HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-02-04 - Orange Coast PilotI
I
I
. -.. I .•
Drugged Patients
•
··underdog~ Held 2 Mesa Burglars
On Illegal Meat Collared-· Thanks
Selling Charges To Citizen~s Tip -..
• DAILY PILOT x-a1 e
* * * '10' * * *
FRIDAY AFTERNOON , FEBRUARY 4, 1972
VOL. &•MO. JI. 4 S£C IONS, 4' PAOIS ••
WIT ......
Irish Frisk
A British soldier in Bellast searcbe! this llt2ll on the street daring a
swoop search of aulos and pedestriaru; in the city center. Spokesmen
for the Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association said that minority
Roman Calhclics will bold a march Sanday through the town of Newry m tribute lo ljle 13 people slain in recent violence. Slory Page 4.
3 Batte1·ed Bodies Found
Ill North Carolina Home
"BOONE. N.C. (UPI) -The ballaed
llodia ol three memhen of a locally pro-
)11,lomt family were found stuffed In an
•tr0ow1ng bathtub In. thetr fosblcGable
borne our Ulis mountain resort.
Tho victims -.. i.i.otilI<d u Bryce B.
Durham, 51, 1 co-owner of an auto
4Weribip, Iii! wile, "1r1inlJ. 411. and
iWr -Jlobby Joe, II, I fralman II ~Sale U-llilf.
•
?lie bodies. alriod aide by aide with
lhelr lep ~ ..,., Ille <di• ol the
tub • ...,.. discovered abollt 11 :30 p.m.
Thunday by • -ID-lff. Illy Hall.
Wat.up Colmiy Sheriff Wm! Cam>O
said he belined !be Durlmna -. vic-
tims <ii ••1 lrt'dc• killing" .... though
every room. lodudins the bamJenl ol the~ trick lam m ... 11rked
ears a ro
Ex-CIA Man
Convicted
111 As sault
CHICAGO (UPI) -Dr. Jam" G. Mid-
dleton, a fonner Central Intelligeoce
Agency employe, has been Jound guilty of
drugging and sexually assaulting a
woman patient.
The JCH:lay trial was marked by
te stimony of several other women who
told of being injected with drugs which
left them unable to move, caused ab-
normal hair growth on their fa ces and
bodies, and caused their voice~ to drop.
Several women spoke of having "in-
creased sexual appetite'' after visiting
the doctor and receiving injections.
Middleton, 45, of suburban De! Plaines,
was accused of Injecting a 24-year~ld
woman with a drug which left her dazed
Feb. 7, 1970. The woman said Middleton
11sxually assaulted her a f t e r ad-
ministering the drug.
The jury or eight men ahd four women
returned the verdict Thursday arter
about 17 hours of deliberaUon, finding
him guilty of. deviate sexual assault and
aggravated battery.
M'Midleton showed no reaction at the
verdict.
Middleton wu arrested Dec. 1, 19'70, in
!See DOCl'OR, P11e II
Agnew Fin&
A New Target
NEW YORK (UPl) -VU:. Pre.>-
d<!nt Spiro T. AIIJl<" PYt he woul~
not trade: all the environmental
"dilettantes:" iD the country ror one
level-headed, aeriouJ...minded Boy
Seoul.
~ told the Boy Sc:oull' an-
mlll dawn petrol bttakl11t lhll
tbdr l1""P bad been prlClldng eccloo for yun and In 1 single
day lut year collected a mnllon
tons ol litt<r from parks and public
~
•'Al JD American vitally ln-
tert:sled In the environment,••
AgMW aald. "I wouldn't trad< you
.... levd-beaded, -.minded.
~ Boy Smut for an
the polllicitJ-tttldni environmental
dlktWl!o the nrwa media can dJc
up ~em now and Hallowtta."
~leaty Caper
•
Man Hel.d iii Illegal Stea~ Sales
Dropping by a Corona del Mar tailor
shop, a Torrance 11alesman allegedly ped·
dling hla leftover steaks and hamburger
at bargain basement prices wound up in
a bit of stew Thursday night.
Frederick W. "Underdog" Kook. 22,
was 11ub11equently arrested and booked In·
to Newport Beach City Jail on IU&picion
of illegal sales of meat, SecUon 12024 of
the State BU!llness & Profeuions Code.
Orange County has 1.5 million residenl1
and more than 50 tailor shops.
The lone customer when poor Underdog
-who didn't explain his nickname to
police -entered Purdue's Tailors, 3637
E. Coast ~lighway, was none other than
William Fitchen.
He is the Orange County sealer or
weigh!J: and measures, who is directly
responsible for countywide enforcement
of such state laws.
"Anybody want to buy any meat~''
Kook was quoted as saying.
Fitcben identified himself and demand-
ed Kook do the same, as11ertlng the
suspect claimed to be a John Henry
Jones, but didn 't have any Identification
papers on him.
The state weights and mea11ure11 control
evecutive then escorted Kook out lo a
Lowery's Meal!: truck parked at the curb,
where he allegedly tried to hightail it
with the hamburger.
Filehen 11natched the keys out of the lg·
nition and kept the six foot. six Inch Kook
in cu.•!lody, while a tailor and 11eamstreas
listed as witnesses summoned Patrolman
Larry Gabriel.
The 11fflcer lOQk Kook r11r booking at
5:45 p.m. while fltchen confiscated three
cartons of meat he llaid bore no markings
of weight, another state Jaw vlolalion.
Defendant Kook was finally released on
$190 bail, pending arraignment on the
misdemeaoor charge nellt week in
Harbor Judicial Diltrlct Court.
City ofOcial1 alto plan to prosedite
Underdog for peddling without a llc"'1Jt.
Mesn , Burglar$ Grabbed
On T -ip from Citizen
A telephone can to a teller at an Irvine
bank and a subsequent trip to take out
the truh triggered the capture of two
burglary suipeclJJ u they drove out of
Costa Mesa Thursday with $829 ln loot ln-
dudlnc a Bible.
Police seeking criminal complaints
agaimt ten today died the Incldtnt u
a perfect esample of citiun parUdpatlon
in law enforcemenl.
Johrmy R. Williama, 32, Palmdale, and
Daniel H. Spirlock, 23, EI Mont<, are cur·
Desert bm Due .
Remodeling Job
LAS VEGAS (UPI> -A l300.000
,.,,..i.ung procram 11 pbnned for the
HowlJ'd HuaheM>wnod Daer\ Inn Hot.I,
accnnllng to gener1I manager Frtd Gtt.
The fl«lllt will ellminate the L 1 d y
• Lock Lounge. wbk::h f t 1 tu r e 1 en-
ttrtalnmtnt. nt area will be uad for a
100-t K<no lounge and will tllJOnd the
Casino uu by 10.000 square feet
Gee Iii<! Tbunday then art pWia to
reopeJI the Uy room II the IJaert Inn for
-and dondns-
•
rently booked on 1uiplc1on of burglary
and po11UJion of 1tolen property.
They were 1topped on H a r b o r
Boulevard at Mesa Verde Drive by Of·
fi cer Phil Donohue •nd Sg1. John Regan,
with a color televiJion aet protruding
from the trunl of their old 'ledan.
Investigators alM> found steTeo IOUnd
equipmertt, a chet1 Kt aoo 1 Holy Bible
111 ~ stolen by B•nk or America
kiter Ch<f}'I Eckert.
Officer Chuck OuvilJ uld MIA Etkert.
of 1M Cabrltlo St., was at work when a
neighbor hetrd the victim's doort>ell ring.
Sh«tty 1fterword, the neighbor 11ld
tile hiw4tM¥..,,'feJn the JOW11 WomtDts
apartment and e1Dtd her •t work to b-vetlipte.
laming DO .... hid IU!horlty to be ID-
-· the wom•n called poJJca and !hen Jool< out her tmh nondlllantly to see
what the could Re.
Spotting a man pttrln& out of the vie·
tlm'a lpartmtnl, the wllntM ala<> noticed
an unfamiliar car park.cd at the curb and
IC!ibbltd 00wn the Iiu-oumber.
Just moment.I lltft', the vehk:Jt WU
JOO<. but a pollco rildlo broodc111 hid
already -out ~ the car aod the ouspeda.
They wore spotted tnd stopped
moment.I lite".
Co11sultant
Testifies
About Book
f'rom Wire Sfrvlces
NEW YORK -John fl.1cler, • former
!!Clenllflc consultant to How1rd Jlu&hu.
tcstUled today be/ore a federa l trand
jury lnvestlgatlng tht" circumstancu 1ur.
rounding a purporled Hu & ht 1
autobiography.
Mtler. 38, of Albuquerque, N.M., hed
obtained a po1tponcment earlier thll
week. lie denied befort he came here
that he had ever met Clifford Irving, !he
author who clalm11 W have cnmplled the
manuscript In colleboratlon '4'1lh Hu ehts.
There were other developmenta In lhe
bizarre ca11e :
-Th< New York Times today published
what It said were n:cerpta from the con-
trover1lal autobiography, but strelled
that the malerlal "could have come from
prevlou1ty publl1hed anecdote•" about
the recluiie bllllon11lre.
-Federal 1uthorltle1 aald thty may In-
itiate extradition proceedlnp aplnst
flic._d "'9k1nd,·a collaboralor wltb Irv·
Ing on the •utobtography ~ Suaklnd rilled
to apptar Mond.ly before. the Iedtr1l
lllee IRVING, r.,. II
0r .. ,.
1t'eadler
Thate hip clouds ovrr the SouU..
land wlll cle1r by Slturdly, 1JtU,.
1118 way for • pleasant wee~
with allchtly winner knlp<l'llur•.
fflcha 1lrlntl the heldl IO rlltq lo
Ill Inland. Lowa ....
INSIDE TODAY
TM Nt1bf>"'I HarbM Ar I
ll"!<•iv. h4a U of EdtDCrd Hap-
per'i polntlnQI on dlap/ay tAll
"'°"lh In tile main QO!lcrv, and
a()'n'IC other fntert1tfng amoU e_a:..
hlbltl ttt tht tftfrmsct ga.Uery.
Ste PO{lt 21 of todav'• w rtktftd.
tr fM pklurtf and lt<W'JI,
"·.. .... , ...... .
'"''....... t Cl~ ... C:-lt• ,. ,_ n --' ~ .... ' . ._. "'" ,.., .. ._.. ' -.. --~· u -.
-...., ..,..,.. ,_. ,. ............... ---. ............ ,,.. --.. ....,.. .. ... .... ...,.,.... ... .. ·-" --·-. ._. .... u. ...
• 7 $ ..
•
z O.l.IL Y PIL01
Do~k Boss Threatens From Pqa J
IRVING ...
WASlllNGTON (Al'J -Harry Bridge>,
bou of the ltrlklng \\'est Coalt dock
workers, today threatened a world""·lde
lhlPOina Ueup if Conaress forcea an end
'°Hie atrlke by compUiSOr)' arbltrat io11.
llr!daeo, teotlfyln1 !>.fore a Hou,. labor
ai.bcommlttee, aald any law Congress
puaet tD end the ltrlke will affect ships
on1y when they touch at U.S. docU. 111btae 1hip1 go overHU," ht 11.\d.,
''a.nd we 've got a few friends Jn other
countries. ind !hey wlll rtSPond to our
call for help. It may reach the point
where the 1hlps won't come back here."
?resident Nixon baa asked Congress to
pa11 emergency leghilaUon that would
create a three-membtr board wltb the
power to settle the strike by compullOry
arbitration.
Edmund J. F1yM, president of the
P'acil1c M1rltime Aasoc:iallon, which
repruenb the 5hlpper1, endorsed the bill,
Jllayl~ saw Httle prospect of aettlin&
the d le by negotia tion.
But ridges empbatlcally rejected it
Jobless Rate
Shows Drop
ln 'January
WASHINGTON (UPJ) -Unemploy-
ment fell 1llghtly to 5.9 percent in
January while the number of Americans
holding jobs rose to 80.6 milllon after
aeuonal adjuatment, the government
11ald today.
The Bureau of Labor St.allstlcs said lhe
Jobless rate w11 ''euentla.Dy unchanged''
from December when the unemployment
rate -revised downward from 6.1 per·
cent -wu t.o percent, but ad·
mlnl9tratlon spakesmen ln1mediately saw
the Clgures as a sign of hope.
Presldent Nixon's press secretary,
Ronald L. Ziegler. said at the Florida
White Hou11e that the unemployment
figures "give u1 a 1en1e of optimism.'"
He 1ald that although the change was
small, "It 11 on the right side ."
Labor Secretary James D. 1-fodgson
aaJd ti11t employment "ls atlll oo the
march, sleadlly upward."
President Nixon ha9 expressed the hope
of cutting sharply Into the Jobless rate In
this eleclion year, Jlnd top aides have
predicted It wlll fall to five percent.
Unemployment stood at .six percent
each of the hast two months of 1971 , and
according to 1tatlstlcs released tod1y by
the Labor Department, based on changes
ln seasonal adjustment f a c to r s ,
unemp\oymmt never dipped below !5.S
percent during the year. That figure was
reached In June and October.
The BLS said that oonfarm payroll ·
t.mployrnent, after seasonal adjustment,
rose In January to another record.high of
71 .4 mllllon.
The bureau said the emplo yment flJCure
In all job categories of 80.6 million
represented a rise of 2.1 mlll ion since the
un employment rate passed the 5.?i percent
level In October, 1970.
1'he December unemployn1ent rate "Was
originally reported at 6.1 percent, but
that was lowered to 8.0 percen t after an
annual •dju11tment of seasonal (actor
rates.
The BLS also reported that average
weekly earnings of rank and file workers
fell $1.35 during January to $129.20
because of a three-tenths or an hour
decllne ln the average work week to 36.9
hourt.
Long Beach Girl, 5,
Falls iu Pool, Dies
LONG BEACH (UPl) -A 5-year-old
who had been ltlt alone at her family's
lliwimm\ng pool drowned after she appar·
ently slipped and fell into the deep end.
POiice said Shirley Ann Wh ite had
moved to the home with her parents from
Colorado only two days a10.
She drowned Thursday.
OIU.HGI ~OAIT
DAILY PILOT _. .... . ._ .... .
C..,.M_.
H.-1....,_IMd -·-... -OAAMOf co..uT "11L1SHINO COMl"ANY
•oO••i N. w.,~
l't1"1G1111 •llOI 1"\IOllMW
J1tlc It. c,,r!..,
'tl<f l"rwld .... •NI 0-rtl __,,.,.
Thtll'lll IC11Yil 1•11r
tli•""'' A. M •• ir,,111,. MMetl"' 11111..,.
Ctl1tl11 M. l•M 111,tr.."'1 '· H1il Mlt""l ,......,,.,. at111or1
•
and lDd.iClted t1i1 longshoremen .Wgbt Jg.
nore the 11w If It were enackd.
uwe have no lntent lon of 1ubm1ttlng to
JU.Ch ltgls\aUon unless that ls the. will of
our members aa exprt.!lsed In • &ecret
ballot," he said .
Brld1e1 aald he did not blame the JlMA
(or 11cceptlng Nixon's proposal.
"We hsve these blokes on the ropes."
he told the subcomm ittee. "We're going
to wh ip them and they are depending on
Congress to save them.''
Bridges and F'ly11n appea red by sub-
poena before a gpecial subcommittee of
the HOU!e Labor Commi ttee headed by
Rep. P'rank Thompson Jr. (0.N.J. ).
Bridges 1a td the parties to the dl!i pute
are close together and he urged that
Congress let them settle It.
Even If the bill ls passtd, Bridge! said,
he would recommend that the 15,IJOO..
member lnlernational Longshoremen '•
and Warehousemen'' Union return lo
work only If they elect to do ao by secret
vote.
Standing Proud
"ln saying W.. 1 mean no dlsruptet
or dtfilnce of President Nixon or bls high
ofhce.'' Bridges 1akt. "I simply mean 10
say that in thl s lnsllnce he 1s trying by
method11 that won't work lo force an end
to our 11trlkt.''
Bridges sald oot even President Nixon
claJms the slri ke must bt ended because
the nallonaJ health and safety is In
danger.
I-le said the lLWU Is working all cargo
des ignated as ts'.'!entlal by the mllitary,
and loaded wheat at the special request
of the Presiden t for emergency relief for
l1akiSt.an.
1-te said that the union ll negotiating
with sh ippers of wheat and foodstuffs and
are near settlement on a separate agree-
me nt to permit normal shipments of
grafn and foodstuff• to begi n Im-
mediately.
If the President baa ispecial requests
for any other special carBO, "we 1hall
consider his request to move that cargo
now," he said.
-~· l
l.l'I Teldl!Olt
l!nlike bent-over tree in background, thi s. waterJ'urnp stands rnajes·
t1cally at a lonely farm, the cold Iowa wind an plenty of snow its
only company.
Four Men Facing Charges
Of Sl1ooting at Hippies
BUFFALO. N.Y. fUPI ) -Four men,
fnclud1ng a graduate student and a
former depu ty sheriff. have been Indicted
on charges of conspiring to shoo t up a
blpple household In an attempt to frighten
away the rcs!denls. One resident was
shot and wounded.
The l~·o-count ind!ctrncnt returned
Thursday by a federal grand jury ac-
cused the four of staging an anned raid
on a hippie commune In Kendall. N.Y., Jn
December, 1009.
Named In the lndiclrr.ent were Ric hard
J. Wagner. a forn1er Orleans County
deputy sheriff: Bryon J . Nichols, 28, of
Cheektowa~a. N.Y.: Alan R. ~fagee, 23,
of 801.avin , N.Y.. and Richard M.
Willia1ns, 26. Identified as 11 graduate stu·
dent at Georgetown University in
Wa shington.
The indictment also accused the four of
entering th e flon1e -with force of arms
-and seizing, detaining and controlling
the occupants Jn violation of their rights.
The Indictment also accused the four or
enttrlng the home -with force of arms
U.S. Unit Eyes
Bogu.s Alie1i ·
Card Charges
lnvt!sUgaUon of chargts or coun-
terfeiting alien registration card1 filed
against Santa Ana Chicano leader Jose
"Papa Joe'' Perea:, SJ , Is being conducted
by the U.S. Strike Force, a special
presidential unit of the Justlct1 Depart·
menl, the U.S. attorney 's office in Los
Angtles said today.
Pere1 was arrestt'd by U.S. lm-
mlgra.Uon Department officials Wed·
nesday after he allea:edly aold 1 "gl't'en''
card, requlrtd of alien lmmtgranls, to a
federal Wldercover qent. & wu rtlta.s-
ed on his own recognlunce.
The Orange County MexlC&ll,·Amerlcan
leader. • residrnt or the aru for more
than 5(1 years, was taken Into custody In
his Palace Caft'. 420 E. 4lh St .. Santa
Ana .
-and seizing, detaining and controlllni£
the occupants in viol!tion of their con·
stittulonal rights.
One of the residents of the commune,
~flchael E. Hackett, 26, was shot and
wounded in both legs during the raid.
The case drew nat ional attention Jasl
Ma y when the Buffalo Evening News
disclosed in a copyrighted story that
Nichols and Magee told U.S. Attorney H.
Kt'nneth Schroeder they and an unnamed
third party raided the commune with the
Intention of terrorizing the residents !nd
killing them if necessary to drive them
out of th& county.
Nichols and Magee allegedly told
Schroeder last May that they and others
discussed plans for the ra id on several
occasions at the Orleans County SheMff's
Department.
The two said that they and their com-
pan ion wore slitted pillow cases over
their heads dur ing the raid while a fou rth
man waited in a getaway car, the
nev.:speper said.
They alleged ly said they broke Into the
house during a blinding snowstorm and
1hot Hac kett when he tried to escape up 1
~ta i rcase.
Nichols was de scribed by the News as
''a tough undercov~r agent for m11.ny
police agencies." He Is c u r r e n t 1 y
employed as a fork lift operator. Ma gee
111 untmployed. but formerly owned a Jog·
1\ng business In Batavl1.
From Page l
DOCTOR .•.
• police raid on hls office. Polkf: said
they found two revolvers, 1uu1l devices,
~:rploslvcs and electrical detonators.
~1iddleton was tried beCore U.S.
District Court Judge Jamts 8 . P1rsons
on the firearms charges. A decision Is
pending In th11t case.
The Woman Middleton was accused o{
attacking, a 24-year-old Clrpentersville
housewife and mother. tned a •1.2 ml.lllon
suit against him.
~tiddleton's attomey1. Edward M.
Gen!On and Sam Adam. aald tht cbaraes
wtre "spurlous" because none of the
wltnesse!I made any police complalnt.1
unW a year after the 1lleaed attacks.
Bridges denied lhat there :S an
emergeney 1n Hawali, where he said the
union hu made special provUions to han-
dle the export of 1ugar and has permitted
1pecial voyagea to bring ln necessary
aupplies.
"The emergency ha.s bten ma nurae-
tured in the facile ml.nd! of 501'ne of the
member• of Congress from the sU.te -
and In the mind of the present assistant
Secretary of Labor who was formerly
employed by the Hawaii Employer!
Council.''
Bridges said the principal items ln
disagreement are the effective date of
the wage lncrease of 72 cents an hour,
which the unk>n wants retroactive to Nov .
14; paid holidays: employer-paid
prescription drugs for empkiyes : an in-
crease in insurance coverage and wages
for certain skilled differentials.
Bridges said the administration's com-
pulsory arbitration req uest "ls the first
step ln bringing about compulsory
art11tration for all unions.
"Thfl passage oi this joint resolutton
will change the race of America and
bring w a long way down the road to
c<J mpulsory arbitration, elimination of
the right to 1trike, Vt.Sting tbe power over
wages and wor ~g conditions ln the
btllnds of the goverrunent," he said.
Flynn likened lhe compulJOrY arbitra-
tio n proposal to oourt ~djudication or
di1ipules involving civil rights, personal
liberties and properties.
"And yet we do not refer to such ad·
judicallon as 'compulsory' nor to the
judges as 'outsidcrr, ", Fly an 1adi.
\Yhile Bridges was testifying, Chairman
Wiiiiam ~1. Colmer (0-MW.), announc ed
a Rules Com mittee meeting for Tuesd ay
to consider a proposal to take the strike
bill from the Labor Committee.
Colmer's committee has pending a
resolution which. Ir approved by the com-
mittee, ~·ou!d give the House an op.-
portu n1ly for an immediate vote on the
strike bill.
Sobbing Woman Pleads
For 'Right to Death'
By CHARLES S. JOBNSON
HELENA , Mont. (AP) -Poignantly
tracing the lingering d~ath of her 86-year-
old lather, a housewife has pleaded with
a committee to proyide in a new stat.e
constitution the right to die.
"l maintain that to gi ve the people fac-
ing certain death ... the right to die
quickly, easily aQd in peace when they
want to do so, is being compassionate, in·
tel!igent and humane," Joyce M. Franks
of Alberton told a hushed audience Thurs·
day in the Senate chamberS.
"And 1 affirm that it is an act that
God, who give us all life, would approve
of," she sa id.
Mrs. Franks, the mother of two
children, described her father's suffering
to the Bill of Rights C.Ommittee at the
Montana Constitutional Convention.
After her father broke a hip, his doctor
described the nece!sary operation, she
said.
"Dad asked me if the doctor would
please gi\•e him something to put him to
sleep righ t tht'n ," ~1rs. Franks said, but
she did not ask the doctor to do so.
As his health deteriorated, she related.
her father made the request again.
"My father had been a farmer, and he
had given merciful death to animals who
had been pets and companions," Mrs.
Franks said, sobbing. "He could not
stand to see them · ltlffer prolonged and
agonizing death when they were severely
mutilated OI' dying of illness.
i•tte was compassionate and merciful.
He asked for the same mercy for himself.
"For eight weeks he died, little by lit·
tie. minute by minute, day by da y," htrs.
franks said.
"He Wai just denied a release from the
suffering and torture wh ich he knew, .and
we kne w and the doctor knew he faced."
He died in December.
~1rs. Frank s has Y:ritten Jellers lG
delegates and editors or ~1ontana
'newspapers, polled doctors a n d
spearheaded a move for the right to die
with dignity.
Bridal Prizes
Not Tlieir Bag
CX>LUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) -
Among 6,000 visitors at the Seventh
Annual Bridal Fair at Ohio Sllte
Unive rsity were delegations of
demonstralors denouncing the fair
from !he \Vernen's Liberation
Movement and the Gay Activist
Alliance.
Individual proteste rs from both.
groups were awarded door prizes
thursday.
gnnd jury inve$tigatlng the case.
-Business Week ,._lai;:azlne rtported
that part of the money McGraw-HID p.ald
for the book was invested In American
.securities by a Swisll bank at the direc-
tion or the author's wife, Edith. Tbe
report did not :1pec1fy lhe •mount.
Published re pOrts said that lrvlng iden.
Uf!ed Meier as a man who wa!i actually
"George Gordon, Holmes," wOOm the
writer ducribed as a trusted Hucbea
a!lsociate. ~
Irving later denied the reports, saying
that "lo my knowledge I h11 ve never mt\
Joh n Air it'r."
i\1eier ill a candidale for th t
Democratic nomination for senator from
New Mexico.
He had advised the reclu~ on com-
puteriz.ed systems before lea ving Hughes"
e:mploy in 1969 but may have played
some role In a project to computerize a
C'ross-reference listing or pub 11 •he d
material on Hughes .
'The Times a!so said today the excerpts,
obtained from a sourc e fa miliar with Irv·
lng's manuscript. F;ave "no indicatio11
... that ~1r. liughe5 had a part in
preparing the manuscript."
Hughes come3 across as a hill er mi1n
whose language is vulgar, the Times said.
1'/Je account said he was c<1 re less about
libeling others and talked iit length iibout
sexual exploits.
In one excerpt. Hughes was quoted 11s
saying he purposely leaked fa cts about 11n
alleged $400,000 payment made io the
then Vice President Richard ~1. Nixon in
the hopes of getting help for his problems
with Trans World Airlines.
.. Nobody was raising a hand to help
me," Hughes is said to have complained.
''They v.·ere glad. I'm talking about
\Vashington. They were glad to see me in
trouble. So I lea ked the details to Drew
Pearson.''
Pearson, the late columnist, v.•role an
article during the 1960 preside ntial cam·
paign, in whi ch Nixon was a candidate,
that the J-l ughes Tool Co. had loaned
$205,000 to his brother. F. Donald Nixon
of Newport Beach, Calif .
"Now whether it actually turned the
tide of the election or not, 1 don't know,''
Hughes is quoted as saying.
In other excerpts, Hughes allegedly
called fonner aide Robert Maheu a "very
Icy calculating man" and said singer-ac·
tor Frank Sinatra "was just taking ad·
vantage of my prestige to bolster his
waning prestige."
Jn two parts of the published excerpts.
the Times omitted what it said were
further derogatory remarks about Maheu
and a long aecUon o( purported Hughes
discussions or sexual exploits i n
Hollywood during the 1930s and t9.ios.
Maheu managed Hughes' enterprises In
Nevada for four yeaMI until his dismissal
in 1970. Sinatra had financial interests in
Nevada casinos until the state took .away
hil' gambling license. He was a frequent
performer at Las Vegas ttiti:btcluba
before retirJng.
-Sale Continues
OFFICERS CHEST BY HE NREDON ••. NOW ON SALE
OfFICIU CHEST DISK
SAL! $A89 PRICE 1"W e
• ~ '·
SerKt groups from Henr1Clon
-Heritage -Drexel •. , on
1ale now. Upholstery floor 1am•
pies on 11le include , •. He"'"
radon -Sherrill -M1r9•
Cenon & others. Lamps, pie•
ture1 & •cc•11ori e1 •re 1lse
reduc.d.
COCKTAIL CHUT
SALE $189 PlfCI e
Hooredon f.e~
DEALERS. FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL-HERITAGE -KARASTAN
NIWPOft ITOll OP1M MIMI,... f
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 Wutcllfl Dr., 6'12·2050
"PIN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
·-
INTERIO-R-S
,.,..1 ... 1on11 lntwi.r
Dealt...,. AYlllobl-ID
,.._ r.n ,,_ ..._., o..,. c._, •4• '"'
LAGUNA llACH
W North c .. 11 Hlthw1y '"°""' m.551
•
\
-----
Mystery Hughes' Game
Book On e Qf Long Li11 e of Controversies
Editor's N<Jlr -Controversy und
mystery have been carisisten t com-
panion s of billionaire i11dustrialist
1-!owt'lrd l /ughes. Rut feUJ things i'rl his
l ife liave tnatchPd the bizarre events
~1rrotouli11g a book u1hich purports
•to be his autobioQraphy, Following
tlze last of four articles an Hu.ghes.
B.v JA~1ES NOR~1AN
NE\V YORK -For a man ~·ho pro-
bably. ha~ been more serious than any
other in !us steadfast pursuit of seclusion
billionaire Howard Mughes has ~
remarkable career as the center of con-
troversies.
Ll\'ing behind an elaborate cloak of
s~crecy that only a fortune or some $2
b1ll1ou could buy, Hughes became a
v.·atched.for and hunted man.
Nothing. it seemed, could bring him out
(If his hiding places~he Beve rly Ji.ill s
mansion where he spent his time with hls
former wlfe Jean Peters, the carefully
gu:irdcd penthouse in th e Desert Inn in
La s Vef!as and finnllv the ninth floo r of
the Britannia Beach Hotel in the
B;1h:1111as.
r·:l'cn in his more visible days as a
linl!yY.•ood figure. Hughes generated con-
troversy. t!ltin v, with censors and flouting
mo\·ie <'Onvcntion~ with the producti on nf
such films as "Scarface," an d "The
Outla\v.''
The sa me was true with his career as a
ptanemaker.
Jn 1953. Hug hes, now 66, dropped from
sight and hasn't been seen in public
since-yet he remained at the center of
in trigue .
Hughes refused to show up in court
\\'hen Trans \\l"or ld Airlin es charged him
with mismanagement while he was the
firni"s majority stockholder. The result :
T\','A \.\"On a judgn1ent of at least $137
mll lion . But Jiughcs kept his privacy.
And wrapped in that secrecy. Hughes,
in 19fi4i descended on Nevada and within
four years-at wh ich tiTne he lef t in
secrecy-had become the state"s largest
landowner and empl oyer, around Y.·hom
5y,·irl ed a stat ewide debate.
Difficulties in firing Robert Maheu. the
man Hughes hired lo run his $.10().million
Nevada empi re, almost brought the
bil lionaire into the light. A voice iden·
tified as Hughes' spoke over the
telej3hone "'ith Nevada Gov . Paul Laxalt
in 1970 lo affirm the intention to sack
J\1aheu .
But Dec. 7, r-.1cGraw-Hill Book C:O. an-
nounced it planned to publish the
autobiography of the elusive billionaire.
It was a publishing sensation. But once
again, the Hu~hes penchant for privacy
wa s to assert itself.
IS IT HIM? -DAILY PILOT
artist's conception shows how
Howard Hughes m ig ht look lo·
day. It wa s done by taking an
old picture of the billionaire
and adding a beard, lines of
age and whitening the hair.
The experts also vou ched for the many
handwritten notations in the margins of
the trariscript Irving said he had typed
from tape record ed interviews with
J{ughes.
Then , even more sensational things
began to happen :
-McGraw-Hill announced it intended to
hold up publication until certain questions
pertaining lo the Swiss bank account
were answered.
-Irv ing swore, in an explicitly
detailed, 2.1-page affidav it, that he
personall y handed two checks totaling
$325,000 lo Hughe s and had given another
check for $325,000 to a Hughes aide.
Then, the writer took off for his home on
the Mediterranean island of Ibiza. saying
he did not plan to return to the United
Sta tes until there was a valid reason for
him to do so.
-Word came from Switzerland that the
"H. R. Hughes" who opened the Swiss
Credit Bank account was not a gaunt, 6-
fool-3 Texan but a blonde in her JOs car-
rying a forged Swiss passport in the
name of "Helga R. Hug hes." Later
reports said the woman wa s a brunette .
Hoping to return to tht: quietude of his
300-year-<ild peasant house, Irving instead
found himself besieged by newsmen.
Angered by suggestions that his lovely
wire Edith, a Swiss painter. was the
niysterious Helga, the ·writer threatened
to sue anyone who implied that.
S. Ackerman, announced that int.ht: "bfst
interest" ol his client ht was withdrawing
from the case because ht felt Irving a.t
that stage needed a competent criminal
lawyer.
-Irving's new attorney, Maurice
Nessen, hu stled the couple and their
children out of their previous place or
seclusion north of New York and into a
new hideout.
If the events following that Dec. 7 an-
nouncement by htcGraw-Hill appear con-
fusing, the proliferating theories on what
led up to it are positively James Bondian.
One scenario would have it exactly as ·
Irving now says the whole thing hap-
pened : that he met with Howard Hughes
at the times and locations specified iii his
affidavit , that he handed the checks to
Hughes or an aide, but that because or
some whim on the part of the billionaire,
he agreed to take them back and have his
wife depo sit the m and they withdrew the
money, putting it into another account.
On the other extreme is the scenario
that makes Irving the hoaxer who in·
vented the details of his meetings with
Hughes and how he obtained
autobiographical material from him. Irv·
ing has rejected th is theory and has
steadfastedly maintained that the book is
authentic.
Another proposed theory is that Irving
was given a packet of material stolen
from Hughes by a disgruntled former
aide and that he ingeniously wove the
documents into an autobiography in an
intervie\V form.
Still, another possibility, outlined by
Hughes Tool Co. public relations man
Richard Hannah, is that a computerized
readout indexing every item that has
ever ap pe ared in print about Hughes plus
some notes by Hughes was given to Irv·
ing, who then used it as a roadmap in
researching a plausible autobiography.
Hannah suggested the possi bility that
Robert Ma heu, whom Hughes had fired in
Nevada, could have leaked the material
to Irving.
~1aheu , central to a number or the
theories, denies leaking the material to
Irving. Saying he understood the book
was derogatory toward him. Maheu asks :
"Does it make sense I'd leak it?"
Life magazine. which contracted to
publish excerpts of the book in three in-
stallments, speculated that authentic
material might have been stolen and
given to Irving by "a disloyal or greedy
employe."
Yet another theory is that Irving
traveled through the United States and
htexico a.s he claims to have, meeting
with and interviewing a man ht: believes
was Hughes-in 1hort, that he was duped
by a band of imposttrs who would have
had to tncJude masterful actors with In·
timate knowledge of Hughes' life as well
as a master forger_
Cabbie Did Well
A onetime cab driver. '''ho couldn 't park his ca b in fro nl of the 'V il·
Jiam Penn 1-lote l in do\vn to\.vn l·louston 20 years ago berause he \\las
black, now O\vns the hotel. lie says he plans to spend $500.000 lo turn
it into a first class f;u:illty. James A . Si ngleterry, 48, said he \\'as
forced to park his cab across the street '"bile the 'vhite drivers pulled
up in front of the hotel.
Report on Area Mu sei1ms
Set for Capistra110 Bay
A report on area museums and
buildings of historical significance will be
made at the Feb. 8 meeting of the
Capistrano Bay Area Provisional l.caguc
of Women Voters.
Mrs. James Thorpe will present the
'Prof' Coloring
Book Publishecl
EAST LANSING , 11ich. (APl -[)on·t
be fooled by your instructor's pretty legs.
Ron Watkins advises rellow ~1ichigan
State University students in h.is book,
"The MSU Professor Rating and Coloring
Book."
The Jl.-page guide offers 387 thumbnail
sketches of faculty members.
"'She has nice legs __ • but should rely
more on what's in her head than what 's
on her lecture notes." he quips.
report on historical buildings. including
Mission San Juan Capistrano, at the 9:30
a rn. meet ing a t the home of Mr s.
Wallace Walton, 2812 La Vcnlana, Sa n
C.1emente.
Also on lhe agenda will be a report on
housing and welfare presented by ~!rs.
.John Erickson and a report on financin~
local governn1ents presented by A1rli.
Kathryn McMahan.
share her know\ed~e nf recent changes
"~veryone present will be invited lo
and of current area government practices
by commenting and questioning during
the studv srssion." said Mrs. Lyn Harris
!licks. Chairn1an of the lea~ue·s Know
Your Area study. Menibers will be asked
to help select portions of the study for
release lo the public.
The report <."Overs San Juan Capistrano,
San Clemente, Dana Point, Capistrano
Beach and La~una Niguel.
All women of the area are invited to
participate. Transportation and child
care services are available by calling 495-
5759.
s DAJL Y PILOT J
La s Vegas
'Fu11 Train'
Roll s TodaY.
LAS VEGAS (AP) -Pampered by
dancing and bar cars. aod mingling with
celebrities and pollt!ctans. about 400
persons will ro ll out of Los Angeles tnday
on the first "fun train" to this southern
Ne\'ada gambling city.
The solldlv booked An1trak train y,•ill l>f!
making the -first of nine Y.'et>kend runs to
Las \'('!(a~. pn1\1d1ng for $59 9~ a rv lBlCI
trip, a hotel 1·0.:11n arK.I as sortt"<I fl!hl'r ex·
tr as
'l'he fun tr111n 1.~ \hf' drea1nC'h1 ltl nl l~'\
Vt>!(a~ hote l 111tere~1s seekin,R In stin1 ul<1h:
the relat1\'ely ~lu1v v.•inler busu1c.ss.
It's also hoped sUl'<'essful wu11er 11111.,
will pron1pt A1ntra k to prO\'ld(• regular
train ~rrv1ce tu Las Vcgns. v.·luch ~uf
fere<I a disappointing blu11· w h e n
pa.sst•ni.:er Sl'f\"ll'f'. ended n )'!'nr ngn.
1'he train as to pull out uf Los Angclf'."
nt -I p Ill ;uid 1HT1ve at 11 lll'Y.' and nhnost
1111u.scd c·;1rpt'l£'d railroad slnt1011 nt tho
Union 1'1111.11 Hotel downtown
The stat ion is connected tu the l1otel,
;il101v1n~ !rnin passengers 1!1 step !rom
lr;iin to c11s1no \~ithout \\'Rlking outside.
A planeload of local Vll's and press
VIRS to ny to Los Angeles t•ar\irr today lo
make the tri p back. joining more than a
dozen Southern California mayor's.
Adttlt School
Regi stration
Next Week
Registration will be held early next
week for South Coast area adult~ in·
lerested in more than three-dmen clas~
offerings during the llprh1g umester o{
thr San Clemen te adult school.
Courses ranging rrom art and craft lo
pure acadeniic activi ties are available f?r
classes of 20 students ar more.
Signups will be held Feb. 7 and 8 from
7 lo 9 p.m. in the San Clemente High
School library. Registrnlion fee Is $5 fo r
each evenini;: course.
Adull School Principal Al Valen tine
said that an estim ated 800 persons are
expected lo register for the sl!mester
which begins Feb. 14. Most courses meet
once a wel'k lo for l'.1.'0 or three hou rs.
Some studen1 s who wish may apply
credit lron1 the classes toward a hig h
school diploma. Others can take the
course1 for no academic credit I! they
wish.
Information an 1peeiflc courstl and
dates and lime!! of ela1!1 meetings ill
available through the adult school office
any evening at 492-4 165.
First. the Hughes Tool Co ., led by Its
general counsel Chester Davis, denied
sueh a book rould be possible. It set up a
Jong-distance telephone ca ll said to be
from J·lughes in the Bahamas lo seven
L<ls Angeles newsmen. The man on the
phone told the newsmen he had never
heard of Clifford Ir ving , lhe 41-year-<ild
writer v.·ho clai med to have met Hughes
for secret interviews as he collaborated
Jn the \VOrk. The reporters agreed they
had spoken "A'ilh Hughes.
Irving. in New York to give the galley
proofs of the book a final once-<>ver, said
he was prepared to show numerous
documents with Hughes' handwriting.
authenticated by experts. There were two
checks. endorsed by an "H. R. Hughes"
and deposited. in a Swiss bank accoun t.
Additionally, there were handwritten let-
ll'rS lo Irving, allegedly from Hu ghes,
and a nine-page letter to Harold McG raw,
president of the publishing house.
While bands of ne"A·smen camped in the
l rving living room for nearly a week and
Swiss authorities asked the Irvingi; to
come to Zu rich for an investigation af
fraud , Hughes maintained his splendid
isolation on an island in the Bahamas.
Irving returned to New York Jess than
a week after he left, and with him ca me
his wife and their two young sons.
Barnaby and Ned.sky, Ind there were
the se further developments:
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!
_;Irving disclosed through his lav.'Yer
that his wife opened th111 Swis.s account in
the name of "H-R. Hughes" and had
vo'ithdrawn the $650,000, placing it
"substantially intact" in another S\viss
account.
-Irving's friend and attorney, r-.farlin
Eighth Graders Sign Up
For Mission Viejo High
Eig hth graders will be registered for
f.1ission Viejo High School's freshman
class starting Tuesday, Feb. 15.
The registration calenda~ includes ac-
tivities and information for both parents
and students. The progra m plans include
student orientation assemblies, counselor
visitation of eighth grade classes, parent
night meetings and student registration.
Each eighth graeler will receive a com-
plete packet or registralion material con-
taining instn1cti ons and infonnation on
how to register, course offerings, gradua-
tion requi rements and coll ege entrance
data.
Orientation assemblies for all eighth
graders Wlll be Tuesday Feb. 15 al La
Paz and Los Alisos Intermediate Schools.
Members of the high school counseling
Actress Pushes
Sex in Prison
SUNN11'1GDALE, England (AP)
Actress Diana Dora bas joined a cam-
paign aimed at allowing prisoners to have
Sl!l"Ual relations with their wive.a ln Jail.
The campaign "" start<d by Rene
Wisbey, whose husband is serving a »
year for his part In t.ht $7 million lrain
robbe ry of 1963.
Mrs. Wisbey, 39, recently lost her 16-
year-old daughter ln a lraffic accident.
She has appealed to Home Secretary
Jteginald Maudllng to be allowed to sleep
wi lh her husband to have another chlld.
MIS!! Dors sa id she supports tM. appeal.
Iler husband, act.or Alan Lakt, wu
ttleastd from prison last October. He
Mrvttl 11n JS.month sentence for wound-
ing a man in 1 t3VUTI brawl.
staff will be visiting eighth grade classes
at both intermediate schools on Wed-
nesday, Feb. 16 and Thursday, Feb. 17.
A parent night will be held on
Thursday, Feb. 17 at 7:30 p.m. in the high
school multipurpose room.
Actual registration will lake place on
Feb. 18, 22, 23, and 24.
Litter Patrol
Idea Advanced
By Supervisor
The County Administrative Office is
studying the possibility of establishlng a
countywlde mobile a n t i · 11 t t e r en·
forcement palrol':
The idea, advanced by_ Supervisor
Robert W. Battin of Santa Ana, calls for
I determination of txi!ting areas of
resporu;ibUity for cleaning up litter and
possible esU!blishment ol the trash
patrol.
The purpose, Battin said, 11 to
"establish overall respons:iblllty for keep-
ing Orange County free from vl.luall)' Of-
fensive trash and litter."
The supervisor aald his request was
triggered by complalnta from several
&real, parllculnly Midway Clly.
Board Chairman Ronald W. Ca'J>O!I Of
Newport Beach cautioned that.-.ny aoch
project ""'Id not legally Include clll..,
within It.I scope.
"We have long planned to work with
the clUes on thil problem," aald
Supervi10r William J. Pbllllpe o f
F'nlh!rlon-"I think the COOl!ty llhould stay
out of communltlu tlctpl where we c•n
work out a )oint powtn 1grttment."
2F9 18529585
The magnificent ''Cat'' COUGAR.
The cat comes. on beautifully for '72 ... Pound for pound and dollar fo r
dollar America's best equipped sport. car ! What othe rs call extras are just
standard on the sleek sophisticated fvlercury Cougar. Now1s your chance
to see all the 1972 models as Johnson and son has on hand a great stock to
choose from, equipped the way you like best ...
PRICED FROM ONLY $3466.00
e TERRIFIC SELECTION!
e NEARLY ALL COLORS AND MODELS!
.. Ora11ae Countv'1 Family of FiM Cara'"
ohnson & son
. .
LI NC f JL~J Ml 111 111:¥
COlJGl\k
2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 54().lil30
• •
4
'
•
.f DAILY PILOr
Wlrlu
U.S. Interest
111 Red Pla n
Call ed Sli ght
PARI S \U PI J -The United Stale~
f;howed little Interest today in a new Viet
Cong proposal to end the war in South
Vietnam, describing it as ''nothing new"
and serving only to confuse the issues.
Frio.,, f~ 4, 19/2
SALT Pact
Said Ne ar
I n Austria
VIENNA, Austria (AP) -U.S. and
Soviet negotiators have come closer to
agreement on curbing the nuclear arms
ract but there was no clear indicaUon on
"''hen a treaty limiting antiballistic
mi.Milts may be signed.
"We have made reasonable progres.s,"
a conference spokesman said today after
the 24th plenary meeting of the strategic
anns limitation t.a\U-SALT. He refw:ed
to disclose whether the treaty on limiting
defense nuclear weapons and an interim
ap;reement on certain curbs of offensive
missiles may be signed during a seventh
round ()f talks at Helsinki, Finland,
starting in March.
A communique Issued at the close ()f
the sixth round here today said both
delegations in the last 21h months
''engaged in further consideration of
issues relating (() a treaty on the limita·
lion or antiballislic missile systems and
to an interim agreement on certain
measures with respect to the \imitation
of strategic offensive arms."
Up in S moke
To demonstrate the dangerous
inadequacies of the present
standards set by the Flammable
Fabrics Act, Herman Glaser of
the American Trial Lawyers
Association touched a match to
a n ordinary girl's nightgown
while testifying before a House
panel Thursday.
T h ree P ending •
8 More Nations
Okay Bangladesh
Fnim Wlrc: Senlce1
Eight countries today recognized the
new natk>n or Bangladesh, formerly £.ast
Paklstan, and three others .!laid they
would do so aoon.
Of those granting recognition to the
government of Bangladesh Premier
Shelkh Mujibur Rahman, seven were
European nations were Austria, Britain,
Denmark, Finland, Norway, Sweden and
West Gennany.
llolland, Belgiwn and Japan saJd they
would grant recognition soon.
Britain's previously announced in-
tention to recognize Banglade.!!h promp-
ted Pak.isl.an to announce last Sunday
its immediate withdrawal from the
British Commonwealth. Pakistan lost its
former eastern province as a result of a
civil war there and subsequent war \Yith
Jndla last year, which set the stage tor
the Bengali leaders of East Pakistan to
proclaim the province U1e independent
nation ol Bangladesh.
British Prime 1'.1inister Edward tteath
sent a personal message to Sheik Mujib
today saying he looked forward to "''Ork·
ing wltb bim "for the strengthening of
the good relations which alrea.dy exist
between our two peoples.
"I am sure that your government will
do everything it can to promott' pe.act
and good relations with the other coun-
tries of the subcontinent. I can urure
you of our strong support in lhi.!," Heath
sald.
The Dutch fore ign office said Holland
would soon recognize Bangladeeb. And in
Tokyo, Prime Minister Eisaku Sato gave
approval today to a foreign ministry plan
to recognize the new nalloil.
More than 25 nations, including
Australia, the Soviet Union and India,
already have recognized Bangladesh. Tbe
United Slates, which backed Pakistan in
the December war, has made no com-
mitment on the iuue of recognition.
Meanwhile, a Bangladesh official sald
Sheik Mujib has 'ordered a house-tc>-bouse
check across the naiion to determine the
number of victims of atrocities con1·
milted by the Pakistani army.
.Journe y 's E nd
Mrs. Salvadore Castillo gives
h er son fi.1jguel a chocolate
candy as she and her husband
visit Miguel in a Kansas City
hospital. The boy came to
Kansas City by freight from
Mexicali, Mexico. He lost part.I
or his feet to frostbite during
the long co1d r ide.
TI1e Viet Cong plan, which was
presented Thursday at the regular
session of the Vietnam ~ace talks. 1.:on-
la1ned t~·u major changes from their
previous plan submitted last July. The
Jatesl proposal called only for the
resignation of President NJ::uyen Van
'/"hicu of South Vietnam instead of the en·
tire Saigon government and left it lo
P resident Nixon to delerminc the date of
4.:omplele An1crican withdrawal instead of
<Jl'cepting :i date set by the Communists.
.. Progress was made on .a number of
issues. The delegations express their
determjnation to continue their efforts to
reach an agreement." The SALT
spokesman described the Vienna round as
··satisfactory.·· Faulkner, Heath Meet;
Agriculture Minister Abdul Aziz said
the government was taking the census of
civilians killed, wounded or maimed lo
place before an international tribunal
whic h would be set up to try war
criminals.
Sheik ~tujib has estimated that 3
million Bengali civilians were killed by
the Pakistan army between the lime it
moved Into East Pakistan last March 25
to crush his independence movement and
its surrender to the Indian army in
December.
Family Escapes
Czecl1oslovakia
In Car Gas Tank
Prior to his departure the US. chief
delegate, Gerard C. Smith. t o I d
newsmen: ''The U.S. delegation is en--
courage<! by the progress toward agree-
ment on the complex issue s relating to
strategic arms limitations."
Huge Protest Looming
VIENNA (UPI) -An Austrian musi-
cian smuggled his wile and two teen-age
children out of Czechoslovakia in the
rebuilt gas tank or his car, po Ii ct said to-
day. Minutes after lhe Viel Cong proposal
\vas placed before the U.S. and South
Vietnamese delegation!! at the peace
talks, the American delegation renewed
its endorsement ()f Thieu's presence at
lhc head of the South Vietnamese govern·
1nent.
The Vlel Cong's Nguyen Van Tien
presented to U.S. negotiator William J .
1~orler and Saigon's Pham Dang Lam a
rephrased version of the seven-month old
pl an demanding Thieu's dismissal. The
Viel Cong said immediately on Thieu's
res ignalion and the adoption by re-
1naining Saigon leaders of a "new policy"
t hey would open !silks to form a new
cabinet. Thnt cabinet would organize new
C'leclions lo the conslitut>nt assembly.
The U.S. delegation rebutted the plan.
U.S. delegation spokesman Stephen
l .cdogar and his Saigon colleague.
Nguyen Drieu Dan, said the Communist
draft cont;iincd "nothing new". They sald
it merely confused the issue. and they
lTiliclzed the Viet Cong and Hanoi
1iovernment for using Thursday's session
HS a sounding board to condemn Presi-
ctcnl Nixon's own peace pl<1n made public
.Jan. 25.
Smith wa s asked about reports that the
·Americans did not want to come to an
agreement before President N i x o n
returned from hi s Peking visit.
Smith said: "No, I think you can tell
by my s~s there has been no foot ·
dragging. We have worked as hard as we.
can and there was nQ relationship
between our efforts and any other events.
We have been working independently of
any other politicaJ expectations and
developments.·•
Another question was whether Smith
thought it possible an agreement could be
reached this year.
"Well, I have to suspend my judgment
on that,'' he replied. "I don't like to
speculate.''
The delegations decided to resume
negoliations in Helsinki on March 28 -
four weeks after Nixon's visit to China.
Three Peepers Fired
DONCASTER, England (UPI) -The
municipal swimming pool has fired three
men bath attendants for drilling a peep
hole from the men's to women's dressing
room .
W 01·ld Trade Barrier Set
Fo1· Europe, U.S. Talk s
Ul1USSELS, Bt>lgn1n1 (API -The
Linitcd St.all's and the Cornn1on ~larket
lt!11latlvel y a~rred today lu s l a r t
\\'rJrldwid1· negu!i:11J0ns 111 l~iJ that \\'ould
break do\1•n barriers to \\'orld trade.
'!'h11y HIS(l :1grced 011 i'I series of short
lcrrn concc.!isions designed lo help trade
ix't1veen 1hcn1
Prc.sidrnL Nixon's ad1n1nislralion is
plannin~ !o present UH!$t'. and sirnilur
ag:rccrnent s \l'ilh Japnn and Cant1da. al
lhe same tin1e as he sends lo Con~ress
lhr bill to ilcva lue !he dollar hy raising
!hr official price of gold .
It is hopt'd that the conce!'sions 11•ill
prevent conJ!re.ssmen from a d d i n g
atncndments th:it \\'Ould hinder trade.
The accords are subject to approval by
lhf' go vernments concerned. 1bey were
rr:u·hcd af!cr three rounds of negotia·
!l1111s bv \Villiam D. Eberle, President
Nixon's· trade representative. and
rcpresenlnt11·1·s of !he Common ~tarket's
Ext>cu tive Comm ission.
The long·lerm negoLialions will cover
trade in farm producU and raw
materiaJs, as well as industrial goods.
They will be another in the series of
trade negotiations -the last was the
"Kennedy round" -which have greatly
reduced tarlfls since World War If.
Tariffs are now geoerally low enough
so that other trade barriers are more im-
port.ant, especially the subsidies that
many governments give for the eiport of
{arm products and import quotas on
goods of all kinds.
The short -term concessions include a
cut in the Common l\.1arket tariff on U.S.
oranges and grapefruits. and a promise
to keep another 1.5 million tons of last
year's West European wheat crop off the
world market.
Details of the accord were not of!ic iallv
disclosed. but the general lines "'er~
kno\l'n from previous disclosure:i1.
BELFAST, Northern Ireland {UPI J -
Premier Brian Faulkner flew to London
today to review with British Prime
J\1inister Edward Heath the critical situa·
tion in Northern Ireland highlighted by a
civil rights demonstration called Sunday
in defiance or a government ban.
For security reasons, there was no
prior announcement of Fa u I kn e r 's
departure for London, a Northern Ireland
government official .!laid.
Faulkner left as civil rights leaders
said the march Sunday in the town of
Newry near the Irish Republic border
v.·ould be he ld as planned. They said they
\vould consider ii '"extremely pro-
vocative" if the British paratroop unit
killed 13 civilians that in a demonstration
in Londonderry last Sunday were on duty
for the parade.
Army sources said it \\'85 likely thal
the First Battalion ()f the paratroop regi·
ment, the same unit involved in the
shootings in Londonderry.' would be in
Newry.
* * * Irish Republic
Demonstrators
Burn Rail Office
DUBLIN (UP!l -Dfmonstrators set
fire to a British Raih~1ays office in Cork
today in a fresh wave of anti-British
violence in the predominantly Roman
Catholic Irish Republic.
!\fore lhan 1,000 demnn s trators
gathered in front of the Railways office.
police said. and set the lower noor CJf the
building ablaze with firebombs.
Police finally drove back the crowd
with successive baton charges. At least
six persons were injured, none .!ltriously,
police said.
A crowd of 25,000 set fire to the Briti!h
embassy in Dublin Wednesday and stop-
ped firemen from reaching the scene un-
ti l the building was destroyed.
Today'.!! attack was the first major
move on British property since the em·
bassy fire.
Extremists also bombed l\1'0 British-
O\\'ned homes in the Connemara area
Thursday but no casualties were
reported.
The antl·British feeling was e reaction
to the killing of 13 persons by British
troops in Londonderry, Northern Ireland.
last Sunday.
Heavy Sto r m s Rock U.S.
W inter Pu1st ers Nortlieast; Higli Winds Smack South
Tc!111pe ratt1rPs H4110NA1 WlAlJUt SllVIC( fOUCA$1 .. 1A.• IS1 J .. 4 .. 7J
'T .... "r~!11rt' l'ld f>•K•~•!t!~ "°'
IN 1 .. l!oor Pf'oOd t n<l•n• •I I 1"'
30.').C 30.00 2 ~l
A11M..,.
Al~.,-qu~
.-.11111•
8 11JTMf(lo,
... M ......
llull1t. ,,..,...,,,
Cl'\ICIM
CIMll!Nfl
(1""9111'111
0.111• ..._
Dft.MoilM• ....... "--· lftdl ..... l,
J.O:llOM'llle
11:1-(lf'f • u.v ....
t.oulWltll
Memtifll•
M l""'I
Ml"°"'ulo:" Ml.,...,.,.!1
N-Oi'lft11l
Nt• Yo.1. 01o,1.,..,...c+1v
""'"" flllllllll9t~ll
~,.......
flllttllv•tlfl ........ ·-·-,,, .....
S-Pra.ndtftl ...... w-
l'llt~ l•• ... ,< ..
~ ,. 100 .. ..
' ~
" • •
..
" " .. p ,, ..
Tl 01 ...
•@ l ~
" " I:> IO
0, 01
" » I• (I ,. "
" " 11 1\ " ~ . ,. . " . ~
~ ~ ,. ~ ... , ...
"
" •
" " ~
"
JJ )7 ,. " " " .., n n 111
'
""wt.1.1~t,OJOCAA •
Cnllfo,..I•
toNJdt••~ clout'-•llfil • d\en(e " .. .. " " " . " " ,. » ..
!I •1 • • ••
.4l .. 1111111 ,..~ ·~ -...... ,.,,... .. ,. l'cdtY ,.,, ,.._ ""!IMt .., ~
Cflllfrlin'l.L• Cool.. '-'"""' -,6\ Ml IV •lclllt 11'14! ('llo1f.
·" ...
111 lM ~ (......,.. 9klft """ I
~ cl «Ol,laoow! ll•llt ,. ... -~ •Wll c!M•"" h""""" ,,,.,. -
Tiit 0\911(9 el r11ft tnl JO ~I
.... ...... ..... Jltlltllt -• ---arl ~v.
'"' •"'""' 111911 ,., -.., _... lfl """""llM ... .. to.
"'"' ""' ""'"""" C..fNI Ohtrl<f w 111 ,,_. ""N M 111 we lffltell0!1
ft'Ol'll '1t1M lo! N Mt111,
Ill rtc:rw"-1 .,-., "-""" wUI
II _,,., flwfrr wll'tl • ~ flf IC·
a.i..1 r•~ • .. •""'Mlft.
v.s. s ....... .,,
A fMJll..,. t-11Wr1'1 1t1r.ll'lecl 11\e
~II l'Odtr wlltl 1trone wll'ldf •f'ld
"""" _, wNll' ODld -IN• cr'91 11 l1r 11Wttl ._ 11'19 Giii! Cot$!.
S-met. flf .,_ burled Syra.
CUM, H.Y., In 1 1la ,..,. -lod -
ffll'M Irle• "' u If! .,. '*''. Ont to raur ll'l(f)fif t't ~ l'OYt rld metl
Oil IM rtmalndtr et IN ~I 1f'ld, ,,. • ,_ d""" ~r ''"' '""''""" -• In t'fftct b Nr'll'lem Mal,.., ,..,,_,"'~---···"~ tfo(I, ill'ld l,..v,i..,• w1rnl.,.1 wtrt
_,.., for '*'""'" "'-"'"land ...
l'IOl1f\wft H .. Ve<il; SMt.. wllfft -· llffl, frttclll'lt fl lll Ind rtl" ..,.,._
~•H<'tM.
F11""4'f' _... ,...., tN AT\.lrtlk .....
board, he9Y'I' ~ -· C91'1'll'nOl'I. a~. c-. . .....,.,... _,1., tw..
ll'l(ftfa of ,.!fl.
SI..-wkin ~ llw ~
°' "" '"""'" s .... "'-Tl<I~• Clollf¥' ........ UeM ¥1rl9bl9> wl!WI
11loflt ~ """"'-""1rl IMC.-nlnt
wnttorly It tit II kllltl In .tt.nlOOfll
toOt'I' ancl .. "'"'9?. Hhfl tiadl'I' 4of.
c:-1.i twm-.iw. ''""" ll'Om "' -"5. 11111m11 """"'"M" r<1"" trom • lit 11, '#Ii .. ......,.."',,_ U. c .......
..llNT
Stcell4 low •• tt• ·-' J SATVlN't'
'l"lt llltll , ....... llt11 •A I .I '"' '°"' ...... J;ll 1.M. 1.1 I~ 111911 ,. . J11al ~ l.t
S..... llw •:t» II>,,,., I t
ikoA 11 .... 6:,,_ 1-"I. llh J.IJ •-"'-
,,,,_ llltM Mt• 1.11'1-ltfl t ;W t.M.
Aziz said the Bangladesh Television
Corp. has been ordered to take movies of
the mass graves that have been found.
The film will be placed before the
tribunal.
British army sources declined to say
officially if the paratroop unit which fired
on demonstrators would be sent to
Newry, but one official said failure to
send the troopers would be a tacit ad-
miMion of their guilt.
Each side has blamed the other for the
shooting in Londonderry. Demonstrators
said the soldiers fired on the crowd
without reason but anny officials said the
troopers acted in sell defense.
Beer Official Dies
RYE, N.Y. (AP) -Philip Charles
Liebmann, 56, long-time president ()f
Liebmann Bros. Brewery, died Wed·
nesday at a nursing home in nearby Port
Chester. The former husband of the late
movie star Linda Darnell. LlebmaM is
credited with originating the annual
''1\1iss Rheingold" competition.
Police said Ferry Janoschka, 35,
brought his wile, Marie, 35, and his
children. Ferry, 13, and Gisela, 17, across
the Czechoslovak·Austrian border in two
separate trips. Czechoslovak authoriUes
had refused his family exit visas.
Violence increased across the country
after the shootings and extremists have
threatened to extend their .attack to
1
England.
Janoschka, a night club musician, first
rebuilt and enlarged the gas tank of his
car.
In his first trip, he took out hi1
children. Then he returned to Bratislave
to bring out his v.'ife.
•
•
• •
~ • ~ ~ • ~ • c
• •
.• ... ... . 'ilo .. .. .. ;:}.
• • • Gffind Ope ni ng
World Saving s'
FoL;Jntain Valley
Off Ice 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 balloons for the· kids. We've just opened our
beautiful new office and we want you to see it
Our office hours are Saturdays, from 10 to14, from 9 to 4 Monday
through Thursday and from 9 to 6 on Friday -all for your savings
conven ience. The caricaturist will be with us Wedn esday through
Saturday, February 2, 3, 4 and 5.
•
Come see us, we'll be happy to see you and tell you all about
our twelve free services for savers.
• .. ••
'°'1NJAIN YAUIY: .. IS Nii ..... lhll.M ""'9f, ,...........,_c.m, (1M) __,
LYNWOOD (tfMlte °"'9•: 1tt10 l.oftV leedl lhd. It f"""9IW. L.J'l"'IOOd,Celt. ---tNJ ~t
Ul'NTWOOO: 11801 WlllNr9 8fvd, It Ian Vlo9nlll. LOii ~ c.lll -.. ---f7'1) '17-IOM
LAGUNA l lACH: 292& CCMltt HlfhwlY 91 'Of'NI Jw •• lAigunl, lw:fl. Ollll. -----(T1'4) ........
NO"THfllOQI: IO:M ~ Bkod. 11 No"9hoff, Haft~. CllK--·--·------"213) _.....
ONTA"t0: Nt N, (UeM-.. Ofl\ltlo, CINf. ····--·-·-·--·~--·-----··--··· ,(7M) 114-tm IAN HMIAfUMNO: 1115 E. tfOl\llll!d 1t Def"'-~ a.i ltf'rwdhwl;, Celt -........... ---(114) -...111
I AN DllOO: 1170'1ttfllffe.91 I Stiwe.SM £>19ga.Cllll. -··--('TM)ZIN1•
WUT A~A.: t200 l.1.io.11'-., al Dwnt Ad., Al'Clldl1, Cllll. -Cl'QJ 4"-411f
Wft.IMIM-Al.YAAAD0:20.13WlllNt98ML•~lM~C.W.-.... __ ,_. ___ ~ .. 1011
WOODLANO Nl.U:8*5 MuttotllndDr.•VllltlrC:..flLotl~ lhelppnf Qf .. WI: dti ICl ... Ctlf. (111)-..nt
•
•• -..
on Rebound 1
I
Ca11didate R eneivs Attack on Viet1'1a,1 1i Wa r
Hy HfJRt~ltT t.. CA,\1PBELL.
An.O<.l .. ICI .... II Wrt1•r
Oel yu1g a hris\ of Hcp ublit ans who
hove rhast1st'<.1 hirn for criticizing Presi-
d1•11 l Ni ;..u11 's liill·st 1>eace proposals . Sen .
t:dn1u11 tl S. Muskie ha s renewed his al-
t::t C'k on the President ror not unilaterally
bl'\l111g a date for con1plete ""ithd raw·al of
U S. forces fro1n Vietnaru.
On the campaign triul in \\'1 scunsin, the
t.talne Democrat 1'hursday issued a
statement responding to the latest GOP
criticis1n -from Secretary of State
\Vtlliam P. Rogers hours earlier. \\'ho,
said Muskie harn1ed the national interest
b.v rejecting Nixon's plan btlfore 11anoi
did.
"f'or years,'' Muskie said. "e\'ery lime
an Arneriean senator has 1nade a pro-
posal to bring this \Yar to an end earlier.
he. has been greeted with the same
res ponse frtHH our govcrn1nc11t as
Seeret<iry Hogcrs used today.
"It is app;1rent thLJt the other side \Vil!
1101 accept the tcrn1s the udministration
ha" Sl'l." Muskie continued. adding: "I
btlicvc they would respond seriously to
the tcrn1s I have suggested."
r-.1uskie said \Vcdnesday release of U.S.
prisoners of 1Yar and safety of the troops
should be the only conditions attached to
setting a withdrawa~ date. . . .
B.ogers' denunciation of f\luskic s view
1.s "inost inappropriate and harm.rul. to
the nation's interest" fo\lo>A'ed sun1lar
criticisin fron1 presidential p r e s s
6ecretary llonald L. Ziegler. Secretary of
Defense Melvin R. Laird and several
Republicans in Congress
And a source close to the \\'hite !louse I CAM PAI GN'721
lndit<ited more of the sanH! probably
\l.'ould be forthcoming today at an ap-
~arance in New Ha1npshire by Interior
secret.ary Rogers C. B: J\1ortorl': M~rton,
in New Hampshire lo kick off Nixon s re-
election campaign for the March 7 slate
primary. "might be . pretty tough on
?iluskie" the source said. . .
Another Democratic p r e s 1 d en t 1 a I
aspirant. Sen. Henry J\t. Jackso~ of
\rashington. told the \Vo1nen's Natlonal
Democratic Club Thursday : "I v.·~s. sorry
to sec Sen l\luskie take the pos11Lon h~
did." In an apparent refcrl'nte lo escalat1~11
nf the war undl'r recent Democratu.:
presidents. Jackson sai~ .t~e Democrat:-;
''have a s~ial rcsponstbihty to help get
the 1\'ar over "
In other political developments:
l't1USKIE: Later Thursday n i g ht
f..l uskie engaged in a heated exchange
\vilh hooting and hissing antiwa~ pro-
testors v.·hcn he <1Ucn1pted to discuss
questions on which they de manded
answers· -lhe Vietnam war, and
whether marijuana and abortions should
be legalized. r-.1uskie said the reception at
'N EVER THOUGHT l'D GIVE MONEY TO A ROCKEFELLER'
Hubert Humphrey Pays Election Fee to W. Va. Secretary
a ti.ladison. Wis .. hotel wa s the most
hostile he had encountered since his vice
presidential campaign days.
LINDSAY: New York Mayor John \I .
Lindsay predicted Thursday nighl the
J\tassachusetts Democratic prin1ary .<\pril
25 will be a head-to-head battle bel\vecn
J\1uskie and himself. Linds:1y told the
1'11assachusetts I-lou se l'ress Associatiuu
that the field will t;e nrirrov.·cd by eoirller
prim;iry contests in 1vhich he c·xpl'l'!S 1o
du pr11grl'Ssi vc!y better
JACKSON: ·rhe \Vashingtun IJemucraL
arriving in \Visconsin later 1'hursday tu
begin a three·dHy campciign for the
i;tates' 1\pril 4 prirnary. said Con gress
should close existing i n co 111 c -l :.i x
loopholes instead of approvinb: a value.-
added tax, no•v being discussed. 111e
working 1nan, Jakkson said in \Vau~au ,
"is being taxed too much for too. little
because or tax systems that arc riddled
1•·ith ravoritisn1."
llUMPllREY: Sen . llubert IL Hun1-
phrey filed in Charleston. W.Va .. for the
ti.1av 9 Democratic primary and told a
joi~t session of the legislature he v.·ould
relight thl' torch t :irril'<l by the late Joh11
F Kennedy, uniting \\'est Virginians lo
bring him victory'' I 1\·;1nt .to b1uld :1
l'\1alition fron1 \he 1nounta1nlops ~nt!
valleys across this great state, the kind
John Kenaedy had in ou r 1960 can1-
pa ign," the ti.1innesota senator said. l .. aler
at a $35-a-plate fund-raising dinner 111
\Vilmington. Del., llumphrey called for
"a spiritual renaissance'' in placing a
commitment of manpower and resources
to get America moving ahead.
McCLOSKEY: Ilep. Paul N. McCJoskey
J r. of California. antiwar challenger to
President Nixon. told the National Press
Club in the nation's capital if he were
elected president. he >A'ould appear
monthly before a joint session of
Congress to ans1\·er questions.
1\SHBllOOK : Rep. John !\I. Ashbrook
t H-Ohio1, conservative challenger to Nix-
un. s;1 id a con1prornise reached between
the Nixon adrninistration and Sen.
Abrahan\ J{ibicoff ID-Conn.), on welf;ire
e·cforrn "calls for preceding full -scale i1n-
plc1nentallo11 01 the !<.1n11lv-a~sistance
plan . but it pro1 ides that the plan \viii
take effect regardless of the results "
llAltTKE: Sen. Vance 11~1rtke of Jn-
d1a11a, can1palgning in Nc'.Y l la1npshirc
for the De mocratic non1ination, challeng-
ed Sen. George S. McGovern of South
D<ikota to a debate. McGovern replied
lhal he would like to debate Hartke, but
would prefer a New Hampshire debate
l\'ith Muskie. the acknowledged front-run-
ner.
1\luskie , J\1cGovern. Jackson and
Alaban1a Gov. George C. \\1allace didn't
show up Thursday night for a Dernocratic
lund-raising dinner in lhc nation 's
1·~p1ta l. but Dcrnocratic N a ti o n a I
Chairman La\\'rencc E. O'Brien hosted
congressional aides. pages and newsmen
at the S500-ri-plate affair.
1-lumphrey, former Sen. Eugene
1'-tcCarthy and Rep. Palsy T. Mink of
~lawaii were the presidential contenders
on hAnd, but the biggest applause went to
retired House Speaker J ohn \V .
McCormack.
Narcotics Agents Seize
$1 Million Cash in NY
Also on hand was Thomas Donelon,
who earlier this week d e le a t c d
Republican Burgess Nixon for the
presidency of suburban Jefferson Parish,
La .. outside of New Orleans.
"I'm the only man to beat Nixon for
president since 1960, ·• Donelon told a
howling crO\\'d.
"That's what we need." O'Brien said.
Hospital P lan
Instructs Ne\¥
Dads in Classes
NE\V YORK ~U PI ) -Law en-
fo rcement agents seized aln1ost Sl million
in cash on a New York street corner
'J'hursday night and charged three men
with conspiracy to violate fede~al
narcotics statutes, lhc New York Joint
Task i''orce revealed today.
The $967.500 in cash carried by one of
the men in a s uitcase in the Bronx was
sa id to be the largest amount or cash
ever seized in a narcotics conspiracy
c:a se.
The three s uspects were iden.tilied a.s
Charles Papa. 55, Joseph A. Di Napoli ,
37, and George f . Rossi, 46, all of New
York.
Bureau of Narcotics and Dangerous
Dal.'• OU'!
K urt w. Engbrel5on is al odd}'
with Edwa rdsviUe High SChool
authorit ies in [Uinois over their
r efu sal to allow a picture taken
of him wearing a favorite h at
to appear in the school year·
book. Engbretson, 18. was un·
suc<ess!uI in appealing the
iS<Ue before the school board
and Is consldcrlnJI leJl,ll action .
Drugs (BNDD l Director John Inger soll
said the arrests were made by the Ne\Y
York Joint Task Force. made up of New
York State and city police and BNDD
agents.
BNDD Agent Theodore Bernier said no
narcotics >A'ere seized.
Papa and DiNatxtli , he said. 1~·ere ar-
rested last night after agents converged
on their automobile in the Bronx. The
suitcase carrying the cosh \\'as discover-
ed in their possession by arresting
agcnlS.
Rossi was arrested in the Bronx early
this morning.
All three were charged with conspiracy
to violate federal narcotics statutes and
Rossi was additionally charged with at-
tempting to sell narcotics.
Bernier said Papa was free on bond
pending trial ln Brooklyn Federal Court
on charges of violating federal narcotics
laws.
Jn Washington. lnger6oll sa id the
$967 500 was lhe largest amount of cash ' . . . . ever seized 1n a narcotics conspiracy
case. He said both Papa and DiNapoli
disclaimed ownersti.ip of the money.
Bernier said the arrests followed an in·
vestlgation "in excess of a month."
'Bomb Factor y'
· Foun.d by Po lice
DETROIT (UPI ) -Agent. stumbled
across an alleged "bomb factory" in a
routine narooics raid Thursday and seiz..
«ti a quantity of expk>alve chemicals they
sald were capable of blowing up an entire
city block.
One man was arrested in the raid,
whlclr alao netted two pounds of mar;.
juana, police oald. Thr .. olber pcnons
were arrested and more marijuana wu
seized tn two other raids conducted
earllcr by the \Vayne County Mttro
Squad.
"All of the lndlvktua.llJ Are known to
each other and "'l!:'re BUTe they're con-
nected In som) way," Sheriff William
Lucas said.
"The mtn of the Detroit narcotk:s
squad and the metro aquad are con-
Unuing their lnveJtlgallon lo ,.. what
oonneclloo lhb bomb ractory and lhcs<
pioskJns ,ire've had In the last few
months."
\VASHJNGTON ( U P I ) A.~
Georgetown University Jlospital saw 1t.
the tin1e had con1e to give some thought
to that poor, bewildered fellow. the new
father.
Jn the nature of things priority had, of
course, to go t.o the new mother and the
new infant. They got all the care and at-
tention.
The father was strictly a second-class
citizen, as far as most hospitals were
concerned
~le was permitted to gaze at his first
born through a glass window dimly but
only at restricted intervals.
"Then, with no preparation," says
Georgetown, "he took home a small,
terrifyingly fragile stranger."
Now, Geor getown lfospilal, according
to Pat Mcshea, a registert'd nurse whose
awesome title is clinical coordinator of
obstetrics, is trying to teach father how
to be a father at the same time it fs
preparing molher lo be a mother.
It ls doing this "in a special family
centered maternity care program."
"Involved from the beginning," says
Georgetown, "the father attends educa·
tlon classes, takes tours of the hospi tal
before the birth, and receives an In~
vitaUon to stay with hls wife duri ng labor
and delivery."
Instead of being restricted to one of
those waiting rooms where all he can do
Is sit around wondering what goes on, he
is pennitted tp vl!ll his wife and newborn
any time of day. He gets a "guest tray''
at mealtimes.
He even la taught how to hold a baby.
lo change It. diapen, and lo balbe 11. One
scoundrelly father of three robust sons
was dublous1 when he heard about thls
aspect of the' Georgetown program.
"By playing Ignorant about such
things." said this veteran, "you can get
out or a lot of work."
But MW Ft1cShea's·concern is with the
frightened by hll new responsiblll tie~. by
lhll "small. terrifying fragile slrflnger"
he Is taking borne, by the thought he
woo't know what to do when tomething,
OOV!ously, baa 10 be don<. ·
"We"re trying to meet his nttdl,
whatever they art, 11 said '-11.ss Mc.Shea
"Fathers can relax if they millz.e their
ball>' Ii real w wQQ'L li<oal<."
. ' • • ' -~·
r_'-"-''o.c·_r_._.,_ .. _.,_,_,'-' _1._n __________ D_A_IL_V P_IL_o_r _;;
Saturday last day.
15°/o off every $14-$20
dress. Including
knits and pant sets .~--=;.., ....
Sale 11 .90 to $17 , ..........
819, beautiful colloction of
daytime dresses. dresS·UP
dresses and pant sets. In
polyeste rs, a cetates,
acetate/nylon blends. Colors
galore. And lots of prints
and patterns. Misses',
women's and junior sizes.
J
<I ~ l I ~ I I \ f ~ r \ ~ I " , t +,
ii ~ \/, !Ji
!iii l :~
Sale 3ggyd.
Reg. 4.ff yd. Now you can sew up the softest, easy-
care . easy·wear ward robe with these polyester k_n1ts,
a ll at one low sale pr ice. Choose from high fashion
jacquards, coordinaled patterns. and sol1d6. Colors
from the most vib rant to sol! healhery tones. All
machine washable. All Penn-Prest ~.
The same high fashion, 58 to 60" widlh.
easiest car• tabries that were such gre11 values
11 our everyd.-y low price..
"Sele pftoe 9'1~ tfw lll:Uf'Nf·
,
JC Penney
The values are here every day.
// I: ~ i
Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at the following stores:
NEWPORT BEACH, F•shion i.lond. HUNTINGTON BEACH , Huntington Center.
•COSTA MESA, H•rbor Center• (Closed Sundey)
~
•
•
I
I j,
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE .
For a Safer Freeway
Ntw11 th•l the State Divunnn ()r lllghw1y1 wlll In·
11!.1ll 11alety rail• around freeway bridge abutment$ In
I.he Snuth Orange Coun ty area 11 welcome Indeed.
Becau~ of the accident rero rd along th e freewa y
1n th 111 area , any nc\1:11 of 11a fety mea11ure1 ha11 to be wel·
come.
In thlA in1tan(',e the 11tjjte plan" to optn bidA th is
month nn· a SI ~.000 proJert to provide tubular 11teel rails
along cone rrll! bridge. ahutment11. pillar11 and hr1dRt
en d~
Thr prr1JPtl 1'1 df'~ignrt1 lo redur, the 11evr.r1ty nf
11n~Jf'-r;ir r-oll 1i.1nn~ wi th ft xerl nh1ert11
In rPrrnl yea r111. 111cvr.ral rleath11 Bnd multiple Inju ry
arrlrl cnlf; havr rr~ullcrf from thl11 type of h1gh·iipecd
r ra,;h
• Th~re '" annthl'r airr;pci·l of the problem lhttt ii; 11till
r1r frnm Knlut1nn The. ~crt ion of freeway in lh l.11 area
la one nf lhe fr.w In the co unty without ccntrr-d1vidcr
barrierl'i lo kccr vr.hi clei:: !hat are out of co ntrol from
hurtlin ~ 1n tn on ·rnming lane11
1'hcy Nhould he conlliidered.
s ,p1irrcls in th e Park
Thi! rnr11J3 r ~rounrt squirrelfi of l ... aguna'i; l·fc1sler
Park arc once n1nre In the mid11l of 1 l'imaJI storm in-
volvlne their devoted fans and the r tty r"rk11 depart-
ment
1'hc l'lqu1rrcll'!, exhibiting the d1 srrlmlnating la/Ille
I.hat bcflll'i j'f!8 r·r<iund Art Colony rel'iidcntl'i, li ke tn l'ic t
ur hnulliekccplng Jn the rliff that cxtcndl'I from the park
proper rtnw n to the bcar h
Unfortunately, their <·omplex m;i zt of hurrow!i,
Whtn fll led wi th rain wa ter. tend to undermine the cliff.
'l'hl11 hnzard. romhine.d ~11!h natural erosion, reriulre11
frequent and cosUy 1horln11·uf operation• b~ lbe parb
department. .'.nd, in an effor to keep one ump lhe1d
of the squirrels. poison is used to control t eir popula-
tion.
Thi~ leads to an outcry from animal lovers, who
point out that the squirrel deci mation ls talc:ini place
JUSt ya rd 11 from the marine preservt where t1depool
ln habttanlJ! are legally protected .
'rhe parks people say the only alternative is a giant
wall wh1l'h would be expensive and ugly -and also
would wipe out the !l(!Uirrel homes.
Solutio ns to the periodic d ilemma would be wel·
com ed.
Public's Ri ght to Know
A propo.'\al hy the excc.-utive committee of the ~·
guna Beach (;hamber of Commerce to ban the working
prc11!I, therefore the publir, from its monthly board meet·
1n,c:s would appear to be not only poor public relation&,
hu t also r ather difficult to defend.
'fhe suggestion did not seem to he too well receiv·
ed hy !lome -memherr; of the chamber hoard and may
mean they will continue the policy of open board meet·
1ngl\.
Ry its own choice, the chamber has accepted the
responsi bility of admini!lterlng $36,200 of public funds
th li; ye ar, of which $13.900 goe11 toward the cost of of-
fi('e i;al aries and expense~.
Thus the chamber has become a quasi-public body
and the people of the community ire entitled to be
kept informed of it~ activities.
A •·pub/i(' be damned'' altitude is never good policy.
\Vhen puhli<' fun ds are Involved it i:-; quite inexcusable.
Cotild Lose Power atad Even lli11 Head Meaning of
'Survival of
The Fittest'
Sadat Foes Are Internal
Wi\S lll Nl:TUN -P1·efllrlrnt Anw1tr
•int hi tee tcrlna prec11rlou11ly on lht i :i1• of n fu riously 11ccthln~ Int ernal
f'l'UIJ!lon -whl('h rould hh1 111 hlm out of
power, and po111lbly even co111 hhn hill
h1 ·n1I.
Thnt 111 lhe r1111I tn-
l'lld1· rcn11on fnr thr
E,qvr.ll1tn IPOrlflr'11
Rluh en trip lo ~1ns
co"'
II 11 a dt11f)f'r•te
J11 Ucm pt to hol11!er
hJmstU 111ln11t h I 1
ln rrcn1lnAlY numrr.
au11 and ••11:reJ1111lvfl:
ho mei ,.nemle11 S11.
d11t'11 moat dangero ull fnc11 11nd crl11ls
rll(hl now 11re In his own country and not
h1r1u·I.
1'ho11e viole nt Cairo 11tudt>nt rlo111 11nd
dc1nons trnl lnn1t werr julll lhe vl11lble tip
Of II drrp-r11,11inR cn nf\n,qrotlon
H11hlnd 1ht l'llu<ltn l~ nre nt llltary •nd
ult rn ·nnt lnnnH.it t!tmt•nts.
IN .. ~ACT, they tnsrl,1u1t~ lht t11H1dtnt
oulhrcnk11 11nd plnyt•d 11 key behind-lht -
11cr11r11 role ln k ccpt11~ lht'nl rhu rn lng
rlc11pllt1 llrcnuou. anvtrnmrnt f'ffnrt11 to
11Ut'll them , flr11t by conclllnlory promts t.oi
11111 then hy ht:11vy-h11nds-l forcf'.
ll 111 highly .oit Rninc11nt 1h11t 1vhtn tough
1upprr1.oilon ht-..:11n1r ntce111111ry. S•d11t
rr!l11rlcd to police rt~tr1'r.'.'I nod not nrnty
tr111•11.~
Ht•n:\on · I. 11 t milltnr.v·-ro rllcu lnrly
~·iu111Mrr nfrlcors-wcrr no! tlormtd
rrllnhle.
Al so nnl rf!1)()rfrrt 111 thr !Jn1r· !hr
l•:11vpll11n 11!rl nrr4" wn~ 1otrnundrd.
1:1·ndlnR n rlrrhdvr hnnd In lhAt
"pr1·1·n1 1!lon11ry " t't"/1rk dnwn 1vt"rr lht"
{' --
Ru.~~lan MIC: flJihlcr-homher crr.w.oi 11nrl
11n1le lrcr1fl mlulle batlallon11 -numbf'r·
Ing mort: th11n 10,000 n1rn 11nd ofrlcer11.
STERN WORD wen! 0111 fr om S11d11l'11
be.leaguered he1dquertera thst the Sovlel
forcas were prepared to ln.~t11ntly ~o tnto
action agaJnat any move hy El{Ypllan air
elements to 1upport the thre1lenlng
1tudent1 or t cnup tttempt-tht reel tlm
of the turbulent furor .
Preaum1bly, S1dat h11rl Kremlin ap-
proval to sound thl1t e1etraordln1ry w11rn·
Jng.
Whether he did nr nol., fl. worked . The
Egyptln.n 1lrforce meekly 11t11yed .51round·
ed Ill ordered, 11l thou11h ll I.ii an open
~ecrrt In C11 tro that the mo.~t veheme nt
clh111iclent11 11mong the mllll Ary 11re
11 lr mcn-pa11slon11tcly ltch~nR fnr reven"e
for their 1hatlerlng defeat hy thr Jsrnrll~
In the 1967 confllcl.
It would have been quite 11 11prctecle If
the airmen hid Ignored S 11d1 t '11
ukase-with Ru1111l1n-manned Mf(',111 and
AA batlerle.!1 t11n11Jn1 with EgyptlAn
pllotll and planes.
CRUCIAL WEA KNESS of the 11nll·
SArl Al forctll 11 111ck of 11n ou11111ndlnR
lcarlrr. '
There Is no on1. flmona 1hese bll11!cally
d!.oicordant eltmtnt1 with t ilhr:r the
11lnturto or charillmB tn unite them 1uf-
fi f'!rntly tn mount a wldely·ba .!IM pu1111ch
11~11 ln11t Sed111. The mlllt1ry don 't trust
the extremist civillan clemen\1. and vict":
Vtr.'18.
Thl.'1 funrlttme:ntal WPllknf'S!i 1s due
dlrc('tly 1.0 the deltber11t e policy of the 111\I':
(iF1m11I NR.~~er And hlll i;ucccl'\sor and
lon,q·tlme inllmR!r Sadat.
Both leadr.r.!I ma d!'! it 1 flxtd rule tn
wecrl out potential r ivels. That wa.!I done
in ll number of way:-;-ran~ln,q from
mnrt-or-less perm11nent hou~,, 3rres1 to
ou tright execution.
Sadat l.!t not without powerful aup-
porter11 , both military and civlll1n.
Th1t h1 why he 1urvlved the m11ss 1tu-
dent demonst!'ltions--wlth the 1tron1!y
Implied Rld of the Rus11IM force!.
A FORMER GENERAL. Sadoi hu In·
nuentlal 11upporter8 .!lmong the older
commanrltrs, rarll cularly army And
n11vy. Similarly, Egyprl1n bu11lne1111men
are he11v i!y bt'hind him . Moat of thf'm
privately havf' no 11tomach tor another
r1.Junrl nf fiJZhtlng with l.~racl . They want
ti c;:11.,h in nn the e"tcnslvt elcct rificnllon
•nrl incre1u1ini;( industrlaJlzRtl on resulUna
from the complet ion of the A.~wan 0Rm .
All'ln !hey !nn~ly mi11s !ht' once many
millions of tourist!' dollars
In Mns('O\\'. Snrlat ii> seeklna an Im-
pressive h1ce-sev!lr with which to placate
hts war.clamorinR critics and olhtr
malcontent.!!.
Thi~ r111.zlc-d11.z1.l r ir; virtuall y certain to
be: 11 n 11 nnouncemtnt lhal Russl11 wlll
untlerrakt a IRrJie-!cal,, pr0Ar11m t.o
enable t:gypi to h<icon1c sel f-sufficient in
we11pon.!I produrlion. LRsl w e I!: k ,
authorlt.aUve W1shln1tlon ~ o u r re 11
"leaked " report! that the lJ ~ hA! 11,qreed
to do tluu for I .oi r 11 ,, l-l n r. I 11 d l n g
1111rr.r!onic wRr plAnr s.
Military Critics Aid Enemy
Th,. •~lk• f\.t11a1lne
It 11 dlfflt·ull In ronrel vt of l' tre11ttr
l11ni;:cr lo Lhi.l! nn11on thnn lh,. u11warr1nl·
~I 111111ck1 on "''hnl 11nn1e rror,lt ltrm ou r
"n1Hl tary.l11du.oirrJ11l ,omplox . 'They vilify
lhr mlll!Rry 11.• ''w1trn100,11rr~" who.m only
·nnf'rrn 111 pr1"11•1din.11 ou r armed force1
1Ylth A mflAnt lfl pr11clll"t !ht' 11rltnce •nd
1rl nr kllllnji, 11nd thr dtl'el npnu:nt of ntw
~11 r·111nklnA n1nlrrl11I.
'l'ho ln 111t11ou11 1u1r l of lhf'~t 11!111ck~ ll'i
.hnl they rln t Xll('fly \l'hll! !hr rn~mle~ of
~11r f'11Jl11bllr wnnt •.. lhry undern1tne
1>11r n1ollon 11nrl 1111 prrr11rrdl'lf'~~ c11p11blll-
·Y
The Con11n11nl!il~ "'11nt <1ur NJuntry to
'nil Into thfl hi.nd~ or tho5e who would
hiny freedom of tho u11 ht , ~ptrrh. mov•
31r11t and prr~nn11l llbrrt y. They hive
~r lttr.n and ~Alrl 1n11ny tln1r~ thnt they
Nill over throw 011 r nnllon by force and
rlolenC'I! nnt nN'e1111nrlly from
DAILY PILOT
without. but prtferably from wllbln.
IT 18 AXIOMATIC th11l whPn 1erious
trouble 1rlae11. we must rely on the
mllltary for protection . Tl 11 tqu111ly true
th11t no m!Utttry org11n l1Allon c11n be l'iUC·
cessful without close eoo prrntlon from ln-
du.!ltry. Why. then, should both ,qroupg he
victims of scurr\101111 111\A('kll on their In·
tegrlty, th~lr motives 11 nd pr11ctlces 11s we
sit Idly by? We do not think nur mf'm ·
hershlp, rledtc11ted to a stron• and
healthy nation, sub11cr!bes to i u c h a1
ldonlngy.
lt appear! to be thti nld story. "wh11l
have you done for me lately?" lh1t
DrtCJPllAle1 tht violent 11ctlon1 we !IM:
8nd1hffr abOut on ou r colleie c1mpuset1.
Armed forces recrulter1 11re thrown ofr
ca mpu1e1 and phyatc111ly 11tu1ulted . The
ROTC '11 vili fied, buildings burned, i nd
tht.Corpa thrown off many r.ampuses.
are more in other counltl@:s 1uch •I
Sweden.
WE EVEN WITNESS the sickening
sight or polltlclan11 sharlna the 1ame plat-
form with n!l>-leltlsta att they exhort all
who would ll$ten lo brlng pressure on
WMshington to t.xttnd 1mne11ty to dr11fl
dodgers and deserters. To do 50 would be
to Insult every man In the 11rmed forces .
piirtl c:ul11rly those who d I e d whlle In
uniform.
We will alw11y1 protect and defen d our
righ t of dl511ont ... but we c11nnot con-
donfJ Irrational, hysterical condemneUon
or eit her our mll lt11ry or nur Industries.
They helped make lhla nation the
greotest nn oarl h. They wlll help KE EP
th is the gre1~1t nation on earth. despite
the poisonous rhetoric 1pewlng from the
mouths af the very 1m1ll mJnorlty who
would see us btcome subservient to the
Communist phfl.,.phy ... 1 phlloeophy
wnlch dally tnows It la we1kenln1 ln Its
own he1rU1nd.
Some months ago. I mentioned that
moat people have no lde11 of \\'hat
"survival of the fi ll.est" means in a
biologlc1I 1en1e -wron1ly Imagining It
mean• survival of the atrongeal or most
1ggresslve.
Si nce then qui te 1 few reader1 hive
asked me to amplify 1Dd explain
"surviva l of the flt-
lest." and I am hap-
py to do so. fl means
11imply that those
species or members
of species, which are
ht.st able to adapt to
changi111 ci rtUm-
J1tances hive t h e
ife•test chance to
survive.
THE DI NOSAUR may have been the
''stron1cst" of early creatures. and the
11abre-loothed tiger the "most aa:-
gressive," but both species became ex-
tinct precl8ely because they continued tn
dtpl'!od upon strength or ferocity a.t 1
time when other qualities Wl'!rt more
ne('essary.
Ll'!t U!I consider modem man in this
cantext. In Japan today , traffic accidents
11re the fourth leadi ng cause of de1tha ; in
1111 technologicllJ countries. deaths by
violence are rising, and most of these are
11ccounteble to the numbl!:r of l.r1 fric
deaths. as world population gr ows and
a('cident11 ~ow alon1 wit h it.
Now . 1ccldents rise in 1 geometric rate
compared to populttlon. That la , with
three auto11 only three encounters ire
possible : with four autos, six are possi·
ble : with five autos, n1ne: with sl1 1utb1.
1!1: and JO on.
SO, AS THE WORLD geta more people
and mora cars and more traffic, the
possibility of viole nt de1lh by accident
1oes up gt10metrlcally. •nd not just
1rlthmetlc11ly. When you double the
number of cars. you far more lhan deu-
ble 'the number or accidents.
Given th la fact, who then would be the
"fittest" survivors of this enormous
reducer In human population? Those who
are the most prudent, not the strongest
or moll auresslve. Those who stay home
most, Who drive the least, and who drtve
with the lf'tltelt cauUon and the fa tte1t
rene1ea. Alto. thole who conaume the.
le11i 1Jcohol and llkt lho feweal plll1. •
AND JN PAST WARS, of courae, ""
know tt ta actu•llY tbt ·"~aknt'' Ro
hive 1UrVlvod: lho •tmnau~ br•ftfl.
heillhllll. youncal:"'"."J!!ve been Jdllod
by the mlWona. Indeed, oome historians
have 1uat1ted that World War ti w11 ao
lost In comlni pncllOly bee•-lho
"nowftr" of the upcomlna: pneratlon w11
1l1u1hllred -men wh9 ~ bin led the~ countrit1 with...,.~ llld
reuon lhln tho ......O.t !lift 1'ehlnd Ibo
Jina. . '
Al ony rote , .. DHd lo undenllnd Ilia!
.. .
SPO~T5MEN
Burke Hung Up
Over Cory's Hair
To the Editor:
Our ocean stinks from the de-ad fish
and birds killed by the modern indu11trie,.
of convenience. Our 11ir i!I like the ocean;
"'e ma y aoon be like the fish 11 nd birds.
Apartments are spre11ding over thia land
like 1 fungus . I could 10 on-taxes. Viet-
nam .. ,
However. everything ls In control. We
have our representatives to et>ofide in·
...,.like A11semblyman Robert Burke (R •
HUnllngton Be1ch) for lnlf.1n~.
IT JS REALLY rea1111ur inR to know that
whlle 111 these major problemll ere con-
fronting us, the Repuhlican t11wmaker i11
carrylnR on hia own cam paign to unseat
Astte mbly man Kenneth Cory I 0 •
Anaheim ). The rtason : Cory's hair
covl'!rll hl11 collar; he also wear11 boot!.
Hasn't anyone Informed Assemblyman
Burke that hair and boots Ile quite still
without the action of the individual wear -
ing them? Burke et>uld judge Cory ac-
cordin1 to Cory '1 actions. But that would
be too difficult.
1 wish I had lht time to waste c1rrying
on me1nlngless campaigns.
RON HAYDEN
Peculiar Alchem11
To the Ed!Wr :
Help me : I am confu11ed! Our Presi-
dent has come out with what sounds like
1 more th11n reasonable propos11I to end
the hostllitits in Southe11st Asi1. and
STILL we 11re bombarded with·
"STOP THE KILLING !" Thr ide11
seems to be that by somt peculiAr
al chemy or war, our unilateral and com-
plete pullout wilt guarantee that the
North Vietnsmese will never fire another
gun, toss 11 grenade. bury 11 clvitlan 1live,
nor slit the throat of a village leader.
Wi th no bombing to slow up the
lr1Mfer of IJ'laterlel from Russia i nd
Cltln1 via North Vietnam to Soulh Vi,t-
nJJTl, Cambodl•. i nd LI.,, th< killing will
atop ?
WITH NO P'INA.NCIA.L aid and arm1-
ment to the South Vietnamese, Cam-
bodia ns, •nd L10U1m. they wi ll aomehow
survive the Communist aggression?
How?
As I uy, I am confused. But n<it ao
confused, 1 would submit, as are 90m.e of
the memben of Coriireas who continue to
mouth lho old . cry, "STOP THE KILJ,.
ING! We want a complete pullout NOW!"
Fronkly, II sc om Ille hell· out of mt
when I lhfnk of Ille c1Jlber of menl1illy
of 110me of thoH 1n a:ovemn1tnt. But
think God we have 1 President who ii
11Ton1 OftOlllh to blwh oil," \ht. barbs of
IUC:h &•ttll!• aa ··the Mc:Oovema, Mc-
Clolkey1, and 1uch.
ELIZABETH T. 1.ANCASTEll " .
Mailhox j
Lttttrs rrom rtadtri ar• wtlc~.
Nonnall11 writtr.s 1hould conve11 their
mt.s.sage1 in . 300 words or less. TM
right to condt rut letters 10· fit 1pae1
or C?lfmin att libt l b resn"Wd. All ""'
ttr1 m ust includt si gnature and mmz..
ing addrt1.s. but ttamts mau bl wit,...
htld on requeit If 11.1.fflcU·nt TtCU01'
U appartnt. Poetr11 will not b1 pulJ.
li&htd.
fut ure and th1t great cesspool in the aky,
Dana Point Harbor.
We i re loslng 111 semblance of ncetn·
front living. For the ple11sure of putting
our towe\11 on the sand , we mu!t di1 in
our pockets, even as the tourist must.
No, chlcken·llttle, the 11ky i.s n't faUinJ:.
It is only fo1y·loxy erasing the 1ky
with .apartments.
MARGARET CONNOR.5
'The Three Stooges'
To the Editor·
Since I have lived in Lagun11. Beach, 1
have 1lways maintained lhat our city
council meetings ire a show . Not a 1ood
show , not one that would rate 1 Nielsen
rating , but one that is of inter~t to the
taxpayer -the fellow that ptiys the city
hall bills.
Since we no~ have leleviliion equip-
ment to cover these show~. not because it
was needed, but becau sl'! it was in·
corporated into our new budget by city
hall finaglers as 111 political toy. then It
should be utilized for its utmost benefit.
I WOULD SUGGEST that we get in on
open circuit television cable so tbe people
of Lagun1 Beach who do not attend coun·
cil meetings c1n see the ahow and the
shenanigans that are golng on at city
hall.
Furthermore, I would 1ugge1t 1 tiUt
for the thow . and not to re fleet on a
bygone era, It ahould be ealled, "Tht
Thrte Stooges." A.ft.tr all , how much
more stooglf: c.n tht three get?
Such a show, televlaed to lhfl relidentt:
of Llguna Beach. would aoon answ• the
queation whetl'iet· we shoold recaU. the
three iitoogea.
ALl!:XAl)'DER HOOK
Satet•·•lllf Ne i81ppl#
To the Edllor: J • 1
Ple1S• prlnl Ulla flO IP.II perh1po ·mt
of Ille jud1•• In ·~ BelCh :iril1 1•
how others feel • ~ \he •iluollolil flt
lhf.t country. ,
We lived in ~' Btacb for 14 )'Mn
ind four y"" q,, tllini• ll"'1ed
lochlnfl•· W•.~oal1"UC1n, nw,ei.
To lho Editor: ly hill, IO lff<iilcl ~·"Mll\lllul -·ind
The rope Ind _,,Uon of Din• ~oint moved lo Herber~
II 1lm011 compJet.:. Willi lho bl..,. iii Tllo climlt;o · °""PllO Wiili
tho Ortnp Count, Plannb\1 Cominlllloo LI~• Beacl\, wt t!l!l(l'lllln ...... • the,,,...,~ dneloPen .... pllolini .. Ind tt 11ll&le .ftll111 lfil·lwhol~:
lfnlle reoideni -., oul • of exllteoce. Tbank God lfl<ro '::I:: ""-111 11111
Our plan nm ll't llllklnl an lhal w1 ,.. ~ilc;;rr=.r.' ..:_.-, wll!l!ll~~.,. lain our Sponlob llMino oo tbcY .,. copy-l\1n:O ----ore ...,.
RoMrf N. Wtit'd, P11blilher
Thom<U K111>ll, Editor
.Albrrt lV. Bntr11
Edftorlot Pop( £d1 ror
PEOPLE WHO boast of their Com·
munill phUoaophle1 11'1 not only pennll·
led .•. U>ey 11'1 tven lnvfl>d to 1peok to eoneae 11udle.nct1 wbtre the.y can spre11d
lhltr vlluperotlon .,.1n11 OID' country
and fJverythtna It 1tand1 for. some pro-
f11oon who openly 1cknowled(• lhoy or•
Communfatl or Communist 1ymptthl~e.r1
co nllnue to tti1ch our youth, 11ecure tn the
knowlodgo thot they con't be fired
bec1u11 nf lll olr "pollllcol belief•."
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
IUfVlvil for 'm111 .(llldlvldllilly Ind u 1
speclel) hi• noClllni to do with power or .,,..., ...... , ~. u.. b. ......
become ·1uJcldil -quollllti for . im. 'nit "ft~
lest" hum•111 .,. ~ who .,. lllOll
wll!lnl IQ, l"odifY OOft!lucL
"" TijUIOl'I bliloa1nla. Our , ...n • ' · ~CTOIUA U .
· view• wlll nol fll, loll, however: "' 1111.. '
Th• 9dltorllJ ,,.~ (\r th!! 1'!11Jy 11Uot ~k• to tnlGrm 11tlfl ,1111111•
1110 rrtde.n by f""Cii~'nl1,.,i: U11J
hel"'"Wl1Af1l'l''I "'f)tnlou. •M l'.'<Hn• mtnU1r)' OI\ t:o(llCI (\f lnltrl':llt 1111'
•lanlflt'artee. b.j JH'Ol'l1hn11 .111 forurtt
for th• CXflN"UIM (If ll\l r ff'Adr"''
oDlnlona. and by prurnUnc t~ 4J~ \"~"'~ht• Of lntumi,.1' nb-
tfllr\'tl"I •nd tPQbunf'n on luJ1&i:1
<it ... """· Friday, February 4. 1072
Wt do not advnc11 te thouaht Cf>ntml
1\1~ 111 exerclaecf by CC1mm unl11t nnUon!
, •• but n~lther dn we 1t1vocAl1 ext11ndln.c
lnvll11ion• to 1 "Typhoid Miry" In t"ch
In our 11chonl1t im the off chance her In·
fectlon wlll not 1trlk1 our children.
Wt t11pecl•llY 1bhor lho11e who knnw·
tnaly t1nC(l1Jr.,1 youn1 men to dodaa the
dr1fl or de1trt from the armed lorot1.
Some 26.noo to IO,OIXI art ullmattd to
have 1one to Canada alon, •.. and there
f\1r Lorr eccused Mr. Boyd of vo~
Ing 11ainsl th e: Nyes Place school
bu11 route because Mr1. Boyd wa1
•galnsl It. Is It too mean to poin t
out that ~fra. Lorr will benefit di·
rectly from II?
-A. T. B.
' Quot~
Jee1 Uan•, L.A., u4..-.0 looder
-"I 1WI 11plrt to polfUcil olllct, In l,be
direction lhlt I can best tk> 1 job, 1 ~t
ier job 111111 IO-ocevpyln( tbll qi· nee." \
on\)' lo cllmb our TV 1t1illl !or • bird 's •• G""1fe --...,
· eye view. , •
Dano Point Clll""' for Action Coo\· Dt:or George:
mlttee b11 ocortd a '"' minor tri umphs, Why do women ilw•)ll, 11k, 'Iii'•
bul 1ben II 10 muc~ to do Ind 10 UIU1 llllf Ill )'OU men oriir llllnk ol1'·'
t1mt left. "Cblole·Jl ~ Looe II'' is qiu llARllY
cry,, but "Lo,. Ii or Love U" ii fut O..r U.rry:
becoi11Jr11 oar lol. • I clonl -&J'icf k'1 very unl1~.
TllDI All! NOi' enM•h '-pie will-I nol only nenr-ltnow ·w11111 ~ ..... ,... ful meon, but I C111 ~ uy tJllil
1111 to'canllnue our fllht for'lhe peoce ~ulle often. l llllUol other .• ~. u lslenco lo which they '"' entJtled. Tbt _ , , ~I -t lhlll bllleril Dul ~ of lllo
•.
L. M. Boyd
Pat Nixon Top s
In World Travel
''Every yur It take• le11 Umt &o fty aao11 Ute
AlJulic and more llme to drive to tbe office."
Amerkan Mercury
Any old timer might t.ell you the late Mr1. Fr11nklin D,
ROOleVell was the tn.OJit widety traveled First Lady of our
land. But any old Tuner, &O saying. would err. Mrs. Roost--
velt vi!itecl about 20 nations plus
Caribbean Islands. So far, Mrs. Ri ch-
ard Nixon. both a11 y,·ife of the Vice
President and as First Lady, has set
foot in 74 nations. That's already the
record. undoubtedly.
OF THE WORKING women herP-
abouts, three out of· five are married,
half of them have children.
OBSERVED Somerset ~augham; "A woman may b'
as wicked as she likes. but if she isn't pretty, it won't do
her much good ."
CAN YOU e1plain why the curry powder ih Europe is
so much stronger than the curry pov.·der around these
part~? Odd .
NAM ES -Q. "Wasn'l Maria Cole, widow of lhe late
Nal Cole, the sister of Duke Ellington?"
A. No. sir, her maiden name is Ellington, and she sang
with Duke Ellington's orchestra once. But they werenl
related.
Q. ·•JS ~1lKE DOUGLAS his real name?"
A. That TV personality to whom you refer. miss. start.
ed out as Michael Del;iney Dowd Jr.
HAVE HEA RO it said a wise man never negotiates hi!
[lwn ~alary. li.1ight be somethin.'l to that . 0. 0. Mcintyre,
that hil(hl.v popular conversationalist of yesteryear. de.
clined lo talk monev with the newspaper synriic;ite that
peddled hi~ wares'. The gre11t Albert Einstein · likewise rf'·
fulled to dillcuss financial matters with his emplo.vers at
Princeton. Rnth Mclntvre and Ein stein turned such deal·
ings over entirely to their wives. Fine ladies.
JEFFERSON -How can you call yourself 11n old
history buff, if you can't name which or these United
Stales was once ciilled the Territory or Jefferson? r.Iy
Colorado client neeri not repl y.
AS TO THAT nf!en-posed query about hnw to keep the
nei1i:hborhood do~s from visitin~ your ~"rrlen. trv mouse.
traps. says a cust.omPr. Just set out h:ilf a drizPn. Doi:!.~.
beini;i murh smarter than mice. nnt only avoid them. but
their area.
WHAT'S THE liirgest number of books a man can
read in his lifetime? Lawrence nf Arabia claimed he r&ad
4-0,000. Thomas \Volfe said be read 20.000. Adolf . Hitler an-
nounced h.e reaQ. 7,000 military books. Doubtful, these con·
~nt.iQns. Extremely d.;iubtful.
. .Address mait .'to .L.. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Bo:r·1875, Ntw-
port .B1ach, CnU/. 92660 .•
Secrecy Under Fire
SACRAMENTO (UPI I -A·
bill that would include the
Public Util ities Commission
under the state's open meeting
laws has been introduced by
Sen. Alfred E. AIQuist (0-San
Jo~~ i.
Alquist sa id the measur~
was "ln response to a policy or
Increasing secrecy by th~
commission meeting in secret
when making regulatory
decisions."
The commission, as a quasi-
judicial body, is allowed to
hold certain meeting~. in
secre t. Alquisl 's bill would
have the effect of removing
that exemption.
"While the exc[us'1on of the
public has been in effect for
years," he SAid. ''the complete
exclusinn of all staff from the
final deliberative process did
not occur until 1971."
Alquist introduced similar
legislation last year .that was
passed by the Senate but killed
in Assembly committee.
Child Killer
Given Death
VAN NUYS (UPI )
Gordon Barkley. who was con-
victed of fii-st Oegret murder
for strangling his ll}.year-0\d
stepdaughter, has been senten·
ced to die in the San Quentin
gas chamber:
The sentence was in1posed
by Superior Court J udge Har-
ry V. Peetris. who denied
defense motions for a new
trial. Peetri.s convicted
Barkley of first degree
murder Dec. 28 at the end of a
month-long trial heard without
a jury.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Pa~ilic Goldfish Farm
POND FILTERS ·
' "llill'Ot!SD1, ' l'l!OI' TIND
HI l'l .. •I•
KOi
'FOOD
5,000 GAL.
. PER; 'HOUR:-
. t' a.,;.n•i~~ M,O!iff.". !,~.,,,~.
cl1•ni. n.tit1, ··!J:. ~·•••h ~ your poiMf'for "te1i1. flh 11-•
'-"l-1' .ti81t 111y• pio1uf boc•tt•• It
1ti11d1 Oii Miv•+•"'r·i..1. N. pllltf'lblft9."'''"''~· "''"' •• -to111h lorlt , l11tlf1f plttll&>,
t" rtody v.10. ·~ ··-'325~
0~~· ..... 89S0 710S .
·: ·~42 EDWARDS ST., WESr-.tfl ,: ..
'.t '":' "'!a.MWJlt'jlM"""'· &f MlOIN wtnT ........ ~ •
,..J, _, -__ ._ -· -
F• rl1~ Ftbl"u.lry '1 l'l72
~~~~~~~~~~~---'
Du ring this once-a-year eveni most
Magnavox models are substantially
price-reduced: Sa ve up to $151 on
Color Stereo Theatres ... up to $ I 0 I on
fine furniture Color TV .•. up to$ I 02on
Stereo consoles ••. up to $80 on Stereo
Component Systems. Save on M ono-
chrome TV, Tape Recorders and Radios,
too. All have the built -in performance
and reliability that have made Magnavox
a leader in the field of fines t quality
electronics for over 60 yea rs I
. .. on each of three
magnificent Drum Tables
with solid-state stereo .
FM/AM Radio-Phonograph ,
'. :'(~ :,,. t
' .
..·,
. .... · .. . ·.·
SAVE $21
Sl1nu leted TV pic1ur1.
on slim and trim por-
table Color TV "model 6112 with 12·-
di agonal measure.piC1ures, 1.el~scopl_ng
dip01e ante·nna and convenientretr.actable '.
carrying haridle. Perf,cton taf?les,shelves,
or bookca111-1nywbere-I· 5"1"' · -~· .,.ow ·~~
.. . '
. .
;• . . . . . ' . ..
•
••• • <
SA·VE $10 on FM/AM Rad io /
Cassette Recorder AC /DC. model 9041.
FM /AFC, auto level, tales.coping FM
antenna, battery and le~e\ meters, tone
cbntrbl, cassene eject, record monitor,
Md of t1pe 1J1rm. Baneiies, cassette.
NOW '8995
c ., '
Who eiS. btit Magnavox could create 8 stereo that can
ho!d a lamp, ·an ash tray, two martinis, a bowl of shrimp
11nd the complete works of Beethoven ? Well, these
drum tables can/ And you'd never guess there's a
superb puU·out 20-Watt (EI A music power) radio-
phono hidden behind those doors .. Or a six·speaker
omni·dimensional sound system concealed behind the
grille work (projecting sound in all directions). Or
enough space to store 20 record albums. But there is.
It's a sort of hid9·a-stereo. Magnavox makes it for
people who believe a great stereo system should be
heard, but not necessarily saen. A. Spanish 1tyling-
mridel 3463. B. Model 3483 w ith doors open. c.
Early American-modal 3462. D. Contemporary
-model 3461. All great to eee and hear I
Slmul1ted TV picture. SAVE $5 on slim-and-trim por-
table TV model 5010 and enjoy 12~ (diag-
onal) sharp pictures. With telescoping
antenna, and convenient carrying handle
-it's perfect anywhere . , • in any room
in your home.:SH it today.
SAVE $1 on AM portabl• rtdio
model 1008. Only 4 ~· high, it offers big
room.filling sound. Easy to read sllde rule
dial,wrth Log Seate and Vernier Tuning,
bui lt·in 1ntenna. Ea rphone and batteriH
included. Take it wherever you go.
NOW '8495 Nowsrs
•
46 , YEARS OF DEPENDABLE SERVICE!
aOLDINWUT &
WAINll
HUNTIN•TON llACH s ... 01df
14J·llt'
401 MAIN sn1n
HUNTINGTON IU.CH
t.mc• " Set•
SJ,·75,t
' ••oo•HUIST a
WAlNI•
POUNTAIN YALLIY '°'" 01tfy
,,J.J416
'
' ' .. ... t.i
•
•
Sinking Feeling
J1aisersby view the sail of the 45-sloop Sea Song ill-all that was visible Thurs·
day after vessel sank in 13 feet of water at the San Diego Harbor entrance. Five
persons lvere rescued from the craft.
Water Boa1~d Studies Big Pact
.. ·-
Record Inspection Barred
Reagan Blasts Judge's Aid Ruling
SACRAMENTO <UPI 1 -do u b I e . ch e l' k reeipient any evidenct to support the any information from the
GO\'. Ronald Reagan has ac· ~hgibility. adm inistration's posi tion. I-le state Department of lluman
cused a judge of "sheer Gallagher has handed the baid he didn't learn of the Resources Dfvelopment about
obstructionism" In ruling lh<il Reagan ad1nin.islralion several decision until Thursday af· !he earnings or income of
state and local offic1als cannot setbacks at implementing both ternoon. "'elf are recipients.
inspect lhe outside income the \\lelfnre nerorn1 Act of ··Perhaps the judgt did no1 Add itional!)'. repor1ed a
returns of welfare retlplenls. 1971 and administration in· reahze what he v.·as doing Reagan aide, state attorneys
The .l(OVernor leveled <1 1tinted regulatory ··reforn1s " because it is difficu lt to Uelie\'e the order 111 a y
verb<1I bla!.I i hursday at "!low anyone in a responsi-believe that any inlel!1genl ··seriously inlerferr" \\' i l h
Superior Court Judge "'11lian1 ble ixisition -especially a person "·ould say the stalt> operation or the federall~·
Gallagher of Sacr<1menlo , judge -could rule that the does not have a n1or;il as \\'l'll ~ponsored \\' o r k
charging him "'ith "a rla~rant state cannot check into the as a legal obligation tu Program !\~'!N i
vio\11tion of public trust" and outside income of welfare determine a person's eligibi!i· unernployed .
•·juda:1al m1 scondul'I " recipients is almost beyond ty before handing 01 1t the tax --=""'..;,_~~======;!
E11rlu~r this week. Gall agher belief." Reagan de c I are d . payers' c ash l\'illy·nilly," TAKE THE
Issued a tempor;,ry order "although this is not the first Reagan said .
restrai ning slate and local decision of thi~ ~ou~~ that Reagan said the order prrr NEWS QUIZ
welfare officials from ex-1neets that .description. , hibits the state Departmf'nl of Every Saturdey
arnining employ me nt records Regan said that Gallagher s Social Welfare from obtaining
"'ilhout a re c 1 pie n t ' s ruling at the request of a ----------
J.ck h•s lot~ of
id ••~ for
v.!entine's d•y
, , , come lee
tl'le tu99estion
t11ble •t ...
346 7 v;, lido-Newport l•1d•
67)-4510
permission. welfare rights group v.·as "un·
The govrrnor's offi ce said conscionable, i n deed a
stale Attorney General Evelle flagrant violation of publlc GIGANTIC AQUARIUM SALE
You nger had been asked to trust."
\ n1 n1 c ti ; ate.\ y a pp ea I "Such judicial miscondu ct
(;11Jtach~r 's order i11 the :Jrd certainly reinforces the "'flS 'fROl'IC'AI, •'ISll
U 1•1.
11 gal. •~OW
l~ ,.1.
11 11r. 1ht ..
'" u." U.tJ ,._,,
l)1strlt\ I 'ourl uf Ap11c:1l 111 public "s lo"' opinion of our Ct11T111\Klu• w••~11 c1r•w1110 !Gr ,111. anc1 "'''d''"''"· l'•n111•111 , ,, ,,, '"' •• ,,,,, ,,,.,, ltle<llan .t f:•otlc T•OJli<•I l'hl!. " " S1Jtra1nc11lh c1111rt system.'' he asserted. I 16175 BROOKHURST fouN1.t.1N ~o 1u . ••.•t
SAC.:f<A ~1ENTO fU PI I -
The ."!late \Vater Resource5
Control B o a r d . "'hose
chalrn1an Is accused of at·
tempted bribery along wilh
two executives of an enginetr-
lng company . is takln1
another look at awarding $1
mllllon In contra cts to the
firm.
A11 1ntcgr:1I part rit B1.,1gt1n \ ·rtie guvcrnor charged that 1 v.t.LLEY 11 ,,1. 1JJ.•1
Adams, who initiated action lo &s a consultant to a privatf' 1rclfar<' ··reforn1s ." the 111· r:allagl1er issued the order[ 1w11111iv911 "1"••> 1n·110, 1 c1a1• 11 1•' 41111~1 •nu 11 ... hooO>l
take a second look at the ES! firm which the governor dido' ~l ~c~·o~n~l<~c~h~c~ck~w~•~S ~a~im~e=dia~l~g~i,~·-~~w~il~ho~u~l~a~n~v~a=d~v~an~c~e~no~ti~ce~to~========M='=''='='="'='='"="="="='='="='='~'=''=m='='="=''="'=:::::===w:':'":'"="='~'====== idenlify. 1ng offic 1al s another tool to the state and without hea ring ·----. ----·--proposals. offered no public ----------
explanation of his motion. }fe .------------------------------------------------------------------,
The agency voted routine
final approval to almost n
million worth of contracls for
development o f watershed
anti-pollution plarur Thursday
but without discussion decided
l-0 "re·evaluate" bids sub-
mitted by E n g i n t er in g
Science. Inc,, of Arcadia
fESl l.
The firm had bf.en ten·
tatlvely selected by the board
Dec. 6 to receive $1 million
worth ol contract.' for
preparation of waler quality
plan! for three baalm. Four·
teen other bkkfera also 1ub-
mllted offers on tho!e pro-
jeds.
Board member W. W .
later refused to tell reporters
whether It had any connection
with the alleged attempted
bribery of a Honolulu official.
';The board was not willing
to entertain a motion to award
lhat contract," Adams told
newsmen. "I have no com-
ment on ESl's difflcultte1."
Slate board chairman Kerry
~1ulllgan and two top ex-
ecutives of ESI have been
charged by Hawaii authorities
\vlth attempting to bribe a
l~onolulu urban renewal co-
ordinator with a $20,000 check
in connection with a $2.5
mlllton design contract for a
sew1ge treatment plant.
Gov. Ronald Re:agan called
for Mulli11n'1 re1l1n1tlon last
week, ch1rgln1 Mulligan wu
eutlty of a "conflict of ~
terest" becau.se he had served
KKK -sty le Protest
E11ds i11 6 Arrests
SfANfORD (UP!l -Sil
persons wearing sheets in Ku
Klux Klan 1tyl~ have been ar-
rested for disrupting a clas:i
Mayor Held
In Sex Case
Will Run
PJ'ITSBUflG (AP ) -ri.1ayor
?\1arcellno Vasquti. chargtd
wit h kidnftp and other offenses
involving a teenage girl. says
he wl\I seek re-election
because "I cAnnot Jet personal
problems interfere w i I h
buslness as ma yor."
City Clerk Mary Erbes aaid
\·asquer. filed nonUnating pel i·
lions Thursday for his second
term on the city council. Theo
mayor of this San .Francisco
suburb of 20,000 Is picked by
lhe council from among its
members.
Vasquez pleaded innocent to
charges of kidnap, assault
\vlth Intent to commit rape,
and lewd Hnd lascivious con-
duct with a 13 -yeir~old
A.lamerla girl and Is scheduled
lo be tried April 6. The city
t"ltctlons are fi\'e days later.
The mayor and soother man
\\'ere arrestrd Nov. 8 in
Oak.l11nd 's Lnke slde Park by a
policen lan \\'ho henrd screams
f11:1m dense shrubbery and
said ht' found the man drcssf'd
only In undt>rsliort-'. The girl
told polite that the pair had
removrd somr of her clothing.
Finch Won't
Seek Office
LOS ANGEi.ES (AP \ -
Presidential advisr.r Hohc!rl
J-~inch says he won't run for
Cotlgrtas this ye1r, a bid
many st1 ppoMer1 had asked
the former C all !ornia
lieutenant gov tm0r to make.
Finch told a news wn·
ference In suburban P1sadrn11
Thur5d1y he will not enter the
race for the 20th
Congresslon1t Dlrtrict stat
bting vacated this year by. the
retirement (If Rep. H. Allen
Smith, a fellow Republican.
Finch said he wantt to ke.p
h.is pollllc1\ ''opUom open un·
tU 1974" ••htin he could run for
eovcrnor or U.S. atnator.
"I think the dlsttlct Is en·
lilied to a cornmltment ol
JnOre than one ltrm." Finch
told newsmen. "1 was not
prtpartd to make thal com·
mitment. To ht 1 one-term
co~n ls to use it •• a •le"'"' ,_ •
Laught by Nobel Prir.e-winnlng
scientist \Vllliam Shockley a t
Stanford University.
They \\•ere part of a group
of 10 protesters who Thursday
entertd Shockley's cl1s.,: in
seml-eonductor theory and ac-
cwtd him of "genocide"
because of his views on
genetic factors In lntelllgenct.
Sixteen y o u n I persons
staged a slmllar clasa dis-
ruption on Jan. 18. A grad·
uate student and five non-
students v.·ere among those
arrested Thursday on charges
of disturbing the peace, lre.s-
passlng and v.·eartng masks.
Vice Provost Robert
Rosenweig gaJd the classroom
disruptions "·ere "a vivid
threat" to the freedom of
faculty members and their
students. Ht said faculty and
studen1" mugt resolve "that
lhe disruption of education at
stanlord bys e If · el e c I e d
censors of the public morals
i~ repugnant lo the values and
purposes of thi~ university,"
Murderess
Of Husba1id
Paroled
FORTERA tUPll -Mrs .
Lucille Mlller, convicted of
burning her husband to death
for his life insurance, has won
a parole on her first a~
plication.
ri.lrs. J\.iiller. 41. ~·ho was
sentenced to life In prison, \\'ill
be paroled in J\.lay, the
Women's Board of Terms and
Parole decided Thursday.
Mrs. Miller was convicted In
1965 or setting fire to the fami·
ly car at btr home in Alta
Loma whfle her hu.sblnd, Dr.
Gordon E. Miller, a dentist.
was asleep In it.
The prosecution 11ld she
was havln( an 1rf1lr with 1
Sao Bernardino lawyer and
"'anted to collect the $100,000
Insurance policy on h e r
husband's Ute.
She has b9en servinr her
1cnn 1t the Jostltutlon for
\\'omen at f'rontera, where tht
board decldod Thursd11 lo
pll<Ole her. She ha• MTVed ll>e
n1lnhnum Umt necuury for
parole on a Jlf& sentence,
se\·en yun.
?-.1rs. MIUtr'a attorney• bl\'t
appealed her convlcllon all the
way lo the U.S. Suprtme
Court and are 1Ull trytni to
overtum it. They argue that
tlio ~lion wron11Ully ol>
talntd evidenced throu1b a
(emale uodt.rCQver agent viho
was made ti.trs. l-1111 e r • 3
ctllllllte to obt1ln uniuarded
..itnlsslons from her'
'
No wonder people
don't leave Park Newport
on weekends.
Would gou?
A beautiful back-bay location -congenial new people lo meet -
an unbelievable· choice of things to do, when you're in the
mood-it's all here at Pa rk Newport for as little as $170 monthly.
Your rent includes unlimited use of 7 lighted tennis courts,
7 SY11mming pools and !he tully staffed $750.000 health spa, with
saunas. whirlpool. paddleball courts and cond1\1oning room.
I! you're the enterlatning ty pe. Park Newport provides four
catering kitchens and priva te rooms lor dining and dancin g ~Ve
also have several miles of bicycle tra its, a pulling green,
shuflleboard and (1ust for a touch ol nostalgia) a croquet cour!
And your Park Newport aparlment is a joy. Quiet, pr ivate and
chee.rlul. Bandbox new, it features a G. E. kitchen, drapery,
carpeting and a private patio or balcony. All parking is covered
and reserved, with elevators to all floors.
Choose a spacious bachelor apartment for as tittle as $170
monthly, or a roomy 1-or 2-bedroom plan. Or a stunning town
house wilh 2 or 3 bedrooms.
For your convenience, we have our
own gourmel market, beauty
sa!on and dry cleaner, located at our
60-foot clock lower. • • " " • ' •
Today, see how 1he v1orld of Newport
Beach comes toge!her at Park ,.
Newport. All of ii here wa iting for you, ~
at a rent that may be no more lhan ..:
you're paying now. And where you'll
hardly ever want to leave home •
yPark Newport
• S., Jo~ Molls llMI.
on weekends.
We're located next 1o Irvine Genier
and Fashion Island. at the
intersection of Jamboree and San
Joaquin Hills Roads. Telephone
(714) 644-1900 for rental information .
• " <
Park Newport
Apartments on the Bag
... ,
r
> .
For The
Record
Births
l•UTM COAST COMMl.INITY
MOSP ITAL
Jl,..ltl' " Mr. Ind Mrt. Th1lt..rt Coldwell T 1~111r
Jr .. m Dtl M•t APL A, $1n Cl•m~t. 1lrl
Mr. *1<I Mii. W11!1rM1 Proctor Ctlk!ns,
229 Montrch !111. Sout!'I L""n., t l•I
J_,.,,21
Mr. Ind Mrl. A. Grqe ~tlt>erl, 1•112
lt:I Mlr1", Soultl Ltr;JUnt, t hl J_.,., ii
Mr. Ind Mt1. 0 111\11 AoTllOny MltclMll,
U.S W, C1o.ad1, Stn Cl1m1ntt. t lrl
Mr. •Ml Mr1. Kt11Mlh R1111tld 0111v.
'6.122 C1!1t OtlPhl11a. .Sin Jv1n
C11l1tr1110, boy
J11111vy :M
Mr. •!Id Mr1. lllilv Ltt l t llVM. P,O.
l111t UJ•, C1pl1u1no 111dl, 1ltl
J111111ry ,,
Mr. trod Mr1. MMllM>n Guy Hlncllm1n,
Jl n2 Scenic Orlvt, S""'lh L11vn1, ...
Mf. I nd Mr1. Goroon fd,,..trd JO.WI,
:~ S10nln1lon Ro9d.. Soutn L1oun1,
Marriage
Licenses
M1rr11 .. Uct l\HI _r .. 111\lld to lh•
folltwt"" •• of J111 27· Gll,MOllE·WALLICK. -8..,..rtv 0., 15. "II Vii AnMllnl Wy., Hunllnoton
B11ch, Ind ll oCln L .. Jl, Sovlh Galt.
11.AOOS MACHARl?Kl-W1tter s .. 31.
2301 lllutt Or ... N-POrl ll11cn, and lltr11!1 J., 1'. <.vlvtr Clh GALLARDO-SALAS -E,,.,.;lrd R., 31. 5'I Wll11n, ond Niner s .• .n, 2156
Mfp11 51., llOth OI C4l" "\"· lAMllll GHT ·ROENS EEL -
umethv R~n~ltl Olli SI_,, Co1t1 15, 1,.1\d (.,:Ill, W. L0\11111. '1: Ell·ll AOL Y -IUclwird J .• , 1lrnd1l1,_1 JOlln M., lol, 16731 "'~ ln., Huntinelon llH Cll. 0 HL lt·WADOMAN -01vld C., 27, Jtl llumont, L11 .. n1 Btacn, I nd
Oeb0r11'1 L .. :1'21 L~ Afllleltl.
MOSS·OOUGLASS -Vernon H. Jrd, 2i, lnt llWOOd, 1nd Oolares A. 1!, 20332 Crll1'!9t LIM, Hu11tlnoton 911cll. G~ll"lt·RtLEY -S!~Mn II., 10.~»1 Ollll Ml1h,,..1y, N-POrl 8t1ch, 11111 llYln M,, 13, Art1dl11. HUll.IH·LUCIOO -Thtodor1 I!. 2nd., 20, 2117 Edllfl St., COii& Miii, •no
•~• M , 11, Torra11c1. 00 1!-W"AoEL -L1ur111C1 .'!~'. jll 1· BtHi1 J , 4J, both of 1.....,. E
Plano AM~· F 1111111 V1ll1r . Q~IG\EY·VI NUEVA -MavrkP t&Na 1~ .. ~ I lcl1, 39, bo!h of l•d
TRIJHILL·ICENNEDY -Oo1JC1l11 A., :1'2, 25'0 l'ardh1m Or., (0111 Mt ...
11'1d Shtron A. l!,r El Monlt 'HILllPS-llOIJiiKr: -Jo119fi G.1 "· Color1do, 11\d Lindi C.. 1l. 6221 MontfrlY ln_,, Hunlln1!on llttch.
MlNDOZA·lAllUlllO -Ell.C.n F. '· !J' ~ Bristol SI., (ct.II Miii, ,;.;! r[t.~ C :)2, LOI Anteltt. CAS'f VEN Lids -Dtc. :it, Mlch1tl
Citlltof\, 2l. 1nll s1uron M., 2'7, both
of Co111 Mt11.
LAHf·PAGE -Oec. 79, John H., 31.
u\d NlncY l tt. 3', boln ol Hun·
ttn11on Btacti.
KLl!INEISEL-R1VEll.A -Ole. JO.
l'r1nk, 35, of Narlh Ho1ir,ooo. 1nd
Anl M1rl1, 20, of Huntlnt~ lllach.
STUltNIOLO.WIOMAN -DI<. 30.
Ch1rl11 A., 20, of NIWjlorl llt ai;h,
111<1 Oon~ K1y, 14 of s1m1 An•.
II.AV-MYERS -Dec. 30, ThClrl\11 W •.
2(, Ind lt~l(CI l., 12, both o!
N-t>Orl 811ch.
MIX·McCULLOUGM -Ol!!c. ». Joel
Tatil1t, •1, of Hunllr>11lon llwch. Ind
Alltl n C .• .u, or Fwn111n val!ly.
SELllY.JACKSON -DK. JD, J1""'s
L .• .U, ind Jo Anne, lJ, both ol Cotti
Miii. STILGEN~AUER·SMITH -Otc. JO,
Ch1r111 E ., 411. of NfWpart Btacn,
and P1""'l1 Ltt, 25, of i-1 .. 111!r>11to11
Bitch.
'TAltR·liGBEllT -DK. JO, Rob<ert
G1ry 2J, of Loni 811ch. and M1rv
Ell11blltl 1~, of Hvntlntton 1111dl.
VEii I URG·MOFFITT -Ott. :IO,
llltkY LH . 11, ~Jo.Ann Mltlt. 16,
bolh ol W11tm!n1 .
HARRISON-HAltlttS -De(-, 30.
Dile H .. 31, re lld Ellttn L., •1,
bo!11 01 Cotll Mtsl.
LEl!..CRIVA RO -OK . JI, Fr111cis J.,
lt, i ncl Karon Ell11Mlrl, :n, bolh ot
Nl!Wpatl Btec~.
P'ETll.ONE ·PETRONE -OK. 31,
Mldl11I AnTl>cnv. :!', •tm~rrltd 3us1n
C1rot, 13, bQth cl ("'18 Mts•.
Death Notices
K•MP'•
Mlbll K-. M North LI SlllCle Oflvl,
South LI.VIII. Olll of dffltl, l'lb<vl t'I'
t, 1'71. SurvlYld bV Q1119hltr, P1ulln1 K.
Ptrl<,", Sou!ll l 1tu111; gr~ndd1uoh!1r.
Joe~ P1r~ft P1rlltr, Turtln; !lit" trMI·
1r1rdclllklrtn. S1rvlct1, fodly, f r k11y,
• p.m .• P1clllc v i .. .,. Ch11tl. lnltrmt'lt,
P1elllc Vlrw Mtmorill Park. P1dflc
VI-MOrlU•tv· Olrfetnro .
TRITTIPO
J1mH It Trll11PO. ~) Aster, LIDU"4
l!Mcll 0111 of dNTh. Fff>ru1t'I' l, nn.
F1tht; of m1 111• Jame~ Wllll1m Trlnipo.
SurvlYld Cv wilt, Lllll1n; l<>'\, John R,
Tr1!111>Q, bc'lll of L11u111 l!HCh; Cllulf'I·
'''· Ml" Joan L. Trtnloo, Loi AMII";
tll'Otllt•I, Walltr E. Trlt!loo. Ev1MTon,
lll!nol11 H1rvev W. l r\t!IPO, of Sunnyv1lt ;
two 1i11tr1. Mrs. Margart ! Ll.,...,tf. ol
N1W•rk, Ofllo; Mrt. MIJdrtd Seo!!, of
Cohll'l'!bul, onlo; !WO erandcMldrt n. St tv·
le• will ~ l'ltld S~!urdlv. J P.m .• Luth-
'"'" Chun:ll of 1111 Ma1!1t. N-POrt l!Ndl. lnlennffl•. P1elf\c Vltw M...-111
Ptrl!. ,,muv tuv<1tsli lllol• wt.1111111 IO
m1k1 m-1•1 co~lrlbuticn1. ple1s1 con-
trl""11 la tilt American Can.cot Scclt lv.
P1tlflc VI-MorTu1rv. Dlre<:IOl"I.
WADOWICI
Mfchltl c . Wtdoowkr, .A.91 11. of Mj).Q
Avt111d1 S ... 11\1, L1eun1 Hllll . Dltt of
d111t1, l'ltll",...rv 1, 1t11. s .. rv1vec1 bY
Wiit. Ctrotlllll '°"' Mon•l-r J . M. WldoWlch, M1rt!111r, C11lf.; lhrtt dlll91!-
1..-1, It-STry, Miami. FlorldtJ l!Xlilt
K1111r. Fount1!n V1llt v1 1(1mlatn W-•·
Wft!tMtltr, C1llf.1 two brollltrl, C1'11rlft
11\d John Vi dovic, bo'l'I ot N...., York
<:!ty1 111111 9r1ndffilldrt n: !hre1 Oriti·
1r1ndchllc:tr1~. Row rv. fonlthl, l'tld1v,
I ~-"'·· Smllhs Clwiptf. RtoUll'm Mau.
S..tvrdlv, t 1.rn.. SS SI,,_ a. J"*
C1mdlc Church. 1n1trmfflf, Good Sllf• lltrtl (tmf!trv. Sm!1ll1 Mortu1r'P', OI·
1tctw1.
ARBUClll! 6 SON
WESTCLll"F MORnJARY
U7 E. m• SL, Cott< M ...
llMlll • BALTZ BERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Clrou dtl Mar m.1111
Oollallk• -• IBLL noAl>WAY
-TU ARY
lit ..-.,. Cooll -. u W4ll • MeCOllMIClt LAGUNA
UACB lllOllTUARY
1711 ._. Cn)'u llAL _ ..
• PACIFIC VDW
MDIOlllAL P&ll&
Ct Jflff ..... ,
a.pol
lllt hctll< View Drift
Newport ........ Cal--• PEElt FAMILY
COLONIAL FIJlmW.
llOlll
1111-An.
Westmlastfr lltl4SU • S."1TRS' MORnJARY
117 Mahl 11t.
ffntbetlll le-' ....
. -.
Retirees Could
Get Exemption
SAro..r-r A ANA -Owners of cooperative hou sing simi·
lar lo th e Leisure Worlds of Laguna Hllls and Seal Btach
were urged today by County As.sessor Andrew J. Hinshaw
to contact homeowners exemption division of his office
to obtain forms to qualify for a $750 assessed value uemp-
tion on their 1972-73 tax bills.
Hinshaw said the bulk of such beneficiaries are in the
two Leisure World developments and arrangements have
been made to insure that all qualified shareholders there
receive the benefit.
All such claims must be fi\fd no later than April 15.
"When the homeowner's property lax exemption law
was enacted in 1968, cooperative housing units were not
included ," Hinshaw explained. "Alter three years of lob-
bying by count y assessors, the Legislature passed a bill
(SB569) correcting this oversight.
"Most residents of the retirement communities are
of limited income and would benefit most by the exemp...
lion ," the assessor said.
The assessor's office is located at 630 N. Broad\\·ay,
Santa Ana, telephone, 834-3821.
County Millionaire's
2 Widow s Will Meet
LOS ANGELES
Millionaire Juan Abel Yargas'
two widows are scheduled to
meet for the first time Feb. 9
in a courtroom confrol\tation
that is expected to determine
the monthly allo\l:ance to be
paid to his first wife pending
disposition of the $1.063,165
estate.
~1rs. Mildred Vargas, 66.
Christmas Seal
Seeks Advisors
SAJ\'TA ANA -The Orange
Countv Christmas Seal As-
l!ociatlon is setking advisors
for its environmental in·
for mation center.
The association hopes to
secure environmental experts
to form a board which v.·ou ld
pr ovi de direction for the
center, known as Eco-Info.
Those interested in volun-
teering for the advisory panel
should call 553-8155.
had her $2.000 a month
allowance halted last Monday
when Los Angeles Superior
Court Commissioner Vi ctor E.
Donatelli refused to extend the
payment without a full court
hearing.
Donatelli acted after Mrs.
Josephine V a r g a s • the
mi 11 i onaire industrialist's
other wife, complained that
further payments would only
deplete the estate that had
earlier been divided between
the two women by Superior
Cou rt Judge Robert Kenny.
Vargas, who died July 13,
1969 in an automobile ac-
cident, married Mildred in
1929. She had three children by
the Peruvian-bor n in-
dustrialist.
Vargas married Josephine
in 1945. The couple had fou r
children.
Mildred and Josephine lived
just siJ: miles away from each
other in almost identical
$60,000 homes. Neither knew
of the existence of the other.
XL-100@ ----
,,,. [ltlClllON
lolod•• GQ-72'11
25'd!•ional~
. "
Barber Gets
Court Date
/1i Arso1i
SANTA ANA -Barber
Ricky Star hRs been ordered
to face trial March 27 in Or-
ange County Su!)Crior Court on
arson cha rges stemm ing from
his alleged torching of a
cocktail lounge near h i s
barber shop.
Judge William Murray set
T\Iarch 3 for the former prize
fighter's pretrial session and
granted the defendant's re-
quest for psychiatric reports
that will not be made part of
the court record.
Star, 38, was arrested last
Jan. 7 in his Orange barber
shop shortly after the nearby
Plaza Room cocktail lounge
was burned to the ground.
Star was awaiting court ac-
tion on 1nultiple charges or
violating the state's haircut
price laws when he was ar-
rested on the arson allega-
tions. It is alleged that he has
persistently defied state law
by charging less than the
agreed minimum.
Star is held in Orange Coun-
ty Jail in lieu of $50.000 bail.
Meeting Slated
ORANGE -The Oraftge
County Chapter of the
California Genealogy Society
~'ill meet here at IO a.m.
Saturday at the Le m o n
Heights Baptist Church, 815
Esplanade Street.
25 INCH
DIA60NAL SOLID STATE
•• ----·
~nd•1 F'tbruary 4, l~l __________ DAILV PlltlT 9 1
Merger of Nurses Proposed
SANTA ANA -A plan to
merge the Orange Q)unty
Visiting Nurses Association
tVNAJ 1vith the county Health
Department's public health
nu rses to pro\·lde less ex-
pensive health care has been
proposed by Dr. Jolm Philp,
that there has bten .some
cooperation bet"·een h 1 .!I
department aod the private
group dating back 25 years.
"Up until two years ago. "'e
paid the salary or out \.'N1\
nurse who acted as extcutive
director for the assocl.alion ."
he $&\d.
lie said the merger would
provide • larger staff with
shorter tl'nvel di.stances for in·
d1 vldua l nurses.
"Tl\t resu.Il:s 111·il1 be heller
service to those in need
through more frequent visits,·•
Dr. Phil p 3toled.
Bemon said the VNA board
includes representation from
citizens throughout U1e county
including fonner mayor Paul
Gruber of Ne wport Beach and
representaUves o( the county
medical aasocl11tion.
county health officer. 1----------------------------------
Count y supervisors hal'e
asked Robert Thoma!, countv
administrative officer, t 0
evaluate the proposal and
report back in four v:eeks
before they v.·ould agree to
allow Philp to conclu d e
negoti ation s u•ith the
privately-supported VNA.
Both groups provide service
for the same peo ple, those who
cannot afiord to pay for a
private nurse. but t he i r
functions do not overlap.
"VNA de11ls v.·ith bedside
.services while our public
health nurses h a ndle
treatments and some advicr,"
the medical officer exp\11ined.
Dr. Philp's proposal folio\\'·
ed nine n'onths of negotiations
which began when the board
turned dov.•n a $15,000 subsidy
request by VNA last July.
Dr. Philp said the areas
where the two groups overlap,
although minor, will be
eliminated if the board ap-
proves the merger n e x t
month.
Beverly Benson, president of
the private nursing group, said
his organization supported the
merger but urged that com-
munity participation, such as
United Fund ~upport. should
continue.
In addition to funds from the
Community Chest organiza-
tio ns, VNA receives some pa-
tient fee s. private donations
and fo.1edicare and P.1edi-Cal
payments, Benson said.
The VNA leader said the
group was suffering from
money problems because of
rising costs and s I o w
payments by the government
agencies.
. Dr. Philp re\'ealed Tuesday
Doctor Elected
SANTA ANA -Dr. Richard
Kendall of Santa Ana has been
elected president of t h e
Orange Q:iunty Optometric
Society for 1972.
r---..... ~--,.----.....
All cotton tailored
blouse by Lanz.
beige. blue. yel I ow.
Sizes 5-13.
$17.
The perfect put-on
fo r today's look •••
All cotton bean bag
sk irt by
P((Rl(fJ
/PO k TJU!(H <I
' '
Jn print as shown .,
Also available in
solid colors.
hot pink. purple.
navy. natural.
one size fits al I.
$16.
Newport Beach
fashion island
open late tonight.
FREE COLOR ANTENNA
INSTALLED WITH ALL
CONSOLES PURCHASED
WHY BUY
AT ABC?
• No Finance Charge if
paid in 90 Days or
No Down & 36 Months
to Pay oac
• 1 Year !Tee Parts
• 1 Year Free Service
• 3 Year ~!cture Tube
Warranty
• Free Delivery and Set Up
•We Service What We Sell
lentlt.I Co•t"'(ltOHllY cMIMt $
11HM1 IL.IDO-le.A IOI% s.IW s.... Acc•Cet. n . All...ehMNt.
• .... , .. hlltel .. bttni "'' .. '"" 26~~.:: '-' ,...,. ,. .. . -"' ,. .......... -•p111••Utry. Acc.M.ttc uler .......,,. .......... """"" ...... .......... ,... .t • ..,._,
ICA's ,.._ w.di-'* ,..._. ............ ,.. ......... ;
Ultimate In Television Engineering And Cabinetry • • •
RCA's 25 Inch Diagonal XJ....100 .•. Ton1orrow's Set Today
SENSATIONAL PRICE
FOR
.18''DIA60NAL
COLOR OOIBfJO
Color TV
The
Ramsgate
$
wllh olKl""'lc r-. contnl
AT AIC THE IEST
COSTS LESS
From RCA'• Avent G1rtle Collection,
• new concept in c1blntiry to show·
<H• Xl-100.RCA 100'4 Solid State
(no tvbe1 to bum out) Ac:cuColor. 1,,..
1t1nt Electronic Tuning with Elect-
ronic Remote. Chamel Ch1ng.r oper·
•tu quickly and quiolly. Doort di ..
appear Into C1b1ner. ,,
•
J 0 DAIL V PILOT
LEGAL NOTICE
llMlt.WftOlll NO, )tM
A 1111141..lfftcMll 0" THI ClfY .....
* Frld.111, FtbrUll')' 4, 1972
LEGAL NO'TICE
,.l'CTITIOVS ,u•r••••
111.\MI ITATIMl•f
LEGAL NOTICE ...
'. . ...
FtUllLV CIRCUS 1>11 Bil Keane Openi•ag To1al9ht_
foUOW• .... --i. OOlf\11 1t...11 .... u ,ICT lflOUI lllllNl 11
NAMI' tTATliota'lfT College Sc1~eenit1g lol)owoi,. ,.._,_ It do<"' M IMt.1
LEGAL NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUJ IUSIHl!!S
HAMI STATRMl!NT
fOl~lnt Ptrl"" II dolnt b~1IM1~
•when I grow~, Grandma, I ~ight"come ond
I ive with you al l the time.
Postal Rate Hikes
Approval Requested
WASHINGTON (UPI) -A
Postal Rate Commission ex-
across-the-board Increase in
rates, asking an I 1 -c ent
airmail rate and a 7-cent
postcard rate.
British Movies
A pair or British thrillers main plot.
will begin the Ch a p nl a n Other films !o bt-shown In
College Great Films Guild lhe series are "Brief En·
spring series wh ich will ru1l counter." "The Third Man,"
from F'eb, 4 to f\.1ay 20. ":19 Steps," ' •G r e a t Ex-
'' Blackmail" \ 1929 ). Alfred pectations," ''H am le t,''
•1Hc:hcock 's fi rst sound mov 1e, "H.ic:haJ'd Ill," "1-lenry V."
and "The lpcress F'ile" ( 1965 i "The Man in the \\'h1le Suit."
will be shown Friday. ''The Lavender Hill f\.1ob,''
The series is titled ''The "1'he Lady K i 11 er !'I , ' '
British Film: "A Retrospec-'·Repulsion,'' '·Georgie Girl."
live," and is similar lo series •·A F'unny Thing Happened to
sponsored by the Museum of 11 ~ ~-~he Way to the Forum,"
~todern Art in New Yor~ and "llelp!," "A Ha r d Day's
the San Francisco F' i 1 m f\'ight, ·• ''Yellow Submarine,"
Festi\•al. "Billy Budd." "Alfie."
"This a rather new th ing forf1-.-.-;.;;:;;-;;;-;;;-~;;;,_ .. _,.-.. ;o;1j
the British film. There have
been many Italian, F'rench
and American retrospectives,
but at last the British films
are gaining the serious at-
lention they deserve," claims
Dr. Pau l F'riz!er. assistant
English professor at Chapman
and Films Guild chairman.
The films will be grouped by
genre and/or director, rather
than chronologically.
WANT TO CRUSH
de
SMOKING HABIT?
far easier than you
thought possible?
I
Wdras,
with 14 y101' of to ~
exfMti•nt•, 11ow offer•
a to• •4!rvi ce with all
the•• big adll'ontag11
• f l:X!D MA XIMU M fll
f}O ,, th• lf\011 yav po~
IOI pt11°"0I ftdtHI! IO••I
• SIM,llFllO fll
SCHE DUlf
fedt ral p•t pcHOl•on fe e
,~\~-SlO-),llo• \20
TAX 'fl QUOTATION
f,,,d ~ow• preporo••on i,,
b•fo1t;.and-1t1 bf low
,.111>llsht"d
J•11u1rv 21
F-UJ24
Or1oe1 Coan 0111.,. Pl101
I nd Ftbr111, ... 4, 11. It,
llt-72
aminer has recommended ap-
proval of about $1.45 billion in
annual postal rate increases
which Americans ha\'e been
Under the 1970 Post a 1
Reorganization Act, t he
servJce put into effect on a
temporary basis last 'f\..lay 16 a
one-third hike in then existing
On Saturday two more film s
in the thriller style will be
featured . "Seven Days to
Noon'' (1950), a forerunner of
today's ecology movies, tells
the story of a man who
threatens to blow up England
with an atomic bomb. The se-
cond feature. ··Dead of Night"'
(1946). involves five weird
happenings built around a 1
"" LEGAL NOTICE paying since last 11ay 16. He
also urged higher airmail and
parcel post rates and a reduc-
tion in special fourth class
material.
Chief hearing e :x a m in e r
Seymour W e n n e r recom-
mended a 2-cent increase in
airmail rates from l I lo 13
cents Thursday and said the
new permanent rate I o r
postcards should stay at the
temporary rllte fixed last ?\Tay
16 at 6 cents.
The U.S. Postal Service last
Feb. 1 requested a virtual
End Near
For Indians
In Brazil?
"" ,.ICTlflOUJ IUltN•ll
Nt.Mf JTATIM•Ml
feUowt1111 "''°" IJ dollll bvllntH
I' IN1' ~lllNf ~ COlltt 0-11¥ ~llllt,
'""""'•"' "' 11, 11. u. 1m m.n
LEGAL NOTICI!
rates.
Hearings opened the next
day -May 17 -before Wen-
ner, \\'hose recommendations
now go to the full five-member
Rate Commission. w hi e h
scheduled oral arguments to
be.gin at 9 a.m. March JS.
Contemporaryf urniture PRESENTING •••
due lo popuf•r interest
THE S·DA Y PLAN
ro STOP SMOKING
FEB. 7th THRU 11th
7,30 to 9 P.M.
Oakwood North
880 Irvine
Newport leach
Wenner recommended a 4.6
percent increase \n parcel post
rates and a 17.S percent
decrease in the proposed 4!h
class special rate for books,
records and films, The Postal
Service did not seek a change
Maln fntranc•
Confernce Room in parcel post rates but Ill •k•
v.·anled to increase the 4th I In~
year period. 3.o$fhf.iill t 14.;;C(i For free
class Spe<!ial rate over a rive-8 Wenner re c om m ended '"c~· ~""~,' ~-,."';,,•; tickeb or
against the Service's request 17137 IU.CH ILYD. Information.
to implement in one step a ~~!Y~~~~· ~!:'..H .. ~~-~~ HUNTINGTON CENTU
Edinger •t 111ch l lvd. proposed five-year hike in 3rd '-ell IJ.d. -Nartll af T.!i-t 645-0550
Huntington l••ch
Phone 892-6611
class rates. This had been "<..,.s lnm H.11. 111t•r-548-1817 CommuRlty Hospllol estimated lo produce ap-2 Mil•• s..u111 11 s111 ci.o. l'rwv. Brttc-r Living Ccnt€'r
proximately $350 million extra/:;-------~--~~-~~-~~----~~----~-----' in revenues annually.
The examiner recommended
no change in the temporary
rate request or 8 ceots ror tst
class mail and a one-third In-
crease in 2nd class matter.
Jn a 200-page opinion, he
reprimanded the Po st a I
Service for its reliance on
short term rather than long
tenn cost calculations.
"We shall expect and re-
quire Postal Service to
establish a system which will
determine the long run costs
or the classes of mail," Wen-
ner said.
He found no material sup-
port for the service's con-
tention that salvation lies in
increased volume and said it
must discover the truth about
the economics of its oper ... tions
and slop relying on untested
beliers.
"The scope for judgment in
setting rates should be
reduced.'' Wenner s a id .
"Distributin~ bi 11 l t1 n s of
dollar5 on the basis of th inly
supported judgments is not an
acceptable method. And It is
an invitation to pressures
which Congress sought to
avoid."
Mrs. Judd
Now Living
Under Alias
DANVILLE, Calli. (APJ -
WinnJe Ruth Judd, convicted
of two trunk murders of the
1930s, is living he.re qllieUy un-
der a name she used during
one or her many escapes,
Marian Lane.
During seven years u a
fugitive from the Arizona
State Hospital in the 1980s,
Mn. Judd lived with Dr. and
Mrs. John Biemer of Danville
as Marian Lane -houseketp.
er, part-lime babysitter and
friend.
Mrs. Judd's life sentence
was commuted two months
ago, ending a long fight le><
frtedom U..t atarl<d at the
time 1,.. ol her Pbocnlit
glrtlr1enoU were killed in mi
and Ille rewmed to the
Blemer home.
Mn. Biemer laid IOmt of
Mrs. Judd's rt.Iatives have
visited her, along with others.
"Many residents have said
they are wry plea!fd to have
her hen. Some br o ught
p.....,,ts. Tbert ii n o
00.tlllty," she nld, adding
that Mn Judd ii Introduced ..
Marian.
COASTLINE HEALTH FOODS
FEBRUARY SPECIALS
VITA TIME
Abtol1tely TM .... , 1 o-Dey Avcillabl1! INCLUDE$ 100 Unlh Yltomht I .
Special 2.79 I ~~r~•;;" Special 4.79
VITAMIN E, 200 1.U., 100 CAPSULES
Ro<J.
4.75 SPECIAL 3.59
LECITHIN GRANULES 1 LB. SIZE
REG. 2.lf SPECIAL 2.49
DESSICATED LIVER TABLETS
100 TABLETS
REG. 1.5f NOW , .27 I :::G:~~·TS NOW 2.63
CONTINENTAL ACIDOPHILUS
I PINT IOTTLE
R09. 2.25 SPECIAL 1.95
WE HAVE BROCKMEYER NATURAL ICE CREAM!
1.-, • Tasto Tlvlll ONLY 9$C 9 t
EL · MOLINO 100"/, STONE .GROUND
WHOLE WHEAT FLOUR 2 lb. Sia
Rag. 6.5c
•
RAW WHEAT GERM I lb-
Rog. 49c
YOU'VE GOT TO TASTE THllll
CHEESE-RICE ORUICH CUCIERS
5 ...
.... 6'c SPECIAL 59'
SPECIAL
55'
SPECIAL
39'
COASTLINE HEAL TH FOODS
TUSTIN-IOM IRVINE BLVD.
t ... 1n.o.1
~7134
COSTA MESA-270 E. 17 ... ST. --54t-f5J7
.. , ....... lboll&hl of btt u ::c.1'"" the," Mn. Biemer
I ••..a.in I .. _.,..,..
•
QUEENIE By Phll lnleflandl
"We've been bere4.5 minutes. They've given us a table
wfth a view of everything but a waiter!"
Callie Televi sion
Rules An11ounced
WASHI NGTON (AP) -The
Feder a I Co mmunicalions
Commission has issued Its
long-awaited rules char~ng
lhe /uture of cable television,
<ln event which FCC Chairtnan
Dean Burch called his toric.
Under the new rules issued
Thursday, cable television in
!he lop 50 markets would be
;iuthorizcd to c11rry the signals
of three full net work atations
;i.nd three indeptndent sta-
tions.
Jn television markets from
50 to 100, the standard would
be three networ k signals and
two independent. In markets
below 100 , systems could car-
ry th ree fu ll network signals
and one independent. If the
signals are not available
y,•ithin a Jl>.mite radius. the
syste ms would be able to im-
port dis tant signal'.'1 to reach
required levels of service.
Cable television b r i n gs
tcleYision programs into the
Clia11ce llor
Opposes
JC Plari
SACRAf\tENTO (UPI)
Community College Chancellor
Sidney W. BrosS man says he
opposes the idea of assigning
all freshme n and sophomores
in public higher education to
community colleges.
At a meeting of the Stale
Coordina ting Council f o r
Jlighcr Education. Brossman
said he considers il "critically
important lhal young people in
lhis sl ate haYe a choice" of at·
tending com munity colleges.
~late colleges, the University
of California or pr i Y a t e
school.•.
Brossman said !he pos sible
n1oney 5avin_gs resultin_g fr om
!';UCh a plan ma ke i l
worthwhile to sl11dy I h e
feasibility of it. The plan
"·ould close the state college~
and UC to lower division
stu den t!.
Dr. M. Durward Long.
director of the counci l'•
master plan committee, ,;aid
the co mmittee has decided to
undertake the st udy and has
hired a cons ultant to report on
the experience of st rictly up-
per division college.s elsewhere
in the nation.
home on a coaxial cable
which, in theory, can offer an
almost unlimited num~r or
channels. Less than 10 percent
or !he nation's 60 million
tclcvis1on homes no w haYe
cable.
The new ru!cs represent the
m o s l comprehensi ve com-
pilation of regulations for the
infant industry and are de sign-
ed to bring a new revolution in
broadcasting to America's li v-
ing rooms.
The rules foll ow basically
proposed outlines sent to
Congress on Aug. S. They art
to go into effect March JI.
The FCC said "out of an
abundance of caution. we are
delaying the date tieyond the
30 days ord inarily required so
that we may have before U!I
any petitions fo r
reconsideration prior to the
rules becoming operative,"
The major change from the
rarlier proposals provide some
exclusivity for local programs
as well u network progr1.m.1
in the big cities.
Commissioner N i c ho I as
Johnson, ag~eeing with the ffn.
dings in part aod dissenting in
part, said "the much-heralded
new dawn for cable turns out
lo be a cold and smoke-filled
da y."
He said the commission had
made an about -f a c e ac-
commodation to the desitts of
the largest broadcasters, cable
companit'l and copyright in-
terests.
In addition lo the authorized
signals, cable systems in he
top 100 markets will also be
permitted to carry two ad-
ditional independent signal1.
Any distant signa ls that have
been imported, however, to
mett the authorized com-
plement of stations will be
deducted from the additional
signals permitted . C a b I e
syslems in markets below the
top 100 will not be permitted
to import signals beyond the
sperified three networks and
one independent authorized.
The commission noted that
il was amending its Aug. S
proposal to permit importation
of two additional signals In
major markets because it felt
this i.s the mln imal amount of
new service that can be u -
pected to attract investment
capital netded for construction
of new systems to "open the
way for full development of
cable'• potenUal."
' Juvenile Delinquency
Program Set F eh. I 7
The lrvine Center o f
Women's American Organlza·
lion for Rehabilitation through
Trainin1 (ORT) plans a pro-
gram on juvenile dellnqueocy
preventk>n at 9 p.m. Feb. 17 in
the V!Uage Ill t1ubhouse, 4552
Michelson Drive, Irvine.
Mrs. Stant.on Co r b a l ,
president, 11"1 the public 11 in-.
vited to hear preaentaUons by
Toby Dicldnaon and Jlm
Husset of the PltctnUa 1Dd.
Fountain Valley V I SA :
Passport to the Future pro-
grams.
DlcktMOn and Jlunet work
with lhe federally funded pr~
gram run by the Oranse Coun-
ty Proballon O.partmtnt.
Women'• American ORT
has t0 ,001 members
throughout th• U.S. The
or111nltaUon tupporll v~a4
06nal tralnln1 pro1ramt for
youth In 23 countrla •lo11f
with a d u It rehabllltotfon
tra1Jiing pr"OltlJN In 1everal
ovlneaa 1Chool1,
The Irvine ,chapter, with 27
members. plans a t 2 • SO
potluck dinner at 7:30 p.m.
5atunl1y, Feb. t9 Jo be held In
the Park West Apartments
Clubhouse. 3883 P 1 r k v I e w
Drive, Jrvlne.
The publlc is also lnvtted to
th• fund ro~lng poUucl< cllnner
and is asked Jo br1Jlc I
covered dish or ulad. Call m-
1"3 for tnfarm1Uon about
t lllitt ORT e...,J.
Voters Defeat
1st Override
DAVIS (UPI) -Votet'I ill
the Davis Joint Unillod School
Dtlltlct ha,. deleat.d a t.s
override lor tht 111'11 lime In
lht dlllrict'• JO-year ~.
The vote "" 1,132 le l ,4G'I.
1be me.uure would have ln-
creued the dllb1ct'1 tu rate
by 11.25 from 14.ll 10< an 111-
delloile pttlocl. I '(
-. "· • . "
'
·~ . . " " ... " .,.-., .. --.
FINAL
WINTER
•
•
DAILY PllOT l.l
STARTS TOMORROW, SATURDAY SA VE 1/4, 1/3, 1/2 AND MORE
FASH ION SAVINGS
EVENING WEAR COLLECTION
evening shop 97 were $30.$60 19.99-29.99
f AMOUS MA KER DRESS COLLECTION
misses dresses 9& were $40.$60 27.99-J9.99
CAMEL HAIR COATS, ll-16
misses' coats 27 were $60.00 46.99
HOODED PANT COATS, S-13
jr.coatsand suits 24 "Nere«.00 29.99
DAY AND EVENINGS FASHIONS
cosmop. shop 96 were $30-$50 22.99-3'.99
MATERNllY DRESS COLLECTION
matemityshop10S we<e $16-$24 14.99
SPORTSWEAR SAVI NGS
FAMOUS MAKER LONG WOOL SKIRTS
coordinaleS 101 were $22-$24. 1 S.99
FAMOUS COTION VELVET BLAZERS
coordiOillles 101 were34.00 23.'9
WASHABLE SWEATERS, 100'.I\ ACRYLIC
knitsp<swr. 72 were $1 2.99-14.30 9,99
FASH ION WOOi. SKIRTS
coordinates 101 were $14-$16 10.99
KNIT TOP COLLECTION, 6-16
better blou.es 39 were $12-$16 7.99
ACCESSO RY SAVING S
BLOUSES, TUNICS, 10-18
blouses 31 were SB·S 15
VINYL HANDBAGS
handbags 26 were 14.~ 18.00
SWEATER COATS
accesSO<ies 19 were 26.00
KNIT GROUP, SCARVES, HA TS
accessorte-519 were3.~$1 0
SHAWl COl.LECT!ON
.ctes!Orie 19 ~ $9-$20
SHOE VALUES
FASH ION BOOTS
S.9'J
9.99
1S.9'J
1.99-4.99
S.99-9.99
modera!e dress shoes 12 were 28.00 19.99
FAMOUS MAKER SHOES
women's shoes 51 were S 17·$22 9.99
INFA I\. S, CH ILD REN'S W EAR
SOYS' PARKAS FAMOUS MAKER
liule boys' wear 52 were 14.00 7.99
GIRLS' PANTS, TOPS
girls' dress 56 were S4-$5
BOYS' AND GIRLS' PARKAS
tcxldlers 128 were 14.00 7.9')
LINGER IE AND LOUNGEWEAR
NYLON LONG ROB ES
loungewear SJ were 20.00
BRlffS AND BIKINIS
ddylime !ingerle 28 'Alel'e 1.25 ea .
1 IALF SLIPS, LACE TRIM
daytime lingerie 28 were 4.00
WARM SLEEPWEAR,
I ingerie 1 O were S8·S 10
1S.99
6 for 4.9'J
2.9'J
4.99-5.9')
COSMETICS, TOILETR IES
JAQUET COSMETICS CLEARANCE
cosmetics I 00 •
FAMOUS MAKER SUNGlASSES
toilelries 136 were 6.00
M EN'S WEAR
DOUBLE KN IT FlARES
SO~Off
men's sportswear 133 '"""'$22·$23 13.'l'J
FANCYkNITSHIRTS
men's 'Ill furn. 8-4 were $11..fl 4 7.9'J
-,
MEN'S ANO BOYS' VALUES
CASUAL PANTS AND )EAN S
me1ch ten shop were S6·S 11 J.99
JACKETS, CORD., NYLON, DENIM
machten shop I lb\verc27.50·35.00 19.99
LONG SLEJ:V ( SI llRT COLUCTION
men's furn ishings 6 were 7.50-9.00 4.99
2-PANT SUITS
men's suits 21 \W'rc 95.00 69.00
WOOL SlACKS, FLARES STRAIGHTS
men'ssportswear 4 s-were 18.00-23.00 5. 99
FAMOUS MAKER SHOES
. men'sshoes 60 were $J0-$37 24.99
BOAR BR ISTL E I IAIRBRUSH ES
men's furn. 80wcre 7.50 3.99
ORLON CREW SOCK~
men's furn. 127 ...,.•e re 1.00 79c
COTTON VELOUR SHIR rs
boys' furnishings 2:1 were S6·S8 3.99
FAMOUS MAKER PANTS
boys' clothing 14 were $4-$6 1.99
LINED WINTER JACKETS
boys' clothing 14 were $16-$26 14.99
STATIONERY, NOTIONS
FABRIC LID BOXED STATIONERY
stationery66-was 2.0<} 1.19
MAGNETIC JO PAGE PHOTO ALBUMS
statiOnery 66·were 5.00 2.99
30" WIDE FU LL DOOR WARDROBES
notions l·were :.12.00 15.l)q
JUMBO DRESS SJZ[ GARMENT BAGS
notions l ·wert' 5.00 2.99
LINENS, BEDDING
JWEt-JILE PRINT TOWELS, WASH CLOTHES
towels 30 ...,,,.. llOc-2.50 59c-l .7'1
SPRINGMAID WHITE COTION PERC. SHEETS
Sheets 34 all sizes were 3 50-B.50 . 1.99.5.9'
SAVINGS FOR THE HOME
NYLON PILE CABLE SJ-IA G BROADLOOM
carpet32·was 13.00 sq. yd. insr. 8.49
NYLON PILE SHAG BROADLOOM
carpet 32-was 12.00 sq. yd . inst. 7 .99
WOOL PILE ORIENTAL DESIGN RUGS
area rugs 137 -were $20 -S 180 11 ,99-'l'J.99
6-PC. MEDITERRANEAN DINING ROOM
fumiture142 .. wasS1 320 $959
3-PC. MEDITERRANEAN BEDROOM
furniture 143 .. was $445 $34?
TRADITIONAL RECLINER
~cl iners 147·Was $199 $149
COUNTRY FRENCH Sn'LE SOFA
furn:ture 141 .. wa s S45Cl $249
FLOOR SAMPl.ESOFAS AND CHAIRS
furniture 141 -Were $1 79-$5<JrJ $129·S399
MEDITERRANEAN STYL E OCC. TABLES
furniture 144 .. were SI 00-S 140 $5')..$ IO')
TWO Sn'LES OF CURIO CA81NlTS
furn iture 144 ·were S 19'J·S34''J $125-$279
SEALY TWIN OR FULL MA TI. OR BOX SPRING.
i.leep shop 145. were 69.95 ea. 49.90
QUEEN SIZE INNERSPRING SLEEP >OFA
sl .. p shop 145-wa.S4~9 Sl99
SEVERAL Sn'LE5 Of TABLE LAM PS
lamps 63-were 35.00 19.99
COLORED GLASS PANEL SWAG LAMPS
lamps .63-were 75.00 49.9'
DECORATIVE BOUDOIR LAMPS
lamps63-were 17.00 12.99
OR IGINAL ACRYLIC PAINTINGS
pictures 75-were 39.99-$ JOO 29.99-74.'9
POLYESlER NINON TIER CURTAINS
curtains 113-were $4-4.50 2.'9-J.A9
may.., -.Ill -It''"''' Hn ""°fwy . at ~rl1tol, ceota .,,...; 54Hnl "'°" menday lhrv frW.y 10 1.m, to 9: 30 p.m., H lurday, 10 a.m. io 6 p.m.
aunday ,_., 'Ill 5 p.m,
•
SAVIN GS I·( lR I HE HO ME
ONEIDA DINNI Rl\'.\RI 4 l'l. PLACE StTJlNGS
hOll~{'\.\1,Jf(!', 11 · \l\1('1t• f, l)(J J,99
SJ-JAG RUt. RAKI ~I OR YOUR CARPETS
h OUSCWillf'\ !l \\l'l1•J.'l'I 5 .'9
CAR OCli.11 ( Ol 'N II K I OI' DISHWA~H(RS
hou!icw,1rt'., h1r,1. 07 \4).«l 'i·'1'1.'l5 24.9S-34 .. 9S
BL UC PRINT 10011.11•;
!'lousew.)r~ rur1111tir<' H7 • W'M'C' 16.99 8.99
4'i PC. IRONSTONI !>LRVICl ~OR 8
chin.i 4!i·wa" 50.C)(J 29.99
7-PC. DURAND !>AL.\D SlT
gldSS\'\'Jre 126. \Vil .. 1) 00 4 .99
ClJT VEI \/[ r Pit I OW'>
<'rt ncccHt·,,·01 k -10 . 1 on11l. value 8.00 3.99
STITCHERY Kl I'' BY A< .NI W
art needlework 40 · WPrr .!. 'l'J 99c
SPORTING GOODS, TOYS
3-STRIPE ATHLL nc '.>HO[S, WHITE, COLORS
sporting good!> .'JO.were b . 95 7.38
SLIM GYM EXrnCIS[ LOUNGE
sporting goods SC).w.i s 7C).f)_r; <49.95
ASSORTED £COLOGY Kl f'>
~porlinggood s50 ·wcrc6.~5 4.59
ASSORTED BA!>IBALL GLOV{S
sports 50-were (1.'l:J-I 'i.99 l.99-3.99
TOPPF.R'S FANCY fll I DANCE PARTY
IOy<.4 ~-WJS7.'lfl ).91.J
Pl IY\ICA.I I I 1 NI 'iS (~YM
It)~"· 4 .! • \V,1~ h 'l 'l{I
l'LA '>I IC RlillNC, I RAC! OK
loys 42 -wer~· I(,. '!8
34.!l'l
BUDGET STORE VALUES
MISSES' TOPS, SWEA HRS
· iportswear 800 ·'Were 7 .99 4.'9
MISSES' 1'CKYUC PAN'fSETS
dressesato:wtire 11.99 8.9'!>
JUNIOR ORESS~AVJNGS
jr. scene 829 -were 1 J. qry. 14 . 99 5.'9
MISSES' PANTCOATS, R-JI,
women's coat.s 8 28 · wr-rr 12.99 16.99
NUDE-LOOK l'ANT'l' 1 IOS[
hosiery 807 -were I .5tJ 99c
WOMEN'S r ASH JON aoors
\vomen's shoes 81 2 -were 7, 1)9.9.99 .S.99
WOMEN'S WARM SlECl'WEAR
sleepwear821-wcre4.J9-5.99 217.00
MIRROR-GO-LIGHTLY MIRRORS
accessories 826 ·val. 15.00 4.9'9
CHILDREN'S RAINCOATS, 4-7
children'swear80S.were 1.49 9'c
BOYS' NO-IRON IEANS
boys'wear822·val.5.99 t.99
GIRLS' SKI JACKETS, 3-14
girlo;' wear 824 ··were 8. 99· 1 0.'J9 4.99-6.'9
MEN'S WARM PLAID SI llRTS
men's <;portswear 805 -wcrc 3.99 2/5..00
MEN'S L. SL. OR[>S SHIR rs
mt'n'o; f1 trni~hing., 806 ·were J .99 1.99
MEN'S Al l '-W(ATI IER COATS
men's <..lothing 814-val. 18.00-22.99 15.00
MEN'S )UMP suns
men's sporlswe.ar R 17 -were 6.99-3.99 J.99
NO-IRON KING SHEETS
domestie< 603 -if pcrf. 9.9!1-13.50 4.9'J
TWIN, FULL BEDSPREADS
hedding825-w.,,e I0.99·15.9'J 8.9'J
PEPPERELL BATH TOWELS
linens 631 -reg. 2.49 l .'9
9xt2' ORIENTAL RUG COPIES
rugs 81 l --exc. earls., mont.,-oJCn . Wf!re 89.t9
50.00
CHAIR, SOFA TliROW t::OVERS
et 8 -exc. mOnt., c•rls.,'Oxn. were 4.'49 .. 9A9
1.9'-5.9'!
MAVCC>
•
" "
•' , ..
'
"
I• "
• ..
" ,
,,
• .
•
• •• '
••
' "
JJ DAil Y PILOT
.... _..~ -~ -. . ...., ... " ~ . .
Ail ing Muntlt Stripped of Duties C.RAFl=•Tt -m,.;.;;..-;-----~ .. .-.~~, .... '9'.,~.J ., .. Z .,~
St~i~ · '."f .At;·:~j~; •-Wn8A1~1tJ~9puTObNl1'ca"~UPhlla ,: ~oJ'!'~.o~Go· ,.,.F~ ~,•.-. ~aril~ vSuberel .... o! ~n.toMundl"tem· Mar1 Mundt, who hll Men
Prison Aide Oppose s 1972
1 Phase Out of San Quentin !;.F:\~:_~l!ji~_:g::;',l ~~:::. ~~~g0 ~;;:,:a;~ ~ ~.,;;; G:'mmiu;.._"~" ~.... =..::."co;; mi t t• e ~ ..:i~no1"::!:
SACRAMENTO (UPI J -Qumtin provid.,," he said . t 'ned f · iS'f,l,.'(;;_ B .. ·R . .'·~·; commHt .. a.signmen"5. !U!~~~~an w~ u:,.' ~:.~! S.n. Margaret Oiase Smith the GOP -.ators' action but
The "Relgan ad01lnlltration "W• think w• need that extra d~lared :'h:.t :~.~""~irn.':0~~ i ,c;'·:':'Af?:.£:.·t;::::.:: 1,,1;, ~~', ~~~;~st~ry ~f :~: ;n~n\he<t'•2~~p ~;:;,~;t: ~~:ao~' .. ~ ~nf~~:: :;',::1 his ~:i:.,. he could :~ ·;:;'~1TI': 0 thatb ~ "'(':;'; ~t:3 :r ~~~~=·~ ~~e ~~ ~~~~.:!< ~d toR~nW.:a~ :<?<>; ·'·\:·1ef.:·'/;::/;~ Senate such an action wao t h • A pp r opriatioll! and returned to >cti•• duty be "He ls Improving a gr•at
Ugla11ture'1 budget adviser Quentin." "scarcely suffici ent." ~::;.;~ .-~YJ · l .. ?¥:ti:~:~.:'.;·.i ta ken against a member. Foreign R e I a t i o n s Com-would be reinstated on the 4eal," 1be said. "He hat use ot
t.o shut down San Quentin Post recommended that the He aaid that another "a~ Mundt. suffering rom a mittees. committees with full seniority. his right arm in wrlUng and
Prison this year would caux Legislature spend $71 million pro:1imately three-fourths of a stroke, has been absent from A year ago, the Republicans Mundt'& tenn expire! at the do.ing a great many lhinis and
11fety and security hazard!( at more next year than Reagan billion dollars" in state or the Senate since Nove mber. too k away Mundt's seniority end of ' tbiJ ye8r, and ~ aide his speech is improving."
other ln11tltu tiOTUJ. suggested. most of it for state federal aid would be required 1969. on the corrunittees and denied has said be probably would not SQe said he had visited hit
"We don't think we can harr employes and higher education to refonn school financing and The action by S e n a t e him his patronage positions. seek re-election. He bu been a office in the New Senate Of-
die guy1 in minim um security sa lary increases. provide ; long·tenn property Republicans at a twcrhour. On a 19-14 vote Thursday, member of the Senate aince fice Buildin;: occasionally, and
Queniln," the st.ate Depart· --==-~~.:..1~:;,. ... ~),.._.:s.r.s _;; ... ,•' ... ~.:: created key va cancies on the motion ofrered by Sen. Will· the House prior to that. Saturday. facilltles that are now in San
1
_ _...:i~n~his~·~a~na~ly~s~i•~· ~w~rue~· ~h~co~n-~~ta~x;r~e~li•~f:. ~==~~~=~g§~~~~~~~~cl~osed§~m~e~•~ti~ng~7~h~u~r ~s ~d ~a~y=t~h~e ~R<~p~u~b~lic~811!~~ad~o~p~ted~~·='~9U~, ~m!§~oerv~ed~f~our~te~rma;~in~~-§~tben~~~u~~rece~n~U~y_:_a:•
ment of Correctklns said in
lo !·---· b AdY•r1l Md 1pecl1;1l• gCIOd reaponae 1..: propo:MU Y o,n.i F•b. 1.1!7:z. ll 1h•
fi scal analyst A. Alan Poat. ,,,.~.special H llt 0,,.1
Port suggested in his annual .arly • .,.·n gh·• you <1
aruilyaia ol Gov . Ron a I d 1ympcith•tlc .at <1l l.a1t.
Reaean's $7 .6 billion proposed
atate budget that the 120-year·
ol~ Pr ison on ll'le shore or San
Franci8co Bay be closed by
Jan. 1 !or a sa9ing of $4.7
mil lion.
Reagan on the other hand ,
has reCornmeMed that the
v I olence-plagued maximum
aecurlty prlJJOn be gradually
re\lre4 and put out of business
com pletely by the end of 1974.
He has called for construction
of two s~ller penitentiaries
to take it1 place.
At the pfne time, Post urg·
ed rejectiQn of the governor's
proposal to "deactivate" half
of the 1,200-bed minimum
ucurrty California Coll3erva-
t iOl'1 Cente;r nee r Susanville
during tht ne1t fiscal year. He
said thi1 would cost $605,000.
Post, the Legl1lature's non·
JMrtlsan chief bud~et adviaer
for 2.1 year1, said if San Quen·
tin were closed the prison
system 1tlll would have a
surplus of 1,4.17 bedlf.
But Phil Guthrie, t h e
de p ar t men t 's oUlcial
1pat e.ania11' and chief of com-
muni ty CQITectional services,
said P.01t's analysis failed to
recognize and deal with the
"new" violence-oriented oon-
Vicl.
"It's our best opinion now
that closure on an accelerated
schedule of San Quentin would
give ui secuMty and ei'nploye
u fety problems elsewhere,"
be uld.
"We think -we need the kind
of security facilities that San
Trust,ee
Will Do
TV Show f Huntington Beach U n I o n
Hlfh School District Trustee
Dennis Mangers will atar on
( televblon this month.
I He will co nduct a closed·
f clrcuJt program with the title
"New Programs for Migrant
~ Children" Feb. 12-16 In At11 n-
Uc City , N. J.
His audience will be educa-
tors attending the annual co n-
vention of the American
A sso ciat i on of School
Administrators.
Mangers was asked to con·
duct t he TV program because
of his background as the prin-
cipal of 1 school in the San
Joaquin Valley where the
predominant population con·
sisted of Mexican-American j farm laborers.
A funner principal of the
f
Harper Elementary School,
Mangers Is now an executive
with a firm whic h speciallzes
1 in Improving the reading
l"'' performance of youngsters.
Club Gives t .$450 Check
i For Clinic
:>
l
f
The Newport Harbor Area
Kiwanis Club h11 donated $450
toward tM coMtrucUon of 1
clinic for the Melod)'land Dfl'I
Prevention Center.
The contrl buUon b port of
an an Ol"lnge C.OUnty Klwanl1
Clubs effort to raise $25,000
for .Ule con1tructlon of the
( f1Clllt1 lo be built adjacont to ~land Theatre.
. ~y, the dfl'I preven-
tion center is ope:raUng 1 14-
hour hoUlne and counseling fll"Ylce from trailers located
an tllo Melodyland property.
.......
'
,
"
PATENTED
NO. I
ROSES
"Bewitch'' your fri ends. s how them
"Hawaii.'' take them to the "Gt-and
Performctnce1" li1ten to them sh out "O le!"
Plant these ro1e1 and have a riot in your
yard.
STRAWBERRY
PLANTS
49~
Ca lifornia 11 the plaee to grow
atra•l>.rri•• and our expert chon the !Mist
moat h.altby 1tock. (This weelr: he'• cm
expert. laat week he was a stock boy.)
6FT.
COMBED
CEDAR
PALINGS ~
25~. "~
The mill combing gl"Yea th••• a nice
texture and cedar 11 th• wood to make a
fenc• tha t la1t1 and looks good with each
pa11lng year. Four Inch width.
!!I
'II
'~ ~-''· -
• ' '
2x4ECONOMY
STUDS
Good, economy. building materia l are th•••
1tud .. Throw together that little room
ro~'" been u.t.ndlng to build. or bu!ld a
com.I for your alll!ICll<>r.
WATER
BEATER
BOUSE
11 88
lfeedan--0<aeedth1b-
cl0Mt for linen 1t01ag• Ihm pot It oatlld•
th• bou1e In thl1 ga1.,....1...i metal beaat.
When the dam bunta rou ain't lnirollt c4 IL
I
REMEMBER THE
HOT FOOT?
('
I
(You do U you're over 30 or
under 30 and watch the Late,
Late Show.)
GOLDEN CLOUD
Am QUE
WHJTE
PANELING
391
White and Gold. with that antiqued
look. Full 4x8. You know bow we got
that antiqued look? Sam left tt out In
the rain last month. ·
SIX-FOOT
ALUMINUM
LADDER
897 :.-:··;. . .
Comea ln bandy when you need to
reach things -like your glrl when
you elope. or the flreplace log1 you
atored in the attic (you dummy. that' a
not aafel).
/, / .
~ MIRROR TILE
12"xl2" 48~. ·
What you can dawltb crwall
using this la aometblng short of
lh• d9Corator'1 a rt (About three
foot short. actually), Plain mirror
to magnify the room sin and
.reflect colors.
CLASSIC BRICK WALL COVEllllfC
Nothing ••can. draw can. show the nall•tlc
look of thla qliallly conrlugl lt'1 the.,.,,, w•'•• carried "l S.. '
ltlnacbolceofbrlck 677.
lllylH. Six IN! to th•
cattOn.
I C"W 1>16-
"Tllls l<INI> Of
f, lllE,JHClltTY
' . , . . ' ·,.
1
I
1
-~ . . . . .. ... ' .. ., ' ' -· • • . -
. ,
•. ., 1' ,, .. --:. .
.
-.• . . ~ :
. I l
J l
6men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
, ••• u
Ann Landers -
Glow ing Tri bute
Offe red by W ife
DEAR ANN LANDERS I am a 23-
yea'r-.old mother of four. Today is Sunday
and wt are home alone. Where is my
hu1band? He's on duty -a fire fighter .
Wt consider ourselves an average
famil y and I wou ld ne ver consider asking
my husban d to change professions.
This is a man who loves hi~ job. He
work.!1 a relativel y short week , 56 hours ,
cor?ip.ared to other husbands. But fire
fighters Art sometimes called on to work
24 hour! at a time in case of a disaster. it
protecl you and your loved ones. And 1ay
11 little prayer for them, will you? -
MRS. FIRE FIGHTER U.S.A.
DEAR i\tRS.: Yo11 bet I will. And
thanks for maktni It possi ble for millio11s
Df Amerlcan11 to ~ lhe picture lbTIK1fh
the eyes nf 1 Hre·flg hter'1 wife.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : 1 Am 12 years
old an d in the seventh grade. My problem
is my Engli sh teacher. There are 72 kids
in our class so she has to ~peak with a
microphone. It seems like she i1 1
is part. of the job and I 'rt:l!lpect his obliga· nervous w~ck.
tions .
Once · my fire fighter work~ seven
dayt 1traight. He came home only twice,
to ~ange clothes and 1't' grocerie1. (Ou r
men have ~ buy th~ir own food when on
duty1) Our baby was Ill months. old at
th; time, and 1ick with pneumonia-. Our
olbtr children were 5, 4 and 2._
This teacher stands in· front of ttle class
with a bag of buttered Popcorn, yakkina a
mile 11 minute, tossing the com into her
mouth and crunching into the ~icropho!le
till it drivu everybody crazy. Then the
jabs her filigernails btli!een her teeth to
get the kernel, of c~rn ·out. It's very
uriappeti:r.ing, not to say il gratu on
everybocfyls nerves.
Do · you think 72 !ludents o~hl to keep
their collective mou ths shut and put up
with this display of horrll>le 11_1anner1'!,
We would appreciate a solu'-1on to our
problem -one that will not get us t i·
pelled. pleue. 1 Thank you. -VICTIMS
WITHOUT PORTFOLIO
. -DEAR ~VJcrtMS: Flnt· tel me uy lll
behalf If Ute te:acMr..'· t. feel 'very IOR')'
fer a11 yent who fias '71 khls le OM d lJI.
No wnldtr IH's eet...i.
• -" • I W ... 4 t • • 4 .. ' ' • -·~~--•
THEY 'RE STILL WAITING ..
•
'
Open Arms Need Filling
I i f ; 1 ·
h~.t:-: '(.. r .. . '
..
...
.. 1 ' ..
•
• ' -
'
•
Lee (up per left) is lucky-
someone has chosen him.
Tommy (•bove) is 3 ond
still w•its. Tob y (left)
is I I and als o unclaimed.
Doesn't anyone wa11t to
t.ke them ho me?
Healthy. Caucasian Infant 1
usually find their way into adoptive
parents' hearts and homes be.fore
they are thret month:i; old, and
lhere are many couples ""ailing fo r
these ''wh ite. bright infants."
Some children are not as
fortunate and for them the ~·ailing
period extends far btyond three
months.
These are the children ~·ho are
racially nlixed , medically han-
dicapped or btyond infancy.
Who are some of these equally as
lovable childre n who need homes
ju.!it as much as their more
fortunate sister~ and brothers:'
A peek into the files of Miss Nina
LaRosa. supervi sor of the Sa nta
Ana district office of Children's
Home Society, will reveal candi-
da~s such as E\arbara. Carol. Tum-
my, Ptter and Toby. ·
Barbara is a hea lthy 4-month-.okt
child. but she has not bt:en taken
because she is black and Caucas fo n.
carol, lhe same age . has not been
chosen because of a similar reason.
Her heritage 1s F'rench. English,
Oriental, Negro and American In·
dlan, and her skin is an olive tone.
Tommy waits because he i1 deal.
He was adopted once, bur hi! pro·
spective parents returned him after
1even weeks because th e y
discovered his handicap. HI!: also
has 1 streak of white hair and eyes
of different colors.
~stless and hyperactive. 11·
year-.old Peter is suffering from
maternal rejection. He is in ex·
cellent health and has normal In-
tell igence. but has been depri ved of
1eeurity.
Peter has been in four different
..
-·
. '
boarding homes Ur hJs short Jlfe,
and mus t attend group therapy to
O\'t rcom e hil problems .
Alw 11. Toby ii 1 •·marvelous
acrol:>at and fearless elimber,"'ae·
cording to hlS foster mother. Ti)is
ts "'"Clrthy of praise. btcause Toby
has '""n lypes of etrebral palsy.
His speech is unde veloped and hi s
""al k ts irregular. Ht has had. cor·
rtrt1\·e muscle and tendon 1urgery
and no tonger has to ""ar leg
braces. though he wears a special
heln1et to protect himself in the
n1<1ny falls he has.
'"Toby falls all the time. but more
irnport;int. he alway_. 1na-ps bac:k
up and seldom cr ies over cuts and
bruises." his roster mother added.
Toby· is enrolled in tax-supported
s p e ci a l cl asses ror th e
orthoped ically hand ic apped and
lov"~ art and physical t:ducation
best.
His tt:acher says he's ··suptr ac-
tive but kn ows he doesn 't have a
rooted fam ily like the other klds'ln ·
school."
One little boy wasn't mentii)ned
bec ause his file has been pulled.
Lee. who is 3~ la vuy Ju~,. for
10meone has already choaeri llm.
He al!O has cerebral palsy·'bu&
has had ertenslve therapy. Thoqh
he will require help on a· 1on1-tenit
basis , he haS llml!ed UH: of'Wil left
hand and nOw Is able to grasp ,Qt).
jects.
Therapist! are euarded in "tbeir
opinion of whether he eVer ,,,UI bt
able to walk, but are optlmtsti~.
Lee's new ''forever · fern.ily"
thares this optimism, but whethe.r
he ever walks or not , his chann·hll
captured their bu.J1.5 and love.
. '
r~
• .. ' ..
Search Seeks Missing Homes
• I -
A week·lonc SAfMI for Search
will be spomottd by the Orange
County Council of lhe A1J,1lliarle1
ol Chllilnll'• Home Society Mon-
day, P'"eb: 14, throug h Saturday,
.feb. 19.
The ooJect or the ~lari. whk h
Will travt\ to three coun ty loca-tion•. ii to fin<I home1 for •·special
need&" childr en.
Thatched-roof ' ' j u n g 1 e com-
poundl" will be .. 1 up In !he mall•
'ol thret lhoppinJ cenlu1 ond
l.,ruentatlv .. Of lhe 20 CJlS lUJ•
Ulat1es w1l1 ""'' " oafarl auJd ...
The aafarl has been organized to
augment the efforts of adopt.ion
agencies In finding l;lome1 for
children who are in foster homes
awaJting -.i:Joptlon but have a· long
wait because ttlt:y are racially mlr·
f!d, bave 11erlOUJ medical problems
or are. of school age .
According to Mrt. K e n net h
Brown, Search chairman. the Child
Welrare. League e1tlm11tes thal
60.000 children throoghout lhe conn.
try, who are either older or have
se.rloua medical problems, ate
awaiting permanent famijje1.
The µ.s. Children'• Bureau
f\lrther aays th.al 40,000 black
children also are awaiting place-
ment.
Chllilren'1 Home Society offlcia!J
added I.hilt I.here are ~.ooo h'ealtliy
children ln 16ng-term foal.tr cm In
CalUornla and that at least 10 per-
cent tif th ese could be adopted with
no delay.
Tbe ,.farl wlll travel lo The City
ln Orange Feb. 14 and is. Him-
llngfon Center. Feb. I! and 17. ml
fashion J1IMd. Newport Beac~
Feb. 18 1.nd 19. Au1Ulary members
•111 •i,Il tbe boo:ha !rorn 10 a.m. lo
. . .
9 p.m ... c:1i day. . •
A wpri,. vial!' from I,°lon• ~.' \
try S.f•M lion cubi fs plomiolfror I'
one of lhe moll dlaplayo. \
An llH!eplh dbcuulCKI qi Ibo
Storch PfOcr•ftl "\ll llh P~·ifl ·
p.m. M~. 'Peb. ll, Ill Qi< Sonia
Ans dlltrl<l dflke ol €hlldnn'1
Home · Socltty. fe1turin1 )i ' 1ltdt,
1erie1. 1
lnv itallo111< l<> lhe fo l\~w -u '
m .. urw will be avall.lfo 4.,111,
lhe Safari "'" ·~ -~ lJt u.. malls.<>t"IMY be~ from U.. Cll\ dlllrltt olfice.
.'
If DAIL y PILOT
'.Polit icians,
~ ,..
' A pan,] d1sc:uulon. lecturt.
uocheon1 tnd p1rtlu head
uganlzatk>nal aetivi tiea.
Women Voters r~, of f.ducauOO wlU be
the topic of a panel discu.ssi on
when Orange Coast League of
Women Voters meet! at 9·30
a .m. Thursday, F'eb. 10, in tht
Gateway Commons. UCL
Panelists will be Dr Helen
J\elley. Prtsidtnt of Im·
Jnacula te. Heart Colle.gt; Dr
'tlonnan Loat!, a 11 o C' i a t e
llJptr1ntendent of Newport·
l!esa Unified SC'hool Di.strict :
~ Haven, prinC'tpal of Top of
the World
Stach 11nd
Senta Ana
teacher.
Sc hool. Llitinl
Mrs . Ina BIJJsl
HIJh Sc hoo
Madrecita•
Palronesse.s will be hoMred
and a check prtsenttid durlnc
a Junch!On mee ti og of the Ho-
ly Family fo.1 ad re c I ta 1
Aux iliary.
~1rs . Anthony Colandra will
open htr Laguna Niguel home
for th e ga ther ing Thursday,
feb. 10.
A check for S9.000 will be
pr e s e nt ed t o Si ster
Bertille. tlecutive dirtctor of
Patrons Bid
tht Holy Family Adoption
Service.
Ntw au1iliary officers will
be the Mmes . Jame.s Delaney,
president; Edward 0 J •en ,
Dean Q. Waddell and Allan
Burgess. v ice pre11iden te:;
Frederick Huehes and George
Scott, secretaries: John 8.
Lawson, tre.asurer: H en r y
Ull man, parliamentarian. and
Robert Hancock, publicity.
Me•• Harbor
~fella Harbor Club members
will hear I lecture by Mrs.
Dorothy Wenck. Orange Cou n·
ty home advisor when they
&ather at 10:30 a.m. Thurtday,
Feb. 10. tn the Meu Verde
Country Club.
Her topil' will lM! So You
Want to Go Back to Work
which will center on the pro--
blems women fa ce in aeeking
a new career or returning to
'A'Ork.
Thursday Club
Pianist Bob R.tlaton wUI
entertain the Thurad1y Morn·
ing Club of Newport Buch
after a luncheon In the
A1rporter Inn Thurlday, P'eb.
IO.
The music ian bu been wilh
' ' ' '
to Meetings
lhe Lawrence Welk Orchestra
for ma.ny years. Al.so en·
ltrtaining will be members ot
the Mannequin Section who
will parade fashion.! during
the luncheon .
Niguel GOP
Atty. Grn. Evelle J .
Younger will be the speaker
when the Laguna Niguel
Republican Women mett at 8
p.m. ThLirsday. Feb. IO, in lhe
United Califomia Bank.
SC Junio"
A Valen tine party will be
given by South Coast Juniors
for I.ht Albe.rt Sl.Uon Home at
7 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 10.
Homemake"
Coast Homemakers w 111
hear Newport Beach librarian ,
Mrs. Marlin Sheely discuss
r e f I e c I i o n s of female
personalities. The group will
meet at 9:45 a.m. Friday, Feb.
It. in the Corona de1 Mar
You Vi Center.
Garden Club
Ros a r i a n Joh" Van
Barneveld of RO!e Hills. Whit·
!iu will be the guest speaker
at the ne1t metllnb' of the
Laguna Beach Garden Club.
The group wiU meet at 11
a.m. Friday, Feb. 11. in the
Woman 'a Clu bhouse and tea
will be served at 12:30 p.m.
Chin a Po inte"
Mrs. Roy L. Oswald , presi-
dent of the South Coast China
Painters will be the delegate
to the slate conventton in
Pasadena Friday·Sunda y, Feb.
11-13.
Attention will be focused on
demonstrationa and ditplay1.
PANELIST
Or. H•l t n Kelley
Fault Shift Shakes Insurance
' ' I .
Hearts, Flo wers Embellish Ball room
By ALI.ISON DEERR
OI l1'tt D<llU' Pli.t •'4tt
Courll are congested with
accident damage s u i t 1 :
automobile insurance rates
are climbing steadily and
there are doubt! that accident
victims are be ing properly
comperuated.
Thelle are some of tbe
reasons why no fault in·
auranct has been proposed,
said Los Angeles attorney
John La Follette who spokt
before Newport H a r b o r
Republican Women Federated
In th e Newport Beach Tennis
Club.
La Folleue, a former pre!i-
de nt or the American Board of
Trial Advocates, hall been
as.signed lo the five-man State
Bar or California No Fault
Insurance Committee to draft
no fault legislation acceptable
to the legislature.
"The f i r s t requirement
Preschool Alert
would be mandatory .auto
liability insurance," La Fol-
lette explained.
"Today it is not mandatory
and 13 to 20 percent or
Californ ia d r i v e r ll are
uninsured. Unless your own in-
surance carried an uninsured
motorist clause, YQU can now
be hurt (financially ) a great
deal by the uninsured driver."
Also under no rault proposed
plans provide for each in·
.suranct company to pay all
medical and hospital benefits
for it.! insurees.
No fault, in addition , would
award the accident victim 75
to 80 percent of hill norm al
wages amounting to a\ set
amount for a set time :
premiums would be based on a
sliding llcale depending 1 on
regular earnings. and services
usually performed will be paid
for. for ex1mple, housekeeping
Time to 'Fall •
By JAN EDWARDS and are not ta1ed.
01 1111 01ltv l"llel Sllff
expenses for a housewife.
No fa ult would eliminate
double payment for an injury
from the insurance companies
of both persons involved.
Under no fault suils could not
be filed for add itional
d1mages unlells there was a
grave injury or impairment or
death.
MEDIA BLAMED
The speaker blamed the
news media for the C()n·
troveny over oo fault saying
that the press has "boiled
lawyers in oil" by questioning
their moti ves for opposing the
proposed pl11.n.
Howe ver, he cited 8
Massachusetts survey which
showed the people themselves
are unhappy over no fault. He
noted ty,·o out of three victim s
are dis.satisfied with damage
payments.
Although insurance rates
Love'
Hearts and f\o\vers will be used in profusion to
decorate the Ne\vporter Inn Saturday, Feb. 12,
when t.he 13th annual Valentine Ball is presented.
Sponsoring the black-tie benefit is the Silver and
Gold Chapter. Auxiliary of South Coast Commun·
it y Hospital , Laguna Beach. Selecting flowers for
arrangements are Oeft to right) Mrs. Thomas J.
Fletcher and Mrs. Frederick Garcelon.
Parents should be enrolling
their children oow for Se~
!ember sessioru in one of the
80 l ic ens ed church,
cooperative or private pre-
schools along the Orange
C.oa st. But not without careful
selection.
In cooper11.tiv e.s. p 1 re n t 1
must help as board, com-
mittee or staff members
under the direction of one paid
professional. Private schools,
in contrast. have a princip11J
and staff who determine what
will be t.11ught.
C.Osts also vary among types
of schools and cooperatives
usually are the least ex-
pensive. Mrs. Heruig men·
tioned some average costs.
Church schools cost S2D per
month for two days per week
and S28 a month for three
days per week. Cooperatives
average Sll per month for two
da ys weekl y and $16 for three
days.
All licensed schools are in·
spected aMually iY the
Department of Social Welfare.
State regulations affect only
the phy~ical set-up: safety.
health. space per child and
teachers' credentials. Horoscope: Aq.uarius Creative
"Any school worth its name
already will be almost fu11 for
Seplember," cautioned Mrs.
Norma Herzog, director of two
Costa Mesa preschools ud
past president of the Southern
California Association for the
Education of Young Children.
Private schools charge $28
per month for two half-d11.ys
per week . $39 for three half·
days, $49 for five half-days
and $125 per month for five
full days.
Lesson plans and personal
character of the teachers are
not inspected or regulated,
necessitating parents' person·
al deci.!ion on which school
wUJ lluit their child best.
SA TU RDAY
FE BRUARY 5
By SYDNEY OMA.RR
ARir;S (March 21-AprU 19 l:
Get plans outlined with mate.
partner. one ""'ho shares
mu tual financial lnteresti"i.
Joint effn rt.s succeed. Going it
alone nC)v" migh! create un·
11ettllsary problems. Invest-
ment procedure r e q u I r e s
review.
TA URUS (Aprll 20.May 20 l;
Time i.!i on your side. You wlll
be in a better position to
ootllne own strategy. Leo is
involved. You make ultimate
gain.
Fo r Petites Fleurs
GE~1INI (May 21-June 20 ):
Caution now is advisable.
Some would like to see you
trip. make error. Key is to
heed hour own cou nsel . He alth
is important factor. ~leans
avoid extremes. Take It easy
with home remedies. Get suf.
ficient rest.
CANCER (June 21-July 22 ):
Some pressures are relieved.
There now ar@ opportunities
for C'hange. travel. variety.
Key is to tear down your own
emotional restrictions. Recent
setback may have caused you
to lose confidence. Regain IL
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 1'
Solidify pl.11ns. Build on solid
base, Be aware.of .subUe nuan·
Fashions to Blossom
ces. Thorough approach is
necessary . Know meaning of
fine print. Home, domestic
area is accented. If forthright,
you will get green light.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 221'
Movement, tr 1 v e I , sending
and receiving messat1es -
these are spotlighted. Gemini
person figures prominently.
Stress verll atility. Ha v e
alternatives at hand . Expand
activitiell, but. don't scatter
forces.
LIBRA !Sept. 23--0ct. 221'
Review money position. What
appears a sure thing m11y be
just the opposite. Protttt
aa.sets. Consolidate. Get back-
i"I of one whn has experience.
Deb!s Art paid, collected .
Last-minute arrangement is
settled.
SCORPIO (Oct ~1·N°' 21 )'
Lunar cycle high; you come
out of doldrums. WMre you
may have doubted. you now
ire posltJve. F r e e d o m
~mell more than a term. Red 1nd wh ite 19t h century Laguna Niguel is in charge of You can expr6S yourself. im -
decor incl red and pink floral reservations and the Mmes. print personality. Get going.
centerpieces will transform Charles Gassett. Ch a r I es SAGmARJUS 1Nov. 22·
the Airporter Inn for \1alentine Varlas. James Hotel. Lloyd Dec. 21): The future i:i now.
Fishlons to be presented by Petrash. Stewart Shandie and Don't waste time brooding
Ro y Baughman art committee 1bout past. You may play role
Les Petites fleurs auxiliary nf chairmen. now of power behind scenes.
Children's Home Society on Les Petit&s F1eurs. with Backing from Im po r t 1 n t
Saturday, Feb. 12. Mr~. Rozella Roberts as presi· persons Js 1vailable. Key is
Mrs. Jackson Goffman is dent, is one of 19 CHS aux-proper approach. presentation.
chairman ol the fi fth annu1J illarlell in Orange County CAPRJCOl\N (Dec. 22--Jan.
eventthatw!ll st11rt attla.m. which raille funds and 19): See people as they are,
and feat ure outf its for the publicize Information about not as they af!pear: cet to
well-dressed mBn. woman and adoptive services ind counsel· he1rt of matters. Some of
child. Ing. your fondest wishes can be
Modellni through 1 l•U iced:1p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;mi;;;;;;;;= guebo will be commentated
by Mrs. Florence Smale.a ind l\fn. Charles Henry of San
Clementi! will provide lhr
music.
l'ofrs. Raymond Strauch of I
I See by Today's
Want Ads
fulfill ed . Depends on faith,
cenfidence and sharing with
one who cares for you.
Message will be clarified.
AQUARIUS (J1n. :W.Feb.
18): Career. standing in aim·
munity. ability to achieve
meaningful results -these
are emphasized . Bring forth
creative resources. Adhere to
individual style. Make room
for yourself at top.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Add e d knowledge is in·
dicated. You learn and teach.
You draw to you persons who
are more spiritual I ha n ,.
material. Means inspiration is
keynoted . You can preeeive
beyond the immediate. Gain
shown now through reading,
writini.
She admitted, though, that
"selecting 1 nursery achoo! for
your child is a little like falling
in love." Parents, particularly
mothers, will know which
achool is right the minute they
walk into it.
But prel imi nary in·
ve!tigation is recommended.
Parenl.5 sMuld ask friends.
consult the family pediatrician
or check the yellow pages for
llchools within a reasonable
dilltance fro m home. Or the
National Association f o r
Nursery Education, lM East
Ohio St., Chicaao. has 1
pamphlet of guidelines for
~electing 1 school.
The next 11tep is to make an
appointment to vi!.it each
school to observe o l h e r
children. the teacher and
parenll" intuitive reactionll to
the group atmosphere.
While visiting, also find out
the staff'll te1ching
baekfround.
To avoid disappointment, prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and white J?lossy pbot1>
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's D"'
partment one week before the wedding.
Pictures received after that time will not be used.
For engagement announcements i t ts
imperative that the s't.ory, also accompanied
by a black and whit• glossy picture, be sul>-
mitted six weeks or more before the wedding
date. If deadline is not met, only a story will
be used.
To help fill requirements on bo th wed-
ding and engagement stories, forms art
available in all of the DAILY P ILOT offices.
Further questions will be answered by
Women's Section st.a!f members at 642-4321.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you are dynamic,
progressive. willing to reach
beyond what appear! to be
limitation. If single. marriage
is on horizon. If married, 1d·
dition lo family could be aim-
ing. Thi! year you will have
more responsibility -but you
also will earn more money.
T~ tllld flUI wtlo'I luclv flll' '1'1111 In
..._., 111'11111 ............... l\'dnn OtNlll''\ booki.t. "S.Cr.i Hints for Mlfl tnd WOl'Ml'I."' Sltld tllrtl'ldtlt t rod JJ nnh
to Orn-rr Allrel"v *''"' tM OAtl Y 'IL0!1_ hx .n•. G,tntl C*"'"fl Sit· 111111, .._ York, N.Y. 18017.
The 80 1chool.s can enroll
from 21 to I 10 children and
each type or .school has dil·
ferent te1ching philosophies,
Mn. Herzog explained.
Some church schools are • r-i-:=:;;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;====;;;;;;:::;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;:::::;~ C()ntinuation of Sunday school.
They oost 1... boo1use they LOW l'IKISl-Wl COMPIRI
hi ve tho ""'"'"Y buildlnf.I TUIUllDOUS SlllCTIOlll WI uaw
JO·HNA'S
WOMEN'S FASHIONS
NAME BRANDS ONLY
SUPER SALE
OUR REGULAR PRICIS ARI
W /, BELOW WHAT OTHEllt
STORIS CHAROI
Now WHILE THI SALi
LASTS WI Alltl
GIVING UP TO 50% OFF
OUllt ALRIADY MARKID
DOWN "lltlCISI
...... ,_ -·-.. _
Ml•11tl
FACTORY
OUTLITS
HIGH FASHION KlllT FAAICS FOl
THE STLYE CONSCIOUS WOMAN,
6000 Mj. It. el ](111! fo!.rlc-Tev "'"' M• • .,,n, .... h11,.rt1, 1to11c -'141, ... ._,.., ,..1ri11,
..,11,, c.lor' Onet. e ll l11 "lett41 ef ,..,_let', liner1, l'lt•, Wee!, Al~. Nyl9il, O..n•l11, flerlnllHt,
Trevirl, Dleltr1, I~ ... t'IO•• "-"41.
OUlt EX,llIINCID Sllff l'llOVIDIS
&UIDANCI ANO ADVICI
We -,....,, ,.ett.NI -4 he!, Y9" 1eled ..t ..,. '*k. kof !fl. rifht
t.ltrlc ._ ~ lr14i•i4u.U1y.
NIWl'OllT STlEIClt & SIW TICHNIQUIS
We te.tlri If lr1 -~ fllea11111t ci.1UM• "r 1•llle4 "9ft ui.•
teeth'" .. Y'9U" -1r11 er,.,i-. ~ ..it:..1l1frl"f ...., ..,. M
... ,.. ... lr1 Yt ....... 1 .... ff~
HIGH FASHION lfflCTS -YIS I
0.. Strektio & &.w ted1ri~vt1 -•i.t• .,..,.. Mlle awtf.i,., witfl -., fllMI
lit'IO el v .. w, & ...,le, ,....,.. ,., '4tte -'wrMte -4 Jioiflri ,.,._.. liMl.
fill -TUT_ Ill. 19. 4, 1"'9 A.M. -, , l'OllCllO~ lAT.'8.S,1.00,.11.,,,rw,un-
----INL~ll'='--I POt I WllU t 1f.OD 'IVf 1111. a.Aaft Sll.811
........,, "'" 1 ··········"······ ... ~ ,......,, M , I .•·· .•• ,,7,IU,lf •·•· ~. M . J ••· .••• t ll-•·•·
r~. M . 11 ...... 1.1s-•.1t •·•·
TtlN a.us '
~ I lfl. a.us• .....
,.....,. ...... '' •••••• JJll.Jt• •••.
NIWPOllT 1-T .. -l·T..c-H a AW
COINll 17TM a llVN ,..., .. ....,, .....
,., .................... , 5120 ••• .,.,..
..._.. ....... ".~ .. e
were initia lly [oY:, legislated
so by the stale. premium!
eventually rose. Cal ifornls ha~
no laws regulating premiums
and none are propo.s~d.
La Follette listed hl.s own
feelings on the negative
aspects of no fault.
LOSES RIGHTS
-No fault would lake away
the accident victim 's right to
sue for damages u cept for
serious impairment or death .
-No fault insurance would
oot clear up the congestion in
the cou rt s. lie blamed "legal
pretrial m a n e u v e r i n g ,
technicatiti('s and loopholes·•
in crim inal law for crowded
co urt calendars.
-The good aspects of no
raull could be 1 e g i 5 I a t e d
without making no fault in·
ll u r a n c e mandatory. Man·
dalOry insurance could b4
leg islated and double recovtry
could be abolished if deemed
desirabl e.
-Under no faull the fellow
who caused the accident would
be let off the hook and the viC'·
tim would have no recourse
under the lsw.
-The family man. now a
good risk, would take over the
bad risk spot from the young,
teenage hot-rodder.
-No fault could lead to
governmen t takeover o l
pr ivate insurance industry.
Heaths
Tell News
Mr. and ~trs. Ira ~leath an-
nounced lhe engagement of
their daughter, Maril yn Heath,
to Ph i 11 p Kunde of
WestC'hester during an open
house in thei r Costa Mesa
home.
r..1iss Heath is a graduate of
Southern California College
and is a teacher at Prince of
Peace Lutheran Da y School,
Costa Mesa.
Her fia nce. son of ~1r. and
Mrs. Albert Kunde of Lo~
Angeles. is ~ graduate of
Ca!if(')r nia State C.Ollege at Los
Angeles and taught in Whittier
for lwo year8 before becominl
a ju vcnlle co urt soci11J worker .
A summer v.•edding i11 plan.
ned by the couple.
DINNER FOl TWO I
''" or~,... -..M
Coler lrt velt111ue
for M•nleo Cou111"
C•ll 6U-M41 11141 H .. t TIM
H·Hfff llKt,_ MftMtt
MOTHERS!
HERE'S THE
OPPORTUNITY
R YOUR CHILDREN
TO SEE ONE
OF WALT DIS NEY'S
GREATEST HITS
-THIS WEIK IND
WALT
Song~
mSOuth
-
-.. --:--·.
Lal{ers, Buck·s Go at It
LOS ANGELES (AP) -All eyes wtll
be on the season's third meeting between
National Basketball Associatlou titans
Milwaukee and Los AngPlf'S tonli::ht.
The Lake.rs and Bucks have m~l twice l~is seaso" and both games have been plYOtaJ.
The two teams played here Nov. 21.
when the Lakers. off to a hot start, still
had to convince themselves and ske ptics
around lht league that they were for
rul.
They did just that witb a 112~105 vic-
tory, stretching their winning streak to
1 l. lt was 33 1traight v.·hen they met the
Bucks again in t-.1ilwaukee Jan. 9 as
rnany fan s y,·ere saying the NBA cham-
pions' reign would be a short one.
But the Bucks, playing overwhelming
defen se, smothered the Los Angeles fast
break and won . 120-HH.
The Lakers haven 't really been the
same since, losing three o{ the following
si~ games bc{ore they righted themselves
and won the last three in a row. The
Bucks, by contrast. have won six in a row
and nine of their last JO.
In the race to determine possible home--
court advantage In the Western Con·
ference playoffs. Los Angeles still holds 8
three-game lead. Re sults of the teams'
two meetings would indicate the home·
court edge mi~ht be decisive in a playoff.
The Lakers have both a positi\'e and a
··-.... --·~"""'('·~·,.··~-~ • > «ft}t.
:) ~'
•
~\, .. ' ;
' "
BOB MIKELS IN HIS ORANGE COAST PLAYING DAYS.
Now a q11adraplegic
Mikels Fighting Bacl{
Af te1· Crippling Injury
Bob ~i ikels had just regained con-
11ciousness.
He "'as laying by a rock close to y,·here
his wrecked car had coine to rest after a
rear tire peeled, son1e\1·hcrc near Ytrmo,
Cal.
.r.1ikels and his slightly-injured com·
panion looked at the ovcr~urned vchi~le,
vohich had its roor shoved in after coming
down on top of a boulder .
"The first thing ..... e did was laugh ."
P.1ikels recalls. "We were so glad to still
be alive. I couldn't move at the time ?ut
I really didn't think it was anything
serious.''
However, for the 25-year-old former
-----------WHITE
WASH
..,__ -----
.._ ... ,. WMITI
Laguna Beach resident and sport's star,
that night in March, 197 1 would be the
last lime he'd find much to laugh over.
And It wou1d be the last time he'd have
the use of his arms and legs.
Ourirtg the next 3Y.a months Mikels wa:!I
confined to a hospital bed, recovering
from a broken neck and the severed
spinal cord which has left him •
quadraple:gic. -
embrace all his friends.
"l think I have deeper emotional feel ·
ings now than I did before the accident.
Last Christmas was a wonderful day -
the best Christmas J ever had. I wal'i
home and dozens ol friends came by to
see m~ I was very touched.
"I a~v.·ays loved bcin~ around the
ocean .... it's such an expan~. it's a
Sf'nse of freedom to me. It bothers me
now that I don't live around it.
The dark days in Bob Mikel s' life seem
to be diminishing.
Now he's making a determined bid to
find a place in the world.
He's enrolled in two sociology classes
at UC Riverside. Attendant Stanley Kohl ,
who feeds, bathes. dresses and transports
Mikels, has become the youthful victim 's
arms and legs.
Those limbs, rendered uscles., by the
accident, were once the toast of Laguna
Beach. As a Little Leaguer he batted .675
and as a Babe Ruth League pitcher he
once struck ou t 2:0 of 21 batters then
came back the next game to strike out 18
and throw a one-hitter.
He won letters in five different varsity
!J>OrlS at Laguna fligh and was a
baseba11 and football letterman at Orange
Coast College.
Now those days ln athletics are part of
the fond memories that nourish Bob
Mikels. "I really enjoy thinking about the
past." he admits.
"Not only sports, but my father and 1
used to have a garden and I really en-
joyed that. Too , I recall being with the
family in front of the fireplace or with
everyone in bathing suits at a summer
barbecut.
...
negative note go1ng Into tonight 's game,
which has been sold out for weeks and
will be televised at sii local ~aters.
r)n the po~ilive side, swlngman Keith
Erickson is healthy again after missing
most of the season with knee surgery,
and could draw the assignment on the
Bucks' Oscar Rl>bertson, who is several
inches taller than the Laker:s' other
guard,
Negatively, Los Angeles hasn't played
since Sunday night and tends to be stale
after a layoff.
"It came at a bad time for us," said
coach Bill Shannan. "We have been
playing v.·elJ and we didn't need any time
off."
Tift Upset
With UCI
After Witt
By HO\VARD L. HANDY
Of lh• D•ll1 P llol Sl1ff
It was an .unemotional, disappoLnling
performance tn the words of coach Tim
Tift but none-the-less. UC Irvine posted
its 13th basketball victory of the season
Thursday night over \'isiting Puget
Sound 's Log&::ers, Bf>.n, at UC J's
Crawford Hall .
Saturday night the Anteaters entertain
potent University of Hawai i, which boasts
a 17-J season record and is ranked in the
top 20 uni\'ersity division teams in the na·
lion. An impro\'ed performance is a must
if ucr is to stay with the visitors from
the islands.
The victory Thursday was sparked by
the return to action or forward Bi ll
Moore, who hit 17 points as all five of
UCI 's usual starting quintet scored in double figures.
Ste\'e Parker. filling in for rvtoore ti)
start. did a good job defensively but lacks
Moore's scoring punch.
"\Ve're tired and not al full physical
~trength," Tift explained wiH1Qut using
the statement for a crutch.
"I didn"t think we were alert and aware
during much of the game. I really can't
put my finger on any Qne thing we did
wrong but our defense wasn't as good as
It has been.
"I have to give Puget Sound credit,
though . \Ve played a decent first half but
they hurt us on the boards early in the
Eiecond half when they went ahead.
"But when you can't stop them
defensively and you throw the ball away
on top of it. you are in trouble ."
Puget Sound coach Don Zeck concurred
fn Tift 's analysis.
''I don't think Irvine played as well as
they are capable of playing. But we were
short-handt!fi, too."
Moore still isn't at full strength with A
leg injury causing him to hobble a bit. Ed
Burlingham has bruised ribs and chest
and spent most of the day in bed with the
flu.
F'or Puget Sound, the team's leading
scorer, Ned Delmore (21.2 average) and
;:ilso the leading rebounder, Sam May (11
per gameJ were not in uniform.
When Moore entered the contest with
11 :57 left in the first half, lJO had l'itrug-
gled to a lfi..13 advantage. Before the half
ended, he hit 13 and UCI left the noor
leading , 44·33.
Nine lun1overs in the first 8:35 of the
s~cond half and a hot shooting guitrd,
Vince Greene, pulled the Loggers in front
briefly at 55-54 before Troy Rolph hit "
free throw. Burlingham scored a pair of
12-footers from the baseline and Baker
8dded another charity toss to put UC! in
front to stay.
In the SeCQnd half. UCI had 16
turnovers and 2J for the game. giving up
numerous scoring opportunities.
UCI hit at a 60 percent figure in the
first half and 58.5 for the game while Che
northern visitors from Tacoma hit 44 per-
cent from the floor.
Greene W8S high man for the game In
scoring with 27 while Rolph again pace<!
the Anteaters with ta. Rhyne hit 18.
~foore 11, Burlingham 14 and Baker 11.
UC lrvlM (Ml r ll'ltt S011M 071
lwtt ,ti. t1111fh
Rl'>YM • 10 4 It 0U11lll0t1 4 7 4 10
P1rlr.er 7 (I 1 l Je...,.11 6 I J JI
0 . Baktt" 7 1 7 !I PllllPOt j O 4 I
Rols>ll 76020(,r"n 17l l JI
e11r1l"9h1m 6 2 4 !4 mo0r•nd o 1 J 1
Moott 6 5 l 17 GalM\ I 11 1 1
Mdllew. 1 0 J 1 Lar!Qrl J ' 4 10
e.1r OOJOC..ln 170 '
lo!•ll n ... It M Tol~ll n I)""
!11ll!l1TM: UC lf¥1t>e 1.4, P-1 lo!,lf'd J).
UCT ''"" Utl .... , ..... JV !tll
""''" l J ' It ,,., ... ,
M<w•
I-lotter
...... lltl'lOf'I ..... 11
Mclwr ,_,
7ol•lt.
M•llliml!;
" " ,. i. • ' 2 11 Jenw
' ) $ I' Br10M1
l I 2 11 Maoon
l •$10._v_
'4!1,l•V"'e
IJOJlro!ttll
llt•OGtilwell
U 10 11 IO Tol•ll
R.019"0\ JC .._ UCI
I J II 1
t 1 2 n 11 ' 2 )o6 ) J J •
, 0 1 '
0 I t I
7ttJt1•1 Ff'Otfl 1'.
, . -·-
•
frldu, ''br\wy 4, 1971
LAKERS SEEK REVENGE -Los Angele• Lake"
Wilt Chamberlain, Jerry West (44) will renew their
series with Oscar Robinson (lJ and the Milwaukee
Bucks ton1i;:ht al. the Forum. The NBA hlggie lfi a
i;.cllout. t.111 \vaukee snapperi the Lakers' fabulous
33-game \vin streak the last lime they met.
Sports ln Brief
Asher Falls to Second;
Kings Tie Canadiens
SAN JOSE -Don Glover. a South
Bend, Ind. pro who owns five t.itre~.
crashed into first plare Thursday night RS
the match play sen11fi/lals bf'gan in the
$85,000 pro bowling tournament.
Each of Glover's triumphs eamerf for
him a 30-pin bonus as he came from ninth
place, 91 pins down, to a lead of seven
over Barry Asher of Costa Mesa. whosr
223 average. showed the way through the
first three six-game sessions.
Asher dropped five of his eight games
while showin!!: a pin fall of 1,775, whi ch
Included a 287 effort .
\\'ith 15 more games on t.ap before !he
field is trimmed ti') five finalists, Ashe r
was three in front of Don M1:CunP .
Munster, Ind., wht) 11'10k i;evpn of eight
and moved up fro.m !Ith place.
•
INGLEWOOD-Like lhe character on
"Laugh.Jn,"' the Lr.is Ang~les Kings ha ve
some good news anrl Sllme bad news.
The good news wa s a l·l tie w1lh the
Stanle y Cup champion Monlre;il Cana·
rl iens Thursday night that str,trhed the
Kings' unbeaten string ti') five games and
mo\'ed them within three victories or a
playoff spot in the National Hockey
Lea~ue West .
But the bad news could get worse today
after x rays on goalie Rogatien Vachon,
who injured his left knee on the only goa l
the Canadiens scored.
•
Vienna fire dl'.partment offir!Ali; 1'iairi
the unknown man empt.il'.d gaMillne intn
the gap hetwcen the door11tep anf:! the
door of Pruckner·s rlowntllwn apartment,
setting ablaze the door. a doormat and a
carpet.
Police said Ulrike Pruckner, rlaughter-
in-law of the Au5trian Olympic of!icial,
who happened In bf in the apartment,
managed to put out the names with
bucket.s of water. Jn the attempted arson,
the door was charred but the apartment
wai; nt)t damaged.
Meanwhilt . newl"papen r,. por tl'.d
anonymous callers threatened the family
of Karl Heinz Klee. president of t ht
Austrian Ski F'edl'!ration, who is all'iO in
Sapporo But no inr1rlents were reported.
•
KANSAS CITY -The top three seeiied
pl11 yPri; 5<'0trrl vi ctl'lrlPl'i In thP f1rii;I rnunrl
nf thP $1~,oon Grr:iter Kan.~al'i City lndl')t}r
fPnn1s rhamp1nnships Thursday.
lire Nastase, No. I r~nked. knocke'1 off
r.11ke Bf'lkln, 6·4. fl.O, 5f'cond-1'ieeded Clark
r.raeilner defested Milan Holecek, 7-5. fi...
2, and ZelJko Franulovic No. ~ s e I'. d ,
downerf Patricio Cornjeo. 6-4. 6-3.
In other matches Manuel Orantes
downed Ove Bengtson. fi...2, 6-4 ; Ion
Tiriac, ~topped Alex Olmedo, li-2. 6-4 :
Tom Edlefsen defeated Jamie f"lllol , U,
6-4, 7-5; Pierre Barthes turned back Tom
Gonnan. 7-4, U, 7-6, and F.rik van Dillen
halted Andres Cimeno, 6-2, 6-4.
Lav er, Emo
Roll by Foes
At Richmond
RICl1i\1nND. V11 . IAP' -Top-seeded
Rod La\'Pr of Corona dtl Mar arlvanced
ea~il,v in Thursday'!! ,;ecnnd rountl of the
F'Jrlel1tv \Vnrld Champ1nnship Tnur ~nnll
ln11rn11m,.n!. bul t.h1rtl·ranked Arthur
A.~hi' n1trrnwly mi!l~ed being up$f'L
Al.\-0, NPwport Bf'ach'~ Roy F.mf'rsnn
came from behind to beat .11nnlh,.r
Au str:ilJ an, .John Al,.x!nder. 3-'i. 6-.1. 6-3.
Laver routed Nikki Pille of Yugoslavut,
&-1, f>.l. tn movt Into F'r1day nighl'J
quarter-finals. but Ar;he wa1o on the brink
of c'.lefeat hrfore pullinit nut a ft..7 . 7~. f>.2
\"ICtory nvl!r Jeff Bnrnw111k nf 8'-rkelf'y.
Borow iak , af!rr taking lhfi flr!it ·'''· was learhng 6-S and was ahead nn point&
in the serond befnre Alih" pulled his
1tamr lngrther In win lhr !if'I H,. harf no
dtf11culty laking the der11;ive third t.el.
AlSll winning Thursday were fl)urth·
r.:inked Cliff Drysdale of Sou!h Africa.
f1fth-1ePderl Bob Lutz. ,,l'.ve:nth-11eed~d
.John Newrllmbt of Au11traha. rl~hth-rank~
ed Roy Emeri;on. ninth·11errlerf Chiirlle
PasareJI nf Purrtn R1rn and unrated
Roger T:i ylnr Qf England .
Pa11arel! turned In th~ <'ln,.rst thing In
an upset Thur~ay with ft 4-6. t;.,l , ~4
tri11mph nver tlxlh-rankPd M;i rly Rl.,35e'n
nf Ch1rago. Taylor , whrl had s1dellnei1
llteond-seeded Tom Okker nf The
Netherlands in th .. opening round. tumrd
back Austra ll8n Allan $tone . 7-~. 7·~
Lutz defeated Gr:tham Stillwell or
England, 6--2. ~I ; Newcombe whipp!d
lellow Au11tralian Ray Ruttela. 6-4, 6-4,
Drysdale drubbed Bob Cannichael.
FREMONT, Ca hf -Jim Otto. veteran
center for the Oakland Raiders of the Na·
tional Football Le.ague, filed papers here
ThW"sday as a candidate for the city
council.
Low Scores in Hawaii
The 34·year-old otto i11 one of 18 can·
didates for three vacant seats. The city
of 110,000 will hold its munici pal elections
April 4. •
VIENNA -An arsonJst attempted to
&el fire Thursday tn the home of HP.ini
Pruckner, president or the Austrian
Olympic Committee. apparently tn pr~
test alleged fallur!: of Austrian officials l.o
withdraw their team 1tfter Olympie d11-
quallficalon of Karl Schram.
HONOWLU <APl -'"That's abou t 811
good as I know how to play," chunky UOb
Murphy aaid after po11Ung a 11parkllng 65
for ll three-way share o( the top spot in
the Hawatlan Open gol! tournament.
The red-haired Murphy Thursday mov-
ed Into 8 tie with Dave Eichelberger anti
Grier Jones In the ev,.nt that offer& a
$40.000 fir111 prize.
There ... as aome spectacularly low
gcortng a.a the 1trongeat field of the year
took advantage: of the mild temper1tures
and near-perfect conditions. Ha lf I.ht field
-72 players -broke par 72.
"That'& wtiat tM people want to ~e."'
said Lee Trevino, In con~ntton with 1 63.
''They comt out lo~ birdies and e11Je1,
You get your leader• shooting twtt (Ir
three ove:r par llnd the people are gnlnc
to say, 'he ll , J can M that ,' •nd go oft
and play r.mnewhere ."
TIM wtth Charll'.t f.oody were tq
Elder. Curtis Sllford, Jim Ftrrell;Marty,
F'leckman and New ~aland'&, John
L<>Isw. Subeequently he went into therapy and
over the oes t six months was able to be
taken off the breathing machine arxt
buUd up hi1 endurance to where he rould
sit up wt1hout fainting.
Bob tries to coowy the fee.line ht bas
had since: hit life wu lumed 1rouod by
lhQ1t Injurltl: . · · .. Anyone can go over tn a comer and
cry .... on. 1e.veral OCCMloni 1 etitd. And
there were times when I thought. 'get,
maybe It wouldn't be 10 bad if it were all
over' (that he'd hive been kllle11 In the
acc ident ). But thole llmtt are g'ett.ing to
bt fewtt •nd rewer .
"Before f was a loner -I did things
with my body. But now I have to do
something with my head to do something to IUl'Vive. School was never 1 big thing
to me before -1 ne'Ver got Into studies
unless the teachtt wa1 i'ltere!ling."
MU..ls .-Y• il's tough lo get back lnlo
the routine ol lltudy\J!g. "!l's dllflcull lo
leant to concentrate again and studying
Is a slow proceSA because I have to tum
the pages with ,. chin slick to rt11d."
U.S. Hockey Team Trips Swiss, 5-3 ,
"The toughest moments llrf. when you
rJallu you can't be with your friends and
do the things th.at ™'ve bee• tmportant to
yoo all your Ille.
"I still have poolll•e lhougllls lhal
..,mtc1a1 IO<liethlnc will haplpen lhot 1
can mO'c ~" be ll1J.
Mlktll A,YI U thlll cloy -. he would
finl jump ... Ind down kr Joy : then he'd
He toot the first ex::im by uying his
quiz answer1 Into a ta pe recorder.
Asked what he l!I prcparini;: hlmM!lf for .
~tikels responds: "1 don't feel I'm ready
lo make that kind of decision ri~t now
... I just hope to tvcntually find my
plaef In lilt."
And if determination :tnd courage are
any tlnd of meaturing Mvk-e for ~
in such an mdeavor, Bob Mikeb 1Utt:ly
will find lh•l platt.
SAPPORO. J•pan (UPI) -The United
States gaintd entry into lhe ClaSI A
hodtey oompeUtion today at the 1972
Winter Olympic games but did not fare
very wtll in either of the two gC;ld mtdal
even ti.
Ke\'ln Ahearn and Tim Sheehy, former
Boston CoUege st.an, each scored t w o
goab as lhe U.S. lt>m downed
SW'iturland 5--3. The Swiss tied the game
11 3-3 earty in tht th\rd period bot were
onable lo ketp lhe tanb from further
acoring. .
ln the gold medal S,OOJ.meter ipeed
1ksUng event, towering Dutchman Ard
Schenk braved 11wlrhng wlOO, and falling
OnChannel4
11:30, J J :30 Tonight
snow to ca pture the Tn"rlalboo with a
Ume of 7 minutes: Zt81 &ecQnds.
Schenk will lry lor anolh<r gold mtdal
today at 5l'lO mP.tl'.rs ronsldere:d hi1
weakest distance If he lr1umph.'I.
bowevtr, ht will be fht choict ll1 tM
1.$00-·~ltr and 10,000.mtter r1ee1.
The otbl'.r gold med1I at 1t.1ke today
wa1 won by Vlacht1lav Veden lne. a 30-
year-old &lvltt Army offictr wM took the
40-kllometer cros!I country fikl rice.
The be1t the Am~rie.1n1 Cf)U)d do In Ult
goltl medal l'.Vl'.nta were 10th In the 1pted
!-katlng -arhlevtd by D11niel Carroll of
St lrols -and ~th in the crM5-country
by Mloh>tl Elllnt nf Ouron~o. Col<>
World ch11mpton Beatrts Schuba of
AuAtrla tooi 1 Mrong lead aver Julie
Lynn llolmt141>I Nor11> Hollywood 11lrr
' three of tht 1u: comp.iltory flgurH fl\
women'• flguri skatma.
Miu Schub1 was aw1rdttt 1.T7 Ii f!Oinll..
Miss Holme& •• second with 43A 5 pttlnt•
1M U S. champton J .. ne:-L l..ynn 4'f
Rockford, Ill , rank• th1rl1 with 478 I
P'Jinll
The XI Wtnter Olym r11ct f rint1nur1 v.-
day wtth four l'>ki medalA 11t 11.ake. in.
rlud1ng th--game f1r11t ilamoor ntnt --
10. !Idles' downhill Other cold m..tai.
in compttltl.on todAy are !hf: 1~m11'
boblltd. lhe lllf).m.itr mtn•1 oUUac Ind
lht Nodic combined
\
If ~ PILOT
Edison
Quintet
AtCdM
A m•jor hurdle to Corona
del Mar High'1 lrvtne Le.ague
basket bat I championship
aspitatlons looms tonight as
Edison's Chargtr1 invade the
CdM confines ln the loop's
--
Wives'
Image
Changes
By LAURIE BECKLUND ,
Of 11111 Dill)> "1191 S11ff
bis t .. 1. •
Coach Tandy Gillis' Corona t
If Jeri Roseboro has
anything to say about it. the
1tereotype image of t h e
athlete's wife -a sweet, at·
tractive homebody who lives
only to raise her children and
attend her husband's games -
is on the way oul.
del Mar Sea Kings are tied '-ii•• with Los Alamitos for the •
circu1t lead and must wln to Wife or the Angels• butlpe.n
coach, John Roseboro. she is
in the process of organizing
pro athletes ' wives into a
group called The Supporters.
keep pace with Los Al, which
la a heavy favorite to crush
winless Santa Ana Valley.
Tipoff in each case ls S
o'clock. other clashes with
pride only at stake includes
Fountain Valley at Magnolia
and Estancia at Costa Mesa .
Coach Dave Mohs' Chargers
snapped a four-game klsing
streak Wednesday and if the
combination of 6-4 Rod Snook
and guards Dirk. Zirbel and
Greg Parker can cllck Jn a
successful manner similar to
their efforts Wedne!day it
could mean trouble for the Sea
Kings.
Parker has accounted for 42
polnls In his last two !tarts
and hia field goal percentage
was t:> percent against Estan-
cia (12of15 from outaide).
Corona's offenJe is well
balanced but Jt was the lruiide
rebounding prowt!! of Mike
Sevier that turned the tide for
CdM against Edison in first
round battle.
Coach Dave Brown's Foun-
tain Valley Barons will be
trying to snap back e.fter near-
ly upsetting Lo11 Alamitos
Wednesday before falling by a
1Jngle field goal.
His combination of 6-91h
Scott Reider and 6-5 Bill Burns
complete the Barons• re--
hounding strength wh.ile the
host Sentinels present a lineup
that ranges from 6-4 to 6-2
right down the Une.
Mesa is favored to dump
Estancia again in what figures
to be a high scoring test.
Coach Emil Neeme's host
Mesans are scoring at a n-
point rate. But they lead the
league in poillts allowed -80
points per outlng.
Coach Dave Carlisle's
Estancia quintet will be trying
to end a four-game losing
streak and even its series with
Mesa after losing a first round
battle with the Mustangs., 79-
16.
1111VIHI LIAGUI LIAOllll P'l•"ter, ltl'loel 0 T" .lv1. ~ terr•ll, AW111oll• ' 1'0 1;.• Atchtr Co1!1 ~ ' Iii ' .< • 1-1rl M11nOllt -t 17.J ~. l'..,1~n, (oe Al•f'J'llloe I U 11.1 '· 71111 ~nook. l!:dl1on ,,, 1•.l loltotll"t, $.A Vt l. 1 1!4 1'-l
Area Fives
Top Sunset
Cage Slate
With Marina Higti's Vikings
100-1 favorites to thrash in-
vading Anaheim tonight. in-
ter~t centers around Hun-
t l n g t on Beach and
Westminster in their bid for a
CIF AAAA basketball playoff
berth.
Marina's Vikings have a
two-game bulge over Hun-
tington Beach in S u n s e t
League circles while the latter
has a one-game advantage
over Westminster.
Huntington Beach plays host
to upstart Loara w hi I e
Westminster is al Western.
The othe r loop test is Santa
Ana at Newport Harbor. All
at.art st 8.
Coach Elmer Combs' Hun-
tington Beach Oilers could
manage only a five-point vic-
tory over Loara In first round
action, but they're favored by
a dozen points tonight to stay
In contention for the loop
championsh ip p r o v i d I n g
somewhere along the line
someone gives them help with
an upsel of lhe Marln1 coo-
lillllent. Coech Don Leavey'1
WutmlnsW' Lions have the
wughest task with their trek
to Wertern. The host Pioneers,
delplte losing to Westmlmter
tn first round activity, ire
f1t'Ored to end the Lions' title
dream.I and put" 1 severe dent
Jn their bid to tie or overtake
8'mtia&ton Beach .
~ C2lll(" IJDOnl the Western
... 116-S junjor Mike I>Jnn,
tf» _,..,leading !COrer !or
Ille llOOllCI atralghl yeor.
1feslem'I hopes !or playoff
compe!ltloll went down the Grain • .......,.,. wllen Marina
llold on fA>r a 16-M l<l•mph.
M-bJla cooch J I m
lllepboiaS' MaMa V~ng1 •P-~ ao ban thlm:1 ea1y 11
WlnJlll Anl.helm. trlu lo avert
Ill 17111 lltrol&bl Jou ol lh• ........
._ L..-VI "84M•1 ., .. 1i11111t e tP' AVL = 111rtl . -1u1u:1
.. The idea is limitless as I
see it," she said. ··1've run
across so many interesting
and talented wives but they're
so oflen content just to stay at
home. An organit~tion like the
Supporters can draw them out
more. help them become fulle r
persons."
Jeri -as she likes lo be
called because "Mrs. John
RosebOro is fine. but my
mother named me Jeri" -
foresees the groop spoO!Oring
charity events, fashion shows
and fan tours to cities where
their husbands &Ii! playing.
"Thf!re's fun involved and
there are funds involved," she
said. "We'll get together
monthly, t::ilk and eat and
meet the wives of other
sporl..9. We'll also ra ise mone.y
for charity, maybe by having
fashion-sho w-luncheons where
the girls model."
The Supporters also hope to
open a boutique lo display and
i;ell the artistic work of the
women, such as sculpture,
painting .and needlework.
"So man y of !Jle wives just
keep their ta lents l-0
themselves and are content to
become involved in their
husband.!' little circle," she
said .
MONARCH LEADER -Mater Dei's Rick Kniffin (33) plucks a rebound away
from University's Dan Stuart (44) and Tom Mullinix. Kniffin leads coach Jerry
Tardie's Angelus League cagers in both scoring and rebounding and will be in
the forefront when the J\1onarchs visit league-leader Servite tonight.
"I get on my bandbox
sometimes because l really
feel it is necessary tor the
girls to be themselves. This
doesn't have anything lo do
with women's lib. It's just that
women need to realize. they
can be better wives by becom-
i ng (uller pers on s
themselves."
Chandos Left Vacancy,But ...
Shoes are Filled by l(niffin
"I mean, how many times
can you clean the house"!
Husbands a re continually
growing. But I've seen so
many wives thal never get out
or the house so they don't even
have anything to talk l!lbout,
except maybe my son Johnny
broke his finger, or Susie got
an A in math. And that only
By PHIL ROSS
01 Tiie Dtllr '°\1 Dt Slelf
Admittedly, Mater Dei High
basketball coach Jerry Tardie
is firm on hi.s opinion that
Ralph Chandos (circa 196S-70)
is one of the best, if not the
best, players to ever don the
Scarlet and Gray for Monarch
hardwood action.
While Chandos graduated
two years ago, he's left his
imp ression on the Monarchs'
varsity. and that imprint is
stamped all over the current
Mater Dei star -6-4 Rick
Kniffin.
Now a senior and the
acknowledged team leader for
the Angelus League entrants,
Kniffin was promoted to the
varsity as a sophomore after a
worthwhile freshman cam-
paign as the sixth man on the
junior varsity squad.
Immediate success was not
imminent, howev~r. !<inc e
Kniffin spent the better part
o! the varsity season his soph
year riding the Monarch
bench.
Why?
Chandos was the main
reason.
Then a 6·5 senior and as
much a team spark. at that
time as Kniffin is at the
present, Chandol5 captured a\1 -
league and all-Orange County
honors after leading the team
in scoring and rebounding for
a pair of seasons.
But, during daily practice
sess ion s, the player assigned
lo guard Cbandos and lo be
ready to replace him in case
of any unforeseen roadblocks
in an actual game situalion,
wa s a 6-3 soph named Rick
Kniffin.
And loday. Tardie claims.
"Rick always guarded Ralph
in practice. Playing against
him every day made Rick 1
better player and it helped
him gf!t started when he really
needed It."
Monarchs Seek Upset
Over Servite Tonight
When the 1972 Angelus
League basketball season is
reviewed, Mater Dei High
followers will be able to look
back and pick out a two-g1me
set that made or broke the
Monarchs' campaign.
'The lint hall of tllat RI Is
slated for tonij:ht when coach
Jerry T a r d I e ' 1 revlt.a.llzed
Monarchs inv1dc the confines
of Servite. possessor o f
Orange C.Ounty's longest cur-
rent win streak at 13.
Tipoff is slated for 8 o'clock
11nd Tardie opines his quintet
must execute near perfectly to
turn a first-round setback
around on the Friars.
"We can't afford to lose the
ball on turnovers. And
although we're getting great
rebounding from Rick Kniffin,
we need more help Jn that
area," says Tardle.
The Monarchs have turned
things around wlt.h three
straight loop conquests and
11re tied wltb Pius X for se--
cond place. 'Tl\ey host Piu. X
Tuesday night 1n the other half
of the lwln bill tllat will doclde
Mater De.J 's championship and
C!F ptarol! file.
T1nlle crtdlls the play of
oen1or cu1n11 John Adllt\1 and I
Jert Kiley for much of the
Monarch.!' recent s u cc es s
along with the arrival of 1
bench In Dave Nanry and
Steve Martindale.
Nanry w1s back in action
sparingly against Sl. Paul
Tuesday after missing the St.
Anthony conquest becauae of
injury.
Volleyball
Tourney Set
Orange Coast College will
ho.sl • JO.team wlleyball
tournament Saturday begin-
ning at 9:30 with the publlc ln-
vlltd to attend free of charge.
Tht bosl Pirate. wlll be
favomd. Included in the li!t of
entrants Are :
Los Angel~ V11ley, El
Camlno. Cypr@ss, Pasadena,
Lona Beach, Mt. S-n Antonio,
S.ddleback, Fullerton 1nd l,A
Southwest Jn addition to lhe
Plr•tea.
Future plans call for a
le:1sue to be formed with these
JO ochoof& tnl'Otvtd.
Finals an IChedwed to fel
under way ol 4::111.
I
I
The fact still stands that takes five minutes," she said.
Chandos is the tallest regular Aided by Sue Perranoski,
Tardie has ever coached. But, wife of Detroit pitcher Ron,
although an inch shorter than Mrs. Roseboro has sent ques-
the ex-Monarch star, Kniffin tioMaires to the spouses of
rates right up !here with the Los Angeles Lakers.
Chandos in scoring ability and Dodgers, Rams and Angels,
rebounding prowess. telling them about the group.
Tidbits of Kniffin·s current -----------performance include a 16.2
scoring average , a 14.4 re-
bounding norm and shooting
figures which surpass 50 per·
cent from the fie!d and 65 per-
cent from the foul line.
La st season, in pacing the
Mona rchs to ~ 16·9 overall
record and a 5-5 third place
Angelus deadlock with St.
Anthony. Kniffin cranked in
points at a 13.7 rate to le::id I.he
learn in point-producing.
Says Tardie, ''Rick is about
the same size as last year.
v.·hen he played forward for
us. But he.'s our center this
year and works out of either a
high or low post.
"He's pretty tough in low
but he can also shoot from the
high post, with a goOO IS-foot
range.
GWC HO STS
HARBOR FIVE
Golden West Co 1 I e g e.' s
basketball team will attempt
to get back to the .500 mark in
Southern Ca 1 if or n i a Con-
ference play tonight when tl1e
Rustlers host LA Harbor. It
begins al 8.
Coach Dick Strick! in· s
Rusllerz droppe<I an 8()-66
decision t-0 tough Rio Hondo
Wednesday, running Golden
West's circuit mark to 3-4.
LA Harbor's Seahawks come
Into the tilt with a 3-3 con·
ference record, including 1 53-
56 victory over the Rustler! in
the first round.
"If I had to choose one over -----------
the other, Rick is a better
scorer than Chandos was but
he's not as good on the
boards."
As of late. Kniffin's Inside
play has been comple.mented
well by the outs ide shooti ng or
Greg Green and Dave Nanry,
among others.
However, his biggest strides
have been in the area of
speed, where, according to
Tardie, "it'1 bis bi 1 c est
weakness.
"He did work hard In
bwldlng up hJs speed Jaal fall
in cross country and be also
worked hard on lut 1prlng'•
weight and exercise program.
"While h.is speed Is really
Improved. I stiU think he
should b<llld up his speed
even more by rwining in trick
or something."
Tardie ftels J<niffin , a Con-
necticut naUve who moved lo
califomia jU!l before his
fre&bman year, can play col-
lege ball, elth<r on tile Junior
college or small college level.
"He shoot.I well enough
from the outSlde to play a
forward spot In college," adds
the Monarch coach.
He may not have Ralph
Chandos around anymore, bul
Jerry Tanlle Isn 't ashamed kl
admll Chlndoa' sboe1 hove
bttn amply !Uled by Rlclt
KniUln.
HB Retains
Swim Title ·
~luntington Beach High hung
onto the perpetuaJ trophy
giv~n at the Sixth AMual Hun-
tington Beach girls' awlm
meet al the HB pool Monday
afterooon. '
Thirty Polnta 1bove Its
closest competJtor, ooach Julie
Murphy'• HunUnaton team
(ll:J l de I ea 1 e"<n1e11hborlng
schools Marina (52), Edi&on
151) and Fountain Valley (38)
for the .steond str&lght year. ..,.,..,,,.
100 MtdlW tt ... ., -M..u.ll!wtM ••Kl'I -T1¥1tr , ·-AllerMrni, Qllle. TifM.:...1~·'·
" ... -··· '"" ""'" !'·' SO lrM•tlltOl.1 -K•lhti IM llfM:
•1L trtdtvkfll11 ,,,..,.., -••N$110tt !"VI ttmt ~ l :OS.J
ro:;-11,..; ~11-r~"1J.:r llmt: 5'J\ l11H1rtl\I -He~ CMI llll'ltl
"jf, lti;ftttOlt:e -Cl'ltfelk• IHll lfl"fM~ ~ •. :!Oii P'r" lt1le"t -H11t1ll!Wfln a..cft '"""I tt-. A~. Cele ). Time~ :JO.t' Vtniltf ... rw"' ""r.1 • ., _ H1111tl111!9ll "ir IY,.,., Wiii ~ .. O'"""*", A,,. ~ , 11'114~ t:OOi , .. -W•' II. T : U,t 1r;••t1trolc1 -0..7Jftamt !Mil
l lt'2'!1:.C.1!1.f\lel """"' -0-C.OIUIOr .. 11. '""''~"·' Div!,.. -••it•r CMllltt.t ,., •• 911 ,..,.. -"'°II*' Of J, Tltnt: Jt.•.
lJ •utflrf,... -Cr1wfor' ll>. Tll'llf: "' i1 1.0tttea:e -CvlllNl'l !Ml. Tim• UJ
... ''" llller -M1111Mllflrofl .. tdt "-s ,......,,.,.,..,.,, "''''''''• ~ • Tl"M: Sl.:t.
# J' • • • ~
• 20-30 Club Ill
Of Diahlos' Plans
Riding the cre1t of a five-
game winning stre1k. Mi ssion
Viejo's Diablos take direct
tnm al Katella's pacesetting
Knighl3 tonight in a Crestvitw
Leaguf! basketball crucial at
Mission Viejo.
At the same time, the San
Clemente 1'ritons will return
home with a more mode.st
three-game victory skein to
protM"t against Tu st 1 n ' s
Tillers.
Ot her C re s I v i e w con-
frontations find Villa Park in-
vading Orange and El Modena
engaging in combat with
Foothill at the latter site.
All varsity starling times
are at 8 o'clock with junior
varsity preliminaries on tap
on all fronts at 6:30.
Coach Pal Roberts's Diablos
rurrently sit in a lie for sec-
ond with El Modena at 6-3.
and keep him off the offensive
boards will make. a difference.
"Then,· we'll also have to
worry about their 1-2·1-1 press,
which is just unreal and which
1s their rea l weapon.''
Robert! hopes lo slow the
tempo considerably, although
he disclaims any similaritle..!
to his anticipated offense and
the all-out stall wh ich Notre
Dame threw at UCLA in a rf"-
cent nationally televised col~
legiate contest.
All of Katella's starters
score in double figures, with
that fast-breaking lineup in-
cluding Hutton (15.4),
forwards Stan Whieldon 114.41
and Steve Sneegas (12.91 and
guards Steve Pacho (10.l ) and
Mark Steinmeyer (19.6).
The latter leads the circuit
in point-producing and is just
a notch ahead of Mission Vie-
jo'1 leaping S-1 junior Gil
Normandie, who averages 18.1
points and 1 S reboundl per
outing .
At San CI em en le,
meanwhile, coach Job n
Baker's Tritons (5-4 ) are just
a gan1e in back of tht. Diab!~
El Modena duo and the home
court advantage should lift
them above a Tiller five which
they conquered, 59-s.'l, in th e
first round at Tustin.
Forwards Dan Nau lllld
r-.1ike Dowling have identical
15 ppg averages for the
Trilons and t~ir shooting has:
combined with a defense
which ranks second in fewest
points ::iJlowed only behind the
Diablos.
CllllTVll!W LIAOUI LIADlllS l't1~1r, l cl!DOI 0 T" .lYf.
1 !>10lnm1vtr. 1(1!1111 t 116 1'' l: Norm1..0l1, M. Vitia t 1'3 U.1 . WtlJll•n•, Foolhlll t hf 1'·' ~. TlveMn, E! Moden• I lU 111 $. H~tron, 1(1!•111 llt U j But both clubs already trail
the unbeaten Knights (9-(l) by
three games with just five re-
maining on the loop slate. Area in Brief
Therefore, a more realistic
goal for the Diablos to shoot at
is a runnerup finish and the
cinching of a CIF AAA
postseason playoff berth.
Jokingly, Roberts admits,
"we call Katella the 21}.30 Club
because they've been wirming
all of their games by 20 to 30-
poinl margins.
Laguna Coach
Squashes Rumor
"But," he adds on .11: more
serious note," we just hope to
regain the poise which we've
shou·n in the past few games
and play. well. a pe.rfe<:t game
... that 's what it lakes to
beat these guys."
Prior to embarking on thelr
blitz l.o five s u cc es s i v e
triumphs, the Diablos were
dealt their last defeat by these
same Knights -that one a 70-
54 setback at Kateila .
"We've oulrebounded our
opponents in the last five
games," says Roberts, "and
that's what well have to do in
this one.
"Our ability to contain Jeff
Hutton fKatella's 6-Jlf.z center)
Laguna,
Valencia
Showdown
It's showdown time for the
Laguna Beach High basketball
team tonight as coach Jerry
Fair take s his playoff con-
tending Artist team lo Valen-
cia for a headon clash with the
Tigers with tipoff at 8.
Laguna and Valencia are
tied for !he runnerup position
in the Orange League behind
undefeated El Dorado. Each
sports a 6-2 record in league
play and chances are that only
one u•i!l make the annual CIF'
pla yoffs.
Tn ;i. first round meeting
between the two I e a m s ,
Laguna annexed a 59-57 vic-
lory on a last second layup by
Nick Gillespie after taking a
perfect pass from mate. Norm
Bedell.
"This was Laguna's biggest
win in three years." an elated
Fair said following the game.
Th is time around he is hop-
ing his Artists can overcome a
Valencia home court ad-
vantage. Unfortunately for the
Artis~. they not only lost to
league leader El Dorado in
first round action but to
Sonora as well.
Tonight's action closes out a
six-game road slate for the
Artists (in league play ) with
the final three contest on the
home court.
Fair will start a combine in-
cluding Gillespie and Bedell
along with David Klesselbach,
Vince McCaUa and Chuck
Corwin.
This combine shot at 1
creditable 47 .8 percent In
defeating Saddleback Tuesday
In preparation for the game
that is now the. key to the en·
Ure Artist seuon.
ln other Orange League ac·
tion tonight, JelT)' Redman's
University High T r o J a n 1
entertain Sonora.
Rtdman's charges hope to
move up the Orange League
ladder with a vi ct o r y.
Unive rsity ls currently 2-6 in
league play while Sonora ii 3-
l .
Travel OK
Laguna Beach High football
coach Hal Akins has squashed
rumors that he 'll be leaving
the Artists
It h::is been a prevalent
ruroor that the popular Akins
would accept a si milar post at
San Clemente High it the offer
was made.
"I've decided lo stay at
L::igun::i. My allegiance and
loyalties to Laguna are just
too strong," Akins told the
DAILY PILOT today.
Thus the vacancy at San
Clemente created by the
dismissal of Tom Eads re-
ma ins open and "Probably
won 't be filled until March.
"It was a difficult decision
to make but I've informed the
principals at San Clemente
and here at Laguna Beach of
my decision.
"I've been here a Jong time
and suddenly "'-hen lt really
came down to making the
dec ision I just couldn't bring
myself to leave Laguna.
"1 decided the greatest
challenge is here at Laguna.
l'm just an incurable op-
ti mist," says Akins.
Akins' response was to an
exclusive DAILY P IL 0 T
report Monday that lie was
seriously considering th e
move.
"I'm kind of glad the story
broke because it helped me
m3ke up my mind," says
Akins.
Rea Wins, 43-40
Coach Dave Stowe 's Rea
School b::iske.tball team of
Costa r-.1esa 3d va:nctd lo the
semifinals of the second an·
nual junior high invitational
cage classic at !he Tustin
Boys' Club Wednesd ay by
defeating Columbus Tustin, 43·
40.
Rea played Wilshire junior
high of Fullerton this af-
ternoon in semifinal action.
Wil shi re, the pre-tournament
favorite, defeated St. Cecelia
of Tu stin in opening play, 74-
38.
FV Sorcer
Fountain Valley's Barons
tangle at home with St. John
Bosco f'riday at 3:15 p.m.
after coach Bob Rathmann's
Barons dropped a 1--0 Southern
Soccer League decision ta
unbeaten Bosco Tech Wed·
nesday afternoon at Fountain
Valley.
Wlth the win. Bosco Tech
remained in first place. while
Fountain Valley's record drop-
Barr Hurls
'72 Opener
Mark Barr wilt he the
alartlng ptlcher for Golden
Weal College Saturday when
the Rust.Im open the 1972
se110n again.st invading Sad-
dleback. Tbe game b at noon.
Barr will split the pitching
dutlu with 1J10ther right·
hander. Ken Murillo. Both are
aophomores.
In lhe Infield, Bud B•lllng
will be the atartinc: catcher,
with Blaine C..lder at ftr1t,
Mike Dodd or Gone Recl>-
&telner at ll«Ond, TonI Cresci
at third and Scott Wilson at
lhort.
Will McCan..v will be in
left field with Gary Simpson
The C!F Southern Section or Phll McCartney In ctnler
haa voted to rescind lta rule and Pat Curran in right.
regarding a 300-mUe limit for Rustler coach Fred Hoover
prep 1thle:tlc te1m1 to travel. Is expected to atart lefty Dave
Bqlnning In tile fill . hiJ!b · Klungreller Wtdnesd•y morn-
ochools wfll he allowed lo Ing when tile Rustlers hoal
travel out ol state providing College of th• canyons It
approval !& cranted by the 10::111 In lbe openln1 round of
s<ctlon. llale and n1Uonal the Orallfe Coul baseball
!ederotloos: toutnamenL _
'
ped to 2-4 in league and 2-5-1
overall.
The Baron junior varsity
lost to Bosco Tech Wednesday,
2·1.
OCC Golf
Boosted by four lettermen
and a handful of top freshmen
prospects, Orange Co a 1 t
College 's golf team figures lo
have another winning cam·
palgn in '72.
Last season, coach Ra y
Rosso's Pirstes compiled a ll-
S season recofd .end finished
with a 9-3 South Coast Con·
ference mark, good enough for
second place.
John Frees. Bob Randle,
Tom Schauppner and Bob
Whittington are the lettermen. '
The freshmen s e e k i n g
starting berths include Bruce
Carlisle and Ken Husk of
Fountain Valley, Steve Ken!,
Ulman r..1iller and K e 11 y
Young of Costa Mesa, Jeff
Sarno of Garden Grove and
Brad Sipp! .and Steve Smith of
Corona del Mar.
Pilot Five
Puts Down
Oil ers, 48-19
The DAILY PfLOT basket·
ball team oulSCQred Hun-
tington Beach J·ligh coactie~.
48-19. Th ursd11y afternoon in A
-40-minute game-like .scrim-
ma ge al the latter's gym ar
both teams gird for the big St.
Valent in e 's Oay cage
doubleheader at the Hun·
tington gyn1 ,
That show ma tc hes Hun·
tington tutors with Marina
coaches while the DAILY
PILOT takes on CIF com·
missio ner Ken Fagans and his
crew .
Unfortunately for the DAI-
LY PILOT , the 48·19 bulge
racked up was the count on
personal foul s. On th•
scoreboard, the coaches took 1
100-36 decision in five quarters
after the regulation match
ended in e lie.
outside of having mor1
height, youth . speed and
talent, the coaches showed Ill·
tie edge.
Steve Setterlu nd struck a
personal blow for ju1tice by
sending sports editor GleM
White sprawling to the floo r
with a severely sprained
ankle.
And the duo of J•ck Olson
and George Clemens ate t.he
writers alive on the boards
while Navajo chld Hank
LeJchtfrltd WIS UJ\atoppoble
on the drive.
, Etmer fthe Gr01t) Comb.
uw limited action and w11
$hut out Qn the scoreboard by
the Scribes.
OIJOn, C lemens •nd
Le.lchtfrled shared 1eorlng
honors for the co1clte1 with 24
apiece while White and Cr1tc:
Shell tallltd ID apiece for the
loaers. Phil Ross scored t lsht
while llkin1 only 50 1hota for
the losers.
The D~IL'I' Pl.LOT fac<O
Marina Tuelday It 2 IL
Marina.
!Juntlnglon coaches a r •
trying 1<1 get a come wltll tho
Liker a.
Ticket. for the doubleheader
are now on salt at Marina and
Hunllng1on wJtll adult ducata
priced 11 71 c:<nta whllo
children 1nd lludellt1 1et In
for 50 cents. ·
Varsity clubl ol the "'°
achooll l]lilt the proceeds and
lhe !Int 1ame Feb. II ii !let
for 7 p.m .
•
• , • 'j ' ' " -
DAJL V PILOT J 7.-
LEGAL NCYnCB Cleaning the Market
SEC See kin g On e Tape for All Exc hange s
1'1US1
P11blilhN o ...... Coe>! Dell'/ ll'llDI, LEGAL NOTICE
J 1,,.,1rv It, 11. ,,, 1nd 1'1br111rv •·1------~~------I
ltl? 103·72 11211
LEGAL NCYnCE
HOTIC• 01' Dll'AULT ANO
ILl!CTION TO SILL UNDlll:
0 1'10 01' Tll:UST
NOTICE 15 HEll:EIY GIVEN; Tl\11
l'ICTITICUS I USIM•ll UNITED STATES HOLDING COM,AHY.
NAMI ITATl!Ml'NT I cor1>0r1rlo.,. It du!v eP1>0l"41d l rulllt
Ttlt followl"" Pft•M>nl t rt dolnt under t dffd ol lr111I dt!ed Julv 1, , ... ,
bl.lllnul 11: ••tcvled b• JAME~ W. HUNT Ind MAAY
AILE PAINTING CONTlllA(TOll.5, \llAGI NIA HUNT, hu1bill(I tnd wilt, ti
1'.0 . l o• \Pl', 11Jt TrtdltWlnd1 L"" !otnr nn111n, 11 Trv1!or, to w cur·e c1trl1in
Newport lt1ch, Ct llt. <>blltlllDN In t1vor ol J AMES L
Jack Wl lltr (!1r11.. 113t T•1d1wlr>t11 HAYDEN Ind BEANICE (, HAYOEH.,
l11 .. NniollOl'I lttcll. (11\1. llUllllnd Ind wilt , ti lotnr ltrttll .... II
By JOHN CUNNIFF"
NE W YOflK (AP i -There
.&re elemenls or an old . old
story in the report just releas-
ed by lhe Securit1e.T and Ex-
change Co nl m i s s i o n nn
restructuring the 111 t Io 11 : s
stock n1arkcl s to 111ak!' them
simple, direct and open.
There will ht-lhree \\'Ork -
Ing committees. for example,
whose job will be to study.
report and propose on the
policies outlined. Inherent in
s u ch rec o m mendations,
neces sary 11s they might bt. is
delay. GltO'H Edw1td J1tnl<lns, lfOI Ht!I ltftlllclt rv. racor.S.d July U, 19'1, 11 I~·
AYt .. ""' Cl1. Hun!l1111on 8e1c11. (1111. l!rument nutnlltt l :t'tl, In Booll "'4, fl
Thll llotln111 h llt'l11g conduClld by I P11t1 160, 01 0Hltlt l RK11rd1 I" !hit oll\ct
,,.r1n111111t.,. ol 11\t A~ord1r cf O•t /\tt County NEW
' • OAILY P ILOT $1111 ,.,,.ti There are fresh e.len1ent!I
too. The SEC con formed its in-
tention nf seeking one tape lo
report the pric:es of stocks on
111 11 ex changes -and even the
pr1ces of some stocks not so
listed.
JM;IO, W Clt rlt Ct1Uor.,!1. dt•t•lblng l1rM1 11'!1r1ln 11; •
T'111 1111.,,.,1n! tllNI wl111 !ht County Per Otld o1 Tru1t
Cltrll. el Or1nk Coo..nl• on: Jin 11, 1f11. •tld olllltlllons lncludl"" One nolt tor 1111 Bw l11v1r1v J. Mtddo•, Oo.,utv Counlv 11flnclo1l """ or d .000,00;
Clt rk. Tiit! !111 bln1Ucl1I lnltrlll undt r 1ud\
l'llJ21 deed ot lrv11 1nd tl\1 ebllt1llon1 st<;ured
Publl11>1d Or1nt1 Co1~1 D•llv Pllo!, Thtrebv 1r1 pr1wnt1v Mld by lht un-
J1nu1..,. ll, I nd Febru1rv 4, 11. 11, dertloned; TPl1I • br11Ch of, 1nd d•!•ul1
lfl! lll·I? fn, int oblltarlon• IO< which 1uch d19d of
LEGAL NOTICE
l•ull !1 H<urltv h.11 or::curretl Jn !hi t P•Y·
meot h•• n<>I blln m1<1t 01:
F ICTITIOUS •VSIP<l l!SS
HAMI! I TATl!Ml!NT
Tnt 111vmenr <tut 1! •11rll ltJ\ 1r>d t ll
lUb11<1uenl ln"e!lmtnh.
lhtt bY •••son rn1r1ol. me und1riltned,
orts.nl ben1!1c!1rv unoor such aeed ol
Tt>I lollOwlnt 1>1no111 1r1 dolnt !rv1!, "11 executed •nd dellvt r..:I to s•ld
bu1l11eu t1: duly 1PP0111t9d Trulllt. 1 wrl"f"
SPECTRA AO\IERTI Sl ~G. ~11, C•m· Otcltrt!lon ol Oeflul1 •nd Of:om•nd !or
f>UI Orlve, Su1!1 1·1, New..orl Be1ch, 11lt , 1rl<I h11 d1..01l!Ht wlln 111<1 duty 11>-
C1llf. t:iu.o. POlnled Trullff, 111ch dt ed ct !r111t 1nd 11! Otnnll W. WUll1m1. O& 01hll1 Slret !, dor::umt MI 1vldt nclrig cb!lt tlloro1 1tcur1te1
Cora111 oet Mt•. thereby, 1nd 1111 dec;l1reo 1nd t1a.1
M1rc!11e A, Newm1n, 4.ll Othlll hl'rlbY dt<ltre 111 w m1 1Kur9d th.lrtbY
Stre1tl, Coror11 dt l M1r. lmmectlt lt lY dill Ind ptY•bll t nd hll
TM• bu1ln111 It bllnt conducted b'I' • t lecll<I' I nd dots h1r1bY ltlt<I to Ct UW !hit
Gtftll't l P1r1nt11hl11. lru1t Pt-rly ta bl told 10 11Tlt!Y ll'lt
Otnnl1 W, WllU1m1 abtlt11!ons MC11rtd IPltrtt>v.
Tllll 1111 ..... nr llltd w ill! 1t!1 Coulll'I' COAST INVESTMENTS.
Cl1rl! ol Orin" COllnf'f on: J t n. 11, itn. 1 C1Ularnlt corPo••llon
I Y t lYttlV J . AVddal< Dll'U!Y County ly It/ ROY It. McC1r<ll1,
Cltrk. "r11.
l'U1>11 IY /I/ Ju1!111p lllch.lrdl, l'ubnVild Or1nt1 Coia1t Ot!IY "!IOI, Ste.
Jll'lul rY 11. 21, 21 Ind l"tllru1ry •• 1'71 Recorded Dec. :xi. lt11, II !nit. !Mtl, I"
t ).12 ltMo ottlce of tho Or1nu1 County ltecatdt•. -------------1 Rt·rtcarded Jan11•rv 11, ltn , 11 lnllrll· LEGAL NOTlCE men! No. 10525, In !ht afll<• ol the
----Drano• County "'cardu .
NOTtC• TO Cll:l!DITOltl Oiied DKfmtier U, ltll.
SUll'lltlOA COURT 0 1' TH'E P•Jblished Otlftffl (011! 0•11~ Pllol,
ITATI 01' CALll'OANIA l'Oll J1nu1ry fl, 11 I nd February 1, l\,
T HI COUNTY 01' Oll:AHOI lt7! 1Sl·1l
No. A4n ll
E1!1t1 of HtflY L. Wll!l1m" 0.Ctlllil,
NOTICE IS HEltEBY GIVEN lo the LEGAL NOTICE
cr1dller1 ol t~I 1bovt 111m..:I dtcedontt-------------1 l~ll tll Hrl11n1 ht vlng cl1Tm1 1~1ln1I the l'l(TITIOUS IUSIHt:SS
Hid Cltc9dtnl 1r1 <1<1ulrtd 111 Ille Tntm. HAMI! I TATt:Mt:HT
With "'' M(IHl•Y ~OUCllOFI, In th~ 11lllc1 Tiit followlng 11•T1on1 ••• clolnt
of Ill• clt rk ct lht 1bo"'1 1n!ltlld c&.1rt, "' b111lnl11 11:
t11 11r111nt them, w!lh !~e nKIUtry WESTERN MANAGEMENT
Y011Cllltr1."10 !ht unclt Fllon..:I •'!Pit <>tllct SEllVICES, 117 Sou!h Mtln sr .• Stnll
"' 1111 Attorney Aobtrt L. HurnphrtYt , An1, '2101. UeD Ad1m1, Suflt ~~mblr :IOI. Co1t1 Wllll•m L. Owen1, '41t lorinlt Pl1c1.
M~. C1!llornl1 f1611. Wll!Ch 11 11\t Plitt Co1t1 MtH, f1621.
el M ln111 al lht urder1l9n.ld In 1ll tnll· Ltrrv e.imn, 1101 l11c1nd1 ltnt , St n·
11r1 ,..n1lnll!ll 10 "'' •11•11 "' 1&ld c!Ol'Cf. 11 An1, C1. f110$. Mn!, wl!hln toor m11n1111 1tttr 1111 fir1I Thi• bu1lnen I• belnt1 conduc:!ed bv 1
,..11uc111on et 11111 no11c1. G-••I P1rtMr~111.,_
0 1i.d J1 ..... 1rv :Joi. nn. Wllli1m L. Owen1
Eldon L. WllU1m1 L1rry llelmn
Admlnl1lrllor or Ille E1t111 of !ht T"l1 Jltlffnent 111..:t wll~ ti..e County
1bov1 ntmld decedfnt (!erk ol Or1nH Covntv on: Jt n. lt, lt11. 1-.rt 1.. Hum,,.rtYI. 8• llt¥erh' J. M1ddoJ( Dl1111ly (111,1n1y
1• M1rn1, l~lhl Numbtr :JIM, Cl1rk.
CMI• Mt11, C1ll'°"'l1 tUll Tt l· {n 4) ,..._..Sf JI, lt, t rod F•b•111rv ,, II,
164.'1 ..,,........, fir A~ml~lllr•lor
~.il1tled Or•no• Cots!
Jtnul .... 11 t nd F"1bnJI ....
J•nuerv
Delly l',)OI 1t7l
4, II. 11. -------------!
"" LEGAL NOTICE
LEG AL NOTICE
SU P'l ltlOlt COUltT OF THt:
llt-)f tEGAL NOTICE
P'1JU4
D•I!~ Pilot,
F~ru1ry l ,
llM-71
LEGAL NOTICE
IT.t.Tll OP' CALIFO•HIA l'Olt P'ICTITIOUS aUllNESS
THI COUP<ITY 01' 011;ANOI N.o\Mf ST.lTIMt:NT
No, A-11'14 Th• fo!klwlnt o'r1o.n tJ doing bu1ln111 NOTl(I OP' Hf,t,11.ll'fO OP' l'l!TITIOM •l:
l"O• P'llOIATI OP' WILL AND DES llllDUSTRIES, 1$0ol M1rlntrt
CODICIL ANO Ll!TTlllS TISTAMIN-Drive, Nfwparl Be1eh, Ce!lf.
TAll'I' Mr. 0llfltld W. Pro.ii, !50' M1rl.,tr1
Etlt!t ot MABEL A. M ... ll .. LE, Drive, Newpart 811ch. C.1\11.
Otce11ed. Thll bi11ln1n It being cond11ctt'd by An NO'T"ICE 15 HEREB Y GIVEN lh1t lndl~'1:1uil. ~"'tty P'tclllc Nt rlo""I ll1nk h11 !!led Oon•IO w. Prou!
M rl ln 1 HilUon lo• orotltlt ot will I nd Thll slt Tement filtd wl!ll '"'-Coo.mtv
flll' Cocllclt Ind L1!11r1 T1s11m1nt1rv IO Cllrk cf Or•nt• County on: J1....,1rv 1'.
P1tltloner r11er1nc1 lo which 11 m ..:le '°' itn. 8• &!~r!y J. M1ddcll, Oeftllty
turll\lt' p1rtlcv11r1, end th1r l!M n.,,1 Ind Countv Cltrk.
1111<1 ol 1\11rlnt !ht 11"'1 1\11 ir.e... sf! '1Jf9J
lor ""'"'rt' 12. lt11, II ,,. 1.m .. In IM Publllllld Or•"'" Co-11 Ot ll• l"!lor. cfl\lr!r-.. 111 Of'Ot rlmfnl N<>, l DI Mid Ji r>Ul rY 21. 21. t nd F1bru1rv 1, II, ~ri ••• l'OCI (IY!C c ... , ... OrlYI Wnl, In lt12 .. ~n
!ht CITY o1 S1nt1 An1, C1lllornl1.
Ot t..:! F111<u1rv 1. 1912
W. E. SI JOHN
., , Counll' Clerk
scuao•lll. l'OlllDI ""o HI PL•Y II* S1111MI t 1¥1.
Pitclfk P11l1 ... 1, Ct llfM'11l1
N o .ltUI •M·IJ11 .. ,........., • .., '""lettlt' ll'W~ll\ld Or1n11 Cati!
l'ebrllln' J, I, 10, 1t7)
Ot llY PllOI,
')f).12
LEGAL NOTICl'
11:
LEGAL NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS tUllNl'll
NAMI' lTATIM•NT
lollowlnt "'"°" la dollll b1,11llll011
JUNE FAIUl:All IUSIN t: I S
SERVICES. 17J Nor1!1 N 1 w11 or I
8&.lll Ylnl. N-llOl'I 811d'I,
JUNE I. JOt-INSON, A06 E. IDfll "·· (0111 .........
T"I• bll1!.,.11 !1 btlnt cCflf:Wcletl by t n
ll!dlVIOUtl. PltJ H Junt I, John..,..
l U,l'lllOI COUllT 0 1' TMI' T"ll 11119"'1tnl tl!td with lht COVl'l'IV ,TATI 0, C"l.1,0ll'llA ,01 Cltrll o1 Ortnff Count¥ on : Mer. 23, 1'71.
THI COUNTY 01' OlllANO• Iv ••Ytrly J. AVdd(l)C. OIKlut'I' CounlY
' Nt. A 71111 Cltrk
fr(.OTKI 01' HIAlllOIO 0' ,l 'tlTION ' I' 4Jlf
;ii:(Mll ,IOIATI O' WILL ANO 1'0111 Publlilhld Or1~1t C011I 0 1lly 11'1~, Qipt•• TatTAMINTAIY J1tnuery 14. 11. 21 •l!d ftbfWl'Y I, lt7J iJli.ihl ef 0-" H. I H lt•lf.ln Olfflt< .,.11 .._
LEGAL NCYrlCE JIQ,TICE 11 tlflll!.I Y Gl\llN TI11t
,t.M.,.; t . f"i..ton l'I•• flltd htt1t!n • .-ti· "Wt for ,,obahl d .... Ill •nd lor IHUll"CI otl---=======:---1 l;d_.t fu1.m"'t..V lo 'ftltlonft', PICTITIOUI IUllM•ll
tfvttilClt to wl'llcl'I II ""..,. 19!' !\l~ll'ltr NAM• ITATaMl'N't ~l~ltrt. tPll lll1tt 1111 llml ltnd •ll<f The followl .... l'lrtOfl It doltll blit1111Q
ef .,..,,..,. 11'11 H int Pllt bl<tll NI fol' ••: '*"lfY H. 1t12, t i f :JO Im .. 1n !tit Ml, T. fNTflllll'lttSES. 102, H•. CliUflft«n o1 DtNrtrnltllf No, ~ of t l ld 11'1r~ff' Unit lG, Orl ntt, Cllll.
c-1 1t In ltlt CllY 91' s1nt1 Ant. Ttn"I' HllllftUl'll. 1t '1J C•tfl~ Clrclt, ,,11,0,,,11. H111111nt10n l•tcfl, c1n1.
Oaltol l'tbrv•l'Y J. lf7J Ttil1 llu1lnn1 It birll!f cendllC~ W 1n
W IE It JOHN, lndl•ld\!11.
' cWri.Y c11r11 Tflry "'""""' ""911 1: •• .,,., . Thll "tttrMnl tllld wtlll h C-IY 1~ Wlltlllrt .,,.,....,., Clwll of Or-CO\lflfv on; J 1ri, U. ttn.
..... .,,....,, l w lewrfY J, M.-... 0..Ul't' CtvnJT ,..,.. ,..,,, (ltrk,
Tth UU) •>-Hfl '1JDI A,.., .. , ,.,It...., l"'vblhlltd Ortflff (O-tl O•llY Piiot,
l'llinPMllll °''"" , .... , O•llY "11111 J ....... ,... I~ JI, n. 11111 .. ~.,.., '· "'*"'l'Y ,, 4 '· lt 7' ,.,.7' ,,,, 10$.!1
LEGAL NOTICE
JAPANESE-BUILT FORO COURIER INTRODUCED IN NEWPORT BEACH
Compact Truck to Go on Sile in Western Stites on March 17
New Compact Ford Truck
Gets Coast Introduction
Ford Motor Company's: new
Japanese built comp act pickup
truck, introduced to the press
Wednesday at the Newporter
Inn. will go on sale in western
U.S. markets beginning March
17, according to Ford officials.
The new truck , the Courier,
is being built in Hiroshima by
Toyo Kogyo. Ltd .. a Japanese
car and truck manufacturer.
ford has set a goal of 35 ,000
sales in ifs rirsl year.
us a chance to meet the grow-
ing trend to compact pickups
as well as continue leadership
in the already extensive Ford
truck line," J ohn Naughton.
Ford vice president a n d
division general manager. said
at the press conference.
"The enormous growth in
this segment, accelerated by
sales to people who have never
beforf' owned tru cks should be
an added bonus in wh~l looks
like another record sales year
for our trucks and the truck
industry .''
Service for the Courier will
be handled primarily by
franchised Courier dealers.
but technicians are being
trained throughout the country
to provide availability of ade-
quate s er v i c e in alt
''SINCE 1966, penetration by
imported compact trucks on
the Pacific Coast has risen
from six percent to 34 percent
of the under-6000-pound con-
ventional tru ck m a r kt t . '•
Naughton said. "We lead the
industry in truck sales and
want to keep it that way, so
we ha ... e to get our share of
that sm::ill truck action. The
small-picku p tru ck market for
1971 reached about 85.000
sales."
Naugh!o n said lhe Courier
has what American com pact
truck buyers demand : Low
purchase price, o p e r a t i n g
e co n o m y , engineerlng ex-
cellence, durability and good
handling.
"The two leading imported
compact pickups are getting
UNDER THE existing
system, each exchanf.!e has i1s
01\'n tape. Any investor reading;
that tll.pe would never know if
the stock he seeks is av::iilable
elsewhere al a lower price.
Broadly summarized, the
SEC sees the necessity for
more competition a mo n p;
brokers and exchanges b_v
bringing them Into one central
market place.
It intends to end the situll·
tion in which large institution~
hold exchange seal.3: mainly to
trade ror their own accounts.
It hope.! to bring more com-
petition on large orders by
lowering lo $300,000 front
$500,000 the level at which
negoliated ralher than fixed
commissions are charged.
Th e rec o mmendations,
especially for one tape.. would
certainly make for securities
markets "as sin1ple, as dirccl
and as open as we can,'' in the
words of William J. Casey, the
SEC chairman.
Bul implementing those in-
tentions could be another
TH~ 104-INCH wheelbase
Courier is powered by an 1800-
cc four-cylinder engine with a
four-speed manual
transmission. Inltially, options
will be limited to a de aler-in-
stalled radio. Courier's front
end design shows a strong
rese mblance to the Ford
pick up line.
"Our continued truck sales
leadership depends on our
dealers providing customers
wit h the kind of trucks they
want -and the Cnurier gives
geographica l areas. M r .
Naught on said. He added that
expansion of sales into other
areas will depend on pro-
duction availability and public
acceptance on the West Coast.
about one-third of the sm all-.----------~
'Bullnaoose Dyi11.g'.
Executives Realizing
Consumer Importance
MORAGA (U Pi l -Viginia
H. Knauer. President Nixon's
con:iumer affairs adviser, says
executives responsive to con·
sumer demand! are fast
replacing busi nessmen who
cons ider consumer advocates
thei r foes.
"Bullmoose is still around,
but he is dying," Mrs. Knauer
said. referring to a character
in the L'il Abner cartoon strip.
" ... The n u m be r of
Bullmooses is declining rAlher
rapidly as the more responsive
leaders ignore him ... taking
his place ls a new man on the
scene ... the trend-setter.''
JN ADVERT ISING. Mrs.
Knauer s;iid, these trend·set-
1.er "tell the truth about their
products . what is good about
them. what is bad about
·them."
Mrs. Knauer 's r e m a r ks
were prepared for delivery to
the 15th annual Saint Mary's
Co \I e g e Executives' Sym-
posium.
She credited consumerism
for the change in business
practices. "The central thrust
of consumerism is a powerful
moti 11 1tion towards higher
standard5 of conduct on the
Tn1st Open
In Newport
Newport Harbor Trust, 8
newly fonned real estate In·
vestment trust located at 3333
West Coast Highway i n
Newport Beach is offering
1hart1 of interest to pro-
spective Investors. The 11a\e of
shares will be limited to
residents of tM State of
Cali!oml1.
Newport H1rbnr Trust was
originally formed as 1 limited
partnership by Arnold 0,
Beekman, Agne! Blomqulst,
Charles C r ln1le , Don
Griswold, Emery S. 11anson,
Roy D. Uwi1, John MacLeod,
Paiul A. Palmer. 0 . W •
RichJrd, Walter Schmid, Alan
C. Stoneman and Wllllam W.
Wright, 1nd ls now preparing
to comme:nct bualneu as a
qu11llfled real eat 1 t e In-
vestment trust.
Newport. Harl)(lr Truat In-
tend• to exp11nd its lnve11tor
group from 12 t(I a minimum
of 110. Offers to purchase
1hare1 al Newport H11rbor
Trust m1y only be made
through the offering clrC"Ular
which I.he truatees announced
11 ovolloble ol the offlca of
the 7n1st.
part of all those who serve the
public,'' Mrs Knauer said.
As exam ples of recalcitrant
"Bullmooses," Mrs. Knauer
cited a manufacturer who said
consumers should not be told
the ingredients of a cosmetic;
ll food dealers" magazine
,.,,hich opposed the idea of new
bacon packages show i n g
relative amounts of fat ;ind
lean meat; and a packaging
manufac :urer ~'ho said ;:id-
vocates nf more rclurnahle
packaging were "misin-
formed .··
SHE DID
three men.
nol name the
Quentin Jleyno!ds. Safeway
Stores Inc. board chairman
"'ho was another symposium
speaker . stressed !he im~
portance of consumerism.
"Business operates in any
community only with the ap-
proval and permission of the
public," he said.
"It has become more and
more evident th a t cor-
poration~ and com pa n i e !I
structured and designed to
generate profit must a150
generate 'social profits.'
''It is quite apparent that In
the '70s demands will be made
upon many com panies to com-
mit financial resources and
executives' time tow ard solv-
ing social problems in the
community."
ANOTHER S P E AK E R ,
Marvin Field, Field Research
Corp. president , considered
the place or housewives in
consumerism, saying:
''I don't think it is an ex-
aggeration to say that many
frustrated housewives. tra~
ped into the drudgery of mun-
dane household chores, unable
to substantially change their
Jot. !lre the shock troops of
today's conse rva ti on. ecology
move ments.''
1-1. Bruce Palmer. the Coun·
cil of Better Business Bureaus
president , nottd lhe l1rge
number of organizations and
Individu als in I h e Ciln·
sumerlsm movement 1 n d
said:
"WHAT IS needed now Is for
each Individual, organization
And institution to ste p back,
view the goals 11nd the
needs, and the capabilities of
the various otht.rs: to con·
trlbult toward I h e 1e-
complishment of these goal11
and the fulfillment or these
needs-and then coalesce their
effort.I, working to ward unity
of purpose and • combining or
!lrtngth.1. ''
truck market in California and
one·h::itf of that market in the
Los Angeles area," he said.
"It is in thi s We st Coast
area th::it we must start our
push with Courier, and v.·e feel
that our truck ha s the design
and engineering f e a t u r es
necessary to get us off on the
right foot ."
Mr. Naugh ton noted that
multiple-vehicle owners and
first -time truck buyers can be
expected to account for a ma-
jor share or Courier sal es. He
said th at surveys show that of
all the small trucks now on the
road, about 86 percent were
sold to multiple-vehicle owners
and 53 percent to first-time
truck buyers.
HE ADDED that most of the
sma ll-truck buyers use their
vehicles for p e rs o n a I
transportation and the Courier
is expected to follow that
trend, although its payload
capacity makes it ideal for
son1e commercial jobs.
"This refati\'ely ncv.· seg-
CinderellC1
On Board.?
LOS ANGELES !UPI\
-The president of !he
corporation. the ch1tirn1::in
of the board and the lre.11s·
urer read !heir repo rt s lo
the annual stoc khold ers
meeting TuPsday and dis-
cussed profits. di vidends
and stock splits.
\Vhen the session was
opened to questions from
the floor , 11 small voice
piped up :
"When is Cinderella
coming ba ck?"
But then even the stock-
holders mertine of Walt
Disney Productions is 11
Disney production, 11nd the
children of shareholders
.11re nol nnlv tolerated. hut
en<'our;fPord to join in
ThP [)isnev PXPCU01'f'.~
prom ised thC mol'it Cin·
rferella ll.'OHlrl he rf'·
released in 1974
ment of the market is an~----------~
oulgrow th or the lremendous
interest hy Americans in thr.
versatility of a truck as a se-
co nd farnily car.'' he said . "In
f::i ct. aboul one 1n seven
suburban families now o"·ns a
truck.
"The Ford pickup, for in-
stance. is: now a 'car' to most
owners -they use it fnr sho~
ping, going to church, toting a
camper or just m O vi n g
lumber or other materials.
It's grown so popular that we
sold over 500.000 last year and
it continued to be the second
bl!:st selling vehic lt in the
company -outsold only by
the standard-size Ford car."
CPA Units
Slate Meet
In County
Donald T. Burns. president
of the 11.000 member
CaH!ornla Soc.iety or Certified
Public Accountants. will ad·
dress the 80Ciety'! Lo n g
Beach -Orange County
chapters Feb. 15.
The meeting, scheduled for
7:45 p.m., will be held at the
Old Ranch Country Club in
Seal Beach and will highlight
key Issues of concern to the
accounting professM>n. Bums
wlll speak on topics covering
education and eipc;rience rt:-
qu irements for the CPA
certific11te.
Jll1 remark.A will all() In-
clude commenl! on t h e
!OClety'! public rel11llons ac-
tivity of coo perative programs
with Callforn\A ha n k er 3.
legislators, e du c a l o r 11 ,
students and the publk.
The. mettlng wlll begin with
r:oc ktail11 at 6 p.m. and dinner
1t 7, For lurthtr lnfonnaUon ,
contact Glynda M. Stone at
(213) !M-llOO.
Cost U1iit
Ma y Li f t
Rent Lid s
WASHINGTON \AP I -The
Cost of Living Counci l Is
weighing the ide;i of removing
federal r~nt controls from all
livi rig un its when tenant., leave
them voluntarily. newly
available documents show.
Official minutes of lhe Price
Corruniss:ion, available for in·
spection by newsmen for the
fir st time, show that the com-
missio n voted 6 to I last
month to advise against im-
mediate impl ementation of
this plan.
A council spokesman said
the idea of "vacancy de~n
trol." 8! this plan is known.
has never been put forth as a
formal proposal but Is 1till
being 11tudied by the council ais
a possible way to trim blick
further ~the extent of federal
rent controls..
He !laid !he cooncll. whic h
wpervises tM Phase 2
economic pollcy, has asked the
Department of Housing and
Urban Ol!:velopment to study
how weU 1ueh 1 plan might
work.
Unde r vacancy decont rol,
tenant.'J would enjoy I he
benefit or federail rent control
so long is they remain In their
present dwelling , But when
they move, rent controls
would no longer 11pp\y fo that
dw~Ung or tht new tenants
who movf!I in aft er I.hem.
Price Commisi1lnn minutes
for Its meetings of Jen. 11 ·12
show that it rejected the ldeB
of Immediate vacancy decon·
lroJ Al the u me time that It
endorM!d proPoUls by the
council to decontrol luxury
11>3rtments and smaller rental
unil!,
thing This is testy ground nn
...,·h1ch residr many pCl\l.'f'rfully
\'ested f111iH1(·1al intrrest.~. In
addition. drp<'nding upon the
amount •If r11operat1on an1on~
exchanges, the anlllruFI IHll'S
conc:eivab!y t:ould be trsted.
M01l£0VER, I 11 e iin-
plcn1entation nf :oinv n1a1or
rlvingcs in the.::;e b1111nn-do\111r
market places must <Ji11':lys be
restrained by co11slder<1!1on fur
unknown and poss1hl y ad1·crse
affects on the entire economy .
The nld , nld story is thr
slowness \Vilh which progress
t::ikes place. Change in the
securities markets. no n1atler
how badlv needed , cannot
corne q\1iCkly. 11 tt1kcs tin1r
and courtti;:e lo change pr<1c·
tices v•hose origins arP in
another century.
The prf'sent rn:i rkel wn!'i
struttured more bv sel f-in-
terest , especially in -ils early
d;iys. than by pl::inning for the
public J;oal. What worked for
!he private interest loo k
prl'crdrnc:r ovrr 1he pub!it'.
Quite nrld pr a 1' t i (' e s
develop('(!. 1·hcre still exists
the situation in which brokers
who make a living selling
stock are presented as finan -
cial advisers. This is not just a
dual rolt but often a oon•
fll t tlng one.
THt-:ni:: fl":"'1A INf>i l h e
al111ost lnsol\'able problem of
the spec111Ji.,t, who is a5Signed
to nu1 inlain an orderly market
Jn stocks even ir it means
trading ag11inst himself, or
buying stocks th;iit nobody ellle
tA·ants at the prtt e,
And therf' hall existed-now
to be ended-a practice on
s"n1e eicchanges of permitting
1n!':l1!ut1n11al traders to trade
for their own aceounts. thu.!1
<1 vo1d1ni.: commissions and In
C'ffl'C't ohln1ning stock at a di,s.
l'OUll\
llpt'rat1ons of !he securities
1n;1rkt>ts. said c:nsey, "ha\'e
breo111e too L'Omplic::iled , with
lrwi 111anv transactions slruc-
hired. eOntrived and rarried
oul 111 a particular place or in
1.u1 1111n11lural way or wilhoul
public disclosure .. ,''
llE CONCLU l)~l) in a
s1ntcn1cnt about the report:
"The steps spelled out in this
rfpnrl are designed to put
l'nn1pelltion lo "'Ork for the io-
\'cstor, to n1ove f r o m
rrclprocal and reb11tive prac-
tices "
But then comes a return to
the old script. The untangling
in the public inte rest will be
en!rusted largely to a market
establishment that permitted
or encouraged !he tangle for
it.~ u~·n interest.
Bel'ause those iovol\'ed in
lhe seeur itie5 markets are Lhe
experts. having learned how to
deal with and benefit from the
tan,i::le, they will be promi nent
on the working committees.
rt rneans th a t tlMi
supervisory ski lls of the SEC
.... ·ill be tested. ll meaM that
its proteclive lns:tincl.3: must
remain arou sed . That too ls an
old, old story, a story without
end.
Clieck-processing
S pee dup in Works
B~ RILL ,,EIKIRK
\\1 ASIHNC'r()~ fA r i -·r1u ..
Federal Reserve Bo a r d
adopted guidelines this: week
aimed at spcrding up the na-
tion's c /1 r r k-proccssing
systcn1, saying it will make it
possible for An1ericans to use
deposited paychecks sooner.
Another by-produ ct of 1.hP
system, when it becomes fully
operative in about a year, will
he that Americans will kno w
sooner when their check!
bounce. if their bank accounts
slip to the minus side.
The guideline!! direct ·the
board's 12-bank system and
regional offices how ! o
establish and opera!(' n('w
regional clearlni: hou ses In
communities across the na-
tion.
Tllf<: SYSTl!:l\1 will be arm-
ed \l.'f1h more modern equip-
n1enl, such as compulers, to
speed up clearing of checks
within areas or from area to
;:irea.
The board said it is expected
that the new system will
result in a majority of the 62
million checks written each
day by Americans to be
cleared and paid by the open-
ing of business the day fo11ow-
ing deposit of the check.
For i n d i "' id u a I s and
businesses making and recei\'·
ing payments by check, this
new system will mean earller
receipt of fu nds due to them
or earlier payment of funds
they are transferring to
others. the board said .
Most payroll checks wHI be
cleared and emplo yes wil l
have the use of their deposited
p;iy within a day 8flcr they
put It in the bank, the board
ea id.
"SmfCLARLY, a check writ-
.ten to pay a bill, or make a
purcha~. will be debited
within 1 day after the check Is
deposited In a participating
art& bank,'' It said.
The board said faster and
better check-handlin~ i s
urgent because the large num-
l>Pr of checks now being writ·
ten. About 3 bill ion wit h a
\'alue of $13 trilHon aire written
earh yea r, and these. totals are
expected to double by 1980.
In addition. the board said,
Improving the chtck-paymenL
system is 11 ntce~sary transl·
Auto Output Up
tONT)()N (UPI) -Auto out·
put Jn H.rita ln In 1971 hit the
!hire! highest lolAI e v e. r
record&cl and wa$ at Us he11t
level since 1963. the Depart·
ment or Trade. and Industry
announrcd , Total car output
wss 1.741.939 in lhe year. 1
jump of 6 ptrccnt over the
prtvlous ytar's flgurt
tiona! step towa rd repl1ein&
the use of check.!! with an elec-
tronic transfer of mooey.
THI!: BOARD ha!! betn
working on a system to move
ID a checkJess society by,
trall.i;:ferring f un d 1 etec-
lronica lly and officia ls . say
lhat day may come 1100ner ht
the United Slates than moa t
people expect.
The board envisions lf!lasing
space and, in some c1ses,
com puters to es tablbh the
regional centers. The system
is expected !o b e c o m 1
operative on 1 region-by•
region basis as soon a! poMl -
ble, the board said, with a
t;irget date of the f!lnd of the
year.
Commerce
U1iit Oka ys
Amtrak Bid
WASHINGTON (A P J -Ji
House Co m m e r c e 1ub-
commltt~ approved Amt.rak'a
request for $170 million thlt
week and called for major
changes In the n1tloria l
rallroad pusenger ffrvlce
operatlons.
The money was sought by
lhe National Ra l I r o a d
Passenger Corp. which took ,
~"'e~ much ~f the nation·r c ity·:
l1nk1ng train rider services
last May 1 and had extiauated
ils origina l $40 million fede raL '
grant by July, -
White giving voice-vote •P-.
proval to the f I n 1 n c I a I :
authorization legls l1tion aimed ..
at helping Amtrak Out of lll -
flnancial hole, t b e aub-:
committee accepted a aeries .,
of amendments Including: 4
-; Having Amtr1k acquire ·~
equipment to carry rtll U'•
pre51 and pack.lie freight.
-Earmarking 1117.S million
of the funds for c1pit1I Jm--·\:
provements. •
-De:iiij[natlng '2 mllllo n an-,
nually to Im p r o v e In-·~
ternational r 1 11 passenier .!
service conntetlon1 to Canada
.and Mt-xlco.
-Requiring annualTeport..
to Congress on t h e ef. l
fectivrness of the Jaw In-
cluding fl.qures on the Amtr1k
performance.
-Lctling Amtrak apply to ..
the lnterslate C om mer c e
Cclmmiuion for tracks pro-
viding more direct routes. -c1 ... 1ng passenger servke
prcferr:net over freight train.I
on right of-wny.
-I-laving the f e d er 1 f
government move more troops
by ra l1. Instead of vi a pl1nt1.
whl're-ever feasible. '
The legl1l1Uon w11 sent to '
the subcommlttet'1 partne
Commtrct; committee for ac..
ti on.
I
----
J If D~ILV Fll"OT ----
¥ 011r Jtl 011ey
OVER THE COUNTER C1·ime Insurance ._..,._!•llYt 1111..-4-e .... -•tl•M 11 ~•lfMtlly t 1 111 """' MAtO ~rl«l .. Mt IM11169 111111 er mmN ,...rt;lllf'W111 "" c.mrnlul•R
NASO L1ist1ng1 for Thurtd•y, Febru•ry 3, 1972
Now 'Aff ordallle' 'EW YQltll; Al'l ~~• In -r~.10 10 .. .,., 1A C• nd 1 • ertll'll Aa 1 ~1
N• n~r !>tcu1 I ti A •w U
0•.0 r • Ann ov~ A nA• ~
By S\'I VIA l'ORTE R ed -by about 50 percent of .~:u,,c~;"., r"'.:i~~ ! ~0;.
Ir II h I lfd IQ(~\ A>Hn ~• you are 11 :s Hl a l e oss s.,, •• ,.., r ~·1 1'icc nu buslne~man In a .h igh cri m~ ~4 1 An agent or tiroker !'E8"o 5! ;,"; ~~, :~g· n~1
risk a1ta In city or suburb 11nd counstllng .)Oll on the In ~1;'' ~~; ~~ ~· r:1 dP~tC
you are ch.~speriilt ly eager for suranc' 15 now ltable under i~e: g~ ~ ' ~·~ ~:~~n tt;,
(rime insurance a t :lf~ the F'edtral crllnlnal statutes "• ".~~:r.,.:,• 21'' 1:,..,rw ~
lo1dab!e rates l h1t\C ~ood only if he commits 1ntent1onal F d u;:..~.,,J:1, :ii s!~"''
news for you fraud or m1srepresent111Lon :tl \." 5 ,a ? • 871 L.~
A' Or J.n 197 II t,•s Before I J bl 1 •10 tnc 1, • 11 tit. co " le \~as 1a e mere \i All~ rnc 1 1 •le a ~on ~on1e O\U(;h easier rind also for ra1Jure t 1 counse-1 you cor !~::\..l 0 ~ • ~ 1:1,.c" 11,
t htaper fo r 'OU to obt:un rectly -a110thtr reason the .,cm11 1 • l e.,..,,.. El AOC in W 1~ U o BOOl Afl
federal crune 1 n s u rant e crime 1nsuraOCt' prouram uot """ 119, • • 1 IB •<If>" " b A !ft ~ 11 11 IB' n~• C"-O\trage Tlus 1s now a pro. off to so haltmg a start • '"" 1 , • 11 k• sc. .. 11»t HD } ~. B "'f\Q /Ar
gram "'hlch }OU should In If )OU are interested and .o.bt • HL. \ ,e .,. Wal A <P •< l o Butkb M 'est1gate al ooce It v.cll ma\ t>l1giblc go to any licensed 10 "'"en El '• J suc~~v•
be h
•/cok d 19 'JO Bvn 111rn
l at ) ou art> not E'\ en suranct an enl or broker ask ,. 1 Tech 1 , By n !. m "' llQ 8ev 9 , 9 o C•lWSv ::i."are that ~edera l crune in-for an appltcatlon co1nplete 1! ,. 11 Eou1 6 1 •"> c.mn N
I f ., vn B•" 1 17 (• n M I tiUr,1nce up o a 1nax1n1u1n o You will have to certi fy 1n • "! c m 4 • Canno" Fl '1'000 I ll I l.pnG~o l J, •n•dP • " e:os s ca1ne 1n o writing lhat )OU hive 1nsta\le<1 Am FluiP ' 21 • •o M111e
be • I t t A I h d I ~El L111> I • ~ , Cao swsr in"' on Y as 11gu~( urx er 1 t e protect ive ev 1ces and me ,.,. ;. " 1 ' •O ~·p n .o. r
program of the Dcpartrnenl of other requirements Your:~: 'Ls J~ •• J~ ! c!0~ Tl~
H ou " I n g a n d U r b' n I b k t II t Am F~ n 1~ ' • )• • D a » agen or ro er a so v;1 1ave ""' G eet • , ~·, G,.
Developrnent rhe ob1ect1 ve of to certify 1n wr1l1ng that he :,:~!·;~ -i: • .A..: c:·~11~Gc
lhe p1ograrn \\/:JS lo nu1ke has fully r xpla1ned lhese re.-:::'aaw:d ~. ~"':E!~~,l~~
crime insurance available al quircmenls lo you to th<' best """•u\ 11 M S9 Chane• A.
tolerable rates in slates where of his knowledge
it was especially h11rd to conie Your application w1h then be
by Connecticut I 111 no 1 s forwarded to an insurance
M 11 r y land r-.tass:ichusetts company acting unde1 con
"-11ssour1 Nev• York Ohio tract "'1th the Feder a I
Penn syJvanu1 Rhode. Island Insurance Adm1n1strat1on The
and the Dish 1ct o[ Columbia policies are not available
And even 1r you havt bten dtrectly from an) Federal
a1vare of the program 1t L'i agency but are sold through
hlghly probable you don L licensed agents and brokers
know about the 197'l hberahza Rates vary dependtng on
t1ons Htre are four you r geographic loca!Jon
t I I If you are the owner of a crime stalislLcs comp iled by
$mall business (gas station h Lhe F'BI and the amount
quor store Je"elry store of your gross receipts You
restau rant clothing s I o re "11! bt put 1n one of these
beauty shop etc) )OU can lhiee classes for rating pur
tJO\'I buy either burglar} poses
coverage <lr thert coverage Low harnrd low premium -
Burgllllry coverage pays ofr <ln 1£ yours 1s a barber shop
\1slble sign~ of entry while beauty shop shoe repair
theft 1nsura1a:e pays for arm traiel agtncy c h 1 Id re n s
ed robbery clothing store hardware store
Be/ore the change you had card and gift shop
to buy lhe whole package 1 l\f e d 1 u m ha zard medium
according to an analysis rnade prem1um-1f yours 1s an auto
Industrial
Parl{ Gets
~? .: . iPl I:C
jJ\o 1.0 Fii C:eco ~" 11 4 l'tb r ... 1 •~ "'"Ft dr" C 1 ~ 1~~ Flndl•r 1, !~o Foe 0 g
21 "FnuM it,. l F~I ll-01 • '!~ F'r Genii: j • "FIPM .. t o l~ Fr,IW~F i~ l "I"~ 1•1o lf'tf t Tt ~~ l',,,, ~!:.a wt ~
'''Fo-.1 0 "° • '~' F mltll 11 ""-Fe>U Grnt 11 1' Folom•t 1:1.>, ,, Frn~I Co
l' l •\I F n'o n El ''"'•F nCll~ l\o 4 GR! Cmo ~. XI • Gtlll Moe
"'• 2•(.ttn'o U • l''• Gtv Gib" 7 o 7c;on/t t t t G~ II: E• JP U (;ten 5 :. ~ • G/•!!dt '1 )'G ••1il w • j I (;odl (~d
27 1 2' l(';oYld T 6 o 1.l'•Gov EFfl llG.01tt>Cn l l•c;oti Sc ?S at 4 '"'GrA M<> l U1'GeenM16 G ev Adv .,rove P """'~"Tl'"l .. ,,..,~"°'" ,.._~ Gvlf In~•
G! ~~ R
MUTUAL ~1'P00: r ' A<> 1 doc n
FUNDS :~~~H:.·,,
Howfd G ~~ i:Jl:Et1l. ;"\:lnl ~~~I<"~ 9
Hud\ PAI>
?SS,'1!5"1 HU'' P Fu Ids H ~al C.1> •Oll5JIHVA nl 1tn:io1 l"'AO• Sv :IOS•2?J1 l"'f-" CP '!110M nd ,_.u~r I 7t ~ oa n!or nc I 7J 1 3' nto DI~<> :xi 91 » 9 lnl • Ind
11 01 \lll "'"'" n '36 10 11 lnlrmr C.
'lt 6 71 lnBlf. W>h sn 5 11 nLe ' C1> 1 lO 1 00 Int svstm 10 62 •l nt,..,.av
131 '°' on<• nc 11JJ1111 laSou u1 \6 ll 11 IS J1cob FL
• 11 S 6 Lb I~ Fd 4 9 1 SS Ja<1u n ( 10 ~ 9J Lite sr~ I SI 7 11 J•m W•1 515 Sl~L.lel nv Ill t 1JJ"mU>V 0 /6 1111Lnc NI 112t1J •J J fly Fdi
•11 1A BLln, ''' Jo,·vnl.\ ! 11'1 Loom s 5avle• KM!. na 2 l IJ I" Canfd 11 91 ll t~ I<• Jr Sii •ll l~7Q Cao 1112nKes~!l of
6'1'9 /~ I ut 15091509 K1tv~ 1 SS!" 6G Lo d AbDlll l'!'eman A
""' E<I V Sii 6 Jl A!fld I 3 771 K•t G r Exore•• A Bu• J JS J 11 Kavam 9 19 08 Lord A l!IS Kea l ''1 O:l<l Lulh B o l1J6llS1Ke<:n"C<I '00 f &<I M•11na In 9 19 100• >;'.el t11 0 9 1~ • Ma11naC I I 59 110 Kellw<I 9 1900-IManhn jS3 6JOK~hSvt 615 lli M~I Gth il S •l l<::~ul E~ S la 5 11! Ma•,•chus• Co Kev~ F ll 9 11 0 3 F tt<I 111 9 SI ey Cu1F AmN G /) J BI. 15 ndtP 755 117 Key• PC
Ana10 GteuP M•~• 12 01 n B K in~ lnl Cao I 9 J i!Ol MA • F nancl Kln<1i El Grwhl~•lliO MtT UI01J99KkC<> t.cme S 26 9 OS MG 11 ti \513 W;n•P Vot Fa"" 9#? 0 .31 MO Sl1 14 1• l•nce In Ve 1 •1 '23 Sl 7• MFD 1J 3' 6 1 l and Res •~ron 5 O'i 551i M~eo J99 Jl"I La ~on In
A•e Ho"9/\l()fl /'.a the • l• n I• 1 Le•dv (p Fn<IA 56tA.0 Md AM 61 661Lt •G<>
Fnd 8 a l7 6 IJ MOOd• 11 85 1J I! Lew 5 BF StocO •;a 6 91 Moody, ] 3D !J XI L n Beast
Seen SOI S51 ,,,FFd I Sl f ?6 L <1fln c 8 D1on 1011 1~111'.FGh 5896]/LOblaw
for me by the An1er1ca11 sales and ser\tre grocery
l\1ulual lnsur:111ce Alh:lnce the .store de!Jcates~en drug store
50 yea r--0ld ti ade assoc 1at1on bowling center men s and
of about 100 maJUr mutual womens clothing :i Io r t
property habll1ty insurers rest aura nt
This change alone can rur lhgh hazard high prem1un1
Sa•~ Fd 8 U 9)1 M OmaG ••O 69t Lo; E n
W Ba•~ c....-516 6'lO'M Om•h1 10• 1169 I •d•n G ay Beatn H! 17 l8 1131 Mut ~h < 1169 lltt Ma P ool Beacn In 530 J'.lOMut T >! IOJ ?Ol ~a lll!Y Bt<1 Ken lll•llllt<tEA ul 109'1 G• Mal~ il~,Gll 6 11 6llO N~ Ind 11011101N•norC
!he blL•nnessman s premium 111 -1{ yours 1s a drvc\eaner ga s
hair and the res no doubt th:i t statton furrier camera and
one reason sales of federal photo supplies gun and ammo
cr1mt pohc1es ha \e been lag ~hop Je "elrv stnrt hquor
g1ng has be.en their high cost store
12) The prov 1s1ons requ1r1ng Oesp1te lhl' llbe1ahzat1on~ Ll ~ou to use protective de\ ices \~on t pay for you to certify
ranging from window thal you have: compiled "-llh
grates to cenlral and loca l the requirements of th e law If
alarm system s -have been ~ou haven t, warns the AMIA
Jiberahzed Thi s means y0u1 Because if a loi;s occurs and
store will be easier to quahfy your proteetion "asn t up to
f-Or bu rglary insurance says {ert1fied standards l ht
the A.M"IA Another reaS-On go\'ernment won l pay err on
sales of crime pohc1es ha\t' ='=he=c=l=alffi==·========: been slow so far has been the ir
very stiff r e q u 1 re m'n t s STARS
necessary to qualify f o r !';vdne~ On nrr 1s on~ or
CO\erage ' the \\01\d~ grea t 11s1rolo
llond• ~ O 5, 1 • N't S"'ur Se M B ow Bost Fc11 l ol17 n B• ~n J 1•., 1 Mao/ L.P fl.'fore !Han 20 r1111)S have :ur~ckFd(~lv~ ;o •IO R0ond S 18 S 66 f.lc(or
'''
ff Vd •a •-.OMcQu~v
'It b II tld Bui<~ 6 C,wt11 1017 1 l~Mi!'d c H e llr UL 01 l:01nm1 e C•n<ln ?lO 101 Pl sr~ 151 •n Me-d e M
lhernsel\l" to 'Pl'" 1n th ~el~ s J~1·6~ 11•0m s i.o 6 1' Hl'()t n '-'-e NY VI )IO ~l S!ock 111 891 Nt ~ '"
John!) Lusk and Son Hun a vrnh ta 3011•1~: ~~~ l~~;1 ~~j tJd •W
t 1n~lon Beach Industrial Park
according to Geo1 ge Lusk
BU• Mg 1£1 I 9 Ntuw (el 1l7 100 Mad C• CG Fund i 51 1 S-Ntuw Fd 17 JI J 51 M die> Capim •>II 9 I ,_.e w W d llto Sl' Ndw GI
Cao! G11 J t'I •16 New on ,,S61lll Miio Cap ! Sii 692 IY Nlc'1 SI 9 11011!01 MI Mu\ CaP T1ln 1111'11•0I N l o0 M111 n Cenll'V Sii 111711505 o e•sl S 1 to MP1• Gs (hAnn !\II Fun<JS Ocr1ngr I JO I JO N 11 RT
II .,~ E!.•la 2 01 1 1~ o,.,m~~., ,,' ,•, 01> ,•, M 1s V G llll 1011 .>;11 r!Cre Com SI i 1 '6 l u" Mo Rsd1 G"'~ 6 g 7u,lO Fund 96SOSlMonCol
\ice pres1clent
The $~0
l1ghf industry dcvelopn1enl 1s 1ncom 11>1 1 l9 g~~ fmS 1!~l~~ Mooe f'
t Spec 11' JS.oPe !'I 91610 Moo e S oc.1!ed betv.een Bolsa Al enue Cnase Gr El.01 , OP~ A M ll19 "1,' MMo ~n I( Funo 1 'I ' I 0 T 11 G
and fd II I FI C•1>19 914 P1>en 0?611M1olrwl 11 gcr Ill II inglon Sh h d ~ 5~ 10 •a OTC Sec 0 OJ II u Motch M
ll I 5P~C •l Pe ~m Ml /1960/y\~ICuo CaCl ( ,n c 19:.0? 6 P.lu llvr 169 ll W Mue!e Coonil Pt nnSq 16S76..IMi.JPh P
Sites r • i!t fi oni ul1e hal f lo
5U acres \I.Uh paicel~ of rron1
£qui~ •6 .1o•P~Mvt '°" •61! J.ICC Ind f 1>ntl 71 ll lS ;~ a 161111 6S NA a11 Co
c ,..,..1,. ~"5 1MPn11eS' 11ol 1~01~!'~,,0R rn:<>"' ~91 651 P on En! IS 96J N Ho'p
f\10 lo f nc ac1 e s 111 !he park s cov:nG, h 6110 '"' P o11 Fnd 1'6911 11 Nat Lb ( h A~ \a 153 Pan Inv 11'91l4JN Pelt I
nelVCS\ l rr!C\ bctng: 1 ffe1ed at c!:'.rn C 111 t Pl11rlh •OllSJI N St cR'!<i
$1
comoGri.09ePt~Fund• N•tSv I 5 a squaic foot CQITID ,.,, •• , ISl G wth )1)1!:!!111 N En11GE (3 ) Tht dollar deductible f."rs 1-1 ~ 10Jurnn t!I; one ot
amounts for smaller losses the DAlLY PILOTS rre1.t. fen tu res
'tla\e been substanlla\ly~r~ed~u;c~~;;::::::~~~
COITIP (p 7Sb 111 N 1' • 10 17 10 11 NJN• G Various th Comp Bd 9 3• 10 15 N Ho ' :n> 90 Jt '° Nici!'" F 1rms are e1 er l'l! ComP F~ 9 86 10 n P o Fl.Ind 11 s• 11 s•1--~--~"""'-=
I I th I d Con«1<1 ldUlll61 Pro Po I 101 701
1000 ORDER ~t Beautiful
YOURS • Stick-on
\ LABELS
TODAY!
Personalized • Stylish • Efficient
Order For Yourself or .I Friend
M•'f b• u,ed c11 envelcpei. •s return eddr•st
l•b•ls Also 'ver y handy ., 1dent1f1c•t1on
l•b•ll for m•rlon9 persona/ items tuch es
boolr.10 record• photos etc. Lebels 1f1ck on
9le11 •nd m•y be u1t1d for mer~1ng horn•
u nned foc.d items All labels ere printed
<with 1tyl1sh Vogue type on fin• qu•l1ty white
9umm•d p•s>-'·
1-;,:::;:-t=:.:.::;.:~~:----,,
' •IMI ~r;M;f99 u~• OIY. , 0 ~ '"' 1 (••II ,.., .... ''"' /lUS I
I I
I I
I I
I t I I
I L---~L~!_PRJNJ!~_G J
~
oca 1ng cir iea quarters con• n"' i:i 67 17 oo Prov d :S :J4 51•
d (on.tel G b •I l'lt P ov Giii lf1 t6f an plants at the Orange Con1 Mui 1.a '"' " u s1P 10 •• n ts cont G " 1 ,.. )II s Pulrwm Funds
Counly location or building E~: ~:; li ~ 1z fl a~~~ l~ ll l} ~·
new d dd I I r 11 C n \\ID v • ll I 11 Grwth 11 61 17 69 an a J Iona ac111es," WD•I 1 10 1•1 1ncom 1 :16 •u
ti It <ld dtVeo'I ?5 ~ 15 ~ Inv~'' '70 10 O! 1e.re 1us a 1ni:; to bus1ness 0., a"'a e c; ovo v '" 10 '~ 11 Jl Dtc~ 116 ll )9 VoV•O 'U. 10 56 and employ1ncnt opportunities oei.w ll ?J ~ .o Rev•r• 1 •~ ,, 98 Ab"'~'" I'<;
r Ot ~ I lS 91) R nt ti IS JI II 11 Abb Lil O
Or both liU ppl1crs <llld labor o c~o 115 •'9 Sa~llatl l i• J IM ACF Ind 2 •~
I I l)odo Co>' " j 6 J S{,,IJS 11 50 t• 1S Atrr .. c "" l!O O 111 D I usk pres1de11\ 0 ., •• 1 H 0 1~ o s,udo• Funds o\cme Mkt 11;>
Al I d o Iv Go lnl lnY H?•l~I~ ActamE• 19" rc<1c v u11 ct cnnsfruclion O'"evl 1 r• 198 s~·' 361636&6 Adr. • 20
I r r Ir Levoe 11 1 11811an 1614 16R•o\dde>~l:.o, s a rn inu <ICIUI 1ng: :1(111} or S<I "" I u 9 25 Com St ,0 It 10 Adm l
Noa''· D1<pl•1 I "llCI C f~h>n&Howa a StGll Iv Fund~ Ae!nllL e 1 bO I'> " •• ~· fl B~•n 00-OI" E<iutv • 5 I ~\ •.itu e Co prrsentl ~ loc 1ted 111 ( :11de11ri Gnc~~ 6s5•J 1 °l t;'~';' ~,J 1 ~: ~"oa"'i~o
\V1ll1rir11 Nriatk IS prrs1dcnl of 5D"" ll ~ ·~ Seeced "nd1 AfCOl'I 1Dt 50t1< '111JOll ~elAm OJlllJJAJndu•~•
!tu:' rtrnl \\I Ith speCl(l]JZff> J/1Eb1.1(!1 l•Stl }9 Se OP<> 1680 I • Akrc.n~ ~ 0 EDE ~~ 1811181 Se ~rl 1 951 9~~ AA G~; I hl' Ill JtltJf 1('tl11 e nf f \ n e EFC Ma111ot"'n! Stnt Gfn • ;~ O '11 o\ asJo.a In t ~ f<I Gl'I 96,!106 5tn!rv F ll !a l1 ?~AbP!oC l? display lC!t{ IS f Or bUJ Jd1ng E<1 Pro • >.\ 5 00 S~tn I'd •.SO 9 SO "' bertsns l6 t=d Am ~~'I'S ~haehoUts GP AcanAu BO Signs Ell ti Gr lJ 'IS 15 16 Cm'11i I 45 'at. A. co~t~nd lO
C E run T un•v• En! p 1 ?1 1 tS o\lcon L~b 71, onstruction has al so begun Em• SK 190 1>1 t=•! ra 1.11 6 75 "'~"d' 10.-
1 d
Ev l?M766 Har~ •909/JAUAlf•?"" on a 1ca QU;1rler.'l struct ure E~ ~v " , , o ll Le;~• ''' 1 01 A le<i en :xiy r P S ( I FD (~P S 11 Pace 11J)1) J11 Al t<ILUdlm or arson tgn o a so F r1 <1 1113 1 tJ Sh~~ so11 F11nd1 ,. leoil L11d 1111
localed 1n Gardenn Ralph ~!a;ilty8~cr!: 0 41 ~~.,'~ i.~~t !1i:~l"e 1#1
ParsonJr dl f th ana •a•o1s 1rovt s111GC1111At •dChl70 1s pres1 en o e ,:01 13001,11 s11tm O 1t.t1 1t 11 "'ldM1lnAS
firm uh1ch manufactur es ele<: contt.t ••11os1 s1<1r I'd 10•1 1110 :111:P:dr>1&a3 osrnv 1"' S g"'' Fund> At!ledSr 1 «I Irie signs ror Jargf' re!a1l r:,,.'( 1sJ116 H c ... , 10 ,311 .wi Aiied l
r Evr>I 135110tl i nvest l !N\?91 Aul.ch UD!l lrn1s Fl<le\ 16 71 lf )I T 11•1 ' :JO lG 14 A I 1.,. i~ .. Purlln 1070116'1Smth • 1'611161 r.., u Brockn1an Enterprises or S••"' $66 6.1• &w Inv, 'ln.1 911 :1::~1o"m
It I Toend 'MJ1 '1917 SwJn Cl I ll t,4 un 1ngton Beach v.111 build Flnan(11t Proo !oYer Inv 13 10 1'.l' ~~~1l'r ~060
rrlt !ht d 0Vn1 4•41l51>~lrat •S •:MA£: our ac\ 1 1es on e s1 e sn n<1uit j 01 'tt. s1M• 8ondG• ,. "'if s.,J »
Tansey Aircraft Pulley Co A' •~co"' • ' • 11 ~om F 514 '~' A;;:He'u ~ l1j Ven f 55 •911 Y Fd S ~I ••l AmtH DD30 G a rd t n a Nill begin con F1IFd Vt l!L.ll 1~ •9 Oii F '71 I :u AA lrF/llr IO Fs lnve•IOr' 51F'rm GI 1.62 4 6) Am A I struchon of a 30000 square O!.<o ''1 t16 s11r• s• ••1J •VJ1 AB•kt ~ Grw" 10~ 11 '6 Sttadll"IA~ FYndS A8 d 7_7f
(OOt pla nt tn March for July 1 Sieck • 10 5' Am Ind • U 'U ,._;~.tl_1r 1 '° Fsl Mu t 10 10 19 As•O F l 3J , u AlliM " occupancy F I N~t 1?t1'1 FldlJ'C 7-tll •JA e n? F I Slt rr 6 •I 1 IM Slt!n Roe Fdi ~ Standard Chemical Corpora F~ Gtt> s 01 s • ~1111n 'l',. 21" ~ t~" {5,
tlon will begin construction F~~~· <;8":'! • ri sti:.k0 l~ :; l~ 2~ :cf:!':u:; 11'l.
J
1
une
1
edt orda new1 toract1J1ty to
1
be M~~~ ~; H :: ~ 51Z;;~r511 :JvU 1J ~ :,;v~11111r1, oca a 1acen 1 s ex1s 1ng F~~ 10 1.s 11 09 Ttch , n 1.i1 r.01111.i 10o;r
h'adquarters Great \Vestern F t,~'"fc" G~8'71 1 1 Cl tM"i l': .. ,, 1~ 1; n :;;:,~u~ll\tle:;
Industrial Realty of Carson ls 8rf."' ~~ l lt ~::~~U. 1 J:11 l:l!::iE~~ Ji!:
presently erecting a multi u"scor;:0., 1~l! ,~ ~ t::':' c".',. :: :~ :;: ~i,," 1~o tenant facthly and 30 IO-F<I' OrO l-81 '1 ll Trns C•P I 61 • IJ AmF'ln P11 lo0 Fu'ICI Inc GrP Tr1• Eo 1110 lt •' A Gened n. VtO!Ory bUJ!dtng bofh ror C01111!' 10 6, 11 ~7 Tudr Hett 13 to ll'IG A Gen Ins SO 1'1Pl t • U lj l:I lwnC GI 4 Ol I C~ .. Gnln Dll IO lease. 1"" Trd l j "1 1~ rwne •nc 1 lt 'n A,., Hold co 'I I r h Pllol 11 ''° us.r..-. GI 11-U ,, 21 H-, n r· rs occupant o t e 1&-•t•wv 1 •' 11 u us G<IYS• '?·re 1n 1s ""' H"'P 16
months-old 1ndus1rial park P,£, 5~~c. 5 ~ rl '..,. H~llu~"' /, ~ \J ~ :m~~ 1~
E d r . t r ,. r,lb1'1t1• 11" 111u~1on Svc. Grr ,_• was ngar ....ua 1ngs ......,rpora· ~" Sfoc lrNd 1•~ 1•11 " M...i ... 011>
tlon \\h1ch manufa ctures a ~:n ~~ ;;;. ~·~:;v 1;g:1:,: :,..M~~',':t),'°
S"""'lrum o( p r 0 I • c I l v e r°"" SI l? •.I l'I ~1 Wflftll ,. 01 U,. AN••G.s 119 ,,~~ r. rlhFd A 1 W I~ United Fllfld\ AReiOY 11<1
eoatings for corrosion control c.''" 1nc1 n .tint• M:(m 'j I" Am S••• 12 •:!t~ ''-107'10 Con ft' l l l O ,., Snlo •
1n every environment llS well H}7'°HFI • 11 s.'6 f~-11C 13 l ·E :s~:. 1_;r:
85 convent.Iona!, pl1tsbc and f: t:! I ii c;1ot11 i!t1 ,,:g !E'~:....~.:
zinc coatlngs Ht! l_f '' '' :t•1 u "n'" Id '"°'" std pf• 75 Secood occupant was Croan U=. ~ ~i;! 1:~ v~' lt111t' ~ I~ :Ta l'"..!! .u
Engineering Co cus toml!!r1~ ~~ tii'!t •~ .. "::::T1a\1J~
des1gnen and manufa ctures or fir c;~ .. 1 '
11 v\~'"' 5•fllfzi • ~ AWerwt ..,
bJO-mecilce l d1sposAble SU~ f~ :~ ~-~ f~f·"' 1~ ll~ ::.::,"' ~J
pht!l and plti.Btlc molding ~ri:' ~ u.s; ,~,4 ~=ll(ffbl r l! !Z'f..c 't'
owned by Kennell\ r Croan or \"'P ~.,, il !1 '~ ~ v-""r. TN l fl Aml•c '° mt Gtl'I l.:'f t~ ~ft.' tn ~ -'1 AM~ Int 6'
All adena 'I~~;~ 1~\7 f '' ~;itf, o l J 1 It :::::!'.111111c0~
Sam [Jiuon or JiunhnJ(ton '"'~~''I' '"'' '~ W••tl M u 001•,.11 """" C•r• INTGN ton1 ,, Wein• £Ol ,40I • Amd.tr 1 H
Bencti \s another r e c e n l \~~ ouict \'#i 1~)~ w~~~11 ~~;1 t3 "'"I' ron 1t.1
purC.h3Sf.f o{ J(unt1ngt0fl l"v 1nt!c 107 i!l IYr'I f"l u::.:,:;; ,, .. ~ach lndu.str1al Park pro-/~~·,~:'~~, rf:'J,, '1~ 11 ~~"L'o
perty Ills firm supplie& de.otru ~ nc1i ,;~Ai ,~,4 'tr:if:\ lt ll~ A'tK~"i;~. 1
specialties throughout t he 1~ ,& ,t.F. ~1:.f· 111' 1 ::~~ 4?u
West from lU neuly buHt ~r~ i 1t:n ~ 1.t ~ ~~~Oli' .;ti l•clllUeJ at the Orange ~-···Jy '"" -tt~ ..! '' 11' W1n1~ri:t • ,. ,._. c~ i• \..UU.U IJtfl l~ 4o1 J ' Wl~flif 6..4 1 J, A~t. tort
11te. ~·~""i.; .~ : ~ fl~lf' ,: ~ 1f .. AfA_ "~ ~ ;:
"' • " ' " •1 ,,
" ., ' j l 11 1 0 600 1 , 18
•1 11 ..,
7J 1) I
" " ' ~' 59 11 ' 60 ,. ... . ~~ I ., •
110 '"" J ~
,16 ·~· ,,, ,, ..,
J' 19'~ J 11~ )1~ O(I 5 ,,.,
lJI lf'o
-
Complete-New York Stock List
..... ....
(atl.j Hl111 Lw t'-' CIW
J11M i..1
tMlt,J Hirt Lew ci.w ea., ''* ... CMl.l H ti! LI• Cllou t h ..
•
.. <•~ ,, _,, _.,
+ .. """ +.~ _, .. ~
'• " •• -" ,/ .. .. .. 1: -" =it -· +> ...
' + .. ~ .. :: 1l +\ "' .. "
+ " -i• • • + l:
+ " +'~ • "' • "' " '. -.. -..
.! '! + .,. r~ "'' . . ,
•• '• "
;?. .,
'• •• ..
" ,,
~
' .. •• :I .. "
• •
·' I
• '
'
i
•
T
I
•• ' . • .... 1' ··-• • '
1'71 l
Thursday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List
..... ~
fW. I HIP Ltw c .... Clil•
hi.. 1111
UNll) Mith Uw C~H Cllt
llltJ Ml
4W. I Mltlil l-CltM Cllt
•
•
DAILY l'tLOT
,.... -(IW1 ) NI.it Uw C•N t.••
•
1
. . . .
•
Harbor Boats Battle . .. -~
fj .,, •• '"I .,. ' , . -_, ,.. . '· -~ !f.,;·in. Acapulco L i neup f or Sunday
~ f ... ,,., ' I
•
.111y1~· 1t ·"""" 'llarbdr boall • wUrbe.., ,..rtlng,Uoeup ol
tbl : J" ' ttr. Ian O'.l)iego to
~pulco ~ ~Y-Four
• wJll Oy U.. ~ or Newport
~ Ya<hl Club and 00< 11
frnm South Shore Saillni Club.
A last-minute withdrawal by
Jl(limt, a Columbia-39 from
San francisro reduced the
fleet to 27. Here they 11.rf!. in
alphabetical nrdf'r. wifh a
brief background nn each:
ALE r. RE -A Palmer
Johruon-43 o~'ncd by San
Diegan John MacAllister and
eo-1kipptred by John Rumsey.
She \I/fin SnYC's Waterman
Series hist winter.
ALERT -A 6.1-fool ketch
from SDVC, Qwned b v
Dorothy Radcliffe. and a
former Ac;ipulco race entry.
ATORRANTE-A C a 1 -3 2
sloop <46 fttl overall \ owned
and skippered by Bu r k e
Sawyer of Newport Harbor
Yacht Club.
BARCA DE ORO--Cal·4ll
owned by Enrique Braun of the
co-sponsoring AcA pulco Yacht
Club. She was the first Me11:·
lean entry to tlnish the race
two years ago.
·B L A C K F I N -Ken
DeMeuse 's 76-(oot ketch from
St. Francis Yacht C I u b •
Vete:ran of two Transpacs, t~
Long Beach to La Pa z race
and two match races series
with the arch. .rival Windward
Passage.
Bt.JTZEN-Morgan-33 .sloop
c»skippered by Bill Corbett
and Mike Busch from SDYC.
Second smallest boat in the
race.
D OROT'H Y 0 -Bob
Beauchamp's well-eampalgned
Columbia-57 from Newport
Harbor Yacht Club. She is a
v e t e ra n ot every long
dlstence race from Southern
California 1ince she was
launched in 1969.
MELTEMI -A custom 37-
foot iloop owned 11nd sailed by
Bill Jonu ot Corinthian Yacht
Club. San Francisco.
designed 43-foot sloop owned
and skippered by Pe:ler Grant
nf Newport Harbor Yacht
Club. Alli of Granl'1 Nalu
boats ha ve a record of close
contention in the Acapulco
ra ce.
NEMES IS--Ericson-39 sloop
skippered by SDYC'.• Tom
Tobin. She became one of the
ocean racing fleet's most con-
sistent winners after her
launching last year.
PERICUS--Ericson-41 sloop
11kippered by John A •
Willian1son of Saratoga,, ~lif .,
and flying the colors of the
Lahaina Yacht Club of Rawl!ii.
RAINY DAY -Robert W.
Levi's 37.foot sloop from South
Shore Salling Club.1
SALACIA-Cal-48 from San
Franci8CO and R i ch mo n d
yacht clubs. owned and ski~
pered by .Joe DeMet e r .
formerly owned and cam-
p11igned by Tom Corkett of
Newport Harbor Y11cht Club.
SANGRITA--Cal·2·30 from
Seal Beach Y1cht Club. She 's
tht smallest boat in the fleet
and is skippered by John
McGee.
SA YULA-Another Ca I -4 0
from Acapulco, owned and
1kippered by Ramon Garlin.
SIGAME-Sid Re n k ow ' s
heavily campaigned Cal-36
from ~I Rey Yacht Club.
from Aca lpulco ''11cht Club
skippered by th e owner Jorge
Escall\nte.
Meltemi-A cuslom 37-foot
sloop owned and sailed by Bill
Jonu of Corinthian Yacht
Club. San Francisco.
NALU I V -A Lapworth-
SIRIUS ll-The famed old
rampaigner (ex·Barlovento,
ex·PatilitoJ v.·hich owns the
existing elapsed time record in
tht Acapulco r11ce--eight day11.
nine hours. l5 minutes, S4
seconds, !'let in 1964. The 8.1·
foot M Class Cutter is now
Biggest Boat Show
Opens in LA Toda)·
The largest boa! show in the
16-year history of the sponso'r-
lng Southern Californi a '
Marine Association opened its
doors at the Lo11 Angeles
Convention Center today for a
lo.day run.
The Los An,lileles Boat Show
was started at lhe Great
Western Livestock Sh o w
building on Atlantic Boulevard
16 years l,lil:O t1nd lilter moved
lo the Pan Pacific Auditorium
in Los Angeles.
The move to the Conve ntion
Center gives the exposition
240,000 square feet of space
solely devoted lo boats, mak·
in( lt a close second to the Na~
tion1l Boat Show in Ne w York .
The show features more
than goo boats raoging in price
fropi $100 to $100.000.
Aside from the bruits. there
will be 170 booth~ displaying
such Items as electronic gear,
clolhina. navigational aid~.
hardware and just about
• everything a person wants or
needs aboard A boat.
All the m11jor outboard
m 1 n u fa. c t urers-..John.<;on,
Evinrude. Mercury, Chrysler,
BeJrcal, Sea~ull and Aer&
ceanic-will be on display .
Among the power cruisers
will be suc h well-known
ma nufacturm as Trojan. Vik-
i n g . Hatteras. Chris-Craft,
Unlfllte, Gr11.nd B a n k !i \
Berllm. Concorde, Luhrs.
Brl.atol. Fjord. Tolleycrafl and
Vega.
The sail secUon wi ll fea lure
' BOAT SHOW QUEEN
1111 K lmbl1
1 such names as Islander,
Columl>ia, Schoc k, Yankee,
Catalina, Coronado. Aqulriu!,
Balboa, O ipper, Kor.a I J e ,
MacGregor, Hobie Cat and
Sailcrafter.
DA YE ROSS PONTIAC
-Lease or Buy All Models •••
' ··~
•,
.D~VE ROSS
• .• PONTIAC
-IUi'llol ll¥t. • PAil Dllft :cosya MW Pli~ 546-1017
•
' ' .,.. , ....... Wftlf t1• AA Tt ttrte ,_.,
,.,... ... , n ..-. "°' r>.M.
\
.... -,-~ ......
~-' ...,,
...
owned by Bob l.ynch of NHYC
who spent a small fortune
rebuilding her.
STARLING Ill-A ~I -foot
yawl sk:lppered by Norrrun
Ream , SDYC. veteran of
1everal other of fshore races.
TATEi-A brand · new
Ericson-39 owned hy Carlos
Cardenas of Acapulco. SDYC's
Rob Collin.,. Brliln Hanzel 11nd
John Burnham will be among
lhf' crew.
THALIA IV -Cal-43 from
SDYC 1kippered by John
Barbey who won SDYC'11 oce;in
racinjl: championship. t he
Rumsey Series. with his
former Cal·40.
THERA-Redline-41 making
her second race to Acapulco.
She's from SDYC and is skip-
pered by James O'Hern.
TZCHAK II-An Ericson-39
owned by Manuel Senderos of
Acapulco. She 'll have Lowell
North and Mal in .Burnham
from SDYC aboard.
llMil ,.,.~~•r P~ei.
VECTOR II-New Zealand·
46 owned and skippered by
Herb Johnson of SOYC. She
has been widely campaigned
in San Diego a!1(t other
Southland races.
BLUE WATER CAMPAIGNER -Bob Bcauchamp's Col un1bia-5 7 Dorothy 0
from NHYC starts her eighth long distance race \\'hen she sets sail for Acapul co
Sunday. Launched in the fall of 1969, she has made every offshore race from
Southern California. VIXEN-Ericson·39 u n d e r
charter to SDYC Commodore
Frank Hope. who was second
overall in the Acapulco race in
his K.-43 four years ago. He
hall the same crew on Vixen.
Balboa Dentist Finds
W IND STAR-Commance·
42 fro m SDYC, skippered by
Walter East who won last
year's San Diego to Ensenada
race.
WINDWARD PASSAGE -
Considered the fastest 73·foot
ketch in the world, first to fin-
ish in two Transptics and nu·
merous other offshore battles
in F'lorida. Sailed by owner
Mark John!ion who want! first
to finish honors if nothing else.
Yachti~g is like pulling teeth
-tind 1ometimes just as pain-
ful.
So reasons credit dentist
Bob Beauchamp of 2000 E.
Bay Front. Balboa, who has
had considerable experience at
both .
Fifth Cup
Bid Slated
For Turner
NEW 1972 OLDSMOBILE
TORONADO
2 DOOR HARDTOP
MON TM
24 MO.
Ol'IN IND
INCLUDES: AIR CONO., FULL POWER INC. DOOR
LOCKS ANO SEATS, AM -FM STEREO, VINYL TOP,
TINT. GLASS, TILT WHEEL, BELTED W/W, AND
MORt
We .leaM all · popui.
male• can and tnlC;kl
LEASE DEPARTMENT
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
HIO HAllOI ILYD. COSTA MIU
CAU. NOaM RUDLOYI. M7-47IO
•
'
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
SATURDA YS IN
THE DA ILY PILOT
SUEDE COATS & VESTS
le4li11· ••d 30% Me•11tyl11
wlrll fri•t•· 1 o· O~F . . .
Rasmussen's
OPEN DARY 9 It 5'30 ,, .. "'"' n OSll> SUHDAY
'
TUSTIN
........ ! -'
' • I ' ' R.a~ing Preside~t : j
To Speak":Tonigh~j
J im Michael of San Fran-
ri~. the new pre1ident ol lhe
North American Yacht Racin&
Union , will bf the aue:st
speaker tonight at the annutil
meeting of the Ocean Racing
fleet of Southern Ca lifornia al
Balboa Ya cht Club.
Pt1 ichael wa s for me r I y
chairman of the offshore sec-
tion of NA YRL'. He is expected
lo discu,11s proposed ··1evtl ra c·
in,il" under the lnlerntitional
Offshore Ru le \!OR). im·
porlant aspects of proposed
changes to the IOR me.asure·
ment rule and other topics of
interest to offshore raci ng .
Michael is the t i r !i l
Y.'esterner ever to be elected
to the presidency of NA ''RU,
the governing body for all
yac ht racing in N o r I h
Amer ica. He was elected at
the recent annual meeting in
and Ros!! award •
the yar r6r; . . ytcht&mJn of .... ' lr11. . , ,
"ether usigftflle nb lnclU41t-
the •naming of Chuc.k KoMr (olf
Long Beach as ass.lita.nt1
manilger of the U.S. Olyralije
yachting team , and olcV-;
Stearns of Chicago as eoac,ho;
Stearns gave up his plans to:
try for an Olympic berth _U(
the Star Cl ass to accept thj('
ass ignment. _..,,.+
In discussi ng !ht histo -, "*r
NAYRU. retirinl{ pr!!I , t
Bob Bavier brought out t r
the organi?.alion was
found ed by a group of east a
yachtsmen in 1925--as recp I
indicate-but was founded t lf
1897 by an equill repre~
tation of both western ~
western yachtsmen. ~ ..
New York. II ;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
Other westerners honored al
the NA YR U meeting were.
des igner Gary Mull or Sanl
Francisco who will replace!
Olin Stephens as NA YR U'S ex-
1 pert on yacht designing under
IOR ; Gordon Curlis o[ Los 1 Angeles, vice president of the
Offs hort Committee, and Bill I
Ficker . Newport Beach, to the I
botird of directors. !
Another new member of the
board i!i Ding Schoonmi1 ker of
Miami. Fla. who recently· was
named recipient of the Martini
ROLLER
lilMES
Friday
f•bruery 4
1:00 l'.M.
11 11 Jenn John•-v•.
Cho•I Jthn P••I<.,.
HEY
DAD!
• ~ .. • •• • .. , •
Here's Tho i
Opportunity For f
Y O<Jr Ch ildren To ·
See Ono Of
Well Disney'<
Greatest Hits ,
-This W eekencl!'
WALT
DISNEY
soiig
OF THE
South
ll\fMEDIATE DELIVERY! I'
PANTERA I' ,,,
I .
b.\' dcTom1so ... imporled fo't Llncoln-l\.1ercury. 1wiQq ~
c-oa<"h"'·o~k cr,..alrd hy !hf' brillian t GhiA Studios of Turill.1,'
Frird rt,..~1gnf'd th,.. .'\5 1 ClD 4V V-8. l'nginl'. r our wh~l in· drr'lf'nent suspen~i n n And mid·l'.hip enli:ine placemtnL Yivt·r•I
1~ gear boa:. fully 1ynchronlzed • . . ·,•
"PanlerA ... IIRlian for Panther, •. -, ,..o(
Or.1111 ,, •• ,.,., •F11•i'1 ~Fi11t cm•
. '
• IAllUMCll<Atl
• MAlfil CllA ..
' '
r .
·--, r 'I 1 1 l . . . . . . . . • • .. : . . -. . . ~. . ---. • ... ,._, ~·,,-,,
A Complete Guitle • • • Where to go ••• What to tlo • ••
I
I.
.... _ .. ,.... .... ..._ ... -·~-~·
. --.
• •
•• .-.. (I" ••
•
-'
j
•
,
•
EDWARD HOPPER'S OIL ON CANVAS TI T LE D 'NOV EMBER, WASHINGTON SQUARE'
Hollywood Backstage • -·
i-.J~~~;jp ~nnis Cole Lands
. Startmg B'roadwa y Role
.Ry VERNON SCOIT
UPI HallYWtoll Cotre111onll111f He is the father of a son. Joey. an ac·
HOLLYWOOD -Dennis Cole •. the tive IO-year-old who visits him every
haodsome young soldier of fortun~ 1n other weekend. On those occasions father
"Bearcats,'~· is a one-tnJlt: disCQtheque and son play football in a nearby park or,
bouncer, :profes,k>nal foO!QaA ppect, dorlng·tbe summer. head for the beach.
dance 1nstrUctor. movie 'e'itra ·&nd, 'in , ·As an actor Cole has mixed feelings
fact, something Or a soldier of fortune in ·about his CBS series being cancelled. "It
private life. , started out to be an adult adventure
A nati ve of ~it, Cole m'igr&led -to drama and ended up as a kiddy show,"
California a decade ago and spent most he says. "It could have been a lot better
of his time eking out a livi ng as best he than it ••as. but you learn something
could : from failures. too."
But he has co.starred in three Moreover. Cole diSliked spending IS
televiSion series and now is headed for weeks in Tucson. Ariz., and Santa Fe. N.
Broadway and lhc starring role in "And M .• where most nf "Bea.reals" was film-
All the Girls Came Out to Pla y.·· Ste COLE, Page tz
The title is apt.
Cole is di\'orced and likes nothing hel-
ler than the CTlmpany of pretty girls.
CO LE STARS ON BROADWAY
Fortunately, many pretty girls return his
attentions.
The young blond actor bought a home
in the Nichols Canyon area of \\'est Los
Angeles and set about redecorating it
hiniself.
Intermission
The two-bedroom house y,•as a typical
California stucco rafl chslyle building.
Denni!! ·has · transfoimed it into what
might pass for a Spanish hacienda by ad·
ding wooden beams. tiled floors and
~1editerranean type furniture to the in-
terior .
HE · HAS DONE most of the masonry
and carpentry himself,. using his con-
tiiderable collection of power tools.
Cole doubts the-house will ever.be com-
pleted to his satisfaction,-JO he continue!
to work OD' it at his own pace. Wbe~ be
can't find a j>articuJ8.r plece of fuotiture
to suit his nee<U,, he .'builds ib from
scratch.
WEEKENDER I '. , I.
INSIDE FEATURES
-LUCY BELL. Edjlor . ' ;a., ~rlday, February 4, 197% . ... . .
. Jeanine Altmeyer, former stu-
dent at e31 State Fullerton, Is the
youngest member of the New York
Metropolitan Opera . A pi<;t~ .and
story 1ppeir on Pa11 .22 m· ~
daJ'&•Wjl!Okmcler .. ' --siaaJ Delo;laM
"' ... 'llOUerltt Artllrllls '~ Volealloo~
1 ''Thief ,,, ..,... ••
Oat •N' Abeiit
DtfiioYf1oil ... ~,
Holbrook'• ~Nata"
Live 'Mleatet • t
Plp.U .
Pqe 1%
..... 1%
Pl(• 1%
P11e t2 Pacnu ~a
1 P ... IS
Pqe IS
·Page IS
P11e f.5
t
''M" on KCET,
Gulde ht Movlts
t.A • Ve1a1 Tr;lla . I
TeleVfsktn t.n1·
Gahl< lo Fuo
lleaaty Cotrte•~ , .... , ,.-rv
OS<arl
P1ge U .· p u . .,.
Pqe It
!'al• r. ,.,,. 17
Paae !i
P1p l7 .
" • I ,
Lag una Musical Actress
Now in Good 'C o1np any'
By TOl\f TITUS
Of Ille 0.11~ Pl .. ! Sltlf
Those of you who haJl8 on to your com-
munity theater programs and dig them
out for reflection every once in a while,
probably relisb spotting the name of a
.favorite actoJi.or 1clress who'!i gone on lu
·lietter tltings.
For instan~. tbere Is Diane Hall from
•Orange C.O..st QoUege's "Bye Bye Blrd ie"
and "'l'he Sound· of Music," wh o, as Diane
Keaton. took over the leading ro le in
••Hair" on Broadway, then originated tlie
top female role in r ,,
. wOcxfY Allen's "Play
It Again: Sam." Or
Mike · Farrell from
the o1$:f Laguna Play-
house, who found hll
way into two shod,..
Uvedtelevls lo n
seriea, "The Young
Doctors" and '"Mle
Ma'n and the Cky." T••• •ALSTON
Mike once played the lead in Laguna's
swnmer muslc'1 ""The Fantastic~s.,.
circa 1965, along with 1 ltighly talented
yoong lady nam~ <Teri Ralston . tt •'as
Min Ral1ton '1 first mu1ical-and her
last show along the Orange Coast; she
was on bu way up.
LIKE MISS KEATON, Teri had her eye
on Broadway-and she alto made. it tn a
big way. After 1 series of Civic Light
Opera type musicals, concert and night
club tQurs and a musical ' revue, Teri
grabbed the plum role of Jenny in the
orlg1nal production of ''ComP•ny.'' ~
After a tw1>-year Broadway run, she
rollowed the musical to London where she
ope'ned J11n. 18 at Her M1jesty'1 The~ter.
In 1 cable to her parents. Dr. and Mrs.
Robert J. Ra111on of Laguna Beach, she
announced that "C:Ompany" is a big hit
there as well. .
On the circuitous road irom Laguna tO
Times Square, Teri appeared in ''The
Student Prince," "Your Own Thing" <as
Olivia ). "The Boy Friend" (as Polly) and
"How To Succeed in Business WithouJ
,Really Trying" (as the sexy Hedy ). She's
!appeared with Judy Garland and Johnny
Mathis. traveled with the Y o u n g
Americans and toured her own show in
the Orient.
A 1961 graduate of Laguna Beach High
School, Teri ha sn't neglected her educa·
lion· en route to musical theater ilardom •
She holds a bachelor's degree In drama,
music and EngUsh and a teaching
credential as well .
BACKSTAGE -Three DAILY PILOT
DistingUis.tied Perfonnance 1DP 1 awards
will be preaenCed tonight at the Irvine
Community '.fheat.er to Richard Dow
(best direclor). Aaron Fletcher (best ac-
tor ) and Bob Mills (best !Upporting ac-
tor), and tbe JCT group has invited other
winnera and runners-up in 1971 listings to
be It& guest for the opening of "The
Amorous PJea ."
The caraled product.ion of "Long
Day's Journey Into Night" for the Slnta
Ana Community Players Is still alive and
looking for someplace else to
perfonn ..•. director Art Winslow h~s
stepped into the vecaled role of Jan1es
Tyrone and the cast Is see k Ing
auditorium fa cilities in which to present
the Eugene O'Neill drama.
The new Fullerton Civic Light Opera ,
making itA; first appearan-:e next weekend
with "F'iddler on the Roof," figures to be
aold out for It& flnt productiof! ••• an ts·
lra performance bas bffn addtrl for Son·
day, Feb. 20. lollow1oi a 2:30 maUnee the
same day.
'
HIS 'NEW YORK MOVIE' OIL ON CANVAS ALSO IS ON .DISPLAY AT NEWPORT ART MUSEUM
Hopper Realist Art Shown
15 Works i n Pr emiere Ex hibit at N~wport Museum ..
Fifte~n w.orks by Edward Hopper, con·
!iidered to be America's foremO'St realist
painter, are being shown through Feb. 24
at the Newport Harbor A.rt Museum . .
rt is the rirst lime H'opper's paintings
h~ve been seen in the \Vest CoR.st in a ma-
jor n1useum show.
The Newporl jlarbor Art Museum, 2211
\V. Balboa Blvd., developed the sh0'4'ing
with the Pasadena Art Museum.
The ex hi1'ilion opened "'ith the help of
such leaders as the ~1etropolitan Mu-
seum of Art, the \Vh itnC"y Museum of
American Art , New York City: the Ad-
dison Gallery of Ari. Pennsylva nia ; the
Corcoran Gallery of Art, \Vashington,
D.C.; the Butler Institute. Youngstown,
Ohio, and the Museum of Modern Art,
New York City.
Hop per. who was born in Ny1ck, New
Ynrk. in 1882 studied al the New York
School of Art from 1899-1900.
He later studied "'ilh 1wo turn-of-the·
century urban realists, Robert Henri anti .
Kenne lh Ha ys Miller. and made three ~
trip!! to Europe before be com i n g
St udent Mus ical.
Groups Featured
111 Mes a Fes ti val ..
Six student musical groups and in-
dividuals from sc hools along the orange
Coast will be featured in the fourth
Festival of Music benefit at 3 p.m. Sun-
day in the Lyceum of Costa Mesa High
School, 2650 Fairview Road,. Cost~ Mesa.
The program ia being presented by
Todas Las Cludades Committee or the
Orange County Philharmonic Society.
Proceeds from the $1 .SO .contribution will
help finance the sociefy's youth concert,
series which is presente<J frff to elemep.
tary Jiul>il• fn orange eounfi.lchodls ..
The aludtnU appeaiing Jn'the aflernoen
program were 5elected from a number of
high wchool and college groups who of·
fered their talents for the bellerit~ the
chaJnn1n, Mra. Michael Bdck, said.
F1atured thla year are the Eltanci1
High School vocal ensemble: Ljoda ~v
lngton. vocal soloist from Orange Coast
College : the Costa Mesa Hlgfi School
Madrigals; Rkk FoundJ, guitarilt from
Eft.ancia Hlgh and the Mttghan Brothers
Jau Trio from Golden West College.
Dennis Manger• will be master of
ceremonies . He la an lntemational
Toastmasters winner . Is active In civic
liitht opera . 111 11 vice president of the
Amcricoo Learnin11: Corporation, tnwt is
vice president of the Huntington B~c:h
Union High School Diltrlct Board of
Education.
Tlck~t:I ti $1.M for itdulls artd 75-ctnts
for children, may be purchased ll 'the
door. Call 968-2862 for Information.
disillusioned with painting .
Because h.i s "unromantic" works were
not s~lling well in the early · 190<l'F, he
took up printmaking, but eventually
retumed 'to wntercolor and oil s by 1920.
According to ;irl museum -0Hicial ~.
Hoppe rl's "uncompromising style has
survival every major art mGvement in
the last two decades. His understanding
of man's isolation and loneliness has been
a major theme ln his p&.intings. ·'
F'avorite subjects include New York
brownitone houses. theatre:-going pu~·c.
wooden houses and lighthouses o! tl'le
East Coast and traiqs. ·
Hopper died In 1967. Hl1 wlfe,
• .,
' I
I
• . -'•I •
1 .: ..... ~~·
.... . . ,
• I ·I
I '
•
'-
.' ' ' ,,
:;~""::-)~ '~ .. ~
. ' -. ,, ,, .... ~ . '"" I ,f • ' .-.. _,, . . ' • ·"I.' ;. t::·-
.,,. ' i ~1 .1 •• •
'
. -
Josephine. whom he had married In J.
died Jn 19611. '
After her death. more than 2.l'tfo
watercolor.~. otls, drawings and prints by
Hopper were bequeathed to the Whitney
MusC"um of Amer ican Art.
fiu1dcd tours by the museum 11re glvht
every Thursday at 2 p.m. or by advanbe
rescrv11t ion. '
The entrance gallery is featuring 1
three-sided exhibition of a sandal shop,
books by Calllornla artists and vieyl
sculpture by Michael Davis.
Museum hours are noon to~ p.m. TU!I·
day through Sunday.
For further information call 675-3886.
·RIC~ FOUNDS, 1srANc1A HIGH scHOOL FesnvAL.""'~;ollMh't .. ...
• • ' •
'
I:
I ' I
I
-nl".AJLY PILOT
••
• Guard Pies
I • • At Bowers
IOWERS ~fU8t:UM -!002 N. Maln St , Sant.a Ann. Hours:
10 11 m tn <l .lll p.m. 'rue~ -SAL : I lo 5 p t!l , Sun, :tnd 7 tG
9 p rn \\1Prl Hnd 'l'hur."I 1·:xhlh1t or 1_,o11:an Ln<·kabf'y phntn!'I
on 1trt•i,:t1ard ~f'rv1i·1•s in New1>Urt Reat·h, ftO. 5 ll1rou~h
Frb. 27 CfJllLi:l1011 ur old \lalt•1ll1nes on dlspl11y f't•h. fi-27 .
Nl-:l\11'CJRT llAlllUl/t ART :O.fUSfo.:Uf\1 -2211 W. fia!boa
Blvd . Nr1oo•por1 Rc:-tt'ti Hours : noon tu 4 p nl. 'l'u•·~ -Sun .;
C.:loud Mon Cm exh1h1t in nuun gallery, p;;u1tings by F:d.
-•rd Hopper, throu$lh F'eh 24 In entrance gallery, collec·
lion of unique arl book.s by Sn CahL artists: a sandal shop
"'all , 11nrl vin yl objttl."1 created by htlt·hael Davis. through
Feb. 'll.
OCC GALl,to_:nv -2701 Fairview !load, Costa Mesa. Hours:
Mon. · Thur~ 7:30 a.m · JO p 01,; Fri.. 7:3'1 a.m. -5 J>.m.;
Sun .. I t" 5 p.m. Closed Sul. African Art Exhibit opens F'eb. 1• lo run throui;i:h Mar. 3, masks , wt-arlng apparel and sculp-
1.ure.
S1£CURITV PACIF'I C -196 I':. 17th St .. Costa Mesa. On eK·
hlblt during regular bu11ines11 hours . oil paintings by Pegge
Wiico x, through l''t:hruRry.
AVCO SAVINGS ANJl LOAN -3310 J3rlstol St., tosla Mesa.
On exhibit during regular business hours through Febru·
ary, oil paint ings by Marjorie Ludlam
MESA VEHl>1': 1.181\i\RY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive East,
Co11ta Me11a . On exhibit dur ing regular hours oil paintings
by Fred Olds, through February.
COSTA MESA LIBRARY -513 Center SL. Costa Mesa .
Oil pa intings by Pat Ingram on exhibit during reg ular
library hour11 through February.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF 0C -16.50 Adkms St., Costa
Meu. On exhibit during regular business hours, acrylics
and watercolors by Fen1e Will iams, through February.
TRANSAMERICA TITl.J<.: CO. -170 E. 17th St .. Co.~ta Mesa.
On &xhlblt du ring reg ular business hours through February,
olla by Beula Treadwiiy.
DOWNEY SAVINGS -lOO F.. 17lh SL., Costa fl1esa. On ex·
hiblt dur ing regular bui>iness hours. oi l paintings by Manci
Schontal , Llvene Chnrron, Phyllis M{·Carty an d Atma Phil-
li pa, through Fcllru11.ry.
MUTUAL SAVINGS ANIJ LOAN -2867 E. Coast Highway,
Corona del Ma r. On exhibit during regular business hours,
palntingt by Robert Dennistoun , through February.
LAGUNA BEAClf ART GALLERY -307 Cliff Drive .• Lag una
Beach. Hou rs: 11.30 a.m. to 4.:30 p.m. daily. On exhibit
Feb. 6, Calif. artists rrom Thomas Inch collection: ceramics
by Allen Davis; sculpture of H. Frielicher. L. Heath and
palnllnga by Fred Kopp and Ruth Rossman, through Feb·
ruary ..
MARINERS LIBRARY -2004 Dover Drive, Newport Beach.
On exhibit lhrough fl'ebruary, dur ing regular libra ry hours,
Amtrlcfl.n history artifacts.
CORONA DEl. MAR LIBRAR Y -420 fl1arigold Ave .. Corona
del Mar .. On exhibit through February during regular li·
brary hours, American history artifacts.
Jane Wyrrian Heads
Arthritis Can1paig11
Hy Al.DEl!T \\'. RATl<:S
01 tll• O.Hy l"li.I Still
J•lle Wyman rnRY be retired
1s R motion pif'fure Rrtress
but she Is 11nything but that
, when It comes to working to
hf'lp suffe!"frs from arthritis, f
the n1ttlon·s No. I crippling f·
'dl~ase.
Onct" 11gain P.ti~s Wy1n11n is
'erving a.s ca mpaign chairma n
lnr the Arthritis Foundation.
·lit'r energies "'ill be f u 11 y
bxtd stArl ing at midnight lo-
·01orro"' nighl ~Sat., Feb. 51
•·hen she brin1s to the 171h
':Slop Arthritis" l ·e 1 et hon
l nn!her pl'lradP of top st11rs.
Thr trltlhon will r\ln for 19
b nu rs nn KT1.A . Ch1111nrl 5.
enfi1n1111t i p n1 . Sund11 y Ch11n·
nel 5 h11.~ nonat&f tht lime ror
ttui; ('RUS('
Of 17 million An1ertl'RrlS suf-
tenn.1: from 11rthrills. includ ln,1.t
rhilfi ren 11s well 11s 11dults.
nr11r l\' 1 rnilllnn 11rr 111
&1uthf'rn C11li forni;1. w i I h
l:J0.000 11f then1 in Orange
Cnunly 11lnnr
Thr t1h.u1d11t1on·s OrRn~e
Counl y br1H11·h s u p po r l s
n1Ni1c11I p r fl ,R r 11 m s in-
\•estigat1n.1: nf'w lrads into the
rMu se 1111d curt' of Arthritis 11.t
UCLA 11nd use med ic al
centers !.Q(·11lh·. the foun ·
d1111on i~ he\11 \ni; lo establish lll
Rhrum11tolog,v 01\'1~ion al UC
lr\'1ne r-.tf'(!irR\ S<'hoo\.
Add1tln11111I \' thl' Or•nge
Count~· hrlinl'h ~uppi:1rts :
-Arthn!i1· pat1Pnl c-11 r"
t'hnu·~ 11t llr:in).!P Count}'
Mtd1c-11I Ct'nlrr 11nd l'hildren'.!i
Hosri1 111
-llt'h11b1l1!111u>n srr\'l!'I'' RI
the OranJ:t' i,)1un!\ l\ehsbilllll·
Uon Ct-nTf't '
-Nur~1n,11; 11nd t h , r 11 p y
Fa111ilv Tl'a111
JANE WYMAN
Telethon Hostess
srrvict•s fnr ho rn e -b n u n (l
arthr1tits !hrnugh thr \'\si1ing
Nuri;e As~41t•1at1011
The brAnrh al:;o p!'O\'ldts
fret' Jttrriiture. fi0<·\or find
rlin17 rrferral \isls and public
and professional e<lucatior111l
forun1s.
Th e rieighbor-to-nei~hhor
c11mpaign began ~·esterda~._
Feb. 3, "·ith more lh11n JS.000
Orange Co u n t ~-volunlrers
.seeking contributions.
CIRire 1'rl'\"Or. of Nf'\\pclrt
Reach. anolhrr retir('d ar-
tres.s, is lbt' ('(lUnly campai,11n
chairm11n. and ~1r~. Cl1tude
Osteen, "·ife of !he Ilodgers·
pitching regular. Is chA1rn1an
of the victory march .
'l'he 11.dv\sory co1n1nittet",
headed by Costa ri.1 e .!i a
b11sine"ml\n t"' r e d e r i c k.
Hughes. was set a 1972 goal of
SJ40,000 to ttpand Io c 11 \
~search, treatment racllititi;,
nursing cart 11nd doctors'
trAining .
Bug dad Nostalgia
Dougla s Fairbanks, Sr. may be seen tonight at 10
p.m. in the 1924 film , "The Th ief of Ba gdad/1 on
Channel 28 . It is one of the station's ser ies titled
''The Silent 'Years.''
Valentine Collection
Displa yed at Museum
''\Vilh Mearls.and Flowers,"
an outstanding exh ibition o( a
private t'flllerlion of early
Valentin es will be shovt'n for
the first time at the Bowers
~1u seum, 2002 No. Main St.,
Santa Ana. l"eb. fi through the
271h .
The observance of Valen-
tine's 0Ay as a lime to
remember one's sweet heart
wi1h a sentimental missive
has been practiced for several
cen!uries. There is mention of
the cu.~lom in !he works of
Chau<'er , Sh11kcspeare. and
oth1•rs. It has been a tradition
1nainty in England 11 n d
An1erica, where it reached il.!i
(>Cflk in the tv<enly years
he1\1'ee11 1840 and HIOO.
1'hc earlie st known ex-
:in1ples ul -valeatines v.•ere
handmade with k1vi ng ..:<1.re
and 11 very ~erious in1ent -a
drrlarA lion of love or i\ pro-
posal uf nurrriagc. But with
the adve nt u( t'hl'H!)l'r \)OSlage
in !840, fhe sending'uf till sort~
of gree tinJ: cards bccan1t' ve ry
popula r, an d the seriousness of
receiving a valentine declined.
Hy 1840 !he busi ness of rnak·
ing v a 1 e n l i n e s flourished .
J\1er trnnica! produC'tion w.11s
pt'rfec!ed in ~_:n~land, where
the rnust bt'aut1ful l;n:e papers
\\'Crc n1ade. Thev were
decornted by hand ;it fuctorlt>s
or stal10111~rs with tiny flov.·ers,
let1 ves and birds of paper or
silk. <l nrl later. y,•1th the col-
Ol'ful. t•n1bossrd figures and
fhiwf'rs in11)1"1rlf'd I r om
t:rrrn;iny. 1'l11•se "'rre sold in
~rrat quanl1t1rs. of1cn f11r as
n1u<'h as fl \'t' or !f'n dnll:irs.
!\ dt'rhne in !ht' l>f'autv and
ta ste 1•f \Alt'nl1nr~ ciln {.11sdy
be nc11('{! '111 lhosc produced
;1ftcr th(' fi{l's. '!'herr was pro-
~i-rss 111 t h~ field r> f
!1lhngrRphy, but 1he
ltlh(l~!l·aµhed c:ard s, ('!I I en
t'n1rrNI hv a lR\'cr cir t11·0 of
l'ti!hrr eoUrse h;rr paper, did
1101 f'On1 parc v.·11h the fine
qual11y or style ot the f'arller
ex;i1nples A ~ro\\·1ng and erer
ruore ~phis!tra1ed S-O<'i ely !o.!it
interest in tht sending of
rf'nlly lovely \·alcntines.
custom may have died out
altogether had it oot been for
school children who continued
lo delight in ex changing small.
inex pensive vale n!ines with
the ir classmates. After the
end of World War II, there
was a renewed interest in St.
Valentine's Day. and the
custom of observing it is well
e.!!tablished again.
COLE ...
From Page 21
ed on location. He "'orked si x
da.vs R week and it interfered
y,•ilh visits from Joey.
Now that he is between
assignments Cole and his
agent are working together for
guest shots on otJier telf:visio n
shows and prt-pari11 Ji: for the
Broadway play.
He has Lime now to continue
/1is Ae ling lessons y,·Hh Robert
Paris. who i.iave him drama
instructio ns when Dennis was
loo poor to pay for then1 ,
\.\1i1hout worrying about ~et·
ling up at 5 a.m. lo report for
\vork , C-Ole has su ffici ent time
lo take pretty girls to the
theater and movies. H i s
favnrite ploy is to coax them
lo his house and talk them into
fixing dinner for him.
"l used to do some cookin~
n1ysell. .. he say,!!. "But not
any more. Besides . girls like
to let \"OU !(:now they have
s"me dclmrstic instincts ·•
Having been me1T ied once,
Dennis is no longer in 11 rush
to rrmarry. He says : "It's a
bore to spend so murh l\me
a tone. Keeping house and
~·ashing dishes is A p-Atn. But
it's nice to have yo ur in·
dependence and lo spend R lot
of time 1t!ont'.'."
Because 1nnsl of Colr ·s
parts ha~'f' called for physical
nexterit y !he former
Southeastern /Detroit) High
School fnotMll flAsh "'orks out
1n a gym and i!! dedicated to
c11hsthenirs.
Ht believes 11 leading man
should ha ve muscles. Dennis
has got 'em.
Big Voice
Gets Girl
Met Role
...
At the time, it wu an insult.
But now Jeannine Altmeyer
doesn't mind having been told
lh•t her voice was too loud
and "stuck out'' in her high
school l:ho1r .
Because today. seven years
laler, Jeannine has found her
place -as the youngest mem·
ber of the New Yo r k
Metropolitan Opera .
And the Music Department
at California Slate College,
Fullerton is following her
•
JE ANNINE AL TEMYER
With Metropcllt11n Opa:ril
every note. Jt may well be according to Dav¥t Thorsen ,
tha t Jeannine is the college's her music professor. Conse-
mosl distinguished alumna In quenlly, he made every effort
the field of fine arts. to give her the kind of musical Today , just si x years after :;he took her first formal voice education that he felt she
lesson, 2J-year-0ld Jeannine is needed at her particular level.
a recognized success -from "Jeannine wa s an extremely
pupil lo prima donna. talented, p I ea s a n t and
Her accom plishment5 , in ad· cooperative student," he
dition lo being awarded a recalled.
three-y ear contract with the Soon after she enrolled,
Met in November, 1g10 when however. it became apparent
she won ils annual nationwide that Jeannine needed in·
auditions in New York City, struction beyond what was of·
include : fered on campus. Accordingly,
-Two solo performances on Martial Singher, w o r I d •
national television when shf: renowned baritone and vocal
appeared for the Glendale director of the Academy of the
Symphony 0 r chest r a ' s West in Montecito. was added
Christmas special. to the music faculty at
-The best performance in Fullerton.
the WGM Mutual Broad· Jeannine. who credits Cal
casting Company's ''Auditions Slate with being primarily
of the Air" contest in Chicago. responsible for her success,
Performances at the said that her contact with
Holly wood Bowl. the Wilshire Singher was the turni ng point
Ebell Theater and in Chicago's in her career. ;.If it weren't
Grant Park. for the help I got at Cal State
-Guest so prano with the and for Mr. Singher showing
Chicago Lyric Ope ra. me how to use my voice , J
-Being named "Citizen of probably wou ld have given up
the Mo nth" by the city of La singing,'' she said .
Habra for January. But .!ihe did not. and the rest
Her latest acco mplishment is histor y.
was seeing herself as the A lyric so prano. Jeannine
cover girl on the Cal State's continued her study at UCLA
Alumni Associa tion magazine, for a short while before
Continuum . Jeann ine, who left returning on a full -time basis
Ca.I Stale in 1969. was the sub-at the Academ y. It was not
ject of !he magazine 's lead much longer before she w•s
arlic:le th is month. awarded the contract with the
She "'as a natural choice for l\1et. and in October 1971 she
the cover and feature article. made ber debut.
Not only is she attractive All this success has failed to
(she was raled by critics as change her and Jeannine re-
.among the six most beautiful mains a quiet. unassuming
prima donnas to appear with home-town type girl. When liv-
Chicago Lyr ic\, but she is the ing in New York City , she
story of success. calls her family in La Habra
A resident of La Habra since three or four times a Wet"k .
childhood , Jeannine graduated And even before she asks
from La Habra High School in about hf'r lhree brothers. she
1966. It was wh ile in high asks about her dog, Blue.
school that her voice received "She reall y misses her
first criticism ~for being too pets," said her father, William
loud for the school choir. T. Altmrytr. ''Before she
Recognizing the potenti al. her hangs up. she want.~ a full
teacher , William Dunton, now report on all of them -the
the school"s Fine Arts Depart-rabbit. the raccoon and the
men t chairman. ad vis ed her to two cats, too."
see a pri vate voice coach. From her p e n t ho u s"
Jeannine took private voice ov erlook ing Central P a r k ,
lessons during the rest of her Jeannine has found life ei:-
high school da ys and then citing and glamorous in New
entered a music conservatory York City. But it's a long way
in Los Angeles as a e-01\ege from home and her friends
fre sh ma n. and Cal State.
"l got discouraged th~e ." "I miss my old friends and II
she said . "They didn't teacb miss lhe college .'' she said
opera at all and t didn 't care recently on a short visit home.1
for the atmosphere of the peo-"The school was good to me
pie.'' atlrl I'll never forget 11." I
But she perservere<l . "floly And the eyes of Cal State
mon1 was of special en-are on Jeannine -singing \
rouragement." Jeannine said. star. citizen of the montb,I
Travel
Virgin-Isles
Get Popular
By STAN DILA,LANE
s·r. THOMAS, \1irgin Isl ands -\Varm, blue
Caribbean weather. Mort> and more cruise ships
are simply overwhelming these islands. 1'wo in port
when we came in on lhe new M;S Southward. \Ve
added 800 passen gers to the jammed little shop·
ping street of Charlotte Aina lie. Stores \Veil stock·
ed and staffed, but just no room to get near coun·
ters.
* Southward (Norwegian Caribbeiiln Line) on
maiden voyage is full. AJmost a11 Americans. EN·
TIRE passenger service sold to concessions. Dinft.tg
room is a concession. Bar another. Tours another.
Shopping center one more. .
Some exasperations and rival concession husl·
li ng. You cannot have after d inner drink \\'ith cof·
fee since the din ing room serves coffee. the bar
se rves drinks. Won't cross each other's lines.
L.oudspeaker rattles with tour sales and count·
down: "Only one hour befo re tour o!fice closes.
F·ifteen minutes to closing. Five minutes. une min·
ute. Etc." Can 't sign bar chits -each drink must
be paid for in cash. Co mputerized dining room.
Specialized choices impossi ble. Food good. though.
Ship sail s each day ct 5 p.m. and circl es . al l
night to reach next port sometimes onJ y 40 mil es
away. Passengers suspect so they will spend even•
.e.ing money with ship concessions r ather than ashore.
* New concept to me a nd maybe makes mon~y,
but feels like being fed into a machine. BIG ship·
ping center with duty-free prices. Perfume atH?ar d
CHEAPER than St. Thomas. Se rvice by blacks hired
in the islands on the short sometim"es su rly side.
T\VO passenger meetings to be told ho\v much ~o
tip: waiter. Room steward. AND bus boy. AND wait·
er captain : Total $7 per day a couple on a 14 day
cruise. Seems high to me.
* Three bars. A night club. Evening sna cks. En·
terlainment is BEST of any cruise shir. I've seen.
Victor Borge for one. Good ports of cal .
* "C11n we get rooms in Europe without advance
reserv11tions? We hate to be on a fi xed schedule."
l j ust wouldn •t try it. Not in the capital cities.
In summer they are jammed. Tours, Charters. Peo-
ple \Vho DO stay on fixed schedules. Even after the
summer seaso n you run into convenlion r;. The most
distinguished hotels -the ones v.'ho made a point
of repeat guests -are now selling to conventions.
Using all the juice I could \vith tourist offices and
airlines, I had MUCH trouble in Athens, Paris, Ma·
drid in LA.TE October .
* Now. if you'll stay fifty miles or so out of the
city, you can do it. Couple r iding a motorcycle this
summer (and v.•r iting to me ) did this . Had no prol>
!em finding rooms.
* "We are driving to Mexico for the first time
•nd don't know tr11ffic laws ther&. We've hurd
Mexican police ar• severe on fo reigner• .• .''
\Vrong. Mexican police arc lenient with you -
unless yo u start taking a bar apart. They used to
hassle us. But the word is out: l~ay off the tourist.
* Mostly what we do wrong is go wrong way on
a one-way street. We aren 'l ,used to the signs. These
are painted arrows high On ttle side of buildings at
ea.ch corner. Arrow points the "'ay. Two-pointed ar·
rov.'. tv.'o wa ys. Usuall y the v.•ord "c1rculacion"
v.•ritten into the arrov.1•
Village West Fine Arts & Crafts Center
Carl l ro!let"ic:k. N•llC'f Ooyl•, ptot Ke1111erty •ltd P.ttl It-ck el•"t
wl'11 forty-1l:r otM1 Art\'" 1111d Cr•ttl111e11, 11ow hft • werill1tt
studio o•ollcible f•• • qu•llfled ,.etNr. A ll111ltH """'"' •f
11rtl1t1 di1pl1ty •recn 011• nolloble. Her mother. Mrs. William T. cover girl and one t1me l
Allmeyer. once studied music hopeful for the high school 793 L.agun• Canyon Road, Laguna Beach, 494--9390
herself and she could ap-1 ;~ch~o~i~L~;;:°'"r.;:;=;;;c:;;;;:;:;;:~I~:;;~~~;;;:~~~~~~~~~~;;;~ preciate the value of good in-wv .. •-·-·· ... -~ ....... , ---.. ~~ t ,. ----r...,.,..,..,.._,.,,.,...,, slrllction . ··--·-'«< r-,-· -. ., ........ _ ·-·-'>~.· ........ ·.,1·~~-' .. e~ ~ • -• ~ ·--
"\\'e never pushe<l music or
lessons." Mrs . Altmeyer said .
"But once Jeannine decided
sh~ wanted to si ng. we tried to
find the very best teachers. tt
v.·as no t unl il she went to Cal
Stale. though , that she ac-
tually began true opera
study."
BIG BIRJHDA Y SALE THIS W~EK
1t'i our bth hirt hd •y in N•wport -f-•h ru•ry 1,+, lt'1 our )5th birthdey in th•
produce busin •ls, Febru ary 3. l+'i my wife's (ov•r 21) birthd •y. Febru•ry '4.
It 's my daug hter Di•ne's hirlftdey F•bru11 ry 8.
So. Celebr11+• "Our" Birthdays With These Birthd ay Special~! ................................
I• Our Ftow., Shop • • • HOWi Wo wr.o • OPEN 7 DAYS SMALL cots• •
At the turn of the centurv in
this country, the piclure Post
rnrd \\'llS introrlured. Rnd
there \\'SS a great craz.e for
rollerting them. ~·or 111 time
the posl c11rd \·alenline \1·as
the only one in vogu e. The
Jeannine entered Cal St ate.
as a sophomore in September Eggar Anna. 1!161. and was imme<11ate1y
·r singled ou t by Clifford Heims ,
• Flow ... ly f.T.D. • r' • Celery •
• • fRll DELIVERY • • • ,INIST PRODUCE •
• • • LOWIST PRIC",li • 15« ·lune• • HOLLYWOOD 1UPtl associate professor of music.
Samantha Eggar vdll co-st ar "She auditioned for • part in our summer opera workshop,"
with ~ul Brynner in the 20th he said. ··and I thought she
Cent ury-Fox tele vision pilot had tremendous potential." Buvs ~lorv . . .
HOLI.Y \\'OOD ~UP I ) show "Anna and the King of Jeannine was already hud-
James (i11rner's Cher 0 k e e Siam," based on the hit play ed toward an oper1~k: career
Productions has purchased and movie. ''The King and I." whtn she came to Cal .S'tltte,
"The Outfit," 11 cont emPorary1--,..------::...-------------'---'
stor.v or A cattle roundup. in
which the actor v.·ill not ap-
peJtr.
a • IVIRYTHINO IN •
• • 1.IADY MADI tALADS • Llrnlt-4 •
• • P'RISH DAILY ' • With Thl1 Ceu"'" •
• lemember SomNll• . a • • • •• • • ••• I ••• I I •·l ••.•·I 1·. I ••• ;a.WI . . . . ' .
l•t kY '" tftml ly ....... r ai..rl lm11l~T .. ty-~ • ru1H tQUllHD • • ... 11 .... .... • . , ......... -1"'!" ·"
• 0rall4J• Jlllce 1 liri ~!4 : .T~NG~IJl,N~ : • 29' • ,UCE . . • , :.-ow1 o.:::::'.:"it• ... : · ; 1·.oc: , : sc u. :.
• Lhwlt of 2 ioU • I ~~.· • IJMl-U.., jl
HOt.l. Y\\'000 , l f'l 1
J ohn C•rrad1n, 11n(l his son.
David. have 11ppt'1rtd in th•
Pm, filnl 1n 1hto pa,1, but
never In lht s1me ~crM until
~·Bo1H"•r 8f!rth11 " rPqu1red
lhtm lo emolt 101etht-r.
THI wur~ l'llllST IOOKSTOalS
• Wltlt Tltl• c-•' 'Nltlt·Tloh·-... • Wit!\ TMi ~ ••
• • • • • • • • 1 • •·•·II ... II~'• II a'I •a•••• l:Jl<ti" •
-
SAN FRANCISCO
. t •. ' • ··~
HUNTER'S BOOKS
'°a UO YIAllS-SINCI 1151 •
LocoNd Al
FASHION SQUARE
IN SANTA ANA
Phone ,(714} 543.9343
U,l~O hob I ~oparM<ln
lZ,oot u ...... "'"""' c.-. ua•AINS ••Lotti!
OPEN EVE/\'I NGS 'TIL 9 P./11,
474 t 17111 ST. COSTA MISA 6~6 JlU
. . ' ' . . )
• COUilONl. lllPlll .... ' •' , · '., ,"i • 1
• These re1taur11nts ffmand the. ftn'w /~)Mlr cl;itofrie,..;:' Tl\a+:1 ~ +twyf~
Newpelt "•lice ~·•!oni:t• ~Mt ~ ....... ~ l'IJ"I'.=~ MdllJf ...........
Ntwport: ........ 0. ne.,-..r.r-N~: .,._ -;-A ~ H""i~
... eh : D•l•oyt 5¥1 5h ty, ~1 •~ -~' loO 6tjlo'r<• · w,i: y-
e.e l ling us1 , -, 1 • -·, ~ •r ••{'"'
"()r<mg< C01111ir't rortnt GI .. ~ """ ""'"' O>iultioutitllt~ •
NfWPORT.', PSODUCE··I ~: r
1
, '0,. 7 ii.yt • Woolt 7, ~ 19 .a:p& =
2616 New,_. l1uta .. d eath •w'1s•
"W~·· quollly .. Ula
Otdn o/ lh• llot11f'•
•
•
-. --.
, , N ABOUT •11
NOllJU SJ'ANLEl' OUT WEEKENDER
ORANGE COUNTY'S REST AU RANT, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE
Kuna Doubleheader
There's still time this \\'eekend -although it's
li1nited to this evening and ton1orro'v night -lo
catch the musical talents of t\ro fine artists appear·
ing in the area. They're the sensational duo of
~1ike and Leni. "'ho \viii be \Vrapping up an ex ·
tended engagement at th.e Kana Lanes in Costa
~Iesa.
t~.~ •
Originally signed on for a l\\'O-\Veek stand. the
boys were able to n1ak<> a las t minute change in
plans and hold over for one additional v.•eek. Ac·
cording to Kona's big boss n1an. Dick Stoeffler. thi s
fortunate shift happily coin cided v.1ilh consider·
able public den1and fo r such a hold over.
WELL RECEIVED
Judgin g by the enthusiastic audience response
that's been accorded to !\:like and Leni during their
nightly performances, if circumstances permitted
they could stay on for months to come. And their
great sounds that spell the best of yesterday. and
today clearly appeal to listeners of every age.
(;l
Alternating '"ith 1nike and Leni is the zany
·entertainer who's both a local institution and Kana
fixture. 1-le's the one and only Iioscoe Holland , no\v
in hi s ninth incredible and record-breaking year
on stage in th e Kona lounge.
~·
This entertainment doubleheader \\'ill get
under \Yay for the t\vo ren1aining nights at 8:30
p.m. Address for the Kona Lanes is 2699 1-larbor
Blvd., immediately south of Adan1s Ave .. Costa
~-lesa.
Anchor Inn
For son1e pretty \\'ell-kno\vn reasons, San
Clemente figures rather prominently in the ne,vs
these days. \Ve found our O\vn bit of good ne\vs
there one night la st \reek and it has nothing to do
\1·ith activities at the \\'estern \Vh ite 1-louse.
The story u1e obtained v.•on't nlake international
HOUSE OF SEAFOOD
NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH
11 :30 to 2:30 Tues. thtu Fri.
Nightly Oinner-Cocktaill -4 t'o 11 p.m.
Sundoy 2 to 9:30 pm-Cfoled Mond e y~
1814 N. Coast Hwy. !El Camino Reall
SAN CLEMENTE 492-6571
496-5773
--..-;v£1fRS'
"\\.\. " ~"~\\\
499-2626
GOURMET DINING
OYSTER BAR • COCKTAILS
ENTERTAINMENT
lue1cl1v t~ru Selu•d•v. 1:)0 lo 1:30
BRANDIE BRANDON DUO
headlines but out 'n' abouters "'an't be able to over·
look its significance. So, Y•ithout benefit of a wire
service dispatch. \ve're urging you to pay an early
r isit to San Cle1nente's Anchor Inn.
HOWDY MEANS IS BACK
'J'o put first fa cts first. the Inn under\1'ent 3
1najor change in management and O\\·nership la~t
sun1mer. The llC\\' proprietor is Orange County's
hi ghl y-regarded restaurateur. tlo\vdy lt1eans, \\'ho
took over fron1 the former and now retired, O\\'ner.
'fomn1y Thon1pson
"'\ r--"-'+-' < v..,._(!) '"'--r,
llo1vdv's return to the local restaurant scene
follo,red a· year's \\'ell-deserved rest after the clos·
ing of his last place -Josef's in Corona del f\1ar.
It al so signaled so1nelhing of a homecoming to San
Clemente -the city where he held his first post
in the business -after an absence of n1orc than 20
years.
FAMILIAR TO SAN CLEMENTE
tie arrived in town shortly after World \Var II
and became manager of l.ee Bering's Beach !·louse.
This •spot "'·as located in \vhat is no1y the San
Clemente i\l oose Lodge on Avenida Pico.
Ho"1dy next mahaged several restaurants in
Los Angeles and Beverly Hills. Then it \va s back to
Orange County as manager of the Balboa Bay Club.
follo\ved by cO-O\l"nership of such top·r anking places
as the ol d Christian's tlut in Corona de! 1Iar and the
White House in Laguna Beath.
SEAFOODS .
Under Jlo,rrly's proprietorship. the Anchor Inn
specializes in a \vide range of seafoods, but also of·
fers some select. char·broiler items su ch as Ne\11
Yor k steak. fil et 1nignon and pepper steak. Our first
visit. a di nne r outini', found us pondering the
lengthy menu for \\'ha t seemed like hours.
1\nd that. it ::;hoo ld be noted, \vas \vithou t any
tonsideration for thc lead·o(f a la carle selections.
DINE IN OUR ROMANTIC CELLAR
LA CAVE RESTAURANT
STEAK • LOBSTER • PRIME RIB
COCKTAILS • WINE
TWILIGHT SPECIALS
5 to 6:45 p.m.-Sun. thru Fri.
Roa1t Primo Rib of lleef. Au Jua .
Top Sl,.loin Luncheon Steak
Served wilh lon t d g r••~ ••ltd.
Choic:• of dttui~g, 1nowflekt pot.1011
G 1rdt11 vtgtft bl•1 end girlie l>rt1tl
levt regt 1ddifio11 el
·-· Sl.fS
·-Sl.25
l•1tellff11 l M•11. tltr11 Ft-I.) •••••••••••••.•••• l l:JO t• 2 :10
Dl1111er Weelidey1 • , , ..••• , • , • , ••.••• , , • • • S:OO to 11 :00
Frldor e11d Sorurdl'y ...• , .. , ••... , ... , . . . • S :00 t• 12:00
16951/, Irvine Ave, !Corner of 17th St.I
COSTA MESA 646°7944
ORANGE COUNTY'S NEWEST
DINING & NIGHT CLUB SCENE
Pre wdly P1t1e11h Ill•
BILL MALO TRIO
GERMAINE
Tu.. thru S•t.-t p.m. to l •.m.
These, for your informat1on. include appetizers -
c·rab cocktail supreme. $1 .75, and six blue point
oysters on the half shell. $1.95 ; and salads such as
a shrimp or l'rab J..ouie. $3 and $3.25, respec tivel y.
THREE CATEGORIES
Seafood entree! are broken dO\\'ll in to three
generaJ categories-fish •·that s""·in1:' "frorn shells·•
and "for gourmets." A numbered count fron1 top
to bottom quickly sho .... ·s the staggering variety of
24 poss ibilities.
To name only a rew prospects in each group-
ing, there's sole, fUet petrale, $3.85: catfish, LouLsi·
ana channel. $4.25; rainbo\v !rout, fron1 the lli g:h
Sierras. $4.25; sca1npi, butterflied pra1vns in garlic
sauce, $4 .25; coqui!l es St. Jacques (scallops en she il l.
$4.25; crap or shrin1p Ne\vburg. $3.95; crab and
lobster combination, en shell. $6.50; oysters. en
tasserole. $4. 75 .
OTHER CHOICES
The Ne\v York, filet and pepper steak offerings
from the char·broiler are tabbed at $6.25 each.
OU1ers are lobster. $6: lobster and steak combo,
$6.95: broiled double French lainb chops, $6.95;
broiled hall spring chicken , $3.75.
The prices struck us as extraordinarily reason·
able considering the extent of the n1eal you receive.
Because all entrees are served wit h a shri1np c:ock ·
tail . clam chowder, salad, a choice of rice. baked
potato or au gratin potatoes, and beverage! and
dessert.
If that constitutes a bit more than you want to
take on at one time it's still possible to dine well and
reasonably. Ordering a la carte reduces all din·
ners $1.
.~ .,i;a
A special chi1dren 's dinner, for tots tinder l 2.
is offered at $2.50 and includes soup, salad, dessert
and beverage. Entree choices are fried shrimp or
chicken, fiJet of sole, halibut and broiled ground
round steak.
APP~~:rNG RICK ROBINS
Wodn.,day thr• Sundoy 1:]0 to 1 :]0
SUNDAY 'llUNCH
S.NM Pfoll'I
10 A.M. t. 1 P.M.
SANQUIT PACILITllS
l17 P.\Clp;1c COAST HW't'.
HUNTINQ.TON llACH
. OPEN 1 DAYS
53'·2555
Fine
lntimete end Delightful
FRENCH RESTAURANT
OPEN FOR LUNCH
l l ·l0-2 e Tue1d •v if..1u Frill•v
DINNER S:30 . 10 P.M.
Tu t 1dev tl1ru SunJ1v
CLOSED MONDAY
lt.nlinn Cubine Cocktail•
232.1 E. COAST HIGHWAY
673·1267
hNNodl ...
o, .. Doily -I , .•• re 2 •• ,._
CLOSlD MONDAY
Dec1 d.Jng to confine our ftrsl testing of the
lni:i's v.·ares to its rcan1 -0 C seafood specialization. \l.e
finally n1anaged to t'Otne llP. \\'It h t"·o fin1I choice~.
But. n1any intriguing possibLlities had t o be set aside:
111 th e process.
OUR CHOICES
'!'he initial nod 1vrnt 111 abalone til ontcrev . ~4.95. It netlrd a." d1.•[i('1011<; and trnde r a portion Of
lh!s native. shellf1!--h as \\'t'\t• t•vt·r found -1 top
pron1 otional cxaiupl t• of nn<" ol t '3\iforn1a'~ finest
de/i('arics.
1'he second or1lt>r \\'C'n! ((1 :-.hrinip l'urry, liiervcd
\\'ilh 1·ire .1nd chntnf·y. S·I :ill. "l'llis perfectl y ~ca·
soncd dish \ \1·hich c·Jn ht' ordPrcd hvt or mild) \\•as
presented in <1. flcli~titt'ul \ray \\"I' l1atln 't encountered
before-in :111 1ndl\ ulual ca.-..~('r c1!e and partially
spread over four '''l•dgc::. or toa ... t.
SPECIAL TOUCHES
Allhough evetything that accompanied our din-
ne rs \\1as en11nently sat Lsfyi ng. \\'C took special note
of t\VO parlit ularly l<lsty itr1ns, 1'hese v.1erc the sniaU
shrun p coc-ktail \Vilh its l:tllJ!Y ~auce, and the well·
µrcpared , outstandingly fluffy rit'e.
('laiininJ! no cxper1 is1· :is judges of age, "''e
nonl"theles~ felt the builliini:: housing the restaurant
is probably an1ong the ol dest in San Clemente. That
in itself adds considerable charrn but so does the
unusual shape of the structure.
Sporting a massive but delicately crafted chan·
delier, a higl1 vauJted ceUing rises to its center point
above the main dining r oom and rock.tall loun1e
belo\v. At ground level the fact that the building
reaches up from an octagon base is somewhat ob-
scured by the dividers and recessed areas that break
up the e1ght·sided construction.
LUNCH IS SERVED
Up to very recently, the Anchor l nn was only
open for dinner. \Vith in the past couple of weeks,
Continued on P1ge 24
MEXICAN
BUFFET
LUNCH $1.45 Mtn, lllru '•I.
DINNER $2.35
NOW APrU.ltlHO. -WIDNISDAY THl:U tUNDA'f'
CARLOS AND Hll OUfTAlt
AT THI PIANO IAI
llertrf ~ AEROPUERTO
21 22 BRISTOL -PALISADES Sl.S.557'
A ou.idt to the best in enter1ai11me11t
•
ISADORE'S
l)1 ley1id t Ori•• -NtwpDrl l1•th
* AMERICAN HEAD BAND
•
REUBEN 'S -NEWPORT
lSl E.tt Coe1t Hi9hw.ty -N t wpo•t l•1th
* JOHNNY SHERIDAN DUO
•
THE MOONRAKER
115-42 M1cA dhu1 lowl•~••<I -S111I• An1 * LYNN KELLOGG ood 80 8 HOULE
•
REUBEN E LEE
151 l e1t Co••t Hl4llw•r
* SOUND ARRANGEMENT
•
REUBEN'S -TUSTIN
151) lutti11 A•t11ue -Se11t1 A111 * FEMALE SPECIES • Fobrutry hi
•
REUBEN'S -COST A MESA
1551 AJe11•11 A..-1. -Co1f1 Mt11 * IOHI WALTERS
•
REUBEN'S -FULLERTON
IOI Ntrlh Stilt Col1t t • -F11U1rto11 * TWIN PIPER S
•
REUBEN'S -LAGUNA HILLS
24001 A"• 41 11 Ct rlote -L..,11111 ~ill•
*TI M IURR
•
REUBEN'S AIRPORT
4•41 M11:Ar1f,..,, l 1ult •1r .. -Newport let1.lt * DOUG KENNEDY
•
REUBEN'S -SANTA ANA
2) 1) Nerth l re e4w•'f' -S1t lt Alo•
*SHANNON
•
. . . .
~ .. •
. ' •
4
I
DA.IL Y PILOT Frid1J, frbnl.lry 4, 1CJ72
KING'S CROSS
PROUDLY PRESENTS
MISS HADDA BROOKS
Limited En91gement
Tues. ttlru Sat.-Four ShoWs Nigtltly
--------
EARLY DINERS SPECIAL
2 Olnn•rs For Tht Price of On•
Ctlolce of 2 Entries Da ily
Until 9:00 P.M.
2831 Bristol -Costa Mesa
FOR RESERVATIONS -S46-3484
MEADOWLARK
COUNTRY CLUB
LARK ROOM
DINNER SPECIALS
WED.-T op Sirloi n Ste•k $2.95
THUR.-Prime Rib $3.10
FRl.-Se•food Newburg $2.95
SUN.-lobster T •ii $4.35
1.~.,·~· • 011J•rl
ENTl~TAINMINT-PllDAY AND SATURDAY
THE ONLY ONES
FEATURING SHIRLEY BELLAMY
16712 GIAHAM AYINUI
HUNTINGTON IUCH 17141146·111' IZIJI lf2·1954
Heg, B&Lbi'A (,aU
AT REUBEN'S-COSTA MESA
•
. The delightful
songs and guitar of
BOBBI WALTERS
(Tuesdays thru Saturdays)
Reuben"s
1555 ADAMS, COSTA MESA
WEEKENDER
(Continued from P19e 27)
however, lunch has been added to lhe restaurant's
regular offerings, Tuesday through Friday, from
11.30 a.m. lo 2:30 p.m.
A brtet perusal of the ne\\·' luncheon menu wa s
all that was necessary to stir our interest in a mid·
day return as soon as possible.. A large selection of
salads, sandwi ches . seafood entrees and omelettes
add up to a bill of fare that seems well worth ex·
ploring.
The Anchor Inn is loca ted at 1814 N. !'.:I Camino
Real (Coast Highway) in the extreme north end of
tow n, San Clemente. Closed Mondays, di nner hours
get under way at 5 p.m., Tuesda y through Saturday,
and at 2 p.m. on Sun days.
' We Gel Letters
From Mrs. Su san J. White '"--==-a faithful Hunt-
ington Beach reader to whom we doff our best
dining-out chapeau in gratitude -come the fol-
lowing kind words and restaurant recommenda-
tion.
'·1 woul d like to take this opportunity to tell
1
/1*'-. Chinesc~Ms~!~ine
BAMBDD LUNC l-IEON PLATES I fRO M $1.25 TERRA.CE COt\·IPLETE DI NNERS
FHOM SB5 ~ X It Orien1al Cocktail 1....nung-e "f\ -rr fp1\l11rin~ Tropiral Drinks OPEN DAILY 11 AM-11 PM
CLOSED MONDAY
I llJ -11 ";_~ lj-
ruo111E •• ; .645-5550
'1~3 EAST 17TH ••.. COST A MESA
ftIVIERA
ft£5TAUMNT
Continental Cuisine
Cocktails
Serving
Lut1cht on and Dinner
Monda11 through Saturda11.
Closed Sundays
We ire loc•tecl ne xt to
the May Co. in South
Coes t Pl•i:1.
JJ]J S. lrktel
C•"• Meso 540-Jl40
BONED
RAINBOW
TROUT
Sa u1r
A!mondinl'
AMONG-10
SfLECT
DINNfl !NTllES
Vt NA
HARMER
DUO
PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES
HAVE CHANGED A LOT
SINCE THE
OLD DAYS
PALETINA'S ..
POLYNESIAN
REVUE
No C:O.or-N• Mlol111.,.
FRIDAY l SA TU RDA y' NllOHTS
AT
N THE BEACHCOMBER
'3901 E. Coast Hwy. -Corona del Mar
Resel'Yatlons 675-0900
I I
BRING OR BE I BROUGHT BY YOUR
DANDIEST DATE
• l~". •
• • ... '11'*
it ••••
6/d-/d,; @//{pa,
TllE CLllSIM[ or CENTJAl ANO NO~JHlRN IJllY
served b1y5ide
I~ Hewpcrt Beach every tveml\{.
6~2.]UO
3131 W. Cea11 Hichw1y • •
ALLEY
VllT
PRESENTS
GINO LANZI
Mffffy tfint WH•"'-Y
ANl>--FROM HAWAII
LlaOY~ to 10 '"'"·
JOHN GLOl.IA-11 te I .. m.
ThurMlay thn. Sun4oy
FIATURINIO DINNERS
111 th• Sin F-r•nc i1ce M1nn1r
IACI Of LA.Ml
STIAIS e SIAPOOD
5 TO 11 Nl6HTL Y
IUllNllSMAN'S LUNCH
11 :00 TO S
SATURDAY-II to 5
LUNCH OR BRUNCH ._ ..... c .............
SUNCAY-llRUNCH
onN MIY DAY
Off THI OCIU 110,llCINT
TO N•WNlllT •IA(tl ,, ••
2106 W. 'OCIAN l'ltONT
NllWPOU lllACH
OUT IN I
you how mu ch I enjoy your column. As a native
of Orange County and one who spent most of my
childhood in Newport Beach area , I can espe-
rially appreciate your views.
"r can remember as a child when my parents
would take us out for dinner to a good restaurant.
\.Ye reall y had a small choice, ce rtainly noth ing
like today when it takes my hus band and me an
hour to decide where to go .
"By way of recommendation I would like to
mention a 1.1exican restaurant in the Huntington
Beach area that we think is just tops. It is the El
1'-1oro at \Varner and Bolsa Chica.
"We have been going there !or y.ears -even
to their old location in Sea! Beach . The food at F:I
Moro is excellent and their Margaritas are the best
-only 80 cents. They ha ve a secret recipe.
".i\gain, keep up the good work.''
A 11r! our thanks to you again , too, Mrs. Whitt. B~·
yontl agreeing fully with your observatiO'ns about El
hf oro, we hope we 'll always meril you r complimen t fo r
\-'·good work."' ___ _ __ _
and AMERICAN CUISINE
TROPICAL COCKTAILS
POLYNESIAN
MUSIC ~
Fri. and Sat.
Nights
8961 ADAMS AVE . (at Magn 0 i;1 } 968 SOSO
HUNTINGTON BEACH "
THE BLACK KNIGHT
RESTAURANT
DINNER • COCKTAILS
ENTERTAINMENT
LUNCH 12 TO 3
Daily 1: A.M. to '2 A.M.
Now Appearing
JERRY LAMBUTH DUO
330 EAST 17TH STREET
COSTA MESA S48·7791
B.F.C.* HOURS
Whats It All About Alfit -Ellen -Geor9e -Gina
-Ray -Tori -Jsy -Lisa -Bud -P099y -
Danny -Gall -Nnl -Bonnit -Tom -Sallie? * "Big Freaking Cocktail"
As You 'll AU Find Out
If You Troop Down To
THE
VILLAGE
I NN
4:JO TO 7:00 P.M.
M1ndq-fhr11 Frld•J ....
Hen d' """"
COINll OP PAii
AND MARINI
IALIOA ISL.AHi •7J~IJO
NOW OPEN
THE
UNDERGROUND
FEA TliRING DANCE MUSIC BY THE
RED NECK QUARnT
Nightly Wed. thru Sat.
WAYNE GABRIEL
IN THE LOUNGE '
Tueld•y throuth Saturday
9 P·'!'· to 2 •.m.
SUNDAY
C~PA•NI IRUNCH
11 to J
LUNCH e DINNER
COCKTAILS e CANCIN&
ABOUT
•
Classical guitar stylings and vocal s in se ven lang-
uages by Pepe Villa may be heard at the Village
Inn on Balboa Island. l·le's currently appearing Sun-
day, Tuesday and Wednesday nights starting at
8:30. The Inn is at Park and Marine Ave .
NEW IN NEWPORT
P~i\RIS INN
GO U R~1ET CUISINE
11.e FLING-
ENTERTAINMENT • 7 NIGHTS A WEEK
DANCING MON .-TUIS .. Wlt.~ * HAP HALL DUO * L"ry Like
•ilh G.,,• Willit.., Ian S in~er
Thur. tll r11 S11•. ~
For Early Risers ind Late Players
Open Daily From 6 A.M. to 2 AM.
Rear·Mesa Theater siuEi:e Costa Meta
145 E. 19tti Sf. Jvst •ff N_,.rt 11,d,
''The 6reat -Great Sho1v!!''
FABULOUS ENTERTAINMENT
HELD OVER
ONLY TWO MORE NITES -FRI. ·SAT.
Sensa tional Sounds of Yesterday end Tod1y
MIKE & LENI
ANO THE AREA'S Z4NIEST ENTERTAINER
ROSCOE HOLLAND
Now in his 9ttl year 11 Kan•
OUTRIGGER ROOM
KONA ··LANES
2699 HARBOR BLVD .
COSTA · MESA
mI~L.f.I
MEXICA~ RESJ AURANT
"FINEST MEXICAN CUISINE
IN ORAN&E COUNTY"
FOi YOUR DININ• & DANClN• l'UASUU
MARCql
A7'.1D 'IHI
LAftN
MARK• TRIO
• • Pr!._, s.t. Nltllh
I p.111. to 2 •·"'·
54 7 W . l 9t11 STREET .
COSTA MESA 642-9764
..
Pop Stars Headlining
Party at Disneyland
S.J. Thoma!, "Climai,''
Carla and Rufus Thomas, 1bt
Great Crowd, and The
RobilllOn Family will provide
the musical inaplration, while
t w i nkle-Jighted Disneyland
supplles the romantic at-
mosphere for the p a r k ' 1
"Valentine Party," set for
Satu rday evening, Feb. 12.
In addition to dancing and
li!tening to five consecutive
hours of pop mu!lc from 8:30
p.m. until 1:30 p.m., guests
will be able to enjoy unlimited
use of the more than 50 major
Disneyland attractions (except
•hooting galleries).
Mod mood singer B . J .
Thomas, whose rendition of
"Raindropa Keep FalMn' On
My Head" has become a
mwical milestone, will exhibit
his big personality and even
bigger voice on Tomorrowland
Stage at 9 and 11 p.m.
Today 's music in it s
~
team Carla and R u r u s
Thomas, w i 11 demonstrate
their musical virtuosity in 10
p.m. and midnight concerts.
Rufus' inimitable style ha~
made standards out of several
Mngs. including "Walking'
The Dog" and ''Fu nky
Chicken." Carla's re co rd 11
have been freq uent items on
the best-selling charts ever
since "Gee Whl.%" sold a
million copies .
Disneyland's ow n con-
tribution to the rock music
world. Sound Castel Ltd .• will
add their music11.I gusto and
limitleu talents to t he
ce lebration on Tomorrowland
Terrace.
And further musical energy
will be generated throughout
the evening in Plaza Gardens,
the "Valentine Party" head-
quarters for The Great Crowd.
Advance tickets for this one-
night-only spectacular may be
purchased for $6 at Disneyland
box office or all Southern
California branches of the
.. ~ . ' •••
MOD MOOD SINGER 8. J. THOMAS
Will Headline Disneyland Valentine Party
. ""' '·~ " ' .. -.. .. ... ' . -"'""" '
Frld.y, Februlf'Y 4, 1972
Live Theurer Lorre's
'M' Airs
Tonight 1
'Amorous Flea' Opens;
'Blithe Spirit' Ending
"Glrl In Freudian Slip"
Comedy on stage at Hun-
tington Beach Playhouse, 2110
~fain St , Huntington Beach,
Fri.-Sat. at 8:30 p.m. through
' Feb . 12. Reservations -5.16-l 8861.
"Mother Eartb"
' Ecology rock mu sical on
l stage at South Co a s t
Repertory, 1827 Newport
Blvd., Costa lt1esa, at 8 p.nl.
j Feb. 9-10, 24 • ~farch 2 and 9.
'~ Then! is an extra 10:30 p.n1 .
performance as well as at 8 on
I f•eb. 12 only.
"Blithe Spirit"
Noel Coward Cflmedy on
stage at Costa ~-fesa Civic
Playhouse. west gate 11 f
Orange County Fairgrounds,
C.Osta Mesa. at 8:30 p.m. Fri .
Sat., through Feb. 5. Reser,•a·
tions -834·5303.
·"You're a Good ~1an
Charlie Brown·•
Musical based on
Feb. + 19. Re servations -547·
nn. Peter Lorre Sl8rs in Fritz
Lang's motkln picture thriller. "Teahouse of August ~1oon " •·M." this Friday al 8:30 p.m.
A con1edy of po s t w a r on KCET. Channel 28.
Okinawa on stage at the Fourth film in the 26-week
Laguna Moullon Playhouse. Film Odyssey series, "M" is
606 Laguna Canyon Road, the bizarre tale of a psychotic
Laguna Beach, at 8:30 p.m. child·murderer. The story Is
Tues.·Sal. Feb. 8-26. Reserva-based on a series of fiendish
lions -494.0743 . killings that spread terror
"Star Spangled Girl '' through Dusseldorf, Germany,
in 1929.
A comedy on stage by "!\1," which was one of the \\'estminslt'r Com m u n \ I y Theater al Finley School, earliest sound films made, will
be telecast uncut and unin· 13521 E<h•:ards, \Vest minster, Fri ·Sat . at 8 30 Feb. l l-26. terrupted, with the original
Reservations _ 892·9883. SClund track and English sub·
titles prepared especially for "Fiddler on the Roof" television.
!-.tusical on stage b y Jn lhe story. the law·s
Fu ller ton Civic L1ghL Opera search for the murderer.
played by Lorre, paralyzes the Company at P I u m m c r other criminal ac tivities of the
Auditorium. Fullerton, Fri.· underworld, so the crin1inals
Sat. at 8:30 p.m. Feb . lt-19. themselves organize to trail
Reservations -525-6877. the slayer.
freshest, most listenable form
Is the quality product of
"Climax." which j o i n s
Thomas on To morrowland
Stage. This top-rated ensemble
has zoomed into the musical
sky with their fast-rising
ballad, "Precious and Few."
Bank of America with ----------------------
BankAmericards.
th•,-:;:::~;;;.~;::;~~~~~~~~~::=:;ii];r::::.:::.:~ "Peanuts" comic strip onl NOW·ONE WEEK ONLY rlfos stage at San Clemente Com -rursDA't'
.munity Theater, 202 Avenida
Cabrillo, San Clemente, at
8:30 p.m. Thurs . .Sat. through
Feb. 13. Reservations -834· Part of the same star-stud-
ded lineup will be another rock
f1 vorite, The Robinson Faml·
Iy.
If "Valentine Party" tickets
are still available after 6 p.m.
that evening. they ma y be
purchased at Disneyland for
$7 .50.
Hours at the park are JO
a.m. until 8 p.m. Wedneaday
through Friday and 9 a.m. to 7
p.m. Saturday Feb. 12)
before reopening from 8:30
p.m. until I :30 a.m.
Across the promenade en
Tcmcrrowland Terrace, two cf
the foremost advocates of the
"Soul Sound," father-daughter
VISIT OLD JAPAN
®
ffil~RKO
Luncheon Dinner Cocktail•
PASADENA 139 S. Los Robles • 795·7005
ORANGE 33 Ta\\·n & Country • 541·3303
TORR.'i.NCE 24 De l An10 Fashion Sq.• 5<12-8677
FRESH LOCAL
LOBSTER!
$4.95 NIGHTLY
TAtEt/tkWHAt~
400 MAIN, BALBOA PENINSULA
PLENTY OF PARKING • 673-4633
Re.al
Cantonese F11od
STAG
OIDISE WINO
111 21st pl., Newport .leach ORiola 3-9560
0,. , ......... hit 11·11 -M. -s.t • .,. J ....
TEMPLE GARDENS
Q-HNt~Renaurant
RICKSHA
COCKTAIL
~~~.'}~E
M. • s.t. I te 1
Fealurlng ExoUe
1Toptcal Drlnlc.
IUFl'IT LUNCH 11 :3o.1 :JO
Mond .. y thru Friday
15" ADAMS (1t Hillrltor)
COSTA MllA
140·1tl7 140-1923
CONTINENTAL CUISINE e SEA FOODS
CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS
"" .,, .......
NORM PANTO DUO
0,.. W,. w ... ...,_ W. -11 t,M. t9 2 A.M. c.....-1670 NowP"" -· C-M.. 642-12'3
..,..,...,. __ ....
"ZACARRO".
W ... ty NeWI : 11 :Jt A.M."' 11iJt
PtW.y eM hte....,1 ll:JI A.M ... 11JI A.M.
........ 141 ... IJ MIONleHT
9093 I. ADAMS
HUNTINGTON llACH '62·7'11
Holbrook's 'Twain '
5303.
Comes to Southland "The Amorous Flea"
A musical based on a
Moliere comedy, on stage at
Irvine Commu11ity Theater,
To thousands of Eisenhower, Kennedy a n d Humanities Hall on the UCI
theatregoers and mil lions of Johnson. campus, Fri .-Sa t. at 8 p.m.
television viewers, Hal 1----------------------
Holbrook and h-fark Twain
have been one and the same.
Now. at last , Hal Holbrook
brings "Mark Twain Tonight''
to the Southland with ap-
pearanCes at the Santa Monica
Civic Auditorium on Thursday,
Feb. 24 and the Pasadena
Civic Auditorium on Saturday,
Feb. 2ti.
After his sudden success as
Mark Twain in 1959 at an off.
"Dustin Hoffman's best pertormance to date,"
-JOYCE HABER, LOS ANGELES TIMES
Broadway theatre. when he MOWAT11ISIJPICWl.TaKTllT1UtmM
won the Vernon Rice Award HOLLYWOOD wt:STWOOD d th 0 t C ·1· . c· I PAllTAGES 469-7161 Pl.AZA ~n.fXJ97 -.·fll.1,110 an e u er r1 lCS 1rce llAILTU•O•l,l)•S.:IG•l,OO &lo.JO .a4T.&SllN.l,4,1,l,!Orit '
Award , Hal H 0 I b r 0 0 k SANTA ANA
presen ted his highly acclaimed HARBOR BLVD. Drive.In 531.12n l'\.Ua JNo 1uru11£
television production ''Mark '"'°" IOIOS• ra111 utt ftl...,.'" .ue • totrr
Twain Tonight" which was!--}.~~~~·~•~"~' ~-~""~'~""~"~"'~""'~""~·~IWl~""~?\~~~~~~I seen by thirty million people
and received three Emmy
nominations. "THE BEST MOVIE
MUSICAL OF 1971." Since that original New
York opening Mr. Holbrook
has added six hours of new
mRlerial to the repertoire
while playing Mme six hun·
dred performances here and
abroad.
In 1960 he was chosen by the
State Department as the first
non·musical theater attraction
to be sent to Europe under the
Auspices of the cultural ex·
change. He played twelve
countries with much acclaim.
He also has performed
Twain for Presidents
.AIM Wo~ Dl....,.'1
"NEVER A DULL
MOMENT"
Co11th1uo11S Show
s.t, & S111. "-• 12:30
New York's
Critic Award
HELD OVER AGAIN
THE FRENCH
CONNECTION
NEWSOAV -Jot"llh G.lmll
"ONE OF THE YEAR'S
BEST FILMS."
N4TION-'L 80.a.110 OF REVIEW e NEWSWEl!.I( -Paul O. Zlmmermen LOS ANGELES TIMES -Ch1r1es Chl m!llln
ASSOCIATED PRt!SS -8Db Thom1i
LOS A"-'GELES HERALO.EXAMINER -8rldg1t ftvrn1
CU E -WIU11m Woll . NEWSDAV -Joseph Gt lmls
i Tw~GGr"" -...... ~,,,
IN
KEN RussEUls
111[
BOY
fl!lfND~
EDWARDS .
HARBOR c1W:a1
MAlllOJI ILYD. AT WllJOft ST.
COSTA Ml lA . 141-011>
Exclualv•
Orillnt• Caunty
Engagement .._,..,_-..
IT·s FOR
EVERYBODY
Detective Harry Callahan.You don't assign
him to murder
cases.
You just turn
him loose.
int Eastwood
Dirty Harry .. : .
-@
PANAVISIOW •TECHNICOLOR-• W1rner Broe., A Kinney Comp1ny
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENTS
2ND :.\111 "THE DELTA FACTOR" WITH ~:~~!"'""
2ND KIT"' GEORGE C. SCOTT In "THE LAST RUN" -·
THE STRENGTH OF MANKIND HAS ALWAYS BEEN ITS WOMEN.
KATHARINE HEPBURN
VANES.IA IZEDGRAVE
GENEVIEVE BUJOlD
!RENE PAPAS • 'THE TROJAN WOMEN.
PLUS • HIL:::D=--:Oc_Yc.:l:::Rc:.._ __ _
,....~ ........ ,,.,. ...... , .. ,
llOlltll FlrlDi ••<• ~·· ..,. " ..... ... I.I!...-•00 ••• ...... ~ ....
Srflhetimu
a Gfwat Notion
·q•'"::• rara1·a
ST ARTS W!ON!SOAY ·FEBRUARY 9
JOHN WAYNE IN "THE COWBOYS"
DEORDE c.scmr • illE llOSl11Al" <GPJ
NOW
SHOWING , ..
Tin.
fol>. I
JUST A SHORT DISTANCE DOWN THE IRJ-..:.~+
SAN DIEGO FREEWAY TO LA PAZ OFF RAMP·
THEN NORTH 'I• MILE TO CHRISANTA DR.
--.... . ~· . ...
DAil Y PILOT !,j
3RD ORIAT WHK
Geor&e c. Scot!
IN "THE (GP)
HOSPITAL"
20. ""••S•ll•ra "THf PARTY"
"THI GODJifHll"
STARTS
•UCH ·~"0. AT ILLI• • • .. ... c .... _,, .......... o -· IM7-'ifl08 • HUHr u"•fGN •IACH
ENDS TUESDAY f:l
11o.,,.,. .. -..c .... -.~'-J• .. 1101 -............ ~·····-··--·· .. . Ket!htr•~f HtpOOm.VoMUo Rtdgro"e
THE STRENGTH O~MANl(INO HAS
ALWAYS BEEN ITS WOMEN.
'THE
TR.QIAN ~OMEN"
IID'J<m
A/10 • WMll DJ1,,ry
"NIYll A DUil MOMINT"
STAITS WIO. Ill.,. "ONI
DAT IN THlllfl Of
IVAN DINISOYICM" IGPI
,•
.. ~ . ~ ......
. Friday
Evening
~ .
Saturday
Morning
nBltUAlt'I' 4 f'EBRUAR'f 5
••
1:00 8 (]) fil (ii Em Newt ':00 Cl) T'f I a..tMN 0 CJ)"_.. ':lt 0 l lKk {IJlfllllCA o CiJ w114 wi111 wnt m l.tr' 111,
CD Jiit rtlllbton• 7:00 6 N•w Wonls. Hew W111
OJ I Drt .. ti Jt111nill Q l) m Dr. 1>61ittlt
(iii s,..Mi11a f"11J 0 (}) ltrlJ LIWls Slltw
ED ~P Loda• (I) TV I C/1111 .. • 9 M.,tierry RID m 1111.rMIHtllnb
l:JD 0 "9111 Dlrl't Cit flle Oll5i1s m SfUet••ll
0 Mt\'if: (C) (!O) "The l ints •nil 7:30 G Dusty'1 lrttft01111
1111 , .. ,~ (mm1dy) '56 -Geo1a1 0 m Dt""1 D.we:
Cobfl, Miili G1ynor, 01vrd "lvtn. 0 Ct•IM "91111 ([) m News u CV({) ••• lllllMf
(ii ..... of tN ,... 0 Mf.vit: "Dnti111tlo11 Ml,000 ..
(8 Alldy Cttlfltl Sii.-. (1dwnlUf1) '57-Pralon fost•r. P1I
llJ Minny aftd flit Ptoleutr Conwey, C~~MI Cray.
Em Tllilty Mln!Ms Wltlt • • . 9 Undl tun m W111d11lust GI lrotlltr 11111 9 lm1 Auw Q) lettlt 111\tf
mi Dutlt "' htilMI 1:00 6 l11rs IUnftJ
7:90 f) 00 B m fllfft 0 m Wtody WoodPttklf
0 Tllt liUtm111 0 "'iNYt ind rri111dt
(j) Jrvtlt., tonMq11111w 0 m CfJ r~nky '''""'"' rn Dntntt CV C1rtao11 C.r111'11I
0 Whtr1 M) lint! m l.M. Mtvi«1: "S,lrit ti fft!t QI I LM LllC)' roinr (ldvtnlure) '-47 -•·0oc~ m I h• ti Jttnnlt !!1nch1rd, G\11111 Dlv!s. "Nptb 1M
Cill TM C.,.,... Yin lM t.t Stmb ti Hlppocratel'" GD Hlthtrtci (1dwerttur1) "&6--4<1y Atlrid&t.
tE '"m " ,. .. , m Snnnn a fM11: (C) ''t«klllMn fftrttt"' l:lO fJ()) Sc.Mtly·O.
Ill -0 ®I Ill'"' ·-· 7:l0 B Chtue "CittllS ti !ht Litt1• MH· 0 rn JatMtfi 'j"
1111id" !:00 D (I) Hirte. Cltbttr.tttrJ
Cl Ho!.,_... s~u1ru O @l m Tiit Jlbolls ft Mo.It: (21/1h1) "H~M~ IJ Mevit: ""•cllic: ll1dout" (id·
(dram1) '37 -Dorothy L1mcur, Jon v1nlun) '-42 -Robert Pr1itan, £~•
Hill. G1bor.
Cil Tt Tiii ~ T~ 0 (l)@ ltwikhtll
(j} I D1•111 ti J111111ie 0 Mlrif: "Soft ti ltll• SbrT"
0 Mllllt11 S Movit: (2hr) ''C..l~nf (wesltrn) '53-K&ilh l111en, Dent
Jlorth5lcl1 nr (dflml) '4S--l1mes 011ke.
Stew1rt, Htlr" Wilker, Richird (D A,trt111nt Hunb(s S111w
Contt. el CiM 111 SU Cast
mMtpa't ~ c;)h1'1nM a..tint ID CI) Dni1111t !:lD 1J (I) flit Hair ..... l u/ldl m Dt c.vr. .. Our Tlmn 0 i1j) m larrl« ... , m Lii c..allftl (iJ Tlju1111: W'llltlt• lf tht S&utll m U11t1Mt4 ~ 0 (]) l.Wtrillt l!D MoN 11• 10:90 f) (]) P1bbll1 allltl l1ra111 11111•
l:DO D (f) O'Hl'fl, U.S. r....,, 0 a m THI • Cltnl Ste,
0 9 tD Slnlof• aMI SM "The 0 00 (I) CurittitJ Siio'
C.per C1pe(' 'rtd Sanford is ws· lD:lO lb (f) Aliltit'• TY 'u11nl11
Jiclous et 1 man stMinr copptr. but 8 Mwir. "Ju1111t Coddm'' (•d·
aon Ltmorrt mikes lht putth1se venlurt) '-4S-CtGrft Rttves, W1nd1
1ft1r thttkin1 lht Wall SlrHt Jou1-McKl y.
n1!. Q Mowlt: ., •• CllM Incl• ladt•'"
D (]) (IJ m The .,.., luWI (west11n) '5-4--W1yn• Morri5. m Wr lriffltll Sll09 ID "'Jltl Sinfi11a Jublltt
at Tiit YlrsU!lalt 11:00 1J (I) S.bri111 fD (JIJ W1Min(totl Wttlf in Rtwin 0 l1J ml Mr. Wiz1"1 9 hcknlva Cl) Afl4 btlft ltnttls
11!1-O III """' q,..1 l:lODO m I i&tilJI X1 Wi 11111 Q) Kltlr Wtllti
Dlpt,it C.1111 (2hl) Ll'le, vii ult!· fll L•lll UMt
lllt, from Sl•poro, J11M11. Q'i) YariMH
0 (J)(])(DTilo P11tric111r1111iJJ1J:3t 8 (1)Jou. ,,.. tht huyuta
GI Truttl tr COfllfq(lllllUt CiJ ®J m n1 lua:11Ms ma1r .. cw,., ''hi .. Fritl 0 (])1.1"'*1 UM
Un1's thssic th1in1r 1tlrrint Peter m b.Jeniiln ...,
l~q WIS mid~ In llJlO, Ind t!nls GI MoWt: .,tuthnt Mall Alift"
wi111 tt11 purS\11t •n• capture ol I (myslery) 'SS -Dint Clark Litt
tlemtnlld child murdertr. Milin. 1
t.DO IJ (() CIS ,,.., Mffll: (C) (90) (D luJ li111
''Tiit Sim Hloll" (dr1m1) '71 -11:45 U Mf'lit: "llin1 Dir1M111r" (s:i-li)
~ Mom:1111, ~u G11l111r, ll~ly Dtt '55 -Bill Bry1nt, W1nd1 Curt is.
Wi!IJ11ns. ll:nttot11r T1bofi, Dt1n
Jager, Al1n Aidt. Afternoon
fJ CJ) Cil EE lt•11 ll2 "Sulnt
Muns S.~lnr: 'l'ou·r. Sorry" P1t1 IZ:DD 0 (j) The M.ri•tn
Dixcn Is sued by t studrnt's p1rents 0 Hl1h ScMol lnk.tNM C1Me tf
owr' 1n injury inc:urrtif whtn Pete Utt W..k
stepped In to b1•\ up 1 fithl (}) Mf'lit: NDtlti b 1 Wt1111n"
GI D..w 'r..t Shaw Gutlls an (mrsttry) '67 -Wirti rm Dt•t~r.
Mrc Dt~is, Delli R"st. 1nd Of. 0 {I) G) A1ntrican l1ndrt1ncl
'et1r Sttl1n. D SMl1tdt ttetMtS Thttllt OJ Lt Clta ®J Mnew Ytlll' l lbt.
Qt TM Virfini111 m hkllri m ... 0ms ,., Mi m s,.rbcopt "
1:'° a mrn mn. ou c. u, 11 a undt Wald•
"Putn11's t"Vtttmtnt" fehx !ted! ml Viii• •' his y•n tor Jtpinese food by lnwsl-IZ:lD II CIS tnildrtn'l F~• f'fl'tittl
Ina hi1 ind Osc1,·1 m01'tlf ih , (JJ Y111 Art Thtrt
l•ptnt• rest11Jran1. ~ Nwil: "Cuit1h1 Call II C«t1r1
Q N_.atdl Creek" (musical) '50 -Oon1ld
(!) Tiit I ll Vtlltf O'Connor, Ca tt S!Ol'm.
10:00 am 111nr1 m Cifllon s.IY•i•
0 Cl) (}) f!I lo¥1 A111eriun StJJ1 a:I AJritulta" USA
"lovt tnd tht Pl•l11 Truth," "lOYt Qtl lltckJ ind FritndJ
t nd !ht Scn;una•rs." "LO'le •nd the l :DOO Mnlc let
Smt!! Weddin1:· 0 (]) Ctllttt 1Nltb1ll "ev1dt ol
0 lllluftcil Dltl1l1 Las Ve11s 1t St. Ma ry's.
g) rt Mutiul Oulri (j) Pttbe
6l) Lll(llt l ibq 1 m Unl1111ttl Wot1•
lO:JD IJ Cl) Don Rick1tt Show Muell to' ID Jhws Nitk Cl rt tr
ftU'otrl'5 Cha1nn, Don buys I S~S rn Consumer's °!"OfltJ
cu from Tylu 1nd treth it like t Of Adhrrrlt f1ir11ly
n rt 1em until 1 11ra1e mKhink CID 11 ~ .Aimounu•
tell! him it's bef!n in 1 m1Jcr atCi· (D Cutltsity s>i.,
dr nt. lleschHultd from l1sf wtek. l:lO 0 At1icultu11 USA ''4·H II wt a·
0 LlmlliJ Tt~I This Wtin11 (R) lioo"
tfj Sin Dltfo r1110111111 0 Hati!Wltl HK\IJ lntut Actio1
Qt Ntwt Hufh W!IUtms (!) Mtbllt Ktl!tt Shtw
(I;) A11tdu n 0111«1 Mtdlint (II) (j) TV I I.Mb 11 lnfllina
fZi) Siii!! 0 Movie: "Sattltitt hti tM Sly"
g) Aftf'l!ttrttda (sei·fi) '5&--Kiero" Moo rt. m Dr. Sillltn ltdt m Dodprt '72. Hlah!lthts tf list
af]Cn.hJrt Thutn ~e1r's Dodier t11m 1nd times, •!Iii
11-a 11UCJ)®}6i) 8:1 Ntw.1 !ht lont r!vatry thtl t~ists btl'M&en
l) Ont St.p ..,.,.d !ht Ood~11s tn<l lh~ Giants.
CJ.) Mush! Dillon m Mow11: (C) .. Mutill(' (1dYtnlu11)
D (]) (B Nfft '52 -. M Ilk SltvtnS,
0 Mtwie: ''l'llt lnhlul Cleph1nl., m Exrlllllletn
(drtmt) '62-Mo!ly Mick, m Sodllils Jn fl'Mlltion
GI Jr.U. " C011-.111nm 9 Tht M11111hrs
II Li.dlt 1tims 2:00 1J h.tJ'• TretMll•
11:10 • likiW: "SttH111lfll l•tltS"' (dr•· D °"· Ct111'1111.
tr11) 'Si-Tam Trron. )111 Merlin. 0 Tl111 WIK 111 1111 MIA
ll·ISllJCtn11111 l4 @ fll• ffftllrt ' (() l"""'ltifl'll:I Miii'
11:• G Mtm: (C) "Nev11 stwl Any· ®) Wf!W ti Sflll'b 1nustr11td twllc SNlr' (mmtdy) '59-Jtme:i m Stu1 Trai11
Ca1111Y. Shlrlty Joo15. Ill Cl• "' It rm o amll!lmDx1 wi"''' mc.i...• Mwttitu11 oi,.,it C.ms 9 NIA Actiie 8 tlltoM: ''Cliiup DNdUnt" (m)'1· G!) JellllJ QtMI
ftl'f) '4t--At1n ~dd, Donni Rhd. Z:lO II l"'*'/o,tlilhr "trltnt Pl}'I.
D t])(j)OJM C.\'lfl I, f. But UllfQllfUf'
StoM tM lt/'I MM1~ l\ltsl. CJ FKUS
(Jlfl...... O ft a>•111l l lc I...._.., m•••I•:..,,.. Min lttwttn"! S1111lorif lndilftt \'$. Ct!lfomlt
(-rM111) 'SC -Urnt.1 M11CM1, Claift Beirs.
ai.om. l (I) rilll ;. ..
U:XllMttle: •M• Willi the 11111'"1 (11$.ptrll Aditft ,,.fllt
('ltSl•tnl 'SS -Rol:ltrt Mite.ti um.I Cl TJMI .. Wllrll
For Advertisi11g in,
Out 'N' .4.bout
Plwne Nor1n Stanley
6424321
..
\
Yoarr Guide to Movies PICKWICK
'Vanishing Point' Action Movie
······~·
BOOKSHOPS "
IHl (UT o.-~,,11,. 1110 ,,. noo
\OUOI (0 ... ~l ,LAlA o,.. .. C••''" .... ,. • (7l'I ~.O lttl 1 ... ~.~t•
Ed t to r ·! Nott: Tiu.~
motiit ptiklt ts prtpartd
by tlit fil-ni,, com1ni ttce of
!Tarbo r Council P'fA. t.11s.
llarry lilellur is prt>sidtllC
a11d /lfrJ. Bruct Nordland
1s committee cltnirrnb n. I!
is 111te·nded a,, a re fere11ce
i11 deltrrnining surlable
film s for cerla111 age
groups a11d will op~ar
1oeekty. Y ou r views are
solicited. t.1a1l them to /.lo-
vie Guidr, cart of //tt
VA/LY PILOT.
* ADULTS
Billy Jack ( R,: Billy Jack. a
halt-breed, returns disillusion-
ed from Vietnam "'ar. i-lelps
thildren and teenagers 011
reserYation r~reedom Sl'houl
lhrough their trials o f
pregnant:>·· prejudice and the
unfairness of the powerful
town sheriff. Stars T o 1n
Langhlin and Of' lores Taylor.
Dirty !tarry lRJ : Clint
Eastwood stars as trigger-
happy private delective I-Jarry
Callahan.
The G:ing ibat Couldn't
Shoot Straighl (PG): Film
version of comedy about
bumbling Ita lian gang.&ters in
New York's lo1ver East side .
.Jo Van Fleet portrays wine
drinking (I.lama. Lion e I
Stander is under"·orld kingpin
who worships plastic statues
of l\1ary and Robert De.Niro is
the conniving bicycle racer
immigrant.
race dr1\'er !A'ho speeds rron1
DenYer to San 1''rancisco wiU1
police In pursuit encouraged
hy blind Black radio d11K:
Jockey against hard roci;_
mu51cal background.
i\IATURE TEEr\S
ANU A0Ul.1'S
1'be Hellstrom Chron.iclt
'PG): Sc:1ence ract documen-
tary presenting !he theory that
lhe w<1rld will .<10111eday be
dominated by i n s e c I s .
Suspe nseful pholography as
millions of ant~ march across
the African plain. termites
v.·ork with robot·llke ef11c1enry
and sv,·arms of locusts b!ot uu\
:iun.
Kotl'h I PG I· \\'3lt~1· ~lat
lhau 1s ta!ka!lve. opinionated,
lovable w1do"'er retired frorn
hard1vare store and living
,1·i1h son's fan1 ily. FarnUv
rries lo move him lo re~l
home. Jack L.en1m on rlirl"c\s
this drama-comedy dcahng
with three generations undl'r
vnc roof.
TM Last Run (PG)· Afler a
niue-ye:ir hide-out in Lal in
America. gangster co1nes out
of hiding when he can't resis1
one last l'!Ssignment. Ceor~e
C. Scotl is lhe under"·orld
frgure.
Odd Coup1t tPGl . Cun1cd\'
in 1vhich two ill-ma tched . eX-
rnarried.s decide lo roont
together. \Valter ~1allhau is
the s Io pp y , irresponsible
sportswriter and Jack Len1-
mon portrays the fastidious
perfectionist.
ftl8nte Walsb (PG): Lee
MarYJ n portrays a toogh
cowboy who lives lo Set the
\Yest outg_row the need for his
kind of man. f-le and Jat'k
P:llance return fron1 range lo
discover !heir ranch has been
bought by big 1.'()mpany and
their jobs are in jeoparty.
Sno w Job (PG): Olympic ski
t:ha1np. Jean-Claude K i 11 y ,
Slar!'i as thief in an atlempl lo
rob ski resort. Sus pe nse
drama.
So1nt'times a Great Notion
l PGJ · Saga of an independent
lugger 's family in lodJy's
!'\orthwest as it unde rgoes the
rigors of sibling r 1 v a I r y ,
st rikes ::ind father-son con-
nict s. Stars Pau l Ne1A·man.
lfenr\' Fonda and Lee Remick.
TrUe Grit IG I \Vestern sel
in the 1880's about a 14-year-
old girl 1vho 1s determinded to
avenge her father's n1urder
and is helped b~· one-eyed
marshal and a young ranger.
John \\'ay11e. Glen Campbell
and i\un J)arby star.
F'Al\IJ LY
Bedknobs and Broomsticks
(G): Angela Lansbury houses
three homesick co c k n e '!
children iii her seaside cottage
<luring \\'orld \V ar II Because
she 1s taking 21 correspond-
enet' course in \l'itchcr:tt!. hC'r
t:harges bec·on1e in vol ved in
her n1arveluu5 ad\'cnlures.
~tusie and dancing in both ac·
t1on and animation
The Boy frieod ( G ~ · T1\·ig·
gy stars as the understudy
NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES Tbe Good, lhe Bad. aod the I
Ugly (PG ): In the hUnt for a
hidden cash box, two sadisticl'------------------------'1
killers and their comrade
(Clint Eastmanl murder t"·o
dozen people. Western filmt<I
in Italy.
The Freoch ConDKhon (R):
Suspense mystery starring
Gene Hackman and Fernando
Rey. Brooklyn police detec·
tives move in on the Amt>rican
connection lo F r e n c h -
American heroin ring in a
chase story of Yio\ence.
Harold and Maude f PGl :
Bud Cort portrays an unhappy
teenager "'hose encounter with
an older woman ( R u t h
Gordon) and her irreverent
philosophy revitalizes him.
JUNIOR MATINIE
S.t11rMy, hit. S, 12 Nao_..11 Snts 75'.
"THE FANTASTIC FLYING FOOLS"
plus Color C11rtoon1
Hospital (PG!: George Scott piiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii iiiiiiiliiiiiillll--iiiiii
portrays hard-drinking doctor ._,
who copes with an unsuc-TONIGHT 8 30 p M cessfu\ marriage, and the
emergencies of a n un-•
dcrst•fled . overcrowd<!<!, big • • •
citr hospital.
The Last Picture Show (RI: MAJOR STUDIO Story filmed in black and
while showing last generation ·
of film making and !he part
films played in our lives . SHEAK····PREVIEW Depicts dying Texas town of
the 1950~s. the sex and
dreariness of i!s inhabitants.
Stars Doris L. a' h ma n • Un"1ted Ar11·s1 Timothy Bottoms.
Last Summer (R): Four
teenagers left to their own
devices for the summer on an
island, drink, smoke pot and
make love, eventually pushing
these pasttimes to the point of
rape and murder. S t a r s
Barbara 1-Jershey and Richard
Thomas.
The Party tR): Slapstick
comedy occurs \\'hen disaster·
So. Coast Cinema I
1561 West Sunflower !West of Bristol!
540-0594
who makes good In this film
\'f!rs1on of the stage UlUSJC<ll
depicting theater song·and·
dante hfe or the 1920's.
Costars Christopher Cablr.
SOUTH SEAS
TROPICAL FISH
O•-. Cou11ty'1 fh1inf
wlectioe of Ttopic;al fbh
oftd Goldtlt.h The lady and 1he Trump
(G 1 · Disney cartoon feature
aboul a dainty eo<.·ker .spaniel,
her young owners arid a
1nongrel knight errant.
Tht: lt!ttr immediate/11
after tJit title. 111dicates !ht•
'Tal ing (llt>en flte picture IJ !
tlu! llfotio11 Picture C0</t1
The Corie .~nd Ra!lng pro
grani mau be found 011 one
of rhe 1notion picture pages e AQUARIUMS r---------..,11 e MAINTEHANC! SERVICE e LIVE FOODS
Nevtr a Uull r.1oment j GI
J)1sney slapstiek con1edy abuul
a s!ruggling actor who is
1nist<1kc11 fo r a notorious i.;un ·
1nan by gangSll'J's. Stars Ll1t·k
Van O\ke
011 Any Sutklay !GI· Brure
Oru1vn. \1ho did surfing 's
"1'.:ndlt'S" Su1nn1cr" brings the
beauty, dunger. JUY and humor
IJf young Arncr1 l·a 's n10IOl'l')·
l'le cr<ize to !he !>Creen as
st1n1-docun1entar\. S t f .., "
McQueen :Hid paJS ndl· in )><i!ld
dune shots
ltA t~xpedltiflns j GI 'fhor
llcyerdehl film ;ibout true life
adventure of tu <; C'rossini:: the
Atlan11c Ocet1n amidst 35-foot
\1'a\es and ~h<lrks
Song of lht> South !GI·
Disney fea ture or Southern life
"'ilh Uncle Hernus a11d his
an11nal fr iends. Stars Bohbv
J)r1scolJ. -
MCMERATINGS
ffiR PAREIVTS AND
YOUNG PEOPl.E
rn. 01)1•criwt ol '"" u 1rn11r Ir ro i/lf1111W
P41•"'1• •boul ffW ..,,!•O.My ol
fllV'l••c-/Oir .... br-~.,,
----~--------------
®MG 011[ UNDER 17 AOIUTIEll
!Agt lo11ut rn1~ V•ty
lft CtMli!l lr.11)
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
..... [!I~-~·~ ... -........ ~""-.... _t>UVt<C,.,.,. .. ............-
••SHOWING NOW! ••
l'E~ltGlicon :,, .. 1· · ··1'!;· . . ' .. , " . ":. '111. E '. , . . . "'"'1·&" .-. OSPl'll ",,, .
. . • • '· ' }_.; ··~: ,.,_ >~,;;[ .
' ' -'·_ '''-i~ ' -J\.' "< • , ,. . •• .
. ' ·. ( . " .. ·' '· (if:,.1·· • ~ > ' ' ' ·~ ,.){ ---. --.. ,~.-'· .... ~ ,
.lafGEORGE~scurr
"THE HOSPITAL"
" PADDY CHAYEFSKY
GEORGE (. ston
NOMINATED BEST
DRAMATICAL ACTOR
"G<XJ)EN GLOB< AWAROI" -· ARTHUR HlllfR
(0 ~lKIU ~
DWIARIBB ,,_,,
HOWARD GOTTFRIED
A HCM'ARD GOTTFlllED·PADDY CHAYEFSKY PROOUC'TION ti •---
Gp ....::.=-.--<~-,,=~~~... ARTHUR ttlliR -........ --............ IJnrtlllArtartl
CO-HIT
EXCLUSIVE
ORANGE
COUNTY
SHOWINGS
PETER SELLER S
'THE PARTY:P)
e LIVE Pl.ANTS
111 W. WILSON, COSTA MESA
loll FlirYl•w 1111.I Ull-1 .. 1
ff2t A111fttl , HUNTINGTON t EACN
(l-lrAI 10 l<•w Lucll~'sl
l•l·@lll
"KOTCH"
Jack Lammon
"THE
ODO COUPLE"
if.00 PER CAll-LOAO
(RI Und•r 17 mwfl •• w/part11I
1.llp•C•-. ,_,.,.,....,.11)
.t. "to ..... OINrSt ........ -.~n .
l. Cuulr I D-(IJ
,.,.,., • .,, ... t· ..... , ..... I!
'°"I NEWM.O-N •Colo> "SOMITIMIS A &aUJltOJJOr
_ .... ,.., -
lh#• l l Mnilkrillir....,.
O'IHl'ft Ho-•Coloor
'"STUW DOCS'" (I).
~ .. '1.m SO.Ir RUKA TO HA.,,,...,
\'iled accidentally to chic -----'--------------------! prone East Indian actor is in-,l~;;;;;;=~~~~~~~~~~~~=;;;;;;;;;;:~I Jiol!yvtood party. Peter Sellers
--~ ·--·-• , U44ZU
st ars.
Trojan Woman
Katharine 1-lcpbum. Vanessa
Redgrave and Genevieve Bu-
JOld in current rendering <1f
the classical Greek tragedy <1f
Euripides.
Vanishing Point ~GPJ : Stars
Barry Newman as ex-cop, ex-
-....... w-slnkitJg t.M# .....
': .. th• w•veS we,. 35 f..t •bov• us ... -
...... ,,,orw •nd ,,_ shMk r,,..
Mlittg th• wntr ... •
-·· THOll MEVIRDAHL
Youn..t-RAI
""-...dint 1Juo ·lifo-
for th• whole fomilyl
ENDS TUESDAY
South Co.st Pl•t• I
s. .... ,.., ... ,,.,..
14•·1111
...... , .... 14+1-t '·"" ... °'"'-' .. , .... ftl •
RICHARD UllOA • CLIFF JAECKEL • LAWSON POffi
/
I "ftPICfURE
is "One Of The Year's
-lolYCOCXS ,_ .... .,. ..
-""'""' -----"""""' _.,..._
-'£\'111 lllll' --
............ --
-M.lCOlUllS ------MCIOYmlST(N __ ,.,.,
..... .,.. ..._, ..........
~tlR(W ~flP'f --s-f<• ~....,,_
Plus 11 other i..o:na u.s. tilmailics.
' . ----------~-~,_ .. ~
'1111 l!l .. _::Ir
rcna-JMa
(Under 11 m11•t be-with l>o!r
T"Plf HCtfOf PrOgrun
1. "11000 fUST"ll J,C.W
2. "1,0DO MANIACS". (l).c.IW
3. "HIGHT Of THE UVl"6 DIAD" (I) .. -.... --·--171·LK?
• ,/J,\J •• f • .,.,,.,,,
J.g, tl<no<!· ""'' "SlfOW JOI" (G'l •t.a.
PioL ""~ u.,....,_
.... ..,,,="(~OO::l MA•D lU119
--·--·-•s.t·70U
/;""'•11114•!.llt~r;q,._
"DN°it =-~;.via] l ... ...
'"TilllOOl,Ut,A•MlT"fW) ·--·---..,., ..
-·-.... .....,,,
THE BEST
Rtttdf'l'lhlp po 11 1 prove
"PtftnuLI" Is one of thf'
WO:ld'1 ~l popul_ar e«nk
amps. Rf'Ad it dill¥ 1n lht DAlLY PILOT .
-. -.. • • .. -
'-"=d•~•--'-''='~'"='~ry-·~·~1~•=12:__~~~~~~~~D~•~1~L-v_,_1 L_o_r__.'"'7
Gulde to .Fun
'Marty's Corral' on Mesa High Campus
Young Girls Vie
Young Cahfornla g Ir Is
between the. ages of three and
15 and one-half, will compete
for fou r Important beauty
titles on lhlS Sllnday, in the
Ballroom of the Los Angele!!
Am bassador Hotel startlnJ::: at
I p m. The annual event is
sponso red by the Callforrua
Bea uty Pageant. Inc . which
also selects the Californiii
deleaate to the Miss USA·
Universe Bea.uty Pageant 1n
Pu erto Rico eaeh May.
California ," 11 1~ tJit..13, and
"Teen Miss California," 1gts
13-151'2.
FEB. I· 11
WHALE WATCHING -The Parent Tucher..student A~
elation nf S.n Clemente High School is sponsorin& whale ,
watching boat lrlp11 each Sat. and Sun. through Feb. 13. Boals l~ave Dana Wharf, 0.11.na Point, at 10 a.m. and I p.m. and
tickets are $3.50 for adults, $2.50 for children 12 years and
younger. Group rates for 20 or more. Por reservations
phone 495-5219 or 49&-9486 11:30 to 4 p.m. week days).
'
F EB. 4 • II
\\-'HALE WATCHING -A close up look at the eray whales.
as they pass along lhe Orange County Coast on their yearly
trt.k from Arctic waters to breedinJ 1rounds off Ba ja Cali-
fornia. may be had ever)' Saturday and Sunday 1board the
passenger cruist r, Island Hohday, whicb h~aves the Balboa
Pavilion. 400 Main St .. Balbo<1. 9 a.m. and t p.m. on a
whale watching tour. Adult fare . $.1 : children 12 years and
youn1er. $2. Rest rvations may be made by calling 673-5245.
FEB. 4 · 13
WHALE WATCHING -The UC! Biology Club is sponsor-
ing whalt watching boat trips through Feb. 13 from Dana
Point at 10 a.m. and J p.m, each Sat. and Sun. Tickets to
public, $4, must be purchased by 5 p.m. Thurs .. one week
in advance, at ASUCI ticket booth on fi rst floor of Commons.
Phone 833-5549 for information.
FEB. 4 -6
CJ\1 HIGH CARNIVAL -Costa Mesa Hi&h School is spon-
soring its second annual carnival. ''Marty's Co rral." Feb.
4 - 6 on the school campu s. There will be fun for a ll incJud.
Ing about 15 carnival rides for adults and children; food
and game booths: a rodeo: gen eral store: a haunted house ,
a battle of the bands and a ba sketball game. The hours are:
Fri., Feb. 4. 3 p.m. to midn ight : Sat, Feb. 5. 10 a.m. to
tnidnight and Sun ., Feb. 6, noon to 5 p.m. For more informa-
tion phone. 54f>.94.ll during regular school hours.
FEB. 4 . fi
SADOLEBACK PLAY -Saddleback College will prNtnt
"Pygma lion" by the ~aders' Theatt r in the Campus
the1ter for three performances Feb. 4 and 5 at 8 p.m. and
Feb. 6 at 2 p.m. Tic kets are SJ to general public. For infor-
m1tion phone 837-9700 or 495-4950.
FEB. 4 • Z4
PRE.SCHOOL STORIES -The Newport Beach Public Li-
brary has scheduled pre-school prog rams which will take
place at 10 a.m. in the following locationa : Mariners Li·
brary. 2005 Dover Drive, Tuesdays: Corona del Mar Library,
420 Marigold St .. Corona del Mar, Wednesda ys ; Harbor
View Clubhouse. 1871 Port Cllarles, Newport Beach. Thurs·
days, and th e Balboa Library, 100 E. Balboa ~Jvd., Newport
Beach. Tuesdays.
FEB. S
BALLET FOR CHILDREN -Le&min& Unli mited will pre-
sent two performances of baJlet for children, perfo~ by
the Laguna Civic Ballet C.O. at I and 3 p.m .. Feb. ~ m the
University Pa rk Elemtntary School, Sandberg and Michelson
Sts .. Irvine. Ti cket!. 12 for adult11 ; chlldren. 11.25. Phone
833-2305.
FEB. 1. I
ClllLDAEN'S TllEATSR -'!be Cblldta'a Tll••W' <l<l!id
ol Newpo'rt Harber will present :'T.U 1 Sland," a chlid-
ren'a fanta sy by Pru Holden and Jun Tandowsky, ht the
Oran1e Coast Collqe Auditorium, 2701 Falrvielf Road, Yffi .
I at 10 1.m., 1 and J p.m.; Feb. g at land S p.m. Tlcketa, fl
may be reserved by calling 645-3191 or &?Ul97.
FEB. 7. 16
Ill.ACK CULTUI\!: -Seta Alli Coll•ce. 1530 W. 11th St .'
Santa Ana. will present a comprthensive slate of educa-
tional and entertaining activities during Black Culture Wetk.
Feb. 7·10. LKtures. slut!, debates, a play, fashion sho~·.
ta lent show. musical jam seuion IJ'ld 1 dance have been
sched uled. For additional information and schedule of event!
phone M7-95e l. Ext. 241.
FEB. I • MARCH 2
PLANETARIUM SHOW -Tessman Plantt.arium at Santa
An a Colle1e, l~ W. 17lh St., Santa Ana will present a
special sho w, "Winter Sky Spectacular." each Tuea. and
Thura. at 7: 15 p.m. throue:h March 2. Through the eyes of a
major observatory the audience will examine the Orion
Nebula, the Pleiades, the Y.."hirlpool galaxy an d the Leo
clustera of galaxies. A trip to Alaska to witness a displa y
ol I.he Northern Lights will close the show which is free to
the public , but reservations must he made. Phone 5'17-9661.
Ext. 314.
FEB. 10
HONOR BAND FE.STJV AL -The Orange Coast Colle(e
Music btpartmenl is sponsoring an all day Distrie t Honor
Band and Orchestra Fe1tlvaJ at the college on Feb . 10 from
8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Orange County High Schools wil l be par·
ticipating In all day fel!ilival with the winners givinc eve-
nine: concert. No admission charge.
FEB. IO • %9
STORY HOUR -Costa Mesa Library. 566 Center St.. Costa
t-.1e sa, offerli a children's story heur each Thurs. ,at 10:30 a.m.
On P'eb. 10. two films will alBO be shown : "Caps for Sale"
and "Tt!e C3mel Who Took a Wa lk."
FEB. 11 • 1%
DANCE PRODUCTION -P~rformance by second-year UCJ
students in Master of Fine Arts program will stage a dance
production in the \'illage Concert Hall on campus at 8:30
p.m. Fri .and Sa t., F'eb. 11 and 12. Admission, $1. For in-
formation phone 833-6617.
FEB. 12
CHOffi CONCERT -The Acapella Choir from Brieham
Young University will be heard in concert at 8 p.m. P'eb.
12 in the coqe1e auditorium. 2701 Fairview Road . Costa
Mesa . Ther.e i!ll no charge for admission.
FEB. 13
FILM LECTURE -Dr. Clara Hill will present a film lec-
ture series. sponsored by the Bower's Museum of S.nt.a
Ana. In the auditorium of the City Hall Annex In Santa An.!!,
52f> N. Rm;e St. C.Omforlable theater ae1ts should provide
11:udJenct!I with more comfort an d ''iewing pleasurt . f'rtt
parking in re4r lot. The programs all will be setn at 2:30
p.m. with lhe first one, Feb. 13 titled, "Romantic Spain
and Portugal." On Feb. 'l7 ·'Morocco.·· Ancient and Nrw··
will be teen . There is no admission ch1rge.
FE B. 14
JAZZ SESSION -Jazz lnrorporated "'ill hold its re1ul 1r
ja:a seuion. Fe b. 14 at 2 p m. in the Elks Chlh. 211 E.
Chapman . Orange. Featured artist will be Rick Nelson plus
the El Bekal Shrine Jazz Band from Long Beach. Muscians
and mem bers free . Public invited. $2 donation.
TV Coverage Slated
For Tennis Circuit
men 's singles C'hamp1(1n chff
Riche y, the i;:reat Pancho
Gonzales and the 1971 Czech
doubles learn of Vladimir ZOO-
nick and Milan Holocek.
The four classlfitafinns art·
''Wet Mlu California ,'' ages '.I·
6: "Little fo,1iss Cal1forn1a ,"
aaes 6-9~: "Preteen 1'.ltss
Talent is not taken Into con-
s1deral1on in any of the c:oo-
1ests. The girls are judgtd
strictly on beauty of face.
bone strucWre, charm, poise
and personality. Tbe con·
testants will -ppe1r ln 1w1nt
suits and a dre111 be fore a
panel of hl&hly qualified
judges .
Each of the wlnnu a will be
royally crowned, awlJ'ded •
sash sta ting her title. and
receivt numerous prius and
11\\Brd.S
CHILDREN'S THEATRE GUILD
prrs"nts
"TAKE A STAND"
SATUROAY -'•b. S -10 .1.m. • 1 P-"'· • J ,.m.
SUNDAY -fib. ' -1 p.m .• J p.m.
ORANGE COAST COLLEGE .
AUDITORIUM
Admistion: $1 .00
Ticket lnform1tlon: 64S~l6f1 673·6191
Co\'t rage of the Uni ted
States Indoor Winter Tennis
Circuit by the Public Broad-
casting Service will be kicked
off this Sunday with the Des
f\-loi nes International Tennis
Champion11hips. The two-hour
tape delay sports special will
begin at I p.rn. on KCET,
Channel 28.
Commentary wlll be handled !~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ by former competition pl aye r a I~
Fred Perry and Gene Scolt .
Other 11tops on the tennis
crcuit to be covered on follow-
A field of 16 lawyers fro m 13
countries in the Des Moines
event win incl ude defending
ing Sundays are London. Feb.
13; Salisbu ry, f..1d ., Feb. 20;
New York. Ftb. 27, and
Washinit.on , D. C .. March 12.
---CINFOOM( JO ..
" ... ·:..·~f-l '""l"I''~
~-· -.... $TAD/UM , I '.'I
~ .....-nr:q._-_.1· .... ---.. STADIUM ? '. .. -· ...... ----·'' SfADIDM ,J
"~~........ -
"IEOKHOIS AHO lkOOM STICKS~
11t111 LuclH• 1111
"YOUkl, MIH• AHO OUkS"
Mlll111• Ill. l lld 51111.
Jolln Kiiiy ''SNOW JOA" (GI"}
1IH 1"1111 H•wm111
"COOL HAHD LUKI" 101"1
"•ILLY JACK" 101") ...
"MONTI WALJHH
"Thi fl,_,. C-11911" Cll ... ''V'"""'"" h 111r c•1
"LH1 11119 tM Tr1ni1,.-• 101
"•A l111fdlll011" All In C110r
\i111~•rn•ri t•rd e l'n•1l1r ch119e
1 f1ihie11 bl•n•, 11ewp11I ct"l•r 644 ·1070
334 Films
Eligible
For Honors
he $240.00J Alpine capec
JE6Na.&JDE KILIY &et to know Michaels.
•
A total of 334 feature-length
fil ms meet the eligibility re-
quirements for 1971 Acldemy
A w a r d consid1ration. ac-cordlfi~ to the Academy of
Motion Picture Art! and
Sciences.
La st year . there were 374
eligible fil ms The current
Remind er List of El~ible
Films has the same number
as th at of 1969 . whic h until Jaat
year was the la rgest in nine
years.
Eligibility is established by
the rul es of the Academy,
which will av.·ard the Oscar to
the year's best film. best
performances by actors and
best achievemenli!I by f i I m
makers 11t the 44th A n n u a l
Awards Program.
Feature-length motion plc-
lures in English or with
English subtitles. regardless
of country of origin. are eligi-
ble if they have had a week·s
exhibition for paid admi ssions
in the Los Angeles area
starting In the ca lendar year
1971.
T h e Academy's Reminder
\
Li st includes pic tures ~
duced tn Argentina. Australla,
CUlada. Denmark. England,
Finland, Fr1nce. Germany,
Ireland, Israel . It1ly, Japan,
Mexico, Rom.11nia, R u s 1 i a •
Spain. Sweden and the United
States. Czechoslovakia co-pro-
du ced one film and YugGS\avia
two.
Separate consideration is
aiven to fllnu competing for
the Foreign Language Film
Award. Pictures !llubmitted for
consideration in this cate1ory
need not have been exhibited
in the United States. but mu1t
flnt have bMn lhown In the
country of tbtlr o r I g I n
between November 1, 1970 and
October ·31, 11171. They Milli
also have Entlllh subtitles and I
bt submitted" by 1 reeo&nir.ed
org1niuUon 1lmllar to the
Academy In the picture's
country of orll:in.
Foretgn fllrn1 with sound
trackl dubbed In En,;lls h are
el!Jlble for 111 but acUn1
awards. Acton In .those fUnu
·whole volcts have betln dul>
bed br othert ire lnell1Jble for
O.Can.
TbfJ year'• Awards will be
pr ... nted A!!>U 10 1t the
Pavilion of ihe 'l.o• An1el11
Muatc C.ntar i nd will be
llroadcoll In oolor by tho l'IBC
11levt1lon Network.
KIDS WVE
UNCLE LEN
Saturd1y1 in
The DAILY PILOT
in
~Jlij3
fOUNTANI fl lA MAIRA D.L
VAll ll' t71·ll•Z
tlf.1500
PAULO fl.I.
CDSTAMlSA
SfS-llll
co. .. 11
"WHAT DO
YOU SAYTO
! NAK[O lADY?"
,f.DUl TS Oti.Y . ...
All.lllllM
tJ4.11U
WORLD PREMIERE
SEVEN WONDERS
. -OF :!"~ _,,
.THE 5:: .. all rgi·~~i·.=.:-~ WEST ::.:...
SUrrinJ Ja~SID~ • P!Dducedby S1111u1l H1wman • Cr~1\ed by De1 n.Uw• fatmlaColar
EXCITING FILM FARE TO ENTERTAIN
THE WHOU FAMIL T! * STAU * CILllRITIU
*CHAMPAGNE c..,.n..,.,....1 + CURTAIN UP 1:00
* FISTIVITIU llGIN AT 7
SURF THEATRE
121 .... St.
"'"''"''•• ..... 536-9396
Saturcloy I S...., letu&. Sche4ul•
WHkdays -7:30 I t :JO 1 :l0·3:30·5:30.7:JO·f:JO
--.... ,..,... ....-,.,
"THI HILLSTROM Cl4RONICLI" '
Polo.2threvth,H.I -6:.Uopen
ConllnuoUI Runnln1 Show Sundoy 2.-00
Kids Like to Ask Andy
•
I
•
•
ATLMI
t:Hll¥St81
. V;.. .. , IMPERlllL PLl'ltlO ... ·~. . . · C~ta .Mesa
BRAND
NEW
•72 SATELLITE
• •
•
• I
'
• ·v L2'9.a21.2·•1111 SE •
IT'S TRUE .. •
WE ·CAN DELIVER llAND:, -NEW,
11972 CHRYSl.E~/Pl¥ ... ourHs . . . . . -
AT LOWL-OW ·n PRICES
COM PLEll . OSED CAR
INvENT~~ A~. INGS REDU CTION · SAY HUG_£· · · -· .
MUSTANG.
St•nJertl fr•111llfi11lo11, .,•Gio •llCl'~•afer, (791 1NF')'
•i195 This ;, •11 elfcelt•nf,2ncf .c•r.f0r ti,. f1m ilr tr1•11. INNX. .6611
'66 FORD
STATION WAGON
VII, •ufomeHc, r•dio, "••l•r, powe r Jfeering ., br•k11, ... ~.,79s '65 PlYMOUTH
BARllACUoA . · ~•Gio end "••l•r, wli;+9·;itf•· we ll ti,..J. 1Utli24JJ
'495 '71 Pl YMOUTH _:'69 JORD
'
CRICKET
SEDA[:I ,
VII, euf""'•fi't. ,..t/io, heetar, pow•r 1teeri119, "'"fjjJj
'70 RAMBLER
AMBASSADOR STATION ·WAGON
'. ..
'67 BUICK Vs , e ulem1lic, .redio, li1eler, power 1t1,.ri11g-.& brek•1,
wh it, we ll1, .roof reek. •ir co11ditio11 i11e. 1286A.NF J
•2595 SKYLARK
Vt, •ufoP11 1fic, r•Gie, ~••+•r, l'Ow1r •. tf11rl119, Wsw, "---··1:1ts
.~ --•
' . ..,_ . . ' .. ' ,
. , > r =----~.
i ··: f ·: . : •
• • I f' "''
•
••
. -~
'68
'69
'69
'69
'70
'69
-. ---
MONTEGO
MX V-8, outo. Irons, J>Qwer steering, fix!. oir, WXR 145
FORD ****
CUSTOM V-8, outCI trans, p/stter, radio, tieo1er. ol!
or19. YWN SSO
PLYM ****
FURY II V-8. O!lto irons, p/steer, roct, oil'. XVU 417
MUSTANG ****
HDTP Rod10, heeler, OOcke1 ~eels, ZAC 652
MAVERICK ****
6 cvi., outo, rodio. heeler, I/glass, w#overs, vinyl int,
occent group. ZSP 701
PLYM ****
ruRY Ill HT V~8. auto Irons. p/sieer, FACT. AIR. dlx.
vinyl int PM230910138868
--... .... .. ....
JEEP
l/2 TON PICKUP 6 Cy1, heavy.tluty l(ijlt R3394)
MOTORCYCLE
Hond11 450 C.C. Li•• New! (9476 1)1
FORD
f. 250 V-8, auto trans, heavy duly equipt. 91912A
FORD
f·lOO Ton p;ckup, v.e, ou10 trons. fo(tory oir. PCO
"'
JEEP
WA.GONAIRE 4 wheel drive, v.s tngio9. ZJl'. 569
.,,.. .. ~ ... ·--~ ....
P'rld'ay, 'tbruary 4, I9n
TORINO
H 1. V·8. 11ut6 lrC1ns. PCIW~ Sleer -fA( IOiY AIR 918
(If SPEC fACTOR't' PURCHA.Sl
MUSTA NG
Iii V·A. ooto Irons. p!)Wff steer .. !otklry oor, bucler
1eo11. 21 4 CAU SPEC. FACTORY PURCHASE
~ !.~! Y-8, '"" "'"" .,.,, "~" fACTORY A« $ 29 88 radio. heater. 602 CCZ SPEC. FACTORY PURCHASE
LTD
4 OR HI V·8. °"'o Iron s. toct. lit! (ond, power stetr,
rndio. healer. wh1!ewalls. t/olass. w/co~ers. londou
top, ~·n~J •nt. 362 CCK SPEC. IA( JORY PURCHA.SE
FORD
(oun11y St'don. V-8, OU10 loo111, flOW~J ~•ee•. fAClORY
AIR, power disc brakes. 10 pos1e11~er. 10~8 I SP[(.
FACTORY PURCHASE
FORD
WAGON 10 Possenger, 419 V.8, 2V, ooto Iron s. power
s!~ing, !ocl. a<r, power disc brokes, lJ74K 133S98
SPEC. fA.CTORY PURCHASf
$30 88
$3 188
$31 88
'7 0 ~?r~,?,~,,~:,~.: . ., """ $1688 I 6 9 ;;~;~~~'~'~!~.~~:!,~." .. ~., "~"
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-''----~-
$318 8 ,71 T-BIRD $39 88 l A.N OAU V-8, outo Irons. FA.CTORY A.Ill: pwr
s~etnng/dosc hfC1kes/w111dows/sean, radoo, hf!l1er.
vinyl roof, l/g!as1. WSW's. 558 CCM 5P£C. FA.CIORY
PURCHASE
' 70
'70
'70
FORD ****
CUSTOM 500 IJ.8, outo Irons, p/~reer, fQCI. air, oll
0"9· 108 AK~
TORINO****
G.T. SPORT ROOF V-8, auto Irons, fat!. olrcond,
p/steer, & di" brakes, radio. heoter. whitewalls. vinyl
roof, I/glass, w/tovers. vinyl int. 470 AGY
FORD ****
GALX 500 Sport roof, V·S, ou!a Irons. foci. air co~d.
radio. healer, whiiewnlls, I/gloss, w/covers, landou
tap, vinyl int. 901 BMZ
Fully synchron11ed Irons, l-70
CID economy engine, emission
CO/llro l. self od1usling brakes,
the simple machine. (9 IVl071 83)
IMMIDIA Tl DILIVIRT
USED
LANDAU
Splil ben ch sea t, Mic heli n
, WSW rodiol tire s, powe r
steering/brakes, landau roo f.
Less than 800 mile s.
(2J87N 138271 )
·::~ND '72 LTD$ ..
2 DOOR HARDTOP
302 v.s, crui somolic, p/disc·broke s &
steering, luxury trim, emission control.
order your s in your choice of color lodoy.
•
TRUCK & CAMPER TRUCK & CAMPER
NEW 8' CAMPER NEW KING O' THE ROAD
full cob O•tr ""'fle1• wilh !font tf1netle, icebo~ "Ov1, I ' Cabovtr tomper, complett wilii i;1bo11,, ''°"'· drlfH,
$lefp• 5. 1507~ 11e. 2506~U
ONA ONA
'69 ford f100 V-8, foe'l.oir, tlUIO. (31!661) '68 foril f. 250 3/4 Ton MM. nidio, Matw, Gil heavy 6.rty,
9\912A
COMPLETE CAMPER PACKAGE COMPLETE CAMPER PACKAGE
$2688 $2488 ----
BRAND TRUCK & CAMPER NEW .
KING O' THE ROAD CABOYER
_ . --Eq,t. with stove, sink, icebox, etc. (2509RY)
ON A NEW '72 FORD PICK·UP
CUSTOM STYllSIDE. ORDE~ YOURS TODAY
COMPLETE CAMPER PACKAGE
FULL PRICE
$
FU~LPRICE
250 CIO.eng; outO. trons., emission con--
. trol~ direct air ventilation. ORDER: YOURS
JOOAY
1
:::
0 VAN $
E-200
FULL y, FACTORY EQUIPPED
~mission co ~trol, direct·oir venlilo tiow.
ORDER· YOURS TOOAY
PINTO 2 DOOR '71 Fact, eir. auto. trt ru ., redio, htafer.
279 CCB $1 988
'71
• Speed Irons, 1600 (( •og ..
bucktt seots, tmission
control.
Ord er Todoy
In The Color of
Your Choice
PULL PRICI
HA!~PRINO $
Cruisomatic trans., all new Torino design,
. front disc brakes. direct air ventilation,
emission co rol. ·
(2A25l:~ 65.t72)
Not stripped but equipped wit h outo.
trans., be lted tires, color keyed raci ng
mirrors, bock et stats. 2FOIL l 5095 2
IMMEOIA TE DfllVHY
r
r
,. '
·'
S0 DAil Y PI LOT Fr1d.1t, Ftriruary 4, 1W2
"-''---~~~~~~~-
Df CK TIACY
; ® BUT WMal 5N£
TUMBLEWEEDS
~ 1HAI fOREIGt.tfR JllVOUACKED U1'0N OOR LANP: I 1Rlfl> l\mf])llNG A~P CNOJ.ING-1Hf DOt-1 -!'V£N
SUW£C11NG lliM 10 A SCATHINIT
l'l'NCIL l.A'iHING. ~£ ~ffUSfS 10
!lLIDlif ,
.. t .
Mun AND JEFF
MUTT, FOR THE
FIRSTTIME IN
MY LIFE I 'M
REALLY IN LCM;!
By Chestet' Gould
"H.EARE5T 5MELTER
•ND WAJZMTI.I WCU..0
&!. ™E TOL~V
C»o'SIS!' SAVS TRACY,
By Tom K. Ryan
I CONSID£HB' UIALLfN&ING-
HIM 1V Pt VUfL1 JJUT M'i
GiJJ\1£5 1\Rf AT nlf PRY
CLfA»fRS .
OH, ITS NOT
UKE SHE WAS
A COMPLETE
STRANGER·
-:.rtJiM
By Al Smith
MY FRIEND, OTTO,
WAS ENGAGED
lo HER FOR
"fHREEYEARS!
EMILY! I JUST
MET HERTONIGl!r.
WE FELL IN LOVE.
WE"REGoNNA
GET MARRIE D
TOMORROW.'
MARRIED?
DON'T YOU
THtNKYoU
OUGHT TO
WAITUITTIL
YOU KNOW HER?I-..---,.-
FIGMENTS
.OOIF
AN\QE ,NfID5
TO LEAVE IBE
ROO'I. ... JUST
RAISE THEIR
HAND!
PLAIN JANE
ACROSS 47 Anclr nt namt
tor Jtrusal rm
l A1111ttll' 1ad!o 4' VinCtnl -
optr11tors: Go r;h: Dutch
lnform1 I pa inlt r
5 Strrn 50 Srclio11 of
10 Mothr1s : 1mhrwn timb rr
lnforma I 52 H1vin9
14 Opt11l1c frag1ancr
highl ight 54 linkrd
15 Neighbor logrthrr
of Fr1nct 58 Olympic
l b Way out G~mrs 17 Milk: Prrlit coottslanl
18 Biologlt1l 59 Put th r
grou? QU9$\it>n
19 M~sh 1l -: 60 Unltt srcurtfy
Europe~n b1: Sparst
dictator 65 William,
:?O Son9b11d h1 l1tla11d
22 Stries of 67 Shop rrgul ady
riur~11on~ at a g1ve11
24 Dtr;ree: Abbr. stori!'
2~ Pray ing 1og11rt 6'J t.ll~uJbly pOO(
27 Witch,rah 70 Fot rr;n that
21J Heavy fall of 71 E11r1orern
rain lrre
32 [Qoa!ity or 72 Columnis t -
levt1 Bombtclc
33 -Tanguay : 73 Son of Zrus
TM "I Don't 74 Vt rlic al
Cart " girl 75 Di~h out
34 Systr111 tor clumsily
dt!tctlng
submtrgtd DOWN
obi t els
36 Wa lktd b1ck l Su~ptnslon
and forth of mov tmtnl
across 2 ldsh
40 A mili tar y rxcl ~mat ion
4 Sixth planrt 35 Dominatrd
f10111 the ~1111
5 Notffi Gary
Cooptr
vehicl P:
2 word~
b R,111ageil
7 Lo11d sprech
8 Movrs !o
the s1dr
~Woody pla11L
of Asia
10 As~embltd
11 Chrmical
J7 Poser for ~
lll.1111Zir1i!'
photo: 2 word s
18 Das11
contr aclio11
41 U\trr a ~harp,
shorl cry
-4 ) Drtgs
•i. US prtsidenl
48 Cha119e 111
posit ion
SI Am1ablt
compound 53 Plant parts
12 Kind of joint 54 ·-Jll y
in carPtnlry 55 Twig of l
13 Rough ly PlMle wil low
hravy boot % Russ ian
21 Dtvil!liZrs c1ar's
2) Btnd in a pr ocl amation
drl'i npipr 57 Mort rxtrrmt
2b City in north• bl Submisslvr
~rn Afric a bl Patron saint
28 Crus tacean of sailors
P~ANUTS
JUDGE PARKER
MISS PEACH
By Dale Hale
By Frank Baginski
t. ~i
I
Ll'L ABNER
GORDO
W!l'/.AJ.1-
TH& Fl.AP
°"""' T!IAT
O UiF/T.?
MOON MULLINS
®
THIS 151-J.Y 31!? DAY
WITHOUT CRE',t.M IN
MYCOFFoo,LORD?.-
Do'/OU •
"THINK l 1V< ~ t..OST .., -.
Wo/GHT? ~~\
!T's
J!IS N&f'/
OOU!!JlE•
KN!Tf .SUIT,.
ANIMAL CRACKERS
By Charles M. Sc:hulz
By Harold i.e Doux
1F WE ClOW'T GET OUT
OF MERE NOW, WE MIGHT
BE STUC.1( -FOR PAVS, Mil.
,l.PP\.ETOM! I MOPE-
WOTMl ~G MA.PPENED
TO ERIC!
PERMAPS WE'D &EITE~·
FLV OUT, PAVIP! WHEN
ERIC 6ETS &AC.K, ME U.N
ST'4.V MErE AT TME FARM-
HOUSE'. I WOULDN'T WOR·
RV ,t,&oUT MIM.! HE'S
A.M EXPE5rr SKIER ~
By Men
orr;~nil~hon 3 Kind of
"42 Ntsl t lt ct10-
-44 L..a19e knilr ma9nt tlc
.CS Noctima l stitf 11dl •lion
29 La irs 64 Harvesl a crop
30 Rr stmb l\ng an Ob Metric Ion~:
rllipst Abbr.
31 Navioation b8 "What's up,
drvict -1"
J'RTMUllt ~AS THOU6HT OF A 'NAY
TO COHSll'VI! QUlr F1'E5M ,.,. ? Yl!S,
MISS
P8AC>f .
TMlfOU6H ~SY!
HOW
wow..:>
COUltTISY
..-t.P, _ .. ?
, t>OM'T
.JUST
GoA-
-~ AS-IN"""" fF lWHllVf A
F"tmO WNO
Wf)IA.OUdl'O ... ..,.., ..
POI.IT• NII>
WAIT~
HlfF-P. •
PERKINS
--TMS-.Y .,.. WHO
M\l\TTIUll-
. ' .. 1: I
II
ii
11 ~.-'t-"
)
WHAttS so W USlfAt. .ABour THAT."
LA.DIES
FIRST-
ANV-
7H IN&
HJ: WEARS
JS
l'Oll8LE· 50ME-
T!l!N&f
By Al Capp . ·-----... ---
By Ferd Johnson
11l've UJed one 11da cream 1f1er the otbtr but aU tbt ever
happens Is I end ap wUb an empty jar tbat'1 nice
and smooth."
DENNIS THE MENACE
11 ~r-,.,
i
I t .
l
I ' • i
I
1
-• • • • • • • • . -
DAILY PILO'f ;;_J
Everyone Hai
Somethin9 That
Someone El,e Wan+.
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Se ll It,
Fi nd It , Tr ade It
With a Wan t Ad The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
General
*
*
General
* * * * TAYLOR CO.
BIG CANYON . $99,SOO
*
*
Exclus ive offering of a cl1 ston1ized 4 BH
ho1ne near con1plction. Lar ge fanuly r1n, fo r-
mal D I~. exquisite n1aste r s ui te & 3 rar ga-
rage. Enjoy the luxury of li ving in th is r.res·
lige area of Co untry C'lub atinosphere. Gu'ard-
ed entrance. Vie\v of golf course.
12 PI NEHURST LANE OPE N SAT/S UN .1·5
HARBOR VIEW HOMES. $68,500
Beautiful near·nev.i 2 stor v ho1ne \vith 4 bed-
r ms. fam rn1 & forn1 al DR 2 fireplaces. ex·
pensive wool cptng & custom drapes. Land
incl. 'V ait until vo11 see the garage!
1741 PORT SHEFFIELD OPEN SUN 1·5
LINDA ISLE
A Gr eat Opport unity! Arch itect owners of 2
brand 'NEW wa terfron t hon1es \Vi ii consider
in e xchange: your smaller home. !and , apart-
n1ent bldgs .. or 1'rust Deeds. Or wi ll lease/
option. F.ach has 4 BR, FR formal DR & study.
T·Iigh ceil in gs, s pac'ious r n1s & luxur y carpet-
ing. . .$155.000 each.
8 LI NDA ISLE OP EN SAT/SUN 1·5
DOVER SHORES · VIEW
Hi!!h on a hill \vith a lovelv vie\v of Bav &
mo-untains. Like ne\V thruout. Prof decorated
w/quality cptnp:, drapes & \va !l paper. 3 BR.
FR & study. Privacy! ... _. . ...... $79.500
2042 GALAXY OPEN SAT/SUN 1·5
CORONA DEL MAR . $72,500
A ttractive Ne\V Orleans style. l-l on1e plus
good in come. \Va lk to beach & shops. 1-lurry!
439 HELI OTROP E OPEN SUN 1·5
BIG CANYON · $98,500
Ne\V 5 BR home, e legantly decoralec1 v.1ilh
top quali t,v rptng & custom drapes. ti1 any ex-
tras. Ext·hrsivc llC\V li sting: in thi s ftib u\ous
Country Club area of Ne\.vport Beach.
BACK BAY · $64,500
Ne\\•porl Beach C'Ustorn built 3 RR home.
Spacious r oon1s . For mal di ning rm & huge
recreation rn1. iconvert it to 2 bed roomsl
S BEDROOMS . PLUS POOL! $79,900
Popular area of \Vestcliff. All large rms.
Family roon1 'vith fireplace. 4 Baths, 20'x40'
pool with separate J acuzzi pool. By appt.
BA YCREST • $58,900
Sharp 3 bedroo m home \vith ne\V carpeting
& custom drapes. Owner will consider ex-
change for 'fDs, income or land. Callt
CHOI CE WATERFRONT LOTS
Dover Shores · $49.500.
Linda Isle . $69,500·$75,000·$85.000·$100,000.
Office Open Saturday & Sunday
''Our 27th Ytar"
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors
211 1 San J oaquin Hills
NEWPORT CENTER
* * * *
Road
644-4910
* * General General
s w·n F II 16 BLOCKS TO OCEAN now I a I B1><1u1 ifully dcCQratcd drea m
ON _the O\Vner, of this ~u.st.i:im hnnH' onl>" .2 yf'U l"S uld 11·11h
built 4 bedroom, E<1.~ts1de 1·h:1r1Tiini; l1n'r la("('. convf'n·
Cos!a J\·lt•sa hon1l'. !J r '.~ !rw1 I ien1 kilrhf'n. hu~I' palio and
lar oorth to ('njoy lhe pan· lnrgf' l'l1QU~h yarrf rr1r ponl
f'lerl run1pu~ roon1 or 1hf' addition. Only $27,950 viilh
fan1 ily room, so hr wants I GI or f'l!A IPrn1s. Deller
us to sell hls all cll'ctrir F.~r 1 hi~ today;
home lnr hin1. Prif'f' for ;1u w I k · & L
inulll'rllah' sail' Il l only a er ee
$.12,j()(J \\'i lh FllA and VA
terms. Call Now 646-7171 Rf'nltors
1-o·THEREAL
\""'-ESTATERS
" I'. J'• I" '• i'M
2790 J-larhrir Rlvd. a1 Adams
5"1~9-191 Open 'Iii 9 P.M.
f asl results arc Just a phone I-"======== j call awny . 642-5678 General General
_,,, ..
IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION
3 LUXURY
CONDOMINIUMS
J BR. & 2 & 3 Baths, heated
puols, t('nr.1s court. Take ov-
l'r VA loan.
*WOOD
FLOORS*
1 ·I bcdrooni Calif. Clasi;1c, xlnt. I Carpl'.'!lng. firrpl, and a plRy
ya)·d. Q\11ncr has bought an-
utht'!\ Submit l)n down and
r;1kt' over a great G'": loan
at $600 p(.'I' rno. total.
-+-
HOT WEATHER
COMING
Try a pool for sigh~. 3 BR
11~ BA. a ll frt'shly paintPd,
Only $26. 750. Tola! payment
$233 mo. on VA loan.
SHOWCASE
HOME
MACNAB
Fl N ER
FINE PANELLING-
USED BRICK
with beamed ceilin gs, g r e a t
\Varmth and charm in this custom
4 BR, formal DR home. Spacious
sun room & gam e room opening to
sheltered south patio. $1 22 ,500 .
BAYCREST
Childrens v.1ing off FR. forn1al DR.
4 BR's. and pool. $89.500. OP EN
SUNDAY 1·5 p.m . 1009 Antigua,
Baycrest.
BEACON BAY-CAPE COD
On the beach -ultima te in Bay
View-new & charming 3 BR home
-conv. den -plank floors -fire-
place in master BR & private 2 BR
-beamed ceili ng apt. $210,000.
Barbara Aune 642-8235.
G BR., J BA, 2.100 sq. IL ART GALLERY ON BAY
barga in priced af $.15,500. i 'our private 25'x 30' gallery o r stu-
LARWIN dio + 3 BR's. 5% baths. study,
CALL 546-5411 Anytime FR. y acht. lock~r_s . terr aced dec k
ABANDONED ! !
5 + FAMILY +
DINING
-GOLF COURSE-
\Vo\r1 An abandonl!d Athen·
ian Villa overlooking one of
Orange Coasts mo st exclus·
ive goll courses! From Cnr·
nithian iron 11;ates to atr ium
to the massive entry -De·
hL'l:C! 5 giant be<lrooms -3
halhs. Hugr faniily room +
forn111J dining. King size 20 'x
Hi' living rcx1n1. Df'cnrarors
roueh all over. Ptirk Jikr
r::l'ounds + DIRECT COLI<'
COURSE \11 1'.:\V · o n 1 y
$.~9.500 -A fantastic valuf'!
Call 110\v . 6'15·0303.
HlRlST [ OLSO~ '" R EA L TO R S
WORK OUT OF
YOUR LIVE IN
Cozy 3 bedroom home 'l'ith
(•rar kling lire plact'. ZONED
-C-2 Apartment and bath!
for employee off garage.
f't1akes ideal wor kshop:. Lo ve-
ly lenced yard in quiet
llC'ighborhood. But 11. short
block ofr 17th Street, East·
side Costa Mt'sa.
All ror $28,500. Hurry! \Von•t
be here llt'XI week, Call
6-16-7171
OPEN UNTIL It PM
to ba y, s!1p pr1v1le ges. 1641 Bay-
, sid e Drive, Co rona de! Mar. OPEN
DAILY.
"HOME BEAUTIFUL"
Be longs on the fron t page! Looks
like a mode] in & out. Assumable
6\12% loan. $34,950. OPE N SAT. &
SUN. 1-5 p .m. 21142 Lockhaven,
Hunt ing ton Be3ch.
BAYSHORES MANOR
156' on the bay will a ccommodate
your 100' yacht. Dr amatic s lo ping
la,vn accents this gracious immac-
ulate Bayfront Manor. 4 BR, stud.Y,
F'R . maid's quarters. 5000 sq. ft.
S650,000. Shown by a ppt. only .
"THE SUN & STARS"
fro1n the ba lconv overlooking the
Bay & Ocean. !\1ost char ming 2
BR. 2 bath, newly decorated con-
dom inium. I-l ot pool. underground
parking, boat s lips available. Sale
or lease option . To see , call 642-
6235.
NO OVERHEAD
Office at home plus 3 BR, 3 ba th,
fo rmat DR & huge kitchen. $66,500.
OPEN SUNDAY 1·5 p .m . 1915
Tradewinds, Baycrest .
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO
COUNTRY ESTATE
Beautiful 3000 sq. ft. home situated
high a bove the 5an Juan Capistra-
no Va lley on approx. 91h a cres of
View Property. Corrals, guest cot-
tages & white rail fencing. The for-
ever vie \v extends from Catalina to
Mt. Baldy. This custotn home Has
central air conditioning to assure
yea r-round comfort. $270.000. Joel
Smilh 642-8235.
PARK VIEW-MUST SELL
Luxury Condo. Lagoons. Club· 4 BR. 21;2 bath, FR. DR-P alernio
house, tennis, golf, sa unas. M d \oraterfall. 3 Br, 3 ba, h'plr. O el. Next to park w i~h vie w up
\vf'tbar. Guest suitt. O\\'ner length of pa rk. Brk. patio \V/pond .
PALM DESERT
$51.500. (7141 34~3256: I OP EN SAT. & SUN. 1·5 p.m . 1930
S33-S743. Port Locksleigh, Harbor Vie\V
YOUR OWN ISLAND Homes. 163·400.
F inest 2-1.9 acn-Can adian CAMEO SHOR ES VIEW
S.i.1111011 lishini; Island. O ose Outstanding canyon a n d ocean
ro Prndor Harbour. I-louse, vi e"'·s from th is truly gorgeous 3 tractl)r, 5 d('('r & .,.,·ild game.
0 . fVV\ BR, split level, a dult occupied n!y $1l:i,V\l\I.
Bill Grundy, Rltr. home. Professionally landscaped .
3·11 Bayslde, N.B. 6T;r&\61 S69,500, OPEN SAT. & SUNDAY
The fastest a.raw 111 the West 1-5 p.m. 221 Milfordi Cameo Shores.
• IRVINE
HOMES
EAST BLUFF
OPEN SAT. & SUN. l ·S P.M.
2901 CATALPA STREET
Im m acula te 4 UR & FR. I1nmedi·
ate occupancy. $52,500 . Jack How-
ell 644-620-0 .
VERY NEAR THE BEACH
Income & com rort. Char ming du-
pl ex -extra large R -2 property.
$89,500. Betty Kerr 644-620-0.
CAPTI VATI NG BAY &
OC EAN VIEWS
Just listed -stunning 180~ vie\v.
3 BR • .for mal DR, 3-car garage -
spacious patio. 10% down. $71 ,500.
STATELY MANSION
with pier & float. 60 ' on Bay. 5000
sq . fl .. 5 BR's, 5 ba ths and PR.
Look
to
CiLENlr4LE
FEDERAL
for a
Home Loan
and
Escrow Help
In
Costo Mesa
2300 Horbor Bo11levo1 rl
64 2.~711
In
Newport Beoch
500 Nt1wpo1! Cen!er Dr.
644.5300
$169,500. OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1-5 1 --c===~
p.m . 309 Evening Sta r Ln .. Dove r INVESTORS
Shores. DREAM!
UNITS! UNITS!
UNITS!
NEAR COASTAL
CAMEO-SOMETH ING SPECIAL
'l'h i~ !u xu rio u~ hun1c 1s l l'lli y one·11f-a -k1 nd. f u ~ton1 d etailed lo lhc 1il tin1ale. ln1ag1n e
:-:u('h itC'n1s as :iutn. i·offel' inak c.r 111 the
beaut. k1\t·h(:'n , ;:inklc deep rarpel.l n ~ & n1ar·
ble r1·pl(' 1'ht~ li!>t gur.:-nn ,t..._ on. Let us sho1v
you thl!-i ~ho,rpla('e , snon $76.50 0 .. Jean c;ole.
BA YSHORES-3 BDRMS.
The f1n1 plact' lo livt>. in Ne\vport._ ('lose to
yo ur pr ivate beach , .o.:n1al\ boat storage, & lots
of ron1n1 unity pri de . 1~r1va te entr:ince is
guarded in sununcr. L,;i.rge fa1nily rn1. over·
looks huge. enclosed patio. Ne\Yly painted &
cti r pe tcd ~~ avail. for in11ned. occupancy.
$47 ,850.
HARBOR VIEW HILLS-3 BR.
A splend id home in top condition. Large fam-
ily r rn . w/parquet floor, a kitchen to delight
any lady & an enclosed yard , Jge. enough for
the kids & dogs. $57,500. Dorothy Pardee.
CALL 675-3000 ANYTIME
WATERFRONT-PIER & FLOAT
Newport Isla nd -fac es Balboa
Cove s. 2 BR's, 2 ba ths, tiny den -
fabulous kitc hen -decorator/own-
er. Price now only $79, 750.
BEAUTIFUL SPREADING
TREES
line the parkway of this des irable
Baycrest location. Go rgeous Ivan
\Veil s home w/formal DR . pool &
plans fo r a 4th BR. $85.000.
WATERS BAYi BEACl-J REALTY "
Very spacious units. Clo!ll' u 1wi .. c. '"' ... 1,01 ••I• ",.,, ''"
Don't miss this rare bargain ~%B
• Let tenants pay your r ent:
to ocean. Farm style kitch-1~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"'!1!!!!!!!!!!!!~~""'":"'""""'"""""""' m s -fully equipped -ovt'ns, I'
rangts and refrigerators! Gen•ral I Gener•I
Dining rooms! 2 bedrooms 1---------!;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;
per unit. Garden I i k e BALBOA ISLAND
grounds. Extrcmrly nnxiou~
own<' JUsr REDUCED WATERFRONT
PRICE TO ONLY S27.000'. DOLL HOUSE Call at on<e • 645-0303
SEA LOVERS
BALBOA ISLAND BAYFRONT
Your choice, duplex or single fa m-
ily. Quiet distinctive charm. On Lit-
tle Isla nd. P ier & Float. $155.000.
Tom Queen 644-6200. HIRl.ST [ OLSO~ . " P E AL TOR<;
· CHOICE BAYCREST ADDRESS
Stunning 4 BR's, lofty c eilings, 2
massive stone fireplaces . Great
flair & style -a home to be proud
of. $92,500. OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1·5 j;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ ~~:i. 10-01 Ham pshire Lane. Bay· IT'S BEAUTIFUL
This i;:orgcous 4 bedroom
ALL YEAR FUN IN THE SUN p 11. (!e s e t t er home is
ON THE BAYFRONT absolulcly 1r-.tr-.tACULATE
Exquisitely decorated 4 BR. 4 bath in e\!C'ry way. It's further
Mediterranea n hom e w /pier & enhanced by an impressive
slip. 2 yrs . new. $169,500 -ALSO, 20' ll: 40· hl"a tro POOL. Jr
:J BR, 3 ba th _ $129.500. Dave Cook you'vt .-vt r wanted a pool,
642-8235. don't miss this one! Pr iC'ed
at a bargain. $39.950. Owner
NEW BAY VIEW HOMES
F'inal opportunity to own a new
Ivan Wells custom home. Still time
to c hoose your decor. Fro1n $89.200
to $151.000. Furnished m ode l OPEN
DAILY -2006 Galaxy Drive, Dov-
e r Shores.
v.-iJI offer VA lern1s too !
COATS
&
. WALLACE
REALTORS
-54'-4141-
(0pen Evenings)
A homr l il!rrt \\'i!h 1v;i nn!h
anr! prrs•l!ltili!,\', ~·,•a r ur1nr:
lhl<'k shai.,: C"arp1'1 11\i.,: rhn1ui.;h
t'\'1'1)' sq11:1rC' i11,'ll, :.1111 ii
11'•'1111'1l<l<>llS IL~f'1I l1r11·k !In •.
11la!'I' Add •\ l'i·dro1un~. ;1
•l('ll, 11.nd 2 Pr\I!""· T" !IJl-1 :
irtc·hnlt· y•)tlr ••11'!1 p1'tv:1I••
h1!1P fl'"'"-Tr11ly a 11 1111
i·ompo.rable vw.lu f' al $~!<,·
800. II you've been shoppini<:.
don't wait for this buy to
he purch11.~rd by wmMnc
else, call 54G-2313.
Drnn1nti(' 4 bedroom home
11·ilh ff'n!IH'o•S np[)Calinl!: 10 1
Iii•· cnrirt> f;1111 ily. fnm111.I
d1111n;::, rnmdy rnon1. cozy
).'Ullk•·n t•n11\·1•1·sal1nn pit 1\•/
1!oublr $ p fl ,. r rirrpli!('l'.
n.•nl)t 1v/1v ··rpl).', cust drps,
11 :i 1+:>ril()f1<'1l•'r. l111v 1na1nl
yar!t \V .'2 pi1t i0s. 0 1\'fll.'r
1run:dt•rr"'' F~asl Rnrl has
p r·a·t•d 1hi ~ hom" tn !1"11.
FHA I V /\ 1 .. rn1s. $36.700.
llurry~ Nt'w \1s1\ng.
/fj;.,. COATS
~WAL~ACE
REALTORS
LOVELY LIDO ISLE
3 BR., 2 ba .. neat as a pin home o n best st .
to st. location. Great for second home, re·
t irernent o r srnall famiJy. $55.000.
Eugene Vreeland
FAMILY EXPANDING?
Stop in at 1707 r.ANDLESTICK LANE, BAY·
CR EST & see thi s lg., livable n oor plan with
4 BR .. 2•,<, bath; deep lo t. $74.500.
2 HOMES -TURTLE ROCK
Customized, priv. patios, prof. landscape,
fully air·cond. 3 & 4 ·aR .. w/d lning r m. &
fam . rn1. Live in one . rent o ther. $49.750.
M. Harvey ·
••. a Daily P ilot Classllled
Ad. 642-5678
, Gener•I
MACNAB· IRVINE
Realty Company Cinderella Home
In
REDUCED $25,000 TODAYI
Owner anxious to sell l·lar bor Is, estate; re·
cently remodeled & exquisitely decorate<f.
Ample grounds. pool. dock. Now · $325,000.
lt1. C. Buie
644-6200
HARBOR VIEW CENTER
1644 MacARTHUR BOULEVARD 901
NEWPORT BEACH IT HAS HAPPENED!
642-1235
DOVER DRIVE
Colle9e Park
Seeing is believing thlll'' 3
bedroom like-new home.
New shag carpettnp:, new
vinyl flooring throuJ&oout.
new tile in showe·r, new gar·
bage disp:o1'al Bnd rt'l"t'nlly
painted ootside. $31,700.
Owner wants action! For
more information call,
546-2313.
LIDO ISLE
Qv,rner moved Must sen this :l BR .. family
room. Beautiful condition. 40' Lot. $67,500.
Cathryn Tennill e
. '
THE ELMORE COMPANY
ANNOUNCES THE OPENING
OF ITS NEWEST OFFICE
Fully Dedicated To The llighest
Standards in Real Estate Sales.
BE AMONG THE FIRST
To Receiv e The Fullest Attention .•
of Our Professional Staff
Intervi ewing ...
REAL ES 'ATE
881 DOVER DRIVE 6 4 5 •4040
NEWPORT BEACH
LA HACIENDA-
OLE!
BEACH AREA
3 +FORMAL
DINING + 2
Sl!e this authentic Spanish
entry! From there 'te p
down Into the spacious vaull·
ed Cf'iling living room wllh
m1tMive lireplnCe! Formal
dining room! Thi.~ gourmel·
ganlen kitchen takes you
out to patio gr11.nde! Giant
m11.ster 11ulle wlth dre11sing
table and w11.lkln cloSt't +
2 more king size bedrooms
• 2 baths! Bike to beach or
take a jog • .$25,995. Call
645-0003.
10111\l I. Ol'O\
l.'f ,f/f (),4',
I V.A. ·FHA
Tske a look at thi1 de11\rnh1r
General
CORONA DEL MAR
Home with income • contemporary desitn -
3 bedrooms & 2 baths: located on tree-lined
street, close to youth center & shopping. In-
come unit over 'the garage. Reduced to
$57,500.
IRVINE TERRACE
Sweepin~ ocean view from this 4 bedroom
& 3 bath home. with an otien fl ow livine &
dining area, featuring large, white stone
fireplace · pool well sheltered in enclosed
yard. $92,600.
UDO ISLE
On Via Waziers • 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, formal
dinin~ room -enclosed yard -cozy & cute.
$62,500.
HARBOR
3 BR. " acrrenl"d lane.I COMP1•Nv
homo: conv•nicnt loc .: din· "'
Ing nn .. •lee. bll ·ln1. Carp. REALTORS & drapes. log:bumlng frptc. I
Ovr rslted gnrai;t. No down ''SINCE 1944"'
lo Vets, le lcr.v down to a ll ! I
MORGAN REAL TY 673•4400
673-6642 6JS.'4lf !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'
IO 'THEREAL
\""'-ESTATERS • • • • 'I'
Investor's Dream
~· acre zoned for 11 unit.ti
llnd pool. Plans included.
Near 1hopping ttnter, a11k-
lng $30,000./LOT ZONED ft.
1 locat~J in Easbilde Co11ta
Mesa, Great area -pril"C"d
below market at only $14.·
(XXJ. Call
Walker & lee
COMMUNITY POOL· PARK
Gr eat area for childre n. 4 BR. separate din.
rm., step down liv. room w/cozy fireplace.
Spaci ous, cathedral ceilings. $57 ,000.
LaVera Burns
VIEW AND PRIVATE BEACH
Only available home in Lo wer Emerald Bay
• 3 bedroom. 21f.1 baths. Beautiful master
suite w/ftrep1ace & 2 walk·in closets.
$110,000. Fee. Carol Tatum
DOVER SHORES · DREAM HOME
Beautiful wa terfront aJI elec. home. 4 Lovely
bdrms., study & formal din. rm. Separate
maid's area. Lge. pool. pier & slip. $190,000.
Kathryn Raulston
HARD TD BELIEVE
5 Bdrms .. 3 Y, ba., r.o rona de! Mar . VIEW
home. Steps from Ocean Blvd.; wet bar.
nicely furnished with bit-In kitchen. $65,000.
i1arriett Davi es
CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX
Live ln one. r ent the other. Both large 4
BR. 3 ba. s tudio h'Pe apls. 2 Car closed ga·
race & carport. Asking $77 .500. Make Offer.
Al Fink
833-0700 --Coldwell, Banker 644-2430 ~
lSO NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.B.
~~~~~~ ........................................................... .
"
l!f DAJLY PI LOT Friday, FtbrlW',f 4, 1972
'
oflnJa Jj/e
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
12 Linde Isl• Drive
Elegant new 5 BR., 41,t.1; ba. home \V/formal
din . rn1., fa m. rm .. v.•et bar. lmpresl5 ivc en-
try court \\1/l6 ft. mahog. doors ... $179.500.
58 Linde Isl• Drive
5 BR., 41/2 ba., on lagoon . Lge . waterfront
family rm. & living rm. l<"'ormal dining rm.
custo1n decor . deck & slip .. $189,000.
92 Lind• Isle Drive
Beaut. 5 BR . 4 ha . home w/formal din. rm.
& family rn1. 3 Frplcs. Outside stairway.
Built-i11 g un cabinet & bookshelves. $155,000.
106 Linda Isle Drive
Custom Single story, 3 Bdr1n., 3 bath v.1ater-
front \Vilh pier & slip. Large master bdrn1.
\Vith sauna. Dining, kitc hen & Jiving room
have "'ater vie\V, 52 ' lot $135,000.
Weterfront Lofa
No. 56 : Nortl\ Lagoon exposure ...... $80 ,000.
4-03 Bayside, 70 fl. sandy beach ...... $43,950.
For Complete lnform1tion
On All Homes & Lots, Pleaa1 Cell:
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
Islanders Bldg. 1t Linde Isle
341 B1y1lde Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 675-4161
0.Mral
P ele Barrell R ea ft'J
pre:Jen/.J
1CUFFHAVEN
TWO STORY CUSTOM . "·ar1nly inviting. Se-
r
eluded patio opens in to dining and Jiving
area. Three bedrooms and den, new heated
f pool in large fenced yard ......... $58,500.
'SUNSHINE AND FRESH AIR
HILLTOP HIDEAWAY WITH VIEW • Small
home with all utilities on 35 acres. $35,000.
Rancho Calif., Vail Lake.
I BA YCREST-NEW LISTING
OUTSTANDING CORNER LOCATION • Three
bedrooms two baths, family room and dining
roo1n. l·leated and filtered pool. hobby room
an d boat storage. . . . . $53,500.
R-4 BUILDERS
GREAT LOCATION • For family apartments,
l near Canyon Elementary Scho.ol.
Offio:• Open Seturd•ys' & Sundays
PETE BAR REIT REAl TY
1605 WestcHff Dr., N.I .
642-5200
ORANGE COAST'S BEST
Daily Pilot Classified
"THINGS ARE POPPIN' "
ON POPPY
ADORABLE UPPER FRONT LEVEL UNlT,
2 bedroo1n, 2 bath. formal dining room fire·
place, built-ins. LO\V'ER UNl'f, private en-
trance, fireplace. BA CH UNIT one bedroon1
deluxe apartn1ent, CORONA DEL MAR.
.. . . . . . $61 ,500.
BAY VIEW
FROM THE BLUFFS
You have a view of the bay from all \vincto\vs.
3 bedrooms, 21/2 baths. builtin kitchen \Vi th
self cleaning oven, EXTRA PATIO, on the
greenbell. A lovely buy at ........ $45,950.
"SPLISH, SPLASH"
TO THE BEACH
CORO NA DEL MAR 2 bedroom 2 baths, fire-
place, cute modern kjtchen, picture windou1s
with enclosed side patio, GUEST QUARTERS
over the garage. Only one block to the beach.
............................... $49,900.
"UNITS-UNITS-UNITS"
WE HAVE THEM
3·4 Plexes all in a row. All units have 2·3 bed·
r oo m, 2 bath, 1·2 bedroom 1-1 bedroo1n. SPA·
CIOUS and close to shopping. in SU PER·
RENTAL AREA . . . . . ....... $196,500.
HOP, SKIP, JUMP
TO THE BEACH
LARGE FIREPLACE · SPLIT LEVEL BEAU·
TY with atriun1 type entry, huge living room,
4 lovely bed rooms, 21/i baths. New SJ1AG
AND PAINT, 3 BLOCKS FROM BEACH,
Newport Beach that is ............ $38,500.
* * * OPEN HOUSE
GMMrel
COLWELL J1r.C.
BUSINESS INVESTMENT
50' x 90' commercial property on Newport
Blvd . -DOWNTOWN NEWPORT BEACH.
Older 2 Bdrm. home si ts on one lot and other
25' is vacant and ready for construction.
Formerly used as a smoked fish business
but ideal for numerous multi-purpose uses .
Priced at going value of $1,000 a front fool.
Let us show you this sleeper.
CONVENIENCE PLUS
Charming 1 BR. Fixer-upper y,•ith detached
garage on large 55' x 130' level lot. Alley
access -ExceUent opportunity for four
unjts. Close to downtov11n, shopping and
banking. 'fhis is an excellent investment for
only $18,950. Call now for further informa-
t ion.
SERENDIPITY
2-Story Slee per which is only 4·1\1Jinutes to
SOUTH COAST PLAZA. 5-M inutes to San
Diego Freeway, 10-Minute \valk to kinder-
garten and grade school. 4 Bdrms .. 3 Bath
plus family room a nd screened in patio.
Great carpet and drapes. \Vant to know
\vhere all this value is for $36,950? Call us
and \\•e'll show you.
F.H.A .• V.A.
Secluded HARBOR ESTATES 3-Bdrm., 2·
bath home. Surrounded on 2 sides by beau-
tiful Myoporum shade trees. Room for boat
or trailer storage from side street. Located
close to schools and shopping. Only $29,500
TOP DOLLAR VALUE
Eastside value-plus POOL HOME. 3 Bdrm,
2 Bath, built-in kitchen, large service porch
and 12' x 19' paneled den. Oversized heated
& filtered pool \Vith dress in g room & enter-
tainment bar. Dbl. ga rage on alley , com-
pletely block \Va ll fenced and neat as a pin.
An excellent buy a t only $34,950 '''ith 10~0
down.
VALUE PLUS
BARGAIN OF THE MONTH -ONLY $18.·
500. Sharp 2 Br. home, fully carpeted &
draped. Elect. B/1 kitchen, Dbl. garage,
large fenced lot. Perfect starter ho1nc -
call today.
I~
1 CAN'T FIND IT7
Ir '\'lLL BUILD you r dream
hon1e. H1tve ii lRff lor t:om·
plele ho1ne package.
Pul ,YOUr cof\fldence In our
I -'9 yt'a111 of quall(y cua!o111
hOme builrl lng.
See example ot product at
zoo; (.;.'.lluxy. Dover Shores.
Ivan Wells & Sons
• 642-111 1 •
EASTSIDE-
-VACANT
l Bedroom. fir<'place h<lme.
All<'y a<'ces.11 for boat, trail·
er. $24,950. FllA or VA.
N•wport
••
F•irview
646-8811
(enytime}
$1D.OOO
BELOW MARKET
HARBOR vrEw lflLLS
Spacious (SPACIOUS! 4 bed·
roon1 + large bonus artist
studio + formal dining +
enormous family room oft
big happy kitchen. 2 Fire·
places. Gorgeous dra(>('s
and C'leganl cnrpeting.
If Value Counts
We Have
Thre home for you in prestigt!
location. H.oon1 for camper
or boat. Near school & shop.
plng cC'nt<'r. This home has
a buil!in BBQ in kitchen,
upgradt'tt throughout. Owl'K'r
Y.ill sell G.l. or F.H.A.
$33,950. 897-6010.
llH• thlt ll•11dy dlrfftory wltfr .,., .W. •••b!M • r• 90 11 ..... 11111tl1t. All tfle l1catle111 lhtH below .,.
d.urlbed h1 tr•at., fftall by ednt'thl"f ei..w•re 11 tedoy'1 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. P'.rre• ah1wl1t9 .,..
hffM:I fir .. 1. er to r••t .,. •rtecf t• llst 11tCh l11f1r1,..tl•• 11 tflfl c•••-~ frldor od Sat11rdor.
THURS., FRI., SAT. & SUN.
(3 Bedrooml
1819 PORT KIMBERLY
NEWPORT BEACH
"HARBOR VIEW HOMES"
RED & RUSTIC
Th·at once in a lifetime buy. Eastside Costa
ifesa on quiet cul·de·sac street. I1nrnaculate
3 bdrm 2 bath with detached double garage
and large fenced yard. Can be purchased un·
der FHA or VA financing at FHA appraisal
of $27,200. Better hurry!!!
~-0 ' THE REAL
\""'-ESTATERS
HOUSES FOR SALE
409 Glou cester. Costa ifesa
642·8235 (Sun 1·5)
(2 Bedroom & Family Room or Oen)
1977 Port Cardiff, Corona de! f\.1ar
644·10\0 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
(3 B•draom)
1819 Port Kimberly (Hbr Vu Homes) NB
644-7270 $49,500 (Fri, Sat & Sun)
221 Milford (Cameo Shores) CdM
642-8235 $69,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
1860 Port Wheeler (Hbr Vu Homes) NB
833-0700 $48,900 (Sun 1-5)
(3 Bltdroom & F1mily Room or Oen)
2504 CIUf Drive, Newport Beach
646-6429 $48,900 (Sat & Sun ll-41
*406 Len\vood Dr., Costa A-fesa
675-1642 (Sun 1·51
611 Poinsettia, Corona de! itar
673·6510 ISu n l-5)
4.13-16th Place (Newport Heights) NB
642·5 200 $39,950 (Sat 1-4030)
2742 Drake, Costa Mesa
642-5200 $31.950 (Sal & Sun 1·5)
*305 Kin gs Place IC!ilfhaven) NB
642·5200 $58,500 (Sun 1-5 1
*1820 trvine Ave. (Baycrest) NB
642-5200 $53,500 (Sal & Sun 1-51
1026 Sea Lane (H.V. Hil ls) Coron a del Mar
675-3000 JSal & Sun 1-5)
4606 Cortland !Cameo Hgl ds) CdM
675-3000 (Sa t & Sun 1-5)
5412 An1alfi, Turtle Rock Hills
833-0 101 (Su n 1-5)
11 00 Cambridge. Westcliff, NB
642-8235 S64,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
1915 Tradc\vinds, (Baycrest) NB
642-8235 (Sun 1-5)
2114 2 Lockhaven. Huntington Beach
642-8235 $34,950 (Sat & Sun l-5)
1808 Port Charles, (Hbr Vu Homes) NB
644-6200 $51 ,900 (Sun 1-4)
3830 Key Bay (Harbor View Hill s) CdM
833-0iOO; 644-2430 (Sun 1-5)
2042 Galaxy, New port Beach
644-4910 $79,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
1934 Port Carney (Hbr Vu Homes) NB
673-2222 Sun 1-5) * 1933 Sabrina Terrace, Corona del Mar
673-2222 (Sun 1-4)
(4 Bltdroom)
*4545 Or rington, Corona del Mar
644-tl33 (Sun 1-5)
2901 Catalpa, (Easlblu/I) NB
644-6200 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
614 Powell (Newport Heights) NB
675-5726 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
1707 Caodleslick Ln. (Baycr~st) NB
833-0700; 1>44-2430
**501 Morning Star Lane (Dov Shrs) NB
•135,000 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
(4 &edroom & Family Room or Den)
2000 Balearic Dr. [Mesa Verde) CM
540-1649 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
1601 Tradewinds, Baycrest. NB
64.2·5200 $55,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
**'l58 Linda Isle, Newport Beach
64:!-5200 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
*2815 Horbor View Dr., Corona del Mar
675-SOOO (Sun 1•5)
*2910 Royal Palm Dr. (Mesa Verde) CM
545-1858 '32.250 (Sat & Sun 10-5)
2306 Redlands Dr., Newport Beach
6f6.M08 $311,500 (Sat & Sun 1-4)
1001 Bampshln Lane (Baycrest) N1l
MU2ll5 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
*1609 AnUgu• (Baycrest) NB
~ '89,500 (Su n 1-5) ~ St. J1111111 Pl., (Newport Hts) NB
84U235 fl9~ (Sun 1·5)
1930 Port ~elgh (Jlbr Vu Hms) .NB
e4U21S "3,400 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
II!==
369 Vista Baya, Ne\\•port Beach
642-8235 $47,950 <Sun 1-5)
2724 Wavecrest (Broadmoor) Cd1'1
642-8235 $75,000 (Sunday)
**#15 Linda isle (Linda Isle) NB
642-8235 (S un 1-5)
**lMl Riverside Dr .. Corona del Mar
675-1935 (Daily)
19031 Antioch , Irvine
833·0700 $51 ,500 (Sun 1·5)
**8 Linda Isle Drive (Linda isle) NB
644-4910 $155,000 (Sal & Sun 1-5)
1741 Port Sheflield (Hbr Vu Hms) NB
644-4910 $68,500 (S un 1-5)
1219 Santiago, Nev,:port Beach
673-2222 (S un 1-4)
(5 Bedroom)
**1306 IV. Bay Ave., Balboa Peninsula
675-4600 $210,000 (Sal & Sun 1-4)
** 1100 W. Bay, Balboa Peninsula
675-3000 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
17582 Cypress, University Park
833-0101 (S un 1-5)
(S Bedroom & family Room or Den i
3607 Park Green Dr .. Corona del Mar
675-7225; 644-7787 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
*2006 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB
646-1550 <Daily 10-51
**309 Evening Star (Dover Shores) NB
642-8235 $169,500 (Sat & Sun 1-51
1337 Gal axy (Dover Shores) NB
642-8 235 $219,500 (Sun 1-5)
16 PinC'hurst Lane IBig Canyon C.C.) NB
644-4910 $98,500 (Sat & Sun 1-51
* 1842 Galaxy Dr. (Do ver Shores) NB
642-2589 $115,000 (Daily afl. JI a.m).
HOME & INC::OME
(4 Bedroom & 2 Bedroom)
4808 Neptune, Newport, Beach
548-1290 (Sal & Sun 1-5)
(2 Bedroom & 2 Bedroom Apa rtment)
439 Heliotrope, Corona del Mar
644-4910 $72,500 (Sun 1-5)
CONDO. FOR SALE
(3 Bedroom•I
2605 Vi sta Ornada (The Blulfs) NB
675-3000 (Sun 1·4)
411 Vista Flora (The Blulfs) NB
675-3000 (S un 1·5)
DUPLEXES FOR SALE
12 Bedrooms ind l Bltdroom)
700 Begonia, Corona del Mar
673·6510 (Fri, Sat & Sun 1-5)
(2 Bedroom Eech)
1320 W. Balboa, Newport Beach·
673-3663; 642·2253 eves. (Sat 12·2)
4506 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach
642·5200 $53,950 (Sun 1·5)
(2 Bedroom each &. Guest Room)
212 Femleaf, Corona del Mar
675'1000 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
(3 Bedroom ind 1 Bedroom)
309-311 HeUotrope, Corona do! Mar
678·6510 .(Sat It Sun 1·5)
(3 Bedroom & l Bedroom)
43 l Goldenrod. Corona de! Mor
675-3000 (Sun l·'J
WATDFRONT LOTS FOR SALE
HYachtsman's Cove, _
1641 Bayside Dr., Corona del Mar
675-1935 (Dally) ..... .............
***'"' ....... ,. ..
I
,
'Tlf.'4•• co LUJ e LL PROPERTIES. INC.
~1,. •••• ~ .. , ••
REALTORS
644-7270
2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR , CALIF.
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • General General
LACHENMYER, REALTOR
-PRESENTS -
BEST BUYS IN ALL AREAS
5°/o DOWN ON SOME HOMES
LOW INTEREST RATES
6'1• 0/o INTEREST AND UP
-NEWPORT BEACH -
BAYCREST · Charming, large three bedroom
2'h BA hon1e surrounded by beautiful homes.
****** CAREFREE, LEISURE LIVING · in this lhree
BR., 2 BA. home, pool and clubhouse priv .•
****** CONTEMPORARY HOME • four bedrooms,
2112 baths, with pool and vie\v.
****** IMMACULATE · New shag carpet and rtrapes,
completely redecorated 3 bedrooms 2 baths,
separate family and dining plus huge living
room. 1anaj and patio. ·
****** TWO HOMES ON. ONE LOT
One-2 bedroom, plus I-bedroom home. East·
side. Best o:f financing.
CALL ANYTIME
1860 Newport Boulev1rd Cotti Mesa
646-3928 Call eves 61).151S
G.n•rel
Leveraqe •
Appttciation
Depreciation •
Spendable
. ., ..... . . . .... -·· ..... MESA VERDE
$35,950
Custom bWlt 14'x23" family
room, 3 k l na:·1lzt1d
bedrooms, 2 generous bathl,
Formerly lo Bo rde R E
220 E .17th St.
Costa Mesa 646· 0555 • 549·1910
Ev•ning1 Call 646-5226 or 646-8406
General Gener el
WELCOME RACHELLE ROBERS
TO BAY & BEACH
REALTY
SALES STAFF
WE'RE PROUD
TO HAVE YOU
REPRESENTING
OUR FIRM
R?chelle brings an outstanding sales record
with her. earned by combining a woman's
touc~ \Vilh proven do\vn-to-earth knowledge
of this area, plus years of experience in boU1
residential & investn1ent property. She in-
vites you to drop in or give her a calJ -real
soon .
SELLING YOUR HOME 7
\Ve provide more sales exposure to sell your
home fast & at the right price -and these
are the people who can help:
Helen C. Anderson
Ruth Bennett
Lucy Casey
Jean Cole
Dick Colvin
Berta Farr
Walter Haase
Anne Keenan
F1orence Lichter
Lorraine Masak
Lucille R. Moore
Jo Murdock
.Janet Oderman
Dorothy Pardee
Joe W. Poole
Ro semary Sietz
J, Leonard Smith
Farrell E. Smith
Richard Tryon
Donald E. Yahn
large living room &: formal 2407 E. Coatt Hwy., Corona del M11r
dining room • Both with 6 75-3000
'"' '· ,•.r ..
OPEN SAT./SUN. l·S
614 POWELL
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
New llsling on Powell St. 4
BR, 2 baths, 1800 Sq. Ft., 2
used brick fireplaces. Quiet
cul·de-sac street & clOlle to
all schools. Priced right
$4.l.500.
CALL 675-5i26
-tj-Home & Income
close to the b..1y. Cozy 3. bed·
, room 2 bath home. Living:
j room with beam ceiling and
crackling fireplace. Dinin11:
room open~ to clclightlul
patio J3 LUS l bedroom
apartment for Jn.laws or tax
shelter. A.~ing $89,500.
C\Ll. GT:>-4930.
~&co. •. ·..,_,~T~~H·01t ;
$27,000
BARGAIN HUNTERS
I [{'re ii is in the middle of
l\Tesa. Verdi", 3 bedroom 2
\Jathi; anrl large country
kitchen. F11 A·VA !('l'lilS
available fol' 00 do1vn pay.
ment. 011'?ler moving South,
must sell.
Call 54fi..115l (Open Eves)
• (> J ·'· ...
'
[ ~ ::r::o: I .
IDEAL FOR
EXPANDING
ramily. La~es1 homf" in
tract. 12x2l Oen, larrt
bdrm11., 16x20 pe tlo. Ca.rpeb!
& dtaPf't throughout, To see
is to huy. Priced ai $32,950.
847...£010.
1-0 THE REAL
I"'-J:STATERS
$24,950
Tettific C.I. apr now on ~
perty! 3 bt"droom1. 2 bathl,
wife .aver buU1in kitchen.
•''I
I
!
i
' I
N"' wall to wall carpetinJ,
drapes iliruout! Covered , ' I
patio.! lm me d i ate ·~1•
pos8eSSIOfl! j 1 $4()..lnt j
TARBELL •:
are fancy worda that dtmibe
~ most d~lra.bJe upeci1
Of income pn:ipcrt y owrw.r-
shJp to 1he tflx consciou.s
empire-builder. 1'hb prop.
erty bu it all. 2 -4 BR
unlbl mo I mo tncomc-
$79.500 price. 10<µ. Down.
Call 6734!6fi0. ()pen Sat and s...i.,: 7l4 Coldenrod.
f\repl11.ce1. F\lll bu t It I"'"!''""""!''""'""'""!!!!!!!!!!!!~ ... ~ ... !!!!'""!!!!!!!!! i
kitchen with. pe.ntzy a.ndlG.ner•I GeMrel 2955 Harbor, Costa Me1111 ~le 9C1'VK'e room. and
r-01 THE REAJ,
""'-[STAT!.:RS
•IO-CANYON
Golf c..,,... lbtai.
...,..., much mo"' to .... 1------------------CLOSE TO BEACH
F<>< d«•"-' Call S4(>.ll51 NEED ELIOW $29,950 Lart• 3 BR. 2 b>. duplex with 3 tireplt1ce1. r 1
COpoo Evnl. ROOM? NO DOWN TERMS 156,000 -TERMS BJIG(I Thrtl call at once a.tout 1h111 \Vliet fun )'OU'll >wave thU G*Orge Wiiiiams°"
.. M 111'•• almosi new -t Bedroom ~ 31, wmm~ In the aluminum, Realtor
.. _..;::L;; ___ _,I bath homt. Tt Ma: every· cc~ patio, built·ln BDQ ' .WUS70 64.S-ISM '·'
~~-r th · t FIAPtone &. brick patio. J --------1 _,,. "' e fl'"OW>nR Ml· bedroonll, 2 ..... d<O 2 DOVER SHORES ht OFFERING 11y -sep. dinmg room • ·~ OPEN SUN. t-S lrt'JJ. ramUy room am lg clepnt ftttplllcts, 1-.mlly
btdmome, Spticiout living room. ..U electric push bu.t·
406 L.nwood Dr. room with nrptc _ ftoc>eed ton buU t..tn kitchen .
St-e thi1 1hArp 3 bdrm. home yard. Patio _ dow to Sprtnklen. MQ..1721.
wllh farnUy room, 2 bit.hi, 11ehoola _ only $66.500. Call
l trplcs.: many CUJtom ~· qu.kk _ 61U560. TARBELL
View Home c~ Dr. i' I
SJ>adou.t A kl@aJ for tnter-
taln.Jng. w/lndoor pool. A
Jacuut. f122.00 • J...u. or
$145.000 • F~. By t»P't.
lill o.-y, R.olhr
30 Bayside, NB flS.6161 I •
BRANO new ftv. bedtooina,
lli.m.Dy room, a beth.I. 3 car
1araae. 3 ftreplacea. atpar-
•te ~ room, view oornr.r
lot. Lett than $100,000. Drive
.,,. • lfemtll~ l.n, 11..t
Roni St Ctorae Rd., New·
JD1: 8Mch and then call .... mo.
~ Pool with pstW;, arta
for sutnmt>r hm. Sl!J. 750 •
, Newport Beoch RHlty iZ T! ll~ R!:.n.r.
!. "r:.T :·p ~ _.,) ' '. 29116 lt.u11or. O>ota I .. • T!w tutat dnw ja lb<
Fut ruult& 11t just a phmt Wut. . .a Dally Pl lot : . 2627 N..._ Blvd.
N't'WP'r1 Beach 675-1542 '--------'"11 • ...,, -a...ifled Ad. 14U611.
I
N
s
1
2
J
'
. ' . ..,. .. •
Cos·ta Mesa Dover Shor••
DOVER SHORES "EXECUTIVE LICENSED * OPEN HOUSE *
SALESMEN SAT. I: SUN. 1 .. ~, Sat. rul4' <batt'aubriand inJ'DREAM PALACE''
WE NEED You n5 \\lak" i.·0~1 . al Colun1· lhf-fQrmal Oft \11th 111' A d ,_ h ~ tnandelier, sun. A.\! I e<"Orator ahOw p ... Ct" t at
For our 2nd l'f'a.l f'~lall" offir-c ~~~~~~!~ !'i':tr;,.~~ ~~ mooar:r.turys on tht' "'Blt'f-IJoa .. ~tll an f'normoull'. pr1var.,.
'
l "!I 0! C ! ••1 h 1 I A I XU"> _, lllEl.3l•'r .:.uih· 1' 1th Hui 111111 cu ' 1 •7 ·• .u1> '-' '' 1..·;:,o.. • • •·a n1p1>r or boa1 .. J\.iany t'.\-'Oil en'Bi'f'. u • ou""v b -" 1 ·1·1
Irvine
* OPEN HOUSES SUN. 1-5 *
Mt s• V•rd•
LAHl;fo: f1111nly home b~
011rlt'r, 4 JJlt. Mu, DR. Ji'R,
nwi.ny f'.,.;tnu: lncludf" 11'8.tl"r
50f1rnt'r. t·u.~on1 1hef\'et,
1 s: ,, r a ,;" 1'---.rn. prnl ! ~f', .... ~~~·:· •• r.-0.:-. .... l().-0'204. v111•111nl: soon! tras surh a:i: lll'IY bath olf appointed :l stor:v. 4 Br c1..ui-1 tu """ ii:an,.n \'ti"\\'. lf'
Jfo" YOl I lorn homr-with Fil 11.0d h\·1ngn·l(ln1 \1 Ith 1!:i 11""
• I n1:s!r. RR.. f'fl'('. rn.ngf', ,,.,,lk·••• "·". O!l•·•,•I ,, J ,.h.ai.: 11k.l fluo r-to-ef'1l1nii , • An• ~·11t •1tt•!u • rn!hU$ • tll:oih11•as hf'r, y;•atcr iroflrllt"r, ...... '
5412 AMALFI . TURTLE ROCK HILLS
('har111 &. elegance • Beautiful Pres1de-nl
llon)e. 3 Bdrn1's, 2 baths. f;un. roon1 . up·
J:raded lhrouj:!hout. ('on1ptelely lands!'aped &
sprinklered. ~hor l \\'Jlk to pools & \('nni~
\'Oltrls. Only $56,950. I Nf 'l.lJDINl~ VIE:\\'~
·i Bi , i Ba. hon1(', ru n1 1m . I hh11~. r n('I. 11a t10 J\r prk &·
asff•' 1 t 1 $l~i.OOO. l11'l"J1hH'>:' "di r n1rna1n ~uuf I
I ""'•trr 1@a11•rs, f' tt. gar-J 1110 l 1 •II ,1 s • ,\Ju~l liavi· Ing 1 1n•'Om f' Ali<' <loor. 1ur-ronelitl1n1r r . OPEN SAT. & SUN. U): 1 :< 1111 \\t ~our I fs82 CYPRESS -UNIVERSITY PARK
sr ho•1I $31.000. fly O\\"tlf'r
,.u;...14:;1
• ~:llJUY haJlflY ~urrou nd1 ngs lt11s nf srora1:,. !!pl!lc.,. llouo;(' j I lo 5, !ltll rit om 1ni:; Shtr l.11 2'\l<'Sta s.~paral,. f • rn i I ' • "k• ""' ••· , ... , •• , 1•mp bb R I ~m ·. ·r1'''· ''''uni 11111dl'l ·~ ._. ··--· """· -111 unn1ar. •'Onrf. Looi.. 11t1 Peter Do $, eotor """'
T!IEN C1\l.L furtht'r. ll 's !f'rrifii· at uri a 1·ul-dc-sa1· s1rt'f'l 11 1~1 HOPE GER RIE RLTY. t:wl.!"!00 ! 61.:-00-1::, s:ft"r1l64. li7J7:t.'\-L 11111.1 $·Ll.:~~1 All 1r rn111. call
64S...WOO l\E:-.l T J\INCSLt:Y East Bluff g.1 :t-!:~~:i. ·---
~ Bdr111 ':-;, all on one flnnr fl11 fy Ol'('Up1ed tor
4 1110 Bf'a11!1fut sh;1g rarpct1n).! lhroughnu!
1 ·orporatc o,,·ncr ~ay~ SELL N(l\\'11 {)f fe1'f'd
at $47.HOO. [l\'('Ll l f>IN(i l,/\Nl l'
··s1Nn : 1!146 ·
----Mi••ion Viejo
[,i )\'~ 1.Y, upl{1,o!l••d, !1 i-\.,11t'l
!lf! J•l 1111•' ',,,,, ltd, " h• 4
1:1:. ~I:\, I~·· f.1 111 1111 , lrn1
!.ll•-.. (hl ll•'I' )'o '~>-1~);\ Joyous Li~ing For ~:AL'f:?" ____ "'"°':.::
• • $100 TOTAL DOWN Entire Fom1ly PAYMENT
ThJo; aln1ost TH'IV homf' has plu~ 1:Jos1ng co:o;t,,; \'f'f,,; or
t>vrrythi1-.:; ror ttw lucky FHA. Surf' be:1is renllng. 4
ht1~C'r. 4 bdrn1s , (•arpr1s &:. bedrooms :! balhs, ad<lf'd
1!r11 !X'!'. plus ownrr 11·i!J in-pariellrfl fam ily room. cor-
<'lude \\"ll.Sht'r, dryf:T & n<'r lot in Costa t-.tesa .
cumb. fi,>e~C'r ,r,, rPfrig . All $24.CKXJ. Cti!l
BLUFFS BONANZA
$42,900!!!
Newport-B•~ch "IJoh ''l 11•!111. \o ·THEREAL
\""-ESTATERS l \,f \\ •'"!•·11 1 Bri 11k Bld1
t 11•1•·1 ... •11• l':uh., 11\11w OPEN SUN. 1-4
U~l()Uf: ti()Mf:~
UN IQUE HAS THE BEST LISTING S
............ IN THE BEST AREAS ~~'..:~~. "''' lll.OC<l. GI Walker & Lee
r.r11.l!or~
2790 ll:irOOr Blvd. 11.! Arian\s
:~r.-~1191 Opf'n ·111 9 P.\l
---··1 l.1•11llor
-. ' ' [ -"-c'=====~== 1219 SANTIAGO I -BEAUTIFUL-D ays 83l-OIOJ Nights 1 11111"1ul 4 lxlrsu lou11~'. illl).:f'
• Chok·e early &N"a I 2 450 sn FT 1 ~............................................................. r.11n1h 1111. fl\"••rk1ok 111i: f}f'll • 3 811, 211~ tm. 190Q sq, 11. 1 T• • 11l1t1i1· lurnl.~:Hpi'd ~1\rdms : * Ot'sirabll' end unll -4 Bf'droonl. fanllly l"OOm, Irvine I rvin• 1111111\ "i..:nodii•s .. $,11.!l,'."IX) * t:r('rnbt'Jt. bay \'l('\1· I fornutl fl 1n1nb roon1. Sun-OPEN SUN. 1-S
• Steps fron1 pool deck 1u 1d parents rr!rP:i! nff 1934 PORT CARNEY * \'1u·ant & \\'l\it1ng I lht• 11ta~lrr bftl1'00111. \\'Alk 11<•.iiLI l'tiit(ifil\o i \lnttrl, ll11r
• Chec kbook trnn!'I to 111(' h1•n1·h. 5C'hOOl!i. a nd / ... ....,... I 1~.r \'II'\\' \lninr~. ~ JlR, pl u~
~Ian_\' thousands undrr 1"0111-1 .~hopp1ni.: ---~ ,.,,1111,1,.1rd h,,11,1,. n••
p11r<ihlr hon1r:<. Bring of!l'r-Sparow Rlty 842·44 7~ 1933 SABRINA TERR. IN HARBOR VIEW : Th• Da lton's home
.Just li.~ted ! l.u:-;k bu1l1 4 bcdroonis. 2 stur-
1es. 3 bath'i , c111cl a backyard playground
lhal goes forever. ltnn1acutately kept. beau-
tifully decorated and rea sonably priced. 1'his
fa1nily horne has a flare and 1s locnted on a
quiet cul·de-s::tc ju st steps fro111 the green·
belt. This is the Dalton's ho1ne and they have
real fun neighbors. \Ve ca ll the1n all ''The
Dalton Gang."
• 5 ""DllOO'!S-.-4 BEDROOMS '
·r~.p rr~ident 1al lt>t·11!io11 In ~<'al" /\C'il'poi1 llr.o:. 0 11 lli!h
C"osla ,\lt>sa .. 3 Ba1h:;, 11('11 ~I. Jusl " fe11• i;.tep,,; fron1
i·d b) original (j\\"ll(·r "·ho · ,\ ll''~l 1or '"''t)· 1i1r1r · --er !9A 1 ·,,,~.1111. o1(·1 \l 1u <>1.11i;r.<11<h11£ hair; 111ovf'rl &: kno1v,,; <! ho111· 9'1"1 ..W I
$ INSTAN-T-CA-SH--1-1.•11·" rlt'Md . .1 Hit. rr11111I) f'.~ art> not as l·h('tlp as Oil('
"ll'I·.· •L\l'AYS llAVf', I I I I fit .. aC; 1111 S<t:.~.00 " r•. 1 ir rqu ry )II )our ioinr . DON V FRANKLIN
TllE HEST LISTrNGS'' \r(' p11y Alt ,,l~I<;. In fOl'f' •
,·lo;;u,,.. or. .. Jusi call • 24 Re1ltol' ~-rplK. ;i7 rt . JXlOI. p;1rk 8,. rh1 ldrr11 playground.
hours " d11y. 8~1-8:.01 Park we~ . 673-2222 • ~!Ir CHEE R.FUC HOME ~A 11n <[U1('1 11l ret't, l lJ!ock lo
Uv.ner ·rra1t~fen'ftl SI0.~.00 4 BH . 2 BA. l\itrhcn bJtns.,
Balboa Bay Propcrtie" FA hrnlin~. Ill'\\' carpet,
k 642-7491 • targr fenced yard. $29,900.
,/<..,.
&st ~V! ./3!i_i/f' BY OWNER CALL "=" ,,, .. 1411
1 Jn Santa Ana . 3 B<lrin., 2 car ~~ ~ if'"'-rcnlry ..,,,, ..
""'1oSt.t.trt Am{1.t.llD Upp1'r Bay. \\'e l111vr "njoy.
\... _ ..... _( Huntln5i1ton Beach Lagun• Be1ch f'(I our -4 BDRi\1 & 2 BATH
~ I IOi\1 ~~-tnstalll'rl ll<'I\' l'rpl!I., PRESENTED AT $8S,950. PHONE 675-6111l0 garage. shag crpts , '\'our .~'f~#L
choice of financing $2'l. 750. 2414 Visla Del Oro U~l()Uf: ti()Mf:S
G CORONA DEL MAR-675-6000
244J l:.Jst Cu~~t ltixllw ~v. Coron.1 dtl M•r
G MESA VERDE--546-5990
2SS O Vrrde £>t j Vf',
General
BA YSHORES VIEW & POOL
\Vaterfront custom ho1ne. 4 bedroo1n & den
or 5 bedroon1s. 51/:.1. baths ·ror> <1ualitv car-
peting, draperies, \vallpaper & fixtures. Vic\v
fro1n n1ost rooms. 87 ' lot. spac·iou s yard \\"Ith
beautiful gardens. S240.000.
341
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
Islanders Bldg. at Linda
Bayside Or., Suite 1, N.B.
l ~le
675-6161
$162 per nionlh. \\"ill caITy Nr1r Nrwporl Pott Offlct
211d 836--5612. VACANT & READY
O" 111•1·. Ii:; 4 RR &· fan1 nn. :: B,, form {lit!, assu111 Jn.
s::!J.!J;-0. f'rinr unl.v :1:17-182::
Balboa Island
Salisbury
Realty
QUALITY CUSTOM
WATERFRONT HOME
WITH LCE. APT.
SJ-IAJ?P t-:ASTSJDE J!O~IE * .1 BiJ::" b~1lrrns, * :.? Full hnl h.'\.
• Plu~h shag 1·rp1. * ~{)· " 140' lor * Boat aecr s..; * S27,500 full pt't"f'
FllA/VJ\ Tf.:R1\IS A\'AIL.
*FULLER REALTY*
;,.16·0814 .•..•.•••••• Anytime!
BY Oll'nt'r. ~nsts1dr··. 4 BR. 2
BA. tonn din rm, ci-p~.
<lrp.o:, boat gate, huge R-4
loL n1any many extras,
assum1• ,j~. loan or FIIA.
VA. Be1<1 buy 111 Costa
:\1eAA . Principal:i; only.
642-0427c. ==~,--cc~ ExlrJ largt• cnrn('r lo1 \l'ith FOR!X:.LOSURI-~. Beautiful J
lull Vl<'ll' of So. b:iy & har-hedroon1. 2 hath /M'.ln1e -f.:x-
bor <'ntr~ner. llomf' 1"0ns1sts
or :1 btlrnis. & J baths. J\pt.,
:1 Hdrn1. w11h :.!11 haths.
General General____ Sall' pr1f'C inclutleo; 1•arf)("to;
----------1 & rtrl.lf)f's 1n horn1• f.i. apt. is
ttllrnt location. ~·ireplacf',
:>ha.kl.' roo{. 11·a!led yard and
Jn1maculalr . S250 n1onth in-
<·lutk's 1aX('S, with !es.'! lhan
s1000 •lo\1·11 t ·aa ~~12-1
SOUTII f"OA!-.-1' H. E A I .• ----------par11ally furn. prr i11vrnlory. SOME PAINT View of UCI & t-lills Room for bon1. t-:Sl'A'rE.
and a littl<' r!ho\1 ~rrrasi• 11·ill ! Un1qu1• llrick l1ay. 2 sly. Shown By App't. Only __ -· :'-c=~""==;-
cure Uus \\"I'll bu1U 1 IX'd-I hon11•. Na I u r 11 I \V()()(l As Both Units Bl'.:AUT. l\ll!:SA VERDf;
rtxun . family room and din· 1 ··alile<.lrnl l-ei!in&:s A; antique Occupied Til Summ•r J."ormt'r 111odf'I, hke ne.w. 4
1ng roon1 .. •li•o ·urah· anfl l<'aUt'Cl g!11ss "·\fldo"1.o;, 4 * * J~R. J RA. Nrar goll.
savf'. The <l••s1rablr Pac·e-txlrn1s. &:. d<'n & balh on ·* * * l\i·llOOls. Sunk~~iv rm, dm
sc1ter 111odP1. Vat·ru1I. 011"Jl-to\'.<,. lf'1·<'I . Spl11 lf'l'f'! en-CORNER DUPLEX rn1. ta.n1 rn1. frplf'. pa1io.
,.,. lransft'ITt'd !_, lihic·~ 1ry 0J)l'rl ~1a 11-,,1 a}' In uppt'r i\1·1v ,_hag. cusln111 d1-p.~.
fron1 &:1 \"isl a ~· B.dn.-nr, J1•\'(·I 11·1th !ar~P Jvg. n:1n111. On ftill lo l. 2 Hdrrn. hoUSC' J\s..~unHthlr n101·tga,gr 6'!.i',,.
Ne111port Beach GOVERNMENT
_ _;;. ... ~·U:cll=--Ac:Nc.Y.:.T.:.•c.• ... 1P._. -I OWN E 0
Fountain V•ll•Y FllA & VA repoSS<>~sed , ____ _,;,.;;..c_:___ To1\·nhousl's & homrs. Lc11v
1 4 Br. Iain rn1. shn~ I.: drps. do1\·11. No points or Escro1v
I Close ro .!!chis. $:'1[1,000 ap. fees. {.;ov'f pay!' l'los1ng
praisal. Suhn11t I r rm J. 111."ls . All prier rangrs. Call I 011-nC'r, 84t-6300. 968-4441
4 BR. lam nn. ,'-,-.,-,-,00-,q , CREST REAL TY
'" , .... ;.
2
"
1
"' '
1
'"' & "': $23,500-3 BR-Pool sthools. l 39.900 0 1\· 11 r
962-3674
HuntinAton Be•ch I '·l'!i, il",,; lru<'! Pool & patio
I
for elegant en1erta1rung.
''Goodies Galore'' Guurmf't kitl'hf'ri . \\' i' h
. superior blrns. Ov11 r \\a1t 11 Just hste:I, a fabulou,,; DeanP 1 nli tlutr .. l·all
l{arden home_ surrounded by I Roberts & Co. 962-SSI I n 712 foot private wall \1·11h ..
lots of goodies ! i k e : * T\\10 imn1aculalr 4 hed-
1 n t er com , sf'U-clcaning room homes, 1 mile from
ovf'n. garage door opener, lhC' beal:h. Nr\vly pa1n1f'd
p.llio cover, 11'00d beain intf'rio r. e harming rxlerio1'1.
cnthedra.I ceiling, central Priced in lo1v -40's • al!
a trium. Roman t u h , ter111s. Quirk pos.~eso;ion.
garden kitchen and more ..• CALL 5 46-5411 Anyti me
.3 bedrooms, (]en plu.~ lam1-LARWIN
ly room. only $10,950 and ----------
""IY 10'. .. rlmm. c,11 mw. NEAR the BEACH
~2-2:'13~,.
BUY DIRECTLY
J Be<lnn, 21 j hath, t:usron1
drps. crpts, lik.E' rlt'll' 1·ond .•
watl:"l'~ltrn,.r. f'ornf't" lot,
rm lor boa1 or tr!r. 011·np1·
lransferrffl .. All IC'rm.~. Cal!
842-44£6
i\l csa Verd(·. u,C'<J IJr1t·k frpJ. All <'let· 1v1th sep. 1-lxlrni. apt. Full Open J.;, Set & ."W\. 0111ncr, from Broker & save I Teadership ~ REAL E.STATE OPEN SU0.'D,,Y 1 :i 1;11, h:t!h. "n tl 1l 1n-prtr-<' $55.CKXl \Vith low do11"n. 510-1!\4!1 $27,500
~ Chios Dr1,·r 1111:1ram1ly room \\'ith patio $23.9,j()_ .. $209 Pays all. GOURMET KITCJIEN $2 J, 950.
1k.ur 111 1'!"..:14' <tf'rk. 1-:.\!l'B Qua inr 3 bedioom home on RUi\fPUS ROOi\1 J BEORMS +
ltn'l· .T \V,,H11 !{LT!~~-J.i~r yatd. \larurr trf'es, largl"' lol • Private t.l"Cf' I l\fASSlVE FTREPLACf: 2 BATHS
16.J9 \\'cs!t'litr Dr · N.B. Co\•('r<'1 I pallv. Clost> to shaded stl'f'cl. Submit. 1'1iA DECORATO!t DRAPES rmmaculale home, n icely ld-
646-022!1 I I 1 I ............. ~...i PricC'd bf'Jo1v market by ao· -~~~I 1.'t"H< (' .•i· 11•l an< P• .,,,..,.,.,.,_. EVE'S. 673-l.'!62 or VA no flown, terms. • • sept!! J."irep!, drapes. hl!in COUNTRY CLUB I .upi.dw p;ork S39.500. 20241 315 il1ARINE AVE. 673-G!JOO CALL ~5-8424 /Open xiou!I owner. J-lurry & in· RIO. mai11L frre grounds
S h d -·' · B.1~·\1ro1\ lend o/ M('sa Dr.I BALBOA ISLAND I SOUTll COAST 5Pf'r-I today! p!lm large patio! Submil!
pan1s ('('Or <.'01....,01111n1u1n i -~l{;.-'l!"J l6 ;~;lL ESTATE Roberts & Co. 962·5511 Call 8'17_1221 Plush 3 hN!room, l ha!h. •iiiiiiiii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Balboa Peninsul• \Val k to Coun1y Clu b Truly • BY (r.\'flt'r. Dt>I Ct'tro MOOe l j ''NOT A SEYMOUR REALTY, 17l~l Buy 1 OR 6 Beach Blvd .. Jlunl. Bch.
NO DOWN
NO CLOSING COSTS
lo all Veleran11. 4 Bd1·n1 lovr-
!;v lln!g Ur-h nriJ::l1hnrl1\KJd.
J\tJ tf'm1s avail. Onl.v S2".000.
Plt•ase hUly ·this on<' won'1
ll\Sl!
C11!1 Nf'il !ltJlh'l'I ."
714/536-4566. 714 'K94-4401
.JOl!N READ H~:ALT'I
21 4/5$-4401 ---s QUICK $
WE BUY HOMES
f\JR . KASllBIJ\N 11-1 7·9604
KASABIAN
REAL ESTATF.
WHY RENT?
l·:nsll'~I uf lrnns. 111is ll"l'f'k
1·nUrr hull ruturP poh•11ri11l of
("1J1111nl'n·i;1l t!rvr]op11n•nl .
'.!1-; Hdrins .. 2 1·ar g11rah1':
t'lltl yon v11•\1-i1. 1vith lnt~ ol
prlvnry. ~\ill pricf' S22,500
\\ tt h l1•1·ni. you'll hava to
Sf'!' IH l}f'l ll'\'('1 11·3f
..A&tan
REAL ESTATE
1lrp.~& wallpaJ)f'r. Our kttrh·
~-11 has all bJllUI. Liv. room
hns m11rhlf" f'l1try k Irr
frpk'. FamllY rm w/frple
looks out nn ITK bnck y11rd
11· 'l'OV<'rCd patio & fil'fplt.
Side boat yard + spriokl<"T
& flood li11:hr" front &: :\Mlr k.
01~·n~r 't>rtertn.1 ,Jor SSl.500
a! 2306 Rcdlnnd11 Dr., N.B.
3-CAR GARAGE
S1in(·1uus 4 bedrooms, 2 lux·
Ut"\OUS bath~. "Knre-Dttp"
~hag waU-lo-1\•nJI l'llrptling, 1190 Glrnnryrt' !'I.
4!J.J.!J'1 i'.; ~9-0:\lG ht•aulifu l ru,,;torn draperies
and fift'pl1'C'r makr !his a
OCEANFRONT rrn·ific family home to
Look1n1t 1lo11"n on l'l&llrl)' ~!fir! your Nrw Ycflt. Only
TRANSFER fore<'~ sali., lov-ht'111·h. h:r, .1 RR., 3 ha. S:;t,WQ and CI or fllA !f'm\3
ing 6 mo. nc11• J Br. ~ Ha . 1101 111· :->p:tt'1nus tll 111ni.: & 1 11vnll1thle.
18111 rin. Bcllf'r tluo11 Ill'\\ f11n1. rrn~.; uir·f' VH·1v drr k 1 w lk & L
homf' in \'rry tll'Slrabh· loi·. & jU:tllH 11rrr1s. A)'lfll,J,\. l OOO a er ee
r\r Prk & st·hoolr.. Sn1J {'QUI I I'(!. rt. or lu.~1iry l1vlnj,,'.,
I II I ( I R<'nilor!': \}' and 11.s.~urnr j '"~ F .11./\., ~rn;u• t nn l{' snrlc . 111,. o
I r :l7!"1!1 !Tarbor Ul vrt. Ill Adam,'!
al'•'ll ll~l11ng Slf.0,0t~) 5'\.',.0465 Opf'n '111 9 P~1 full price $30,000 968-271:.. 1 • 11• r,v 111•u 1I. 111 lh(' LaJ,.'ttnA
BRANO NEW • 4~1'1-21-100 * -OPEN 12-2 SAT-.-
DELUXE \B I 1320 W. B•lboa Blvd. 3 BR, 2 BA, frplc, cus· Q ~ 1Ju111""· "l Bit. f'Brh: xlnt
tom home by owner. ~ • ~~i.T,:V' rond. Nr"·ly d<'cilr. ins\dr
Adjacent to park in ::1n.~1 =: &: ouL Carµ., drapea. oflf'
lux. 5i10lf cours• tract. ...,...i ... -.-c.-urut \\'/1111cd brick lrpl. Priv.
$36,500. 83~8389 SOUTH LAGUNA-patio. 2 1·a.r sar. plwi I·
$5o TOTAL OCEANFRONT , r~;:~· 'P"'" R-' 1.01
In vrteran.~. <I O\'l'r~11.ril TxJ-Bf't1 lll. 1 BI L, :i_ Joa. ~/illf lrii•I c'a!I : 67.1<166.1 fi-42-225.1 .Evt-8.
'
f II h fl s Cr-nt / fu 1•11, horr11• 11 Jlr!\, ~r111 1·11·u) rm!'!,. u a1 ... ,.!'!,I" (' B ff •-& h fl \I I 0 ·"'!'•'!,'I \)\'f' /'jl l' 1; '1 J'l!l· ..,1ps ;11 u l'rS. aeAn . I [ 1 ('I I F t • . Cull 961( 444 1 r 1• 1on1r o Char It• 11q1l1rr
H~~llllf'f·~O $1l1.0ll11
associated
BROKERS-REAL TORS
lOlS W 8olboo 6 7].J66J
'c' R"""E's"T~s10R'" EALTY. ::11i!l!J Sra <iirr rir . h~ ;q,11r /
f<'OR salf' h.v mvlll'r 1 mi. tn EMERALD BAY LOT
l)f'uch. 4 Rdr~. :1 Ba. 2.100 Largest View Lot , WATERFRONT
Sq. r r. J)rtlK.'iplc.o: only. 112i l•;nu'rald Jla.v •... $90,000 ' Duplex-home
962-8983. For lo!~ & hornr.~ ('nl/: l·~il!I any !amlly nttd. 4 Br
Bill Grundy, Realtor ,1·/rear &tudio rental Or J
J·ll Uayo;lrl". N11'r 84.'ac h hr front -I bf rear Or l A Irvine
675-6161 '2 Or opl'ri it 1111 up for 11
fa nt as fl('' Only one / • BAYl-'P.0 :\'T, pier· !'IBR.4 lfomca11968pricc;-4Br.3 CRACKER aox·· =~==~~=~~
axnila blC' l!t1r1·y • f'O~J)Qil11N1Ui\1 S .. untl<'r b DIR h~ l!v rm ba. tam rm. Oprn 1-4 pm HY OWNER. 6 B!1 :; BA,
S36 ~ ma•·kc! •I II"""" ., RR 1 ,, rl . . • • Su·. 59,·, l',c,~r-' Jla\·en Cir-Ru! r o u r generou~i;12ed 2700 YI fr. lt'R fam nn nd-·"''"'· _ .uvv. • :I' $210,000 Rral1or 67;:-l-'l('ll() " " "' b Call 545·.~'124 1Up1·11 t'\'''\ .
1
RA •·11,~h. l I 10 sq fl .. ra 11n11 ---rl<'. (rll'fll" Paulo Thra1rr) bC'droonn1. 1\i·o a 1 h ~. di1 ion. upgrad('t r-rpts, 11<'\\.
Quiet Sophistication
In a perfrrl r ountry !lf'lli11g.
1'h 1.~ muc·h soui::hT af!('r
Pion 4. has n 11111 1•1r-1~· from
til"in~ r011111 . ni11~lr-r l)f'<l·
roon1 & k1!,.hr11 . Our n1rlil'· 1
ulu,1~ •J1\'n('r has 1nc-orvor·
al<·ll (•\'<'!)' 11!•m rwr1!rtl ror •
~B~l~G~OCEAN VIEW hus.:e family homf'. Prof.
Nf'\1', cuslnin hll .. 3 BR.-:-'2 . rlone. Dork your boot Al •I
t1u·~-: living rm. har;; l>rnm you r own fli"r & 11oal.
r,·11. & f11>l1 ·. U:"C'. tnmlly S!l8,:i00.
Ca ll fnr· fur1 h<'r info_ PENINSULA Point Ca pr Cod -<·II. r PP I -" and (irape'!I j ly painlf'rl int. 2 hlks lo flt'\\ ! •I HH, 2 BA. 176:i E. Ocean l~VF:!-."TO-R"S SJM:Clftl ! :.! Bit. throughouL Don'! forgf'! lht> f'lern<'nl<J r.· .~•·h! Shor t>!
Newport Hlvd .. li7:t-?.'\J2_Pl'I'.~ -o_ \\'ll('r F.-S ldt' (' \I' Joi n~ (."-1. ~·111er so[!ell<'r. sprui klf'rs C.'N"ttl \\ll'sl lr11rr. S-\4.!m. '
Potf'ntiAI i>IU!< i\I u s T load I " ,. a nd ,,; o extr11s. .nJOY ~1 1 ~ih rr Stn111rl l)r . ! \outh ~ (~ oast Capistrano B•ach •I SELL' tllyf""t'~. t;7.'""61.l6. Nl\ll s1tnlrnl'r O<'l't1n b1·r1-·1-" 962-2';1/l ,
---Fairview c· AP I ST R 1' ;-.. r1 BraC'h. i:::SIDL"°3-l~P.-. -F-1~. fron1 the largr pallo. Only 1----------1
N rt Island r I, II 'I II l>omc 1 -" I · I Id ' s-'~ d I r '' II <'I * C)jw n l!tiu!<r . By 0\\!1t·r, 4 eWpO ., 1·11s on1 •UI • u u . . <ew-4" e-s:11· ser U< r yu. .:1"1,.1\J'J a.n lf'~ ' fl , , BH. 21., BA oonclo. ,
2 1111 n 1 646-8811 BR, :I BA rotnpl frnced. llf'aut ff•l)o ·l'J. $'.:R,q j o . buyrrswt>IC'omc.ll11rry :ind I I Ouplrx <111!11r,1i1t1•r. r::iu ,! S'OOOO Jo '1!16 Z1"l ·h ! ~!'22.~~-lro111 tJ.cneh , sauna )A lli,
•'ond. You 11\"•' i11 otu·. ren! 1 (anyt ime) :.! , 1 11·n. · · · 1 · ~.lf;....;\;~·,-~"=-cc-:=-c su 1n1 . .,. -"'"· pool, Ja<.i!?7.I, cluloh~P & !en-
ull" 11u1. l\t'f'P your bo<I! <ti Corona del Mar vA Rf.:PO, J BP~ .• 2 Ba. 11i5 C'rts. Cuslm drps & s hug
iloal hy fronr door. /\ bci.1-PRICE REDUCED UPEN flOUSES S28,9::.0. $!ri0 On. S'.!i:l ~10. r·rpl'g thruout. ~lany extra~.
lcr hc"'o''R"'a·""1·N VACANT :'.607 Park Grprn Dr Authorized Broker 54&-65i0 :\lus1 li('e' lo apprecia\t'.
.. --~ hr. S::it _r., Sun 1-5 VACANT ~ BP.. REPO S33.500. 21286 Wnvecre.~t.
: Tiu• 01vnf'r nf thii; illl'R" '1 41R St>Jt\\•ard, Sun 1-5 Huge cui;!om h1ile. 1 1 ~ Ba. CHEAP POOL HOME DOUGLAS TRANSfo'EH.Ef.:S
MARTIN lwdroon1 homC' is anxious Triplex. Sun 1-5 $23.500 Bkr. ~,IB-7739. $23,500, FULL PRICE ·J '!lin lo \\"Ork: ~chools, ~hop.
an1I \\',1 nti; ra.,r ne1ion. f"ea-l'aU : 675-772!"1 2 P'"" 3 b d rm f SALE hy •... _, L'l< 4 be 3 gd ,, .•• •-•rm•. •l••.t bl!•·-,, . .,.. r. uung , cp 11,
turrs inr-ludc r-usrom drnpc>.~ ba, ror 10~·~ for boat· le. \\'l w :;;;; le: drp;"th~t drps, beaut )'d, asauml'! for REAL TORS 644-7662
TROPICAL
PARADISE
~ BEDRMS +
2 BATHS
$28,750
N<>w paint 111 Anti out, 11('1\•
r;h1g f'arp('I, nr\V 1111'. all
posh huUon appl '~! Clran
"-sharp! f"llA-VA IC'rms!
Call 8-47-1221
sr:Y~10UR REAL T'{. 17141
Bt'!:lch Blvd .• llunt. Sch.
i DUPLEXES •
N•wport Peninsula
& rarpets. rxtra larg<' yard tr11iler. 642·6459. 2 car att gar, 11!1uated on 1t $-4,000 t"QUlly. $2.30/mo. By ntld nrar nr1\' rondilion. 84G 4041
Pn1·pd a1 't\6,500. Suhmil --TIME FOR hugf': privacy lo!. el~e to 0"71er. · •
F iii\ & (:! !rrni!'. (R!I 1111 major shopping. This 3 BR home on CJtl iet <.i.Jl-de-
1 :rlO-S~~;:, QUICK CASH bf'auty r::a n be purchas~d / a:a<'. LuxuMou11 lnt. Pmr.
I SHERWeeo REAL TY THROUGH A \\'ilh just S2400. <In&. pAymt' lnt!Rcpd frnt & rear. \Valk to
I lll!"IM Rrnokhut·st . r-.v. or $219. incli'J all. ht'ach, schools. AS11um11 6':~1
- --DAILY PILOT ll "' w.OC<> ,.,_1,.1 $27,950 Hom• & lnvos tm•nl WANT AD I . h II R I Is • rttU' •• se your COUNTRY GARDEN ea ty tu.4471 C :) 546-1103 Hl'm~ 1\•i1h f"~. uM" Daily
No do1vn. T<'rms. Mon!hly in-_:
1425
F:. Cour Hwy..:, CdM i==,,;:6~4~2;;·5~6~7;B;,==~~~~~~~~~~""."~P~Lio~t~Cl~a;~s~i~li~~·;64~>-~56~7~7~. = ! ,.taJlm!!n!,,; l1•u than rent! Lock Th• World Out
F:xqu isirP rea1• yard Wllh Quif'L 2nd floor BR., sillin&'
fruit &. shade tt'ee!l: ga.ior@! nn. & bath, plus 2 more
Lovely garden. Covered BR., paneled fam. rn1., w@t
pat io . CompH!te l y bar.Ukenewin&out.Great
redl'COrated inside &. out. 3 for Cv.'O familie!.. Only
S@\\.JtllA-~"E~s·
bedrooms, 2 bat:M, built-in $57,SOO. The l'unle with the Built-In Clrudl•
go u rm e I k It<: h" n , 6U PQlnsettia Open Sun. 1-5
i,:!'111·1011~ ll\'1112'. 1n R r.rrr sli2'.f' I
11rii;:-l1 hori1001I. $.ii,000
(ired hill
HEAi.TY
Un 11·. Park c·rnc,..r. Irvine
Ca ll Any1 11111·. 833-0820
MOVE RIGHT IN
Thi.~ Turtlr Ror-k Broadmoor
home is \'R1·anr & ~mpletf!
in e"VM)' <lelall. 4 Bdrms.,
2~~ ha., large family room
&: ronnal dlnins room. Low
malntenanc,. landscnflin1t
1vlth brick patio.~. alriun1 I:
«ommunity pool.~. Pricer! !I.I
$4J,2:"!0. See lhL" Uri(' brfor~ j
you df"c!dr. ,
(ired hill
REALTY
Univ. Park Center, Irvine
CaU Anytime, 833-0820
1•n1. w,'i)('<irn c-eiL: 11. Rood ~l5IO ~~~_'11~~2~; TUtr.
!l<"l'/111 \11("\Y rrun1 11ln10SI
,,vr ry roon1 1n th(' tiouM!. 2 HOUSEs-:-OaL. LOT
Huy 1lt11\ & t·hoo!H:! your o\.\·n V2 BLK. TO BEACH
•'Olflr~ & c·a11wt.~. Xl11 t neigh-l.ike new 2-i1!y. 4 RR .. 2 ba.,
li01·hood, A good hu,y al formal din. rm., bltn11: tam.
$14,J(.() m 1, v,•/wf'! hnr & BBQ. 2
• 199-28<Xl • f1-pl1·11. 2 1·ar RBr.; ffome
'l ~il)l tY l{l1tM ~inl view 1·•-.uld br made inlo duplex.
IK1n1e . J J:>drm. z ha rh, Also • 1·urc 'l BH. cottase.
Bal<.'Ofly In hf'am ln;ng Uo!h only S7-4,900. Oi>tn
room overlooks d ining arra. weekmds l-5.
2 t.k>1:ks, fenced yard, CAYWOOD REALTY 548-1290
f1replarf', l\'t>tbar, rflrp,.111-, BY 0wl'l('Z"-Beautiful new 4
drapt·~. buil1-ln'I, $39,500. BR, 2~ BA, 2 ,11ty home.
49-1-5200 or 6-16-7562. Lrg llv. din & fnn1 rm•, 2
Lagun• Niguel frplcs, ~'et-bar, m •st er
Allltt 18x27' On ovenil~
cuJ-de-s.ac lot. nf'Xt to park
& IJWim'a: pool. at.500.
644-4132 1930 Porl
Lo1:ks.leigh Pl, N.B.
STEPS TO OCEAN
BLOCK TO BAY
BY Q\\'f"ICr: 1'-follllJ"dl Buy
TcrrMcC'. Spectacular \'iew
of hill11 '1 ~an. ;, lgt: BR!,
:t RAs, r.an1 r rn, 3-car icw-.
pool In lovely ll('!llnJ:. 2
)r.~ o!U, 1na.ny f' )(I r<1 11,
$79.500. -496-401,6. lmmat". 3 BR. 2-11ory horn('
,\1UVING 1o Denniark. Fore-on Balboa Pt.nln., plus 111.
"'' lo l.lf'li OUIJJ!Anding 4 BR, l'Otl1t' unit I() help pey YoUr
21lA Nigllf'I llil111 vic\Y way. $59,950. ""m" SJ.t.400. 4"'""231. MORGAN REAL TY
3 Br, 2~' bfl, attractive & 673-6642 67>671l
clean with tam nn, frple, CARMEL MODEL
walk to school. By owneor Harbor' Vt.w Homes
GORGEOUS new 3 to 4 BR. $29,900 firm . ~2812. By awntr, 3 Br, tam nn..
Spa.ni.VI ?.'Iden, formal din-Llclo l1le C\Ut drps/crpja, lndtcpd
lne & living. Dttorator's ovtrnd kit. F'tt. $51 ,500.
• ·I
'
"
·1
. ·' " " " '.1 :• " :!
" I BR+ 2BR •... $SOOOdOWn
2 BR + 3 BR ..•• ssooo do'i\'tl I
3 BR+ 3 BR •... $5000 down
NEWPORT BEACH .
d is h \.\'a 1 he r, elegant University Re•lty
tireplaC'I'. 546--li~. 300J E . Csl Hwy. 673-6510
TARBELL
low to farm four tllmple "°"'9.
I, llYDSOR I 1...,h Uu-ouJ Extnonlinary BAYFRONT BUYI 11191PortNoltonPl.644-88U
landscaping. \Valk .cbool.11, Channing hayfront home. 3 BR. 2 ha, l•m. nn. A din. I
pool If. ~ al'f'a. $57,500 ~A.rkllkr setting -~ lae Jot. nn, ~fin. ynrd Cire. ()pt-n ~
1
• REAL TY 675-1642
SUPER SALE
$1. MOVES VET IN
:'! BIG BDRP.fS. 3 RATHS.
$38,SOO
--GE.MMr--
~ Harbor. Costa t.1~
ONLY $27,900.
NO DOWN
GI TERMS
UJVEL\' view of catalina
"'-bay area. C'u1.1tom built.
\Vrll loca1<'d. 2 Bedrm w /
hid poot , Outdoor wrt her I
ga" BBQ. Be.auliful t.'000-
Call owner al 644·15,,~.
OPEN DAILYl-S-
504 LARKSPUR 1610 \V. Coa.'lt 1111.'Y .. N.B. d Rf~ALTORS G42-46Zl for thl11 J hcdroom a ult OI'· 2 IJedroortl~ • lhllfPf
1•ut°)icd home In ahOYIC•M" ' Jt..2 Loi $42,950
BAYSHORES oondltion. reaturlna J5'xlT Cen Pat Wood ~t
VIEW & POOL family area. profa'llonal bnlc ProputJ~ 67S-5726
\\l'almmnt ru11t l\omt. 4 or landlc11plng, brick B-B-Q CHINA COVE VIEW
5 bdnns. View from mo!! itnd v11cMI for quick oc-3 8 2 Bath Bf'a h 2713 rooms. 81 Fl. lol , ~cloua ntpa.1'11")'. CAii !J.i0.85.".6. Stter. S85 • lJy c ~
yanl. Red. lo $2'0.000. SHERWeeD REAL TY 11· .ooo. ·
I lm>-2914 or 644-0900. 8111 Grundy, Re• tor 111964 Brookhuri;r. F.V.
:',At Bayiddr, NB 675-6161 O\\'NER Tm ~ Bedroo LUSK 2 ~tor:v. 5 br, 4 ba, 3
VA-FHA I den, 2 litll~:.' .flnt q\IR~;; lrplc, ~nbt>lt location, fN<
1 •. I br<lrrn fun1. kilchc_n bullt..ln11, !'IP'W thick _land. /\gent fm>.i225 ll.l.R.
Crt'flll rf'jf't't. rf'lldy to kD · \\'all 10 W8U tart>'lilll". park * k CAMEO SlfORES * t
544,800. Jncomf' '500. A.gt. like yard, oow-rt•d JW1UO. RY O"INER. Vi1'.--W POOL, 4
~~-2739 S24.950. Ork. Call day or BDJU1S. 6n-86.;1.
DAILY PILOT tor 11clkln! night. ~0-IT21'1. HARBOR Vl W H ME
Call &42..fi673 & ~vt': f'or be-lit rtsul111! &4VJ678 'l BR A-lk-n e e&W.1mo
_111111
:e PR~s~0~~~s LETIERS IN r r I' r r I
.. LNSCIAM"' A!OV£ u m•s
V TO G£T AN~Wt:t I I I I I I
•
SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 700
Owner (71•1) 83.1-11121. /" BR ,. 2 RA. f'.xtra,, 11,.l'I'" Sf\t/SUn 11-4. }<"uU prlre
U V · l»tt 1111P· $l;.ill. 'XI-I .. , iOO ¥~1 Oil! D · NB : I• NI ERSITY P11rk, V1llolilf' / KEN BRITTlNGHf \ :' • • _, nve, i '
II_ By owm.'r. Elcganl ~ hr, R It 1 646-61~. ------I 21 L be 2 f..J N-e• or , -----~ , , .,.cs. """· tw-9\·y 67S-Gl23 * Big C•nyon * ~~ 1•rpt , <.'Ulllrn 1lrp11.1 (;r.lf t'OUT'll(' ~1.atr, lllpttUlt:u-
OrstrAbl,. Ln Sall" f'llan. 1111· vu llMl' homf' Owner
21iOO ~ 11. Jux ulj. $4G.IXX!. 4 BR. l !)It. 70x83 $125,000 ,\.fr. Lf'.r 64~. s.is.-!lru.
83.1-&177 3 ~ft. 31,i ba. lam nn, pool NEAR°"' _
BY Owner, bf'aU 11fu11 y
uPf:T"adtd Cltmhritlar model
In Univ Park. 3 BR. 2 BA,
a!rlum, l'nd unit on wk.k
rm, din rm. 40' lot S89.!'i00 ouy<'tul, .>1.VV aq ft of
LIDO REAL TY INC. .'lJ>lll l~vel elt11:1u1ce. 41Ai br. 3
3377 VIA 1.IIX ..
673-7300
Kf'l!le"l'I Mk. $35,500. 833-9131. 3 8 R, A 11 b I l n 1, Wuher/f)rytr, N@w crpt, Legun1 e.ach fl'J)I('. 2-cRr garn,ae. $58,000.
• SEU. OR LEAST-: k Alt 6 ~ 497-1 076.
2'00 Sq. Ft 3 lllt , :l'Ai AA. FIX UJ1 lo; 111\V'P! 3 Br. 2 Bii ,
14(. (am. rm., dto mi., [rpl. 40' lot. $53.500. huy, 1f'l\Se
ba, VLfW, ftt land. $119,500.
By owncer, 548-2514.
DESPf.RATE OWNER 2 BR.
+<Jen 2'\ Bl.good view,
AJl'f. 675-'122:i 11.f.R.
CUTE l br, 2 bA townhou1e.
Swimming J'l(lOI, fet land.
A1tenL 6T;S..7m. ll.J.Jt
Cpl It drar~-bl1lru. '-'"!:"t wf11pto0n or tndc. 173--i13.I. S:\l,500 Park IJdn To•"n-
~.:~j p~:~~ l mm~r. s1;.9:.o. I Lido 111• t ~~· J ~:~~*• BA~1~'.
:O.flS.S U)~ Rt-./\L1'Y 49-H>l l l I POOL 4 0f'l!rn1., fa.mdy rm .• I ~-OR, ram rm •• pool, ••ll'r
f'a.•I 1't•Uit~ ll-;;-Ju~(,. photW I 11ll f \r r-kl!. Xlnl eontL vu. \Ml t.:•.la.xy Dr. ()pr1i
eaJJ .iov.11y • 64l..t...G71 i11.~ ()\\ nf'T'. 54f>.1'511 ! •btly. Ownt>r. 60-J.lll.
" ..
: .
' •
I ' ill }
; 1
')1 •
Newpo,.t BNd\ Ap.1 rtment1 for 1ale 151: Mountain, DMert, Houae1 Furnished lOO HOUM• Unfum. 30S Hown Unfurn. 30.5 Dupl•••• Unfurn. :ISO Aph. Fucn.
A-FRAME RARE OPPORTUNITY I Ro1<>rt 174
1
Bolboa hland Costa MoH 1 Laguna kach
&ach. boating • '"nn1s 9'% N'r N'' Net **BIG BEAR LAKE Ll'IT. &I. 111 •rtr, rum h5" HOME FOR RENT "'View OF OCEAN Sll'Pfi away. l..i.kr. nPW 3 BR., SU,000 Buy1 r h ,. f'o'TUllY If 1-Ttt• it~r " . . 2 b11..1)n1y S29,500 !.'.! ll'nllr\111 paJ ()II t"a~ *FISHERMAN* nr ""'Ir., patia tcovd lncri•.1 OR LEASE OPTION 2 BR.'&, tireplace, nlee Ltta.
CAYWOOD REAL T Y ()r S98.0CKI plus ..... 11 e.J\p.. . 3 Br · 2 & • op. Irpl The lrg. addition C"Ollld ma.Ice Stove, re!Mg, crpu:, drps,
1 Genar.-1
2 BR. on cul~·A<". Nu cpl•
• 1illtti. pvt. yard, ga.raae.
Sl6.5. mo. 54;,...532,
6= W C H . , NB I!• lO y Id , try 1h11 bciutilu! l11k"-lr11nr 67H267. ~ bMrmr::. liar:: 3 halhrooms tinuhle -+ garage. F~need
.J''<I • "ft!! \\)' . . • ..~. rni::r rtr. r " hQm to on! S.1J ~ 1>1 -' 'I an1 12.15
548-1290 hldg nr. Harbor Blvd .. CM., vorc! <'~$e. YMak~· orii:r,' Coron• del M•r huge covt"r~ patio. Only ~U~VIEW RENTALS
FA/\'TAS"rJC E.\tt Conrlo ~l~·by ~pt."~1111~9 1romc''ur C11~I RO!!llr f1t.ti ~J~.1il or SMAl-14. !)('al home. '.I BR 2 $2'l5. per m:.so 673-4000 or 494-3248
Corona del Mar
Luxury Beach Home
119 Gold!'nrod On -t~t> hay + ON.'l\!l Vl('W. 0 <e.L"l"'TLE REAl~~·v r-.t. v.•rJle; s~ Rt"al. f_11tfllf>, BA $3[11 ptr 1no lPll~. Call -A -lfi~.10 trn·a1·P. f irs! nf. 548.9493 • ~R-2542 P.O. Box. 2828, Big Brar Jn. llniqur Jlomr!I fi7~. 3 Bedrm. home. Mrt.a Vt>rde. *OPEN HOUSE* Costa Mesa
ft1'1 ni.;. Pr1ctd rit .... v.·o n't " · l.;1ke, Calif. L B h H l block to f.1arkf'I Baskf'I. 1790 Solano Wa y, I.B ----------lasr. Tl!F. BEST BUY JN TfJ\VN 178 uxury eac omt $250 ?('r rno S S'"'' 2 BR. $135. Ga.rage. Out of State Prop. 219 Golrltnrnrl · · AT , u1~, 2-5 646-2544 • 543-8.l.'33 \\'lCK\IA~I R.!~ALTY fi44 -64AA SA n ClrmPnlr, 0t·f'an VIP"'' -546-9521 OR 540-'631 1 Bdt ho1nf', OC't>an \'if'w. S46-463l
llomS m11nn
Pa1°11wes~
-()pf;0 SA~t;i·-.:-1 .~-Onrlt'r $40.<m . 1111 2 RnRt\-1 * MARINA RESORT East Bluff N" ._ I R IE , gardt>n, nr Victoria EWai·h. El~11n1 ' RR l¥lll1f' In 1\1111 gHrllJ.:P~. ("Jt,<;t> In PH IF.ST l.AKF:. 101\ll(J ICnO s ea stat• I Sll!O.
Ra.1r1~st 11/n1any r~tr11 ~ ("Ii 1 1 "I IR • FREE i! 'v ~ ~ ii nr rlr!a1 • "..A J-"or I~ lll'l11l!I' v.<1th l!XVI' l AR, den, 1 Ba, 2 pario~ Ap..-1rnen11 !or Rent ' •. hf>;u·h. n ... nrr rlf'~f)l'rlllP Elnar Shp~ & Shtrl\l!'P 81,LiFFS Tl)\\'NJll)U"F: '~=n~,.-.---.~.-,.~,-"--.-.. -m ;l:;;·-----~l~/9~.1 , Apia. Furn.
Rmut •'rl prt('P thi<ii llf'(>k nn-JE:'\h'.INS rtEAL1'Y 4!'12-AAll nf l11kP fmn1agr, ('a ft, N!!1•:ly rlecoratPd, qu1ei arPa Landlo rds·Owners rm. crpt, drpe. SJ20. roo.
h·. w;,;,oo, 011fl('r. C hoar .11a!P.11 & ~rvir·f'. nr pnol. 644--11435 nr 21.1-\\'r 11•1/J rrfPr rrnants lo \'()U 494--17~8. 360 Apt. Unfurn. 365
1rin S.:.nl\a~n Dr &f2--:,~1j\:\ ommercial J.'RF.:E ol 1•h•r•• ... M ~·y L.d ~~--____ p 1 158 Exrt>llet1I NPf Prorit 7~ .. ~ "" 1 o Isle Apts. Furn. 360 Costa Mesa -RB 11 M roper V ' · · 1!Psrr•hl• ,,.,.,, 0 .. 0 .. _ ----------~ /-IA OR V1<'1v ()n1rs .. 011· Pt1(•.-S225,0Cl0 -29": Dnwn • " " " ... ...:---------1ng Ea.st. rnus1 ~f·ll llln1nst C'O.'-f Highway lronras;:.-, C-1 , (flld Term.11 . May F:,'1:,.hnns;:P Laguna Baach wa111n£, l1s1. QUAINT 7 Ar, frplc:, ~I
nr"'' Pl)rr,,f1nn n1l'lllrl. i-;.,. land & bl<IJZ"S I* • * * • ' IO-ALA Rentals e 645-3900 p;t.lio. dbl gar, adu1!11, $225
tra11. S6051'1). 641·AA.1 1. As::Pnt. 67.,,,:772.S H.I R. Also P.,rcrra11on t,, Rr1 lrf'mrnl "-$hl l UTIL PAI ID VACANT & READY NOW __ m~·~>~·c~ly:...:968-=..~7>1:.:::C!.c_ __ _ i>«r 11 or 11p1 11v111 . yf'11r BR D
$100 • J\IOVE IN Allowance
Shady Elms-Lav.·n·Pool
Childttn'a Sf'ction
Furn . ~ Unfurn l & 2 Br.
Balboa Peninsula
2 AR I ba 11e11ly rP<IP.r, $225.
I l'\r ON'An & bay. No
chilrlrtn or Pf'tl'i. 673-9591.
·corona del Mar TRADE rnr uni r.~ 4 RR, :i Duplexes/Units 11111<1, ranehf'~. hnn1rs for rnunrL fullv lurni~hrrl ·RP-\1•i1h 3 BR 2 BA. bl!inl, 4 , EN, 3 bath lo\/t'ly
BA. /\'eii·por1 Short's, As::t. s.11le 162 tho~". "h~ Jrive f1sh1ns:: & fr'!L! /,, hot. pl11.lr. NICEST flrrpl, lencrl yaf'ff v.•/pario. home. A11a1I Ff'h, to JILiy. Eii~72Z.i. H.l.R l~un11ng 1n thf' R1 •aut1ful AREA IN LAG UNA ' ,\!').Ill-mo OK at $235. Call S600 mn. 5.'\1 ·2720.
From Sll5/mo. Up liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 177 E. 22nd Si. e &12-3645
A
Bold New Concept
New port Heights [)J;rL~:x. I hlk to brach. \\'. f\orthwC'sl. Ag,.n! NU VIEW RENTALS As::enr . 54&---1141. Mesa def Mar
' 1 B 'D-' Pl/ONE ITI4• h44-~6 -'~''l"lf'., r.. °" t'll uni!, 1 fi7:1-4(1]) nr 4!l.1..J24.'I ~ESA <lt>l
FOR S;ilr By 01vn11J", SJ0.9:11 !rpli·c;. \\al!rrl patio. frl' itl:!J :'l!l!).S!iM ---~-rm. 2 o •. Newport Bea~h D<1
r-.tar--t Br. tam
crpri;, drps. frpl ,
S275/n10, Rf'f's
4BR, 7BA. Douhl,. iaragr.
Large fenrr d yard.
:i.40·9127
FURNITURE RENTAL LRG sunny 2 BR, nr
Fairgmunds. Marrlf'rl rpl or
1 mature arllt. 1 infant ok ,
r J\fonlh to fl-fonlh Sl:,O. ~226. NP11.! 1111\r hrach hflll'" 1 i.u11plr !11nd . Goorl 1nron1e. I Ranches, Farms, fri1'd \'td.
!ilks to Cliff Pr .. 1 RR, 2 RA 36:'1,000. O"·nrr f>.15--42~ Groves 180 ./ BLUF'FS. Braut viciv,. ~5 7:1~9 Apr11i.ncr~. l.tflf'ral l•'r11111 DANA Pninl -NPw rtuplrx. I srclurlC'd. Fully furn 2 BR, 2 1-•~L-R~C~.~p-,-JV-,-,-,-,0-_-G--,,..-s.:e Mesa Verdt
Dr1\·P by . .,31 Rivrr.~J<lr DI' $1!1,.'l()(). Silvrr• Lan1ern 111 l.1.1 CATTLE RANCH BA. For I~ approx 3 mos v.•/\\>01·kbenrh, 2 3 Br J\lesa Verde home with
* lOOo/., Purchase Optlo:1 * STUNNJNG 1·2-:l Br's. 2
*Wide Sell'cfion-Br Furn & Unf_ Llk!! nPl\I, l A 2·BR Furn. A: Untum,
Style-Col.on; $140 Up. 645-5530. $30 11.·ith Fireplaces / priv. patb:. ~;5-~. oi~·ner alll'I' ~:30, CrP!i.111 . Wf'bb-Bkr. 6'12--4005. SM Acrrs plus '.12.000 11.crr11 644--10'17. I (' p 1 Io r pr;. $16 ~ /R~ ~ '. pool.
I 'om. P 0 ~-11.1. btm grazing. :l!)O 11.rrrs H U I 305 6iJ..3690
* U Hour Delivery Ad. Pools Tennia Contnt'I Bkfll't.
900 Sea Lane, CdM 644-Jill M ~ SHARP BEAUT. 2 BR. CMa cArthur nr CMst Hwy) San Juan Capistrano
CASTTAS CAPISTRAN<)
Tnv.:nho11Sf' livtn.t: 111 11.~ hri;t'
\\'ell dt'i;1gned !'An & 1hrrP
!)ptlf'f'M)m h()mrs. 11i ,11,nrl 2
h11thi;, Hnu:o;C'w1ft'i; 1!rran1
kil<'hens. Pr1valr Pa!l<ili &
Balrnnl1"5. 2 rar clo11('rl gar·
11i;;es. Braut1f11! v.'ell -krpl
grouftr1s. Let us sh()W ynu :
2 br, 11,, bi!, 2 l!tnry -$27/11)()
2 hr, 2 hit. l ,;tory • S2!!.5CKl
3 hr, 11,'.i bl!. 2 story· S2!J.OOO
CAPISTRANO VALLF.Y
REALTY <19.1·1124
Santa Ana
n r pe, •ll' -plllllled alfalfa. 3 ~ood "'"rll11. ouses n urn. 1----·-------C11.n carry 500 11.nin1al unils. 3 BR, Lrg encle yard. 840 Mission Viejo
DUPLEX Bishnp area . S250.(l(l(I • Ge neral Govt>nor, ;185. 213 1286·9656
Each 11111t hAJi. 2 hrdroom11. I Rood term5 • Call George ] ,'~'~·'~'-· ~-~~-~--
hll1n R&O. cr pls, drp~. err· Tabrr • Investment Div. ; • • I 2 BR, Crpt & drp~. G11ragf',
Lovrly M issKin Vi~.
San i\1iguM, <I BR, 3 BA,
$.150. pt>r mo, 8»-0127
fY !'4 I Pool_. AduHs. no ptts 'l trrn ii!.:'.~.;.:~~!!~~--._;..---or infant okl $155. 642-9520. NEW
SEE & GET BONUS J Brlrrn., 3 bath rluplex. Car-
517 W. ]9th, CM 548-3481 2 BR 11.·/Jrg patio. Com· pe1ed, rlraflt'd. bl!-ins; priv.
amic tilP. firPp!acr , i;:ara~r . ~-1600 No pel~. 2 sm11JJ chflrlrf'n.
E-Z yard maint. Goo<i loca· J RENTAL FINDERS $14.'i n10. &1&-2719, Newport Beach
7756 N. Main, Sii 547-(1314 fortably furn. PRrVACY~ p111io. Cov!"'rl"d garagf', 705
11011. $J4.9~/I. . •JI w. lfft. costA MIU. j CllARM !NG 2 h I Balboa Island
Houses * Apts. . 1 • r twlmt>. THE BLUFJ'S. 3 BR. 2 blL * '45--0111 * ) Fenf'C'd ~d, crp! I drps, frpl. $325: 3 BR, 2'·'.i ha. 1 • WOMEN.single room~. <.,.I"'°~ · stove. Sl!i.'l mil. S:!7-9517. S11rier deluxe vit>.,,,', $:;(X) k i I ch ens ITV room.
.. Fr~ 18 I.nMLonU ' 2 BR & sunporrh, crp15, Mo. Broker ' 6 4 4 -1 l 3 3 D a· \V k -Mo. $60 Up. I Real Estate Wanted 184
drps. adults, no p e ts anytime. 675--3611
$165/mo. Call 646--0672. !-!ARBOR ViPw Home 2 Br, _SM_A_LL--,-lu-d-;o--typ<--a-.. -,-,.
3 BR. I ba. crpr, warrr !urn. den. ~ ha, 11'g garden lri! men!. No cooking facilitles.
Encl yan:i. CkJ~e to tl'lOOk & din rm! $400. rncld 675-1238. Call ~fore 6:30
Adulrs. 768 Scott PL C\f. Orchirl. $325 Per month,
&16--732.'l. yearly.
* WINTER RATES * l i >, 675-6050 0 Attrac fu m Sturll0s $115, .. .. .
Brs $Ill. Adults, tl(l peis. -.,,,,PW ca..-.
21.35 Elden. Mgr. Apt 6.
LA RGE 1 BR furn apt. S\25
mo, util pcl. Arlul ts only, no
pets. &12-442'1/646-1730
2 BR & FRPLC
SIX
RESIDENTIAL
UNITS
EASTSIDE. COST A ~!ESA
$69.500. V.'JTH TERMS
Roy McCardle Realtar
1810 Nev.•porf Blvd., C.M.
548-7729
HEY, WHY LIST
YOUR HOUSE
FOR SALE?
Furnished
SSO.PRIVATE B,11,chf'lnr \\•/
Jr . cooking, nirl' k clf'll.O,
<'lose to everything. F'or ma-t:'Vl"rything. $210. 54fH'.>469. gardener & pool mt'm-p.m. e AVL NOV.'! l /,_ 2 Br turn.
f will olfer you CASI/ torlay be h. "' •~< "-=--------I I N
E (.1J 2 Br xtra nicr. Respon. rs !p .......---. . .,...,. \VATERFRONT J Br .. pvt. JIOO • rec rm. gd oc. 0
BY OWN R PRIM-E UNITS fnr your home at the F'llA il
3 "" 2 or VA ,,0,0; .• ,I. Foe fcrr $1Th-CORON A 1'111 fl-1ar-l Br. 1·pl. No child I pet~. F'rom TOWN HSE for sale n r patio, wintl"r or )Tly. <100 s. ch· dren or pets. 646--5824 ,
ture male.
l Block lo Ocean. Beam ceil-
ings, b!r-1ns, covered patio
& deck. Carport. Avail Year-
ly. Small pet ok. S230.
NU.VIEW RENTALS
673-<ID.10 or 434-3248
3 BR, l BA, Ntw paint. crpts
k drpi:;, beam crd1ns;, tllllr.,
rangl'. rPfri.i;, b a l cony.
gRrage. Oceans1<!P \'I[ H1,1.-y.
Arllt non--~mokf,TI. $285 per
mo. 642--:1.'i'.\l.
In Santa Ana. ,,,..rm. rar SIX 2 BR, 2 BA apts. llt>ar "
SI 'pl' y0 .. , rs!imlllP & no obligation 1" frplr, he11m cril, hu•e \\'flOrl· $175. 54.'.i-6412, 64Z.-91 3!1. T'f'nl·S:?R.'l. :! Br. 21.., Ba. f'rpl, Bayfronl, No. 5. Bal . Island. l BR furn apt .. 11dults, gar:i-ge. 1.ag c. · · _u Wesrcl1H Shoppin~ C1'1111"r. I " choice of financ1n'l'. $22.75(). AJr .in kitch n~ t r p I , 1 .YQU. call 11rl .vard, pet (onsiderrd. Ulil 4 BR. 2 BA and A ponl 2 car g11r. enel pa1io. pool I LOVELY 2 hr 11U hll -i ns no pe1s. 687 Victnria.
$162 p<>r _"!n n!h. \\'ill rarr.v lr1r~" Br .. la:J~ry. Sca~n;ci CAPITAL p11 irl. $300/mn. Ca!J--1 privl. Nr Hoag Ii ll s P • fully cptd, hug~ clme1s. $20'.i * 548--{il:ul *
2nrl. R.16-5612. Arlult tenants. G()()f] return INVESTMENT AGEI\'T, 646-RRll 6'13--9ll!~. 6i~245 or 213/241--080:! 2 Br, lg rms, pool. nr shops.
LIKE new 4 BR. 2 BA. sev.·"I! + ta..1.; ... hrltrr. $135,000 \Vtth 833-1103, Bier. 11 _ E '~IDnfurn i shed 2 BR $160 month 2 BR, 2 BA. den, frplc, LGE. J BR. 2 BA, rrplc. nr. ulit pcl. Adults. 1S.~4 f\1on·
room. air-rond.. CO\'f'~ firxlhle rem1s . ,,..,..,...,...,...,,...,.,...,....,.1 ""' · E 2 Hr f()zy mt-979.1o5o or 6'16-4&13 fMll<>:'i. Nr beach. pool pnvs. So. Bay. !\'t>v.'ly redec. S.100 ; -'°-==-'~;·~· ~C~'~'·c..:."~'~·"~'".:::..·~--
patio. fully !nrl~rprl . r.111ny 3 BEDROOM home plus la~f'. lovtly yarrl \\'1 !rres. Arlulr.c:. $275. 6 42-3 082 ; mn. 117 Diamond. 675-:12811. 1 BR turn apr. utibtirs in· CLOSE In bearh. lrg. 2 Br, 2
other t>xtra1::. Tmmf'ci1A1f' oc-bc>a1aR& (OW8012 Jll. mom fnr rloclnr.o; pr11cr1rP, 11'l'R1 /or mature cnuplf'. SllARP & Clean! 2 BR 5.i7-14R7. I Ila hr lrpl
()tJ ii·el! iravrlrrl ''"'' or share .,.-irh eouple or S?uy., ----------Balboa Peninsula r udt"d. tlJO. Older tl'nant. . OD('n ams. r. cupanry. $31,500. By 011•ner. i:aeoltom 112, mo. 570 v ,·,,,,,·,. ~.'!. BA YCREST $39f//mo. 3 Be ___.. f>.12-6560. bllns, priv. porch, priv. gar. 54!>-2417. 3416 Via Lido 675-4562 Ar'f'll where zon1n~ i.~ pos-$14.<;..DOLLHOUSE. 2 Br w l '-" I 25 331). . '-'--~'-~=-'--'--sibl(', plrase r·a!I Jnrk en<'I gar. Crp!s, drps. rncd H B h 21, Ba, IS?f'. DIR. F'/R. • $ WK & Up-On Ocean • * Lrg _! br. 2 ha. ponl , u(il A i\largurr1tt>. 673--0937.
Santa Ana Heights 10 UNITS \\light at 646-7171 or 644_59115 yrd. Chilrl ok. untington eac 1rp.lc, o\•ers7.rl kl!. Also Ulvely Badl--1 Br-Room11 pd. Adults o\•er 3.5. $130 mo. I LUA'URIOUS French R!'gen-
1-------''----Just romp!f'ted. All 2 BY THE SEA 11vail. FurnishEtl. 642-4589. l\1aid srrvicl'-Pool-Util pd 6<1&-4292 548--2407. cy, l bedroom, 2\t bath,
l\fUS'T SEE. Sparkling 3 BR., '---'...-..-.m 2 "-Jh. E•e•l\•·1 l~,~~~-iil\I -e Call 67«740 e · din, rm., used hr1ck frplc., ~~:~·1;1~tf' cos":'a Mf'sa 11~~-.. ·~ ; 'i.~·;~nll~~~.~~n~k.1 t~r.hry•r~hr: Vacan1, 2 Bedroom, J)('IS & * BLUITS CoOOominium on .r<> FURNISllE D 2 Br. Rp1 , url1 I Fireplace. Dining Room,
hid I C I rl children \vl?lcome. Tennis Bay. 3, den .\ din. 3 Ba. 2 Br crpl'd util pd. 1 blk pd. $170/mo. m7-B 'l"plr laundry. $400. Agt. GT.>-4930. poo · P ~, rps. many lion. Walk to shopping. Real F l p t u I ...,.i 1' " J · 1 , E · 1 • •· rp c. B JO, h •"" courts, gw\mn1ing po o ! , S0:<16 de<:k. Short 1rrm ten-trom bclt. $195. mo, Call SI. 540 59\J, Adu Is only. 1mprovemen s. n)<ly 111· quality ·wilh !ov.• mAln-<r =~--'-~-~~~
in2 . 21'}201 Spruce. ~1;...1175.. h'l'lA.OCP. CALI. 546--5R80, 4l•Oo'.. mh'.',e ~nn~,~·,.,•,~,'~,,',: St!>:.. SPACIOUS l Br, l'i.a. Ra, :~~:ieoo~. ja~~i787 N ~ la!. 49!)...2974 nr 644--57:!6. I 673-53&1. 1 Br trailer, $100 + util. Nn NR oceilll. New. de!ux, 2 ~f F, RI T A GE RE AL " u ·., 1• ·~' blJ 1 d h Id BEACH home tor lell.M'. Op-Coron1 del Mar children. no .-u:. 6<1&-l809 leve.\, 2 BR. 2 BA. beam
pnrta.nt priv ""rt 546-871!1 n:o;, C'rp s. rps, c 1 ren 962-4<171 I 557-8623 Agt. · t b 3 BR 2 BA ....-·1 I 1 bltn $300 J ~ r:STATE. · ,_. Y· · welc()me. tlon ° uy. • • B CHELOR 1 . or 642-337S. cf'I ·• rp c, 5• M!. I l"vl'S llr Sa!/l'un. *WE have a large selection nt'lvly rlrcorated. 201' lrom A apt or quiet 1>73--3477 . l ,:;;;M;obmi11;Ho;;m;"•-~;llllm~/ 7 HOUSES LISTfr>:GS v;antf'rl. \\'r hi11:<' $125-POOL + 4 BR. 2 Ba !;!11il nr 3 and 4 bedroom homPs OC<'an. $325. mo. 6'16-23.10. ~:;·11pup~'.'~I'r~i. close in.' _H_u_n_i_;n_gt_o_n_B_o_•_m ___ 'L~G~E~.~2~B~R~.-,-,-,-,-,,-~,,,.-,.-.
. . ()n 2 lnr~. downinwn C~ta huyers fnr hon1es. R2. R:! &· lev('I. Crpr~. <!rp~ hJtn~. that can be moved inTn 2 Br. 2 barh, ortan ba,v. EXECUTIVE SUITES bltlins. pool. Sl00.-225.
r.1esa, $.1175. monthly in· i -:."'~m~·1~. ~A~<~"~''~'~6~7'~-7?25~~1~11~R~li~f~·,~m~;~1y~or~•;~o~gl~•~•·;P~•~l~o~k~. 11lmost i0mmr.~iafe!y n~ our, frplc. Nice, $250. 673--2937 or ~~fe~.' \.\;;~v!~e~· ~l~.tplfr:i:. MOTEL APTS. \\lf'sley N. Taylor Co. Mobile Homes
For Sale 125
comr. $10.000. rlown. Hurry, BEACON * 64S.Cl l l R r n t • Pt Jon P ll n. 494-7/:52. 727 y kt Bl d Realtors ~910
v.'on't la~I ! Only -SI-IERWOOD R E A LT Y, Sa ta An uti!. 6'1~. or own v •
$79 SOO I~ $130. 2 BR. crp!s . .11tove. gar, 540-SSSS n a C t M 19411 BE:ACH BLVD., 2 BR. view, stove, doublt
NEW AOUL T PARK • • Financial • Tnt &. pet OK. C.M. ----------os a eu AT YORK"J'OWN door relrig, cpti;:, drps. AU
Hunllngton Arbor fl1ob1le PERRON REALTY 6-lZ.1711 '--------$135. 2 BR pv1 home, fenrd 3 BR., 214 &1hs, family 4 BR. 3 bAth. imT1111culate. 536-0411 nt"'-''. Adults, no pt"ll, $1~.
Home Park. F'acitilies in· 17!H Or11J1ge AV!' .• C.f\f. for kid~ & Pf'IS. room .,,,,il h lirepl11ce; two-lols 01 exiru. 1 block off LIVE LIKE A KING STUDIOS FROM $35 673--f..397.
rludt': Jacuzzi, card nn , DELUXE TRIPLEX $140. 2 BR. slove, gar. fencd neighOOrhood, near ~ 11 fl-1ain & MacArthur . $350 mo 'OCE=~Al=----:---o '!ATV o•·ldoor BBQ -I Business foe tot & -t ll B --hoof• •nd "-~. R•nl or least'. 5.=tT-22RS. At Budget Pri"ce•.I 1 BEDROOMS AVAn..ABLE N view, elegant 3
" • .. • 0 ~· • E:i111sirl(' Co~IA flf('s,a, 111' yrii; Opportunity '" · · · "'" <>=<:" ~ • FuH kitchen bedroom. 2 bath~. firrplaee,
b1lliarrl rm, shulflt"hoarct, in-()/d. B!lns, i·p!s, dr'p!I. 4 li:llr-J.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;2;00;;; S\5(1. 7 BR w/ e11rrylhing, IPase $795/mu. 0 w n er · Con'dominiumt. FURNtSHED--e Heated pool dini ni; room. Adults only.
dividual me1cr1ng. Ptt ,11rt" RJ.:e!I + 1 space. ~rp. IRl!n-kirl~ OK. C.M. Agent. 962-81 IR. Unfurn. 320 UNFURNISHED • Laundry t11.cihti~ S500 per mo. Agt. 675-4930.
tio.n. 19350 \VRrd St., llnlgn dJy ,,,_ Jm-mr I"'" Own-**BIG BEAR LAKE $\45. 2 BR. crpls. drp11, patio, -D~EL"-'u--'·~-"-~,~B"--~1-,-, -o-.-r-.. ·----------e F B h ""'" 4445 " °'""' k'd OK CM J ,.,"' r., 2 °" ......,.,.. Costa Mosa l'e.r utilities * GR.EAT VIE\V-2 Br, frpL r11c . ·71>"· • rr. $h7.500. 642-51172. L!PUOR SfOR~ fo·or Sale g11r. I s . . , rln. \Valled in community. * POOLS • Ff"t'e linen!! bl elf> k I $:!00
20x57 FLAi\llNGO, 2 hrtrm.. 2S .UNIT . Nets approx. $50.000. yr. 176-J330 Agent C!bh!1E'. pools & park. Nr. MESA Verde Villa. Brand *ENCLOSED 1 • T.V. & maid 1erv. a11;t.1]. 111~~4 c 6~~ x:·
2 bafh, 11•asl1~r & dryC'r. 2 & 3 Br. 2 Ba. Nr e.hni)li:. Owner will ca.rry financing. 3 BEDROOM HOME schools & shpg. Dcp. & new <i bdrm. r,.ar unit wi lh GARAGES • Bar·B-Que up. ' · .hl •
d1shw:isht'r-fron t .J)1rr-h J;:l.ll ~~Jlis A\·e., J-iB. 5420 M. g:,rn:~itf7~,11~~!-~~'.;1<';r No agcnr r•hal"J.?f' tn rrnlC'r. :z rr-i's. SZ10/mo. 6 4 ~·4573 yA.Id & patio, cptll. nrp~. *CONVENIENT •Phone R rvice 2 BR .. Bltns. W11!k fo
11nd sh('rl i:rr-up 1n Joa1n1l.~ 1147.:\957, baths. 2·r11r gara.gr, c11.rprt-l'\P~. s::a.raR:l'. v.•ashini:: lacllilics. TO ALL BEACHES 1 RG · ht_.ach. $2<Xl. Oran,i::.-Coas1
park. PC't 0 .K. S%00. 4!Ir wPri.'o". ~~,"~_n's',·~ F.a·',','r1r, wl, clr111~l. lrnrcrl, patio, Clos"" to 5eh0ol1t k fv.'ys. FROM $1 35 MONTH ~p!. ·~~~e~~~ryN! ~e~.t~~~ Real E111a1e. l 'all: ft.1'HS48
\. '! ,-dd ... ,,n-BY ()ll'nrr, Crl.Y! 4--plf·':i>. h\·n :! <><> ..,"" ,., h s~ h HOUSE for renr. 3 Bdrm~.. , #JU \ • 1' <' a en, .-..pace .,,,;i Lake, California. SUfll'r i; arp, <.J'J rrr mont · larJ?,E!' kitchf>n. v.'!'lll'r pll id. Rrc & pool faci!ilitli. mov('·in all()wanrl'. GARAGE apt '-''I s! o v e . ~~;;;LI l' Santa Ana. ~~~i~·:.~~~ ~~rl;n:, ,H~~: E~ABLJSHED Mnrl .... ·1ch Wa Iker & Lee $\~ prr month. $40 cle11nin1? $200. 545--1304 :i~l~r:;~~A~! CREST REALTY ~~~g; ~~e ~~l~o~~~ultll,
$!°19,T.iO. 642--!}.'>:n. s ......... <-'Xcel locA.tion. 011.·n<'r. dcrwi~1t . Pay first & lr..<;t mo. NEW 2 BR, crpts. drps, ** 968-<l«l * * ELEGA.\'T J!l7l Key11rst .. ..:,~~~~-'~~~~ ·~' R LRG 1 ~ F I •11 I .
rl.,,,,E 'pl•.•. ,,, 3 Be. 2 \Vr ilf' Clai;sifit'd Arl No. 205. raltors 962--!ll!O.'"t. bltn~. Pool privil, Nr 3chl1!. PHONE 642-201S FREE u1·1 DI . rp c. , b t-U'JI!. 74xfi0. Prirl"d f()r f'fll\f'k '-~ ..-"''' l\12·4455 1" rurn. 1 BR .. nr. S1R5/mn LeasP U!il 1ncl'd. Ba, lnmme S7()')/mn. No c/() Dn1ly P i!nr, P. O. Box ____ _.:c_c::_ ___ ;i BR. J'J BA , twTihSf'. Rrc l\o1f"Q Verde art"a. $nJ. (17li0 Pomona Avf'.) bch Pool $l30 20l l0th S
rrsale. S17.~)0 ~pacr 7, 1 ~ c M LANDLORDS' .1 f "--l"'B 1-··a SI "' ~,, ~ '""""""""""""""'"'"""" · · 1·· n11~ .Vlari2old 67'.1--5267.
2:l:\Ol P.1<\~P Rflutr nr , r!l1·n II" Cl. $62.~. Nr OCC ·""-'· .osr.o1 Ps;t. • f,11,c1 1r1e5. rre nu<1! nr .,..,,.... v -• ,,..,,.....,~ •v i 53&3TI7/5..16-72R2/536-!3ti6.
('<lnlPmpn L.iu::una Hi 11 s :,:ii ·fll.11. UNIVERSITY P&rk rrvinr \Ve .SpPf'i<'llir.e in N,.1.vpnr! tr111 lrr prk'ing. $26 5. appt. Casa del Oro LU>.'URY 2 Br., 2 Ba. Pool. Costa Mesa
'.\lflbllr Parle 'll~O~M7~,:"""'&-.,.i0<'0--m-,-.-,,...,--:-m-:-1ri ·"h~ping fl"ntf'r BP:i1J!.Y Btarh e Cnmna drl ;V/ar e 962·1 4~.'I. San Juan Capistrano ALL UTILITIES PAID RPc . .mom. Walk to beach! l·--Y-O_U_N.,A-M--E -IT--
3 RR, 1 BA. 10 X ~. 1962 huil<I, 71;xGrn~~ 1 O ,...,. ."nlon Si!'i.000. f'nn. Only. L ... 1g11na • & Dana Pninl. TRl-lrvel exec. horn!!': 3 BR, f'OR RENT OR LEASE Compare before you rent· 2a> 12th St., H.B.
fiPPtlr001! j\.1Jl , fum ,,.,.1 12" Onivn. Princip;d~. S<ll'--8007. .113.1--0270 flur RPnla! ~n.·1cr !11 FREE :l BA, lan1 rm .• 2200 sq fl. 2 BR. 1 bath, new condn. Cusrom <lesigned, fe'alur1ng ~ * * Block to BcaC'h! At·
20 rabana, v.·1nrlhrrak, a11·n· 2 N<'v.-r>nr1 J-l'C'ieh!.11 rriplf'xr~. ITALIAN Rrs-tauranr. Mul!! 10 Vnu• s::arrlener. Private party. Carp. drapes; wa t i' r • SpacloU.!1 kitchen "'1th in-tr active l BR . $13.'i/n10. fn-
\\'P'rl" nrar ii! f'nr ronvrn-
irncP 'o fhP lhin.i;:s th&!
rounr. compare our location
near tbe park. librnry. 11<o-
rnen'i; club, bny'R club, gir1'1
club and r;hopping!
1nL'.~. "'or. !!hf'rt ,_ rl,.,. k, Xtnr N'n!. By o \\' n" r . l'C'll. flf'tiring. soori hrs. NU-VIEW RENTALS r $.150 mo. 536-4872. $17~/200 rt irecr lig'htini.! lan1 ok. (213! 433--41~.
S27()1'). 2 \Vks lo rt'mOvf', 54.11-969:1. GoOO in1'0mP. 213/921 ·9115. 673-10.'lO or ~94-32.JS OUR Home ror rent· Begin-CapLStrano Valley • Separ1ite din'g Ana N
4fli.61i16. l.-:-~l-~S'""'l,_---;l~l~O Investment EASTSIDE COSfA MESA. n1ng April lst. 3 BR. 2 BA, ReaHy 493-ll'l<l : ~~~~~=•ge ewport Beach
i\IOBl!.F: l/(lme & Cabilrm.i ;;o;h;;;;;o;r;;;;;";o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; O ., 220 Rent 111 SJ95 or option tn n-pt11, drps, awning cove~ e C'Joged gMage w/t torage 3 VERY lrg Bcfrm'i, 1 blk to
nn the hay. fully furn 'd, I' pportuni V buy. 3 bedroom. 2 bath, OOu-pa!io. 5..16--4323. Townhouse Unfurn. 335 • Full length marble pull-be a c. h . N ew c r P t 1 . frpl~. pAllO. Lid() Vill11,gl" CHOICE 2 Invl'slors. develop in-hie gArage, fenced yard, $240 _mo., 3 BR, 2 BA. f'rplr, ma.n S 22S/win~. $325/yearly.
* :! bedroom,;, 2 bathw * Picl11tt-hook kitchen
No. 4, iOO Lirlo Park Dr.. R-2 LOT ternttl'l P t rsia.n k Orienlal new shag carpet!, fttshly hhnlll, crpt, fncd . Aft 5: 1 Cost• ~s• e King.11 Bdrm• 642--1403.
N.D. fl7}-f'l6M, 2 Blnck~ To Be11rh, $15.000 Rug & Art Co. ill N.B. S5000 pai ntf'd. CAil Brok e r • 119.1--8768. COSTA Mesa Townhouse e Pool • BIU'beq~ -sur. BACHELOR apl, 1-i t,lk Jrom And mnre at
• Pool. puttiTlg i'J'eCn
'
tlfUST ~ell, dC'lu,'l:t! V1k1n2
f:d~Pwoori, 2\x6() V.i !h l'Jl<'l
porch. ~·lake ()frPr, Fivr
Star Park, l\.R. ~~1!l
minimum hirl. Birl opening cuh req'd. Be!tt income. 545-0465 Open Eve.'11. C ciao .. east•;d•. 2 be<lroom: rounded with plu11h land· ~ch. Ulil. pd. $100. mo. 544-..5868 3 BR 2~ Ra t~. ID &. ........ Th• V•ndom•
Febn1ary 17~h. 1971. · ;;: VE Y CLEAN & VACANT 4 B/I. Pool & clbf'lse. Mo.mo J'Ai bathe, CJ!hf, drapu, acaping 772--8046 or 526--7G.1 l 1845 Anaheim
-CITY OF-Money to Loan 21iCJ 2 Story home in primf' nr Jse. 96~206. Ov.·n!Agt. builfina. privaifl patio. $165 Adult liv:ing llt UR best 2 BR 2 ba trpl ~m 2 block' olf Newport Blvd.
NEWPORT BEACH 1st TD Loans ~~ ";; ~!~~~~~~ Irvine pr. month, Rltr. 646-0055. ~M~RJ11 ~i1'&; ~ lo., beach. Call: 6<12-2824, Mn. Philllf*
"iO L\NCER 21b:43. A\\"n1ngs
'-shed. Nr'>'' f.'nnrl.
673-2110
1
S.16-4 l<ll. Fount•ln \f•llev 365 w. WiillOn 642-1971 1.,e,ll,ff. Adulta only. 64Z--.1850. e BEAtmf1JL GROUNo se
Ext 271 2 BR 2 ba Furn SJJO * . ..., WK & UP * 2 t'lf 3 Br deluxe duplex "Pl. SPANISH DECOR
642-2110< · 6~ % INTEREST Bayshoros · · . 2 BR. 2 BA + 4:11 "' tt bonu• .-• A. I nd G ~ 4 BR, 2% ha, lam rm $340. r m. Alt' bHN ind upgraded e Studio i' 1 BR Apls ~ blk to bch A: bay. AU nu 1r co . 8..!t, wtr. .,...
ROADCRAF'T' llx.3.i Mohilt' C1101CE lot 100'x135', R-2.
home. J\1ctal av.·ning. $1075. p 11 v t> d alley. 3-48 E . 2nd TD Loans PRIVATE C'fll'nmunlty A 3 BR, 2 BA. Atrium $335. -..f.& &: .-..s, ~. tennie, e Room $15 WK&: Up. furnltur«. 67J..«i26. ~uagd '· IPoolBR' UR~. 2rmBR.,
3 BR 2 RA stp home S335 ~.,, .... )' t""'' e TV "· ""·' .. ~-' A -• ** ~"'~DNT.· 1·2·3 mun ry. ""'· beach, 2 Br, 2 patios. Unk!:ue--1 • .,. ' · · clubtt>iae &: aU mainten, .,. •naru .x-rviee Vllll v....c.ni•r.n. $160-U65-t175. * fl4&-8.173 * Rochester St., C.M . Short
lOxJl' ~-1oblle homl'. enrlnseil WB ik lo l7tb SI. ,;hopping
cabllnti. Jn Pi;irk <lown!O'll'n,1 ~'-"~tr_.~1~2~1.~750_. _6_7'_-_9509~·~~
Bo/O Int. baaed on ~ty. Jy dUlerent w I pe:nonll.1-3 BR, 2 BA. 'J'urtle Rock U'.30, paid. Close to beach, $250 • Phone Setvitt. UtiJ Pd BR'1 Winter. Adult1 only, Haefenda de Men Apts
Also NEW 95% lty of it'• own. $320/mo. WE HAVE OTHERS mo. By owner~. •AU major credit card& no J)l!!ts. 673--8088. 160 W. Wilson, Stt Mgr. No. l ol' .111\.le-prlce loans (1J 52U932. 2376 Newport Blvd. 543--9755
S ti Ml C 1 ~--------L k F t Thi Ad Worth SS n. LOWEJ< ~ut furn apt nr BRAND NEW 2 BR.
I iicii.Mii.iiCii•iill ii,..._iiii50iilii9.iiiiiiiiij R /2 LOT $10,500. 11 IDEAL FUR tNCOMEl
If er g. o. Corona do! Mar • • ores ' ' on nt ocea.n. Avail mw. Ute. A" FROM $155 642-2171 54S-0611 --------Children t. P•t Section ~
Lakesidf! Park, new, l BR, 1 BR. Furn. 2 Jge donls. ~bo.....cy_R~lc-t'~·-----·-~= i Near 11hops, entlo(led 1ar-
Reil E111te,
Gene11I
F111:Hi1\rs A: MWl?t'S In~ Serving l-fari:lor area l1 yrll. HALF blk trom CdM Sch.
HAFFOAL REAL TY Immac. 2 Bdnn .. 2 beth &
842-4405 • Evrs: 541 -2446 [ II Je j KUHi Me. Couple only. No j
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;; Permanent Ocean View "'-" hirRlnt _ · dogs. $375 mo. AVlllil. mid
Acreagl for sale ISO DAna Point, 8lh:lOO R·I.' ~~~8 ::~· dltys or Univt'l'Sfty Park,
---'---... ___ S19.ROO, 644..()259 D•Y•
INVESTMENT Mountiln, Desert, Houses Furnl1hld 3~ Nn ~llll. 3 BR. J BA. den.
OPPORTUNITY Resort 174 d in rm, bl tns, beam Ct"il·
5 Acrn nt11.r Pll.lmdale Jnt'I. __ Gener ii Ink's. frplc, UOO 'J s e . 2 BR. 2 ba ............. $300
AJrpor1. Xlnt gro"1h pol<nl· ttBIG BEAR LAKE EASTSIDE 67;.M77. 4 BR .. 2\i balh• ••• •· • l350
la J. Only $35,000 • terms. ~OW FLAKE SPECIAL 3 BR. 2 va C'P11 drps bltnl l BR., 2 bA. hOme • • S3001335
1111 Grundy, RHltor Pull )'Ollr inow· el..S up "I COSTA MESA Jro Jl"tlo: ouio. ·OK, ,.; 3 BR., 211 ha.········ $350
341 &ya:l<le. NB 675-6161 lhit Apecial buy. Cabin-In-~nt •t Sl9S or optlon to btty. ~· st15, 615 ~te 8 ed h.11 2\t AC level, ~· rrri to lakt!. the•Wood&, nef!da tlniahlng, 3 bedroom, 2 bath, doutU c~a -• • r I
I 0 -tuU only $6,650. E-Z terms. Tt t ~ ~ -· 1 ,v.N price. S500 won't la.~t CA.tt ROM {n•l a:•~. '0'-'"' ""'""' new, _________ _
dowil, S9S mo (16.') monthll SJ6.I7l8 or write: Spenc.r •h11.1 c:arpttl:, fresb\y e CLEAN 6: Qu~l 1 Br •. ml
--•~. ~1942 Brl<. ReaJ Est.le, P.O. Box 2828, PR lnted. ~I 8 r o II: tr y rd, e ncl pr. walk to •
TAKE' OVER PAY~E~JS B1i;e Bear Ltl.kf', Ct'Htornli., !>46-()465 OJ>tn Ev,s. •hop1, SUS.
.UJ roon&tlly, % acre p11rcel, * YEARLY' RENTALS • ALA Rent1ls e 645-3900 BIG Rrnr J BR rurn, view. 1-i l'IM" home~ tn bee.eh arc11.. J~ c'i:::6:"J63:i Qui(>! ,.r .. 11, All ulil, or-Rill Grundy R.llr . fl7~161 e J.'IXER Upper 2 Br, tlow,
f'ER! M~l'll. 6il..fi7jf). ttftla. ldds ok. $130. ll111o.".~iri..,.;-RRo;;Wnrm.;;-;m;;;r;;•;;:tlo;;wJ1;:-r:-,:.:.,o:., • ..:..,:.:.,,=.lhr.:..::r:.:.ig:.:.h:.:.t ::,,:.:.m-,~,. Bfllbo• lsl•nd ALA Rentals e '4S.-l900
~TY
Univ. Pe.rk °"nter. lrvtne
CaU Anytim~. mtmro ...... ..........................
LEASE or ls/opt S.~ mo. 4 !
BR, r11m rm, 3 BA, 2 aty.
Nr perk, tcbools le pool.
Bea.ut dttor, T'UrtJe Rk 3J3-3m. 18005 Antioch Dr. ftr M Uonal fort"al. TA.KE 1l1A'.l)'S tht> ri~hl pl .. C'f' If 4 BR Mme with Jge. P11.llo' LOVELY 3 BR. 2 BA, OOM'lf'r
OV!i1t Uf, MO. 968-0047• )'t'>l1 \l.•anl RESULTS! C11ll pier wltb 1)taurlfu1 view A ho~,.crpU, drpa. ptJi lN·
Nttd a ""PM"T Place an ad/ 6-12--5671 4i pl.1~ that ad So. 8&)1ronL USO. mo. DOO R POOl •. $290. mo. Call Da"1 PUot: Wa nt Adi haw
CalllCMlll-t '"""'' ,winton ·R.E. 6~1 Dave. -lUL -·..-.
crptg, drpg, air cond., d/w, QUttn size b@d, priv dressing Apt. Unfum. 365 ageii, biltlt-ina. er.cl pat\ot,
bltM, dbl carport, enc. nn xtra lRe tooma encl attractive l~scp. Adu1l1
patio, Ii. dmets. lndry rm., g..; w/ itnra.ge, AduJt~ or11y, Bilbo. l1l1nd only. No pel~. 1970 Wallace
y<I "1)f'k incl. Pool A lake no pets. $160/mo. SPACIOUS 1 br w'fbal«mJ ~s,,i."-==~· ~"'~·2'119,..;,.~· --1
prlv. SZiO (2'Jl) 327--1-A."il col-2035 Fullerton, C.M. New p&lnt & c.rpt. Stove a VACANT--Re3ec. 2 BR, l Bi.
lect. -.-MOVE IN TODA y~ rt'.trig. Yrly only, AdultR Crpf~. drJ>!r, ~fria, bl tn a,
Newport lelch Kids ol pet& welcomit. 2 Br., only. $200 mo. 208Wi Grand li.undry rm. 2 chHdrt n ok.
$164. All mru. Pool. aar., Canal. 613-5270. Walk to Harbor ahop 'r . * ADULTS PREFERRED * JNlUO. 17362-A Ktt<lllOn Ln., UNFURN, IS own• I a I r s . $135/mo. 642--1461. 3 :."ci!li ~L 2 carport. $275. H.B. S47.J689 .or !M;3-m!O. eu,..i.d. I Bdrm., 2 1111 ., LRO. 1 BR Dtlp!PX, ~.
REALTOR -LRG. l BR opt. pu1Jy furn, Soulh. Boy Front W.O por Nowcy rodoc sml. 1 Bt.
--------$125. Fum., $13S. Adults. mo. By OWnor. 644-2922. dupl"11 U!O. Ulll. pd. Frplc, BUJn'S new dtx 2 BR 2 "' '-.... ,..,i..1 beam cell., pado. l adul• m -·•¥· pr. -· rr. GRAND CANAL. yr!y "'"'4. ' BA Boy vu, !M. It<!. Av! .......... 1922 Walloco No. B, 2 Br, 2 Bo, hlt-lM, ~. No ..... 66-1317.
now. Sf56 mo, 54e-4fm. -• ~. fll'. 675--Clll &ft. 5 PM. TRIPLEX, 1 yr old, 2 Ip
Dup1ex11 Fum. -·~y 2 Bit. •·-t bdnna. liv nn, dinl""' nn ~·~ ·~"· ... , .. , ......... ,..... .. Uiq crpts, pool. cJoM tn lhAi cpta, drps, bltnl, J*tlo Balboa poeftfntulo ..... , .. _ .. . ,., .. , •...
J\,'IODERN 2 DR. low-er.
Clot;e to &y. SJ!Al/mo.
Wlntr r. • 673·1~1
From "Chriatmu Necklltif'
to outrrown Levi.s • )'CIU tin
tum '"trub tQ Cf'h" In a
DAlLY Pll.D'T d •lfltild fd ·"'"--
alortt. Adultl, no pelf. ttaJ 3 BR, 2 Ba., 2 d8Clat , d1W11hr, II garagt. Liiurwtry fteU!tin
pu mo. 1941 Pomana, Ca•I• 1tovit, rTtr:ig., cpt!I, drp•. avall11ble. SJ75 mo. 64S-3311.
MHI.. . prfv. gar. 'it blk Octaii • 1 • WILSON
SMAU. turnilhed a partment,
aU utUJtle1. no childN'n 1 or
...._ In odult mobltt homo
,,.rt. lde<J tor n u..,t
pm.n. ins mo. m --
"'" Call Ml IM6'-
a.,.. S.100/mo. Loe. No "''· 1 GARDENS e
f75-6034. l BR, I ~ BA, cpl/dt'pl.
2 BR. 2 BA. ."1>Je, yey .
(Balboa Blvd . .t. F S!. l 1285.
No · J)ets~ Buul
""-m-m.I.
EncJ patio. $.140. '42.fl«l l \
l BEDROOM, dlstl,.._r,
rttriaen.tor. $12). ,. l D I
ShallMAr. S42-<Mt . --'
0
. -' . ' . . ..
I
rrld-'Y, Ftbru"ry '1 lq72
' ,.,
r,.. A.pt . Unfurn. ' 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 .1 Apt .U -:_:":.:,' ":.:'_:;".:_· __ .....,::165.:,:: l::Ap::.1;;.. _u::.n::lu.::-'":::· ::---:165-;A::-p::t.:::U::n:::f;-u-;;rn:.:::;~-365-I A pt", Apts .• Apts.,
•-
'
Coste Mesa Coste Mesa
Furn. Of" U nfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. ·-Furn. or Unfurn. 370 ' Newport 8e1eh Newport S.1ch 1-----------370
CHILDREN
••• NEW •••
, Costa Mes• Balboa Peninsula I Costa Mesa Costa Mesa
-BA_Y_M_E_A_O-OW_A_P_T_S_ : -.-, -B-EA_U_T_lf-UL-1 ,-, -Bit WHY PARK NEWPORTERS • • ' Bn, ''" "'''rn'• IRJ;:;xfil'.f,,~§~,,]I GI '~' §§~"61C!if,,'§§~'~' UI C
2 Rr, hr11n1 l"f'!l!nJ:•;, pr1v p11-Conlf'rnporary Gsrrlen Apts TAY 'HOME ON WEEKENDS Yr11r JYltJn•l rf'nl.1l 1n Balhna ~ THE EXCITING
VILLA RIVIERA
110. Jt:i.'. fa cd, c'I"""'" i;:ai·· I'llllo.c:, frplr, pool. $l:..0-SlG::i. S . 111· R;-.~ S:."S:-1~_; ___ _
111-:•~. C;,~ ti"ai, 1 ~>0kini.: t. Call :.-1G-516l (05ta Mesa
I \.\'<l!l'r nil pd. l\IJ .11r!ul1.~. no -----~-WOULDN'T YOU 7 PALM MESA APTS
''''" f'rnrn ""'' I m.x I RH, '""· "'"" ,,., • • .ll'.'iT Fll\'l"ill!•:n ::-87 \\'. Buv ST, C.tll. fnr edull ' only. No pe!JI. -SPACIOUS -
110) 2 BR , 2 FULL BA Call 6.46 -0073 . Sl.l'i 1:.0 E. ~lsr . 64&-f,016. ll·s all here for you to enjoy Saturdays and WELL-DESIGNED FUN IN THE SUN!
• S111~·1;i1 1·Hh1nrt sp;1,.,.. Park-Lik;-Surrounding * 'l \\'EEKS rREE! * Sundays and all, week long, too. Ap!s ~·or p ,,,1,1" \\ 11,,
• l~·k 1.:a1a£1•s w lg ~t()r t AR Sl?l up -2 BR S\40 up 7 \\' 0 1 ·r1 r1·.,·r· e Bn1 ''"ii e 1.n<lrv • p.,11n~ QUIF:"J' -Dl::LUXf; POOL * * 64 2_2181 $750,000 health spa. 7 s wimn1ing pools. ;irit n Y "' '· .
e 11 \\' 111s1-.",,1 e Di.1 1., . ., 1-% & l BR J\PTS lighted tennis courts. bicycle trails. putting l -~· 2 REnHjW >\f..;
Pr\• patios • lltd Pools 2 Br. J'-Ba Studio, f'n("I h f" bo d t S 1·0115 ba ch "11h 'J'ER/t \('!'.,..: • DN'll '/. n•lnr ,h~"' 1,,1.. -. a reen, s U 11e ar , c roque . • pac < -~ I " 1 -~ ;'.; ho " * Adull nJ . nd f 1-d 339 I> r"ron1 $ ..,, !l'I ~I' 11\<1 • ~PCT1al .-. .. u11d,>1••1f1n1.: · r i; pg ~ 0 Y pe.ho. r 0 cu e-sac. elor s from $170 rnonthly, plus l or 2.-bedroorn • ~ M rt• • A ts C h 'If ""39''3 . .·nae: t"iU"pl""I ~ !http• l"I•"' • .\r S;u1 llio·i.:o ~n•\, JL1r· a 1n1que p • P n °· .,.,_._ ·'-·___ plans and 2-slory to ,vn houses \Vtlh 2 nr .1 e :-:,11111:" l'<•it .,1,.,.11111
Minutes to Newport Beach
L'n hel 1r,·ab!y large a pt.~ Decorator fur111 ~h
cd lluge Pool. Jaruz11. f'lcrtric bu1lt-1n ~. ~ha~
c:irpcts, drape:;. sauna A· 1norc !
tYtr Kl\'d $· '" l1N1l~ 1777 SCJnra Ana A\'e, ('\I I BDRl\f., alt blrn~. shai;: bedrooms. ;\ll \\•ith electric kitchens, private 1e ~:111 ,1.,~,.,1 ~:.u·ir•·,
ti.\S 111·11 1 li11~ <"••1li1nc. \h;r .. \pi 111 616-:-~l-12 .-pr~. 1!q1s, (·lo~f'd i.:ara.i::r & balcony o r pat io, carpeting, dra peries. :-iuh-e Quu•t ,\iJu!i J.1\111c ;ii
ADULTS-NO PETS
SINGLES Sl 45
anil \\.il•'I' AU Jo;uit C,\l1Lr:s·· ,t-··s1-:v11,Lr-:" pr1. patio._r 11·an! ~l~I.-terranean parkin g. elev<ilur s , optional n1a1d
Mo to Mo from S1115 2 Hr. 11 iz;ir, arlult.~. 1·pr. 2 Rr apt , frplr, privatr patio ser vice. Gourn1et food market. dry cleAncr,
622 H amilton , CM 1l1J1~. hltn.~. fncd y rd . Sl&l, Phnrw 5-18-8226 11f1rr 7 beaut y salon on grounds. See be;iutifully fur-
S.,.r :'-l••r \Ir. & 1\lr~. Jl.,IJ;in \I I o pd "" '1" I k I Oth • 548_2062 ' p;i ~'. "r · o.:><r-+ ~u. , P 111 or 11 ·ni ~. nis he<I 1nodels today. 9 a.nl . to 6 p .n1. er
DELUXE
APARTMENTS
Air ('onrt . frpl···~. :l ·""lrn
rn1n.1:: PMI.~ -l!r;il1h ~p:1 -
'J'rn111 s l'rls -G11rnc & l.:11 1
l1ard fl.00111.
'2l 3fJ.' (;:· f)r;inge Av<'. sin 3 Br:-"2-B•--. -cp-,-.,-,~""-.. times by appointment. Just north of F'ash ion ~'ii lfl ".!'" Sr•n1a Ana Avt!. $155 bit-in.~. riswhr, 2 pool~. l sland s t J amboree and San J oaquin ~!ills
NEWL Y DECO-RATED clhbQutt, $215. 546-3710. Road.
f'l1111111111i.: 1 Bil. duplrx, new * 2 RR Dupll'x w/lf'U"l'ite !.·
1·;1rp. dJ";1 prs & p111nr. 1.ov('-hll ·in.~. $l40/mo. 26 ~3 Telephone (71 4) 644-1900 for rental information.
I.\ .: " r r! •' r1 .~urrnund ini.;.~. 0 . A N A C ~I
1\la1111·1' fldul!s onlv. Sl'/.5. 1 1111"~ v~ o. ' ·' ·
+ :1'1~ llfl211 -· Sl:r.-1 nrt. util. .. ~iovr ,., PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS
:*_MERRIMA C
,XWOODS
425 Merrimac Way
Costa .Mesa
1 BDRMS. . . $1 55
2 BDRMS. S 175
Unfurnished Apt1. A vitilabl•
From $10 t o SIS LESS.
YOU'RE RIGHT-
THEY 'RE UNDERPRICED !
* BRAND NEW*
I 1561 MESA OR., Co•I•
5 blks So, of N ewport
LA COSTA APTS. I 546-9860
Mesa
Blvd.
l 111'.:J)fl.(}()\I
~·1~Q\I Sl:i·,
MEDITERRAN EAN
VILLAGE
1 --rrr1·i,i.:. furn ishrd. No kiris. no 0 Th B 1 .\J~;SA \11'n1r 2 Bft upprr. fK'I.~. <'llll ti<l2-J.'\?.), fi4fi-l&lfl. ~-~~-----"~ • •y
1 !\c11l.1· 1lf'('Or.<1lf'll , hlt~lns, _ 4.pt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn.
,·pis s, rlrps, no iw:s_ 1 rh1Jd ~O~a~n~a~P~o~i~n~t-----,,.-1 ;.:i;;;;;;;;;;;:;::;;-.,;;;;;;---365 oo~x[l '~'~~"]ll["~~iJ~-,~1-~-,~~"I C 2 Bedroom A vail. I ~
2-100 ll;i rhur Rlvd . C.:\L '
!7111 557·110:.!fl
n'ENTAI. n1-·~·1cr:
OPEN 10 A:'l l TO Ii P,\!
Fnr1•rrl ;iir hr11t111g
2 1·hlldrrn 11 rh"nn1P
l!nr ,i:, 1·olrl \\alrr furn
J Rrlrn1 . 2 Rath. 51~1{1
Carpf'I~ and rlraprs
Ruill-111 stnvr
Ca1·port-s1all i;howrr
Laundry roo1u.
rrnrrci ~·:lrr!. ·""n prl~
MESA VILLAGE Apl<,
1046 El Camino Dr. •A
546-7331
O !{. S·l1'-.-i227, _~ .. 1_1>-_1_:-.6~ _s_1;o_. LRG 2 Ar, 2 Ba, liv rni. ...Jin Huntington Be•ch _Newport Beach • Ruill·ins e ,'i11 11111\1111i:: j Apt1., Apts.,
370
PARK NEWPORT
APARTMENTS
Ln 11·~:1c Golr! l\1 rc1a\lion, rni, bl1 -in11. crpt~. rtrp~·I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-.
fnu1!. 2 RP., P:i110. eru·I gar. O("ean view. $190 f m 0 . ON BEACH!
la11nc1rornat, arHrs, no pt!l&, 837-3927, 837-Sl78.
Sl5::i rnn. 64:i-3.'J1~. 642·6499 ~------1 Bat·h<'lor. 1 or 2 Brdroorn~.
r nnl • !.anai e flrit· ll -Q~H'.~ Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfuni.
• G11riii;r. 1,.-,--------------------ALL UTrLrr!Es r .'°\Jf) Huntington Ueach Huntington Beach
A D l 1LT~. I\" 11 PET~ ;::;;::;::;:;;;;:;::;;::;::;;::;;:;:::::;;;;;:;;:;;;:;::;::;;;;;;;:;::;;::;;;
• Lnc.:. rri\'. paho -l-;:i rage
\1 /\\'Ork1X'1u·h, 2 B H. ' s ,
i·p 1 /rl rp!i. $I 6 0/ 111 0,
117:1-.1690.
SPAC. 2 & J Br. Apr. Sl40 up
Pool. cpr drp .. bl ins, hid.~ ok
, Z206 Collri::r No. 5 6·12-70.l"•
1¥.14 :'llaplr .'In. 3 642-31111 ----QUIET g11rr!f'n ,.,.!ling 2 RH.
('IH'l)l1r1, rrpl~. rlrps, bl11us,
514:, to $!Ii~" !\o pels.
lil:!-9:J64 or 8:Jl'\..-O!):i!l.
East Bluff ----------2 BR Unturn Fr. 1230/mo. anci Tow11house!<. Sp;i. pools,
NEWPORT BEACH Furniture Available !f'nnis. Fron1 1170, Acrw.;~
C I-• d' h h fron1 i'0ash1on Island Bl ,J;im·
354 A vocado St., C .M , I
642-9708
Villa Granada Apts. arpe ..... rape ... -lS v.·as t'r
h
'
_, I I · borre & San .lru1.11u in JlilJs /;:::;:::;:~~~~:::::::l:::::: Fo''r '·d-m, w;lh balcon. ea cu poo -saunas-enrus ....-'"" · Roarls. 11 1-1 1 641-1900. -------if'S 11bovf! /i .... helow. Graciou s rec room-ocean views _ __ ____ __
Jiv ing & quie1 ,urmunriing patios-ample piirking \VATE:l{FRONT, lr'l: c1 I'"
fnr fiim ily ll'i1h rhilrlren. Security guard,, Tn11•nhsr, ~ Hr, ~ R11 , ffl'n. BRAND NEW
Nr;ir Corona drt r-.lar Jligh HUNTINGTON. ]/()(} ·"<1. ff, i\·l iu iy (',\tr1<s. rmm $1[i. Dish11 a~hr r. ~h:ig
Srhnol. F lrrpl11re, V.'1"1 har ~-PACIFIC $4.-iO l*I" 1110 . Nn pf'ls. P1rr <"af])("lini:-, ii·alk-in ('lnsris.
built·in kitchrn 11.pp!iarn;e.~. & flna1 11v111I lnr lrg hn;il Fnr<·rd air hrar. r -..:tra la rt:r
835 A.\11GOS \VAY 644.2991 711 OCEAN AVJ.: .. l!.B. :t..'Xl7 f lnlry A I'•·. Ap· ronn1~. Rrauliful g;ur.r f{'W}rn.
Coldwell, Bankf'r & Co. (714) 536-1487 po111tn1(,l( 71 4 :673-~2'19. healrd pool BBQ"!<, r nclns-
J\1anaging Agt!nt Ole open JO am~ pm Daily s p Ac Jou s y,. 11 r I y ed garage!\".· quif't 5tHT'OUnri·
'.'HR, CrpL~ &. rlrapes. Choi<'e EASTS LUFF W!Ll.TAM WALTERS CO. ''PE:NTl·IOUSE APT."' 2 RR in.i::s ,r., close to shnppini;:.
2Jo11 f Y/l/i:J:J ~/,e /Je :J t ..
1 Bedroom, 1 Bath
2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths
• l:rnlral air ro11di1i1111 in.,: /I. h,.nl i11!.:
• f:hnrntinii; fir1·11lnt'r11, :J 11p11l'iou11 flPor pln1111
• I '111111unl lar,a.:r ("l0!14'lll &. 1lorni:c on p11lio
• 211'><i r11111 in1C poolll, thf'r11prutir pool, u11nt1ll
• f.yn1, hill inn l~. •lrii·in,11: r1111gt', pullinf( f(rrf'll
• • .\JI 11till1ir~ inrlutlo·li
-·
DAILV PILOT :iS
Apts.,
1 Furn. or Unfurn. 370
Costa Mes•
Huntington Beach
1 1 ,\. :? l:H. 1111!11rri. nr furn. 1
j hlk IP1111 ·~·1'.u1. A1 :n :1 i11ri l
:-;1 llo·nlhl p,~11 Al!n•. lmm 1
SI 10, 1111 ! '1111 \ll°>-1'>22, ----Newport B•ach
RESORT LIVING
FROM $135
\1• !I I 1\r Ill• •
r '"·
11 .. 11 .. 111 1n 11•• rr·111nn _ . ,
•II "1111111~, 11'1 1111~, h1!111 n!~,
l!f' dih rJ11 1'\~, ~/lllHil~. flf'l-
'l"'i'. l11dr.1r s::.nl f rlr1\'1 ni::
,.,,.,,., •• 1•h1hh.111•f', f'1/'.
<'11-11>111 1lr,·orn11•1I .•11111:1,,~.
IX 1 1'1{. l·'111111~nrr1 /,,\In
f11 1'•1 'hrd ~" lr1<r l"<'flli ll~rl.
\lud•'I~ ()pr11 11.1 111 in In i ,
OAK WOOD GARDE N
APARTMENTS
( /~"~nrt J ,1\ 111i:: fnr
f\d11l1~ onl.\.I
~~:\\T•on·r nf:ACJ l
l61h 11t ]i, 1ne
j -VISTA DEL MESA_
Apartments
1 N 2 HI(. ~·urn. & IJnf. nt.~h-
11·11.~hrr • S1nv,. k rl.rln i;: -
Shai;i: •·rpr'~·l.l"l{ Rr(" 1'f'n1 er.
rl.1-'..\/T .'\l :u·1.~ $1"1."1
Irvine & Mes• Drive
' -10<·. in J\.1f'sa Vrrde. lmmed. 2 Br. 2 ha upstair.~ virw 11pl, -----& Den. Avll il !o rig hl part)' Arlul t li1·ini:: nn P<'I~. 11.-'11 \~f Q &
U~f O~~ll~fO * 5-45-4855 *
AHnv~: Al.I.' N r1\•rnrt
Tnll'rr,.. lrn1n $.1.'ll. Ray
ln1ri1. 'l Br 2 RA .• rifl("k8.
·:121 \\'. ('na~t Hwy .
71 l/frl2-2202
I 1·
• ' I
t
' I
•"ll·rupan(·y. $130 per mo. Carprted, draped, bltn!I". 2 2 Wks free Rent :Fe b. 25th ror only $2.)1)/mo. EL CORDOVA APTS.
!162-91194. t"OV('rerl parking spices. ~16 W11lk lo beai·h. new luxuriou!'( CRll fi7:l-190~. 20TI Charle St. *"12·4470 i\Pf\R~·~'"7:NTS I ],~;~:. 2 RR "'/pa1io. qu if't . ''D" An1igo!I. S250 mo. lrg 1 RR , Shag-rTpt , Bltns, EASTRLUFF <lb: .. 1 Odrni .. 3 Near .Harbor & llan1ilton St.
2 BR. 11, Bf\ ........ $ll1fl l rpt/rirps, s10~·,./rr rri~. yearly. rtrp.~. p11!1n. l11nai 11rr11, hhq. ba .•. ~i' rm/d<'ll. Ctn. blt-
3 BR . 2 RA ••••..••.• St.">~i. f:arflgf'. Adul!!<, no pell!. I ,75.,0SO i1uh1rrranr11n park'Jl, g11 r illl!:. trpl, patio, rnrl cibl Cllr.l •----------I
iAI-"° ,\r All.. ~·!'P..N i 1 _6!f>.-27!)11. I 11va il. R11!cnni ,,~. trplr·.~. lrlf!rv fae1I porrl/rrr nr11r 1-:-r:F::-2-Afl111fmn -11;-n:;
New adult garden A pts. 1 E/SID~:. 11tt rar. 2 BR, rpl!< .. 1 ... MM&IOlllT Cl.,& lnrlry fll("i!, 5.19·l61>1 , ~1'1.0109. hy 6'14-640'1 nr f>.14-.'i03i 1 1 "-•
1 ri hi rl h h 1 ~36·501~. _ ___ __ __ ri::. \</Irr rno~·~ !<l.-.r:ii,:r , I 151 E. 21st 641>-8666 rp~. t 11~. "IV~ r, enr 1-.-NEW-DE L UXE-.-------SF:ACLJFF :v!ANOH . .\pTs-2 i::a~ hr;it k rlrr. !<lnvr I
AOULT LIV l'IG
'-----"'"_''''_]~
6551 Warner, Huntington Bea<h J Rooms 400
714/847-8526 --------
~3 B -2 B h i::ar., no Pf'!S. ~18-00"1 ! LRG . 2 BR. $140 I Rr. S160 Unf. S17:l rurn SlfiO/n1n .. ~ 10 drp ; Al~" drm * at ~\1Lt-BP.. duplrx w/'i!_ar,, 3 RR. 2 BA Apt fo~i leasr~ !Jnrtrr Nr 1v i\1~nagrn11•ol Cpts. rlrpll. bltn~. g11rb ch.~pl. 1.rg. R:11"h Apt . furn. u1il
Living room wuh cathedral I pii!m l ariult nn pf'lS l 132 1 lnc.ld spac. ma.!ller.11 ,ted d Ask about our ciismunt plan 152.'i Placentia A\f' ,\sk p<I . $lJj/n1n., S~O cirp. ~II
ce1hni.:: & frplc, Separa1 e ~.R.I! ,\. Ray s;. r..i2-.!(~2o . rm & db! ,g~r11;;;, ~ ~ oor &. move-in allO\\". Chlldrrn & a.bciul our di~unr. ~s.26Ji2. El Ca1n1m. ;\n. 1. C\I.
!aundrv 11re11. r.:ntJ palio. ---- - --OpPner a\ar. ere:-limall Pf'IS 1.1.rlmn1e. Ne"·ty SY•im~i ng pool & children"s 1 Br duptf'x, shag crp!. drp~. ation IH'l!a . rt>der. Sra Air Apl.~. l Bil, 2 li;i. fr·plr•, d~hv.•hr.1 _,._r._>-0-1_:_o1_, ------~ .... ]'If\[.!-: !R lo '1 1 "'!1h ki11·ht"l1 -I & launitrv 11nvli;:!I. Altrr 2 bll ~s "'' A1i"IO< Sl'O '211 e $275 e I blk N f •• , !•ff" I J 0t·1·a11 VI('\\. S:lllO/n10 yol_, playground. $200. "· ·" · " · · ~ · • · .. o ... 1111111 .., ,nr~t· 1
1-fAR.BOR GREE.'lS Or·ani.:<' Av _ :>4!l-1771. 8e5 An1igo!1 \Vay, NB 729 Apl 6 Ul1ea ;i.10·2796 ava.11. ~I l3rd S1 , &12-2020 HACIENDA
HARBOR
Apts., Apts., p111 •·nll fi42-1131fl.
F urn . or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 0-;...· .,;;;, _ _;;.,;;;;;;;•! ,16 ,3_,3 ,-.... l\111n.1i.:ecl By S:i&-7070 -"' MG-<_114. "" -• .~ 3 RDRM , 2 Ba., ..,, pt!<. drps. \VfLLTAM \VAL'rER.c; CO. --f -~----
---*--$170 * bl11ns., pa1 io. 10.10 El ! •MOVE: JN TODAY !• , 2 BR, 2 Ba, S/Coven, ("pt'rl,
1 .-1 . !I Ca mino St, 962-577.l Fountain Valley Kidll & pc-ts wclc.01nr. 2 Br., 11rp"tl, ~k & ea.r. No pr!i;
'·1 'RR , rl~ lA~ ,P·• ~: 1011111~· $13!1 . .All extras_ Pool, f,!ar., l.11)()/prr mo. Siri r tic avail.
241 AV()('AI)() ST!lJ.;f:T
Ac1ul1~ nnly -No Pris
neluxr 1 t.. 2 BR. Pnn1 ("rp1i;, rr~. ns · 111~111 1111r LR(; 2 RR, New CllJI & rlrp!<, NICE area. nr"·ly p11.lntrrl. ,-i-si•o Gara"e. D1s!nvshr. rain ut1L
kl bl paUo, furnilul'e a vail. J7:l62-1 ~ .. c11Sl'Ollll1 pl;in .'IS() Crnlrr $1.10 rno. J,11ri:;r 2 BR . r tn!'(. _· ___ .:_: ··--FHOTl-11150. 646-1204
_:"1 ,_Cilt_. f.12·~'\4(1, :,..1,11.m~2._ 1 • * M.11·7200 * • Sl :J!", n1o. Call 549·1704. A f(eelwn Ln., H · B • LARGI:: .1 RR. 2 BA, ("pts.
_ 1147-3669 or 96~7.~10. rl hll r· 1· hlk•-----------Apt. Unfurn. J65 Apt. Unfu'rn. 365 A t Unfurn. 365 rp~. n.~. '111·acr. :i FABULOUS 2 BR 1-'---------'-----------.CP'---------* FRESH AIR 1o b11y. J hlk flC("8n . $:Zfl."1 -'-':v:;":"=::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;'a'~v~;;"a"~;;~;;&iiiii:iiiiiiil~•~·~;n~oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;i-I \Valk 3 blks to Beach! mn.
1-~ .... !'i-4.11-
21120
· $ 150 & $165 Furn/ Unf Lg,.. :1 RR Apl, nr"•ly rlN'flr. 2204 "'· OCF.AN ~·RnNT )'nu 1\'nn't finci a Jar,r:rr. nu·rr
Ohl a tlarherl a:11r, rrplr, I~ 1 RR. $150/mn. YrR.rly. R.fll lor lr.~s. Hr11ur. cardrn
•11youfH~n ac Park Wes•1
Quick to reserve an spartment .•• In our new adult section. (Th•
Quicker you are, lhe better your chances of getting tM lloor plan
" hf C o • , u n r1 e ck Rl"l'a. pal111~. Qu1l'! rir;ifi .rnr! 011: tn.<;, exf'<'pt rrfrig. P ""'· .. rp~. . ·
1 -N 644 ~~11-!<trre1, Jlll(! S. or N""·porr "'~.i. o mgr~, no Pf"ls. -.1.,, ...
5.1&1711. --------1 Avr. Arhilt~. nn rrt.~. 2020
2 BR in Np! HI~. Pv1 p.Aftn. ~-ul!r>rlon A\'('., C.f¥1. (Just
F.l"l<"I £Ar. St.-.v~ rompl F:. nf Ray 1 fi42-R690.
rrptd._!IGO. ~8-9&9:1. __ * 2 BEDROOM *
LGE 2 Br. _2 Ba. Yrs )Sf' 1•;. Ra Tn"•nhouse rnncrpl.
Sl!lO/mn. 2l;i Prosprc'I _Al'(', Beam crll1n~~. (.'Xtra !rg I
Newpol1 Shorr!<. 4~1-!Y.il2._ hl'rlrm~. encl J rio. rccrf'a-
SPACIOUS 4 Rr. 2 1~ 811. !inn rn1, sauna h.CJ!h.~. f'l(". j
1 BR., $125 up. 2 BR., 2 BA ..
$1 60. up. Cp15, drps. pool,
N'C. r m. Walk to hearh.
Clo!W m gnll. 2?0 12th St.,
536--0492. 119 15th s t • '
~1244.
:Z & l BR, $140 up. Pool. Like n""'· 1 hlk to bf'a("h. Adulrs. Our Sund;iy affrr-
Childrf'na bonu.~. i\lora Kai I Yrllrly. 61.\.-24 ."'l:i. noon J3.n.q ·~ ~ ~-rre Arr
Apt ~ JRll81 Mora K;ii Ln, 1h -----------i..f"l<snn~ ~l11rt 1 nc: ~nnn
blk i:. of Brarh. 962-.11.99-1. NF:\\' Rluffs Cor"llln. 2 RP.., HAR.8 .0R GREENS
cirn '.I RA , pool. 11. 11 e CHE7. ORO APTS_ e fHnt:nillf'~. $.~:il. ~:\3....(19!'1~ f---~~·16-502~i~~--
112:Y4 Allantt1 . J·2-3 Br'~. Pool. -.:C.-----'-e ~J>AC!Ol1S e NT·:\V APT. nn lhr Prn1nsu!a . Pr i \·11tf' cloocri gar.
D "" "3~" S2'I'l p.-i· rnnn!h. 2 Stnry. \ \\'a.<l1rr/ r)·rr. .,.,.,...,,, ·"'·
Rrdroon1. 673-3!).17. B EACHWOOD APTS.
.~· 2 R~. \I / Trrr:11·r~.
---~·rnni $1~0 -s21:. mn ~F.f\SE/01111011, 2 hr & (!rn. Sh11,g ('Pl~. ci r·rs .. ~a111111 .~,
Irvine Irvine
Clorslfled ods ore
, ,. , ensy to use
I n11d ln1v
itt cost.
and !oca1 1on that lit you bes!) t:"
Park West apartments tend to fill up fast
With junio r ex:ecu1rves. And secretaries-. And engineers. And
everybody else who likes our location. (Close to empl oyment centers
and freeways. Near s hopping, schools, churches and the UC lrvlne
campus.)
Branci nl'IV 1-2-.1 nr. \\'11lk
tn Noach. Cpl rlrrs. bltn.~.
frpl. 125 16th SI. !!47.J!l:i7.
21, h~ .. o;nni P vii'", Anxinu.~ pnnl, i11•·11~11, rnr·J g;ir, 642 5678
i\i,:rn! 67~>-722;, l/lR 0111r 1 f\dnl1 lit •n<' Phone •
With lady golfers. And everybody else who likes living across the
street from an 18-hole public gol f course.
With weight-watchers. And weight-lifters. And ewrybody else
who could gain (or lose) something from Park West's fabulous rec-
reation. (Swimming a nd therapy pools. Complete heallh club willt
trained attendants. Night-lighted tennis. Volleybalf, handball. Large
turf area for jogging a nd touch football. Plus lounges, game ind
card rooms Jn the handsome two-story clubhouse.}
Park West has many otlter altraclions, loo, So even ir you'ra not
an e11:ecutive, or a golfer, or a weight-watcher ••. you'll alill fit Jn. U
you hurry. _ , •
(Families: you'll fit in here. loo. SJ'&Cial sec\1ons with tot lots.
Special facili ties: Pre-school.Junior Olympi' size pool. Teen center.)
w•=s•I'
r 3883 Parkvlew Lane, Irvine. Just off !he San Diego F-11 CUl¥lr Rotd.f
On"! bedroom, fr om S180. Two bedroom, two bl1hfram t1tl.
BEACH-BLUFF APTS:
Spac 2 Br, 2 811. Ponl . Palio.
D!W. szn Ellis 842-7&11.
2 BR Studio Rpl, 1111 rler,
Crpt'd. drp'd. $150/mo, Call
53&-9937.
2 BR. S131l, cpl~. cl.rps, stovr.
No J)f!t:o;. f'ence-d. Child OK.
847-7064.
Irvine
PARK WEST
APARTMENTS
Bdrm. From S160
2 Bdrm., 2 Ba,
From $195
388.1 Parkviry,• l.ar.c
Trvine. (Ju~r nft
S.11.n Diego f"wy at Culver Rrl )
I &: :Z BR on quirt 11~1 .
$165, util. incl, AVlltloble
"Feb. 7 2/7 aft 7 p.m .
213:521-7665 or 944-5717.
r OR Le11 1e: 2 BR. 2 8'1 ..
bltnt. bf-11.ch-lront. a p t •
Adu ti., $300, 5.16-71 24 I've~.
L•gun• Niguel
Lagun• Niguel Apts
1 Bit, J BA +-2 BR, 2 BA
FROM Sts.'l. C'q>fd, drp'd,
11:•• pd., TV cabl'" w11lrr,
All bltn!I, lndry iln'A!I. hid.
pool, BBQ'1, priv palini1 1'.
bl'lJoonif'g. 0;ppn· 10 A.M. lo
~ P.M. 495-4n2, 499-2277.
29()41 Alnma. ott Crown Val-
ley Prkwy.
Mei• Verde
\V F:~Trr.r~·-r-.-"-,-, -2 MERRIMAC WOODS for results!
Rrdroom 2 balh. Ariul ls on·1--'~~~· -'-''~'-'~"'~"-'-"-'~"·~, _c_.'_1 _ '-=======~=~=========== ly. $275. A,1;1 675-4!1'.lfl. I ~ ---""'-_:_~_:_c_-----f Apts ., I Apts., Apts.,
Santa Ana Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370
FAMILIES
WELCOME!
Santa Ana Santa Ana
SINGLE STORY
South Se• Atmo1ph•re
2 BDRM-2 BATll
$175/mo.
Carprt~ 11nrl Dra1"'11
Air Cnnd1tioncrt
PriVll re P11.l!011
llF.ATF.0 POOi.
C11rpnrt k Slorage
Nr. School.~
Nr. Sn. Coa ~i PIR.7.,11
HIDDEN VILLAGE
2500 Sou th Sa.HR
(rnter 2 blk.11 W. ol Bristol,
oH Warner on Llnti& Way,
llOUlh to W, Central!
Santa An& e 5*-152!1
3 Hea1f'd Pool•
!Arge Clubhouse etc. B8Q
Child Can Center
Gret1I ne1v 1 2 ' 3 Bdmu
rrom $149
SOUTH COAST
VILLAS
1101 Mai=Artbur Blvd.
"'6-8S23
l Br. encl 1ar. rw"w <ktttr.
Sm11.rl rhild ok. $1 In I mo.
Cul-<le-M<' 11tr. 839-24.'il!.
S•n Ju•n C•pistrano
UNF. CApi1tr. OmOO lnr nonl,
2 B<lrm., porrl, Wa11h/dry.
S.180/mo. 675-2162.
Westcliff
CLASSIFIED
HOURS I
I ~:00 n.m. 1n 5 'Jl.m.
J\fondny lhr!I r r!dll.'f
9 to noon S.11.turd11.y
I Ad~·c rrl.~rr!l n111.r, place
th<'ir ads by tc ephone I COSTA 1'.J~:S A '1FflCE JJn \V. B11y
6112-5678
NE\\'PORT AEAOI
3333 Nr\\'rlflrt Bl vd.
642-SG78
HUNTINGTfJ N REACH
17875 Br;tr h Blvd.
540-1220
I~Al.lJ './A nEACit
2 22 1' orrst .\ve.
494-9466
SAN f'f.E:'o.'1F.NTP.
305 N •. El C11mi no Real
•192-4420 .
NORTJr CO!JNT"{
dJa l !rec 540-1.22()
CLASSIFIED
DEADLINES
DcArllinc fqr r·opy .!(; l<illo;
l,q 5:30 Ii m. !hr dll y he·
forr 11u i!ir·11 !i11n, r xcrrt
for r.1nnday Eri illfln
'""hrn flrnd!lnc Is Satur-
day, 1'.! noon.
CLASSIFIED
REGULATIONS
ERRORS: Advrr tisr.n:
~hould chl:'t'k their adtl
dally & report <'rron1
imn1f'diatf'/y. TH t:
DAILY PILOT fl!UlumC5
ti11.billl y for thr flni.t ln-
co1Tcct Insertion ()n!y,
CANCELLATIONS:
\.Vhl'n killin1: .an ad br
sure to 111ake 11. rrrnrd
nf the K ILi~ NUMBER
;:1l'rn you by your ad
1.a.krr tl!l rocctpl ot ,ynur
(·ancrltallon. TI1!s kJll
nun1h,.r m ust be 11r~
scntrd by the 11dvt'rtlser
in ca.,e ot a d ispute.
CA NCELT~ATION' () n
COH R~Xl'lON OF' NEW
AD BErORE RUNNJNG:
Every c frort ls made f()
kill or correct a new Ad
th11.t hu hf>t'n ordered,
but \\'C cannot !nl•ran-
tee to do 5o until the ad
hll!l a p~arcd In thto pa.
JK'r.
D1~1E-A-Ll 1''E ADS:
These ad5 ar,. 11trlc t?Y
Cllsh In 11.dv11.nr.:r by m•ll
I nr 11l 11n v nnr n( our or-
ri ct's. NO phonf! ordt'rS.
TJIE IJAILY PILOT 1·f'-
~f'l"\'l.'!l 1ht" r ichl lrt c)as-~ify. f'dil, .-·•·n••H' "" rr-fus,. Any 11d\•~1·tl~111rnt .
•nd lo ch11n1te Ii.. ra!r!l
~ tt>.1t:ul11tlon.s without
prior nntlcc.
CLASSIFIED
I MAILING ADDRESS
P. 0. 811~ 1560,
I Cost111 ~les11.
DELUXE 2 .\ 3 BR, 2 Ra .
encl a;l'lr $150 up. Ren~I
Ofr, 3095 Mace .A v e .
~1034
SHia • 2 RI!. ('f'll~/t1tp~. bltn~:.
~11.m <'"il. llr11!~d pool
qulf'I adult!I, no pe 111
642--251~.
94?'126
ONE PICTURI IS WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS I ~~~~~~~~1
le adv enturou1 -Come diicover for yourielf oll lh• I DAILY PILOT ..
. --
:z nR., CAf1)f't.11. dra.Pf'!I. buflr-
lm, f'xNJl,.m lorai10n In
M,.. v~. 1 1~0 /mo. --
fon!ostic fe oture1 of our "Mou ntoin Greenery Apartments,"
3050 s. BRISTOL, SANTA ANA ''·~"'HO.,. O• IOI/TH COAST'"" I CLASSIFIED ADS '·p1k• •0
1 <nde" "'" Tf"""" I & 2 bedroom 557-0586 Adult Uvin g j FOR ACTION. , ,
a.nut_,. rolumn ht. nr )ll)U'
1
~·•'•••l•"•ll, M•"•••" IJy I•, <•v"''•• Mtmt. c.. ~u .... 1 • .,..1nr>buck,_ ~===================~ CALL 642-5671
------
t
I
j
I
"
I •
("'\
•
'
Looking For Someone
To Take An 'Order?
We 're Ciood At It
)
We'll even pay the postage to get you to give us an onle~ )Get
ready for some quick profits by mailing in your order today. Put
a hard-working DAILY PILOT classified want ad to work for you.
USE THIS ORDER FORM
USE THIS HAND Y ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE!
S SHORT W ORl>S MAKE ONE LINE-NO Al> LESS THAN 3 LINES
' TIMfS
-"
S4.SO
SS.BO
$6.80
PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0
OR USE YOUR
CH ARG E CAR D •• Publi1~ fer •••• , ,, ,, ,, , d1v1, be9•11M"9 , •..•.• •• •• •• •••••• ,, •••• •••
ci.,.;i,,,,,,,.., •...........................•..•......•....•.•...•
N1...,1 •.''. •• '' '•. • •• •• • • '. •' ••••••• ' ••••• • ••••••• •. • •' •' '•. • • • •
"-.ldrru ••• , •• , •••••••. , •••.•••••.. , , . , •• , ••••.•.• • • .. ,.,., •• , • •
C.ly ••••·••••••••••·•••••···•·•••· P~o~• ....................... .
M•1l•r C~•r91 Numb1r , ..........•• , , . , , E~pir •li on O .. t, . , . , .. , •
l~"j,A..,1ri(1rd Number , .•. , , , .. , .. , . , ..• fz ipr,.lion 0,1, , , , ,, •.•
• ' " TIMES TI MES T1 MfS
---
$7.40 Sll.70 $17.70
$8.28 $14.SO $22.$0
$1 0.76 $1 7.JO $27.30
TO FIC:.UJ:f COST
Pul onlv "'"• "'""' i11 ••'" ~:i•<• •b"••· t11clud• v•u•
e cldr•u or p~on e 11u,..b•r.
n •• ,.,,! of your .J ;, •• ·~·
end of I~• !;no on wh.i<h the
1.,1 word e l vou• eel ;, writ.
le ~. ,1.Jd $1.00 plu1 l ljn•t
.,(,~ of YOU .l1oir1 Ut t ef
Q,1.1LY PILOT l o• ttt~i<•
wdh. m1il1d r1 p!i1~.
-.. --.--..-..-. CU T Hf~E -l'ASTE ON YOU R fNVfLOl'E------
Classified Dept:
BUSINESS REPLY MA IL
Orange Coa1t DAILY PILOT
P. 0 . Box I 560
Co1ta Me1a, Cal;f. n626
Or Give Us an Order by Phone
At 642-5678, The Direct Line to ·
'
•
•
Cla11lflecl Want Ad
~ .
•11i1LTS •
• . t
l I
' ' .,
' ' '
. .
J: •
I •' " " • • • ;
' ' 'l
I 'j: ··:
t .~l
. • ..
' ' l I
I ' • I
• • ~ •
' • < : !
.
'
I
' '
...
'° ' I .
• •
Are You Letting Cash
Slip Through Your Fingers
. .
S~ If You Have Any
_ .. -•
Of These lhings A
DAILY PILOT
WANT-AD
Will Sell Fast!
1. Stove
2. Guitar
3. Baby Crib
4. Electric Saw
S. C11mer11
6. Washer
7. Outbo11rd Motor
8. Stereo Set
9. Couch
10. Cl11 rinet
11 . Refriger11tor
1'2. Pickup Truck
13. Sewing M11ch lne
14. Surfbo11rd
15. Machine Tools
16. Dishw11sher
17. Puppy
18. Cabin Cruise r
19. Golf Cart
20. Barometer
21. St1mp Collection
22. Dinette Set
23. Pl ay Pen
24. Bowling Btll
25. Water Ski1
26. frH1er
27 .. Suite•••
28. Clock
29. Bicycle
30. Typt1wrlter
31 . Bar Stools
32. Encyclopedi•
33. Vacuum Cleaner
34, Tropical Fi1h
35. Hot Rod Equipm't
36. File Cabinet
37. Golf Clubs
38. Sterling Silver
39. Victorian Mir ror
40. Bedroom S.t
41 . Slide Projector
42. Lawn Mower
43 . Pool Table
44. Ti res
45. PianC\...
46. Fur C~
41. Drapes
48. Linens
49. HorH
SO. Airplane
51 . Org1n
52. Exercycle
53. Rare Books
54. Ski Boots
55. High Choir
56. Coins
51. Electric Train
51. Kitten
59. Cl11slc Auto
60. CoflH T1bl1
61 . Motorcycle
62. Accordion
63. Skis
M. TV Sot
65 . Workbench
66. Diarnond Witch
61 . Go-Kart
68. Ironer
69. Camping Triller
70. Antique Furniture
71 . Tape Recorder
72. Sailbo1t
73. Sports Cer
14. Mattress Box Spgs
75. lnboord Sf'Mdboot
16. Shotgun
n . Siddle
78. Dort Gome
79. Punching lag
80. Baby C1rrl1P
81. Drums
12. Rifle
13. °""' 14. SCUBA Gelr
Thew or any otlier extra things around the h-
c:an be tvmed Into c:ash with a
D'.AILJ; PllOt WANT-'.A.D ...
so
. . -Poh .. ;t · Juj-t ·· ·Sit ·There!·
. . ' ,_ •'
' DIAL DIRICT
.. . , .
'
Frld11, February 4, lCi172 DUL V •ILOT :J7
I~ I'--_ ... _ ... __,J~l1 !'--t_ ..... ,._, ..... __,]8]11
&
)@ ......
LKl .... f ..... 18111 l,.,..,,_
Rooms
Bu•ln.11 Rental 445 ! Found (fr .. i1d1I 550
~~·1 1;;::;;, :~ ~~;~~.·FOR Rent: Deiuxi!! 0N1rt's. I FND blk k. Erf'Y hunnllK dog.
p:I . JJ4 ~h S!., See i\tgr. lndu~trtal &.n"ll, New bld1: I r ml. VI(', &ach Blvd. &
Apt. 6 Jt.B. nr, San Olt'flll Frv.y & Sl1ttrr, JIB. 842-85.17.
• C'mwn V11.UPy P • r k \I. 11 ) f-;No--:--;;'n char{'(MI! kittl"n.
ROOl30 Ml~'k. $15 Wk\. up w/2k1•11 !lll-1400. I V1r. \\'. NP"'f"•rt Blvd.,
Found (frM •d1 ) .550 Lost 55!
J.'EMALE BAsf'nj [' APRICOT Cllf'kllP'lfl lf'mitle
011.!rnal!nn. \I' ht 1,. w hlk
1
PUPflY In\! v1r1n1') Ch1 1~an
marks. In ht'at. Vf'I)' frif'nd ''-' !.· \'111 \'1 rntn, \.I V. l/31
Jy & "'l"ll tr.:ul'l('d. Vir t A\l Rr"ar<l' '117fll50 e.\t
Flo'olo·er & .V., Altnn ;;. A 24-1 or !l30·301S rvf'.~. ~~2'618. ' l~O:-;T 111;1lr PU/IP\, v«-.-f~f.-t~I ~. "' u~ 'pt!I, · b ~fANUFACTURTNG, Sale~.1 67J-:?72fi . t<ewport Bl\'d., C. i\-1 . u· c-• I • -----~-54A-9i». n 1c.-llpAt'f'. ""'-' ..ag\ln1t BLACK 11111/P C n c It er FOUND J an, 27th !nv11.blr 1 location, S\00. lo $390. 1110. ~flilnlr!, , 1r Bf'1ch Rlvtl. & lrnl. nierhum Sl7.l'rt, J11pr1 rn1
!""" lnnd. Rl111 k "-1>>hiTr
"/hr•111 11 r111 ~ 1r Jnuoo
tilf'"il~ rnnfart . .ll!7-.'\·1."t-1. ROOM, private ir nrranrP &· 494·465.1. I r.1111r,. 211 Al1tlvlm11., H.B. k "'hllf' sh11i,:izy p11.r! p,......JI,.
bilth. Coron11. rlf'I Mar, 1..Arly Industrial Rental 450 co~1'5r.N-R;;rlP\'er--Vir. V1r, ,W!h ,(: \\'all11rP, l' \I
l)nly. $60. 673-7•169. I · 1 ~1'-.':i6'l7 ~-oR rent to lad OOt'troo~' Edinger-Santa An• 17111 St ,ft 1'\u(lf'rior: r ~f. Ap--·-.~·-·.,..,;-;co---cc--'t· ""rv. ..., fl •. ,1 1 • 1 pr,,x. 1 }r~. n1rl fi7:\-A41!l. YOUNr. malP (~rmu1n Slv•p on 2n.1 floor ga r&il' Jll1aJ" .........., ...,. • ... n , 1p:. 11TH1 _ _ __ T CM~ k s.ii-066!1 ' nfhcP, nf'ar N""'f)()rt Fn11• fll.l'~: Pllr11kerl vie Onvcr . an ""Jnr. v1r 011rs:.:1 lh•.• .
par· " In So. San111. Ana. $2!il. p.•r [)r & llilh . N.A. 67:t-1717. Mn Ju11n f',lpn. 11rl1 n1;1n
Gues1 Hom• 415 f --nPrrrl. Ail & "",." 4!l~ !~fl") A 1. R · mn., ,.a~(lrmn.lnn1n. AL>l'l.T mil.I,. g 1111n,..o;r __ • _ ppl!lnce epatr
SCOTT'S (;ue.o;I l!nnlf' \\a!s1.,nrrh Rr11l E!'tatf' I ii h•<i\Jar, \'Jr, v111. L.irlo l B!.ACK & bJT111n l i,.rm11n 1 & Paris
PrL\-alf' a r M'ffil-J>rll'tl\f' 6..19-4210 :-.'nrd . N.B. G75-tl.~. Slif'phM'rl . ff'nu1lr , I ~ r I -,:---------
avail for am h u ! 11 t 0 r 1 -!RI •11 o. 1 f nd ~oun.i;;-Vil"1n1ty \'u·tnn:1 ..,. /l" <111111 \rrli-•n1·r fif'['fl !r
4 000 59 FT ~ .,...Her, ma f', ou fin Co~111 \ff'sa. &IHAA:'. \\,,,h,·r, Dr.'•·r f) ,1 111.,~hrr pf"rsan. Nurrit10u11 foorl & 1 • • 11 hf'a, h nr 461h Sr , r.; B. '
d S l I SSS <it \H.'\.\TEF11 • .i \f.-fi6'.\-l beau1. s u r r o u n 1 n I! s . prink!e,-1 • <rl>ocl locAtinn. 67'.-2372. OS
5.i7-4JR7. ~!·~-~ere~~~· Realtor J:·E\!ALE lrlllh Sr11t•r pup ' o,~\f~A~l~.J.-.-T-,-,-,-,-"',...."_'_".-"-.,-,,. sa bY.ittlng
BEAUTU"UL 1 lrve! pvt l8JO N Bf 11 h! .1 mo't1 old, flf'a rolll\r stn1n;11 ·h. hll"k 1.. o: r r ·' c, .. -,-.f-'.-n,-n-tl-,0-.--1-1-1-,--1,·,.·n h<>me for 11mbuli!.tnrv. • r11'JXlrt vd., C.:'ll. I "" 1 • 111 11 · ,. tn
S4•7729 ;o0:!-I"'""'· I ~tr1 .....n hack. \ ic·. S.~111ri 1 1 fl •• I o--~,,.., 1~" ,·,1.rl' rw ~ r" .1c;r<. .: \. lr>1 2ue~t8. Pf't'!'iOrnl z.,u O\'Jni;: An11 /\\ 11:-011 (_'\f. nP11Arol rare. 557-."'527. ________ . ___ 1 FOUND M11Jr husky, v1cin1ty "ll ,:,·7 r.fi(J 1110: 111\d prr!"">11AI n11 rr111nn •
.\I I 12.iO SfJ . It. 11•/nfh rr. 12r , 17111 anrl rn11in, S11.nt11, An.<1. _._._· _1 -'l. 11 .. 1 11\Pa l~. I• nerd 1,,r.;
BOARDING CAN", l11u1idry
rnr the 11ctil'" Pldrr\y
PrivAtl'. $250; 11emi, $2':IO.
531-.-1114.
rPar door $1.i9.5(} n1n. Al.~" Call brl11·e,.n JO and 5. LOS'f, rniil~.lri.~h .~11rr .~. (,q"'( hnn1e il!lfl f;i111 1tv "n·
:.~ /IQ fL . 2 h11 . lt:r fJ't)l!I ~9-210.1 /\1111111 I r ITI " I f'. hl11rk I •t""l1111f'nt . \\ •'l'k <!~, ~ nnh
nrf1rr. 11c s•1 , /1 . $.11:> r11n l..ARt:E rf'<I "-\i'hllt' l'llRle Cor·k-R-fl'Vl 11\ SPal Rt'•H'li l·,,·rllr nt rrl~ $11~l 11kl)· ..
l:l•IO ~1111 S!. ('. \!. ,)OJ.! 11/11r,.1111e fn ur1'1 \'Ir Rr1111rd . Phnnr i!1S-.li77 °''~-ll~tl.l.
Summer Rentals 420 fi 11>~·~1.l1 rl11y~. li·l&-Oli~"~r~ I ~larhnr H i~h ·°' r h "n I . 1 CnL1.1r; Sh;rhf'rrlPur 'I n1•~ R,\HYSITTJN(; 011 r hnm" ~~~,l~L-L-f~ra_d_'_"'_'_n_f_ht_c_m_<_h,-rl· ti.-,()1 Sq . VI .\11 hlrlc; 11 /nr. .'1.1:-l~fil. I Ill !RI:~ V1« fl11rhnr I: \'1r • .~noo "'1 r1, 1111~ l•lll•"!i xln 1
.1 Brlrn1., 2 BR. hnrnf' In f ief'~.~ l11rg~ :·rar ".tv>r. llr : f:°·NU:-r-.1in . SchMUt.("r Vw lOrlll c .. ~I . Lit~ n111rkllll!"S. ( r_l,11 liir1I Crn1f1.r<tl fl";irhf'r
Tnkyn from mj{l June f(l ft . 1.19 \\·h1tt!f'r ~I. ('ill. .T11~nllnP Al'P. ~ Cro1~I ;i,ii::.21n______ :'\('\I !n Sri. ( '<!. r111 ;:;i
Par!y Aug. for bE>11ch hnn11• f.41>-:.033 day~; 6 46-0fi.I: I l h1y., ('rl,\1. K,.n 'f> :'11nhllf', LOST Black Gt'{'il! ll11nP :i.1 :--:-P-li'l"
similar size in Sri. Calif. •'V"~-fi-\.1-7077. 11 /11hth• ~pol nn r•hr.~r. ~ff'!)rc1,-,-o,c,-1.0-.-7~,-m-.7;-,,c,I
\\'ri!r 11 irma1l. i™:ld'i::-photo Storage 455 FOliND 11·ha~ l'l n n rl J,,.. ~:,;~~~-2Ll/i~2-!liJ\ r rn . !lot , mr;il.~. :\1nt r ;irr
lo George R ingwald. female. Vir, Qr11nge Ave !l;irhor/R11ke r 11re<1.
Kasumigaseki B uildiog , STORAGE: SpaN', $.l.l mo. hrtwecn 19th & 20th, Cosla BROWN Mi!Chf'I full nr ·.1r.-1:~i!l.
Room 152.8, 2-~. Kasumi-20x20 enclosed l'QOTTI. fllMiA. 54!L!}40j, l'rhool hoo~ v1r Sh;iJ1mRr, ;..·~.:\\"=P~O~R~T~l~f.-,.~f-,l-.•-m-n-,h<-,
gaseki 3-chome, Chiyor!a.ku, 645-3.5.'l!) f"OUND: Apricot m 11 I,. S·~;\\·IU'rl. 5 4 8 -:t 6fi 9, 11·ill r·arr f1Jr ~"!Jr 2.7 }T nlt1
Tokyo, J apan. Rentals Wanted 460 pocxl!t'. 1_2 yrs flld, !Ang ,lJ · I rhil!t All nr p.irt rlay.
Rentals to Shire 430 UNFURN. 11.pt. wa n 1 f' <I t11 1J. Vil". SAn1A An11 Avr & LOS'T: Jk>agle t~'P" hnund ('4t~-6:!1li.
NE\VPORT Be II.ch: pro-Balboa Pf'nin arr.<1, 2 BR Mrs11 Dr. C.M. 645-11!75. Irma.Ir llf!Ar ~rh & ll11rhnr. J'.\'FA:-.i~'T~,-,,.-1-,,-,.-m-•-,-.,-,-.,-,,
f I l Lov BLE h S.A. R'.Ul-1514 . ,1 I f0 I fel'l§ionalorbui;inel'il'im11n tn rpr .. garll.'j!f'. ,e11~r-/\ ... med io.iz<'. \\" 11r '':' 10n1r. '"fl· ninr1er,
l'ihare hnmf' \l'/pool. $1:\0. pcrmanrnt. Re[/\. 675-2976 j !ihai::-izy do2. vie 20th k LO~T Jn 1·1r. 1!1Th ,([ Or11ncr. r\cr~ 4 1nn f..· 11[1 r:,rrl!en1
i;7;t-74 20 IPRVI' mesSAge or nr 67~8484. I \Vall11r·r Cos111 M ,. .~ 11 , ~-~!. ~hl1e tnale ri!.bh1I , I ~:r111kl,v. ~}.!\-!1S.":,J
M:.,...1:.02 \\•kr.ri!i. TF./\CllER rlr~1rf'.~ QlllllnT. 1 642-:i:-.S.i. \rry fri!'nrlly. fi.l2-fi774· C'HILl1 r11rr n1.v hnn1r. Vic
I --·--=-~---MATURf. \\'Oman \\'A.Ill.~ tn brlrm 11pt or hnuse w/'i!Ar.1 SM/\LI_, hlk .o;hp,gcy ma!r LOST Rf'fl Lab. Retrir1·rr \\'11.<:nn ,(· \7 Ir ! or I a .
~hare homf' (Ir \\'Omnn livln.1t Jn quirt bf'acb 11rf!11 . 675-7524 rloi.;, no ID. ~nil rh11Jn Nll-l\11~.~1nn Virjo AN'll. An.o;11r r~
in Cd~1 . f)rsi rrs quir1 at· li7:\--0!l(}I. l;.ir, S. Cnast r1w1.fl ;irc11, l!l Tin1. R<:"1v11rrl . .1:.~7-:t~27. I
n1ospherf". MR-2979. COLLEGF: Proff'i;sor & f'.M. li7.')..n7t2 nr 67:1-3472· (;Qt.DEN fletriever, apornx .
Pr r .o; ch n n I 11 !m0l'iJlhf'rr.
:i t~7!i47. -
WILL .mare my h 0 ni e fan1ily Sf't'~ 3 Br .. 2 B.1 .. F OUND: M11le /\11str11Ji11n 2 yr.~. olct fo'ound vie. Mesa
"'/amthE'r nu.o;ineS/\ won111 n home in Cr!M nr Npt. Hghts. I Sh~ Ph f' r ri do1;. 51oi~ Vf"rrlr. ~---006.1.
111\RYSITIING. ll1Y hnmt .
!1a)'!'i, l\lnn . lh111 F"rl. c .. 1·...,11a rl"I l\l;ir h.14-7'.lf12
17 ~ «o ~59 Le11Sf' nr Salf'. :i41!-:l703. Alah11.mA SL 5.16-9-11!1. LO~ G Pvt. hath. $1 .. IU. Q'tu"'VD .,, : .crmi!.n Shorlt1R1r. Carpet Service
~!. 10 11 .m. Private party wishes to FND: Female Colli!'. Vlr, m11!~ I YT old. V1r. Arl11n1~ -----.Jf)HN'~ Carprt k IJpho!/\fery rent double gara~ nea r Harbor&· Edinger. 839-85j3. Schl-~1f'sa. VC"rdc. 545-3774.
C'll'anPrS. F.xlra f)ri -Sh11m-
fl'Vl fl~P ~Otrht:Harrl l~iJ
lt"l-irrl11nt?1"). l1•'t:rr.i~r r, .t·
;ill rnlnr hr1t:hlrnrr!I" f.. 10
r11 1nutP hl,..11rh rnr wh1lr
r11rpet?1". Nl\'r y<iur mnnf'y
hy ~;\\'Int: In" l''(ll'll tr\[!/\.
\\'11l rl<'<1n l11·1nt!. r m, d1nint:
r1n .• ~ h111J Sl.'i. Any rm
$1 ;,{). t'OUl'h $111, <'hair $5. "J :;
\r~, r ..;p 1 ~ 11MI rnun11'i, nnt
n1r1hnit. I rlo 11·11rk myself.
(i("l(ll\ rrf. ;.,J \...fllfll.
GARAGE foe rent tor
C .M .
NPw \Vatn1ron1 Off\Cf's
from S.160 r.1 nnlh
Primr !.ocRlion
.¥i1 B;iys1rlr l)r., N'pt Rl"i!.l'h
Bill Gnindy Rl1r. li7:-rfi161
DESK space available S5ll
mo. WW provide furniture
at $5 ma. Answerini' Rrvlee
11.\'ailablf'. 17875 Beach Blvd.
Huntington Beach. 642--4321
N11·rit. Reh. Rea~. 644-6692
530
Social Clubs 53S
PRIVATF. _f'to rr> n ffire, ~ep. FOTO . DATE
rloor ma10r ct"Mtt'r. Pf'rf.
for income tiuc, R.E., f'!l". Select you r comp11.nion from
Sign ~s-furn tf desirf'd. JOO'~ ~ photo referrals tha t
CM °'S-9990 ~·e mall to you.
. . ""' . NO CONTRACTS
DESK 1pe.ce available $50
mo. Wlll provide furniture
at $5 mo. Answering service
available. 222 Forut Ave,
24 hr. r('Cf)rded me5511.1e
714/l!.15-22'Jl. 213/42f..ll22
Travel 540
La.gUna Beach. 494-9466 WANTED! Exp. ~"°" In -D-E~L-UXE=,~65JJ~"1-.-,-.. -0=11-;.,.-I M il to Matzalan · 2/10/72
42c/sq. ft . Corona. de! Mar. Cllll Mr. Relnh11rd. ~!l-2411.
* * * * * * ,.-~~~~~~~~~,!
I Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
Carpenter
LARGE OR SMALL ' All TypPl'i Work : Cul. rloor.o;,
I r11nrl, rf'ml)(ff'I, f1ni~h.
lr111rir, fPf'JA ir,_ rtr . ~2.J96J.
I '.11!J\'On hnmr rl"rialN;. Plum-
hlni.; -ca.rprnTry -r111nt1ng • ..._ ___________________ ..,, MOfing. Cal] ,jolfl.,'i.'Jli'l.
ALL type11; nf c;irpenlry hy
* L<ikr Ta.hoe lot, MU!h
~irif', levPl. ch?11.rtd. StrPf'~
&. all improvpment11 tn. Ap-
prox $4500 rq lnr hoal, cu ,
ro or 7 7 673-663.5.
Ven or Truck Wanted
Tr11.de '70 Cougar. 17,000
m He1. In xln t condition. * 67!>-7304 *
'69 DODGE Coron,.r, auto, lrn;a.I men.
P/S, P/B, Landau tor. s-rrr-fl.~!MR
el'l tape. Trade !or la.le mn-c0o_m_o_n~t.~Con-cc_o_t_o __ _
del c amper fully equipped.
6TJ--5Z'8 nr 839·0701. CONCRETF. \\'ORK. fair
lfave: 148 acre11 nr Fallon, I nri<'e~. r·r"'" r sr. L 1 r . N~. Free&: l'lear. 1111.Juf' hondM, qual ity work .
$18.500. \Vant: Small home I "42-140.'l. E-sidf' C.M. or Nrt Bch. FR~E=E~fcd~,-,.-.-,-,fcv-,~--,-n-rlJ * Myl'n>. 67.l-6756 * r .. 1 1m.<it,.~ All 1 rhF!l'i:'' for
Mulfiplf> 1.on!'d J11nd & t,11. I 1s ii. bc11ut1ru1 nh at a rr;is.
~un11 rl!"ve\opment AM'Cl'Utr I 11r11'f'. 64~::ft7~.
S88M k $133iltt f'qUilie~. (Eo\IENT \VO'R cK-. -«-<>J-n~h-.,.,-I
Tr11d,. 1 nr both fnr hnmP, ~mall. rl"n.wnable. F'rrr
~pt~. nr comm. 494·'165.1 f:shm. lf. S!ufhck. 548-8615.
lli!.VP: $25.000 equity in B11y· PATIOS ~·al k~ drive inst.all rrf-~1 3 Br homf'. 2600 ·"'1 nrw J~\\'n~. '~Ill\', • h~ak ,
f~. Tnr rnnd·aduH or'.·ur•cn. r,.movr. a1F.-AA1i1i f()r r~I .
1 r11rJe for local 1nrnmP t --_ _ 11nit~. f>42·5~3. I CEMENT WORK
SAN ClPmcntf' Of'l'Anl lllulf·
front n1uJI. tf'~. rnr. Int 151l1
Bul"na Vista. Over \i II.Cf'(',
Tri!.de for Newpor1. VAJu,.
$~7.950. 673-492!1
211 Ar. hi rlPSf'rt . nr r in,.s.
nr Pcarblosaom. Eq for car.
wagon, van or '! Will rlcal
gf'('l('m1.u1ly. 646-831.'l, l·5PM.
MS-2429 Sun.
Ladie11 Antique garnet ring
lo 18K irold v&lued a t S800.
Will tr&dt for M tique1, ob-
ject& d'art or submi t.
673-0JI02
Prcr r:,,1, 1;.i ,.nm
\VJNTF:n r.a 1 r~: C'nnrrrre
ll(')flrs. 11a11n". rfr 11·cs ,
~1drw11Jk~. IYin. 1>•1 2-11~1,I .
Contractor
rl:OOM Adrlftinn.o;. Est1m<Lle~.
plans & 1!1:vout, ~ingle Qr 2
11rory. i_,.T, Canstruerlon.
847-l5tt.
JACK Ta u I a. ne--Repa.ir,
rtmocl .• addll. 20 yrs e.xp.
Lle'd. My Wa.v Co. StZ-4703.
Addll!on.o; • Remodelin1
Ge.T'\lllck & Son, Lie.
Near post orlice • Snac:k
Shop. Priv. park .• air cond.
R.e11.JonomiC1, Bkr. ~5-6700
LGE, Air-cond. tmnt offl~.
WANTF:D! Exp, person 10 *
Mil In M3zatlll.fl. 2110/72 '
Call Mr. Reinhard, 67a-Z474 I * * * * * ------·------·--·-----
673-fi041 • 549-2170
Driveways
Re11eal 1100 Save Ml)nt"y!
Ave rage $29-$511. Gullr.
• 5-li>-!1347 •
new cptl, dl"J)ll: 11.uD-ll!M! or
ma/mo. Sl.l."J Mo. DovP:r
Bldg., Newpart B e a ch
645-.1320.
CORONA DEL MAR
De.luxe bus, 0Ulce11. Private
hath. Cptl'ld'r'pl. 61:\-6151.
e OFTICl:S e
300 It 600 IQ. ft. Ct>f;ta Ml!M,
CaJ1 &t&-nJO
14'xl6' Ofe or ttore, mod.
bldg. -444 Newport Bvd, N.B.
~n. $8."J mo. 548-5300.
EXECUTIVE SUrTE$
Newport Cntr-Rodeffer Blds.
Se.rvlct'I Rld'd ~.
J3.45 Nowpoct Blvd, NI
AO'CIU/City HalJ. 675-1601
CORONA DEL MAR
Deluxe gn1 fk>or off!Cf'. A/C,
xlnt. J)l"ka ~-
LARGE l mom offiC'f', Pvt
entr. Newly df'ror. $6.'> nm.
548-1200, N,8.
Buslne11 Rant1I 44S
.-
Electrlc1l
EL ECTRIC AL, re.aid ..
comm'/, lnrlu11. Al 1 o,
remodel, rt!)fl1r11, install,
Bigt11mal!. t.lr'd/ln1. Free.
f'lll . Mf,.-0211.
EL EcntlClAN. h~n~.
hrinrled. 5mall jobs, mAlnt.
/, rt'flfllf~. 548-520.l .
F ibergl•1s
COMP. m'lhll'" f11rtlll1e~ lor
hnmt/1ndus1ry, 111r mR.nu.,
hoat/auto rt'J)A ir. Nf'W pro-
duct devtlopm'f, ~7·1~
Furniture
SPECIAL! Avg, chair or
rocker 'tripped S..'i. Glulfl8',
britA« polish~!. 645--0!!66.
Gardening
Exper .Jti [lAnc~e G11.rrll'nf!r
Cnmp1rtl" vrJ 11rf"\'i""· NeAt
& RPhll ff"" f"~t. 642-4:w.l.
F.XP. H11\\ 11i 1Rn C.11.Nll'l'lf'T OEL.UXf; STORE, 1600 IQ.
fl., on bully E. 17'1 St .. C.M.
Aal-Ew fi4Z.~.· ~l-lfilJ .
LARGE building on Ne'll.'J)Of't
Blvd. Call tor lnformAtJon.
' Comr1f'!f' ,1t11rden1na 14"rvice' 1
-~ /
K.tim11h~ni, 646-467fi •
GRt::EN MANSION
G&rden1nc A Yard Main.
r~anc ... JM Elmtr, W.LU7
l
!
\
I
I
..
·~ ' ' I ..
·1
!
' 1( ..
I ' ..
' I
I'
" ,,
•
•• fl ..
II ' • ' 1'
I[)] I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! ~'~~~ .. ...,... Ill l,___ ...... _ .... -JI [)] I
AL'S GARDENING
Palntint &
Paperhangi"I
tM gardening &: s m a 11 P A 11\'TING: Int«>r/Exter.
Jand5Capina: 1ervJce1, ca J I WAlls washed & minor
~198. Serv11!( Newport, npain at prices: )IOU 01.t1 •f·
Cd~I. Co1ca Me11, D?ver I ~rd. Non drinktr. Free e!Jt.
~~. \Ve-stcl!ff. rl.i'f.s. 67"r1166.
GARDEN ~taint. Oea.n-up, PROTECT Your 1nvntrnen1
rototilllna-, new I.awn pn1n-"~th pe.lnt, Jnt-Ext. Co11ts
lng, sprinklen. Oda G1..rden nothing ior free ea I.
Smv. 531-#48 dys, alt s. 5-1~7.
139--9585. 1 -INT_E_R_IO_R_&~,-,-.. -n~ .• -,-.,.-,-,.
PROFESSIONAL Gardener, ti~. Guara.n. work &:
Jree work, p r u fl I n g , reallOnable priol!s, B 111
gprlnklers, cl~up job~. 548-2409.
l a n d 11 ta p I n I . Geori:e, _.c__c.~N~o~W~unn--g---
646-5803. * WALLPAPER *
AL'S 1..and~ap1ng. 'f r " e When )'OU can "Mac''
rtm0\'81. "\"11 rd ttmocll"ling. t 548-1444 Gf8...tru
Tru.h hauling, lot cleanup.' PAINTING prof All work
Repair ll"pr1nklen . 673-l lfi6. guarn. Coior t ~ e Ci & } i I l * Complt'te Landsca~ Serv. 842-4~. 5t7-144L
Sl'rving A.JI Orange Co. 546-0211.
Furnitu,..
Mi1nllaneou1 Ill ...
KINGSIZE water bed, ma1-FANTASTIC Garage Sa.If' ~~s. pad, hner arwl frame. sponftOred by 40 fail)' god-
NE~ CONDITION~ & 5 yr. mothrn of tM Clndt~JJa
iuarant~. Sl'i. Black ))8d-Guild "t Newporl Beach.
ded vinyl baby car u-e.t, Se.I. l"ril. .)th· 9e.m-4pm.
}t.00. 968--0833. Come by roac11 flr ('11.r to
buy antiquei, I u r n 1 I u r e PF.CAN Kine headboard $40. men'•, .,...0men·1. a 11 d ~ ., glf!M" top cotlee tblt". chilclrens clottiing. 10y1, roll·
$55. Lge-mirror $30. Auto !lime j t w r Ir y, tapt
wufler ~ Antique dining recorder, carpet & tons of
tbte $150, Antiquf' marblf" 8~ B
2 m isc. item&. l ~· ut· top ~ tT'llfl.nl tble, vii lonsheU Ln. Take Santlll.gO
chain SlOO. 643-2206 ro Hobday to Bul!Ur.she!J lll
QUEEN Bii:e bed. firm, Newp0rt Beach.
w/hdbd, like new $98. Ken-cLA:C:D~Y;:::K~•~='-.,..,--w-.~,h~<~r~IJ5c;;-.,
mort, opt'n top dishwshr, 2 surf boards $10. lz. S20., hi·
like new $96. Sep Wed/Sat fi $1 0., maple gossip bfonch
or Sun. 645-4325, 501 Tustin & desk $~ .. mediurn /111.ng
AvP., Nwpl Bch. Ten sh irts $.SO.SI. & lots
SIMMONS Hide-a·Md. new more. 318.11 Grand Ca.nyon
eondition.. $15. 3 Bnuded Dr., Laguna Niguel.
STEREOS. If ymi an! \ookina
tor a roMOle or component
a:terK> 1ystem, I am ha.nd!.
lntc tomll! l>a.nkrupt Malers
& lrt."l~hl clailn stereos that
J rnust liquidate •I ~en
do\11 MtVL!'lglJ MVPf bf!()tt
potilll»e for iM1vlduaJs like
yourM"ll , il-1 will •cctpt
&Tia.11 monthly paymnti.
Mr. Wllilams, 714189.'!r-0501.
l'l72 STERE.U: Garrard com-
p on r n t &ystem,
Ai\1 I f '\I f !'i11"reo/MPX/1-
IT'ar k I rurntiib!I", baas
r'Pfl('X sf)("akers, M>parar.>ly
re ta lll'd for $40!!.84. p.iiy fl ff
balance Sl99Jl7 or pyrnnls or
ss.50 mo. u .~.A. Slel""O
t::qu1p. Watthouir.e, )79 E .
171h St., Co~ta Mt 11 1
645-2442.
NICE vinyl platform rockt r
Ml1cellaneou1 118 SW: Torque-wrrrtch S20:
Childs dre&Stt unpaint@d $8: Formal & natural pruning. -P-A-!N-TI~N~'G-,--,0-.. -.,--&-,-,-..
Also. tree ,;erv. J57-9379. re11.s. rates, \\'Ork guarntd. * 549-2015
21 Yrt exp .• r~ eirt.
U>ca.I refs, lie. P h i I ,
494-8691.
INVEST IN
YOUR FUTURE
BE YOUR OWN BOSSI
Men or Women
ACTIVITY
DIRECTORS
Excellent career opportunity
rugs, r ed Ible klg rty.
9 '6 "x7'6"', 8 '6 ''x5',
3'1 1" x 5'7''. All for $25.
l _______ _,I[~ J Othl.'l' mi.c. item&. 54!l-1477
. V HIDE-A-BED, orang,. plaid
Womftflll" bike gd cond $25:
Antique drop leal table
Fine 'Furniture-needs ll':fin $:al: JO gpd bike
& Appl1aoces-needs wheel & seat $25: 5
*AUCTION*
Gentral Services PAINTING, prof, All work
guarn. Color Ii p e c i a tis t
842-43fii, 547-1141 .
rnr II. ma!ure wom11.n lo di· ••••••••••ii $125. Rattan loYeseat & cor-
IOO nerlbl .. orangf!/green Auctions Friday, 7:30 p.m. blue chip stamp books $2
THfNGS by Moose, Lt.
e-lecl., plumb, tence, tile,
in.stlns, carpentry, paint etc.
.....S20.
Lease A Yellow
Taxi Cab
rer! rrrreation & Mle'i11l II('· Antiques tloral SlOO. Both li ke ne1\'. llvitie.o; tor our l11rgl" apart· W indy's Auction 81!lrn ea: 642-8773 20Thl~ Newport, CM &tG-8686 ...:.:.;.Mc;.,O~V~IN~G=IN~SA=L~E~!~! -
Hauling
COMPI.ETE ext er. $ID:l &.
up. Avg. rm. $20. Neat
work. Reis. JWy, 847-1358.
BOOKKEEPER w11.ntffi for
TI'tall rlrul:' s1o~. Retail exp
desired. 5-18-7521.
BOOKKEEPER Call for Appt
546-1311
mC'nt complex. Good bene· ROLL lop rlesk. haJ\.trl'f' ~6~7~5-<127_:::.:c· ----~~~
lits &. 11al11ry. S8400 Per seal, i~ .(Tt"aro !able w/5 F'RENCJI Provincial: &d
Anurn. Full time position, chalrs, rd oak table 42". $30, chair $2Tl, pair gretn
but mu.~! be available tor Other unusueJ o!rl turniture (:hairs S:.l5 each. 962-4093.
Behind Tony's Bldg f.1a t'l Many items. no room! Lr(.
ORIG, OIL PAINTINGS cii;11.re\lr n111chulf' ~95. Ven-
Below cost! Q u it 11 n g do 7 eok~ machine w/foun-
bill!lne61. Also '5 nt"lv heavy tain $4~. Maplf." rif."sk, $17. FOR clean & neat painting,
WANTED: f',lessy t r '-" ' s interior or exterior & ttas.
Yards & garages -moving rates, Dick, 968-4065 eve11.
lz hauling. S7.50 per hr. + Plaster, Patch, Repair
odd jobfi, 548-5863. -
HAULING CLE AN_ Up 1 * PATGI. PLAST_ERTNG
For Furniture Store. Full
bookkte-ping txper. neces,;.
Please call betwn 9 k 10
am. 642-Xl50.
evenings & wttkend work. oak & wicker. 18.'.199 Sanla Garage Sal• 112
Leonora in CI'P{'nbrook, nr.
Ellls & Magnolia, F.V.
duty 6' folding tablt>i;. Cost Pictures. Lots o! mist. 1660
' . 1 ' ' All type.II, Fret< est11nates local moves, exp d Col ege Call 54(}-6825
student. Lrz truck, Rea.s.
534--1846. Plumbing
COLE PLUMBING
BOOKK EEPER typi.o;t
pt/time for a CPA in Cdt\1.
Approx. 4 hn.. a day. Salary
open. 675-2070. ----I
BOYS
Ask tar Herman
IVENTORY
trol-&Uing-Typing.
nnly. 641--3472, NB.
" ·-
c 0,,.
Ex per.
Apply:
OAKWOOD
GARDEN APTS
12001 Bayport Ave
Garrlen Grove
{714J 636·3030
Equal Oppor. Emplnyt'r
* Sporting painting for
s11.le-Grey Hunter, mounted
Geltleman lit Dog -Rolling
Hills & Estate, framed, gilt
with black linen liner, cirat.
.1840. 54()..5291.
YARD/garage, cleanups.
Remove trees, dlrt, ivy.
Sklploader , backhoe. 24 hr. service. 64S.U61
Age 10.14 lo deli\ltt p11.pen
in the Dana Point, San Cle-[
mentr are11~.
DAILY PILOT
492-4420
-· e RELIEF COOK e NURSES AIDES e LVN'S
ANTIQUE small clllna. or
curio cabinet. Curved glaios,
oak, beautiful. 644-4314.
847-2666. • $8 HR. Plumbing &:
TRASH & Green clean-up Electrical Repair.
day•. Free est. Anytime. I --~&1~2~-27=55:..::"':..::&1~2~-1~41l3::::. __
548-5031. PLUMBING REPAIR
1% T TRUCK. Hauling & No job too small
associated task.!i. Coast· * 642-3128 *
Valley Haullng -496-3278. Roofing
Housecleaning
DUTC~l Main!. Service for LEE Roofing Co. Roofi~ a.II
noon, wtndow1 & carpet types. Rttover, rt'pflin,
cleaning. ~7-1508 thermo roof coatings, wt.ire
Anti Soil CerpetJ & color. Lie/bonded, &ince
After Cleaning 1947· fi2-?Z22.
1--=c::...:=.:.:::c:::c:... __ / e T, Guy Roofing. De&l
LICENSED, Jni;ured, Reis. Direct. l do my own "'-ork, R&S Malnlt'nll.nce. 548-9456, 27 642-291 3. We do everything. ~.,-,,.~-'°~·~"'~'-_9_500~· __ _
Master Chargf'. Sewing/Afteraiions
LADY wanl11 1-fouseclea.ning
work. E.xper. own trans.
$3.5a hr. Call alt 4 p.m.
847-36.17
W0i\.1AN wants 'M"ork by day.
No walls or windows. Call
Dorothy, 835-8394.
Mesa Cleantng Service
CS:rpets, Windows, Floor etc.
Resid. & Comm'!. 548-4ll.1.
Will do housecleaning
Avail. anytim•, 0"'" trans.
$2.50 Hr. 646-1557 a.ft 5.
Dedicated Cleaning * WE DO EVERYTJ·llNG *
2-4 l!R. PHONE 673·4077 ...... ·
HOUSECLEANING. By clay,
Harbor area pref. Own
transportation, MS-2513.
lncQm• Tax
Smiley Tax Service
e 14 Years LOCAU. Y e
Fee Schedule
itai.tf'd On Request
W.A. St.flLEY, C.P .A.
642-2221. Anytime 646-96fi6
CLARK & Toner T a x
Service . 24 YEARS up. in
area. Per!IOnal lieTVice in
your home. Ca.I! tor appl.
--European Dressmaking
All custom titted. Personal
1'~ashion advice, 673-1849.
Alterations -642-5845
Ne11.t, accurate. 20 yell.TS exp,
Television Repair
* BLAINE'S 'JV *
Servil'ing All Bni.nds
Authorized Magnavox
Known for honesty 540-4313
Tree Service --TRIM.MING, .s-pecializing in
truit trees. Gen. Oean-up.
R.&88. Free f'sf. 548-8318.
REl\10VAL & trimming, fire
"-'Oocl allowance. 642-2755 or
642-1403.
Tile
Job Wanted, Male 700
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
54&-i7Jj, Howard Clark & Drow.o;y -Gamut -Entry -
John Toner. ChOS(>f1 -MONEY
PROFESSIONAi. J>E'rSOnahz. Thtore·.~ a ne\v pi>rfume for
f'i1 tax seivice ~irlee 1962. men. \V11n1en are crazy about
FormC'r IRS agent H.B. 11 . It ~mrll.~ like MONEY.
963-2035. Job Wa nted, Female 702
Harbour Tax Service NEED help at home ? \Ve 15 yr11. exp, ~ervice 11.I your have Aides e Nurses e home. For appl., 8-46-4187. J~ousekeepers • Com-
DIGNIFIED pvt preparation panion.o; Homemakers • Uir
ol your return, ACCU·Tax, john, 547~1.
314 N. Newpt. N.B. &15-0n9. EXPERIENCED East Coa.st
TAX Service, Jf'deral & Yachtswoman nee<111 \\'Ork.
state, J)f:nqnal a.t your Office exp. sail marina prd.
homf', call for appl 546--0125. 633-9393 ext. 172. 63&-0100.
lronln9 L11'E bookkeeping my home.
lronT09 Done In F,xper. in romtr. bkkpng &
My Home data processing for CPA
540-2241 firm. Cal! 644-7928.
l·J-.-n-lt_o_r_la.:_lc:.c:=---1 TR A N SC RI 8 ING-typing
tntlnuscrlpts, f{'f'TI1 pa.per!!.
A.P'r. C!e11.ning -C11.rptt"t! My home, Fountain Valley,
shampooed, ovens, !loori. 968-6874.
windows, bathroom,.., cup-Hskpr, full c:'hg. live-in. dr.
~rda, closela c I e a n e d • for eldeT\y gentleman, ~
Jkady 1o move in!o, Free hlth. Ref. "37--9357.
f'tt. 842--l996. BOOKKEEPER. 14 )TS U •
SP~!tKLE JanltoriaJ Wlit-per. Full or p /time.
dowa:, Dn. ttpla-re1id. & 548--0+45.
CASHIER
Attractive Jemalr, mid 2()'s
for full lime position in new
fant11.~tie self serv 11ervice
station. Apply, Aulo-Mat,
Appliances I02
IR\llNE PER$()\lNEl Convale.sc~nl }{ospi1al &
S<D\llrES•Arrh. v-v Residential CAre Facilities.
UV,.._ rv...&..1 v.._ 1 642·3505 or 540·5690
J9th & Placentia, C.M. A/P Bookkffper to $550 RENTAL
AGENT
KENMORE washer S6.l. Ken-
more electric dryer, Ho!.
point washer $45 &
Signature gas clryet $40. All
in Xlnt cond. Cuar. & del.
847-8115. 546-8672.
CHI.LO ca.re Wood I a n d Stmng A!Payable bckgrnd RECOND. Applittnces &
Sclnol Dist. 2 girls 2 k 6, 4 Typist to $500
daYll wk. 8-i2-2593: 548-3980 PBX Recept. $433 + Altrllctivf', \ve!l • groomed TV's. Guar. & De!v"d .
woman w I dynamic person· Dunlap's, 1815 New po r {
alily. Must have knowledge Blvd, CM. 548-7780. n-e. Recent exJ)E'rience/typing
CLAIMS ADJUSTER I nf lcasf'i; & r('n!al "~ e WHIRLPOOL--KENMORE
Jndivlrlual tx)M"Menrl"d In dis-
ability or life insurance
claim._,$(«!. +. ~ day ""'k.
Smllll Sanla Ana Otfice.
Phone Mrs. LadenbUrger !or
Appl. 547-64.17.
CONTROLLER or Chitf ac--
coun1a.n1 !or laslf."S"t gro\ving
million S Co. in men'& sporl
shirt tit'ld. Need fairly
qualified & exper'd con-
troUer or chiel acco11nlant
tn h&netle-atttg. & 11.d-
mln\stration. Salary, bonus
& stock. Send r esume to
Pr1!11ident. P .O. Bo x 2307,
Capistrano Bea<'h, Calif.
CUSTOMER
SERVICE
ENGINEER
Static
Uninterruptible
Power Systems
Mu:i;I Qe able lo supervise
t"QUipment inli!lf.Hations, in·
ve:o;figate r-ustomu trouble
reports, rirovid~ cuslomer
i;t>rvice on repairs, provide:
instruction~ to customers &
be v.·illing to travel.
3·5 Yean. M!rvice exf}f'rirnce
w/comparabl~ ntnipment,
Ability lo trouble shoot cir-
cuir:1.
~nd re.~umr lo Classi fier! Ari
no. 319. r ·n D1tily P ilot,
P.O. Box 1560. Costa Mesa.
Cali!. 92626.
Eq1111.l Oppnr. Emptoy,r
DISABLED person neerl~
lady lo prepru'e meal ~ &
Pf'CSOr\11/ cal't', 00 lifti ng. 6
rlys wk .. 8-1, Mon-Sal. Nr.
D?ver &. 16!h St., N.B.
s:t2--0971 .
EXEC. SECRETARY
Adv@rtislng dt<pl. of publish·
Ing firm has poii:i!lon open
for a competent sec'y. Must
be sf'lt starter who hM pridt-
in he:r work & doe:s not need
rnnslanl 11u~rvl1lon. Accur-
ate: typing a must. SH help-
fUI. $475-$525 to start. New-
port Bearh localion. Inter·
viewa i!ilAJ'I Mon. Call Gary
"Bisel, 646-4456.
EXECUTIVE
Ptr1on~I Au•ncy
Exec. Stc'y Te Pr11.
Good skills, Good fleuni
aptitude. Top croomlng.
410 W. CoAll Hwy., NB
frer IFee Posll1ons ment~. C'.ood typ1~t. llours h h /d
488 E. 17th ta! Irvine) Ct.I J2:30-9 pm. k wrck·,,nds. r pr. ma,n .. ~=.5~1',' ',,','·76ry20. p•ono 546-5025 ers , se s. """"' . . 642-1470 " ..,... ... .;;;;;;,;;.:;.. ......... 1 --:--ss:J;AiiL:iE~-S~MMEEN--RCA \Vhirlpool ,,.,, 8 .Ii he~&. .! dryer, eltt, good running
LEGAL SECRETARY Neeif men who are. ready to cond. 1'.1ust sell~! 8-42-7213.
Newport Beach area learn The car business and1.::=::..:.:.:::::..:c..._:_:_c.c::._:__
642-9440 Rre willing to train. Must MOVING: gas stove S25,
have ~ood personality, be elec. stove SlS, Vac. S10,
LIVE-in housekeeper. full interested in a future , dress Cd. rood. 1975 "C" Wallace, time to c~ fur 4 .smaU
children & keep house in well. sa.lesminded. Benefits; WASHER & dryer, elec.,
Nev.-port Beach home. Must Demo., group ins., gua:ran· litacked. $100. Both good
teed Wary plu:t crimmi&· C..'Ond 64.5-1628 . have lQcal ref. \Vage ac· sions. Unlimited income. Ap-·
cording to Dept. of Employ-ply in Person. UNTVERSJ· NICE clean colored gfls stove
rrnmt scale. 543-3035. TY OLDSMOBILE, 2850 $j(). 4 Burner. Pvt pty.
Luhrs Boat Company
Needs • stock clerk.
Must have drivers lie.
Apply at 849 W. 18th
St., Costa MeJa, bat.
}[Arbor Blvd., CoslA Mesa. 673-Zti6 -'--'----------SA LES MAN. NCl'd 11ggres· Used GE \vasher /.: dryer,
sive harrl working Ni'\V CA.r S75 eacil.
Salesman, Li~ral De.mo :>48-9845
Plan. Monthly Bonuses & Cameres &
l~surance. Experienc_e de-Equipment
sired. See Don Crevier al IOI
Theodore Robin11 Ford. 2060 MINOX Camera outtil. in-
1-farbor Blvd., Coi;ta Mesa. eludes Mlnox B. flash at.
SECRETARY
Excellent shorthand & typ-1 a.m . & 10 a.m, only. ing skill!!i required. Attrac-
tach, film f'ditor, righl
angle vif'v.'er, dcvel. tank &
che111icaJs. SIOO. 847-3002.
Furniture 110
tive salary & benefits.
,..""l ... ~~"""!!"'""'"""~I Please apply in pc.rson. 7 PC. VELVET & MANAGER TRAINEE SPANISH OAK
Moo o' woman oo'<i•d with UNION BANK LIVING RM. GROUP
managerial potenlial. Our consisting or 11' velvet sole, · t · tw 610 Newnnrl Center Drive Pxpans1on pan req:u1res o .--contrasting velvet accent
l I. I N~v.·""'rt Beach curren 1~nsees, sa esmen "" cha ir, 2 Spanish oak end
or brokers, to be groomed An equal opportunity tahles, Spanish oak C'Offee
for ortice manager in ll.B, employC'r table & 2 Spanish lamps.
"Anah<im. Pl•noed 'I"'"· SECRETARY ALL FOR $199 ings in March &. May, Dt-· TERMS-ALSO si~ m inimum of two years
cxl)f'rience but \\•ill consider For Ncwpo~t B~ach A_rl Agen· LAY-AWAY PLAN
others based on t1hilify. Ex· cy. All &kills 1nclud111g SH. TRADERS
·ceUent benefits. CA.II Mr. Sharp looka, long hours, FURNITURE
Cr11ve! fo r confidential good P<IY· &'13·1670. 202 N. Broadway, S.A.
in ter vi f' w appointmenl. SECRETARY: SJ-I req'd tor 835-1305 Open 7 rl11.y11
R9J.506J & 697-4'il94 COLLINS xln't cri. v.•/numernu! fringe CLOSE OUTI I
& \VATTS INC. lm5l Mag· bl'nefits. Raub, Bein. Frost Model Home l'"'Urnish ings
nolia, Garderi Grovf'. & Assoc. 136 Rochester, Lusk Homes -Harbor View
NEED extra money? Beeline C.M. 548-772."J. Hills. 1406 Keel Drive. Cor-
Fashions need 6 \\'Omen. Gd. SEAMSTRESS ,tr: Alteratiorv; ona df'l t.1ar.
money. No crillect., delivery "-"Oman tor dry cle&.ner.!i. SAT & SUN
or invt:sl 968-6869 or 1'"/lime. Exper, neces.s. Call Feb. ~ & 6, 10 am to 5 pm
1m-2.117. 644-ZJ12. 1 Antique Chi.nMie Oriental
NEED 25 appt. makers, SERVICE 6tation attendant. rugs, bet!lul C"Olor &: conri.
photo atudio. 1mmf'd. ea.m-exp. preferTed. Full le part Diamond ring & watcil
ln.gs. Jnterv~w• Mon thru time 1>hiftll" a vail. Apply at1_&36-__ 1238 _______ _
Fn 11-4 pm C.M. 645-3848. Shell, 17th & Irvine, N.B. 8' CRUSHED velvet 90fa,
NURSES, pvt. duty. all SERVICE Station Allendant. rKMr new~ $150. Matching
types, aU shifts. Lescoulie Apply in person, 200 w. kweseAt $100. Cockla.il tables
Nurses ft e g Is try , 351 Coe.st Hwy, N.B. · $35. And lamps. 546-2973.
H~~·~;f!._9954 SffiPPIN(;/WAREHOUSE BDRM. living nn, dining nn
Interviews ~ M/F Well known Ii.mt moving to turn, nr new. Allio mile
spacious new quarten in pietes. 2338 Westrnm.tf'r
NURSES AIDE Irvine will train cluncut1 ~A~v~·~·~CM=·~·'------
7 am • 3 pm. Bapti!'I Conv. man. Start $2.50. IMPORTED Scftn sidebolll'd •
HOllp. 661 Center SI .. C.M. Call Bob WUaon, 540-.ro56 Solid teak. Be!lut, cond .
543-5685. Coe.tlal Agency <Mt $450. sell S I 7 ~ .
P /TIME 2790 Harbor BL at Adams 6f6-.5390. 1 ..:;c:..o:::.::.--~--$285 Per Month SHOE SALESMAN BEAUTIFUL wr. iron 9t<>
Eve1. 6 :30-9:30 P/time. childttna .hoes ttonaJ, 3 pc + ~ $115. * 968-3397 * 4 atutdy aqua MU(. bar comm'L F'Tw. est. ISJ-0672. _B_E_A_IJ'l'_IC!~AN-, -ma-..... --.-,._
,etntlrw & cent 11'11.dua.te-6"irt1 Plrf. Suite }I 6'6-2116 Y!"I"& men, m.cbanleally tn. TIRE CHANGER _.. $100. 49l-118T ~. Can U9t •12 mtn re-Must be ttp'd both truck a oLD iiltl!lhkined m. p I e
pnflta: of type: of \WJrk passenaer. Top w a i e s, Bird~ dreS$er with mir·
bAtkgroonds. Muat be ablt fringe benefits, 5~ di,)' work ror. $49. 5'18-$'27.
Paperh•nglng Ume. 968-1745. ...... ----ENGLJSI{ Pa~ >fa.ngu &
Painter. ~ yrs. exper. Call
Ed., 908-7461.
Halp Wantad, MA F 710
A beautiJuJ I~. Div. of
Gen'I Faods. needs you.
LeATTI & tellCh prof. mttkeup
1tth.s. Exec. l>fll"· avail.
EXPER.. alt<ldady in u -
thaive "Mvmf'i1'1 v.-ear 11hop.
Sa.1uy • Comm. Rel1. Rep..
Ly CluaitH!d ad no. ll'.l, t/o
Dalq Pllo~ P.O. Box 1'60,
0.taMe..Ca.~
to •tart Imm ed.. For J>!!:t· :w~k~61S-~~2t!!l~O ~:.::.~~~~j~~ftiF-::.:""i~co;;;; .anal intnview call - . S0F A BED Top cond . ~ONE Said. 'lbp $9&. • $7-Cl9
77M551
PRIVATE SALE $50., ;:?;), tach, Sat & Sun Sanla Ana Avf."., C.M.
only. J2 to 5 pm. IH'i; 646-7~2. Everythi09 from Original Oils, 369 E. 17th SI. .c.c::..c.=----~~.~~·~ ... -1 Antiques to Wigs. POPCORN Booth o. ,..,........,y O>!lta f.1esa. 64>-53fll used al Long Beach Pike. Ineludes relrig., freezer, CARPETING Would make great pa.tio china, pol!!, pans It misc. bar. Al-·-. ..Je11.n "51) 10 ftm lo 3 pm. Sat &. Sun Carpel your house in luxur-~ •··· J ..
(Frb. Sth &. 6th. I ious nylon shag for Jes!! Ford 1,2 Ion pickup. Make
308 Morning Star Ln. lhan half price! Have ju.o;I offer. Mu.o;t M!U. 494-4971
DOVE:R Si"IOR~S. N.B. Onf." mil con!aining 72 square after 6P.\1 .
yards of brand ne\v carpet·N --U-,-,E-R_O_U_S-.--.,-.• -,--.·I IBM elec ..... ,_writer $1 7:l. 1• .)8n1 on ... equtp •J,.... ing at only $299. Call 837-4239 8" c •· Hallicrafters SX42, radio, incl AdvRn ce J onver.,.-
$75. Women's ski hoot.<; s i"Zf' RUSfY, used boat moorinf;?: matic, f:?:l\J'df'n , pwr & hand
'
$~ 2 p fi ctlain, 1;,-· material, rach 1ools, antique~. aquariums, . ~;•. r , mrn":t guno
skates, 9D, $12 ea, Girl"s link 211i" long, 1-X" \\'ide. camping t'QUlp. Call fTI.()
motor cycle hrlnlet: S:lO. 2 5lk per ft. Marine Surplus 892-9724 for long li•t DI
Bar stools, $-1. ea. & Co., 3307 S. ~1ain, S.A. c'c'c'~ry~t~hi~n~•~· ----=-I
MORE! rotl2 Anchor Cir. 5'1!>-6551. ·n Rem i n gt on El~.
HB 9611-9181. DIVAN, end table11, coff~ c.aiculat.or. Like new, S95.
GARAGE Sale Sat. Remodel-table, area rug, occ. chllin. Twin Bly-rHt matt &: ~
ing. TcmPf'rrti w i n d 0 w wrough~ iron 1wag chan-1q1rg. on legs. $35. Gailiano
I 4, • $25 h delier; drapl'!"ll: dbl. matt.&. L iquore lge. btl W/~pigot, . g aS8, x~' · iesc : I 557 2440 kitchen sink, $2: drawe~. box aprings; TV /SteTeo s1and & 1ght. $31). -
50c. rlrawt>r pt.1lls, 4 c ; combo., lawn mower, etc. GORl-IAM sterling { Sf' a
Fr ig i rl a f r e washing 833-271.J Afr. 6 PM. R.n~ci 12-4 pirte urtlng1.
n1achult', $45: baby items. J00-8 Warner electric plastic All or p11rt; Vie b e r
elc. s:m DeAnza, Corona de! I laminating madrinf'. Corr;1 Bar-8-Q. 536-45:l.l
Mar. 675-5i09. S780 w/part11 & 81.Jpplies., Miscelleneous
AMP. rnd. table. plastic Used tv.•ice to calibra1e-Wanted
ahttti~. TV. ¥.·as~. die· hf'af. \Viii ~ for $400. 120
taphonfos, baby i1ems, toys, 54s-27s3. SPRING-aire double W -
fa.n boK, dog hse .. jev.·elry. SKIS: f'isdlt'r S u p e r g I a s
(2 nev.· tires, mag v.•hls $80.) w/Marker bindings ZlO cm
s:iriz Stingray t:nke $15, & SSO. 2 VW ~ w/tirea $75.
p~. 2459-6()..61 None. E . of SmaJI boat mo IOI' $25.
spring!f and mattr e11 .
Medium finn, vuy good
conclilion. C&ll afler S P.lll.
Ore.~ off S1a. Isabel, C.M. 675-4455. ~INO-IESTERS Canadian
Sftt & Sun. 9-5. MS-7043. -G-A~S-Rang=::..c..~w~~~.-... ----o-···, . bl = .. .x en tennittl riflf'-CU' ne.
SAT. Only 10am -6pm : l twin bed, 9xl2 blue wool N('w, boxt'd. SOO ta .
54&-1879.
Surfboard. maple 1win btd rur. Kenmore washer. 2 S.i7-740;ll.
lfll.me. ('Ject. lloor polisher Prov. JamP4§, prrltn hose. -----------I
1:!ide projector & 8Cfeen, 642_1187. Musical lnstrumentsm
rllshes. misc. item.'!, 2032 _MU;::N~T~z;:.:4~&~~,-,-,..-,~,-,.-1"'
Phalarope Cr1. C.l\f. South deck, 6 montM: old, good
of Adams, \Vf:'SI 'o! Esta.ncla. cooditlOn $.10 or !Tade for
540-3692 Al\1-F'M radio !or VW or ol·
WHITE desk, golrl trim $35. fer. 548-~.
S!ertt1 phono, v.·ood cabinet FM tuner & amp, SIT ; Ex·
$75. Old rlesk. bee.r lrP.ll;s $10. t>rgflnie, S15; skis, $F. & S:Zl;
\VhifP. porcelain cup.~ & gas motors. SU to $25;
Jigurines •o china pa1n1. hardwood couch, 1 1 o, Di~s k hand peinted
h. '"10 ·-v . 5.16-3912. t uigs. ~ ~• 1ew
G'r.>-6448. STEREO, record c~r.
A·MfF'M combo, portable.
Rth Street Bizarre Garage detachablf' ~aker.1 $3.5.
Sale. 1000 useful itt'ms, Naug diair $5. 675-673:?.
featuring hand -crafted
artifacts & il l'ms th&t DOUBLE bt!d se'ls. 1 canopy,
belong in the tr;\!:h, Sat & J .maple, .trost-frtt retrig.,
Sun, ftb 5th ~ 6th. 1n w. pt>can t hesl All like new.
Balboa Blvd, Ba!. 543--0436.
HiOO VW eng & lnu1t1. '57 MOVING: Cbldspot Reftig ..
pan. ~ts-; '69 l:lo<ly Pflrl~. 17 cu i.n $75. Upright piano
T ires, wheels·all k i n d 1. ~$1_00.~M~;.~26~89~~=~~
Honda st...qo, "\'a""'1i h11 80. e OAK R.R. TIES e
i\f1sc. Sal-Su n 249-22nd S!. $3.50 each. 5.16-5112
CM. BEDS king & twin. chairs,
UNIQUE, J him1/ies. Fri & din ser, T.V., rloghoust,
Silt, Ff't!. 4 & ;,, 9:30 to 3:30. lawn mowf'r, etr. 549·1461.
21311 Vi11 Strajti;, Villa II' 1., Cabover <'amper !lihell
1 Pactlic Tr11 cl, of! Hamilton $\00, Honda 100 132.i Hide·
bctw Brooknurst & Bushard, a -way bed $2.i &42-4826.
H.B.
2 flNE Gu itars, both mint
cond. w/catte ; G-10 Goya
Sl2.i, J .JR:i Gibson, rare,
gold I< ivory trim $~.
Much finl" •terM eqUtp.
Huge Bolak~ w/JO 5J'kn.
Lrg. Cl'ntorien ~pkrs k
otlW'n!I. 1660 Santa Ana Ave.,
C.M. 646-T.:>62.
RICKENBACKER J2 airing
Byrd deluxf' Slpreo, hATd
case. Sal'. $21.i. 642-9262
Gurr AR, ClaSf>lcal. COSI S85
nr,w 2 monlM 11rro, Pt'fittl,
~. 962-lj97
Office furnrturt/
Equip. 124
ADDING Marhlf'll'S and caah
registflP!f.""S \8 Ir. up.
6'15-0595
Pianos/Organs 826
ONCE A YEAR TAX
Q.EARANCE SALf: ON
1 of 11.. kinri noor rltmN-
Conn-\Vurlti7.rr-Al!en.
Org11.n11
Knabe-~mer -E\lerett ..
Cable Nel!IOn·Wurlitter NEW. Trimmer, front throw PiAnos.
REDF.cORATING: B d r.m !awn mower, 1 Year old SA.batb"I H I I r1 ~Ill", colfee Tbl:i;, lamp~. pie-coucfl. 838-22&1. · 1 ~rp~ c m ~
tures chain glasaY,.att. ]0 All merehll.ndiJe sold wttb
am 1~ s pm Sal & Sun. 17180 1 LIKE new GE Color TV. WM 1 new w11.rranty & delivery,
Ec!gewa~r Ln H, Harbour. $800. Now l40(). Baby !urn & GOULD 'MUSIC CO.
M&-1291 ' all equip. $00. 545-7(37. 2045 Nn. Main, !5.A. ,
11 547-0681 Since 1!111 MOVING; ch\Jdttnil Ir. baby
c lothes, play piru, lamps,
hood for '65 Ford & m~.
Sat & Sun. 1.126 Peularirn,
C.M. 557-3032
SAT-Sun. AJI kinda of
tumUutt/houAehold goods.
.124 M11.rguf'rite, Apt. B,
CdM. 67!i-20TI.
GARAGE Sa I e Satunlay:
ga.rden tools, toy1, pictures,
dinnette tel, gTrls bdrm. Mr!:,
mlac:. 69$2 Carla Cir, H.B.
CAR Phone -Compacl
channl!I: unit COS't $1700
Sell for $lCOJ. 644-2940.
+ PIANOS ** OR-GANS
WALK·IN 7x7. Meat C88e1,
10' & 12'. Slicer &. oven, '65
CadULac. 54!l-J250 5-8 pm.
FARBERWARE rotli!i8tl'le
$30. Bing rurtboa.nf. 9'&".
$J>. 962-4251 Likf' new!
14' Bofit -Fibe.rgla11s bottom.
till trailer, '72 llc. 4 H.P. rolo
tilltt Oike new) 968-8011
Krl""lU, Steinway, lAlw~y.
Allen, Ba ldwin etc. From
S295 up. R!:N't'Ar.s no up.
Daily 10-6 Sun. 12-!
FIELD'S PIANO CO.
183.1 Newport Blvd. ,
O>Bla MeaA 714/645-325(1
*HAMMOND ORGANS
Largest 4r oldest dealer In
U.S. All moclel1 new·uttd.
Before )'OU buy • live ua .a
INFANT .Jirja c Io th t n g • try.·
GARAGE Sale, Furniture. Beautiful cond. Sz 0.18 mo'1. PENNY OWSLEY CO
rmigerator & m ix.. Fri., Be:11:1 11\oml. 644-4314. lTI4l 892-111•
Sat, & SWt. f'~b. 41. 9821 BRITANNICA grtat booka, U152 Bf'aeh Blvd
Se.lint', H.B. 962-9578. 52 vol. aet with 34 sup. (So. ot KateUa)
GARAGE SALE: Saturday • plements and bookc:ue Sl!JO WOULD YOU
H.B. Mi.>4:12 KINCSiZEXJ<d liner pod • • REE ORGAN IXSllONI
.t.....-.& ' • old '. . .. -. .. )'OU J.J.b? ~ ..... GARAGE oole. Raund ool< ~. S ..,, ' 5 I"" t.lntlon. N oblln!lon J
...,, ... chain, nlM1.--$35. Prlvalo -°'""' ar..J.,.,,,lO p.._"" PAINTlNC,. Guan.n!ttd pm-
fttlk>nal WOlit 1.t fair prices.
U t'd A Jos. fTS..5740.
PAINTING I PAl'Elt!NG,
tt yi,: tn ~~ att11.. Lie •
loonded. 11or. """-612-2356.
84).2664. • EXP.' lady tor child catt, 3
dty$ a wetlc, my home. 1
cMld, own trans prete~.
6461709 or 644--M18.
Sat 1°'111-Spm.
Mon lOtm.Spm
PART TIME COO K
WANTED. Vl:U.AGE INN.
BALBOA ISLAND.
commilaions and bonus. Ap. _31(8 Warr"en Ln., C.M."
ply ln peraon betwftft 9·00 l''Gteen-Sota. beautiful con-Md U,00 .-r ll 8311 l!oilO ctltloO $&5
AYemH!', Midway Cfty. I . ~ 6'75-5767
Sunday. 63n Braemt.r Dr. llrm. ~. 11 BELIEVE
anllquo """" ..._1995 &i !Ill 1183.1 COAST MUSIC
5 FAMILY .9.lptt Canst 9'x15' han:I .own Orlt.nt&I sd.11!151
Sale. Sat. • &in. lD62 r-rua from ·Thd.it,. 6 mo. dd\ PIANO Qpf"taM ln lood eon!
B ..... rd. r.v. RiioO • ryory oo1ora AonJ Paid $OOo 1or •~tor liA TCltEST lledeOontlnt )iiollem $21), G-:M!I. $110: m.3122 o/t. S PM '
PAPER" HUNG $30
Aey rm. + . -· 646-2449
!DDJNG Ir Fada tm. 2 story
Jm_ Exter only. e:42--Z755 or
00-1403.
Acct.ng. amc SSOO
Girl F'rldAy·EI Toro $6ro
Insurance Sttrtrtary to S700
Exec. Sec'y·St1n1on $650
Medical Secretary 1o $550
Exec. Sc!e'y/Const.r to $«iO r:. Olc·Pmp. Jn~. $500
Se<-'y.Comm'\ 1.n1utt 1525
Olct.3;phorw' Scc'ya $500
P/Tlmf' 1'ypi11t $2.50 h.r
NEWPORT
Personnel Agency
U3 Dover Or., N.B.
642-3170
EX1'R.A lneom4!'. Full or pt.
time. Shftklee• Oraanlc Skin
CAre Product.I lhru home
J>Artiet:. BUI or Bo b •
548-ll82!1.
FULL or pltlme, Mam!
trne, no f'Xp. n e c ,
Sal•ry/co mm . Fullt<r
Brush, 962-0416.
F/Cllool<kooptt'
Rttltaurant ec'l)ef. pn:t'd.
m..tTI4
t ALWAYS TOP ~G •"" V1oWU•ta bedroom f:!J TElll'OIAIJ oot -$800. Dari< !In ..
'if.ILL llSllllHllTS beaut. c.'001d. $400. ><&-"'5.
PIQC 'J'Ypl8t. Fam I l I 1 r C..... .. Ii ,.+Nr ._._ sgDROOM set, double btd.
w /IBM Exec. lyptwrit!.r. .., ·~' ... $~ s.1aJy UOO mo. nvtne lndui. YH'tl M tiM Y" M. dreuf'r. mJJTOr_, Corell, ,.,.
area. 833-2S70, Mrs. 'T'lnkler N. fff tww. JTA h ~ 4i4-i:l3%1 at! 6 pm.
Ptaie .SO.idton Dtiiv• • .,.... llJ..12'1 OLIVE rm ao(a & belgt
t"M.lr. Bookrhtlf. Good con-Gals ~t In 5be.pe, frtt TRAY AIDE. full fun~. 6:30 dition, CaJJ 64)...0888:.
n"duclnt' cpurv + euh a.m lo l pm. S2.34 ~r hr. --'-------
«1mm. l.eadlna Ttductnc: Pttl6nne1 Office, South Put a Uttle "mt' tn your
Salon fl.qurwa Hilla) Work COLft Ccmmvnlty Holp!IA.~ Levf1 • aefl U.:. bau~11
oul ol yOttT own ltomt. Call South t.arunL An oqual op. liir ''bocks". Call O.Uolllid
-....... portunlt;y tmpl•l'•'" ------•
S&le! EWl')'thlnaeoet! WHIRLPOOL Relr l 1 weekd"ys, a nyti me
• Mf;..5154 Ir w/frd'J.er, boy 4 rhi blkd, weekends.
Nt:JGHBORlJOOD I a r a St door l•n., ·dbl be!it ~ ~SA=VE=IZO'=-on-...,.,--,-...,--I ,
...,, Hu .. vorlely. Frl·Sun. Color T. V. Xlnt C..... t>U'flM eleo orran. wolrltt,
_9).!6 LaC.-loi F.V. W..1515 198,. '46-lla ·-, i411 , -•ft/e,,;,
GARAGE -Sat· • Sun OOPPERTOl<E '"'""'"'tOr· PRIVATE PAliTY ·wANTS
19322 JetT!Jyn IAM, Hur> 4 WJlnut 30" Bu StOOll: TO BUY PJANO FOR
t1rcton Beach. ~ CtU at 5 ~· SS'f--61'J8,. 1 CA~. 135--~.J
DOUBLE bed $15, buttM lllO. SLIM-<:Yld BABY .,..00 ptano.,llowon!.
<:rib. blk•. tr11or. i .... "'*· 125. •boo> &Wt. tlood """"11on.. . ··. QolotQr.-.m-1»1 --.
I
t.
• t
• y
r
Friday, Frbruary 4, 1972 * DAIL V PILOT :Jf)
I -I~ I .. b .. ~ I ~ I ...::-"~ J~ ~[ ,_......,._,;..~JfiJ i l 1""-"'1'" lfiJ / I ., ... ,, ... i. l§J I ~ ·_"'""'-s...~l§i ~I '"_""_"""~!§] I ., ........ ,. 1§1 IS.!~w;lng;;M;;•d\;;lno;;•;;;l2l;:1 Dott IS4 &o.h, S.11 '°' CyclH. llll<tl, I Auto S.rvic•, P•rh 949 : T""'ks 9'2 , •A~u;to;s;, ;lm;;po;r;tod;;;~9;70;'1~u;t;os;,;l;m;po;;rt;od;;~;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1
BUY d~t. Elna salt' only BASE NJ I AKC pup 1----------Scooters '2.5 ---------
$269. Whit~Elna, 4822 Para.. Barkless, o®rless, prrf~ H~lE Cat 16 J mos md. AITENTION
mount Blvd. Lakewoxl house dog, champ ped. Llme ~n hull, ydlow 125 CC KaWUAld, 17 hp.1
2131423--0717 , . M/f' 979-0T40 tran1pohne. S1495. Phone Clean, motocrou dirt bikr. TRUCK BUYERS ' ' after 6 pm 842-3737. SJOO. 64.\-0682 •
SEWING machine, ltke new, NOVICE ~ 0 bed 1 enc e Boats SI' /Dock t lO
Kenmore modt>I SJ. Paid Clul starting Tufii.. f'eb. ' IPS S
i 109. Sell $38. 675-8067. 8th, 7 P.M. MARTINCREST SL.JPS, lS' lo <12', Finest in
Sporting Goods 130 KENNELS. :;46.0089. Npt Harbor. BeJ11t facilities.
_---'-------\MUST go! Two black toy r~rtt pa.rkin&. 673-8ffi till
RElDADlNG e quipm e nt poodles, 4 D\08. ol.d, 3 10 p.m.
'67 BULTACO LoB1!0 F.x-
pamlon C"hambPr llf'"' tirt'-:'I".
Runs fM'tf«t S300. 979-1319
5 SPEED &hwlnn C.OUC'g1atc
Btk", $35. Call
979-0"72 Hetters Pl"fi!I, RCBS. Dies charn~ liny toy poodles. N=EWPO==R~T°""'Sl~l~.,-.-lro~m-$~2~.25~
lor . 270. 300 . wby, M-l 646--tEi65, per II. Sail or pov.oer. YAMAflA 100 trail bike.
carbine, 243 Wl11, 44 mii.g. GREAT DANE Pups AKC 4 548-2592 4!M-2671 Good cond. $2Z5.
Case tnrnmer, R c BS Wk! Harl~uin & bik s~ . . I 67l-7499 after 5 pm
Powder ineaJliUrP, man Y le ~t quality. 586-7038. w M~R ING f~r rent"· ~55', i '70 HONDA 175 Scr"dmblf'r,
buUets, brass, Pr i mer' , . Betit acr:ess JUST off B St. I gd. cond., 5,000 nil. $390. I
much ....,uipmenr Sl;xJ for Af'G l-IAN PUPS, finest in Nr. Pavilion. 642-5557. M 1 II ~o ~,. 1 -, ' · OC Ex · 1 us Sf' . ;JQO""U(} anyHmf'.
Buy, Sell, Trade
----L60X15 S2!:1.!Y.1
J.OOX14 $29.95
G60X14 $29.95
U.S. Mag!! $15.~
Hi-Jackers $.Vt.;.o
100 r.1PH Balan('e on Car
{!\lags OK !
'72 GMC 1 TON P.U,
1"1 n!rd glass, (•amprr mirn»-, 1 i;i~· W. heavy du1y rron! &
ro•ar spring:;, automati<', air
•'Ond., radio, c11mpl'r wiring,
tool box, gauges, 1X1wer dist·
brakes. &UPf'r cuslom, 950.x_
l6x5, 8 ply tire~. This is not
a s!r1ppy, this ls 11 1-on1pl(•!r :
heavy duty urut, equ1p[l('rl I
lo hendlf' fhC' largC'st t·an1p /
everything. 97~lJl9. ·. otic rolors !uperb * BOAT Sp11ce near Lido. , • 1!1511 Ne .... ·port, cr.1 64~1154
GUN Colleclion Rl'mlngton pcdigret. By app!. 962-9989. .Side tie & slip. Arcom. 20 to ~il~~;uK~i'S ~::~ 0
l\' J ~CORVAIR C'l1~. rornr. I
pump. 276 win SllO, Ru&f'r COLLIE PUPS AKC 40 ft. boar. 673-6450. 646-464;: ' or rehl1 g, V\V front l'!ld & pan.
10/22 carbint, brand new Tri'11 -Males Boats Speed & Ski 911 I r..1akf' offer Jolg....9fl5:i. !
f'r. No. 500.526. Ruy !hi• 10-
1
day for
$3999
Ovrr 4-0 C111n[l('l'.'i &
Trucks Av11.ilahl<'
S30, Charles Daly Ventura $50. * 646---0219 , , MUST Sell! Honda CL 100.1 ,63 V\I/ Bod
Crade 12 ga. 26" barrels AKC Ba1!set Hound, male, 17' flBERGLAS.S 11ki hoe.I, ~11\ 001~· &1~~;i~sB S285. shot. $175.
00
rngLne. y
S200. Ithaca Model 37 pump Champion 11in!d. Sacrifice lnboard/outboenl M e r c . us see. · · e 646-6..119
12 ga. 30" be.rte! $130. S50. 830-00Jl. l'tuiser; tilt trlr; CRTIV8S.'I '69 YAMAHA 250 cc DT-IB, cor . Beach & 1•-7 "'-* Valve ITT"lndf'r. like l'lf'1-•.', 97~13\9. A!<~GHANS, AKC, 6 mo11, red l'Over. $2,695. Also 8 , lnor: new, 4 00 v1ig. mi. $Aj() w/a!I ettachmf'nls incl'd. M c F a dden,
LEFT Hand shooters , or silver. Must stll. Jiberglass dinghy, 3 hp Firm. 537-7o35 art 5 pm. S4:iQ. Call 536-1288. Westm in ster
Weatherby 257 m R g n u m $125 8-16-:)265 motor. S~. 673-7499 11.fteir 5 HODAKA Super Rat 1971. 894• 1336
Leapold 3x9 variable Bueler BOXER PUPS AKC reg. pm. Many c.xtra..~. Like new,
mounts, br and new $320.00. Champton lHlf' 12 Ft Boston Whalf'r 18 HP 644-2677 l§J 531 -2450
We11.rherby 300 m11gnum * 714 . 962.8067 John50n. center steeri~, re-'71 HONDA SL 125 new conrl. .___'_'_"_'_"'_"'_' _ _, M CHEV. '68
Leapold 3x9 variable Buelf'r · · molt controls boat cover, lo mi , 7 mos old, make of--·
moun1s $280.00, 97~1319. Beagle Pups 8 33 ~1526 lights_ over sisoo invest~. fer. 557-1 14.l 1/2 Ton Pickup
ROSSJGNOL Strate> Skis Cute & beautiful $35/$50 , Sacrifice $195, After 6 pm ~.7~1 -Y~a-m-,-ha--350-.-,-tre-el-b-;k-f!. G ene ral 950 I ONLY 23,CXXI LOCAL f\llLES
{:;n?I Lll ng Boots, sz 9. GERMAN Shorthair Pointers ~2-:737· . Like new. 400 :r.1iles. $600. ----------Lcing 1.vheel baSf', 6 cyl. slick.
Grand Prbc heel/Nevada AKC. 2 males 8 wks. 13. _F .G. Ski hM!, 35 h.p. }''inn. 962-4618. '70 VVJ, low miles, offer. '72 rad .• htr. Cui;1. r1th. Mir-
toe. Super steal flt SIOO. 676-81135. Ev1_nrurlr, runs g o od, Du.~rcr. Both xlnt rond. mrs, heavy du1y equipped.
Mike McCarthy
GMC
I I •~25 <.A<. =-n10 fl 6 '67 Suzuki 250 cc, X6 538-6815 ra1 er, ~ · ..,..,-"J;'I a er 846-0720. \\'ith <lrluxe camper shell. 968 1 AUSTIN HEALEY
1
BMW . BEAG).ES, AKC puppies. 2 pm. Good condition. $275. "l t '--~ ...... GOLF CLUBS, left hand, pro female! 135 ea 962-5915 T " us '-"-" sei'n K .. nvf'n lo . ' . 13' ALLEN 'th 40 HP * 847-9883 * rucks 962 Jully apprecia!c. I 14992CI 1-----------~~~ :;;~: :J'f.f,.';:'"'· A •11" 3 pm 0
' all day wknd" "'""' • ,,.;.;,;;' w;1h w.,;h: '70 KAWASAKJ 2SO CC. Mu.i ,64 CH EV. 314 TON NABERS CADILtAC WE b"y all m•k" or_ de'" 1 '67 Austin Healey I IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
AKC Malamute pup p I es , $.'50. 531-7294. M>ll by Sunday. First i 385. used spor1s ears, pa1rl for 1 $2295
KNEE BOARD $150. Males & females. take!'i, 673-8800. Split rin1s, heavy duty or not. Pleas(' drive in for II 2002,5 &
Xl..JllT COND, no dinv. 968-1170 springs, radio, healer, ''28:!" AUTHORrZr.":D DEALER free appraisal. Harlin. 1 lra1rr. ovrrrlriv1-.
S50 * 642 9329 '~---'-----'I I •) Motor Homes 940 VI\, 3 speer! trans .. s r" p 2SOO 1-IARBOR BL.,
1
only 27.000 n1iles, Jmnuu·u Bavaria's . ~ . GERMAN SHEPHERDS Tran&pOrtation bumper.Only$700.Byowner COSTA l\1ESA lair, s1h•f'r hlur ~1th rus-
Stor•, Restaur•nT, AKC. champ stock, 8 wk!. *Marvin Pearce* 548-8778 540-9100 Open Sunrla.v 1nr11 interior.
Bar 132 • 67;)...2533 * I I '68 DODGE ··culi!om • Newport mports
RESTAURANT Pquipmenc: AKC Great Dane Pups, c s I /R 1920 1 Motor Homes Sporlsman" Y.'indow van. V-HI. t 3100 \V. Cnai:1 11\\·y ..
N.l.,on•I C••h R<g,·,1er, 2 Champion stock, 8 wks. $50. ampers, a e en " 8, auto, air, \\'ide tirf'S & 3100 W. Coast lh\'y., Nr11·port Beach
Hotpoinl fryen & f:"l<!C. Call 64.2..fi625. APACHE . Wheel Camper • Sales e Rentals r uns. Heavy duty options. Nev.·port Brach 642-MOS
grills. 6' stainlf'SS s1tt1 Horses 156 Tent Trailers. ·n car load 25.000 mi. Like Tll'W. $2395. International ~er 642-9405
f!'lrig., double head Taylor sale · Some freight damage 558·3222 67~2359. RECREATION CENTER W£ PAY TOP DOLLAR
shake machine, Scotchman APPALOOSA -Ne1v &. used from S295 up. MARINE Parts & equip. ROY CARVER, Inc. FOR TOP USED CARS
lee machine, Corey coffet any reas offer. 675-2973 ALPINE TRAILER Mercury props & control 2925 Harbor Blvd. 1t yPur car b extra clean,
ma ker. Rusi'! Hamburger s, SALES cables, air g uid e in-Costa Mesa 546-4444 Sef: U!I f.rst.
1144 Newport Blvd., C.M. I! .. Ji I 8352 Garden Grove Blvrl. struments, controls (single '67 Chevy.~ ton, &'bed with BAUER BUICK &42-7~. I ...!:'~ "-Carden Grove, Calif. 92641 lever), winrlshicld. Block & camper, r /h. Good cond. z.i E. 17th St.
16 Illuminated sho.,.,•case, 3 (714! 534-6686 t&ckle. 549-05.10. Sl.500. R.12-792!1. CCk'lla Mesa s.1&-7765
flasa shelve~. gold anodized VACATIONEER '67 Ford van. _Finished in
!?ttings. Excel oond. C a 11 Gen•ral 900 4 Star &. Weekender. Over haek V.'ilh carpet, paneling
526-lll4 or 646-6721. 40 different models to choose & 8 track st<'rro. Rebuilt
Auto Leasing 964 L\1PORTS WANTED
Orange Counties
TOP l BUYEll
'&\ 3000 i\1K 11 orig. O""'Tlt'r,
clc11.n, sharp, xoo<l cond.
$1 L'iO. 54-0-3491\.
BMW
AutomotiVP. E.xcellence
SEE u~ ABOu-r
Overseas Delivery
CREVIER MOTORS
208 w. l~t SI .. Santa Ana I s3.s.3111
DATSUN
I '72 DATSUN PICKUP
TV, Radio, H iF I, SCUBA 111r c<> mp re R g" r fronl. 13631 Harbor. Garden Grcl\1e C'ngine & small aiiioun! o!
Stereo ll6 ck-humidilier misc. Marine Scotts Canipcr~ 1 Blk, So. of G.G. Frv.)'. hofty \\"Ork. $1};{1 6464i792_ Bn.L MAXEY TOYOTA ROY CARVER I , nc:, < .<pd, di" ""camper , Rad;o,
18881 Beach B!vrl. I 292~ 1-1 ·bor Bl ·d 6 ply 111·r~. 01ra1n cnginr. Han:hvare, line, anchor. 911 H!\f'bor Blvd. 6.16-2333
1972 ZENITH & RCA Color & &14-8866. Sant11. Ana 1971 CRUISATRE F 0 rd 1970 El Camino, 14·!XXI iniles.
bl k --Un<kT V.'arranly. Air, p/~. ac & white TV sale. LIF{E new Lido 14 1970 vw Ad•~oiu-r campe•, Custom Su pc.-van :WO, V·8 d b k ..._._~ ... '" • P"'r IS<.' ra f'S, au1 n. Shell
r•-"-' below I he dis-* BOAT TRAILER * cu~tom made. 18,000 miles. auto-trans .. power steering 13 000 °"
I 13 · . 1 .1 '--top, mags, , , "''""'5616, ooun e~ ...,. yr ptc!un 673-2522 14 ga1 pressurized water air, ow mi es, owner s,..,...,., 642-2173.
tube. l Yt palis & servi~. , tank, Magic Chef built-in 842-2489. Color antenna installed tree 16 !'IBERG.LASS Came. Us-'56 J.'on.i 1~ T, S600. Cherry •. 1,11 ~, .. 1,, --· 7 F·'. td one hmf' only, $20l 51ove; Will tradt" up for T r•ilers, Trave l 945 .__ .. .. '-"""" uuu or:u 97~1050 646-4643 motor homC'. 642-0358. ,,.,.,y. Motor pref., o'drv,
No do .... ·n required 0 .A.C. · or ' NOMAD mag V.'h!s, glas tires
ABC Color TV. 9021 A!Janta, Boats, Malnt./ * SHELLTOPS--,,C: VACATIONEE R 962-4618.
Huntington Beach 968-33 29. Service 902 EL CAMINO * RANCHERO l 4'-l5' sizes, shop le com"'3""· '6.1 FORD Falcon ...,.jl'l(iow .. DATSUN P ick Ups ..-·~ e RCA 21 color TV A-1 BOAT Bott<>ms cleaning 25t B & J SALES You'll be happy with our van, Ne~v clutch & s.larter.
condition. $175 -console 11 fl. Lenglh ll t w/l. 1030 S. Harbor, SA S3S-2S1S 1 _dPal. $pe-cial this week only, niag \\-'heels, good cone!.
.model • 836-S.'i23 , 18' with .fihower.toilet, r:cfr ig, $750. 675-~153.
P11 clrard Bell 21" black & · · 7o V\V "·/pop top, lent. fully s_ell-c.'<lntllint'd. S2195. '62 f'ORD Econoline Pick
white. A-1 conditioo. SSS, Boats/Maclne chem. toil_et, front tire ml:, Scotts Ca mpers Up, Perfect rondilion, Call Consol~ rn od e l -Phon'e Equip. 904 sl~ps 4, hke ne""', 11,00J mi. 925 N. Harbor Blvrl. 642-0037 anytime.
548-1395. 4$-2190. Santa An11
1 ~==--------1 r.1ARI NE E qui p m P n t -•71 El Dorado Mini-home. ""T'""B~--08,.---~,--~-, '68 Douhle-C8h VW Truck, MUNTZ 4 &. 8 ll'ack tapl" Mercury props. SO H.P. to A ig ear self contained roof rack. nev: tirts, xlnl
<leek, fi months old, good 120 H.P. W'•P ·-·od Sell-cont., sl~ 6, All pwr. traii('r on lake shoN' Jal . ....1 "" .. 7,91 .,,...,._, Winter ral .... 511° 951 3. '""I'• boo! • boa/. -J I COhu, """'""" .. · condition S.iO or trade Jor _w i11d sh.iel.d . All new. "" """" ,.._ '-"' "r. n fi -~ All I 11995 Call 1959 CHEVY 1 Ton $47:l. 1700 Af\f-FM radio for VW or of-, ReaM>nable, 549-0530. '69 VW Sundial Camper rie <.-uoPU. or · {7141646-9238 Superior, Costa i\-lesa . fer. 548-5.'m. BOAT "'-". . I * VERY CLEAN * "'d"-69 'l it.Lier , 111ng e drop $2500 499-4175 A I S • p I 949 .,...,..1 l. FOR Sale 2 Lancer 30\V alllf', heauv duty,~ lbs. u o erv1ce,, a r s 1-----------·.r '65 lntcmatioool Travelall 4 rpeakt rs. BSR Mc-Donald extend11.ble bed S 3 5 O, Cycles, Sikes, hi ·
31 -1 SI O O MUNTZ 4 & • •-ck ''""' w . rlr1vr . Sl~?ll. OX Turn •u. . 673-0732. Scooters 915 • u ... ··~ 1\47-n~"' u•nt6 dPCk, 6 month!'i olrl, good "" .,...,... · 6 HP Johnson out"-----' eng.1------------"'-"ll"{I , rondition $50 or tr11de for '63 Chevy ~ ton P.U. $500.
COLOR TV, 1969, liltle use. & fuel Tank. l yr. old Little 70 Honda CL450 Af\1-Fl\1 rarlio for V\Y or of· Call
""'alnut c11binet. $185. Must UM'. $195. 673-1066 kl! 6 pm. SCT11.mbler. Twin OlfC. Too fer. ~g....5Jllo. 1· 646-1175, 642--5845
8ell. 642--0584. n--ts, P-•r 906 n!rt' to be ralled used. gva """ NEVER u1*'d rull length rack '71 Dodge Va.n. 127 WR. r/h.
RCA Vi1:tor Colnr TV. 21'' (4A7228) Only S695· !or VW Squa.reback. Cost I tapr, p;tll('!IC'<!. beaut iMlde. .crrrn, consoL In gd, cond. 16' BOSTON Whaler, 2 yrs.
Id Fo -~ t'sh" d k ~ ll•f\· • $75. Sell $49.50, 644-4265. $2900. 675-771.lt. 642-9619. o • nl.ouu i mg ec . "\$
full life rails, 115 HP M Autos, Imported 970 A u tos, Imported 970
radio, Johll!50n outboard. I u 11 m'"' STEREO w/AM /l"M
good cond. $40. cover, $2395. 673-1006 aft 6 .,.n
Try our lf'il.<,e experts for
Savings • Satisfaction • Ser ·
YiCC,
\VF: LEASE ALL POPULAR
J9n MAKES AT COMPETI-
TIVE RATES.
Call Malcolm Reid for
further detail~.
THEODORE
ROBINS FORD
2000 H"arbor Blvd.
CO!';la Mesa 642-0010
Aut os Wanted 968
WE PAY TOP CASH
for used can I: trucks, juJt
call Us far free Pstimat~.
GROTH CHEVROLET
Ask lot Sales Ma..nqer
18'lll Beach Blvd ,
Huntington Beach
847-lilm KI 9-3331
WlLL Buy )'Our car paid for
or not. Call R.Rlph Co0rr1<=1n
673-0900 -~!}-3031. 1970
Harbor RJud., Costa i\-Tesa.
Turn unused Hems inlo quick
ca.~h. call 642-5678
H. Beach. P'i. 847-8555 i Cn!!tn ~~rs:1 S~f,~444•1 I S2389.9:i. ('an r1n pvt pty w t
970 B,\l'\\' '70, h1r~r. Jrotlf\ <-nnrl~' no. mnnry rl?wn f)AC. •
Autos, Imported C'IC':in. s2.~~l nr n r r" r, 771;4&1. 546-117.16 alt l t am
\ ,;;,1&-32;i; 494-&111.
I 00Bt-.·\\I/ ~flfl CS. 11 1 r, '67 D~A7T=su~.~,-.=,,-,~ti-o0-w=.-.-,-,,
: ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, .1<11nroof, \r111hcr. A~1/F:-Ol. rarlio, hra1•·r. 46.1 AGC.
P\"I pl~'. $/j:iflfl Mfi-6020. sm:i. Jit.1 ~LEMONS lJ\.1-
f'ORTS. 2'~1 So, ~lain, S.A.
5."i7-7i2-U.
ALFA ROMEO
~~o(';o
\ I
~IL 0
ALFA-ROMEO
(S•r. 57186 1 From $2990
One of Ilic \\lorld 's
Finest
Spons C11rs
?;low on Display
al
COAST IMPORTS
1000·1210 \V. Coai;! Hwy.
Nf"Ul>Orl Rf'arh
642-0406
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH ·
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
'67 DATSUN Sta Wgn, xlnt
rorul. Best orter takes!
842-51.1R
'67 DATSUN PICK UP.
$1,tnl nr hr~I offrr.
5-IS-!1845
~~--~~----' 67 Spor1s 1600 (\1nvC'r1 . Stick
shift .. R/I!. !op conrl. Jm-
mac. int. $!)7~ •. %R-Ql59.
FIAT
BILL BARRY
PON TIAC-GM C-FIAT
BRAND NE\V
'71 FIAT R511 SE:DAN
Fully fii c·tory equ1pl)l'd. $1295 .
t>lus_ ta.x & 111·. + rloc frc.
2000 E. f"J n.'-.1, SANTA A..1'1;A
5!>!'· 1000 ----Jr.~ 11 twee~!" .. M"ll y<>ur
Items with PRM!', use Daily
P ilol Classifie<l. 642-5677.
Autos, Imported' 970 : Autos, lmportea 970Autos. Imported 970 Aut os, Imported 970
644-44~3 !:~~~~~~~~:~! pm. Toyo1a & Jaguar Dealer 16' DOLPHIN, C11.bin, fly ing 900 S. Coast Highw11.y
I[' bndge, 11:alley, hrad, com-Lagun11 Beach 540-:1100
~--''" __ ''-~-"'--~ pass_, S1 S Radio, 11 11 '67 !o(UZUKJ X-6 Hustler COSTA MESA DATSUN
-f1br~ass $600.00. 646-9076. ~'1'69 Pnginf'. Xtra parrs.
3 Lin", 2 T imes, $2.00 after 5 pm . Xln! col'l<l . $:195 or make ofr. I
• 16' TROJAN SKI Boet. 200 962-18.)() or 64&--344,l
SPAYED ~tit, J yrs. old, HP, V-8, xtnt oond . .$950. 196.'t TRIUMPff Trophy &50.
must ha\·e ctosed yard. Will finance Very clean. Can & e e
Preftr older p e r Bon . 673-6450 or 61:>-3122 anytime 11\ J95L-s Costa
8'l-41n. --31' 1W1N Screw Cruise Mesa St, CM.
Y6UNG, black, female, part Along. ~ause <>f tailing '69 BRJDGESTONE dual
Cocker Spaniel. Abandoned, health will accept be!t ofr. twin. Road & dirt. 5 speed.
obedient. lovable. 548-9659. as is. 673-6247, Xlnl cond. Sac! $2~0 .
TWO Newfoundl11nd white BOSTON WhaJer 13' w/till 646-3062.
rebbitJJ wi ltl caaes. up trailer, 40 HP Johnson,1'·05""°~H~O'°N~D=A~l~60,,-~N-.-.-c-,-,~,k
• 548-984."> • xl~t cond. S48--0545. pistons, tin>s, etc ... Full
BLACK male Silky/Cocker 26' TOU..YCRAFJ, A·l cond. chroJ!le, e!ee. start. Xlnt!
pup, all lbots, very biendly; Fully equipped incl. moor-SlSO/offer. 644--0938.
t0 eood l!Ome. 968-3257 ing &: dinghy. 548-4643 aft ~-KAWASAKI 175, 1100 mi
. Bo•h, Rent/Ch•rt'r 9fM _$;300· _Al so ~zig zag ~wing [ '!El
machine. li'J. 557-2676. r.ttw-'L. CATALINA 27' SLOOP . '70 HONDA cs 350
_ . ~ Brand new boat Aux, power, Good cond e Xtru
• slttP8 six, SIS radk:J, RDF, $ 833-2302
6"l" headroom, convenienll--~~~·~~~=--Ptb, Gener•I l50 N~ .Slip / w/plmt:J ot '68 Honda 0. 350
1r Extn Large * perking. Clµb r-,tn. For Info Perfect ~ cor1d..
TROPICAL ·FISH call 557~· Aft~S:30. S450. '1r 673--~
----
Jtet.mn11.b~ 830-%126 Boats, Sail '°' ·n Triumph. 650 Trophy. 6CXl
16,.,.. MiJM. Llke1 new. Sl150 or
J""" • .,..'·------15-21 '3' S A S SLOOP T.O.P. !162-4618.
WANTED: good home tor M~rict'nt cO~. ~ak hull1 . '69 Yainaha 100, S2:25. Pllr ~n cats. neuterf!ld • etc. -· e 1111 d81• 3400 miles. Good condltlOn.
A: diclaMd. 8 4 2-·-t 6 5 9 , •lffps: 7• Wonderful for Cail 644-31117 aft $. . tamilf crulf", wllh race rpv~ .,, ' p>tentaL ~al \N;)'I Open "89 BSA 650 Ughtning, mint
U9f8 • -154 1JwaiuR ttu. . wietlcitnd at cond, New ene. W~ fJ050
·· , FRASER YAOIT I 8ROK· i.t !lllO takes. ~-fJ'!L
!Jl'<?USll S.tt«, f<ntll•. 5 'ERS, :IOI 0,,.... NpMldt. I "Ill HONnA 100 'l'J'U 81bt mo 1 ~ 4 champs, 4 tn-<1l!l ...,. _ _,,. 'i. • .. 12.-Llk krnat'i mM:lps $20 0 . 'L :'""'"~a• 'l"--,+ .tra...... e new. Very ~ .' . a· Tr><nmn C!!Olplelt Gcsi low m~ ... ·mo. -T3l6.
, w'11Uii -A eut1111y miniature _._ ••• l!lf;'. 1 JO SPD. M.., ScltwtM vanJ.
khnaum, J)tlpp\tt, AK{: ""!'--~ A•..U.. ty'. ~ c:ond. $50,
ng. Al.I ihota. Call Joanne Malnr_ofttt. ~ 345:3611
alter f pm, 847'89l9, SJ!OCK fiba'gluo lnh!hta· '!Ill !llOf<. Triumph Tro\lh>,
WtRE Ralr f ox 't'eniet-. I~ 14 with tnUtr,. $300. X1nt OOnd. ~-
AKC m . > ...,, mal<. gaod C.11 W-4111. ~ "' 64:1-4895
!"_at k In i 1, Evellwkndt, LOA 17, new trailer, klok!t Mu!t Aell l-kmda 90,
J33-86:C5. • srtal $995 xln't ccindkion. $lSlt
. SCH N A U ZE.J\ pup s, • * ~ * , C.H 64ih5!l18
itotwbrolt•n. ""'''· SOtd l•' CATi'\l.'RAll · l\AWASAKI 4 HP mlnl-l>ilt<. ) .. rv/c<, Groomlre. lmta. New, F~ lo ..UI Gd>! t:OOttltlon.
~.· lllOlJ * -• ~~ .. ---
• • ~ --
--.~J
;;;e-: ·-. '
••
Eyes right: Datsun 240.Z. Left: !)a(sun SjO Sedan. Both have ovorheadc;amenglne& lndependont raarsuspen9ions. Safety front disc
brakes. So if you're Jn the markel for a sensational ll!Ue famil y car, pick tlie one wilh a sports car heritage. The Datsun 510 Sadan.
See Our Complete Line of '72 ·Datsuns e STATION WAGONS e PICKUPS e 2 & 4
DR. SEDANS e FASTBACKS e 240Z (LIMITED QUANTITY> -GOOD SHOW! DRIYI If. D4TSUN , ". THE N DECIDE •
2845 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA· 540-6410
I \
•
]§]11 ......... I§]! [ .,,,.~§] I .,,...... l§J IL_[ ~_ ....... _ .... ___,]§]
Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmport.O 1--'--'------
9'70 /A:;ulo;;•;· ;lm;;)>O;rt;od;;~;,~711 ! Auto" Imported 970 1' Autos, hnportod 970 1 Autos, UNCI
TOYOTA TRIUMPH VOLKSWAGEN HOT WHEELSI
990 970 Auros., Import.a 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmportM
FIAT JAGUAR
'68 FIAT R5tl Sf)flrl (l)tlP".
R&ll, J~\\" clutrh & brakr~.
r.noct rubber. Clean & X]n1
Nnd. .1fl 111l/v11 p•·r i;~I
Iii;,.. \.W.i l'\'('I.
SAUER BUICK
HONDA
Radio,
'i1 110.'\DA
llNllf'r, t426R.SYI
l l09S
'70 Ja9uar 2 + 2 1
$4995
,Auto Trans, Air Conrl. Ai\f/
TM Radio. Chron1r \\"hrr]ir;,
Burgunrly 11 t!h 11111 inrrrinr,
Hurl). l:\"1'/\202!
Newport Imports
:nno \\'. Cl"l11~1 1iv.-y .,
Nr1vpnr1 RrRch
1'-__ 64_2_-9_4o_s __ _
'67 JAG XKE. Aulo Tr11ri",
Air C..onrl. 0 u ts t 11 n rl 1 n i:::
price. Musl ~cr1/1l'r, $2:¥.15,
, (TRH.Olft), Dir. {"o dealer
calls. 557-5242.
FINAL CLEARANCE
NEW 1971'S!
NEW '71 TOYOTA MARK II
2 DOOR HARDTOP'
F•c'lorv •+r, r11d io, w/w Ii•••, pwf. di1c1. ro11 r w on·
dow d•fo99•r, li ~I. 91•11 and mu,h mor•! #02171116
WIND. STIC KER $3185.44
SALE PRICE $26111.00
SAVE $504
'71 VOLVO 144
Dl:MONSTRATOR
REDUCED TO
$3722
'72 DEMO CHANGEOVER!
Over a dozen s howroom fresh 1972 clemo
and executive cars no\v a vailable at im-
portant sa vings '. Con1e 111 today for your
choice of these beautiful, lo\\1 mileage,
never regislercd. 1972 ·ro_votas and VoJvos .
FIRST COME, FIRST SAYE!
'68
$1277
$1777
VI SIT OUR ULTRA MODERN
SERVICE DEPARTMENT
PAINT SHOPS e BODY SHOPS
JAGUAR OPEL PORSCHE
OVER 25
'f;fi !\18 2.10 Sl. <:f'IUfl". ~·ul/
pO'll·f'r, Jiir, Jn E'XC{'l 1·or1<I.
Rof11 lllp!I f.t nr1v Micl1rlt>11
r11dial Tires. $.~,fiOO. 644-TIOll
POllSCHl'.: 0 11· n er 11 Al-
1970 220 Dic~cl. Likr nr11•.
trnfi1ln1 Pnrsrhr m P I 11 I
1vork 3.· pt11ntin; 111 VW
prirrs. 1!1~hes! qua I i t y
1rorkm11nsh1p, <~all !. e n 1
Sf'hoff 612-9,1i3 or 67,)...1.02~
f'\"f~. Po11·rr. R11Tn, R1r l..llv.' n1i1f1i
$4.200. fi7.l:I045. --------
MG
IMMEDIATE .DELIVERY
ROTARY ENGINE MAZDA • Brand New MAZDA 616
• OOOr Se<lll' AM ~11dlo Power
n1,, Rr11~'-'· • Soef<I Svr><ro l '""'
c.1•1•, Nvlnn C•rOf"I, C•• l•n-lnc•.
l'ln !"'II Vtnlil•llQn. (l•ISJN-1 SI•
$2289 37
SEE OUR FABULOUS CUSTOMIZED "RALL Y'S"
'70 V.W. BUG
' •Of""<I. ,,.rl•n. h""'''· cncn ,.,~11
A~ XJ
$1288
''""·
'69 P.LYM. ROADRUNNER
Au-lie, rldlo ~"" h .. le•. (llMlJ ~OE·
l6'12J)
H8ro:lto11. Ait!Of"llle, ••dlo, heatt r. Df'IW·
1!~1rtn11, Ylnyl 100. (XOM111)
$1488
.t.u1om~11c. PG-r 1t"'1 .. a, AM JM ••dlO,
ll(lwtr ''"'l"O & b•t~ll'\. t lr cone! (t5f.
ll EM)
'70 V. W. FASTBACK
V•"!"! • '~""!! tr•n~m·s11cn,
(19,()NOI
$1288
CIMIF!trv ..ed•n. Automt tic. "°''"' 1retr-
l"l1, roof r•ck. lectarv t lr, OtOWDtO
$788
Ste""· .A11!om~TI~. IM!htr Inter., ·~ll fa,
l\fO!lr. cnrom. "'lni wflMll. IJAlltll\
$588
v-11•1'11 \ OoM. A11i-11( tl'9n1mlnlon •
t&dit>, llelltr. tVLll~UIW'11
I e '67 PLYMOUTH e
---1---------'68 VW Mnd ihf'<I for hii:h I IM'rforrnanN' 11nd
TRIUMPH
* TRIUMPH *
Orange Co 's, Largest
STAGS
Immediate
Delivery
(Ampf'r Van, Campf'r F,quipt. ;ippearanl.'e'
S.-11uUluJJy Equip!, (\\'G Y· ,\!UST SELl.! $1000.
403) 548·7!Ull
VOLVO
'fiO V\\1• mu~r srll! !
'72 VOLVO
lmmediat• Del ivery
BIG SAVINGS ON S300. C11ll 11 flrr 4·30 REMAINING '7J"S
----AMERICAN
American Moton
J;"'Gremlins J."Hornets
,......M .tadors yJavellns
yAmbassadors
l/ugf' slnt'k of ·7r~ & '7'2'1
Bi9-Bi9 Savin9s
Harbor American
JlomP flf CnnvPnienl
P11ymf'nl~
1969 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa '46-0161
BUICK
'70 Buick 225
Electra
L1mllf'rl, Jn1nHl<'UlRIP, Vinyl
Top. TRpt>~lry ln1rrlor, f'ull
Pn1vrr, FRr lnry Air. Till
\VhrPI . l:>oor Lock!!, A1\1 "f'M
StrrPf/ ~1ul t1p!r\". U..1•RI Car,
25,0flO niilt'.~. 1702BIN)
Sale Priced
NABERS CADILLAC
'67 SKYLARK
2 Door H11.rdtnr. AUi() Tl'MI.
Pnwrr Steering, Air Cond.
IVECS.161.
$13tt
CREVIER MOTORS
POPULAR 4·DR HARDTOP
~-ACTOR'i.
AIR CONOITIONJN(;
Only 40.000 locR.1 milr!!
Full pnw<'r. cruisP rontml,
tn1nk 1JflC'llCr, r;idial tir""·
rl1JO r lock~. !ill w~rl. vinyl
tnr & vinyl in1 r rior, *'le.,
i:'!t', t>lr. IVG\'5.1'.ll
NABERS CADILLAC !i.11>-4'.l.OO ' '
V\\' Sri1111rl"hllC'~ "6.'1. Original flm lewi& AUTHO RIZED Dt:ALER
priv;:ilr nii·nrr. Xlnr conrl. VOLVO 2600 TiARBOR. BL .. $~00 ~16-1219 I COSTA MESA
I
1
• • • • ~i4(}.9J(l() Oprn Sunrlay
'6'1 V\I' Bllj.1 Rug fi46·9J03 Fo. RESULTS YQll can De-
11·i1h tov..· h.1r I 19•1fi !!arbor. co~IR r.1rsa pend on, Call th& Su per-____ 64f,...JR.'il 'f;J VOLVO 1m. good cond. s !. ! e gm II n .. De.Uy PUol
'69 VW-Best Offer ~fui;t ~!J. ~! n ft,. r . Cll'l.ss!JIM 64:Z.-5678 -place
Xlnl mnd. &1.lR81 4 592-511.&5 after ;; pm. your ad&. Ch&J'l"I II!
TR-6's
'72 TRfi. New
'71 • 6000 Jl,fi!es
'70 -Sharp
~~!A"~~UG~;··u~LE~;tAu~CE 990
GT-6's
'70 · British racing
"""" '69 One 9wner ..
SPITFIRES
12699
·n • Demd SAVE
'70 • AM·FM l&he.rp) Sl599
'67 • MKj S999
FRITZ WARREN
Spam ;Ccir Center
710 E. lkf St. 547-0164
BRAND NEW
1972 COUGAR
Fully •quipped, •u+om•tic tr•n1., f•cfory •ir, pow•r
1te•rin9, pow•r di1c brak•s, r•dio, tin+•d 9la1s, dual r•t·
ing mirrors, whi t• w•ll t ir•s, delu x• whe•I c.ov•rs. f •506·
488 1 $367600
GREAT SELECTION • ALL COLORS
Sa.n14 An11 11.•C""-WE LIKE l'fOPlE. .. w.·,. Glad "t o s.. '69 Chev l/4 Ton
Pickup
\13, HNvy .Duty Campt'r
Equlpf>'d. SpUt Rims. Cus-
tom. •38724.
$2195
YOU!
'.
MacHoward BEACH1 ~~me~~:r ~n~ar~;-ml '59 TR-J, rcblt ~ng. N~s
j mll'ICr '11.'0rk. $300. or off~r.
. ' ' "1 • ' I ! PIE~ OOlfr ).JAVI '
UNTIL You~~_ HAm It
•
Ew~ M~3096
1 '71 TR6, AM/f'M stPreci,
bnt.nd nt'W. 13.000 111\. Mu51
!letl, $.14.~. 968-4140.
·n TR 6, &m/fm. Mlchel!n
flrtl w/Beauty rtms. J2,COO
GAllD~ GAOVI 1Lv1>: tit IROOKH~
Phono U'-2HO,
..inL.DNnac:.~9ew!~-a.:.~~~~~~~~~~~_,;;::;_;_.l"'li! .. ,_~~~~.;._~~...J
'·
. -.. ··-~ .. .. . ••
I ......... l§J I ......... l§l I ----.l§JI ---1§1 I ---1§1 I ----l§J I -.... 1§1
Autos. Utod 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos. UMd 990 Auloo. UMll 990 Autos. UMd 990 Autoo. UMll 990 Autos, UMd
CADILLAC CADILLAC CADILLAC CHEVROLET CHEVROLET CONTINENTAL DODGE
CADILLAC 1970
SEDAN DE VILLE '
F.4.C'TOP.Y
AIR CONDITIONING
Only 17.000 local n1iles
Striking Adriatic turquoise
with white padded lop.
BeautUut tape11try & !eat.her
interior, full power. tilt &.
telescopic steeri n,::, stereo,
door locks, local to w mil~
age. Gem Solrl & Serviced
by us. IS69 VCQJ
EL DORADOS
8 TO CHOOSE
1967 TO 19TI
'71 El Dorado
FACTORY
AIR CONDITIONlNG
FULL LEATHER INTERIOR
VERY UJW LOCAL MILES
Full power, vinyl top, till &
telescopic steering, AM·FM
l"ftdlo, door locks, cruise con·
trol. Just flawless & pricfi!
to sell today. ("39CZf}
'70 El Dorado
FACTORY
--------CADILLAC 1971
SEDAN DE VILLE
ONLY 9320 i1fLE.!
FACTORY
'66 CAPRICE
4 DR. H.T.
All power extras tncludlnit
air C<lnd., ltettiJta, windoW11,
11eat• -AM/FM stereo. Ex·
eeplionally nlc~. Midnight
blue w/black nylon intuior.
$995. (SKR733) Warranty .l:
bank financing available.
/
'70 Chev Impala 'GS Convert .. MW top new titt•. ""'" 0>nd. SIOO undu Custom Cpe. 12,000 mllet. air Ylholesa.le book. 64.l-9062.
cood., power alett\na", pow·
er disc: brakes, vmyl roof & '63 CONTil\'ENT AL
Interior, heavy duty 1U&Ptn· Good condition $500.
sion, new tires. 3S8CAX. 6~78 * 642-1403
$3195 '61 Linoolo Coo. Lo•th<r. All
extru, 46M. $1795. Ex.
1".acl10W'ard 1 -<0nd--'.~&«--00~~~-~
11 • SSS-!1!00 or "'1®8 CORVAIR • f. l!Mii• Corner lsl ll Harbor 1----------
"lllQ Santa Aoa 1965 CORVAJR 2 OO<>r ho.rd
tMil etm '67 IMPALA top. $400. Days call 494-9515, Ul eves ~70.
' DR. '70 Dod.&e Cornet,
P/S, P/B, Air. Xlnt cond.
Lo mi. $2290. 675-7985 or
962-4~-
TRANSFERRED to Vietnam,
M u 1 t se.U '69 Che.r]?er.
Lo miles, pis, p/b, a ir,
tapes. &M-8188 or 673-Z7-i9.
'64 DODGE DART
Good running condition.
$175 .. ~1072
FOR &llf'. '6..1 Dodge Dart .
Runs ok~ Be-st offer. $125.
642-7:229.
'63 DODGE 1vtth rebu1!1
--
DAILY PILOT •ll
~ .... _ .... _ ... ~§] I -·-1§1
Autos, !'Md 990 Autos, Uted ----------FORD FORD
'69 f'ORD LTD Brgm, 4 dr,
HT. a.ir-!l('re<>, rM'W tltts,
mech xlnt $2395. 847.6007
e~.
'60 T4 BlRD $400 or be-st o!-
fer . gd. cond . ~loving to Ita-
ly, 847-89:29, alt 5.
1950 FORD -Runs good
In.side N>stared
Xlnt cond_ 646-:2221
'64 'FORD 4 rloor, PIS, auto,
good tln's. sm
6T.>--4,l74
1966 FORD Country Squirt'
Pv.T 1tttrin&:, pwr brakes.
air , 10 pa.uenger. Excel
rond. St.015. M2-.resf.
'67 FORD, good condition
S4:J'.I.
536-8934 d&.yl!
'69 LTD. Full pwr. & a.it. Lo.
nll. 10,700. $2,195 Prt. ply.
673.-3396.
'6-1 ~40RD Convt'rt. Good
conil111on, $275 hrm.
.. 847-JQOl *
Auto1, New 980 ' Autos, N•w NABERS CADILLAC Affi CONDITION ING
Full leather interior
Tnrlividual front 5eats
.AIR CONDITIONING
FULL LEATHER INTERIOR
Beautiful Cua.blanc• Ivory
with black top & black Inter.,
dual C<lmfort front .15eat, .15ter·
to t11pe, tilt & telescopic
steering, door locks, light
t1entinf'I, cruise cnnlrol.
~lo~t evtry deluxe t xli'll. &
absolutely flawless thruout.
10J2CX\VI
NABERS CADILLAC
Toyota Ai: Jaguar Dealer Au~o Traru, Powe~ Stttn ng.
900 s. Coast Hichway Air Cond, New Paint. (UZM-'63 Corvair Van, ·n tag. •ngine 1966. New tlre!11 & 1--------------------
AUTHOR IZEn DEALER
2600 HARBO R BL., Laguna Beach 540-3100 7251 rt"blt eng., 4 spd, new pa mt
1 $I 199 & shocks. S775. 536-0283.
battE.'ry. S425. 644-6647 &f t. ~-
COSTA r.IESA
540-9100 0J)C.'n Sunctay
1970 Cadillac F.J Dorado, Ex-
ecutive ('at, Air rond, PIS.
PIB, P11•r v.·1ndows. P11T
locks, a djustahle tilt v.·herl,
auto trunk. FM strrro, new
radial !ires, lealhcr 1nt,
vinyl roor. Lo n1i's, Xln t
cond, 1624 Antigua Way,
N.B. 642·9980.
Beautiful Firemist finish. Full
power, stereo, tilt Ir telc-
sropic steering, door locks,
~n!inel, crui~ control,
trunk lock, rear Ylindow de-
f01:gcr, auto light dimmer.
Loca l \01v mileage beauty.
(ZVEJ4j)
Au~o~~z~~E.;'c_"R 71 Camaro 350SS CREVIER MOTORS • ·ro Corv•ir, R/H. good
COSTA MESA Only 9102 original miles. 208 W. ls! St., Santa Ana condition, engine 4 yn old.
f ALCON
RED WAGON
540_9100 Open Sunday Loaded. Many ~xtras. Auro ll.S.JJ7l , _s_165_. ="o-'=-1"104=. ===---~~-=-~=----I Trans., fact. air, P S, AM I 1 7'=~=--~~~~~~ ' CORVETTE '62, Radio, Auto Iran~. 4 nev.·
Uniroyal \\'hf "'alls. Must
JSte! $295. Onr. 646-0101. '69 Cadillac: FM. R•lly Equ;ppo<1. S.<M· VAN "68. Valv• job. Srock
fice! Call 644-2950 Mori'! 4..sp. On colunln paneled. 1-.,.-=-----.,.---C pe -De Ville 8 pm. MUST SELL! M&-3497. '66 VETT. Lots of goodies. FORD
'67 El Dorado
FACTORY
Full Power. Air Cond, (YCW-1-'-*~-c~H~E=v=v-·s~-*----.. c--H"R"'Y ... S'"LE""'R ... -1 $1500. or :6~1; trade.
972\ IMPALA'S * MALIBU'S '64 FORD CUslnm V-8, r /h,
nf'v.' ti~s. nins good. S250.
83(}-97-il.
AIR CONDITIONING
F'ull leather interior
CPE DVL '70, Extr emely 1 Padded top, full po1\•er, tiH
low m iles. A?-.1-F'jl.1 st(-Teo. ; & telescopi c steering. s igna l
Cruise control. Lesthcr in-seeking radio, all dL'\". extras
terior. All m El g n i f ice n t & ve.ry low mileage & s hows
F J A. m ! n g 0 Rc<I. Will thr ultimate in care. (TUR-
sacrifice. Dir (798 AZ[). No 850).
$3995 Lo mll•••• "61 lmpe•·;,1 Crown Coupe. DODGE
KEYi Sf HERTZ CORP. FuU pov,.·er, leath!'r aea~. ---------'6.) DODGE C.oronet. Neerls .. _. .. :11"':~ T .... selectlon·Many colors air, tilt v.•hee!, Crown Ian-..... work. $200 or best offer. · • (7 14) 778-4050 dau. Top best otter. 692--8661 • !!62---094!
FOR Sa!e, '57 Ford Fairla ne
auto. $150. * 540-:2746
111allAfuiilVD I '70 IMPALA '63 CHRYSLER hard 1 op , COSTA MESA Autos, u .. 549-30311x1.66·67·61 VS A 1 _ F auto., air, new brakes, Autos, UHd
d•al<e call• P'"" 551-5242. NABERS CADILLAC
Ask for Sandy Sanders.
'65 Sedan DeVille
Full Powet , Factory Air
Cond, AM/Fr-.1 Rarlin, Ex-
cellent Car. !NDY977)
$999
NABERS CADILLAC
AUTHORIZED DEALER
2flOO HARBOR BL.,
COSTA ~1ESA
540-9100 Open Sund11y
'67 DE VILLE
AUTIIORIZEO DEALER
2600 HARBOR BL.,
COSTA MESA
540·9100 Open Sunday
CAD. Cpe. Dvle, '68 Full
p"·r .. air, tilt \\'heel, 8 v..·ay
leather seat, exr. tires,
be11utiful po\vdcr blue v.·ith
"·hite padded top. Priv, Pty.
$:2600. Call anytime 546-78:27,
LARGEST
SELECTION OF
CADILLACS IN
ORANGE COUNTY
SALES-LEASING
4 Door Sedan. Full fX)l11er, AUTHORIZED
fact. air cond. Loaded. (368-• SERVICE.
sxoi m's. •1'· ci;" w.i. Nabers Cad1"Uac: drop 540-5164 or 842-0631.
·-. , · , u o. i1ims., actory paint. tuneup, $500. Excel 10 CAD C.D.V .. full y equip d Air Cond., Power Stttring,
$4700. or best offt:T, l\1ust Radio, Heater. f197 APll Tn.ns. 673-304S.
sell. 1213) 592-3157. $2295. dlr. C!ifl Waldrop. can '67 IMPERIAL 4 Dr. Beaut.
CADILLAC 1970 540-Sl'4 or '42--06.11. ~,,~·~;~;~""· $1950.
COUPE DE VILLE "65 1m.!a :~, s!r1. 396. COMET
F ACT'OR Y 4-spd, PIS. New clutch &
AIR CONDITIONING brks, 57.000 mi's, Tape deck.
Only 23.300 local mi!6 GOOD COND. 892-5966
Special order factory fin i_sh 1963 CHEVY. Nttd.1 lots of
with pl ush full lealht'r in· body work. Engine 283 is
terior, full po~cr, ste~co, good, trans., good, good
ti!1 & 1elesoop1c steering, rear end. Needs body work
light i;cntinel. doo r l~ks, only. i i25. eu 549--0530.
trunk opener. A magnificent _
jcv.·el lhat defies description. '63 CHEV Greenb r i e r
(419BQDl Camper. Xlnt condition. NABERS CADILLAC ~~~ Ferol•al, Corooa d•I
AUTHORIZED DEALER '63 CHEV. Van S800 or best
2600 t!ARBOR BL.: ofter, '58 Chev. Impala, '65
COSTA r-.1ESA 327 eng., 4 sp. 4ll pos. i.'>50.
1966 COMET Caliente. 390
ene., Air, new tires $700
• 543-5949 .
CONTINENTAL
1971 Mark Ill Cpe.
WITH ELECTRIC SUNROOF
FACTORY
54(}.!IHlO Open Sunday 96:2-1760. 1970 CADILLAC C o u p e 2!iOO HARBOR BL.,
DeVille. Loaded. Xln! cnnd. COSTA MESA CAMARO
n...: ••"c"" o. 1c c<.1:7 , 540·9100 Open Sunday ~ .. ~~~;,:;:;: "'7.:; 0 "'&'5'0-=-vll·r1-=--1--=,..,.,.,.-:-=o::--:--
'64 CHEVELLE SS, V-8,
auto, bucket M'llts. GoOO
eng. S375. 6-16-8526 or
642-4895.
Al'R CONDITIONING
Padded top, full leather fn.
ltrior, dua l comfort se11ts.
cruise control, door locks,
stereo, lilt .15teering, all pow-
er xtras. Very tew careful
miles. Showroom tresh? {508-
CBll
Sale Pric:ed
e I e * CAMARO'S * Devill•. o~ owner Luxo-• :r '11 Hardtops * Lo mi's
equippffi. E:2G84. J 1 M Coupe. Full factory powrr, HERTZ CORP 1966 Chevy II S37:5 AtrrHORIZED DEALER
SLEMONS l~1 P0RTS. :2201 fa ctory a ir conditioning. • Ex:ceilf;l'lf running cone!. 2600 HARBOR BL.,
S. Main, S.A. 557-5242. power windows. {PBP983) Lrg selection-Many colors * 494-8278 * COSTA MESA
'72 Cadlilac $995. dlr. Cliff Waldrop -~("7~14~l=77=-M-O="SO=-·l ·66 WAGON, 1tir, excep. 540-9100 Open Sunday
54(}.5l64 , 842-0631. CHEVROLET clean. Xlnt mech. $875 .. CONTINENTAL coupe '6R.
El Dorado CADILLAC 1970 :::::--::::-:::::::-::::::::--::--:--:-:l-,;:5.16-6~9~75~. ;,."":;:.·:::P:::ty:... ~~ lo CotiUK>o WhH• w;!h
Fine Mist Paint , Vinyl Top, SEDAN DE VILLE '69 KINGS\VOOD Es t a I e '69 CHEVY Impala, 4 dr HT, grained Black Landau top &
Leather lnlerior, Full PYJw-\Vgn. lo m\, air , loaded, full r /h, 11.ir C<lnd, PSIPB. matching black leather in-
f'r, Factory Air Cond, Tele 'FACTORY pwr. $2595. 67~74. $1500. fi7~. terior. Michelin 11teel be.J.ted
Tilt \Vhttl, Door Locks, AIR CONDITIONING -whitewall1. Climate rnnt:rol
AM/FM Stereo & S!creo Full power equipment, pad· 1964 O~EV Malibu \Va.gon. '63 IMPALA, 4-dr, PIS, a ir. Til t steering. Full
Tape, Cruise Control. Trunk ded top, cloth & leather in-R&H . xlnl cond. $650. P/B, Runs great, $400. p ower, Immaculate. Of-
Locks, 3000 mile local 1 own· tcrior, 5lereo AM /Ffl.1 radio, 968-483l * * ~271 * * fe'ring from p RI v ATE
er. (951EB\VJ tilt & teJei;copic 11tcering, '65 CHEVY VAN For best remlb!! 64i..5678 PARTY. 557-5242.
NABERS CADILLAC
~ 'tlOal "" .... TALK TO US .. ;
T1!k 11 c~tlp, -);now ••• In l1cl, 11 COlb 'r'Oll nolf'llllQ lo flr,d ool
!u11 w1111 ~Ind ol • d"I 'fOU tin ''' 1: T1rrv Buick. Wt 1u11 w1nt !I'll opp0rrunl!y to tllcw yQu how much 'fOU c1n 11~e htr1 .
BRAND NEW '72 OPEL 1'00 2 DR. HD.' 1999 '""'"r, Tinted Wlnd1M1!d, +1peed Tr1n1ml11lon. lSER 0052)
'71 OPEL 1ft0 STATION WAGON
Leu lflln 10.000 mlla . Too n•w to bl ct ll<ld 1,1tld l
Go\ll llnlsh wlln bll111 lnllrlor. (51lCPNl
BRAND NEW '72 SKYLARK
! Da<>r M.T .• Fullv F•clory Equ1PP9(1.
Otd1r Now !
Since 1933 .. 5th & W•lnut
Huntington Be•ch
536·6588
11889
'2795
,,t Ad1m1 ... . • > •
Ii NOW 15 THE TIME TO
..:·: GO ALL . /
~ AMERICAN! \
'. .... "'
AMERICAN
MOTORS
DEMO
SALE
Used Car,Manager' s Sale
'71 Cricketl Dr.
~r--"'·-"' $1795
· '67 Amba ssa dor
'"·''·''·····~. se95 lor.IO<joir."'11-..-.,,.; ..... , ...... ···vi ....
'ii Fon LTO 4 Dr. y.1, ____ ....,
··-·--$1295 -....-.-.....
'67Toyotl 2 Dr. H.T. , . ... ____ $891:
•.UO!l6f.. ~
'70 AMI
Clo-l·S.Ottt ""'loo4" .. 0¥
'66 Ambassador Dpl 2 Dr. '66 Chev. 4 Dr.
Y·I ""'"· l'IA10 •it <0H, $795 -·-..... -·* .... "
'69 Chev. Van Camper s2595
'70 Rebel Machins
•-ll~CS• ·-·~···$1795 ,,.
1969 Harbor Blvd.
.... -.-.-~•. $695 __ ..................
'
'69 Chevelle 2 Dr.
v.1. l ._, .. .., -· '""" ., .. ,, ... ro.ooo ....... ,. (I'{,
'71 In1lin SST
~95
.... -· --~ $2795 ... --...... -. -• ..,.i ..... 1ttuo
646•0261 <All POO POii CllDIT COICI
0 en Doll 9.9 . kt. & Su". to'
$8888 etc. ilS8ASf) Auto. s7so. 545·4554 Autos, N•w 980 Autos, N•w Autos, New 980Autos, New
NABERS CADILLAC NABER5S42CA2D21LLAC ~/s.'M!~'."" ow~~c. Im~~~: iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.;.;iiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
PIO.
AUTHORIZED DEALER
2600 HARBOR BL.,
COSTA MESA
540-9100 0JK'n Sunday
SELLING Your boat? "List"
with us .. sell It fast. Daily
Pilot ClaMUled. 642-S67S
AUTHORIZED DEALER
2600 HARBOR BL.,
COSTA MESA
540·9100 Open Sunday
For that item under $:A),
try the Pe:nny Pinclier
830-0555 l'VC!'i, 545-3754 day.
'70 CHEV Kingswood wagon,
air, pb/ps, 12,000 mi.
SJOOO .. 540-<1263
'6'1 CHEVELLE nee:ls lota of
attention. $200.
962-3827
Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, lmportR 970
It's a big world these days . , . it's very appropriate in respect to ou,.
s•lection of new and used cars. We're sure you'll love the cars and
the price1 we have on them I Come on in and let11 put it •II tog•th•r
for you!
.-------TAKE YOUR CHOICE-------.
Her•'s 3 C•rs. All pr•ctically brand new, with 100°/o VW warranty,
(6 mo1./6,000 mile ). '69 VW Convertible, Red with Black Top &.
Interior, Whit•wall Tires, 4 Speed, Radio, (YNT 299 ). '69 VW Bug.
Sky Blue, Sun Roof. 4 Spffd, Radio. Whitewall Tire1. IXNJ565)
'68 VW Bug. Rool BHr, 4 Speed, Radio. (XCU704}
'87 YW SUNDIAL CAMPER F•lly EiNJ,,_,
IVQK m l
'86 MERCURY
'70YWBUG
'83YWBUG
Mellkl1lr. Air conc1r11tnll11, 1'"111 Pawtr.
Llllt Ntwt {$JN '")
I Dltlr s.t.n. a11t1 WIW ... lll!ilrr.t'. Llllt
N ... Avtom1t", 11U A.NCI
.... ,.. P.llfthn. •It , ...... lllCll't l td!• .... ,..
CllSltnt. C.S!Mn. ll'YC •'I
'&ICHIDIAUBU
'llYWVA~ u .. --.'"'""" 11-.... fQLl' ... I
s11aa
S1896
SJ96
'1896
s491
S129&
$1688
•
ohnson son
ANNOUNCES the new car
'Go
Effective Immediately, every new Lincoln or Mercury pr1>-
·auct sold at Johnson and Son will receive the unique, new
and exciting 0 Golden Touch'' treatment created specifically
to offer you a new car as positively troubl~free as humanly
possible. Starting from the moment a new car enters our
"get ready" department right throu1h every step In tuning,
polishing: adjusting. lnspecUon and our exclusive 20 MILE
ROAD TEST, the "Golden Touch'' program b In effect.
II
1
When you see the seal bearing the Golden Touch emblem
on the windshield , you 'll know that thi~ new car has met all
the rigid requirements we demand for delivery. Come in
today and see for yourself bow this "Golden Touch" pro-
gram will provll!e the "trouble free" driving pleasure you've
always wanted.
"'Ormiga County'1 Famllu of 1fnt Cart"'
2929 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • li4oa30 .
I
' l
I
I
!
~~~~~~~~~~.~~~·~~~1 ~~~1 I§]:(~ _'"'"1_«""__,)§J 1
:;;;;;' ;;;;;._ .. ;;;; .. ;;;:I;;;§]~ ,__[ ,__ .... __,!§]! [ U n._,. ]§] [ • .,.,...,,. 1§1 i I .,, .. t«S.~ l§J ;1 '-f«S. l §J 1 ~[ A;;;"'""';;;W.;;;1:;;§1
ft altLY PILOT _ ....
990 I Autos, UMCI 990 I Aulos, UMd '90 Auto., UNd t90 Auto., UMCI 990 I Auto., U1td 990 Autos, UtH 990 Autos, Uted 990
MERCURY MUSTANG OLDSMOBILE OLDSMOBILE-PLYMOUTH RAMBLER T-BIRD
Autos, UMd
FORD FORD ------------1 ·71 LTD'S '62 fORO VAJtJ . GOOD '63 MERCURY j
GAL\X..IES &: TORINO'!' C0:"-10 Jr.in. lmmal'1.1l;i.1<'. Air Cond. ~·uU
AIM '71 Country &>dan Wgn ___ •_•_.,_i-_'·-"-'-'-'--1 i'Ollitl' \'.,u lllU 1 f.f!-(' l h l~
Nit P."n' wuti np!tOn !n
* MUSTANGS * '71 HARDTOPS
Lo mileage
HERTZ CORP.
I '69 Olds Custo Olds '68 Toronodo J '69 Sport Fury
T-onodo cu~r.f DELUXE SERrES S11ttion \\'Agnn, 9 P1111M"ni:rr
Vinyl Top. Delu>.:e lnlrr1nr, t'AC."T'ORV Lugga,ll'.t' f{ack. •YL .. '4021
'in HORNF:T SS'I' Hvrlrnm , I 'St T-BIRD CO NV.
atr. new tlrl'!. Xln1 <'<111d . £15·:\55.'l
.Sl 7(W) or hei;! Ofrf'r 5-1~27!7.1 --ST
-.65-Rambler Sta Wgn-TEMPE I ""'"' JUST 42.IXMI MILE.'> I Prno.t r Strer1ng, Air Cond
f'ull Powf'r, Fartnry A Ir A!R L'OND11'10NJNG 1 $1999 '61 T~:;o.tPF:ST 2 rlr 0.11 C' r,
Lo m!!('a.i;r G M ,.. I HERTZ CORP. · ..... pt1rcha~" S2!1 AO prr nio. Op· l..f'i !l'lf'C'tio11 -~1any 1'fllors
)Ion to fllll'f'hii!le $595. (714 ) 771-4050
P\•t. Pa.r!y 5'l.'i·71J:l
Cond, AMJFM ~tN'O Mulli· F"ull po\O.'rr, cust_om in1erior.
1
1 CREVIER MOTORS T-BIRD .. :ro11. W.\1Pf:. ~.000 m1 .
l•lrx, Tilt Wh~I. Door ltit"k~. l•I• wh ••I AM t ''l • t ,xxr.13~1 :o:!f'rNJ ~,/j~. ~~k ~';:";, W8 V.', \sl 5S~1 ~n!a Ana I • 1966 T-BIRO :ti~~'.t;_ Cl<'"ilrl $R 75. $2555 ab!K>JutpJy spo!le&! in!ldf' &i 83 -_7____ _,-~~~-~-
out.. !VZ\\'5761 'fiA ~'URY HI l"OUpf'. o1u r, -"-"-'_1 r_-onrt ___ S9_7'_. _fic_.l·l~I -li~ TE.\tPEST, ll R rd In ti .
l..rJi: M>lecllon·Man,v •·ulo!·,; I (714 ) 77MOSO LI CL!'.: Sam .Force~ Sa.If'!
~~------__ 'fiR G~C ~. Ton Van. 6 c.vl
'70 Galaxie 500 I "'· "·'"· 67l-&IOO.
CONTI NENTAL I '67 J\fu11ta11~ V~to tran,;,
MOTORS h1trory a ir. AM /Y.'VI, pv.r
847-3142 ll!l'Cr1n,i.::, ~IUXI' lfllf"r!Or, ---"2 Dr. HRrdtop. v.~. Auto. JEEP
, Tr-ans., f"ac\ory Air Conrl ,
'67 MONTCLAIR rt1Hf'd i:,:1851!1, l o"'ner. Sh11rp. ~37-2473.
Po\\ S R d JI 2 0tw)r II T. Di r. V.Top., Air ; ·~r_. tl'<'nng. a 10 r&!· 'i(t Landcru1M.'r. hardtop. ~ \1Jnd. ,\ \f, J"~I. Loaded. Lu.
: et'. Vlny! Roof ll72A.B8) 1 11iheel dr1vr. \\larrt'Tl hut)~. 1lf' old haukr~ i.:ar, IVOA-
OLDSMOBILE
NABERS CADILLAC NABERS CADILLAC I PIR. P1' V-cy -' '""" Ho""' """""'' W"ch "" '"" ;""'"· ,~~ """'I. "''' S!f95. f;IHAA9. l ()PEN JIOUSI:: rolun1n. _ hnr 2n1! •"\llr. S~!Y.1. ~·lt.26
A u~o ~ ~~;o ~EBA~ •• ER A UT1 !OR i zi::o ot~" LETt --p 0 NTI AC--_A;"::'•;:';;;';;u;;;; .. ;;d;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;990;;;;;;A;;;;u;;to;;';' ;:U;•;•;:•;;;;;;;;;;;;;990;;;;1 !
. SZ'.::95. dlr. CliJf \Valdrop. rlf'Ver a bllsrd, f'Xcl'llrnt <"'n-n.191 <'all ;,.'6-8736 aft JO OLDS ~O St;i Wgn Visr;i
, Call 54().~~ or 842·0631 I d1t1on. •928 Bzt.11 S269) 4~~11 I Cru1srr. ~·uJly f'QU\ppt"<i.
('OSTA f.IESA 2600 JIARBOR BL., r ~·"" COSTA to;tF.SA
'68 FORD LTD Brgm., •I dr. Xi-j2·12. MUSTANG A \I/FM i;lrl'f'<J, lo m1lr<: ,,...,.,.HJtl 01)('n SunrlRy '68 p t ' GTO !Hfl·9!flll Oprn Sunrlay Oft IGC
HT. 11.ir·slerro. nf'W 11.res, .68 TOYCYf,\ Land Cru!Y'r. I S:(iOO. R.13-8121.
mcch xtnr $2150. Cons1d('r I Hard lop, good cnnd. $159.i. J 9 6 2 s -f" DA~,-.--,-,-,-, '71 Olds Delta 88 '65 OLDS STARFIRE-llrint1np CnuJ)I', Vin.\•I Tnp.
tra~ for ne1••er modrl P.U Call 17!4 J 54~7JR. '69 t-.l li~"TA.r-;G I tl"i'lllspor1alion. s1;-io. Call ~e<'s. I: cam[lf't s.!7-5007 '4;, \1.'illis Jt:'ep, <t·Whf'f'I ' \'.~. 4 1'prl, fJO\.l('r, hf'_;ivy duty aftf'r ;,_P~ ~JO:l."t.
drive Warren hubs Xl n1 litL<:l)('nSllln. low nHlt'.'agP "'-I 1966 Ol DS [)('Ira 118.~,~n~ •.
C..'ustom cpt-. Automatic trans.
p!')Wf'r, Vinyl R.onr. 15,000
m1lf's, 793 CQS
$3595
'71 L TO Brougham, l'Orwi.' tt(}...3.4 J3. • ~'.',!'Y9 ~harp. $1900. Call .Ylri Vf'ry ,.1 ,.an lf"l('al, ~Fu.LI py,·r !·.air. Jo mill's. MERC -·~~-lfil. I fJrU,'lrnll car. Air, f'IC. $895 MacHoward
. ivory w1wh1te landau top. URY •68 MUSTANG Firm 54.'l-20113.
~ One OWller Coll 544.2950 '71 MarquL<i Brougham 2 t1r ) VR, At!t"!"ll.!Jc. R.a.dio, J!r~t· 'f..l ('UTLASS. p/s, plh.' AT, Comrr !!II k }larOOr
COUPE 'I Vinyl lnlrrior. F11rlnrv ,\1r
t·u11 f'o1,1,·er lllt·luding l-'Ri'-f 'nnd, \' !I. Au1n ·rr;111!l,
Jory Alr Cond. fu-nt with P"""r S1rf'rini: P1h1t·r
Rtakf'i.. tlad111, \11"11tf'r, opr lfln IQ purcliasf' S2!L~
J)l'r n10, Option tu Purchase
~""· CONTINENTAL
MOTORS
847-3842
\\lhitf' !1rlf' '1all.•. ln•·:il 1
'"''nr>r \\'t!h n11ly 'Z5 fl(I(! 11111
f'.~. t\VVLl4401.
Sale Priced
NABERS CADILLAC
• Truly a hf'auuful car $3295
1
I ----~--~~-) R19·!}(,()0 or 5.11 -06/)R
, be!ore 8 P1'1. JIT, lull p11i•r & air 17,00J i Pr, tXW7.797) $1095. rllr. Cliff tapr rlerk, exC1"\ \'Qnrl. S47j ~R nt::t An::t
, SACRlF'ICE .70 TORINO 1'11. Like new rond, Savr 1-\\'aldrnp ~10·5164 or 842-06.11. nr nffr r. 8.t~176. 1969 4 rloor-flELTA~ 'fi.1 Olds Sp1i;, 2-rlr. fa{' 11 1r.
HT. v.s. Cnuso., air conrL.: S700. Ont" ownf'r. Ca 11 'fi7 Mu.~lan~ 2 rlr HT. Au!n '40 OLDS 6 •·y!., :1 ,;pee<l. l)('rff'ct C'l'Trid. l..<111.rlPrl ! l!lll!I. P/!', PfB . .:Nu tirakl'11. Nrv: AUTl!ORIZED OEAL~Jt
PIS, P /8. Sec tn ap-644-2950 before 8 PM. P 1/;. F11•·1nry Air. S tra<·k Xlnt .shAp<', $.JW. '4() Olds, 8
1 98 4 <!onr. Jminiu: <•unrl. overhaul, Raduil 11res -2600 JI ARBOR Al..,
: prec1a!e, $192.'i. Sat. & Sun. '65 MERC. Comf'!. V.8. aulo. ~· Q\\·ner fi.14-:'5) 1·yl , Runr; SIOO. 962-1760. 1.oarlf'ri! You r !'hoi<·r. $11150. ~;~~~~:~~~g & -c,:;~~n C.~~~7 1 540-9 1()!1 COSTA ~~~:A ~unrlR.Y
• 6al SeawHTd Rd .. CdM. P/S, R/}{ l..n mi' ill . 1966 i\1USTANG V.fl, aUI<), \'i7 -0l~DS, good Iran!!.· fYl2-7491 0 1· ;,.Jl!-29il. ' -Ou"-·d nd th ' I ri .,~ ha 7(ii;i;--r;;;t;;~i;-;;;:;:;;;;:l~O(Jo'."l~y~$64~a.~S._.:·','LCC:·~4.!l3-t l_'l<. --,64 PO"TIAC __ _ : 6'9 FORD LTD. 1 Ownf'r. ...,.....,1 1ng co . ruou . very g{)()( ('Ofl • ¥1VV• pnrtat1on, 1lf'eds fiery. '67 Old! Cu!lll!.'l Supremr, l'I 2.fi 000 · 429 E Dt $795 64&-aJ.16 !'ri!J...-07:'.15 .S50 EvPs 64. 3096 '65 Olri~ .TP !s1ar 1111, P/S, 12 rioor Hardtop. R11i11n, • v!n . .,.1 ~1. .ng,.
11
x. !ll1., • · · · · · ;>-11111 & whilr., lull pcl\\"er, a ir "P/B, R,t·H. Rf'hll r ni:: .• nl"11' HM11Pr, Air Conri. r:xccl!f'nl 1
.,, ...,p, lllr. u pwr., '69 MERC .r.farquis, white '6.'i Muslart.J:, VR. RUio, irood OLDS '66 Vista Cru~r, 9 CO(ld. $800. Di •i nos I i c aood n~ 50000 w blk · I brakf'~. $250. 557-8658 airer Conrl. ISXZ371~ $•199.
'-""'!'· , rru. ar-wt v111y 1np & in1 , fa c mnrt., new l lfr~. mags. pill>.". Full pWf., air. Good t't'pnrt 11vailablf', '494--0251 fi PM. CONTINENTAL
ranty $2495. 54S-3388. air , excel cond. 8.17-5426, $800. 548--0420. f'Onrl . Pri/pty. ~5. f'Vf'."' or wkndr;. MOTORS
Autot, New 980 Autos, New 980 Aut01, New 980 j Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 PINTO 847-3842
USED
VEHICLE
DEALER
WARRANTY
WaRRanty
coo
FOR .30 DAYS
OR
2.000 MILES
WE WILL REPAIR OR
REPLACE THE ENGINE-
TRANSMISSION-REAR AXLE
BRAKE SYSTEM-OR
ELECTRICAL SYSTEM
* PINTO'S * l9TI's, \\lith or \Vithour air
!..ll milcRgr
HERTZ CORI'.
Lrg Sf'll"Ctio11·Many t"OlOrS
( 714 1 778-4050
PLYMOUTH
PONT. 'fi7 GTO Convrrt. ,
PIS. P /R, xlnt cone.I. 4:,,500 1
m1, nrlli!; ownr. $995 .
644-16.10.
·~ PON'TIAC Catahna 4 rlr I
auro. PB, PS, 11.U'. Xln! 1
Con<!. ti7:\-671'1.
·:;9 PONTIAC, •t rir, f'!l"IHl,
1i.111.~ \\'f'll. OriJ! n11'tlf'r, '66 Pl YMDUTff WAGON I &ll)'.X) m;, $1IO. '1&-1.1'6.
PONTIAC Star Chief '59. ll;i~
V~. autom111ic, po1,1,•f'r slef'r· ~very1hinir. real good rond.
inj;. (RZY1301 Don't niis~ Lo nii. S•IOO CRSh. ;,.J8-67~~. I 1h~!l'. Only $695. Call d!r. j ·s7 C11talina. ~ r1r. HT, xlnl
Chff Waldmp 54!!-51&1 OJ" ('Orlr1., low rn J., ps/ph. AUIO,
R42·fl6..1l. S900 or offer. ~9--2641, I
e '67 Pl YMOUTH .-s1 21 C11!<ti St11.r Oiirr Pn11-
J\Todiliffi for high r111c, '.i6 'l.oorl cnnrl. l\1 ti~t
J)f'rfonnRn('t' anri i'll"r ff' a~preciatf'. ~!!-!*i.l2.
appcaran('r!
Sl{XXI. MUST SELL!
54~·7R81
'69 Valiant
Runs i;::ood. Blue with ·,vhi1e
\"iny\ top. 2 Door. 6 cylinder [
automatie, radio, heatl'r.
IYBAi541 $1295. dlr. CliU
W11 \rlrop 54<1-51£4, M2-£t.ll.
1970 PLYMOUTH Duster,
11utnmatir lran~mis~ion,
Pont , '70 Le Mans
$2777
SPORT CUSTOM COUPF. I
Fa1·tory Atr Conrlitin11in£
Po1,1,·('r !l(ttr, hr11kt11. a u1n.
trans., R 11. WSW. vinyl t11p
1
& vinyl huckct !f'8t. i..llf'11\
low mileage & sprilleS!. ~ Str
• 7Zl4!!1)
NABERS CADILLAC
Jl"li\·f'r i;!PrrinJ<!, h u r k" 1 AUTllORIZF:D DF'.ALER
st'a!s. ronsolr radio & 2600 HARBOR BL.,
hr;itcr. Lo mile!, S:1.7JO. COSTA ~1 ~:SA
'65
'69
FORD Mustang
• <<I, l ~1111. Be~111••u• l 11rql>O"t f •n""• ... Vt•y Cl•an U!tlt (M ,.,1n
l!'&h<I n • .,. •~<1;11 tor" H'Er•lll
DATSUN 510
1 Qt, • 5J'f'..i, llOd<O H•-'" w"h
H...OU<b> ""''flOM frn"ll ! "(OIV.S.I
'69 ~~!~Yi. t~.~~~ !.~,:.KUP
110011c 1 .o.rctoc wn11• f'ft 1n1, LOO•• &.
llun• E•c•!lt "I
'70
'70
'70
'69
'71
'68
'70
'68
CHEVY El Camino SS
VI, Auto lr~n>, Po""' 01" BrA•••
ll•dlo, H••l•r Wll1ttw"H !Ir•• \Hn•I
11<>0!, 1onn~u. ''"'<:<:!GI"" B•Aul<h.>I
m ftroon Ii'"'"· IO<l~> And fU<!I ••~•111"1•
LWIXIG) \_OW M•I••
CHEVY 3/4 Ton Custom
w1camp•• tqu1pm&n1, HO lurJl<'lhyd•o
V I, Aulo Tr&n" f'O"'•' Sl•er i~o.
AM IFM Rod•o. H•~l•r. """',, •••. LO ..
n"l•t. MlrllOI Blu• with wl>l!f TOP &
tn&l<lllno lnl« tor, I 1Jl~7G I
FORD Super Van
V I, Aulo l r11n•. Air (of!d , ~~Ola.
H•al•r. lll., wheol B~u. r0t1<1n o'" Grr•n w11n whil• lop, (ll:CllJlll
FORD 3/& Ton Ranger P.U.
w l H•A..Y Duly E<1ul1>m.nt. V I, Aulo
Tr~n•. Air Con<!, Pow•r ~l••"~Q. R•oflc,
H•~I ... l oMod (.IA .. , Be~ulllul Hc ..... 11••• "'"'OOt'I wol~ tonl••"•nG "'~"• two !One,
1£1)90•1
VW Bug
• Spefd, ll•dlC, He~t!r, 11/SBS'i'l (cm-punion Or•l>llt wlTn bl•<~ Vinyl
'"'"''"'.
TRIUMPH GT-6
• cyl, • Speod, lil.tdlo, H.,.ltr, W>l~
Brltl•h R•clllQ Palnr, A WOii ••?! 11>0•h car wl!n lo mil••. & r~o•~I wiro w~a~I"
!1'19DCU1
TOY OT A Corolla
Station Waoon. • s~. 11 1010, H•Alt•.
Bt•u•Hul Ill'(! wlT~ confr~•t•no l'\i.(' lntat lor, l~!>/;BQV\
DATSUN Sta. Wag .
• Speod, o ;>< B cA~..,. AM l ~M q~a10. Siu• wit~ me1cn1"u vl"VI l"t~rLo•.
l'l'P01t91
$895
$1495
SAVE
$2895
$3195
$2995
$2995
$1795
$1395
$]595
$]395
18135 Beach Bl vd., Huntington Be"ch
842•7781 OR 540-0442 ' WITHOUT CHARGE TO THE EXTENT NECESSARY TO KEEP THE
VEHICLE IN SERVICEABLE CONOITION UNDER NORMAL USE . 962-3577. I !"140-~!100 Opl'n Sunrl;i.y ; l::":"::"~~C::::::" ___ 'l!!l~~~~~""':---..,. ... ~I
Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 99iJ I Aut Autos, Used
1969 Coprice
Co11pt-
Vinvl Roof, El.ctri' Win·
dow., Tilt Wh,,I, Air Con·
ditioninq., Auto. Tr.tn1.,
Pow•r S+•••inq, Pow••
l r•k••· Fint Cir. 1798 ·
.A.OF I
$2599
1969 Nova
.( Or., V.B, Power Ste•ring.
AOr Cond .. R.,d io, Rt 111 e1n·
in9 F•clory W.,,.~nfy, I
Own•r C .. r. IYWT l60l
$1999 -1969 Impala
.(Door H11rd top, Vjny l Roof,
Power SlettiMJ. Pow ••
Br 1 ~e1, R .. dio. "'11 to. T111 n1.
Sht rp. f820CP)(1
$2199
1969 Chevy
ro1t '4 Door Secloit
R1dio, Pow•r 5+1•rin9, Air
Colld., Auto. Trt n1., lor·
9tin. !YEK12J I
$1299
1969 Nova
.( Door, 6 cyl., R•dio, Auto.
7r•n1.. Pow•r 5+e•rin9 .
Nie• C,r. Should loo~ 1t
thi1 prlc1. IZCF•9&J
$1599
1967 Malibu
• Doo• S.d 1n, Pow ,, St•••·
in9. Auto. Tr...,1., Rt dio.
Low, low pric. IYCPJOO)
$999
1967 Chevy
lelolr
6 p,..,1n9 •r W19on, Pow1r
51,erOn9, A11lo. T111n1 .. AOt
Co.,di*ion;n9 , 11:.td io. l\IGT .
217)
$1299
1965 Corvette
H,,d+op. 3'6 cu. ·;,, . .(
Spd.. R .. d;o. N1c1 1>ne.
!PJW7161
$1999
1971 Pinto
Cotiiw
Auto. i••n1., R.tdio. Sh 11rp
cl!•, H09h R.ubb1r, (65 7.
Oll)
$2099
1971 Ford
Wo90•
I 0 P11•11n9ar, Counl•v St -
d,.n, Riqhl V.8 En9in1, un-
der J 0,000 ,.,;r,. Power
St1trin9, Power Sr•~••, Su·
pt r Sh•rp. !9998Q51
$3699
1970 Ford
T ori110 Squlr• Stolio11 W111.
Pow•• Steerin9. Air Cond.,
Auto. Tr•n1., Po,..t r lr 1 ~11 ,
R.dio, Lu99 •9• Ric~, 17,•
75• ... ilet . Sup•• Sh•rp,
f!J98EIC I F1clory W.trr1n-
Iv R1m1inin9.
$2999
1967 Ford
Coup•
One c"rtfu! .,,..,..,, rl•:~.,
to nitt , R11d io. Vinyl Roof.
Ait Cond., Powl r Slet rin9.
Auto. Tt t n1. !\1058501
$1199
1965 Fore;! LTD
• 01. Auto. Tr•n1., P1>w•r
S!11rin 9, One C11r1ful own-
t r, nict c11 r. !SBROIO J
$899
Morq•ll Co•,.
Vinyl Roof. °'-i• Cond., Pow-
'' Stterin9, Auto. Tr1n1.,
Pow1r Window•, Super l uy,
IUVTl1•1
$1399
1966 vw
1971 Buick
l•Sobr• Co•,..
R1dio, Pow•r St••rin9, A11·
to Tr•n1 .. Vinvl Roof. You
won't b•li•v• th, pric•,
! P2 56 7l
$2699
1971 Chevy
Mollbu
"' Ooor H.,Jlop. V.t . 11: ...
dOo, A11lo. 'rr•n•., Power
Ste~rin 9, Air Condltion;n9.
Sh •rp "•" I 55 00F8 )
$3099
1971 Nova
'70 Monte Carlo
J50 cu . in. \I -I . Vi nvl Roof,
Air Cond., Power 5t••ri n9,
RAdio, Aulo. l•1n1. Sh'''·
!•IOAQA I
$3199
1970 lmpola
COlllN
Auto. T••t11 . Air Cond .,
R•dio. Po w•r Stee•in9,
Po ... 11 r !r •k~., E:•t 1ll1,.t
Co.,d . (.t65AICS l
$2499 ----1970 Kingswood
6 P""·· )~0 cu. ;~ V.1.
Auto. Tr ""'-· Pow•r S+tt•·
in9, R .. d i1>, Air Cond, Low,
low 1TTilei. /P26:l SJ
VERY SPECIAL(,
1 OWNER 1965 CHEVY II HARDTOP
Blue J,.lt rior, "'"' new rubber, ll:•dio. Power .St.1rin9. Thi1 ct• h•1 hid
liHl1 ol e lady '''' t nd i.,, Deen kept in the 911191. lrri,,.tculele i:e,,di-
lion lhrou9ho11•. IN0Ztt9)
2828 HARBOR BLVD. NEW CAIS 546-1200 ' USED CAll~546-120J
'
DON'T MISS OUR BIG Winter
Push
\Vf''rf' pushing for R rrcord yr ar \11 nt'11i1 and US('d CA r 11a\r~ Il l Davf' Rnss Pn111i11r. This mran8 trcmendnus
savln1<s In yn11 \\'hrn you huy from us. Our prices are right a11d our selection l.s betlf'r !han e1·r r! Drop hy
A11d gel 'lUt dral brfnrc you buy.
'64 Chev.
STATION WAGON
A11ton111t ir, pn\\"f'r s Lecr-
in~. radin, ll"ater. (IDZ-
<16.11
'68 Pontiac
LEMANS H.T. CPE.
Automatic, pn\\•er stPer-
i11g. Air rn11d ., radio, heat-
er . (VHA187J
'69 Pontiac
CATALINA H,T, CPE.
Full power, factory a ir
conditioning, low m ileage.
tYUF563J
'68 Mere.
MAVERICK CPE.
9 pguc ngPr, full JlO"'t::r,
factory air. (WXJ713~
'70 Chevy
IMPALA
CUSTOM COUPE
F'u!l J)('l\\'f'r. fR r 1ory Rir
rood .. v1n_vl top. 1172-
REKI $2499
'69 Pontiac
FIREllRD
Radio. hf'Atf'r, power
11l.f'er1 ng. flO WPr b r11 kr11. 4
speed trAn~. (ZXX399)
'66 Forci
MUSTANG
Cn11v., ypllow "'\\h blaC'k
Jn terlor, 11 utn. Iran.~ .. r•-
•dio, hea.tc:r. (TEZ604l
'70 Ford
WAGON
Auto. lr1U1~ .• rAdio, hea t·
Pr. (508DF8)
'63 Chevy
CORVAIR VAN
4 Spd, ri1d10. ii;ond tnndi-
11on. j F\\''f7".l71
'69 Pontiac
FIREBIRD
Full power, farlory air.
custom I.rim. 3!KI e11gint'.
(373CAOJ
'68 Dodge
DART G.T,
Full power, fActory a.Ir
conditioning. {WPB943)
'69 Pontiac
GRAND PRIX
Full pc>wer, f11d. 111 lr,
vinyl lop, fact. tape, tilt
"•hl., oew tlrf'S. (972-
BRLI
'69 Pontiac
GTO H.T. CPE.
Full pn11rr. f11 r tnry 111r
rn110 1110 n 1n£, vinyl tnp.
1ZAV~:t')1
'71 Pontiac
GRAND PRIX
Fu ll po,,..·rr, fRctnry Air.
vin.vl rnr)f. fRr1 \\'llrr11.11ty
avail. 127657 JAl76703J
'68 Chrysler
NEWPORT H.T. CPI,
f llll po11i·cr, factory a ir
conditioning, vlnyl lop,
(VTD835J
'67 Pontiac
IONNIVILLI H.T, CPI.
rull power. f11 ctory a ir,
power wlndmw;, power
scat.1. {VCK6l4)
• ...
NEW1972
COMET$
TWO DOOR
(570563)
FULL PRICE
' --..-.-
COJlllllAalOUR·
SAVINGS-SERVICE··SELEaloN·
BIPORIYOU•UY
WE ARE PROUD OF OUR FACTOl'<Y AWARD WINNING DWEISHIP AND
THE FRIENDLY PEOPLE WHIJ RUN IT. COME IN TODAY AND PROVE TO
YOURSELF THAT SANTA ANA LINCOLN.MERCURY DOES OFFER "A umE
OORA".
NEW '72 MONTEREY
CUSTOM 2 DR. HDTP
Auto. lt'CM. olr cond. pwr. dtics. Wiid W/W'~ Ilic. dd:. riirrt raof ""-"""" WINDOWSTKR
OUR PRICE
DISCOUNT
$5072.SO
4130
$94258
NEW '72 MARQUIS .
4 DR. BROUGHAM
Pwr. ~!eenll!), ~sears and IOcb.. AM-fM. vilyt top,. 111tll
ienv .• air und, speed cont.. beitedWJW"s and rnorw. (S49i00)
WINDOW STKR $6456.79
OUR PRICE $5351
DISCOUNT $1105
-------------------------------------------------------------
NEW 1972
CONTINENTAL
2 DOOR HARDTOP $6686 FULL\..,
PRICE
(807416)
1969 MARK Ill
An immaculote luxury car comPletely equipped
wilh full power, AM-FM stereo, vinyl roof, air
condirioning, etc.
10 PRE.DRIVEN
MARK lll'S IN STOCK
ALL
PRICE SLASHED FOR
QUICK CLEARANCE!
NEW '72 Cougar XR-7 NEW '72 MONTEGO
2DOORHDTP
~uto. trmm. p\11'1'. lllw. mid di~ rrid. and stereo lcpt. F7(). J4
WfN wide owls. air,toll$01c. Ill«. clad:cmcl IDOf& CSl493 l)
4 DOOR SEDAN.
35 1 V-8, Qll11). fnms., pWT. sl•ln<J. W/W'4dli_ whee.I (0
rodioand more.
WINDOW STKR
OUR PRICE
$4597.80
$4060
WINDOWSTkR
OURPRICI
$3477.06
$2972.
DISCOUNT $53780 '•506
Power steering/disc brakes, win·
dows and 6 way seat with pass.
recliner, auto. temp. air, leather
inter., tilt steer., vinyl roof, W/W
Michelins, pwr. and antenna and
much more.
NOW ON DISPLAY
FROM EUROPE!
Just Arrived! Big Shipment
SEXY CAPRI FOR '72
READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
71 CHEV. Vega Wagon
4 ~·ot mdo, OOOOVI A nol '°"'Y fu< ~' fumrry'" $218 8 11,01 4 oc~m1l es
'69 LINCOLN Co!lt. Door
power Sll(lfS. ra(j'jl), heater, whitewo!l ·tires, vinyt roof. $
Prestig1 Gofore. 385 AVB
;~},,~, ""'~;~'!,l~~,E~.~~-,,,...,,
pi>Wer (disc) brakes, power windaws. power 5eCl'!so mcfiQ. $
healer, whitewoll 1ires,vinyt roof, limed g!ms, test drrt.
ltiis 1)118 you'll be Mppy. XOA 901
'69 COUGAR Convertible
aulo. Irons .• fac·tory oir conditioolng, power (dist) $2088 brake.\ power wRlowJi. rodio, wtiitewoll tirts..XTP473
e owner light i\tl)ry yel!oww~tchi1! interiar. ·
'68 OPEL 2 Door
s1;.:k sh iff, rcdio. XCA-204
'67 FORD Country Sedan
Auto. trcns ... foclofy oir condilioning. power s·1eerilg, paw• $9 8 irokrs, rodio, 314CKZ
arqu1s
v.s. CJ.Ill). trans~ foc:tl)ry oir cooditionirQ, pawtr mer~ $318 8 ing, power (diic) lrokts. pl)wer sl'OtJ, radio, heater,
power wiidow s. 904AFZ. 20,000 mies remaini'll on
lotto wam:in .
'70 CAPRI 2 Door Hardtop
4 spied, radio, heoter, whilewall lires.li:ense 17.SZfQA $ J 98
reallit111goe1"
'66 LINC. Cont. DR. H ••
.•. "'"· -... '"""' '" ""';""""" ,,,, ,...,, ... $ J 48 8 io, heoter, whit1wall rires, vinyl roof, tinted gloss,
covn. See & OriYe to opprs.io1• SAW 734
Y-8, Outa. trans. factory cir conditioning, full power,
power steering, pl)wer (di sc) brokts. JXIWer windows, $
poWl!1" seots, radii), he!Jler, whi1ewllll lires, vinyl roof,
tinted gloss, wtieel tl)vers. [;ttra nite tar. 866 ASM
'69 FORD Fairlane
V-8: oufo. trans.. power stee.rifYJ', power (disc) bro kt~ s 1 s 8
radio, heater, XYL724
'69 FORD MUSTANG
.9, mclc: sl)ift. mdio, hMTer, whif'IWa!J ffrq. whlel $1
vers. Real Spl)(fy. VCM 686
Sl)eed, rodici, heater. A little Dandy. 142 AGC
'67 LINCOLN
4 door SMlan V·S auto. fl'ans.. b:fbrf oiremfilionic. __ .._,,,..,...,...,,....,.wmow.,powo< $198
seafl. nil'io. whitewufl tires. •i:Jyl raoi tilted gloss.
vwtlHI CoYSl. Landau top, 7415
V-8. foclory air condilioning, power Slerilg. power $1
bnikes. radii), heater, whitewaH tires. VID80, Only
37.SOO 0::1\ml m~ei. ....
'66 PONT Bonnevi le 4 r. . . V-8, m.rlo. trans .. foctory cir tondilioniflg, full power, power
steering. power (dist) bralw, power windows. power uots.. $
radio, heater, whit1wall tires, vinyl rl)of. tinted QlaSS. A real
winner. TYV 400
1970 LINCOLN Cont. 4 Door
v.a. outO. trons.. fslory oir tcmdilioning, lllll pawtr", $
powr steering, power. (diu) brakas. pow• windows..
JIOWIW llUfs. rodio. healer, whiflWoll lira. myt rod,
tin red ss, wheel ciwen. Bolante of New car Wllfl'tJnfY. o/•
'67 MERCURY Wagon
milo. tnms.. power s:llfira, powir btikt" radio. heat .. , $8 8
263CQT
1968 D.ODGE Cliarger
11111). trons .. facl'!ly oir condilionirig. power steet~. ~ $
dlo, healer, whitewu.11 tires, tinted glau. whlM C.OYWL
WUM 863 GreatsportSc.arJ
I
:,
r
I
I ' i
,.
4.f DAIL V PllOT ----r nday, ftbruar) 4, 1972 ------
•
'
BEST .THING THAT
' .
EVER HAPPENED FOR
'
CAR BUYERS !r
-L '
BR·AND NEW 1972
OLDS CUTLASS
SUPREME
AIR CONDITIONING
Automatic: Trans.
Power Steering
White Side Walls
Whnl Disc:s
Bucket Seats, Etc:.
ONLY
$
o~
HONDA INVENTORY
LOTS OF '72 HONDA COUPES
• LEASING?
LOOK!
NEW 1972 OLDS
TORO NA DO
1 DOOlt HARDT0'
$159 MON TH. 1•
MO. O~t!'N END
lnclud•• .;, cond . full po..-•t
•ntl. do or lo<k• .. nd •••h. A.M -
FM 1f•t•o, ~inyl lo". lint. q l•11,
lilt wh•tl, b•ll •d WSW 1;,,, •nd
mor•.
WE LEASE ALL
POPULAR MAKE
CARS AND TRUCKS
WINTER SPECIALS
RENT A GMC CAMPER
FULLY SELF CONTAINED
for FRIDAY
SATURDAYS
SUNDAY
$ 95
ENTIRE 3 DAYS
FIRST 300 MILES ARE FREE!
I
ROCK-BOTTOM
USED CAR
PRICES
1967 OLDS WAGON
V;,1, Cruis••· VI, •utom•lic, ra-
dio, h,,,,,, pow•r 1+1trinq I
br•k11, f•c:I. ,;, co11d., roof 1•ck.
! F-024115)
$1595
1971 DATSUN PICKUP
R•dio '"' .... , .. , • speecl
lf•nimis•ion. (7JJCJY)
51795
1969 OPEL WAGON
R•dio, he•ter, 4 sp•ed lrt n1m i1-
mitsion. l•c:ellent lod <••· !YQCI07J
5695
1969 PONTIAC
CATALINA
Coupt. R•dio, ht.oler, •11+om•·
ti<:, full power, f1clory ,;,, vonyl
roof. !ZSV 8811 1 ·$1995
1968 CHEVROLET
IMPALA
' o, H.T. Air cond .. •uto.,
P.S .. P.8., r•dio t nd hetlt r.
fUG Ll .(7 )
$1295
1969 VOLKSWAGEN
Bu9. R•d<o t nd h1tl1r, IZOC·
71 7)
1968 OLDSMOBILE 1969 OLDSMOBILE 98
DELTA II • door h•rdiop. f utl power, f,,. Coup•. 1adio, h••l1r, •ulom•l;c,
•it <;ond., wh ite w•ll1, vinyl roof, lo•y •i•, ~inyl •oof. !NXK7601
IWP81111 1)
$1495 $2195
1969 DATSUN 510 1970 SUBARU
Sed•n. Equipped •nd •••dv to 3110 Mini V•n. l71o5ASTl dti•• home tod,.y. !Y RF90J)
5995 5695
1967 BUICK SKYLARK 1966 CHRYSLER
VB, •ulomttic l rt n1mi 11 ion, r•-Newport. VB, e11lom flic, r•dio,
dio. 1i •• 1,,. rTV F5J7l lie1I••, power 1le1rin9 & br1k11 ,
f1clory •ir. (42711311
$695 $595
1962 CHEVY % TON 1971 HONDA CAR
Truck with ~•bo•e • <.i mper. 4
1pe1d, 11 ir <ond>tionin9. !GSO. • 'P""d lr~n1mi<1ion , rtdoo t nd
0901 hetler (]41215)
$1495 $795
1970 GRAND PRIX 1967 PLYM. GTX
va, •u1ometic. ··dio, "••ltr.
1peftd ,,.d,.,, powtt 1lett1nq & brt~e1, f,.i;lory • f•dn•m•n;on,
t ir, powt r windows, vin1I roof. heeler. (UQT46:1 1
(054,A.QY )
53295 $795
. . . . ..
•
540-9640
•
•
. ' ' -· '
Fri11av Ftbl'U.1ry 4, 1<172 DAILY PILOT 45 ·:
~~~~~~~~-
WE
APPRECIATE
YOUR
BUSINESS
IMMEDIATE 1
DELIVERY
$199DOWN
BRAND NEW
'72CHARGER
I ood9d .,.;lh .;...,1 bioith ''°'"
hea!tr. f71•14 1 .. 11. WlndiJW!d
-w-1, direcliofl ~" kill
•inyl ;,,1e<io<, odmin ion control
''""" + much mu(h mart. Onftr Youn Tod1y!
S 199 ;, lo1ol do pymr. $73 i1 total mo ~ym!
in' I. lo Y. I ot tn>t & o 11 co rrylng chorgtl on $73 MONTH {OR 36 "'''"''"lo 36 ~•. ''''"~ ,ym• '"°' $1827 HICI. la & loc.n1t. MONTHS Annual Percente11t Rate l0.06"-
TAKE YOUR CHOICE
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
$13889ul~ PRICE
'71 COLT
ltl!ldtd wilh radio. ln•h oif htottr, dtl"°'tv. di.c
b•olte1, !vi! ~ow ~en!olat1011. rtdming ~ket 1eo11,
.It.,.,, O•lrheodtom 1600 CC 1110 & much mor 1.
lowmole<>cjt 72JCPM
$199 DOWN _ $43 MONTH ~~~~~s
$199 is total dn. pymt. $43 is total mo. pymt. in cl. tax & license
& all carrying charges on appr. credit for 36 mos. Deferred pyrnt.
price $1747 incl . tax & license. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE
JS 11.52%.
'71 VEGA
Auto 1rnns, radon, he-oitr, l<mdou, budtrl
stet~. vinyl in1eriar, wh11ewolls & deluxe
.,..hHI caverL 14 I 11 lUI15990
COMPARE
OUR
PRICES
BRAND NEW
'
'72 DODGE
TRUCK
loodtd .... i1h heater, .,..Ofldi.hi.id ....o~. 41
omp o11t mo1or, il'lwlotion pockoQt, 9006-
ye-or !ires. odminion control 1 S1S.S S sld. IMMEDIATE
disc wheels. 011As2ss16S6J DELIVERY
$2288~ $199DOWN
J199 i1 lololdn pym! SIJi•!olalmo p1m1 o<K!. FOR 36 '""~"''""""~, ...... ~ ..... "~·· $73MONTH tor 31> mot Oof11tr~ pym1 pri<:t S7871 ,,.1 10• & MONTHS
loclfl11. AHNUAL PIRClNTAGI ~AH 10.0• "-
IRAND NEW
loodtod wotl! wirol•h'-ld 1o o1h.-'
orl, h•9h bucl ••oh. h•o••r.
wonyl hoodlonlf, ou11'31 m•ttOf.
Gq )• 14 h<n , od"'•ll•M 1.,,,1,ol
. 1y11u11, ho9h "''P0C1 peon! A
n1<1Ch"""h"'°'" ll19B28192~91
5199DOWN
POLARA-MONACO
INVENTORY CLEARANCE!
SAVEuP To $1591 66
FROM LIST P'll:ICI
CllTOl Tlll
It COUITllT
SEE AND DRIVE
THE FAMOUS
COFFIN VAN
......... ' iilil 1 .....
BARGAIN CORNER
CLEANEST TRANSPORTATION
CARS IN TOWN
'65 PONTIAC '66 PLYMOUTH
J.DOoa HARDTOP
V·I , eulo. lrlnl., DO.,...r s!Hrlfl'Gt, whltewlll
tlrn, IMICkll •Mh. CZX.H 490) $288 FULL P'llCI
'66 CHEV.
II NQVA
111.~1o. ""'.,.· emo., ot11 t. Nm9, ~· IOW
mlln. "$3""'aa l'Ull
NICI
v .1, 1u10. tr1n1.. p0Wt1r stN•l"Q, rlCllo,
llNter. (PN41E6Zltt4"11l $388 FULL ..-1c1
'67 Fl~T
150 COUP'I
4 ..,....d, slick IJ'IUI. /UVU W l $488 FULL Pl I Cl
'70 FORD MAVERICK
$199 DOWN $30 MONTH ~~Hi~s
8 \1 ~9 1 '0i~l dn ''"'' SJO '"'''•t Sn~ ff\!llnt!, •Ir cond•· $ 9 8 ,.0 "'"''· ,,..1. '"'· l•ttQlf ~ n 1
t1onh-.11, r1d•O, he11tr. '""'"II ''""'" on ""9". ''""' '" 16 ...... D<' .. •od ~...,, .... '1111
M uc;ti, mll(;.h m Or"· FULL -1,.,1 1~"""' •-l•I "f'f!N
(411] APS) PRI CE T•l'.d •.o11EU.t\%
'71 PLYM. 2 DR. H.TOP
$199 DOWN $53 MONTH ~~~i~s
v.1, outo trans., radio, htet. $1688 f~;!C~~;:;'.~~~~;fg
•r, whitewoll lir11, Yi111! int.. l6 mos. Deltrr.:I pyml,
· 47J DIP 11r11;" 11101 Ir.er. "" a rtor, uc.,,1e. ANNUAL PE ii!.·
CENTAGE RATE 11 ."°"'·
'68 PONT. FIREBIRD '70 DATSUN '70 CHEVROLET
$866 v.f, "~· '""'·• '"'~' ''' '""·· $1488 power ''"""'iii· r.odlo. he•!t•,
f'ULL m1.1Ch mort . (2tl CGX) PULi, ""''. .. .. ,c.
'69 MERC. COUGAR '69 VW DELUXE '69 FORD GALAXIE
V•. ,,,;,, ""'"· WOii~"' $1188 ' '""· '"'"' WOHi '°"°''· $888 .. H' V.f. '"'· "°''·• ltt•" $988 llres, lull wl'l~t! Ul~trl, 81•t k , wl~VI \~I. 111 btt k 11a!s . (){fN. t lr cOl'ld, POWtr l'-t•l"9, _,
ti.euty. (ZUS $111 l'ULL lll) l'ULL brtket, rtctlo, hHIH. CZE U •1~) l'ULL
l'ltlCE PlllCI l"lltlCe
•
'70 PLY. FURY Ill H.T. '70 DART SWINGER '69 CHEV. PICKUP
v;_;uro11~:7~, !•::::I•~::,: $1488 1:::. 11::~~.l~~lr~~l~l:ylf~~ $1288 11\tlflt 4 10ffd, i<l9001f8) $1188
""lt"""tll llru . (71 t AZV) l'ULL 11'~. Muell, m11Cll !Nrt . (.SI)-l'ULL
l"ltlCI ICS!. PllllCI ,.:v~~
I
~-
. . . .
.... ~· . ' ·C
' • ' ' ' ' • • I
' ' • ' ) •
)
I .
I I
I • . • • . . .
' . . . .
' •
r
I
i
• I
D.IJI. Y PILOT fddl1. Ftb<uaq 4, 1972
TIME
Ill
n....M.,a•
911•llty DeoJer
Aw•rd for 1971
•• THIODOltl
IOllNS Jl.
AMERICAN MADE
IS ALSO PRICED
UNDER
$2000
BUT PINTO'S PRICE
INCLUDES SPECIAL DEMO CLEARANCE
TEST
DRIVE
PINTO
AND
COMPARE!
All FREIGHT AND
PREPARATION CHARGES
WE FEATURE
ONE OF
SO. CALIF.'S
LARGEST
PINTO
SELECTIONS
SHOWROOM
FRESH
7l's-72's
BIG SAVINGS 0
L. T .D.-Ga lare-T-Bird-Ford Sa le!
Many to choose from. '65 thru '71 Models, Sport rooh, forma:S, 2 door & 4
door hardtops & sedans. Full power, air condltlonln9. Warranties avalJable.
EXAMPLE : 1971 T-BIRD HARDTOP
Aufo, l'.S., P.I., P-irui•w1, AM -FM, •ir, tilt will., 9ood rn il•1. f6t41ZJJ
OUR PRICE $3996
'70 TOYOTA CORONA $1696
Tremendous Discounts on Low Mileage
Staff and Exec. Cars that include Pinto,
Ma¥erick, Torino and Station Wagon
Models!
Save While They Last!
ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED
TRA'DES ACCEPTED
PAID FOR OR NOT!
~ • '69 TOYOTA CORONA 2 Dr. Hardtop. Radio, heater, 4
Spd .. air cond., good miles.
CYD0720)
IUI IOOK PRICE $1440
NEW '72 LTD's
PRICE BUSTER DISCOUNTS UP TO
NEW '72 T-BIRDS
PRICE BUSTER DISCOUNTS UP TO $1101 w::g~w STICkllt $1402 WI~·.~~ STICKER
S•r. # !2J61Sll6026l 1105 1 s ••. # 12Jl7Nl46124) I 10191
NEW '72 GALAXIES
PRICE BUSTER DISCOUNTS UP TO
NEW '72 TORINOS
PRICE IUSTER DISCOUNTS UP TO s901 w::g~w STICKER
Ser.# 12J51Hl44041J 110851' ~
$800 w1':~o"w STICKER
Sir. 1t 12AJISJ7<!1S7l (906)
NEW '72 MUSTANGS
PRICE BUSTER DISCOUNTS UP TO
NEW '72 MAVERICKS
PRICE BUSTER DISCOUNTS UP TO
$500 FROM
WINDOW
STICKER
oi:350 FROM <II WINDOW
STICKIJt
Sir. :t: 12F02H11 17J61 (2501 Sir, t: 12K92lll67911' 1907)
EVERY NEW '72 IN OUR HUGE
STOCK NOW DISCOUNTED TO
SAVE YOU HUNDREDS OF $$$!
LEASING ., SAYE ON LOW MILEAGE
• PRE DRIVEN MODELSI
'72 LTD HD TP 51 0266
400 VS, A/T, pwr. r;;teer, & discs, 24 MO. ?!o.
air cond., radio, tint glass. OPEN END
'72 GRAN TORINO HD TP
302 VB, AIT. pwr. steer. and discs,
air cond, radio, tint. glass.
'72 PINTO RUNABOUT
24 MO
OPEN END
2000 CC Eng., A/T, d isc brks., 24 ?.tO.
W/W, accent grourJ. OPEN END
-· --FALS -----94'~10.
15 PRE-DRIVEN MODELS AT SAVINGS LIKE THIS!
WE LEASE ALL POPULAR MAKES AT COMPETITIVE RATES.
MAVERICK-PINTO SALE!
EXAMPLES:
'70 MAVERICK
Fully fact ory equippt'd.
radio, heater. (688BEP J
ILUE BOOK PRICE $1710
67 OLDS CUTLASS $1 096 Supreme 2 Dr. H.T. R&H,
Auto., air, P.S., Good miles.
(TZM866) · ·
Fully equip~. 4 spd., '71 PINTO $1796
!Aw mile1. f334EAD )
ILUE IOOK PRICI $2111
'70 IMPALA 2 Dr. H.T. $2096 Auto. ~·· P.S., radJo,
heater, &r cond
!091AI{U)
"69 CHEVY MALllU
Hardtop. R&H, auto ..
P.S., vinyl roor. air
cond. <YWT5351
'70 FORD CUSTOM $1496
RT83. 4 Dr .. rac:!io, heater,
auto. trans .• air cond. a:ood
miles. (530VHP)
ILUE IOOK PRICE $1950
'71 COUGAR H.T. $2996 '68 V.W. BUG Loaded. good miles.
(XSR931)
$~50 1_.L_u_•_•_o_o_K_•_•_"_"_'_'•_u ____ _
'71 MIRCURY CAPRI $2096 Fully equipped. R&H, good
ILUI: IOOK PRICI '2275
'70 BUICK RIVIERA $31 96 Full power, tacto air, J.t
&H, tilt whl., vin:f' roof, 4 door, VS, automatic, R&H, auto., P.S., a ir cond.,
Lo...,, miles. f957BSXl BLUE BOOK PRICE $1015
powoc ""''"•· good mil,., (357\'Wl
'67 DODGE DART $1 096 2 Dr. H.T. VB, auto., R&H,
.•L_u_•_•_o_o•_••_,_c•_s_, .. _, ----•I '65 ~'i!~r~~TR~:.~~~.~l~.s .. air
cond. Good miles. CPIT484)
'69 FORD GALAXIE $1396 $650 miles. (218BNP)
BLUE IOOK PRICE $2415
'69 CHEVY IMPALA $1696
good miles. (066AFWJ
BLUE BOOK PRICE Sl62t
'70 DODGE CHARGER $2196 R/T 2 Dr., H .T., Auto., R&l-L P.S., air cond., lo\v miles.
(UZT667)
ILUE BOOK PRICE $1215
'70 TOYOTA MARK II $2150 \Vagon. R&:H, air cond.,
Low mllC's. !UZT667)
BLUE BOOK PRICE S2~70
4 Dr. Seel., fac. alr cond ..
po\\'Cr steering, radio, heat•
er, V-8. (ZDX781)
'70 CHEVY IMPALA
Cust. R&H. auto., P.S.,
air, vinyl roof. i;::ood
miles. {475AFXI
ILUE BOOK PRICE 52520
TRUCK SALE!
Many to choose from. Chevy, Datsun, ltanchero, 'fl ton and lf• tons. Fkrt bed. '67 thru '71 models.
EXAMPLE: '65 FORD t!z.TON PICKUP
Ste nd1rd T r1n1., FUiiy· Equipped, Goad Miles. I 535950 l
$796
'66 CHEV, MALIBU S.S. VB. 4 speed, good miles.
(XWY9401 '64 BUICK ELECTRA 225 4 Dr. H.T. Excellent condition,
ori~i nal thru-out. full power,
factory air, low miles. IPBC185) '63 FORD FAIRLANE V8. rad.in. heater. \~'hi tc/
red interior, good miles.
<353CQRl '67 OLDS CUTLASS 442 Supreme, 4 sJxl .. V8, 2 Dr. 1-J.T.
R&H, air, P.S.., good miles. (TSR640)
BLUE BOOK PRICE $1305 '66 PLYMOUTH FURY 111 4 Dr. Scd. V8, R&H, auto.,
P.S., lov.r miles, a ir cond.
(SVYS90)
9 Pass. Radio. heat.er, good '69 VW KOMBI WAGON
miles. CYWS750)
$896. Cust. H.T. VB, R&H, auto.,
P.S .. P.B., vinyl coo!. aic
oond., good miles. (XTL773)
BLUE IOOK PRICE $1975
'69 OLDS DELTA CUST. $2'196 2.Dr. Hardtop. F.ull power,
1ur cond .. low mile!!.
fYCN414)
BLUE IOOK PRICE $2520
Air., Cond., Vinyl Roof.
(1 18 A GF')
BLUE BOOK PRICE $2760
'I• TON FLAT IED
Chevy. VS, fully fact.
equipped. Good miles.
(Q95421 )
MUSTANG SALE!
Many ta dlaose '""'-'65 tin '71 models. Coupes, llardtaps, canvertlble cmd
2 + 2 faltbacks. Some wltll 4 speeds, also air cOllCfltfonlnt •d automatic models.
EXAMPLE: '65 MUSTANG HARDTOP
f ully f•etory ,,quippff. YI, 1uto., pow1r 1tHrirtt1 r1clie, h11t.r, 9ood rnile1. IPFfOl4)
OUR PRICE $896
'------------------------BLUE BOOK PRICE $2140
SALES DEPT.
HOURS
.. : ...
I AM TO t PM MOIM'll
I AM TO 6 PM SAT
10 AM TO 6 PM SUN I
-•''"li<~"!:ifi!r =·••·,.-,.-.;.,, ' .. ' f _j, llfz .acres of the Jtlostmoderrl:Ford sales and }~~· I.¥~' »:c·~ .. " "~ ,,y,;j. ' "J1l service'facilities on the West Coast
.
.i
PART~SERVICE
-HOURS ·
,~ /~~~s@:~' ~ Robins
• ,
2060 Harbor
7 AM To 9 PM MON
7 AM To 6 PM TUE.Fii ·
; I
PARTS DEPT. ONLY
I AM-to 1 PM .JATUIDAYS
I
'
San Cle1nente
Capistrano
VOL 65, NO. 30, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES
)
\
EDITION
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORt~IA
' --
Toclay's Fl•al
N.Y. Stooks
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY ~. 1972 TEN CENTS
General Plan Sparl{s Debate • Ill Capistrano
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of IM D&Lly r1111 Sl•ff
While the swallows are witlging their
way back to Sao Juan Capistrano, the
biggest flap is taking place on the
ground.
The issue is growth.
And at the heart of the issue is the
city's general plan and its author, City
Planner Bob Johns.
In recent weeks members of the Alli-
ance of Homeowners' Associations have
attacked the general plan as being out-
dated ud unrealistic. They have recom-
mended that a new general plan be
drawn by a professional land planner.
Chafing under these remarks, Johns
defended his plan and tht professionalism
of his staff.
"A general plan is a general outline to
accomplish citizenry-determined goals,
general in nature," said Johns.
"It's a group of ideas of what people
would like to see at one particular time, a
guide for the future, continuously subject
to change."
John.s said there are two kinds of plans.
One is a "canned" plan that balances all
land uses with respect to percentages of
each and is not affected by people or
their goals. The other is a flexible plan,
which is oot balanced but incorporates
the consensus of the pe<>ple and changes
as people's objectives change.
San Juan has the latter.
"Certain groups through the use of
emotionalism rather than research. have
come to unsubstantiated conclusions that
certain things should be done with
respect to future development without in-
vestigating procedures l.o accomplish
their desires," said Johns.
The planning director added that whtn
the consensus of the public changes about
any part of the general plan, there are
buill·in ways to get these changes made.
For example if a group wanted to
reduce densities in any area they could
by following procedures in the land use
element of the general plan.
"But an important consideration is that
if certain types of wning are lefl out that
are resource producers it can be an-
ticipated that people in a lower density
city will have higher taxes," he said.
One part of the' plan that has been
highly criticized is the part that says San
Juan may ultimately have 85,000 popula-
tion.
Johns said this is the maxln1u1n holding
capacity of the land but is not a true
reflec tion of future population.
"Twenty-two percent of the city will be
in streets, highways, freeways, bridges
and other roon1-takif).g projects ." said
Johns. "\\le are adding a conservation
clement to the plan which will take lnto
consideration areas subject to seismic
vibrations. shale areas, flood pla ins,
scenic highway corridors. equestrian and
bike trails, parks. historical preserva-
tions and archeologically important areas
-an nswers
'Drastic Cuts'
Board Gets 1st
Look at Budget
The first look at the 1972-73 budget was
taken by _Trustees of the Capistrano
Unified School District Thursday -with
and wlthout the 50-cent tax override.
Even if voters approve the conUntlAUon
of lhe override for the next three years
there still will be drastic cut!)p the areas
oi capital outlay and mi.tnenanee, IC·
mrdlng to Superintendent T r u m a n
Benedict.
Benedict had asked the board ta hike
the override to 78 cent.! to continue the
ulstlng level of services.
The superintendent said the district'•
assessed value is not growing as fast as
enrollment and soon there will be the ad-
ditional expenses for opening the new
Dana Hills High School.
The total budget (with override) i.s
$9,764,088, represenLing an increase of
$364,936, over last year.
An estimated $285,000 will be used to
open the new high school and lhe cost of
educating 700 additional students n e x t
year has been added to the educational
categories.
The largest cu ts are in capital outlay
for site improvements, library books and
new equipment. Next year's trimmed
budget figure is $127 .280. This year
$252,902 wa:o; budgeted. The maintenance
category will be cut by_$36,103.
"We have many projects that need at-
tention," said Benedict. "We're not going
to be able to do any of them."
Clemente Higl1
Enrollment Set
All new students enrolling for the first
time at Sarr Clemente High School will be
registered on Tuesday, Feb. a. ·
New student! .are being asked to report
to the career center for counsellng prklr
to enrolling in their classes..
studenU: who are returning for the Je--
cond semester will be registered on Mon--
day, Feb. 7. Signs will be posted on the
Campus directing students to varlOUJ
areas for the registration process.
For information · report to the ad-
mini.!tration office or call the school at
~~165.
Agnew Finds
A New Target
NEW YORK (UPI) -Vice PruJ..
dent Spiro T. Agnew 1ay1 he would
not trade all the envlronmtntal
"dilettantes" in the country for one
level-headed, serious-mlnded Boy
Scout.
Agnew told the Boy SCOUla' an-
nual dawn patrol breaklast that
their groep had boen practlclo1
ecology for yean and In a ltngle
day last year collected a million
tons or litter from parkl and public
area
">J an American vitally I&
tertsted ln the enVtronrMnt, '*
Agnew sakl, "l wouldn't trade you
one level-headed, 1triou.mlnded,
atrvlce-oriented Boy Scout for all
the publicity-seeking onvtronm .. lal
dDeuantea the: newt media can di&
up between now IDlt Halloween . .,
r
Benedict said that in preparing the bud·
get (with SO cents) he sought to leave the
educational program intact and make
sacrifices in olhu areas.
Looking at the budget without the 50
cents, the board aaw that the to\tl would
be $8,938,951 which ii $815,000 less than
tbjf year. ·
lev8re Cuts would have to be inade ln
Instruction, heallh lftt'vlc.._ lr&lllJ>Orta· llcin. operations, maintenance, and fixed
chargu.
Benedict has said that failure to pa8.!11
the override would set the d~trict'a
educational program back 20 years.
Former Hughes
Aide Testifies
At Book Probe
From Wire Services ....
NEW YORK -A fonner consultant to
Howard Hughes made an offer before a
grand jury today to read the mariuscript
of a pnrported Hughes autobiography
with a view toward judginf its authen-
tici ty,
"I would be able to say if the book
were authentic or not." added Joh n
Meier, 38, who was a scientific consultant
lo Hughes until 1970.
He is running for U.S. senator from
New Mexico as a Democratic candidate.
Meier's lawyer, Robert H. Wyshak, told
newsmen the government's response to
the offer to check the book's authenticity
was that "a lot of J>eople would like to
read the manuscript." -...
"We told the U.S. attorney that we
would be available if they wanted Mr.
Meler to read it," Wyshak added.
Jn a prepared statement di1tributed
after his one-hour grand jury appearance,
Meler said be never met the book's
author, Clifford Irving, or the latter'1
wife, Edith.
"I do not have 1ceess to any personal
flleJ: of Howard Hughes," the 1tatement
went on. "When I resigned my position in
Nevad1, J tn'ered all connections with
the Hughes «1mJuUOl'I. I b a v e no
koowled1e of any computeri7.ed In-
formation about Howard Hughes."
There have been suue•UonJ that com·
puterized lnfonnaUon .,on Hughes may
have bttn leaked b1 one of hia 1ide1 to
Irving,. for ... In writing the purport..i
autoblolflpey. A. voice ld<ntHled as
H111htl In a Wephone Jntervlew has
d<nled ever t.lklna lo lrv!ng.
There ...,. olh<r cleveloP""'nll In the
btzarr.•caae :·
-The New Yo<k Times today published
what It Hid wmrnctrpC.o from the con-
tsovenlal autoblolrapllf, but llmsod
t1lal Illa malarial "Cllllld have come !tom
pre'riomif -,_,.. •boat
the reclooe' lilDlaOalto.
-Fodml autJ1orJt1et llld they may ln-
1\iato utredlllon _.stnaa aplnl\ lllChml &mtnd. • co11a11ora1or wtlh 11"-inl on die .._,..phJ II bk1nd failed
to appall' _.,. _.. Iha federal
v•nd fury ilMllilatlnl the cue.
-Bu.ID<• Waeli M'apsl'ne report..i
Iha\ pm of the llJOllO!' McGra,.·HIU paid
for tht book wu invnted ln American
l<Cllfltiu by • sw!U baOlt al Illa dlreo-
u... of tho e11111br'I wif•, Edith. 1lJe
report did not apeclly Iha amount. Tho,,_ lloo Aid todo.y Iha uc<rp!i,
flot IRVllfG, P ... fl
,, •• I ~ I
! I •• _,,, I 1 • 1.j;:_
.o~· •.I):'
CONTAINERS ON TRUCK EACH CONTAIN A SPENT NUCLEAR REACTOR ROD FOR SHIPMENT
Every 18 Months 52 Rods Ar• Remov9d During Overhliul; Cont1iner1 C1n Wlth1t•nd Cr11hts
Auto Fraud Jurors Talking
Coiuity Panel Hears Prosecution Testi1no11.y Again
Twelve jurorl!I who must rule on the
guilt or innocence of the ''service station
seven"' flied back to the courtroom today
for the rereading of testimony offered by
a prosecution witnesl!I during the seve~
week trial.
All seven defendants and their three
lawyerl!I }<lined Orangt County Superior
Court Judge James Turner and pro--
Church Members
Protest License
In San Clemente
A pet!llon 1llfl0d by more than 300
membe:r1 of a San Clemente church came
b<fm a hearing olllcer of tile state
Alcoholic Beverage Control Commialon
In San Clem.nte lhll mornl11-a proUst
against granting 1 beer and wine Ucense
to a folk mlllic cablrel
'The slgnalur.9 formed the major pro-
test of the San Clemente United
Presbyterian Church agalns\ grant1111 the
lictnle to lhe Four Mutes, 301 Avenlda
Estrella.
The ABC has be<n uUd to grant ii> the
on-Ille permit to the buslneu whlcll u ..
about IO feet .crou the stre<I lrom !ht
church.
Local lawyer rl Ktgley, a church mtm-
ber, gpou for the proator and before the
hearing straaed the major objtttlon waa
hoarinC· str.....S the !lllljor obje<tlon ""
l gr111Ung tht 1Jetnse would worsen an
alr<ady exllUng lfut ol be<r-ttrvin&
estabUthmtntl near the sanctuary.
"!1'1 1eUlng so they have to havt a
join! every 15 feet to 1et a drink," be
chlrled. .. •
secutor Richard Stenton in the courtroom
to listen again to the testimony provided
by a former employe of the Harbor and
Gilller Mobil station In Costa Mesa.
It took an hour to meet the jury re-
quest. The session enc:ted with Judge
Turner again reading his-irlltructlom as
they applied fo charges of conspiracy.
All seven defendanU: are ctiarg~ with
cor11plracy to cheat and· defraud Orange
County motorist.a In an alleged auto
repalr racket that included 11 service
stations.
The testimony re-read today contained
a statement or the tanner employe at the
Costa Mesa statkln th11.t he aaw tlres
deliberately punctured and radiator seals
broken by fellow employes.
The jury went back to the jury room to
resume Ill dellberatlon of additional
charges by nearly 30 prosecution wit·
nesses that the seven defendant! were ln4
volved in the spraying of fuel pumpa of
shock absorbe rs which were then
represented to be leak.Ing and in need ~f
replacement.
ft was alleged by the prosecullon that
lht repair racket Included Arco, Mobil,
Shell and Texaco rtations ranging from
Seal Beach \0 5an Clemente Ind tbat the
practice put many thousands of dollars
into the pocJr:etJ of lt1 operator•.
·:tleaty Caper
Man Held in Illegal Steak Sales
Droppln& by a Corona ckl Mar tollor
1oop, a Torrance nlmnan allegedly pod.
dllng his leftover sttakl and hambureer
at bargahl baRmftlta'llfOUnd up in a bit of 1tew Thul'lday nl .
Frederick W. "U • Kook, Z2.
WU IUboequtnUy lll'1'tilfed and book'ed In·
to Newport Beach City JIU oli ausplclon
of IUtgal Mlea of mtat, Sec\lon 121114 of
the State Bualnnri I< Prof-Code.
Ora,.e County hM I.I million ral<1tnU
and more than IO \iUor ahopL
The I°"' cullomer When poor Undmlog
-who dldn1 nplaln hit nlcknamt to
police -entued Purdut11 Tailon, 3637
E. Cout Highway, wu none other than
William Fltchen.
He Is the Orange C<>Unty ltaler of
WtightJ and mea.surei. wbo ta dlr.ectly
responsible for countywide enforcement
of such state laws. .
.. Anybody want lo bJy any meat ?"
Koot "u quotod 11 aarlnr.
Fltcbm ldenllfled biliutl! and demand-
•
ed. Kook do the same, auertlnr the
suspect claimed lo be a John Htnry
Jones, but dldn't have .any ldenUflcatlon
papers on him. ,
The stale welchll and meuurea conll'.01
evecutlve then Moorted Kook out to a 1-ery'o Mtall b11Cli parked a! Ille curb,
whtre ho allefodly tried lo blaJi!aU ~
wltll the hambureer.
Fltcll<n onatdlad Ibo byl out of Q1' Ig-
nition and kept the ab toqt, Ill Inch Kook
In cuetody, while I tailor and ... mstr .. s
11.Jttd N wltneuel aummoDld Patrolman
Larry Gabriel.
The officer toolr Kool< f« bookJni 11
1,45 p.m. while Fltchon canllscatod three
carton1 of meat ht ttJd·bore no m1rkln1s
of welaht, another stalt law violation.
Delendam Kook "u finally relened on
11110 ball, ptndln& arral&nment Oii tile
m1adunu.nor char1e nut weet tn
Harbor Judicial D1strlct Cowt.
City o!flclala aho plan to iw-cuto
UndenloJ for peddllnc wllhout a l1ceNa.
'
-all of which will not be populated.
"This will reduce densltlel!I even more."
Johns said the city 's staff currently in~
eludes n director of planning with
degrees in polllical science end public ,g...
ministration. ""'ilh eight years' experience
and special training in planning ; a parks
and recreation specialist with a master's
degree and a year and a half experience,
and a stat1s11cian with a degree in
engineering.
'"To state tha t professionalism Is not
present in this city is a grol!ls injustice,"
he said.
• 1ven
Scientists
Meet Press
In Clemente
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 ''" DellY ,.11.1 "'"
While large crews or specialists were
busy at San Onofre refueling a nuclear
reactor and rebuilding turbines Thursday
a panel or scienUsts in San Clemente
spent hours rebulldlng the image of
nuclear power for a &fOUP of newsmen.
The seminar, which offered nnrly
unlimited que1tlontng of 1 panel of aclen-
tlata a~ the San Clemente Inn. touched
hard. cm earthqu1ke factoro 1n nuclear
generation. nuclear health upectl, ufety
o1 reactors and bandl!ni and d!Jpolll of
radlo1ctlve waa:te.
Durlng the day'• conferenca crews •t
the San Onofre Nuclear Gener1tlng Sta.-
lion -a plant under siege of sorta: by th•
People's Lobby -were rebulldlng a
ma11l!llve turblne and auxiliary rystems
dealing with conventional generating
machinery.
Simultaneously 1peclallsts dreeed In
aurgeon's garb were winding up the
refueling of 52 spent fuel rods Jn the reac-
to' 11 .. 1r.
The month-long routine shutdown Is
almost over.
The 1peaker1 at the day's talks, not
geared 11pecillcally to generating news
storie.!l. but ln!tead to help educate
writers on the subject. are affill1ted with
the Atomic Jndustrlal Forum.
The selmlc factor of the plant, and
particularly those affecting San Onofre
took a 11potlight for a time as Or. Crall
B. Smith. a UCLA assistant engioeertng
professor, pointed out tests made on
many nuclear lnstallatioru to determine
their abl!ity to withstand quakes.
Smith stressed that close lrupecUon. at
Sa11 Onofre after t.he Feb. 9 Sylmar
earthquake showed absolutely no pro-
blems with any 1y1tems at the reactor .
In relative terms, he 1ald, the San
Fernando temblor was ''minor," and
several nuclear lnatallatlon.s closer to the
eplmiter than San Onofre withstood the
shock just as well .
One at UCLA, he said, had only aome
minor crack.a In office buildings, but
crucial systemt fared extremely weU.
Smith pointed out lhal aUff tosta m.
volve the U&e or special vibration ~
ment at many polnU: of 1 reactor com-
plex: and through mathem.ttJcal exteMion
(SM NUCLEAR. P11• I)
0r .. ,.
Weder
Thole high cloud& over the Souih.
laild will clea' by Slturdly, maJr.
lng way lor a, pleaunt weekend
wllh slightly wanner tamperaturu.
litchi alooi the beach II rlalq IO ea Inland. LoWJ ......
JNSmE TODAY
The NtlDJ>"l'I Harbor A r I
11 .. eum haa 15 of Ed""'rr! Hop-
JJ<r'• palnll"ll• on dflplav 11111
monlh In ti<• main gallefV, "'"!.
IO'fftl othtr inUre1tiliQ imo11 t :c-
hibitl tn. Chi cntranc1 oolllru.
See Pape 21 of todov'• Wrelocftd.
v for pfciurt1 and f10t'W.
'-·""' lml 1 1 .. n,.. ,.
Clllfotnll• I c't•111RM1 »4f
C•"'lt' ll (,..,...,.. "
DMltl IM'1c.• f .......... , ....
""'--'"" "~ ......... f "'1'ttot-•• ~L.8--II "-""'• .
I
z DAILY PILDl ___ sc __ _
FA.A Deari1a9
Citizens Blast
Chi n o Airport
By JACK BROBACK
01 lfll Dallr P'llcol 11111
North Orange County residents hauled
out their antiaircraft guns Thursday
night and verbally shot down the pro-
posed Chino I-tills jet airport
Laguna IU!ls spokesmen, howev er,
were on hand to support the concept.
A crowd of 600 to 700 persons filled
Valencia High School auditorium to lell a
panel of Federal Aviation AdminiBtratlon
officials that they wanted no part or the
jet.age facilify in their neighborhood.
Col. John Lohman . project manager for
Chino Hills Airport Complex Inc. told the
hostile audience of pl ans for the facili ty
including an industrial park on 2.500
acres of hilly land north of Yorba Linda.
The site Is surrounded by 25,000 acres of
almost uninhabited area.
"The proposed airport will fill a need
for most of the people of Orange County
and will add greatly to the economic
growth of the area ," he said stressing the
importance of future air freight service.
FAA official Don Davis soid written
comments will be accepted until Feb. 11.
He set no time for a final decision on ac-
ceptability of the project by the federal
agency which lll necessary for state ap-
proval or construction.
Thursday night's bearing was billed to
"gather facts relevant to the effects of
the proposed airport upon the safe and
efficient use of navigable air space."
Davis cautioned th at testimony on the
effec t on the environment would not be
considered but he allowed many speakers
to discuss that facet.
They urged that a federal -state study
be made of the environmental aspects of
the jet·age facility.
Brian Do uglass, Fullerton Airport
manager and a member of the county
Airport Land Use Commlssion 1ed off
with a slinging technical condemnation.
"The Fullerton runway take off
Jim Regelhrt1 gge
Named to Lead
Dana Point Unit
Jim Regelbrugge has been una nimously
elected president of the Dana Point
Citizens for Action.
Serving bis second term, Regelbrugge
will be assisted by Hal Day, vice presi·
dent; Nancy Shrewsbury, secretary, and
Charles Cross, treasurer.
Other board members are Vern
Gerhardt, J . M. Miller, Steve Papanek,
Hank van der Velden and Hal Jlllson.
"The primary goal of the association
will be to determine what form of local
government the cilizens of Dana Point
desire," said Regelbrugge. "The longer
we wa it for local controls, the more cos--
tly our problems will be come ,
a esthetically as well as finan cially."
The association is currently interested
In the county's updating of the Capistrano
Valley master plan. The directors plan to
map out their own proposals to present to
the county planning board for their CQTr
1ideratlon.
All resident! of the area who have
ideas about the proposed plan are asked
to contact one of the board members.
Pro and con comments regarding bolh
annexation to San Juan Capistrano and a
fourth incorporation attempt are also
being sought. A summary of the!e com ..
ment.s and results of the group 's various
gtudies will be presente d at the February
general meeting which will be an open
forum to present fact!, figures and opin -
ions regarding taxes, zoning, police and
fire protection.
"In 1971 the Dana Point Citizens for
Action proved that It is here to stay,"
said Rege\brugge. "In 1972 we hope to
Jead the way for the establishment of
local control in our community."
DAILY PILOT
ClltMQR Co.t.ST PUILtSHDtO cttMl'Mf'f
ltoM~ N. w • .1
Prtskl9!1t .w l"ulltbl#
J .ck 11. e .. t.r Vb ,,. .... , ... co.-11 "---
11i11111t K1.-hl Editor
nci-.iHA..M.....,._ _ .......
Qto4oo H. 1.-lldoo.d P. 11611 ---..__.._
222 hrtst Aft•ll•
11.ir.., •ddtft•1 r.o .... '''· tt•st s-c ....... Offk4I
IOI NMll IEI c..u ....... tz•n ..... -c.'9 ..... I» w.t ..., ...... ,=::i a-dll .,, .....,,.,. ......... ·-... ws.-.......
heading and that of the proposed Chino
llffis facility would meet headon," he
charged. "Our instnunenl landing systern
turn 1, five miles out, just seven miles
from the lLS for the proposed airport.
Interference would be inevitable."
A steady stream of city, school and
homeowner association leaders followed
Douglas, all in agreement that the facili·
ty should not be built.
Dr. Ralph Ruth. board chairman,
Placentia Unified School District: ''Our
board is unanimous in opl'.JO'ilion. The
proposed airport would be just four miles
north of Yorba Linda. Our schools are not
sound proofed and a new elementary
facility i.s planned within two mlle-s of the
:site."
Sam Cooper, North Orange County
Airport Commitee: "We told the county
superviSOl'S last year we are opposed lo
this project. Col. Lohman said hi.s firm
has hired ma ny consultants to check the
viability of the project. The county hired
Pereira and Parsons Bnd their reports
were full of errors. Consultants are not
infallible."
Mayor Henry Wedaa of Yorba Linda:
.. Our city opposes for several reasons -
noise, overcrowded airspace, unrealistic
flight paths, possible crashes In inhabited
areas and an unfavorable Southern
California Association of Governments:
report.''
Robert Fennell, Placentia mayor and
president of the Orange County League of
Cities: "It is a different decision you
face. We rieed air transport in Southern
California and the land owners have a
right to develop th eir property. The
1!170 FAA preliminary report said the
site was boxed In by El Toro, Long
Beach, Los Angeles, Ontario and other
existing airports:. The busie!t Los Angelet
airport incoming traffic path from the
east is within five mlle! of this site."
There were a few voices rai!ed In favor
of the project.
George Kellogg, Yorba Linda, president
of the Imperial Highway Association:T "I
have lived and worked in Orange County
since 1897. There is opposition to Los
AngeJes airport, Orange CoWlly Airport
and even the proposed Palmdale in·
temational facility.
''Why do we need an.other airport? Sim-
ply becaU!e the people want It. No one
rides the trains to San Francisco any
more and mo!t people don't even drive
there in their cars. There la only one
other place. In Southern Callfonia better
for a new airport -Death Valley.
Pioneer Aviator
Lawrence Gr ant
Dies in County
Lawrence L. Grant, who flew the first
Canada-to-America a ir mall, landing on
the little town's main street to amaze
Port Angeles, Wash., cil\iens in 1919, has
died after a long, colorful life.
Memorial rites for the pioneer aviator
,,.,.ho later helped subdivide central Los
Angeles and film movies about flying will
be Saturday at St. John's Episcopal
Church in Fallbrook.
He moved to Orange County just
recently. where he leaves two daughters
and six granddaughte!, dying Tuesday at
a Garden Grove convalescent hospital.
The 76-year-old World War I combat
flier served with the Roya l Canadian Alr
Force and continued in aviation after the
armistice.
He took off from Vancouver, B.C. In
f\1ay, 1919, setting his frail bipl ane down
on the main drag through Port Angeles to
deliver a packet of letters.
Son1e air historJan 3 are uncertain, but
most believe it was the first such flight
between the two nations.
He later entered the building and 1ub-
dlvlsion industry, developing a large
parcel of property tn what is now Los
Angeles' Wiishire district.
Acting as a consultant on variOUI films
involving ea rly-day aviation, Mr. Grant
retired in 1956 and moved to Bonsall,
'near Fallbrook In San Diego County.
Surviving daushters Betty A. Grant
and Barbara G. Helm and the six
grandchildren Jive In Anaheim , where Mr.
Grant also moved three months ago.
San Clem ente
H u1iter Safety
Courses Offer ed
Registration for the next edition of the
San Clemente Peace Officer'• Associa-
tion's basic rifle 1arely and bunter 11ftly
courses will be held P'eb. 11
Instruction Jn the two phases of
ftrearmt u fety will be &IVen for a $2 I~
at the newty refurbished firlna range at
Vista Bahia Park.
Tht 1inguP1 will begin at the range •t
t a.m. for youngster• o{ both sexes
between the ages of 10 and II. Ap-
plicatlon forms will be provided . at the
signups and should be filled out by the
epplicanla and returned on the second
dass meeilng.
The couree, which comblnea the two
.. r.ty programs, are held on SatuNl1y
mornln(s and wlll Include experience at
firing shotguns •• well u other weapons.
U . Mtl Portnu will oerve u chief In·
struclor in the cour1t.
Wupona and 1mmunlUon, a! well as
expert supervUlon, Ill •Ill be furnisbed
by lbe wodlliofl. ~ uld.
Bridal Prizes
Not Tlieir Bug
COLUMBUS, Olllo (UPI)
Among 6,000 villtors at the seventh
Annual Bridal F1tr 1t Ohio S~te
University were dclc11Uons of
demonstrators deoounclng the fa ir
from the Women's Liberation
Movement and the Cay Activist
Alliance,
lndlv1dual protesters from both
group! were 11warded door prizes
Thursday.
Feb. 17 Deadline
For Registration
I n April 11 Votes
San Clemente resident! who wlsti to
cast balloll for city council office and a
flu oridation measure oq the April 11
municipal ballot have until Feb. 17 to
register as a voter, City Clerk Max Berg
stressed this week .
Berg said that to assist in regi stration
;;. registrar will be on duty each weekday
in cily hall until the deadline day.
Residents eligible to register must:
-Be citizens or the U.S. for at least 90
days .
-Be resident. of the county for at
least 90 day!.
-Be residents of their precinct for at
least 54 days.
-Be 18 years old or older by election
day, April 11.
Berg said regis trars will be on duty at
city hall ea ch weekday fr om 8:30 a.m. to
s p.n1.
He said that persons new to the area,
those who have changed their name,
residence or party alfiliation all must
register In flrder to be eligible to vote.
The municipal elections will fill two ex·
piring terms on the city council, the of-
fice of city clerk and city treasurer and
offer a mandate to the city on the issue
of adding artificial fluoride to the city
water supply.
From Page 1
IRVING •••
obtained from a source familiar with Irv-
ing's manuscript, gave "no indication
. . . that Mr. Hughes had a part in
prepa ring the manuscript."
Hughes comes across as a bitter man
whose language .b vulgar, the Times said.
The account 1aid he was careles! about
Ubeling others and talked at lenilh about
1exual exploits:.
In one ei:cerpt, Hughes was quoted as
saying he purposely leaked lad! about an
alleged $400,000 payment made to the
then Vice Pr esident Richard M. Nixon In
the hopes of getting help for his problems
with Trans World Airlines.
"Nobody was railing a hand to help
me," Hughes ls said to have complained.
"They were glad. I'm talking about
Washington. They were 1lad to see me in
trouble. So I leaked the detail! to Drew
Ptarson."
Pearson, the late columnist, wrote an
article during the 1960 presidential cam-
paign, in which Nixon was a candidate,
that the Hughes Tool Co. had loaned
$205,000 to hls brother, F. Donald Nixon
of Newport Beach, Calli.
''Now whether it actually turned the
tide of the election or not, I don't know,"
Hughes is quoted as saying.
In other excerpts. tlughes allegedly
called former a1de Robert Maheu a "very
Icy calculating man" and said singer-ac-
tor Frank Sinatra "was just taking ad·
vantage of n1y prestige to bolster his
9:aning prestige."
In two parts of the published excerpts,
the Times omitted what it said were
further 'derogatory re.marks about Maheu
and a long section of purported Hughes
dlscusslons of sexuaJ exploits I n
Hollywood during the 1930! and 1940S.
Maheu managed Hughes' enterprises in
Nevada for four years until his dismissal
in 1970. Sinatra had financial interests in
Nevada casinos until the state took away
his gambling license. He 'Wu a frequent
performer at L11 Vegas nightclubs
before retlrlng.
Susklnd ts the only person so far to say
he witnessed a meeting between Hughes
and Irving at which unexpected e~
counter Hughes , according to Suskind, of·
fered him a prune from a paper bag.
Brass to Tour
Serviceman's
Center F eb. 6
Camp Pendleton's top brass, lncludirig
its new commander, Maj. Gen. Herman
Poggemeyer Jr., will tour the Interfaith
Serviceman's Centu 1n San Clemente
later this month. The event, scheduled for Feb. I, polntt
up .,community relaUons in pctton," ac-
cording to Ibo cenW'• new pl<sldent Joe
Gould. The commanders of·tht bllse will Tlew
the cenur 1ctlvltt.1 flnthand.
Besides Gen. Poia:emeyer, othtra on
the tour will Include two other cenerala,
six colonels and several bUe chaplains.
Their wives also wtll accompany the
brass on the J p.m. taur of the center
that operateJ on a nonprofit buls
throup community conirlbutlons.
A recepllon for the crouP wlll be held
after the tour at the home of ~ter
secretary Mrs. Kay Chaney •.
Capo Flood
Guru·d Unit
Dedicated
Dedication ceremonies for a $620,000
nood control project were held this n1orn-
ing in San Juan Capistrano.
1'he project was jointly funded by the
city of San J ua n. Orange County
\llaterworks District No. 4, the State
Division of Highways, and the Flood Con-
trol District.
floods in 1969 severely damaged the
Trabuco Creek channel where it flows un-
der the San Diego Freeway and Camu10
Capistrano. A bridge over the Camino
Capistrano was completely washed out.
The new project provides protection for
a new bridge and the freev.·ay bridge.
The entire project involved the con-
struction of the bridge, a 24·inch water
n1ain. a large verti cal walled reinforced
concrete channel, a large chute and still·
log basin, and a heavy rock·reveted ap-
proach and outlet channels.
Restoration or the bridge and the
city's water main was con1pleted on Jan.
25 of last year. The project just com·
pleted will protect the bridge, water line.
the freeway and the Rancho Viejo Road
br idge fronl possible future flooding.
Cont ractor for the work was Airco
Engineers of La fi.1esa. They began the
entire reconstruction work in November
of 1970.
Science Y outl1
Dav Scheduled ,
San Clemente High School science in•
structor Philip Grignon r.tonday will ad·
dress a Science Youth Day luncheon in
San Diego.
The luncheon is being held in honor or
top science students from 58 high schools
In San Diego and Orange Counties.
Grignon will spe ak on "The Ocean,
Eartil's Greatest Resource," and will
show slides of a recent trip to Scammon's
Lagoon, a while mating J!round Off Baja
California.
The program, to be held at the town
and Country Hotel in San Diego, ls
sponsored by the San Dit&O Gas and
Electric Company.
Terrorist Killed
SAIGON (AP) - A bomb hidden in a
radio blew up and killed the terrorist car·
rying it and wounded 11 other persons
Thursday night in a theater in the town or
Ben Tranh, 30 miles southwest of Saigon,
the Saigon Command reported.
DAIL'( 1"1LOT Slltf l"Mlt
SAN ONOF RE PUMP MOVES SEA WATER FOR COOLING
Nuclear Experts Observe Plant Interior During Tour
Fron• l'age 1
NUCLEAR PLANT ...
of the test resulls, performances during
a major quake can be projected wilh '"en-
couraging accuracy.''
Al midpoint in the day's discussions
scienti!ts and utility aides condu cted a
guided tour of the generating station with
particular emphasis on the refueling
stage of operations.
Al one comer of the large complex
stood several flatbed trucks lade11 with
large lead and steel capsules -each con-
taining a rod of spent uranium fuel re-
cently removed from the reactor.
Those containers, according to Dr.
Morton I. Goldman, a specialist in fuel
disposil:l, can withstand "incredible
stresses" \\•ithout sho1v\ng fatigue.
He said that the containers \Vhich,
usually are trucked to Illinois v.•here the
waste is processed, can easily withstand
crashes or explosive shocks.
"If someone really wanted lo blow one
up," he said, "lhey could probably do it
with a massive amount of explosives. but
it's doubtful," he observed .
Among the da y's speakers. besides Dr.
Smith and Dr. Goldman were Dr. Norman
C. Rasmussen . professor of nuclear
engineering at Massachusetts Institute of
Technology (~·11T ) and Dr. Leonard
Sagan, the director of environmental
medicine 11t the Palo Alto Med ical Clinic.
Sale Continues
OFFICERS CHEST BY HE NR EDO N ... NOW ON SAL E
OFFICERS CHEST DESK
SALE $489 PRICE • e
S•lect 9roup1 from He nredon
-Htrit•g• -Drexel , , • on
sal• now. Uphol1t•ry floor ,•m-
pl•s on 1•1• includ• , , . Hen-
r1don -Sherrill -M•rg• c.r,on & oth•ri. l•mp1, pie..
tur•s & •c.c.1•sori11 •r• .tho
reduc•d.
f,
COCKTAIL CHIST
SALE $189 PRICE , e
Henredon re~
' DEALERS FOR: HENREDON-DREXEL-HERJT AGE - KARAST AN
MIWPOllT STOii ONlf PlllAY 11L t
7NI•' NEWPORT llACH
1727 W11tcllff Dr., 642·2050
'IPI N FRIDAY 'TIL 9
INTERIORS
Profet1lon•I lnltrlor
D11lgner1 AV1ll1bf..,.AID ,,.._ r.n ,,_ ,..., ., a....,. c • ....-H ... ttiJ
LAGUNA I EACH
~ North c°'"mlhw•y
Phone: 49 I
•
The center, Gould JM>lnled ollt, pl'.Ovldes
homelike holpll1llly for :t,000 Marlnes a
month. offtrln& food, r e c re a t I o n , televlJlon, ~,_rudlng and boltema. !----.---------------------------------
•
LEGAL NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS I USll'lllll
NAM• •TATIMIHT
T'llit llllow .... ,..._ II Mint ...... Mil
Lni&L N011CI!:
l'IC-TITtOUs •u11H•t1
HAMa •Tll.TIM•lfT
TM loilfWt"' •rWlfl 11 lt0il'l9 INll..._.1
••· •s. VII.A "Ill"' OHi , *5 E111 CN ll SEA l ltEf:ll CO .. 2'11 • ..,, .. 1"1lm
Hlthw..,, Cw-6et ,.,..,, C1lltou1l1 l)r . CMll Mlle, Call!, t2d6.
A, M I ll I C A H AGlt ICUL TUllAL lr1.., TeM<11 hflM, ttlt 11.,.11 l")lm
\l!lllYICI COlt~lltATIOH (t.ll1lllr11l1 Or., .. t. MHI, C1Nr. f'fil6
c.r-1111111) ICf.l.Mfl l 1"111,,_! lllliiU Tlll1 "°lltWU It IWI ... CONIUCIMI llT 111
1!111 CMll Hl111w1r . CO•-•1 M1r llllllrlotu.1.
Tllll IH;llMU II M ltlf tonll....::""' "' I 1 .... 111 I 01!111
IJll'llMllll "r1Mtlll'llit. Tl!fl tlll«f!'ll lll tllfia ... JI~ "'• (-IV
AMlllCAN AGRICULTUR•L C t.r~ of Ori-CD1111ly '"' J'""'"' lf,
I ER\llCE COlll"Olllt.llON 11n . Ir 8ererlr J. MadOo•, 01~11'
Sit .... : MIU111I $. "'''''" • County Clt rk. Pttoldon! l"lllfl
Tlllt ll1t-11t !!led wltll tt>e County l'ub!l1Md 0••-Co-11 Dt lly "llot,
Cl1r-.,, 0•111111 C1111nh Oii. J111. 11, 1,n_ J'""'''' 11 , ?II, '"" Ftb,ut''t' '· 11, .... lt't't•IY J. MMldOJI. Dejluly Cou111y Ult IU-72 Clttk, PIHIJ 01Hy llllol, LEGAL NOTICE Publli.1'1*<! Ortnle C11<11t Jt,.UllY U, ?l, 11. tnd ,.,,. F111r11trv 4.1-------------·I •0>n
LEGAL NOTICE
"'" NOTICIE OP OI PAULT AND ILICTICN TO S•tl UNO•• Ot:l!O 0" TltUS,.
---~~·---· NOTICE IS HER EB Y GIVEN . TNI P'ICtltlO US IUllNISS UNIT ED ST.tTES HOLOING COMPAHY, NA.Ml ITATIMINT • tOl'Pllrtllon, h duly 1ppeln!td Tru1111 Tl\t 1~11owln1 P••Mlf1• 1r1 do!M under • llffd ol t•111t d•loed Julv 1, 19'1, bui111M1 11 t•KutPd bY JAMES W. HUNT •NI MAlt'I' A9LE "'-INTING CONTll.-.CTOll:S, Vl lll G!NlA HUNT. hu1ll1"" 111d Witt. 11 ,. 0. Box IOW, lrlf Tr•dtwlndt Ln .. lolnl le1>1t1ll, 11 Trustor. to 11eur• Ctrlll" Ntwperf lletUI. C:tlll. ollll111!on1 In lt~or el JAMl!I L. Jttk Wtlllr Cl1rll, 11lt Tr1d1w!nd1 HAYOE N tnd BEii.NiCE C. 11,t,YOEN ,. Ln .. NtWPflrl 1111(11, Ctllf. llutlttnd 11>11 wlte, 11 lolnl 11nent1. 11
•••
... ~.'::'::, ~1~~:;i,.11~="~ •• :".1c1~:.11 ~~~~~'';;.,;..~":ri!~~Y 1~'' ~:; ':.!:; " ~ Tllll butlntu 11 btl,,_ col'ldu<ltd by 1 Pt•t Ito, of Olflcl1l lltCtJ•ll• 111 11'141 office DAIL 'I' l'I LOT Sl•lt 1'1\111
01rlntr slli1. DI lllt Rec:oratr of Ot t'ltlf County, NEW JAPANESE.BUil T FORD COURIER INTRODUCED IN NEWPORT BEACH Jee>. w. Clerk Ctlllornlt, descrlb!M lll'ld tller1!1> 10: • Tn11 1t11tm•nt 111..:1 wl!11 th~ c:ounry "•r oeo11 el Tr111t Compact Truck to Go on Sate in Western States on M1 rc:h 17 Cltrk ol O•tntt Coun!Y .,,,. J•n, 26. 1971, 11!d DOll•1!10<11 lnc:ludlM One no1t for 11\.t ly ltvtrly J. Mld<lllJ(, OepulY COtJnh prlncl P•I 1\l!'f\ of 11.000.00; Cl1rk. Tn11 ll\1 Mnlll(ft t 1ni1re11 undtr tucn
P'l!J~l dttd ol lru11 1nd 11\.e ollll111lon1 tKllred Publltlled Or1ntt Cotll O•llY ,llo!, lll•ttbv Art prtHnllY lltkl tly 1111 Un· J1n111ry 11. 1nd F1bru1rv '• Jl, 11, oer11gne<1 ; Tlltl 1 b•e•dl el. 1nd dtltult nn 211·72 1n, 11\t o1111t1llon1 Ill• wlllcn 1uc11 dtt(I or
1 .. EGAL NOTICE
lr~1! It Mcurlll' ""'' oc:currtd In 1111! PIY· mtnt 1111 nol bttn m1dt ol : The P•Ymtnl 011• 1J April 1'11 Ind 111 111b1eciuenl ln,l•llm1nl1. FICTIT IOUS 9USINIESS Th1! bY re1ion the•tOI, t~e und1rol1ned. NAM I. STAT.Ml.NT pr111n1 ri.ntlfcl e•Y und•• IUU\ Giid ol
a.1, .. 1, Cor0<11 dtl Mtr.
TN followl"'9 pertons ''' doln• lrvJ1, h•t e•tcured incl o~llvttt(I 10 11111
llv•l'IU• '" duty tPPOl,.tMI Tru1ltt. • w•ltt•n S,!CTllA ,t,OVE PTJSING, 4?1l Ctrn· Oec!1r1llon el [).ef1ult Ind Oemtnd for
11u1 Orlve, Suitt 11·1, N""'PGrt ll!tCll, 1111, Ind 1111 dtl'Olflld wl!ll 11ld duly '"'/ CtllF. 9161.C. PGl~ltd Trul!H, 1UOI 01111 ol trutt tnd tll Denn!t W. Wlltl1ms. 431 01Ml1 51r••1. dOC~meMJ ev!dto(lng obll11U0111 11eur*<! Caron• oel Mir. tllertby, t l'ld ll tt dKltred 1nd dot1 Mtr(llle A. Ntwm1n. a 0111111 111r1bY de<:ltrt 111 wm1 1ecu'ed 111tl"1bv lmmHl1t1l't' ""' '"' ptYtblt ... "" T~ llll•lnt>1 11 btln9 (Ondutled " I tttclH Ind dot• lltrtb't' II•" lo (11111 Int Gt,..r.11 P1r!ntr1hl1. !ru1I preperf'f IO bt 1old 10 ltlllfY '"' Den,.11 w. Wllll tm• ot1!11111lons i.tcur ed tf'lt•i'bv. Thl1 1l1t1m1n1 filed willl ~. Ceu,.ly CO,t,ST INVESTMENTS, Cleft of Orin~ Countv on: Jtn. 11, Hn. • C1Ulornl1 corpar1llon ,, leYtrly '· M"'H "'~" County ll' /1/ ROY R. M<Ctrdlt, (ttt•. Pre•. PlSl>ll Bv /1/ Ju111...., 11.lcNrcll, l'llbllW!ed Ort"" CO'sl D1lty Pllol. ''" ~·11111,..,. "· 11, 21 tnd FtbrU.IY ,, "" 11.Kord*<:I D«. XI. 1t 11, •• 1,.11. ,.,.1. In f l.11 1111 cfflct of lllt Or1n111 Cou,.1¥ lllttorder.
~recorded J1,.u1ry 14, 1f72, 11 ln•••u·
LEGAL NOTICE mt No. IOS25, Jn lllt olfkt o! lllt Or1n11e Cou,.tv lllecorder. -Otled December U, ltl l. NOTICE TO Clll!!OITOll.S SUPlll.1011. COUll.T OF '"" Puri1111>ed 0•1n11e Co.it Dtlty Piie!,
STATI OF CALll'OlllNIA FOil J1nu1ry "· " '"' FebrU••Y " " THI. COUNTY OP OltANel ltn isa.n
NI. A·lt201 !tll!t or Htr•Y L. W1tll1mt, Dec111ed, LEGAL NOTICE NOTICE " HEREIY GIVEN " '"' trtdl!o" o• '"' ~boVI namtd dectdeM 11111 •II Pt.Son• ll1v\no cl1lm1 101!n1! ll'lt l"!CTITIOUS IVSIN•ss 11td dtctdenl ere requl "d 1" !lit lllem, NAMt: STATEMENT
wl!l'I Ille necen~•l' voucller1. In Ill•. ol!lte '"' lo!1owln9 PtrlOf'll ... do!n1 of 11'11 cler~ ol Ill• 1bovt ..-illtlt<I court. or bu1lne11 eo: •o Pre1en1 '"""'· wl111 '" nt(•111ry Wl!ST £RN M,t,NAG £MEIJ T vouchtr1, to tht 11ndtrsl9nt'd 1! !lie olllct SERVICES, ... ""'" M1ln SI., Stn!t • "' A!!crMY f{obert L Humpllrtyt. ""'· fl10l.
"" Ad1m1, Suitt Number ''" Cc111 Wllll1m L. Owen1. 2011 l on nlt Pltct.
M111. Ct llfornl1 9:16H, wlll(h 11 tl'ltl p!1ce Co1t1 Me11, t1j16.
ol 1>1.11lne11 ol ll'lt uncler1l1n..i In 111 mtl· L1rrY Btlmn, 1411! Lvdnclt L•ne, sin-le<1 p1rt1lnln1 to tl'lt e1t1tt ol 11111 dKt· lt ,t,n1, Ct. n1as.
""'· Wllllln fovr month• '"'' •M r1ri1 Tiii• bu•lri.eu It btlnt conduc!H ,, .
New Compact Ford Truck
Gets Coast Introduction
Ford Motor Company's new
Japanese built compact pickup
truck , introduced to the press
Wednesday at the Newporter
Inn , will go on sale in western
U.S. markets beginning March
17, according to Ford officials.
The new truck, the Courier,
Is being built in Hiroshima by
Toyo Kogyo, Ltd .. a Japanese
car and truck manufacturer.
Ford has set a goal of 35.000
sales in its first yea r.
us a chance to meet the grow-
ing trend to rompacL pickups
as well as continue leadership
in the already extensive Ford
truc k line ," John Naughton,
F'ord vice president a n d
divisio n general manager. said
at the press conference.
"The enormous growth in
this segment, accelerated by
sales to people who ha ve never
before owned trucks should be
an added bo nus in what looks
like another record sales year
for our trucks and the truck
industry.''
Service for the Courier will
be handled primarily by
franchised Courier dealers,
but technicians are being
trained throughout the country
to provide availability of ade-
quate service in all
"SINCE 196', penetration hy
Impo rted compact truck~ on
the Pacific Co ast has risen
from six percent tn 34 percent
of the under-600Q.pound con·
venl ional truck m a r k e t . ' '
Naughton said . ''\Ve lead the
industry in truck sales and
want to keep it that way . so
v.•e have to get our share of
that small truck action. The
small-pickup truck market for
1971 reached about 85,000
sales."
Naughton said the Courier
has what An1crlcan cnmp;ict
lruck buyers demand : Low
purchase price, n p er a t i n g
e c o no m y . en~ineering ex·
ccll ence , durability and good
handling.
"The two leading imported
compact pickups are getting
'
F"d'1. Frbn..,y 4. 1972 DAI~ V /PILOT 17 ' ' • 1
Cleaning the Market
SEC Seeki ng 011.e Tape for All Exclianges
f:Sy JOHN CUNN1 1'~f'
NEW YORK l AP) -There
are elements or an old, old
.story 1n the report Jl!St r!leas-
ed by I.he Securllir.!i 11nd EJC·
change Cornm1sg Jon on
restructuring !he n 11 t i n n 's
stock markets to m11k~ lhtm
simple. direct and o~n
Th ere will be three \\·nrk ·
Ing romnl ittees. for t'."<an1pl!",
whost job \!.·ill Ix-to l'>ludv.
report and propo se un the
policies outlined. lnhr rrnt in
s u c h r e r n n1 mend1tt1n11!':.
necessary as lhty n11i:;hl be . is
delay.
There iu·e fre sh elen1e11ts
too. 1'he SEC conformed lls in·
tention of seek ing one laf>f to
report the prices of slllC ks nn
All ex ch an~es -and evrn 1hr-
prlces of some stncks not so
listed.
UNDER TH ~ e x is l l 11~
sysle1n. each cxrhani:;r h<ts ils
011•11 laJW. Any investor rt'adin~
thal !11pe v.·ould never knnw if
th e s!nck he seek.~ is a\'ailablr
elsewhere al a lower price
Broadly summarized , the
SEC seel'i the nec:csslly for
more competition a m" n J.:-
brokers and exchanges b.v
bringing thetn into one central
market place.
It intends In end the situa-
tio n in which la rge ins titutions
hold exchange seats mRinly lo
trade for their own accounts.
ll hopes to bring more com·
petition on large orders hy
lower ing to $300,000 fronl
$500,000 the level at which
negotiated rather than fixed
commissions are charged.
T h ! rec o mmendation~.
especially for one tape, \vnulrl
certainly n1ake for set'uril1rs
rnarkels "as si mple, as ct1rr!'l
and as ope11 as we can," in thi>
words of William J. Casey , thr
SEC cha ir1n1111.
But implementing thnsr in·
tentions C<>uld be another
th i n~ '1'111~ is !r:-ly j;!rounr! f'llt
\.\'l11ch rr!'1dr n1any pci11'l'rfullv
1·rstt'Cl f1n;111r·1:i ! in!errsts 111
nrld1t1on. r1t'pr nd1ng upnn thi-
;imni111t 11f t'nopf'ratu1 n ;nn1111g
exi·ha r1g1·~ thr an!1ll'l!RI la11"
Cllrl\"l'l \':11'11\· ("IHJl<f ht' ll'S11•r1
~UIHEl>\'t:n_ 1 h ,. 1r11
pl('1 ncr1t ~l!1i111 of ;111\ 111;11nr
e!1:i!1 i,:1•s 111 1 lit•:-t b1ll11111-d ull;1r
1narkt'I lflarl'S 1nus1 ;i1\\·;1ys h~
rl'sira1nt•d b\ 1·ons1d<·r~t1nt1 fnr
unk no1vn :111d 1~1ss1hi1· atli•ersr
afft·l·ts un !ht· t•110rl' 1·n 11u1n1).
Tht' old, nld Slnry 1s lhC'
sloY;nrs:-11•1\h 1vha·h prngress
lakes plat·r. t'h<1nge 1n 1hr
S<'f't1r1lics n111rkt"ts, nn ntatlf'r
hnl\' badl.v nC"f'deci. ("illl lll'lt
cnn1e qu ickly, It takes t1n1c
and cou ra~e to ~·h~uge prac-
llt es \.\'hos<' origins arc in
another century,
1'he pre.sen! 1narkrl was
structured n10re by self·1n-
tcrest. cspr("ially in its early
dt1ys, than by planning for the
puhl ic gC>al. \V hat wnrkcd fnr
!hr priva 1e infcl"est t11nk
prrc'f'ffi'n<'<' O\'(•r the puhhi·_
~1111t• ndd p r a r l 1 1· e !Ii
rlr1'rlnp<·d Tl1t•rf' srill f'Xists
th(' s11u<111n11 in "·h1!'h hrnkcrs
1vho n1akr a l1v1ng scll 1 n~
slof'k are prcscntcrl as linan·
rial advisers. Thi s is not JUSl a
dual role bul often a con·
nil·lin.: une.
Tll 1':RJ<: REMAINS th e
aln1 osl lnS<1l vAble problem ol
the specialist, who i~ assigned
to rna1nta1n an orderly market
111 shx·ks even ir It means
tr<id ing RJ:;R in!':t hlmselr, or
bu} 1ni,: stc1<:ks th11t n(lbody else
\.\'an ts at the price.
i\nd lherr 11<1~ existed-no.,.
to be_· <·ndrd 11 prac!Lce nn
~nr11c t'>:.<"hangrs of ptrm1ttlng
lnst1l11!1onal trader!\ lo tri!ldt
fur !111·1r own ;icrounts, thns
:11 111rl 1ni.: 1.:01n n11~sions and in
l'ffrrt nhtai nill!! stock at a di~·
rnunt
Opt'ra t1 ons of !he securi tif'.,
l'T'l<H"kl'IS, snid ("11.~y . "h8\'f,I
hrr·n1ne too cnn1p!ica1ed. with
l r~1 11111ny lran.'\aC"t1011s .struc·
!urrd, N>nlr il'f'd 11nr1 l'Rrried
1111! 111 a particul ar placf' or in
;111 unnatural 11ny nr without
pu hl1<' disclosurf' ·•
Il l-: ('(J~C 'l.ll lll~IJ in R
s1 :it r o1cnt abnut 1 he rcpnrt;
'"Thi• strps spe.ll<'d out In thl~
r t p11rl arr desii:;ned tn pu t
~·n111pclil1nn to work for the in·
1 t·~lr1r, In ntn vr f r n rr'I
rl•r1procal and rchative prac·
l!C'l'S ..
But then co n1r~ a return to
!hf' old script. The untangling
111 the public interest wil l tM!!
rntrusled largely to 11 m11rk!"t
<'sl:1hlishment lhnt permitted
llf t'nL'OUragrd the !angle ror
its nwn interest.
Because !hose Involved in
!he securities markets are the
expert:<:, havini;: lea rned how to
deal wit h and benefit from the
Cangle. they will be prominent
on the workinji co mmittees.
11. 1ncans l h a l thf!
:;;upC"rvisory skills or the SEC'
11•111 be teslcd . It mean:<: that
its protective Instincts mu st
rt'nlRin arouserl. Th11t too i:<: Rn
old, old story, B story without
end .
P11bl!(tllot1 of llllt notlc t. G1ner1I P1rtner•lllP.
Dtr..i J1nut•Y 14, lfn. WUll1m L. Owtns
THE 104-fNCK wheelbase
Courier is powered by an 1800·
cc four-cylinder engine with a
f our·sp e ed manua l
transmission. Initially, options
wi!I be limited to a dealer-in·
stalled radio. Co urier's front
end design shows a strong
resemblance lo the Ford
pickup line.
"Our continued truck sales
leadership depends on our
dealers providing customers
with the ki nd of trucks !hey
want -and the Courier gi ves
geog raphical areas. Mr .
Naughton sald. He added that
expansion of sales into other
areas will depend nn pro-
duction ava1lability and public
acceptance on the \Vest Coasl.
about one-third or the small-,----------~
Clieck-processing
SJJeedu p iii Works
EldOfl L. Wltll1m1 Ltrry llelmn
Adm!nhrrt!or ol !l'lt E11111 ot ll'lt ThlJ 1!11emtM !lied willl 11>* Covnty
1bo¥t nemfd dt<:f'dtnt Cler-of Or1ntt Count¥ fltl: Jin. U, lt12.
•oMrt L. Humpllrtr•, llY lleverlY J, M1ddox OtPU!y Cwnrv
Ult Adtmt, SVlll NvmHr )K, C ler~.
C:1111 M111. C1lllorn11 n•1• '1Ul1 ,.,It 1n•1 Mt-tut Publl•hf'<I Or1nv1 Co~JI D1il• Pllol.
Arte•!llY lftr Admlnhtreler J1nu1ry "· "· '"' Ftbru1ry .. " ' "ullllthf'd Or1n11• Cot•! 01Tly P•IOI •m 11!1·1'
Jt»Ull"f ~ '"' Febrlllrl' " "' "· 1•11 ,,..n '..EGAL NOTICE
LEGAL NOTICE ---FICTITIOUI IVSINllS
..... :w" NA.Ml STATI Ml!!NT
MOTICI TO C11.•01TOll.I Thi follcwlflil per:IO<l 11 del,.1 bu1l..-u
IU,.11111011. COUll.T " '"' '" COMPIJTEll. lllt OS, l!S l4ttl Strffl , ITATI OF CALl,011.NIA POlt NtwPOr! llet(l'I THI! COUNTY OP 011.ANOI. Terr ine• E. Oou1l111. \U .Mth J!reel. Ne. A-119'2 Suitt A. Newport B11cll l5sl1t1 ef CL,t,RENCE STRONG Wll-TM1 bu1lnt1• !1 btlnt C0<1duc1HI by tn \IAMS. 1110 know" .. CLAlllENCE •• lncllVIClutl. NILL IAMS, 0tte1std. Tefr t,.Ct E. D<llll itu ~OTICE " 11EREfl'I' GIVE N " .. T11l1 1!1!om.,,I filed whll Ill• Countv trtdl!Orl o! lllt eb<lvt nemHI d1ctd1nt Clerk ol Ortnvt Cou"lv ""' Jin, 2&, 1'77. lh tl 111 per1on1 h1vln1 cl•lm• 111ln1t lht Bv lltvtrly J. Mtddo•, Deputy Coun!v 11ld c!Ktdtn! 1r1 requ ltl'I! to 1111 them, Clerk. Nlth !lie nectUl fV YOlltlle•t. 1 .. IM o!llct 'ISJ11 (If 11'11 clerk of 11'1• tbovt enlllled court, er f'ubll1nHI Or1n1e Cct!I Dt llY Pllo!, ·o Pft1enr tllem. wllll !ht nKe1•1rv J1nu1rv "· "' Febr111•v •• ". "· taucher1, lo 1111 undtrtl1ntd. ti "'• offlc• 1•11 2'•·7l ,, lier 11!orneys: M<:OWEN , GREEN I. SYLVIA. 550 E11I C:h1pm1n ,t,v1nut. 511111 LEGAL NOTICE 'A". Or1n1e, Ctlllornl1 m ... ~"" " Ille dltct cl butlMH of Ille undtrtltned In 111 mt11tr1 ptrt1lnl"9 to fhe es!llt ol 111d P"ICTITIOUI IUS INllS IKftltnl, wlll'lln lour month• tilt• IM NAME STA.TIMI.NT 1iri1 •ublk1ll0<1 of 11111 notice, Tht lolloWlnl perton 11 dol11t1 ... 1ln111 Otlt<I J1nu1,..,. II, 1911 VIRGIN!il H. WILLIAMS '" Admlnl•lr 1trl• wllh·lllt-wlll P,t,CIFIC w''" HOLIOAYS. l lJ.12, Ne. 21'.M. 8t1cll 111¥<:1 .. Hun!Onllon l11cll. Annexed Weymon Leo Otnlelt.. 1501 f'ko ll lwl .. cf rht Et111t el Ille tb!lvf "'"'ed No. 109, S1n!1 MOnkt. !ltc!'(ltrl Tiii• bu1ln1u 11 belnt ccnduc:led by 1n "'-cOW•N, Cill.EIN & SYLVIA !ndlw•du1l. IH lttl Cht•ml" Awt .. Sulll "Au w1vmon LNl o.~1t1, O!'tntt. C11l"'r"l1 f11M TM1 $1altmtM Ille<! will\ •• Countv Tth !114) ')J.JlM Clt1k ol Or•n9• Counlv e11· J111 i1. 11n. ll,.,.n1y1 fir Aomlnl1lr1trlx " 9tYtrly ,, Mtddox. Deputy C:01Jnh !<lllo-IM-Wlll "" .... " C ler~. Publls111 0•1119'! Co1H 0111¥ Pilot, PIJlU l111utrY '· 11. ll •nd Febru••" " Publl\hed Ortnve (Ofll1 Dtllw Pilot. '"' 101-ll J111u1ry '" "· ~. '"' F~ru1ry .. . "'' 104-11 LEGAL NOTICE
SUP'•lllOR COUlllT 0' TH• LEGAL NOTICE
IT'-T• 0, CALt,OlllN IA P'Oll PI CTI TIOVI IUSINllS TNI. COUNTY 011' OJl,t,NO• NAME IT'-TIMl'NT N1 . .t.-n•u Ttit lolklwlnt 01 .. on Is ""Int bu1inlll ~OTICI OP Hl!All.INO OF P'l!TITI ON 11: P'Olt 1'11.0IATI OP WILL ANO OH IN OUSTRI ES, ""' M1rlntr1 CODICIL AND LllTTlllll TEST.t.MIN· D•IYI, Ne .. oon Betch, Ct\11. TA•Y Mr. Oon1ld W. Prou!, ""' Mt•l,.eri e11111 • MAlll!L .. MARPLE, Drivt, NewPOrt Bt1th, C1l1I Ottltsed. TMJ bv1!n111 !t beln1 conduttltd bY "" NOTICE " Hl:REll Y GIV EN 11111 lndlvldu11. l1<url!Y Ptclflc N11lon1I ll"n-h11 flltd Don11d W. Proul ttre!fl 1 Hllllotl for o•ob•Tt l>f .. 111 1nd Thlt oltltment lllPd wlrll Ille C:ou11lY <ir Clldkll tnd L1t1tr1 T11t1ment1ry '" C!trk fJf Or1n11 Counl'Y on: J1nu1rw It . Pt!ftlflnt'r rtltfl,.Ct !o wl'llcll 11 mtdt tor itn. Br Beverly J. Mtddox , Ot•uly k/1"111« partlc11l1r1, t nd !ht! -lime Incl Counh' Clerk. 1!1c1 of lltlr!l'lt 11\t 11me 1111 bffn tel l'lJJn fClf" Fltiru1ry 72, lt7'2, t i t :JG 1.m .. In 1111 Pllblllhed Ortn111 Cot•! Dilly Piiot, :ourt,_,. nl ~lr!mtnl NI'. J ot 11ld Jtllut ry Jl, 21, 1nd F1bru1ry ,, 11. ftlllrf, It 7"0 CIYfc ''"'"'" Ori¥• Wttl, In 1972 IU.72 ff>e Clll' OI 51n!1 An t, 'C1lltornl1. CtlMI FtbrutrY l , 1t72. LEGAL NOTICE W, E. SI JOHN Counll' Clerk P'ICTITIOU1 IVllM•ss KUDOI•. FOllOI AMO HIDLIY
1"* ~nMI llW. HAMii S,.A,.IEM•NT
P'.-.c:lflc; Jl1!1 ....... C1111"'1!1t Thi 1ollowl"' Pl'l"IOn 11 Ool.,. ltull ... •1 Y1h ltlll 4tl-U7l II: AfftotM'l'I NI" ,tllti.Mr JUNE FAll•All BU SI NIES S ,,,..., .. 0••11111 Cot1! D•llY l'llol, SERVICES. "' NM~ Ntw11rl
f«bfutlY ), 4, 10, 1t1, ~•n l oultu1rd, N....,l>or't hid!. JU NI! I. JOHNSON, 41116 IE. 10t!'I SI ..
LEGAL NOTICf Cotlt M111. Tllh 'ou1lf!l:U l1 belol (O!lltucled tlY tn
,It.JU lncl!wldut l Jvn1 I, John"'" IVP'a1t10• cou•r OP' TMIE Tlll1 1!11tmtl!t 1!1..:1 ••• •• CN"" STA.Ta OP CALIP'Oll.NtA PO• Ci.trk ol Ortn11 CllU'MI' on : Mtr. U. 1'11, Tl'll COUNTY OP OltAl'lell " 81v1rly '· Mldekl•. """" COoofy I'll-A 11'17 Cltrll, H01'1C• o• l'llA•INO " P'ITITION .... ... PllO•AT• 01' WILL ANO ••• J'Ubt!lllld OrtMI Co11I 011ty l'llfll, L•n••s TllTAMINTAll.Y J1nu.ry 14, 21, 2' •nd Fetirl.OlllY 4, 1'11 llfltt ol OlorP H. IH .. t'-1 0.C-1 ... .,.,, ... . HOTIC IS MEll.l!IY GIVl!N "T1'tl LEGAL NOTICE Alkl I. EH ltOOll ri.t lllld Mrt!n I Hit-
!ltn '°'"°*''Ill w!H ll'ld ter IHUtlK• al' ,ICTITIOUI IUSIN•ll t..Mtl TKl-ltrY i. P'ttlllontr,
Nftr~ II wtllcfl II m.dt tor l\Jrrhef l'IAMI STA'tl:fl"INT -1IClll1rt. ,,.. !Ml h time ttld •t11:1 TM fllllowlM --II cWoit11 ~11111111
ef lltlf"IM "'9 MIN Ml• lliltft Mt +. Ill ~·"' lj, 1m. II t:» ''"'" In flw M•. T. l!JolTE•fl•1Sl!S. 1024 Ne. '*"""-" o1 Dto1rtlntftt NO. J ti salt! P'trlr.tf' Un11 10. Of""11N, Gtllf. ..,..,, It In Ill• (tty of ltl!t• AN. Ttrf1' HIM\lm, lfm C1Tfhll ClrcM, C.tlfotlllt. Hunlln9tell 9ffd'I, C1"f,
Ctlfd Fttrvlf1' t. 1972 Tllll butlnnt II MIM c~ lrl' '" W. I. SI J()tlN, lnd!Yldutl. Ctul!tY Cleft. T...-,., H•-V"9fl •• W111t, Tllh lf .. emel!t tl"6 ._.Ith h CIUl!t'I' 1• ...._.,, a.Mt"'-(ltrtl r.1 Orlftft ~ tr1: Jt11. It, ltn,
lAa ......... ar •-tv J. M~ PeMy c..intY ~ ,.,,,, C!ert.
"'"'' T1h 01JI OHtl
.. ""'"' .. , l"ttlt ...... P'ue.H'"" 0••-, .. Ot11¥ 1'1191,
'..alltl>ld Or1nH (Mii "''~ .... J'""'" ... "· "' ... l"-tltrutN ..
,~ '·"''' "" JU.72 "" ,.,_n
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICB
NOTICI 0' MIA•INe ,Ll!ASI TAl(I NOTICI! !1111 I .,Wiie: llHr"'t •fll bl trlld ti.for• tllt 161,d
o1 SUjllr•hofl ti Ollllft C-ly Ill tllt nr• d1y ol P'•brutry, lfJt, tt l•~OO t 'cJotll A.M ., 11'1 tM Crlt,,..,.f ol tM ... ,,. ol """"'ltera, JlJ NOftl'I l ye•-• Sir"', s.tnt1 Ant. Cll!f.rnll, to CllNllll~ ,,.. """°"" '"""°'rntflt ti !tit Ort]; Clllrl~ z...~ Coclt , l~lllb!I 11-14, llnlNfFlll hctlant 71.0tt., (o.ilnlllclm), 7t. I IB•
"tff< •t<rMl ltn '"" o. .. ..,_ ... Dl•lrkl), 11.0251.1, 1a.12s1.1, lfWf n.w1.a '"" tfll ll'lll klltnt 7t,02~1,, Miii 71.f2JI J. A Collf. If lfllllltMt 11.u 11 en fllt wnri
the ci.r• ol' flw lollrd " Sup«Vlterl •lllf II IVll '"' -.,ubll( ININC!lln.
DAl•f "''' 1A'" .. .,. e1 '"""'"'' 1tn. t Y 0 DIA ' THI llOAJlC OP' IUP'IAV ISOJlS OP' OAANGI!' COUNTY, CAU,O •N l,t,. Wll,LIAM •· IT JOHN c-ty Cl«tl •nd n.«tlc.le Cltrll
of flw tot,_ If SllC*'VltOr'i M
CltALJ Or•llff (Wily, (111191"~1• ,., M.t"' l. c..i.w
P'llin.tlld 0••• (NII 0.Hy -1'11111, ll'tllr\llry '· lf'1 "'"
"B ull111oose Dyit1.9'
Executives Realizing
Cons11mer Importance
MORAGA (UPI f -Viginia
H. Kna uer. President Nixon's
consumer affairs adviser, sa ys
executives· re~ponsive to con·
sumer demands are fast
replacing businessmen who
consider consumer advocates
their foes.
"Bullmoose is still around .
but he is dyi ng ," Mrs. Knau er
said. referring to a character
in the L'il Abner cartoon strip.
". Tht numher nf
Bullmooses is declining rather
rapidly as the more responsive
leaders igno re him •.. taking
hill place is a new man on the
scene . __ the trend-setter."
IN ADV ERTI SING . Mrs.
Knauer said , these trend-sel·
ter ''tell the truth about lheir
products. what 1s good about
them, what is bad about
thtin."
Mrs. Knauer's re m a r ks
were prepared for delivery to
the 15th annual Saint Mary's
Co 11 e g e Executives' Sym-
posium.
She credited consumerism
for the change in business
praclices. "The central thrust
of consumerism is a powerful
motivation lowards higher
standards of conduct on the
Trust Open
In Newport
Newport Harbor Trust, a
4Tl!wly formed real estate In·
vestment trust located at 333..1
West Coast Highway i n
Newport Beach is offering
shares of interest lo pr~
1peclive investors. The sale of
shares will be limited to
residents of lht Slate of
Callfornla.
Newport Harbor Tru st was
originally formed as A limited
partnership by Arnold 0.
Beckman, Agnes Blomquist.
Charles C ringle . Don
Griswold. Emery S. Hanson,
Roy D. Lewis, John MacLeod,
Paul A. Palmer, 0 , W.
Richard, Walter Schmid. Alan
C. Stoneman and Wllllam W.
Wright, and ls now preparing
to oommence business 11 a
quallrled re11l e 1 tat e in~
vestment trust.
Newport H1rbor Trust In·
tends to expand Its investor
group from 12 t.o a minimum
of 110. Offers to purchase
shares of Newport. Harbor
Trust may only be mada
throua:h the offering circular
•'nlch tM trustees announced
lJ available at the offices of
ttie Tn1si.
part or all those who serve the
public." Mrs Knauer said.
As examp!e!I of recalcitrant
''Bullmooses, '' Mrs. Knauer
cited a manufacturer who said
consumers shoul d not be told
the ingredients of a cosmetic;
a food dealers" magazine
which opposed the idea of new
bacon packages s h o w i n g
relative amounts of fat and
lean meat : and a pa ckagin~
manufac:urer whn ,.;a id ad·
vacates of mnre returnable
packaging we r ! "misin-
formed."
SHE DID not name: the
three men.
Quentin Reynolds, Safeway
Stores Inc. board chairman
who \.\'as another symposium
speaker, :;;tressed the. im-
portance of consumerism.
"Business operates in any
community only with the ap--
proval and permissio n of the
public," he said.
"It has become more and
more evident I h a t cor-
porations and co n1 p a n i e 5
structured and designed lo
generate profit must also
generate 'social profits.'
"It is quite apparent that in
the '70s demands will be made
upon many companies to com-
iTiit fi nancial resources: and
executives' time tow ard solv·
ing social problems in the
community .•·
ANOTHER S P E A K E R ,
Marvin Field , Field Rt.search
Corp. president. considered
the place or housewives In
consumerism, say ing :
"I don't think it Is an ex·
aggeration to say that many
frustrated housewives, trap-
ped into the drudgery or mun-
dane household chores, unable
to substantlally change their
lot. are the shock troops of
today's con:qervatlon. ecology
movements." •t Bruce Palmer. the Couo--
cil of Bttter Business Bure.11u1
president. noted the h1rge
number or organiuiUons find
individuals In t he con·
sumerism movement a n d
said:
''WRAT IS needed now \5 for
each Individual, organization
and Institution to step back,
View the goals and the
nef!ds. 11nd the cap11bllltlei1 of
the varlou~ othe.rA to con--
trlbute toward I h e ac-
complishment of the~ goB.ls
•nd the fulf\llment or these
needs-And thtn coalesce thelr
efforts. workll'lg lowArd unity
of purpose and a com bining of
5lrengths. ''
truck market in California and
one-half of that market in the
Los Angeles area," he said.
•·11 is in this West Coast
area that \\'e must start our
push with Courier, and we feel
that our truck has the design
and engineering f e a tu r e s
necessary lo get us off on the
right foot."
Mr. Na ughton noled that
multiple-vehicle owners and
first-time truck bu yers can be
expected to acco unt for a ma-
jor share of Courier sales. He
said that surveys show that of
all the small trucks now on t.he
road, about 86 percent were
sold lo multiple-vehicle owners
and 53 percent to first-lime
truck buyers.
HE ADDED that most of the
small-truck buyers use their
vehicles for personal
transportation and the Courier
is expected to follow that
trend, although its payload
cRpacity makes it ideal for
some commercial jobs.
"This relatively new sei;-
Cinclerella
On Boarcl?
LOS ANGEL•:S (lJ Pl )
-The president of the
corporation. the chairman
of the board and !he lre11s-
urer read their report.'l 10
lhe annual stockholde.r!'l
meeting Tuesday and dis-
cussed profit s, dividends
and stock splil.5 .
Wheri the sess ion \.\'as
opened to que!':tinn.~ from
lhe floor. a sn1all voice
piON1 up :
"When is Cinderell11
comin,e back?''
But then even the stock-
hold ers meetinl? of Walt
Disney Productions is a
Disney production , Anrl thP.
children of sharehnlders
are not onJv tolerated . but
encoura!:!cd lo join in
The Oi:oiney rxr.cuth·rs
nromiscd th<" movie Cin-
de.rella \.\'011ld b<' re·
released in 1974.
menl or the market is an ~-----------~
nulgrowlh or the tremendous
interest by Americans in the
vcrsatil ily uf a truck as a Se·
cond family car." he said . •·Jn
fa ct, about one in seven
subu rba n families nnw O\\'ns a
truck.
"The Ford pickup, for In-
stance, is now a 'car' to most
owner!': -they use it fo r shop.
ping, goini;: to church, tntlng a
camper or just mo v i n g
lumber or other materials.
It's grown so popular that we
sold over 500,000 last year and
it continued to be the second
best selling vehicle in the
company -outsold only by
the 11tandard·size Ford c11r."
CPA Units
Slate Meet
In County
Donald T. Burn.1, president
or the tt,000 member
California Society of Certified
Public Accountants. will ad·
dress the soclety'1 Long
B e1ch ·Orange County
chapters Feb. 15.
The muting, scheduled for
7:45 p.m .. will be held at the
. Old Ranch Country Club in
Seal Beach and will highlight
key issues of concern lo the
accountiog profession. Burns
will speak on topics covering
education and experience re·
qu irement1 for tlle C P A
certificate.
His remarks will also In·
elude comment& on t h e
11oclety's public relatidns ac-
tivity or coo per1tlve programs
with California b a n k er 1 ,
legislators, e du ca tor 1 1
1tudenta ind the public.
The meeting will begin with
cocktAllt 1t I p.m. and dinner
at 7. For further Information,
contact Glynda M. Stone at
(2131 !80-2500.
Cost Unit
May Lift
Re11l Lids
WASHI NGTON (AP l -The
Cost of Living Council ls
weigh ing the id!a of removing
federal r!"nt C<>ntrols from all
Jiving units when tenants leave
them voluntarily, new I y
availabl!" documents show.
Official minutes of the Price
Commission, available for in-
spection by new.'lmen for the
first ti me, show that the com·
miSsion voted g to 1 l11l'it
month to advise against im·
medial! Implementation of
this plan.
A counci l .apokesman s11ld
th! idea of "vacancy decon·
trnL" 113 th is plan Is known .
has never be!n put forth 11s a
formal propos11l but 1!1 11till
being studied by the council as
a possible way to trim back
further the extent of federal
rent controls.
He said the council , which
supervises the PhAse 1
economic policy, has a.9ked the
Department of Housing and
Urban DevcHlpmtnt to study
how well such a plan might
work.
Under vacancy decontrol,
tenant.! would enjoy t h e
benefit or feder11l rent control
so k>ng as they remai n in tlle lr
present dwelllng. But whtn
they move, rtnt controls
woold no long!"r apply to th1t
dwelling or tht: new tenants
who move In after them.
Price Commission minutes
for Its meetings of .Jan . 11 ·12
show that It rejected the Idea
of tmmediate vacancy dec<1n·
tro l At the same lime that lt
endorltd proposals by tht
council to demntrol luxury
apa rtments and smalle r re ntal
units.
n~ Jlll.I. l\EIKll\K
WA Slll N<:T ON {i\P l -The
Federal neserve Bo a rd
adopted guidelines !his \~eek
ainicd at speeding up lhe na·
t i o n 's c· he c: k-proce.~sin~
syslrrn, say1nf: it 1vill 111ake 1l
ro.~sihle for An1cricans to USC
dcpt)sitrd p;1yfheC"ks sooner.
Another hy -product nf th('
system, when it bteornes fu llv
operative in about a year. "·ill
he that Americans will knnw
sooner "'hen their checks
bou nce. if their bank accounts
slip to the m.inus side.
The guidelines direct the
board's 12-bank system and
regional offices how t n
establish and nperRtr nrw
regional clcarini:: houses 1n
rommunities across the na·
tion.
Tll E SYSTEM lv1ll be arm-
ed with more mode rn eq ulp--
ment . such es computers, to
speed up clearing of check"
within areas or from area lo
area.
The hoard said it is expected
that the new system will
resull in l'I majority of the 62
million checks "·rit ten each
day by Americans to be
t'lcared and paid by lhe open·
ing of business the day follow·
Ing deposit of the check.
For i n d i v id u a l s and
bul!inesses making and receiv-
ing payments by check. this
new system will mtan earlier
receipt of funds due lo then1
or earlier payment of fu nds
they are transferring to
others, the board said.
Most payroll C'hecks will he
cleared and employr.s will
hav! the use of their depo,.;ited
pay within a day after they
pul it in the bank, the board
said.
"SII\tJl..ARl,V. A check wr1l·
ten to pay 3 bill. or make a
purchase, will be debited
with in a day after the check 111
d!"paslted In a partici pating
ares bank." ll said.
The board said fast.er and
better check-handling I s
urRent because the large num-
ber of check.'! now btlng writ·
ten. About 3 billion with 1
velue of $13 trillion are written
each year, and these totill1 are
eitpected to double by 191K>.
Jn addition. the hoard staid,
Improving the check.pa yment
aystem is 111 neceSNry tr.ansi-
Auto Output Up
l.ONDON (l)Pl ) -Auto out -
put In Britain in 1971 hit the
third highest total e. v e. r
recorded And was at Its best
level since J968. the Depart-
ment of Trade and Industry
announced Total car output
w11~ 1,741.939 In the year, •
Jump or s J)Uttnt ()\'er the
previous year's figurt,
l1nnal step toward replacing
the use or checU with an tlec·
Ironic transfer of money.
TH E BOARD has been
working on A 1ystem to move
to a checkle.!!s society by
transfe rring f u n d 1t elec-
trnnicalty and officials say
rha t day ma y con1e sooner tn
1he Unlted States than mol!lt
people expect.
The bnerd envistnnll lea3lng
:;;pace and , in llf)me casts,
computerll to esl11blish the
regional renters. The system
is expected lo b e c o m e
operati ve on R region-by.
region basil! as .!IOOn 11s possl·
ble. the board said, with a
targ!"t date nf thf! end of the
year.
Commerce
U1rit Okays •
Amtrak Bid
WASHINGTON IAP \ -A
lfouse Co m m e r c e tul>
com mittee approved Amtr1k '1
rtquest !or $170 mllJion this
week and called for major
change5 in the na t lo nal
railroad passenger service
operations.
The money was sought by
the National n a I J r 0 a d -
Passenger Corp. wh ich took ,
0:ver much or the nation 's city--
hnking train rider iie rvJce.•
l11st May I and had exhausted. •
Hi. orlJ:/nal WI million federal:"'
11rant by July. 7
Wh ile giving volc:e..vote ap.i":
provaJ lo the (I n a n c I a I :
authnrization leglslation aimed :
at helping Amtrak out of Its ·:
flnanclt1I hole. t h e t1ub-• e
co1nmlttee accepted 1 1erlt1 ,
ol a1nendments lncludin1: • ..
--: lfaving Amtrak acquire ;
tqu1pment to carry rail ez ..
press and package freight. ,,
-Earmarking $147.S million
o! the !unds ror capital Im-•
provements:. A
-Designating t2 million ,,,...
nu.ally to i m p r o ., e In-•;
tcrnational r a 11 p.uatnger ..
urvice connec:Uona to Canada ••
and Mexico. :·:
-Requiring annual reporu
ln Congrw on t h a ff-~ i;
fecUv@ neas o( the l•w ·In-•
eluding figures on the Amtn.lc ~
performance.
-Letting Amtrak apply to ·•
!he lnterl!lttilt C tt m mer c e '..":
Commission for tracka pro-
viding more direct routes.
-Giving passenger service 1
preference over freight lralns
on right or.way .
-Having the f e d era J
go1Jtrnment move more troopt ·
by rail. instead of via. planu,
where-ever reaslblt.
The leglslatlon wu se:nl to
the subcommlttee'1 ~nt
Ct'lmmttct C:Ommlttee ror ac>
!lon.
1.
,,
I:
J 8 DAILY PILOT
¥0111•
SC -f'I • 1lfo11e y
OVER THE COUNTER C1·in1 e lnsi11·ance •••••-l•t Ot 1111 .. ,._ • ..,. -"*"""-" -.,~ t I II\. ~ NA'IJ ,,1cq .. ,.., Wl<.IWt , ... n ., ,...,... .. _ _,,_ ... -W1Mit11.
NASO L1st1ng1 fo r ThvNd1y, Febr u1ry 3, 1972
Now 'Affo1~clable' -c:.
'lw YO"io:: i.-~f ""'•n r~ -1i11~no .. n111u i11 ~ 11 h 1 14•et1111 d M1v
Ky SYLVIA l'OR r ER
1r )OU ~I~ I :;rn <i ll
busznessn1rt11 trl a high <:1 1n1e
r isk ar eti 111 <'II} or !)uburO and
)OU llre ti t s pc1 1l L ly t:ager lur
<:rime 1nsur;ince a 1 af
fordable r 1te:s I hil\ t gout!
nev.s !ur )OU
\S of Jan 19 12 H ha~
,.. o0n1l ~tu II ti I> tW U o •• t I I.Un O'f .. n1Y In I~• covn11 111n~ l>•rvw H ed -by about 50 percent of ~1ur• 11:1 ' • au.,."''~"' !r a i !uc'J A.l<>tn 5v the Jos s e ... ~ 1na T i.11 A1cc Bo • II• Sy ( • •? A Ga1 LI
\() An agent or broker • i::.,,., ~ 1• l• •ac e 1n11 •1 t"IC JO :l0 81dA. coun~ehng ~ou en the In "'"' 111., ,.>... '° ~~· PnC ~now e~ s ; Si l •ng H~ surancf' is now Habif' under u v1 n'> "."f i••• ~·~"' 11 ' Yo N fl nk o , ~111 ~I rng II the Federal criminal statutes 1n""'"'' s.u ,u F
I ~oun L• I JI 3.t<JRF unly 1! he com1n1l s 1ntent1ona 111<1u11 111 6••1s M~ r d I Aili (1> i 1 fl~~lnPF rau or misrepresenta 1011 "'F" p s 10 ee L•b
Before ht v.as hable merely : v$ l~ct. : I : rig ~:,,
tor f:11lure ta toun:.el you cor !iu~•~," l ' ~, =lc~'nH \
re<'.lly -another reason the !g:;;~ .. w •• • 1 ~, ::;::~e .. ~1
crime insurance program got :",~ "'~~ 1• • 1l l •:-n
ofr to i;o halting a start ,. • '"" J ' J • 11 ~1 Sc• Alllff tlo J JI fl ,,,.,._. A.-
If you are interested and !1~~~ 1: 11 ! l.!.~"w~111
ehg1ble go 10 any licensed 1n :r.,(-..n l~t., 1i1: ,i a~~~~
Surance agent or broker ask Alt l ec~ J F'o Burn s m Ag lltv 9 •1 C•WSv for an ap pl1cat1on cornptele it ... , d Eou1 ' a • c1n1b >1 All~n fl•c 1 • 11 inn Mii You will have lo certify 1n "'°' c m 1~. •• 1nnort 11 l\loln Gpo 1 J> (1nr.od P Y.'fll1ng that you have 1nstalle<I Am 11"'" 11"4 13 c • ., Mtve ,. El L•b 1~. li • a .. 5wsr
•• • "" ' . fMI t on ~w,Lf~
nt>• Ut 'I e 109 !'I non n bSt n nUI '4. tu1 UI 8 o k Ml
!•"•nil 1 orn 011 O\, I IQ"' Cl> hi, I~• ooi• 21 , in. Col,ln F4 a 6 C<>rn Cir !ii'• S'l {i Coml Sh •SI.. ~ • (O<f>w P• ~'1 , ~I '1mo' Cm
• t 0 m" ''"' 67 6.• cmn '~.con f'1P lt.I 10) Con Roe~ 1, •,Cont •n
36 1 )T I !" e<K<I • • 0 0 s IJ • , 0~"1 Yr, ''''!""'" n l•,C ois Co n n , ''"' Re~ Tl 16 C11Ur F~ ;,. ' ,. • (VP Com I; 'I , Oanalal> 1• • ojDanl• llo ?• l• 0••• Co J1 oll o 0•• 09n 16• 11\, Oa!• Gen l o l~ge•Pk<t '1'1 9• •~• Fd ' " ' .. ' n . , .
$ I µ. .. VIII Ifft 1•~ ll\IJ tL11~ C 6. ~ In
1!: 1il ~~f o1r io!2 11,.,11 ..:M~.,,t
>S' ~ • I lnllr 33>:. l• t. w.,. El
;• 1 2•" • n Crv ••7 •0galA.P
i ~·' Olg Iron ?6-' ;1 • 011c Inc l11 •0•nC 11 ~· ii /I ()oc" I l6 lol Dono! LJ n n Oorth G 1i 21 ~ 0""' JOnf
6l.. 1 •§:v • 0 11 •1 SJ'n'nO
1 • ' • p "" 7' • )] • Our •on l I ll El P1 nl
i. E""rln In '.n l• E'on L•I> ' • • E<1vc• !' • S • EI P1~
• 11.t,, ! •. '!" ,. )01, ,.,., ~
11 ~ 11' Eltc N11cl i• 1 E K !rm
J 1 •' E « MDlf 6 r i1 F 1ct <n I• I• IEmoS o 1 ! l 1£ne gy c
1 l••iEne ~· II. 61 •1 Fnrw 11 A ! 1 EP>CO In i 1 1'2E<>u V O t
bt1:unie 111111 h r<.1s1t1 oind al ~o
cheaper f1 r 111u 10 ollla1n
·~ederal crune. 1 t\ s u r an re
co\ erage TW1:; 1~ now a pro
gra m wh1lh )uu should 1n
\esttg~te at once It v.ell may
be that }OU :ire not even
;n~are that Federal crime in
surance up to a maximum of
.SlS 000 exists It ca1ne into
bt1ng only la st August under a
progra1n of the Departrnenl of
Hou~rn g and Urban
Developrnenl The obiecl1ve of
the progran1 11a s to m::ike
1..r1me 1nsurrincp ~va1lable at
tolerable rates 1n .states "here
1l was espttially hard to Cfnne
bv Connect1rul I J I 1 nu 1 s
f\.I a r y land 1\1a ssai.:husetts
Missouri Ne~ York Ohio
Pennsylvania Hhode Island
and the District of Columbia
the p1otect1ve devices and met .-m "'" l:it i...o ao n Al .. m F n Jl Jj I D Tet other requirements You r ... Fini LS 10 . , • C• , '"
I 11 1 l>m Fu•n ~ • 1 • 1 ~ Ill• agent or b1oker a so w1 1ave ... ,,.. c ''" 11 a1• 1r1 c; o
h h AP n!K t •• s . ••c r e I 1 certify in wr1t1ng t at e 1>m re ev 1' , ""', C•v ... ~ r
d h illtn Wed I I > C•nV PS ha s fully expla1ne I ese re Anadl , J 1 , <tn• L•t
C[UIJ crncnts lo you lri !hr best Ann•u9 II st .)' c n111ee "'
' ' J • • \ • • I " " " ' ... ~ • 1~ . ' 19 19 •
MUTUAL
FUND S
And even 1f you have been
aware of the program, 1t IS
highly probable you don L
know about the 1972 hberahza
uons Here are four
i I ) Jf you are the owner of a
small business (gas station It
quor store Jewelry slore
1estaurant clothing s Io re
beauty shop etc J you can
of his kno\\ledgr
Your apphcallon will !hen be
forwarded to an 1n~urance
company acting under con
lrrtct v.1th the Federal
Insurance Adm1n1straLion The
policies are not available
du ectly from any federal
agency but are sold through
licensed agents and brokers
Rates \'ary depending en
your geographic location
C"rune stat1sUcs compiled by
the FB I and the amot1nt
of your gross receipts You
\I ill be put 1n one of these
rh1 ce classes for ralrng ptH
no1v buy r1!hrr burglary poses
cove rage or !ht!t cuvei age U11v haZlld Jo\.\ prcm1u1n -
Burghiry cover3ge pays off or if ;,ours is a barber shop
\1 slble signs of entrv 11hlle beaurv shop shoe 1epa1 r
lhefl insurance pays for arm ti avel agency c h 1 Id re n s
cd robber} clothing slo1e hardware store
Before the change you had ca rd and gift shop
to buy the whole package J\.f e d 1 u rn hazard mednun
according to an analysis made prem1um-1f yours 1s an auto
for me by the American sales and ser1 ice grocery
Mutual Insurance Alli ance the store delicatessen drug store
50-year-old trade association bowling center mens and
of about JOO major mutual \\omens clothing s t Dre
pro perty 1Lab1l1ty insure r" restaurant
This change alone can cut lligh hazard high prernium
the businessman s pren11um in -1( yours is a drycleaner gas
hair and theres no doubt th:it station furrier tamera and
-0ne re 1son sales of Federal photo supphes gun and amn10
crime policies have been la~ shop Je\\elr) store hqu-0r
g1ng has been thrlr high cost store
!21 The provi:;ions requiring Desp1t~ the 1tberal1za1ions 1l
\OU to use protective devlces wont pay for you to cerllf~
ranging from wuxlow that you ha\e compiled with
grates to central and local the requirements of the law 1f
alarn1 systems _ have been you haven t warns tht A~tl A
hberahzed •This means your Because lf a loss occurs and
store will be easier to qua lify your prote<:hon wa sn t up to
for burglary insurance says certified standards l he
the Ai\11A • Another reason government wont pay off on
sales of crime policies ha ve "t~h~e=c=l=m=m=========;
been slo w so f11r has been the!..:
\Cry stiff req u 1 r e me nt sl
necessarv lo qua\Lfy f o r
to\ erage '
131 The dollar deductible
amounts for srnaller losses
have been substant1ally reduc
YOURS
TODAY!
>TARS
S)dney Oma1 r s fl11" of
the \\ft id~ great ltslrOlo g~rs His 1..olumn is one ot
the DAILY PILOTS ~eat
features
Beautiful
Stick-on
\ LABELS
Personafn:rrd • Stylish • Efficient
Order For Youn.elf or a Friend
M•y be u1..d o" enw-afop1s '' return addrecs
labels Al,o "llry handy "' 1dent1f1 c.1 t1on
l•bels. for marlun9 pe rson•! 1femt. su ch .1s
book, record1 photo' etc.. l 1bel1 stick on
9l1ss •nd may b• u,•d for m•rk n9 home
c •n'l.ed fcx.d item' All l1b1l1 •r• pri nted
w ith s tylish Vogu• type o" fin• quality wh1t1
9 umm1d paper.!_ .. -----·------------, r .I ... ,..,.--. d ..... _11 ... '"" u .. , t Pi.t ~r1111i., Ll ... t 1>11r,. •A. .... lwt I
j C..11 Meu (#II(, "°'
I I
' ' I I
I I
I I
I I
l PILOT PRINTING J •L -~--------------------
Industrial
Parl{ Get s
Und er Way
!\.lore lu;in
e1the1 b111\I
Complete-New York Stock List
I
l
I
I
l
-. • • .. ' . ' ' -
rrl~o rtbruUJ • lf72 SC 0'1lY •tLor JC!
.friday"s Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List -..
CW. I llOt* ~ C .... c-.\••··--------------···-----·, 00W JONI• AV.11.AOlt
Ntw Y0tlo.!A"J'1 ... 1 l)o.o.Jon•• .¥., ... , Llkit "'" fMI ) Ml9fl LI• (IMI O t
t <II il\o tllit .. ITOCKI Un! l" ~ ~ I! I'' !!"~ ,_ t-,~ M k Cl 0•11 Hl/~ L..., Cl-N•! UnJff\l lu\ > ,. \.'i .. ..,. t JO !'Id fCd•t tl jl !f1.Je tOt•i.i11u..t1MM M !~ U" t "' ar e oses ~ 0\r mr. '1'111 irrn I~:'! •·i ~:)~'•· 2 "' h ,,,. I' S•• 1 s d j1 11 1 1 •I i •I• l o vi ... ""'° 11 I'll .... " ··~••t• ..... " •IM~• "'"" .. I V....... ti ldG l M 21 16~ 1Jh ,, ...WI I t I U 1"4 ts.
)t 1 ·~ I~ I on Un ~I".,, I fft I u ... Ui ... I•"'° Ullt 4 lt n l'l l t1 ~ l: i:: u .. " s1· h I H. h 1·-·-·-· _________ ,_~_'_1 ..-t ... ·t ..... ~
l'l ~· Iii:: Ii " ;-,.; tg t y tg et• "~ "" v~;:;;".« •• "' 5 1Jllo 7•.0 H~• .. O•h I HI .. L .. C'"' Chi ..-r.:1o.,,: to 1~ ~~" ~~ J;:: _ 1 '<I!( C:omtl 'O 'i ·.~ ~u ;, .... · j:',"•; ·~ 11'! tt: ~,: ';,. · ~:~nr: 1 ,~
101 Jt V. ,.~ i·~-~ k I d •n~u· n ~ :r.: ··~ ~ l1 v1lP ••••• 1DQ1 11~ ,Ot\i "" ... " N~W YORK (U PI) -The stol.'k m1r rt r ose 1 :~.,,. ,,r, ~ • ~... :, , "'' I" .,, ,11•m 1,:~ :t, ,~ ~~ !1~ ~"'-+ ~ slightl y higher Friday In fairly 1cuve trading on the 1'~w~ ~ "1 H ~ i'i.· ~·:. ~ ~= l".r: JO 11:. E·~ n·
' 01"" 4t" ''"" New York Stock Ex chanfe l ·~•m • ~ i' "'! •1ao " 1 1 '° It II• Ill• 4 •n1u1~ I l o 1;'1 ).)<> 41, V I ~O It 11 ~I. ll ,l ~ ~~ ,~ -14 Shortl y before the c os1n~ bell the Dow lones ~ •n•e 1 ~ ~ lf 3, ,;,,: ._~~~Jn, ':, ,t ,~ 11 •
1 15" u.., 15-.-" 1ndustr1al avera~e moved up 16 to 90631 St and '::;1 ' "' 1 .... '"" "• • w x y z T) ll'Vo 11\11 11" I •~L O• '" It I I -' -
•5 1 . "' u,.. .... ard&Poor s 50 stoc k1ndexrose018to l0482 1r1c°"' ~· l4~,'·•,, 1'1 • w1bll~•M 1 014" I IJ\'t 11" IJ 1 .. ~ l (l)R o>tt'oO 1 " 1,1 w1r h(g I 2t ~M i H 10 ..... •• ~ uq + .. Of the more than l 700 1ssu :ii:e crossi ng the tape 1 .,,..1no io • 1• • 1 w.(~ .,,, JC 1J 11 ' I 11 10 10 -7 11l1r11 P 1S• 'o' ),l\t lt' .. 1'" .._ W1~1'\lt l•t I IC, l,J ,
Js1 ll'I uv. i.-. " 824 advan ced and 600 declined ''0"1t •n• 11 ,. 1 1 ,.::1:~•n ~ 'i l''· ,, r 1: ~ I~~:;-.... , ... ., ..................... ,. ............. ,. ......... 1i:: ;f, <() f'! u' !: lJ ' WI ~U•~ <() ll jj'"•'; '1'1,' Ill J?"' 1 10 11 , 1 \i' luctn Ct' 11 14 11 • h > 1, • w! "' • l?•M;,95 ~1!11 .. '"''"(°" Jll~o l• l •ti oo 'oll o JOI,, JON 30 , ...,s..c •• 10 1 s~ ,..., "'--.. 11mp e l n •• ?1 , ,. l • • l•rr Co o n1 1' • ,. ,. \•\JS Ch~oyn 11 i 1 n ,
JOS •I " "l "> SunCl'\1m "11 ,',' •,,', .•,•, U0 o > ,• Ten!IK• I l? 111 11 11,, ?I -UV-USG•ll "' to 11 l • l 1 •1~ ,,,, Im Ui Su"°ll lO • ~I us '""' ·~ ) •• If ' -. • .. 11 'O 0 ~yn 011 pl1 )J •12<1 '6 •5\o IS ' 11 ...., w1 A I I • I /lo •1U•L lnc Uf tl • C "'·' \1 5 1<1'! o eJ ) 6 11 1' I 11 ... 11 , 11.. , Suni..•m i,o l~ ), .. l '' llh -.i h l en....: pU )0 U ti .. > '''°' o V"Ji ~I oil Xl q , >0 ' OI)•.. U} l t& u 1t H <I •7
11 '"' I 1 ~ -"Sunoitrnd IG 161 J.O ll lJq 1 0 l •to" Po! U d'• "• t S o .. 1~~1 I .. 1 1~ 1; !,j',• H~ 11 l S P Y{I I• _,. l' • 11
•107 60 , l~ 11(1 • \0 ~ur!d• pll 'O 1 •I , ""'° .... -1 Ttoico t.I 111 ll > ll ll • U c I• 1'6 1 iho USP~!'\ "'I~ 1 ~ t • ;~% 't'! ~~:';~,·~I ~~~;~~7~ "ir0 ~~ ~~ ~~~! ~~-!i::c~1l l:f ,f ~~ t,'• ~~ .!~~·le£"~ 7i 1~:. ~t. 1• 8~Psho:'u 1• 11 ' i~ .. ~1 ''"' u 'I ''"" 1 Sup• 0 1 I •O fj )Of 10I :rot -' 1 •• G pl w l """ n .... ll... u~1 NV I ,.. 1 i. ~ ·. i!~ v~ }M• I 11> 1' 1<~. l 00 61 •l I J 1 $upm~IG 10 HI Ith t 1 ,,, _ i'< j•• G $yl .0 lll It a 11~ 11\:o U ...... h•I .'A• ) :..., 1t ji,, US '1•• Ml I 1 U • 'nOo 1:~ 1~~ 1~~ 1 ~:t -\ Swrvv , °'' Ill 11o 1 • •••• r...i lb 11 XI.,, 30 30 un C•n • 1 1' "" ll 'II.. , ~~',°t~~. ;:i t\ 'f : ;l1,
1 ;ui. 111 .. JJ\lo ._ .,Sw•n~ llO• 10 11 .. 11., 1111o -.. l ••••lft•! tO 111 l'~''""'""' unc1 ra• 7 C1 ., d>< 'J'• •un u "'' 10 1 1 ,
!~
' ' "' ' " ,, ,,
"~ " ' '
1''• 1µ., ''l'o t-o,; :w0~i.;o .,:o 1t1111 ~~. ~h t!~ + ~~ ~::~~~G ~ ~ !i~ ~~ l!EV ! ~~•r,,,.. '\1, 1 :.i~ : ,., ., un v1 •I )I 11 .,, u
161<, 16 0 UOo "f'h y ! •. ••" •• "!.~j•:<U!ll f t'I 13 ttr. SI~ , ... Un £111 ~1 1 I 01 106 06 11UnUIP!I SO I °10 • ~' •I'• 11 •1\/o Svbllftpl)IO -- --,, !! o 1---• O< • 'll ''' " IV vOI l"<I 17 I • l4• .. ,, .. _,0 .. _1.A SvotronC>oll1' J•n t1 Jl'l.1J,,__,,.ex" "''""'' -t un 11 1 .. ~Jl ,., '1nCv•I ..,., ' -" '• " " .,. \•• °" t0 11) JJ~o W... UO(•t 017 lO ... I~\> " !lo s:..., ~, 1.t _f _ •~trA!llOI 1 .,.~,"I•""" Vn P~cCP 1 'J f','• 0 1 oll• 'I V~lol n .0 J ,' '1 .. ,,, ......... ""' 1·~'•rf1 "° • ",. )S " -Un l'•c•" 1 l u •I OQ '°II 90lof0 90lo +,T1!18 dMI IJ JO ""''°+I"""'"!~ U il!ill•l6 ~ Un o<1•m lO OllO 1'~)(1 UlL F'fiO 11$ M > 1' JI .. 18h -l t •lcor1 I lO 1J 11Wi '10 .... XRO-+ * !'\Om •I ! Q.4 O ~ Sol. Un o••I 10 '" II I 11 U!M •10 ..01 II ) JI . )61o 1'"' l't T•ll•v f\O m 11'1. I• ••• ,.... ... ""I'~. 'il ll lO JI)< Uni <>Y• ol • •JOO o• QI QI v M oil 10 ' )(). 1'1,, " 10 10 '> ,r .i.v ot& ... '' 11 ,., 1 • hofrdW • d •11• • • 11 .. un 1nn"' ID 111 H 11 • a . UM Pl j(I /llOO '
1.S 11, !t'-_ I• l •MPI El 10 ll) 13 JJ ll -~. ~r\n Or • ,.,, 1o • 16" Ufl 1' Ill 0 l) 1• Jo I • U •h !n to• S.'.100 •'0'• ~· •1'" , 1 ,,... t 0 l •t>dV (o>•ll 1n t1'4 0 1, '''' ... Tl Co<o 1 XI ~ JI .... 11"' W o '' Vn 8 •nO• •ll , , ! •1 Ww•,•04 l~_ll1 ll0 t t t T C 0 ' JI ll>\ lllo -1 Tlmt ln! 1to 0 S~ ... '6> 56 ... o\J 1 ~ ftll XI 1'0 lJ• I\, \\', ~""" \I ' ll' 17 , JJ 1 ! 1:~~1~11~ c'ft 1111 10 ''"' 70 , Tlme1M JO 11 \ '°"' s • u a nil l'll JI ' -ww," -•~n, ~. 110 '' 1• , •
'
••
''
••
''
" -, >jm~tfl I IC l d • I/'' <3 , Uni (1> 16-t • ,,. '' I " C -\01 \() ,,.,~ 11 "'"'t ,.~1 11n • ... '''' l ~1-.., •-u •Ct o t t •"'•'•--'j f'" 1 t 19 It 1 To.avn• I~ 16 l'I • 1''t ll"" + Vo T~nl"lk '" Ill• -;: v: G •~ I~ t .,_,' ' •
1
w. ~~_;~ ....,, ),j
19 JS • l• • Ji • l tle<1vnt "' • 10 l b 0 ..-\:, r~a SM1 ~ 1i~ J1o.l;, ~. Un u.,., 1 M I 1••• lt:I• l•~• , W• ~ Go ,,!!' U \' 1' 11 JI JI , ll f >.o Te IA Cg 2ll ll., J • 1l -To!Klo f.: I .S )I ~ ) ..,. \1 Un lf>ll )II ll 1» J I 1 Wl•~S ""' \ I •
• ... r.· .. " , "" ft~
" i:·:
"" ff ' th:
!!• ... ;f.
l. ,,
' ,, ,, • " " I,"
" •• ..
" •• • , ,.
" • • • •• " •• II"
tt~
\ ...
"
'I Wl lftW, 1 '6
I Will fl Ja.nno
, 'lfl•n Oo>I lo
W••O t>tlll
0 W•tln Un IW••~ Uni or
• W••ll'lt OW :r::o,b l!:. , ,
'!Well I {a g • W• •I'• Ill
Wo •It(;; 1r
W••t ' II
\w ... 11 • 111
'• w P """ II• W""' l,n Wn ltn( )(I
.... ~ M y 0
'.N p~ ...i
W Un"" 1 00 Wn \ n o •tll
Wt 01' " W• I' pl •O
1
0\•\• n n1 ........ ~""° ,. W• ~ 11!• I
! • -
!
" • ..
Complete Closing Prices-American Stock Exchange List
••le• 89 t~•· I Hllll LIW ci.11 c~.
1' 11 ... ,
I lt lo 9 JV, '! "• ' " ' "" . ,.
11).l 11 >"> " "' ,so .. ,.
h Y•
1 ••lit ' " .... , ....
so l ~--
10 -~
! "' 111 ....... " ,_
U.5 ll'!o • •
! ~· ' ·~ l • ." Ill J l'I 110 ,.
' ' •Jll l~ ,, "'" . ·~ 11 II lo • !~ " ' ~ r~
1 '" ' n ,, '" • • • lit'• 11 11 •
ll 11 • • y. u )!
11 S'~ l~ ,, , ' .
n "' l'IO 16 < ,.l 71 .. ,.,..
:J ~ 11 211-.
?J 1't'4 . ~IJ 116\lt
'13 11•.
' lt\lt 10 lllo . , ,,,..
ll!S'4 ' , .. n 1~/.
].II 11'1. I 1' 'o. u ••• . ' JI l J>.11 ' . • • ' "' " ... ' 1•· , .
\J) 1:11'/t . " ' '"" . " , 1S. ' ., JJ fl , ..
"" » ':l • " " ,
lllel "'' llWl l tUllll IAW Cl•lt Cht .. .. '"' (11111 I Hlell L•w Clllt (~•
11111 ~ ..
(1141 I Mlell LIW Cl•tt C ~t
..... ...
Ctift l Mlttl l .. ( ..... 0..
" ,.
~ , ,
" .. " ' .. • " ' ..
"' '" • .. .,
". "" '" •• .. • "" "' .... .. •• ,,
u~:
" " "" ..
" " ' fl
1 ' ... 110 •7 . " t(IG o .. )0 101
l• ll ,,,, ..
10 ..
~ .
1)(1 II"
•100 •• ., .
,, }j • ' " , ,
hl 11 1~~ l. .. .. • • •1 'l,
" ,U
1•10 " ll
•
• • " . '" ' " ' " • "
n•• t2'• + ~
1'14 ,\Ill\~
Jj"'j1~~:·
.·": 1'1": :
I~ In: , -...... •lo I I\ ., lo a:; ;: ..
#. ~; ,,,. n
••• Jl • ll •
,. 1• ,.. 1, ...
11" •l fl H
d .. •l ....
jt .. •1 .... '"' ... •l\t 0. IOI ,, • \J • , " ,, '' , .. • • ...
" '" .. • Jl'o ,
,I ' • • " l 1 ... ... lj" ,,
• 'I "
• • • .. .
'" ,
" " ,, ,, . ,_ ... • " • ,. ..
'" ~~ " ~
'I " .. .
11 n •
• "
' ..
• ..
• ( 'C.
!l j ,, ,, • ' ' " " ! " ' ~
' !
"' '"'
I ' l•o I ' ... " ?• • r 'I. r:~
" I ,., '? H"' ~~.,
~ ~ I~ ;
• " ?; !>J :;l . r .. ~r. ... ~'•n I• 1
..,.. ~ ..
lllf1 I 141111 Uw Cll1• Ch ..
I
-•
•
• •
'• • ..
~
I
I
I
I I
I
iJ> DAIL V PILOT ' ,
Harbor Boats Battle Racing President
To Speak Tonight Five in Acapu1c o L i1ieup fo r Siuida y • Fh·e Ntwport Harbor boats
wit1 bt ll"l the ~tarting lineup of
the 1,431)..mile. San Diego to
Acapt.t!Cfl race Sunday. Foor
will fly the buri;iet of Newport
Haror Yach( Oub and one is
from South Shore SailinJi! Club.
A h1st-m1nutr v.·ithdr11wal by
JiQtimr, a Colun1bi11-:t!I frnm
San rr::inci~·o reduced the
fleet tn 27 . Here lhPV an!. in
alphabetical nrder. "v.1th a
brief bl'!rki;i.round nn eOlch·
A LE fi R E -A Pa\n1er
John!!On-43 l)wned by San
Diegan John ~1acAlh~ter and
ro--!!kip~rerl b.v .John Run1sey.
She y,•on snvr·s Waterman
Series last WIJlll'-r
ALERT -A 6.l-foOI ketch
from SOYC.:. owned b y
Dorothy Radcliffe . 11nd a
forme r Aca pulco race entry
ATORRANTE-A C a 1-:J 2
slonp i46 feel overall I oy,·ned
and skippered by B u r k e
Sawyer of Newport Harbor
Yacht Club.
BARCA DE: C)H0-Ca!-4R
owned by Enrique Braun of the
co-sponsoring Aca pulco YRcht
Club. She was the first Mex-
ican entry to finish the race
two years ago.
8 L A C K F l N -Ken
DeMeuse·.~ 76-foot ketch from
St. f'rancis Yac ht CI u b.
Veteran of two Transpacs. the
Long Beach to La Paz race
and two m;itch races series
with the arch rival Windward
Passage.
BL1TZEN-Morgan-33 sloop
co-skippered by Bill Corbell
and Mike Busch from SDYC.
Second smallest boat in the
race.
DOROTHY 0 -Bob
Beauchamp's well-campaigned
Columbia-57 from Newport
Harbor Ya ch! Club. She is 11
v et er a n or every long
dish1nce race from Southern
California since she was
launched in 1969.
f\.1ELTEMf -A custom 37-
foot sloop O\vned and sailed by
Bill Jonas of Corinthian Yacht
Club. San Francisco.
from Acalpulco Yacht Club
skippered by the owner Jorge
Escalante.
Meltemi-·A custom 37-fool
sloop owned and sailed by Bill
Jona.!i of Corinthian Yacht
Club, San F'rancisco.
NALU IV -A Lapworth-
designed 4S.root sloop owned
and skippered by Peter (;rr1nt
nf Newport H;irbor Y;i,chl
Club. Alli of Grant's Nalu
boats ha ve a record of clnse
contention in the Acapulco
race .
NEMESIS-l'.:ri cson-J9 !llonp
skippered by SDV r'.~ Tom
Tobin . She became one nf lhP
ocean raring fleet'~ mnst con-
sistent winners After her
IAunrhing last yea r.
PERICUS-Ericson-41 sloop
skippered by John A .
Williamson of Saratoga. Calif.,
11nd nying the colo rs of the
Lahaina Yacht Cl ub of Hawaii.
RAINY DAY -Robert W,
Le vi's 37-foot sloop from South
Shore Sailing.Club.
SALACIA-Cal-48 from San
Francisco and R i c h m o n d
yacht clubs. owned 11nd skip-
pered by Joe neMeter .
F'nrmerly owned and cam·
paigned hy Tom Corkett of
Newport Harbor Yacht Club.
SANGRJTA-Cal-2-JB from
Seal Beach Yacht Club. She'!ii
the smallest bo<1t in the fleet
and i.~ ski ppered hy John
McGee.
SA YU LA-Another C a 1-4 0
from Acapulco, owned and
skippered by Ramon Carlin.
SJGAME-Sid Re n k o w ' s
hea vily campaigned Ca1·36
from Del Rey Yacht Club.
SIRIUS JI-The famed old
r;impaigner ! ex-Barlovenio,
ex-Patilito l whic h own11 the
existing elapsed time record in
the Acapulco race-eight days,
nine hours. 15 minutes . 54
seconds, set in 1!164. Tht: 8J-
foot M C\;iss Cutter is now
Biggest Boat Shoiv
Opens • in LA Toda)·
The largest boat show in the
16-ye;ir history or the sponsor-
ing Southern Ca 1 i f n r n i a
Marine Assncialinn opened its
door.!! at the Los An~e.les
Con\'ention Center tod<'ly for a
llk:lay run .
The Los Angeles Boat Show
?.'as started at the Great
Western Livestock Sho w
building on Atlan tic Boulevard
16 years aRo and later moved
to !ht Pan P,qcific Auditorium
in Lo.!i AnRelcs.
The move lo the Convention
Center gives the exposition
240.000 square feet of space
Sllle!y devoted lo boats, mak -
ing it a clnsf' second to the Na-
tional BoAl Show in Ne w York .
The show features more
than 600 boats rAn11;1n~ in price
from $100 to $100.{l(IO
Asi de from the boats, \here
will be 170 booths dlsplriylng
such items as electronic gear.
clothing. navii::ational aids.
hardware and just abo ut
everything a person wants or
needs aboard a boat .
All the major outboard
m a n u f a c t urers-.Johnson,
Evinrude, Mercury, Chrysler,
Bearcat. Seagull and Aero-
cea nic -will be on dis play
Among the power cruisf'r s
••ill be such we I 1-k n n 1o1' n
manufacturers as Troja n, Vik-
i n g . Hatteras. Chri!-Craft,
Uniflite, Grand B a n k s ,
Bertam. Concorde. Luhrs .
Bristol , F'jord . TolleycrAfl and
Vega.
The sail section will feature
1
BOAT SHOW QUEEN
Ilse Kimble )
such names as Tsl;inder.
Columbia, Schock, Yankee .
Caralina. Coronado, Aq uarius,
Balboa, Clipper, Kor a I I e .1
MacGregor, Hobie Cat and!
Sailcrafter. !
DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
Lease or .Buy All Models ...
DAVE ROSS
PO-NTIAC
l•H HAllOI ILYD. • •All DllYI
COSTA MUA
""· 546-8017
.... --
...
owned by Boh Lynch or NHYC
who IJf"'nt a !!mall fortune
rehullding her.
STARLING Ill-A 51-root
yawl skipprrcd by ·Norman
Rearn , SDYC. vettran or
several other offshore rat·e~.
TATEi-A h r and -new
Jo~ricson-39 owned hy Carlos
Cardenas of Acapulco. SDYC's
&b Collins, Brian Hanzel and
John Burnh<l m 'A'ill bt: among
the crew.
TH.\LIA IV -Oil-43 from
SDYC skippered by John
Barhey "'ho 'A'On SDY C's ocean
rAcing ch11n1pinnship, I h e
Rumsey Series, with his
former Cal-40.
THERA-Redline-41 n1aking
her second r11ce to Acapu lco.
She'.!! from SDYC and is skip-
pered by .James O'Hern.
TZCHAK 11 -An Ericson·39
owned by Manuel Sendero11 of
AcRpulcn. She 'll have Lowell
North Rnd Malin Burnham
frnrn SOYC aboard .
VF.CTOR II -New Zea land-
46 owned And skippered by
Herb Johnson of SDYC. She
has been widely campaigned
in San Diego and other
Southland races.
. !Mii l1ctn1• l"~or.
BLUE WATER CAMP~IGNER -Bob Beauchamp's Colum bia·5 7 Doroth y 0
from NHYC starts her eighth long d istance race v;hen she sets .~;iii for . .\rapulcn
Sunday. Launched in the fall of 1969, she has made every offshore race fron1
Southern California.
VIXEN-Jo:ncson-39 unde r
char1er io SDYC Commodore
Frank Hope. who was second
overall in the Acapulco ra ce in
his K·43 four years ago. He
has the same crew on Vixen.
Balboa Dentist Finds
W IND STAR----Commance-
42 from SDYC. skippered by
Walter East who won last
years San Diego lo Ensenada
race.
\\llNDWARD PASSAGE -
Considered the !11stest 73-foot
kl'lch in lhe 'A'orld. rirst 10 fin-
ish in !wn Transp11cs and nu·
merous other offshore battle5
in Florirl11. Sailed by owner
Mark Johnson who w;ints first
to rinish honors if nothing else.
Fifth Cup
Bid Slated
For Turner
NEW 1972 OLDSMOBILE
TORONADO
2 DOOR HARDTOP
5159
-
MONTH
24 MO.
OrtN IND
--------
INCLUDES' AIR COND .. FVLL POWER INC. DOOR
LOCKS AND SEATS, AM.~M STEREO, VINYL TOP,
TINT. GLASS, TI LT WHEEL, BELTED W/W, AND
MORE.
W• IHM all popular
mak• cars and trucb
LEASE DEPARTMENT
KID S LOVE
UNCLE LEN
SATURDAYS IN
THE DAILY PILOT
tw
WESTERN SADDLES
2030FF
New I ll1k So441H 10,_ Off
SUEDE COATS & VESTS
lodits ORd
MtRI styl11
witlr frio191. 30%oFF
SPORT SUEDE COATS
SiRtl• Dftd Doulllt 203 lreosttd oho
,ffttct liwtol 0 Off .
-----
Jim Michael of San Fran-'I w ~rd as and Rnosl
cisco, the new president of the yachtsman of the f tllr for
North American Yacht Racing 1971,
Union, will be the guest · speaker tonight al the annual . Other llS!lgnments includt
meeting of the Ocean Racing the naming of Chuck Kober Q(
Fleet of 56ulhf'rn Californla al Long Beach as a3s\rtant'
Balboa Yatht Club. rnenager of the U.S. Olympic
f\.1 ichael was Io rm er 1 y yachting team. and Dick,
chnirman of the oHshnre sec· Stearns of Chicago a.s coach.
t1on of NAYRL .' He 1s expt'f'!ed lo discuss proposed "level rac-Stearns ~ave up his plans t.o
ini;:'' under the lnternationi:il try for an Olympic berth in
Offshore Rule 1 !OR l. im· the Star Class to accept the
ptJrtant aspects or propo!ied assignment. ''
changes to the \OR measure-In d1.~cus!iing !ht history of
ment rule and other topics of NA YHU , relirin11: president
intert>st lo offshore racing. Bob Ba vier brought ou t ~It
,\o1 1chael LS lhe fir St the Org11oizatiOn 'A'aS ~
westernt>r e\'er to be elected founded by a group or eastetft
j(J tht presidency of NA YR U. yachtsmen in 1925--a.!i reco~I
lhe governi n11: body for all indicate-but wa'.'! founded •1ift
yacht racing in Nor t h 1897 by an equa l repre.!i!n-
An1er ica. He was elf'cted at lt1linn of both we.!itern liiid
the reeent annual meeting in we!itl'rn yachlsmen . ~ ·
liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ' N{''A' York lit-
Othcr we sterners honored a! H EY t the NA YRU meeti ng \\'ere
desig ner (;ary Mull of Sa n1 t
Francisco who will replace: DAD! .. JI.
Olin Stephens as NAYR U'S f'x ·1
pe rt on y11cht designing under
J()H : Gordon Curlis of Los
Angf'lc!i, viee president of the
()ffshort Committee, and Bill \
Ficker , Nf'wport Beach, to the ,
bo;ird of dirtttors. 1
Another new member of the ,
board is Ding Schoonmaker of
MiAmi. Fla. who recently "'as
named recipient of the Martini I
ROLLER
liAmES
Friday
February 4
8:00 P.M.
COSTA MESA
FAIRGROUNDS
L A. T-&IRDS v •.
NORTHERN HAWKS
HaKtim• Match Rae•:
Here's The
Opporl uni-ly Fo r
Your Childre n To
See One Of ..
Walt Disney's C
Greatest Hits ;,:..
' -This Weekend! ~ •
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!
PANTERA
• • .,,
by dPToml'l.sn _ _ import11rl fnr Unroln-MPrrury. Itaha.n' i
eoarhu·ork crralPd by thP brilli,11 n1 Gh111. Studior. of Turin.
Ford drs1g n!"'d lhr 3."i l CID 4V V-8 Pni;?inr . four u·httl \n·
dPpenC'nt 'uspcn~inn 11.nd mid-~hlfl <'n;ine placement. fit·~ '
llP<'<'rl gea r box, fully r.ynrhronlzrd ...
\
··rantf'r! ... llR liRn (or Panthrr ...
ohnson&son
l-411==1 ··.
-
CANVAS
BAREBACK PADS • ••• 7.95
•••• 17.95
NOW ~590 j
WATllPIO f
BLANKETS
llOW $
N
SAVI
I
l
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE Rasm11ssen's SADDLEBACK SADDLE:RY
• JHO HAllOI ILVD. COSTA MISA
CALL NOIM llHDLOVI, 147·67'0.
I
Of'EN D~ll Y 9 IO 5,30
•• ,, 'tll t
CLOSED SUNDAY TUSTIN
13,22NIWPOaT
~-~... 838-0800
• ·l ,AllMAMUICAID
• MASTll CNAltl I •' '
-~, -·
• ~ f I •
•
Laguna Beaeh
EDITION
Today's Fl••I
N.Y. Steeb
VOL. 65 , NO. 30, -4 SECTIONS, -46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNlA ' FRIDAY, FEBRUARY -4, 1972 TEN CENTS
Police Action Protested • Ill Bluebird Raid
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
01 IM 01llY "1111 Iliff
Three persons arrested in Laguna
Beach earlier this week when narcotics
officers raided a Bluebird Canyon 6rive
home charged Thursday night that police
used exceslllive rorce, did not advise them
or their rights and shoured streams of
obscenities and threats.
Police denied there was "excessive
force ."
Pierce L. ShaMon, 29, 506 Bluebird Can-
yon Drive: Scott I. Pitman. %5, 109 N,
Bayfront, Newport Beach, and Mar sha J.
Rockwell , 21, 31913 9th St., South Laguna,
spoke out at.an Informal meeting called
by the Volunteer Post, as part of a "com-
munity response" program.
The trio and five other persons were
arrested Wednesday night when a l(}.man
team of Laguna Beacn police, San
Clemente police and state narcotics
agents entered Shannon's borne and ar-
• _x-a1 e
Laguna Caper
Suspects Nabbed
In Wild Chase
A frantic attempt lo escape Laguna
Beach police failed early lhis morning
and ended in the arrest of a Los Angeles
couple on charges of burglarizing the
Peacock Insurance Company.
Police claim the man and woman, ar-
New Lifeguard
Stauffer Joins
Staff in Lagitna
James Stauffer is something of an
amateur pinnipedologist.
He's also the most recent permanent
lifeguard to join the force in Laguna
Beach, City Manager Larry Rose an-
nounced thi1 week.
Pinnipedology, St a u ff e r explained,
refers to the study of aquatic mammals
such as sea lions, walruses and seals.
Stauffer, 26, replacts Eugene dePaulis
who worked as permanent lifeguard !or
aix years.
Rose said Stauffer has 10 yean of ex-
perience with the Marine Safety Depart-
ment af Newport Beach and was active
there in organizing lifeguard com-
petitions.
He has participated in AAU Master'l
~wlm meets and dory races and 111 a na-
tional board member of the Surf Life
Saving Associatian.
More recently, in addition to his hab-
bies of surfing and surfbaard con-
struction. Stauffer has been l!ltudylng the
pinni ped population. Last year, under the
direction of a harbor area veterinarian,
Stauffer spent several off-duty hours car·
ing 'tor injured sea lions that otherwise
would have died, said Rose.
St.Buffer who Is not married, lives in
Co$la Mesa .
Indian Movie Tonight
A film on the Navajo and Hap! lndlarus
of Arl.zona and a di!play of their crafts
will be presented by Danny Dave>: in the
Laguna Beach High School auditorium at
7:30 a'clock tonlgttt.
The free program ls Davey's "thank
yau" gift to Lagunan11 who have con-
tributed · through the years to his
caravans to the Indian reservations, tak-
ing food, cl<llhlng, toya and fann equip-
ment ,
Bobby Mikels
Story Told
The tragedy of Bobby Mikels, one
oI Laguna Beach Hieb School's
finest othlelel wbo wu par1l)'led
by Injuries 111rtmd In ID outo ""°
ddent, Is told todly In t futurod
at«y In the DAILY PILOT Sporil
Section, Pqe 11.
Laguna resktents and sports
boosttra have started I fund MIYI
to buy young Mlk•ls-o ~
equipped van to aid In hll
tronsportation wblle 1· 1tudtnt at
R<dlands Unlyd1Hy. About 11.000
of the needed '6,000 bu already
been pledged.
Olecka m1y be sent to the "Bob-
by M.!Jtela Van CJub'• It LllUDI
Federal Savlnp llld 1-.
rested at the corner of Forest A venue
and Glenneyre Street following a six-
block, high speed chase, had broken into
the Veacock building at 4-01 Glenneyre St.
and stolen seven electric typewriters .
The merchandise, valued at about
$3,500, was recovered from the trunk of
the couple's aut.o, police said.
The suspects were identified as
Theodle:t Jobn9011, 35,.and his wift: Bessie
L. Jollnlon, 113. TblJ 1111 ~Ing held
withou! bail at Laguna Beach jail pending
arr....,nt Mond1y on burs I• r y
cblrg•, offictrt: aakt.
Police orflcer Dave Cleland, on routine
patrol, said be spotted • wblte 1uta park-
ed at the rear of the lnlw-ance building at
2:20 a.m. M he drove hla police unit
toward the parked car, ClelaDd said he
saw a man pick a large object up lrom
the ground and throw it into the trunk.
Cleland said the man then jumped into
his auto and sped out of the parking lot
down Glenneyre Street.
Cleland pursued the auta and radioed
ather units rar auistance as the fleeing
vehicle went up Legian Street, across
Goff Strett and back onto Glenn,yre
Street, aometimes reaching speeds of 80
miles per hour In the short distances.
The vehicle spun odt at Forest Avenue ,
poll<:e said, and the two suspects alleged-
ly jumped from the car and begM to run .
By this lime, four police unlta were at the
scene and the pair was quickly ap-
prehended, authorities said.
Following the capture, police returned
to the Peacock building and determined
the rear door had been pried apen. Of-
ficers also noted that several typewriters
were missing from their tables.
Pallce said one at the typewriters
discovered in the suspects' auto had a
broken case and speculated It had shat·
tered when Johnson allegedly threw It in-
to the trunk of the auto.
Expense Policy
To Be Studied
In Laguna Beach
Al the ~ ol Civic Loque Preal·
dent Jolm Broni!, the Laguna lleoch City
Council th11 week ln1tructed City
Manager Lawrence Rose to study and
recommond to the council 1 policy
reglrdlfta payment of conference ex·
pe111e1 for CO\Ulcllmen and clty staff
members.
"As you know l have been concerned
aboutthts.," iald Brand, rtferrtnc to 1 re-
cent contnrfeny over payment of ex-
penses for councilman Edward Lorr11
wife" at conftriactl in San Francisco and
Hlwail. .ir· have 1eeroed lhlt moat clUea have
definite pollciel in th11 1rea. Palm
Sprtnas, for: uample, requir11 a council
ruolulloo before a """1cillnon hlml<U ii
aent 1o a coofe:renci." · Wyat Rlclwd Gok!berr. com-w.
''We don~ want -ol lhooe flapo . •
11o •waled !hat -1oo1t Into the pollcloa ol othor COIDlllanltla and mU&. ~iloa to Ille cvundl.
Terrorist Killed
SAIGON (AP) -A bomb hidden In a
radio blew up ll1d killed the lem>rlst car-
rying tt ll1d wounded ll olhtt penon1
Thuraday nl&ht In • lheal<r In the town ol
Bell 'l'nl)h, • -ooutllwllll ol 8eJgon. the 8alaoa Command .-.por1<d.
rested the group on Possession of mari-
juana charges.
Sgt. Neil Purcell of the Laguna Beach
Police Department said later. "there was
a lot bf confusion -which is to be ex-
pected -and · the usual amount of
pushing and shoving" but said that ex-
cessive force was not used by agents.
Shannon, Pitman and Miss Rockwell, at
the conclusion of the meeting , gave
depositions and claimed they would file
lawsuits against the city, demand a
pollce department investigation and en-
courage a massive letter-writing cam-
paign .
Slatements by I.he other five suspect.'!
are expected to be taken today at the
Volunteer Post. dfrector'Van King said.
City Councilman Charlton Boyd, the on-
ly city official to attend the meeting, sug-
gested the group might bring their
grievances to the council meeting Feb.
16.
BoY,d noted that lawsuits brought
again!>l the ci ty are routine ly denied by
the City Council and sent to the city at-
torne y and insurance carriers for re solu·
tion.
Shannon said It was about 9 p m.
\\'ednesday and he and seven other
fr iends were ilsten ing to records when a
knock was heard on a sliding glass door
at the front of the house.
"Then there was pounding at the front
doo r and it came nylng open. It seemed
like there were hundreds of people . The
es
CIAILY l'ILOT lllH l"Mftt
CONTAINERS ON TRUCK EACH CONTAIN A SPENT NUCLEAR REACTOR ROO FOR SHIPMENT
Ev•ry 18 Months 52 Roch Are Removed During Ov1rh1ul ; Cont1ln1r1 Can Wlth1t1nd Cra1ht1
San Onofre Activity Hums
Scie11tists H ol,d Forum While Cre ·ws Busy at Work
By JOHN VALTERZA
01 lht Otlty l'llol 511!1
Wh ile large crews of specialists were
busy at San Onofre ref uel ing a nuclear
reactor and rebuilding turbi nes Thursday
a panel af scientists in San Clemente
spent hours rebu ilding the image af
nuclear power for a group af newsmen.
The seminar, which offered nearly
unlimited questianing of a panel of .scien-
tista at the San Clemente Inn, tauched
hard on earthquake factor: in nuclear
generatian, nuclear health aspects, safety
of reactors and handling and disposal ar
radioactive waste.
During the day's conferences crews at
the San Onofre Nuclear Generating St&-
ti-On -• plant under siege of sorts by the
Peop le's Lobby -were rebuilding 3
niassive turblne and auxiliary systems
dealing with conventional generating
machinery.
Simultaneously specialists dressed In
surgeon's garb were winding up the
refueling of 52 spent fuel rods in the reac-
tor itself.
The m-0nth-l-0ng routine shutdown is
almost over.
The speakers at the da y's talks, not
geared specifically to generating news
stories, but instead to help educate
writers on the subject, are affiliated with
.the Atamic Industrial Forum.
The seismic factor af the plant, and
particularly those affecting San Onofre
took a 11potllght for a time aa Dr. Craig
Meaty Caper
Man Held iii Illegal Steak Sales
Dropping by a Corona de1 Mar tailor
shop, a Tarrance saleaman allegedly peel·
dllng hi.I leftover steaks and hambura:er
•t bargain basement prices woond up In
a bit of 1tew Thursday night.
Frederick w. "Underdog" Kook. 22,
wu 111baequently arr,.ted and booked Jn.
to Newport Beocb·City Joli on suspicion
of illegal IA!es of meat. Section l20U of
the Stale BUlineu I< Profeaalona Code.
Or•DI• County bu l.5 million reoldeols
and more than 50 tailor lhopa.
Tbe lone customer when poor Underdog
-who didn't explain. ~ nickname . to
~llct -entered PurdUe 1 Tallor1, 3137 ~-Coast Highway, wu Done other than
William F'ltchen.
'ne ii th• Orang• Counlt aeoler of
welghll and measures, who b directly
reapoNible for countywlde: enforcement
of such state Ltwa.
"Anybody wanl to buy any meat'''
Kook WU uolecl ... Nying.
F'ltch<n -llimaell 111d demand-
ed Kook d-0 the aame, auertinf lhe
mpect claimed lo be a John l•nry
Jones, but didn 't have any ldenUflcaUon
papers. on him.
The atate welghl5 and measures control
evecutlve then escorted Kook out to a
Lowery'• Meals truck parked at the curb,
where he allegedly tried to hlihtoU . It
with the hamburger.
Fltchen matched the key1 out of the tr·
nltlon llld k•pt the 1lx fool , 1lx Inch Kook
ln CUJtody, while a tailor and aeamstreu
liat.ecf 11 wltne.asea aummoned Patrolman
Larry ~brlel.
The offl!:« took Kook for hooking at
1,45 p.m, while Fitchen conllsclted Jhr ..
cartom -0( meat be said bore.no markings
of welght,tanothet 1late la"', violation.
Defendant Kook was finall y released on
1190 baU, pending amlgnment on the
miademeanor charge next wttk In
Harbor Judlelal Diltrlct Court.
City orllclol1 alao plan to prooocute
Unduq rot pedd!Jni without 1 Ucenoe.
,
B. Smith, a UCLA assistant engineering
professor, pointed out tests made on
many nuclear ln~tallaUons to determine
their ability to withstand quakes.
Smi th stressed that close inapections at
San Onofre after the Feb. 9 Sylm.ar
earthquake showed absalutely no pro-
blems with any systems at the reactor.
In relative terms, he said, the San
Fernando temblor was "minor," and
several nuclear i11Stallatlon1 closer to the
epicenter than San Onofre wllhltood the
shock just as well. ,
One at UCLA, he said, had only tome
minor crack• In office buildings, but
crucial systems fared extreme!( well.
Smllh po inted out that 1111 teals 1,,.
valve the use of special vibration !Qui~
ment at many pofnt1 of a react-Or com-
plex and through mathematical extension
of the teat result., performances during
.a major quake can be projected with "en-
cou raging accuracy."
At midpoint ln the day's d1Jcu11ton1
aclentlat$ and utility aldes conducted a
guided tour of the generating atalion w\th
particular emph.aal1 · on the refueling
stage of operations.
At one comer ot the lara:e comple:x
stood ae:veral flatbed trucka Jadfft with
lsrge lead and 1teeJ capeule. -each con-
taining 1 rod of spent uranium fuel re-
cently removed rrom lbe react.or.
Those contalnen, accord!na to Dr.
Morton I. Goldman, a rpeclalfst in ruel
dllpoul, can withstand ... lncrediblt
1tre1101" without lhoWIDI fatigue. •
He aald that the container• which,
u1U1lly ara trucked to Dllnoil .wbm the
w11le ii procwed, can easily wllhlland
cr1ahea or explosive aboclu .
"If oomeone·really wanted to blow one
up," he aald. "they could probably do It
wtth a massive amount af uplosiya, but
It'• doubtful ," he oba<rved.
Among the day's 1peakers, besides Dr.
Smith and Dr. Goldman •trt Dr. Narman
C. Raamuaun. profenOr of nuclear
englnffrlng at Mawchusetla Institute of
Teclmology (MIT) and Or. L<onard
Sagan, the dlrecior of 1envlronmenlll
medicine at the Palo Alto 11\tdlc•I Clinic.
-
officers \\'ere carrying long nashllghts
and .,.,·earing el'rryday clothing.
.. Office r j Hobert) Roma ine told LI! to
Ji(et in !he bt.'<froorn, so we went there.
'rhen , (S gt. Nt>i!I Purcell fl ipped out his
badge and said we were all under ar-
rC'st, ·· said Shannon.
Speakini;: at the police department
later. Pu rcell said lnvestigallora "30
minutes before we entered the house
tSee BLUEBIRD, Paa:e %)
Candidate
Would See
If Authentic
From Wire Services ....
NEW YORK -A farmer consultant lo
Howard Hughel!l made an affer before 1
grand jury today t-0 read the manuscript
ot. a purported Hughes autablography
with a view toward judglnr Its authen-
ticity.
"I would be able to say 1r the book
were authentic or not." added John
Meier, 3!, who was a aclentlflc consultant
to Hughes until 1970.
He ii runnlns for U:S. nnator 1from
New Me1.lco as 1 Democr1tlc candtdlte.
Meier's lawytt, Robert H. Wy1balr, told
newsmen the government's re.pcme to
the offer to check Jhebook'• aulhentlelty
w11 that "a lol of people would like to
read the manuacr1p!."
"We told the U.S. 1ttorney that we
would be avallable lf they wanted Mr.
Meler to read U," Wysttak added.
In a prepared statement dlstrlbule<!
after his -One-hour a:rand jury appearance.
Meler said he never met the book's
authar. Clifford Irving, or the latter '•
wife, Edith.
.. I d-0 not have accw to any pertonal
files af Howard Hughes," the statement
went on. ''When l resigned my position In
Nevada, I severed all connections with
the Hughes ara:anlzatlon. I h a v 1 no
knowledge of any computerlted tn-
formaUon ab-Out Haward Hughes."
There have been 1uggestl-0n1 that com-
puterized lnfonnatlon on Hughes may
have been leaked by one of his aldea to
Jrvlng, far use In writing the purported
autobiography. A voice Identified as
Hughea in a telephone interview hall
denied ever talking to Irving..
There were -Other developmenta In the
bizarre case :
-The New York Times today publlahed
wh at it said were e:tcerpt1 from the con-
troversial autobiography, but stressed
that the material "could have come from
previously published anecdotes" about
the recluse blllk>nalre.
-Federal authorillet uld they may In-
itiate extradiUon proceedlng1 against
Richard SUUiod, a coll1bor1tor with Irv-
ing on the autoblogropby U Swklnd Ialled
to appear Mond1y before lhe federal
grand Jury lnve1Jl.t!1Uni the C.1<.
-Buslnet1 Wee\ M11nl.ne reported
that part of the money McGraw·HW pald
(!lee IRVJNO, Pap II
I o.. .. ,. ~-
WeaCIMii-
Tboae hlch cloudl over the ~
land wlll cleor by Satunlay, lnak-
ln& way for a pllllant weekend
with 1llchily warmor tom[llratureo.
Hlgba along Ula bllch. II rtsln( to
• Inland. Lows IMI.
INSmE TODAY
Th< NIWJ>Orl Hotl>or A r I
llluHum 1141 16 of ld1D01'd Hop.
p<t'I paintl!IClf on :,~la~ tbil monlh m till main .,,, cmcl
lmM at.Mr h1kr11dng ""4ll •»-
hfblll m 1M •nlran<• goll•l'll·
Se• Page ~I of lodat1 W.,"'11<1-
tr /6r plctvru and -.to111. = ·-"'ll ........... ..:i ..._....., . ......... "": =;:. ... :, ~:: := ..... --.1 • tr ldl ff
•
'
I
I
(
' •
2 OAJLY PILOT LC r,14-q, fcbnwJ 4, 1m
f'roua Pote J
BLUEBIRD CONTROVERSY • • •
showed lbere ••• dope activity 101ng
an "
··we walked up to the front door and
CCIUld 1mtll bumloa: marljl.l&na,'' uld
Pureell.
"We knocked on the sliding glass door
and a young lady pulled back the curtain.
We displayed our badges and demanded
entrance." At that point, said Purcell, he
forced the heavy wooden fron t door open
and, <Jnce Inside, that he saw people run-
ning all over. hiding in closets and yell-
Jng.
Purcell cla imed the first person he en-
c<Juntered ln the residence had a Dn•
ounet bag of marijuana In hand.
The trio firm ly denied that they had
any narcotics in the house but Sh81lilon
mentioned that ()ff icers seized pipes, cig-
art'tte pape rs, 'roach" clips and ol.ber
paraphernalia.
Shannon !&Id he was grabbed by Ro-
maine, led lnlo a hallway and choked for
several minutes. "Romaine was shouting,
'I'm going to send you to state pri!IOn.' "
ShaMOn charged.
The next thing that occurred, ShaMon
said, wa.!I "a tremendous commotion in
the pool area in the rear of the yard."
Shannon said that one of the person!! at
the house was swimming at the pool
when of!Jcers arrived. "They (the p<>llce)
brought him Into the housl!. He was
bleeding from the back and head."
Shannon said that police used a com-
bination o( 1 garden hose and a can (lf
mace -much like a giant Insect bomb -
to ~t the suspect out o{ the pool. Purcell
said that no mace, to his knowledge was
used. "We have to file aerosol usage
report• when we use mace end none was
filed laat night," the officer sald.
"The you ng man In the pool was
challenging officers, yelling obscenitif!
and refusing to get out. l took the Jong
pole that Is used to clean the pool and
told him to get out. He yelled some more
obscenities and said •you'll have to come
Jn and get me, Purcell.' 0
"We got him out of the pool, but !here
was still fighting and screaming. He ~od
ed up back in the pool and I trad to U!e
the pole again. We got him o0t the second
time, handcuffed hlm, wrapped a towel
around him Ind VJClk the IUlptd. iM , •
1114 officer uplatned.
Boyd, 11"'1 with LaJUlll B<a<h 1~
tome)' Gerard En&ellklrcben contacted a
phyaictan lollowin, the meetln& lo vtall
the vtcUm 11 city jail and detmnlne the
ext.enl of lht Injuries.
·•He had 1Uperflclal cut. and brulleJ,
with one severe bru ise on bl!! right
flank." Boyd aaid this 1nornlng. ,
Also pre1ent .at Thur!day nights
gathering were Jack Bradley a~d Robert
Kruege,r, both of 2235 Temple Hill s Drive,
owners of the property where the raid
took place.
Bradley charged that police had
d"stroyed the hand-cJ1.rVed front door,
smashed 1ever1l windows and caused
othe.r damage to the interior of the
residence. "I'd like to know who's liable
(or this damage," said Br,adley. He added
be Ill plaMlng a 11Ult .againrt the city.
Purcell admitted It was necessary ta
kick In the front door and the windows In
a downstairs apartment had been broken
when state narcotics agent! were pursu·
Ing a subject.
··Some bed eovera we re re moved i nd
drawers emptied, but most eve~ythlng
was put ba ck " said Purcell. He ss1d that
he secured u'ie house bef<Jre the officers
8Jld the subjects left.
Purcell alleged search of the house and
ground! revealed "an ounce and a .lla\f of
marijuana, a half ounce of hashish, 20
LSD tablets, and some hashish oil."
Purcell said that offi cers had no search
warrant and that one was not needed
because one of the occupa nUI of the house
had lost search and selzure righl.!i In a
previous narcotics conviction.
"The subjects were cooperative and
there were no complaints (lr beln&
manh andled." said Purcell.
At the meeting, however, Mi 111
Rockwell and Shannon said the off icers
"acted insane." The third member <Jf the
trio, Scott Pitman, a former member of
Laguna's Hare Krishna temple , said they
were like "animals."
Miss Rockwell charged that none (lf the
eight arrested was advl!ed of co~
stltutlonal right!!. Purcell said the rlght1
do not~ave to be administered unless an
(lfflcer plans to Interrogate a suspect.
Free Clinic Officials
Shopping for New Ho1ne
The Laguna Beach Free Clinic, an
(lperatlon which has been praised by
some for providing needed health
service!! and scorned by (lthers for at-
racUna "hippies," 11 looking for a new
home.
Clinic board chairman Burt Altemus
disclosed Thuraday that the clinic 's lease
on the buildin g at m Glenneyre St. ts ex·
pirlnc March 31. And owner Donald
JohnlOn, or !!I Oak St., k\ld Altemus In A
Jetter that he has no lnteinon ''to renew
or extend the lease."
AltemuS said that when the clini c board
team ed af Johnson's Intentions to
terminate the lease, board members ap-
proached the owner ln an attempt to buy
the building from him.
"He. refused to even Wk to us ,"
A1temu1 claims. Johnson could not be
reached this morning for comment.
The lease was negotiated nearly two
yean ago when the clinic first opened at
jta location in 1970. After ll somewhat
1haky flnanclal beginnina, the operation
became solvent and will soon be re ceiv·
ing a S~ per month aubsldy from the
county.
Appeal Tur ned Down
SAPULPA, Okla. ~UPI ) -District
court judge Kenneth Hughes has deni ed
an appeal fr om a man who said he wa s a
vic tim of double jeopardy. Donald
Stockton appealed on grounds that
separate convlctlona ln 1964 for kldnap-
lng a girl In Tulsa County and raping
Iler ln Creek County violated hla conslt-
tutlonal rights.
DAILY PILOT
01.MN co.uT PUllllHJMe OJIUAltt
I "''*' N. W • .4 ' ,.,......, Md '*I ..
J•cll a. c....wr Ylrit rww.io.it .... o.."111 ._.
"-'•• Lt.I 1!111"'
no::.:. M:;:r•
Cli•rf• H. l "' 1U.r.h•nl P. Nib " .............. """"" ,_ __
J J 2 ,.._.. ... ., ••••
Mtoill ..... ..-1 P.O. I••'"-'1•11 5MC--.e~
IDI -It c..too JlooJ, tlln --e...-. ......... .,... .....,.,, '-111 »II ........ ........... .... , ............ ........
Fonner Ctty Councilman Helen Keely,
said Thursday at a health services
!lemlnar that the clinic has looked wltOOut
succesa for another location In tht
downtown area.
"If they don 't rind a place tG move,''
Mrs. Keeley said, "there wtll be a lot o(
pec:iple in town going without medical
care."
During the pa1t year, t.he clinic pro-
vided medical aid lo 6,1.M persons,
Altemua 1ald. The patients average 22
years old, he added.
"I don't know where they would 10 lf
they were not coming to us," Ile se.ld.
Altemus 1ald the clinic now pay1 a rent
of $202 per month. but would be able to
pay more U a suitable locatlon could be
found. The cllnlt'I only source of Income
1t the present tlme Is from donations
made by patients and Jn t er e ate d
residents.
Interim Zonin g
Ordinance OK'd;
Vote Unanim ous
By a unanlmous vote, the Laguna
Beach city coun cil has ad opted an In-
terim zoning ordinance placing a 90-day
moratorium on lhe issuance of buil~ing
permits in the Sycamore Hill s area.
The action, which followed a planning
commiss ion recommendation, dre\v a rip-
ple of applause fr on1 the au dienc e in
council chambert Wednesday and word!
of commendation from Laguna Greenbelt
president James Dilley.
The bu11dlng freeze was recommended
to give the plann ing staff time to com-
plete planning studies l11 the area, with a
view to revising ex isti ng zontna. Under
toning adopted at the time the S20-acre
parcel was annexed, density ranges from
one unit per acre to a high one unit for
2,900 squm feet. The zoning wall
established specifically for a planned
residential development proposed for the
area, but later abandoned.
RecenUy a Newport Btach de velop-
ment firm revealed tentative plans to
develop the p&rcel under thi!I iontn1 with
more than 2,000 dwelling unll.J.
The Sycamore Hilla parcel Is con·
sidered a key to the propo1ed Laguna
Greenbelt and a Iona campaign has been
waged to obtain federal open apace funds
to preserve the l1nd.
Last Rites Held
For Jess Onstot
Funeral wvtcea for Jou W. Onstol, 14·
C Calle Arqon, Ltauna Huts were hold
this afternoon at Laguna Beach Mortuary
Chapel. Mr. On.tot died Saturday ., the
.,. of Ill.
The Rtv. DaUu Turner conducted the
strVJou, which wen followed by burial
A.t El Toro Cemetery.
Mr. Onotot II aurvlved by his widow,
Clara. ot the family OOme: two aona,
Joho of Ontario and Jacob of Lagun•
Beach: two rrandchlldren and one great·
grandchild,
&fore hla retirement, Mr. On1tot
wor ked as a postal supervllor In OntaMQ:
Ho had rtal6ed Jn l.a(una HUia for the
past sl.x years.
I
Agneiv Finds
A New Target
NEW YORK (UPI) -Vieo J>rul.
dtnl Splro T. Aaa1w 11ys be woul d
not trade all the tnvironmental
"dlltlllol<o" ill U.. ....,lrY for one
level·headed, 1<rlou1-mlnded Boy
Scou~
Agnew ttlld the Boy Scouts' an·
nual dawn patrol breakfast tha t
the ir group had been practicing
ecology for years and In a single
day last year collected a million
tons <Jt litter from parks and public
areas.
"As an America n villlly in-
terested ln the environment,"
Agnew said, "I wouldn't trade you
one level-headed, serious·minded,
service-oriented Boy Scout for all
the pu blicity-seeking environmental
dilettantes the new1 media can dil
up between now and Halloween."
Laguna Okays
Const1"Uction
Tax Mea sm·e
FAA Hecrittg
Citizens Blast
Chino Airport
From P age J
IRVING ...
for the book wu inYtlttd ln ,. rn,rlc.n
muriUes by a Swlu hlnk 1l fl · d1re<'-
llon of the author's wife, Edith Tht
report did cm 1pecily lhe amount.
The Timfl Ibo Ille! today the txctl'pl$,
obtained from a aource f1m Jll1r with Jr11-
i.ng's rnanuscript , a:ave "no indlcatJun
. . that ~tr. Hua,hes had a pa.rt in
prtpar1ng the manuscript."
Hughes comes i:i.:ross as a bitter man
whose language is IJUlgar, the Times a1ld. By JACK BROBACK Thursday night's hearing was billed to The account said he was c~reles.s abo ut
ot 1111 o.u, P1i.1 ''•" "gather fact_, relevant to the effects ot ll~Hng others and talked at length abo ut
North Orange County residents hauled the proposed airport upon the safe and sexual exploits.
out their antiaircraft guns Thursday efficien t use of navigable air space." In one excerpt. Hughe.s was quot td as
night and verbally ahol down the pro-l)avla cautioned that testimony on the saying he purposely leaked fa cts about an
posed Chino Hills jet airport. effect on the environment would not be alleged $400,000 payment made to the
Laguna Hill! 8pokesmen, however, considered but he all owed many speJkers then Vice President Richard M. Nixon ln
v.·ere on hand to support the concept. to discuss that facet. th_e hopes of getting help for his problems
They urged that a fed eral-state study with Trans \Vorld Airline!!.
A crowd of 600 to 700 persons filled be made of the environmental aspects of '"Nobody was raising a hand to help
Va lencia High School auditorium to tell a the jet-age faci lity. me," Hughes is said lo have complained.
panel of Federal Av iation Administration Br ian Dougla.ss, Fullerton Airport "They were glad. I'm talking about
(lfficlals that they "'anted no part of the manager and a member of. the coun!y \Vashing ton. They were glad to see me in
jet-age facility in their neighborhood. Airport Land Use Commission led off trouble. So l leaked the details to Drew
Col. John Lohman. project manager for "''ith a sttnging technica l co ndemnation. Pearson."
Chino HUJs Airport Complex Inc. lold the "The Fullerton runway take oft Pearson, the late columnist, wrote an
hostile audience of plans for lhe faci lity heading and that or the proposed. Chino srticle during the 1960 presldtntl1l cam-
inc!udlng an indusLrial park on 2,500 llills racUlty would meet headon," he paign, in which Nixon was a candidate.
acres of hilly land north of Yorba Linda. charged. "Our lri.strument landing system th at the Hughes Tool Co. had loaned
The site ls surrounded by 25,000 acres of turn i.!I rive miles out, just seven miles $205,000 to his brother, F. Donald Nixon
almost uninhabited area. rrom the lLS for the proposed airp:>rt. of Newport Beach, Calif. ,
"The proposed atrport will fill a need Interference would be lnevltable.1' "No1v whether it actually turned the
for most of the people of Orange County t•d r th I ti d A steady stream of city, school and I e o e e ec on or not. I on't know,"
and will add greatly to the economic: homeowner association leaders followed Hughes is quoted as saying. growth of the area," he said stressing the I I imJXlrlance of !uture air freight serv ice. Dougla s. all in agreement that the fa cili· n ot 1er excerpts, 11ughes allegedly
1'"AA official Don Davis said written ty should not be built. called former aide Robert Maheu a "ve~y
Tbe Laguna Beach City Council has comments will be accepted unli l Feb. lL Dr. Ralph Ruth, board chairman, icy calculating nian" and !lid 11inger-ac~
d ted I He set no time for a final decision on ac-Placentia Unifi ed School District: "Our tor Frank Sinatra ''was just taking Id-a op a controversia construction tax bo d . . 1 vantage of my prestige to bolster his ceptabil ity of the project by the federal ar 1s unan1mou.!I in o~posit on . The (lrdinance designed to help fin ance h. h 1 r proposed airport would be ust four miles waning prestige." agency w 1c s necessary or state ap-capital Improvements necessitated by in-proval of construction . nort h of Yorba Linda. Our schools are not In two parts of the published e1cerpts.
creasing population. soundproofed and a new elementary the Tim es omitted what it said were
Revenue from the tax, esti mated at fa ci lity is planned within two miles of the further derogatory remarks about Maheu
L L site ." and a long section of purported Hughes
$25,000 a year, will be used exclus ively to 3!f"Ull31l OSeS Sam Cooper. North Orange County discussions of sexual exploits in
finance fire stations and other public CJ Airport Commltee: "We told the county Hollywood during the 1930s and 19403.
safety structures and equipment, under $825 I d supe rv isors last year we are opposed to Maheu managed Hughes' enterprises In
an amendment added to the bill before • IlSt ea this project Col. Lohman sa id his firm Nevada for four years unti l his dismissal
has hired many consultants to check tht! in 1970. Sinatra had finl!ncial intere!UI in
passage. Qf G • • $l 5 viRbility of the project. The county hired Nev ada casinos until the st.ate took away
Both the amendment and the Ordinance 8J.nlng Pereira and Parsons and their reports his gambling license. He WIS a frequent
1queaked by In an unusual 3-2 council were fu ll of errors. Consultants are not performer at Las Vegas nlghtclubs
vote, which found Mayor Richard A Laguna Beach man trying to seU his infallible." before retiring.
Goldberg and Councilman Peter wet suit ln~tead lost hJs shirt when a pro-Mayor Henry Wedaa o( Yorba Linda: Su.skind is the only person .a far to say
0 d · d In 11pectlve buyer allegedly stole $825 cash "Our city opposes for se\.lfral reasons _ he witn essed a meeting between Hughes stran er castmg the lssent g votes, h d . d d . 1. and lrvi·ng at whi·ch unex pecled en. Id en in the man's closet, police noise, overcrow e airspace, unrea 1stic while councilmen Edward Lorr, Charlton reported Thursday. fli ght paths, possible crashes in inhabited counter Hughes, according to Suskind, of.
Boyd and Roy Holm vo ted ln rare unison. Authorities said J ames Lee Van. areas and an unfav orable Southern fered him a prune from a paper bag.
The onc~nly tu will be levied when derkolk, of 964 Miramar St., discovered Cali fornia Association of Governments "Would you like a prune?'' Suslcind
building penn it.!I are Issued at a rate of the theft after he had invited a .!ltranger report." quoted the industrialist. "Go ahead, take
lnlo his home to examine a surfing we t Robert Fennell. Placentia mayor and or:e. They're organic." f225 for a new single famJly dwelUng or 1utt he wa!I selling for $15. president of the Orange County League of The meeting allegedly took place in a
duplex, $100 per dwelllng unit for re!lden-Vanderkolk told police he had met the Cities: ··rt is a different decision you Palm Springs, Calif. hotel last June.
tlal atructures with three or more un its, man while walking along the beach and face. \Ve need air transport in Southern Suskind, 46, li ves on the Spanish i1l1nct
$25 per room for hotel and motel con~ was able to supply authorities with the California and the land owners have a of f..1allorca and indicated earlier ~
structlon; $IOO per pad (or mobile home man'1 name and a complete description. right to develop their property. The would not voluntarily appear before the
According to Vanderkol k, he had left the 1970 FAA preliminary repcrt said the grand jury to discuss the book and the
lnstallatlons ; and 10 cents per square foot room monentarily after showing the item site was boxed lo by El Toro. Long whereabou ts 0( $450,000 paid by McGraw-
for floor area for commercial bu lldlngs. to the prospective buyer and when he Beach. Lo! Angeles, Ontario and other Hiil to "H.R. Hughes."
Mayor Goldberg said be had at first returned, the man told him he was not In-exisling airports. The busiest Im Angeles But Thursday Suskind was subpoenaed
favored the measure, but had changed h.ia terested in buying the suit. airport incoming traffic path from the to appear with notes, correspondence and
Shortly afterward!!, Vanderkolk said he ea st Is within fi ve miles of this site." <Jther materials relaUng to the alleged
mlnd. "Laguna ll a town advertised as di&c0vered the $825. hidden among There were a few voices raised In favor autobiography, and today be sald be
• Iovelr, resort and nsldenUal com~ magadies In hb: -closet, waa goot . ot the project. would appear.
munlty,' he said. "We like to encourage 1---':.....-----,,.--.....:---------'---------------'-'-~--------
people to come and make thei r home s
'here. l wonder lf $15,000 (lf revenue Is
worth it."
"We have arrived at a point," said
Lorr, "where we can't go on the premise
that property ta x alone will meet the
need1 of a growing city. It's new homes
that cause the need for new fir e and
other equipment."
Holm noted that new atate legislation
recognizes that a construction tax Is f!lr
and equitable.
Ostr ander, an architect, said he con·
sidered it "immoral" to legisl ate a tax on
building. He said he would favor a capital
Improvement plan through the general
plan, with a tax used to benefit the entire
community with such ameniti es as
sidewalks, trees, <Jrnamen ta l li ght stan·
dards and ''things everyone sees and en-
joys."
Lorr advocated narrowing the ta ii: use
down to "essential services, not lux-
urie.s."
Holm said it was "not a novel idea"
that when development takes place, ad·
dltiona\ ci ty expenditures are need ed . Ci-
ty l\.1anager Lawrence Rose noted that
the rates proposed for Laguna were the
same as those In a 11 im!lar Orange Coun-
ty ordlnance.
"We know that this cost will be added
lv the price of new homes," he said, "but
Jt will be spread over the years by finan-
cing. The city cannot plan any capital lm·
provement program without provldlng
revenue. We mmt start producing
revenue, not l• massive bit.a, but
Police Probing
House Burglary
Police are investigating the theft (lf a
gold watch and diamond·studded ring
from the home of a Laguna Beach resi·
dent.
Officers !aid Ted Loui1 currier, of 3093
Zell Drive, returned home Thursday
following • two-day absence a n d
discovered hla locked home had been
entered and the items taken from hlti:
bedroom. Value of the loai was aet at
!800 .
Police determined the rutdenco was
burglarized by ruchln& throuah 1 dos
entrance and unlockin& the door.
Reinecke Hints
Governor's Bid
SANTA CRUZ (AP) -U . Gov. Ed
Reinecke hu come hta ci-ot lo 1 public
announcement that hi wUJ be a candidate,
for eovernor ln 111•.
Tho Republican ·ntU&enanl 1onrnor
Wlll asked Wedntlday Dlabt at 1 neWI
conlerence 1bout Derllocrallc cherpa he
b 111ln1 hb office for Polltlcal· 11ln.
Sale Continues
OFFICERS CHEST BY HE NREDON •.. NOW ON SA~E
OfflCERS CHEST DESK
SALE $489 PRICE , e
'·
S•l•ct 9roup1 from H•nr,clo"
-H•rit•g• -Dr•x•I , , , ci"
1•1• now. Upholsf•ry floor,.,.,,.
pl•1 on ••I• inclucl , , • , H•n·
r•don -Sherrill -M•rg e
Ct1 r•oft I oth •t•. l t1mp1, pie.
ture1 I •c.c.et1o~i •1 ere e ll•
r•duc.ed.,
COClrTAIL CHIST
SALi '189 rarer . •
Henredon fi~
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL-HERITAGE -KARAST AN
NIWPOIT ITC!D ~ NllAT 'TIL t
NI WPORT llACH
1727 Weatcll ff Dr., 642-20!0
'\PIN FRIDAY 'Tll t
•
JNTIRIORS
Prof1Ulonal lntarlor
0..ltnara Av1ll1bl-AID
,.._ f .it ,,_ "-ef a..,.. Caul("\ •••·121.J
•
•
"They know I 1m a c•IWI~ for
governor In 1174. and IO lbe1 ai.-almply
out to knock m1 an my pt1 at Uiil time," Relneck1rtop0nded. I-~~~~..:....-=-..... ~~~-~~~~~~~~~--''--~~~~~~~~~~~-.,
l
•
Saddlehaek ' .
VOL 65, NO. 30 , 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES
• _x-a1 e
lrvitae Tonaorrow
Citizen Housing
Group Requested
The Irvine Tomorrow Board of Direc-
tors has endorsed a recom mendation that
th e Irvine City Council appoint a citizens
ad visory committee on housing.
11 Precincts
Contributed
To Bond Loss
By GEORGE LEIOAL
Of tl1t D•llY Plltl 11111
Although voters in 31 or 42 precincts in
tile Tustin Union High School District
favored by at least a majority vote ap-
proval of a $IS million school bond issue,
the measure failed .
Official preci nct vote ta!lies released
today fro m the Orange County Re gistrar
of Voters office in Santa Ana break down
the S8 .l percent yes vote the bonds
received, short of the two-thirds majority
required for passage. .
Leisure World Laguna Hills voters
showed at least margin"'1 support for the .
bonds at five precincts gave the measure
a majority vote. Precincts with the
largest no votes on the. schoo! con.
struction money bid were 1n Tustin and
only two Le isure World prec incts.
The bonds go t most su pport from
Irvine El Toro and Mission Viejo voters
with s~me precincts voting 3 to t in favor
of the SIS million issue, notably Turtle
Roc k ~hool, University Park Sc~l,
AHso School and the Getchell residence in
El Toro.
Earl Carraway, an El Toro mortgage
banker Jed the field of six trustee
hopefuls for the high school board vacan·
cy in 29 preci ncts and the absentee votes.
Nearly every precinct in Tustin and
Leisure \Vorld backed Carraway, ac·
counting for the bulk of the 4,'29 votes
cast for the cand idate who opposed the
district's tax override bid.
That issue passed by a vote. ot 8,081 to
7 310 drew majority votes 1n only 18 p~ecincts most o.f whi~~ were in El Toro.
Irvi ne and Mission Viejo. Most of the 21
precincts voling against the $1.99 total
(See ANALYSIS, Page !)
Telephone Call
To Bank Teller
Nets 2 Thieves
A telephone call to a teller at an Irvine
bank and a subsequent trip to take out
the trash triggered the capture of two
burglary . suspects as they drove out of
Costa Mesa Th~r~df!Y with $829 in loot in-
cluding a. Bible.
Police seeking criffiinal complaints
against them tbday cited the mc:i~ent . as
a perfect 'etample of ciUzen partu:1pation
in Jaw enforcmlent.
Johnny R. Williams, 32., Palmdale, and
Danl~l H. Spirlock, 23, El Monte, are cur-
rently booked on suspicion of burglary
and J?OSsession of lllolen property.
~y were stopped on H a.r b o r
Bou)evard at Mesa Verde Drive by Of-
ficer Pbil Donohue and 'S~. John Reg.an,
with a color television set protruding
fr om the trunk or their old sedan.
tnvestigatora al!IO foond stereo 90llnd
eqUtpment a ches3 'set and a Holy Bible
sll ~rt.;.i stol .. by Bank or America
tenerl Cheryl Ecl<ert.
O!llcer Chuck Duv11l ~Id Mila E<kert,
of 284 Cabrillo St., was at work when • nel~r heard the victim'• doorbell rlnJ.
SMr!ly iillerward, the neighbor Hid
she heard someone tn .~young woman'•
aparbnent J.Dd caUed-tif:r at wori: to ln-
vestl(ate. Lurnlng no one hid ,.,thortty lo bo In-
side. the woman c&lle(I polloe and then
took out het tr11sh bOnchalantty to .e
what r she could see.
spotting a man peerln1 out or the ..i.-
tim'• epartmenl. the wltnaa alao notlcod
an unfamiliar car parked at the curb tnd
acrtbbled down the llceNI numbor.
Jost motnenl.8 later. the vebltle ...,
gone but a police rJdl~ broadeut had
alreidy gone out deicrlblng the car and
then:"'~.;.. spotted \and stopped
moments later.
Guy Sircello, 4111 Brisbane Way,
University Park told the city council th is
week, the env ironmental action-citizens
forum group backed a proposal urged
last month by the Irvine Housing Council
and its chairman Richard Regosin of
18241 Yellowwood Way, University Park.
Regosin also appeared at Wednesday's
counci l meeting to formally present the
Irvine J{ousing Council plan.
Such a committee both IT and IHC
agree would be made up of nine persons
including representatives of the Irvine
Company, UC Irvine, the l r vine
Industrial Complex and both the Tustin
Union High and San Joaquin Elementary
School Districts.
The city council-appointed committee
would:
-Define the need for low and moderate
cost housing to serve student, industrial
and general populations ;
-Research ways to provide such hous-
ing, and
-Serve as liaison between the city,
county, Irvine Company, un iversity and
developers on all matters of housing.
"Our initial subcoinmittee reports show
that significant demand for such hou sing
may exist in Irvine and that low-income
housing can be built which more than
m~t.J the ·aesth~tic standards of present
housing in the city," Slrcello told tbe City
Council.
Regoaln added that the comm ittee
might "establish criteria for the develop-
ment and balanced distribution of low in·
come housing throughout the city to in·
sure the availability of schoola and public
services and the meaningful participation
of low and moderate income families in
the main!jtream of community life."
"The problems concerning housing for
UCI students, the blue collar popula tion
of the Irvine Indu strial Complex, th e
employes of commercial establishments
and the retired senior citizens come
directly to mind ," Regosin said, urgi ng
early appointment or &lii,Ch a committee.
One Me eting's
Just Not Enougli
The e:s:per iment failed.
Trwtees of the San Joaquin Eh~men·
tary School District. hoping to ac-
complish their business with one meeting
a month, ha ve thrown in the towel.
They voted unanimously Wednesday to
go back to meeting on the first and third
Wednesday of each month.
Since adopting the poli cy of one
meeting a month they found they were
staying until 2 a.m. on the night of the
regula r meeting and holding numerous
"special" meetings besidell .
So they're back to two night.!!.
And they're trying another ei:periment.
Meetings are to begin at 7:30 and end at
10 :30 p.m. on the dot.
Terrorist Killed
SAIGON (AP) -A bomb hidden In a
radio blew up and killed the terrorist car·
rying It and wounded 11 other persons
Thursday n!gbt In a theater In the town or
Ben Tranh, 30 mUu IOUtbwest of Saigon,
the Sahz:on Command rennrted.
Agnew Finds
A New Target
NEW YORK (UPI) -Vice Prtal-
dent Spiro T. Agnew says he would
not trade au the tnvinmmental
"dllettanttl'' ln the country for one
tevel-huded, ltriou•mlnded Boy
Scout.
Agnew-told the Boy Scout•' ;.,.
nual d4wn. pa~ bruldaat that
tllO!r • -hod -pnctlclng ecology !or yun and In a slnile
day fall yHr collected a m!Dfon
tons or litter rnim ,.,.a and publlc ......
"Al ID American Vila Uy In-
terested In the · amronment,"
Agoew said, 0 1 wouldn't trade you
... 1 ... i«aded, aerlapmindcd.
.. ..-"l!o!':-·'ftr all
the publlc:flr-... klng -merital
dllettan!ao the °"" media can dig
up between now aad Ballowten."
·~· .... I I ' ' '
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, ·1972
CONTAINERS ON TRUCK EACH CONTAIN A SPENT NUCLEAR REACTOR ROD FOR SHIPMENT
Ewry ·18:M0nths 52 'Rods Are Removed During Overhiul; COnt1ln1r1 C1n Wlthatand Cr11he1
' ' ' I
.. "'·t1· tt' ·· · · ;s .. ·m
0
' I ~I.) ' • i .· I
Scientists Hold Forum While Crews . Busy at Work
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of 1111 Ol llf l"U1t Sf11f
While large crews of specialists ,were
busy at San Onof re refueling a nuclear
reactor and rebuilding turbines Thursday
a panel of scientists in San Clemente
spent hours rebuild ing the image of
nuclear po wer for a group of 11ewsmen.
The semina r, which offered nearly
unlimited questioning of a panel or scien-,
tists at the San Clemente Inn, tou.ched
hard on earthquake factor!: in nuclear
generation, nuclear health aspects. saff:ty
of reactors and handling and disposal of
radioactive waste.
During the day's conferences crews at
the San Onofre Nuclear Genera ting Sta-
tion - a plant under siege of sorts by the
~eople's Lobby -were rebuilding a
massive turb ine and auxiliary syN,ems
dealing with conventional generating
machinery.
Simultaneously speclal!sts dressed In
su rgeon's gai'b were winding up the
refueling of 52 spent fuel rods in the reac-
tor itself.
The month·long routine shutdown Ls
~leaty Caper 11!most over.
The speakers al the day's talks. not
geared specifically to generating news
stories, but instead to help educate
writers on the subject, are artlllated with
the Atomic Jndustrlar Forum. Man HeUl in Illegal Steak Sales
Dropping by a Corona del Mar tailor
shop , a Torrance salesman allegedly ped-
dling his leftover steaks and hamburger
at bargain basement prices wound up in
a bit of stew Thursday night.
Frederick W. "Unde rdog" Kook, 22,
was subseq uently arrested and booked in-
to Newport Beach City Jail on suspicion
of illegal sales of meat, Section 12024 of
the State Business & Professions Code.
Orange CountY has 1.5 million residents
and more than 50 tailor shops.
The lone customer when poor Underdog
-who didn't explai n his nickname to
police -entered Purdue 's Tailors, 3637
E. Coast Highway, was none other than
William Fitchen.
He. is the Orange County sealer of
weilhta and measures, who ls directly
responsible for countywide enforcement
of such state laws.
"Anybody want to .buy any meal?''
Kook WU quolad U Mying.
Fltcben ldenlllled blmsell and demand-
ed Kook do the same, asserting the
suspect claimed to be a John lfenry
Jones. but didn't have any identifi cation
papers on him.
The state weights and measu res co ntrol
evecutive then escorted Kook out lo a
Lowe ry's Meats truck parked al the curb,
where he allegedly tried to hljhtai.1 it
with the harr.burger.
Fitchen snatched the keys out of the Ig-
nition and kept the 11x root, ahi: inch Kook
in custody, while a tailor and seamstress
listed as witnesses summoned Patrolman
Larry Gabriel.
The officer took Kook for booking at
5:45 p.m. while Fltcben conliltated &tree
cartorui of meat be laid bore oo mark.logs
Of we.!ght, another atate Jaw violation.
Defendant Kook was finally released on
$190 bail , pending arraignment on the
misdemeanor charge next week In
Harbor Judicial District c.ourt. ,
City o{ficiala ailo plan to proaecute
Underdog !or peddling wllbout a ~-·
The seismic !actor of the plant, and
particularly those affecting San Onofre
took a spotlight f()f' a time as Dr. Craig
B. Smith, a UCLA allsistant engineering
professor, pointed out tests made on
many nuclear installations to determ ine
their ability to withstand quakes.
Smi th stresaed that close lnspectlon1 at
Sa11 Onofre after the Feb. 9 Sylmar
earthquake sliowed ab!Olutely no pro-
blems with any systems at the reactor.
In relative terrrtll, he said, the San
Fernando temblor was 1'minor," and
several nuclear lmtallaUons closer to the
epicenter than San Onofre withstood the
shock just as well.
Ooe at UCLA, be 11ld, had only some
minor cracb In office buildlng1, but
crucial 1y1tem1 fared extremely well.
Smith pointed out that 8ttfl tests in-
volve the ute of speclal vibration equip-
ment at many pofnts of a reictor com·
p~ex and through mathematical eX1'Mion
of the ttsf r'tsultii, performances aurinc
a ma jor quake can be projected With "en-
Joaquin ·Trustees Adopt couraging accuracy."
At midpoint In 1!Je clay'1 dilCU¥iOlll
tcientista and utWty •Ides ~conducted a
guided tour or lhe generating ataUon wfth
particular emphallll on lhe refueling
1h1ge of 'opeuUona. • 1 ' ' . St~eamlinecl Meeting Pla11 At one comer of the larfe ~pin
1tood aevera l flatbed tn.icka ladea with
larse lead and 1te:eJ capsulesi-eachreo9o tarcln• -• rod of rp«1t vrllllum futl rt-
A ntW system~ deslgned 'to eliminate
the somtllmes "carnival atmosphere' of
controver11al meetings -hat been
adopled by ftil•l<e• of the Sin Joan
Elemritary ~1 Dl~ct.
The boon! nieelinl procedureo apply lo
the boar~., !he dl1trlct staff, and the
public. The procedu're wa11 adopted dyr-
tDg a mettlng this week lhat wa1
dlSrUpled by cat calla and clapping dur-
ing ·dlacuasion of aU-yur school.
I1rue1 of Importance WW be iptroduced
al the meotirig wflh a clt.&r undenlalld-
fllt 'llllt a decisi<n will ·not ht reached
untll' tllil. -meeting.. '
cen\ly removed from the roactor. to mate commenta. Thi>ae cont1iners, accofdlpg. IO Dr.
·Any member di th&· pilbllc wfahlng lo · Morton L Goldman,. a• apeclallit In· fuel
speak'.on an·agenda lt.enYor BD •ltein niot ' dlapoJal,. ctn wlt.hatand • "lncrtcUb'e
on the ·agenda' wllf be r<qulted lo'!llJ odt al<.,..•" without .oo..tng l.Ugue,
''can! !><fore lhe'lneetfllg. ' · · He ~d that the -conlalner~ wblch,
On <till> card wlll be Uated the-·· UJUally are tn1eked to llllnol.8 where-the
name, add.rt:••. phorie number. topic, and wute ii p~euod, can eaally wJthltand
wfto1 they tepreseht ·(either lherriRlvet crashu or explosive 1hoc:b.
or a group). "lf tomeone really .wanted. le blow one
Audience commenlf1, #1n be made· in, up," be said, "thty could pfpbabl)' ... do It
the 'Or'det iftat the card11 art filed . wlth a mas1lv~ amount ot explo1lvu, but
'"1e mat1'r wlll'then be accei>lfd by lt'i doubtful,': he observt.I.
the boird a'nd referred for· actJon to (the M"tong the day's 1peak.er11 bealdt1 Or.
nest meeun,. ' Smith and Dr. Goldman wm: Dr. Noruian
At the ltCOnd meeting each board C. Rasmussen. profes.qr of nuclear
mi!mber will have an opportunity to e~lnetrln1 at· Ma1sachusetts lNtitute of
make a prepartd 1ta-.nt followed by TechOOlogy (MIT) and Dr. Leonard I
Today's Fl•••
N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
Ca11didate
Would See
If Au thentic
From \Vire Services ..
NE W YORK -A former ronsullnnl to
lloward llughes made an offer before a
grand jury today to read the manuscript
of a pu~ported Hughe~ nu tobiography
wit h a vie w toward judginp its a.uthen·
tlcl ty. .
"I would be able to say If the book
were authentic or pot." adde d John
Meier, 38, who was a scfcnt!fic consultant
to Hughes until 1970.
lie is running for U.S. senator rrom
New Mexico as a Democratic candidate.
Meier 's lawyt"r, Robert M. Wys hak, told
newsmen the go vernment's response to
the offer to chtck the book 's authenticity
was that "'a lot nf pe ople would like to
read the manuscript."
··we told the U.S. Rttomey that wo
would be available U they wanted Mr.
Meier to re ad it.~ Wyshak added.
In a prepared stalen1en t distributed
After his one-hour grand jury appearance
Meler sa id he never met the book ';
author. Clifford Irving. or the latter's
wife, Edith.
. "l do not have access to any personal
fi les of Howard Hughes," the statement
went on. 1'When I rf!lllgned my pnaltlon In
Nevada. I severed all connectk>n1 with
th e Hughes or1anluUoa. I h 1 v 1 no
knowledge of any computarlucl I&
formation about Howard Hugbi1."
There have been •uggest1on1 that com-
puterized Information on Hughes m1y
have been leaked by one of hta 1lde1 to
Irving, ror use in writing the purported
eutoblography. A voice ldentlfJed 1a
Hugh es in 1 telephone interview h11
denied ever talking to Irving.
There were other developments Jn the
bizarre case:
-The New York Times today publlshed
what Jt said were e:tcerpts from lhe con·
!rovcraial autobiography, but lltreased
thRt the ma terial "could have e-0me from
previously published anecdotes" about
the recluse bllllonalre.
-Federal authorltlea said they may In.
ltiate e~tradltlon procee<i.lngs against
Richard Susklnd, a collaborator with Irv-
ing on the autobiography Jf Suskind failed
to appear Monday before the federal
grand jury investlga tlng the case.
-Business Week Mag1u:ine reported
that part of the money McGraw·HIU paid
tor the book was invested ln American
securities by a Swiss bank. 1t the dJrec-.
lion or the all'lhor's wife , Edith. The
report d!d not specify the amou nt.
The Ti n1es also sa id today the excerpts,
vbtalned fro m a source familiar with Irv-
ing's manu111crlpt. gave "no indication
... that Mr. llughes had a part In
preparing the manuscript."
Hughes comes across a" a bitter man
whose language WI vulgar, the Tlmea 1ald.
The account said he wa1 ct1reles1 about
libeling other• and talked at length abou t
sexual explollt.
Jn one ex cerpt, Hughe1 was quot&d 11
1aylng he purpoaely leaked facts about an
alleged '400,000 payment made to the
then Vice President Richard M. Nlxon In
the hopes of getting help for h11 problem1
with Tr8ns World ~lrllnes.
''Nobody was ral1lng a hand to help
(Bee IRVING, Pare !)
0r .. ,.
. Welitller
Those high clood1 over the Soulb.
land will cle1r by Slturday, mU-
lng way !or a pleasant -
with 1llghtly wanner lempen-
. Hight along the beach ill rllln( to
ee Inland. Lowa 3Me.
INSmE TODAY
Tht N •WJJO'l'I Harbor A rt
Mu1eum hoa lS of Edward .Hop.
per'• pafn~ng1 on dl>J>loV tlila
month tti the main gotlery, and
101ne othf'r fntereatfng tmGtt tl>
hlbftt fn the entrance gallery.
Stt Pag< 21 of todav'• WHkend-
tr /01' pklure1 and •to'll.
L.""'ltT• 1 ···""' . Ctllfolt1111 I
Cltt&lllM ......
C.W.1« JI ,_ .
DMlfll '-tk ft ' .. ,,.,"' ,.,,. ' "!ft•-IJ•lt ,..,. ftle llKHlf f -" ~·Lt..., ,, -.
-.... -'"' ,..... ,. ................... ..__ .
............ IHt
--1t ..... ...., ..... ~ ... , .. '''"..... .. --.... ·~..,..., . __ ,. .. ·--.. The ll<m will be !Ira! lnlroduced In •
1tafl report. Board membera wtU then
be SiV<D ID opportunity to Uk qtieftlont.
The p0bllc, at thll point, will bo allowed
1taternen.U-tlO'lft •ud• members Who Sq1n, the dlredor of eovtronmmtaJ "·
CW MN llOAQIJll', Pace JI medlcilla at lhe Palo Alto Medical Clllllc. ~-----------'
' ;,
T
\
•
~ D"1l Y PILOT SB frill>J', f.....,. ... 1912
How Yon Voted on Sehools FAA Hearing
Citizens Blast
TUSTIN UNION HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT VOTE RETURHS BY f'REC INCT
TRUSTEI RACE
~ ~
t ,... • ,... • • • c -•• l .-·-c ·-. -· ~l ·-. 8'~ ¥-c~ • • • • •• • • • • -· •• .3l o..t: Ou WU .... :l :l
E. Irvine Irvine School ....... ····· ...... 386 13 83 51 5 9
The Meadows ........••..••••..• 439 16 60 35 2 25
El Tor o Aliso Sc hool ................... 591 83 173 163 9 33
Olivewood School .............. 427 78 111 92 l4 30
Getchell Residence ..•.•........ 477 127 Ill 100 3 44
Laguna Hill s Leisure World .... ' ........... ' 319 25 111 36 7 36
Leis ure \Vor ld 12 ....•••..••...• 402 32 202 42 2 23
303 47 164 17 I 15
Lei sure \Vorld 1 1 -...... ' ..... 35 5 45 161 35 3 26
Leisure \Vorl d ~3 .....•.... '. 336 40 149 32 2 :w
Leisure \Vor ld DR 2 .....•...... 216 19 102 16 I 29
Leisure \Vorld DR 1 .... , , .•.... 298 49 109 40 4 20
Leisure World 2 DR l ...•...... 146 15 56 13 0 16
Leisure World DR 3 ......• , .•.. 255 35 99 24 2 16
Valencia School .............•.• 407 152 73 66 8 31
Le isure World ..........•....... 264 20 106 35 4 22
Leisure World ...... ......... 312 33 132 43 1 24
Jrvlne Uni versity Park School ........ 412 3 55 49 I 6
Reaser Residence . ' .. ' ......... 571 10 86 69 6 34
Turtle Rock Sc hool ............. 575 10 79 57 I 15
University Fire Station ..•...... 92 0 3 32 2 2
Mission Viejo Del Cerro School ............... 428 117 111 90 0 26
Cordillera School .....•......•.. 272 35 99 60 3 16
O'Neill School .................. 476 49 166 120 7 22
lligh School ' ...... ····· ......... 399 67 91 104 6 32
La Paz School .. , .........••. , .. 248 43 58 70 3 24
Trabuco Trabuco School ........ , .....•.. 54 I 13 11 4 4
Tustin Wallace School ................. 251 12 112 41 3 22
Arroyo School ..........••... , .. 509 43 108 98 2 110
Tucker Residence ............•. 333 21 110 53 4 68
Lambert Residence ....•.•....• 341 21 99 62 6 68
Saddleback Lodge .............. 184 18 62 26 12 30
Estock 5chool ................ 396 17 119 70 4 77
Administration Building ........ 204 21 72 21 7 28
Nelson School .................. 556 36 148 200 5 59
Beswick School ................. 163 10 45 44 4 12
San Juan School . , ..•.. , ... , ...• 3136 31 68 70 3 95
Morrow School ........• , •...•.•. 580 35 120 119 7 143
Red Hill School .....•.•••.•.... 582 30 143 84 5 156
Sycamore School ......•..•. , ..• 475 36 103 73 6 147
Del Norte School ' .............. 540 37 122 110 9 98
Columbus Tustin Int .. , ......... 538 27 109 74 9 147
Imperial Clubhouse ....... , . , .. 218 14 75 49 5 33
Ab.!entee .................................•.•.... 90 4 31 14 3 11
rota!s .... ' .................... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15806 1577 4429 2710 195 1914
SU Miiiion Sl.tt T•x
Bond• Mex Im um
Z .~ .. 0 "' 0 w w _,.,. >-z >-z
196 262 120 236 146
265 297 131 268 158
52 419 168 380 208
43 270 151 233 186
39 367 108 334 139
42 156 146 132 163
21 104 250 87 268
24 81 202 69 222
30 173 168 147 185
20 159 143 134 161
16 95 110 90 115
22 135 144 !l5 165
17 83 58 75 65
29 132 121 103 132
36 259 141 244 154
19 126 124 107 142
16 146 157 136 163
277 305 101 289 118
327 391 169 375 182
3137 423 140 402 158
32 89 3 88 3
32 310 Jl5 270 154
21 170 100 130 134
51 299 165 265 202
43 293 107 272 123
23 169 77 147 97
5 23 29 20 33
37 118 130 95 152
99 305 203 264 241
47 183 148 158 171
51 151 186 138 199
15 77 106 63 115
70 186 208 168 223
23 73 127 58 141
73 319 235 274 281
28 86 77 77 85
77 21 0 174 172 207
JIB 345 231 287 287
126 301 269 262 311
71 258 213 232 236
106 322 216 290 244
132 283 247 267 267
21 100 116 82 132
16 53 35 46 42
3173 9106 6367 8081 7310
S.n JN~n ElertL
District$%. T•x R•I•
_,
< .. 0 ... w 0 >-z ...
256 129 386
290 145 439
375 211 591
251 174 427
339 138 477
146 172 319
99 245 402
69 231 303
156 194 355
158 178 336
95 118 214
122 171 298
77 69 146
105 148 255
256 150 407
125 133 264
141 160 312
289 122 412
372 195 571
430 144 575
88 4 92
263 162 426
129 140 272
263 209 476
261 134 399
151 97 248
27 21 48
5333 :im 9452
Chino Airport
By JACK BROBACK
Of lltt1 D•llr ,.l,_T Sltlt
North Orange County residents hauled
ou t their antiaircraft guns Th ursday
night .and verbally shot down the pro-
posed Chlllo Hills jet airport.
Laguna llills .spokesmen, however,
were on hand to support the concept.
A C'rowd of 600 to 700 persons filled
Valencia lligh School auditorium to tell a
panel of Federal Avia tion Administration
offici als that they \Yanled no part of the
jet-age facility in their neighborhood.
Col. John Lohman. project manager ror
Chino Hills Airport Complex Inc. told the
hostile aud ience of pla ns for the fa cility
including an industrial park on 2,500
acres of hilly land north of Yorba Llnda.
1'he site is surrounded by 25 ,000 acres or
aJmost uninhabited area.
"The proposed airport will fill a need
for n1os t of the people or Ora[lge County
and will add gre atly to the economic
growth or the area ," he sa id stressing the
im po rtance of future air freight service.
FAA official Don Davis .said written
comments will be accepted until Feb. 11.
l!e se t no time for a final decision on ac·
ceptabil ily of the project by the fed eral
agency which is necessary for stale air
proval of construction.
Thursday night's hearing was billed to
••gather facts relevant to the effects or
the proposed airport upon the safe and
efficient use of navigable air space."
Davis cautioned that testimony on the
effect on the environment would not be
considered but he allowed many speakers
to discuss that facet.
They urged that a federal-st.ate study
be made of the environmental aspects or
the jet-age facility.
Brian Douglass, .Fullerton Airpart
manager and a member of the county
Airport Land Use Commission Jed 6ff
with a .stinging technical condemnation.
racility Is pl anned within two mJlH Of the
site."
Sam Cooper, North Oran11e t.ounty
Airport Commitee: "We told the county
supervisors la st year we .art apposed to
this project. Col. Lohman said hl.!1 firm
has hired many consultants to chtek the
viability of the project. The cou nty hired
Pereira and Parsons and their repGris
were full of errors. Consultants are not
infallible."
Mayor llenry \Vedaa or Yorba Linda :
"Our city opposes for several reasons -
noise, ()vercrowded airspace, unrea\l!tic
fli ght paths, poss ible crashes in inhabited
areas and an unfavorable Southern
Californi a Assoc iation of Governments
report.''
Robert Fennell . Placentia mayor and
president of the Orange County League or
Cities: .. It is a different decision you
face. We need air transport in Souther n
Cali fornia and the 1;1nd owners have a
right to develop !heir prope rty. The
1970 F'AA preliminary report said th r:
site wa s boxed in by El Toro. Lon ~
Beach, Los Angeles, Ontario and other
-existing airports. The busiest Los Anxele!t
airport incoming traffic path from the
east is within five miles of this site."
There were a few voices raised in fav or
of the project.
Only 3 Members
Had Affiliation
Only thrtt of the seven Irvine planning
adviso ry committee members appointed
th is week by the Irvine City Council have
affiliations with the environmental action
organization Irvine Tomorrow.
It was learned today that Mrs . Ellen G.
Freund of Sierra Bonita was not ;1J-
filiated with the IT group and is not no1v
a member.
From Page I Carpenter Bill
Would lricrease
Spending Tot.al
From Page I
"The Fullerton runway take of!
heading and that of the proposed Chino
Hills facility would meet headon," he
charged. "Our instrument landing system
turn is five miles out, just seven miles
from the !LS for the proposed airport.
Interference would be inevitable."
Mrs. Freund today reiterated her posi·
tion on civic involvement as she stated it
to the council during Its 10-hour interview
session on Saturday. She noted she has
restricted her involvement in community
organizations in order to keep "from
spreading myself too thin. I'd rather be
an effective member of one organization
than be inef!ectual in se veral organiza·
tion!!I."
ANALYSIS ...
tu rate muimum were in Leisure World
and Tusti n.
Mrs. Elizabeth "Lee" Sicoli of Irvine
swept every Irvine precinct by a wide
margin except the University Flre Sta·
lion polling place where Tustin tea cher
Steven Fabula lied her vote count.
Fabula ran lhlrd in Tuesday's race for
the year and • half term on the high
school board with 2,710 votes, but led the
field In only three precincts.
Tu.rtln con~rvative R e p u b 11 c a n
Douglas Moran, who had the backing or
Jrv!ne City Councilman Henry Quigley in
advertisements that circulated In Tustin
newspapers, carried only three preclncl!,
all ln Tustin. He r eceived a total of 1,91 4
voles.
Telephone engineer Dana Carkey was
the top vote getter in only one Mission
Viejo precinct, Del Cerro School, though
he led the field tn one Laguna Hills and
one Et Toro polling place.
Voters ln the San Joaquin Elementary
Distrlct·s successful bid for a $2.85 per
$100 of assessed va lue maximu m tax rate
also voted for the high school Issues.
The tax dverrlde was passed 5,333 to
3,994 1s 16 elementary district prtclncts
gavt it majority support. Ten precincts,
all In Laguna Hills Leisure World, voted
against th! tax rate increasl!! from this
ye.ar's $2.09 per $100 of assessed value
levy.
Again, vote.rs In El Toro and Irvine
supported the school funding measure in
every prtelnct in the areas which have
bttn plagued by shortages of classroom
space and double se ssion1.
•
DAllY PllOT --..__
c-•-
H•Uft•.._. -·-s-Cl a•••
OA.MGI COAIT MLIM41M9 ~NtY
••t.•rt N. WtN ,.,. • .., ....... ,1111111.iw
J,,i: It. C•rlrr
.,.. '"' ......... co-.i ......
Tk.tt K,,,11 ·-· tH"'" A. .M.r~i .. ,_,,.,,.... lAli""
Q.,t .. H. t... •1u..n1 P. Ntlf
,__, ....... h ... -c....-:-......... ~ ........ '-di! JUI ~ ........... u.-..o: m ,..,,,., •-Mutt:c I I a.di: 1"1S lowlll ......_.. .. c-. ......... c... ...
DltLT~, ........ "......_ .. ·-··~· .................. -...... .., .................... i;..-...... ....... ....,, '*" ........ _.. ............ .,....., .... a.--w
~-..::... r!:d,.:. .. .:::. ~-;
..... .., ....... Qilll ....
, t ,, m•> MMJtt
Q rw .,, .... ,, '4W71
s. ce r ••Al.,., a
Ythf\ 1r 4f'l.44lt
~ """ or.,. a. ............... . °""'911111, ... -....-. .. .......... __... _..., ............. , .... ....... .., -.• "'"' ............... ,... .................. ---.. ·---=' E' ~ ..::--., •,!.'" _., ... " .......... ~.
,
State Senator Dennis E. Carpenter (R·
Newport Beach) ill ()nce again asking the
Leglslature to consider a bill allowing
echool dlstrlcts to spend more of their
voter-approved bond moneys than the law
now allows.
Presently, California &cbool districts
may spend construction bonds ()n1y up to
an amount equal to five percent or their
total district assessed property valuation.
ln districts such 11 the San Joaquin
Elementary District the law has meant a
delay in building needed schools for
growing pupil enrollments -even though
the voters hav e approved bond moneys
for construction.
Thursday, Senator Carpenter I.~
troduced a bill that would increue the
spending maximum to aeven percent of
the total property value. Carpenter's bill
would provide that two-thirds of the
voters in the di.strict should approve such
a hike in the bond spending ceiling,
however.
Nearly two year1 ago, two-thlrds of the
voters In the San Joaquin district ap-
proved a $15 million bond Issue. To date,
only $2 million has been spent on school
construction, despite a pressing need for
new schools.
If the Legislature approves Carpenter's
proposed law, another vote of the people
could free more money from !he
district's remaining $13 million of un1
spent bonds to build schools.
Both the Increased ceiling and the two.
thirds district vote to allow the increased
bond spending would bt temporary
measurts, Carpenter said. The laws
would remain ln effect only untll July 1,
1975.
Similar leglslatk>n was killed in the
assembly EducaUon Committee last
year, a Carpenter aide aald. The bills are
aimed at providing temparary relief to
dlstrlcl!: in California with fa:st·growlng
enrollments.
San Joaquin ls among that list cf
d~trict.. and expecll It. 11.200 pupU
enrollment of Ulla year to double In the
next five years.
The Carpenter measures are SB 174
and SB 178.
Science Course
Program Studied
A program to -.lin•le ttclence
courses between bi&h IChooh •nd S.d-
dlebact CoUege hu been Implemented by
college olllcllls.
ln.structon !rem the collep, under the
leadenhip of lclence de p a r t m e n t
chairman Frank Scllll'Ot.a, have rnet
wilh instructo" from Mlaslon Viejo Hifh
School ond lulurt .. UIOlll an ochedulod
with olb<r hip llChoolt In the coll•p
di>trlct.
"A united effort by ol1 ocl"1<e ln-
1tructon can provldt tht besl plamWI&,"
Sclarrottl noced, e:rplaintn1 the procram
would help lnttar•te the collep pn>
gnms with U-llUdenll have alru<Qo
bad ol • hlllf> tcllool levtl.
He alJo notod !hot be II condlJctlnr •
wles ol t<SSlom with lllte coD•p IDCI
unlvmilJ olllc:lll• to <moolh 0. tronol·
lloa bet ..... -·-·· ............. upper di•lliorl obld1.
SAN JOAQUIN TRUSTEES . • • A steady stream of city, school and
homrowner association leaders followed
Douglas, all in agreement that the facili·
ly should not be bu ilt.
have rilled out cards. At the end of each
public: presentation board members will
be allowed to question the speakers.
At the close of these statements the
board president will make a statement,
followed by a call for a motion,
discussion and the vote.
The policy does not provide any time
for members ot the district staff to ques-
tion speakers or rebut any misin-
formation that might be inadvertenlly
provided.
Other parts of the board's new pro.
cedures include:
-Board and staff members shall
channel their communications to the
board through the superintendent.
-All items on the Jgenda that are
there at the request of a board member
shall be referred through the president of
the board who will develop the agenda
with the superintendent.
-A vice president, representing an op.
From Page 1
IRVING ...
me ," Hughes is said to have complained.
"They ~·ere glad. I'm talking about
Washington. They were glad to see me ill
trouble. So I leaked the de tails to Drew
Pearson."
Pearson, the late columnist, wrote an
article during the 1960 presidential cam-
paign, ln which Nixon was a candidate,
that the Hughes Tool Co. had loaned
$205,000 to his brother, F. Donald Nixon
of Newport Beach, Calif.
"Now whether it actually turned the
tide of the election or not, I don't know/'
Hughes is quoted a1 saying.
Jn other excerpts, Hughes allegedly
called farmer aide Robert Maheu a "very
Icy calculating man" and said slnaer·ac-
tor Frank Sinatra "wu Juat taking ad-
vantage or my prestige to bolster h1I
wanlng prestige."
In two part.I of the published ucerpt.,
the Times omitted what It uJd wtre
further derogatory remarks about Maheu
and a Jong section qi purported Hughes
discussions of aixuaJ exploits j n
Hollywood during the 1113111 Md IMOI.
Maheu llWlllfed HU(hu' •nluprlJe• In
Nevada for four yeert until his dismissal
in 1970. Sinatra hod llnancl•l lnleresi. In
Nevada cuiDOI until the 1tate took away
hll rambling llcentt. He wu a tttquent
performer •t Lu v .. u nl&htclube
before rttirlng.
Susklnd h Ille oozy penon .. far to ,.Y
he wilnessql • mee!Jna be-H\llllel
and 1rvlng •t which anupected .,,.
counter H.,i.ea. ~ to Susklnd, ol·
lmd him• pnme lrun a peper bq.
.iwould you lib a pnmet" SU.kind
quot.d the lndultrl•lllL ''Go ohead, lako
or.e. They're orcanic."
The meetliig alltgtdly toot place In •
Palm Springs. Calli. hotel 1ut JWl<.
Susklnd, ... u ... 00 the Sponlall lslond
ol M1llorco and lndlcotod tarller ho
would not volunllrlly •ppur before the
grand jury to d!S<>Jll the -•nd the
wh<naboot.. of f!I0.000 paid by McGraw-
8111 to "H.R. H\llhes ...
But Tlnurday Suotlnd WH tubpo<nHd
to 1ppear wllh notes, oornl]>Ond<ncc ond
olhtr matmo!a re!o~na to the oll .. ed
•utoblolf•plly, ad tod•y be Mid ho
woold ·-· I
posing viewpoint from
shall be elected.
the president,
-All ltems of major lmpcrtanc e will
be introduced at one meeting and not
acted upon until the second.
-Executive sessions shall only be call,
ed during the course of a regular or
special meeting.
Dr. Ralph Ruth, board chairman,
P\ace11tia Unified School District: "Our
board is unanimous in opposition . The
proposed airport would be just four miles
north of Yorba Linda. Our schools are not
soundproofed and a new elementary
The Da ily Pilot regrets the erroneou.t
impl ication that a majority of lhe plan·
ning commission appointees were drawa
from IT.
Sale Continues
OFFICERS CHEST BY HE NREDON •.. NOW ON SALE
OFFICUS CHlST DlSK
:tr~rs489.
f.
Salec.t g roups from H •nrti:fo"
-H•ritag• -Or•••I • • , 011
sal• now. Uphol1t•ry floor ••rn·
ple1 en i•I• include • , , H•n•
radon -Sherrill -Marg•
Car1on l othars. Lamp•, pie ·
f ur•s ' a cc••1ori•s era als•
rsduc.ad.
COCICTAIL CHIST
SAL! '189 PllCI , •
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL-HERl1A'7E -KA RAST AN
NIWPOIT STOU OPlll fllt.\Y "Ill. t
NEWPORT llACH
172l' Westcllff Or., 642-20»
"PEN FRIDAY 'TIL 9
"· INTERIORS
P1 or-1on.i lntorlor
D11fpW1 Av1ll•lts.-.AID
.... ftl ........ ., 0...,. c •• , ••• 1UJ-
LAGUNA llACH
345 -~~ ~s'fhwlJ ~ I
•
'
I
I
I
_,,/ ,,,,,: I
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
-For a Safer Freeway
News that the State Division of Highways will in·
stall safety rails around freeway bridge abutments in
the South Orange County area is welcome indeed.
Because of the accident record along the freeway
in this area, any news of ~afety measures bas to be wel·
come.
In th is instance the state plans to open bids this
month on a $16,000 project to provide tubular steel ~ails
along concrete bridge abutments, piUars and bridge
ends.
. The project is designed to reduce the :i;everity of
smgle-car rollisions with fixed objects.
In recent years, several deaths and multiple injury
accidents have resulted from this type of high·speed
crash.
There is another aspect of the problem that is still
far from solution. The section of freeway in this area
is one of the few in the county without center·divider
barriers to keep vehicles that are out of control from
hurtling into on-coming lanes.
They should be considered.
Squirrels in the Park
The popular ground squirrels oi Laguna's l·teister
Park are once more in the midst of a small storm in·
volving their devoted fans and the city parks depart-
ment.
The sq uirrels, exhibiting the disc riminating taste
that befits year.round Art Colony residents, like to set
up housekeeping in the cliff that extends from the park
proper down to the beach.
Unfortunately, their co mplex maze of burrows,
when filled with rainwater. tend to undermine the cliff.
This hazard, CQffibined \Vith natural erosion, requires
frequent and costly slloring·uf operation• tJr the pub departmen~ And, in an e£for to keep one. JU~p a.head
o.f the squi rels, poison is used to control their popula·
t1on.
This leads to an outcry from animal loven. who
paint out that the squirrel decimation is taking pJac.e
JUSl yards from the marine preserve where tidepool
inhabitants are legally protected.
The parks people say the only alternative is a g)ant
wall which \vould be expensive and ugly -and also
would wipe ou t the squirrel homes.
Solutions to the periodic di.lemma would be wel·
corned . -
P1tblic's Right to Know
A proposaJ--by the executive committee of the ~·
guna Beach Chamber of Commerce to ban the working
press. th erefore the public. from its mon thly ~ard ~eel·
ings would appear to be not only poor public relations,
but al so rather difficult to defend.
The sugge stion did not seem t<l be too well receiv·
ed by some members of the chamber board and may
mean they will continue the policy of open board meet·
in gs.
By its own choice, the chamber has accepted the
responsibility of administering $36.200 of public funds
this year, of which $13,900 goes toward the cost of of·
fice salaries and expenses.
Thus the chamber has become a quasi-public bcxfy
and the people of the community are entitled to be.
kept informed of its activities.
A "public be damned" attitude is never good policy,
When public funds are involved it is quite inexcusabl4S,:
• ,,,_, .._ I '
Co11ld Lose Power and Even His Head
Sadat Foes Are Internal
WASHINGTON -President Anwar
Meaning of
'Survival of
The Fittest'
••
J Sadat is teetering precariously on the
edge of a furiously seething internal
eruption -which could blast him out of
pcn ... er, ant.I possibly even cost him his
hear!.
the extremist civilian elements, and vice
versa.
This fundamental weakness is due
directly to the deliberate policy of the late
Carnal Nasser and his successor and
long-time inLimate Sadat.
• .
l
• • •
That is the real in·
side reason for the
Egvplian leade.r's
.sudden trip to Mos-
cow .
it is a desperate
attempt to bolster
himself against h i s
increasingly nwner-
ous and aggressive
hom e enemies. Sa-
:lars most dan$erous foes and crisis
right now are in his own .country and not
Israel.
Those violent Cairo student riots and
iemonstrations were just the visible tip
~f a deep-raging connagration.
Behind the students are military and
lllra·nationalist elements.
IN FACT, they instigated the student
1utbreaks and played a ke y behind-the-
1cencs role in keeping them churning
Jespite strenuous government effort:; to
~ue.11 them, first by conciliatory promises
ind then by heavy·h~nded fo rce.
It is highly significant that when tough
ruppression became necessa.ry, Sadat
·esorted to pol!Ce reserves and not army
;roops.
Reason: t 11 e military-particularly
1ounger officerrwere not deemed
·eliable.
Also not reported at the lime : the
~gyptian airforce was grounded.
Lending a decisive hand in that
'precautionary" cra ckdown were the
Russian MIG fighter-bomber crews and
antiaircraft missile battalions -number·
ing more than 10,000 men and officers.
STERN WORD went out from Sadat's
beleaguered headquarters that the Soviet
forces were prepared to instantly go into
action against any move by Egyptian air
elementa to support the threatening
student& or • coup atternpt-thf: real aim
of the turbulent ruror.
Presumably, Sadat had Kremlin ap-
proval to sound thi! extraordinary warn-
ing.
Whether he did or not, it worked . The
Egyptian airforce meekly staY.ed ground·
ed as ordered, although it is an open
secret ln Cairo that the most vehement
dissidents among the military are
airmen-passionately itching for revenge
for ·tbeir shattering de feat by the Israelis
in the 1967 conflict.
lt would have been quite a spectacle lf
the airmen had ignored S a d a t ' s
ukue--with Russian-manned MIGs and
AA batteries tangling with Egyptian
pilots and planea.
CRUCIAL WEAKNESS of the anti-
Sadat forces is lack of an Olll..rtanding
leader.
There is no ooe among the!Me basically_
disco rdant elements with either the
11talure or charisma to unite them 11uf-
ficiently to mount • widely.based putsch
against Sadat. The military don't trust
Both leaders made it a fixed rule lo
weed out potential rivals. That was done
in a number of ways-ranging from
more.Or-less permanent house arrest to
outright execution.
Sadat is not without powerful sup.
porters. both military and civilian.
That ls why he survived the mass 1tu-
dent demonstrations-with the 1trongly
implied aid of the Russian forces. ...
A FORMER GENERAL, Sadat has in-
fluential supporters amon1 the oidir
commanders , particularly army and
navy. Similarly. Egyptian businessmen
are heavily behind him . Most of them
privately have no Btoma ch for another
r1.1und of fighling with Israel. They want
t'l cash in on the extensive electrification
and increasing industlialii.ation resulting
from the completion of the Aswan Dam,
Also they sorely miss the once many
millions of tourists' dollars.
In Moscow. Sadat is seeking an im·
pressive fa ce·saver with which to placate
his war-clamoring critics and othe r
malcontents.
This razzle-dau.le is 'lirtually certain In
be an announcement that Russia wil l
undertake a large.scale program tn
enable Egypl to become self-sufficient in
weapons production. Last wee. k •
11uthoritat.ive Washington s o u r c es
"leaked" report.! that the U.S. has agreed
to do that for Israel -1nclud l ng
supersonic war planes.
Military Critics Aid Enemy
Tbe Elk• Ma1•a:iDe:
It ls difficult to conceive Of .-greater
langer to this nation than the u"warrant·
id attacks on what some people tum our
'mlli~-indastriel complex." They vilify
be military as "warmongers" whose.only
()ncem I.I providini our armed forces
'ith a means to practice the science and 1rt of killing, and the devalopment ·of new
var-making material.
The lnsldious part of these attacks is
hat they do ex1etly what the enemies of
•Ur repubUc want . . . they undermine
11.lr nr.tlon and lta prepared.nets c~p11HiU·
y.
The Communists warit our countr)' to
all into the hands of those whb wOu1d
leny ffftdom of thought, s~b. n!<I• ..
oent Ind peraonal liberty. They .ha ..
~rltten slid 11id m1ny tunes that they
rill overtttrow our natkm by force and
1iolence . . . not nectlSl{llY from
oaAMlll COAST I . " DAILY PILOT
Rof>ert.ff:·w • ..i, Mll.ll<r
TMma Kcnril., Edit.or
Albm W.Batu
Editorial pCig. EdUor
Th< -18 .. al the IJollYI. rllot aeeU to lnfmn and stlmu--late ~. by P1!M1Ubl Odl _ ..... -.. --mcnt.arY on topics ol tnla'elt Cid
slKnltLcence. by ~tnc • forum for llie uprtulon ot our 1'Mlkn'
ordn'°ns. and bf JlttMflllnc tJw dlv~rw ~ d. lnfonntd ~
gM'"\fttl and tpol&#mftl on ~
or Wday.
Friday, FebrUl!'Y 4, 1972
wllllou~ but pr<ferably from wlthln .
JT lS AXIOMATIC that when serious
trouble arises, we must rely on the
military for protection. It is equally true
that no military organization can be suc--
ce1sfW wfthout <Close cooperation from in-
dustry. Why, then, should both groups be
victims of scurrilous attacts on their in--
Ugrlty, theirmotlves and practices as we
sit ldly by? We do not think our mem·
hershlp, dedicated to a strong and
healthy naUon, subscribes to s u c h a•
Ideology.
It appean to be the old Btory, "what
have you done for me Jat.ely ~" that
pteclpitatea the violent 1ction1 we see
and bear about on QOr college campuses.
A.nned forcts recnifters are t.hrowri orf
campwet Ooct physlooly auautted. 'The
ROTC Is · vfllfled, bulldlngs barned, and
U.. ~ th.-i off m11111 campuses. ' .
PEOPLE WOO· boast of their C<im·
monist phllosopblto ore not only pennft.
ltd ••. they m<even lnvll<dlo speak lo
l!Dllea• aud~'where they can spread
their vltuperlu6n 1g1lnst onr country
and everytlllng H atandl for . Some pro-
fessors Who openly oclqlowl<dp tlley ""'
Commllllili'or C<imm101lll sympalhlzera
-to ldl:h·our YQllh. secure In Ibo ltnowledll• thll they un'I be llttJd 1*au. of tbeir ''p>llUcal bellefl."
We do not advoc1te thought control
~ q uerclaed by Communllt •atiom
•'"bot -.do .... advocoi. ul<ndl/18
trmlatlons lo • "'l'yphold Mary" to l<loch
In ""' lcbool• on tho ofJ cb•n« ber In· fedloi!, wW not strflc• our cbDdren.
We _..u, 1bbor lhoR "ho i<MW·
1ng1y!-... -..., lo dod3• u.. draft'« -.rt,. !tom the mned fon:es .
~ 25,0I) lo J0100D are estl.rnattd to
-_ ... Quuido -.•. Ind Ihm
'
are more in other cowitries aucb 11
Sweden.
WE EVEN WITNESS the. sickening
sight or Politicians sharing the same plat-
form with neo-Jeftist1 I S they ea:hort all
who would listen to bring pressure on
Washington to extend amnesty to drtift
dodger! and deserters. To do so would be
to Insult every man in the 11rmed forces,
port.icularly those who d ie d while in
unllonn.
We will always protect .and defend our
right of di &sent .. , but we cannot con-
done Irrational, hy11terlaJ condemnation
of either our mititary or our Industries.
They helped make this nation the
greatest on earth. They will help KEEP
ttt11 the greatest nation on earth, despite
the: poisonous rhetorlc spewing from the
mouttis of the 'lleT'J small minority who
would see us become subservient to lhe
Communist pltilosopby ... a phltoaophy
which daUy 100W1 It ii weakening 1n tr.a
own heartland.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus l
Mr. Lorr accused Mr. Boyd of wt.
Ing agawt lh• NY<> Ploce IChool
bus n:iute becat11e Mra. Boyd wa1
a.gafmt It. 11 It too mean to point
out lllal Mrs. lo(r will benefit di·
reotly from it'!
-A. T. B.
1'1111 ..... ,....,.. ......... .....,, ... -It.,,.., fll>W II """ •• d a , ..... -... ....,. " • ..., .... Delft ,,...,.,
Some months ago, I mentioned that
most people have oo ldea of what
••survival or the fittest" means in a
biological sense -wrongly imagining it
means survival of the strongest or most
aggressive.
Since then qu.ite a few readers hav e
asked me to amplify aod explain
"survival of the fit.
test," and I am hap.
PY to do so. It means
simply that tho&e
species or members
of species. whieh are
best able to adapt to
changil'lg circum-
stances have t h t
greatest chance to
survive.
THE DINO.SAUR may have been the
"strongest'' of early creatures , and the
sabr~toothed tiger the ·•most ag-
gressive," but both 1pecies became ex-
tinct precisely bec~use they con~inued to
depend upon strength or ferocity at a
time when other qualities were more
necessary.
Let us consider modem man In thi11
context. In Japan today, traffic accidents
are the fourth leading cau11e of deatM;. in
all t,echnological countries, deaths by
violence are rising. 8nd mO!l of these 1re
accountable to the number of traffi c
deaths, &!I world population grows and
accidents grow along with It .
Now. accident! rise in 11 geometric rate
compared to population. That is, with
three autos only three encounters are
possible : with four autos. 11i• 11re possi.
b~; with fiv!. autos, nine; with sit alftos.
IS; and so on.
SO, AS THE WORLD reta more pebple
Md more-e111· and more tr.aff;c, the
))03Sibllity of violent death .by 1cc:tdent
goes up geometrically, and not just
arithmetically. When you double the
number o( earl, you far more thin dou·
ble the number of accidents.
Given WI ract, wbo then woukl be the
"fittest" 1Urvtvor1 or thl• fDOrm0\11
reducer In human population'? Tho1t who
are the · mOlt prudent, not the 1ttongest
or most agreuive. Thole who stay home
m011t, who drive ~ least, and who drive.
with the &"featest caution ind the futut
refle.1t11. AIJO, those who conawne the
least 1lcobol llld Ilk• tile few..i pills.
AND IN PAii' WARS, of C0\11'1<, we
kMw 11 I• fflullly tho "w<1lust" -
have ·1Un'1ved : the ttrongttl. hr-•ve11t.
heallhi<ll, youigeit men hi•• been killed
by tile mltuon1. lllde<d, ..... hiMrlllll
have l lJl&Mted that World W1r ll Wit ..,
fut In . .comtrw proctt<ly becluoe tbe
"nower'' of tbt upcomlnc eeneration waa
11iughl<red -men who mfchl h••<. led the~ countrltl .. ~""'"' 1n1eru1...,. ind
r..,.n lllln. tbi remnant left behind tl!e
lines.
Al any m.. we oeed lo andmllnd 11111
wrv\11,,i fol,... (fndJ.tclulJly Ind U I
spe<les) hos nothtn1 lo do •ith power or
aggreatw:ne11; fndud, these h • V"e.
be<ome safddol iiuo!Hles for m. '!'ht "111-
test" bumlM m thole. wbo are mo1t
wlllln1 lo l)lOdlly conduct.
Quotes
Jea1 U1n11l, L.A., u-lethlltt•e ladt'r
-"I 1tllf Hplre to polltlcsl offlct, In the
dlredlon !hit I can best do 1 job. a be«
ter job Ullft JOmeont: occupyine lhlt ol-
Ooe."
SPORTSMEN
Burke Hung Up
Over Cory's Hair
To lhe Edilor ·
Ou r ocean slinks irnm the dt'ad f1s.h
and birds killed by the modern indu::;1r1e s
of convenience. Our air 1~ like the ocean .
y,·e. may soon be like rhe fi~h 11nd b1rrl~
Apartments are spreading nvcr this land
like a fungus . I could gn on-taxes, Viet·
nam . , ,
However , everything 1~ 1rl rnnlrn1 Wr
have our represe.ntati'le~ to confidr In·
-like As:1emblyman Robert Burke ( R •
Hwi tlngton Beach) for Instance:
IT IS REALLY reassuring In knnw !h;:il
while all these majbr problem~ are con-
fronting u1, the Republican 1Rwmaker i.~
carryi ng on his own campaign lo unsr.sit
.Al.semblyman Kenneth Cory t D •
Anahei m!. The reason : Cory·,; ha ir
'covers hig collar: he ah10 wears boot~.
Hasn 't anyone informed AssemblymRn
Burke that hair and boot3 lie quite stil:
without the action of the individual wear.
ing them? Burke could judRe Cory •c·
cording to Cory's actions. But thst would
be too di fficult.
I wish 1 had the time to waste carrylnR
on meaningless campaign.~.
RON HAYD~N
Perullar Alrhemy
Tn the Editor ;
Help me : I am confu!:led! Our Pre~I·
dent h11 come nut with what sounds like
a more than reason11ble propos11I to end
the hostilities in Southeast Asi11 , .11nd
STILL we are bombarded with ·
"STOP THE KILLING !" The i<feR
5eems to be that by ~me. peculi11.r
alchemy of war, our unilateral and com·
plcte pullout will guarantee that the
North Vietnamese wlll never fire another
gun, toss a grenade. bury A civilian alive .
nor 11it the throat of a viUage leader .
Wi th no bombing to slow up the
lr8Rllfer or materiel from Russia and
China via North Vietnam to South Viet-
nam. Cambodia, and L101, tht: killing wlll
atop?
WJTlf NO FINANOAL aid and 11rm1t·
ment to the South Vietnamese, Cam-
bodians, and 1.Aotlans. they will 30mehow
aurvlve the Communl~t aggre!slon?
How?
A11 I say, J •m confused. But not .,n
confused, I would aubmi t, 111 11re aome of
ttle membtr1 or Congre1111 who «mtlnue to
mouth tht old cry, "STOP THE Kil.t..-
lNG! Wt want 1 complete pullout NOW !"
Frankly. It 1c11re1 the hell out of m11
when J think of the caliber of mtntallty
CJf 11<1me of those in iiovemment. But
thank God w~ have a President who Is
1trong enough to bruah off the barbs of
M.JCh 1adf1lt11 •• the McGovema. Mc·
Clollc.ey1, Md 1uch.
ELIZABETH T. LANCASTER
It I• Onlv Fox11·Laxv
To the Editor :
The r•pe Md deMcrallon of Dana Pclinl
11 •lmoal complete. With the bltMinga of
the Orange County Pl111nln1 Comm luloo,
the money-hunery developer• are ph311tnic
1ln1Je ruidtnt homes out of Watencc .
Our ptannen are mak1ne aure that we re-
tain our Spanilh theme tn thty •re copy·
Ing Tijua111'1 blueprlnta. OUr ocenn
vitw1 will not be lost, however; we hive
only to climb our TV aerlab: for 1 blrd'1
eye view.
01111.o1 Point Citizen~ for Action Com-
mittee Ml scored • few minor t.ri11mph11.
but lhttt II IO much to do 11nd IO lltUe
time left. "O\ange Jt or Lole It'' \a our
cry, but ").(Jve lt or Le11ve II" ll fut
btcomlng our lot.
Tl!EllE ARE NOT tn()llgh poop!• w\I\.
Ing to continue our fight for the puttful
exlst.tnce to .,h\ch thf>y are entitletf. The
m«k 1b1\I Inherit Ilona Polnl of tho
Mailhox
I
l.1•rt1·r .. 1rnm r cn(!tr1 are wr.lcome. .
Normally 1J1riter_. !!hould COT!V t ll 11lttr
nir .(."ilJQl!.J fn 300 word.1 or le.,.s. Thf
r 1qh.t to r.ondcn!l11 lttttri to fit .spact:
or r!imi11nte libt.I !$ resenJed. A.ti let.-
1.r.r."i mu3t inctudt .tig11ature and moti..
iun add.re1s . but tiames may bt tolth..
helrl. nn reque.tt If 1uffide-nt rea.1ort
1$ nprarent. Pottr11 will tlO~ b1 pub--
hslted.
future anrl lh1tt great cesspool in I.he 11ky •
011n11 Poinl H8rbnr .
Wf' Rrl': JOlltng I ll 6em bl11nr.t. n( OCt.lln•
rrnn! llvlng. For the pleR~UrP.' of putUnl
011r !.owc!s on the sand, wP must dig In
our pockets, even s11 the lourJ8l mu:oil.
Nn, chicken·llttle. the ~ky isn't rauina:.
ll is only foa:y·loxy erMlng the sky
with apartment.3.
MARGAHf:T CONNORS
•The Three Stooge•'
Tn !hf' P.dltor ·
Since I have lived 1n La,'lun1t Beach , I
ha ve always mainta ined that our city
council meeting!I are 1 11how Not 11 goOd
show, not one that would rate It Nielsen
rating, but one that ill or Interest to I.he
taa:payer -tht fellow th11t pa.y1 the clt7
h11!1 bllls.
Since we now havP television ~u lp
mcnl to rover the~ show•, not becatLSe ll
wa" needed, but because i t w11s in•
cnrpor11led intQ our new budp:el by city
hall hnaglers •s • politicRI toy, then 1l
should be utll lzed for il5 utmM L benefit.
I WOULD SUGGEST thal we get tn on
open circuit television cable 10 the people
of l...aguna Beach who do not attend coon·
ell meetlngs c111 see the show and the
r;henllnigans that ire going on al city
hall
F\Jrthermore, I would 1u1ge&t a Uth1
for the show, and not to rencct on 81
bygone era. It ahould be called. ''The
TWree St.oogea." After 111, how much
more •toos"~ ca.n the three cet'
Such 1 ohow, l<ltviled lo U.. r,.ldenll
al L.agun1 Beach, lfflUld soon •nrwer lh•
que!!Uon Whether we ahould recall Ute
three stooges.
ALEXANDER HOOi(
Satetv au No·Blppfe•
To the Editor ·
Pie•,. prtnt Util so !hit perhlpo .,.,,.
of the judges In Laguna &ach will 1ee
how other• fet1I libout the aitu.atklnl in
thl• country.
We lived tn La.1t.1n1 l3e1ch for J• J'flll'W
and four ytart 1go thine• tt..ted
to chRnge. We founil out you can't opt. do-
ty hall , so we 10ld our btliutlful umtt and
mllYed lo llor\10r, Qrer."'.
Tho cll1111te doefn I «Jmplno witll
L>Run1 Beld\. but ft don~ hove blppteo
and It II iai• tn wollc Oft tilt beJd>es !im.
'111111): Goci there ore _. pl1<11 In lhll
wondorfut """'try 11111 .,. willing lo ....
for« the ten •1¥1 polk:t ore respected.
MllS. VICTORIA SAT!NO
B11 George ---
Dear George :
Why do wome11 alw1ys ask. "Is
that .au yoo mtn et1er think of?"
HARRY
Deir Harry·
f don't knt1w and ll'J v"ry unfair.
t Ml only nevrr know what they
mean, but 1 can tmeslly 11.Y that
qui!• oft<si I think of olher thlnp.
. '
,,
on Rebound
Candidate R e11 eivs A ttack 011 V i e t11a1ri War
U)' ltOllt::ltT L. CA.\1J'UELL
Auoc:l•t.0 J'rtl) w1111r
Defying a bost or Republicans Ylh~
have chastised hi1n for criticizing Pres!·
dent ~ixon's latest peace proposals. Sen.
Edmund S. Muskie has renewed his at·
tack on the President tor not unilaterally
6etting a date for complete withdrawal uf
U .S. forces from Vletnun·i.
On Uie campaign trial in W1SL'Ollsin. the
f\1alne Democrat 'fhursday issued a
lilatement responding lo the latest GOP
criticism -from Secretary lJf State
\Villiam P. Rogers hours earlier. v.·ho ,
said l\1uskie harmed the national lnteres~
by rejechng Nixon's plan befo re Hanoi
did.
"For years," f\1usldc saicl . "every lime
an American senator has made a pro-
posal to bring this war to an end earlier.
he has been greeted with the sanH!
response fro1n our governrrient as
Secretary Rogers used today. . .
''It Is apparent that the othe: ~1de ~·ill
f'!Ot accept the terms the adm1n1strati~n
has set.'' ~tuskie co11tinued, adding: 'I
believe they would respond seriously to
the terms J have suggested."
Muskie said Wednesday release of U.S.
prisoners of war and safety of the troops
should be the only C"Onditions attached to
getting a "•ithdrawal date. . . .
Rogers' denunciation of Mu skie s view
1s "most ina ppropriate and harm.Cul. to
the nation's interest" followed sun1\ar
criticisnl fro1n presidential pre s s
secretary Ronald L. Ziegler, Secretary of
Defense f\.1elvin R. Laird and several
Republicans in Congress.
And a source close to th e \Vhite House I CAMPAIGN '721
tndicated more of the same probably
would be forthcoming t~;i.y at an ~!>"
pearance in New Hampshire by Interior
Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton. Morton,
in New Hampshire to kic k off Nixon's re-
election campaign for the March 7 state
primary, ·•might be. pretty tough on
Muskie" the source said. .
. Another Democratic preside n l t al
upirant, Sen . Henry M. Jackson of
Washington , told tl1e \Vomen's National
Democratic Club Thursday: "J was sorry
to see Sen. f\·1uskle take the position he
did." . In an apparent reference to escalah~n
of the war under recent Democratic
presi dents, J ackson sai~ .l~e Democrats
"have a special respons1bihty to help get
lhe war over."
Jn other political developments :
!\fUSKIE: Lat.er Thursday night
Muskie engaged in a heated exchange
with hooting and hissing antlwa~ pro-
testors when he attempted to discuss
questions on which they demanded
an swers -the Vietnam war, and
whether marijuana aod abortions should
be legalized. 1'-1uskie said the reception at
'NEVER THOUGHT l 'O GIVE MONEY TO A ROCKEFELLER'
Hubert Humphrey Payi Election Fee to W. Va. Secretary
a ~1adison, \Vis., l1otel wa s the Jll(J:-.\
hostile he had encountered sin<:c h1 " vk:c
presidentia l c:a1npalgn days.
L I NDSA Y: New York Mayor Juhri V
Lindsay predicted Thursday nigh t lhc
f\1 assachusetts Democratic primary April
25 \•:ill be a head-to-head battle bet\\·ec11
f\1uskie and himself. Linds<iy told lhc
Massachusetts !·louse Press Assoc:i<iliu11
that the field will be 11<1rro"·cd by earlier
prin1ary contests in \\'hich he cxpe<:\S tu
do progressively better.
J AC KSON : The Washington Democrat,
arriving In Wisconsin later Thursday t11
begin a th ree-day campaign for Ille
stales' April 4 priniary, said Congress
shou ld close existing i n co n1 e -t a x
loopholes instead of approving H v<.1!ue-
added tax. now being discussed. 'rhc
working man, Jakkson said in Wau~au.
"is being taxed too much for too. 111\!c
because of tax systems that arc r1ddll'd
\\'ith favoritisn1 ."
JI U1'1Pl1REY : Sen. Hubert I·!. llu111-
phrey filed in Charleston. \\I.Va .. for Ille
May 9 Democratic primary and told a
joint session of the legislature he "·ould
relight the torch carried by the late John
F'. Kennedy, uniting \Vest Virginia1_1s t ll
bring him victory." I want .to build <1
coalition from the n1ow11a1nlops and
valleys across this great stale, the kind
J ohn Kennedy had in our 1960 canl·
paign," the Minnesota senator said . Lat~r
at a $35-a-plate fund-raising dinnf'r in
\Vi\mington. Del., llumphrey called for
•·a spiritual renaissance" in placing a
commitment of manpower and resources
to get America n1oving ahead.
?i-1cCLOSKEY: Rep. Paul N. McCloske y
J r. of California, antiwar challenger to
President Nixon, told the National Press
Club in the nation's capital lf hi!' \verc
e!e:cted µresident. he \\Quid appear
01011\h!y before a 1uint session of
Congress to ans1\Cr questions.
ASllBIIOOK: Rep. John :r.t. Ashbrook
t It-Ohio), conservative challenger to Nix-
110, said a comprotnise reached betv .. een
the Nixon administration and Sen .
Abrahan1 Bibicoff (0-Conn.l. on 11•elfare
reforin "calls for preceding full-scale im-
µlt•nientation of the fan1ily ·assistance
pl;;in, but it provides thitt the plan \\'ill
take effect regardless of the results.''
tl ,\HTKE : Sen. V:1ncc l lartkc of In -
diana, can1paigning in New llanlpshire
tlJr the Democratic nomination, challeng·
cd Sen. (;eorge S. McGovern of South
IJ:1kota to a debate. McGovern replied
I.hat he would like to debate Hartke, but
\I OU!d prefer a Ne1v llampshire de bate
11·1th l\.·tuskie. the ackno,vledged [ront-run-
uer.
1'-1uskic, ?\-1cC'r0vern, J ackson an d
Alaban1a Gov. George C. \\.'allace didn'I
show up Thursday night for a Democratic
fund -raising dirUJer in the nation 's
capital, but Democratic N a ti on a I
Chairman La\vrence E. o·erien hosted
congressional aides, pages and newsmen
at the $500-a-p!ate arrair.
~lun1phrey, former Sen. Eugene
McCarthy <ind Rep. Patsy 1'. l\1ink of
l lav.·aii were the presidential contenders
on hand, but the biggest ;ipplause \\'eut t.o
retired House Speaker J ohn \V .
McConnack.
Also on hand was Tho111as Donelon .
who earlier this week d e f ea t e d
Republican Burgess Nixon for the
presidency of suburban Jefferson Parish.
La., outside of New Orle;ins.
Nar cotics Agents Seize
$1 Million C~h in NY
··rn1 the only man to beat Nixon for
president since 1960," Donelon told a
how ling crowd.
"That's \I' hat \l'e need," O'Brien said.
Hospital Plan
I11structs Nclv
Dads i11 Classes
NC:\Y YOf<K (UPI) -Law en-
force1ncnt agents seized a\mosl $1 million
in cash on a New York street corner
Thursday night and charged three men
with conspiracy t.u violate fede~al
narcotics st...'ltutes, the. Nc\v York Jotn t
Task Force revealed tod<iy.
The $967.500 in ('ash carrie<I by one 111
thr men in a suitcase in the Bronx was ~ald to bt-\he largest anlount of ca sh
ever seized in a narc:ofi('s conspiracy
L'.liSC.
The t.hree "uspei;ts 1~cre 1dl'nlific<l a:-.
Charles Papa. 33, Joseph A. Di NapOli.
:17, ;ind George ~~. Rossi, 46. all of Ne1v
York.
Bureau of N:.1rco1 ics ::ind Uangcrous
Bat'• Ort?
Kurt \V. ~;ngbrctson is at odds
with Edwardsville Hig h School authorltic~ in Ulinois over their
re.fusal to allo\V a picture taken
of him wearing a favori te hat
to appear in the school year·
book. t:ngbretson, 18, w .. un ·
successful In appeali ng the Issue before the school board
1 and Is considerinJt lei:,al acUon. 1 ,I
Drugs (BNDD) Director John Ingerson
said the arrests were made by the New
York J oint Task Force, made up of Ne"•'
York Stale and clty police and BNDD
agents .
BNDD Agent Theodore Bernier said nn
narcotics were seized.
Papa and DiNapoli, he said. 1vere ar-
rested la st night after agents converged
on their automobile in the Bron x. The
suitca<;e carrying the cash \\•as di scover-
rd in their possession by iirresting
;1gcnts.
Rossi \11as arrested in the Bronx early
this n1orning .
All th ree were chargOO with conspiracy
to violate federal n;ircolics statutes and
Rossi v.•as additionally ehargOO with al-
\CJnpting to sell narcotics.
Bernier said Papa was free on bund
pending trial in Brooldyn t'edcral CQurl
on charges of violating icderal narcotic!>
IR\\'S.
In \Yashington, Ingersoll said the
$967 ,500 n•as the largest an,ount or cash
ever seized in a narcotics conspiracy
case. He s;iid both Papa and DINapoli
disclaimed ownership of the money.
Bernier said the arrests rollowed an in-
vestigation "in excess of a n1ont.h."
'Boni b Facto ry'
F oun,cl by Police
DE'l'ROlT (UPtl -Agents sturnbh .. >d
across an alleged ''bomb factory" in a
routine narcoic.s raid Thursday and seiz·
ed. a quantity o! explosive chemicals they
said were capable oC blowing up an enUrc
city block.
One man was arrested In the raid ,
which also netted two pounds of mari-
juana, police sald . Three other persons
were arrtsled and more marijuana was
.selud In t"°'O otht'!r raids ronductcd
earlier by the Vl ayne County Metro
Squad.
"1\ll Qf the Individuals are known tu
each other and we're sure they're con-
nected In some way," Sherir f \\I ill lam
Luca! said.
''The n1cn or the Detroit narcotics
squad and the n1ctro squad 1:1re con-
tinuing their lnvestigB;lion t(l sL>e what
connecUon this bolnb factory aQ<l thex
plosk>ns we've bad In the last !ew
months. 0
\\' ASH INGTON ( U P I ) A"'
t:corgctO\\'fl University Hosµit.1.1( saw it,
the li111e had con1e to give some thought
!.O that poor. be\vi!dered rellow , !he neu·
(ather.
Jn the nature of things priority had, of
euursc, LO go to the ne\v nlolher and the
new infant. They got all the care and at-
tention.
The father was strictly a second-class
<:ilizen, as far as nlost hos pitals "'ere
concerned.
!·le was pe rmit!e<I to gaze at hi.s first
bom through a glass \\'indow dimly but
only at restricted intervals.
"Then. v.•ith no preparatlon ." savs
c:eorget0\\'11, "he took home a sn1a'r1
terrify ingly fragi le stranger." '
Now, Georgetown Hospital, ac<.'Ording
to Pat McShea. a registered nurse whose
nwesome title is clinical coordinator of
obstetrics. is trying to teach father how
l.o be a father at the same time it is
preparing n1other to be a mo t.her.
It is doing this "in a special family
centered ntatemit.y care progra1n."
··involved from the ,beginning," say.s
Georgetown, "the father attends educa-
tion classes, takes tourS of lhe hoopltal
before the birth. and receives an in-
vitation to stay with his wife during labor
and deUverv."
lnstead o·r being restricted to one o(
!hose wailing rooms where all he can do
Is sit arotmd v.·ondertng what goe.s on, he
Is pennitted to visit his wife and newborn
any time of day. He gel.a a "guest tray"
at mea!Umes.
He even ts taught how to hold a baby,
to change Its diapers, and to balhe IL Ono
scoundrelly father of three robust sons
was dubious, when he heard about thl.s
aspect of the Georgelown program.
"By playing ignorllnt about .such
things.·· said this veteran, "you can get
out of H lot of work."
But ~1iss ~1cShea's concern is with the
frig htened Dy his new responslbHltles, by
1Ws ··sma ll , terrifying fragile .stranger"
he is taking home, by the thought he
woo 't know what to do when something,
obvlowly, has to be done .
"We're trying to meet hls needa 1 whate\'er they aft/' said Miss McShea:.
"Fathers can relax if they rtallze tbelr
baby is real llDd WOD'l l>rpi."
•
f11day, Ftbruary 4. 1972 OA!l Y PILOT 5
Saturday last day.
15°/o off every $14-$20
dress. Including
knits and pant sets .. ~'.JV.~.1-'\\.I
Sale 11 .90 to $17 '"'-""'
... -..;;::_ ' .
Saturday last
day. Sale o~n~
polyester~
knits.
Big, beaut iful collection of
dayti me dresse s, dress-up
dresses and pant sets. In
polyesters, acetates,
acetate/nylon blends. Colors
galore. And lots of prints
a nd patterns. Misses',
women's and jonior sizes.
Sa~e 399yd. \ ;~
Aeg. 4.99 yd. Now you can sew up the softest, ea~y
care, easy-wear wardrobe with these po~yester k.n1.ts,
all at one low sale price. Choose from high fashion
jacquards, coordinated patterns, and &olids. Colors
trom the most vibrant to soft heathery tones. All
machine washable. All Penn-Prest®.
The same high fashion, 58 to 60'" width,
e1slett care fabrics that were suc;:h great values
at our everyday low price.
.... prk:e ~ "'"'' .... ,.
JC Penney
The values are here every day •
Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at the following 1tore1:
NEWPORT BEACH , Fuhion loland, HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington C.ntor.
•,COSTA MESA, H~rbor Cent.r* (~ed Sundoy)
1 • • • ' .--
Huntington Bea~h
•
Fountain Valley Today's Fhull
N.Y. Stocks
vot:. 65, NO. 30, 4 SECTIONS, :i6 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C!LIFORNIA FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, '19.72 JEN CENTS
Valley
By JOHN ZALLER
Of IM O.!ry l"li.t lief!
'frustees or the Fountain Valley School
Distr!ct took action Thursday night to
natr1ct use or physical punishment in the
1ystem's 16 schools.
The current operalions policy of the
d.iJtrict specifies that "except in an
emergency, the consent 0( the parent! or
guardian to use corporal punishment as a
Ex-Hughes
AUk Eyes
Manuscript
From Wire Services ....
~ YORK -A former consultant to
Boward Hughes made an offer before a
grand jury today to read the manuscript
of a purported Hughes autobiography
with a view toward judginr its authen-
ticity.
"I would be able to say if the book
were authentic or not." added John
Meier, 38, who wa s a scientific consultant
to Hughes until 1970.
He is running for U.S. senator from
New Mexico as a Democratic candidate.
~teier's lawyer, Robert H. Wyshak, told
newsmen the government's response to
the offer to che<:k the book 's authenticity
was that "a lot of people would like to
method of discipline for the student
should have been obtained before such
form of punishment is used."
Trustees moved Thursday night to
make that requirement mandatory. They
unanimously ordered superintendent
Mi ke Brick to draft a new policy that will
require parents or guardians to be
notified. in all cases be/ore physical
punishment is administered.
.,
Restrict Use of Spanking
'"This will insure that ln every case du'
consideralion is given before corporal
punishment is applied." said school Trus·
tee Fred Voss, who pro~sed the change.
"This will not only give us a cleaner
policy," he said, "but it will assure us
that there will be little possibility that an
administrator might apply corporal
punishment arbitrarily or in·
discriminately."
Although Thursday night's action ls not
final , superintendent Bric k sa i d he
lhought the trustees would almost
certainly approve the final draft when it
is put before them .
"I think they made their feeling known
tonight," he said.
ln most cases, Dr. Brick said, parents
are already notified. But he added, "to be
effectJv,. corporal punishment must be
used thoughtfully and cooly, This policy
v.·ill insure that now there will be DO ex-
ceptions to these requirements."
Voss said a~ter the meeting that he
favored further restriction of physical
punishment, but that he cUdn't think the
rest of the board or the top district ad·
mlnistrators agreed with him.
"l\ty personal feeling Is that corporal
punishme nt 1s an anachronism." Voss
said. "I v.·ould hke to see It eliminated
altog~~her. but I don 't see that haPPflll.i.na
soon.
"Corporal punishment Is not a common
practice tn this district." said Dr. Brick.
"Basically. we've got a pre tty wbole90me
bunch of kids there with atrong f.amlly
ties."
Au.to Lot Battled
'
Beacli Landowners Ready Petition
By TERRY COVILLE
ot IM DlllJ f'll91 Staff
Downtown property owners will present
Huntington Beach City Counc ilmen with a
petition Monday night in a new effort to
block construction of a proposed fi ve--
block parking lot.
The petition carries the certified
signatures of 4,318 registered voters who
live in Huntington Beach.
It asks the council to adopt an
ordinance which would require an elec-
tion before city officials could authorize
the sale af revenue bonds t.o build any
type of parking lot in the downtown area.
City Attorney Don Bonfa has already
advised the council that he considers the
petition illegal.
blocks for a mas&lve hoteJ proje<:t.
Original plans called for two, if.story
Holiday IM hotels overlooking the ocean.
That plan was conceived by Devcoa Inc,
of Los Angeles, a subsidiary of W. R.
Grace le Co., Ute former steamship line,
now dlverslfled. The hotel plan called for
two hotels tataling 500 rooms, delivered
State Rejects
Unifying Plan
in a package for lease to llo\lday lM.
A raised restaurant and shopping area
connecting the hotels was part or the
plan. Grace manageme11t o f f I c I a I 1 ,
however, backed out of the proposal. but
it Ls being carried forward by property
owners and some former Gr ace penon-
nel.
Harper Won't
Run for Seat
As Councilman
· • read the manuscript."
Bonfa argue.! that the petition is an at·
tempt to control by initiative something
that is a simple administrative act. A
state law pa"Ssed in 1949 allaws cities to
adopt parking authorities and sell
revenue bonds wlthout voter approval.
The sta te Department of Educa-
tion says the proposed four·way
unification plan for the Huntington
Beach Unian High Schoo l District
fails to meet the requirements of
the Stale Board of Education.
'
"We told the U.S. attorney that we
would be available tf they wanted Mr.
Meier to read it," Wyshak added.
In a prepared 1tatement dilltributed
titer b1I ane--haur grand JW'J' appearance,
Meier said be never mot the book's
author, Clifford Irving, or the latter'•
wile, Edith. ·
"I do not have access to any persona1
fUes ot Howard Hugbe1,11 the atatement
went on. "When I resigned rny position In
Nevada, I severed all connections with
the Hughes crganizatiot1. I have no
knowled ge af any computerized in-
formatian abaut !!award Hughes.I>
There have been suggestions that com·
puterized informatian on Hughes may
have been leaked by one of his aides ta
Irving, for use In writing the purported
autobiography. A voice Identified as
!See IBVING, P1ge !)
Lawmaker Tries
To Abolish Oil
Depletion Plan
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The present oil
depletion allowance allotted to California
oil companies wau ld be abalished under
legislation introduced here.
.Assemblyman John Burton, who has in·
troduced the same measure in five
previous sessions, said Thursday his
measure would bring over $24 million into
the state coffers next year.
''It would correct the most glaring
loophole in our state tax structure," the
San Francisco Democrat said in an in·
terview.
"It gets right at some of Gov. Ronald
Reagan's oil millionaire supporters whom
he has been protecting ever since they
elected him in 19615," Burton added .
Last year the California Legislature
reduced tbe companies' d e p I e t i o n
allowance from abaut 'll percent to 22
percent to bring the st.ate rate in com-
pliance with federal law.
The oil dep letion allowance is granted
the oil companies on the theory that uch
year they are using up reJOurces that
they will never be able to replace.
Agnew Finds
A New Target
NEW YORK (UPI) -Vic. Presi-
dent Spiro T. Agnew says he would
not trade all the environmental
"dilettantes" in the counlry for one
level-headed. serioUl--mlnded Boy
Scout.
AgneW lold the Boy Sa>uts' ....
nual dawn patrol breakfast that
their group had been practicine:
ecology for yeart and in a single
day last yea r collected a mJllJon
tom of Utter from par~ and public
areas.
"As an American vitally l~
terested in the environment~"
, Agnew aa.ld, "I wouldn't trfde you
one lcvel·hceded, serioug..rnlnded,
senilce-orlented Bay Scout for all
the publicity-seeking environmental
dilettantes lhe news media can dig
up between nmr and Halloween."
.Declsimaa, Decisions
Mao, a Pekingese· pi>oCh In Sacramento, can't seem to make up his
mind about tj!e ~IBible 'rest stop' he encountered on a walk wi th his
mistress GynthJi Scarlett. Perhaps the big question is if the object is
a single fire hydrant, or three?
Unemployment Rate Dips
Sligl1tly Over January
W ASl!INGTON (\IPil -Unemploy-
ment fell slighUy to ~.9 percent in
January while the number of Americans
holding jobs rose to 80.6 million after
seasonal adjustment, the government
said today.
The Bureau of Labar Statistics said the
jobless rate was "essentially unchanged''
from December when the unemployment
rate ~ revised downward from 6.1 pe.r·
cent -was 6.0 percent, but ad·
ministration spokes me n immediately saw
the figures as a sign of hope.
President Nixon's press secretary,
Ronald L. Ziegler, said at the Florida
White House that the unemployment
figures "give us a sense of optimism."
He said that although the change was
small, "it is on the right side."
Labar Secretary James 0. Hodgson
said that employment "is still on the
march, steadily upward."
President Nb:on has expressed the hope
of cutting sharply into the jobless rate in
this. election yetr, and top aktes have
predicted it will fall to Ove percent.
Unemployment stood at •ix percent
each of the last two months 0£ 1971. and
according to statistics released today by
the Labor Department, based on changes
in seasonal adjustment factors,
unemplayment never dipped below 5.8
percent dur ing the yea r. That figure was
reached in June and October.
The BLS said that nonfarm payroll
employment. after seasonal adjustment.
rose in January to another record high of
71.4 million.
The bureau said the employment figure
In all job categories of 80.6 million
represen ted a rise of 2.1 mill ion since the
unemployment rate passed the 5.5 percent
level in October, 1970.
The December unemployment rate was
originally reJX1rted at 6. I percent, but
that was lowered ta 6.0 percent after an
annual adjustment of seasonal factor
rates.
The BLS also reported that average
weekly earnings ot rank and file. workers
fell ll.3S during January· lo 1129.20
because ar a. tbrft.tenths of an hour
decline in the average work week to 36.9
houn.
l'leaty Caper
Man Held in Illegal Steak _Sales
The petition has enough signatures to
Ire its placement on ~ .AJ191 ll
lf •tl!t .-it doea "'91 .• U.. eq Ocl on!lna,oce. •ccordlni tO City Clerk.P.,~ones.
Oiidi1n Could; "°"""""· ... Bo .. fa's lepl vice al a reasm for no action
on tM petttlbn, 'wfilch wbuld IMct !ht
downtown property owneri to take It to
court.
The $10 million five-block parking lot
has been proposed for property facing the
ocean on the inland side of Pacific Coast
Highway. The parking lot is a key section
of the controversial Top of ·the Pier
redevelopment plan.
The petition form was signed by Robert
Terry. leader of the downtown property
owners and merchants wha have fought
the Top of the Pier Plan .
Attorney Arthur Guy, who is handling
the downtown Suit against the city's con·
demnation procedu{es said today he 's
sure Bonfa's ruling is wrong.
The petition was prepared by a Los
Angeles legal finn that rpeeializes in
such matters, Guy said.
While Terry's group continues to b.attle
the parking lot concept, some property
owners, led by Martha Holt, are working
on a package deal ta use two of those city
U.S. Unit Eyes
Bogus Alien
Card Charges
Invtstlgation of charges of coun·
terfeltlng alien registration cards filed
against Santa Ana Chicano leader Jose
"Papa Joe/' Perez, 81 , is being conducted
by the U.S. Strike Force, a special
presidential unit of the Ju.sUce Depart·
ment, the U.S. attorney'• affice in Los
Angeles sald today.
Perei was arreatfod by U.S. Im·
migration Department officials Wed·
nesday after he allegedly eold a "green"
card, required of alien immigrants, to a
federal undercover agen~ He was re leas--
eel on bis own recognliaA'Ce.
The Orange county Mellcan·American
leader, a resident of the area for more
than ~ years, waa taken Into CU$tody tn
hl1 Palace Cafe, 420 E. 4th St., Santa
Ana.
A spokesman for U.S. Attorney Wlllla.m
Droppln( by a Corona de! Mar tsllor ed Kook do the same1 a"'rtlng the Keller said today that an lndlclment bu
The department has recom·
mended that the state board di.sap--
prove the plan durlng a bearing
1Ch'4,~ l)f:lt' Th\.lflday. ll'!li·~endal!oa'll Ftaioed In a roport Hiii !roin 11ato
Superintendent of Pµbllc Inatruc>
tlon.WU.On Ril e. to all membtn t4
the stste panel tod1y.
Procrastinators
Snake Around
DMV Building
A long line snaked around the atate
Department of Motor Vehicles office in
Costa Mesa today as car owners rushed
to beat tbe S p.m. deadline to pay their
1972 auto registration fees.
Edward T. O'Brien, manager of the of·
fice, said he ei:pected three to four
thousand people to pass throug h his
facility today,
"They have the option of paying their
fees in a state office by 5 o'clock tonigh t
or have thei r fees and cards in the mail
and postmarked by midnight tonight," he
said.
People who fall to pay their registra-
tion on time wlll be subjected to penalties
of 10 percent of their registration fee. 10
percent of their vehicle fee and 100 per·
cent of their weight fee if they have a
commercial vehicle.
Almost everyone lntervlew-ed In the line
claimed thl& waa the first time they had
waited until the last day to pay tor their
registration.
"I didn't get the regllllraUon card from
the state thia year," said Mra. Edward
Peruue of Huntington 811eh. "•nd now I
have to wait in line for the flrlt time.·"
"l· Just had a baby," Aid Mrs. Gerald
D'.Amort of Costa Meta, who had been
waiting in llne for a half an hour. "I don't
really like waiting In line, but It seems to
be goln1 pretty fut.''
John W. Brooker of H1111tlngton Beach
aaid the fellow who sold him hit truck
signed on the wrong line and he has bi<t
to make 18 trips to CarllOn City, Nev., to
straighten It 04l before today. Brooker
wu philosophical: "If you're stuck, you
have to put up with It." He said he was
lollng n 1n hour from hit job &1 1 carpontar.
shop, a Tarrance aaleoman allegedly pee!. • 111Spect clilmed lo oe a John Henry not yet been J11ued Ind lhaf no olben
dllng hit• ldlover stem Ind hamburger Jon ... but didn't have any ldentUlcatlon have been Implicated In tbe tuegal opera-£. _ _ ·
,•t bari1ia baitJneot prices WOWld up 1n papers .. him. u.,. u Y•t. '700rge C. Scott
a bit Ol *" 1bunday nlsht. 1\e state weights and measures control Si1 Mei.Jean naliona.11, three of tbem
Frederick W. "Underdog" Kook, 22, eveciltive then escorted Kook oot lo 1 ,...,.., employed by Perez, imrted 11
WU suboequeDtly ormted Ind bookOd Jn. Lowery'• Meats tniclt parked at the curb, the cafe .. allena 1t the ...,. Ume ... Divorces Again
tO NOwport"Beoch City Jail on 1111plclon where he allegedly tried lo hlghlall II being beld peoct1nc poalble deportation.
of lllepl ~ "' meat; Section 12021 of wltb the hamburger. The U.S. 1ttomey'1 opcilttllllll1 •id the SANTO DOMINGO, D 0 m I • I c I •
the Stale --61'rol-<:ode. Fitct1en llllltched the keys out of the lg· IP,<Clfl 1lrlko force lovestlplft and proo-a.or c. Scott
Orange County bu LI million residents nltlon and kept the 1lt foot, alJ: lndi'¥ook eciiteO aria.u.e.t crilft6 In U'9ct q.lsO(l ~bile (AP) -Actor · I•
ind more lhan • 'tallor lbopa. In Cllllody, whlle 'tailor Ind stan!Jlreu wttll )h• !J.S. 111o~·1 ctllee. HO Mid actrul. !Jollel<t llewhpra ha" been
_._, • .J u '":'.'~ __ .._.. " \"f · -for \ho ilioond UJM. The lone~ .'!hen -Undo.... us1e4 u wltne~ llWlllJ!Oned Paltolmlll !~'"" prob.!bly ""'~·--"'" ··y· ~-'--"I .... In .. ~-·~ jM• -1'bo 'd!Ul ~. bli iilckNllio m Larey .Gabriel . to • ,J wltbiJI lwo ~ ' _,,,,..,.. ..... ., ~ --
.pOuc..:..,ll!liir<d Pyrt!•'• 'l'ittorll-)1.!7 , The 11"fi"1' tool IC~ '141'.'~1~~ ' · · • · iy·,·"'·~,,.~ati,. aecon4 E. Coat Hlgl>w1y._,... none other than !:U p.m. while Fllcben confiiel\ed t1"' . · •N'
William li'ltcben. , • ...,,,, of meat lie .~Id bore no rbark lng1 errori.&t Killed union under the Ilomlnlc1n ' R<pnbllc's
He ts the <)range County sealer of of wei3ht, anolber atalt law vlol1llon. , new tows pennllilnc quick divorce.
weighlS and lllelJUrOI, who b direcUy Defendant Kook wu 6n•lly releued on · SA!'lioN (API -A bomb hidden In 1 The ScollJ' two chlldrtn -Aleullder •
rtaponatble for c:ountywlde enforcement 1190 ball, pending tirr1ignment on the radio blew up 1nd kllle<I tho lem>r!Jtcor-U, Ind Clmpbell, 11 -""'left In their
of 11t1ch rt.ate taw1. mlsdemeanor charge next week Jn tying It and 'Wounded 11 other penoM mother'• custody. So9tf, M. wu not
"Anybody want lo buy any mut?" Harbor Judicial Dlslrlcl Court. . ' Thursday oiaht In 1 tholter lo !(le !own of pruont 11 the proceeding but c:onoented
Kook,... quoted a saylm. , CJl7 ofllclalJ abo plan lo protea1t1 lien Tranh, 30 mlt.. ooutlr!'eot'ol Saigon, throug.b 1n 1ttoniey. Miio Dewbun~ 47,
Fllchen ldealllled him.MT! Ind dtmand· Underclot for peddling wl""'t 1 U.... the S.lilXI Command rtporled. ~ be/orl 1be llldi•·
I ~, •
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of Ille D1lty "'let ll•n
The race for two seats on the FOUntain
Valley City Couni>ll took on unupocted
turn Tl>Ursday wltb the ~-by
Incumbent John D. lllrper that he 11011ld
not rup again.
Harper, a four-year council veteran.
•nnoi\Jlced hls doclJlon one mllnlle befonl
\M.l'f.ldllne lo Ill• nomlnetloa pa~
"Rfluctantly I find II lmpolllble lo
Htk rHlectlOll lo the office of city ....,.
cllman," Harper atated In a new1 release
brought to the city clerk's office by h1I
wife, Shirley.
"Increasing business com mitments and
the uncertainty of available time In the
ruture causes me to make this decision.
To the people who have supported me on
the council during the past fou r years,
and who are encouraging me ta continue,
1 wish to express my sincere appreciation
and loyalty." Harper stated.
"It has truly been a privilege to
represent the citizens of Fountain Valley
for the past eight years, four on the
school board, and four on the city councll,
and I am grateful for havl11g had this o~
portunlty. l will endeavor to contlnut
serving our community , where my ex·
perlence will be of benefit, to the extent
that my time permits."
Harper, of 9165 La Colonla AvfJ., wu
not challenged by a recall move ment in
1969 during which three of his council col·
leagues Jost their seats .
He was the second incumbent to an.
nounce he would not seek re-elution In
this year's council race. The other la
Councilman Ron Shenkman who said
Monday he would step down, also becau.se
of increasing business commitments.
Shenkman said he would probably give
an endorsement to one of the. tlx can·
didates In the April 11 election. Harper
bas not made a commitment.
Only six of the 12 persons who took out
nomination papers actually filed them on
Thunday. They are ..Marvin P. Adler,
Paul P. Savarino, Mr1. Jan Wllhtlm,
Clarence G. caiper, 8ernJe P. Sv111tad
ind Roy Richardl.
Weatll ...
nio.. hlsh clouck over the Souu..
land will cl•r by Sltunloy, mok·
Ing way lqr 1 pleulnl weekend
with ailihUy W1m1tr lelnp<r1Iuru.
Hishs aloaa: U.. bellcl! • riltnc to
• lntsnd. Lon -
INSWE TODAY
Th< NC1DJ)Orl Harbor A r I
MIU<Um hat IS of Edward Hop-
ptr'1 J>Ol•d119f • .,. clllplau Ullo
month In lh• main ~. ond
101'1Wl other lntere1tf"O tmOU c:i-
hfbif1 I• the mln>n<e oolkTJI.
Ste Page 21 of todau'• WetMnd-
c.r ,for Pl<IVv<• and ..Jlor)I,
L.. M. ,;,. 1 ... "... . Clllltnlhl I (t..1111• .....
~· n Cf'M->'f II
Dl•ll Mette.. ' lllitritl ..... • ,. __ , tJ•lt ........... _. '
H9rt1r.1r1 1•
AIMI ... ...,.. ll -.
-
I
, Z OAIL 't PILOl H friday, Ftlltl&otJ 4, 1972
Shipping Tieup Eyed
Dock Boss Tells Plan to Foil Congress
WASHINGTON (AP) -Harry Bridges,
bos5 of the &triking West Coast dock
workera, today threatened a worldwide
shipping Ueup if Congres5 forces an end
to the strike by compulsory arbitration.
Bridge!!, testify ing before a House labor
aubcommittee, said any law Congress
passes to end the strike will affect ships
anly when they touch at U.S. docks.
"These &hips go overseas," be said,
"and "e'vt got 1 few friends in other
countries, and they will respond to our
call for help. It may r.:!ach the point
y,·here the ships won't come back here."
Pre.sident Nixon bas a.sked C.Ongress to
pw emergency legi.!lation that would
create a three-member board with the
power to selUe the strike by compulsory
arbitration.
Edmund J. Flynn, president of the
Paclllc Marltlme Auoclatlon, which
............ lbl llhlppen. endoroed the bill,
saying he aaw little prospect of settling
the dispute by negotiation.
But Bridges emphatically rejected it
and indicated his longshoremen mlght ig·
nore the law if it were enacted.
•·we have no intention of submitting to
such legislation unless that la the will of
our members as expressed lo a secret
ballot," he said.
Bridges said he did not blame th e PMA
for accepting Ni:xon's propollal.
"We have these blokes on the ropes,"
he told the mbcommittee. "We're going
to whip them and they are depending on
Congress to save them ."
Bridges and F1ynn appeared by aub-
poena before a apeclal subcommittee of
the Houlle Labor Committee headed by
Sobbing Woman Pleads
For 'Righ.t to Death'
By CHARLES S. JOHNSON
HELENA, Mont. (AP) -Poignantly
tracing the lingering death of her 86-year·
old father , a housewife bas pleaded with
a conunJttee to provide ln a new state
constitution the rlght to die.
"I maintain that to give the people fac-
ing certain death . . . the right to die
quickly, eully and in peace when they
want to do '°• is beinR compassionate, tn-
te.lllaent and humane,'' Joyce M. Franks
cl Alberton lold a bushed audience Tburl-
Nixon Praises
Valley Scl1ool's
Japanese Name
President Nl:xon has taken note of the
Fountain Valley School District's decision
to name Its newest school after an
American of Japanese descent.
"I share your confidence," he said in a
teleg ram to the principal of Isojiro Oka
school, "that in keeping with the ideals
and accomplishments of the great Nisei
pioneer after whom it is named, it will
provide valuable guidance and inspiration
to all who study there."
The ochool WU dedicated Wednesday
night.
"We're very proud of the special
recognition the President has glven us, ..
uld Fountain Valley Super4lt~ndent
Michael Brick. . ,
Isojiro Oka was a farmer in Fqunta !n
Valley. Born in Japan, be first came to
the area in 1907. During the 1930s hs
often donated vegetables from his farm
to hungry elementary school children.
Later he helped establish a language
5Chool.
Another Fountah1 Valley school ls nam-
ed after an American of Japanese des-
cent. Hlsamatsu Tamura . And the next
school the district plans to build will be
named after a Japanese-American, Kasua
Masuda.
"We believe In calllng our schools after
local pioneers," said Dr. Brick. "A large
number of them In this area were of
Japanese descent."
Masuda was killed In action Jn World
\Var II while fighting in Germany with
the famed 442nd Nlsie Combat Regiment.
"A lot of Japanese during the war
wanted t.o show that they really were
Americans all the way," Dr. Brick said.
''The 442nd was made up of all Japanese,
and it \vas the most decorated regiment
in army history."
Masuda was killed while holding off a
large German patrol singlehandedly with
automatic weapons while other members
of his unit escaped to safety. Masuda was
ay,·arded the Silver Star, the Bronze Star,
and the Distinguished Service medal.
OIA.MCJI C.OAST
DAILY PILOT
o.Mft CCAST PVl\.SSHDIO COMP"'1Y
lobtott H. W-' Pr•ldlllt ... hlll111111'
Jo<k R.. C.rloy
Vb l'NlcWlt .... 0--:-1 ......
lhotli•• x,.,.a £"'~
1"t1111 A. lril""Jlloi11• ~lnl l&lllW
Ali• Dtrkl• Wllt~a-tt.-ir
tfMll'bt••• .... O""-
''''' a.a a..i.,..,..
ll•m'f M4f-P.O. ._no, t2t4f --~..., ......... ---=-~---~ ......... ... ~---a.m ...
day in the Senate chambers.
"Aod I affirm that It is an act that
God, who give us all life, would approve
of/' she 1aid.
Mrs. Franks, the mother of two
chlldrel'I, described her father's suffering
to the Bill of Rights Committee at the
Montana Constitutional Convention.
Aller her father broke a hip, his doctor
described the necessary operaUon, she
said.
"Dad asked me ti the doctor would
please give him aomething to put him to
sleep right then," Mrs. Franks said, but~
she did not ask the doctor to do 10.
As his health deteriorated, she related,
her fathe r made the request again.
"My father had been a farmer, and he
had given merciful death to animals who
had been pets and companions," Mrs .
Franks said, sobbing. "He could not
stand to see them suffer prolonged and
agonizing death when they were severely
mutilated or dying of illness.
''He was compassionate and merciful.
He asked for the same mercy for himself.
"For eight weeks he died, little by lit·
tie, minute by minute, day by day," Mrs.
Franks said.
"He was just denied a release from the
suffering and torture which he knew, and
we knew and the doctor knew he faced."
He died ln December.
Mrs. Franks has written letters to
delegates and editors of Montana
newspapers, polled doctors a n d
spearheaded a move for the right to die
with dignity.
Irving Friend
Tells Relations
With Author
Fro m Wire Services
LONDON {AP) -Nina van Pa!Jandt,
the blonde Danish singer who is the key
witness in the Howard Hughes book
mystery, said today author CTlfford Irv·
Ing had asked her to marry him.
"He IO\'es me, he has asked me to mar·
ry him and I am sure that 11 why he
thought I would stand by him ," 1he told
newsmen at London's Heathrow Airport
on her arrival from the Bahamas.
"Our future relationship must now de-
pend on the outcome of his book," 1he
said.
The 39-year-old "mystery woman'" in
the case said she had never heard of
Hughes when Irving first mentioned his
plans to meet the industrialist in Mexico
last year.
Baroness Van Pallandl, who ac·
compan ied Irving on his Mexican visit.
has said previously she can 't remember
an opportunity when Irving might have
met Hughes.
"I wouldn't know Hughes even il I met
him." she said. "l have only seen old pie·
tures of him."
Her personal manlger, John Marshall,
Jaid he met Irving ln Hollywood and was
shown the notes for the autobiography, in
which he was interested for filming . He
aaid l!vlng told hlm he had "pulled tbe
coup of the century."
"i.Jp until the day before yesterday, I
thought it was possible that Irving had
met Hughes, but now I am left with the
conclusion that he bad not," Marshall
aald.
I Only 3 Members
Had Affiliation
Only three of the seven Irvine planning
advi!ory committee member• appointed
this week by the Irvine City Council hive
affiliations with the e.nvironmtnt.al action
organization Irvlne Tomorrow.
It was learned today that Mn. Ellen G.
Freund of Siur1 Bonita was not af~
filiated with the IT lfOUP aad ls not now
a ruember.
Mrs. Freund today r<IJerOted her posi-
tion on civic involvement as she stated It
to the council durifli ltJ JG-hour Interview
session on Saturday. She noted she has
restricted her Jitvotvement lrf Community
organizations in order to keep "Crom
spreading my"U too thin. I'd rather be
an efltcU\'.e member of one orcanlulion
than be ineffectual tn several organlr.a·
tlons. ••
The Daily Pilot rtgrtta the erroneous
lmplictt1ion that a majority of lhe pl1n--
ning Nmmisslon appointees wtte drawn
Crom IT.
Rep. Frank Thomp110n Jr. (0.N.J.).
Bridges 1ald the parties to the dispute
are close together and he urged that
Congress let them settle It.
Even If the bill is passed, Bridges said,
he would recommend th.at the 15,000-
rnem ber International Longshoremen 's
and Warehousemen's Union return to
work only if they elect to do so by secret
vote.
''In saying this , I mean no disrespect
Clr defiance of President Nixon Clr his high
office," Bridges said. "I simply mean lo
say that in this instance he is trying by
methods that won't work to force an end
to our strike."
Br idges iiaid not even President Nixon
claims the strike must be ended because
the national health and 1&fety ia in
danger.
He said the ILWU is working all cargo
designated as essential by the military.
and loaded wheat at the spttiol request
of the President for emergency relief for
Pakistan.
He said that the union is negotiating
with shippers of wheat and foodstuffs and
are near settlement on a separate agree·
ment to permit normaJ shipments of
grain and foodstuffs to begin im·
mediately.
lf the President has special reque sts
for any other specia l cargo, "we shall
consider his request to move that cargo
now," he said.
Bridges denied that there :S an
emergency in Hawaii, where he said the
union has made 1peclal provisions to ban·
dle the export of sugar and has permitted
1peclal voyages to bring 1n nece1sary
supplies.
"The emergency has been manufac-
tured in the faci le minds of &Orne of the
members of Congress from the &late -
and in the mind of the present assistant
Secretary of Labor who was formerly
employed by the Hawaii Employers
Council."
Bridges said the principal items in
disagreement are the effective date of
the wage Increase of 72 cents an hour.
which the union wants retroactive to Nov.
14: paid holidays; em pl oyer·paid
prescription drugs for employes: an In--
crease in insurance coverage and wages
for certain skilled differentials .
Bridges said the administration's com-
pulsory arbitration request "is the first
step in bringing about compulsory
arbitration for all unions.
"The passage Cl( this joint resolution
will change the face of America and
bring us a Jong way down the road to
compulsory arbitration, ellminatJon Clf
the right to strike, vesting t.he power over
wages and worklng conditions lD the
hands of the government," he said.
From Page 1
IRVING •..
Hughes in a telephone Interview has
denied ever talking to Irving.
There were other developments In the
bizarre case:
-The New York Times today published
what it said were e:tcerpts from the con-
troversial autobiography, but stressed
that the material "could have come from
previously publis~ anecdotes" about
the recluse billiona ire.
-Federal authorities said they may in·
ltlate extradition proceedings against
Richard Susltind, a collaborator with Irv~
ing on the autobiography if Suskind faUed
to appear Monday before the federal
grand jury investigating the case.
-Business Week Magazine reported
th at part of the money McG raw-Hill paid
for the book was invested in American
:;ecurities by a Swiss bank at the dircc·
lion of the author's wife, Edith. The
report did not specify the amount.
The Times also 58.id today the excerpt!,
obtained from a source familiar with Irv·
ing's manuscript, gave "no indication
. .. that Mr. Hughes had a part In
preparing the manuscript."
Hughes comes across as a bitter man
whose language is vulgar, the Times said.
The account said be was ca~less about
libeling others and talked at Tength about
sexual exploits.
In one excerpt, Hughes was quoted as
saying he purposely leaked facts about an
alleged $400,COO payment made to the
then Vice President Rlchard M. Nixon in
the hopes of getting help for his problems
with Trans World Airlines.
"Nobody was raising a hand to hel p
me," Hughes ls said to have complained.
"They were glad. l'm talkina: about
Washington. They were &lad 10 see me in
trouble. So I leaked the details to Drew
Pearson."
Pearson, the late columnl.rl, wrote an
article during the 1960 presldentlaJ canr
paign, in which NI.Ion was a candidate,
tbal the Hughes Tool Co. bad loaned
$205,000 lo hb brotber, F. Donald Nixon
of Newport Beach, CalU .
"Now whether It actually turned the
tide of the election or not, 1 don't know,"
Hughes ia quoted u saying.
ln other excerpts. Hughes allegedly
called fonn'r alde Robert Maheu a 11vtfY
Icy calculating man" and a\d 1lnger-1c-
tor Frank Sinatra "wu jut tating 1d·
vantage of my prestlp lo bolster hll
wanlnc prestige ...
In two parts of the publMlhed excerpts,
the Times omitted what it sald we.re
further derogatory remarks about Maheu
and a long section of purported 'RUgtu~s
discussions of sexual e:r:plolts I n
Hollywood during the 191W And 19405.
Maheu managed HugbM' enterprises In
Nevada for four years until hla ~lsmi.ual
Jn 11711. Slnalra had finoncl&l lotemtl In
Nevada casinos until the state toot away
bis gambling Ucense. He .., a frequent
performer at Las Vqu bl&hldubl
befo" retiring.
CAll.'I' ,II.OT Stott ,hole
DANNY Rqy, I, MEETS SCOUT BENEFACTO~ GEORGE HOAG II Hunting~jn Beach Cub Scout, Thousands ol Others to Benefit
Hoag Foundation Donates
Huge Gift to Boy Scouts
The Hoag Foundation is giving nearly
$1 million lo the Orange Empire Boy
Scout Council.
The girt was announced \Vednesday
night at the council's SOth Annual
Recognition Dinner.
J . S. Fluor, fund-raising chairman for
Hijack False Alarm
LOS ANGELES {AP )-A hijack alann,
triggered by the pllot of a Pan American
Boeing 747, aroused a flurry of activity
among official a""ncies until a check
with the pilot revealed if was set off ac·
cide11tally. The huge jet, flying the polar
route from London to Los Angeles Thurs.
day· lSfKled on schedule at Lo,, Angeles.
International" Airport, with none of the
passengers .aboard aware of the br:le!
drama. •
the Scouts, said the gift will guarantee
the completion of the large Camp Grace
Valley project.
The 137-acre camp in the San
Berna rd ino Moun tains is designed to han·
die 200 can1pers at a tln1e.
Other projects are lo expand the Sea
Scout Base in Newport Harbor, the Santa
Ana administration center, and
campgrounds in San Diego County.
1''1uor reported the council will receive
$487,000 outright. Then it must raise an
additional $Ml0.000 wh ich the foundation
will match . The total goal of the e-0uncil
is $2,480,000.
The. Hoag Foundatio n was fonned in
1940 by Mr. and Mrs. George Hoag and
their son administers its activites. Most
foundation gifts: have been made in
Orange County, principally to Hoag
Memorial Hospital and to various youth
groups.
Auto Repah~
Ju1·y Heai·s
•
Testimony
Twelve jurors who must rule on the
guilt or innocence of the "service 1tation
1even" filed back to the courtroom today
for the rereading of testimony offered by
a prosecution witness during the 1ev~
week trial.
All seven defendants and their three
lawyers jolned Orange. County Superior
Court Judge James Turner and prcr
secutor Richard Stenton In the courtroom
to listen again to the testimony provided
by a former employe of the Harbor and
Gisler Mobil station in Coata Mesa.
It took an hour to meet ,the jury re-
quest. The session ended with Judge
Turner again reading bis lru:tru cUona as
they applied to charges of conspiracy.
AH seven defendants are charged with
conspiracy to cheat and defraud Orange
County motorists ln an alleged auto
repair racket that lncluded 11 service
stations.
'l'he testimony re-read today contained
a statement of the former employe at the
Cosla Mesa station that he saw tirea
deliberately punctured and radiator seals
broke n by fello w employes.
The jury went back to the jury room to
resun1e its deliberation of additional
charges by nearly 30 prosecution wit·
nesses that the seven defend ants were ln-
vol\Ped in the spraying of fuel pumps of
shock absorbers v.•hich were then
represented to be leaking and in need of
replacement.
It v.•as alleged by the prosecution that
the repair racket included Arco, Mobil,
Shell and Texaco stations ranging from
Seal Beach to San Clemente and that the
practice put many thousands of doll&rs
into the pockets of its operators.
Girls Softball
Signups Slated
Signups start Saturday for the llummer
Bobby Sox Softball League in Fount.ain
Valley.
Girls frorri 9 to 14 who want to compete
in softball can register from 10 a.m. to 1
p.m. al the Von's ~iarkel. Talbert
Avenue and ?-.tagnolia Street.
The registration fee is $5, and girls can
pay an extra $3 (or an Clptional team pie·
ture. Girls must bring a birth certificate
Saturday and be accompanied by an
adult.
Additional signups will be held Feb. II
and 19, same time, same plsct. For
further infonnation phone 1142-3630 or 1147·
4567. '
Sale Continues
I
-OFFICERS i CHEST HE NREDON •. _N OW ON SALE
OFl'ICERS CHEST DESK
SALE $A 89 PRICE !'I e
...
St1Kt 9roup1 from Henrti:fon
-H•rit•9• -Dr•xt l •• , on
s•l• now. Upholsttry floor s•m•
pl•s on s•I• include • •• Htn•
rtdon -Sh •rtill -M•rq•
Cerson & othtr1. l•mp1, pie·
tures & acc.•11on•1 are a ls•
reduc•d.
COCKTAIL CHIST
::it1$189.
'·
Henredon f-t~
DEALERS FOR : HENREDON -DREXEL-HEJtlT AGE -KARASTAN
.. IWPOIT ITOll ONM NIDAl "Tl&. t
?u/11111
NEWPORT lllACH INTER I 0 Rs
1727 Wostcllff Dr., 642-2050
'IPEN FRIDAY 'Tll 9 Prof•tlonal lnt.rMr
0.1Jsnera Avallabi.-.llD
..... '•" ,,. ...... .t 0...... c ,, .... ,261
LAGUNA llACH
145 North CN1I Hl,hwty
Photlei 494'5 1
•
!
l
J
~ i ystery Hughe ·s' Game
Boo k ()_ne of L'!'!:_g Line of Controve rsies
l~'dltor'1 NOif' -.ontrover.ry a·nd
11iystery haur l consisten t com-
panions of l.11llic1 . aire indus trialis t
ffowo·rd I iies. But few things ?11 hi.$
life /ia vi ,t(l tched the biz..orre events
surrou11 <f 11y a book uil1ich purports
to be }us autobiography. Foll owing
the last of fo11r articles O'n. Hughes.
B.v JArt1ES NOR~1AN
AHoOCllltd ~ .... Wrfhlr
NE\V YORK -For a man who pro-
bably has been more serious than any
other in his steadfast pursuit of seclusion,
billionaire Howard llughes has a
remarkable career as the center of con-
troversies.
Living behind an elaborate cloak of
serrecy that only a fortune or some $2
bilhon coul d buy , Hughes became a
watched.for and huntN. man .
Nothing. it seemed, could bring him out
"r his hiding places-the Beverly Hills
mansion where he spent his time with his
former wife Jean Peters, the carefully
guarded penthouse in the Desert Inn in
Las Vf']'.!ns and finallv the ninth floor of
the Britannia Beach Jtotel in the
B:•han1as.
Even in hi s more visible days as a
llollywood fi gure , Hughes generated con-
troversy. lilting with censors and fl outing
m{lvie conve ntions 11·ith the productioo of
such film s as "Scarface." and "The
Outlaw.''
The sa me was true with his career as a
pJ;i nemaker.
In 19~. llughes, now 66. dropped from
sight and hasn't been seen in public
since-yet he remained at the center of
intrigue.
l·lughes refu sed to show up in court
when Trans \Vorld Airlines charged him
1vith mismanagement while he was the
firm's majority stockholder. The result:
T\YA wnn a judgment of al lea.~t $137
million. But Hughes kept his privacy.
And wr<ippcd in that secrecy, Hughes,
in 19G6 descended on Nevnda and wit hin
rour years-at which time he lert in
secrecy-had heco me the state's largest
landowner and en1ployer, around whom
S\.\·irled a statewide debate.
Difficulties in fi ring Robert r-.1aheu, the
man llughcs hired to run his $300-mil\ion
Nevada empire, almost brought the
billionaire into the light. A voice iden-
tified as Jlughes· spoke over !he
telephone wilh Nevada Ciov. Paul Laxa!l
in 1970 lo affirn1 the intention to sack
J\l:i heu.
But Dec . 7, 1\lcG ray,·-llill Book Co. an-
nr·1 '"ti it planned to publish the
;iu\ biography or the elusive billionaire.
It v.as a publ is hing sensation. But once
a~' .11. !he Hughes penc hant for privacy
\.\'as to assert itself.
IS IT HIM? -DAILY PILOT
artist's conception shows how
1-loward Hughes migh t look to-
day. It \Vas done by taking an
old picture o( the billionaire
and adding a beard, lines o(
age and \vhitening the hair.
The expe rts also vouched fo r the many
handwritten notations in the margins of
the transcript Irving said he had typed
from tape recorded interv iews with
Hughes .
The n. even more sensational things
began to happen :
-McG raw-Hill announced it intended to
hold up publication until certain questions
pertaining to the Swiss bank account
were answered.
-Irv ing swore, in an explicitly
detailed, 2.3-page aHidavit, that he
persona lly handed two checks totaling
$325,000 to Hughes and had given another
check for $325,000 to a Hughes aide.
Then. the writer took off for his home on
the Mediterranean island of Ibiza, saying
he did not plan lo retum to the United
States until there was a valid reason for
him to do so.
-\Vord came from Switzerland that the
"H. R. Hughes" who opened the Swiss
Credit Bank account was not a gaunt, 6-
foot-3 Texan but a blonde in her 30s car-
rying a forgN. Swiss pa ssport in the
name of ''Helga R. Hughes." Later
reports said the woman was a brunette.
Hoping to return to the quietude of his
300-year-old peasant house, Irving instead
found himself besieged by newsmen.
Angered by suggestions that his lovely
wife Edith, a Swiss painter, was the
n1ysteriow. Helga, the writer threatened
to sue anyone who implied that.
S. Ackennan, announced tbl'lt In the "best
Interest" of his clJent he wa.s withdrawing
from the case because he felt Irving at
that st8j'.e needed a competent criminal
lawyer.
-Irving's new attorney, ttiaurlce
Nessen, bustled the couple and their
children out of their previous place of
seclusion north of New York and into a
new hideout.
If the events following that Dec. 7 an·
nouncement by McGraw-Hiii appear con-
fusing, the proliferating theories on what
led up to it are positively James Bondian.
One scenario would have it exactly aa
"Irving now says the whole th ing hai>-
pened: that he met wi th Howard Jlu,t{hes
at the times and locatlons specified In his
affidavit, that he handed lhe checks to
Hu ghes or an aide, but that because of
some whim on the part of the bill ionaire,
he agreed to take them back and have his
wife deposit them and they withdrew the
money, putting it into another account.
On the other extreme is the 1cenario
that makes Irving ihe hoaxer who in-
ve nted the details of his meetings with
Hughes and how he obtained
autobiographical material from him. Irv-
ing has rejected this theory and has
steadfas tedly maintained that the book is
aut hentic.
Another proposed theory is that Irving
was given a packet or material stolen
from Hughes by a disgruntled former
aide and that be ingeniously wove the
documents into an autobiography in an
interview form .
Still, another possibility, outlined by
Hughes Tool Co. public relations man
Richa rd Hannah, is that a computerized
readout indexing every item that has
ever appeared in print about llughes pl us
some notes by Hughes was given to Irv·
ing, who then used It as a roadmap in
researching a plausible autobiography.
Hanna h suggested the possibility that
Robert Maheu, whom Hughes had fired in
Nevad1t, could have leaked the material
to Irving.
Maheu, central to a number of the
theories, denies leaking the materia l to
Irving. Saying he understood the book
was derogatory toward him, Maheu asks :
"Does it make .sense I'd leak it?"
Lite magazine, wh ich contracted to
publish excerpts of the book in three in-
stallments, speculated tha t authentic
material might have been stolen and
given to Irving by "a disloy al or greedy
employe."
Yet another theory is that Irving
traveled through the United States and
Mexico as he claims to have, meeting
with and lnlerviewlng a man he believes
was Hughe1-fn short, that he was duped
by a band of imposters who ~ould have
had to inetude masterful actors with in·
timate knowledge of Hugf>es' llle as well
as a master forge r.
• • • • • r r ~· . . •
frldol}', f'tbruary 4, 1972 H /DAILY PILOT :; --'-'---~~~~~~~~~~-
• 0.1.ILY "ILOT 11111 ,~tie
SAN ONOFRE PUMP MO VES SEA WATER FOR COOLING
Nuclear Expe rts Observe Plant Interior During Tou r
Jury Convicts Doctor
In Drugging -Sex Case
CHI CAGO (UPI J -Dr. James r.. ~l id
dleton , a former Central lnteltigrncr
Agency employe, has been found guilly of
drugging and sexually assaulting ;1
woman pat ient.
The 10-day trial l'.'as marked by
tes!lmony of several other \\"ornen whu
told of being injected with drugs which
left them unable to move. ca used ab-
normal hair growth on their faces and
bod ies, and caused their voices to drop.
Several women spoke of having "in·
creased sexual appetite" after visiting
the doctor and recei ving Jnje ctions.
Middleton, 45, of suburban I.it's Plaines,
was accused or injecting a 24-year-old
woman with A dru,:i which left her dazed
Ft•b. 7. 1970. ·rhe "'omt1n said Middleton
ssxually assaulted her a ( t e r ad-
rr11n1stcring the drug .
The jury of eight mr.n And four women
rf'turned thf' verdict Thursday aflrr
11l'J(1ut 17 hours of deliberation, findin~
h1111 guilty of deviate sexual assault and
aggrava1ed battery.
Middleton showed no reaction al the
verdict.
r-.·llddleton wa s arrested Det'. I. 1970, in
a police raid on h!s oftlce. Police said
lhey found two revolvers, sexual deviets,
explosives and electrical detonators.
Sa11 0110£ re
Hu1n s Witl1
Acti vit y ... By JOIJ'N VAL Tf:RZA
O! "'• Dlttlr ""'' lt•lf
\\'hile large crtl'.'S of specialists wrre
bu sy at San Onofre refueling a nuclt<ir
reactor and rebullding lurblne!I Thursday
a panel of scientists in San Clemente ~penl hours rtbu1ld1ng ll1c !n1age ot
nu1·le;1r pol'.·('r for n i.:rnup of oe\.\·s1nen
Tl1c scrn1n:1r, 1\lurh nffer•·d nearly
un hrn1trd qupsl1on111~ uf :i pi!nl'I of ,cittl·
lists :1 1 the S;ui l"!etnrnlf' 11111. touc·h('rt
h;ird •HI l'a1 !hquakr f:it•\ur·· tn nurl enr
~P11f'r.'.tti1)1l 1uu·lr:1r hei1lth ;1~r11•1·t~. :i;11f<'11•
of re:11 ·101' .ind handl111g .uul 1l1spo,al •ll
r:uhoucl1\1' 11•;1,le.
l)unng tht' tta y's rvnfen·n1·1·s 1-r1·ws :t l
the S:111 ()nufrc Nu<·lc;u 1:,•nf'1.t111u: Sl:i-
Unn -a plant under Sli'J.:l! 11f sort ..; hv !h<'
l't'tiplC''s l~1!1hv -w1·r1· rTbullchn~ a
1l"la!<>St1 e t1 11'h1ne and .111x1l i:1ry S)'trn1~
dealing 111lh t'onvcnt11111al i•.c nt·ralu 1i.;
rn;1t•h111ery.
Sin1ult:1neously spt~c1.1l1sf, drr~sed t11
5urg('(Jn 's ).:arh \.\'Crr \\Hl<l111~ up tll!'
rr.fuehng of f12 ."pent lut•l 1pds 111 !hi· rr,11·
tor 1ts111f
'fhr ruonth·long rou!1n1· sl1utdown I;,
al n1osl over
1'hc S\k'l1kr1·.~ Ill !hi' <In~·\ \;ilk.". IHI!
gen red SJ1t'Cif1e;1!ly 1!1 ge11erat10~ 11('\.\ ~
stories, hul instead 111 h•·lr edul'.1 lt•
"'filers ur1 the su b1c1·1. ;1r'f' .d F1liutPd \vith
the Ato1n1c lndu slriCJI Fo r11 1u.
The se1sr11ie f11clor ol th~ plant. nnd
p;1rl1{"ularly those aff r1·\111i.; S;1:i Onofrf'
took a spotlight for a lune '1S Or. Cr;11g
B. Smith . a UCLA assist1nl r.ni;tncerin~
professor, pointed out lests nlade on
many nuclear inslnllaltnns II• determi ne
their ability to withstand quakes.
Smith stressed that close inspcclions at
Saft Onofre after the f>'eb. 9 Sylmar
earthquake showed absolutely no pro-
blems with any syslC'ms at the reactor.
In relative terms. he said, the San
Frmando temb lor was "nlinor,'' :tnd
severil! nuclen r inslallat inns closer In !hr
epice nter tha n Sa n Onofrr wit hstood the
shock just ns well.
One at UCLA, he stud. li;id only so1ne
n1inor cracks in off1t·t· bu1ldu1gs, Uut
crucial systeins fared extreinely \.\'ell.
Srn ith pointed out that stiff tesls in·
\'O]Ye lhe llSC Of Spel'ia] Vihr11t1011 t.'<)UI Jr
1ne nt at ma11y point.~ uf n re <1ctor con1·
plex and through mathc1n:i 1tc:i l exttn~lou
of the test results, pe rfnrn1ance!I during
;i major quake can ht> projected wit h "t•r1·
cvuraging accuracy "
Al nl idpoint in the day ·s dii;l'll~sinn~
scientists and utili ty Hldl'" tr111ducted :1
guided tour of ihe generat1n~ sta!ion with
particular emphasis on lhP refuel ing
.stage of operations.
AL one corner of the largf' eomplci
stood .several f\albed trucks lad e" wllh
large lead and steel capsules -each C()n-
tai ning a rod of spent uran ium fuel rt.'-
cently removed from the reactor.
Those containers, according to Dr.
Morton I. Goldman, a 11peclnl111t In fuel
di.!posal . can withstand "lncredib/1
.stresses" without 11howlng fatlgue.
First, the Hughes Tool Co., led by its
general counsel Chester Davis, denied
such a book could be possi ble. It set up a
Jong-distance telephone ca ll said to be
from Hughes in the Bahamas to seven
.Los Angeles newsmen. The man on the
phone told the newsmen he had never
, he<ird of Clifford Irvi ng, the 41-year-old
writer who claimed to have met Hughes
ror secret interviews as he collaborated
on the work . The reporters agreed they
had spo ken with Hughes.
Irv ing. in New York to give the galley
proo fs of the book a final once-over, said
he was prepared to show numerous
documents y,•i th Hughes' ftandwriting,
authenticated by e:tperts. There were two
checks. endorsed by an "H. R. Hughes"
and deposited in a Swiss bank account.
Additionally, there y,·ere handwritten let-
ters to Irvi ng, allegedly from Hughes,
and a nine-page letter to fl arold ~tcGraw,
president of the publishing house.
While bands of newsmen camped in the
Irving li\.'lng room for nearly a week and
Swiss authorities a~ked the lrvings to
come to Zurich for an investigation of
fraud , Hughes maintained his splendid
isolation on an island in the Bahamas.
Irving returned to New York less than
a week after he left. and with him came
his wife and thelt two young sons.
Barnaby and Nedslcy, and there were
these further develo pments:
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!
7 00 Residentt1
-Irving disclosed through his lawyer
that his wife opened the Swiss account in
the name of "H, R. Hughes" and had
withdrawn the $650,000, placing it
"substantially intact'' in another Swls.s
account.
-Irving's friend and attorney, Martin
Countians 'Shoot Down '
Cl1i110 1-Iills Airport Bid
By JACK BROBACK
Of IM O.it"f' ,.1191 Jt1H
North Orange County residents hauled
out their antiaircra ft guns Thursday
· night and verbally shot down the p~
posed Chino Hills jet airport.
Laguna Hills spoke smen, however.
were on h;ind to support the concept.
A crowd of 600 to 700 persons filled
Valencia Jligh School auditorium to tell a
~panel of FN.cral Avia tion Administration
· officials that lhey wanted no part of the
• jet-age facility in their neighborhood.
' Col. John Loh man. project manage r for
Chino llills Airport Complex Inc. told the
.. hostile audience of plans for the facility
: including an industrial park on 2.500
: acres of hilly land north of Yorba Linda .
; The site is surrounded by 25,<nl acres of
~ .almost uninhabited area.
: "The proposed airport will fill a n«d
; ror most of the people of Orange County
: snd will add greatly to the tronomic
~ growth of the area," he said stressing the
... importance of future air freight servke.
• FAA official Don Davis said written
; comments will be accepted tmtil Feb. 11.
; He set no ti.me for a final decision on ac-
; ceptabilily of the project by the federal
: agency which b nect!58ry for state ap--
: proval or construction.
': Thursday night's hearing was billed to
·: "gather facts relevant to the effect.I of
-: the proposed ai~rt upon the sa~~ and
-efficien t use of navigable air spact.
• Davis cautioned that testimony on the
effect on the environment would not be
considered but he allowed IW.lny 1peakers
to discus~ that facet.
: • They urged that a federal-state study
: be made of the environment.al aspttU of
the jet·age facility.
Brian DougW.. Fullerton Airport
manager and 11 member of the county
Airport Land u.. Commlasloo l<d off
with a stinging technical e!endemnation.
"The Fullerton runway take off
heading and that of the proposed. Chino
Hills facil ity would meet beadon," ht
charged. "Our instrument landlng system
turn is five miles out, just seven miles
from the n.s for the proposed airport.
Interference would be Inevitable."
A steady stream of city, achool and
homeowner association leaden followed
Douglas, all in agreement that the facili·
ty 'llJqlll(not be built. Dr. Rlilph Ruth, board chainnan,
PlacenUa Unified School District: "Our
board is unanimous in opposition. The
proposed airport would be just four milea
north of'Vorba Linda. Our schools are not
soundproo°fed and a new elementary
facility b planned within two mile.a 0( the
site."
Sam Cooper, North Orange County
Airpoit Commllff: "We told the county
&Upervison last year we are opposed to
thil project. Col. Lohman said bll firm
has hired. many """111tanta to chocl: the
viability of the projed. The county hired
Pereira and Panons and their rep>rll
were full of errors. Consultantl au not
infallible."
Mayor Henry Wedaa of Yorba Linda:
''Our city OpposH for sevtttl reuona -
noise, overcrowded alnpact, unreallJtjc
Olght paths, po"lbl• O'A!be! In Inhabited
areas and an unfavorable Southern
CalUomia AJ.~l.aUon of Governments
report."
Robert Fennell, Placentia mayor and
president of the Orange OJunty 1...eague of
Cities: "It ls 1 dlf(erent decision you
face. We Offd air transport in Southern
CalUomiJ and the land ownen have a
right to dev•lop their property. The
1170 FAA pnollmlnary report ,.Id the·
lite wa1 boxed in by EJ Toro. 1..<Jo1
Beach. Loo Angel,., Ontario and other
emt.ing airport!.
2F918529585
The magnificent ''Cat'' COUGAR.
The cat comes on beautifully for '72 ... P ound for pound and dollar for
dollar America 's best equipped sport car ! What others call extras are just
standard on the sleek sophisticated Mercury Cougar. Now 's your chance
Lo see all the 1972 models as J ohnson and son has on hand a g reat stock to
choose from, equipped the way you like be st ...
PRI CE D FH QM ONLY $3466.00
e TERRIFIC SELECTION!
e NEARLY ALL COLORS AND MODELS!
.. Orange Count11's Fam llu of Fint Cart•
ohnson & son.
. .
LI NC CJI N rl/tf I<< I lh V
2826 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 540-6e30
• •
•
4 DA.IL\' PILOJ
Wicka
U.S. Interest
In Red Plan
Call ed Sli ght
f'ARJ S {U PI ! -'/'he United States
:-ho"·cd little Interest today in a new Viet
Cong proposal to end the \Var in South
Vietnam. describing it a! "nothing new"
.:ind serving only to confuse the issues.
SALT P act
Sam Near
In Austria
VIENNA, Austria (AP) -U.S. and
Soviet negotiators have come closer to
agreement on c urbing the nuclear anna
ra~ but there was no clear incUc•tlon on
when a treaty limiting antlballlstlc
missile! may be signed.
"We have made rea&enable progrt!l!I,"
a conference spokesman aaid today after
the 24th plenary meeting of the strategic
arm! limitation talks-SALT. He refused
to disclO!e whether the treaty on llmitlng
defense nuclear weapons and an Interim
agreement on certain curba of offeruive
mis5llts may be signed during a seventh
round of talks at Helslnkl, F inland,
starting lo March.
A communJque tssued at the close of
the sixth round here today said both
delegations in the last 21iii months
"engaged in further consideration of
iuues relaUng to a treaty on the llmlta·
tion of antlballlstlc ml.aalle 11y11tems and
to an Interim agreement on certain
measures with respect to the limitation
of strategic offensive arms."
Vpit1Smoke
To demonstrate the dangerous
inadequacies of the present
standards set by the Flammable
F abrics Act, Herman Glaser of
the American Trial Lawyers
Association to uched a match to
an ordinary girl's nightgown
while testifying before a House
panel Thursday.
8 More Nations
Okay Bangladesh
From Wire Sentices
Eight countrlea today recognit.ed the
new nation of Bangladesh. formerly East
Pakl!t.111,, and three others said they
would do ao aoon.
Of those granting recognition to the
government of Bangladesh Premier
Sheikh Mujlbur Rahman, seven were
European nations were Austria, Britain.
Denmark, Finland, Norwsy, S\\'eden and
Wert Germany.
Ilolland, Belgium and Japan said they
would grant recognition soon.
Britain's previously announced irr
tenUon to recognlz.e Bangladesh promp-
ted Pallitan to announce last Sunday
its lmmediate withdrawal from the
British Commonwealth. Pakistan Jost its
former eastern province as a result of a
civil war there and BUbsequent war with
India last year, which set the stage for
the Bengali leaders of East Pakistan to
proclaim the province the independent
nation of Bangladesh.
British Prime Minister Edward Heath
sent a personal message to Sheik Mujib
today saying he.Jooked forward to work·
Ing with him "for the streogthenin( of
the good niatlonl whi<h already ulst
between our two peoples.
"I am sure that your government will
do everything it can to promote peace
and good relations with the other coun·
tries of the subcontinent. I can assure
you of our strong support In this ," Heath
said.
The Dutch foreign offlce !aid Holland
would soon recognize Bangladesh. And in
Tokyo, Prime Minister Eisaku Sato gave
approval today to a foreign ministry plan
to recognize lhe new nation.
More than 2S nations, including
Australia, the ~viet Union and India,
already have recognized Bangladesh. The
UnJted States, which backed Pakistan in
the December war, h M made no com-
mitment on the issue of recognition.
Meanwhile, a Bangladesh official said
Sheik Mujib has ordered a house-to-house
check across the nation to determine the
number of victims of atrocities com-
1nitted by the PaklstanJ army.
Uf'I Tt ._.....
Journey's End
Mrs. Salvadore Castillo gives
her son Miguel a chocolate
candy as she and her husband
visit Miguel in a Kansas City
hospital. The boy came to
Kansas City by freight from
Mexicali, Mexico. lie lost parts
of his fee t to frostbite during
the long cold ride.
The Viet Cong plan. wh ich was
prl'S('nted Thursday at the regular
session of the Vietnam peace talks, con·
tained two 1najor changes from their
previous plan submitted last July. The
latest proposal called only for the
resignation of President Nguyen Van
Thieu of South Vietnam instead of the en.
lire Sa.igon government and left it to
President Nixon to determine the date or
complete Am erican withdrawal instead of
accepting a date set by the Communists.
"Progress was made on a number er
issues. The delegations express their
determination to continue their efforta to
reach an agreement." The SALT
spokesman described the VieMa round as
··sallsfa ctory. '' Faulkner, Heath Meet;
Agriculture Minister Abdul Aziz said
the government was taking the census of
civilians killed, wounded or maimed to
place before an international tribunal
which would be set up to try war
criminals.
Sheik A1ujib has estimated that 3
million Bengali civilians were killed by
the Pakistan army between the time it
moved into East Pakistan last March 25
to crush his independence movement and
its surrender to the 1ndian anny in
December.
Family Escapes
Czechoslovakia
In Car Gas Tank
P rior to his departW'e the US. chief
delegate, Gerard C. Smith, t o Id
newsmen: "The U.S. delegaUon Is en-
couraged by the progress toward agree-
ment on the complex issues relating to
strategic anns limitations."
Huge Protest Looming
Minutes after t.he Viet Cong proposal
"'as placed before the U.S. end Sou th
Vietnamese delegation! at the peace
talks. the American delegation renewed
il s endorsement of Thieu's presence at
the he:id of the South Vietnamese govern-
n1ent .
Tile Viet Cong's Nguyen Van Tlen
presented to U.S. negotiator William J .
Porter and Saigon's Pham Dang Lem a
rephrased version of the seven.month old
plan de1nandlng Thieu's dismissal. The
Viet Cong .said immediately on Thieu's
resignation and the adoption by re·
rnaining Saigon leaders of a "new policy"
they "'·ould open talks to form a new
cabinet. That cabinet would organize new
electi ons to the constituent assembly.
The U.S. delegalion rebutted the plan.
U.S. . dele1ation spokecman Stephen
Ledogar and hi! Saigon colleague,
Nguyen Drieu Dan, said the Communist
draft contained "nothing new ''. They sald
it n1erely confused the issue, and tbey
criticized the Viel Cong and Hanoi
governmen t for using Thursday's Ses!lon ·
as " sounding board to conde1n n Prtsl·
clent Nixon 's own peace plan made public
.Jon. 25.
Smith was asked about reports that the
Americans did not want to come to an
agreement before l'resident N i :x on
returned from his Peking visit.
Smith said: "No, I think1 you can tell
by my shoes there ha s been no foot·
dragging. \Ve h11ve worked as ht!rd as \Ve
can and there was no relationship
bet"·een our efforts and any other events.
\Ve have been working independently of
any other political expectations and
dcvelop1nents."
Another question 'vas whether Smith
thought it possible an agreement could be.
reached this year.
"\Veil , l have to su,,pend my judgment
on that." he replied. i·1 don't like to
speculate."
The delegaUons decided to resume
negotiations in Helsinki on Mareh 28 -
four weeks after Nixon's visit to China.
Three Peepe rs Fired
DONCA.!!TER, England (UPI) -The
municipal 1wlmming pool has fired three
men bath attendants for drilling a peep
hole from the men's to women's dres.sing
room.
W 01·lcl Trade Barrie1· Set
Fo1· Europe, U.S. Talli:s
BRUSSELS. Belgium (AP) -The
Vnil cd SI.ates and the Com1non ~1arket
tentatively agrt'Cd today lo s tart
"'1Jrldwide negotiations in 1973 lhAt would
break dO\\'n barriers to y,•orld trade.
They also ngrct'd on <i series of short
ll'r Bl cOril'ess ions desi).!nc cl lu help trade
l><'!wttn !11cn1 .
l'rcsldl'nl Nixon's :1d111inistr11tion is
pl:1 nnlni.; IQ prcscll! lhcsc. nnd sirnil:ir
,1 grec111t•11ts \\·itll .J:ipnn nnd C:in:ida, ;1l
Iii(• SlHlll' l11nc a.~ hf' sends 111 Cnnj.!l'fS~
lhl' hill lo cll"\'nlur lhl' ctol!ar hy raisin~
lht• of (1cinl prict' of i.:old,
II is ho])('cl th:1t !he concessions \~·ill
)ll'C'\'Cnt l'Oll~l'('SSlTICn fr,,n1 <l d d i 11 g
:unrndn1rnts lh;it "'ould hinder trade.
l'he Accords <tt'e subjl'Ct to approval by
!hp ROVt'rnments concenK'd . They were
rr11rhed after three rounds cf nC'gotia·
!Ions by \V illin111 0. Eberle. President
Nixon's !rode repr~ntAth•e. A n d
represtnlali\'l':S of the Common f\tarkel's
Executive Commission.
The long·term negotiations wUI cover
trade in farm products and raw
materials, as well as industrial cood!.
They will be another in the series of
trade negoUations -the last was the
''Kennedy round" -which have greatly
reduced tarWs since World \Var II.
Tariffs are now generally low enough
so that olher lrade barriers are more im·
portant, espcclal!y the subsidies that
many governn1ents glvl': for lhe expart of
farm products and in1port quotas on
i:toods of all kinds.
The short-term concessions include a
cul in the Common A.1arket tariff on U.S.
or11nges and grapefruits, and a promise
to keep another 1.5 mllUon tons of last
year's We!t European wheat crop off the
world market.
Details of the accord y,•ere not officially
disclosed, but the general lines were
known from prtvinu!I dlsclO!ure!.
BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) -
Premier Brian Faulkner flew to London
today to review with British Prime
i\finister Edward Heath the critical si tua-
tion in Northern Ireland highlighted by a
civil rights demonstration called Sunday
in defia nce of a government ban.
~~or securlty reasons, there \Vas no
prior announcement of Fa u I k n er 's
departure for London, a Northern Ireland
government offi cial said.
Faulkner left a!I civil rights leaders
said the march Sunday in the town of
Newry near the Irish Republic border
would be held a5 planned. They said they
\VOUld consider it "ext~mely pro-
vocative" if the British paratroop unit
killed 13 civilian!! that in a demorl!f:ration
in l.Alndonderry last Sunday were on duty
for the parade.
Anny sources 88id it was likely that
the FJrst Battalion of the paratroop regi·
ment. the same unit involved in the
shooting! in Londonderry, would be in
Newry.
* * * Irish Republic
Demonstrators
Biirn Rail Office
DUBLIN (UPI) -Demonstrators set
fire to a British Railway! office in Cark
today in a fresh wave oC anti-British
violence in the predominantly Roman
Catholic Irish Republic.
ltfore than l ,000 demon st rat o r s
gathered in front of the Railway! offi~.
police said, and set the lower floor cf the
building ablaze with firebombs
Police finally drove back the crowd
with successive batm charges. At le.ast
six per500s were injured, none ~riously,
police !a.id.
A crowd of 25,000 set fire to the British
embassy in Dublin Wednesday and stop-
ped firemen from reaching the scene un·
Iii the building was destroyed.
Today's attack was the first major
n1ove on British property since the em·
bassy fire.
Extremists also bombed l\.l'O Brilish-
ow·ned homes in the Connemara area
Thursday but no casualties were
reported.
The anti-British fttling was a reaction
to the ulling ol 13 perwns by British
troops In l..oodonclerry, Northern Ireland,
last Sunday.
Heavy Storms Rock U.S.
W i.11 Le r Pln sters N ortlieast; Higli Wi1ids S1nack Soutli .
Tr111pt"rfttttrrs
l ...... ..-.-.!~fff. •llCI P<9(1pll•I-fl)t
..... '"""""'' Po"•oOCI ....ii .... , • 1 .1'1
,Alhlll'f
Jii i~ ....
Allt nfl ·-"" ..... -.......
~ .,,.._
•. (ll!CinMtl ,_ ... ..... -.. -= -· ,,,...,..llOl!t
=:re~ .... -. ,..-. -.. , ....
Mll~M .. _. --,. .. v~
C)llleNIN c l!y -~ ''·&Aull *'""""'----
Ml.i. \.tW '"1;,
'-" 100 t i 11
~ n 11
J •11 ,. " " ,. Jt ,, .ll
.r " ·" » Ol 0) ,. " " 00 16 ,..
~ " ~ .. " .. .. ,. .....
n " .)ol 01 01 11 ,, .er
" m " " .. " u ,.
M " ,. m .... .. .
..
" .~ ...
.13 » I •
:n " " .., .JJ Jf I H " .. ,. n .~ .... . " f1 .. .~ " ,, J,I U .fl ...
" a "'
.., ... !tOMolt Wl Al"lt Sll:VICI roa1CASl .. '""''1 J .. "•71
30.2.C 30,00 \
fl.S. ~"'"m•rw " fMUl~ MOW 1trom1 lllfl"*! ttM ~I l'Ocltr ..,111'1 tf!'CIM WI!'$ 11\d ,.._\I'll lnows 'llt llll c;elCI -tlltf <•HI
I\ ltt '°"'"' .. "'°" Gulf Co.11.
k¥'tft 119dott .t -bl.lt'IM s,.., ..
CV-. N,V .. In 1 t br Miii' -led -
""'-lftc1* ot It lit -flour. Ont 111 fl:il.lr llletoeol et -cw...i m.t
lttll .. "" ,.,.,.Mdw .. ""' ...,,,._, atod,
... "' • -dtltlt.. """""" ..... .... ... .--. M tlffwt tw ,........ .......
°" Wl .t,llll l I OfOC.A.A.
Callfond•
(Of!tillotr.blf ttoud ... ...,., • d\all(:f
of 11 ... 1 ~ ... l'I\ .... ..,, -'• l•Jt
todl• ""'' 11'!9 -~ .., ~ C1hfOl'ftl1 tfol• i-..tt11rt1 -.
1111 ......... ,,,,. "'"'·
'"' lM "-'-tllud¥ •ltJ tt'f1I! • tflef'o d t1C.au-.1 IWW r.111 -~ -~ ~ ........ •Br--
Thi ~IKll fl '''" ~-.. "'"""' ..,. ....., .... ... .,,. . ....
«*II .. .,..,.
,,.~ ........ ., .......
.... ... ww.le!W ""' .. ...
"'9 Alt ""'""""' C...'"' l>lttric Mid ffltf"f -.iN tie 4" ..,. lrrltl'lell
,,..,. ..,_ Ill "'°' Mtl11.,
.. ,....."-' .,... ~ wlll
.. ,......., ~ ..,., • C""ra ., .,. ...... ,.. ..... ~
~ t br '""'-"' -.......
Hod, ..... '"""""'' ..,.,,... -_..., ltlr ~ ............. .,..
...........,. N-Vtn. It.ft. ..._.. -·
-'"'· ""9.lhll r•lll """ "'"' _.. --· Fll'ttltl' -.tfri ...... A~lc ....
l!otrd. ,,....., ,... -~. ~. c-. ,.,.,... '*"' .... lrod'oo9 flf ,......, '"""' ..... ..,....... ,.. ~ ...........
S•1t. M-Thin
(~ -..,. l.llflt v.rltbl• ~
"""' .... llWfllM '*'" ._ .... -tfftr lt " II ...... lfl ~
IOOtf •"Cl S.""*'Y. H!th ,....., ...
C-!M ""'""lwtt ,.,_ ,,_ G
• 4$. '"l•ftd ~ ,.,... fl'orn 4 to ,,, W•lw """"'elllN $4, c_, .• , . ..... ,.
British anny sources declined to say
officially if the paratroop unlt which fired
on demonstrators would be sent to
Newry, but one official said failure to
send the troopers would be a tacit ad·
mission of their guilt.
Each side bas blamed the other for the
shooting in Londonderry. Demonstrators
sald the soldiers fired on the crowd
without reason but army officials said the
troopers acted in self defense.
Violence increased across the country
after the shooting!! and extremists have
threatened to extend their a ttack to
England.
• • • • • • -• ~ • • • • •
•
•
Aziz said the Bangladesh Television
Corp. has been ordered to take movies of
the mass graves that have been found.
The film will be placed before the
tribunal.
Beer Official Dies
RYE, N.Y. (AP) -Philip Charles
Liebmann, 56, long·time president of
Liebmann Bros. Brewery, died Wed·
nesday at a nursing home in nearby Port
Chester. The former husband of the late
movie star Linda Darnell, Liebmann is
credited with originating the annual
"Miss Rheingold" competition.
• • •
VIENNA (UPI) -An Austrian musi-
c~ smuggled his wife and two tee~age
children out cf Czechoslcvakia in the
rebuilt gas tank of. his car , police said to-
day.
Police said Ferry Janoschka, 35,
brought his wile, Marie, 35, and his
children, Ferry, 13, and Gisela, 17, across
the Czechoslovak·Austrian border in two
separate t rips. Czechoslovak authorities
had refused his family exit visa!.
Janoschka, a night club musician, first
rebuilt and enlarged the gas tank of his
car.
In his first trip. he took out hi1
child ren. Then he returned to Bratislave
to bring cut his \\'ife.
• • •
•
• • •
• • • • Grarld Operiirig
World Savings'
FoL:J~tain Valley
Off Ice Join the Celebration ... have your caricature
drawn, have a cup of co ffee and cookies,
.. •
pick up a free copy of the Farmer's Almanac (while supplies last)
and choose some free balloons for the kids. We've just opened our
beautiful new office and we want you to see it.
Our office hours are Saturdays, from 10 to 4, from 9 to 4 Monday
through Thursday and from 9 to 6 on Friday-all for your.savings
convenience. The caricaturist will be with us Wednesday through
Saturday,.Februaiy 2, 3, 4 and 5 .
Come see us, we'll be happy to see you and tell you all about
our twelve free services for savers.
~ •••
•
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Overcrowded School·s
To some people biggest means best, but in the
Huntiniton Beacti Union High School District bigger
campuses simply mean horribly overcrowded classes.
It's a problem the district muJt t.a.ckle, but so far
basn 't. One of the district's five high schools. Fountain
Valley, may be the biggest in the stale next year and
three others aren't far behind.
Projected enrollments for the 1972·73 school year
are: Fountain Valley, 4,506: Marina. 3,543: \Ve stminster,
3,519: Edison, 3,497, and Huntington Beach. 2,483.
The state's educational master plan says 2.500 en-
rollment is about right for most high schools.
So far the district's only answer to the question of
overcrowding has been the installation of portable
classrooms at the five campuses -and lhat is no real
solution.
A small series of boundary switches have also been
designed to take about 300 freshmen away from Foun-
tain Valley next year, but district officials admit that is
only spreading the overload.
mittee is studyin& this idea, but no time limit has been
put on the study.
-Consider using one campus (or more) for an eve-
ning school of 3.000 volunteer students.
-Extend the school day into two or three more
periods and spread the student load over a lopger day.
Al least fewer students would be on campus part of the
time.
-Build n1ore high schools. The district already
owns three high school sites. but has not even proposed
a bond ele<'tion for school construction funds. It oughl
to be considered no\v .
Considering ihe rapid growth of the district. and
its potential for further population expansion. it will
probably take more than one of these methods to cut
the school load down to its proper size.
Some of these ideas may not be very popular with
the public, but they may be necessary. One way to alle·
viate public criticism is to simply ask for volunteers
for the odd-hour. and odd-date classes to see if enough
students and parents are wiUing to help make the pro·
gram work on a volunteer basis.
• ' <
The local schools were all built big for relatively
large enrollments -3.000 students on each campus
except Huntington Beach -but they have all far ex·
ceeded that capacity.
Some 51 percent of the high school students al·
ready take at least a few summer courses. The only real
road block to any of the possibilities is ingrained tra·
ditlon. but it might be n1 ore popular than critics believe.
~-. I ,/(..___,_ .. District trustees must soon consider drastic meas-
ures to lighten these packed schools. A few possibilities
include:
-Installation of year-around school. U a third
semester were established this summer, Fountain Valley
High would only have to serve 3.000 students (still full)
at one time. Other schools would be less. A district com-
District officials say they can hire the extra staff
for the load. so there's no hitch there. If parents think
it's unpopular to shift the traditional classes -they
should try taking a shower in the overcrowded physical
education facilities. The problem is growing worse, not
better. Immediate action is required.
IQ 1
H
Could Lose Power and Even His Bead Meaning of
'Survival of
The Fittest'
Sadat Foes Are Internal ,
\VASHINGTON -President Anwar
Sadat is teetering precariously on the
edge of a furiously seeth ing internal
eruption -which could blast him out of
pov•er, and possibly e.ven cost him his
head.
That is the real in·
side reason for the
Egyptial\._ leader's
sudden trlp io ~Ios
cow.
It is a desperate
attempt to bolster
himself apinst hi 1
increasingly numer-
ous and aggressive
home enemies. Sa -1 dars mosl dan~erous foes and crisis.
tight now are in his own country and not
Israel.
Those violent Cairo student riots and
demonstrations were just the visible tip
of a deep-raging conflagration.
Behind the students are military and
ultra-nationalist elements.
IN FACT, they instigated the student
outbreaks and played a key behind-the·
scenes role in keeping them churning
de spite strenuous government efforts to
quell them. first by conciliatory promises
and then by heavy-handed force .
It is highly signific;ii;!t that when tough
suppression became~ /'necessary. Sadat
resorted lo police reserves and not army
troops.
Reason : I n e military-particularly
younger offictrs-were not deemed
reliable.
Also not reported at the lime: the
Egyptian airforce was grounded.
Lending a decisive hand in that
"precautionary" crackdown were the
Russian MIG fighter-bomber crews and
antiaircraft missile battalions -number·
ing more than 10,000 men and orficers.
STERN WORD went out from Sadat's
beleaguered headquarters lhat the Soviet
f~ were prepared to instantly go inlo
.aCtien'.against any move by Egyptian air
tl.ementa to support the threatening
students or 11 coup·11tlempt-the real aim
of the turbulei:it furor.
· Pre!um3&1y, Sadat had Kremlin ap--
pro1111 to sound this extraordinary warn-
ing.
Whether he: did or not, it worked . The
Egyptian airforce meekly stayed ground-
ed as ordered, although it is an open
secret in Cairo that the most vehement
dissidents among the military are
airmen-passionately itching for revenge
for their shattering defeat by the Israelis
in lhe 1967 conflict.
lt would have been quite a spectacle if
the airmen had ignored S a d a t • s
ukase-with Russian-manned MIGs and
AA batteries tangling ~·ith Egyptian
pilots and planes.
CRUCIAL WEAKNESS of the anti-
Sadat rorces is lack of an outstanding
leader.
There is no one among these basically
discordant elements with either the
stature or charisma to unite them suf.
liciently to moun t a widely.based-putsch
against Sadat. The military don't trust
the extremist civilian elements, and vie!
ver sa.
This fundamenta1 weakness Is due
direclly to the d!liberate policy of the late
Gama! Nasser and his successor and
long·time intimate Sadat.
Both leaders made It a fixed rule to
weed out potential rivals. That was done
in a number of ways-ranging from
more-or-less permanent house arrest lo
outright execution.
Sadat is not without powerful sup-
porters, both military and civilian.
That is why he survived the mass stu·
dent demonstrat..ions-,..wJth the 1trongly
implied aid of the Ruuiab forces.
A FORMER GENERAL, Sadat has in·
nuential supporters among the older
commanders, particularly army and
navy. Similarly. Egyptian businessmen
are heavily behind him. Pi-1ost of them
privately have no stomach for another
round of fighting with Israel. They want
tn cash in on the extensive electrification
and increasing industrialization resulting
from the completion of the Aswan Dam .
Alw the y sorely miss the once many
1nillions or tourists' do1\ars.
In Moscow. Sadat is seeking an im·
pressive face-saver with wh.ich to placate
his war-clamoring critics and other
malcontents.
This rauJe-dazzle i~ virtually certain lo
be an announcement that Russia will
undertake a large-scale program to
enable Egypt to become self-sufficient in
W!apons product ion. Last w e e k ,
authoritative Washington so u r c e Ii
"leaked" reports that the U.S. has agreed
to do that for I srael-includ i ng
!upersonic war planes.
Military Critics Aid Enemy
Tbt El.ks MJgaziM
It is difficult to conceive of a greater
danger to this nation than the UftWarrant·
ed attacks on what some people term our
"military-industrial complex." They vilify
the military as ,;warmongers" wh0se only
concern is providing our armed forces
with a means to practice the science and
art of kUling . and the development of new
war-making material.
The insidious part of these attacks is
that they do exactly what the enemiei of
our republic want . . . they undermine
our n.ation ind its preparedness capabili·
ty.
wlthoui, but preierably from •itllin.
IT IS AXJOMA TIC that ~·hen serious
trouble arises, we must rely on the
mil itary for protection. It is equally true
that no military organization can be suc-
cessful without clo&e COOp!ration from in-
du stry. Why, then, should both groups be
victims of scurrilous attacb on their in-
tegrity,. their motives and practices as we
5il idly by? We· do not think our mem·
be:rship, dedicated to a atrong and
healthy nation, subscribes to such BR
ideology.
The Communists want our country to
fall into the hands of those who would
deny fr«dom of thought, •peed>. moY~
ment llld personal liberty. They hM •
written and said many ttmes lhat tbey -
will overthrow our nation by force anit
violence . . . not nectasarl!J "from
It appe•rs to be the old stol-y, "what
have you done for me late.ly?'" that
pr.ecipita!U •. the violent actions W! see
and ~ on our college campuses.
Armed forces recruiters are thrown off
campu.aes and phy!icany assaulted. The
ROTC Is vilified, buildings burned, and
the Corps thrown off many campmes.
DAILY PILOT
PEOPLE WHO bout of th<~ Com-
•. munlsl phifolophles are not only permit-
ted ... they a~ .... Invited lo speak lo
-ooU.C• audiencea w6in they CJ• •pread
their Vituperation qalpst DUr country
ml everything It 1tand1 for. Some P""
r ...... who openly acknowledge th<y' ...
Communllta .or Communist 1ympalhl:z.e.r1
CCllJtinue to ttach our youth. HCUre in the
taaw1edge !hot th<y can't be Oniel
limule of their "JIOlitlcal belid1."
We do not ldvocate thought oonlrnl
JDCh 1,1 e1trciaed by C.OmmunL'il n.atlrms
•• ~ bUt neither do we advocate extendln~
lrMlallon• lo • "'l)]>hold Mary" lo teach
in our tchools on the off chance her in-
fec:Uon wW not strike our children.
\lfe •spoclaJJy abhor tbo1e who know-
ingly -e jOWlg men lo dodge the
draft or desert from tho armed fore<S.
SOme ~.000 lo 30,000 ""' ..Umat.d lo
ba .. -lo tanada -... and the«
ar~ more in other countries &uch as
Sweden .
WE EVEN WITNESS the 1ickening
i;ight of pollticianl sharing the same plat-
form with ne<>-left~l.5 as they exhort all
who would listen to bring pressur! on
Washington lO extend amnesty to draft
dodgers and deurten. To do so would be
to insult every man in tbe armed forces,
p.&rticularly those who d i e d while in
uniform.
We will alwa ys pro1ect and defelld our
right of dissent ..• but we cannot con-
done irrational. hyaterical condemnation
of either our military or our lndu1trie1.
They helped make this nation the
greatest on earth. They will help• KEEP
tbl1 th! greatest naUOn on earth, despite
the poisonous rhetorlc spewing from the
mouths or the: very 1mall mlnority who
would see us become 1ubservient to the
Communist philosophy ••• 1 pllilooophy
wblch daily .mow& Jt Is weakening in its:
own heartland.
Dear
Gloom y
Gus
I UJOughl uniflcition wa1 meant to
bring ochoob 1o1ether. Why In
HunUnglon ll<ach ii it drlvln1
evtrybody 1pan?
-D.S. R.
f\lt ....... ""'*"" .......... "'--....wtJf ._ If tTl9 _,ru1r . ....,
-........... Ir __ ,, hi. °""" ,..,.
Some months ago, I menlioned that
most people have no idea of what
•·survival of th! fittest" means in a
bio\ogi~al sense -wrongly imagining It
means survival o( lh! strongest or most
aggressive. .
Since then qjllte 1 few readers have
asked me to amplify and e1plain
"survival of tht fit·
test," and J am hap..
PY to do so. It means
simply that thOI!
species or members
of species. which are
best able to ad.ipt to
changing circum.
.&lances have th e
greatest chance to
survive.
THE DINOSAUR may have been the
"strongest" of early creatures, and the
sabre-toothed tiger the "most •g·
gres.sive," bul both specie~ became ex·
tinct precisely becauu they continued to
depend upon strength or ferocity at 1
time when other qualitie1 were more
necessary.
Let us consider modem man In this
context. In Japan today, traffic accidents
are the four.th leading cause of deaths: in
all technological countries, deaths by
violence are rising, and most <If these are
accountable 00 the number of traffic
deaths, as world population grows and
accidents grow along with It
Now . accidents rise in a geom etric rate
compared to population. Thal is, with
three auto1 onJy Ulret encounters are
possible: with four autos. six are possi-
ble; with five autoa, nine.; with six autos,
IS: and JO on.
SO, AS THE WORLD get.& more people
and more cars and more traffic , the
possibility of violent death by !ccident
goe.J up geometrically. and not Just
arilllmetlcally. When you double the
number of cars, you far more than dou·
ble the number of accident.I.
Given this fact, who then would be the
''fittest" survivors of thi1 enonnou11
reducer in human populatkm? Those who
are the most prudent , not the strongest
or .most aggressive. Those who tlay home
mdst. who drive the least, ind who drive
with the gr!atest caution and the tamest
reflex:u. Also. thole who comume the
least alcohol and take the fewest pill!.
AND IN PAST WARS, of «IW'&e, w'
know n ii actually tho ·"weUelt" who
have aurvlved: the strongest, bravest.
health~,. youneest mf'n have been killed
by the mlIIIOOI. Indeed, """"' hillortan&
have 1uge1ted lhtt World War II w11 10
'"' In comlns precisely 11eca... the •·nower"' of the upcomtnc iener•Uon wu
slaughtered -mm· who mlihl hlw led
their c:ounlri .. with more 1n1ow,._ and
r._. thoo Iha rtl!Ulalll left bohlnd the
Una.
At any ratf. We need to undtt1t1nd tbal
1wvtval for man Cindlvidu11Jy and 11 a
1peciel) baa nothlnc lo do with power er
ag:nuivenea: todeed., lheM h-a v •'
beoome IUlddal quaUtla for ua. The "Ill·
lelt'' hwnlM are thole wbo are molt
wllllnc lo modify oooduct.
Quotes
Jess Uar&, LA., o~ll11tlf! luder
-"I still aspire lo polltlcal olnce, In the
direction that l can best do 1 job, a bet-
ter )ob than '°""""" occupyln1 thJt of. rtce. ...
·-·.-'·I --~~ \ -· .
~~-
SP0i<,T5MEN .. ~ ....... I>~
Burke Hung Up
Over Cory's Hair
To the Edllor :
Our ocean 5llnks from the <lead fl:-.h
and birds killed by the morlern industrir.~
of convenience. Our air is like thf' octan;
we may soon be like the rish 11 nd birds.
Apartments are spre ad1nfi( over this !;ind
like a fungus. I could go on-ta xc.!i. Virt-
nam ...
However, everylh inR ls In control. V•lr
have our representatives IQ confide in·
-like A~aemblyman Robert Burke ( R •
Huntington Beach) !or Instance.
IT IS REALLY rea11surinR lo kno\v tha t
while 111J these major problems !re con·
fronting U:i, the Republican IRwmnkrr ill"
carrying on his own campai,i::n lo unsrnl
Assemblyman Kennelh Cory I 0 •
Anaheim ). The reason: Cory's hair
covers his collar: he elso wears boots.
Hasn 't anyone informed Assemblyman
Burke that hair and boots lie quite stlll
without the action of the Individual wear-
ing them? Burke could judge Cory ac-
cording to Cory's actions. But that would
be too difficult.
1 wish I had the lime to waste carrying .
on meaningless campaign!I.
RON HAYDEN
Pecu liar Ale hetn11
To the Editor ·
Help me : I am confused ! Our Prt!li·
dent has come out witb what sounds li ke
a more than reasonable proposal to end
the hostilities in Southeaiit Asia , ind
STILL wt are bombarded wilh ·
'·STOP THE KILLING'.'' The idea
seem!I lo be thal by some peculi ar
al chemy of war. our unilateral and com·
plete pullout will guaran tee that the
North Vietnamese will never fire another
Ma il hox
l,etl<:rs 1rom r endeTI ort 1DtLcom«.
Normall11 wr.iltrs should conveu thtir
mes.~aoes tn. 300 word.t or lcs1. TIL•
r iaht to conden.te letters toJtt 1pac•
or <:hminate libel ls re1erve . AU ltt-
rers must include 1lgnaturc and mote..
Ing arldru:s. but 11antf1 mau b1 ~t~
held on reque.!t tf 1ufflde·nt reo.1011
is nrparcnt. Po1tr11 wjll not bt pub-
lished.
gun . loss a grenade . bury a civilian alive,
nor idil the throat of 1 village ltader.
With no bombing to !low up the
trAnsfer of malerlcl lrom Ruui,11 1'nd
China vi a North Vietnam tn South Viet..
nam. Cambodia, and Laos, the killina will
stop ~
"'ITif NO FINANCIAL aid a.nd armt-
mf'nt to the South Vlelnameu. Cam.
boclien11, and La otian11, they will somehow
.survive the Commun i.st aggression?
How?
As J 11ay. I arn confused. But not so
confused, t would 11ubm lt. a11 nre some C'I(
the member!! of CongreM who contlnu! to
mouth the old cry, "'STOP THE KILL.-
ING ~ We want 1 complete pullout NOW !''
Frankly . it scarea the hell out of me
when I think of lhe caliber of mentality
of Mme of th(')11e In government. But
l.hnnk fiod we ha ve a President who is
!Itron~ enough to hrush of( the barbs of
J1uch gadnle1 as thr J\1cGOv!rna. J\1r·
Closkeys, and auch
ELIZABETH T. LANCASTER
In Strength Lies Peace
Callfonlia Feature Service
President Ni10n·1 requtsl for an in·
crease, not a deereaH, In the natlon '1
defen1~ •Ptnding wa! 81j: mocking to _
those who have made a political pro-
fe1111 ion of neo-i10l11Uoni1m u It wa s
reassuring to thoH who, perhaps. have
read history a little more altentlvtly.
Mr. Nlton made it unmistakably clear
In his State of the Union address that his
first priority for thJs country IA ti) ma in-
tain its dominant military 1trength as the
greatest po11lble aafe&uard of world
pea~. As ht put It:
"We must maintain the strength
necessary to cit.fer wtr. Strong military
defenae1 are not the enemy of peace..
Thfy ire the guardl.an of peace."
TO THOSE WHO f!lr that thll strona
stance would fndlnger the hopu for a
1ucce11fuJ meeun, wlUJ (;ormnun11t
leaders ln Pekin1 ind Moscow. the Preti·
d!nt •aid; "My planned vl1it1 will mt1n
not that our difl'ertnce1 have disappeared
or will disappear In the near future , Th4!1
Important thine I• th1t we talk about
these d.Uference~ rather thin flght about
them.'''
To the doves he added the waminr!
''There could be no more mlJIUlded set
of priorllles than one which would temp&
others by W!akcnll\g America, and
th<roby enda"let !lie pe1ee Cl( lhe
world.''
THE STATE or Tiii Unicn mtlUI•
11 a nat challe~e to the McGownu ind
P'ulbrlghts who want tnOrtnoUI decru1e1
in our defeDM ·SPl"dlnc and more
cowlowlng lo the Commilnl1t Woitd.
Jn contrast, Prnktent Nlmn hll pos'-
tioned himself u did Teddy -I~
He betleve1 In taJldn& loflly, but canylnc
• big 1Uck.
Dear George :
By 6eof'9e ---------.
yuk.I
I took )'OIJT Holiday Hint aboot
utlllzin& tbo1e left-over slivers of
toap bars and melUng them down
In milk cartona lO ere.Ile btautlful.
var1cok>red C1ndlt1. liowever, I
find lhtse candles won 't bum.
MRS.ER.
Otar Mrt. £.R. ·
You know, people write that to
me alt.tr ttf!I')' jolly holiday aeuon
•nd have for )'ears. Some:how It
starta off my new year right.
flmagio10 au tJlOI< people trying to
light a big chunk of soap~ Yuk,
Dear c-,.,
I &aw YOU Ill 'fv the oCbor .,
and you're I.Iller than )'OU are on
the r1dlo.
W.R:
Dear WR :
Evorybody lool!1 tall« the other
d1y.
t S.nd yoor . problems lo Goorp
and m..a.ke. f'.t:tra room in thll hall
clolel. Or •hmvu you kHP c*I ...... )
, .
!
on Rebound I
Candidate Re11eivs Attack 01t Vietna111 W<tr
U} ROBl-~RT L. CA:\IPBELL
A.1-L•*I ~ •• ,. Wrll•r
Defying a host of Republicans who
have chastised hin1 for criticizing Pres!·
dent Nixon's lateiH pence proposals, Sen.
Edmund S. Muskie has renewed his al·
lilck on the President for not unilaterally
11ctting a date for complete withdrawal of
U.S. forces fro1n Vielnarn .
On the campaign tr!al in \\'1scunsin . the
?o.taine Democrat Thursda~' issued <1
statement responding to thl' latest f.OP
criticism -from Secretar~· of :;1ate
\\'ill lam P Rogers hour:. earlier. v.·ho .
said ~1usk ie harn1ed the national inter('!>'.
by rejecting Nixun's plt111 before Hanoi
did .
"For years,'' Mu skie said ... every time
an American senator has made a pro-
posal to bring this war to an e nd earlier.
lie has been greeted with the same
response from our government as
Secretary Rogers used today.
UPI TtltPhlll"I
"It is apparent that the other side will
not accept the terms the administration
tias set." Muskle continued, ad~lng: "I
believe they would respond seriously to
the tenns 1 have suggested."
Muskie said Wednesday release of U.S.
prisoners of war and sa~~ty of the troops
should be the only cond1t1ons attached to
'NEVER THOUGHT l'D GIVE MONE Y TO A ROCKEFELLER'
Hubert Humph rey Pays Election Fee to W. Va. Secretary
!ietting a withdrawal date. . .
Rogers' denunciation of l\lu sk1e s v1e\v
a s "most inappropriate t1nd harm_ful_ t11
the nation·s in terest" follo\\'ed s 1m 1\<1r
criticisn1 fron1 presidential P r c s s
secretary Ronald L. Ziep;ler. Sec-retary of
Defense ~lelvin n.. Laird and several
Republicans in Congress.
And a source close to the \\'hitc House
( CAMPAIGN'721
indicated JTl(lre of the same probably
would be forthcoming today at an ~p·
pearance in New ~lamps hirc by Interior
Secretary Rogers C. H. l\torton: J\>l~rton,
in New Hampshire to kic k off Nixon s re-
election ca1npaign for the !\·larch 7 state
primary. "might be . prelty tough on
Muskie" the source said.
Another Democra tic pre s i d e n ti a l
aspirant, Sen. Henry M. Jackson of
\Vashington, told the Women·s National
Democratic Club Thursday: "I w~s. sorry
to see Sen. lo.·1uskie take the pos1t1on he
did." . tn an apparent reference lo escalali~n
of the war under recent Democral1c
presidents, J ackson said the Democrats
.. have a special responsibility to help gel
the war over."
In other pol itical developments:
MUSKIE: Later Thursday n i g h l
Muskie engaged in a heated exchange
~·ith hooting and hissing antl wa~ pro-
testors when hl' :1 ttemptcd to discuss
questions on \Yhich they de1nanded
answers -the Vietnan1 war, and
whether marijuana and abortions should
be legalized. r-.1uskic said the reception at
a ;\1:idisu1l. \\It)) .• hult:! 1\'(1:-i Ille 1ou-.1
hust1ll' hf' h1.1d encountered su1~·1 · tu ~ \'It'~·
presidential can1pnign da.\s.
LINDSAY : ~C\\' York 1\1a)UI .John \
Lindsa~· predicted 'l'hursd<iy 111gh1 tl1•·
to.lassachusctts Detnocratic prin1ary Apr 1l
25 '''ill be a head·to-head battle belwe(•ri
1\·1uskie and himself. Lindsay told tlil'
l\1assachusetts I louse Press Associatiun
that the field \Vil! be n:irro1\·ccl by eartiPr
primary contests in \1•hich he expects 10
do progressively better.
JACKSON: The \Vashington Demuc1·~11 .
arriving in 'Visconsin later Thursday to
begi n a three-day ca1npaign for lilt•
stales' April 4 prin1<1ry, said Congrc!:.'s
should t'lose existing inc o n1e·1 ax
loopholes instead of ;i pproving a value-
added tax. no1v bt'ing discussed. '!'he
v.•orking n1an . Jakkson said in Waus:iu .
"is being taxed too 1nuch for too litt!t•
because of tax systc1ns 1hil1 tire riddlr·d
1\·ith favoritisn1 ."
llUI\1PllB.E,': Sl·n lluhert II 1t u111
phrey filed in Charleston. \V.Va. for lhl'
r..1ay 9 Democratic primary and tulcl ;1
joint session of the legislature he \\'Ould
relight the torch carried by the late John r·. Kennedy. uniting \Vest Virginia~s 10
brini,: him victory.'' I want to build a
coalition fro1n the niountnintops :ind
valleys across this great stale. the k1111.I
John Kennedy had in our 1960 can1·
paign," the .l\1innesota senator said. Later
at a $35-a·plate fund-raising dinner u1
\Vilmington. Del.,. l lu mp~r~y c-alle_d for
"a spiritual renaissa nce 1n placing a
commitment of manpQ\\'er and resources
to get America 1noving ahead.
McCLOSKEY: Rep. Pa ul N. f\.1cCloskcy
Jr. of California. antiwar challenger Lo
President Nixon. told the National Press
Club in the nation's capital If he \\'Cr('
Narcotics Agents Seize
$1 Million Cash in NY
NE\V YORK (UPI) -Law en·
forcement agents setzed almost $1 million
in cash on a New York street corner
Thursday night and charged three tnen
with conspiracy io vlo\a\C' federal
narcotics statutes. the New York J oint
Task Force revealed today.
The $967.500 in cash carried by ~1nc .~!
the n1en in a suitcase in \hC' Bronx: \Va:--
s1:11d to tw I.ht· largest a1nount nf cash
ever &Ci1.ed i11 a narL'OtiC-l' ronspirae.\
1·asf'.
The U1rcc sus pects IYl'rt• 1dt.>nllf1ed ;;-.
Charles Papa. a.l. Jos<'ph A. Di Napoli.
37. and c:eorge r·. Rossi. 46. all of t\e\v
York.
B ureau of Narcotics aud lJangcrous
B•t'• Off!
Kurt \V. Engbretson u; •t odds
with Edwardsville lligh School authoriU~ in Illinois over their
refusal to a.llow a pictur e taken
of him "rearing a favorite hat
to appear In the school year·
book. Enfbretson, 18, was un·
successfu In appealing the
Issue before the school board
and Is cOllSiderinJl !WI action.
Urugs {BNDD) Dirc<:tor John l nger~ol l
said the arrests y,·ere made by the Nt'\V
York J oint Task Forcr. made ur or !\t.'IV
York State and city police and BNDlJ
agents.
BNl)D Agent 'M1eodore Bernlt.'r said 11\J
narcotics \Ycrr seized.
Papa and DiNapoli. he ~aid ;\·ere .1r
res!C'd last night after agC'nl.<; convergL·d
on their auto1nobile in the Bronx. Thf'
suilcao;e cnrr\•ing the l"<l:\h 11·11s disCO\t•r
c•d in their. pOssf':-:s11111 lJ~· <1rrf'SI 111.c.
;1gcnts.
f{ossi v.·as arresicd In lhl· Bronx l'arl~
this nlOrning.
All three \\'ere charged 1\'Llh consp1r;ie~
to violate federal narcotics sl;l\Ult'S and
Rossi \\'as additionally c-h;irged , \vith at·
lcn1pting to sell narcotics.
Bemler said Papa was fre<! on bond
pending trial in Brooklyn 1''cdcral C<>url
on charges of violating federal narcoll<'!>
htv.·s.
In \\'ashington. lnfl'.crsoll said the
$967,500 "'as the largest nmount of cash
ever seized in a narcotics conspirat.v
case. He said both Papa and DiNapoli
disclaimed ownership of the n1oncy.
Bernier said the arrests fol lov.·cd an 111-
vesligation "in excess of a n1onth.''
'Bo nib Factor·)"' •
F ou1id by Police
DETROIT (UPI I -Agents stu1nbled
across an alleged ''bomb factory" in a
routine narcoics ra1d Thursday and S<'iZ·
ed a quantity of c:rplos.ive chemicals they
said were capable of blowing up an entire
city block.
One man 'va.s arttSled in the raid.
which also netted two pounds of mar'"-
juana., police said. Three other persons
were a?TtSted and more marijuana Wf:l!i
seiil'd in two olher raids conducted
earlier by the WR}'lle. C.Ounty l\tetro
Squad.
"All of the individuals are kl'°"'"" 11>
<'ach 01her nnd ;-e're sure they're con-
nected ln some IA'ay." Sheriff \\1itllo1n
Lucas said.
''The men of lht [)etroit nan:otics
!IQU8d and lhe metro squad art con-
tinuing their 1nvtslle.ation lo ~ "·hat
tonnc<'tion !his bomb factory and tbest
plosK>ns •·e-,e had In Ill<' IRsl fr,.,,
months.''
pr o·:-1dl·111 . Ill' 11 otild appeur ••lt•,·tl'd
!llUJl\hly before ;i JUJJI\ :>~:'.>.'>IU!l iJf
("ongrl'S:'.> !!1 an.'i11('r que:'.>tiuns .
1\SllBHOt>K : Jlep John ;vi . Ashbrook
! 1:.ohu~1. L"Orl~l'l'I :itive chal!en~cr to Nix -
011. :-;11tl a t'u1nprun1i:;;e reached bc\v.·een
1he :\'ixon :1dministr:1tion and Sen.
Abrahan1 ltibicoff (D·Con11.J. on welfare
rcfor1n "calls for preceding full-scale itn·
plen1entatinn of the family-assistance
plan. but il provides that the pla n \\'ill
take e ffect regardless of the results."
llA.f{Tfi.E: Sen. Vance Hartke of In·
cl1.:i11a. can1paigning in Nc;v l·lampshirc
fur the. De1nocr:Jtic non1 ination, chall eng-
t•d !)en. (.;eorge S. McGovern of South
Dakota t11 <i debate. 1\1c(;ovcrn replied I
th;it he would li ke lo debate llarlk<'. but \
11ould prefC'r a J\c1v ll;.srnµshirc debate
111th ,\lus k1e. the acknowledged front-run·
ncr
f\luskie. 1\lcGovern. Jackson and
Alabama Gov. George C. \Vallace didn't
sho1y up Thursday night for a Democratic
fund·raising dinner in the nation's
eapital. but Df.rnocr;itic N a t i o n a I
Cha1rn1an La\vre11ce E. o·Brien hosled
congressional aides, pages and newsn1cn
at !he $5-00·a-plate affair.
llun1phrey. former Sen. Eugene
J\.fcCarthy and Rep. Patsy T . .l\1ink of
llawaii "'ere the presidential contenders
on hand, but the bi ggest applause \\'en! to
retired House Speaker John 'V
McCormack.
Al so on hand \Vas 'l'hon1as Donelon,
who earlier th is week d e f e a l e d
Republican Burgess Nixon for !he
presideney of suburban Jefferson Parish.
La ., outside of New Orleans.
"I'm the only man to beat Nixon for
president since 1960.'' Donelon told a
howling cro"':d.
"That's what "'e need," O'Brien said.
Hospital Plan
l11structs Nclv
Dads in Classes
\\'ASlll!\GTO:-.i ( Li P I l 1\:-;
(;e0rgeto\\'n l'nivcrsity l!ospil<il s;111· 11.
thl' 11111t l1<11J con1e to givl' !:ion1e thought
to that poor. bev.•lldcr(•d fellow. the ncv.·
tathl'r.
111 the nature of things priority had. of
("nurse, to go to the ne11• 111other and the
11e11· 1nran!. Th<'y got all th<' care and at-
lt.'n!ion
1'he father \Vas s!r1ctlv a Sl'concl -clR:SS
cilizcn. as far as most hospitals ~'ere
ronccmcd.
!·le "'·as pennitled to gaze at his first
born lhrough a glass v.·indow dimly but
vnly at restricted intervals.
"Then. \\•ilh no preparation:· says
CeorgetO\\'TI, "he took home a small
terrifyingly fragile stranger." '
Now, Georgetown Hospital, according
to Pat f\ofcShea, a registered nurse whose
av.·eso1ne title is clinical coordinator of
obstetrics, is trying to teach fa ther ho1\!
to be a ra ther at t.he sa1ne tirne it is
preparing 1nothcr lo be a mother.
1t is doing this "in a special family
tent<' red maternity care program."
""Involved fro1n the beginning," says
(;eorgelown, "the father attends educa·
r1on classes. lakes tours of the hospital
before the birth. and receives an inp
,·itation to stay with his wife during labor
and deli\'ery.''
Instead of be.ing restricted lo one of
those waiting rooms where all he can do
is s it around wondering \Vhat goes on. he
is permitted to visit his wife and newborn
any time or day. He gets a "guest tray''
at mealtimes.
He even is taught how to hold a baby.
to change its diapers. and to bathe it. One
scoundrelly rather of three robust !Ons
"'as dubious, when he heard about this
aspect or ~Georgetown program.
··By playl'ng ignorant about such
things." said this veteran, "you can get
out of a lot of work."
Out t.fiss li.fcShea's concern is with the
frightened by his new r~sponslbillties. by
this "small. terrtfying fragile stranger"
he Is taking home, by lht thought ht
won 't know y;bat to do when something,
obviously. hu to be done.
··We're ll')'ln& lo mttl his need,t,
whate,•er lbey art," Slid Mi.ss McShea-
.' Fathers <'an rtla.x if thty realize the.tr
bahll ill rul 11111 .... l liroaL"
frjd.Jy, fttruarY 4, lt72 DAILY PILOT 5
Saturday last day.
15°/o off every $14-$20
dress. Including
knits and pant sets.~---.-i
Sale 11.90 to $17
•
Sale 3ggyd.
Reg. 4.tt yd. Now you can sew up Iha softest. e~)'·
ca.re, easy.wear wardrobe with these po~yester knits,
811 at one low sale price. Choose from high fashion
jacquards. coordinated patterns, and solids. Color$
from the most vibrant to soft heathery tones. All
machine w&shable. All Penn-Prest®,
The same high fashion, 58 to 60" width,
easiest care fabrics that were such great values
at our everyday low price.
Sale prtce eft.-..,. llwv Setul'Uy.
r
Big, beautttul collection ot
daytime dresses, dress-up
dresses and pant sets. In
polyesters. acetates,
acetate/nylon blends. Colors
galore. And lots of prints
and patterns. Misses',
women 's and junior sizes.
I !
1. ~ 'f:
j \ ~
'
~
l t
JC Penney
The values are here every day.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at the following stores:
\
NEWPORT BEACH, Foshion hl1nd, HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Center.
•COST A MESA , Herbot Center• !Closed Sunday)
• •, -. -
range Coast Today's Fl•al
N.Y. Steeb
VOL. 65, NO. 30, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNIA FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, '1972 N TEN CENTS
I
Economi·st Sees Great Year in Harbor Speech
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of 1111 D•llY l'U<>t S1•11
Economically, 1972 will be one or the
best years the United Sta tes has ever
had, a noted economist told a meeting of
municipal finance officers th is morning
at the Newporter Inn.
Dr. Raymond Jallow, senior vice presi-
dent and chief economist for United
California Bank, made his ''Economic
Forecast" to the 12th annual California
Society of Municipal F inance Officers
Seminar, which is ending today.
"We are entering the year with great
economic vitality," Jallow said.
\Vith the consumer more optimistic,
credit more available and income rising
just a little, Jallow estimated the public's
"appetite to spend will be the highe!l t in
four to five years."
California , which has been lagging
behind the nation in economic growth for
the last four years, will for the "flrst
time move In harmony this year," be ad -
ded.
While it Is estimated that nationally 1.8
million more jobs than last year will be
available, Jallow said, unemployment
will only decrease from 6 percent to 5.5
percent.
California should expect to get 175,000
of those new jobs, he said, but the state's
unemployment rate will p r o b a b l y
average 6.5 percent.
Most of the new positions will be in
retail. wholesale and trade services and
branches of federal government, he ad·
ded.
But the outlook for California retail
sales forecasts an "all-lime high," Jallow
said, with an estim ated $47 billion in
sales.
AbOut BS percent of that will be tax-
able.
This represents a 10 percent increase
over 1971.
''Don't wait for better days," Jallow
said, "Becau st there aren't going to ht'
any next year or by the end of the ytar,"
He was refering sperifl cally 10 what he
5aid were now the year'5 lows in all Joan
interest rates.
"If you're going to borrow money , dO lt
now." he advised. adding that h() ex-
pected all rates to rise by the end af the
year.
The economis t told the aud ience of
more than 100 that a better International
reaction to the American dollar Is helpina
thr hon1f" f'<'1,nnrny.
lie <'HllC'd 1h\:; year·~ dollar .. sup-
J'lflrled" a11d '>'-'t•l('ome as compared to la:sb
year's. "·hlth wa!I "weak and unwanted."
Other cst1n1ates ln his ecanomic
fo reca st 5ay tha t lnnatlon wlll be cut to
thret Pf'TCf"11t and that the (lro5S n1tlon11l
product \viii r('1:1Ch $1.146 trillion, a $99
billion inrrcas1: over 197 1.
Howevrr, lhc budget deficit will stilt
be a ltiri:te $25 billion beca use of his h
i Overn n1ent ~ponding , he ad ded.
Aide Mal{es Offer
H-ughes Consultant May Judge Book
;I.'"
Pier Pilings Protected
. r
\ .<'
l ild
DAILY P'ILOT $1•11 P'llllO
From Wire Suv\ces ....
NEW YORK -A former consultant to
Howard Hughea made an orfer before a
grand jury today to read the maauscrlpt
ot a purported Hug hes autobiography
with a vie w toward judginp its authen-
ticit.y.
''I would be able to say If the book
were authentic or not." added John
Meier. 38, who was a scientifi c consultant
to Hughes until 1970.
He is running for U.S. senator from
New Mexico as a Democratic candidate.
Me ier's lawyer, Robert H. Wyshak, told
newsmen the government's rellponse to
the offer to chec k the book's authenticity
was tha t "a Jot of people would like to
read the manuscript."
Newport Beach mun icipal work crews are busy
fiberglassing new pilings that are to be installed
beginning Monday. The coating is to protect the
supports against sea life. The 10 pil ings range from
66 to 76 feet in length. They will replace old pilings
supporting the piers at 23rd Street.
"We told the U.S. attorney tha t we
would be available If they wanted Mr.
Meier to read it," Wy shak added.
In a prepared statement dl1trlbuted
after hil one.hour 1rand ju::.ia arance,
Mtier 1114 he never met , book'I
Unemplo yment Rat'e Dips
./
Slightly During January
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Unemploy-
ment fell sli ghtly to 5.9 percent in
January while the number or Ameri cans
holding jobs rose to 80.6 mil lion after
seasonal adjustment, the go vernment
said today.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics said the
jobless rate was "essentially unchanged'•
Crom December when the unemployment
rate -revised downward from 6.1 per4
cent - was 6.0 percent. but ad-
ministration spok esmen immediately saw
the figures as a sign of hope.
President Nixon's press secretary,
Ronal d L. Ziegler, said at the Florida
Wh ite J{ouse that the unemployment
figures "give us a sense of optimism."
He said that although the change was
small, "it is on the right side ."
Labor Secretary James D. Hodgson
said that employment "is still on the
ma rch, steadil y upward."
President Nixon has expressed the hope
of cutting sharply into the jobless rate in
this election year, and top ai des have
predicted it will fall to live percent. '
Unemp!Qym,ent stood at six percent
each of the last two months of 1971, and
accord ing to statistics released today by
the Labor D"partment, based on changes
in seasonal adjustment f a c t o r s ,
unemployment never dipped belo w 5.8
percent during the year. That figure was
reached in June and October.
The BLS said that nonfarm payroll
employment, after seasonal adjustment,
rose in January to another record high of
71.4 million.
The burea u said the employment figure
In all job categories of 80.6 million
rep resented a rise of 2.1 million since the
unemployment rate passed the 5.5 percent
level in Octo ber, 1970.
The December unemployment rate was
origina lly reported at 6.1 percent, but
that was lowered to 6.0 percent after an
ann ual ad justment of seasonal factor
rates.
The BLS also reported that average
weekly earnings of rank and file workers
fell $1.35 during January to $129.20
because ol a three-tenths of an hour
decline in the average work week to 36.9
hours.
Dock Boss Threatening
Worldwide Ship Tieup
WASHINGTON (AP) -Harry Bridges,
boss of the striking West Coast dock
workers, today threatened a worldwide
ahipping tieup if Congress forces an end
to the strike by compulsory arbitration.
Bridges, testifyi ng before a House labor
cubcompliltee, said any law Congress
passes lo end the strike wUI affect •hips
only when they touch at U.S. docks.
'1'best ships go oversea&," he aaid,
"and we've got a few friends io other
countries, and they will respond to our
call for help. It may reach the point
where the ships won't come back here."
President Nixon has ubd Congrtll to
pw emergency leglltatioo tbat would
crtate a three-member board with the
power lo &eUle the strike by compul5ory
arbitration.
Edmund J. Flynn, preskfO!rt of the
Pacific Ma.rl.Umt AuociatfOD, which
represents tbt ahippen , endonod the bill,
u ylng he uw littl<! prospect '11 aettllng
the dl!p01' by negotiation.
But Bridges emphatically rejected it
and indicattd his long&boremen misJit ig·
nore the law lf It were en1dtd.
"We have no lntenUoo or submitting to
IUCb legislation unltss that la the wUJ of
our memben u apressed tn a sea-et
ballot," be said.
•
Bridgea said be dld not blame the PMA
for accepting Nixon's proposal.
"We have these blokes on the ropes,"
he told the subcommittee. "We're going
to whip them and they are depending on
Congress to save them."
Bridges and Flynn appeared by sul>-
poena before a special subcommittee of
the Houao Labor Committee beaded by
Rep. Franl: 'fhs>mpson Jr. (0.N.J.). •
Bridgea said the partiea to the di!pute
are clole together 1nd be urged that
Congreu let them oettle i~
Even U the bill II pused, Brtdgea aald,
be woold recommml that the tJ,000.
member lnlmlatfonaf Loaphoremen'•
and Warehoustmm's Union return to
work only U they tied lo do oo by oecret
V<lte. • ,
"In 11yh>c> thll, 1.ine0n no dis~ or defiance of President Nixon ..-lllki;h
office," Bridges aaid. "I 1imp1y mean to
say that In thiJ lnstanei he i1 trying by
methods that won't work to fo rce an end
lo our strikt."
Br\dgea said not even rr .. ident Nixon
claims the ttrlke mU!t bt ended because •
the Mllonal health and Jaftty II In
danger.
•
•I
Police to Skip
A ction Against
Helicop te r Crew
Newport Beach police officia ls said tt>-
day they plan to take no actlon again.'Jt
a helico pter crew tha t swooped down over
Old Newport Thursday morning to re-
move a water tank from atop a hig h r ise
apartment build ing.
Assistani Police Chief Harry Nelson
said thls morning a "misunderstanding''
in a conversatio,, lasl Week lef t police
and city officials unprepared for the dis-
turbance.
Nelson said officials of Vista del Lido
had contacted his office a week ago to
te ll him the work was Roing to be done,
but Nelson said he understood a crane
v:as to be used .
"It was a misu J11dcrstanding," Nelson
said. "ani:l we're no t going to pursue any-
thing."'
The helicopter ha d appeared seemingly
out of nowhere about 8 a.m. Thursday,
lowered the old water tank and raised
a new one.
"it never tou ched the ground so we
can't do anything about it either," 1aid
As1istant City Manager Phillp F. Betten-
court this morn ing.
Bettencourt noted the plannin1 director
has the authority to grant temporary
helistop permits, but the helicopter never
i;topped.
"We ju!t doa 't have jurisdiction if it's
airborne," Bettencourt said, "it'1 jw:t
like any other alrborne noiJe, it'1 beyond
our control."
11111o1r. Qtlfll4, fJVlnir, . :llltor'• wilt: Edith ' .,
•;r' do qol haw. a=eu .,,, ,;.,....i flle1 of Howa'!! Hu11>ea , the mtement
wenhn. "W~ I · 1111.polluon (fl
Nevi1dl, ·I 1evertd all oomeet.JoU wltb
tile Hugh., orpnluUoo. I .b a·• t no
knowledge of any computeriZecl in-
formation about Howard Hughea."
There hav.e been 1ugge1tlon1 that com-
puterized inlonnatlon on Hughes may
have been leaked by one of hl1 aides to
Irving, for use in wr iting the pwrported
au tobiography. A voice Identified al
Hughes in a telephone Interview ha1
denied ever talking to Irving.
There were other development.a In the
bl:.arre case :
-The New York Timea today published
Agnew Finds
A New Tar get
NEW YORK (UPI) -Vice Presi-
dent Spiro T. Agnew says he would
not trade all the environmental
"dilettantes" In the country for one
level-headed, aerlous4 minded Boy
Scout.
Agnew told the Boy Scouts' an-
nual dawn patrol breakfast that
their group had been practlcing
ecology for year1 and in a 1ingle
day last year collected a million
tons or litter from parka: and public
areN.
"As an American vita Hy In-
terested In the environment."
Agnew uld, "l •ouldo'I trade you
one 1,vel·headed, aerloU1-mlnded,
service-oriented Boy SCout for 111
the publlclty-... ldng envtroo.,.ntal
dUettanlel the"new1 modia con dll
up between now and Halloween."
Meaty Caper
Man Held ilt Illegal Steak Sales
Dropping by a Corona dtf MM tailor eel Kook do the aamt, IMflinl tht
shop , a Tornnce aalmnan allegedly peel-IOlpect claimed lo be a John l!tnry
dllng his l<!ftover lleab and bamburger Jona, but cfldn't baft ay ldentlflcAdloo
at bargain baaemeot prlcu wound up In popen on him.
a bit of mw 1buraday nlgh l The nm wetchll and .,........ control
Fredtrk:k W. "Undenlog" Kook, 2%, evecutlve then eocorted Kbok out to a
WU IUbtequtntly arrested and boolcld in-i.ow<rJ'I -truci< portld al the curb,
to Newport Buch City JaU on IUapicfon -· bs·.U.,.U, tried to hfchlall It
of Ul<!pl Illa of mHl Section i20l4 of wltb thoJwnhurse".
the State Bustnoa I< Pror...lorul Codt. Fitdllil anotdlld the a,. oat"' the la·
Orange County bu U million restdellla "!f!!rJtiitol'.,.,... loo!. ols 1Dcb KoOic
and more than ilO tailor 1bops. Iii ·;~·I tailor i nd -Tbe looe customer>wbenpoorU~· ·1 -51 . ...,_,...PatrGl11110 -who didn't uplaln his ~ · : ,
oolk:e -tnlered -·· Taf!Gl'(,' • ... Joot lor ~ •• l!:. Coast Highway, !Oaoj DOM .a..t -i411 p;lji. 'Wii1'It J'ltdlea ....a-tad tlireo'
WIU!am Fitcben. car.-'11 ineat lit llkf bort llO" DW'.kJnp,
He iJ the OnlOCt Count1 ... ttr of of ••illlt, ......... state llir vlolatfoa.
weight.. and mWllres, who ~ directly Delendinl M* was DnaD7 nleued on
rt1pon&ible for tomllroute enfor"'1ltllt flJO ball, pend!ri, arrafCnmilll on the
of 1111eh 1tate laws. mlldornoanor charge nut net tn
"Anybody want to boy aoy IDNt?'' Harl>or Judtdll Dbtt1d °""1.
Kook wu quottd u uy!ng. Oty ofllclob a&o pin to ~.
Fltcben Ulenllfied ldm>eR and domu4-Undtrcloc for ~ rilltlll a U-.
' t •
what lt said were excerpts from the con-
trovers.lal autobiography. but 1tru1ed
that tbe material Hcould have-come from
previously published aneedotes" about
the reclu~e billionaire.
-Federal authori ties said they may in4
ltiate extradition proceed ings against
Richard Susk!nd, a collaborator with Irv·
Stnuggle Plot
Ing on the autobiography If Su~klnd failed
to appear Monday before the federal
1rand Jury 1nve1tlgatlng the case.
-Buslnes:s Week Magazi ne reported
that part of the money McGraw-Hill paid
for the book was Invested In American
sec ur ities by a Swls~ bank at the dlrec·
(See IRVING, Page %)
Balboa Island Attorney
Di sciplined -Marijuana
Sy ARTll\111 JI. VIN8l!L °' Ille ~" "19' '''" Convicted J1h year1 110 ln connection
with a marJJua"a 1muUUu ... plot, Balboa
Jallnd atjomey and lonnor Natport
Beii<!i plfJUIIng C<lllllllW!on melrib<r RI~ A. Hlgblo today WU IUlpenciecf
from prtctlee for one year.
The decialon Wit contained f1 a 32-
page report llsued Jn Sin Franeflco by
th e State Supreme Court.
Qualifying its flndln&s In forbidding
Hlgble to pracllce law, the court 1ald
pos~sion of marijuana in ll&elf -by
tod ay 's 1t.andardJ -doe1 not coruitltute
mora l turpitude.
Stipulating that the 29-yea r-o ld lawyer
was Jnv olved in 1988 1mugglin1 plo t,
the cou rt said hls conduct -not slmply
having marijuana -J.11 what motiv11ted
the suspenlon.
"Measured by lhe moral• of the day,
Archeolog ists
Ge t City Help
I n Site Finding
After hearing tale11 of prehlltorlc In-
dians , camels and whaJea that li ved In
this area, Newp:>rt Beach Planning Com-
mi.!lslooer1 Thursday offered to help an
archeologilt's firm contact owner1 of
sites that may prove vtluable.
Archeologlc1J Research Jnc. of Cotta
Mesa told commlqloner1 that many of
the 11Ltea recorded ln the county and ln
Newport Botch are already totalfy
dertroytd by developm ent.
"And )'OU can't gt! people and antmatt
who ltved more than 2,000 year1 110 to
come back -IO you have to excavate,"
Roger Defauttll, ARI prelident, added.
RAmafnJnc t rcheolcsi<:•l rlta In the c~
ty are prlmattly around Newport Bay ,
ARI llllde the preaenlatlon In bopet
"that something could be done to 11ve
what ii: ltft," Detautel1 uid.
Hl1 non-proltt compony u ked for
notlflcatlon of any llrge developmeota
and 11id ~ could tell planning Ital! now
'Where known tttel are.
Deautela admitted many "' the -. valuabla lltea are on land owned by the
Jrvfno Compony, which has conlnclod
ARI to "'""' au lta 1anda and 111v.,. or ~•Illa.
•1Sbow • on a map wbert the alt.ff are
tbal aren'I on Irvine Compony land and
wt., the plannl~~::= you who to coolact," WUltam
Martin uld.
"Eiallmt, tha~'• whit we're Ukln&,"
Hid l>oaauttll, who had Writl«I the ctly
Jut Stplembtt uldlll for & htar)J!c OD
tho rpMler
eommi.i.ner Jodie lfftther "" pre .... tl>e ...... splnll;the -
of · bOr 'CC>lleqUes. to which cllalnnan
cm """' aiillded 'nlnda7. "We reoognlte the valve·d what you're
~."be uld, "Ira Juat boon a problem
ot one era aptNt another."
Some -bad . ....,, con-
-tbat acttnU!lc tnHnfg1t1om
would tntttlera with bulldfn(, but
lleaautell uld thq wlnttd lo ruch 1itts
...... lllt. PlaildaC "-"
Its poue,.lon or u11 doe& not eottllllute
an aet of ba1enn1, v1ltnt11 or deprav.
lely ••. " tht court 11id in Ju. "P1'.~·~·
If It had rul• ot!liirW!le, ~~!-'"-""' , "< • .'·
have betn dllbamd. -
Hlgbll •nd MVeral ol1ltl' d.,.._all
were arrested In November of 1•, tn •
connection with ,.lzure of !,!llO ponnda of
alle1cd marijuana nown from Mexico to
the Palm Sprln,c1 area.
Ironically, Me1lci'l11 .11uthorl tle1 who
learned of the pending thlpment aelzed
the original cargo below the border and
subst it uted alfalfa.
Courts have held that whether the 1ub-
atance involved 11 Indeed marijuana, the
circum1tancet show Intent to de1l In mar-
ijuana.
Convicted on a le11aer charge, Higbie
was aentr,nctd to 90 days In jail , but thla
was not the ba1l1 for Wday'a rullng.
The cou rt said there were mJtlaatlng
facton Involved -adding Higbie wa111't
Involved Jn the caper for personal profit
-and this 1hould be taken Into consid4
er11Uon.
Once considered the Harbor Area'•
m01t eligible bachelor-. the hafldlOme hot
•Ir ballooning enthu1la1t claimed In In-
terviews after hla .11rnft that he had met
other prlnlcpals Jnv Glved BOC lally,
lfe was quite talkative about the whole
thing a11 court proceed ing• unfolded In
tht> monthl following 1ei7.Ure of wha t
would have been worth $1.7 million -if
lt hadn 't' been aUalfa.
"Thll'I 11 a blurre result of an attom ey-
cllent relation.s hip," Hlg'b!e remarked at
one po int.
Terrorist Killed
SAI GON (AP ) -A bomb hidden In a
radlo blew up and klllfld the ttrrorlat car•
rylng it and wounded 11 other peraona
ThurldJiy night In a lhealtr In the town of
Ben Tranh, 30 mUa aouthwu t of Saigon.
the Sat1on Command reported.
0r..,. Cout
w .. t11er
ThoM hllh clouds over tht South-
land w!U clear by Saturday, mak·
tng way for a pleuaot weektnd
witll 111lghUy warmer l4mpontura.
lllgbl 111onc the beadl IO rillng to
• Inland. Lowa --
INSmE TODAY
. ri.. N1urport Harbor A rt
M111t um 1141 16 of 141'01'1 H&r>-
pcr'a p<1fn1f119r on dllJ'ltJ~ lhll month In tit• matn 00""11, ...i
1omc other tnttr11tlno rmall •~
hfbltl tn the t tltrance ooUm/.
Sec Page 21 of todoV'• Wl1Jcnd.
<r for p!Civr., ond •tin'V.
~--a: <•~ • Cl~._. ._..
c-k• JI .__. n --. .... ,.,... .• . ,.,._ ,,.,,
.., ... ...... t ...... "'" .. :...~ ~
• ........... --.. ................... .,.. .... """" ' "=":::... .... . . .. -. ,,. .. ..... ...,..... ~· ;i:::-.. • .., ""! w....-. ..... , .... ·-....
•
I
I
Newpo1·t Planners Yield
To Mysteries of Past
By CANDACE rEARSON
ot I~• Dtllr f'lltl '"''
It l.s amazing wh.1t one woman and a fev.· dinosaura can do.
Newport Beach pl;inning commissioners have t11ken a tentative step to..
ward aiding scientific investigallon!'l into Lhe cily·s ancient past.
But Jt took some hard proddillg by Mrs. Jackie Heather, the only woman
on lhe commission, to get her six male colleagues to make
that bow to history.
f.1n!\t of lhe men setm more Inclined toward buU..
doters than archeology, but they have now agreed to co..
o~rale with a non-profit firm which wants to salvage at
least some artifacts before buildings go up on all of tbe
lilrch eologically rich sites in the Harbor Area.
It all started some months ago when Archaeological
Research Inc. (Arll) of Costa ~1esa aent a letter to the city
Planning Department. The firm has pinpointed 350 1ites
v· r-throughou t Orange County that It deems archeologlcally
algnlflca nt. More than 50 of these are in Newport Beach.
Anl orrcred to sh:ire lts Information with the city Planning Department.
"We 'll tell you where the sites are, if you will tell us when developmen!J are
planned on the property," said the fol ks at ARI. The ~irm's battle plan Is to
contact the properly owner and work with him In mi ning the .archeologlcal
value of his land before the bil5 of history are burled under bulldinga.
But the city's professional planners neglec ted to pass the offer on to com-
miaslonera. They didn 't even answer the letter.
Enter ~lrs. !leather. She stumbled onto the letter while doing a little
tp•dework herself in planning department [Jlea.
Then ahe began her determined effort to convince her fellow planners of
the need to preserve some of the past for present and future generations.
She managed to arrange la!'lt night's presentation· befort the commission
by ARI and also got commissioners to include a section encouragin& archeo-
loglca l work In the city's proposed planning policy statement.
But those steps came grudgingly and only after some commissioners
learned there ls more than one way to dig a hole.
During one of Mrs. Heather's first attempts, Cornmlssloner1 William
Hazewlnkel and William Agee both Ignored talk of 2,000-year-old Indian villages
and Jndlvldually declared. "I don't care about dinosaurs."
Hazewlnkcl iioon after rective<I a letter from a boyhood history teacher
who said he couldn't understand how the commissioner could "turn out like he
did."
Agee experienced even closer criticism.
"Miss Pearson.'' he entreated quietly one night during a break in a meet.
Ing, "please don 't print that f don't like dinosaur!!.
"I hove o little boy who doesn't unde rstand how his father could say
that."
NolhJng like a little pressure to give one a aense of history.
Sobbing Woman Pleads
For 'Right to Death'
By CHARLES S. JOHNSON
HELENA Mont. (AP) -Poignantly
tracing the hfliertng deaUi of her f&..yea r·
old fa lher, a housewife his pleaded with
a commltlee to provide In a new state
constitution the right to die.
"l maintain that to give tbe people fac-
ing certain death •.. the right to die
quickly, ea~ily and In peace when they
want to do so, la being compassionate, In~
telllgent and hum nne," Joyce ~f. Franks
cf Albtrton told a hushed audience Thurs-
day In the Senate chambers.
"And I afflnn that it Is an act thet
God, who i;ilve U.'I all life. wou ld approve
of," the aald.
~Irs. Franks, tlle mother of two
children, described her fath er's suffering
to the Biil of Rights Con1n1illte at the
Montana ConstltuUonal Convention.
After her father broke a hip, his doctor
'df'~cribed the necessary operation, she
,15a1d.
"Dad RskM me lf the doctor would
please give h!n1 ~omething to put him to
11letp right then ." f\lrs. 1-~rRnks said, bul
r:.he did not ask the doctflr to do so.
As hl~ health detPrior11t£'rl, sht related,
her fathtr mnde the request again.
"~ty (;ithtr hRrl lx'en a fanncr. and he
flad Jt\\'Cn ml!'rClfll] death to animals v:ho
had been pets and CQn1pan!ons," ~lr~.
Ftanka stlid. sobbing. ''J{e could not
stand to ste them sufftr prolonged and
agonizlni;i dealh \\'hen they \vcre severely
OIAll91 COAST
DAILY PILOT
...... (:O,qf ,.,., =..a ~
l.l.m H. w .... ,,..... ...... ....
Jet\ ... c..t.., * ............ .,.... .........
Tli••• ICeeriJ ......
n.,._,, A. M.,,v ..
#lllMll9;iw ••Hlor
L ,,..., kr11.,
....... Melt City ..,..
,...,.., ..... OMc.
lllJ ~ loW""'r4
.... ~P.O. ... 1171, flHl --=r;-:·.··=---=-~-::: •. .....,1 ......
• --• a.Ill ....
Ollt-.,. .,..., .. a •:::..·:r.::~
~:..<.-.:: ~'::"C: .........
1:0 ,, m•• w.un
M C 'Msu:Mtc MJ.MJI
B ....... °"" ,.,., •• ............ ·--·-· .......................... ............ _.. .... .. ...,.......,,
mutilated or dying of Illness.
"He was compassionate and merciful.
ile aaka:t for the aame mercy for himseU.
~'For eight weeks he died, little by lit-
tle, minute by minute, day by day1" Mrs.
Franks said.
"He was just denied • release from the
suffering and torturt which he knew, and
we !.;new and the doctor knew he laced."
He died lo December.
J\frs. Franks has wrltten letters to
delegates and editor.'! of Montana
newspapers, polled doctors a n d
spearheaded a move for the right to dle
wilh dignity.
From Pagel
IRVING ...
lion or the author·s wife, Edith. The
report did not specify the amount.
The Times also said today tht ercerpts,
obtaine<l from a source familiar with Irv·
ing's manuscript, gave "no Indication
. . . that Mr. HuRhe.'1 had a part in
prl'par!ng the mnnuscript."
llughes comes across BS a biller man
"'hose language Is vulii:ar. lhe Times said .
Thr account snid he wns ~·<1reless about
libeling others and talked at length about
sexual exploits.
In one excerpt, Hughes was quoted as
saying he purposely leaked facts about an
alleged $400,000 payment made to the
lh<'n \1ice President RJchard M. Nixon in
the hope! of getting help for his problems
wi th Trans World Airlines.
"Nobody was raising a hand to help
ml!'," Hugh-es b said lo have C'Omplairll!d.
"They ~·ere 1lad. I'm talkina about
Washington. They. were glad lo see me in
trouble. So I leaked the dttaUs to Drew
Pl!'arson."
Pearson, the late columnist, wrote aa
articlt during the 1960 preskl.e.nllal cam-
paign. in which NiJ:on was a ca.ndldate,
that the Hughu Tool Co. had loaned
$205.000 to his brother, F. Donald Ni1on
of Newport Be•cb.
"Now whether tt actually turTll!'d the
tlde of the election or not, I don't know,"
Hugh<s b quoted as saying.
In other excerpt~. Hughes alltgtdly
called former akfe Robert Ma~ a "very
lc:y calt'lllating man" and aJd lin.gtNC-
tor Frank Slnatn ''wu Jost uting ""-
'"""''' of my prestlae IO bolster bis waning prestige."
In two par1s of the piblished Ue<rpb,
the Tun" omitted wbat It llld ....,..
IUrthet d<"'lll«'J' r<marts about Mah<u
and a 10111 ll<dJon of purported Hlljiha
disousoiom of iC<Ual aplolb I n
Holtywood dorini the li!Os and ltlOS.
Maheu manqod Hqtiea• enterprlsos In
~evadl for fOur years untD h1s dismissal
In 1910. Sinatra had finandal lnlerots In
Nevada cuinos until the state toot away
bis gambllnc lioenso. He ns a f)'equent
P<rform« at Lu Ve1u Dl&btclul>&
beJore .. UriJ>s.
Swklnd Js the ooly ptl'IOll 11> for lo "1
ht .. ltnes..'Od o -U.. bet-Hucheo
and lrvir.-at which ~ed tn--
OOUl!tu llqliH, occoidq to~ of·
fered him o pmoe fnlm o PIP"' bat.
"Woald )"Cll lite a pnme:'" SuMibJ
quol..t the lndus1riaJJst. "'Go .-. -ca. ll>ey'ro cqanlc. •
-.
Auto Repair
Jury Heai·s
Testiinony
Twelve Jurors who mun rule on the
guilt or innocence of the "service itatlon
.seven" filed back to the courtroom today
for the rereading of testimony offered bY
a prosecution witneaa during t.b.e seven-
wuk trial.
All seven defendant. and their three
lawyers joined Orange County Superior
C<iurt Judge James Turner and pro--
secutor Richard Stenton in the courtroom
to listen again to the testimony provided
by a former employe of the Harbor and
Gisler 1'-1obil station in Costa Mesa.
Jt took an hour to meet the jury re-
quest. The session ended with Judge
Turner again reading his Instructions iu
they applied to charges of conspiracy.
All seven defendant! are charged with
conspiracy to cheat and defraud Orange
County motorists In an alleged auto
repair racket that included 11 1ervice
stations.
The testimony re-read today contained
a statement or the former employe at the
C.Osta Mesa station that he saw tires
deliberately punctured and radiator seals
broken by fellow employe!I,
The jury went back to the jury room to
resume its deliberation of additional
charges by nearly 30 prosecution wit·
nesses that the seven defendants were in-
volved in the spraying of fuel pumps of
!hock absorbers which were then
represented to be leaking and in need or
replacement.
It was alleged by the prosecution that
the repair racket included Arco, Mobil,
Shell and Texaco atatlorui ranging from
Seal Beach to San Clemente and that the
practice put many thousands of dollars
into the pocket! of ita operatora.
Elsie Deeter
Named Special
Teach.er of Year
Elsie Deeter. a teacher of the hard~f
hearing at Wilson Elementary School in
Costa Mesa, has been selected Special
Education Teacher of the Year by the
Orange County chapter of the Council of
Exceptional Children.
?o.lrs. Deeter has taught in the Newport-
itesa Unified School District for 12 years,
seven of them in the HOH program at
Wilson.
The council will now recommend her
(or the state special education teacher
award, to be announced :!latewlde May 12
at a conferencl! in Ftesno.
1'Mr!. Deeter has mad~ an important
contribution to the lives of children with
hearing handicaps," Mark Hansen ,
Newport·Mesa director of special educa-
tion , said today of the honor.
She was awarded a plaque by the coun-
cil.
She ls also a 1970 recipient of the
Beacon Award, given by the Newport-
Mesa Education Association for oul.!tan-
ding leadership in education. ·
Other affUiations include American
Association of University Women and
Eastern Star, a division of the Masonic
Lodge .
Choir to Off er
Spiritual Sing
Costa Mesa High School's Concert
Choir will present a program of spirituals
featurinl{ composer-arranger Dr, Jester
Hairston Monday at 7 p.m. at the
Newport Harbor Lutheran Church.
Admission is $1 for adults and 50 cents
for students and children.
The church is at 16th Street and Dover
Drive in Newport Beach.
Dr. Hairston will present his own com·
positions and arrangements of spirituals
\\'hile e1plaining the background and
origin of each song.
Students from all grade le velt will be
participating in the ~5·membe.r C.Oncert
Choir.
C. F. Sullivan
Succumbs at 71
Charles F. Sullivan, a fonner alrlloe
pilot \\·ho lived on Balboa Island for 15
years. has died in Longbranch, Wash., his
retirement home for the past 10 years.
~1r. Sullivan's death lut 'Ibursday wu
attributed to 1 heart attack. The former
pilot. a veteran of 30 years with United
Air Lines. wu n.
SUrvivwa lncludt bis -· Winston; o daughter. Mlh ltelilkoo; O IOll, Dennis,
•nd throe gnndclilldrm.
Bridal Prizes
Not Tlr.eir Bag
COLUMBUS. Ohio (UPI) -
Amoog 6,000 vis!lors.ot the s...,,u.
Annual Brid<l Foir ol 6bto Slat.
IJ•h-ty .. .,.. dol,..UOO. "'
demanslralors d.....,..illl tbe fair
from the Womeo'1 Liberation
Mo>'ement and Ibo C., Adl•lst
AW&oc..
Individual protutm frocn bo11o
sroups ...,. awarded doer prtael
Tlrunday,
DAILY l"ILOT Slit! Phato DANNY ROY, 8, MEETS SCOUT BENEFACTOR GEORGE HOAG 11
Huntington Be•ch Cub Scout, Thou11nds of Other1 to Benefit
Hoag Foundatio11 Donates
Huge Gift to Boy Scouts
The Hoag Foundation Is givmg nearly
$1 million lo the Orange Empire Boy
Scout Coun cil.
The gift was arµiounced W~dnesday
night at the council's 50th Annual
Recognition Dinner.
J. S. Fluor, fund-raising chairman for
Hijack False Alarn1
~ANGELES .<AP )-A hijack alann,
triggered by the pilot of a Pan Amer ican
Boeing 747, aroused a flurry of activity
among official aJi!encies until a cheek
with the pilot revealed it was set off ac·
cide•talty. The huge jet, Dying the polar
roote from London to Los Angeles Thurs-
day landed on schedule at Los Angeles.
Intematienal Airport, ·with nQlle of the
passengers ,aboard aware of the brief
drains. . • ,
the Scouts, said the gift will guarantee
the completion of th e large Camp Grace
Valley project.
The 137-acre can1p in the San
Bernardino Mou11tains is designed to han-
dle 200 campers at a time.
Other projects are to expand the Sea
Scout Base in Newport 1-Iarbor, the Santa
Ana administration center, and
ca1npgro'unds 111 San Diego County.
Fluor reported the council v.·ill receive
$'187.000 ou!righL Then it n1ust raise an
additional $500.000 which the foundation
will n1alrh. The total goat of the council
JS $2,480 ,000.
The Hoag Founda lion was formed in
1940 by Mr. and Mrs. George Hoag and
their son administers Its activile!'l. Most
foundation gifts have been made in
Orange County, principally to Hoag
Memorial Hospital and to various youth
groups.
Gas Station
Standards
Re stored
Newport Beach p I a n n Ing com-
missioners 1'hur!'lday night once again
plodded through provisions of their pro-
posed gas station control ordinance,
res toring many controls previously aban-
doned.
They again de1·ided to require fi\•e
parking spaces for ea ch lubrication bay
in a service station.
'!'hey reduced the number of tire.'!
allo1ved on display to 16 Crom the com·
millee proposal of 32.
T~ey restored a provisio n requiring
slat1?ns to reach a 15 percent landscaping
requirement unless h<1rdship is proved.
In the end, one service station operator
summed up the mood of the evening :
"You're working very hard and we a~
preciale it but now it's just more or Jes!
a joke," suggested George Perlman, a
Balboa Island Ar co dealer.
Commissioners didn't laugh very hard
Hearings on the ordinance have bee~
going on now For niorc than four month s.
Co.mmissioners had already passed one
version of the proposed ordinance which
would regulate uses and appearances of
new and old stations and sent it to the
council.
A .co uncil study committee, composed
of city staff and gas station represen·
tatives, then .'recommended change!,
many of which commissioners felt
weakened the ordinance.
Commissioner! were especially con·
cerned that more compromises in the
document would make it weaker than
conditions required for present g33 ata-
tion use permits.
"What are we going to have left?" if all
the committee's suggestions are taken
asked C.Ommissioner Jackie Heather. '
Other commiSl!lioners agreed
The ordinance is expected i.o be in-
troduced to the council 1',eb. I~.
Counci.l ~en ~d watered down many of
the provisions 1n the ordinance when fill-
ing station owners protested be!ore them
Councilr:ian Richard Croul has ~trongJj
opposed virtually all of theprovisions on
the grounds they are unconstitutional
He said he feared such controls wollld
be extended to other types of businesses
-and perhaps even let private
residences.
Newsman's Rites Held
MORRO BAY (AP) -Funeral services
have been conducted here for Charles \Y.
Judson, a long-timl!' Ca Ii f o r n i a
ne~vspapennan and former managin~
editor of the de!unct Los Angeles Daily
News.
Sale Continues
OFFICERS CHEST BY HE NREDON ... NOW ON SALE
OFFICERS CHEST DlSK
::.~E $489.
Select 9roup1 from Henre(fo"
-Herit•ge -Drexel , , . Dll
sele now. Upholstery floor s•m·
plei on sele include ••• Hen-
redon -Sherrill -Merge
C enon & others. Lempi, pie.
turei. & e cces1ori1s e re el10
reductd.
COCKTAlt CHm
SALE $189 l'lllCI . e
DEALERS FOR : HENREDON-OllEXEL-HERITAGE-KARASTAN
-llOU--T'Tllt
7,d1111
NEWl'OlltT llACH I NT ER I 0 RS
ln7 Welldlff Dr~ 642·2050
"tPEN FRIDAY 'TIL f P, of-Iona! Int• tor 0."'*'1 Auilow.-..AID
,.._, .. ,._..__,0.-,.Ca t olttfW
•
-· -
DARV PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
. ..
' ~ . .
--·Council's
Newport Beach is supposed to be working OOward
writing a new master plan of development but· -six
months after that wor.k: started -still isn 't sure· bow lo
1et-it done.
The problem is, governJQeot officials don't know
whether to tell the profession~ planner~ what kind of
city they want or to let the pfanners tell them What is
best. I
One day one councilman advocates taking a stand
on fligh rise while another is urging the council to follow
the rul&s it set up to get professional opinions first.
Doing it without specific direction does allow for
changes in any proposals once public hearings have
been conducted. This seems to be the logical way to go.
Right now emotion·s against such things as hi gh
rise and future annexations are running high. It ma y be
easy to get the voters tO say "no" to both of them in a
gpecial election, bot that could create as many problems
as it solves.
ffigh rise buildings along the exist~ng city water·
front, for example, are generally very unpopular. But
how about downcoast? Or in Newport Center? Or be·
neath the bluffs in West Newport?
Professional, non-emotional evidence should be con•
sidered before a permanent die is casl
Wynn Trims Costs
Newport Beach City Manager Robert L. Wynn is
moving slowly to trim the size of the government he
manages.
For the taxpayer. that's good news. Wynn's latest
decision, to eliminate the entire Harbor and Tidelands
Department and a half-dozen other jobs, will reduce
&alaries a total of $109,000 annually.
For part of the staff, it wasn't good news. Some of
them clauned that such item~ as harbor permits will •
get low priority treatment from the· Public Work.a De-
partmenL
The proposed cutbacks, to be e!lective July I, were
generally applauded by councilmein and most other po-j
litical figures, however.
When Bcb Wynn first came to Newport Beach, he
made the statement that he thought the city was spend·
ing too much money. He said righl off that he would do
something about it.
He took his t ime before acting. however. but he has
at least begun to prove that he \Vas not just talking.
Whether other employes agree with him or not,
Bob Wynn is the manager and it's up to him to see that
the work gets done. It looks as though he's accepting the
responsi bility in stride.
YES's Good Job
What do you need done at your home or office?
Sprinkler system installed? A little help with the
filing? Windo\VS washed? Flo,ver beds weeded? Fences
painted? Trash hauled away to the dump?
Chances are you may find someone specifically
suited for these jobs -and many more -through the
Youth Employment Service of the Harbor Area. which
has done a yeoman's job of placing prospective employ·
ers together with 14-to 18-year·old youngsters in Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach.
During 1971 . YES put together a total of 1,610
youngsters and employers -but even that Jmpressive
figure does not reflect the overall effects of the opera·
tion. Very oft~n a young person, skilled or semi-skilled
in one field, finds himself being recommended time and
time again by former employers.
Right now, YES has far more applicants than it
has jobs. If yo u need some special service that might
apply, give YES a call at 642-0474. N
Could Lose Power and Even His Head Meaning of
'Survival of
The Fittest'
Sadat Foes Are Internal
WASHINGTON -President Anwar
Sadat is teetering precariously on the
dge of a furiously seething internal
ruption -which could blast him out of
wer. and possibly even cost him bis
ead.
That is the real in·
side reason for rhe
Egyptian leader 's
dden trip to Mog.
w.
It is a desperate
:-attempt to bolster
'.himself against h i ti
"lncreasingly numer.
r .4>US and aggres!:ive
.bome el'lemies. Sa·
lat 's mo.st dangerous foes and crisil .
l'ft"•-tight now are in his own country and not
lsrael. ~ 1
"' Those violent Cairo student riots and
emonstrations were just the visible tip
-of a deep-raging conflagration.
; Behind the students are military and
lra-nationalist elements.
IN F'ACT, they instigated the student
'utbreaks and played a key behind-the-
Jcenes role in keeping them churning
jespite strenuous government efforf.s to
Jplell them, first by conciliatory promises
.. nd then by heavy.handed force.
It is highly signiffc.ant that when tough
JUPPression became necessary, Sadat
resorted to police reserves and not army
}loops.
... Reason: t 11 e military-particularly
founger officers-were not deemed
reliable.
Also not reported at the time: the
.. Egyptian airforc.e was groWlded.
-Lending a decisive hand in thttt
~precautionary" crackdown were the
Russian MIG fighter-bomber crew11 and
antiaircraft missile battalions -number·
ing more than 10,000 men and officers.
STERN WORD went out from Sadat's
beleaguertd headquarters that the Soviet
forces were prepared. to instantly go into
~-a~st any move by Egyptian air
~~ ·to 1upport the threatening
itudfnts or a coup attempt-the real aim
of the. turbulent furor.
• !'fe!timalily, Salta! had Kremlin •I"
provaJ to t0und this extraordinary warn·
ing. •. ~her be did or not. it worked. The
Egyptian, airforce meekly 11tayed ground-
ed as · on:l(J"td, although it is an open
secret In C'iiro that the most vehement
dissident5 ·among the military are
airmen-passionately itching for revenge
for tfiey' thattering defeat by the Israelis
In ~ 11!17 cooflicL
It wquld have been quite a spectacle if
the airmen had ignored S a d a t ' s
ukas&-with R~sian--mapned MIGs and
AA batteries tangling with Egyptian
pilots and planes.
.CRUCIAL WEAKNESS of the anti·
Sadat forces is lack of an outstanding
leader.
There is no one among these basically
discordant · elements with either the
stature or charisma to unite them suf.
ficiently to mount a widely-based putsc)l
against. Sadat. The military don 't tru!t
the extremist civilian element s, and vice
ver sa.
This fundamental weakness is due
directly to the deliberate policy of the l11te
Gama! Nasser and his successor and
long-time intimate Sadat .
Both leaders made it a fixed rule to
weed out potential ri vals. That was done
in a number of ways-ranging from
more.or-less permanent house arrest to
out.right execution.
Sadat ls not without powerful 1up·
porters, both military and civilian .
That is why he 11urvived the mas1 stu·
dent demonstrations-with the 1trongly
implied aid of the Russian forces.
A FORMER GENERAL, Sadat hM in·
fluential supporters among the older
commanders, particu larly anny and
navy. Similarly, Egyptian businessmen
are heavily behind him. Most of them
privately have no stomach for another
rCtund of fighting With lsraeL They want
t'l cash in on the extenl'live electrification
and increasing industrialization resulting
from the completion of the Aswan Dam .
Also they ~rely miss the once many
millions of tourists' dollars.
In Moscow, Sadat is seeking an im·
pressive fa ce·saver with which to placate
his war-clamoring crit ics and other
mal contents.
This razzle-dazzle is virtually certain to
be an announcement that Russia will
undertake a large-scale program to
enable Egypt to become self·sufficient in
weapons production. Last w eek ,
authoritative Washington sou r c e 11
"leaked" reports that the U.S. has agreed
to do that for Israel-including
supersonic war planes.
:Military Critics Aid Enemy
' Tiie Elb Mapzloe
.. It b diffieult to concetw of s greater
langer to this nation than the u11wa.rrant-
'td attacks on what some people term our
', .. milit.ary--indw:bial complex." They vilify
the military a.a "warmcmgen" whose only
roncern is providing our armed forces
~rith a means to practice tht science and
1rl of killing, and the development ci n<W
war-making material.
' • • l • i • ! . i
• I l
!
l • • • .
1be insidious part of the.le attacks ls
that they do exactly •bat the enemies of
11ur republic want .. -they undermine
our nation and its preparedness capabili·
ly.
The Communists want our oountry to
fall into the bands of those who would
leny (reedom of thou8h\. •(IO<ch. mov ..
., .. t and P't'Ollll ~.· They """" ..ntten and said many times Illa! Ibey
t.rill ovtrthroW our nation by force and
violftlce • • not .-1llrll1 from
-COAST ,
DAILY PI LOT
•
l!obaf N. "'"""' l'Ufloll<r
n-JC•roil.lldilor
AlbcT1 JV. llaUI
Editoriol l'op• Editor
·-~ but prmrably from wllhfll.
IT 15 AXIOMATIC that when serious
trouble arises, we must rely on the
military for protection. It is equally true
that no military organizatkm can be sue·
cessful without close cooperation from in--
dustry. Why, then. •hould both groups be
victims of acurrlous attacb on their in--
tegrity, their motives and practices as we
sit idly· by? We do not think our mem·
benhip. dedicat.d to a strong and
healthy nation. subscribes to s u ch aa
ideology.
It appears-to be the old story. "wh.at
have you done for me Jalely'!" that
precipit.llel the violent action5 we see
iDcl llU:r •bOut on our ooUege campuses.
Armed foroes recruiten: are thrown off
cam-Ind physically a1uulted. The
ROTC is Tilified. building• burned. and
the C4f1lO thrown off many campuug.
PmPLI! WHO bout ci their Cool·
munilt pllilolophlet . .,. not ""' permit.-
lid .•• Ibey .... -lnYited "1j>eak to ~......,,..~they em ipl'Qd
• thdr Yituperallon jpiost -· COUl1tzy · nd .-yUiing tt stondl for. Som• pro-
...,.. •ho _.r,. aclmowledce they .,.
Qrmmmis11 ar Comnmru.t f1lllflllhi,....
--1o,;o<b our youth, aecun in the ~ tllal they con'! be fired
bec¥t ol•Uwir ''polittca.J beliefs."
-•• do oot advocate !hough! control I,,... u eim:lJ«f by Communist n1tions
' .. ,. ... IMR ~do we advocate eltt:ndlna
--to a '"Typhoid igry .. to teadi · ;,, our ICbooll on the olf chance her In-
!edbl will not IUik< ""' childttn.
We ljP<ICiallY abhor tho!< who know·
1llgiy -)'OClnl men to dodge the drlfl, ar duert fnim the ll1Jled roro...
Some 25.111111 to 30.000 .,. tsllmat.d to
hive -lo t:anad& alon< ..• and lb<re
are more in other countrit1 such a&
Sweden.
WE EVEN WITNDS the sickenlng
sight of politicians sharing the same plat·
rorm with ~le.ftislJ as they exhort all
~~: ~~~te~ b~~~ur~r;f~
dodgers and deHrten. To do so would be
to insult every man in the armed fora s.
poi:ticularly th... who d I e d "1111< in
uniform. '
\fe will always protect and defend our
right of dia5ent .•. but we cannot COO·
done irrational, hysterical condemnation
of eit.Mr our military or our Industries.
They helped rnake thia MUon tile
greatest OD earth. They will help KEEP
thlJ tbe grutesl nation OD .. rib, delpite
the poisonous rhetoric spewing from the
mouths of the very mall minority who
would ... UI become •tJbsttV..knt to the
Conununi!I phllooophy •••• philosophy
which dally "10W1 tt is ~ In it•
.... bear\lAnd.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
-D.R. 8 .
nit. ""'" ,.......,.. .............. Mt .......,., ........ _, .. ....
-........... ......,. ... Olllt-..... .
Some months ago, l mentioned that
most people have no idea of what
"survival of the fittest" means in a
biological sense -wrongly imagining it
means 11urvival of the. 1trongest or most
aggressive.
Since then , quite 1 few reader1 have
asked me f?_ amplify aqd e.xplain
"survival or the fit-
test." and ram hap.
py to do so. It means
simply that thOH
1pecies or members
of specie11, which are
be!lt able. to adapt to
changil'lg circum·
1tance1 have the
greatest chance to
survive,
THE DINOSAUR may have been the
"strongest'' of ea.fly crealure11, a_nd the.
sabre-toothed tiger the "most ag-
gressive," but both species became. ex·
tinct precisely becallle they continued to
depend upon 11trength or ferocity at a
time when other qualities were more
neces&ary.
Let us consider modern man in thi11
cont.ext. In Japan today, traffic accidents
are the fourth leading cause ot deaths ; In
all technological countries, deaths by
violence art rising, and most of the11e are
accountable to the number of traffic
deaths. u world population grows and
accidents grow along with it .
Now, accident. rise ln a geometric rate
compared to popu]ation. Th11t ill. with
three autos only three encounter11 are
possible: with four 1ulo!, 11lx are po11i·
bit: with five autos, nine ; with !1.1 autos,
15: and to on.
SO. AS THE WORLD geta more. people
and more cars and more traffic, the
po11sibility of violent death by accident
goes up geometrically, and not just
arithmetically. When you double the
number of cara, You far more than dou-
ble the number of accidtnts.
Given this ract, who then would be the
"ritlelt" survivors of thia enormoUJJ
reduoer in human population '! Thole who
are tht most prudent, not the 1tronge11t
or moat qgrellive. Thole who ltly home
most, who drive the least, and who ck'ive
.. ith tbe veatest caution and the futesl
reflexes. Alto, thole who con.aume the
least alcohol and IU< the !<Well pills.
AND IN PAIT WAHi, o( COW'&e, we
know tt ii actuaUy the "•eUat" who
have survived : the atroniest. bravm.
healthiest, younge.ot men have been killed
by the millions. Indeed. oome hiltorl..,
ba•e sugelted that World War U w11 so
fllt in ""'"" prtj:laely becauae the ,,.flower" of the upmrnJAc lfneraUon wu
alaughtered -meo Wllo llllcJlt ha .. led
their <OUlltriel -more iii<~ and rwooo tllan tho ranmnt left bohlrld the
linel.
At any rote. we oeed to uodentand that
IUTYival kw man IUidividualfy and u a
•pecitt) bu notlilng to do with powtr ...
qcraaivmeA: indeed, tMM h 1 • e
beoome IUldclal qua.lJtlea for 111. The "R~
ttJt" mi.mans an tMle who are moct
wlllinl to modify oooducl.
Quo~
J ... Vorll. L.A .• u.lql.iatlve Iud<t
-.. f otilJ 111pirt .. polltJcal ofllct. "' the
direct.loll that I can .befl do a job. • bet·
tu job than .,,,_,. ocxupyiJ>l that of·
nee:'
·--:----·--
\ ·~
\.
~: ·-......_
SPORT5MEN
Burke Hung Up
Over Cory's Hair
To the Editor :
Our ocean r;tink s from lhe dead fl~h
and bird11 killed by the modern !ndu11tr!es
of conven ience. Our air is like the ocrfln;
wt may soon be like !he fi sh and birds.
Apartments are spreading ove r lhis land
like a fungu11 . l could go on-laxes, VJPt·
nam .,.
However, everything 1~ in control. Wt>
ha ve our rtpre11entative s lo confid t. in·
-like A11semblyman Robert Burke ( R •
Huntington Beach ) for ln1tance.
lT ts REALLY rea11l!uring to know that
while 111 these major problem~ ire co n-
fronting us, the Republican lawmaker 111
carrying on his own cam pa li;in to unl!eat
Assemblyman Kenneth Cory I I)·
Anaheim ). The rea30n : Cory 's hair
cover11 his collar : he also wears boots.
Hasn't anyone Informed Asstmblyman
Burke that hair and boot.II lit. quite 11tJll
without the actio n of the Ind ividual wear-
ing them? Burke could judge Cory I C·
cording to Cory's actlon.s . But that would
be too difficult.
I wish t had the time to wu:lt carrying
on meaningle111 campaigns .
RON HAYDEN
Perullar Al.,hem11
To the Editor ·
Help me : I am confused ! Our Presl·
dent has com~ out with what iounds Ilk'-
• more than reasonable proposal to end
lhf! ho11tllitier; in Southea~t A1\11 and
STILL we are bombarded with :
"STOP THE KILLING!" Tht Idea
11eem11 to be that hy some pe~ullar
al chemy fl f war . .our unilateral ind com-
plete pullout will guarantee that tke
North Vietnamese wJ.Jl never fire 11oother
gun, tos11 a grenadi. bury 1 civilian alivl!',
nor slit the throat of a village leader.
With no bombing tll 1low up the
transfer of mattrltl from Russia ind
China via North Vietnam to South Vlet--
nam. Cambodia , and L101, the. k!Ulng will
atop?
WITH NO FINANCIAL aid and llrnlll·
ment to the South Vle.tnamtlt, C1m--
bodl11n1, •nd Laotllru:, thty will somehow
1urvive the Communist aaarnaWn?
How!
AJ I 11y, t am confu!!td. But not '°
\
Mailbox
I
Le tters fr om re0:der1 art wtlct>m•.
No rmall11 writer& ih.ould conv111 thtttr
t1te,,,,age1 tn 300 worda or le11. The
rig ht to condenae letier1 to flt 1pac1
or (:/imiriate libel ia reserved, AU let-
ters 1nuit inctud• 1i171i.atur, and mau ...
l no addrt~a. hut nnmtia mau b• tDtth.-
he ld on ftqueit ij auffkitnt 11a.aon
'·' ri pparent. Pnr.tri; will not bt pub-
h&ht!d.
confused. I would 1ubm lt. a11 ire aomt of
the membe rs of Congre1111 who continue lo
mouth the old cry. "STOP T•IE KILL-
ING ! We wnnt 1 complete pullout NOW!''
Frankly, H 11care11 the hell out of me
when I think of the callber or mentallty
nf 11on1e of tho11e In govt.mment. But
thank God we have 1 Preisldtol who 11
11trong enough to brush off the barh• nf
1uch gadnie1 aa the Mc(iovt.rn1, Mc·
Cloi;key11, and 1uch ,
ELIZABETll T. LANCASTER
Cuun.,Umen Applauded
To the t:dltor ·
I 1hould like to publfcly r,nmmenrl
Mayor Hirth ind CouncJlmt.n Mclnnl11,
Roger1 and Kyml1 for their 1en1itlve
decl1ion to l111ten to the cltlu.n1 of
Ntwport Beach end ln retain the city hlll
Rnd polict rac llltlea at thf. prt.aenl loca-
tlon,
We. lht people of Newport Beach wh~
have !nv e11ted our llve1 here , have work·
M for a slow and orderly growth and we
refu~ tn let the exp!Qiter11 ruin wtuit we
havt AO carefully cortJtructed.
THE MAINTENANCE of t.he Iran·
quillly of a peaceful tnvfronment, the
prtM;rv1tion of 1 way of life , the refu1111I
to let old ar1u of Newprwt Beach de cay
end dte -thele are dw! major priority
11nd respon.alblllty of our elected and 1p-
polnt<d offlclall.
I appllud tlMM cen~-'°" their
O'>Ul'l&eDUI stand qilnlt ~11lve and ambltlooJ~
WJNJniflD L. VOEGELfN
•
In Strength Lies .Pet;tee
CIJ1fonala F eetare Service
Pl'Nid<nt Nlxoo'a requeat kw an, In-
cruu, not a decrtue, in the nation'•
defeiue 1pendlnc wu as shocking to
tho1< who have made a pollllcal pro-
feuion o( neo-ilOlltiooi.&m 11 ii wa1
rea1aorln1 to d)oat wbo, ptrhap1. hi••
re.ad blltorJ a U.tUe more attentively ,
Mr. Nlmo made ll unmlslllably clear
In hl• Suto ol the UnJon addreu that his
111'11 priority I« Ulll c:ountrr. II to l!lllln-
uln 111 domlnanl mlllur)' llfflllfth u th•
cn•te1t poulble llft(uard ci world
p;tace. Al be pal B:
"We muat lllllnLlin the 1trengtil
ntttlllfl' lo deter war. lttO!ll mllltory
delen1<• ore not the .....,, al -
They ar• the IU'tdia• ci pu<e."
TO T110fiE WHO f• ... 11111 thb strooc
U.-would tlldanltt the hopu !Dr •
~ meetln( wiill Co<m>""isl
laden In Pel<lng ml M.-. the Prea.i-
dmt sald: "My planned Vl.U. wUI mun
not that our dllfft"tDC!tl nave diuppe1r-ed
or will di&appear In the ...., !utun. The
Jmporunl lhJne ii tllal Wt Lllk about
thel< di!l«eacel -thao fl&bl •bout them.. ••
~--•• Geo,.,e ---,
Otar George
Why 00 women aJwl)'1 Uk. ''la
that •ll you ....., -th1M ci!"
HARllY
Deir Harry :
l dOn'I know and it's """f unlafr.
I not ooly oertr -1'1111 llMY ....,,, bu! I can booutly OIY IMt
qulk olteo l llllnl< or -thlnp._
• ' ' ••
I
I
I i
l
I
..
Friday, Ftbrtlary 4, 1912: DAILY PIL OT 5
on Rebound 1
Saturday last day.
Candidate R eneivs Attack on Viet11a11i W £tr
B) KO!lt:R T I,. CA!Ul'Ht:LL
A•>ot<itltcl l"rl•t Wrlllr
Defying a host iJf Repu blicans who
have rhasti~ hirn for criticizing Presi·
dent Nixon's latest IK'ace proposals. Sen.
Edn1und S. Muskie has renev1•ed his at-
tack on the President for not unilaterally
setting a date for complete \Yithdrawal of
U.S. forces frorn Vletnani.
On the campaign trial in \Y1:::.con:::.1n. th('
Maine Democrat Thursda y issued a
statement responding tu the latest r:o1>
c riticism -fron1 Scrrct:ir~' of State
William P. Hoge rs hours earlier. who
said h1uskie harmed the nutional interest
by reJetling \'1xo11 ·s plan bl'forc Hanoi
djd,
"For years,'' ~1usktl' ~tt id . •·cyery time
an American senator has 1nade a pro-
posal to brini:?: this war to an end earlier.
he has bet•n greeted with the same
response from our government as
Secretary Rogers used today. . .
UPI l •ltPllllll
''IL is apparent that the other side "'tll
not accept the terms the ad ministration
has set." Mu skie continued, ad~ing : "l
bel ieve they would respo nd seriously to
the tenns 1· have suggested."
l\1uskie sti id \Vednesday release or U.S.
prisoners of \var <ind sa.f~ty of the troops
should be the only cond1t1ons attached to
'NEVER THOUGHT 1'0 GIVE MONEY TO A ROCKEFELLER'
setting ti 1vithdrawal date. . . .
Rog ers' denunciation of ~1usk1c s view
as "most inappropriate and harm.fu l. to
the nation 's inte rest" follo\1•ed SUTll!ar
criticism froin presidential P r e s s
secretary Jlonald I.. Ziegjcr, Secretary of
Defense l\·tclvin ll . Laird and scyeral
Republicans in Congress.
And a source close to the \\1hilc House I CAMPAIGN '721
tndicated more of the san1e probably
would be forthcoming today at an ~p
Pearance in New Hampshire by Interior
Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton: l\1~rton,
In Ne w Hampshire to ki ck off Nixon s re-
~lcction cam paign for the March 7 state
primary, "might be . pretty tough on
Muskie'' the source satd. . .
An other Democratic p r e s 1 d e n t 1 a I
aspir:ant. Sen. l~enry r..t. Jack1so~ of
\\lashing to n. told the Women's National
Democratic Club Thursday: "I "'~s. sorry
to see Sen. l\1uskie take the posit ion he
did." .
In an apparent reference to escalah~n
of the war under recent Democratic
presidents, Jackson sai~ .t~1e Democrats
"have a special rcspons1b1hty to help get
the war over ."
In other political developments:
J\fUSKIE: Later Thursday n \ g h t
Muskie engaged in a heated .exchange
with hooting and hi ssing anlt\va~ pro·
testors when he at tempted to discuss
questions on which they demanded
answers -the Vietnam war, and
whether marijuana and abortions should
be legalized. l\1uskic said the reception at
Hubert Humphrey Pays Elec t ion Fee to W. Va. Secreta ry
a 1\ladi:-.011 Wis ., hotel 11·as !hi· 11Hi:.I clcrted prc:-;1de1iL he 11uu!d appear !
hostile he l1ad encountered sint'l' !11:. v1<·f· nionthly beforr a Joint session or
presidcnti<1l 1:a1n paign da ys. rongress to a11s11·er questions I
l~IKDSAY : i"ev.· York Mayur .Jt1l1n \
Lindsay prcdictt."CI Thursday tught thl·
Massach usetts Den1ocratic 1>ri1nary April
25 will be a head-to-head ballle bct11•ce11
l\.1uskie and himself. Lindsay told th£·
l\.1assachusetts I-louse Press Associatuu i
that the field will be narrov.'cd by earlier
primary contests in 11·hich he cxpef'ts lo
do progrcssiYely belier.
JACKSON: The \\i'ashington Democr;1t.
arriving in Wisconsin later .Thursday Lu
begin ,_. three-day campa 1~n for 1hc
slatC's' April 4 prirnary, s:.lld CongrC'S!'i
should close cxlsting inc· om<' -tax
loopholes instead of approving a value·
added lax. now t>ei ng disc ussed. The
working man, Jakkson said in \Vau sau.
"is being taxed loo n1ueh fur too. lill lt•
bec:ause of tax systcn1s th11t arc r1ddl C'd
1\'ith favoritisni.''
HU,\IPHREY : SC'n. 1-lubC'rl 11. J lun1-
phrey filed in Charleston. \V.\'a. for the
l\.fay 9 Democratic primary and told 11
joint session of the legi slature he \\'Quid
relight the torch. ~arr ied by t~c ~a~e .John
F'. Kenned y, unit ing Wesl V1rg1n1ans Ill
brinl?; him victory.'' I "';i nt _ lo build a
coalition fro1n the 1nounta1ntops llnd
''alleys across this great state. the kind
John Kennedy had in our 1960 cam-
paign," the Minnesota se"!a~or sa~d. Lat~r at a $35-a-platc fund-ra1s1ng dinner 111
\Vilmingto n, Del.. Humphrey called [or
"a spiritual renaissanc<'" in placing a
commitn1ent of manpower and resources
to get America moving ahead.
McCLOS KEY: Rep. Paul N. McC!oskey
J r. or CaJifornia, antiwar chall enger to
President Nixon. told !he Nationa l Press
Club in the nation's capital If he \\'ere
ASHBROOK : !{ep. John l\.1. Ashb rook
1 J :-Ohio), conservat1\ e challenger lo N1x-
\Jn. said a con1promise reached bet.,..·een
!he Nixon admi nistration and Sen.
Abrahan1 H.ibicoff ID-Conn.), on 1Yelfare
reform "calls for preceding full ·scate im·
plC'mcntation of the family-assistance
plan, but it provides that the plan v.·i!I
take effect regardless of the results."
llAltTKE: Sen. V:incc llartkc of In-
t!i<ina, campaigning in Ne1y l~a1npsh irc
for the Democratic nomination , challeng-
ed Sen. George S. J\.1cGove rn of South
Dakota to a deba te. J\.fcGovern replied
Iha! he \Yould like lo debate Hartke, but
11·ould prefer a New llan1pshire deb<1!e
1vtth Muskie, the acknov.·ledged front -run-!
ner. ~1uskie, J\ilcGoYern. Jackson and I
Alabama Go Y. George C. \\latlace didn 't
sho1\· up Thursday night for a Democratic
fund-raising dinner in the nation 's
capital. but Den1ocratic Na t i o n a I
Chairn1an La .... -rence E. O'Brien hosted
congressional aides, pages and newsmen
at the S500-a-platc affair.
~lumphrey. former Sen_ E u g e n e
McCarthy and Rep. Patsy T. Mink or
Hawaii were the presidential contenders
on hand , but th e biggest applau se \VCnt 10
retired House Speaker John \V .
.1\1/cCormack.
Narcotics Agents Seize
Also on hand was Tho n1as Donelon.
'''ho earlier this week d e f ea t e d
Republican Burgess Nixon for the
presidency of suburban Jefferso n Parish.
La., outside of Ne w Orleans.
"I'm the only man to beat Nixon for
president since 1960," Dunelon told a
howling crowd.
$1 Million Cash in NY
NE \\i' YORK (VP!\ -Law en-
forcement agents seized almost $1 million
in cash on a New York street corner
Thursday night and cha rg<'d three men
\Yith conspiracy 1o \'iolate federal
narcotics slatulei::. the Ne1.,. York Joint
Ta sk Foret• revealed 1oda~·
1'hc $967.500 in cash carried by vnc or
the n1cn in a suitcase in the Bronx wa~
said to br 1hc la rgest an1uu11t vi t·a~h
cYc r seized 111 a narcotics r'Qnspirac,\'
l'aSC.
1'he thrt'<' ... u~pccl.., 11·crc 1Ucnt1f1ed it~
Charles Papa. 55 .. lnsPph 1\. Di Napoli .
37, and George F. Ho~si. ~6. all or Ne\\'
York .
Burcuu of t\arcotics and Dangerous
••t'• Ott?
Kurt W. Engbretson is at odds
wilh Edwardsville Hlgh School
1uthorlties in llJinois over t.heir
rofusal to allow a picture taken
of blm wearing a f avorllAl hat
to appeor In Qle school year·
book. Engbretaon , 18, WH Un·
suc<elllful In appealing the
islue be/ore lho school board
and Is considerlna loial action .
Drug s (BNDD) Director John lngC'rson
said the arrests were ma~e by the f\c\v
York Joint Task }<'orce, 1nade up of Nc\1'
York State and city police and BNDD
agents.
BNDD Agent TilCOdorc Bernifr said no
na rcotit:s were seized.
Papn and DiNapoli. he said. v.rrc ar-
rested lcist night <Jftcr agent s conl'crged
on their auton1obilc in the Bronx. Thr
sultea<>e carrying thr t·nsh 11·as disCOVL'r-
Pd i11 their possC':::.SHlll h~· 11.rrcst!n!!
11gc111s
Rossi 11·as arrested in the Bronx C'ilrh
this niorning.
All three "·ere ch argt..'d .,..·it h conspirarv
to viola!~ federal n:i r('()tics st:i tutes nnd
llossi 1vas additionally charged \1·1th al ·
tempting to sell narcotics.
Bernier said Papa v.·as free on IXlnd
pending trial in Brookl yn Federal Court
on charges uf Yiolaling f~eral narcotics
lav.•s.
In \\'ushinglon, Ingersol\ said the
$967,500 \\'as the largest an1ount of cash
ever seized in a narcolics conspirat'Y
case. lie said both Papa and DiJl.'npoh
discla imed ownership of the money.
Bernier said the arrests fo llo'"'Ni an 111·
\'estigatlon "in excess of a 1nonth "
'Bornb Factory·'
Found by Police
DETROIT (UPI) -Agents st umbled
across an allegtd "bomb factory" in a
routine narcoics raid Thursday and seiz·
ed a quantity of explosive chemicals they
said were c.tpable of blowing up an entire
city block.
One man wu arrt.$ted in the raid,
""hlch al!o netted two pounds of mari-
juana, police saki. Three other persons
were arrHted and more marijuana WAS
seized In two other raids conducted
earlier by the Wayne County ~fetro
Squad.
"All of the lndJvlduals are known to
tacb other and we're sure they're con-
nected In some wa)'," Sherif! \\1illlam
Lucas said. ·
··T'bt men or lhe Detroit narcotics
9Quad and the metro M!Uad are con-
tinuing lheir in~uu1ation to see wha t
"""'4!<:Uon !his bo<nb factory •Rd ~
plosions •·e've had in thr last few
months."
"That's \Vhat we need ," O'Brien said.
Hospital Pla11
Instructs New
Dads in Classes
\VASIO NGTON ( U r~ J \ 1\:.
t:eorgeto\vn Univcrsi!y Hospita l sa1Y i!.
the tin1c had com e to give some thought
to that poor. bcwilderefl fellow , the llC\1'
la!hl'r
In Lile nature of things pr1orlly had, ot l
rourse. to go to the new n1other and lhc
ne\\' 1nfn111 1'hey got all the care and at-
lt·nlion.
The father was strictly a second-<:lass
ci ti.:en. ns rar as most hospitals v.•erc
\·once med.
Ile \\'as permitted to gaze at his first
bom through a glass window dimly but
only at restricted inlervals.
"Then. with no preparation," says
Georgetown , "he took hon1e a small
terrifyingly fragile stranger." '
Now, Georgetown Hospital, according
to Pat McShea, a registered nurse whose
awesome title is clinical coordinator of
obstetrics, is trying to teach father how
to be a father at the same lime it is
preparin g mother lo be a mother.
It is doing this "in a special famil y
('Clllcrt'd maternity care program."
"In volved from the beginning," says
Georgetown. "th e father attends educa·
lion classes . takes tours of the hospital
before the birth. and receives an in-
vitation to stay with his wile during labor
and delivery." · ·
Instead of bting restricted to one or
those waiting rooms where all he can do
is sit around wondering what goes on, he
is pennitted to visit bis wife and newborn
<lny lime of day. He gel~ R "guest tray"
al mealtimes.
He even Is taught how to hold a baby.
to change its diapers, and to bathe it. One
scoundrelly falher or three robust !01\S
was dubious, when he heard aboul this
aspect of the Georgetown program.
"By playing Ignorant about such
things," said this veteran. "you can get
out or a lot ot work."
But Miss hfcShea's concern is with the
frightened by his new responsiblllllc1, by
this "sn1all, terrifytng fragile stranger"
he I• taking home , by the thought he
won't know wbat tQ do when 90mething,
obviously, has Jo be done.
"We·re trying to meet h.io -111 "'hatever they are," said MiM AtcShta.
"Fathers can relax If tl'lty ruUze tht.tr
bllilY is real and w ... ·1 break."
15°/o off every $14-$20
dress. Including
knits and pant sets.~11~
Sale 11.90 to $17
Sale 3gg yd.
R•o. 4.tt rd. Now you can MW up the softest, e~y
care, easy-wear wardrobe with these Polyester knits,
all at one low sale price. Choose from high fashion
facquardt, coordinated patterns, and sollds. Colors
from the most vibrant to soft heathery tones. AU
machine washable. All Penn -Prest~.
The same high fashion, 58 to 60" w1dlh,
easiest care fab rics that were such great va!oes
· 111 our everyday low price.
lal• price effitetlff thru laturd•J·
Big, beautiful collection of
daytime dresses, dreu-up
d resses end pant sets. In
polyesters, acetates,
acetate/nylon blends. Colot1
galore. And lots of prints
and patterns. Misses',
women·s and junior sizes.
I I
; ~ 1 \ ,
/ ~ ' l ~
"
JCPenney
The values are here every day.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at the following 1tore1:
NEWPORT BEACH, Fa.i.ion Island·. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington C.nt.r,
*COSTA MESA, H1rbor C.nt.r• (Closed Sund1y)
\
J
I
I
I •
-.. ·--·--------..... -,. -----------~
'•
Orange Coast Today's Final
N.Y. Stoelu ,,
VOL 65 , NO. 30, 4 SECTION S, 46 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1972 c TEN CENTS
Economi·st Sees Great Yea~ in Harbor Speech
By CANDACE PEARSON
01 lllt D•lt~ f'flol lt•ff
Economically, 1972: will be one of the
but years the United States has ever
had, a noted economist told a meeting of
municipal finance officers this morning
at the Newporter Inn.
Dr. Raymond Jallow, senior vice presi·
dent and chief economist for United
California Bank, made his "Economic
P'(lrecast" to the 12th annual California
Society (If Municipal Finance Officers
Seminar, which ts ending today.
"We are entering the year with greai.
economic vitality," Jallow said.
With the consumer more optimistic,
credit more available and lnCQme rising
just a little, Jallow estimated the public's
"appetite to spend will be the highest in
four to five years."
California, which has been lagging
behind the nation in economic growth for
the last four years, will for the "first
time move in harmony this year." he ad-
ded.
While it is estimated that nationally 1.8
milllon more jobs than last year will be
€\lailable, Jallow said, unemployment
will only decrease from 6 percent to S.S
percent.
California should expect to get 175,000
of those new jobs, he said, but the state's
unemployment rate will pr o b ab I y
average 6.5 percent.
Most of the new positions will be in
COSTA MESA POLICE OFFICER TAKES PAIR OF BURGLARY SUSPECTS INTO CUSTODY
On Harbor Boulevard Thursday, a Color TV Protruding From Trunk of an Old Car
-~~~~~~~~~---'-~~~~~~~~~~~~-
elephone Call
o Bank Teller
Nets 2 Thie'\'·es
A telephone call to a teller at an Irvine
lank and a subseq uent' trip to take out
:ht lrash triggered the capture of two
)Ul'glary suspects as they drove out of
~ Mesa Thursday with $829 in loot in-
:Juding a Bible.
Police seeking criminal complaints
lgainst them today cited the incident as ·
t Perfect example of citizen participation
n Jaw enforcement.
Johnny R. Will iams, 32, Palmdale, and
Daniel H. Spirlock, 2.1, El Monte, are cur4
"eDtly booked on suspicion of burglary
tnd possession of stolen property.
They were stopped (In H a r b o r
Boulevard al Mesa Verde Drive by Of4
5ctr Phil Donohue and Sgt. John Regan,
with a color television set protruding
i'om the trunk' Of their old sedan.
Investigators also found stereo sound
1quipment,· a cheu set and a Holy Bible
l.11 reported stolen by Bank of America
•lier Qieryl Eckert.
Officer Chuck Duvall. said Mi85 Eckert,
,, 284 Cabrillo St., was at work when a
111ighbor heard the victim's doorbell ring.
Dock Boss Threatening
Worldwide Ship Tieup
WASHINGTON (AP ) -Harry Bridges,
boss of the striking West Coast dock
workers, today threatened a worldwide
shipping lieup ii Congress forces an end
to the strike by compuisory arbitration.
Bridges, testifying before a House labor
subcommittee, said any law Congress
passes to end the st:-ike will affect ships
(ln]y when they touch at U.S. docks.
"These ships go overseas," he said,
"and we've gol a few friends in other
countries, and they will respond to our
call for help. It may r.:!ach the point
wh ere the ships won't come back here."
President Nixo n has asked Congress to
pass emergency legislation that would
create a three-member board with the
power to settle the strike by compulsory
arbitration.
Edmund J , Flynn, president of the
Pacific Maritime Association, which
represents the shi ppers, endorsed the biU,
saying he saw litUe prospect of settli.Dg
the dispute by negotiation.
But Bridges emphatically rejected it
and indicated his longshoremen might ig4
nore the law if it were enacted.
designated as essential by the military,
and loaded wheat at the special request
Of the President for emergency relief for
Pakistan.
He said that the union is negotiating
with shippers of wheat and foodstuffs and
are near settlement on a separate agree·
ment to permit normal shipments of
grain and foodstuffs to begin im·
mediately.
II the President has special requests
for any other special cargo, "we shall
consider his request to move that cargo
now," be said.
Bridges denied that there :s an
emergency in Hawaii, where he said the
union has made special provisions to han4
die the export of sugar and has pennitted
special voyages to bring in necessary
supplies.
"The emergency has been manufac-
tured in the fa cile minds of so me of the
members of Congress from the state -
and in the mind of the present assistant
Secretary of Labor who was formerly
employed by the HawaU Employers Council ...
retail. wholesale and trade services and
branches of federal government, he ad·
ded .
But the outlook for California retail
sales forecasts an "all-time high," Jallow
sai.d. with an estimated $47 billion in
sales.
About 15 percent of that will be tax-
able.
This represents a 10 percent Increase
over 1971.
"Don't wait for better days,·• JaUow
said, ''Because there aren't going to be
any next year or by the end of the year."
He was referring specifically to what he
said were now the year's lows ln all loan
interest rates.
"If you 're going to borrow money, do it
now,'' he advised, adding that he ex·
pected all rates to rise by the end of the
year.
The economist told the audience of
more than 100 that a better international
reaction to the American doll ar is helping
the home economy.
He called this year's doll.ar "sul>'
ported " and welcome as compared to las t
year's, whl<'h was "weak and unwanted.••
Other estimates In his economic
forecast say that inflation will be cut t<•
three percent and that the gross nationa l
product will reach $1.1 46 trill ion, a $99
billion increase over 1971.
Howeve r, the budget deficit will 11till
be a large $25 billion because of high
eovemment spending, he added.
Aide Mal(es Offer
Hugh.es Consultnnt May Judge Book
From Wire Services ....
NEW YORK -A former consultant to
Howard Hughes 111ade an offer before a
grand jury today to read the ma•uscript
of a purported Hughes autobiography
with a view toward judginf Its authen-
ticity.
"I would be able to say If the book
were authent ic or not." added John
Meier, 38, who wa s a scientific consultant
to Hughes until 1970.
He is running for U.S. senato r from
New Mexico as a Democratic candidate.
what it said were excerpts from the con~
troverslal autobiography, but stressed
that the material "could have come from
previously published anecdotes" about
the recluse billionaire.
-Federal authorities said they may In·
ltiate extradition proceedings against
Richard Suskind, a collaborator with Irv-
Record Field
Ing on the autobiography tr Susklnd failed
to appear Monday before thfl federal
grand jury investigating the case.
-Buslness Week Magazine reported
that part of the money McGraw-Hill paid
for the book was Invested ln American
securities by a Swiss bank at the dlree-
CS.e ffiVING, Page Z)
Meier's lawyer, Robert H. Wyshak , tol d
newsmen the government's response to
the offer to check the book's authenticity
was that "a lot of people would like to
read the manuscript."
"We told the U.S. attorney that we
would be available If they wanted Mr.
Meier to read it,'' Wyshak added.
In a prepared statement distributed
21 Costa Mesa Hopefuls
Qualify for City Ballot
after his one-hour grand jury appearance, ·
Meier said he never met the book's 1'.'he calm before the &torm 11eemed to
author, Clifford 1'vlog, or ·"•• l.o!Jer't · • ~;_ll!ti P PTflllng ~· ID ~ Wife, Edith. · i.;; · . ilT\,;;;. ~··'611.,, 'fOUowi/w 'ftlftfldlJ'i'fftb.ili
"I do no~' ve • .,.... to any penonol d!lldllne for cllY ""IJl!'ll candldololl cpm.
files of How · Ha(lle1," \he llalemont petlni fj1 tho .lii><onilllf J111111iclpal tJec..
went on. " en I resigned 1ll1 position In tiob.
Nevada, I sever«! all connection& wllh A checll: wllll the County Regi..trar ot
the Hughes cr-ganizatiOll. I h I l' e no VOU!n thawed the final all sets of
knowledge of any computerized in· nomination papers filed were all In order,
fonnation about Howard Huahts.'' thus qualtfyl11g 21 candlda1": ror a place
There have been 1ug1est1ons that com· on the Aprll 11 ballots.
puterized lnfOnnati on on Hughes may
have been leaked by one of his aides to
Irving, for use in writing the purported
autobiography. A voice identilled as
Hughes in a telephone Interview has
denied ever talking to Irving.
There were other developments in the
bizarre case:
-The New York Times loday published
Agnew Finds
A · New Target
NEW YORK (U PI) -Vice Presi-
dent Spiro T. Agnew says he would
not trade all the environmental
"dilettantes" in the country for one
level-headed, serious-minded Boy
Scout.
Agnew told the Boy Scouts' an4
nual dawn patrol breakfast that
thei r group had been practicing
ecology for years and in a single
day last year collected a million
tons of Utter from parb and public
areas.
"As an American vitally in4
terested in the environment,"
Agnew said, "I wouldn't trade you
one level-headed, serious-minded,
service-oriented Boy Scout for all
the publicity-seeking environmental
dilettantes the news media can dig
up between now and Hallowttn."
F or1ner Planner
Gets Suspension
From Practice
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
OI 1t1t D•llY f'll•I Stall
Convicted 21f. years ago in connection
with a marljua11a smuggling plot, Balboa
Island attomey and former Newport
Beach planning commission member
Richard A. Higbie today was suiipended
from practice for one year.
The decision was contained I" a 32-
page report issued in San Francisco by
the State Supreme Court.
Quali!ying its findings in forbidding
Higbie to practice law, the court said
possession of mariju a11a in itself -by
today's standard! -does not constitute
moral turpitude.
Stipulating that the 29-year-old lawyer
was involved in 1968 smuggling plot,
the court said his conduct -not simply
having marijuana -is what moti vated
the suspension.
"Measured by the morals of the day,
lt 11 possession or use doea not constitute
an act of basenesi, vileness or deprav~
iety .•. " the court said ln Its opinion.
If It had ruled otherwl .. , !Ugble might
have been disbarred.
Last among the candldatea to file were
Charlie Eifert, of JTU Sin Marino Ch'tle;
David Leighton, of 31.05 Loren Lane;
WWlam l,lanb, of 2403 Francll Lane:
Frederik Bos. ot :161 Magnoll1 St., and
Betty Nolan, ol IOIO Balin Place.
Papers were taken out by C. Eric
Funston, of 332 Princeton Drive, but he
did not return tbtm.
O\ances appear 1ood that the record
field of candidates -just one under dou-
ble the 1964 all·tlrne mark -will draw a
record number of voters.
By the same token, veteran political
obse-rvers suggest the covey competing
for thrtt available seals Is good news
for Incumbent!.
They will split the vote while the In-
cumbents can generally count on some
built-in votes at the outset.
Mayor Robert M. Wil son will be going
for his fourth term and Councilman Alvin
L. Pinkley will be seeking a sixth term in
offi ce.
Each has held the mayor 's gavel for
two-year terms before.
Councilman William L. St. Clair ls also
campaigning for re-election after himself
becoming the first council candidate to
knock out an Incumbent in city biJtory.
So far . the first Meet the Candidates•
session is set for Monday. Feb. 14 , at
Estancia lfigb School under sponsorship
of the Governmental Awareness Com4
mittee.
The cirganlzatlon 111 primarily a support
group for candidate Theodore C. "Ted"
Balogh, of MS Joann St., three-Ume coun-
cil candidate who thus far has Jost .
Scheduled for 1 p.m., the event will be
limited to new candidates only, 1ccordlng,
to a Balogh ecUcL
He contends the three incumbents can
run on their service records, but did con-
cede at one point to allow Mayor WUson
time U he would debate Bologb on in-
ternaUonal luuea.
The mayor declined. ShcriJY. afterward, the neighbor said
lhe heard' aomeone in the young woman's
tparlment and called her at work to ln-
rostlgale.
Leaming no one bad authority to be in4
ddt, the woman called police and then
ioot out her trash nonchalanUy to see
whit lhe could see.
spot$ing a man peering out of the vic-
tim'• apartment, the witness also noticed
an unfamiliar car parked at the curb and oOrlbbled down the.license number.
"We have no intention of submitting to
such legislation 1Dlless that is the will (If
our members as expressed in a secret
ballot," be Said.
Bridges said be did not blame the PMA
for accepting Nixon 's proposal.
"We have these blokes oo the ropes,"
he told the subcommittee. "We're going
to whip them and they are depending on
Congress to save them."
:tleaty Caper
Man Hel.d in Illegal Steak Sales
Higbie and several othff defend1ats
were arrested in November of 1988, in
connection with selrure of 3,800 poundl of
alleged marijuana flown from Mexico to
the Palm Springs area.
IronlcaUy, Mei:ica• 1uthorltlea "ho
leam<d of the ptndlng ahlpment Mited
the ()fjglnal cargo below the border and
substituted alfalfa.
Oraa1e
'tt'eatller
n-high clouda over the Soulb.
land will c1 .. r by Saturday, m•k-
lng way for 1 pleuant weekend
with 1llghUy wanner Jemperatum.
llJ&hs •ioog the beach CIO rtaJna to Choir to Offer
Spiritual Sing
Com Mesa High School's Qmcert
Cbolr will present a program of spirituals
rettunnr composer-arranger Dr. Jester
-llondiy at 7 p.m. at the
Ne'""'1 lltrbor :.Utbertn ChurdL Admlssll>n ii I l for adulta and 50 centl
lor 111>dena •nd chlldrtn. The church ii it 11th 5lrttl and Dover
Drive In Nnrport. S.ach. Pr. Hairston will present 11111 own com-
positions and arn111emtnt1 of aplrltwail
while uplalnlllf the baoJccround and
or1gln o1 each oong.
Studena from alt grade levds wW be
partlcipailn( In the ~IMlllber C4nc:oft
Clloir.
. ·~
Brldg.., and Flynn appeared by sub-
Jl()ena before a special subcommittee of
the Howe Labor Cojnmittee beaded by
Rep. Frank Tbompeoo Jr. (l).N.J.).
Bridges said the parties to the dilpuhi
are close together and he urged that
Congreu lei them oetlle IL
Ewa il the bW II puaed, Brldg .. said,
ht -.Id """mmend that the Ll,000.
mtmber lniemotlonal Lonphoremen's
and W~'a Union return to
-k only il they elect to do oo by 11eerel
vote.
"lo oaylllJI this. I mun no disrespect
or dellanceof Presl4enl Nbon or bla high
office," ·Bridles 11ld. '.'I slmpty mean to
say thel in lliis Instance ht li trying by
melhocb: that won't work \o force an end
to our strike.''
Bridges aald not ev<n President N!Ion
claims the ltrlke must be ended becauu
the naUonal health and safety 11 In
dana••". He uld the ILWU ls working all cargo
Dropping by a Corona del Mar tillor
shop, a TofT'8JlCe salesman alleeedly ped4
dling his leftover sleaa and hamburger
at bargain baseme11t prices wound up in
a bit oC atew Thursday night.
Frederick W. "Underdog" Kook, 22,
was subalqutntly UT<Nd and booked Jn.
to Newport Beach City Jail on IUSplclon
of filegal sales of mea~ Section llOU of
the Stale Busln.,. I< Professions Code.
Oranse c.unty baa 1.5 mllllon resldenla
and more than 50 tailor 1hoJl".
The lono customer when poor Undenfog
-who didn't explain hLs nLckname \o
poUce -entered Purdue's Tailon, 3137
E. Coast Hi&Jlway, wu none other lban
Wllllam Filcben.
He ls the Orange County xaltt of
weight.t and measures, who is directly
responsible for countywide enforctmtnt
of such state la••.
''Anybody want to buy any meat?''
Kook was quoted as sayJng.
Fllchen ldenUlled hbrueU and d•mand-
ed Kook do lhe same, -Ina lhe
IU!peCt clalmed to be a · John l!elllY
JODel, liul didn't have any ldentlllcatlon
papen on him.
The slale welghll and meuur .. contn>I
evecutJve then eKOrted Kook out to a
Lowery'• Me.ala truck parted 1t the curb,
wbere be allqedly ltled to hlghtall U
with the bambur1er.
Filchen analcbed the keys oul of the 11-
nilloa and kept the III fool, III Inell Kook
In custody, while • tall..-and ... ms1rea
listed 8' witneaea IWiayMied J>atrolinu
Larry Gabriel.
The officer tool: Kook lot bookllla Ill
5:45 p.111. wllllo ll'llcben coollaaled dirto
<lll'IOnl ol mtat he aald bore no maB1niJ
of welgbt, another state l1w vlol1tlon.
DefendJn\ Kook WU finally r<J .. led 00
1190 ball, pending arraignment on tho
miademeanor ctiarge next week 1n
Harbor Judicial District Court.
City ofllclals alto plan to proaecuta
UnclerdOI for peddlin& without a Ucense.
J
Court& ha .. held lhllt whether the sub-
llaoce Involved Is Indeed marijuana, the
circumitlnces show llterit to de1l 1n mar.
ljuana.
Convicted on 1 leatt charge, Higbie
was sentenced to to day1 fn JaU, but lh1I
was not the balls for today'• rultn1. ne court said there were mW1aunc
facton Involved -1ddln1.Hllhle wun•t
Involved In the e&JlOI' for penonal profit
-and thla should be laken Into consJd.
eratfon.
Once ...aldereci the Harbor Am'•
moll ellglllle·bich<lor, the bandlOn>e hol
air balloonln( enlhllllall claimed In 11>-
Jervlowl •Iler his arm! l!la• he bad met
other prlnclpala JnvolV<d · toclally.
He •u quUe talullve •bout the whole
thing u coort procee<llncs untolded In
the month! folfO:,:.fi, ad.DJ.re oC what would have betn 11 .7 mlJUon -U
Jt hadn't been alfalf1 .
''This Is 1 bizarre result of 1n attomty4
client rcl.atlonshlp," Hlgbi. remarked at '·
one point
)
II Inland. Lows -· ·
INSmE TODAY
Th• Newport Hm'bor A TI
M111tum ,,.. J 5 of Edward Hop-
per'& paintings on dflplav lhfl
month In the maln galUry, and
1ome oChtr fntne1Ung rm.all ez,
hfbti. In the mtnmce gallary.
Set Pagt JI of todav'• Wttktndo
tr f<>r picluru and •tori!. -.... _.,..,. ,.... II
N.tt ..... ,...,. ...
Or"" c..tY ' lnl-atm n-ts
IWIYla ....... II '""-, .. ,,
.... Maftilfl ... ,, ·-. nt•twt is.no ·-. ...._. ....... 1t-14
WMll.... tl.V
'
~ "' ·~· ······ '
CITED BY COLLEAGUES
Newport-Me11 '1 Deeter
Elsie Deeter
Nanied Special
Teacher of Year
Elsie Deeter, a teacher of the bard-or·
hearing at \Vllson Elementary School in
Costa Me sa, has been selected Special
Education Teacher of the Year by the
Orange County chapter of the Council of
ExcepUonal Children.
1'.1rs. Deeter has taught in the Newport-
f\.1esa Unified School District for 12 years,
i;even of them in the HOH program at
Wilson. 1 The council will now recommend her
for the state 1peclal education teacher
award, to be announced &tatewide May 12
at a conference 1n Fresno.
"Mrs. Deeter has made an Important
contribution to the lives of children wlth
hearing handicaps,'' Mark H a ns ~ n ,
Newport-M esa director of special educa·
Uon. said today of the honor.
She was awarded a plaque by the coun-
cil .
She is al so a 1970 reci pient of the
Beacon Award, given by the Newport.
~1esa Education Ass'ociatlon for out.stan·
ding leadership in educatlon.
Other affiliations include American
Association of University Women and
Eastern Star, a division of the Masonic
Lodge.
Palice to Skip
Action 'Agains~
Helicopter Crew
Newport Beach Police ofllclala said to.
day they plin to lake no action 1g1tnrt
t helicopter crew that swooped down over
[)Id Newport Thursday mor11lng to re.
move a water tank from atop a high rise
1partment building.
Assistant Police Ch.le! Harry Nel!on
iaid this morning a "misunderstanding"
11 a conversation last week left police
•nd city officials unprepared for the dis.
rurbance.
Nels on sa id officials of Vista del Lido
'ad contacted hi! office a week ago to
1ell him the work was ROlng to be done,
~ut Nelson said he understood a crane
lr'as to be used .
"It was a misu11derslanding," Nelson
1aid. "and we're not going to pur!ue any.
!hing."
The helicopter had appeared seemingly
•ut of no\11here about 8 a.m. Thursday,
ov>'ered the old \.\'lilt.er tank and ra ised
1 new one.
"It never touched the gr ound so we
:an 't do anything about it either," said
'ss islant City Manager Philip F. Be tten-
!ourt th is morning .
Bettencourt noted the planning: director
1as the authority to grant temporary
1elistop permits, but the helicopter never
1topped .
DAILY PILOT
---CQAIT l'VILJltmlG CDUMr
I•"" H. W• .. Pr•*"f ... PlilblWW'
J•clc ... cm.,.
Vici ~ilWir n 0...1 M-..
1ft1,,,11 K11vil .....
l h•"''' A. MOfJ!lrii111 ...........
Ckrfe1 H. loot ~1h1nf P. H1Q ~ ...... Mlliln
c .... M-~
3JO W.t Irr Str..t
M.m .. Mil,.., PJJ ... lllO, '2121 --.............. ......,., . U.-l.cllrm,...,,_• .......... , hlc:ht 11'N ._ ...... .. o..a.1 -.... 14 a.....· ...
Auto Repair
Jm-y Hem·s
Testimony
Twelve Jurors who must rule on th•
iUilt or innocence of the "1ervlce 1t.Btion
iseven" filed back to the courtroom today
for the rereading of testimony offered by
a prosecution witness during the seven·
week Lrlal.
All seven defendants and their three
lawyers joined Orange County Super ior
Court Judge James Turner and pro-
secutor Richard Stenton in the courtroom
to listen again to Uie testimony provided
by a former employe of the Ha rbor and
Gisler Mobll atatlon ln Cos ta Mesa.
It took an hour to meet the jury r&>
quest. The .session ended with Judge
Turner again reading his instructions u
they applled to charges of conspiracy.
All seven defeodanta are charged with
conspiracy to cheat and defraud Orange
County rnotorisJ1 in an alleged auto
repair racket that included 11 aerv lce
ataUons.
The testimony re-read today contain~
a statement of the former employe at the
Costa Mesa station that he sa w tires
deliberately punctured and radiator aeal.s
broken by fellow employes.
The jury went back to the jury room to
resume Its deliberation of additional
charges by nearly 30 prosecution wit·
nesses that the seven defendants were in-
volved in the spraying of fuel pumps of
shock absorbers which were then
represented to be leaking and in need of
rtplacement.
It was alleged by the prosecution that
the repair racket included Arco, Mobil,
SheU and Texaco stations ranging from
Seal Beach to San Clemtnte and that the
practice put many thousands of dollars
into the pockets of lts operatora.
Housewife Makes
Dra1natic Plea:
'Let Them Die'
By CHARLES S. JOHNSON
HELENA , Mont. (AP ) -Poignantly
tracing the lingering death of her a&.year-
old father, a housewife has pleaded wit h
a committee to provide in a new &tate
COMtitution the right to die.
"I maintain that to give the people fac-
ing certain death ... the right to die
quickly, easily and in peace when they
want to do so, i!I belng compaaslonate, In.
telligent and humane," Joyce M. Frank.I
of Alberton told a bushed audience Thur s·
day In the Senate cham~rs.
"And I affirm that It ls an act that 0'!1• !'ho glvo UJ all lile, would approve
o_f,' sJte 1ald.
Mrs. Franks, the mother of two
children, described her father's suffering
to the BUI or Rights Committee at the
Montana Constitutional Convention.
After her father broke a hip, his doctor
descrit;ied the necessary operation, she
sa id.
"Dad asked me if the doctor would
please give h1m something to put him to
sleep right then." Mrs. Franks said, but
she did not ask the doctor to do so.
As his health deteriorated, she related,
her father made the request again.
"'My father had been a fa rmer, and he
had given mercifu1 death to animal• who
had been pets and companions," Mrs.
Franks said, IObblng. ''He could not
stand ta see them suffer prolonged and
agonizing death when they were severely
mutilated or dying of Ill ness.
"He was compassionate and merciful.
He asked for the J1Jame mercy for himself.
"For eight weeks he died. little by lit-
tle, minute by minute, day by day," Mrs.
Franks said.
"He was just denied a release from the
suffering and torture wh ich he knew, and
we knew and the doctor knew he faced.''
He died In December.
Mrs . Franks has written letters to
delegates and editors of Montana
newspapers, polled doctors a n d
spearheaded a move for the right to die
with dignity.
Ernst Everman
Services Slated
Ernst E. Everman, who served 10
years as Costa Mesa Deputy Bulldlng
Jnspe-ctor, died Tuesday from the
lingering effects of a stroke he suffered
In 1965.
Servlcts will be held 11 a.m. Saturday
at Wavt!rley Chspel, 1700 I!:. FaJrhaven
Ave., Santa Ana.
A 20-year resident of Costa Mesa,
Everman 11 aurvlved by his widow,
Josephine A. of Santa Ana; and two IOTII
Clifford L. of Tmtln and Harold of
Pasaden1 .
Everman became Costa Meta Deputy
Building Inspector in 1964 ud remaJned
In th1t posiUon until he "'Ure<! In 1165
at the age ti 78.
DAILY l'llOT l l•ft .. hol'I
•
30Years
Roy June Recalls
Santa Ana Base
By MICllA~L GOODRICH
Of ll'lf Dlllr 1'1111 •t•ff
JWy June reached back 30 years to
re-create the world of the Santa Ana
Army Air Ba se in a speech Thursday
night before the Costa f.fesa Historical
Society.
J une, who Is now Costa ~fesa City At-
torney. firsl came to th e Orange Coast as
a 2(}.ycar-0\d air cadet assigned to the
Santa Ana Base for a 10.week training
period in 1944.
The 1,400 acre base wM at that time
bounded by Baker St. and \Yilson St. on
the north and south with Harbor Blvd .
and Nt>wport Blvd. serving as the eastern
and western boundaries.
June recalled that a typical day in the
life or a cadet at the Santa Ana Air Base
Included spit and polish combined with
rigorous exercise and classes in physics,
Eoircra ft engines and other night orien,
tated subjects.
.. We sang evcrylime we marched to
classes." he said. "The drill instructors
would Insist on us being happy and
singing -even If lt was raining and im·
After JlU'le"s speec h many or tht 111-
dlence who had also served at the S.anta
Ana Army Air Balie talked about their
experiences there.
Among them wa.s Irene Lancaster of
4328 W. Regent Dr., Santa Ana who
remembered the lnternatlonal flavo r of
the base.
"The re were many German prisoners
there \.'.'ho did l.he cleaning and com-
plained about not having eno ugh meat to
('a t." she sa id, "but they didn't want 10
leave when the war was over."
''There were also ma11y Chinese cadets
who were training to become pilots. Th'Y
had to stay close to the base and wer•
disciplined very severely. 11 they
misbehaved too badly they were sho t
when they returned to China ," she said.
DANNY ROY, 8, MEETS SCOUT BENEFACTOR GEORGE HOAG II
Huntington Beach Cub Scout, Thouund1 of Oth1r1 to Benefit
possible to be happy."
June said that the biggest worry of the
<'adets was the rigorous physical exam
!hat had to be passed before going to
Job less Rate
Shows Drop
ln January
Hoag Foundation Donates
Huge Gift to Boy Scouts
flight school .
'·The depth perception test was the WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Unemploy,
toughest. The guys used to try and prac-ment fell slightly to 5.9 perctnt in
tice It by matching two moving sticks in January while the number of Americant
the barracks," he said. holding jobs rose to 8(1.6 mllUon after "Some even tried to memorize the col·
or blindness charts, but the examiners seasonal adjustment, the eove.rnment
always changed the charts around," he said today.
added. The Bureau of Labor Statistics said the "'
The Hoag Foundation ls giving nearly
$1 mJlllon to the Orange Empire Boy
Scout Council.
The gift was announced Wednesday
night at the council's 50th Annual
Recognition Dinner.
J. S. Fluor, fund-raising chairman for
From Page 1
IRVING ...
The city attorney also recalled the jobless rate was "essenUllly unchanged"
the Scouts, said the gift will guarantee weekly Sunday parades that were staged from December when the unemployment
the completion of the large Camp Grace at the base. "We spent twa houn in Valley project. fonnation and passing in review before rate -revlsed downward from &.l per-
The 137.acre camp in the San the camp commander." he said. "I cent -was 11.0 percent, but ad·
Bernardino Mountains is designed to han-remem ber that the worst marching ministration spokesmen immediately saw
die 200 campers at a tlme. groups from th e week before always went the figures as a sign of hope.
Other projects are to expand the Sea last and they never finished till after it p ·d t N" . wa' dark." resi en ixon s press secretary, Scout Base. in Newport Harbor, the Santa -R Ana adm inistratio n center, JJ n d Some or the landmarks that June onald L. Ziegler. said at the Florida
campgrounds in San Diego County. recalled In his speech were the old WAC White Hous e that the unemployment
Fluor reported the coun cil will receive barracks which is toda y the site or the figures "give us a sense of optimism ...
$487,000 outright. Then It must ra ise an Costa 1'.ofesa City Hall and Southern He said that .although the change wai
8dditional $500,000 which the foundation California College and the base he ad-·11 t h Th total al f th il qua rters wh1.ch 1·s now the same spot •mall, "it is on the right side." w1 ma c . e go o e cou nc
lion of the author's wife, Edith. The is $2,480,000. which houses the nuns fro m St. John's Labor Secretary James D. Hoda.son
report did not specify the amount. The Hoag Foundation was fanned In Church. sa id that empl oyment "l.! still on the
The Times also said today the ex cerpts, 1940 by Mr. and Mn. George Hoag and Other buildings recalled by June were march, steadily upward ."
obtained from a source familiar with Irv· the ir son adm inisters Its activites. Most the base mess hall which is today lhe President Ni.Jon has expresatd the hope
ing'a manuscript, gave "no indication foundation gifts have been made in automobil e body shop at Orange Co ast of cutUna sharply into the jobless rate in
. • . that Mr. Hughes had a part in Orange County, principally ta Hoag College and the base exchange which is •
preparing the manuscript." Memorial, Hospital and to various youth now the location of Davis Junior High this election year, and top aides hav1
Hughes comes acrosa as a bitter man groups. SC'hool. predicted It will fall to five percent. whose language Js vulgar, the Times said. 1 --"'----------------------------~:.:::.:.:.::.::::_::::.::::..:::.:::.:..::.:::=::_-
The account said he was cHreless about
libeling others 81ld talked at length about
sexual ezplott.s.
In one excerpt, Hughes was quoted as
saying he purposely leaked facts about an
alleged ~.ooo payment made to th e
then Vice President Richard M. Nixon in
the hopes of getting help for his problems
with Trans World Airlines.
"Nobody was raising a hand to help
me," Hughes ls said to have complained,
•'They were glad. I'm talking about
Washington. They were glad to see me in
trouble. So I leaked the details to Drew
Pearson.''
Pearson, the late colwnnist, wrote an
article during the 1960 presidential cam-
paign, in which Nixon was a candidate.
that the Hughes Tool Co. had loaned
$205 .000 to his brother, F. Donald Nixon
of Newport Beach.
"Now whether It actually turned the
tide or the election or not, I don 't know,"
Hughes is quoted as saying.
In other excerpts, Hughes allegedly
called former aide Robert Ma heu a "very
icy calculating man" and said singer-ac·
tor Frank Sinatra "was just taking ad·
vtintage of my prestige to bolster his
wnning preatige."
In two parts of the published excerpts,
the Times omitted what It saJd were
further derogatory remarks about Maheu
and a long section of purported Hughes
discussions of sexual exploit.s J n
Hollywood during the 1930s and 1940!!.
Maheu managed~ughes' enterprises In
Nevad a for four y rs unUI his dlsmlssal
in 1970. Sinatra ha flnancla1 lntereru ln
Nevad1 caslnos til the state took away
hi~ gambling license.
Mesa Clia1nber
' Installs U.S.
'Night Flag'
Oh say did you see by that brand-new
spotlight, what so proudly they hailed on
the Chamber of Commerce fl agpole
Thursday nlaflt?
1£ not, Costa Mesans CID lffl the ban-
ner in qutsUon -a flapping American
Flag -flying 24 boun per day from now
on. at least wtth only occasional
abs,nces.
Sale Continues
OFFICERS CHEST
OFFICERS CHEST DISK
'
SALi $489 'RICI , e
S•l•c.t greup• from H•nrecfert
-H•rit•9• -Dr•x•I , .• en ••I• now. Uphol1t•ry floor ••m-
pl•1 on ••I• includ• ••• H•n-
r•dOfl -Sh•rr ill -M•r9•
C•rson & ethers. l•mp1, pic.-
tur•1 & •cc•11ori e1 •r• •I••
rtduced.
COCKTAIL CHEST
SAU $189 ,RICI e
I.
Henredon feF
•
School Board Drops
Debate on Official
The Chamber of Commerce
Americanism Committee has begun a
drive to have Old' Glory flJtn.1 over the
city'• public buildlnp around the clock
by erecUni Ill own pole and figh ting
1ystem.
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE -KARAST AN
NIWPOIT ITOll OPIM NlhT "l'fL t
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The S.n
FranClco School Board haa vot.ed In a
closed m .. unr to drop Ill debate ov.r
whether to fire controverlial Supl of
School• Tbomu Shaheen.
Once It wa1 a breach ol both patriotic
l•w and etiquette, but raVl&lon of the
1tatuto allows a U.~, Fllll tO be dl.!ployed
at all hours, provided it ls Ughted. NEWPORT lllACH INTERIORS •
Shaheea bas been under nre for
polkies of Jmplement1n1 1 federAI court
order to bus school children t(l achieve
n dal bolance, and for reorganlzin1 hl1
&taff ~Ua 1 priority for minority
mtmbtr<c
Officials ran it up the newly-lnst1\led
fln~pole Thursday night for the first rull
night of display aner apendfng Wed-
nesday evening getting the lpOUlll>I.! ad·
Justed.
The chamber committee project fl In-
tended to encoura1e mer.ch ant 1
throughout Costa M ... to folio" lu!L '
I 7'U w .. tcllff Dr., 642·2050
OPIN l'RIDAY 'TlL 9 ProfoHIDMI lnt..ler
Dollgnoro Avallabl~ID
...... , ... "" ...... 0,... c .... , .... 12•1
LAGUNA llACH
34S Notth Coaat Hl,hway
Phono: 494-65 1
•
( \' ;
)
'
t DAILY P ILOT EDITORlil PAGE .
21 Enter Council Race
It mar. be a conJusi.ng city council race in Costa
M1111, but,Jt ii bound to be an interesting one.
When dead.line filing: time came around at noon
yesterday, no fewer than 21 candidate& officially made
themselves available for the three vacancies to be filled
in tbe April 11 city council election.
It is, by far, a record in numbers. The preview
high was 1964 when 11 candidates entered the field.
And for variety of age, occupations and back·
grounds, voters will have a wide choice.
The sheer bulk of candidates' list indicates a wild
and wooly campaign may be in store. Thete are other
indications in that direction:
-Pesky, peppery candidate Ted C. Bologh is hav-
ing what amounts to his own meet-the-candidates ses·
sion on Feb. 14, but he· has added one twist of his own:
Only the challengers will be invited to speak, not the
three incumbents. Bologh explains that their records
are known and, to use an expression you may have heard
before, they need no introduction.
-Incumbent Councilman William L . St. Clair, who
ran a free·wheeling, lively campaign when he won of·
fice fou r years ago, has indicated ·he · has a pack f ull of
tactics ready this time. He already has written letters
to all· the nominees offering them suggestions on hov.·
to save money on their campaigns, a4ViCe on campaign
si'gn and handbill ordinances, and OfferinS" to lend them
assistahce. (Somewhat Iike Bologh. he didn't send the
letter to the other two incumbents.)
-Do,vntown jeweler Dominic· Raciti has left little
doubt for the past two months that he has an all·steps·
out campaign already in motion . He has even attended
at hi s own expense a special seminar on how to get
elected to public offi ce.
-And in a footnote of absolutely no consequence or
no connection, three of the candidates -Councilman
A. L. Pinkley, service station owner Phil Evans and
Raciti -all have been burglarized in the past week. We
hope that doesn't set a pattern for the othe r 18 candi·
dates.
Add all of this new blood to the undoubted edge
of the three incumbent.! -Pinkley, St. Clair and Mayor
Robert M. Wilson -and Costa ?t1esa has all the makings
of the most intriguing city coun cil election in its 19
years.
YES's Good Joh
What do you need done at you r home or office?
Sprinkler system installed? A little help with lhe
filing? Windows washed? Flower beds weeded? Fences
painted? Trash hauled away to the dump?
Chances are you may find someone specifically
suited for these jobs -and many more -through the
Youth Employment Service of the Harbor Area, which
has done a yeoman's job of placing prospective employ·
ers together with 14· to 18·year-old youngstf'!rs in Costa
Mesa and Newport Beach.
Dur ing 1971. YES put together a total of 1.610
youngsters and employers -but even that impressive
figure does not reflect the overall effects of the opera·
lion. Very often a young person, ,skilled or semi·skilled
in one field. finds himself being recommended time and
time again by form er employers.
Right now, YES has far more applicants than it
has jobs. H you need some special service that might
apply, give YES a call al 642-0474.
c
Could Lose Power and Even His Head Meaning of
'Survival of
The Fittest'
Sadat Foes Are Internal
\VASHINGTON -President Anwar
Sadat is teetering precariously on the
edge of a furiously seethin g internal
eruplion -which could blast him out of
power, and possibly eve n cost h.im his
head.
That is the real in·
Side reason for the
Egyptian leader 's
sudden trip to Mos.
cow.
It jg a desperate
attempt to bolsfer
hi mself again11t h is
·inc~ngly numer-
ous and aggressive
home enemie.s. Sa.
dat's most dan~erous foes and crisis-
right now are in his ov.·n country and not
Jsrael.
Those violent Cairo stude nt riots and
demonstrations were just the visible tip
1 of a deep.raging conflagration.
Behind the students are military and
ultra·nationalist elements.
IN FACT, they instigated the student
outbreaks and played a key behind -the.
scenes role· in keeping them churning
despite strenuous government efforts to
quell them , first by conciliatory promises
and then by heavy.handed force .
It is highly significant th.at when tough
suppression became necessary, Sadat
resorted to police reserves and not army
troops.
Reason: t •le military-particula rly
younger ()fficers-were not deemed
reliable.
Also not reported at. the time : the
Egyptian airforce was grounded .
Lending a. decisive hand in thet
"precautionary" crackdown were the
' /
Russian MIG righter-bomber crews and
antiaircraft missile battalions -number·
ing more than 10,000 men and off icers.
STERN WORD went out from Sadat's
beleaguertd headquarters that the Soviet
fort.ea were 'prepared lb instantly go into
aeUqn against any move by Egyptia.n air
eleQnts ~ to .,,,. !U,ppOrt the threatening
studenfs.or a couP attempt-the real aim
of the tdrbu1ent furor.
Pri!um8bly, Sadat had Kre'mi!n ap-
proval to sound t.l\i.s extraordinary warn-
ing.
Whether he did or .not, it worked . The
Egyptian airforce meekly stayed ground.
e<'! as ordered, although it is an open
B«ret in Cairo that the most vehement
dissidents among the military are
airmen-passionalely itching for reven~e
for their 1hattering defeat by the Israelis
in I~ 1967 conflict
It would have been quite a spectacle if
the airmen had ignor'ed S a d a t · s
ukase-with RusSian·manned MIGs and
AA batteries tangling with Egyptian
pilots and plaoes.
CRUCIAL WEAKNESS of the anti·
Sadat forces is lack of an outstanding
leader.
There is oo one among these basically
discordant 1el!:ments with either the
stature or cQarisma to unite them suf·
/icienUy to mount a widely·bl!lsed putsch
against Sadat. The military don 't trust
the extremist Civ11ian elemen ts, and vice
versa.
Th is fundamental weakness is due
directly to the deli berate policy of the late
Gama! Nasser and hls successor and
long·time intimate Sadat.
Both leaders made it a fixed rule to
weed out potentia.1 rivals. That was done
in a number of ways-ranging from
more-or-less permanent house arrest to
outright execution.
Sa~at is not without powerful sup-
porters, both military and civilian.
That is why he survived the mass stu·
dent derDOIJ!trations-wtth the strongly
implied aid of the Russian forces .
A FOBMER GENERAL, Sadat bas in-
fluential. supporters among the ()Jder
commanders, -particularly army and
navy. Simila rly, Egyptian businessmen
are heavily behind him. Most of them
private ly ha ve no stomach for another
rCJund of fighting with Israel. They want
t1 cash in on the extensive electrification
and increasing industrialization resulting
from !he completion of the Aswan Dam.
Also they sorely miss the once many
millions of tourists' dollars .
In Moscow, Sadat i3 seeking an im·
pressive fa ce·saver with which to placate
his war-clamoring critics and other
malcontents.
This razzle-dazzle is virtually certain to
be an announcement that Russia will
undertake a large-scale program to
enable Egypt to become self.sufficient in
w~apons production. Last w e e k ,
authoritative Washington sou r c es
"leaked '" reports that the U.S. has agreed
to do that for I srael -i ncludin g
supersonic war planes.
Military Critics Aid Enemy
The-Elka Mlga:a:lne
It Is difficult to conceive of 8 greater
danger to this nation than the UJ1warrant-
ed attacb on what some people tenn our
"mllitary·industria.l·complex. ''They vilify'
the military as "wannongers" whose only
C<lncern is providing our armed forces
with a means to practice the science and
art of kUllng, and the development of new
war·making matertal.
The lnsldit>us part of these attacks ii
that they do exactly what the enemies ()f
our republic want . . • they undennine
our na.tion and its preparedness capabili· cy,
The Communists want our country to
fall into the hands of those who would
deny freedom of lbou.ght, 1peeqb, i;no~eoo~ ment and personal .liberty. 'lbty have
written and· said many times tha t they
wlJJ overthrow our niiUcn tiy force and
YtoJenct • • . not necessarily from
oaANOI COAST ~ . I '
DAILY PILOT . ' .Bo~\N:Weed. hbU.Mr
T"-JC•rvi~ Edit<w ' Alll<rt W.Bat.1
Z:ditoriol POii< Editor
The editorial -of the DoJlJ' Pilot teekl to Worm tn4 atlmu•
late ~*" .., praeatinc thll\
new1paper'1 Cll'Wolll and com-
mt:ntaJY OG tcitet of !ntts'IMt anl
1tanUicanoi, b)t. Jl'OVl41nc. a foNm tor the cxl'.'f'ellion of our ....SCTS•
•Dlntona. .... by ~""' .... dlvn"SC vlewPolnta of lnfonned ob-
~en •M cpoknmm on toplcl
of thedQ'.
Friday, February 4, 1972
wltboltt, but preferably from wlthia.
IT IS AXIOMATIC that when serious
trouble arises. we must rely on the
military for protection. It is equally true
that nO military organization can be suc·
cessfuJ without close cooperation from in-
duitry. Why, then , should both groups be
victin}I of scurrilous attacks on their in-
tegrity, their motives and practices a.s we
sit idly •by'.' We do not think our mem·
bership, dedicated to a ltrong and
healthy naUoa, subscribes to s u c h a• ideologl',
It appears to be tbe old story, "what
have you done fot me lately'?" that
precip~ the vk>lent actions we see
an8 bttir about on our college campuses.
Armed forces recruiters are thrown off
campbieg .and pbyslcaJly uuulted. The
ROTC ii vUUied, buUdlng1 burned, and
tl>e Corp& thrown off rnony ~pu1e1. . --' ·J'EOPLt 'llllO boat! of U..lr Corn-.11WOfit phfbic,ble1 are not Clily ptnnltr
"'1 , , , they ano ev111 invited to speak to oo)lqe __ 1itlfre they can spread
~Yll!lperatloo aplnst .... eowtlly
,Ad_'mfy1hlnc tt 1lllldl for. Some pro-
. fSion ""° -i1 actaiawlodtl• they ml ' • Oiiiunan!lli or Coaunpalot sympathberr
Ooolln,!it fO -" our ,.ath, IOCUl'I lo tho plodp that they canl be fired
~ --ol t1ltlt "polltl<ol 'balleft.''
•
0lle ao oot advoato thought control
'illlch 11 uercllod by Comm1111lat n1tlonl
••• bOt nettht.r dO we adVOClte utendin1
lnvttltloo1 to a ''Typhoid Mary" to teach
tn our school• on the off chance her in-
feclloo wW oot atrlke our children.
We: eapecially· abhor those who know·
lngly fn<OW'lgo youna men to dndge tho
draft or desert from tho inned fon:es.
Some lUOO to I0,000 are Hllmated to
have gone to Conadl alon< ••. and there
c
ere more in other countries such as
Sweden.
WE EVEN WIT~ the sickening
sight of politicians sharing the same: plat·
fonn with fi~leftists a.s they exhort all
who would listen to bring pressure nn
Washington 4' extend amnesty to dr11(t
dodgers and deserters. To do so would be
to insult every man in the llTTlled forces,
pnrticularly those who d I e d while in
uniform.
We will always protect and deJ'end our
right of dissent ... bUt we canoot con.
done irrational, hysterical condemnation
of either our military ()r our Industries.
They helped make this nation the
greatest on earth. They will help KEEP
this the greatest oation on earth, despite
the poisonous rhetoric «pewlng from the
mouths of the very small minority who
would see us become subservient to the
Communiat phll090phy ••. a philosophy
which daily ISbOWI It is weakening 'bl its
own heartland.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Maybe Mayor Wllaoo belltated
about l'llllllinl for a new term be-
Cl-UM he wants to aucceed Prut..
dent Yorty in Lo1 Angele.. where
1 city official bat a broader base
for developinc . international war
policies. -D. G. T.
""" ...... """""' ........ ........ ., 'lllU.atllr ...... tlllt -· IJIO ...... -... ""'" ... ...,. ............... .
Some months ago, I mentioned that
most people have no idea of what
"survival ()f the fittest" means in a
biolo1ical sense -wrongly imagining it
means survival of the stron1est or most
aggressive .
Since then quite a few readers have
asked me to .a.mpU/y and explain
"survivaJ ol the fjt.
test," and I am hap.
PY to do so. It means
si mply that those
species or members
of species, which are
best able to adapt to
changb1g circum.
stances have t h e
greatest chanee to
survive.
THE DINOSAUR may have been the
''strongest" of early creatures, and the
sabre-toothed tiger the "most •g·
gressive," but both species became ex·
tinct precisely because they continued to
depend upon strength or ferocity a.t a
time when other qualities were more
necessary.
Let us consider modem man in this
contexl. In Japan today. traffic a.cci~nh1
are the fourth leading cause: of deaths; in
all technological countries. deaths by
violence are rising , and most of these are
accountable lb the number of traffic
deaths, a.s world population grows and
accident.! grow a.Jong with it.
No w. accidents rise in a geomelric rate
compared to population. That is. with
three: autos onl y three encounters are
possible ; with four autos, six are possi·
hie ; with five autos . nine : with six autos,
15: and so on.
SO, A.S THE WORLD gets more people
and more cars and more traffic. the
possibility of violent death by accident
goea up geometrically, and not just
arithmetically. When you double the
number of car1, you far more than dou·
ble the number of accidents.
Given this fact, who lhen wou1d be the
''litte.st" survivors of thi1 enormous
reducer In human population? Thoae who
a.re the · m011t prudent, not the strongest
or most aggressive. Those who stay home
most, who drive the lent, and who drive
with the greatest caution and the fastest
reflexes. Alto, . lho!t who consume the
lea1t alcohol and take the fewett pills.
ANn 1N PAST WARS. 0£ course, we
k..,w tt ii oclually t!lo "-kat" who
haV. l1D'l'iv.d: th1r 11nm1 .. t. braves~
healthlell, Y""-1 m•n have been killed
by the milllono. Indeed, aome hlatorlans
have suggested that World War 11 wa1 '°
fut in comlnJ preclttly beclUIO tho
"Dower" of the upcomlnc generation wu
1laughtered --who miehl "'"• led th<lr counlriN with .,... )DtoDl1eoce and
reuon than the remnant Iott behind tho
lines. '
At any r.-, we oeed to undermnd tba\
llW'Ylval for moo (individually and u a •llOdaa l bu oot111111 to do with pow<r or
._,.,_; llldaod, -b~•· beoocna IUlddal qUolltlol for UI. tho "fll.,
tfft'' burna _.. thoM who are' mo.t
wUIIoc to modl'1 """1uct,
Qµotes
\
Jt11 ua,.11, L.A., n ·1eit111ttv1 le:adu
-"I llUI 11plre to political oUlce , In tho
dlreetlon !hf! I can best do 1 Job, a bat-
ter job than someone occupyin1 llal of·
nee."
\ \\ \ '•
\
' ~ . '
-------....
SPO PIT5MEN
Burke Hung Up
'
Over Cory's Hair
To the Edilor :
Our ocea n stinks from the dead fish
and birds killed by the modern Industries
of conveniern:e. Our air is li ke thP ocean ;
we may soon be like the fish 11nd birds.
Apar lmenta a.re spreading over this land
llke a fungus . I could go 'on-laxe.s, Viet.
nam ...
However, ever ything is In control. We
have our representative!! to confide in·
-like Assemblyman Robert Burke (R •
Huntington Beach) for instance.
IT IS REALLY rea!lsuring to know that
while all 1heae major problerm ire con·
frontirw u.s, the Republican lawmaker is
carrying on his own campaign to unseat
AMemblyman Ke nneth Cory ( D •
Anaheim). The reason : Cory's hair
covers his collar; he also wears bool..s .
Hasn't 1nyone lnfortned Assemblyman
Burke that hair and boola .fie quite 11till
without the action ()f the individuaJ wear-
ing them? Burke could judge Cory ac·
cording to Cory'1 11ctlons. But that would
be too difficult.
I wish I had the time to waste carrying
on meaningless campai1ns .
RON HAyPEN
P erullnl" A lr hem11
To the Edilbr :
Help me: 1 am confused! Our Presj.
dent ha.1 come out with what sounds like
a more than reasonable proposal to end
the hostilities in Soulheafit Asia , and
STILL we are bombarded with :
"STOP THE KILLING ~·· The idea
seems to be that by some peculiar
alchemy of war, our unllateral an d com·
plete pullout will guarantee that thfl:
North Vietname&e will never fire another
Mailhox j
Letttrs 1rom rtadtr• art w1lcom1.
Normall11 writtrs ihoutd c011v111 their
m'ssaaes in 300 words or Its•. TM
right to condtrut lctttr1 to fit apou
or c/iminat.t libel is reserved. AU leC.-
trrs must include 1ignatur1 and maU.
ing addreas. but namts ma11 be 1"'th-
held on rtqut~t f/ 1u.ffidtfl.t rtCUOft
,., appa rent. Pof!trv will not bl p~
li8htd. .
gun , tns~ a grenade , bury a clvlll1n auw.
nor slit the throat of a vllla1• leader.
With no bombing to alow up the
transfer of mate'rfel from Russia and
China via North Vietnam to South Viet•
nam. Cambod1a, and Laos, the killin1 will
stop?
WITH NO FINANCIAL aid and arma.
ment to the South Vle:tnamest, Cam·
bodiana. and Laotians. they will 10mehow
survive the Communist ag(fe11lon?
How'.'
As I say, 1 am confused. But not so
confusert. 1 would ~uhmil , 11s are some: of
lhe: members of Congre ss who continue: to
mouth tht old cry. "STOP THE KILL-
ING~ We want a complete pullout NOW!"
f'rankly. 1t scares the hell out of ms
when J think or the ca.Uber of ment.lllty
of some of those In govemment. But
thank God we have a Presi dent who ta
.~trong t.nough to bru.~h off the barbs or
:o:uch gadnies as thP McGoverns, Mc·
Closkeys. and such.
EI.IZABETH T. l.ANCASTER
In Strength Lws Peace
CalUonlfa Fe1tatt Se"1«
Pttsident Ntlpn'1 reque1t for an In.
crease, not a decrea1e, in the nation's
defen se spending was 11s shoc king to
those who ha ve made 1 political pro-
res&ion of neo-l10lallonlsm 1s It w111
reassuring to tbo1e who, perhap11 , have
read history 1 little: more attentively.
Mr. Nixon made It unmistakably clear
in his State of the Union addre:11 thAt his
firat priority for th1 s country 11 to main·
tain its dominant military 1trength as the
greatest po11lble 11feguard of world
peace. A1,Jie pu~ Jt, ,
"We hiuat m~intaln the 1trength
necesaary to d~r war. Stroni military
defen1e1 are not the enemy of peace.
Tbey •re the iuardlan or peace:."
TO THOSE 1WRO fear that this atrong
1taoct would eadancer the hope1 for' a
1UCCt.11ful meetlnc with Conxnunlst
leaders In Ptklng and Moscow. Uw Preal·
dent 11id : "My planned v\1lt& wUJ mean
not tha t our differences nave dls1ppe1re:d
or will disappear Ill ~he ntar future, The
Important thlnr Is that we talk about
these diffierence1 rather thin fight about
them." ·
To the dove• he addid the warn.log:
''There could be no mol'fl ml.apided 1et
of prloritle1 than one whJch would tempt
otherli by , weak~ America. and
thereby emfan1er the peBice of. the
world." '
mE STATE'"•Of' TRE Union nte•••ae
Is a fiat challen1a;C.O lhe McGoverria and
Fu1brlg ht1 who wtint ebormous decr111e1
In our defente" 1peoding and more
<'bwtowl1111 to.tho Comrriuniit world, . . ' In contra at. .Prtifdent Nixon bal. poal-
tloned blmltlf· u did Teddy -L
He belleves,lo ta1tfoc aoftly, but CllTJlo(
a big stick. '
J
B11 Geo,..e ----------•
Dear Goor1e:
I took Y<J11r Holiday Hint about
uWWn1 lbole left-<1vtr 1Uvers of
IOle bara IDd m~'"°' them.~
In milk cartool t.o cnate bu.uUfuJ •
varicolored clndle1. However, J
!Ind th ... Clndlu woo't burn.
MRS. !.R.
Dear Mrt. E.R.:
You know, people write that to
me 1fttr every jolly holiday season
and have for ye1r1. Somehow It rt.am off my new year right.
Clm•iW au thote people tryinc to
light a bl( cbwst ol aoap! Yim.
yul<. I •
1 Dear Georp'
I uw you co TV I.be other day
Ind you're lalliar than you are ta
the radio.
W.Jl,
Dur W,R,,
Everybody looka taller lhe othu
day.
(S.nd your problm1 to a.or ..
and make utr• room In lhlt ball
closet. Or Wberever )'Ill llttp Did
woo.)
'
i
on Rebound
Candida te R enews Attack on V iet11am Wa r
8)' Kl)IJt.:KT I,. t.:A~1P8t:LL
A1w<ltltlll "'''' Wr1!1r Defyin~ a hosL or lltpubllcan1 who
have cha5tiaed hlrn for crltlcizlng Preli·
dent Nixon 's late st i>tace proposal11 Sen.
Edmund S. Mua.kle ha' renewed hi s al·
tack on the President for not untlaterally
11elting a dtile for co n1 plete withdrawal of
U.S. force11 fron1 Vlrh1am.
On the c1mp11lgn trlul in W111t()nsin. the
italne De1nocrat Th urlclay issued a
11tatement rci;pond11111 to the latest \.OP
rriUcl1 m -frOJn Secretary of St<i lc
\Vil\lam P. lto~ers houri earlier, "-'ho.
h~ld Muskie harmtd the national intere st
h'>' reJet:lin!( :-.lixun's plan before Hanoi
did.
"f'or years," ~1uski1:t_ said. ··every time
an American senator~as made a pro--
}X)Sal lo bring this war to an eild earlier.
he has tx:cn greeted with the same
response from our 1ovemmcnt as
Secretary Rogers used lodfy.
''It ii apparent that the other aide wlll
not aecept the term• the admlnlstratlon
has set." Muskie continued, ad~lng : "I
believe they would respond serwusly to
the terms I have suggested."
to.1uskie said Wednesday release of U.S.
prisoners or v.•ar <1nd safety of the troop11 ~hould be the only conditlons attached to
&etting a withdrawal date. . . .
Rogers ' denunciation of J\.tusk1e s view
11s "most in<1ppropriatc and harmful. to
the nation 's inte rest" foJlo y,·cd similar
rritic~sm from p1:esident1a.l pr c s s ~ccretary Ronald L. Ziegler. Secretary of
l>cfcnsc Melvin J{. Laird and geveral
llepubHcans in Congress.
And a source close to the \Vhite llousc I CAMPAIGN '72]
Indicated more of the same probably
would be rorthco1nlng today at an ap-
pe arance In New Hampshire by Interior
Secretary Rogers C. B. T\1orton. T\torton,
in New Hampshire to kick off Ni xo n's re·
el ection ca1npalgn for the March 7 state
iir im ary. "rnight be pretty tough on
Muskie" the source said .
Another Democratic p re s i d en l i " l
aspirant, Sen . Hen ry ~-1. Jackson of
Washington. told the Women 's National
Democratic Club Thursday: "I was sorry
to see Sen. Musk ie take the position he
did." .
tn an appa rent refe rence lo escalati~n
of the war under recent Democratic
presidents, Jackson said t~e Democrats
i•hJve a 8pe.clal re1pon1lbihty to help acl
the war over.''
In other polltlcal developments:
MUSKIE: Later Thursday night
Muskie engaged in a heated exchange
y.•ith hoot ing nnd hiss ing antiwar pro-
testors when he uttem1itcd to discuss
queslions on whic h lhry demanded
answers -the Vlet n1un war. and
whether mar\ju11na and abortions should
be Jeaalized. Muskie said the reception at
'NEVER THOUGHT l'D GI VE MONEY TO A RO CKEFELLER'
Hubert Humphrey P•ys Election Fee to W. Va . Secretary
a ~1ad 1...,rin. Wiii . hotel ""'lll> 1h" rnl1:,l
hos t1lc hr h::id cncuu ntered si11 cc· hi\ \ 11·1•
preside111!al cempalgu days .
Lll\:fJSA Y: ;\ey,· York ~1ayur .Joh n \'
Lindsay pre<lirted 'l'hurs4ay 111ght t!1•·
J\1assachusctts Oemocr<ttlc pr 11TI<1ry April
25 wfll be a head-to-hca<l battle hctw£"c u
J\.1uskie and him.!elf. Lindsay told the
J\1assachusetts House Press Assoc1alior1
that the field will be 11arrov.'cd hy earlier
primary contests in \\•hieh he expeicts to
do progressively better.
JACKSON: The Washingt.on Democrat,
arriving In Wisconsin later Thursday tu
begi n a three-day campa ign for !he
stales' Apr il 4 prirnary. soitl Congress
!ihould close ex isting i n e o nt e -ta x
loopholes ins\e<id of :ipprovi ng a value·
add ed tax. now being discussed. 1'11c
working n1 an. Ja kkson said ln \Vau sau.
"ls being: t:oxed 100 m1ich fnr too lillll'
hceausc uf lnx systc111s lh<1 t arc ri<ldlL•d
\1'ith !avor!ti srn "
HU1\1PllltE\': Sl'll lluherl JI Hun1
phrey filed in Charleston. \V.Va ., for !ht•
May 9 Deinocratic pri mury and told a
joint session of the leg islature he y,·ould
relight the torch cu rried by the lnt e John
.. ~. Kennedy . un iting West VirglniHnS tu
bring hlm victory." I wont to build <•
coallllon from the 1nountalntops 11 nd
valleys across this great state. the kinct
John Kennedy had in our 1960 can1-
patgn" the T\1\Mel!Ota senalor said. Late r
al a ' $35·a·plate fu nd·ral!ing dinner in
\\filmington, Del .. l-lumphrey called for
''a spiritual renaissance" in plf1cing a
commitment or manpower and resources
to get America moving ahead.
MeCLOSKEY : Rep. Paul N. McCloske y
J r. of Cali fornia, antiwar challenger to
President Nixon. told the National Press
Club In the nation's capital tr he we re
f•lct tcd prcs1dc11L !1e l\OUld appear
rnouthly be/ore a JOtnl se.'!SIOn of
Co ngress tu ;111~\\rr qu~stio11s.
ASllHHOOK : Hep. John :O.I. :~hhrook 1
1J;.()J110 1, cu nser•at1ve cha llenger to Nix·
•in. said a tuinpron1ise reached bet\\·een
the i\11xo11 adrniHislration and Sen
Abra han\ Hibicoff tD-Conn.i , on \Velfa re
reform "calls Coe preceding full·scale in1-
plementalion of !he fam ily·assistance
plan, but it provides that the plan y.·ill
take effect regardless or the results."
l lAJtTK E: Sen. Vance llartke of In-
diana , campaigning In Ne•.v Hampsh ire
for the Dernocretlc 1101nlnatlon. challeng-
ed Sen. George S. Mc(;overn of Sou th
IJakota to a deba te. McGovern replied
!hal he would !Ike to deb;:1te Hartke, but
11uuld prefer a Ne\',i Jfa mpshire de bate
1vi lh l\luskie . the acknowledged fronl ·run-
11er.
~1usk1e . McGov ern. Jackson and
Alabama (;ov. George C. Wallace didn't
show up Thur~day night for a Democratic
ft111d·raisi ng dirmer in the nation's
cnpita l. bu t Democratic N a ti o n a I
Chairman Lawrence E. O'Brien hosted
congressional aides, pages and newsmen
:1l the $500-a-plate affair.
llumphrey, former Sen. Eugene
McCarthy and Rep. Patsy T. Mink of
lfawaii ,.,.ere the presidential con tenders
on hand, but the biggest applause went to
retlred House Speaker John \\I .
McCormack.
Narcotics Agents Seize
'$1 Million Cash in NY
Also on hand was Tho1nas Donelon,
who earlier this '''eek d e f ea t c d
Republican Burgess Nixon for the
presidency of suburban Jefferson Parish.
La., outside of New Orlea ns.
"I'm the only man to beat Nixon tor
president since 1960 .'' Donelon told a
howling cro,vd.
"That's '''hat \\'C need ." O'Brien said.
Hospital Plan
Instructs New
Dads in Classes
NEW YORK !UPI\ -Law tn•
forcement aaents tu:!lzcd almost SI ml\lion
In cash on a New York street comer
Thursda y night and l'harged three men
with conspiracy to violate federal
narcotics statutes. the New York Joint
Task Force revealed toda y.
11le S967.500 in CflSh c»rried b,,, one ur
the men in a sullcsse 111 lhe: Bronx was
~aid Ui II{• thP Jnrgesl <llllOllnt of Cll.lih
ever setted ln ll narcotic s co11spir<H·.~
t·;1SC'.
1'hc three :,u:-cpccl s \Vt'rr 1dc11tifietl .l ~
c..,11arlcs l'apa. 55, Joseph A. Di Napoli.
:11. and Geor~r .,. Ros:il. 46, al l of Nr1v
York.
Bureau of Nar cotll'S and Oangcrous
""''' ....... Bat'• OH'!
Kurt W. Engbre tson is at odds
with Edwardsville High School
authorities In Illinois over their
refusal lo allow a picture taken ot. him wearing a favorite hat
to appear In the school year·
book. En&btellon , 18. was un·
successful In appealing the
laue before the school board
and ls comld~ lwl 1ctlon .
Orug s (BNDDI Director John Ingersoll
said U1e arrests were made by the Ne\v
York Joint Task Force. made up of Ne\v
York State and city police and BNDIJ
agents.
BNDD Agent Theodore Bern lrr said no
narcotics u·erc seized .
Papa and DiNapoli. he ~1ud, \\'C'rc ;1r-
rested la st night af!cr ogents convcrgf'd
on their automob!le In the Bron x. T!1c
~uilc<1'ie C'urrying the cash \\'<IS dlsrovl'r-
l'd 111 thei r l)()SSt'sslnn h.v .'lrrr~l 1111.:
agent ~
llo.~s 1 \1 a.~ a1Tl's!ct1 in li lt' l:lru11 ~ 1"1rl~'
llus n1or11ing
All three were chu rgcd with cons1i1r~i<".1
lo violate fC'dcr<1I na rt.'<l11cs ~talu lt.'s iu1cl
ltossl 1vas add ition ally charged y,·i!h at-
tempting t.o scU narcutics.
Bernier said Papa was fr ee un bond
pending trial In Brooklyn federal Co urt
on charges of \'lolatlng federal narcotics
J~WS .
tn Washinglon, lngcr15oll said the
$967 ,600 \VllS the largest amount of cash
ever seized In 8 narcotics conspiracy
case. He 1ald both Para and DINapoli
disclaimed ownership o the money.
Bernier said the arrests followed an in-
vestigation "In e1ces111 of a month."
'Bouib Fa.ctory'
Fou1id by Police
or;TROIT ( Ul'l l -Agcnl s stum bled
across an nlleged "bomb f11 ctory" in a
routlne nartolcs raid Thur!d1y &nd seiz-
ed a quantity of explosive C'hemical~ they
said were capable or blowing up an entire
cl!y block.
One man \\'AS arruted in lhe raid .
which alao netted two pounds of mar•·
Juana, police said. Three other pcrsoM
were arrested and more marijuana was
selztd In two other raids conducted
earlier by the Wayne County T\letro
Squad .
"All of the Individuals are known to
each other nnd v.•e'~ !Ure they 're oon·
nected in some way," Sheriff Wlllhtn1
Lucas said.
"The men of the DelrOlt narcotics
squad and the metro squad are con·
Llnulng their lnveatigallon .to see what
connection t.hls bomb factory and thest
s;ilO!lon! we ·,·c had In the la st ftw
months."
\\IASHINGTON (U P I ) As
< ico rgeto1vn University l·Iospilal saw it,
tile U111c had come lo give son1c thou,l{ht
lo that poor. bewild ered felloy,·. the nc11·
father.
In the natw·c of things priur1ty had , of
1·011 rse. to go to the new 1nother and lhe
nC\1' i11rant. They go! all !he care and at·
tent ion
1'he fut hcr wns :rtri C'Uy a sei:ond-c las~
('itlzen, <1s Car as mo!I hospitals "'ere
concerned.
He y,•as permitled to gaze at his first
OOm Utrough a glass window dimly but
only at restricted intervals.
"Then, "'Ith no preparation," says
Goorgeto.,.,11. "he took home • smaU1 terrifyingly fragile stranger.·•
Now, Georgetown Ho11pita1. according
to Pat McShea, a registered nurse whostt
awesome title il'I clinical coordinator of
obstetriC5, is trying to teach father how
to be a father at the same time It is
preparing 1nother to be a mother.
It is doing this "In a special f1n1Hy
centered 1nalemity care prog ram."
•·Jnvolved from the beginning," says
Georgetown. "the father attends educa·
lion classea, takes tour! of the hospital
before the birth. and rtcelve1 an ln-
vltaUon to slay with his wife durlng labor
and delivery.''
Instead of bclng restricted to one of
those wailing roonu where all he can do
is sit around wondering what goes on , he
ls pennltted to visit his wife and newborn
any time of day. He gets A "gue1t tray"
at mealtimes.
He ~ven Is lauahl how lo hold a baby,
to ebon1e Ill dl1per1, and to b11he II . One
scoundrelly lather or three r<>bust '°"' was dubious, wllon he beard about thla
aspect o/ the GeOrplown _..,,.
"By playlna ip>rant about sue~
U1lngs," said thb veteran, 0 you can get
out or a Jot of work."
But Miss McShee's concern is wllh the
frigh lened by hJa new .._nslblllties, br,
tius "small; terrllylng fragile s1ra1111er •
he Is taking bome1 by the thought ht
won 't know what to do when something,
obviously, has fo be done.
"We're ll')'lnl to meet his noeds,
whatever they are," said Mtg MoShea.
"father. can rt!IH If they rulU. their
babll .. ru1 """ "'"''I lnak."
•
f'1dl;', ,......,,., 1972 DAIL V PILOT 5
Saturday last day.
15°/o off every $14-$20
dress. Including
kn its and pa nt sets.~~\l ... ..c.,
Sale 11.90 to $17
0
Saturday last
day. Sale oe===n~
polyester ~ ... "'u
knits. ·
Big, beautiful collection of
d1ytime dreaaes. dreaa...up
dresses and pant sets. In
polyesters, acetates.
acetate/nylon blenda. Colora
galore. And lots of prints
and patterns. MiSS81'.
women'• and junior 11z-.
~
' ~
Sale 399 yd.
I ~~
\~
"'8· 4.n yd. Now you can MW ll p th• soltnt, e~y
care. easy-wear wardrobt with the5t polyester knits,
all at one low sale pri ce. Choon from high fathlon
jacqu1rd1, coordinated patterns, end 10Uds. Colors
from th• most vibrlnt to aort h111hery tonn . All
machine w11habl1. All P1nn-Pr1stoll.
Thi same high t1shlon, M to 60" width,
111le1t cart fabr1ca that we re such ar11t value•
at our everyday low price.
tai. lllt1oe lf'f""'9 tMI ltturday.
JCPenney
The values are here every day.
//'?
Shop SUnday noon to 5 p.rn. at the followlng 1toree:
NEWP6RT BEACH, Fuhion lsl1nil. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntlnifon Cent.r.
•COST A MESA, Ha rbor Center* (Closed Sunday)
I )
•