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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-02-03 - Orange Coast PilotI I -• ' en' • Mesan~s llth"hour Heli~opter Wreaks Car Repair Fraud Ravo ·~ at Newport TestiJDony B~rred Constru~·tion S -ite DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * THURSDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 1·, ~1972 VOL. If. HO. 1f, a St:CTIONS, JI P'AGES • Ears Dave It • ' I ~serioas Offer' Willing to Hear POW Plans--U .S. Friend Says · Mexico Talk .· Impossible ~. From Wire ~rvlces UPI Tt ltllhll• : These elephants at a zoo in \Vindsor, England have been fitted with : special ear muffs ~ protect .then1 from . the roar of jet engines at • nearby Heathrow All"port . -'.~~~~~~~~~~~~ Judge Rejects 11 tl1-l1ot1r • Testimony in Auto Trial By TOM BARLEY Of 1M Dilly flllot Slaff ~-young Gosta Mesa.n's dramatic eleyenth hour return to the Orange Coun·· r;SUperlor Cdurt trial of .the "service tatton seven" and the statement he · behind closed doors will not be ed to Influence the Jury, Judge, 'l'urher"'ruled.tbday. -v J udge Turn er rejected a defense mo- tion for the admission of a new state01ent by Ron i'l"ickels, 19, <1nd began the jury instructions that were delayed early W~ , nesday. Judge Turner, defense attorneys Al ~ Stokke, 1'~ra nk Moran and George Shibata ~ and prosecutor Richard Stenton r-;~ated·'? .1y huddled wilh° Nib~s 'lliiiilll!Mllll"\ft°el°' afternoon while Nickels' fattfer and Other defendants awaited the outcome of the discussions. Coast ' Judge Turner . w.arned everyone in· o\;. •\olyed on n"IQ(ef tht1:n·1ori6~1Jon·"tbat ~ • r ~-' \be topic .91 thos'e.="d&cusS}qnS was'1~t t" ). ... be 'revealed tO~anyonet-·lS&rticulai-1~\he ~ ~ ' ••·..+ ' r· news riledia , ' . ' ~, . ' : ;' • w · • ' • :: ~ , .' ljte reptf.(ed'":Uiat 'wirhing';\odal·~in ·a· ·,:will be a: bit coolei-oa Frnlly," .: ~ · ~~m.ert, which corltiifts \he",nlere .col\-. :- 1 increasing blgh clobds ac. 1 ; • firihaUon _ that .a motion by the d~ !: · ing to the weather ~~ for . the 1~us1on of NI ck e1l s 'f.n~ \\1ASHINGTON {UPJ) -The United States is willing to consi der any .serious North Vietnamese proposa l concerning release of prisoners of war, a high-rank· ing State Department officia l testified to· day. William ~I. Sullivan, deputy assistant secretary of sta te for East Asian and Pacific affairs. said that while President Nixon's Jan. 25 peace proposal "offers a fair. reasonable basis for resolving the Vietnam connict. v.·e remain willing to consider any serious proposa l concerning POWs." Sullivan spoke only a short time after the Viet Cong's new peace plan in Paris and apparently did not take note of it. (See earlier story, page 4). Meanwhile, Ellsworth Bunker, U.S. Ambassador to South Vietnam, conferred at the White House with President Nixon. During his Capitol Hill visit, Sullivan faces questioning on an allegation that the United States allowed Saigon to possibly block a neutral inspection of POW camps in North Vietnam. Sulli van told the House Foreign Affain subcommittee on National Security Polley and Scientific Developments that Nixon's public offer included an offer to Implement prisoner releases in parallel with troop withdrawals. "To date there is little evidence that the other side is willing lo negotiate in terms which seriously and realistically FAA Must OK •:~might lows 30 to 40 ~t • testunony . into .tbe , . butky seven-~1 ' • highs ot.'58 to 61 Frfday 'i; tr~script is den1ed11 , , ~·.., ·:I ·cf · '1 ' ~ D/llLY Pl!41' bu learned WASJIJ NGTON !AP) -Radio ! '' INSWE TOD~· · ' ',, • '•• • '~\ 'Siltl.'IW.~~16' ;~, and television slalions must get List.ening lri • • { • c•J. 1 ·~f . , !ii §~#U\IW ~<lb!-permission from the Federal Avla· ii HofuO rd fiuQhe i ' m Ct' . to "· f8tint 'w8nt' e&tnr'Y,' 1't"" t Shllt' lion Administrati on before tuning in Los Vegas in 1966 and began Harbour Drive, HunUngton Be a ch, 0 n alr·to--ground conversations m;i.s lO'rl.Q rtign as the "mw.s~ry Nickels' former employer. between hijacked air crews and •,,,..,. .. o( the desert. The lhird Carney relayed the subslaqce or that lll'Ound personnel. ' • rlici. tn Chis strlei'is Im P40e ·call .lo 6loklte ·~ ~ou~•W1tr' tro~ • '1'.l'riie : 'Fideral'" Communl~dtions' ·~today ' mediately made the gist o{ what was C'.ol:nmls . d' u-+...t atat)o.n ~' ;: ', · descri~d as . "highly revealing irl· wednesJ;:1y0 to 1~1'l:ct t~e · prf°~r , .... M .• ..-. 1 ,..,...,. " formation" available to Judge Turner. . . · · be g:~::; 12.,! ~:,1::,1 '::!! .. ': Nickels, accompanied by his father. ~AA off1clals ~or permission fore :-c.m 'c• " or•• , •• ,.,., 11 spent the afternoon In Judge Turner'• lotercefltlng air-to-ground commu-; =~-=t1a1 : =.! Ptrtw »J: courtroom. lie was frequently called into nlcallorui:. , .. '•i.n.• ""' • ,...... ~,..,, tMJ the JU' rist's chambe-lo ten and •i•rfly Uhauthor1zed use of such rorn--'.11!lkrt•111ll'ltftf ,. TtltYfllM tt ... "" I I lh . . Id .·: "~ tt-J::I f'llNltn ,. the detail! that hive now been withheld, mun cat ons, e comm1&11on a.a • !•ht '!It ._... '; w,.ffltr 4 from the jury Is unlawful and could r-est1lt In :;:!'~ ;, ~·:..:,."" 17~~ Walling with Carney In the courtroom criminal prosecution. • (Ste REPAIR, Page Z) ' \ reflect the actual situation in Indociina ," Sullivan said. "They are slill attempting to achieve their maximum objectives," he said. "We nevertheless hope that we may induce Hanoi to forsake the battlefield in favor of the conference table and thereby achieve -the release of our prisoners." Sullivan said. Sulli van said tha t "over 1600 U.S. military personnel are listed as missing or captured in Sou!heast Asia , and over 40 U.S. civilians are in the same status. According to Defense Depa rtment figures , 383 of our men are listed as cap- tured in North Vietnam, 92 in South Viet- nam. 5 in Laos." "Two U.S. pilots are known to be cap- tured in China . The missing ci'Vilians in- clude three U.S. newsmen lost in Cam- boclia." Sull ivan said, however, that 0 the actual total held as prisoners remains uncertain due to the other side's conUnued refusal Lo identify all prisoners." Sullivan also said the Communists• record on the matter of prisoner!' mail and packages has deteriorated, Firm in 'Court ·Over Pollt1tion; Student Helped Ufl!T ........ I• LINKED WITH IRVING? Singer Nina Van Pallandt Hu ge H elicopt.er Triggers Furor l1i Newport Ceili ngs and walls trembled. Sand scoured virlufllly every vehicle in a th ree-block radius. A huge cloud of dirt and dust soared heavenward, taking all sorts of. debris with it. NEW YORK -A blQnde Dan ish slngejo who was in Mexico with author Clifford Jrving last year says she sees no way he could have met with Howard Hug hes as he claimed. The name of singer Nina van Pallandt., 39, was brought into the case of the purported Hughes autobiography when Jrving last year says she sees no way be could have met with Howard Hughes as he cla imed. The name <Jf singer Nina van Pa/land t, 39, was brought into the case of ttie purJXlrted Hughes aulobi ography wheq lrving claimed she was with him for two of 100 interview taping sessions he said he held with the billionaire. Irving clainl- ed s he was with him when he met Hughes in Mexico last Febru ary and in Los Angeles in June. A Los Angeles Times corresponde~t reJX1r1ed today from New York in '9 telephone interview with the singer, who fs in the Bahamas. that she said at ro time did she see any man who could have passed for HUghes during the Mexica'n trip last Feb: 13-14. ' · She was apart from lt'Ying, ''one to-Or\t and half hours at· the most," the Tim._ quoted her ·as saying. Miss van Pallandt said she spent Ii~ ~urs Wedllfsday lalklng lo a U.S1 postal mspector woo· wall 'In !he Blliamas 1/1 connection with the Hughes book' la. vestigation, according to the Times. I She said she and her manager-produc~ John Marshall, who aJso · · 11 1n ~ Bahamas, would return to New Yo voluntarily to appear before a feder bag! from a construction site that was Fed al and N y t l Candy wrappers and -scraps of cement grand jury. ~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -A 24-year-old Ground Zero floated down out of the sky er cw or coun Y . student at Long Beach Slate College pro-for 10 minutes afterward. Juries are I n v e 11 t 1 & a t 1 n g t vided information that resulted in a Criminal charges are IM,inr considered auto biog raphy case. ~ federal grand Jury lndlctment against the The U.S. Attorney's Office said IM J h ,1 UI Prod C today in the invesUgation following a wo··'d nol appear ~•ore the r-• 1 · o ns·1vanv e ucts orp . on iu Lft:.I cu · · Newport Beach episode that sounded to d j tod h d be • 'charges or polluting a stream In Los all withill earshot like another Krakatoa gran ury ay as • en repo , ' Angeles C.ounty, the Ju.sttce Department earlier. · Volcano and the er,ck of Doom rolled In-The t t ht and t. says. t pos ponemcn was soug o A four-count indictment was returned 0 one. tained by Jrvlng'a lawyer , said U.S. Af. • Wedne&tay charging the frrm with ·That should be about 10,000 soul&, give Whitney North seymour Jr:. Ke gave' do discharging alkaline solld!i Into the Dom-or take a few · explanation other than to say he ,,.., , 1 1nf)'.;' =!0~'~;i~~· ~~1Z.rp, • ''•n~h • 'A'iin· ~i~l ·· :~~~f;.h'.emenlwl~ J&, &raduate stu4~t, pr.gvided Information water tank atop the eight-story _Vista de.I Pt1eler, a fonner sclenUOc consultant'• refuYUng' In ffie · coun"I. of ~i314lfhi 81e" '!lido-· •p-nt' tower, 611 . Lido , Park Hughe•. Soym011r-a1Jo wo•lll. &J.ve 1¥> •• ,. 1 Refuse Act of 1899. Drive. planatlon for Meler's postponemtnl the act proVldes that the court can The job was to be done by Briles Nelth!!r Jrvlng Mr ~eler nor their award ha lf of the fine lm~ed to the Helicopters, Santa Monica. lawyers was reiched 1mmtdlately for; perM>n furnishing Information lel'dlng to The Briles crew did Indeed do a job. comment. a conviction, The only problem It. It 11ppears, that trvtng had been asked to appear Morr Johns·ManvlU e makes ubestos and they didn't notify city offlclals and obtain day before both the federal and a COW1ty other types of construction materials In a rnandntory helicopter landing pennit grand juries, but won pestpooementa oo lu ptanl in suburban canon. (Ste CHOPPER, P11t I) rs.. FRIEND, P°'e I) Irving Deal Reported But Firm D enies Offer to R eturn Mo11 ey CHICAGO (AP ) -Tht Chicag<> '.tribune has reported that it learned an &ttomey for author Clifford Irving and ·~ wife propo3ed Immediate return of j50o,OOO to • group of New York Publishers In excha nge for withdrawing all prosecution against the lrvings. In New York , a spokesman for McGraw-Jiill Inc. categorically denied lbe report Wednesday. . McGraw-Hill says it paid $650,000 which Was intended for bill ionair e Howard Hughes for ri~hts to publish his autobiography. Although Irving says he collaborated with 1-lughes in preparing She autobiography, spokesmen for liughes f!,Y the book is a fraud . ·The newspaper said In today's editioM that Maurice Nessen. a.n attorney for the l.rvings, made the proposal l a •l::iillihurton Faileg II , gtneral {'OijOSfl ror McGra w.Hill . Falle.s' Initi al response lo the offer, the Tribune said , reportedly was to flatly rejec t it. In subseq uent conversation with r ailes and Haro ld McGraw, president ()( ~fcG raw ·Hill, Nessen 1nd ~ca led lhat !he immediate re turn of $500,000 now "may be be tter than not hing obtained afte r .ii. long court Ugh!," the Tribu ne said. The newspaper said th is argumt:nl wa.'I unde rstood lo have been received wllh more interest. 1'he newspape r added. however, that Nessen, Faile.'1 and ~1 cGra w "'ere not available for commen t. Irving and his wife face fraud war. rants in Zurich, Switzerland, and ques- tio ning by federal and state grand juries In New York in ('onnection with s.6."Jl,CXXI paid by M(·Graw-lfill. The company, In lurn, planned to sell subsidiary rights to the book to Time Jnc., Book-of.the-Month Club aop. Dell Book!. No plans of prosecution have been an. no unced Jn this country, however. The ne wspaper sald it received its in· for mation about the alleged offer from negotia tors involved in the case. 1'he paper said Nessen indicated lhat the money can be obtained from a Zurich bank and from a safe deposit vaull on Ibiza. the Spanish isla nd where the Irv· ings ha ve n1aintained a home fo r fiv e years. 1'he newspaper did not explain lhe discrepancy between the amount offered and the amount the pu blishers say the y originally paid Irving for transfer to Hughes. Frona Page 1 ·FRIEND ..• grounds that he needed more time to con· 1t1lt with a new lawyer. · Meanwhlle . a special agent of the U.S. Post.al Service, John Tarpey, was In New York to take over the postal service's in· vestlgation of possible mail fraud. He Confinned that the Postal Service sent an ~vestlgator to Switzerland but did not s\iy what the lnvesligator accompli shed !Jiere. 'Perfect' Raid Flops; Wrong House Invaded On the Spanish Island of lbiza where Irving and his wife have their home, a man describing himself as a Jong-time /riend of the author sald he had been ask- ~ by postal inspectors if he is willin& to C'Ome to the United States. .The friend 1 Gerald Albertini , an American, said he kept the Hughes manuscript in his home for about 10 days and also said he had no plans to come ht re "unless I am instructed to do so." Tarpey's office refused to say whether Albertini had been questioned. but said none of its agents had been to Ibiza, were On th eir way there or planned a trip there. The special agent's office said no visits were planned to Majorca. a nearby Island where Richa rd Suskind lives. Suskind; a researcher, has been described by Irving as being preaent during one of his meet- ings with Hughe.a. Autopsy Reveals Slain Executive Choked to Death LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -Alao Scott MacFarlane, vice p r es id en t of Transamerica Financia l Corp. w h ose hogtied body was found on a little league baseball diamond, choked to death on his blood after he was apparently beaten by a robber. an autoPl)' report said today. The 'bOdy of MacFarlant, 43, was found by a woman walking her dog on Tuesday. In Sari Francisco, police held a suspect In the rilufder. Aulhorities said James Smith, ~4, was arrested on suspicion of PQMes!ling a s t o l e n credit ca.n:l of Macf'arlane's and later was booked in conntttion with the slaying. The body was wrappe.<4 in a blue blanket. the feet bound and a noose. around the neck, sheriff's deteetives said, lfe had been severely beaten on the head. The pockets of MacFarlane·s su it had been turned out and his wallet, wat ch. identif'°ation and other valu ables were miss ing. MacFarlane's wife said he did not ordinarily carry large sums of cash, but had maoy credit cards. His car v.·as missing. Transamerica Fin anci al Corp. is a 11ubsldiary of the big Transamerica Corp .• a CtJnglomerate headquartered in San Francisco. Ir OUNel COAST DAllY PllOT H_..,. .. .._. -·-s-Cl1•11ta OAMGI COAST ~L.ISHIMO COM,AJfY ·&~trt N, Wtti ,,.Ill_ Mii ,~...,... J .tli •· C11rl.., Ylat "'"''.__ .... 0-al .,,..... 1111111 •1 Ktt'f'il ttllf&r' 1~•• A.. M11,,i..: .. ,.._.....,. ., ... Clit,IH H. L111 •ic.k1r1I. '· Nib ,._llt..U ~ MIW• °""" (Miii flillien: DI W•I l.y ........ ,._, ·~! Jal ,,._., .... ~.,.. l-tlVM ._,,I HI ~-Ml A-~ l..cto; T7'1'1 .... ~ ... ~: * ~-" ~,...,. ..... BALDWIN PARK (AP) -Il was 1 perfectly executed raid on a suspe cted bookmaking operation. The front and rear doors of the one-story house were bashed open and the three sheriff's deputies rush~ inside. But there were two prObiems. One, nobody was home. Two. it turned out to be the wrong house . And the owner still was mighty unhap- py about ii Wednesday, a day after the raid. "They said they were looking for some bookie," sa id Bernadette Charland, 62. "I don't even know what a bookie is." She said she had been out shopping. Belgimn's Giant Weds -He Stands 7 Ft. 81;2 Incl1es ROUCOURT, Belgium (UPI) -Atlas, the tallest man of western Europe, got married here. Somewhat nervous. ~8-year·old Fcr- nand Bachelard -nicknamed "Atl as" because he stands 7-feet-8'h: inches -put the. wedding ring on his bride's finger and nearly dou bled over to kiss her. It was his first marriage and the se- cond for bride Renee Colin . a girl tall enough by many standards. She stands 5- 7 ~. A special armchair was brought in for Atlas, who weighs 462 pounds. Workman picked it up at his home because there was no other chair available which fit his bulk. The chair was four times bigger than the one for the bride, who weighs 187 pounds. Atlas, who runs a pub near the Belgian- French border, is a popular figure in the region. He has appeared in tele vision pro- grams when a giant was needed. The entire vUlage had taken off the afternoon for the wedding. The bridal couple was preceded by the local band and village people fired a shotgun salute as they entered the school building for the ceremony. Production Norn1a] CHULA VJSTA (AP )-Production wa s reported back to normal today at the Rohr Industries plants shackled until last weekend by their first strike in :11 years. After months or delay. work started again on 2.2 of the si lver-aluminum su b\vay cars earmarked for the San Francisco Bay Area Rapid Tran sil District. When she returned home shortly after S p.m., she found plainclothes deputies searchi ng her house . •·1 thought my house was being rob- bed," she sa id. "The back door was in smithereens and they broke the lock on the front door. It scared me because my hou se was robbed two years ago." She said one deputy, clad in dungarees, showed her his badge, and said they'd "made a mistake," handed her a blank piece of paper and told her to send a bill for the damages to the sheriff's~e art- ment. ''He said it was the first mistake h d made in IS years." she said. The deputies went across the street and ::irre sted an unemployed waitress, iden· lified as Billie Joanne Strohmeye r, 38, for investigation of bookmaking, authorities said. Detectives later said they were look· Ing for an alleged telephone drop for bookmakers and t r a c ed Miss Strohmeyer's address with the General Telephone Co . The error occurred, authorities said, when the com pany gave them Mrs. Charland's address -503;. Landis Ave. - instead of Miss Stro hmeyer's, the last digit of wh ich was one number higher. The sheriff's department said an in· vestigation is under way. LA Medical Aide Not a Doctor, Authorities Say LOS ANGELES (AP) ~ A man who worked as a deputy Los Angeles County medical eir:aminer for 31J.z years has neither a medical degree nor a physi· cian's license. authorities !ay. Donald Angus Stuart. 50, was sc heduled for arraignment today on one coun t of perjury and two misdemeanor violations or th e stale Business and Proressions Code . He was arrested Wednesda y when he repo rted for wor k. An Illi nois physician's li cense Stuart listed when he applied for the job on the county coroner's staff was actuaJly issued to a doctor in 1914. officials said. They said although Stuart cla imed to have both law and n1edical degrees from the University of London earned between 1939 and 1946. the school cou ld not find any trace of him even having attended any classes, sa id Depu ty Dist. Atty. Ra lph Maye r. Coroner Tho mas Nogu chi said ah in- vestig ation was promp ted recently wh en SLuarl, on the coroner's staff since July I, 1968, /ailed to apply for a Ca li forn ia licens e lo practice medicine despite repeated requ ests fr om bis superiors. Safety of Old Shrine Sought by Cambodians PHNOM PENH (UPI ) -Cambodia n Information Minister Long Borel sa id to- day the famed 9th Century temples of Angkor Wat would be destroyed by lhe North Vietnamese or allowed to fall Into disrepair if actio n is not t11ken soon. 1..ong Borel said tht North Vietnamese. who have controlled the area 150 mlles northwest of Phnom Penh since June, 1970, have forced a stop to conservation work. kidnaped hundreds of conservatton workers and confiscated the repair materi•L Long Boret asked the United Nations to declare the area a neutral zone to pennlt conservation work to continue and aave them from destruction. The Cambodian h.igh command sakt to- day that two government . .soldiers were killed and five wounded Wednesda y by a North Vietnamese mortar barrage wltbln three milts of ttsnemples. The ~plts are a aeries ol alone shrines ere<:ted by the Ktwners. The temples were covered by jungle foliage and not rediscovered until the ltlb ctn- iurr~ut the Indochina war spread l.o cam. bodio In 1170, Alilkor Wat and !be nurby ruln1 of Anikor Thom were ltie n1Uoa'1 • greatest tou rist attractions. Among the thousands of visitors to the tt.m ples was Mrs. John F. Kennedy, wife of the late U.S. president, who visited the shrines In 1967. 1..ong Boret said intelligence reports In- dicated North Vietnamese troops may be planning a fresh miUtary oper1tkm ln the area soon. Bernard Grolier, a French national in charge of 1,100 conservation workers •t the site. said last week the Communists hall<d his W<lrk Jon. :JO mI!l' -=Kd him and his men of workJn& tor the U.S. Ctn· ·lrol lnteUJienct Agency. • Croller, wbo earlJet., Was • .iillowed pa111ge into the arta .b)' the Com- munlsta, aald be wu not .f9fbldden from reentering the are111. • One conservation eJ:Wl s1ld the temples could 1urvtve without major W<M'k for .two years but tW old 1tobe would be pennan<ntly <Wnqod ll not treated regularly. -• . Cam,bQdlan forces have Mfff tried to rccaptu.. the area becallie of Im of damaging ~ temples and Lons 8ott1 uld the &0flnunent would atlck' lo 11.1 policy ol a~oldlng mUitaty adlon wblcll oould barn\ tbe templ11. ·I.. I ·~I • . }~ " . ,. .. Big for Britches • Salesmen Steve Garner and Lou Rosebroc k jok ingly try on so me of the special ~lathing being sold at a loca l store in f{aleigh. N.C'. 'rhe s.ho~ts are.size 68, and can be stretched lo 82, \vi t.h 48·inch legs, 'rhe tie 1s 120-inches Jong. The store caters to the ·tall' and 'big' people. Mesa Police Corral Wild W oma11 at l11tersectio11 Desperately fend ing off {I a sh i n g , slashi ng feet, teeth and nails . Cosla ~1esa police finally corralled an. incoherent woman racing around a busy intersection Lrying to stop cars wi th her bare hands early today. The detainee, 18, was almost struck and killed or seriously injured aho ut 3 a.m . when one motorist missed her by inches on !·!arbor Boulevard at West \Yilso n Street. She was taken into protective custody as a possible psychotic and admitted lo Orange County Medical Center for 72 hours' observation. No evidence or drug use was discovered, according to investigating of· ficers, who did not book her on any criminal charge . Patrolma n Chano Cammarillo and hi s followup orrlcer said when they finally did co rral the incoherent fema le she repeatedly smashed her head lnto the police car windows trying to break out. Armed GI Arrestetl SA N DIEGO (AP\ -A 21-year-ol d sold ier was arrested trying lo boa rd a Weste rn Airlines fligh t to L-Os Angel es ca rrying a pistol in his luggage. the r~BI said today. A compl aint against Rote Del'.' Winegar, 11•ho was released on $7,500 bond pending a hearing Friday. said he also carried a cli p of ammunition and 50 additional round s when he was arrested Wednesday. Officer Camarillo said bot h were kick· ed, hit and bitten by lhe frantic woman but neither su ffered more tha n minor in- juries. The victim became so violent after er· riving at headqu arters for booking that she had lo be held down and strapped in- to a strai t jacket. Passersby first' reported th e bizarre in· dicent. fearing the stocky five.foot, two- inc h won1an wearing a red blanket , poncho and beanie cap woul d be hit by a car. Airline Oka.ys Back Pa y Pllct WASHINGTON ~APJ -The AFlrCIO Interna tional Association of Machinists anno unced today 1ls members have approved ;i sel · Uemcnt of $6 mill ion in back pay from Na tional Airlines. wh ich the union called the bi~gest such set· l!ement in labor histnr)'- The iij:!rcement , ratified bv a vot e of i 42 In 104 arnnni.,: !he 11'!'.lrk ers in· volved, is suhjec! lu form al ap- proval by U.S. Dislrict Judge Clyde Atkins in Miami , Fla. Nearly 1,000 1nechrin ics and nthe r groun d service perso nnel will share in the settlement. the union said From Pagel CHOP.PEI~ ..• wl11cl1 requ1rt'$ City Council approval. 1'he h1g t·srgo rhQpper !IWOOped In over 1he sdjllt't'll l Newpbrt Beach City lla!J and Polu.:e Ocpart rnent eomplrx about 1:1 05 a m . v1r1 unJl y e\'at'uat1ng the L'<lm- buuxt :slaff. Secretaries. departn1enl heads. po lice off1ters and detec tives rushed, out Ir.iv· ing 1rails ()f spilled roffef'. "f\1y Lord ... it isn't ours is it:'" gasped one pohce d e p ar I 111 e nt t·lerk. S l' I t i n ~ down nl <1 V a t a n I cOn· struct1on SJ!e Jot. thr l11g hehcopter·~ rol,irv.·ash sent . .i;r<:un.~ of sa11d rl_v1ng 1n all dircct 1on.~ The ro<ir1ng turbine engine ;1l~o M>nt sound waves ricocheting off the ap arl· 1neo1 h111't•r and broug ht heads popping out of v. u1rJt1 "'~ for blocks aro11ncf P11J11•e \Va tch ('or11111andt·r Lt. Rich J l:irni llnn hnp1l('d in a patrol car and :S4 't f'cched uul flf the headqu art ers lot wi!h red ]Jghts na sh1ng lo investig11 te. Nn ont" could ha ve heard the siren if he used it. Bv this 11111e, the tank rcplaccn1rnt wa s alnlnsl co n1plete and the chopper pilot - support cables detached -beat a hasty retreat for Santa f\1ona:a, leaving ground cre v.·mcn to fa ce the poll t'l'. OHit cr (~ary Lee 1111crrog<ited en1ployc Louie Nava and Sgt. Wayne Connelly said today that the city is in vestigating to determine what -if any -violations OC· cur red. Ge.nl'.'rally, witnesses agreed, there was a disturbance of the peace. Ont. in fact. is a Vista Del Lido gen tleman currently involved in suing a church across the street over its hourly sacred chimes, which he contends are too loud. From Pagel REPAIR ' ... were formt.r defendant s Ralph Carney, 29, Edward 's brother or 32852 Call e San l\'larcos. San Jua n Capi strano and R. C. \\o'elsner, 28, of Santa Ana. both of "·horn were cleared of all charges by Judge Turnrr before the defense opened ils <:nse. All the defenda nt s have bee11 warned by their lawyers to nol disc uss the natunt of Nickels' statement with an yone. They hav e pointed oul that if the former pro- secution witness' new testimony were to come to the jur y's attention it would in· ev1tably lead Judge Turner to rule a mistrial . Prosecutor Stenton said today that Nickels worked as an attenda nt at three of the It ser vice stations na med in the Orange County Grand Jury indictment issued following allegations of in· volvemrnt in an auto repair racket. But S\enton made it clear that he was only inte rested in what v.·ent on at the Ha rbor 11.nd T r a s k Mobil stati on ip Gardt.n Grove at the time Nick.et. was employed there and that is why he used the Costa Mesan as a prosecution wit· ness. • • J : ft 'is expeeted that the jury wh1C'h ha~ now sat through seven week s of tt'sti mony on the multiple ch<1 rges of con· spiracy to cheat and defra ud Orange OJuntv ruotorlsts will teavt. I h t courtfoom toda y to begin deliberations. Cosmetic Firm Founder Dies SYDNEY, Australia (AP) -~lerle Norman . who stirred up he r first pot o! face cream on a kitchen stove and con· trolled one of the last pe rso nal cosmetics: empi res. d[ed Tuesda y. She was 85. l\liss No rman arrived 1n Sydn ey Mon· da y on the li ner Monterrey. She died of nai ural causes while t11king an afternoon na p at her hotel after film ing a television inte rvie w, a US. consula r official said.' li er body is to be emb11lmed here and f)n 1~·n to 1hc L.'n1tcd States. The cigar-smoking president of l\1erle· /";orman Cosmetics. Inc. got the idea ('If making cosm etics when , as a medical stu· dent in Santa r.1onica . Calif. she com .. pounded a salve 10 treat children's rashl'f! and other skin irr itations. STOREWIDE JJ. J. (}arreffj CLEARANCE SALE LAST 7 DAYS e Many Drexel and Heritage Groups at Generous Savings e Many Disconti'nued Pieces as well as Several Floor Samples . 30°!o •• anJ PROFESSIONAL H aJ. G.ARRtfT f u RNflll ~~HARIO~ ILVO. INTERIOR DESIGNS COSTA MESA, CALIF. op .. M .... 'l'ltur1. ~ Jlrl. hH. 646·0215 646·0276 .• ,. .; I ( I ! I I \ ------ U.S. Agenc y Could Use 'Ziggu1·at' By BARBARA KREIBICJI Of tnt Otlly l'l!tl Slllf The idea uf n1uving a government agen- cy \\'ilh only -40 or 50 regular en1ployes in- lo thf' giant Laguna Nigurl plant bu ilt by North A1neriean Hock\\'ell is not as far- fl'tched as it sounds, according to Earl H:111•.t1111a11, regional directrir of public IJ11.i •1.~ :'>l'f\•ices for the l' S. General S1·•·.1,·t'S Adn11nistratinn ''Thf' nun1ber of employes 1 ·' r n i~ll'nding." Uaughn1an said in San Fr.111 rist:o \\'t>rlncsday , "Act aully our Los An ··,,lr.~ archives section. v;h ich is 111- (('n ... :rrl in the nlO\'e, needs 282.000 :-.rp n.r re feet of floor :;pace." T!iu ~ the agency, if it were to tllO\'e to the Niguel farilil~'. v.·o uld occupy more !han one-fourth of the plant 's million square feet of floor space. · There \\•ould be no reason for not hous- ing more than one agency in !ht> plant, the official added, saying, ''It is our in- tention to fill it completely if \Ye can ·• The \Vashington D.C. office of GSA . he ~aid . is contacting lhe \Vashington hend- <1uarters of a nun1ber of agencies in ad- ·tlition to the 34 contacted locally by the regional GSA office. Eleven of the first 12 U.S. agencies to re£pond to the proposal to move into the HoCk\\•ell "ziggurat" have indicated they are not interested, the twelfth being GSA. ·whi ch Bughrnan said is "tlefinite\y iu- terc.~ted. ·· This leaves 22 agencies of those which have inspected the plant to be heard fron1 . These hare been asked to respond by F'eb. 15. Ra11 gh1nan said. If sufficient interest is not sho\\.n, additiona l agencies \l'ill he contac!ed. he added. c:SA is respon sible fOr locating building sp21ce for all fr re r a I government larili1il'$, In seeking governn1ent 1ena n1s for the Rock\\·ell pl<int ii V.'lls respondin.I! lo a proposal by the aviation firin to trtirle the facilit.v for gO\'('rnmcnl-ov•ned buildings in o!hcr areas f\O\\' occupied 011 a lease basis bv North Amer ican Rock11·ell. · In discussing housi ng and lransporta· tion needs of government agencies during the December inspection lour or the Ni_gue\ plant. c:sA officials pointed nut t11at. althou~h the pl<'lnt \\'ns designed to house up to 7.500 NAR en1plo~·es. it n1i~ht be equal!~· suitable for <in agent\' \l'ith <r 101\·er (cl'rl of emplo~·rs bu t a need for \t'ry exten~i\'(' floor ~pacr Boys Cl ub Seeks Carpe11try 1'ooJs For Ne\V (~ourse Three professional cabinctn1akrrs from Sa n <,;!emente ha\'e \'Oluntee red as in- !'lnicrors in a ne1v carpentry course of· trred lo South Coast area bor~ and lheir fathers al the Boy 's Club. · The progran1 , offering the ch ance to lf'a rn 1roodworking skills for perso ns of all ages, will met Tuesday and ThurSday nights ll'ith special emphasis on fafher- and-son instruclion. Despite the succe~s or the c.:oursl'. hOl\'C\'<'L Boy'.-; C!ub fJirector Ron .\fichelson S<iid that hand tools Slill arc ril'sprrate!y n!'Cded as equipn1ent for thr i:Ja.~se$. ~tichelson issued an ;1ppra l th1 ~ v.·er\.. lor do11ntions of too ls of any kind suitabl~ 1\·potJv.·orking. The \·oluntecr experts who ll'ill teal'l1 tlle courses are Bill Roberts, 1\I Oensn1ore and Dick Copthorne. Registration for the classe~ now 1~ under\11ay at the club and the first t·!ass meeting 1.,.jJI be Feb. 15. 1\lichelson said that pcl\rer tools are alrcadv ;available, bu!. hand tools are urgent.ly needed. Stitch, Weaving Displays Offered Stitchery and u·eav ing by Festival or Ai'ts exhibitor Ruby liufford and arts and ct.arts by students at El Morro Elemen- taty School will be displayed during the rrflnlh of February at Laguna Federal ~\'ings Gallery. ~trs. J~ufford, who exhibits annually at t~ gallery. \1·ill also present the work of stUdents from her adult education c{asses, which she teaches In Leisure \Yorld, Tustin and Irvine. 7rhe gallery located at 260 Ocean Ave., i* open da ily during business houri!. The ejhibit is free and complimentary coffee i~ served. .. • • • ·! Da1i cer Splits > , l Jur y Decisio11 I llUNT~NGTON. W.Va. (UPI ) -$ A mistrial \\'as declared here when , il jury of six men and six women ~ t·ould not agree on the verdict in i. the case of "bottomless dancer" Teresa Scot! ~toore, 21. ., ~liss Moore was accused of dan- cing "in a le\\'d and obscene man- ner . Courtroom sources ·said the six n1en voted 'Vednesday fo r acquitUll 11nd lhe six women voted for con· viction. -· -- S ____ oA_l_LV_Pl_L_OT-2:J Hughe ·s 'Buying Spree' Recluse 'Reig11e<l' Oi,er St rip i11 1966 Ed 1tor s 11u l1' \'errid11 1011~1 /10.~ )J/ar;ed a rnlt' 1u !lie 11/e OJ llt1u·anl //t191ies. lie u_:o,-; 111;1r11e tl !111·11·, 1!1vorce.tl tlit>rr . u11d 111 //1 1' /ol~r U t'<11~ lu' lived tlt i•te , ll1j/$/1•r11111,\l11 101</ 111 'ii'!'/11 .~IVl/, b t'f(!!lit' //1 1· SIU(t'\ IUl'!)t',,/ lnn!/011.:11e1\ 1"111p/0111'r n111/ c11~1110 op- cr(itOr F'olln11 •111i1 is 1111· 1/11t(/ 11f ru"" r1·por t:s 011 th e 1111111!1 1r1ces 11( //(1Jl'U1</ /I 11.11/(c~· L:\S \/ E (;A s lt l\':1:-. Vil .1 11·i11ltr night 111 :\ovenibl'r" J:fjili th;1t llu1v;_1rd Hughes drsc11nded 011 :-,l'vadu 111 <lll <irriv~l rloakl'd wit h th(' $t'{'ft>1·y and inrrigue !hat ht• has n1:1tl<' p:.1 n ur /11 s !tl1· Hughes arril'Cd on :1 pr11';1Lc train th.i t stopped on the drscrt 0111.o;.kirt>: of Ln.; Vegas. :iecordi11g to thr 1·011rl tt'stunouy of people \~·Jiu said lht'y \.\'l'l't' I here llc slipped into 11 ('<lr '-'Sa sn1n ll "011 1'11v hcnclcd for 1h1' gl1ttf•nng ··~1r1p." ;1 1111 latf'r 1v:ilk<1d unnoticf'd into thr [)\"'r!I Inn Hntrl as a covPrcd slrt·tf'her 11·as l':1r ried through the lobby as a d1vcr.~1n11 \\'ith S5-lfi million from thr sal!' o! 111, stock in Trans-\\'orld Airlin es. llt11;h1•, \l'enl on a buying ;;prre th;it 1n;1cle h1111 Ne\'nda 's largest lando1\·11cr e1nployt·r ;;ind C':.1S1no oper<itor ,111d ;n 1at11•11 indui.trics. ho\d1ng.s ]!1111· 11urll1 <111 l'~l1111;1H·d S2 Li1l\1on 111 h1-. llull111vod 1e;1r~. ll t11:lil·' 1.:iu rll'd sl;1rle!~ and prtid ul'cd l1lni-. A" ;111 .111,1 lu1· !:1' .'t'I 11t1rltl 'Pt•1·d .111d 1•11 d11ran(·1· 1\•1·urd .. Hughes 11\f'd 111 1hl' p1·ntllu11,1· t•f 1111· ll~'.'L't'I tnu !1 11 ~l'\t•r;1I ll t1·k:-l'hl'!I Ii,• :'>lltkl1•11lv .-.1·111 doJ1\·1 1 ordt•r:. lo bl11 lh1 h1i!l'I. !<'!'"rl1·dl;. l>t'l';ll!'t' 1ht• 1n;;n:-ig1 1111'111 ;1s ~Pd h1111 to rn(•;111' 111:'> ... u1!1· 1<1 lfl<l kt• 1'0011\ !\II' lllgh·l'<illi!lJ.; ~:!1 1)/i it'I ~ F"r ~j.-, 111ilhPO !1 11::1 11·:. .ll'ljllll t'd Ii' l1u1rl in Ap11I l~fi7 H1•1orc tl11• .\t•:u· 11.0' 111·1·r ht· u1r111·d t11 rl't' u1he1· St1111 1·.1,111• l1111l·b. i\t'1<1d;1 11l l 1r 1;d:. \1'l'lt·u1l11'fl l lu~l 11""' ;11 11v1t1l·:• 'l'hl· :.!<1 !(1 11a s !r,1111~ t11 1nq1r111•• 11-; 1111ag1'. :111d H11µ,!1r·:'> 11:1:'> 11i'l111h·d lo .1.; :1 .'ign lif a 111'11· 1L·g1l11n;1cy 111 n .. i,;:1 11 111\,.: UldU :'>!f.1 _ 'rht• 11ri.l 11p11tis 1t 1\~1 t1) 11 11glit·" ,., ptH!SIOn 111 \'cv:1cl!! \',Hilt' t1.,11n (Ill' I :-- Jtistit'I' l)t·p:1rtrll('n1 , 11 h1r·h 11 ii.Jt'1'lt'd l" hi ::; ofl'r1· 111 bu y Ille Sl.1n h1~t 11•111•1 cl:11111ing it would g11'r llu ~li1·" .1 111<•11 npoli ~!Jl· hold 011 !!u' :.1 l'lp 11 11 ~ hr d1·oppefl Ju.-. 1il <ln 111 ;1cqur l't' Ill\· Sl;11·t111'.1, I.Jui bought .1 :;1n;dlcr c:1s11111 11t"\! !11 11 H111 ~hl·.-.· 11:1111\' 1111 111' :-ill'lp ho!t•I" 11 :1, ,1 1·1s1blP :.ig11 111 111-. µro\1 1nr! 1111·i·-.t1 n•·111 111 l'\t'l'<1d:1 \\'1th llHll'h i!'S~ puhl lt' nt1l1er ll!r b!llin11:1 JJ't' !'t·1·lu,1• ,1f'qui 11•tl 111 tlllllH'rnblr tr:1(•1s througlluut th1· 'trit e ol :1 si xth ca~u10. the Landmilrk Hotel 11t Lil' \'t·gas, pr imarily because llughes• 1n1111l'I 11·a.~ nt•eded to fiiu sh its i;oll* ~tn11·1111n 111 1970. dl'spit(' ~on1e Joc:.it ob- lt'\'l11,ll ll ughc~ purch:1:-.cd Jfarol<ls Clul> 111 Br1111 Jlt1i.;llt·~ n111v t·n1pl oytd 8.UOO per ~on ~. tlu· l,1rg1"! \111rk 1orct· in the slate. Hi!l • 1 ~1111 1• p;i1J g;1111til111).; t;ixes th at <1•11u1111trd 1" 1111lr1· than :i pcrl'cnl uf the '.•11• ~ ;11u111:d 1Judi::c1 Ill s holdings 1n the l.111• ·111·r\' \1•1r!h ;in c:.t1111att'd .~300 1111l)i11t1 'fh1·uu1:l1()l1! 11 all , 1-!ughrs rt'n1t1111!'d i11- 11~il1l1· ~l'CjU\·~tl•red in hi:'> pcnthou~e t l'I r\',11 .JIJ11 1·1• \h(' Strip I Ir <h'nlt only by l•·l1 ·pl ~\11r :ind le tt<'r 1vith thl' l1eutenanl.t 11!1" r:i n h1 ~ \'1•1";1da holtl 1 11g~. ·1 l1r 111:111 (1111 fr·ont. thi• 1na11 11·ho 11 n- 11·11111{'1·d lli1· ;irq11isit1.111' a 11 d Ol' 1•;1sJOn:1ll\' tnlrl the slat1• 11h:it llughes h,1r! 111 111111({ y,•as· Hnber! A. J\lahell. 11rnn1.·1· VIH agcut \l'ho arrh·ed with I !uglii·:. 11\ J f~i Sud~nl.1, Hughes Jett. La s Vegas iQ \i1\t•rnb1·r l97G--alrnost four years to the. 1!:1.1 ol hi:-; arrival Top executives of the I !u.r.:t1r.~ Tool Co. ;irrived a 1vrek later and .11111~11 11 1!·cd Iii(· firing of ~laheu. previous· THEY WAITED FOR THE MULTITUDES TO JOIN THEM Mrs. Jan Pi pperger, Daughter Bette Stood Shivering '"lie 1•ei911ed 11s f 11 ,~ Sfflfe's Jll(ISt illlJlf)l'fflllt p1·i c 11fe citi.:·e11.·· Hughe -; J1:1d p11rc:l1:1:'>L'd :10,001 <KT{·~ 11e<1r L:1s \'1•ga:. 111 !ht• t':1rll' l!l:·,o.~. ;1 parl'\'I n) ,;1 ~t· bru;li :ind · ... :ind lh;d bccan1c k11011·11 "·" llu,,i!c. To !h1-; ht• no1v added !11·•) srn;ill airporl.~. :1 rn1u11ry rluh ;111d ;1 ran1·h torn1rrll u11'111'd h,1 \'t·r.1 l\tupp. 11·id11'.1 of tlif• (;t'fln :111 111 .... ··fl11si11ess leode1•s a11d s•1•••t• s•ttte or r; ,_.i ors f<1/l,p1/ of 11119/111.• RS flff· 11ft•1· Io 11<-r . '' A11ahei1n W 01na11 's VigiJ P1·ove s Lo11ely , Expensive du st rial isl Pr:oplc 1u1t rf'cogn1zcU ;is Hughes n·prt'scnt nli\'f's quietly began buying th e For lour year,. until his equ:ill y l:i nd 111 .1nd ;1t'1)t1nd Lns Vegas. Hughe -. t . d t Th 0 nk ·,,·,·n I\' l'On~idcrrd the crov.•n prince o( th• mys CflOUS !'P<lf urr ()Jl ,, ·~ ... 1 I t.: ~<)till Ull lll'd 111•:1rlv \'\'t'fY Pll'l'(' of Ull~ '- Eve or 1970, he rei Rned :i s !ht· :'>tati.:'s dt•i·i•lopl'd l:uid 1111 tilt• S1rip. llif' I'll-Jl11gl1(•.; empire n1os! 1n1port;1nt pri\'.1\f' !'ili'l.(·11 l('r\ain1111·11t h1·:ir1 pf !.~1:. Vt g:i s :.i:1!1ru rr1;1stcd. tl<11n1i11g he had ::i." SACR:\:\JE~TO 1L'PI1 -As Jan Pi1>- penger or Annhei1n and her 9·ycnr-old daughter stood shivering on the steps or the Cnlifornia c·apitol \Vcdnesdny lookin~ for "good Chri stians.'' son1ebodv ~lo\e her \\'allet. . She lold capitol po lice. "l 11r::is prayinc: for tht'.'ir soul s. and thev stole mv ·wnllel.., Originally. she h;:r d hnped "tliousnnds,·• \rould join her in a d<ty of prayer pro- testing mQral d!'c;1y nnt! askin14 (;Qd !\1 hesto\\' "di\'ine 11 i'dnm" on thl' Calt!0rn1;1 1Rgisl:ilt1rf' lt didn'I turn out 11la1 1ra~· .\Jr .., l-'1 r- J>enger said eight pC'ople joinl·d ill , antl they .irri1'!'d lour hnurs \a!t' A! II am when ttie r1·ent o!lic1all\' began, Gov _ Honakl ll<:agan sent cin aict{> to read a p<_•rsonal mei;sagc 10 thr assembled throng. There v.·as no one there but ~1 rs. Pippenger and her daughter, Belle An n. The governor's aide left a!1cr pro- mising to return if an.vone sho1\'Cd up ll<' v.•as never c.11l<'d back. "You can't get good Christians tu i;t·I concerned abou1 their t·oun!r 1'" ,\tr~ f'ippengC'r lamentrd_ , A single man \\'i1h hi:> dog lil!er stood and \\'alched curiously as she told hin,, "The Lord has given us this land. \\'e have lo defend and v.•ork it. The Lord does not do the di shes." By noon, no one h:i.d JOined her and she v.·as asked \Vhat she 1\·ould do 1r no one did. "I've got to ha1'e al lca ~t fil'e pc wple .. 1· the Lord IYill ner«·r -.a\·e th is l3nd ." .•hr smiled . '·The Lord .-.<1 1d hc'<I sp;1rl' <;omo rrah if he l'OUld f111d 10 good penpll' I c:-in't find JO_" F'innlly l'igh! nt!i ('I' p~·J~HIL~ d/Tl\1.'d !11 help hrr prar tor !o:-t sotlls -.i nd !hf' return flf her rni~:.in:=: 11 ;11!rl The cil!ht harl tr:1\·c'ied !ron1 11r:1ng(' {~uunl ~· 1\·hcrc :;hP l il't'~-They 11p1·r lour hou rs late and \lrs. Pippenger ~aid ~h<' had bef'n t'.-.:pceting "<1 briut a h1111dr('d " "I had <'on1mil1ncnt :-. Iron' ll1,1 u;;an1ls t1f people. The.v .~II t110u~ht 1! 11a-. ;1 marvelous idc<i." she SJic!. She remained cheerful de ~pitr thr lo~s of her \\·allcr. 11•hich 11·as taken frorn lhr huge open pur~<' shr left open on lhr Capitol steps. "The Lord got n'e th is tar."' she sa1rl "He'll get me back .'' Eventually. it gre111 dark and her friends from Orange County le ft. l\lr~ Pippen~er and Bette Ann \vaitcd alon<'. "The Lord told me to come." fllrs. Pippenger said . "You gel over feelin g foolish." Al Ii p.nl .. the ot11c1a l end o! th e Dav of Prayer. ?11rs . Pippeng!'r left. · ln addition !o a \Va!let. $50 and fj\·p eredit cnrds. she left behind about 8.000 letiflrt s still in !he ir \.\Tappings . and ;i large sign. IL said ".Join us in prayer l'or our n:i· lli/11 .. Oldest: .Sex Sig1i , F ouud iu Rocks Of Austrc1lia llu uhcs. fili. prnbahll ~1111 holds U1;11 l1f'1 '''''' ,0 1·b0 I cot 1 ·ih.11 h th t ll uf.:he:> ;il;,.u hvt'<t1111 · lhl' ()\\'Hc·r ol t.'i(lll t ' " n rae \\'I ug es a position. n!though 111• rcportcd!.1· ll:is . 1 !hi' 10111 con1pany, 11·holly Ul\'!led by' lived in !11r Raha111<1 s f11r 111!' l;1s1 l·I 1111111::-, ;uicl n11 11111i· l'l<illll:. ~l'<Htl'l't'I 1!11;:111·'· 11as po v.•erlcss to break. months. llirnug/1 rur;il \t•1 ;11l.1 l:1 r n1orr ll1:u1 ht•Jd A l'Ourt. b.1ttle follo\\'ed. The tool com~ Th<' contro\'crsy ovrr lhe purpor!!'d by any ri!he r p1•t'.,1>n 1 "" p:11 1y prrit uc""' a proxy bearin g the au1 ohiograpln.• uf l/uglie ::; has focu sed nt'w 'fl t I f b ir n11nt·:-. an( c n 111\~; rna y 1;1\'C' l:l'n .~1;.:n:i111r·t· l-lo\vard n _ llughcs that gave al1enlion on his Ncv<ida ye<1rs. ff. · I one of t11c te11· b:1d i11\'rs11ncnt :J n1nUe b1· i·rin1p;1ny o 1c1a s f.IO\\'er to act for Durinrr his years in Hol ly\1•ood. hr ' ti I · II "' lluglit·s The.1· rr1n:i1q idl1 · ;i nd un1vurkl'd , up H'.~ 111 <1 matters. Hand\\Titing ex· \'i siled La;; Vegas ortcn. The 2-1-huur·a-da v p<tcc of the rit~· app:ircntly agreed 1\11 illl'C'Stigator hirt·d h~ ll11gilc ~ de~LTlh prrt s \vere called hy both sides. t'd thrn1 a-. "!hl· 1 11~1;1·'1 inc:;:. I ,.1·t·r ~lahcu ·s P>;pcrt s:iiU the signature \\'as with J!u gllc s. 1~·ho frcqul'ntly nppc:ired in r I 'fl ~a 11· · i.rgc< _ .1c tool com pany 's expert said it baggy ~:ibardin<· trousers and tenn1 ~ 1"h1·rl' 11·a.;; t:1 lt. durin1•, !1 111,11··~· 1ir,1 11:1-. i:l't1llllll'. shoes · 111u 1c:1rs 111 \l'V:1d;1 o! ,, n1:1~1 r1· 111:11 1 Tl11· JUdgc decided i11 lavur uf 1he tool IL 11·as in Tonopah. <l tnu1111t:n11 1111111111.:, I h1r lus v111 rr11n~;(·~ .i <'1;1111 11e11 1\1\\t•I. 111. 1·11n1p:11\.I' r·ulin~ !hr IJrox y valid and (Oll'n 1\'ilh <l rugged \\'cstt·rr1 flair t i:\1 " du ~trial dl'\·l'lnptnt'lll llll 111, \:ind :ind ,1 -~:1~ 111•.: 11 rou\d !lrl' fl·lahcu. ~lahC'u Hughe$ 1~·a~ Sl·crcl\y niarried to o:ie\rf'~s ... ur:<·r~qn1r a ·1rp111·1 11 I11rl1 I \t1g li1·~ l)!f 1·1'rd ( rn1nt 1•rf'<I with a $50-tn\llion damage su\t. .Jean Peters in l~j7 . Thal 11111rr1.-1 ge ended 1 !•1 bll ild 111 ~uulhl'l'll \1•1n(l<l. '\01 1!111~ .ind \ w :\cvad;1 Supreme Court decided in a divorce grnnted r.·1i1\s Peters in June t',1!l1e of :in v. of thu se idea-. th;1t Hughes n1ay be subpoened for a !971 at the cour\\1ouse in H:11vthornc _ 1 1 1. 1 drnosition. The llo\1·ard Hu ghes \1·ho arrived in 1 1ngc ol c !.'enc 1antmen1 cippcnrcd in Nevada in 1966 alread y had li ved liC'\'er:1! thf' relation bC>1v.'rl'n Hughes and Nevadri. llughes' einpire has run smoothly in hi ~ LOS ANGELC:S !U PI \ -Sex is a d <il>sence and. accordin", to the tool COil\· I ·11· td d •·-roles, anv one or \l'hich \11ou! h:l\'l' n • 1 •d 1 t t rr· · 1 • ii ron years o an ut:gan as "a novel u ~iness c .. ers anc son1e s n e o 1c1a s 11any. also more profitably. The compan• I satisfied 1110s! men for a lifeti1ne :r experin1cnr· I iat caught on pretty \\'t'll, !:tlked of 1-Jughf's <i s {1n in1 rrl upcr ll'hu h<l~ nnnounced se\'eral times that it has 'cco d1· ' t c· 1· t t th u· · ·1 S!<ir!lni:: \Vith <111 estimated $lO-mHl1on r 11g o a s 1en is a e nrvers1 v -.~unt>l.v b<iugh! 111 r0 !hl' ~l<ilt• i\·itliuur nu 1nle1111on of selling any of Hugbes' pro-of Cal ·ro · t L A 1 -inheritance in the llughes ·roo1 ·Co. of 1 rnia a os nge es_ µl'rtics. !hough it is reportedly willing t~ Th' Olde t ·,.,,.of h b I d H0uston. Tex .. he built a far.ranging con-building a11 y!11111g 11e11 tJ r <idtlin n to 11~ s s ... ·' S<'X ti\'<' een oun " /1slcn lo 1ntercsling off{'rs. In >\us!ralia. he said. glo1nera!e 11•i!h interests in th e com-ernno1n1t I.las('_ The appe<irnnce of sex u·as "an evolu· munlcaqons. en!crtainment, electronics The slate approved Hughes' purchase Nrr l '/'h p Book Co11rroversy t1011ary event ... possibly r;1nking ::;e-1 ____________________________ _.:. _ _c _____ _ cond in in1porta11ce only to the creation of life itself more lhan three billion years ago," Dr. J. \Vi!lian1 Scho pf :::aid rodav. Schopf. 30. is <i geologist ·and paleobiologist who special izes 111 lhc study of rocks and life forn1s frnn1 !he Precambrian era -the period fron1 1he ) Ji)r1nation of lhe e;ir!h 4.i billinn .\'cars 1 ;i go !n 600 n1ill1on years ag(J I Iii' 1vas picked by NASA to ex::uninr 1 1110011 ri1ck s for fo.-;.~i l rcrn;:rins ol pri1111l 1\'e life (nrn1s. ··Tei tr;ir k <lO\l'n the earliest evirlcnre ut ~t''\, Dr. Schopr l1ad to go h<ick in !ime , ,111J e\'~lu~i~n !o sorne of !~e most ancien! j :.ind pr11n1t1vc pl.1nls. rn 1 r· r o s c o p i c nr(!.111isn1' " llf'LA :.:iid 1 I 11' 11·;i s looking tor a fossil rcn1 ;lfl1S of a pyr.arntd·:::hapcd s!ruc1ure or cells \hilt 1\·as "lhe keystone to !he ::;exual process," 1 l1e uni\·ersilv said Sc/1opf ancf a s!uden!. .J:1n Blacir. found such rcm:iins in the fos.~ils of mi11ut r <ilga<" en1bf'drled in the billion-year-old f'hcr!y rocks o! biller SJ)rings in Central Au,<;lral in , UCLA said. "Based on these rem a rk ah\t n1icroscopic reintii ns. Dr. Schopf is satisfi ed that lie has found lhe earlies! evidence no\~· koo\vn in the gC\'llngica! record of life c.vcles involving sexu<ility,'' the nniversity said. '·Judging by the primiti\'eness and lack of diversity of plant life a billion years ago, sex was probably st.ill a novfl ex- periment at the time. Dr . Schopf be- lieves.'' the universi!y said . . . . WHATS NEW IN STEREO?? NEW SONY 6036 AM-FM STEREO SYSTEM GARRARD'S .. 08 l .., J 1,1 '"' -• , '! ;,qr. •IJ ·n r. '!inl • ! <l,o! IH• )1 ,1, ,f !ct'« ,, •I SHURE 111 7 ' "11 od· •' '"' ''"'llU•Hrl .. 1' 1 .. , T:• J . .i• /'I I'" ~,;,, ·,n, ~ ~I " ,• I ! -•---=1 L,&,NC! ~ '' 11 LANCER '•,1 1 ~111··1L"r"~'" I 111 r;on ,. I l•·•I" 'I .. l.11\I L , !•"liar I'••'" ;:111:1'.11> u 1 ... 11. Cj)UADRAPHONIC DECODER - NEW '72 SONY SQD-1000 -·· ,. ( I' "( 1' , • ' 'r) ')'1 ~.,. ,---· • l l : °r-j . •e 192.50 !'Tr,-rri .. :11.il)r11\,. Sony'< newtst t ecr;v~r h~' ., 1111w1r OVfDUf of 24 Wills (R.M.$, •I II ohrnt ) w ilft u1111s11<ol je1tur11 •11ch .fl 1ronr panel mik• lnpvf,, SALE $277 92 ONLY 2 LEFT! HURRY IN! SONY AM-FM STEREO TUNER SAVE $50.10! Baby ~la~hine ~ --··· . --·--111.- Tht ST·SIOO It 1 top porlorm•r with 111 dttd slltrot Mlut1iequi1i Slioivs How It's Done SAN DI EGO <AP ) -Students. meet flera. She'll show you ho1v a baby is bon1 -as often as you like. Hera is a lifesized n1annequin built by Charles F. Kn app, a mechanical en gi neer at the University of Kentucky 's nursing college. It's a machine t'fhich realistically goes through the prod:ss of having a human child. righl dow n to givinl{ lhe fetus .-. heartbeat. "\Ve built this n1anne<1uin to finf'- tune the nurse prior to the clin ical si tu:i- ti<>n, so that when she gets to tha t first patient she has a higher degree of con - fidence and compctc.11cc." Knapp sntd 'Vednesday at the ::innual San Diego Biomedical Symposium. "I expect that it might prove usef ul in rr1edJcal schools and even in courses for riremt?n , policemen and c x p e ct a n t mothers." he added. Knapp ~aid the mannequin was named Hera after the c:reek sOOde~s of chlldblrth. Shr consists or pe1vl s, vaglnal canal. uterus, placenta. umbilical cord and fetus. The machine is made of nib. ber and po,lyvlncl chloride gel. Hera's uterus is encircled with l\VO balloons which force labor Contractions and evcntu11lly expel the baby and the afterbirth. The rctus is loaded with a speaker that produces a heartbeat. An in· flatable wedge in front or the spine alters 1he position of thl' uterus to fit \'ariou3 stages of tabor Hera is con1rollcd by an eltt· tropncumatic systcn1 1vhich automatically \'arirs the intensit y. frequenc y and durA· lion of conlr11ctions and the nnture of the fetal heartbeat, Knilpp said Knapp, who bu1lt llcra \vith fund::; from the Pu blic llcalth Service. sa~·s the prtr jcct increased his appreciation of the human OOdy. "Jo tryi ng to build it v.·e just had ter· rlble problems." he s11id . "It m11krs you realize v.·hat 11 gorgeou s creation tilt real thin g is." Sony Corpor<otion of Amtrica '" cotl<obor•l ion with Col11mbi1 ••cord• introduc11 th• new "SO" 4·Ch•nntl Rttord .Sy1t1m. Th• sci Sy1tem t1k1s 4 orlgin<ol ch1nnols of 1011nd 11nd 1t1cod1t them irolo • form th1t c1n ht record1d in two (hlnn•l1, Thi• dtcoder t h t n recr1•t•1 lh• 4 1ep.,r.1lt c:htnmil1. Thi~ 111w to11nd i1 now ;aiv•llahle $9650 .,, Atlanttc. NOW ONLY b1ckgrovnd on l'M, cl••n •rod e11y 1ovnd and slllcy 1mooth h1ndtlng. W ith• .5ttr110 1tptr1tf.,. of' 40 ....... 1elec1ivl1y of 10 dB thl1 l.5 trvly •mon9 th• fln•I unlta 1v-1l•W.. REG. PRICE $219.SO NEW '72 SONY PS-5520 STEREO TURNTABLE Th• "''"''' J05-SS20 i. tn9IM1rl4 t• .,.,,,, eu1•m•tl<•llr • lftaiwelly. lt't m•PIJ' f11tur" l11clut111ritj..1ltttlnf, hyttrMlt tJ'"c.hr•ltMlll flMtW. atotlc ll1lt11cM ton• t rm, .trt. ..,.,n•l-1 ~utllty M!.1"4 r1,...4wt• with ••h drlvtn ,.11tte r Is tfllt by tho SS20 pltyltttk vnlt, "St•rt, .. ''r•l•ct," .. ,,,_,,., •11lilf "stop,'' ar• 1vtomatlc•lly tctlv1ttd 1rf 1 t.Vdl- W1lnu1 bes• .,l'\d hiniatd du•t·c:over ltodvlilftd, I NOW $131 5G ONLY 1 f DAILY PI LOT \ \ I ~ps All the Best Laid Plans ... By TH0~1AS MURP HINE 01 lflt O.ilv "Ill! l111f RJCKY TICKY POLITIX : Orln,R:r Count~"• newrst munici pality la.~t night appured ln have slipped and f,!illen nn 1t~ calltclive kazoo for the f1r11l lime in 11~ heretofore careful campaign lo protect mother nature. This all developed when lrv int'.ll new City Council Almo:iil appointed a pl11nning commi.llsion. Almost , but nor quire. You wlll recall that the fledgling munici pality warmed the heart., of nature lnver1 i nd environmentalist:ii 1lmost before the new City Council had the .~e1t!I CJf <>ffice warm . Th11I happened when councilmen abruptly adopted an anti-tree choppin1 law. Then too. they slapped 11 9tk:lay freeze nn any new construction within the infant city. THIS WAS particularly significant btt1use w1 iling in the wings with county ble1slng were di!velopers who sought rewninis to allow five new subdivi.llklns and 5.115 new homes in Irvine. The free.ze. it was reasoned by the new council. wouli1 allow some breathing time to appoint a plannln11: C<lmmission. In turn. tht 90 day~ would give new planntrii time tn study where 111 the.~e tract.s would propose to spread foun- t1.ation1 and just whal kind of impact al! lhi11 would hive on the ntw city. So the council went through the painful procel.'! of .'!Creening .!Jome 2.'1 c11ndidates and last night WA!! the limr for !he coun· ell to appoint~r.even commisAioners fron1 the Ii.lit of hig~y qualified folks. ACTION TO APPOINT was approved, but Jo. it came on 11 :'I to 2 vote wilh coun- cilmen Ray Quig ley and John Burton casting nayt. Wh.v? Wtll, neare!I it can be determined. Burton 111'1d Ray Qu igl l'y wanttd each of five: councilmen lo Appoint one com- missioner ap iece. rather than hiving the job done sort of en masst. So anyway, the planning C-Ommission ordinance pa!sed. right? Yes. but a:oi 11 r11ular sort of l11w, it won 't be effective for 31 day.ll. And that cho ps pretty deeply into the to.day ~tudy freeze. So ne1t, the council trie1 a motion tha t would create it• first plannin g c<im- mi1sion as tn "urgency'' melter. That make.ll ii effective immeditlely. No waiting per iod. Pop, instant commis.'!ion . WELL. THAT drew the same 3 to 2 volt. Ray Quigley and Burton s:iying no deal. Nnw to pas.ll an emergency h1w, you need f<>ur votes. And the planning com- misaion didn't get four v<>te:oi. After a brief recess. the other Quigley, Councllm•n Henry, comes up with a mo- tion th1 t would •ppoint the chosen can- didal@I a.ll an ''Interim Advisory Com- mittee on Zoning and Plann ing." This gets approved. So there you have ii, folks. lrvlne has !Orne planners but they aren'l really em- powered to do an ything yet. MEANWHlLE. if my arithemetic isn 't lno fuuy, it seems that the 90-day con· ~truction freeze is in it!! 36th day. Anti it will take another 3~ day.ll btfnre that regularly-adopted <1rdinance becomes la ...... thus turnin!I! the commiller pumpkin 1ntn a <'ommiss1on coach Tha1 leave.'I IS or ~<1 <lay.~ on tht cnn· !!!ruction frel!ze in which the new com· mission ~els to 11r udy plan.11 for 5,115 homes. proposals for the McDonnell · Dougla.~ properly and Lord only knnws what else that may dribble through the rront door at city hall. Whoever gels to be Irvine'!! first plan- ning ct1mmission chairman heller have thr fastelll aavtl in the We.o;t. You can only hope the whole com- mission -oner it i1 a commission - dotsn'I disappear from tiiht. Buri td 1n 1 blizzard of paperwork. POW Relecue ' Viet Cong Off er ~ New Peace Plan ~ 'Matt ll'itl1 Scytlie' PARIS (U PI ) -The Viet Cong formally submitted a new peare plan to. day. promising lo release American prisoners of war the day all U.S. troops leave Vietnam. The plan. submitted by Viet Cong delegate Nguyen Van Tien to the United States and th e South Vietnamese at the 14.1rd session of the Paris talks. also agreed to formal peace discussions with the South Vietnamese if President Nguyen Van 'l'hieu resigns . , • There was no in1mediate comment from U.S. or South Virtnt1mese officials. Tien described the plan as a variation of the seven-point proposal submitted by the Viet Cong last July I. The new plan was im rnediately en· dorsed by the North Vietnamese. Canad ian Prime Minister Pierre l'rudeau clowns and trades quips with Quebec farmers in Montreal after they presented him with a statue of him self entitled "l,e faurheur" (~Ian \vith a Scythe). Standing in a cold drizzle on Lhe sidewalk of the Avenue KI e be r negotiating hall minutes before the start of the session, the silver-haired Viet Cong official said there were two high points in the redrafted plan ; Actress Charges George Peppard With Sex Atu1.ck BOSTON (UPI J -Warrants charging attempted rape and 11ssault and battery have been issued for actor George Pep- pard. who ili working on a ml)vie being filmed in Bost.lo. The warrants were issued in Muni cipal Court following a complai nt by Miss Joan McLaughlin , 24 , who had a bit part in the nlov1e. !:hr claimed !he assault took place Jn Pepp~rd 's suite al a Boslnn hole] on !he morning of Jan. 30 after she hed ac- cepted an invitation to i;::o to his hotel. Ci!y poticC' were called by a holcl set:urify guard who heard the girl screaming. After hcarini.: of !he alleged assault, police ad vised lhe girl lo file a complaint in the court . Peppard has since left tile cily, police said. "The char.1:e is completely false and without foundation," Peppard said 1n California. "A court hearing will make short work o( this slander." Peppard':ii estranged y,·1fe, actress Eliubeth Ashlt.y . said "anyone who knows George y,·ould know how absolutely ridiculous this charge is.'' Pepparrl's press agent , .Jay Bernstein, said "this kind of accusation is common and ingurance Cflmpanics call 111tars like Peppard target risks, since anyone can use their name for the ir own self publici- ty ... " Deal Collapses, King's Castle Casino Closed INCLINE VJLLAGI::. Nev. (UPI) - King's Castle Hotel-Casino closed today becau.'!e .ii S23 million deal to sell it fell throu1h. accordinJI to operator N11thon ,Jacobson. The garnbling 1n !he casino section stopped \\'edne~rlay. .locob~n. who opentd the resort in 1969, ~air! he hopes to reopen it in the ~ummrr whPn l ouni;L.~ brin~ 11 bus1nross boom to the Lake Tahoe area in the sum· IT1tr . In the meantime. son1f' 6:iO cmployc~ will pick up lheir checks F'rid11y but then be oul of work. "A procee<lin11: will he f1lc1/ in L.:.S. District C-Ourl for reor11:anization of the company," Jacobson said. He did not s11v whelher he would. re- main with the reOrganizcd comp.any. Jacobson said the closure became ntcessary whrn proposed buyers C1'1uld not avoid prolonged delay in transferring tbe mone y through European banks. M11sliie Ralied Over Coals The United States must set a ne"' deadline for the complete withdrawal or its troops and Thitu must resign im- For Attacli 011 Nixo11 Plan mediately. . "This dale also will be the one mark1ni.:: the release of alt prisoners of war in· C'\uding the U.S. pilots" held in l\'nrth Vietnam. he said . By WALTER R. ~tE:A RS AP l'1Utlc1t Wrll•r Led by the Whitt HOUSI!, Republicans have joined in denouncing Sen. Edmund S. f..1uskic for a campaign speech dismissing President Nixon'11 Indochina peace terms as proven fa ilures. And Nixon's campaign organization. the Committee for Re·Election of the PresidenL said Its only interpretation of Muskie's "change of heart is that he is appealing blatant ly for votes from the !eft wing of his party." I CAMPAIGN'721 Fo ur Republican senator~ and House GOP Leader Gerald R. Ford issued statements accusing the Democratic presidential candidate of trying to 1m· prove his political status at the expense of Nixon's efforts to end the war. "This is the worsl kind ol guUcr politics," said Sen. William E. Brock Ill of Tennl!ssee. \Vhilr Hou~e press secretary llonald L. Ziegler said Muskie'!! remarks "were not lvorthy of co mment ," then called it regrettable and unfortunate that some public figures chose lo reject the Nixon lern1s "before Hanoi has." "Now is not the time for parl1sansh1 p lo be put above the cause of peace,'' said Zie.li:ler. The Republ ican \.countert1ltack drew more attention than the original speech, in y,•hich ~1uskie told 150 chu rchwomen W~nesda y that the United States should set a date for total military withdrawal from Indochina . l'r'ilh release of U.S. prisoners and safely of the trf)(lps the on· ly condition He said Nixon "did not offer t0 ex- change our presence in Vietnam for !hf' freedom of our prisoners. Ins tead, hr l;:i1d down additional conditions. a i;::enrral set- tlement of all outstanding issues. or a Cti'lse-firr 111 all of Indochina " ~1usk1e called !hat an a!tempt "t(l '.l'i n ;iJ the conference table y,•hat we h11vP not won and cannot win on the battlefield Brnck said he found JI incredible that l'rluskic. y,·hom he called an instrument <1f war policy during !he ,/o h n s on Administrat ion. "would have tht nerve ro stand before the American people and de· nounce the one President who h11.~ bet.n 11ble to get us: out of the Vietnam quagmire _ .. ''This is the worst kind of gutter politics,'' Brock sa.id . "If it were th~l and nothing more, the damage would be slight. "But the greater and more-lra.gic: effort of r-.1r. ~1uskie's desperate elfort is to in· sure that the war y,·ill go on and more wil! die because he wanted to be presi- dent so bad he y,•as willing lo undercut the President's efforts to win a final peace." the Tennessee senator said. Sen. Hobert J. Dole of Kansas, the Republitari n11tional chairman. said the speech indicated !hat Muskie "lacks the wisdoin, the 1naturity and the sense nf responsibility needed lo guide this nation during the 1970s ... " Sen. Peter Dominick \R-Co!o.J, said it y,•as incredible !hat Muskie "[or the most blatant partis;in purposes. lvould try to undi!rmine" Nixnn·~ program for peace in South Vielnam . silverwoods "We also demand that Thieu rou st resign immediately and the Saigon government must change its policy." he said . "If thi s becomes the case. the Provisional Revolut ionary r.overnmenl i PRG 1 .,.,.ill discuss with this government the fo rmation of a nation:i l concord government.·· . . . Tien w:irned 1tiat only on lh1s tond1l1(1n will the Viet l'nn.c; lalk with Saigon. He firmly denied Thieu's recent statement th;it ihere ha\·e been pr ivate talk~ with the Comn1un1sts. The new plan was essentially the pro- gram outlined in a Rad io Hanoi broadcast mnnitnred 1n Sa1.c;on \Vednesday. The PRG -the political arm of thP Viel Cong -s;11d in the broadcast Presi· ' Repeat of a Sell-out! Reg. 27.50 famousJaymar ·Double Knit Slacks with finished bottoms 19.90 '• dent Nixon's eighl-po1nL pcatt offer wa •~· un acceptable and was "glaring proof of:· Nl1on 's secret desian tn buy time fot:_: com pleting his Vietnamization policy and_:: perpetuating U.S. neocolonialism in Soutlf:: Vie1n;:im through the presence of the p~; Amer ican Thieu government " ·-: -:; Jur y Sentences Sickle Slayer To Life Term • '· f\"EVADA Cl'fY IUPll -A Superior:: Court jury ha5 ordered life imprilClllmenC:4 fnr C!arente Olis Smith in the slaylnjs ot") two persons last summer In a quit~ California campground with a sicklt-lik~;: ... weapon. ··1 thought of notifying them to prepare the gas chamber but now ii won't be necess11rv." the baldin.11:. 44-year-oht Smith jo-ked to newsmen moments after the jury reaC'hed it.~ decision Wednesday night. The penalty was imposed by the same seven woman. five man jury that co~ v1cted Smith last week of bt:ing the ''laughin(!. growling " man who ~l ipped in· to Dog Bar campground July 12 and hacked two campers to death. Smith smiled when the jury announced the penalty shortly before 11 p.m. in the plush courtroom of Ju<l ge Harold \VoHers. y,•ho announced he would furmally pass sentence Valentine's Day. \Vhi!n asked by a newsman whether the was happy with the outcome, Smitlt replied : ··ves. I am happy 1f there had ta be a verdict al all." Smith. an unemploy ed garbaje col· lector. was convicted of first degree murder in the slaying of Donna F'\lzhugh, 28. Ontario. and second-derree murder in the killing of John Simmons. 29. Weimar, Calif. Ht alsn was convicted of two lesser crime~ in !he midnight at tack. .. • ' • • ' • • • • • • ' I l • ' • ' ' l ' • • • • • l I • . • • • ~ • • c • • Snow Hits Upper Michigan In answer to many requests, SHverwoods hes made special arrang~ men ts to repeat a recent Jaymar a11ek setr..out. ltyou missed out last time, here's your chance to save substanllally ! • • I I Storni Prontpts Gale W a r11.i1igs on Great Lakes WAtlOIU.l WIA?Kll SIMCI rottC.A.S.11• 1AMln' • 4 •7t on these nationally famous polyeater double knit slacks .•• with finis hed bottoms and exact Inseams. No waiting for alttratlono. No rotum trips. They're eelf-belttd, flared and Nldy to wear. Don't delay. If history repeota ltaelf, they won't IHI long. • • • • • • 30.14 !10.00 • 3 ~ / U11 TOUll l&.'idll G DM CIMW, ....,... OMAM1, llMtAlllllCAM Oil AMINCM C lllS •s FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT CENTER • NEWPORT IEACH ' ' I ! ~ . l ·- -- Irish Cheer Flames Crowd Celebrates Enibassy Bur1iin.g PROTESTS JN BOSTON • BOSTON (UPI \ -Prote:i;t! over the dealhs of 13 C'ivil ian~ DUBLIN (AP) -Gangs of the staff had evacuated lhe Ne"·ry and avert the possibili- youths milled through Dublin build ing and removed all ty of a repetition of· th e in Ulster "'ere staged \Ved- all night. taunting police and scerrt and ... aiuab!e documents bloodshed last Sunday. But a nesday at the State House and ; ~inginfghinBce~~brhaEtionbof burn-before the attack Wedne5day . member of the aS!OCiatlon told for the second day, al the 1ng o t e r1tis m assy. British consu late. Th B .. h b do 5. The value of the building was newsmen, • •N e 1 t Sunday's e r1t1s am assa r. Jr esti·mated al M".000. 1 House Speaker David M. h k -• l •-.w march ts defin tely and tr-Jo n Pee • returnn.i rom 1'h I . h l bl "I d 1· f Bartley (0-Holyoke), w a :s London and remarked coolly, e ri s govern men revoca yon, n e iance o a "I suppose we'll just have to a Po Io g i zed. accepted ban on all such demonstra-forced to clear the \'isitors' compromise." l~e said he responsibility for the damage tions. The government warned gallery in the House of h and offered to pay full com-that British troops would Rep res en la li ves when planned to see t e government pensalion. break up the march. demonstrator~ dernanded an **************·~**** MERCURY SAVINGS and loan as30Ciation Open Mon.·Thurs. 9 a.m.4 p.m.; Fri. 9 a.m • ..S p.m. BUENA PARK Mercury Savings Bldg., \'a lley Vie w at Lincoln HUNTINGTON BEA CH Mercury Savfnl' Bldg .. E~inger at Beach TUSTIN Mercury Savings Bldg., Irvine Blvd. at Newport Ave. * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * as soon as possible lo discuss 1·mm-•i·ale vote 00 a '''"lu-l. f th f In Northern Ireland, of-British toops came under cu ''" compensa ion or e our-1 -~ilit~;~~~~~j~~~~~~~~~~~l:·0::u:,:··==~l:e:w::·t:d:':w:a:l:o~f]~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~3 lo G-g·an building ficials called on the Civil sni per fire and an attack by --------s ry ... ..,r 1 near troops from Northern lreland. the center of the Irish capital. Rights Associ ation to cancel a nail bombs in Belfast after ___ _ A mob estimated at 30,000 parade scheduled Sunday in midnight. _ _ _ __ _ burned out the Embassy Wednesday in retaliation for the kill ing last Sunday of 13 civilians in a clash wit h British troops in Londonderry, Northern Ireland 's second Ul'I T1l1phok1 FIREMAN WATCHES FLAMES SWEEP EMBASSY 30,000 Stormed Building With Fiery Gasoline Bombs Toll Now 235 fl Bomb Shatters Pub, .· 1 l(illed, 7 Injured BELF'AS1' IUPil -One pe rson "'as killed and seven irrjured Wednesday v1hen a bomb exploded outside a rural pub frequented by Ron1an Catholics. 'Police said the blast at a pub in Stewartstown, about 40 miles west of Belfast, was the Archdiocese Fornis Fund NEW YORK (UPI) -The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York announced the formation Wed nesday of a fund for the families of men killed or jailed in the sectarian figh ting in Northern Ireland. Money from the fund will be made available td'both ~e!J. tant and Catholic families, a spokesman for the J .8 million member archdiocese said. first in the community since the current wave or Irish na- tionalism began three years ago. The victim, who was not im- mediately identified. brought the total number of persons killed in violence in Northern Ireland in the la st three years to 235. The Stewartstown explosion follo wed by several hours a bomb al a grocery in Sion Mills, O:iunty Londonderry. Four masked men walk ed into the Sion Mills store, lefl a bomb. ordered cmp!oyes out of the building and set off the explosive. There were no in- juries. In other acts of violence Wednesday, one man was shot and killed by British soldiers in ·:Belfast, and a gnoline bomb ~ttack was reported on an army .information of- fi ce in Hudder~ield, England. PACKAGED ROSES PACKAGED ROSES GRADE Ph PACKAGED ROSES GRADE 1 GRADE 2 Ch•rlott• Armatrong Mlr•ndy Ctlmaon Glory Lowell Thom•• Chryaler lmperl.11 Bucc11neer Pe•<• largest city. The outnumbered p o I i c e made no attempt to restrain the mob as it hurled salvos of gasoline bombs and burned symbolic coffins straddled by effigies of British Prime Mini ster Edward Heath. After seeing the Embassy gutted, one group moved on to s torm the nearby British Passport Office. But there the !)')lice broke up the attack with a baton charge that gave several demonstrators sore heads. A firebomb altack had been n1ade on the Embassy Tues- day, and the 30 members of Rogers Has Meetings On Crisis WASHINGTON IAPl Secretary of State William P. Rogers, foll owing up hi s meeting Wednesday with Bri· tain's ambassador to the United States. confers today with Foreign Minister Patrick J . Hillary of Ireland. Hillary is expected to ask Rogers to put pressure on Bri- tain to withdraw its troops from embattled Nor the r n Ireland, the British-held coun- ties to the north of the Irish republic. State Department a n d British representatives refus- ed to disclose details of Rogers' meeting with Britain's ambassador, the Earl of Cro~r, but they said the pair discussed matters of mutua] concern. including B r it is h views of the Irish crisis. c TREE ROSES Apollo s7 99 C•ntury Two Troplun• Summer Shine C ROSE CARE NEEDS e I OZ. VITAMIN 11 (Rosa lnsuraft<•i e PRUNING CLIPPRS . • ' ' e 5 LI, ORTHO ROSE l Fl.OWEI CAii ' . • ORTHO ISOTOX CO~lo ,ACK ' ; ~ 'e 1 O pz. ~CSE & 'LO'!'fER) DUST . ' l ' - : • 14 oz. OR THO •os~ ' '1.0wt• SPRA y • 29C 3.99 2.98 5.98 1.69 1.69 COME ~ AND M~ OUR ROSE SPECIALIST IN OUR GARDEN SHOP SAT., FEB. 5. HE WILL ANSWER ALL :vouR ROSE PROBLEMS. SESSIONS AT 11 A.M. AND 2 P.M. GARDEN CLUBS INVITED. 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M1ln Sr. CANOGA 'AJl.IC • 21339 S.ticoy St. WOODLAHO HILLS• 22766 Ventu r• Blvd. SANTA ANA • 2533 S, M11n SI, SAN 01100 • 346$ C1m11\0 Del Rio South AAJlOYO QJlANDIE • 1200 Grand Awt. SANTA MARIA• 1'4•t South &lof.Mf Rd. ' ., '· ·' " •• i • . ' DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Shuttle 's California and FJorida appear Lo be emerging from a fie ld of 144 candidates for the forthcoming Space Shutl le launl'hing and retrieving sites. 'fhe Los Angeles-based CaJifornia Sp ace Shuttle 'J'ask f<'orce has advanced more than 30 cogent reasons \\hy the combination Vandenberg and Ed wards ~1r ba!.(:S should be preferred over Cape Kennedy. \Vh1le !hey n1ust ~urely be _Impre ssive to the site_ decision·ma_k· <'fl'. the nod could go to Cape Kennedy \\'llh "cconomiz· Hig" used as the overriding political consideration - not I/lat "cheaper location" \\1ould be a tact. . r~ven if that 0<·curs. the Pacifi c states \vould st1ll he a major benefici ary in terms of thousands of job~ for presenUy unenlployed, or under-en1ployed, aero- !)pace \11orkers. ~·tcDonneJl Douglas, North American Ro ck\\1ell , Lockheed cind Grumman are all making de· sign studies of the ne\v craft in the hope of lcinding the main development contract. \\lhile governrnent debate goes on over t he Space Shuttle's "'here. \\'hen and how much, some outspoken layme n continue to demand, either modification or a toinpl cte s hUtdown of the !!i pace program and diversion of the funds to pressing problems on the grou.nd. . 1'his concern is und erstandable, but misses a pr1· 1nary point. The space program has already been a heavy contributor to the science and tech.nology nee(.led to deal with air a nd water pollution. mass transit shortages, medical technology and other earth-bound problems of immediate importance. Importance 1nodlfy then1 while in orbit, using a space station. On the defense side, the shuttle might be used to approach unn1aoned enemy sat.e Uites cu1d, if they are arn1ed. neutralize them. Enemy mlssile sites and troop movements could be observed by th e manned craft. Space scientists visualize a vast in1provement an~ expansion of present wea ther forecasting an.d C'omm~n 1· cations uses. They see t he shuttle as making possible discovery of presently unknown deposits of fresh water, oil and n1inerals; reporting on depletion of these re· sources: spotting crop d iseases, for est fires and the movements of fish in the oceans. 'fhe lis t of potential benefits is endless. Those cited are only samples. Apart from tangible, immediate job and economic benefi ts, however, is the long·term need to protect and advance t he nation's economic base U1rou gh advanced technology. The s pace program is the essential research and development prelude to that technological advancement. A Real King of tl1e Beasts 'fhe best thing that has happened to lhe male ego since Won1en's Lib started making the scene -and s on1e scenes -is a J 7-year-old lion named Frasier. Sinc:e lions live only 12 years on the average, Fra!;· ier, the ex-circus lion now Jiving the life of Riley -or more likely the life of Casanova -at Lion Country Safari in Laguna Hills is at least a centenarian, and may· be a Methuselah. • "-" ' ~,., .. .If>;::.._.,.,,_, .~~7 . .,.,,.,. '" ,,~ . \;~ .-'"''""~~ .... "· . T he new Space ShutUe program stands to reap the benefits of the na ti on's heavy investment in space ex· pl oration, and at a much lo"·e~ cost. On ly 14 ~ears ag?· the firsl 31-pound U.S. satellite was thrust into orbit at a cost of $100,000 per payload pound. The present Apollo C'ost of $1,000 per payload pound will come down to $100 -possibly only $50 -for the Space Shutt.le. To relieve the despondency of a pride or 11 young lionesses, the Safari brought in a succession of young lions. Each 'vas mauled in the rejectio n process. 'rhen they introduced old 1''rasier. Next day, the lionesses purred placidly in the su11. 'The Supreme Court on our doorstep ? Surely there must In addition, the shuttle would return to earth 1n· tact. And it '-''Ould repeatedly be used to put ci vilian and mil itary satellites into orbit and rel.urn the~ for repair and reuse. Or the shutUe crew might repair or But an exhausted but happy .F'rasier lay on his back, paws in the air. Vitamins are reviving him. Let's hear it for Frasier -a morale booster ror aJJ oldsters, human as \Vell as animal. Next Step ita l'ie~nat•a Negotiatio1as Headed for The Search for Flexibility WASHI NGTON -After several days or public and private brierings and the clash of pro and anti reaction. a certain clarity begins to emerge here on ·what the nexl .step in the Vietnam negotiations n1ust necessarily be. The political prob- lem is pa rarnount. This is what lfenry A. Kissinger has bee• continually say- ing, but il is subor· dinated in the wealth vf detail ove r his ::;ecret ml!!Sions. $2.:-i billion for recon. · - struction, prisOllfr ex change, withdrawal date11 and ao on. A ne,,. formulation ii needed to bridge the wide gap between Hanoi 's c(lncept and \Vashlngton's coneept of the political con· ditlons that would exist when a ceasefire went into effect. JIANOl'S VIEW is adarnant. No Thieu- Jed government. Political pnrt icipation in determining Vietnam 's future only by •·peace elements." Washi ngton 's view is equally adamant. No cashiering of President Thieu. Political participation open lo all element s. Decision by ballot. Where and hO\Y can such "'ide <llf. rt'rences by resol\'ed ? They probably can- not be resolved so long as Hanoi has the means to conti nue !he war Hanoi obtains the means to continue the \\'ar from Pe· king and Mosco"'• mainly from ~tosco11'. Therefore. le\'erage to make Hanoi ac· ccpt a new politi cal formulation and . ,, • Richard Wilson. move to a standstill ceasefire lies in Pe· king and Mosco1v. President Nixon visit :i1 both capitals in the next four monUls .. If he returns v•ithout having set in motion those forces which \\'ill cause Peking and/ or f\toscow to exert their leverage. the outlook for a precleclion settlement in Vietna1n ~'11\ not be very good. TlllS IS J~1PLJCIT in lhe President's c.'Oming journeys however much Kissi nger may disparage speculalion linking pe-ace in Vie tnam to th e presidential visitations. Natu rally. Kissinger would do so. 'fhe letdown of failure in such publicly slated ain1s could not be risked. Nixon has tried to get <1round the prob- Jen1s of a political settlement by of· fering to irnplement military aspects of the agreement separately (Ince an overall agreement in principle has t>een sig ned. But Hanoi want s to know the political shape of thing s in South Vietnam rirsl. In this area so mewhere may .lie some nexibility on both .sides which could be pursued in Peking and Moscow. Th is is evidently one of the things Ni:con had in mind when he said that "as .s~el negotiations can sometimes break a public deadlock, public disclosure may help to bre ak a secret deadlock." Now ever)1hing is out in the open so that Pe· king and Mosco1v will not have to depend entirely upc;in its information about !he negotiations from what Hanoi tells them . TJfE PRISONER Of<" WAR question dominates American public discussion but. 1vith all sympathy for lhe men being held, the real problem is the nature of the political settle1nent. So mething will have to give way on both sides in this area before the prisoners are released, The search ror this nexibility is y,•hat the ne"· stage of the negotiations is all about. As difficult as the search may prove to be, it does not deserve to be judged im- possible. Nor does Nixon's pursuit of the search deserve to be judged n1erely as a domestic political exercise. It has a higher ind more justifiable purpose. At the very least. one purwse has been served. The Hanoi governlnent and the National Liberation Front are no longe r ignorin g the proposal Nixo n made last October. FLICKERINGS of interest may be deceptive. but they also may lead to modificat ions y,·hich Nixon can pursue. One route has been largely overlooked. The President said he is "'illing to settle only the milit ary issues and leave the political issues to the Vietnamese alone. Under that approach the United States would wilhd ra1v all U.S. and all ied forces within six months in ex change for an Indochina ceasefire and the release or all prisoners. Nothing said, here, about !he political structure in Vietnam. There are many possible variations of the Nixon proposal. It is not mission im· possible but mission poli tical. y,·it h the formulation yet to be found. Why Hughes Is Folk Hero The rich. ;'_ SColt Fitzgerald once 11bserved. art> dil ft>rt>nt from you and me. rhey are differcn~ not only 1n having mo re mone y, as l{em ing1vay quipped, but 1n the 11•ays they spend or don't spend it. 'iteel millionaire Andrew Carnegie btLie\'- :d that it was a disgrace for a man lo die ric h and made a valiant effort to dispose if as much of his largt fortune as possi· >le. Likewise. E. (\airborne Robbins. c.'OS· 11etic. drug and pet food heir. took 132 of Jis employes to Jla vena for a five-day nicatlon in 1959 and no"' gives e:ach of ·hr more than 2,000 men and women who ~·ork for hirn birthday end Christmas :Hts. 011 mJllionaire Nubar Gulbenkian. ~·ho died earlier this 1nonth . thought 1othing of impor1ing a lroup nf Turk ish l<'ll y dancers at a cost of $50.000 for one- 1alf hour's enlertelnmcn l al hi s London •nrlies. Olhers are less eager lo part \l'iUl their ni llions. Oilmfln J . Paul ~tty -whose iaily tncome may be as high as $300,000 -installed a pay lelephont 1n his IUJ· I ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Rabcr't N. W~~. PM.b lisher ThomQ.'I Xervil, Edi.tor A.ibl"rt 'U'. Batu Ed1rorial Paqe Editor The e-ditnrh1 I N .. or tM v.ily rlJot ~ks 10 inronn •nd atlrnu• 1a.1e-rtildf':ni 1iy f11"raenlin5t' this ncwilf>l'Pl!l"0111 01linlorw and tl001· Mlf'fllt.Ty t'ltl l opla. nr tnt"1'ftt and :iilJl:nHlttno\ by 11tovklbtJC • forum ror Ow-"-"~inn ol oor n-eden' (r~nto~. And hy Jlf'tlMlllnii: the dJ,•ffS# •l~polnt1 o( lnftm"not!d nb. P't'\'M'lt and 111poknm.m tm topk;s 111 the daf. Thursday, February 3. 1072 ·Editorial Research urious 72·room home in Britain and Is reportedly a reluctant and infrequent <.'Ontributor to charily. Another oil billiooalre, H. L. ~lunt. drives his ()"TI car and takes his lunch to work in a p~per bag. J. 0. Rockefeller used to bestolv a shin v new dime on attentive servants and caddies. TllE VERY R(CU are able to afford and cultivate their cceentrlcilies. ll. L. Hunt. for example. spends large sum s of money only on unorthodox righl·"'ing causes. Despite his personal friendship '"'ith Lyndon B. John son, the la~t Presi· detlt Hunt really approvt!d ()f was Calvin Coolidge. In The Rich and the Super-Rich ( t968), Fernlnand Lundberg notes lhal Hunt's wealth has bttn variously estimated between '2SO mllUon and $3 billion but that "rew people art able to say they have ever seen the color of his money.'' For sheer eccentrie:il)', no con· temporary billionaire can match Howard Roba rds Hughes. Recent con tro versy over the autobiography wblch the "'year- otd Mr. Hughes lllped or did nol tape has brougbt forth an abundance (Ir publicity. llughes and bit associates oontend that the whole episode is a hoaL McGraw-Hill Book Co. insists thJI It has Irrefutable proof that Hughes aulhorlud h i s autobiography. but Is deftrrlng publlca· tlon Ptnding furthe r investigation. For anyone who has followed the. career of lloward Hug hes, this Is just thl!! ]a.test In 1 seritl ot blzarrt Incidents. Alter making Jane R111sell famous . Oying the largest SU.plane in history. and buyln& • Stuble Portion of NevH1. Hughe> S<duded bim,.11 In the 1. .. • Vegas Desert Inn in the late 1900s. Then on Thanksgiving Day 1970, he departed !or another hideay,•ay in the Bahamas. SINCE BECO:\UNG a virtual recluse more than a decade ago. Holli·ard Hughes has been the subject of endless specula· tion. Hughes has been portrayed as a • pound hypochondriac with eight-inch fingernails, a long beard and hair down to his waist. He was reputed t.o be a firm believer in cryogenics. a technique ror freezing dead bodies end preserving then1 until science find s a way lo resunect them. He is said to require anyone. visiting him to remove their watches lesL he be reminded that time exists. In 1967, Joan Didion asked : "Why have we made a rolk hero of a man who is the antithesis of all our official heroes. a haunted millionaire out of the West, trail· ing 1 lege nd of desperation and power and white sneakers?" h-fiss Didion con· eluded: "Jn a nation which increasingly appears to prize soclal virtues, Howard Hughes remains not merely antisocial but grandly, brilliantly, surpassln&ly. uociat. He is tbe last private person. the drtam we no longer admit.'' Dear Gloomy Gus If Hanora pooltlon on public vs. prtvate peace PtgotlaUons bas in- deed forced the Amerk an 1ovem- ment to be more rrank and open wtlh llS people, lhtn lhe war ""' served aome eort ()f perverted pur- pose. • --S. H. ntlt .. ,... """"' ,_,... ...... ., .__.., ................ .... _,.. ................ ....,,.., A Needless Depression? California Water Resources Association Are environmental extremists ' Ia"·suits "'hich have halted needed water works, power plants. free\\·ay s and other public and priv ate works contributing substan· tially to unemployment and to a national economic slo11·down ? The record ind icates that obstructionisi programs of well-fina nced en\'ironmental action groups are playing havoc with the economy at a time when l he Administration is trying to get it back on the track. Tht. president of Atlantic Richfield Co. said November 16 that the threat ot f n- virorunental lawsuit s is keeping major companies from making large capital in- vest111ents. llis firm was hit by an en - vironmentalist suit after spending $200 mill ion on a \Vashinglon state refinery. !\DD TO TIUS the fact that 15 Bureau of Rech1.malion and 13 U.S. Anny Corps of Engineers waler projects across tht> nation are being opposed by the tunnel· vision zeal of activist groups. Further. a federal court bas invoked the En \'ironmental Proteetion Act to stop C<lnstruction of the muJli-million dollar Cross-Florida Barge canal: another court has hall~ the $337 million Tennes!fe· Tombig bee Waterway; the Trans·.o\laska Pipeline is st.ailed, freezing a near billion· dollar oil industry in vestment in leases: freeways und er construction in New York. Tennessee and Californ ia were stopped: a large recreational project at i\tineral King is stalled: the Palmdale l nternational Airport h.11s been indefinitely postponed; licensi ng delays for con· struction of I 12 nuclear power plants na - tionwide is costing utilities billions of dollars and posing the threat of bro11·n· outs; suits seek to halt the keystones to the Golden State's economy. California '\\tat.er Project and the Central Valley Project. in which nearly $5 billion is ifl.. vested. THE MILITANT environmentalist-as differentiated from the informed oorl- servationist with a balanced viewpoint - doesn't seem to realize that America can- not sacrifice its economy on the altar or environmental goals. \Vithout a sound economy such goals - along with ma jor social ()bjectives - must fail. A federal appellate court recently su~ ported this thesis in declaring Congress did not establish environment protection as an excl usive goal to the exclusion nf all other priorities. And the House or Representatives adopted a requiremt!nl that all federal agencie$ shaU take into account In their report." not only the en- vironment, but the economy, unemploy· ment and otber impacts. UNREASONING envimunentat In- temperance. must not be permltled to drive this n1Uon into 1 major depression with I rtductJoo of ]j\lbij standards ror all. Truly, os the chairman of Standard Oil CompJny of C.lifornla sakl last Nov. 17, the U.S. need s a policy that strikes a ra- Uonal evltonmtntal baJance. Quotes O.utea <.'llan11 Slaafwcl rttearttl Ul1., Ullft ol Taiwan. • t1"1ada polky - h'lbe avenge Amulcan Is oot aware of the dWe.rent bacqround between the native Taiwanese and the Chinese mainlander•. The new U.S. policy Is long , ,overdue to lbe Taiwanese •s well as kl the Chinese refugees, who want to pursue lhelr goal of Hie. In Taiwan for a;ood.,. be some mistake!' Children Can DeaJ] In Abstractions It is absurd and condescend ing to sug- gest. as so ma ny adult s do. that you ng childre n arc incapable of deali ng 'vith •·abstr.11cl" ide.11s. Abstract ideas fasc inate children almost from the tlme they are able lo think -but most for 1nal educa- llon buries this inte res t deep under the debris or "hard facts ... Not long ago. the sma rte5t 9-~car-old girl I koo1v 1 who 1s co.icei1ed enough withou t getting her naine in the paper 1 said to me, ''Daddy. there's something pecul iar abou~ that whole story or God and the De vil and He!l-it jui;t doesn 't hold together." "OH,'' I SA TO, in that tone or f11lsc brightness a parent puts on 11·hen he think.~ a child is out of ils intellectual depth. "And "'hy doesn'l it hold together?'' •·\Veil.·· she pondered aloud , •·God is supposed to love good people. and the Dev il is supposed to ravor bad people. right ? The good people go to Goel. but the bad peopl e to go Hell , where the De\'11 puni shes lhen1 rorever. lsn'l tha t the story?" •·PRt."ITY l\IUCll,"' I replied ... \\'hats "'rong with it?" "It does n·1 make sen.se." she conhnued .. ''In tha t case. 1he Devil couldn't b!' the enemy of God." "Ho1v do you mean ·!·' I asked. ··1 1nean if the Devil really 11·as on the side. Of the bad people. he \\'OU\dn'l punis ll them in Hell. 11·ould he? lfe'd Ire.at then1 nicely and ht> kind to thern !or comi]lg o\·er to his ~!de. ll e·d g1\'C th em ca nj:l y and presents and not burn th em up." ; ''YOU'VE GOT a point." I admit1td. •·so how do vou 11•urk it our?" '·It seems· to me." she reflC('trd. "that Ir the 1vhole story is true. then 1he Dev il is sec retly on the side of God. and is just pretending to be wicked. lie works for God as a ~i nd of ~ecret agen t. lestinf,; people lo find ou t v.·ho·s good or bad, but not really figh !ing against (iod ." "That's a remarkable theological in · sight" I said. "Do yo u think there's an';/ proof ?" "\VELL." SllE SAID. ''here·s anothe r thing. If God is really all -powerful. no Devil would have a chance against Hirn. So if a De vil really exists. it must be because he's secretly in cahoots with God." Here is a child who is busy learning lhe multiplication tabl e, the ca pitals of states. and the proper use or punct uatio n marks. All of then1 necessary, ()f coucse -but how long v.·ill it be be fore S4Ch 1nc1aphys1ca! speculati ons are sti(]ed out or niind under the pressure of a pedagogical system that imagi nes yoUlli: children can 't !h1nk? Season's 'Ca 1np' Item llow to discourage lhc atlentJons of a young man who uses tobacco. How to prepare a bail bond , or to apply ror a job as a chambermaid. How about the "'ording of an invitation to a funeral '! And 1vha.t are the rules of penmanship? The season's "camp" item, publi shed in the style of tho.o;e fac simile editions of vintage mailorder catalogues; is a racsimile ()f the 1885 edition or "liill's ManUl1." by 't'hos. E. Jlill (who was also the aut hor of "MoraJs and ~1anners, Illustrated") HiU put out hi s first "Manual .. in Chicago in 1873. There were eight revised editions or this vastl y popular how-to guide to just about anything, but mos tly "the right thing al lhe right time in various important positions in life." Now in another century it is a, ,great book. to browse in, the most navorsome 19th Cen· tury American item in this "nostaJgia·• branch of publishing . mERE ARE rules of grammar, dala on how the United States ls governed. a rhyming dictionary. lips on racial ex· pressions and gestures in oratory: eti· quef.te or tht street. suggesUoaS for tombstone instrlptions ("Absent, Not Dead" wis one). Thos. E. HUI knew all , in<:ludlng bow to remove Insects from your foesd •lthout making an Impolite display It tbe lablt. The tatiflty and scope of th!s en. cyclopedic heap of demeanor and general knowledge is amusing when viewed from a more urbane point In our nathlnal pageanl Yet with all the laughter, this is a rAther poiinant book. Bttau_,e readers of the "Manual," undtmlueated aDCI no doubt recent Immigrants, actuauY did want to know the proper wording of a Jet· ter requesting the Joan of a pistol , or, ll 1 young lady, the proper wordill8 of a lcttu spuming a young man who proltsses love at first "lght. THIS WAS A signpost 1011.·ard rcachh1g • The Bookman the middle class -the Jaws of Janguaie, tht> positions for holding knile and fork :_ to be studied (along with the mail~~r catalogues) on some Minnesota farm or: a miner's cottage near Scranton. Respc!c· tabllily was lhe goal ; and the re.ason tor 'Thos. E. Hill's success. In an introduction. Theodore ~1 . Berns- tein Of The New York Times notes that "the forms of the 19th and earl ie r cen· turies quite unintentionally cast a cold shield or conventionality over candor, over honesty, over human reeling. All thi! is evident in the content or Hur• lrlanual. ·· So it is. These were the rules of the gentry, the Establishment, one's bette(5. lb1 effect, the pursuit ol hlippiness !Quadrangle Book>: 19.9li. · Wllllam U<>1u B11 Geor9e --~ Dear George: George, thanks for the daily l~u1h. l 've been reading you for eight years and meanlQ& al leul once a month to writt to :tou: A col· umn that can bring a sri'l.lle tht:se day1 Ls a valuable commodity and don'! yw ever forget It A lot of people fee.I that way , too. R. H. COLLINS llHl' R.H.: Wbtthcr you waited eight yea rs or not, that lt!tter wa1 worth It. Thank you very much. ( Serid your problem1 to George ~od start out 1972 with a ping, pine • m )'1IUr valvu.) I ., f I . · ' ' •. -- L. M. Bo9d Animals Need More Doctors .. In advertising, wben all around you an being &.oo Loo clever, tbu U'1 1m1rt to be plala.." Arnold Gingrich Maybe you remember that one of the most famous ad- vertising slogans of all times was Cadillac's line : "The penalty or le.adership." But dcJ you recall which little auto- motive 1nasterpiece wa.s sold under the idogan: "'Gits Ya There, and Gits Ya Back''? C<irreel, the ri.todel T Ford. Simplicity, simplic- ity . TIME TO ASK the family &eholar to identify the first names of these ge nuises: I. Dante . 2. Raphael. 3. Rembrandt. 4. ~fichelangelo. What said scholar dOt's not recall? Under- standable. In order. they are: 1. Ali- ghieri. 2. Santi. 3. Van Rijn. 4. Buon· arroli. TllAT A UNIT of firewood is called a cord you know. But were you aware a unit of paper is a quire? Or a unit of 111ine is a pipe? Or a unit of cloth is an ell? Or a unit or fish is a firkin? Remember that, next time you're down at the n1ongt!r's. Ask for a firkin of fancy flounder file ts. QUERY -Q. "What percentage or marriages end in di vorce around here? A. J UST 18 PERCEf\'T when both bride and groom are at least aged 20. And 36 percent when only the bride is a teenager. And 54 percent when both bride and groom are teenagers. ANY SCHOOLBOY who loves animals might do weII to consider velerinary medicine as his profession. I'm told. Experts say there are only about 28,000 veterinarians in pra<:tice hereabouts now. But twice that many v.•ill be needed in 1he next IO years. THE HARD f<"ACTS -Am asked what proportion or college freshrnen ev entually wind up \\'ilh degrees. About seven ou t of 10. THAT THE ordinary little old lead pencil etill out.sells all other writing instruments by nine to one also should be noted . RESEARCHERS say just about one out of every 100 doctors gets hooked on narcotics. fl.1ADAftf. IF you do not own an evening gown , you are in the majority. ln checking out this matter, poll ste rs round only 39 percent of the women in this country claimed possession of such apparel. NOBODY ''ET has explained why regular church- goers seem to deve lop far fewer food aversions than do non-churchg()(!rs. But the social :scientis ts report such ap- appears to be the case. Addres.! m-0il to L. M. Boyd, P. 0, Box 1875, Newport Beacli, Calif. 92660. New3·Way Time Savings Passbook For Individuals and Businesses *5%3 on you r "long-term .. nest egg savings on deposit for 2 yea rs INTEREST P£R ANHUM 5~3 on the savings you want to leave for 1 year 1HTEREST PER ANHUr.I 53 on savings you want to leave for 90 days INTER£Sr PER AHHUM Any comb1nat1on of above Now-wilh one passbook-)'OU can choose these interest ra tes on your savings . This convenient new service is available right now et Cenlinela Bank with a "Three-Way Passbook savings Plan." Here's how it works: You make deposits k1 this passbook, with your choice of maturittes from 90 days to two years. The interest rate depends on the maturities you chooee that best fit your financial planning. $500 goll you--chldod •• , • .,""' lfko. Then youc....--UOflll ~II any lime of $50 or-lo MIJ .. ._.,In your panbook. If you IQ, -'II """'" out-tic tranofers fn>m,...., c:Mcklng eccount. Qu1r1or1y In-lo -lo your_,.,, ond compoundM -or wll bo moiled lo you without chlrgo upon ......-. Get star1ed today·wilh your own "Three-Way Savings Plan,'' Cell or stop in any Centinela Bank olfice 10< complete lnfonnatioo. YOIJ 'U get our full interest. liJ Centnela Bank tnglowood / 524 c. Nulwood / 674·4660 south B•J / 1103Avialion, Hermosa Beach/ 372-2102 Pl•Y• Del Rey / 8117 W. Manchester / 823-928 1 Newport Booeh I 3333 W. Coast Hwy.'/ 646-7 t 2 t Accounts fllSU!ed by F.0.t.C. IRS Says ·no It Yourself ~ WASHJNGTON tAP) -The Internal Revenue Service is pushing a do-it.yourself move- ment among the nation's tu x· payers in hopes that nlore "·di fill out their ov.·n re turns thi s year. lllS officials say they expect a decline in the numUer of tax· payers \.\:ho use professio11<1I accounting services lo fill out their returns for th en1 . Com· missioner J ohnnie 1\1 . Walters said he hopes at least :w million people can fill out 1he1r own returns this year. salaries and wages. should pa~ a comp.aoy to 1111 out bls return. "We have stressed lhe fa ct lh3l It's simple enough." \\'alters said . · 'The in· strucl!on!! ~nd the il!u!tra!ed examples in the tax booklet n1ake filling oul a rehu·u simple." \Vallers cited lhe cast of a Florida man who paid S85 lo gel his return filed out last year when the sunple onc.pa.:e Forni 1040 was in\'olved and the man too k the standard dcduC'tion. years. The IRS has put into effect this yt ar a system allowing Rn aulomuhc t w o . m o n t h f'X· tensio n of thr April 17 fihng deadli ne for tRxpayers. I BONNIE CASHIN ARRIVES THINK Newport lecteh WfSTCllff l"LAIA 11th & lrvlne IRS says there is no reason a taxpayer \·\!ho earned und1'r $20.000 a year, n1os l of il u1 Jn a number of cases, the commissioner said, tax payers "'ho take the standard dedul'· lion have paid to get their rt'tw·n filed . Ill• :.aid the return is so simple that if ;1 standard deduction is in volved •·your d:iughter in the f1f1h gradt" can fill it out !his year.'' The IHS has taken steps lo elirnintttt' nbuses trarrcl to rrrors by professional !fix preparers. \\'alters said a nun1ber of sa nctions are being considered against such con1· panies. such as t.xtend1ng the negllgen cr penalty to cover persons "'hn prepared returns for rnont•y and requiring prl'parcrs to keep copies of all ret urn! for at least three li11dt'r lhi:s rule, a taxµ.,yer tnust muke a t e n t a I 1 v e e:;lln1ate of tiw tax he owes . fill out an applic11lion for e-x.I tensio n, and pay the esti1natl'd tax by the deadline. llo can fl lr his tax return t1,1.·o 1nontl1~ later so tong as hf' 11ays 111 terest on 1111y add 1 ti on :1 I amounts due . If ht> h;i~ un derestim11t ed his tax hill hy 10 pert'ent, he 1nust pay 1111 ad · dit iona l 6-perl·rnt pcnnl!\'. i·'-----------i NEW STORE HOURS-OPEN EVERYDAY AT 10 ·A.M.-PRICES GOOD THRU SUN., FEB.6 ANYTHING FOR EVERY HOME AND FAMILY • • • AT WHITE FRONT! DIMS ANO MOPS Replenisb 100f broom closet. Choice ot corn broom, dust mop or sponge mop. OUI llG. PtlCI l .ltlO 1..6t 88~ CASSETTE RECORDER Pushbutton tape recorder; easy drop.in bading. With batteri~S" & 1emote m1f.e. OUtllG. PtKI U.97 23es SAUNA SUMMBI PAHTS BASlmAU GOAL SET W1•e up )'Olf IKMfJ lo feel and look better. for meft & women-one size lits tlL AAU ap- JfOV!d. OOlllf..l"ltCIJ.t7 248 IET •I •AllPIJCS l1coft dllio'1ed ft w k 11~ lltW. 10.- .000 mUt r11late· ITltllt warnnty: lor IOOSl Clfl, fll3mial dri¥in& coMfitions. ... t ... "9Cl•M s1 51!" '"'' ,;. w;lh 11 3es ro.tie locks arid 48 thread l!oor glass flll L With steel bac~ plates. out tu;. •11a •.•1 AUTO TIMING LIGHT l'!oc;s;,n bum .,. '"' ~ s 3 t~; h'fJl! yoa 6o 1 better f\tlle-up job on JOUT c.ar. 11537 OVI •••• r11a , ... Box of 40 at sensational savings. Choice of regu- lar or iuper. Stoi;k up price. Otlt UG. "ICI I.JI I~ Ii Rt LISTBllNE MOUTHWASH [llec live, an!i· ~eptic mo,thwasll •ills germs on con-tact. 14 oz. sire. Olltll.rtKI '" 78C 2 PC. DRAINER SET ALIMlllM COOKWARE Vinyl r.oated me1al dish. glass, llat.vare ltolder arid matching color ru~ber. J pan set BC lobecmfllll,4"-sac 8 ::~~!!':£ COWAnATIAt OUtlM.l.2tT01M RCA PORTABlf PllNO ;~~/~r~l~.si~~1f~ 1496 ~tale am p Ii lie r and lull range ~peaker CUI llG. • PlllCl 1 S.f7 -SYMPlllNIC 3 PC. SIEllEO AW/fW 1lrrto 1.::ti'ler 1111~ ~Gllt•ll Cli· Miit IJpt ,. W'ie"' 1111~ lllabc: -clllriJ!f. 2 $1*'kf:ts. COMP AH "' l 7t .t7 1gge1 BRllDlll m-Cllll BASmllAll 8 FT. POil TAIU Nyloii ..,.._ pehble grain finislled r~. 'lll'h1te and blu! bask etball. Of. ticial si1e and weight. OUI Ill. l"IKI 6.t7 5 t 3 U!lllRU CIURE I I t 7 steel frame tnd '*" bed. 2 Clle$, ba lls. rack. ~15828 OUlllO.PIKI 25PC.HANDYJaSET Plier~. screwdrivtrs, wtkelq, ntcllrl, ~ ,ml, alien witnChts 111d more plus lilted C1$C. #4848 OUt HI.. l'llCl11.'7 gas 1lt.t7 4G lllCll ilAllnllcl All metal frame 111"1tb 5Y.z"1l l" tot pli1e· c11· tin l!IO 1bs.: •n ' inclt rubber wbetls. l~ily m1- llel!Yef~. f 4 OVltM.mCllM s2 STOii Hff11 DA1lr AllD UllllDAr 10 AM ro' , •• SU#DAJ ta All ro 7 , •• THiii~. """' llOtn 111.U JOit 3088 BRISTOL ST. San Diego FrMw•y at Br l1to1 COSTA MESA • J.ltJ ··- •IV•"'°'· CIUl"l1'm r ' • • • Thlnd.Q, '""""'" '· l'tn: Reag.,. Bf.anted Davis Eyes State Funding in Trial Violations In Safety Unit Eyed ' • Ul'I T..,.... Nem Director Tokyo • trained Seiji OzaY:a. 36, will be music director of the Boston Orchestra be· ginning with the 1973- season. D u r i n g the 1972-73 season he will hol d the title of music advisor. Woodland Hills Fire Contained By OOUG WILLIS SACRAMENTO (AP I -A I 8)' DONALD 8. THAC'KJ{EY spiracy," ahe said. stud,Y 00 Gov. Reagan's desk SAN JOSE tUPl1 -Angela "We contend Gov. Ronald today ciles 10 rep:irts of death . Davis. arguing a motion for Reagan played no smaU part state funds to aid ber defense, in thiA conspiracy. We intend or seriow injury to California J said Wednesday that Gov. to subpoena Ronald Reagan. workers because state officials Rooald Reagan was r~ponsl-call him , and put him on the tail ed to enforce industrial ble for a "conspiracy" against stand ... " U , S d. safely laws. her and would be subpoenaed A prel-5 aide to Reagan said mt tU JeS The special probe. by in-N • w J t n es 1 during her the governor would not com- mun:ier. kidnap and con-meot on f.iiss Davi!' state-vestigators for the Republican 1plracy t~. ment because "the matter is Earthquake governor does not :spell out Six demonstt3toni were ar-in the courts." details of the i n c i d en t s rested out.!idt the guarded MW Davis, 28, i.s accused of reported by state s a f e t y courthouse while Miss Davis, supplying the guns used in the Predictions engineers and supervisors. ' ct. he r Aug. 7, 1970, Marin County a 1ng as r own CO-COUnM · The report on the Division of ... A ... • t 1 I courthouse escape attempt 1 ma"" a ....... minu e Pea or and shooting in wh ich a judge SACRAMENTO IUPI J -A lndwtrial Safety says many money. and three kidnapers died . 32-member board has been ap-divl.si<in field investig ators feel The arrtsU brought to 25 the number of person! taken pointed by Gov. R o n a Id supervisors deliberately av oid- into custody during her last Reagan to m a k e recom· e d prosecuting influential two hearings on defense mo-Smog Report mendations on ways of reduc-employers for safety viola-, tions prior to the start of her ing deaths and destruction lions, adding 101-1· morale in at trial. Vt•der APCD caused by earthquakes ln least one agency branch is Miss Davis argued that ., "indicative of major pro- because Reagan would be ca ll· California. blems" in its management. eel as a wilnes!, funds were C • • • Reagan sa id Wednesday the The report -based on in· needed for her own attorneys' rttLClSm Governor's Earthquake Coun-terviews with 192 of the em· legal expenses rather than cil would coordinate earth-battled agency's 214 pro-havjna the court appoint a LOS ANGELES (AP ) - A fessional investigators -was ·~ ca11·1ornia Inst i t u le of quake research programs, re-I sed w d d b public defender v.·ho would be re ea e n es a Y y afraid to "bite the hand that TeChnology report proposing a commend legislation and work Rea gan's office with no com-11 bl·111·on effort to help clear t d I hq k t from the go"ernor feed! him." o eve op an eart ua e-men • . Denying the motion. she the air in the Los Angeles warning system. But Earl Coke, a member of LOS ANGELES (AP ) sai·d, would be "flylna in the basin has been attacked by h·r the Republican governor's ·~ Robert L. Chass. head of the "W 1 e we cannot prevent b. nd ed · Wind-rushed flames burned face" of the adversary nature ca 1net. co emn lfl an ac· tbr h I 80 of of .a trial m· which the ...,.o-county Air Pollution Control earthquakes, we know that companying letter what he oug near Y acres ,.. District. much can be done to reduce called "shameful, politically . b h ed h.,,_.d t secution has unlimited funds r us -cover 1"61 es a Chass said Wednesday the 1 motivated statements" b y I for "development and fabrica-the loss ol Ii e and property Woodland Hills before being tion of the case'' and the report from Ca 1 tech 's damage,,, Reagan said. "But some u n n a m e d legislators contained Wednesday and a defense has l'-ited fu~. Environmental Quality Labo-against the safety agency . " 1 ' ratory is "trying to "''I the we must also explore every Go" Reagan accepted the short time later a fire erupted Su,...rior Judge Ri chard E. "y •· ,,_ monkey on the consumer 's avenue that can lead to a resignation of division chief in Eaton Can Yon above Amason took the motion under back instead of where it syslem that will help !Js Jack Hatton last week shortly Alladena . advisement, along with one belongs -Detroit." predict when and where earth-after Democratic Assembly Firemen, aided by water-challenging a jury list. He con· The report does not ade· quakes are likely to occur and Speaker Bob Moretti said the tinued the case until today. t t d r ·th \ h th · ·t d " • r r t f d r 0 pp; n g helicopl<rs. con-qua e Y ea wi e e1r magn1 u e. agency s ax en orcemen o Miss Davis argued that 'be! · d \ • Ja1·1ure to J G St d. t · d t · I I t J Jed t talned the Woodland HlP· auLom1 1n us ry s ames . earns. 1rec or 1n us r1a sa e y aws 0 .,,, Reagan was part of a 1969 errfcli ve ly cope with air pollu-of the State Conservation the deaths of 17 workers last blaze in aOOut two hours after campaign to have her fired as tion, Chass said. Department. was named to year in the Sylrnar tunnel it brieOy posed a threat to an acting asBOCiate professor Amo,ng the Caltech report's head the council which will blast . some expensive homes in the of philosophy at UCLA after re c o m men dations were hold its organizational meeting Coke made no mention of ~fulhoUand Drive are 8 • she publicly announced she tightening the district's air later this month. charges in at least seven authorities said. was a member of the Com-pollution control alert system, Reagan ooted that next places in the 4S.page report A few hot spot. remained munist Party. mandatory conversion of some week has been designated as that safety laws have not been but winds died down, a fire "The govern m en t of vehicles to propane, butan'e "Seismic Safety Week" by the enforced or recommendations department spokemian said. California is responsible for a and natural gas and incentives legislature in memory of the for prosecution have been In Eaton Canyon, In the conspiracy against me rather and penalties to curtail driving victims of last year's San reversed w he n influential Angeles National P'oreit a than my being guilty of a con-by 20 percent. Fernando earthqua ke . employers are involved . mile northeast of Altadena,t ___ ..:.__.::..::c.......:._ ___ __:c.......:.._ _____________ ;__ _____ .:.__.:..._ _______ , flames burned through chest. high brush Ut an area too steep to put firemen on the Jines, a forest 11 er v Ice spokesman said. Journalists Nix Women In SF Cluh SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A move to give women full voting membership and other privileges in the San Fran· cisco Press Club was defeated \Yednesday 271 to 247. lt·need- ed a tw~fhln:ls majority vote to pass. "It did not ·:surprise me ," said club president Dick Alex- ander , who Initiated l he measure. "ln fact, I am delighted that 247 people in the club recognize that women are human beings. I still hope that sometiJue we will have .a press club without discrimination for race, sex or anything else." \Vomcn now are admitted as associate members , but they cannot use all the facilities .~uch a~ the swimming pool 1-1·here the men swim nude and an upstairs bar. They cannot vote. WANT TO CRUSH de SMOKING HABIT? far •asier than you thought possible? PRE.SDlllH • • . Jw fo popul•r lldtred THE 5-DAY PLAN ,. ro STOP SMOKING I'll. 7111 THIU 11111 7il0 to t P.M. Oe11 w a 1 If Notft 810 im... Nowport .... ,,..,. --. c:..,.,_ - • • • • • • • • • • • ~ • • • • • . ~. .. .. • • • • • • • • • • • Gfcind Opening World Savings' Fo~ntarn·Vafley Office Join the Celebration ... have your caricature drawn, have a cup of coffee and cookies, pick up a free copy of the Farmer's Almanac (while supplies last) and choose some free balloon.s for the kids. We've just opened our beautiful new office and we want you to see it Our offi ce hours are Saturdays, from 10 to 4, from 9 to 4 Monday throughThursday and from 9 to 6 on Friday-all for your savings convenience. The caricaturist will be with us Wednesday throug~ Saturday, February 2, 3, 4 and 5. . Come see us, we1! be happy .to see yoQ ~ tell you all about our tw~lve free services for savers. q~ •• . . . • HUNTAINVAUIY: 1•125 Hefllof llWl.et ........ "°""'""'Viney, c• ... -·.. . ........ ·---···"1~} 1»1111 •-a..Z• ' ' ..i --' LY .. ~ (Htfft• Ofrlol): 11171) Lona S..c:h 8t¥d, •I lmPtrl1I, Lynwood, c.:.r ...... _ .. -......................... (213) -...OStt IRINTWOOO: 11801 Wllthlrt 811/d, 11 S.11 YIMtlle, lOI Angtt.,, Calll ..... j\.-..... ,_,. ___ ,.,, .. ., ....... ,_ .. ,(2;13) 417-I004 U.OUNA-H4Ctf: n2 s. eo.11 Highway tt·Fo,.111: ,,..,.., LtQ1.1n1 8..cti, c.r r. ... ~ .................... :1. ................... (11•1-• NO'"°""IOOI: DOM Raec11Blvd.11 NOl'dhoff, Nor11'1rldge, C.Hf .......... , ................. _ .•••••• -............ , .......... ,(111 ~ ONTAltlO: 6~ N. E.11clld Nit., 011t1rkl, Gtllf ..................................... -........... -........ ,.:.. ___ 1""""'"-.. ,(714) ilf.t~• "" llJINAJtDINO: 1511~ E.. Hlghl•nd ., °*' ""-Avt:. Sin hnwdfno, C.Ht •................. -....................... (Ti4) ..... '"!1 UN DllQO: 1170 Flfll'I Aw. •I 8 Slf'Mt, hn Citgo. t:.ill .............................................. --.................. (714) ...,,., • • • • r I ' " i • • ., LAflG~8T PAM ILV Cl.OTHINe CHAIN ·~- / .... ......__ wardrobe ... refresh your :AV 20% .· .. ONASPECIAL GROUP OF DRESSES, .. _ :I-PIECE AND i 3 ~PIECE PANTSUITS regularly $6 to 15.99 -.ao to \ Take 20o/o off the ticketed price and you save a good bit of chilngel Choose from one and 2-piece dre~ses, 2 and' 3-piece pan ts1 lit.~ ... in ~tripes, solids,· prints, 79 \Vidc as~ortn1en t of styles and fabrics in sizes for'misscs, juniors and half-sizes. I.furry in, they're terrific buys! re~l~a~ of@-- -,sell-outl - I YOUR FAVORITE ·PANTS AT A FABU.LOUS PRIC n · $5 I:;. for Temflc vwludl llonded 100% ... ,..,, aad 100% oqyli<s .,. ponlJ 1"ilh pennaoent ltJtched fron.t. aftles , .• pa•.wlth eaty i>UJ'.14-l wafSUJ.nds .and your l•"J"',. ...,_ 1eg, ... all the ff!atW'S ou(JoOk for. Hurry m; at tbJi d"'!blo-....!u• price. th"1''11'1!'1out fut! S\7.el,8 t<>J.8 • . ....... -, ·~ ,,...,· .. ·.·, ~ ~4:.......-. ,.. ... I ; • . ' f· WJIT AM:AOIA: 1200 S. l•ldwlri ""9.tt 0....rtt Rd., Arcadle, C.Ht. ......... -.... _, .. _._ ~ .. _ .... ., .. _(213) 44$-43111 WfLIHllll ·AlVAllADO: 2033 Wlllhlrt 81\'d, •t Al'tal'lldO, lo• MgtJita, Citllf ........ _.,,.,,n., ..... ~ ........... , ........... .c2DJ 4D-1011 WOOOl.AMO HLLI: 23321 Mu~ f.!:f ..... Je; Gfttl ~E.'Ccillr'o Sh~f!O Ctr .. ~·nlf-"H"' Cilff. (lti, llk'm -OPEN ~IMlll"ll SUN: -11-5 ; • COSTA MESA-1601 HEWPDRJ BLVD. AT 1 , GARDEN· GROVE-,12372 GARDEN GRflVE BLVD • l: I' I · ! ' r i I j j ; i I I j I j • • p'. . . ·-· HISTORIC-AND IRONIC -PHOTO SHOWS CHINESE RIVALS TOASTING Shot of Mao T1e-tung (left) and Chiang Kai-•hek D1tes from 1946 Chiang's Candidacy Seen Obser·vers Expect Hi1n to Seek Fiftli Terni By JOE HUNG and ARNOLD DIBBLE TAIPEI {UPI! -There was talk nol long ago tha: it might be time for Chiang Kai-shek to step down from the presiden· cy of Nationalist China and turn over the reins of govern ment to his eldest son and his vice president. But growing uncertainties about the future of th is contested island -statei less than 125 miles from the Chinese· mainland have ended that. Chiang, 84. is expected to run for his fifth six-year term as president on May 20. No one dou bts that Chiang's abdi cat ion would have been one in name only and that if the generalissimo did not ru!e Taiwan fonna!ly from the red hric.:k presidential orrice building he would wield his pov.·e r informally from one of his luxurious ''illas. tn the light of the budding Sino- American accommodation, howevar. his publi c presence also is cons idered.vital to th e Nationalists' interests. As Jong as Chiang -the last living leader among the Big Five of World War II -remains Nali'Jnalist head of state. il "·ill be just that much harder for the United Stales to sacrifice its old ally to the reali1ics of power polities. Metliculone Expansion Proposed SACRAMENTO I UPll Leg islation wh ich And Chiang needs that and every other advantage he ca n ma rshal. The U.S. decision to open the United Nations to the Communists already has mc.1nt not only a scat for the People's Republic of Communist China but also the explu.~ion of the Republ ic of Nationalist China -a founding member of the world organization. While President Nixon ha s as serted that his visit to Peking does not mean U.S. recognition of Communist China. it is considered probable that 'growing L!.S. trade and tou rism in China will make it ' (Last in a Series) de sirable for the United States to open a '. consulate there. Under Pek ing·s conditions. diplomatic relations at the ambassadorial level would be possible only if lhe United '.Slates broke off relations with the l\1a- ilionalists -highly improbable today but a tonger-range possibility iJI superpower 'tnaneuvering . \ Another drastic but possible develop- ment would be the withdrawal of the U.S. defe nse mantel in a deal with Peking, lt aving the Nationalists' 5000,000-man atniy and well-trained ai r force to fend off any attack on Taiwan or renewed at- tempt lo conquer the island s of Quemoy and l\fatsu. Premier Chou En·lai has been at pains to tell western visi tors recentl y that while his country still expects to reclairn Taiv.•a n as a province of China. he· does not expect this to happen by force -thus makin g the continued U.S. presence less necessary. Even if a U.S. pull b~ck had no im· mediate milit ary repercussions for the Nationalists. it could affect Taiwan·s economic boom of recent yea rs by un· dercutting: the feelin g of security and con[idence in continued stability. Peking, meanwhile. is in a position to take a tough line against countries whose businessmen invest and trade with Taiwan. in an attempt to further isolate the Nationalists and damage their economy. Taiwan. a tobacco leaf-shaped iSJand 250 miles Joni and 100 n1iles wide. was originally populated by aborigines of l\1alaysian origin. It wa s known to the Chinese as early as the 7th century. The Portuguese discovered it in 1590, named it Formosa from the Portuguese word f {) r ··beautiful '' and tried without success to settle the island. FLOOR TAX SALE greatly expand the state's I methadone trcatmen1 pro· l gram for heroin addicts at an 1 annual cost of $10 million has be~n p ro posed by A !sembly ma n John Va sconcellos (0-San Jose). State Floor Tax is Levied on March 1st, and we must lower our invl'!ntory to save on taxes Simila r legislation w a s vetoed last year by Gov. Ronald Reagan who said ex- isting me thadone programs should' be &:tudied f irs I . Va scancetlos said his bill would actually save "more than $3CJO milli on a year" because addicts would not Jongei; ~ave to st.ea! to support their heroin habits. He Cstimated there are 15 ,000 addicts in California who wou ld take part in an ex- panded methadone program and said there are now 1,000 addicts ta·king part I n methadone clinics and another 4.900 on waiting lists. What is the l{ev to " a better life? You d1>11't h • .,.. to be tlit .,fefi111 of c:irtuftnfttoe• or ftiM thet 1olutlo111 to prab· ltmt ,,., eut of reec:h. A client• in v•ut tlii11ki119 eta 11'4 you out of prob• 1 ... ,.Vo"''"'Y bt feci119. let 111Gh 1 c:h•nt• must be !.•••ti °" ton11thl111 1ufD· 1ta11fltl -•11 uncl1rrt•ncll111 ef GM' t 11cl Hi1 41 .. 1., l•w1 af h1rmo11lou1 llfe , THURS.· FRI.· SAT.· SUN.• MON. ~~llOMA(OlOl 101~ 25 INCH DIAGONAL PICTURE PRICED TO SELL DURING FLOOR TAX SALE The Avante 600 With Space Cctinmand Wireless Remote Control ' ' Bengali Plight Ravaged Women Assisted By MARTIN STUART·FOX 'DACCA, Bangladesh fVP I! -Anuna Khatun. 16, was taken from her village by Paki!:tani soldiers to their sprawling Dacca encampment. For thre• nights, she was raped by two soldiers each night, she said, before being left on a road where her father found her. She was one of thousands of Bengali i,•:on1en y.•ho suffered sinular treat· menl during the nine months that Wesl Pakistan forces tried unsu ccessfu lly to put do\\•n the independence move- ment of the nevr state of Bangladesh. then E a s t I Pakista n. No one "'ill ever know the exact number. but Mrs . Sahera Ha med. who is an organiier of the Ba nglade sh \\1 um c n ' s llehabilitation Center, puts it al "hundreds of thousands." The Christian missions suggest the figure of 200,000. Amina , now eight months pregnant, is under the care of Mrs. Harncd's center where she will have the child and leave it ta go back to her ran1ily . She hopes to marry someone ·who does not knO\.\' her story. ., 1 --~N ITED STATES NAT IO NAL BA N K SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW Ol'fN SATURDAYS 9 to 1 P.M. MON .• THUllS. 10-5 l'.M. I F•IDATS 10-' l'.M. 17141 S40·5211 . laccrted 111: Sa. Caos' Pla1.a, Casto Mesa The majority of the women rape<!. hides t.he fo.ct. In many cases, Mr s.. Ha med says, even l'lose relatlves are unaware \.l'hat happened lo their sisters or n1others. Suria Ktlantun, 35, a widow with two children. said a soldier came into hfr home one da y when the children were out and raped he r. She said he returned several times. No1¥ she is faur months pregnant and asked t he wom,n's rehabUitatiQn center to arrange an 11bortian for her. Abortion is illegal I n Bangladesh, but a special allowance has been made for raped girls, Mrs. llanu~<I said. 1'hose whose pregnancy is too far Ad vanced also are being helped to haVf' their children at the rehab1htat1on center. Anrimportant message for people who prepare their own income tax returns. Maybe you've been cheating yourself all these years~ , Every year, between January and April, milliolUI or peopla ait down to do batt.l• with Uncle Sam. Some are"1elf atyled" accountants. Other1 think they can 11ve a few dol\11rs doing it themselvea-so why not. The 11d truth is, how- ever, no matter what their Yeaeon wss for atartinr, ma.ny of them end the same. On the •hart end. You •ee, when it _ com1a to income ta..r:e1. am11.te11r1 •hould depend on H&R Block. We have all the facilitie1 to help you make "income tax time" a ple1aant uperieoce.. To begin with, H&R Block now baa over 6,000 conveniently loca ted office1 manned by thouaand1 of1pecially trained personnel who are a.nxlou1 to help you. They'll 1it you dGwn. over a free cup of cGffee and 1how you 1ome things about your .in- come t a:1. that you might never ba•e known e:iri1ted. For e:nmple, do you. lmo1'" all about deductions fGr child care or ca1ualty 1011e1? And maybe yoa aren't aware that if your income incrttaed la1t year, you may be able lo 1ave ta..z: .dollar• by .. income averaging." Well. when it comes to Income laxes.H&R Block i1 awafll of just. about eve.Yythinr becaa1e we're a company that ~~~~ eat., 1l1ep1, and drink• tu: returua 366 da11 a year. po~ Ye1, macybe you can aave a couple of bucb b,- . doing your 01m. ,..bun bat it really may be co1tin1 yoa a lot more by not having your l"tlturn done by B&.R Block. DON 'T LET AN AMATEUR DO H&R BLOCK'S JOB. H&R Block. n.m-1u ....... 9 A.M •• 9 P.M. WHkdays 9 A.M.·S l'.M. Sat. & Sun. 3427 E. Coast Hwy. Corana del Mar Pha11e '42-6940 2300 Harbor Blvd . NO FINANCE CHARGES IF PAID ·IN 90 DAYS -••. . o• NO DOWN AND UP TO 36 MONTHS TO PAYo •. c .. WHY BUY AT ABC? • Color TV Antenna Installed At · Cost If Needed • 1 Year Free Parts • 1 Year Free Service • 3 Year Picture Tube Warranty • Free Delivery and Set Up • We Service What We Sell ' Zenith Giant screen!Giant value! NEw ~lf.!'H ClHlROM.A(OlOl.100~ 25' CONSOLE SPECIAL $568 The BRITIANY • C2913W Contemparary 11yled lowboy con1<>le. • Chromacolar 100 Picture Tube •Titan 100 Handcrafted Chassis • Su'P9r Gold Vldea Guard Tuning Sy1tem •Gyro.Drive UHF.Chi nner Selec!or • A.utomatlc Fine-tuning Control 5 8·8 COME ellfl Hf;AR. hew thin.int .ht.r~i1111 yeur ••peritnc••· JOHN H. WYNDHAM t•tk1 on •'WHAT AltE YOUl DEMINSIONS FOii; l lVlt-1&1" Home Entertainment 11 INCH' ~)A•ONAL l'IClUll Center 111 .. Fr•• 'uhllt le ~tur• . . ONLY-SAVE ON THIS 1971 CLOSE Ol/T Christian Science ' Church e 25 inch diagonal Chroma color 100 Color \elevi1i.oi:t e Spac • Com mtnd 600 Remote Control w!tft his I' .hers AL~ iENITH BLACK & WHITE SETS PRICED TO CLEAR THIS WEEKEND - ,,,,_ Drl.._ 1-r· sdNDA1', Na. 6 -J r., ~ "'"""'-t' " hend units .. e Titt n 100 Chassis wit h Gold Tun .,- • 200 w,.tt Solid Stat• Stereo wi th AM .FM/FM · Stereo & Precision Cha n9tt ·· e Pecan C abinet ry on Casters with All 'Ze.&lth Models In St.Hie.At OrllKge Co11nty'1 Lor9e1t · Zenllll De•ler ' I -. ' I . . ·: ·: JO DAI LY PILOT For The Record Dissolutio11s Of Marriage En111.cr J1n•1111 11 Anhermen, sn1ron L. 11'Jd Ron1kl A. W1rne, EIHnor Ro11 1nd llv•on Mhcn111 H'l!e"r"n~n $1ndr1 lvnn 1n<f PlllU)p Hen1on, P111rlcl1 J111n •nd J1tk 1e.R~1~'?hom S H. Ind CorlN E. Buct1 .. 1n, A•fnur W. Ind S1!1rrl1 l. G1\I, Rove• L. '"" Jlne "· J onei. C1rol M. Ind Jo"" L, Gould( K1thlfftl M11 1nd k owrt ~111f1~1.~1ndr1 kly Ind Rober! Audy Jolln~on. Rol1fld 81011 I nd B1ri..r1 Avlll Dennl1, Ch1rt11 Jr. 1nd F1nfl\1 Mollu nl, J1n1 Elll!'IO!° I nd J1m11 P•llcl!IO'll l . Cuc!nell1, J1cou1Une Ind l 1rrv L1mt>er!, WUl l1m l . I nd H11tl l . ICenef k -M1,.., L. 1nd Dont ld J. P1l11lou1:£1, John L. 1nd MarJ••t! V. r~r..='. Ht~rnldTiri'c~ °Wir.\,~· 1 n d Ellr1beth llu••-· 51'lvl1 Ju n 1nd Lo•'"I' Ellon Hird/,., S1ndr1 Mt rlt 11'd Geor" Lirwls Sorens.n, Su11n G. 1n<1 Aot>erl G M1ng1n, T,..,,...1 J . Ind Be11¥ L. Ptteri.on, Alison 1nd Lewrenct "'rlhur M1lon1f, Wllll1m Gtorllt 11'1<1 Re!Y Oonnl1 !IOVfl, J 1n1 G. 1P'l<I Edwtrd A. M1rll1to, Jr. Oltn• Lvnn 1nd Vl!o Pe!er f:.7"~~6!~~·~,:,,•~J,r;,ci ic~r•h Ltt Jc~n1, Evelvn 1nd JO'l. Yb1rr1. ll ober! Y. ':;3 Norm• I. }:'~11Tlo~~81;~nti~.;n~ Oe~~!~ )'ut Wlr11., II . Mlrrv F. 1P'l<I Wllll•m O. Owen, JCW1nn1 C. u'l<f Oouut11 J. Frink. C1!herlr11 Y. 1nd John J. Jr, Marvel. Nor11 0. Ind Thom11 P. 01vh, Ret>ecca t nd Thom11 IC Benv. MtlD<ly Annt •nd Tom Jeromt Llovd. Gtr1ld 0 , •nd "'11• IC1v W1Tdm1n, WIJlltm Edwt rd 1nd !11111• Ev1lvn ·l•whun. Joaei>h J. •nd Audrtv Colt k11perttn, Arl"n L. Ind Frt nlc R. llr und101. Allct J. 1nd Rtvmond K. P011111. GIOl've T. •nd 81rdlt J . Grlrne1, Vlro11 RIV Ind Wind! M .. Orlh.V, Ann rfnl '1ld Frfd..,. cir. E1rt An<Hrson, Chlrlottt tM Arthur ~m111I AmtlC\11, l lMa t nd Alfonoo M1nuel ThurSda1, 1tbruM1 3, lm •Aerial Patrol' r ~~~~~ r :SW , Planners Given Board List P hillip,s Seeking I Nine Coast Parks Get Eye Study of Copters ; Bv .JACK BROBACK OI 1111 OallJ 1"1111 Stall SANTA AN> -Supervisor William J. Phillips o f Fullerton will ask his fellow county supervisors next Tues- day to approve a study of a countywide helicopter pro- gram to provide aerial patrol, surveillance, pursuit. search and rescue and emergency ambulance service. Phillips :said he would ask for the study to determine if the program is economically feasible. He said the need is obvious. Al present only four county cities-Anaheim, Huntington Beach, Costa Mesa a n d Newport Bea ch -ha ve helicopter patrols. di strict includes most of the unincorporated territory In the county. predicted that 1972 ''will oe a year of action on the <:hopper project. The Crimi nal Justice Council is already studying lt and any study we 111ake could aid their program.'' In the past, a helicopter patrol has been urged by grand jur ies, but there has been no action. County of- ficials have cited high costs during a period of economic sq ueeze. Opponents a Is o poin ted to c n1 erg enc y helico pter service offered by the Marine Corps. ' I : Takes Post SANTA ANA -Orange County Superv isors have ac- cepted and passed on to the county Planning Comm ission for study an updated list of projected reglonal parks that includes nine such facilities along the Orange Coast. Sixteen new facilities are projected in Laguna Canyon, Costa 1t1esa. Crystal Cove, Peters Canyon, Buena Park, along the Santa Ana River in Anaheim, in H u n t in g to n Beach, Los Alamitos , Laguna Beach, Irvine, San Ju a n Capistrano, in Modjeska Ca- nyon, Upper Silverado Canyon and along Serrano Creek. 'l'he add itional facilities will. 1f ucctptcd increase the overa ll cos t or acquisit ion and development to $222.8 million, according to county Planning Director Forest Dickason. v.•ho al so acts as chairman of the Regional Parks Ad vi so r y 1980; 1980 to 1985, and 1985 to 1990. The first priority group (Im to 1980) carries a price tag of $ 8 3 million-$32.9 million for acquisition and $50 million for development, Dickason said. Included are Yorba Park on the Santa Ana River (a federal grant of $1.32 million was approved last week for this faci lity, which added to a like am ount of county park funds will finance purchase of the 2QS acres I: Richard Nixon Lake Park in Yorba Linda, 102 acres: Carbon Canyon Da m in Brea, 208 ; Bell Canyon Flat near Ortega· Highway, 592; Laguna Lakes in Laguna Ca- nyon. 210. Old Santa Ana at the bend of the river, 246; Primera Deshecha and Se gun d a Deshecha in the San Juan Cap lstrano-San Clemente Laguna Beach and Sand Ca· area, 1625; Fairview in Costa nyon Reservoir 1n Irvine. 1'he ~1esa, 324 ; Peters Canyon pr ice tag for nu1e second Reservoir in E:ast Orange, priori ty parks is listed at $66 7 399; Los Trancos near Crystal n1Hlion. Cove in Laguna, 620; Olinda 1'hird pr ior ity parks. )3 ill Disposal Station. 225 ; Lo 1~· e r all would cos t $72.9 millio n !u Santiago Creek in Orange. 636 acqu ire <1!ld deve lop at today's and Los Coyotes in Buena costs , accord inM to Dickas1u1. Park, 92. 'l'hey include Sa n J ua n Ca · The first priority list tota ls nyon. northwest of San J u;111 7,589 acres. Dickason said a Capis trano in the Clevehu1d desired ratio to the expected Nationa l Forest; Upp t' r L9 million populat ion of the l\'ewporl Bay ; the Starr-VtCJH county in 1980 "'ou ld be 11.528 Ranch in lhe sout heast tOUlll\' acres, leaving a dericit of 3.938 area ; Bolsa Chica 1n Jiun- acres. 11 ng1un Bea ch: Arr o \ o Second priority ratings wen t 'J'rabut:o llt'ilr !:ian J u a n to these proposed parks in the Capistrano. Blatk Star Can}o1i Orange Coast area; Talbert in ;uid 1'rahuco Can\'on. lluntington Beaeh: Los "This list of 1hi-rt• priorll u'!'I Alamitos Basin in the Cypress-is designed to avoid the risk or Los Alamitos area; l'hiqu1t <:1 losing sites in !he next fl'1'l Flats near Ortega Highway , vears to urbani7.Rlion," the the Santa Ana Ri ver r-.1ou1h. Planning director said. Also, Morro Canyon near1-========::::::::::::; Sheriff James Musick, who would probably head the helicopter project, has con- si stently opposed such a pr0- gram. He does not believe it would be as effective as its proponents contend. Ile es timated th<\l it would cost the count y about $500,000 to get the prograrn started and said federal aid might be sought to help fi nance iL Dr. Floyd L. \Vergl'- Jand of Laguna Niguel has been named as Chief of Medical Serv· ices of Goodwill Indus· tries of Orange County. His duties \Vil! include conducting annual phy- sicals of all workers an d responsibility f or emergency medical services. Con1n1Htec. The li st Dickason submitted Tuesday n1arks the third time the ninc-ye11r-o!d master plan CSF Gets Preserve jRT CJl.Bll Phillips pointed out that the four cities constitute only 90 of the 315 square miles within the county's 26 incorporated com- munities and that 490 square miles of unincorporated area have no service. High School Coach, Put on Commission has been updated since 1963 FULLERTON -A 24.5-acre when it ws first created. ecological preserve for Cal The addition of the 16 parks, State F'ullerton has Hecn including the nine in the authorized by state college Orange Coast area, jumps the tn1stces. nurnber of regional facilities The preserve u•il l be planned from 29 to 45 and the developed in the northeast SANTA ANA Baldwin, Santa School football Tom Ana High coach and Beall. an attorney_ resigned number of acres from 7,000 to corner of the campus. from the commission i n more than 15,000. It \l'ill be financed by stu- October, sho rtly after the new D ic ka so n gave the dent funds and public con- district boundaries were ap-supervisors a 1990 deadline for tributions. proved. the deve lopments in three Plans for the preserve call grass with a lake and two ponds . The complex will be stocked with nali\'e California fish and is expected to attract 11·ater fo"·J and s m a 11 er anima ls. Kids Like To Ask Andy Transmissions 20 YEARS EXPERIENCE FR ESTIMATES TOWING 11-UP & DELl¥EllV "No aerial ambulance is available and no sea rescue helicopter has sufficient lifting capacity to raise victims from the ocean," Phillips noted . teacher of government, has been appointed to the county Harbor and Pa r k s Com- mission. Baldwin , 40, has been a root-priority grouping: 1972 to for open 11rea:s of trees and hall coach at the hi gh schoo l 1--'--'-"--....:.-"--------'--------'--------------'="---------- slnce 1958, and head coach The third di s tr ict supervisor. a 15-yea r member of the county board. has long been an aviation booster. He concedes that the proposed service will be costly, but said. ''The time has come for the county and cities to join in an analysis of the basic problem and acute needs." Supervisor Ronald Caspers of Newport Beach, whose fifth I-le succeeds Theodore Beall of Santa Ana wh o was forced to resign from the commission when his residence was edged out or the first supervisorial rlis tricl in the recent redistric- ting by the county Board of Superv isors. Supervisor Robert W. Ballin nominated B a I d w in to represent his district on the commi ssion. -·---... ~- since 1965. He holds an Associ· ate of Arts degree from Santa Ana College, Bachelor of Art s degree from Cal State Long Beach, and a Maste r of Ari s degree from Chapman College in Orange. He foug ht in the Korean War and was awarded the Purple l-leart and Bronze Star. He has taught hi story and economics at Santa Ana High :since 1958. ------~---- Death l\'otlres IRITTON Ji"'" o. 8rlt1'1:>n. 1060'l Grvv-lr. Drive. S.I\~ A,... Delt of dttlh, Fet1ru;1ry 2, 1"7, krvlcH wlll be htld .S.turd1v, Ftbnl1rv J, 1 p.m .. Ptcltlc vi-Cha111L l!nlombmtnt, l"tclllc v1-M1m<>rl•I Par1<. Ptc:lllc VIN MO<"luarv. Dlrecton. CAllltOW.ti Jo.911h D. Ctrront . 31661 Medlterrtnttn Or!v1, South Ltount . Datt OI d111!'1, F.O. rUtrv 1. un. S.Urvlvld bv wl!t, c..,e- vltvt. ol "11 home; <11u11htll'f, Merit Hollvwood, of Gl111<1tlt; lhree 11r1rd- chll<lr..,, Suwn, Jim trld Marv. Services, ,.rfdtV. Fotbrut rv •, 1 1>.m., Pacific View > Cl'l.t111r. Enltlfnbm•nl, Ptcl!lc Vlrw M .. rnorltl Per~. P1clfle VI-Mor1~1ry, Dlr~IOl"I. You could end ~upp~.ng$,,.95 tor ·a .·mattress t~is;fifM, -- Clean Up At The Rubbermaid® SALE! Stylish Vanity Wastebasket KIM~I M.tbtl ICtmH. JI N. -LI Stnd•, South Ltitunt. O.t• l>f clttlh, 1"ebru1rv 2, 1,n. StrVk fl ~ndl1111 al Pacific VI-Mortu-m . ONSTOTT J•M W. OnJtott, "'•• I?. ol S•·C Calle Ara11or1, LtUU"" Hlll1. Ctle cf <IHJh, J1nutrv JO, nn. Survlvtd by wUt, Cl1r1; two 10rn., John A .. or On1t tlo: Jacob W. OnstO'll, or EM1ra ld ll•v: '""' grand- t:t'llldr"'; gne grfff-1trtn<1chlld. Funert l MrV](", Frl(l.-y, J p,M,, Mcc,,.,.1ck LI· llUnt BNCll Cl\•1111. will\ Or. 0..1111 It TUrlMr ofllcl1t!n11. ln!trment. El Toro C11mtt..-v. Mt;Cormlck LtVUnt !leach Morlut rv. Dlrm<:lors. PAnlllSON Dorvlhv GrH n PtMtr1Cn. Aot ''· of 250 Wttnur, fl-Porl !IH Ch. Otlt of dH!h, "'•brut rv I, lt11. Survlvtd bv hu•bari<I, Jor>n Pttttnon: lhrH ton1, Don1ld V. Picker, Co•te Mtst: Sidney I. Plc~tr. Shaker H•l•hf•. Ol'llo1 Alt n B. Picker. End no: mother, Mr$. Ell• GrMn; bro- "'''' Irwin Grffn. bO!h cl N-Ye,.. (ltv; four 11rendchlld1en Prlva!e s•rv•c~ """'' '""<IU(!N! by !IAIT1·B•r••·"" Funer-11 Hcmt. Co•O"t dtl Mar F1ml!• JUG· 1111!1 tno.t wl1hln11 le m•k• me..,.,rit l contrlbullon1. 11ltAU <:"Ontrlbule lo the Cl"' ol HoPt. 81Ur-B1r11eron Funer11 Home. Coron1 d•I MAr. Olrt clors. SACICETT Slbvl M. S1cktll. 10M-8 Marlpew 1"111, ltvu.,,. Hll l1. O..!t ol dtt!h, Fehrutrv 11, 19n. Survlvld bv hu1lund, Chtrltt G, St cktlll 'D'" Cl'larlr.i Iii. S..cke!f, Co111 Mtu ; M ugMer, Mt1. Gll leM1 ""'II•. S1n!1 Monlct: stven 11randchll· clrrn Mll'mCrlt l 1trvlc11, Seturd•v. Feb- ruary J. 11 1.m .. Unlttd Mtlt!odltl O.urch, L111une Hills. Family su11on11 tt.ose wl•hlflO to mtkt '"""Ol'l•I conlrl· bullo,.1. pltH11• conrrlbutt la C~ll<l•en•s H.....,1111. Or1"111. McCorm tc-~~ouna 81a'~ MOr!u1rv In ch1r11e or 1rr~n111· TRITTIPO •, San I-Sea,. prof.otect ~r and extra heavy Comtorfex cushkmtn_g against mildew, bacteria anctodor•· ~ ,'> . St11o:dvllm-Guard ~· . _,,__. tffi>t n1<11tr..S ed9ft ·11m1,~sag...,.g. Exclu11¥ecowr~ned , bywofld 1G-oscar u1a.1.nta. Ray0n°tpftn co-quUted to felt and Polyu~M foam for long wear anCI surface comtor1. I exc~r· AdjUsfJ)-Resf cotll. . . I , -.. King -Size Wastebasket • r ' j / Altrcd;Yl!ly styled lo match ony Qpth ~oom decor, in your choice of popular fashion colo rs. Also fits nicely into bedroom or den. Model 2959. ' ' i I .; ; Reg, 1.79 J1ml!I II.. Trlttll><l. "'3 Aster S!rMI. Lt· gu,. Beach. Oltl1 of cit'<llh, Ftbru1rv l, ,,n. S•rvk• pendl1111 •t P1clfle Vitw M«!Ult'f. \'IV!t.N ' !. ' I ' \ Golden Value Super Firm ' Extra large plastic trash container is ideal for kitchen, workshop or laundry room. Attractively styled in your choice of popular colors. Mod· el 2846. ~git V!vlt n. tll-N. Avtt11d1 M1Jcrc1, Liou.,,. Hiii •. D••• of <le~th, Febru1rv 2. 11n . ~trVk11 P9'!dln11 11 Pac111, view Mortvtrv. ARBUCKLE A SON WESTCLIFF MORTUA RY U7 E. 11th St .. Coatr Mt:11 '4M811 • BALTZ BERGERON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar 173-94.50 Costa !\fesa 646-%424 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Broadny, Costa Mesa u 8-l433 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTIJARY 17• Llpna C.nyoa Rd. IH-MU • PACIJl'IC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemdery Mortuary Oapel -Podllc:VlewDrln Newport Seid, CalHonla 144-17• • PED FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL ROME '1111 BoluA"' ·--1111111 • IMITllS' MOllTVAllY tr! Malo Ill. R ........ Budl ... . . . ' ---~ ·~ bl!!_ it's only $55.00* when you buy this Simmons Golden Value with cover by Oscar de la Renta •Twl• 9f' F•ll Mottr .. s er 1...,,1 .. 9 .... she set, SISt.DS, llitt W.. Mt, S22t.IO BEAU'f¥REST leoutyre1t mottr•sMtl, there's one rigl'tl lof you. Because everyone hos o ditle1er.1 idea of ~st how llrm o mattress sl'louJd be. we now make 8ttouty1e5! mattresses In four d lHe1eo1 llrmnes&es. Besides Normal fhm. lhere ore lhree Bock Core models: EllTro Firm, Extra FlfTTl Plus, and Supe1 Firm. But becou&e fi1mneu alone eon'! support vou PfOpertv. every leo~est Is olso ne:dble. Se pa rote coils 1<:onfofm to your shape, 10 o Beo\J"r't'e1r con give you more support. more comlortobJv . I hon onyother firm mottreu. Come In and try o il lour Beoutyresl ll1mnesses. The OOOYoU wind up on shovld be the hrmness !hot makes you unwind the mew. 8eoutyJest Supreme OI Bock Core I Monreu 01 Foundofion . $99.95 eoch1Twlo0<-) ·1:ttro long, 'fwln, $2'19 95 1el Queen sire. $2~.9~ sel. Klng size. $J!19 95 sel 8eo.Jlyres! prices itort a t S89 QS AUO RIVOLYING CHAIGI •• 1865 Hllrbor Blvd. •.J)owatown C111ta Mesa• 548-5131 . ' , ' ' I leg,2.91 Your Choice Dishpan Or Neat 'n Tidy Bucket Ois~pan has b ui1t-in handles for easy carrying, fits all standard and twin sink bowls. Model 2970. Stur- dy plastic bucket ha1 twin spouts for easy pouring. Model 2963. .... , ..• 81nkAmerieerd/M1ster Ch1r9~'/lmp•ri1I Credit 1'14 NEW MecARTHUR ILYD. H-View Clrlt-Nowpert ._. Heun: t a.m. • 6 ,.m., Mon.· S•t.; 11 • f, Sund•y • , ' QUEENIE By Phil lnlerlandi "\Vh.Y do_ they have to give us tha t baloney about the moVJe being so great they have to show it in two parts? \Vhy don't they admit it's because there are too darn 1nany commercials?" •F1mds Available' Reagan 'Dawdling' On Jobs-Moretti SACRAMENTO \AP I Dawdling by the Reagan Adminis tration has left hun· dreds of state public service jobs unfilled even though federal funds were available to pay salaries. Assembly Speaker Bob ~toretti says. California received $ I 8 0 million to fi ll those jobs last year under the fed er a I Emergency E1nployn1ent Act and the state..has been slO\Y to spend its $42 million portion of !he funds, the Van Nuys Democrat said. The counties, on the other hand. ha ve moved ahead sv.·iflly, fill ing positions and spending the $138 million they were given. ~-loretti added in a statement. jobs be~ind the 3,000 the state promislct the federa~ govern- ment it v.·ould fill. said to.1ikc O'Key, a ~Ioretti aide. Bill Lawson. HRD"s public information officer. denied O'Key's appraisal of the pro- gram, saying HRO is right up on its schedule in the program and will fill all the jobs it pro· 1nised to fill by Feb. 25. Lall'son s<iid }JH.D ne\·er promi::;ed to fill 3.000 jobs quickly. He added that ~toretti aides are unfairl y counting l\\.'O progra1ns that have just begun and shouldn't be con- sidered in the analysis. "The governor is fond of :: l'apping the ·hodgepodge' of , federal manpo\ver programs. : but I don 't think his personal .; opinions justify sitting on •: authorized and paid .for ·:: em p I oyment opportunities : when more than a half-million O'Key admitted that Lhe programs. \Vhich \Viii even- tually ltffer about 775 jobs. "·ere being counted. But he said both had been finan ced since la st Noven1ber and that should h<ivr given official s enough t11nc Lu gel thein started . No one k11• 1\'S \\'hat has prompted Reagl'ln administra- tion ol ficials to be so tardy in their handling of the program. O'Key said. ··u doesn't seem to make sense." he added. ' . · people in Cahforn1a are look- ing for work." Moretti said in a statement. There is a lag of aboul I.500 On at Singer This quality machine at this low price! FEATURES: §Does Adjustable zig-zag s, makes [§] button· holes, ~sews on ~buttons! Take II home In lb own carrying c:aMnowl FREE INSTRUCTIONS on use of your new machine. T'1u1sday Ftbru.iry '· 1972 Firm's Medi-Cal Overcharge Told SACRAMENTO I AP1 -·' (i.lmputer firnt has overcharg. ed California by $240,000 !ur processing i\:edi-Cal cl<orns. incl uding 179,00() claims that m<1y nut ~ven exist. a legislative audit <:omrnitlee has been told, But a spoke.'lrn1.u1 for the ~tate's Departrnent of Health Care Services-the agency that runs to $1 69 billion prv· gr;im-.says the thilrges are meaningless. "'fhe in1pltcaL1011 th<it lht money is lost 1s erroneous. 'l'here 's no money lost." said Dwight Geduldig, assistant to ~tedi-Cal Director Ear! Brian. ''1'he st;ite operated on an actual cusl con~ract. \\'hen we audit. Yte pick up the overcharges and omissions.'' l:eduldig said after the hear· 111g. '!'he departn1ent is scheduled 10 Lestify next week before the Assernbl)' Cornmi ttee on Ef· !tciency and Cost Control to answer thl'. Charges of mismanai:ernenl were raised by auditors hired by the con1n1ittee lo rev ie\~ ~·ledi·CaJ billing and payment procedures. The dispute centers ove.r Lhe 22.4 cents processing cost per computer bill charged the sLate by Electronic Data Systems J.~ederal Corp., double processing by the firm and an alleged discrepancy of 179,000 bills for \•lh ich the state paid the 22.4 cent processing fee. The actual cost of proc- essing a clai1n could be five cents or less. tht committee's auditors said. The aud itors also said Blue Shield billing records show 1.277,000 t\1edi·Cal bill!'! \l'ere submitted to the state during 1971 , but that Blue Shield sub- mitted a bill for the process.Ing of l,466,000 claims, the number t he EDS.Federal Corp. said it processed. EDS.Federal is a sulr- co ntractor \vhich handles the billing of doctor. dentist and drug claims after Blue Shiel9. a direct state contractor, verifies the claim s. The-dif- ference cost the state $40.000. the auditors said. Committee Chairn1an J"..·like Cullen, (D·Long Beach! sharp~ ly criticized the Medi-Cal agency for faillng to resolve th e issue of how much it ac· ANTHONY SCHOOLS tually costs lhe EDS...Fedcral • ,h. 1714) 77l-51DO C I !llJ f . aroo1t1twr>I II, orp. tu prOCt'SS bi Is , cven1 ~;;:;:;:;~·~·~·"'~'m~·~'~"·~-~~~ though It lia1> Ut·eu an is1>ue 1r: runong J'\1edi-Cal's private con-/ tractors for more Lh<Jn a year.I The cun1mittee \v as also told "an rxressive nurnber " of ' bil!s \re re returned tu t!1e ::;ub-[ rn1tting physlc1<1ns. druggists , 1111d dentists during ii p;1rt of 1970 to de lay rhe tulb tv the follo \ving fisc<1 ! year ;uid th;!! the sta te \\'as billed t\rire fur processing those bills. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN SA TU RDA YS IN THE DAILY PILOT Save to beat-the-band DELTA FAUCETS FOR KITCHEN OR BATH e Hand som• ch•om•- pl.it•d lauc•h e B.ith mod e l No. 500wf e Kitchen.Ne. IOOwf YOUR CHOICE G.E. 24-HOUR SENTRY OR INTER MA TIC TIMER e Tu•nJ li,_hh .and •pplj. .ince' on .a nd off .automalic.illv e Giv• you• homt <I liv•d- ;11 look wht n you 'r• """"Y e G.E. Sentry, Model No. 8110 e fnterm.ilic, Mod,I HT. 75 YOUR ass CHOICE •••• • Model No. 7105 2999 WITH SPOUT I ·GAL GAS CAN H•nd~ when yo\I need ii Spoul-lid "'""'•• pouri11 9 .. ,., Yo11'r1 nt v•• out' e>f 911 77' at Kerm's concert of values • 27·i n." 6·ft. Prol•cl your floors •nd c•rp•t from mud •nd dirt 17' U.S.M. THERMOGRIP' ELECTRIC GLUE GUN e Tri99•r conlfof for •cc11•••• P•rform1 nc• e Include• 3 1licks of '4'' .,II p!oirPO'' g!u• •11d I i11- •huclion book e Model No. 107 sea (;-~) I' LIJJ= ' Yi" E.M.T. CONDUIT Fin/Jh off •II 1l•ctric•I jOb1 with &on· c:l 11it •ltc.trictl pip•. M1 k1 wlrln9 t .. , .. 69' ...... WASTE · KING FOOD WASTE DISPOSER e Pant•nt•d •nli·i•m Jftinl•n ,1,,1 Jwi~•I imp•ll1r1 e R11bb•r &ompr•1.1ion mount •nd 'ttinl.,, 1•••' turnt.ble e Mod•I 2500 25aa Prk• effffti•• thr1 Wff., f_.,, t EASY-ROLL FOAM CORNER TOOL • Ea1y w•y to cut in corn•rJ • Thick fo 1m 011 mtt•I h1ndl• • Ro!l1 qu ick1v 111 d 'moothlv 69' TW SOLID ELECTRICAL WIRE • Ri9ht fo r ,11 jo bt, l~''i• or 11"111 • Choic• o f color1 • ri., wir• yow c•n d•p•nd ofl 2' ... 3' ... Conveniently locoted ••• Eosy To Reach! 2666 HARBOR BLVD. BIG RO LL OF MASKING TAPE e 1, 1no h , 60 v•·d~ • U,. d for iu•I .bout •v•rvt~in9 29' 12-INCH SQUARES OF DECORATOR CORK e O.irk b•ow11 cork f or bulletin board ' or •ntir• e Ab1orb1 11oi1e, in1ul •l•1 e AddJ b•.iuty ind dept~ to •"Y room 77¢ PKG. OF< • • • ·• L••ve1 110 1.ip m•r~1 E.i1y lo cl••n., , iu1t we1h e G iv11 !11+· i119 b••11tv .. 1111pl ·~·t_. ... fo r boo•• •11cl knick-k11.11ck1 1 1lld1n9 cloo11 11"•10 Vt"• 62 " Mod,! No. K5·1101 J 2 OAJLV PI LOT • : ., .. ~-.... . ·-. , ...... ~~ ''If Gr andpa we nt to heaven just before I was bor ned ma ybe he picked me ou t for Mommy a nd Dadd y." Hayal{awa Reports Calm Returning to Campuses PHOENIX IAP) -Dr. S T. Hayakawa, no-nonsense presi- dent of S<ln f'rancisto Stal e College, said academ ic freedom gradually 1s bring restored on American crtm· puses. Before addressing t h e Phoenix E x e c u ti v c Club, Hayakawa told n e w s m e n scarce jobs, revulsion by violence l'lnd new \nte!lectual challenges have brought calm to most colleges a n d universities lhat w£'re tnrn by disturba nces a few years ago. The radicals or the late 1960s were gradlHl!ed, "look jobs. , .sorne <'Ire in jails, and snme are tn law school," he said. "The ra cl tha t graduates of two years ago still are looking for jobs h;w; turned pe<>ple toward serious study." The search for solutions to ecology problems, Ha yakawa added, has presented new in- tellectual challenges. Howe ver, Ha yakawa con· tinued, there remains an ele- ment on campus that main· tai ns that !ts idea!'! are r ight and shouts down those of dif- fering opinions even though ''educators are trying to restore the freedom" through rational debate. Great Prices for Great Colo Pick of the Portables I ii; Accu Color wiih lu~ury fee• tur1J •I • prit• ih•I f<h your bud· 9et. AFT, Autom•· lie Chrom• t olll•ol, Accuti11I fo r l+ddl,. fre• color. Ht "d· 1ome wood91•i~•d c•bi"•'· On the Table ••• J The \IJXlllY of console color, but in a ""1lllCt table model size and at a table model ~rice. This 100% •1 Solid Slate AccuColor 1V with 21 diagonal picbrrl · eatures the AccuMatic Color Monitor, tbl · remarkable control that 2S Ye•t5 of CO.STA MESA Newport -h · keeps color and tint u you Ike I~ Integrity •nd Oepend•bili~y EL TORO Soddloback Volley 24)66 loclf'leld 14 • c..., ~ Sn-oe1 Detlty: 10.6, Tiln.1 M . 10.t 837-lBJO • , t l . s. ... 111 .. llttl St. hilly: •••• s.r. , .. '46·1684 NUNTINIOTON WCH • FOUNTAIN VALLIY .......,., • ....,. ... ( ...... &..dry ...... MM., W .. , .M, l .. t : T-.,. n.., W . 1M fU·HZI • Old Soldiers Await Taps LOS ANGELES !AP) - Last call ls aounded. The old 'Didier• are pulling back from the Western Fron!. f..lany of the men have been there for a decade or more. "I'd sooner go through hell or another war tha n no t be able lo com r here," a hol\ow - cheeked man 111id, a "rup- tured duck" World War II discharge emblem on hl!i! Jacket. f.len around him nodded . Like him the y had littl e money in !he pockets of their bagg y pants-and lonesomenes!'I in thei r chests. The ligQts were low, and, around tht un- varn is hed bitr. the y looked tall and vague, hll:e ah1dow1 leav· ing 11 gra vt . 'fhe Front is an are.a oC gim- crack movie housts, chili parlors and taverns where a glass of beer costs 2 5 cents-all near the Velt rans Administrat io n Center in west Los Angeles. It 's the unofficial rest and rtcreation center to o ! d troopen from the center's domiciliary. middle-aged and elderly men who ma y not be actually ill but live there. because the y have nowhere else. Earlier this month tht VA in Washington ordered the 1.460 residents and patients of the center -known as the "Dome"-lo be shipped nut starting next month to facil ties al Camp Wh ite. Ore., Val\.couver , \\'ash., Ten1p!e, Tex., and Tucson, Ariz. The rea son · to 1nake r1)cirn for 68.t ~e riously ill pancnts frorn a nearby hospital cnndentned bet·ause of ea r t h q u a k e s danu1ge For the Front's lroorers, \e;.iv 1ng is hard, frie nd s will be separated . r.losl wonder ir th ey'll find anything like the F'ront where they're goini;:. Al the Front they knit a earnaraderie from loneliness and boredom and l h e kn owledge th at soon most of them will die forgotten men. "This 1s our outlet." said a lurnpy·faced \et. ' ' Y o u 1 r e ;i"ay fron1 the stiff-necked doctors and wat ch ing TV and listening lo cars come up !he dr11e and koow lhe people In them artn"t con1ing to see ~Oll " A bartender "These guy5 aren't alcohol1c~ An a!tnhol1r ilnly wants a bottle to keep hnn eornp<tnv. 'l he~e i;:uys \\'ant other human beings." The hars open a! Ii a rn but n1<TSI or the ve ts don't show up until after 3 p.m. 1'hey walk tn the front from the \I A hospital through a tunnel under Sa n Vicente Bouleva rd littered "1th e1gC1 rette bulls. For some it"s a Jung rnarch. The y step, pant, cough, spil out phleg1n. ll"s worth it. they say. 10 JU p rn 1'he 1nrn began lo filter out into the en1pty nigh!. They must be ba ck for the 11 p m bed ch tck or to.st their pass privilegts. I soon afterwards the lights in the bar \~·ink out. '!'hey are l lo1·k£'d ur for tt1e night ,\II quiet on the \\'estern Front. I Cupid on Target SA\! FRANCISCO !GPl l - IL !>tarted tv.·o \\'eeks ago on a 1:able car. OflfSfT •ntl LmEI ,..ESS • 1 te' (0t011 ' • OIE CUTTINO • l lNO EMllOSSIN(; • TYl'IE SITTING • CAMERA • ll lNOl!llY Prin1•" on1t 1 511ppll11-~1•1iorll'Y 111tt M!. a1lcly Clrci. •OUHTl.IH VALL•Y Janel Hill accidentally jab-1~===='='='·='="='===~ bed Robert Young with a hat 1. rack and rontance bloomed. The romance culminated ha1>pily during the weekend \~·hen a city judge married the couple -on a cablt car. Kl1ls Like To Ask Andy omia Federal Savi11 s IATIOl'S LIBGBST FBDBRAL I $5,000·M11•11111tOoo• :ale IY:cc•ts.2-Y_.._ 5" PaaobookAocXMlla Ave' •deNeo. Al I THESE SERVICES ARE AVAILABLE NOW! FREE TrlNllrsQlcb 1fltll $1,000 ,., .. -• mEE Mill • FREE _,_111111 $l,OOOnill.-..e FREE C..•ll!Jl- for chlritabl1 lftd ...,.,_, znM'I. Where •Y•il•\le • • FREE lloblJ s.mlll!h $1,IXl)mia.bolance. FREE Tmt Deed Rote Collection With ~l,lXXlmin.batance. FREE r1yroll sn11rs D1d1ctl11 Pll1 mEE Pholocoff Stnfct Wit h $1,000 min. balance. FREE Chock Biiien for &ifl cbedcs. FREE s_,,.1.n Post· "" FREE lollrbi ..... ltsMdllltMr- at 111J of oar olflcos.; mEE Elllh pa.ts FREE D1-U11 Ellctrftlc !Mmts....lcl mEE s-..am It's ._Ill' a.. ever to sne1!Callo fornia FedoraL Open16%.._ maker cortillclfe -.i,. .... lor 5% nrr111t annual rate ~ booll-- C«snla,...... Sa¥lntl & Loon Ma clallen • Mow••._.. ap to $20.000 bym~ of the~ -Oe1•TI•; a. Costa Mesa Office: 2700·Hmbor BM!.• 546-2300 • Anaheim Office: 600 N. Euclid Ave. • 77 tr'Ol2 Orange Office: 4050 Melropflhtan Dr. • 639-3033 • i .. ' • ---- -- Thursday rtbru.t::.~.:.l::.·.:.l.:.'7:.:2c__ _______ o_•_IL_V_'1_L_Or_ .. {u~<. Physicist Tie s Endi11g Ph.D. To More Jobs Report Flletl JFK Center Negotiates On Wages Scientists T11ink E<1rth UC Investments Put Once Had 5 to 10 Moons At $891 Million Value SAN DIEGO fAP) -Two sc1tnt1sts say !ht rarth may once h.avt> had five to 10 small fi~ld.s No 1Jne kncws. ti pru- ent . 11he1her fir nol Pluto has satellites.'' SA.N FRANCISCO t AP 1 -A leading physicist says that the high unemp\oy. ment rate an1on~ scientists and enginee rs might be lowered tr the Ph.D. degree were f'l1mlna ted SACRA~IENTO (AP l -The Unive rsi ty of California rates h1J!h in the nat ion·s financial circles. v,•ith blue chip stnC'k~. bonds and other invr~tments worth $191 million in market ~'alue. UC. Firms hstcd represent oil , the auto industry. electronics, aviation and c:hemicals. WASHI NGTON I AP I -Of. ficials of the John F Kenntdy Center for the Performing Arts said they ilre seeking to negotill.t'-chanQ'-S 1n ii union C<Jntract under wti1ch sorne stagehands are 1naking as much as $1 ,500 a week. ' :-..tt~rs. 11 ith only l 1110 sale]. lilt~. n1ay bt le!'is 1ypieat Mercury and Venus have nu satelhtes. probably be<.'RUSf" of moons fhal were destroytd !heir extremely slow rotauon after the present moon was and their lark of 1nagnt'll1· F:ar'!h and Neptune did n!\t follow thf" normal evolutionary paltern, they said. Thev include Shell. Standard. Texaco. i\tlaniic·Richfield. l.~1. Ford. Chr ys ler, (;cnera! E\ectrK', RCA. Hewlett-Packard, Rnc (n~. 1..nekhecd. ():)w, A mer i can Cyanan11d 11nd Du Pont. formed In space and was ----- Dr. Ronald Peierls, of !he Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, r\. Y. told !he <1nnual Joint meel1nR of the Arner 1can Physical Society c1rirl Arneri tan Associa- llon of Physics Trachers thal eliminating the degree \.\1\ul<I al101\' studc11ts flex- ibility lo take r!lurscs in 1nLerd1sciplinary field s and tra111 for careers outside acadcn1ic rt's<'!lreh . drawn 1nlo orbit of the cart h rjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii '"The only likely poss 1b1hty l' is that the n1oon S"-'rpt nut the spare orcup1cd by ! h l'·S e1 orii;:1nal sa tell ites. either col· l1dlni:; 1"'11h 1l1cn1 or forcing [ them from their norm a I orbits In the latter <"a!'r. the! satell!t"s wou!d eithrr havr] Nlhdrd \\'Ith earth {lf been e1ected into re1note space,"I they said. l "\\'e h1-1ve been tr.1 inini.: physu.:ists and other scientists in the pa!>\ in " much too narrow wa y.·· dc r!aretl Pe1cr!s. who h; chaim1an of the A.PS eotnn1ittee on economie concerns ··we have lo re!ilrut- tu re acadcn11t' lr<11nrng so it will be useful both fo industry and s0<·1cty.'' Beside:"! leading to ovcrs1>eci;il1zalinn. the degree's existence prornpts graduate schools to turn out more P h.D. holders than there are jobs ror, Peierls said. Peler!s suggested .:raduate stho1J ls merely require a student lo con1plete cer- tain courses and research work for graduation. and allow him more time to take courses in related fields. Since 1924 YOUR FIRST UC's investments -ranging from Alabam;i Powrr to Z;ipata Off-Shorf' lol' -include 58,5{)5 shares of General r-.·tntors stock with ;i rnarkel v11Jue or $4.6 0)1!1ion, accnrding to a Jegislat1ve report. UC also hnlds 20.99·1 sh:ires 11f ~luc·k in Dow Chen11caf Co. ;1 rmliti<"ally louc·hy investmrnt since thr firm in rreenl 1t'ars as been the target of a n I i \\'a r dernons!ratinns on campuses because il m;:ikrs nap<1lm . The financial report filed v,·ith lhc legisl ature undersc-0res a key point often missed in rinnoal healed debates over uc·s budget : direct slate support of UC arnounts to only about a third of !he school's yearly budget. State su pport next year to the nine~ campus un iversity will be about $.1S6 milhon -bu! UC"s budget will top the $1 billion mark. A tisl of 1nvl':)t11)cnts reading like a stockbroker·s dre;im will hel p provide Lhe rest of the UC budget. along 11'ith incon1e from federal sou rces and research con- tracts. A total of 72 n1ajor U.S. firms are represented in common stock with a m11.rkel value of $106 million 011·ned by Ca!erpillar Tractor wa s the major UC s\ock investment last year because of a n1aJ11r gift to the school. accurd10.c: to ~ L 'C tre;isurer's report al.~o filed \\'ith the leg1 s!aturr-. '!'he school held in cndowrnenl funds 12~.000 shares or Caterpillar common ~to{'k with market value of $\ii million. lB~t ran a c·lose second wi!h market v<1 !ue of $15 n1illion. All con1n1on s tock s netted UC $4 million during the fiscal year ending last J une JO, the report said. "Basic investn1ent policy >A'as un - thanged during the year ,'' said UC Begents Treasurer Owsley B. Hammond. '·Ne"' money wa s invested 40 percent in li>:ed·lncome securities and 60 percent in equities." uc·s portfolio includes $306 mill ion in endcllvment funds invested in stocks, bonds. real estate and other investments: $422 million in retirement funds; $fi.5 n1illion in a variable annuity plan ; $74 million in plant funds : $79 million in cur· rent funds and $4 .4 million in loan fund.5 . But a spokesn)an said he could i;:1ve no details nn pr(}- gress nr the talks with the local of the Int ernational Association nf Theatrical and Stilge f.n1plo ycs, \Vi!l iarn Brn- nell . business agenl for th1• \ncal which has about 12~ n1ernbers. det'lined lo discuss the contract. The contract calls for an hourly rate of $7 70 for lhe head electrician, carpenter a"d property man in eaC'h of the center's three halls. down lo a minin1um of $6.60 for their subordinates. There also i.~ a rule re- quiring four hours' pay fo r each assignment . or '"call " There may be as many as four or five calls fl dRv. and stagehands ge:t a ru·ll four hours pay lo reach of !he firsl two ;ind time and a half. or six hours' pay, for succeeding ones. Tl1e theory 11•as adv;int'ed by l Or. Hannes Alfven, " N0bel Prite physicist, and n r . Gustaf Arrhenius, both of !he University of Californi;i at SAn 1 Die1:0 They are consultants tn 1 lhe t\;ilional Aerona tll's ;u1d SpaC'e Administration on space researt'h. The scientists said Hu·v btts- ecl their theory on a shidy of ' the evolution of other planets ! and their satellites. Saturn. Jupiter an<l Ur rin11s l followed a "normal" pa!trrn of drvelopmenl. they said. ··~ach nf these has five or more secondary bodies. nr satellites." Alfven s a i d . FOR TIRES Just Arrived New Steel Radials! ... Finest Tires lo Fil VW's to Cadillacs ... Mark C. Bloome carries 'em. all! wllh Prices that speak lor themselves! OUR POLICY BA'ITERIES II ,.. .Nulol ,.11 -..I 1""' •••• • •...,i ... ..... 1 .... ,11 h• , .... <1. """""9 • 1 ...... dtllwt>..,. o• "'• .,.; .. .,;...i ... ~ •. Flo1hl H1tr• i1 the bcitt1ry yo11'y1 b,.l!n looking forl ll1!li1t•I ii or ,.ol ..• FRE E REf'lACEMENT GUAllANTEE• with lQNG LASTING POWfRIZfO PLATES & AMPERE HOURS. Arid lo top "erything. "'°'~ C. Bloome llot1erie1 01e SUPER POWERED ,..;1h EXTRA, RESEJl'Vf POWEii! Do"'' b• t.,h 0111 ;., lh1" <old. f it. "'°'"t popular co• .. All battery pric1t1 with •acl.o nge. fllEE INSTAllATION. 88 .... ,...,1,. C1rs >t D17 fl EE 1.,11, .... , "·· »1o11 ......... 1 •• .,llfl ICI 3 Year 18., 6 uar. ::, 12 l'o lt 4 l "itnr 2 9., (..ru ar. d :::. 1-.,..1_ .. __ ... ,., __ _ "PREE REPLACEMlllT BATTERY GUAR. F,... replatemont within •pecifi1td p•riod of purchote if bat. tery prov•• defective . .A.ft•r 1pecifiod P41 riod we ,will ,.ploce it w ith a now battory, if dofectiYe, cl'IGrging anly for tho period of narmol pa11•~•r o~hip. Your monthly charg• fM ownor• 1hip will be comput•d by cli'fiding t+i• cunont tolliftg pric• at tho ti1t11t ol ~tum by th• numb.r of months of guaront••· W ith 2 fi•1t P11rcho11!. f 11ll Si1• U.S. Can i'ld11dl!: Carrl!ding io1t1r, ca'"b1tr, k> ... in, wh1" n•<11tary. lnd11ding air iandi- 1;0111!d can & Chry1ll!r Ton ion !or. ALL 4 WHEELS DISC Regular BRAKE CARS Dr1u1t T11pe • All NEW DISC PADS l LINING • NEW DUAL FRICTION LINING "4 WHEELS INSTALLED ON 4 WllEELS , TURN All DI SC ROTORS l • REBUILD All WHEEL CYLIN· DRUMS . DERS' • REBUILD All DISC CALIPERS •TURN l RESURFACE All 4 l CYLINDERS' DRUMS • REPACK FIDNT WHEEL BW· • REPACK FIDNT WllEEL IW· INIS INGS • ILEED All LINES, ADD BRAKE • BLEED All LINES, All Wl£ FLUID . FLUID • INSPECT MASTER CYLINDEl l • INSPECT llASTO CYLINDER l . llAllE HOSES IRIKE MOSES •ARC HIND BRAKE SHOES · •ARC IRIND IRAKE SHGES , INSPECT IRE.IS! SEALS • INSPECT HUSE SWS , FREE ADJUSTMENTS FDR THE • FREE ADIUSTMEllTS Fii LlfE • ~~·~~r~~~ SAfETY • :~~1rs8r FDI WITT f9'1 SIN U.S. c.,..,. 01lr '" "''" 88 W D11C."lan Te:t·ota Unbl!lievobll!I for !iJOll"""" op~tit91 & t.o- b urgl!r p<Kketbook.t ti.I! BEST TIRE PRICE IN ~~=~~13 12 ~?.. S.60:xl S 11 ., ...... · Tubrl~•• ;,~ UNIROYAL l'ASTRAK Btlted Glau S • 8 BB ';~~·:;: & 'olyest&r ~,, .. _1 ... ~~~l,!2,, LoH""" hd• Grove 2000 w. l~O~O Whitti•r 81. Broo~hur1t 68 ~.~ ... C. 11-'(1111 Net Do ltu Jh. 1 SAii IWf JOll • .,_ ,.._ C¥tl~-... .. i, ••. ., _ ...w1. IC•'· M W'tllttllr • 1-"il ~ ~ ......... -c,., ,.__ WMfl ~ ... ·-Cltl ~ ........ •••·l666 Uniroyal E'astrak c~:;,·., POLYESTER & BELTED-GLASS WHITEWALLS .. -I . Sen1otionol! W• modi!! o lremendou1 buy on th•111 new originol equipment W -l·D-E 78 GLASS BELTED . TIRE S. The111 ore oll first quality, L ot twi~e the prite thi1 would be o great volu11. At thHe price• you con buy a set for yoursel( & buy a 1111 for a friend. Don't mit1 out! $ 88 <173/l.~ F a••rak TB Serie• T•M ly•• ~-. '' 4l '""'· b . r .. Terrflc l'rlce• on ALL SIZES of f'a1tralc1 ClOSfOIJT' n.. NfW 1 lt•h ..-.1-1+1 ......... ~~ -• ! ....... -.i ,. .... 2 ,1.,. •ur 1.,.,..... ,...-, ,~. •-i..;.. " .... _. ' .._.,.,., ... 11.;. ._ .,.i .. lo. .... iO'Wlll ~Cl ...,.....,.. !., ..._ -1., ..... ,.., lllfl D 71 _i .. WWlffWAUSl )_~ I -F78/14 2395 2595 G7a/15 25 9 5 • FREE Installation & Rotation -~ G78/1' H78/15 H7B/14 289 5 2895 J1s11• 2995 J78/l5 29'5 Blacltt00U.J IZ.95 t.11! r.~eh • .;. U.•11,, '3.Jt food. t •. Tt:11 • BRAND NEW E'lJLL 4 PLY TUBELESS n.. U11i•o.,..Z toO ;. • fiN ._voUty tir• f...-~bHy'1 ,.cl..a-l. h Pl'.,_., '•' IPKN--ltf -'* &. i.. "°TfCTIDI 1.,., • Mt l'offy. KIN c•1t )'9\1 .. -..... ., t+ilt p!'ice? F 0 R 88 6.SOslJ "'" 1 78113 --...... 11.11 ,...,, h. l•• Full 4 PIJI WB ITEW ALL T1i•eleaa 7.75xl4 r•;~;. 7:75x.J5 f"illlS 13 95 7.0(al) l .25w.l5 7.35aJ4 ''••1 l'llli 11.25•14 C7'11£.t:Tl/ll 1695 8.55• l4 ""' 8.8SdS Y.OOdS • HTWI' n..: PllM 8.55sJ;, H7111• Ulll!SJ lt.?lllJI 1995 21'5 Cosio M-1 lueM Park I FuAl<I .. JOOS 2962 I llll H•rbor Bl. Lincoln BL So. Eucl id !Cir.-' lllrff' 1Ctr. ti LIM.111! I Cl ·--"· ., I "''"'I • ""'"'' lit¥-* .. ..,.,,, 1714) 126-1510 111 4) 110.0100 EARLY BIRD PAINI Sllf YOUR LOCAL HIROWIRE MERCHINT w;lh NITIOHIL CHllH BUYING POWER! Be an £1rly Bird! Shop t1rly to rel the rre1t piint buys th1I other shoppers miss! Plan your Sprin1 p1intin1 projttlt not - then see us for s~i1I Ea rly Bird prlcu ind uv1 money. SAT-N-HUE 11.AT INTERIOR LA1f1 WHITE P·I WMI (C.Slom·Mo Colo11 SU1hlly H;1h1r). NON-DRIP LATEX I Odorless interior flat finish flows on smoothly -covers most $Urlaces in one coat. Dries in 30 minutes. Truly scrubb1ble; fad .. resistant. Tol)\S, e~uipmtnt titan up in warm soapy ¥titer. 2 6llS. ftOO FOR thoost White or T1shion Puttlt (Cuslom Colo~ Sli&hlly H;1htr) Usually cowers most surfaces Jn on1 1 l coal! Dries in 30 minutes to soft. dull linlsh. Amazinf scu bbabilily. Soapy J water tssily cleans tools. Q~~ LATEX HOUSE PAINT WHITI (Custom Colo~ Slijlllly Hi1h1r) Protects and weirs like quality oil b1st p1int-yet tools clean up i11 J soapy water. Breather-type finish ex· pels moislure without blisterine:. IN-SINK-ERA TOR THE NO. 1 DISPOSER MetcMt. ht·M·Ht1• W\lte (c.stDtn Colo~ Slip!~ H;lllttf itl rushes, rollers c!e1n up In soapy , wale r! Dries lister thin other type · en1 mels. Idell for b1th, woodwork. REPUBLIC "GEMINI" WATER HEATERS 2f ..... '47" ...... !49" .. .., .. '59" 1t..i.!74" • l1ut•ll•lle1t •~•il a\ile, lf yo11 whh, AU 11•rl'l'l1I l11tl •ll1fie" ,,,._ f.,cl.,J. •'· All ..,,,~ ••n• lty m••f•r pl ~'"I:.'"· Moo..·Frl. f.t: ht. M 1 Sun. 1M. • • , • • • • • ·. ~. ·. ·: ' ' ( ' J.f OAIL 'f Pl lOI lJC'I P1·of . . t.\t1to No Lo11ge1· • ~1,1()ljze <I ' i11 U.S. 'I !11• l 11llt'tl 'IT.11!' 1111 l1111g1·f idul!'l.t'" !It! 1n11!un .11 t·lt 1n:1 .. ._t, "I ,j0TllllllllHd :1!~·~ !Ill· ',1!1l<•llJl1b1i1l1· tl1:1! 11 'lll .... 101 HI t'd 1\trll'f n ;111 1n,t1tu t1or1, :i11d !1 tl•11;1\' ..,;11 ' hi :.;1tif\au .J.1tll•'' .J !-'Ii!" .. 1 I 'f' Ji·11111 I\\ 1fl,. l'1 1;u, !llt• !1 ;111..,lurr 11:1\l11n .,1 AnuT1i·01t1 '11 il11.:1t 1un h1 Ila· 111vh111·ar 1\,1' I tr!L1;1!1\ I H!l l!lll"l!•cl ,11,d 1n•i!un11;: h:1d 111· T 1111H Ii i•I 11, 1·al'l1l·r 111111:1u1 ,. ,\ Ill•\\ , l'fll'I .o1 hlll u f \11 11·1 u·;1n~ r1·.i11 c. 111 o111 :1111n11111t111t· 1 11!1111 t', 1 •1111<1 .u· t'<'Jl1 tht· .u11u1 puhtl1• 11•1 0IU!l••ll :1' ,1 tllllll\l.1111• p.11 t •11 llu• f· ... 1alil1 .. h1111·nt ,11 1il 1111·1 I•• 11101 1• pr i.:.., ... i 11 g pr1,1Jl(•111" l\'!lrld jJl'il('(' p••l'l'l'l l 1·1111 l'l,L'h1 " ,111d t 'i'Ol<ig~ ··~J urh nl Hus nt•11 ~~·ocr:o l1nll .. t:!H.'l'gl' pron)l,..,j!~ !o be Rt1i.~i11 f.,'rop E't1r111urketl SAN FllANCISCO ! AP 1 - Seventy-seven percent ol this 1·ear·-i nalural T ho rTI p s o n Seedless ra1s11 r crop h:is been earmarked for don1cstu.: and \Vestcr11 l l l•rn•~phcre markets, the U.S. Department of A~riculture i:;ays. USDA e s tin1aled 1he California crop al 171.000 tons :'.tost of lhe rcn1a1ni11g 2:1 per· c·cnl 11·ill be f':q)()rted 1o rnnrkct ~ 011t sidr 1h<' \\'r.~1ern llf'1nispl11•re 'J'hc allnt·a \Jun \\ ;1~ ret·u111- 1nt'nded h.v !hr Ha i s 1 n /Id rn1n1str;1tiv l· j'on11nit1ee. 1·01nposed (j f produc·crs :incl handlers. the US DA said The \Vester11 llen1i sphere n1arkct exclude.~ J\1exico ;ind (;reenl ~u1<l \ ll<lnll l'lt'<I iutu cop111g \\'l lh I 1u1;int1t·1p:1 !cd conscqut•nce' ol ' 1he !H1!on1ob1le rc\·0Jut1on . t·n· · \ 1ron111t•n\;1I 111)\luuon. urhan . '!)!':1111, !lie dc·rav c1I !hej (·cntcl' £·1tr. the derin1;ll1u n of 1 1,u1· r 1· 1n :1 1 n 1 n g 1\·ilder11ess I arc;1s ;111d rrt·e -ll oY. 1ng ... 1re::11ns ;11111 the n1ol-lt1ric· 1tonings col ol1~npoly •· Or Flin~ find~ th is 1lt!\~, 1·on:>t·1ou:;nt·~~ a ~1g ruffcant I turnHJJ-' pi:•1nl 111 An1e rican luslor1 ;ind pre d 1 t· l s l 11~1on;111.~ 1\·111 Jahel 189j to rhe t n1ifl.J9fiO~ :1., 1he age-or the : :111!01n<1htli· \o 1apu1 11·on . ..;to1·1na11ons ;iH f'X\)('l'tcd b\· Dr Flink : ' .'\o 1nlorn1cd . per::.un . or ~·uur~e. 1·n11 seriously que~t ion 1/Jnt 111 tllc lorl"S('CL!h!e future the rnotor vcl1icle \\.'ill continue 10 be 1hr l;ull\.';u·k ol our l lranspnrtat1on sy~te111 and tn<it Ila: .aulurnohlle indu stry 1rHI re11111in prosperous 11.nd I po1\·crful ·· Aut on101Jili t~· i~ to Dr Fl111k : one of the las! cultural habits 1 expressing individualism that ren1ain io our bureaucralized and conformist society. Solving · lhe problcn1 s 1 recognized by the ne1v genera-1 lion 1vil1 "undoubtedly requ1re 1 the collective polit ical action 1 lhiil a11 e;irlicr ~cneralion of A.n1ericans sought lo escape j through auton1ohilit~·." says 1 l)r. F'link. , 1 1:orecasl as the issues in the I 1970s are the concenlr:ition and abuse of economic IJO"'er ~ 1\'i!hin lhe :111tnrnohi lr 111-1 dustry Sal's Flink. "\\'ln·lht>1' 1he nC\I' · ern uf A ni t' r i l' a n I historical devetopn1ent that has dinvncd \\•ill be C.\'Cll nuire I ;tn ero or the people or becoinel' the age of the ~uper s!:llr re- 111ains to be seen." , I o Great Prices for Great Colo Pick of the Portables If you want col or, plus portability, plus a generous screen ~1ze . RCA 's Adair has if all! A powerful 21.SOO·volf (design average) colo r chas· ~·s with 2 plug-in .AccuC1rc111t mod ules i:t. enclosed rn ~ de· lu~e walnut ~r ained 11111~h plasl•r cabinet' "11 On the Table ... "· ' I , I ' [Q.~O~ 18 D:o~Onil Poc!urt S!~nd Opl onno l [-1(" CAMELLIAS Fll:IOA T SATURDAY ONLY •. DAILY 1Q.10, SUNDAY 10-7 COSTA MESA, AND HUNTINGTON BEACH STORES ONLY! • 4" COLOR-SPOT PANSIES FRIDA Y SAfURDA T ONLY ! I, • t " • I ' "i r 1 l I ., . •· .. , ~ 1 GALLON LEMON TREE FRIDAY SATURDA Y ONLY I, \ .. • • .. I . > ~ Lit[orut1·:1. _ r. l~ En rl; · ' .. - DECORATIVE BARK FRIDAY SATURDAY ONLY • '1 'I G t l lo~ C •m•ll••l ;n tf1or!ed tclc11. St•rl you• 1 pti~9 plt n!in9 ~o w. V,.it OU• <J •tdt ,, 1hop for •If your 9•rd 1n l upp1i1•. arow yo u• own Km•tl way. l cu. It. b•9. Co••1 t .,,d m•d•um •i1t1 . WiR t• bt•utily your !lower g•rdon. f ' ·' ,_, •• 1 .~ '•. ••.• ,' -·· .. -~: ... t'fl INSULATED RUBBER BOOT REGULARlY 51.11 s5 22 Rubb•1 hunl1n9 p•c boo!, wd~ dttl <h t nk •<ch 1uppod onlv. i 17 . Sold if! Soorlin9 Good1 Di p•. ,. ,., r -.. '· ;; . ' " ,. ' ' ·' ' LADIES SHORT QUILTED NYLON ROBES ltEG. SS.DO HI-BACK BAR STOOL • ' ' ' 5.88 2 days only! .... .. ' • '., . . S<>h p•1ttl colo" bu!+on Iron ! 100". fl wt1h tblt . In 111e1 IQ .I I Shop •nd "' FAST SPRAY ENAMEL ' ' ) 2/$1.00 {--..,,..__~, ' L .' . ' . ,~ i ' ' r ' ! ....... ~: , .i , I - REDWOOD COMPOST 2 DAYS ON LY 60 POUND BAG 1.84 \'{ '" n•lroqtn. Applv now lot qood grow'h. 60 lb b•q. H 1q~lv orgo noo. ld~~I •oil conditiont r Se• Km••' l<tll lo• •II vo~r p•t•o n9~d 1 INSTA·LOAD CAMERA CASE QUALITY BLUE DOT• FLASHCUBE PACK R•9. 1.28 1 Day s 74c I " I I ' j FRI DAT 9 SATURDAT 6' ONLY J cube~ 1n each p~<kagc. ,\ .. fotal of 11 fla\hcs. Save 4ic, 011 ick·dryin9 glou fini,h for met.I or wood uirl•t ts. lnl id t o• out. 1 C •rry1n9 c•1• llo!d1 t•lrt f;!,,. •nd flt.Ji cube1 for lntl•mt fic ttm•••, ~ .,, ..:;J;'Q • --=:'!" -... l_,__,_, ___ ~ ....... ·.~~-- ,,_,. .......... ,.,..._. -'t --~'!' -'l'I ,... ' ' t ' I ". -"'=""""'· ....... --,..~, Waltham Watches REGULARLY S26.14 ltEGIJLAltLY S2.14 l- 2196 • j • 17'6 ' l ALL IRANDS OF MOTOR OIL l BOYS HIGH TOP •;1.0 """'' .. rooo -.,1 ... 1 _.. ·- • SNEAKERS '·" ''"' ''';" 01 '"' ''"'"' 3 7 C :· '"0 " ' ll se l' oar u·naar~, ,.,,; ,, '"' '"" ''"' _ UTUIOAY $1 Q22 -I lht y •• 111 h•tt t i • 1tn1ttion•I ONLY Ch ' 111" Qt, ai •••• ¥0\lf ft vorltt . . a·rge 0 -r ,, HUNTINGTON BEACH TV I 20 & :io wT. ~;1:.1"' ... ,,,, ~,,, ''' ""1"' '' '1"1 " '"" s; .. , ,. Bankamericard l·:: l d1ys only I AU'TMOllm•D u.t.IS&SlaVKl,WISltVl(IMOSTMAKIS, r:::::::::::::c::::::~~~~~~~~::~~~~~~~~::::::::::::::::::::::::::~~:::::::::::::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~:::~~~~~~~~::::::::~J Wt ._, au. f'Mtl I ._._, Wtrt'°"f .... ,..... °' ......... "' ••• ,._.. .... .. ' ~:~N~O~H.'8.gt. ••••• m-: ... ~· COSTA MESA I HUNTINGTON BEACH ....... '°"'"'' I ,....., UDO HARBOR ILVD. 19101 MAGNOUA ...... cov•n CONVENIENT TERMS lat wii-i 1,1 Gorll<!ldl • • • ----~ J 5 DAILY PILOT Thur~day, Ftbroary l , 1'112 'Folson• Insulted' Towns Set for Old-time Showdown TEAC HERS TO STRIK E FOLSOM (UPI I -Son1e of the businessmen on F'olsom's $utter Street plan to ride into P\acervi Ue in a st<1gecoach Saturday fur an old -time western showdown wi!h the n1ayor or that gold rush era tow n. The F'olsnn1 men said they "'111 den1and that Placerville t.1a yor Don 11obu1so11 retract his statement that t he restored area or Sutter Street is "honky·tonk." The men said that 1f Robinson does not retract, they y,•11! sue him for $4 million. Bud Davies said he and about 20 of his fellow Sutter Street busin essmen will put on the ir ~·estern clothes for the showdown. He said they hope to roll up to Ro bi n so n 's Placerville d rugstore in a stagecoach. now being shipped to Folson1 for use during the anniversary of the Sutter Gaslight Theater. Davies said the business1ne11 \1•11! picket the drugstore and hand out flyers ad vertising r~olsom. Asked tf he wa s standing by INCLUDES : his words, Robinson said, "At this po1n! I would have to say yes." As for the s h o w down , Hobinson said, ''This coming Junr, I will ba ve been i'n business here 40 years. Satur· day will be no different." Hobinson angered t he Folson1 hus1nl'Ssn1rn when he told a llCl\SJTICHl o( his feelin~s again~! changing Placerville 's narne to llangto"'n. "\Ve don't \l'ant downto"·n Placerville turned into another INCLUDES: Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus Ortho ·Pak & Double Bonus one of those hun ky.tonk things like do"·nto"'" F o I so m , ' ' Robinsoo was quoted a s say,.~· Folsom Mavor Sam Ki pp de fended his town by 1<;ay1ng tbal Sutter Street with its old bu sinesses such 1t8 t he Gas!tgbt 1'heater and the Ton.sor1<1l Palace is "steeped in h1slorv " "It is derin1tcly not 'ho11ky - tonk' on that street, Kipp said . "\\'e have bars on Sutter Street but no honky·tonks." HONOLULU I U P I l liawa1i's teachers have voted tn hold a statewide walkout br~ining Frb. 17 . The teflL'hers voled 4,SM to 2,3 11 in favo r of a .5lr1ke under Hawaii 's Public Employee Collective Ba rgaining Law, passed by the 1971 state legislature. John D u n 1 o p, chief negotiator for the Hawaii State Teachers Association, said llnwa ii is the first state 111 the na!Jon to have teacher harga1ning rondur!('d on a statevnde basis. lla\1·a1I has a slate school system. INCLUDES: Special Double BOllU$ A durable sleep unit ·th at's lavished.with an the support features and extra comfort featuresf All lhe qual ity fe atures here at new low prices. Heavy duty un it, center support, exclttsive cOYSrl Orlho star!s with a durable and Jong lastfng lem-o pered steel inne rspring unit and comfort, plus? MATTRESS l 2 BOX SPRIJIGS s139e5 Rlf,$11195 NOW ONLY INCLUDES: Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus Slep all ttie way up to !he I rue luxury ol an Ortho King-sized set! Get l ull-time support aod value! MATTRESS l 2 BOX SPRINGS $22995 Rt(.$71!.!S NOW ONLY INCLUDES: Ortho -Pak & Double Bonus Tempered eleel Innerspring unit bullt '°last and lest and give you the finest In sleeping comfort! MIITTESS l 2 BOX SPRIJIGS s24995 II(. $349.95 NOW ONLY SANTA ANA and MATTRESS l BOX SPRING $11995 Rot. $159.!5 NOW ONLY INCLUDES : Ortho-Pak & Double Bonus Ortho's own, e11.eioJSive Crown Flex center sup-- port is a never-sag and Jong lasting support. MAITTESS l BOX SPRING $5995 Rer $09.95 NOW ONLY t ---T -"1""i1~ -• --• .:;,.,J INCLUDES : Special Double Bonus Ori ho designed, conslructed, built and ins pec!ed this sleep se!! You slmply can 't find better for less! MAITTESS l BOX SPRING $8995 Rot 111 9.95 NOW ONLY ..•. ,, ... _ ... ; ·_./II". ' INCLUDES: Special Double Bonus superior conetructlon and ~!~.features at sa\ll ngel Sturdy Innerspring un~l lt to last! .MATTRESS l BOX SPRIMG .$9895 Rt(. $1Sll5 NOW ONLY ANAHEIM OR·ANGE LAKEWOOD FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Harbor Blvd. 1811 W11t Lincoln Avenue no No. Tust in Av1 . 4433 C1ndl1wood Av1nut1 Cancllewood Shope f ce,11er ef 1'111t•r>J N..,.t .. Zedy't Phon•: I Jf .4570 lttween Eucl!J •Ml lrook+t11,1t A.,•ttuet Jutf ll•tf of F.J Mtrl Otte llod So11lh ef Coll:ft t l neri te Mlcli11 t'e ~•r•••l Phot1e: 611·1102 2640 Harbor Blvd. COSTA MESA • • ... • ' . .,, ··1 I . . . . . . ' ... --. ":."-~···,....~--;-:r 9-6 SUN. 9.5 LavcnJcr LaJ y Bu sh LILACS MIA'llLY I UDDI D WITH lHI SAME GOll:GIOUS I LOOMS AS l.A.Sllll:N LILACS ! 4 r•fted le C•llfor11lo root 1tock & well olloptell le 1hh. ••eo Wt'll 1how yow how It ple111 h . S GAL. 13 so Vcgcrablt Cardcning Ma de E~1'1· \Xlith Ferry-Morse Insta nt Planting SEED-TAP E ,RI-SPA.CID Sll!DS IN WATER SOLUAILI TAl"I CUT TO OfSl ~E O L~NGlH W ITH fA S[ RIMIMllA YOUR VALINTINI WITH A GRllN THUMI G-IFT- fll. 14th. ,. "LAWN EXPERT" HERi ALL DAY SAT., Fii. 5 f••• l"rolenlon•I AdYICI "" •11 l•w11 pr1bl1mt . Bandini $3 OFF 3 '111>rn • '\'/,',~ Wf ( 011 Ill fl Ju11 rr1ake • 1hollow furrow, J lay the lope 111 II & <•"'· ') . There'• en" • row marker ottethed to tho top• 10 you e•11 wrl~ the 1101110 or cleto of pla11rl119. S TllAIGHT N! ... T JI OWS All( lASV No 111or• thl1111l119, 110 inoro worry wh<lther 1ttd1 wlll ltr1r tl11 the e11ll of row, 11e more 1trin9 1tretc;hln•I WI HAYE MOST VE~ITAILI AND 79 fLOW!R SllDS ON l Z FT. TAPI ....•. , , .. .. . ( GIANT FLOWERING PANSIES MA$9UIRADI, MAJISTIC l!AUT'I', RACI Tit.ACK, WILL ILOOM ALL SPRING! 79~"' rock1 3 .~~~~158 •o• Srrawberri es TIME TO PLANT IN A IARRfL IN A POT OR IN YOUR I Oll:DIR, THIT'RI DICOR· ATl'f'I AS WILL AS DILICIOUS! Wel •reote4, rMClly lo TIOGA 1H9'111U ttril1 yeorl \~~~~I~ 6 FOR 99c GAIN A YEAR'S GROWTH! "FRUIT TREE S PEACHES APRICOTS PL UMS FIGS PERSIMMONS ·;-._ Bev erl y Hill s APP LE r:.. OR 3 FOR 2250 MANT Will HAVI llll:UIT THIS YU.II FOR ESTABLISHED 01cHON-Bare Root Ro se s ORA ON LY, NOW! Th" b"°''' !•JI stutt doe$ three n•ce !h.ngs for your lawn.Flf1!,out go owal11, spurge and 32 olhar stubborn, ugly weeds. C>ut go the bugs, la:IJ army w6m1s, leafho ppers, etc .. •le. Then'" gots our r;chest ferl ifizer for green, green, all fall, Done, THIRl'S STILL TIMI fOR GUARANTEED ;±1 FINEST QUALITY I All the r11e4en1 fnerltK ' me11y eld tlmel'I , , , 1'8 TO 4so • WE DELIVER EVER Y DAY SUNDAY'S TOO ! CORSAGE SPECIAL THURS., FRI., SAT. & SUN. YOUR trHOICI Of LOm'( .. UIDllllA O• CAMILL14 COllA•• I . $198 .. -..ONLY INDOOR BOSTON FERN Special 498 .... SJ.fl ' SHOP IY PHONE -USE 'YOUR CREDIT CARD I ' PHONE 546-5525 . ' I J 8 CAil Y PILOT ......... •111f 5M06'5 NOT '50tl)4.0100A'(4 VOO DO"''fC.OU61-l A'S MlJC.H WllfN 'r'OU ')1N6 ! "' San Diego Readies For GOPs SAN DIEGO (A P) Demonstrators who come l.o the Republican N a t i o n a I Convention in August will find th<1t the city has put on a friend ly face-and 7.000 police officers to keep the conve.ntion peaceful. RepubJ ican <and eily officials decided after long talks on a plan that would p e r m i t picketing bu t overwhelm any riot in the making. "We will be ready," says Mayor Pele Wilson. "We will be a gracious host, but we will be ready for trouble." The security force in volving 21 law enforcement a,genc ies will supplement San Diego's 1,000-m.an police force with 8,000 officers from nearby communities as well as sher- iff's deputies and highway patrolmen. Special training is being undergone. A rov ing team of 400 volunteer lawyers wil l deal with ma ss arrests with the aim of easing pressure on jails and courts and assuring con- stitutional rights. A "dial-a-neutral·IRwver" plan ls being put togethef. But police inspector J ames Connole. in charge of the law enforcement task force. said police will cooperate with anx· ious civil rights groups and try to assure that anyone's rights a re protected. I-le s a i d picketing will be allowed outside the Sports Arena while the convention's h u s in e s s sessions are bei ng held inside. ''Ma ss, arbitrary arrests are not our objecti ve at all." Con· nole said. "We don't want to throw a lot of bodies in j;__uL Tulare Ca11 't Stop Power Plant Plans VISALIA I UPI 1 -The Tulare Board of Supervisors has been told the county can- not prevent construction of a nuclear pD\\'Cr plant by means ()f Z()ning or bu i Id i n g ordinances. The superviso rs received the st<itemcnt this week in a letter from Deputy Le g i s I at iv c <.:ounscl Hobl•rt C u I I e n Sacramento. ' Cullen s<1id \'fhilc a slate or local agency is norrnally free to regulate 11uc!car develop- ment acti vities tllt1l rule pro- bably docs not apply to city or county-owned property such as the proposed: plant by lhc Los Angeles Depart n1cnt ·of \\later and Power. A citizens co n1 n1 i I t cc recently recommended that the county not permit the 1.ADWP to build ;i proposed 11uclear po!A'Cr plant near Porterville. Cullen said th e county's nnly control of the proposed plant would be in imposing re- quirements that the LAD\l/f' l!lubmit environmental in1pacl reports lo the county planning commission and loca l agency formation conunittec. Divor ces . Take Climb CARSON CITY, N". (UPIJ - Nevada's marriage trade rema1ned cons~nt d u r i n g 197..1, but the divorce bu siness plged up sllghlly. , There were 94.411 marriage lkenses in the state during the year; 194 (ewer Utan In 1970 - • a d('OP of .. 1 percent, the State Bea.Ith Department repcirted Monday, Divorces or an- nulments totaled 9,474, up 3.7 per<ent lrom 1971J. -Hall the m8.1'1"lage licenses and· 54.6 -·t or the divorces or annulments were ~ in Las Vegas. ' TAKE THE NEWS .QUIZ Ev e ry Saturday T""'1dq, F-., 3, ! 97Z ANAHEIM 2144 W, LI NCOLN 1100 YAUI Ult or U OOXUU IJf) PHOHl774-1300 FOUNTAIN VALLEY 1 7200 J , llOOKMURST (100 YAltl toVTN Of WAIMllJ -····331 1 l/N·IROOK· Red Concrete BRICKS! BRICKS! 11 A fantastic flx·up Bargain!'' • For planters, walkways, potios- build your own "Greet Woll." • 7 1/2"x2 1/" "x3 1/2 11 standard size. •We've got stacks of 'em- come in & help yourself to big savings! REG . 9c Pre-Finished WALL PANELS ''New Walls For Salel'' • Gorgeous deep tone lua n p~ne1s ore random planked & V-grooved. • 4 ft. x 8 ft. -3 beautiful tones to choose from. Special Purchase! DOORS! DOORS! • These doors can do double duty a s table lops, desks, book stielves, dividers. • Widths up to 32 inches. • Your choice of several woods & fin ishes -so me with slig ht imperfections. REG. $3.49 ~249 SPECIAL PURCHASEf Glass Like Panel ROOM DIVIDER •Complete ensemble includes 2 ft. x 6 ft. glass·like panels, prefinished floor to ceiling frame & all necessary hardware. • Many patterns & colors to choose from . REG. $11.95 SAVE $4.001 ' Sale Prices Honored Thru Sun., Feb. 6 Utility u • "Create More Storage Space!" • For the orga niz a tio n m a n -helps you g el it a ll toge ther in the garage, pantry, or service area . • Surface d lour sides. •Wit hout a d oubt-the oest price in town! 1"x12" .4 c 4 Ft •.. ..... 1"x12" 5 Ft ... 1"x12" 6 Ft •.. 1"x12" 8 Ft •.. 1"x12" 10 Ft •. 100 Sq. Ft. Ro ll FOIL· BACK INSULATION • Installs easily -just staple between studs. . . . . . . ' .. ' .. ... ' ' . ...... • 15" wide io; 2 1/1" thick x 80 ft. long. REG. $7.4 9 SAVE $2.501 Peel 'n Stick FLOOR TILE Regulation 511.e BASKOBALL BACKBOARD • 1f1" thick eio;lerior plywood. • Ready for *<ISY finishing. RIO . $4.99 5 c 72c 6c s119 1 0 Ft. Long RAIN GUTTER • A" O.G. ga!von· ired gutter in 10 ft . lenglh~. • All ~lip jaini~ - no soldering required. REG. $1.25 79' 12''x1 2" CEILING TILE • Easy to install tongue & groo ... e tile. • White--can be pointed. REG. 1 Bc Polyethylene KORDITE SHE DING • HNVY duty 4 mil sheeting. • 3,6 or 12 ft. wide, clear or block, cut to your desired length. HG. 3c 1' l q. "· 90 Lb. Bag REDl·MIX CONCRETE ''Just Add Wate r & Mix/'' • Pre~i11:ed c:em:nt, sand & rock-just odd water & mod • Use for fence posls, walkways, polios. • Covers 8 sq. ft. approx. l " thick. REG. 99c Black & Decker 7 'I• Inch POWER SAW ' • Excellent bolonc• & control. • Safety approved for 7 1/4 •• & 6 1/2 " blodet. • Easy be ... el & depth adiustment. "7301 ... --r" • ---,-.-·.-·r ' ·- I " • • ' . . .. Someone Needed To Care By JO OLSON 01 lh• OallY l"llot Siii! Three young unwed mothers agreed there is 11 continuing need for maternity services in Orange County. They \\·ere keynoters at the an- nual meeting o{ Florence Cri uenlon Services of Orange County. Introduced by Criltenton's part· time professional social worker. Mrs. Karen Bigelman, the th ree represented three different pro- blems and had chosen three dif- ferent solution ~. The first (Vicki ) wrote a letter to the Crittenton office when she Wl'l.!I expecting her second out-0!-wedl ock haby , seeking help to break the continuous circle of d r u gs, unwanted babies and welfare. "When I was !3 I started using drugs," she said. "and when l was IS my mother died . ANOTHER STATE '"Right before my senior year in high school I discovered l was pre gnant. I "'enl to another state, h;id my baby and ga ve it up for adoption .'' She related that when she came back to her high school everyone knew about her pregnancy, so she dropped out of school 11nd started running around with an older crow d and became involved with drugs again. When her second pregnancy oc- cured, she called Cr i t ten ton Services with an abortion in mind , then dec ided to keep her baby. Her daughter now is seven months old. and she has a job as a hollsekeeper·baby-sitter but hopes to finish high school and ta ke some college courses. "I put up the first baby for adop- tion because I didn 't know what It was to have a baby and lo be a mother," she said. "l had no one to talk to about it." OUT OF CYCLE "l hope to help other girls gel out of the cycle. It seems to be a con· tinuous circle. Now I'm trying to decide if I can go to school." Going to school for Vicki will mean giving up her job, which is a 24-hour commitment, and finding some other way to support herself and her child so she will have time to attend classes and study . The second girl. !i.lary Jo. graduated from high school and moved out on her own before :!'he became pregnant. She is five months along and still working. but soon will be forced to qult work and seek welfare help. "I called a help line ·and got the Florence Crillenton number," she said. "J knew right away J wanted to give my baby up for adoplion." After the baby is born. she hope~ to go back to schoo l so she can get a better job. She h11sn·1 told her parents yet. but thinks they won't be too upset when they find she has . definite plans for her life. Shr said she still sees the baby's father and that he is helping her just by "being there,'' though he cannot offer financial support. BETTER CHANCE "\Ve're in this together," she em· phasized. "I'm not ready for a baby. ll has a better chance this way. My baby's parents wi ll be ready. The baby will be 200 times heller off." The third panelist. Pat. said she "kept telling her.sel f she wa sn't pregnant." bu t by the lime she was four m<>nlhs along she was sure. !See SERVICE, Page 181 . . · .. ,~· .. r • ' I • BEA ANDERSON , Edilo• ... ,. 11 ••• • ......... '. . , ' ;o:: • I DAil y l"llOT l"lloM by JK ..... tl ne c-n A need for services for three young girls unwed mothers still very definitely exists, '" testified at the annual meeting of Florence Crittenton Services of Orange County. Ann Landers New Wrinkle Found In Closet Hang-up column and go 1tralgbt to the comJc1. Goodbye and good luck. Research Everyone's Job DEAR ANN LANDERS : Several yea rs ago you printed a letter from a man who complained because his wife undressed in the closet. He said it had been going on for IS years and he was sick of it. I have been undressing in the closet for longer than I.hat and it ha s taken n1e until now to understand the reason welt enough to put it down on paper. DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband'a son by his fi rst marriage is 20 yea rs old. He does not get al ong with his mother and asked if he could stay with us. I said "OK until he gets a place of his own." He found a place. but two months later he wanted to come back to live here witil he got a job. I said no. My husband said yes . He mo ved in. 11c pays $20 a week which we don't need . I'd rather have him out of here. Hi s own mother wants him at home !she can use the mone_v1 but he is mad at her. When Beverl y \Vest was still in high school she slarted having pai n in her fee t, and by the tim e graduation day ca me she could barely walk up to get her diploma. Consullations with the fam ily doctor began. and after a year of treatment her 1 condition was no better. Beverly's mother. Mrs. Sylvia West of Costa Mesa. was adv ised by the doctor to take her Ul someone else for diagnosis and further treatment. Mrs. West happened to hear Dr . 1 Thoma s J. Rank in. direcUlr of the Orange County Medical Center Arthritis CJinic, 1speak at an area high school, and con- ' tacted him for a consultation. · His diaRnosis was rheumatoid arthrilis, a form of 11rthritis that .strikes both young and old . ' Beverly began having injections of gold every week, which brought her relief 'from her pain, and she now hl'ls treat- ments once a month or every .!lix weeks. "Though the disease cannot be cured , it can be controlled ," Mrs. West said. ''Beverly is very active now. She likes to ride 11 bike, sew ber own clothes, play tht • piallO and play with her poodle." Beverly is an art major al UCI and "ill leave soon for three months of arts and crafts study at the institute AJ!endt in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico. She and her mother, who will 1c- company her and audit a cla55 in Mu· lean history, will Uve with a Mexican family during tht lt\l"ec months. , The two Wegls, who also enjoy visiting 11rt exhibits together. have become avid ' supporters of the Arthritis Foundation 11nd are re mind ing their friends to take ~part in the foundation'• doorbell cam· 'plllgn toda y through Sunday. Feb. S. A 20-hour telethon also is scheduled to raise funds for rese1rch. This will be 'alr<d on Channel I Feb. I and f. i RESEARCH PROJECT Mrs. Sylvi1 Wesl and her daughter Beverly a victim of rhewnato1d arthritis, are atudying the brochures published by ' 1 • ,I • the Arthritis Foundation's .Orange County Branch. They will support the roundation's drive for funds Feb. 3·6. \\1hat opened my eyes was an article J read recentl y about nudists. Jl said lhey lh ink nothing of nakedness because they become accustomed Ul it. No one turns his head to look after the first day or two. It stands to reason that anything on djsplay constantly loses its my&tique. 1'm glad t read that article. Now I know the answer. Whal do you think, Ann' -REFINED IN STEUBENVILLE DEAR R.l.S.: I think you are kiddln' yo ur ltlf. Y.ro m the tone of your letter your relaUonahJp with your bu1band is lo no danger of ovtr-txpo1ure. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I've been reading your column for years and have cancluded that you think by printing. a sad letter you will help not only the person with the problem (people love 1ympalhy), but also others who might have the 1ame trouble. Well. you're wasting your lime. As my de11r late ~ grandmolher used to say, ''Vo u r pneumonia won't cure my measles." I don 't ca re to read about mlserj' 11nd grief. Life ls sad enough as it is. I read Ann Landers fo r laug hs. If l want to cry I can read my own ma\\. I have a mother ~ crippled with arthritis, a sister who is liv- ing with a drunk , a daughter on drugs and a son who went to Canada because he didn't want to serve in Vietnam. So keep It funny. Ann, or l 'm going to paH you by. -VIRGll'llA BEACH DEAR VIRGINIA : t hate to lose 1 reader, but l &bhlk you ou1bt to 1klp my We have five ch.ildren of our own and are crowded. I worked to help my hus- band pay support for this boy and hi1 sister until they reache.d 18. I am sick or his face and tired of seeing him hanglnl around. Please give me some advice . .:_ WABASH WOE ~ . ~· ' , .. .. , DEAR WABASH: Sorry, bvl I tbJak you 1bouJd accept thl1 boy lato yoc home 1r1clou1ly (be'1 tbere 1aywa7, you'll noll«I. View the bttoavnlnce • your Ct'lntrtbutloa to your lla1bud'1 luif' plness. Att1>rdlng to your leUtr Utt boy It wlQ- ln1 to pay for room tDd bMrd, to -'ei1 ' oot a freeloader. He 11 a1klnC for boa•ldl on • temporary bul1. la my opllllot. y • ' have simple won1e1 ctmparcd whll to~ women who wrtte to me •bout tbt p,.. blesn1 they are havlnC with 1t.epchlldrn. Is alcoholism rulnlng your life? Know the danger signals and what to do. Rt*1 the booklet. "Alcoholism -Hope ard Help," by Ann Lander1. Enclose 35 centl In coi n wi th your request and 1 long. stamped. sell-addre1&ed enve\ope to lt.I DAU.Y Pll..<Yr . • I ·. . .Jf OAJLY PILOT I ' I nternationa I Itinerary Covered at Home Ora.nee Cout club •ctiv111u .-Ill have an lnlerri1Uonal navor nut wttlc. Member111 will sample talks on Chln.1 ar~ world 1ff1lrt and vie w ex- ('f!rp{a of "Fldd!er 011 !hi· Roof" and ''TeahouH. or th e Augw:t Moon." British Empire Women of British birth hove been invited to JOln member11: of the Daughter!! of tht Br1t1sh Emplrr, Carisbr()(ik Ca.slle Chapter for a meetin;;t Tues- day, Feb. 8, at 7:30 pm. In lhl' home nf Mr&. Peter Dixon. Newport Beach . USC Moth ers A I.our of the County-USC f\.1ed ical Center and lhc USC School o f ~1edit'1ne w 11 l hlahlighl the Tuesday, f'ch. 8, plans of the lnterlralern1ly Mothers of the University of Southern California_ The day, which will bcj!in at 9:30 a.m., will include talk~ by the medical slafr. an airing of a new fllm. tours and a luncheon. Silver An chor Happiness ls . . . Vo!un- leer1nJ! will theme l he CaJiforni <1 Jlospilal Assnci.at1nn C'A'"lnvent\on for Vo I u n I e r r l.f'aders TueM!ay , fch. 8, through Friday, f''eb. J t, 1n the Jack Tar Hotel, San Frttn· Cl!ICO. The ~n1r11 Wi lf red nose. .Joseph McG1nley, U ale l·:ru.:kson end M1char.I Wf'tn- x!r1n wJJ n>prcscnt srt~rr Anthnr Auxtlia ry of llun- t I n lot t n n lnterco1nmun1ty H n.~p1tal. Rho Lambda Mtmbcrs of Rho !.amhd::i Cha pter , Epsilon S 1 ~ n1 ,11 Alpha will ga thf'r ·rursday, Feb. 8, al 8 p m. l11r a business an rt educational mer.ting in !he llunlington Beach home nf Mrs. James ~1unsnn. Plans for the Jewel Pi n Lexicologist a 'Shero'? ceremony will be made . Mrinty Kno:ti: will pre:i;ent a program on China. GOP Women Or. Joel Fisher, Cal1forn1;1 Slate College at Fullert1Jn, will ct 1stus~ world affair.~ <1l the Tuesday, }'eb. 8, g<1thcr1nl( 1Jr !he Women':i; Hepublu.:an Club, Federated of La~una Beach at 2 r n1 1n the v.·omens' cluhhuuse. l)r. Fisher rt·rcnt!v f1n1:.hcd a lwv-yeilr s;1lJba1Jc;I to d() government w1Jrk Ne wl y·e!ccted nl!H·rr.~ ;jrf: !he Mm('S. Y1ar1e E~l1ngcr, Vrrn f{1111dQ)p/1, C l a r a 'l't1.~l1nrr. 1;J11r11"1 l'udach and Katherine Scott. Secretaries Oretnge County Leg a J Srcrctaries wilt conduct an r1,1;ht·v.·eek series of workshops rnr legal secrctC1rics beginning Tuesday. Feb. 8, fro1n 7 p.m. 1n Saddleback ll!gh School, Santa Ana . Vocabulary Balanced By DI CK WEST WASHINGTON /UPI 1 Protesting that the uac of female names to Ident ify hur· rlcanes ls degrading 1 n womanhood, an a r d e n t feminist suggested !he other d11y that the storms be nRmed after U.S. senators instead. She has a good point there. Senators are v i r tu a 11 y 1ynonymouii with high winds. But when the women's llb leader pro posed changing the meteorological term f r o m "hurrica ne" to "himicanc,'' she lost my support forthwith. f or v.•hen you start tam· pering with words in an effort !o achieve a sexually balanced language, you are raisi ng an illsue that could be Rlmost as controversial as busin~. H verbal equality could be 11chieved with a few ll'X · Jcographical a!teral!ons, okay. Unfortunately, ho we v P r , there 11re a host of words with ~';:t F~Y,~.~ .~~~S .t1:~ TT POii: ALL YOUlt JIWILltY NllDS JV+ Rll"AIRIN~RlllTTINO-<UITOM OISION 011motM1t. R..-111, lmtrlld1, l•llllltlr" 111111 .,..,..,. ttllrt cw• ,,..,,, , , ... tr.m ,01 ptl"'h t. J ch. llAltAT OOLO MOUNTINGS l"lc~ Ow.__,twr Slollt 111d /oltwrUl"I· Owllll~ An1tv111 & .r.,11r1l11ll Avtlltlllt -Rtlfll"•b11 ~•lc11. 270 E. 17th St. Co1tt Me•• In Hlllgren Squere 645-1909 Fullerton Open Sun., 12-5 p.m . Half l"otye1ter IM'"' "91f'l.- pauporh to 191..ure. Ecny core, teay wtor IMI occtpttd everywhere. ,lck youl'l at Illa Nor'• lrom U0.00 Sizes I SIZES 1-4 1 1 -26 1/~ • unpleas<int connotations that have a feminine sound. To bring all of them in line with the women's liberation movement would require ma· jor surgery on the n1other tongue. feminists, J'rn sure, woul d want tn restructure a word like "hern ifl." spelling it "himnia." And certainly they would insist 011 switrhing from "hcrelie" to ''hirnelic." ~1ost µe<.>ple of both sexes consider reptiles repulsive, Fe1n inists, the r e ! ore , un· doubtedly would vote t n 11bolish the s I u d y of ''herpetology" 11nd replace it v,·ith ''himpetology.·· There be ing n1ort m;ile recluses than fernale an· chorites. it is only fa ir that ''hrrmlts'' beco111r ''hi111its.·· Nnr is there nny ~ood reason v•hy .. hcrmnphrod1 tc" should havr ;1 fcm inin r ring. Anyo ne w1lh du:ll srx org<iris t·ou\d just as <ii 'rur:ilrly he c:illed 11 "hi1nophrOOt!l'." In r ,ed rr.~sinj:! the};I' J.1.1'1evanccs, \cl us ool ovcr\l)Clk. the multitude of v.·ords in "'h1rh \VOn1ank1nd ernerges lr1un1pha11t . In sin1ple ju.~!icr. !hry shnuld be shared "'ilh rnrn. l'arcnta~c. for cxan1plr. is not exclu sively a frn1;ilc funr· lion . The thi ngs th ;11 :irr hand- <'rl down lo us "r<' A pnrl of our ''himila,i.:e" AS 11·cl! as our ''hl'rilagr .. Whl'n the ('hn:.ln1a:. i-f'ilt:>IHI rnlls arnunrl. 11·hv sh1111ld 11·r not sin~ "Hark " the !lt1nald 1\nge\5 Sing;·· Thrrl' n111st h<' as n1any boy ;ini;cls as girl an,i.:cls. These '"'Ords, \'Otl 'viii nnl<'. 11 rr Just a ff'w fif !11r nh1·1011s re1 is1nns 1n !hr f('1n1n111r po.~sessi\·e. tlncl' 1i>t1 ,i.:cl 111111 11·nrd.; hr,i.:1nn1n~ "'ilh !hr th 1 rd 11erson pron11un ''Sh l'nan1gan~ · !n •·hrn.1ni,i.:.ins"; "$hl'l'Jl1~h" t1• '·hrep1sh" !ht• pr0Je1't h('ronH'S trul~· hcrtulr~1n Oop~. 1 n1ran h1n1culC'.111 . MY Women Bridge, bunko and other games will be featured Tues- day , Feb. 8, 1r1 the Mi ssion V1e;o Sv.·1m and J(acquet f!\Jb whe n the ~tJ..,1;1on V rr] o Women '!i Club gathers for a Game Night. Christion Club \\.'1Hiam Beck, a Newport Reach bu.<.1nessman will speak and the San Clemf'nte High &:h-001 ~1adril(al Singers will pr11v1de mu~Je for the Tues- day, Feb. 8, l(<tlher1ng of th e South Coast C h r l !\ t 1 a n Wr1men's (Juh al !2 :l~ p.n1. 1n Hen Rrown·s restaurant, South Laguna . First Nighters First Nighters of the Laguna l\ln ullon Comm unity Playhouse w11t honor Dr. and Mrs. Norman Nixon. founding members of the playhouse, Tuesday, Feb. 8. al their tradi· tiona! opening night dinner in Named Soloist thf Viet.or Hugo Jnn precedlng the premiere of ''Teahouse of t.he Augu.st t.loon " Philhormon ic P1anlst-0rganist Mrs. John Wym an will .lipea k on Baroque n11JS1C' to members Qf the Harbor View Hills Philharmonic Commit tee Tues- day, Feb. 8, al 10 am. in the Co ronil del Mar home of Mrs. t\lillard .\lcAda m. A coffee will precede the meeting al 9 30. Coost Juniors &1uth Coast Junior Woman 's Cluh will honor its sponsoring l'IUb, the La Mlrada Ebells \Vednesday, Feb. 9. al the Ebells' 7:30 p.m. meeting in ~1 cNally Intermediate School in La l'l·l1rada. Garden Club South Coast members will Garden Club take home trinket! and l re a s u re s Wednesday, F't'b. 9, from the club's annual silent aul·tion al I p m, in lhe Three Arch Bay clubhouse. J ohn II. van Barneveld, noted rosarian, will narr<ite slides from his three·rnonlh lour of r:uropean gardens. Plans will be m<ide lor the Fun \\'1th 1''1owers by the Sta flower ~huw srl for Saturday, April 15. Temple Hillel A Chinese <1ucl1nn and Bid and Buy 1s planned fnr \Vednesday. Feb. 9, :it 7 .. 1rl p rn. by ·rem pie I! 1 l le I Sisterhood in the Fountain Valley Jl1gh School. Chinese food l\'IJI be served and prizes aw arded. Theater Night I Excerpts frorn "Fiddler nn the Roof'' v.·ill highlighl the \Vednesday. Feb. 9. meeti:1g of l the Sisterhood of Ten1ple Beth \'1olinisl .i\n gcla .Juda. ctaughlC'r of f\·lr . ;:ind f\\rs . .1\rnold Jud;:i of Costa i\fcsa, \\'ill arpc_ar v.1th the Orange County Youth Phil harmonic Orchestra Thursday. t-~eb. 10, in the Orange Coast College auditorium. She is concerlmistress of the l'nsta l\lcsa I ligh School orchestra. From Page 17 • • • Service Needed Her mother fot1nd nut 11•hile they were on \•arat1on. and 1\·hen they returned. :Vlrs. li1gcln1an "'as con tacted. '"I found out the closest n1a1trn1tv hontr Y.'i!S i11 l.-0s An~rles.;, she related "I v.·ent tr1 hr{'llllse my parf'nls "'ere afr:i1rt the nci~hbors 11·ould finrl nu ! · Thf'rc. :-hr 11as l1111cl1 and n1adr 111a111· l'al!s to hoo'e "[ kcp! ih1nk1nc. ·wtn. v.·1 th all rh r rr11111rv 1n Oran,lle Cour.· 11 . 1s11'1 Hirrr a tiome in <)r•:ingr Cfl11n!y'" "Lo15 f1f n1~· fr1('nds are pregnant. Some ,1;ot married just to keep the baby. rn1 18 Or:inge l)1strict. School -I can keep my baby, vote-;r;;;;;;;;;;-, but after the b;iby wa s born I looked al her and knew \l \\·otilrf he better for her to be ad opted ·· She had hoped someonr 11·nuld lake !he baby hnn1c in I r1n1e fnr Christmas. Pal ad- d<u I CONSOLATION "It \\·as a greal consolal!on lo be around other girls in the san1e s1 luat1on. We coul d ,get tn¢ether and T<l\l abolit it." shf' cnntinurd. BONNIE CASHIN ARRIVES THINK Sholom 111 ronJunttinn v.Hh ORT chapters tJI S.1n1a 1\n:1· Tustin and \!Ila Pa r k • Orange, Santa Ana·Tu:.un and Lagunn ll 1tts J!ndassah :ind the J. F. Kennedy B'na1 Br1!11 The groups v.·ill g-.1hrr :it 12 ~!O p.n1 al 'l"en1pll:'. Brtlt Shol on1. :\!embers of the Cn H' Light Opera Company v. ill perform . Cooking Series Around the \\'orld Cooking will !heme a demon.~lrat1l.ln on f0re1gn cookery with spce1i1\ blender and appliance rip s given by th e San Diego Gas and Elt'ctric Company in their San Cle1nentc facility. The dernonslralion has been plan· ned lnr \\1ednesday, Feb. 9, al 10 a 111. Twins' Moms < lr;:in~e C'oa.!il ~1other1 o( 1\\lns hil\e IO\lle<l th ~ i r :.11l·t:IJ1e;1rts to .!ih<ire their \\ed111·~da~, ~ l·h. \I. gatherin,t: 111 thr· !;(old Anct1rJr r<'s taurant , llunl1111:L11n Bcol'h. :-io1.:1:JI hour is Sl'! for' 7 p n1. v. 1th d11u1er to f11llll w at R. l!u:-.b:u11!s "Ill t·undu1·L the r 11·ntn.1(s lJu5111ess. '!'he HC\'. J;1Hlt .~ \\ org.111, in ii r r 1 a i; e t·1111n•1 \fir. \\ 1l1 :.µca\\ on inar· ridgt ad1u ~tn1C'n t Toastmistress I.as 01;-i s T(l<iStrnistrtss Cl11h of llu1111ngtnn l3c11rh l\'lll g.i!tirr for a r('gUlilr 1neetint: \\'l'dJJ('~d;1~·. Feb. '.}, al 7<'lft p 11i. 111 the r.1ert'.ury Sa\'ln~s and L11iir1 building. GOWNS • FORMALS FINI SHED TO PER FECTION VAN'S CLEANERS 3512 East Coast Hw y, Corona del Mar Across from See's Candy • 673·4920 You can find the "l atest" in Styles and Fabrics on those wonderful Stone-Phillips sorxs. CH11ns e HO CK IB I NOW ON for a Limir.cl Tl"'• 01111! Y111.1 mo'I 1el~t any 1fll• of 1ofo, clu:ilr or fOCil ... and ho•• lt custom roll11red i11 011y fabric: yo11 d"lre ot , .. tfte t'llCITlufotlur ... ·s 1u99ni.d r•loll prke dwri119 rhis Spe-c:locwlor Sole. Do11'r miss t his opp11rtu"ity to get EXAC TLY what v11w wish. Periodic Problems She said she was surprised at thr number of wcll·to-do girls in the home . "It does happened tn be 1he best of fa milies,'' she emphasized. JE.DJn tn~ I BLACkMAJl:s I Cycle Reverses NeWIJ>Grf leoc:h WESTCLlff PL.Ali I 7tti ' lrwlM "'~1y mother wanted to adopt the baby. and my mother and father and I wentl~~~~~~~~~~~~~;i through a lot of emotional Ii LAEJlJNA 8£ACl1 FURNITURE 260 FOREST AVE. 494.1071 '~~:'s HALF-SIZE SHOP \\'01nrn ;:irr n1nre likely tn 1·on11n11 1·11,lrnt rrin1es and get 111\"0h'l'd 111 arctde.nts during 1hr \\.'l'ek brlore I he. i r menstrual period begins lh;:i.n RI any (l\hcr l\111e of \he I 1805 NEWPORT BLVD. COSJA MIU C"J ltk. N. 11"-Si .I 84 HUNTINGTON CENTER MUNTINGTON llACH INttl,.. loft.fl' lrot. hn1llw,1l Altt: 'II OllA.1110[~1111 MA.LL 'ULlflt10"1 iii BE DINNER FOR TWOI "'" 01~ .... , A.nd (elf>• l r•v•ll!tut •o' M•"'ftl Couplos. (oil •U·J6,lr.1 •f'MI l<lolr T"'t l'·l10U' 11.onrftd M" ... t BE HIS VALENTINE IN A ROMANTIC HAIRSTYLE SHl.MPOO ... SET l.FTER •PM .. d SATURDAY . lon1 M•lr lxtr• PERMANENTS $750 !-~'- l•to1t fashlon•t.lt 1tyln Roge,.J Bea.uf'i .Sa4r,: Q &oath (oast '1 540.8888 , lOWU llVlL-COSTA MISA~ 540-8889 DAILY t-t-.S.AT. t""-ClOSID SUN, HO AP1'0UfTMlNT NICIUAIY month, accordu1~ In a pro- rninenl gynecologist. "There is no question from a slalistical standpoint that the cvcle affrcts ..-·hat l:idies do,'' s8id Dr. Georgeanna S. Jones. an award·vrinning professor of gynerology and obstetrics at t~ Johns l~opkins f\;ted ical School . On the olher end of the scale, Dr. Jones said, •·Many women are much more tr.11.n- quil and more even tempered after menopause. Frequently, they become more producLi,,e people." She added that fo r reasons not \•el understood. menopause is ·beg inning later among American v;omen -betwttn $0 and 52 years old is the average -and the y are begin- ning to menstruate eatlier - age IO is the average now. traumas. "I found a lot of Orange County girls in Los Angeles," she concluded. The three panelists were selected to show the variety of services needed in Orange County that the Crittenton organiuition hopes to offer. A search now is under way for a large home for Crit· tenlon headquarters but. at· cording to P.1rs. Dor a Hill, outgoing pre:sident, '"unsur· mountable difficulties in re- quirements for zoning, licens- ing. fire and health approval have not been met." "Board members arc still determined to succttd, ·• she said. Mrs. Hill relinquished her gavel to Dr. Wallace Raynor. assistant supcrh11tendent ol secondary edue11tion of the : I ~· .. D'l'ERY ~ ~ ~ > -- Allt STE,. -llRHAltOO-l(f til(L EDWARDS -GEltllltlCH PF FLYElS - U. S. ICEOS c., •••• o.~c• s .... , D111u:• w,,, ~., 0 .. 11,.i._ 225 E. 17111 ST.-COSTA MESA 541 ·2771 e •ANl(IJlpl(AJIO • e MAtr•• O.&.•M e FREE • With eny purch••• a IS'' t•ll stetu• I 1ntique merble fini1h I v•lutd at SI 7.,5 -wh•n you buy on• of our meny lemp1 on •• 1.1 Tht "l ittlt" 1tort, with Bi9 Savin91. Custom finish•• to match your decor •ho •vailtbl •• GRAND OPENING SALE THE LAMP GALLERY 1666 Newport A.Ye. Costa Mao &45-3215 lotwH!'I 16th & 11th St. N1•t to th• farnou1 M•r~u i1 lt•taurant Rail Splitter Remembered Portrait of Lin coln. is compared with the invitation to Lincoln Day din ner sponsored by the Irvine Coast Republi can Women's Club Tuesday, Feb-. 8, at 6:30 p.m. in the Airporter Inn by the Mmes. W. Lee Spencer and Winston Severson (l eft to right). Historian Louis Semtei \viii speak on t he life style of Abraham Lincoln. Dynamo Looses Energy To Aid Unwed Mothers Behind Kate Powell 's qu iet manner there is a dynan10 of energy, and it 's about to be turned loose for benefit of Florence Crittenton Services of Orange County. Mrs. Powell has been ap+ pointed the fir st executive di rector of the organization 'Which is dedicated to assisting unwed mothers. Her concern for o!hers circles the globe and she keeps it alive through a large cor· respondence wllh friend s old and new. Born in Knoxville. Tenn .. f\.1rs . Powell earned he r bachelors degree and nlasters degree in socia l work from the University of Tennessee , then left the "conservative" at- mosphere of Knoxvi lle for travels to Japan. the Phili~ pines and various parts of the United States. She spent two years in Japan and thr~e in the ~~ilip· pines working 1n U.S. m1l1ta_ry service clubs and a Methodist social center providing recrea· tion for enlisted personnel. and still correslX'nds \lo'it h many of her co-workers. She met her hu s band , Preston, in \\'yom ing where they were both working . and they ha ve since lived in Arizona for seven years and now are at home in Orange. Both have collected Oriental art du ring their travels in the f'ar East. and their home resembles a museum . '"When you walk in. it's obvious that someone's either an enthusiast or has traveled," she laughs. DIRECTOR Kate Powell Powell was in the F'ar East during World \\'ar II and then in Guam after the war as a i\avy l\1edical Service C-Orps officer. Now retired from the Navy, Ire ls administrator of Alvarado Rehabilitation and Convalescent Hospital. The new Cri ttenton director enjoys playing go lf, \t'hich she hasn't had much time for late- ly, 1o•:orking in her garden and collecting small bottles. wh ich she started doing '"before they became popular." Mrs. Powell also considers her friend s very important and keeps the post offi ce 1n business by keeping up with them. While she was working in !he Ph ilippines she was maid of honor at the weddi ng of one of her childhood pen pals, and most recently she wrote lo a couple in a Philippine leper colony who v.·anted someone to correspond with them . Since the Critter.ton pro- gram is a rapidly changing one, the new director has not set specific goals. "We will provide a program for the needs of Orange County," she said. ''These are not the Crit- tenton needs of the past. "Live-in care is not the only need. There are girls who need counseling and other help, and the most. important thing is to help a girl reach the decision she can best live wit h. I'm looking rorward to it." Disease Determined Diagnosi ng disease a n d determining sex before birth are no 11 possible with a dramatic new technique called ··amniocentesis''. ft is a painless. almost foo], proof method of performing \a'boratory tests on the am- niotic, water·ll ke fluid that surrounds the fetus_ A team of scientists al the University of r.11chigan Medical Center here is one of seven in the nation studying the subject with the help of funds from the Na- tional Institutes of Health. A NEW CONCEPT IN FASHION FABRIC BUYING NOTE: ~tudents who enroll in one of our class.es receive a Dis- count Card that enables them to buv all their fabrics in our store, at prices lower than the large fabric chains, dis- count houses and department stores who only sell fabric incidentally. THIS IS A LIFUIME DISCOUNT FREE SEWING BOOK FOR STUDENTS CLASSES NOW -FORMING •• Bosit Stretch: Tuescl•y, Fib_ 15th A.M. & P.M., Mond1y, Msrch 6th A.M. & P.M. ..• Ll,,..ri•, Feb. 17th P.M. ... M.ns P•nls •nd J•ckets: Msrch 30, P.M BARGAINS LIKE THESE 10CI ~ ,.., SJ.ff IV•l11•• to ''·''' lt/M ,...,~ SJ.7t IV•l1111 lo $4.00 ) N-. r.kJ SJ.ti IV•l1101 to $5.911 JM-4 • ..._SJ.ft IV•luot lo lS.91 1 Auyfic SJ,tf (V,11101 t. l S.91 1 FREE DEMONSTRATION R.S.V.P. ,.._ry 11th, II e.m. & 7:JI p.M. , Nec,k Yarlatten. rwrw aJ,,_. .,,..... f•lh'-WaW & •at.,._. ..,..,.,, V. JERIJACS KNIT FABRIC CENTER 16157 HARBOR AT EDINGER-FOUNTAIN VALLEY-139.-250 Nut To Zod y's • "". n ' ' . ,__.. ______ DAfl Y PILOT J3 If Blinkers Could Only Talk By ERMA DOMBECK Speaking of body English, there should be an entire manual on how to interpret husbands who are foilov.'111g vou in the second car to tl1t Auto serv iee deparhnent. :i1tual!or1 thHI is rfady zu \IHI) suddt'olv at call lhncs. and (3 \ It is mY r11r and I 11in-sluC''k with it. ' AT WIT 'S END lhrt'r honk s uf the h\)rn 11nd l\\"O ftn~ers rni~ro 111e1111:s a ear Jll:'l pa ssed d1spl ay1n~ ., 1·1ur1d:1 lu·1't1S'' plntes 11hLl'h is "tierr tus n1utl1t•r !1Vl's. WHAT'S NEW AT HARBOR VIEW I have seen my hu sband through my rear vi('w n1irror in performances that should not only win him a nonuna- tion , but an Oscar. I am alwa ys driving the lead car for several reasons: (I I In the event the police stop n1e for displaying only o n e headlight, my husband can identify me; !2) Th c transmission 1s ready to drop out and I should be fntlnwrd by a car familiar with the Your Horoscope ·the first motion bv rr1v hu"· band I cbs<"rV<" 1s 11•hrn '1 s1op 11t <1 traff1e li~hl and !urn 11round lo S('e if he is ~1111 behind n1e. I r10t1et he 15 signalling hy po1n1tng to tus ribs and then ges!uriug toward the dashbo;ird . Vt'ht•n thi.' hi.:ht turns green. I pull over 10 the curb and go back In t11s tar. "\\-'hat's up~" 1 <l~k "1)1dn'l you get rny sign.'.I!""' "l_,t•l t11(' guess. I 11•;is off. side and a1n lx>111g pen(iht.Cd 15 y<1rds Hight '"' '"No." h£' grn11'!(•fi. '"1 1l'a.' trying to tell you to tu rn un :-our r<ul 1(1 FHnn1C' l'l:1i.:g h;1s a u('11· albuni 11t11 and ··And .1ou 'r~ h1t11ni: your l'Lh!' hf'("/l\l~t' 11 \I'll :> !'ld('•Spli! ling" 1 vl11nh('d hark 111111 !ht' t':u· 1\~ I 1n:111f' 11 lt•f! :1( 111t' tl\''\( ClH'tH'f . tll\' h11~h11r1d hn11J..t•1l 111~ IHJrll, ~i!u·k out hi), !1)J1L'..llt', !_!!'llhhf'd h 1~ lht'(IH ! ;111d 111;1dt· ;i n ght 'J'h1 ~ 1n('fl11t ht' 11 ;1 ~ 11ut iJf g;1s f)11r111g 11!1• r1·~1 of lhr hist<•l'I(' trip I 1' ill ll'at 1\ that I l1.~ hr11d hanging out nr thr \4'1!1(h.JW , !1li•Hlh111~ 7'1\l1'1•lhL11~ lfll"Hhtrt•tll. IS to l"t'lllilld t11f' Ill 1 ('!"1wd n chrtk ht· \\'l'ute \1'h1•t1 \If' ~i'\ hn1n(' A 1Jl1t\Ku1i.; I 1.:h1 ~1i,t11ul nnd 111•1\ 11·111111,i.: an11:'> 11 ht•u dl'roded n1t'<111~ 1 'hHrl11· Hull"t'l :; ])cit1i.;h1 II !lt'W 11 .. u ... • 011 1 thf' llf'X't !'\l'\•('t \Vht'n 111· nrr111·d n1 1111· ,111tu ~t'r"l'l\'t' df•pa1t1nr111 l h•11 1111 t"Ht' ;ind 1Ti1Wlt•d ltl l1l'-.11lo• 1\1111 '"llnh t)llf" :'>IL'..11 .d l 1t1d11"I l111de1'~1:u11:1." I -..1111 '\111,11 1lnt'S I! \llt'(lll lllf' :L ~!'!ll ll' lllllllJJt•r'"' 11!11•11 1••11 ;:111· l!U1\g1• 1111 II\\ "lf 1uu 1-.111 l f1~11r1 • n1it 1111':111~ I !(111· 11111 1111•11 .~huuld11 I [,e 11111111;; :1 \",ii i;:ni111l>led \l>ll 111· Libra: Be Dynamic @,~~:!,~?',!,!,NG FRIDAY FEBRUARY 4 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (March 21·Aprit 191: Quick changes in n1arriage, partnership area. F r i en d makes unorthodox 11) 0 v e n Maintain aplomb. Eccentric actions on part of those close to yo u is accented. Don't pani c. Patience now is great a lly. TAURUS (April 2(}.May 20 1: Basic chores are subject to sudden revision. Finish rather than initiate projects. You ge t work accomplished by setting your own pace. And, also. be ready for change of pace. h1cssage becomes increasingly clear. GE~fiNI (May 21 ,June 20 1: ~1ove which involved travel is on agenda. Keep li nes of com- munication open. C h i Id r c n could play important roles. Stress originality, Lead rather than follow . Set example. Ob- tain hint from T a u r u s message. CANCER (June 2l ·July 22 f: VlllGO (i\ug. 2;i.Sc·p1 :l:!1 nal. t'\'1•11 daring ronf·rpl~ Stcfldy approach a chic v c s l'ISL'ES 1 Fell I!• ;\1;1r<"l1 :lU , gn<il. Financial t'{'\\'a1·d 1.~ 111 j\'i•I\' ;1ppnioirh In SUl'lllgS, Ill picture. Be a\\'<l!'C of apparent . l'CSl1ncnt.~. :l''!'C('lllf'll!S 1\111: mu1or n1a1ters. Be thorough , " Delay ,vork s in your frtvor, tnah'. p;1rtner. \Vhat 11 ;1~ Know thi s and respond a(•, esta l>l1 slit'd is ;1pt !ti he cordingly. Aquarius lndividu;i l overturned. l)on't light n11'r is involved . 1vhal h;i.~ been , Li1u ld b{", n1ight ht1vc been . Consohdalc W o m~n1 Apparel by e Norn,an Wiatt· e Bleyle Al•o Ga ll W~•• 2711 Ea11 Coo•t H ... y. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22I: Stress lTCB!ive progrrss. Personal publicity is a distinct ]"'"':"::".:"::~:""::":'-~~::~~~l[j ___________ "'i, possibility. Check appearance. r Put aero" ideas io <lvmm1ic BONNIE CASHIN 1·awels by 1·aseph manner. Take initiat'ive in ARRIVES mak ing creative changes. Op·I se~rches for jewels posite sex is involved. Don't hide light. Be definile. j sconrro (Oct. 23,Nov. 21 l Secrets are revealed. Don't al · tempt to color or conceal fa cts. Take famil y memher1in- to confidence. What \\'as COii · sidered a perm anent pro- position shifts. changes. Go with tide . Don 't battle pro·1 gress. SA GITT ARIUS (Nov. 22- Dcc. 21 J: Surprise of pleasant variety is featured. Acce pt. Eschew false modesty. Sec THINIC I JED.Jo lnhl i situations in light of real!ly Nt>wport l et1elt (i amc plan :;hould he hascd on WESTCLIFF rL.t.ZA Conv•tl un1•,.n!IHI 1ewtlly to l"'''''"<tt• ••• <••~ b~ ••I• to • "'m w~n•• ~nowlllCIGt• ~•pulht, on~ L"1•q"11 anu•• you (•rtlul evoluUlon 11 to •Uy1 m•••tr v.iu•• Wt ,,..111 tit pl•••N II •••min• ytur 9em• onCI 11lv1u 11guOlng lhtlf Cll•· p01ll, Coll Mt. J11tph It Mf. fOl!I 11 HO· '0.•. (~) ~,:;..a jewels by 1oseph South Coftol Pl ftrt 8ri1lol ~! the Stn D•ega Fwy. f <ict. nnl w 1shful thinkrng 17tlt & lr•l11• l;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Jj Pisces person pliiys prnn1inc11l ,'------------ Cr,.!o Mn•• ~4Q,906 b rolc. ;;--------------------,,.----~ IL1 v(' .1n u go tt en up tn ' ·s <1 n .Jnaqu1n 11 111.~ Hc1:i d . ve t"' Ht'tlll'rnhrr Har. bor View 1s J!l.~t t'a~I u! I·' a~ t1 1 o 11 l:-.l11nd Co1n1eo Cl•aners is _ 11p1._·n t roni 7 a1t1 tn Ii p111 ~hi11 .~.1L ()111• di\)' .-.1·1·111·r 011 llrv l'IP:111 · ·11 1 ~ .i11d sli 111 ,: .~o 11111 11 :111• ph•n l\' of \1111(' .•. Tho Fringe Benefit h:1:'> l.ihr1rs to 111:11\1' !11111 .1 \'alen1in t>. l'.111 li·l•I :101!0 :;, : .. 1 .~11 tip lnr • ···1·1ir t-.lJ1r1:1' S11rn .~t1n'' •. .. 111f•thod 11f :-1•111111: ;111 d .. •. gc·t ti u .~ .v , .. l·'1x a .• ldlll'l'l. :-. .1 \\" ii 1!1111J,. \'\l l .'l !rl'L'. pu\..e holes ·~1n the 11:dl, pal11t~ llic• dogho11.,p " lnlp&r· l.'11 H11rdwi'lrft h;1\ :111 1' 1111• \pnls vu11 n11c·d and t ~11re \l'Ot1i d 11\.:i• In ht'lp '\11u .•. Six d1t'f1'1"('11l ' 111;111), 1vi !!1 011L' .1pp lic11· 111111 ~ 'T'h L\ you c:in get 1 11·11h the 11111rp1C' "Six·~· •in ono" p r o g r a 111 ·;it Southern C"lifornia ·j. Fi rit National Bank ,, Itilii) N1•11· ~1~1r:\rll111r IHv<I , Nr1vport l~carh . 1 ("al l li44·Hr> 11 . , . /\ .., :1 1t1lpf1 1I lnnl f rn1n H•r· , bor View Shell; '1'1 r1· - rul:111on ran ;1d tl 22' ,, n1nrc n1ilea~e to the :11 .life of vour I i re s . .. ln1Ci·c.-.:t ratrs arc .1, d111vn &· ),;tl(•s 11rt• up . : ' 1 I . d ,, J1 sc:u:-:s vour n t: c s 11111l h the· pen p I c at 'Macnab lrvin1 Re11lty '.Co. '!'hey are ncxl 10 ~Richard ',; Markot nt Harbor View Center ,, " ... /\nil at Rlch11rcl '1 .. , Mark•t Y!lll ("H t! d i .~~ 1covcr r;ifiulo11 :-. fi :-.11' ! ? · .i\sk .l t1ck. lh,t! 11 1('1' ,~ ·f i 1i h tt1<111 111 Ii c I p ~J •you. Al so ~.1g n 11p for Past co mmitment could upset current plan. Aim toward greater security. Don 't permit yourself to be cajoled, chided or talked out of intentions. Let family know where you stand -in fair, firm manner. CAP IUCORN rDcc. 22-,ho YOU CAN FINO IT AT 19 !; On!" al top expressc5 0 a "e Cou11 ty'~ sn rne radical ideas. Adhere to r · n,_., · 1 ,. the d ral'nng of ~1 (} ~ 1vnrlh ul' 1111·al of Yfl ltr • ("hn1t c . '1\vo 11111l nr<r!'I ca<"h v.•cc:k. Fri. <1l 4. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): Check appointment, reserva- tions and messages. You are on the move. Jdeas are plent i- ful. Ke y is to choose quality. t-.1ca ns develop concepts. Avoid hasty conclusions . Relative, neighbor could be misi n, formed . printiples. Your po.~ition v.·iH Larges t & Fi1iest be vindicated. Know lhis <ind OVll IJ,000 acl like you know IL. Avo id so '' oF 11NE g e I -rich -qu ick sc herne. i.1.B•1<s lJ ~9 lR~~~:uR~~u~d ~~:;·off2~~;~.~~ ~~l~\~~:~iM . a e unless coo peration is receivrd O,E ,.. OA1lY t ;lO TO' ,M SHOP -preferably from Aries in-SATIJtOAT divi duat. You ca n populari~.c t ,Jo •r;f • "'' 1960 Knott Ave. (•t lincoh1) product. (ircater recogn ition, suN01.r R 8 3820 NOON 10 s ,,. IUENA PA K • 12 · sales indicated ; utilize origi- You' re Invited to . . . . , Go o~rene JAPAN KOREA A fABULOUS MINI VACATION THAT TAKES YOU IN ONE EVENING TO •.. TAIWAN PHILIPPINES MACAU THAILAND HONG KONG and Unforgettable Color hfovles 90 Minutes of Live Entertainment Thursday, Feb. 24 "t 8 p.m . Or<!nge Coast College Audit orium Co-spon•ored by Orange Co,,•t DAILY PILOT P<!rt of Evening 2701 Fa irv ie w Ro<!d , Co>ta Me•a • Orange Coast Evening Co liege Lecture Serie• College Frae Tickets Availa bl e Now at • All DAILY PILOT Office• Pl"OCJl'am, FrN Gifts Presented by EAST ASIA TRAVEL ASSOCIATION • • Orange Coast Colle ge • Golden West College • Area Travel Ag encie• HURRY-TICKET SUPPLY IS LIMITED Go Qqien-e --.---,._ ------- · pn1 is the tirne to wi n Guild Drug n1adc :- •. a spcl:i<al nurcha8e and -..t .~·the :oi a v I n g :i go ~ lo ro11. l,ad lc~ full fa.~h1oncd knit suils · (reg . $40) this 1vcck Jor $Ii. • , . a n o t h c r 'I very s pecial price at ,, ~Magic Mirror, on lhal s p r i n g pcr111a11c11t <t wa ve. (';di fi44,H040 - Hnd rn:ikc ~111 <1ppou1 l-1 1• n1cnt or purchase a g-ift c c rt1fitale for fu- t u r c tt sH . . • l)o you ren1 e r11hcr batk in "the /.! o o d nl d dciy s'' when you could find" quality th.<H:olatc~ . .., at · y o u r 1ocnt l' a n d y ~ ~ t o r c ? W e I I now you ran again ! Ca ld· 1~wells Candi•• sl d! fea- ture hanrl d i pp e rl chocoldtC.'I rnade with the n1ost. wholesome 11ingrcdi cnt.'! available. Valentines J) a y is !\11o11 d a v . J·'(~/Jr!lary 4lh .... Ho w " rd , ,.Nutrition h<i ~ ;1 ta.~ty ,.s u r /I I' 1 s 1~ in i\lfaffa Sprolll \. ,\1 ix 111 ,\;d:id". .q,:;e ;1" ~· lc:ttu('e. Hir·h in vi1:tn1111 "f'" & ... enzyrncs ... O.K. fo lks this is it~(:rcat ;,:0(1ds: from Sandcaitle Gifts for all the "IO\ICl'tt" IHI '·.v.our Valentine ~ift . · 11 st. F'ar out hang1nK · ~bark b a s ket s and · wood,'jy bird hou~e!'i for your earthy friends or some isuner elegant cr ystal & 1_·hina to nleas:e c<1 ll ector11 ... · By "new" cu!litomer re-.... 'quest Newport Stat io~ • er& now hall In !Stock a · complete line of Con-· tempo party goods. , Placemats, napkin:i, ,'" naper plates & cupr,: . bn d~e lallle<. party in-· vitation11 and they all :'• , match~~! AIJio Cranenf informsls they will engrave ju11t for-.. vo u , •• Children Un- limited hu unpacked · 1 their sprin~ merchan·; 1 dise ju.st 1n tjme to . 'send lhe kid.< back to. their 2nd J1:eme1ter .•• • Profesil"ional halr-styJ. · n ing for the kids avalJ-. !!'Ible here too . • -· Flowers by Morrl has any & all the beau-' 1 tiful Oower" & ar- , ran uement! ynu could'" nud for Valenl.1ne f)ay. Be 1ure and de- lite someone clr;ise lo vou r he art , .. Cobr•r ... animo, Lola Joy '1 %4) DAILV PILOT ~AL N011CE WOTK• 10 CllS0110•1 IU'•••o. cou•• cw ••• ITATf 0,. CAll,.Ootll"A 'Oil TMS COUlllTY 011' oaA•Gf IN A llUI f ca!I • o4 >!(Tltl /IMJ./I. H(N•Y l ko '1f'l'TV M_.,£ HI NI Y D"<t•tlG HOT (l ! to!(lill!"I Y GtVE"' to t11• •••llto<• of ,,.. .ii..... .....,..., °'''"'n' -I I U M lllC<ll r.t~ nt ( 1 l'f\I 111 no! 1r.. ltlt CN(-M I I tt<NI td ' I t l""m wllll IP>I n«tno y -.<"" I n lr.t 'I c• t i ftlOt t~ 91 ..... l ll<ht t MllflG '°" Ot lo p •••" tt\fll'I "' "' tr.• Mett '"' "OW<-1 " "'' ~-,.~ 1 HO t 11 lltrl S t fl \u I 111 (01 • Mt>t (1) •orn • t76JI '""en h '"' p •t• o bll&ln~" o Int unet 1 '"'" In • 1' • •• 1 Pfth n "' 10 l/11 I I • t 6 10 <I <llt~tnl Wltfl n '°"' "'°"" 1 I If ff,_ I H ""b ct I on 0 111 I l>C!lc• 0.. f(I Jf ""t T 11 \It~ A Ir.cf H1~r. •omno o o• of tnt £.olt 1 O! 1~1 100•< n1,...t11 <!1Ce<11 • KEITIOI DOIJNIOOlil AUtr"'r 11 1.t w ltt • lltfl II ,~11 H I Ct1l1 N1111 C1Ul9rn 1 '111) 11\0 s-i1 nw All.,,.._ 1.,. A•111l"l1tr•tor ~Ubl 1nr<1 0 • GI C<>11I D• F•b uo Y l 0 / 1• lt/l LEGAL NOT ICE v P •ot 1') '' ' • Tilur\day Ftbr1.1irr 3 1972 LEGAL NOTIC~ l'IC'flTIOUS I UllMl'l jlj.t,Nlt lt.tf lMIMT LEGAL NOTICE e " ,..,, --------1 LEGAL NOTICE , .. "'DTICI! 10 CltlDITOIS su•l!ltlO• COU•T OF THI ST.IT( OF CALll'OlllNIA 11'011 Tlfl CQU jljf~ 0 ' Olt.tNGI "'0 A 1U•J E11 t ol l 1 00Njlj.\ CA STLE •-n 11 leOONNA l CASTLE (flltll NOi Cl' S k EREllY GIVE N ta lht t f<lllo t n II• 1bov@ namf'd dtcfd~nl 1111! • ! pe M1n1 '""',.. ( •IM1 111 nst tt\o 11ld dtCtmnt I f •11<1u tel <1 tile ""'"" wl!TI lhf ntoc:Ht l f¥ vll<KJM" In tl'lo otlkt of tl\1 <ltrlr ol ""' 111<!¥0 1nn11.., ''"'"' or lo I twnl '"""" wl"' "'-...Ctllll'Y W'Oll<Nl•s to 1n1 undil o!ollf'll 11 lt>t ofl '' fl// 1'1 t "'11"""" A '" Ni<ho•to:tn 1jJO Flltfl """".,. $v '' IOOCl 5tn D too Ct ll!Otlllt tt102 wfl (l'I h IP>I p l (t 91 bll1l,,.,11 Of lht """' • onM 111 11! m1Uro "'"'" n no ta lftl nt1lt el u ld OfUlltnl w ti\ n tou• 1'1111111111 '""' "" 1 ,., <111btlc:1tlon of tr.!1 ..o!l(t' LEGAL N011CE .t.lto ntr• •! Lo .. lSO E••I 11tn s ,., ~u I 1 I (OI I M1•• Ct IOtn I 'll )/ L r.ettr 1 n u Ito IO nt~> to rt ...... , Pu!> 1n~ 0 •n~• Coo D& v Jonu• 1 2~ 11 1n~ Fe!> u• .,, . ' ' . •I ll ------ LEGAL NOTI CE LEGAL NOTJC~ 1--------- , .. .. •lr;tlll°"'' I Ul lll.\I lllAMI l""fATl.MflOlf ~iq.1,.. H -• a.o.in1 llut ""H LEGAL NOTICg ,.ICTlf le UI I U'91011fl l lolAMI ITATIMflOlf IOI-Int "'"" lo <!0 "' llutl"fH T!o;I ~UM llilft: d i ) 11 $ 1•1 •• fLM GAJtO!'M~ oll'AltfM(jljl' !rf f 2'ncll SI (01lo Moo• (1 "''"*Pl>" Bt•d'I Ctl r lovro l ( t c•llwt f'.!6 lo Oen !\ti i1nto Ant Cl I Tn I r...1 n.u II 11tln1 (-VUe<I 11 ... •II !l'ld • o~• L•u•• L c '''U~• Tl'I. •ll'•""'M I !rd .. II\ ". Count> C~ i <II 0 1noo C11<1n1~ on J•nu••r I& 1'11 I • l 1v1r o J M...r<!o.o 0e..., r c...,n1>C t i ,. ll)IJ H.\LLPQllT COll P 100 Wu ca.,1 Hw; p.trwl>Qt lrtt~ (al I C~• ti W Ho I J• )00 S Pt lrn C1n•cn Or P1 m ~o no1 Cll f ft\h llvl n1n co lducteoo b~ • ml i duo Ctio \u W 1-ldl J ,.., ' • • 1m111! ""''' I ra "' I I • '""" v C • I a! 0 •nlk c...,nrv en J•"U•')' 16 "' Pub 1nt<1 J ~nu~ '( 10 .,, ~ Ut4 O ong• Cc••' 01 v P o! JI a d Ftl!fU8 v 3 0 Rulft Forlll'• M(L~ )tllO Nl wjlll(f Or "•wt>0.-1 ll••d'I (• Tt\lo out nou Ii bfln1 <Q"""' Kl !P'lll v 11u11 111/ln Forbt• M(LtoO Tt\11 111 •me111 IUMI w Ill l ne Co..nTv Cle i 01 0 one• (6unl"f on Jonyo • l) un av Bevorlv J Mt Olla• DoPUl"f Ca.,,11lt C11r~ THE Bllil.RlilE 6AlAAR i. TllAO jlj(;. COMP.\NY 115' NIWPO'I I Yd (OJ I M••• II c:t\1 d A" an Mo•I• h 1151 N1w1>0r 9 •II Co1 1 Mt•• (<' l!o t bu1 "" h br no co,.du(!fd bv I I\ Ind w dut "'"" d Mere Iv 1nl1 sto rm•nt 1 ...i w tn tn~ Countv C ••0.. o! O 1noo Cou~!r o J111u• v 'l) tn 8v B•ve r J M•Odo• Dt ou ' County C t • "" J1nut •ne.t ' " .,, ----1"' LEG A_L_N_oT1cE ~~~~~~~~~-I " ' NOT ICE 1 0 Clll![llTOllS SUPflillOlil COUlllT OP lttE StATE 0 1' (ALIFOlilN IA FOR THE COUNTY 0" OlilAjljGf "' .. LEGAL ~OTICE fl(l T 0US llUS INf'S) N.t.ME STATEMENt follow ng or 100 1 dolnr 11111lntu mo 0 SPO~AL CO 11111 Fcun!I n V1ll1-C•I I ~rc1mo•• sr ,,, .. Jo11 'fill• Soyo 1n 6111 Svt1mor1 ~t Fc"n • n Vo •v Cal I ~1108 T~ • bu• nou ls btln~ (onaut!ota bv on ""• <lu• Jon £ S~•fl Th 1 $ ttr menl ea w 11'1 m1 Coon v C!t rl<. ot O anv• Coun v on J1nu1 ~ 11 1tn 6 y B•ue r J M•aao~ orourv County Cit•~ Fl 121! Pl11yi1r9 Footsie Pub •htd O anvr Coa't Da Ir P ot Jonuo -)) 10 11 1nd Fell u1 ~ l ' 2 JI n US Scnalor !i.Yark ll alf1cl d (R 0 1c) smiles as his "1fc Antoinette no1n ls lo tenn is "'i1 oc she '1orc on he r right foo t prior to the str11 t of a 1 crc nt pi ess c:onfcJCnC'C She told nc11 sn1cn ~he harl dropped a ca 1ton of soda on the foot and the s11ell1ng n1ade 1t necc~sai-y to 11car a tcnnrs );hoc -------- Famed N11n Aicls Girls Pub nrd .h"u• v 17 l9Jl O •ng~ Cn~ t D• Iv 1na ~tl!UI• l Coun ~1 ----~=--1~n LEGAL NOTICE Coun "l---~-c=ccccccce'7occ. FICTITIOUS BUS jljl[JJ jljAME !TATEMENT Pulll 1hrd Januo v lJ 1'11lJt Or1nqe Ca••' 01 ly P ot 10 21 1nd ll'IHI 1,10 Y l 1'1? 11 11 LEGAL NOTICE PUBLIC HEllll.tNGS W LL 9E HELO ll Y THE (O~Tll. MESA PL ... NN NG COM MIS ION J,T THE cnv H ... LL n F• Dr ve Co•I• Me\I Cat to•nlo 11 I JD "rn o-•• ~ "' "°'' ble Ille ...,1te on Mond.>Y F,b u• v • Jtn R~~ d nq h• !<11 ow no •oo (I I 6n\ 1 lt•t-P11t on Na •not. 1a Co1• M~•• P •nnlno Comm 11 on PD Bo• 1r.~ l<l c,. no Pt •on• I t oa no tr.J' 111U & L & w M,t.lp.tfENANCE SERVICE I JO E 1 l!h 8 ~o Co1 1 Mr•I 91676 W 1m I! <hi II Liii> :JOI (om- monw•o M Ao! n1 Fu • on R cho a Let Wh le Jill Com monweol n .\o 111 Fu I• on ""fn s 1>u1 ne1~ • ""no contlvcled l>v • P1 lne "~ W I om II Thi 11 •m•n! 1 !'<I w n •n Coun• c rr~ ol o 1noe Coun v on Jin 11 1•11 a. ee"t Ir M•ll<lo~ 0t11111-Ctun•r "' 100 Co•, Me>1 Ct I 0 ~ m" on Pub h•d to u cn' l•om lil2 ond R• 10 •• CP Jenua V J Fl,711 n ~no• Co•• O~ v f' or 20 21 1nd Fellra u v l 9/2 19 n o ope • 11 d•>< lle!l n he POI I on •n!l OC• •a n h• o•n• a ~ ·~ b• w~•" • ~1-----------------1 5 ee """ HMn !on ~! ~"" be ""rn LEGAL NOTI CE Pnmon• llw• And I'~ •c f>v• (01 "I-----c---1 Me ... (~ ! Yov• 0 o~e y ' n•QIYPd !'l(T\TlOUS BUSIN ESS nin1 ezon• "'0" ~ t 01>• lo NAMf STATEMEjljT II no Ill• P oot '• n1n con o m ,_ w rn Tht tol awl"9 Pt S(!n\ • I"<' "'"t I 0 •n b<>11flOll Ill l lile1ono P1! I on NII II II.ct! lot Gen VE OLDE G FT $HOPP£ "05~ (•r k.•womu ~ f ~ SI J1mt • Pow:• , !O• A•r S "non C• Newoo Be•c" (11 I lo oe mh • QI! le 5~11 on p G "" 11>6~ o 11n~• a.ve N<1 r on• ! om A ta Ct "Oii< Y ~ ,.. cos 11 Mel~ Cnl I ~?671 G£011G.E W Ll AM 11 l£V A ! A & A5S0C .\TES Jal! C•mDt1\ 0 ve Sw t• 21• tltwco Beat~ C• 9760(! G•o D• W ~ l•v l8•! C•mou• O ~• ~ I 71 • Newpo I Beo'h (• QJ660 l n < bv n•" ' cona11c NI Dv A co 11a • ed •uoc 11 on olnt hon P••nt1no C.eage W R r• T"' 'I omtn W&I I ~ W h "' (O ~ h Cle•k DI O 1not Co11"'1 on J on11a ¥ '• .,, Wf l & FlillTZ NC .\ P o t n lontl Coroo JI on 11501 E ~" •dt lof\ • SI Wh ! 1 Ct '64o0! Al!ornt v• t ! ltw Pull 1ned Jdnuo • 11 •n I' l•n 0 1n9f Co••I D~ v P o an<! Feo u• ~ ). O 11 JJI 1 LEGAL NOTI CE F ICTITIOUS BUS NESS NAME STATfMEMT T~• lol ow n9 "" sen 1 ao no b1>1 nr 1 ., NOl!TH BLUFF llEALTY Jilt V ! o d• 0 0 Nt Wl>(I Btoch (. OJI.ID 1"t 8 ~ h lil•• !v nco•1><1•• ..t n Co on • l • i V • • d• 0 o Nr woo Be1cll Ca •7660 1" • bu1 .. ,.. I br ... COndU( f<I by I (Otl'O 1t 0" Jo " V ~· l~n' P e1 d,nt/Tr•1•..,.• T~ 1 ua tm~n t ltd w tn Ill• (11untv Cit ~ o• o •nae Cou<1h 0" Jonu• v ;s 1912 8¥ l ••t ¥ J /\Oofjcjc~ Dtcu ~ (ounlY C , ~ Put> 1nen O onor (O••I D• bV • Jonu1r-21 t <>cl Frb ul"" l nn "''' ~ n tne o• on """ Oc• td n O:e""" h M U\'~"' 1 JI ? ll anne Ave !Mt ~nt • t •• no " of '" S111> 0 rao G~•d•" c;. nY• c~ ! Ql~•l F e-tw•" and w11! o• llt• S tt Co•~ "Tn, bu• ne • 1 bt no co \due ed Mt•t Ca I P8 ,,.1111 p I' 111a , e o ,. ' 116 n ll'ton1 ~. I Ill "'O It IJ.()j fo S!u on G 01\ LEGAL NOTICE 0 •• •It <'!I Sl\ooc n9 (•n • • Inc llll Tl\ 1 , 1teme<1t 1 1...t wt~ 1~, CC""'' M•colrli'IU II •d No 0 Nt""l>O I Cit • ., Q ... ~. ("' n!V Oii J•llU~ ¥ 1 Beocll (8 I •a °" ml••P" o e1cnt lt71 s~ ll ev• 1¥ J M&ddc~ OePVl<>•l----,-"-,-,-,-,-0-,-,-,-,-,-,-,,.-,---- " oor !v ~• O•t< bt<I n "• •• I on 8nd (ounly Cle ~ loc11ttd In lh• ••n• A ~ t• of !h• F1Sl16 NAMf IT ... TfMEjljl ftOt h~I ~ ne ct He bor B vd &nd Pub li'ltd o an~e COA•t 0 8 ~ p ot The Jollowlne ~"°" 11 de ng bu1 nts1 V C!o f11 SI H COllo Mt111 (8 f I om j 8 nu8r-1 XI '' •nd Feb 11&f ¥ J Jtl7 I I 117 to (I I S-17 Zant E•tlollOfl ••mt Na ?EHO<l,1 ----------------- tc Cal • C o" lnc Jl Comm• c t W•w Ca1!a M••• Co t !o or m ts on LEGAL NOTICE l o con! nue nonco«ta m no 61!fftl onl----------------1 c1>nsJllno (II !!or toU01Wno fl\ oenr 1 F ICTITIOUS BUSINESS Pt~ no cont t <IOt 1 oun ldt itoriot of NAME STolTEMENT l<u<ll$ !1\ ou!tldl' • 0 •oe ol 1 1n11 Tl'l1 followl"'ll Pl'""' IJ doing bu•lMlli 0 I VI IOP 101 •lld 11;•,.0t!d <tnd l"'o I~ p ooan~ •n•1 •Aid pro<!uch lo• ,81e to C,t.L RIV-CO ms Sooth Ha l1d1v oul>t c ano 01 w 1!<1e 1 0 19, of emoly S!rtl'I St~I• Ant C1 I t770S ft nd 1un 0 1 d•vml !o who ,1•1• 1~1~1 Ch&•ltl G lil ublt 17Sll llvf Oak (Ir CATHY $ YARN j, YARDAGE Uo:I I( Wt~• 8 •1 liload ""''" m <• 1 0 :it; E TlllMM NG. COMPANY I~( (ii. Ca fornla Co "°''' cnl 1•1 E•1 8!h St ee• Lo• A.no•~• C•l I lh s buslnr u condu(ll<I bV I Corr>0rt l on 511 G <1nn1vol1 P t • den! Tiii• il•1emtnt w~1 I NI w rn lht (QI.In l"f C t k of 0 1nge (O\lllly an Jt nUI Y II "" , .. o oc on o Q<>t IV ocat!'d ft f s Comme ( 1 ''-Founllln V1 f Y C1I I 90271 WAY c .. ~tA Meift C•I 1 In 1 Cl 1°"' 1hh bui ~u 11 bf!l<19 conducttO b• an ~ubll•llffl s Zen. EKct1tlo" "••mil N1 ZE 11 .. J '"" • dua J1nu11v :>e JI ISM.$ O ~ngf Co~!t 01 ly PllOI II 1nd Feb•u1rv J 10 "' n fo Don ICo I ComDanv lntP DO tied Cl\• 1~$ G. Aublt ltn lllll Skvo• k C •cit 1 ,.\fie (olll to ""fh I st•ltmt nl f ltd with the Countvl-----,---,,-,,--,-c,-=-=c=------1 i>e m 1, on 11 con~r uct 116 "n!h lo (le•k et 0 •1no1 CounlY <!fl J111 I• 1911 LEGAL NOTICE mf'!I CP •l•nd• di w '" I• b1Ck di~# 6'( Btw•I'( J Mt6"0• o_,., Coun•11---,,-~-=-o-:-:ccc:c-:-c-:-:c----1 l 0'11 11 \tlawn on l"t p ec U: p(fn 11 Cletk ,.lJU! NOTICI 011' TJtUSTEIE S SALE 11(1\f'd 1<1 Ind mi di' I p1rl cf llllJ •D l .. ft Mt 1"-ttfl 117V, 0 1(11 on Ind Dt fm111 on IQ •llOw P11b tlll'CI O•lntf Co.o 1t DR Ir PllOI flllt Mt Ml1 c•n•otl1 n •tu ol ••fttl'• en o oi>e Iv J11>u1 Y 10 77 '"" Ftb utrv J1~~ On Ft \OIY Ftb•uorv 11 ltn at 11 Otl loc l!Pd on th1 SW co "' of B•~•• tnd 1911 0 clock 1 m o-n lhi f>\!bll< 1ldt,.tft In Ftonl••t Road tdl&ct nl to Ntwoo ! l•onl of Ille ent•anct to th• blll dln1 ftl F•rtw11 (0>11 Mttl C1llt !<\ I Ai CP LEGAL NOTICE 1711 Sou" 8r6(tlll'lur1I \trffl l" !ht Cl!v of 1nnt An1h1lm C1I lorn 1 Retll"f l"COl'llOflll<I ll"t f•C11tl<foo l'tfmll Nt 21[ 11-N NOtlCE INVITtHO 1 101 1 carr>0rlllOt1,. •• Tr111IM u!'>Cler !I'll DHCI to• St.•\"' W Pf\111101 >~ 'Eldfn Nollce lt l'>eri!bv 11ven 1n•1 1r.1 Board ot of Ttu1l m..io bY C.<6vft C Sln1lt ¥ tP'IO DACC \ I AP\ !'llvlher 'T'ercsn lht nun 1 ho h l'> helper! C:rlr1 ll;i " poo1 ~11 k and d111ng for 4~ \ears h 1~ crossed the Banglade<.:h b<lrdt r to set up a home fnr gu ls pregn;int a:; ;i result of being raped by Pa k1sfan1 solder s ln the unused monaster} she is converti ng for the hnn1e Mothe r Teresa cst!nl:llrd !ht 1 may be up to 4 000 rape \ 1r t1ms expecting babies in lh<' Dacca area alone She SiJ d she had been !old many others killed !hen1sclves or were killed by their c11pto1s aflf'r the surrende r to India Dec 16 1 he B;ingladcsh government f'la1ms that tens of thousands of won1en and girls "ere raped during the nine monrh secess1on 1st rebellion in the rorm cr £1st Pakistan manv 'D' 'H ino as J-lassle I II Vegas LAS VEGt\S Ni:\ (\Pl - Enterta ner Dean Jlrlartin and the H1v1era Hotel are cm brn led 10 a contr<ict dispute hi:re that arcording tn 111 C' la!c~t report has t.t;irtin Jock ed out of hts ov. n su1 ie The R111l'ra and Marlln are fighti ng over r-.1art1n s demaru1 lhnt he do onlv one sho1\ a night 11 hen appearing here - a mnJor precedent 10 ;i r1tv where big stars appe;ir nightly at 8 pm and midnight Don D1g1ho editor n( lhc Las Vegas Re111ev. Journal sa1d Wednesday he has learn ed tha t R1 v1era Hotel boss Ed die Toi res had the Jocks changed on Marlin s su1!c recentl y Marlin however 1s not in town and isn t due to appear again unt il thi s su m mer I he t1olel had nn com mcnt on lhe lockout s!Qry but admilled we re at an 1m passe Dean wants l o rlo on !y one show a night and we JUSl can t set tha t precedent one hotel off1c1al said We re at an zm passe now and frank lv we l/ have to determine 1( hes com 1ng back Martin switched from the Sands Hotel lo the R1 v1era two years ago gelling 10 percent ownership in the R1v1era as parl of the bargaui LEGAL NOTICE Av,nuf Co\11 M•1• C1! 1 lo TtwSltel et f\t Cotti Communll'I' (l!llH'e Vlfll nl1 C S!n1lrv l'>\l~nd 111d .. 111 i nd oe•mlul11n to conll•u<I 62 unll1 on Ol•l•lct ol o """' '°""" C1tltor11 1 wlll roc:ttdtd Na•e<T'btf 2• 100 h• Boot t.iff 11 JOO 10 11 o1 l•nd •••• f1 11nll .,., rtcilvt ,_,,.., b di uo le II Oil 1 n\ .... ,!.4 ol Otflcl1! flt<Ol'<lt of Orlnt41 1$!M eJ \a II l wlln • 1S fl ~n-TutMf•'I' Ftbr .. •rr tJ nn •• 111e c;o..M¥ c 1 lfctrnl1 vl11tn I• MC11r1 111 1 ... crotd1menr Into 1.J I! ••cul rNI •t•r l'utchll n; O.pt of 11!d tcl'lool d tlrltl cftOttdn•» I" ltww OI "" Colwltl COfT'I Vlrd ~lbttl<. •nd I 10 II l•anl l'lfd ff\ l(K;U ... •t 1)10 _.,(lt mt AlllMll (01tt Pin\' 1 (.Ol'_.11\on -CIW""9 11\d llt kl C•Olcl'lment 1nd 10 II be!Wttn l ttruc M~t• Ci llfct•flll 1t .....,!<h !lmt 111<1 bld1 by Tiit Colwell Comp111r llr re•son of 1he1----------------I 1ure1 1s it.own on 1 Ni ol1n on Pt601r!v will be 1>Ubllc!v ooeneO ,...., •tad tor n1 bnact\ al c:1rt1ln obi 11t!on1 ll'tUtll'd Jlll loctlf'<I 11 l'l Html Ion $1•HI Ca111 !NT EllLDCI( 1"1\m !'ltOJECTOlt UI llllrtlw T'>Olk • OI' wl'lldl w11 !llC.Mdtd MOTICt! 10 CltEOtTOltl Mesi Collr In 1n A),_ AUOl0-1/IS UAL EQIJIPMENT { J ) Oc:lllbar ll, ltll 111 Book "-" Pl" 1~ of IUl'EltlOtl! COUltT 01< THI ' 1-E•C .. "Ofl Jllnnlt N• 71! n 11 TELE\llSION MI (. 0 w A v E COM Mid 01nd11 ltlCOO'dl win ltlf •• Mii< STAT"I OJI' CALll'OINIA ,o. ,..,.,,.,.., •or o, ... ,. COlll ... 1111"11,lnQ MUNICATION S'l'STEl!'I aucllllll I• "" l'llll'le11 bldlMf !'Of' '"" TNI COUNTY 01' OIU.lolQI IMO E. EOlnvt"t Slnll _.,,.. Ct lll fOl' All bids 1 1 to ti. f,, tccor<t1nc1 wlltl ,.,1Ma "' lawful ..,_¥ M !tit U ... ttd Nt A '1'51 "'" 111h1lon lo cOllllllUt fct 1'1'\1111111!1 1 10 lf'4' lnittutllonl •rod Cond 11<on1 tn<1 $!1!11 ti ltlt ti .... of 1tltr wllll<lul w1r E1t1t. o, JENNIE C PATTElilSON II , 10 n s" dlrodl-1 t lon to •d !Ptclllci ll-which art now on llltr t l'ld ,..,.., 11 10 lllle -1t1i•IMI er 1t11 0«1111<1 ¥t•llMP 11•11 Mlt '(JI ll6ll'llrt Ill ITICI 10•1 m•-bf' tt<urPll !11 11\11 olll<t 111 ~ (V!Tltl•tncfl !tit ll'l11rttl con•t¥MI r. al'll NOTICE IS H'EREBY Gt\IEN lo tho loc11..i '' lflfl i nd ""1'11ttl., ~Id 11911 Jlurcl\lltlno """t .. 1.1 ld 1cllool <1l11r1c:t -1'11141 •¥ uld '"""'"~Mid o.td CTelJttor• of IP>f 1b0ve n1med dea-Gf'nl ~11tto 11 l'01J Horbl!r 91y(l Coit• E•~ bllkk!r m11l! 1ubrrlll wllll I! t ttkl 1 of Trutl Ln tnll ,. JM t~lvWl~ deter!!>-lhtl •II 111•-.t h1v1no cl•lm• •v• nu tht Me•~ (~I I 11 1 C1 1r.... ctollltl t 'hi(~ c•rllll ... cl'ladl ar bl(l ... Pl'llll"I~ L.ol I of Trtcl No. M1 In !Uld 0.C:Mknf l tl •Ml.I •I'd lo Ille lhtm I z.o ... li•c..,llM hf''"ll Ht t i! n 11 ) dO!' 1 bo<>O m.oe PIYlbl• 10 th1 orlltr of 1r.. CllY of Cot11 Mt11 C111m" of wllfl ~ n«11urv vl!llChlr• n tfl• afflct t mf'fldl't !or Town tlld C-1'1 Pt!~ fl'll Ce11t (On\munlty Colle.. 0\\l>ICI Ora111t. $1111 flf/ CtlL .. ,nl• II .... m111 of 11'11 tl•rk Of 1111 tbll'lt t Mllled <curt !II' Sholl! ll'Clt NI""'°" 61y(l (1111 ...... 11 B01r(l of Tru\ HI lft t n •"""'"' "'' It!» 'OCOl'(led In OOOlc ltt """' 6 1o It Ill-lo 0 ltfnl lt\ff'll w!lf\ 11\t fllll:lllf Y (1111 fOt ,..,mluloft lo • low •tdu<:li<!n th•" r ••-"I'll 15.,..l of !tot W'!I bid at clu1lvt et r'lllK•ll•MOV• mrPS 111 11'tt .,_ -.<M•t to Ille undert.l•nPll tt tho ltw of In pan lno lo "''"'II '" 1ddlll1!11 IO 1• • 0111r1nlH "''' tl'll lllOlft• wlft ..,. ... \"to fl« fl// "" c.,,.,., ·--1 ., Mhl (Wf>o net~ ,, F A~•AND .. FARltit.NO Sullt 1111119 .... ll(llnf ,.,. ,..,,. .. ,. OU 00111 PO "'' prOPOll<I '°"'rKI u !I'll ·-11 I~ JOI l>Ot Wll!l'll•e llouit'W•rcl l 111 Artor"'' tlMCn l~llltbft POI" '"' 1n!t•t 1>11 Jdl"'ll! ••~•-•o 1111"1 lft 11141 1vt"I of ltllu•• to Jl~r!Y 16dr111 1ttD Alldr0t I.TIMI C11110tnl1 90011 ""'di I 1111 •l"Ct 111 11\d i tlOW -" lier••• •I tflt rl'I• ol ent1r lnlo lfKI\ (Cll\lt.cf llw erac...,1 el (8111 Ml,.. (tlllorlllt "°' ""' .ufl>Ol4 of ll11tlMt\ of 1111 11nd1r1!1ne<1 n II m1!t•r1 ""ttulldlno an~,,,.,..,,, IO(•lld 11 •'06 tlle cntci.. wlll 111 1or,_.,.., or 111 ~ c111 111"1"'11 Obll•lf on• 1ffuttd ff M141 0 ..., perl1l11l"t to tM 111111 ol ••Id M<.O.nl "''-' '""' Co1t1 M1sa (1111 In • of • bond 1111 fllij Mff'I IMl•of wm .,. ol T•YH lnchtdl"f "'"" dt1r"1 Ind n with 11 tou• ml)fllh• ~I flf' 11\t 1 r1t C2 ,_ lorll'll ... TO t•!il tc"°OI tl1!rlC1 Mflffl of ll'lt Trv1lt1 •O-.tll(tl. II lllV JIUbll(t l\1111 et ll'llt notk:• For 1u1ll\tf lnlMm•• on "" '"' '"°"' N11 bhkl•r mn w!llKl'•tw hit bid 1or • 11notr 1111 l•nnt of t1l(l DIM fl// Tr~ll 111 D1tlld J1nu•rv 7J ltn Hl the pre~rnrc flf sons nr J l sh 1nd" 1 h111s ind s of thP 1 u urn:; h 11 c s1nte been re .JC< led lr1 tlu 1r hu~bands Rctal1se of Ir ad 1t10 n ri 1 ~10<.:!cfn tt1ndcn1na!lon of ;t \\()tnnn "110 hu s ~cxual rela ! on 1> 1th a 111 in other than h~r hu~h:i r d Lhc :;ensc of shan e :111Qrg Uc gr!:; 1s great, ~li!h<'r T11(s1 ~11d \\e are re1dy to l:'lke 200 ' ~h(' said of hrr 1nst1tul1on 111 t)td D<itf a hut so far only a h;i 1dful h<l1c corne for11,ard lhe govrrnrnenL ha !! derlari:d !he g rls hcro1ni:s ft 1s \Cry bea11(1ful lo s:iv !hri1 b111 the i,;ir!s I a\e suf fcrrd sp1 r tulllll phvs1call\ :lnd sor10/og1ralh s a 1 ff :\!other 1 erc"a The ncerl nn" 1~ fnr d<'ep compassion to hrlp lhcrn forgrr The 6l }cH1id Roma n { a!hol c nun sa rl the gtr[<; kcipl in barr<icks for Pakistani Ml ld er s pleasure ran~ed in ;ige rrom !J 10 JO many or !hem students The B:ing!~desh mission t, not the f1r sl \enture <luts1de 1nd1a fo1 r-1nther Te resa an Albanian Yi ho ~tarted the Sisters or Charily order in Calcutta 24 years ago She Wf)fkC'd for a ~ hi!c last vcar among the poor Cathoh<:= n11nority of Northern !rel ind lier order or opproximate\v 500 nuns and ;i!Jout 100 lay brothers 1s mostl:1 based 1n India although there are m1ss1nn~ 1n SC\ en o!her coun· Irie ~ l>es1drs Bangladesh :\!other Trrpc;;:i took her firc;t \ow~ in CalctJ1!'1 in 1!128 wil h the lnsh order Sisters nt Corctto Nu c \'Cf!rs l11tcr ;it ige 26 she look her r1nal 1011.s and for 11 more )ears ~;i s with lhal order Cities Ask PJ1one Fee Ref1mding SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) - Cahforn1a s lhree I a r g cs t <'riles havl' asked the Stalo Su preme Court to order the Pacific Telephone Co to f 1ake immedi ate rtfunds on a $14:1 mill on a year rate increa se gr::1nted last June The htgh co urt held last November lhal o v er a l I operating costs of Pac1flc Telephone on whtc h PUC bas. cd its appro11a l of \he rate in. crease cou ld ha ve been reduc ed matertally 11 the utility had used <1n accelerated deprec1a lion method of accounting The June increase included $53 m1lhon a year resulting from a fed eral income tax ac· counting mefhod other than the accelerated deprec iation method used by all other California uUlltles At a three-hour he aring Wednesday lhe cities of Lo~ Angeles San Orcg o and San Francisco df!manded refundJ. 0 1teod l'r b•u•,.., I nn ••ell"'l lO(lt lllO>llolll)nt *J•S2.U Ot <•H ,, !lf•lad of lot-1¥.flyt iU ) ...... '"'' lll4t "'''' ,,.. ...... •I'll l21t1lfl In Uf\1118111 S Tl!"PHEN M F Allll .\N[) !flt Ori Cl o! lhi p ~ ........ ()roartm1nl dllf ttl for .... °""lf'lt ttieroof .,lMlot l of 1111 nott ttc:llrld bY Miii 0.N E~ttulOO of !ht W II al !!'It llocrm :ioo. 11 ~11t Orlw ((ltll Mn' T,.. eOll'd fJf Tru''"'' '''""" lht of Tr1111 will! lnl1 ••• lt>traon trom Attll l bovli 11amod dtcodtflt Attorneys for P a c I f I C Telephone nrgued that thig company s rates are lhe Jowc~t in the countrv and the service 1s unchalle nged llt ... "fOl!ill D CASTLE f~t'l:UIOt flf/ tflf W of Ille t llow nl""tll dl("'tM All .I.# MICMOl.M:IN ni.t s111 ... ,_ s,11, , ... l•n DION Ct llfttlllt n 1•1 AftwllfY tft •JK lltw l"lltl ltl\d Or•-Co11t Dt "" JJHol Fte11l1ry J ID II )• I• 2 '" 11 Ctlllonol1 a•l• lMt ol rtffd "' •n¥ t ntl 1 r llldt or I ltll 10 !ft 1ald llOtt .... .., 1tW -l'AJtltAMO a l'Atl!lllAND COSTA MEJA l'LANNING re wtlv• .tny lrtnYl1rlllt1 "' J,.. vldtd 1M 'Mhtt,,.. e tW.. S•it •1 C-IOIOll ior1Nllti.1 In • ...., bid fl( ;,, IP>I blddlllt 0.lf(I J1nu1•v U 1t l1 Let Afltlitlft Ct ll"'11Lt .. U Cl'll rlt' l ttat (flt lrtl''-" S O""' NOJtMAN E WATSON lltt ltr l1'<11t'P9"1tfll Tru1111i Ttt Ull) tn"41' w11111m L Ollftll S.C,1t1•'l' 11'11 SKl1 ao.r• of l1uttff1 •1 ltld\ard " Jt-•n *'"'"' .I.It.,...,, ._ ••tc•• l:W'Ki'ff 91 l'llntll... °'"" !'"I'll U. 1tn I I rtO I IT' •10 JJ!lttll.111... Ort-Coa1I JJi.olllhfled °'-c ... " 0.lff' llJlof •ut1H ...... Or•MI COit! C.lty •nttl MUllll'd Or•llt• COi'' °''"' Jlllol J•-f'f' " '"" F'fbrvt •? 1br11•'Y l 1'11 21• n J l fl\ltrr JJ 111(1 !''tlt"IHl'Y J !f11 '~ n J t"Vtrv '° '111111 l'1ttrvar'I' l. Im 11• 7' 1'11 They s11d the PUC srmuld bt g111en time by the court to re\:\ew and corrett any errors It may have m11ckl in ap- proving the Increase ... -... _ , s DAILY PILOT !?} Panther Raid Trial Set Illinois State Attorney, 13 Otliers Face Cliarges ClllCAGO (UPI) -A Cr1mlnal Court judge has ruled that Slate's Attorney Edward V. Hanrahan and 13 codefen- dants mu~t stand tn:it on a co11trov~rsial ind1ctmcnl charging them with con- :;piracy to obstruct Justice in the Chicago Black Panther case. l·lanrahan, a onc-tilne 1>rotege of Mayor Pentagoti Fu11ds Richard J. Daley and a cand idate for re- election. shol an angry glance at Judge Philip Romiti when the judge said he found "little merit" 1n defense ellorts to quash the indictment. Romiti denied !he defense set ar- raignment for today . The ruHng ended n1onths of legal maneuvers by the delendanls attempting to avoid a trial in the politically explosive case. Hanrahan, one of his assistants and 12 Chicago policemen were indicted by "' Cook CoUJlty grand jury on charges 9f trying to cover up the facts after a Dec.. 4, 1969, police raid in a search for weapons on a West Side apartrnent. BULLJf'INKLE VOTE BLOC LOS ANGELES 1UPIJ The Bullwinkle Party is not a pov.·er in Southern California politics, but there are 23 reJtistered Bul!winl!.les on the \'Oter rolls. In a close race, they could heat the Russellian lsocratics party, with 17 registered voters. Morrison Appoin ted To Coi1ncil Robfrt !\1 ~1orrlson. a llUJl- t l n;.: ton Beach pol ice lieU!l•Oant. has been appointed to the California Council on l'rirn1nal Justice, the agency fur planning and coordination of crintlna! JUst1ee As a men1ber 11r a task forct>. i'o1orr1son "·11! :iss ist !he FREE ESTIMATES ... lt•tn18t l • ., .... CUSTOM DRAPERY CLEANING BY PRESTIGE C111t•J111 S."lc• Gw•r•11tM4 L•'"lth ,.,, .. , , ... ,. DRAPES-CLEANED, PRESSED UNLINED-$1.89 LINED-$2.35 P'ER PANl!L -TAklN DOWN, aEHUNG. C11ll fer ... ,,_111t11Mltt 1100 IDINCllR, HUNTING-TON llACH Oppolif• Hw"tl11qlo11 Ce11I•• 847-1005 Docto1~s U1~ge Shifting Black Panther leaders h1ark Clark and Fred Hampton were killed by police gun- fire during the raid, which turned up an arsenal of illegal weapons. A federal grand jury found that police had fired some JOO shots and the Pan- thers only one, but did not return in- dictntents. 1'here are 14,9'17 \-o\ers ln Los Angeles County registered l'I~ 1nembers or 35 ··n1inor'' parties. according to County Registrar-Recordl"r J a m e s Allison. They can register as members of v.·hatever party strikes their fancy, but the parties cannot get on the ballot as such v.·ithout more members. CCCJ in its cr1 n11nal dttect1on1 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ and appr£'hension rffnrts. Of Radiatio11 Fina11ce s CINCINNATI (UPll -A University of Cincinnati blue-ribbon con1n1iltee has recon1n1endrd that financing of a c:on- trovers: .. : ··full -body" radiation treat- ml"nt progran1 Ill !he school be shifted fron1 the l)efense J)cpartment to another agency. The comrn1tlee or 11 physicians was ap- pointed by lhe university following disclosures that fund s for full body radia- tion trealmenl of cancer patients here u•as being partially funded by a Defense Departn1ent grant. The progran1 has been criticized by Sen. Edward !\1. Kennedy, (0-Mass.) who said his Senate subcommittee on health \\'ould investigate thl" treatment program being conducted at General Hospital by the University of Cincinnati h1edical School. The committee did not name other agencies that could finance the radiation program. Dr. Ed"'ard A. Gall, director of lhe university's medical college, listed the Department of 1-fl"alth , Education and Welfare and the American Cancer Socie· ly as possible sources. The commiltee also recommended the full-body treatment program be con- tinued for the pt.1rpose of com paring whole body radiation therapy with other n1ethods now in use. The panel said only pa!ienls suffering rrom cancer of the colon or lung be used 1n the treatn1ents beciiuse other lypes of cancer were considered relatively un - common and had not shown significant improvement during trial treatment periods. The committee said the data it was provided did not indicate that patient survival differed significanlly from that observed in patients treated with customary methods such as X-ray, oral medication and surgery. Although the lreatn1ent program has been criticized by Kennedy, the universi- ty has denied it used terminal cancer pa- tients as "human guinea pigs" to determine hnw much radiation a person could absorb before he suffered bodily damage. The county grand jury, which later in· vestigated the case, charged the defen- dants with altering, concealing and liisguising evidence in the case "by plan- ting false evidt>nce and by furnishing false information." 1-fanrahan, v.'ho authorized the raid and ~teadily defended the police actions, was dumped by Daley's De mo c r a ti c sl atemakers after an adverse ruling by lhe Ill inois Supreme Court in lhe pretrial n1aneuvering but is wag ing an in- dependent fight against the organization in the March 21 Illinois primary elettion. 1'he state Supreme Court ruled three times on various aspects of the case. On Dec. 17, the court turned down Hanrahan's request to question the grand jurors who indicted him lo find out whether Special Prosecutor Barnaba~ Scars had exhorted them lo return the in· diclment. Defense attorneys said Wedne-sday they Are considering appealing that decisio'n to the U.S. Supreme Court, which could further tie up the case. The indictment was opened last August after months of legal hassling. The defen- dan~ were arraigned at tha t time, but refused to enter a plea , contending that the indictment was not valid. T!iEa'S II1TERIORS .................. ~ Private Firttis . "" 2 Students Selectecl l<'or Month Two Fountain Valley High School seniors have been selected boy and girl of the month for January by their classntates. t-.lorr1son supcrvitcs I h t hrlicopter program in the lluntington Beach Police Department. He is secretary treasurer of the Airborne La"" ~:nfnrce· ment Associc11!011. and a board n1e1nber of the Southern California chapter nf the Professional J·ielicoptcrs Pilot s Association. Morrison also attends Long e811ch Sr.ate College. Draft Class? SACRAMENTO (AP) California's high schools would be required lG provide in- struction on the military drafl under a bill by Assemblyman John Burton, (D-San Fran- cisco). " T\1ark Schildhauer, son of Mr. an d Mrs. Paul Schildhauer, 7671 Rhone Lane, ~luntington Beach. carries a 4.0 grade point average and was a semi-finalist in the Na·<P __________ ;;I tional h1erit Scholarship con- test. He serves as you th representative to the Hun- tington Beach Environmental Council a nd belongs to the campus ecology and Key clubs. Worlcl'1 L1r9t1I T11n1mlu !o11 Linda Sakauye, daughter of Sp1c111i1t1 ~l r. and Mrs. Akilo Sakauye, Loco! Dealer WI! Ho>Well OPEN MONDAY N1TES -15301 Pacific St., Midway City, CLOSED SATURDAY i.!i the Barons' student body "Wt 1rv h••d to mtrlt vour (OnOdentt"' j"' '" SCHOLARSHIPS are now offered by Armonds Beauty College, Inc. 9ualified Students learn a fun filled, high paying profession. Call or visi t Armond1 8e1uty College, Inc. for program ind r99i1tr1tlon information 496-9436 / 34052 La Plaza , Dana Point • ~ N C"1 Cl 3 Failure of Learning Experiment Reported treasurer. She carries a 3.96 ll9to Do~•nv P1r1t tt~. Cn••• vono grade point average and is alii~'~"~"~"~'"~'~'~"~'"~~"~'"~"~"~~iiiii~i~iiiiiiiii~iiii~ member of several campus clubs . .· . ' • -· = ·c C"1 Cl 'Cl iii" -.. Cl = c • U1 •••••••••• ...• ; 830·11100 493·19.00 ' .. -' ~ . . . -make · no ~avment ,,.,, :~ until JulVI ;li.7;~;!,"~~&,~ Righi no w you c;in have year iol''fi:;"<it,.;i'· W: .. If 'round gas air conditioning in-fu ~~.-!'.f:f:· v :~::::,:~~.~~~~~~::~;~::· ;1;~~- a tong term financing arrangement that includes parts and service on the air conditioning unit until 1982. A lull !en years. But th ts is a limited offer that expires February 29, i972, so don'l put it off. Call us today and one of our air conditioning specialists will arranga to mea!'lure your home for a tree esl!mate. There's no obligation, ol couf"!e. Call your local C•r+ified Ga , Air Conditionin9 Contr1ctor Pacific Heating Company, Inc. 2 I 75 L•9un1 Canyon Rd. -la9un1 Be1 ch 494.9745 or 837 -2000 WASl~I NGTON IAP) -The Office of Economic Op- portunity says its experiments with performance contracting indicate the new method doesn't help poor children learn any better than tradi- t ion a I classroom teaching. Two giant teachers' organiza· tions say, in effect, "We told you so.'' OEO Director P h i 11 i p V. Sanchez !old newsmen. "We're back ;it the drawing board," following the failure of the $6.5-million experiment lo intprove the reading and math skills or poor children. During the 1970-71 school year. performance co ntracts were signed y,·ith private firms that used combinations of teaching machines, special materials and student and Leacher incentives in an effort to greatly improve pupil-learn· ing levels. The companies were to be paid based on the degree of improvement the children achieved. The 13,000 children in an ex- perimental group and 10,000 in a control group "did equally poorly in terms of achieve· ment ga ins," the prelimjnary Ba11 Urged On Freeway SACRAMENTO (U PI) -A bill that would remove the proposed Torrance freeway from the state freeway and expressv.·.ay system ha! been introduced by Assemblyman Robert Beverly (R-Manhattan Beach). The measure would require the slate Division of Hia:hways to cease planning and design studies for the freeway from the Sa n Diego Freeway on the north to the Pacific Coast Highway on the south. Beverly said Tuesday that In addition to h omeo wner associations, conservationists and other citizens, the city councils of Torrance, Redondo Beach and Lomita are opposed to the project. lfJ!ilak~. Forest Victoria Bicycle Ceaterll • 1tMd-, It .. 11tfv .,..,r 11111....., ......, Vk191it eky<1t '"'"" '"'" • ...i.c:t""' ti' t ...-11 ,...,. ... r ,,... lllC --· All llllltl t t t ~ffl'l'el• "1cH llld •rt .. If (1111 .. ltllt\' ·-•1'1111 11 flt t•I•• ll!f ,.. .. .,. ,,... •lff"Yk• 11111 !Tlllfll-M• ,.r" tl!yl. w, .... , .. .,,,. "5)0•••T 111tl/1Ca" ell IU ,.,.rr .. ,.._ !IC 0"'" T....-.yt "°"' ll~•V• 1M, 19"•,., It le I. MU I II.ANOS " ~ SAN Dl•DO 'WY, 0 t-=-------... LAKE FOREST VICTORIA BICYCLE CENTER 24J01 Jihd,._. llft. -11 Tere 1Leb fwMt1 IJMJJt report said. David Seldon. president of the American Federation of Teachers, responded: "As we have said right along. OEO should stick to the poverty business and leave education to the teachers. Huntington l11troduces 11 Courses Eleven new, pilot courses have been approved for in- troduction this semester in the BOUTIQUE CLEANERS WarJier-Dale Center Corner of Warner & Springdale -Huntington Be•ch. 842·2050 SAVE MONEY SA'fl POLYllTll LI Pl Polyesters last longer th•n other f•brh:1. dry cleaned, and cost lt11 to clt•n "Now that the failure of performance contracting has been acknowledged , it is time lo devote ourselves to building a truly fine school system bas- ed on recognized principles and not on educational gim· mickry." Huntington Beach Union High :::;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiii~iiiiiiii~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;7 School District. I And Donald Morrison, presi- dent of the National Education Association , said the OEO report verifies what the NEA has been saying "all along, that performance contracts simply don't work unless they meet ca ref u 11 y drawn criteria." "If performance contracting is to succeed." Morrison ad· dcd, "the key will be teacher involvement fr om the begin· ning." Trustee! recently approved lhe courses for sec o n d semester scheduling at the district's five high schools. Different courses will be of- fered on different campuses. NEWI MASTERCHARGE ACCEPTED FOR STORAGE CHARGES The new cou rses are 11ass Media II. California and the Far WesL through Literature, Public Relations Workshop, Literature of the Future, Mountain Eco I o g y , Con- versational German, Traffic and Safely Education, Man and Communication, Ca r Maintenance for Girls and Sports Literature. FOR THI BEST MOVE 0 1' YOUR LIFE CALL 494-1025 FURNITURE The double chaise In tufted fur fabric We designed It. we made it, we know it's terrific! Full "double size, supremely com- fortable, contoured s hape, deep plush fur fabr ic cover and base Jn soft or bold colors. ..SS ... The '200 look •et an RB pib. l0$ ANC!W: 6111 Wilohire Blvd. Miracle Mil ~ 11040 W. Pico Blvd.; 8840 S. Western Ave. AN AHEIM: 1671 W. Lincoln IA!ERSFIUD: :JHO Min1 A¥1. CllUU VISlA: 476 Broodw1y CU!EMONl/POMONA: 132 E. foolh<ll COVlH A: 945 N. AM• DOWNEY: 9435 t filutone ClENDALE: 333 N. Centr1I ~ CWADA NUS: !OHIO Balbol Blvd. HUHTlNGIOH BEACH: 19431 B"ch Blvd. LI HAIRA: 1710 W. WhiWer lONi BEACH: 1189 l1kewood Blvd. 1191illll! PAil: 415 S. Atlantic BM!. PASADENA: 85 S. Rosem"d RIVERSIDE: 10.000 Ma1noli1 SANTA AHA/TUSTIN: 1703 t 17th St SAii IE!H.\IDINO, 999 S. 'T' It. ·soUTN IAI: 15S33 S. Cltnshlw Blvd. THOUSAND DAIS: 244 Thounnd O•ks Blvd. VEJllURA: 340'l Tele1roph Rd, WDODUND HllS: 11223 Ventura Blwd. • --7 IMYI A W([I( • W[D<IMYS 10 UM TI L t •SATU"OAY 10UffTIL15 •SUNDAY 11:30 UNTIL I· nit[ J'AIU(IHG ' f"[[ D[CO"ATO" S[fMC[• Pl![[ OCLIVt"Y•COftVDOUIT IAHIC,..... ' ' ' ' ' •• • ~ ' • • . , • .. :· .l •• • • 1 .. • •• ~ • . • . • - • 22 OAJLV PILOT S Thu,~aJ rcbruar1) l!J72 ~~~~~~~~-· Y 011r Jtl oney Wl1at Do Optio11s Really Cost You? By SYLVIA PORTER In a ft w weeks we w1l! move mto lhc big nutomoblle buying season of '72 -a period during which m11J1ons of you will buy new cars m1ll1ons of )OU ~ 11! ~pend big time extra money to add op- tions to your car and m1l!Jons (If you will \l.aste huge sums because you do not fu lly understand v.hat you v.a nt ()r what the options are really costing yo u Tuesday s column submitted a table dran1at1z1ng this c:ost factor on a wide range or automobile makes and models aod detailing how options can add fr om one third to nearly 100 percent lo the bassc cost of your automobile How !hen do you find you r way around the vast assort ment of alternatives in equ1r; ment today" To begin with bere are some fundamentals on the more popular opuons •Larger engines cosl!ng $75 to $11000 extra move your car around with much more pep and can improve safety when passing or 1n other situa lions where you must at· WHAT IS A MIGRAINE HEADACHE7 by TERRY GRANT, R Ph The word migraine coml"s from the tcehn1cal namr hrm1cra.n1a v.hu::h translalPd means half a hrad This 1s because 1n so many people the pain bf>gr ns 1n the cen IC'r of t hC' forehead or ovc1 one eye It most co1nninnly remains 1n The fronr of the head Ot.hf'r fratutrs cnn1 mon to m1gra1nf's a rf' flash ing patterns or spoto;; 1n v1s1on JUSt tx-rore the> head ache follovved by nausea and dizziness l'wlore than twice as many womC'n as men have. rn1gra1ncs A migraine c11nnot hE' treated hkr l'I cnmmon hC'e.d ache with aspirin Il rrquu:es a different type of drug rn· t1rely and only a phys1c1a• can determine how any one person should Jx. 1rcatrd YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a delivery We v.:ill de liver promptly v.rithout extra charge A grf'at many people rely on us for their health needs We \\clcome requests for dehvery s e r v i c e and charge accounts PARK LIDO PHARMACY J51 Ho1plt1I Ro•d N•wport l••ch 642·1580 Fr'ff O.llvtry ctlerate rapidly 1Ml\1EDIATE DELIVERY! 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MAM COMtllt Of' fltCO l MtOAOWA'J HUHTl"8TON 81EACH TORRANCIE l lNCOl "I ~ ll'I OSf~ ~t\00 W411'H R ~~r ,' r I "-•r.1 ~ 1B1rc ~l u •Br,,;~r11rs t l\i eirCr•~rn >/ti • t ., 'l'I · -,o · ANAHEIM HUNTINGTON BE~CH SANTA ANA l£1[PHON£ ~131~·07 Tft{PHO "i r -:.' hrf flllfi,•j[ '.Jf,J~O" 1111 WAllMD AYINUl U ln K.t.WTitOMtl k'tO. N•••O..... ....... .._. mtl.Mllt•ltN. 12 OZ. llfllOSOl CAN •PERFECT FOR FURNITURE, MACHINERY, ETC. • FAST DRYING •HIGH GLOSS WHITE & 4 COLORS • ....,. • b .. .. Former occ PORTLAND, Ore. -Former Orange Coast College ba sketball coach Stu Inman has been named as interim coach of the Portland Trail Blazers o( the National Basketball Association. replacing lto!Jand Todd. lnnian. whose OCC learns had a 42·13 overall record from 1~57, has been the Portland club's director of player person- nel. He replaces Todd for the team's 26 remaining games this season, with the search for a ntw coach starting lm· mediately. With low team morale end a dismal won-loss record in the club's second NBA season, it was decided that Todd should be given his release, in the best interes ts of the team. ''I reeJ ba sketball begins with defense and this is where y,·e will place the most emphasis for the remainder of the year," said lMlan. Inman told a news conference, "lt is Puget Sou1id Here Anteaters Shoot For Comeback lt's back to inters~tional baskelbatl warfare for coach Tim Tift and the UC Jrvine team tonight when lhe Anteaters entertain Puget Sound {Wash.) in Crawford Hall beginning at 8. rollowing a pair of losses including the most recent to No. S rated Cal State (Long Beach ) that brought the UCI season record to 12-7, tonight's game con- tinues horror week for Tift and Co. "This has to be the toughest week in UCI basketball history," Tift said Mon- day. before the start of a three-game sel Following the Puget Sound encounter, the Anteaters will entertain the potent University of Hawaii Saturday evening. Bill Moore. a starter for three years, was sidelined one of the few times in his brilliant career aga inst Long Beach. He r;uffered a leg injury a week ago and re- Rams Stress Backs, Tab Record Kicker KANSAS Cl'l'Y (AP) -The Los Angeles Rams concentrated on offensi ve and defensive backs in their final 11 picks of the college football draft Wednesday, but also included a Chilean soccer-style placekicker who once attempted a JOI· yard field goaL Jaime Nunez of Weber Slate, picked on the 13th round, booted 19 field goals last seal!loOfl to set an NCAA· small-coUege r~d. and his 81 points were one sOOrt of Jan Stenerud's small-school mark. He made one 50-yarder and two from 48. One or his 13 "misses" came on a win- dy day nt Nevada-Las Vegas. Weber 's punter had been having problems. so with the ball deep ln his ov.·n territory, the coach sent Nunez in to kick against a JO.. mile-per-hour wind. !Us boot carried 18 yards from the nine to the 27-yard·line, longer than any punt into the wind that day. If he makes the team, Nunez will be the first soccer-style kjcker ever to play for the Rams. Another playe r selected was David Hoot. chosen 12th , a teammate in the Tex- as A&M defensi ve backfield two years ago v.·ith the Rams' Dave Elmendorf. A third-round pick last year, Elmendorf started at safety for the Rams. Hoot is not considered as quick as Elmendorf but is rated a good tackler. The 16th choice was Long Beach State's swift running back .Jim Kirby, who the Ran1s think n1ight be a sleeper if he's healthy. Kirby mi ssed 1110.'>l of last season \\'ilh a knee injury but avera ged 6.3 yards per carry and scored 10 touchdowns the yea r before. Other running backs picked were Albert Schmidt of Kansas State at Pittsburg and Jim Massey of Lindrie!d, Ore .. a sprinter who also plays defensive back. '· The Rams also chose Harry Howard, Ohio State defensive back and ro--captain : Tom Graham, Baldwin-Wallace wide receiver and three-time all-leaguer in lhe Ohio Valley Conference; and Larry Brooks, 270-p<?untj defensive tackle for Virginia Stare at Petersburg. How they drafted: LOS AMOl!"Lll!l llAM5 JlrTt &trtfl..,. rvnnll\e bed, T•Jt•li Urry McCvtdleool .-,,11nl"f bed;., Color•clo Sii •i Johll s. ... ~. 0.lentltt beck, Toi""°; ·Eddlt YhlUJ91, Of:f~lw beci(. T•~·" Bob Child .. ..,.,d, K•nNll Soto (::tlrl91l•nHn, 11111'>1 l!'f'lf, UCL.Ai t:crw1rd HHMrt. ~,lvt l•clllt, Tt•ll1 Sovt1>1r11 1 Tom Gr•tlfm, wlele r.c.ivtr B•ldwln-Wtll&ee; Htrry .-ird. defenllV• to•-" f"'l~!o S''IA 1•,..·M·'"~"· d~tl"•l"t' ~"(Ii:, I ln-flt'ld; A!t..rt SChmlllt, r.,.nn\119 b9ck, Plfhbufll, K•n., 0.\rid Horii, tlfffm/VI bedl. TfQJ /14.MI J•lme H~z. llldl..-. Wtbotr .Sltlt; Ltrrv 9oodt1. 1•dl'fc. "11<•1nl• State; Ken~• P•ve. llnt!Hcl<er, IC1nw1; J im Klrtw wld9 r•el,,.,. lA"9 •B••llh $1111; • Lu!Mr P•t~. 119M ttld. i/1r1lnl• Union; JQl\t'I IM;JCt..,, etnltr' °'"°"' SAM 01•00 CHAllGtlll ~r1e Lint...,;, .kt-rve 'enit.' Sl~I Miit MeCl1rd. 111<J1.;, 1o~11 Jim er~. 1~ ....,, , ft .,..,.,'II HalT'I' GflOCMft. ~... tfld. A. 1 •rlltf Wf,r<I, ~· l;-" Ql-.o SI~ of!tM, I~... =~rtw•tw sf.~; '*tJ:.'1(::F., ~i .q. . MC:h ~·"'1 s..n ...... , llnel»C • mained on the bench throughout the CSLB tilt. "I won't know if he will play tonight OI' not until game time," Tift said this n1orning. "If things go our way , we will try to rest him until the •IaWaii game." \Vhile loss of Moore who is averaging 14 .7 points a game and is currently third on lhe all-time UC! scoring list has hurt the Anteaters. Puget Sound has also been hit by the injury bug. Leading scorer Ned Delmore (21.2) and top rebounder Sam May (11 per game) were left at home because of injuries. Both are sophon1ores and have been starters all sea son. Delmore is 6-4 and ?.1ay 6-6. Puget Sound has an 8-9 r~ord which is misleading. 13 of the 17 games played have been against university division teams. The Loggers boast wins over com- mon foes UC Davi s and Occidental and lost to Seattle-Pacific, 89-79, in their most recent outing. UC! defeated Scatt!e- Pacific, 81-65, earlier, Starting at for~·ard for the Loggers will he Ron Oughton <&.4, jr., ll.7) and Jan Jewett (6-5, sr., 6.6). At center will be Steve Philpot (6-8, jr .. 7.S') and at guard will be the team captain Dan Bogrand (6-0, sr., 9.7) and Vince Greene (6-3, jr., 10.8). The Loggers have a strong bench wilh height. Curt Peterson (6·101h ) has recently been brought up from the freshman team; Gord on Anderson (6-81 is a sophomore who became eligible at the semester change : and Fred Cain (6- 7) is a freshman who was the leading high school scorer in the slate of Washington a year ago. U Moore is stlll sidelined, Garrick Barr ()f ·Steve Parker will start in the front Une. other UCI starters will include Phil Rhyne (16.0), Dave Baker (14.0), Troy Rolph (14.5) and Ed Burlingham (10.8). In this week 's UPI college division cage poll, the Anteaters were ranked 19th in the nation with a JU record. Coach Replace·s Todd difficult 10 leave a good frltod, and It ls very difficult lo see Rolland so. We've been through a lot logelher.'' The front office executive sakl., however. he thought "there ..,,~s too much enerb'Y spent by our players on offense" in Todd's system. "So much so lhal they didn't have much lefl for defense." He said. ·'That "would be my major <'riticisnt of Rolland's mot.'°11 t offense) philosophy. There just wasn't any piece in that offense for a player to take a " ,, ' ' '} r • r.t•.-,;: ~:l1~ L,....,.~~c4'o\\..~,,. breathtt: consequently. the ltam gol hurt at tht defensive end.·' Todd, the mod-dressed fonncr Nevada- Las Vegas COJCh. directed the Blazers to a 29-:13 record In the ~Iub's tlr~I season in the NBA. This year, however, Portland's re<.'Ord sank to 12-44 after a Tuesday night loss to Phoenix. II w11s the <'lub's ninth straight setback. Harry Glickman, exeruti\•e viCt' presi- dent of the Trail Blazers, annount·ed Todd's disn1issal. "RC\.·ent t'Oniments by our playtrs are not rupon,lble tor this situ ation," he s111d, "bul lhey did point out a pro blcro that has both1Jred u.11 for son1e lime -namely the absence of dlst·ipl ine and t.'O mmunication bttween coarh illld players that I believe to be Ike found11tlun of any successful sports franl·hist. '' lnnu111 said. "A Jack of communication and a lack of deflnlng to each player by the coa<'h was at fault, bul lhis wilt not happen to n1e, I can assure you." ., A CAPACITY CROWD VIEWS OPENING OLYMPIC CEREMONIES AT SAPPORO. Competition Under Way In XI Winter Olympics SAPPORO, Japan (UPI ) -With its in- ternal disputes put in the shadows by the brilliance of a perfectly performed open- ing ceremony, the Xl Winter Olympi cs turned today to the first full day of com- pelition. AlmoSt 50,000 spectators were on hand at the outdoor Makomanal speed-skating i-tadium when • Emperor Hirohito of- ficiaJ/y decJared the games open Wed- ""' T.-....i. nesday. It wa s a simple but imp ressivr. ceremony, and it went off with preci sio n. The 35 national teams, dressed \n uniforms. marched In ; the Olympic. flame was lighted, guns boomed their i:;alute and fireworks rocketed into the sky. But the high point came when 800 Japanese boys and girls .skated Into the stadium and after a tum around the rink let 111,000 colored ballons float into the sunny skies. Athletic action was minimal, with only two elimination round hockey matches. In one . a four-goal outburst in the se- cond period powered Czechoslovakia to an 8-2 Olympic hockey elimlnation-round victory over Japan. Then Sweden, rated No . 3. slammed home four goals in each of the la st two period~ to demo 11 s h 10th-ranked Yugoslavia 8-1. Hakan Wlckberg scored twice for the Swedes after teammate Stig Ostling's second-period goal broke the scoreless tie. Gold medal events begin early Friday morning, whi ch will be toni ght in America . The men's 30 kilometer <'ross- country skiing and the men 's 5,000 meter speed skating will be the first events. A1nerlcans were not given a good chance al picking up _gold , silver or bronze medals in the early events. Before the Olympics end Feb. 13. 35 gold medals will be handed out in skii ng. skating, bobsledd ing, luge, biathlon and hockey. The opening ceremonies, wh ich were televised live via satellite, were held in windy, 26--degree .weather. Some or the more noted athletes failed IO appear ln the ceremon ies. for various reasons, but 120 of the 160 U.S. athletes were in the line o{ march and constituted the largest group in the parade. Asher in Early San Jose Lead SAN JOSI:: (AP I -Barry Asher ol Costa Mesa bowled at a steady 231 clip Wednelday night to take the lead after 12 games In the '85,00J Mercury Cougat Open. Brundage Raps Denver Plan For '76 Games SAPPOllO, Japan (AP ) -Avery Brun- da&e, president of tho lnternaUol'l.lll Olympic Commltlee, said todlly he waa not very happy over the fact thnt sltt:~ will be widely separated in lhc 1976 gan1es at Denver. "This seen1s to"be one of the tliffi culti('s of the expanding WJnter Gnmes," he told a news conrercncc at the cl~ of the OpenJng Day ceremonies for the 11 lh Winter Olympi cs. "It Is difficult to find large com- nlunille8 with facilities in close proximity lo the ci!y. The smaller communil ics can't efrord lhe enormous expense," he said. Sapporo is the first city of one million people to st.age the Winter Gam,!I. On TV Tonight Channel 4 at J(I f 'rlday, B::Jfl a.in. J'reviou!I ones have been held In smaller reso rt areas. ' In ~rtt ing the 1976 game11, Denver an - nounced it would be necessary to ;oitai;:c the Nordi c event s at Steamboa t Sprini;:ll and the Alpine events at Villl , with J)enve r serving as the center of the com- plex . Bn1ndage said the IOC was continuini;: to 5Carch for ways lo Limit the 11ize of tho field. •·we are pa ying the pennlly for suc·- ecss and the popularity of winter «ports," he added. fie praised the .fapanese for their ex- cellent organization· of the openlng day parade and compared with It the fine1t ever staged in the games.· "For a successful Wlnter Games,'• ht said, "you need both 1un1hlne and SllOw. The god• were with ua today. We had both." And, when Brundage: spoke of f11r play ln opening the Games Thurld3¥. Au~rlan :11klcr Karl Schranz, who wa.a barred at a competitor, said bitterly : ' • T h a t ' a ridi culous, coming from him.'' The roc banlsht!d Schranz becaute he has been paid for advertising 1kl11. Schranz watched the opening on tel(!vl11lon in the hotel room of Frani Knleul, the manufacturer In whole adverUaement.s he hu appeared. Schrsnz •aid he planl to Leave Sapporo Monday for Frankfurt, Germany, and wlll go rrom there eltJwr to Vienna ar Jiii naUve St. Anton. He plam to altend -of the Olympia con lt:rt•, hut none of lhe llplne tld ,.. .... ' ~ ' llnebK "' .Vl•t hil•: Jat\n fft "".,, •• lflll. Wf!llllMfon .stti.: ~ """"" Md. T~i J-• ,,.,~,•Iv;, l:>'>clr. Tu•ll'' °"""• Dr-nonn-, Arllotllt lwtt'1, &ob "feehtf, tedtlt,. t~EI ""' HIDEKI TAICADA CARRIES TORCH ~OR XI WINTER GAMES. Asher. second alter the first sis. games Wedneaday alltrnooll, put togethel' 1oore1 of %%7, 244, 207, 2j)g, 235 and 243 to total 2.771 for 1.2 garnet and take the lead from Don Glover of SO\llh Bend, Ind. Gkwer, who led Aaher by 25 piM with a ""~1118 1,04 '"' 11>e r1nt .111 gamtt, dropped to third ln the eveni ng round behind Larry Llthlleln of Sufll<!d, Conn. "After all, there la onl)' 11> much lhat a man can take," he uJd. Brundage w1• uktd (or comment on dlatCtt by Schranz that he 11 a .. tyrant" and a "dictator." Austrian Threatened SAPPORO, Japan !AP\ -The Pr .. I· dent of I.be Au1Uia11 Ski Federation says he recei'led telegrams Crom Austria with threats to kill him becau!t the Austrians did not withdraw from the 11th Winter Olympic G•me& after tbe 9Ulttt ol. ace 1kJer Karl Schrlltlf.. Dr. Karl Heinz Klee told ~" Wednesday : "! still think It was tlghl to 1t.ny here afler Schranz asted u1 to re- main. ''You know I was in ravor of wtt.hdraw- Ing , bul I b!Jwed to Ille wbli o1 S<brani," barred from com.petition for allowing his name and picture to be used In ad- vertising, leadlng lo h1I banishment a1 a professional. ''rhe dec11don will become rnore right 1L we win medals here," Klee &aid. "lf fr don't, it will become worse. "I have received t.e.legrami, Jett.en and telephone. calls from Austria and the m• jorlty were agaimit our staying ht.re. Some of them .were with lhreaU: J.n.. eluding that I "°"Id bo kllled." While KJee •JJPeJred downc.ut, he I de&cribed the mood in the Austrian ski team u "ttlievt:d." '1'hey agreed that tfltre was no othe r JOlutkJn but to stay after Schram 11kt.d us to do that. I talked this over with Schr:mz and with 1-leinl Mesntr I a veteran ski ace) and they declared deci.JiveJ1 OU. wu what •e must do. "We also could not overlook the fact that we would do hann above all to the Japanese wbo had nothing to do with lbe dcd1lon ol Avery Brundaae," pre11dent ol lhe lnternatlooa! Olympic COmmlttoe. Llchsttln, who llCl>l'ed his o n I y ProfesSon&l Bowler ASlodat!Ofl victory here last year, bd round.I of 1,395 and I,315 for 2,710. Gi<M'r fell to l.223 !or 2,657, Don Johnoon of Akron, Ohio, lhe 1971 Bowler of lhe Year who has woo two Otles thW year, was fourth at 2.651, and Palmer Fallgttn of Sacramento ..,at lhr .. pinl back In fifth. Blll Buch of Sharon. Pa., !alt week 't wtnntt In Arc•dia, 11nd Don McCuM of Munster, Ind. each bowled pcrfeci XlO gamt:t 'Jbunday. Mc<'un<.' u~ his Rame to move up to s.e~enth place, bul Beach ., .. back in l)th. "II would be ditrlcult to edUClllt Mr. Schram -J hive nothl.nc else to Ny," Brundage said. King11 in Action I.OS ANGEi.ES -The Loa An 1•1 • t Klng1, perched pre:ca.rlously ln 1llth plac' ln the NatlooAI llockey. Leal(ue West. will try ta JnO\'t up another ootch lonl ghl when th<y boll the Monlrtal Canadltns. A Loi An gele• victory, cooplH with • ?hlladtlphi# lo11i1 to Dttrott , would Ut the Kmgl with the flytrt for filth place, ST U INMAN SC to Alter It's Off e11se; Laver Rolls Lt>S AN(:ELES -Shulll•rcd by the lo:-;s uf 11 four1h key ba sketball p\nyrr, Univrrs1ty of Soulher11 C11lifornla COPc ti J3ob l.toyd .s1:1'1d Wednesd11y hls te11.1n wilt use n Olll"-f_{lJnrd offense fur the re~t of tho season. "Puul \Vcs tphnl ls lrrepluteable and we urcn't ~oing tQ try to rcplor o him," s11ld the vetcr\.111 coach sadly. Late ·ruesday It w11s learnt'<! thnt th«i! super 6-foot-4 guard 's supposedly n1lld left knee Injury was serious -damaged llgunlents and cnrtilnge with surgery scheduled Friday: \Vc!)tJ1h11l, n second-tcntn All-American lu st yl·;\r as ll junior, was l lSC"s !ending !l{'nrrr and guided the Trojnn fnst break. llL· wll! 1nis.s the rest nr his senio r )!Cason. The Trojnns were curly se11~n pick!! lo <lt•throne UCLA as th(l P1'rlrlc-8 t•hn111p~ lhis Yl'llr, llerore piny b1•1.:fln , hOW('\lT , lhcy lost &.5 Monroe Na1il1 nnd 6-8 Uruce c;Jark. a p:tir of potet1t inl sttirtrr!i, plu." nble rest•rve Joe Ken1p 6-2. lo serious ln· jur ies. Clark Is just now returning. • !l.lf;!IM<>N D. Vo . ~ UnseedOO Ro11.rr 'l'1iylor se rambled all over the court \VC'clnesd:1 y to upset !lectlnd-11cl'litd Toni Okkc r In the npenin1t round of the ~.ooo 1''~d,e\\ty World Champion1hlp tennlt tow'namcnt. The 30-y1.u1r-old Ta ylor finessed Okker'1 power ~tune for a 7-6, 6-3 decision lhat took Josi over an hour. Jn Hie only olher upset of the day Bob Cannich11t'I ' upended 12th-11eedL'd Mark Cox 6-4 , fJ-7. 6-3. 'rop se1•ded Rod Laver of Corona del l\.1 nr ca ~Hy wlpped lto y Borth, 6-3 , 6-2, t1nd Arthur Ashe, the tourna1ncn1 '11 third· secrlPd player, blasted by 'ferry Addison. C.:llff llrvsdale toppt>d ~RYPllAn l.ormall 1.<:1 ShofPi .'6-1. 7-5 wh ile sixth-11ct!dcd Mar- ty Jtlt•S3cll overwhclrned T,.rnnk F'roebl· ln.ll 6-2, 6-2. John Newcomb cdgf!d vetrran Fred Strille 7-6, 7-ti, In tw o tie hrc;i ker!J . Jeff Borowiak , the 11th scrd. bt'at Owen IJav idsnn. 6·2. 6-7. 7·5. and Nikki Piiie downed T9ny Roche. • ARCAIJIA -J.~unPral servlrrs are iichecluled Friday for Joe Hernandez, the •·voirc of Santa Anita " who died of a heHrt al!mcnt Wednesday. fie was 62. llernHnde.z had cal lt-d every Mr.ore race at Santa Anita elnce thf' tra(·k started operations on Chri!litmas Day. 1934, unt il he wa !I h<ispitallzed h1 11t Thursday after being kicked by a horse. • SACRAMENTO -l)cbblr Mryer, the triple (l\ymplc gold medalli\l whn recently announced Mr retlrc1ne11t fro1n competitive 11wlmmlng, Nis been forced Into lemporary rellrement Jn htr latest athletic venture -skiing. The Ii-year-old former world swim- ming ch.ampk>n broke her ankle Monday while leamlog to 1kl with friends 1t Lake Tahoe. • LOS ANGELES -The fonner flAncee of l.oo Angelet n.mt quorlerblc\ Ro- man Gabriel h11 to return the 1port1 car be gave her, a court ruled Wednesday. Mls1 Su1anne Lewl1, ze, a J)Rtt1 blonde. was ordered by Supe:rktr C«lrt C.orntnl1siontr Clinton Rodda to return the 18,500 Portche coupe to Gabri<l tnd oi.... Por!Cbe-Audl, the Encloo car dealership Jn which he 11 a partner. Wlelcs 'Thflr8 goes anotMr v"""'°' of thtl Olympic rulu/' " • Marina All But Wraps Up ~rown • .. :, , ~ i ~ $ ' : ... ~ . ' ~i DAILY 'ILOT "1'1110 b1 "•lrlck O'Donnell ~-~~ '·~ ANOTH~R REB OU~D -Marina Hi gh's Bob Losner fbotton1) readies himself to haul 111 a carom 1n th e Vikings' 55-54 Sunset League ba sketball conquest of Western ".\'ednesday nig ht: Mates f\.1ark Ford (33) and Bruce Miller (21 ) look on. The victory . keeps Marina ahead of J-luntington Bea<:h by two games in the Sunset League title race. f ~~~~~~~~~~~~- ' :~ ·~ :I ~ Oilers Breeze Past Rival; 'l" " ••• ... ~ ·; ~~ ... Westminster Edges Saints • • 1. : ~· • ,... Huntington Beach and l ;t Westminster stayed in hot : :A pursuit of Sunset League t,_.i",·. basketball leader Marina Wed -nesday night with r o a d triumphs over Anaheim · and Santa Ana . ,j! i Coach Elmer Combs' Hun-' tinglon Beach Oilers blitzed the Ana heim Colonists. 72-42, ., while the Lions of coach Don ~ Leavey got out of Santa Ana ., wj\h a 63-60 conquest. The Oilers had a few pro· blen1s in the initial goings at Anaheim as the Colonists seemed to solve the Hun· tington press and Dave Ludwig scored a dozen counters in the first quarter as Hun!ington assu med only a one-point ad- vantage at the first break. 'But the steady pumping of Steve Brooks, Scott Whitfi eld and reserve Dave Axelson eventually sealed Anaheim 's l j I' ' J • Loara Honie Advantage Too Much for Sailors < By 110 \\'ARO L. ll ANDY Of lh• Di lly P'lll! SllH Lua ra 's Saxons are a tough outfit on home grounds and they proved th e point again WOOnesday night. This time ii was a reversal of a first round loss ro Newport Harbor High in Sunse t. L"'ngue action tha t gave the hosts a 7a-63 hnmr court victory. Each te,1m has no\v posted two wins in league com petition - one against lhe other and each wilh a triumph over winless Anaheim. At the halftime intermission, Loa ra held a l\VO point edge, 3a-33, But a full court pressing defense and a hot hand by Kevi n Flynn spurted Luara in- to a con1manding nlne poinl bu lge at the conclusion of the third quarter and it wa s all over . Fl.vnn tallied four baskets in the thi rd stanza and the Sax- ons posted 2l point s on the board while stopping the Newport fast break offense . "\\'e didn 't play our best game tonight and we didn't hit well at all in the second half," coach Dale Hagey admitted arter the struggle. But LQara's home court record is impressive despite the lowly posilion of the Sax- ons in the league standings. The Sax ons have lost to Newioort H•rlj; o,~• ,i " \Vestminster by one, \\'estern so•tt!'I ' 2 1 ," S""l(k l I~ • ' tiy l\\'O and Huntington Beach ~1~~!'11'1Y ~ & ! •: ·. •, by rive on the home court. In BO..m~n ,' •' l to~nS()n 4 , ·' pre-league action, Magnolia •• ...,., i 0o ' ' • :s copped a one !Xlint verdict. H~~l:1~ '~ n 1l J ~ '; Wednesday n i g h t ' s en-L0t•• 1"1', tt ,, : : counter with the Tars was ~r;,,'~ ~ ; i i ; close throu ghout the first half i~ffi'.-l, ,l i' ; ; with lh e hos ts leading five JM!'l,o;;· 1 0 doom . It v"as the 16th straight loss for the winless Colonists. Hun· tington's overall record is now 17-J and the Oilers remain two games off the pace or Marina and a game ahead of Westminster in the bsittlc for second place and a Clf AAAA playoff berth. Ludwig finished with 21 points for high scoring honors while Brooks, Whitfield and Axelson had 18, 15 and 11. Gordon Bla keley was the cl utch player for Leavey's Lions as he connected on one- and -one situations from the free throw line tw ice in the last 25 seconds to nail Santa Ana. \\'estminster never trailed but the Saints crept to y,·ithin 59-58 before Blakeley senl everyo ne home \~lith his ef- forts. Hun!ln1fon l••<h !n l 8")Ci:.I While wc1mv w~l!llth1 C:run~ A~~l1~n R •~lr:.in A•hford (;~rlol\d To,,11 C:•r>On "~ V1l~erd• LudwlQ Ar,nht n V1\end1 lo'.oll Toll" ,1, " • • • • . ' < ' ' • ,, An•h•lm 141\ ' ' ' • 1 • t1 " J g ' . 10 ' ' ' g g " ' Ster• _, Ou•'"'' H~llnf!on Bt•cl'I 1~ 1~ 11 Aneht m 11 6 11 W•t1mln1l1r !UI " " M1lu nn,l••11r Len!IU ' ' ' ' ' ' ' . Ca•e 81•~elf~ Jot>nrson 511m"'i Tel•lt Mtod H•m•n II town W<:>olst~ tJ•rrell z.,.,. To111s ' ' ' ' jJ II l111l1 Anl 00) " . . ' ' ' . ' ' ' ' . ' ' l4 11 Sc•r• ''f Oul rllro W1ttmln111r 19 n l~ 51!'1!1 AN 1' ll 17 " " i " ' ' • ' " ' • 1 " ' ' • ' • ' ' " ,, .. • • ' • • ' • " • " ' • ' • • ., ,,,__11 , ..... , " • • ' ' • ' " ,, • • ' • ' ' " , ... , ,, ..... •• " " ' " ' .. ~ .. " " ' .. " • .. By Gl ... t::1"'N WH ITE 01 111• OeHr ''* 11111 f\.tarina H1gh's Vikings have only the forn1ali1y of shov.·lnR up the res! of lh e season to t·apture-their first clear cul S u n se t League ba$ketball championship 1n school history after nudging stubborn \\'cs- lern. 55·54, \1.'ednesday night al the winne r's eonfines. That win gi ves the Yikes a tv.·o- gam(' lead over Huntingt on Beach in loop standings. The Vikings. un beaten in ni ne loop ouungs, have only lough Hun tington to fret about with such palsies as Anaheim, Loara, San1a Ana and New- Chargers Turn Bacli Estancia By ROGER CARI.SON 01 !hi Di iiy Pllol 51111 Things haven't been any too rosy for coach Dave Carlisle and his Estancia Eagles basketball team this year. If it hasn't been a case of running into a team that turns in one of its be s t performances of the year it's a case of coming up cold against a quintet with heigh t advantage coupled by hot shooting guards. Tha l was the cast Wed- nesday night as host Edison trampled the Eagles, 72-45, in lrvine League action. Coach Dave Mohs' Chargers had all the physical advantage and then to rub it in they unlea shed guard Greg Parker from the out side. And al! Parker did was blister the nets for a career high of 24 points with a dozen field goals in \5 attempts. His shots were almost ex- clusively from the corner and 1vhen he was n't busy pumping it was backcourt 1nate Dirk Zirbel \Vilh his layups or 6-4 Rod Snook inside or al th e free throw line. The latter pair each ac· co unted for 16 points fo r Mohs' winners as th e hosts never trail ed. Edison apened up a seven- p:iint spread at'the quarter, ex- tended it to 10 ;ind 12 points through the middle or the third quarter, then ble\v it open ln the latter stages -mo stl y on the aforementioned bu slness of Parker. Zirbel and Snook . A mild threat by Estancia came about with 1: 10 left in the half when Doug Confer clicked with a basket to nar· row the Edison advantage to 29--25. Ediso n wa s 29 for 51 from the field for 56.9 percent \\'hile Estanci a hit 18 of 60 attempts for 30 percent. The win snapped a four- game losing streak for Edison \\'hile Estancia's setback was its fo urth in a row. " .. • ' ' ' ' " ' .. • " ' ' • • ' ' " n " " ' " ' , ' • ' ., ' ; I ' " " 11-4\ 12-12 Cage Scores : " times, Newporl on four oc-Ll~•-v 1 1 l I W IM)ll0 ,.. 1., o, >Sl • t' caslon!'i and the score knotted 01•.. ,. ~ ' N $(t " llf O\t•rt•" l~'--;;o;n;a;n;o;t;he;r;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::='=::""==,.=='='="="'==~l~l~l~l=l~l_c:~~ ·} . SPECIAL PRICES! DAVE ROSS PONTIAC Lease or .Buy All Models ... I , . INSTALLED CHAIN-LINK FENCING WARDS DOES IT ALL! . 192-6611 ,, '~"":J'".l :~~~!EE ESTIMATE , DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 1410 H.lllllOI ILYD • .t Mil DllYI COSTA MISA Ph. 546°8017 Ol"llrt 1 DAYS .. wr•• t ;M A.M'. TO 1t:M P'.M. IUHOAY1 II A.M. TO ' JO.M. po rt lef t on 1heir schedule The latter four comprise the. lower div ision of the league and v.·ould probably be hard- pressed to beat a Girl Scout tean1. Marina (·oa1..h Jim Stephens credited luck for the squea ker over \Vestern . But in more de- finitive tcrn1s it was M~rina 's searing shooting from the free throw line that told !he story. The v.·inners hit 14 straight gratis shots and had 15 of J7 for the night \\0h1le \\lestern collec ted on 12 of 17, bagging one mo re fiel d goal than did the Yikes. It boiled dow n lo the last seconds of play after \Veslern had connetted on e i g h t slraight shots from the floor to overcome a deficit that ont'e re.acherl J7 points. \\'cs1 crn rnanuged In ste<.tl the ball v.·1th 7:1 seconds to go and th1·n \1·ork1xl for one !11st do-or-<lic ~hot 1'hc Pionee rs cal!C'd tune \1·1th 17 seconds 10 go and then began work in g the ball. Dennis Surak unloaded a !4- footcr \11 th six ~cconds lef1 and n11ssC'd but thr visllors rr- boundcd and Brad J\1i.:K1nz1e moved 1ns1de 1,1•ith ! wo seconds to go to put up anothC'r shot II f;i1Jed ond lhe enr1:1gcd Pioneer rlairncd lo officials he had been fouled on the al · ten1 pt, to no avail, and Marina had \1·on it Th c \'ikes had suffered through a ghas1Jy last quarter. 'l'he y h1l lWO of nine shots fro111 the fl oor and made only t\10 free tosses in the final 6:22. Then Western suddenly go\ hot, gradually cutting the bulge v.·hile Marina ble\\' shots undern eath, had the ball stolen and fo rced foolish shots from outside v.•hich 11·ere far off tar- gc!. J\1arina had overcome :1n early 9-3 defici t and strcnk('{J to a 40-23 bulge befo re losing momentun1 u·hen fresh1na11 Bob Losner picked up his fourth foul early in the third quarter and he left !he action l1ntil the last 4 35 of the 1otame \Vhen the going got frantic. Lc:o;nt r M•ll•r 1!.~0111 Fero A08m• s .. , ..... to111, Mt K~I·' Gn1ne11 1'1·1~~ !>u•~• N~l1>ger l rU!ION 1ot••• M •"~• !SI! II ft pl !~ \ I ' II • ' ' \ ) !J l ' n . ' ' . ' . 0 ' I 1 20 11 11 SS Wt11tr~ t Ml " fl ,, '" 1 < J I~ 1 ' 1 t I I ' l~ • • • ' ' • • • 11 n 1: s~ Store t Y 0 Ulf!lrl wo\te•~ u I If 11-1' ""'""" 19 I~ U ~SJ Baron Rally Falls Short; Mustangs In 93-75 Griffins Triumph, 58-56 Rever sal By PHIL ROSS 01 tlo• O•ltY 1"1101 Sll!I A second half rally by F'oun- lain Valley 's Barons fell bare· ly short of its goal as the I...-0s Alarnitos Griffins eked out a 58·56 Irvine League b<isketb~ll victory Wednesday night at the Barons' gym . Swa nso n futilely lrled a desperation full cou rt hoo k at the buzzer <'lfler 1nissing a missed Los Al gra ti~ try. The Barons ne ver led in the con te!il but coach D a v e Brown's quintet did manage the aforen1cntioned deadlock in the wanning minutes after u•hi Uling down a 17-point l..os A! Lh ird quarter lead (43·26 f. Six-foot-nine junior cen\C'r Scott Reider played his best overall g<ime 11s a Baron in chalking up 21 points while he also was the prime mover in the late Fountain Valley come- back. By LA UHli': BECKLUND 01 lh• Dt\ly .. 1101 S!ltf Los Al thus maintained a share of f i r s t place v.·ith Corona de! ~tar, an easy Wednesday night winner over winless Santa Ana Valley. For the losers. meanwhile , the defeat dropped them virtually out of serious con- tention for a CIF AAAA playoff berth and back into fourth place behind Magnolia (6-3). which they'll in vade Fri· da y night. CdM Gets a Laugher; Belts Falcons, 74-31 Costa r-.1esa ll igh 's basket· ball tea 1n was trampled under by tall f'..1agnolia. 9 3 -7 5 , V.1ednesd<'ly night in Irvine L e a g u e play after falling behind during a dead I y onslaught of steady shooting by the visiting victors in the third quarter. Time after time Magnolia's Sentine ls completed s h o r t , sure passes tilted down over the heads of their com- paratively diminutlve op- ponents in green to score 30 points in lhe third quarter. Slick free throw accura cy by the Griffins· qu ick guard duo of 5-9 (;Jen tl1yers and 5-10 John Moore pulled it out of the fire for the visitors. In the first case, Myers was foul ed \\'ith I : 19 left 111 the issue with the count knolled at 52. J~e proceeded to can bo th ends of a one-and-one aurmpt to provide Los Al 11·1th a t11·0- point cushion. Then. 18 seconds later. the Barons agai n cli pped J\iyers and he stepped up to the charity st ripe like a true dendeye and potted another pa ir of one-and-o ne gratis tosses. providing the Griffins with a 56·52 margin. A pair of long: bullseves bv Steve Sull ivan in the iast 41 seconds weren't enough to lurn the trlc k for the hosts as Moore iced the iss ue \.\•i th a pair of successful free thro"·s with 30 seconds to go. Fountain Valley's S 1 e v c l 11 Al1mllo1 «SI! It II i>I Ip H1mllton J I 1 1 Miller I 1 l 9 Qy•nn I S ? 19 Mv••$ 2 6 I 10 u'T'o~~~·n 1~ 1~ 1 ~ si F111,1nl1ln V1llev l~l ,, " pf 11> , 1 .I 6 ' 0 l 8 I .I I 1l J I l 10 g 5 ! ! 0 O I O 10 16 24 '16 ~~"" bv Ou•'1••• Loi Al1m!IC$ lJ 1'(I 11 J:mon11ln V1ll'v l 1 ! 25 11-58 13-!i6 B.v CRAIG SHEFF 01 !ht Diily Pllol Sllll Coron;i de! f\.tar 1-tigh's bas- ketbal l tcan1 had a laugh er \Yed ncsdi1y nig tll . Co;1ch Tandy Gillis' Sea Kinj!s hardly worked Up a sweat in rol!ing lo a 74-J l Irvine Lea gue triumph over visi ting San ta Ana Valley. The victory kept the Sea Kings in a first pl ace tie with Los Alan1itos. a 58·56 winner n\'cr Fountain \1allev. Both have 8· I marks. · Corona now meets Edison Friday night at the Sea King gym. The n1argin of victory for Gillis' crew could ha\•e been quite a bit higher had the Sea King coach elected lo stay with his horses longer. But he started pouring in the reserves early in the second quarter. And most of the se- cond five played the enti re fourth period , also. OCIR Me11u Enduro Kart road racing come s to Orange County International H.acewa y this v.·eeke nd with a tv.•o-day run. Gates open at 8 a.m. on both Saturday and Sunday with practice an hour later and ra cing from 1-5 p.m. each day. General admission is $2 per person v.·1th the p u b I i c welcome. Tennis Dresses CLOSEOUT Brooks leather Basketball Orlonls Sale Price 7.95 White canvas Topsiders Reg. 12.95 Sale 7 .95 Womens Navy T opsiders Reg. 12.95 Sale 7.95 All After Ski Boots Reduced 20 % Subject To Stock On Hand Starters Casey Jones, Matt Keough and Mike Se vier \\'CT~ the scoring stars \Vith 18. 14 and 12 poinls -bul the blg- i:;est factor in the \'ictory w:1s the \vay the Sea Kings' rnan- to-man defense performed. Corona completely shut off !he Falcons' inside garne. forci ng the poor shooting San- ta Ana Va lley pla yers to cast from out side-with litt le suc- cess. \'alley usually settl ed for one shot each time it brought !hf' ball downcourt-that is if a Corona player did not ste al it a vtay. J ones. as usual, mad e some picture shots. He canned three nifty lay-ins and four jumpers from long range. And Sevi er had an easy time insi de, controlling both boards. The Sea Kings canned 28 of 61 shots from the field for 45.9 percent while Sa nta Ana Valley. 1·16. for the sea son. hit IO of 46 (21.7 percentf. The loss v.·as the 15th in a row for the Falcons. M1•c"-1 Sum~tr i,,.,.,., l<eoutl'I ,~. Wl'll•IOn G•l9$tlV La....eree Wvnn1 C1d 1e11 Tc!1l• •' to ' ' . ' ' ' . ' ' . ... 16 lt " •• • ' ' • ' " • .. • .. ' • ' ' ' • ' ' • • " " 11 -jl 21-7• Backed hy solid teamwork. center Bob Stewart made 14 po in ts fnr the visitors, in- cluding six close range field goal s in the third quarter. But when the f'..1ustangs at- lcmpt ed revenge nn their O\Vn end of the court, the Sentinels crushed them as easily as they wou ld a li ve·leaf clover. That was the third quarter v.·hen f'..1a gno lia's defense was nearlv im pe netrable and il:ii shooting accuracy wa s jus t nver 50 percent and the un- derhorses just co uldn't sc~n1 to enter the ke y. In the fourth quarter things were different. The Mustangs' Jack Archer, rired four long and short shot:ii in less !han three minutes in the last quarter before foulini;t: out. Teammate Rick Browning al so made eight points in the last minutes before the fi na l buzzer, St,w1d 8 &r<f tt AO•m•on ~·1,i•,'i'i.1n1 L1Ue•t~ l(fndrl'O M Watl<inl TOU ll .... ,~ .. l rnwnlno cld•n P.ck,n1 I-In"' "''""" Nev/I,. l:nd1lev Tcl1l1 M1t n011'! r••l ,, .. • • • • ! 1 : g ~ g 11 11 CIJll Mtt.11 17Sl ,, fl " ' . ' . ' ~ 1 i ! . ' M '> l(Ort b1 0ul'1•ri ,, • • ll ' • " ' • ' ' ' • ' • ' ' " " •• • ' " ' .. ' " ' 'l ' • ' ' • ' ,1 " M•anato~ 19 II 1' ~., Cos!f Mts• 11 n J? n -1S ---· • Wilson Tennis Balls White or Yellow Doz. 7.95 15.95 16.95 17.95 32.95 Dunlop Fort Frames Wilson Kramer Autograph Frames Davis Imperial Frames • Wilson T-2000 Steel Strung Nylon • Duck Feet Fins Blems ' Duck Feet Fins Regulars Basketballs · Voit Leather Basketballs Volleyballs Rubber VoHeyballs Leather Soccer Balls · Voit • • • • • • • 6.95 8.95 5.95 to 16.95 15.95 & 28.95 3.95 to 9.95 10.95-12.95-17.95 • 3.95 & 8.95 Soccer Balls Leather 15.95 & 17.95 Our 1972 Baseball Mitts Gloves & Shoes Are In Stock. Mens Tennis Shoes • • . 8.50-9.00 & 14.95 Ladles Tennis Shoes • • • 7.95 & 14.95 Bicycles -Parts -fires Tubes WHAT'S l1RNi- OUTDOORS? By Jli\1 1\'lE.\llEC' 1 t;enerally .speaking. fis.hing a! most inland fresh "'~!er lrikes ,~ I:~ ror th is t une of the year. 'l'rout. crappie and bluegil arc h1ghl~ghl!ng !ht' <ttl ion and buss arc beginning to 1n<.1 ke a fair shu11·1ng Planted 1r·out are pr0<h.1<•1ng the best act1011, <IS v:ater and 11 eather i:o nditlons nre ideal for a good rainbo1v bite in Soul h- land lakes. lrvinl' and Anaheim Lakes. lwo or the n10st heuvilv stoc,ke.~ .lakes. ar~ producing a fal r number of li mit s for reguta'r lAkc 11!>1t~rs. "hile once n yea r :inglers are SlTUlching out two or three ftsh for their efforts Lakes Cachuma, Pir11. Lopez and C..:asitas arc gelling a lot of angling pressure from slill fi shermen using salmon e~gs and 1~1arshm:i1Joy.·s. Regular stocku1g by the dt'partment of Fish and I .ame makes 11·eekend anghng productive for ltshermen fishinA 111 about 20 fctt of 1\·atcr, 1..opc;r and Casitas are also hsted as good lakes for butkel- rnouths l111ting Nunnery bass lures 111 15 to 30 feet or \vater. Blue. blaek and purple art' lhc be."il colors ror bass, as clear 11ater LS keeping thr bass fro1n hitt ing other eolored lures. Vail L'.tke is very good for panfish, 11·1th sti·ingers of cr:ipp1t• and blueg1l outwei~hi ng !he ('<J.lches of trout bass dud t•alfish 1.:ombincd. . i\lcal worms anti sn1a!l weighted jigs <ire rrwarding the boat fi shermen \v1th the bcsl catches \\'hilc fishing in the shallower C'Ovcs over submerged \'lecds. 'froul are hitting large "'orn1s <ind troll ed spoons and plugs in the deeper bays, \Vhile bass arc climbing onto rubbC'r \Vorn1s and lead heat! jigs off the points. 'l't•p llfl<• f 'i<hi11!1 RPpf>rf e d Even though the lnkt>:s Jn lhe northern part of the Southland ba\·e been hit by "·inds and cold tempt>tatures. they are still producing some of the best bass rishlng. Both Naclmiento a nd San Anlonio lakes are good for bass 10 four pounds bein~ taken on lead beads amt bladed lures. The fish ha\'e not moved oot or deep "'ater yet but "'hen located In the dttpt>:r holes 11re fttdin~ ~ood. Lake Sher\\·ood v.·111 open its gates for the 1972 ;;eason Thurli· day. Sber"·ood is located just off the Ventura FreeM·ay near Thousand Oaks and offers an~lers some bl2 bass and crappie. The lake "'ill he hea\•lly "ifOl'ked with rairibow trout to thrtt pounds prior to opening weekend. For more lnfor1nation on the lake and boat reservations. phont> (885) 49.)..2512. Lake llavasu Is slo1v for nil SPf'eies of fish, according tu Newport Harbor angler George Lobaugh. Lobaugh fisbt>d lhl' Colorado Rivf'r Lakr over the weekend. but failed to register a strike from either a lnrJ?enlonth or striped bass. A fe"' bass M·ert' lakt'n In deep watt>:r on "·attrdogs, but lhe fishing \\'ill not lmpro\•e until the \\'ater te1nper:1ture "'arms up a few dt>grees. i\'o C l11111~1e i11 lt'11te1· C.'1•111liti1111 .• Rock cod arc still !he main stay of deep sea fishermen, as there has bt>en no significant change in the "'aler conditions oft the coast l.andings are gelling into very good areas of the deep "'ater fish and anglers are loading up on big rock and ling cod. tleavy tackle is recon1mended for this deep "'ater fishing and can be rented at a ll the landings y,•ho regularly run fishing trips to the outer reefs and islands- .'1rl11/1 Clf,.sPs (~fff'rPrl The South Coa<;t Gun Club il'i offering adult gun safety ('Ourses to Oran~(' County hunll'r'i and shooters. Thr first of a t"·o "-eek program heit:lns Feb. 10. Thf' classes will meet from i-10 p.m. for l\\'O 1,·eeks and at the completion of lhe cour~t' students will know how to proJ>f'rly handle and care for • fire- arm and also be ellglblt>: lo obtain a huriting licens". For more Information on the <"lesses phone 544-9818 daily ()r !38-3875 during tbe evening hours. ,\!e1v l ... 11re D11e 011 lhP illarket? Capt. George Parker, !he masler skipper rrom the famed Kona Ha \vaii sportfishi n~ fleet , \'las seen entering the Seven. s trand/Fenwick Tackle r..tanufncturing Company in \Vestminstcr \vilh a small locked suitcasf'. Capt. Pnrker had just flo\vn up from the Cape with veteran California sportsman ~1i ke Belcher after having succcssfu1Jy tested a new billfish lure. The pair of anglers boated a number or marlin and had shot movie film of the fishing trip. Parker spent more than four hours behind locked doors at the popular Orange County tackle company before departing on Belch<>r"s privale plane for some sleelhead fishing \1·i th Al Kutzkcy on the Klamath River One can only speculate \\'hat will come out of the 1nccting, but \\·itb tile sucress that th(' Sevenstrand!F'en v.·ick Company has had in the salt and fresh 1vatcr fishing market. it can only be good ne"s for harbor area marlin and broadbill fishermen. V ike, Oiler Coaches Clasli i11 Cage Tilt ~1arina a n d I luntingtou Beach High resume their in- tense basketball rivalry in a special replay ol the St. Valen- tine's Day t\1assacrc Only this match n·ill bring together coaching staffs of the t\\00 schools Feb. 14 al llun- tington Beach High. In the co- feature the DAILY PILOT sports staff \\'ill tackle CJF Co mmissioner Ken Fagans PUGET SOUND That game opens at 7 ""·it h the coaches' struggle follov.·ing . Tickets. price<! at 7ft cents for adults and ao cents for students and c hildren, are cur- r~ntly on sale at Huntington and 1'-1arina. Proceeds will be s p I i l between the varsity clubs of the two schools. ILLINOIS STATE • DAILY P!l0f ··-_, JC, Prep Basketball Standings Barons, ~ea l{ings Bag Swfin Victories 1 iOUTM COAST CON,••t.NCIE W L ,.,_ Fullf r!CH> O •J• 1111 S1<1 Anl011•0 I &ll O••Ne Co.•• ~f.l Certlto1 H• s~n•• ,....,. •t.(I ~n Olt'lo 1$1 S." Olfto Mt•• • &3& We<lnt'4•1'• Sc•rt• Or•ne• Co.ul 11. S•n o,..,,. If ruH"'IO" IOJ. S~<llft An~ /J .. ... '" ,,, ,,. M1 S•n "nlonoo IOJ, SA<1 01~ '"''~ • S•l~rd1~·, Gtmt-• $.IM~ AfWI U MT Sftn An!on.,) S•n Ol1110 Mf'WI ti Fullt•ton ( erril!n II 5&n Oll'Qo O••Me Co•s! n! TM• ? ~ m SOUTHl!llN CAL CONFlillENC£ w l "'"' ... E~r t• f O 6,. )10 Rio HOt1ao 1 )\$ "80 LA ll•rbO< 1 &80 •J< (jol11~nWf>I ) Jll ~·· Los AM!ele• cc J I'/ 111 (•pre., ? •Ill I~< L" Sc~n,,,•<I 0 ~\ 111 w . ..in11d••'• Su•ro• Pio flan!IO 10. Got~""" We'' &b l":A,! L ... U . ('/'Qrt~I (II} l ACC !01, LA S1>1J!nwe!! ~l l'rldlY't G1m1• L .... flft•bor •I \,ol<IM We>• 1110 ltO<'tOO 81 CYl"•H Eat! LA 11 LA So\ITl!Wtll LACC 11 SFVSC Frcr;n l'l<ln·CO•"'' enco l MI SSION CONFERENCE W l PF Rlvtr1ldt Cn•lfty (ilrus ~ I 531 I 6:'1 '" G..nsmont 66~ S11n 8trn•r<lll\o • • 61~ P•k>m•r l , 511 sc ... Jlnwo:t"S•ern .1 ~ 5~8 S•ddlOOllck ? ~ II• Wtdnttd•v·• Scorf't Cn•Hev 80. !i•dOlet>.vk •I S11n ller,,.rdlno !1. P~lom•r Sl Citrus '7. fi:,v.,~i(l• 61 Cros1mon1 10. 5ou1nw .. •t•rn .ii S•turd•v't G•m•• Gni~"no•U "' S1111dlet>at~ c ;1ru• 11 P•lom•r FHv~lldo! a t !.wthwO'\lern ClwHn 11 Si n 8urwrdlno lllVl"IE LEAGUE '" "' "' ., "' ., "' Coren• del Mir I l !iS6 •01 t."' Al•mllo1 I 1 305 •'• M•,rolla 6 l 6'6 5'1 F1111nl•ln V•ltay ~ • !/Iii •~• '"~" r.',••• • s 60 no Fdhon • ~ ~~, srs Est,.ncl• I t •61 501 Sant• An• vnllt v (I 9 3H 6!8 W..Ontt"•v'• ~t•rtt fdl•an ''· f"•ntla •3 CdM I•, Santa An• VAl!tY JI t.o> '°l•m1!01 SI. Foun1,1ln V~lltl S~ M•~no!la 91. (o\t1 M••• H Frld1v•• G1""'' Fdl1cn ., Ca•on• <!•I //\Ar F.sl8nd11 M CO>M Me•a l 01 Al•ml!o5 at 5A v.11 ... Fovnl•in Valley •I Ma11no11 .. SUN$l!:T t.EAOUE M•dnt Hynllnqron Ott<n Weotmlntler ~•nla An• Wt•!e•n tlewpor1 H••bo< loart An1nelm W L PF PA 9 0 Sl/ ,-,. 1 ]1()(1~11 6 l 56' S•I ~ • 56~ Sii \ • S~9 S<I 1 1 soi s11 / I 5•~ jQ• a 9 uo 660 Wt•nnd•v't $(or•• Vle1!..,ln11er 6J, ~•nM An~ 60 Marine 51, Wtllt•n S• Loar! 15. NewPOrt •l thin! nct!on 121 Anaheim •? l'rh1•y'1 G•mn S1n1• Anl •I NtWPo•I H•rl>Or Wt•lt•n at W"'Tmintrer An1ht lm •! M1rln1 Lo.o•t 1t Hll'lllngtOft !lt&tl> ' Fountain \'alley 's Barons <ind the Cornna dt>l t.lar Sea Kings \l'l'l'I' \ 1rtorious in tl11~ 11rs1 day <lf 1hc 1972 s"•in1n1ini:: i.e:.son for Ur;ulge Coast rin;;1 pre1> 11ggrt'gritio11s. t:ou<"h Hay Uray 's Bnruri- playcd the host role and .-.kunked llancho Alain ltos, 56· U, 1n a dual 1neel l'onlt'stl'<I strictly on a ret;1y bas1~. Clilf lluopcr·.s Coronan:.. rnean11 hill'. edge<! past 1·1siti11g Do\vney. ~5-41 In other act1011. Doug Burr~ ~hssion Viejo J)iablos \\'Crr stopped by invRding Bre:1 , 54- 31. "·hile the hosl Cost;i ~lcsa :0.lustang~ of Trrry l34111·t•t1 rang up 43 points tu 1ic !hct11 tnr second place v.0ith Anahein1 behind Lakc11·ood !561 111 :1 1riangular n1cet. Vtfl!IY Coron• Otl Mir Id / D0111n1v (01 100 M1111ev II••~~ I. Downt• r<<i '"ne, 700 Fre• I, Wll11nf• {() ~ 1,.,,,., (OJ J. Compto11 40J Thno. 1 140 )()() Ind, Me~loy ! Philpot !01 I P<1ln1er !Cl l Le•P•ll Cl. Tin,.. 2 I(),) 10 Fref' -1. C~rr /Ol '·R o~ 101 1 8ri•lev ICI. No !Imp 100 Flv -1 1<111mpl>Ol1 /Cl 7 °1UscF~ereD~l.1C'&'i~o 1?t 1 1~'."haJ:,~n IOJ ) llov !D\ Ton>t I' 1 1c~~ F$~~111;1 <o'f'~1:::.~. 1~1ol1 La••n• 100 !he~ -L 1•n1toot (0) 7 P~ln\r• I(/ J_ El•i•lrv !Cl Tornr · 1 000. 100 O•e1,1 -l K•11mP11rOl1 !Cl J n0<111'><1n !01 l, M •ltth ttl Jim• 1 ·0..6. .00 Frr• l!leev -! Co•°"• 11r1 """' l lme~ J.21 l. 8 et • (Ofllftl dll Mir US! OowntY Ill) 700 M..oley litlav -I. Oo\lollt•. r.o tlmt . 100 F<tt L 8<>u~ney ICJ 1 C.an1o1,,, !0) ), M•r;enthal (C), Tlmtc ' ro 9 100 l"d Mt<!lt Y I . S1allm1n IC! ' McOowtU ICI, llleck (0). limt ,.., '>U Frft !. Iliac~ 101 1 Crimo II' J. Conkliil (OJ_ No 1lmt. 100 Fh I_ Mar\tnlh•I lCJ ' l!l(hard~ lD! l. lle~tlv (C), Tm• I 01 1 100 Fre• -K I. Pfn'>ln~lon !C 1 I 81~•!<. (!)) l . Rkh<lf!l' (0). l omt ~I.~ ~ Fret -81~ck !DI. flm• '~cOo,.~11 IC t J, Oloc~ ~01. lun• • 71 \ 100 flild• 1. lll~t~ !01 ' .. l~llmM• ((I l R~vtlV ICJ No llm< 100 Brt/nl -I, Cr!ni11 (Cl 1 \\'~huo ((•lo6'-F~~~~~~I~~~ 11'":1°.ir~~~1·Jtl M•• l 1m~ J •l6. C1r1 Cor<1n1 011 Mar Oil Oownty (._.) '100 /,\e<!ltv lleloy -I "Q"•· 100 Fr.,.. -t. M•r~hal1 !OJ 7 Dllo ((J l. Fro!I IC!. Ne !i"1t. 100 Ind. Mt<!lf~ -I, M1rlno (C.l ; J•ck•on COl l. Weddle ((), 1!m~ 1:01.0. ' 'ill FrH! -I 1•Ck10n !Dl 1. Mer~•I Cl l . Marsh1ll DJ No tlmt 50 Flv -1 °''" lc1 1 Mtr\ht!I •DI ~ JBtkiOn (0) Mlrl.,a. l lm•· 'It 8 Cliico State Outlasts A 11teater Swi111rriers Chico Stall" College from '\Jorthern California nipped coach 1:-;d Ncwland's UC Irvine ~v.·imm ing team. 5 7 -5 ti • \\lednesday afternoon in a dual meet held a t the loser 's pool. UCJ's Brett Bernard was high point man \Vith victories in the 50 and 100 free s prinl races and a lap on the \\•inning 400 relay team. (II, lLH.O. ?00 h~r:;tv•• , l &mo IC! '!.I I ~ Ftrgu, 11!. I 11.l. J TrO'lh ((I. SO f•tt1!vit -l llr•n•r<I (I\, n !; 1 '"ve•lll t(>, 1J.1: l G•r<ln~ I I. 231 7!)0 Ind. mr<llt Y -I l<ofltr I( I, 1·10.J; 2. O'Orl'n ((/, '!I], 1 6ougnev (IL 2:\2.0 I mo!er <llvlno 1. McC~ml1h Ir 1•9.~: ;. N•ck•rO !CJ. 210.0: l. O'Nl'H! O J. 119 SO, ;>()() butle1ll¥ -1, r.relve ((\, J.01.~. '· C1rn,1han (II. 2 Ol.•. J . 8rel!jn8 11 1 1:10 ~. ' 100 l••e•lvl• -t. t'>Prnnr<I !IL '° B: ~1.?!tkmfnn ti), 50.1: l Beck•n•n {Cl. 100 b~Ck\!ro~~ 1 l.Amb !Cl . ? ll.I. l. Garone• llJ, l .lli. 3. O'lldtn !(). SIXl ''~!1VI• -1. 80!,JGMev 111 'I 01.1:? Sn..r~t lC..); 1 Ft1QV' !I!. 200 brea111oke -1. 11.ott" re i. J•)l.J; l. COOl>tr Ill. 2 16.0; l AverUI ICI. 7"76.0 l·rntl~r diving -1 McC1mi'h 1CI. no stare; 1. N~ti<tr<! IC.I; ) O'Ntll1 (I ). dlO !rttllYlt tfllV Consistent Tom Baughey of the losing Anteaters copped both ends of the dL<;taocc freestyle evenls. winning the 500 in 5:01.2 and the 1,000 in IO:Z9.2. Hi~k~~~;r. ), :i.t. r " • ' 0 • .,.;;;;::;:::;;;;;;;:;;. ....... ..;; ..... Chic• 1111• CU) (J6) UC \"'int Ill •OO I.IN/Irv •el~v -1 U(I 4G1r<1ner,, Coooer. Ctrn.ohtn, D1<•mtnnl. J <11.1. 1 (hie. 3 qi l 1.000 frttllYle -1 801111htY (I\, 10·J9 I; 7, Sh•rPt IC), 10 ·.00; l. Sunon -' TAB takes ''no"' out of ''no Truinswer." Te'.,ltOM A1t1-rl119 lvreou 835-7777 ' IMPROVE YOUR IMAGE e Prlva1e Booth• e StyHnct & DttiQ" e "jyda Shea• CVll•"9 e Fbcf~I Slr11cl11••1 ~ ~;:!, "~; / R"1!ltr Stulpt11• Kvt Mtmod AVANlE LOOK "MO<!" & t.ong Hair 5tyll~Q" CUSTOM HAii! PIE ([5 ~Mir poec"' tltantd & ,tyle<I wh•le y~o wan -Far b~r>Cintmen! <•II JIM'S INTERNAllO"IAt. MAI" STYLl"IG CE"ITER lU l!:. 111~, C•ll• Mtlt -''1·2•l l 100 I "" -I l."•A.,ntll 10 )' /,'""'" •CI I ltlll (Dl, No 11 ...... 'l!I 11•(1. I tllll (lll -1 M~,~~" •~I 3. 1 .. ,1 .(.) "'~ !111'~ ~ 8•r~•r 1 l•••'fn 1f11 ? '"'! llh J W~~~I<' IC') N11 rn"r :1'(1 I'"" ll•l•Y l ll"'""•• "' '""~ l•~•w-!'• «JI to•1" Mn• \0 1 An •llfl"' 100 l.\t O•t> -<<lo> I I 6•e..,~~ <Olld Mr>• Tom• I U I 7((1 flt• I l'loll•o"" I A.•~ l:J••i~> !,o.I J Mt '101' 1(1 '""' I )}6 700 Inn ''"••llr, I I••"" 0 l~I "~IWOW 1(1 j Nrrt••' IA )1ni. .. ' ._, Fr~ I ll•lf 1,0. y.,~ '"''" !Cf J J Wnoltnort \I I T«nt 711. 100 f lv ! l •YU•l<l U! I Utnllt.rr ~ !'"') J '.lut llH (l I 1 ""' " ' 100 J=•ct I r,,,,,, ll I 1. 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Wood•ut!. l ull•ell, Aer1~•111 r,,.,, '·?9 : 50 nr••''' ••I•• 1 F"vn1~ .. o Vellev l8Arfon, ~itl•Of', 8•<1•n•, Bro""'l li.n~ 2 10 O •• so !Iv ••l•V 1 F"11n111 .. VAll•v r o<~ 011>•_,,,., !,j\N•h '.lo~ll<><'ll 1;,.., ' •9 ~ • -• '0 IMC• •~Ml VAU••v fLu•l•,.;I, Mt ,0.0M•l N "''l•rl•!<ll l "nr 1 ',&• I .,.,nl.no\ ""'"""'" • • 100 ir~e r .. l•v '"""'~"' V•ll~y JNonll, E\<n. 6.' I • "'' fl•l>l~hot \.Time: l: .... •. • " 50 m••Un ••IRY -1_ "":Y,"'•'n ~!~:~h0!1Yi'~~:~~~iu.1 \~':"'""' Or ~""' 10 • $0 ''"" t~l•v l Founl<1on • • IO h••• ••••r 1 I ,\.,ni•,n V•O•v II>'~··''-M<(•,1n., Mui<•• ih,.:nllnl 1, .. ,r ; ~) • • l"'l lo~e ,.1,., I •uul'l••n V.111•• •A,,<b"'"" ll•tl1. •'4"d~""ll.. 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Ii , I~ • IQ ft•·~ ••l~V 1 I''""'"'" VAii•• lii•ll/~lllfl, f'OGlt•. l ... th<1utf'!~ Nd ~"· I"""~· Mtl~n.ie1. F'u+I . (.flD ••• L.•.111011. M<mYn! l ••n~ '" v.r .. 1v M111loft Vit ia (Jl ~ 1 ..... ollnd1 tl<'I }U M"<ll•v 1-(elov -I, 11.,~. 1.,,,. ' ,,, u .'<10 Fr•~ I Love!•UV !Ill /. M""'f (fl,• J l-lc"t II/\) !""" I \) 4 100 lrnt. M•UlfY -I lltl•ln\ I/L I ~ (..nn~uell !Ml J. t•o1lf1 1111. I"" " lo.l l-1t• l l~•hO" IOJ ? llwo!,"" 1.,.1 J L.11-lroJ (U). H(n< lo.I fl,Y""' I l<otlb• IM) 7 Mll~rl'» I/,\) l ~l&lr• !Ml lom• I•• ·.JV I I• I 111,..,eYul 1111 /. LYlt IMI J l'<t 1•Uo '"'" Nn lun• 100 ! rte I 111.1<1'.on IMl J Ar\il't"' Cllll J l•~u• 11111 '""" II • .fllO f•r• I Lo~t'la<.h 111 1 7, 11111ut IMl J ltll"f !.._If Time ; 0!1 ~. It) l\"<k t llr"<!t•·<·'1 tl!I J O•~c8~• \Ml J 8u1n lf~I ''"'" ! (111 t 100 BINI\! I, llotltr !8) J. ll~ltrU\ 18) l t~•,,t>llfll. I .th~ luliv. ....0 Frl't' i.tlllY I. lltO• tic llu•t ... , MutlOll Vlt10 (01 Br•• UOl NO /,\MlfY lltlav -I PlQ!)• <W F-rt·e l. /l.uburn fMI '· M~l~f N> IM) ). M•M•"•r lllf. l lmt; ;: 1t_t, 100 l<><I Mt<HOY -r 0fGr(IO\j IM) 7. S'"'~"' 11\i J, Noni . Hm~: I Q9 1 ~o 1 ,.,. 1. t.ou1on 11111 1 C.ottt.·.~n llJ\ J /\lcM~)ler \fl>. Jltn• 7!0 ltO ! •v I, MtCfttl \Ill ?. 111'.1 '"<o"<l No 11.,,e. IV() I ••C I Gar!l~~ IMl 7 i.o~k•Gn l 161 ) l~c(~•I 18 1, llu'~~ I 0.\ J •i'.tl) •·•r~ I Mnlhtw• IM) 1 OunldP Ill• l . no 11 .. ro flmf S lll I I 100 Uhr~ I Au1>ur11 111" ' "" \•tono Tun•. ! u J I llO Brt~·.! I O•l,roo<J Olll I )"r.<l"" {Ill J no tlllrd, Tim• I 117. li)(l ft~r llel~v I M"1lon Vor10. I trll• • 11 ! ,,,. l•llUIO" Vltll (IS! ., •• 1111 7(0 M""ltY lltl&v • I C~mol!r11 !8,' I 1 Monrey (Ill J. l!f...,r ot~ (81 tlfllon No lllHf. ;oo ,,,.,. 1 /Aur<*v (/Al' Wc.o<l•I IM.l J dh11111ll!led l"'" 7 11 •, o 'I lr<I .._'-'dl•'Y 1 ll•r.> 1 .,_, q,1~(111•<! :l nn th.r~ l Im• I I I I I''" I ~fr'JIMI <Ill ) h /1'<., llH o l(r<I'/ Pl" !1"'~ 1• ~ '.0 ! Iv I Monr~·1 lf\1 1 \!•J1•rt •/,.! J ll•n<l"t ' "'·' r,.,,. 1 • 100 Frtr I. BV•~ lllol 7 (t "'''lo•ll (OIJ G.11I B1 r.11,• l~•l ~ ll,1• 0 I l •H IO• \Ml Ylu•J<!>, (Ml l Bre• \no n1mr,l Tlrno: l• I \ 50 9,.,.., l. MoinrO'f llU 1. w1,,1•low IMo J Murph¥ (IYI). rill'" "' V•ll•v. IWnUm•"· lu!lrtll. A<!•ms. \ ·-------------· ~tv•1U. Fich, Noan, tt•t~••· WOOdrufl, II l:l•ho~hoff, e~·t~nl). Time, • ll? ·-FounU!n V•ll•• llSJ !111 "•nC~o A11mllo. • • 100 l.m rol•Y & I, R~nr,ho AIAmllo,. Tim•· s:o~.I. 6 • 50 l•H-re!AY -1 Fo11n1a:n ~~irr1, r ~:~~ .. :1~ti~°¥l:.,<>t~i.~: E v•n'' • ~ SO brt•!I r•l•v -I. Fountnln Vallty 1Se1kman, McC••lnev. Menon.I [vAn•) Time 1111 • • SO !IY re!•v ~ '-li&ncho lll•mll.,.. fl'l'lt: 2.11.1 ----1 ROLLER liAmEs Friday Febn.iory 4 8:00 P.M, COSTA MESA FAI RGROUND S l. A. T -BIROS v •. NORTHERN HAWKS Halftime Match Race: B oo John John11<1n v•. Chotf John P•tkef' All S~t1 $3.50 Tieken on 1ale 5 pm Friday fo, information call: Rl-95171 GUY L1CVHNGSf0N • ' . ~ Pric•t. Etftctlvc Thru Ftb. I .,~ '"()ly111pic 7'!.'' \Voo d Ski Ideal for beginner and intermediate skiers. • 'I k s I ·r Reg. $70.90 11 n r er • landarf oc $4 0 • t\1arkcr ·rehnat !!eel • ln s ta l!<ilion lnclucle d Children Sizes ~30. ··<>S::oo'" Filu·1·i!la~~ Ski • i\lurkcr St;nidard 'l'ol~ Rog. $100.90 $75 • !\'larker 'I'elni;it lle:t•I • l11 s lallation Included "'0S400'" Filwr~la~~ Ski Top Metal Edge -M3de In Germany • \lark1·r Strn1t\:1rd '1'111· e \1<11 kl'!' 'J'c\1nt1t I lt·t•I e lns tall:1t1nn \n('\urh·d Reg. Sl20.90 $85 MEN'S & WOMEN'S CUSTOM "Foa111-Fi1 .. Ski Bool .• J·:ncl .vo11r .-.ki b11oi fitti1 1~ \vith foa1n inj L·t·rcd llonts. Jo:N./OY llA PPY 1,.l·:l·:T prob!cr1 1 $90 .i B11<"kl1· Ski Boots l .. cather lined Reinfo rced 1·:po-.;1 parallel soles Reg. $44.88 S60.0-0 FULL FASHIONED Floral .l111111le11il • Originul l3s1k Ski\\C[lr or AustrlJ 4,IJ '; \ 1rg1n \VOOI. 487,, nylon , Hnd 4', ~pandc.\. · • Over-the-boot s lylc ; center \l'HL~led hclt und huckle : nylon sno11· cuffs. E xciting and elec tric colors $3 9.88 Rog . S60.00 Reg. $58 .00 Florel Sib Overall $J9.88 All Men's & Women'' \\'ARIH·lll' PANTS Worncu's Fur J-lat~ Reg. Sll.99 To $14.99 NOW $9.9'J . $11.99 "" 1 · I " I G · ,., H e r 1y arc111 LOW FRICTION SOLE PAO REDUCE REl!: ... SE FRICTION BEnER BINDING PERFORMANCE DON'T lET FRICflON CAUSE INJURY 0 1 veloped hy Or. Gordon LIP'f s499 ... Men's •nd Women 's 1/2 FLAilEIJ SKI PANTS PRICE COMPLETE RENT AL PROGRAM Over 200 pair of skis and boots availabl•. Skis, boots, and pol~. AS LOW AS S4 l'ER DAY To 10°/o DISCOUNT Ski Club Memb•rs Soulll Coast Plaza 3131 Brt11A11 Stntl Mf.lll3 l tf DAILY P!L01 For C:la8sy Katella Humanistic Approach Ke y to Cage Success • Can anyone ups!!.! the Katel!J High bandwaxon In Crestview Learue blalcet· ball clrcle.1! Conl'liderlnK the Knillhts' awe.ome display of power through their first nlne i11me1 it would seem doubtful Coach Tom Darilcy's outfit 1s 9-0 for the C"urrent camp11ign and rti; margin of vlt· tory 1s 22 points per outing. Ka!e\111 ·Ji record !n loop warf,.re i;ince . ------ ROGER CARLSON ------· the outset in 1966, including the l•le!il nine wins . is 71·( Thar 's not bad considering no st"rt.t r fnr Danley has measured over 6-l. Dan ley credits much of his team's suc- cess to dis cip line and attitude . "We teach our kids they must believe that what lhey are doing is preparing themselves for later In life. It 's a matte r nf considering them as human beings fll'!I. "You have to give lhem your best ef· fnrt . I ca ll it the humanistic 11pprotch," 1ay1 Danley. His policies <if no cutll , the last break offense and pressing defense and highly disciplined grooming has p:ild off wHh four league championships and entry into the p/ayoffll every year ~tnce the school opened its door!!. Danley'!! previous prep f'XJX'rien ce was al Anaheim where fnur of his five Bee tea ms won Sun,~c! l.A'lt$:Ue chan1pionship~. Kalella i.~ 18·Z for the year and I~ ra nk- ed fifth in Orange County. * * * El1ewhere: Co1ta Me1a fflfh '11 11"·lm equipmenl his btel!I 1urmenttd with the aeqalsiUon nf 1even new llartlng blocks through the courte1y of the Coast Cl ipptr1. Costa Mesa boosters and lbe Men athlellc department . Estancia high basketball aiach Dive Carh1Je had • sp1rkling career ln co1chin1 pr ior to t1kin~ ov~r al Es!ancia. HI~ most produc!lve sport wall ln btlleball. Seven of his C.:e ntenn1al Hi1h pla ye rs on the 1957 tean1 si gned pro con· tracts. .'ind his 1960 Centennial ro iste.r Included Roy While (New Ynrk Yankee5 1, Reggie Smith (Boston Red Sox 1 and Don Wilson t Houston A1tros 1. Another ltllow who lollei:l for Carlislt. in American Ltginn b!'ll 1n Florida was Herb Score. Co11ta l\1esa llljth'11 dual meel wre1tlln1 record the pa lit twn ye.11r1 I ll-4 1 Includes five conqut:tl8 by three point• or le11. "Someone finds It within hlm 5ell to get ii donf','' 111 ft'ltsa coal'h .John Swea1y·1 1.xplaoatlon. San Clemente High 's footbaJI schedule has been finalized with the acquisilion of Alemany High on the Trit.on1' sl11tt. It 's a one-year shot and the San l''ernando Valley-based Alemany crew will be the home team Sept. 29, If p1ycbln1 out tbt oppo1JU011 11 the name of the 11me chalk one up for Mltslon Viejo baslletb•ll coach Pat Roberti. Wllb his team down by fiYe points wltb •:10 lert in the third ~lod, Roberti call· ed time out, whipped out • 11~ me•l ure and procuded to prove Or•nge Hla:h h•d a b•1ket with the front rim nne Inch shorter than re1ul1tlon. The maneuver took up 15 mlnutr,ll and hi1 team re1 ponded by taktna: the te11 In· to nYertime and eventuall y wlnnin~. "Or1nge didn 't 1core fflr ffl ur mlnute1," 11ay11 Roberts. "but you c1n be sure we'll have our besktlll ctrllfled Defore. they 1how up down here.'' Perhaps the most dt.>cc1v1ng record in Orange County prep bal!iki!'tba!J th is year belongs lo Loara. The Sa xons are ~I J but haYe lost four timel!i by one point, and another by two pninl$. Four juniors dot the Saxons' starting lineup. GWC, Gaaiclaos Lose Orange Coast Holds 011 For 88-87 Cage Victory Orange Co1u1t College w11s the lone vic- lor amoni;: the thre:e area junior collese bRSke!bRll teamll Wednesd11y night, but tht Piralell had to hold off a last ditch rally by visiting San Diego to win it. Coach Herb Livsey's Bucs captured lht-ir fourth victory in seYen South Coast Conference outings . 88-87. In other tills, (iolden West's Rustlers were thumped by host Rio Hondo. ~66. In a Southern Californi 11 circuit meeting ,,..h1Je Saddlcback s Griuchos took 11 on the chin from \n\'ad in,1? Chtiffey. 8~1 . in }.i 1ss1on <.:onferr.ncr: action . OCC held an 87-llfl lead with ;)fl llct·ond~ left in its game \\'11h SRn Diego, but 1hf' Knights closed lhe f.lllP w!tli .~even ch11r11y to5Se~ sandw ic hed around a Bue rree throw in th!' clPs1ng second <;. San D1t>go ('llmt> \\'Ith only seven players "'tlh four roul1ni; oul. Tht third Knight to foul out d~d so with 34 seconds left 11o•h1le the final San Diego ph1,ver with fi\'e fouls sat down w[th two seconds re· mainini;:. Volleyball Tiff Set for CdM A power vollryball doubleheader is on tap Monda y night 11 the Corona del Mir High boys· gymna:tium . At 6:30. teams from Newport Harbor and Corona drl Mar highs wilt clash 1n a preliminary while lhe Baltxia Bay Club challenges Honolulu 's fo rmidable Outr\g. aer Canoe Club an hour later in the: fe11ture matchup. Oul!landing area play ers who ' 11 ~rform for the BBC squad include the U.S. Voileyball A.ssocie!.lon 'll lop 1971 rookie, Tom Read . And ti-Cal SI.ate !Long Beach) stAr s M;il Gage and Sill Jmw1\lc. Adult admission is n. with all proceeds bene tilting the Newport lnter!Choll!llc Voll1yb1JI Fund. from which a loeal l\la:h scMol league wlll bt hopefully etlabli1h· od. Skip Wi lliams ag ain Jed the OCC att:ick with 23 points "'hire San Oie10'11 Terry Antoine hit 40, including 1~ of 20 from thr. charity stripe, Antoine scored 42 itga insl the Pirates in a first round meeting. Al Rio Hondo, the Rustlers of Coarh Dick Stricklin just couldn 't find the range Against a Roadrunner outfit that played ball control. The y,·inners led . 18-6, with 10 minutes lert in lhe first half ind held a 13-1 5 point lt>ad through most of thr serond half. Golden Wesl's to p ptrform&nce camr from sophomore .Jim Anderl'ion "'ho can· ned 20. Al Miss ion Viejo H\.i,:h. ChRlrcv had ~ rather easv timr \1'ilh C01'C'h RtJy Stevens' Gauchos Chalfcv streaked lo a rom· rortable 411·.11 ha.lflime )ead an·d It was gr1'v y !he rest of !ht w11.v . Bill Helm took -'COrinR hnnPr~ for Sad· dltback wJth 13. Golden Wesl returns to action Frid~.v night. hoslinf: LA Harbor while OCC visits Taft Sa turda y afte rnoon !2 o'clock ·1 lilOd S&dd leback ho!IS Grtissmont that same ni51:ht. c111tt.r 1Nl .,,..,,. J ~ ' n J I 0 11 J I _s I• I • l II .5 1 ) 1, l ! l j I l j 4 l 0 1 ' l •t•ltuc• (Ul ~~·••r Mto.t\•ld &u••~••ltt H•n!-(1~ "' H•.,11 Vl1u r Jo•t,..,.,. lt•f!/ Gf ltl• Crum!fy Sw•"" Prlc• AJhcr•!I Helm Nrl1wt1nc1tr Pettr •0Mrl1 Tot1 I• ,. ,, " 10 loT•l1 Hellllme: Cl'l•llt >" ll. St_,.!•IMlt k JI It " ,, •• J ' j I~ ~ n l 10 l I J 1 0 0 I 0 9 I I l 0 1 ) I j J l 1) 1 0 0 , l J J 11 a ' J ' XI Jl 1' 'l flft 0 1111 (I ll 0!'11191 Cl•1t IU ) l1Utl l• htllllll• ~1"111~11> tJ51JCo,,...~ t 1 1 1t C,trltft'lt lt ' I J 11 Stvmour J 1 l 11 Mllll r ' 1 J t Jo..ttiwlt~ J l J t ·~,.l~a i) Ii 1 '° Wl!!lemt I 1 • lJ GIOH 1 & ! 1 NtlM~ J t .! U 8rtw" 1 0 ) • Yrr•tv O 1 J t -'~"" OOlOll wl., l lJ I Tl !ll• 'Jll ,, I~ l1 ltltll ll 11 IJ .. H•Ullme t"lr~n,~ C .. !1 d , t.•~ DltofO ll ••Htll *ttl UtJ •t. M11141t Ill) .. "'''" ,.,.,,,. ..... ,,.,." Ii I I te f'trl-• ' I lt ICtlctl ' l I 11 W1till ' 1 7 11 $1. Clflr l a c 4 Kri utll••' 1 1 l I! Ottlll 11 1 1JllHn 7)11t G•lt t"°' o o t 0 J tll\tt 1 1 o f WHSOll lt1•1' ..... tf!n lllt Wfl Hfl t ll •Wo!l,.-1 11 11 l r•wri IOltt....,t• !''' 1.r1 e o • t Lt mllht•• 1 1 1 c...... ) • ' ' t ut1 !llt T11111 JI • n" Tol•I• "' " 11 • H1lf!oiMt; .. 141 H'""9 :U, ()el!lln Wtot fl Checking Gals Golf Fo1· A1·ea The \'1S1 lor~ nul sco re<I the hbsts at 8iR Canyon \\'omen's Club's last monthly &Uf"SI d11y 1ournament, with i\1rs 8 11! Cini of El Niguel shooting a low gross of 16 - two strokes undtr ~lrs. ,Jerome Helptrin'll 88. Other low gross St.'Otes 1n A Flight in· eluded ~1rs. flenry Meyer and Mrs . Henry Cn:a:'s second place 91s and i;ues l i\1rs. Elden Eads ' 87. Second place tow gross scoreli 1n A. Fllihl included Mrs. Meyer 's and Mrs . Cox 's~!. and guest ph1yer Mrs. Eads' 87. Big Canyon 's B Flight lov.• Rrn~s winners werr i\-lrs I .. B. Le11•is 193 1 and to.Ir!. W. B. \\'hitlow (103 ). Guest B Flight low :;;corers \\•ere Leo1a c:ould ! 1001 and Mrii. Howard Concoby (JOI ). Low net honors for Big Canyon 's A Flight were shared hy Mrs. John Hooten and Mrs_ R E. l\tcCasline, both with 71.~. Mrs .. ,Jack Blaisdell re.me in lle<:Ond 11fter posting a 7:1. Mrs. Thomas fnch 170 1 captured low net spot in B Flight, with l\frs . JUymond Flall ey six strokll".~ be.hind for second plare. Low net scorer in the Guest A Flii;iht well i\frs . N. A. Nellick of Western Hills with a 7.1, followed by M:-s. John Sigr:e1t !7.l l. ~frs. Ray Freebl'l irn was B flight low nel winner with a 74. In second pllil Ce. was Mrs. John Davies. who !l!lbulat.ed a 76. El Toro A dozen first place winntrs in El Torn Women 's Golf Association's mo~t recent tournament at !he Marine base? Yes . Sharing a lie in a besl ball of the threesome rompetilion were four t eam~. Turning in 64s were the threesomes of MarJ{n Sullivan, Martha Ciampa !!Ind Grace Deal; Betty Sue Barry. Erny Burkle 11nd l\fae Stoneman ; Glee Quee n, Mary Mucciacco and Doris EIT.y ; and Lee Velton . Sue Roberrs and Joan Lear. l'lleadt11vla1•1< There were also lots of winners in Meadowlark Countr~ Club's Women·~ Golf Club two low balls net tour nament. f irst place foursome with 12.S included Freda Mcintosh. Gloria Boland. i\-f3rcetla Crandall and Sally Jones. In second pl ace \\'ere Fionna Moore , Bonnie Nuccio. Betty Briley and Lael i\-1urrA y. I 126 1. Three foursomes turned in ll2 for third honors They V.'ere Polly J\.1yers. Harvey Ann Wolcott, Barbara Hanke y and Roberta Can': Helen Moul.on, .Ann Mays. Rose Erickson and Florence Bike r; Anita Appleton . Faye Pederson, Cuba OJrl and Allee Geiger. Cnsta ltfe•a H11.zel Web&ter won the only pri7.e in A f light in Costa Mesa's crier's tourn•- ment again last week with a low llco re. of 6' Barbar11 Shepardson t62l look first in 8 Jo~light. witn Rosemary Skillion i nd Mer- rilee Dungan titing for second with 651. Also with a 62. Maxine A1smus w1s low nt>l scorer in C Flight. Runners-up were Phyllis Bames (67 1 and Ruth ~hilli ng ( 71 !. In a selecliYe nine tournament Friday, to.!ArY Evt lyn Imler posttd an adjul!ited lnw · nt>t !'rore of W, follow ed by Vi Hnskins ' 33 and Doris Bell 's 33V.. 811.rbara Morton mad e 11 28 for lop honors in B Flight. Rosemary Skillion 1.101 and Svbil Foster (3 1 ~) took second and third P11ces . Phy\lill Barnes was low sco rer with a 27 1.i. in C Flight, followl!d by Ruth Schilling and Carole Ross tieina: for second after turning in a pair of z9 1 ii'. l,Bfl""" Bearh La.gun& Beach Wome.n·-' Golf Club al~o staged a crier's tourney for their weekly •vent. I.ow gross w1nner5 were Gracia .Johnson in A Fli.c.ht i81l. to.1ary LOu Yaeger in B Flight !97 1 and Margaret \\lestmorland in C Flip:ht (991. f irst place for low net in A Flight went to Dian Stys v.·ith a 46. Pi t Gullt'k and r>onada Plumley with 50s in B flighl. and r.ene Abasjian wilh a 43 in C Flight. 1H e•n l'f'rdf' ~1nre than 80 golfers turned out at the ~1esa Verde Country Club for their Women 's ~If Club monthly meetinM day i:ind be.st~ ba11 of the foursome. touma- mtnt. Wlnner!ll by four strokes with 1 net 56 1vcre Marion Schulte., Gloria Bowden. P•I Gill and Mary Con ner. Four te1ms tied for stc0nd place: afl e.r posting &Os. They we.re Miry Rattkln, Louise Robinson . Le.la Staderm1n and Louise Wilson: Margaret Gordon . Kelly Adams. ~Umi Smith and Joan Ctt.m- berlaln: Alice Derby, Brenda Ronald.son. Gerl Gothlt •nd Pat Gebo; and thJ'11somt Louise Paddock . Prudy P1rm1nUw and Ida FHr1r. Gauchos Nab Opener, 3-1 Pilcher Tom Nel50n l-O•sed 1 (our·hil· ler. struck out JO i nd 11\n1ltd In a run tn ltadlng Saddlebac.k Colleae to a S-1 vic- tory tiver vf1IUn1 Mt. San Jacinto Collt&e in the 1tn bl1tball opener Wtdne.sday. Nelson, a rilht·hande.:r, walked only rour EAgles In 10Jn1 the mute: for tht Gaucho! ol ....,ell Doug Fritz. Mt. Sall J1dnto'1 lone nm w11 untamed. Ntlaon Is 1 tr1111ler from Sin Fernando Valley Stile t.IJ .. e. 51ddloblck 1o1 lht only t"" runs It I I nt.e.:ded in Lhe second lnntne wntn, fre1hm11n Grea: Ke11lflr Jtd ofr the rramt. with • 11ina:Je, atole 1econd and scorff on Doua: Mitten'• •lnale. Milttn was the.n 11crlfk:td to third by 8 ill Holdrid1t •od 1cortd <in a ,.,MCI boll. A t~o.oul double by Slln I.It and S«>lt Johann"' •lntled pt11>d S.di!J.i..tlt'a third run . Tbt G1uclto1 return to ad»o P'rlday. ho&1ln1 Rio Hondo In 1 I :JO Utl. • Mt,_..., .. ._ Ill ........... , .. "" .. " .. 1111._ ti .I I I I C.....it. ti I I I I M41111. N I 0 O I 011~.1,lll JllO Altfl... l• 1 I 0 0 l.1\lf'I. It J I I t U>\lt, ti I I O I Mlll\lllck, 111 I I l O """"""'.... lll 1 • 0 • 0.-.........•l ,,,, Hlftllf, fl I t I D II"*'· c , • • • .,, ..... 1'I J • • • '""'*"''· .,, ' • • • 0\1.,.,.1, I l I I I ,.~ ... '""' d Jiii•-,. C.t r...,11r. 1• l(IHler, rl Wt,_llw, » lol.!nfll. II Htltr-. ' MtltM. 11 ftl~ .. I ' I Ttftlt _,,_ .... "'"' ' • 1 • ' ' . . ' ' . ' . t I I 0 ' ... J I ' l .. ' t I I I JI I 11 J M• S..:.. JK!Rtl .. IM iMlltflHll .. .,, __ , j J .,,._, !I I Swimming Prospects For Coast Area Teams The 1972 prep 1wim &ea.son i.8 under wa,y and topping tM liet ol 1ction during th1,: first wttk are relay meeta at f.-t•rha and Est.ancia Saturday. Top individuals among lhe Orange Coest area's IJ contingents appl:ar lO be ll unlincton Btach's Clay Evans and f ounlain Valley's Jack Ba bashoff Here's a rundown on each ol the area 1quadll ' Corona d .,I Mar The emphasis is on youth at Coron a del Mar High where coach Cliff Hooper 's Sea Kings art. taking a bead on the Jrvine League championship -a title they lost last year to Costa Mesa. Hooper has junior Bruce Krumpholz a8 hi~ key performer with his freestyle Lime. of ~9.8 in the JOO and 56.0 in the !00 but· te rfly due tn be pared further. Along wirh Krumpholz are seniors Har· l'Y Palmer, Brian Millich and Dave Otto. Palmer has a 50.0 100 free clocking to hl1 credit all a ju nior while i\1il H('h '. best in the 100 breast has been in the !.!Os. OUo h8l5 been in the 52s in the 100 free. A trio of freshmen could make the dif- rerence for Corona's title hopes . The set <-'onsists of_Jack Lorenz. Mark \\latson and D11n Pennington. They playtcl fo r Hooper on the Sea Kings' Irvine League rhampionship \\'alcr polo oulfit and Hooper'ii high on each of them. They 've compiled JOO freestyle limes of 55 lo 56. None are from age group swimming back11rou nds. Two others are prominent in thr. Sea Kings plans. The y are sophomore Simon Boughe.y anrf Ma rk Brisley. co.ta ltf.,•a The Mustang' of coach Terry Bowen pos.st!ll perhaps the best breastrnke com· blnation in the Irvine League with senior Mike Yarwood and junior Ste.Ye SponagJe on hand. Both were in the 1.05.s last year and the hvo combined recently with sophomore Don Pentecost and junior Tnm Stover to clock a ~:02.0 in the 4x50 breast relay in pr11c11ce. Aside from the breaststroke combo the i\,esans boast of Matt Waidelich in their St:\ up. W11oldel ich i!! a retumlng All-American scwimmer with his fly and fr ee performancell , Hill best mark last year n•as in !he low 57s in the 100 fly. Bowen has a young te.am, however, in which to defend the Mustangs' 1971 Irvine League: title. Senior Sttve Mllrron i~ the leading sprinler for the Mesan s while junior Richard Whitmore is be.:1i in the short sprint s. Sophomore sprinter John \Vhltmore i1 also an lnstrume.nt.a l figure 1n the Mesans· alt ack. Junior Al1n Llna1ton is set for tht in- dividual rMdley. Edison The Char(ler&' Irvine IA1gue swim championl!ihip hopes hav~ taken a swing upwards with the re.tum of HVtral flnt: prospects and th• enrollment of fr6shl'l'l1n M11olt Van Gordon Coach Eric Emery ha5 three seniors anrl four junior!! back in du ty yet he claims his m1jor strength is with hi.s sophomores and VanGorrf on . VanGordon has already broken the 200 individual medle:y school reeord in prac· lice "''ilh a 2: 1 ~ and M's set to perform in the freestyles. Other big items for the Chargers are !W!ni(Jr!I Mike Braun 1231 in the SO free la st yeer). Pat West 1fre e. fly and breast 1 and sophomore George Budr i~. The latter set the school record in the 100 brealll last year with a I :09.9. Others C(Junled on by Emery are senior Dan Graham (free and brtasl ), jun iors Albert McCown (free and breast). Sig Muhlhauser (distance and indo), and water polo plcitye.rs Pat Moorhouse and Todd Hopson. Estenele The outlook is bright at Est1ncl1 Hl1h where coach ~s Cutle.r's Ea1le1 an preparing for the 1972 Irvine LeafUe 11'1m 1t1son. Cutle.r ha• several promlsin1 returning lettermen to work with l@d by senior Llr· ry Blatterman. perhaps the clrcult't belt In the backstroke. Blallennan turned lhe JOI) back in ~.2 last year 1nd also bu 23.0 and 11.t credJtl In tht sprint.a:. Se.nlor Tom Smallwood ii hick and rudy tn compete In the IOI IDd lilt f'"'tyl". lUo buts 1ut yur wort !<I.I and 2:1MU. Juniors J•H Otvt1 (1 :111.1 100 butlorfly Ind 2!.2 50 lrMI and Robert Wtbstor f2:20 200 hldo, 1:1115 100 back .. t :IO 400 fr .. ) 1lve C:Ullu 1dded depUt. And 1 captblt tnn1fe:r ill irl camp. He'I junior Man Mc:Clrtln lrom San Clement.. McCartln ml1hl bt tho Id· dlllonol Item required for tho E11lt1 to up1•'1 tllo dope ohett tn dual mHll with Coron• del Mar, Colt• M111 and P'oun· llln V11l1y. Ho hu Umoa of 17.t ( 100 nyi. SU CtOO fr.,l. t :tt (400 froe ) and l:N tlOO frM l under hls be.It •• a IOphomort at Sin Cltmull. Alld three mph<lmort di ven r_itun Lo 11•1 tho E111ta dUal mett pohlti. 111ey .,. Morshlll Btll, Terry O'Toolo and Wlnoli tnnlfor Grea Jloitz. A polr of lmhm"1 round out CUiler's ftnt lint. 'lbly 111t llill Let 111.1. !IS.I and l .Oil In the f,..stylal and Mike Mod- dock t24.6 and 56.3 Ln lhe sprmts and 1 .l~ in the 100 brtast 1 Founlalu Voll"fl F'oun!aln Valley High ·s Barons will be taking their most serious crack at lhe Corona del Mar.CO!la Melli syndrome in lrYlne League 11w1m circles this year All t'oach R1y Bray hall a 1olid C'orps of retum1ng lettermen and an outstanding tran.cifer. Thr: l1ller ill jur.ior Jack Babashoff, 11 trsinsfer from Lyn wood Hlgh who set CIF Cee rerords in the JOO and 200 freestyles last year. B~bashoff hopes to improve his JOO free clock ing of 49.5 lo tbf' 471 this season and his best in the 200 and 400 frtt1tyles is 1:4&.5 and .1 :48.0. Babashoff and his threat in the fr eestyles makel'l f ountain Valley 's crew a complete le1m. Bray ha!'l el11ht returning varsity lel- tennen with 1eniors Frank Browne tbreastl. ,Jim McAdams ~frtt ), Peter Noah ! butterfly\ and Kurt Westerfeld (backstroke ) le11d ing tht way. Junior monogram winners back in the fold l'lre fl.fike Eich (free) and John Bertani (sprints) itlong with sophomore Scott Shelton (individual medley), Too. the Barons hRYt help with pros- pectll Clay Stuard in the sprints, Terry Woodruff in the back!ltroke and Jim A11rons in the breaststroke. "We may he Ye a couple of sophomores whn could do well , too. but our strength i1 with our returning l~ttermen ," says Br•y. lluntlngl.on Bearl1 The Oilerll possess the Orange Coast area's fine st swimmer In iienior Clay Evans. last year's CIF !00-yard butterny champion. Evans has clocke1t a 52.J in the fly and Is also an outstanding individual medlt.y man. He holds ne1rly e"ery record 1t Huntington Beach and is prt)ficient in all &troke1. With 1spir1tion5 of co mpeting with the 1972 Canadian Olympic Team at Mun ich this sum mer. it's an yone 'll guesll what the Oiler phenom will do thi! year in his prep stint. Unfortunale\y, ho"·ever, fnr CQach Duane GeHy, the aYallab!e t11le11t 11 nd speed drops of f quickly in the Oilers' Sunset League til!P hopts. Gell~ comes to Huntington from Foun- tain Valley and he ha11 his work cut out for him after the Oller •ported a aeven- man squad for the three cla111es last year. Sophomore Dean Kenynn g ivr..~ the Oilers added punch , however. with his freestyle ability. He lurnr.d a J :56 200 free in workouf11 re~ntly . The rest or the squad i~ made up of juniors Bill Holman lbreast l and Gary Kaiser (free ) along with sophomore Mark Kenyon. fres hman Eric Cushm an. two othe.r &ophom nres and a dor.en freshmen. l,0911uo B.,arh Ozzie Simmonll and a host ol other fre1hmen are the brightest spots in tht. L1guna Beach High swim oullo0k with the Orange League sea.son approaching. Simmons ia already the faste st Laguna swimmer in camp in •very iitrok e and he hat met qualifying lime~ in itYeral Cee events already in pr1ctice. As an eighth gr ader S1mnns was in the 27s in the 50 fly ind J ·00.2s in the 100 in· dividual medley. Care y is hopeful he'll be dowr. in the 52.oi this ye.ar in tht JOO fr eestvle. Thrte other freshmen ar e Under J:(l().O in t~ 100 free with Dan Penney, Cliff Amsdtn and David Devore joining Sim· mons. The Arti1l11 flaure to compete in varsity and Bees fir1t , then pos.9ibly 1witthing to Yarsity and Gees In le.ague. competition, Other ca ndidates tor the varsity are senior John Hlrbold Jn tht. sprints. sophomore Conley Ware (diYing ) ind junior Ne al Amsden (1prinU). The lat ter wa1 the Orange Le.ague ch•mpion in the Cee 50 free last year and his time.:s bt Ye lake.n rapid drops since the first of pr•ctice. C1rey i1 hopeful he 'll be in the low 531 in the 100 yard free..style by 1tUOn'1 eDd. Mat'ln• Marina High'• 1171 Sunset W1ue ehampions have a !Olid crack •I repelitlnc for tht litle with ieve.ral pr~ mising returnets i" coach Tom Lklyd'• fold, Two teniors who Lloyd LI counting on for crucial dual meet points Ire Mark Carden•s ind Ken King . Cardenas speclaliiea In the &prints od ·hu done 1 52.3 in the 100 whlle Kil\& l\U 1 Y.t 100 ny mark to bis cr~t. Junior Dave FIMey tat11 care of the diallnc< lood Ind hu polled 1:52.0 and t :OI crodi" U I oopbomore.' Anod"r '°" ,.OIJ>Od is Colin Hardy, 1 junior who turned I I :OU In tho !nut la.It yur ind ••• in the 2: 10. in the 200 19dlyldual medley . , !ol>boolon Bruce Scbollfs is countod on tOr poi.nls In the blcll and indo. Olhln who moy htlp the Vildlll CIUI< aro ...,lor Mlk• Prtme In tllo spr\nll. oopbomCIO"• Dou& Slblu, ...ior Dou1 Dunn and freshman Sein Buckner. The latttr Could mall:t the vinity wiU. 'hit~. f ... pound Iron• btlylns bis clllo. Th< Vlk.. k»l Jim Rock wla Ibo ltlJllftr ,...,,. but pick up Illy Storti '1tlffl MIMtlOll. "'"''" "'~J• M!Mlon Vt•Jo'• nrlm lortuna •l•ln ride on tho sftautdori ol John Lqvt, tllt Di•bl°'' cl•il)' Juator. Leog\le Ill fivt ochool ........ U I sophomore &nd II prtmari(y 1 lrlOllyi« ' in tht Oi.11blos' dual meet plans . His best event. howevu, 11 the 100 fly. His quicke!l in that eYtnt 1s "·I and coach Doug Burt opintll l..~ogue will 1•1 down to the 5l!i thtl year a! a Junior. Junior Scotl Campbell < breas\ ind relays ) g1Yes Mi1.!11on Viejo 1 solid one-- two threat but arter 1ha1 the Di1blos \f ill be counting on .several sophomores tl'td freshmen !o fill the gap!. \\li1h 1971 's CIF champion f'oolhill 1p- pearlng even better this time around. ti 's l!ilrictlv a case or fight ing II out fnr No J in thf Crestvie\v Ltai ue with S•l'l Ciemen!t 8nd Tusti n. Freshmen prospects 1ha1 could make the Dia.bias' season art Tom Miller (free and fly 1, Taylor Howe idistance ~vents) and Cary Okaz11k1 ifreestyle i. Snphomore Fred Ridge and 11enior Mark Andrews also figure in Mlssitln Vie· jo'1 plans. Burt has a couple of promislna dJYat!, !oo, in junlor Bill Hobbs and senior Neil McCArthy. Nett"port Barh"r Only three seniors dot the Sailtirs' ro.ster 11 ntw coach Bill Jew~ll rUdi~s his learn for Sunset Le11ue swim hostitilie$. St andoot seniors Scott Wall. Kevin Ashe and Tim Quinn are M tland but seve.ral othell who figured heavily in Newport 's plans i re sillin.g the season out. Most ate water polo players who finish· ed second in the Clf' finals in Lhe fall . But Jewell say~ ht still has a few 1ems in camp and most notable of the retumeell is Wall. an ei:cellenl fly awlm· mer. Huntingt on·!! Clay Evans provides a tough challenge in league pl1y. however. Asht it ~!l in the ZOO 11nd 400 free And can also turn in good fl y times while Quinn is • I :01 backstroker. And there are o!hers in Newport 's squad thal could make thin11s rou1h for circuit opponents. Sop homore Jeff DuyndAm is m1kinr excellent progress in the bre11t and ean be.nch press 250 pounda. Perhaps the most outstanding swim· mer on !he team i11 M>phomore Tirn Regan , y,•ho is proficient in all 1trokt.t and has the fig ht feel for the water. ac- cording to Jewell. Junior James Wilcox i1 a backstroke lhreat and Charles Glazier h11 impreved a areat deal o"er last year In the 100 and ZOO free.st yles. Junior Jim Youn£ i1 a.nothtr freestyle candidate in Jewell 's pl•ns for the Sailors. Son Cle1n.,nt., The Tr1ton.'i' swim outlook is hampered with the lack of 1 pool to 1wim their home mt.els •nd the fa ct that they mu~t trek lo Camp Pendleton for their dally workouts . Too, coach Ben Cummin111 h~ only four seniors and one junior in tht pri> gram, givin11 them little chance 11 up!et.- ting the foothill High b1ndw1aon in Crestview League circlell. Bui Cummings say• his young crew it solid in tht weight levels and ht! 1 t6Cld chance Al grabbinll the loop title iJ) MC bf tM; ligh1er levels. Leading his crew are &enior1 Dana King. Steve Diamund, D1 vid Davi&bn and diver David Vick. King is the school record holdtr in the 100 breast ! 1 :08.0l and D1vison is in tl'le 1: !Os in the back.Btroke while Oiamo!MI is the Triton~· sprinter. Junior Rick Talcott t4·J8s in the •oo frer ) i~ joined by sophomore Mik& Lashbrook. The latter i~ tht yount~r brother of the L1shbroo k1 wh<1 led Anaheim swim And polo teams in years past. rdentic al twins Dunc11n and M•lcolm Wilson are 1l1ted for the. spr int! 4nd backstroke!! while fellow snphomoru J\m Btaae. Ric k Joyce: and Davit! Atklna&n firure heavily in Cumminl8' pl1ns. llnl.,.,rsltw Universi ty Hi&h'• initi al swim IUlon geu 1t1rttd uncle.r the rein of coich Chuck Morris and it's 1 freshman and iophomore d<lmintted aquad that •Ill try r itJ luck in Ora"11e Lupe circlta. ~ ,Despite:. ~ !•~k of •tlerana in c1mp :• Its Morm oplnM>n that bl.I varsity can ·~ place in the middle of Ole pack atitad &1: : Ll1Un1 Beach, Saddleb&a and Bre•. : And if the Trojana point their attack it • the lower levelt he ftt.1~ th•y cin ; enhance their po1iticn tvln better. : The beat all-round awlrnmer In camp i1 • junior Kevin Phillips, who werka thf: fly, : b1ck and M>me 1prlnt1. • Another 1ood sprinter ~ ...... Nick ; Blba, who ii stlD Involved in baalletball. ; Sophomore Kurt Ve.rtuzii is t nothtr • blut cltip p~ with h~ 51.1 tOO.y1..t l h'Mstylt ind 1:11 IOll lndo tla>u llA ( YW' provtdlnc blP u peclltioN fer UM , futurt. ~ l'rlllllmen lllrk Slevtn.1 flpthitl ) lftd l --eo_... Coqt:oyt lllo ) litm bd¥1Jy hi tN 1"j1M' pllnt U <lo ~ ...,_. lUll Ooaillr tny and inllt) ·, Ind-· llirlt ... Jeff Tliomls. l lit' nt•l11Ster i ' A rtlatlldJn& -Ion la In tloR tor " COICh Gtrald MaMkln ll Wtltmlnltar ~ HJ&h whorl tM LloNI IA ltlri"' lor tM i -lnlSttnoeli.aptwbn ....... " Mannion hu • very )"Uni tum WI~ ~ fmhmtn and"'"'soPhOfilorg dom lfttt1n1 lht 1 rotter. ~ TOI» omon1 lht Liou ii "'l>hom6rt Otvt Jut<lff. wlto tpld11izoo In llw diJlln<t 1r .. 11y1 ... Two other so;ltom°"" In tht lo14 ll't Mlltt Mull14Y llld Don &loJI 11 h llrtulllrelt• whllt ~. If I 1 Bllktl•Y and lralmao M11'1t lltnilio o~·~ 1n the lxrtt.rn, f" wes1m1ns1v ·--. I l I l Thursday Evening f [BM UAR't J l :OO 1J Bia: N11n Jerry Dunphy (J) News 811! Huddy 0 KN8C Ntws Tom Snyder Q rn Ntws 0 (6) Wiid Wiid Wtll ®J NllC Ne-s m Tiit FllntJtonta ID I Dream ol .1t1nnl1 (ij) Tht Silent Yttl'l ED Kodrepod11 Lo411 €D Notic1t10 l.4 @n DrMrt Report Oji Mayberry RFD 6;)0 0 PlttSI Oon'I £11 Ille D1lsle1 0 Movie: IC) (90) "Sp1nlsh All1Jt' (dr1m1) '58 -Richard Kiley. Ctr. men ~v1ll1. Ill CBS Hen Waller Cr011k11e l10) Hollywood Sq11are1 m And1 Grillith Show m N1nn1 Ind lht ,rof1uo1 fi) Pl1yint lht Gulttr ffi Wtndulusl C'i9i G11t11 Acrt1 (Ii) Vlvi1n1 Hcrtla11•1• 7:00 0 CIS N•ws Waller Cronk111 (3)ABC New1 Smith. Reasoner 0 a;, NBC Ne•1n Jol1n Ch1nc e!lcr 0 The Rllltm1n (i) T111th er Conlfq uences (fl Or11n1I 0 Whit's My Liner [9l Tom J011e1 Show m I love Luq fD I Drt tm of Je1nnlt ID Het~•roa• !I) Puentt dt Amor Q_~ film: "Double Indemnity" eJ M1ntr1p ' ·-m Truth or Coltlfit\llllCft fII ()]) N£T l'lttMllM liorrapfiy ~Harriet Bffcher Stowe" 1\l 1d1 pt1· llOft of !ht 1943 Bro.itw11 dram•. "Herritt."' ID El Sllow lit Loco Vtldfiz t:OO 0 (fJ CBS Thwrsd11 Movit; (10 (C) (2h1) "Huntus Are tor Klllln(' (dr1m1) ·69--Burt Reynolds, Mt lY)'n Oou111s, Martin B1l11 m, Suunne Pltsheue. L11ry Storch. Jill Banner, Peter Brown. A. youn 2 man ftlurns hom1 1het servmr 1n undeservtd pr1Y>n term lo collect his u[ll ttul sh•re of hlS mother's 11t1te. 0 :}Ql ffi lranlidt "Bubble, Bub· bit, Toil and Murder .. A nine-ye11· old "witch" and a mentall~ retuded letnager 11e invo!vfl'd in the IOt!lnr n! an apartment /louse m1n111r. Jodie fos1tr and Lei P1ul RUrst. 0 (3)(61 ffi lonptreet "Anati>- my of t Mayd.iy" Mlkt investi1a1es lh! d1sappearanc1 ol 1 friend 11 M t under su1piciou1 tin:umsiances. m Otvid frost Show Guests iocludt Carly Simon. Sh nley Myren H1ndlt · man and cast members of the .s.atul· cal revue, "The Proposition ·· iI} L1 Gita ti~ The Virainian C!:l No ltorts por Ml 9:30 D Hewsw1tth 10;00 0 @] g;, I JJfCIAl I XI Olympi1 Winlll' '1iames Hi2hli2Ms of !he d&y'1 most outstand ln2 even!s, via utel· hte, from Sapporo , J1p1n. 0 Hews George Putnam 7:30 0 a;, Rollin' 011 tht Rlnr Jt!On Robirds 1uestl. 0 CIJ @ @ 0 w 1 n Mal'lhall, Counse lo1 •t L1w "S.hln1 1 Liaht on Mt" Ja mes Btolin 2uests as Zich Jamison, an t •·lill'hter turned coun· hy rock singer, who is th arged with as.u ult wi!h 1 deadly wn pon-his lists-1fte1 he ett1tks 1 heckler. 0 G1m1 Gtmt m NtWI Pete Ml!!er, Ktn Jones m Saf1ri le Adttnlurt 0 Uult "Paaca Is Our Profession" Part II lassie tonlmues her e5tt- pade s w11h !ht S!11teaic Air Com· mand. ED @ World rteu eI) Viejo Si nYl!ra:uen11 CE fulbol·Slxter 0 Movie: (21hhr ) "Hurrlctntft 10;30 D C1ndld Camer1 (drama) '37-Dorothy Lamour. Jon fD News Hugh Williams Hall. Raymond Massey, Mary As!or. €!) Atroment1d1 00 To Ttll th• Truth OJ: fi lm: '1yphoon• CU I Dn 1m ol Je1nnt1 10:45 ED 1ffi David Littlejohn/Clltic 11 0 Miiiien S MO\llt: (2hr) •'Cry ol L1r11 B1ttJ1~ (drama) '63-Van Heflin Ri!t Moreno, J1mu MtcArthur. '11:00 I) m €[l Newn 0 ®.l ffi News O Ont Step h~ond @ Mtl'lhtll Dillon O @ @NIW1 m Ho11n'a Heroes ffi Ci) Or1a:n•t €D Newseekera m Upedaculo1 CE Movil G1mt !:00 0 ()l Mt ind the Chimp Buttons. lhe chimp. maers 1 r1rl·tl11mpl named Mildred in lht pu k 1nd Mike dec ides to tall on M11dred'!1 D Movit: "Gun Cm(' {drama) '50 -Peggy Cummins . .lohn Dall. m Truth or Consequence• m l ucillt Riott l'l @ Corwrntion Updtlt ED f irtnr Uni owner ... esoec1ally 1flu he meets 11:10 (E) Morit: ~Blur Mu1dt1 11 Sl Tri n· Mildred's beautiful Swedish baby.I i1n's" (comedy) '58-Terry·lhomas, sitter. AJastal1 Sim. 0 @) fD nip WlllOll Phil Sllv1rs., 11:15 ([I '1ir1n Cln1 dtl Jurm Barb1r1 Feldon ind B. B. Klnr join Fllp end hb ch1r1ct1r1. M11vln L•l· l l:JO IJ Cil w.,. ertm.i "Husbtnds i nd timer end C111rley -the a#lbr1 order Wi¥n" Wriltl'!·actora Rene T1,.ior cook. for an hour of CX1medy i nd i nd .loe Bolon•, ac!Of Ch1d [verett sona:. and Shelby Grant &nd tdOf Jot 0 (})@ (E) Allu S m 11 h 1 11 d Flynn 1nd wilt Shirley; wr iter Ru bin J011u '1 h1 Bia:a:est G1m1 m the Car\cn i nd wife Linda. West .. Heyts and Curry use $200.000 Q ®J @n Jo~nny Clt$0n Lee Marv- in coun!erleit money to ret into 1 !n, M1rilyn Horne 1uesr. htl!h sta~n poker 11me, only to be O MO¥ie; "The Sinister Mont'" blackmailed by 1 cmoked banker (my1tery( '67--Harold teipnitz 1111· and ro bbed by their old 111 nr. Roi:er in Dot, ' Da vis debuh in the role of Hannibal D r..-. 'i' n:'I Did c;, tt •-~ Heyes. ~»J ~J w ¥1 "'""rt Prm n 11uests. m ArHl1 '1iritfitb Show m Movif: "Sttrel ol ~vict Lilt" fD Bcxint from the Ol)'mplc Thur· (western) 'S I -Glenn fOfd, [!he! man Durden lakes on Ma rio Olmeda Barl)'more, Gene Tierney. In 1 1D·ro1.1nd we lterweia:ht battle. en Cityw1tdltn m Sonritaa (ID Nino 1;00 I) Movie: (C) "Sevin Wayi Fram SUndown" (western) '60 -Audit Murphy, Biii)' Sullivan. (]) 0 0 (!) @I Ne-s l ;JO I) Cl) My Thrtt Sltna A visit to the LJO m All·Ni(lrt Sllow: "Showdown 1t Oou1l11 home by one of her hus·I Boot Hill" ''Hous. ol Slrt aeri" band's aMleaRues hel1hlens K1!it's (C) "List' of thll B11tt1netrs'~ ' loneline:ss for lhe lather of her t1ip· tet~lill on assianment In Puu. 1:JD O News Friday DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 m "'Tht lnfonn•r" (drtml) '35 - Victor Mct11len. Preston Fostrr. 9:30 0 .,History h Mtdt tt Nl1ht" (dtt · m1) ·37 ~ Char!u Boytr, Jun Arthur. 10:00 ffi wit C1ilfJ"5 Ill TIMI" (comedy) '52-lrene Dunne, De1n J1per. 1:00 O "Welcome StJ1n1u" (comedy) '47-Blnll Crosb1. Jorn Caulfield. O (C) "Tht"'ai1 Show" (dr1m1) '61 -Esther Willl1ms , Cliff Robert~on. ID "Tht Udy h Willln(' {comedy) '42 -Fred Mat Murray, Ma rlen• Dietrich. 2:00 m (CJ "Mad About Men" Conclu· aion (comedy) '54 -Gl)'llls .lohns, M1r11rel Rutherford. J;OO (}) .. Prw ur1 l"olnr (dram1) '62- Sidney Poi!ier, Bobby Darin. @): (C) "Mister Cory" (dr.m1 ) •57 -Tony Curlis, M1r11!1 Hyer. 4:00 0 (C) "The Bii Clrcu1" (drama) '59 -Y-iclor Mature, Rhonda Flem· ''• 4:JG Cil S11111t tt lDAM llsth11 "Must be seen by anybody who really enjoys movies." •• SU -John khubKlr, ASC· TV A film by Bruce ( .. Endless Summer .. ) Brown Rated !Gj -'•• ,1oylnt ,... ,., ''THE HELLSTROM CHRONICLE" Feb. 2 through Feb. I 6,45 open Contlnuou1 R""nlng Show Sund•y 2:00 Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers • --- DA.IL'( PILOT S!1U Pho11 Two-part Butcl1ery TY Destroy s Great ~1o vie s' l 11i11act Oy RI CK OU Bf{OW llOLI. \'\VOOD ~UPP -Thr lnl'rl'ased lr[l'\'is1on use of I \.\'B•p<ir~ prPSf'nl<ih(ln,<; (\ r 11101·1t·s -divided u1> and sho11·n ,111 ~ur1·ess 1vf' rughts, or ('\'l'll with R ll't'('k b1.'!ll'l'l'll lhl' s~grnl'lll S -1"' an t'Aan1pll' nf nl't ,,.,·ork butvhtl'y O[ lll<LJOI' f1ln1s H 1s bad cnou~h \1·hcn h·!e11s1on "edJts'' 11 rt I u l ntt1\11e~ hi'forf' pu!ltng the11l <ln. ;ind then 1nsf'rts 11 plil,1.!Ut of c'<lnunercials to ruin !IH'J11 t'I l'n n1or£' And 1t 1o;; nl1th1 ng less than f'rim1n:il hn11· t't·rt;11n l11e;1I st.111nns hflck a11·av and eltn11nat£> rnl1rr srrtini1s nf SOUit' film" ctnt movie It is in thPRlf'rs. And now "'e Rre fR<'fd "1th other upcon11n1: ex111nples 11{ buteherv in thP .... :u11f' \ fl lfl. "Bi'll·l!lir," "11\_l·h 1tb11 11.1~ :1ho11n on R ~1 1f).:le 111 ~ht h~ ('US.TV, Jllld 11Hrl Rl'f'H! ln1r:1rt !hat \\'ay , will he reru11 h~ thr nf'l\\'Ork In \l\'{l VHl'IS nn F1·b l8 and 20. ''\Vesl Side Stury'' 1s st·heduletl 111 be bro1Hll'.1'il <1:; ;1 nutl11-r 11111 p;1r1t·r 1111 NBC T\'. \l;1rl'h l·l 111ul \;, In :i11 11u·r,~1t1hll' 1tu11'l'. 1\f\r 1'\'. "h1ch 1.., ll'l)()ib·i! 111 ha1t' paid riholll ~"• 1111\11011 fur !111' 1-: I 1 / ,1 hi'! h T;11101 fl1l·h;ird Bur1tu1·fl1';1. l!.11r 1....,11) i' p 11·. .. {'l('11p;l!J ,\ .. 11!11\' J\;i -; 1tl'l'Uh•rt to i 'lll 1t UJl :u11t 111 l'\l'I\! I{ Ill l\.\O parts. 1:,.h 1;1 ;111d 14 lhrl'e hours th(· f1r:-r n1.:h1. two the :-.c·ci111d 111111 rnul'h n'urc or a "Pf't1<1J 1l·le1·1s1on attr:1ct1on 11 11·uuld );t't•rn 1f 1! 1\'l'rt' $h01\'ll ;1s a si11glt•·1ughl blix:khusll'r. s;1enfit·1ng sun1r uf !hr l'Olllllll'ITl<ll~. :-1drr ho1\' plt';1:.a11t il ha5 hHn 111 s~t' f1 nr f 11tn~ hl..1• "Tht• lo.in~ <HKI 1" offt·n•d 1n nn t Pll'Cc so tl1<1t !11c1r rcputa\Jons Iii!\(' bt.'t'tl prCSt'r1·rtl. \\'hat 1!1t• nt't11 1•rh~ ~rf'n' In 011·rl11<1~ IS !h1• f:u·I 1111·1 111'111' dt•~tr111l•d tl u·1r 111),t~·· of 11 g<K•d rno1'i11 hv 1·u1t111i,; 1t up un1nt·r1·1rulll . !h1•\ u111!1 ·rru! II ~ c·orn1n~·n·1 :1I 1 ;,1111· 1111 1l11•1r 1111n tutur1' tl ~• '1'111• r;1t111g<. 1!,•n11"'fl nr 'Th1· l\111t1:r un th•· ltl\('r 1\11.u !1.1' pio \ f'd lhlll ~111111 p,111 lld1•() n!lt't lll~' ;ll'f' fllll' f11 J' ·lU )1 ~1'1 "'' ,I '\:11!1,tl\HI.!•" :t!ld \lt!lll' \\t•lh1 \1 ll" .tntt 1•1 1•11 <H'· \·t•p!alilr th•>ug h 11 .. 1 d1•-.u :1hl1• fur 1'rs:it1 1t•J,·1·1s11111 ' 11\11\ It'<.' 111..1· \ht' l .. 111· lh•llr t11v·n1}.:hl '\ .11ush1·d ·• 11h11·h \l(liild htllf' h,1d 11\HI •' llllp:u 'I 1111 ;i sini::lr -;110 111111i.:. Hut I 1lio<.C ;1rr · flr1I~ pr•"1ut·t11>11 j \11u·. fu1g1•t!atili· J1•lt'11s11111 p1·11~r;i1ns Ti1 t.111 1111·1 1111 1 11 1• (1lh1•r h,1111!, llli '•t 11\diPI' ,d l t'lllpt~ :ti Hll'lllHl ,dllt • t'll t1 •1 !a1111nr11t -.-.1>1111•11111r <: tl1a1 heconl<'S p:1r1 ,if 11!1· 11,1 111111111 le~a1·~ 1 ~ u11 Stveet l1111ocence Hut \hf' final hurntl1abn11. in a \\'a~. is 11he11 a net"·ork l;1kl's a mo11on p1cturr that n1ay ha\'e hecn conc£>ived And prrsentf'd on a grand scale in it." ori gin11I thrati·r fnr1n . and then rcduees il 10 llif' size of ;111 £>1o ng<i tcd tf'tr1·1!'-I011 show -spread 011! over !if'\'f'l'a[ 111ghts. "'hat was· f' p ! 1' hccon1l'-. p1nl -siZ!'d, its in1;1~r din1in1shcd nnt 11nly hy th £> n'111iHlur£' hon1e screens bul by thf' reduction of its impact to that of A n1er£' 1·ideo "special." ()1111 al1nu.~1 11·ish£'~ thri! ;i fd111 l1kt• "l;Pllt' \\'1!h lhr \\'1111i'' is 111'\'t•r :11·qu1rt•d f11r lt•lc11 s1011 shu 11'1ng . ht•v:111~c lhl'l't' 1s l1!tl1• <loubl thflt 11. 1t1<f. 1vould havr 11.<; gloriou ~ 11n~1g<' tarnishC'd harllv br rn1 <;h;i111tl· iii~. And. nrrdie~s-to !<>:'11 . Ir-;~ f11rg1\'e:ihl1• itnprcssivf' 111ovies ~uffr·r 1hr piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•••- Ri ~h ard Do\v casts a loving eye on his in tended bride. F.llcn Robinson. in a scene fro1n the Irvine Community T heate r musical. .. The t\1norous Flea," openin g Friday on lhe UC Irvine campus. And, furlhf'rmorf'. 1\'hal nn inconv<'ntencr it is for v1r11·crs 11•ho have other plans for one or the nights that the l w~ parter is on. \Ve recrntly had a sad ex· an1ple of how a great movie can have 1!s in1Age destroyed sa111c but i·hcry -as. !or e~ arnple, "]cf' Station 'l.l'hr<l." which ARC ·rv will prcs1•nt in t1vo parts th is coming Sunday a nd i\lond<ly nights. But i·un- " ... w• w•r• ainlt.ing f•sr•r ._ • '; .. l/'t• WIVIS ...... ,.. 35 f••t •bov• us .. • ~ .. more 1111d mo,. sh11rk fin• c:11tt1n9 th• wat•r. • ---THOR HEYERDAHL Mon. lht\> lh,o~ tor,m ''~o.1>6'XI P .M. Jono.Clo..do "111• ~" l<•r •••• "'SHOW JOI" !G'I •Color ""' '""' "-·· '" "COOL MI ND LUI(" 51.DO PER CA.JI LOA O [RI Und•r 11 muu H W/P•,...,, 1. o,.. c ....... "D .. 1W1 w; • .,H11) 1 ......... 101~ .. sr ...... ,,....,,,) 3. Cin4y & Oo='":::"o'="=:::' l--..... """'"'"-1 e 11-•010 l'i '"'"c' ''"l~~•..,••U '""I N!W.10,N • t"nlo• "WME TlMES a tOal&T JllOl lOfll• (G, Plu• lronk 51NA!AA • C<>ic• '1>11Tl DIN,US MAGi i" (GP! ..... °"""'''"" , __ ~·­.., .• ).j ro'~"•""•i•• c-1. "CAIJllAl! l'NOWlfDGl" rt) 1. "IAITMll'fa" (I ) (•lo~ l. PollJ D•kt. "Ml, NAT All!" (G'J 'f een Actin g Co1u·se Set Another tet.!nagers' 1hr- <1lrit:nl workshop \viii he or. fercd by Bowers rvtuseun1 Hl San la Ana under lhe rutorsh1ri of South Coast Repertory ac- tress Saundra Ma l h c w s· Dencon. Under the t 1 11 e "im- provisational workshop," the eight weekly s<'sslons are i:cared to bring out latent :ic· ting talent 11nd :ib1!1ty. The classes are for young people from 13 to 17 years. The session~ \\'111 begin i\lnn- day. i'o1arch 6, from 4 to 6 1> rn . at Torana House adjacent to the. museum parking loL There will be a li init of 20 students. Further information may be obtained by calling 834-4024. for many viewers. The rilm l.ia!l:lll'fuil!Ci!f!dif 11•as "1'he Bridge on the River I, Kw ai,'' and CBS-TV presented d . d.d --~ J .. ~ 5m\th'• it as a two-parter, an il 1 , )......,,.l(:.,s..,.n Wonders I nol <lo well in t he ratings. 11 is ':'>. ~:-"'. ol _t.h• .W~1t I true 1hat !hi s rnotion pic ture If,~ ...... :;1-1,...... 1,, .. ,, ... ··ee" ,, oumber of lt~·: '·• " j 111nes onvidt'oby now,and its 1 ,., ~·\" ... .. .. " ~,. 1')~· ~ in1;114c ha s bet'n w<illnpcd. ,.,,_.,~... LG· ...... ~:,.,., I \Vhf'n first shown some ·-......... , .... ~ -·-·~~· I vcars hal'k . on ABC.TV. it was Wl'dnadar-7:J O Ir ':JO Presented in one piece. and Mci1111-Saturdcir & g;11nrd ;i lren1endous rating,l~=======--o-----' v•hich in turn opened the floodgates for movies on television as the networks sud· drnlv went into a bidding frrnZy lo acqui re notable filn1s. If nnylh1ng. "K1vai" h<ld its 11nage onlv sli ghtly tarnishc bv its origin,1\ l'idC<l exposure ___:_ and. on the other hand. still h;id impart eno ugh to enthrall rn lllions. But now consider it. In its last, re<:ent CBS.. TV two· pal-t. outing, it carried little weight, yet what a magnifi- TUE5DAY Woller Mcillhau "KOTCW '. Jock Lemrno11 WHALE WATCHERS! "THE Commencing J.n. 8 lwwk.n<k only) orNV·• Loc:k1r wta affer 2 Wh•I• W1td>in9 Trips 1itd1 dl'f luvino 9 am ...ct 1 pm from me Bllbot Ptvilion, 400 Miiin StN 881bot. T•l.P-,OM f714)673-fi245 Fw1: $3.00 Adulu : $2.00 Cttildr., 12 80d imdi9t' ODD COUPLE" You must see RA ! An astoundin g 1rue -lite adventur& for t ho whole family! l!NDS TUESDA"f South Coast Plaza I Sci11 Dlefjo f111'y. al lrl1tol 54•·2711 l of. & l u11,: 1·J·J·7-' P m , Wt•lr 01y1: J.7.f p m Mesa Costa Civic Pl ayhouse "BLITHE SPIRIT" RUTH GORDON "HAROLD AND MAUDE " (GP ) W••kdor• 011• S.t. J:JO Op•it "LAST SUMMER " (RJ So.i11. l:lo 6:45 •• No~ Co111'Gfd J•n 11 11. 11 · l '; -=•~. t J I ~°''''''l· •l f VALLEY : ORIYl·IN • -...... , .. , *11•11 WEST GATE -ORANGE COUNTY FAIRGROUNOS I FINAL WEEK • • • ·'r'"'' 1: •• ,,,.,.,..., , ,..,,r.,.,.,.,(nln• "'nlAMOHDS Ill ro11vrr ,,,, r•u• "Wllot'1 llt1 Ma lltr Jfltlo 1't1H" {GP l,,.J,. /lM"'I /lr ll"/~I'•~ 0..1•" >lollm"" • Cnl"' "STllW DOGS"(a) Plu• "'lm Kill Ju.SKA toDU.TP'(CP) ..... -.... ·""-~ ·-"'·'212 I lido lol~NAOt-otllM ­.. 1-1•'" IM• lolo -Of . >•.UO New York's Cr itic Award HELD OVER AGAIN THE FRENCH CONNECTION 1!!1-00.M BY "'LUXE" Loo tat.y.Foz : WALT DJ5 N EY'S it $ongof~ the South Als. W•lt Dl.-,'1 "NEVER A DULL MOMENT" Co11tl11•on Show Sert.' S1t1. ftolft 12:)0 "The Great -Great Shoo.,11" FABULOUS ENTERTAINMENT HELD OVER ONE EXTRA WEEK -THRU SAT. ONLY Sen11tional Sounds of Yesterday and Today MIKE & LENI AND THE AREA'S ZANIEST ENTERTAINER ROSCOE HOLLAND Now in his 9th year at Kon1 OUTRIGGER ROOM KONA ··LANES 2699 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA , ALSO IN RIEPIRTORY: A ••V•llC, <O ... >( ......... •t mo hv,...t •liv o• f>ll!Ptl(• •"4 !ht m>I· W•d. & Th ur. I p.111. ~'!? Jbuth oast Re ertor The $240.000 Alpine copet J~·QAUDE KILIY in M§JN:Kro .~-Pa,..,,.,..o-.~ T••d,riicOC.O• ~· l•(Ylllflatr>"rB'O' /I K"1rll"/Con'>p1V1'1..,, fO UITl llt #l VAILIY l l'· 1 SOD TITAN FUllllffOll 1,1.ss1s l A·MAll l D.I, 171-11•2 PAUlD Do.I. cosra MISA S4J.lll l lA MllADI WAl KIH $ll·•••o $1A DIUMD.L 011111110( •3t-177D ' ' "l'/llAI 00 VOii 'f• f 10 A Nl1Y I I! I AOY?" ADlJllS Ott..( lOG I ,1.1111.NllM •)6.1111 "l l:l)IO~OIS .t.tfO llOOM ST +c:kS" 11t11• Lw111, 1111 --. -·;10 SIAD/UM " I .'/,' • .-n!m"W-•1 ·~ -- -... SIAD/UM •/ .'I,' ...... .Tll ..... W:::•t-==--- -..... SIADIUM •J :.;· .. _,.~!:'TT"~ ---r.;. SIAD/UM ·4 : :; . --· ....... ··-- "YOUllJ, MINtl ANO OUlll" M1Mf1M 1•1, 111111 ktl. Jtlln lllllW "INOW JOtl" !0,) .. ,_ "•111 N•"'lftfll "COOL HANO lUl(I'" fO"I "l lLLl' JA.CI!," 10"1 -"MONTI' Wll1H" ..,.~ ,.,_.. c-•'...,'' c111 -"'V1nl1lillflt ...int" 1•1 "L"y •11111 lfll t t•m,.. 1•1 •·•A lo-It-" AU 111 (•II• DAILY PILOT l!l.! l RD GRIA I WUK George C. Stoll IN "THE HOSPITAL" I GPJ • •••• c ..... ., .... ~ .... . ••• CO .. •• ....... • .... D •O•O .. ..... 8•J 'ileQe o .. V ...... QTON ••• , .. ENDS TUESD AY ·:1 TWIGGY ,. Tl1f8()l' fDltND I •1Ut toolll or 1A11 111110 fWl' ENDS TUESDA Y fl8. 8 l!<M•\Ml~!JI•• "'""''"'''"-"' FRIENDS Jnd Hit -, tin-s11111r1 "LA.OY !N CliMl!Nf •• I TAllTS WED 'El , t Du1t111 H•llm111 I• "I TRA.W DOCS'' "°'""' "' '''"' 1 < ·•o """" , I•• IU, -.............. ""' ·~"· "' ·-....... . ~Oll'''"'•ll"'I'''' ~O,,•I ~orl•j •I THI STIUNG IH Of MANKIND HAS ALWAYS lllfN HS WOMEN. "I HI: Tl\.C)IAN :-WOMEN" " • " '" ,, ,, I " ·' ,, IGPI ~ I ·" ltJ , l <<t't'Pl .~ Wflf•1•1!1~ lo CIOU)I" wttf • .. , f6t l ...... N GA•n•• a•o". ,A.'"''"·~·· .. , EXP£Dl110NS "' "' I . ' 1~0 t•fOn G~ir ·•1•1 1111 5 11111 (OllD•·111tOOl lft AMlf" t· I lfA•llWlt.111.e Altfl • W11/1 ();.,,,,, .,,; ,, " .. "Ml'lll A DU l l MOMlNT" I STAITSWl D.fll.t ·"ON l I DAT IN l Ml LIJI or , I, IVAM DINISOVICN .. IGr) I :'t ..._ C. "· '.' PILOT T.1ursd;ay r ebruM"J" 3 1'11.: i· ~ r .\ TRACY ----- : TUMBLEWEEDS ! SO PACK UP IVLJR RUJlllLE IN VOLJ~ OLP KNIT 1!,\G A~P Gf;T iOu HENCE, llOVINJ:-80'(. IM GIVING-YOU E~ACTlY 10 MINUTES TO E;J;f OFf OLJR LAND OR SUFFER f tff CON5£QUENCE5. . . , MUTI AND JEFF WHAT CON5E:QOEl-l:E'S? THE SAME THING AS YOU, HO NEY '/OU REALLY MEAN IT, . ~·t t • fl1r,ro • • .... r.11',A:;. ~ , . Chester GoL~d • ·"'S • •·~.-;ra:., Bv Tom K. Ryan I MAY BE fORC fD TO SNUB YO(), OR AT ])ir VfRY LJ'AST, NFJt-R w~1ir TO YOLJ AGAIN! By Al Smith O.K . f.IOWABOUT 'l'L Af .. C:R DUMP rTJNTO 'eic>tLIN' SPRING!!° SALLY BANANAS GORDO T>IEC-1 D01J1f .\\AKE WOW.~'·n1API'. ·nur~SOAP ir ~ T~{AP., 1-JOW TO CLEAN Tif HIDE OFt· A F.Ll 'l'·PHLH-.1 r .'! NE1'.T VJf. GOTTA 1.UA.E f.l'OC>N8E.AM OUTO't~ER ~~AING WAI.Lt:~ ArJ IHTO 1r- • r L By Charles Barsotti ''·~~~ I i'.-ai& ~ trnt5. I f<Cc..~ f f\6W -~' ) _.,,. \'\C~Y - . 0, J1!5 ~ 4jrsrf--,.,U. By Gus Arriala SJ GA<:!? J---7r-1 A f\AM AND CHEESE ON R'IE?,cr.-..:'....j 1.\0\/lt:.S LIKE Tt-le_v' t lSE.0 IO! ' " .. , . ' ,. , .. <" .. . ·' ~ ., ,. ,. ·. .,, '-" •• ... ' . ' .. ... •• , .. ,. .,. ,,. ,. •• .. ,. " ,, • '" '" .. ;, ' ' • ' ; •• FIGMENTS PLAIN JANE .r, I -. ,, ,\ ... "'' . ~-... " ~ .• l ~ '!~ ': ~ ~ ,f '~ 1",•, .,.,,,~~.~-;:::· .... ":.~''"' ' . •By Frank Baginski ~'E:A~2 TIE­i\~A.CroNA1-C." J'-C>- CAK IE ! 0l)"/ K1a6f'f'! :. ·j MOON MULLINS I . /, ~ . ''· '! "t ,. ' ~·· . , .... CHASING. MEN A6AIN,;:rANE ?! NOPE,GLORl"- RLINNIN6 ..... C RACl<-1<-k ANIMAL CRACKERS . .. ··: .,., ..... ' .. GOi .1. 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'I\. foim S7 -·· P~lrn~s 12 ll PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER .. - MISS PEACH PERKINS ~ . ' \JELL 1.:ov COULD WR1Tf A NICE l;>\C T~Ll LETTfR A':iKI~ 1r: A~lf'TH1"0 -. ../, 1'7 Wti'ONt- l{ t() YES . ANP :X: DON'T KNOW WHETH•I< TO ....... tNSULTft> OR. Netr ... roo. DD • -}ii,, .... ..i: .................... ,.. - By Charles M. Schulz .. . ; NOW FOR THE ;; TACTFUL PARL By Harald Le Doux YOU'RE SURROUNPEP ! .\ PROP YOUR WEAPONS ! ,, By Mell By John Miies THE Gt'." S . '. -f ,;,- -------:Y ''You ~·on't think ten dollars an hour is high ~·bta J tell yo u llow kind be. is-during lunch, be sat and chatted wllh me for ovtr three bours." .1 ) .. I I l Soviets Eye Long-term Space Goals By AL ROSSIT~R JR. 1.1 .. 1 IN<• Writtr CAPE KENNEDY IUPIJ -A govern- ment report concludes that the Soviet spece program Is a strong, going en- terprise with the potential for manned nights lo Mars before the end of the cen- tury. The study, prepared by the Library of r..-0ngress for the Senate Space and Aeronautics Committee, al so said Ru ssia could proceed with a manned landing on the moon sometime in the 1970s and have a reusable space ,;huttle by 1985. "One cannot be certain about the future,'' said Or. Charles Sheldon, chief <>f the library's science policy research division. "But as of now, there is every indication of a continuing jSoviet) com- mitment to maintain a high level of ac- tivity and investment in a long-term, orderly development of space science and technology." The recently published study, com· pleted last June, is based on unclassified documents and Soviet statements and an· nouncements. Sheldon said the Russians are now · more active in unmanned earth orbital . scientific missions than the United States : "and there is no indication of any early : change in this situation. . "Hence, over a period of time when~ ; the United States once could pride itself as having made a large number of significant contributions In this field, such leadership seems likely to pass to . their Soviet colleagues." As far as civilian app!icalions·type spacecraft -such 'as weather and com· munlcations satellites -is concerned, Sheldon said the Russians were !ale-com- er~. But he predicted more and better ac- tivity in this field from Russia in the future. The largest part of the Soviet space program, Sheldon said, is devoted to mllit.11.ry applications with the highest priority going to photographic observa· tion of earth. , He said the Soviet military space pro- gram goes beyo nd America's by having te sted orbital bomb carriers and a possi· bte s a t e 1 1 i t e interceptor-destructor system. The report said Russian unmanned moon exploration ls expected to continue, and Sheldon predicted the Soviets would take advantage of most launch op- portunities in the next few years to send robot spacecraft to !\-tars and Venus. As for manned spaceflight, Sheldon s.11.id the Soviets appear to be aiming to- v.•ard establishing a permanent euth orb. Ital space station around 1974. It is expected to be used for a variety of scientific and practical purposes. If Russia proceeds with such a space stalion, Sheldon said development of • reusable space shu ttle transport to supply it would seem likely. lie said the most likely lime period for such a step would be between 1975 and 1985. The United States plans to fly a space shuttle in 1978. The study found ample evidence to show that in the mid·1960s the Soviets thought they were going to be the first to land men on the moon. Priorities then were shifted, but Sheldon said the Russian manned moon program does not appear abandoned. lie predicted a Ian· ding between 1973 and 197'. The long-time specialist on Soviet space efforts said manned flight to the planets has always been a long·range goal of the Russian space program. "It is probably most realistic to estimate a Soviet expedition of 20 or so men to Mars in the 1990's, '' he said. U.S . Paperwork Escalates Fast 111 Washington By MICHA EL POSNER WASIUNGTON (UPI) -Washington, a one-time swamp on the Potomac, he.11.ds into its 182.nd year supported on an ever· iJ'owlng mountain of paper and words. After World War II, the Hoover Com· mission, looking into g o v e r n m e n t organization, said that if all the paper ~­ ed by the government were piled up each year. a man could walk a sla.lrway to the moon. Today, he probably could make it to Mars. Although the new year is less than two months old, the domestic word and paper production. as usual, is escalating. President Nixon delivered to Congre!ll not one but two State of the Union :; messages. One half-hour speech was :: glven in person. And lo case anyone was in doubt what :: he said, he delivered to Con,a:re:M thou.sands of copies of • 15·,000.word message, erpanding on the main polntl. There will be another big me&Nlt - one devoted to the world, situation - following the economic message, of course, the budget. The President's budget breakdown ran only 1,111.1 paaes thls year. pmumably refiectlng Nixon's lower budget dtlldt !or fiJCal 1973 or 125.5 billion. Last yur'a budget book ran 1,112 pages and that oodg<t d<lid t com" to '31.1 billion. Nert come the Dtmocratl. They couldn' Id Nlmn get 1w1y with e''en one State of the Union rmssage without a reply. So, they al.aged an hour- \. long t.aJUl.hon on naUonal teJevillon. with · a new gimmick -telephoned questions trom ll1lenus. That acalattd the word count, too. The telephone company aay:ii that JOO,ooo JllOllie caUtd looc dbtance, oot cmly m aot on tilt air. N ote Frona Nixo1i Fourth grader Christine Detzel received a letter from President Nixon, thanking her for a birthday card on his birthday, Jan 9 - the same day as Christie's own birthday. The Jetter wishes the ten· year-old "health and happiness in the year ahead." Christie is the daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Detzel, 22701 Fernwood in El Toro. ·uerb Superb' Garlic Mciy Replace Har1nful DDT WASlllNGTON (UP I) -It has been :said that "garlic breath can kill at 40 paces." It isn't true, of course. The lethal range is much shorter. actually, although some residual doubt persist! that any human being ever died Crom inhaling fumes from a garlic eater. Another old notion -that garlic kills bacteria and has other medicinal pro- perties -was long considered by skep- tics to belong in the category of o!d wives' tales. But whatever garlic's effect on humans may be. it now seems to have been established that its .. active principle" is death to mosquitoes and may even turn out to be a safe substitute for DOT as a general pesticide. Prompted by the general di.srepute into which our has ra11en, two Indian scien· tists started a search for a harmless replacement. They settled on garlic because its "non· toxic nature ... to higher animal! has been establi shed on the basis that it has been used for edible purposes for a long time." Its medicinal value to people also has been extensively studied. Previous research by D. D. Greenstock of the Henry Doubleday Research Association of Braintree, England, had shown that garlic oil could destroy aphids. cabbage, white b utter f I y caterpillars, and Colorado beetle larvae. The Indian scientists, S. V. Amonkar and A. Banerji of the Bhabha Atomic Research Centre. Trombay, discovered that garlic oil also was deadly to at least four species of mosquitoes. In a recent issue of the technical journal, Science. they reported that they isolated, identified, tested, and syn- thesized the "active principle in garlic" responsible for its lethal effect on mos· quito larvae. The}! also found that this ''active prin· ciple," in natural or synthetic form. is "antagonistic" in tiny concentrations to •·several pests of economic and medical lmportance 1t1ch u i>0tato tuber moth, red cotton bug, red palm weev il, houseflies, and mosquitoes." Amonkar and Banerji decided tha t garlic's Jong history as an edible established its safety for human con· sumption. "This, together with the wide range of activity of the oil , suggests." they said, "that garlic oil or its active principle, whether natural or synthet ic. could be us~ ed as pesticides." Latest Hijacker Linked To Robert Kennedy Plot DALLAS, Tex. (AP) -1''ational Archives documents show that Garrett B. Trapnell, the man shot and ca ptured Saturday following the hijacking of an airliner in New York, was questioned by FBI agents concerning a plot to kill former Atty. Gen. Robert F. Kennedy . Federal agents were told Aug. 19. 1963 that Trapnell met with three Cuban refugees planning to kidnap and kill Robert Kennedy. The statements were given by Trapnell. The Dallas News reported Tuesday in a dispatch Crom its Washington bureau that the material Is contained in 23 pages of documents on file at the archives. The FBI questioned him again Nov. 23, 1963 -the day after President John F. Kennedy was assassinated -at which time he susstituted the name "Oswaldo" for one of the Cuban refugees with whom he said he met in Miami. Fla., in May 1963. Trapnell later denied hls story. saying he fabricated it to confu se and com· plicate facts surrounding a bad check charge lodged atainst him a t Chestertown, Md. 1'rapnell once was hospitalized in a f\.faryland hospital from where Dr. Oscar G. Prado wrote an opinion of Trapnell for Uie courts. 1'rapnell "is a menace to 50Clety" by virtue or hill psychotlc-inaane mental ill· ness whose prognosi.!J for fuU recovery ia very poor," Prado wrote. Latu! Rush? Mission Valley Developing Fast SA.i"l DIEGO (A1)) -The Spaniards who claimed ca!Jtornia two centuries 1go went directly to the lush. winding \'alley carved through the ages by a meandering r iver. On a grassy knoll three n11les fron1 sea, ~tission San Diego de Alcala was founded -first of 21 churches launched along the California coast by Father Juniper Scrra. The old n1lssion which overlooked the San Diego }liver still serves as the Serra Museunt but the original buildings y,•ere relocated five miles farther inland where the irrigation and farming were better In between, lies ti.-fission Valley. y,•host transformation into a major metropolitan center in a fla s h of time. comparatively, has surprised even city planners. The result already rivals downtown San Diego a few miles to the south and there are those who expect it to overtake 11 Private developers since 1960 t1ave poured at least $120 million into the five- mile stretch between the two old missions. The vegetable stands along a t\\·o-1ane road have been replaced by tourist towers. expensive restaurants a n d nightclubs. high·rise office buildings and showcase automobile lots. And the road has turned into eight-lane Interstate 8, which carried 129,000 cars daily across one counting point in 1971 and nearly 1:>0,000 by 1972. After 1960. !\fission Valley became a major cast-we st travel center with the opening of lnterslate 8. In thrff more months. a massive $21.6- mil\ion interchange will open, linking up with Interstate 5 on two sides of San Diego. A spectacular, 3,900-foot·long bridge of Interstate 8~5 straddles the vallef some 100 feet below. To the west not far from h-tission San Diego de Alcala, sits the $27-million San Diego Stadium, where an average of S0.000 fans watch National Football League games and far fe wtr $et' National League baseball. To the west of the original n1is$ion , sits the $7-milhon Sports Arena. \\hith \\'Ill hold lhe Repub!lcan National Conventfon next August. The fancitst shopping centers In San Diego lure $hoppers into the valley th.at bisects California's se<:ond·btggest ('ity from its Claremont and other re sidential developments to the north . By \ate nel!.I year. an $3-mlllion ne~·spaper planl vdll house the Union· Tribune Publishing Co., moved after .a century downtown. r.1ost or the hotels are in f\.fisslon Valley nOY.'. 1\:ith lavish new ones planned. Into the ~Iay Co. department store complex alone. an estimated 25.000 sho~ pers crowd daily . The nearby Fashion \111!ley <"enter draws about 20.000. The volun1e of business has ('lHnb«I stendily in both. Today, a decade after cattle grazed on Mission Valley 's grassy slopts. land values range from $100,000 lo $225 ,000 an acre. "There are still a lot of oppo rtunities to open lakes and parks up the 1•alley. ·· says James Fairman. an associate or Wilsey & Han1, a planning and engineering con· suiting firm, But opponents of the fast development say it's already too late to talk of estheUcs. Or. John A. l·lobbs, professor of political science al San Diego State College at the east-end of Mission Valley , says there are those who feel "Mission Valley has largely been ruined." But pe<iple are still swarming to it, tak- ing over sparkling new apartment towers and condominiums. buying and renting hotel rooms, dining and dancing. A visitor, in fact, could spend a busy week in it and go home never seeing anything else. Huntington Bu s Drivers Get New Look-for Safety By RU DI NIEDZIELSKI 01 ltlt D•llY P'lltl l l•tt School bus drivers from the Huntington Beach City (elementary) School DlltrlG.t claim they have made pupil transporta- tion safer. And they're ready to prove it in black and yellow. Thal ill the color of the new uni forms the district's drivers have been wearing since the beginning o( the school year. The result? Traffic viol ations from driver failure to stop for students getting off the bus have been reduced by 91 percent. "It's so simple, it's just common sense," says f\.trs. Virginia "Buzzie" Barnes, a five-year bus driving veteran who is pushing the new color :iicheme. "I don't see why someone didn't do something about it years ago. As far back as I can remember, school buses have been painted a bright yellow and al l we are l!IUggesting Is a standard uniform of that same color," she said. The golden yellow shirts. contrasted against black trousers. are claimed to be an inexpensive method of catching a driver's eye and signaling him to stop when children are being picked up or discharged from buses. Mrs. Barnes said that since 1966 there has not been one pupil fatality in a school bus in California, but that there have been nine fatalities and 207 injuries while student! were boarding and disem- barking from buses. The Huntington Beach color scheme, endorsed by the California Associatk)n or School Transportation Officials, has now been borrowed by six other school districts throughout the state. On the recommendation or Mrs. Barnes the slate Department df Education Technical Co mmit tee on Pu pl I Transportation Is now studylnc the con· cept of standardlzing the uni(onn OAILY ~ILOT 1111! ~llete MODELING NEW ATTIRE Driver Sevey Wllll1ms throughout California. Before 'the final un iform color was chosen for Huntington Beach, extensive tests were conducted using several col· ors. Golden yellow won out because it was the most consistently distinguishable in good or bad weather. The golden yellow . according to Mr:ii. Barnes, was identifiable at distances of I,000 feet and one half mile when all other colors were obscured or only seen as gray or black. "Perhaps we're putting too much emphasiJ on this whole idea," Mrs. Barnes said, "But we don't think so. If a simple and Inex pensive plan can reduce the accident risk for our children -if it ssves ju.st one lift, it would be worth It, no matter what the cost. Commodity Program Irks Se11;1tor By PAUL ANDERSON SEA'ITLE, W8'h. [UPI) -When 1,000 paunds of noodles , rice and other foodstuffs from Japan arrived on the. Seattlt docks last December, Sen. War· reo G. Magnuson ([).Wash.), arose In wrath. The 1tate's senior senator wasn't angry at the good people of Kol>e, Seattle'• Sister city, for sending food to the hungry lamUI" in the economically depreued Puget Sound region. He wu more than mlfled at hi.a own covernment, 1pecifically the Department or Agriculture, for rtfu.slng to open Its stort.s of aurpius foods to the needy in the SeatUe, Tacoma and Everett areas. The deportm.m had taken the position that because the food st.amp program wall operating In lhoae anu, the govern- ment could not alao distrlbute surplus commodltl<I. "In one simple humanitarian gesture, Japan hai1 made a mockery of our pious clalrrui of being a nation dedicaftd to ,.rvlng the cauoe of human dJcnlty and concern for the well-being of our cltlzens," MagnUllOf'I told colleaguts. 1' I have served ln the United Slates Senile for over 2S years and In aU that time I have never felt dlsgraeed by my govemmenl But today I 1tand an lhe floor of lhe attat"t d.Ubu1Uve body In the world in total humiH.11.tion." That afternoon, new Secretary of Agriculture Earl Buti reversed bi1 department's stand and ordered a dual food stamp aocl commodities dlstribuUon program for three we.stern Wa:iihington counties. Previously, t'J). District Judge Will iam Bub In Se.att}~ ruled in a suit brought by legal services that the Agriculture Department acted unlawfully In refusing to allow both food stamps and com- modity programs to operate In the state. DtspJte the ruling, local officials feared the department might appeal. Butz' decision put those fears to rest. and Washington. whose unemployment rate of 12 percent is twice the national avttace.. became the state where oeedy peraons e1n choose either the food stamp program or apply for surplus com· modi Uc. The argument ror the dual program ctntered on the fact that some of the hungry needed the commodttiia becaUH I.hey could not afford to buy (ood stam ps. When tbt Ur1t commodlly outlet open- ed In Seattle'• central area Dec. 30. Rose Madara and her two children were the nm 1n 11ne. "I think th~ i. 1 good deal ," she said. "Tho llUl'J!lua food la 1 good substllut• for what you Id with food 11amp1. I think these things will last me a couple (lf months." Since Ulen, distribution centers in Seat· Ue, Tacoma and ENe rett have been glv· Ing food s ranging from peanut butler to powdered eggs, dried frulta to c-.nned meat, cheese to rice, ttl ao average of more than 1,200 penona per day. Al Sea!Ue. patrona puah lhopplng cam through a former supermarket stacked with bo1es full of canned and p1cklged foods. A chart tells how much each faml· Jy is allowed to take. Despite the newness of the dual stamps-commodlUea program, Mary [.(lu Everaon, who Is In charge of the com- modity program for the Washington Stale department of &0eial and health services, aald her office has had inqulrle:ii from othtr states and from other areas of her state-. Out lht combination of food stamps, commodity distribution and stale wel(are programs doe1n1t take care ol all joble1s families who don 't ho11.ve ash for food. Many unemployed are hlgbly skilled and professional persona "ho lost their job& when the Boeing Co. trimmed its payroll from more than 100,000 to about 3!,000 the past three years. For example, the family of a fonner Boelng englneer with an equity in 1 !30,000 bouH and two cars isn't ellalble for food 1tamp:ii, surplus commodities or atate public as&istance untll he ha1 used up resources that can be converted readl· ly into cash. When his ready re90urce1 a n d unemployment compensation are ex- hausted, he is forced to look for charity. A voluntetr, sell-help organization, Neighbors In Need, wa:ii organized in late t97t> to help such persons, throueh diltrlbutlon of food donated by residents in the area. Thou!and1 of famllle:ii have been Un.Ing up each week at the S8 Neighbors In Need food bank1. The organization as)(s no Questions or those in line and doesn't require anyone to produce proof of n~. assuming that virtually everyone accepting the free grocerie:ii is: hungry. St.eve WUJlams, an official of Neighbors In Need, said the volunteer proa:ram needs to continue. "The only people 1urplu1 food Is 1oln1 to help are those who qualify for food slllmps but ca.n't afford to purchase them," he said. "Donations (to Nel&hbors in· Need > have :iilacked off. Peopfe feel the oetd ii over," ht said. "But we are lt\U serving a:l.OOJ people a month and we don't want to tum our backs on peoiile who are very much In dire 11r1l1a.' DAILY ~ILOT DAIL V P'lt.OT Siii! 1"""9 SHE LIKES PEOPLE Conte1t1nt O.KeyMr Count:y Queen Candidate Out To Meet People \Vhy does n girl enter a beauty con\e!!t? Is it because she is vain? A1nbiliousr Looking for money? Nol if she's Carol DeKeyser. Hun· Lington Beach's repre&entative in the Feb. 17 Miss Orange CoWlty Beauty Pageant. lier main interest ls in meeting dif· ferent people. "Of course l want to win ." said !\tis!! De.Keyser, "but l hope to get a lot out ot the contesl even if I'm not crowned Miu Orange County.'' As the Orange Coast College freshman sees it. she s!ands lo profit in al least t~o w;1ys . Firsl, as a drama rnajor, she hope11 meeting people will help build lhe poise she wi ll need for her anticipated career ()n the professional stage. But more impartant, she just liked making new friends. "The be!lt part of the Huntington Beach pageant was aJI the wonderful people J met and will remember for the rest ot my life," she said. "I hope to me('! even more in the county contest." Entrants in the ti.1iss Ornnr:e Counly r.t'lnlest will be jud&ed tlot only on lhe lradilinnal grounds of physical beauty, hut on the basis or such qualities as friendl iness and talent. As a freshman at 1-tunHngton Beach , lli&h School Miss DeKeyaeT w~ cho&e.n tht school'! ouutandlng actrese. Sinte then she .bll won two 'dram a scholar:iihlps. She Is tentaUvely plaMlng to go on to UC, Irvine atter finishing II occ. . "l think beauty con(estants should be Judged on more than just ou tward heRU· ly," said Miss DeKeyser. who certainly is far from .!lhort on good looks. "Other qualities such as talent, personality, friendliness -things that tell about lhe inner person -de£initely should be taken into account." Having p~y,ed just about. every kind of dramatic role from a stngfng. dancing teen-ager In "Bye Bye Birdie" to the groping, silent Helen Keller of "The Miracle Worker ," Miss OeKeyser hope.ii that her dramatic presentation rnay 1nake the difference in comp.!l1l1ur1 against les:ii accomplished be8uty queeus. But whet.htr or not Mi!ll OeKeyser goe1 on to repreaent Orange County 1n the Miss California Pageant, she figures she's a sure w!Mer. "How could I fail to meet likeable and lntercstlng people?" she asks. Reaga1i Talk On Aid R ef ornr Get Rebuttal From Wlre Services LOS ANGELES -The head of the N11· Uonal Aaaoclatloo of Social Workt:rs has responded to Gov. Ronald H.eagan'1 criticism of wtlfare reform by saying lhe nation Is 111ubltantlally a welfare state already." Mrs. Mitchell Ginsberg, As!OClation president and former welfare director In New York City, cited Tuelday the recent $250 million recteral loan to the Lockheed Alrcraft ~. and subsldie1 to farmers, shipbuilders and the oil industry as ei.:· amples of the nation's 0 wel!are." Reagan ch11rged Tu e 1 d a y in Washington that P retldent Nl1ot1 '1 pr<r pc)ltd wettare reform would be a :iitep toward the "welfare st.ate.'' Reagan'• testimony was described by Flnance Committee chalnnan S e n . Rtwell B, Loni ( D·La . J, 11 "magnificent." "You have made the molt encour1glng and the moat logical as well as the n'\Od. eloquent statement made by any pubUc witness," Long told R.eaa:an. Buckley Claims Bid Causes 'Shock Wa''<' ;' WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. Jamu ,_ BuckJey says that Pttaldtnt NiJr 1·s over1ures to communist aUna cre<t '.>d "•hock waves·• of doubt over l S. military commitments amonc As a11 allies. Buckley, Just blck from an t l&hl·n11.on AJlan tour, 11id Tuesday •'the dramatic: shlft In U.S. policy toward China Ms aiven rUe to doubt• 15 to ~ ~~ ten:o wUI or lhe U.S. lo llay with our allies." I I .. , • ' . Everyone Has Somethin g Th at Som eone Else Wanh DAILY · PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS. ! • f •r ... ~ ... 1ou Can Sell It, iind It, TNide ·tt With • Want Ad ·: i. -• The Biggest Marketpla~e ·on the Orange ·Coast-Dial 642·5678 for Fast Results • _ .... _ ..... ,General General ' General ' ,Ge11:9r•l • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ABANDONED ! ! 5 -i FAMILY + EXECUTIVE ii;liiiiiiiiiiiiliiiii,iiiiii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiii Near Harbor HICJ!i LACHENMYER "REAL TOR I G.:~~ 3 '" ":.:· ,.;;.::~ -. "THINGS ARE POPPIN' " ON POPPY ADOHABLE UPPER FRONT LEVEL UN IT, 2 bedroo1n, 2 bath. forn1al dining room fire- plAl'e. built-in s. LO\\'ER UNllf, private en- trance, fireplace. BACH UNIT one bedroom deluxe apartment. C01{0NA DEL lt1AR. . '' '''' ' ' . . .. ' .. ''. $61,500. BAY VIEW FROM THE BLUFFS You have a vie.w of the bay from all windo,vs. 3 bedroom s, 2112 baths. builtin kitchen wi th , se lf cl eaning oven, EXTR . .o\ PATIO. on the greenbelt. A lovely bu y at ........ $45,950. "SPLISH, SPLASH" TO THE BEACH CORONA DEL MA R 2 bedroom 2 bath s, fire· place, cute 1nodern kitchen . pi cture windows with enclosed side patio. GUEST QUARTERS over the garage. Onl y one block to the beach. ' ' ' ' ' .. ' ' ' ' . ' . . . . . . . $49,900. "UNITS-UNITS-UNITS" WE HAVE THEM 3-4 Pl exes all in a ro\v. All units have 2-3 bed- ,room. 2 bat.b, 1-2 bedroom 1-1 bedroom. SPA· CJOUS and close to shopping. in SUPER- RENTAL AREA ............ , .. $196,500. HOP, SKIP, JUMP TO THE BEACH LARGE FIREPl,.~('E · SPLIT LE VEL BEAU- TY v,iith atrium type cn t_ry, huge living room. 4 lovely bedrooms. 21'2 baths. Ne\v SHAG AND PAINT, 3 BLOCKS FROM BEACH, Newport B°"ch that is ........... , $38,500. DINING -GOLF COURSE- wow• An abandoned Athen· ian Villa ovrrlookinR on" or OrllngP C'OMSll! most (':..elu~ ivt' R"olr l'f)Ur:q>g[ f'rorrl Cor- nUh i11n !1un Rlllr11; to atriun1 10 the ma:i;s1v" rntry • De lux11: 5 g1an1 brdmom11 · :'l b:tlhs. J.!11gf' family !'nom + formal din111g. h'.lng s1zr 20'x 16' living mon1. Derora!or:i: 101u·h all over. Park like ground11 + DIRF.CT GOL F c·ouRSE VIE\V -on J y S:l9.JOO • A f11n1aslit· value~ Call no\\' -64a-030J. IOR I. \l J Ol.SO\ REAL TOR~ If Value Counts We Have The home ror you in prestigr loci!tion. Room for campl"r or boa.I. Near .'IChool & shop-I ping center. This home-hall A builtin BBQ 111 kilchf'n, upgrii.df:tl ttiroughOul. 01\•ner 1~·1 11 :i1ell c;.1. or f"'.li.A. S:\3,950. 897-{i{)IO. l-0' THE REAL \"-ESTATERS ' '' I , 'i ' I ".' MESA VERDE $35,950 UNl()U~ ti()M~S UNIQUE HAS THE BEST LISTINGS ............ IN THE BEST AREAS IN CORQNA1I;lEL MM!' Buck Gully Rally 'rOtlnd you artists , writers and UC I ptofeSsois. This 2 bedroom cottage bas a thogght provoking view of the Fl ora and Fauna of Corona del . Mar's Buck Gully. It also has a sun drenched studio, a cheery brick fireplace, honelit beam ceilings aad a sloping garden that plays h~s t t9 every skunk. d~r and fox in beautlfUI Buck Gully. PRESENTED AT $S2,000. e PHONE 675-6000 IN MESA VERDE : A 4 P,edroom, Pool Single story wi th lots of light. plenty of glass and a nifty filterec;l and heated pool. Atrium entry, format dining and practical pool area make tor great traffic flow , This Republic Home has'm3.ny unique a spects to it and it's vacant. PRESE.NTED AT $52,500, e PHONE 546-599Q Ui'llWIVU~ Jl()M~S 9 CORONA DEL MAR-675-6000 ESTATE! Be11utiful spacious 4 bed-, room, 3 bath estate, 2.600 sq. ft. c u.slam built homr. l-llL'l everything -plus ~ -40 heated It. filtered pool. central_ air conditioning, Ato.1-FM. 2 fireplal"es, elt-c- fric garagt" door opener and much. much more, all i t-I-I ling on 11 huge doublr ror· ner: lot. loan available 01'! price reductioi:i of S58.SOO. Call I , \\'alk to Westclltf Shopptq Walker & Lee Realtors 2190 Harbor ·Blvd. al Adams 54.S-9491 Open 'Iii 9 PM • PRESENTS • BEST BUYS IN ALL AREAS 5°/o DOWN ON SOME HOMES LOW INTEREST RATES 63/4•/o INTEREST AND UP · NEWPORT BEACH - BAYCREST . Charming,.la"rge three bedroom 21h BA home surrounded.by beautiful homes. ******'. CAREFREE, LEISURE LIVING · in this three BR., 2 BA. home. pool a_nd cluPhouse priv. ****** CONTEMPORARY HOME , -four bedrooms, .21h baths, with pool and view. ****** IMMACULATE -New shag carpel and drapes, completely redecorated 3 bedrooms 2 baths. separate family and dining plus huge liv ing room , lanai and patio. ****** Center. Nice family room, 2 baths, 1paciou1 Jivi ne rm. with flttplace. :Sltin kit • chen. PiU! 15 X 32 he11ted pc»l and nice patlo. Arorw $36,500. Won't lut. 673-3560. '-0 THE f;'f:AL '·'.'"". ESTA'l'F:J?S BUY 1 OR 6 CONDOMINIUMS • under market &t $18,000. 2 BR 1,., BA each. 1170 sq fl· ea unit. Call for furlhrr illfo. ' NewpOrt ,, Fiirview 646-1111 ·{•nytim•l Grab Your Phone Thi.s sparkling model 3 bedroom home in choic-e ; Harbor View homes for only s;,4,900 fee simple is lodey'.s best value. Load& of ex- pensive-extras. \Va I er .sofleoer, garage door open- ing. sprinklers. OuU;tanding red brick patio. Call oow for 5howing. 673-8550. TWO HOMES ON ONE LOT • DUPLlXlS • One-2 bedroom, plus 1-bedtooin home. East-Nawporf Peninsul• side. Best of financing. . ' 1 BR +2BR ••.• ~down \-0" THI: REAL '-0-E~TATERS CALL ANYTIME 2 BR + 3 BR .... $50<lO down 1860 Newport Boulevard Costa Me11 3 BR + 3 BR · · ·· $5a:lo doWll View of UCI & "Hills Unique . back bay, 2 st)'. hon1f>. Na t u r a I \\'o6d catliedral ceLll ngs & antiqu~ leaded .glasi; windows. 4 646-3928 , Call evH 67~7575 NEWPORT llliACH !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!i!!!IJ!!li!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I REALTY 67~1'42 G.neral General l NO DOWN VA . FHA· "'"m•. • d'" • "''" '" MESA VERDE-lo\v~· level. Spl it level en-$ I try, Open stajr.vay to upPer 42, 950. _lf'vel with large lvg. room, 4 + FORMAL ONLY $27, 9.00. NO DOW~ GI TERMS , used brick frpl, All elec. DINING + DEN for "thls"3 bedroom 11dult oc- ki!., bath, a n d din. Cu j:tied ~ome in sho\\•ca:i;e ing/family room with patio BREAKFAST coridit,ion, featuring 1~xl7' door to 12'xl4' deck. Extra family .area, proJesaional V11ca11t. sharp 3 BR. 2 B,\', in No. C'ost.a Meal. Walk tu shopplne J,. enjoy. the lrg tenc~ cor. lot. frptc &. &.ll blt-ina:. Priced to sell •t $29,900. U:iw monthly pymlL BKR.·642-0177. LICENSED SALESMEN WE NEED YOU large yard. ;\fature trtta. NOOK! landscaping, brick B-B-Q Covf'red pa Tio. Close to Twin giant palms hi-lite !hf' and vacant tor quick oc-For our~ rMl e&tate office grade school and proposed park like grounds ot lhis cupancy, _ C.all 540-8555." on 17th st .. Costa-M06&. • • Aquatic park. $39.5(1(1. 20241 gre.:1.t Mesa Verde· valut-~ SHERWee.D REAL TY I opertini 500n! Bayview jef1d of !\fesa Dr.) From the Del Piso tile en-18964 ~rookhurst , f"'.V. If' YOU Custo111 built 14'x23' ra.miJy nl()/n, .l k i ng -sized bed1wms, 2 genrrous ba_th11, large living roon1 & fonnal d ining room -Both with fireplaces. f'~uu b u l I 1 i n kitchen 1.1·1th pantry and l'Cparate M'•v ice room. arv:l lhere't. much mare' to ~e. f'~<tr drtailll Call 540:1151 (Open f.vei:;I, ...mit. 546-9946. try to thr huge livin.1: room --.--* Are energetic I: tnthud- 1 •~ I -MESA VERDE ---546 -5990 lo th• fonnal dining room ' 1 ACRE w11f1 .~k ~ ~~!: 28S!J Mesi Verde Dr ivr, Co i li Meii PRICE REDUCED A buyers dr'eam~ Plus 4 • .1' HOUSE I* M°;St havt high bieome -VA~ANf-~~~~:h;nJ ~at~~c~~~i {".ood Coala Mesa Location. : ~~yr:B~':' :o~:~•, * * * OPEN HOUSE . -~-1 ~-.tr~l i G•ra_l _ The owner of this large . 4 rioGk? 2 gian( patios + tlr~ · $34;950.• Builders -Gnat TH.EN CAi.L , lJ -'--"'-";.,._------'.:.,;._;..;;_ _____ I hedroom home is_ anxtou11 (pit + lish ponrl + \\'atertall Potential for 12 units. Plua HOPE GERRIE Rl TY· , BAYSHORES * * *·. * * * and wa.nL'I fut" 11.ction. Fea· . And morr' See it now . a good 2 bedroom ho~e. &.cs.:4400 THURS,, ·FRI., SAT. & SUN. lure~ inclu~e custom drape!'I Ca!l 64S-030.'\: Call 646-7171. Exclusive beach Jiving at it~ T & carpets. extra· large yard ~ ---I ·· -~-· * 5 BEDROOMS * Top' residential location ln Costa Mesa. 3 Be.ths, ne · erpt,g. 37 ft. pool, 13 Bedroom ) · 1819 PORT KIMBERLY NEWPORT BEACH "HARBOR VIEW HOMES" ?~,~:~·1,~.~ .. ~r~:~i , A.YLOR co. ~~~'"0:~ G~~~=.~~~::: 1-11t• 1nove in <''Ondition. Owner 540-85.55 1 • Owner Transferred $40,500 ha.s oulgrown & t~ ree.dy to / BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB SHERWeeo REALTY Sell .the old stutr niove. Act q uickly on_ ·this Exclusive aTid beautiful! E,njqy thi? Ju~ury 18964 .Brookhursl, F.v. BIG CANYON ~"~·~·-','u~U-----'- ooe .. OlfeN'rl rllclusively a.1 and prestigious Jiving in the heart of New· EXPANDABLE-Golf Cours~ Estate G9ft~~a"I Buy .Ute ' Sa.JOO. Bay PI'OJ)f:rties ! * M:Z~7491 * . [Gener•! REALTORS 644-7270 S52.SOO. CALL 675--4930; 1 port Be~ch. \\'here homes surround. the golf &CO.I course and private country club. AJ so a DUPLEX REAL.TORS g4arded en~rance. See our new offering of Chr:ck into tki.t charming ... ,_.,"·"'!_ j a lovely NEWS BR .. FR. & formal DR. Fine Avocado A\'e. older home i Joyous Living For cptng & drap.es + many extras! : ... $98,500. \\•ith 2 bedrooms & !oft ' E ' fa 'I !orm&.1 dining and 114 bat~ ntire mr y ''Our 17th Y·ear" "'1th exCE'Hent potential for This almost new home has I WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realton &n OCEAN VIE\V 11.ddiiion BRAND new five bedrooms, family room. 3 baths. 3 car garage, 3 rircplaces. Rp<U'· ale guest room, view corner lo!. Le~ lhan Sl00,000. Drive by 26 Hennttage Ln. at Royal St. Grorge Rd., NI!\\'· port Beach and then call 64+1140. 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR , CALIF, everythinJ: !or !ht' lucky I 2l l l S J , H"l l Road \\i lhout disturbing the h ••. 1 < an oaqu1n 1 s oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii...., uyrr. l" rm~ .. carpris _"' ' NEWPORT CENTE ~ .... _.91 .. present stTUeture P LUS ,.. r1rape8, plu.~ owl'lt'r "''Lil in.' ~-~-----':...R.:_ _____ ~:..:_•:...~.:.:.:c.:"c__\ roomy 1 bedroom garage \-oTHEREAL \""'\.. ESTATERS rlude washrr. dry~ & i General I Gtner1I 1pt. $47.900. Call 67:Hi560. • • • 8 • • • • • • 8 • • • • • • • 8 • romb. freeier 1' re-frig, All ---------1 -Gene<al---Gene •al lhi• I~ nnly S33."'1. G.l. Your Every Wish I INVESTORS BA YSHORES VIEW & POOL -. ,. [;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, [ 847--6010. UndoubtMly 1h1" ho mt' · feature!! ~vcryth1ng you've I DREAM! . $27,000 BARGAIN HUNTERS I J1rre it is in the middie or M!"M VPrde .. J bcdroon1 2 ba!hs ancl large country kitchen. F11A-VA terms \Vatc r front cus tom ho1ne. 4 bedroom & den or 5 bcdroorns. 51;.l bath s 1'oo aualitv ca r- peting. draper1C's, \Vallpaper & fixtures. View f.rorn most roon1i.;, 87' lot. spacio us yard with beautiful ~ardens. $240,000. ,0 THE REAL \'""" ESTATERS ,, .. , •• ·' l • pver wished /or. A tastelully I UNITS! UNITS! Executive E1t4tel decorated 4 bedroom plus UNIJSI Beautlful spa c i o u 1 41 fa1n1ly room hornP 1vllh • l>Mroom, ;t batti est&tf!, 2600 I available for no do11.1n pay- ment. (hvner moving South, must sell. $29,950 NO DOWN TERMS perrectly l 11 ndsr 11 p ~d I NEAR COASTAL sq. II. custom built Mme. 1<rounci~. . F'ealuring au!o. WATERS Ha.s everything • plus 2Qx4-0 elPc. sprinkler.;. laundry . · heated & filtered pool, cen- Ca~ 540-J!Sl jOpen F:vrs) BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR \V ha! fun you'll h&ve thii; summrr ill Utt< aluminum t'Ovrn..'t"l palio, built-in BBQ .Flaptone & brick patio. J tx-<lrooms. 2 balh5, rlen 2 romn. low : \'OltaJte flood Don'I miss this rare barg11Ki Intl a ir con di t i 0 n i n g , l'ighling, and even a pull-·Let lenanll! pay your rent! AM /FM. :J flr@pl.!lces, e-lec- clo""·n 5lairCUl' in the Vt-ry spacious Unifi;. Close tic garage door Opt'IM!f and garage for sJor~J{e. PriC£'cl I ·to ocean. Farm style kitch· much, mut':h more. aU· set- 111 S45.995. and l~ted by ens • fully equip~ • oveM, ting on a huge double comer r ~ HIRITAGll _ ~ = u m-n. ,.,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;;;; ' .fDEAL FOR EXP~DING lsl1nders Bldg. at Linda Isle 341 Bay5ide Dr., Suit• 1, N:B. 675 ·6161 Cfllling ~l:IIJ. T~ng~!'I ~d ttfrigerato!"3! lot Loan available 011 p~ i~""",_:"".,....,."""""""""~'"-"'""""':'"'"'"-._.,...,...,...I f'lrgant JirC'places, family General 1 General morn. ll.ll rlectric pu~h bu1· 'O THE REAL "-ESTATERS · DHHng rooms! 2 bedrooms reductio 1 .,~0 500 Call per unit. Ga.rde!'I 11 k e n ti """"' · f11mily. Largf!I home In tracl. 12x21 . den, large bdtms.. 16'1::20 petio. Carpet1 It drape1; t~t. To see ! is to buy. Prict<I at $32,9~. I =· ,~~m~i~:':~ Walker & Lee PRICE TO ONLY $21,000~ REALTORS I ton built-in kilcben . l----V-IE_W_!___ Sprinklers. f>40....17:KI. WITH A VIEW! 1 CUSTOM j BUY ROD'S l 101\l\l I Ol\11\ Call at onee • 645-0303 1190 Harbor Blvd. at Adams i ~9491 Open'"' 'ti! t ·PPif. $27;95jl ..• WITH A VIEW! I BAY VIEW I Channing, tdeal •'•rt" l\'r~· home, f':WCUtive . i<plil 2955 H~bcir, Coata Mesa home in east!lde-Cost. 847.!6010. ~- O THf. REAL '-l:S"I A TERS To · ."njoy thf' f_ifW"st in lf'\'el h\.ing ~· i ·I ·h 4 Mesa. NO DOWN ·VETS OR Nev.port &-ach L1v1ng Sc-e hedmorns, lami!y room, 3 LOW-OOWN-ntA TERMS. . COUNTRY GA'R'DEN No down. Term1. Monthly in-,,, { A , • o. 4 • iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiol 11tallrTtent11 ·1eS. 'than N!nt! BUY JOHN'S thlll g~us 3U.R. \\'1th baths & bonus room. 4'1· EASTSJDE-:! Bdrm., ~Den homr wlih 11e plU'll !r n'asler !l u l I e : t.'f'llenl 0 pp 0 r 1 un 11 y to -VACANT hard~·ood noors. Yard tor ' Largr family roon1 learhng l'flt't'Ul&lf' on l'l('W plan 1or . I the .k1~s_:-n~~ sc~!!I ~-d ou1 In -a ~parkl1 ng llf'11led ~ &ek H . , Hecreational J Bedroom, Ju-epl11ee hOfrl.,. shopping. PhcM to 11eU al Macnab -Irvine Exquisite · n!aT yal:'d with "Bee.uliful . level M' x 100' ; fruit .\ made tree. galort! BAYCRESI' LDT. Two-story f!l tct'f'd pool and Thtr n10111 a ' Alley llCCf'M for boat, tra!I-ooly .$26.000. Area. Ollly 1 leJt al $72.~l". $24 = Fl!A VA hl'tRlh\J\king \I i e v.• ol er. •"""· or · · ' Lovely ga.J"(kn. c Cl v e r ~ d pennlul.ble, vi~ of Bad&: Realty Company p11tio . Co.mple·te.Jy Bay.Ex.il!Unc'buik!lnCp!mta Newport . PRIVATE BEACH f'edecoratul iNidf! 4i: ®t . .l Jncludied A{t(-.~•ln AJ.es af Tel'lnill, ooTnlruinity docks. bedroema, 2· bat1u, buill·ln prl~ of onJr ~;50Q. N"""JX>rt llar '"" Catolina MAGNIFICENT "'~' rould "" '""'"'· ,.,,,,, • MONTEREY s:e-qt hy the Pacifi c. $82.500 CaJI 646-7171. r -, THE REAL, 1 ESTATERS ' . . CbUNTRY CLUB Spanish decor «iOOominlum. Ph1sh 3 bedronm, l bath. \V!llk kl Count)' Cluh. Truly f &~n t R tlic! Only orw- •vallAble -• Jjurry t 1$,99>. Call ~ !Open ~t'J!l > \o uth . (-oasl -- tifoi;i~TK'd home ln .beautiful ,Sbtrp ).llot)-'. 4 BR, 3 bath I' our me I kitchen . I Port:afioo l..aitUna.. One of F1irvi•w j home.Ba)<View.-AirCon-di1)aw_11ih".er. el_ea:ant \ H~ firnt artas, aatom dltioned. '65,000. · fireplace. 541):172). de v clopmcrl! speclacular 64&-11• 1 . ' BEAUTIFUL JARB'ELL """"· o,., 2:<XI ... n, of (on.;ii.:..) .. -~Can 644-1'103i-SPlll:ADING -TREES .. --------PR {J PE RT ! l-S . IN{: '·· p f .1 .'0 f l l 1hSt .C M (",di 646 · 0555 luxury ronstrucOon a n d I ~~~~~~~~~ ~ Line tbt Jl(lrilw f this d mud! """'· 1: C_OLLC-PARK --.ir.•1•t a..c~· 1o<a1~ = IUHiari..c.ilO.$,a NEWPORT HEIGHTS "IESt,IUY'" ' 00..'-Ivan w.n. bultt DECOltAle '-"AVE 11>.,dap 001·- 1"81; ~·~~ ~~;:;u f, ; I , ~ 2 1toili: .,:.,,~ }>Qalc..11//toanaJ oR,, poo1 • A »111< pelltt • .,_ .,.... $-24 950 ' ' . ·. . " / k'rcher{.' 1 .. .:_ • .:...""{:-" J)laJis kw a 4th' bedroom • -Ul CUN tnfl..."'""1 ~~ ~ ~ I used bnck fireplaces. Quiel ~ • .... "' y .... ..,.. "!XI .• uS.cb:L. , lath rint t.-41n ' ~.. l'l"irrific Q.t. •Ill" now on __.Pr!-cul~c 1trttt Ir. clOK 10 nl<:f' playMuse.. for ' ttlt • . -• '"1\.. • • l 3 ........ ..=..:~. 2 \at.bi all !choola. Priced rls::bt ciUl~n. Nt U lhpppins am' tft' modi!. \'•c· o 'W ft r '::f 1 ~--• '2043 We11cllU Orlvt $43,500. a.U ICbools and ~ •1 oA-trarwf'd. ~ blk to Boa Viii•' aver ibU!¥in kllchl'!ft; 'liliiiiiiiilJ ~n."1119 P f.f CAU.. 675-5726 1 .. $29950 roi further in-4 &>Mrtc, Mea.-Verde. New wall ta Wlll.carpetirwr, ~~ ·-------· v . , , ROY J. WARDR.t.TRS drapet Uwoatt 'OMtMt -. JormAtkla call 541)..2311. • l6f9 Wettd.ltf Dr .• N.B. pa tlo l 1 m.me d late 1 VA NO DOWN ~ A · "it~. lfHA · 6*<1228 ....... Ion, . L.ARGE. LARGE OJ SfflJ1-·-Tq~ t lOc.ic 'at ttilt' delh'able SfO..l°bO , I t!DO ISLE -NEW LISTING ; .Gr.eat buy for family home. 50' lot ,w/lri.. So. patio. ·()versize !iv: rm., fam. rm. l .f lrg. Br's. Buy now -be ready for summei fun. $89.500. Mary Harvjoy. HARBOR: VIEW HILLS ; Firs·.1 6ITerlng. Lusk built 3 Bdrm. home w I famdy·room. Dramatic beam ceilings. Cor- ner loc. $6.2.000. Cet;f)ryn IJ'ennille .FAlllTASTIC 11,iy & OCEAN VIEW Cho.ice 4 Bdrm,, f bath,. extra lrg. family room. ·Lovely rose. gardens. Must 1ee! $69,500. Mary Lou 1'\arion. SEEING IS BELIEVING 5 Bdrm's. 3¥2 Ba. --Corlltia· de! Mar ·vmw h<_>me. Steps from ocean Blvd., w~t bar. _q1celv furni shed wit~ bit-in kitchen. $65 ,000. · Harriett Davies. · · WESTCLIFF _;,CUSTOM 4 llR.:. A really huge yard ~·with room for 1 i>ool ,boat •tor age, and tben some ! .Big falµuY , ~;.,fQrmal DR., "•undeck, cov'il pptlo. . wQ,...! .Only $65,000. ¥.C. Buie. • _ . '. · 'SUPER LARGE DUl'LEX . , . , Io _old ,Corona def M)r. 2-4 BR., 3 BA,:ea. unit. Cpts., drapes, built'IM w/1ep.·tlmutg ~rea . 2 car gar + I port. Make offer. A.sk- mg 177,500. Al Fink. . .• EM'ERALD IA¥ ,Oceanside homes -~. ranly available - . especially_· one 'wi!b illrm•l d\nlhg room, ll!rgt 1llttidy room, ·I pills b e d r o·o 1Jt • • . 1110,0(lt), Fee. Carol 1'.at11ln. -· .. _ ·. DOVER S!iQRIS. • ~vocy' ~Bdrm., =: liome on •~Ir• 11111 wt •. lrilitlaculate llon , Irntnealate 'occa- • pency~l99.500. K .Raulston. ' ·." .. :r,.V.6.:·LIDO ISLE4MALL llAUT11t I. Cheerful 2 BR., ~v. den on cllolce SC. lo St.. loc. Fresh. clean-!'65,1JOO. • • 2: Chann .·s BR., quiet St. St p&tlo, 11111 doet. .,fW,QOO. Eugene Voeeland.--. •• ~ .~ .. -IRVl'NE ]li!UtACI ~ r Bright ~httrful I Bl\.1 l_~th bome. Cori flJ:epl~c~. decora1or carpet~, draperies, awi!en Paho. Garage It ca · . n.d~ to '"3,~.·LaVera Burns. 3 R<tlroom "°"'° "'"'""''"' < '"~Ill<• -~.;,:.~.:"'i: 0~·= ~~' TARBELL BAYC IST LOT "' •""1)1hi"'. llanl""°" BY OWNER -. .._ ,, oc blt•lns. Corp, kltehen bttUl-lntl, now thick .....-..·-_ , __ so x 110_ Prk:«f al JU&t floor., fr>rm&.I dlnulj( room, Jrt Santa AN. 3 Ddnn J car ~ $3:l;fSQ. ~ ~ los·blmb!I frpk. ..-.I.I to wall catptll~. park 2965 Harbor. Coat.a Meu $18.!IOO. Oul ot Artll own..r. :~h':~:::.· !,'..'~l\fl l ~-~h',·. guage. Shllf crpta.'' Your 1 Levely M'E54 W6' MM-1 ~ ·~.No cknm ~ ..J'~~ A~~ j CLOSE TO "IEACH 1 • H•A'fDO ~n11 for details.. I block lf'nt'I'!, flt'PAttlfe. ilun-fl&I per month, WIU carry I.er su.lle. Near "e w .., . MOR6UI l(~L TY njpf, MG-ln>. wrth 3 nn!placti I 644-2'430 ~ - ' J ' I , o .THl: REAL "'4 F:STAT ERS Re'"4;>le on ttrml. c.a.11 ..... ~ "" choke af tln.nclng $22,750. t 4 J3dr!n's-~~~ m!!-t>:.V• •· ~..-.m to all! ~·-· .on.' '-UI ~ UI" 1 l.arp1 3 BR. 2 ba. dUP18': \ -._,,,. -t.ti •...•. a· . dry mnm. Ottly S3UOO. bl IJ&.M12. cllrpeb. ~ ...iue. ~ 6~ • J 7UC59 , "'$16,llllO . ;ERMS I ' .. ~·. ~-ILJctll • ' Walker & Lee 0Wl10I", le< BRA lomnn. ""'JlidfiW, c'ollflt.!11511. AJf1dO)llalhe BESl'DAY to Tllo lul~dr.,tlll.tlteWoat Geer,. WHl~moon 11 • 3 BA, form din, aoaun\ lit. ' .MAIN~L\l:.'J'T' ' 11'1111' ·' •• '41 I 0 0 11 ··1 Ad:~ PillltOullliod RNl!or •1 -======= I Jl<•lton &U-»55 139,s;o. Prine""'' u1.1m ca Bek« •. "sa.w.~ _...,.,._.all ....,. '4W61I. 1 54M57' • :H .. .U.UH, ~!!!!!550!!!!!!!!1.N!!~!!W!!!~!!. !!!Ji!!T!!. !!!!C~T!!!9il!'!!!Dlil'--.Ni!!iil•lli·, -~· ., • I - Classified I N·D· EX Adverti$ing ;. . _ · · · · . ' . . ; . .....~·~-·-·~~~~~..., [.__"-'--'°'_s.i.___JJ[~ I [ ~~~'Rlpmrl ff5J All •"'-' cllln ltkatLH . .. .• I• •• ....., caulfldllM ,. ........ ... {h!Klfr .,_ .,_ ..... ,., "'-•) IS"'f't' -..._ "'"' ..... , ........ v .. lfel ... 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" ~Kii,, ........................ .. ='..WCJ ..... ·:--... -...... ... ~ ... ,; ............. . ~ili~iliii~~lil,,. .. ,_"~"-""'""' .. ~ .... .:. ... -........... . ~· '"-··-···---··"·"' • i ., 1 ' ' • ~ 1 ~. ,._, I ' " . " l °"'"''' FoR THE DISCRIMINATING LOVE I OKISI I. Iii liO\ '" Rt A, 'u,.,. I Can make this thr mostl---------- Thur>d11, ''""''"' ,, 1'72 DAJLV ·l'll.llr 33 ~-~ ....... ~. ~. e~1 ~1' -~--~-.... ~!~~·!~-~ ... ~ .... ~,~~!~-~ .... ~_~,~~I . ' Cost• Mei• -~•Mosa IN'VESTOR'S $pecia.ll ~2 Bit E-!ide C.M. Joins C-1. Poten11al pius. M U S T EELL! .r..tyen, 673-6756. &.SIDE. 3 BR, F . R . , cul-de-sac. Sf-eluded yd. !>taut. feoced. $38 .9 50 . 54S-35TI. E 11t Bluff BLUFFS BONANZA $42,900!!! * Choi<"I' ,.arly ANa • 3 BR. 2~1 ba , 1900 sq. It. * Desirable l"nrf unit * Greeribt!Jt, bay view * Steps from pool * Vacant & wailini * Checkbook terms Many thou1ands undl!"r rom· parable homes. Bl!'tng ofrt-r· ed by original owner, 11•ho hai:: ntovt'd & knovos 1 horn· es are not a., ch!'ap as one. H'*11Jn...., 8"ch Laguna llaa!'fl --;,~.E~XEC::-=UT~l~VE:::--1 ~EW DR~M PALACE" PLUS POOL A decorator •how pla~ that Ne-w h<lme with pa.noramk boa.lb an enom"IO\.ls prlva te ocean .I: eoaslal view•. 2 • master 6\llte \l.'llh Roman Bdrrns., :2 bathg .l den; tub and ~n vjew. The heated ?JOI with automatic . liviJlgroom with \ts new clt-aning device. In an area so,.&: and floor.to-eeiltng of higher priced homes - fl~&Cf' \l.'\11 t'O\f'rtain your priced for lmm«t!ate Slif' thoughts lUi \l.'ell as your at $55.500. 12-JJ ~. Sepe.rate f a m i I y room: This atrium model 1~ oo a cul-dt"-sa<" 11trttt e.rvl only $43.500. All t~ms. Call 842-~ . ·1-p THE REAL \"-ESTATERS ' ( " . " ... '. ,.,,; AO Ian REAL ESTATE 1190 Glt-nnf'yre St. 494-9-473 549-0316 * SEU. OR Lf:ASE * 2200 Sq. Ft. 3 BR ., 2~ B~. oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO I Lg. fa.m. rm .• din. rm., trpl. Cpt &. drapt"ll. bltl.n!!, \\·et bar, ~. Immac. $47,950. f'ull price NO GIMMICKS ~11SSION REALTY ~31 Lido 11~ beautiful 4 & family rm I ---....... ,.,,,.,.,.-::~.,,,.,- around. It's vacant and so $100 TOTAL DOWN "\\IE ALWAYS HA VE THE BEST LISTINGS'' ' This 4 ·BR ~rh horn(' \v111 BAYFRONT BUY I be 90\d VA ·With $LOO d•)\\Jl . h r t h<lm to th~ first huy,.r • lralur· Chan:llng ~Y ron 1 1 ~· Ing branrl nrw crpt~ of lhr Parklike 11el11ng on ge o . · :l BR 2 BA. Extra large huyf'rs rho1re, newly p:unt-·. •15o ·- .•:f,c ~1 ··~ de,perate for your help. You PAYMENT could call it a · plus closing costs \,,.ts or DELUXE FIXER F1fA. SQre ~ts renting , 4 {r;st (9 .&iJr I c-· ( 1 boat sllp. ~ '""'~'· ec, your :uvH'e o l."ll ors. EN BR ITT ING HAM Xlnt lo!' tn lhP hear! of K UPPER bedroom:-;, 2· tia.trus , eddffi Hunt Bch. $28 500. R ealtor' Let the little , woman have her Ding a.t interior decor:· ating, you'll be glad you did becaute the only thing 'mall OPEN HOUSE about it is the price. C d 1 M orona e ar, near ocean. C.. _ UW & euest swtf", on. 1% lots. 400 E.17"~f0. I All Spleod;d 2 bdrm., 2 bdrm. • --. * ~ Top cOnd. -ocean view -#=:t!!L S87,000. Open Fri/Sat/Sun. ' 1-5. ABSOLUTELY 212 FERNLEAF Helen Anderson Your Hostess TERRIFIC 675-3000 -4 bedrooms-. far!iilt room -stp;,f 'tii-ep~ee · -Enclosed patio ; -Fine neighbbrhood -Ck!se to shopping -Close to schools -Tastefully decorated and lani.lscaped -A"ssumab1e GI Joan -$33,500 -Call 546·2313. I · s23,500 1 1 1 · 3 + FAMILY + 2 ' . GI OR fHA O.K.!! ; Wow! Giant value plus 3 ki:ngsize bedrooms + 2 baths. Bright kitchen in front! Range. ovw, di,h- washer , .new carpets • all over! Family room to giant CC1vered patio · Truly a gi· 1;antii: value~ Call now • 645-0303. I OKl.\l L 01.liO\ ' R£A • 'v A', 2-407 E. Coast ~wy. BAY• BEACl-I REALTY 1 REALT0RS 'SINC E l!M-4 673-44(10 =- IASTSIDE GOY'T REPO. I $750 down to anyobe: Need -decorating, but check these 11/2 ACRES-features. 3 bedroo1m1, real hardviood floors, brick fire. FENCED place, FIA heat, built-ins&. I Roomy 3 bedroom .ho m f", heavy shake roof, detached 1 large trees and lovely gar-double go.rage on alley, ov· den, plenty ·of f?Om Io r ersized Jot. VacllJlt &: ready stabl es and pool. \\11\l ex-for your inspection. Hurry! change for small hom~ or Call 546-5880 {Open Eves.) ;n00PETEBl7R~E~ 1~~1 -REALTY---~ .. mw_ penelled. family rwm, ror- ner lot in Costa ~tesa. $24,000. Call Walker & Lee Realton ' (:-(~· rcnJ ty 2414 ·Vista Ol!"I Oro Newport Bearh 644"-1133 ANYTIME 2790 Harhor Blvd. al Adams 54S.~91 Open 'til "9 PM -4· BEDROOMS 4 "" fain nn, Iha< & dcp•· 1 Close to sch!s. ;35.00J ap- praisal. Submit te r m & • Near Newp:>rt: Hts. On: 16th Owner, 842-6300 . St. Just a few steps from 1 ~---,-,----~-;:---­ paY.k & children playgrourid. Huntlnaton Beach 4 BR., 2 BA. Kitcfien bltne., F'A heatin'g. new cal-pet, ''Goodies Galore•• large fenced y&td. $29;900." CALL ci> ''lf·24 f4 !Ad'4.. I Ta.tALTY, Near N~wpcfrl Po11 OfflCe EXECUTIVI; RETREAT POOL -4 Bedtm. 3 bath, 2 Jireplace1, la:rge. faml!y nn, formaJ dining. High · on · a · hill. scenic view, Mesa Verde area. All terms. Call sq-4466 . " Teadership u REAL ESTA1 E Just listl"d, a fabulous DeaM garden home surrounded by a 7'.4 foot private w&ll with lots _ of 1oodies I ! k e : I nit e l"C O n1 , M!it·C~ning oven, &araa:e door opener, patio cover, wood bf'am cathl-draJ ceiling, central atrium, . Roman f u h, ga.rclep kilchen and mort'. , . . l bedrooms, den plu11 rami- ·1y room, , only $40.950 and only 107o down. Call now, 842-2535. . 675-0 123 diage Real Estate l' '. • ••71 ( -) 546 II Ol 4 BR. 3 ha. 'rox8' SJ'5.000 ,...... ••0 • • 3 BR. 31,fi ba. tam rm, pool rn1 din rm. 40' !01 S~!l.500 $ INSTA NT CASH $ L.100 REALTY INC, fn, the equity in your hon1f'. 3377 VIA r .J[X, \\le pay all costi;. ln foff'-67J..7300 c-!osure ok. Ju5t i:all • 24 3 BR All bltn1, hours a day, 847-8:i07 W h t'D N rpl a:o; er ryer, ew c , GOVERNMEN T OWNED frplc. 2-car garage. $58,00'.l . Aft 6: 497-1076. FIX up & u.ve! 3 Br, 2 B11.., 40' lot. $53,500.-buy, lease "''/optlort or trade. 673--7185 . M11i1 Verd• Fl·IA & VA repos!t"ssed J Bi, 2 Ba. home, fam rm, Townhouses & homes. !J11v hltns encl. patio. Nr prk & down. No Points or Escro1v :o;c~I." $.31,000. By owner fe es. Gov t payl'! <"losing 54&-J4SI costs. All price range11. Ca!l 1~--~· ~-~---968-4441 Newport Beach CREST REALTY 1-· ----......._ DESPERATE OWNER 2 BR $23,500-3 BR-Poof +d•" 211 """""" v;ew • Agt . 675--7225 H.I.R. '!PS, it's true ! Pool k patio CUTE 2 br, 2 ba townhouse. for elegant entertaining. s~imming pool, lee land. Gourmet ki1chen \\' i I h Agent, 67~7225. H.LR. StJperior bltns. Don't \\"B it a $33.500 Park Llrlo Town· minute · call hou~. 3 RR, 21-';i BA . patio, 1 RED HOT -~-R 7_o"b•c;;.r;cts-;::&=Cc:-o:c.=96c-2<·S-.:S::llc I ".poo::::::.L _ _:_O:cw.:.:n'c:':_· _;:_54::_7·:_5846;.;.:... I B_ea,utiful , big 3 bdrm.: b9me. BUY DIRECTLY • nvo immaculate 4 h!'d- Many fruit trees on ·lfU'ge room homt"s. 1 mile fmm lot. Top cond.: vacant &:-from Brok-er & savel the heach. Newly painted ready lo go. Only $23,500, 127.500 interior, charming exteriors. 1-GO~MET KITCHEN Priced in low 40's · all HOPE GERRIE ,R: · .US.ROOM-term11. Quick poasesston. 1 REALTY· I i;I-~ #!REPLACE'• CALL 546-5411 Anytime &45-4400 6'5-3320 . DECORATOR DRAPES LARWIN · Priced below market by an· TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH .A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 642-5678 IOJDov,.. D'"• ND xoou' •~er. Hurry & m-NEAR 'he BEACH VACANT. & READY spect today! 511 3 Bedrm. 2Wi bftth. custom/pmmmmmmmm~/ SHARP EASTSJDE HOME Roberti & Co. 962•5 drps-. crpt11, like new cond., * J Big bedrms. ''NOT A watersoftenf't'. Comer lot, * 2 Fill! baths. nn for boat or trlr. Owner * Plu!!h shag crpt. CRACKER BOX'' tntnsferred ·All term11. Call * 55' x 140' lot But four generoua-siz~ 842·4466 * Boat access bed"rrom.s. two b A t h 1 , * -$27,500 full -price carpets and drape1i FHA/VA TERMS'AVA?L. th~ho\it., Don:t fo~et the *'FULLER R~AL TY* water Oollene" 'P"inJ<len -===s~"'-o-=--=--~l.( .............. ..\nftlmt-" and loads of extras!! Enjoy 21,950. T e·adcrship IJ REAL ESTATE . FORECLOSURE. Beautiful 3 CQO! rummer ocea.n brtt"ze 3 BEDRMS + bedn::Om, 2 bath home . Ex-from ttte'. ~ patio.· Only 2 BATHS CLASSIFIED HOURS 8:00 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday thru Frida)' 9 to noon Saturday Advertlacrs mar, place their adJ by te epbonie COSTA MtSA Oma: 330 w. Bay 642-5678 L-ellent · loc:atioo. Firephi.oe, $28,500 Md best or all. GI Immaculate home, nicely lrJ.. shake roof, walled yard and buyers welcome. Hurry and t11cpd! Firept. drapes. bltin 642-5200 I I inlm3.cuiate. $250 month in-rubmit. 842-2535. RIO, malnt. free groundll !!!!!~""'""'""'~:"'!""'~"-. B_•_l_boa __ P_•n_i_,n_s_u_•°"".,.."' eludes tax!?!'i, with ie·!i! then plulf JargP. patio! Submit! Newport Island BA YFRONT, pier: 5 B,R. 4 siooo down. Call 545--8424 Call 847·1221 NEWPORT BEACH 3333 Newport Blvd. 642-ess1s HUNTINGTON BEAOt 17875 Beach Blvd. 540-l.220 b D/" I 1· · AL SEYMOUR REiALTY. 17141 Duplex OD the water. Beaut. II ., n., g. IV. rm.· SOUTH COAST RE cona.· You Jive in oRe,' {ent S210,000. Realtor 67.':HOOO. ESTATE. Beach Blvd,, Hurit. &h. : one out. Keep· yOW' boat at PENINSULA Poinl Cape Cod l-;;$23;;-.•950c:c-_ --~$;;209;;;;--;p;:,-::,,:-,.,-c;;l. -BEAUTIFUL-SPANJSH 4 BRI floAt by front"door-. A bet-1 4 BR. 2 BA, 1763 E. Ocf!an Qua.int 3 bedroom ~ on FT Immac! Medallion kltch! LAGUNA REACH 222 Foreat Ave. - ter buy at $82,00Q. Blvd., 673-2332 eves. Owner. large lot . Private tree 2,450 SQ . • Profe&.!1 ldscpd! Mocho xtras: CORBIN • Ca pi•tr ano 81a"'1 shaded stree t'. S'-'bmit. FHA I .f Bedroom,_ tamlly room. G.-!HA'F'rmFD,,AL REALTY or VA no dol.'.·n, term!!>. . . formal dining room. Sun· CALL 568424 ·!Open deck a.nd pttrents retreat off 842-4405 Eves: 968·9006 A.94·9468 SAN CLEMENTE 305 N. El Camino Real 492-4420 . NORTH COUmY dlel tree 540..122Q MARTIN CAPIS TRANO Beach; ~es .. ) SOLTrH C O AST !lie ma,;ter l>Mroom. \Valle DOUGLAS TRANSFEREES custom built, ,bluU home. 3 REAL ESTATE to the beac~. schools a nd 3 min to work, schooh1. shop- REAL TORS 644--7662 ~~:OC:. :!n~:f.ks!~nct'd. VA , REPO. 3 BR. 2 Ba. 1hopping. ping. 3 br, din ing rm. cpts, CLASSIFIED ADUL·T' LIVING Coron• dol Ma r 128.9'0. !950 D•. siJ Mo. Sparow Riiy 842-4474 drp•, beaut yd , "'"um•'"' DEADL'INES super ·Sharp 2 BR condo. Authorittd Broker 548-6570 l "A nest tor every b~ $4,000 eqoity. $230/mo. By Deadline for copy & kills Quiet. Patio. Pool. Dbl. gar· VACANT .J BR. REPO I GOV'T. RE PO'S _•_wn ___ er_ . .c846-_;_<l41 __ • ____ il la ':30 p.m. the day be· are. dMwr. dspl, ·wuher/ HAPPINESS. . Hug• cu•lom frpk, 1,L Ba. FHA-VA fore publication, except r1--S20 ;;oo · " 731 lrvlne r or Monday Editton .... .I'"'' ·apaee. · · A little sh~led_ cottage for -"S2J.500 Bkr. 54&--n39. M7·9604 when deadl.fne Is Satur· --GEM-lwo, plu•· • mod•m -!·BR. • ' . • . . ,, • . KASABIAN Clay, 12 noon. B 'Income. un!L. Lott: or · brick W h 1 t e Elepba!ltl over-MOVE RIGHT IN 1610 W. Cout Hwy., N. ·. R0 'L ESTATE CLASSIFIED REALroRs 6.f2-467J I: thake1. below Coaat runninc yOIU' bouait"!; TUrn ---~~--~-~.,. This furtlf' Rock '3roadmooT-· ===~==..---1 Hwy°., i: onJY $46,500. · "Make · Room ·For Dad· home ts vacs.nt 4· et1mplete REGULATIONS ·TROPICAL UftlveriJty ;Rulty them into ' ''CASH'' -11ell d y' ', , e l•e an out tM Jn every detai(, 4 Bdrms., ERRORS: Advertllen PARADISE 3001 t. Cit. Hwy. ~o them thru Daily pl Io t gart1e. '.yo\lr truh is CASH 21,.) be .. !t!rg'e famlly room ~~Id .~~c~rx!: 4 BEDRMS· +: 'Need i .. "Pad"~·'.¥an.ad with a DAILY PILOT &: formal dining room. Low lmmcCl'ia tely. TH E 2 BATHS CAU 6+2-~. ' . .-. · Qaulfjed. 6fZ-5678. Ouritied ad. mll lntena.ncE' la.nd11eaping DAILY PILOT anumea wtth bri{'k patios, Atrium & liAbllitl for th~ first ln-$21,750 • -• • • rommunily pools. Priced at corrt>c inlertion only. N~ pa.int in and out. new "' "' $43,250, See thit one before CANCELLATIONS: 1ha1 carpet, new_ tile, all you d@clde. When kJIUng an ad bt ••"' button appl'•' Cl•an -s.&· ~-.· ~}r\--:Pa£i/'S" ' 1u,.. to make a l'e<Ord . A lha.rp! ntA-VA tmns! "" . . eel h·11 of the KILt. NUMBER Call 847-1221 · • r I glven )'OU by· your ad SEY!dO\JR . REALTY, mu The .l'unle ,V:::t!r the 'Bu.ii( 11 • • huckle 1•kor u recil"' ot your Beach Blvd .• Hunt. Bch. ~ canctll•"1or\.,. ltlll k.111 t..-..-f .,, ' .l , REALTY number: mw t· 1» pre. VA-FHA 0 '""'0,.. -~ or ""' f' 1enltd '~"th• -~·•rt'·--four a:rOmbf.d ~·· ~ • Univ. PtM!: Center, Irvine "¥ auv ~ i4-PLEX. .1 bedrm furn. low "' form f,,.,r llrnpJ. W\Wds. , ' Call Anytime, 833-0820 ln cue·oJ·& dltpute. o-ectit reject, n:ady to IO· 144.t!OO. I-·$IOI), Alf. I .K J . D s A R'' : I 1 S.2'159 -~ _' 1 1 1 1 r _ . TIM.E FOR 1.-j, ..,...{ "'T"El ..... o t,..,l,.....,I ; QUICK CASH -.. ---,-I _ . I _: j;: u 1 1_ 11 ·Ir ~ "T~~":;,~n,t::r;,i:-1::. '.f HROUGH 'A clon'l whi•tle ot the boys ony , . ':::;;:;'.:;:::;~~.., mcro. They lust atond In the .DAILY~ ,PILOT ' 'WAlf ~AD r.;, .. • \ ' Mt4'71 r ' I d~-"ff' ancl -, ... as they I. M 0.". LE C ..., • , 1•l t-· .,.., _,r,..._ -ln-1 .,,.,. _,.,-1 r9 ' -. ' tho cit6d<I ..i..t, ~ .,,.,) .... ., ;i,,, "'""'""-· -,... ....... ''°"' .... No. 3 """'- .6 PRINT· NUMllERtO V tOTERS fN SOUA• SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIF.ICA TION 400 BIG-OCEAN VIEW New, CU3tom blt .. 3 BR .. 2 ba'L: livinr . rm. hu beam cell. A ~. Lc~, tunll)' nn. w/.beant tt.lt: ) ·IOOd 0Cf".ar1 ~ from ••• every room ln · the hou.11. Buy now .t: choote your awt'I ""'°" " cerpeta. Xlol DC!lfi---. ... """'· ..... 4t 144.500. SD~ ~IC!lmt ~Cltilf ....., ............ c:-- ~. 499-2800 * 1r1 aJa:m ~ riaht Hme I: alwa.y1 tbe rtgbt pl~ It 100i want, ~LIS! Call Ml-5671 " place lhat ad toda,y! I CAllC!lLATION 0'11 COltRtCl'ION OT NEW AD'l!l'OlU: RUN!ONG' Every etrort ·is Jbiidf' 'to kill 9r corrttta· new ad that bu been ordere(l. but •WO C'llhnot ruifan. tee to dO ao untl the ad ha1 appeattd in the pa.. ..... DlME-A·UNE Al>S: ~ ada are 1tricU:v ~h In advanCf' by mah or at any one of o"r of· fim. NO phone orden. THI: DAD.Y PILOT ,.._ acrve, t1'1t rlaht to cllJ.. slfy, Wilt. aensor or ,. t'\lte any adVerttwment. 11nd to chan1e Ill ratn Ir rt1Nl11tlona without prior ootla. CLASStl'IED MAIL ING ADDRISS '· .0. Bo• i!lllO, • Cotta -Me.. 112626 •f .. ' ,_, I -I ) I • " . ' . ' .. ' . I DAILY PILOT TlwndoJ, r......,. '· 1972 ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~I I ]1-1 ~c~.-~ .. ~ .. ~J~~~~1 ~-~-~1 ~;r1~,L-~.~~·-·~.,~lli1~~rr1~-~ .. :;:_:i1~~ 1 _ ..... 1~:r -~--...... i~ r ·~--... ·-1t!J1 r-·-·I~ ... ~ • .,i:m;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;; I •A• T -<-... F J10 AJ>t. Unfu.n. 36.! H U~. 305 H u <. -• HouHt Unfurn. ~ owl'lflUVa9 Unfurn. 335 Aptt, um. Mobile ttom" Mount•ln, Desert, ousn n•um. OUMli n1urn. <#U.J :..--------..;..________ ---0:-:-----1 ' Nowpon llucb • -N c .. ___ -l-------::-.,.-::-:o l For Sal• 125 Resort 17• General Costa Mei• Irvin• ewport &each os-ta ~ CQsta Mes• J .. CAR GARAGE 1 ·m LA."iCER 20x43. Awninp SIC Bear 3 DR turn, '"'"'"'· 4 SR, 21, ba, lan1 rm $340. *ADULTS PR.Et"ERREO •I -*--$lO_W_K_._&_U_P_*_ Spec1ow 1 Mdroom1, 2' lux· &: ahec!.. New ~. Quiet ana, All utll. ot·· HOME FOR RENT 3 BR, 2 BA, Atrium $.135. J BR, 21~ ba ., 2 carport. $2Q. 1 • Studio & l BR Ap1s unou. Mrtu1, "~·~p" I 6.(2...280-t YER ~ J\.fytors, 67H1~. RENTAL FINDERS OR LEASE OPTION 3 BR. 2 HA. &ep. homf! $335. Facing Pool. • Room ns WK & L'p. hl'llul•lut l'UJtom dta pf'.nn I . •rm5, H *A t 1 The ill!. addition could make j \\'£ tlAVE OTHERS e Phone Service. UtJJ Pd ~alt .... ·all-to-,,.,·aJJ l'aJ'!)eli'_lK· ROAOCP.AF"l' S':':l; .Vlobilt" Ranches, F 4" w. '""-CORA MU4 3 BR. '.?BA, Turt!t-Rock S.330. Ri::A L'J'Ort :,;~966 1 .• TV & ~lah.1 !kIVit·e A~all and tirtplllC'I" iriake th!• a tiome. Metal a1,1,·n1:g· $1075. Groves 180 OU... P 1• 5 ~'</rm~. Hat 3 bathrooms, 1 Duplexes Unrurn. 150 • Alt major •TN.lit earrls lt>rrlflc 11.mily hom~ to 1 ff ~73 * 645-0111 * huKe f'Ov~retl patio. Only I General 2376,"Je\\'})Ol'I Blvd. 548-97!".>5 !illlrt your New \'r11r. Only I 1 CA TILE RANCH Fr• i. ~ $2'15. per rno. This Ad \\'orth $5 on Rent $8.!JOO and Gr or f"l lA trnn1 I ~ -ALSO -Children & Pet Section ••• I '.l.I• .. oo• A I 3% 000 2 BR. on C."lll·d£"-se c. Nu cp1' av11 il11hlr. ... I onw CN'S P ua · erres Furnished 13 Be<lnn. honu't J\1 eaa VerdP, BR t ' 2 I Jo W lk & L I Genef•I him rra.zing. 350 ar·res SM-PRlVATE Bachelor Y•.'/ 1 block To J\iarkel Bukf't. & ti.Jing, Jl"1' y af\'t, ge.tagt'. lquet·~ siz'::";~d, p:i~ 1'~sss~~s~ a er ee ' I planted alfalfa.;! gr..oc'I wr·lls. I!. C'OOking, ni~ It (']f'Sn, $250. per 1nu. "SINCf. 1.946" $!6.l. nru. S45-5R5:i. nn, xtra Jge rooms. f'ncl I Can carTy 500 anlnu1I un1ls . Cost M sa I Ad I t Realtors I Acreage for s•I• ISO Bishop area • S:lSIJ,OOO . 1·1Dse to everything. f or ma-S46-9521 OR 54()..6631 J:o.:t \\'estem Bank Bl dg. • • gar ~· s!1)ra.1:e. u r.11 on y, n9Q Harbor Blvrl 11! A<tam& ----, turf' male. linivcr..!ty Park, Irvine 00 Pf'lS. $\GO 111"· ~ OJWn 'hi 9 P.\f TAKE OVER PAYMENTS gc.nd tern1• • Call Gl'f'lrJ.:P --Nichols Real Estate D ay• 83J..0101 N ights 2 BR. SIJ:l. <:arage. 2035 Fullerton, C .M . I -=--~.----$30 monthly, »acre parcel, Taber · ln\'eslmenl Ll!\' $17$-CORO!'IJA d I M l B 646.25-14 ft ~-KUl LRC.-1 "It.,,.,,. l'""I". '''rn. Chennelfront Home J.,hua Tree. Ben, S.16"1600 f'""I", •·•m' <'"iel, h .. :',·wor.;.rl: 1 • ~10VF. In ·rot1ay . '.!Hr t:t ,,.,, .,,~1 ° .. ,.. "''' • ' 0 R' lo · h • • I ·,.." ""' ..,., '-!ti• l""U y~ kid ~1 'LE . .\SE or !s/<ipt S365 n10. 4 ..,.....,.......,,, $125, Furn, $13.:I. A.dull~. n . t. '411 pr"r uoa. in•i .,~~ ,,,.~~ _.. d 1 d --·• U 1 " , .. ~ •u, .s .--s . .. <>.>.r.>Q.>. ..,, ydar • pe ronin e•=· 11 II '.""· BR ram rnl, 3 BA, 2 •ly. Lnd".'· "ar. Quh'I, nr. $65,000. f'or Appointment .-.., ,., Call: GT.l-3663 836-0238 Evf!. mvsr seU l ac-CaJit. Pint'11, pai · ALA Renta ls e 64.S..3900 t\r ' park. SC'hools & pool. mrlrts. 1922 \\'allace J'\<\ B, associated BROKERS-REALTORS J OlS W lolboo 671·3'6) gTelll for investmnt or ~ d &-aut d«Qr, Turtle Rk Ap•rlme nli forRent fiiil 1 54~18. tterefl. $2995. 645-()98.1. U"rurnlshe • BONANZA! 3 Br, 2 Ba. >133-3m. 1'1905 Antiorh Dr. ~ LOVELY 2 BR. turn. apt , Reel Estete W•nfed 184 $125-E/SIDE 2 Br Cozy col <·pt, fncd yrd, ent·J gar, 40 ACRES Rolling meadOwE -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I tagr. lr.ively yard w ' !rees. kid~. SlS5. Laguna Beach shag c.rpts. pool, l"low 10 nr national fort.11f. TAK • LIST lrleal for mature couple. ALA Rentals e 64.S..3900 -.__.. ......... Apts Furn 360 1;tores. ArtuHs. no pe!s. $160 - I CHILDREN NEW ••• , ... VILLA RIVIERA .TUS'T' F'INJSllE!l 110) 2 BR. 2 FULL BA e ~pN·1al <'ah1nel splh'f' e 1..1.lCk ~ara~rs 1\ I~ 5l~r • Rill ""ll e 1 .. ndry • PahO!I e-n \\'-{)1spa!(ll.J e Drupes e Di•Pp 2 tillur 5h;ig <'Pl! e Spt•cinl snundpro<1f1nt: e t'\r S,'ln Diri::o f n11·. /{aJ'• hot' l~lv<I & o;rhf)u]~ CA-; 11•':\1, Cao; ('onku1g a111t \\'atcr·Ail p;111I Mo to Mo from $1~5 622 Hamilton, CM Srr illgr·.\1r & J\lrs. Hoban 548-2062 THINK A MOMENT I OVER $29. MO. 96&-0047. HEY, WHY ~~~~---~--I QUI ET & SECLUDED . . per mo. 19-ll Poniona, Costa fo I 152 YOUR HOUSE Sl4:'i·OOLLIJOUSt::, 2 Br iv/ • l.flG. Priv. patio· Garage $75 General Mesa. BY Owrw:'r-~auti!ul oew 4 Apartments r sa • FOR SALE7 1 C 1 1 1 d 11 /11nrk~nch, 2 BR ' s , Ba eh. apt, N. rnd Laguna. l'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiii I H.;;;tJ;,;i;;;;--B.;;<~:b"--I Cnnsiller tu)1v in1pof1ant lhel'ir BR. 212 BA, 2 it)' home. TllE BEST BUY IN TOWN r will oiler you CASH lorlay ''nl' ~:ir. rps, 'rps, nc i· p ! Id r p 11. • S 1 6 O I n1 o. Rcl'.rig & hot plate. Cons id-)I A Huntington Beaui ilrlnil.;; ai·e tn your 11'01T)I· Lrr liv, r11n & fam rms, 2 San Clernente, ocean vif'w. for your home at lhe FHA yrrl. Child ok. 673-3690. er St-.1ALL pet. Close To fr!'r living style: l~kable trplc1, wf't-ba.r. m 11 11 ! e r under $40.000 .. all 2 BDRM or _VA appraisal .. "·or: lrre Sl50-in LAGUNA. l Br. yr11.r-3 Bil, L.rg encle yard, 1140 brN•Ut·~11. IEW RENTALS Bold New Concept EXECUTIVE SUITES i.:arn.~rs .•. guest parkinR :U~~;:;;1;ot.O~x~v~n~:~~ ;:!~h-ga~:ee~ ~~=rat~~ i ~:~~~:~1 & no obhgat!on lo ,1? rle11rpa1.,.BJ0Ur~·1 loxlbeach. GQvenor, $185. 213/286-9656 673--4030 or 494-3248 72~$!r~;o::1~;d. : : _·,~~'.n~·i:.·r~~~~~:h~~~ CAPITAL "''" '"· ' I . .v... FURNITURE RENTAL &: li\l.'lm'i: pool, $59,:it'IO. Cell for deta.Hs. BLAIR & 2 BR. Crpt & Urps, Garage. 2 BR, l BA, fireplace, 2-ca.r 19471 BEAC.1-1 BLVD., lx1ard. your own firep\a<:t> 6 4 4 -4 13 2 19 3 O P o r I JENICINS REALTY 492-11911 INVESTMENT $165-SPACIOUS 3 Br, 1•' Ba. ga<ag•, block rrom beach. AT 1'0RK1'0\VN rl<'c!ric kitchen .. Z baths Bk ~ No pc!l'I'. 2 11matl C"hildrt'n, • · · · ., I Lockaleigh Pl, N.B. Commerci•I 83)..1103, r . bl!ns, C'fp!.!i, drps. children $145 mo. 646-27!9. 494-6372 • fl1on\h to t.!onlh 536-0411 ... 3 bedrooms or ~ P us A-FRAME.---Pr-rty ISi 111'!comr. -----.L-7r'd7o-l~s7lo-------I* J,~'io Pur chase Optio:1 STUDIOS FROM $35 ilrn .•. i;rp11rate adulr and Beech, boating &. tennis ----•-_ _..,......__: 4 Or more unit.!i, good IO!·a· C!IAR.!\11NG 2 br hon1e.1 ___________ * \~hle Selection. 1 BEDROOr-.TS AVAILABLE 1 ff11nlly sections. .unique lllep!I away. Like new 3 BR .. CDM High1,1,•ay trontqe, e-1 / tion, but condHion not 1n1· $225-POOL + 4 BR. 2 Ba split Jo'enced yd, crpr I drp11. 4 BR, DEN. 3 ba!h ]o\1'.'ly Style-Colors • FUJI kitchen l0<.·1111on. land &: bldgi. 1 portanl, priv pe.r\y, 546-8739 l•·vel. Crpls, rlrps. bltns. s10VI'. $165 mo. 837·9517. home-. Avail F e-b. to July. * 2-1 I lour Delivery • H•a lcd pool 2 ha. Onl)' $29,500. Sa /S • CAYWOOD REAL TY Agent 675-7225 H.l.R. t'\'t'S or t un. Family or singles. Pet ok. 2 BR k sunporch, crpls, $600/mo. 531-2220. ~ e Laundry facilities 630li w. CoMt Hwy., N.B. I Duplexes/Units LISTINGS wan!rd. We ha\'f' BEACON * 64~0111 r1rp!i, adul!s, no pets Mesa del Mar r:l $TO ~q e Free urilities 541-1290 , sale , ~ 161 huyers for homrs, R2. R3 & $130. 2 BR. crpts. stove, gar, ~$~16~;·~/m~o~. ~C~•~ll~646--06~:::'.;7~2~. __ 1'"'.;;;;;-:;;;;:-;;;:;;:;:--;::::::;, re _ ~ ~ e Free hnens l-~0~P~EN=~SA=T""•-=s~U~Nc-c1.~5-roin'I. Agents 675-7225 HIR Tot & pet OK. C.P.1. Huntiniton S.ach 4BR, 2BA. Double garage. o:.;;;,,.:.;l;!!~~~---, e T.V. & maid serv. av;iiJ, Liv<' in " F'~nch country garden at The Vendom• 1R45 Anaht>i m Ave. Call r.1rs. Phillips, 642-2&24 I • DANA Point -Ne~' duplex. ~~~~~~~~~~~1 $135. 2 BR p'o'l home. fencd Large fenced yard. • Bar-B·Que El*nt S BR. home ll'I $~9.500. Silv"° Lante-m a t La 1; ~ for kids Ir pets. 540-9127 517 \\'. 19lh, C~l 5-18-3481 e Phone service DELUXE ' ' ' ,. " &ycrrst w/mSJIY extru. r>-•t,,.. Webb-Bkr. 641-4905. JI """''J I • $l40. 2 BR, stove, gar, fencd e VACATION Yr Round-1 ~-~~-o------2756 N. t.Iain SA 547-0314 ~ prlC4 this week on-..... "tJ .. , Br. child/!!ml pet. NICE. Mesa V!~~!._ LRG sing-le slory 2 BR furn ~. Income p,_..... 166 for tot & pet H.B. U 1 . 11~ -------B lb 1 I d apt. $150 mo. No rrr, S50 Jy, $66,SOO. v ... 'J'ler. ''" ••••••••••• $150. 2 BR w/ every1hing. liAinc. .<.J,I 3 Br i\'tcsa Verde home 1,1,·ith a oa San move-in al!O\\'anef'. 19ZT Santiago Dr. &12-5583 k.d OK c •1 AL Rentas e 645-3900 I pool. 1 s . ·" · * \\'0:'11EN-singlc 1oorns, CREST REAL TY HARBORVlew Home1.Mo\'· DUPLEX Busine11 $145.2BR.crpts,drps,pa tio, e HARDI ""l'2B 1 1 979-0909 k 't I ITV I Ina-Ea.11t. must sell alm..,st d Opportunrtv "" •• yrd. encl gar, child/pet. $140 Newport Beach o a -\\ k -)I o, $60 Up. ~-~=~. ~. ~-~---Ea<'h unit has 2 brrlroom~. 200 '''· k•."" OK. c.•1. 0 """'4 · r, nr( '----~-~---1 c 1.f' n 5 r 0 0 111 · * * 968-4441 • ~ I new Portotlnn model. Ex· bltin R&:O, crpts, rps, cer-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.,1776-7330 Agent ALA Rentals e 645_3900 67,->--3613_ FREE Ut1L. furn. 1 BR., nr. tra.11. $60,500. ti4-4·R&11. amlc tile, f\rt>placc. garag"· 1 G BEAR LAKE 3 BEDROOM HOME Tilt: B\.UFFS. 3 BR, 2 hn-1=~~-~-----lx:h. Pool $130. 201 101h s i .. TRADE for units 4 BR, 3 E·Z yard maint. Good loca· ttBI BY THE SEA lrpl. $32j: 3 BR, 2'~ ha. S:\IALL _s turlin . lypr ll~rt-53&-3T17/536·72fl2/S36-!3S6. tlon. $34,950. LIC"IUOR ~!'OH.f. For Sal(' No agent charge to renter. 2 VaC"nnt, 2 Bedroom. Jlf>l:i & Suf)('r <lf'luxr. viev.'. $:i)() n1cn1 . No rooking fac\h11es. BA. NewpoI1 Shores, Agt. Nets appro.-.. $50,000. yr. balh.!1, 2-car garage'. carper-chddrcn \VC.IJ<.'On1c, ·rennis tlfo. Broker 6 4 4 -1 133 67~1238. Call before 6:30 LUXURY 2 Rr., 2 Ba. Pool. 675-7225. llJ.R., SIX Ow II -~ fina•·''ng ed, dra-..1, rrnced. patio, Rec. roon1, \\'alk lo beach! ner wt c~... .. .. 1 • I"-" eotu•!s, :>"Win1111ing po o I, anytlnlt'. _Jl.rn. ..,.,,. 1~h St., 'l.B. San Juan Ceplstrano RESIDENTIAL OjlPOrruni ty of 11 li fctinte! super ~harp, $2'"...0 rirt mon!h, sauna & jacuzzi. J\' o WATE:Tt''RON'r 1 8 1 •w " ' UNITS Call Ros!!t (714) 536-1738 or w lk & L inainlena~. 842_3287 I 1-fARBOR VJew Honie 2 Br • r 1 r .. pv ' N B h GET SMART . Near~y Saddlt'bllck Collt'ge 1 lve1 you a marvelous op- portunity to continue your f!duca!kln. Channing two bedroom home on huge easy Clln' lot. Custom drapes Md carpets thruout. Let us show you today. ONLY S17 .500 CAPl!rrRANO VALLE '' REALTY 4!!3·1124 1~-~~-----1 S1nt1 An• \ BY OWNER write: SpenCf'r Real Estate, a er ee den 2 ba lrg garden kii patio. i1'intrr or yrly. 400 S. ewport eac EASTSIDE. COSTA t.1ESA O 2828 B B 962-44n I 557-8623 Agt. (~k & cl~ rm\ $400. Incld Baylro111 . No. 5, Bal. li;lanct.1 __________ _ $69.500. WITH TERMS P. · Box · ' ig ear Realtors •WE h I I 1· Lake, California. ave a arge se ec ion gardener & pool n1c'm· LOVELY 2 br , all blt-111~. 3 VERY l.rg &Inn's, l blk !o Roy McCardle Realtor d . h 842·4455 of 3 a nd 4 bedroom homes bershlp 644-49--IS. fully rpld, huge f'loseis. S200 b e ac h . Ne 11· r r p r s. 1810 Nl!\l'J)Ort Blvd .. c.r.f. ESTABL!Slll':D san WIC LANDLORDS! lhal ,., ·-"'"'\"'"' into •1-121-213121'--0'"3 1 2251 . I •3~1 I S4"7729 I I ~" t' 0 ""' •v ~u * BLUF"S Condont•·ru·um on . ..-· .1 or ' 1 "" v.in er. " M<> yt"ar Y· g.-s lOfl. e.icce ""'8 ion. ,,.,·nrr. almost in1mediately on our r 642-1403. PRIME UNITS SIX 2 BR. 2 BA apts. near Westcliff Shopping Cetiter , Blt·in kitchens, fr pl c ' s, lar2e-Br., laundry. Sea.soned adult tenanui. Good return + tax sheller. $135,000 '"·ith flexible terms. \Vrite Cl!tssified Ad No. m, \Ve SpeeialiZe in Ne1,1,1>0rl Rent .Op 1l0 n p I an . Bay. 3, den & din, 3 Ba. LGE. 3 BR. 2 BA. rrpl<:, nr , ----------- c/o Daily Pilot, P. 0. Box Beach e Corona del M11r e SHERWOOD RE ALT y , 50xl6 deck. Short tr rm ren-&l. Bay. !lfe1\•]y redt>e. $JOO * * OCEAt'\f"RONT: 1-2·3 1560, Costa ~tesa. Laguna e & Dana Point. 540-8555 1al. 4~29i4 or 6--\-l-jt36. n'\O. 117 Diamond, 61~3288. BR's \\''inter. ,\dulls only. ITALIAN RPstaurant. ~lust Our Renfa.I Scrvire is FREE -~~~~~~----I BEAClI home for lease. Op-Corona del Mar no pels. 67J..808S. . . 5 1 tn 1'ou• l e RARE !nrleed-1 Br cottage b 3 BR 2 8 \ '.'1L' ~f'trrin1t-00':1 11"· NU·V.IEW RENTALS , nr bC'ach. $95. tion 10 uy. . '' -t.iood rom 21 3 921 fl115 ne11·ly decorared. 200' fron1 * S111AU. 1 BR, n e 11· 111 r. ' ·. ' 673-4030 or 4g.1.J248 ALA Rentalt e 645-3900 ocean. $325. mo. 646-2330. t'rpts/drps. Nt'flr shop'g & LO\\'ER Beau\ furn apt nr ocean. A\'ail ~I\'. Lse. Ab- bey Rlty. Gt~-3850. Investment c 1175 1 u ·1 pd orona del Mar • tlEAR Th'• z B 1 2 8 2 b h .__ . (){'('rtn. :i yr y. 11 · h Opport unity 220 . i • r, s ovr, r, at . OC1-'Rn ""}, ~·-11.-IOO Newport Heig ts retrig, cpt/drps, nr beach. frpll'. NiC'e. $250. 673-2937 or1~~·==·=-~~--~ 1----------, I I d I . J-IALf blk from Cdr-.1 Bch. nves ors. eve op in· , $120. 4g.j..78.'l2. BACHELOR apt for quiet CLEAN 1 or ~ Bf; Adils, no APARTMENTS Air Cond . FrplC"'s . 3 Swim· ining Pools -lleelrh Spa • 1'cnnis Crl!! • Game & Bil· liard Rooni. l BF.DR00~1 Jo'R0:\1 $'1~ MEDlTERRANEAN VILLAGE 2-100 1-fill'bor Blvrl .. C.r.f. 17!4) 557.S02Q P.EN"rAL OF'FICE OPE."N 10 AM 1'0 6 P\1: F'otl'f'rl Bir heating 2 ehildrrn \l'l'lcome Jlot & colrl \\"a!er furn J Bdrn1. 2 Bath. $150 C8l'Pt'IS and drapes Built-in srove Carporl-stnll sho\\·r.r Laundry room. f"cncrd yan1 . No J><>tS MESA VILLAGE Apts. 1046 El Camino Or. #A 546-7331 Jn Santa Ana, 3 Bdrm. 2 l'IU' ,, , • ~nrage. Shag crplJ. Your ehoiet ot financing $22. 750. $162 pe1· month. \Viti carry 2nd . 836-5672. l>oW<nlb laweon JIL _., .. 3416 Via Udo 675-4562 ~rnat'l Prrsian & OriPntal Immac. 2 J3drm .. 2 'bath & R & A 1 C . NB S!JOOO gw~t h.o;e. Couple Qnl}'. No ugh '.d o.Btn 1• ·, · · .. dogs. $37S mo, A\·ai!. mid ALA Rentals e 645-3900 ~-~-------1 n1an, uril 's p;iJrl, close in. pets. lg kit. $125-$lj(), 2-121 Santa An• f or a ppt. &l•l--170\. E. 16th SI. NS. 646---1801. llle8liBJllJ .. ' • l . I t I LIKE new 4 BR, 2 BA, sr1,1,•'g roon1. a!r-concl., co1't>red patio. fully lndscpcl. !'>1uny o!hf'l' exlr11i . tmm<"dia te oc- rUflll nC')'. $31.500. By owocr. r>45--24I 7. ! Santi An• H•ights r..1usr SEE. Sparkling :t BR., din. rm-. u9Cd br k k frplc., h!cl pool CptA, drps. n1any impm\•emt'n!~~ Enjoy liv- i~. X!201 Spn.ict. 5'i~tnJ. I Mob ile Hr.mes For Sal• CONTEMPO. LAGUNA HILLS I Ill JO UNITS, J usl cornpleled. All 2 tx>d room 2 batl1. Excellent Eestside Costa i\lesa loca· lion. \\'alk to shopping. Real quality Vo'i!h IO\\' n1nln- tt111ancf'. CALL 5-16-5880. l~B RI T A GE RE AL ESfATE. 7 HOUSES c11.."i n"q • cs ncom.,. ~ 5-14-SRtiR. ~farch. S36-98:i.1, days or 67~1 78 eves. Money to Loan i 240 Costa M••• 1 t TD L e FA\·l rLY \.Vantrd • 2 hr, s oa ns ''""' Y"d, encl gM, kid,/ 11e1. Sl40. 6 % % INTE REST ALA Rentals e 645-3900 2nd T 0 Loans •• BEDROOMS. 2 s. E l . side-, big Incd yrd, kids/ 8~0 int. ha.IN! on i;iwty. prts. $200. ... on 2 lots, downlo"'" Cosla Also NE\V 95'"a ALA Rentals e 645-3900 l\fcsa. $875. monthly in· t1f sale-price Joans romt". $10,CKXI. dov.'n. llurry, Sattlar Mtg. Co. VACANT & READY NOW v.un't la~t! On1y -642•2171 545·0611 "'ilh 3 BR 2 BA, bltins, $79,500. Serving 1-larbor area 21 yr.:. ht"t'pl. fencrl yard wfpatio. P ERRON REALTY fi.12 -trn :\lo-to-mo 01\ 111 $235. Call i\.':~llt, 5-16-414\. 17'97 Orange Ave., C.M. [ I~ 28 UNIT I ffaul;n lorR1nt fl! BEAUT. toccl. )Td. & 3 BR, 2 L-------'-B..'l. hse. trplc, 2 car gar. 2 & 3 Rr, 2 8 11, Nr ~hnp'R- i.231 f.l\\g Ave., HB. $4%0 fl1 . •••••••••••! rp1/r!111 Qu irt 6tr. 21).!S Gardrn Ln. Avl. FC'b. 15. ,1;47.3957_ Hou1•• Furnished 300 4 Br. 2 Ba, fenred yrd, crpts, <lrps. Im mac. Vaca n t • $2.iO/n\O. i\1o to Nlo or lease, Call 8."J.'J.1J03. resi- dence 546·9754 . Owner/ J\senf. T WNH SE, whr /dr y , refrig/r ng, dtp/crpt. pool. clbhse, 1 ~) Ba. \vtrpd. 3 Br, $195. 2 Br, S170. 548-1405. 531·538-4. l lOUSE lor rent. 3 Bdnni;., large kitchen, 1\-aler paid. nro per month. $40 cleaning deposit. Pay first &. last mo. 962-9805. TRI-lever exec. homE': 3 BR, 3 BA . tam rm .. 2200 sq ft. gardener. Privat<" party. $350 n10. 5..16-4Si7. 2 BR. 2 ba ............. $300 4 BR., 2~ balhs ••.... $350 3 BR .. 2 ba. home •• SJ00 /335 3 BR., :.1 11' ba ...... ••• $350 (ired hill llEALTY Uni\'. Puk Center, Irvine Call Anytime, 833..(&ll) 4 BR, 3 bath, immacula1c. Cost• Mesa Apt. Unfur11. 365 lots or extras. l block oH ---------- -21 - APART~IENTS l\-1ai n & J\1acArthur. S350 mo lease. 557-2285. Casa del Oro ALL UTILITIES PAID Condominiums Co111pare before you l"t'nt • Unfurn. 32.0 C11ston1 dc.!iign«I, featuring: 1 ----------e Spacious kitchen wnh 1n- Costa Mesa d1rect lighlu'lg • Separe!e d in'1t area 3 BDfu\1, 2 BA. \V/iv epts, e Hon1e·llke storage drps. Complete bltns & e Pr1\·ate pa.!los dishv.·asher. $193. 540-ll5l e C1osed garage v.•/sioragc oUice, ~9-1132 home J\1r. • I-UH length marble pull. Queen. 8i9-0850 home '.'11r. man S~han. • K1ng.sz Bdrms t\lESA Verde Villa, Brand • Pool · BariK-qu('s -sur- 11e11' 2 bdrm. rear unil 11i!h rounrlcd "'"llh plush land· yard & pano, cpts. drps, &:apu1~ garage, \\'ashing !act.lilit"s. Adul1 living at ils best Close to S<'hools & f\\·ys. Large 1 BR Sita liT1LmES rno.: Rec. & pool raciliries. ...,~ \V 11. 1 ,1,.1971 $200. ~>l;)-L'l0-1 .J<T.)=, ~·~-•-oo_n~~-·--­:_:.:__ __ ~-~----1 Si\1A!_.I. fl)rrush<'fl ap.1r1rnrr11, San Juan Capi1trano a.JI utlli!ies, no children or 2 Bt>droom, 1 bath condo apt. Carpets, drapes k blHni;. $200/mo. Capistrano VaU('y Realty -<193-112~. Townhouse Unfurn. 335 Costa Mes• f)C'1$, in nrlult n1oblle hon1r park. Ideal for rf'tirf'd ix·r~on. 1!15 inc, $35 sccu!'J· ly Ca.JI &16-..~&I. $100 · .\TOVE IN Allowance Shady E1ms-La"'·n·Pool Children's Section Furn. & Unfurn 1 & :2 Br. COSTA r.-fESA E a I I s id e. From Sl35/nio. Up dean 2 bedroom l'"' _ba'.h , 177 F.. 22nd St. e &;2-3645 carpe'ts, drapes, built-1n,1--~-=~~~~~~ private pe.tio, garage. SIS:; * STUNNING 1·2·3. Br's, 2 th ~ Br Furn Ir. Unf. Llke 11t'1''- mon · $140 Up, ~55,10. S30 with Lake Forest Ad. '==~==~~= t..amide Park. n<w. 3 BR. SHARP BEAUT. 2 BR. crptg drps, air cond., d/11·, Pool. Adults. no pets fl teen bltfl.'!i.' dbl carport enc. or infant ok) $155. 642-~. patiO, lg. closets. Jndr)' rm., SEE & GET BONUS yd work incl. Pool A: lake 2 BR w/lrg patio. Com- pril·. $250 {21Jl 327-1851 col· fortllbly furn, PRrvACY! lect. AduJ t11, '768 Scott Pl. CM. &J6..2323. Balboa Island SPACIOUS l br \\"/balrony New palnt & crpt. Stove & retrig, Yrly only. AduHs only. $200 mn. 2081-2 Grand Canal. 673·5270. LITTLE Islanrl: Lrg, 1 Br., bltns, cpts. drps, gar. $275. )'rly. 673-7178. GRAi'l/D CANAL. yriy least'. 2 Br, 2 Ba. bit-ins, lrplc. f'o gar. 6~131 aft. 5 P.\1. Balboa Peninsula 2 BR, I \4 BA ........ Sl80, 3 BR, 2 BA .......... $255. 1ALSO AVAJL. FURN.) New adult garden Apts. 151 E. 2ht. 64'-8666 3 Bdrm * 2 Bath Living room with cathedral ceiling & f.rplc. Separate laundry area. Encl patio. Swtmmlng pool & childttn'1 playground, mi. HARBOR GREENS """'"' e BEA UTIFUL GROt/NDSi 3 BR, 2 Ba .. 2 decks. dswshr, SPANISH DECOR 51ove, rerrig. cp!$, drps. 1 Air/rond. Gas, 1,1,•tr. pd. pri1·. gar. 1., b!k Ocean & Garage, Pool, Rt>c. nn., Bay. $300/mo. Lse. No pets. I laundry. 1 BR f140. 2 BR 61.1-JIJ;).f. I $1ti0-$16:i-SJ75. 2 RR, 2 RA . frp!c, vrly. lla cif'~a de Mt>sa Aplx (Balboa Blvd. t.· F St.I $26:;. 160 IV. \\·i!son, Sec :\fgr. i'\o. -1 r-.·o pct~IChildrl'n. Brau1 BRAND NEW 2 BR. \'U _ £.U-Si35. I ' FROM $155 2 BR 1 ba 11ev .. 1v n'.'dec. sm I Near shops, Clll'lOSC'd gar. Nr oc-ean i bay, No 11ge-~. built-in~. mcl patio.I!, h.ld 1 6-., n.::n1 at1ract1vc Jnd5cp. Adultx c i ren or P"' i;. 1cr-""" . l 1 ., I on Y-,,.o )'.l('ls. 1970 \li'allace *•ff PEN Ii\ SULA Poin!: 21 St. 548.()804, 646-2W9. Br .• 2 Ba .. den. $210. \'€'al'· LP.G l BP. D I ly. Call 673-8•180. : • up ex, $150. Coron• del Mar ~~ ON TEN AQ!ES 1 a 2 ea. Furn. a uatum. Fittplace.-I priv. palb. Poolt T«nrn. Coritnt1 B1Wt 900 Sea Lane, CdM 6'4.3S!.l (MacArthur nJ" Coilst Hwy) ~cwly rPdec ,;ml. l Be , duplt-'X Sl51'.l. l,;td. pd. F'rplc, he::Jm criJ., pst!O. I adult, no pell!, 6-1!>-l.lli e WILSON GARDENS e 2 BP., l '~ EA, cpt/dl'p!. End pauo, SI40. 64Ui8lt ~ff.SA Ve'f"de 2 BR uppa, N'"'·Jy decorated, blt-ina, t"Pla ~ ltrps, no pets. 1 child O.K. "'3-.1277, -1562 $150. LOWER, Gold I Moda!Lion. front. 2 BP., P&ti6. ~ncl gar. * \VINT ER RA TES * NEW laundromat. arllll'I, no Pf'(I, Attrac rum Studio5 $U 5, 1 3 Bdnn .. 3 bath duplex. Car-$l$ mo. 6G-35l.S, 6(2.6499 Br5 $125. Adults, no pets. peted.-draped, bit-ins; priv. • LRG. pnv. pe.IJo . G!lJ'llCe 2135 Elden, Mgr. Apl. 6. patio. Covered garaa-e. 705 111'/~nrti. 2 BR• 1 , 1 BR. Tralle\', $ll0 + 2 BR Orchid. $32S P6 month. c P t I d r p 1 . $ J C 0 I m 0 • Trailer, $135. No cl\Udttn/ ~ yearly. 673-:.J. no pet!:. 646-!BO!I. 1 a. 17540 .... SO 0 SP;;;;AC:;;-2"-'•"'l"'Br'°"'. A"'p<.-$.,.1'-0u-pl e AVL NOW! l & 2 Br furn, --• • Pt.r.il, t'pt/d'lJ . bl tllll, KJda ok pool, rec nn, gd k>c. No 2'205 O'JI~ No. 5 6f2.7035 children or pets. 646-5824. O.OSE to beach. q_ .2 Br. 2 ~ M-1.pk Xo. l M2-.38ll 1 BR tum apt , adults. Ba.. oprn beams. rr,&c. EISJOE. •ttr¥:. 1 BR, cpea., no pets., 687 Vletoria. bllnl ..... ..,., porch, priv. pr. I drpl, ~lnl. dlbinhr .. ~net * 543-6138 * 33().A Marguerite. 6'fl..Ol37. pt •• M p-"1. ~ 2 Br. 1g mu. pool, nr &hops. wxuruous f?"el:lrCb ~I &\fl. J mt ..._ •lcu, util pd. Adults. 1884 Mon· cy, 3 bedroom, 21.4 '*th. Pl~. 1 _,.,,, M pru. S1ll. rov\a, CM. 540-0336. ru.piace. Dininc Room. m w ""' " -· I BR Tn.Uer, $100 + utiJ. No la.undry. $0. Aa1. ~.1 Sllrt I Ml:-Vit.. doVf A children., no pelJ:. 64&-tl'» Adults only. j l'rl.f'c. L~ 'AtJW11• no or 64l-3375. OCEAN vtiew. dtopnt l p«s Ca.ll f.G..tm, ~llOI. l BR tum apt. utilities in-1 bedroom, 2 battta. flnplM:t, WPLD. J-11*; '" t.. dudod. SUO. Oktu tenant dining room. Aduli. qolr. W/I), -· M..., ""'° 64)-6560. $500 per mo. Agt. m-eJ'J. drJll ... .!' • • ~ 2 BR. l\.fol>lle home fJ.fO. t * GREAT VIEW-2 Br, trpl. J 9r ~ .__... "'flA ~ BR trailer ~. Adult! 132 bltns, sundecks, pool P'l.lJ -.. *"" ~ 1Ht. 2231 W. \\l'Uaon 645-45JO. up. &U-6344. 6'7>SIM. c.v_... .w, 1*-'7tTJ. * Lrg 1 br , 2 b&, pool, util l 2 BR., ~tns. Walk ~ btada. T,. !:.JC . • ... Ct,ta.. pt!. AduJIJ: OYer 35. SUI mo. I SD>. Orange Cout Jltnl 1 ..._. ~ YM fl 6t&-4292. ~. !:Mate. Call: 6#441. 1 ~ • X!SJ..111. TIWLEll for ,..., $BS. S%>. ' BR. Frpk. Bak. mi. =I n.. -...... -.... """ swim pool. 61S-2111 • fl-· °"'· ..• ,_ ,..., "--"' ;, ""'· --~ ···-;-~--;....;;;;;.;.., ___ _ . . • \ ~~~.---..... --- ]. I [· , " !!!..!I I Ao•<1Hlr•U~ •o• Rr"I ~ Apartment• for ftef1C ~ ,.p,11 tu•r rih 0' n"'lf V W us ! ' AplL., Furn. or Unfu rn. 370 Ap..:..•_._u_n_f_" ... '";;.· ___ ;:.3'::5 Apt. Unfurn. 370 Apts .• Fu rn. or Unfurn. Costa Mes• BAY MEADOW APTS ~ 8 1 l.rtHil , t"1hn)!' µn1 ~ 111.1. r.·1 1,,,,·1l.. ··111~•~! ~,,1 11.21• 0 as h•'.11 , •~•I.."•:: & 11 1i\~r fl.I! f.11( .\ll ... ll11! ... 1111 Pf'!S fnuu SHI .• :.~7 II l\.l.I ~I l' \j C11H ti-lti ou7·: Park-Lik e Surrounding Q\'H·:r 11~:1.1 :\}. l-.! & .1 Ht{ .\!YI'" PN !J<1 f1t.l• • ll1rt t'uol ~ '.\r shop'G • .\dt1l1, uuh Martinique Apts. 1717 Sanl..l .\/\« .\11· ('\I \l;:::r .\pl IL. 1;1•, i rl:! "G,\l:iLI·::-. l '...:l·'\'11.LL' 'I Hi·_ 11 ).:ill'., i!.dllll.• ,·pl drp<., hl111~. frh·•( 1 1 ti 11/pi!.ll<J. 11tr 111! 1>:;tt--i1~~1 :!t::!J.."G" ()l'angr ·''"" ~I" '2t.H1-"J " Santa .\11,i ,\\r ,i;,:i NEWLY DECORATED C'harm1nL) 1 B!~ duiilr\. nr11 l·arr. dn11~·s & ,.au11 l-01" ly g at' rl (' ll .'<lUTulllHllll;!~ ~larurl' 11.duJt, •1nh \!:!;. j48·0~~0. . QUIET garrfL·11 .~l'll111i;: '.! Dr: Hunt inqton Beact-t e \\O\'E !'.\' TOlJ.·\ Y ' e i-;1,1,., ,f,;, Pl''" "'"lvouie '! 61•. $!.;'.! All ~·,!1.1,, f'•)Ql . gar p:i •:o. !:·~·tr !:tz'!' ;l\:'111 .\ h:r,•l,1•!1 ! .n II " 1;1;-.~><i.!• ,.r 'I\.~-~ do :! \I J.,1·:1, . .; FREE P.~.:>.T \1•11 1 1:1 :·~ \I 11lh lo 81 : .. 11 Frµi.··., hnl1u11,,,. Sl\O.s \,.U ,._:•1.1ti(il u1 ;~;!I :•111;'., * FRESH \\ 1111\ .: JJlhs 1 .. s.~11,.h' Li;:r :t U!: .\tJ1 ur11ly •!f'o'>I' [)IJI ;i11 n•·11r r! i.:<tl' fr11l.· 1·', Hu . bllll,, r't'l'J1! 1 l'11'!~ :r.!:!'.1. \\v sn)!b, .1:;n.1:1 I 11n I l11l .. \1 2.1 llP. '! H!: •. :.! !l.\ 11110, uf' ('p1~ di·v~ poo. •'<'<'. 1111 . \I ,ilh "' hl'~n·h t 'tu"" llJ .golf '!~\I 1'!1\1 St .)::1;-u1•t' :!1'1 I i'lt :.: t . _,;: i-l:.!11 :!-Bl:-... 11u!ui a 11t. all f'rpl'rl, 1(1 Jl rl ~l.".U/111(1 l'all .' !;J:.-51 ::11. \'Ill•. d1·u~ .. ,101c 1 \u l"'I• l·'r1i.·f'l.I ('h1l1! O!\. 84i-jljij \ ~~~~.~~~~ Cllt'))(IJ'I, i ·rpt~. il!')o•. $].j"o ltl $1tj o .'\'11 ti·!:!-!l'.:b-1 ur s;:~l--o;i;,:i_ /J£'1~. Irvi ne Cost• Mes• THE EXCITING PALM MESA APTS. FUN IN THE SUN! Minutes to Newport Beach lJ11bcl 1cvablv large apl:-;. llr1 ora\nr f11r11t·h ed. I luge Po-ol. iacuz1i. elr1·\r1r hu11\-111:-. :-!Jn;; l'arpcts. drape~. sauna ,t· 1nore ' ADULTS-NO PETS SINGLES S145 1 BDRMS. $155 2 BDRMS. S175 Unfurnished Ap ts. Avai lable From $10 to SlS LE SS . YOU 'RE RIGHT- THE Y'RE UNDERPR IC ED ! 1561 MESA OR ., Cosl• S blks So. of Newport 546-9860 li1 ril ,;--;, ~~~"ll [I'~' ~~~"ll Gi[,;--;·'.:.'.· ~~~~~,;;-i,}JI r;:~" Apt. Unfurn. 36S Apts .• Thursit.r. ,,brr.Mr) '· 1971 DAI L V >!LOT ~ l .,, .... _J~ ·_c_.,,_ .. ,. _1_~ _ ..... _,.. _J_~ t~,.;; ...... ;;·-~'l~ V•c•tion Rent•ls 4l5 8u1ln•ss Renta.I 44S Per1onal1 '30 Lost Si! El•ct rlc .• I l..\J~f.. \11u11 t1C'.hl .: h1' :! h,1, llHll 11lo..tnl ,,,,.,•111 !o111·n•. SI\ ~l .O J1<'t "" .>l >-8..•l!l 430 '\ I '\ \ I 'l 1 I : I Ii I' ,. 0 h (llV l•'-•h•llo1! <.JI liu~1r11·'~ 11111.11 lot ll•t1+" 11 Ip·~>! SJ .• o o,,, , '.\I /,,~,,. 1111·~~.111.•• t'll io ' ii: II h.1 ·d, '• j I l,.o\'lil'lul' 11 1lh "'' n HI: •loll!!' 111~ •'\llklt> '11111),:lil ' S\llll l\1U ... 11·•,·11.1 ''io _.: l 11 I J l I: I· \1011111 11 -i1.11I' lru1111" ~r 11011111n 111 ~ ', I I I J 1, • _• I J'I'' !j 11 "'! ii I lll•l•fll;•·1 ,. 'l~ ~'!1;•1 \ ,1l:L <l,111\, d tu ,!1101 1" IH I II .' 1:1; 1liol1I ol, ,,,~/lliP 'I~,;~·., "I \l;-_;•11\ \\ .111lf'd, ., 1, 1:.!-'I ,~··, I'\ •'~ f:( It ,,\J.\L\TI·: 11r1"1l1•ll lo ,J1,11,• !.11i,:111111 k"1u·h llou.~r o\~1-:!SI'' l;ll:l. 111111lr1! 111 ~11.ur i1•1rl1 .1111 Ill' ~I. {'ua~I /'1111 .. I Cnll .-1.li-i(ltf.1 Ga rages for Rent 435 l;,o\HA(;~: r.1r 1<'111 •so Edlnger-S•nte Ana ::11.11) ""I 11 u111t lrg l<'•td .. 111,,·, 1)1'111' :\1'11 1 .. 11( ~'"' 111 ""' s.1utl\ 1\111\ $2''tl 1,. 1 1111• \<'!\"(" t1l' I IHI (1\ !11" \\ • .i .~11 ••! 11 1 g,.,,1 1"~1111 .. n.:!~•:!111 4,000 SQ. FT. ·"J•lo!!l..lt•d t;,.,,J IO.iilhlll ~I, 1() l•<'r 1ll\i l1111. Ro v McC4!rdle Re•lto r l.~IU '.\1•11 rvl't Hl11I, l . \I S4f.7729 Rentals W•nted 460 11111• ll<'IY 11 111"11" Ill I' !ll(l\I" llhd '\) 0 p ~ \ "' l hUll£•'! l 'l"IO •I' fo!Jo>1,.. ~· .. 1-.11 \lo•111• !)1111~ l'ilul l\1\!IJl'!I • Sr 1·t1f•ll .;1.'A'.:.'1 SJl FOTO DATE .; ',r',' I I <1111 1 "I llf11l l\l1l0\ /1 t)PI II~}\ \if pli .. ro• rrl r 11 ,.J~ 1h .. 1 •I f' 1111111 !,• 1<!11 '\1• ( 1f\TR.1,1 ·1-. "I lo1 1,., .,rdrd n1•·•.~MX" -;"1 ~ ,'\.:•.'-'-'I .'I: 4:~. IL'.' Tra ve l 540 II \:-.'T~;u· l·\1• pl"!'"n t.1 '"ii In ,\lt•l-'.•l/Oh ! Ju •• ' \',di .\11 I!< •nl1unl ',1.~ ~!.ti sso /'l•:\l'l!Ef: 1ft'.'11r~ 1111111111. I ------------ hrf1111 llfJI 01 lk<ll~I' ll/l,?.<i-F'.\ll ll<•J.! l '!H! Sh~'p/11•1d 111 qui1'1 bf'h•·li rll!'1t n;,, i.l.'I .\11rJult' \!1111• 111:1<!, 1\11' h:.:-():1().f l\"11111 11 ilh hl1u !, !l<'li , .~1 lu1. A1•111"\ \·I 11"" 11id ('111.l.l>'.1;1.; l'rufl'N>ul ,\·, \'1<·. \\'tl~uu II f'j,.,·<'nl111 t.11-:1 f"~"t:" 111 I l T1>1•' I h'Ulll). r.r1>111ot. l '11·a011 ·~I \JI' lllll!t• \trt11h111111 Ii. UI!;\ !11111" •utl,u 11...; ·IJ!UJ .. 1 Jt.'.O·ll".'Sti .\PR !LOT l \11k.1p ... > to•1111.1Jr J)llJ>fl.I 111:<1 \ lo'illtl~ ( ')11 l'iill 1111 ,( \ 1.1 \'tr r\lu \I \ !/.:\ \II rl1•11,.l'•I' .~,;~ u lolO ,.,, :!~~ "'' ,l\.,O·.:UI,~ r1•·• . 0"" nln, I~••!' II !ul f' 111•,1 , ••I "' 1 , \ «1!.1,,11111 1:1 •••l.1!111 • 11 r: 1 1 ~~ l:r111tHI ·~,~ 11111 • kil lf'I II i.11• ,111prd i. ... I, .. 11.., 1 II '"'" \ " .\ I: O I I '•IH ' !' ' '"I' IHI I(' iH I od I .+1111 • "'"! II / 11 1111• "11 , I t ,,:J 1, I.' •I I" 11 •1, 1 • ., \I" 111• lJ 1,-; I ,.,,,,u l 1• H! ,\I t In '' I ' '" I, " I~~' '" ..,, .. .! !;,.,\, 11 l:1'\,,ud l 'L"n" "!' ,,, I.I \" I (' 11 Ill I Oo' 11 h'I" \ <'I I I• 11·1Hll,1 ~. 1: I•, , \ l.1 1,.; I ) ·'" t:••f111\t'I 11 t<\ rr:r <· .. i.. 1Y31d .. ,11uul1 I, 1111/u;o. ·" I ' o, H'Hio~!t•J 1>111:/, .. 1011 l<'l•~lj'll l.11· d 1 lr~ 11111.1111 >'t'fll' I L t I ll:ll L\:"\. l•u11lr1I ...:1111111 /; 1,-1 ... 11' ,)\)I Fl ber9l•1s Jlllu, ~'UI 1111 1111 ,.,!\II' lli"l11ll" t: ... 1ll1 •r~ rur 11 ... 11r .111h1,11,1 , ll!r 111.i111u. I•"' I "Oll•I 1·r1 •1111 :"\r II Ill" .tuo1 1k11·l••l'•I • 1 'o.i7 1l'Jq Furnilure \\ g '"' /,,.r •I! l'I" •! l•I ,, •' j• ol o' I 111 I Gardeni ng iod' "' ~ • I :lu111:; I•\ i l~llfi .< ' Ill ,. I I 1,111.l""'l""I: ... 1 I l•'I"• , ... 'I , 111 ,J :1.~ '''o 1 J11.: 1'\ r 11 11<u·1 1 d IJ, I ·,,,111 \Jr,1., IJ.i\r 1 •a,,i,,.. 1r .. ,1.11rr t, \J:J I!•,'\ 1·,1<•1!1!0111.; ll.1<11• 11•" •ILi-: 'I" ud..111 • '•'I \ ... ii ·1-116 \\HJ h, 1111111 111•1111 (~!JI I'"' lif'll ·h '· .ri ll I ;1'1dl'lll'1 n BR. Crpts J.: dra!Jl'~. <.:liu1~·c loc. 111 ,\lr~a \'t'l·dc. l1111urd OCC'\\\)d!H') $\~>() Pf'!' 11hJ 96:!-!l:::i9 I PARK WEST APARTMENTS Bdrm. From $160 2 Bdrm .. 2 Ba. Santa Ana Furn. or Unfurn. 370 , !-1111':\l:I" 1:.10 !1\t). ffl I' (' \1 • !;111111) ~C<'k ~ H1· .. :! Ila. t' .. \I. b?:I ~H~tf ho1111• UI {'rl\l 01· Npl llJ,!/JJ, I . I I ' • V E ~I A l. ~: ll 1t .•,. n 11 ll L•• Pll \'1•'1" nr.·11 o\11•11•'1'> 1., '! 1111. H1·11111 d .~ ;, :•1:, 11 1 ll ll I " i::' 'l!'.1111111 l•'h~ I JI 11 rl ~ r A I' I 11 I: bh• ,i.~!JJ LGE. ~ P.rt 11 /1J<il1u. 11u1r1 (' r fJ t/1lrp,, .'tO\<'/H•f11~. Gar<H:I'. :\d11 11~. 1)1} J11'\~ 6-Hi-2iti.:O:. * * BEA t.:T!l'LI. J .tc ~· Bf{. From S19S ;:~~;; l'a1l.:1 '"' l..irir J11 1nf'. ,,/u,..r 1111' .:,111 fl i.·;:v F11_1 al Cuhr1 r:d • FJMILIES W~,.l''lMf.! Con1"n1porai·y l,;ard!"n :\pis 1 Lagur1a-BV:Ch Pal1os. fl·pl!:. pool. S l."JO-.~Jti;J. I SINGLE STORY South Sea Atmosphere :! HDR.\1-:! B.\1'J t Call J.tti-JJS:;. ! .~· '! BP. un rru1rt slrrPt S!7,i lllO l ".1r[)('t.( llOd IJr;Jnr' .\11· (:ondi!ionrd Pr11arr P:111"~ lfl-~1\TED /'(1()1, DLX ] BP •. ga\'_, quiet arra SHi:>. ut1I. 111r1. Al'allablr Frh. , '!17 :111 i p.n1 ro1· a.iu11~ 0111.\. !'\o rrls. I S13~. \:iQ I·. :!l!-.1. li'!G-tilJlti_ '..'J::::.~1-~tlii.'• or _!:lll-.'1i1i. ----• '.! \\'1-:fl\:-i Vl:E!·:! 1t 1 8!~ .s1:r, up -'! J:P. ~l~IJ 1111 POUi. • * 61 :!-~l~l I '.! (';1 I I f':,I ~!thlt". f'lh'] p 0 0 111'. f'lld .~'.'. '.::1!.~l"-~a1·. :::::~ <..:. hi 1!1\). til.-... 1,, .. f:DP.~I .. al! <'[II.~. drp.•. \'\u~('d g~1rag" .~ pn. pallo. C!• .tn: :,10-1~1 pill Col' 11).;111!• ., r,r , b!l-111~. 1':ht1ou•r .t '..':;.; ·'Iii-:;111 • '! i;J! bl'·lll~ UUjJ;,., 11/;_:,.1.i~" .~ SJHl/i!IU_ '!,;-,~ ' "" ·.1 ld1n~. lil'."11 li -lt'f>lll ;1 p I ,\d11 1!~. ~::00. ;1::ti--Ol:?I {'\ .. ~_ La quna Nigu@I LAGUNA NIGUEL APARTMENTS RI:, 1 I~\ • :! 1:1:. '.! B:\ ( ',1 rfl• •!'t .t ."ilul "~'· .'Iii·. s .. 110o11~ '\ I' '-' l I ·, " . ". HIDDEN VILLAGE !.11!1 ~·u1rtl1 .'.Ill.• '1'111••1 '! l)ik~ \\', "I f\r1•1HI uff \\'ar111•1· "II l.1111la \l'a.1 ~oulli 10 II l '1•11t1·.il1 >lo-l.•:!.1 full~ , . d ' .. prJ l .'i.tnla .\11;. • From $185 Santa llh'\ 'l,.I~. r\· 1•,,\i[(', 11.tl('l', Ana Heights i\ll kit 1'11111 ... lt1d11 il l'('H.~. -----------n-,,. \1::0. '! Bl:. \11111. ('IJ1ld ·~ h1,\ ,_11 Ill\ p..)O:. P,f~Q ~ pt'll' ('lo,l'rl G <I 1 '1 ~ r . 1:1:1~ P"I"" ,t 1 •. 1l•·ool"'· (/IJl'JI Oro·ha101 !O ,\\I 1 .. ;tl''! * l!l.o-l?i:.'. 1'1:1.~::~; • :_l·lllll ,\lu111,1 San Juan Capistrano rrk111· Lido Isle ! '\.f' (-;ip1,.J1 , ('•11U)h 1111' p "·llt, ------------,:? f.;drin r•~.i. l\<1,.h/dr). LIDO ISLE APT. SI W/1110 fii~1-:!1ti:! .. Rt 1\ ha 111!11 h11111"11 .\1·;1il<>l ol•· no11 S:!'.lfJ. ) r1~ We stcliff -------------LRG :! B1·. ~ Bo1 . \11 fill. din Call ti(:\.::l;n:~ tii:'i-llS~; J<:1···~. lHi:1 -2 Bf~. cp1 ~/drp.~. t1l1n.s- rw.i r" t ~. hll-111~. orean 1 1P11 . ! qi!~. ·h·p~. l l ') ll / 111 0. 83i-:l!!27. ~Ji-:1JiR. East Bluff associated BAOKER5--AEALTORS ZOZS W lolboo 17J·JllJ Mesa Verde IK'1H11 j·r-11 IJl',1 trrl 11u1rr 1H!Ull~. rrn ti l:?-2:i11. .Apl s., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Balboa Peninsula D~:l.l.'\r: '..' .~-.~ RR, ('111•! g.1r SJ:J.1 up. llfo . :Jt.\:, \],H·f' ·,1&-10::1 '!!'ta.----·--------J:ruti\l A I C' ------- • fl ~ BP.. ;ip1 11 /g:Jr;ii:e. Yr;;r ruund 1'1'1"11"1 111 BallJ<Jil nr Ra.1 s:~-1S~7 Newport Beach Cost• Me5a • NOW OPEN • ==== NEWPORT BEACH Villa Granada Apts. four l'wd1"00n1s 11 ith ha!•·••ll- irs 11 1inve i bclo11· (;rat·1ous 111·1n~ ,t. fJ lUt't surrounrl1n& for ran11ly 11·1111 1·hildff'n. ,'\'ra1· Co10na ()f'I :'lla r ll ig-11 Scl1t101. VIN"flllH:l'. \\(";bark h11dt-1 n 1i11cl1r n 11ppl1;~11rr~ SJ.l A:'ll lGO::i \\'.\Y 611-~Jl Coldwell. Ba11kt'r .l Co. ~lan;i~in.!:' .'l~f-111 RP.A'.\'D '.\'E\\-I & ! B1· Froni ) 'il IS. Pr11 . 1,;,liu, b1J\i;iril *BRAND NEW* --EASTBLUFF 2 Bl'. 2 ha uos!;i1 rs \'tf'll 11pl j I ( ... ,.Jl .. l"d. d1'apf'1I. 11)111 .... : j <'01 l'l't"d p;irkrng sp.u·f's. Slti "D" ,\1 111;~0~ t.:!:'! lllP. W• aLWliUtUH ct .. lllC. I .-NEW DELU XE • '.: BR . :Z B.\ .\p1 !01· I"'''" lnl·ld '!l"L IU<i.-rrr ;:1Ultl', ()ii, rm & dbl g,1ragC'; a uro r11 .. 1r opcnrr a1·a•I Pool S. P.c• It'- n11. ht.',olrd po..I 'Jd•"llll!. ll U)(e rlu,.·1.~. (!('!'fl pile , <11'-I Jl"l:llg, lush liln•!Sl'ilPlfl::! .\rlu li~. '\'1 a 11·pnr1 1u~1 \\ o! Pal1•'1d"" lOlu! R1r!·h ~1 '\'r111)0rl Br;1,·h .-i~)' !'.!-\ti v BRAND NEW v .XH3:l .'ian1;i Ana A1·r I A1'l'O~~: fru111 ~ .\. r .. unu·.1· C1ubl ...:pc.•·1olt~ 1 t 'l RR rrorn $1.-IJ S. ~!\,t. f n:EPL.\CI· ."i Pr11 p,1 r10~. h1,1r!~ vf closr l~ /lr,.ird /' .• ,/ \duJ1. \Ian LA COSTA APTS . 2 Bedroom Avail. e E:111H-111s e ~\\111111111•!: Pool • /.11.11a1 e R:ir B·Qu<'~ • 1:,1r"::" \l.J. l "fll.lllt: . .-l'\!IJ \/1!'!.T.'. -.:o Pl·:T-.: 354 Avocado St., C.M. 642.9708 ------------:)t..,-!J:ll6 aft 4p111 Cosla Mesa e S P.\1'/i ll .; • \\ o•ll-1><'•1!.!llO'd \p1' ,{ .: ll!C 11 'fr1 r.H·1·~. ~'1,,111 .~11(1 :;:_17:, 111\1 ~li.tj!' l'fil>;, clrp•, 'Hill,,:<, nr•,I. J.ol'\i!IJ, r1i. I ).:ill'. ! 1""'1 \ \ ·ti I· •1 • MERRIMAC WOODS It :, ,\ll'1 l'i111.u \\'a.1. ('\I Hunlington Be~Ch __ _ I ,'<: :.' Ill: Hllll1l·n. HI' fur11 f1!k f1 ·0111 U('!',tll r\I :!l.1 1 fill Si H•·:i···d l'o.d 1 :Ju 1~. ~1 ·10. up l';llJ ,,:~,-Li:.':.' lru111 Newport Beach RESORT LIVING FROM $135 ,,. \p,11·J111l'nl ~ f1111. f111r 1111•1 If· I If' I,', 1111• •I'• />I "~111!1' Ill 11!~ I" •nl" !IP.Ill 'rlwt• • " l10illu111 il1 1·•···1 f',11 .. ,11 ,.;\\ lflllHlll~. il'lllli< l1tl,1.11 o!- )11',1)t!i < l1 il". '""lid•. f!l'O· .~hllp. 111dvu1' i:;vlf d1 II Ill!; l'itll!.:I', t'IUhhOU.-.c', <'I <' ('11.~h)1l1 rll'1'0Jr,1 !o'd .•in;.:lc.'. .t 1 Bl: f' 111·111"h"d .t ! '11 run1 1.~hf'd. ·'" Jr.1-r /'l'tlllil'rd. :\lor!cl~ (J11c11 lia1!.1 !() to 7 OAKWOOD GARDEN APART ME NTS (l 'i ·~•JI T L11111;.; ''•I Adul •~ ull/) :\1~\IPUr.'t /·;J .. \('J I ltit11 iii J11'lll(' .,, VISTA DEL MESA Aparlments I .i L HJ: V11n1 ,.,, l 111 IJ1•Ji. \I ;,,/J, I -,.;1,,1 r I.· f:t'I 1 llo; 'iha;· <'I p1 (.:·I 1 ,: ft,., ""Ill' /'. f'.J .. \"J' . .:• <1 1· I' Irvine & Mesa Dri ve * S4S-48SS * \!;r 1\·~ ,\!.!,' :°'\ r I\ (I<• I 110111 .t l . .-0. B"} Rt ~ H« <Jo, k.~. ciffiCi Rental --·--«O MEDICAL/DENTAL Bo·~l ln1 '11llt111 7<!~ DOI'<'!' I l l', !:l.j() .~q II . (i!fit·r 111 ,111. lt11 !ll"(I. OH'\'\lp;\lh'~, <'US!<llll !1111"1'101'. I ( '714010 0 --.1··u11na.,a l>J-:Sl( !'Jllh.:e :ll\'t1.1\ab!e $:t!l 1no. \\'ill provid" furnilurt 11.1 s:, rno. An,11'C'1'ing ser l'irr l\\'al!nble. 171\j:, llci\1•h n :\•1!, Hunlin~lon Bra1·h. li'1'.!-4l:!I Pl!/\',\TI·; !-l<>1P fl1th·I'. Sl'Jt ol• • .,·, 11111101' 1·t'111 r1· J 'er! f,1r U1<~'1ur t;i\, It )·,. r l< ,..:IJ.:11 i,:•Jf'•-IUl'll If lil'\U'ril. (' .. \I ..• 1~-~!~IO n1·:s1..: ~pa.er. •1a1lablr S.)O , rno, \\'ill provide rurn iturc a1 ~::i 1no. Ano;11 ,.ri11i:: l f'l'Vil'e ~v;clabll". '.!22 Vorl'sl A1·e, l.11gunn H(':teh 1!14-91C6 I J[~I J ':\·I·'. -i_i.-,(1-;:;I· -fl IJ!l 1-;:;-l ~•· 1'>11 II t '111·• •!1<1 •l"I \!;ii. , '\,·,11· l••SI ullH I' S11a o I, "\!i••1• l't'll !'"l'lt . ;u1 , """ l:t•;iloliqllil"'· n1,1 ljj I fijllfl !.t:I !I!'\\ ;1 ·1 < ·,,111 I o·p1-. d, I" r11.,l 1111 • Rid;.: h 11111 ••l!lo o' Slll)-l•r "I \I., I J.o•1 1· I Fl ,. ,, ' I\ h ! ,_ :.;~1u CORONA --DEL-· MAR- Di•lt1\e hu.~. olflt'<'~. P ri1alr ha :11 ( 'p1.~;r1 1.,1~. f:i7:>-f:ii .-,; • ;(111 .S.-fiOO sq 11 , 1 ·"~1., C;ilJ 1.!1; :!1::0 11 \ 11,·-Ore· "' .•l•1l't", 111ud hlrl;::, ~\\ ;\{'1\/.1"1'1 l~1d, :"\,H •1rwn s;.;, 111u :.1.1t<1::00 331'5 Newport Blvd. NB ArTOS.\ l°ll,1' fl.di. lii,-1 ltiOI l'OP.Oi\A IJEL .\\Al: L1('!l1\f' grd fl(•ul' of!H r /\/(' .. 1111 l>l'k& 1~11-tiOoO l.,\J~t;E I 1 •~111 1 ollr•-r. Pv1 rnh· '.\'1'11/1 dt'<"•I ·.1 .~-l :!~. \.fi Busin•ss Rental Sti, 11111 Jr11J1J•t11;11 111·~1 '\'rw hid~ n1 ..;,,ri U1r~o Fr11\ ~ 1·1''"'11 \'1111".Y r~rk11 8 ~ ~.: r. J 1011 ru11n111i:,: )•1v1 hou.•e" T urn thC'in irllo '•[,\Sii ' -~,.JI l hMn rhru fJ;.1Jy r I ! o 1 I 'la,•dil!d . ti4 '.!.:)fi"i,11. ,1•.isl' 111· .-.a"'· ,l X-,loO:t I I la lllH!IOll, It h ! Ir \\ hll, 1'1 l\ Jtll' fl,l!'l,I II l.~lll"lt 10 1·r111 t111uhl1• ~111·11i,:I" lll'ur '.\1\lll fl,h. f~('hS. till·tili~I:! 1t111rl..'I In l1rnl \'1•11 ll 1r•tn\ l,1 ,\\\!'!I lil•lll•:d ,,, I Bl: li01l'1'. N.B . Al'f'l-1 . Nf)I .>1~•~'Jli1S Il l.~ r r••l'ot Jl<11 r Sllut ll pl'I Fl)lJ,\ll ,l,1u, ~;111 t,,1 nhlr 1i43-5ti l.o\ f I I • ---I Ill . l!ll"l 111111 ~111·11 10111 Ot 'td Misc. Rentals 4'5 1 .t· 1111 11" ~111ti.;.i1 1•1t1 1 l'••11H" \'1t·. :.\l!h f.· \\ 11ll1t<'", t ' \I For: Lad} • r.00111 &: i·1u·r l :~111-.~i:r. 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'oll f' ll"illlr 1· 11 .. u!d loll•· lit low ~111~ ll J.:"~ : , J,,. f11i: 11 11•1 )"'I 'Oll,d 11!1••111 .. ,11 11111 111,.,d~. l•'ll< 1•d \ .ol ii 11 ' l.1111.i.\, 11 1111•5: ·r r 11" o•'l!l"I ul \',11 d 1 l'lll•HJl']llll i'l'll•h l"11 d111i.:, lul • 11"11111111 11•·1 •11 11' ~pi 11il.h·1 ~ ,;;:; I It~. • 1 ',.111111!·1•· \.ut1d"·1q11· .VI'\ 'i1 i·1111i.:, 11\I !J1·11t1~I' ("O. ,. ·11·111 . .! ~ \1"1. trr(' t1.dur111 1'l'1 1n1111: •l'I'\. ·' ·7-'l!li 9. * S0-2015 '.!1 II, "'/i ~01'1't• r•I . l·\:µt•t .!apu11r•r (;1u·1lt'11t1r ('ou1pll"lf9 ,\d a!"l'l'h•r . N~a ( ,to /(1'!111 Frt'I" l'~I tM'.!~~!~9. l·:'\I '. 1 lol ll oillhll ( :111·,11'1ic1· ( •llilll1f'lf' j(lil•ll'lllllj.\ l\,ll!l.1lJ1f'• ,, 111 11111. ~l'I I \"!'! ltt\\11 ... , l1'1•r~ Al~I ~1,111lh 1r 11101 r d u.,101!1H1•1<: h I' li,1,l.1 ':Ht·.!·.:-> 1!.\.'\.'lJtl,'\ ( :Ml'lil'lllllJ.: ,{ Vt11 <j \J1t ill• l<'Hlt\h'I' ,l.,r 1·:1111 1'1' ti4:!-l l.11 I 11 u11111••11I \\',•11k oln1, •oOI.\ _ I·. ,, . ..,tJ,·111 1 l'f, \11 oo 11 ld1. G•ner•I Services ·~ •. ~ Iii!,; .• 11.\1 :~ :-.! t·t 1;..c •i\!I IH•h h h•n111• ~!llM,J ~'I 11 1•1°1;. 1,,. 11 \, \I ,., , " ','l,j •'' .110 I ( 0<'1I1t1< 'I t"'" 111'1 ..... t \!. ) ·1 • ., .. "·' 1•1.,:-, JN:-.t 'I.\ I" h '••t•• J•ll01 !•I'"' I• /1111" 111,.t 'd 1{"11~ liT\-'lll!,.~ l.lt:'IJ lJ11 y C111~. 7 ~111 °1 ::O p111. I lfJt n1r 1;1J, :'\t11r r11r<' Jlnrh1t 1 /A11!.r 1 ~1 1·,. ..!fi I 1;;~ 1·1111.11 ··1ur IHI 1i ....... 1·,, \\ d"'oll /..• \' I<' I " I' I ;, I' 1· •' • • lo" fl J ,1tl1ll•1Sfl lir1 r ,, II( 7!tlj Carp•nt•r ----····· LARGE OR SMAL L '" LI rll',·1, 1tl1u11lo lr11,·r 1il1· 111~!111~ '"I pl'O>il I f!M Iii[ ft lo , ,\'.HJ:l.'lQ Hauling \uni •• 11 il,11>·•1.'."~, ltl(llllH!(. l· h1tilhll1t. '.\1.:'.0 \)f't' h1· ... ,,,1,1 .i .. 11•. ;;1K~~1i!\i:1 llAI Jl .INC:.-l' I.EA N:-U fl, l()4·fll rnnvr ,., l".\'fl'fl (~ollrre 11l111lrul I .f£ IJ'lll'k , Rl'l l . .')."l·l-JR11i --y AH ll/.{:IH'llJ.:•', 'lt'ltrlUp.I llr111r111' ll'f'l'Ji, 1/11·1, ivy .'iltl fl lt1 • dr 1·, b&l'khu~ .11 l i~:lfilifi Tl:ASll l. c:1111<1(f' 1li1)~ ~ rrr "~I .,U\-:l(J:•.1 ---o·lti!ll·llp An} l!ine. !'~T Tll!Jt'h -ll0 ;;;117i..--. lllfWH 'llfl l'(f IHMkll ('mu1I V11J/")' J l•ul1ng >l!ll:i-:1:!711 . -··---· Hou1•cl1•nin9 l\'IN Jl ll\\'S ('11r p,.11, l!.1f'/rJr.1t• 11,. l(llf' Blu,. ('ll!p .-;1,,,.111~ H&.'i \111111 11•11111!•'" .111 •l1,, ~4'1~:191:: .\liu•l •·o 1 tu;; f (f'I~ I ,r\lJY "'/Jj'k. $:; .1'J 1<:&11111 ll•ttl;tl'• lf'llOlnf /-:_..pr•1• 01111 IJ Mil•. lw ( '1111 1/l ~ p.n1. lj4'j' ,;v.:7 I [1 ll ':-ii ;\\'f!Hh. , \ fl • , l'lll'ul 1 ••t•·i • '11> r 1 '1•\J11lr • hi '. 1·1'.!/. ~!NKll ( 'lr111J)llJ., "'"l'V ll r ('Hll/f't• \\1rid•1l\~ Fl••" ,.1 ... flr11u/ A '"""1" I. dS-111 ! DAILY PILOT lnundAy, FtbnlMJ l , 1972 :~-~ ... ~-~~~l;-.. P¥~ [ ![fl] [ 1rm 11 L__ _ ...... _ ..... __,J[ll]1 ~1 --~Jl§l 1 -]~I b--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil:;,;,~:1 i-C .. _, .... _-~J~rh 1 Help Wonted, M & F 710 I Help We ntod MI. F 710 15l 11ilnt lnv & Help WantMI, M & F 71 0 I ' Help W•nttd, M & F 710 Furniture 110 Ml1callineout Ill Office Furniture/ 124 1:C;::•::.":.....--.-.,..-c--:- l :,:f'"P""a"'po=rh=•"'...:.'-"'.::...---I AIDES 11, Ordf!rlks full or-EXP. l&d)' for chi.Ir! ('f;l"I'.-' MATERIAL ISJ-..CR£rARY . SJ! 1-rqd for KINGSIZE 111.aier bed, mai-* Equip. \~'A,"\Jf..l• '"''"~1 00111 " for ""I NTlNG: Inter/Exler. p/tlme. Appl)' Ln Pf'?"IOll, dayli .a v.ttk, my horne. I HANDLER xln'1 ro. v.·/f'll.ln1Prou! lr1ngf' I rms, riad, hntl' ~nd frame. PUBLIC * ADD ING ri.tach1nes and ca~h r-;.11 r,·r~na11 i·a ~~. ntulf'l'f'd f9-h--~o.-.J , __ 1445Sl.lpnior'Avt., N.B .....L.Ud f -· ~ I co AUCTION -···te-. 11•. ""· ' ,1r1 la111~1. so1:-1£ij$, :::li ........ --•1c•u & m u..,, ==='-~---'-"--·-'-'TI ·own tram JlrT f'11 n.. DRy ah!tl. Mu111 he ntll, rj,.. ,,.,nt' lll. Rauh. Bein, 1'"ros1 NF.\V .'~DlTION~ k 5 yr. ·~ "' •a .. ,. ~-pain at ~ )00 cu a_f. ARTfSf.pastt-up pn>ductlon, 646--e709 t1r ~18. Pf'ndable & ~51 at.!!. bit &. N.6oc. 136 Rocheiiter, I gt;ara_nrtt. S35. Black pad-FR I DA &l:>--0595 .11!2-3.'i:::!J:_ ____ "'°' :"11.. Non drinM. l'rTie Nt. dnitnna. P /time. A!t ~ pm,: E'XTIU llldlmP. FUJI or pt work: N:cord. Mu11t 1~ ahle C :0.1. !>18-7723. I ded vinyl ha by car .seat. F EBR~lk~ ~;~· P ianos/Or g a ns 826 D09s 154 :"ll. 673-U66. !rl:Z..2859. time, Sht1klt"!I r-.11.nic Skin lO wnrk wknds. \Vill rra1n. SEM.1STRf'"'."'S • All•·•t<~·. _$I 00. ~lt\li--Os,13. B -· - fiO'i "''" .. -.. .,, • ..... ~ -ankruptcy & Repo'$ P IANOS**ORGANS NOVJC£Doj;Ob ,.tf1rnc r -FCr Your lnVf'tinM-nl Catt P roducllli thru lv>m,., * Apply 8.30-11;'.IO A~I "~1rnan for r1rv clt'aJ'tl'rl!. (,J\1)-1-,..., !>lZP ber1. firm,+ t EST f' I .,.-'ftl P11lnL Jn!-Exl. CoslA pal11o"'I!, BUJ or A o b, ange ~ as!lc1 * fo"/!1mf', Ex,_,., net ... ~. Call "'/h<lbd . ltke new 19•. J(eo-FURN ,., "' ~-" LV ·~ • ' Or -·--1 Pl ., I ATE or· f:O Of)ll<r\··~, St·•·••Y. •~11""y, r1as.<; J.taruni:: T11r~. fol • T' """ W t 18th S ,~. ~"" 1.-..rl!NGS cons1'l!1n~ Ail,.1>, Balrh111ri. "'· From ll!h , 7 r \1 !\l,\R'f!N('RE:ST ~:it-:-.: --·1. . • Co~la Mesa, Cali f. ·-" ,, JU 0 ?t" ard Bell colorr•I TV, $295 Ufl. RESTAJA<:; $10 un. KE/\:-IELS nothlnsc fOl' trtt e 1 t 54il-2$125. I <>.JV es •I. 6-14-~!1. n11w1•. o....,n ton dit, tow•'-, f p k l''ULL or p/l1me, ~gm! ~ SERVICF: 5!a1Lon a ttendan!. 1 like n('"W ~98. St'\! \\'~d/~1 KE'lvina!or F"o0d·n-ran1;i . H.:ir 1 O~i1 11 lrl 6 '-"•t11 12.s ~U'~fl~'! JlifERIOR &:. extrnor pain-I trne, rlf') t'11p. n Pc., NEED extra money?' Beeline I exp. prelf'rret!. f ull & par1 °1' Sun. &l>-43l.J, ;,()} f w;t:in & 5 stools, f rr.n('h p1,,\'1nrrn.I FIELD'S PIANO CO. \!UST , ,.11-,-b710-, 7 ,-.,-, f!iQg-. Guaran. worlr & 1 ARE THERE S ll I 11. r y I (om m. Fuller FallhJOllfi need 6 \\'Omf'n. Cd., time gh1f1t; .avail. Apply at A\e .• Nl'.'Pt Sch. hdrm sel. WroU,1thl iron !a-! 1/\33 Ne .... poir n!vd · · 1 WI l<l 3 uonable price• B 111 Brush 962---0416 + Sh II J7 h & t N R / • s I ho -' blf' & 4 rha1rs, D1nn1' "' C . \f 71 1 'I' ,..,..A f""Pr..-1 es, 4 nio~. 0 · ,. •·-. · · · tnO™-'Y. No ooUl"ct., delivery · " . r rv1nf', . . ·' ·us x spn ngr; + ma t-C .__ . 1 osra. esa. v J·, •·'V 4,hH1ll"'nf' r1nv 1oy ...-vv!it>s. --1 2 r s-~o " orner '"""rl un 1r Co!IN' ,t.,. -, , ,._, ANY LEFT? f /C Ronkkeeper : or ln\•e5t. ~9 o r SF.RVICE ~tat1on attendant re.!is, nr ~u. •• f'a lamp lablf's Cnm orl t ONCE A YEAR 'rA\" 646--'IGlij. • Rm aurant exper. prt!:f"rl. .l.9l--2317. I par! 11rne. f'\'e5 & 1.1('t>kenc15: naug ('hatrs $5 .e11 . Study Ro .... • h, d·. Moln~:,:,~· 1 CLEARA. NCE SAL~: ON ------~-; Ne Wunng •;/f WALLPAPE R * :"When yoo call "Mac" si-l#t 6f6.1ru J~ard Worlo.n1, Door ~·INTING. prof, All work I] Knocking Salesmen. C!W1L Color 1 p e c I a I l 1 1 F'or This Type Of 1.lan ~· 547-1441. We Offer 1 'f!NTI~G. int l"r It. nt, e High Commission il t &I. rate,, \.\'Ork f!18rnld .• H ospitaliza tion i oceJ refs, he. Ph i I . 1 • L lttl• • ~I. O r No Com petition MPLETE extrr. $200 • e 3 Year P a yme nt :'C>. Av1. rm. $20. Neal e No Inte rest Or i;;rk. Refs. Roy, 847-1351J. F inance Cha rg• ~R clean & neat painting, e No C redit Papers ,~tf!rlor or exterior I: n!u. 1 To F iii Out ~:ntes, Dick, 9684065 eve11. 1 e Good Bonus dGLISH Paper Han&er &.. Program ~intrr, 30 yrL v.:per. Call • Profit Sha r ing 'Ed., 968--7f61. e P restige Selllng Jl'AlNTING ·Guarantee~ pro- O!aion11l work a.f f11lr pticf!ll. · Uc'd &. Ins. 675-5740. PAINTING I PAPERING, ·ts yrs in ffarho!-a.~a . Lie & bonded. Ref's turn. 64:Z..2356. PAINTING, prol. AU ~·ork 'gt.111.rn. Color " p eel A I l 1 1 842-4~. 547-1441 . PAPER HUNG $30 AJ!y rm. + paper. 646-1449 !iIOING &-F'aci11. $129, 2 1!ory $.229. Exter onl:y. 642-2755 or 1 .~1403. you supply the p a. 1 n t . Rooms painted $10 ea.. Also e,-cterior. Call 5'40--7046. PROF . pa.!ntina:-lnter/exter. Honest work. L I c I I n s • $t8-2759. 540-1«4. Pf•tter,. Patch, Repelr * PATOI PLASTERING All typf!!. Frtt estimates ; ~ Call 540-6825 Plumbing For An Interview 644-0212 BE AN AVON REPRESENTATIVE Let me show :you how easy ll l1 to make money & have tun in your frte hn:. For .!!. personal lnrerview, c a I J 5<10-7CH l. BOOKKEEPER v.·anted for rf"tail dn1i;: slo!'P. Retail exp rlf'!!irl'rl . 548-7!>21 . BOOKKEEPER- For Fumlture Store. Full bookkeeping exper, necess. Please call beh\TI 9 & 10 11.m, 642-~50. BOO K KEEPER typist pt/time for 11 CPA in CdM. Approx. 4 hrs. a day. Salary open_ 65-2070. BOYS '~ 1714 rlt>i'ik $! • r:-nn tab! I ?= """ , . ., , .-l::Nt;J.fi:!ll ~uPr. frmale. 5 ~=--~'"~r-=~ _ NEF.O 21 appt, maker.;, LxpE'ncnced ~nly. !"eat. Ap-.it-l2_11700J. •· e. • JJ, Comn1erc1al vnruu1n t·l f'an-1 nf a kind flOC>r rlrmos-1110'5 "Id. 4.11 rhan1ps. 4 tn· G E N 'L P LANT MGR phn!n ,.r11rt10. lmmf'd. earn-I ply a! 7:190 NPwporl Blvrl., · f"r. Lamp5, ·rn1nki'i + m:iplr l .conn-\Vuritl1.('r·A!l('n, 1rrr1;1t"I ('harnps, S100, Knn .... l~i;:e of llbergliWi. 1 •ng~. J ntcr.·1<>1.1·~ r.lon thru I Cosra f\.lr<:a . 18" CRUSHED ve]v,-.r M"lfa, d1n1n~ ~f't.'\. Bunk brd'i, Srii· 1 KCoebhe-J SoNhn1rr 11.-t 1\·rrt>lt 6i;-H~i1. "'"eldlng & Spray Pain l1ng. Fn 11 -1 pm C. :\!. 64>--3848. 5.1'.:H\l lCE S1ation Al!o"'iM1anL 1 n<~ir ne"·· S\50 ~1,11,·h1n~ ing n1ach1nri'i, D1v11.11s. f;r.-·r· a e C'lson-ur llz.c r \\'AR!\-l_K_· ------ Call Ml"!I". ~hmif'll .. "'UP.>E.S, pi•t O"ly ·'I A-ty in ""rsnn. '.!OO \\'. l'l\·Psrat $100. Cn<'ktait lah!rs fYIS. Ap(Jlianccs. 16" ho;1I \I' J~111no~. t·urli!ly rnin11uur!' • " "'--' ,,,. ,~ ,,. A·" t c..~ • "'' J •-oath J ti t ..... Sehnduzcr popp1r~. AKC \\'F.STCLrrr lypes, all r;hif!.5. Le~'.-.. .. 1,P Coa'11 11 .... 'Y. N.B. . .. 1. '"' amps. _,.,,,_2973_ ... ; 1rP motor & trailer AND ,.,., 1 -arps1r inru. PERSONNF.L AGENCY ......,.. !\·!UCI/ MORE! All 111t>rchand1se sold \\'1tb rrt:. 1'11 r.hot~. C::r.ll Joanne 204.l .Westcllff Dr .• NB l\"ur.v·~ R eg i 11 t r y • 351 SlllP r JNG \VAREllOUSE RIJR\l, l1v1ni;: rn1, 'hning rm WINDY' UC IK'W 1.1•nrran1.v &· rieh~rr). af!C'r 6 p1n !;~7-&929. 645-m O llospuaJ Rd., N.B. \Ve!I koown firm mn..-in~ m furn, nr Ile"'· Al.so misc S A JION GOULD :'olU!'-IC CO. \\'!P.E ll!t 1r Fox Tf'rr1er. 64Z-9955 or 540-9954 ....-.oc-ious nf'w "Uat1,..rs 111 p1,..,·,..~. Zl.38 \\'estminster "" 011 HAIRDRESSER t ' . .,... ., A Cl\ ·"ince I. AKC rt>~ ;i mos. mllle. good -, ma~. PX-l ntervie11"1 ~5 f\.1 /F lr"\•111r \\•1JI train f"le11.ncul vr , · COr-.tE BRO\\'SE AROl lND per. Exccllrnl opportunity, -~~~~~~~"---1Q45 No. :0.1:1111, S.A. in a r k 1 ng .s. Eves/"·knds. NURSING CARE m an. St;1r! $2.50. FH~'.\"CH Provincial; BPd W75 1~ NPwpol1 Blvrl. * 547...(1@1 * S."'"' ""'" guarantee. 4!m-3165 Call Bob \V1lson, ~55 1.'10 -ha<" s~, pa •• ·-e~ Behinrl Tony's Bldg Mal"Js c:.:"c·c~c.::.='=· -------~°""~--"-"=---'For e\d('rly larly l'Jtroke pii -· ' ' ..,, • ·~ " *HAMMOND O RGANS -l1ELP ~ !Jeni. Ronrn & hoard + $400 Coastal Agency C'hairs $35 each. 962-4091 Cos!a Mesa • &lfi-8686 ~ \\PEltllARANER pupi'i Al<C I havf! • new bu~lne~1 ln 279J ]!arbor BL at Adaml'i OPt~N DAIL Y 9 lo 4 1 t.argcsf & o!do"'S1 dealer in r<>g., 1.1•arm & lricnrlly. Look- town and I nrl!rl YQllr ht>l p. mn. 67.1-7254 alt 5 pm. f'ROVJNCIAL d111ini;: table & -. U.S. All modP1s ne11'·11s('<l. ing ff'lr lo\"r , rPasonahlf'. Jf a grounrl fioor op-PART tin1t' program aid, T IR E CHANG ~ Ii 11phols1rrt>rl tha1rs, 2 arm, STEREO~. If you a!'C' looking BC'forc you buy . givt' us a ~Ui-71~7. $1 .65 ""r hour, afll'r"""n.<, 11 u.~l h,-. exr1'd holh truck & 4 s1rlr , !°"l-16-•1709 aft.';. for a eonoolr or C"ompnn<"nl trv. IC:~~-=-=~~-=~ portunity olfl"rerl by a nPw ,.-'""'' 1 1 r t CR EAT OAN f' P AKC 4 r hrs JlC'I' 1.1·k. Call r>tiss pass!'ngcr. Top wages, Gara eSolo 812 ~Prrosy::.f'm, :im hanri -PENNY OW SLE Y CO ' · ~ups, ' oomp11ny with new lrle11s , Iring~ hcnC'fits, 51 ~ dlly "'ork 9 111g rome hankru p! rlealf'~ 17141 '''·."!< 11·k~. Jlarleqtun t.· hlk . Sho11• possihlf' earnings ln ex cess n ustf'nhRch &1&---1lff!. • & f f I I h ''""' & t 11 «< 70l' of$30,000andmoreper:yf'ar PART Time Gal to assist in wk. G45-20 lO f'ANTASfJC Gara.1:e Sal,. J"t-ii;:-i _ catm s tf'rCOs tat l J:\52 Beach Blvd ·Pl' ~-"'-1 Y:._·""'_r-_._• __ intere~s yo" _ you lnte-1 r,-.n!al dept. L 1·,,., ft TELEPl-IONE Salf'S. Top SJX)nsored by 4-0 f"rury i;:od-1 1 niust liq uidate a! trenicn-(So. of Karella\ AFGHAN PUPS, linl"st tn '"'~ '' .. ((/US S.1\'lrl~S rlC\"l'l' he/Ort' oc E ' I h me! And I \\'Ol!id like to pr"e'fC'red hut not n""l'sc~r-v, t'tlmn11.~~1ons nnrl honus. Ap. mo!hPrs of 1he Cinrlt>rella WOULD YOU · .'\O I" ('fl ors ~11 f)f'r """ ..... ~ 1 (; possible for tnrlivlrluals likr pcrl1grcf'. By appt. 962-99i!9. meet you! fbr personal tn-Akr. 546-8640. P y in person bet\\•een 9.00 itllld of Nf'l'.'(Xlrt Brach. yourscJf, & I \\'ill accr pt BELIEVE lerview only, call ~r. oP~B~X7' ~T~,-.-,,-L ___ F_a_m_; _J -1,-r ' and 12:00 nm n a t ~~l Bolsa I ~t-.Feb. 5tb 9am-4pm . small monthly pa ymnt~. • J(fE ORGAN LESSONS COLl.!t~ PUPS AKC Bruno, 835-9000. \~' I IBM Exec. lypewri!er. Avenue', l\tidway City. b ine b_y coac-h nr car to .\I r. \V ill1an1s 714 1893--050!. as Jong: as you like ~ No rf'.C::· Tri's -\-lalf'~ HSKPRS Emplyr P8Y5 fee. Salary $400 mo. Irvine lnrlus. uy a.n t1quf"S, fu r n i I u r e 1972 STEREO ,G _ _. istration. No obligar1on. Jusl $j(). *" 6-l&--0219 George Allen Bylanti Agen--area. 1133--2670, Mrs. Tinkler. f-.• __ 1 TEMPORARY childrens clothing, loys, COS· fl o n c n t 1; y s I e m , COAST MUS IC AKC Ba..,set llound , malr . 1i ALWAYS TOP men's, \\'Ome n's, a. n rl · ~ : arraiu com-I Come !\londays 7::10 Tim. 1-:-:=-=-.,.--~-cc---c- cy 106-B E. 16th S.A. Prl"stige position for ma.Ir "<Jfil ASSIGNMENTS tume j ewe Jr y. laf>C' A.\! I i-·t11 I Strreo/~1PX l8· 641_2851 Champion s1reti. Sacrifice 547--0395. HAIRSTYLIST. Must have recorder, carpet & tons of Jrack I lurntable. ba s s $50. 830--0051. some clientP.le. Generous I Come lfl & r9giiter t oday m1.se. uenls. 1811 But-reflex 1peaker1, separalt>ly BABY grand piano, Howard. AFGHANS, Al<C, 6 mos, n!'d HOUSEKEEPF:R full or p/tim('. Apply in person, 1445 Superior AVf"., N.B. HOSTESS P /time \Vcckcnrls Call Iv11n Bob Bum'1 Resrauran1 64'1-10.10 romm. Al ~". e'x p, r . You'll be ~lod you did. tonshell L". Take <--ti'ogo TC'!ailed for $<109.84. pay off ,-.bony finish, good condition. -No I•• eve r. ..112 Du Pont · " .,.._,, bala e 1199 87 I I $650 .WS.1635 or silvt>r. tllu~t ~11- J\lANJCURJST needf'd . Both ... !o Ho!irlay to Buttotl6hell in nc · or pymn s 0 '";';j.;;;,ij~''ht;;;;----;rn;l!"~"~===""'=~"~"-::5~26~55j manicuring & pedicuring. Drlv•, JrVlne. lll-1.295 N , Beach $11.50 mo. U.S.A. S1C'reo Se wing M achines 828 Locatffi in Park Ne1.1""'rt cwpor . l:-;quip. \Varehousc, 179 E.: BOXER PUPS AKC rei;. 1~ TRAY A.IDE, full time, 6:30 \VHITE desk, gold trim 3J.}. 17th St., Costa ~1 e s a KENMOHE Zig-Zag Seivin~ Cha mpion line ATllS. Spa privil. 644--5750 OT am lo 3 pm, $2.34 f)f'r hr. Sleroo phono, "'ood cabinet 645-24~2. 1 machi ne , 112 yrs ol<I. J\·lodel * 114: !"162-R067 ftt4--<19M (C'ves). P I Off" So h $7 ersonne ice, ul ."i. Old desk. beer kE'S:s $10. NicE 1 1 1 If k 1207 SlOO f1r1n 645-1609 Beegle Pups 833-1526 PROF'ESSIONAL p hone Coast Con1m11nity Jlospital. \\lhite porcelain cups & v_ny pa nrni roC' rr ' · · INVEST IN YOUR FUTURE iolicitor -Dana Point, S11..n South LagunR . An t"qual op-1 1~ ·nc t h -I $21} 1orqt1c 11Tenrh $2fl: SE\VJNG machine, like nc1•·, Cu te & beautiful $35/S50 portuni!y f'niployer. -"1r1 s 0 c ina ~n · Childs dresser unpain1erl $.11: KC'nmoN" rnod('J ~l Pa1dl;c~·=""'"'°",_-~-~,---I . Clemente, Capistrano 11.re;i, Dishes & hand pa1_n1ed \\.-ornaris bike gd m nd SZl· i StO!l_ S<-ll S.18 fil:rSQ67_ Gr~Rl\-1AN Sh(lrfh111r Poinlt>rs Work in your own home. TYPI S T/Rc c ('pt1oni:o;t. !h1nw; . .1010 &a View A · · · A!\:C 2 males 8 1.1·ks. :Re~t deal ln Area. Phone p / 11 m E", Thurs/Sat/Sun. 675-6448. ntiquf' _drop leaJ labl!! Sporting Goods 830 67-s's3· . 8'"1"~ •·tw• 9 00 needs rer1n $20: !O sprl hikC' I .r ·-"~· -=°""'----. BE YOUR OWN BOSSI Men or Women L•ase A Ye llow Taxi Ca b Call tor Appt "',;;;; ~n~ en : .t.m. Acc!Jfg backgrou nd. Front ''H" Street Bizarre Garage nef'ds wheel & seat $25: !i . BEAGLiS, AKC puppies, 2 ofc appearance. r.tesa Verde Sale. 1000 useful itc'ms. h!ue f'hl fl i;lamp books $1 RELOADING f' q u 1 pm e _n I lcmalcs, $3.'> f'a . 962-5.l!\5 REC EPTIONIST $450 Typing 50 w.p.m. S1.1·itch· board. Front ofc appear. Country Club, 549--0377, Nita ff'a turirJg" ha n d. c r a fl e ct ea: 64z--s773 1-le-rters Press, RCB S. Dies afk"r 3 pm or 11.ll day \Yknrls l\lyer. I ;i.nifact~ & items tha1 tl!OVING IN SALE" for 270, 300 v.·hv, tll-1 . \VATTRESS \VANT ED-Days, bC'long 1n the trash. Sa t & _ ·;·· carhine, 243 \Yin, 4.t m11g. AK~ tltalamule puppi e s, over 21. Appl y in person Sun. Yeh $1h & 61..h. 721 \V, l\lany ilems, no_ room. Lrg. Case trimmer. RC B S $150, r.lales &. females. LOVE'S B-B-Q, 3046 :Ralbna Blvrl Ba.1. r 1gA re!le mach1~e $95. Ven-1 Po1.1'der measure, m an y 968--11 70 B · 1 1 C , 1 ' do 7 cok<' ni achine 1.1•/foun-j bullets, brass, pr i m e r s , GER~1AN SHEPl!F.RDS r1s o · ·" · lfiOO V'I\' e ns:: & 1rans. '57 1a1 1·· 11 I d k 117 ' COLE PLUMBING :• hr. service. 645-1161 n ... 1. ! ap e t'S • • much <'quipmC'nl. Slj(). !or AKC, champ stock. 8 v.•ks. mentr Rl'fl!IC. \\'ANTED: llandyman fnr pa.n. S{'als. "69 body parts. Picturcs. Lot1 of misc. 1660 f'\'Crything. !179-131 ~. * 67'.>-1S33 * DAIL y P l LOT Ail for Herman RF.;CE PTTONIST \VANTED. apt complex, must live in ·rir·e.\ \\'heels..;i.Jl k i n d s. Sa.11111. Ana Ave.. C.'.\t. I ~=-=-~""-'----'--'------1-=~~--~'-----C romplell". Ji7 E . 22nd SI Honda Sl~'JO. Yamaha ~. &16--7::.62. GUN Coltrt·t1on Rf'nnnglon AKC Creal Dane Pu~. 546·1311 Call Lorraine WESTCLIFF PERSONNEL AGENCY 2043 \Ve~!t·li rr Dr., NB 645·2770 AJl'.e 10-14 to deliver papers In the Dan11. Point, &ln Oe- $8 HR. Plumbing & Electrical Repair. 642-2755 Of' 642-1403 PI,tn.m!NG REPAIR No job too small * 64 2-3128 * ~flng •. T. Guy Roofing. J:>e.al 'Direct. I do my O\\'n work. \645-1780, 548-9590. ----·--El!I'Opean DtessmRklng ·All custom filled. Personal f'Mhion advice. 673-1849. .Alteration1 -642-5845 Nllllt, accura!e. 20 :years exp. f elevlslon Rep•lr * BLAINE'S TV • Strvicinr Alt Brands Authortzed Magna\'OX Known !or honesty 540-4313 TN• Service . ilEh10 VAL & trimmi;;t;;; \\'OOd ft.!.lowance. 642--2755 or 642-1403. Til• CERAJ\11C l!le new & trmodrl. Free es!. Sma.11 .l>bs ""C'lcQnlf'. 536-2.426. -1 Jf.b Wanted, F•mal• 702 Nj:ED help at home?' We ~ve Aides • Nune~ e l kousekttfl("rs • Com-~nio~ I fomemakcn -Up- ;,in. 547..fi681. ~ERIENCED F.asl Coast l"M"htS\\'OfT\an ht'oeds \\wk, Ott iN' t'xp. u.il n111.rina pref. ti.l-93'11 ext. 172, ~18J. BOOKKEEPER. 14 yni ex. ir. Full or r lttm e . '*15. E :AUTJCTAN. matutt, "'" flt gradUA!f' ~\~JI pert TW'. 963-1745. 491-4-120____ ompelent, pl e as i ng ap--642-3645_ ;\Jisc. Sa~-Sun 2-19-22ncl St. pun1p, 170 win $110. R11,1?:cr Oiampinn stock, 8 1.1·ks. S50. CASHIER pf"arar1C'e fnr N.B. law ofc. I ~~==~~--~-7 Ot. POPCOR'.'J Booth ori~inally J0/22 carbHK'. brand new1'iiciailli &liii2i·662Siiili. iiiiiiiiiiiiiil Newport Beach firm M"tk'-·ryping, some transcr ibing, \\'ANTED, babysil!C'r, live-in 1-----------used at Lllng Beach Pikt>. $30, Charles Daly Ventura!' o"'!lshier. 1 _2 )'ean nper., t;:: 8:J(}-5pm. Call 54-0-5-100. on Peninsula, for 211 yr old UN IQUE, 3 families, Fri & \\'ould make great patio I G!""11.rle 12 ga. 26,. barrels ~------~ Pleaaant personality & ahil-• --• • RELIEF COOK girl. Call 675-2432 alt l pm. Sa!, F~. 4 & 5, 9: 30 to 3::'.0. har. Also Vf!rY clean 'fll $200. Ithaca ~lode[ 37 pump I Bolls and 11>.L I "-l: 21311 Via. Strait<;, Villa. F ~ " J · ku •1 k u~ ,_, ilytode11 lw/pt1blica nert>s· ~ eNURSESAIDES WAITRE SS oni :2 onp1c p."ae 12 i;:a. JO" barrel $130. ,....;ne.....,;pment · 1 • P11ci ric Tract, off Hamllton off" '1"'' JI 4"' •977 Rily. Xln"I co. benef ts. e LVN'S Exper. Full or p/time. Nol ~r. """ se · .,.,...... 979-1319. 64<1-.125RC. ASHI ER I ' unrler 21. NO PJION E betwBrookhurst&Bushard, af1f'r 6P:'>l. 1 7=~~-------Conva!e~C'ent Hospital 8.: JI R C,~~~~----~· I LEJ-~r Hand shooter', Generol 900 CALLS. Apply In ""rsnn. ' · N~'" EROUS ' Re~irlenliaJ Care Facilities. ,.., ===~=-~~--·I ..,,,1 • •Ja nitor ial equip \Vcatherby 2,57 magn u m1 -----------I AU 1. f 1 _d 21'}' """ p RSO 642_3505 or 540.5690 !""UT( & Sirloin, 5930 \V. Coast REDECORATING : B d rrn incl Advance JS" Convcrta-Leapold 3x9 variable B<l"ier SCRAM LETS rflc tv~ erna ~". m'. 5 1~v 1NE E NNEL 1 -..:....=-====~='"c;,.=:_-I I-hvy, t>-'e1vpor1 B.rach. sets ""'ffee tbt I · · d ' for full tJmf' position in new I -RENT ·=~=='----'-c-~-· '""" s, amps, pie-n1 a!1c, gar en. pv;r & h11 ntl I mount s, brand neiv $320.00. • fanll'lslic i;,-.U scrv service SERYJCES .. AGENCY AL \VAITRF:SS for roll<"e shop, l1J rc$, chairs, i;:-la:;$\\'"1l.rc. 10 tool.~. antiques, aquarhuns, \Veatherhy 300 mai::num fiita!lon . Appl~. Auto-ltfat, Secr•tary ot-£M AGENT over 18, r xprr. Apply 1n ain to 5 pm Sat ,\, Sun. 17180 ('an1pini::-equip. Cal! 1714\ LeapJld Jx9 vari<i ble Bueler ANSWERS 19,h • Pl t CM I ~ .,..,,_,.. ~1 • • t7"~ Ed""e .... •ater Ln, 11. 1-larbour. 89 2 9724 ''' lo"g l•"I of "" Rren ta, . . Construcllon ha"kgro"od. All · '" ,....,n, ,, CS.'l. ~nf's. v.> " • " ·' n1ounrs $280.00. 979-1319. ~ .. ra\llve, Wf'\I • groomer! S · C 11 1\-16-129 1 eve.rv. thin,. C LAIMS ADJUSTER Top :i;kills. Pt>rsonahle. \\'OmAn w' rlynamic permn-uperior, ·' · I=~'-"'-''-------ROSSIGNOL Strato S I< is Radish -Trpld -F'ru1t - Jnrlivldual experiencf!dindis-PBX Rec•pt. $433 + 11Hty. tltu:d ha.ve know!edj?"e GARA GE Sale Sa!urday: BEAL:T!fUL, vcry f'lcar, '~ 1207) Lang Eoo1s, ~l 9 Com pel -TRIP T!I F.ill :,~:~:. ~.1iZ. 41nd~~~~ s:Okk:;;,.nen~';~P~7~ ~e~~;se~ ~;~:::. ~~~ I Met-chandi1e J[""' J ~~:;,~,'::'.-,~';,.,"~'.".; ~:,;;;, ~;·.:;:~~~;,; i:d~~'i · ~:'.:""su ;;"' ,,,~ .. ,~~·~:: ·~h~,'~~':'~,~,:~~~~~·~~;; Small Santa AnR Office. EDP experience/typinR" 12 ::ID.~ pm. &. 11·eek-rnds. ~;;;;;;;~·~V~~ nllsc. 6952 Carla Cir, 1-i.B. man's \\"cddin~ ba nds. Cost 5.18-6815. don t whistle at the boys any Phone Mrs. Ladenburger for T y p ist t o $500 P h one 546-5025 G1\RAGE Sale, furniture, S.1iQ. fl lal"c hill of s:i!C'l. more They just st d · fh •·u 12~,. Call °"5710 nl ler GOLf CI.UBS left ha.nd pro · an 1n e Appl . 547·6437. F'1?e 'Fee Pnsitioni RN f · retngerator ,(, misc. Fri .. ~ •J -'f!T" ' . • doo1v:ays and TRIP THEM 4.S8 E~ 17 th (At rn.·in•I c ,, 1 ull time night 5hift Antique s 800 Sal. & Sun. Feb. 4-6. 98,1 6 P.\1 . or all <lay \\'('Ckends. slaff model. Used twice. A a.~ !hey go by." 11 -7, xlnt fringe bnfts . ----------' ~lea! al $95. 64'.>-2.5-12. 1 .. ~-,---'oc-'~~----I Communic ations O pr- Know Telex & Thr:'\. Domes· !Le Ii: lntemRtional. Call Lorraine \\'E STCLIFF Pt>rsonne! A.c::ency 2043 \Vcs!C'lirr Dr .. NB 645-2770 CUSTOMER SERVICE ENGINEER st.tic Unlnterruptlble Powe r Sy 1t•ms ltfu:i:t hf-11bll' tn s11Pf'r.rise PqUi pmt"nl in11!alla.tions. in- ''rsth;:-.'l.lc rus!nmer tmub!f'' rr~rts, pmvidr cu11!0mf'r gcrJif'e nn repa_i111, provide instn1cUons lo customen le be v.1Jll~ to travel. 3-5 \'t>an M>rvice t>xperien~ 642·1470 Bt>\'l'r)y ~lanor, C11.po ROLL lnp desk, hall-trct> Salillf', H.B. 962~9578. POOL TABLES \Varf!holl-""' S R estau ranT Boats,_M aint./ ~~""'"'""'"'""""'"'"''' Beach, 496-5786. seat, i<'E' c~am table \v/j GARAGE SALE· Saturda & Sale. Frl"ight damaged $49 t'B:; ' Ser vic e 90l LA D''· pArt titnf' nUiC1" v.'f'll'k SALESMEN ch:llr'!'. rd ook tahlr 41'". Sunrtay. fi:t7l Braf'ma.r ~r. !o SI~. Nt'~ ~late f,1('tn~( 132 in professional office. ~ l!rs Other unu.~ual old fur n11urr !I B S41-54~2 <'rated. S!9;, to S 3 9 :::i . B~O~A-:-=-:::------- pcr v.·k. all day Thuf"ll. & Sat Nf'e<l mrn ""ho are rea.rly to oak & '"'·1rkrr. 1&399 Sant.:i · · • 63!Hl623, 529-84fi6. 16 ll um1nated sho\\"case J Tl Bo!!nms cleaning 25c Do _ C learn the car business s.nd G,\RAGE sa!C' Rnund o.i k 1 h-' 1 .' II 1. lA'ngtQ. a t v.·/l <1m. \\'f11v""" o s I a l\rT \\'i!lini;: lo train. Must lPonor;i 1n Gref'nbrook, nr. t b! ha-· GORl!Atll s!erlini;:-I s *" 11 Iii as~ s .,,vt>s, go d anoi1zt>d 836--~23 r>tesa . 54S-51S7. h•i·• ...........i ,,.... -•·tv L-Ellis & f.lagnoha, F.V. a es & c irs, many pthcr P.nset 12-1 pi--M>Nl""'' I fituns::s. EXCf'l rond Ca 11'-=-~"a~·~~-----""'~' ,,.rsoni:u1_,.,.. antjque i1ems. 548-1995 All '" ,·V h""' 5l3--1114or 646-6721 · 1Soats/M arlne LIVE-in housekt'e~r, fu ll I interpstt'd in A future. rtres.~ Appliances 802 Qt part; e er · 11me to care f(l'f' 4 rniflll \\·ell, Mlesn1indt>d. Bf'nefirs: Miscellaneo us 818 Bar-B-Q. 531)...4.1~.t I TV, Radio, Hi F l, Equip. chilrlrcn t.: kf'l"P house in Demo .. group ins., gua.ran-* Sport.in,1.: Tlainting for CA R P E TING fl BL-s g e -roJJa1vav brrl St ereo 136 1----------· 904 ,.,,,·porl Bo•rh t~me. ,'fll'. 1 !E'rrl sat•-plu• -mm·,,. s::i.le-GrC'y lluntn-, n1nuntcr! l 6 HP J oh""'"' .... ,,,_.~ " " r· " ., · •.; '" CRtpe\ your hnusc in luxur-SS-$15. l"{)rTifJ. ,-.fr. Z 2 \\". "·'""" ""'""""'u f'ng, h11\1" '---I _, \\" sion.~. l lnl imitf'd in<'l'ln<P. A"-. Gentlf'man &. !Xlg -nol11nit 10-? & fuel tank I Id s--IUl"ll '' · age ac-,. inu5 nylon ~h;ig fnr ff'!;,•, Vic!oria. C.\I ''fll 1, cat-· •-ZE!\ITH & RC A Color &. · yr. 0 • ••J. ~· 1 ~ 1 r E I ply in Person. UN!VERSI-llills ,!:.:. Esta le, fran1cd. ~11! ·~ 1 67l--1 '"""' 11 6 c'Ch u1ng o u.·p . o mp oy-rha n hair prict'! tlave ,.,,,, tycorncr £ro111 .Statcrs. 1 hack & v.·h1te TVsal"'. """a pm. t J :,.ig 301r. TY OLDS:\10RIT.E, ~ with blAck linen liner, circa ~ ni"1 ~a*"· · -. .,.,,. H 00 !'1-0 "'" -291 one mll containing 72 square BRITANNICA nreat book,. Priced b<'!ow I h e rlis-Boats, Power 906 I Luhrs Boat Company 81' r Blvd., Costa Mesa. ,,.. . ,,. ...... -, " · .. ~ards or hr11 nr! new rnrpet-52 vol. s"t \i1 th 34 ~ur-coiinlers "·/~ )T piclure1 _________ _ N\LF:S \''mf RECOND. A pplianc<'~ & 1ng at on.ty $299. Ca.U 837--4239 p\£"mcnts an<I bookcase s1.·i0 · tubt', 1 )T parts & f.f'rvlCT'. 16" BO~ON \\"haler 2 11-1Ai'IJAGEMENT TV's. Guar. & Del v"rl, RUST\', used hoo t mooring firm. 9G2-4.1117. Color antenn a 1mral!rd frC'f' old f orwan:I fish!. · :,· OPPORTUNrT\' Dunlap·~. hl!5 N e 1\·p o tt 1.1/all oo~l lh 7 F ni;: <' • chain, 1 ~" material. each KINGSIZE bed. liner, pad & , es . ru cb f1i!l li re ra il &. 115 HP l.noktng for a local sa.!esma.n Blvd, Cf. 548-7780. 1 k 2,.. l o down r"'"'Ulr""' o Ac J 1n •'om:-. 1;,." wtde. lrame, 5 mo. old. 5 >T. ' '" n> • · obnson Olltlx>ilrd, ful l for rnreer ""/!rg. fine.nciaJ e \\'1-IIRLPOOL-KENMORE 50c 'I ABC Color TV 9021 AUanl institution. Subs tan ti a I per ft. •• arine_ Surplus KIJaran!ee $35. Private pat· Hunllngton n:. h ~•3329<1. rover . $26.'iO. 673--1066 all 6 Ne•d• • s tock c lerk. Must have d rivers lie. rpr. man has v.·ashrrs rlry· Co., 3307 s. r.tam, S.A. Ty 968--08l3. orar ;,w-• pm. 1 AAlal")' + rommissions for a crs, sels. 546-52111 : .\19-7620. 545--65.il. ·; • RCA 21"' color TV A-!1-~167.-------- 3 ~T. IWTiod. !\tarried, col-~-------. -. --fOl EE Board ''Dee p e r I t'Ondi tion. $!7S _ consol *" TROJAN SKI Boat, 200 lf'tr grad.. O\\-ner of A RCA '""'hirlpool "'as he r & GUITARS. a m ~ 11 f 1 er s, Visions··, custom handles. I mod el • r If P . V-8, x.lnt cond. $950. business pri'fd. 835-7119 dryer, elec, good runntng statues, ceramics, auto Very good. $50. 6T:r1345. p kATd .. \YUi finance days • Ask for Bi 11 rond. Must sell!! 842-7213. harp5, paintings, ba.s!I drum, . --ac_ Bell 21 black &. 673-&150 or 675-31:22 Apply at 149 W. 11th St., Co1ta Me1o1, bet. Ed rd E\ M&-8972 MOVING: gas stove S2S, ukuleles. CUSfOM wheels, fit Ford or '"'hlle. A-1 condition. $65.I ~-,,,,..-.,,,.....,,:c:..:c=--1 V."a s. '!'S. Thrift Shop Galt,...., Chrysler or ad.!!.pt to V\\'. 1 Console mode 1 _ Phone • l>' OWEt-.'S h\•ln eng .. lwt\\'N'n 5:30 & 7 pm. M/F. e!ec. filO~ $15_ Vac. SlO. i ~ --b .11 -.. -;'r S"":;i(). for 4. li'rr>-1345. J 548--1395. Like oew, Loaded w/elec-v.· 'rnmparablf' f'qUlpmf'nt. 8 • I Ability to trouble shoot clr-, a .m . Clll 0 •.m . only. cults. Sfond tt'.~ume to Clas:i;illf'ri Ari nn. 319, ('/ti 011.ily Pilot PO. Box 1560, Cosfa l\1csa. CAiif. 9262G. Eq11al Opmr. Employer. Gd, cond. 1975 "C" \\'allRcc. ""._... n o, .......,,ta "esa _ tmnic «"qllip SACRIFICE Fu •n'otu,.. 810 Open l~ * dosed Sllndey Color T. V. X lnt Cond. I 1'1UNTZ 4 & 8 track tape $l4 (XX) 67~ r>IACHINIST: \\'f>l! kno1vn Salt>s • S98 646-1525 deck 6 month& old ood ' . . 1 al ·nc1 '11 LeadC'r in \Vomens fa.shiom, DIVAN, end tables, cofJ<-" · ' ' g BOSfON Whal oc 1 u1;try '"'· I \\-elcome table, area rug, occ. cha.in, COPPERTONE refrigerator. condition $50 or trade for f'r 13" w/!ilt )"'OUT 11:kill1' for pc-rmftnent no\\' flR}i ng highest o~nide 7 PC. VELVET & 4 al 30" AM-F'M radio for VW or of-up trailer, 40 !IP JohMIJn. job wHh hi lrin .. ,-.s II n d ln industry llS A resull ol 1 SP SH OAK Y.TOUght iron "'ag chan-w nllt Bar Stools. fer. ~o ""~"". ll"lnl oond. 548--0~5. " ANI deher,· dra.-·, dl>I. rne.tt & Call at 5 pm. 557-6926. o-... ,.,., tines! oortdltlon5, To s;; hr. ne1v management program. LIVING RM GROUP .--~· TOLLYCR Call Bob \Vilson, ~ M11.nai;:emenl experi~ de--• I box gprings; TV/St~ h11SCELL.ANEOUS. U ~ e <l COMBINATION 21'' f'fllor w AFT, A-I cond. J.:qual Oppor. Employrr lllir11.bl~ but not nece..'W')'. consisting of 8' velvet 50fa . combo., lawn mo\\'t'l', etc. Fon-ed Air f\Jmace!I 525 & TV, ~tereo, am/Im. Real ~ully ~lppcd incl. moor- (!jO Up L Cflfl~lal AgPncy C'all fnr Interview, 968-S739, contrasting Vf'lvet Accent m-1122 Aft. 6 P,.1. up. Call 548-55.11. bfl.rpin -COf;t $700, tl&kine ing & dinghy. 548--4648 aft 4. ~~ E · *" "< P · • P I· DISABLED penon needl!. 1190 Hrubor Bl. 11t ArtRml'i chair 2 Spanish oak end 1 $100 l'\ttd ~rt. preu.nlly m.11n-111.<ly lo prepfu•e n1f'ft11 &. ?>fACH INIST A wan 1 ed. 6.'Yi-ID:i.l. tsble:;, Sp&nlah Ollik coffee GAS Range \Vedge.,..1'>00 Dix, \VALJ{-1n 7ic7. ~lea! case. 2 I ·... J1,pace. 8.10-l8l 6 . Boets, Rent/Chert'r 9tM !111:W .11 r g e romplex tn person&! CflrT, no lilting. 6 Jntervlt""·s \Vro thru Fri. 9 SALES!-.!AN. Need a.ggres-table &. 2 SpAnish lampg.. l lwin bed, 9xU blue wool at 12 & JO'. Slicer. Ove n. 56 f'Oft ~e 2 Lancer 30W ----------·I J.' bt Wanted, M & F 704 = fh ~;old like to dys ""·k .. S-1. to.ton.Sat. Nr. am ti) 2 pm. Vought Div. of 11ive hllJ'd working Nt'W ev ALL FOR $199 ru)l". Kemnott ""'ll£h(>r, 2 Cacl1Uac. 549-1250. 5-8P~t ;io~ke~ BSR 1 McDona.ld CATALINA 27' SLOOP ~ ..,._ -." "-11~ •r e a.. Do\'f'r & 16th St., N.B. Computer Equip, Corp. 290 Sal1"sm11.n, Llberkl Demo TERMS-ALSO Prov. la.mps. garden hofiie-. SLL\.f--GTh! ~~•ms tb . SJ 0 0, Brand new bolt. Aux. power ...,.,.J,o'Olll.lioJ ....u ""-'· &ez.-09T1. · A P IM, l\1ontbly Bonuses 1: LAY-AWAY PLAN 642-1187. •...:c '"o-· aleep11 •ill'. SIS l'lldlo Ror' ~rp Wentltd, M & F 710 '""iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii .. I Fischer ve .. Co!lta. l\lt'sa. Jna:un.nt"t'. Experience d~ TRADERS Mm'TZ 4 & 8 tA.ck taJ)f' SJ;~ BLACK I. v.11.lle lT' Portable fl'?' headroom, ~eon~ni A~ ...... tflul .. _._ a·, ... • of EXECUTIVE M~~AG,!_RnT~~~E !Elll I sired. Stt Don Crevier at FURNITURE deck. 6 monthll ol.d, good M ' II ' Tf'lt'Visk>n Bick I •'ht 23·· ':,~ a'"bp w/pJtnty ot ... ,....,.. • .,.., ~.. v,.,a •"'"-'= w Theodore Robins Ford. 2)61) condiUon $50 at trade for 11ce aneout remote COnllOle T&vit1oo to""U"'-'l'C· u rt.In. For into ~1 Foods nf'"'t"d' you. EP•r1onS ~I AT91npcy mana&eriAI pott nti11.I. Our lllU'bar" Blvd., Costa Mesa. 202 N . Broadwo1y , S .A. Atlt-FM radki tor vw «of· Wanted 120 S2S each. 613-2462. call 557·9046 •fl C:J'.1, ~am Ir: ff!11.ch prof. makeup xec. ec 'f o res. ('XPM:don plan requ\tfs lwo ~1305 Open '1 da)'ll Boa ~hs. Exirc. pol. &\'All. ('.ood Mllli'i, Good figure ('t.11T'f'nl ucen~etl. Mlesmen SECRET ARY CLOSE OUT I' fer. 548-SlBO. SPRING-aire double box· COLOR iv •. 1969, llttlfo me. ft, Se ll ... 54 1 11ptitude. Top JTOOmin;ii:. I l'Jr brokf'rt, f(l be l!:T'OOmf'd 1 I ?>lode.I !tome Fum!Khlnp I F'M tuner &: amp. S11: E.x· springs and m •It r e as . walnut cabinet SW . Muail.-,-.,.--------,.\QC()u~JNG Oe.rlc. 1 )T. ! su~~o ~·· Cout H""')'" NR for offief' mllnftl"Pr In 11.B. Exctilmt shorthand & typ. Lo$k Homes • llATbor vtew erxenie. SIS: .iti.,. SS! &. $22: ~fettium firm. ~ry good ~II . 642--053-t l~n H~:e c..;_. Br1nd new, ~ JJP or AIR ~:rn& / or Anah~lm, Pl1'nnrd optn· lni ak\115 N'qUired. Attn.c-Hilll. 1406 Kttl Orivt. Cor-gu: moton. Sll to $25; condibon. C&ll a.f ttt ~ P.M. sl~ ·• " saLla, ~laey O>ast C..tamaru Corp., li::Z:li::li::llli::ll:~ lnp In Pifftl'('h A 1\111,.)'. De-! live salary 1: be-nefill. ona de! Pilar hardwood couch. S 1 O. 54&-U79. 1 [ [i a.to--li •/trlr. S 1100 . b>1J: Calif: hrfedo, San Ext>c. Stt'y-O:instr. to SG!lll alre mll:ilmum of ti.I'" )'f'&J'"5 Please apply in pmm. SAT & SUN I ~12-M usico1l ln1t rument1. m 1 ,,.. to You I S ..... .41 or fm...~ :JJan Caplstnun 493-4586. Sr. AN.""lnE,. Cll"rlc ~ l"XPf"tlel\Cf!' hut will (.'('!JU!dtr Fe.b. 5 A 6. 10 am IO 5 pm DOUBLE bed IE'U, J canopy, . . -Tri-mua.n com~te. Cd. 4fitBJ..£RS . r •m • 1 e Ctr! f'ri °Typf'/SJ{ to S400 :1~1;1 ~1~1~ abg~r· ~: UNION BANK 8' Grttn SDf.a.. beautiful COG-1 maple, trost-frtt retrig .• 2c!!t'"E .7u1 ~· G-~h ;: 1 3 LlnM, 2 T lmn, $2.00 ~~-n!:'· 2$' Trt-man.n ~i..1.. rvwitiona cur-C.O. -10 key addt'r to $4.13 Gnvft' f o T confldB\tlR.I 610 Nf'\\'J)Ort Ccnt~r Driw dition. SGS. pecan chest. All like new. • CUC', a • rl,Ulng ' MU.. ~ .. ...., --1\ff!dical &-cretary to SS50 N n --C'.,. ....., " 543--0tl6. Sl25. J .JJG C tb!IM, nttt, )fak.r of!tt. St6-4m. ,.,_tlf a va.lllble 1n final tn~nce ~·y 10 S550 In (tr v l P \\' l!lppointmC!'nl. ewport D<!W-t'.h .o::.~'l"ll ai.7"-iJ'/67 gold & ivory trim rr.:a. fR.EE to COOCl home malt HOBIE C.t 18 3 ~ilh. pejntlrc. "°..up.per. Dlt'1aphooft St<''y 10 $500 893-!IOG.1 & 697.(1194 COU .INS An equil opportunity KING slzie Vi1li:UdA bfrdroom MOVING: Chi~ Refrla:.. "tucll tine tlttt!O equip. I thoroughbred tml:r. Ume ~ hi•" mt>t" ~2 ii: • \.-ariout OChtr llabt Stt'y-O:nnmt"'n'tal Lolln S.'i25 & \\'AITS INC. L16S:l. Mq· rrmp~ 5t't c.'O&t SSXI-Darll" fin., 17 cu in S~-Uprighl piano Huge Bomkl wno spkn. i, 847-4142 -m....:iJ-11 ..:S' ~ ~-lions.. N nolia. Garrfen Grove. SECRETARY --..1 •""' """'11: fl!X> 64:>-liSS -,... ......, '""" ";r.i • """"'' .....--~ ~·-•ox-R«<pllontstlG. omcc ~r:; .... L ·~·" ~· ,.._,_. · '-'<· c"""'"'n """" •,FREE Wire Halr rox T<r· '"" e pm ui.mi ~ ~ry. V.'e will NEWPORT Put " !Hu~ •1001• ln )'OUT lf's aJways the f'11ht lime A e OAK R.R . Tl ES e &then.. 1660 58.nta Ana A\•.. rieT. AKC r-pttt. f/'fl'Lllk ••• w ti I I e Y.ll!'phan~" jilovldo oo-U..-job nlnfnr. Pononnol Apnc~ I l>v" • ..rt 1._ boubr .. "" for Nt~,.... -ch Ad~ """'"" !he rl&ht pr.,,. tr 1 ~1.lO eorh. 53&5112 C.M, &16-7562. Dad •O..,.ic. 1(2.39)1), niMfns ,,..., -· ;t,'.,; ~-= ~ ~ I W Dowr O r., N . • "bucks". c.u Clulttied cy. All lldlh lncludU. SH. you want RESULTS c.u: IBEDS king I r-in. chiUN.,,RICKENBACKER 12 1tnng YOUNG. tMack. fnnale>. put them lnlo "C>Jlf '" '_ ~ll ~ IO--ml 641.J170 642-5671. Sharp Joan. '°'I& bou:r'I. 6()-5671 Ir place that ad dtn Ml. T.V., dcdiouk". B)Td delux:e St~. t.rd Cocbi" ~ Ab9nrbvd. ~m lhru 0.DJ P l l o _ •. i I l'IX>d PQ. 133-1&10. todQJ I&.,, mcr•"tt, t ic. 5&1461. a1w. S.C. J2U-6Ci.-tl62 , ~ ~ ~. Qualfied. '42-5m. ~ • t • - DAil V PILOT •. _ ... _ l§J I.__ ._'"''_M''"___,]§] ,_._""'_M'"•___,]§J I ~' ..... _ .. _u._,j§J : I ~...... 1§1 [ ., ... ~~. · ]§][ '--._,, ... _ .... ,._,lij 970 A•u,•o•,•, •,m•po•,•,•od•••,•70 I Auto" lmporlod Bolts, S.11 tot Treilers, Trevel MS Autot, Imported 970Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970Autos, Import.cl 970Autos, Imported' 97 63' 5 & S SLOOP AT Big Bear seU C'OntaUlt'd !.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ~Ia.gn1fict-•nt cond. 1f'ak hull, tra!ler on lake ~iiore lot. Alfa Romeo <lffks, f'\C. Perkina> ds.t, Incl'& boat & boe.t tr!r. In sleeps 7, Y.'ondcrful !or fme cood. All tor $199!1. Call lan11 Jy crul&', \\Hh ra.i~ (714 ) 64&-9238 porrn:tal. llelil bu~~ Ol"-·11 Auto Service Parts 949 housf' this .,..·cckt'ntl at ' ~'HASER YACHT BHOK-MUNTZ 4 & 11 tr1H:k tapt" ERS. 3414 Oporto Npt &h. deck. 6 n10nths old, good 17141 673-5252. t"t)nd thon $50 or trade for Boats, Slips/Docks 910 Ai\1-f!\I radio for V\V or of- fer. ~&-iJ80. SLIPS, IS' to 42', f in!'s! in Npt !!arbor. Bcsr fac1lif1t's. frer parkmg. 67.l-S7J I 1111 10 p.m. NE'\\'PORT Slip~. rrorn S2.2j per ri . Sall or pov.·er. 548-2592. 494-2671. -------~"' 4. CUST0:-01 wh~l.s • Fit Ford or Chrysler or adRpt to V\V. Sj() IRkes aU. 67>1345. ..... _._'_"_'_''_'_"_'' _ _,) f '4) l tl100RING for rrnt. 40.55·. Brsr IH'Ct'SS jusf olt ··e" s1. l••·-------Nr Pavilion. 642-.:..·.:;1. General 950 Coast Imports Newport Bch. 642-0406 1000.1200 W. Coast Hwy., MGB I SUNBEAM ~~~~~~~1 ~~~~~~~-1 '64 l\1GB. ncw paint, tor .r.. I '6:1 T!~1'r. hl~h Jlt"rforn1&nvf', cnj{ o/hauJ. A:'ll/~-.\1, 1•U"t' rlf''I pa111t. l!lll£JI. 1!1Y'~. v.hl'°. S7~t.J. 6iJ...!l~I I SI IOO. or lx'sl 1l 11 er, ___ o_P_i _L __ [ """"~oYoTA 1 '10 OPEL l'ar.t1·an \\'tiJ.:On. Auto1ni:lt1<· SANTA ANA 11·u11i; . air •'tlnd . !Ui:G· ral,'.k . l-''""'1 J• 64'"'""' TOYOTA _:6s OPEL · CL~~~-. l ~r"\'11"1' <tept. o(ll"n 7·JO 11rn SI 0,1 842·.'0.,·1 't1 9 pnt ~loncluy !11ru Fr!· I PEUGEOT "'" I I PHONE 540-251 2 I • '63 PF.l'GEOT 41'7 \\' \l".1n11"r. S;u1t11 AnA ' t:!>()I) CONDIT10\' WE HAVE 'EM ""' •• Mfi-HSJ '72 LANO CRUISERS ,-POR SCHE_ I !111111rct1.i!r l"ll')l\'•·r~· l;;;-;;;;;-;::::-:;:;;::;-;:;;:::-:~I""'""""'""""""""'""""'~';'!!!!!!!""""~""""'~ * BOAT Space nf'ar Lido. ·70 VW. low mLles. oller. ·12 Autos Wanted 968 Autos 1mpo;:-t8d------,70 Side ti(' & slip. A''~'(lrn. :.'Oto Duslf'r. Bo!h xlnt cond.i-----------,I J' AGUAR I 40 ft . 1>on1. 67H<riO. ll·lf>--0720. WE PAY TOP O\'ER 25 Clean, Reconditioned, & Guaranteed. IF-J 11lot•uis ~motors ---Boats, Speed & Ski 911 Trucks 96' CASH I 1----------1 '67 .)1\C XI'\!::. Aulo Tran~ .. 17' FIBERGLAS.<\ ski boar. • Air Cond 0 u rs! a 11d 1 n;: JnlX>IU'd/outboarr! i\! f! r C". IH. pn<'<'. i\1U$1 ~cnl1«f', $29':);,. 1 cn1isf'r: tilt trlr; canvass tor uaed can It trucks, just iTHll-O:?til Olr. Nu ,·lcalt"'r <."Dvcr. S2.69i Also ~ · call us fCJr free estima tes. (";ill.~. '.1:)7-52,12. hbeci:l'·" dinghy. 3 hp '"'"·national "'"""'" GROTH CHEVROLET nlo\or. SIJO. £73--7~99 11.f\er:; RECREATION CENTER pm . ROY CARVER, Inc. Ail '" 5a1., Man••" 'fi.l .!/\(; ~lark JI ~d1111 :i S, nrw rng1~. 11r11• pa1n1, Cll'an 1nl<'r. ;>.lichrl111~. Vrry PO RSC HES 911 's • 91 2's -914's 1957 lo 1971 NEWPORT IMPORTS 1\ull1uri~<'d S11lt>I' ,t· N-rv11·r '.~~) S. (°11n:;t 11!,::h\\'RY l,.11i.;:u11a Il<'<u·h ~~l<l-11(¥) '69 TOYOTA MK II 4 llr, Slfl \\11~,i.:. Auln Tn111~. Air (\\nd, H.11d1t\ IZ\l'A~2'.IJ $1899 CREVIER MOTORS 12 Ft Roston \\/haler IS HP 2925 Harbor Blvd. 182ll Beach Blvd, Johnson, center s!PCr1ng. f'C'· Cogta Mesa 546-4444 Huntfnaton &!l\ch . 3100 W. CORSI 1-hvy. "'" n1t:r i\lr. , :,,~, \V, l~t !'i1., S11nru 1\na 4!).j !)S" Ne1vport Hench I 835.3171 Dt•A ngrlo. mote controls, boat covt'r. ~1AR!Nf<..: Paris & ('quip. 847.6087 KI 9-3331 lights ovror Sl500 inveslt'd, J\1ercury props & con!ro! 1-=~~~=~=co-=­ Sacrifice $795. Alter 6 pn1 1·ables, a u· ~u ide in-WE PAY TOP DOlLAR S42·3737. strumcnts, controls !single FOR TOP USED CARS 1 13' ALLEN \Vilh 40 H.P . lev<'rl, windshield. Block & U your ~ar lo! l'xtra clean, motor & !r~ilr.r with \\·inch. tackle. ~>'1~530. st.'<", us !:n t. $350. 531-7294. '67 Ford van. Fini.shed in ~UiR 1~~I~ -· ---· '-"~-c·~=~~--I 642-9405 · --,,,.--- MAZDA I ===~~-"'------1 l!liO CORO LI.,\ \V a g n n, • NOW OPEN Immediate Delivery HUNTINGTON BEACH l'Olt ~llE 0 w n er s Ar-12 ~ ~ ·"'~' Ol'IJ:'. 1nilr~. Pr1 fl(V. !<>nti~in• Pors<·hr 111 e l a I \\nrk phnnf' l'l·l7-fi0::1. r 1r 11·ork & pa11111ni: nr V\\' ~!~:.!-OO~l. pru·rs. Hi;:hr~! 11 u n 1 1 ! y \vOrkmans\11p. Call L<' n Setiofr 6-lZ-9373 or 675-JO:t:i 1 f'Vf~. 'ti7 'royo1;1 C"rrina t:ood co1~L StiOO. !'!ti!'l-~i\:~I Autos, Imported VOLKSWAGEN -.,,.. .. - 'jfl V\\I h11t.!. 11.!~)(l 1111. Xl11I 1,)!kl. ,\1.in~· <'\Ir.•~. \]11,1 I ~-1-"_"....., __ '_"_"_~]f •} back \\'i lh carpet, pan<'lin.i:: Cos ~1 • • 5.is.nG5 & l\ track strrro. RebuiJr1 __ 1& __ '-"'---~-=~ engirK' & small amount of Autos, Imported 970 ~.,.I.~ '[17 Porsche l'.•/'~1!1 r ni:; N'blt in AUGusL Nt'-W t·luk·h. hrks, ln111~ &. inlcr , Nc\v rad1<1ls. Nrvrr been h1!, $1800. !i7'."1-0811. 'fiR ·royoln Co1rru1a Auln. 11pp1·1·c·n111• \I\\·,, Sli!W1. "I body work. Sl.350 ~792. AUSTIN HEALEY · 17331 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH I i .. ,i...-.oulh •I W unro Ph .. nr 842 • 6666 '67 POl~\sc-· ~,,~E-9-12-.-.-,f>(-I. rarh:>ry nu1i:;s. Nr"' f)unlorN. Xln! l'Ond, S:wxJ, Jirn1~ 644--17~1. r th, l o"ncr. $750. Afl 5:30 h1·.,1 .. rf•·r. ;,;~;-!l'.11. _P_"_'·-&~•-·1-"_._3_9. _____ , -163 VW Xln't Cond_I _ TRIUMPH l\11·1·tuolll•'Jtlly ~rfrcl~ Prrft't·t u1l1'r(nr. $'.J50 ~·lrm. J'h. :YIO :12R.1 .. ~7~n-.7SQ~UAH t·:l IACJ~--V-\\1 ~ t h·r.111:1'. 1\,\l &. r ndinl lirrs, :-;trn cli>ari. 11111•1. ti7:i-(Yl10. (Hfi-:l'.!.111, '."1'11i-{;7~L '6'.I V.\\'. ('nu1Jll'I' \\"o.,-,,71p~l-,.71,-tt \\•/por lnJl. t1•11!, A•'1·t"tl·I, lupr, 011 1·ng". $:lli7~ nr tw'"I nH<'r. f'hon<> li46·fi'.14'l. • • 4 V\V A~wfHA MAt;S, 1111· 11al<', l\·lakf' nff•'r. I * &1•1-R!Y.l.1 • VOLKSWAGEN '66 Fastback [llU'k 11JtJP 11111,fl, l·:\1 •1•ll(•til t'••ll•li,1011. No ·1v ".! l or.1k•·~ •I Nl)('l'il, l"IH!IO, l1r·nlt ·1' !,'iQY G~J!}J Sll95. di!'. <"llf/ \Vnl<tnip '.A0-~161, !11~ l~i:\1 ------'l'Ull ft(X'llAl{(;t-;1 1 'tiio: V\\! ('1u11p•·r 11/1~1r *••fl, J·:xrru .~t'I i\l 11·hrl1111' ('hr11111r n111~. A\1/1·\11111111v '''Ira" v .. ,., 1·11•1111 ii;1:,. :.u1~1:140 "l' :,,';o7-f!11117, '71 VI\' S,u hl·k, ll.'<11. Alf. 1~.~l(~l 1111, \[Ill 1'111111\lli.; 1"<111•1 N1·1·d~ ll<'W 11·11~li.t1 11•I<!. 1l1·n! & d!~u· n •p1111·,~1. Siii! 110111•1· 1\<l!TlllllY '\\11s! i,i•I! lllHll~'•i . $~~~,w,, J\·1:1·X 1."11. '67 1'HJ U:<.1PH S p it I i r t>, ------ hnrdlop COllV f'rt 1hlr, * 'G6 V\\' S:i'.l:i '4,7 V\V Fn.~lhal'k, Mlfl ")()f, rad10/hrati>r. i'.:ng"lnr. horl.Y f.1!'--0:171 clny.~. r:1rll1\, Xln1 ''"l••I Orii.: CREVIER MOTORS 208 W. Jst SL . ~nta Ana '62 rono Eronnlillf' r 1ck1 ____ 8_3_l-_3_1~7_1~--- Up. Perice! condition. Call Automo t.iv., Excellence &12-0037 anyl!mr 0 Toyota & Jaguar Deal<'r '68 Double·Cab VW Truck, 900 S. Coast fhghway rool rack, nt.>w tires, xlnl Laguna Beach 5'10-3100 cond 494-74.9!. 1968 TRIU>JPH Trophy 650. '"'CHEVY 1Ton1475. 1100 ROY CARVER, Inc.! Very clean, Clln ~ c I" Superior, Coala Mt' 11 a. 2925 Harbor Blvd. any!tm(' at 395 1·1 Costii 645-1691. CO!lta Me!I& 546-444'1 . l\olesa Sl, CM. '65 frrtcrngtional Travt>!all 4 '68 BMW 2002, clean, st ~reo '69 BRIDGESTONE dual \l"hl. drivt:". s ~. casst'!le, new tires. $1490. 'ffi i\1S 2'.lJ SL coupe. f''ull JXl"'Cr, air. In !'Xcel cond. Bolh rops & nrw Michelen ra<l1al !ires. S3,600. 644.-7706 1970 220 Diesel, Like new. J~o~r. auto. 11.ir Lo1v mill!'!i Sri.~. 67.l-3045. & p111n\ excrl c.0111!. Nrr-<ls ~.S-1711 r>11rs k_ \~kndl\ _I """"'''"· All fipm fi•lf-.-210'l, inl<'rior \\.'Ork. !\1 u~I y-11 \)llS 'WI V\V l\!lr.. '72 lie' ~:·•"I 1111y ·,:.11.i-::,.11 ·'"" '70 R<'nault R-lO. Thr littlr "'(.'t'k. llrs1 S700 takrs . .-01111. 1,vi;: rnlry. n111st ~"11 1 1'(/1-V\V -Hq• , .. ,111--;:11;:-111111:- honih that ~r t~ In 40 miles Phonr. 673-81117 iliiys. _111~1~1. !:yt~,~~~14___ C'lw11·y 1·•111.t, /)11lv ?!JO{) fl"r 1::allon. 4 :o;pd. B.&!1, rll.-•Tn-.·10-:~pilf!re $15~ 'f,K V\V Squar,rh:i1·k, 111r. 1111lr·\ \Jn,t :-•'II. A'k t•w 1·<'pf10M.! c·o11d1tinn. 1713 (!)Jjf1QA ! Jt.t-11, tnr 11hnr11'. $\'.\IX'J. !'l11J, ~;7;, ·111~ RNRJ Sl:l9J. Laugh all !hr ~por1K Car Crnlrr-:i17-0764 :1'18-37~2. 17R F.. 2011l C:M. l~l7 1 :-i(,,IUAIU•:llA!'I\, 1:tnlo wa y lo 1he ha.nk. JIM 1 710 ~:. 11l Street Santa Ana '711 V\V Bu1:1. AMfi"M, e;;-_ trunM., AM/FM, hr11t ol!rr. SLr:~tONS L\1PORTS, 2201 I i -TR-6 '70 XlrR •harr. ping equip. $2150. Call 644-41127 So. :v!a1n, S.A. ~7-5242. {:JJ2CTPJ 675-5.ui. J-"A/Tllfo"lll. '6H llt-,.-.-.-u-,0-.-,-n '69 Renault R-16. Bar""" In of SpnMs Car Crnte-r-547-0764 .,,., V V ' II ir• ,~ 7 ..., \ At1s, -pas.~ w/v;/n-111!. , "'· thr Nrw Yrar. • 7 9 5 . 10_ 1-:._1.~1 Strc_ ct San la A1_1R ,, • dowi., H . .ch!t <'nilM . Xl nt e .C.·l-W.l:il~ UnOcl1evab!1-. Srr a! 2201 S. e TR GT6 '6!1. Local beaut. O'lnci. Maire ofrflr. a.'15-6447. Main IXNll 492J D l r .1 IZSR94:1) 557-5242. Sports Car Centcr-547--0764 RENAULT. Siil!" & Servicr & Parr~. JI r-.1 SLEMONS IMPORTS. 2201 S. Main. S.A. ~57-32,12. ROVER 710 £::. l.'it Slrcet Santa Ana '70 f.T·6 Tr1un1f)h, 1.1,000 ml, wh11r, am I Im. $1950. 4'.H-:'600 or 545-Jlfi2. ·s:i TR-.1. rebJ1 rn1.:. N~ds n11ner work. $300. or offer, J-~\'!"S 64>.3()96 '6."> VW HUS. Nttrl c11~h now! Good rond. Sacrifice .$700. 9AA-4347, '64 VW Bui;:. 11l{'f'l 1unroof one owner Xlnt co1.d. $675. 673-717R . 1000. pm. '10 VW $<-dan, ra<lln, 8 trark, hrh~C'. ~lnr 1·ond. .$1125, RJJ....ti:M& <ly; 67:\-~17 rvf'. 1!170 Yrllnw Hui.:, ·7ni;::-1'~­ N'l ('tlJWI. $1,~~JO. 645-475! or ll:l!l--2170 '65 VW, Good Cond. $500. Aft 6 pm 642-67~ !win. Road & rl1rL 5 spttd. 847-7136 Pvt. ply. 494-501'1. '69 l\1ERCEDES 22{) Diegel. 196!"1 BUS, good cond. ('11Jt Gftry 11.!tl'r 6 fi7~,..JSIR or 545-11 51. Xlnt cond. Sac: $2 50.1,-63~~----=~=71.70 BMIV ~~ CS · Xlnt ron<I. 1 01o11l'lf'r, Sl200. ** '70 Rovrr 2000 T.C. Air, Chevy 1.r) ton P.U. $500. """"" • a 1 r. '71 TR6, AM/~',\1 i;trrr>'l. ,63 VW 646-3062. Call r I th A"/F''' 1711) 499-3018 }''M-rad10. ! ownl'.!r, xlnl. h 1964 vw, $450 Call Scoll , 548-48Jli ~unl"Oo'l , ea t'r, ·~• "" rand nr1\, 1.1.l)()f) rn1. .vru.~l HONDA '69 Cl 3."ll. Xlnt 646--1275. 642-;.M~ Pvt. pry. $65\X). 546-6020. MGB S26~. C1tl! 49-t-17?."). g111, s:M~,11. ~!6R--111f). Motor Good Condi cond. Used for louring & '57 ~~ Tun flafhl'rl, gt.akP. DATSUN SPRITE ~ill.-li. am/I~ Mlr>hr hn I &1fl-76.l7 n1akr nffrr. M:hool. S.JOO. R:J.J--flZ>JZ. .. .... ,, •n•. good l''<•, "50. II 1n-1 · 12 000 'iO V\4/ Cam""'r hrliht ,,-u ._ "' " ~ .., '69 'YELLOW r-.tGB R.Md8tl'r. N's"" ,,.,au Y r imll'. · ,.~ · '6!i Honda CL J:iO f'1rm. 536-1225 '72 DATSUN PICKUP n11. lm1nac. fi7~l-'11i1~ f'Yf'S. I yrl101>., x!11r l'fl/)<j . s:noo. Prrfect mech cond. \Vire v.·hee!s, AM/FM. Nt'W '66 Sp1!11 rro, MK JI. A · * 67;,..4,'.\l4 * S.\:JJ. * 673-7~ '71 Dodge Van, 127 \l.'B. ~/h. 1 lop. Vrory rlel!.n. C a 11 rlai;.~1<-. :v!usl sarr1fir'r. TFA Thr la.~!('.~\ <ira111 in \hr 1a pr. pa-~~ed. beau! inside. 4 i;pct dlr. W/ca mpeT, Radio, 494.--0711 ~xt 220 betwn 8:30 j :.:>I _n1r. No cle&lcr calls. Wrsl. .. a Daily PI lo I '69 VW-Be1f off-;r- '6!1 VW, !11 m t'•. XI n t 1hn.111111. Vf'ry drprntlol;!f' S il~. ~>'I0-1:-dl. '69 VW, Xlnt Cond. ,\1u~l ~ell. 67J-72.l7 llll fl l!:W)3 VW huR, I OV.'lll'r s:im .. Call li7.1-33~ arr :\ pn1 VOLKSWAGEN '68 VW BUG :! Pr. tllr. Aui<)n111t1c·. !\\IVI(. fl.t:n UAC 1·un /In. pvr. ply, \V I uo 111ou<'y 11<11vn. ('1lll ~•lliR?'.lli tt fr II 11n1 '19~.fiHU. 'ti.• V\V, lilnrk-li~l"r, 1·!1ron1e uslcui., r11d111l llrc11 K1'lr1·l·n-<lrop, 12 V lly~!f!tn, l111t• ltiOO "ni,:l11r, 1•1111tor11 flX• lun1~1 . f'1c. $~:111. r ·i rm! lo 12-46119. ·1.~ V\\! P"P T"I' 1·1nrr .. i.now l1lr., 1"11d. Xl11t 111 .. 1nr . .VllO 11r lnt. 11•11'd lo ~)nn . h7~1Wl~.1. ·11:1 V\V 11-.. -•• -.,-.,-.,-,-,-.,-m-e-f~i •'quipni••n!. S . ..00 .(( lake n'pll)'lll('l!I ~. li7J-l!l~1R. VOLV700c--- e VOLVO 'M l'l.1100 ~harp COPl-:Rfi! ~ Spo rts f'11 r C:1•11 1<'r-'.Yl7-07M '110 1•;. \111 S!rl"l'I S11n111 An11 l~~'~' V<•I\'", r 1• ,. ':: n t I y rrvnlrt'l'l. (;()Ill[ c:c.uwl!tJor1 S3~/otrf'r 5-tR-0412. ~~-,, ·1;:1 V<)LVO 121S, l(OOll 1_nnd . MUM\ 11r.ll. f\1'11.I o tle r. HOT WHEELS! e '67 PLYMOUTH e Motllflt>d tor hl1h P'rl'onn•nce and appr11rance! ~1USr SELL! $1000. ~.mu AMERICAN American Motort "'Oremllns ,......Hornets ,..,.,M•tador s ,,..,Javellnt ,,,.., Amba1sador1 Jiu.ire 11/}(·k of ·11 ·1 Is J 72"1 Ilg-Big Savln95 Harbor American lfomt> of Cnnvenlent Pi11yrn rnt1 1969 Hubor Blvd. Costa Mes.t 6'U.02'f '71 Tr1un1ph 651) Trophy. 600 SmJ. 61a-,1111. 6 ply tit?~. o/cam f'ngine. & 4.. I !i.17-.12 12. cra~~ifl~d Ad. 6ol2-!'li7R. Xlnt l"'lnrf. !l..U-AA14 Miles. Like nt'l'o'. Sllj() or -_ T O.P. 9tiZ--l6lS. 1967 DODGE Van, Ai\1 /f!\f, S2389.95. Can fin pvt ply w/ Autos, Imported 970 .l\utos, Imported 97P A utos, Imported 970 Aut os, Imported 970 Autos, Imported Autos, Imported -~~-~~==-=c---1 tape deck. Jn.o;ulatcd & 00 money rlown OAC. • -.liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 9To ''° '69 Yamaha 100, S225. pA.fl(']NI. S l~iO. 673-50\6. 77&1!VI. 546-8736 aft 11 am Ill: 3400 mile~. G(\()(j cond1t1on. ,...__ , ,_ ,. •-d 1h 494.-6!!1 l. Call fi.14--8817 all Ii. '67 .._,.._.\'Y 2 wn. '"' "'1 •---------~-camper. r/h. Good cond. '67 DATSUN Sta \Vgn. xlnl '69 BSA 650 Llghtn1nl'!;. mint Sl.'.lOO. R32-7920. eonrl. 81'.~l offrr lakes! 1 con<I, f\cw cng. V.'orth S\050 -----S-9 CHE_V_Y-~P-u-' &42·51 Jlt I 1st S950 takes. 6'16-7040 e~e.~. 6 c I. * * 642.4~1.'\. 2 '10 HONDA 100 Trail B1kt>s1--~'-------­ + trall!'r. Like n!'w . Very Auto Leasing low miles. $72.J. !i-16--7326. 964 RAT BILL BARRY '67 BULTACO LoBiro Ex-PONTIAC-GMC-F IAT pansion chamber nc1~1 tires. ~ BRAND NEW Runs perfect. $300. 97!)..1319. ~ 'TI FIAT 850 SEDAN 5 SPEED Sch\\•inn Coilegiate Try our leaae ~rls tor F ully factory _equipprd. 11295. Bike' $35. CaJI Savings -Satisfaction • Ser-plus tax &: h(". + dor I~. • 979-0472 vice. 2DOO E. r~IRSI'. SANTA ANA I YAMAJIA 100 trail bike. WE LEASE ALL POPULAR 558-l!XXl Good cond. sn;,. 1971 fl1AKES AT COMPETI-'68 FIAT K50 Sport CooJJI'!, ! £73-7499 alter 5 pm TIVE RATES. R&H, new clutch &: brakea:. I -.. ·' ' ' Call Malcolm Reid for Good rubbtr. Clean k Xlnt HODAKA Super R.At um. fu rther dN\ls. cond. 40 mile1 per gal. " M&ny extras. Like new. THEODORE 6Ta-1345 eve1 . 644·2677 ROBINS FORD ·n HONDA SL 125 nt'W cond, 2000 Harbor Blvd. JAGUAR Jo mi, 7 mos old, make of-Cort& Meu 64 2-0010 '"· 557-n<J. Autos wantoc1 961 BAUER BUICK 'TI Yamaha 350. ruttt bike:.1 __ , _________ 1 The Harbor Ar('ll! LiJce ne 11o·. 400 Miles. $600. WE buy all make• of clean Only AutOOrizrd F'irm. 96Z-461S. uled 1porta clll'I, pa.Id for JAGUAR DEALER ~7 Suzuki 250 ct, X6 or not. Pleue drive in fur A1 w1.y1 hae: 11n roxcr\Jcnt se- Good cordition. $275. f~e appnisa.I. ltt'flon of both N"' ' Used * 847-9883 * Jaguan. NEWPORT IMPORTS '70 KAWASAKI 250 CC. Must ~ll by Sunday. Fir9t $335. take•. 673-8800. Motor Homa• 94CI *Marvin Pearce* Motor Hames Sales • Rentals 558-3222 141l S. ViJla1e Wa y, S.A. ll.00 w. Cout llwy., N~Beacb 642-'405 IA<PORTS WAllTED On.nc• °""" ... rop I BUYER SIU. MAXEY 1"YOTA llUl Beach Blvd. H. S..cll. !'>,. U1-&0 WJlL Buy your car pald for m-noL Call Ralph Gordon 67J.--0900 -54!l-l?31. 1970 Harbor Blvd., (.osta Mtla. 1971 JAGUAR VIZ Air amdltionln&'. automatic. Only 8.00'.I mile&. (928DMN) 17295 1'70 XKE 2+2 Coupe. Yellow with bla.ck leather interior. Automatic tran111nlokm, futory alr condltlonfnc, P>Wtt 1teertnc A ""'-PhllU,. AM·FM· SW radio. etc. Jutt the orw yoo've been ~ Sor. (261BQD) -.. ~ In QualUy' IAUER -· -· • Eyes right: Datsun 240.Z. Left: Dalsun SIO Sadan. Both hqvo overhead cam englnG:L lndopondent raar •UIP"rl"iona. Safety Iron! dfoe brakes. So 1f you·re In the mark.et for_ a sensaUo,.'ll llltle family car, ptck tho one with a sporlo car herlla~o. The Dat sun 510 Sedan. See Our Complete Line Of '72 Datsuns e STATION WAGONS e PICKUPS e 2 & 4 DR. SEDANS e FASTBACKS e 240% (LIMITED QUANTITY> GOOD SHOW! D-IVl A DATSUN , •• TIUN DlCIDl. DAILY PILOT Bui~~~·:~"' CLASSIFIED ADS c.os" M... ""·'1185 FOR ACTION .•• • JAG. ·~;--0on : J."'3_1 J.i_~~-=::.c=~c._.F_~_·, __ cA_LL_64_2·_567_•. JIT'11~~~"'"s!::~ l.._ ..... 284..._...,.s_.H..,A.....,.R-.B_.O_Rm...iB_L_V_D_. • ..._c_o_s_T,_A_M....,.E_S_A...,.5_.4 ... o~ ..... 4_10 ..... " ·: OAILY PILOT l§J[ ·~~ .... 1§1 990 990 Autos, UMd OLDSMOBILE '40 Autos, UMd BUICK 990 Aut ... u...i 990 Autos, UMCI DODGE Motor Homtt CADILLAC CHEVROLET CADILLAC * * * * * * * * * 1 ------1------l :-::-:::-"'"::-:~=----'70 Buick Riviera CADILLAC 1970 1 '67 DE VILLE ! '66 CAPRICE 1:r~~~· Gold t>tauty. rur-SEDAN DE VILLE .1 0oor. Sedan. Fuu po~·er, J Au P~l'erD!;,a.'!H~~~uding '71 DODGE DEMON '71 Olds Delhi 88 Au:o Trans, Power Steeri~g, Custon1 cpc. Auton1atic lra.ns, Air Cond, low mlleage, !338-''°111.r, v inyl Roof. 15,000 • . • . • Santa Ana VACATION VEHICLES Where quality is our FIRST consideration •• , IN BOTH SALES & SERVICE -100 • NEW & USED MOTOR HOMES WITH SUCH RELIABLE NAMES AS: rk WINNEBAGO • • MOTOR HOMES &, TRAILERS ~ MEL MAR & NEWPORT * MINI HOMES-3 MODELS BLAZER & INVADER TRAVEL TRAILERS AND MANY LATE MODEL USED CAMPERS AND TRAILERS ! Sale Price This Weekend CALL 531-9990 OR BETTER YET STOP BY AND SEE US AT 1415 No. Harbor Blvd. -SANTA ANA - (JUST 3 BLOCKS SOUTH OF GARDEN GROVE FRWY.) * * * * * * * * $3695 FACI'OR'i" lact. air l'Ol"ld. Loaded'. I~ a.Jr 1·ond., steering, windows AIR CONDITIONING J1XO) SI695. dlr. Clift \Val-.seats • Af\.1/f'M stt>reo. Ex'. DBA) 011J1:~. 793 C.:QS CREVIE~3~0TOR5 53595 Full poWt'r equipment. pad d 540-5l64 842 ~•t MacHoward d-"' rop or ........, . cl'pliOn£illy nice. Midnight cu top, cloth & leather in-hi k 208 W. ]sl SI., Santa An11. MacHoward tr>rior, stereo Af\.f /Ffo.1 ra-CAMARO ue wlblac nylon interior. 839-9600 <Jt 531-0608 dio, tilt & telcsropic: steer-$995. fSKR7331 \VaIT11.n!y & 835-3171 839 ~31 0608 Com~~ln~a &AnJ~arbor Ing, etc. (lG8ASl) * CAMARO'S * !Jank financing available, '63 . DODGE with .rebuilt -~nPr 1 s~i·& flu.rbo~ $4222 ¥ng1ne 1966. New I~ & ''6 BUl~~.SABRE NABERS CADILLAC 07HERn CORP~· ~ mortuis ban<'ty "" ........ , '" '· '6S oL ti;·~;;·RFTRE Call 493-4716 Lrg S(']erlion-J\lany colors moters FORD COUPE BUICK Jnvit:la 1~1. xlnt AUTHORIZED DEALER (714 ) 77M050 Full Pn111•r 1nclu1llng fll('- cond. PIS. PIB. SJSO. Call 2f,OO !!ARBOR BL., CH OLET--1 'fll)'Ola & Jagu11.r Dfaler '71 LTD'S !Qr) Air Cull(!. R('nl 1vith Cosr ' EVR !m S. Coast J.ligh\l•ay GALAXIES & TORINO'S 011r ~1n to nureh11Sf' S:.18.80 alter 5 prn. 646-5219. A IESJ\ I '1 c ·· 540-91 00 0 Laguna &a!'h 540-3100 I A so l 'ountry Sedan \\'gn pf•!' 11\0, Optwn to Pun:htl.Sf' 1970 B . k El . "'" su,doy '70 C M Lo •1·• • UIC ectr1c • -1 hev onte 1!>63-CJ:f°EVY. Needs lots of HERTZm c' 'o'' lllD $"9J. Custom built coupe. Full 69 CADJLL~C C I body 1vork. Engine 283 is ru-. CONTINENTAL power & Faetory Air. A EL DORADO . ar 0 good, trans., good, good Lrg selection-J\lany color~ MOTORS &auty. 562 AGG Lo . I Automatic trans, Pti11·cr 1·ear end. Nl'{'ds body v.·ork (714) 77MOSO 847-3842 aded, Bl'autrrur, 923 AS! Slt>cnng, Po .... ·cr Disc 1 25 c ---''----1 $3595 $4295 °" y. 11 -. "11 549--0530. '70 Galax1"e 500·-'6S OLDS F8S MacHoward MacHoward 839-9600 or 531-0608 839-9600 or 5.11 -0608 Comer 1st & !{arbor Santa Ana '53 Buick, i\)0(1 • o I i d transport.11.tion, $150 • Call 548-7116. CADILLAC ComC'r 1st & JTarbor Santa .Ana CADILLAC 1968 CONVERTIBLE All !rather intrrior, full pov.·- er, AM /FM sterro, till s!eer- ing "·heel. Sec lo fully ap- ...........--~ -----~---~·.. preciute. (VZD300l EL DORAD05 $2222 NABERS CADILLAC AUTHORIZED DEALER 8 TO CHOOSE 1967 TO 1971 '71 El Dorado FACTORY ATR CONDITTONING 2600 llARBOR BL. FULL LEATHER INTERIOR COSTA MESA VERY LOW LOCAL MILES 540-9100 Open Sunday Full pow~r. viny.1 lop, till & LARGEST tele.scop1c steering, ".'M ·F'M SELECTION OF radto,doorlocks,cnnsecon-CADILLACS IN trol. Just flawless lfc priced · to sell toda.v. (439CZil ORANGE COUNTY '10 El Dora do SALES.LEASING FACTORY AUTHORIZED AIR CONDITIONING ·SERVICE - Full leather interior Nabers Cadillac Jndividua.I Jront scats 2600 HARBOR BL. Beautiful Firemist .fin ish. Full C'OSTA MESA ' po"·~r, sler:o, tilt & lele-540.9100 0 n SUnda scop1e: !!feertng, door locks, --pc y """"'1. cru'"' · '°"1"'1• '65 DeV1"lle trunk Jock, re8l' window de- fogger, auto .light dimmer. Coupe. Full factory po11,·er, ~al lO\\' nu!eage beaury. factory air condirioning-, (ZV~14.'i) po\ver 1vindo"•s. tPBP9S3J · 67 El Dorado S995. dlr. Cliff \\laldrop FACTORY 540-5164 842 0631 ATR CONDITIONING ' -. F'ull leather interior 1970 Cadillac El Dorado, Ex- Padded to p, full pov.·er, Iii! ecutive car, Air corxi, PIS. &: tf'lescopic s teering, signal P/B, Pwr "'indo11o·s, f>'AT !'>Ceking radio, all d!J(. !'Xlras locks, adjuslahle tilt 1vheel, & very low mi leage & "'ho1vs aulo trunk, F'l-1 stereo, new t he ullimate in care. (TUR-radiaJ tir!'S, lea~her int. 8501. vinyl :roof, Lo n1i 's. Xlnt NABERS CADILLAC rond, 1624 Anligua Woy, N.B. 642-9980. Brakes, Po...,·cr \v111dn...,·s, .6:1 CHJo:v-:-va.;-$800 ~r ~sl 4 D ~ \\' p Vinyl Roof. ZUE 258 :2 Dr. l lardtop, V-S. Aura. r, , tatio.n_ ai:on. O\\'er $299S ulrt':1', ';)!!Chev_ ln1pala, '65 Trans., Factory Air Cond., S!cenng, A_u Con1I; l\1ust 5ef' 327 eng., 4 Sp. ·Ul pos, $;)50. J>ower Steering, Radio, Ht>BI-lo ap~l't'CIG!C, tZTY 246) MacHoward 002-1760. f'r, Vinyl Roof. 1172/\flBJ Sale p11ecd ar only CHRYSLER $2395. dlr. Cliff \\laldrop. $699 839-91iOO or 531 -0BO!:i Corner lst & Tlarbor Santa Ana '71 Camara 35055 Only 9102 original n1ilrs. Loaded. !\!any Extras. ,\u(o Trans., fact. air, P S. Ai\1 / l-'l\L Rnlly Equipped. Sacri· flee! Call 641-2950 Before 8 pnl. * CHEVY'S. * li\1PALA'S * ~l.ALIBU'S Lo mileage HERTZ CORP. Lrg selection-Many colors (714) 778-40SO '70 IMPALA V-8, .Auto. Trans.. Factory Air Cond., P o1ver Steering. Radio, !-!eater. 1.197 API) $2295. rib'. CliU \Valdrop. Call 540-5164 or 842-06.11. •6s Impala Super Sport 396, 4-.spd, PIS, Ne1v clutch & brks, Tape deck, 57.000 mi's. Good cond, $750. R92-5966. '&-1 l;\llPA.LA A/C, radio, PIS. orig, O\\"ner. Trnmac. $695. 830-0:555 eves. 5.15-375-1 day. '67 Imperial Cro\\'n Cou~. Full po\\'f!I', lcal'her seat~. di!', tilt 1l'het•I, Cn.1wn lan- dau. Top best off<:'r. 692-8661 '63 CllRY~L~.:R ha 1·d top, auto., an·. l'IC'\\' brakC'~. paint, 1urM'up_ $500. Excel Trans. 673-3045. '67 11\lPERl.AL 4 Dr. Beaut. Cond. 1''ully rquippcd. $1950. &12-4391, 6-12-2789. CONTINENTAL CONTINENTAL coupe '68. In Cotillion \\'hi1e with J:rained Black Landau lop & 1111.1tching black Jeathc>r in- 1crt0r. l\1ichelin steel bell!'d v.·hitev.·aUs. Climate control air. Tilt stecrinl=:". }'ull fl o \\'er . In1n1aculate. Of- rering lron1 P R IV ATE PA.RTY. 557-:i242, '65 Conver t., nc1v top new tires, nice cond. SIOO under "11olcsalc book. 6-12-9062. '63 CONTINENTAL Good condilion $500. 675-2778 •. 6-12-1403 CORVAIR I 9S6 Chevy 11 Sl'i'Ii Excellent running cond. 1965 CORVAIR 2 door hard * 494-8Z78 * top, $-l{Xl. Days c.1111 49-1-o/.JlJ, eves 8J0..6310. '66 \\'ACON, air, excep. -~-""C.:.:-'-----­ cl!'an. Xlnt niech. $875. '63 Corvair Van, '72 tag, <•< og~ p -n ·'blt eng., 4 spd, new pain1 -N\l""'J r.), rl. ply. & shocks, $275. 536-0283. '69 CHEVY Impala, • d' HT, CORVmE r/h, air cond. PS/PB. $1500. 615"--0989. '63 IJ..1PALA, 4-dr, PIS, PIB, Runs grea!, $400. Call 540·5164 "R42·06:H . CREVIER MOTORS '71 L TO Brougham, 208 'v. Jst sr.. Santa Ana f"ull P"'l' & air. lo tnilei.. 835-3171 ivory \\'/While landau top. 1!167 Olrls, Cuslorn Dclht. Trulyabcautirutcur.$3295. Totally pnwf'red. One O\\'ncr. Call 64'1-2950 lli u~onnblc milcn,c:e, •rotaJly before 8 PJ\1. cquippt•d (\\1111 497). 'fry 1\, 1%6 1''0RD Country Squirt•. you'U like it al S!090. See at P111' steering, p11,r brakes. 2201 ~. '.\1/\fn, S.A. 557-52-'2. air, JO passenger, Excel 1969 ·I dour DELTA 88 cond. $1,IH5. 642--0584. pcl'ff'Cl rond. Loaded~ 1968 1965 SILVER Grey i\fustang. 98 .i door. lrnrnac cond. V-8, R&l-f, 3 spd., stick Loi1<lf'l'I! Your choice $1850. shlJt. Xlnt cond, Call alter 6 642-7491 or 548-29TI. pm, 64+-~5. JD66 OLDS Delta 88 4 Dr. STATION \Vag., 196 8 , sdn. Vrry clean IOI-al, Fairlane 500. Immac. $950. original car. Air, ('!C. $b'95. 6T.r-3126 evrs. fin11 ;,i1:>-2os::. '67 }'ORD, J;ood condition '64 CUTJ..ASS, p/s, p/b, AT, $450. taix· deck, excel cond. $-175 5~934 day11 or ofrrr. R3.1-0471i . '69 LTD. Full P\l'I' .• ~ air. Lo. '40 OLDS 6 1·yl., 3 speed. mi. 10.700. $2,195 Pri. ply. X!nt !ihtq>e, $:)50. '40 Olds, 8 673-3396. cyl, Runs $100. 962-1760. '69 FORD LTD Brgm, 4 dr. :S-7 OLDS, goo do tranN- ll'r, air-!lterro, 11('\\' tiff's, port11tion, llf'f'ds batt'l!ry. mrch xJnt $2395. 8-17-5007 $.':iO. r::vC's. 64:>-3096 el'('S. '.i7 FORD l'a!I'lanl' -i <1oor1 ____ P_l_N_T_O __ _ auto. S200. Good cond. * PINTO'S * _6c_1.:."".c3:c7_'·-------1 197l's, \\'ilh or 1vithout air '67 FORD Calaxic 4 dht, Lo mile11.i?e P/S, P/B. lac atr, low HERTZ CORP. book, 548-JSOS or 645-0587. , _ 1 . 1..1g sc ection-!\1any colon '60 T-B!RD $400 or best or-(714 ) 778-4050 '"· gd. '"""· "0 '"" lo !ta-PLYMOUT_H_ ly, 8-17..J\929, aft 5. __ G_.M_.c_. __ 1'66 PLYMOUTH WAGON UNCLE Sam Forces Sale~ IL_._·_"'" .. _SM__,./§] I l§ll I~ AUTHORIZED DEALER 2600 HARBOR BL., COSTA MESA 540-9100 Open Sunday CPE DVL '10. Extren1c!y lov1 miles. A:\l-F\\I sl£"J:"CO. Cruise control. Leather in- IC'rior. All n1 a gn if ice n t Flan11n~o Red. Will sacrifice. Dir (798 AZll. No clcaler calls please. 557-5242. Ask for Sanely Sanders. ** S46-6m ** Jo'OR sale, '64 Chevy Malibu SS. $500. Call before ~ pm. 548·8093. '66 VEIT. Lots of goodit>s. '68 GMC '% Ton Van. 6 cyl. VS, automatic, power gt('et'- S1500. or possible trade. Stk. Sl,675. 673-8800. ing. {RZY130l Don't miss --~~&1=7M=-="-=----'--'-'-..-J'-E"E'-P="---1 1his! Only $695. Call dlr. DODGE Clirr Waldrop 540-5164 "" 1142-0631. __________ ,·10 LandcnJiM'r, hardtop. 4 ~.~.~6~7 ~P~L~Y=M7o~u-T-H-.-I TRANS1'~ERRED tn Vie!nam. , "'heel drive. Warren hubs, Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMCI 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 DON'T MISS OUR BIG Winter Push \Ve'.re pushing for a rf'cord year In ne\v and used car sales .11.t D.11.ve Ross Pontiae. This means tremendous '4v>dngs to you y,·hen you buy from us. Our prices are right and our selection is bC'tter than ever! Drop by an grt our dcal bf'forr you buy. '64 Chev. STATION WAIOON Automatic, p<)\ver ing. rndio. hC'ater. 463J stPer- (TDZ- '68 Pontiac LEMANS H.T. CPE. Automatic. pcl\l'er stttr· ing, Air N.lnd., radio, heat- er. (VJ·IA187l '69 Pontiac CATALINA H.T. CPE. Full po11·rr. fa('lory nlr conditioning, lo\\' n1Heagc. (YUF~1J '68 Mere. MAVERICK CPE. 9 pL"5<'ng<>r, full po~r. factory air. (\VXJ713) '70 Chevy IMPALA CUSTOM COUPE F'ull po1ver. factory air cond., vinyl lop. {172- BEK) $2499 '69 Pontiac FIREllRD Radio, heater, powe r s tcerini;:, power brakes, 4 speed trans. lZXX399) '66 Ford MUSTANG Conv., yello1v \vith black interinr, anto. trans .. ra- dio, heater. ITEZ604) '70 Ford WAGON Auto. trans .. radio, f'r, (5080FB I htat- '63 Chevy CORVAIR VAN 4 Spd, radio, good condi- tion. (F'WTI27) '69 Pontiac FIREllRD Full po"·er, fA.ctory air, custom trim, 350 engine. (373CA0) '68 Dodge DART G.T. Full power, fac tory air conditioning. (\VPB943) '69 Pontiac GU.ND l'lllX "111 ~r. facL air, vinyl top. t•ct. U.pe, tnt whl.. new Urn. (972- BHL) '69 Pontiac G TO H. T. CPE. Full power, factory air conditioning, vinyl top. (ZAV535! '71 Pontiac GRAND PRIX Full power, fac tory air, vinyl roof, fact warranty avail. (276571Al76703) '68 Chrysler NEWPORT H.T. CPE. Full power, fae:tory air conditioning, vinyl top. (VTJ'.)835) Full po'A-tt. factory air, power wlndo'A--s. powl!I' stat&. (VQ(6t4) '6S ln1pala \\lagon, full pwr, AC, recent trans, tires & brakes. $750. 675-6369. J\lodi!ied for hig h r.1 us t sell '69 Charger. nevt'r abused, f'xcellenl con-pcrrormanee and Ln milcs, pis, p/b. air. dition. (928 BZU) $2695. , 11p[')('arancr.. tape!i. &14-81E8 or 673-2749. _s.;_1_-5~24~2~. ~-----SIOOJ. !\!UST SELL! '&I DODGE DART LINCOLN '"·"'" 1970 CADILLAC Cou pe DeVille. Loaded, Xlnt cond. Pri. party. $4650. 546-6562. ('!{)()(} 11.1nning condition. '69 v I" t $_\ 75 * 646-1072 I '67 Lincoln Con. Leather. All a I a n Have something you want to 1964 O-IEV !1,falibu Wa.gtin. FOR Sale '63 Dodge Dart. ('Xlras, ~1. $1795. U . '69 KINGS\VOOD Es 1 ate Wgn. lo mi, air, 106.ded, full P"T. $2'595. 673-4614. • rond &H-0026 Rurt-1 good. Blue with white sell? Classified ads do it R&H, xlnt cond. $&i0. Runs ok! Best offer. $125. -vinyl top. 2 Door. 6 cylinder 11,·ell -call NO\Y 642-5678. 968-4831 6-12-7229. MERCURY aulomalic, radio, heater. Autos, lmpor~ 970 Autos1 Imported 970 970 [ <YBA75-1l Sl295. dlr. CUU ~;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;i;.,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;, '63 MERCURY Waldrop 540-5164, 842-0631. It's a big world these days ••• it's very appropriate in respect to our sele,:tion of new and used cars. We're sure you'll love the cars and the prices we have on them! Come on in and let's put it all together for you ! .--------TAKE YOUR CHOICE -------- Here's 3 Cars. All practically brand new, with 100°/o VW warranty, (6 mos./6,000 m ile ). '69 VW Convertible, Red with Black Top & Interior, Whitewall Tires, 4 Speed, Radio, (YNT 299 ). '69 VW Bug. Skv Blue. Sun Roof. 4 Speed, Radio, Whitewall Tires. lX NJ565) '61 VW Bug. Root 8"r, 4 Speed, Radio, (XCU704l ' '68 TOYOTA II II '&91USTAIG ........ VI, .... _ Cllf' ,..) '81 VW SUNDIAL CAMPER '&6MEROURY '10VWBUG '13YWBU8 Mollki...lr . .&Ir c.ditlonlfll. l'111f ,._,, Lill• H .. 1 (S IN K5) t Door ............ W/W ... ,.....,..,, Llllt H ... AutO'"'lk. mot AMC) .... ,.. ,.....-.n. •'ii Tir-. ll~ hdltf S-b,, C•tlltn. o,.i-. (l"VC *> '88YOl.VO142S J °'°' ....... ~. ll .... MM,,,I (lAO CU) '•OHmUUBU '&IYWYAI s11aa Sl695 SJ96 '1696 $1295 $1&a 11711 leach llYd., H11lltillCJhltl hacti 142"4435 Immaculate, Air Cond. Fu.II 1970 PLY'.\llOUTI-f Dustf."r, I Po\\'l.TR, You i:nust s~e thl!i aulomalit: lran!imlMion, car. en! w1rh option lo po11o·rr i;tN"ring, back e l purrhase S2'1.80 pf'r mo. Op-M .. ,11i;, n>nsolC' radio I.· tion to purchaSf' S.195. hrater. Lo n111c11 SI f:JO CONTINENTAL 962-3577. • ' . ~~~2s PONTIAC I '67 MONTCLAIR '70 Pantiac GTO 2 Door H.T. Dir. V.Top .• Air Cp. Automalit· tran.o; air Cond. AM/i'~:\1. Loaded. Lit-<:nnd. Ar.l l F'!\T Slrr:.O It tJe old bankers car. <VOB-1apc, Joadf'd. 156 AVK ~~i..,~all ,,...,36 all 10 $2795 '71 Marquis Brougham 2 dr M ff J-IT, full p111' &: air. 17,000 ac OWard i\1i. Like new cond. S.'lVl' 83.'l-960) or 5Jl-06lll $700. One owner. Cal 1 Cornrr !!11 & Harbor 644-2950 before 8 PA.f . Santa Ana .~-----· '69 l\1ERC Marquit, white '64 PONTIAC w/blk vinyl lop &: int, f.ac 2 door Hardtop, ftadSo air, excel cond. 837-5426. ifealer. Air Cond, Excell.coi MUSTANG * MUSTANGS * '71 JIARDTOPS lo mileage HERTZ CORP. Lrg IH'lection-Many colon ( 714) 118-4050 Cond, ISXZ371) $499. CONTINENTAL MOTO~S 147.1142 l PONT. '67 GTO Convert. PIS, PIB, xlnt cond. 45,500 ml, l'Jt'll:' (M'rtf', S 9 9 S , 6.ff.. Jf)j(J, '61 Mustang V8. auto trans, PONTIAC SI.al' Chief '59. Hu factory air, AM/FM, P"'r t>Very!hln.I{, rt!'al good cond. ateering, deluxe intmor. l.n mi. $·kn ca.ah. 543-61$8. tinted gial!llJ, l OWl'ltt. Sharp. GRAND Prb Jim. Slick and 837-2-473. slt.'ek. Tr,p o-dl&n.. $995. '69 MUSTANG CWBW 241J Olr. ~7...s242 V~. 4 rpd, power. beaY)' duty '67 Cat¥.1Jnt. 4 dr, HT, xlnt su.pmlion. Jow mlleqe Ir ('(Intl., ~ ml., [111/pb, auto, very ahalp. $1900. Call $900 or olfn. 1>$-llML ~ MUSTANGi RAMILER VI. Automatk, RAdlo, Hnt~ '10 ll01\NF:I' ~ lfydrom., er, CXWZ79T) $1D95. dlt. OUf air, new lltt1. Xtnt mnd. Waldrop 541).~JM er IC-OG31. 11700 or bffi oller. 1>$-mT. ·rr M-J <1r 1rr • ...,,. T-llRD PIS. r.....,. Air, • tnctl.,.--------1 sttteO. ().mer-~2151 '&::. T 8lrd. hrp. Top CO!>- OLDSMAmn • dll .... 0-..1lon Go Id . V .. loC F.-11 ftJ&l)p, Atr. Oon'I mt.I '67 Olds QIU.. Ser-, IH"tns fhM riA.Jtle. <NOS ... '"" • .., M'IJ I~ cM!arance tan A: whtte, full JJOWft', air • ....c.... -cood. $800. Ola1Do•t lc ,,. .. .., al_,,, Dtr. 23111 I . rt'pOl1 llAblt fM-Cl'lS M•Jn, I.A. SM--6'42 . ..,,. er=.,,, • l 7'T.li~li~b-- t '65 Olds Jelltar 111 P/• "1.vpf TOC•lly ~ dlr. I • .., 13%4. 144-ZCJJ, PIB, ~JI. Retrt ere. new .-...a-~--- brak<s. 1251), 557.-aJltr TIMra T • P>I. I 7 I \ 7 -• San Clen1ente . Today's Fl•al Ca istrano EDITION N.Y. Stoelu VOL. 65, NO. 29, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORtllA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1972 TEN CENTS 12 Candidates Compete for 2 Council Seats San Clemente voters will have a whole covey of candidates to choose from for ~o city council posts being co ntested at the April 11 municipal election. Shortly before the noon deadline this morning, 12 candidates had Hied lheir nomination paper11 with the city clerk's of!ice. Other candidates had taken out nomination papers, but had Ml filed. The candidates are: WBlter F'. Evans, 41 , of 129 Avenid11 San Mateo. incumbent mayor of the coin· munity who will be seeking his second tenn on tile council. Stanley C. Northrup, 48. of 1712 S. Ole Vista , who \viii be seeking his fourth term on lhe council. Northrup has tw o children , has lived in the community for 20 years and is presently chai rman of the county Loe.al Agency l<""ormallon Com· mission. lie is a former mayor an<t a member of many civic organizations. Paul H. fJre sley 55, of 2430 Ole Vista , owner of lhe San Clemente Inn and rcsi- dent of the community for n\M. years. Presley has three children and has been active in several civic organizations over the past several years. James W. r-.·Joss. 38. of 431 Crespc , a fire captain with the Los Angeles County Fire Department.. He has been a resident of the city for four yea rs, has three children and recently served on a city C'Qmmittec studying the proposal !or upg rading the fl re department. Arthur J. Holmes, 41, or 213 Avenida San Pablo. cha \nnnn or the city plnnnln i: con1mi ssion. Holmes. a sale!iman for 1t Los Angeles steel C'o1npony, ha s lwn rhildren , has lived here seven years ond was narrowly defeated for u council seal in 1970. Courtney R. Allison, 28. of 348 Sontn Margarita, owner of the Bur11cr I louse restaurant. lie I!! single. hHs lived htrc two years and J11 a member of the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Associa llon James R. Straus, 26, ol 232 Avcnida Co br lllo. un Insurance undcrwrlllni: n1an11gl'r. Straus has ll ved herr thrr~ yen rs. hll.s one child und I! a re!'ltr\'c putll:c offl"rr for the <'lty, Eugene II. Ayer, of 114 Calle Balboa. a C'l\'ll t.n${lneer. Ayrr Is a native of the rurn munlty 11n<I wa s the forn1rr city t'nAlnecr. li e ho s five children. Byron E. !lush. 63. of 113 Avenida Prln· ressa. u retired mollon picture studio art d('sl itncr. lie hns one chlld nnd hos llvtd In San Clcn1cntr for onti ycur. • • en' 0 New Units OK'd County Overrules Capo Council Despite recommendations for rejection from two county airport agencie' and the San Juan Capistrano City Council, the County Planning Commission ha s voted 2-1 to approve a 332-unit condominium project ln the San Juan Cnpist:-n no area. The proposed C. l\1ichael Inc. development is less than 1,500 feet from the runway of Capistrano airport. The Airport Commission and the Air port Land Use Commission. upon recommendation of County Avintion Director Robert Bresnahan urged the planners to block the project because planes taking off from the airport could endanger future residents of the complex. Commission Chairman Fred Jefferson of Santa Ana and Commissioner Howard K. Smith of Huntington Beach voted for the 37.!l-acre project, with Commissioner Dan f'oley of Fullerton in opposition. Commissioner Woodrow W. Butterfield of Garden Grove had left the Tuesday meeting before the vote was taken and commission member Arnold Forde of Irvine was not present. The Property is expected to be annexed to San Juan Capistrano and use or city sewers will be necessary. Tbe community has a firm policy against serving out.side areu; · The project site Is bounded by Del ObiBpo St. and proposed Allpaz SJ. and Is East a( Blue Fln Drive. 176-unit Apartment Map Receives Tentative OK A tent.alive tract map for a 176-unit apartment project near San Clemente Gene ral Hospital won approval after painstaking analysis by clly councilmen Wednesday. But councilmen agreed that the $21,000 ln'cash wh ich the developer must deposit in lieu or providing a park should go toward the purchase of a site near the apartment complex so that youngsters will have a place to play. The park i!!ue and the question or 1lope maintena nce were 1¥r'O matters \\lh ich concerned residents in tracL'I near the acreage earmarked for apartments. The project will be built by the Cha~ man Management Col'JM)rat\on east o! the San Diego Gas and Electric storage )'ards. . . •Councilmen reviewed 15 coodit1on1 (or approval set last week by planning com· missioners, then agreed to pan the pro- ject as long I! a ''suitable solution to .the }>arlt matter" ls worked out before a final map It okayed. A tentative idea ls 1 survey ol nearby landowne rs to determine lf some acreage would be made available (or sale a.!I a park. Tom Johnston. lawyer for the manage- ment group, said lhat some recreation already Ls c.ontemplated nearby in the form of a tennis, }ogJling and golf green facility. Th ose proposed uses, he stress· ed, would be for an interim period on land west of the storage yards and would be of benefit ge1.er::illy to staff at the master planned medical com p I ex • Johnston said the plans !or a recreation center of some sort still were vague. The apa rtment complex will involve four units on one lot and all fou r would be sold to a single buyer for a price in the $70,000 range. Several Jots excluded from the original tract map drew council attention and the panel agreed that despite special plan· ning consideration on those lots, only four unit! should be allowed. The land's roning was officially chang· ed last. month to R-3-G (garden apart· m.ent ) to allow for the apartment com- plex. Oemente to Pay Balance • Of Costs f 01· Nixon Bust · If the Pre1idef11'1 Project COmmlttee :falls sOOrt of It.a SS,000 goal toward ·purcho1< ol ihe bronze bust or Prelldtnl Nixon nest month, the 'clty of Sm 'Clemente probably will pick up the rest of the tab. That promile came Wednesday nigh! after committee cbalrmiln Leon Riley IJ(IUght city "'PPCl'1 lot the fund.nllinJ eflorl. LA Hiker Plunges I,000 Feet, Dies BIG PINE (UPl l -An autDpoy was ochedulect today on the body of a Lot An~elt1 man who fell 1,111111 lttl lo htJ death In the mount.tlr>I west of this Inyo Coonty town. Sheriff I dopullt1 13\cl the '1<\lm, Jay o. Hlnd1, l0. bad ..... bit~ witb lrlendl Tutoday In tbe T1111ple Qq atta of the High Sierra wbon he Id! dolm a maw rhute. , Riley llressed \ht IUCCf'U thus far of the llrlctly local campelgn for the !undo and a id 1$.1100 alrudy bad been col· Jocted. But Moreb ti iB a deadline set by the commlUee lo bolp plan the nest plwe of the project -the presentation of the .1arpt-0w>lile Ukenea lo the President, blmM!f And RlleJ 'inmlled that the ' -talion -.Id w • pultllc f\lnctlon ........ .. .,, San Clementa --.... 11>-vltod, probollly at the W.....,, '1111114 Houle office oompln. The commltteo lauUched the dtltt late !alt Y"' In .. effort lo eon•Jnc:. Milon Foundation olflcJatJ that a ltl'OllJ lnl<rflt e:111U locllly to have San C\eruente chos<n 81 the 111' of the NillOll Llbnry. Riley W-y aald he bellevu the purclwe of the _., of ICll!pl-Edith Blind would mate a olgnlllcant Jm. preulon on the lound.ttlon . II ouch a library were lo be built In the city ...... 1 million .Uil<n • )'UI' ~ tour the bulJdUic, he uJl 8 Hopefuls Run for 2 Capo Seats Eight candidates arc in the running !or l\vO seats on lhe San Juan Capistrano Ci· ty Council. Incumbent Bill Balhgate was the lasl to file today. The 47-yeaMld citrus grower is married and has fo'ur children. He resides at 29643 Camino Clpistranq. Bathgate, a native of San Juan, bet: been actlve In lhe Boy ~uts or America. Jfe has served JO yerfi"9h:'the· councll. Another native 1a: Meyer Tony Fonter, incumbent. who resides at 3 1 3 I % Guadalupe with his wife and two children. Forster. 36, Is a member of the Fiesta Association, Chamber of Com· merce, Historical Society and i' a former director of South Coast Community llos pital. lie !s an owner of Forster Brothers automotive part.a ln Santa Ana. A third candidate is Or. Roy Byrnes, 28355 Ortega llig hway. a patholog!s{ at South C-Oast Hospital. He Is married, has four children, and is a mem ber o( the Orange County Medical Association and American Society of Pathologisl8. Dr. Byrnes is 48. Also running Is Mrs. Richard (Judy) Beggs, 31931 Calle Winona, ~trs. Beggs, 31 , is a housewife and businesswoman who belongs to the Fies ta Assoclallon, Republican Women, and Chamber of Commerce. She has two children. George fo~ricdrlch ha s alJo riled for the council seat. He is 11enlor director of marketing for Golden We11t Airllncs. The 58·year-old resident of :13875 V i s Acorclarse ls married and has lour children. Will iam T. Reid. an unsuccessful can- didate two years ago, is again seeking election. Reid is a farm er who rc5ide" with his wife and seven chHdren at 32221 De l Obispo. Reid, 46. ls a membe r af veterans' organizations. Also running Is Robert Olsen, 31. who declined to give an addres11, an engineer· Ing and math teacher at S8ddleback College. Olsen i.s married. has two chlldren, and is a member of the California Teachers A.!sociatlon and the city's Capilal Improvement! Committee. He resldel on M.Wlon HUit Orlvt. The eiahtt. candidate Is J a m e 11 Weathers, 27341 Ortqa Highway, owner of Capistrano Hardware. He ii married. ha1 two chlklrtn, and ii a member of the Chamber of Commerce. Weather• 111 37. Capo Beach Man Shot in Squabble An apparent 1q111bble ln i. C..piJtraoo Beach homo Wednetdar ended with the mile participant betna rushed lo South Cooll Coaunon!ty lfolpital with a bulllt -In the tJC!ll Jee. Oranse c.unt1 oberllf• officers nld Noman !Awrenct. 5Z, of JWt Calle Del Sol, tullered a wound from a .ZZ..:.liber revolvtt atua. llaopllal of!ldall Aid the le( womcf wu minor and tbet Lawrence bu now been d1Jchar1ed. No chlr&el have been filed. ShtrllJ'• officers uJd the Incident tJ lllU under 1nv .. t1ptlon. Rowan Cyst Removed ROCHESTER . Minn . I AP) -Dan Rowan, oottar ol U:levl1ion'a "W.up.h In," completed hi• checkup at M1yo CUnlc Wednesday after having a sm•ll cyst removed from bis rlJhl lhould<r. Rowan aaJd other than havinc the cyll remo'fed, "J'm la One lb.ape.'* Ears Have It These elephant.~ at a zoo In Windsor, England have been fitted wilh special ear muffs to protect lhem from the roar or jet engJnet at nearby ~Jeathro\v Airport. Clemente Pie1· Entrance Rennovation Plan Shown City ~1anagcr Ken Corr Wednesday unvelled a set of plans for a '-10,000 Im· provement ol the San C I e m e n t e municlpal pier entrance -Ideas that Jury Supports Dana Physician In Court Suit An Orange COllnty Superior Coort Jury filed back to the courtroom Wednesday night to reject a Btllnower couple'1 allegaUonJ that Dr. lfarold E. Diy of Dana Point wu guilty of malpractlt:t in hls treatment af former ~tlent Gus Oitden. ' The panel dellbertt.ed 11:1 hour• In the clvll trlal before retumlfli to Judp Ronald Crookahank wltf. a deleJll< verdict that endt Ogden 1 bid for an award of '3921000 in damage.. Ogden, 50, all4!•ed in the two-week trial that be· wu subjected lo -I•• aod unnecasary 'l!Ct.nHhoc.k trutment _,,, yun ·'iO· whUO beinfl tr<•\ed by Dr. pay 'al lite P')'OblaUrrl'1 Caplllr1no By TllO llel l!otpllal. · PlalnlUl'1 atlorney Miko McCray aald Ogden'• dally dole o1 ·tai electro-tbock INlkml wu fir above the ltvel normally employed by J>ll'ChlatrtJt1 and that Ogden'• bnin damaae WN a direct re:tUlt of that lr~atmmt. Mrs. Martanne Ogdtn 1lao a!Jeced tNt 1he was a~aulted by Day when the tried to remove htr h~nd from the facility alter repealed atl<mptl to bait the allta· «ily unnecenary elf!ctrkll treatmtnt of btr huob>nd. Day ind fellow P'fCbtatrllla i..tllled durJnc the trial lbat hl1 trulmeflt ol flleo DOCTOR, P.P l) would ca st mo 11t of the woe.11 al the dingy "doorway'' to the beoch. The proposal Involves the demolition ar the existing 11taJrw11y1 and concrete bunker once used for •tarage. After that waa accornpll1hed, a sweep- ing semlclrt!le Of steps would 1ulde vlsltora t.o a pa1sagt beneath t.twi ratlway tracks. Councllm~n swiftly pralled t b e relatively Jne1peulve project and 1hlp- ptd It on lo pl111nln1 and parlu com- ml11sloner1 ror t.helr perusal. Slmullane.ous with the unvellln& of the plans. Leon Hyun, chalnnan ol the chamber of commerce btautltlc1Uon commUtee. offered the 1roup's enllre 1m budget Cll,1111111 toward coou or plant• and benches for the new entrance. As1de from uPfradln1 the general 1p- pear1nce of the crum'bUng entrance, the project would : -Allow ror the reconltnletlon of drain• and water JNlns 1n poor condllloa ln ao U beneath the entrance. ~Ive pa11ln1 police on patrol ctear •~ion from • · CT11J1ln1 cor Into tho p111a(e w1y under the track1. -Eliminate "perches" that art abun- dant at the present entra,,.. ~ GJf'll. Ing loltorer1 U..t ha•• couNd -pl1lnt1 In lbe past. CouncOmen aave no hJnt When the proJ~ COll!d be completed b u t prt1umably Jhe con«pt would be ;,.. eluded In ne1t year'• bUdgtt. Carr quipped during h~ prtotntatlon that bt<au1t the <enmtt bUJldmc "" bullt 10 0>1\clly durlna lite WPA sra of the Depr'"'""'· "'"'Ybe dyn1mlta would be the qulckt1t WIT lo dfmoltlh the thick wall1." He admitted titer, 00.ever, U..t jockhamm<ro problbl1 would do the trick. I All1\n L. \Vulfcck, 45, of 2706 Via f\lonle.tu111t1 , 1t ~rnrrol conlructor. tie hos tv•o <'hlldrf'll . hn!j il \•ed h<'re elitht yeor11 11nd 111 ;1 mrn1btr of st vl·rnt ('h•1c ori,:11ni:r.nth1ns. t-.::dwln1t 1-~. f'.1<'0crn1oll . or l ll C11l\1 rts1·ntlor. H hOUM'Wlfe. Sht' rnul d oot be rr11rhi-d lh i:rc 1nornln11 tu ohlnln fu rther b1oi.;rupl 1lt't1l lnfc 1rmation. FrrO A. ll1Vf'I, 23. of S02.2 TrefRl1t11r 1.nnl', a studrnt 11! C11I Sl nh~ P'ullerlon. tStt CANUIOATES, Pna~ I) ans High-rank Official Eyes Peace WASHI NGTON IUPl ) -The United State~ ill wllllng lo con11ldcr uny serlouc North Vh!l11n1ne11c propo1111l concernln1 releuse nf prlMlners of wnr, a hlNh·runk• lni; Stutc IJc1111rhntlnt official te1tlfle<.I to- d&y. \\'lllhim II. Rull!van. ctepuly 0111\atont ,;crrctnry ur sli.llt fGr l!:n"l A111Rn and l'nrlflc: afhtlr11, 11ald thnl whlle President Nixon's Jan. ZS ~oce propo1al "oflers • fair, rcaaonnb\1 ~s\1 for resolvlfll the VW:tnam connlct, wt remain wlllln1 to consider a~ 1erk>1.11 propo1al concemtna POW1.'1 8\llllvan •P9.H only • short Ume eltar CM VIII Con~• ~ peace plan la PJrla ind apparen did not t.Jce nott I~ (See ear/Jer ry1 pai:re 4). Mean:fine, EJ/11worth Dunker, U.S. Amba11ador to South Vietnam, conferred 1t tht White Jlou11e with rre1Jdent Nlron. During his C.pltol lllll visit, SUllJva11 faces que11tlonln1 on an allegation that the United St.ates allowed Saigon to poe,11Jbly block 1 neutral ln1pectlon of POW camps In North Vletntm. Sulllven told the llouse Forelan Aff1lr1 subcommittee an National Security Polley and SClentUic Development• th11t Nlx<1n'1 publlc offer Included an offer to implement prlaoner rele1ae11 In parallel with troop wJthdrowoJ1 . "To d11te thtre I.I llttlt evidence that the other 11Jde lt wllllna: lo negotiate 111 term1 which 1ttlou1ly and r1allltlca1Jr. reflect the actual situation In Jndocllna, ' Sulllvan aald. ''They are still attemptlna to achieve their maximum abJectlvn," he u\d. "Wt ncvertheleaa hope that we may induct llBnol 1'1 for111ke the hnttlefleld In favor of the conference table and therehy tl chleve the r.leaffe (jf our 11rlloner1," Sulllvan 1old. Sullivan aald that "over 1800 U.S. military per10nncl arc !lated a1 mll11lnl( or captured In Southeast Alla, and over 40 U.S. clvlllana are In the 1ame 1tatu11. Accordlnl( lo Defenae D e p a r t m e n t flgure1, 383 ot our men are ll•tcd Ml c1p- tured In North. Vietnam, 92 In South Viet... Mrn. 5 In Laol." "Twn U.S. pllotl art knoWn to be c1p. tured Jn Chlnt. TIM mllllnf civilian• In- clude three U.S. ,,.,. ...... loll In cam. bod.bl ." Sulll•an 11\cl, however, thll "lhe ectu1I tot.al held u priaoner1 remaiM uncertaln du4 lo lite otbar lldo'I conUnued relllllll to ldentlfy all pr11ontrs." Sullivan allo aid lite Communllla' record on the matt.er of prllontt1' mad and u n hlil dolorloraled. o...,. We•tlaer 11 wtll be a btt cooler on rr1c1o1, with lncrea11n1 !Itch cloudl ac- cordln1 lo the weather ltTV!ce. Overnight lows IO lo ~ tonllhl wllh hlcM of M IO • l'rldly. INSmE TODA 'Y Hl>Ward ff"l/MI muck f]ilo ''°' V•(l<ll I• J~ o!ld b1gon JIU long rtlqn .. IM "OIJll1t'I/ man" of the dt1ert. t1t.f tltJrd arlttlf 11' lhU 1trle1 U on Pagt 1 todav. • -" --.. l!t!• ......... ~~It i=-.: __ .... , ............ = ~ ~· ..... """ """ -.. -- 1 DAil Y PI LOT SC Saddlebacl{ Unit Settles for 2 Re~ap Plans I • By PATRICK BOVL~ Ot .,.. DtillY Plllll l t1Ff Alttr a quick, unanln1ous vote to leave tile melhod of trustee election unchanged, _a Saddlcback Cvllege board ad visory committee \Vednesd;iy night spenl two hours tryinc to detide how to reapporl1!>n the spra wling dlstr1tt. mendaUons calJ l~r sp!Jtting the ui!llin& area live of the college district -com- posing the S.ddleback Valley, La°guna Niguel aDd Irvine -Into three trwtee areas. The romrn1llee has already decided to rcromn1cnd expanding the colltge board frorn five to seven member!, a proposa l which must be approved by both the <.'Ol· lege trustees and the voters in the college district. part of Laguna Niguel. Area 1ir would encompass lrvlnt ind El Toro. be.Ing divided from area seven by El Toro Road. Area seven "uld Include all of Mission Vltjo and most of Laguna Nigutl. Under tlus fir s! plan , area fi ve woald have J0.723 volers: area six, 10,438 voters and area .seven. l0.G28 voters. The commi ttee. cornposed of two lruslees fro111 each high school or uniflt'd school district in !he college dtstricl, finally settled on two reapporlionn1ent plans. The plans will be recommended to college trustees at their Feb. 22 meeting. Both ot the reapportionment recom· Under the first rea pportionn1ent plan. area live v.•ould be changed to encompass most of Leisure World, La guna J-illl.~. Capistrano Highland s and the northern Commlltee chairman Hi1ns V()Rel. Sad- dlebat•k C.:ollei;e trustee fron1 ·rust1n, said this p!an would probably not insure a voter h<i!ance in the future bct•ause f\1is~ion VieJO .end Jrvi ne v.·ere developing and growing mu ch Jnore quickly than the Laguna /f ills area. Pot Possessio1i Nine Marines Arrested In Two Sepa1·ate Cases Orange County marshals serving traffic \'lolatlon arrest warranls 1n Sa n Clemente Wedn esday night arrested nine Camp Pendleton Mar ines at tv.·o dirferent residences on alleged narcotics viola· tions. Cle11iente OKs . Starid on Beacli Despite Protest .Despite one ci ly councilman's biti ng objections to •·random shacks on the beach" the remainder of the panel Wednesday agreed on I ea s e ar· rangements wilh Fred Gregori for a con· c"ession stand on San Clemente's North Beach. Gregori, the only bidder to come forth with a plan to build a structure for the concession bus iness. plan s to begin operating before the summ er season. Council man Tom O'Keefe said he strongly objected to the project because the style of the building was "sub-stan- dard." ·"If McDonald's or 11ny other business were to build such a structure in our city We never would allow it, yet we're ap- J)toving this on the city beach," he said. "The building will be or a design seen at other points on the beach, constructed or Wood and masonry. · O'Keefe stressed that some esthetic ad- llitions would help the appearance of the box-like structure. Mayor WaJter Evaos, however, said that any slumpslone surface or other "gi11gerbread" would make the conces- lion opera lion vulnerable lo vandalism. "We ca n't expect this man to spend that kind of money for a!! the gingerbread," he said. Gregori agreed to accept tl)e con- cession lease from the city af ter more tha n a year of bid advertising and searc~es for a businessman willing to build; a structure and operate the con· cf:s*i business. Forster Schoo) Blaze Quelled Orange _ County fire units were rushed lo San Juan Capistrano Wednesday night to tackle a reported blaze at the ?\.1arco F. Forster Junior •ligh Schoo!. 25601 Camino Del Av1on. The blaze . reporter! by vice principal Charles Bash. wa s quickly brought untler control. F1rc1ncn s11id a lrash barrel had been propped aga ins~ a class room door and then ign ited . Da mage 1n what is officiill y listed as :en arson attempt v.·as described as mjnor. OIAH&I COAST DAILY PILOT 'OAARCM!! COAST PUl!IL tsHlNO «w.PJNY ~·"" N. w.J P1a1i..n1 A1t11 ...... ._ Jtelt R. c.a., na P'flsldtllf •nd 0-rt/ ..,.....,. n..,,. •• IC•tril l[ctl!Df' n~"''' A. Mwrp•Tt• M-iiillt ~- c~.rt .. H. Loo1 Jlieliard r. N1D: • Au<flt..i: ~ .. ,kW1 222 For11t A'1n11• M1ili1g a<idrtn: ,,0 , .o .. t.U, 92412 S.. Cleo tt• ~ aos Notffa E c ... i .. a...1, t2612 .,_ °""'" c.-......... ;,. w-:~:r ,,,... ~~:l;mM ........ 11 1 a•~w,._.......,. • The serviceme n were booked into San Clemente jail following the arrests and were la ter released to the custody or military authorities, · A spokesrnan for the marshal's office said the first series of arrests look pla ce at Il l Alameda Lane at about 7:15 p.m. On arrival at lhe residence lo serve the misdeamcanor \varrant, deputies alleged· ly discovered the occupa nts engaged in ~moking marijuana , The five suspects taken in to custody were identiried as 1'.1ichael J. Chesney, 22: W a Il e r J. Karase, 20 ; Kenneth W. Da vis. 20; Glen Cephus, 21 , and Abraham Roberts. 28. The suspects were booked on charges of possession of marijuana and being presen t where marijuana is being used, San Clemente police said. The second arrest took place at about 9: 15 p.m. at 109 Coronado Lane, the spokesman said, when deputies ap- proaching the residence allegedly smelled the odor of burning marijuana. Arrested at the residence were Edward D. Wilson, 20; Michael W. Kolbe, 22 ; Robert 0 . Brassette, 22 : and John A. Reinke , 20. Police said the second group of suspects were booked on the same charges as the first. In each case, deputies claim to have confiscated small quantities of marijuana from the homes, the spokesmen said. The suspects named in the arrest warrants were not found. From Page 1 DOCTOR ... Ogden had been in accord with practices adopted at many ot her psyscintric fa cili· ties. The physician denied that he had assaulted Mrs. Ogden and told the jur:y that his treatment of her husband had been at all times with the patient's con- sent. It was the second such successful defense by Day in the last year on malpractice charges filed against hi m by former patients. Barbara and Charles Williams unsuc· cessfully sued Day for more than $500.000 in damages last year in a lawsu it which alleged that Day's frequent t"lectro-shock treatments were the cause of a stroke suffered by 1'.frs. \Villiams at the Capi strano By The Sea J-l ospital. The young Long Beach couple·s lawyers accused Day or running a ··shock shop" in Danti Poin! during a three "'eek trilll tha1 sin1i!arly ended \\'ith a verdict 1n fa vor of the defense. Cosn1ctic Fir1n Founder Dies S\'DNEY. Australia (AP) -r..terle Norman, who stirred up her first pot of face cream on a kitchen stove and con· trolled one of the last personal cosmetics empi res, died Tuesday. She was 85. Miss Norman arrived in Sydne y Mon- day on th e liner Monterrey. She died of natural causes while taking an arternoon nap at her hotel after filming a television ln1en·iew. a 1.J.S. consular orficlal said. Jier body i! to be embalmed here and no\\'n to the L"nited Slates . The cigar-smoking presid ent of Merle Norman Cosmetics. Inc. got the idea of making cosmetics v.·hen , as a medical stu- dent in Santa Monica, Calif. she com- poondecl a salve to treat children's rashet: and olhe r skin irritations. From Pagel CANDIDATES • • Divel was born in San Cle mente Jnd ii single. Ralph L. Tomlinson. of 219 Crlslobol , manager of 1 motorc:yc:Je 1bop. Robert P.C. DeCoster. 202 S. Calle Seville , 1 buslnes! mana1mient consult· ant. For tho post of city tr .......... two ca,,. didat.e.s ba\te filed papers ror office. They art lncumbeot 1'-· II'. "Bill" Mltclldl, ol '10 Calle Puente, and Ro.. L. "Mll<t" Bunktr. Of 210 Via Nida. a public 1c. countaot. Clly Clerk Mu L. Bers. ol "' E. Mariposa. Is unoppol<d ror rwlectloo. &tie Boucher did not fiJe. LINKED WITH IRVING? Singer Nina Vin Pallandt Laguna Niguel Woman Named To Head 'ARVY' Mrs. Carol Person of Laguna Niguel has been named chairman of the cam- paign for the passage of the March 7 50- cent tax override election in the Capistrano Unified School District. f..t rs. Person, a mother a n d busi nesswoman , will he:kl ARVY 's Friends (Area Residents Vote Yes). "Approval or the measure is essential if the educational program for children in the school district is to contin ue to main- tain its progress toward a goal of ex· cellence in education." said Mrs. Person. She added that a failure to approve lhe override would reduce income for the district by ·saoo,000 next year and cause drastic cutbacks in the school program. The chairman said the school board sh ould be commended in its effort to help economize by not seeking a higher tax ceiling. The administration had originally re- quested a higher figure , but the board voted unanimously to keep the override 50 cents. the same as it has been for the last two years. \Vorking \.\'ith Mrs. Person, Charles Dargan of San J uan C a p is t r a no, chairman of a succcss rul campaign two year.'i ago. will head a committee. 10 <lcvc lop ad ve rtisi ng and brol'hurcs Mrs Ruth Dallam of Laguna Niguel will assist h1n1 Other cha irmen in cl ude lrustce Gcor~c \\'lute of Capistrano Beach and S11n Clemente, coordinator of the area chairmen : Dr. J .D. Dulaney or San Clemente, publicity ; Jerry Gaffney of San Juan Capistrano, speakers; Mike Darnold of San Juan Capistrano, finance. A steering com mittee will include other community representatives, s c h o o I district employe group leaders and representatives of parent organizations . Bob D. Hurst, president o{ the board of trustees, will serve as depUty chairman of the ARVY group. Sport Sigwips In Capistrano Slated Tuesday Boys 15 and 16 years of age who like to play baseball art Invited to sign tl p for the Capistrano Valley Pony-Colt teaiiie M Tuesday. Regiatnlion will take place fro m 7:30 lo 1:30 p.m. at Marco Forlttr Junlor lli&b in Roam 204. Any boy w1-J7th bir1May lellt on or af1tr Aug. I r. eligible lo mnptle In lbe program. A roglstntion lee ol llt "t!ill be used lo delray the co.rt of tnsunnce 1nd equip- mtnl If more than one 'boy rrom tht aame family signs up tho 1,. will be 1 mulmum ol 115. Ally boys 11 and 14 wllblng lo 11Jn' up for Pooy Lqgue ma y do iO at lhlJ time lllhough • rpecill reg tslratlon c11y wRI be beld l•l<r. P001-0>lt will not Interfere wltlf lbe sports activillel or playing •IJ&lbll!(y" of boys pertldpallog In .tho b1P ""'6ol 1poris -am. For lurtlw lolonnallab all Hap Hunn al 493--tOM • Al• second plan, suuerted by Voeel to accommodate fulutt lfOW\h, 1rea five would eocompa;ss nearly an of t.aguna Nlgutl 1nd that J>OrUon of Leisure World and Laguna Jllll1 lying east of r:1 ·roro noad and south of the San l.Jicgo .freeway. Area six would Include Irvine, the por- tions of Leisure World to lhe west of El 'foro Road and the northern sec!ions of El Toro. Area seven would encornpass Mission Viejo and the central area or El Toro lyi ng: within the boundaries of the frttway OI) the south, the railroad trac k.s on lhe noi:jb and Irvine on the west. Th.ls plan would P~vlde for 11,796 volt:rs ln aru ttve ; t,78G In atta slx and 10.!83 ilt area .tewn. Vogel notN! ~at since lrvlne-accordlng lo the last county projecllon -would ~row more rapidly than Miaslon Viejo, l&.lmbalanct would soon be a!Jevlated. _ Eacl1 or the cnnimlll t>e 1nembers voic- ed concern over splitting up the com· n1uni11es of Leisure World and El Tnro or of glv111g the plan an appearance of ger· rymandering. "The more ~'' av oid splitting up com· munilies," Vogel 11a1d, "the better off we are." However, he contended that the trustte area Jines should also follow voting precinc:l linea to avoid con!UJion •~ election time. 'rhe voter populalions 111 each area are based on the n1osl recent figures from the Reg1~tr3r of Voter:!. C3 p1strano U111fied School Distril't representati ve Bob 1-lurst of L~..:una Niguel contended the numbers could change radically witl'I a voter registration drive prior to an election . Saddlcb:ick College trustees hope to subm\l the reapportionment plan3 to the co unty school redislricting committee in time for the proposals to appear on the June 6 ele<'lion ballot. Hughes Meet Doubts Told Irving Friend Says Mexico Tapings 'Unlikely' From Wire Services NEW YORK -A blonde Danish singer who was in Mexico with au thor Clif£ord Irvi ng lasl year says she sees no way he could have met with Howard Hughes as he clai m~. 'fhe name or singer Nina van Pallandt, 39. was br ought into the case of the purpo rted Hughes autobiog raphy when Irving la st year says she sees no way he could have met with f10\\'ard Hughes as he <·laimcd . 'fhe name or singer Nin a van Pallandt, 39, wa s brought into the case of the purported Hughes autobiog raphy when Irvi ng claimed she v.•as with him for two or 100 in terview taping sessions he said he held with the billionaire. Irving claim- ed she was with him when he met Hughes in f\1e xico last February and in Lo s Angeles in June. A Los Angeles Times correspondent reported today from New York in a telephone interview wit h the singer, who is in the Bahamas, that she said at no lime did she see any man who could have pa ssed for Hu ghes during the Mexican trip last Feb. 13-14, She wa s apart from Irving "one to one and half hours at the most," the Times quoted her as saying. Miss van Pallandt said she spent five hours Wednesday talking to a U.S. postal inspector who was in the Bahamas in connection with the Hughes book in- vestiga tion. accord ing to the Times. She said she and her manager-producer J ohn Marshall, who al so is in the Bahamas, would return to New York voluntarily to appear before a federal grand jury. Federal and · New Yo rk county grand juries are inv est i gating the autobiography case. The U.S. Atl.orney's Office said lrving would not appear before the federal grand jury today as had been reported earlier. The postponement was sought and olr Marine Arrested In Baby's Deatl1 . A 20-year-old AWOL San Diego Marine fias been jailed by Garden Grov e police on charges of murdering a 10-month-old girl. Police said steve Will iams, comm on- law husband of the baby 's mother , Ethel Richardson or 9691 Atwood SL. was pic k· ed up on 6th St. in downtown Los Angeles at 5:~5 p,m. Wtdnesday ffler a search which began Tuesday night when the baby died in Palm l·la'rbor Hospital. Investigators said Williams, who is reported to have been AWOL for three months, offered no resista nce when ar- re sted. The viclim . Myrlie ~larris, v.·as rushed io the hospilal by a Garden Grove Fire Department rescue squad . It was reported that the child was in con· vul sions . The Orange County Coroner's office said death was due to head in· juries. tained by Irving's lawyer, said U.S. Atty. Whitney North Se y1nour Jr, He gave no explanation other than to say he was "talking only for today ."' Also winning a postponement wa s John ~1cier, a rormer scientific consul tan t to Hughes. Seymour also would give no ex· planatien for Meie r's postponement. Neither Irving nor Meier nor ~r lawyers was rea ched immediately for comment. lrving had been asked to appear Mon• day before bolh th e federal and a county grand juries, but won postponements 011 grounds th at he needed more time to con· sult with a new lawyer. l1·vi11g Lawye1· Assertedly. Asl{ed Firm to Drop Case CHICAGO (AP ) - The Chicago Tribune has reported that il learned an attorney Ior author Clifford Irving and his wi fe proposed immediate return of $500.000 to a group of New York pub lishers in exchange for withdrawing all prosecution against the Irvings. In New York, a spokesman for McG raw-Hill Inc. categorically denied the report Wednesday, l\!cGraw·Hill says it paid $650.000 which "'as in tended for billionaire Howard Hughes for rights to publish his autobiography. Although Irving says he collaborated with ll ughes in pre paring the autobiography, spokesmen for Hughes say the book is a fraud . The ney,·spaper said in today's editions that Maurice Nessen. an attorney for the Jrvings, made the proposal to Hailliburton Failes II , general counsel for McG raw-Hill. Failes' initial response lo the offer, the Tribune sa id, reportedly was to fl atly reject it. In subsequent conversation with F'ajJes and Harold McGraw, prcsidC:11l of McCraw-/·lill, Nessen indicated that the immediate retu rn of $500.000 now "may be belier than nothing obtained after a Jong courl fight.'' the Tribune said. The ne wspaper said this argument was understood to have been received with more interest. The newspaper added. however, that Nessen. failes and ~1cCraw v.·ere not ava ilable for comment. Irving and his wife face fraud wa r- rants in Zurich. Switzerland, and ques· tioning by federal and slate grand juries in New York in cunnection with $650,000 paid by McGraw-liill. The company, in turn, planned to sell subsidiary rights to the book to Time Inc., Book-of-the-Month Club and Dell Books . No plans of prosecution havr been an· nounced in this count ry, however. The newspaper said it received it!'! in- formation about the alleged offer from ne gotiators involved in lhe case. 1"he paper said Nessen indicated th at the money can be obtained from a Zu rich bank and from a safe deposit vault on Ibiza, the Spanish island where the lrv- ings have maintained a home for five years. The newspaper did not expla in the discrepancy between the amount offered and the amount the publishers say they originally paid Irving for transfer to Hughes. Young Candidate Quits Capo Race To Back Others Da vid A. Wolf, the youngest cand idate I.e. ta ke out nomination papers for the San Juan Capistrano City Counc il election, announced his withdrawa l from the race today. Wo lf, 19, who resides at 30112 Silver Spur. said he wiU actively suppert those candidates who express his own views. ··i ta lked.to a great many people about my possib!t candidacy and wbat I believe in," said Wolf. '"While most wished me lu ck and !old me that it u•as nice for 1: 19-year-old to take an interest in hi s gove rnment, they also expressed the co nsensus th at I wa:o1 too young and therefore did not have enough experience. ··1 still feel that chronologic age is not an absolute i.ndicator. At present I am a history major at UC Irvine with a B average. 1 am assistant manager of the campus radio station which ha s a st aff of more Utan rM:l people. "Since I have been in this management position, the station has grown from a toy ir:to an influential voice in the coav munily." Wolf said that he i!'I also employed at a disc jockey for a Santa Ana radio !ill· lion and is probably the youngest pro- fessional disc jockey in Sou thern Cali.. fornia. He said : "I am also a rea list. Since ii appeared that the electorate of San Jua,n D pist rano would not t&ke my candidacy seriously, I have decided against !Hing in l972. "Some people would undoubtedly vo te fnr me, but lhis would result In merely diluting the vote and ma y po!isibly keep candidates from ofrice who share my in· terest in keeping my city free from en· croaching urban sprawl." • JJ. J. (Jarrell~ STOREWIDE CLEARANCE SALE LAST 7 DAYS e Many Drexel and Heritage Groups at Generous Savings e Many Discontinued Pieces as well as Several Floor Samples 'lip ~o 30o/o Savin<JJ PROFESSIONAt H .JI GARl\tfT f URN fJU ~l~HARIOR ILVD. ltfTIRIOR DESIGNS COSTA MESA, CALIF. °'"" .. _ n.-. " "'· .... 6-46.0275 •0-0276 ,• I I ,_. ;;;_ Thurid.tf, rfbru•,,. _'· 1'>7_l __ S. _____ _:o:..•.;.IL;_Yc_•.::1L:.:D_T_,...._z 1~ Panther Raid Trial Set BVLLJVINKLE YOTE BLOC Illinois State Attor1iey, 13 Otliers Face Cliarges CHICAGO (UPJ ) -A Criminal Court judge has ruled that State's Attomey Edward V. Hanrahan and 13 codefen- danl3 must stand trial on a controversial indictment charging them ~·1th con- spiracy lo obstruct justlce in the Chicago Black Panther case. Richard J. Daley and 1 candidate for re-- election. shot an an1ry glance at Judge Philip Romlti when lhe judge said he found "little merit" in defense efforts to quash the indictment. maneuvers by the defendant.s attetnpt.ins to avoid a trial in lbe pollllcally explOli\·e cast. LOS ANGELES ( LIPll The Bullwink.h1 Party l!'I not a power In Soulhtrn CaHfornla politlts, b"-,l there are l3 regi stered Bull'°"'lnkle!'I <ln the voter rolls. Morrison Appointed To Council CUSTOM DRAPERY CLEANING BY PRESTIGE Hanrahan, a one-ume protege of Mayor Pe11ta9on Futads Romiti denied the defense set •r· raignment for today . The ruling ended months of legal l~anrahan, one of his as.sistants and 12 Chicago poli cemen were lndJcled by a Cook County grand jury on charges of trying to cover up the fa.els after a Dec. ~. 1969, police raid in a sea.rch for weapons on a West Side apartment. In a clost: race, they cauld beat the Rus3elllan lsocratic!I party. with 17 rrgl!!tered voters . AlEE ESTIMATES Cini•"' s,,,,,. ~IO.,_.._, L .... I .. ,.,,.., ''""' Rober t M. f\1 orrl son. 11 Hun- t In g l o n Bea c h pol l ee lte utl'nant. has been appointed .--------to lhr CalHornia Counci l on .. Crhninal Justice, the: agency for 11l11.11nlng and coordinauon uf (·rin11nal Jt1sllce. DRAPE~CLEANED, PRESSED UNLINED-$1 .89 LINED-$2.3 5 rllt Pl.NIL -TJ.ll:IN DOWN. ltlHUN•. Cell l•r _.,,.11tt-lllt 847-1005 Docto1~s Urge Shifting Black Panther leaders t-.tark Clark and Fre:d Hampton were killed by police gun- rire during the ra id, which turned up an 11rscnal of illegal weapons. A federal grand jury found that pohce had fired some 100 shots and the Pan.- thers only one , but did not rl'turn ln- dtctments. There art l~.927 \"Oters In Lo.s Angeles County rf'g1stered as rnember!'I of 35 "minor" parties. accDrd1n~ lo County Reg is!rRr·Recol'dt'i' J a m e s Allison. Thty c11n rr~is ter R' mtn1bers of v.hatevcr party strikes lht ir f11 111·y, bu! lhe part ies car1no! ~t i on the ballot 11~ sueh v11thout morf! members . .4.!! II lllC!1'btr Of II \11/\k for<·r . f\!orrison wilt ns::.1sl the 1100 IDING-11, HUNTINO,TON llACH Op,.llft H1111fl11tfon C•11f..- CCCJ In Jls rr1niiru1l detertlon ~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~ and 11pprehf'ns1on eff11rls. i'.torr1~nn sup..'rv h'l'!I l h ~ h1'lil·np!rr proi,:razn tn th(' llunt 1ngton Beach r o l Ice Ut'pnrt ment . Of Racliatio11 Fi11anc es The county grand jury, v•hl<.:h later in- vestigated the case, charged lhe defen- dants with altering, concealing and disguislng evidence in the case "by p!an- tlng false evidence and by fu rnishing false information." CINCINNATI !UPI) -/\.University of Cincinnati blue-ribbon committee has recominendcd that financing o( a con- troversial ··full -Mdy" radlat lon treat- ment program at the sc hool bC! shlfted from the Defense Department to another agency. The committee or 11 physician s \•:as ap- pointed by lhc university follow'1ng disclosures that funds for full body radia- tion treatment · of canc<'r patients here v.·as being parliat!y funded by a IJefense Deparl!nent grant. ·rhe program has been criticized by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, (D·Mass.) who said his Senate subcommittee on health would investigate the treatment program being conducted at General Hospital by the University of Cintinnati Medical School. The commillce did not name othe r agencies that could finance the radiation program. Dr. Edward A. Gall , director of the university 's medical college. listed the Departrncnt of tlcalth, Education and Welfare and the An1crican Cancer Soc.:ie- ty as possible sources. • • • • ,• .. • The com1nittee also recon1mcndcd the full-body treatment program be con- tinued for the purpose of con1paring whole body radiation therapy with other 1nethods now in use. The panel said only patients suffering fron1 cancer of the colon or lung be used in the trealn1ents bec1tuse ol hcr types of cancer \vcre considered relatively un- comn1on and had not shown significant improvement during trial treatn1en~ periods. The committee said t.he data it was provided did not indicate that patient survival differed signific antly from that obsl'rvcd in patients treated with customary methods such as X-ray , or.al medication and surgery. Although the treatn1ent program ha~ been criticized by Kennedy, the universi. ty has denied it used terminal cancer pa - tients as "human guinea pigs" to determine how much radiation a person could absorb before he suffered bodily damage. ~lanrahan, who authorized the raid and llteadily defended the pollce aclions, wa!'I dumped by Daley's De n1 o c r a t I c slatemakers afler an adverse ruling by the Illinois Supreme Court In the pretrial maneuvering but is waging an in- dependent fight llgainst the organization in the fi.tllrch 21 Illinois primary election. The state Supreme Court ruled three times on various aspects of the case. On !)cc. 17, the court turned down l!anrahan 's requl'st to question the grand j11rors who indicled hinl to find out whether Special Prosecutor Barnabas Scars had exhorll'd them to return the in- dictment. Defense attorneys said Wednesday they arc considering appealing t.hat decision tD the U.S. Supreme Court, which could further tie up the case. 1'he indictment was opened last August after months of legal hassling. The defen· dants were arraigned 11t that time, but refused to enter a plea, contending tbat the indictment was not valid. Private Flrms -· :I • Cl ci Ill "C -· Ill -.. Ill :I Cl Failure of Learning Experiment Reported \VASHJ N\.TON (AP ) -The report said. Office of E c on o m i c Op-David Seldon, president or portunity says its exJ)f!riments the American Federation or with performance contracting Teachers. responded : indica\e lhe new method "A.!I we have said right doesn"t help poor children along, OEO should slick to the learn any belll'r than tradi-poverty business and leave t i o n a 1 classroom teaching . education to the teachers. Two giant teachers' orjlaniia-"Now lhal the failure of lions say, In effect, "We told performance contracting ha!! you so." heen acknowledged. il is lime OEO Director Ph i 11 i p to devote ourselves to building 2 Stude11ts Selected For Montl1 Two r~ounta1n Valley Htgh School seniors have been selected boy and girl of the month for January by the ir classmates. Mark Sch!tdhaurr, !!On of ~·1r . and ~1r s . Paul lie ls secretary trt'asurrr of the Airborne Law Enfor ce- n1ent Assoc latlon, and a board me1111X'r of the Southern Califu rn la chapltr 11f the Professional Helicop!rrs Pl!oti; As.so<·i;ilion . Morr!.~o n 11!!10 attends Long eBach State College. ])raft (Jass'! SACRA~1E N'rO IAP I California's hi~h schools wou ld be required to provide !n· struction on lhe mllltary draf1 lire now offored by Armonds Beauty College , Inc. 9ualified Students learn a fun filled, hiqh payin9 profession. Schi!dhauer, 7671 Rhone Lant., unfler a bill by Assemb!vn1an Huntington Beach. cnrries H J~hn Burton, (D·San Fr11n· 4.0 grade point average a.nd ~sco). was a semi-finalist In the Na -·m-iiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOiiiOi-._,I Call or visit Armond• Beauty College, Inc. for progr•m and regl1tratlon lnform•tion tional Merit Scholarship con· test. He aervcs as y o u th 496-9436 representative to the flun- lington Beach Environmental Council and belongs lo the can1pus ecology and Key clubs. W•rld'I L•r111I Tr•ntmlul111 34052 La Pla1a, Dana Point Linda Sakauye. daughter of i11..:1•ll•h ?>.1r. and Mr s. Akllo Sakauye, l oco! Dectl..-Wll Mowell O'•" MONDAY Mlt•I -15301 Pacific St., Midway City, CLos10 5..t.Tu•o1.v is the Barons ' student body ··w;0~~v,:~:1~1~,,".!1'11 treagurtr. She carries a 3.96 JltfO 01111nr '"'"" 1t11. In••' VtmJ grade poinl average and Is a1 ~=='="~''="='"='='="='~'="=·="="="'~'======--=--­member of several campusi: clubs . Huntington Introduces 11 Courses BOUTIQUE CLEANERS Warner-Dale Center Corner of Wi1rne r & Sprlngdi1le -Huntintton l••ch .. U2·20SO SAVE MONEY SAVI POLYlllll LIPI Poly•1ter1 li11t longer than other fabrlca. dry cl••n•d, i1nd co1t le11 to clei1n Eleven new, pilol courses \ I have been approved {or in-, troductlon this seme8lcr in the Huntington Beach Union Jiigl1 =;;;-;-;;;~-;;iiiiiiii;;;iiiiiiii;;;;;iiiiii~~iii'i:iiiiiiiiiiiii:iiiii~iiiiiiiiii~iiii~:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii School District. I • V. Sanchez told newsmen. a truly fine school system bas- " We 're back at the drawing ed on recogniied principles Trustees recently approved board," following the failure and not on educational gim-the courses for second NEW! MASTERC!fARGE ACCIPTED FOR STORAGE CHARGIS FOR THI •...• ; 83D·11JDD 1Jil3·19.DD of the $6.~million experiment mickry ." semester scheduling at the to improve the reading and And Donald Morr ison, pres!-district's five high schools. math skills of poor children. dent of the National Education Different courses wl!I be of-BEST MOVE During the 1970-71 school AsM>Ciation, said the OEO fered on different campuses. year, performance contracts report verifies what the NEA The new courses are Mass were signed with private firms has been saying "all along, Media It, California and the that used combinations of that performance contracts Far West through Literature, teaching machines. special simply don 't work unless they Public Relations Workshop, materials and student and meet c a r e r u 11 y drawn Literature of the Future, teacher incent ives in an effort criteria." Mountain Eco Io g y, Con- to greatly improve pupll-tearn· "If performance contracting versational German, Traffic ing levels. The companies is to succeed ." Morrison ad-and Safety Education, Man were to be paid based on the ded, ''the key wi11 be teacher and Communication, C ar degree of improvement the involvement from the begin-Maintenance for G1r!s and 01' YOUR LIFE CALL 494-1025 . . •· . ·make · children achieved. ning." Sports Literature. The 1J.ooo children In an ex--~~.iij;~-;~···S;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;~~ perimental group and 10,000 In a control group "did equally poorly in terms of achieve· ment gains." the preliminary nopavment until JulV! ,:~ ,. , A19hl now you can ha¥e year f t .-;~.¥·~ 'roun d gas a+r cond1t1oning 1n-.., ~@--~~- stalled 1n your home and make ·~;;;.,:,, · no payment unhl July. This ,,,,. l I speci al offer comes as part of -• a long term finan cing arrangemenl that includes parts and service on the air conditioni ng unit until 1982. A fu ll ten years. But th is is a limited offer Iha! expires February .29, 1972, so don "t put it off. Call us loday and one of our air conditioning specialists will arrange to measure your home !or a rree estimate. Tt"lere 's no obligation. of course. Call your local Certified Ga5 Air Conditioning Contractor Pacific Heating Company, Inc. 2 I 75 lagun• Cenyon Rd. -Le gun• Be•ch • 494.9745 or 837-2 000 Ban Urged On Freeway SACRAMENTO WPl1 -A bill that would remove the proposed Torrance freeway from the stale fr eew ay and expressway system has been introduced by Asaemblyman Robert Beverly 1 R-Manhatlan Beach ). The measure '°"'ould require the state Divi sion of Highways to cease planning and design studies for the freeway from the San Diego Freeway on the north to the Pacific Coast Highway on the south. Beverly said Tuesday that In addllion to homeowner associations, conservatlon.itls an4 other citizens, the city cou ntila of Torrance, Redondo Beach and Lomita are opposed to the project. ll_,,. 19 .atllfy )'tOIM" ...... ....._ Vkttr\9 •kl'fll (fntw_.,,.,, • ..-en. If I .... 1t ........... -... -· ...,. Mtlt1 t•t -...Mw•r Hkflll ... ..,. MN ant;:•~ _,...,. .-... ••Ir• '"' ,....,. p,_ MtVICt tOIPll -lflt-nc:t ftr " ....... Wf •M ,..._ "IX,a•T I• ICI" M •II ,.....1, .....,, 0 .... T ......... ftltlr ..._.,,,.,., TM, s..l•f' 1t 19 I. • MU\11:\..ANOi l4N Otl.O P11Y. • • i • LAKE FOREST VICTORIA BICYCLE CENTER 24)01 Mitfrt..k ltYL -II lfr• IL* F..-l IJMIJI FURNITURE The double chaise In tufted fur fabric We deaigned it, we made It, we know It's 1errilicl Full tjouble size, supremely com .. 1ortable, contoured ahape, deep plush fur fabric cover and base In soft or bold colors. :;; The "200 look •at 1111 Ill prtoe. !OS AlllUU, 6121 Wi~hiro Blvd. Mlr1tle Mil~ 1104-0 W. Pico Blvd_, 8340 S. W<1lern Ave. ANAHllM• 1672 W. Lincoln IUUSfllll' 3010 Mint AWL CNUU VISIAo 476 111-oy CWEMDNl/POMQU, 232 E. foolh'11 COYINAo ~45 N. A.!uso DOWNE!, !M31 E. fimlbne ll!NDAl.l 333 It Ctnlrol Ava. • li ii I J UAJWA MW: 10100 Balboa Blvd. MUNTINCTDN BUCH, 19431 Bu,h Blvd. LA HAl!A, 1120 W. Whillier LONI ILICll: 2119 lok.-Blvd. llOllTOO P~ 415 S. Atllnt~ Blvd. PASADENA' 85 S. Rosemead RNERSIDE, 10.000 Ma1noli1 SANTI ANA/IUSllll: 1703 E. lllh Sl SAN IEAMUIJlllO: 99t S. "F' st. SOllTll UJ, ISS33 S. Cronshlw Blvd. lHOUSAND OAKS: 244 lhouund Oak> B~d. VENTUR.A: 340'l Tele1r0ph Rd. WOOOlAND MIUS• 22223 Vtnlut1 Blvd • »a7 ~Y1A W'(l(l(•WUXOl\'fl JO UNTllt • IAlUll:OAT 10 VHTIL ,. SUNDAY J2:l0 UNTIL I . me ,.Mk/Ht.'"(( OlCOMTOR S(llVW;[. 11tll! DllNUf•COH'IDlltHT INtKTDlll !! DAILY PILOf SC Your ~lotiey OVER THE CO UNTER Wl1at Do Optio ns 11:-r••w l1tlW" ..... -4•-• --lllfMIMr ' • "' .._ IUt,fO P'f'k_ft • 1111 11•<1-"'ll!J II' ,,,.,...,. ftMUftl II Utftr•!I ....... NASO Llst1ng1 fo r WMlneMl•y; Febru1ry 2, 1972 "\<H YOl!lr lj"I lo11lct 11 '" II• fol o#I,. It! Arct 11111 It • 1<111.C.• "''d M•v Nt• oll• 5..curlllt t ArtWIG Really Cost You? By SYLVIA PORTER In a fe\f' weekl we will move into the big automobile buying sca:;on of 72 -a period during which m1l11ons of you will buy new cars millwn.s of .)'OU will speod big time extra monty to add op- ti ons to your car and m1Jhons of you will waste huge sums because you do not fu lly understand whal you want or v.hat the (Jplions arr: r~ally C05ll1lg )'OU Tuesdays rolumn sllhm1tted I table dramallz1ng this cGst Jactor on a wide range of automobile makes and models and detailing how options can add from one third to nearly 100 percent to the basic cost of your automobile How then do you find your way around tht' vast assortr ment of alternatives 1n equip.. ment today? To begin with, here are some fundamentals on the more popular options •Larger engines cosllng $75 to St 000 extra move your car around \\1th much more pep and can improve safety when passing or 1n other :s1tua t1ons where you must ac WHAT IS A MIGRAINE HEADACHE7 ·~ .. ,~1; .. -•• by TERRY GRANT, R Ph The woi d m1gra1ne comes from thP Technlcal namr he1111cran1n "hlch t1anslatcd means half a head This 1s because 1n so many ~ople the pain bl>gtns 10 the cen ter or the fore head or over one eye It mo.st commonly remains in thf' front of the head Othf'r rcaturf's {'Om mon to migraines arr flash 1ng patterns or spots 1n v1.s.1on JUSt before th£' hrad ache followl"d by nausea and dizziness l-1orr lhan twice-as many "omen as men ha\e m1gr1unrs A m1gra1ne c annot~ treated like a con1mon hrad ache with a~p1r1n 11 1 equ1res a differen t type of drug en- tirely and only 11 phy!ilc1an can determ1nr how any one person should be trca ted YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when you need a delivery We will de liver promptly without extra charge A great many people rely on us for thetr health needs We Wl'lcome requ~L"I for delivery s er v Ice and charge accounts PARK LIDO PHARMACY 351 Ho1pltal Road Newport Beech 642-1510 '"" D•flvery Dt •lt • ~W'I ovrt "'""" !'! ct\er3te rapidly Ill• '°""'' 8t nk A qw H But they .... ,, • 1 1'111• A ~ 6• t i ~ ac k• A~"'" sv oflen make a c"r n1ort d1f ... ,cc: eo1 So1>k •no l•u•I ""llGt• Lt licult to handle on wet or ,, B~ s! ~1t. • l.!. ace 1n<1 h fm1> :H4• l•tl !tire' Al snowy pavement, they use 1-10111 NC XI JOt.. ,u Pnrc: d I d MOI 8~• .C #ll<o tf\Q Hv more gas an an 8-cyc in er ~"""' BC>\ 11 " Bk•m "'' I I II UV• IH• 1'I l'\1 1,io Bt •119 I<: engine a most a ways w1 cosl v•"' "'"" 1•. ;1•1 g•u•H F t d lnt11•111ct ~uml I more to main a1n an repatr Fa u" LI 11 , :11 is1v1t i'l'"- lh •. Ind 1ndu11tl.i1 B•~I "" F an a O"\,:y 1 er ,.,,_. c., , , , ~ ltt1 L•ti Af'A p,~ :00, 2 lbb (o ~ Automauc 1ransm1ss1on ,., o 1 .. , 1 J • •d !>o<1 A!T S "' I ,,. Slt1cnr Sl50 lo $250 extra makes AVM co 1~ • J. 1 gJc1, H 1 dr A'Vll'lnT 'N I >J • 09"'° £1 1\flng a Int easier, can oflen •d"'•' 1 • 1 11,,.,, A>i ( I( b •dd•r W I•'-ll •ll•aen p.!y or ltse y prevrnung 1o c. R9, ;. i , 11 rn~• db , __ ( ti ,.. t r ~ I 11 • llr >1 !>1;4 wear an y uvus Lflg 1e car s ,.1 1na I , J • 11 rw1>0 ,., \alue al lrade-tn time. But :ig;e ,Ha s' \ ~ ~u~~bw~• repair and gas bills will pro-:1~~~~cft 1 ' i1: :~~~:';'~ bably be slightly higher :1J<~.~n.a 1~ : 1;\: 2~'W\~"' "Air-c•"•dlt1oner t 'l5(} lo Alla B•• a 1 ~ C1mb• N "'' ..., A!ld EQul , • 5"1. Cenn Miii $55(1 t'Xtra lndlSpUla b[e COffi A l•n Bee 11 > lt Cenf!Or> B Al~ Clm !'I l~. i·~r•d P fort and add! to resale value 1o1"1" G.., 1 ' 11• 10 MTa• •m lluo P ?1 71 eo Sw\I However uses extras gas ,. Et L•b '" '"' ~"'" ,.,, llm f.•1> lW 130'4 C.i• ltc needs reparrs fatrly often is <\m F .,1 31 31,., Ce•e Cp A Finl LS IOll I! Cl It 1111 by far the most expensive Am furn 17 \ll'o C&•t "'" I II I Am (; eel Ml fl C ~•C NG SII\8 e ophon YOU probab y ,. Ptl>le<I ~" 5 • Cevnan C b d I be I I ,.m Te •Y 39 l'I , C•nV! PS uy an o ten ge s ot ier ex Am w•!d 1 , 1 , C•n1 ~•b t I An8rl t~ Jh l (nance A pensive op ions oo A~~evl e 5ll ~ !' • c~ftrl o 1 ·Pov.er steering $100 lo $120 makes handling an in termediate to full sized car easier and safer under some circumstances Power brakes $40 to $100 also are probably worthwhtle on any large car •Tinted w1J1dows $35 !o $50 make air-cond1lloner s Joh easier and improve comfort But reduce margin of safety of a driver with poor night v1s1on •AM radio $60 to $90 useful and helps resale value But fancier setups (A~'f FM tape deck, stereo) are good buys only if you get your money's worth from them while you own the car for they return little of their cost at trade 1n And so it goes dov. n the d1izy1ng hst 0£ alternatives ranging from rear window defoggers to power window s from heavy duty optional equipment to automatic speed control Now here are five general tips on how to save money on options when you buy your car (I) Have fi rmly 1n mind the use to which you expect to put Motorcycle Pisto11 Aids "'"~''"1roc1rd • ..,., •• , ch•r9• 7 l11h 011 Ttl111d 11ewport <•"''' 644 !iO?O Il\'1MEDIATE DELIVERY! PANTERA by deTom1110 Imported frir L!nc:oln-1'.f~ry ltal11Ln coechwork crtatl'd by The bnlllant Ghia Studios nf Turin. f'ord designed till'! 351 CID 4V V-8 engine. Four wheel In· depent:nt 1u1pengton and mid ship l"l'lllne placement. Five speed rear box. fully synchronized P&nt.era Italian fer P1tnthl"r • •JMO.ISllO Complete-New York Stock List ..... .. IWl.1 Hl911 Ln a-a. \ --- Thursda)''s Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange Li st ' • • ' . ' l •l•I "• fM1 ) Hlllt La• Ci.•• t~• ' • ING THE PUBLIC FOR OVER 32 YEARS • • V YOU SAVE MONEY ... THE FIRST PRICE MARKED ON MERCHANDISE INDICATES THE RETAIL PRICE FOR COMPARABLE QUALITY! OPEN 7 DAYS 5 NIGHTS MONDAY THAU FRIDAY 8 A.M. TO 9 P.M. V EXPERT SERVICE AND ADVICE ... QUALIFIED PROFESSIONAL SALESMEN • V LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICES ••• DN EVERY ITEM ... EVERY DAY THE SECOND PRICE IS YOUR COST! YOU SAVE THE DIFFERENCE ••• V VARIETY •. 8000 PAINTING .AND DECORATING ITEMS SATURDAY 8 A.M. TO 6:30 P.M. SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M. OZITE 0 SELF· ADHESIVE SHAG CARPET TILE OUlll AAIC• 57 c , .. 12"11211 "" PiCTIJRE FR.J\MES 4 INCH BRISTLE ~-PAit.l PAit.l BRUSH . .,-"' TttiNNER OUflll P"ICK • OUR PRIC E ag e INYOUR 22c CO METAL ,,~ llTA.lll.50 IA. CONTAINER • IN GREEN AND BLACK 3 IN. X 5 IN. 19 9 COMP. R&TAIL ,_°,.~". 4.oo EA. ROOF COATINGS PROlfCTION·WllITTR & SUMMER 5 GALLON SIZE BL~CK ASPHALTUM FiBERED ASBESTOS •WON'T CRACK OR AUN OUR PRICE 2 98 COMP. RETAIL 5 3.95 GALS. •FINEST GRADE •BLACK ONLY OUR PRICE 3 7 5 COM~ .. ~~TAIL GlLs. AlSO AVAilABlf 5 X 7 IN ....... 2.49 SXIO IN ...... 3.29 9X12 IN ...... 3.59 POLYFoAM PADS I MAKE YOO"R OWN CAt41)LES .• ' :s .. l .. 11 lB. WAX BlOCK OUR PRICE 19 9 COMP. RETAIL "" DYES MOLDS DRiPPiNC WAX scnns WICKS CRYSTAL WAX COMP~EJECTION ART SUPPUES ARTIST OILS 20 CC TUBE WATER COLORS • 30 CC TUBE f OUR •111C• WE CAR"RY A Ll\IWE SELECTION OF WlBER, SH1VA, KR~LON & STRAT~Mdl\E Alll PRISllutTS All AT DiSCOU~1 PRICES! .. • PRE-TRIMMED • GIVE ANY ROOM AN All NEW LOOK • GREASEPROOF CAULK CARTRIDGE ~19~. SPR.J\Y E~lMEL OUR PRICI! 39 c '" 12 oz. CAN GLUE & MASKING TAPE COMBINATION EIMERS MYSTIK WHITE GLUE MASKINC M •4 FLUID OZ .. • DRIES CLEAR REGULAR PRICE 12~, .. SALE PRICE 889 .•. OUR· SPECIAL PRICE c 12 OZ. AEROSOl CAN •PERFECT FOR FURNITURE. MACHINERY, ETC. • FAST DRYING •HIGH GLOSS WHITE & 4 COLORS :"f ... .., !NA.MIL . ' I I I r . . • . . ' I I I ---..-----; ' Laguna Beaeh T oday's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL 65, NO. 29, l SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FE BRUARY 3, 1972 TEN CENTS Council Treasurer Positions lf Lagu11a Bearh City Clerk Dorothy f\1usfelt wins her April 11 bid for e\eclion lo a four-year tern1 in the office, she will find herself with a job paying only $350 a month , instead or the $752 she has been making. .Following a midnight executive session Wednesday night the City Council voted 4 to t, with Councilman Charlton Boyd d1s~entingt to separate the elective of- fices of city clerk and city treasurer rrom the principal clerk positions, which have • • Six • Ill been added lo their duties to augment their income. 1'he move will go ipto effect when the two elective officers begin their new terms after the April election. Under the city code, the salary for the position of city clerk is $350 and that for city treasurer, defined as a part time job, is $250 a month . To augment these sums, holders of both offices ha ve been pla::ed on the city payroll as principal clerks in their respect ive departments. Mrs. l\.1usfelt, who was apPointed city clerk in 1970, following the resignation of James D. Wheaton, who combined his duties as city manager with telective position of city clerk, is the only can- didate for election this year. Only candidate for the treasurer post is Margaret Morreale. Constance Kimble. city treasurer for the past ?5 years, is not running fo r re-election. Vehemently opposing the action, Coun- cilman Boyd deli vered a n1inority state- ment and req•1ested that it be included in tile minutes. Calling it a "great mistake," Boyd said that "no one of talent" could afford to run for the clerk position as a part time job with part time pay. "In my opinion." he said, "we are treating lightly the mat- ter of public information an d emasculating the office of city·clerk." Boyd said he would favor combining the duties of city clerk and principal ' en' 0 Laguna Race clerk into a full tinle P::,sition paying $800 lo $1 ,000 a n1onth, and making the posi· tion fully elective. Ex plaining his vote later, Councilman Roy Holm said the council seemed to agree that it was not good policy to have one person in the dual role of elected of· ficial and cUy employe, but disagreed on the procedure of separation. "If elected councilmen serve on a part time basis for $150 a month, and planning commissioners for $40 a month ," said ·Fo u r Challeng i11 g 2 l ricumbents for Council B~-r. \RBARA KRETRICH 01 !n1 D•ll~ l'llOI S!lll Six cr -i tes were 1n the running for iwo Le 1 Beach City Council seals as the fil i riod ended at noon today . The l1cld inc ludes the two incwnbents, Council Seeli.s Festival Deal Discussions Laguna Beach city councilmen agreed Wednesday that it is time to reopen discussions with the Festival of Arts board regarding a festival offer to in· crease the city's share of its revenue to help defray the cost of the Main Beach Park. By a 4-1 motion, with Mayor Richard Goldbe rg dissenting, the council agreed to Roy Holm's proposal that the city sug- gest negotiations oI a new lease with the festival extending only until J98S and providing for payment to the city of 271h percent of gross festival revenue or $155,000 yearly, whichever Is less. A previous offer by the festival to ex· tend the lease until 1998 under the same terms was rejected by the city on the theory that by that time inflation might have advanced to the point where the agreement no longer would be favorable to the city. Under the present lease, the festival pays the city 17!-2 percent of its gross revenue. During the earlier discussions, a counter proposal by the city, which would have provided for payment of an ad- ditional 15 percent of revenues over the $156,000 figure was rejected by the festival board. The negotiations came to an abrupt halt with imposition of the price freei.e, r;ince any agreement lo increase lease payments to the city would have to be contingent upon an increase in Pageant ticket prices. Noting that the principal area of disagreement had been the length of the )ease, and that the festival now is in a position to consider a ticket price boost, Holm proposed the new com promise. Councilman Edward Lorr said it re!lected his position and COuncilman Charlton Boyd called it a very workable compromise. Mayor Goldberg, however, said he still could not support the proposal. "Perhaps this is a good deal for the clty, perhaps not," he said. "The city is still tbe landlord and the festival is still the tenant. It's very rare that a tenant goes to a landlord with a take it Oi:' leave it of. (er . Thf: dty ha.s had nothing to say about this." From the audience, restaurant owner Harry Moon rose to comment, "This Is not • tenant-landlord relationship in the ctdlnary sense. Where do you f.md a ¥ndlord who puts up buildings with his qwn l\md!, gives them to the landlord, then uki how much rent ht ahould P8J1 . ,. ... thml?" ' l"OllOWlnl the 4·1 vote, City Manager tawreoce Role was Instructed to convey (Ile basic cltJ proposal to the lesllva!, 'flth the underm ndlng that further ~tails of a new lease would nuna1n to be .. goliated. · (;en. McNa ~ey Dies : LA JOLLA (AP! -Gen. Joseph T. McNamey, 71. who succeeded Gen. [)wight D. EJsenhower aa commander of flmerlcan forces In Europe alter World .,.,.. II, 4ltd 1\JO$day. McNamey later .. vaed aa Preoldent ol Co!lvalr Aircralt. ' Charlton Boyd and Roy Holm , both seek- ing re-election to four-year tenns, two women . attorney Frances Haller and '-·lrs. Beth Leeds, civic leader Harry Lawrence and attorney Richard L. Carr. Candidates who had filed nomination papers by today's noon deadline are : Charlton P. Boyd, (incumbent), 1274 Starlit Drive. Boyd, 52, is the owner or Adventure T.raveJ Service in Laguna Beach. He and his wife, Jane, have three gro'l\'n children, Scott, 261 of ~dlands, A.Ian , 23:, of f.o.9 Angeles, and Lucy, 18, a trec;hman at Mills College. Ro1 Holm, (incUmbeni), 1~ Hillcrest Drive. Holm is ts, and a personnel e,x ... ecutive at Bttkman lnstruments in Fullerton. He and his wife, Bett.v, are the parents of two children. Tom, 20, a stu· dent at UC Irvlne and Peggy, 19, a stu· dent at UC Santa Barbara. Mrs. Roy (Frances) Haller, 1229 Temple Hills Drive. An attorney cur· rently employed as a loan officer at Laguna Federal Savings and Loan. Mr s. Haller is 41, and the mother of two children, Steve. 18, a student at San Diego State, and Debbie, 9, who attends St. Catherine School. Richard L. Carr, 13.15 Bluebird Canyon Drive. A ('(lrporate attorney for Control Data Corporation, Carr, 40, has lived in Laguna since 1969 and is the owner of the Ocean View Motel. Holder of a doctorate in law, Carr ha s been admitted to prac· tice before the bars of the state of Wisconsin, the Federal District Courts Crippled Child Of Easter Seal Fam e Contes ted Easter Seal organizations in three Southern California counties joined forces Wednesday to halt what they claimed is misrepresentation by the rival Crippled Children's Society of Los Angeles. Orange County Superior Court Judge J. E. T. "Ned" Rutter signed a restraining order that will prevent the 'Los Angeles organization from distributing its alleged· ly almost identical seals during upcoming campaigns in Orange, Ventura and San Bernardino counties. AU three plaintiffs argued in their Superior Court lawsuit that the pubUc in their areas was "confused and misled" by the Los Angeles group's use of a crip- pled child as a campaign symbol - a traditional Easter Seal identification. They also ask in the ir lawsuit for recognition of the title "Easter Seal" and the Easter lily as their copyright w.hich should be expressly forbidden to any other organiZation. , Joseph Carrona Services Friday ' Funeral servi<es will be held at I p.m. Friday at Pacmc View Chapel !or Jo1epb D. Camma, 3*l Medllemlnean.Dr!Ye, south Laguna, Who died Wedn•sday at the age of 82. Mr. Carrona is survived by his widow. Geneivive, of the (amlly home ; a da1111hter, Merie Hollywood ol Glendale, and three grandchildren. Burial al Paclllc View Memorial Park will follow the services. A naNve of New Jersey, Mr. Carron11 -was a retired Paclllc Telep.Woe Company employe. He h'd lived In South "8guna for the past nine years. · ' j and the U.S. Supreme Court. He is un· married. Harry Lawrence, 2345 S. C o a s t Highway. is owner of Warren Imports and has resided in Laguna with his wire, _r..1axine. since 1946. They have one daughter, Susan. Long active in civic af· fairs, Lawence has served with more than 20 local organizations, is running for elective office for the first time. Beth Lef45, 21532, Treetop Lane, is a 30- year-old divor cee and the motber of two children. She has lived in LagU{la·Beach since-' 1947, w~ .it. ~r of 1ttijlabee'1 Treats, a • tieallh fbo'.d .. restauran"t On Thalia Street and cprreoUy ~ wlth the Volunfeu Post: She was o Of the organl7.era of the 1970 Christ ' "li•p. periing" in Laguna canyon and a 1ilmilar gttherlng· in Death Valley last Easter. New Assistant Succeeds Autry In Lag1ma Bea ch Terry Brandt, at present ad- ministrative anal yst for the city of West Covina has been named administrative assistant for programs in Laguna Beach, City Manager Lawrence B. Rose an- nounced \Vednesday. Brandt, 31, will replace Alvin O. Autry who departed Laguna Feb. 1 to work for the city ol Costa Mesa on urbM design projects. Brandt has worked in West Covina since 1969. He holds a master's degree in economics from UC Santa Barbara and a bachelor's deg ree from California State College, San Diego. In West Covina, Brandt has been responsib le for personnel progra ms, liaison to the Human Relations Com· mission, workmen's co mpensation cases and annexation proceedings. He has background in computer opera· lion, economic research and systems analysis, Rose said. Brandt is married and has two children, ages three and five. He served in both the Peace Corps and the Job Corps. Brandt will begin work Feb. 14, at a starting annua l salary Of $12,012, said Rose. Russ Announce Shot MOSCOW (AP) -Tht: Soviet Union an- nounced today the launching of Cosmos 473, latest in the toirsecret aeries of un· manned satellites. Tass said Cosmos 473 made Its first revolution of the earth in 89.7 minutes. and its inclination to the earth's orbit "'as &5 degrees. l1nposter UP.I , ......... Ears Have It These elephants at a zoo in Windsor, England have been fitted with special ear muffs to protect them from the roar of jet engines at nearby Heathrow Airport. County Social Worker, Otl1 ers Held in Pot Raid Eight persons -including a county. employed social worker -were arrested in Laguna Beach Wednesday night when a JG-m an team of Laguna Beach police. San Clemente police and slate narcotics agents raided what they all eged was a "pot party" at a rambling Bluebird Can· yon residence. Sgt. Neil Purcell of the local police department, clai med three ounceiii of marijuana, small quantities of LSD and potent ha&hish oil and paraphernalia were taken as evidence. Jofce L. Mortensen. 34, of 316 Bluebird Can)'on Drive, Laguna Beach, employed by the Orange County Department of S<>. cial Welfare as a social worker, wu ooe of the eight arrested oo possession of marijuana charges, Purcell said. Others arrested at the home at S06 Bluebird Canyon Drive included George E. Desoto, 26: Pierce H. Sharmon, 29: and F~anz L. Roubison along with Wllliam A. Oriel. 1198 Victory Walk ; Marsha J'. Rockwell, 21, 31913 9th St., Spotted South Laguna; Scott 1. Pitman, 25, 109 N. Bayfront, Newport Beach, and Richard W. Aguire, 21 , a transient. Purcell said it took more than six of the officers lo arrest Aguire, who was swimming in a swimming pxil in the back yard of the residence. Many of the officers were thoroughly drenched after the ordeal, he added. Aguire was subsequenUy charged with relony ·assault on a pollce of~lcer and resisting arrest, in addltlbn to posRUb\ of marijuana charges. Miss Mortensen, said Purttll, II a former probation officer for I.he Orange County Probation Department. DeSoto, Shannon and Aguire are still In custody and the other five have been released on lheir own recognizance. The eight persons are scheduled to ap-- pear In South County Municipal Court Friday ror arraignment. Sirhan Shifted; Good Behavior Laguna Urged to A void 'Marshal' ~N QUENTIN (AP) -Sirhan B • Sirhan, , convicted ol QU11lnattnc Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, r.1 been moved from his supcrseca:te cell on ·San Quentin Priaon's Death Row to an area for 1'the most amiable" condemned prisoners, prison officials report. Laguna Beach police !OOay encouraged residents to watch out for a man who, claiming he is a U.S. Marshal, bas en- tered Into at lea.st one home and birdied the elderly female occupant. Police said the Incident occumct Jap. 2S, when a well dressed man knocked oo the door of .a Hawthorne Road address ond told the female resident -a musi c teacher-that he wanted to enroll hl.s "°" in her classes. once inside the house. the man pro- duce<! a $20 b!JI,. tol<l_lhe laey he was a U.S. Marahal, 1that the""'hlll was coonltr· /elt and lb1t lhe wu believe<! to be sproadlni the bogus money. He then told Uie woman to show him the rest of the money she' had In the home, police said.. The lad)!' followed. his instructions, the man examined th! mOney, iald It was legiti mate and left. The man warned the womari not to tel l anyorie about the incident or race a federal offenM. · PoUcc suspect the imposter l~ using the guise to gain entry to the bomes of we:\lthy, elderly persons. AJI U.S. marshals. police said, .carry Identification which must tK! presented. The impost.or bad no such ideollfication. .. Because of threaLI against his life from other death row Inmates and hls temper tantrums, Sirhan wu kept under heavy guard in an Isolated cell. However, three years have tnade Sirhan more tractablt and '1hla behavior In general is now sat18factory1" a_prison spokesman said. J·loln1. "I fee l the established salary of $350 is suff icient for an elected city clerk prov ided she ls required lo undertake on· ly the duties presc ribed in the go vern· ment code -keeper of the seal. In charge of off iri:1I documents end running elec· tions. She stould not be required to pick up mail at the post office , lake n1inutes at council n1eetings or do other offi ce work." Uo!n1 said he 1.•:ould strongly oppose the (See CITY CLERK, Page Z) ans Higl1-rank Official Eyes Peace WASH INGTON (UPI) -The Unlled States is willing to consider any seriouJ North Vietnamese proposal concernin1t release of prisoners of war. a high·rank- ing State Department official testified t<>- day. \Villiam f{. Sullivan. deputy assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs. said that while President Nixon's Jan. 'l5 peace proposal "offers a fair, reasonable basis for resolvlng the Vietnam conflict, we remain wUling to consider any aertous proposal concernina POWs.'• Sullivaq spoke only a lhort time alter the Viet Cong_'• new peace plan in Parls Ind _ .. nuy dJd, ncit Uke nOlt (If I~ (See earlier st.ry, page 4). M.anwhne, Ellsworth Bunker, U.S. Arribassador to South Vietna m. conferred at tbe White House with Pre81dent Nixon. During his Capitol Hill visit, Sullivan faces questioning on an allegation that the United States allowed Saigon to possibly block a neutral inspection of POW camps in North Vietnam. Sullivan told the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on National Security Policy and ' Scientific Developments that Nixon's public offer included an offer to Implement prlaoner releases in paralleJ with troop withdrawals. "To date there Is litUe evidence that the other side ls willing to negotiate in terms which seriOU!ly and realistically reflect the actual situation In lndocllna," SUilivan said. "They are still attempting lo achieve their maximum objectives," he said. ''We nevertheless ·hope that we may Induce lJ anoi to forsake the battle.field in favbr of the conference table and thereby achieve the release of our prisoners,'' Sullivan said. Sullivan said that ''over 1600 U.S. military personnel are listed as missing or ca ptured in Southeast Asia, and over 4-0 U.S. civilians are Jn the same status. According to Defense D e p a r t m e n t figures, 383 of our men are listed as cal>' tured In North Vietnam, 92 in South Vie~ nam. 6 In Laos." .. Two U.S. pilot!: are known to be cap- tured In China. The missing civilians in- clude three U.S. newsmen Jost in Cam- bodia." SUUlvan said, however, that "lhe..actual total held as priloner1 remains uncertain due to the other side'• coriltnued refusal to identify all prlaoners. 0 Sulllvan also said the commun!Jts' record on the mat_ter of j)rlaoners• mail 11od packages has deteriorated. W•daer " It will be • bit oooltr on l"rfdly. with lnctehln& bflh cloudl ac- cording to the weelher service. Overnight low1. 30 to 40 tonight with higllo of II .to II Friday. ~sm1f 'l'ODA:Y Hovmd Hughe• muck Into Lai V •9GI In .JS88 and b•gan his lung rrio• .. '"' "mv•"'11 man'' of tht de1trt Tht tb.ird article in thi..s; serie1 ii on Page 3 today. • J f Dl.!LV PILD1 LS Saddlehack Unit Settles for 2 Rei,nap Plans By PATRI C~ BOYLE of IM o.ll'r l'lltt Jltl'f Aft.er 1 quick . unanimous vote to le.ave l.}le method of tru:itce c!ecuon unchanged, • Saddlellack College board .11dv1sory CQ1nm1tlce \\'cdnesday rught spent two flours trying lo det:1dc how to reapportion tpe sprawling d1 str1cl. mendaUons call for sp!Htln& the elisting area five or the colle1e di1trlct -com- posing the Slddleba ck Valley, Laguna Niguel and Irvine -Into three truJtee areas. The com mittee has already de cided to rrcommend txpand!ng the cn!!ege board from five to seven 1nernbers, a propo sal which mu st be approved by both the ('111- lcge trustees a11d ti1e vo!ers in the l"OI Jege district. part 'of I..quna Nlguel. Area 1!1 would encompass' Irvine-and £1 Toro, being divided from area seven by El Toro Road. Area seven would Include all of Ml~slon V~jo and most of l.asuna Nigu,.I . Under this first plan, area {1ve wo;Jld have 10,723 voters; area six. 10,488 Yoters and area seven, J0,628 voters. The t'<1n1n1iltef'. <'nmposed 1)f two ll1.Jsl('CS frorn e1tc·h high sr.:hoo l or unified .o;chool d1~tr1l't 111 the college dlstf1l't, finally settled on two rf'Rpportionment plans. 'J'he plans will he recommended to college trustees at their Feb. 22 meeting. Both of the reapportionment recom- .. 1, .. .... . ........ ,, .. . .. '' . Under lhc first reapporlinnment plan. area five wciuld be changed to encompass 1nus l of Leisure World, Laguna Hills. Ca pistrano ll1ghlands and the nort hern t'ornm i!tee cha1rrnan H11ns Vogel. Sad- dlebatk t ollege tru stee fr om 'J'ustin. said this plan would probably not insure a \O ler balance in the fu ture bt'cau se Mission Viejo and Irvine were develop1ni.: and growing much more quick.Jy than the Laguna !fills area. '· ' Nothi•i' to Boot About . This snowy owl Is recovering at the Museum or Na- . tural His tory in Cleveland after surgery Wednes- day to remove part of its t"10-foot lo ng left wing. The owl collided with a private plane \vhich was landing at downtown Bttrke Lakefront Airport. It \vas found daze d in a grassy area along the runway. Laguna Scl1ool Priorities Study Committee Get s 01( From Poge 1 CITY CLERK •• employment of either of the elected of- ficials in any capacity with the city. When both Holm and Boyd said they still felt the clerk and treasurer positions should remain elective rather than ap- pointive, despite their differing ap- proaches to"the problem. Mayor Gold berg commented. ''Thal ·s quite a switch lo me ••. that's ~t "''hat 1 understand from our last discussion .·· A 20-ma n educational priorities study commlttee was '-pproved by Laguna Beac h U:nified School Dis trict trustees Tuesday night. but it '>'•ill not be activated until LM' board can egrtt on a slate o( potentiaJ committee members. Formation of th e committee wss recommended by a teacher·lrustce wage ncgoti1ling group as a means or determ- Jnlng the extent of community support of di strict programs. The committee will study such topics as budgeting, district special srr\'ices, In· novated program s. l'lemrntar~· school programs and capital outlay . t-.1embers of the community, IC'achrrs, R rc~rnrrh analyst. stud ents. rrprrsen1a!i~·r of the California School s Empl oyrs Assoriallon !CSEA I iind a nien1bcr of !he di strirt board ,,.•ill scr\'c on lhr fai:t·find ing bod y. Truslel's ~l rs. Patril·1a C.1llrllc and Gerald Linke said they \\"Ould ha\'e likrd more time to co nsider !he propos.~l. but finally agre<'d to 1Uow the matter to come lo a \'Ole. Ol.\NGI COAIT DAILY PILOT OAA11GI! COAST PUI LtSH INQ COMP'AX'r lekrl N. w • .J ~ .... .._....,. J•c• a. c.,,.,. 'Vic. ~"-'! ..... 0--tt M.ttltlW TllM1•1 KMY11 ·-n.:111•1 A. M.w,J.ctna M ..... q l 4111f CHtl• H. L••• llicll•nl '· Nin """'ltllf M&Moing ''J"" lot•"._ .. Offk• l 1 l Fo111t A~tllw• M•ili111 ... ar•u: r.o. to ~ ••6, 9265? S..C ....... OMce lOS Ne1l.li1 lJ C&1ni1e Rtal. 9267 2 .,....0 ...... Cllll ....... . JJI Wtitt • .,. """' """""'°1 .M<ft: 1W H~ •oo.i-trf ~ tlMdLi IJIJj hWI ......... ~ Agreemenl was una nimous. The commi ttee, once activated, will have the power to hold meetings, acce pt te stimony and prepare reports on district programs with recommendations to the board. Sus pect Faces T rial in April Art heist suspect Douglas John Eyraud v.·as ordered Tuesday tu jacr trial April 26 in Ora ngl' County Su perior l 'ourt. on l"h.-lrgcs Iha! he st(\le pa111\1ngs valued RI ncarh $100,000 fro1n :1 Laguna Beach art g<dJl'ry .ludgf' '\'ilh;i1n ~1 urrn\' :-<<'t tilt' 1rial dJ!e alter Eyraud. 36, (\f [_,11s A11gclcs. ple:i.dNI innocent In n111l!iple char~es nf ar1ned robber y, k1dnap1ng . ;issaull and burgl11ry. !::yraud ..,,·ill face pretrial action March 31 . It is alleged thal Eyr11ud is one of tv.•o me n \Yho took 16 costly paintings la st Oct . 30 from !he Larry Kronquisl Caller~" 362 N. Coast fl 1gh .... ·av. in a dar· iog robbery that left !\ronquis t and four palrons trussed up on the i;:allc.ry floor. EyrauQ was arrested in Los Angeles as be alleged1;· tried 10 sell !"O~ of the paint.in.gs. 11mong them 12 Robert Wood orlginals. Lawmen are still ~king his alleged 8C('()mplice. Eyraud is htki in Orange County Jail in lieu or 1100,000 bail. Holm said he felt there had been some misunderstanding of his position in a previous executive session '\'hen he had suggested !he council would ha\'e lo ap- point a city clerk should Mrs. t-.lusfelt resign. This did not mean, he cm· phasiied, that he felt the position should be apJl01 nt1 1 r as a general rule. c·ou ne1 hn en F.d"·ard Lorr strongly sur- por1l'd The idt>:i. of appointive office sayi ng . "The job ha s changed 1n 20 y£'ars. The ()nly ..,,·ay to gel I! done properly is to h:i.vr 11 ('lf'rk appo111tcd and responsible d1reclly to the Cit}' Council." ln any event. it "'as agreed there "'ou!d be no point in considering placing the ap- pointment vs. £'!cction issue on the cur- rent election ballot. with the filing deadline on ly hours away. Follo..,,·ing the ext'Cu11ve session, the council also denied. by the same 4·1 vote. Airs. Musfelt 's requ('st for a clerk·lypist and £enior stenographer for the clerk 's office from February lo M11y at a cost of IJ.900. Her request that the city ~ager and department heads be instructed to cooperate v.·ilh her ¥i"ll & r a D t e d unanimously. New Units Cou1it y Ove rruU!s Capo Coun cil Dtsplle mximmendations for re jectkin frotn two county airport 1gencits 11nd Lhe San Juan Capistrano City Council, tbe'"County Planning Commislion ha1 . YOltd 2--t t& 1pprove a l.12·W1il condomblium proj«t in lht San Juan Cap1straoo art1. • Th• pro~ C. Mi<:h3'1 In<. d .. ~I is Im llllo J.500 r..t from lbe runw1y of Capistrano 1.irport. • -1 Th< AlrpOn Commis&ioo i nd the Mii>ort Lend .u.. eomni-.-upon r.comn>t'!ldatlon DI Counly Avis lion D!"""4r llobert :~ahln · url'i! the planners ID block lbe proj•<I because plan'-' la\dnt of! f,.m the aJrpoif could endanger futurt' ~id~t.s of the complex. Commission Chairman Fred Jefferson of Santa Ana and Q:munJssioner Ho··1•ard K. Smith of Huntington Beach voted for the 37.9-acre project, with Comnu'5ioner Don F»lty of Jl'ulltrton Jn opposltloa. Conunbsloner Woodrow W. Buuerfleld of Garden Gro\-e had ttf't~ tht Tuesday mttling before the vote was taken and commission member Amo ... Fordt af Irvine was not present. The pmptrty b erpecltd lo be onntttd to ·San J oan Clp\stnno ind .,. of ctty semt will be n.._ry. Th< commlllllty has 1 11rm polley apbut $tl'\·ln.« oal&ide areas. • • The prokdel s\le I> boundtd by O<l obispo Sl IJld proposed Allpu SL and IS East ol Bl:ue Fin Drift, • A> 1 l«Ood plan, "'""led by Vogel to 1ccanunodl.te fututt £rowth, aru fJve would encompass nearly all of Laguna Niguel and that portion of Leisure World and Laguna Hills lying east of El 'foro !load and south of lhe San Diego Freeway. Area six would include Irvine, the por- tions of Leisure World to the west of El 'foro Road and lhe northern sections of r:1 Toro. Area seven would enc ompass t-.1ission Viejo and the central area of El 1'oro lying within the boundaries of the freeway on the soulh, the railroad tracks on the north and Irvine on the west. Thit plan would P'l•fie for ll,?96 voten In area five ; 9,760 ,ln aru 1lx and 10,!83 iR area ttven. Vogel noted that since Irvine-according to the la!Jt county proJeclion -would grow more roipid ly lhan Mill..!ion Viejo, the imbalaoce would soon be alleviated. "' Each o! the committee members \'Olc- ed concern over splitt ing up the com· munities of Leisure World and El Toro or uf giving the plan an appearance of ger· rymandering. ''The more we avoid splitting up com· munitie:s." Vogel :said, ''the better off we are." Ho .... ·ever, he contended that the trustee area Jin" should al.so follow voting preclnct llne.s to 1vold confUJion 1t election time. The voter populations In each area are based on the n1ost recer)l figures from the Reg istrar of Voler:s. C<ipblrauG U111f1ed School District represen tallve .llob Hursi •of Laguna Nisuel contended the numbers could change radically with a voter registration dri~·e prior to an elecl1on. Saddteback College trustees hope t11 submit the reapportion1nent plans to the county school redistricting committee in time for the proposals to appear on the June 6 election ballot. Hughes Meet Doubts Told lrvi11g Friend Says Mexico Tapings 'U nlike ly' From Wire Services NEW YORK -A blonde Danish singer who wa s in Mexico with author Clifford Irvi ng la sl yea r say s she sees no way he c:ould have met with Howard Hughes as he claimed. 1'he name of singer Nina van Pallandt, 39: was brought into the case of the purported Hughes autobiography when Irving last year says she sees no way he could have met with }!oward Hughe s as he i:la imed. The name of singer Nina va n Pallandt, 39. \vas brought into the case of the purported Hughes auto biography when Irvi ng claimf'd she v.·as with him for l\\'O of 100 interview taping sessions he said he held with the billionaire. l rving claim- ed she was with him when he met Hughes in f\.1exico last February and in Los Angeles in June. A Los Ange les Times correspondent reported today from New York in a tel ephone interview with the singer. who is in the Bahamas, that she said at no lime did she see any man who could have passed for tlughes during the Mexican trip last Feb. 13·14. She wa s apart fr om Irving "one to one and half hours at the most.·• the Times quoted her as saying . Miss \'an Pallandt said she spen t five hours \Vednesday talking to a U.S. postal inspector v:ho wa s in the Bahamas in connection with the Jlughe s book in- vestigation, according to the Times. She said she and her manager-produ cer John Marshall, who also is in the Bahamas, would return to New York voluntarily to appear before a federal grand jury. Federal and New York county grand juries are i n vest i i at i n g the autobiography case. The U.S. Attorney's Q[fice said Irving would ·not appear before the federal grand jury today as had been reported earlier. The postponement was sought and oh- la incd by lr\'ing·s lawyer. said U.S. Att y. Marine Arrested In Baby's Deatl1 A 20-year-old AWOL San Diego ~1arine has been jailed by Garden Grove police on charges of murdering a IO·month-old girl. Police said Steve Williams, common· Jaw husband of the baby's mother. Ethel Richardson of 9691 Alwood St., was pick- ed up on 6th Sf. in downtown Los Angeles al 5:45 p.m. Wednesday ffter a search wh ich began Tuesday nighl when the baby died in Palm ~!arbor 11ospita1. ln\'es!igators said Williams, wh o is reported to have been AWOL for three nionths, offered no resistance when ar· rested. The \'ictim, r.1yrt!e Harris, wa s rushed lo the hospital by a Garden Grove Fire Department rescue squad, It was reported lhal the child was in con· vulsions. The Orange County Coroner's office said dealh was due to head in· juries. Wh itney North Seymour Jr. He gave no explanation other than to say he wa s "talking only fo r today ." Also winning a postponement wa s John Meier, e former scientific consultant to llughes. Seymour also would give no el· planation for Meier 's postponement. Neither Irving nor Meler nor their !a .... ·yers "''GS reached immediately for comment. Dana Docto1· Not Gi1ilt y Of Malpractice Charge An Orange Coun ty Superior Court jury fi led back to the courtroom Wednesday night to reject a Bellflower couple's allegations that Dr. Harold E. Day of Daoa Point was guilty of malpractice in his treatment of former patient Gus Ogden. The panel deliberated six hours in the civil trial before returning to Judge Ronald Crookshank wit h a defense ve rdict tha t ends Ogden's bid for an award of $392.000 in damages. Ogden. 50. alleged in the two·week trial that he was su bjected to excessive and unnecessary electro-shock treatment seven years ago while being treated by Or. Day at the psychiatirst's Capistrano By The Sea Hos pital. Plaintiff's attorney t-.1ike McCray said Ogden's da ily dose of ten electro-shock sessions was far above the level normally employed by psychiatrists and that Ogden 's brain damage was a direct result of that treatment. Mrs. Marianne Ogden also alleged that she was assaulted by Day when she tried to remo ve her husband from the facil ity after repeated attempts to halt the atleg· edly unnecessary electrical treatment of her husband . Day and fellow psychiatrists testified during the trial that his treatment of Ogden had been in accord with practices adopted at many other psysciatric faci li· ties. The physician den ied that he had assaulted Mrs. Ogden and told the jury that his treatment of her husband had been at all times with the patient's con- sent. It was the second such successful defense by Day in the last year on malpractice charges filed against him by former patients. Barbara and Charles Williams unsue· cessfully sued Da y for more than $500,000 in damages last year in a lawsuit which alleged that Day 's frequent electr<rshock treatments we re the cause of a stroke surfercd by ~!rs \\'illiams at the Capistrano By The Sea lfospital. Rowa 11 Cys t R e n1o ved ROCHESTER. ~!inn. (AP \ -Dan Rowan. costar of telev ision's "Laugh In .'' completed his checkup al Mayo Clinic \Vednesday after having a small cyst removed from hi s righl shoulder. Rowan said other than having the cyst removed, "I'm in fine shape." The young Long Beach couple's lawyers accused Day of running a "shock shop" in Dana Point during a three week tritil that similarly ended with a verdict in favor of the defense. Lag una Ni g uel · Woman Na1ned To Head 'A RVY'. M1 s. Carol Person of Laguna Nigue1 has been named chairman of the cam- paign for the passage of the Mar ch 7 5(J.. cent lax override election 1n the Capist rano Unified School District. &1rs. Person, a mother a nd Friends (Area Residents Vote Yes). "Approval of the measure is esse nti al businesswoman, will head AR VY 'a if lhe·eduaattonal program for cbi~en in the school distric t Is to continue to main- tain its progress toward a goal of ex• cell~c in education, 'j Jaid Mrs. J;'erso(I. She 'addcd that a rai Jre to apptOfe the override would reduce income for the dis trict by $800.000 next year and cauSe draslic cutbacks In the sc hool progrti m. · The chairman said the school board should be commended in its effort to hel p economize by not seeking a higher tat ceiling. · The administration had originally re- quested a higher figure , but the board voted unanimously to keep the override 50 cents. the same as it ha!J been for Uie last two years. Working with Mrs. Person. Charle• Dargan of San Juan C ap istr a no; chairman of a successful campaign two years ago. will head a committee to develop advertising and brochures. Mrt. Ruth Dallam of Laguna Niguel will assist him Other chairmen include trustee George White of Capistrano Beach and San Clemente, coordinator of the ar@• chairmen; Dr_ J .D. Dulaney of San Clemcn!e, publicity: Jerry Gaffney of San Juan Capistrano, !ipeake rs ; Mike Da rnol d of San Juan Capistrano, finance. A steer ing committee will include other community representative.~. !Jc ho o l distric t employe group leaders and representatives of parent organizations. " Bob D. Hurst. president of the board of trustees. ~·ill serve as deputy chairman of the ARVY group. ,• e Many Discon tinued Pieces as well as Several Floor Samples -. · . .. ., U,, :Jo 30<1o .. ,RO ~S IONA( H.J.GARRETf fURNflU~l~HARIOl llVD. INTERIOR DfSIGN S COSTA MESA, CAL.If. 0,. Meo., '!'Mn. I "'· h& 6A4.0275 H 4-0l 76 I I ( I I 7 I I • ---. l· • Saddleha~k • Today's .t'i.nal N.Y. Stocks VOL. 65, NO. 29, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COU NTY, CALIFORNIA THURS DAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1972 TEN CENTS Po·ssible Harbor Court Sites Reduced to T wo By JACK BROBACK 01 1he o.nr .. 11tt ll•tt Possible sites fo r temporary quarters of the Harbor Judicial Dislrict courts have been narrowed lo two, it was learn· ed today . St.ill under consideration are the Collins Radio Company office building on lhe firm's property south of Campus Drive and east of Jamboree Road and the forme r Astrop<H\·er Division buildings of the .11cDonnell Douglas Corporation at the northeast corner of Campus Drive and MacArthur Boulevard. Both sites are near Orange County Airport. Temporary quarters are sought lo relieve the courts of their present "totally inadequate" facili ties on West 1 81~ Stteet in Costa Mesa, In the words of Judge Donald Dungan . Dungan is handling negotiations for the three-judge court which wi ll be increased to four next March. Last week county supervisors were told by c;ounty Building Service11 Director Joseph Smis~k that six sites were under consideration. Tbe board accepted Supervisor Ronald • Caspers' suggestion that the decision be narrowed to three sites -the Collins of. fer of 28.000 square feel or more, lhe Airport Business ~nter, owned by the Irvine Company at 18662 'MacArthur Boulevard, just ·south of the San Die ga Freewa y, and the Elpac Inc. building at 18651 Von Karman Ave., in the same area. The latter two have been eliminated because of ex tensive remodeling re- quired , and the Astropow er facility ad· ded, according to Stanley Krause, county real property services director. "We have not received forrna l offers from McDonnell Douglas or Collins as yet," Krause said. "But we expoct to have them by Friday. "We will burn t~ midni ght oil over thr weekend, dig esting the cosl:i and report to tn<Uvldual supervisors Monday," he added. The board has scheduled m o r e discusaion on the problem for Wednesday at 10 a.rn. Last week, a Collins representati ve said hia: firm would lease the necessary space ror temporary courts for 59 cents a • square foot for lhree yr11rs or 49.~ cents 1 .::.qunre foot for fi ve years. Smisek said the5e flgureR were llQl final as they did not lnclude the co.11, ~·hich Collins must bear. of bulldlnt1 jury boxes , providi ng proper ligh tlng and con· strucling prisoner holding cells. The Collins man .said his firm could have the bu ildi ng midy for Ulle In 7~ dny~ after the slarl of remodelln~. llarbor Dis trict Judge Calv in &hmldt said thr courts could be> moved "over a wf<'kend " Judge Dungan uq;ied quick actlo11 prn· ding the conslruc.:tlon of permanent facilltles on properly lhc county phu-...1 to ann1n ..... ane • School Plan Attacl{ed W oman Say s Double Sessions Pre f erred By PArt·IELA HAI .LAN Ot Ill• Dl lh" ,11111 Slit! A Mission Viejo woman -speaking at a meeting punctuated by clappin g and catcaJJs -told trustees of the San Joa· U.S. Willing To Consider New Proposal WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United States is willing to consider any serioll! North Vietnamese proposal concerning rtlease of prisoners of war, a high-rank· Ing State Department official testified to- day . William H. Sullivan. deputy assistant 11eeretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs, said that while President Nixon ·a Jan. 25 peace proposal "offers a fair, reasonable basis !or resol vi ng the :Vietnam conflict, we remain willing to tonsider any serioll! proposal concerning POWs." Sullivan spoke only a short time alter Y1e Viet Cong's new peace plan in Paris ud apparently did not take note Of it. (Stt earlier story, page .f). Meanwhile, Ellsworth Bunker, U.S. Ambassador to Sbutb Vietnam, conferred at the White House \\'ith President Nixon. During his Capitol lli!I visit, Sulliva n faces questioning on an allega tion tha t the United States allowed Saigon to possibly bk>ck a neutral inspection of POW cam~ in North Vie tnam. Sullivan told the Holl!e Foreign Affairs '!tlbcommittee on National Security ·Policy and Scientific Developments lhal Nixon 's public offer incllJded an offer lo 'implement prisoner releases in parallel 9iith troop withdrawals. ·"To date there is little evidence that the other side is willing to negotiate In t.trms which teriously and realWically feflect the actual situation in lndocilna," $illlvan said. ; · ~-;''They ire still attempting to achieve ibeir maximuni objectives,'" be said. "We nevertheless hope that we may induce Hanoi to forsake the battle.field in favor of the conference table and thereby achieve. the release of our prisoners,'' Slllivan saki. SUUivan said that ''over 1600 U.S. military per90MCI a.re listed as missing or captured in 5".lttJt:ast Asla, and over 46 U.S. civ~ are tn the same status . According £0 Orfense Depa-rt men l figures, '83 of our men are.lllted u cap-- lun:d in North Vietnam. 12 In sooth Vie~ mm, 5 In Laos." "Two U.S. pllofa .,.. known to be ~ lur<d in China. The lil1sshlC -Jn. dude three U.S. ne'ft1!ltfl lost In Cam- bodia." : swuvan 11Ml. ,.,..e~Ei j that "the actual 1o1a1 held u prt.onm remains uncmaln due lo the other side'• -refuul , lo liJlnlJl1 .U prilonm." . Fife Loss SIS,000 In Viejo Residence A fire 111arted by defecti.. wiring did •15.000 damage to th• Patrlcll Donnelly home. 2'0l2 Arcada Drive, •tisslort Viejo, w~ aft ernoon, county firemen reporUd. . r.my-two m<n wllo mponded to the '. s p.m. alarm r<p<>rted that Ibey foaod the bedroom In the borne enveloped in t ft4mtS. Tbtn.,. no ln)uriea. ' quin Elen1enta ry School District Wed· nesday that parent s would rather have double sessions than all year school. r..trs. Mary f..1usial, whose children al· tend Cordillera Sc hool. accu sed the ad· ministration or ''rallroadin~" the "45·15'' plan and not being truthfu l about its disadvantages. She told the board that savinJ{s on the cost ~ future conslruclioo wculd be in- 1ignUicanl to the taxpayer because of the meager amount that Is repaid on bonds and loans each year: operating C(JS\s on •s...1a would be hlgtre.r. "Its not an educational program but a calend ar." said Mrs. Musial. "Don't be confused that educational improvements are more. likely with 45-15." She said th e much touted idea tha t children have better retention in a 45-15 plan is flimsy. "Wbat about the learning loss at the end of each three week break?" "This Is not the educational en· vironm ent we want for our children. There are too many unknowns," she said. "We would prefer double sessions." She said many parents object beca use or the effect it will have on opportunities ror cultural activitie s and family life in general. She added that the educationa l benefit s have not been proven. "Where Is the trutb." Three other speakers supported Mrs. Musial's posi tion, pleading with the board to make more information available to the public and to postpon e any decision for at least a year. The district is considering a 45-1~ pro-- gram for a few schools on a pilot basi s J u!y l. The board has only gi ven ten· Missio11 Viejo Little League Signups Slated Boys from 8 to 12 years old will be able to register for the fl.1ission Viejo Liu.le League on either Saturday or Feb, 12 from 9:30 a.m. Wltil 2:30 p.m. To be eligible, eacb boy's birthday must fall between Aug. I, 19" and J uly 31, 1964. Each boy must live within these bou~ dary lines: Oao Parkway on the aouth, the Santa Fe tracks on lht west, and Seville homes (included in the league) on the norih. Aegean Hills and Mission Hills will be in the Saddleback Little League for lhia season. Granada 1'1..11 be in the Laguna Niguel Utile League and Coronada home! will play in the San Juan Caplstnoo League. Each boy must prel<llt his birth certillcat< and be eccompanied by a pamll. Donallom will be $10 for one boy, IU !« two boY> and Siii for tine or lllOl'L J essie Landis, 67, Film ActreAS Dies DANBURY. Conn. (UPIJ -J..,ie Royce lA.odil. 1 m.ge and acreen actreu •·M performed In capitals all over the -lcf. died Wednesday at lllnbury "°"11tal. SM ..., fl. Ml11 Landis WH utm ID wben •he retumtd ,...,...1y from making a fUm In llollywood. Hu longest rtage run wu in "Kiss and Tell" wllidl ran lo N .. York le< l l; yean. tative approval so pl ans could be made but final decision will be made March 15. Dr. William Stocks. a s s I s tan t supe ri ntendent for educational services, reiterated that only schools in which there is support ror the program by staff and parents will be used for the pilot pro-- gram. Addressing himself to the ~duct ol tbe meetin&, t.ni~ Peilnis Smith said· he reuntdd "cheer1Uding tadics," lhd In.appropriate Input. Irvine Voters Gave Override Most Support Voters in Irvin e supported the sue· cessful Sa n Joaquin Elementary School District tax operrlde by the highest percentage Tuesday ... The only area that did not support the measure by a majority was Leisure \Vorld, Unofficial flgu re:i obtained by the district show Turtle Roc k voters cast 130 yes vote!!I and 144 no vol£S for a whopping 74.9 perce nt. University Park voters cast 769 yes votes and 321 no votes for a percentage of 70.1. Voters in East Irvine cast 546 yes votes and 274 no votes for a total of 66 pe rcent support . Jn Leisure \Vorld the votes cast were 1,273 for and 1,819 agains t with only abou t 41 percent supporting the measure. The overall percentage or support, however, was 57.2 with 9,327 casting votes out of a possible 27,190 or a 34.3 percent voter turnout. Other area• voted this way: -El Toro. 6U yes, 38S no , il.9 percent. -Aegean Hills, 263 yes, 162 no, 61.9 percent. -Mission Viejo, 1,143 yes, 718 no, 61 .4 percent. -Capistrano Highbnds, 2.S4 yes, 150 no, 83, t percent. -Ab.1e.ntee ballot.I, 'l1 yes, 21 no, ~-3 percent. Quigley Admits . Endorsing Moran Imno City Cooncllman Henry Quigl•y Wednoday admitted lie endorted Tustin W,b Scbool Boon! candidate Dooglu Marau for election lo tilt ... t won r..... day bJ Eorl cam.way, .. El Toro buter. QWClel' esplllned tho! ... dJd not back Mn. Elliabelh "Lee" Skol! beca"'° he didn't btJ1tte ••ft had I chance to win.." atinc a '°'1ltimlf: ''friendebip" wtlb Douglu Maran " Tultln, Qulll<>' 1tld he felt bt -... ,_. -.. the 1'Ultill Hip Boo" lllould ....... ...... bom el«tfd ''"' Mn. Slcoll . JU H turned out, 111'1. SJcolJ tnlJed the winning tlVltee hopeful "' ...,. J,200 YO(.el and Moran ran lourth ir a fitJd of liL Gen. ~lcNamey Dies LA JOLLA (AP I -Geo • .i.e.ph T. lllc!lamey, 'II, who lllJC<feded G<n. Dwlgllt D. llilenbow" .. commander ol Arnel1eao forces lo Europe titer World War I~ died Tloeldty. )lcNmli17 later ~ .. Pi..-ol C4a'n.lr AlmafL Ears Have It These elephants at a zoo ln Windso r. England have been fltted with special ear muffs to protect them from th~ roar of jet engines at nearby Heathrow Airpo rt. Irving's Compa11ion Tell s Doubts on Hu ghes Con tact From Wirt Strvtct l NEW YORK -A blonde Danish 1lnger who was in Mexico with author Clllford Irving last year says she see11 no way he could have met with Howard Hughes as he claimed. The name of singer Nina van Pallandt, 39, waa brought Into the case ol lhe purported Hughes autoblogr1phy when Irvin& l.ut ·ye1r 1811 1he teel no way be could have· met wtth lloward Huahel J I he claimed. The name of singer Nio1 van Pallandt, 39, w11 brought lnto the cue of the purported Hughes autobiography wheo Irving claimed she wu wllh bUn for two of JOO Interview taping 1e11ion1 he 1ald he htld with the billionaire. Irvina: claim· ed she was with him when he mf!t Hughes in Mex:lco last February and in Loa An qeleii In June. A Los Angeles Tim.et correspondent reported today from New York In a telephone Interview wJth the 1injj:er, who Is In the Bahamas. that she •aid •l no time did the see any man who coold h•"t paslt:d for Hughes during the Mexk:ln trip. !ail Feb. 13-14. Sht wa1 apart from Irvtrta .. one to one and half hour a 1t the moat," the nme1 guoted her ill aaytng. Ml!:1 van Pallandt 1aid lhe 1ptnt fJve hours Wedllfl<l•Y talking to a U.S. postal insptetor who was tn the B1hlma1 In connection with the Hu~het book ln- (See FRIEND, P11• %1 Ir-ving_ Deal Due? Pap er Reports Offer Ten.dered QIJCAGO (AP) -• '!be ~ TrlllllDt lw rtp01'ltd that H learned en alloi'llq for author alllord lrVlnc and bf. wtle propolled Immediate ..,turn of · $600,GGO to a group of N.. Yorll publllh<n In ex<hange for wltbd<•wlnl all pro....,llon against the !rvlnp. Jn New York, • 1poktKman for McGraw-11111 Inc. categorically denied the report Wednelday. McCra,.·Hlll u y1 ii peld f&l0,000 which was intended for billionaire Howard llu!)lu for rlgbtJ to J*bll!b his autobiography. Al though lrvln( aaya be mllaborated with H.P. In pnpomc ' .. ·-' " buy froro f'nl lini1 on Jan1l)()rff Ro11lrvQrd , south of ('nn1 pus Drive. Comp lt•tion of the TK'l"nlll11t'lll eourt buildlnl' h1 expt'('ted in lhr1•e lo fh'c ytnrs. The Colllns site wl\s 1pproved by roun-- !y iiupcrv lsors Jnn. 25. E~tirnated cott 11 $:128,000 for 8.2 ncres. Tht rost Includes any severoure award mndl' to lhe lrvlne <'ompn ny whic h owns the properly an d leases 1t lo Co llins on 11 99·ycar agref"- rnrnt. Sn11sek estimates thot the new rourt~ hui lclu1R 1·ould be compl tlt'd in 1~ months fron1 the !lmc the title to lhe proparty I~ ussured . e Commis sion To Start In 39 Day s Hy GEORG>: LrnOAL 0 1 Tiit D11tr l'll•t tr111 A minor ity of the Irvi ne City Council Wcdne11dny blocktd 1111 urRcncy ordinance lo <·rentc a planni ng romml!19\on, ~lthouJih the council later named sr.ve11 per~on5 who wilt eventually 11crvc on the ptonrung hotly. Namod. to a zonln1 and plannln1 ad· " Vltory comr1ltttt that may In It d1y1 become th e clty'1 pl1nnln&: commlplon, are: Wea)fy Man, 11, of 180&1 Butler 61., Unlvmlty Port : Ricllard A. Ktnl IZ, of IMS! Ar1enl Clrtlo, Tht ~· Wayne A. Clarie, 43, of 17901 Butler SI ., Unlvenl· ty Perk: Harry Shuptrine, of Plrk West .Apartment.; Franklin S. Hurd, 42, of 1818l Dftbfrry Way, University Park; Mrr. Ellen G. Freund, of 19431 Sie rra Lago, Sierra Bonita ; 11nd Robert J . West, 32, of atin Carmel, The Colony. The appointments came after continued wrnngll ng between members of !he coun· ell over the method or selection of com~ ml sslo ner1. · Cou ncilman John Burton reiterated hi! belief ihat the planning comml11ion ordinance 1hould provide for appc'llntmcnt of one comml11loner hy each e<>uncll man with the two to be named by the m11yor 1u bject to the approval ol 111 majority of the council. An ordinance adopted on 11 3 to l vote. with Burton and Councilman E, Ray Qu igley opposed , provided lh1t tht mayor .appoint .all seven, aubject only to the ap- prova l or a majority of the council. That ordinance does not legally become effective until It h1u1 receiv ed a 11eeond readln11: approval of a majority of the council and ha.a undergone a JO-c11y waiting period. Mayor WlllJam F'i.Jchbach, followina 1p- prov1J of the ordinance, uracd !he coun· ell to consldtr 1n emergency vt r•ion of the 1ame 1'w. Emergency ordlnanct1 re· quire a four·flfthl okiy and Mcome law lmmedlslely. Councilmen Ray Quigley and OurU11t voled ag1inrt the emergel)Q ordinance, thµt defeatina: It . They or!JUed they believed the publi• lilould know which plannlllf ccm- mluJontl'I fVlf& to be appoln&ed b7 wbJcb aiuncUmen. Mayor Pllchboch, In def.... of the ordln.ance .. drafted followln& nwr• tball !tie• PLANNERS, hit t) Or .... Weadler ft will be a bfl .... 1 ..... "'1day, wtth lncr•UlllJ hlgl! clouda a<> cord.Ins to the wealhtr tttVlct. Ovemlafrt Iowa JO to 40 tonlgl!t with hlgha of II to • P'rfday, IN818E TeD.-\ 'Y Hotoard H"f"41 m1«t Into L<U Vl(IQI In "lg46 and "'""" hU fimll reign ., the "mu11..,, man" of tM de1trt The thttd arttc~ hi UIU 1t rle• fJ on Page J UJ<l4p. L. M. tt'l'f 1 (........ . = ,... : <~• ., .• Jll .......... .. C-c:t • .._ .... . .. _ . = ,.._..: --. . .,.,,.. ,... . . ....,,., . ....., .. .. _ ..... ~¥ ......... "' ..... ... ..,. ---·-.. """"' . ·~..., . ........... ,,,.,. --.. ---. 'I I ~z DAI L v PtLOT SS Thursday, Ftbruary '· lqn -------Saddlebacl~ Unit Settle·s for 2 ReIQ.ap Plans By PATRICK BOYLE Ot .... OlllY ,lie! l l•lf After a quick, unanimous vote to leavt the method of \rust-ee ele<"Hon unchanged, a Saddleback College board ad visory committee Wednesday nighl spent twn hours trying to decide how to reapportion .the sprawling d1s1 r1rt. The c:on1m11tee. t·omposed of t'"'·o trus tees fron1 each high Schoo! or un1r1cd school district in the college district, finally settled on l~'O reapportionment plans. The plans will be recommended to college trustees at their Feb. 22 meeting. Both of the re:ipport1onrnent recom· mtndallons call !or splitting the tlistlng area five of the college district -corn. pos ing the Seddleba ck Valley, Laguna Niguel aod Irvine -into three trullte areas. 'fhe comm ittee has already decided to recon1mend expanding the college board from five to seven members. a proposal which must be approved by both the col- lege trustees and fhe \'Olers Hl the college dt~trict. tinder the first reapport10nment plan, area five would be changed to encompa~s most or Leisure World, Laguna Hills, Capi strano Jlighlands .::ind the northern ·part of Laguna Nigutl. Area &ix would encompass Irvine and El Toro, being divided lrom area seven by El Toro Road. Area seven woul d incl ude all of ~1lssion Viejo and most or Laguna Niguel. Under this first plan, area five would have 10.nJ \'uters. area six, 10,488 voters and Rrf'a seven. J0.628 voters. Co1nn11t1re eh.'.l1r1u:in Hans Vogel. Sad- dlcback College trustee fr om Tu::>lin, said this pl<u1 '.ruuld prob;ibly not insure a vo!er bttlance in the future because f\lission V1eio and fr\'ine were develop111g and gru1v1ng much n1ore quickly than the Lagu11;1 1!11Js area. As I ""°"" plan, 111&1tAted by VOJ!el lo accoqxnodl te future growth, aru five would '•nt!OmPW nearly all or Lagun a Nliutl..ADd that pmtlon of Le isure World and Laggna Hills lying east of El Toro Road and south ot the San Diego Freeway. · Area six would include Irvine, the por· lions of Leisure World to th e west or El Toro Road and the northern sections of El Toro. Are a seven would encompa ss Mission Viejo and the central area of El Toro lying within the bound11ries of the freeway on the gouth, the railroad trackl on the no rth and Irvine on the west. Thi.I plan would provide for 11,796 voters ln aru five; 1,760 ln aru a1x and J0',233 in area seven. Vogel noted that since Irvine-according to lhe last county projection -would grow more rapidly tha11 Mission 'Vlejo, the imbalance would soo!l be alleviated. Each of the committee members voic- ed concern over splitting up the com· munit1es of Leisure World and El Toro or of giving the plan an appearance of ger - rymandering. "The more we avoid splitling lip com- n1unities," Vogel said, "the better off "'e are." However, he contended thal the trustee area linea ahould also folio• voting preclnct llnes to avoid con!u.sloo at election ti me. The voter pop1Jlltions \11 eRch area are h;ist'd fin the rnogt retenl figure s from the Reg istrar of Voters. Cap1stranD Unified School Dislrict representative Bob ~lurst of Laguna Nigue l contended the nun1bers could change radically witl'I a \'Oler reg1stralion dri ve prior to an c!eclion. Saddlebark College tru stees hope tB subn1it the reapporlionmenl plans to the county school redistricting committee in time for the proJXJsals to appear on the June 6 election ballot. New Aides Profiled ROBERT J. WEST 5 W on1e11 Held In Youth's Death . FORT JllERCE, Fl•, (UPll -Police'. have Mr~tcd fi\'e black \A'omen i.n the· r;tabbing I nd shooting murder of a white Boynton. Beach youth in what officers described as a "crime of passion." The body of Christopher '''ren. 1~. \va s found Dre. 19 in a 11·oodcd arra near Fort Pierce. He had been stabbed 20 times and i;hot in the head tv.·1cr Police toda;-.o dechnecl to cllsc\ose any details of their investigation. Palm Beach Sheriff \\li\Jiam Heidtman \li'OUlcl only say it was .. a crime of passion." OlANGI COAST DAllY PILOl OUff(;.E COAJ'l' ,.L!I LISMIM!i ('Oo\l\,Nol'f :·l olt•rt N. w • .J p,...iow .nil l"WINW' J.c~ "· Cu•l•T Vti:t;,,..'°""' •'Id G-•l ,,......., 111,,,, •• 1(.,-,u £tll0< Tho..-11 A. M w•pl.i~• M_I.,.. £',..,. Ch1rl tt H. l.... Aichi.§ '· ~.II A»•lllW M~"'t E41W' ""''" <••• _..! "" w..• lll 'f' ,..,.... ........... a....ui: lll) ,._, ........... "' L""""' e .. cto· m o:o, .. i ,.,.......,. ................... t~' 11'11 l...U. h\llt-•·1 ... -(JM'*lft ; -Horii! .IJ ~ It•! WAYNE A. CLARK t: f' JWjl '"';'"t1Y>~Y>W±~'.!~I --'~ .... •'f.:" i FRAN RLIN S. HURD • l'.,.om Page 1 PLANN ERS . • • !wo hours ·deba!e at a previous council session. said. "No( one ciiy in Orange Coun ty appoints planning commissioners other than by n1ajority \'ote " "I want each member elf the Irvine Planntng Commissinn to look at one ::inother as having been put there by a lll<!Jnri1y of th(' Cf1uric!I ;ind not feel lh<'v h<:11e lo illlS\\'l'I' Iii -any on(' counc1Jn1an.:. the mayor argued. Ray QuiRley rebutted that "Irvine ~hould not be tiidcbc1u11d by trad1!ions of \!\her •,:1\1cs." cities that he said have pro.- duced "bltght all around us which "·e hope to Rvoid in this dream citv." Rny Quigley a!so ques tioned ·the urgen- cy nature of the ordinance establishing a planning commission. Remarks of ?-.1ayor Fischbach and Councilmen Gabrielle Pryor and •lenry Quigley cited a number of responsibilities the commisson, faces. Amo ng them are ~ bui~ding permit freeze exception con· 6iderahons. the rezorung considerations f?i five tracts in central lrvine that in- volve: some 5,115 ne w bomes, the ftfcDon-- neU Douglas 50...acre parcel in the Irvine Industrial Complex that awaits planning commission df'tisio n for 11 change from industrial to commercial zcn!ng and other new tracts :i-·et to recei\'e a hearing by the city. Since the urgency ordinance failed. the <'OUnc1I adjou rned Wednesday's meeting lo .f 30 p.m. Friday, Fe b. 11 . when ~layor Fischbach said the counci l will gh•e the approved first read.mg ordinance the r~ quired second reading. A majority of the council may be expected to approve the !av;. Thirty da)'S ane:r that the planning commission "'iii become establish ed. Burtoo and Quigley qUt?Stioned tha t the council could in fact adjour n to an agen- da les.s meeting or give .ln ordinance a st-- cond rtlding in what technJcaJly il 1bt 747 Arrives Safely LOS ANG ELES 1AP J -A Continenlal ,Airlines 747 jtUlner en route from Honolulu ID Loi Aofiltl with 102 pe....., •board 1.-wtthout problem early to- day after rtlportlng a r~I loss In one tank. an alttlneo .,.tetman 50ili. Tht apokosnlan aaid the pilot reported the 1 ... •hlk about 2V. boun away from Los Anll•leo lnC<mo~ A!ri>ort. but laaded and un'°1dtd hi3 J191ae:nga s wit!oit tn- <idenl, with 15,GOI podDlls of utn lotl to a pan. DAILY ,ILOT Ili ff ""°"'' MRS. ELLEN FREUND \ 4 Appointees Served Irvin e Tomorrow Four of the seven persons appointed Wednesday nig ht to an Irvine planning ;idvisory body that is desU ned to become the city planning commission have been active in the envi ronmental organiza tio n l rvine Tomorrow. One appo intee served as campaign manager for Counciln1an J ohn Burton and another aided Hen ry Quigley's suc· cessful bid for a council seat. and yet another wns active in Council of Com· muniti es or Irvine study com n1Htees. 1'he fou r affil iat ed wilh the Irvine Tomorrow organization which endorsed the majority of the Irvine City Cou ncil are Wesley Marx, Wayne A. Clark. Mrs. Ellen G. Freund and Robert ./. West. Appo intee Harry Shuptrine w a s who would offe r a cross section of the comm unity geographical ly and con- ceptually. Qualities of each of the appointees noted by the tl.1ayor inrlude the followinR : Wesley tl.1arx. 37, of Chancellor Homes, University Pas·k is an author and lerturer in environn1ental fields with a bachelors deg ree fro m Stanford University. !le pen· ned "The Frail Ocean" an d is working on anot her book lo be called "The Pacifir Shore." Marx is a member of Pi Sigma Alpha , national politica l science honor fraternitv. and a contributor of arti cles on ecolo-gy and marine aHairs to such publica tions as Atlan lic, Ame r i can lleritage and other periodicals. University Park, the mayor said, is a graduate chemical eng ineer from the University of Michigan and is employed b.v lhe Pacific Tube Company of Lo! Angeles. Shuptrine ht1s six years Of plan· ning coinrnissiun experience in Mon· tebe!lo and v.•as both chairman arid vice t•hairn1;1n or that body. l'rank!in S. ~turd , 41 , of University J>ark, has both a bachelor's degree and ,a master 's in business administration from use and is employed "·ith f>.1cDonnell· Douglas Corporation. Fischbach said he foresees no difficu l!y in Hurd stepping down during con· siderations of the McDonnell-Dougla! rezoning. • Burton's campaign manager, Franklin l·lurd assisted Quigley 's eleclion bid and Richard Kent served on the Urban Plan· ning Committee that sprang from a CCI I-"Com mittee. \ 'rhe seven we re drawn fron1 a list or 25 persons who were interviewed last Satur- day in a 10 hour public council meeting, j Mayor \Villiam Fischbach noted in his Richard A. Kent. 32, father of four children, Jives in The Ranch and js a graduate architect from Cal Poly San Lu is Obispo. He wa s affiliat ed wit h th e William Pereira and \V il!iam Ficker architect firms and is now affiliated with a Santa Ana architect firm . Wayne A. Clark, 43, of University Park. is a journalist presently serving as public informatio n officer for UC Irvine. Il e was twice elected president of the University Park Elementary parent -I e 11 ch er organization, served as chairman of the San Joaquin Elementary district parent· teacher gr ou p coordinating council, founded the Irvine Counci l of Education and is a director of Irvine Tomorrow. Mrs. !::lien G. 'F'reund of Broadmoor Jlomes in Turtle Rock \Sierra Bonita ), is ;1 Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Goucher College and has a master of arts degree in international studies from John llopkins University . Robert J. \\le st, 32. of The Colony, has a bachelor's degree in economics and a master's of business ad ministration from Stanford University and is employed by the William Lyon Development Com- pany. Newport Beach. RICHi RO A. KENT WESLEY MARX . I ~ame r:neeting. even if the adjop.rned por- tion will be ~Id more than five days after the fi rst reading. Acting City Attorney H. Rodger Howell !old the council it could consider anything 1t wants to at an adjourned port ion of a meeting. Later he to ld the DAIL y !'ILOT. "Councilmen may pick up any i(e m from the table and act on it l\'ithout p~ior notiC!'. That's V.'by you guys shou ld shclt aro und." Later in Yl'ednesclay's meeting the counc il voted to set the Feb. II date as a study ~ion to consider. bu t not act on, creation or a num ber of city advisory CXlllll1illtees !1111.1& .ad~menl motion, Ma)'Or F~baoh -lndi<ated he expecltd to. give .Qae pllnnlng rommission estabrttbment ~~lls -se<:O~g . The city's 90-day build~ ~permit £reeze, enact.cd"Dtc. 2a to give_ the city Ume lo sll>dy plamring and zoning prior to having to •pprove or deny developers' requests wa! 36 days old u the council ma. W,._,ay nlcht. When It next meets the buildi"i lreeu will be 45 d1ys old a.Rd 30 d.tya tiler. If Ute S«Ond reading appt'Ov11 ii gr.lflkd, the pfanolna c:ouunissiooen l<&aUy could taU allke.-Tbal 1 .. v,. the body ooly 1$ di)'! to mull, i!vt public hw'fnp ID and t.ilbet approve or reject the pendiqg rnonlnp ooco approved by ~ government. ( non1i nation motion that was approved by a J-2 counci l vote. Councilme n E. Ray Quigley and Burton opposed the naming of the seven. Fischbach int roduced his motion to name the seven to an int erim advisory committee that he sees will become the city 's plann ing commission upon ex· pirat ion of the requ ired 30-day wa it ing period following an approved second reading of the pla nning commission establishment ordinance. "I feel it is a ,tragi c error on the eoun· cil's part not to have enacted an urgency ordinance creating a planning co m· miss ion," Fischbach said. Noting he did not view, as Counc ilmen Ray Quigley and Burton did, that the 11p- pointment of the temporary committee was an "evasion of the law," Fischbach s<tld "I am try ing to repair what l con· sider to be a terri ble, terri ble error." Remarks by Burton that the in· tcrviewing process of the 25 was a "sha m" and "waste of time " were met by a 3 to 2 showdown vo te allowing Mayor Fisc hbach to go ahead and name the seven , despite the a bsence of an adopted ordinance allowing him to do so. Proceeding with the no mina tion prc>- ced ure spelled out in the as yet unadopted plan ning commission creation ordinance, Mayor Fischbach detailed the public selection process of the past few v.·eeks that led up to his selection of the se\'en. He noted five or the seven had been named by al least one councilmen in their list of preferences submitted privately to him "in writing and by one or more telephone conv ersations" s1nc-e last Saturday's interview session. Furlhcr. the mayor noted , aJI of the ap.- pcuntees had received the support of at least three councilmen. Fischbach outlined the criteria he employed in ma king the final selection noting he looked for applicants with ''definable skills and ex perience, a <ledicati<ln to the community" and those Ha rry Shuptrine, who lives in Park West Apartments and owns a home in Today, Councilman Burton indicated he ranked Sh uptrine first on a list of 10 11 amcs he submitted to Ma vor Fischbach. f'ollowing Wednesday's ·meeting CouJro cilman Henry Quigley indicated he su p- ported the appoin tment of Cl ark, Hurd, \Vest and Mrs. Freund. f',.om Page 1 FRIEND OF IRVING . • • vestigalion, accord ing to th e Times. She said she and her manager-produ'cer John Marsh all, v.·ho also is in the Bahamas. woul d return tn Ne w York volunta rily lo appear before a federal grand jury. Federal and New York county-grand Juries are i n v e s I i g a ti n g the autobiography case. The U.S. Attorney's Office said Irving would not. appear before the federal grand jury toda.y as had bee n reported earlier. The postponement was sought and ob- ta ined by Irving's lawyer. said U.S. Atty. Whitney North Seymour Jr. He gave no explana tion other than to say he was "talking only for today.'' Also winning a postponement was John r.1eier. a forme r scientific consultant to Hughes. Seymour also °"''ould gi\'e no ex- planation for Meier's poSIJXJnement. Neither Irving nor tl.1eier no r their lav.·ycrs was reached immediately for comment. Irv ing had been asked to appear ~1on­ day hefore both the federal and a county grand juries. but won postponements on grounds that he needed more time to con- sull with a new la~·yer. Meanwhile. a special agent or the U.S Po stal Service, J ohn Tarpey, wa s in Ne w York to take over the postal service's in- vestigalion of possible mail fraud. He coi;i~~m~ tbst the Ppt!.Al S~rvice sent an in\'estigator to Sw1!zerland but did not say v.•hat the investigator accompliShfd there. On the Spanish island or Ibiza where Irving and his wife have thei r home, a man describing himseU as a long-lime fr iend of the author said he had been ask· ed by postal inspectors if he is willi ng to come to the t.:nitcd Slates. The friend. Gerald Albertini, an American. said he kept the Hughes manuscript in his home for about 10 day1 and also said he had no plans lo come here ''unless I am instructed to do so.'' Tarpey's office refused to say whether Albertini bad been questioned. but said none of its agent s had been to Ibiza, were on their way there or planned a trip there. The special agent's office said no visits were planned to Majorca. a nea rby island v.·hcre Richard Suskind lives . Suskind, .l researcher, has been described by Irving as being pre5"nl during one of his me..:lr 1ngs "'llh ffughes . Russ Announce Shot MOSCOW I AP l -Th~ Sov 1el Union air oounced today the launching of Cosmos 473, lates\ in the lop.secret series of u~ manned satellites. .JJ. J. (}arreffj STOREWIDE CLEARANCE SALE LAST 7 DAYS e Many Drexel and Heritage Groups at Generous Savings e Many Discontinued Pieces as well as Several Floor Samples 1Jp :lo 30o/o anJ ·' PROFESSIONA( INTElllOll DES l9NS H.J'.GARRFfT fURNf}1J~t~HAR80R ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALI F. f>.46.0275 1>46-02 76 • ( l r I ( I I I I ':,,.. --... ~ -. --- Huntington Beaeh Fountain Valley •i ']:-----lllt' .. • Today's Fiaal N.Y. Stoelu vor. 65 , NO. 29. 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUA!lY 3, 1972 TEN CENTS U.S. Would Take Look at Red POW Proposals WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United States is willing to consider any serious North Vietnamese proposal concerning ~elease of prisoners or war, a high-rank· 1ng St.ate Departn1ent official testified to- day. Willian1 Ii. Sullivan, deputy assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs, said that while President Nhton's Jan. 25 peace proposal "offe rs a fair, reasonable basis for resolving the Vietnam confllcl, we remain willing to consider any ser ious proposal concernlng POWs." Sullivan spoke only a short time after the Viet Cong's new peace plan in Paris and apparently did not take note of It. (See earlier story, page 4). Meanwhile. Ellsworth Bunker, U.S. Ambassador to South Vietnam, conferred at the White House w1th· President Nix.on. During his Capitol Jlill visit, Sulliva n faces questioning on an allegation that the United St.ales allowed Saigon to possibly block a neutral lnspecUon of POW camps in North Vietnam. Sullivan told the House Foreign Affalrs subcommittee on National Security Policy and Scientific Developmenta that Nixon's public ofier included an offer to implement prlsoOer releases ln parallel with troop withdrawals. ''To date there Is llttle evidence that the other side is willing to negotiate In terms which seriously and realistlcally renect the actual situat ion In Indocllna,'' Sullivan said. "They are still attempting to achieve their maximum objeetlves," he &aid. "We nevertheless hope that we may Induce llano! to forsake the battl efield In fa vor of the conference table and thereby achle\·c the relea~ of ou r prisoners.'' Sullivan said. Sullivan said that "over 1600 U S. mllltary pet!IOnnel are listed '" ml11~1ni;: or captured In Southeast Asia, and ovrr 40 U.S. clvlllans are In the 1ame statuit. According to Defense De pa rt m en t flgure11, 383 of our men are listed 11 Cttp· lured In North Vietnam, 92 In South Viet· nem , S In La n11 ." "Two U.S. pllot11 are known to be cnp- lurrrl ln l hln11 The missing clvl llan8 \n· <"lucltJ ll1rc1: U.S newsmen ln11t In l'lm· IJod [H." Sulliv:in 111ld. howevtr, that "the actual ltHul ht'ld Hi'I prisoner& r1:n111ln11 uncertal " <lur lo lhr! nthcr sldti'a rontlnued rt1fu11al t<i ldl'ntHy all prlM>rler11 " l'ulltvlln HlilO 1111d the Communl&ti'I' r1'tord on the m11tter of prl~ner11' mall and packa11e11 has deteriorated. 12 • Ill Huntington Race Ex-administrator, Two Planners Seeking Seats DAILY PILOT 11111 ,llell 'YOU HAVE TO PICK UP CHINCHILLAS BY THE TAIL' Westmont School's Terri Osborne, 13, ind Friend Library Squir1ns School Puts Animals on Display By JOHN ZALLER 01 tlHI Dtlly ,1i.,1 Jllft What would happen if a student reach- ed for a book in the library at Westmont High School in Hunti ngton Beach and it squealed? Or hissed? Or perhaps nibbled on his finger? If the child were smart. he'd withdraw his hand and reach around from the back . That's the way animals are handl- ed, whether they be outdoors or in Westmont's new animal library. "With all the talk about ecology to- day," said Barbara F'lynn, the library 's curator. "Kids in the city still don 't understand what it is like to be near natural processes such as mice giving birth.'' The new library should bridge so me of that gap. In addition to a pregnant mouse and a chinchilla that's probably pregnant, it has three king and two garter !nakes, two non-pregnant chinchillas. three guinea pigs , nine rats, two lizzards, three turtlet, and two fleh tanks. · Altoget~r. it is C!Uiing ~voc,.witb the Dtwey Decimal System. After all , where ln a library fUing system does a pregnant chJnchiUa belong1 ''For example, you have lo pick up chin- chillas by their tails. 1 think it ·s mean, but that's the only way to keep from hurting them. Their bones are very weak." Mrs. Flynn is very enthusiastic about the educational benefitl of the animal library. "I think it giv«!s the kids relfpect for animals," she sf!id . "By taking care of them and watching them closely, they begin lo see that <1nima!s are individuals. When they realize this, they're less likely to torture or kill them for fun." Of course. an imals do kill and eat each other, and the library stock in cludes a supply of worms. mice, and fish that may be checked out !or this purpose. "I want the Ir.ids to see that it's natural for some kinds of animal! to eat others," Mrs. Flynn said . "Without snakes eat ing mice. for e:Qlmple, the rodent population would quickly run out of control. Both sides 01 thia procesa are illustrated in the Jibrary. We have snakes that eat mk:e while the children watch, and very soon we should have a litter of little mice." "The lesson ls really brought home (Set ANIMALS, Page %) By TERRY COVILLE 01 rite Ptll~ "llClt Slllf An even dozen candidates have of- ficially filed for the April 11 City Council election in Huntington Beach. Filing clos- ed at noon today In the city elerk's of!lce. The l2 cahdldates will seek to flll three counc il seats. Only one Person, Robert Potter, of the 13 who took out nominatlon papers, failed to file . Potter said business pressure forced him out. The campaigning is not expectM lo bf! Hughes-Irving Meet Unlikely, Singer States From Wire Senictt NEW YORK -A blonde Danish singer who was In M,11co with author Clifford lrving last year aay1 .she 1ee1 no way he could have met with Howard Hughe• a.s he claimed. The name of singer Nina van Pallandt, 39, was brought into the case of the purported Hughes autobiography when Irving last yea r says she sees no way he could have met with Howard ~lughes e!I he claimed. The name or singer Nina van Pallendt, 39, was brought into the case of the purported Hughes autobiography when Irving claimed she waa with him for two or 100 interview taping session11 he 11ald he held with the billionaire. Irving claim· ed she was with him when he met Hughes In Mexico last February a!ld in Lo• Angeles in J une. A Los Angeles Times corre!pondent reported today from New York In a telephone interview with the singer, who Is in the Bahamas. that she said et no time did she see any man who could have passed for Hughes during the Mexican trip last Feb. 13-14. She was apart from Irving "one to one and half hours et the most," the Times quoted her as saying. Miss van Pallandt said she spent five hours Wednesday t.aJklng to a U.S. posta l inspector who was in the Bahamas in connection with the Hughes book in- vestigation, accordin& to the Times. She said she and her manager·producer John Marshall, who also 111 In the Bahamas, would return lo New York voluntarily to appear before a federal grand jury. Federal and New York county grand juries are inve1tla at ln& the autobiography <Ill•. The U.S. Attorney'• Office 1aid Irving would not appear befort the federal {See FRIEND, Pa1e !) so hard. or biller as it "'as In 19'10 when 18 candidates fought for four council i;eats. But the 1972 race does have Interesting elements. There Is former city ad- ministrator Doyle rvtiller trying to cap· lure a seat on the council that fired him just a few months ago. , And two city planning commissjoner11, Marcus Port er end Henry Duke, are ex- pected to wage a tough climpalgn 11galnsl U,IT....,_19 LINKED WITH IRVJNO? Singer Nin• V•n P•ll1ndt LWV to Stage Theater Party The lluntington Beach Leagut: of Women Voler11 will hold a fund raising cocktail and theater party Sunday night . Everyone wJU meet al the home o{ Dr. and Mr11. Bernard O'Laughlln lrom 8:ll p.m. to 7;30 p.m. for a aocial OOur. They will then attend "Girl in the F'reudlsn Slip" at 8 p.m. at the Huntington Beach Playhou!<. Money ralted will be U!ed l4 cover t:1- penaer in the LWV ''Candidates F'alr" •od election publi<atioM put out by m<mbm or lhe LWV. For reservations for the cocktail party and tholt<r trtp .. phone LWV Pr011dent Mr1. Ruth Finley, M6-530t. Having animals in a library could give - a teacher fits , too, but Mrs: Flynn is fortunate. She has a committee of animal tenders to take care of the dirty work and a committee of animal exbibiklrs to handle loans to regular classrooms. "I've got more student appUcations than I can possibly use," said Mrs. Ji'lyM. "i'hiJ is a very popular 1lbr1r.y. '' Judge, Jury View Home The animal exhibitors. she aaid, ac. company the animals when they are checked out to regular cla!ses, uplain bow they must be cared for, and make perlodk: checks to make 1Ure all the rules .,.. being lollowod. "'lbere are a iot of thingt about the animals that we even have to tell the tuchtrs,'' 11id eighth graders Ttrri O.bome. P"'•ldtnl ol lhe Commltltt of 111imal nhlbilOfl. "But lhey don't mlnd becaute they like to ltam. '' Individual Clum may kttp lhe anlmal1 for up to a week, u1ing thm1 for IClence proJectl and II model1 for dt!cfiplfve writing and drawing lessons. Miss Osborne ,.Id membm ol bu commllte< mllll ,,..,,.re wrttun ttpe>rt.I tn txiw the anlmals mllll be cared for, 1nd U..l tach report mllll bo dtar«I by 1 vote or tht wbolt committee. 1llae ,.ports .... tben l<!ll "'1b lhe onlm11' ,,,,.,, lJ1<)' .,. ch<ckod out. "'Tbtte b IO much to lmcrJr," uki the younc --al tbo anhuJ uhlblton. Widow, 51, Shows Place Where Husband Died · Murdet" ,....pect Maxine POlth play«! bosl<a loday lo an <Jnnce County S..porlor Court Juda• snd jury who decid- ed ·Jo, .. lor tlionialva lhe HWlllnlloo -...... In whldl "" husbllld illod over tbt SWlday dinner toble lut J-II. Mn. POlllh, .-vued from tbo pit! that Jed lo froquont halllnc ol lw C011rtroc>m lnltmony Wodnooday, lod Ibo way 'in the home at l3S2 i\Jv....m a., thit witnoss«I 'lhe Lui hours or Robert Postb. 41. The trial or the 1ilvtr·hairtd wklow will 'l'luro later loday lo Jwjgo Kenneth Williama' courtroom for resumption of her t<stlmony and .lb< aecounl or how bu OOsband wat lllbbed to death. Mn. l'Olth. SI. tearfully told a llory W-y of 1 hulband who rnquonUy phyllully abu...i bu. ofl<tl lr .. led h<T wiU1 contempt 1od dllnspect and lopped It 10 olJ lut JW11 II -bo 11rw1bt • hlmburJ<n bomo lor-_,. dinner. "II< -I dido~ we ror hlmburgm rrom 1 drive.In." she II.kl. mattna no rd.....,. lo bot eartler reportod lllte- rnmt lo pollco that llbe spec:lllcally wanted -for lhe SWlday .... 1. Mn. POlllh l<ltlllod In tho crowdod courtroom that llbe and her huabond hid hid ,....., c1r1nu durlni • weokad • lponl .... , 1rom lhe home """ that !hoy Md 1 few more when they returned Sun- day lo lhe modnt -on Alvarado SU-eot. IJoryiJ!( her rice In 1...-hlndl. she laid the jUry lhtt tho quarTOI r•ally be-s•n -"" lllaband nung • gla,. ol wino la bu Lac. and Ill< ran to tho p. rage •nd trted to start the car. BmJdnc down 1gabi, she i..itnod Uut POlth came .n.r bu, pullod b« rrom tho car and dragod her bock lnt4 tile - ••I wu 1npy ind I told h1m •t could till )'OU'.'" W Jlid. t ,. 5ho told tbo jllry that POlllh took 1 -a.ill lrom lhe --and told her "Okay ID abe8't" It " .~ that Mn.. -llltn plunsed Ibo bile 1111o ..,. -·· d!Olt. She <*Ill "'*" .. ~ -Wodnaday, "I thought be took tbe knit• bock," the uMS. "But then he 11MS •J'm hurt' or •1•m rut" and fell over. I lmmodl1lely ..iled the Dre department for help." Posth died 1<11 thin two houri lat. 1t , 1o<1I lmpflll rrom what w" dotorlbed u a ma.ulve cllat wound innlcled by the eight Inch knife. o.r..... 1tlo(ney Leonard McBride 11 t>lt1dln1 Ills c!Jent'1 dlmlnlJhed ••= ln •ntWtt to cbar&n of flnt te mor<ler. Tb< ,.......,U.. ii not lhe doth penalty. I Mayor George McCracken and Coun· cllman Donal d Shipley. One young candidate, Dave GorofaJo, has already !aced one city bJttle. He won a Superior Court ordtr forcing th e clty to allow him In lhe race, even though he hasn't llved In }!untlngton Beach two years, ns rc<tulred by city charter. The lncumbent11, on the othtr hand. come orf a stormy H171 in which a city adm inistrator WAl'I fired, the Top of the , Pier Plan died (temporarilyi 11nrl -~ -::r -/;( 2nd I11eumhent munl clp11! llnance1 were rock~ by 1.:rltlcl11rn. The queatlo n 111 whelher vote.rt ...-111 blame them for fault11 m1de public, or 'thlink them for action• taken to correct tho11e feulh1. nut rr.11ldent1 wlll have 12 mfln, 12 dlf• ferent ldeo11, to chose from , and that may be ha rder thon It looka. Here 111 the comrlelei ll11t of lfuntlngton Dcach c;uy COuncl c11ndldat11~ as they fU· t5ee llUNTINGTON, P•s• II Harper Won't Seek . , Valley Re.election By RUDI NlBDZU:UHU Of .. Dflllf 'M ...., I" ' ' An e<cltlnf roe'• for the P'ount11n Valley City Councll w~1 as1ured today wJth both lncumberits declCUng not to run tor re-election. The April II conte1t wJJJ be far two vacancies -those of councllmen John B. Harper and Ron Stwlkman. Harper announced hls decltlon at thtl noon deadline. A new• rele1H handed to City Clerk t.fary Cole 1t1te1 the followlng : "Reluc· tantly I find It lmPQillslble to seek rt-elec- tion to the office of city councilman. fner:easln11 buslnt11 commitment! and the uncert.a lnty ol aval11ble time In tbe future causea mt: to mike thll decllllon." Shenkman annou nced his decision Mon· day morning. He also said he would not Eight Hopefuls Meet Deadline In W eshninster F"Jve challenger• will lake on thttt ln- cumbent11 In the April 11 Wea-tmtn1t.tr Ci- ty Council electl(ln. A total of elRht candktata met the noon deadline for f!Un1 nomlnaUon thla morning, according to lhe Wettmln1ter city clerk. H .. dlng the ll•t or lncu mbtnta 1' tl1ayor Derek McWhlnney, 33, of HeO Calendubr Ave., who wUI be seeklna h1I aecond row.y01r City CoonclJ lmn. FrlllCl1 G. Fry Jr., 4'. ol 7111 e.Jel Av•., will bo ... tma 1111 third council term. J oy L. Neuaeblutr, tea Edita Ave,, ""'""' out the 1111 of lncumbontl. Mn. Nougoba uer i. ,..king her .....Iii council !<rm. The ch11Jencer1 Include a rormtr w .. tmtnster police chi.r and • memb<r of the city pllMln& commlalon. They ""' -<:onnor Collaroot~ 4'. Wollmlnll<r polJce chief ror over 12 yun. He i. now a .. 11..mployod prlv11< lnvmlplor and llv .. II 1722 Dtl Illy Circle. -Harold V. Lorton, Cl, I mcnbor ol tbt dly pWin1ns cammllllon, bo ...... chaiJ! al dairy n11rM11 ad U.• al ICZl2 Mlddlelownl.ono. -All1le Marie """'· 1•1 Alloo II., 1' • pn>botlon -for Loi """* eou.. ty. -Jld< E. Mlllor, r7, ol 1M1t IAl'll Pllce, • ttlf-employed aoc:ounu.t. , -Wlllllm C. ·1Bin ) ,_,,, 44, 1411 Vlllectlo Dr., 1' 1n lldmlnlllt• lor 1 eomput.tr firm. Gen. McNamey Dice LA JOLLA IAP I -0tn. 1-" T. McNarney, 71, who IUCCteded Ctn. Dw1jllt D. Ell<nhowor u ..,....,.,., ol Amorlcan lorCH In Europe alUr World Wor II, dlod Ta...,,y. McllltllO)' laUr MVrrod 11 Pr"ldcnl ol Connlt AlrcnlL •• be 1blt lo run for rHlectlon boeouN d Ff,:.-u== ~~ '-chi formrr counallman Bemle P, lv1litld back tnlo the pollllc1I u1111, Sval1t1d w11 one of three new councilmen elected during the city'• tcmpe1tuou11 recall elec· tlon In 1969. He terved for le11 than a year but did not run for re-electk)n In 1870. AnotMr contender 11 M•rvln Adler, thl optometrl.11t who served •• pretident of the Chamber of Commerce lor two year• and on the Chlmber board of dJrector1 tor 11lx: years. AIJO challengln1 11re F"ountaln Valley notable• Hoy D. Rl ch1rd1. a dent11t who ampalgned for rluortdl.Uoo , and P1W r•. Savarino, 1 c•ndldate during tht liff election. There waa 1 total of 111 candldaltl who flied nomination p11pcr1 by the noon deadline. They wtre : -Marvin P. AclJer, :Je, 19117 La Donna. Coort. optometr~t. married, line chi~ c1ren, former two-time preAldent of the clutmhr.r of commerce. -rt1r1. Jan Wllhtlm , Ul527 Redwood Circle, market re1e11rch executive, mar· rltd, three children, pa1t preNdent ot the chamber of commerce women '• dJ. vlAlon. -Paul P. 81v1r11M, 51, 10719 El Centro Ave., aerotpacMlectronk1 m 1 n a 8 e r, married , one chUd, current 11tttetary. treuurcr of lhe Green Valley Jlorneown. er1 Auoclatlon. -C.'lareace o. CUper, ~I. t700 La C•· pllla Ave ., bullne111 e1ecutlve, married, one child, lnv°'ved with homeowner• and t.J:paytr lf'OUJ'll. -B<rale P. lvalllld, IQ El Tullp1n Circle, 1poclal projecl llUpll'\'ilor, ror• m.r city coundlmln, DWTled. . -lloy D, _,., 17 ... liq Circle, morrlod, • dtntllt .no cam1JOfcned ror the Ouorld•llon ol tho city'• ,,_ oupply. Oraa•• It wlll bo 1 bll ""!itr oo Vrldly, with lna"ff#ll)I .~ICll clouds ... cordlnl lo !lit walhcr ..,.I«. OvornlcJ!t low1 . JD to 40 tonJahl with hliha ol • lo • Friday. •• I Olll Y_PILOT H ____ l'll_IWJd_,,, F'tbru.vy ), '1'1Z Newport 5care Angko r Wat Shrine Said Endanger ed PHNOM PENH (lJPll -C:ambOdlil n Information M lnl~lcr Lonii Borel eaid lu· d1 y the funied flth Century tcn1plcs o! Angkor WHl wuuld h1' dc~lruyt•i1 by the North Vlrtn1.11ntse 11r allr1w<·d to fall into dl11repair if action Is not l11ktn soon. I.Ang floret 1Ald the No rth V1ctnamrse, who havt controlled the itrta ISO nH[t'!ll northwMt ol J'hnom l'enh since June, 1970, have forced 11 i;lup tu ronservallun "'-'Ork. kidn11ped hvndrcds of thtl5crvt1t1un workers and conflst·atcd thr rcp1ur matcrlsl. Long Borel 11skcd the United Nations 10 declare the 1rea 1 neutral wne tn perrnlt con&ervatlon work to continue and save them trom deslruc..1ton. The Cambodian high command said to- day that two government f!Ol d1crs were killed and live wounded Wednesday by 11 North Vletname1e mortar barrage within throe miles of the tc1nples. The tem ples are a series of stnnf! 8hrincs erected by the Ktu-ners. The temples were covered by jungle folial{C 1nd not rediscovered until the 19th crn· . tury. Until the lr\,dochlna war &pread to Carn· bod\11 In !970. Angkor Wat and the nearby ruins of Angkor Thom were the nation 's greatest tourist 11ttractlons ,. Among the thousands of visitors lo lht! temples was Mrs. John F. Kennedy, wife of the late U.S. president. who vis ited the t1hrlnes In 1987. Long Boret 111id lntcll lgcnce reports In· dlcated North Vietnamese troops may be planning a fresh military operation In the .area soon. Bernard Grolier. a French national in ,charge of 1,100 conservation workers at the site, s1ld last week the C',ommunlst.~ hailed his work Jan. 20 and accused him i nd his men of working for the U.S. Cen· t.ra l Intelligence Agency. Gro lier. who earl!er was allowed pa!sagc Into the area by the Com· muni11 ts, said he was not forbidden fron1 ·reentering the area. One con11ervallon expert sald I he temples could survive without major work for two ycar111 but lhe old stone would be permanently damaged If not 1.rt1ted regularly. Cambodia n force$ have nevC'r tried to recapture the area because oi fea r of damaging lhe temples and L<lng Boret said the government would stick to Its policy of avoiding military action which could harm the temples. Two Other Races B~ing Conducted 1'wO races h11ve vlrtually escaped notice In Huntington Beach. burled undtr the hoopla of the April II clly cou ncil election. City Treasurer Warren G. HaH, 46. (lf t3ll .Nantucket lliive, ls runnlnJ; upop- poltlt fbr his second four.year term. Hill worb· t.s a controller for Levi tt Mobile Syolllll&. SO ·rar. only one man has stepped fnrward to chillenae incumbent City Clerk Paul C. Jones. Bernard J . t.11honey, 46. of 6851 Retherford Drive, is the lollf. '1hlllengv. Jontti Cl, ol 7UI Rhine Drivt:. has been city: cltrk 1lnct 1060. He's seekin& his loU!\h \d-m. 11te clerk and lrt1surer positions 111re rleclin In lh1nli1lilan Besch because it 1s 11 charter rily Rowa n Cy~t Rc1110"\ic d HOCH!'.:STl·:l{. ~ltn1t. 1A r 1 -111111 RO"'llll. COSIAr 11f trlr\"1~1on ·~ "L!HIJ;:h 111 .' <'On,plt\M h1~ \'hrckup 11! ?>ta~·o Chnir \\'rdnrsd11~· after har111~ 11 ~n1nl\ ·~ $.f removM from hi~ rip:ht s.hou\drr Ho~·fln iAid othr r 1ha 11 h11\tn~ !hf' r.1s1 ren1n1·N1. "I'm In lint' ~h~p<' ·• OU.MGol <.OAiT DAILY PILOT OU.WW COAn PUI UIM1*» a..P,,..., 11:•\ttt N. Wet4 ---J11.\: 11:.. c.t., Vlot,....., ............. n....~ .... ·-1\...,.1• A. ... ._. -·-Al•• 0-rli• ... ~~-­ H..-1 ......... Ofllke 11111 S.tdl ···''"'"' w.;1;~ AUms: ,,0. ._no, '''" --L .... hldri: 121 ,_, i-a."° ._, • .._ ._. ,.,_ ......... -! .uD .._, ........ a. C-_.. ,..,. IU c;a.,. ._. .,. ... ,. tttt.OT ................. .. •ts I Pi#Lr .. ,...,.... ...,, ..... .... ......................... ""-'" ...... ......., ~ CU.M -.. II•··~ ...... v-...... ....--~ =:.... --·i;:==='".::::. -::..-: • -.... ...... Olilll --. : ~··· ·1 t11U MMm G? Y ., M:s 0 t I M.W'll • Foliage Aids Parkitig 'I th ink that r shall never sec . a rul de sac n1adc llfl of trt'es.' 'J'hcse rot ted you ng trees arc being used to frcalc an arl1fi c1al dead cnrl on Orange Avenue at 13th Street. 'J'hc !'lreet itself ha s been diagonally striped to in crease on·slrccl parking. If"the 90·day tc:-;t is su<.·1.:cssful, others \Viii be installed bCl\vecn Ocean and Pa lm .!\venues and Sixth and Gol den \Ve st Streets. J,oo ks nice. anyn1ay. 'Perfect' Raid Flops; Wrong House Invaded BALDWIN PARK 1AP) -JI was ;i perfectly executed raid on a suspected bookmaking operati on. The front and rear doors of the one.story house wrre bashf'd open and the three sheriff 's dt:putics rushed inside. But thrre were two problems. One. nobody ~'8.5 home. Two, il turned out lo be the wrong house. And the owner still ~·as mighty unhap- py about it Wednesday. a dR y after the raid. "1'hey said they were looking for some bookie," said Bernadette ChRrland. 62 . •·t don't rven kno1v what a bookie is." She said she had been out shoppinp;. \\'hen she returned home shortly after 5 p.m., &ht found plainclothes deputies T'vo i\ides Picked For Seal Beach sea l Bc11ch City ~1anager ncnnls. se arching her house. ··1 thought rny house wa s bcin.[( rotr bed," she said. "The back dnor 1\.as 1n sinithcreens and they broke the lor:k 011 the front door. It scared 1ne because n1y l1ouse was robbed two years ago." She said one deputy, clad in dungaree.~. showed her his badge, and said they 'd "made a mistake,'' handed her a blank piece of pape r and told her to send a bill for the damages to the sheriff's depart· n1ent. "He said it was the first mistake he ·d made in 15 years," she said. The deputie:s went across the street and arrested an unemployed waitress, ide n· tified as Billle Joanne Strohmeyer. 38. for investigation ol bookmaking, authorities said . Detectives later said' th ey were look· Ing for an alleged telephone drop f o r bookm aker5 and tra c ed Miss Strohn1eyer 's address with the General Telephone Co. The error occurred, authorities said. when the company gave them Mrs. Charland 's address-5035 Landis Ave. - Jnste.ad di Miss Strohmeyer's. ~e last digit or ~ich was one number higher. Valley Ma y Split Its Recreation, Park Deparllnent The city of Fountain Valley is giving some thought to splitling up its recrea· tion Bnd parks commission into two separate bodies. Although the idea. advanced by Coun· <·1l n1an Al Hollindcn. wa s di scussed brlef· ly Tuesda y night, no action was taken . A staff report read by City ~1anager James Neal cited greater community in· volvemcnt. better capability of solving t~chnical problems and bett er evaluation of rt>creation programs as the major ad· va nta ges. On the debit side are the need for ad· dil1onal staff and clerical lln1e and the possibility that there may not be enoug h ·work for two commissions, according to the report . The commission. composed or eight members <>flen end with a tie vote on crucial issues. said Hollindcrs. f-le suggested that the situation might be re1ncdicd by removing the com· mission 's three student members from ''oting niember ship and ret urning them to an advisory ca pacity. Councilmen will take up the rear· rangement of the commission at the ir March 1 meeting. Copter Fallout I : Causes Furor Ce.il\ngs and walls trembled. !and 11coured virtually every veh icle in a three.block radius. A huge cloud of dirt and dust soared heavenward, taking all so~ of debris with it. Candy "·rappers and scraps of cement bags fron1 a cons truction site that ~·as Ground Zero floated down out of the sky for 10 min ules afterward. Criminal charges are being considerC'd today in the investigation following a Ne~·port Beach episode that sounded lo all "'ithin earshot like another Krakatoa Volcano and the Crack of Doom rolled in· to one. Thal should be about 10,000 ~ouls. give or take a (ew. The whole show started innocently Undergrou11d <3e nter Wins Federal Grant An $85,000 (ederal grant has been a"·arded to the city o[ Huntington Beach for construction of an underground emergency operation center. U.S. Rep. Craig llosmer (R·Long Beach) said today the federal grant would help build about half of the center which is scheduled for const ruction in March. , Money from the Huntington Beach civic center bonds will help build the un- derground bunker which will house emergency communications equipment. The bUnker has been designed as part of the new civic center and will 'be located between the administration building and policC' headquarters. The idea for it stems from a state and federal st udy of the San Fernando Valley earthquake disaster, according to city of· ficials. It will be used for such emergen- cies as earthquakes, fires, floods or any other disaster. During a civil disaster city officials will gather in the emergency center. \\'he.re William Lage, Direc tor of Civil Defense, will take charge ol rescue operations. From Pagel ANIMALS ... when the kids see that mice can produce eig ht ro ten babies every three ~·eeks." she said . "Without snakes we could really be in trouble." ll·lrs . Flynn is looking for more animals. If anyone has ajSJ)<lre guinea pig or rat around. Her onlf requirement for accep!ing animals. she said, is that they not smell. Frain Page 1 enough with a plan to replace an old water tank atop the e1ght-.!ltory Vista de l Lido apartment Lower , 61 l Lido Park Drive. The job V>'<ls to be done by Briles Helieoptcrs. Santa ~1oniea, The Briles crew did indeed do a job. 1'hC' only problen1 is. it appears, that thry didn"t notlry C'l!y officials and obtain a rnandatory hclieopter landing pern11& which requires City Counci l approval. The big cargo chopper swoo ped in over the adjacent Newport Beach City Hall and Police Department complex about 8:05 a.m .. virtually evacuating the com· ~ined staff. Secretaries, department heads, police officers and detectives rushed, <>ut lea.v· ing trails of spilled coffee. ··~1y Lord ... il isn't ours is it?" gasped one police departmen t clerk. Se I t i n g do,.,.n at a v a c a n t cnn· struction site Jot , the big helicopter's rotorwash sent grains of sand flying in 3\J directions. The roaring turbine engine also sent sound waves ricocheting off the apa rt· menl tower and brought heads popping out of windo ws for blocks around. ' Police Walch Commander Lt. Rich }~amilton hopped in a patrol ca r an,d screeched out of the headquarters lot with red lights flashing to investigate. No one could have heard the .siren if he used it. By lhis time , the tank replacement was almost complete and the chopper pil<>t - support cables detached -beat a hasty retreat for Santa Monica, leaving ground crewmen to face the police. Officer Gary Lee interrogated employe Louie Nava and Sgt. Wayne Connelly said today lhat the city is investigating t:o determine what -if any -violations oc- curred. Generally, witnesses agreed, there was a disturbance of the peace. · One in fa ct, is a Vista Del Lido gentleman currenily involved in suing 'll church across the street over it.s hourty sacred chimes, which he contends are tOo loud. From Page 1 HUNTINGTON •• ed with the city clerk's office : -George E. Arnold, 623 Main SL, gardener. -Ri chard Belyea, 52, of 6811 iVa Carona, management engineer a t McDonneU Oou.&las. -.James DeGuelle. 50, of 1 0 1 l Ca.lifornia St., owner of DeGuelle and Soh Gia~. -Henry H. Duke. 34, of 16422 Fairway Lane . stockbroker. -David P. Garofalo . 26, of 100'12 Dana Drive, marketing representative fur Union Carbide. -Charles S. Geers. 51, or 8021 Mermaid Circle , plumbing contractor. CoLlttemarche has lppointed two men to 11sshit him with the administration or the citv. They are James \'an Derhyden, 27, the new assistant to the city n1anager. ind Gino Gaudio, 2e, adm inistrative assistant. · V.ati Dtrhyden formerly worked ln Courtemarc~'s offiC'e .115 purchasing 11gent 11nd ptrson rtel offlcl'.'r. Gaudio ~'RS a city aidl'.' in Newport BeRch. The s.$riff's departn1ent said an ln· vestigatl~ is under way. FRIEND OF IRVI NG ... -Doyle 111il!er. 60. of 1021 Park St., former city administrator of Hunt.Jngto n Beach. -i\1arcus M. Porter, 34. of 198:42 Providence Lant. an employe e ( California Q:imputers. 8 Die ;,, Ba ttle l 11si<l e Pri son ~!A;'l;!LA !\'I'll -Bi\"al pri~11n fUlni;:~ 11·1<'\d1nR nnpro11sNl Jllnt:\r bo\r\<:.. !r11d llllK'S and darts rl11shC'd ror JO 111inu1cs 10- da.1· 1n !he !-l('('llnd da ~1 nf r1011n~ in the rro11·rl<'d Natkinal Pl'n1teo!i11r~·. l':ighl f)f'rsons ~'trt k1llC'd 11.nd se1·rn \1·ou nded in lht clash Tod8v'$' toll raistd to HI lhc nunibfr of pri$.On('fs k1Jlf'd in r1n1~ inside the pl'.'n1!tntiary, about 20 n11 lt s south of Manila . Pair of Eagles Councihna11 Raps Ca11 s on, Campus Fount ain 1lallt y Cooocilman . J11hn I). l!arptr is on the track of some 'Bachan· na\1;1.n litterbu~ \\'ho allegedly sc<ittered lhe Los An1igo~ l!ip;h School can1pus 11·1th br11krn b(l\t\es and b<'er can~ last \l"C't'k. "1 \\'ant to kno"· 11·hy th is lype of RC'· \\\"1\~· is being \o\rra\ed." rh:-ir~l'.'d !!Rrprr 11·ho snid hr 1·1si1ed the can1pus at 9 11 ni. Sunday 1norn inJ! and sa11' the 11,css He requested Iha! 1he council a~k thr prin · eipa\ and the JXllite chief fnr lencrs nf explanation . Bui hi s colle;ii;:-ues did nol ::.ee 11 that "'al'. and the matter was ta bl· rd · ··1 don't kno"· ho1•; this ~·oul d be inented from the council,·· said Coun· c1\n1an Al Hollinden . His colleague. Ron Shenkman. added . "I don'!. think you'll ever solve the problem o{ beer cans oo c.ampus." . . . liunUn&1on llu<b residenl< Charlos WISdom Ot!ll and Pat Matthews;· botb members ol Su Explorer Ship 412 spa~ by tho ii.imtllllllDD · Harbour Ylcbt Club. are n.,. &a.11• Scouts. Both boys are IG Alld liolJI • &!tend Edison lfiib School. grand jury today as had been reported earlier. The postpon ement wa s so ught and ot>- tained by lr~·ing's lawyer. said U.S. Atty. \Vhitney North Seymour J r. He gave no <'Xplanation other than lo say he ~·as 'talking only for today." Also "'inning a postpone.ment "·as John lllei('r, a fom1er SCl('ntific consultant to llu,ghes. Seymour also ~·ould gil"e no ex· pl:-in.1tion for 1'.icier"s postponement. Neither Irving nor Meier nor thrir l;iw~'ers "'aS reached immediately for c·on1n1rnt. lrvlng had been asked to Rppe ar 111on· day before both the federal and a count y grand juries. but won postpon ements on grounds lhat he needed more lime to con· suit with a new la~·ye r. ~feanwhHe. a special Rgenl of the U.S. Postal Ser\'ice. John Tarpey. was in New 'i'ork to take ol'er the postal ser\·ice's in· vestigation of possible mail fraud . He confirnlcd that the Postal Service sent an inl'estigator to S"·i!zerland but did not say 11,·hat the inl"estigator accomplished !here. On the Spanish island of lbi:z.a "·here Jrving and his "'1[e have thrir home. a n1an de scribing himself as a long·l1me friend nf the ;iuthor sai d hr hild been ask· rd by postRl inspectors 11 he is willing to c0n1 r 10 the t;nited States. The fr iend. Gerald Albertini. an An1erican. said he kept the Hughes manuscript in his home for about 10 day s -Donald D. Shipley, 58. of ltl9 Main St, incumbent and a professor al Cal State, Long Brach. -Jerry A. Matney. 38, of 17951 Scotia. Circle. incumbent and a school princip111. -G«irge C. ~1cCracken, 48, of 1654.% \\'ande rer Lane. incumbent and a gene.Ml contractor. -Joseph T. "''haling. 31. of 6732 Ca!pe Circle. a program !o~istics analyst. McCra cktn and Matney, both elected in 1968. arr seeking their second term in of. f1ce. while Shipley is trying for his third four·year trrm. lie wa5 elected in 1964, the first time. Residents who want to vole in the April l l election must be registered by Feb. 17, if not already registered. _jJ. J. (}arreffj STOREWIDE CLEARANCE SALE LAST 7 DAYS ,ROFESS IONA[ INURIOR DESISNS e Many Drexel end Heritage Groups ct Generous Savings • Many Discontinued Pieces cs well cs Several Floor Samples Up :Jo 30°!o SavingJ and more H.J.GARRElT fURNfIU~l~HARW.ILVD. COSTA MESA, CALIF. M6--0l75 M6.Ql7' ' i \ I I I I i • I I \ Late Car Testimony Scuttled By TO~I BARL £Y 01 In• 0•111 ,-1111 Sl•tl ~ A ~oung Costa ~1esan's dram;d1c eleventh hour return to the Orange Coun- ty Superior Court !rial or the "ser\'ice ~talion seven" and the s!alrrnen! he 111ade behind closed doors \\'ill not be ;illo\ved to influence die jur;., Judge .la1nes Turner ruled toda y Judgt' 'rurner rejected a deft'nse 1nu· hll n for the ad1n1sslon ol o new staten1ent by Bon i\l'ickels. 19. and began the Jury 1nstruetio11s !hat \\'ere delayed early \\'ed- ··nesday Judge '!'umer, defensr attorneys Al St-0kke, Frank Moran and George Shibata -find prosecutor Richard Stenton repeated- l.1· huddled \Vllh Nickels throughout the 'afternoon 1vhi!e Nickels' father and other defendants a1vaited the outcon1e or the discussions. .Judge Turner \Yarned e\·ervone ill· 1 olved on more than one occaSion that. the topi c of those di scuss ions v.•as not to .b(' revealed to anyone . parlicu !arly the ne11·s media lie repeated !ha! \\'arning today 111 a ,stalenient \Vhich co ntains the n1ere con· J1rmation that a motion by the de/ense .. Tpr !he in('lusion of N i c k el s ' no11• 'testimony into the hulk.v seven-1reek ,rranstript is denied. : The DAIL Y PILOT has learned, '.ho\\·ever. that Nickels· 11e\\' state1nent ·'followed a telephone call by him to defen· ,dant Ed\\•ard Carney. 27. of 20862 Shell \!arbour Drive, 1-Iunlington B e a e h , _.'Jickels' form er e1nployer. Carney relayed the substance of that .call to Stokke and the young lawyer im · mediately made the gist of Y>'hat 11•as described as "highly revealing in- .formation" available to Judge Tu rner. .. Nickels, accompanied by his father . • ::ipent the afternoon in Judge Tumer's .t·ourtroom. I-le was frequently called into the jurist's chambers to tell and clarify ,the details that have now been \Vithheld fro1n the jury. ',Waiting \1·ith Carney in the courtroon1 ."·ere former defendants Ra!ph Carney, ·:.?9 . Ed"1a rd's brother of 31852 Calle San ·f\.l arcos, San Joan Capistrano and R. C. \\'eisner. 28. of Santa Ana. both of \\•hon1 ''•ere cleared of all charges by Judge Turner before the defense opened i1s case All the defendants ha,·e been 11"arned by their la1Yyers to not discuss the naturt' of i\ickels' statement with anyone. They have pointed out that if the former pro- secution witness' ne1Y testimony were tu .con1e to the jury's attention it ~·ould in- evitably lead Judge Turner to rule a .111istrial :· Prosecutor Stenton said loda.v that 1\'ickels "'ork'd as an attendant at three -0f the II service stati<>n~ named in the .()range County Grand Jury indictment issued follo11'ing allegations of 1n· \Jlll'ement in an auto repair ratke!. But Stenlon rnade ii clear that he was -011ly interested in 11•ha1 1l'ent on at the ·Harbor and Trask ~lobil station in (;arden (;ro1·e at !he tin1e Nickels "'as .en1ployed there and that is "'hy he used the C<>sta f.!esan as a prosecution \Yi!· ness. ,' It is expected that the jury .,.,.hich ha~ now sat through seven weeks of ··testi mony on the multi ple charges of con· .spiracy to cheat and defraud Orange County motorists will leav' t he courtroom today to begin deliberations. ·Autopsy Reveals ·Slain Executive Chokccl lo Death LOS A.\'(;ELES 1L'PJ 1 -Alan Scott ),\acfarlanc. vice p r e s i de n \ of 'fran~~n1eriea Financial Corp . .,.,. ho s e hogtied body .,.,·as found on a little league baseball diamond. choked to death <>n his blood after he was apparently beaten by a robber. an autopsy report said today. The body of l\facFarlane. 43, was found by a woman .,.,,alking her dog on Tutsday. In San Francisco. police held a suspec1 in the murder. Authorities said James Smith. 24. \Vas arrested on suspicion of possessing a s t o I e n credit card or .\facFarlane·s and later was booked in connection "'ilh the slaying. The body .,.,·as wrap))ef' in a blue blanket . the feet bound and a noose around the neck. sheriff's detectives said. He had been sel'erely beaten on the head The pockets of f.l acfarlane's suit had been turned out and his wallet. watch. identffication and other valuables were nlissing ::-.1acfar\ane·s ~ife sakt he did not otdinarily carry \arg' sums of cash, but t'fid many credit cardi. His car was rf.issing. ; Dancer Splits • i Jur y Decisio1t lltSTmGTON. wx •. n:PTJ - A mistrial ras declared bett W"brn a JUTY ol su: men and six women could not agree on the venftct in the case of .. bouomles! 'danttr .• Teresa Scou }.toort, 21. t.fiss Moore was acaJsed of dan.. " t mg .. in a Jev.'<t and oblcent man-ner .. Courtroom JOUrCeS said the m '" men '""Oted Wednesday for acquittal ~ aod tM w womm "'Oted for cm-....uon. .. ---• H DAIL V PILOT :J ---- Hughes 'Buying Spree' Recluse 'R eig11 ed' Over Strtp • 1966 lll l::di rgr·1 norr: Ntoodo /ou g he.t J)/O!/td a role i11 Ui t Ifft' of llort'<lrd lluolies. lit! w<Js Pnu rr1td !ltl'!rt, d ivorced tlltrt. <111d Wr 1l1e f01ir y1·a r~ li r livtd thert. 11111sterio11s/11 t111d 111 ,1:eclusiot1, beco111e tlir stofc '.~ /a1·!/t.~r loudowiutr. t mplo11rr a11d CC1 $IU11 1>p· t rator. Following 1.~ tltr rh1rd 11( f(ll•r •eports ou flit' rn1nq1 Jnrr.~ ilf /l1>1r1Pd Jf11gli ts. H~· Tl'.:ltRY ll\'A1': -'..ucl•r•• "••1> ,.,.•l•t• LAS VE (i A S -It 11·11 ~ un ,1 1Yinte r night in Nove1nber. 1%6 !hat l~oward ~lujthes descended on Nel':ida Jn tin arrival tloaked 11·ith the secrecy nnd intrigue that he hAs ninde part of hi~ life• Hughes arrived on a pril'flte trn!n thn! stopped on the de sert outskirts of Las Vegas , according to the l'Ourt testln1ony of peopl e who said !hey ll'ere there. lie slipptd into a car il$ a srnall eonvn•; headed for 1hC' glilll'rini:: "Strip." nnd later walked unnolired into the Di>~r rl Tnn llotel as a eovc-red strt>tcher \\·as t"ar ried through the lobby a~ ;1 diversion \Vit h $54ti 1nillion fron1 rhe sulr ot 111~ ..,lock in Truns·\\'urld Airhne~. llughL·~ wenl un a buyini.: sprt'c-1J1 n! n1tHIC' hi111 Nevada's l;1rgci;l lnnd1JW11('r, c•111pluyt'1· and \~ns 111u opt'rutor and 1tv1ation lndustrits. hold ln£5 now '.I Qrlh an r~tln1Hled $1 blltlon. 111hlS1-lolly\\'ood years. l lu~heO) ~~'\Urlt·d ~l:irltt:. and produced rth11 ). As 1111 Ill Lil!Or. ht• l>t't \\'Otld i>pc~I 1u1d I'll th1!'<111l't' rt<·ort!s. llught':.; lii·t•d 111 the ptnthou~e ot \hr· llt•s('r! Inn for scvrru! \Vtcks 1\'ht'11 111· 'uddl·nl1 :-r nt down urdcrs to buv ltw t1111r l. 1:1·p••t'1t·dll' htl"l\USfl \hi' 111~11ar c· 11a•11! .1 ~~1·d 111111 In \lll'lllr< 111.~ 11t1i!1· \\> 111 :1kt• 100 111 low lui.:h·roll ln): f:lllllhl4·r~ 1·'p1 $1~• u11l li.•11, 1111)\ht·S tH'(]td1•r1I 1tw h(l1t•I in Apr·il 1~167_ Belore th~· y1•flr 11 •• ~ 111·rr. hi• u11·111·d n11·t•1• nthrr Strip 1·11.,1111• hotel:; ~t'l'Utla ,1f!1t•1nls 11•r!ron1e d ll11f!hrs' ii.· t!l'l\1cs. Th(' .)!air was rrytn~ 10 l111pro1 " its unngt'. and ll u~h'"~ 1111s 1)(1inlt•d !o ;i, :1 sign 111 a !l('ll' l(·g1t11nav~· i11 !\:-i.::1111 111._>: 1ndustr~·, The f1r,t oppo:-1111111 to ll ughrs' ,., p:1n~!on 111 J\\•1adn c·anH' frntn tht· ti.'\ Juslll'!" l)cp11r1 1n1·111 \1lur h <ihJC'<;lf'd t .. h i~ offer t.1 hu.v 1h1· S1arctust J!u11·I. l'la i1ning ii 11 .. ultl 1'(ll'r l!ugl11•.' 11 111 .. 11 opoll~li(' hold un rh1· s!np. JI u i-:: h ,. , d!'oppC'd h1-" 11111!1 \ti ll<'<JUlrt~ lhto Sti.l'dll,!, bul hougl1 t :i '111:il/1•r t·:i,111u t11•xt to 11 ll 1u:he' 11a1n1· oil h1-. Sl!'1p h1111 ·I, 11'.1 ' .1 1·1 ~1blt' ·'1)!11 •ii 111' )'r'u 11111i.: 1111 ••,t1111 •n! 111 ;\lt•vi1d11 \Villi 111111·!1 Ii·:-~ puhlu· fl\111•'!' the 1Jdll1\11a1r1· l't'!'lll'•' .t<'fj 111 n·d 111 llll11H'l'lii)J.• 11',1!'1 \ lhr'PUgiHl\I! t)ii• ~!uti • oJ 11 :it\th t"11~10\\ !he t..oodm1rk tfottl hi l.<1s \'rsus. pri marily becau~e Jl1111hell' u11uu•y \\'J1:. nt.'t<!ed to l 1n!~h itll ron• !>lru1·11un ln 1970. drllplt(' :.OO\f! 101..'t1l 11b- J1•1.·t11)11 Hut;h1·., pur1·ha~tid 1r1rold1 t:lub 111 Ht'll•+ Hu,.;ht•, 11.n1 ~1nplo~·t<t S,000 ptt'l1rt ~. llu• l.1 11;t·,I \\'11rl, f1l l(!' Ill Th1• :o\11.lf' !11; I ,l,ill<l~ p.1hl ~!<111ilJl ll\t: 11'\t'.' !h!t t Ul llH!llilt'(I !1\ !111•1 1· !!l.111 .1 fll'l'!'t'tlt ul !11!'1 ,J.11!· ' .i1111u.1I h11d,i.:1·1 !1 1, h1\[d1ngs 111 th11 'l\.llo• 11111• ll<'!'lh .111 ,·,li1 1l,J!t•d $JOO 1111l l1<11l ·r111,~ugl 111111 1t i1ll . ll t1i.;t1r:-r1·111,1111i>d 111 11~1tJl,v "'11111'.,ll'l'Cd 111 h1.~ IX'Utltnu ~t: 11•!r1·at ul~>v1· th1• ~trip llr d1·ul! only h.v !1·lt·pl1t1111· .11H t l1·1!1•r with !ht· l1tute1111nt.~ 11111• r:111 !11 , N1•v 11c!u h11l1llni.;~. 'l''lt' 1n1111 nu! lront. tl1t 1111111 11'ht) 1111• llHlJflt'•'•I 111!' ;u ·ciu1~1111111S u II d (>\'• i'a.,1tin11lly !11ld lht• .~!ult' 11hal llUJ:hr:t li:ul Ill 111111d Wl1S f!11hr l'I 1\ ,\l hhf'll, 1 .. r11Jt•1· Flt! ,1t:rnt 11110 11rrlvr1I wl!h ltuglu·s 111 !1\li S11d1 h·11ly, Ht1J:ht'.'i lrtt 1.11-. Veg11.o;-111 :\u1 1•111IH·r 11170-u!mo~t tnur .\'f'll r~ to the d11.1 "' 1\1., .1rr1vn l Top r•~f'\'Ull1't'ri ul thr ll11gli1·~ '1'1k1! \\1 arrlv1·d n wc1:k hll cr an1I :1111111u11i ·t·d lilt' flnng ol \1 11!1t:u , pr1,1\'hlU.'\· THEY WA ITED FOR THE MUL Tl TU DES TO JOIN THEM Mrs. Jan Pipperger, Daughter Bette Stood Shivering "lie reigned "' I 11 e state's 111t1st i1111•••••ft111f prit•ale ellize11." ll ugh'"' ll:id p11n ·l111 ~1·d :11\,1)(~1 111T"" ncur 1.;i ~ \'~·,i.:11.' 111 Ill!' 1·nl'ly 1 H~1!b . 11 par('rl cir ~;11•,1· l1n1,,1i .-ind ~1111(\ rli:1t lit'l'Ull\f' kno11·11 .11• liu ~Jl t• TH !his he uu1Y :-tdded 11\'0 ,,111all atr'llC1rt ~. ;, !'n11111ry r·lub ;ind a r<in<"h fonnerly o\Vll<'d by . Vt·l'a l\rupp. widow of tlu· (;1·nnnt1 111 dustr!illL'I ••fr11•i11e## /t•fldPr# at11f NfJlltt• ·"''''.. 0 , , I'"' .. I,, tnll<ed "' ll119l1e1 "' ,.,. 111 ,,.,.1,,pe,. .. , Anahei1n W 01nan's Vigil Pcopl!' not n·Lug1111.t d 11 ~ lluf,(tu·s reprrsrntat1vcs <1ultll y bci.:an huy1ni;t !ht! }'or four years. unttl his equnlly land 111 and <1rou11d l.ii s Vt'J.(US. llught~~ rnysterious drparture on Thank sgivln~ soon o\Yned nearly every piece 0( 1111• ly <·onsldnrM lhti crown prince or the l·:ve .91 1970. he reigned as the state's dcvrlope{l !:ind <1n the SI rip. th!' I'll• llug hr.~ tmplrC' . ----Jll<'lST impo rtant private cilill'I\ ll'rtni11111c11! hl·~1 rt 11f La~ Vf•i.:us. J\lu!1t•tt r1·~i ~led, cl11 lrl'llng hfl horl • Proves Lo11ely, Expensive SACRA,\1E:NT() 1L'.PI J ~As Jan Pip- penger of Anaheim and her 9·vear-olJ dau'.l"hler !itood shil'ering 011 !he 'stf'ps of the California cap]t(JI \Vcdn(·sd ay looking for "good Christians," sn1nebodv ~101~· her 1\·allet. · She told c:ipitol poliec. •·1 11·t1 s pr;iying for their soul s. and they stole my wal!{'t ., Originally. ~he had hoped "thou s:ind ~" 1rould joiu her 1n :r day of pra yer pro- testing moral dt'('<!Y and asking Cod 10 besto"' "divinr 1risdon1" 11n the Cal1forn1a Legis lature It didn·1 turn out that V.':1.1'. ,\Jr~ Pip- penger said eight 1woplr JOL11 L·d 111. and they arrived lour hours \atL· Al 11 a.n1 1vhcn the eve11L ofl1t1<i!lv hegan. f;o" Ronald Heagan sent an aidr to re11d a per.wnal message lo thC' assembled throng There was no one there but ~Irs. Pippenger and her daughter . Bette Ann , The governor·s aide left alter pro- rnising to return if .'.lnyonr ~howed up . 1!1· was never called baek . "You can '! get good Chrisl 1<:111~ lo g('t concemcd about their i-o un1r1· .\Ir~ P ippenger lamented · A single man v.·1th hi s dog later stood and 1va!ched curiouslv as she !old him "The Lord has give1; us this land . \\'~ ha ve to defend and \\'Ork it The Lord does not do the dishes.'; By noon. no one had joined her and she ,,·as asked v.·hat she 1~·ould do if no one did ll 11i;:hes, 66 . probabl y ~till ho ld~ that ll ui,:he.~ nl ~u hr!';unc-1111, ow ui·r 11r 'l,700 llf1·llr111· v1•rh11 I conlrnrt with llttghti th11l "!'\'c got to have at least fiv' people or position, although he rrportedl y ha.~ i11111cs a111I rni11l11~: (·luln1 s ~c:ilti·rrd !ht" tiH1I i·11nlpany, wholly o1vned liy the Lord \viii never save this land," she lived in lhe Bahan1ns for the la~! l·I llugh1·~. wu !l powerl~K/'i to hrtHk. ·1 ·' Tl l d ·d h d months. lhrough rural N1·1;11!;i J11r rnnrl' than he~ld sn11 eu " 1e ..or ~a1 e· spare /\. t'o11rl hnl tl e followed. The 1001 i:on1• (·omo h r J J 1 r· d 10 ood I The controversy over th" "Lll'JXirll·d J,y '''Y ,,111•1• 1,,,,.,,,,1 • rra 1 1e tou < 1n g peop c. ... 1' • ' ,. •' p;111.v produrcd 11 pro11.y beflrl1114 the J can't find 10 ·· autobiography of Hughes ha~ focused neii Tl 1r n1l111·s arid t'l;11rns 1nuy h11vf' b~·1·11 !1 lg1111llu'l' llowflrd R. llughell !hat gave • 1 a Lt·~n lion on his Nevada yea rs If f-1nal Y eight olher person s arrived to one of th(' !cw b11d 111vt·~t111en1 s rnnd~ hy r·on1p11uy u lcl11111 power lo act for I I During his years in I lolly1\'00d. hr I it· p her pray tor lost souls -and the I lughes ·r11ey f(•1na111 1dlt' and unworkf'd. I ui.:h(•ll in ull m11Ucr~. l~ondwrltl n& ex· f I visiteij Las Vegas often. 'fhc 24·hOur·;l · return o icr n1 issing "'allet. An invcs!ig;1t<1r hirt·d hy Hughe:; dtsf'rih· jll'r!11 w1•r1~ culled by bo th .11lde1. day pace of !he city app11rently agrl'l'd The eight had !raveled fron1 Orange with }lui;:hes . who freq uently appeared 111 c·d U11·r11 11 s "Ill!' l1igg1 .. ~\ nies~ I 1·v1·r ~lnhr•11'"' •·Xptrt lll\!d th~ slgn11ture wait Cuun t.v where she lives. They were four b d. 1 saw " f 11t~c·1J. ·nil' tool cornp11ny '11 expert .11ald It baggy i;:a ar 1ne trousers ant lenn1 ~ hour:; lat!' 11nd l\1rs. Pip penger said sh" Tl1l'rl.' was lr1lk 1l11r1ng l lu~h1·s' t1r~1 1v111'i ~1·n11111C'. h;id been cxnecting "about a hundred " shoe~. Lwn yl!ar,~ 111 Nrv;ul:, 11f ;1 mai;ter pl;u1 ·rht Jlld~1· d«-clderl ln l11vnr of lhe tool 1· 1t was in Tonopah, ;1 niounlain n11n1n~ · 1,had _croln1mitmllcnlls fro1h11 thousands of town with a rugged Wes!c·rn flair that l<ir his r-ntcrpri:;1·s. :1 guin! nc·w 1!(1l1•l, in. ~~n,.:~~ny;I r~~ll~l~ 1 :;~: .. pr~:te,~i.H~1 n~~~ JJCQP e. 1ey a t 1oug t ii \l'a.~ a Hughes iva s secretly inarricd lu art re ~~ du1-1!nal llcv1·lnpin1·nl 11n l u ~ la111 I :uid ;1 ., '·,1a"'•elou s 1·cte·'··· •.··he sai·d. · d 1 supc·rs11 r11~· r11r1111rt wh1f'h J!u ulu·.~ ot1'•rc•d 1'"11111t·rf'•I w1th R •W·111lllion d 111un~f' 1111Jl , '~ " ·' .Jean Peters in 1957. 1'hat 1narr1age 1'n 1:1 lu h11\!d in .~11u\hl'l'll N1·vad:1 Nnttii11~ ;ind the· Nf'vudu Suprcmf' C<iurt t..cldtrl She remained t·hcerfu! despite the !os1> 1n a divorce granlcd Miss Peters in Jun1· lliul. ll t•"!ii·~ mn y 'e ,uhpoe.i1'd /or , of he r 11•allet. \\'hic h was taken from tht 1971 at the courthouse in lla\Ylhornc. c:nmc-of any 01 thii~f' i<l~«1 ~ (Jf'f')OJilth~l. " "' huge open purse she lrft open on the The Howard ilughcs who arrived in A \Jnge of ch~cnthtirlllneut Clj)l">eltrcd 11' lluxht:t' empire ha~ run 1tnloo lhly In hi1' Capitol steps. !'levada in 1006 already had lived sevcrt1\ the relation between l·luGhcs nnd Ne vada . llbr.t:ni:c and, ncr.ordlng to the tool c:.nm· ''Tile Lord4:0l nie thi!I far." she ~aid roles. any one -Of whi ch would have Uu sine:1i; lenders and ~on1c i;tate officln!J pqny . l\lltO more profitably. The cqrnpany ''He 'll get mt back." :ialisfied most men for a llfeU ine. tol kcd or llughc s ns a11 !11!erlo1>f'r who ha~ nnnou nced 1evf r&I tJme1 t~•( ff h1 1 !::1•entualli·. it grew dark and her Sta rting with an estimated $IO·million I 1 I I 1 1 I '''' lnl•·,111•>11 oi •"I/Jn• ony of llufhe•' pro· 1 h · · h H T c r :-nip y )(1ug it 111 o I If' .~t:rlr wit inut .. .., ., friends fron1 Orange County left. ~lrs n eritancc in I c ughes 0111 o. 0 petr!1·~. 1houuh It J1 rer.;rtedly wlllln1 to J,,.ppeng"• and B 11 A ·1 d I Jlou~ton. Te x .. he bull! a far·r111"ing cor1 building anythi11~ new or ;iUdlnu lo 11, ., , . , e e nn wa1 e a one. .. 11,,rcu !u ullerc11f/ng or er#. "The Lord told me to come.'' !\1rs glomcrat' with Interests in Ille t•o111 · ct'onomlc bu:ic. Pippenger said . "You get O\'er feeling munications. entertainment. e!ectronlt·~ The ~l <ite approved l/ug/1~!1· purchase N 1'1/· 'J'/1e Hook l'unltouerh'/f rooiish.·· ---------------------------------------------- At 6 p.m., the official 'nd of the Day of Prayer. ~trs. Pippenger left. In addit ion to a wallet, $50 and five credit card&, she left behind about 8,000 leaflets still in their wrappings, and a large sign. It said "Join us in prayer for our na· tion •· WHATS NEW IN STEREO?? NEW SONY 6036 AM-FM STEREO SYSTEM Irving Deal Due:,J 01 r •• Paper Re11ort.~ Offer Te11clerecl L iff(:\!,() 1 \fl Tribune l1 t1-; r<'p(Jrt etl tba: ll le<irned a11 auorne) f11r <1u!hor i'J1lfr1rd Ir ving <1nd his wile prOP4'J-'ied immediate rc:urn ,,f S500.000 tu a group uf .\e11 Vurk publishers 1n exchange !or "·ithdrawing all prosecution against the Irv1ngs. In Ne\\' York . a spokesman for 1<.fcGraw·Hill Inc. categorically denied the report Wednesday. McGraw·HiJI says it paid $650,000 which was intended for bilhooaire JloWa rd Jfughes for rights to publish ·hi! autobiography. Although Irving says ht coUaboraled with Hughes in preparing the autobiography. !pOkesm'n for Hugbes say lhe book is a fraud. Th' new-ipaper said in today's editions that Maur ice ~es.sen. an attomev for the lrvings, made tht propoSaJ to Hailliburton fail es I I. gent>ral counsel for AfcGraw-Hill . failes' initial response to the olfer. the Tril:JuM said, reportedly ~·as !o natl~ reje.ct it In subS«"quen1 conversa!Jon "''Ith Yailes and Harold McGraw. pre.slde"t of P..fcGraw·Hill. Nessen uxbcated that the immediate return of $300,tU now "may be better than nothing obtained alter ;a Joni oourt fight:' the Tribune said . The newspaptr said this argument was underRood to ~vt been rett.i\·ed with more inteul The newspaper added. 00w,ver. that Nes5en. Failes and McGra•· .-tl"e not available for comment. lrvit1J and his wile face fraud war· rant. m ZUrich. Swllwtand, atid qu.r tioning by ftdcral and state grand juries in Ntw York in cunnection with $65(),000 pa.id by ~tl'Gra11·-Hi1J . Th«-company. in turn. planned Lo sell subsadi.ary righu t(J the book to Timt Inc , Book-of·the·M<>n!JI Club and o.u Boob No pl2n1 of prote01tkln ha\'' been an .. nuunoed in thiJ country. bow~·er TM ntWSpaper said 1t received its 111 formatioo a.bout tbt aJleged ofler from negot.Q;ton 1ovol ved Ul Uw caR Tbt p;:ptr w.ld N"f's&tn 1ndlCl1.td th"t • 1he 1nu11ey c·an be obtained from a Zurich b;u1J.: and trom a safe deposit vauJL on Ibiza . the Spa ntsh island wl1ere the Ir\. 1ng~ ha ve maintained a home for li ve : ears The newspaper did not e.tplaiu the discrepancy between tht amount off,red and the amount the publi11ber11 say th«""y originally paid Irving for transf'r to Hugb,s. Belgium's Giant Weds -He Stands 7 Ft. 8 l/2 Inches ROUCOURT. Belgium (!.:Pl 1 -Atla s, Ille tallest man of .,.,·estcrn Euro~, got ma rried here . Somc•·ba1 nervou.s. 4S-ye<1r-old Fer- nand Bacbelard -nicknamed "Atlu'' because he stands 7·fett41.l: inches -put the wedding ring on hi1 bride· s finger and nearly doubled O\'tr to kii s htr, It was hi s fir1t mtrriage and the se- cond for bri4t -Colln, • girl talt enough by many standards. SM sLand1 5· 711. A 1peciaJ armchair wa1 brought in 'for Atlas. •ho "''ighs 412 pounds. Workman picked it up at bis home became tbtte wa1 no other ehJir available which nt bi1 bulk, The chair was I-Our WM1 biuer than the one tor tht bridt. who w·eiJba: 111 pound•. AUu. "A'ho run' a pub ne1r the Btlgian· Frt1)('b border. iJ a popular fl&urt lo tht regjon, Ht hali appeared in lf!le\•i lkln pro. gram1 when a glant wa1 needed . The entir«' vil!~t! bad lilin ~I tbe aftemool'I for tbe •'eddina The brid.aJ tw ple •as preetdfd by tht kal band atid vilJq. -" IJred • lho<iw> ..iw ., thty entered the tehoot bWJ4ina lor the ttmnOn)'. . . . GAJtJtAR0'5 401 ' 'I lh!' I •-•j :0 ,I •,•· I ' '"" ... , l '""! ' • I• •I• " I !·I• ;,"d S H UR£. 11; j,--;' • '" .. ,, .. ,. • ,,, t1 , ·"I'« ,/,<1 ' , I', J • • I~. f•I •" ~•1:t i'I, I LA N CiR '• I ···•'" • • , I • "· • , , l . I I! , I ,1'.J j l• • ~l'/J'•J •I '"" 192.50 ~ 1'1"''•"•'11••" So"y'1 "•WeO f t(•lv•• hat • powtr •vl11,1t ef :14 W•ltl (~.M.I, •f l 41\,,,o) w ll" llllVfV•I fll lV,t l 111(" II f,onr '""'l n11kt Jnpvl•. SALE $277 92 QUADRAPHONIC DECODER - NEW '72 SONY SQD-1000 ONLY 2 LEFT! HURRY IN! SONY AM·FM STEREO TUNER SAVI $50.101 .. " ~. --- ... " -,.._ .... Tb. IT-tlOl 11 a fff ,.rl••Mw wltti ft1 ll•H tll_.t loockfrou""9"' 1M, cl1•1t 0114 •••1 ..v"4 •"'4 olllly 1.....n ho ... I,.,. With • '''''' .. ,.,_.., 'ff .. ff olMI .. 1,,11w1ty .. H ,. 1h11 l• ,,.,,,•-"II th•'"""' .,.;r, fttlU.M• REG , •RICE $219.50 NEW '72 SONY PS-5520 STEREO TURNTAIL! Tk ........ "4• It--~ t• .,.. ... •wt• ..... , •-Y~ 1r.,...,,_..,.......,.~..,,..,_,,.,... ..... ..-v. •111k ... ..,.. ,.....,..,.,, rr .. ...i-.1 tfMlltf....,•• t ..... ~ lrtfff ,,.,._ ,....._. h IM'f ..,. tM Ji2' plofa..dt ..wt. •st.rt.'" •r•J«t,• •r......r .-141 • ..,.,,.. •-'• W-nullt Mft•..., 111 • ,..,... W•lflllrl M• ... ~ '"' dfff ~. HOW '13114 OHLY I 4 tl41 L V PILOT POW R eleue Viet Cong Off er \ \ I New Peace Plan :: .. ~ps All the Bes t Laid Plans ... By THOi\1A S i\1URPHll"E RICKY TI CKY POLI TIX : Oran,11e County'• newest munici pa lity last night •ppe.arf!d to have slJpped and fall en on its collective kazoo for the firs t time in it~ heretofore careful campaign to protect mo ther nature. This all developed when lrvi ne 'iii new City Council almost appointed a planning commlMion. Almost, but not qu ite. You Vt'ill recall that the fl edgling munici pality warmed the hea rts of nature lnvers and environmenta lislll almost before the new City Counci l had the i.eat~ of <lffice warm . That happrned '1\-'htn Ct1uncilmen Abruptly adopted an anti-tree choppin« law. Then too. thry slapped a 90-day freeze on any new constniction within lhe infa nt city. THlS WAS parliciJlarly significan t btcauu wa iting in the wings with county blessing were develnperll who MJUght rezon ing! lo allow live new subd ivisions and S.l I~ new homes in Irvine. The freeie. it \lo'llS rea50ned by the new council, wou ld allow sorne breathing lime to appoint a planning commission. In turn, the 90 days would give new plan ner" time to "tudy whrre all these tracts would propose lo spread fo un- d11tiona and just what kind of impact all this would have on the new city. So the council went through lhe painful process of screening some 25 candidates and lasl night was the time fnr the coun- cil to appoint seven comm is11ioners from the list of hi&hly qualified folks. ACTION TO APPO JNT was approved, but lo, It came on a 3 to 2 vote with coun- cilmen Ray Qu igl ry and John Burton casting nays. Why? Well, nearest it can be determined, Surf.on and Ra y Quigley wanted ea ch of five coun cilmen to appoint one com- missioner apiece. rather than havin g the job done 110rl of en masse. Sb anyway, the pl anning commission ordiftance passed , right? Yes, but 11 s a reaular sort of law . it won't be effective for 39 days. And th11t chops pretty dreply into the 91)..da y study freeie. So nezt, the C"Ouncil tries a motion th11t would create i.tll fi rst planning com- mls!lon •11 an "urgency" m11tter . T'hlt make11 it effective immediately. No waitinf period. Pop, instant commission. WELL, THAT drew the same 3 to l vote, Ray Quigley and Burton sayi ng no de1l. No w lo pass an emergency law , you netd fo ur votes. And !he planning com- mi11d6n dldrft get four votes. After a brief recess. the other Qu i11ley, C.OUncllman Henry, comes up with a mo- 1.ion Utat "ould 11ppoint the chosen can- l'!idalt:1 u an "Interim Advisory Com· mittee on Zon ing and Planning." This aets approved. So there you have ii, fol k!. Irvine has some plaftnera but they a~n't really em- ~wered to do anything yet. MEANWHILE, If my arithemetic isn't too fuzzy, it seems th1 t the 90-day con- 1truction frttie is in its J6th da y. And ii will Uke another 39 days before that regul 1rly·adopted ord inance becomes la"·· thu~ turning the comm ittee pumpkin into a com m is~iC1n roach. TI'lat leave.'!! 15 or sn cla.1·~ on the t'On· ,_!ruction freete in wh ich the nrw rnm - mi~sinn i;:rti. In sludy plt1ns fnr S,l 15 homes, proposa ls for !he McDonnell- Dnulfa~ properly 11 nd Lord onl y kno11·ll "·hat el~e lhal may dribble through the front door at city ha ll. Whoe ver gttll to be Irvine's first plan- ning commission chairman better have th'" fastest 1avel in the West. Yt1u can only hope the whole com· mission -onct it Is a commission - dt1un't di!.appear from sight. Buried in 1 blluard of pap<nrork. PARIS (UPl l -The Viet Cong formally submitted a new peace plan to- da y, promising to release American prisoners of war the day all U.S. troops lea\'C Vietnam. 1'hc plan, submitted by Viet Cong delegate Nguyen Van Tien to the United States and the South Vietnamese al the J43rd session of the Paris talks, also agreed to formal peace discussions with the South Vie tnamese if President r\t;uycn Van Thieu resigns. There was no im mediate comment frorn U.S. or South Vietnamese nffici als. 1'1cn described the plan as a variation of the seven-point proposal submitted by the Viel Cong la st J uly L 'Man ll'ith Scythe' The new plan \V(IS in1mcdiately en- dorsed by the Nort h Vietnamese. Stand ing in a cold drizzle on the sidewalk of the Avenue Kleber negotiatin11; hall n1inutes before the start of the session, the silver-haired Viet Cong official sald there were two high points in the redrafted plan : Cana dian Prime Minister Pier re Trudeau clowns and trades quips with Quebec farmers in fli1ontrea1 after they presented him with a statue of himself entitled ''Le Faucbeur" 1Man with a Scythe:). Actress Charges Geor g e Peppard Witli Sex Attack BOSTON ( UPJ ) -\Varrants charging attempted rape and assault 11nd battery have been iss ued for actor George Pep- pard, who ls working on a movie being filmed in BoslJn. The warrants were issued 1n ~1unicipa l Court following a com plriint by Miss Joan McLaughlin, 24, who had a bit part in lhe movie. She claimed the a.qsault took place in Peppard's suite at a Boston hotel on the morning of Jan. 30 alter she had ac- cepted an invitation to go to his hotel. City police were caller! hy a hotel 11ecurity guard who heard the girl screa ming. After hearing of the alleged assault, police advised the gir l lo file A compla int in the court. Peppard has since left the city, police said . "The charge is cornpl elcly fa lse and without foundation," Peppard said in California. "A cou rt hearing will ma e . short work of this slander. .. Peppard's estranged wife , actress Elizabeth Ashley, sa1rl "anyone who knows Gcorr;::e would know how absolutel y ridiculous this charge is." Peppard"s press agent , Jay Bernstein , said "this kind of accusation is common and ini;uranct: comp&nies cal\ stars like Peppard target risks, since anyone can use their name for their nwn self publici· ty •. '" Deal Collapses, Kin g's Ca stl e Ca si110 Closed INCLINE VILLA GE. Nev. IUPJ) - King·11 Castle Hotel-Casino closed today because. a $l3 million deal to sell it fell through, acrording to operatnr Nathon Jacobson. The gamblinJi: in the casino section stopped Wedne~day. Jocob..i;on. who opened the resort in 1969 , i.aid he hoprs to rtnpen il in the summer "'hen t oun~ts bnn~ 1 busine~s boom In the Lake Tahoe arra in the sum· mer. In the meantin1r , son1r li~O rmplo\ cs will pick up their ch('cks F'riday but thrn be ou! of work. "A proceeding "'111 be !1le<l in r S. J)islrict court for rror~;i.ni1.a tinn of the compan y." Jactibson said. He did not say \lo•he1hrr he wou ld re- main with the reorganiU'<I C"nm pany. J1cobson said the closure bec1me necessa ry when proposed bU)'ers rould not •void prolongecl dela y in transferrlni; the mooey through Europe.an bani•. Mu sl{ie Ral{ed Over Coals The United States ntust set a new de~dl i ne for the complete w1thdr<1wal of its troops and Thieu must resign im- 1nrdialely. For Attacl{ 011 Nixon Pla11 '"This date also will be lh(' one rnarkinr;:: the release or all pr isoners of 11·ar in- cluding the U.S. pilots"' held in North \l iclnam. he s;.lid. By \\'ALTER R. MEARS AP l'tllllc•I Wtlllr Led by the \Vhite House, fi ve Republicans have joined in denouncing Sen. Edmund S. t-.luskie for a campaign speech dism issing President Nixon'!! Indochina peace terms a.~ proven failures. And Nixon's cam paign organization, the Committee for Re·Election of the President. said its only interpretation of Muskie "s ''change of heart is that he i~ appealing blatantly for votes from U1e left \lo'i ng of his party." I CAMPAIGN'721 Four Republica n senator~ and House c.:or Leader Gerald R. F'ord issued statements accusing the Democratic presidential candidate of trying to im- prove his political status at the expense of Nixon's efforts to end the \lo'ar. "This is the worsl kind nf gulter politics," said Sen . William E. Brock Ill of Tennessee. \\lh ite House press secretary Ron11ld L. Ziegler said Muskie's remark.'!! •·were nnt worthy of comment,'' then called it re~rettable and unfortuna te that some public figures chose lo reject the Nixon terms •·before Hanoi ha s." "Now is not the time for partisanship to be put above the cause of peact," said Ziegler. The Republican counterattack. drew more attention than the original speech, in which Muskie told 150 churchwomen \Vednesday that the Unit ed States shoul d set a date for total military withdra\\'a! from Indochina. with release of US. prisoners and safely of the troo ps the on· ly condition. ~le sa id :\'ixon "did not offer to rx- change our presence in Vietnam for !he freedom or our prisoners. Instead, he la id cto1\•n add1tinnal conditions. a genera l set- tlernent of al l outstanding issues, or a cease·fire in all nr Indochina." ~1 uskie called that an attempt "to v.·in 11! the conference tahle what wr ha\·e no! "·on and cannot win nn the balt!cf1eld Rrn('k said he lou nrl lt in rrrd1ble 1ha! r-.1u sk1r, v.·h11n1 he called ;in instrument of \\·ar policy durini:: th<' .In h n s; on Arlministr11t1on, "v.·ould have the ner\r 10 ~t:inrl b{'fr>re the American people and de· nounre the nnf' Preside nt \\'hn h<1s bt'l.'n able to get us out of the Vietnam quag mir e . , . "This is the W(lrst kind of gul1er politics," Brock said, "If it were tha t and nothing more. the damage would be alight. "But the greater and more-tragic effort of ~1r. Muskie's desperate effort is lo in- .~ure that !he war will go on and more v.·ill die because he wanted to be presi- dent i.o bad he was \\'i lling to undercut the President's efforts to v.·in a (ina! peace," the Tennessee senator said . Sen . fiobert J. Dole of Kansas. the llepublican nationa l chairman. said the speech indicated that Muskie '"lacks the wisdom , the maturity and the sense of responsibil ity needed to guide this nation during the 1970s ... " Sen . Peter Dominick (R·Coto.J. sa "1d it 1\•as incredible that Mu skie "for the most blatant partisan purposes. would try lo undermine" Nixon's program fnr peace in South Vietnam . ··\Ve 11l so de1nand that Thll'U must resign i1nmediate!y and the Saigon government ntust change its policy." he said. "If this becomes the case. the Provisionn l Rcvolutin narv (;overnmrnt ~ PRG l 11-'i\I di scuss v.•1\h this government the formation of a national cnnco rd gove rnment." Tien warned that only on th is conditi on 1vill the Viel Cong talk \1-'ilh Saigon. He firml v denied Thieu 's recent statement that ·there have been private talks \\'ith th e Commun ists. The ne\v plan was essentially the pro- gr<im ou tl ined in a Radio Hanni broad cast mon1tnrcd in Saigon \Vrdnesday. The PRG -the political arm of the Vie l Cong -said in the broadcast Presi- I silverwoods I ' ' Repeat of a Sell-out! Reg. 27.50 famousJaymar Double Knit Slacks with finished bottoms 19.90 Snow Hits Upper Michigan Storrn Pro111pts Gale W ar1iiugs 011 Great Lakes In answer to many requests, Stlverwoods has made special arrange- ments to repeat a recent Jaymar slack sell-out If you missed out last time, here's your chance to save substantially HA.TIO~ WfA1MllUIV1aro1tC.Ut .. ., ..... n I .. 4 -n 'Q.24 30.00 Sl ' ·~··-...£:.--... --~­~'1IOWln '-t .~~ on these nationally famous polyeater double knit slacks ••• with finished bottoms and exa~ lnsei ms. No waiting for al terations. No return trips. They're Mll·belltd, flared and ready to wear. Don't delay. If hlolory repea.11 ltaelf, they wo n't lat long. dent Nixon ·s e1ght-po1nt pe;;ice of.fer wa(: unacceptable and was ''glaring proof o(: Nlxon·s secret design to buy time for " completing his Vietnam iiation policy an'-; prrpetuating U.S. neocn!onial ism In South~~ Vietnam through the presence of !ht: pro-:: American Thieu government." Jur y Se ntences Sickle Sla y er To Life Term • . NF.VADA CITY IUPl l -A Superior :: Court jury has ordered life imprisonmenf~ for Clarence Otis Smith in the slayings of· .. : two persons last summer in a quiet} California c11mpground witn a gickte-like:: y:ea pon. --:· '"\ thought of notif ying them lo prepare the gas chamber but now it won 't be necessary." the bAlding , 44-year-old . Smith joked to newsmen moments after the jury reached it s decision Wednesday nieht. The penalty wa s imposed by the same seven woman , five man jury that con· viclcd Smith last week of being the '"la ughing . gro wling " man who slipped in• lo Dog Bar campground July 12 and hacked two campers lo death. Smith smiled when the jury announced the penalty shortly before 1 I p.m. in the plush courtroom of Judge Harol d Wolters, who announced he would fvrmally pass sentence Valentine's Day. \\!hen asked by a newsman whether th& "'as happy with the outcome. Smith repl"ied : ''Yes. I am happy \f there had to · be ·a verdict at all.'' Smith. an unemployed garbage col· Jec tor. wa s convicted of first degree murder in the. slayi ng of Donna Fltzhugh,- 28, Ontario, and second-degree murd er ill· the killing of John Simmons, 29, Weimar, Calif. He also wa s convicted of two lesser crimes in the midnight attack. .· • • ' . ' • l , ' • ,. •, ·' ·: ( .. • .• .• • • • l I l ' • • • ! • • • • l l • l ...... f'li.tl ......... """ .... ....... ........ • • . .. 11 :JS ...... u ..,, •-""· . ' ...... ,. ~~ •u"" •·• •-"' It ,. ...... , • ' ... •"""'-1.ii J:.0•.11\. IJ """ .. .., ..... s.tt •• -· 45 FASHION ISLAND •'NEWPORT CENTER • NEWPORT BEACH JI '---~------___J ~. Mool'I ·-t ...... • ' i 1 t 1 ' ( . . • -... -- Orange f;oast Today's Fhud N.Y. Stoeks VOL 65, NO. 29, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBR UA·RY 3, 1972 N TEN CENTS County By CANDACE PEARSON Of ttte o•llV 1'1111 Stall Orange County never requested that State Sen. Peter Behr (R·Tiburon) in- clude Upper Newport Bay in his proposed ''wild rivers'' bill as Behr claimed earlier this week, a spokesman for Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers said today. And the Board of Supervisors cannot endorse or oppose the bill, wh ich is aimed at protecting scenic values and wildlife . "until full study by our legislative com· Sa ys n1ittee," Tom Fuentes, Caspers' ad- ministrative assistant, said. Irvine Company offi cials said only they're looking at the bl!/. Behr's proposal would permanently outlaw dam construction, reservoirs and dredging and filling by pr i v ate developments in included areas. His addition of the Newport Beach estuary Tue.9day accompanied two other additions: the North Fork of the American River in Northern California Rivers and part of the American River it.self. The Republican said he added the three waterways to the protective bUI at the specific request of officials represe .. tina: the three areas. "Senator Behr called us to request our input into the bill and to express his in-- terest in Including the Upper B11y,'' Fuentes explained, empha1il!ng lt was not a county-initiated action. He called Behr's b!U just one possible solution Caspers is investigating "to \Crane Seel\.s Off ice \.) Ex-realty Man Just Beats Deadline By L. PETER KRIEG 01 lhe Dilly f'llOI St1rf A retired real estate investor r r om Shorecliffs shook up Newport Beach's po- litical waters today as he filed to run for the City Council from Corona del Mar's seventh district minutes before the noon deadline. Jame!! A. Crane, 47, walked into the city clerk's office at 9:30 a.m. and left half an hour later to get his required five signatures on a nomination form. He was back at 11 :25 a.m. He is one of seven candidates ror the U.S. Willing To Consid er New Proposal ' WASHINGTON (UPIJ -The United states is willing lt comider any serlowi: North Vietnamese proposal concerning release of prisooen: of war, a high-rank- ing State Department official testified to- day. William H. SuJllvan, depu ty assistant secretary of state for East Asian and Pacific affairs. said that whi le President ijixon's Jan. 25 peace proposal "offers a fair, reasonable basis for resolving the Vietnam conflict, we remain willing to consider any serious proposal concerning PO\\'s." Sullivan spoke only a !lhort time aft er the Viet Cong's new peace plan in Paris and apparently did not take note of it. <See earlier story. page 4). Meanwhile, Ellsworth Bunker. U.S. Ambassador to South Vietnam, conferred at the White House with President Nixon. During his Capitol HUI visit. Sullivan fa ces questioning on an all egation that the United States allowed Saigon to possibly block a neutra1 inspection of POW camps in North Vietnam. Sullivan told the House Foreign Affairs 1ubcommittee on National Security Policy and Scientific Developments that Nixon's public offer included an offer to implement prisoner releases in parallel with troop withdrawals. "To date there is JitUe evidence that the other side is willing to negotiate In terms which seriously and realistically reflect the actual situation in Indociina, ·• Sullivan said. "They are still attempting to achieve their maximum objectives," be said. "We nevertheless hope that we may induce Hanoi to forsake the battlefield in favor of the conference table and thereby achieve the release of our prisoners," Sullivan said. Sullivan said that "over ll500 U.S. military personnel are listed as missing Cll" captured in Southeast Asia, aod over 40 U.S. civilians are in the same stabl!I. 1''e ather It wi! be a bit cooler on Friday, with increasing high clouds •c· cordjng to the w.ealher strYict. OVtmigbt lows 30 to 40 looiibt wllh highs ol 58 to " Friday. INSIDE TODAY Ho!DO!'d Hugh<• muck 11\to Lat V tga.1 in J 966 and began hi& lung ttlf111 a1 the "mvsteru mon'' of the <Ustrt. Tht third article in thi.t series U on Page l todn!/. L M. llnC 1 ._.... . ,......,.. ,, .. CMl:C• • ,. ...,_. . --. ,...,... ,._ ' ... rW --" ,..... Ja.Jt ..... ._. ,. ....... ft -..-. n -. ,,,..... ..... . ...:t.11.. """ ..... Or-,..., ,. smia ,....., n _.. .... St.di ~· n.n ,.....,.. " -.. Wt.._ 4 ........... """ 1,.,. --.. three district seats up for election April 11. Crane will be opposing P. D. "Dee" Cook, a fo rmer councilman, and Jonas "John" Store for the seat to be vacated by retiring Councilman Lindsley Parsons. Cook, 68, resides at 2291/.: Orchid Ave· nue. Store, 44, Jives al 441 Isabe!Ja Tcr· race. There is only a real race in one of the two other seats up for election April II. Incumbent Councilman Donald Mein· nis is running unopposed in West Nev.'- port's second district. J\1clnnis, 51. lives Harbor Ne ,ws On Pa ge 21 Tbe saga of an aromatic skunk veraua bureaucricy, an an1lysis of the undl!!Mnrollment school pro- blem in the Harbor Arl!!a and an ac- count or how a Corona del Mar church !Oloi!t made it on Broadway are featured storil!!ll inside today's DAILY PILOT. For a full pafe Of these and other news reports o the Newport Beach- Costa Mesa area, turn to Page 21 today. i\'l an Falls l o Death BIG PINE (UP11 -An autopsy was scheduled today on the body of a Los Angeles man who fell 1,000 feet to hi s death in the mountains west of this Inyo County town. Sheriff's deputies said the victim . J ay D. Hinds, 20. had been hiking with friends Tuesday in the Temple Crag area of the High Sierra when he fell down a snow chute. at 4105 Seashore Drive. f\.1ayor Ed Hirth is facing two chillen· gers as he seeks a second term from the fifth district. fiirth, 61 , of 319 Avenlda Cerritos, will face Paul B. Ryckoff, 53, 1200 South Bayfront, Balboa lsland, and lf arvey D. Pease. 61, of 304 Collins Ave· nue. Bi'llhoa Island. Crane. who has no political experience, said he's thought about running for sev· era\ yea rs but conceded he made his de· ci sion to ma ke the plunge only Wednesday nie.ht . "[ was talking to the twins,'' Crane snid. referring to two of his four chil· drrn. "and I su~~csted it." "Thry said. ·oad, you talked about it four years ago' and I told them, 'You 're rif!hl, so lel 's do it,'" he said. Crane appeared calm and collected a~ he obtained his papers from City Clerk Laura 1...a.P.ios. casually talking about his family end his background as Mrs. La.· gios reminded him he.~ only two hq_IF,I to J(et bllC'k with the idPatures. ~ t •·oh, J've got plenty of time,'' Crane said, "a lot of my nelflhbors are home ... He even apofoJ:?ized for interrupting a blrthdav celebration for 1'-irs. Laglos at a nearby coffee shop. An 11:"1sistant, knowinllt' time was short, harf called her to sa.v CMt ne Was in the office, but it was over hi! protests. "Don't spoil her party.'' he s11id. "I'd ralher not pet on thf' ballot tban do that." r,rnne calls himsel f a conSPrvatlve Re- publican who dfW>sn't act "without think- in.e thinli!!S over." ~fe !!ti.id he madf' his deci:oiion to run "becau:ie I've got faith in this city. It's been good to me. monetarily, and I want to eive something back." Crane said he doesn't think Newport Reach need!'> a freeway throu~h the mid· dle of it llnd said it does need good plan· nif'I" to nrt>servP the cha rl'!cter. "Thr Irvine Comoany offered the state srvrr:oil routes for that freeway." he said. "hut thev chose to put it through our es· lablished areas." Irving's Companion Tells Doubts on Hugh es Contact From Wire Services NE;W YORK -A blonde Danish singer who was in Mexico with author Clif£ord Irving last year says she sees no way he could have met with Howard Hughes as he claimed. The name or s".nger Nina van Pallandt, 39, was brought into the case of the purported Hughe!! autobiography when Irving claimed she was with him for two of JOO interview taping ses!lions he said he held with the billionaire. Irving cla im· ed she was with him when he met Hughu ln Mexico last February and In Los Angeles in June. A Lm: Angele!! Times correspondent reported today from New York In a teJephone Interview with the singer, who Ja. in the Bahamas, that she said at no time did she see. any man who could ha'Ye pa1Sed !or Hogbe1 during !he Mmcan trip Tut Feb. I.Ht. She was apart from Irving "one to one and half houri al the most," the Times quoted her .. ..,.,._ Milt van PaDandt 111d she spent nve hours Wednesday talking to a U.S. polllal inspector who wu in tht Bahamas In connection wllh the llughe1 book ln- veslicatlon, according to the Timei. She 1aid ahe and her manager·producer John Marshall, who allO IJ ln the &Mrnas. would return to New York voluntarily to appear before a federal grand . jury. Federal and New York county grand Juries are inve 1 tlg1 tlng tbe au!Dbtogr>Jlhy case. The U.S. Atlorllf'J'1 Office uid lrvinl .... _ LINKED WITH IRVING? S1n9tl' Nina Van P1llandt would not appear ht!°" Ille lodor1l grand Jury today u had been npoMI earlier. . The postponement ... aouaht llld ob- Lilned by lrvilJi'• llwftr, &aid llAi Alty. Whitney North Seymour Jr. Ha pff. no <See FlllEND, Pap II· • Bill Aid Not Sought wort in every direction to assure preservation or the bay." Caspers did, at Behr's request, Fuentes added, direct county counsel to provide the !lenator with necessary legal descrlp- Uoru1 of the area. The fututt development of the Upper Bay is currently the 1ubject of a cooperative Newport Beach-Oange Coun· ty study, a U.S. Department of Inlerlor .study and or much. local debate. Superviso rs last year voiced dlsa p- proval with the long-propo!!ed exchange of tidelands and uplands betwc'n tl1e county aod the lrvlne Company . Tbe Irvine Company OWT\!I uplands sur· rounding the Back Bay except for p11t rnt lands at the far end of the bay, whic h 1-1rr undtr both public and private ownership claims. Irvine Company officials were cautiously studying Behr's proposal to- day . "We don 't know enough about il to say niurh of nn )•thinj.l ," Gi lbert \Y. F'cr.iuson, \ l<'l'·1Jr1•s1dc11! ol l' u 1· [l u r a t e <..'Qrn .. tlllUl lt':,JIUUlS, atirnlttcd. ••\\'r ar" looking int o 1l JU~t ns I 511\l" ptisr lur nl puhlic agenc11•s url·. "\\'c tlnn'l know wh11l 1n1pa<'I the hill \VOU!d ha\·e 1in the county's 1u°ld the 1_·1ty's pians fur tho Upper Huy.'' he added. "Th11t 1.~ a public \v11tcr1vuy there, Qf ('OUfSI' " N1•wp11rl ll<'aCh ti.1n,vor r:d l'l lrth CX· !Str UPPER UA Y, PMll' %) WHlll~YBl~~T•S lllA"•Sllll.11! 'TANKl)flQP' ~\~RT BEACH IAR~Y TODAY ""·'•.r ;io •'f~t\llide l 9'fa ·1r i~llllllll, lr1Wllftfif"\N1' th Offlctr Gery t it Htige Helioop'tl!r Triggers Furor In Newport Ceilill&• and walls trembled. Setid 1coured virtually every vehicle in a three-block radius. A huge cloud of dirt. and duet aoared heavenward, takln& all IOrU of debris with It. Caridy wr1ppers and scraPI or cement bags from a construction site that was Ground 7.ero floated down out of the 1ky for JO minute11 afterward. Criminal charges are being considered today in the inve~Ugalion following a Newport Beach episode that .sounded to all within ear!lhot like another Krakatoa Volcano and the Crack of Doom roll~ in- to one. That sho uld be about 10,000 aoul8, gi ve or take a few. The whole 8how 1tarted Innocently enough with a plan to replace an old water tank atop the eight.story Vilta ~I Lido apartment tower, 611 Lido Park Drive. The job w11 to he don< by Brtlet Helicopters, Santa Monica. The Brllel crew did indeed do a job. The only problem ii, It lpPllrl, thlt Ibey didn't notUy city olficllla and - a mandatory helicopt..-Llndlnf pennlt whlcll nqulta City Council •Pr>fO"•L The big carao cbopper IWooped Ill ov.,. the ad jacent Newport Beach City Hall and Police Department complts about a:~ a.m., virtually evacuatlng the com· btned .Wl. Secretaries, d<partment he•dJ, police officen and detectives rulbed, out leav- ing trails of spilled coffee. "My Lmd ..• tt ltn't • oun 11 it?," gaped one pollce de p artment clerl. Se tt i'nc down at• Y•c•nt coo-- llructlon 111< lot, the bif helicopt.r'• rotorwlllli ... t srallll or sand flyla( In all di1'Ctlons. Tbe roarln( --...,,. .... IO!ll -...... rl<:oc¥lnl oll the lj)lrt-...m tow• and llioact>t lllOadt popplJ!C out of -far'blocb•swnd. 'l;'Ollte ..... C.11 .. i,. u. Jlldl. HamUlon .......... pOtlot ... Md .....cbeclOO!lofqie~lol wllb nd ll8'1!i'lllilbiiic lo l..,.CfCM<. No .... could -beard the llrCll 11 he -tt. . . . 81 uu. trmt, die tank r~ w11 almolt complete .,.S the pllol - tupporl. cablet jlolld>ed -• hut!' ntrnt !er S..U Monica, luvlnfl l70Wld rnwmm lo "'8 the poll«. OfflCft' Guy Loe l"""""ted employ< Looi< Nava and Sfll. Wayna COMeDy .. Id today !hit the city It lnYmigllillg lo de1ennint what -1£ 1117 -•lollllonf oc. CUrTed. Omually. -.....S.'diere ,,. • -I( the ,...,.:. .. ' • ' Possible Harbor · Court Sites Trimmed to Two ' . . fer of 23,ru> square feet or more. t,. Airport Builnw Cetlter, owood by the Irvine Company at t#G llaeArlbur Boulevard, Ju$I l()llth ol the lion lllo1lo Freew1y, aod the Elpac lac. bu~ It 191$1 Von Karman Ave., In !lie ame lrtL The Litt..-two hive been tllmlnai.6 boc11110 ol -.. remod<llnc .., quired, and lhe Alltopowtr l1ell1ty * ded, accordll?I lo 6tanlty Kt•-· countt real property .ervlca dlredor . "'llt have not ncdved form.ti Ollttt !rom JlldJo1111<ll Ooug!u or ColU.. • J"I.'' Kt•u.e .uJd. •1Jut we upod i. &a .. \hem by Frk!ly . ' "Wt wUI bum Ille mJdnJl)lt on over Iha weekend, dl&est1otl the cosil and rtpoit lo lndJvldlW tupervlaor• Monday," be ldded. The board lw tcbeduled more -loo on the problem !or Wednttdly It 10 1.m. Loll Wetk, I Colllot Hp<tltTll&Uve uld bla firm woul4 .... the -·"1 IJ*" !or 1'mP<nf7 C01a1a for II c<1M a squue loot !or lhr,. y..,. or 4U ""'111 1 lSoo COOBTI, hit ti • • • Muskie Talk On Viet Pla11 ·Attackecl WASHINGTON (AP1 -Secretary or Slate William P. R.oger:i: today 11ccused Sen. Edmund S. ~luskie of f\1:iine. can· C:idale for the Dc-mo<:ratic presidential nominatk>n. of harming the U S. national jntert:st by rejecting the new Nixon Vu~t­ riam settlement plan before enemy t n· voys have. "I tlunk this [larlicular speech ! by Mu skie ), coming al lhis time , was most _inappropriate and harmful to the nalional interest," Rogers told new s men . ''I think every man who runs for office -I'm spe.akmg particularly of preside.n- tial candidates -should ask himself whether it serves the national interest" ~fore laldng a pu blic stand on the Viet- Nffi issue . Rogers said. • "Whal has happened. we have 1 re- ~ection here in this country" of the Nixon .proposals by a prominent politica l rigure :•before the enemy has rejected our pro- posals," he said. The Nixon administration has been mounting a co un terattack a g a i n s t Musk.ie 's speech Wednesday saying the United States should set a date for total tn ilitary withdr11wal from Indochina. with release of U.S. prisoners and safety of U.S. troops the only condition. The Maine sena tor said Nixon's eight· j,otnt plan put forwa rd publicly at the Paris talb: a week ago was an attempt to win at the conference table what cannot -be wo11.on the Indochina battlefield. Rogers said that "I was dismayed" by Muskiels sland because, he said,' the pro- spects for success at the e<>nference table ,.re lil'lked to whether the North Vlet- Jl•mese and the enemy negotiators th ink Jhe American people support Nixon's pro-- posai or are divided about it. He said that Hanoi and the Viel Cong would not be induced to negotiate serious· Jy if they ligure the American public is •pllt on the U.S. offer. · "We hope they will not be misled," Rogers said. According to the secretary of state, Nixon 's offer has wide support among American citizenry and Is also regarded .as "lair" widely throughout the w<Jrld. Jle said some Communi!t governments. -Which be did not identify, regarded it as fair. From Puge 1 FRIEND •.. explanation other than to say he was ''talking only for today." ·, Also winning a postponement was John Meier, a former scientific consultant to Hughes. Seymour also would give no ex- planation for Meier's postponement. Neither Irving nor 1'-1eler nor their 1awytr9 wai reached immedialf.ly for comment. lrvlnC had been asked to appear Mon- day before ~both the federal and a county grand Juries, but won postponements on grounds th at be needed more time to con-- ault with a new lawyer. Meanwhile. a special agent or the U.S. Postal Servioe, John Tarpey, was in New York to take over the postal serv ice 's in- vestig•tion fJf possible mail fraud. He conllrmed that the Postal Service sent an tnve1Ugator to Switzerland but did not say what the investigator accompUshed there. ' On the Spani sh Island of Ibiz11 where Irving and his wife have their ho me. a man describing himself as a long-time friend of the author said he had been ask· ed by postal Inspectors if he is willi ng to come to the United States. The friend. Gerald Albertini. an American, said he kept the Hughes manuscript in his home for about 10 days f!ld also said he had no plans to come fi ere "unless I am instructed lo do so ." OUN .. COAST DAILY PILOT .,.,,.... °""'1 f'YIUltllHO ~ l•Mtf N. W-' ---J9<.k •• e.;.:e.., \'ti;t PMIOW _, 09...i ~ n-•• K....U ...... 1\e111•• A.. MllT'JMli• MMIPl9 .,. L '•'•' k ri., ...,., "-* Clly t:llW ..... ,.. .... Oflk9 )))J l'i-,.,t •·11l t••t4 IN ... ~ ,.o. ha 11 71, 126U --~--i -~ .... --....,._._.1m.._,,.,_ IWI ,._We 1JVJ..-e 1 11•• .. Cll• tr ..... &A ~ ... 1 I "'' i m4J U2-4U1 I •.-·-.c .... ., ................... Ml.U71 . , NotJ1i11' to Hoot Abo11.t This snowy owl is recove ring at the Muse urn of Na· tural History in Cleveland after surgery \Vednes· day to remove part of its two-foot long le ft wing. The .owl co!lidcd with a private plane 'vhich \vas la nding at do\Vnt0\\1n Burke Lakefront Airport. It was folind dazed in a grassy area along the runway. Finch Decides Against Race For House Seat PASADENA (AP l -Presidential aide Robert H. Finch said today he has decid· ed against running fo r Congress. He said he wa nts to keep his options open for a possible run for governor or California or the U.S. Senate in 1974. The state's forme r lieutenant governor, a Republican, said he had been en· couraged by many to run for the seat of veteran Republican Rep. H. Allen Smith, but felt it would be unfair to run (or the seat just for one term. "I think the district is entitled to have a ccnnmihnent for more than one term and I am not prepare<! to make that com· mitm ent, '' said Finch, 46. Finch said Smith now is reconsidering tht decision to retlrt from the 2tlth District seat in the Pas.adena.(Jlendale area he has held ror 16 years. Finch said he soon will decide wheth er to resign his Cabinet-leve l White House job and to campaign as a private citi zen for Nixon's re-election. In any event, Finch sald he would return to California following the November election. Smith, tanking Republican on the key House'Rules Committee, said last month he wouldn't seek re-election th is year, touching off the announcement of several candidates for his House seat. From Page 1 UPPER BAY • • • pressed so me of the same CQncern and indicated he Celt Behr was butting in where he wasn"t needed . The mayor is cha irman ()f the city· county commi ttee studying maximum uses or th e bay for possible wildlife and recreation purposes. He is al so .a member of anot.her city· county committee studying tffects on thr bay from the more than 50,000 acres of county land which drain into ii. Safety of Old Shrine Sought by Cambodians PHNOM PENH (UPI) - Cambod ian Information Minister Long Borel said to- day th~ fa med 9th Century temples nf Angkor Wat would be destroyed by the North Vietnamese or allo wed to fall into disrepair if action is not taken soon. Ulng Borel said the North Vietnamese, who have controlled the area 150 miles northwes t of Phnom Penh since June, 1970, have forced a slop to conservation work. kidnaped hundred s of conservation workers and confiscated the repai r material. Long Borel asked the United Nations to decla re the area a neutral zone to permit conservation work to conlinue and save them from destruction. The CamOOdian high <;ommand said to- day that two government soldiers were killed and five wounded Wednesday by a North Vietnamese mortar barrage wi lhin lhree miles of the temples. The temples are a series of stone shrine& erected by the Khmers. The temples were covered by jungle foliag e .and not rediscovered until the 19th cen· tury. • Until the Indochin a war sp read· to (;am. bodi a in 1970, Angkor Wat and 'the ntarby ruins of Anikor Thom we!"!: the hatlon's greatest tourist attractions. Am ong the thousands of visitors to the lcn1ples was ~1rs. J ohn F. Kennedy, wife of the late U.S. president, who visited the 11h rines in 1967. Lon~ Boret said intelligence reports in- dicated North Vietnamese troops may be planning a fresh military operation in the area soon . Bernard Grolier, a FN!nch national in charge of 1.100 conser\'ation workers at the site . said last week the Communists halted his v.'ork Jan. 20 and accused b1n1 Police Prolling At tempted Rape Of Waitress and his men or working ror the U.S. Cen- tral Inlelligence Agency. Grolier , who earlier y,·as allowed passage in to the area by the Com· munist;, said he was not forbidden from reenterfng the area. One conservation expert said the temples could survive without major work for two years but the old stone would be permanenlly damaged if not treated regularly. Carnbodian forces have never tried to recapture the area because of fe11r of damaging the te mples and Long Boret said the government would stick to its policy of avoiding military action which could harm th e tem ples. f'rona Page 1 COU RTS ... square foot fo r five years. Smisek said these fig ures were not fin~] as they did not include the cost, v.·h1ch Collins must bear. of building jury boxes . providing prope r lightin g and con· structiRg prisooer holding cells. The Collins man said his firm could have the building ready for use in 75 days afte r the sta rt of remodeling. Harbor Dislrict J udge Calvin Schmidt said the courts could be moved "over a weekend."' Judge Dungan urged quick action pen- ding the construction of permanent facil ities on property the county plans to buy from Collins dn Jamboree Boulevard , south of Campus Dri ve. Completion of the pcrn1anent court building is expected in thrC'e to f1\'e yea rs. The CoHins site v.·as approved hy coun· ly supervisors J<tn . 25. Estimated cost i! $.128,000 for 1\.2 acres. The. cost include! any severanee a111ard made to the Irvine Conlpany wh1cl1 ov.·ns the property and leases it to (;()llins on a 99-year agree· ment. Smisek estima tes that the new court-'! buildi ng could be completed in 20 months from the time the title to the property is assu red . Fate Awqlted Talks Continue ' . On Dock Strike By MICHA EL HUDSON S!\N F RANC ISCO (UPI\ -President Nixon has called on <;ongress to end !he 116-day-old West Coast dock strike . .,.,.h1('h he says has .. thrust a spike lnto our pro- gress toward economic rtco11ery." Jn San FrancisC'O, mean w hi 1 e , s1>okf'~n1en for the Longshorenlen's Un ion and ~h1powners had no word of progress lnwnrd ending the walkout. whith ad· 111in1strat1on officials conte nd has alreadv cost more than $1 billion in trade deficils FAA to Listen To Airport Ideas For Chino Hills Chino Hills Airport . the brainehild of Santa Ana developer Reg Wood, gets its first official hearing tonight at Valencia High School in Place nt ia . The 7:30 p.m. Federal Aviation Administration session has been schedul· cd "to gather all fa cts relevant to the ef· feels of . the proposed airport upon the safe and cffic.·1ent u::;e of navigable airspace." Don M. Davis. chief of the airspace and proced ures bra nch of the air traffic division of FA A, will act as chairman. Proposed is a 2.500-acre Chino l1ills eomp!ex in the rolling canyon and hill country northy,·est o[ Prado Dam, north of Yorba Linda, and east of Brea. The massive project, estimated ten· tatively at $200,000,000, has been in the works for over two years but tonight's hea ring wi ll be the first official action by an air agency . Orange Coun ty supervisors brushed it aside in 1970 upon recommendation of Aviation Director Robert Bresnahan , who said the FAA in a preliminarY repo rt had indicated that traffic from the proposed facH1!y "'ould interfere with that from Ontario International. Chino 1'.tun1c1pal and Fullerton l\1untcipal airports. The proposed site IS 10 mHes back in the hills and the nearest traffic artery is Telegraph Canyon Hoad, v.·hich runs from Brea into San Berna rdino County. \Vood·s plan includes an airport-10- airport freeway connecting Los Angele! Internationa l \\'ilh the proposed facility . J~is pla n calls for leveling off ridges and filling canyons to prepa re the site for the jel·age airport and industrial center. Although FAA offi cial Davis stated that the hearing was to det ermine safe use of airspace 1t is ant icipated that many residents fro m Yorba Linda and Brea v.·ill be on hand and object to the possi ble noise facto r. LA Medical Aide Not a Doctor, Authorities Say LOS ANGELES (AP l -A man who "'orked as a deputy !As Angeles Co unty n1edlcal examiner for 31.lz years has neither a medical degree nor a physi- cian's license. authorities say. Donald Angus St uart. 50, was scheduled fnr arrai!Jllmcnl today on one count of pf'rJury and l\\'O misderneanor violations of the state Bu .,incss ;tnd Professions Code. He \•:as arrested Wednesday when he reported for \\'Ork . An Illinois physirian\: license St uar! listed when he applied for the ]ob on the county c·oroner"s staff wa s acttra!ly issued to a doctor in 1914, offici als said. 1'hc y said although Stuart claimed to have. both Jaw and n\edical degrees from the Universi ty of London earned between 1939 and 1946. 1:1nd agricultural losses. Although. spoke5m'n cleclined !(I ('Om· n1ent on negouations, talks conl1nuecl nfr· and-on \l.1ednesda~ and did not break up until after I a 111. today. 1"hey were lo resun'e at 10 a 111. ~ul while the \\'e:sl Coast dvck situation \~as stalemated, the threat of an E:isl l'uast doek 11:1lkuu t later t111s 111n11th ":1.~ cased '.l"hl'll lhe I n t e r n 11 t I o n a l LtJn~shorl'nH:ri's Assoi.:1alH)ll ( 1 l. A 1 ;1grecd 1n New York to exteno tis C"nn· lraet "ith At lanlll' and G1ilf Coast st11µ• pers for 30 days bl:'yond the Valenltne ·! Day Taft ·llartley strike deadl ine. In his blunt!y -wordl'd written inessage lo Congress \Vednesday. Nixon urged pass age of both his emergl'nC"y dock strike bill and his l\l•o-year-old proposal to limit strikes in the longshore. trucking, rail, airline and shippi ng industries. The Nixon emergency measu re. would o rd e r s t r i k i n g I n t e r national l.ongshorcn1en's 1111d Warehousemen·~ Union ( ILWU) rnen1bers bark to w or le irnmedhitcly 111hilc a three-man arbilta· lion board picked hy the secretary of labor decided on a fi11al settlement of the dispute within 40 days. 'rhe board-ordered settlement would remain in elfel'I for 18 months. "I.cl us resolve that this stoppage nn the \Vest Coast .,.,·1Jl be the last or its kind ." Nixon Silid. "The doc k strike thrust l':l spike into our progress toward econornic rec()very, threa tened our balance of payn1ents and tJndern1ined the confiden ce of foreign buyers who need to rely upon dependable deliveries," he said. 'fhe 11ouse \\'as expected to act next week on the legislation \v hile Senate ac· tion was more of a question. "Nol a!I the senators or congressmen a~ree that there is an emergency," Sen. Richard S. Schweiker (R·Pa. l, a member of !he Senate Labor an d Public Welfare Cornmi ttee, said \Vednesda y. It is hi~ con1mittee which would hold purview over such legislation. Co mn1 ittee Chairman Harrison A. Williams (D-N.J.). said the strike was fl "very urgent matter," but Congress should give !he parties fu rther op- portun ity for ('Ollective bargaining. Sen. Alan Cranston f D·Calif. ). said lie had ta lked to both si des hy telep hone and \\'as ''increasing ly hopeful" of a non- coerced settlement. Planners Meet 011 Car Agency, Co11dominium Newport Beach p I a n n i n g com- m1s_sioners w1!1 conduct public hea ring~ ton1ght at 7:30 o'clock in City Hall on A request to perrnit a car dealership on Emkay Development Company properl y and on a request (or a three·story e<>n- domin iu m near the Lido Isle Bridge. The application by Ho"·ard Chevrolet, Inc., to establish an auto sales an rf service center near Dove and Quail Streets is the first request to come from Emkay's "Newport Place" project. 'fhree other auto centers and a covertd auto storage building are also planned in this area. Shelter Indust ries. Inc .. Newpor t Beach. is requesting the permit for the four-uni t condominium and hve boat ~lips at 3300 Via Lido \lo'est of the hridge . Although ii is in a commercial 1.nne. lt is surrounded by resident ia l uses. Cnmm1ssioners will also: -Co11duct a public hearing on a request by lhe I rvlnc Company lo amend parkJn2 req uirements in secllons of the Harbor \1iew Hill s Planned Com munity. -Conduct a public hearing on a request by Ed Pisoni of Newport Beach to perro1t an accessory building at 2209 Coif( Dr. 15.73 feel in height where only 15 feet is allowed. ''The city of Newpor t Beach i;o; responsible for the planning," Hirlh said today. "1 don't see why somebody else should get involved -someo ne who really isn't familiar wit h what it is all about -where so much is already being done." The mayor added he would welcome technical or fina ncial assistance. "But," he said. "if they'd just leave us alone a little while, we 'll work out the best solution.'' Newport Beach police investigating the attempted rape of a 24-year-old cafe host- ess in her apartment about 7:30 a.m. l<' day are trying to learn his identity. The victim franticalJ.y , called Jolice from her home iA the nearby Old 'New- -port district to report th' r,.~ a'tempt. which she finall y foiled .in .• deSJ)erate, fl. J. (Jarrell~ STOREWIDE CLEARANCE SALE In his Tuesday statement. Behr described the Upper Newport Bay as "the most beautiful and the most threatened" ol all Southern California wateM\·ays. He said the estuary was threatened because of "lend tills and other priva te developments b(cause a lot of tidelands are privately owned." This is the firlit time a. Southern California waterwa y has been pro posed in Behr's measure. He added that l'le would be willing to In- clude other waterways wbic.h have been named ln a 1971 Resoorces Agency report as "posse.s.'ilng extnlordinary set.nic And wildllie values .Jnd jn imminent danger or development." His Jeglslation declare! the Klamath. Trinity, Smith and Eel Rivers in northern California al "wUd" And prohibits dams on tboM! ri ver1. A similar bill authored last year by Behr would hive stopped dams on the Eel. Klamath and TrinJty Rivers. but wu dcr .. ted. Rowan Cyst Removed ROCHESTER, Minn. (AP) ,-Dao .Rowan, co.flar of television's "~b .In." completed hil cbfo:l<up at Mayo Clinlc Wednesday after ha ving a small cyst rimoved from hla right shoulder. Rowan 1aid olher th11n ha vi nc the cyst removed. "I'm In fi ne 1hape." scn!aming st.n.Jggle. ~1 .J Officer Harry Williams sa:fd th e victim told or be ing awakened by a ma11 wear. ing a white handkerchief mask and claw- ln.R: at her garments. She said she screamed and foug ht. causing the two to fall of( the bed and roll around on the floor i11 a fi ve-minute struggle. The intruder was desc ribed as about 30 : rive £aet, 10 inches, wilh s.hQrt· cropped blond ha ir aod blue eyes . N. E. Hackford ' . SitCCUJDbS at ·:ss Normaa E. llacktord1.11 loai time res· lden t .11nd bllsinessman..m Ne:•por t Bea ch and Costa Mesa , dltd J••-26 or a cere- brRI hemorhage in Tucson. Ariz. He was 58. Mr. Hackford lived in the Harbor .Vea for 2J years before movlnr lD 'I'Uc· "°" In t!IM. He owned and ~ale!!' a wholesale gtocery bUs lness. PadffC--Pi'o-v~lon• on 30th St. In N"'l)Ort Belic h and w11 ptet:ident of the Balboa .. :B11y Uons Club In 1951. . 1Je l.s 1Urvtved by hls tvUe Mon:&: iOn, Norman Hackford 111 ; and lhrilo llllugt>- ter$, rhylli11 Orri!on, Oon•a O'NlelJ I nd Linda Ro&en thall . LAST 7 DAYS e Many Drexel and Meritage Groups at Generous Savings e Many Discontinued Pieces as well as Several Floor Samples • 30o/o and PROFEss ioNAr H ,J 'GAl\l\E1T f u RNfllJ ~1~HARBO~ BLVD. INTERIOR DESIGNS COSTA MESA, CALIF. Opoo Moo., n..n. & l'tl. hoc. 60-0275 6~6.0276 • I, I ' 1 Bureaucracy vs . Skunk- N either Smells Ro sy By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 "" D•llY ..... , tl•ll SADDLED BY the spectacle of a supine skunk that suffered and suc- cumbed under her very nose, a Costa Mesa lady finally gol action and satis- faction Tuesday. She had been skunked for 24 hours trying lo get rid of it. dead or alive. The encounter didn 't just involve the deceased beast and Mrs. Dale H. Black, of 2018 Lemnos Drive. but three humane societies, pollce. heallh officers and the Orange County Anim al Shetter too. CHANCES ARE he won't be the last such noidous nocturnal visitor in the Mesa Verde district. "'h1ch once upon a time was known as Skun k llollow. The adjacent Santa Ana River channel teems with w1ldlHe, not all of it sub-human in nature. A former DAILY PILOT sportswriter chasing jack- rabbits while full of suds and youthful folly Cell into an abandoned outhouse hole there one night, but th11t's another story. What do you do and w·ho do you call about a marauding skunk. sick or well? "l'VE CA LLED three humane societies and none of them will touch him with a 10-foot pole," Mrs. Black declared in her plea to the DAILY PILOT Tuesday. "Can you help me?" she entreated. Normally, the DAILY PILOT is a repository of helpful data such as how much van illa goes in beef stroganoff : the score of the 1939 Rose Bowl game, or the Zip Code in Katmandu. We weren 't much more help than other sources consulted about the ob- viously ailing skunk camped in the Black's backyard. HUNTINGTON BEACH Humane Society spokesman said they cannot interfere with comings and goings of creatures designated by the state as wild. Laguna Beach Humane Society spokesman .said they do indeed trap skunks humanely but only in Laguna Beach. · She declined the~r offer of a teleph~ne training session in laying a snare for the skunk -and literally herself -since she would then be trapping wild- life illegally . They also advised her to try bombarding the critically ill quadruped with mothballs lo make him go away. SKUNKS DISLIKE disagreeable odors jusl Jike anyone else and those who claim to know contend they consider mothballs a frightfully awful frag. ranee. The patient. alas, passed on about 5 p.m. Mondav. ··He just rolled ove r with his feet in the air riiht afler I hung up," Mrs. Black reported to the newsroom Tuesday. What does one do about a postmortem polecat problem? SHE CALLED the Orange County Animal Shelter. which is listed in the l.elephone book. and they said the skunk was sufficiently dead so as kl be .,.,·ith- in their proper jurisdiction. Only the man who came to taJte charge of the furry remains put some of her fears at rest and said she wasitiven misinforma tion about county animal control activities. NO RABID \\-'ILD animal has turned up in the county since 1941 , he ex- plained, suggesting the late Brer Skunk may have co ntracted cat fever just like his domesticated cousins. Trapping of specific. slray creatures such as the skunk that look over Mrs. Black's backyard or wholesale roundups of wildlife for humane release in unsettled areas is also regularly done by the c-ounty. Just f\i onday. he sa id he nabbed six possums Jn the riverbed below tiir s. Black 's neighborhood !or deporlati~to the hills. Ul)fortunately, it was too late to save the defunct skunk through any such ecological transplant surgery. ''Poor thing.'' mused Mrs. Black. •·1 just don't know about these hlt!e wild creatures that get caught up by civilization." • Talks Set On Postal Contract Contract negotiations between local Jet. ter carriers and the U.S. Postal Service or Costa Mesa has begun . Under consideration are working con- dition:<1 anrl sa fety measures in the two Costa Mesa racitilies and on n1a1I rou1e5, health benefits, annual I t' a v e pr<r \'lSions and discl pline procedures, ac· cording to ~1arl y Roberts, u n i o n negotiator. There 1s no pay rl1sputc. as wages are covered by a national contract. Negotia· lions will end March I, or before thrn if agreement is reached , and no strike is Impending. If agreement on all issues proposed by the union is not reached, disputed mat· ters will be. deelded by the regional office In San Francisco. Lyle Ver Planck, superintendent of mails and a negotiator for the Postal Service, said he doubted that any dispute would go that far. Both Ver Planck and Roberts. hov1ever, said they expected the arbitration lo last the full scheduled 29 days. Ver Planck said he leamctl in a prenegoliation meeting with Joe Reaves, union president, that the re might be more than 150 proposals. Roberts indicated the primary issues would be safety standards and the pro- posed formation of a safety committee, consisting of management and union members, to "implement present safety standards and set new ones." Safety grievances primarily concern vehicle facilities and regulations relating to approximately 50 vehicles used et the l\vo post offices. Street haz11rds such as encounters between carriers and dogs may also be considered. Arbitration sessions will begin between the 104-member National Associa tion of Letter Carriers Local No. 4248 and the Postal Service dally at 4:30 p.m. in the main post office, 1590 Adams. Each side has de signated three negotiators. Clerks will n cg o t i a t e separa tely witb the Postal Service. Ver Planck said the first list of points for negotiation inc luded annual leave, welfare committees and provisions for summer and winter unifonns. lie said there was some disagreement over what issues can be negotiated, and lhat he can- not negoliatc "anythi ng that will con- trad ict or change national rules" Roberts sa.Jd he thought about 90 per- cent of the union proposals would be ac- cepted readily. But he said negotiations over discipline procedures and defi. ciencies in training might take more time. Gr11d11nted .J ohn Eugene !11err1tt of Costa ti1csa ,,·as graduated recently fron1 the ('alifornia lligh1\'ay Patrol Atademy in Saeratncnto ;ind has been assigned to the South Lo s .!\ngelcs area of the patrol. ' . Thursday, Frbruary J, 1972 N OAJL y PJLOT II . No Actio1a Taken Under-enrolled Schools Debated By TO!\f PALi\·lER Ot t~t D•lly 1"1111 $1111 Nc\lo·porl -:\1 esa lJnifit'd Sehoot DJslrirt l n.i.~1ecs ·ruesday night discussed a hot issue in A coo) m11 nner hut reaehed no decision on t/11• probl<'tll of lagging en- rolln1c111 Hl S1)rn1• .lit..·hool.~. Concerning the d1:.:tr1r t f;11·1hties USf' SUl'\'f'\', lh1· bu;1rrl ret'f'J\'Cd \'OIUll)Cs f'>f n('I\' d:1ta, t'Xt..l1>u1getl per!l<Jnal \'tf'Ws on lll!ern..i!e !10lu11ons and eons1dera11ons and rcsol1·ed to ~!ud~ lh<' pr<1bl£'1n 1nd1 1•1duat~y before the nrx1 lune ll Js l·on- s1dered Dr. J ohn \V. \'u:olt. supcr1 nt endrnt, said board mrmber!t could nn t rcart to all lhr nrw rnal crial prcSC'nled 1hen1 al the n1cct111g. ''\\lr '!J try t11 come back "'1!h the an- swl'rs.·· hr Si!Jd. The llli.1 111 ques1ion cont't'rns prOJ'l()sa ls that sornc schnul~ be closed due lo rlc- crcn si ng cnrollrnent But wit h till' \\'ealt h or stati s11 cal <ind analytical n1;.J!erial d1stributC<t 1'ucsday night but s!il! much rn11re 1v1!1 be re4 quired bcfort' the compli cated questions of fac1l1 t1cs use are answerable. The rneet1n_w: was conducted before a ru!I houS(' of about 400 persons at the Cosl a :-.1t'Sa l·l1gh Schl)(lt lyceum . A ftut spokr hriefly 1n oppos1uon to clos111g any sc hool ~ Niro!! said ,\lrtrl'h I is thr dale when (o/l1f' d1·c1su)r1 shou:cl l>c made. "Person· nt") .u1d llud,1:1'! cun:.1dr rit11ons make up M /W'li'c"n l nf !hr rle(·1sion" ,"'l1<'ntl ex• JJl'1!1l('rl "iUl<I l•I Jtllplrtllf'/lf !he [lrOgram, 11 <' mu~! n1,1 k1· <l ur drc1s1uns by ~1arch J ~ for ~urr " "'\~'l' a rt• !r\111.i.: lo irtcntifv olht'r ~·;ir i· i'lhles . ..,u,·t1 :is soc10-econoni1c lt'Vc ls fa· cil!11('>; anrl reading S<'nre d1fferericrs. which \If' think n1ay ha1·e ~ome bearin g 1111 lhl' r1uest1on of betlrr educa!IOl'l ," Nt· i:ol! .~.11d Sctin1 S. Fr<ln klin. a board mcmlll'r. ~illrl ~11c of enroll ment alone was a poor c-r1!cr11111 l(lr 1•Jns 1ng a school. Frankl111 .111d board 1nrrnber Donald F,;'. S1nali11·(10d tl,t!rCf'd thal the impact on !hr st11dcnls nF 11'hl\lc1•er rf'so!uti on In !he en · rnllrnl'nl rroblrms is chosen , should be considf'rrd. OCC 'l11 ves tn1ent s' Series A sf'rJrs (lf shouts of ;igrtcmcnt came fron1 !ht• audience when SmAl!wood made lh;it point Roard mem/x>r Thomas C. Casey said he thought !hr wa!kinJ.?. or neighborhood school pro~ram was the most popular, anrl audience reaclion 5upported that IOC'I. Scl1eduled Each W eel{ William L. O'Bryon of fl.1cwporl Beach 111 pr<'scnting his Orange Coasl Colcge •·in vestments" series on Wednesday even- ings. The series continues next \Ved- ncsday The first lecture covered the reading of Gulp; Boy, 10, 01ie Cent Richer The call came in at 5:18 p.m. ·rueSday, toti late for Newport Beach Fire Depart· ment rescue crewmen to do much more than commiserate with !O-year--old Dan Sher. "Viclirn had swallowed a penny," said the public service call report written upon the squad's return from the Sher home at JI I Golclenrod Ave., Corona de! Mor. "Fircnien con1fortcd the boy until he hacl reco vereri fr om the shock," it con- tluricd. the financial page of a ne\Vspapcr, opera· tions of a stock exchange, the over-the· counter market, types of brokers and tbe costs of buying and selling various sccurlties. The five-part series is held from 7:30- 9:30 p.m. on consecutive Wednesday evening in !he OCC Forum and there is no tuition charge . Persons n1ay reg ister at the lecture. O'Bryon has been in the securities business for 25 years and has headed his own firm for 15 years. He \VAS president of a national mutual fund and has dealt in real estate development. The Feb. 9 lecture will cxan1ine the pit- falls that the average investor may en. counter, how to ta lk with a stock broker. the Dow Jones and other averages and analyzing market lrcnds from economic conditions. On Feb. 16, O'Bryon wilt disCU);S n1utual fund s, thcir relation to lhe .:cncral markcl , doll ar-cost averaging and \ax -deferred relirernent incomes. Utilizing commercial banks, savings and loans. thrift companies a nd munici pal and government bond markets will be discussed on Feb. N1c-oll sairl many n1ore factors needed lo be considered in the final decisio11 , and hr enumeralcd some : cl erical expenses, hi~hcr cost for schools with more youn g children rlue to the need for more milk. 11nd rhc high cost of processing transient studrnts. "We've been working on all front.~ isince August," Nicoll said. The board needed tin1e tD continue ii.! 11tudy before a rational solution can be reached, he added, "We're not zeroing in on any particulat school.~ with the inte ntion of closing them." Nicoll said Jn response to a· query from lhe audience. Rodericli; l·I. Ma cMiJ!ian. president of the board. said, "These are Jong-ranlile problems aAd we are only opening the door and taking a peck. Maci\1illian said that the board should look at the pairing system clo.sely, be· cause "we don't want to close two schools and affect 18 others." Nicoll said Lincoln School could be used at capacity Jn 1972, !bough in 1973- 74 it would not accommodate tbe pro. 1el'tcd enrollment increase. "But the bulgr will be over in three or four years and a Lhrce-yet1r lease might be I.he an· swer ," he spcculiitcd ."As lrv1ne developmenls get closer we will su rvey other methods of getting lht crunch off." he added . Trustees Back Park Effort "I swallowed a whole nickel when J \va s a kiri,'' fire department dispatcher Ed McPherson recalled today. ''But H \•·as my old man v.·ho went into shock . J ruined the family budget." The lasl lecture, on March I, will deal with short-term versus long-term gain, market letters. how !he Federal Reserve Board Affects the markets, when to buy and sell, end general trends. Beverly Langston, board member, ask~ ed "how disastrous a double ae&:sion at son'l'e schools mll!lht be," for a year or two. Nicoll sald it deflnJtely could be considered as a possible eolutlon. "J've worked with quadruple H!lslons, .. ht . .&aid. ·--' Neivpo rt-Mesa Board Also Debates Building Delay A resolution was passed at Tuesday night's Newport-Mesa Unified School District Board of Education meeting sup- porting efforts of the city of Costa Mesa to maintain th e present public ownership status of the proposed Fairview Park. Trustee Donald E. Smallwood said, "The proposed resolulion, as broad as H 1s. indicates resolve lo stay with the city lo keep the !and public." Selim S. Franklin. another board member, said the resolution was ap- propriate because it might have some er4 feet on the district's schools. The only debate of the evening came when the board considered a change order requesting extension of 56 calendar days on the W.J. Shirley contract for remodeling work done at Te\Vinkle School. Denial had been recommended. Don MacGregor, general manager of the contracting firm was present to de- fend that request, and another on lhc same job requesting 12 days' damages CdM Church Performer Heading for Broadway A frequent solo baritone performer at )t. Mark Presbyterian Church in Corona jel Mar will soon continue his successful '.heater career in a Los Angeles pro- :luction 'ultimately headed for Broadway. Carl Lindstrom, 32, of Tustin,, who prov- !<! to be a hit In his role as ~tiles Jloriousus in "A Funny Thing Happened Jn the Way to the Forum" at the &.hmanson Theater, opens with the show .n Chjcago on Feb. 21. The singer is offering a "goinl!I away" )rogram in co njunction with the St. \1ark's chancel choir at 7 p.m. Sunday. rhe program at the church will be under the direction of Mrs. Leslie Johnston. Lindstrom will sing several operatic trias including one fro m "Don Carlos"; fi'rench chansons, incl uding "Ne Me ~uitte Pas" (If You Go Av.·ay): semi-clilS- sics such as "Danny Boy" and "Old Man River" and folk songs. Lindstrom's booming yet controlled voice and ti foot-two inch stage presence wned him unanimous critlcaJ acclaim durinl!I his stint with Phil Silvers in a "A 1 Funny Thing" last fall at the Music Center. Rumors that the show was Broadway· bound have been confirmed. The Los Angeles staging of the Jong-running Broadway hit will play McVlcker's Theater in Chicago, travel kl yet-to.be-- named theaters in Canada prior to open- ing in the Lunt·f'ontaine Theater in New York City. !.lndslrom whose talents were In- troduced to Orangl" Coast readers in a November issue of the Weekender, m1y wonder if the Orl'lnge Co111st Collcgr theatrical career convert, mll!lht just stay ln New York once critics there view hl~ abilities The Orartie Coast youth who once plan- DAILY PllOt ltlfl Pl'ltlt NY NEXT STOP? Carl Lindstrom ned a career as a professional footba ll player, spent several years In Europe studying opera prior to catching on as 11 musical theater pcrformtd last sum mer. Sunda y's concert Is free and open tn the public. St. Mark Presbyterian Church is located at 2100 Mar Vista, Corooa del Mar. and extension of contract lime. Damages are $50 per day according to the TeWinkle contract. Smallwood said inspectors for the district had reported that work was lag- ging on the job and said he opposed the approval of the two time extensions. ··vours was the only school contract job in wh ich there was dragging of feet. and for a substantial period or tin1e no contractor's pressure to get going on !he job," Franklin said. He said he wou ld op- pose the extensions. MacGregor said a state agency kept the plans for the work six weeks, fou r weeks longer than usual, and that delayed board approval. Franklin said the board reacts lo ex- tension requests based on the attitude of the contractor. "It is naive lo expect us to be lenient and ignore these bad reports." Franklin said. Marian Bergeson, board member, sug. gested that the board deny the request and renegotiate the period extension that should be granted. due to uncontrollable fa ctors such as a strike and bad weather. The board agreed to take this course. Jn other action: e The board approved revisM rentlll rates for school facilities. President Roderick ff. MacMilllan .&aid he proposed the changes in an attempt to make the fees more realistic . e A low bid of $21 ,300 by Otis K. Coyle Co. for construction of two tennis courts at Estancia High School was accepted. e Also approved was acceptance of • low bid or $27,94-0 for construction of four tennis courts at Costa Mesa High School. The contract went to Anderson Bros. Engineering, Inc. Pair Take $120 From Hitchhiker Orange County sheriff'• officers are to- day tnvesUgating the robbery of a young Newport Beach man who told depuUe1 that two men gavt him a llft Tuta:day that' carried him for about 11 mile and coat him exactly $120. Pierre Jacques Bertolino, 21 , of 73 10 W. Ocean Front, said he was given the lifl at the intersection of the San Diego and Newport freeways by two men who pro- duced a gun shortly after he joined them In the vehicle. Bertolino uid he was push~ from the car at gunpoint about 1 mile Awa y from where be was picked up wilhout hls bUUold. State's Finance Chiefs Convene Finance directors Crom 150 California cities are gathering at the Newporter Inn for a two-day seminar of the Cali fornia Society of Municipal Finance Officers toda y and Friday. Harbor High Offering TB Tests to Students Ne\VJJOrl Beach Finance Director George Pappas is host for the annual convention \\'hicb 1vJ1J be highlighted by two talks Friday. Vernon Orr. director of finance for the state of California, will address the group at noon. ll is speech 1viJJ be preceded at 9 am. by a talk by Dr. Jtaymond .Jallow, senior vice president and chief economist for United California Bank. Orr ls expected to talk on Governor Reagan 's proposed budget and Ja!Jow wilt present a ~ational and state economi c forecast. Newport Harbor l{igh School, with thr. cooperation or the Orange County lfealth Department, will offer free tuberculosis lcsls f-'eb. 12 for all fre shmen and seniors. Barbara Ma rlin, school nurse, said the tcsls will begin at IO a.m. in the physical educalion foyer. Cards will be dislributed at ~chool to all ninth and 12th graders asking for parenlal consent. Testing is confined to those two grades, Mrs. Martin explai ned, because of -·--·~-·· ·--~~--.... -~ ..... -·.--w- • Day for Everyoiae limited suppllcs given to the school by th1 county. She feels catching the students as they ent~r and prepare to leave school is e!· feclive. "TB testing is one of the most valuabls controls for tubercu losis,'' she said. "A ' positive reaction indicates there are TB germs present -whether active or not. And It can be taken care or 1r caught ear· Jy." She added that seniors can use the lestll as part of their requ ired college enlrance physical exams. ., , OAILY ,ILOT iM1ttt" \.M Ptr• ., A sunny '"inter day ,overlooking the jet ty ln Corona del Mar draws all kinds of people to the great out· doors. Lovers, spectators, picnickers and boaters on the ba y !ind the unseasonable warmth jun what lhe doctor ordered. 22 DAll Y PILOT Your Motley OVER THE COUNTER Complete-New York Stock List What Do Options ._,...,,.. !Mw ........ ._......_ .. ~ ..... t 1 • ._ "MO .. ~ ............ , ......... _..... .. _Ill~ -.... 0-.J "~ uw c-.. c .. .... , ... ..n 1i ~C•"" 1lJlS 10il• 106 lOll \, + '--Ill~ "-''-' lrMt •s 1•\lo u1, u "' _ ,,, ~ Ml l NASO llttlrlft for Wodnetcloy, Fobruory 2, 1972 Rea ll y Cost You? AAA iW l .!t J I~ !il l•l -+ \'I ~'N '"" Art•ll 1~ JJ lf'-11"-11" +.. wit$ Com .11.rUllN t 4 Jl ;Jlli(, :D + \II lktnl .. l::::::r.z:;::;,:;;o11::.i;;:1<:"'"'"'•••••••••••m•'"•"""'"'"'•••"'"""''""'"'"'"""'"'"'aj "'°' o... ll JJ.... »·~ J~~ -t 1, '"" , 10 l Ar<tlc lntr, 171 JO~ ~ 1t -1"" Ct•r>t 1.-'I"" VOiltl( 1.-. .. 11 ......... 1 .. ... teii.-1"4 U•I A•<-• I .... ff • ..l~!od .... ., ,,, ... N"IQntl Ul.11•111 .. o\•~W!C. ~ 1'4 c l 14 14'1r.o.L c ti ... ~ l:M N~"i ... I°' '" JI"" " 2n. ,,.,Fiii n 4 4\'lf(.:::. t: m 4'4~4'1• f11 131o. U ~:A~ 1\:: lh =::!.: ~ ff" fmA• "I D&tr ll S"6 J'o S:,,. z roclr;ltn t .. '•oO'" • ' o ... Ooo "'" ''''!'''"' •• "•W•oOG oo•oo•"'""°$UI lll l l ~ Jl -+~Cr.,.,, .. Ml'ICI I ll,,.1J "!::t1~ ll" ~I""• 4'"'~·"•b rt~ J"" jl'I Nl!.,,.OI• Pit •\o"' 1111.,D~ 11n n w . n;, +1"" rvm111C ,.., By SYLV IA PORTER In a few wee:lu, we will move Into the b1~ automobile buying season or '72. -a period during which m11l1ons of you will huy new tafs, mll hon1 of y(lu will s~l'ld big· llmt t itl ra money lo add Or>" l ion~ to your (at anrl million~ of you will w;iste huge .-ium11 becau~ you dn nol fully undersland what you want or what the options are really co11t1ni;: you Tursday s column !'luhm1tted 111 table dr&rna111.1ng this cost factor an 11 wlde ran1;e nf 11ut.omoblle makes and models and dctal11ng how option~ can add from one th ird to nc:irlv JOO per"ent to the basic co!t of your aut.omoblle llow, then, do you find yo ur way Bround the vast assort· ment of nltcrnatl ves In eq111p- mcnt today' To begin with, here are aome fundamentals on the more popular options •Larger engtnt'.!!. c081lng $75 to $1 ,000 extra move yo ur car around with muc h more pep and can improve safe ty when p&8sing or 1n other s1tua· tlon~ where you n1ust nc· WHAT 15 A MIGRAINI HIADACHE7 by TIRRY GRANT, R Ph The wn1d nl l!P'8!nr com<'~ f1onl th<' 11•(hnlral nanl<' h<'111lc-r n n1s 11 hlch ti fl n"!atrd m r llnll hnlf-a-hrad Thi!!. I<; tx-cau11r In sn tnanv pro p tr U1e pain b<-~ln~ hi fhe <'f'n- l rr of !ht forr hrnd or 01rr onr ryt-ti mn~I con1monly rl'mflln!!. In lhl' fr ont o f the h ead O tht'r fr81 Ulf'J C'om~ mon tn m la:ralnrs 11.re f\11 1ih· ln1:; J)llllrr nJ or 111'l0t ~ 1n vision jufil hl"f,)rf' l hr hrRd tt.C'hl', fo lln"''"d h y nn11sr11. And dlzi1nr11R. ~lnrr thl\n l \VJC't' Rll 1118TIV \\l'lmf'll 8! mt-n h11 ve mli;;r8 ln <'B A ml~11.l nr C' an n fl I hi" t rc81t'd l ike 11. r n m mnn hl'Rc\• s chr with 11.spl1 ln It requ 11 I'S ft d 1fferrnl IY['(' of d ru,1.:. t'TI· tlrr\y and only a rhvslc1nn c11n de lt'rmlt1f! h o \V any one per11on Rhou!d be t r('O!l'd YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PllO NF. US whrn you nM<I R dcl!11rry \Ve 11 ill d~­ lh·er promptly \\ !tl'IOUI f'Xll'R chRr&"· A (.:r<'n.l mRT\Y peop le rf'IY on us l nr 1helr hralth n!'edi'I We \Vl'lcon1I" T"QU(lfifJ rnr drl!vrry s r r v I c e and ch11rge a ccounts PAltK LIDO PHARMACY l51 He1plt•I •••d N1wport l••<h '42·lSIO FrH O.llvery " .. celerate rapidly Oo•l1t1 •••n, °"'' .-.rn1v rn 1111 (.oon•tr ll•ni< Arf-H But they 1nwr1nc1 ~ lne111t-.-,,,1<11 1r111 11~•• A.ll>l!n !" .. in" llllton 121\ UjYi Mir P ';ii j n F ndt~; S 't lif; NW p115.,. 11': J:W. "'"" DI t lf It lCl '4 llll,l, '9"4."--C•o...Coll •Sf 2t'n '_? nr11St 13' 1~ t (1.,t 11\'o ll'n F 111 Ort '"' ""Ho~f! Cr> J1Vt •J\lo Atmr ~.t11 tSOO .oi 4JYl •JVt -Crow-Dll 10 l •n 41jo lt111U1 A !fil tr; '"'!' ~I '9 Flntrt>t ::rth 411'• N,,..l 11.oc f\l 10~ .-,,m,I Ck ID ]II JI JN JI\\ -I\\ Cr~ 0C..0 ,•,, il l• 1'1. 11J<1U! , \4 ...... .,. I j lol J F1t J::' It tO Otill"v M '°' 4-1 ..... m(k DI] 1t 1!70 '° liYl ll\\ -YI (tw•w.I often make a car more d1r t "" .,,., ,.,u.. :rt> .. C,, 1~: flc ult to handle on wet o r 111f1.:• ~~ 4 1~· t1i.:. lc'l Ind h 1tte'm1> ~" 7"'11 1lr<1 "'' s nowy pavement, t e y u se .. ''I' " • »"" 111 ""'c MIO B~> 0Cl1' lr>I l'iY mor e gJt5 and an 8-eycltndtr ~, .. ,~ I:"" ~' k•m 1111 I I ll 111 ., • "'"" "'"'" engine almost a way5 w1 I cost 111 N n-•'• 11 .. I"""" F \/o S-l>'l l1••M '4 !om Cr>' l \lo 1''•F11 ft 1YJ 3 Ohlo .11.'1 M 1 "'•mllu l Mt •3 ·~ u•. ••'•+w.C•nlP1'10 f,lf '4 1111.,,_ ~ ''•g•111.r.. J'lt j'•F!P ..-! • •'M Qt.loF ... r 16'n l111o"'oC..-p"O JI 104 l•I,; 10 CT~Corp olO 111'4 lOYJ~lmn OU 114 ~. "'''P'I :)\~ ~Fl!WnF 1•, g:· $111!1 , ... 4 .-.r .. Jn lndl ]l )']•1o Jl'I) l2t\+ _.cuH!Gtn :It S"' P't low Ct 1~ 11W. loc lt>C j'° l F lc~nt' 11 n n l pl k tn lh '""" A1111d OU ! 20 ti J-Vll JS"o 2~ Cumm0<o H 1 ~ 1~ O.tr 'l 141-> !t n Crll 1 "'19'• Fla TtO l~ JJ\l 11( Te<: 4" •'h o\ud !Ir""' 1 ~ t >i '"' f'lt Cunn •UO !jt, !7 oflln Fd '21"1 """ ~l•l l..,. 711~ Fl1 w1 1u l ... 3 °'" MTI ?ft l"" ,l.\dOGd 1 ]' ~~1 s~ " "'" -""Cur!IUW•I \ 'i'ilii ""' Cl• U 51 -I J 3\1 II FOO<! ,,. j\.o tt't 0•.._! 101/t 11 Aud s ... I l'O U JO». lO lO + v. C11r1ouWr A I ,..., oml Sn 7l 72 ~ Df(,11 C. }l·o j • Fo•t ll D 1 '• 11'11. ou..-TP 7llfo ll-'o\ o\ud Trtn10 • 10•1 lO~ 1014 _ \t Culle•M 120 S7"" ~·"I°"'"" ... it Jt .. JDrlt "°"'' •1'• •mlo!I s~ ...... Ovt r NA S\» '"" Alhl-J!)g \t ll"-l)\l I). Cvt loc>$ 11 I d ln..,rl !l(I """'"' more lo 1na n ta1n a n repair F•d u" L• 11 , • I'"'' Mk ~l\4S~~ mo!Cm •~ 11 •08 76"o 71,,.Fo,tC.rnt ll·1l•'•l'11»18r 17'11o n h.-.1ICvE l!•O .a 7l" 'l'• 11,,._,_1 c vorOJt,M ln 1 14i,o 11•1, mo Intl • • $"' Unllln 0 h 1•"1 Fotoml! '"" 6"lo f'I( c; ll;D JI•,. ;,, ,till lllthlla ' n1 .,.\. 4''• 66'-.. '- lh •. I d 1n<11111••l'' ~-1 "" " an a ..-...y 1n er. ""' CP ) ••11 1•11 l •D , .-.F.11. P11 , "''I'~ Co ".A utomatic tran!!m1ss1on "1D 1..... 1, f, ••rf ~on 1'o .'lo l)mrn 1'1 J"'Dllol•' 13"' Ii Frnl.! CP I'll 11.\ Pt~to ~ ~t,titlRcll l>IJ7S r160 \I loo\ S. '• •l "'" on P• ""'j '4 0~rl•on 1 .. '4 1S'•F•nkln £1 1• 1l ~>l'•rODr ll o l~,ti!l lUchPl l ]117 .11?'/.llJ•, .,_,_.R~""',",.'M,• '"'-!O on llQ<I. )1 11) )Va ll Poll'! '"' f V.Frnd It~ JI lll P•r01 H SVa 6 ''''' "''" o> > .... n .e IOt 107 onlr•n l'~ ''Ao t>fftn In l .. • •o (mo > '" >o••• G• 0 c "" I 1 ST'o ll'• + 1• O.N CD I ?S 1111 ~ l'I( I , '°" 11!t/\• $150 'o $2SO e x l r a 1nak es >-1111 CP 11 . 11r111t -H u1 d I f ,ticu•/\nl ?I • JO" llODv, El • O"-10'4 All111CO<P tt7 1'4 1•o f \t 1"' 2'1) or•nco ll"'lt tMl l•b lO >II'• l lOMot U .. l1'•Ptrkw H llf1 l ~AlO JrK n \IOI 111 11 • 11,., ,,D•rl l""' lOO ~~1 ll'1 CO•• S ''• l 'o Cll>C! 5~ Po ?\\c;1rlnkl 11'• 11\.o P1r F••h I '• l .'J Aulom D•ll t J .. Ii(, IJ .. Oi'~ 1 , .. Dir! ln<ll Pl l l'o ,.,_ Co1m '°" I 5"" IP11 El lt>o 141,:o G.1v Gll>n I > • P•ulev p t •' " "Dt .. CoCP I H rJ\ing a <it easier . c tin o tenl ... 11"'"' 1"' I JB001 •H I Ir b -"""1~~ W 14'• I o .-,,llll•n pay o r 1Lsc y preventing .11rtv ""' ~ , 6'• B•ln•• wear -anrl by booslini;: the car 's ~:~··1~1 • 1' 1 1 l~ 1;~: ~:, value flt trade-in time But 1 !lf::~1.''D l~ l li~rg~~~~~I 11 I•'' (r• .. Co 1t , lt\lo E1b.i s .. u I • I"' C.en "r< ,.,. ' 1 Pt veUt IA,' 11-.I Au!omtn 1....:1 101 II• I 11, Dt .. lln 7• 11' l\1 C•ou Co ?9''> 1'~> EI0.1 81 t .... t~, G•n lllf1 I'• t Po .. l ,, .. 371']) .. vto CotP lU 11 II"-lf ._ '• OeytftHUCI ~ !J. ~'i ~~¥.~ llF~ 1:~~ 1; ... 1"1:,/!,"""I l•l~ 1 1~ g:~1~:11 ,cl 1 lt\;, ~=\"MIT 11~ n•, !:~: c.,i:] '";J ;~ I~~ .~~ .~·· = ;! DtvlnPl 1 .. f J 1$\ro r:o Com lt'4 1•"-l'C 'Sn i.:. J•~ Glt•in w :nv, 33''• l'•nn Pac 1i.,, 1 ! vttv f'(I ?4 1' ?&Ii(, lS'i:. ZI -\~ &:!;.."f: ~ l!i r epair and gas b ills will pro-:\~1,,"<E1 ~~: ~1'1=~~::,;~~ bab ly be sl1~htly h1ghtr :::t~.~~11 1~\o 1i,: £~;:.:!,5~1"" •Al1'-cond1t1onc r , $350 l o ~111: ~~.~. t,.: 1~~!~nb'M~r ?S°"l6 ,..lt b •~••Vo ll'Ct• 11 1•, •\•C.OJcl c .. tt :no 10 PoG&W 1i1,7~Av""' n o !266 l•'lo 111, 1•'•-+l'•o.imi <P l l7 It Jt \IJ 1n1Y M 1-l~Vi mos II ,,.. 'I '• Ge111ld !T r.14 .... P•••' ow "' ,,,, "'~""' ... , jg • I~ AA 1tl +so.., "·IM' "' l'"-1~\li 111 (p !o l:il"''I¥ C <1Yl11 Gov EF!" :it 21h p'"°'I! • "".11.vnt'I Pl l t JI ?t'n J I ..._,\,""' n r 3'1o l'4 0111 Don l IO " ,.., ... It J j'~ C.rt n/\ en 11 1a1rt Pe!1IDDrl Sl'n St•h ,ti vnn PO l lO 'l? 1n\ 10J!i(, l~I + 1•, O.na "1' jg )Uo JI',. 0•'• G"" 11 ' ntwlltl 31• ',Gron s,1 111~ ,6..._ Pnl!lo l J:n' in' .l.lltcOll 1101 11 11 ,.,,.. 20.,.. _ \, Deltec Int '~~ '~i; 8:~11 ",1 ,t-~ r,'•~ E:~~~ o'ii 1;i,; 1!~ 9~~n M~~ ]l ~ l!._ Pnoton 10~: \i\? -&--&:~~M:;• 1 ';., f1 •• D1vrn lrn lt l'> f O:. Erlt Tee s"" 1 ~ .. v Adv i:\.z J~~ ~I~~" JI'.,. IJ"i S1tlt.l<'ft 50 106 l7.,, 32 :n -\0 DlnnMlt tr 1 $550 extra· 1nd1sputable. c o m · .-.1 ~n 11 .. , 11., 11 C•n""" 8 .-.11'f (<m 1\\ J'l1o i •nr1d P '01> 91 ~ ,. P ~ k '''''''" 1114 13 l'l•k•O 1r 10 11 4'1'• •,r4 ..,.,,_ +1 \, Dtnnvll:st o. 6 6\0 Y,","o•ooO 15 16 I"" GE 1" 7.3' )l\, J I'~ OenllPlvlnt 1 7'0 J'O"o u 11 " S'° Port HK 25 M t !I ol 8' jl) i1t'O 41 ~ "' DerecD pl B fort and adds to re s ale value ,ti101n Geo J • 1\, •P M•ue "m 11101' n ~ 1l •o Sw.i ~,,., 6,,_ '"'"'"'"'"'•!!!mm.,::z:c;:n,.,•jc.vrodn 1~:· ,5,,. P<11$I$ CD TI\ ••4 B•noor P~n! 116 lj'• ll''o 1111, ... '-' DeSo1olnc 10 l lowevt'r uses extra! gas .-. E1 ~•D 1y. 11• ~Pi n .-.1, ' ' .-.m •D 139 J)f\• Cop Ttt needs r e piurs fairly oflen, Is "'"' 1n1 ~s JIY> Catt c~ .-, Finl l S l<l\li 11'1. C•r!I l!lt by far the most expens ive ,tim F~rn 17 11"" c11r1 Go• J Ji.. Ha•PI'• It I "'<IC'. Pl •14 71(. 8an11~P<I ,• i.·· l' 1· j -.... Ot!Edl$ 1 _f(J J-\lo 4,~ M11 trhl 1"11 1l\ l'ro C.ol! Hit. 6Vt San1 1 'H I.,.. 1\1> _ 'I 0.1 Ed 11" l2 • " MUTUAL H""'rf'd F ~ 'l•t. 1'11bS NM ?1 4 2l"li 81. O •I l_J.1 U 11'11. 77"-71"--\\ Oel Ed ol1" ,~ l" Herl! Cr> Pub 5 NC 111"1 llli(, Stnk of NY 2 .,.., l9 Ja'h lll ... -1~ O<o << -> ~ I 'II I ,tim G•t•I 10'4 t i (eot NG 111ng e option you probab y " Pro1.c-1 ~\i s•,,, C11vnQh c 141'1 1 ;; He" Ap J\~ 6 Publ•t.• Slit S>A Bink T• i"' <II 59'11 511>.< J9 'o oe,ter '2~ _,,. Wln 1~,, ~~m~" 1 ...., Pu••o• 2•,,., '' Ra•OOll 11 ~' 411v, u 47 -•"'° Ol•IFln•n lO 1:~ 1: Hoov" ,s~: ,•,'" ~ur6nti~ 4~~ ·~ e:~rc~~c 1Jo• 10 ';~~ ii~•• ~·.-. D11mtnt1 1 Ml b d f b h Am Ttltv 3? Yl"'I C1nllt P~ uy an o ten egets ot er ex-.-.m W•td t '"' '~ (•n~ Lah 1111 09 • FUNDS ~','•"••'" ,"." • Qual CM t \• 9_.. B•!e, Miii lJ lj'• lJ'I» \l" Diam Sham I -, -•, n GI • RT s .. sl sv, S'4 81tesMI oil f 1 >~ 18\, ~'lo Ol11S pfOl..1'0 t I "'n•dl!e ~\ J<• (h8nte A ~ns1ve op ions oo """'"' 11 3''• !9 , c11~·• 011 '~ ,. Howmd JS<:i 3/o'll Ra en p, l! 1S>,:, s.rn l'M! ~ :.. , J1•4 Jll, + "• Dk !tPllone J ' J\o H ut~ Mlp 6\. l''o lla~&ll C 11•1> 1J ~ 8au.Chlb 80 41! lllV. lll'.4 Ill -l•i Diebold 1n "Power steering, $100 In $120· makes handling an in- termediate to full-sized c ar easier and safer under S()mc CJrcumstances . P ower brake11 $40 to $100 also are probably worthwhile o n any large c a r •r1nlcd windows , $:!~ tn $50 make air-conditioner's JOh eas ier and improve comfort But reduce margin of safety of a d river with poor night Vl510n •AM radio, $60 to $90 . u seful and helps resale value But fanc ier setups (AM f'r\1, tape deck, stereo) are good buys only If you Ret y o ur money s worth from them while you own the car. for they return little of their cos t at trade-in And so 1t goes down lhe dizzying list of alternatlve s. ranging from rear window defoggers to power windows, from ' heavy duty ' optio nal equipment to automatic s peed control No"' he re are five general tips on ho w to save money on npt1o ns when you buy your car: I I ) Jlave firmly 1n mind the use to w hich you expect to put Huds P•D 31 J? R•n••• • " '''L B•xl l~I> 11 11• )II,. • .• ]!"lo -·~ DIGlor11 &O •':lL',..•1!0"11!"'"'"'"'0-C<,,.7.:I Mur~IP &•I. 1'4 150 16.l" B1vk Coo !,!) 25 1l l\• 11>o -"'° DIGlor11 DI II HVfll CD ]],,.: J)"" RaVtM CP 10'h )IV, Bt•rln11$ 11 I Jll \o 3' ')ti,!, + 1"I Dolll!ll Eoulo NEW YORK {iii, Pl A~llo '' o> o> >O "4•111 Int 1'" l J'A. llevmndE lJV. Ill BeatFd1 l If lo.I ~1"11 t6i • 41 Dllt!nohm ~O -f /\elo110 .. 1noQUO-C~l1 19l'170 '1 T"'llll ~~ 17 h 11'11 11K Oll 31 :n 'l!••tFd$11!~ lllS'1lll'n l l••>-+t!l'lDlihn11olA l t 11 I ed b C 1!1 10 17 I 1me• Cp I 'I 1"" ~"1!CeE J• J 'h BKkm•n 5~ •1 41"1 •1'" 41'' Dolio" Co Ill ,~. 0';,'111~!r ',,,, r. c~: 8~ , n lZ 0~ nd Nutlf 31"' 31•~ e•o en" 39 • 19,_., 8«1 Dl<~ lO 411 ~1u tO'• ., • -·~ Dlsntv 10t> •fitln ol ~ecur~1 Cut K 1 t 7'I 9 09 In tor Inc 10\1; lC''o ~:~n ,; 16 ti 9"1!th.-.r l>Oh 61 11 •, ?ti'• ?!I'• -'• Dl11 Se•o 0 •• 1... I/IC . ... '"' ,, ••• '.,Info D•ID ~ • .._ ''''"' ' ••• 1116. l!tl(O Pt! ~ 67 l9•t ,, •• n•. DIVMlt 7Se ~I I I d )'4 ~ ~ 1 •Aed•n 1 10 T 'A", .... ,.~ o • • me prlc•1 •T which Cu1 SJ 1'C II 7? 17 n ·~ n ' ,,,_ ll oD!"o l 11 ' 19 8eldHem "' IJ ll~ ?J ,; , + ,, ' ePDet ' 1n••e 1tturlhes C\1$ 57 11 11 1111 ln!rmk In ~ llo.elon 1 t l'I 11 H lh 1 OomeMM IO ould l>t•e bttn Cv1 Sl f 3510?.l lnlrml G 1l'•1•'•11ouse ?t';lO B:ms oC'o tO :~ ~'• ~;,0 ~'·::::~DomFnll tSe o!d Jbldl or Oo1141hl Cu1 $4 '16 '1J ln8k W•h 1'• 7'1;, Ro .. •n In W. 7"11 8e<>lllx 1 60 11~ ~•"-11,1 ;1,, _ 10 Oonnellev J4 (ISklHl l Wt<ln$dY Pol"' J ?I .176 lnleos Cr> lO\o 19'1 Rus Stoy IS 1 tb 6endix olJ S7 61 U 61 ~ Doric Co J2 Knlclot> 1 l! I 01 In! Svstm l1>.4 l6'4 S"(lht • 1'• l ''I Senell CP n 117 •1 4n 1 17 _ , Dorr Oliver lid A1k Knick GI 1059 1160 ,!!!',",,"', < lJ'> ll'o Scan 01! 11\< 17'1' Benell pft lO 11\0 67 67 'J ..._ ~. 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Hilt I ll f4 h ~• • •~'Ito + v. 8.;!n ,;,, I) r;i e e op ions a ccor in F=d 1nv 9'3toll Ml 15 3~1•11 L~nd R•i 4•• •i.t r~s•wv 19,1, 19,, dwvHal pt? 1 S•'• 51''1 5~h ~hli"n.e:i 60 to how much each will add to Ven1 •1<16.1101 Mz::.o 1 ~i~1~~~ La•son In ~~. ,,,. T•vlor t 41'1 4"" 8rwwvc;1, I~ .SJ 11'\ l'"" ?~~ -'I> e k dJK ,, o\'!ron 508 555 M !h, 111Jltl1 Le8dv CD 11\o J?'• l'•vlr WI .ll Sl <i Bkl•nUC. 117 I 161' J>, 16'1 + '~ Eckrrd NC the capacity or to ur car to Art MouQhton Mfd 1~ 6 Oii • 67 L•h Grp '"" '"• TKn Pub ,..,, i 1•0 .. n co Al •·~ I~ ... -,.., e c1:.,B, 1 04 Fnd ,ti 5 11 flll MDOd lJ IS IJ IS L• .. I• I F 11 11 \, Ttcum p 16, 161 r .. nGo !jl) 6ii :Ill''> ll '• 31'• !Sa.c;. 10 perform adequately fo r you Fn<1 a Bis • u MDOd~ • 13 13 13 33 LI~ Bca11 l&ll 11•1 T•l~om t'l'o &'l'o B .. nS/\rD ,~ ,, lJll:> n.., ll"-!Kl AnDC h I !,'~~ 1 ~ ~;: M!F I'd t S~ 9 ?II ~~':.~:;; l'• J"" Ttnn8n! •l ltV, Br .. nF•" :It 1'9 1~'• 19 + ''o ltctn Oala t 21 Put tog et er a nors ona ,,,,,. 00 ,, 00 'l MtF c.111 .s 90 6 Je , _ ,,,R 71, 1',. T11er m A l"4 1"" Brun• .. <\ 16 l6? 4''-•J\, 41 -'· 11 Mem M"I I'" " M 0 G 6 l 699 ~v~ " ''• 9~ Tlln• Co 1~ .... 10>1 8ut v Er 1 Xf 31 19 21'1 19 + \t IMMeg ol s ho pping lis t o f options before 80',',','• '0', •, ',,• ! L. M 0~:111 10 :1 n 16 •"',"•,n __ t;' 16'\ 11'~ Tllfn• '" 15'1. 15'.lo(, 811"" Co 11 16'• 16.., 16''> + '• 191n Nat •~ < o> o> > j ""' J O•'-fl!OnG'O >'• .. ,8udCI Co o!S J\00 M'o 6''• 6'1o -\\ ''''""G 0 lh h Do ••o<n Hll n >l ll n Mut "" _, 6 Ma '''' oo• oo•-'"~' 0o ., 1 1•~ '' 7\\ ·~ ~ \'Oll g o lo C S Ol'lroom ,,,,.,. ''"''~Mutl'r11 7Ci7 0•.,,,,,,, • "'T•aco•C 1.,,. 21"1 • ' --,u•aCp l20 " " -' " 6• 1!I l'rncnt c. 171!. 17•• l!udoel Ind 11 I '• ,!\' I'• -'II mer El o M no t normit yours elf to IJeBe•o io:;en 11 1'8 11 ~E1"''t.:'J l ~~l\~M•no• c ,,., 1 rranso o 2, 21,,.BuflForQ 1 2" 6 3n. ....... 36""-"' me...,.-.r 52 t'"" l!erk Glh 6 1' 617 8 M l rowr 7'1'• 30.., Tri Hom I~ I\• 8UIOYI W 60 41 ll'c. 11 11'~ -t , Em,rv In Xf dazzled by the overwhelming l!ondMk 'si 111 "'"~ 1sttur 115rf 1111 M•11I LP 9>4 JO"" Tr•to l"d '3Uo 4'!' 8 un-r ll•mo l6l 10•. 10•11 10•, -• 1 mh•rt 1 20b 8o•t Fa~ 'l'1iiJ17 n 1 •n MtCor 11 90 r ,ldtl• •'• .~ eun~ll Dll lO 16 J:µ.. ~"-ll"'-+ '· Ml Lta 151 array of 1 mprovemenl58rwn Fd 4JO 11!1 ~\"'1~ 11: 5 ~MtOIHv 10·~11v•T•l!n OG Jt ,,,_su.i lnd1 ..o 116 J6l. -~ J6>..,.+-•. M 1n O.g 8ulloc11 C1lvl" v '' • Medic ff •>;;;. 51, l'Yion F is•' !5\ 8ut1Nor l .SO SOI 4'1'• ~7to U l• +-1 ... moO!ll l Q availab le ''Edmund s New Bulle~ 1S Sl16 99 Grw!h 1nl4\l:JO MIHllC M 30'•ll'•Un11K 3'. ~\·11ur!N11fOf'.>S I•,,, I l l 1>.o -·~ mpDSol!iO C•ndn 7106 1311 Pt 5!k 1S4 114 MIHl!rn 7•>• IS>.. Un McGll 9 ~ 9,' 6 ur"!lv 10 76 1'•~ 7'11l ?9'• + '• l moFln 971 ( rir Pr1c es " whic h lists all 0 1v1d J 11 • u hnc'f ~ t~ t ~~ Mtr•CI In 16'1'1 16'• us s nt nt 1, 9:J: Burro~• 60 11111 111 .. l'iJ\.o 15.1'" _,,,_ mDl•e G•• the Opt''o n• 0' ffered on the new ~~rwlln~ \~~: B#1 Nei'~•lh 10 1, 111, !::::iiJ ~ 11 11~~ us E"vlD 16': lAt Bu•h Uni• 1 n » n•-i 11"1 -"'° nu1hM1n -tO " 811rnh I'd 13 •1 lJ •1 Net S•Oe 16 96 ll il Mldte• ~~ ~'' 8~1J•:~n ~!; l~~ -C-~~,Ms~:~ lS cars in the market and l!us Mo1 1., 1 1 .. Na\IW C•I 1 J~ I~' Mldw c.1 21•i, 21•n UP p.., p ,1,., 13 CaOot c o 10 JO "'• •J '> ti u, -•1, oulmk 1 1l! hi h l CG.Fund 11 !i8115?Neu .. 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Wlln NA 17 11'h C•rr11rCp loO 11• ~•"• '"' '7~. -1 F•lrmonl 1 engines c per ormance a G' .. '" 1 02 1 67 P11l!A 16 JI 116s •• ,,,,, ,P 18'• 19\\ Wstn Mt11 ''~ 1v, carrGnt 1s. ~ 1<1,,. 16"-16'• -•1 Fals1111 10. t lO llljOtPll ll lllj16" 4" 5 W'lnPvO 21~21"'C••tW1I .0. ea 111 . ?1 1/t ~l''>-'•F1m!yF ln •O \antage made possible by 11n:,,o,m s•i !D P1n":'R: 11 nJ 1 oJ ~1!.,0,•,o IO••l0'1 Wst S1(p 1 ~. 1 ca111,c~e 6d 3!1 19 1e•, 11•.-·~F•ns!..,1 inc ' ( I G th 16 I te IS Pl E I t 11 t lol " l'o ?>~ Weit9ol ,1 • I"' C81t•T• I 4Cl JS<! t'll;i .j!µ1 49 '> -•• Ftr Wes! Fon engines requ1r1ng premium c~I~" ~I 1 " \ !• ,,gi,: F~d 11~· !)ft7 ~·~.\~~' 1~,I",. '~ •• '".,· ·w·~,".·,:·,~hl ,r,.: ',1,,:,:.1~•~<ts~.·.·.!,,, ~9,' z~.·.: ~!t !~~ ~ •••• ',,.'",",M··"··"' fuel IS SO s light thal Jl S lffi· Cw th C 1 11 1 t l P!•n tnv 11 :tit ll S4 N ~t R >" , ~ ... .,.. ,.. ..,, ..., "" ~ (omg Gr Ill t lf PTlortll l •Ol llll N11! 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JI '• ll\t ->t Cllel1e• l i t9 16 lo l' •• -''° F1tNStr l.le ' Eolcn&How•rd Com SI 111111 n lollm!r1I o'1o' ",,~', 10'1 10\o +11 Chemltrn 40 ti 2!'2'1 1''i. 71'• + • f'11Penn 111 <ome o ver-equopped c nr he B•l•n 1c 01 1c ~• Securl!Y Fund• •llnt L!e 1 ~ 6d , 60 •> -'• cnt mHY 118 l tO 55'• 5s•. ss->o + "'F•P•M l 929 c;rwt~ l}s.8 110l f:qu!V •!6 i l~ Aqulrff Co IJ 10\• IO • 10\o -• (l'>fs 01\lo n l 56'• 55' SS''-J'-F>tVtBk~ 40 may have in stock Caution 1ncnm o .11 1 11 1.,y,,1 1 11 1 tJ .-.11H n inc in 16'-14'• 1.p.,, + \\ CN!'•bl" 1 O• n 61"-591,., so'o -1 ~, F,1w 11c 166 ' Sn Pd 11:111'" Ul•r lOJ6 \ll5ili,frPrOO' 70b ]7 !J'• 6J•, 411-1-_,,.Chl E•1l lll 11 101• 10 ~ 10'•+ ~l'lschtx:n 10 this may be d 1H1cult to dn 1n ~''"k n t1 is oo s~io:.;i:d Fund• ' .-.1rco1n 1°" 111 11, n•. ni. + ~. c11°M11 .. Ca 11 !l 17\o 11" -• Fiih•Fd ,09 Eto<•Td! l•M1S OJ S I Am !O l lll'!!AJ lndV•lrl•1 ft t 1•1 "-1>.. 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"H\4o """ _" 11 1 • tot ..,. ~ ;;;; - Und.r. •r•nl i-m t•· N•4 1...,"f,..,,!'!1s'f:Tue1rHN 1lU''''"'Gt<i'111.so 21110 , ... 7CI ,.,.n,. , at? v. ,•-• D '"lit: l"llot 1 n 1•~' 4UA G<ll11ofl t(I S!Jl,,.JJ'tlN -\4 Dl'l'llSof¥ ... n~ M -" Uonal Aeron1uUa and Space c.~r. $ ~~,Niu ~ 1'1 '1""1 n :'"~', ;f '~ ~~ ~~ :.r.z :;,~ =-:1~',:; i1.0J H ;] + \; Admlni!tt1Uon to hnd a ~ • ... , ,, 8~~;"14 1 1 'R Am M.,,,,, " 13' "° Jt"lo ao + .,. omJ• llA~ s i' f~ _ " means of controlling sound •l G= trs..c 111 'ai ~IOI\ nltll~ :"'k~~.i'°ri : W! ~: :i:}; :'.:: !: 111 J,~ "; ,~:A. t l% "ls .r..u I"' 1-" m ,fa,._~ .-, Medk'Oro "111 741, 1"' n U-~d .. t ,_ r.1 I SOUf'C't r:rst ,,..JJ 1\ 1 '"' f..it •. A MllCI• 1,.. 11 1't"-,.,_, 2N + .. "1" rJ + Usu11 the p iston and the ;~~1" Q'C,j '" ltfll~ A~.~'° ':~.;;<A ri'-'I ~ 1 .3t 1. .,_i;t piece ol p~~~Sturtevant 1hu t!'ri. 1' ul~ir * lif ,..!9'~, 1~ 1 :,;:"' :0 ,;.~ "'If ~ "" ';:.: :4:." __.,.....,,. a.i~ waves a a Fill "'"' ij I c"" °'" i 1, A'" SMe • a "" 41 nl\ El: ,,,. -.. --·-0-(~ '" o tff l>.S""'"ilt I " •1 •• !o• ,, .. + .._ " -+ ~ rate of up to 6,000 per miMte ,:.;;;;_ • 1 AmkAl'r " iO "" n \'i !m _.; HJlll t A ,. -whkb abo products JOUnd ni~ .. Ufl \ ~ . 4 I :~:-. ': 'll a~ != n~ -" "·<'~ I ~ '5 '° lnteme il can kill. 200 ,, ,:._:, ~~:r ~ t., :..,s"",::·".u .. --, """ J:B + .. ~., ;.:. . declbtls. B)' w~y of com-..., 1J1J 1 • ~ l· ltl "~' 1 '1 160 ,.. N ,. di parlaon. a discoUlfque bas a •SJ.~· _,,. v:;:. sns.,J • ii "'rt.\ "' 4 1l~ noise levtl ol about 110 V:"t11 ~...:C ~'" t-:1:n::•::,11s .~ :~ 1J l~ _-:: • 1 ~g IC ~=t dt'Cibels. T,-vs, "" V'\fVln II., Ir ti "1tO"OI\ AO JI II ,,_ 11 + \Ii • ... r.: ll'!IO CM 11n n 1'I Vo (!'~ A1"1t111 '°" tlS ,.... '"' ltl'o -\Ii ,,II ~ e _:t To protect ~mself. Sturt .. t_: :~ ~':, 1t.#J ~:f!I 1,. t -f! :f.1"".01 m ~ c: Jr' -.., t:; it'., Ol7 s;;I; i'i' ~ -~ Vanl Wt:ln 1-\")' t:Af plU<> ~ 90l , 8 l~ vir''lit It 4 "t.i AM~ '"" U " 'n: 1$,. 1N tN .~ ,, ,t .... ~ -'I while studying the. shock INTG:t' J-w 11~ -:,':ii"l. 0 '. I n'1 .. =."'re:: .?! 11:: 1:l! 1r'--~ ?1'~ "I: T 3t; I -=: Wl\'6 wb1cb are lhe prlma"" 1tA 'J '' \~ Wtt11 " I 14 4 ,.,'",... ('"' al ,.,. """ """' -" JJi' ' i ft1{ !-" , •1 "'"("..pt '\,., t. """"' It• • ..... ,"" , ,. -Stt, ~ 3'Wi 3'\11 -~ n1 l' -""' CIUY of lhe noise or SUCh \':.,.!1~ ,,~· IJ.fl w;~~ 1\if<M ·.~'o' ~ '' _..... JO\'I ..,. -" t~m 1.ll "' • • d ·-' I ,..__ •• "".,, .,.. ,•, ~,;,~ ~ ~ + l41• ' "' " ,,.. • -.~ (!VICt'!Umolon:T.,,,_.eengntS '"'~~,~-.~.,~ ~ \ •s.1 : """" J ~.; ....... --+ ' t and }et 1 lrcraft engines ~ 'l!!" 1' ,~ 1 •, ,. ::":.'::...,~ ~ 11 jf!"' 1::-~ ""' 1 ~1 Jd' flv. fl!m 1 "' + ~ Hh,, ob ..... t•• is to br!ak r.;".-70J;,ffl J.I.\1,, ,f.:Z ,t .. ~llthHKt I ·~,. ~::i4 -f ~ i -~ vu I'-"' s.ct t ~ 't M W;titt. 11 "'1:1! --~ .-~,..,: le: """ + ~ Olt• l• ... -" Up the !hor_k Wl\lt.~ at lhf Vat --, •P ~ Wl"'f:: tll I :if~ 1..: """"' I• := :f" +1:! '..!~ .. ".l' ~ =+ ~ IOW'Ct talher lhln trying to~~ ~,.we11 rn""~•"'W O'll1 .,. r ·~ .,..._ .. -..... "' mufOe the r?.Sullin& IOUOd ~ ~ :11 "'1 {" :~cc;. 1• 1~ ~ Jr. ; ~ ,µ:' IS E ~ " =:1: wavtS," he Slkt ..... ,_ ,~a.e ,1;11 S ,,,tl: :f ij." i 11"1 ~ 1"' = 14C. :0,,jl' J "" "~ + ~ I I I I • . -~ . ' • -.... _ • • • Orange Coast Today' Final N.Y. Stocks VOL 65, NO. 29, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1972 c TEN CENTS U.S. Would Talie Looli at Red POW Proposals WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United States is willing to consider any serious North Vietnamese proposal concerning release or prisoners of war, a high-rank· ing State Department official testified to-day. , William H. Sullivan, deputy assist.ant secretary or stale for East Asian and Pacific •ffairll, said that while President Ni.zoo's J an. 2$ peace proposal "offers a fair, rtuonable basis for resolving the Vietnam conflict, we remain willing to consider any serious proposal concerning POWs." Sullivan spoke only a short time after the Viet Cong's new peace plan in Paris and apparently did not take note of it. (See earlier story, page 4). Meanwhile, Ellsworth Bunker, U.S. Ambassador to South Vietnam, conferred at the White How;e with President Nixon. During his Capitol Hill visit, Sullivan faces questioning on an allegation that the United States allowed Saigon to possibly block a neutral lnspecUon of PO W camps in North Vietnam. Sullivan told the House Foreign Affairs subcommittee on National Security Policy and Scientific Developments that Nixon's public offer included an offer to implement prisoner releases in parallel with troop withdrawals. "To date there is litUe evidence that the other side Is willlng to negotiate In terms which seriously and reallsUcall y renect the actual ·sltuaUon in 1ndocilna," Sullivan said. "They are still attempting tG achieve their maximum objecllves." he said . "We nevertheless hope that we may induce Hanoi to forsake the batUefield In favor of the conference table and thereby achieve the release of our prisoners,·• Sullivan said. Sul\lv11n s11id that "over 1600 U S. n1lllta ry personntl are Usttd a:<1 mls.!-llni:- or c1pturtd In Southeast Asi&. and ovrr 40 U.S. clvill1ns 11.rl!'.! In lhe same slatu~. According to Defense D e p 11 r l m e n t figures, 383 nf our men are ll~led as c1t1>- tured In North Vietnam, 92 In South Vltt- n11:m. 5 In Lan:<i." "Tw o U.S. pilots are known to Ix: clip· 21 Vie • Ill turtd lo <'h1nM The tnl11!!ill~ 1·1v1l1an:ii: In· <'lt1dr three t ' S. news1nrn lo:.t 111 C'an1- l>otlla ." S11lli\'1U1 snid , however . that "lht Actu11I ltttal hrltl A:is prisoner" rrtnAins Un<'trl 11l" lht~ to th1• nthf'r side's <11ntlnur.d refusa l tu 1d1•n!Hy nil prl~ner~" Sullivan Al.~o said the f'omn1u11lst.~· rt·t·nrd un !ht' rn11tll'r or pri.~uners ' ma il i1nd pnl"'kngcs hus deteriorated. Mesa Record Field for Council Vote Drive i1a for Renewal? Kilik Romberg. 4. appem· to. be lookiDC for the "dr1ve-1n window" fQI' his "driver's UCe'ft:Se renewal while other la teco~n wait in line outstde the Costa Mesa office of the Department of Motor Vehicles. Kirk, son o[ Mr· an<l Mrs. H., F. Romberl or Newport Beach, won't really have to worry abOul thinp like this for another 12 years at least. Police Seize Incoherent Girl Battling Autos Desperately rending oU r I a s h Ing , slashing feet , teeth and nails, e.ostl Mesa police finally corralled an incoberent woman racing around a busy intersection trying to stop cars with her bare hands early today. The detainee, 18, was almost struck and killed or seriously injured about 3 a.m ., when ooe motorist mls5ed her by inches on Harbor Bou1evard at West Wilson Street. She was taken into protective custody as a possible psychotic and admitted to Orange Coun ty ~ted.ical Center for 72 hours' observation. No evidence or drug use '4'as di5covered . according to investigating of· licers. who did not book her on any criminal charge. Patrolman Chano Cammarillo and his followup orficer said when they finally did corral the incoherent female she repeatedly smashed her head into the poUce car windows trying to btta'i: out. Offi~ Camarillo said both were kick- ed, h.it and bitten by the frantic wom.aq but neither suffered more than minor ·m.: juries. 1be victim ~ ao Violent ·after ar· f riving at headQlwters for booking that ~ 1he had to be held down and strapprecJ !&- to a .strait jacket. · Passersby ftrsl reported the bizaJTe in- dlcent, fearing the stocky five-foot, two- Inch woman wearing a rtd blanket, poncho and beanie cap would be hit by. a car. Santa Ana Chica110 Leacler Seized on Fraud Charges A leader or the Santa Ana Chicano communlty who rose from an orange grove laborer and handyman to hotel and cafe owner today faces prosecution a5 kingpin in a lucrative ring allegedly sell· ing false U.S. papers to Mexican aliens. Portly Jose "Papa Joe" Perez. 61, was taken into custody at his Palace Cafe, 320 E. Fourth · St., by federal agents Wed· nesday afternoon and booked into Orange County Jail. He was released on his own recognizan- ce several hours later. while six Mexican nalionals -three of them women employed by him -were lakcn Into custody at the cafe as aliens and are still he ld for deportation. Specific cha rges to be filed against the arrestee, an. Orange resident , were bf>. ing determined this morning in Los An- geles. Spokesmen for the U.S. Department of Immigration and U.S. Attorney's Office said they would be announced later in the day. Perez was initially booked on a charge . (:rippled Child Of Easter Seal .Fame Contested of possession of counterfeit a I i e n registration cards for sale, but other item.!! taken as evidence may lead to ad- ditional criminal counts. No suspected counterfeit registration card dealer has ever been arre sted be· fore i11 Orange County. The case was bicoken after Perez allegedly sold a counterfeit green card - authorizing alien presence and employ· ment here . Perez and the other she were arrested after $300 allegedly cha nged ha nd~ between him and a federa l agen t to com- ple te. the transaction. Perez is well-known in the Santa Ana business com munity. both for his Mex- ican food -favored by many policemen, attorneys and judges -and his generosi· ty toward the poor. One annual Christmas tradition observ· ed by Papa J oe has been the transportation of truckl oads of donated clothing for the poor of Tijuana. Born in New Mex ico, Perez was railed In the El Modena area of Orahge County Bod hu been held up a1 an example of what a Chicano with thrift and energy can achieve for himself. One ironic oote was injected during the booking process, the kind !hat OC· cuhmally comes in a family with one member in the field of Jaw enfOrcemenl. Perez' son Peter Ls a deputy marshal . assigned to jail duty. Stunned observers today surveyed a record field of 21 Costa Mesa City Coun· cil candidates -twice l964's previous high -predlcllng a lively, 68-<lay ride down the rugged campaign trail. Only photo darkroom technician C. Eric Funston is ·now left out of the party of 22 \4'ho announced their candidacy earlier. Funston, of 332 Prin ceton Dr ive, failed to make the noon fi ling deadline with nomination papers assuring his name a place on the ballot.. By noon. City Clerk Eileen Phinney had logged in 21 sets of nomination papers , at least 15 or which have already been checked again st voter r e g i s t r a ti on records and ruled valid . Si x more late-filing candidates were le> ha ve their papers examined against records at the County Registrar of Voters' office -in Santa Ana this 1£~ ternoon. c~ appeared good lhal all would lie Wltd . ~were.....,..... to obta in JO nominee !l~ature1, tn c1se some ·of the fl ve required are nlled ln· valld. Costa Me11'1 previous 1U-otlme high for councll candklata occurred fn 19H wbea II ca ndidates ran. The roster dropped to nine in 1968 - with one wrlte·in campaign waged · - and in 1970 only seven sought office. The field i1 vastly varied amoog age and occu pation. Candidate!: range from their early 20s to near-retirement years. Occupations include : at t orney , machinist, legislative lobbyist, motorcy· cle mechanic, mail carrier, educator, real estate, sales and various types of self-employment. Veteran observers point out that !he large field makes r~lectlon easier for the incumbent candidates. City Councilman \\'llliam L. St. Clair, fighting far hi.!I first ~·e.leclion. jumped into the fral by 11tndin1 Jetten of 1dvice and counse to challengers based ()TI his polltica\ educallon. lie knocked then-Viet Mayor Cal Barck out in 1968, the first C01St1 Mesan ever to unseat an incumben t candidate. Reaction around town was va ried todny 1U,lf ....... LINKED WITH IRVING.T Singer Nina Vin '•ll1ncft Rogers Accuses Muskie Of Harming Interests WAS HI NGTON (AP ) -Secretary of State William P. Rogers today acc used Sen. Edmund S. Muskie of f\.1aine, can· didate for the Democratic presidential nomination, of harming the U.S. national interest by rejecting the new Nixon Viet- nam settlement plan before enemy en- voys have . "I thlnk this particular !lpeech {by Muskie ), coming at this time, was most inappropriate and hannful to the natk>nal interest," Rogers Uild newsmen, "I think every man who run1 f()r office -I'm speaking particularly of preiilden· tlal candidates -should ask himself whether tt serves the nat;onal inltre1t" before taking a public stand on the Vitt· nam issue, Rogers said. "What ha1 happened, we have 1 re· Jffilon here In this country" or the Nixon proposals by a prominent political figure "before the enemy has rejected our pro- posals , ·• he 1aid. The Nixon admlnl1traUon ha1 been mounting a counterattack 1 I a I n 1 t Mull kle'1 spetch Wednesday 1ay1ng the United States should set a date for tot.al military wlthdraw1J from lndochlf\I, with release of U.S. prltoner1 and 11fety o( U.S. troops the only concllllon. The Maine llft11tor 1ald Nixon's eight,.. point plan put forward publicly ti the Paris t.alk1 a week ago was 1n 1ttempt to win at the confer,nce t1ble whit cannot be won on the Indochina battlefield. . '. Gen. i\lcNarney Dies LA JOLLA (AP) -Gen .• J ... ph T. l1cNamey, 78, who aUccetded Qen. ~ [)wight D. Eisenhower 11 C\>mlnlnder of American forces In ~ a11or !forld War II, died TuelClay. Mdlar'ney I.il<r . severed as Pttsident or Corrrlir Aira'•ft. Easter Seal organizations in three Southern C8lifomia counties joined forces Wednesday to halt what Ibey claimed is miartpresentaUon by the rival Crippled tbildml'• Society of Los Angeles. Two Court Sites Studied Harbor News On Page 21 1bt saga of aa aroma.tic skunk versus bureaucracy, an a91l~als of the under-enrollment ~ pro- blem In the Harbor Area and an ac- c~nt of how • c.orona del M.ar chur<h 80lolst mode tt1>11 Broodway art featured st.or.ill msMte toda,..1 OAJLV PII.oT. Pora lull page ol 0-and olhet ...... -o1the-..,.i11e1c1>- Coota t.i ... .,..., l"'!I to p ... 21 loday. nge .County'Sllperior Court Judge J. "Neid" Rutter signed a restraining that will prevent the Los Angeles oiiumlloo from distrlbuling Its alleged· ly almo<l idenlkal aeals during upcoming campaigns in Orange, Ventura and San Bemal'dlnooountles. Ai -ploinlI!la argued In thtlr Sli>irlor Court IaWIUll Illa\ the publle In tbttf area was "cx:nfuM!d Ind ml&led" bJ .. L0o Al!CeJeo JP'Ollp'I UM of a alp- pied' cbIJd u a campaign symbol -a iradlUonaJ Easttr s..I ldeollllcation. ~ allo uk In lhelr lawsuit lor recep\ition ol the tllie "Easler Sul" and the &amr IUy u lhelr copyright which should be expressly -"' .. , other organlzltJoo_ Ru88 Announce Shot llOSOOW (AP) -The Soviet Union an- nounced today tho launching of Cosmos m. latat In <he top-secr<l seriel o/ W>- DWlnOd saleIIJfa; Temporary Harbor Judicial District Housing Sought By J4CI( BROBACK °' .. Dtltr ...... ,..,. Possible sites for t<mporary quarten ol the Harbor Judicial Dlalrlct <Ourta have been n&ITOWed to two, it wa.1 IUrn- ed today. St.ill uodtr cona:Jde:raUon art the Collil'll Radlo Company office buiLdln& on the !Inn's property m th of Campm Drive and eaJt o! Jamboree Road and tbt lonner Aslropower Divbion buildings of the McDonntll DouglH Corporf,lion Al the not1l1easl c:orn<r of campus Drive and MacArthur Boulevard. Both sites are near Ora"8< County Ail'jlOrt. Temporary quart.en are IOUght to rdieve the courta ol their •. .!'! ...... "lo!ally lnad<qual<" lacilttlet ._,.:west IJlh &rte! In Colla "'-. ID the words 01 Judit Donald DungaA. 0unpn b bandlbJi oecoli>llona 1or !ht lhne-Judc• OOUf1 •blcb will be - Io I• next IWdl. • Lui ...t ooqnly -rvlaorl .. re told by cooaly llldldllic ~ Dlnclor Joaoph -that lilt -..... uodtt conilderallon. Tho board tcc<pted llupmlllor Ronald Cuptt1' sugeatlon that the decision be norrowed l<> three slta -the Colllna of· Ier ol 2',000 oquare I.et or """"· the Airport Bultneu c.m.r. owoed by th< I.rvlnt Company Al lM MacArthur Roulevord , Just south of the 8en Dlef<I Pr..,.ay. and !ht Elpac Inc. bulidlnc at 11151 Von Kannan Awe .• In tbl 11me am. Tho Ialltr two h1Ve bftft dlmlnal>d becaUJe ol nlm!lvt r..,,....... re- > •• quired, and the --., bcllity ado ded, accilrdlnc Io SWiley Kn .... camty real property -cllnclor. "We hive not received fqnnal offm Imm McDonnell DoucJas or Col1Ina u yet," Kra111e Wd. "But We npect to have them by Prldly. "We wlll burn the mktftlght oil ovu the weekend. di&tslln& the oosi. and rtport Io Individual supervllors llonday," he added. The board baa tchedukd m () r e dllcuulon on the problem !or Wednetday st 10 a.m. Lut week, 1 ColUnt reprfll!ntltlve said his firm would Ieue Ibt -ry _. !or temporary -11 !or It ....U a loCJlllre foot Ior 11r-:,1.m or ll.J cau a ~OOIJ ...... 11 at the final 21-candldale field . "Holy Mo ses!," marveled Chamber o! Corr11ncrcr. Executive l'ol1nager Nick Zlr.ner. Incumbent Councllm11n Alvln L. Pink· lt•y wns fr11nkly bafflett by the sudden (Ste MF.SA. P111e ZI H11ghes-lrving Meet Unlil\:ely, Singer States l>'rom Wire Servlcc11 NE\V YORK -A blonoe Oanl1h 1lnRtr who w111 In Maxloo with 1ulhor Cllfkird Jrvlna last ye1r uy1 1he 1ee1 no w17 h• l:OUld hive met wllh How1rd Hul}M1 11 lie clalmed . The name of 111nger Nina van Pall1ndt, n, w11 brolllhl lnlo the 0111 or tht purported Hu,hH aul<>bloR••Phf when lrvfna cl11lmed she was with hlrn lt11' two of JOO Interview t1tplng 1e111l()nl ht 1111d ht1 held with the billionaire. Jrvlng claim· ed she wn1 with him when he met ffu,:ihe1 In MC!xlr.o la 1t Ftbrunry 1:1nd In l.01 An geles in June. A !As An&ele1 Time« corre1 pondtnt reported today from New York In a telephone lntervltw with the 11lngcr, who Is In the Bahnm11, that l'lhe 1111d at no time did 1he 1et any man who could have p1.11.11ed for Hughes during the Mex ican trip last Feb. 13-14. She wa 11 ep1rt from Irving "one to on e ind h11U hours 1t the mo11I ," !he Tfme1 quoted her al 11oylng. Miss van P11landt 1111ld 1he 11pent five hours Wednesday talking tc " U.S. postal tn1pect.or who was In the DahamaJ in connectlon with the Hughe1 book tn~ ve11Ugstlon, according to the Tlmea. She 1ald 1he and her manager-producer .John Mar1hs tl, who 111110 ill In the Uaha ma11, would r1!lurn W New York vl)!unterlly W apptar btfore a lederal grand Jury. J<""ederal and Nt-w York r.ounty ;rand jurie1 are lnl/t s ·tlgatlng the autobiogra phy cast. The U.S. Attom1"y'11 Office 11ld Jrvln &r would not 1ppear berore the federa l grand Jury today a1 had been reported earlier. The pojl)tponemtnt WIJ IOU,llht and ob- tained by Jrvlna'• lawyer, 1ald U.S. Atty. Whitney N()rth Seymour Jr. He 11ve no explanation other thin to 11y he wa1 "talking only for Ioday."' Also winning 1 pol lPol\ement w11 John Mtler. 1 formtr 1de:ntlflc: o:::in1ultant to H.ughf'1. Seymour •llO would 1lve no ti· planatlon f()r Meler'• po1tponement. Neither lrvlna: oor Meier nor their (Ileo FJ\IEll'D, Pose JI 0r .... It wIU be a bit cooler on l'r!dty, with lncrusinc nllh cioudl .., c:orc!Jq "' Ille ••a111er ..,.Ice. 0Hn>ICht Iowa Ill Jo 40 loaJl)Jl with hJiha of 11 Io 11 f"rlday. INllDE TOD~ 'f lloword. ff1J9/t.ef miu::lc. Info i.. V t[IOI hi JOf4 and b<g<m his !<ma reign ., the "mvll•rtl matt" of the cU1trt. TM third article In thi1 1n-tt1 ii °" Paa• · 3 Wdav. L. M. 9t'l'4 1 Cfll""""• • < ... ..,.,. ... C-'4.t • -. DMI• liMfkM M ....... p .... ........ 7 ,. ·-.... , .......... ,, ....IU J I It ... ~ ,, -. --. --.. °'-c..r " .,.... ..... " ,_,, .... ---·-. -" ·-. ............ , .... --.. • -\ .. :t DAI LY PILOl Helicopte1· Does Joh- And How! Celllna!I and wall!'! tren1blcd . Sand scourtd vlrlually every vchicJ, in a three-block r11d1u.~ A huge cl11ud of dirt and dust 11ri<irtd he avenward, litkin~ all !'IOrL~ of debris 'with it Candy wr&1,pcr~ :u1d !'lcrups of crn1cn1 ·hall!'! from A 1 ·nn~lru1·tion sllf' !hat wall (;round Ztro floated rlnwn l\Ul ol !he sky for 10 minulr!'I 11ftcrw11 rd Crln1tnl:il charRel'i Aff" bt1nR ton!'l1dered today In !he 1nvci;t1i;iallon fotlowlng a Newport Beach episode that 110undcd ti) all withlJ'I e1trlhot like another Krakatoa Volcano ind the Crack of Doom rolled in· to one. Thal 1hould bt about 10,000 !'!Outs. give Or take I few. The whole ~how 11h1rtr.d Innocently enough with 11 pl11n to repl11ce an nlrl water t11 nk atop !hf" eii;:ht-!'ltory Vista drl Lido apartment tower , fill Lido Park Drive. 'rhc job w11s to be done by Rr i!t:.!I ·11clicopter.!I, Santa Monica. Talks Continue . On Dock Strike Hy MJ CllAEL llUDSON SAN FRANCISCO I UPI l -President Nixon h;is cal led on C.:8ngress to end the 116-da },uld West Coast dock strike, which he says has "thrust a spik e into our pro· gress toward econom ic recovery." In San Francisco, m e a n w h j 1 e , •·roua Page 1 FRIEND ... lawyers was reached Immediately for comment. Irving had been asked to appear Mon· day before both the federal and a county grand juries, but won postponements on grounds that he needed more time to con- sult with a new lawyer . Meanwh ile. a specitil agent of the U.S. spokesmen for the Long~horemen·s Union and sh1~ner~ had no word of progres! (o"ol'ard ending the walkout. which ad· ni1oistrat1on off1 t·1:1ls toolend has already ('Ost more than $1 billion in trade defi cits and agricultural losst'S Although spokt:scncn drcl1ned to com- ment on neg1111at1ons. ta lks continued olf- and-on \\'edn!'sday an<! did not break up unul after 1 a in tuda }. 1"hey v.·ere to l'l'Surne .1t 10 a.ni. Bu t while the \\'est Coast doc k situation was stalemated. the threa t or an East Coast doc k v.·alkou t later th'1s monlh wa.it eased when the I n t e r n a t i on a I Longshoremen's Association ( I L A) agreed in New ''ork lo extenci its con .. tract with Atlantic and Gulf Coast ship- pers for 30 days beyond the Valentine's Day Taft,Hartley strike deadli ne. In his bluntly-worded written message to Congress Wednesday, Nixon urged passage of both his crnergency dock str1~e . bill _and _his l\vo-yea r-old proposal to _!im~t ~trikes in the longshore, truc ki ng, rail , airline and shipping industries. The Nixon emergency measure would 1'he Brlle.!1 crew did indeed r!o a job. The only problem i!'I, it appear!!, !hR l !hey didn't noury <.·i1y offi<'ials and ohtai n -a mandatory hel it'Qpter la11tlu1~ ptrn11l l\'otl1i11' to Hoot Abot«t Poslal Service, John 1'arpey, was in New 'York to take over the posta! service's in- vestigation of possible mail frau d. He confl rn1cd that the Postal Service sent an investigator to Switzerland but did not say \\'hat the inves tigator acco mplished th ere. o rd e r s I r i k i n g I n t e r national !,(J ~gsho remen's and Warehousemen's _Union 1 ILWU ) mernbers back to w o r k 1?1mcdiate!y while a three-man arbilra · tlon board picked by the secretary or l~bor decided on a final settlement of the di spute within 4-0 da ys. The board-ordertd settlement v.·ould remain in effect for 18 months. -"·hich requires C.:1ty Council approval. The big cargn chopper .!IWO()pcd in nvf'r lhe Adjacent Nt:wport Beach Clty Hall 11nd Police Dep11rtment com plex 11bout .S :05 11.m .. vi rtually evacui:it ing the com- bined slaff. Secretaries. department heads. police officer.!! and detective!! ru.!lhed, out leav- '1ng trails of spilled coffee. "My Lord ... It isn 'I nurl'i is it?" iasped one po/Jee cl e p a r t m en t clerk. S t: t I I n g down at a v 11 c R n I <.'On· 1truction .!lite lot, the bi,i:: hel icopter·.~ rotorwash sent £rains of sand fl yi ng in all direction.!!. The roaring turbine engine 11\so 5cnt .. ~ound v.•ave.!I rlcoche!lng off lhe apart· .ment tower 11nd broujt:hl hellds popping out of windows tor blocks arounrl. Police Walch Co1nman rler Lt. Ric h llamllton hopped Jn a pa trol car and ,11creecht:d out of !he headquarters lot wit h red lights nashinJi to invesllgate. No one could have heard the siren if he used It. By this time , the lank replaet!mtnl was ... 1ln1ost complete ind lilt choppeo r pilot - 't upport cables detached -beat 1 hasty .retr~t fur Santa Monic a, leaving ground ;crewmen to face the polict. Officer Gary Lte lnterTogated employe Louie N1va and Sgt. Wa yne Connelly sa id today that the city is investigating lo determine what -il any -violations oc .. curred. GeneraUy, witnesses agreed . there wa!f a dlsturbance of the peace. 'J'h 1s snowy O\\ll is recoverinJ:( at the Museum of f\1a- tural History in Clevel and after surgery \Vedn es· day to remove part of its two-foot long left Y:ing. 'fhe O\vl col I idcd \vilh a private plane \vhich \Vas land ing at do\1•nto11•n Burke Lakefron t Airport. It was fnunrl dazed in a grassy area along the run\1•ay. Ca1nbodians Fear N. Viet Daniage To Old Sliri1ie Pt!NO~I PENlt (UPI) -Can1bodlan Informati on Minister Long Boret said to- day th ~ fam ed 9th Centu ry temples of Angkor Wat would be des troyed by lhr North Vietnamese or allowed to fa f! into disrepair if action is not taken soon. Long Boret said !ht: No rth Vietnamese. who ha ve controlled the area lf>O miles northwest or Phnom Pen h since J une, 1970, have forced a stop to conservation work . kidnaped hundred s of conservation workers and confi scated the repa ir material. Long Borel asked the United Nations to declare the area a neutral zon~ to permit conservation work to cont inue and .!lave them from destruction . The Cambod ian high command said to- day · that two government .lloldiers were killed and five wounded Wednesda y by a North Vietnamese mortar barrage within three miles of the temples. lnclusi~11 of Newport Bay 111 Bill 'Not Solicited' ' By CANDA CE PEARSON 01 l~t Dtll1 '°!IOI sr1rr Orange Cnun ly never requested that State Sen. Peter Ilchr (R-Tiburon) 111, elud e Upper Newport Bay in his proposed ''v.·ild ri vers" bill as Behr claimed earlier this \.\'eek, a spo kes rnan for Fifth District Supervisor Ronald Caspers said today. And the Board of Supervisors cannot endorse or oppose the bill. which is llimed at protecting scenic values and 1vildlife, •·until lull study by our legislative com- mittee," Tom Fuentes. Caspers' ad· minis trative assistant, said. Irvine Com pany officials said only they 're loo k.ing al the bill . Behr 's proposa l would pcrmanenlly outlaw dam construction, reservoirs and dredg ing and fi lling by pr" i v a I e developme nts in incl uded areas. !·le said the estuary was threatened beca use of "land fill s and othe r priv ate developments because a lot or tidelands are privately owned." This is the first time a Southern California waterway has been proposed in Behr's measure. He added that he would be willing to in- clude other waterways which have been nan1ed in a 1971 Resources Agency report ll S "possessing extraordinary scenic and l\'ildl ife values and in imminent danger of development." His legislation declares the Klan1ath, Trin ity, Smith and Eel Rivers in northern Cali forl'lia as "wild" an d prohibit! dams on those rivers. fl. si1ni!a r bill authored last year by Behr Y..'Ould ha ve slopped dams on the Eel. Klamath and Trinity Rivers. but v.·as defeated. On the Spanish isJ;:ind of Ibiza "'here Irving and his wife have their home. a nian describing him self as a long-time friend of the author said he had been ask- ed by JXIStal inspectors if he is will ing to come lo the linited States. The friend, Gerald Albertini. an American, said he ke pt the Hughes ma nuscript in his home for about 10 days and also said he had no plans to come here "unless I am instructed to do so." Ta rpey's office rerused to say whether Alberti ni had been questioned , but said none of its agents had been to Ibiza. were on their way there or planned a tri p there. The special agent's office said no visits were planned to Majorca. a nearby isl and where Richard Suskind lives. Suskind. a resea rcher, has been described by [rving as being present during one of his meet· ings '.l'ith Hughes. From Page 1 COURTS ... square foo l for fi ve years. Sn1isek. said these figures ~·ere not final as they did not include the cost whic h Col li~s must bear, of building jurY boxe s. providuig proper lighting and con· s!ruct 1J1g p ri.~oner holding cells. "Let us resolve that this stoppage on t~e West Coast will be the last o! its kind," Nixon said. "The doc k strike thrust a spike into our progress toward economic recovery threat~ed our balance of payments and undermined the confi dence of foreign buyers who need to rely UJXln dependable deliveries." he said. The House was expected to act ne1t ~eek on the legislation while Senate ac- tio n wa s more of a question. "Not all th e senators or congre5.5men a~ree that there is an emergency," Se n. Richard S. Schweiker IR-Pa. I, a member or the Senate Labor and Public Welfa"re Committee, said Wednesday. It Is his co mmittee which would hol d purvi ew ove r such legislation. .~o.mmittet' Chairman ~farrison A. \\1l11ams iD-N.J.), said the strike was a ''very ur~ent rnatter," but Congress should _ gi ve the .parties furt her op- portunity for collectu·e bargaining. Sen. Alan Cranston ~ D·Calif. ), said be h01d talked to both sides by telephone and "'as "increasingly hope ful" or a non· coerced settlement. Frona Page 1 His addition of the Newport Beach t?stuary Tuesday accompanied two oth!'r additions: the Nor th Fork of the Arneric an River in No rthern California and part Of the An1eric an River itself. LA Medical Aide The L'ollins rnan said hi s firm could ha ve the building ready for use in 75 days af.tcr . the start of remodeling . Har bor District Judge Calvin Schn1idt said the courts could be moved "over ll weekend~'' Burglars Lure Bo y From Home, Get $900 L>ot MESA CANDIDATES. • • surre of city-wide Interest. "I dorft 'know why , .. I just don 't know," he remarked . "There doesn't teem to be an)' pattem to II." ''But 1 think it'5 hea lthy," he 11dded . Candldal" will appear in alphabetical order on the April 11 ballot, but here i.!I a general list of the 21 Costa Mesans, be.glnnlni: with incumbents: M1yor Robert M. Wiison, or 2000 AliM> A1·t ., an aluminum awning C'ontraetor ~·ho$e scrvlct' ln co1nniun1tv 11ffairs and politics dates back 20 yl"ar~.-llr has serv· f'd on the plannin,i.: conln11s!i1o n and is a Cha1n~r of Con,n1ercc lradf'r He i~ fit tkini;: A fourth counr1l trrrn ' Councilman Alrln I.. l'inklrr. flf !R.11 l-'l1lltrlnn A\r. phHrn111i-1:-t 1tr;d lon~r~t l'Onl11n111u~ hnlilfr of pt1li11r;il •1fr1cr 111 Or11ngt Cnll nl~·. ElCl'tf'd tn \954 tf1 a tv.·f\- Ytllr t"t'lun<:1I ltl"ll\ !hat rs lab!1~hr<l lhr 11taggcrtd. 111·0 and thrt:e-:i t 11t v11eanr1r.~ j n . 111ltrnatr rlert1on )tars. P1nk.ley 1~ £fling for hi~ s\rth rampaign \ 1rto1r\', Councilman \\'\l lla m I.. St. f lili r, o{ OUJt•I COAR DAILY PILOT IMilOli CWT f'Val.UIUW <faHJrr l •'*i ti. WM4 ,,....... ............ J.,1c ~ c..i.., ""' ,,......, ... -.. ...... •••• k1ml •dllw Titt11111 A. M...,.lr.lt• JMM1"9 adl*' c~.r1., H. L .. , l.i·"·""' '· Nin .... uttwrol ............ llfllllrt c:.... ..... OM. )JO w .. 1 lty St1tri .. ..., A.14,_ ,.0 .... IU.O, '2lll --..._, ~ -.._., _.._. a...,. --..: ta ,... ·-.... Cl 9-d>;: 1"7S ._. .......... .. "-' ..... &f c-.. ... t"'" """°'· ........ ~ .. ; Pu -.. .....-...... .... 9'(WI S-. ............. •"'-.. "'-"""" ..._ """"""" ...._ 0.111 -... 11u •c= .............. v • ...,. ,,... <......., C¢k'll ... .,. • rrsaec't,, .-. .-.. W-~T."J:"C::':-.-. T< t14I 111tl MMm d S ·a ..Uzztl La .....n Q;p 5 ... "" ..... Cllillll , 5 •••• e '''' .. ..., ,.....,..,,,.... _. ...... .,.,., $ .... fllll'f:: • • • ..._.... ~ .... .... _ . ...,... ..... _____ ..., .. __.. ..... ----... ..,.,. ... _..,.. "' ... . ,, _..,....,., ............... -... 23 40 Newport Blvd., barber and aparl· me.nt house owner. He i.!I aee king first· term re-election. Domin.le Raciti, of 341 Hanove r Dri ve, jewelry and loan shop owner who was one of the first chall engers lo announce ran· dtclacy. He Is pruident or the Costa f\.fesa-Newport Harbor Lions Clu b. 11n ac- ti ve Chamber of Commt rce leader 11 nd longtime resident. Theodore C. "Ted " Bologh, of 845 Joann St., a machinist-eni;:.ine t:r "'Im stroni;:ly believes city ~overnmE>nt ncieds $n o\·erh11ul. not ju.c;t a l1tl!e tinker1ni;:. Rol0E:h is an oulspokrn t•rill r of !fical i;:ovr~nn1rnt He ha .c; i.'iln1pnigned 1hree t iinrs brfore Th11n1as l\1anu s. of 22\l Co llei;ie A\'f'. :;111dr11!. rx·J\otarine 11nd fur11i!lirc niakrr 11·ho r1u1 for C'nu ne1! 1n !970 without mu rh financial back1nl(. He ha~ rna1nla in rd ~ready a\lendance at council meeting~ after losing . Oa \'lrl ttlghton, of 3105 Loren Lane. planning ronsultanl "·ho quit h1~t year as the city's M>nior ass is tant planner to enttr business. A rt'Sident since 1952, be has 11 broad background or cornmun itv servu.:t . Leighton says he plan.ll a quiCt campaign CQncen tratlng on local ls.sues. ~. .~ed Palzattr. or 2373 Europa Drive, is an Orange Coast College phi!osoph)' profcs30r: also a Cal stale F'U.llerlon facully instructor. A pa st prtsi· de nt of lhe Cilizt ns' Harbor Area Researrh T~am iC>IART l. Painter urges an ~ura,llonal approach to c i t y bt11ut1flcallon and planning. l'rrsonality profil rs. photoi;:raphs and comi:nt'nt~ by 111! those runni ng vdl! be publtsht'd prior to the E'let'tlon. Htrf i~ a ba!!ic lnform11itlon capsule 00 the remaindr r: ~lyra H. Kl,.schf'nbaum . 366 LJ:iurd es Lane. real estate agent. Blllit R. Goldra. Qf 1222 Londonderry SI , crt<!it m1n1grr. ~lary E. Nola•. o( 2010 Baltra Pla'rt." tducator . f'ttdu\k Bos. or :SSI 11-tagoolla St . stlr- tmploy..t. - G. E. "'~t.e)"' Mc<i•lrt. or r;g w. lath St. motorcycle mechanic. . Jclfny t;•Dt. of 2051 C.lvtrt A\'t., at .. tomey. WIDilm F, Manlll. of 2402 F'rancls Lane, S.cramtnto lt&L1l•livt public re.la· lions Spteia.li5'. Lt1rb F. S.wd<•. ol ~ W 1~• St d<idmal!er. . ~ ·• PWH-!t~·aas. ol !211 ld•ho Plaet. str''· iC"t stauvo operator. Sim Elttvic:i. Of Pt Darrtll st .. mail c:a nitr. llarftll Nell. ol ml f'<>lnoM Avo . _, .. ,.,_, ., Qarlle R. ldtrt, o1 JIU Sao Marino Circlt, sa.ltsman. J•rnes Ai:nzsa, nl ltoS ~,., C'llt'le. t Jraaft •wk.tr. The Republican said he added the three wa te rways to the protective bill at the specific requtst of officials represe11ting the three areas. "5'nator Behr called us tv request" our lnput into the bill and lo express his in- terest in including the Upper Ba y," Fuentes explained. e.nlpha siz.ing it "'as not a county-initiated action . He called Behr's bill just one possible solution Caspers is investigating "to \lo'Ork in eve.rv direction to assure prcscrvar ion or ihe bay." Caspers did, at Behr 's request. Fuentrs added, direct county counsel to provirlc tht' srn<itor \.\"ith necessary Jega! descr1p· lion!! of lhe area . The future dtve!opnu•nt flf the Upprr Ha y is rurrrntly the subject of ;:i coopcrat1rr Ncll"port Beach·Oan ge ('oun- ly sludy. a U.S. Oepartn1cnt of lnteri(lr !'itud.v .111d of rn11 eh loC'al debalr. Supervisors la~t ~e01r \"f11Ccd rl1sap- pro1·al 1~·1th the lon~·proposed exch an~c of tidelands and upl ands betv.·een the <'oun ty and the lr\"ine Co mpa ny . The Irvine Company owns uplands sur- rounding the Back Bay except for patent lands at the far e11d of the bay, "'hic h are under both public and pri11ate ov.·nership claims. Irvine CQmpany offi cials \.\' e r e cauttously studying Behr's proposal to- day. "We don't know e.nougb about It tn say much of anything." Gllbut W. Ferguson. \•lct-prtsidtnt of c n r po.rate com- munlc1tlons, admitted. "We ire looking into it .just as I sup- pose local public agencle! are. ''We don't know ~·hat Impact the bill \\'OUld have on tht' coutity 's and the city's pians for the llpper Bay." he added . "Tha t is a pu blic waterway there. or COLI L"Se." Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth ex- pressed some of the same conctrn and indicated he ft lt Behr "A'aS bu tti ng ln where ht wasn 't needed. Tbt' 11\,a)'or l.s chairman of the city. county tGmmitltt studying maximum USC3 of the bay fot possible wildlife 11nd ncreition ~· He ls also a me.mbff ot another city. rounty ootnmutae Sbldyial ~ on the bay from the more tllan lt,OIO acr<s ol _, '-' •bicb droin ... It. ·~ . citi or Newport &ach i. r...,...ii.i, for tho p&amlnr," H1rth said tod•y. "l dbo~ ... wby ...,.body else should get lnvo!,·ed -90m«ine •bo really t.sni f1miflar wtth what it i.s all •bout -wOO< oo much b olrtocty being dane. •• • ,,,. DlafO< -ho _ .. "leotn• lechnk-al or flM ncial lmistlnce. •· "But," he uld, "if lhey:d just loo ... "' aJone ~ IJtlk wbil<. wt 'II wut ... ·111< bat IOlullall ••• lo his 'llladay sutemetll. Behr dncrilled tho Upptr Ntw)>Oli Bl.I' "-' "'Ult most · beautUlll ...i the tnost lhr .. tffl<d" ol all Southon Calil«nio wattrWays. Not a Doctor'· Autliorities Say LOS Al'\GELES (AP! - A man who "'Orked as a deputy Los Angeles County medictil examiner for Jt.., years has neither ll medical degree nor a physi- cian's license. aut horities ~;:iy, l)onald Angus Stuart . 50, wiis scheduled fnr arraijlnmrnt today on one count of perjury 11nd two misdemcaoor violation!' of the !'!lltr Bus1 ncs!' ;:ind Profes sion s Code. He 11·a5 arrr:;trd \\'edncsda v 11·hen he reported for \1·ork . · . :\n lll1no1s ph_l'sician's license Stuart !1~ted \\·hen he app lied for the job nn the county c-nroncr's staff v.·as actuallv is~ued to a doctor in 1914. offici11ls said.· Tht'y said althou gh Stu01rt cl aimed In ha..-e bo!h la\.\' and medical degrees fr om the University of London eamed bet ween 1939 and 1946. .fudge Dungan urged qu irk action pen- ding the construction of permanent fa cilities on property the county plans to buy from Collins on Jamboree Boulevard , south of Campus Drive. Completion of the pcrrnanent court building is expected in th ree to five years. , The Colli ns site was approved by coun· ty su pervisors Jan. 25. Est ima ted cost is S.128.000 for 8.2 acres. The cost includes any severance a"·ard made to the Irvine Co mpany wh ich 011'ns the property and leases it to Collins on a 99-year agret- ment Smisek estunatcs that the new courts buildin,I! could be completed in 20 months from the time the title to the property is assured Rowan (yst Rernovecl ROCHESTER. r.·11nn. 1AP 1 -Dan 1lo"·an. cost;ir of television 's "L;1ugh In .'' completed his checku p at Mayo Clinic \\1cdnesda v after havinf! a small Clll'it ren\Ol'Ni from his right shoulder. Ro....;a n said other than havi ng the cyst removed, "I'm ln fine shape ." Burglars !ured a Santa Ana fireman's s~n fro m the family home in Costa Mesa \.\'1lh a phony emergency telephone messi ge \\'ednesday. then looted it or nearly $900 in possessions whil e he wa.!I away. Darrell S. Holland of 947 Paularino Ave. returned after an unsuccessful sea rch for his sister a1 a nearby shopping center 11•here she had reportedl y been in- volved in an aceidcnL . He found three shotguns, ll 22 caliber rifl~ and a color television set missing. 1 ou n,.; Holl and told Off icer Roscoe Broad an unidentified yo1ith called durin f! the afternoon and &..'Ud his sisltr netdrd help. She h;id allegedl y been involved !n some type of arr1dent at tile Whitt f"mnt Store and wanlrd him to come right away, '.l'!thout telling anyone. The youth did so, ·locking up the house t1~d. depositing !hr key \n its custom11 ry hiding pl ace. probably v.•hile wmeone wa5 \.\'atching. No ev1denct' of any accident wa! ever unco\'ered. fi. J. (Jarrell~ STOREWIDE CLEARANCE SALE LAST 7 DAYS • Many Drexel and Heritage Groups at Generous Savings • Many Discontinued Pieces as well as Several Floor Samples 14 :Jo 30<>/o SavingJ anJ PRO~SSIONAL H.J. GARRETT f URNrpJ~~HARWR ILVD INTERIOR DES IGNS COSTA MESA, CALIF. o.-Moo, n.... • Jlrl. In&. 646-027S 644-0276 , I' • \ f I