\Ve started among oursel.,es to see if
we can't try to do some or the th ings the
city v.·ants." Evans continues.
lie specifically cited the 1969 proposed
.'icrvice .station ordinance considered by
the council. \\.'hich ordered it revised and
then chose to adopt the final draft its
policy on ly instead of law.
. A toughly-worded docu ment. I he
original study singled out various sta-
tions, classifying a ppea rance fron1 poor
to excellent and noling the degree of
automobile maintenance or repairs of-
fered .
Some were criticized for disJ>('nsing
tverything fr om free sod• pop for •
minimum purchase to sets of glasses for
drinking it and selling cut-rate ttttr
manure for lawn fertilizer.
~veral vacant service atations located
Rround the city could bet.om down by the
city as public nuisances·and the Oil com·
pany or landowner Involved billed lf the
original 1969 study btcame an ordinance.
"That's why I'd lite 10 be elected 10th<!
Cty Council," remarks Evans, a cen·
didate in the April JI eledloo.
"They need a service allUon man," he
adds. painting out he is 1ble to •wreciate
and undC1rstand the special problems en-
countered in that industry.
AU service station owners in the city
11re being contacted by Jetter and urged
to joln the new organiulion which will
meet the. fourth Tbursd17 ol each month.
"Our goal will be to hl\"e harmony in
Nr competitivt businesa. more 11ti1fied
custcmers," the note upl.ains.
•
-.,_,
Double Trouble Looms
lrvings on Spot in Both U.S., S'witzerland
.
NEW YORK (U PI ) -'fht: inquiry into
pos!lble fraud I n v o I \" 1 n g the
"'autobiography" of Howard Hughe~
spa•ned lhr Atlanuc today wi th arrest
warrants for author Clifford Jrv\ng issued
in Switzerland and the pron11 se of an of·
f1c1<1\ 1nvcst1g<1t1un rn:ide Jn lhe t:nited
Stales.
In Zurich the .sit uat ion was n1urt
~e1·1ous for Irving, an American citizen,
cind his Swi.~s-ho m wife. Edith, 36.
(}ff icial.~ tht're issued arrest warrant~
for the-1.:oup!e on ··urgl'nt suspicion rif
fraud. fals1f1c·a tion of of£1c1a\ doc·un1en1s,
and invest1ga11on of these crimes."
In this country where the COl1ple ar·
rivrd Thursday, !;.S. Attorney \\'h i1ney
l\"orlh Seyn1our and New York County
Jl1str1ct Attorney Frank S. Hogan c:-on-
fl'rred on possible federal charges of wire:
and mail fraud and state charge5 of
friiud and purjury against Irving.
Zurich D1str1et Attorney Peter Veleff
11a1d today that although the.y ha\'e issue.<!
!he arrest w11rrants they need the
("ooperation of U.S. pohce to solve the
"autobiography 1nystery."
'"Since part of the sLispected crinie wa~
c:arried out In Zurich, bLit the effects -
1he actual damages -occurred in the
Uni!ed States to McGraw-Hill , we believe
lhal both Zurich and An1ericai1 officials
arf' responsible for this in\'esligation,"
s1id Veleff.
His announcement followed police in·
vesligations which turned up $442,000 in
cash and securities in a branch of the
Swiss Bank Corporation.
The bank, one of Switzerland's largest,
is located across the street from the
Swiss Credit Bank, where Irving's wife
cashed $650 ,000 in checks issued to
Hughes.
By Irving'~ admission, his wife used
the name "Helga R. Hughes" on a
falsified Swiss passport as identification
for cashing the checks, from the
publishing firm ~fcGraw-flill to Hughes
for the rights to his "autobiography."
Irving said she did so on instructions
from the billionaire recluse, with whom
he also said he collaborated in writing the
book. However, Hughes has issued
Scl1ools ,Study
Boost in Fees
Newport-~1esa School Superintendent
John Nicoll today recommended raisi11g
the fee:! charged for the use of 11chool
facilities by as much as 50 percent for
certain facilities.
School trustees are scheduled lo act
ori the recommendation. first urged by
Board President Roderick N. f.facMilllan.
at their meellng t011i&hl. •t 7:30 o'clock
lit Co«ta Meiia ffigh Schoof.
Two new rate st'hedules <1re offered.
One is for non -profit groops. The other 1s
fnr pri vat e organizations. Both wou ld
;affect !he rales charged for everything
from a single classroom to football sta·
diums.
Cowt Site Eyed
In Domain Suit
Orange County moved ?o.londay In ac-
quire the 8.2-acre site earmarked as the
lnc11tion of the new Harbor Judicial
01'.'ltrlct headquarters hy filing an
en1i11enl domain action in Superior Court.
The lav.•suit sets the stage for I.he eoun-
fy"s taking over nf the Jamboree Road·
C<1mpus Drive location from the parties
li stl'd as defendant ;is in the complaint -
lessee Collins Radio and lht !rvine
Industrial Complex. ov.'ners of the land.
County supervisors agreed last week to
file th!" eminent domain lawsuit a.~ their
f1r~t ~trp ln the building of 1t $328.000
courlhou.se on the vac~t silt.
denials of Irvi ng 's statements.
VE·leff safd police investigation here
Monday showed that a "·omrHl , "'who was
probably 1tk·ntlcal with the suspect Ldnh
Irving, opened an aceou11t "·itli the Swiss
Ba.11k C(Jrporation on May 27. 197L"
'l'J11s d;1te Is close to the 111ne when ihe
'1r:it McGr<iw-l\111 l'.hcclt was cashed al
thP S"·iss Credit Bank.
Veleff said he has not decided whether
to ask for extrathlion of the lr\•ings to
Switzerland.
The V.T1ler. "ho :-J)('Ol lhe V.'eckc.nd in
seclusion 111 C..:onnecucu1 . was to ha ve ap.-
peared before 1 granc1 jury .r.1onf1a1,-f11r'
questioning but won postponcrl1t•nt n[ \t1A
interrogation so that he and h1~ nf'IV
lawyer, M.11ur1ce Nt·ssc11 , "ould li111oJ
more lime to go ov('r the details of ihe
case. No new date was set.
Later. Irving and N<::bS('n n11 l 11 11t1
Seyrnour'.s staff in the offi ce of the L S.
attorney,
They had ··no con1ment"· "'ht111 they lt•ft
but Stymou r and Hogan 1ssu('d their
s I ate men t promising "a 101nt. in·
vest1gauon into this m11ttcr . !onk1ng 1n1 0
possible st ate and fedrral violations.''
-~
J'ro111 Page l
HUGHES' CAREER ...
frither's death was variously estimated at
$!0 million or more but Hughes said the
government appraised it al $650,000.
\Vhile l·lughcs is reputed not to have
h<'en seen in 'foolco 's Houston offices
since 1926. the ('Ompany nourished unde r
hi s direction and the operations of his
hand-p1eke<l c:<eculives .
The nil tool business grrw until il now
ernploys about 4,000 at Hou ston and has
other manufacturing plants in England,
Jreland, Canada, West Germany, Italy,
Argentina and Brazil. The tool division 's
annual revenues have been estimated at
$75 million . Because it is privately own·
ed, Toolco is.sues no reports on sale!i and
earnings. ,
llughes, who long had been interest~
in airplanes, left Texas for California lri
the 1920s and became a legendary figure
In aviation. lie set many world speed
records and designed aircraft.
He also became enchanted with motion
.,,ictures, and actresses as well. He pro-
duced a number of movies, among them
''Hell"s Angels" and "The Outlaw," and
for a \\'hile owned RKO studios.
Noah Dietrich. Hughes' chief executive
from 1925 until they split in 1953, takes
issue with those who give Hughes the
lion"s share of credit for building Too\co.
"He can't explain the growth of his em·
pire." Dietrich said in an interview
recently. "He left that part of the
business lo me.
··in those days. his main interests Wf're
rom~nce, airplanes and motion pictures.
None of those produced any profits.''
The first big diversification move und£r
the banner or Toolco was the founding of
Hughes Aircraft Co. in CUiver City in
1931.
With the burgeoning of commercial
aviation and the approach of World War
11. Hughes Aircraft quickly became a
giant it1 its field. It was one of thi~ coun·
try's niajor warllme suppliers of aerial
"'eaponry.
In 19:i-4, Hughes turned over the
a1r cr;ifl con1pany In the Hu_ghes Med ica l
Institute, "'hi ch he formed as phil~n
!hrop1cal organiz11t1on, to carry on
1nedict1l researl·h. All of its profits go to
the institute, of which llughes is the sole
tru slf'e . and it no longer is under the cor-
por<1te umbrella of Toolco.
1-lughes Aircraft. "·hi(·h has heen
estimated to he \\'Orth $500 million with
annual sales about equal that amount,
manufactures communications satellites.
guided missi les. aircraft armament
svstems and other elcctronic5 gear.
·The most spectacular deals 10 which
Aske'v to Speak
TALLAHASSEE, 1-'la. (AP \ -Go v.
Rc11h1n Askew will niake the keynote ad -
dress at !he 1971 Democratic National
l'.rinvention 1n ~liarni Beach in ,July.
The: ~'lorida ~overnor's selection "'as
11nnounced ~1onday in Washington by
1Jemocro:1tic National Chairman Lawrence
F, O'Brien.
Hughes involved Toolco werP ma1ority
ownership of Trans·World Airlines . and
resulting legal ha ss les: and ownership of
Nevada Hotels, co:isinos and othr.r pro-
perties, and resulting legal hassl es .
Hughes started buying into 1'WA in 1939
and took control with 77 percent of thr.
stock in 1947.
After the commercial jcl age dawnrd,
Hughes, with hi.s customary del ihera ti1in,
waited fi ve years before ordr.ring
jetliners and other cquipn1ent costin~
S497 m.illion. Partly because of the la1e
starts in jets, TWA lost huge amounts !"If
money, and financial institutions which
loaned money for the aircraft purchases
became concerned.
Toolco lost control of 1'W A in 1960 when
creditors forced Hughes to place his
stock in a nonvoting trust. TWA manage-
ment sued Hughes, alleging mismanag"e-
\pent. Claims and cou nter c la im ~
a);nounted to $481 millio n. A judgment of
$137' million was won against Hughes, but
it is yet to be collected.
Hughes pulled out of TWA in grand
fashion by selling his stock for $r.46
million in 1966.
Armed with more than $400 million rr·
maining after capital gains taxes on the
5tock sale, J~ughes moved secretly in!'l
La s Vegas. Nev ., in 1966 and started
buying jusl about everything ln sight in
the name of Hughes 1-lotel Propertie.~.
which had been. set up as a division of
Toolco.
With 8,000 employes, Hughes Hotel
Properties became Nevada's bigg:!st
employer.
It was estimated the Nevada properties
cost $250 million and were worth SJOO
million when Hughes slipped out of to"'"
on Thanksgiving Eve 1970, reputedly
going to the Bahamas.
Toolco continues to have its eyes on the
future. Recently it launched at San
Diego, a J24.foot-long barge_ for the d~i>
sea miniOK, of manganese 1n the Pacific
Oct.iin. The fnove w11~ proclaim td b.v lhA
company as "the birth of a new tn·
dustry."
Next: The f-fnllyivood Yeor5.
* * * lrvin.g to Study
Pliotos of Aides
NEW YORK IAP ) -Federal Rnd
Manhattan prosecutors ha ve put together
a photograph album of present ;ind
former aides to Howard llughes.
The authorities will ask Clifford Irving
lo try to identify one of them as the
··George Gordon llolmes'' he claim~
served as a g°""between during the
writing of an alleged JI ugh es
autobiography, it was !earned toda y.
One former Hughes aide, .John Me ier,
has already denied reports that he "'aS
the man who dealt with lrvin11:.
"'That's ridiculous." said Meier. nov.· "-
candidat~ for the Dcmocral!c senatorial
nomination in New Mexicn. "1 ne ver met
the man."
WHAT YOU SEE IS
(NOT NECESSARILY)
WHAT YOU GET!
Technological advances in carpet mo 'nufocturing hove re-
sulted in lower prices today then 30 yeon ogo.
.The tufting machines make carpet 70 times faster then Ax -
minister ond W ilton looms. These machines will make up to
12 lineal feet of carpeting per minute, either twelve or
fifteen feet wide . The relative ease of this manufacturing
method hos hod one negative aspect. Instead of about ten
respected , relioble mill s, today there ore more th on 300 mills,
many of questionable integrity. It is not difficult for 11 clever
carpet designer to make o carpet look for better than it is.
The answer to the consumer is clear: Either know your manu-
facturer -or rely on a reputable retailer. (Alden's, of
coune.)
'
ALDEN'S
CA~PETS e DRAPES ·
16.~3 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646 4838
/