HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-02-07 - Orange Coast Pilot1.
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• Ie
Arson Suspe~ted
In Junior High
Sehool Dolo~aust
DAILY PILOT
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MONDAY AFTERNOON, .FEBRUARY 7, :1972
VOL "-HO. n. S 12CTIOMS, SI P'A•IS
Doll •survives~
l"'ing Case
-..
Carnage on County
Roads Continuing;
3 Die • ID Crashes
Wife Sees
Mystery Blonde
Next to Surf ace
Pop Artist
Die in Home
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of ltllf D•llr ~li.t 11•11
DAILY PILOT Pb11i1 _, 1Ud11!'"4 ~
LAGUNA BEACH WOMAN KILLED IN COAST HIGHWAY CRASH
Doll on Ground Looks Sadly Out of Piece •I Accident Scone
County Traffic Carnage
Continues; 3 More Die
8 Die in Bus Crash
·ZARAGOZA, Spain CAP ! -Eialrt
porions were killed and •lght ~lhus
.-Y l!l)tred •hon a bus lcfl lhe roed
.nit ' PYfd:lrned. oe.,-Truovares. a
vUloge 40 milts from Zaragoza, traffic
polloe ~ loday. n. bUI WU ..,.
'7/n& 21 ie-homo -• bunfUic plrtJ, I •
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NEW YORK /AP) -Another mystery
woman. this ';,,t; a blonde scuba driver,
has surfaced . .' in the Cllf(ord Irving-
Howard Hughes saga.
The woman, Identified only as Ann
Baxter, fle w with Irving last Decem~r
to St. Croir in the Virgin Islands and
gave him scuba lessons while he was
there in what he said was an attempt to
•Contact Hughes, Lile magazine said Sun-
ds.y.
In a court paper filed last month ,
novelist Irving, 41 , swore he flew to St.
Croix Crom Miami last Dec. 10 on in·
1tructions of a Hughes alde, who told him
the billionaire wouJd meet him there for
a final session about H u g h e s '
"autobiography.''
J.rving said be stayed on St . Croix until
Oeo. 12, but when no message came from
Hughes, be left.
Hughes, who hasn't been teen In public
f.or a decade an~ Is said to Uve as a
recluse In the Bahamas, has denied ever
-Ung Irving and labdtd lht lrving-
,s)roduced 0 autobiographJ" a fate .
lfughes' di&elaimel'I came from. a vok:e
Identified u bis to a telephone new• con-1.,..nco, and In court allldaVU. .alltl<dlY
signed by Hughes.
Another beautiful wcman., Nina van
Pallandt, a 39-year-old Danish cabaret
1inger, aald last week 1he wa1 wtth Irv·
Ing when be went to Mexico last
February.
2 Stragglers
Seen in Guam
TOKYO (AP) -A polloo IJlo _.....from Guam said lodaJ that
l1ro --.,......,. -to ... World War II Jape..,.. IOldlll'1
have. -spoUed In the ...... of G.-.
H.G.Sdlarfflolda .. 1• Weiof
the Jip111 ere Partltnw!t 1111 *8
wore .... In Julf. and -. !lilt, ·...i qaln !alt Dee .• -
71> mll .. eut of Ai•oa. UM dpltaf
of Guam.
SCliarff came to Tokyo 'l'hal'ldly
to ,.rt to the ,_ -the
finding of Sholchl Yokol, the fonntl'
81111)' .. ,gun1 caplta'ed Jan. 24
an.r IMl!f In • jungle -on a-for JI )'Hl'I. He b .....,.
1tn1Jnc la a Tolcyo bolpltal
His story that he met Hughes on that
trip "flabbergasted" her, she said. She
was quoted as saying she knew or no way
Irving could have met with Hughes dur-
ing that trip.
l¥1r!I, van Pallandt, estranged wife of a
Dutch baron, lives on the Spanl!!h
Mediterranean laland or Jbiza , where the
lrvings alao reside.
Life , which pictured Mrs. van Pallandt
on its cover thi!I week, quotes an Ibiza
resident as saying "whenever Nina 's
name was mentioned, Edith clim bed the
wall."
Police Hold 8
Carnival Men
LOS ANGELES (UPIJ -Police have
arrested seven persons on suspicion of
fleecing ~ns of game booths early
Sunday at a carnlval in MacArthur Park
1....-td by the City Parb and R<cr .. -
tlon 0.partmont.
Police AJd complalntl were lsrued to
several olhtr penons alleging that tho
gama tbef ran d1d not give partlclpant.s
1 fair chance to win. ·
!be anat.B came aftel-several patrons
complalnod to police.
The ltVe:rt arruted were held on
dw'gea rangina: from J)OUe81ion of slot
machlnu and '"'actlclng games of chance to lhefl by.,.... of Irick and d•vlco.
!
U1'tT..._... Dllternat ,...,,,._,.
The •'different drummer" cited
by Henry Thoreau may be with
the Leamington, Ontario Royal
Canadian Legion Bagpipe Band.
As the New Orleans festivities
got under way, th is drummer
had fellow veterans In step with
him, except perhaps in hair·
styles.
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Santa Ana School Blaze
· :(jiuses $60,000 Damage
Ph -.Yed a M ,000 llrb locktt
...i -... room at La~ Junior High
Sdlool, UGO S, llfa"! ~ In_ 51!1~ ,W .. ,.
fy today. A dwfoOm llUlldlllf It 1he
...,,. 1ehool wu brokto Into durtn1 tho
night, police report<d.
Fire and polLce lnvestlcat.or1 are prob.
Ina the blau and br .. t In today. Thty
hinted thal anoo 'may be Involved. A
poll« patrolman spotted lmOlte pourlna
from lhe buildlnc obout I a.m.
'"" Lallnp -hu -the ..... .. ti dUtW!mt<a ill the past ""' , ..... '"'
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main buik!J.ng war demollahed two year•
ago btca111t It filled to mod urthqualuo
safety .Undlrdl.
Fl>Jr <~ Wotl~ lojured,. nope,
serlou.!dy, nghtlna: the blau. 811 fl rt com-
panlet with 28 men undtt the dlrtctlon of
Batt•llon Chief John Mahany fought the
costly fire for an hour.
Both the locker room ' and clauroom
""' lht rofoc•t.ble typo, princi pal Dr.
Pal Kennedy 1ald. fie reported that utlll·
ty oervlct to the school has been cut o!I
IM that claua •r• btlnl bold 11 uauol.
A pop music duo drawing crowds to a
Costa Mesa night club where they began
cnly two week! ago wa.11 tragically broken
up early Sunday, wh en a dl11putt led to
the alaylng of one member at hl1 horn!!.
. The killing of J ohn J. Bren l 28, who
bled to dea th after being 1hol ln°the grot n
a11 hit hor rif ied wife watched, had no
local connection, lnve1tlgator1 aald today.
One man among several Brent cha1.
tiscd for creating a disturbance at the
four .unit Highland Park apartment.1 he
manngcd 11 Jn custody today, booked on
rn urclcr charges.
Jfe was ldenUrJed as William Riddle, 21,
also of 111ghJand Park.
Brent and hll artner, Jerry Lambeth,
ha ve been playing at the Black Kn ight,
330 E. 17th St., u the Jerry Lambeth
Duo.
The victim and hl1 wife Mickle, 22.
ret urned lo I.he Loi Ancele1 1uburb after
the club cioted early Sunday morning and
were drlnklrlg hot chocolate In the klt.-
chen before 1•lntl to bod, lnvesllptor1
Bald.
Several men apperently wlndlnC up a
party aL lht old teaan<Jrt..lllre atructaro
IS. II.UN, hp ·1)
Or•• ..
Beller plan "' 1attln1 up 1 lrw
mJnutes artier Tuetda7 becaUJI
the i.te ovmlng (Of toolCJll will
tum Into early rnomln1 fOf. Other·
Wilt moltJy IUMY 1t.Ja Tueldly
wllh hlglls •lone lht coul 1t ii
rt.Ing to • Inland. Lows .,.,
INllmE TODAY
Litt!< TonN Coskilo toa1 con-
flntd ~ hU Toom, but Ro1emam
McCGntf1"r0017Ud the 1trect1 fot
outogrophl during the qukl d.U
rlg'htl march Sund.a~ fn NtWfl,
N_o'!-h lrel/Jnd. Set atorv Pa.ae 4.
"· .M.~ ..,. ,, """ ....... ,., ...~ " ~lff ,, C•ll..,111• I •.tltfi.. ........ W
C1•Hlflff t1 n CU"tllff ~ lf c.tilct 11 k i... .. ,..... ,. c,..-.. 11 kiMt ~
Cle•Hlll lttllt M It I i.di ......... t•tf I.fl~ ..... I .,....,.. 1t
._., .......... , " '""'..... 1' ,IN.ct l .. !f .,,.._...., 41
, ... -~ If .............
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_1. DAIL V PllOf ,.,Olld•J Ftbr11ll'J 7 1912 ----
Author's Story Told
Federal Grand Jury Eyes Irving Version
NEW YORK -AutlN•r r11Hnrrl Irving,
tlar w1lne1111 1n !hr ll!JWltr<:I Hui.:hes
IJlerary. lpYlltery ca~. went brfMe <i
ftderal i(tand iury today to lel! hill
ver!lion of thr rl 1strcd1tcd •lu~he~
autobioJ.traphy.
Irving rn!rrrd !he JlJr; roo1n <it
Federal O;urthou~r on f''oley Square
Edtacated Con
... t-.nrll~ hf>forf' 7 a 1n I PST 1 ;u·1·omp<i.n11·d
by h1!i a!\(Jrney , ,\1aurice Ne~\en, and
PhHip l.f!rbtr. a la wyer reprrsen 11ng Irv-
in~·~ wife . f':d1th.
Irvin~ refu.~ed to an!l,,.,rr nt,,.,·smen 's
'IUt:ltlJun~.
111· dal pose brirfly for pit turl'~ bt(orr
hi!! );.wyer hurried h1rn up lO the l ~lh
Ul"1 Ttlel"M ..
\ViUiam I lci rcns. 43, who has served 26 years of three co nsecutive
life sentences for murder, marthes in with his classmales to graduate
from Lewis College, UL The Stateville Prison inmate \Vore his cap and
gown to becontc the first prisoner in Illinois to receive a bachelor's
degree.
House Unit Authorizes
Dock Strike Injunction
\VAS•lfNGTON (AP ) -A ll nuse 111bor
aubcommlttee voted today to 11.uthorize a
partlal Slkfay injunction against the \Vest
Coast dock st rike.
The subcnmmlllC'r vntrd S to 1 ln allow
a major pRrt (lf the .~trike tn l'nntinur hut
to rillow a court. upon petition fron1 1hr
Attorney f!C'll!'ral. to hAlt strikC's arf<'t'li11g
lhr. shiprnents of n1il1t11ry n n ct
a,i::rlc11ltur11I c·11r~oes anct shipine n!s tn
and frorn Hnw ni1.
1'he subcn1n1111llr<' r<'jectrrl nn a 5 In :l
pnrt,v HnC' \n!<' lhf' l'tllt'l'j.ll'llty str ike
lel{islallon rL·questtd hy l'rc.~id<'nt Nixon.
The l'rf'sidcnt's proposal \vould have
con1pcllC'd the ""'<1rkcr~ tn return to their
jobs while the enti re disput<', resulting in
,. strike now in ii!! !22nd da.v, ls sub-
OUHG>I COAST
DAllY PllOT
N_.,.... ._.It
L.9t•H h.cll c .........
H,..i .. '" S-lt ,. .. ,.,. ,. .. ...,\
s.. C'-"t• I
Ou.NO• COAST JllJ aLllH1HCI "°""'ANY
•o~•..t N. w •• ~ l"rnloMnl ,..,. rloCMbW
J.,~ Jt. c •• 1,¥
Ykt l'rnlllMt _. ~•I MMlt«'
Th-•• 1e., .. n
milled to compulsory arbitration. (See
earlier story, page 8 )
All the Democrats on the sub-
committee, headed by flep. Fr;ink
Thon1pson (0-NJ I, volC'd for I he
substitute, whic h v.·as offered by
Thompson . Hep. John D. Oellenback I H.-
()r(' 1, \·oted rtRlllnsl il and two olh!'r
Bl'publirans, Reps . J ohn Ashhrook of
<>haf and Ogden Reid of New l'ork voled
pn·sr11t.
Thon1pson C'stimated his proposa l
\1·nuld ~et 80 percent of the West Coas~
Cflrgo n1oving 11g11in.
1 !c said the n1C'asure will J.lO to the full
llouse Labor Co1nmittee Tuesday and
rould be pa~se<I by the lfouse Wednesday
if it a~-reed lo suspend all its rules
against act ing so quickly.
Under the Thom pson substitutt, R
district court could issue an anli·slrike
in junction only upon findin~ that fRilure
to ship military and agricultural supplies
and all product.s to and from Hawai i
WGuld jeopardize the 1u1tional health and
safely,
Thompson told the subc.'Om1niltee that
llarry Brldgell. the \Vf'st Co 11 st
lon,i.:shoremcn's leader. was unen·
lhusiastic about the sl!b.stilu te , wishing to
continue negotiations.
floor grand 1ury room .
He left an hour and 40 minules later,
1m1l1ng but still &1Jent.
f\elther he n11r his lawyer would say
wh1·ther he actually te.~t1fied and what he
said
"l don 't want tn sePm impolite , but I
.... ·ant the pru<·ccd1ngs tn go along in an
orderly way," Nc~sen said.
Nessen managt>d to delay Jrving's ap-
pearance bt':fnrf' !hf' JU ry for nearly two
weeks by pleading rnore time to acquaint
himself wdh his 1 hen\·~ i;asc.
In the mcant1nll'. a .stream of witnesses
provided lestimony whi<:h has furthe r
('omplicated the bizarre cfise.
Other figures 1n lhe n1ystcry arc
i;theduled to appe:.r before the federal
i;rand jury as the panel tnters its second
week of invcst1gat1on.
lrvini:t 's Swiss.born wire Edith and
Ru·hard Suskind. a resc:.rcher who said
irl a sworn aHidavit that he wit nessed a
rncct1ng between Hughes and Ir ving, are
among those ~·ho have been subpoenaed
tu testify in the probe.
Mc<_;raw-Hill paid JrvlnR $650.000 in
three checks for transrnittal to Hughes.
But Irving conced ed two weeks ago that
the checks made out to ''II. H. Hugh~··
were deposited and lalc·r withdrawn from
a Swiss bank by his wife who opened an
account as Helga ft Hughes.
(Jn Saturday, 5.,.,·1ss ;iuthorilies Issued
an arrest warrant for t\1 rs. Irving in con·
nection with possible fraud and forgery
charges.
Suskind. lefl Spain aboard an lbcna
airl iner for Ne w York today to appear
before the grand jury. He was served a
subpoena at hi s ~1allorca home Friday
and ordered to appear with all his notes.
tape3 and other ma!C'rial he might ha\·e
CQl\ectcd for the book.
On the Spani sh isla nd of Ibiza, police
search!'d the home uf a friend of Irving's,
Gerald Albertini . Albertini . a wealthy
American, told newsmen !ast week he
once kept Irving's manuscript of the
l-/ughes book for the nuthor for about 10
days. d Albcrtini's \Vtfc said lhc police "foun
nnthing at all ."
{:; ..;, -tt
Hughes-1narked
Transcript Said
18 Years Old
NF.W YORK <UPI ) -A transcript with
marginal notes in Howard i-\ughe5'
handwriting Cliford Irving used 8!1 proof
that an autobiography of the billiona ire
\\'as authentic 1nay he 18 yc;i rs old,
Ncws .... ·eek magazine has reported.
An agent of lnler!e[. Hughes' in·
IC'l!igencc network , claimed the
transcript originally may have been us·
rd as the basis for a long profile on
11ug hes that appeared in Look magazine
1n 1954, Nc"""~week !illid Sunday.
Stephen \\1hitc. who wrote the Look
arhcle confirmed that t a pc s and
transcfipts were made of his Hughes in·
ler\•iews in 1954, Newsweek said, and that
hC' thought he remembered that Hughes
had made h a n d w r i l It n corrections.
m.ilerial h~·ever. :-aid he thou ght all thal
material had beeJi burned years ago.
Irving. y.·ho :;howed the transcript to
~lcGrt1w-Hitl Rook l'o. to prove that he
rnct y.•ith l-lughes in 11 series of in·
tcr\'iews. appearC'd before a federal
t::rand iury (()(la y.
Jlv1ean,,.,·h1lr. a filnl d0<·u mentary in
which lr\'ing appc<ired in 1969 on French
television y.•as shown Sunday night on the
CRS.TV pro~ram "Sixty Minutes ...
The fllrn w<1s made on the subject nf
n1aslC'r ar t forger Elymr De Jlory on
whu111 JrVing bas('d a book called
"fake." Jrving seHI in the f1ln1.
''AH the ~·orl d lO\'f'S to SC'C' lhe rxperts
anrl th<' eslablishn1l'nt 11u1de ·a fool of.
And C'\'l'rvone likes to fecl 1hat th Os!' who
srl them.Selves up as ex perts 11 re really
just a.~ gullible as anyone !'lse."
Another character in "Fake.' art dealer
F'cmand Legros. is suing Irving here for
$.">5 million, claimin g he v.•as libeled in the
book.
Sh e Quit Movement
LONDON tUPI ) -An advertisement
in the South Londoner newspaper read:
"Harry. Have given up women's lib.
Please come back. June.''
.,ltw
T•tfl'I•• A. ~11~hi"•
#• ... tllll ···-Union Asks Court Action
atrl•• H. L..-ltld,.,~ '· N•n ~11t1nl M-.1"9 1!.a1to1 1
• To .t\J>p1·ove Space Pacts
ll'ASlllNGTON (UPI\ -The United
Aull1 \Vork!'rs 11skN1 R fl'<f,r:il court today
to force the go\'crnn1rnl i':iv Hoard to
re\•r rs' itsrlf and hcinor in fuli th~ union's
('(lntract.s coveril'l,J.t 30.000 aerospace
worktr~.
Anothtr un ion. the In t r rn a l inn ~ 1
Assoch1tion of M11chlnlsts. said it would
file a si milar suit ntxt Y.'~k for its nenrly
200.00l n1emtx-rs v.•nrlting for 11erospace
firm s.
UAV.1 president Leanard WnoclC"OCk told
a new~ coofertnce that the P11y Board
acted "unf11lrly And irrRtiona lly:' ln de-
nyin~ th!' tv.•o unions thr fuU SI ccnls·1n.
hour. 12 percrnt pay r11lse during tht first
year of !he lhree-ye~r contracts with the
arrosparr ro111 panlts.
The board denied the full riS<! but said
It would approve 34 ctnts-an-hour (In I
pcrcttll increase, tht lint yea r of the
c0ntrad• and dclay th< additional 4 ptr·
cenl until tbe second or third year.
But \\loodcock sakl the 34 cents-an-hour
tncrease Wat actually part or the
pre•iousiy uplttd contracts. whlch pro-
vided for that much in a cost-of-living ln·
rnase over tbe past three years payable
whenever the old agreement eiplrcd.
He contended tbt 34 tent.s was not sub-
Je<:t to Pay Board control and should be
111dded to the old 1verage hourly pay of
14 .30 bcfort com puUng the addlllonal 17
ccnl s·an·hour increase provldtd as part
of the new contract.
With the new bast of $4.64 per hour,
\VoodC'QCk said lhe 17 Crnts-an-hour in·
crease we s well below the ~rd's $.$
percent guideline. which would hive
allt>wed an lncrtase up to 26 cents per
bout.
Nixon Inks
Campaign
Fu11dBill
WASHINGTON I AP) -President Nlx·
on today signed a federal elet:tion spend·
Ing reform bill de.s igned to plug finance
reporting loophole s and curb r1s1ng can1·
paign cGSls .
The 1nca.sure, Nu:on said in a .state-
n1ent, "is a real!stic and enforceable bill,
an important i,tep forward in an area
v.·h1ch has been of great public concern. '
In his three-paraj.!raph statement. Nix.
on noted the leg1slat1on limtls 1he arnount
candidates for Congress and president
may spend on advertising. and reqwres
full reporting of both the sources and
uses of campaign funds.
··By giving the Arneriea n puhlit full ar··
CCSS lo the fa('\S of pohtical flnaneing,''
the President said, "1h1s legisla!Jon will
guard against t:an1 pa ign abuses and will
work lo build public confidence in the Ill·
tcgrity or the electoral process.''
Nixon vetoed in 1970 a bll! intended Lo
limlt spending on polit ical broadcasting,
He said in today's stalcment that his ob-
jecti on was thal the 1970 measure applied
only lo radio and television and did not
limit over-al! costs. But he said the 1972
act is a better bill because it limits spen·
ding through all communications media.
Under the legislation, the limit on a
\Vhit c llouse hopeful's radio-TV ad
budget thi s fall will be .set at $8 .4 million.
lt is the fi rst such White House campaign
.spending ceiling in histor y.
Lunits, t·alculat<'d on a formula nf a
din1e per pot cnti;il voter, are applied on
all candidates for the presidency, vcrc
presidency, Senate and House for their
spending on lelevlsion. rad io, newspaper,
magazine and outdoor ad ve rtisi ng and
paid-telephone campaigns. No more than
six cents of each dime can be spent on
broadcast eds.
There would be no over-all limit im·
posed on 8 candidate's tot al campaign
spending. The legislation would cover, in·
stead. what are considered to be the most
expensive and enforceable categories.
Fro•H l'age I
SL_4.IN . • •
bc~an creating loo much noise outside.
according lo homicide detectives.
Going out to investigate, Brent tried lo
quiel the group and became involved in
an <1r~ument which gradually grew more
heated, police said.
Detective Sgt. C:lenn Bordcmann, of the
LAPD homicide di vision. said Brent then
returned for a .22 caliber rifle and his
German Shepherd dog.
His wife. meanwhile, was calling police
to ask help in quieting the noisy gang
out si de.
"I-le poked his head out the door ::ind
told 1hern 11galn to 'rnakc it.'" Sg1
Bordemann said in recounting the fatal
feud .
One or the men allegedly involved drew
v.·hat investigators believe wa s a .38
caliber pis tol and fired once through a
window, striking Brent in the groin area.
"We haven't recovered the gun yet."
Sgt. Bordemann said.
Brent collapsed and bled to death on
the din ing room floor .
A spok!'sman at the Black Knigh t said
th is morning that Brent and his partner
had just been booked about two weeks
ago for entertainment six nights a week.
The two-man combo had been dray.·ing
cro .... •ds and w<1s well-received hy patrons
11•ho en1oyed their music for dancing.
''Isn't it somethimg else? \Vhat a
tragedy. ."their employer said tod ay
cir Brent·~ murder
TV Producer Di es
AMITYVILLE, N.Y. (AP) -Telev ision
producer John A. Aaron, 51, died Sunday
after a short illness. Aaron co-produced
the Columbia Broadcasting System's
"Person to Person" program starring the
late Edward R. Murrow.
Ul"I r1l1Mlort
Latv's Lot•!J A1·111
SomC\\•hrire along the \\'ay little J ay Gullcdgc,5. of Dallas lost a \vhcel
on his Jate·n1odet tritycle -son1ething any motorist can relate to. But
he got help \vhen the long arn1 of the la\v intervened. Three-foot nine·
inch Jay found the helping hand \Vas that of Jiin \Vri ght, a six-foot
si x-inch Dallas policcn1an.
Peace Proposal C1·itics
Rzirt U.S.-Nixon Aide
By U.niled Press International
Presidential aide H. R. lla)de man said
today that some critics of President Nix·
on's Vietnam peace proposal s ,,.,·ere
"consciously aiding and abetting" the
Communists.
Haldeman. one of Nixon's key advisers
often descr ibed as "chief of staff'' at the
\Vhite I-louse. said, "I think there is the
question here sometimes of pulling
partisanship above peace."
•1aldeman did not mention names but
left tittle doubt he meant some of the
Democratic presidential candidates \Vhen
he sa id ·
"Partisan critics arc consciously aiding
and abettin~ the enemies of the United
States ... \V e hare a very clear offer
out.
"It makes all the points that the critics
have sought except one -putting a Com·
Solici tors Get
New Environment
~\\'.Cl Alhambra women y.·ho allegedly
solic 1ted Tustin homes dunng the
weekend in aid of an organization kno .... ·n
as Citizens for a Better Environment
were given a brand new if not better en·
\·ironmen t in \\•hich to contemplate
charges of illegally soliciting.
Orange County sheriff's officers sav
they did a service fur ecology by loadin~
Irene Ellrn t-.1 cnns. 19. and lrn1<1 Drusilla
B1<·hey, lll. in Orange County Jail.
Both \\·o men were :.rrestcd aftC'r
horneo1l'ners cn1nplAincd lhC'~' 1\lcre urg·
ing locAI resident to contribute funds to
y.·hal is alleged to be a mythical
organization.
munist government in South Vie!nam.
The (ln]y conclllsion you can drt1w now is
1hat the President's critics \•;ant to put a
Co1nmunist government in Saigon."
1-laldeman repeated under questioning
the charge of some critics "consciously''
aiding Communists "in this particular
posture."
He was interviewed on the NBC· TV T&-
day Show .
Air,vest Strike
Settled; Ne,v
Agreement Ol('d
l~ughes Airwest and the Aircran
ti1echanics Fraternal Association have
reached a tentative agreement to end a
seven.wee k strike.
Lee Pitt . information officer for
AirY.·est. and 0 . V. Delle..Femine, national
director of AMFA. both stressed Sunday
the agr~ment is still subject to back-to-
work procedures being seltl!'d and
rat1ficat1on by the 5i0 striking union
mC'n1bers.
Pitt also said th<' agreement was sub-
ject lo approval by the Federal Pay
Board.
l\o dC'lail s of the scttll'rncn!. \\'Cre
d 1.~closed pending the rat1f1calu1n 1otr
~leanwhile, Air.\·est will continue to fly
its lim ited schedule ""'h ich il has n1a1n·
tainC'd since the stnkc began Dec. I).
The di spute ln\'olv1ng mechan!('S <1nd
aircraft cleaners has been ov<'r \1'ages,
fringe benefiL~ and y.•ork rules.
ONE FULL CARAT DIAMONDS
Fine white colol,
American cut
brilliant
Select the mounting
of your choice from
our stock .
$
~ DIAMOND & MOUNTIH•
Wo hrn ell quell"" end tlrOI iof Ql1mond• In stock rNdy for your lntpK"
tloft. ChooH {rom Gem qU11iti .. et 1tn1lbl1 prices. Or choose Dl•monds es
.._ n ,1.00 1 point. All 011mond1 urry our money beck sru•r•nt ... .
..__ .... Center for Or•,,.e Co••tll
Find It Here Flnt • 1002 ltem5 to Ch-Prom
·COST A ·MESA JiWELRY & LOAN
OP<• Dallu 9 to s
1138 NEWl'ORT ILVD.
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA
Comt In and Brow.se Arotu1d
Phone 646-7741
I.tween H1rbor and llro•dway
GEMOLOGICAL
.APPRAISALS
We will appr•i.. In
writing your v1lu1bt1
J•welry for person•I •
or lnauranc• purposes..
Quick, efficient 1ervlc1 •
EXPERT WATCH
REPAIR DONE
ON PREMISE
I
I
T,vo Towns
Still Hold
Old Custom
BARTELSO. Ill (UPI • -Strangers
passing th rough this German community
on Illinois Rt. 161 often do a double take
when_ they spot a straw dummy or effigy
hanging from a utility pole or sometimes
from a wire over Main StreeL
And if they're heading wnt toward st.
Louis. it's likel y they see more straw
dummies in Germantown and Albe rs.
Bartelso ?o.1ayor Frank Kreke makes It
clea r that the hanging of straw dummies
In a conspicuous place has no sinister
meaning but is only an "old German
cu stom that's beeing going on for as long
ai. I can ren1cmber."
The strav.• dumm ies pop up y,•hen either
a young man or young woman who have
been courting each other ups and marries
Eomeone else .
The dun1m y, which usually is ac·
co.mpanied by a cardboard sign con·
ta1ning some pertinenl data about the
breakup of the romance, is strung up by
friends and dedicated to the rejected
person.
"They usually do it to someone with a
good sense of humor." said Kreke, who
admits to having helped strin2 a few
straw dummies in bis day.
"If the dummy is intended for a girl it
is dressed 1n a man 's clot hing and if ifs
intended for a man. it's dressed in a
girl's clothing.'' said Kreke
"Sometimes you 'll see a car coming
dfJwn the road and il will stop suddenly
when the driver secs the dummy ," he
~id. "The n he'll usually get out and have
a look and then drive to a nearby filling
.tlation to ask more questions.
Priest Arrested
On Pot Charges
LOS ANGELES (UPT ) -A Roman
c.~1holic priest arrcs!cd during sit-ins in
lhe office of the New Mexico governor
\viii be arraigned F-'eb. !7 on a charge of
marijuana possess ion.
The Rev. Louis Demescio Jaramillo. 40,
and coclefenda nt Ri chard V. Sawtelle, 21 ,
appeared Thursday for a peliminary
hearing and were bound over to Superior
Court for trial.
The pair were arrested Jan. 5 by police
who said the car in which they were
riding was weaving from lane to lane and
went through a red light. Officers aaid
they fowid marijuana in the car.
College Employe
Boosts Proposed
SACRA:\<l:ENTO (AP) -Se11. Donald
Grunsky has introduced a bill to allocate
$28 mi ll ion in pa y hi kes for nonteaching
state college and University of California
employes .
The Watsonville Republican said Thurs-
da y the bill would give UC employes a
10.4 pe.rceat pay raise and state college
workers an 11.8 percent pay boost.
Gov. Ronald Reagan's new budget in-
c:Judes money for 7 5 percent pay increas-
es to teachers at UC and state colleges,
and a 5.5 percent raise for other state
¥.·orkers.
•
Pigskin Hainhat
. .
l
' J
This little pig went out into the rain in San Francis·
co over the weekend and by all odds was the bright-
est thing on a 'vet day. Patty Fisher. \vh ose fellow
Ne\v Orleans citizens \\•ill be \\'ea r ing the most un-
usual Mardi Gras garb in the next few weeks. sport·
ed the piece of porcine millinery under her um -
brellas.
Clemente Crime Declines
Police Effectiveness l1i creases, Report Indicates
By the closest possible yar&tick. San
Clement.e's crime rate dipped strongly in
1971 and effectiveness of the polic e
department increased. figure s in a
recently released annual report indicale.
In a terse transmittal letter Public
Safety Director Clifford Murray said the
year's figures show that in almost every
category "we have accomplishe d a better
crime prevention and law enforcement
job than before." ._
An increased complement of
patrolmen, IO new men whose training
and other costs are underwrit ten by a
large federal grant, have helped, the
chief has said.
Briggs Offers
New Tax Plan
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Legisl.!ation
to prol'ide edded property tax relief by
increasing the state income tax exemp-
tion for homeowners was proposed Fri·
day by Assemblyman John V. Briggs (R-
Fullerton ).
The measure would ~t the exemp-
tion from $750 to $2,000 in 1973·74.
Briggs said. "On an average $20,000
home, a tax rate of $12 per $100 assessed
valuation would produce a normal tax
of $600. My bill \\"Ou!d. lower that to $360."
~le said he would introduce the bill
Monday.
Significant gains in several areas were
reported.
There were no murders or traffic
fatalities in the city during 1971 , as oi>-
posed to one homicide the year before
and six deat hs on city streets.
Speed violation citations doubled and
other traffic enforcement measures were
up significanlly as well , f..1urray reported.
Some notable facts gleaned from the
report in the area of juvenile crime show
a tapering off of offenses ranging from
serious narcotics violations to minor van-
dalism.
Seizure or contraband narcotics and
dangerous drugs were up, especially In
the marijuana category. Seizure records
also show, however, that enforcement in·
creases may have Jed to less traffi cking
in olher illegal drugs in the city during
the year.
Some of the statistics are as follows :
-Class-one offenses, generally the
violent felonies and major the ft
categories, dropped significantly from 662
in 1970 to 548 in 1971. The clearance
figures, generally resulting in conviction
were especially encouraging. In 1970
police cleared 47 percent of the major
cases. Last year 67 percent were cleared.
-Conviction! of persorui charged with
crimes soared in the comparison of
perti!ntages. Of those suspects charged in
major crimes last year 94 perti!nt were
convicted. The year before 60 percent
were convicted.
-Narcotics officers arrested 226
persons in 1971 on felony cases. The same
category the year before showed 112. The .
conviction rate on those arrests last year
hit Lhe 86 percent mark as opposed to on-
ly 46 percent in 1970.
-Traffic citation~, particularly in the
hazardous violation category, soared in
1971, yet mishaps on city streets took a
steep dip . Patrolmen wrote 1.955 speed ing
tickets last year. They served 8.17 the
year before. The total moving violation
record showed 6,327 in 1971 and only 3.528
the yeer before -almost a 100-percent
Increase.
Pendleton Girl
Gets Disease
CAMP PENDLETON (AP) -The 8·
month-old daughter of l'I Marine sergeant
wss in serious condition at the Naval
Hospital here Friday with a contagious
end sometimes fatal type of meningitis
a hase spokesman said. '
Candy Ellen Riles, daughter of Sgt.
and Mrs. Milton Riles, was admitted to
the hospital last Sunday but her illness
was not confirmed as memingococcal
meningiti.! until Friday, the spokesman
said. The Riles family lives 1n nearby
Oceanside.
It was the first meningitis cue re-
ported ;it the huge Marine base north
of San Diego this year. Last year two
Marines end an inf an! died there of men·
ingocor.cal meningitis.
•
s DAIL V PILOT 3
Northern Area
Clemente Eyes
Fire Substation
A fire department substation in the
rapidly gro~·ing northl"rly portion of San
Clemente will hold 1 top-priority position
during budget studies in the city late next
spring, city councilmen have promi.sed.
In a motion last week spurred by Coun-
cilman Cliff Myers the pled1e won
unanlmoU! approval.
The con~pt or a northuly station has
bttn discussed for years. but In the past
12 months large, expensive development
has taken place in the area .
That north area lies farthest of any in
the city fr om the main fire headquarters
at city ha ll.
Dr. \lade l.owrr a~recd 1.~1ith l\l ve r:o;,
but emph.iisizcd that he and other Coun-
cilmen have often urged that the station
be built.
F'unds are anu1n,t: the prune re11sons for
thr dela ys.
The city presently is pouring $140,000
into a new headquArtrrs bu ilding capable
of housing tin.·o full fire co mpailies on a
24·hour basis.
11JC ci ty alw plans to hlre four new
men to beef up the full-time ranks which
will give San Clemente its first 'round·
I.he-clock :o;ervicr. Thr full timers would
he augmented by volunteers 8! in the
past.
f..1ore men. mnrr cquipmt'nt And fund~
for structures \vn11 ld ha ve to be found to
install a substation.
No specific cos t pst1mates have yet
been detcrnl1ned, but suggestions last
year includ ed the use of portable
buildin.i;:s on leased land for a i·mobile''
substation .
The concept, used In the City of Garden
Grove, u11uelly involves a house or
portable buildirlg housin.i;: a llkeleton crew
and a canopy nearby covering a small.
quick·response squad truck similar to the
one now in use from San Clemente head·
quarters.
"We should have a substation in the
north end as soon as financing is
available," Myers 11tressed.
Woman Injured
As Auto Flips
In Laguna Beach
A young Capistrano Beach woman sus-
tained minor injuries Saturday night
when 11he l08t control of hu auto while
rounding a corner in Laguna Beach and
flipped the vehicle.
Police ssid Stephanie Reed, 19, of 26662:
Vuelta Loma, suffered lacerations on her
right hand and a possible head injury.
She was taken uncon11cio us to South Coast
Community Hospital following the 10 p.m.
mishap, where she was treated and
released.
Officers said the one<ar accident oc-
curred when Miss Reed, northbound on
Coast Highway, rounded the corner near
Forest Avenue. Witnesses told police the
woman's auto appeared to be traveling at
a high rate of speed and apparenUy went
out or control on wet pavement.
The car fishtailed aero!!! the dividing
line into oncoming Janes, hit the curb at
El Paseo and nipped once, according to
witnesses' statement.!.
Officers said the accident Ls still under
in vestigation .
tie addt'd th1tt :o;onie rrsidenls tn th1l
area .. have "'Ondcrtd \vha l the official
feeling was on the issue. We should
answ er with a pron11st of high prklrlty."
Councal:nrn gl'neratly begin wranglint
with the cily budget -alway!! prefaced
by pledges fron1 the city staff that It is a
bare-~nes docun1ent -an late spring,
ilear1ngs on the budget generally eome in
June and p8.S!age comes before the start
of the July t fi scal yr.ar.
Some strong com1nent~ in favor of the
north station can1r durini;: budget study
last yer1r hy nr. l..ower. but the project
nE.'\"Cr ""AS f11ndrd brC'llLIS(' n( the ]lrgr.
headquarlrrs 1;11111m1tn1rnl
The city AS a rule ~('Ju1rrrt~ 11w Av 11~
11nnuAl rr\'rn11r frnn1 i;\;i1c 1·1,1tHrf't l<ixe:ci
for flrE.' <lrp11rt111 P11t u11pn •11·111rnt:ii. ThRt
is thr sn11n·r i•f thr $140.0iJO ht•111g used Jn
th e hcild('Juarlrrs build1n~,
That structur r will be ready (or oc-
c:-upanry ]Rte lh is spring. prontlsed City
Managrr Ken Carr.
Southland Secure
Despite Radio
'Nc,vs Special'
PASADEN A !UPI \ -Rela x. CahFor·
ni11ns. The Pacific Coast still is aitt1ched
Lo tht rest of the continent.
Radio Station KPPC -F~l broadcast a
two-hou~ news speclal Sunday, describing
a flctltlous catasrophe !et off by aa
underground nuclear test.
The simulated newscast described II
series of events, winding up with the
Golden Gale Bridge toppling Into San
Francisco Bay and the Pacific Coad
fi:om .Alaska to Southern California gJip.
ping into U1e ocea n.
The broadcast aet off worried telephone
calls to law enforcement 11gencies and
newsrooms in the Los Angele s aretl.
The program was preceded and follow.
~d by announcements poinli ng out that i\
"'as nol a real newscast. a requirement
imposed by the Federal Communications
Commissio n after Orson Welles' famou!I
broadcast of the late 1930s that panicked
some people into believing the earth had
been invaded by creatures from space.
Micha~eterson, the program'• pn>
ducer, sai l was Intended to arouae the
station·~-edomlnantly young listening
audience by dramatizing threat.a to the
environment.
'nle young people who Usten to the 1t.a-
tion are too 1ophlslicated to be fooled bJ
an ersatz broadcast, Peteraon said.
But apparently at leut &O listener•
were fooled, ·according to police and
sheriff's depuUes, who with mounting
_bew_llder~ent fielded Jelcphone calls alik~
ing 1f California hadfeally lallCJll into the
ocean.
POLISH JOKE?
SUTION, England (UPI) -Evelyn
Gale opened a new jar of pickles to find •
note lmlde written In Polish. Thlnldng tt
was an SOS, she called a Poll.afi
translater. The note was from one Pollah
woman worker to another in the factory,
warning that a man wa~ trying to aeduce
her daughter In the pickling shed.
El Rancho has the hottest price in town! •
I WEBER'S BUrnRNUT
16 OUNCE LOAF!
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Give them sand~iches they'H love!~~ aand":lches that wi!I provide flav~r as well M nutrition. Rath'• meaty tasty bolorna, piled bD tr.oh
gJ1ces of Weber 1 Butternut bread will be AO 1nv1t1nr. And at El Rancho a lowest price in town price the c.ombination la t.oo rood to reaiitf
Anjou Pears ... ~~' .... 19~
The kind they'll weloome in a lunch or enjoy after &chool I
Lamb Chops.~~~.~.~ .. 99~.
Lean, delicious chops, cut from U.S.D.A. Choice qualitr fresh Jamb.
Lamb Chops .. ~.~ .. $.1~9
Domestic Jamb ... fresh! ... not Imported and frozen!
Stuffed Breast of Lamb .......... amt If.IDT ......... 49~
The work's all done ••• •ti you have to do is cook It!
' Lamb Stew Meat ............. utui ll!MMED ........ _. _. 29~
!.fake a !hepherd'1 pie this week and surprise them I
Prices i"n effect Mon., Tut~ .. lVtd.,
Feb. 7, 8, 9. No 1nlu to dealtr1,
Napkins .... ~.~:.... 1i1~
Colon IO brl(hf, taturt IO IOt!, and priood IO low J • , • 60 cl
Sunshine Hydrox Cookies ..... _ ... 20 oz. r1r. ........ 53'
Th~ chocolate aandwich cookie that ju1t about everyone )(l,·ts !
Glad Sandwich Bags ........... ·'° CT. r1c ............. 29•
You put flavor in a sandwich, why not keep It there!
ARCADIA : ~. c, • ,,.~ 1 :: • .: .. , n ,":i.1 P ~SA OEN A i::r'1 ~ SOUTH PAS AD ENA ;::1•11
1• HUNTINGTON BEACH '·!1,1 NEWPORT BEACH: 1111 Ne•p01 1 a1 .~ "
l l Rancho f.entct !• '-• C r .• 11. b1 111 Freu1n11i an1l Hui1:,nr. ,, Or '//,:: J'! 01.rl :.1 i!~n~1 .. n ~ · ·· "' ~ · > 1
' /'•'' f , · 111! [I• f 1·tbhift Villape Crn ler
I •
4~llY PllO~l:._ ________ .,onda1, ftbt'LliV'f 7, 1972
Off er by Nixon 'Dead'
Red Bloc Demands Own Terms Paris • in
By GEORGE SlBERA
PARIS (UPI) -Delegation! from
N<>rth Vietnam, the Viet Cong. the Pathet
Lao and the C.ambodian rebel movement
new into Paris today to demand peace in
Indochina on their own terms. They said
President Nixon's latest peace plan was
dead.
Tbe four Communist Indochina delega-
tions new in from Moscow on a Soviet
plane to take part in a three-day, Com-
munist-backed international a n t i w a r
assembly in Pari.s: later this week.
Spokesmen said they would not consider
any portion of President Nixon's Jan. 25
peace )eckage.
in the latest Viet Cong peact proposal put
before the Paris talks: on Thur.sc:tay. , /
""I gave Schumann some additional ex-
planations on our import.ant declaration
of Feb. 2," Tien told newsmen after leav-
ing the Quai D'Orsay foreign ministry.
"The minister was very interested and he
found some new elements in the declara-
tion."
The new Viet Cong proposal urged
President Nixon to set a firm date for
total , unconditional U.S. mi I i tar y
1,1,·Jthdrawal from South Vietnam. Jt of·
fered to open direct negotiations with the
Saigon government if President Nguyen
Van Thieu resigns and the South Viet-
namese government changes drastically
its poliey and dissolves the police.
the "obstinate. bellicose and perfidious
ch!racter of the American i1nperialists."
"In spite of ever heuvier defeats in the
battlefield in Vietnarn , Laos and Cam-
bodia, the chiefs in the White 11ouse are
still cherishing dark designs. and they
continue to consider military and politica l
adventures leading into a blind alley in
an attempt to hang on lo South Vielnan1,
Laos. and Ca1nbodia ." Dong said in
Hanoi. His com1nents \\'ere 1nade public
ttu·oogh the Hanoi delegation to the Paris
talks.
FIREBRAND BERNADETTE DEVLIN LOOKS OUT ON CROWD OF MARCHERS
Large Parade W11 Swelled by Many Sympa thh:er1 From Irish Republic
Hoang Quoc Viet, the North Viet-
namese Miaister in charge of relations
with Parliament, said he and the other
de~gations were ready to denounce the
Nixon plan at the meeting and said,
'"This meeting will be a great en-
couragement for our struggle against
U.S. aggression ."
South Vietnam rejected the Viet Cong
plan. The U.S. peace delegation said it of-
fered no changes from previous pro·
posals. Simultaneously, the Vietnamese
Communists hammered at the recent
U.S. peace offers, calling them unac·
ceptable.
In Hanoi. fo'reneh Con1n1unist legislator
Jean de Broglie said the North Viel·
nainese and Viel Cong want not only
Thieu's resignation but the South Viet·
namese police force di sman!led. 11is:
remarks were brought out Saturday by
Le Tranh Khoi, vice president of the
Union of Vietnamese in France.
"The que stion is not to nlake 'Thieu
pollc1es without Thieu ." De Broglie was
quoted . 6·1aour 'Cont 1·ontatio••' Viet Cong see ks the prior dissolution of
the police machine." ,
Ireland March Bloodless
·;The U.S. attitude is still obstinate -
and it clearly appea rs in President Nix-
on's socalled peace plan which all peace-
loving peoples have rejected." Viet said.
The Hanoi minister said South Vietnam
President Nguyen Van Thieu 's resigna-
tion would not be suffic ient to lead to
direct talks with Saigon and he insisted
that the South Vietnamese police system
be dismanlled.
North Vietnamese Premier Pham Van
Dong Saturday condemned Nixon's plan
as "a piece of trickery."
Dong said the eight-point package Nix-
on proposed Jan. 25 was an example of
The French legislator was on a five-day
visll to Hanoi with other Communist
parlian1entarians. The visit ended Satur·
day.
By DONALD O'HIGGINS
Nl<:WllY, Northern Ireland (UPI !
ll1:s parents banished Tony Costello. 11. lo
lus bedroom because they fearrd for his
Ii'' But llny Hosemarie 1'1cCanley roan1--. ~:1. lhe streets for autographs as 1r she
\Yerc al a football game.
J\bouL 1.000 yards away . a British
.soldier WRited for 1n1nutes with his Sten
gun poised. then stepped from the bitter
chill for a welcome lcli break in I he
-tt {?
Belfast Leaders
Set Wednesday
For Disruption
BELFAST. Northern Ireland (UP I)
Roma n Cathloic civil rights leaders today
proclaimed Wednesday a "day or disrup-
tion" throughout NorU1em Ir c I and
despite a police crackdown on leaders of
Sunduy"s mam1noth protest murch by
20.000 persons in Newry_
Police in Belfast said 30 persons. 1n-
,·ludinA S(ln1c me1nber~ of the British and
Northern Ireland Parliaments. wlll be
prosecuted for taking port in Sunday's il-
legal civil rights m11rch in Newry, the
biggesl in Northern Ireland history.
"Thr ~u 1nmonses arc in the course of
being served." 11 police spokesman said,
•·so1 nr or thr su1nmonses arc aga inst
1'1Ps and pro1nincnl 1nembcrs of !he civil
rights 1noven\ent."
Police said lhe alleged offenders were
being ordered lo appear in Ne1~TY Court
1-'eb. 16. Conviction of violating the
government ban on parades carries a
rnandatory six-month prison sentence
;ilthough rnagistrates can suspend sen-
tence if I he re .arr exte11uat1ng ci r{'\Jm -
tilances .
1'1t1rch leaders did not 11µpt·11r 1>1urrieJ .
llorv ~tcShane, cha1m1an of the Ne\.\'T"\'
Civil il ights Association. 1>1•hich organ11.rd
lh(' prolt'.~1 niarch, sa1c\. "\\'r expt.'l'1
.\t1111n1onses and arE' not particularly 11 n1
rh~<l if 1h11v !'f'lld us to pn,c;on. 1r 1hut is ~0111i: Ill ~t:t ;u·ro.c;s our political \'i('" :-> ••
t;1·1-ry FH1. lt•ndf'r of the :-;ix Norlht·ni
lr!'lllnd l'ut'lia111ent 111en1bPr~ "'ho
ui:u·(·tu•d 111 !hi' p11rnde . s111d. "l :-i1n
proud 10 s<1.v 11·e 1vi1! resard any punish·
111ent \\'liil'h !hr Stor1nont I Northern
lri•l11nd ) <1dn1in1strst1on cllres to inflict 011
tis l\'llh h on or , , . Wf' "'il l not be in -
t 1111id<1tcd. ··
fill is a member of the British Parlia·
n1c111. along with Ulster nationalist ~fP
Utr•l'ldctte Devlin, \\"ho alS(I marrlled.
\\'L-d11c!'d1lv is the :\ix-month an·
ni\'crsnry 1ir the British govemn1ent"s
ctrr1s1011 to inte rn lerrorisl suspects
\l.1t hout Ina!
pol1c.:e headquarters 011 Edwards Street
1"hc rnarchcrs 111<1rched <1nd soldiers
built their barricadts ;ind "'hen the :.ix
hours 1vere gone Sunday. Hoscn1arie had
her autographs, the snldit•r had his lea.
the demonstrators h:.id their march and
srcuril y forcl's had their show nf
strength .
When the hazy af tl·rnonn uf paradrrs
and whirling nrn1y helicopters was 01Jer.
there 1vere fi.'W ans1vers to the questions
raised by three years of violence 1n
Northern Ireland.
J\ \veek ago. a detnonstration in Lv11-
tlonderry left 13 civili.;ins dc~d . ·•Derry ."
<is iL is known to locals, and Ncwrv. six
1niles rron1 the border w11h the· Irish
ltepublic, are s1n1il;1r-la rg cly Hon1an
(;atholic. high 11nc1nployn1cnt and histoJ'-
Jes of violence.
Thus when the Nl'1vry Ci.,.11 Bights
J\ssocilition announced it "'oul<l rnarch
frorn the heights of <.:athol11· r)crrybeg
housing c.c:tatc lo the center uf Newry 111
defiance of a government ban against
processions. Tony Cost('llo's lather. John.
!old hin1 to '"stay a! hornc and not to
leave the house."'
Hut young Tony Costello. "sneaked out
1he b('droo111 11•1nd1111· 1>1°ht•11 !us 1nother"s
hack "·as tur11ed . ·• his falhe r sa'.id . l-\e
joined thousands of de1nunstratc;irs frwn
both sides of the border who swarmed
across the slopes of Derrybcg Sunday.
Cunfrun!a lion 1v<.ts th<' go<.tl of neither
side.
1'he marchers nll•I in a s1nall
atlditorium the night hrforr 1o thalk !h('ir
plncards. "Lizzie (Queen El iznbf'lh ) cal!
your pigs t so ldier11 f )1orne. ·· son1e read.
Yt't march urga1117.l'f l'harle~ l\fa~hl'r
said if thr proe<'s~1011 1\·ert• stopJ)f"d '"\l'C
"'ill probably call if off ..
The army called in 2.000 nf tl1e 15.000
troops now stationed in North ern Ireland
I.inked \•;ith the local polH't.' -the Hoyal
Ulster Constabulary lRUl"l-thcy .c;et up
the fi rs! major roadblock of conrrele
Wlrks
'We 1ce 're goin g 10
lreland for the 1oeelrend,
but Sid11Py couldn't find
his helniet !'
blocks and barbed wire one mile from the
parade's starling point.
Hundred s of JJewsn1en converged on
this lawn of 12,500. Bul this was not to be
the "'Bloody Sunday:• that son1e said they
experted. The Irish Republican Army
1rHA 1. blamed by the army for much of
the violence that has claimed at least 237
The Communist group arriving today
included members of the Pe k i n g
government-in-exile of Prince Norodom
Sihanouk who was ousted as leader of
Cambodia a year and a half ago.
* * * * * ~ Red N egotiato1· Tells
Of 1970 Peace Offer French Foreign !\1inister ~laurice
Schumann conferred meanwhile with
Communist negotiator Nguyen Van Tien
and sa id he had found "some new points'' l11Jes 1n the past three years, ordered its By J ll\I LUTHER political and military problems as a
l;Ullli a"'ay from the par;ide. honoring a -{r {;:{ '-f:I WASHINGTON (AP! _ Hanoi's chief si ngle question. Thuy replied :
request by the civil rights association. negotiator at the Paris peace talks savs "As I sa id. thr '"'0 crucial points. the
The llev. Tom Jordan urged his Roman A1·my Rate Falls the United States was offered a straig.ht [WO key points. should be settled , and the
Gatholic congregation to '"refrain from prisoners-ror-pullout swap last year hut settlement of these two points will
doing anything to cause trouble." ·rhe President Nixon refused. facilitate the settlernent of the other
<1rmy and police told their men the same. Below } 00,000 l\·linister Xuan Thuy added, however. points."
if in different words. lhat such an exchange can no longer be CBS fol!O\\'ed the Thuy interview . taped
F'or Rosemarie McCanley. 9, it became SA IGON tAP) _ The U.S. Ariny·s di scussed without linking it to the future Friday. v•ith live questioning or Secretary
a festive Sunday outing of autograph hun-strength in Vietnam dropped to below of South Vietnamese President Nguyen of Sta te \Villian1 P, Rogers in \\'ashingtoo
ting. An hour befnre parade time, her 100.000 last week for the first time in Van Thieu. Sunday.
"'autograph book'" l!np ro1Jised from a more than six years. and to tal A1nerican 'Thuy was asked in an interview in Asked whether Thuy had ever offered a ~chool notebook included the names of military strength fell to 133.700. the U.S. Paris with CBS' "'Face the Nation": prisoner-for-pullout trade. Rogers
"Vanessa Redgrave" and "'a r i o us Command announced today. ''\V iii you agree to a simple swap of replied :
newsme11 and other strangers to the neat. The weekly U.S. strength su1nmary American troops out for American '"There 1vas ne\·er anr discussion of
!\VO-story houses of Derrybeg . said that last 'Thursdav the American prisoners back')" that kind. Ln e\·er\· ... "sessK>n that we
The parade started precisely at 3 p.n1. force included 99.700 Army. 26.600 Air He replied : "'It is not a swap here . . . had with the ~oi-tn \"1e1namese. they
It was all but over 15 minutes later half Force, 6.800 Navy. 500 Mar ines and 100 You should remember that this approach made it clear that thev would not ta lk
a rnile down Camlough Road when Coast Guard . "·as advanced in 1971 It "'as our about a military soluttOn. ri:C'f'Pl in thr
balding Barney Hughes. a 1narch Army strength the pre.,.ious week was earnest desi re lo see !\lr. Nixon rapidly context of an O\'er-all poi.JlJcal solution
organizer. rnotioncd a leading truck to \02.300 men. settle the Vietnam problem peacefullv.
block the road and said •·there's a The total of 133.700 represented a "Thal is to say . . to "'ilhdraw ·u.s. '"So it iS not possible for us to ~·ork out
roadblock ahead." reduction of 2.800 troops during the wee k. force s and to change the ... Thieu ad-any military solution unless we . 111 effecl.
The truck detoured the marchers. \Yho 1'he U.S. Command must cut another n1inistration. Through the election of Oct. give them exactly what they want. And
doubled back toward Derrybeg along a 64,700 troops by 1'1ay I to reach the ceil -3. 1971. it was a very opportune occasion that \\'OUld mean a total defeat for the
six foot wide country path. ing or 69,000 set by President Nixoo for to do so, and it would have allowed 1\lr. United States _ . :· Rogers said.
Overhead. three army helicopters circl-that date. Nixon to get out or thr "'ar ve rv Despite a stream of criticism from
l'd and called up roadhlocks to thwart the The strength sun1mary does not include honorably. But Mr. Nixon refused to d0 North Vietnam and the Viet Cong, Rogers
hun1an chain from trying alternative 32,000 American servicemen based in that." said. the Communists still have not re·
routes lo the lo1vn center. Thailand and 13.000 Navy men aboard Asked specifically "'hether the Hanoi jected Nixon's latest cig hl-point. peace
f'ron1 200 feet up. the helicopters look ships operating off the coast of Vietnam . position no1v requires handling of the plan.
pictures and broadcast a warning: "Any \------'------------'--------'-----::__~=~--'=~-----------
person taking part in a procession is
I iab\e lo be prosecuted.·· One marcher
shouted back: ··Take your blades off and
say that again.·· The crowd chuckled .
Confrontation 1vas averted. Neither side
actuaUy saw the other. The procession
t.'nded t"'o hours and 111 miles later,
about half a mile from where it started.
in the slender green strip callf!d
"Rooney"s meadov.·" at the foo t of Der-
r~·beg.
As the-sun sei. !\1aureen Dunaghy lean·
('d from her \\"indow to hear Rory
.\lt"Shane. a 23-year-old organizer say :
"This ts a total success and a total \•ic-
tor.v for c1r1l l'L~hls."
On Jan. 11. 1969. demonstrators: in
;\'e1>1•ry ran '\'ild tn the town's narrow
"'! r<'Cts. sho\'ed police cars into i canal
.ind burned dO\\'ll the post office. This
Sunday night the to"'n went to sleep
11 ithout a drop of blood shed.
There \\'as a postcript from an army
~pnkesman . "The law has been broken
bccauSt" th('re was a rnarch-for what-
ever distance-despite the official ban,"
he said. ''The consequence of that will
have to be borne in mind.
Ne1>1·ry survi\"ed this day in peace. No
one. save an elderly man who fainted, US·
t'<i the ambulance that stood by. The jails
remained empty. the barriers un-
challenged
IMPORTAHT. Coupott iMm1 -'II be
.. Oft01'ld oMf Oft d•ya llOKified,
Vo. -' ~ • couoon • tirM .. ~'°'~.....,..
··-·, ...... ........
Suo1v E111erge1icy Declared • Ne1v lll. York's Worst Storm
'l'em.,..ralures
T_.-.•u"'' •!>d •'~"'i't''°" ''" ...... )..-r Hf•Od .-.if "t •' • • ~ ..,,.., ltw "tt<
:1 11 .Oo/
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~
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"
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J >
" ·" "
" n • 111
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•
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C..tlel """"",.,. ,..... '-li .. .. '"'-' ,........,,. ,._ ..._ .., .... ..,.,., .........
s.., M-. twe. -· flnf'*"'· a:w..-. u '"' -.. _,,_ .......
s... tti.t ~-·""" .... ·~··-.... .... IJ-• •A .... l.:Jt ......
DON SWEDLUND
COAST GENE"" TIRE .. """'"' --,._....,,, .. ........,) 1"41 ................. .... _..,_ I
..J
' "
e
e
~
n
n
'
r •· y ,_
' y
c
u
s
f
y
t
r
s
. . . '
'I'm still shopping around!'
Lo11g-ti1ne
Russ Er1voy
Dies at 67
Had Success
Negotiating
In Kremlin
LllWlllYn E. TftomPoon
..
\\'ASlll.'\G1'0N (AP • -Llewellvn E.
'l'ho1npson, :1 enreer a n1bassadoi \\'ho
served 111 Cornmunist Bus!-.i<i longer than
<in~ ot her An1crican d1plorna\, 1s dead on
('itncer at 67.
·rhornpson. who spent 11 vears in
J\loseow during his '10 ycRr s in t!ie fr)rl'ign
service. died Suncl<t y evening al the Na-
l i'lrnl Institutes of Health in nearby
Ucthesda, t-.1d.. where he had been
hospitali1.cd since Jan. :IL
Test at Polls
Winne1· Co11 Jd Be Lo se1·
In New I-li1111psl1i1·e Ri1ce
Hy J OllN i\1IL.\/E
CONCORD . N. II. IUPl i -Th(' \1'1n111·r
could turn out to bt· th« lo~1·r in l\'ew
Harnpshire's I id -I if t i n g prr~idenuaJ
primary ~1arch 7.
The real significance i~ not 1r1 v.•1nning
politiral QbSt'rvers c·untcnd. but in "'ho1v
v.·ell yo u do.'' Thus, even though Presi -
dent Nixon and Dc1nocr:itic Sen. Edmund
S. ~·lusk ie from neighboring i\1a1ne may
top the vote count. lhf'y n1ay not do so
\.\'ell in th e hved-up-to-cxpeel ations
category.
\Vitness Lyndon B .• Johnson an d then-
Sen. Eugen e J. l\lcCa rthy or l\linnt•\ola in
the 1968 Jlrimary. J uhnsun. a wri!f'-in
candidate, •·y,·on" bul ICl'>l
He came up 1v1th 50 111.'t'('C11\ !1f the'
bal lots cast, hul {IJcC<1rth.1 '.s .~tunning 42
percenl vole lotal greased the ~k id!<> f11r
.Johnson. \Vho decided not L11 si;ck anut!1t'r
tern1 in the \\lh itc House. I CAMPAIGN '72 1
Consequently. cand idates and their
aides tend to soft-pedal their tharu.:cs.
As Johnson said. "I think th at Ne1v
1-l ampshi re is !he only place where a can-
didate can clain1 that 20 percent of the
\·o\c is a landslide and 40 percent i~ a
mandate and 60 percent is unanunuus "
'l'he nature of the guessing u~ually
n1eans there are some surpriS!'S \1•hen lhf'
statc·s 386 .894 registered voters cast their
ballo!s on tov;n tTit't'ling day.
Just under hulf ;ire ex~ctcd to volt'. if
previous figures C1re an indication. 'There
are about G0,000 more licpublicans than
Den1ocrats.
Sen. George S. i\tc.:Govcrn . i D-S.D. I,
says "Muskie's going to have to gel 60
p{'n.:rnt or the vote tu make his v.•111
1vurthv.·hdc .. ,
f1l1'd his n0tn inat1ng pct 11ions. he told a
ne11s t:ullference, ··New Hampshire is in1-
µo rl;i11l lo n1c. in p;irt. because -,·ou
gc·utlt•n1en of tht• press hal'e rnade it '1111-
port<int '
The (;Q P eandidates are Nixo11.
l\ltC'loskey and Hep. John J\t. Ashbrook of
Oluo \o, hil l' the Den1cx.·rals. in addillon lu
!'l·luskie and i\1c(;overn, are Sen. Vanl'c
llartke of Indiana. l\lllyo r Sain Yorty of
Los Angeles and . on a write-in basis,
Hep. \\'1l bur 0. l\lills of Arkansas.
Th<' first primary v.·as l!t52 and since
then dark-horse candidates have made
several surprise showings.
In 1956. Sen. Este s Kefauver u ~ed
volunteers to gel a surprise victory.
In the 19&1 f{cpubliean race. llcnry
Cabot Lodge got 33.000 \\'rite-in votes
even though he \\"as slill in Vietnam .
And then there \l'as J\1cCnrlhy and his
"Children·s rrusadt"' in 1968 .
The Sltrprises .also shov.• that Nc11
ll :in1psh11·e doesn't fit its stereotypes.
The population inereased 21.5 ~rcf'nt
bet1vecn 1960 and 1970 and the state's
unen1ploy1nent rate is 5.2 percent. below
the national average and the lowet:i t in
New Eng la nd.
Unlike the image of Ne1v l~ainpshlrc as
an agricultural state. much of the income
is earned in small factories. with 100 or
so employe s. tucked away in an old mill
tOl\'n.
Presillent Ends
Stay in Florid<i ·
\VASJ-fINGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on is bal'.k in Washington arter a quiet,
three-day weekend in Florida wh ere he
studied fQr his China trip and went
boating 1vith his friend and ne ighbor, C. c:. !Bebe) l~cbozo.
Aides said the Pres ident spent hours :;it
his Key Biscayne co1npound readi ng-
background material in preparation for
his historic visit to Peking f<~eb. 21-28 .
Mond,ly, rtbru;iry 7, lCl72 ---
Boy, Girl
Rescued
Iii Crasli
OAlt 'v ruo r ,.. ••
Es('a11ees
Terrorizt·
Fa1nilv •
EOLI.\. l\1 !1\l'l -Su11d:1v , . ' 11fler11uun 1111 o(·d lnlu 8 l
11l~hln1:1rc· !ur lhl' \\orley r
Slul'gt ll l.111111\ 't\1·0 111r n l
lll":1r 111g i,:111 1s ln1ri.:1·d 11t!to !he
Stllr.'(111 lun nt' a1u t hf'l rl tht•
fa 1111l~ pr1so111·r fur· ltirce
li!llU''I lit•lurl' ~u1 rcra.!cr111~ to
j)OIH'I'. ~
1'11c I 11·11 \1'rr1• 1drnl1ht'd 11.s
escapers fr111 n \hf' Southv.·c:-:1
Virgi nia 1·n111p ;i t l'0t•bu r11.
Jf1n1es F:rps. JS. and Hulx.·rl
(.'ha r\es Ula11 rh11rd. 21
Sturgill and h1.~ \1•1fc i\l;trv
l\ay. both :.!!I. {UUI lht·1r t h!'l'~
s1n:t11 c·h1ldrrn !huugl1t lhr
111:1!1 \1;1ll.1 11g ln11'Hl"d liit'll'
hulllf' 11 :i., :t lll'l jolllbur.
··:'Jri.:1 1h111g .11111 k1u111• l11'·s
11·all.1t1g 111to 1111· lin11,1· ;i11d
EAST OORSF.T, Vt . rAP \ -
J\ lt•C"11age girl nnd a yo ung
boy h11ve been reS('Ucd fro n1 a
snov.•y 1nountninsidt.> a ft r r
trud gi ng in nr;1r zrrn !t'tll-
peraturcs !ro111 th(• v.•rPe k:1gc·
uf a plane c.:rash. A11othi•r girl :-. <1 ,1 1 n J.! ·nuluul\· 11 1•11 1•' ''
thed trying to c.:linlb duwn tilt· Su trg1ll :-.:111 1 S1111d;11 l it" ~;11d 1
n1ountain and two 0 1 h c r till' 1111111 1·n111pl;1111Pd lw 11.i•.'
persons :ire n1 iss111g. hun~rv and C'nld J\ :-.1·!'u11d I
Sixlccn-v('ar-old p ~1 ni ~· 1 ~• rnan ll11'n t'nh·rt•d ll1c li1111~t·
Fletcher -of lr\'ington . N 'i' , .Sturgill said. I
was found walking through the Mcnr11vhill'. \ t1 ~(1111 :. •.t,1!1·
1v11ods shortly after 1nidday troopers \1'111111111.:-. li;ul f11llov. I
-·
lntemationaf'f Sterling
I "'~\l!N I I> 111\•l l "+I\ I< l•l ll'loi" t• 1•1 '1 1 \1 ~ Sunday. t'd lrarks in tlir snow ru
Baeklracking nn hl'r tr;1il. Sturgill's hon1f' Jll ~l ;1!"n1-..s tl11· "''' 1 ~1·11 • 1 ,. • ,.,,,., 11•11 1 "' l•I 11..,wN Mo\I 11
I f do
·dzl K 1 k 1 , 1 1·•0••1·1 , 1,,.,,,H ,." ... ·~·1•1 ... l'O••·" ,,.11 ,,1 ,1
'.arc >ers oun av1 o1vc , en u1· v ~1r1 t•r I H\'-1"1 t <'1\111 1'11 'If ~' ""N iii• \~I \ '~ Mll,.,I''"'" 11
15. A Kcnl11 ek.v truopl'I' 11 it!1 L-~·~· ~"~" ~,·~-'~"~"~'~"~"~'~':._' __ •~·~"~'~"~' ~··~"~''_::'-~'"~'~' "~'~"~'~'~"~':._:.__J
Darkn ess pre\·cnlcd lhefn . ·r~1 \\n 1:h1. 11a-. .1
!\earchcrs from rc;iching the ll'1enll o Stur~lll .111d hr .1p
pl ane crash on Mt. T;ity1r proached hoJ..1,
\1•herc i\llss Fl eleher said sh1· "Thost_> ,1:uvs 11hi• "·lPl•ll'-.!
left the pilot. l..e<inard Zlow1·. \vt·n L cr;1zy." Sluq.:111 s.i ut
auc1 another son. 17-vea r-old "They !old u.~ th;1I 1f 11 1• had 111
Huger. 'rhc Zlowes a1su arc ~II t1} I he door. \\'t• ~hou Id jll.~t l
from Irvington. ;1ct norn1;il."
1'he J.~letchcr girl, suffering -
1:ut s, bruises and eX])(}Sure,
told resl'.uers Zlowe's tw in-
engine aircraft crashed Satur-
day when he attempted to land
in a l'.learlng. She said they
werf' headed ror a weekend of ski ing,. ., Ja c:k has lots of
' 1"he girl didn 'l talk about .. ideas for
( >pt:11 Stu1.k al ~pt.'r lal ular Sale l'ri i.:c-.,
I \l'.f \ th1n!!-I ronl :1 I t:a ... pc>nn 111" ( ar\ 111r
'-1\·t 111 All I fi c,t.: P:1th:r11 -.
1 u1\""11111 .. 1'111 1.·111·t 11111,. 1,,··u p•l.1.tc" )·t•11 1M:J•i.c111tl Id
, .. uul .hid''" l"f<1''. (Ir I \HI .f.1tl \"\II ""l •h t d 1·~· ,i, ,,·,
oli1',nl 1 ••Ill> ••t" /\11<1 I"'"' .il••1d a inft !;•1 1u 111c,,1ic; 'l"'''•d 1
) \Iii ·'~~C ''ll ( \t'I I 1•1!1d1~"°··
1
-Hijl,, ...... , ...... u ow• 1
.. ,,, .. •••••• ,.,, ...
H ti• • ____ ,
. .......... ...
• ,... .... "l ....
'" '"' .... .... ,,,.
•.• "I• •
' . ' . .. ,., .
.. , ... ... ... •... ... ... . ..
1•'~ 11110 I~~ ~II ~/~ ~110 ~,., ~··
O' • •l<I 00.1' •Jt U"O ''" /Ill U ,lf
·~ !!! 1~'4 '·" ..... 1 11 .... , '"
•JO •••o UM u "" .. I ....
"'' " " . "
.. .. ,, .. I••·• !I "
I•.. :: : I ;,·:
lf \I ,,, ....
"·" ""
" •• ,, '"
"" "" "" "" ""
A qu iet <i nd unassurning rn an called
1·urnrn; by his fric11ds, 'rh0n1psr;n \\'Jetdetl
significant influence in the shaping of
U.S. policy Lov•ard the Con1n1 unist bloe.
lie 1v:1s :icknov.·!cdgcd !o have had 1norc
~U L'ccss in negol taling with the Russians
than any U S. envny since est ahlishrnenl
(lf d1plon1a11c re lations v.11th !he So\•ict
U11 1fln in 193:1.
llep. fJaul 1\1 1\1cClos kcy, (H -C:1\d .i,
\1'ho is opposing Ni xon in the GOP
prirnary. says, "Nixon's going to have to
rc1.>eat the 78 perce nt he got 111 1968 or
else it v.·1ll be a rcpud1::itton or his
policies.''
i\Iu skie knows Lhe game, too. \\'he n he
He went boating three days in a row
aboard Coco L-Obo III . Rebozo's
houseboat and new back to the White
1-fousc Sunday night.
her overnight ordeal in the
woods, said !\label Steven s. to
whose home Miss Flett·her
\\'as taken im rncdiately alter
Va luntine', day
-.. c:ome '"•
the 'ugge5tion
table at . , ,
' '" . ' .. -'"
"
...
I ...
I "" f .,, .... I :.: 1:: I ::~I :::: :::: :::: I
'"' .... 111• I '"" "" "" I
Aftrr Thornp~on's death. Secretary of
S!:il(' \\"ihlam P. Rogers issued a .stale-
n1ent praising hi m as ··one of the oul-
srand 1nl? diplomats nf his generation.''
lie added. '"Roth President Nixon and t
111iss his sage adviee.
she u·as found. ...
'"" ' I I :. 'I ::~ I :::: ::.:I:.: I::: I::: :::: 11
,,,, lt l• d. "" ~·)"\ ....
P11litzer Prize Fire Takes
250 Jobs
WAKEFIELD, Mass. CAP )
,. ---... ........... _. '"*' ................ ,, •..•• ,,,
,, .... ,_.~ ... -~ .. ,, ..... 1 ............ , ... , t!.."!
Hija cke r Takes
Bus for Wild,
Dangerous Ride
Beloved Poetess Dies,
Called Self a 'Hack'
NE\V YORK I AP l -Poet /l.lariannc daren't await their historical progres~."
-A .state task rorce is GD ~ t+ ...... r ... ~
heading cff<Jrts to help 1.000 -r"f'Gfl fl (,(3 muu • 1
\.\'orkers left jobless by a $1 5 ~
million Ore in an industrial S
center. 3<467 v;, L;do-Ne wport a •• ,h ,~_O_UTH COAST PLAZA •ri•i.• ~o':;.':1~1~ ,,.,.
'!'he six-n1c1nbe r group from 1 ---.~~•'•';'·;';'•";;;p;;~-~-;;.. Craig ~Ioore had the Pulitzer P rize on Be abstract and you'll wi sh you"d been
her long list of literary <!wards. But she specific;. it"s a fact._ \\'hat wa s J studying? the Massachusetts Depart-
SALJSBlJ RY. N.C. IAP l -At one timr
• _9u ring-.i. an 80-niile-per-hour ri dC' with a
:·-bus hri;1ckcr. 15-l"ear-old Sh ir\('V Jane
::: Clookey meekly retrieved the ma'n·s lost
-; gu n and gave it back to him.
li ked to deserilx> herself as a "happy Values 1n use. "Judged on their own
ha t k of a writer" and co nsidered her ground."
favorite Brooklyn Dodgers the true Despite her relatively Limited life work
rnenl of (;omn1ercc a n d
Development will also try to
rind space for the 18 firms
which were destroyed or
damaged in the blaze. the
latest in a series of fires '4'hich
have hit Wakefield.
PHARMACY
•·natural artists.'' of only 120 poems. she was praised and
"The onl y reuson J know for calling my respected by ~any fellow poets and
. "r w:\s scared. and afraid of "'hat he
·~· mi"hl d'o," she ~aid of the incident.
,-The gun. ti wa s discovered later. v;·as
lnadcd lli'ith bla nks . Shirley. of Largo.
}•'la .. V.'ai one of 10 passengers on !he
f'ont1ncnt.a l Tra\lways bus v.·hen ii left
llirh Point. ;-.: C .. earlv Sunda\·
\•;ork poetry at alJ is that there is no critics.
other category in wh ich to pu t it." she From the Kfy Biscayne White i{O\lse
said on one occasion. on Sunday, Pr~sident Nixon praised MiliS
~1 iss ~1oore. who died in her Manhattan Moore as "oat of our most distinguished
And It will also explore
mearui of providing financial
aid to this community of 25.000
north of Boston.
WE OUOTE. PRICES
·: ·.
..
;,
" ~
.:: ::·· ,:
;: • . •
~!Jnules la ter. a ma n pullt~ a JllS!OI
nnd Hild the bu s dri\rr he 11as ta king
c t1m1nand . lie forced the dn •. r-r to leave
Interstate 85 and drive along sid e roads.
. \Ii ~~ Clook1·y said the hijat kt>r forced
her .i nd a1101her gi rl ti1 eo llcct all of the
p.1.~~1 ·ngt.1r s · v. a1thcs and jev.·ctry in pape r
bags. 1 re hij:1ckcr was arrested later.
home Saturday night al 84 . said two poets." t hin~s attracted her to poet ry -the "We can ~ graterul that the splash ol
rhythm and "the Jei:erdemain of saying a color and enchantment which s~ added
lut in a fe\v v.·ords ·· lo the western world "''ill brighten our
As she v.·rote in the opening of her landscape for many years 10 co me," Nix-
poem ··Value!" in Use:" on ~aid.
l al\ended s<:hool and t liked the place A private fW1eral service, to be follow-
-grass and lit tle Jocusl-lcof shadows ed by a pub lic service. was scheduled for
like !acc. Ti.:esday at the Lafayette Avenue
Writing was dist:ussed . They s~ud. '•\\'c Presb)?erian Church in Brooklyn , v.·hich
create values in the process of livin g. ,\i1ss Moore joined in 193fl. -------
"There's a whole state wan-
ting to kMW how it can help,"
Tho mas Atk in.". secretary of
t:ommcrce and de velopment,
Lold town off1c1a ls and in-
du~trial leaders Sunday .
OVER THE PHONE ••• ANmME
-CHECK THISI sur11 IALI Jl'l!CIALJ-'""' ••t I °"' .... ,.,1(.1
1
M ~l •nl•. A11 t1eid, 11 01 ... ·····•••••••··•••••·•·• SI 'I I SI 7'
~~··•~··~~ Vi11..,itt1, 100 Plu1 10 ····--·····-······ \119 SS &I •'•"'•~ C . 150 MG ..... , ...................... $!JS 'l'r
Vot•min "E"' N•lut1f '1 00 I U 16 71 · · · • • .. • • • • -• •• -•.••• , • • • S<l .95
C•11t Toothp11t1, 6.75 01. ·-·············-··-······· SI o• l lit
2700 E. Coast Hi~hway, at Fernleaf. Corona del Mar
SI.It "'•" .,.
SJ .'9
7lc
And now a word about
H&R Block's competition.
STARS
Sydney Oman-Is one or
the l••orld's greal astrolo-
gers.. His column l.11 one o!
the DAil..Y Pll.,Q'J"S iD""eat features.
The fire broke out Saturday
nig ht in the Robie Industrial
1·1·nter. Fir cm e. n were
tian1pered by winds gusting to
f:.0 mile!! per hour and a
temperature or 7 degrees. It
was controlled early Sunday .
The despe radoes we r c
seized aft.er Sturgill aJerted
the officer when ~ said
··everything was okay" bu!
• AMrLI rARICIH~ IH 11£.t.•
H••r• -':JO · 6:00 Dollf
Cllttff ~ eH HoUffrt
644-7575
Because we think our competition represents
more of •threat to you than it does to us, we're going.
to help you sort them out.
Your Family
The greatest people in the world. Most
or the lime.'Unlorhmat:cly, most or the
lime doesn't include income tax time.
Because the Jut Uring you need when
you're doing 'yoor taxeA is an aunt who
took an accounting course just before
!he d.l'opped out o( college. Or a father
who thinks how much money you make
and whet you do with jt ia something
the rest of the family should bow
about.
Your N•i&hbors
You know thl": t.1J>e-The mild.man-
nered lihoo tSt1lesman next door who
suddenly turru; into a mathematical
""1:ius just about the time income tu:
is due. He knows aU the anfl.._ Some
of which even the 1ntema Revenue
Service 00...'t Jcnow about yet. And
he'• willinl ID lbare them wilh l'ou.
"Josi to bo neiibborly."
YO.
Ywr own..-enmlY-All yeoz lon1
yoo cm'I boio-your c:hecl: book, but u .. 1-~ tlDP you. Armed wifh your
W-'r1.a few l1!lllnl of paper and a oOuple
of p llons of coffee you bra'¥'tly attack
that J1tact or form., You may be takint•
dcduct..io111 you're not en.titled to, and
entitled to deduction• y"''re not taJo.
in1. So, .OOUld you he dol.n1 your own
t.ar:r"'? •
Us
We're H & R Block. with ov~ 6,000
ooovenieotly Jocald:i officee manned
by thousands of 8jlecia1Jy trained tu
preparen who eat, lleop, and drink in.
oome tax return&. People who Bout to
save yoUtmoney and much or tJ:ie time
do it. 'The cut? Fees start at $5 ind the
avera~e c::ost was under $12.50 for over
7 million customers we aened last year .
Furthermore, if your return is audited
we will accompany you. at' no ulra
coll, to the lnt.mal ~ Semoe
and explain haw your rdum wu in-
pared, even though we will not act u
yow Jega1 repreeentative.
And everyone is eligible to receive our
year 'round llflr'Vioe whidl ii oavend by
our one time fee-No ertr& cbaf1l9 for
help wilh aiadill, -""' or tu qaetfiww -
We-tho people_..,. jmt told you
-will do :roar income tu rdum for lem tban we am but we dcll't think
you am afford Ihm>.
DOll'T LE1' All AMATEUR DO
Hall lll.OCIK'S JOB.
t A.M.·f , _ _,_ WMld..-p
t A.M.-1 PM . ht, J. $•11.
"-"Ml-M4t
No Ap,...,._1tN......,
O'lN tONIGHT
3427 E. Cbast Hwy . Corona del Mar
2300 H!"'bw Blvd. • Costa Mesa
1875 Harbor Blvd. I Costa Mesa
•
•
winked .
Our Anniversary Sale
is the time to reach out for ••.
The mlema
by HERffAGE'
I . •
.... $279
S'"tly CD11tt"'fJO'Oiy, but rih a tovc:h of 1ha mo11i'f'• i11 its c.ol'9'h.lty
d•t~lled ~r_quiet t~bl,fl top •• _ ond, ol cc>w••, wllti !he lft<Otltporoble
Henloge f1"1•h. Thu " the d4'tiV"" quoh1y ot iii fi""' . _ . from lh•
fomed "MiUe""kJ" coll~Oft. 1'Ktongulo1 cock roil toble m.a111re1 W60,
028, H 16. Yov11 kffP thk one o lifefi"1e. Hurry, Of you Moy milt ovt.
SANTA ANA
Mlin •f Elr1enfh
POMONA
S47·16ll
PASAOENA
•
•
\
•
• D ARY P ROT EDITORIAL PAGE
A Count y 'Air Force'?
Despite comploiints of some residents ahout noi o;c
and eye-in·lhe-sky Invasion of privacy, police hellcoplers
In Anaheim, Costa Mesa. Hun tington Beach and Ne"'flOrt
Beach have, on the whole. proved th eir worth to a sub·
stantiaJ number or ci tizens.
They ~re not only effective in law enforcc1ncnl, they
also save Jives in emergencies.
Now a .dormant propo!:iaJ to have a counl y\vidc heh·
CDJ?lc::r se~1ce has been revived by Supervisor \Villiam
Ph1l11ps with support from Boa rd Chairman ltonald
Caspers.
The program Phillips visualizes could provide acritll
pa~ols for the sheriff's office in sparsely settled area s.
ThlS would free ground units now patrolling lonely roads
in mountaino1;1s areas for duty in more congested places.
The service couJd also handle fire and traffic con·
trol. high speed emergency blood runs, search missions,
police pursuits and limited aerial ambulance work on
both land and sea.
A county helicopter patrol has had Grand Jury sur·
port in the past but Sheriff James Musick has been op·
p osed. Unimpressed with the choppers' value in routine
pati:ol work, Musick h~s considered th em chiefly as
vehicles for emergency lifesaving. For this he \voutd call
OIJ the Marine Air Facility at Santa Ana,
But for Musick's opposition, a county-coordinal·
ed helicopter service might have been \vorked out with
the cit ies several years ago at the time H un tington Beach
established the first helicopter adjunct to its police force.
. N~w it probably _is too late. to consolidate the city
units into a countyw1de operation, even though joint
purcha~lng and maint~nance could be a major cost saver.
Each city h~s patrolling problems peculiar to its area
and the police departments \Vant to control their O\\'n
local operations.
. Nevertheless •. if the fou r cities were willing to unite
with the county, 1t would seem to be feasible simply to
Real Mea11ing
Of 'Fear of
The Lord'
Dear
Gloo111 Y
Gus
'!'1'('· . .,.~ :•. --..... -~--~
• ,, I , 'f ",J.,
,l· ~ydney J .. Harris'. -. ' "°'')-.. J.e
•
If there is someone you respect
enormously, and whose good opinion you
value highly, what is it that makes you
net well in this person's presence? The
fear th at otherwise he might withdraw
his favor from you.
might lose his good
opinion of you .
There is nothing
wrong with su ch
feRr: It Is perfec tly
logical and legiti-
mate. All Jove rela-
tionships are con-
trolled by an ele.
ment of fear -that
of acting, or becoming, unworthy Of the
loved one'1 approbation.
WHEN MODERN ~pie, however.
deplore the Bible's emphasis on "fear of
the Lord," they fail lo understand what it
properly means. Worship of the Lord.
they insist. should be based on "love,·•
not on "fear" -but there Is no love
unless it is accompanied by the kin:! of
fear that helps us to live up to the \o\·ed
one's conception of us
The reason for this y,•idespread ron·
fqsion is that we equate all "fear " y,1~h
fear of punishment. This. indeed, v;ould
be the y,·orst reason for doing honor to
God -Iha! we are afraid of being
eternally punished. Fire-and·brin,ston~
religion has fallen into a deserved
disrepute because it stressed such
punishment. which would be uny,·orthy of
any God we would care to W<>rship.
lfow can we stop prople from ha11g·
ing unsolicited adver!ising on our
front door knobs?
E. E. D.
Tl\11 '9•'11•• "'"""'' ~<MN""' ~1-t, IMll flff•Ull•llr ll'IOM ol lftt n1W1P•i>t"•. St .... row Ptl _...., t. Glffmr Gui, D•llr Pllor .
BUT NOT ALL FEAR is of !his
punitive kind . which is ,11 childish C(ln-
ception of (',od's power. Fear of losing
respect, of the loved vnc 's withdrawal, of
the severing of the bond, is what is
psychologically true in our relationships.
All moral authority is based on this
Jegitimate form of fear . not on power or
punishment or ret.a\iat ion.
Hell is to be loveless. To be ahandnnf'd.
To have forfeited one·s interdeprndencr.
To live only for oneself. No fire and
brimstone cRn equal this deso l;i!1on. God
has no need to ··do anything'" to us ; we
are our own punishers. we create our O\\'n
HeU. we become either what we v.•ere
meant to be, or go to our death without
ever having known what 1~ was kl Live.
A.LL TUJS HAS nothing to do. in-
cidentally. wilh ''bclie\'ing"" in God.
Avowed atheists can be closer to 11 im
than devout church-goers. God is nn1
"religious"" in any pelly human sen.~c nf
the word : this 1~ \vhy thrre can br no
"right .. religion -only right IX'o:•lf',
,.,,r;ny of 1\·hon1 profess n\1 religion ar :ill
Those \\'ho re spect the cosn1os. "ho
treat all men ;is brnlhers. \\'ho knr+\V
there 1s a law hiizher than lhal or sel:-ag.
grand1zcrnent Rn d srlf·preservat1on,
"y,·ho w<\1k humbl~· and act mercifully ."'
live in ronstant f('ar nf the Lord. whethrr
they kn<rw it or not Thry fear beC1Jm1n~
Un\\'Orthy of the hun1anhoocl the y v.•cr<'
created v.·ilh. and f\1r.
Mental Convolutions
California Feature Sen1ce
P~sident Richard Nixon's dramatic
re\'elation of !ht secret negotiations lo
end the war in V1:!tnam and return both
U.S. and North \'ittn11mese prisoners of
war to their rtspec1ive home.lands
elicited a fairly humorous response from
bis politiCA\ opponents at home.
That the North \'ictnamese would nol
•grH to a termination of hostilities was
evJdent in the simple fact that Pr~ident
Nixon m11de the discussion5 public.
Yet the mental convolutions of Senators
J. WilHam Fulbright and &!ward Ken-
nedy, not to ~uon coJWMist James
Reston and a dozen ot.htrs. v.·ert' magni!i-
<enL
Till! GR&AT FllLBRJGIIT~ ron-
trtbaUol! upon learning that the President
bad In fact been engagtd in negotiations
while be fulminated was that whit v.-ould
be coosklertd in Western tiyes 1 .. fair
aod g-. )ln)llOSll" migh1 "not look
£tiNS om to Nort.b Vietnam." "We may
haw ta do more." bt Ald.
Ttdllr Jt<nn«IY. """" bn>thtr -aJoog trilh l.Jndoa --pUI lht majority
"' ~ In Yldoam. llte ....... Prui-..,, , Nam bu withdn""" obwwd -11 that ''Ibo point la not .. upWn
lht ranur.a "' t11e put. The point ~ ..
eod tlle war." Teddy boy migbl -.ll be ...,..,,,..s abool apUlnlng "laihtm of
Quotes ... ----Iii• ... ftctt, • MCC.Ua ti 1111nw flali -"'Wt
toudl llte No, I moClntloe ol OOll' ~ da1 Ult ••. ,_ ••
,I
the pa"t."
Colum nist Jamrs Rl"slon·s (lbservati(lns
had !Cl be cla s~ir SllJd Reston. '"ii he~
~lmost ber.omr :i rlu:he that t"'resictcnt
Nixon deals effe<'tivl"ly wilh the politic~
of his problen1s better than v.·1th
the problems lhemsel"·es. '1 What in the
name ol heaven that means. be took a
fufl column to disCdSS tt. wilh B C'(ll1·
clusion similar to Fulbright's -lo v.·it.
none.
THE GREAT DEMOCRATIC front·rUn·
ner. Edmund Muskie. wRs so taken bv
surprise 8t Nixon's a.nnouncemcn t thit
one. of his spokesmen said he wonldn 't
have anything to say until the next day .
The nut day Senator tt.1uskie gamely
sa.Jd the Nixon initiatlvf! must be
Wt'lt"Omt. but problibly the North \'iel·
namese wouldn 't aettpt.
The fact of U>e matter is that once
again President Nlxon has demonslratfd
an amatingly bold •hillty to mov~ toward
tqUitabl< resolution of crillal probl<ms
and has left hLs pollll<al oppononLs
.....ier!rtg when: Ibey ,,.... bet°" the
llghLs came on.
THE LAn:sT tplaode Ls nol thal Mr.
N°IXOl'I hJS all ol the utopian answers to
!hr pn>blem• ol mankind. JI he did, he
wouk5 be in God's ht.a\'en and 1mablt to
communicate •Ith U'>«' rest of us. But ht
is working intelllgenUy to resol,·e the
many problems of our .erJ.
Wbdber hl5 poblk:al ad~rits :trt
ll1l' bolter or not mlly lsn'I the point.
Tht fact is that thty hive ·~•un
demons1rlted a }lllinfully t b i I d i 5 h
pdul.-. lhal ltt ....id ha .. the ne""' to
lty -· l<tting tlttm Issue I pn'5s rdt>st ID .ct....,, l<illn& him wb:it lo do.
transfer .the present total pilo ls to the (·ounty service,
I hen assign them to cover the areas they know best.
Operations of the Joca lly·assigned helicopters could
he locally directed, as th ey are now. Patrol of unincor-
porated ilreas would of course be directed by the sheriff 's
office.
IL seems likely that lowered costs from jn1nt county-
\VJde operation would altract a nu1nher of cities which
now feel they can't afford a helicopter program of their
O\vn. Each ne\v city joining in would mean lo\Ve r costs
to the county.
Also, with larger helicopters serving as aerial am·
bulances, federal funds could well become available.
. Th~ idea of a county "air force'' deserves the study
it 1s being g1"en by the Criminal Justice Council. It al so
~hould be looked at from the viewpoint of humanitarian
benefits, not just law enforcement.
Intra11sigcnce a nd Bigotry
.\.'1olcnct in Northern Ireland has reached the pro·
portions of a civil as well as religious war. / 1'~e intransigence and bigotry on both sides in the
a ppalling holocaust is both deplorable and difficult to
understand.
. 'The lssucs are more complex than simply Catholic
f1gh t1ng fJrotestant and hope of a settlement wi thout
rnore bloodshed seen1s remote.
So1ne of that blood is on the hands of the Belfast
governrnent. \\'hich controls the Brit ish troops. Fail ure
to control and put down the Irish Republican Army has
brought a steady escal ation of bombings, blirnings and
n1urders. '
In this day and age. the \vord for the horrible
sprctacle is -unbelievable.
l'irgitaiutas Stauly British Syste11a
Finding a Way Out of Urban Sprawl
SNICKE J'lS GAP, Va . -An open
1\'tnlrr has pen11itted frequent visits to
!his Bluf' Ridge ~lountain area 55 m1ll•s
from ~\'ashington which is often locked in
.'!{) •nrhrs of snnw
and ice at tlus !1mr
of year.
A lot has been ~n
ing on. A lady is al·
lrgcct to have shot
another lady throu~h
the heart with a .22
cal iber p1s1ol al a
nearby Elks Club
du r i n g what the -
sheriff called "an altercation."
Another lady y,·as arrested and fined
$100 for piling up her trash smack in the
middle of !he l11ghv.·ay. Ex-tcnuatin~
circun1st.nnccs arc imaginable in both
(':lS('S.
Bu! Uy far the most significan t event
for 1his area ~1nd perh<ips ultimately for
many other areas of the country has bctn
the visit of the Loudou n and Fauquier
counties' boa rds of supervisors to
Engla nd to study the British system of
land use and planning.
APPLIED HERE or anvwhere else, in
I\ hole or m part. this syslem would be a
rr\'olution probably as far·reaching in
the~e historic hills and valleys as the
('Venls of 1776. which y,·ere not inC(ln·
sidcr21ble
'
Rich ard Wil son
The thing about it in Loudoun and Fau-
quier counties is that it is not too lat e.
Only nov• are the sea rching fingers or the
eastern seaboard megalopolis reaching
into the lern1.in surveyed by George
Washi ngton and over which coursed
~Tosby"s..raiden; and Lee's annies.
Dulles Interftational Airport was not
really a threat. The planned community
of Reston seemed fitting. Mellons, Du
Ponts and Phip~es set a tone acceptable
to the tradition of the Byrds. Randolphs
11 nd Marshalls. Even the Kennedvs and
their rich co unterparts from Chicago.
Pittshurgh and New York were absorbed
as consistent \~ith an aristocratic
pastoral heritage and the more so if they
raised horses or Charolais cattle. the
y,·hite breed of Burgundy.
BUT NOW THE subdivisions are
reaching out. includ ing one developed by
the finn of an influential Virginia con·
gressman. Levitt Brothers and IBM have
extended their long arms. Real estate
owners and speculators are slavering.
Progress has arrived. Along ""llh it has
come the ugly. gimcrack corridors of gas
stations. shopping centers and con·
cessionaires on newly created div ided
highways.
Loudoun and r~a uquier count ies arr
crying. halt! Loudoun turned down Levitt
Brothers in an historic reversal of the
usual eager sc ramble of rural counties
for residen!lat development.
Whal the bclarCs of supervisors say,· in
England both frig htened and fa scinated
them. If they just had the guts they
might re-create what they saw and still
enjoy the fruits of progress on a mea·
sured scale.
WHAT THEY SAW v.•as downright Un·
American and not what their distant
forbears fought for against the Red-
coats. As recounted by the Loudoun
Times-~t irror , which is C()Urageously
leading the fight gai ns! urban sprav.'1, the
supervisors surveyed a system in which
land owners have been divested of the
right to do as they wish with their pro-
perty.
Their desires must conform in the
finest detail lo a central plan preserving
the pastoral scene. They cannot appeal to
the courts. The planning board's dictum
is final. Furthennore such plans and rul·
ings are commonly accepted by potenllat
developers as essential and desirable.
··it has traditionally been felt in this
coun try that man"s right to his own land
is inalienable. that there is always more
la nd over the nexl hill for everybody
else.•· the Times·~1irror commen!ed.
"Th:it is just no longer so. The wealthy
csta!e owners and ge ntl emari rarn1er1
\vho once kept large green space brt"·oen
fo,1ns are fast disappearing . replaced~
suhdivisions ;ind shopping centers. Frhn·
11er America and ri(·h man's Loudoun
:ire gone . like it or not.
"Tins IS ROl:GH stuff for Amcr1oon.~
lo grasp but if y,·e don"t, we have nobody
to blame for the shambles that \\'Ill
follow "
The "rough stuff'' -Brit ain's '·1'own
and Country Pl anning Act ' -is' un-
doubtedly too rugged for Loudoun and
Fauqu ier counties at this st.a,Re. Pel!haps
not later. One can only dream of the
bea uty and serenity that might hav!fbeen
created harl there hecn some kind iJf ef·
fcctive cont rol when the cities bec<i n
their frantic spread nito lhe count ryside.
The present evidence of poorly controlled
expansion is an object lesson. j
Now the problem has been co~Jical·
cd by cnncepts of racial. social and
economic equality y,•hich ilre irre~st1ble.
But if a socialist nation like Bnt11n can
find a partial ans\\·er by abrogating the
principle that an En gilshman's .bome is
his cas!le perhaps the aulhoriher; of ex·
urban Virginia can lead the \\3 ~' nut of
the urban spray,•! by s1m1lar methods.
\'irginia has a chaoce to lead the way
once again.
Learning as a Survival Mechanism
There are many puzzle s about human
~cxtiality, The rrprodul'l1ve process in
l011 er fo rn1s ('If hff' is extremely wasteful.
ilnwever. as one f!OCS up the scale of
b1 o!ogical complexity, the infant mor-
tallly r a t e goes
stt>adily do~·n~·ard.
In contrast to 1he
1nil!1ons that fish
,!;f\'e birth 10 in on:lcr
to ensure the contin-
uance of their spe-
c 1 e s . amphibians
such a~ frogs rcpr(}.
duce in lht-o thou-
s:ands, rep1iles in the
huAdreds. mammals
and birds in lhe dozens.
The increasing co mplexit y of
organisms as they move up the evolu-
tionary scale is accompanied by the in-
creased length of dependency of the
young. The striped bass ls on hls own la
the hosllle waters of the San Jnaquin
Rivt"r from the moment he is extruded
as an egg. For him there LI no period of
protecled maturation within a shelled
egg, « Inside the warmth of a maternal
womb. bclore bei11g thrown oo his own
r<S(!Urt<'<.
BUT INF AJ\"TS OF biglttr form• ol me
are fed aM nurtured in their nests in In-
fancy. A puppy is well oo his ny to
becoming a ...U.lormed dog wbest he is
born, but he is still sudled and cared lot
•• 6Ml'!J8 ---,
Deir C'.eorge :
I r<ad wit<rt l11<ft wlto <hue
arter W0111e11 all the Um• actually
aren't sure of their masailinity. Is
t.bal true:'
fED
Dear Ntd
G<-e.. r don· 1 know-. This woukl
make the most masculiM guy tM
one wbo wouktn 't gi\'f: • womu a
......t glance. I lhint psJdilalrilll
ju!I ttll each oflttr that stuff lllllll
they sta.n lo bclie\·e it.
.. """ -·
Hayakawa
many months after birth before becom·
ing independent. During infancy all
mammals experience a period of
dependency during which they undergo
some kind of education from their elders.
This period of dependency has an
enormously important function. ne·
longer the period of infant dependency in
any creature, the greater his reliance OI\
le11mlng -on information-gathering ard,
proctssing -as his st1rvival mechanism.\
And the more he relies on learning. the
less he relies on built-in reflexes, usually
called instincts.
AS WE GO UP the scale of biological
complexity, it Is fascinating to observe to
what degree" this completity is essentially
a matter of the ability of an organism to
lake in and uUJU:e for purposes of
,slJrvivaJ more and more lnfonnation
about the environment.
Although the odojlw and tltt oyster ....
hoth <ll tltt onl<r Mollusca Ibey provlcle
a fascinalhig contrast. Oysters, In the bt-
terests d str'Vival. gave up JocomoUon..
They attadt Utamdves lo nicD and
.....,. themselves witb hard shells. These
slt<lls, aklog wtth their ability to pndlce
egs .i a f1ntastic nrte, are 111* baic
'""'"'al _........... s .. t inC oaftO'
behind a Mqioot Une la by DD -a Plll"l1 l1clman .,_tlm.
But O)'llers aacrillc<d • lot ~1o -
security. Tbey hive no adv!n&ura. Al
·-r<ali>es, u you..., In-pi... 111 ,..,. IUe, you doo~ .. t lo -.. '7
mudL That Is the -of tbo .,.......
IN OOM'llMT, Ille odopJI J9Nlined
wltboul armor platlna. Wltb DD lhdl lo
proCed him. lie had lo mp .-Ing. ""
-t ...... .., did tblnp, ~
t«ltnlqnH <ll nPcl locilmotloo. -
.. -and food mllapmm1 it order ..
survive. The octopus , as the British
biologist J . Z. Young has shown , is by far
the smartest of the mollusks, being
capable of learning and even of certain
elementary forms of problem.solving. In
other words. mobility brings one in con-
tact with many aspects of the en-
virooment and therefore i n e v i t a b I y
develops intelligence.
Or take the mailer of the warm-
bloodedness of mammals. 1be cold·blood-
ed animal is the prisoner of the tem-
perature Oe happens to be in. In cold
weather, he slows down lo a complete.
halt. like the alligators that lie motionless
al the bottom of the pool in the
Sacramento zoo in January 11le warm-
blooded animah:, including the blrds,
maillWn lhoir bcxly heat rqanll.,, of
oul31de temper•--
' ABLE TO !rrAY cool In hot climates
\and to stay war:m in cold cUmates. manr
~Is have great mobility. Tfiey are able lo live in or to wander around in·far more
pl.lc:es lhao tltt ttp!Des.
Warm-bloodedness, then1 meaM mobili·
ty, which in. turn muns expanded op-
'fled, Not Read
' .._ _______ .....}
portunlties for informal 1on-gatherinl!.
which in turn means the d(•velopmcnt o[
higher intelligencr. Keenn ess of sight,
smell. hearing or touch develo ped along
with brain·size. in the higher mammals in
order to take in and utili1.e an abundance
of informalion, Habits of sociab11itv -of
running in packs or Oock.s or hei-ds -
ensured the sharing of that Lnformation.
All these are dominant characteristics ol
the higher mammals Thty achieve !heir
highest development in man.
THE SEXUALITY of human beings
originates In thei r mammalian and
primate heritage. But ii goes far beyond
that heritage in its demands for C(lln-
municaUon -in the need to create those
bonds between male and female through
shared experience based on courtship.
communication and a shared life. which
in ~ make . pCJl}Sible the rich emotional 1
env1ronmCflt m.1Which the children. dur-
ing their long ir:riod of dependency. also
learn ID be hupian.
/ By S. J. H1yakatr1
L P"'ldml
... Fnoodsc:o Slale c.n.se
DAILY PILOT
Rob<rt fi. Wet<!, Pwb1is.Ur
Tlloma Krtoll, EdUor
Alb<rlW.&tu
l1ditoriol l'09< EdUor
. -'
Princess 'Noses Out' Jacquelin e
lwilAMl <APl -Princ6S
Anne's aristocratic nose ls lhe
rage or fashionable Euro~an
women who want a nose job,
while Jackie Kennedy Onassis'
has nosedived in popularity,
says a Viennese p I a st i c
surgeon.
PruM:e.ss Annt or Q u e e n
Eliubelh," be sald.
Despite the fact that the
Englisb royal family tends to
displa y rather p r o m i n e c t
noses, Bruck said, • ' ltf y
foreign patients, l\ilo come
from northwest Europe, from
Scandinavia and F.Jlgland .
think this nose has ,Aharacter."
Bruck presented a pa per
Friday describing his 'x·
perlences in conducting about
5,000.rhinoplastics -nose jobs
-during the past 10 years to
an inltrnational conferenct of
plastic surgeons c o n v e n e d
here. The meeting is dealing
with cosmetic surgery.
Dr. Hans G. Bruck said pros·
pective patients used to come
to his office clutching pictures
of the former America n First
Lady saying "I want my nose
to look like hers."
Now they thrust photos of
Britain's princess u n de r
Bruck's sniffer.
Bruck says tha, probably
won't have any eflkl on the
"American nose,"
Fast, Thorough, Guaranre(>d
Real Estate
So'(>' and or Braker License
TRAINING
Phone ,or Free Folder
"
"They want the noses from
the flouse of Windsor, like
"The American nose is a
small . slightly turned up nose
on the short side," he said.
"Obviously the great majority
of American girls seem to like
it." a 1117 S. ·-llvnl U , .f.u"911!1, C•I. '*'4
Carpet sale .
20% off 31 top
selling styles.
Last week!
Sale ends Saturday Februa ry 12, 1972
Savesso
R90. 291.50, now 239.50 on 50 9Cf. yds. • •
Sa le 4.79 sq. yd. reg. 5.99 sq. yd. 'Legion'
level loop pile carpeting of continuous
filament nylon. Wide serectlon of tweed
colors. S10 a month'
Saves75so
Rag. S42S, now 349.SO on 50 sq. yd1. • •
Sa la 6.99 Slf. yd. re9. I.SO. 'Coronal ion·
of scul ptured Kadel~ pol yes!er pile is
practical, yet beautiful. You get more carpel
lo the yard. Choose from a wide selection
of two-tone colors. 14.00 a month.•
Savesgo
. Rev. 449.50, now 359.50
on 50 sq. yd1. ••
Sale 7.19 tq. yd. reg. 8.99. Beautiful.
thick 'Heiress' nylon shag pile carpeting.
Wideaelection of vibrant solid colors to
match with every decor. 14.00 a month.·
"Thrs amov11t repre.ser"lts the rsqu1red m1r"lrmum monttlly oaym"?n t urv1Pr P~nneys l •me
Payment Plan lor the purchasa of tne related item. No FINANCE CHARGE will be incurred
of the balance ol tne account 1n the !orst b•ll1ng is pa rd in !ull by tne clos1nq rla1'! ol th'! n'!1I
b1ll1·19 period. When incurred FINANCE CH ARGES will be aeterm1ned hf applying
per.od•c rates ol 1.~-(ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 14.4°.-) on the lors t SSOO anci 1 ~,.
1Af\,NUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 12"1~) on the portion over $500 of the pre'f1ous ba lance
"''1r out deducting payments or credits ·
Shag carpet tiles
Lush wall-to-wall nylon shag at an affordable price. How? Do it yourself
with carpet tiles. No costly ex1ras. no waiting for installation. Just place
and press ... walk on them right away. High density foam rubber back. 8
tri-tone colorat1ons that hide seams and traffic spots perfec~ty.
e.cti 1211:12" Ille
JCPenney -
The values are here every day.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P .M. at the followlng 1tore1:
Awollobl• ot: NEWPORT BEACH , F•sh ioo lslond. HUNTJN4i'TON BEACH,
Hunfift9fon C."ter. Us• Pe nn•ys tim• p•pff'f ,1.ll.
I
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• •
DAILY '!LOT
Short c urtai ns t hat
are long on value.
If you ttke to aave money, save on Sundtly, too.•
••
~ \ 1 I I
\·I
,,
11
I 11
.. ' . ·' I • • I ; Ii \ ! I : I
: I
I
1; • ' !·
JI "
I I ; : '
J,.,.. ..... _,.....~r. ,...,-. "1 · .,
Ii
!'
188
'Yuma• .
Polyeslerlrayon -body Wfth Ortone acrylic bnlld trim. -.,,,,.
""" machiM wnllablo, too. Yotlow,
g-. melon, blue or racL 8'1' X
2.4. 30 ond 36'' lengths.
Malcliln~ volarx:e, 1.12
I
\1
\:
\,
\
I
\
' I . I
. I
I
I I ' I I,
I
I I ! I
•
,, i1 . ,. • < ..
' I ·~~ ~ ·, ~
4 ~ ....
• ~!
,,.,
• -.,
188
'Regency•
188
.Moh•'
Rayon slub weave wfth an Ortone
acrylic embroldered band that
1ies Into a color scheme belu-
11fully. Yellow, red. green.
melon or blue. tn 80" X 24.
30 and 36" lenglhl.
Matching walance, 1.12
tOO'J. palyeoter nlnon wtth ombroldor9d
W1•-ll8YOll bond trim Jn yellow,
green ot lllllon. What a WIY to brlnO
llJl1nO to -WlllclOWS. fl()" X 24,
30 ..,., 311" lengala. Mll<:lllng ......... 1.12
JCPenney
The values are here fNer/ day.
•Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at the following atores:
NEWPORT BEACH , Funion Isl.no. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Center. COSTA MESA ,• Horlior C.nlor.
Cio..d 5.indoy
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UPI Ttltpholtl
Moder11 'Spaceship'
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Docl~ Issues 3 'Fi lm Scouts'
Labor Solon Says
w Held in Scheme
Strike Near s E11cl llollywood area men were San Diego, i n for nl 1· d
SAN OTEGO (AP) -Three branch office ror lhc trio Ill
buoked for investigation of authorities instead.
SAN l'~RANCISCO (UPI ! -tional Longshoremen's and grand theft, false advertising The spul-.e.;nuin snid tlie 111u
A high-rnnklng Dem o c r a I \Varehousen1en's Union and !l.nd conspiracy in a movie of-
prc."<licts !he 121-day old West fer schen1e in which up to 500 ran advertiseme11ts seeking:
the Pat:ific ~1ar1time. Assoc:ia· Cuast doc:k st rike v.•ill end \\•omen and 200 men may have i1ctors and at:tresses for a
\vlthi11 1)11· next week tu !O !!on hl'ld lengthy talks here been bilked of $557 each. movie on ecology to be shot 111
days IJU!<>!'>lhly by governrnent duri11g the \YCekcnd. ineeting r:ui;ene Craig, 36, Eddie Son Diego. telling :.ippla:a11ts
intervention. Jale into the night Sunday. Bowden. 46. and Donald Gran-to report to Los Angell'~ 1 .. r
Sen. flarrison W1H1an1s, The JLWU also met witt1 .'TV a1·i cy Gets tis, 25, were accused of luring inll'r\'l('"'S ;1t ('ra1g ,\:
chairman of the Senale Labor representatives of the Pacific television and movie aspirants Assoc1~1tes and (' re a t i \ e
and Public We!rare Com-Coast Grain E Jc v a t 0 r by offering them roles paying Productio11s of Ho!l y....,•ood
Jn ittee, said during the Operators to discuss a O'Wll Columll about $100 a day. Persons reporting fur 111-
weekend in San Diego that the .separate contract agreement A San Diego p o I i c e t e r v i e w s \\'ere askt·d.
dispute boils down to few real which would get wheat moving spokesman said Sunday afler authorities said. lu prudurl!
issues. again through ports in SACRA!\lENTO ( Up 1 ) -the men's arrest that the their portfolios und !11u~t· ll1<1L
"The issue11 that remain are Callfornia, \Vashington and Nancy Reagan s~ys h c r sche1ne was discovered v.•hen 1·ouldn't \Yere told the}" 11uuld
not insoluble," he said. "But Oregon. foreign and do1nest1c travels one or the applicants for a need U1en1 if th ey \\'anted a
if they can't solve their pre>-Sam Kagel, the arbitrator as CaJHornia ·.s flrsl lady have 1_:.:'•::l'::·_w::.h::'".:....:"::'::.ked::::..::.''.:....:o~pe=n _.:•.:__:_.:'::'".:.":.:'.:.'::.".:.' ::'':.:'".:.''.:.l!'>_'"_"_°'_"_'_"_"_rs.
blems the federal government who helped mediate the last given he r the opportunity to
will have to take action." major West Coast d ()ck 1neet ·•m;iny, rnany interesting
1'he ·r. S. I lam burg, flag-ship of the German Atlantic Linc, arrived in Los An·
gclcs ov t•r the \vcekcnd to let oll passengers prior to sailing to its cruise head·
<1uartcrs in San, l''rancisco. The ship passed under the Vincent 'fhon1as Bridge a~
it steered up the main channel. The maritime ·spaceship' wilt carry up to 600
passengers.
!-le said !e of the issues in-walkout in 1949, took part in pc<!ple" and ~he is "grateful
valved is pa Ct holidays and the the talks bet\veen the IL\VU for all these expl-r ientes."
\Jlhers are on a similar level. and the Pl\1A for the fourth Earlier , in \Vashington, Sen. straight da y. "l'hc v.·ife of 1..;uv. Honald
Mike fo.1an sfield (D-Mont.), the .. We have some things J{e<ig<HI n1ade the conunent
Senate Majority leader, called behind us and now \ve're going Sunday in her debut as a ques-
for his party's majority on the to start over the whole 1 i un ·<lnd-ans...,·er nc~·spaper
comrnitlce to take action this package," Kagel said during a <"nlurnnist for Ll1c Sal'ramento
Does More Than Help Shrink
Swelling Of HemorrhoidaJ
Tissues Due To Infection
Also Gives Prompt, Temporary Relic! in Many
Cases horn Pai n, ltching in Such 1 'issuc:s.
7 Charged in Drug
Smuggling Incident
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
Arraignment was scheduled
today ror seven persons ar·
rested In connection with an
attempt to smuggle $500,000
worth of coca ine Into the Los
Angeles International Airport.
Customs agents announced
the arrests during t h e
Ain't Like
Old West
PASADENA (UPI)
Galloping away fron1 the
Jaw on horseback just isn't
~·hat II wns in the old
days. even in the \Vest. as
two young men discovered.
Two youths stole t ~·o
horses they round tied up
outside a restaurant 00.
side a golr course Sunday,
police reported.
One youth, who had
escaped rrom police cus-
tody. hnd his flight ended
when he was knocked ()ff
the horse by a low tree
branch.
y.·eckend and said they
resulted from the search of
I wo young women who arrived
Tuesday from Uma, Peru.
Agents said 11 pound s of ~
c.·aine was found taped to the
women's bodies. They were
identified as Cheryl Dubbert,
21, of Shawnee. Kan., and Los
Angeles and Mary Hildreth,
22, of Harvard, Moss.
Jn the subs equen t In-
vestiga tion, three other
persons were aryested in Los
Angeles and two In San Fran-
cisco. All were taken to San
Francisco where they will be
arraigned on smuggling con-
spiracy charges.
The Bureau of Customs also
announced the arrest of three
others In connection with the
s1nugg ling of 5.5 kilos of
hashish. ....·orth about $16,CRJ
on the street.
Agents said DeMis Sturgess,
an English citizen, had the
hashish in the false bottom of
a suitcase when he arrived in
New York from Bombay_ He
\\.'as brought here where two
other persons were 11rresled
on charges of attempting to
accept delivery.
LAST 6 DAYS
Give him your love
In a Valentine Portrait
••• talcen Just with him In mind/
3FORONLY495
Huny In now and you'll receive one big,
t>eautllul 8 x 10 for him ..• plus two S x Ts
!Of Dad and Grandad! Don't miss 1tJ And
l.,,...ber, you can charge It at Penney's.
JCPenney
The values are here every day.
NEWPORT BEACH
F.1hlon hlo•d
bd R-.... llll
..
HllHTINGTON BEACH
HU'fttin9to.. C.nter
2nd~ n2.1n1 ·
Police Nab
Detention
Camp Fig11re
Union. week. break in the talks Sunday. Doctors have found a remark-nnd itching in these tiss u<'"'-
"If somclhing is not done, lie was asked if a contract Another inain advantage of ably successful medication that Tests by doetors proved thiii
other countries could step in settlement was close. being a governor's v.•ifc, J\irs. actually helps shri nk swelling true in m3n)' (';Jses. 1
and take away our markets, Reagan said is that her hus-of hemorrhoidal tissues when 1'hemeJicali onu:;NlwnsPre1~
add to further losses in the "Saying you're close is a band has a fa sc inating and infected and inflamed. And it aretion H. And no prcscriptin ~
ba lance of payments and only matter of judgment," he challenging job and is .. happy does more. In many cases it is needed for PrC'para t1on 11•4 answered. in his work." gives relier !or hours from pain Ointment or suppositories. y.·orsen the economic picture," _____________ __:._....:. ______ ~.:_: _______ .:_:_.:_: __________ _
LOS ANGELES (AP ) -An
inmate escaped from a sher-
iff's detention c:11mp." a1tc1np-
ted lo rape a 20-year-old
\\'Oman, fled in her car \vas
then captured four hours
later, deputies sa id.
A sherirf's spokesman said
Frank Irace, 22, of Glendale,
was captured Sunday near Los
Vlrgenes Canyon road and the
Ventura J-~reeway.
The spokesman said !race
slipped a\vay fronl the l\falibu
Detention CRmp and attacked
an unidenlifie~ v.·oman who
was returning to her car after
visiting another inn1ate.
Irace fled in the \voman's
car and then set it ablaze
before abandoning it near the
spot where he was captured,
the spokesman added.
He said Ir11ce was serving a
one-year sentence for battery,
resisting arrest and loitering
on a school ground and now
\\•ill face additional charges of
suspicion or escape. auto theft,
attempted rape and arson.
Mansfield said.
Negotiators for lhe Inlerna-
-(:( * * Red China
Sliips Get
Dock Snub
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -11
the United States st a r t s
trading with Mainland China,
East Coasl Longshoremen will
refuse to unload Con1munist
shi ps unless A 1n er i ca n
prisonrrs of \\•ar are released
from North Vietnam , says an
official of the International
Long sho remen's Union.
John Bowers. executive vice
president of the !LU, made
the remark Sunday while
being honored as "patriot of
the year" by Voices in a Vital
America (VIVA)), an
organization dedicated to help-
ing POWS.
"We will refuse to unload
cargo unless five prisoners of
\var are released for each
ship." said Bowers. whose
union represents IO 0 , 0 0 0
v.·o rk ers on the ~:ast Coast.
One good perm sale
deserves another.
You save 30°/o ,
either way.
All Sue Cory boxed perms
usually $15, now 10.50
All Sue Cory boxed perm s
usually 12.50, now 8.75
Both prices include shampoo,
cut and set. Start making
headl ines!
No llppoinlment ne::essary. Charge IL
JCPenney
beauty salon
NEWPORT BEACH --,..,,._. ..... :ti ,,,
HUNTINGTON BEACH
H--....,c-M "-'..,_m 1
Dishwasner sale. For
mother, daughter or sis.
Or any dish you love.
J '
Save 21 95
Reg. 199.115. Sale S178. 14 table setting,
lop loading portable dishw-.
Laminated maple cutting board top,
3 cycle selection, trHevel wash action for
hyglenicaJly cleaner dishes. Soft food
waste disposer ..• dishes can be loeded
without p<e-<tnsing. Rinse agent dlspoaer
gives spotless dishwashing......, In
hard water. Whtte or avocado ••• color
costs no more at JCPet•"flf1'f· t8 •month•
Save21 95
Reg. 199.96. Sale" 711. 1 7 table setting,
front k>adlng convertible dishwasher.
Fea1ures2wash cycles, fiber resin cutting
board top with maple finish, dual
del8rgent dispenser, full width tea cart
handle for ease in handling, and
ooncealed swivel casters. White, avocado
qr harvest gold ... cok><-121 no mo<'8
at JCPenney. S8 • -·
Save31 95 ------&17---ig. front.loldll'l{/ oc:.1uu dble clltla ......
Fl .... COlblllll llld lllbwltt-
~ -·· ... .,i-..-padding ID minimize noloe. Nm._
maple cutting oo.rd top,--. cord
reel, full width lea cart,_, plus dual
lewl washing and 6.,.,.._ owllch
wtth sanitary wash at 150• W1l1er
_..,..._ -or -gold. tt•• ••••
JCPenney
Shop Sunday noon to 5 PM at the following stores:
' NEWPORT BEACH, Fe1h ion hlend. HUNTINGTON BEACH,
Hu"1ingtot1 C.!"t•r. Us.e Penneys t·im• ,-ym.nt plan.
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EAMll.Y CIRCVS by Bil Keane ----.:.._
"Grordmo I That lad y called you Florence I
never knew you hod a REAL nomel"
Hot Dog Additives
Under Fire in Suit
SAN FRANCISCO I AP ) -
The government s h o u I d
release confidential test data
on food additives , including
those which are used v.•idely in
hot dogs and sandwich meals,
says a lawsuit that's been filed
in U.S. District Court.
"Certain food preservatives
have recently come under
heavy suspicion of producing
mutalions and cancer." the
filers of the lawsuit, the
Environmental Defense Fund
of Berkeley, and Dale B. Hat-
tis. a doctoral candidate in the
Stanford University Depart-
ment of Genelics. said in a
statement.
They challenged the Food
and D rug Administration
policy which restricts public
access to toxicological in·
formation s ubmitted by
manufacturers in petitions for
food additive tolerances.
The FDA contends this data
should be protected because it
involves trade secrets.
Hattis said the FDA has
refused since July. 1970 to give
him data it has collected on
food additivies, particularly
sodium nitrite. a compound
used to preserve the red color
in frankfurters, salami and
other cold cuts.
Nobel prize-winn i ng
geneticist Dr. J o s h u a
Lederberg submitted a state·
ment with the suit, urging that
it be expedited. He argued
that scientists cannot weigh
the safety of any food additive
unless a!J e x p e r i men t a I
evidence is made public.
Lederberg said s od i u m
nitrite long has been used by
geneticists to induce muta -
tions -genetic changes -in
strains of bacteria.
Now! Save 20%
Fish Di e
In Change
At Plant
LACEY TOWNSHIP. N.J .
tUP!) -When New Jersey's
first nuclear plant began rom-
mercial o per a l ions in
Deceniber, 1969, the warm
"'ater it poured into Oyster
Creek created a w i n t e r
paradise for fishermen.
Young menhacien, tiny. her-
ring-type fish \lo'hich usually
rn1gra1e south in the late fall .
i.tayed on in the unnaturally
warnl waters of the m1le--long
creek rlo"·ing into Barnegat
Hay.
Last weekend. after two
years of uneventful coex-
istence b e t w e e n fish.
fi shcrn1cn and the $68 million
nuclc;:ir plant, son1ething went
wrong.
J~undreds of thousands of
·one-to-two inch long fis h were
found f!oaling in the 50-foot-
wide creek. The flow of 460,000
gallons of water a minute at
temperatures of 5a to 60
degrees. had stopped because
the plant was shut down for
repairs.
Spokesmen for the Nev.•
Jersey Central Power & Light
Co. fi rst denied that the fish
dying was due to the shut·
down. State b io logists
disagreed. They said the
menhaden. or mossbackers,
v.·ere the victims of "t.hermal
shock."
State officials figured that
the water temperature drop-
ped l I degrees between last
'rhursday and Saturday, when
the first dead rish were
discovered.
Will iarn J. Jeschke. assls·
tant district conservation of-
ficer in the Department of
Fish. Came and Shellfisheries.
attributed the death of more
than 200,000 menhaden to
··that sudden change in the en-
vironment."
on custom draperies,
slipcovers, reupholstery.
fabric and labor. ·
Every fabric in our custom collection
priced at 20% savings. Our decorator
will bring you samples and
professional suggestions on styling
draperies, sl ipcovers or reupholstery
for your home alone.
Al the same time save 20~• on the
fabrication labor of your custom
draperies. sl ipcover and
reupholstery. All reduced for our
Annual February Sale.
Our Al-Home Decorating Service has
e'lerything. Custom d raperies.
slipcovers, 1.>pholstery. carpeting.
fur niture, acce59ories.
~0 Call collect
(714) 523-6511
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JCPenney
Thevalues are here wery day.
Dec:or1te now, UM Penney• time p1yment plan .
'
DA.II V PllOf f> -
20% off on furniture
groups. Here are a few.
If you llke to save money, save Sunday, too:
Early America n group with Scotchgard~ treated covers
Floral design covers 1reated with Scotchgard'B brand fabric protector
to resist soil, oily and watery stains. Kiln dried hardwood frames.
Marftexii coil and foam seat cushions. Dacron~ polyester wrapped.
Sofa,Reg.22320 loveseal, 14320 Chair, 10320 $279, Sale Reg. $179, Sale Reg . $129, Sale
Sola, Reg.19920 $249, Sale
l'rad ilionat style group with
bullon tufted backs.
Herc ulon1!l olefin
loveaeat, 15120 Reg. $189, Sale
covers. Full coil spring base and back
construction, Dacron• polyester wrapped
foam and coil cu shions. Castera standard,
arm caps included.
Chair, 10320 Reg. $129, Sal e
Early American style group with
Herculon9 cove11.
· Herculon9 olefln cover ta
moisture and ataln rnlatant, cleens eaaUy,
wears beautifully. Kiin drted hardwood frames.
Marflex9 coll and foam seat cushions, Dacron•
polyester wrapped. Maple finished wood frames.
sofa, Reg.18320 chair, 9520 $229, Sala Reg. $119, Sale
~:t $~i, Sale 14 3 20
Spanl1h 1tyl• bedroom group with oak veneare .
Selected hardwood• with brown antiqued and dl1tre1aed glaze
finish; genuine oak veneers. Simulated Spanish style moldlng:i,
brass finish hardware. Drawers are dovetaJled, center guided
and completely dustproof.
Trlpladr-r, 15120 Mirror, 3440 Reg. $189, Sale R19. $43, Sala
5-dra-chnt, $136 Full/queen headboard, 45so R19. $170, Sale · ·Reg. i57, Sale
. ,
JCPenney
The values are here every day.
"Shop Sunday noon lo I p.m. a the lolowt1111 stor":
Night eland,
R19. '86, Sale
'
NEWPORT BEACH, F•>hi°" 1.1.nd. HUNTINGTON BEACH . Hunt in9t°" Center .
u .. Penney> limo Poyment Pion.
(
52ao
\ t
,
--·
JO DAILY PILO T '
For The
Record
Marriage
Lice11ses
MAilflllAGE Ll(tNSES
O•<•mt>or JI, !17!
1" ol 1•1 ll to"a'"'•• Apt V. L"li~"•
ll••tl• •rod ........... ~ ... 1J. ol 110
Chfl Otlv•. •pl II. L•WU"I llr1(h.
(Al'IOENA~·CA~T•NEO_. -l>l<hl fd
C11t•llo. :i.. of ~•S w. H1rnll!on
~hff1 (Oii• Miu
tlll .. C.C.·HOGA.N ~ltl>/>t" P•ul. II. of
1!1()o •t •I••· F'o.ml,.Jn V•lle-., •...:! V.c ~I L-.nn. 11 ol l!t<lt Ml!IOfnotn.
f"r..,nl"'" v,.u,,
POWf II f>Ar>A. li•Yw,_ W.ll'•m. 1S,
o• 111J II.<"''"· Hunl"li!l<>n II""'"' •nd L"'"' .Jn•n, n. 01 ll\l "'<•<I•.
liy!lJ,no!M B•~<"
PAii ~ r ... l'llC l'/O(NtO. It. o! 71~
••• Hun•1nq1on 8••<" • ..,,, ll nm•
J,.1nn•. 1~ n! IU• HOii "'"", Hun·
11n1,o1on B•~rn
!111/>..N OSEl TE:ll'·OL •NOEll P•ul
Will!1m. 11 ol Ill/ FIOfltlg• O•lve,
Ai>! (, 51 LOU!'""" G•IP MA•l!Of tff, 11. OI 7)1~ P•d lit Orlvt , (0<on1 <lt l
M" 8110WNING, .Jll ·WHITE -J11me1
L119, 71, o! 1••7 J1nlu St., H~lef\01
Htl111>t1 ""' G•rle LouiN , 11. ol 2175
S1>trln111on Plat •, Aot. c.:101, N""'"""
Beech.
GllAHAM·LEE -Mlchffl C.tOYf,, 71,
ol 1'9 F , 111-. ... 101 A.YI . NtwPotl
8e1ch •nd Lil Len•, 2tl. or 13• W•Y!
Str"I. L111un1 !lt t<.h.
THOMAS·SANllOllN -lloMr! JAm•"
7.l. of 36SI lllvtt ll<Md. 511\ll 1101•
•nd Otbot1h LH . 11. ol ~, Avtnld•
lticl•, N.,..PQ<I Beach.
IONG·NORTZ -Gtnt Phllll1>, ?/. of
3111 E. 11. (O<!A MtlA .,,,., l vno~
Loul1•. 11. of M15' Or•nllt Av•. Ar
F. C111l1 M111•
SUllC.ES·MACLEA.N -l •rr• Cl>.,I••,
•I. ol 11111 T1tomt Or. C.Ar(len c;,.,... t l\tl ll•tbt r• l •"'""· '0· ol 77JO CID.I" A.ve . (altt Mtifl
KllATSCt"9A.llEY -1Cfnf\•1h M11rvl<1,
JI. ol JOMl Or ltlwood Dnve. LAO""'
15•..:h •nO P111• .Jutf\11 1. 11. or J.Dltl
D• lt!wood Or,. L11un• Bt•t fl.
8UTTEllMOllE·SELM'°'N IC I r k
Thom••· n. ol ~ Se1w1rd, Ca1on1
tlPI Mor ""' M1rY C•lflV. :11, ol 151
PfMP9CI, NowP<trl 9tl<.h.
Tll .. UB·C.lllVIN -z.no P1vt. ]!, of toett Gol<l'ln9vt, Founllln v 1lltv A!>tl
Loh J t1n, ]!, of 1atf11 Gold•nov•,
Fount1ln V1!11v,
UllESTl·SWAIN -ill udl llabbln1. 27. of
10'l61 Stin V•lleY Ori-.•, L1gun•
lleKh •nd C1rol LM. :n, 01 Ulll
_.ll•rd SI., G11re11n Grove.
M./>..RTINE Z-ARCHULET_. -"°rthur
ll1vmond, 21. o! tl71 J1.,rlcf'I ,
Wnrmln1tto" •nd 11011111no 8 t•Yfl, n,
nf 95'1 M1dl10f\ SI.. _.Pl. 7,
W•1tmln1ltr.
OVEll MILLElll·OINSMOllE -W1rn•t 0 1lt. ll. ol 71'111 W1rntr _. .. ,, ,._l>I. M
Ill. Hun!ln11!on 15• .. cfl 1r><1 Oa""'
Su•, 1', ol tJO S. Avllln. S1nt1 •n•
-... ---._ Oo<•mbef~I 1~1 --.U·~·SHULM"'N -'( h ~ r ! •, wl 11. ol jl Mhl• lrcl,.,
,Uf!i I C1IY. M IOU" ln<I l•n• Jltv, 11 , at~-l' ...,~. (1>"1 M
NESS·C•llTEA \_,. · Ch1rl•1 Eur • 12 ol 1Sl )I Ed<1an W11-. l~9u
H1!1l and NlntY .J••nn• C1n tr. ~1. I>
lll2• H1••e<. "'"' II, G•11l•n C.ro•• sw ... N-L•llARGE -L•"'"'''" .Jo..-..... n. of 7HOI Lo• C.••"""'· 1 •C' .,. Hllh 1nd Lotrllt An ..... 71 , of 7llo01
LOI Gr1~1, l"9vn1 Hiil\.
ANOERSON.C .. ll NES Rocl>Ard
8 r11....-, SI. of lOt Le»nvton Clrcl•,
Newiiorl 811Ch end M••!otle Ann•, «., ol 171 WH I Caa11 H;g/\WIY,
Nf'M'Ort 8-Cfl.
P Ell lCI NS "'lMONO -J .,ry Wtvnt. 11. al n1 Yort!-fl, A.Pl. 11, HY'l·
llno•of\ 8•1cfl i nd ~•nd•• P1rfl1h. ll,
al 171 Yor~town, "°"'· 210, Hvntln111>n
8t1c.f\,
.. MES, J lt.·KRAMER -B<IY11 W1Ynt, }]. of 107·PlltYO, Si n Clemen!• •nd
Gl•dYI J111t. n, of tJll 81rd A-.t., w.,,,..,., ......
CDL LETTA·ICEELEll Oo,,.lnlc
Gtor111. JJ, al 11111 llt'/1n!.
Norlhrld" 1nd _.nno Mot!•. 11. ol
JSJtl Cl111lc Ol"l~1. Min ion Vl•lo.
Death Notices
•UIH
LOYIW Sutton l infl. C1llfor1\l1 , .. ..,...,
l•lf more 1'hen JO YM rl. A .. ti; <Mtt
ol dffll'I, FllCWVilO' t, ttn. S.Urvlv.o tw
""In ,ip.,., L""'"9 Sutton •ush; two """"· H1rolcl C euv. I nd Glr11t1 W. l u•fl :
,._ <Mvvl'llero. llVTh V1ro.m1n 1...t
M.'11ue•ll• Smith, w"-ol lht 11!1
Ftr"I M Smilh, Sr . Fov-al 81bCOCll:
E1ircrrnnic1 CC<'VOl"t llon, Cotti Mn •: ,..,.
•n 9r•ndeh1l<1rf'l'I •"" ,.., ore11.gr1f\tl·
fhlklren r vn•r•I ~ltf't. -•• flf!d io. <I•~. MOn(J1y, 11 )Cl • m . 11 1Cie•1r '""
Eye<•(~ M1>'1u1•-. C.lt"llAI•.
OUl"fl(l D
0<:>"~" M,.gy••• t"ol.i!"tl~ No )j l•n<M
h, NtwD<>" 9,.~,~ Dlo'• 01 dtllfl. l'r1>
"'"'• '· ttn W •t <" "'""""II D Qui. 1 .,<1 1 ~ r " 1 A"'•'''"" i:-0011>o111 011 ..
t b,I...., 'U"''"" ~' '0". "'"'"'~II 0
Q , ... ,,,,1 Jr 01 Nt,..~1>r' !lrA<h. oau9""-
!•• • "'"' ,.,,,,, 1~"'"'' n r;.1, ... 1. c,,.r.,
N•'• """ >lob•"''~'""'"' D' ~'""'''"'' ~I Wt>I "'''<llc><a "'•"•cnu•r•i.1 ..,~,~•' '-''' r n••I•• .Y•Qv"•· ,,,r,,.
M r1 i"•l"c11 M"uu>rt 5n"I••· t>c•~ ol
lot 11.r>Of lt• Mtmo,,al \Pn>f(lt. Tuesc!A•.
11 Noon, r>•c•!k y,..,.. ,,,.,,.1. !nt•rm•nT,
P•col•C .... _ Mtmnfl~I P1r\. F1m11V
....v11•'" 1"°6• ''""''no t11 m<>l• m......,.,.1 ~""" '""""""'· l>IN •• oon1rlb<J1• lo "'-J.mll'f1(1n C•nt"' Socl"v or "'•Ir ,.....,...
Jf• <""rl l"I'. Pacffk V•-Morlv1ry, 01· ,..,1.:,.,,
TILLER
M11rlan f t!ltr . .0.91 S5. o! ll• si>~..:in
Li ne. (IJOI* Mew. Dirt of "-•lh, Ftl>-""'v •. 1911 ~u•VIY~ bv ""''· l •W·
••net . OOnald inti f'"'ll T•!l•'. 111 of
o~'°' CMv•<I, J°"n •rod (l••<'<K• f ltlp"
o1 WHI V!r11ln11 d•uVMf'I. N/>.flfY D•n·
""d Cott~ M•1~. >l•:tl Tl>Qm~~n •!>ti J""• O•DO•M, l>O!~ o! W••I y ,.9,n•1. '"" 11 ll••fl<knlldt•n ~rt.•(fl '"II l:t ~ti"
i u....i1v. Ft!> I '" Hu"""g•on . Wt\! v ..
111n .... WHtclil! (~• .... I Mn,1u1•v. M6 411,
f orw1rd•"9 Do•r<;!Q'"\
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCUFF MORTUARY
U7 E. 17tll St, CosW ft1esa -• BALTZ BERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona ~I M1.r mMsn
Costa Mep 646-UU • BELL BROADW,.V
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Cn!!t11 Mt51
LI l~l.&1l • McCOR~IJCK LAGt.:NA
BEA CB MORTUARY
17M LapDa Canyon Rd. -15 • PACIFIC VTEll
MEMORIAL PAR~
o-.ttry Monury
o.,.i • Pac1fk:·vn Drive
N<•pori -· Cal~onll -• PEElt FA~UL V
COLOMAL FUNERAL
ROM E
1111 &I.a An.
Wtstmin!h"r llJ..UlS • SMITHS' MORTUAll Y
117Malo81.
........ 11< ... --
Hospital
Policies
Defended
Who Did What to Whom?
Crime in County Terriwry Declines in 1971
milted decreased 7.4 percent assaults, burglarie!, larC%nies Most frequent crimes com· iff's Department.
from 1970 tolals. and auto thefts -increased 1n milled in the unincorporated New Sheriff-Coroner Musick
By JACK BROBACK
Of l~I Pt l!1 flllll Sllll
S1\1\'TA A!\'A Maybe l)uring the same period the 1971 by 6.9 percent , however area were I arc en i e s. ~aid thal branch or his for ces
ex~~N~~w~~ rJ;a~gJ~fer~~~~Ys Uunji(s are 11ut as bad as they total population served by The fig ures varied in this burglaries, narcotics viola-Investigated 4,372 deathi:. in·
f\.led ieal Cen5. polieies on .seem. Sheriff Musick's leg i 0 n 5 category. For exam p J e. t1ons, and crin1es against eluding 43 1nurdcrs: 2,37() Today She ri ff James A. deereased 3 3 percent. largely mu ders ' h cd gain r r I a d h Id II I deaths by natura l cause! i·h11r~es f orho.1t ;1l\i\1t,;ir1d hf·c11use the conlr<icl lo r ,,.sow a o ;:irniy n c1 am1y prescriptions nd th 0 ~ f' QDlMt!t Dill 1'.lu~a:k offered a report on :-.ervice 'Yorba Linda was one third ; rapes, 54 , decreased fii;:hts, chlld abuse I. ~ha ndled because a doctor was
pr1·str1hed hy e sta te, 1}{"~1C ~ """' wUNTY t"rllll(' trend~ Jn Orange Coun. termined in late 1970. by aln1osl 29 percent: roh-The Sheriff's Department not in allend<inre 1. 2 2 2
Arlrllini:,trator Hoht•rt \Vhl\C, !_ -·· .. ): · ly during 1971 While !hf beries, 89, showed an increase recorded 31,611 actual crimes suicides. 259 traffic f11talities
rf»,falf'd. Sheriff's Dep11rtn1ent does not The department still pro-of 4 7 percent: aggravated dunng the past year. Arrests 11norr than hal! \\'ere caused
Wtute told supervisors that 1.:uve r all of the (_'ounly il does v1des pohce patrol service for assaults. 290, up II percent: in('Juded 3,673 felonies, 9,714 by drinking, carelessness and
!he county does not agree with TAKE THE service f1ve·e ighths ''' ap· San Juan Capistano. Villa burglaries, 3,120, jumped 2 4 misdemeanors and 4 , 3 12 aggress1on1, and 2 9 9 a e-
state orders on the charges NEWS QU ~~ proximately 805 square rn!les. Park and now the new city of percent. while larcenies. 3,448, juveniles. c1dental deaths. There were
no r with income guidelines set In the 490 square miles. Jrvine. were up 12 percent and auto Begi nning Jan. t. 1971 the 1,206 deaths which were not
by the state government. Every 58turday largely the southern half o! Serious crimes -homicides. thefts, '440, showed a 4 percent supervisors assigned the assigned as coroner's cases to
He said an exception !s i'============'--~l~h•::__:<:•:•n:<~Y:· :'°'=•:I ~c:r=im:':':<:•:m::_· _:':'~pe:':·__:"':bbe=:':i':'·:_:•~g~g:ra:v:•:l:cd:__i:n:c~ro:•:':'·:_ ________ :C-O:r:o:n:•:r':s_o:l:li:r:•_t:•__:•h:•:_:S:he::::._r·_:'°~":":d__:ou:t__:<h:•_l:o:l•:I:. ----
made whe n treatment is elec-
tive rather than emergency.
"If it is an emergency we
treat the patient firs! and t<ilk
11bout the papcr1~ork later,"
he said
'"But we have be ('orn<' rnnre
restricti ve (Jn m e d i c ::i I
treatments on sir1 r•leclJ\'l'
basis," he continued. •·Jn such
cases "'e require that the pi!·
tient establi sh his ~1edi·Cal
(']igibi!i ty first. If he ref uses,
we withhold treatment, which
I believe is fa ir."
\Vhite said to try to collect
emergency treatment fees
\1•ould cost n1ore than it ~
worth and, more importantly,
would deter many patients
from seeking hel p.
'"That might mean tit at they
would later appear as medical
center inpatients which would
increase ou r costs," he ex·
plained.
He said the policy is working
successfully. ; ·If we should
revert to the former syste m
with higher early collection at-
tempts from families, l am
sure our revenues would not
increase and we would be
unsuccessfu l in collecting most
of our bills."
The center director gave an
example of a family ar four
with income over $314 a
month. "The state says they
must pay all income above
that fig ure toward a 11 y
medical bills,'' he said . "\\'·e
use a base figure of $468 a
mon1h for the same family
and there is a tv.·o-year l1nu1 -
··:1tion on colll't'tion of charges."
\\'hilt>'s report f o 11 o w s
crilicism by 1he 1971 Grand
Jury which argued that state
RUidelines should be followed .
The jury members felt that
failure to follow such rules
could jeopardi ze rei m-
bursement from the state
under the Medic-Cal program.
New Judge
Takes Post
On Tuesday
SANTA ANA -Judgr Lloyd
E. Blanpied Jr. or Newport
Beach, Orange C o u n t y
Su perior Court's 25t h and
newest jurist, wi ll be formally
installed Tuesday in county
cour!house ceremonies.
Judge Blanpicd. 48. of 2232
Al!;i Vista Dn\'f', v..·11! he
welcomed hy officials of lhe
Orange County Bar Assoc1 a·
lion and fellow judges as he
'"kcs !he post re<"en1Jy
vaca!ed by retiring Judge
1-IO\\'llrd C~mrron
Presiding J udge Bruce Sum-
ner \\'ill chair the Department
One proceedings. J u d g e
Harmon G. Scoville will be the
featured speaker l'l nd the Rev.
Charles Herbert Die renfield of
St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Chureh of Newport Beach v.·ill
deliver the invocation.
Gov. Ronald Reai;!an named
Judge Blanpied last v.·eek to
his ne"' Superior Court post.
The appointment c<1me three
and one--half years ti rt c r
Reagan named the Newpo rt
Republican to the W e s t
Orange County mu n i c i pa I
court bench.
Donors Get
~fore Time
S:\:\i'A AN A Orange
County cmployes v.·i ll be given
n1ort' lat itude in taking lime
f!ff t11 don;ite blood to the Red
('rn~s <ind other a1?cnc1es . the
r~)unly Board of Supcrl'1sors
h.1s: ruled .
C<>unf~· Prrsonnel Dirt'Clor
\\'ilham Hart told supervisors
that the prPsent rt>striction
allowing rmployf'S to be away
from ~·ork only betwttn 4
pm. and S p.m. was found to
be too restricti\·e.
~1csbuinl't cr
Plan Tahlcd
\\'E S T~fl'.\STE R
"'eslm1n~trr v(lter~ ~·111 mt
decldr if the tn~·n ~hou1d ha\t
an t lf'"'rd m~\nr 1n th1!
~ra r"s Cll\ t lt'Cl l•)'l'
Coooci!mtn h.ti1 t r..,hltd ,.
rtsolutJOn !h.11 •ould ha\ t
placed tM: r lectJ \'t mayor
....... tit< Ajlrtl 11 ballot.
Save 40% to 50%
annual famous
maker • 1ersey
dress event
$11.99 Rcg.$22 to $26
• more jersey dress savings
Rog ul•~Y $20 ond $24. Assort ed style, &nd prinh .
12 to 20 ond 141/i to 221/i. 9.9'1
Pleze Day time Dresses.
• Flattering 1 n~irOn, nylon fricol Clresses
• A big select ion of •tylos in ossor+ed prints
• Sizes 12 to 20 end holf 5'zes 141/i to 221/i
• Not every size in eve ry style and coldr
•4~ la S
ANA.HIJW
444 N. IKIW
171 41 IJMIZI
• Sorry no rneil orders on these
• Phone orders while quantites last
P.laza Dp)".lime Dresses
•
at the brOadway
NIWPOIT HUNTIN&TOM WCH OU.N•I
47 ,...._ ....,. 1711 ,..,., A..... IJll Ne.. T .... "'-'
f 7141 644-IJ1J 17141 "1.JJ.JI 171 41 ,,..1)11
SHOP 11 A..M.,. t :lf P.M. MONDAY 1l410UMI RfNY, SATUQA"Y 11 A..M. ti' P.M. SUNDAY 1J NOOH hi I P.M.
cannot
UOLM~Mtil
CJ1JI ....... 11
I
Reporter
Pick s Up
Support
LOS ANC:ELES (AP)
The Californ ia Freedom of
Information Committee has
endorsed newsman William
f<'arr's fight again.st a con-
tempt of court citation issued
after he refused to disclose
sources of a story he wrote
about the Sharon Tate ITWrder
case.
1'hc sta tewide committee
ml't here in conjunction with
the Cahforn1;i N e w s p a per
Publishers Association con-
vention and voted to pay $250
for printing expenses in Farr's
appeal of a !-iupcrior Court rul-
ing in Los Angeles.
Although ordered to do so,
Farr refused to disclose his
news sources for a particular
story he wrote on the Tate
case while working for the Los
Angeles Jierald-Examiner.
At the lime or the contempt
citation Farr was working a11
fl press aide for the county
district attorney and the Tate
trial judge said Farr wasn't
protected by a Jaw permitting
reporters to keep sources
scl'rct. Farr now works a! a
reporter for the Los Angeles
Times.
The newsmen's group also
spo ke out against ' • g a g
orders." such as the one that
silenced many persons in-
volved in the Tate case.
Through gag orders judges
forbid attorne ys. defendants
and o!hcr principles in a case
from talking to newsmen .
Ray Spangler, r or mer
Redwood Ci ty publisher. said
i.;ag orders once were issued
only in sensational trials but
''now in every little murder-
case you've got a gag order."
The co mmittee is sponsored
by CNPA and Sigma Delta
Chi, the p r of essional
journalism society .
Operation
'No-Srnoke'
S putters
S1\N DIEGO (AP) -Two
months ago a federal anti·
smo kin,1.t official was refer ring
lo Pacific Southwest Airlines
Rs "the great hope of
nnnesmokers' right in the
"' "
·rh:ir ·s her a use PS A decided
hi l1stahh.~h fl fulltime "no
smf!k1ng " section on i ls
planrs. And the results?
.. It 's d1 sl'ouraging as hell ,"
says PSA pre11ident J. Floyd
Andre~·s. "We put in thi!
pioneer plan and nobod y
seems lo care, least of all the
nons mokers.··
Barbara t-lcath, a training
stc~·ardess . said the airline
"allocated the front !:lank of
seal'! hecause they are the
quietest and the best ven·
hla ted "
It apparently makes little
diff erence, however.
l'OWlllfUI -~ CLOGGED TOILETS
MVll MAIN..._."-'" ...... ...... ,.. ...... , ......
TOILAPLIX.
Toilet ~ "••11r
Uft!1llt ordin.l'l' P*ullP'". 1Mi.&n
.,.,. riot pc.nnlt CMP1,..-..t -*w or ,....,..,. __ .,. t.o .,i..,., ti.ls-Of ~
WitJ, 'Ji>it."" !tic-full ,,.__., .. ,.a-.
th•ov1li 1he c loc1•nc M•t • •:&4
_.._ it d<>wn,
•~IMl'IOf'S~ . '°"" ITIUI', U#T ••> ..... .,~::.:.~'7."' .,...., .............
AJCAHltM ............
171•1 UMUI
t
ft.1on1t.ar I tbl'u.1ry 7, 1"111
~ollar
~omfort
hy dellso debs
it's th e ring around the collar
that makes the difference with
our streamlined pump ... it
caresses your every step,
putting the comfort in your
walking. You 'll love its classic
good looks tool In white,
bone, blue, black or red. 25.00.
matching hand bag. 25.00.
fashion shoes
DAIL 'I PILOT
at the broadway
JflW'POIT HUNTtN6TOH IUC:H OUN~I
47 ,..... w.; nn ...... ....... ta• "'· ,..,,. "'"" C714J f.44.1212 f71tl lft.11J1 (714 1 tta.1111
Clllllot
"' L. c.rJtt .... ..
IJ:IJl ........ 11
IMOP If ........ f!ll P.M. MONDAT fHIOtfet4 1 ... DA1', IAT11UAT 11 A.M. NI P.M, MWP.AT U MOON t• I PM .
,-
•
' . '
r• '
•
., ..
I
I
..
••
.. .. ... ., ., ·-
••
1~
r·
'" .,
'
Monday, r rbruar, 1, 1'1?
L. ~I. Boyd
Hot Pa11t s Begun
By Ruby l(eel~r
"Marriage 11 an lnstitatlon that entitles women
to the protection af ~trong men who steady the step-
ladder for them ""hilr they paint the kitchen ctlllng."
Wall Street Journal
\\'h<1t one thing is most apt to cause a husband to
abandon his v•ife? That query has been researched al great
len gth. Money trouble, as you might guess, is No. I. No. 2
is nagging. No. J is a little different, best expressed by 1he
husbands themselves, who say, in ef.
rect "I had this life-long dream I want.
ed to fulfill before it was too late, but
she wouldn't let me."
• SOJ\1E RA!l\'BOWS do indeed make
complete circles. And that profession-
al man most apt to see same is the
pilot, clearly.
TO BE SPECIFIC, "quick as a
v.'ink" is one-twentieth of a second.
f"LI EN'f \VA!'ltl'S to know the starting salary of register.
1 I 1u11·scs nO\\'. 1'hnl's $163 a week. A nationwide average.
NOT ALL ants have eyes, you know.
l\1IGHT ALSO make note of the fact the average park-
ing time on a meter a 29 minutes.
QUERY -Q. "As a father of six youngsters, I wish
~omcbody would tell me whether thumb sucking Is normal?''
A. Not ror a father or six, It isn 't, sir. Too flip? AD
n'~ht. perfectly normal during the first two years or life.
;1l·cording to a Denver doc tor named Ernest Klein . ln fact.
h(' ~ays you ought not to discourage thumb sucking in such
:-.111all souls .
If' ''OU'VE never heard of Ruby K~ler, young fellow.
it's pa st your bedtime. But seasoned citizens will recall it
\Vas she and none other 40 years ago who originated that
article of feminine apparel now known as hot pants.
THE SNOWPLOW tum is what it's called, as any skier
will testify. And all said skier has to do to cut the chances
of breaking a leg by two-thirds is master the maneuver.
Such is the claim or the American Medical Association .
MOTH ERHOOD -Am asked wh ich go to hospitals
more, men or women. Dcpl'!nds on the age bracket. Be-
tween 17 Rnd 24, the hospi L::ili zed men outnumber the '~·om
en admitted. And bel\\'Cen .iges 45 and 54. loo. ~ut . fro~
a~cs 25 to 44 . it's lhc women v.•ho are in the maJorily in
those antiseptic wall s. l\lotherhood, motherhood.
r.11ss. DOES your boyfriend wear his hair long? If so,
gaze upon same, while il lasts, v.·hich it mos t probably
won 't. Chances are nine to one he 'll be bald by age 60.
Address mail to L. ~1. Boyd, P, 0 . Box 1875,
Newport Beach, Calif. 92660,
'Part of Trend'
California Parks'
Attendance Drops
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
State Parks and Recreati on
Director William Penn ~1ott
Jr. has reported that 1.3 mil-
lion fewer perS(lns visited
state parks last year than
during the previous year .
l\1ot t said there was "no
specif ic reason for att endanre
to be dov.·n_ ft just appears to
be pt1rt of a national trend ."
Aides to r.1011 said althou~h
no rf'ason rould be pinpointed
for !he decline. a handful (lf
p.1rks seen1ed to t1ccoun t for
n10~1 of the loss.
They said those par ks had
suffered "bad puhlicity" about
11110 ) ears ago due to rowdies
and hippies but that hnv en-
f1Y.cemen t problems since had
btta corrtcted.
Mm: re porte d that
Invasion
Of Youths
Rumored
ESfES PARK. Colo (AP) -
A group of Lar imer County
landown ers hns sent a letter to
the superintendent of Rocky
Mountain National Park pro-
testing the rumored invasio n
of the park this summer by
half a million youths .
42.668,157 persons visited state
parks in the fiscal year which
ended July 1. compared with
43,984,960 during the previous
fiscal period.
"We are off about 2.5 per-
cent from 1969-70," he said.
"The National Park Service
reports th:it its nttendance is
down 10 j)('rcent."
He said !he decline oc-
rurrred in ' d il y -us e ' at-
tendance onl~· · ll'hilc crun pers
in the parks set a new
record-3.9 rn1llion . an in-
('rease of 70.000,
The departn1cnl s111d it wt1s
the third ti me that yca r-to-
3·ear attend<l nce had fallen off.
In fiscal 1966-67. there was n
dC<'line of 105,500 and in fi scal
1968-69 there was a red uction
of 464,228.
Department spokesman Ra y
Chapman said the dropoff last
year occurred mostly at Big
Sur and Folsom stale parks
and at Huntinglon S I a t e
Beach.
Chapman noted that rowdies
<1t Folsom and hippies al Big
Sur a couple of years ago
caused law enrorceinent pro-
blems and attendance drop ped
off.
"We had bad publicity from
a law enforcement stand-
point," Chapman said. "Since
then we believe we coped with
the problem."
The event, described as a
11peace gathering and picnic"
by the Universal Life Church
Of Moclesto, Calif., v.•hich is the
sponsor of the ev ent. is to be
held during a week in July,
He said one theory in the
department holds that word
that su ch problems have been
corrected may not have reach·
ed the publie and this could
contribute to the decli ne in at-
tendance.
The church held a similar
gathering in Farragut State
Park, Idaho, la st summer.
Some 16,000 persons attended
and police termed th!'! gather·
ing a ''rock festival."
In the letter fb Jimmie L.
Dunning, park superintendent,
the Tahosa V1lley Landowners
Assot!i.a tlon In E.fles Park said
It feels so many persons spell
lroublt.
"There are no facllitics to
accommodate that number,"
th!'! let ter says. "There is no
sa.nitaUon, the . roads and
highways stmply cannot han-
dle the mulUtude.s of cars and
lnlclcJ, and tho posslbtllUts of
.. ..,., !oml !Im cannot be ·-·
'
Gan1ing Club
Closes Shop
RENO (UPI) -Gaming at
downtown Reno's new China
Club has come to a halt after
19 years or continuous ex-
istence.
Bew TI. Fong, president of
the club. has prt\'iously an-
nounced plans for a hlgh-ri!;C
casino-hotel wh('re the Ch ina
Club now stands 11! Lake and
Commcrci:i l Rri"'·
The application for a hich-
r ise variaoct to accommodatf'
a buildinJ: from "l2 to 32''
SIOrifl:s '4-'lS approved last
summer.
Watson's
Measures
Qualifies
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -An
Initiative measure w h i c h
would Hmit property taxes to
17 per $100 assessed valuation
has qualified ror the
November general election
::1llot.
Secreta ry of State Edmund
C. Brown Jr. said tbe Wat.son
initiative had received 561 ,524
signatures. exc~ing the
520,806 needed to qualify it for
the ballot.
lf approved by the state's
voters, the measure would shift
$L~ billion in local school
costs and $688 million in cou~
• QUEENIE
«J kliir'--~'-''Jl. -.......... _......
By Phil lnterlandi
ty welfare costs to the state. "Person3;1Iy, I don't care for a man'S' company unless
lt would also hike the state Jie owns Jt."
sales tax by two cents a----------------------
dollar, ra ise state business
taxes by 56 percent and ·boost
liquor and cigarette levies to
offset property ta x: reductions.
Los Angeles C o u n t y
Assessor Phll ip Watson ,
spo nsor of th e iniliative, had
hoped to qu alify it for the June
ballot. But Brown said it
would appear on the
November ballot because the
req uired nu mber of signatures.
were submitted too late for
the June election.
Paraplegic Coll-ects
LOS ANGELES I UPI I -
Percy J . Williams, who said
he was left a paraplegic by the
negligence of two doctors. has
been awarded $1.4 million in
damages.
A Superior Court j u r y
assessed the damages for
malpractice against 0 r.
J-ferberl I. Singer and Dr. John
·F. Hervey.
Willjams, 22. said he was
taken to the Bon Air Hospital
after a fight in the summer of
1968 and in examining him the
doctors failed to note a spinal
disorder and aggravated it by
moving his head, causing him
to permanently lose the use of
his. arms and legs.
Teller Barbara Nesman of Los Angeles loves working with people, ls thoroughly
trained to expedite transactions with speed and accuracy.
Son1e Exercises 1
Hazai~dou s -AMA
CHICAGO, DI. (AP) -Nol
all exercise i! good, and some
e1ercises can be harmlul, in
!pile of the claims of health
clubs, says the magazine
'foday's llealth, published by
the American M e d I c a I
Association.
The failure of health clubs'
exercise programs "to result
in the promised success is
dismaying enough" the
magazine says in its February
issue in a surv ey of health
clubs.
''But worse, of course, is the
possibility of suffering actual
physical harm," it adds. Bac k
and knee problems for ei::-
ample, can res uJt from certain
exercises.
Researchers were sen t to
health clubs across tbe coun-
try to study th eir activities,
and medical experts were ton-
sui ted.
Dr. John Bo ye r, a
cardiologist and member of
the President's Council for
Physical Fitness and Sports,
says, "Health clubs tradi-
tionally concentrate on
building muscular strength
through calisthenics such as
pushups and weight training.
But muscular strength is not
fitness. Our living is not
dependent on our biceps. Jt b
dependent on the condition of
our heart and lungs."
These organs a re C'Qn-
ditioned by such activities as
jogging, rowing, cycling, walk-
ing, swimming and skipping
rope. "We need a Cadillac
heart far more than a Cadillac
body," Boyer said.
So me doctors say exercise
should be prescribed by physi-
cians and that these ei::ercises
are not the kind emphasized in
health clubs.
The survey also says in-
structors at health clubs are
inadequately trained. Instruc--
tors are not required to have a
degree or any formal training
in physical education.
"Some or the instructors are
actually salesmen for the club,
working on commission, and
1nay be more inclined to sell
than train yo u,'' the report
states.
Jt state s also that there is no
such thing as "spot redue-
tion"-taking off weight from
a particular part of the body
with exercise concentrating on
that part of the body.
Fat is reduced from the
area where it is most con-
spicuous, regardless of type of
exercise or diet, researchers
have found.
M•wll..,,.... (hew!
HERBERT l. MILLER
TIRE CO. INC .
Accounting Supervisor Mary leightnerof La Mirad8Shows a customer hoW
to c:cmbine-toeom 6% on a two yeartenn ($5000 minimum),
The le at Home do moi~ for}1lltt
I.
~Billion
Strong
Behind your.omngs at Home stand t11e
greatest &Ssets and the greatest actual
dol lar reserves of any savings and loan
associatiQD. For 83 years, Home Savings
has been '10 ld Dependable.J•-
Americas
Largest
Yelll ago, Rome Savlnp be\!mll@tlle
nwnber one savings and loan .-.&iatlon
in the nation simply by pto~ mo..
of the services savers want most. Home
Savings pays more interest to ........., toe
, •. now at the rale of over $600,000 ~
single day.
t:!% Guaranteed, ·2 year minimum u--=:on depollla ot $5.000·«
" ' I: ·-QlBonusA"""""ts. Yoaean5" ~far the 11tat 90 cJ.,.. '1'hin' a .
'A bonuo b~f: your mt...eot ID •
5%9' Guaranteed, 1 year tenli, cin-
c;J depo>lts of $1,000 or e"'N. ~ . : . .. ,
All inter~ otH~·~poimdtil~dailw
for grmter~. · ~ 5%%,w thoreafterllpold to day of wlthdnwll.
5 0l Passbooks, ))8!d clay·ln to My. •,
}Oou t (on tfie a•me :~e of ' ac~unts banko pay %). 5?~ also is paid on "Christmas
Account..:;'' :ind all Lh.e special
"Pay Yourself First" plans.
(
!
•
Flowers Mask Framewor
Teamwork Key to Reaching Top
By JO OLSON
Of tlle o.llY ''"" Sl•tf
The uquisite fioraJ headdresses
at the Bal Masque each year are
like lhe floa ts in the Rose Parade
-you never get' to Stt what's in-
side and you always wonder what
holds them together.
Two Orange Coast norists, both
veteran competitors, know very
well what is necessary to design
award-winning ma sques and are
about to unveil their ~ entries.
Morri Molho of Flowers by Morri
and Carl Freeman of Carl 's
Flowers, are willing to reveal some
of their trade secrets and enjoy
discussing the preparation of the
masques.
Plans for the Bal Masque begin
very early, Freeman said. Before
the last mannequin has left the
runway in the Anaheim Convention
Center this year. the florists will be
thinking of next year's competition
and how they can imp rove their en-
fries.
Like the Rose Parade, the Bal
Masque entries become more
1
••• Floral entries
become more
sophisticated ••
sophisticated each year as the
florists try new and different ideas
and the techniques are improved .
Showmanship is the key to suc-
cess, Molho said. Many extra steP!
are taken to add pizzazz -mir-
rored dresses to reflect the lightt5,
moving parts on the headdresses
and special music and dance steps.
Jlilolho's son Randy studied metal
sculpture so he couid build the
rrames. and he said they may be
tbe only florists who make their
Dwn frame.
"Even during the making of the
frame we change OW' ideas:· he ad-
ded . "As we progress we add tem-
porary weights for the model to
practice with."
During the dress rehearsal the
models wear the flowerless
framework, which is supported by
their back brace. They control the
masque1 by means of fiberglass
Clubs
To Share
Pledges
An exchange of valentines is plaMed
for Friday, Feb. II, in the Balboa Bay
Club by the Girls and Boys clubs of the
Harbor Area.
The occasion will be the seventh annual
fund-raising dinner dance sponsored by
the clubs, whic h will feature Harry Bab-
bitt as master of ceremonies and ap-
pearances by Dick Lane and Roberta
Linn.
The guests will give valentines to the
clubs to underwrite aervices lo the
Harbor Area's youth, and the clubs will
give the essentiala of a gala even.
ing in return.
Capping the festivities will be the
preM:ntation of awards to citizens 'for
outstanding contributions to helping
youth. Spomorioa: the awards will be ~th
<:lubs.
Providing dan<:e music will ht The
Retrogressive Five Plus Three.
To make reaervationl for the $.1S per
plate event, resident! may call the Girb
Clubt1'6tl-7111, or the Boys Club, M&-9317.
P1ytn1 tribute to St. Valtoti>e In! (left
to rtabt) Clrolyn Clrrldua, Dllvid 8-
Jlmln and Mr. and Mn. lleory c.
v.,.m.
•'
belmetJ which are lined with foam,
but the back supports the weight,
Randy emphasired.
During the six-week to two-month
preparation period, the florists
meet with the mannequins when
needed, but the major work is done
just a few days before the ball.
' ... Many steps
are token lo add
• • p1z1au ...
"If you put the petals (whi ch
must be whole! on too late you
hAve more weight." Morri said
there is a 20-pound weight limit.
Flower weight is mostly water
whic h will evaporate, he explained.
The norists get extra credit for
using whole flower s, and the mas·
ques must not extend more than
four feet above the mannequins'
heads or four feet to the sides.
They can reach to the noor. the
rules say.
Freeman, who enters because
"it's about the only thing a norist
can do for recognition," makes a
model then tears it up about 40
times before the final masque is
made. ...
liis crew of five or six works
three days around the clock to glue
the petals and nowers on the frame
just before the ball.
When the light.s are dimmed in
the Anaheim Convention Center
Saturday. Feb. 26, and the man-
nequin parade begins to un(old the
theme Bal Masque de L'Epoque,
the florists and their models will be
hoping everything comes up ra.ses
for them. ·
If they don't wi..D, though. it will
have been a beaUtµut experience
because of the beauty of the
nowers and the joy of arranging
them.
Sponsored by Damas de Caridad,
an ·auxiliary of St. Jude Hospital,
Fullerton, the ball raises funds for
puchases of a linear accelerator for
lhe hospital. Re5ervation deadline
is Feb. 11.
'
One of th e first st e ps in ma kin g a ma squ e
1s fitting t he brace. Ab ove, Mrs. Cochr an e
Cha se is assisted by Morri Molho. At
right, C arl Fre eman show s Mrs . Rob ert L.
Hu mphrey> the frame of her mas que.
• ' . . '
"
'· ................ __
.. ·=
•
of Plans
6men
BEA ANDE RSON, Editor
l't M II ~ -:
An n La nde rs
. : . Nursing a Fetish
Not Good Medicine j:
DE AR ANN LANDERS: Fred and t
have been married three years. When we
n1et I was a student nurse.
He has a hangup about that uniform t
used to wear, and has asked me to put it
on al the craziest times. To please him
I've worn it on occasions which J felt
were most inappropriate, and r came off
looking like a damed fool.
For example, we had his boss and his
wife to dinner a few weeks ago. Fred in-
sisted that I wear my student nurse
uniform . When I greeted the guests -
st.arched, bibbed, collared and cu/fed -
they were stunned. At first they didn 't
recognize me. They thought someone in
the hou se wag gick. My husband didn't
bat an eye.
I don 't enjoy this sort of thing and I'm
uncomfortable about it. Fred says I'm
childish. If I refuse to oblige him he
poutg , What should I do! -CANADIAN
WIFE.
DEAR WIFE: Yoar hu1band h11 ao
right to Inflict hJ1 ftt11b oa yoa II public.
Tell bhn you11 pat on tbe 1111form for
him once In a wblle In prlv1~. but not for
11e1t1. Aod let him pout.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : I am 18 but
very mature ror my age. My problem ii
one t ca n't talk to anybody about because
my parents thlnk It already jg setUed. I
eatt•t·uotl! ·.y·c1tance·on them··finding out
that I'm sUll teeing Hank .
I'm In love with Hank and want lo mar-
ry him . The problem is that he Is already
married and having trouble getttna. a
divorce. Hank 11 10 years oldtr than lam
but doesn 't look It.
He ha1 a drlnklng problem but I'm sure
after we are marrled it wiU be over
bec1iae ht won't have any reason to
drink. He'll be happy with me. Now ha ta
hurt inside because he is separated from
his two little children and he hag to drink
to keep from going crazy.
My folk5 are very much ag ainst Hank
and I promised I would stop seeing him. I
haven't been able to keep my promise.
Please tell me how to present my case to
my parents so they will understand that t
· am 1avlng a human being. I've alway1
Wiil;~ to be a wcial worker eod without
D Hank wouldn't be able to make It.
'l'lltw, Ann . -CORNING , N.Y.
• .
DEAR CORNING : Fl.Dd aaotbu ~
ect. A IS.year-old air! •bould ao t be ...
social work on a married man wttll :>e chlldr~n and a dr1nklng problem. You ....
not .going to save this py. Io fact, If yo,
don t stop 1ttlng him you'll be lucky If
you lave younelf. He already h•I nu1;
• liar •nd 1 •neat o"t of yoa. Cati :tJ
qulla. The sooner tile better. -
. DEAR ANN LANDERS : I'm ll, ...ii..
r1ed lo a succegsfW buslne1s executfci
and we have two chlldrtn lt and if!":t
earned a bacheJor of •rta d~gree be~
was marrled •and decided last fall~ ~ck to school for 1 masters ln E
Lit • •
The children w!U be away at achool
within two year1 Ind l think I'd lib: to teach. · •
Whal bug s me Is this : Several friends
when they heard I was back in icliooi'
!5ked , "Is eve'l'ijling lllri&bt wtt.11;;.,i
and Charlie!" 1 can't teH you ho••
bugs me. Does• woman'• marrlaae Jiltt
to break ~P before •he ,... o, -~hoot?
" I , '".! It IO h1ppen1 that (wo of my frliiiilf
'!ho wer~ d.Jvorced recently now are',.,;
ling their degrees and ~ pr
already is teaching. Bvt lo ._ ~
eveiy married woman wbo ••'111 lo
teach ls ha•Jni marllll ~ fl
1blurd. How do I retpOlld to -
ntedlero? I hall to be ..r-1,.i dr
apofogeUc. -A.O.K. AT OUR HOME; ~
DEAR A.O.K.: MMe l!PI If If ..:
1lmply 1ay, "At fir 11 I ca 4eetnl•
tbl1a1 •re in rtpt 1t home. U ,... ._
anything dellnlle tell me. I'd lib to lit
1moa1 the rlrtt It Dow." .. =>
•••
·.
'
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•
Mor1dJy, Ftbru.iry 7, 1972
Boots •
In
Bring on
By ERMA BOMBECK
ri.1y kids a!1A·ays figured 1r
the Good Lord had meant fnr
them lo wear hoots he'd have
Hiven them feet that scre'A' on
and off.
~fe? r never question the
Deity I only adjust to it. But if
I did question it. the boot
mystique would be my target.
Wet Weather
Utter
AT
WIT 'S
END
Dis-pair
black boot r rom a 1A·hlte ooe "
'"Here's a match. Try thts
one."
··one zlps aud one Lui.:klc:.."
"Pull your trousers down
over them."
"I can't. I have lo take my
trousers off to get them on ."
"They can't be lhat tight "
"Tell that to the red marks
going up my leg."
"Why don't you wear Dad-
dy 's boots and \Vear sweat
socks on the outside of your
shoes ."'
"No way." MARY O'BRYON
To begin with. boots come
Into this world as pairs. They
remain side by side in a box
coming home. They are in-
separable throughout the sum-
mer. In fact. you can't open a ~I closet door, trunk car lid. the
drawer containing you r
bathing suit , the mailbox ...
• everywhere you go you are
stumbling over a pair of boots.
Then ('()mes the first rain nr
they will recoil into a corner,
bite a scarf in half in anger,
try to convince you the
blizzard outside will turn into
Miami by noon. and quote
statistics on how many people
died last year from \\Cl reel.
Enter the thlrd mystique .
Assuming boots and children
do mix. how do you keep a
child in boots during those
years when his feet are
literally growing before your
e_ves.
"Then. try you r sister·s and
walk in deep snow so they
"·on't see the heels "
"No."
•·couldn't I spray your reel
\\•ilh Sco tchgard ?"'
Betrothal
Classroom Exhibits Aren't Greek to Them
Balboa Harbor Al umnae of Gamma Phi Beta are
planning an 11 a.m. lu ncheon-fashion show Thurs·
day, Feb. 10, in Airporter Inn to honor Mardan
School of Educational Therapy. Mrs. Alan Miller and
Paul Reed, instructor, watch as Mike Ca~ey experi·
ments. More vi sual aids will be purchased with the
nut sale proceeds the Gamma Phis will donate to the
Costa Mesa school.
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Gemini: Avoid Legal Contests
TUESDAY
FEBRUARY 8
By SYDNEY O~tARR
1'-1any person~. born under
Sagittarius, should now begin
to enjoy a higher standard of
Jiving. The financial pi cture.
for nati ve!ll of this zodiacal
sign. definitely looks brighter
in upcoming months. The
Sagittarius person finds much
in common with Leo, Aries.
Libra and Aquarius. Where
money is concerneri,
Capricorn often proves lucky
for Sagittarius,
ARIES (March 21·Aprll 19):
Travel could be postponed
without loss. Means that delay
ln this area now works in your
fa vor. Avoid acting on im -
pulse. Give logic equal time.
Some relatives, neighbors ma y
be in mood to quarrel.
TAURUS (Apr il U.May 20 l:
Hold off on money deals,
o u ts t anding expenditures.
Budget requires review. You
may be doing same job twice
-without being aware. Means
costs are doubled for
nothing . Check with one born
under Pisces.
GEMI NI (Mriy 21 -June 20 ):
Pressu re arises as result of
past commitment. Steer clear
of legal contests. Wa it. Time
is on your side. Seek postpone-
ment. Friction may exist in
partnerships. M a k e con-
cession. but slick to principles.
CANCER fJune 21-July 221 :
What was supposed lo be con-
fidentia l becomes p u b 11 c
knowledge. Be prepared. phasized. Trust hunch. Delay PISCES I Feb. 19-March 20):
lnfonn family of plans. Trying contract signing. Find out Some of your ambitions are
to hide facts would be error. more _ ask questions and not ambitions -they are pro-
Know this -act accordingly. ducts of frustration. Truth of Truth will make you free. utilize tiinc-stalling tactics. this could now be hamm ered
LEO (July 2...1-Aug. 22 ): Maneuver. Strategy makes all home. Key is to be open to
Lover's quarrel occurs unless the difference. creative changes. Don't con-
you are extremely patient, CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. tinue down track that leads
understanding. In dealing with 19 1: Stress versatility. Have nowhere.
ch ildren. know when lo draw alternatives ready. Don't be I F TODAY IS Y O U R
line . Avoid spec u I at i on. discouraged by one who seems BIRTHDAY you are a natural
Wis hfu l thi nking now could lo know it all. watch diet. executive, one who does better
cloud hard facts. Act ac-Ren1ember recent resolutions. working in policy .making
cordingly, One who ta lks behind your area. By October, you wilt be
. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 \: back will be exposed. on the n1ove and have op-
Review basic values. Get what AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. portunity for greater creative
you need , but avoid dup!ica -lS ): Friends argue among expression. You are dynam ic
lions . Red tape has tendency themselves. Try not 10 become and devastating Where op-
oow to multiply. Set gu ideli nes involved . Key is 10 be fa ctual . posite sex is concerned.
-and stick to them. Older in-You ma y be annoyed by red T" 11r>11 ""' ...,..,. •bl>Ut Y""'".u •nd dlvidual can aid. Throw aside fape, various restrictions. But '"''"'°gv, ordt• svdntv o .. ,. ... , so-if you h Id f" pag1 boo~ter. Tht Tr11th Abov1 fal se pride. 0 your ire you A1trot.,..... ~•/'Id b1rr~d1t1 1/'ld 11 <1n1s
LIBRA iSept. 2J-Oct. 22): ultimately achie ve. Respond '" o"''" soa1c1t1. th• DAILY PILOT, a d" J Bo• ll,O, Gru.a Cenrr1J Stltlon, N~w Steer clear of s e n s e I e s s ccor ing y. YGrt. N.v. ioo11. di sputes with neighbor s .':----.::.:.'----------_:::.::_::::.:_:::::c_ ____ _
relatives. Be sure vou are cor-
rectly quoted. Sorlie now are
anxious to c re a t e em-
barrassing situation. Stand
above and beyond pettiness.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov . 21 ):
New approach to money ques-
tions is necessary. &ln1e who
were dependable in past now
may need chec king. Be more
independent. Stress originali-
ty. Lead instead of follo w.
Dance to your own tune.
SAGITTARIUS /Nov. 22-
Dec. 21 ): Partnen;hip. mar-
riage, joi nt efforts are 1m1-
Kids Like
To Ask Andy
Y2
DENTAL PLATES
PRICE
PERM
SALE
50%
$20 MAGIC CURL ••••
•
• Bridgework , • Fillings
• X.Ray • Extractions
All ON
INSTANT CREDIT TERMS
All Crtdit H•ndlod By My Office! No
l•nk or l'in•nc• Co. To Deal With
(0.. ~ er.Ill)
PENTOT·HAL
~
DR. OAKES
" IN •MISA DENTAL c•NTER
267 I. 17th ST., COSTA MESA
PHONE 646-1812
Ne Appolntmant Noceuary
QulO ,,.._., It-In Wh li. You W•it
Oll'llll lAT. 1'11. l ~.M. .................... _..... ...
$25 GLAMOUR CURL ..•.
$35 REGAL CURL ....••..
Hurry! Oon·1 miss these great savings. Our care-
lree perms gives hair lux urious body and
bounce. BruSh and go!
MON• TUES• WED SAVINGS
SHAMPOO-SET 0.00 HAlllCUT 0.00
.... tbo\it °"' ~ pioiM
Ii> Crowning Glory
beauty salons
l OUTH COAST PLAZA -l'tMfW 146•7116
l ewer L ..... I -N .. 1 ,. Jt1r1
0'"" I Vtllfl'ltl
167 I. 1 71~ St., COSTA MISA -l'tl•• 141·991 t
o,.n lvll!llt1e• tM S11n4t ¥
Wt CAii i eD111t yn I l Mt )'ht .. 11 I
the firsl snow and vou finallv
discover "one" sta~ing at yoU
defiantly under the lawn
mower in the gara,i::e.
Enter the second mystique.
Children are born with a con-
genital boot condition. When
approached to wear a pair,
The conversatinn is. by the
time. a classic one·
"\\'hat's the matter with
these boots?" I ask.
"The y don't match."
''Yl'ho will notice?''
"Anyone wh o can tell a
Suppressed Anger Hu rts
'·MOM '."
As I watch him mu~h
through the snow in his i;::ym
shoes . I can't help but look
up\vard and say aloud, '"If
you're right and l 'n1 wrong,
then how come \\'e can treat a
cold, but no one can find a
cure for boots?"
Better to Bubble Over
News Told
At Party
Mr. and lvtrs. \Vill iam Lapp
O'Brvon announced t h c
engafjcment of their daughter.
~1ary Alison O'Bryon to Frank
Edward l\.1almstone during a
cocktail buffet in t he i r
Nc.,.,•port Beach home.
Guests \vere presented daf·
fod 1I corsages and carnalifl n
boutonnieres bearing t he
narncs of the betrothed.
By JO OLSON
Of ll'le Di iiy l'lltl Slit!
be healthily angry. Depen-commodity," Dr. Schmad el Miss O'Bryon and her fiance,
dency and anger are closely said. "'Ask yourself what you son of l\.1r. and J\·lrs. B!esch
What happens to unex-akin." \\'Ould say to your husband or Ma!mstonc. Phoenix, attend·
pressed anger? Neurotic defenses are built wife if you had five minutes to ed Northern Arizona liniver-
lt becomes a backache with unexpressed anger. she live.'' sity, v.·here he affiliated with
ulcer, colitis or maybe even added . "Most people aren't ac-If you can express your Si,1?ma Chi.
cancer, warned Dr. Elnora complished at expressi ng frustrations and irritalions She is a graduate of
Schmadel at the concluding anger. and those who are are you have an exciting re\a-Cornhel.ia Condnelly High ~h~li
parent education I e ct u r e probably using it as a weapon. tionship, she said. and ~~a ~1~8an N:iT~n':i~ese~h~ri~y
sponsored by El f\-torro Sc hool "Anger is a crisis in-manipulative· behavior is League debutante ball.
PTA, Laguna Beach. tervention. You are saying discarded. A June 10 wroding in Our
Ange r ls fear , frustration. there is something wrong and The psychologist selected Lad y Queen of Angels Catholic
disappointment or fear of help is needed ." !\VO groups of parents to role-Church. Newport Beach 1s
being destroyed, she said. and When a child ha s a tantrum play and the audience su g-planned by the couple.
the important thing about and tells his mother he hates gested different kinds of anizry lc;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiii,
anger is how a person ex-her. she illustrated, he is at-behavior portrayed in the r
presses it. temptinJ:: to expand his world. family Thanksgiving an d fPDTE"V
'"When you get angry blood The adult should 116ten to what breakfast settings. n'
goes to your head. your diges-he says and help him develop These included forgetting,
lion almost stops and you skills by modifying his shutting one's mouth to erase A.111. STEP -ee11NA1tOO
If f th d b -KIMEi.. EOWAROS want to hit someone. What behavior. nnese rom e scene an a · _ GEReE11:1c~ _
happens if you can't hit some-How does an adult learn to dicating authority. PF FLYE11s -u.s. Keos
A · h Ith h · · ! O.nct Weir by Oan1~ln one?" h h 1 h · f nger LS ea Y w en 11 ts C•rie11., D•rw::• s""" ave a eat y conception o expressed she co 1 d d tt · cor•KUv• )~.,., ,~, cttiw"*" You shake. verbalize or · nc u e . ts anger. u p d g th t t k 225 I. 17tti 5t. stom" your feet, she sairt. nex resse an er a a es 0,,., "'" • 141.2771 1• '"Think of life as a limited 1·ts toll
"When we don't express it we -::::::~::~~~~-;:j,~::li"~~~·--------,1:~~~~~~~~~~~~ swallow it and this costs a I vJ__..,~.-'.-J./f8._ _.. l't r-i-':'.;.,.
t d I ,, ~~,.,..,.~ .. . -. ..,., grea ea . "' ,,.,,,,..:_,.~-::.-~-'"~
Anger is healtt.y. the ,.11 h .-.. • <j~1
psychologist cmphasizC!rt. !'!.i(.· 1 ti V .~.,I;' "When a baby is born we hit it -1 until it becomes angry and •\ ·' You Can \ ;.}
cries.'' ~ •,)1 Find The "! (
She listed the sequence one ~'.'1 .) Perfect J~·,
follo \l:S in experiencing anger: . f~. Valentine's <f;;~,
irritation, frustration._ pro-~ti,,~<;)~ Gift At .. (). .. ~?1,·~ tection of the self against a Pi
reaction. retirement from in·
volvement and finally either •"}J)" ::J4 ~il' 11
an explosion or turning of the 1 ~ BJDTJQUE "1; an,~~; ti~:i~;~er-directed anger ~~19.g 8GfA-M11!•• c~e•t• [,f
that is harmful, Dr. Schm adel 1 11111w111 Ch1r11 L *
explained. because it disrupts P: d ™' v1 A Lroo ~
some organic process · '~ MEWl'OllT ••AcH ~
"Anger provides r~lief and -: V ''>-411' ,..
jewels by joseph
searches fo r jewels
Ce"v•r1 ""w1nttl! !•••Irv It lm,..,tl!!·
ate c11h by •~I• lo 1 1;rrn "'ho1t kMwltl!gt . 1x11er1i11, 111d i11!eqrity
'""'' you t l rtlul I Yl lUt lit l! I I N· d•y• mtrkel Yllvt .
W• .. m i.. 111111..i '" •~•mill• your 9em1 tJMI tl!vlM rt,•rdl111 lht it di5-poul.
Ctll Mr. Je ....... 1r Mr. l<tlh If 14• -
v
Q s s
V1l111, Ou•llly, Stltctlen •"d Strvlc t
tho lour k1y, b•1>t weed• !~II
m•~•• Tht Knll WI!, 11um~er 0111 choke fer Ill yeur kllllllne ~•ti!• ..
dr1>p Ill, Wt'I! ttlth you 1hl Ir! ti
k11lltln1 wilhln ml1111ln.
The
KNIT WIT
S.urh Co1t1
1'1111
LCWl:ll MALI..
C11t1 M111
Jd·tl1J release. To the extent a child ~ ~
is healthily independent he will ~~-.:0:::~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~
......... -.... , ...
NARD A .............. . ........ :·.:~~· .. •
Take a closer look at this
Frigidaire Undercounter Dishwasher!
••• lee wlly It'• worth tlle difference.
=:.-=-. ,... laotcecl by Genetll
Motora. 1-vt1r War·
ranty for ~Ir of any
dtftct Without charg ..
plue +year Prot.ctlon
Pltn (par11 only) for
furnl1hlng r1plaoernent to r any def9ctl'19 ptrt
tn thl mo!Or, pump, k>wtr
•l>NY amt, c.,,ter 1pr1y
column, 1pr1y. Impeller
•net auxlll•ry ·~arm onmocl*t0equtPPtt£
··---hot wai.r
llfld 860 watt
h•l'tlncl .1 .. mtnt h1lp ftahl QllrmL
17995
I
211 Ye•• •I 111t.,,r1cr clMI Depetttl•""''"
COSTA 'MUA I , .. ~ ... ~·:... .. ....,,., .... J4JU l.ufltM I" 41 I E. S•Yenfeentll St, 111111t tt lfv-Olll
Dea,, t .fi S•t. •·• Deil,1 10-6, Thur., Fri. 10.t
646-6M §lZ-JSJO
HUNTINGTON IEACH • fOUNTAIN VALLlY
l roo•hvot l G•rfield !n1xt to Luc~, M•t.I
Mol'I,. Wed., Fri., 10-t ; T11e1. ,Th ur .. Set. 10-6
962°5521
IADIO DISPATCHID 'ACTOIY AUTHOllZID
TY I A,,LIANCI HIYICI PHONI 14l•J4J7
..
.... -.. . . . . -
, Mond.1.)'. FebtU•rt 7, 1972 DAILY PjLOT .15
Celebrations Call for T ri·pping Light Fantastic
' ' ., -
' ""'' MRS. K. R. OLBE RT MRS. W. 0 . MARIS
Sweetheart Month
February Rites
Unite Couples
OLBERT-HUDSON
Costa Mesa will be the home
of Kenneth R. Olbert and his
bride, Juliana Ch r i s t j n e
Hudson who y.·ere married in
the Newport Harbor Lutheran
Church, with the Rev. James
Blaine officiating.
The bride is the daughter of
Brig. Gen. Eugene L. Hudson
of Balboa Island and parents
of the bridegroom are Mrs.
James A. Eisele of Newport
Beach and the late Mr.
Russell M, Dibert.
Mrs. J ames Morris wa s the
matron of honor a n d
bridesmaids were the Misses
Marilyn Hall , Bonnie Rowe,
Patty Huff and Mary lfyan.
Leonheart. Marilyn Moore and
Kathy Sweetser.
Serving as best man was
Dan· Harter, while ushers were
Donald and Ronald Bado,
Mike Nevill and Tim Gibson.
The bride is a graduate of
Estancia High School and her
husband is a graduate of Hun-
tington Beach High School.
Both attended Orange Coast
Co!lege and he served with the
Navy,
PETERSON-ANGEL L
Martha Patricia Angell and
Carroll Floyd Peterson ex-
changed vows in St. Andrews
Presbyterian Church, Newport
Beach.
Parents of the newlyweds
are Mr. and Mrs. Robert G.
Many coast groups are
sponsoring dances over the
weekend, both formal and in-
formal. and St. ValenUn,'s
Day provides the theme for
most.
Jewish G.roup
Mrs. Marilyn Clement will
speak for the Laguna Beach.
Jewish Cultural Group at 8
p.m. Saturday, Feb. 12, in
liotel Laguna. .,
Optimis t Danc e
San Clemente Optimist Club
and Elks Lodge will sponsor a
Valentine dinner d a n c e
Saturday, Feb. 12, ln the San
Clemente Elks Lodge, begin-
ning at 7 p.m.
City of Hope
Maxine Caverley Memorial
Chapter of the City of Hope
will sponsor a dinner dance in
f~J Adobe de San Juan Capis-
trano resturant Saturday, Feb.
12, wHh a Valentine theme.
Festivities wil begin with a
social hour at 6:30 p.m. and
n1usic will be provided by Bill
Henrichs' Quintet.
Beta Sigma Phi
The Royal Coach 1 n n ,
Anaheim will be the setting
for the Saturday, Feb. 12,
Valentine Ball sponsored by
the Northern Orange County
Council of Beta Sigma Phi.
Mrs. Brian Kimball w i 11
represent Delta Delta Kappa
Chapter as Valentine princess.
Servile Ball
Dancing, to the music of the
Society for the Preservation of
(: =~--··1"' -:,.j
Peering
Around
Angell of Newport Beach and VICTORY CUP cocktails
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Peterson were served to members of
Big Bands and a gourmet din·
ner wiU highlight the third air
nual Servite Ball Saturday,
Feb. 12, in the DiSJ'leyland
Hotel.
A Valentine motif has been
planned by Dr. and Mrs.
Garth Taggee, chairmen.
Proceeds will help defer the
debt for the Servite Higll
School multipurpose room.
Workshops
Love Makes the World Go
Round is the theme for the
Saturday, Feb. 12. day of
workshops planned by the
Orange District, California
Federation of Women 's Clt1bs.
Junior 11embership, in the
Holiday Inn, Anaheim.
Yacht Club
Balboa Yacht Club wi[J sail
into a new year \vith the 48th
annual Officers Ball Saturday,
Feb. 12. in the clubhouse.
beginning with cocktails at 7
p.m.
llonored will be Commodore
and Mrs. Jack Baillie and
other officers and their wives.
Baha'i
A potluck dinner themed
Mankind ls One llas been plan·
ncd by the Baha'i friends of
Huntington Beach for Satur-
day, Feb. 12, in Lake Park
Clubbouse.
Entertaining during the 5;30
p.m. affair will be the Orange
County Baha'i Chorus,
direeted by Randall Dighton,
and the Grant Family Singers.
Sweet Adelines
spective members 11.ao are in·
vlted to the Family Service.
1u1Uiary event.
Sea Coast
A variety of services will be
sold Ur the highest bidders
during the service auction par-
ty planned by the Sea Coast
Juniors for 8 p.nt. SaturdRy,
Feb. 12, In the home of Mr.
and Mrs. John Veytla. Laguna
Niguel.
wb.lch was organtud last year
under the leadersbip or the
Laguna Beach J 11 n I o r
Woman's Club.
Miss Faye Bentson, pres!·
dent of the Laguna Beach
\Vo1nan's C'lub, presented the
new director Y.'1th Q!'OCeeds
from a club card party.
All ia nce
fellowslllp hall of the Llpia
Beach Presbyterian· Church.
Ber Is noted for bl! fn.
terpretation of claas.ic and
modern French poetry and
readings.
Bach Recital
Coffee, Tea or Harmony, a
barbershop show, will be
presented by the Harborhtes
Chapter of Sweet Adelines,
Ioc., in Clubhottse Three of
Laguna Beach Leisure World
at 3 p.m. Sunday, Feb. 13.
~lore than 100 Orange Coun-
ty 1nus1c1<1ns ranging in age
from 7 to 19 will perform in
A one-man sliow will be the JOth a11nual Bach rttilals
Gl'rls C lub prestnled by troubador Jean Saturday and Sunday, Feb. 12 and 13, in the Santa Ana
Mrs. Don Hodges ha~ been Ber at 8 p.m. Friday. i''eb. II. Public Library, Sponsor ts the
appointed director of the for the AHiance Francaise of r-.tusic Teachers Association of
Laguna Beach Girls Club, the California .Riviera in the Cahfornla. Orange Branch. -=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Mrs. Gall Ranallo will dlrect
1 he hour long show of songs
from Hawaii to Broadway.
Buenas Amigas
A cocktail and ho r s
d'oeuvres party will take pla ce/
from 5 to 8 p.m. Saturday,
Feb. 12, for members of Las1
Buenas Amigas and their
hu sbands. Valentines w i 11 ,
decorate the Mission Hills
Outpost. San Juan Capistrano. ~
setting for the annual affair. "3
Associate, patron and pro-g'
.~
qua Ii t y no seconds or irregulars
~SHEETS ~, ~ QUEEN SIZE .
NO-IRON
Flat or Fitted -By Wamsutta
WE'RE HAVING A " 0
SALE
FEB. 7 THROUGH FEB. 12, 10 AM·S PM
A good selection of handpainted designs will be
I /3 off to make room for the new designs arri v.
1ng daily. Come in and expect to be tempted!
•• •• a.
0 c ,..
:t .. , er
5 3~~~1195
Each
4.97 without C••••
WOW! Another sensational purchase ••• Queen Site Shnts ctt this tiny price
of $3 .97! All first quality, No·lrons. See this fashionable stripe In a combl,.... _
tlon of dtli9htful colors .
True Outlet Prices from Coast ta Coast
BED & BATH FASHION SHOPS
18591 Main St., Huntln9ton leach
Main at Beach-{5 Points Center)
M1111 ...
"''''' Attending as best man was
were Edward Ramsey,
Gary Cerveny, and ushers
Edward Both, Pat r i c k
Stapleton and Ronald Singer.
The bride is a graduate of
• the University of Southern
"·California and is a member of
:chi Omega.
of Kimball, Neb. the Laguna Beach Tennis Dealers and stores •re ••cludtd from th\1 ••I•.
Mrs. Dennis Graves was the Team and guests in the home :Z'JI E. CO.A.ST HIGHWAY, CORONA Dl!L M.A.R--644-7904
NEEDLEPOINT DESIGN DAILY & SAT.
10 TO•
FlllDAYS
TIL ' P.M.
matron of honor and Peter of Norman Powell, team cap-a ll firs+ quality no seconds or irregulars
Flamer and Brent Angell at-tain, in honor of the leam 's\~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~================================= tended the bridegroom, undefeated season which led to
The bride was graduated the Orange County Winter
MARIS-BADO fron1 Westlake School and League championship.
Christ Lutheran Church, magna cum Jaude from the PHI TltETA KAPPA, na-
Costa Mesa was the setting for University of S 0 u t he r n tional scholastic honorary for
California where she was i·unior colleges, has elected the marriage linking Barbara elected to Phi Beta Gamma
J B d 'nd w1·1bur Dale Miss Kathleen Phipps to its oan a o a and Beta Alpha Psi honorary ranks.
Maris. .,,,,.,·e11·es. She also was af-L th T ~ Miss Phipps, the daughter of The Rev. u er ornow filiated with Alpha Delta Pi. Mr. and Mrs. C. Walter
directed the vow exchandgeM. fo~ Her husband is a graduate Phipps Jr. of _ Huntington
the daughter of Mr. an rs. of the University of Nebraska Beach, is a first )'ear student
Robert C. Bado of Costad MMesa and is a member of Delta at Coltey College, Nevada,
and the son of Mr. an rs. Upsilon. They will make their Mo. She "'3S first in her
W. D. Maris of Downey. home Jn San Francisco. freshmen class.
Mrs. Lee F'isher served as,~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;' matron o! jlonor. a n d !
bridesmaids were Mrs. Robert
White and the Misses Patti
Sniffer
Miffed
NEW YORK (UP!) -Chris-
tian Dior's advice on how to
·buy perfume cautions against
sniffing more than three
fragrances.
"After three whiffs, you
·can't tell a rose from an onion.
"' :Your nose loses its power to
discriminate .. ,
( AdY1rt111m•nll
AMANA MICROWAVE
OVENS CLEARED
AMANA. Iowa - Raytheon
Co."s Amana Refrigeration Inc.
i;ubsidiary said its microwaye
ovens Wl're found to meet in-
dustry standards for micro-
wave leakage in tests by the
department of Health, Educa-
tion and V.tclfa re. Amana was
one of 16 microwave oven mak-
ers asked to submit plans to
prove their units didn't leak
unsafe levels of radiatioi:i.
An1ana said it was the flnt to
subn1it such a plan and . the fin~l to be cleared of ~a.zahh .
. 1his favorable report 1s based
.On Amana's own test of 1,000
of its ovens and the separate
-BRH check or 116 Amana ov-
ens. Results of the BR~ sepa-
-nte check were explained to
Amana In a letter from BRH
·d irector Villfor)ti to .A.mana
president Georg"c C. Foorstner.
Thal Jetter also summarized
Amana's own test results whlt::h
showed that of the 1,000 ovens
Amana tested 968 ovens leaked
TRdiation only belween zero
end l milliwatt per square cen·
t imctcr when measured at 5
: centimeters from the external
·eurfacf! with a NARDA Model
;8100 survey meter.
,t• The other 32 ovens tested 'by
: Amana leaked radiation orilY
: ~tween 1.1 and J muuwalts".
·Tho volunll.r)' indUIUY 1afety :,taiidiud&uoWs ~e.up to
10 mt1H"8.ttl per,, flillia're cen· ~-i J.RH· concJl*d that
the .....ft,~'U..s6~ ~ ·-and ti.., -ovb.~~re o-perating subitsfi·
tJally bclO'l!'f JO mllllwatu per·
IQUal'f' cent.Jme:ttt, the volun.
taJ')' lnduttry •tandard to which
the ovens wtrt lflt to contorm
oriil!nally.'' &t , the Am1tna Microwave
-Ovtlns demonstrated al 0Rvt1
Brown TV And Appllancts, 3
100/o 100/o
OFF
thrv
Feb.
72
-~,_-OFF
thru
Feb.
72
"WORLD'S LARGEST"
EXCLUSIVE
GUARANTEED DRAPERY SERVICE
Drapery Cleaning. Perfect regardless of th e oge of
your drapery, or 100 ~;. rtp!oceme nt if cl eanable.
• No Wiited Heads • Flame Proo fing
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Pleats Colt's Exclu1lv1
• No Shrinkage
• Perfect Even Hems
5 Year Guarantee
• Draperies Remade or
Altered
• W1ter Stain Removal • Dr1per1t1 Repilrtd
Drapery Hardware Installed and Rfpil...d
·VALUABLE COUPON
a.:;+,.flfl WORlD'S LARGER
f.Altl, !JLJ DUPERY CWNIRS
lltl BWEl Of 11115 COUPON IS INT!TUD TD 1 OClfl
OFF ANY DRAPERY Cl!AHING ORDER. CAU 642-0270
Ol 5'0-1366 TO HAVI YOUR OIAPDIES PIClCB> UP AND
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BE
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' 642-0270 .
1702 NEWPORT Bl VD. it 17th, COST A MESA
: IOC8tlon11 ln Orangto count.y, '411
: E. 17th St.. Costa Mesa; LA·
. run1t ~tills Pla:r.a tn El Toro
: •Ind serving Hunllna:ton Beach
• and F(luntaln Vallty Ill Brook~
: hurst and G&rfJ,ld. ADv.'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~J
;
... •/
..... . ''"·>J
1
' (.
I
' '
I
r ,
I
lf DAil V PILOT
DICK TRAC Y
TUMBLEWEEDS
Mun AND JEFF •
PLAIN JANE
M~da1, Ftbr11ary 7, 1972
I SA.W FIVE PEOPLE
IN TWA.T CA&,TRACY,
UNDOUBTEOLV A~L
:t AM NC7i A
STRAIGlrr MAN! :tAM NaiAN
ACToR. I'M . ~ AllUMAN-
AllMED.
2·7
'
Bv Tom K. Ryan
By Al Smith
O.K. YOU'RE
-rHE FALLGIJY
BUTYOULOOK
LIKE A
STR.AIGITT MAN
T'ME ·
By Dale Hale
By Frank Baginski
~ rTI Yo\.1'1.l-LI Ke IT!!
GASOLINE ALLEY
®I love
~Ou,
C\ovi a!
Let me
explain
about
Chloe.'
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
.,
k lftttfilliiii!ll!ttfill!lii!Mfli14
ANIMAL CRACKERS
IJ,A!Ji'i.J.OEsHf
AMCHITKA!"'
S TR/l(E.!
77,\~ eoMIJ6.f
µuGGtJ.JG/ "
JI/JACKI
WITHJ.101-IJ!l.J&.f
PDHUT10N/
.S/JIP.4R£
., ... ___ __ ---
u DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by •. A. POWE• I PEANUTS By Charles M. Schulz
..-~~~~~~~~
.lCROSS
l Olvtrs!on
Ii R1.11 ~ of IJIM'
10 Shtll 1c
lngrtdltnts
l~ Shrub
l.5 Iii are gaseous
t!t!l'ltnl
l b 111 I lint
J 1 Wattr bird
l!I Joyful
l~ .6.JT !vt
20 Mtd lca !
lnstru111tr1t
~2 A.ttacktd lht
good namt of
l• Otflclf'flt 111
11u1ntlty
2' Ch1rgt with . , ..
27 Part of tl'lt
A.tl&fll•C
Ott~n .
2 .. ores
JO F~ ll'er.Dtf
o! U1t army :
lnfor!l'IJ.I •
J l "rtdy' s ll<Mtl'lff
l2 VtrV I 09tr1 :17 ,.,._,
T f"!IJ)CW'arily
.)8 L099 il'I)
t Ql'llpaf!y
t90)aytf\
40 Btwlno
~l Ftu quwts: 2-•
4)(.q•
44 Cltdttvl ruTtlff
45 R1l1tH
48 Kind of da isy
Sl Boutique
52 Rt1dl119s from
th t Biblt
S4 Kind of
typeo l•ct
58 OM' who 1s
""'°'"' 59 Rtstmbli ng !ht
tpos In
grarldttK
bl Old lta ll1n
p!1yirog card
bl Anglo-Saxcri
""" b3 "Qot -":
0CM"1S 01y hit
i11 a19f.6 ll'IC)l'lt
b~ A day's march
bS Pronoun
bb Kind of duclt
117 Surf~t
dcOftssions
OOWN
l Dfcli"'s 111
v1l11t
2 Tacit:
J ll;epute
4 Works ~alnst
5 Dffp h.rro•
6 For tM-111ost
?Mt : 2 won! s
7 -lfontt ,
C1H!oml1 a 1i1rttr111
lrwporlr-d
in I vtniclt:
Saturday's fluitlt Solved:
' ' '
••
7 71
9 Ccrurtrd !!:flat 38 -01)ll ingo:
10 A --: Kird d FCJ"l!Yf SpMish
111tnu: Z .,an1s co lony
11 Fravanc• 39 Most lrt(
12 Ctl1stial lrM dirt
body 42 lfldul;ts ·in
U NC1rn9ian's htarsar
ntighbor 43 Abbot
21 Ta lk 4b M1riju1na
tJC!sslvtly: Slanq
Sl ang 47 SPOl:t In 1
23 E•plcns .,ah pompous
caution 1111nntr
25 ThO'St who 48 lilakt I 9Mh 1n
111kt tlll"'IMnts 49 A.s a ttw!t
27 Treaty Gtoufi: SO Lady ~
Abbr. 53 Graf VOii -'
28 Portend GMl!ar-2' City ol Htw act•ir1.l
Y1rk Statt 55 KingdOllll ol
33 Rtlatlng ID As ia
tht Cl'itlA S6 Egypt ian
)4 Pulltd Ught Chri stian
)5 Reg11l1tt 57 f tmilr holy
~ T""wd the PtOC!ft : Abbt.
w11 rttlon 'O Mr. ~rshwin
JUDGE PARKER
0 • 0
A•
APPLETON reru rNs ro ~e 1~~
PllYATE AlfsmP, • O •
ME: !=lNOS o ·
j SA.M t>elVER
WA.\TIN6 FOR MIM
,A.({()MPAt.llED BY
PlAINCLOTM ES
POLICE!
-j',A..-:<)J.U /j,7::-7
MISS PEACH
PERKINS
...
,_,
I SMOULD T~INK'. l(()U'O 6tr
l!ORED JU5f 51TIIN6 ON A
1Xl6HOUSE ALL &I'.~ ..
~ MEAtD Tl-IE 6fNTL£-
Mi t.1 l-IE~E. M,. AP'Pt.ETOW'.
TMiV WA.NT TO MAVE A.
TALK WITl-l voa AT
POU C.E MEAt>QUA.~!
ONWE
CON TRAN
TMIS IS OUT·
lA.GEOOS ! VOVR
SUPErtors wtLL
l-IEAR A&OIT
Tl-115!
WHO COULD 6ET l!OREO Fl ~IN6
THE STAR SHI? "ENTERl'R15E ''?
·' ·' .. ,, ••
By Harold Le DoUJC
[)() '¥OU WA.MT WE WOil Lt>
It\~ TO GO APPIECJATE IT
WITM VOii? IF YOO PIO!
~~~' .. . , . -
.. ~;-A.(~ •·1
~~....s.
Charles Barsotti
By Gus Arriola
., .. --.. ·----.... \.-\-f:;ltj'-1.f ~l OIL f Wf/EIJ ...., ~~ :SPILL. WILL
OOPef \IOU . RIP-t!;ARN 70 1
CFF! sAYHJusr, /,
70 HIM?
SOI
FOl2ecT/ :r .
FOR.ecr!
' By Ferd Johnson
-lUST
•H' NUMBl!t PART, DUMMY.
By Roger Bollen
\ll(I.\., ™AT'l.l-
:t 00 ro!': lAE
~T Of' THE. t:,1.r,J?..
0 II
THE GIRLS
•-7
''Nevermindl l'ff decided I don'l Deed aaytll ln& do11:•
DENNIS THE MENACE
. •
Monday
Evening
FEBRUAftY 7
1:00 • llt Htn Jer11 Dunphy
(}} 1111 Muddy llepar1
D AlflC Nm Tom Snrd11
I lfns B1nll, St:hub1tli
(I) WIW Wiid Wtst
lflC Nt'lfl m The FUnblo1111
Q) I Or1111 11 J11nnl1
!11 Nn Pl1Jflo• llqr1pr.t flD Mod1•11Mtt LM11 ttl lfttldtll l4 ft'! Dt11r1 lltport
I MtJIM"J' llFO
n '"' lftws Jim H1wth01n1
l ;lO 8 PltlM Don't [II !ht D1l1it1 IJ Motl1: (C) (90) • ''Tiit LIJt
S.llri" P1rt I (1itv1ntu") '67 -
Stelfjart 611n1e1, Kat Gu1s, G1bri1f·
It Llcudi, Llim Redmond.
([I CIS News W1l1er Crcnkltt lllJ Tho M11111 Factory
I Arrdr liirltttth Show
lf111ny •nd I~• ,roftuor
Pltfinr 1111 liiuitlr
W1nduhnt
I CrNn Ac111
El ,.,.,, S.tittrio ....
7:0D • CIS Nm Walt1r Cronkltt
Cl) AIC EH1tln1 flll'lll's 8 Ill NIC Nm Jahn Cl!ancellor a The ltl"tm111
CII Truth er C.ns.rquenctt
(I) Dra1~•t
O Wh1r1 Mr Une7
@) Achm·l2 m I Lovt Luq ID I Dre1m ti l11nnl1
Bi H1tl!17011 K1tl!leen Hitchcock
aJ ,utnll d1 Amor
~ fil111: (C) "Tiit H1pfltllln1.~
s1errinr Faye Dunaway ind An1hony
Quinn.
~ EK111l1 dt MDdtlot
Ci!) Ma11t11p
. . . . . . . .
new, tamp1ettl~ tutom1!t!I Grind
Pille. ol Clrtus, • unlt111• i nd
tll01ou1hly modlrn c!rtus bulldln1. m AndJ Crltlilh Show m Tht Vlr1i11l111 ttJ {}]) Sptci1I of the W .. k "U s_-._ •
A topical musk:1I bastd on tht John
Dos Passos triloa1 of llO'lels tov1rl n1
1900·1930. Ptler Bon1rz, John DtY·
fdson, Junes f1renl1110, .loi n Hick·
et!. Sh1r!ey Knit ht 1nd M1tl!el1 L11
Jt1r. mu lttcorid•
Q!)Hlno
l:lO m Trulli or Co1t10Qutnc11
9:00 IJ {)) H•rt'I Lllq' Robt rt Cum·
minis 1uuts 11 Bob CAlllln,, 1n un·
principled wolf wllo 11ms lo 1dd
Lucy lo hlt list of eon11ue1h.
fQ m flllC Molld1r Movll : t2hr)
"A 1111• to Lire" (d11m1) '5S-Su·
l•n nt Ples hel11, Ben G1u1r1, Brad·
fo1d Oil!m1n. A debut1nte who en·
1a1ed !n wild escapades before mar·
ri111 be1ins a 1om1nce w1ti an old
be1u who 11turns lo town. D (})(I) Q) AIC Mond1y Movie:
(CJ (90) "let Slllll1n bbr1" ({)ntlu·
slon (dr1m1) '68 -Roell Hudson,
E1n1st Bor1nln1, P111ick McGooh1ri,
Jim Brown. Tony Biii, Lloyd Nola n.
Chlllin1 adventure ol the d1nrerou1
voy11e by 1 U.S. nude1r sub undtr
lh1 Arctic ice c1p .
@}Movie: fC) "A Ytry Spedl l ft·
rt(' (comedy) '65-Rock Hud:.on,
Leslie Ctrnn. m David Fred Show
@El Lt C1l1
CW. The Vlr1ini1n
(ID N1t1cl!1
Ci) Tht Pt/SUldl/S
9:30 0 (i) Doris Day Joh~ Banner
1uests 1s p1tlenliau s butler who
dupes m11aline writer Doris Martin
by maSQueradinr 1s 1he ruler cl
• Medirerr1nean pri11cip1h1y.
O Broken AM"1W
D NtW1Wth:h
ID II T1kts 1 Thitl
(]]) Book hit
10:00 O (IJ Sonny and Cher Miki Con·
7:l0 fJ S~nd Up i nd Chttr Louis Nye nors and J~n Stipleton 11uesl.
1uest1. O Nen Geor1t Putnam
(I) Dr11n1t Q G1mt G1m1
Q Dr. Simon l.otkt "Sep tember" m News Pt1e Miller
Dr. Sellers 1nd 1n old lf1m~. EIJtnl €D L• Crlad1 lltn Cri td•
H!"fllitl. r1sum1 the ir old rom1nc1 a!) El lomiUo
Dr. Simon lock• di1eovtrs that CD Minlr1 p
[lien is sufferln1 from 1 lermln1I
d1se1s1 with cn ly on~ year 10 !ivt. 1D:30 0 CI) Ci) G) 1 IJICiA' I Mt r . J
O Mo'tii: (C) (2hr) ''Thi l o1tnf'I ftldm1n Comuly M1cbi111 A h1!I·
killtr" {weitein) '&4-Dan Duryei hou r 1111v1ew of 1 new tomtdJ·
Rod Cimcron, Audr ey Oilton. • vari ety ~enn, s1arrin1 M1rty r~ld·
man the bu11"•Y•d. sh11111r·h11red @ l• Ttfl lh1 Truth com~dian lrom En11l1nd. Cuesh 111
Cl) I Drt1111 ol Jt1 nnl1 Art Carney. Lonnie Shon (comedi1n),
O Million $ Mftit: (2hr) "Drtnp" !he tomedy team of Skiles 1nd
(dr1m1) '57-JeU Chtndltr, Joann e Henderson and \ht mu1ic1I 1roup
Dru, Juht London. MtlOf, 1ssi1n1d Honey Cone.
to 1ov1rn a 1m1ll G1or11a town hi
~1d r1v11ed durin1 th• Civil W11.
hies 10 do It wi1h 1 htlpin1 hi nd
lnste1d of • 1110.
@! L1r1 M1t1 1 Dltl m Ho11~'1 Kiron
ID Dr1p1t
[jJ In Ult S,Olll(llt
m Citrtr•ltlltr1
@II Do-Re·MI rn Ltull
CiI1) Mi1wtlH1 Y1ldf:r Sho•
Cl) MOY!t C11111
O Candid C.m1r1
(D Netn Hugh Willi1ms
l'.fi} Matltrpif!te Tht1U.
ffi film Od)'UllJ (R) "M''
€D Attrmrnladl
I!{~ Mo'tit: "Hrlluts el 1111 NtW'J'"
11:00 0 (j) @'!) N•••
0 @ £nHeW1
O Robtrt It Doman Show
(i) M1n llal Dillon
O @ r:Bfllns
O Mowit: ~S\11nprs in !ht City"
(dr1m1) '62-l!tlbtrt Genhlt. Carnl· l:OO l)(fl C11 111M1,e llmu St1q dhs in lht li!l1 role of ''Yan~ton," lo Deli&do •
who swt11l venae1nc1 tltinlt 1 m Te Tttl tht lrulh
wul1hy 11rttht r wllo his butt11 m Tonite--lucille Rivers
llim b•dly ii a pok11 11me. * starts you sewin&
O ®I m Wi11tir DIJmpic '••ts ID r1st1ion1 ill Sewin1
OFromBESTFOOOS ... lllD O ~M ,.,,. * The BUDAPEST CIRCUS I ' '1.> '" " '" . FESTIVAL w/Bill Bixby 0 @] m Wi•ltr DIJlllPIC '11111
& Brandon Cruz 0 (})(I)(;! Diet Cmtt
0 (})(I) Ci) 11,ftll• I lill l itbJ
arwl lr1 ndon Cruz 11 Hit l ud1pcst
Cirtvs fesliv1l Tht Budapelt Circus.
m Mowlt: "Ytllow Ctb
(corr.tdy) ·~Red S~tlton,
de H1ven.
....
GIOfll
f!nown~ 1h1ouahoul tll1 wt1rld. wel· 12:00 g Mo'tit: HPeter lbbtbGn'" (dll ·
comtd Bi1by ind Cru1. who ur1td l m•) 'JS--G1ry Cooper, Ann Hardine.
., hosh to 1h• !1ntsl Hun11nan
t11cus perlormtr~. lht t1!1av11anl1 1:00 0 Mo'rit: (C) "M)uien te Gut~·
suved as the cpen in1 1111 tor lht \ (d11m1) '8&-J1m. lr~t1.
--··---. ---
Wa rrtn. "P'rof&UOI .J.," .. {com• Tuesday dJ) '31 -Harold Lloyd.
1 :OI D "'ttm111 JhrthsWt nr c myi·
lrvl1ae Ma1slcal Cot1aedp;
'Amorous Flea' Rich Farce
,
•
•
DAil Y l"llOl 11111 l'P>lllO
By TO~I TITUS 01 !111 01Uw l"lie! ilttt
\\1hen Jtrrv Uevine and
Bruce f\.lontgOmery hit upo11
the Idea of turning Moliere's
"School for Wives" lnlo 8
muslcal eo1nedy they fell
several leagues short o f
creating the modern n1 ira1:lc
which Lerner and Loewe prcr
duced when they lackled
Shaw 's "Pygamallon" -hut
then. they neve r rr111ty nC'<'dcd
lo
"'The Arn orous Flea" t'<'r·
h1inly is no "~1y Fair Lady";
it LS doubtful that yo u'll lt;ive
"Tl'tl' AMOROUI l'llA"
A mu•IC •I tnmeov ov J~"• O•v•n• •"<I fl rute Montt Orn••v. O•••O "" MDI••'•• · ~c""°r lo• w, ... ., .. dl,.<!•d pv I••'" [ l(lmbtr. •ti OfOIO" b• II ~•lon•n
!)ow, D•OOUtllon IH•tl••v onrt •Ot!~<I b• Sh•rvn Co••. llt hllnt bv 8111 r e•n. ~ro•tnti!'d ~v the l•vlnf C~'""'""''-n·~T:i~' ~~ atj~, in~,.,~~~~~,:;• •,:.1~
in 11ln1nsl ;ill respe<.'lS.
illc epitome or lnooccnct
who111 he hois chosen to plAy
M11y to hl s DecC'nlbcr is
:iuperbl_v por!r8ytd hy EJ!rn
Uobu1s1111 , "hu 111atchcs 11
$ll l)('r!nr S ll)"lll),: \"OI~'(' Wllh II
fu lly dlll\l'!l .~!011111
J>erfot'1n11n(t' ~11~.~ lt1 1b1n~•1n
llllow ~ ll$ to t·atrh !ht· <l1•\ 1!1~11
lvi.·lnk!t• hrh1nd thr hl11nl-. ~1ar1-.
turnin~ v.'hit! l'11uh1 \\'t•H hr 11
hlnnrl rule 111h1 :i J.:•'Hl
C.:1no l;a11d1o1 1~ ;1 l111r rh11l•'t
fur the \fl11ni:: lo\1•r lll•rHl'1·
I' h y s I ~-;i!h pn·p11._,,.,,11u;.
t11wrr1111: nt·arh a f,~,1 u\1·1
llov.•, ht· USt"S 111~ 'II' \H lull
1tclv;intng1· 111 !ht·1r (·11111u
hyphl\' o\d1llt!j•t1.1lly, !1 j ...
l\{KJtlll!IJ.: \qll"•' !"11!' ll \\11h·
sw:l\li <irro'·' 1111' ... t.1J.:t'
r.111l1t•rc·~ M·r1anT' ;d\\t.1\'
CURSESf -Gino Gaud io rhapsodies aboul his lady
love una .. varc that Ri ch ard Do,v. \\•ho al so seeks her
hand, is doing a slow burn in a scene fron1 the Ir·
vine Community 'l'heatcr musical '"l'hc Amorous
Flea."
l'l•Vh"ul• en !ht UC l•vln• C•,.,ou•
lh•ouoh Ft'!>. H. Rt11r vo11ono '4/ lll'J.
TH• CilST
Unlike niaoy stai;:r cl1re1·1nr.~
v.•hoJ.e p11n1111·y forte is n1u~lc,
lrv1111> J·: Knnhcr h;:i.~ not
sarr1fu·1·d the thr a1r11-;1! 111c;1l
of thf· ,\tTlpt 111 f;i\·u r 1it a
pre!>entnt1uual appni»ch dur·
ing tl1t' $O!lf.l ;ind daut'c
nurnb<'r.~ Corncdy rl'rn:11ns
p11r<arnu1u1t in thl· lrv1nr• prn·
dut:tlon. wllh cl111r11clerl1.;it1011
on a h1Kh pl;1nr. l\11n h1-r 's
direction reflects 11 n ad·
te nd In up~l:tp.:c llll'lr 111u~\1·1 ~.
11nd tJ1 r pn1r p11rlrll)'l'ri hv
Cttrl.• llu w ,111d [loon \l,1)1·~
1·1·1·t;11111y 1tr1· 110 rx1 ·1•p11u11
r.11s~ l 1!11v ;1$ 1111• n1·1·r·l 11•;111111;
1tulhur1t11r1Hn 1111t! llil' 11111111d.
chcrutnc !lave$ a ~ lwr t·o11
~!Aul foil 1u1U pt•rt•11111;1l bnd
hoy play $plrnd1dl y h1J.:l'll11•r ,
vlrtu11!ly fallin~ ov1•r j )nt
llnother in .~lllp!ltil'k drl1J.:h!
the theAter humm 1ng-.any of rnirable an1ount of un-
its lyrics. But it is morel'n~agination and ingenuity.
Ozzie, Harriet Return
With New Video Series
essence of Moliere than the H.lchard Dow, who 1111~
other if> lo its creator -it 1s direcloriall y led !CT to 11s
resilient enough to survive the prominent 11!ate in the ~1111,
rigors of adaptation with its don5 the greasepaint this 111n1'
orlginai elcmenls inlact. around to enact lhe rentr;1I
The Irvine Co mmun i I y role of Arno lphe, lhr t'IHss1c
Theater, which in a very short dirty old man. !)ow revr!s 111
Bill Ualiavo '$ you lh ~lf'trays
h11n In his role n.~ Arn(llphc '~
rn1npan1on. lhou11h IH)! nr t1111:
~tyle i$ fir!lt rate. l'c!c
(;Rllagher ;ind UH! Eg;1n 1·n1n·
plete tht' casl hy tyirl J.: I he
ltJ05C end!I tngelhrr Al the I
close.
By VERNON SCOTT
HOLLYWOOD <UPI I
"The Ad ventu res of Ozzie and
Harriet" Nelson are far fro m
over despite their departure
from weekly television in 1966.
Ozzie is busy putting
together a pilot film for a new
series which will depict the
couple much as we saw them
last, but without sons Ricky
and David.
"They've rebuilt the sets
just as they were during our
old series," Ozzie said happily.
"The exterior and interiors
will be cxaclly the same. But
the format is altogether d1f·
ferent.
"There comes a time in the
life or every married couple
when the children are in col·
lege and the house is like a
bus PepoL Bul after the kids
move out lhey are left staring
at one another.
''That's where we begin the
new series. Instead of rattling
around a big house alone we
decide to rent out a room to a
collei;:e student.
"We wind up with two
coeds, one white, one black."
lnterris
'Stabbed'
DETROIT I AP) -All
went well on Channel 7's
4:30 movie until, 15 min-
utes into "The New Jn.
terns,·· the young doclors
stepped into an elevator.
The next scene showed
a lurid stabbing, with a
knife plunging into the vic-
1im ;ind gal!ons of blood
gushing out.
The Channel 7 svdtch·
board lit up as vlev.·ers
called If) protest.
Station official~ are try-
ing to find out who plcked
up a piece of film edited
out of "Night of the Liv-
ing Dead" and spliced it
into ''The New lntems."
•
The Nelsons never wandered
into co ntrove rsial a re a s
before. J[ this pilot sell~ at
NBC they will be confronted
by a generation gap plus the
problems inherent in ra cial
differences.
lime has elbowed its way inlo the part takini.: full i·n1n1c
the forefront of local amateu r command. While his Vot,:ilhll n"
playhouses, is offering the will not evoke vision~ of
farclal "rlca" as its maiden Richard Kiley , he t:ilk~ his
musical, and in doing so way succe~sfully l h r o u ~ h ,
sidesteps most of the pit falls stumbling only In his 1!1111.l
awaiting the community grou p number when by rushing h!s
embarking on such a course. lyrics he minimize5 their Im·
Irvine's production is excellent pact. As he did wi th the previoU!I
Ozzie and Harriet show, the
former attorney anti band
leader will direct all the
segm{!nl.t, 'French Connection'
f\>lus1c<1Hv, Kimhrr h:i~ !'•lllH' J
up v.·llh ;in uu1ov:it1un of s1ll'ts
by di!lpcns1nfil with H live ai··
l'On1panlst ln favor of recorded
mu si<.'. whit:h lends a morr
profc~sional back11;round hul
oct'i1sio11111ly drowns oul thr
s0lo1sl 'J'he hii,:h point of the
~h~1w 's S('Ore is undouhtcdl y
1\1 is5 llob1n~on's snlo offering
11f "The Other Side 1)f the
\Vall." Since leaving the air the
Nelsons have traveled around
the country appearing in stock
productions. They slarred in
"The lmpossib!e Years" on
the road and discovered that
retirement was not for them.
Wins Golden Globe There arl' mon1c11 ts when
the performer:o1 bccornc H bit
\1JO enamored of thrir· own
.. The Ad ventures of Ozzle
and Harriet" became a parl of
Americana two decades ago.
It was a radio hit for 10 years
and survived 14 years on
television during whiC'b time
the se r ies appeared
simultaneously on b o l h
mediums for three years.
Listeners and v i ewe rs
virtually watched the Nelson
boys grow up . It may come as
a shock to learn that young
Ricky will soon celebrate his
llOLLYWOOO IAP i-"The
French Connection" was lhe
hig winner in the Golden (;lobe
film awards or the Hollywood
foreign Press Association.
The 2oth Century.Fox movie
about tracking down heroin
smuggler!': scored as best
dramatic motion picture in
Sunday night's presenlallons
before a fil m colony audience.
Gene Hackman was chosen
bcllt dramatic aclor of 1971 for
his performance aii the dogged
Show," and A nn-~l 1 ri.:rt!, style, for many of lhC' corn1c
"Carns\ Knowlcge." sc quen<.'e'.'I lose their punC'h
Eng\i.sh-language I o r C' i g n hcfore lhcy art' cornpicled
F'ilm · "Sunday Bloody Sun -1·here :il s11 11re dellclou~ oc·
day." 1 ·a.~1ons fnr Hd llh 1'0nu·dy.
Best foreign I an g u ;1 I( e ~u~·h as r>ow':o1 frant i1· $t'Hr1·h
f o re i g n f i I m ; · · 1' he for hill lo!ll handkerchief on
Policeman," !'.'lracl. 11pen1ng n l~ht, or hi11 J~1ck
The foreign corresponcnl'.'I Benny take, an ln!llldc joke
also presented awards to ~en .----
Connery. Ch-arles BronROn and
Ali Mac(;raw es the world's
mnst popul11r performers.
l)esl Arna"!. Jr. of "fied Sky
al Morning " 11od ·rwiggy were
named as the most promising
newcomers.
31st birthday. invcstig~tor in the film and , __ _
William Friedkin was named
best director for "The French
Connection."
Jane Fonda wa s named best
"Our sons ha ve fam ilies and
careers of their own now,"
Ozzie said. "I think it woul d
be demeaning to ask them to
come back to a family show.''
Ricky is still m a k i n g dramatic actress, for her role
personal appearances as a as 1 prostitute In "Klute."
singing star. David is involved In the musical-comedy
in motion picture production. division. "Fiddler on the
Ozzie has directed two Roof" was named best motion
episodes or "Adam-12" and a · l d be r iike number of "The D.A." He PLC ure an st per ormance
has devoted several wee ks to awards in the category went Weffll.,, 7 :JO •"1 ':JO
"KOTCH" ., ..
"THE
ODD COUPLE"
I. d. h . hi . 1 1 1 In Topol of "Fiddler on the Met!,.... l11t•ril-& l1iit4-
1n 1ng I e rig g1r s o P ay Roof." and Twiggy of "The i~======-,;,,,'==="~'~lllllllill'I'~~~~~~!"!!!!li!~I the coeds on the new pilot. Boy Friend " 1=
"We interviewed more than Other awards :
70 girls of college age," he s c re e n p l a y · p add y
said. "and we tested a dozen. Chayefsky. "The Hospital."
None of them wore makeup Song: "Life fl What You
and we let them do their hair Make Jt ," from "Kotch."
themselves. We wanl the Supporting players: Ben
series to be real istic, the wa y .Johnson, "The Last Picture
college girls dress and look -1-'~ay "_ -------,~~~~~~:::=:::=,1
he 5240.000 Alpine copec
JlnN·ClAUDE
KILLY
1n
h@NNJX3
t)•M'· ...... ~ lec:rir..u;o.• ..,..... -
I 'r:m /,1•rJ1!1 8''1). A K.'""'.-/ Co-rotny...,.. · ··
rf't·atllni;: 11n f'8rllf'r Irvine
show.
'l'hf" ub!t'Jullou~ Dow 111~0
doullles HS liCt dc•lji:ntr, 1cvr·
in~ 11 !eC'hnlcal N Up with N
r t1nv1•rllble w11 ll w h I e h
n1lnu11i1.cs the 1 ltne atl o!l td I()
f1·1·(]1_1en1 :o:ei<11c !'h<1n11:in~ Tl1r
,,et 111 hr1~t1t 11nd artlsl1rallv
attrl\t•livr, 1 11 r l u d 1 n )I .1
sptclally 1•n•11 trd pro!cC'nu1n1
Ht't•a 1 v.Jurh 11ppeu r11 t11 h.111i.:
hv ii fr11~1!t' thr·1·;u l an1I "Ill
!l1•t "1lti~t.i11<l trw1 mu 1 h
pl1\\h",il l'1•lllur ! 1.
Thi• A1n11rou~ Flett " l~ 11
\,1,1lv 1•11lt·r!;11r11nl>( r \tn111i:
\\hh·l1 'ut·1 ·r ~~lullv hrrnk~ nr\'
~·111111111 tnr thr .1111h1l11n1'
li 11ru· 1!1Ci1 l•·r l'1·rl1•nt111111·r"
l'fllll lf!Uf' V f Id a I ~ illltl
,;-.;i1urd11\' !111 llirr.· 1nOH'
\\ITkrnds 11( 1ht ll !H llHllll \f'.~
11111! l'laytin11.\1• 1111 !hr l ( ·
lr\"1111! earnpu ~.
"THE 1GPl
HOSPITAL"
2•4 .•• 1 .. ''"'" "TH( ,AIT'f " -""""!•'"• oOoJATHrt·r-s TARTS
OVIES l1ry) '.'3 -llmts Sttw•rt.
DAYTIME M m "TM~ lniP• StolJ" (biccr• '~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
9·00 ID "Ollll' K•llJ'll" (1om1nt'I) ''71 phy) '~Sal Minta, Suun Kohner. II · -.lc>tn Cr1wlotd, 01n1 Andrtwt ):fll (j)"lltt Wtlr (drfml) 'SI-Ric.II·
~do _,MWll ___ _ "WHA1 DO
YOU ~J.Y ro
""'"'"'"' •-,.,.,,., .. •-.. M' JIOl
t:lG D .. .., Could llKMr (dflml)I ml Rober. Henry Mo111n. · ·u-or d H ·u nd 0 (C} "TM ll:tl.Unt Debvttrrt." l'l'll 1 m 1 · (comedy) '51--Rei Htrriscn.
lO:OD (J)-Ttrpl Unbnn'" (drtma) '51 4:00 IJ (CJ "TH JIJ'llawhri" !•dW•
-'!ut SIM M, Alci: fllicel. • IWI) '5'-Jett Ch1ndlu. r1u ,.,.
lt:lG II "a.lb If SM Ft,_." (ld·1 "" ~tnl~re) "•7-Dallald Wood$. G!Grit 4:JO (})SI• n 10 AM liltillt
A film by Broce ("Endlas Somner''J &own RatedlGj ........... ,....., ,.,
"THI HILLSTROM CHRONICLE"
Fol>. 2 tflrough Feb. I 6:45 open
Contlnuew Runnl11t Shew SIMday 1:00
• ... wt ..,.,. 1inkit1f l•lf•r ... --_, ,,, • .,.._, w.,.. Jll l••f
•IHNe UI .•
""-mw• •ad more .,,..,. rill•
Cllfrlng (/It w•ter ...
•.• TMOlll HrYllllDAHL
You-..eRAI
An..-V
true ·•~·-.. for ~ wholo fomilyl
ENDS TUESDAY
5outh Cooot l'lftl I
~-....,··-146-2711
.... & ....._, , .... , .. ·-
--~...,... .....
,. ,....,.._ UH •• -OI . ...,,, l~--'f.ii(;f---f-ffillTI'r-+~:!!!;_,..-.j' Nl!IO 1101'
STADIUM 0.1 ,
OIANGf
Aa..W9ffDllie9y'•
"NIVIR A DULL
MOMENT"
CMtl11•11 a..
let .• s... ~ lJ:Jt
New York's
Critic Aw1rd
HELD OVER AGAIN
THE FRENCH
CONNECTION
111-
"""" IU"'l"
2Q.
""-l·f•
.... -~'!!!!~~~~~~:"\
"HAROLD AND MAUDE" CGP I
W~ .... s.t. J:JI
o,.. "LAST SUMMllt" IRI .... '"' JJJ
,,.. ~~-;;;;;;;;;;;';;;;J-_
---CINIUDMI JO
II. • • I I f L' --CtN/DUM/ ?I
' ' • I 1· • 'f• L ---.. S14tl//JM I "' -.. . -
-- -.. SIAD/UM 'J . -· .. . ----.. S1no1uM J .. -· ..• . -
•1'·''''
"alLL,. JAC•"' /Of>/ -"MOMT• WAl.IM"
"'TIN ,,_. C:-""9" t•I -............. , ...... ,.,
""""'"""" ,,._. l•l ..... l uitlflflH"" .........
KOCM stereol03"M
the sounds of the harbor
~'..:::~~~24 hours a day
... ______ .. _ .. "_
re.., .. .,. ",."" ... v-... ,.._,,,,
THl JTllHOfHOf MANllMIMAJ
Al.W4YS NIN fff WOMl.N.
"THE.
TRO IA N
WOMEN"
. [Qf)q. ......... ~·· . '''''""~" "M*lflMflA lllATNTlfll~
''''"Wt•,,. .. ,
W V'tf!!I'
•
•
J • DAILY '!LOT s
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Wives Fight .Back
.-.---SJ:'' __________ _,
,_ Mia, l"I.... 'tC1'1flOU1 IUl lNlll PKTITIO!n lvtHllll N.tMI 1Ti\1"9MINT H""" ITATIM•#T 1,_ ....... Llof __.. ..,, 11111\f ~.,""• 1'118 ...... --.. "9&111 ....--II -NAMKIAl'T IOA T SALIS. lUU MOll'-9 l'fltltO lfl111MI, Ml l'IJIMirUdltl "'~ 01'11 I' 1I11 I ,
,_,.,. cwa.. """"""• .. ..._ "· c • ...,.~ ""'· .... ,...._ ~tl'I ...,,.,.,,. S1ln IM (A
MwiftM L T1M11, ietl '""" (1'(.11, C1lllwnl1 C 1 • " 1 r 1 I I " ft I • idl I ~i....... lffdl. IC1, l' ...... ltloOtt,, 1'1~ Dini I' e I ~ I ,
"rlllt ...,.,._ ii ~ ... M ..... C..llHomLa nt2'.
fl ....... 11. Tlltt 9vll"°"" 11 ·1tt1111 <llllllllCI .. by 1 ~ L. TCIMll Col"•lllM.
Thll "9hmMI WH tti.. ""'* ""' C-• 111-i.i 0, bv'IClll • '-'crtll'l'
t9' Clll't fll Or-~·~ • ,....,...,.,..,. ), T1111 tlll-1 111_, w•lll ~ C°"'nl'f
1f11. Citrk et Or~ C-Y "" J1~1ty l l. alllMAM & KMMt•tlllf9, .Altt', lf1f, •Y ---·~ J, Mfddo.r, 011>1111 (OIJ"• m OITw Dttft, llrlt8 I 1., ..._,
H""PWI llldl. C•. n...
~ltlllld Or11111 C..11 ~
~r., 1, I•. 21. K. 1rn
LEGAL NOTICE
,.,..,,
J'lklt, Pul'ltlllllfd Or1n1• Cotti 01lty Piiot,
lU·n J1111,1•1)' 14, JI, 1"'11 '"''"''' 1. h , i•n ltG·!"I
LEGAL NOTICE
Beef Prices H iglies t Level in 20 Years
•1 JOHN N. GREGORY
Ufl"9t l'rH& 11111,,..llllltl
"Bttf and pork prlct.5, reac·
tln1 le the law of supply and
demand, hovered this week at
er near their highest level in
20 years.
The American housewife ap-
peared to be fighting back by
pa53ing up steaks and chops
and turning instead lo stew
meal and chicken.
from the west. 1 guess the bad
weather is the reaaon."
ftancbu Jim Humphreys,
manager of a 813,000-•cre
spread near Dickens, Tex.,
had part of the answer.
"We had to trim back our
herds for the. first part of 1971
due to the drought," he said.
"It will take four or five
years to build or start back
up."
Finance
Briefs
• sug.rLo•n
NEW YORK -A ll}'ndlc>le
or 22 regional U.S. banks has
made available $39-million of
short-term loans for Mexiro's
sugar industry, a development
C'Onsidered unusual in that it
tapped new sources of funds
consisting primarily of oon1·
mercial banks outside of New
York ~·hich generally are not
associated with partici pation
in such investments. The syn-
dicate was managed by the
French American Banking
Corp. New York, wholly-owned
subsidiary of Banque Nacional
de Paris.
A UPI survey into factor~
affecting meat prices in·
dicated, however, that buyer
resistance may not succeed in
driving prices down substan·
tially before spring. And with
demand for chicken building,
food ttonomists said, poultry
prices may start climbing,
too.
Aa Agriculture Department
food economist in Washington
predicted that beef prices,
which hit th eir highest point in
20 years last week. will hold at
current levels or even increase
in the next few months.
reflected the p e op I e ' s
preference for beef and pork
and their willingness lo pay
for it," an Agriculture Depart-
ment offic1aJ in Houston, Tex.,
said. He added:
The blight hurt the farm
economy in 1970 a n d ,
agriculture observers believe.
many ranchers were
disco uraged nearly 20 months
ago from expanding th~ir
herds for fear that the blight
would become more severe in
1971 and force feed costs.
With blight resistant corn,
IW71 produced a record crop,
but it was too late tor cat-
Uemen to revamp their plans.
e Sc/1001 Aid
WILM ING TON. Del . -The
Du Pont Co. announced a
$2.575,000 program of educa·
tional aid to 149 colleges and
universilies for 1972. Grants
totaling-$1,826,000 were made
to support teaching a n d
research in science a n d
cnglneering in colleges and
universities; $367,500 to ai d
minorit y education; $200.000
awarded primarily in the State
of Delaware to improve secon-
dary school science educa·
tionand $181,500 in
miscellaneous grants for .sup-
port of graduate schools or
business, innovative educa-
tional programs and other
special educational activities.
,.,,..,. LEGAL NOTICE Publllf\lld O•tl'llt Cw1t Otlly PU<>l,,1 -------~~=---·I J11111ttY 24. ll, 111d Flbr111ty 7, i., l'ICTITIOUS IVUN•S I
nn 1'1·1' HAMI STATIMINT
LEGAL NOTICE
Tht lollowlr>1 ""''°"' 1r1 okllnt lM.111 .... 1 11;
II a. G CONSTRUCTION COMl'ANY, HttbOt Gr•tnt Otlk1. 2100 Ptllr1on l'ICffTIOUI IUIOl•h W•'· Co1f1 M111. C1Ulornl1 t1611. NAMI tTATIM•NT Jolln A. Grlm1 t1d, HOO P1t1111.o" Wey, TM tollowlnt .,., ... 11 11 llolllf but.1nc11 C1111 M111, c11uor1111 mu .. 11: Robtrl '· 8t1u~ll1m1 Jr., 1100 llOIU.TltllT P'OR HAii STYLING, l't11r1CW1 W1y, CD1l1 Mttl, C1lllornl1 130 I'. 17111 SI., C111t1 Mt11, C1lllor"l1 tMn. Johll •· MIJrr Jr., P.O. 11»1 734. lONl lkll••d L 8e1ucfl1mp, 1100 PtTfr1on C1U1 llHlllOl'ldOI', S.., Ju111 C1ol1lttno, W1y, C1111 M•11, C1llfo•nl1 t 2611. C1lll0t~l1, Or. ,._,, F l11uc.f\1mP, 2700 Tl'llt ID\ltlll•N 11 '"'"' cPnClllCl"9 II• In P1!tr1on W1y, Cotti MHI, C1llfornl1 ll'llllv~t. '"''· Jllfln I, Mlln Jr. Thia bu1ln1u 11 1111..,. condudld bY 1 Jhlt lttttmtnl llled Wiiii HM C111111IY G•Mtll 1'1rl"ltt~lp. Cltr• Of Ori,,.. COllnlY.,. J111. 21, 1tn c' John A, Grlin1lld
llYllfiY J, Midclo«, 0.,.uly (OUl'llV Cl1rk. 11111 t!•ffmt nl flied WI!~ !hi Co.illlv l'"l"1f Cllrit of Or•"'" Coulltv en J1n111•Y 21, l"ltblllhH ()r111" COlll O•llY l'Uo!, nn, by llYlrlY J. M1doo~. J1nu1ry 14, Jr, 1nd Ftlt!'u1rv 7, I•, 'USM Int llt-n Publl1~rd Or1n1t Cac11 Dilly P!lo1,
They may show a "very
slight downtu rn" by late
spring, he said, and then level
off for the rest of the year.
The high prices resulted
largely from a low supply and
a high demand . The reason for
lhe demand is simple
Americans love their steaks,
chops and roasts.
The declin' in the supply.
the survey indic11ted, stemmed
from a variety of reasons -a
harsh winter in the nation 's
midsection, drought in some
areas, fears of another siege
of corn leaf blight which would
cut feed supplies.
"This ri1e in meat partly
Your Money
"There is a point "'here you
get buyer resistance and I
think that point has arrived."
Don Magdanz of Omaha.
Neb., executive secretary of
the National Li v e s to c k
Feeders Association, said bad
weather in the midlands in
December ;ind J a nu a r Y
disrupted feeding and pro-
cessing.
feedlot manager Tom Sim-
mons of Lubbock, Tex., said
"Normally, we replace cattle
from a 50().mile area -now
we're looking up to 1,500 miles
away and its hard to find the
number we need."
Samuel Kahn. manager of a
processing plant i n Har-
risburg. Pa ., complained:
"They're not shipping beef
Irving Guss, owner of a
meat and livestock company
in Salt Lake City, Utah.
called the current market .. A
nice break for the farmer,
feeder and rancher.''
"'They've been Jong deserv-
ing of good prices," he said.
Rancher Charley Otley of
Oregon said "prices have just
begun to move into line."
"People are making enough
money," he said. "11ousewives
can spend a little more on red
meat."
Housewife Denna Reed of
Houston said she loves steaks
and roasts '"but they're out of
the question -too expensive." ··ru just buy more ham·
burger and eat a lot or meat
loaf and stew," she said.
Inflation
•-------------1J1nu1rv JI, '"" ~1br11•rY 7, i., 1!, lt17 )U ·1? LEGAL NOTICE
l•OAL NOTICI LEGAL NOTICE
P«IT!CE" IS Hl!lllEIY GtVf.r.t 111•1 !ht l'ICTITIOU1 IUllHl11 fllllowlne lltrnl of IOI/"" Ot 1.1vect .,,_,., NAMI ITCTIMINT f\1v1 blln Mid by lht Pollet 0111Mrn1n1 Tfl• to!lowlnt otr1on1 tr• dolnt ti 1111 Clh' of C~l1 Mttt IOI" I PllflOCI Ill butl"IU 11: ·~Clll of nlM!y !tOJ dlYI: GAEPACO. 1Jl't! !tYlnt 8aulfv1rd. l'our bfUI ll!kH, on• ~l1d bike. ont Tvtlln, C1lilotnl1. Plltelt blkt. -whll1 blk1, -l<tt n Phlll• '· (II•. 11111 Sllv•t MtP!~
Organic Foods Boorri
Makes Big 'Racket'
Aid Sought
By Papers
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Neil bl.kt, -111r11. W1w. S1n11 An1, (1Utornl1. NOTICE U "l'URTHE~ GIVEN 11111 II JOl\n II. l'lnnl1, J:M Mon!f Vl1t1
PIO °"'"'' IPPtCr1 •"4 "'°"" 1111 Avenue, Cool• Meta, C1lllor~l1. -•hip Df !I'll .,...,.,., wlllll11 .. ..,.., lll•nc>• M. Cronin, Uot C•ndl~-111 dl~f IO!lowlnt Ille M lklllon of 11111 11 .... t, AN1f\1lm, C1Mk>rnl1. NOl'k1, """ 111 .. ll!lr.tl 111111 ""' In IM Thi• i.u.-..u h 1111"1 COl'ld11Cl"9 by • llflCllll'", II tlttr1 iM -00' Ill tl'll (11'\1' cf Glrttr .. P1r1nttlh•O. Cotti Miii, 111 '#IMCll UM 1111 Pt-riv fhl1 1!ol""'"' tllld wlttl ffl• Coltnh' ll'lt!I N IOld 1t ..,bile •11dloll 11 I llmt Clerk .i Orll'fM Cwnt'r Ol'I J111111r/ ~. e1111 d1le I• bl 1nnouncM. 1t17,"' 9-ly J, M"6o~, D.vty oun· OATl!O; l<tbrv1rv 1, ltn IY Cl ... ~ •. IE. NETH CHll!' OF l'OLICl '11bll111ect Or1n11 COlff 0111,
''"""''"' 1, 1•11
LEGAL NOTICE
""" P11lllls.llld Or1n11 Co11t OlllY l'llol, Piiot, J1...,1ry J1, and Flllrutrv 1, 14. JI.
712-n 1tn iu."
LEGAL NOTICE
MOTIC• TO c••OtTOlll tu••••o• CCMUlT OP' Ttt• au~•••o• COU llT OP' TH• STATI OP' CALIP'O•HIA P'Oll STAT• OP' CALIP'OlltNIA P'O• THI COUNTY OP' OllANGll THI COllHTY OP' Oii.i.NOi ,_, A-11 .. 1
JM, A•JIMI NOTtCI OP' HIAlltlNO OP' l'ITITIO N 1!1111• of Graci 0. Tr•v•r1 O.c:H11d. 1'01 l'•OIATI 01' WILL AHO 1'01 NO TI CI: IS HE•!IY GIVE N lo lh1 L•ttl•S TllTAMINTA•Y CIOHO
~ldltwl Ill ttlt' Daw-11.,.,.., M(ld111I W,f,IYIOI
111.t 1M .. r-1 h1vl111 t111rM 111h11t tM E111t1 ol ERNEST l'AIGE, Oec1111d.
.. ,~ dKedtnl 1r1 t11«1lrld .. lilt lh..n, NOTICE 15 HEIE"IY G!Vl!N T~1t wllll tt11•M(1111ry voucl'l9ra. 111 -orr:c1 $11911• l'okr11 h1• Ul1d n.r1ln • P1l1llon
Ill h tllrl! Ill lllf •bow .,,lltltd <OUr1, .,. IOI" otOCl•lt of will 11\d fot lnu•ni;t ~ to -~t lfltm, wl!PI ltlt 111<11sfry L1tt1r1 T11t1m1n11ty to '•lltlontr (80'>d vlll,ICl!tf't. lo ffl• undlrtl.,.... tt ffl• 0111<1 Waived). •!'fer1nc1 lo whlci'I It m1dt to•
11 hit Ano........ $<illm s, ,,.,.1111, "'" fln'lll•r P•rtkul1r1, '"" 11>11 1111 llm• 1nd 1!111 Ult'I Slrttl, Coll• Mew, CalHomJ1 Jl lCt el ht1rlne tlle t•mt "'' llwll ul
tH11', whkfl ll IN JI.it• l'I bu11N11 ef ,_ Fltir\llrY U. lt7,, 1f t :XI 1.m., Ill ll'lt '"" u'*'1l1ll4'CI In .~ metttr. -1llnln1 courtroom of Ono1rlmM1I No. J er 11fd ,. fhl 1et1t. a' ,.141 dtc9i119111, wlltlln four courl, II 1l:IO Civic Ctnll'f' Drlv• W•tt, In "'°"tt. 1rtlof' 11'11 flr• .... lullotl ol thlt lfl9 Cl,., of S..111• A111, C1Hlor11l1.
By SYLVIA PORTER
A few weeks ago. a
volunteer shopper for New
York's Dept. cf Consumer Af-
fairs found these gaps between
pr ices of regular goods and
their "organically produced"
counterparts:
• ,,_
Aoplt !uk• 11,
Gra1>1 h1lc• '11 · P''""' bullt• lb. Hon•Y lb.
Ettl 1101. Otll'd pr11m!I lb.
CIOtr vlnH~r •I. Wh .. I br••d lb. !Olf
""· or ... 1!< 'f'trlll'\I' v1rl tlY
t .J1 S .IO
.11 .IO
·" 1.llS ,,l 90
·'l 1 .1 s
·" 1 00 .Jl 1.00
.4 ·''
The same shopper found
these gaps between prices of
regular vitamins and their
''natural" counterparts ·
'"· \111•"'1" w1rl1ty
C 500 Ml . 100 ltlu.. SI.II
11<_1 .. 100 ttb1. 1 n
IE \Oii 1.U. 100 CIPI J.SS M11llfvlt1mJ,.. 100 ltbt. l.~
N1t11rtl 'f'ttl11V
~~ ....
'~ rn
lllflc•. O•fld J1n111ry ''· "" ··o · 1· · " t 0111d Jl l'Ull'V 21. ,,,,_ w. E. SI JO+tH rgaruc 1v1og a
Olw\11 I!. Tr•""' IE•k\ltor Ce.illtf Cit•• markups ranging lo 30, 40,
of nw win"'"'-,.....,, L•Y•N AHO l'011C11t1is even SO percent ~ -has taken _.,. dlCIWnl ._ CINtl A-
11Nl'll s. ,.,...u... Lwi• 1 .. e11. c .. 11trt1I• off in the past two years. By
41t ••st 1m Slf'Ml, t.i: 1'ul ct•·1"' one estimate, our purchases in Cttlt Mftl, C91ftwllil "'11 Alhnwt"1 fir P1111'-t T•I: 1rMl ~ Putiu111"' D••Mt c1111 01nv P11ot. organic food stores alone now
.r.111r111r "' ••_..,. "•brvtr., ,, '· '· 1911 '71-n Iola! 1•~ m1·111·on a year ,~b-11*'°"4 0rlf'IN (11•1 01\IY l'llotl--------~---
J ...... ,,. )1 111C1 ,..~..., '· '"'· 11, LEGAL NOTICE wholesale value. quadruple un 15
"'"" ---~==ccco-c=--J970's tot al. With vitamins and SUl'lllO• cov•T 01' TH( LEGAL NOTICE tTAtr ol'" CALll'"ORHtA '0 111 other "natural " food producls
TN• COUHTV 0' OIAHOI included. the volume is much, l'"ICTITIOUI •Ul!NllS NI. A·111H NAMI ITAT•M•NT NOTICI 0' HlAll lNO OP 'ITITIQtj much larger.
Tiit loll-I"' -IOn 11 dol .... bl.t1I-• P'OI PllOBATtr 01' WILL Ar.to '0" .. The organic foods lisl is no It LI TTlfll Tl1TAMIHTlll•"r "· L. LAWIENCl ENTIEll.l'RISf!. 'Ellt!• ol WILLIAM ll,lY COllll. longer limited lo wheat germ,
ol..IGI ~ • .u.o.. Or. "'-' 11..cn ...... II.now,. II WILLIAM R COBll. •110 Tiger's Milk and bl.!lckstrap Cl lll. k-.. 11 W. II, COii, 1i.o ."O,.n 11 111<.h•"' '-" Lt•r1nC•. uo1 st11~1• 111. w. coaa. dl<"MMd. molasses. It no"' lncludes
Dr .. Ntw,...rl ••tell. C1lll, NOTICf: IS HEll.IEB"r GIVEN lha! fresh fruits and vegetables, Thll ""'"""' Is Mint <lftdu(ffd llY 111 Oltl1 Cobll '"" Rldllrd C1rvel Simi ~1•r 1~1. tu..i n1...in • o"'lfle11 for 1rao.r. of w111 seaweed, organic bakery pro-ll. L L-WM:• llMll tor htutnc• ef L"11,,..1 T11r1m•nl•r"f' d ls h b l d ff T111t •••""""" 111..i with ttw C0<,i111\' "' l"lt111on«1. tlfwtnct ta wn1c:n 11 m•d• uc , er eas an co ees,
C•.tll. " ~ c-rv .,. l'.tt. 1. lfrJ. floe' l\lrthlr Nrtlail1rl. '"" t111r "'"' 1Jm1 spaghetti and macaroni, mill·
•• kltr J, ...... ..,,, 0.....11 CO\>flty 1IMll •M>ee OI' Marin• "" ••mt 11'' bffn ed graim and whole grains of Ci.rt. 111 w "*"'"' u. nn, '' •:» 1.m, In l'"luat tht c~ of Dllotrtmtnt r.r1. J al many types, seeds, o i 1 s , 1111111""" 0r1,.... C<111ot 0111y 111oi, MW ~. 11 1'111 Civic C.,,I., Orlv1 I bull d · 11 l'Hl'N"' 1. 14 21, l8. lt7l -.n Wltll, In lflfl Clh' ot S1nt1 Ant. C11tton1l1 pcanu er an ) e y ,
yogurt makers, organic seecls
for planting. Among the newer
customers are colleges,
universities, co m mu n es ,
re I i g i o us organizations,
bakeries.
•supenn11rkcts are selling
up special sections for organic
foods. Newspapers are prin·
ting organic food columns.
Some schools and colleges are
offering courses on ''organic
living ."
Countless thousands of you
are now regularly gulping the
vi!amins and foods. Organic
gardening clubs are multiply-
ing and Organic Gardening
n1agazine. publ is hed in Em·
maus. Pa ., has more than
700.000 subscribers a
number wh ich certainly brings
this once far-0ut publication
into the big leagues.
•rhe Iowa-based National
Farmers 0 r g a n I :r: a t i on
reccnlly announced it is set·
ting up a special marketing
prog ram for o r g a n i ca 11 y
grown foocls -starting "'i !h
grains -with strict controls
l)n ronditions under which
these food s may be produced.
H. Jacoby, public member of
the Federal Pay Board. called
on the newspaper industry to
freate a climate of public
opinion that would help curb
Inflation.
' "The news med ia can help
to deflate inflationary ex·
pectations by informing the
public of the evHs of inflation,
of the stabilizing action taken
by government. and of the
success being achieved by the
stabilization pr o g r a m , ' '
Jacoby sald.
"They can help engender the
noninflationary climate of
public opinion and action
favorable to stabilization."
Speaking at a luncheon of
the Western News pa p e r
Industrial Relations Bureau,
Jacoby said, '"Wage restraint
i.s difficult to attain because
special interests, including
trade unions and business cor·
porations. are highly organiz·
ed and politically powerful ."
The bureau is meeting here
in conjunction with the annual
convention of the California
Newspaper P u bl i sh er s
Association.
Jacoby said that .sometimes
the business and u n io n
members of lhe Pay Board
ally to approve inflationary
pay increases because of a
fear of a costly strike.
Jacoby, who also is a pro-
fessor of business a n d
econo mi c poltcy at UCLA, said
he did see some encouraging
signs for stabilization.
e Disne11 World
ORLANDO. Fla. -Buena
Vista Land Co .• a Wall Disney
Productions subsidiary, plans
to develop, on a condominium
basis. a 4,000-acre community
of homes, a commercial
ce nter and an industrial park
on part of 27,500 acres owned
by Walt Disney World . A 1,500-
room motor inn plaza, to cost
$35 million, will have motels
o perated by Howard
Johnson's. Travelodge, Dutch
Inns of America and-Royal
Inns of America. No overall in·
vestment figures were an-
nounced.
e Truck Sales
LAS VEGAS -Ford Motor
Co. expects td' sell 50,000 of its
small Japanese-built courier
truck.s in the United States
this year, vice-president M.S.
McLoughlin said last week.
The truck is made by Tolcyo
Kogyo Co. in Japan.
e TV Fishin'
NEW YORK -RCA C-Orp.
said it is testing an un-
derwater television system for
finding fish in commercial
quantities. Ocean fish give off
a dim glow as they swim
through plant life in the water.
To take advanta~e of this.
RCA and the U.S. National
J\1arine Fisheries Ser v ice
wave used a supersensitive+
camer11 similar lo the: Apollo
moon cameras lo find schools
cf anchovies and ol~r fish off
the California coast and in the
Gulf of Mexico.
e Building Vp
NEW YORK -Construction
expenditures in the United
Stales should continue their
upward trend through 1972 to
'12{1.4 billion, or an increase of
9.5 percent, following a 16.7
percent gai n in 1971 , according
to Johns-Manvi ll e Corp. A J·M
industry o u t I co k indicated
gains for both the private and
public sectors of the industry,
and noted that "increased cos·
ts will continue lo account for
a significant segment cf the
gains."
e OU Yield
0tttc1 J_,., l•. un. brukfast cereals. m e a t s ,
LEGAL Nonci: ~'iY ~i.~~" snacb of a dizzying range.
l'Kl'ITK>US IUSIHlll JAMii L •u••L. J•. 'Organic food stores from ...,..,_,, I !UM.I 1t.t.t•M•NT ..._. .,_,., caN..,... ""' coast tc coast a so are selling """ "°1'°"""'9 .,..,. " dolnl Ml,... T•1 fno 11M111 oroanlc food cook books and 1•: ............ hltl--D AGr: 01' TMI GAJtOENl!R. m w, ~ 0r.,... C-r Dally Pllol, g a rd e n i n' g u id e s. ·~ ,..,:.-:.~ w"' .._.,, .,..,_,., 1." '· itn ''s.71 biodegrad1bl~ soaps a n d
~The volume of one of the
nation's biggest organic food
v.•ho!f'salC'rs. Erewhon Trading
Co. in Boston -which has
farm..'l v:ith roughly 25,000
acres under contract and tight
quality controls to produce
seeds. grains, fruits and other
food s -has soared 10 times in
the past two years alone. Th is
volume increase. moreover,
has been achieved despite
price decl ines almost across
the board. Erewhon 's product
list no~· includes ISO items and
new ones are being added
each month.
Theoretically at least. there
could be an organic equivalent
of virtually every food product
you now find on supermarket
shelvu. ~:,"..=. -:•ii:.i.. tonM• t¥ .,,., ___ ~LEGAL~;;::;..NOTl-i;'.';.C~E,.___ cleanJne compounds, home
1.....iw.l. r lfOTQ OP Ml.I o' ljiOii0ii0iii;;;Oii0iiimioiOiiOii0ii;o;o;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i M9lw'llM ,.,,.,,..Htll tte.AL NOl'•llTY AT PUii.iC SALi II TN1 .,..,..,,, 111M w11ti ""' c-"' , -. a "'11 <..,., _. °'""" C:..W., M:i !' ... Jo 1'1t, .._..,,. Clfllft _. h itth l'I C1lltornl1 a, Wtll J. ........... DIHIY c__,., fllr 11M C~ _. Or..,..._
Cllrtt. lfl ... .....,_ f/11""' 1! .. 1tt of llllch1•d IMMEDIATE DELIVERY!
"During the first two weeks
of January, the m e di a n
negotiated wage increase was
24 cents per hour, er about S.2
percent," he SB id. "During the
same period last year it was
29.S cents per hour or about
7.5 percent."
"This is hard evidence," he
said. "that Utt rate of wage
Inflation may finally be slow-
ing."
" .•. the Pay Boa.rd will SUC·.
ceed in its mission cf aJowing
wage and pMce inflation only
if the public becomes more in-
volved and articulate in its dt-o
mand for a noninflationary
wage policy," be said •
DALLAS -McMoran Ex-
ploration Co. sakt it!: ex-
ploratory weU in the Ran.!Om
field 15 miles north of Corpus
Christi. Te:r., has yielded
significant amounts cf gas and
oil condens1te from foar
hitherto uotapped sands at
depths ol 10.313 to 10,392 feet.
McMoran hu a 50 percen
gross intereet ln the well:
P 1-M, Slftltfl. ~
PllMI.... Or-c-t Delly ""-'• Nlfb " ........ .,_.,, ltlilt tl'lt vn-l'llW!wy J, U, JI, a. 1..-! al-11 ........... wtl! wtt If f'llblk ..... 11 1:00 ,. .... "" ...,. ..,, ., , "*"'""· 1tn. ,, LEGAL NOTlCZ ..nc. et •1111ot11 e:1fttf9lll. JJQ 1!. ._.., ....._ ............ CM. tom.
':l:.-=..::::.~ =-.-.. ~-:::,,~1:....:,
~ ......... --.............. ~~ .. "' ':!'';;.~"' " ..... ~
Ill-__, .., .... , ... -.. ... "' uM .......... "" """' •• ,._ ....._ ' .. ,._.,, .... _. tiR .. ,_ tlttt IM lfltwetl -ca-·~ lAiJ u..a. .. ~ .......... "' .......... "'" II<•
Dr • ........, ....,. QI. ::-.::. ':":"" ..:: .. -ltlllt~-=-.. .:.~.~ii..,. • •--.., ., • ...._ • ..,..., lfl 11'11111 to a.. l. ..._... .... """"' .... .,.._., ..... lft ""' Tllil ale..... ... ._. .. c;....., dlt" fll lA .....,._ C_.., • ar.._ St1N
o.t•Or-C.....11'! ..... l..ttn. ~ ~ ............
l'r ..., "" ....... --a.r¥ ""':Qi ~,.,.;,... DrM. LI ....,... c..111.
a.k. ,_ lAt 1J "' Tncl us. .. .. -~ °'-c.-.;..,.""" --............. , ..
,.. _, a. M. JI. .. "" ....,. =-·fl':.... .... ew:,. .. """" ..... "' ... --.................. ., LIGAL JrlOQl:a • ~ ...._ .. ~"'"""'., ..., .--,;!ii';;;ii!u~i!!iiii---1· ~ ~ ......... ~ "' "'''' 110 .,.. __., _. _,.....,.. r,. a... ~sn~ ... ......w ...... .,.~., ,..~ __ .................................. .... •: ~ .............. ...,.. ........ ..
.......... " .... Ot..cf ""'"'"" ... ,....,..,. ... ...,..,.... ...... , .,..,
'"' Md!, ......., ...... QA ..... ·-.. ""' IUIMk.ln.i 1111'1111 .... ... ...... ......... . --&. .,..,, .......... ...,, er..... ........ tm.
PANTERA
by deTomuo •.. imported for Uncoln-Mercury. JtaUu
roa.cbwork crMted by tbt' brilliant Ghia Studi01 or Turin.
Ford desiined the 351 cm -4V v.a enaine. Four wheel t....
dtptMnt susptm.loa and mtd-ahfp enaiDt ~enL~ rt..
•peed ..., bow. ~ ~nlzed ••• ,
.. Pulera ••• Italian tor Plnlher •••
Woman Gets
Phone Post
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI )
Dr. Robtr1o f'. f'tllkm. ..
.....-"' the CoUfomla Modica! ~ hat
booome the·..nra --elected to the bomf or dJl9I>
!ors of the Paclflo -Ttlepllooe
I< Telqraph Co.
e l'lr'e lie•ses
'NEW YORK -Fin ·-.
in the United Star. decllned
over the full ,_r irn, cveo'
though -. _. up 17
tt.nt in Drectmllw, t h e
1-ance Sonic.a Ollie•
.._ud. ._ r.r llil•)'OOr
,..,. '8.JIS blllloo.
e Gu ·SUe
SA(( 1'RANCl800 -L!qald AS', ~ SIDS hl;.s.1 I&
lndmtrtaJ Air P r o d • ~ It -ilrJ wm, ·lilild a fl
-plaM .. llil Tacoma area to-• ~.-.,,,. ... .m ... chioen witldn 10 days,
• llfHel llfttlU
•
·Mo Listens
To Landers?
. ·-----.•.
' ' -·.
!
SINCE
SHE'S
ONE
OF
THE
TEN
MOST
INFLUENTIAL
WOMEN
IN
AMERICA • • •
• • • Just
Everyone
•
You C.n 'Umn'
• -·~
~ -. i: .,. .. ....
' f
.. :· ~ ~ " •'
...
"
..
. ·. ·. '.· ..
..
F, , ...
·~ .. ·-: -:.·:
., .,
:-.
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" ... . ,•
•
,._..,, ...... Cl#..... AMI ... Sm/Ill. ..,. ............. """' Cl .. ""' W llfl ... .,, ...... ii "' .. l~tt .... ~'I I' ~IOwf'll K. a.Niii. Dk"f ...... '-"'" ..............
"Dr. Fenlon not only Is 1
dlsti11111lsbed physician," said
PT&T President Jerome W.
Hull, "she brings to PaciflC
Telephone a wealth or slUJI
Ind uperi<OC< · fl ID lcl-
mlnJstnlor Ind educator."
CHICAGO -7.en1t11 Rldlo
Corp. '""' decided to nicall IS,!llO 1111itl ol U.... ..... cl
Daily in liia DAILY PILOT TNI D1111 ..-.. c...n .. 111 • ...., -....
0.-fl Grelll'c:..r.tr •n-.,... a. ltft.. "-~ C.. -•• f....-.·-..~ ......... ,,, .......
c.-.. " ...... " ... -.... .... -~.:~ .. er=.,.., =,!,~i~c.ttl D.lt =il!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1
'
Dr. r.loo 11 oo ibo llleodlmor
t!aff cl Clilldron'1 lloolilta~ ol
wbldl' lbe 111 lonner dlndor
and m d!lel cl atalf.
IJ.inch bl1et and w b II e
l•i..tslon n<oMn to ""-t
)>OS.11ble -hwrcb. ,,,.
-1tt CIJ15. CIMO lad ntll.
J '.,
-'· . ~· ... {
1
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I:
~l .. .. ;.
~= :· ·'.
..
. ;:
. ::
--.~
..
. . ·
• : . . . ... ·.· ~~~
. . . .
.... ....,
Buy The DAILY PILOT For Peanuts!
H1re'1 here'•. here'•
lut bllt not l•••t.
her.'•
CHARLIE BROWN,,, and LUCY ••• and LINUS ••• and
here's
SCHROEDER,., and SNOOPY
Phone 642-4321 (Clreulatlon Department) to have the
whole Peanuts gang eome and visit y ou dally.
•
I
I "
\
,
I
I·
'
?0 DAIL V PILOT Mond11y, F'tbruary 7, }q72
LEGAL NarICE LEGAL NOTICE
,ICT/TIOUS •UllllllSI
NAMI ITATIMl .. T "J.EGAL NOTICE
TM followlnt per""" It doln1 butl""'"--------------1 11: r
COMP'OllTl!!S UHllMITEO COM· folOTICI Of> 'flU.ISTl:l'S IALI
l"AHY. 2W S. 6r1rod SI., S•nl1 A111, No. 1'2144 '°' C11Jlor11l1. Or! f~ U. 1'12,. It 1:Cll o'C ~
Roll Ulllt111r, 1m 11t11111nc1 !toad, l".M... 11 !ht Nortfl Front 1n1r111U to II'><!
N-POrl hldl, C1Utorf111, Ori n• CounfV' Cour1 Hou... 100 Cl,,1c
Tllll M INll 11 tMIN c.Gflducted bv 111 Crnl« Orlv1 Wnf, fotrm·rl'I' WHI 1111
lndhltdu1I. Slrfft, 111 rlM (lty ol htlt1 An1.
Rll!I Ult11"1r LAWYERS TITll tiUAllANTY COM·
Tri/a 1111tmen1 fllH wllh 1111 Counlv PAN'I', I C1tltor1111 f.ol'POtlllon, U !~1 c11~ of Or1nee Countv "" Ju1u1rv 21. orl'Hnt Trllltw ulldef Ille DHc1 o1 TN1t
1972 Irr .. v ... lv J M41d0o• Oeoulv Covn· rMde bV Hll90 U., F«ria*'91~ln1. I ty Clerk. · ' 1!ntl1 min Ind flCOl'Hd Aprll f, lffl In
f'1S4JO llc:O:. 1J61!. PIH $.CS Of Of!IClll lttoconll ol
l"11blllolled Or1n1N c~s• 01llv PllO!, Or•llH County, .Ctlllornl•, 1!v91\l.1o -""'"''
J 1nu1ry 24, JI, tnd F•b•uar1 7. 14, In lnd.01..:1,...f In ltvor ol Gltlld1l1
1'72 1n..n F.otr•I .S..vlnt• a l.Nn A110d1tklll, •
Unlltd St11t1 cor,.,,.11Jon. b'I' r11W111 of
tri• breach of mrl1ln obll1111on1 ~red LEGAL N011CE 1n1retw, nollce of wllldl w11 r~dtded . -------------1 OCloHI' 15, 1'71, In &ODii Ma, Pttl ... , cl u!d Offlclel Record., Orl1'191 County, wlll
NOTIC• OP Tllt:USTl!R'S SAL• Mii ti Ptibll< 1uctlOll to the hltht.11 bidder
Latn N1. l""n t fol' c1t11 p1y1bl9 In lawful mOMv of rr.t.
T.1. N•. 71-121• United Stein of Amfflce .t the llmt of 0 S l Sffl:VICE COMPANY 81 duly IP-w!f, w1fll0Uf covenant O!' werrent1 e•·
"°'nted TrutlH ulldtl' ltl• lollowlnt PrnMd Ill' JmpUed, •• to tllle, PMll•1lon
dn<;rlbld deed ot tru1I WILL SELL AT « inc.umbl'""'"-Ille lnttrtsl conv.Ved lo
P UILIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST ind ,_ hflcJ 11'1 Mid Tru1"11 uncler u h:I
llOOfllt: FOii: CASH l1>1Y1blt et llmt of Died Oil fn19t, In Ind to t1t9 followln11
Ml• 111 lawful monn of Ille United s111e1) dlKMbtd pr-rtY. 9-11:
1 11 rl .... 1, !Ille tnd lnf'tr11t CO!lYIVed lo Clt'f of COii.> MIN, Gou11ty of 0rtl'tff,
end -held by 11 under U ld OMd of Lot I.ft 111d 1 1/J)41h undlvldtod l11~rel!
Trust Ill !tit pr-rty l'llftl111ll1r In com....on In end lo Loi I of Tr•cl
dtKrlbtd: !UCI, •• per m•P recorded In ltook 111. TRUSTOll:: 1(1nnelll I!!. lr1bllr "'Id pa,.1 40, 41 end c ot MloaU1n1Wt
Jene W. lr•bltr, hu1b1nd t lld w!ft M811S, In the ottk1 or 1111 Coun1v
IENEFICIAll:Y: Certl!led Morlt... RKordtr of .,Id Orelllll Coun1v.
CO., Inc.., e COl'POl"lllon. TOGETHER W 1 TH ,_..,.-clu1lve
lllKOl'Otd Dclober lO. 1'10 11 ln1tr. No. n Mment1 111d llO!Hl!clu1lv1 rlthll ol
1fn7 1,. book ,~, Pete Jl7 of Offlcl•I W"IY OYlr, uncle!' end uoon Loi l lor
•tcord1 lt1 1111 olflct of !ht ll:Kordlr ot neQIHrY °' clftlr1bl1 11111r1u 1nd
Or111111 County; wld deed ol tru11 .,,eu. 1elevl11oft ceble1, pain, wires
dncrlb1n 11\1 flllll7lll'lnt1 111_,fJ': end COl!dulll tor tlKlrlcl!l'", ltl1pllane1
Lot 5 of Tr1<t 4565 In !hi cltv ol end ol't!er 1111,"°"' •rid. tceou1Tement1
C•t• MeM. count1 al Or1nt1, 11811 ol fhtf'llO, .-wero, dreln., -•r, 111 end
C1Ulornl1, 11 per m1p rKOrdtd lfl ilffm pl"'' 1rd ..:cou!Ttmlfflb lhtrelo,
Sook 16J, -U el\d 1~ mloalt111tOU1 and fOI' lllCh roof ov1rlltnl1 11\d o!hlr
m1PS fn !tie otllct al 11!1 county encrotduri1nll of 1 Ukt or dl11lmU1r
fKO!'dlr ot .,Id COi.iniy kll\d; tnd 1111m1nll on lldLec1nt Lof1
11M Peulerlno A~trtut. Cotta Mna, of wrc1 Trtcl 5160 for l'Oof OY1rh1n11
C1lllor11!1 Ill I 1lrHf .cidrn1 « COl'l"I• 11\d Olhtr tt1Cr010\m1nlt. of • Ilk• or
mon dnltnatlon It atiown above, no dlulmller k!ncl.
werr111tv 11 t1Ytn ••to 111 compl11111t11 Also know11 et: 157 L•xlnt t°"' Line.
or corrtclnt••). co.11 Meu, Cell!. Ut1ftltilf9.
Tl'll btnt1lldlr)" Undtr ••Id OHd of lor !ht PUrPON "" 1>1'1'1111 otill11tlon1 Tr1.t11, by re1&on of 1 bretch or ci.f.tult 111 ttcUrl'cl bv 111cl Off!! of Tru11 111Cludln1
fmo obtl1etl°"'1 NCurld f.I! I l'I b V '"'' cht rt11 and ll<P'nlll ol !ht Tru1t1e, heretolort IJltcuted I nd cleH.....-td IG ""' lldvim:ei, H any, ullller !ht 1trm1 ol 181d
1111c1tr1l1111(1 I wrltttn 0Kltr1!lon of Otld of Trust. Intern! lht•11<1t1 arid
Deltull 1~111d lor Seit. Ind written 115,509.• In 11npalcl or!nd1>1! or !h• note
110llC1 Of ~ t nd of l lKllon lo CIUll wcurld by Mid Off<! of Trull with In·
"tM urd1rslt Md to HU 111<:1 orOPerlY lo tertil !hereon frcwri JulY 1!, 191\, •• 1 ..
N lt11V w ld Dbll1etl°"'1• I nd ttl1r11rt1r lht uild nott tlld b"f l1w provhSMI.
1.tllder1l1nld c ... Hd w ld notlc• of breech Oitld: J811u••Y ti, ltn.
end ot 1l1<llorl lo bt ll:tclN'dld OCtaber '1. IJ.WYEJl5 TITLE'
1971 81 ln1fr. No. '1to0 In boGk !'&S7 Pt9'1 GUARANTY COMPANY, "1, of u ld OOklel RICOl'd1. Trust"
Se id u l1 wlll bt me<11. but without av s. ,..., Blulh, Pr1s1111nr ~tnl OI' wtrrent'f, IKPl'9" OI' !mplfed, A.IT••' SYIYI• a. Ha111n
re91rdln1 lltl1, -1111lon, or In· Aul. $1Cl'1t1rv c.urntN"ITICft. lo l>l"f !l>t rlffl'ltlnln1 ~rln· 00'7
CIPll IUIT'I of !hi not1CI) lt<Ufld lw Mid Pvblllhld Or.Intl COff1 OaUy Piiot.
Otld of ,Tr1111. wlti lnl1rnt •• ln 111<11 J e1>U•rv 24. 31 i ncl F1br111rv 1, un lll-11
Niii Ol'O'ikled, edY . ..,clS 11 8tl'f, llndlr "'-1 ;::;:;:;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=======,1 term• of ukl Dttd iJI. Tryat, 1111, dltrlftl,
end npt11111 of llM T""'ee end Of !ht
tr111h Q'Ht.i by ui. Ollllf ot Trv1t. , S41ct 1111 will be ,_1111 °" .WedMMJ81, .. .,,,.,..,. 2), 1'12 .11 lf:DGl .(.M,. ti ""
5oulll ffrontl 1ntrt11CI lo the I-Id county
courlhOU11. 20ll lloo:.k Wt1t '-n!• An1
8oulll'tlard, 51n11 Ane. Ctutonit..
LOCAL
EDl'CORIALS
0111: J 11>U1rv ''· 1,n, D S L 5EltVICl
COMPANY I II I.lid Tru1IH.
IV T. 0. SEll:VICE COMPANY)·
.l.t1nt
By J1me1 A. l1ck1trom, VI~ Pr11ldtn! .. ,.
~ublltlwld Orl'IVI Cot•f 01llv Pllol.
~'The ti'AIL Y PILOT ' " Quite Often
Fights City Holl
J1nU1rV 11 9flCf F1btU1fY 7, U, 1972 ,,.n -
•
We know you're tired of
jumping up and doing the
....
DASH-AND-DIAL
every half hour just
because your newspaper
doesn't list all the TV
channels you can receive
The DAILY PILOT Lists
Them All •••
SAN DIEGO, TOO
fyery
Saturday
'and in daily IOqs, too
•'
DAILY .PILOT
HURRY! SALE PRICES HONORED TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY!
Grajle No. 1
PATENT ROSES
B Root Roses!" "Bl Savings on Our Better are . 9 . h Ch •ler Imperial, Trop1cana, • All the favorite varieties sue: ~s . !Y 1
Americana--every one a pr1ze--w1nner
• Your choice of bu•h or climber types. •
• Finest quality, eanforn1a
field grown roses.
REG. $2.59
TUES. & WED. ONLYI
HURRY-.
WHILE THEY LASTI
WOW! SAVE aoc FIRST COME! FIRST SERVED!
Auto
BIKE RACK
• Place your bike in this rack and it travels with you.
• Steel rack attaches easily lo car bumper.
REG.$5.89 SAVE OVIR.$2.001 79
Set
TUES, & WED. ONLYJ
Deluxe Electric
CAN OPENER
"With Bullt·ln Knife Sharpener!"
• Removable cutting assembly for easy cleaning.
• Magnetic lid lifter-cord
storage compartment •
•Added convenience of a
bottle opener.
REG. $8.99
SAVE $3.501
$ 49
TUES. & WID. ONLYI
Junior Size
SLEEPING BAG
• Perfect for all your camping !rips.
• 3 lb. fill -durable rnaunto"1n cl t& o cover.
• Mildew and water resistant vinyl bottom •
REG. $ $6.49 99
covenng.
Famous ''Speakman''
SHOWER HEAD
Sduors Type
"Perfect For Any Tired Body I"
WOWI
SAVE $2.00/
• A turn of the lever
adjusts from needle to
soft flow---1:J reot for
water massage.
• Swivel-type ball joint
adjusts lo any angle.
TUii, & WID. ONL Tl
Special Purchase
DISH DRAINER
•A hcindy homomaker's helper.
• Hoa¥y duty molded plastic 2 pc. sot-
bright kitchen· colors.
RIG, $1.59
79c
GRASS SHEARS PRUNING SHEARS
41Mode ly Vllloge lloclumlthl''
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lhe spots your mower
misses.
• 5'' tempered steel
blades.
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I I Made Jn' u.s.A.J''
• Best qlJ(IJjty drop forged steel blades.
• A professional type
pruning sheors.
REG.
$1.39
TUES. & WlD. ONlTI
BALLCOCK "' .. -... SHAG
• Keeps tll. cltrt out~ IG'f'"
l'OUf' cmpet. • Operates with hf;h or low . . '·-.. CARPETUKE
• 13"x21""•af~
..... $1.49 . 89'
\
waler preauN;o
• Eoty ta 1-11-
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taB ....
• Woodet1 handled,.
Jlght, durable ra•• ••k• .housel<ooping ecisier. .... -
J
. -.
--..-.. ---"-------- ---.. , .. ---·-.. -· -....-..--·.
American to Bronze Medal
' ~ .
JANET LYNN, MEDALIST
Lakers Take
6th Straight;
Oub Bullets
]
;
LOS ANGELES !API -The Los
Angeles Laker• overcame an early 11·
point defi cit With a 26-3 blitz !'ind coasted
to a 151-127 victory over the Baltimore
Bullets Sunday night to run their latest
winning streak to sill: straight.
C ~ n tr a 1 Division-leading Baltimore
played without All-Star center Wes
Unseld, who twlsted ~his right ankle in
Friday night's game against the Chicago
'Bulls.
John Q. Trapp cam~of~ the bench in
the fftst quarter and ·seored a career high ol If' poll!IJ '!Olea~ 1Jr'Lltw ocarers.
.Jerry V(est ildded 25.
• West scored 16 points in the second
;quarter as th~ Lakers rallied from a 37-26
'di~dvantage to ·a 64-49 halftime lead.
· They scored 15 straight points to take a
41-37 lead, then went on another 11-J
binge to move in front 52-43.
Archie Clark scored 38 points for the
Bullets before leaving the game with five
minutes. Dave Stallworth added 16 and
John Tresvant 14 for Baltimore.
The victory increased the Lakers' lead
over the Golden State Warriors to 141h
games in the Pacific Division of the Na·
lional Basketball Association. The BUiiets
remained four games ahead of Atlanta,
which was beaten by Houston.
•.in_,_ Olli Us Altgelts tl!ll •• • T •• T
L~• ~· ~6 " H11lrs!Qr> • " " Marin ' ,., " Mc.Milll~n • ,., ~
Murrey ' ,., " Cll11mberl1ln • ,,, " Cllrk " ., • WH• " .. " Cllef'll•r ' ,., • Goodr;,11 • " " JOl'r>i.on . , .. • TrlPP " » " Riordan • ,., " RoboMGn • » u
!>1a11wort1> ' ,., " Riiey ' •• ' Tr.,veM • •• " El~S ' .. " Rinal~I • " ' Clemens ' ' ' •
Drl•COll ' .. ' lolllS ~2 jJ . .'1' 127 TOlals ~ lJ.~ Ul
8111\more ~ " ~ 40 -117
t.o. Angeln " ~ Q '5 -1~1
F'oute-d ovt -e1l!lmc!'•, S!•ll-1'111; Lei Anu•!e1.
Tripp. Tot•I !OUIS -8• ltlrnora J2, Los Anttlrl 26,
Atttf\llencc• -11.llll.
SAPPORO -Buldl Sbuho ol Au1tria
wm the .-eu'a figure sbllnc Cold
medal In the XI \Ylnler Olympic Games
today -lGot u w lllMI she woulc!.
Katen Magnussen ol. Canada, third
goi.Qg into the free skating fina.ls, moved
up to take the sUver wtth blonde Janet
Lynn or Rockford, Jllinois winning the
bronr.e.
Miss Shuba had a perfect score of 9.0 ln
ordinals.
Mls.s Magnusoo bad 2U ordincils and
Miss Lynli 26.0.
Julie Holmes of North Hollywood, who
wal!I No. J after the compulsory, finished
Murphy Won't
Blow Putt
Second Time
HONOLULU (AP) -Bob Murphy had
just missed a two--foot par putt on the
first sudden-death playoff hole in the
Hawaiian Open, and Grier Jones was
staring at one from about the same
distance.
"I just said to myself , ·1rs two feet,
you don't want to waste all those years of
hard work on a two-foot putt.',, Jones
said Sunday.
He stroked it in the hole and the young
man from Wichita, Kan. had his first pro-
fessional victory and a $40,000 first-place
check in the rich tournament.
Jones shot a brilliant eight-under-par 64
In the final round on the sun-splashed
Waialae Country Club course and caught
the front-running Murphy on the 16th hole
with his eighth birdie on the 11th hole.
Murphy, who led or shared the lead at
the end of every round, had a fin al 69 and
matched Jones' 72-hole total of 274.
''The stroke that cost me the tourna-
ment was the second shot on the 14th
hole ," the red-haired Murphy said. He
put the shot in a sand trap and made his
on ly bogey of the round, falling out of
sole possession of the lead.
They started the playoff on the 411·
yard, par-four 15th hole. Both reached the
green in two , and Murphy Jagged up a
long putt to about two feet away, Jones
missed from 30 feet.
Then Murphy failed on the short one
and Jones was home.
"Hell, it was just one of those things,"
Murphy said. "I don 't want to make ex·
coses, but there were a lot of spike
marks arouad the hole. But those things
happen.
"It's pretty tough to be leading all rthe
way, playing pretty well , then get caught
by a 64 on the last day. That's a great
round.
"I said the day before th at it'd take a
68 to win and that's just what I needed."
It \vas the fourth playoff in five weeks
on the tour this season.
Laver Rallies for Win;
Gonzalez in Comeback
RICHMOND. Va . ..,-Top.seeded Rod
Latrer rallied after losing the opening set
and · defeated Clill Drysdale o~ South
Africa for the singles chilmp1onsbiP 1n the
Fidelity World Championship Tennis
tournament. ·
The Corona del Mar left hander earned
SI0,®0 in the $5-0,000 toamey, first stop
in this year's pro circuit w:itb a 2-6, 6-3, 1·
5. 6-3 triumph over Drysdale.
•
DES MOJ~. Iowa -Ageless Pancho
Oomalez. giving away 20 yeafl,.and an
earJf tw<Het lcltd to Frenclunan Georges
G<>nn, won S"P!IJly'f sll!gle( final of the
$15,GDO Iles l.!Oine.1 1n!eiut"?nal lem1is
.cbanlploubi~. '
'!'bl ..,_Mid Gonzalez woo the 13,000
'"" ..... -15 P'!lntl In lhe $141,000 BolM ~ 'aaillol °"""' Pl'ls by --'°"""' u; .... w. M, w. . ... -·-" .
DA Y'l'ON~ BEACH. Fla. -Marlo
AndretU 11 ,beck In the winners' circle
again .and llOUllded a wamln& to hll op-
pooltloa tllat Ulil II the year he wUI ahalce
his Jinx.
''!'be years 1970 •pd !VII !'et• t(le dark )'~I _ of my career," Andretti aald foUowin1 hlo victory In the Doytona Cotr -tat wllb the hdp ol partner Jack
'.~ ol ~-and_! Ferr~aporll car
J\e fell in love with the first time he drove
it.
AndretU "°" lhe pole at Daytona with
a speed ol 131.1106 miles per hour.
The race waa won deipite a dead spart
plug that forced them to run the entire
race on 11 cylinders.
•
FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla .
Hometown· teen-ager Chris Evert · s
devastatlq tw~ backhand ltnock·
ed Australian 'Judy Dalton out of the
125,000 Tennia Club Women's Intema·
tiona l finala Bunday and 1erved· IJP a
fmalo rematcl! wllh U.S. Open champion
Billie Jean King. Miss Ever\ .. _n _ _, Mn. Dalton. 6-1,
w. jull lhrM ~. ~ Mr•· llln&'•
··--lio!Pid' bier -'llendJ Overton of a..vr aw.. Md., 6-2, g.j, -
Mn:~lllUQ~ and the~
tailed 11._.-o1c1 ,... to meet today for
the flnl·-llmo ·sb:o the U.S. Open
semllinall lall Sept. 10 In which Mrs.
KUw-.
•
COPEffflAGEN. .Jan Lcschley of
Denmark Sunday won tht men's
singles Scandlnavl.an indoor tenrus cham-
pionship, de/eating Soulb African Ray
Moen, f.l, U.f, W.
lollr1ll afltt sbo landed bod!y on one
jump.
"I dM1 know why I did It," she said,
''it' just happened. l w11 a tittle ne~
as always but It bad nothing to do with
the fact lhll 1 won the gold medal here
last year at the pre-Olympics."
Jt wu lhe first lin1e lhat l\iiss llolmes,
runnerup to M iss Lynn in the United
States, had failed to beat her in in·
temalional competition.
.Miss Lynn , heartily cheered by th e
crw"d in packed Makomanal Arena, also
fell on a jump going into a spin but
reeeiYM ertreltlf:ly high marks from the
judges Jor artistic lmpres.sion.
"It happens all the time," the tiny 13-
yeaMld blonde said. "'11l!J Js I slippery
Sport. •I
The U.S. Hockey team scortd a major
upset today wllh a $.1 win over
Czechoslovakia, one of the two top n•
tional hockey teams, in the Class A
tournament at the XI \\'in ter Olympics
Carnes.
The Netherlands' Ard Schenk "·rupped
up l\is speed skating triple trO"'" today
by adding a gold 1nednl in the 10,000
1neters to hi.! 5.000 and 1.500 ml•ler ti tles.
World champloo Berntiard Russi , as ex·
peeled, won tbt men·s downhill ski 'vent.
The American win in hockey , con,i.ng
after the underdog Swedish team scored
a 3-3 tie with heav ily ravored Russia,
tjVft lbe n>und·robln toumameol w~
open.
The Americans, bispirtd by the spec·
tacutar play of goalie Mike Curran, simp-
ly oulhustled the C!eeN:, who dJdn't come
up to lhe prevlou.s form that made lhe.m
one of the tournament favorites.
But the difference was Curran. whu pl\
ed up 39 snves In the fin;t two periods
alone. Another key factor was t~
American shooting. Although they 1t!dn'!
take many shots. the ones tht')' sco1'('d
\.li'ilh were f::asl and accurate.
Schenk, a 27-year-0ld A1nstcrdan1
physiotherapist, was only tht-third 1nan
in Otyn1pk: history to scure u tr1pl<' VIC'·
tory. The last one was Hjut111ar Anderson
of Norway kl the um 111ne1.
Schenk captured thl!i 10,000 rneter event
In an Olympic reconl Umo ol JS ,01.15 by
btatlnf4 fellow countrym:tn Cces Verkerk.
who wAs timed tn 15:04.70. In lhlrd place
was Sten Swc111e11 ell Norway In 15:07.Cl!.
St·hrnk's time, howtv,r. did not come
nl'Hr !us ..... orld rl't"OrJ of 14 SS.90 set last
~tnreh In lnn•ll.
The 6-foot-2 Srhenk roplured t.he 5,000
tnf'!1·r cvl'nl \;isl week Hnd the 1.500
111t•h•rs Sundu~·.
S1\'t'drn·s Johnny lloglin, who act
thr Olyrnplc rctt1rd of I~ l3 60 in Crtno--
Llll· fou r yt•t1rs Hf.:O, "'as pullt>d out of the
l'lllllPflltron JllSl tx•forl' lh<' :Harl of the
ruco bccnusc or a. throut infection .
i .... , ,,,..,. ll':t t . .:!...I t
So111e Make It~ So1ne • ..
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OLYMPIC UPS AND DOWNS -United States downhill skier Eric Poul-skiing proved more jOyful to Sweden's SvenAk e Lundback (right) who
sen is wheeled to an awaiting plane home by his father after suffering is on his way to a gold medal in 15-kilomcter cross country action in
fractures of the right knee and hand in a warmup mi shap. However, the XI Winter Olympics at Sapporo. ~~~~-'-~~"-~~~~~~~~~--''-''--~~:..:...~~~~~~~~~~~~~
USSR Skaters
Running 1-2;
A1nericans 4th
SAPPORO, Japan (AP J -Russia 's
Irina Rodnina end Alexei Ulanov Jed a 1-
2-3 sweep by Irou Curtai n counlries in the
Olympic figure s k a t i n g pair!
preliminaries Sunday.
The United Slates champions. Jo Jo
Starbuck: and Ken SheUey, finished fourth
behind Ludmila Smirnova and Aodrei
Souralk.ln of Russia and Manuelva Gross
and Uwe Kagelmann of East Germany.
"Slly a prayer for us Tuesday night ,"
said Jo Jo, a striking blonde theater arts
major. "We skated our best today. The
judges take it from there, like it or not.
After that it's in God's hands."
None of the top pairs was up to par In
.the 1bort program of prescribed move-
ment!: that COWJl.9 25 percent toward
the medals to be awarded following Tues-
day. nlshl'• !tee Wiling performance.
Ulanov, a U.year4d rtudent of sports
In Moocow, failed to complet. one ol hi>
prescribed jumps and he and Miss Rod·
nina were oot In their usual unison 1n
another· movement.
The nine Judges, however, seemed
1wayed by the couple's world cham-
plonlhlp reputaUon and awarded them
five fU'lt pJaces and four seconds for a
total ol 13.0 ordinals.
On tbe basis of 6.0 being a perfect
ICOl't, the judges gave the pair -
reported to' be 1n the midst of a personal
feud -marb of 5.1, SA, 5.9, 5.9, 5.8, 5.7,
5.7, 5.i ftr1'dmical .-11.
The other Rulslan couple, No. 2 In the
world, waa clo9e beblod with It.o ordina1I
-, .... firsta and O....oecood!.
Tho Eul <Jennam, 15-year-dd -
-ud X.,elmann, 21, fourth In the
workl omnpeUUon at Lyon Jut year,
..... a -third Sunday with 34.5
ordinals, followed by the No. 3 team in
the world, Jo Jo and Ken. with l7 .5.
"I though they W'tte Utlrd," 1tid Jo
Jo'• mother, Alice, after the competition.
1'ie mlxup occurred becat15e of tht
complicated scoring rystem. In total
point.I, the 21-year-old duo from Downty.
Call!., was one-tenth of 11 potnt ahead of
the Eaat Germans, JOO.I to 100.0. BUI the
total points are virtually rntanin&J.ess ln
tbe final st•Mlnp.
Bruins Unfurl New Star
Be1icliwarmer Co uUl Start lts Pro
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The kid s on
the UCLA campus are joking these day11
that Larry, 1-lollyficld is lhe only college
bench wanner who'll become a starter .as
a pro.
Even UCLA basketball coach John
Wooden admits that the muscular junior
forward is "probably the greatest
physical talent on tbe team" and Jays
''when be gets himself uoder control, he's
an outstandlng prospect. And he's coming
along very well."
Thus it's bard for Hollyfield , and the
UCLA rooting section. to understand why
he doesn't It.art. They feel the record
speaks for itsell:
HollyUeld ill 6 f e c t 5, weig hs 215
pounds atld jumps with power and grace.
He's built like a football fullba ck, shoots
left-handed jump shots with deadly ac-
curacy and has been compared wtth
UCLA's recent AU-American, Sidney
Wicka. Wooden says the two are from the
same mold.
And since he was a Junior 1n h I g h
school, Larry Hollyllel hu played In
only one losing basketball game, IMt
year's UCLA defeat to Notre Dame, 89--
92.
tlis Compton High School team was
sectional champ tw o yean in a row and
at Compton J C he averaged 22 polnt11 a
game, helped win a state tiUe and wa1
named to lhe all-stale team.
.;Larry has tremendous ability," 11ay1
Wooden, "but he hasn't really goL 11
under control. He makes t6o many
mlstaktt and doe!n't play comlltently.
The rwon he doean't start la lbaL I Juot
don'l know which Larry llDllylleid wlll
llJOW up when tht game ltarta."
Wooden aaya the 20-year-o1d "neecle
more maturity," adding, "he'1 better for
our team by coming off the bench
bttatJH he glvet us a big lifL"
The crowd at Pauley PsvlUOn love!!
him, whether he'1 hilting a twisting
under·handed scoop shot or t~rowtng a
behind-the-back p:uis out of bounds.
Sat.urday night , in 15 minute., of playlnJ(
time, he hit three scintillating jump
shots. leaped for a rooftop-high J1yln,
connected on I of 7 shots from the Ooor
,,.. 14 poln1a, got 4 rebounds to aid the
Bruin attack. UCLA won the game, 81-56
over rival Southern California.
··1 thought he really sparked u.11 when
he came in there," Wooden aald. "He
made a couple of timely steals and got us
moving again.''
"It's kind of discouraging not to Jllrt,"
said Hollyfield, "but I know that Keith
Wilkes and Larry Farmer are going to
. start. They deserve to. But I'm a little
happier now. I got a big klck out of
starting the second half against USC."
Has be thought about pro basll:etball?
"Yeah," he say.11 with a grin 3! wide s1
bis size 12 shoe. -
"It wu hard to get adjurted here at
UCLA. l had to chanp;e my whole life
style. I think I'll adjust to"' the pros
easier."
HoUyfjeld admits the pro game la more
suited IG bis rtyle of play -free Janee ,
handle the ball .
''l think I'll be In the backcourt in the
pros and l work hard practicing handling
the ball on my own. I'm getting more
confidence In myself, too."
He wnt· tnto the Saturday night game
with P point.per-game average of less
th:in 1-lCVl'n. a rebound-per-game avera11:e
of U1r(·C. But when he 's Jn there, the
UCLA fans go wild.
On one of his jump shots Saturday
night, USC's 6-8 Ron Riley was draped all
over the muscular Hollynekf. Larry
heslt11ted, fell backwards, moved the ball
to the aide and let ny with a hlgh-archlng
one-hander.
It 11wished ju1t u flollyfleld slid
backward.I out oi bound1 on bJ" back aa
12.858 fans laughed and yelled.
Jle play• with. u11t, 1wlplna il tht ball
as lt '11 being dribbled by an opponent -
'°"'elhlng lV.oo<l•li: "'1't waot hl1
players doing. 'But when he steall the
ball, likely as not he'll beat the defenalve
man down oourt.
Whenever he bttl a lhot, he tlrowt IQ
arm Into the air and grlnl wllb· ......,,,
He Is loved by lbe Paule)' Pavtfton
faithful.
Was It an er;ror, then. when Wooden
referred to him lalt Saturday u "Llrry
IJonywood ex-HoUyfield, l mt;D"?
'
Baltimo1·e Combine Wins;
Bando-LamoiUca Second
SAN JUAN, P.R. (AP) -'Plfdiu Jlni
Palmer of the Baltimore Orioles and
wide recelvt:r WUUe Rlchar4'on of the
Baltlmore Colts lhot a best"tial l M Sun-
day to win the Amerk:an Alrllne11 Golf
Cl3ssic and the tl0,000 first prize.
Tbe tournament mn tched a profe1skmal
ba~ball player with a pro footba ll player
ove r the Cer romar 6eac h llotcl course.
The Palmer-Richardson tlnal round
gave !hem a three-day total of 174 and
enabled them to overtake Sal Rando of
!he Oakland A '1 and Daryle Lamonlca o(.
the Oakland Rald<n, Who {ired a to for a
178 total. Bobbt Murcer ol the Ne" Yor\
Yankeeit and Ed Podolak of the KanJU
City Chiefs were third with 58 for 180 •
One 1troke rarthe.r back •ere the
teams of Ernie Banks of the Chicago
Cub11 and John Niland of the DaUa1
C.OwbOys and Ottrolt'a Norm Cl.lb
(Tlt!cr11 and Wayne Walker (Llon1).
.Joe Dl1'1agglo and Otto Graham finl1h-
ed al 182, Mickey Mantle and Joe
Nam:ith at UM and the defending champa,
Biii Ma1tr01kl or tht Plltsburah Plratel
and Andy Rus1tll of the Pitllburp
Steeler11 at 115.
I I
I
'
Five Gan1es
Left £01· UCI
Afte1· Lo ss
By HOWARD L. HANDY
01 rM C•ll' "ll•I •1111
Five games remain on the UC lrvine
regular season ba l(etball schedule and
the next one isn't until f'riday night at
Chapman College 1n Orange..
Perhaps it 's JUSI as well after the gruel-
ing 'A'CCk the Anlealers completed Sarur-
day night 111 Crawford !!all 1n losing to
tile University of J-lawaii. 88-79, before a
packed house uf 2.357 f'nlhus1ast1c f;in.-.
The loss to 13th-ranked lla,,.·au wa!> !he
1e<:ond 1n three g<irne1' during the hectic
week -both lo top ranked university
d1vis1011 tcarns -with a victory ovPr
Puget Sound sandwiched in between.
UCl stayed with the island visitors fo r
13 minutes. matching basket for basket
before a dry spell from the floor dispelled
toy further thoughts of victory.
While the Anteaters were never able to
catch the Rainbows, they did get within
three with a second half scoring splurge
that brought the count to 75-72 with 3:15
left. And it was ?S-75 with 1 :53 to play.
The closing press defense put on by
UCI, however, was costly in th e foul
:tepartment and the final five points for
Hawaii were posted at the charity stripe.
"We were ready to play tonight and I
thought the kids played very hard emo-
tionally. Hawa ii is a great team and it
~as beaten some good basketball teams,''
UC! coach Tim Tift commented.
"It was unfortunate in this game that
Phil Rhyne and Troy Rolph weren't hit-
ting with their usual accuracy. But I'm
not putting any blame on anyone because
I thought we played a good game aod
!Ital includes Rhyne and Rolph .
"Perhaps we Jost a little of our finesse
in working the passing game because we
haven 'l s e e n anything but a z o n e
defense since we played Seton Hall until
tonight."
Tift was asked to compare the Ra!~
bows with other UC! foes .
"It's hard to compare them because
Long Beach is so physica l. I'm not sure
they shoot any better than Hawaii,
though. This team rates with Tennessee
and West Virginia with Long Beach still
the top team we have played ."
Following to"'riday's game at Chapman,
UCI is at San Diego State (Feb. IS ),
plilys UC Riverside at home (Feb. 19),
journeys to Stanislaus State <Feb. 23)
and closes out the season at home with
Cal State (Bakersfield) on Feb. 26.
UC lrvlM 17'1 H1w1ll (Ul
ft II pl IP Rhyne 1 I J 5 Devis Moo'' 1 1 a 1• Peneblck•r
0 . Beker I I 1 2) N111!
l!:Dlpll 4 1 0 t HDlldl V
Aurllnoh•m I , • • Frffl'Mn
Mtln.w. 1 O ] 2 Wlbon
l'o1rr 4 0 J I Hube'• B laker I 0 0 1 1(-111
P.trker l O II 2 l lack1l'llr1
TDllll :!O lt 16 It T01tll
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H1ll1!me: All·Sllr1 •I. UC! Fro1n .>J.
Net Tourney
Stan Smilh. the number one ranked
netter in the world, has been seeded top
spot In the $40.000 International ten nis
tourney that gets under way at the Sports
Arena tonight at 7:30.
Second-seeded is Ilic Nastase. the fiery
Romanian ""'ilh the long. black hair and a
tempermental flair on the court. He
fini shed second to Smith on the Grand
Prix circuit l;ist year and won the
Swedish Open and the Grand Masters in
Paris.
DAILY PILOT llttl '""°"
UNIVERSITY'S TOM MULLINIX 1321 FIGHTS FOR REBOUND.
Reboa1ndi119 ltttproves
Uni's Mullii1ix Sparkles
In Disappointing Year
By PHrL ROSS
01 l~t Ollly .. llOI 11111
Jl's unfortunate, to say the least. that
disappointment ha s been a byword for
the University Trojans in this, their in-
itial fl ing in the Orange League basket-
ball race .
Last year, in their first taste of com-
petition the Trojans of coach John
Driscoll compiled a 7-16 record. playing
on a free lance basis against many tough
AAAA and AAA schools. In addition, th ey
also qualified for the first round of the
CIF A playoffs and saw one of their
playe rs -Tom ~lullinix -win second
tca:n all·CI F A honors
Therefore. 11ny1h1ng less tha n success
in this season 's Orange loop derby has
been considered subpar a1 Uni, which is
competing in ;:in AA league.
Such holds true on a learn basis for the
Trojans but it's also something which has
been broken down pragmatically.
Take the case of the 6-2112, 18.5-pound
Mullinix as a good for instance.
According to Driscoll. "Tom·s been
working hard but he hasn't sho wn a lot of
improvement over last year. We haven't
been able to pin it down exactly but he's
just not as quick.
"It's disappointing because we were
hoping he'd be the best player in the
league.··
\Vhile the senior front line ace has not
produced anything to consistently equal
last yea r's uncanny shooting repertoire,
he has nevertheless improved in his re-
bou nding skills.
Claims Driscoll. ""·h1!c Tommy's
shooting percentage is rlown from last
year. the f:ict still sta nds tha t he 's the
only player we have who is really capable
of exploding with any kind of offiensive
barrage ;:ii any time.
,. Favorites Surprised "His rebounding ha s kept us in a lot of
games and he 's been getting into better
posltion for offensive rebounds."
Mesan Upset by Gal
At Winternationals
POMONA -Carl Olson of Torrane1?
was clocked at 219.~l miles an hour dur-
ing a quarter-mile run i• 6.74 seconds to
win the top fuel eliminator competition
Sunday at the 121h annual National Hot
Rod Association WlnlernaUonals.
Olson. 28. defeated Dennii Baca, :s2 ot
\Valnut Creek, who 1urned in 214.28
m.p.h. over 7.84 after encountering early
traction problems. Baca had the second
futest qualifying time of the t\l•o days
before tht tourney final s.
Judy Lilly of (;olden, Colo .. became the
first wornan to "'in any class in six yea rs
by taking super stock in a 1968 Bar-
racuda. Her last run took 10.79 5eC(lnds
.and she hit a top speed of 98.57 m.p.h. in
dtfeallng Gary Herman of Costa Mesa.
The fa vorites were eliminated earher
Sunday. Don Garllts, o! Seffrier, Fla., the
fastest qualifier. and defending cham·
pion, h&d traction trouble and was
ellmlnat~ in the first round. Don
Prudhomme went out on the third round
after eliminllllng Steve C.rbone of Tulsa,
cm the ttt0nd round.
tn tunny car competition Ed f\.1cCulloch
ol Clovb , Calif .. turned 215.12 m.p.h. dur-
Jpt • 6.68-second run in a 1972 Dodge. He
defeated Dalt Putde of ne11rby Wilm-
tngton, who was clocked .at IM 62 m.p.h.
and 7.D seconds after the engine in h.!s im P;tnto fail~ In midrJCe. Pulcie •on the American Hot Roel
A9>Clltian winter chlmpioru1hlp at
Pboenis 1ut wetk and was steking an ~tell double vld4ry. lbt pro stock c11<1ory Bill "Grum.
'
py " Jenkins Of York, Pa .. became the on-
ly Winternalionats repeat winner in a
major category. fie gunned his 1972 Bar-
racuda to 14<l. J8 m.p.h. during 9.68
seconds to defeat Don Grotheer of
Oklahoma . (141.95 and 9.72). Jenkins'
previous victory here "'as in 1970.
Olson collected $11 .075, McCulloch
$10,675 and .Jenkins $13 .325.
Jn other resuHs. Ste\'e Woods of Fre-
mont, Calif.. "'on cnmpetit ion eliminator
in a Chrysler-powered 19-49 Prefect. He
was t1n1ed 1n 9.4~ seconds and 147.54
m.p.h. in (f('f('ating Ph il Lukens of
Duarte. in the final round .
Fred Teixeira of Fresno. v.·on modified
elimJnetor in a 62 Corvette. He clocked
9.75 seconds and 140.40 m.p.h. In the
final s against Joe \Villiamson o f
Louisville.
Dave Benisek of Burbank won stock
eliminator honors in e 1972 Buict, clock-
ing 13.39 SttOnds and TOZ.15 m.p.h.
again.st Terry llardy of Ontario, Calif.
Baca recorded the top .!!peed of the
meet. hitting 231.95 m.p.h. in two
separtlle runs. CBrlits had tht best
elapsed time. 6.49 second$.
OCC Hosl.s Two Foes
Orange Coa st C-Ollcge opens the 1972
swim season Tuesday, hos ling Rio Hondo
and Chaffey colleges in a lriangular af-
fair. The meel begins at 3:30.
In another swim meet this v.·cek.
Golden West hosts C.errltos Friday at 3.
Mullinix is averaging 12 caroms per
game after having yanked down rebounds
al a 14-per-game pace last season.
And although his scoring average has
dipped from last yea r's 15.5 to a 12.1
mark in the current campaign, Mullinix
has still experienced several of those
"explosions" which Driscoll mentioned
before.
In the Trojans' second game of the
season -a 62-59 triumph over Laguna
Beach tournament champion Damien -
f\otullini x potted 20 markers and then ad·
ded 22 more the next time out in a 72-53
setback to highly-regarded. Sentite.
His most recent scoring outburst was
18 points against Sonora.
"Tommy is so unselfish," Driscoll says,
"that sometimes he has a tendency to
overlook the possibility of his own shot by
passing off to a tea mmate."
J\olul!inix came to the then-newly-opened
University campus at the beginning of his
Junior year after transferring· from
Tustin li igh.
At Tusltn, he .... ·as a starter in the post
for the Tillers' junior varsity team a1 a
sophomore.
Driscoll says, "I'd like to stt Tommy
make the Orange County all·slar South
squad this summer as sort of a C01ch'1
goal.
"He has oollege potential bot wlU have
to move to guard unlus be goes to •
small college somewhere."
Asher Places 5th
SAN JOSE -Barry Asher of Costa
ri1csa finished rifth in the Mercury·
Cougar pro bowling tournament that end-
ed Saturday Jn this Northtm Callrornla
com munity.
Asher won $.1.000 !or his efforts ln pl1c-
ing fifth Jn the tournament •ft.er leadinc
in the early 1oing.
•
Bruins Await
Washington
Hoop Rivals
Washington State and Wublngton are
UCLA's next Pacific.a basketball victims
with WSU al Pauley Pavilion Friday
night and the Huskies following Saturday
evening.
And in view of UCLA's 81 -56 devasta-
tion of USC over the weekend, the
northwest schools are given little hope of
giving the Bruins much more than a good
workout.
The precise, efficient Bruins wasted no
time Saturday nlghl in destroying
whatever Paci fic-8 hopes the crippled
Trojans had left. The score wa s 5-0
before use even got the ball past the
UCLA full-co urt press into the front
court, and when the Trojans cut the
deficit to seven points late in the half ,
coach John Wooden called on rest>rve
forward Larry Hollyfield.
J.lollyfield, a quick, explosive player
who adds some dash to the Bruin
n1achine, promptly hit a 25-footer, then
stole the ball cleanly from USC's Joe
Mackey and hit jJreg Lee for a layup,
and intercepted a'nother pass and broke
away to score. A few Bill Walton tip-ins
later, the Bruins had a comfortable 45-25
halftime lead.
While Washington and Washington
State visit Los Angeles this weekend,
Stanford and California host Oregon State
and Oregon in a full schedule of con-
ference games.
With guard Paul Westphal lost to knee
surgery and forward Ron Riley kept
away from the basket by the UCLA
defense, Mackey was about the only
weapon the Trojans had.
Cutting behind screens to 1oop in his
soft jump shots, he scored 15 points in the
first halt and tied Walton for game
honors with 22.
HoUyfield, who had a chance to play
more than usual when Keith Wilkes
twisted an ankle, scored 14 points in 15
minutes.
"He puts fire in our team," said
Wooden of the 6-foot-5 junior, whose
abundant and sometimes undisciplined
talent resembles that of UCLA's All·
American forward of last year. Sidney
Wicks.
In the only other conference game
Saturday, California avenged a triple-
overtime loss the night before by drub-
bing Stanford 8+70. The Bears led 45-38
at the half and weren't threatened the
res t of the way.
Oregon made it two straight in non--
conference games against Oregon State
by downing the Beavers 71-63. Doug Lit-
tle, the star of the Ducks' first victory.
led the way again with 2-4 points and IS
rebounds. OSU's Steve Erickson scored
26 points.
•
Clark May Return
Anteaters, 4 9ers Expect
ToResumeCageRivalry
There Isn't anything concrete about the
situation at the moment but an excellent
cha•ce of UC Irvine and Cal State (Long
Beach J continuing their b a s k e t b a 11
rivalr-y exists.
Coach Tim Tift, when questioned about
a rematch between the two teams next
season after they packed the Anaheim
Convention Center recently before the
largest-ever Orange County basketball
crowd , admitted the following :
"Jerry Tarkanian told n1e after the
HOWARD
·HANDY I
game that we would have to get together
right away and schedule a game next
season. We would be willing to play them
again at Anaheim . I thin k it would be a
great annual matchup.
"And we won 't lose to them every year,
either," Tift promised.
UCI is already listed in the four-team
Long Beach Classic at the Long Beaclt
Sports Arena and could meet the 49ers in
that one. also.
* * * Wat ching a recent UCI basketball
game with interest was Richard Clark,
starting center fo r the squad a year ago
who dropped out of school this campajgn.
Clark, aWred in a mod pink and gray
ouUit, ls feeling the urge to return to the
cage wars.
"I would like to come back to UCI next
season," he told the DAILY PILOT.
''Right oow I am working lo help my
mother out floan cially ...
If he Is to complete his college playing
career ln the five years all otted by the
NCAA, he will have to retum to UCI In
the fall .
* * * Ed Newland , UCI swimming and water
polo coach, is burning the candle at both
ends. Once again, drilling his defending
champion college di vision swim team on
one hand and the NIMA water polo squad
on the other.
"We aren't supposed to finish an y
higher than loth this year in the NCAA
meet," Newland says when queried about
the Anteater swim squad.
Asked for a verification Of this thinking,
he adds: "A national magazine has It
figured that way ."
But the coach Is quietly going about
preparing his charges for the nationals
March 16-18 at Washington and Lee
College in Virgi~ia.
* I* * NIMA has ~ken the place ol ClNA and
U it all sttms to be a bit of alphabetical
jargon that Is meanlngles1, lhlnk oolhlng
of it.
Nl1\1A stands for Newpor1. Irvine,
1\tesa Aquatics and Is the group
Ncwland's AAU water polo team Is com-
peliog for this time around.
The water polu squad Is working out •
couple of nights each week until afler the
quarter break lo mld-1\1arch, then it will
be on a daily basis.
"We go Into an Olympic development
league in April and by lhat li me we are
hoping the new Newport pool will be
ready for use."
* * * Ferdy ~1assin1ino. one of the mainstays
in Newland 's waler polo squad and UCI 's
ambassador to Argentina, recently took
some teammates to that country for
clinics and games.
"The trip proved to be very successful
from an athletic as well as a cultural
point of view." Ferdy says,
"The players expressed their delight at
the fantastic hospitality and felt their
time spent wa s appreciated and very
benefi cial for the Argentina polo pro-
gra1n."
The group staged two three-day clinics,
one in Buenos Aires and the other in
Rosario. Each of the players was reponsj..
ble for preparing a portion of the clinic
and r~erdy translated the material,
presenting it in Spanish to Argentine
coa ches and players.
Included in the group in addition to
F'erdy were his brother Rick, Mason
Philpot, Richard Eason, Mike Martin,
Peter Gadd, Greg Arth and Peter
Schnugg.
Follov.1ing each day 's clinic. the U.S.
players participated in exhibition games.
They won them all by substantial
margins of four to 12 points.
Culp Going to SC
SAN DIEGO -Jerry Culp, who high
jumped seven feet a half-dozen times as
a freshn1an last year, says he'll transfer
to the University of SCJuthern Ca lifornia
after withdra":ing from San Diego State.
•
Meet us halfway, and we'll swap skilled training for
a little of your time. It comes down to thi s: you scratch our
back, and we'll scratch yours. We think it's a pretty goo d trade.
Here's how: Join the Army Reserve. Want to learn
helicopter mechanics, electronics, or a medical specialization?
Or administration and finance, heavy-vehicle driving? There
are many, many others to choose from depending upon the
specific skill requirements of your local unit.
After you've finished a short tour of active duty (from
4 to 6 months) that also includes ski ll training, you'll return
to the Army Reserve unit which you joined near your home.
While on active duty training, you get about $300 a month.
Plus quarters. Plus food. Plus medical care. Plus PX and
commissary use!
It's the kind of training that'll put you ahead in civilian
life •.. for a lifetime. And all the time you're going to meetings
and taking training in your skill, you're getting paid for it. ·
If you're a guy who wants to direct his own life, a guy
with purpose, come to our swap meet. We've set it up so it'll
pay you. On purpose. The Army Reserve.
~------------···-···-·············--· • : 6JD~a-..o _ _,. OCP I ': . I A UA; Mr. Holdtt
• 2.J4S~kOld s..Aa,..,_Calt.,210J •
.... (714) "'"'410 j
: City. ld•~--------
' I
• • •
; Zi rho :
' . ................................................................................................
Anteat ers
Open '72
Campaign
UC Irvine will open its third
baseball campaign Tuesday
afternoon with R home game
against the powerful Pacific·B
UCLA Bruins with game time
set for 2:30 on the Anteater
campus field.
The Bruins. an annua l power
In the Pac-8, have 10 let·
ter men including ace right·
handed pitching s tar Gary
Robson who is expected to
start Tuesday's encounter.
Also in the opening UCLA
lineu p will be Mike Gerakos at
lhird base and Eric Swanson
in center field . \.erakos played
for UCI coach C<iry Ad ams in
the Ba sin League during the
past sun1n1cr. ICCC Senior
r
ll'innet·s
Collegiate
Basketball
Scores
In a final warn1up encounter The fou rsome of (from left) Ri ch Basse tt. Tommy Quinn , l~erb \Volfrum and
Saturday against an alumni Charley Fowler posted a hi-lo net total of 141 to captur e top honors in the eigh th
nine, UC I posted an 8-1 annual Irvine Coast Countr y Club seniors golf tourname nt recently. The team
decision with a four-run upris-\\•as s parked by Fowle r, 82, wh o fired a 70 nel. Using irons only he missed
lng in the sixth after scoring breaking 100 by two s trokes.
single markers in the fi rst,-------------------------------------
th ird and fifth frames.
Dan Coronado, Dan Hansen
and Dave Lyons drove in two
runs a piece in th e informal af-
fai r that saw players manning
the umpiring positions when
they weren't in the action. No
nfficial box score was kept of
the game which doesn't count
in the official s lat i st I c a I
tabulations.
Bob Barlow will open on the
mound for UCI against the
Bruins. He worked one inning
on Saturday and last season
posted a 3.52 era in 87 innings
including 15 sta r t i ng
assignments.
Adams will open with the
following batting order : Rich
Molina in center field and bat·
ting in the leadoH position:
Coronado at second base and
batting second; Jeff Malinoff
at first base and hitting third.
Hansen opens at shortstop
for the third strai Rhl seaso n
and will bat in the cleanup
position: Rod Spence. a
freshman brother of last
year's fir st baseman, will bat
fifth and open in left field.
Lyons gels the start al third
base and will bat sixth follow-
ed by righl fielder Clark
Schenz. catcher Joe A:1derson
and Barlow.
Foll owing Tuesday's opener,
UGI w i l l jou r ney to
Cal State (Fullerton) Wed-
nesday for its first away
game, also al 2:30. The first
doubleheader of the campaiF:n
takes place Saturday at home
against Wh ittie r College ( 12).
'r ollcyball
UC Irvine will host the All-
Califo rnia volleyball tourna-
ment Saturday with eight
campus teams competing in a
day-lo ng event.
UCLA, Irvine, Davis and
Riverside are bracketed in one
half while Berkeley, Santa
Cruz. Santa Barbara and San
Diego are m the other half.
Daytime action to determine
semifirialists gets under way at
9 with the evening finals
5tarting around 7:30.
GWC Nn1e T1"ips Gauchos;
Bue Tourney Set Wednesday
By CJlAIG SHEFF
Of tflt Ot lly Piie! Siii!
JV Results
Golden \Vest College has
been tabbed as the favorite
team in the first annual
Orange Coast Invitational
baseball tournamen t which
gets under way Wednesday at
four diamonds. 1:111 .... "'' ,.,, c.,....,"' M•'
Coach Fred Hoover's Golde n ~,:;•/1 •> : 41'\1~'.!.'.':i"~
West Rustlers warmed up for Ke.,. OJ> c O> ~1-1r1 WtY (12) G (•) Clt rl< the tourney Saturday wit h a 1r..i11 r1l G 11> Gll!w••
hard earned 2·1 decision over s~o.1 .. 11 11•b•· Edison -w ll1CW1 1~. Monier 2. CdM -Jttrrlt s L Mor1111 in \•ading Saddl eback in 11 in· o, w111 2, 01uk•• 1
· Ht l!tlme· EdiMln, :ll·lf n1ngs. L11un1 l tt<ft (451 (41) Vt ltnclt It was the •n opener for th e L111e.1rom I!•) F 11•1 HMT>m•n
Rustlers while the loss was th e co111n !Il l F !Sl Loomf1 cnrt1!•1n•"" l•I C (ll f l(f>umm11111 Gauchos' seCQnd in three Garntr OJ c. <n w1l!t •1
t. F ne!le (10) G (lJ Sl'T'l""
OU 1ngs. 5Cor•"9 Wbl. Lieu .... Be1c~ -MC·
Jn Wednesday's first round M1"us 1
of the OCC tourney, Golden_---------------------------"-"-"_m_•·-'-"-'M __ ,_"_"_'_'_"_· -I
West hosts College of the Can-
yons. Saddleback visits Santa
Ana, Orange Coast takes on
invading Mt. San Jacinto and
Riverside and Cypress tangle
at TeWinkl e Park. AD four
games begin at 10:30.
The second round cham-
pionshi p and consolation tilts
are set for 2:30.
Sa turday's ga me at Golden
\Vest was a pitching duel with
the Rustl ers' Mark Ba rr and
Saddleback's Mike Maes hoth
looking in mid-season form.
Barr, a sophomore right -
hander, went the distance for
Hoover's club. striking out six,
walking three and giving up
eight hits.
Maes, a freshman from
Foothill High, went nine In-
nings, allowing just three
singles and a double, strikin&
out five and walking one.
Golden West won the game
with two outs in the I Ith when
Blaine Calder ripped a long
double to center fie ld . scririn.E?
Will ~IcCart.ney fro m !!econd
hase.
If you've got car troubles,
come to Penneys Scientific
Testing Center for
an electronic
examination of your car.
Only9°0
We can point out weak spots In several vital
arc.as of your c ar.
Bucs Belt Taft, 90-55;
Gauchos Fall 97-72
In less than one ho ur we put your car
through a series o f s c ientific tests (212 of
them, lo be exact). Steering, engine,
brakes, tra nsmission, e lectrical and c ooling
s ystems. Yo u watch the results come out
on an electroni c typewriter.
Orange Coast College, fresh
from its fifth basketball vie·
Wry in its last six games,
hosts the No. I JC team in the
state Wednesday night.
Coach Herh Livsey's Pirates
(8-13 \ face Fullerton (25--2) in
a South Co::tst Co nference tllt
at 8. OCC, playing without its
top two scoring slars, had an
easy time in down ing host Taft
Saturday arternoon. 90-55.
Me a n while Saddleback's
G a ucho s t r a v el to
Anteaters
Place Sixth
SA NTA BARBARA -Tom
Boughey placed second in the
1.650 yard freestyle and Mike
Carnahan copped third in the
SO freestyle as hig hllght_, of
UC Irvine's partici pation in
the eight-team Gold Coast
Relays, here, Saturday.
UCI 's six-man, 3 0 0 ·yard
freestyle re.lay team took a R ·
cond place with Carnahan,
Terry Sale, Jim Fergus, Jim
BrttUng, Frank Gardner and
Bret Bernard swimming 50
yards each.
UCI flni!hed In 1ixth place
In the final team standings. '·tr.? ''-"'1• -2. •OWll'leY Ill. ''.iao· . ,,._,y1~ ''I'" -s. VCI 1''""114"· '••911'· ..... ,d. 0 1rtln11),
:Ui,O, lrod. l'l'ltdll'I r1!1Y -'· UC! ts.,.. •• ,.,. .... i11"""· "''· c-111l •11' ~ )00 lret1l't'11 rrtlev -. VCI tC1rr1•llfl~i S.lt. ''r•vt, •fl•l111. O•rfru1•· 1n wrc11. l ;)O,J,
400 1111. medll'I -4, '°""""" Cll. ,:10.1. JCI ,,....,hit -J C1rftlll4ft {ll. tt.41 6. Ge,...,. Ill, t:1 l , ~llY .. 11v -S :r,1 d114~1Ull«l. mlftri ,,..~~'~t:be11J: "~ i:f:'Yj~.,: 1., ... Y{'1,.,1,,1;J t: c~ , r.' ,_ ~ .... o1.,
).
Southwestern W e d n e sd a y
night, seeking their third
Mission circuit victory. The
Gauchos fell to visiting Gros.s-
mont Saturday, 97-72.
Orange Coa st left forward
Skip Williams and guard John
Seymour home Saturday. but
still had a laugher with Taft
Williams has an injured thumb
and Seymour is nursing a skin
rash. Both are expected to
play Wednesday against FJC.
OCC led Taft by llH2 points
through most o! lhe lilt, until
Llvsey's crew went to a half
court trap midway through the
second 20 minutes.
The result was 14 straight
turnovers by Taft and a ~
point lead for Orange Coast.
Sophomore guard T I m
Conroy paced the Pirates with
26 points. a season high while
Chuck Yerkey bit IS, Gl enn
Nelson had 14 and Steve Su·
ton canned II.
er.-c:.at (tt} .. " ,. ... °""""" a " J JI H.._ S4!11 C1ble OlJ l
~ 4· 0 ll I
Ytrll"' 1 l J 16
klf!O'I J J I II
DMl!i1 1 0 I 1
111""1• I J 0 4 •1t1• ,,,, "-,,,, Tert1l1 .U 10 10 to
H•ln""• OCC .U, Tiff ,._
S1ff11btet ('11
""""' P'•lc• I I 1 f
Grum1,... I J 1 1' ~111, I I I S
Helm JO I •
Kr•IJ J f ' n
Nt"-...rl!H' e 0 I 0 ::..... ~':!
1106el'U ' 1 2 J
AJl>c•.ofl ) J t t
TClll•I• JD ,, a n
Htlftll'!w: Grol"""" 41, "1ddlltltct Joi
The written report lhowa the ,...,ns of lh•
teats. ll ln<Ucatea what 1ested parts ol your
car are weak end what parts are strong.
A trained d iagnostician will go over the
report with you. If you wish, he'll give you
an es timate of any necessary repairs . You'll
be able to lake care ol many small
p roblems belore they turn into big problems
cos ti ng big money. There 's no obligation
lo have any of the work done. You decide
what to fix and where lo filt IL
Only 9.88.
Nol bad !or• check-up -deya.
JC Penney
•uto centmr
NEWPORT BEACH, Fa•hion l•l1nd
HUNTINGTGN BEACH, Huntington Center
Dhc• tltlc i.n.,.111111., 1111: .. s.t11•r·
-... --• ---. .
Monday F'tbru•rr_1,_1_•_1_1 ________ o_•l_:L_Y_PILOT %3
Rosters Se t for Cage Twin Bill
Rosier! hctVI!' bttn an-
llOUnced for the St. Valenllnf•s
Day mass 1 c re basketball
doubleheader at Huntington
Beach High a week fron1
tonight.
The twin bill pu!s 1he Cl~'
adrnuustrat1un aga ln,<,t !ht·
DAILY PILOT at 7 '11.·hlll'
Marina and lluntinston Be rich
1-ligh coaches collide ln the eo-
featured ni ghtc;i p
Marina will pi.n It.; ~ on
Jim Stephen1, Ron LlndMy,
Bob Duesler. Jerry White,
l..e<in Wheeler (Dealer), Mike
}fenigan, Dave Okura, Joe
Cr1d1·r. Ray Allen. Joe Corre
ancl 'l"vrn Lloyd ,
Jlu11t1ngton counlt•rs with
(;f'orgr llcn1ens, Jnck Olson.
(;lrn AC'r kcr, Roy Brun1n1e!I ,
Don ·rerr;inuvr. Paul \\lood ,
Strvr Se!terlund. Bdl f;arlan<I.
Don Wall.tr and E I m er
Combt.
The DAILY PILOT will use
Phil Ross, floi;:tr Carl!IOll.
Craig Shtfr. .Jim Niemi~.
Ardt n Malsbury 111 , Glenn
Whltl' llod il! new !ecret
wr-:ipon , L \, Hrt·klund.
flf" ofhl·ials sr-f'ing action
in clude J Ktr1nrth Pagans,
M1kr Pel·k. 'l'om ~1organ . L..01.1
Joseph, Wilt Rou ndy and Bud-
dy l)yer
Free Income Tax
Preparation
Save $30-$40 on professional proparatlon of your 1971
California and Federal Indivi dual Income Tax Returns.
Don't D elay Sign up today: appointments are tree if l'>' open "
Anaheim Savings account of $5,000 or more. or for only $5 by openJnr an account of
$Z500 or more.
ANAl-IEIM SAVINGS
"'°LOAN A5900AAON
ANAHDM 187 W. Lincoln Ave. 92803/Tel: 772-1532
BREA 633 So. Br" Blvd. 92621/Tel: 529-4971
HUNTINGTON BEACH 411 M•ln st. 92648/Tol, 53&-6591
Tough tires.
i her price.
2for19.76
... S ize 650-~3 Plua Fed. tax 8nd old t ire
JCPenney Reliant
~ 4 ply nylon
cord tire.
Size
650·13
775·14
825-14
855-14
855·14
775·15
8 15· 15
845-15
Price
11.H
14.88
18 .88
17.11
17.88
14.88
17.88
11 .H
Fod. tax
1.75
2.12
2.29
2.50
2.50
2.16
2.32
2.48
Wh1!ewall1 av11labl• al slightly 1d·
c1 1t1on11I cost
Plus Fed. 11.11. and old ti11
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3Day ·
Servlc• Spacial
Mon ., Tues., Wed.
only
35ss •
Custom bra ke s peci a l.
We replac e bra kes wi th
new Foremost® linings,
new oil seals, new brake
springs, rebuild all wheel
cylinders.
•Most American cara
Clearance
s44
O rig . 59 .00. P into J r. C B radio .
S oli d state u n it h as a S.c h1 n nel
capa city. Comes ready to op1r1te
o n c hannel 9 tor e me rgency use.
PinlO t""* mount.,..,_ 1 ftlS
W long. No holeo IO drill. ..,--
JC Penney
auto center
The values are here every day.
Shop ~'!nday noon lo 5 P.M. al lhe lollowlng Auto C•ntera:
NEWPORT BEACH. Fu h;on hl.,d. HUNTINGTON
BEACH, Huntington C1nter. U11 P•nn1y1 fimo p•ym•nt plan.
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JC. Pre1»
Wrestlin g
Rest1lt < Win S11nset Relays as
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third pl ace finish Saturday's
16.tean1 f.d~e"·ood lnvita!1on·
11! v. rl'St!ing tournan1enl al
1;:dgc11 ood High . the Corona
d('I ~1ar Sea Kings resun1e
their r1:gul<1r Irvine League
~lulr 11·1111 <1 dual n1at ch at
Costa l\1cs11 \Vednesday
At Edge1-1·ood. co:ich Diek
~forris· Cd!\! grapplers pl<:tcecl
third in the learn scoring 1-1 ith
55'1 points 11hile Ontario and'
\nrth Torrance copped the
first t1vu ~pots \.\'llh 73 and ,
i21·, pu1nt s I
flrangf' ('uu11!1 rf'prcsen·
1<111\e 1'] :-.rollena \.\'as fuurth 1
ll'!lli ~2 n1arl;Pr s
A forrnl'r Edgc v,oud 1·u;11:h
<:orona·s ,\!orris watt·hed fuur
11f t11s eharges capture 111·
from
Long Beach to
San Francisco
4 times a day.
Or take us lo Sacramento or San 01 ego Over 160 ll1ghts
a day between Northern and Sou111e1n C;ilifr:irn•a e11;1ble you 10
take PSA often. VV1th pleasure hls,Q ·"th 10.vesi air fares Your
travel agent knows w~1al s good lor you PSA gives you a 1111.
tl1v1dual niedals I
.,. "'" ... h, 1 L~ M•111•~~ John Bla111i1t·U 1 1 :1 0 ). c--'=------"'==--'===================-...:~="--'='--.:..c===---'=-=. " • J "'"''i~"<h / •lo. J, Rotl1nv "" •11 'L""H~~' <111 1r<1nsfcr Hich G::i!<1nt111e 1168 1 L ... lU bto,11! rola• I Lil 1~i11 ...... ·, 14~ 1"''~•nnd>1ll !. J. ~11~"<'" ;111~1 Gary C<J!'IL'Y 11781 were ,,; •• lBPnlv1J1 9 I
• ,K ,~ '" ·~i•v 1 La Moi11•~" I 1rst place finishers for the · ;,.\f,.a~ ,~~c~~11~v ;-0o •. l. Ro111n11 Sea Kings. with niate WoJ!y 1
' ·' 'I{) ~ ... ~ •et~, -I LB N,1111'-~n I "I k r· · h' · lh 1 ~1 •. . ...~<11,>nds 1 O• i.. J Beve"' '-' ar 1n1s ing Hl e runnerup t
For Top Sports Cove rage
Read the DAILY PIL01'
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t1\f•d1<lfC'ly here IJy 1111..l\.lnj.!
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chain·
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,,f ull a·.ers ;111d ;111ards dinner/
l'l'<"t•1i1l.v 111lh DI" \\"oody Ncl·
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f·:~u1·111· \\' 1r1111tcn. SL'l'l"C\ar\'.
,\I Butt•·r11orrh. !rc;1.~urc.r :
,111rl dircT\ors T1n1 Tate. l'roy '
.\',llf'r. Hobert ll Johnson.
I low;1rd \sh by and Paul
\lj·\';11
,\\1;11"11 111n1Jl'rs inl·ludcd Bill
\1 ,·(;c'r hor 11111~1 rn a r I i n
rc•l(·;1,t·<l ,;, ;1~ wrll ;is the
tir•I tn.u·Jin ot the season : Lou
.l,111~~··11. l1r,1 alln1cor1· for
rP1·r; \I!"~"' Hnb111son, first
:db:1;·11n· tor 11·01nen; Fran
l'r:u1l-.l1n. t1r:-;t. tuna for
111 1111 ''~1 I fr· \\\lody Nl•lson.
l:tf"':('SI 111ad 111 ror 111Cl1. Sally
.!11h11~1111 l;111:est 1n<irl111 for
110111t•11 ;ind S1!'\"C
/'.111·k1 •n11;111 1111rld rc..:ord blue
111:1rl1 11
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Wl'rll 111 l){)n Franklin. Pat
Tr;11r1u1·. Lou Janssen, l'cle
l ·urncll. \\ard Je1\·ell and Or.
!.. \ 111l·rnt Dorrilla "'ho also
caug ht the !arbe~t ;ilbacorc
for ni<.'n
L:1 r;:;c~1 :dbac11rc 111
ju111nr d1v1.~1011 11as caught
I lr ·\I ·rra1nor·s daughter.
the
by
UCI Tennis
l{esults
$
Spopular blackwall
sizes-one low price!
75
WHITEWALLS
ONLY •2875
SAVE UP TO '52 ON A SET OF 4-
ANY OF THESE SIZES
Tube less Size Replaces Plus Fed. Ex. Tax
No Trade Ne•d1d
7.00xl3 -$1.15
C78·14 -$1.10
E78·14 7,35 x 14 $1.34
F78·14 7.75 x 14 $1.51
F78·15 7.75x 15 $2.58
ALL OTHER SIZES 20 % OFF REG . PRICE
HURRY SALE ENDS SAT. NIGHT 2-12 -72
e \u,. j., I ,, \., "" 1"•0~• ••~•n
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r.oon;fiEAR
3 WAYS
TO CHARGE ~-=5~. Ult Owr h i!! C~tck '''""""l t t lUlt 11 flPl et•• ~ •• .,,. d1lfllnlf for Good7nr llrt1 ,., m11 run out t i 10111• 1!1e1 •uun1 lh11olltt,1>\11 .,., wlll be ~,ppy lo o•'u 1ou1 1h1 lb•
•I I~• 1~wert11tlf pnce and lnllt you ' "'n ch•c-lor ~" •11,,.ey !It 1~ •. ,, .. .,c11tl!d1t1.
OUR LOWEST PRICED TIRE
4-PLY NYLON CORD "All-Weather Ill:" Tires
• C:l•~n Jid•w11l
1!1~1an. 11di1I
d1rt1 on 1ho uld'r
- $ ftd. fl. T•t
LOW IOtptlWl1n1 on •i1el
11111 old 111• $1095 1.501 l J lllttl"lllfll t11Ml1s1 pfw
• Yonr b,..,, lirt lt uy ·
ln. lr1 price r1n1~!
-18 ""'"·"""·"
PlllCI BLACKWALL TUBELESS
l l.75 '"·fl'. . •• •n4 "' llA'
,., ,, ""' u,..r Slit! -1.11 l II . . 7.111 II 1.11 I 14
• ~ , . 1
GOODYEAR,:_ THE ONLY MAKER OF POLYGLAS•TIRES I I . -. . . •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
.. ' f • .. .. • • • .... --. .. . . . . . ' .
Mond•Y. Febru.vy 7 1972 ______ DAIL V PflOT 2~
Blacl~fi•i in Front Welsh Scores
Big Yachts Leading Acapulco Race fl.ottu Welsh or Newport
llarbor Yachl Club won the
llJlrry 1'.tann Trophy for tbc
1.ehman·l2 Class in a live race
regatta held at NHYC Satur·
day and Sunday.
By ALMON LOCKABEY
kfllhtll t.•ltw
some of the lower classes a~ returning to start.
nine boall started 011 the The big Class A boats
wrong side or the race corn· started on a reach ~·ith
mittee boat and had to be call-double·heads'l rigs and mizu:n
stays'ls. ~1any of the smaller ed back -some after having 1 boats broke out spinnakers a
sailed for 20 minutes. few seconds after the start
The mixup \\'as the resul! or -
and were falling off toward
t.he Tijuana Slough.
Winds at the start were
about 12 knots ""·ith a promise
of rreshening during the night.
Top interest in the race Is in
the dash for first lo finish
among Blackfm, Windward
Pa:ssage and Sirius JI. Sirius
II ls a renovated f\.f Class cut·
ter "'-'hlch holds the elapsed
time record or 8 days, 09
hours, IS rnlnutes and 54
:seconds for the race.
Jl unner·up in the regatta
\11as Ted .\tu11roe and third
was Chris
J\'HYC.
Colby, both o!
'11lrec Class A giants took an
early lead in the 1,430 miles
San Diego to Acapulco race
Sunday as brisk weasler\y
winds gave promise of a quick
arriv11l in Mexican \Yaters.
Leading the 27-boat fleet 15
minutes after the start was
Ken DeMeuse's 76·foot ketch
Blarkfin r r o m St. Francis
Yacht Club with Bob Lynch's
83-foot cutler Sirius I I ,
Newport Jlarbor Yacht Club
n1aintaining the pace on
Blackfin 's Jeev.'ard quarter.
a red flag planted about 100
yards IO Vlind\.li•ard or the C'Olll-
mittee boat. marking the
restricted area for the spec-
tator ne-et . ti was misho1ken
for the other end of the line.
100°!0 FREE REPLACEMENT
Race chairman Ash Bown
said all hands v.·ere warned at
the skippers meeting Saturday
that the committee boat would
be the weather end of the line.
FLEET LEADERS -Ken De~1euse's 76-foot k etch
Rlatkfin took an carlv lead 111 the I 430·1nile San
J)1cgu tu .l\c:iµulco ral·e 11 Jth Bob L):ncli°s 83·fool
t:U lter S1r1u s II. i\l'11'porl !!arbor Yatht ('lub. 1nuving
up under her lcc11 ard quartt.'r \\'ind11·ard Passage.
no t shov.•n, held a 1vcather pos ition abean1 of Sirius
I I.
f\1ark J ohnson 's 7 3 . r 0 0 t
'Vindward Passage started
ne<1r the v.·eather end of the
line and had movrd up abeam
of Sirius 11 as the three yachts
reached tu1,1·ard the Coronados
Islands.
There was n1ass conf usion in
The nine boats which failed
to start properly were Ator-
rante, Tzach. Tatei, Windstar,
Sigame. Pericus, Sa y u I a .
Sangrita and Vector II. The
Cal-30 Sangrita, smallest boat
in the fleet was a full hour ---·----------------
T'\'O Clinch
Cull Series
Ra ce S1lots
Deanls Conner or San Diego
Yacht Club and A r g y I e
Campbell or Balboa Yacht
Club clinched berths in the la.
man Congressional Cup Series
in a four-way sailoff at Long
Beach S.1turday and Sunday.
Conner was the first to
qualify in Saturday's n1atches
by defeating Andy Macdonald
of King tlarbor Yacht Clu b
and Keit h Lorcnef'.
111 Satu1·day's ma l ch es
Ca1npbcll was defeated by
l\1acdonald but beat Lorence.
This thre11· the final elinlina-
1 ion to Campbell and Mac-
donald on Sunday. Campbell
\1as the winner by a 24 second
rnargin.
·rhe Congressional Cu p
series in i\larch \\'ill be the se·
cond go around fnr Campbell
\1•ho \\!Oil ii in 1970. It \l'ill be
the first try for Conner 1-l'ho is
the current \1'orld chan1pion in
the Star Class.
Cd~1 1-ligli,
Wins Again,
In R egatta
Co rona del Mar fligh school
continued its dominance of the
Sou th e r n Ca l ifo r nia
lnterscholastic Sailing Con-
f ere nee Sunday with wins over
lhl'!e other schools in a six-
race regatta sailed off the
Orange Coast College crew
base in Newp:irt Harbor.
It was the second regatta of
!he season and was sailed in
Flying Jr. dinghies.
Corona de\ Mar's 1nargin
O\'Cr second place Uni versity
l\1gh School was !If~ points.
Other schools were Costa
l\'lcsa 11igh School and
Catalina Island lligh School.
Division A skippers for CdM
\vcre Phil Greene and Dick
Mon roe. Ski p Beck was the
J)i\'is1on B helmsn1an .
Breezes for the regatta
ranged from 8 to 15 knots. The
round robin series \vas cut
short \1•hen a rudder rillin~
broke on one of the boats
before start.
Final results:
CO RONA DEL MAR
(Crecn, Monroe & BcckJ·
points.
U N I V B R S I TY HIGH
(Gaudio and Gebaver) 9.1h
COSTA MESA fSmallwoocl
& Hubert) 16.8.
CATA LINA ISLAND (Taylor
& Dennis) 24.
BYC Sunkist Series Ends
Wit11 Total of 256 Racers
The Balboa Yacht Club
\\·ound up its three-month
Sunkist Series Sunday V.'ilh a
total participation of 256 boats
in 22 classes.
Largest turnout was in the
Pacific Handicap Racing Fleet
\\'ii h 33 entries.
The Sunkist Series is sai led
over a three month period on
the first \\'ee k e n d of
December, January a n d
February. Centerboard boats
raced on Saturdays and keel
boa ts on Sundays.
Trophy winners in ·each
class were:
OC EAN RACING (Ill -(1\
Bandit, Corey M}·er. B\'C; (2)
Andiamo, Bob Sodaro. BYC;
( 3 l Puff, Dave Stone, BCYC.
P~IHF (33 ) -(11 Antares,
Alan Andrev.·s, BYC ; (2) Se-
quoia. Jim !\Wore, SSSC: (3)
Sunda, Graham G i b b o n s ,
BYC; (4> Bebo II, Bob
Darnell. VYC: (5) Pintado,
Dave \Villiams, VYC.
RHODES·33 (22) -(!)
Intrepvid, J 11ck Scholz. BYC;
121 ?\taruja, Bob Kettenhofen,
UYC: 131 'l\listress. B i 11
Tavlor. BYC.
SHIELDS (5l -The~sa,
Bob Searles, BYC.
SOLING \61 -(I! Gold
Bricker, Bruce Ch an d I er,
B'IC.
ENDEAVOR (7) -(1) Irish
J~ass, Elaine ~1artin. N11YC;
(2) Aphrodite, Bill Langjahr, sssc.
SANTANA-22 (71 -(I)
Count Down, Lionel Booth, sssc.
CAL-20 f6) -(1) Josie, Carl
Last. VYC.
LU DERS-16 111 1 -(I)
Zephyr, Da le Gallon, Nl-IYC ;
(2) P re .E m p t . Leroy
Sutherland, NHYC; (3) Little
Lulu, Alan Lindsay, VYC.
METCALF (23) -(1) Li']
Dic kens, Dick \Yillson, BYC;
(2) Hassle, Jack Scholz, BYC;
13) Incredible, Bob Rollins,
BYC.
KITE A (12) -(1) Vortex,
Bruce 'rwlchell. VYC; !2J No
11ame. Phil Ramming. NHYC.
KITE B (6) -t I) Mis ty II,
r.1argaret Dixon, BC YC.
LEHMAN·l2 (7/ -No
name. Pat Scruggs. NHYC.
WI NDMILL 161 -(ti
Soremill, J ohn Ellis, PVSA.
SABOT A (121 -(I) Racing
Machine, ~'l ark Gau d io •
NHYC; (2 J No name, Dave
Sigler . BYC: (3 ) Rice Pud·
ding. Bill Rice. NHYC.
RHODES-19 (81 -(1) Great
Pumpkin, llaro\d G e i d t ,
SFVSC; (2) I mp u l s ive ,
William Stern. VYC.
TJ-IJSTLE (9) -(I) Picnic.
Dave McKinley. PVSA : (2) tie
between Lively Lady. John
B ro v.•n, CBYC, a nd
Firecracker, Wilt Templeton,
BCYC.
INTERNATIONAL-1 4 ( 1 0 )
-Orange Crate. Charles
Sta rk. PVYC; (2) White
Tornado, Peler Gales, BYC.
LID0-14 A (18) - (I)
lread-It-Up-Honey, Gare d
Smith, BYC ; (2) Longshot.
Pat Dunigan, BYC: (3) Little
Twitch, Chad Twichell, BYC;
Class D Takes 2nd Race
In CY C Overton Series
Light to non-existent winds CLASS B -( l ) Aqu avit.
on Saturday turned California Chris Ha n s en . CYC: (2)
'l·achl Club's second race of !1-fadrugador, Bi!l Allen, CYC.
the Overton Series into (3) Diabetical Ill , !11 ~ r c i a
another Class D S\lo'eep. The Campbell, CYC.
race \Yas the 93-mile Point CLASS C -(I) Quicksilver,
Dun1e-Santa Barbara Island Fred Palmier i. Pt.1 YC: (2)
race. Cheetah, D. P enningt o n,
The race started Salurday KHYC; (3) Gauntlet, E .
at 11 a .m. and the first yacht Wood land. S~1YC.
to finish was Ed Sundberg's CLASS 0-(1) Whitecap; (2)
(4) One For the Road. Jim
Tylec. BYC. I
Li.00-14 B (18) -(I ) De
Esque, Preston Zillgilt, BYC: I
(2) Fanny Soaker. Br uce
Orsborn, CBYC; (3) Spider
Web, Don Webb, BYC.
SABOT B (6) -(1) llluc
Dolphin. Wendy Bents, NHYC.
SABOT C (14 1 -O )
Cyclone, Bruce Crary, NHYC;
(2) Widgeon, II , Steve Arrigo,
NHYC: (3) No name, M 11 r y
Andrews. BYC.
FLIPPER (5\ -(1) Flip
Tom Forsyth, BCYC.
Yacl1t Cl1dJ
Gets Classes
Two Olympic sailing classes,
Tempest and Soling, have
been moved to California
Yacht Club for th e i r
Mid winter Reg a t t a com·
petition, according lo ~forgan
Cox, general chairman of the
Southern California Yachting
Association regatta.
Both classes were scheduled
to sail out of Alamitos Bay
Yacht Club and were so listed
in the Midw inter invitation.
C-Ox said the Star Class may
also be moved fro m ABYC to
California Yacht Club at
Marina de! Rey.
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The overall handicap winner
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Jtunner-up was Blue Max,
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LEASING? LOOK!
Class results:
CLASS A -(!) Red
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28 DAILY PILOT MoncMy, ,.tbri.ArJ 7, 1972 . .
Mother Criticizes Report on Downe_d_ Pilots
.ASHI!ICTON (AP I -A St.le
Department offlciaJ has acknowledged
that many Americans missing i n
lndochina are dead. His statement U:l a
House subttimmdltt drew an angry ttac-tioD from the mother or a downed
Amerkan pilot.
"We recognfze. of course, that n1any or
the men !isled as rnissing in Indochina
are almost certainly dead ,·• Wllliam H.
Sullivan. deputy assistant secretary ot
1tate for Eut Asian a..d Pacific affairs
1aid last week.
While cautioning that no one except the
Straw Vote
Suspension
Wins Okay
Laguna Beach city councilmen and
locaJ groups opposing the construction of
a coastal freeway found themselves in
agreement last week, .11.t lc11st for t he
ti me being.
North Vietnamese. really knows how
rnany of the 1,600-plw nuli tary men the
United Stat.es says are captured or ml!&-
Uig are re.ally dead. Sul llvarl said the
government keeps track or lhe names of
me.n who art proba bly dead <1nd notifies
their fam ihes.
Pilots in otber plarles somellmes report
that no parac:hute was opened when a
U.S. jet goes down , ar~ rescue planes
aometin\el find a "hlgh probabillty" that
I pilot did nol survive, Sulhvan said.
P.1r~. Donald Shay, of Linthicum, Md.,
New Missile Boat
did not dispute that tome of the missing
are dead but said Sullivan's SBying so on·
ly cauat moce grief for their famiUea.
Mr3. Shay, mother of Air Force Capt.
Donald Shay Jr. and an a35i.stant national
{'(l(lrdirtt1itor ot the National League of
American Servic.-emen Captured or Miss--
ing in southeast Asia , called Sullivan's
remarks "a terrible thing lo say.
''Why make it public," she told
reporters after the hearing. "We should
hold out until the last hope."
A Pentagon .spokesman came up with a
dlfCerent posJllon than Sullivan when ask-
ed why the Defense Department does not
notify nut-of-kin that relatives are dead.
"Secf!iuse we don 't know that they are
dead," said Brig. Gen. Daniel Jan1es.
In reporting to the House Foreign Af·
fain Committee on the status of U.S. n-
lorts to free prisoners ot war held by the
ene my, Sullivan said, "We are continuing
to do all in our power to assist our men
held by the enemy, to obtain informaJ.iop.
about them and word from them. and\ to
secure their earliest possible release."
But he said Lhe U.S. governme~ wilt
not eocourage or cause lhe collapse of Ule
South Vietnamese government u the
price for obtaintng the release or the
prisoners. ~
Meanwhile, State Department offieia~.
say Rep. Les Aspin (0.Wis.), is being ·ad·
vised by letter that if an international
~ce organization wants to inspttt 'Viet-
n1im prisons. 11 should begin with lhe
North wheie no inspections have been
~rJn.itted.
A!fPih charged Tbursda.)' in 11 Jetter to
Sectetary of State William~-Rogers that
the -state Department. allowed the South
Vietnam government ,, to veto iUl in-
i;pection trip by Amnesty lnternation:at
IHI June .., l1"Ullds that v1e1n.,,,... "·
flclals were too busy.
Aspin is being informed by Asst.
Secretary of St.ate David Abshire that
..south Vietnam never refused a vis.a to an
Amnesty representative, but suggested
that he come at anOtber lime because U1e
Saigon government was then in the midst
of preparations for Uie mass release of
600 North Vietnamese prisoners.
Stale Department officials said the
lnternati.9nal Red Cross, American con·
gressm.en and newsmen have been a!lo~··
ed to talk lo prisoners held In North Viet-
nam.
Huntington Eyes
AII~year Classes
By JOHN ZALLER
Of !ht D1!1y PllOI Stiff
would not be vacant over summer
months.
Michael Schley, vice president of the
Citizens' Town Planning Association , said
representatives of the groups involved
had met with Mayor Richard Goldberg
and agreed that the mayor's proposal to
conduct a st raw ballot on the freeway
issue, which lhcy fonnerly backed, now
would be premature.
This U.S. Navy reconnaissance photo, released
Thursday, shows one of two Soviet OSA·l missile·
carrying gunboats which were given to Castro Cuba.
The boats carry four non-nu clear Styx missiles
whjch have a range of near.Jy 18 miles. The photo
was made about 500 miles from Puerto Rico.
Educators on three campuses in th"C
Ocean View School District h11ve in-
dicated an interest in switching to year-
around operation of their schools.
Staff members at Westmont. Crest
View, and Glenn. View schools in Hun·
·fington Beach have nearly unanimously
agreed that they would like to begin
enlisting parental support tO start year-
-Result in over-all genera l savings,
aside fron1 construction . of about three
percent.
"Its the trend of the (ulure." Meberg
said. ''The old system with Jong summer
vacations might have been best suited to
an agrarian society when the kids were
needed to harvest the crops, but it no
longer fits the needs of urban society.
The year-round-opera.lion does." Noting that spokesmen for the Stale
Division of Highways have indicated the
freeway s~ill i3 more than 10 years away,
Schley sa id they now agree with the
mayor that it would not be ad visable to
polarize the community with any vote at
this time.
Di sneyland Service Awa1·d
ApJllications Under Study
Girls Initiate
Drive for Class -
Sex Jn,struction
around operation UUs July. .
. .Principals at all three schools are
scheduling meetings to inform affected
parents what the new system would
mean, and to see if they want to try it.
"We \Yon't do anything unless there is
at least 75 percent approval from parents
in the school area," said Kenneth
Meberg, chairman of Ocean-View's steer-
ing committee on year-around operation.
"But parents we 've contacted so far have
nearly all responded positively and we·re
very hopeful that -.ye can start some pilot
Meberg pointed out .that the schedule of
the year-round school could allow slightly
longer than three week vacations in the
summer.
"That should help out kids who might
want to spend long periods in the moun-
tains." he said. "On the whole. we hope It
will make it easier for families to take
their vacations.·•
Instead, he said, they would suggest the
council adopt several resolutions on the
freeway matter, including a request to
state authorities to look into alternate
methods of transportation to dclcrntinc if
a freeway realty will be necessi;lry. The
groups also would like a promise, said
Schley, that any freeway agreement
between the city and the state. if
ultimately necessary, be approved by the
electorate.
"My thinking,'' said Goldberg, "is that
I can't see at this point what good would
come out of a straw vote either for or
8gainst the adopted route. At the time of
the South Coast Theater hearing, public
opinion was unanimous. (in favor of the
inland route bypassing Laguna). Today
1ome have different feelings. In five
years it may change again. I feel this
other approach would be more sensible ."
Councilman Roy Holm concurred. "I
1m delighted lo hear you feel that way. I
feel a straw vote in 1972 on 11omething
thaL won 't take place until the late 80s is
JJot sensible."
Goldberg asked Schley to prepare
copies of the proposed resolution s for
council study and lhe council agreed to
drop the straw vote plan.
More lhan 300 applications from
Orange County organizations which ap-
plied far Disneyland's Co m m u n i t y
Service Awards are now being evaluated
by the awards committee.
'fhis is 71 1nore applii:anfs than 1971
and has caused an in crease in award
money and in categories.
Winners will be honored at a luncheon
ln Ma rch. The s11·cepstakes award
winner will receive $7,500 for the moi;t
oulstanding accon1pishments. T h i rt y
$1,0CNJ grants will be awarded to three
organizations in each of the 10 service
categories.
Award committee judges are Edmund
B. Buster of Santa Ana. Stan J. Palowski
of ·santa Ana. James O. Perez of
Fullerton, the Rev . John F. Sammon ot
Tustin, Mrs. Elmer C. Sproul of Ot-Mige,
and Mrs. Charles S. Thom11s of Corona del M11r.
This year, award categories will pro-
vide special recognition in very specific
are11s elf community service. Past awardG
have been n1adc in more general
categories.
Ca tegories this year are general com·
munity service, educational service for
youth, accomplishments by support
Fresh Outlook
Mid-decad e Su rveys Eyed in U.S.
WASHINGTON (AP) -If legislation
being drafted by a congressional sub-
committee becomes law, federal ccnsus-
takers would question every fourth
American at mid-decade.
The objective is fresher inforniation on
which to guarantee fair distribution of
feder al funds to stale and local
eovernments.
The plan for a n11tionwide survey
between the regular ccnsu11 session -
e1 ch 10 ye11rs -represents a com ·
promise reached by the House Post Qf.
flee Committee 's census and statistics
subcommittee. Although no final decision
his been made the subcommittee headed
by Rep. Charles II. Wilson, D-Calif .,
agreed in principle lo lhl plan.
An original proposal opposed by the
Nixon Administration, called for a full
census at mid-decade.
Opposition had centered "on the cosL
and the fear it might require co n·
gressional redislr1ct1ng e\'ery f i v e
years,'' \Vilson said in an interview.
The sample·C'ensus plan would cost
about $170 n1ill1on for a 5·pcrccnl survey
while a complete census would run to
about $230 million, he said.
"The Census Bureau IC'IJs us ihey can
prOJC'CI ace urat(' fi gures 1v1!h the 25-pcr·
cent sarnpling. 1'he rea;;o n we agreed on
this <'tlmpr0tnis(' is that il is less ex·
pensive than a total census of all people
and would not contuse th(' issue or reap-
portionment or Congress1onal districts by
enC"ouraglng possible court a c ti on s
against states that ma y have had 11 large
increase or decrease irt their population
between the five.year periods," he said.
Health Services Outlinecl
By Coordi11ating Cou11cil
Free health services for South Orange
County residents. ranging from well-baby
clinics lo educational programs for multi-
handieapPe<f children. were outlined
•t • recent me<!ling °' the L a g u n a
Be1ch Coordinating Council.
A Pl•el of s~kers, each representing
an organiution providing a health
ltf"\'ice, outlined their indi\lidual pro-
aram.s. WhUe ma!ly of the services are
•Jmed at helping; children or adults vo'ith
pbysk:11 or mental disorders. the
ipdkers outlined several which are
avallabie to all residents.
Tiie 1valllble ltf"\'ices Ind a few
nmarb by tbe speak.,. included:
-u.:.tlon r or mul~pped ddJdrea ot Las Palmas Elementary
lldlool In S.. Clemenie. The progr1m is air-jointly through the Laguna Beadl
ood C.pbtrlno Unified School Districts.
1ta1 U.,, ~. a teacbe.r at the ecboOl. ukl the progr1m was open lO
dllldml aces II lllOR1hs to eight years.
"We really can't predk:t in l<nns of
-h lndivldool child what hls abillU.,
~" abe •id-.. ,be children surprist us
• a da1l7 basb." Siio abo ooled !hat the
ICba9I .. ID need ol YOIUDlttr adults lo
............. wtlll ... chlldml.
-:. wtlJ.blllJ clJllc, lamll1 pWiniog
'
counseling and counseling or new
mothers. all available from the Orange
County Hea\lh Department. Tom McCone
said a public health nurse was avail8blc
to meet with r~idents in their homes for
the .caunselitlg ser\"ices aod the nurse
could be coataclecl through l ti e
departments ait -n&-SSSI .
-Free immunizaLion through the
schools in the area.
-CoUMeling and help to ·control
verien!al disease. McCone said the a>onty
was having a "slight epidemjc" now with
cases of venereal diseaR &nd that
residents could eontact the cUnic at 834-
3171 .
-Aid lor mentally retarded cbildrm
thrwgl> the typical Jnf1nt Development
Program . M .a r g a re t Cari9(1ttaid
parents must ~ue.st lhe service ell
counselors. but that the program could be
carried out in the home. lnformatlon CID
be obtained at 66-47$9, she noted.
-F'ree-medical servicN to all r~idenU
al the Laguna Beach Free Clinic, 122
Glenneyre St The c:llnlc b open Monday
lhroul!h Tbu.-.day from 7 lo 10 p.m.,
ct:tnic chairman Burt AUemus sajd. lie
also noted that the clime IOOn hoped to
start a '""' gorialrlc clinic during the d4y for elderly ....-
groups, health facilities and special
health services. social comm u n l t y
service, cultural, accomplishments by
_youth groups, environment and ecology,
and civic community service.
Among last year's winners are Harbor
Arca You!h Problems Center, the Girls
Club of the Harbor Area , Students to
Overcome Polution (S.T.O.P.) Fountain
Valley, and SL Edward's English classes
or Dana Point.
Applicants must first fill out an in-
vitational notice of intent with .approval
of the organization's officials in order to
receive an official application.
The number of applicants has con-
tinually increased since the program
began in 1957. More than · 2,000 Orange
County organizations have participated
won over $300,000, including this year's
awards.
New Mexico Man
Dies in County
Auto Colli sion
A New Mexico man crossing Orange-
thorpe Avenue in Atwood was killed Fri-
day night when struck by an auto.
Placentia police identified the victim a.s
Chee Woody, 41. a111 American Indian
from Pruitt, N.M.. and said he was
pronounced dead at the scene following
the 6:45 p.m. accident. A coroner's of-
fice spokesman said Woody was employ.
ed as a trackman for the Santa Fe Rail-
road .
According to ir1vestigators. Woody was
not in a crosswalk when he crossed the
!600 block of the busy street. Police
identified the driver of the aulo as Donald
ll. Neal, 33, of Anaheim. and said he was
not held following the mishap.
\Vitnesses told police Woody ra111 into
the street and the driver wa!i un able to
stop his auto.
~
He's Eve.,,where
CHELSEA, Mass. (AP) -Sherri Ros-
enthal and 54 of her classmates at CheJ.
sea Senior High School say childbirth
and pregnancy are more relevant than
algebra.
After a parent complained that a
leacher had strayed from the textbook
in a hygiene class, the girls signed a pe.
lilion calling for classroom instruction on
pregnancy and childbirth. -_
The petition was gathered after the
teacher was ordered to return lo the pre-
scribed course of stud y and the assigned
textbook.
"We found it so ridiculous. we just
couldn't believe it. I got so burned up l
had to do something about ii." said Sher-
ri , author or the petition.
Sherri, a 17-year-old junior, said her
class found the textbook boring and ir-
relevant and had asked to be taught
aboul childbirth.
"We didn't ask for discussions on the
morality, immorality or sexual values-
we just asked for the facts about preg-
nan.cy and childbirth,'' she said.
programs this·JuJy~·1 •
But Meberg added, "\Ve would provide
an alternate school arrangement for
those kids for whom the year·around
operation woukt pres_e.nt a hardship."
If the yea r-a round operation is adopted
at these schools. it would mean that
children would attend school for nine
week sessions and then be off for three
weeks.
The school community would be divided
ir)to. fdur groups so "That· at any given
time~ three groups would be in sChoo! and
one would be on vacation.
Thus school facilities could be in full
operation all year. which educators say
would mean a .1.5.perceDt re<t_tk~.n· i~ the
need for more school'CdnstrucJibn.
Apartn1ent Okay
Left Up in Air
111 Hu11tingtou
The Huntington Beach Planning Com-
mission today still has up in the air the
question of al~owing apartments inside a
major industrial park .
Commissions have denied a master
plan amendment which would have paved
the way for developer John Lusk 'i; 35--
acre apartment proposa l at the northwest
corner of Edinger Avenue and Graham
Street.
Many schciof syS!erris h3ve gone !Ji
year-round schools b c cause of
overcrowding, but al Ocean View,
tileberg said .that the motivation is not so
much to save money, but lo increase
school effectrveness.
The imrnediate fate of the petition is
Jn the hand."i of the seven-man school
committee. Richard Clayman. 24. the.
committee's youngest member, received -
the girls' petition early this week and
pledged to do somthing about it. ~-.~ ·"Many studies have conc!usivetj sboWn
_ .. -{h~t kids tend to forget much or wh,at
The 4 to 2 vote came only afl C"r Com·
missioner Robert Bazil switched his vote
Tuesday night so the item could be taken
to the City Council.
It had been tied 3 to 3 bu! Bazil ch;ing-
ed his position to. achieve the four-vole
majority necessary for· action. He said he
was not real ly opposed to the
apartments. M • Ch } . theY. learned_ in schooJ wheR tbey"re out annerS Or3 -over the long sumrrier," Meberg said. Lusk's request fpr a zone change -
from in_dustrial . to apartments -was
delayed until after the cquncil takes ac-
tion on the master plBn .t'lmendment. Group Scheduled
The celebrated Mariners choral group
or M11rina High School will entertain the
Huntington Beach City Council from 7:15
to 7:l'.> o'clock tonight.
Residents who normally attend the i;e-
cond session of the council at 7:30 p.m.
are urged to attend early to hear the
Mariners sing.
Mayor George McCrack en ha s issuC"d a
proclamalion praising the 12-member
group and its fund raising effort for a
trip to Hawaii.
-···try· eliminafing summer 'learning loss'
with shorter vacalions;we ree1 we ~II be
abJt to make tremendous ,improvemeot
on wha t the kids can learn -when they're
in school. All the time. we us~. to lose
·overcoming the learning loss Will now be
available for new material." -•
Meberg said that his research indicat~s
·tbat transition to the year·around school
year would :
-Save 25 pcrcrnt on new school can·
11f,.nlction costs.
~ Allow fuller utilization of te:i;tbooks
and aUdio-visual materials. ·
:...._ Cut down on vandalism, sihce school
The 3a.acre apartment project is part
of a 350-acre industrial tract owned by
Lusk. The developer had an unoff icial
agreement wilb the city that he would be
allowed t-0 develop one ac.rc o C
apartmenls for eve ry si :ir he develops in·
dustrially.
Two commissioners. Henry Duke and
t1arcus Porter, were sharply critical ol
the council agreemcnL
"There is nothing in writing,·• com-
plaini1d Duke and ~orter sa id such deals
should nol be made. Both men are coun-
·cil candidates in the April 11 election.
LA Catholics
Teacl1 'Natural'
.·
·Birth Control
LOS ANGELES CAP) -The Roman
Catholic Archdiocese of Los Angeles
__ plans to set vp clioics to teach a natural
birth control methOO· that a spokesman
says is "safe , 100 percent sure, and
morally acceptable to t.he church ,"
Called the "ovulation method," It has •im~de the rhythm and temperature
methods obsolete," the Rev . Robert
Deegan. !Jirector_. of the archdiocese's
health and hospitals department, said in
an interview.
· ) The method WaJ developed by an
-·Australian husband-and-wife m e d i c a I
team , Ort. John and Lyn Billings. A book
th~y've written about It sold more than
S0.000 copies ln Australia, and is to be
published pere by the Rom•n Catholic
Church, J:ilhor. Denilf laid. . ' ' ~ •• The Bllllnpil'...,, lhoir method II
based on the ..me principle as the
rhythm method. but i. much aurer, and
does not involve counting d8yS from ooe
p>enstrull cycle lo the next.
They say the method i. baled on a
di9COVery that a woman can become
pregnant only on cfays when a mucua hi!
been 1eereted by 11.ancb in her cervix.
May or John Lindsay ol New 'YOrk ls surrounded by hu own portraits as he addre..,_. stud~f.'l •
Nortbwlem UQ,iversily rally-early last wt«. II. he
had tl)ls many 'Llndsays' campaiJltlng for him, the
miy<>r might find bis bid for ptt!ident a great deal
euier.
''In every· fii;tlle cycle, the woman
.notices UUt secntlon ol ctrVical mucus,"
says Or. John1BflUngs, "so It is an ii>
falllille method of determining when con-
ceptk>n can occur."
The BUJlng11es are Visiting the United
Stat.. to lecture on lheJr method.
·-.. -4 .. •• '
" . ' . . . ~ .
Are You Letting Cash
Slip Through Your Fingers
See ·If You Have Any
Of These Things A
DAILY PILOT
WANT-AD
Will Sell Fast!
1. Sto .. 29. lllcydo 57. Eloctrlc Train
2. Gulttr 30. Typowrltor 58. Kitten
3. lloby Crlb 31. Bar Stools 59. Cloulc Auto
4. Electric Saw 32. Encyclopodlo 60. Cofloe Toblo
5. C1.mer1 33. Vacuum Cloner 6 l . Mo!Ot'cydo
6. W1thfH' 34. Tropkol Fish 62. Accordion
7. Outboard Motor 35. Hot Rod Equlpm't 63. Skit
I . Storoo Sot 36. Fiio Coblnot 64. TV Sot
9. Couch 37. Golf Clubs 65. Workbench
10. Clarinet 38. StorlTr>g Sliver 66 . Diamond Watch
11 . Refrfger1tor 39. Victorian Mirror 67. Go-Kort
12. Pickup Truck 40. Bedroom Sot 68. lron•r
13. Sowing Machine 41. Slldo Projector 69. Comping Trailor
1-4. Surfboard -42. lawn Mower 70. Antique furniture
15. Machine Tools 43. Pool Toblo 71 . Topo R-rdor
1 &. Dishwasher 44. Tires 72. Sollboot
17. Puppy 45. Plano 73. Sports Car
18. C1bin CrulHr -46. Fur Coat 74. Mottr-llox S1'9t
19. Golf Cert 47. Drapes 75. Inboard Spoodboot
20. Blrometer 48. Linens 76. Shotgun
21 . St1mp Collection 49. Hor10 77. Sodcllo.
22. Dlnotto Sot 50. Alrplono 78. Dort~
23. Ploy Pon 51. o.., ... 79. Punching 11"1
24. Bowling Boll 52. Exorcyclo IO, llolty Corr ....
25. Woto< Slcls 53. Ro ........ II. Dnmtt
26. Fr-54. Sic! -12. Rifle
27. Su1te111 55. High Choir U. Dotie
28. Clock 56. Colno 14. SCUIA Goer
TheM or any other •xttil tlllnt1 -ii lh"lio••
c:an be turned lllto cell With a
)
DAILY PILO·t WANT-AD
so
Don~t Jun ~Sit T.~~!,
DIAL .DIRICT
'
642~5678
... ' -' . ' .
M,,,..,, r tbnwy 7, 1972 .. DAIL V PILOT 27 •
DAILY Pll"f)T WANT AltS
-~-WAKE UP TO A
BAY VIEW
and a mi\Uon !winkling har·
bor lights by night. Drama·
tic architecture and design
lends Itself to gracious en-
tertaining and family con·
venience . .f IMKe bedrooms,
formal dinli\g area and v:et
bar ... FoPan appointment to
inipecf.· •. $90, TOO with Oex·
Ible .term!.
~·CQ· -.r:-·~H·4tM
644).0020 6754930
TIE IT IN YOUR
FRONT YARD
Your boat that is~ Newport
Beach home on channel Y.'ilh
large pier . Two separate
homes. one 3 bedroom. one
1 . bedmom. Great for real
famlly IMng an\1· w&ter flln..
$95,500. 646-nn
•,-oTHERI:AL
\~ESTATERS
' ' "I '' I • ' ' '·
Bargain Huntlnq?
Then look at this 11hari:> 3
Bdrm home with large cov.
patio. Located in good I!unt.
Beach a.rea on qulel cul de
aac street. Appraised at
$27,200 G.I. "S47.fi010
I i>1 THE REAL \~ESTATERS \, (>!fNU ... lll ~M
$22,750
BY OWNER
In SAnta Ana. 3 Br. 2 car
gar&ge. Shag cpt!I. Covered
, patio, ·fenced yard. \Viii con·
11ider second. R36-5672.
BEAUTY SHOP
4.station . 9 Dryers. Air con·
ditioned. Excellent parking.
Priced only $5.000. Call now
for appt: 64S-71TI .
ADULT LIVING
Super Sharp 2 BR condo.
Qu iet. P atio. Pnol. Dbl. 11:ar-
age, dshwr. dsp\, washer /
dryer space. $20.500.
--GEM1--
1610 W. Coa.c;t I-fwy .• N.B.
REALTORS 642-4623
General
IRVINE TERRACE
Speetacular view ol
Bay & Jetty
Lovt>ly. enC'losed yud
with fountain
Living room and
!ormal dining attB
Professional wet bar
View-side family room
4 Bedrooms & 4 baths
$180.000
REALTORS
SINCE 1944
673-4400
Emit Loop!!
Forward ifs .. Pool time" and
that's what it will be in a
coup](' of mon!hs. Enter thl~
doublr · doored Ne"•porl
l-h~ighti; hPauty to a flowing
Uvlng !lrea with :l60 dcll'ree
flreplact> exposure. View
your pool front !hf' rlining
room and plan your housP
warming. 3 bedroom 2 baths
\l•ilh Int:-; of :-;toraJ:C -r.opfl('r
plumlwrl. OUTSTANDING
at S?.O.riOO. 646·7171
BLUFFS
"PLAZA"
lowest leasthold
& Maintenance Duel
3 Bdrm., 1 'h ha. END UNIT
Xlnt value at $33.500.
4 Bdrm., 21h ha. END UNIT
$.1J.750. Frplc~. & priv. pa-
!loi;. walk !o pool. park,
sC'hOO!s & market. J\.1ovc·in
cond.: in1mecl . occupancy.
Exclusive with -
HELEN B. DOWD
Realtor 644·0134
5 BR. $37,500
Bar Harhor; single level w/ Unparalleled family rm.; clo~e to puhllc Bluff Bargain! &. ~r. John's schooli. & shop. ping. This lovely home hjlS
It's all yours lO enjoy in thil'! many extras for easy main-
3 bedrom, 21~ ha!h Do}Qrcs f Pnancr & a lge. as~u n1ab!c
plan. Just painted and fre'Sh-6% loan. $37,500. Anne Keen-
ly await.ing your Inspection. an
Compare to everylhing else. 675-3000 and you'll undoubt@dly ap-
pcttiate this value at $35,900.
HurTy. 546-2113.
Bayc:rest Lot
80 x-110. Priced at just
$18.500. Out~f.area owne-r.
Flexible on term!'i. C a 11
6*-TITI fo r detalt.!1.
'-0 THE REAL '~ESTATERS " •, '' .. ,
BEST
RllYSI
t;j t3P
TIME FOR
. QUICK .CASH
' THROUGH A
DAiLY PILOT
WANT ·AD
.IAYB '·•. ··CAii!
BAY & BEACJ.J
REALTY 1·
$10,000
BELOW MARKET
flARBOR VTEW HILLS:
Spacious (SPACIOUS) 4 bed·
room + large bonus artist
studio + formal dining +
enorn1ous family room off
h1g happy kllC'hen. 2 F'ire-
plarcs. (',.Qrge<Jus drapes
anrl elegant carpeting.
Style Conscious
Lovely 3 Bdrm. home on a
hugr corner lot. lmmacu·
late !hmughout and prk:et1
at only $25,950. JW1t right
for that first home. New
r::hag carpel in every ronm.
To see call R47-6010.
IMMACULATE
New sha.g carpet and drllpn,
completely retfeoorated 3
bedroou1s, 2 baths, iteparate
tam11y and dining plus Ince
• llvlng room. lanai Md Pl;lJo.
Lachenmyer:
R~ .!tor 1
IMl N....,.rt m.d,. C.M.
Call 646-3928 Ewt1. m..7575
LICENSED
SALESMEN
WE NEED YOU
For our 2nd rtal ftlt.ate office
on 17th St., Cmta Meu. ••
openJna: .con!
IF YOU . * Art ....,...., '. mthJJll· utlc
+ MUAI -hlCti '--+ EnJoy hai>Pf ............ * Lib rfl .. « comm.· snp. n<EN CAIL '
HOPE OERRll! RL TY.
645-4400
lllY Of 11ie Y-
wattttron1 Pf'Wd'ty, 28 tL
b tinJ dock, lfll wall, 3
bedroom•. c•lhtdraf ailing I
and IJULl&ive ttreplact for
)'OW' comfort. All I o r
$06,9'0.
Walker & Lee
FABULOUS FOUR
VACANT
$26,750
This home is In move in
conditlon -jus t pain t("(!
Inside A: n 111. -ne1v
shag carpeting in all
rooms never lived on -
4 e roomy bcdrnoms, 2
baths, large kitchen -
double gar11;ge -Nln·
venient Cosla ~tesa lo-
cation. VA or Fl-IA
1.crms. Call No\vl
3 BEDROOM,
2 BATH
SUNKEN LIVING
ROOM
$24,970
How about a richly pan·
eled living room, neat
& sriacious kitchen. ror·
ner lot. excellent loca-
tion. boat. or trailer ac·
cess, big trees. This is
it. All terms 11.vailablt>.
l-£urry l
4 BEDROOMS
IN THE COUNTRY
4 BEDROOM
MESA VERDE
WONDER
------___ _..... .
RATED "X" FOR X'LNT
OPPORTUNITY -sellers highly mo tiv ated!
l~ge . 4 BR, 2~ ha. family home; C'JUict l·larbo r
Hi ghlands st. . asking $49.500. C'hu rk Lc\\1is
TURTLE ROCK-"BEST BUYS"
4 BR. fam rm., din . rm. cent. a c !49,750
4 BR. den. din rm . 2'1 ba $51.500
3 BR. Din r 1n .. 211'J ha . cent a;C' $59.500
Pools -tennis courts. Belle Pa rtch
MAGNIFICENT MONACO
Travclog? No, but ho111e buye rs better log
this Newport spot! l.,avis h wi th del'ora tor
drapes, papers & up graded cushionry CM·
pets. 3 BR. $4R,900 -Fee. Bill Comstock
BAYSHORES-$59,500
Choice location near sandy beach. 3 Bdrms.
livi ng roon1 \\•tfi rcpla<'e & 1% baths; recent·
Jy decorated. fl arry r~redc rick
WATERFRONT BALBOA COVES
3 BR. DR, lanai. fam . rn1. -f-scp. gue st rrn .
& bat h. Spacious roon1 s. f'u n for summer
hon1e or lge. fan1 . Sandy beac h lfl.r. pier.
$85.000 Charlvn<' \\lh vtc
BAYCREST ·POOL · $72,800. OPEN
1801 HOLIDAY RD. 3 RR. den, low mainlen·
ance garden & patio. Definitely under mar·
ket. See it SAT. or SUN. 1·5. Bob Yorke
STUNNING
Departs from th e ord inary. Corner. landsc ap·
erl beauty -in Harbor View Hill s. 3 Red·
rooms plus family rm. $65,000. Jim Muller
ONE OF OUR FINEST
BEAUTIFUL BAYCREST. See thi s 3 bdrm.,
Cam. rm ., formal din. rm . home. Immacula te
in side & ou tside. Cared for by original own·
ers. $79,500. Bud Austin
IRVINE TERRACE -VIEW & POOL
OPEN I to 5 MON . & TUES., Feb. 7 & 8th ..
Large 3 BR. & fam . rm ., 38' H&F pool, 90'
lot, at 500 ANGELITA . Nea t as a pin.
$64.950 .
IRVINE TERRACE ·VIEW
OPEN I lo 5 TH URS. & FRI. Feb. 10 & I Ith.
1827 TAH UNA . Lovely 120' view Jot. l.!rge
3 bdrm., 3 bath home. Room to ex pand
$74,500. George Grupe
PRIME LIDO LOCATION
\Vi th pier & float for large boat. 4 Bdrm.,
large pa neled den. Newly & beautifully dee·
orated. Eileen Hudson
833-0700
644·2430
BA YSHORES VIEW & POOL
Waterfrortt·custom home. 4 bedroom & den
or 5 bedrooms. 5 1h baths: Top ouality car·
petiag, draperies, wallpaper & fixtures." View
from most rooms. 87' lot, spacious yard with
beautiful gardens. $240,000.
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341
Islanders Bld9. at Lindi l1le
B1y1ido Dr., Suite I, N.B. 675-6161
General
'
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" . •.,
"' ..
·" '·'
"
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11====-====f , ...
UDO ISLE WATERFRONT '
220 LIDO NORD ~
Brand new home. 5 bedrooms, 4'h baths,
Jovely wallpaper &. carpeting. Large water· \ .
front living room with fireplace. 2 slalrways.
Deck & Dock. Priced below S200.000.
Shown by Appointment
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR ,.
341 Boysldo Dr., Su Ito l, N.B. 675-6161 '"
A btoautiful pool 1ettlng,
enhanced wllh a wa ter·
fall a.nd mood lightlni
as viewed from an o~n
g!BM dining room. This
ls a. home You can be
proud to own. T h e
fourth bedroom can eas.
lly be conver~ to a.n
office or den. 2100 aq.
ft. in &II. Truly a ptts-ll'G"o~ne""""r•~l~-----~G,... __ '"l'I ______ ,
tigious, executive home. ener• J
Talking $54,500 nllh•r NEAR PARK INVESTORS 1.
1oftly,
3 BEDROOM
$22,500
Here·• your doll house!
New ~lu:ict carpet l'M!V-
er walked on, repainted
' now vacant. [t'a priced
about $1000 below mar·
k~t value and It won't
tut IO call now!
4 BR. $29,900 DREAM!
N•ar City park on E. 16th UNr,TSI UNITS! St. close lo Newport Hts.
4 BIL. 2 BL Kilch<n blt.IM. UNITS!
FA h<atlng, ..,. cpt/drpo, NEAR COASTAL Iarre yard, A good lnvrtf·
m<nt ""'•· WATERS 4 BR, FAM RM 0on·t mi.. u.i. ,.,.. "°""" ,0 & POOL $43,000 · Let tenurta pay )'OUr·renu ;1/·
Llke new, warm & rich home Very lf)M!lool unit., C!kMe '"1
In prime Harbor Highlands to ocean. Fann lt)llt ldtcb-, It.
area. 4 spacious BR.a le: ram-en1 • fully f'qlllpped • IJlllllllfta, ,,11:
IJy nn. 2\i ba.tM . living rm. ntngea and ntripratohl ,. ·
overlook:• a sparkling pool. Dlnlne roomal 2 bedrootnt
One of todays bttter buys. per uniL Garden I t k • ~.•
AND -. n,,.....,, '""'°"' '" owner JUST ru:DUCEO •U; We have muy othen we PRICE TO ONLY $27,000J 11t•
would be pleued to •how Call t 1•• a once .. 6603Cn ..•. , at no obllpt1on. ..q•
CALL ·e , 64,·1414 AtJ.c,
7':1ALTY' · H11ir "...-rt Pett Offl~• V.14 .• l'HA
Take a· look at thlr dnlrable
3 BIL a. "'""""1 Iona!
home: conw.n~t loc.: dlfl-
trc rm .. tlec. blt·ina. Carp.
6: dnpn, Jos·burnlna frpJ c.
Ovtrtfzed prage. Nn down
to Veta. 6: low down to all!
MORGAN REAL TY
67U642 67s.6459
ONE "111 acn. Nice 3 BR.
•borne + Pool. Up to 4
hones. All· M&-1-114 or
~44.
I OHi \ I I !ii \II \ ••• T
' -. ' ,_
---------! ;,fl; <!~
lll-• Wbhful th lnk1na, but It'• ~ 1,
true. H«t'• the combined "l'
tranqufllty of auburben ltv-~ •< Ina with ~town ~
SOUNDS UKE
I~. N ta r churchtl, 1 ·.~,
tchoolt, •homrlna cmter and
gotr CGUrse. 3 Bdrms plus '\ .. •
den plu• two fireplaces.
IMH010
O THE Rf.AL ~ f:STATf :r~s
1
I
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I
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DAILY PILOT Mond~. Ftbtuary 7, 1972
.,.,..., ..
Everyone Has
"!&l\\ethiiig That .• ,DAILY . Pl.LOT CLASSIFIED ADS Yo u Can Sell It,
Find It, Trade II
W ith a Want Ad Someone Else W anh
1. The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast-Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results
-1~~~5".--~ ._f _•___:,,;_: ~...,;;,~;....· _.l~ ._I --~---1~[ L _-_""'-""-
_ .......
General General Gen1ral Ge neral Gener .. General Corona del M.r Irvine lrvino
NITE CLUB
RUMPUS ROOM ••••••••••••••••••• CAMEO SHORES
$92,500
TURTLE ROCK-PRESIDENT HOME
Beaulifully & tastefully derorated 4 bd r n1 . &
fa1nily rm. honic uu qtill'l c:u l cle sat 111 the
hills. Charming exterior. prufr:-1o;1onally lnd-
sc:pd., pool sized yard; air-condilio ned. ful l
house intercom~all the extras for fine fan11-
ly living. Priced Ior 11nn1ediate ::.a.le at
$54 ,000 .
..
j' •"P.!-
;..
,.~,
U~IOOI: ti()Mf:S
UNIQUE fV\S THE BEST LI STINGS ..
..... ,., .. •·. IN T_Hf BEST AREAS • IN MESA VERDE A Four Bedroom
A two sto.rr with· three baths, a family room,
I f ormal d1nmg and a s unken living rot>nt.
C!ose shag ·c~pet wall to wall throughout
kitchen, family room and bath. Rich wall
·~ 1on~ an~ PIJ'~rs. Neat yard, nice kids on \he
r block and near park and scQool.
•
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t.~. t-;; ' .
PRESENTED AT $45,950. PHONE 546-5990
U~l()Ut: fi()Mt:S
e CORONA DEL MAR-675 -6000
2441 ' Eut Cout H ighw~y, Corona def M;&r
e MESA VERDE--546-5990
2850 Mesa Verde Drlv~, Co1ta Mesa
General
* * * * * * ·~··'
TAYLOR CO.
CORONA OE L MAR-$72,500
Attractive New Orleans style. Home plus
good ilicome. W.alk to beach & shops. Hurry!
''Out" 27th Year" •
WESLEY N;,•TAYLOR CO., Realtors
2111 San. Joaquin , Hi Iii Road
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 ~ General
1'h1s infom1aJ 1:.iX22 r·•·cn ·<•·
t1vn 1'1X11n cuuld Ii•• a u1lnJa-
!u1·t· f'OIHllry , lllh. Arouni1
Lhu; roorn 1s built '1 Jx.d •
roo1ns. 2 baths ror th.I la~e
ramily. l..IX'tolcd on ;1 quiet
C'Ul·dC'-Saf' stN'rl Jn h1•autl·
ful Mesa Vrrrlr, $37,:.00 is
thr total pric1.•. Cull no 11'
546-2313.
_cnab·lrvine
Realty Company
BA LBOA ISLAND
BAYFRONT
Your <·hoicC'. c!up!ex or s1nglf'
family. Quiet distinctive
charm. On Llttle Island.
P il'r & f'lo<i f. $155,000. Toni
Qucl'n 6'14-6200. ·
Mili:nab·lrvine ·
642-8235 644-6200
Need Elbow Room?
Thr.n call at onct· about this
almost new 4 Bcdruon1 · 3'~
ba1h honte. /I has every-
thing for thr growing-fan1 ·
Hy -Sep. dining room -Sep.
ramily room and lg. bed·
rooms. Spaeious living-roon1
\Vilh firplr -Fenced yard.
Patio. -Clo.~<' ro st·hno!s -
Only $66,;xxJ. CnU <111ick -
673·8550.
--F: H :.(":"' V :A-. --
Sec·lud('d HARBOR t::STAT-
f.;S :{.Br!rn1 .. 2-hafh hr>n1r.
Surrounr!ed on 2 sides by
beaut iful J\tyoporun1 shade
1rct's. Roo1n for.boat or !rail-
1•r s1oragC' fron1 slde !<\!'C'CL
L<lcatcd closf' to sf'l10t'Jls and
shopping. Only S29,500 \1•ifh
FHA or VA tenns.
.. c~
THE FORWARD LOOK
WITH THIS TRADE
3·4 !'!exes all in a rOYi. All units have 2·3 bed-
roonJ. 2 bath, 1-2 bedroom 1-1 bedroom. SPA-
(;_JOU.S and . close to shopping, in SUPER-
RENTAL AREA ............... $196,500.
"IT'S INCOMPARABLE"
THIS CONDOMINIUM
IN THE BLUFFS, 2 bedroom, builtin kitchen,
upgraded carpets and drapes low association
fees, ON THE GREENBELT. See and c.om-
pare. Only . . . . . . . . . . .' ...... $27,950.
GIVE IN TO TEMPTATION
AND BUY
This· three bedroom, 2 bath, fireplace and
F AMrL Y ROOM, carpels & drapes, 2 lovely
patios, pool and recreation room, Easy access
to San Diego freeway. 1n model condition.
.............................. $33,500.
CAN'T FIND 1177 WE (:AN!!
AND IT'S FEE
JN TURTLE ROCK. 3 Bedrooms, family
room. 2 baths, atrium, builtins with self
cleaning oven, shag carpeting and c ustom
drapes. Large covered patio with super land-
scaping. WO ULD YOU BELIEVE .. $47,900.
THE LAST WORD IN STYLE
"IN THE BLUFFS"
You have a view of the bay fron1 all windows .
3, bedroon1s. 2V2 baths. builtin kitchen \Vlth
self cleaning oven, EXTRA PATIO, on the
green bell A lovely buy at ........ $45,950.
REALTORS
6,44~1i1Q
\. ..... . ,. . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..... f""· TAKE YOUR ' TIME LA HACIENDA-
i-;vl'nings Call 979-1907
For Lease
2828 EA.ST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF.
!·-· -BUT HUR.RY O~E! · :-~:' Beller UJJ and inspect a BEACH AREA
Corona del Mar
An extra roomy 4 Bcdroon1
wUl'I fonnal dlnln~; 27.: L:lths
and luxurious master suitc
only n short \va!k !o park
and tennis courts. $425/nio.
••••••••••••••••••• General General
; '" truly exccUe"' 2 uhlt -Val-3 + ·FORMAL
ue -Great home plus income DININ .. G + Z BUDGET BLUFFS ) ...
·.~c.
• (.•fJ.
!' I_~·
:· --
I " '· • t '
• !_o'
'.
I. . , ,.
-3 bedroom rustic with ex-
tra lg living room ~ Firc-
pl~ce : Bit in kitcft.cn -Dish-
washer -2 baths -Separate
dining area · Private patio -
P lus -Lovely unit in· rear ·
Easy to t ent -.A~ng $63,SOO
• Call 673-8550.
1-0' THE REAL
\'."\. ESTATERS ' ul'1r.ut<T11••P~
VA REPOSSESSION
Super North Co~ta Mesa I~
('ation, \\lalk to SOuU1 Coast
Plaza. Large 3 bedroom.
family roo1n on quiet cul·de-
sac. Full bui!tin kitchen,
shake roof, fireplace. $7".JO.
down _lo anyon~. Full price
only $29, 750.
Call 546-SSSO (Open ':VC's.)
i·-j!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
:·~· '. Assume A Loan!
Take over this 7% FHA loan
111ith only $4,300 plus clos-
ing costs. A baigrun doesn't
conic along like this very
•· often. 4 bedrooms. 2 baths,
} fireplaCl', lots or extra built·
I; In stOI'S.8"e spare, !iJ)rh;11ders,
lnrge corner lot \11ith room
foe boat or trailer., Quick
posl!el'lsion. To11ll montbly
paymen(· will be $274/month.
TotaJ price $33,990. Ca11
546-2313 to se<>. ' I ..
1.,.
, .:-1=~~"""~~~ MESA VERDE
, $35,950 i"· Custom buil t 14':.:23' famOy
, room, 3 k ing -siz:ed
.___ bedrooms. 2 gentrous baths, r large living room & rorn1al
-~ dlnln& room • Both with
tlreplaces, Full b u i I t t n
Jdtcben with pantry and
f tePuate pervice Toom, and
1 ililH'' .¥1UcJi more to set. ·~.,d~tails Cail ~U51 (Ol>fM Ev .. 1.
I
.,. , '
]~I~~~i;sr.~~~ .. c~ti»1_~.C.·.-~.~-~1 massive llicplace!. Formal ~ ~i
dining robm! This gourmet-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiii
garden kitchen takes you
out to patm grande! Giant
master suite .wi1 h dressing
table and walkin closet +
2 1norc king size bedrooms
-2 baths! Bike to beach or
lftk(' R jog -$25,995. Call
645-0303.
IORl.\l E OI S01~ " REAL ro ps
YOU NAME IT
Thi11 House Has II!
(1) 6<;;. As!'lumablC' V./\, Loa.n
12) VA-FHA Tcnn!I
(3) Cul·Dc·Sac SlrC't>t
(4) Near Sc:boolB & St¥>pping
(5) Excellent Shag Carpets
(6) Bcauliful Tile Palio
(71 Paneled Family ..Room
(II) Hepvy Shake Roof
19) $215 total m onthly
payment ·
AU this With fou·r bedrooms
and a ramily room. Gl't'at
F,amily Home. Call 546-1.113.
DUPLEXES
• Cho1C(' • N1•\\'flO!'I -On
largr· street·lo-s!rcct J,11.
pnrkg for 6 earl<, rru lo (\\'.·
pand ... S53.D:io. * Ne11.·pot1·2 yl"ars nld :l ,{·
2 Jx>clroom . , ,$58,000. r·i{'X·
ihll' finanl'i ng .
PETE 13ARREIT
I ·REALTY·
642-5200
BIG CANYON
Golf Course Estate
BRAND nc\v five bcdroon1s,
f:\n11ty roon1, 3 baths. :l car
garagr, 3 firc·p1ar-cs. sepal'·
ate guC"st room, vie11.· comf'r
]l)t. Less than $100,000. Dri\'f'
by 26 llrrmi!agC' l.n. al
Royal St. Gcorgf' R<i., Ncw-
porl Bcn('h and lhrn ca!J
644·114().
Newport Island
Dt1p!r.'I: on the 'vatrr. Bl'aut.
rond. You ltvl' in onr, rent
one 'tlut, Kl'l'P your boat at
float by front floor. A bet·
ler buy a't $82.000.
CORBIN-
s21.ooo MARTIN
BARGAIN HUNTERS·
Here it is in the middle of REAL TOR's 644-7662 M•,. Verde. 3 bOOroom 2-$28 500
baths and large countzy ' ,
kilc}'lcn. FHA-VA teryns 4 Bdr. + ~am1ly R_m .
available tor no down ~ ~ room8. 4 twin sized
n1ent: Owner moVing So'Uth, bedrooms, OOge family rm,.
m113t sell. dining rm .. entry hall, built·
Call 540·ll51 (Open Eves) ins. 510-1720. ·
l~:rr~1~l
( ;
TARBELL
2955 Harbor, Costa Mesa
LOWEST LEASEHOLD
LOWEST MAINTENANCE DUES
}-lave you al\vays \vanted to live in the beau-
t iful, carefree Bluffs, but felt you couldn't
afford it? NO\V YOU CAN~ l have 2 lovely
condoininiun1s in the PLAZA A·REA, where
YOLL ca11 \Valk to pool. park, schools & market,
priced t.o sell at -
4 BDRM., 21;, BATH -$33,750
3 BDRM., t'/, BATH -$33,SOO
Built.ins, frplcs .. & priv. patios. Only 3 years
old .. Both vacant, move-i n condition. lVith
20 % down. TOTAL MONTHLY PAYMENTS
approx. $290. Exclusive listings.
OPEN SATURDAY & SUNDAY I TO S
2400 VISTA HOGAR • BLUFFS "PLAZA"
HELEN B. DOWD
REALTOR
General
NEWPORT
HEIGHTS
Charming remodeled 3 bed-
roon1 ho111e with dining
roo1n, new plumbing and
wiring, .alley access.
Newport .,
Fairview
646-8811
(•nyllm•l
ONl:Y $27, 900-;-
NO DOWN
GI TERMS
644-0134
General
ABANDONED ! !
5 + FAMILY +
DINING
·GOLF COURSE·
Wow! An abandoned Athen-
Wt Villa overlQo~ one of
Orangl' Coasts most exclus-
ive goU courset:! From Cor-
niUrlan iron p tM to atrium
to tOe massive entry • IJeo.
lll!'t-! 5 giant bedrooms • 3
baths. Huge family room +
lonnal diiting. King .Ue 3l'x
16' living room. Deeon.tors
touch· all over. Park like
grounds + DIRECT GOLF
COURSE \llEW • •O n I y
$39.500 ~ A fantutic value!
Call now ·~
IOlll\l I Ol\11\
< ' "' ' ,. JEAUJIFUL 4
M~SA DEL MAR
Tremcndo'? family home
with heaV)' .&hag crptg A
proff!Ui'onal land4Caplng.
Drive by our open house
Swlday anernoon.
for lhis 3 bedroom adult oe-
. cupicd ~m.e._Jn showGUe
conditioo, featuring IS'xl.T'
ramlty area, professicnll
b'iiCORATE & SAVE. hmdocaping, brick B-B:Q
A little pa.Int &. <'lbov.• grease and vacant for quick ~
will am this well bl! 4 bR. cupancy. Can: 540-8555. . SAVE $2,500
91.5 Sono'ra
CALI.. 979-1050
OON"T MISS nus ON,.:!
MAIN REALTY
Baker at Bristol, C.M ..
Ov.'ner. tr 4 BR .l tam rm.
l BA,"ionn din, usum J.t...,
$3:9,900. Prine 6nly 5.57-182:1
w. rm. t. din rm. Pac .. t-SHERWeeD REAL TY Vuy sharp owtnunJng pool
ter model. Vac. owner 111$4 Brookhll l"'llf, F .V. home (1BX32 pool). Lovely
tran•rd. 1t blk 10 Boa v1... FIXER UPPER ,.,..i. .t. drape~ '"'"rec1
& ~a~~1~y!~~n·~~~~ 4 BE ORM + 2 BATHS ::·~~~~~Fl~~
1549 Wei lelln Dr' .. ·_N.O. · Ne-eds tender lov'n care. terest loan \\1th S1T1 PlY•
' 646-022$ \\I /W c:rpl~ & d~. Ideal merits. Only $28,990. Unbe-
It's ahta,ys the rlgtit time &.
a,lwa,ya the right place lf
you want RESULTS: Call
~ " ...,,.. th&l ad today!
homc for lqe fr:lm 1!y! Try licvablt!.
2'21 D·2 for family of 5. or· w lk & L
Gl-F'llA «nns •v•Uable. a er ee
Call 847-1221.
SEYMOUR REALTY REALTORS
1n(l&ach Blvd., Hunl. Sch. i842""455
Ma9nificent
Monterey
des1gned horne in bl'a.utiful
1~ortaflno Laguna. One of 4 Br, 4 Ba. Pool. Swt-eping
the finest areas, eustom de-oceanv1ev.', spacious &: ele-
veloprnent and 11rectacular ganl. Luxuriously appt'd,
views. 011er 2500 sq. 11. or Exclusive !isling -
luxury eonstruction and
much more.
Spanish Secret
in Laguna Beach. 2000 sq. ft.
of Spanish <ICL'Or 1vllh a
\l'hire \Valer vle11', lt'On1 the
tori or niajestie Arth Beach
I !eights. A custon1 ho1ne at
a tract price. S39,950.
,1f1'.. ":t f;st ~-~· J3J1{'
./,_ rcult.r
·~;(.·
1Job 11ellil , '
-- -1~rullor
Costa Me sa 2414 'Vista Dt>l Oro
Newport Bcach
64t·ll33 ANYTIJ\tE 1 --~-'-"--"-'-'-::.C::__ I SA.LE by 011.'ner. Lrg. 4 br, 2 -:::::-will;;;U;;;;-:::::>I HAPPINESS ba, cor Jot. rn1 for boat &
A little shingled cottage for tra.iler. 642-5459.
hro, plus a modC'rn l·BR. Fountain Valley
income unit, L<lts ot brick . , .
& shakes, bclO\\' Coast 4 BR. fa~n rnl, .l ba. 2100 ~11
lhl'y,, 1& only $46,500. ft, lanai, Z blk" rlen1 .~ ht
Univer5ity Realty schools, $39.~ 0 '" n r
3001 E. Cst. llwy. 673-6.510' 1...:"'.:.":..·.:.36:..·1.:..1 ------
LOVELY vi£'w of Catalina Huntington Beach
This gorgeous 4 bedroom & bay area. Custom built.
pa c e s c r t e r home is \Veil located. 2 Bcdnn w/ Cheap POOL
.absolutely 1111\-1,\CULATE htd JX>Ol, outdoor \vet bar &
in every way. It's further gas BBQ. Beautiful ('Ond. Home
e nhanced by an impressive Cali 01-1'ne1• at 644-1536. $23,500. Full Price
20· x 40' neated POOL If OPEN DAIL y 1.5 3 Good sized bedrms, e!l.'CI
you've ever wanted a pool, 504 LARKSPUR bltins, w/11.• crpts & drps
don't miss this one! Pricl'd 2 Bed h thruout. 2 Car all gru-, sit-rooms -.!i arp! at_ a bargain. $3.q,950. Owner R·2 Lot $42,950 uated on a huge privacy lot
1111ll offer VA tern1s loo! Call Pat \Vood 548_0201 clo~e lo all n1ajo1· shopping.
Scenic Properties 675-5726 This beauty can bf' purc-has-COATS ed with just $2400. do1vn &
& CHINA COVE VIEW paynits of $219. inr!udcs all.
WALLACE 3 Br, 2 Bath. Beach. 2718 1,
REAL TORS Sheil. $85,000. By 01t·ner.
S'16-4l4l 675-2914 or 644-0906. 1llage Real E~tate
-(0 E .-) LUSK 2 sto .... , s br 4 b• 3 !6z...t471 ( :::.J 546·8103 pen vtn1ngs •J, • '" 1..,,..,..,,....,,.....,,,·..,..,. !rplC', greenbelt location, fee I~
land. Agent 675-7225 H.t.R. ''Custom ·SE~NOIP.ITY ** CAi\fEOSHORES **
2 Stq.ry Sleeper \vh1ch 1s only BY O\VNER. VIE\V, POOL, 4 Upgraded-Sharp
4-n11nu1e to SOUTH COAST BDR!\JS 673-86-1 As A Razer!!''
PLAZA. S·n1inutes to San · · :J •
Diego Tref!11·ay, 10-minute Costa Mesa
\1·a!k to kindergarten andi----------
grade school. 4 Bdrn1s .. 3 Executive Estate
bath plus fainily roon1 and Beautiful spa~·ious 4 bedroo1n,
scre-.'nccl ln patio. Great 3 bath estar e, 2600 sq. ft.
earpct and drapes. \\'ant to custom built home. Has
kno\v \vhere all this value is everything -plus 20x40 heal·
for, $36,950? Call us and eel & filtered pool. central
\\'e ll show you. air conditioning, A~t-F?<.1, 2
fi~places, elet fric garage
fn l·lun!ington Bl"ath, i3
years young and o n 1 y
$22,995~ ~ ! 3 bedroon1, fresh·
ly dE'<."Orated, and, •Jh so sort
greC'n shag l'arpet. 'You'll
learn to Jive \l'ilh lhe IO\\,
low payments. Cail 842-2535
"SINCE 1946"
Jl>\ \\'rstL•rn H.'.1nk Bld~.
VtU \'(•n;ity f'ai·k, Jr\inc
Days 833-0101 Nights
. -
Hu r.~ ir:g ton Beach
6 Blocks to Ocean
Bc-au!1ful!y 1h•r11rah~d 1lr<'am
hon1C' .,.,1_.,. :! .1(·;:11·s old \\ilh
•'h~u·1111ng lin•pl:u't', t'fir1vcn·
ii·n! k1t«l1cn. hug" j),'\110 ;i nti
1111).:\' t•nou:;h yard r(lr pool
:1dt!1t1on. Orily S27,'f1'.) \\llh
l;I Ot' !-'!\,\ h•rtllS. IS1•!!L'r sec
!lus today'.
Walker & Lee
n eallnrs
2TIIO Harbor Bh·'I. at i\<l;uns
Open 't!! 9 l'.\I ~5·04ti5
"Sheer Elegance"
An atrium bi'attly! '. ! Popular
hornc 11·ith p!ush carpets and
drafl('S, suf)('r·sizrd bed·
roon1s, forn1a! dining room.
Sf'par;1t (' ra1111 ly 1"001n. Boat
gal(' l1err and •. , n1any.
n1a11y o•:o<!r;ts. Anxious 011TJ-
('rs \1a11t !o 1110\'('!! ~ubnii!.
All 1••rn1-. and only $4!,950.
C;1 ll Kl.2·~>.'.!5.
Ht.:'! Dir~·tly from Bruk('r
& Save $. ~larters hun1c,
modf'm kif., rlhlf' ~ar & 18x
35 s1\·imn1i11i:: jX}l'.IJ '" p:'lt10
for entl'rt:1in1n1-:. 0 n I y
$:!.~.~-S~l~1. IH_'I' 1nn.
Roberts & Co. 962·5511
1 flDRr-1. llu;tington -Cont.
1\l'nhSf'. Sl:i.:ioD. Ry 011·ner.
Prin. onlJ . '.)6.".-14i:I.
Irvine
door opener and n1ueh, niuth -1;;:;:;;;;;:;;:;:;;;;;;:;;;:;:;;;;;;:;;;
rnore, all setting on a huge NEAR the BEACH
double corn1>r lot. Loan 3 Bcdrm. 21 2 bath. cus\0111
available on price reduction drps. crpl s, JikC' 11(·11· •'{lnd ..
of $58,500. Call \va!,.,rwftencr. Co!'nl'r l•ll ,
Walker & Lee rn> roe boot oc "'' o'""'
Evenings Call 646-5226 transrf'n·ed ·All fPrn1s. Call
--.--''----.'-.C-.-'--1 Rralrors s42-44t.li .~1ew of UCI & Hills 2790 IIarbor Blvd. at Adams
Un1qt1e back bay, 2 ~ry. 54~949 1 Open 'Iii 9 Pl\f I ~11r.l:f:1:'tfn
hon1C'. Natur a I v•ood ---N1r4.ftt=l!nl~
cathedral ceilings ,i::. an1ique VACANT & R.EAOY ME.REDJTH-
leadcd glass \vindows. 4 51-tAR~ EASTSIOE llO~fE
bdrms. & t!en & bath on * 3 Big bedrms, GARDENS
)o\vCT level. Split level en-* 2 Full baths. Buy of the year! 4 BR, for·
FIVE BEDROOMS
21!: B:1ih.~ St fan1lly l'nnm.
f )/ll' •tf !l,r· :-b;irp•·~t pror>f.'r-
11•'' 111 l 'u1\'1·r-."1.1· !>;irk. Cus·
10111 dl"11N'~ u1l(•n·~l 1n-; cn-
fr.1. f!n1• hdr11L l111s liuil1-ins.
f \·4•fyth1ns: ls in n1ovc·i n
t"()nd1n .. n. jJl(•lur!inr. 1he rro-
fl'ssi11•1.'ll lan(j~ "!l'n':. $1;!}fj()
(i;red hill
try 0 * Plush shag crpt. nial din rm + lam rm. , pen stair.vay to upper * 55, 140. 1 142 150 10~ d 1 u · p k •• r · level \l'ilh large Jvg. room, * Bo x
1
ot . . ,,, 0\1·n. !al nt\'. ar · '-'•nl<•r, rv1n~
REALTY
. a access Smith Broker, S42-4526. O[>C'n Call Any1in1r-, S.?..1-0S:?ll
used brick frpl. All clec. * 127 500 1 11 · s 20052 c I c · "'""""":"""'."""""""'" k't b th d d ' . u pnc~ un. o gat(' ir. 0 1 •• a ' a 11 in-FllA/VA TERMS AVATL... Laguna Beach ing /fa1n ily room \\'ilh patio ~ DOUGLAS TRA.NSFEREES dwr 10 12."1.1• deck, Extra *FULLER REAL T".°* 3 min to 1\·ork. sr hoo!s. shop-___ P_O_O_L_+ __ _
'
d \' 1 546-0814 ............ Anytime ning 3 br dinin,.. nn rpO< arge yar , . a!ure rces. ,. · · . ., . . .
Covt'rerl pA tio. Clos!' to TWO ON A LOT drps, bcau_t yd. assun1e rnr
g-rade sC'hool and proposed G $4,000 ('((U1!y ~230 nio. By
aqua1 ic park. $39,:1()(). 2()241 I NO DOWN O\vncr. 846-4(}4!.
Bayvit'w (C"nd of r-·Iesa Dr.) BC'tter see this rare value }'OR sale by ("i\\'liC'r. 1 nii. to
;ll&-99-.16. today!. 3 bedroom plus 1 bed-beach. 4 Bdrs. :; Ba. T:JOO
---room honte on R·2 Jot. 3 Sq. F'!. Principles unly,
bedroon1 no1v ,.aC"ant andlc"'c:':.."'-c""":t==~~~PATIO PARTY
Cai; B·B·Q in large patio.
P!a1'(' to park cnmper and
boat. Oel1ghUul kitchen.
ready for irnn1C'dia1!' occu·
panC'y. 1 tX'droon1 rented :.! $ QUICK $
$120 per nionth. Keep as WE BUY HOMES
rental or use as r-Iothrr-in· MT-:. KAS,\BI \'.\" ,'' ,, c,(j(}J
law house. Only $24,500. KASABIAN Newport Wnn'l be around long.
Walker & Lee Fairview
•I REAL r:STATE
·=~
Panoram11• ocl'an & 1·nnst·
lino• ,.i(',1•t !f,.;i !('lf .'i;\\'lm·
ming Pl"Jt \1'1tl1 <1uton11.tic
d ean('r. 2 J34Jrrn~. & d<'n,
hu>:"f' l1\'in~ roo111 8.: 1..-iunrry
kllchrn Jllu~ srp;1r:11 r lnun-
dry roon1 ; !rs.-.: 1h.1n 1 vcar
olri. AIJSO!utrly !hr IJC!<l .. huy
in this ;u·ea ,,r lui.:h rri1·r{i,
(·u:>h)n1 hnn\r·~. Ar $~i:J.GOO.
!his \\'on'! last lnng. 12·1)
-Iatan
REAL ESTATE
ReaHors $ INSTANT CASH $ f h · 11!l0Glennt')TL·::il, • 2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams o;; l e equity in your home. 494·947:1 519·0316 646-8111
545-0465 Open 'ti! 9 PM \\e pay all <-'OS!s. In fof('. (anytime) BY closure ok. J 11st ralt • 24 -.-Si;;LL OH. CEAsr: -..-.,,,,.,,"'!~~~~"'!""'"I owflC'r, Eastside. 4 BR, 2 hours a day. s.17-3507 2200 Sq. Fr. 3 BB. .. 2,~ BA.
CLOSE TO BEACH BA, fonn din mt, crpts, Lt:. fam. rm .. din_ rnt, lrpl.
Large-3 BR. 2 ba. duplex drps, boat gale, huge R~ ~ Cpl S.· drap('S. bltlnl<. "''el
with 3 fireplaces. lot, many many extras, bar, eh:. ln1n1ac:. $47,950. a·-·me 5" ~-. o• FHA ••·no$TATEs A n11.r.nD $55.000 -TERMS """ ,. N<l" • • "'"\._ _ ........ ( Full pril.'f'.
George Williamson VA. Best buy in Costa ~ .\11SSION REALTY 49-l--0731
Realtor l\1esa. Principals onl y.,_-:======~----_ 548-6570 645-1564 1=642~-04'-"'27"".------i· GOVERNMENT Almost Oceanfront
FORECLOSURE, Bea.utitul 3 OWNED Bcautjful older 2-sty, slucco IMMED. POSSESSION with red tile roof: across
3·.Luxuty Condos: 3 BR &: 2-3 bedroom, 2 bath home ~ Ex-E1lA & VA repossessed the S'tl"a>t from oceanrronL
BA, heated pools, tennis ce!Jent location. Fireplace. Tl7Wl'lhouses & homes. Low Built by old 11.·orld's crarts-
court. Take over VA loan. shake roof, walled yard and ~ No points or Esc:row man, in o n C' of Laguna's
LARWIN e 546-5411 immaculate, $250 month In-rees. Gov't pays dosing finest arC'as. 4 Spaeious BR.,
dudes taxes, with less than costs. All price ranges. Call 2 ba.; huge !iv. rm. "'/mas-
Balboa Penin1ula $1000 down. Call 545-8424 968-4441 :i;ive frplc. Tile & wmul:'hl
SOUTH COASr RE AL CREST REALTY iron"''"' 10 2nd "ocy; lge.
OCEAN ·d Bal Bl • I ~EST~~A~T::E:_. ~~~---1--'i!:ft'i'liiT<..---formal din. rm., chce..., si f!, · v .. cor-1-$50 TOTAL b r ., ntr duplex. $55,000. $23,950, -1209 Pays all. rk st. area off kitch., over ·
Marshall Realty 675-4600 Quaint 3 bedroom home on to veterans. 4 oversized bd· IOOking !he 1valer. One or a
large lo! • Private ttte nm, 3 full baths. Crpts, kind & hanl lo find. Jlrlccd
Capistrano Beech shaded street. SUbmit. FlfA Drps &: Mutters. Vacant, at $92,500,
or VA no down. terms. , . Fast IXJSSeSllon. Call 968·#11 B~ FHA or GI CALL 545--8424 <open CREST REALTY ~~ ,..,._
Custom 3 BR, 2 BA home on eves,) SOU'Ill COAST .,,-:-:-,.,..,....:-,....:,....:::c:..:._ ~~~~
a trg lot. CompleteJy-ttdec-REAL ESTATE IMMAC. 4 BE ORM I I SOJnl LAQ..M.c;.u
orated proft!SSionally. Ask-·JNVESJ'OJl'S Speeia.1! J BR. +SPANISH DECOR* ;-;;7
ing $32.750. : E-&ide C.M. JoW C-1. M'edallloh kitch! shag crpts! RED CARPET Potential plus. MU s T protldscpd! Xlnu! gd lrm•! 2 STORY gla" front view
R"'ALTOR SELL! M,....., 673-<7S6. HAFFDAL RE_AL TY born•. 3 bdnn, 2 bath, ~. $1698. DOWN. No down VA. 842-4405 Ewa. 968-0006 Balcony In ~am living
492.9700 Exquisite 2 """·. 3 BR. 2 Ba. BEAT l1W' heat. Walk lo rooin overlook,, dlnln;t Atta.
, •"J !...:. 2 dc{'k~. ferictd y a rd •
Co-· do! u., 24x27 rumpus room. ~.750 beach from 3 >T old Avn>s fi 1 ,.,..._ ,._ .-·-1N'pact, "'C'lhar, <"8.l'J'IClt1,
Owner, ~174. build, 3 br, 2 ha home, dr"r""· bui:'-in~. $39,!>00, * DUPLEX * 4 BR. 2 Ila, lt-4 Joi. Gd. Joe. Cathedral "'ilings. Jn><c. 4M·'200 0, 646-1""62.
&aut. new ownf.':r't1 unit: 2 nlA·VA $29,500. Are nt . w/w cpl•, drps, shake roof. Lido Isle
-A den, 2 baths, bit-In oven, 147.-9604. Jush l~~Utrlr;: ----------!
range Ir dlMwa11her, carp., VA rtEPO. 3 SR., 2 Ba. ~r:c, ~· $32. . dr~pes &. frplc. PLUS 11.ha;J> $23,95(1. $950 On. $253 Mo. ---------· i 4 BR. 3 IML 70d8 $1 25.000
,2 BR. home In front for ut· Aulhorlzed Broker 548--6570 BY OWNER • 3 BR 2~f, BA 3 BR, 31;) b11., fAm tm, pol)i
come to help pay the way.1----------rm. t!ln rm. ilil' '"' t.~11.500
MAY y,•e &how you this? VACANT 3 BR. REPO Townhouse. $l600. & take LIDO REAL TY INC.
MORGAN REALTY Huge custom lrplc, 1!.t Ba. over loan.~ l3n \ 1 \ 1 11x
67~2 67s.4459 $23,500 --54&-7739: Wlllle EJ;phallt Dlme-A-Lino 1 ___ 6.;.7.:.3-.:.7300=--
• -·
Santa An• Heights Income Property 16', Re•I Estate WantN lM ' Houses Unfurn.
:'llOVJ Nt_; tn Urnn1urk t<"ur\·-1
.!cl IU sell oul:otatwJ111~ ~ 13H ~IL::,,· Sl::E. SVtirkl!ug j BR.,
:lBA .'\Jl:UC! Jftlls \lf_.11 din. rru, ust-1l br1t·k lrpll'.,
Corona Del Marr l\\'ANTED_ by priv•te pany. Genera l
U . ·l·ple.'i:. E-skie Cc~t• l\ttsa ----------
hor11c . S34AOO. 49J.-O'l:il. j li!d fX)fil tp1~. drps. 1nan)
Mesa Verd•
LARC:f<. l • .111111~ !1•1111•• !!\
U\l!ll'I" I BB. d1•11, or:. ~·ii.
nion~ t'"-IJ'..i'-ln1·l11dr 11.1!1•1
soClf'rlf'I' • u ... 10111 ... ho•h ,..,
1n111ro,1•111c11t~· Enjoy l1v.
in;.; :.!IJ~Ot !'i.pnJ<-'t' :'>-l.)..J7jJ.
Westminst~r -----$186. MO. PAYMTS
$5,900 DOWN
17 "'" I G.xld 1..'0nd. \\'ill pay cash. &-st \Uii·&.1\on rvr \'iC\\S E,;,. l\lust ha\'e al least Ol'lt' ;:
1>t•l!1•n! l'f•ntal 11'.'i'Ord. In · Bft un~L Pr1nc;1piJs on!~
r'On1r ovrr s::l ,!XXl !Jf'r \'car R :i h -n ' 7 4 .,. ,. ,. k .-t,. .~
l.1s!1'll i11 S:!t59.000 Tr\,-15', \\/dt'l::til!. 11.1" n · (:li$~i]o-o -,w-,-. -,,-. -b-,.,-,-.,-.,
11an1~ to buy OPt'an \'1e11· :;.
pl<'>. 01· ~-pl<'X. ti1:i-361:i 1~:
RENT•L FINDERS
411 W. 1 ... COJ1A MdA
Hout •• * Apt1. * '45-4111 *
A tor :1:::,.. t~l"ln1 fil'ul
d<'r()r111•·d s1:1.7·.u -~in fllol
On 011~ ·: ru~ hv11u" t ;old
... 1,;11,: 1•;1qx•l1ni.:. C.:111•111~/1
f1n·1ol. 1h111ug 11\!Hll an1! 1•;<1
111g .u·1·a 111 kitvh 11\ukc ltH~
an uk•u l fa111J!y hu111••
Sparow Rlty 842 -4474
Best
Ea st side Location
15 Units
Agate ,\v~. BRlbollo Island. F . h d , • . .... , urn1s •
:; R1', 2 1::>11 ho111<' !:un rni.
bltns. rno·I IJ..1110 ~I f•l'k .t:
!.1°!1UUI s::1 000 Jl.v H\\!l•'r
~16-J.lj 1.
.Ju.~! <;l)uth nf S<.<11\a /111 a
1'1ounl1) l'lut1. 7-:.? B(\ Tu1\n
l10USt'S I. :.! I.kl· ~. I Bd
'I. Baell Ex•·('l1Pn\ r1·nlul
fu'l'a. ,\It Ltr111). lf'tt»i'il. In·
LISTING~ 11anted. \\e hair . $~f'Rl\'A'l'l!: Ba._·hr lor 11 Uuy~rs for hon1~~· -~~ Rl &· I Ir 1'11(11\inl!. ui1·,. h l:!l"tt l\.
l"Olll l. ,\g!'UIJ< 6•.>-l .... .!;J HIR 1 ki~(' tu ('\'Cl)'th1ng For n111o
Mission Vieio
~ BR .(
Newport Beach
2 HOUSES · DBL. LOT
•;, BLK . TO BEACH
l.1ke n1•11· ~-~!.\ ·I HH , :!. 1111 ,
ronnal 11111 t'l!I !ol!n)<; la111
n1\ 11 111·1 h;1r &-f~HQ
F1·plt· '2 t·111· gar". ll11n1•'
{"OUld l;.• il1Hdl' 11110 duplt•\.
Also · •·111<> '1 HH ~·o!f"I:''
&ilh onl~· l7·1,!I(~). Ori.·n
1\·f'('krnds 1.:;
C:\ Y\\'000 ltE.-\LTY ~dio:-l~~J
A-F RAME
Bc:u·h. boating & l••r1nr~
SIC'pS ;111a). Lik,-. 11r11 :; lill ,
2 ha. Only S~l . .'~Xl.
CA YWOOD REAL TY
63Qli \\' l'o11s! I h1 y . N I~
548-1290 , ___ _
ROAMIN' ROOM
:; Bdrms. :l lull haths. 11ln111~
rw111 ,l fonual dinlnJ: 1•111
Over 2700 sq 11 on ii lq; o·u1·
ncr lo1. Asking $j1.fJOO.
RED CARPET
REALTOR
492-9700
~C~h~.-n-n-elf ront H~
On R-2 101. 11•1!h p1••r & (11n11
S6.'l.OOO. r11 1· i\ppr11n11nc111
(.'.all : 67:~.:1.li\i:! S.16-02:~1; l<1·r
associated
BROKERS--REALTORS
1025 W. klboo-'73·J61J
Ill
1fJ,.Yi FLA \llNGO, '! brt1'111
:! h.Jtll. ll'ii"h<'t' .~ rll)l'I
dii:olH\ .• :-lll'L'. i'"tU!ll )J!lfl'h
.olld :-!11·tl ~t'1•\IJ.l hi V;.1111 1_1
J1:irk 1'1•1 () I\ S9:iOO 1110
\r. .\lf·F~1dd1 ·u. SJ1:·1l'l' I)();,
I\ .1 11 « I I , Sar1la .\rl;t,
~,:11-7~'9-I. ----EJ.r:GAN'r 1!171 l\('~'\\'t•S(,
:z.1,t)(I Pr1c·t·<I ror qui!·k
1·1·~ak $17,:iOO. Spart• 7,
~;~~)I Ritlgr Hou((' !)1· ,
C'ontt"nirn Laguna H i 11 ~
:'l>tobil1· l\1rk.
:'1101311.E llon1r & Cab:111u.
on !ti<> ha). full~· fu1·11 'd.
fq1ls. pQtio. L ido Vlll;1 ~r
-.:,, I, IUO l.1do J~ark Dr .
:'\ p, tiO:'.-f)(i.'\U,
• \lobllc
ll<>lt\f'. fl h•tal a11n111g. 3107!'1.
... fi 16-8::1:1 ...
l!l\'lO' \1obd;-i10-;:;1r, P!ll'IOSC'tl
1·11h;in;1 In P:irk 1lo11·nt11\1n
c.~!. C.dt .-~111-.-1919.
Real Estate,
General '
Acreage for sale 150
·10 /\Cl{l;:S f{olling n1rado1r
Ill 11;111111111! fOl'i'ST . TAI\!::
OVEI~ -~~~J .\10 . $~--OIJ.17.
Commercial
BY OWNER Property 158
2 .~1011·. :: BR. A r1·a111t• S1•·r~ I ~-.....---.·--~·--
ro \l('sl t)r;~··h L1kr lit'" IL·\l:U."1111' ('.\SI·.. \ll'!iT
S36 .~. t;.l:!-1:121 Iii-. SU l.0 ' Ch 1u n1rr1·1;11 * Big Canyon *
(;'llf l'UUlf,f' l''l!llf', SJl'l'l'l.•('U•
l .. r 'u ll<'\1 li•nnf' th1111·1•
--l\Ar:.BO/t \.'I('\\ ll unll'". \IOI'·
hid.!. c·:.1 1.onr L<irg<' til;ick
lf'll parkin::: arl'a . .\lak•• 11f-
h·1· nlu . ;,1~--0:.i1.~Jti7::---0:1JI.
t'U\1 H ti:l~;-f,".(;;1111.g,.., l'-\
la1~! & bldg>\.
A!.!t'll1 ti7~l-722J 11.I.P..
• nn1r nvf'r S25.700 f)f"r }'('ar
L1,1o•1I at SJ75.IJ(k). 011n1•1•
11111 'arry :!nrl T.I}.
l 0 Unit
Money Maker
i.l't 111111· NJu11~· i;:ro11 i..n<·al
r1! 111 pr1111!' Ea.~1s1<1<' 1·('111;11
il)'f'i< ('In ... • lfl ~ulf <'OUl'SI'
:, 1nd111du1d 'l h<tnn lio111('s.
II l!li li•'lllll ···•ilHl~S and
hru·k rin·plit•·""· Also ~' bttt•h
•111a1·1 .. 1·s. lrlPH\lf' (I I f' I'
$11,600 f>l'r ~·P;1r Lish•rl al
Sli~f,;iXl. 011·ncr 11 Ill srtl or
11.,11!1• rri1· l::trgrr prufl<'l'ly.
114 Units ·
6.7xGross
Br:iutirur 11ni1s IC'ss than 1 yr
old. S1•hrd11led 11\('0lll<' over
S:Mj,000 J.!{'I' fr ... 'ull prier
S 1.!iS0.000. Sr lier 11·ill t akr
S:l30.000 rk>ll'n. !\!tty takr
l:x•<11·1i JJl'OJ)l.'1'1 ,\ fo1· part nf
f'flUJly
65 Units
Near Harbor
And Baker
Busin•ss
OPPOrtunitv
DISTRIBUTOR'S
NEEDED
200
N1111unal :'llarkf'ting Con1p1u1y
/\'l;;J.:Ds NO\r . 1·e-liablt' tllf'Tl
or \\'Olllf'n in this area 10
"1·1·1·1\·e fasl 111ov111g 1:ou1 Oil·
Pl'a!ed prod11cr~. NE\V n1ult1
n1i!lion dollar ad1·Pr11s1nJ,'(
ean1pnis:-n. HUNT SNACl'-
PAC!{. Con1pany SC('l!l'('rl lo·
l'ation~. 1:on1n1<'r cial and fac-
tory. PART or FULL llmr.
ti to 10 hour~ p!"r 1veek.
NO SELLING
C \Slf REQUIRED StiOO to
S1 ,!J95. For n1orf' inforn1a1ion
1\•ril<': Quid.....-+\up D\~lribul·
in1: Com pan,\·, 111 l \\' Rob·
inhood Dr .. Slockton. Calif ..
9.1207. Gi\'e na111r . 11dc1rc~.~-
and phon<' n11n1hl'r.
**BIG BEAR LAKE
LJCIL:Oft S'TORE ~·01· S<il,.
i\f'!s appt'OX. S.i0.000. ) r.
Gross tnron1f' nv('r Slo\0,000 ()11 nC'r \\lll ca!'ry tinanc1ng
~il'O.~S SJ)f'lld~hlr "PP lO'i I Oppo1·n1nlly or a lile11n1c ~
!0!111 dollar Ul\'l'stn1rnt l'I'· Call f{o,.~ 17141 53ti·J7:l.S 1ir
turn O\'f'I' :i:1' •. l .1sl,.d Pl'lt'!" \\Tllf': Spent:<'!' Reill ~:~talt'.
S!lSO.OlllJ. P.O. Box 28:lS. Big BC'ar
CALL (7l·l1 :)46.\600
INVJ::ST:0.11·:\'T Dl\llSIO~
PRIME UNITS
Lake, California.
JTALIAN ReslauranL Y\U$l
sell. Rrtiring. Shol'I hrs.
Good inl'on1P. 113/921-911 5.
Money to Lo•n 240
1st TD loans SIX ~ t;:H. 'l Bi\ a111s. nc<o1
,,.,..~tc!trr Sl10pp1nR Ct:.'llT('r.
B!t-111 k1tchl"n~. r r p l t· · l'. 63/4 "k INTEREST
tar~{' RL-.. l;1undry. Scasot'lf'd 2nd TD Loans adult 1c1u1nts. l ;ocxl re1ur11
+ 1:1'\ "hcl1rr Sl.~.-1 00111 1111 1
[lrx1hlc IPl'lll'
!!', int. based on cquit)'.
Also NE\V 95r~
how~~ laweon Jez. of salt··p1il·,. loan~
i:aea!Cotl Sattler Mtg, Co.
::4lti \'1a Lido 6;'5.<\:i6~ 642-2171 S4S-061 1
Lo t s for Sal• ~7·~·D'. I 1Serv1ng !!arbor art:a ]2~11t!yl's_
Cl IOJ CE 101 100 xl3Y. '" -
pa1·f'd allr.1". :;1~ Jo;. ~l•Rllnl. 1ng I::ast. 11111.~• .~1·1! aln1nsl
1l('11· Porlof11~1 111!1d1·I. I·:.,
1r<1s soo.~.r.ri li·1'1·Ril::;
TRADE for 1111•1'--1 B~1
BA. l'\<>11riorT .'il101·c.~. ,\;::t
tiO:r l:ll.->. JI . I.IL
DE!-:iP!·'.11,\"rl·: (}\\'NE!\ 2 l:lll
Duplexes/Units
5al•
Hll(·l1,..~1l'r !:it.. C.ill. Short l L~-----~
162 1 \1;1lk lo lil h S1 shovpinz,l lll.li'·i·li···••i-'llll•-
''nlt', $11.7:!0 67:l-!J.i09.
--------H.-·Fumhhod 300
+dru '!1: B<i.:._'O<)(] ~I('\\'.
A"'-675-722:, JI .I.I?.
CUTE :! lir. 1 b,t t"11 nll•lU~
:oil'. 1n1n11ni: µno!. ff'(' land
Agcnt, tl7>-•2t:, ll I !:
Sa n Clemente
FLAWLESS
3 BR O\·crlooktnJi; Shnn•• hlfs
J:Olf 1"0UtY. Fan11I;. 1n/01•rn:1I
din1ni:: rn1 'I' Ire palin ru11-
\ idr!< ,1111 a1·1·11 f()r ~'ntc11:11n·
In;: EX"Cllll\,.. 011 ni•t' 111"1
111g IHH"lli &· 11 Ill )..,\, nfl, f ;11 I
S.:19.:iOO
RED CARPET
REA LTOR
[).'\:\'.-\ Po1n1 -:\°1'11-dupll':\.
S·l!l.:100. Sih•er Lan1rrn a! l..a
Cr('sliJ. \\'rbiJ..Bkr. 6,12-190:1.
Income P roperty 166
IN COME UNI TS
:! BH ra .. ru·f'
pl;wr. \'l'pt~. driis. i;:;uag•'"
S:'.-t!l:ll
TRIPLE X
~ BIL 1 '" Ba. f1r('pl. rlhl i::ar
11nd '!·1 BR unil!< 'i·l~l.'l50.
6 UNIT S
• •ti ' • ;u ·1 •• 101 si;!l,:!00.
8 UNITS
Cor111•1' lr){'Vli1111 Slll(),il(I()
Roy McCardle Realtor
l'\lO .. '\t•11·1111r1 Bll·d C ~1
.~-49_2.9100 ___ I ___ 14_8-_1_12_9 __ _
San Juan Capistrano I I 7 HOUSES
ll lLLTOl' RJ.i\liTY I Oil.!. lot, do11nto11·n co~l.1
V11r h('d 1·ooin~ th1·,-.1• h<tlt·~ \lt,~.1. S~i,,, 1no11lhlv 111·
fan1 1Jy n~J!H ''"'D flun1.1I <'01111' .~10.((JO, do1111. l l1ury,
d111111s.; roc11n Ll1sh, ;,nx·t~ ,\
1
11·011 ! lv.~t · Only ~
drapes. T 11 o f1rrpl;u•P\, $79,500.
ccn11rlr1c·l 1 11ir i'f'liulitior1<>d. I rr:nr-:.O:-J REALn· fJ.12-1771
All th1~ nn lan•i"-"<tJH'll .11!'11 !1!17 Orang!' Air f'.:0.1.
Joi. in ;\\1s~1nn \'1r1u 't ()UI'--'
tor· 28 .UN IT
Per.ill a nen{-Oceail View
f);ina Poir'lt. 80x l00 R·l.
Sl~!.l\00 644·02:.,fl
Mountain, Desert,
Resort 174 _____........ ~-· ...
**BIG BEAR LAK E
1' ,,, ........ "
* F ISHERMAN *
S70 I BR pvt eottagr
$1 00 J BR, :! 111<'11 OK
$100 rnobill' ho1nc, stuclrnt 01\
S120 Cd i\'I I BR. util pd
$60 Bach pad. Bal Isl. uril pd
s100 1 BR c.~1. util pd
979-8430 AGENT
Ir} lh1s beauldtil l.11\r.fronl Billbo• l$land
hon\,-. f()r only S-13.:1()(). Dt-
1.,11"1'(' 1·a~r :O.lakr nfft'I" 4 BR hon1e \\·ith lge. p<1t1<1 k
tall l!o~~ J711 1 ~i3fi.17:\S Or I piC'r \1•ith beauliCul vic1v &
11nl(' ~fl!"ll{'.C'r R('nl E!>lall". So. B.a yfront. S450. n10.
Jl t). I~" 2il:ZS. Ru? 8('!lr \\'inton 'R.I::. 67J-33.11
l..akr. Calif ---
**BfG-BEAR LAKE I C __ •• _._._M_._._. ___ _
. ..:~O\\'Fl.,\l.:1·: :-;PE~J.\I. LOVELY 2 Story, 4 Br , 't
Pt1ll ~ou 1· ,;fl(l11 sl"rl llp 111 B11 T1\'in sinks, 2 masl.
1l11s s11C•c1;•! bu,\'. Cab1n·Ul · b1':<, frplc. 1vash/dryr/dighrs
tllr-11·ood.,, r1l'<'d'I l 1n1~h1111::. linens. Lrg_ yd. lnri. 01111<'r.
()111,v .SG.li:.O. !·>Z ll'l'!ll." II 1'.!I.:1 ·1'.\9-481:1, t1t' TC'lla!\1.
1~tu 1 't la.,1! Cal: RCl!ls 1il·ll 97~723. 97fi Denver Dr
~ .... 11-i-17:\S or 11•n1,..· ~rtn<'<'r C :0..1.
i{('.iJ 1-:~r;o1r. P.O. 1~'' 2.~2R. BA CllEl.OR i izr. ldca.lfor
Bo ~ H"a:...._ L:_d.;1· Cal1for111,o 1n iddJr.agi:-d Pf'l'OOn. 3 7 !I
R,[(: flpar ] Bil furn, \'IP\\. l/am1lton. c.:111-
QuiPI a1'cll. All u!il. OJ.. East Bluff
~-EH' i\o1yl"r•. 67:'.-fii:lfi. ------------· Out of Sta te Prop. 178 BL UfFS TO\Vl\'HOUSE l BR. den, 2 Ba .. ~ pa tio!!.
HAWAI IAN LOT N"'"1Y decorated, quil'l ar('&
P anoramic vu of Kona nr. pool . &ff-843.i or '1l :l-
()/\'!.\' ~·10.000
CAPISTltAf\0 \'/11.l.E\ ..
Rericl_1 tu huilri. !lll util. un-798-9:iCH.
2 & :l Rr. 'l Ra. Nr shop'g. -' d d 1 JO 010 ul'r~roun 811 n. . sq. L•guni h .acli .11231 t]h.s A\'e .• 1 IB. $420 i\I. fl TE:Ri\1S. 54.5-3:116
Reali) 1~1:-r 112·1 sn.:1n.;1. ARIZONA.---$11~TIL PAID
Sant• Ana RY {l\\Ocr. ClL\l 4-rlctx. 11\'0 .l La~" lt'\<'I !ors. 11·alrr. Bachelor 11.pl avail. year
RR 's. one 2 BR & o"" 1 RR. JIO\\'C'f', Good roads. S795 full round. Fully furnished. ft.t:. $22,750 frplc's. Oc:c:1.n stdc of H1>.J.". pr~!'. Eai;y 1rrn1s. Frre frif &: hol pl11if>. NICEST
BY OWNER S99.i:io. 1>42-~11. pi1·1ur<' maps. \\>'rite t:lmer AREA lN LAGUNA!
Jn Santa Ana .. "\ BR. 2 car PRl.\ll:: 4---p,-e-,_-,-11-3--B,-.-2 Bu!lrr. Box 486. Kingn111.n. NU-VIEW RENTALS
&aragr. Shag cpts. Covcr«I Ba. inL'Orne S700 /mo. :-.;o Ari:t.. R&,IOl. £7J4030 or 494-3248
patio. fenced yard. Will l'on-1t\\·n to GI. S62,500. Nr OCC. Tum unused ilen1• into qu1ck N•wport Be•ch
sider srcond. 836·56'72. 5;:i7-S\51. cash, call 642-5678 •L_E_A_SE;...._L_ldo-Sands---1.,.-,-. -3-b, .::;,"'~;;z;::::::;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;::;;.!.;;::;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;::;;:;;;::;;:;;=:;::;.:;::;;;::;;:;;:0:::;:;;;::;;:;;;;;::;:;;;;;::;;. 2 ba. $350. Unfum 2 Br apl .
' .
COll!a' M~sa. $180. 642·107:1
Hous•s Unfurn. lOS
$90 I BR. gar. cpl or 1ng\g
$100 I BR, I on 11 101. kid11'
""" SIJO 2 BR. ulil pd. kid!! ok
$135 2 BR, gar. C.M. kid11 ok
$140 2 BR. &'Ill' 11.B. kidll ok
S1.§ 2 BR. gA.r, \'tlt', kid5 ok
$14."l 2 BR, 1{ l('tt, kidll pets
ok
$165 2 BR •/1wim pool N.B.
Sltri 3 BR w/pr, Jclds Ii: pet•
S170 3 BR. pr l-1.B. kkil A: ....
$175 3 BR. Jtr. C.P..t. kids .l ....
S210 4 BR . pr. nr bch. kids
"""' ok WE htl.ve I hONe rsnc..flt11 w /
a creage. l'OtTllls, tack rmt
tn varkrut 1rca1 stA.rtlnr a1
1200.
979-MJO AGENT
Ea1t11de Costa Mesa
Rent at $195 or option to buy.
3 bedroom. 2 bath. doublt
caraae. fenctd yard. new
•hl1 carpet•, freshly palnl·
ed. Call Brok~r SC!)-9491
Opon Ewa.
lur•r 1111\lt
hst". SIO\'(', rrfl'lg.
1111·(' )llrd
Unfurnished I Huntington a.ach
si-.r,i.i:; :\JOE :.! Br CO'/)' ('01 · -'
ta:::(', lovr1y yard 11· lrl"r's 1 • ('OZ't 1. Br nrar ix-a .. h.
ldral for !ll ll1 1tre <'OUplt . l'J)I rirps, ktdS ~111J J){'I. $11:1
__ ALA Renlot. e '45-3900
Sl~~1DOl.LHOUSE.? B1· 11 /1 · ll,RD ll ., R .... to f'al·. r, 1•p1 l'n•·l gar. Crpts. drps. fni ·d ,h·ps •. 1,1. , o 1 ·d Cl Ii •· , · " -~ rr .-> of'a1· 1 11 r('<1
)1 .• u10 .... SJ::O.
$l50·i11 L~GUNA I Br. )('<II'·
ly l'rnlal. Bl0<:k lo bea._·h
fr)ltr. Patio, Ur1I pd
$165-!iPACTOU!-:i :l Br. 1'~ Ba.
bltn:'l', c rpl:'!'. drps. 1·l11ldrcn
'"~lc.'Onle.
S:tY.>-POOL + 4 BR. 2 Ba split
l!"l'el. Crpts. drps. bltn!!.
~·an1il)' or iinglrs. Prr ok.
BEACON * 645·011 1
--FO R RENT
ALA Rent•f5 e 64S·l 900
*\VE ha1·~ a iarg:r ,.;:j~etion
of 3 1111rl 4 bf'droo1t1 honte-'i
thnt can ~ 111n1 C'd \1110
ahnost in1mediate-ly 011 ou1·
R e-11t.O p tion pla n.
SJIER\VOOD Rf: AL i · Y .
§.lll.1555
,.~B~R~1~8A-.-"l;C'-l _b_lt_i<_, -R-10
FA ht .. crpls, 60'.,100' ftnt d
lot, dbl e;ar., Id ~ c p cl ,
1·.-1<·11n1-n1ri1£' in loda~'. Stl;
!)el' !HO.
~ BEDROO.\l l!Oi\Il'.: VJl--1..A(.;l'.: RLAL 8:.'TATJ.;
'! ba1hs. '..!·car e:aragc, t•ar· !962-4471 ~81(13
pel<'ll. drape:d. fent·f"d, pa-I J-Br nr Edingt'r r.,
llo. SU Pf'l' sharp. s'!:iO !>Cl' I Gold!'nll'{"S1. fn<"d y rd .
1nonth. . ,., p l !/d1•pi;. Jn11111.l
Walker & Lee
Rral1or~
842·44~
LANDLORDS!-
\re specialiZe in 'Ney.·porl
Beach • Corona pr-I r-.1ar 9
Laguna • .&: Dan& Point.
Our Rcn1aJ Servic~ is l''REl::
to You!
NU-VIEW RENTALS
ti73··10W 01· -l[!.1.::2.18
VERY CLEAN &. VACANT ~
BR 2 Sto1y hon1e in pr1n1f'
l01·. llr'. i><:hool!. ~·iunilitR
only at SM;, 1110. Agrnl
al&-4!41
e S17f>.UTIL ln(·\'rl. 1 Br \1·/
rrpl. tx>an1 ('('ili11g~. ··h1ld
pcot uk
ALA Rento1 I• e 64S·3900
e STEPS to BrM:h, 'l Bi·
llf'\\' 1-rpLl rlrp!. lrplc. 4·h1lll·
i·t:n ok. Sl!Kl.
ALA Renl.1ls e 645-3900 --HALf blk fron1 Cd:\1 Bc:h.
ln111HH'. 2 Bclnn., 2 bath &
guest hSI". Couple only, No
tlogs. $375 rno, Avail. mid
r.1arch. 836-98.IJ, day!! or
ti7J-8178 eves.
~rt ocea n. 3 BR , 3 BA, cien.
din 1·m. hllns. ~ilnl ("eil-
ings. rrpll:. $400 Ii,..
673-:"A07.
Costo1 M·'.-,-.-----
SPRING HAS SPRUNG
and you1· housec leaning i>i
clone ~ l::n.)Oy your rarde-n
apartment 1\·ithout \\·ork:
Stroll lhe garden!. play 1iOH
sun at thP. pool.
• l:ZOO square fer. S200
mo111hly * Gratiou:'l' entrrt11ining area
1vit h fi1·eplact", pa!io * '1 brdroon1!!. dCfl. 2 balh!
Jus1 a fe,v 11 1
The Vendom•
1~4:i Annh<'i111 Avenut>,
6~2-28'14 ---~~~ HOME FOR RENT
OR LEASE OPTION
The trg. addition ('Outd 1nake
!'.I bellrms. I.fa.., 3 bathroon111.
huge L'<lvered palio. Only sm. J)('r n10.
-ALSO -
J Be<11·n1. hon1c, l\.1~u. Verdt.
I block lo /l.farket Basktl.
$250. pt<r mo.
S46-f521 OR 540-UJI
Nichols Real Estate
e CLEAN l: Quiel 1 Br. eml
yrd, ~net gar, \Valk tq
ahOp!!. $115.
ALA Ronl•I• e 64S.lfOD
e FIXER Upper 2 Br, 1tove,
rclrig. kid11 <1k. $135.
ALA Rontol1 e 645-°3900
4 BR .. ram room. Almoel 1,,
a cr e . R•n c h hou1e .
$250/ri.10. l~aff. 2 4 4 9
Orange, Costa M r 11 a ,
673-ti020.
Vacan1. .SlXl/n10 10 nt0 or
lease. Call 833-1!03. reiudt ll-
c·e-:'46-97:-rt o\\·ner/.1.1.:1.
3 HR~1..-;-Ba1h.~. ran1ily
100111 with fir~lace : 1110-
neighborhood, uear· a I 1
schoolfi &nd beach. Re111 or
T \V N l~-s-1:: ~--I);:--; d r -y.
refl·ig/rng., drp/crpt , pool .
l:lbhse, 1'~ Ba. 1vtr. pd. l
Br,, S}.9j. 'l Br_, $170.
.>48-14-0-J, 537-J:IS4.
TRl -level •xe('.. hon1"~:!-SR.
l BA, fan1 rrn ,, 2200 sq rt.
gardC'ner. Priva1e J>IH'ly.
S350 1110. 536-487<!.
OUR Ho1ne ror rcn1 • 8eK1n-
ning April IJjL 3 BR. 2 BA,
crpts, drp11. al'.·ning l'Ove1·C<J
palio. :>36-4323.
$240 1110., 38R. 2-BA . f"rplo -,
bl1n~. crp1. fncd. Air 5.
fl93-8768.
J BR, 1\·/1v ct-pt~, drps. a:a.rb
d i!!pl . gar. Call 962-8.i78 for
info. & appl to tt('. No pe!s.
Irvin•
'2 BR, 2 ba. 1-·urn S:ilO.
4 BR. 'l' 1 ba. fan1 rn1 $.'WO.
3 BR, 2 BA. Atriun1 U 1:1.
:I BR. 2 BA. sep. hon1e S33:i.
3 BR , 2 BA. Turtlr Rock S33().
\VE: llAVE Ol}IERS
'll11 l1 ,-, \,li d.
---'l l.1'uli11r
"SINCE 1946.,
11t \\'estcm Bank BlllK.
Univer~ity Park, Irvin,.
Oo1y s tlUIOI Nights
2 BR. :l ba .•....•...... $300
4 BR .. Zl ~ bath:i ••.••. '~
:l BR .• 2 ha. home .. SJO(l/:IJ,;:,
3 BR., 2'z b<t ........ S350
ired hill
Rl::ALTY
Univ. Park Ctnter, Jrvine
CaU Anytime, 833-0GI
-JBR .. 2 BA, $170 -
Canyon a.rl"&. Scclude<I &:
WOODSY. Ni<:e h0u11e Y.:/
hig frpl{'. open bcan11, birch
d i11. rm. ti(', p,.,.r. worklnx
couplr.
NU-VIEW RENTALS
673-4030 or 494-32-tS
VIEW OF OCEAN
• BEST Bet! l Br. 2 Ba. 2 BR'11, tireplac:e. nice affa.
l'l"pf1drps, ne"' palnl. Kid!! Stove, refrig, crpts, drps,
ok. Sl85. dooble + rara1e. F'enced
AL~ Rontol1 e '4S.lf00 yanl. 12Xi.
e El>"TftA Room! 4 8,. 2 "' NU·VIEW RENTALS
.£/srde. Kid• 1: ~f,. S3Xl. 673-4000 or 4Sf.324I
AL~ fi...i~ls •'4s.J900 2 BR. & FIREPLACE * LRG, Priv. ptfio ~ Gal'lllt' Slov(', cupe'la. drape•, tr.c4 w/.,.w~beoeh 2 8 R • • yard, cozy little houtt. ttu . ' ' rtnt. Sl-40. Alto pan'I ofline
cptJd rpt . $160/mo . avail w / be. llc'd mfg. $30 . •-n.3690. NU·VIEW RENTALS
3 BR, U's encle yard, 840 673-4030 or 49f-3248
Govt:nor, SW. 213/59656 L-N. I eves. •1un• 11ue
CllARMING 2 br home.
~'r!nei!:d yd, Crpl I dl"p!I.
1110\'e. $165, mo. 337~9517.
(l~ 2 Br xtr• nic.-e. Respon.
cpL No child I pet•. Fro'l'l
$113. 5e-6412, 142--9139.
2 BR , $1'0 menth
179-llmor~ •·or be•l tttu1ts! 142--ri-
3 HR. 2 BA, liv ' din uea.
frTl l. bl1lns, t p{J, drpti, kar
a:ar., sprn~lrs, vie\\... ln1-
mac. $215 mo-1.d, Jul .&:
dep. 49.j....(244.
Lklo Isle
4 BR. DEN. 3 !>Ith k>vtly
hom~. Avail f"eb. ID July.
16Q(jlmo. 5.ll·ml.
MESA Verde VlUa. Br•nd
11ew 2 bdrm. 1~e1.r unit \vith
yard &. patio, epts, d1·p1!,
l.:'11.rllgf', 1va.~hing latil ille11.
Clo111" !o llCllOOI~ & r1~')~.
Rel: It pool hH·ilitit's.
$200. ~>"15-1304
•
I 3'0 Apf a. Furn.
LP.t;. ! HR apt. pat1l,\· lurn.
$125. tUrn.. $1 35. Adulls,
Lndi'y, gar. Qu iel. 111'.
mrkts. 1922 \Va.llac~ No. 8 ,
5484i518.
t.RL;-;111gle-1110.1) ~ BR !um
apt. $150 tllO. !\'o fee. S50
mo\'f'·in Rll011"ancf' .
CREST REALTY
3 BR. z Ba. lrplc, d•h~'hr, EAST 1i<lt, I br. hoqie, 3 B . ' .
ot.-ca.n vie\\', $~fmo yrty etean. quiet, mature adults. R, .t Ba., 2 deckl. dswlllllr,
a valJ. »4 33rd SI. 642.--a'l20 Retere~t $145 543--8007 ttove,, n!fric,, ·cpts. ' '
or 646--6114. . . • · priv. sat:. % 1)lk Ocean1ll
----·-· $100 ·-MOVE 1N Allowanc.' Bay • .JBOO/rno. LM.fNo pets,
Shady E1n1~LA"'n-Pool G75-503'.
[ I{ I ] Children'• Section i;2o;8;;;R0 -:2;-.. ;;:-r' -:lrPl.°"'.,.,--,-1 ~llllMI• f•ftn: Fur?. &: Unfurn .l 4 2 Br. (BaJ~ 8.1 d ',,,,_ .,E'' ~· :;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~·~~ •tom fll.i/n10. Up \I • • '") m E ~-» s1' e .,,, M .. llll5. No "!.'°.:..!. dlll-. · ..... "" • ......._ Bt-aut vu. t1.i4e'1.1.i Alll .. .._•_._F_u_m_. ------I 1 Br St.10 t. 2 Br $1811. Pool' ~,8Jt 1 ba· 1 _... _1 -terrace. Ideal tor blehelon. • ne"' Y ·~ec. ~
no chUdren. 1993 {:hureh, Nr' octa.n I: bi.)'. MO -S43-983J. children « pell. &'71-9!ifl. X 1 BR tum apt., adttllJ, Ce,.,.. ... J4ar
lolil N•w Cotic:-no """· 617 Victoria. iliiiiiiiiil •r• . * 54M131 * • n-m~ -al 1 ~2-;:-Br"°', ir,.:.-~.::.:,...::. ....... -m'""--. '-~ .-;
rUM11-Kiii ::;,~br~~tt:"·-· ~!!'!'
• )lonth to Moalh S BR rurn apt. utU\ti.ts m: OH TEN Mall * 100",i Purch ... Optlo-.. 1 daded. sno. Olde.r ttl\&fl{, .. • ' •• ~ • v * WK!e Stiecllon-" ...._ • -Sf>'io-O>lon • IM2-GO. ""1ame I ..... pot~
• 24 llour Dalfvery FURNISHED 2 Br. apt, uUI 1-ll Ttnn.11 Contnr1 Bldst.
Ii pd. $l70/fTl9, ?277-B ~faple • SN 1.ane, OW >.J:1 St. ~13. (M1cArlhuT flt 0..• =I w .. £ ~ I Br trailtr. SlOO + 11111. No CLOSE to be ·h 1 .... 2 ---~·---
--- _ --c.;hlldrtn. no pets, fW6.JS09 • •~ • .... Br, 2
or 6'Z..337~ Ba , open bea~. rtp,lc,
Sli \V, 19th, CM SofS.3"1 , bl1n.. priv. pon;h, prlv. pr.
2156 N. Ataln, SA 5'7..()314 LAROE fl.amithed l Br 330-A l\tarpmte. ~.
rrallol!r. 140 Ca.brlllo St. Put • Utile "IOOt' tn )'GUI'
Any d1y is thCI BEST DAY to 64J..3t'U. Lm1 • tell thoiee btubi.
run an ad Oon •1DAILY PU.Or tDr ldion! tor "boclul'' CdOt'"fli!lsl~
dt.Ll y .. call today ~·· Ca.II Sf2..58'11 A: Save! 142-5611. '
------·--
,_...;.... ___ _
r
(
) 30 OAllV PILOT
J~ I •M~ J~I u.i .-r.m J[SJ[ -...--]~ ~iiiiiiiiiiiiii~ ·-SH 430 lndu1trlol Ronl•I 450 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 345 Apt. Unfu,-n. Apt. Unfum. 3'S Apt•.~ Found (fr .. •ds) S50 Furniture
'-----------------E AST S "°".,...,~-----..,. Furn. or Unfum. 370 ..,_.rnnRT 8 h Edinger-Santa Ana , r-Costa Mesa LUFF 2 BR., Ca.rptts, dnl,pcs, built· 1"c."r"" e a c : pro-2500 .ci tL unit 1rr front FND: med u. cixicol&te brn SPECIAL. A\>Z. c.balr or
Coron• cMI Mflr 1----------2 Br. 2 be. Uplll.lni vi~ apt. ins, excelltnt . location lJ\ c" .. -1-.-Mo--.. -----ltxloo&I or buaineas man th ottice .near N~. Frwy & beige Poodle, beiae bar rocket 1tripped ~ Glulnc.
----N-E_W____ CHILDREN OK Ca.l"PC'tcd, draped, bill\!. 2 1'1eu Vttde. S1 50Jmo. lhare home w/pool. Sl.30. in~ &n!a AnL $250. pe.; on chest, beige lee1. \Vht bra.u: polilb~. Ms.-0866.
3 Bdnn., l bath duplex. Car· Ne w Villa Riviere ~~rt~:~ 1~1• !~6. ,.,_...,,
1
~t~ ~~:..me~ or mo1;,.l,~ue llr mo. to mo. ;f,"'1;!'*:;16 Found 1 I2 2 · Gardening
peted, drape.<!, blt-tns; priv. 2 Br, 2 Full Ba t 1 Newport Beach ~oaworlh Rt'al Eslatt ~ · ---..:C-----
patlo. Covered aara,ge. 705 Shag cpl /drps, patio, t>tam Y ar y. * BRAND NEW* Vt'JU. •ha.re my ho mt' 639-4210 FND Siamttt ca1, Srna.ll AL'S GARDENING
Orchid, $325 mo.. ytarly, ceil. gara.g:..-s. , , 675.,050 o PARK NEWPORT w/itOOtht•r hulilr'lf:~~ \\UJi11:in. M;:;;-l "'12=50_,M-,-l.-:f:-1.-w/olh~. lg1"_ male w11h flea collar vf'ry for rardenlna: & 1 ma I I
Mo lo Mo. f"mm SlAS • • APARTMENTS Pvt. bath. $117.50. fi.46..()8:;9 rea r rloor. $159.f~ mo. Ai~ loneiioml!. 1105 Alabama St., l11ndscaping .servict-11. c a 11
t < 675.&05& o 622 fia.milton. CM .... 1''''8"1' CL.& LA COSTA APJS. bt'f. 10 a.m. 2800 S<J. ri .. 2 ba ., lge. fro nt JIB. 53&-3062. 5'10.-5198. Serving N!!wport.
aw····==nca.,a. Sl>e r.1gr l>!r. & tllr1. Jlob&n • NEW DELUXE .-on the bay R00~1t\1ATE V..'anrPd, l.l\lfl nflicc. lit ~{J , IL S315 mo. FND. Small ~y POO(ilP, CdM, Cos\11. '.'1CM, Dovtr
54!l·2062 Luxu"' ;ipar1men1 hv''"' nv. 2 Bedroom Avt il. on beach, 2 BR ft1rn. J240 Logan St.. C. ~1 . !ml. Vit'. Beach & Ht'll. Shore!!, WcslcliU.
l Block to Ot-ean. Bea.m ce1l-
ing1, bit-ins, covttf't'd patio
deck. Ca.rporl. Avail Year·
ly. Small pel ok . .$230.
NU-VIEW RENTALS
or 494-3248
l BR, 1 BA. Sew pa1.t1!, crptA
& drp1, beam ttiling, lrpl(',
range, re.fng, b a Icon y ,
garage, ()cean,;irle of Hwy.
Ad.It non-smokers. $2&5 per
mo. 642-5531.
LUXURIOUS F'r!!nch Regen-
cy, 3 bedroom, 214 bath.
Fireplace, Dinini Room,
laundry. $400. Art. 675-4930.
Adults only.
NR oee11.11. N!!w, d~lux . 2
l!!Vt'I, 2 BR, 2 BA. beam
cell., frplc, bl tna, $300 II!!!.
67J-J4n.
OCEAN view, elegant 3
bedroom, 2 batha, fireplace,
dining room. Adul!JI onJy.
$500 per mo. Agt. 675-4930.
GR.EAT VIE\V-2 Br, trpl.
bll:rul, 11urnleck!, pool. $200
• up. 6#-6344. 675-5204.
2 BR., Blbl!!, Walk to
beach. $200. Orange (.oa.st
Real Estate. Call: 644-4848
Cost• Meta
YOU NAME IT
• ~·re near tt! For conven--
tence to the thlng1 th at
count, compare our locatkm
near the park; library, wo-
mien'1 club. boy's club, i!rl'•
club and shopping! * l bedroom.11. :I hath•
.Jc Picture-hook kitchen * Pool, puttin& ifl!en
3 BR, 2 BA Apt for lce.M>. '' -... " 7 * $170 * Incld lipac. master sui!I!, d[n f'rtooking thP \\"a!tr. Enjoy • Buflt·lfll' • s .... ·1mmlng &1v952 t'vl!s. 646-.1033 riays, 646--0681 rves. 8-17-3866. GARDEN f\ta.int. Cl!!aO-Up,
3 BR, l ~ BA , patio, bltn11. rm&. dbl garffJ!'.e: auto door S7~.IXX> health spa, 7 1w1m-Poot • Lanai • Bar-B·Qul!S Office Renta l 440 1300 SQ. 11. M·I ~pace, front FND: Min. &hna u:icr. Vic. ~totilli~g, new lawn prun-
crpts, drps. Ask about our OJlt'lll!r avAil. Pool & ftel"re· rn1ng pools. 7 hghted ten-• Garage. rea.r door. $167. mo, 1787 Jasm~ Ave . & Coast 111g, apnnklPn:. Otla Garden
discount plan. 880 Cen!t.>r ation area. ni5 oourtll, plus mlles ol ALL UTrl.ITTES PAID MEDICAL/DENTAL Whilller St, CM. 646-:iooJ Hwy., Cd.\1.. K!!n'a Mobile, Serv. 5.11-4440 dys. att 5.
St ., CM. 64UJ.40, 548-2682. • S175 • hJcYcle trails, putting, l'ihuf-ADtn..TS, NO PE'J"S Relit location · 7~ Dover Dr, dayi;, 646--00Rl e.vei. 644-70n. l ~&J~9-~""5=~· =--~~-
MESA V ~ 2 BR 865 Amig°' Way, NB Ileboard, croquet Bachelon 354 Avocado St., C.M. 1150 i;q tt , oHice. avail. Im· PROF"ESSlONAL Garde.Mr !!•1.11" upper, Imm $170 monthly: all!O 1 642.9708 med. occupancy, custom Storage 455 LARGE grey cat. Vic 1600 . ·
Newly de.coratM, bit-ins, \\'ILL~~~vglr.~ CO And Z.bedroom plans and interior. SI'ORAGE Spatt. $35 block Baker, C.~t. Ca.II ~ kl \\'Ork, I Pru n 1 1~:' cptJ & drps, no pet~. 1 child · · 2-story town hOuses. Elec· mo. S4>Si39 spr n en, c ean-up J" s,
0 .K. 548-5217, 54()..7562 $150. Huntington Beach tr1c kitchens. private pa tios ";::=::=::=::=::=::=::=::=~ , , '7MO~ 0 2'.lx20 encl~~7"'· Lo tt . SSS ~~~.ea p In i, Georre,
LO\VER, Gold Mtdallion, or baltonf('s, carflt'ting. ara· • -1 • ta.a .,,--..,-,---.,,-.--0--0--"7.c=I 1----------
tront, 2 BR. Patio, encl gar. ON BEAC peries. Subten-anean park· Rentals Wanted 460 LOST Black Great Dane AL'S Land~aping. Tree
laundromat, adlls. m pets, ff I in;;: \\'llh elevators. OptionaJ BRAND NEW * LIDO BUILDING * ----------1 w/white spot on chest. rt'moval. Yard rl!modeling.
$155 mn. 645-3515. 642.6499 • n1a1rt !lervit r Jus1 m rlh of From $l~5. Dishi•,.asher, sha.1: I lrg & l gnl suile jus! UNfo1JRN 11pt. w a n l t' rl Rewa rd . 213/592-1635, Trash h<'!oul ing, lot cleanup.
e BEAUTifUL GROUNDS• 2 BR Unturn Fr. $230/mo. Fashio n Island a! Jan1hQr. carpering. v.·alk-in close!s. ''aC:alt"d . Call !o Sft', .JONES Balboa Prnin 11rca. 2 BR 714/846-5065. Repilir sprtnkleM. 673-1166.
SPAN!Sl! DEcon Furnitu re Available re llnd San Joaquin Hills "" _ _. · h 1 tr I REALTY S . r .. , r. O" frplc.. ga!'agt-L" 11 s e -CALICO t l · A , Road. ,. orcni air ea . ex a argl! ... v , .. permanent. Reis. 67:;..2976 ca osl vie. vacau
Air/cond. Ga s, wtr. pd . ch.,...dl5-dra1peh-dishwasher T•l•phon" 47141 .,A4_1,,..,., roomi;:. Beautiful game room. premi~. 3355 Vi.a. Lido, NB or 675--8484. &67,,c_08,t5~"6y73c_.~:.· 3 mo:s old. Gara-Pool Rec rm CAl!! poo ·111.unas-tenni.s ' ~ ' · "" ::llJ\J healed pool BBQ'11 tnclos-(site of Blue Dolphin RC'sl.) " "' OWi.i .. ~. ' · ·• for rental information · ' laundry. 1 BR $140. 2 BR rec room--0eean views ed garages, quiet &urround· ti7>-3771. \VANTF.D: Crl!\1 house. or BRO\VN satcheJ lull ol
Slfi0..$165-$175. patios-ample parltinr \VATERFRONT, lrg d l x Jni::-s & close to shopping. DESK space avallable $50 apt. J or 2 Bit Frp!c, bl tns. school boola; vic Shalimar
* Con1plete Landscape Se.rv .
Serving al! Orange Co.
Formal & natural pn1nini .
Also, 1.ree scrv. 557-9379,
Hacil!nda de Mes!! Apts Security guards. Townhse, 3 Br, 3 Ba, den, Adulr living, no pt"!S. mo. Will providl! furniture Nie;('; up to $300. Refs. CM R1"ward 54 8_3 669 '
160 W, Wiliion, See Mgr. No. 1 HUNTINGTON 1700 sq. f!, Many extnu;, EL CORDOVA APTS. at $S mo. Answering service 540.-lm anytime. 557...6ros. ' ' 71 Y1'9 exp. • Frtt ~lit.
BRAND NEW 2 BR. PACIFIC S450 pe.r mo. No pets. Pier 20TI Charle St. 6424470 available. 17875 Beach Blvd. TEAQIER desires quaint, 1 WHITE Samo ed d , ''"'"·General Service•
* 549-2015
FROM $155 & noat avail for 1rg boat. Near Harbor&: ll11mil!on St. Huntington Beach. 642-43n hdrm apt or house w/gar. lost JM ~ Pl
Near shops, enclosed gar-7ll OCEAN AVE .. H.B. 3507 Finley Ave. Ap-bl in quiet beach are.a. 675-7524 Teddy, . · 'V'.c·. t>86e TH INGS by Moo~ LL
.. "· built·inll. encl patios, (714) 536-1487 poinbnl!nt 714:67J...S249. DESK space aval.la e $50 673--0904. phone 548--5669. Gnev1ng. e:lect.. plumb, fl!/Jce, ti!le,
Ofc open 10 am~ pm Dally '"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"' mo. Will provide furniture u · 1 . allnlctive l!ldscp. Adultl'i \VILLIAM \VALTERS CO, Sp AC I 0 US Ye a r I y at S5 mo. Answering servlc:e COLl.EGE Professor & e, JllS'I M, carpentry, pain!
O"ly. No -~. 1970 Walla<• "PENTI!OUSE APT." 2 BR -I I~ etc 5olf>..-08~ " ,.... HACIENDA available. ~ Fore.st Avt!, family seek 3 Br., 2 Ba. · ·
St. 5-IS-0804, 646-2209. 2 Wks Free Rent & Den. Avail to right party HARBOR Laguna Beach. 494.9466 home in CdM or Npt . Hghts. S.W. and'lllPlh GREEN MANSION .-WI LS-ON·~--I Feb. ?.irh for only S250/mo. 241 AVOCADO srREET DELUXE 650 sq. fl. Office Lease or Sale. 548--3703. ~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~IGardening &. Yard Main-
GAROENS • \VAik to heach. new luxurious Call fi7J-l!l09. !••••<• J-Elm "21!'7 1-1 en Sh Bl ===~===~~ Adults only · No P!'.'ls 42c/sq. tt. Corona de! r.1ar. 1 IJR house, N.B. area. Npt. A 1. R , ....... -"" er,'"· " 2 BR l" BA ... . Ag crpl, Ins, SEACLIFT J.lANOR Ap ts-2 ... _, N rr· pp l!I Ct epat EVP • n , cpt/drps. rlrps. palin, !Mai arcn, bbq, ...., tLxe 1 & 2 BR. Pool ear post o IC!! · Snack !Its pref'd llRVI! small pel. n r ·' . Hawaiian Gardener
Encl patio. Sl40. 642-&nl auhlerranran park'g. gar Br. $160 Unf. $175 lurn. Gara~!!. Dishwshr. Paid util. Shop. Priv. park., air eond. 64s..5614 & Parts Compl!!le garrl!!ning service * LRG, priv. petio • Garage avail. &Ironies. frplr·~. Cpts, drps, bltns. garb displ. FROr.1 $150. 646-1204 Realonomics, Bkr. 675-{;700 Discount Appliancl! Repair Kama.Jani, 646-4676.
v.•/...,·orklX'nch, 2 B R' 1, lndry f11 c1I. 539-1661. "'"" nlf)9, 1525 Placentia. Ave. Ask LGE. a ir-cond. fro nt office, ~ aho"I O"" d'·-"nt "0 2682 FABULOUS 2 BR l[tt) \Vasher, Dryer, Dishwasher. H•ullnn cpt/d rp1. $160/mo . 5.16-5015. .. ..... ..,._,,., . .....,. · new cp~. drps: 51.Jb--ISI!! or ··• --,'-;;-,__-,,-=o--=~-Pe~oo•l1 GUARANTEED * ~!M 1----------673-JS!M'l. LRG. 2 BR . $I .. "-2 BR, 2 Ba. SIC oven, cpr d, $ISO & $l6 mo/mo. $135 Mo. Dover \VANTED M -d 'd deck & N ._ 5 Furn/Unf Bid N Babyiittinn : l!l'isy I re es SPAC. 2 & 3 Br. Apl $140 up Under New Managrm•nt <l'fP. · gar. 0 pe~ y g., ewport Be a ch ••••••••••i I __ :_ __ .. •::..,____ Yam. •
Pool ~/per mo. Side tie avail. ou \\'On't find a larger. nicer G4!>--3l20. .,. p.n.ge1 ~ moving
, cpt/drp., bltna, Kids ok Ask about our discount plan · apt for leS!. Beaut. garden Personals 530 BABYSITI'lNG our home, & haul~. S7.50 per hr. +
2206 College No. 5 642-7035 & move-I n allow. Children&: _j .. 73-824 __ 9_· ~====~ area, patios. Quiet de&d-end EXECUTIVE SUITES 3000 r;q ft, hot lunch, :xln't odd jobs. 548-5863.
1994 Map!!! No. l 642-JB'l3 small pc!s welcome. Newly 2ID4 W. OCEANFRONT street. j ust s. of Newport Newport Cntr-Rodetfer Bldg. GuarantHd To In-' play tacil, c~ teacher. HAULING, c L E AN_ u p
1 BEDROOM, dishwasher, tM!!c. Sea Air Apti. 1 BR. $150/mo. Yearly. Ave. Adults, no pets. 2020 Services incl'd ~0. cre•M Your Buatline Ne.xt to So. Cst. Plaz.a. loe&J moves, exp'd CoU!!g~
retrlgerator. $120. 7 2 0 !!_lk N. of Adams (off Beach) Cpts, drps, • u n d ec k · Fullerlon Ave., C.M. (Just CORONA DEL MAR No exercise, no creams, or 557-7869. student. Lri truck, R!!as.
S"-';m••, "" "°", =• '622 ,..., Apt 6 Utica 536-2796 644--5307 E of Bay) 6'12 8690 .,.,. 1 11,,,
'"" ... '"....-.x>'t'f ;i<J(>"""t 536-7070 ---·-----~ · · · Delu:x!! bus, offices. Private gimmicirs. Ka.thy Alls Cus-ENG. Nannie will a.re 1or JV"t-.......,.
NE\V 2 Bfl Condo, Mesa --,-,===o--~'=°C: 2 BR in Npt HL'i. Pvt patio. TifE EXCITINr. bath, Cpt!/drps. 67H757. lorn bra,;. Call Wilson your childrf!n while you ;;Y"A"R~Dco1,-.,..-.-,-,-~d~..,,-,-p,,
Verdf!. crp111. drpg, private * FRESH AIR Encl £ar. Stuve compl PALM MESA APTS. e o m CEs e 833-1177. vacation & Practical nurs-Remove trees, dirt, ivy :
And more al £ar & patio. 545-873!!. WR.lk 3 hlka lo Bea.ch! crpfd. $!60. 548-9695· MINUTES TO NwPT. BOI. 300 & ~ sq. ft. Costa. Mesa. PROBLEM Pregnancy. Con-ing. ::4S-3n6. Skip Jo a d er. ba.ckho!!,
The Vendome * 2 \VEEKS FREE! * l..gf! 3 BR Apt, newly demr. LGE 2 Br. 2 Ba. Yrs lse. Jo'URN. OR UNFURN. Ca.Ji 64f>.Zl30 fidenr, 11 y mp at he 1 i c LIC'D Day Cart', 7 am-S:30 847-2666.
1845 Ana.helm 1BR 1125 "P -2 BR 11•• "P BDhl attached 1{11.r. frplc, 1 ~ $190/mo. 215 Prospect Ave. Unl>tllevahly large ap~. huge. 14'xl6' Ofc. or &tore, mod . pN'gnancy counsel_ ing. Abor-pm. Hot meats. Xlnt ca-_l:TRA="SH=-k~~G-,.-.-,-,-,,-,.-.. ,
2 bl k
''
N t Bl d " ...., 11: blrn•, ''"cpl rrtr1·g. N t Sh -s 4"'9502 pool, J acuzz.i, elect bl!.ins, '"' ''"" OC !I 0 ewpor v · POOL * * 642-Zl81 S225. No sngls'. 00 pets. e\\'J)Or 0'" ' """" ' shag crpts, d....., sauna, bldg. 444 Newport Bvd, N.B. Don 8.: Adoption re I · }/arbor} Baker area. days. Jo'rtt est. Anytime. Call: 642-2824, Mrs. Phillip11 SPACIOUS 4 Br 2•1. Ba .,.d. o-n •o::.,..,., o:AS-SJOO AP-CARE. 642-4436. "'!'1539. 540 ""~1. I 2 Br. 11,2 Ba Studio, encl 5..16·171J. • ,. · e tc . AduJu, no iwts. .,... · __. .,,.., . .,,.. · ~ 1.r ,,...,,,,,.,
DELUXE patio, end ol cul-de-sac. 339 "z_&,_J~B~n~.~11~40-,-p-.-Poo-I. Like I ne;7J-~~k to beach. SINGLES •····• From S135 3345 Newport Blvd. NB ALCOHOLICS Anonymo~s. CHILD care, Christian home. 113 T TRUCK. liaulina &I
' APARTMENTS Obrillo. 642-3933. Childrens bonus. l>fora Kai Yeary. . 1 BEDRl\f ······From $140 Across/Cityl-lall.675-ltifil Phone 542-7217 or v.Ttte Creative play, crafl1 , associated tasks. Coast·i
, Air Cond · Frplc's • 3 Swim· -1-B-0-RM-.-. -.-U-b-ltn.<-.-,-h,-g Apts, l888l 1tlora Kai Ln, ¥.. NE\V AP'T. on the Peninsula. 2 BEDRM .•..•. From $160 CORONA DEL MAR P.O. Box 1221. Costa r.tesa. games. Gd. attn. S 2 O . VaUcy Hauling 4.!11)..3278. ,
: ~~~la~ : ~~ ;P:u: cpll!, drps, closed garage & blk E. of Beach. 962-8994 . s225 per month. 2 Story, 1 YP~~!ri~ ~:;:re~n<Jer. Deluxe grd floor office . AJC. SADDLEBACK Sauna & ~29. Hou1eclunlng ~ ti Cl ,. •• 1~1 Bedroom. 673-3947. xlnt prkg ... ·-. Ma..ssage For better health INFANT "'~ Um' • : liard Room. P• '· pa o. ea..n. -.r ~ · 1 BR., $12S up. 2 BR., 2 BA., (5 biles from Newport Blvd.). ~ . · · '"6"' e can! Ul , • l BEDROOM l Br 2 Ba ts .i-..,60 '""-'• .i-. \VEST CL I FF area. 2 546-~ LARGE l _ olll-. Pvt through better circulation. my home. Exp. mother. DUTCH l\1aint. Suvice for
, . FROM ..,.,c ' · cp • u.....,, .,. • up. "'1'''" ~~. pool, Bedroom, 2 bath . Adult. on--,---;;-...;i;;:-"""""""-.-1 ........... '"" Dry heat, bath & ult glow. Ages 4 mo. & up. Excellent fioon:, windows 1; carpet
.,..,,., blt-lru, dswhr, 2 pooU, IY!c. rm, Walk to beach. 1 $27S Agtfi'i'S-49.10 * 2 BEDROOM * entr. Newly de:or, $65 mo. Female tec h nlci an 1. ~f.S2Swkly.9fl8....001. cleaning. 537-1508 MEDITERRANEAN clb~. $235. 546-3no. Close to eolf. 220 12th St., y. · · 1% Ba Townhouse coneepL 548-1290, N.B. ~ 3417 E. Chapman, • Anti Soll Carpels
VILLAGE * "l BR Dupl~x wlgara~ & S.16--0492· 219 lSth St·' WATER.FRONT 3 BR Upper. Beam cellings, utra lrg Bu1ine11 R•nt•I 445 Orange. 10Ar.t to1 AM. Cabinetmaking After Cleaning S.1&-1244. Y1"arly. 111.i BA. Adu!~. no be.drms. encl .. itio. recre.a·
)40() Harbor Blvc!., C.M. bit-ins. $140/mo. 26 53 e CHEZ ORO APTS. e pets. $285/mo. 675-"27Sl tlon rm, sauna boths, etc. FOR Rent: D@lwce ottices, DISCOVER DISCOVERY CUSTOM BOAT WORK LICENSED, Ins~. Refs.
(714) 557-8020 Orang!! Ave .. No. A, C.M. 8234 Atlanta. 1-2-3 Br's. Pool. * * DELUXE 2 Br. 2 Ba. Adults. Our Sunday after· Industrial area. New bldg Find YOllRSELF in Someonl! Patios. Rm addi!. 64&-521.9 R&S M!linte'l'la~. 548-9456
RENTAL OFTICE Sl35. 1 BR. Ut\L, stove & Priva t e cloacd gar. crpls, drps, bltns, t.>ncl rzar, noon B·B·Q's & Free Art nr. San Diego Ftwy & Else Carpet Service 642-2913. WP. do ~erything:
OPEN 10 AM TO fi PM rl!trig. furn ished. No kids, no W h /D , 1. ~75 Ad lfs 54lt-3708 Lessons startin<> soon. ~ Vall p k CaU now -No obligntion __ Mas!cr Charge. as er rycr. ,,J6-{l,13fi. pa10,.,~. u ..• · ., ._,.,1vn ey ar way . JO
pets. Call 642-3375, 646-1809. BEACHWOOD APTS. Santa Ana HARBOR GREENS &~1•1400_ (714) 835--6885 (213) 387-3393 HN'S Carpet & Up~olstery CLEANING • Lag & C.M. &
Forced a.tr hP.Aling
2 children welcome
Hot k cold water furn
3 Bdrm. 2 Bath. $150
Carpe:t11 11.Jld drapea
Sf\fL 1 BR .;riplex w/ga.r, ----------•I S.16·5025 NATIONALLY Cleaner!!. ExtrA Dr1-Sham-1-funtingron B!!ach ~l-S533
patio. l adult, no ()!!Is. S1J2. Brand nf'w 1-2-3 Br. Walk LIES --=.~s°'P°'A"et"o"u"s=-"e--J\;fANUFACTURING, Sales, RECOGNIZED poo !rel! Scotchguard (So il or 543·3626. By th~ day 642-8520 lo beach. Cpt /drps, bltns, fAMI ollice space. Good Laguna Retardants). Degreasers & · 388 W. Bay St. · frpL 125 16Ui St. 847-3957. \Vell-Designttl Apll! location. $100. to $390. mo. \V0 l\1EN'S Libl!ration Grou p all color brlghtenen & 10 MeM Cl~anlng Service
Bullt-i n 1tove
Carport·1tall lhower
Laundry room.
2 BR 11i1. Ba. twnh~. Blt:M, BEACHBLUFF APTS-: WELCOME! 1 & 2 BR. w/ Tf'rra~s. 494-4653. for wtimen wanting more minute bl!!ach for whit!! Car~ts, W1ndowr. Floor e:tc. praie & patio, 2649 No. E From Sl4-0 -$?15/mo joy, creativity and ~u-R!!s1d. &: Comm'! M8-4U1
809 Spa.c 2 Br, 2 Ba. P0ol, Patio, Shag cpts, drps, saunaii, DELUXE SfORE, lfiOO sq. !ul!illmeil. C 0 u n I I! 11 n g carpets. Save your money . · · ~e. S16S. 548--l D/\V. 8%31 Ellis MZ.7644. SINGLE STORY pool, jacuzzi, encl gar, ft.. on busy E. 17h St .. C.l\1. C!!nler, 494-9755. by saving me extra trips. Dedicated Cleening
Fenced yard. No pet&
MESA VILLAGE Apt1.
1046 El C•mlno Dr. •A
546-7331
2 BR apt $135/mo. Crpts, UNFURN 2 Br. all extras, South Sea Atmospher• Qu ie t Adult livl~ A.gt-Eve 642--9996, fi42-161L Will clean living rm .. dining * WE 00 EVERYTHING *
drps, bltnr, child ok. no $130. Kids & sml pets ok. 2 BDRl\>t-2 BATII MERRIMAC WOODS Industrial Rental 450 BE pampered &: musaged rm. & hall S15. Any rm. 24 JIR. PHONE 6n40T.Z
petw. 568 W. Wilson, C.M. Pool. 847-3fi69 or 968-7510. $175/rno. 425 Merrimae Way, CM ' by attractive females. $7.50. couch $10, eha.ir $5. 15 lncom• Tax ** BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. Carpe d Ora D p $ 8JJ..2lOO yta., exp is what counts, notl-,:--::---:::------
Contempo .... ..., Garclen Apts. 2 BR, $130, cp~. drps; istow. Air 'c' Mndltl" ~ ana otnt 4.000 9. FT. Social Clubs 535 method. I do work myseU. Sm1'ley Tax Serv1"ce ·~.1 No pet:s. F~need. Child OK. 0 oncu -~t..1 Good rel. 5.Jl---0101. Ii Patios. frplc, pool. $150-$165. S47·7064. Private Pati0« 1 & 2 BR. ~a!ed JlOQI. 2 min ""l'''"""'ed • Good location.
ClllJ ~5163. HEATED POOL lo Dana Harbor. modtm S450. per month. 91e81i.B.Jlll • SPANISH Decor . sml 1 Irvine Carport & Storage l~ry. Don't miM ttiis one -5,000 SQ. FT.
-21-Br. duplex. frpl c, h!!am c1"l. N ~_I"· C.&hool~PI ~.sJlln~c.e 1-c""t 8"'na49~le:.,,..~oog · $650. per inonth
APARTh1ENTS pvt. pa1 1n S150 Adull no pets PARK WEST r. '"'· l"l;>~t 117.11 ""' .~n a &n1.. · ,,.....,..,,, · , Roy McCardle Realtor
2 ,, 336 E. 20th St. 66-1317 APARTMENTS HIDDEN VILLAGE Newport Beach 1810 Ne\\.-port Blvd., c .M. BR, lx BA ........ $180. """"" So th o t
drp Bd F ;,.NI} u .. 11 lfl 537729 3 BR. 2 BA ..••...•.. $255. Lnr. 2 BR. New crpt & s, rm. t om $160 (!!nter 2 blk.s \V, nt Brii;lol. VISTADEL ME"SA ...........
(ALSO AVAIL. f1JRN.) $130 mo, 2 Bdrm., 2 Ba. off Warner on Linda Way.
FOTO DATE Cuponlor • 14 y,.,.. LOCALLY e
S:>lect your companion from L O Fee Schl!duJe
lOO 's o! photo ref1"rrals t.har ARGE R. SMALL Mailed On Rl!QUP.st
\\.'e. mAil to you. All Types \Vork. Cut doors, \\'.A. SMILEY. C.P.A.
NO CONTRACTS panel, remodel. flnish, 642-2221 Anytime S46-96f.6
24 hr. recorded mesS11gl! !ram!!, T'('pa1n etc. 962-1961. CLARK & T oner Tax
7141835·2220, 213 /426-1122 Cement, Concrete Service. 24 YE ARS exp. in
New adult garden Apt1. * * ~-7200 • • Fram $195 llOUlh tow. c.entra]) Apartment•
Isl E 21 I ,., 0 ,,, ,~1 I) . 1 !:.:. 2 BH .. Furn. & Uni. Dish-• s • ---Dana Paint <o}O<l. 11rk\1e w Lane Santa. Ana e 5f6..1525 ! _ _. (J 1 ... washer -Stove &: Re[rig -BAY MEADOW APT5. 1----------'vine us ou l Heated Pool.t SM.i: crpt'g-L.1·g Rt'C center.
CONCRETE WORK. Fair llN?ll. ~ersonal service in
,-------------------~! pricl!s. Fn!e est. L ie. your mt'. Call for 11pp!.
bonded. quaHty wo r k . 546-7735, Howard Clark &
2 Br, beam ceiling~. priv pa. LGE l BR ocean view e.pt. San Diego F\vy at Cul~r Rd) Large Oubhouse etc, BBQ RENT Starts fl ~
tio, rec. rac!J., closed gar-bar, din area. liv rm. lze br ----------Child Catt Center Irvine & Mesa Orlvw
age. Gas heat, cooklna; & & ha. Balcony, n!!W shag cpt Laguna Niguel Great new 1 2 &: 3 Bdrma * 545-48.SS *
water all pd. All adults, no & drp11, bl.tns & re{rig. $165., From f149
!J'l•. From $165. &17-3927, 837-517!1. Laguna Niguel Apts SOUTH COAST OAKWOOD-GARDEN 387 W Bay St c M _:::_c.;__:_ ______ I l Bn, l BA + 2 BR. 2 BA LAS A~rtmonls . ., . • East Bluff VIL ,.-Ca.JI 646-0073 FROl\1 $18.5. Crpl'd, drp'rl, 1101 MacArthur Blvd, (Resort Living lor
P k L.k S nd gas pct.. TV cahle, water, Adulfll Onlyl •r • 1 e urrou ing NEWPORT BEACH all bllns. lndry areas. h!d. ~ NE\VPORT BEACH
QUTET • DELUXE Villa Granada Apts. pool, BBQ's, priv f>'ll iO!I & PRIVACY PLUS! Spac1ou~ 16th et Irvine
1-2 & 3 BR APTS Four bedrooms with ba.J oon-halconics. Open 10 A.M. lo rooms. Dish...,·hr. garage, 64~ or 642"8170
Prv patioa * lltd Pool11 Jes above & below, Gracious 9 P.M. 495.4272, 499-2277. patio. Children & peUI OK.
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
642-1403. ;;;J;;coh,;-n;o,_To00:"'~'·~~----1
FREE Ideas advi-And PROFESSIONAL l)CTSOnaJiz. • '-" ed tax . .
estimates,. All I c~ for .Fonner ~~oe SI.nee 1962.
Is a beautiful job at a reas. agent H.B.
price. 645-5073. ;;96.>-;;:-;;;2035=· :;;------1
cn.tENT WORK, no job too DIGNIFIED pvt. preparation
small rea~nable F r ee of your return. ACCU-Tax, Esti~. H. StuD ick .. 54~5. 314 N. NeWpt. N.B . 645--0179.
PATIOS. walks, drive, il'll!tall l:l:".r:':on::i::nC:g:'.':" ____ _
Nr ahop'e * Adults only living I: quJet 8WTOtJndlng 2904J Aloma, oU Cro1vn Val-Xlnt location. $155. to $170. ABT OVE ALL~ Ne w P 0 r f M rt• • A ts ild 1 o\\·ers, from $350. Bay a 1n1que p • for family with ch ren. ey Prkwy. 557-f,830 or 546-7768. front. 2 Br 2 Ba
1m Santa Ana Avtt .. C?tf N!!a.r Corona del itar High Mesa Verde W 1111 ., ., doc.Its.
new lawns. saw, break, PARTICULAR Ironing for
remove. ~ for !!St. parhcular people. Shirts '-----------------...1 CEMENT WORK-linens 11 i;pecialty, 64!>--103.l'
Fl'OI! Est. 645.-£&16 Janltorltl
M.Kr. Apt 113 646--55(2 School. Fireplace, ftt bar & estc ~~SU.~. Cout H wy .
3 Bdrm * 2 Bath buUt·in k!t<hen app!JMC<S. DELUXE 2 & 3 BR, 2 Ba, $165 . 2 BR. cpU/drpo, bltns, I ~~~~~~~~~ * * * * * * WINTER RatH ! Concrete
floors , patios, d t Ive s ; SPARKLE J B1\ltorial Win-
sidewa.lka. Don, 6C-85.14. dows,, Ora, crptrreald. & 835 AMIGOS WAY fiH.299] encl pr $150 up. Rental beam oeil. Heated poot I:
Ltv1nK room with cathedral Coldwell,Ba.nker&C.O. Otc. 3095 Mice Ave . -·1·t &dul"' m pets • ._ _____ __,If •1
oelllna 6 lrpk. Sepuote '-:=:;;'!Anarinl::::;:;;::. ::;;:.._.,,.;:;:::=::=.!...:51$-:::1::;034::.:_ _____ ..!,.;::'4-:i-~251'.'.:4::.· -~-------laundry area. Encl Pl tlo. I
comm I. Free est. ~-
c_•_n_i_r•_cto_r _____ Painting A
* * * * P•porh.tt119lng
Trader's Paradise
~ pool " children"1
-..i.$200.
HAR.SOR GREEN!
5'6-<353
"CABLES" .l "SE~
J Br. w/car., adt1lt3, cpt .
drpg, bltns. fncd y rd .
w/patlo, wtr pd. 636-4120.
M39-"C" Ora.na:e Ave. $156
J619-"J .. Santa Ana Av'°, $155
S@\\QUlA-~"B~s·
The Punfe with the Buiff.fn ChucfJe
ORtormn;• left9rt of thef
four scrambled words be-
low 10 form IOI.Ir simple WOl'ds.
MODERN I Bdrm. apt. Cpu, I L E H T E H I' I
·-""'""'" b l•-1... I I I I ;prare. 1 child °'<.. All util • • _ •
tpL $UG/mo. 30'1 AVOClldD,
;Ai>t .. CM. 645--0984. I v 0 G E L I • fi!~-~A:~~ •;: 1--l'"""'l""'•~l-"-'l-i ·Ii .x--... ·-l. =-:: ~ ~-R;.:-1 ;:;,E 1•6.:;;Er,.:.M:,.1-11 ~ , o.i.i-dt •Afn' II funny,
sie 1D 1115. No ...,_ -• • -_ _ whon a fellow gob ~1r he a~
-"' .....m1. r_H _Y_N_U_L_o _ _,I ways wants to --r
~ BR, Crptl • dropos. Ololee '-,..~~-n~.:...,.--1 0 ~-,
1oc. 1n ..... v....,.. rmm..i. " I I r I I °"""""' "'" """~" •""'..i ~· $1S) per mo. _ . _ _ _ _ bv fltllng In the mlAlng words ~ dey.lop from :il•P No. 3 below.
Rooms
18 DODGE Coronet, aulD,
PIS, P/B, Landau top, stft'·
eo tape. Trade for Jate mo-
d.i camper OJlly .........
675-5258 or 839-0"rol
fl.fALE 18 to 25 with kltcht!n
& laundry privlp. Afta-2
pm, call 642-8310. MOTORHOME, 27 fl. only
FURN. room. Ideal for mi. 7500 mll!!s. like new! Load·
d!!nl. 1 /\dull. $65 & $75 util. ed. Heavy duty motor and
pd. m 5fh St .. Se!! Mgr. frame. Equity $8500. Trade
Apt. 6, H.B. for prop. or ? 71 4-323-340.1
ROOMS · $15 Wk. up w/kit. I HAVE; '69 Sachs llScc. lik<'
$30 Wk up Ap!J. 2376 j new. Wa.nt; Older pickup or
1lewport Blvd., C ..,M , van. Have; '69 FUny lll.
5'&-9'75S. Wa.nt; trailer or '!?
FOR m t to *1)1, bed!oor n --*-*_83f>J093_--,--.,.,*,-*-.._,.
' O'I 2nd &or, ,_,.,., rar Van M.Truck W•nt.d
CM pork. -. Trod• '70 Coopr, 77,000
ROOM w/priv ent, pr1v ba & mllet, In xlnt condition.
mbowu', util pd, put. tum. * S75-730f *
H.B. 9fil..857B e W!I kt' appt.
Summer Rentel• 420
WILL tr1de UR of turni.hed
3 Bdrm., 2 Ba . home in
Tok)'o from mid June to
l"R.rly Aua. for be11ch ho~
similar 1h:e In So. Calif.
Writ!! airmail. incld'c photo
to Georrt: Rlnc•ald,
K.lsu.mtpM!)d 8 u 11dIn 1 ,
* lAke Tahoe '°'· llOUth 1ldt', level. cleared. Slrttt
A all Im provements In. Ap-
prox $t&XI eq for boat. car. ro or plane or 'l'? ~.
S.20.CXX> equity in C 1 pa.reel,
N'pt. Bea.ch; S100 Mo. Inc. + Sl0,000 paper a t $100 mo.
Want vacant prop 0. Cnty.
Act 1!3l-!lfifl5, ~!38S.
Room Ult. ~ Kalum> * ..-S-<barne, Qb<>clo.Q.
Toleyo, Japon. * *
M'ulllple zoned land & La· FATHER & So,. workina _....;. __ ..:;,...:;., __ _
runa d!!Velopment acreage. oontractor team. Design, No Wa.mnr
$88M A $133~ eqult1e11. carpentry, d•c or1t i ng , *WALLPAPER*
Trade 1 or both for home, plumbing, wirinr et c . When JOU call "Mac·•
apts. or cornm. 49-t...f65.1 ALTERATIONS a a~ialty. 548-lfff 6f6..I71J
I-lave: S25.000 ~lly in Ba.y-24 Yni, in busint'Q. Lie &. PAINTING. prof. All work
crelff 3 Br home. 29YI 1!1Q bond!!d. 8JS..3545. I guarn. Color 1 p e c I a 11 3 t
ft . Top oond-adult occu·l:xl. ROOM Additions, Ea:timatl!s, 842--4386, 547-1441 Tr~rle for )oca.J Income plans & layout, alria:le or 2 c~>H""';;'cr--;,::---~--1
un til!. Ml-558..l 1tory. L.T. Construction, PAINTING, inlcr & ""'' SAN Clemente oceanlbhlff. 847-lSll. reaa. TJter, wor k euamtd.
front mult. ru. cor. lot 1501 J Ac K T au I a ~Repair, Local ref1. Ile. Ph 11,
Buena Vista. Over 'ii acre. re.mod., addil 2J yn exp. 49f...8691. i:1a~ tor Newport. V&lue Lic'd, My W~ Co. 547-0036.'l:CO=!llPLETE~i;;'i:::-.,-,.,-. -$200~-..
' ' 673-492S Additions * ~ u.p. AYJ. nn. n>. Ne.at
21ii Ac. hJ dnert, nr pines. Genriclt • Son. Llc. wortt. Rm. Roy, M7-ll51.
nr Pearblomam. F.Q' for car. 613-«MI * 549-2170 FOR clea.n • Dl!tlt palnttnc ;-=~~ ~ wir.= Et.cfrical intniar er .Xittior • ~
MS-2'29 SUn rates, Dick, 95M0S5 eves.
' ELECTRICAL, redd., *PAINTING-PAPERING
IAdlts ant5que l&met rlns romm'I, bJdua. A I 1 o, JnteMor Exte
in 18K IOld valued at $800. remodttl, repa.ln:, ln8taJI, Lie, Int. Guar11ni':
Wiii tr11dl! for &ntlques, ob-Bit/mall. Uc"d/Jns. f'rM CAJI Jlani Jee!• d'art ,,,. 1ubrnlt. n:L 546-0211. ll 642-4!'..68
673-{18()2 YOU supply !he p ll I n t
. EL E CI'RlCIAN. llainsed, R.oomi palnled SlO tta AJ_; Have 1Jllrl'!, J'tllldmtial bonded. Small jobs, main\. lo r-11 ,. ' occ11n view lot, trre A exle:r r. .... .,.0-~. ~l,.11r: P11.lo111 Verdra. Wint & "-Pafrs. ~3. PROF. palntlrw·lnte:r/txter. hou~. duplo. NB, CM. Flberglast Honett "'°""· L l c Ir DI .
>41·6lll Irwin Co. RUrs. COMP. moblle facllltJca I.or 548-2759. ~4«-
* * bome/lndu•try lite manu IJavt aomethut1 JOU want to * *t/aalo ~Ir. New ~ •Ur 0•111&d Ids do tt
---- ----------duct Mvelopm't, S5\;lS7'9 MU -call NOW 6U467L
• . . . ..
Mortdiy, 'fbtuary 1, 1~72 DAILY PILOT :JJ
1--... -l~ L ._ ][Il] I ,, .... ,... ][Il]i I -·-][Il]., --· ][Il][ '--_ ....... _ ..... _][Il] .__[ ---1~ [ _,!!!!!_.,. ~!~~, ~-~]~~~
Help Wonled, M & F 710 I u.
1
W & F
711
I Holp W onted, M & F 710 I Holp Wonlld, M 1 F 710 Ml>eello-.a 1111;;;;;;;;;;;.-__ P •lnting &
P aperhanging 09 P .nMcl, M : H•lp Wanted. M & F 710 App1l•nces I02 TV, Radio, HIFI,
ENGUSJl Pa.per llanatr &
Painter. :JI yn. exper. Call
Ed., 968-7461.
A Beautiful Id.• EXPER. NJeslady In <'X· I J LIVE-In !lspkr 2 School •if= RECEP110~1sr \\'A.I\ TEO. RJ-.;(;()NO. AppJi~s I. ~EREO. 1912 C • r,. •rd S tereo 136
Div ot (:(o'J 1-·oodi" ne«ls clw.lve 'M>lll"n'.i. 111<U.r •t•nn, children. Lite a11Jk11l1. pref Compct•nt J ·rv· G " Del 'd modrl, Ml 11~ cbangu,., ~· ,..-::::-,-,,,.,.-----~ Learn ~.-"-· P "as 1 n I: ap-1• uar. • v · au· SU$pcnakin speakers 1 • .. ,. ~eup trch! ~~-:~ &Ue.ry &. Comm. Refs. Rei}. ~ dri\'er. 5'8-4447. peanux:.-e !or N.B. law ofc. Dunlap's, 1815 New p 0 rt A~l/Ff.i stereo radio ;. RfA 21 roklr TV A .. t
avail. 842-~ ly Classified ad no. 330, c/o ~ • -.. M a ture Host e11ea Typl~. somt' tran!IC'Tibin,i:. B/\'d, 01. MS-7780. t~pc detk. Still brand ntw & ~~~lllo;, $175 -corao1e
PAINTING · Guani.ntttd pro-
fessional "'O rk at fair prices.
Lic'd & Ins. STI>-5740.
g~y :itlot. ~-0mn; liS}, TO INTERVIE\V S·J0-5pm, Call 540-~. • \\'lllRLPOOL-KENt.10RJ.; gu11.ra.nlet'd. \\'a11 I(' 11 Pai·kam Bell 21 ·· black &
Oii a esa. a. · NE:\V P.ESIDI::NTS RENTAL rpr. man has wa~~t'1'/dry· uncla1n1ed on !1:1y-11\\'8y iihite A 1 nd . ..,. E~' ln•-n•• >'ull or pl P ~ T <•0 521' 839 76'~ 0 -'d f 1325 ff · -""' !lion. .....,... "• ,..,.. ,,_,. ... . • -a., 1111<'-AGE crs, sets . ..,,,,.. ; • W. """ or , pay n r.rinlit'llr m.., de 1 _ Phone
PAINTING I PAPERINC
18 yrs in Harbor area. L!1· i.
bonded. Ref's furn . 642-2356.
S ERVICE C E NT ER rin11·. Sluiklct:s Ot·;::.anir Skln( 1CAR & TYPl·:~\'fl lTEH NEC. NT l31:Ut~·~pfree:re" Chest balatK"e ot $~>or t,11,k" O\t'r 5'1R-IJ95
AGENCY Care Products lhru hon1e. !~E PERSONNEL I 1540 D ~ Ed1~;.r. S.A, A!!,.ar ii\'"· \i'<'ll • groomrd t)'J~ ti't'f':tcr $?5. 11mall pyn1nts. Collecuon•I~===·=· =~-----
Neiv Add.res~ par1 1«s. BUI ur Bo h , S CD\ "( M< , I Call 547·,iO.ifi 1.,,,1ni:o1 iv ' dynan1;,. pt>rllOn ~<Y.Xl). D<·p!., 71·11893-CMJ. TICK'rOCKEH. Thrift St'lqP
4262 Campus Drr·ve 54B-2S:l5. U'\.YI ES ~GENCY -allly. ,\hist havt• k11011·l<'d"t' F .1 1 GARAGE st1.!r El71 Jt ·" 70 fts.her ampli ric·r, Ht'lt-0-kllr PAPER HUNG $30 I .. urn 1 u re 8 O ' · or.ua turnrahlr Crf!Ofl k
Any rm. + papl'r. 646-Z.149
SIDING & f-'acia $129, 2 s1ory
$229. E:xtcr only. 642-2755 or
642-1403.
No. 8-4 Newport Sch * FINANCIAL Exel'. St.-crelary $600 Marketing I l)f IC'Usr~ & r·rnlal as,.'Te<'-and hel1net $280 or Lie~! 11!. .,., • v.or UlS
Ph. 557-2711 PLANNER .. $13M To't:hnlc·al proposal l'X()('r. I ~pporh.1n1ty for Ult' ~IC'~ or-~~~11:;; Ct1od typist_-_11,..,~rs 3 ROOM G ROUP fl'r, f'lC•111'.'r },!11·11 n10\1'•';. S:t.5, r'f1rHi Si., :M \\', l!lth Ci\f
I Corp. l~el BS from ti.1ajor A P Bookket-per to $550 lf'nt('(I prnoon · oo·as1onlll , 1. :!O • pm. & \\('('k·i nds. A LL N E W furnllur" and n1uch 1l\C\!'l'.
*Sec'y to $625 Univt>rs1ty. 1-2 yrs exp in! :I Yrars a<'counung t'Xper. lravf'I. 11ust tyJX'. Cc•n1n1 & t _ -P hona 546-~025 F URNITURE ~:~~;?~~{)Dr, 1111111. 13rh., [ lll
Good ,:;kills-work for arC"hl· f1nanc1al funC'l1ons ~· t'rll· Scc·rrtary 10 $550 I t>Xpcuscs. • ,;<.!ale f'\1' fe11 111.lf' I . Free to You
Pla,ter, P atch, Repair
.,, PATCH PLAST0iiNG
All type!. Fref' es11mates
lr1·! fun )Ob. phasis on casl1 lor1'cnst1 ng , Busy office. sharp girL · • ROBINSON'S L'Cln.'-l1't111g 11r $\ ri· hfodrrorn Sl.f:\1-C\"~[
*Se c'y to S600 budg('ting, profit planning. Typisl to $5cll Insurance Sec'y J e NEWPORT e group. 7 flC hvlng rooni SZ5. 3 Linws, 2 T imes, $2.00
Busy job 1'l'por1 lo sales nian-011;. Co. based rorp. ltstM At•1·ura!e. 70 \.V.p m. 1yp1ni;:. Auto rallnJ: 1-lmmN\\\·ners I BEACH l!roup & S pl' rhnJng st't. 531-7~1
aJ:rr. (;d i;;kills-sali>s or At.lf:X. Rnpid r xpansion hils: 1 Gll'l Offl('C' $500+ tns. t.tust IX' xln't 1.1'Pt!it, 1 .-\LI. Strt'I \l.nrk nt~rwh 111111 PL'l'PJES, 2'·• mos. old.
n1klng drpt l:'Xfl hl'lpful. 1·rt'a!r1! this pos111on. \la1 l ln\'f'!ilnlf'~I experirnl:C'. . . 1 Has Opc'ning 111r A ll FOR $299. \'d1'(C'r'. 2 1'1 idi n~ Joor:., t, 11 ... h~hun.l 6.-pnodl e.
*Bookke eper $600 resume. Employer Pays 1-·ee. Grneral Orf1~·r lo $500 ~ Rece1v1ng C lerk loni::. $:!.'i. ~~!7'-+i.l\·l!l \\iinflf'rful f•'r child's pd.
A P, AIR & P.R. Sorn r 1 Fret> & Fr<' Jol)s , P"" nCongen1al Group. ! Good organizl'r. llea\'y fn· F ull Time TE RMS-A LSO -Pt ~L t•'lr. " ,,.,,h .~t!J-lllti7.
knoi\ ·1 nf T.O All l..l'Cal • •>-" etepllo11ist SUJ+ voicing. "-' '"' " ttH'S. - _ =----
Plu mbing
Call S.~~
COLE PLUMB ING
2'1 hr. service. S.15-1161
P1Ir:-.m1NG Rt:PAJJ-,-
No job too sma!J
'*Sec'y l eg~I to S600 JR. P1rrrr Recrnt exf)('rii>nce/typing. NIGUEL LAY·AWAY PLAN bridge, halls. hn1:-h, \·u11l Attl.lvr10:\,\T~; 7 1110, (~ sh ~ ' . k ll Associa1t'S Agl'lll'y, lnl'. Do<-un1rnt Clerk $433 P ersonnel Agency GRILL COOK !'(\\'f'r-$75. 646-7.i 28. . (' ,, t ! I ,. I n ea s: l,.. 1111:.:
2 yrs·e..,~r~~~~~; 5 1 s-rnin 1885 Nr\1por1. CJ\1 642-6720 Engin('{'ring 1.:lerical e:<[lf'r'. 27635 Ftirhrs Rd . T RADERS BEIJS king & f\1J11, ('hair!> Jl"•li1kn. I.I(·. F-110!1'. Afr, 1,
*De nta l Assista nt Clrrk Typist $-100 LagunR N1i::ue! i J:::xper. Prrfrrrcd FURNITURE " din ~t. T \ •. d11J!hn11~r hi:....mq,
Cha1rs1d(' gd oppor, NB. nH-Frc Pain 2 Yrars grnrral offiee e'l'.p, 831-1477 202 N. Broadway, S.A. l;t11n tnr!\vrr. """ :J.o!t\-111;1 -!'l'l'P''ll~C~,.~,-, -,,~,.,.~,-,-,~,d~.-
icr. Bookkeeper F /C to $725 Filr Clerk S:IZ> Exceptional B<>nell1s "'-'"-J305 0 Lll<t~E Colot"fV. 11 ,;:. :\li:o.rd tirri•d, ~in.ill. !rm.
* Go\2-3128 •
Roofing
Ll~E Roofing Co. Roo fing ;ill
types. ll.('(...:ivcr. nlpairs,
lhcrmo l'\10f t:.i>atlngs, \\'hlle
& t'Olor L1e/bo11drd, since
1m1. &1i-1222.
•ppl' •nt p ,. I No rxprrience r""uircd. .,.,.,;,. J'l(.'n 7 ll11y... ·' *Re ce ptionist $450 " ll"n ·ays rf'I' ._,, Nl-:Eo full llnle !iCrt'iCi' Stl'I· $,1100. No11 $100. H11IJ\' flJ!'I\ .'i, • &16-:121;:,.
A '<' 1 . t/f h h 1 Gen'I Off ice $400 f't{'{'/f'cc Position1s lion salesnian. Exp'd pref. Apply in P<'rson 10·5 rm. BDR\t. l!vlni.: rn1, r!1n1ni:-;=;; all eqt 11 S'!O s.t· -~3------r ur. ypis lie s e pf11t Bkk S , $SOO 488 E. 17th (at Ir.·1ne CM A t • A # 2 t,ashion Isl., N.R. furn, nr nC'w. A!..;o nlisc _ 11 · '___:___:_ . ..-i '1 R efr ig . work-;-good bu1 Mt essential/goOO i1·ith pr e c y lf.A2-1470 Pl'·" in pcson. ,,1rport 11· L" JN ' people. Se c 'y , SH JOO $600 Q"t l'exaco, 4678 Campus Dr, Equa! opportunity cmploy{'r pieces. 2338 \Vest11 1lns1rr ,\ n,· 1 'i\"7, il11•11t <'HM'" • * ;i~J'-492>: * *
Sec'y no sh to $550 N.B. Ask for Bob. Av<', Cti-1. 10' & 12', Sltr('!' ,~. "1"'t1. 'ti."> SIX ;Hlorablc nih:ed bi~d
A Bkk ' F' & L' o.. · · INVEST IN N"E J'll'ORTED <-I I Carlillae, 549-l250 S.S pm. l'"n"ll's, ,·Ill >><'i". -----• T. Guy Hoofiug. Dcal sst. pr $550 rec rf'r ,-,~s1t1nns '•~ D extra 1noncy:" Bcel1nr I SALESMEN ,.. '°"·Rn ~1( I' )flll!'il · -'' "'
\\'ill train gal v•ho has snmr RUTH RYAN AGENCY YOUR FUTURE I Fashions .need6\1'0mrn. Gd. Nred mi>n v.·ho are i-cadv In Solid leak . Rl'Hu1. eond. Pianos/Organs 826 546--0631> Direct. I rln n1y O\\'n \\'Ork.
fi4.l-27M. S.18-9.i90. bookke<>pin~ exper. & is ctr-1793 Newporl, Ci\1 6·111·4.\'.!54 I mol'l{'y, No collf'1'!., <le!J\•f"IJ' lrarn thc car business ·and Cost S<l50. St'!l $ 1 i :i. -ONCE A \'EAR TA.'\...,.,.... Rl..OND malr Pt'ke, AKC, tG
l<til minded. Pleasant N.B. 179:11 Beach, IJB S47-9617 BE YOUR OWN BOSSI or invest. 96&-6869 or 646-5390. CLEARANCE SALf"_; ON arlult f11n1~~ "'nll
Sewing/ Alterations ---European Drrssmakiog
All cuslon1 fittcd. Personal
Fashlori a<lvire. 673-JR19.
Alter ations -642-5845
Neat. aCTUrate. 20 years exp. ---Televi sion Repair
* BLAINF.'S TV *
SC'rvicing All Brand!>
Aulhorizcd Magnavox
Kno\\'n for honesty 540-4313
Tree Service --TRI~1J\flNG, specializing in
fru lt trees, Gen. Cl<'an-up.
Rf'as. Free r st. 5-18-RJlit
REMOVAL & II'in1m1ng, fire.
woorl allowance. 642-2755 or
642--1403.
orlices, Stahle co. Xln't hf'n-89:1--2317 ~re v.·~g to train. ~lu~t BEAUT roll lop dr~k 1 ! k' "''"'"'9'
fl C 11 f.i J VULL or It' :\l 1 Men or Women ' · avr ~'"""' J'l("r.;nnality, he n a ind floor rl<'mos-~~~~~~~~~~~ " 1 s. a ISS ran. P inie, ·' .(:nl .~URSES, pv!_ r!uty. all intereslc<l in a f11turr. dress lor salr. harrt1•onorl. Conn·\\'urltiLer-AUt'n. 557·6122· Abigail Ahbnt Per. trn<'. no f'Xp. nee ' Lease A Yellow typcos. all shirts. Lesroulie "'I'll. ~lesn1indrd. Benefit~: 5'12-2W!\ ~,.\()..77()1 Organs ~~n. ~u~;e;J,· S230.A. \V. \\'ar· 5 a 1arY 1 c 0 mm· Fulter Tax i Ca b Nurses Reg is t r y, 351 Den10., group ins., guarnn· FRENCH Pt'O\" 9 pc txlrni I\na~-Sohn1er -E\'rrctt-[ Pets and Supplies II ~1
Bnish, 967--0-116. Hospi!al Rrl., N.B. teed AAlarv plus c i Cable NrJson·\\'u•l>l,nr -_ n ~~-~------! , . , on1n1 s-se1. Ant ique \l lllle. Xln! '"
Banking • F/C Bookke<'per. 1 Call for Appl 642-9955 or ~10-!Y.154 sion~. Unlin1ited incom£'. Ap-t'Ond. 4M-06ti9. $600. Pianos.
Pla tform Secretary Restaurant l'xpl'r. pref'd. 546,1311 ln1erviev.•s 9-5 f\l/F ply in Prrson. UNIVERS[· Sabathll Harpsirhor<ls Cati
'f\.1inimum 1 year expt.'riencr 675-1714 TY OLDSf\10BTLE, 2850 SAC RA r 1 C F.: sofa, nylon All merehandise sold v.•lth Call 12131 674_4660 NURSES AIDE liarbor Blvd .. Costa ~1csa. lTusherl \'f'll'f'l fnf'vcr use<I ! I::'.'"".".'°' ________ ,
HISTOLOTY TECHNICIA N, 7 am . 3 pm. Baptisl Conv. 5140 t h' I t $"" nrw 1111 rranty & rlrlh·ery, \VAill'TED: ~I home for Ask f-Herm•• SALES'! IN .. mac ing ovesea '>"· COULD •tUSJC CO BE AN AVON exp. Tues thru Sat, 6 am -"' ""'' Hosp. 661 Center St., C.M. . 1'' • N:e<t aggrcs-lamp $25. 5.'Ul-62St. " · imir Persia n ca1s, neult'rod
REPRESENTATIVE 12 pm. South Coas1 Comn1. LEGAL SECRETARY 548-5.'1115. sive hard v.urk1ng New Car -~--------8-12 2!Hl No. Main. S.A. & dl'tla\\·cd. 8 4 2-4 6 S9j.
II So I P N">>•port B h , ,.,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..._ Salesman, Li ... -ral Demo Garage Sale 547·0681 Sio•• 1911 84"8329. Let n1e show you how easy · osp, · . ..<llJIHl.'I. f'rson-" eac area • 1.it: ,,_,,_ ,..
ii Is to make money & hav£" ! nel O!ric:<'. ~99-1311. An 1 642-9410 I Oflico \l/orkers Plan, Monthly Bonuses & PIANOS** ORGANS IE0L~E;;i;G~A~N~T~~-u-,-.~B~urm--,,.-111
al · Insurance, Ex""rience de· MOVING • ODDS & ENDS .rv ~ fu n in your #--... hrs. For, NJU opportunity rniployl"r. MANAGER TRAINEE •-B RGA Kr \"a1 Steinw• Lo •-y·" qu --~ LJl',,_ sired. Sec Don Crevier at A INS! 6-t2-6l74 • y, wrey, ,,.. <:\) een ,.._~ .... s somtj
personal intcivit-w. ca I l HOUSEKI::EPER for eon. I r.'Tan er \voman ncC"<led with Secretaries Throdore Ro.bins Ford. 2060 5.119 Bi11cr Crescent, N.B. Allen, Baldwin, ctc. r,rom one to love, S."!5. 846-2500!
540-70.ll. valescent Irvine area. r.1011 nianagerlal potential. Our Typists S295 up RENT;\LS $10 up D Harbor Blvd., Costa ~fesa. PATIO salr, Sat & s11n, 10 ~o · · ogs •c .. BOOKKEEPER F /C , thru f-'ri 11 lo 6. 879·2640 or I expansion plan rcqulrrs llvo Dictaphone Typists D11ilv 10-6 ~11n 12-5 .. .. _.,.
'
"327' k d & ft " tli ··• F " Cl k SECRETARY ~·462 Magnolia,C.M.MC1v-FIELD'S PIANO CD. NOV ICEDogOhcdr·e,::.1 J\lusf be ]X'rsonable. Full ·">-., w -en s a er a; r.'1I"I'Cn censees, M..if'smen 1gure er s . ,,_ limC'. Xln't salary. pm. or brokers, to be groon1ed I Keypunchers uig. ~·urn. car, cloth ini<:. f'tc. 1833 Newport Hlvd C!11.ss starling ·rues .. t,ch:
Garment r.1anufacturer JISKPRS r:mplyr pays rcr. I for o(fice manager in H.B. Demonstrators Excl'llent shorthand & typ-Machinery 816 O':i~!a i\fesa 71 •1 '1~1.i-3?50 11th, 7 P.l\f , l\fARTINCRES'r
642-J472 GrorJ:e Allen Byla.nd A~en-j or Anaheim. Planned open-F actory Tr ainees ing skills required. At!ra.c-----------*HAMMOND ORGANS KENNE~. 546-0!JS!l. ;
cy 106-B £. 16th S.A . ings in March & May. De· tive i;alary & brncfils. LABLONDE lathe 17" rsr!l l..afl:'cst & oldi>~t dealt'r Jn Ao o RA B LE G" rm 11. n
852
~7-0:\9j. sire '?inimumb 1 °1.1™1 ·o Y~d'" I Turn your rxtra d11.ys into Ple ase Contact or trade.) 1 cy!. diesel rni:;. U.S. All models ne1v-used . Sh e pherdfLabrndor pu....'.
·---e)!'flC'!'ICn('e u \Vl .c:insi E'r Sii. Work thr d• • • J . T W I i\!;ich . surface 11 l a 1 r . Before ou b · .~ HOSTESS others based on ability. Ex· .Y" ora eres a a as try Y uy ·give us a pies. Capo Beach 4$-6279. :
P /hnic \\leekends 11 t bt' !'t C 11 M lion most cnnven1C'nl for yo11 UNION BANK .i\lechanics tool toalrr. 5 . GREAT 0 N ]
Call Ivan I c"ra'v"rs f"o'r' "ro,f,>d""''·ari.1 •.. ".K('l!y Girl Employees" radtRI tires 14" w h ls. PENNY OWSLEY CO A E Pups. AKC, 1
B & \V Lab Technician. l\tust
I I[ i I I be <'Xper. in all phasi>~ of _ Enl>loyment _ f blk ,e,,. \l'hite pr i n 1 l n g . :
'-------~ Tltature. Apply bel\\'n 9 & 11 1 I•••••••••• I an1 only. 1363 Logan AVC',
Job Wanted, Male 700 _c_M_. __ Bob Burn's Restaurant in t er view appointment.' in . e~an" Y 1 r !op Newport Beach n:r ., { I I '" arr d " b h 610 Newport Centrr Drive 642-4610 ,7141 -2.3.JJ A \i•k11. Ha.rlf'Cju1n & b!k. Show
644-2030 g9J.506,) & 697.s194 COLLINS compan.1es tn tht' ntf'a. Put 11352 Beach Blvrl ,. pet qua ity. 580-7018. •
your sk1lli;; to 111·ork Call· An equal opportunity Miscellaneou5 818 (SQ. Q[ Ka!ella) COLLIE PUPS AKC •·
SCRAM-LETS'
ANSWERS
It's always the rl~ht lime & I & \VATTS INC. 13651 Mag-· ' · employer
Age lO-l4 to deliver paprrs always the right plaec if nolia, Gardcn Grovp. --~~c"C::c:..::.. ____ IS T E RE 0 ; u n c I a I n1 rd WOULD YOU Tri's -ti.Iales
BOYS
in the Dana Point, San Cle· KELLY GIRL SECRETARY I BELIE $50 * 646-021!) ' you \\'ant RESULTS Call The fastest draw in lhe ayaway, 19TI model, Gar-VE · mcn1e arra ~. E •Kc B H nd ' DAIL y Pl LOT 642-5678 & place that ad \Vesl. .. a Daily pi Io l Jn1rn1iewing 9am-2pn1 rarrl 4 SJX1 changrr, a ir .. R E ORGAN LESSONS " asset ou , malr:
tOOay! Classified Ad. 642-5678. ti.1onday Ihm friday For Newpon Beach Ad Agen-Jiu s p e n s ion s~kcrs, as long as you like! No N"I<:· Champion sired. Sacri!iet1,
Helmet -Glovc -~1erge -
Unholy -GO OUT
<192442() "Y· All skills including SH. w/tnultlplf' CI'06& 0 v r r istration. No obligation. Just $50. 83<Hl05l. ;
BEELl~'E needs allractive Help Wanted, M & F 71 oHelp Wanted, M & F 7lO 833-1441 Sharp looks, long hours, rt c t V.' or k , A.t\i/l-'"M/l\·IPX Com<' Mondays 7:30 pm. AFGHANS, AKC, 6 mos, red
Overheard : "Ain't it fun·
ny, Y.'ht'n a ft'llnw gl'\S 'lit'
he alv.•ays wants lo GO
OUT?''
\\.on1en. Mgmt oppor. F~ good pay. 833-1670. radio & tape deck. SHU COAST MUSIC or sliver. Must sell,
\j,•ai'<imbe, PAI"i or f/time. 2061 Businrs~ Ccntrr Dr, SECRETARY brand new. Origin a 11 y 642-2851 $12.l 846-S~
$18-S·IO v.•k. 636-08>12. EVER THINK 1 Jrvinr Sh 90, type 60. Plush local $419.97 pay off !imall PRIVATE PARTY WANTS BOXER PUPS AKC
5.1!!-S.lJ.5. , . I offices. halanc<? $197.AA or payn1ents 'rO BUY PIANO f"OR n a"
CASHIER / YOU'D BE GOOD , Order Takl'r Call Lorraine of $8.25 monthly. U.S.A. CASH. 835-:2278. ;h;l~~l:.:; , Job Wanted, Fema le 702
NEED help at home~ \\le
have Aides • Nurses e
HouscJ.:('{'pcrs e Com-
pa11ions 1-lomemakrrs -Up-
john, 5'17-fi6Sl.
A!lraf'tivc female, mid :20·.~ PART TIMF,' WESTCLIFF Stereo Equip, "-'acehouse, g •gy ,. grand piano, l-loward, GERMAN SHEPHERDS
for full timl' position in nr\\' AT SELLING Do .vou l'noy talk111g with ....... ~crsonnel Agency 179 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa ebony Unish, good condition. AKC, champ stock, 8 wla
fantastic self scrv scrvice 1 proplr:" \l/r nred people 111 .w-t.1 Westcliff Dr,, NB &15-2442. $650. 499-1635. * 67~2533 *
""''"· Apply, Auto-M•t. LIFE INSURANCE? "1I of the '°'"al """ '' '45-mo * AUCTION * 8 I' · O 19th & Placentia, C.M, j take ordcNi in !hcir home. 1 SEC'Y: Inventory Control· "g;;,n rgan Must Sell ENGLISH Setter, 1emalr,
CHILD care Woo rl I a n d Salary + bonus. Call BiU, I Billing -Typing. Exper. Fin~ Furnltu~ ·4152 or 63.J.3746 mo's nld, 48 champs, 4 fn·
School Dist. 2 girls 2 & 6. 4 1 MUTUAL FUNDS? 77&-1620 only 64Z.-3'172 NB & Appliances Sewing Machines 828 ternet'I champs, $20 0 . LITE bookkeeping my home.
Exper. in cons!r. bkkpng &
data processing for CPA
firm. Call &14-792S.
· · . · ' · . Auctions Friday, 7:30 p.m.
0
675-0BTI .
days wk. 842-2593; 548-3980 VARIABLE ANNUITIES-. PART Time help wMted. SEAMSTRESS & Alt<ratio"' W indy's Auction Barn M DEL 370 n•w "'""' Zig-;;-;;,,,-;:;-;-==o---e\'f', -. lnserters for ti.1ailroom. Age woman for dry cleaners. Zag M!win,g macb. Walnut SC H NA U Z ER Pu P •.
lR. APPLY JN PERSON. 1-"/time. Exper, necess. Call ~1~ Newport. CM 64&8686 cab. Good cond. $SO. housebroken, 5:hols, stu~
Holp Wonted, M & F 710
CLAIMS ADJUSTER
Individual experienced in dis-
ability or lifc insurance
A Beller I"osi!ion claims. SfiOO. +. <I day wk.·
Small Sanla Ana Offire. I
Personnel Agency has open-Phon+' r.1r.::. Ladeoburger !or
ln~ tor 11crompllshcd in-app!. 547-64.37.
rl1v1dual \\.'ilh pro\•('n sur· ===~=~-~~ee~i; 1n the profession. CONTROLLER or Chief ac·
Profits high &· shan'li. coun1ant for fastest ICT"Q\\'in~
LIZ REl'.llDER 'S rnillion $Co. in men's SJ"()rl I
Personnel Agency shi rt. fie!rl , N('ed fairly '
B qnalirii>d & rxpl'r'rl cnn-
INVESTMENT
COUNSELING?
Or d id you ever
could wish
sell
you
all fou r?
.jJOO Campui; Dr ., :'°'l troll+'r or chief aerountant
S.16-2118 tn h<tnd!r act'tg .• t.: ad-\Ve·re one of the few v.•ho offer all four .. l\nd
min1stra1ion. Salary, honus we're ready to offer the rieht man an execu·
AN 01-110 OIL CO, offrr.; np-& stock. Send rrsumr 10 tive sales Opportun ity. Selling broad spec-
po11uni1y for htizh inr.'<ln1e Pr•s>'dc•t, P .O. Bo .. ~"7. t f' . I I . . d ' PLUS regular cash bonuS('s, ,,_ .. " ~ run1 1.nanc1a p ann1ng to tn 1viduals and
ronvention trips itnrl abun-Capistrano Br.ach, Calif. businesses. Representing a fir st-rat e $3-
dant fringe hrnc'fits to DISABLED pcrson needs billion company, \Vith a training salary up to
mature man in hraeh arra. lady tn prepare meals & $850 a month p lus opportunities for additional Regarrlle~s of expcr1cnee. personal care, no lifting. 6 income. And prospects high in the five·figure
air mall l\1. F . Rt'flci , Pres.. dys wk .. S.1. r.1on-Sar. Nr. range.
American Lu bricants Co., Dover & 16th SL, N.B. If th· ( Box 696, Dayton, Ohio. 642.-00TI . IS sounds o interest to you. call us at
4'401. ,..iiiiiiii ... ._iiiiliiiiiiiiiii._._. 1 (714) 542-5623 ext. 321 or write P .O. Box 4338, EXECUTIVE ' ~~~la Ana. Ca. 92702 We'd like to hear from
A Setler Temp:>rary
Position
URGENTLY
NEEDED
• Secretaries
• Repro Typists
• Acct'g Clerks
• Keypunch Oprs
Interviewing llo11ni
9am-llam &. 1pm-4pm
Work when k whert
y<1u want!
Interim
Personnel Service
771 W. 20th, C.M.
642-7523 $46-2592
A<:ctnJf. Corl< l500
Girl f'rlday·lntt lo $700
E)(ec. Se<:'y.stanton $650
Exec. Construction to $6SO
Sec'y/Bkkpr.COnstr $650
Girl Fr.!day·EI Toro $650
Sec'y.Bank S525
G. Ore-Property Ins $500
Rtctpt l'l'ypi!t s..50
P\MI Mjlr·Pla!1tlc11 SS00
R.eJt/BAr M1tr·H11t~·11ii $700+
NEWPORT
P1r1onnel Agency
133 Dover Dr., N.B.
642-3170
Personnel Agency
Exec. Secretary
Accounting Clerk
Secretary
Girl Friday
Receptionist
L09ol
Jr. Acctng Clerk
P /tlmo Girl Friday
P /Tim• Sales..gallery
Coll
!lolly Bruce
410 W . Coast Hwy., NB
Sulla H 64S.2716
EXEC. SECRETARY
Advertisllig depl. of p.ibllsh·
Ing firm hall position open
for a competent eec'f · Mwt
be self stuter vmo hM J:Eide
In htr work ol doet not t'leed
oom:blnf supenisSon. Accur-
ale typing a must SH help.
tuJ. S47>SSZ to rtart. New·
port Beach location. lnlt=r-
vll'W!I 11tar1 Mon. Call G81')'
BiM?I, 646-4455.
"Make Room For Dad· i
dy'', .clea n out the
'"rage .. y<iur II'uh fc CASJI
with a DAILY PILOT
Classtied ad.
HolD Wonted, M & F 710Holp Wonted, M & F 710
BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB
CLUBHOUSE
OPENS ABOUT MARCH 151h, 1972
Now Accept ing Applications
For The Following Qualified Personnel ;
e Busboy•
e Cookl
• Locker Room Attendent1
• Kltchonmtn
e Wolters
Apply In Person
e Captains
•Housemen
• Pantry
• Wi1ltre1u1
BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB
1 Big Canyon Drive, Newpart B11ch
DAlLY PILOT. 330 W, Bay 644-2512. Behind Tony's Bldg Mat'I 673-!ZlJ. R"rvlce, Groomtng, temm
81, Ct.1. SERVICE Station m an CARPETING BUY direct, Elna sale onlyil ~84&-0fl39~·~~·~~~~~~~1 ) Phone Solicitors graveyard shift. Must be ex: \arpct your house in luxur· $269. White-Elna, 4822 Para-I
'Gals i<:et in shape, free per_ Apply Chevron Station, ;0h"' heyaJJfon .sh'!CHfor 1.ess mount Blvd., Lake'1.uod. , loot•""' 11.c·i
m1uc1ng course + f'a sh corner Harbor B! & S.D. an pri.c~-avr JUSI 213/423--0777, MarNE.qWpment
cnmm. Leading reducini;: I Fiv.')'.
0~:_. rollfoobntai~ing 72 square ;~~~~~~~=::!~! ~~~;;~~~~~~;1 Sal La 1111 • y ... us o ran., new carpet. Sporting Goocf1 830
on ( i:tuna 1 s) \\:ork I SEP.VICE s!at1on attendant. 1n2 at only $299. Call 837-4239
nut of you r n\\'n homf'. Call exp. preferred. Full .t: part . · GUN Collection Remington Generel 900 ~JAO Margn. I t1n1c shills avail, Apply at RUS!Y, u~d boat. mooring pump, 270 \\.'i n $110, Ruger , .
. . eha1n, '' material. ('ach 10/" b" 16 FIBERGLASS c u I PTl t1mr box 0H1l'f' & ronsrs. Shf'll, 17th & Jrvuie, N.B. link 2,,., 1 1:.i., .. ·d u. ear 1ne, branrl new anoe . ., · 1 p Th · I '~ oni;:, -"" "L e. $30, Cha.rlcs Daly V•ntur• erl one time on!~. JXO." ·:->ion gir · orl f'afrf' in T IRE CHANGER 50c Pf'r ft. Marine Surplus '"
Crli1·1 SC'c tvlanflJ:f'r .11f1 fi prn 1 ~liisl he cxp'<I OOth Lruck & Co.. 3307 S. M11.in, S.A. Grade 12 ga.. 26 " barrels 979-1050 or 646-4643. ..
673-!lll.17 rns~f'nger. Top wages, 545-0.551. S200. Ithaca tlfodel :17 pump 8' DINGHY
---'"""-------J2 ga. 30" barrel $13{). Good cond. $50. 548·3594 PROFESSIONAL P hone ~~~g~~.;;~~ils, 5~~ day v.·ork POPCORN Booth origina~ly 979-1319.
solicitof' -J)ana Poin!, San used at Long Beach Pike. LEIT Hand llhooters O'DAY Mariner 20', kerl,
C!emen!e, Capistrano area. TELEPHONE Sales. Top Would ma ire great patio \Vcatherby 257 rn a .. n u m' head,. 3 MHs. fflnged fllB.llt
Work in your own homr.. I commissions and bonus. Af1. bar. Also very clean '60 Leapolrl ,~ varlablo.Bu•ler &: tra1lerable $2300. ~39-5790.
SC!it deal in area. Phone ply in person between 9.00 ,,,." 835--14""' betwe<n 9:00 .t.m. 1-·ord }1: fon pickup. Make mounts, brand new S320.00. Boats, M•jnt./ vJ and 12:00 noon at R3Sl Bol~a off r M t II 4~ •9~ W <. I and noon. e • us SC · .,....... '1 eatherby 300 magnum ...-rv ce 902
Avenue, Mid\\·ay City. , _•_f_«_r_G_P_>_r.______ Leapolrl 3x9 varla.ble Bueler , P -GEE INDUSTRIES
Needs Trainee•
$5()8,$650 Per Mo.
.-f-> ALWAYS TOP 1-(-iiJ. TEMPOIAIY 'd ASSIGNMENTS
ti.10VING : Like new G.E. mounts $280.00. 97g..1319, BOAT Bottoms cleaniJi&' ~
gas dryer, Kenmon! Clauic WJNOiESTERS, Ca.nad ian ~ Len&'th at w/1;
gas range. garden lools, pie-Ce ri tenniaJ rifl~arblne.1-;::-.,.-.,,-· ,-..,------
r \"oung rnrn mechanical ex-
per. helpful, but not rt'fJ'<I.
Must be 19 or over. Able to
start "'Ork imml!diatcly, if
ar('eptcd. F'or info on job
placement.I!, call Tuesday 9
nic tbl. Spo.rrlsh coffre tbl New, boxM. $90 e a . Bo.t1/M.rlrM
Com• In & r-.lif•r today w/rommode end t b I 5. 557-7~. Equip.
Ycx.i'U be glad you did. Child's red wagon, many
1 am-I pm only,
Nof•eever. 2112DwP...t 1 ,..-0c,1 hc,or~it.c•"'-'=,·-'"=~="-='·-
Drive, lrvlne. &l).12'5 NUMEROUS janitorial equip
=~~=~------Incl Advance 18" Convert&· TY Pt STIR e c e p ttonist matic, garden, pwr ~ hand
p It i m e, Thurs/Sat/Sun'. tool!!'., M liquc1t, aquarlumJI, I 776-8551 Acctn'g background. Front camping equip. Call (TI 4)
ofc appearance. Mesa Verde 892-9724 for long nit of
ROCEPT-MEDICAL: Asslflf
doctor in this plush p~
feadone.1 oUlce. You will he
r esp on sible for ap-
Country Club, 54S--0377, Nita t!verything.
r.fyer. 1..:c.::c:.:.'-"'------
BOTH TICKTDCKER
THRIFT SHOPS
1 , pointmenlll with very Im.
WANTF_;o, babysilter, live-In
on Peninsula, for 21,s yr old
girl. Call 675-2432 aft l pm. 1h PRICE SALE on all
clothl?ll. Starts Monday
Feb. 7. 13'.I E. 19th, CM.
5'10 W. 191h, Co!ita Meh
portant patients. Start $400.
Call J{.18n Brown, 54().f,()55
Coaal Agency
2790 llarbor Bl at·Adams
RECEPTIONIST $450
Typing 50 w.p.m. ~wttr.h·
board. F'ront ore appear.
Call Lornine
WANTED Mature lady for
kitchen & dininp; mt. 7 am-3
pm. Sawyt?r Home. 64£HiTI6. 100-B Warner electric plastic
WAlTRESS for oolfl't'! 1hop, lamlnatlnr machine. C.OSI
Ovt'!r 18, exper. Apply in $780 w/parts & 11upplir11.
person, MeM Lanes, 1703 Used twltt to CllJlbtl'lle
Superior, C.M. hf:"H!. Will l'l"lJ for $400.
54~2"78.l.
WESTCUFF ~NEW alcohol camper stove
PERroNNEL AGENCY I -I aeils $109 t.ke $7S. EJr~
2043 We!ttr1 Uf Dr., NB ';;;;;;;;;;;;~·~~' Signature 11ewlnc ma.ch fTS. &15-7770 I 00-9051. l8SG Pomona, A.pl. e RELIEF COOK C. C.M.
• NURSES AIDES AntlquH aoo,r,,,_.~-pc~,,-"-... -,~tl-ttp-o~f~VJ~. e LYN'S ----------I vanl slerllng by lteltkxnn. Conv11l~1t J.!Otpllal & SOl.r.> l.Ara:e home, tum\turc Almost new. Bt~t offer.
Roidenll11l Carn F11.cll!Uei. · 100 b\a: fer apt. Din rtn l\lblc &16-3821. It. 6 chairs, hutch. buUe11 .::::..:=:c_ _____ _
642·3505 or 54().5600 I Sl,600, Granrlfa!ht'nr; clock PIWJECTOR Super 8
S900 Sleigh txt 1 ~ /J w/11Creen. b In o cu I,. r R ,
'' \V h 11 e Elf!'Ph,11,MIR" oper· drts'scr 1900. "~;,n ..,"t,8. 11.7 Nlk1~n Sit. Siar Sapphires. I --o~~--~~~-·-~· .;._:•~-· !tlUdlO (!fttl'L 64!')oo l224.
I
• running your tnuM."!' Turn --: s r * ·poring !><'inllng fl"'lr 3 Belter rlrtssr.11, good vood,
them Into "CA.SH" -Mii Mle-Crey Hunl,.r, mQUn1cd Siui 14 $5 each
Gt,,!leman & Doe -RoU inii ' 646-3821
tMm thru D11 lly P 11o1 JHll11 k E!tate. frAmerl, ail1 ----'--'--'-'----
Oflnlfled. &42-l"l671. j with black linen hoer, circa Need a "P11.rl"7 Place an ad!
------"'-~'-1840..._.~S<()..529-'---"1_. ____ 1c.u:=:.~64Z-::..::116'11::::.~N~ow~I---
RELOADJNOC'quipn1entMARlNE Equipment.'
Herteni Pren, RCBs. Dies Mercury props, 50 JtP. to t
1or 210, 300 . wby, M·l 120 H.P. Wrap &round
carhlne, ~ win, 44 mag. wind 1 h I e I d. All ne\lf. :
Calle trimmer, RC BS ReaJOnable 549---0530 I
Powder measure m a n y ' ·
buHets, brus, pr '1 m e r s ' 6 HP J ohnaon outboard eng. !
much equ!pmen[. SL50. tor &. fu<ol tank. 1 yr. okl Uttle
everything . 97~1319. llMr, $195, 673-1096 aft 6 pm.
Store Re1ti1uri1nt Bo.ts, Power 906 • . ' .
Bar 132 16' BOSTON wt\&ler, 2 yrs. 1
RESTAURANT ~qulpment; old. 1',orward fl11hlna: deck. {
National Ca!h Regiiter, 2 fuJI life railt, 115 HP
Hot point f1j1tt11 & d JOhlVIOn outboard, f u 11 ,
gt1l!!i. 6' itainl<>U sr~i oover. $2395, 673--1~ aft 6 :
ttfrig., doublt' head Taylor pm. :
shake machine. Scolchman 16' OOLPfllN, Cabin, fl.)'iJ1g :
Ice machine, Corty cofftt bridge, plley. head. com. l
maker. Russ Hamburi;:l't$, pas.~. S/S Radh. al J :
214'4 Newport Blvd. C.M. fiberrt.a11 $600.00. 64fi..9076, •
64Z-'lffi,5, o aftt'J' 5 pm. I
' TV, R•dlo, MIFI, * 16' TROJAN SKI Boat. 200 ;
Stereo 136 ltP, v.a. x1nt a>nd. $950. 1
Will finance l
1972 ZENITH A-RCA Color It 673-6t50 or f75..3l22 l
bl:ack Ir white 1V Ale. * 'l> Owona: twn q ., llU 1
Priced below t he dl1-oo. Loe.de<! w/eltcL equip. 1
muntera w/3 yr pletuno S..crf. St4,000. 673-6663.
tube', l yr parta &. ttrvi~.1--------'--'--
Color antt>nna lnAtalled fn-e Boats, Rent/Chart'r 90I
~'/all con."°14!S thn.i 7 feh
No dow" ""JUIOTd O.A.c : CATALINA 27' SLOOP
ABC Color TV 9011 Atlanta Brand new Mat. Aux. ~r.
Hun tington Bc'ach 96B-l3:.:'!l ' 11lrtps 11bc. $/S radio, RDF.
""""""="~"";::..:=::::,· · 6'2" h<'~room , ronvenimt MAGNAVOX 25" Color TV, Newport sltp w/plnnty of
11trreo l!IOUtld, pecan cabinet, parkfns, Club ratu. f"or 1nJo
Tambour doors. &4>4491. cal) 5:17-00M alt 6:30.
HOOS(! Hunttng! Wa tch. the HOUSE lfunnn('! Watc.b the
OPEN HOUSE column. O.PEN JlOUSE column.
'
-.
• •
• I
"
:J DAil Y PILOT
..____-_-__ ... ~!~..__I ,_.._.._.,.,,___,lli] I -. .. w. 1§1 ..__I _ ...... _ ....... _!~ r· ............ l~I ..__ _ ........ _ .... _,1~1 ! _ .... 1§1 I -.... l§J l_I _.,,,._,., .. ,._,!~
:.mmm;;--;; lu1 ••. 1mpor1!d 9'8 '---------~;;;;;;;;;;~~:/~;;;;;;;;;;~;;
Boots. S•O M5 Autos W•nttd 968 Autos, Imported 970 Autos# 1-......... td 970 Aul-U-990 A ~-U PORSCHE ___ .. .,....;....... ·---·~ u.-, * 990 Autos, Used 990
; JJOBCE Cal 16 I mot ol.d. 'J"ENT trailer, htdtp, s.leept;'
Lime creen hull. ~Uo•' xlnt cood. $650.
tnunpoliM, $1495. Phone 1---....:.968::_· 73o;'7;__ __ _
after 6 pm 842.-3737. Auto Service, P•rft 949
16' CATAMARAN
New. Fortf!d to !di!
SllDO * 6"fl-38()4
Bo4ts, Slips/Docks 910
SLIPS, 18' to 42'. Fine!! in
Npt Harbor. Bt>st facilitl~·i;.
Free parking, 673"8TIJ 1111
10 p.m.
* BOAT Space near Lido.
Side tie & slip. Ac-i·om. 20 to
40 ft. boat, 673-{;450.
Boots, Speed & Ski 911
Buy, Sell, Trade -·-UiOX15 $29.95
l'60X14 S29.95
G60X1 4 $29.95
tr.s. r-.1ags S15.95
lli.Ja1:keri; $34 .50
12 Ft Boston \Vhalt>r 18 lfP lfXI ?1!1-'H BAlan<;e c.m Car
John900, ('('nler stttring, re-(Ma.gs OK)
mote controls, boat cover,
lights over $1500 invested. 1!150 Ne1.1•por1, CM 645-3554
Sacrifice f79j. Alter 6 pm I\I UNTZ 4 & 8 track tape
842-3737. deck. 6 months old, good
'70 GLASSTilON 16', 75 hp ('()n(l11ion $50 or trade for
Evin. Vanson trlr & equip. A:'ll-F.\f l'adlo for V\V or of.
R. Taylor, dy. 6~6--742:.i f!\'C' i -'-"-"-"-"°-"'-"-·-----6T.Hi973.
u· F .G. Ski boat. 3.i h.p.
Evinrude, runs good,
trailer, $325. 54>-5910 after G
pm.
13' ALLEN, \\'ilh 40 H.P.
motor & trailer \\·ith winch.
$350. 531-7294.
.,, Valve f,,'I'ln<le!', ltke ne"··
\1'/all attechments incl'd.
$-!~. CaJJ 5.'l&-1288.
'63 VW No l'nginc. Dody shoL
$175.
• 646-6319
I AutosforSal• ][.~.]
Tr1nsporlltion JI•! 1~-----~ Antiques/Classics 953
915
Taildragger or Tricycle
Your choice at
DIAMOND AVIATION
Low Cost Flying
Student Plan Available * 54()..1932 *
'47 MERC WOODY
i\1int condition, inside & out.
TaJfy Ia n w /\Vidc w /\v &
wh! vinyl top.
Best offe1· over $2000.
This is a show condition car.
Jim 675-6000. ..c:.:.:....... ___ _
WE PAY TOP CASH
JDr uaed can A trock•, :tust
ca1J UJI kl free ••Umatn.
GROTH CHEVROLET
.Uk for Sal.ea Manager
18%U Beach Blvd.
Huntington Beach
147-60<1 Kl 9-3331
\VE buy all ·1nakes of l'lean
used sports catit, paid for
or not. Please drive rn tor
!rte appraisat
. NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 \V. Coast Hwy.,
Newport !~each
642-9405
WE PAY TOP OOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CARS
lt your car b extra clean,
SeJ" us 1lrst
BAVER BUICK
23': E. 17th St.
Costa Mesa 518-7765
IMPORTS WANTED
Orange Counties
TOP~ BUYER
Bn.L MAXEY TOY OT A
18881 Beach Blvd.
H. Beach. Pl\. 847..s555
\\llLL Buy your car paid for
or not. Call Ralph Gordon
67~ -54!}...3031, 1970
11arbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa.
Autos, Imported 970
AUSTIN HEALEY
'67 Austin Healey
JAGUAR
BAUER BUICK
The liarbor Areas
Only Authorized
JAGUAR DEALER
Always has an excelle11t se·
lf't'!ion of both New & Used
J aguars.
1971 JAGUAR Vl2
Air condilioning, aufomatte.
Only 8,000 miles, (928Dl\1NJ
$7'195
'71 Porsche 911
$7295
900l miles;, still in warranty,
local car, A.\l/FM Radio.
Newport Imports
;uoo w. CoaM1 Hwy,
Newpor1 Beach
=--=64.:::2-9405
'68 Porseht> 912 ... S"'"°"l'd~. -m-,-.-,_
Ko11ii>, lowe1't'd Pi re l J ! s .
$3995_ ~5631.
VOLKSWAGEN BUICK
'66 Squarebac:k '70 Buick Skylark
SUn ~a.ch Car <n6CXW) Cpe. 23,000 mtles, air, power
$799 steering, power brakes,
bench seat, vinyl root Hur-
ry. 976-AGC
CHEVROLET
* $650 * '65 Impala Super SPort, 396.
4·Spd. P/S, NPW clutch &
brk.s, 57.000 mi's, Tape deck.
GOOD COND. 892-5966
JEEP
'70 l.Andcru~. hardtop, 4
whfoel driv<'. Wam:"ll hubs,
oever abu8"d, t'XCl'llent con-
dlrion. (928 BZU) $2ti95.
5:i7-j242.
$2795 '63 CHt:v C r ee n b r 11' r 'GS TOYOT,'\ I.and Cruiser.
• t Can1per. Xlnt <'lnd1t1on. !lard top, good eond. $1595. 111111Wmfu'.I MacHoward 422~11 r~rnleat, Corona t1~1 ca11 111~1 5~&-611s.
COSTA ME SA '.\11U' ~~-
549·JOJl b.!.66-67-Cf 839-9600 or 5.11·0008 . . MERCURY
J971 V\V Bus With curtains. Cornt>r 1st & Harbor '63 CHEV, Van S!!OO <ff bt:•s! ---------
Chl'!TY cond, Only 7000 Santa Ana offer, ·:is Chev. Inip11li1• 'ti.J '71 i\'larquis Bruugh;:in1 2 dr RENAULT miles. \\lust sell. Ask for 327 eng., 4 sp. ~LI pos. Sj 50. Hf, full P"T & au·. 17,00J
1970 XKE 2+2 Phil, 675-771& 1970 Buick Electric 962-1760. NIL Like 11e1~· corlll. Sl:tve
Coupe. Yellow with black '70 Renault R-10. The ll!Ue 69 Custom built coupe. Full '64 CHEVELLE SS, V-8. $700. One O\llncr. Call
leather int0 n'or. A"toma10·,. '-·· b , , VW Bug, Owner leaving & F I · · "'~ 'K\:J'I '·-! 8 PM " ~ ..... m that geta to 40 1niles for SCIVtc(', Sunroo!, 20,000 power ac Ory Air. A auto, bucket St'ats. Good .,.,.,...~""" ur ore .
traMmission, lactory air per gallon. 4 spd. R&lf, elC-nii's. Nu tires. $ l 175 • Bettuty. 562 AGG eng. $375. 646-8526 or '64 Sf A \Vgn., pis, air, gd,
conditioning, po111er SIC'ering cep!i-OM.l C.'Cndition. (71.3 64&-7993. $3595 642-4895. o:i1KI. rle;in. E."<c('J tlrt.'S.
& brakes, Phillips M l·FM-BNR) $1395. Laugh all the =~=~--~--1966 Chevy II $375 S·HlO. 8'12-5972
SW radio. etc. J usl the one way to lhP bank. Jll\,· f '59 V\V Bus, JJeeds trans, MacHoward 1---~==~~~--• •·· 1 '" f 1200 ExC£'Uent running con<l. MUSTANG you ve ...,..,n 001ung or. SL.EMONS IMPORTS, 2201 •
(26IBQD) So. Main, S.A . .&57-5242. * 548-83~ aft 5 pm 839·9000 or 531-0608 =~~*~4'4--8:...;c.."..:8~*~-1---------
$5295 •69 RENAULT RlG '63 VW Bus w ith 1500 (.'.C Comer 1st & 1-lorbor '65 Br! Ai.r \Vgn. P/S. ari * MUSTANGS *
"Specializing in Quali1y" -• Ba.1·1p1in San1a An a RS/I-I, rack, 72 plates, $62:1. '71 l·!ARDTOPS
B of the New Year_ $1195. engine. ~5'-~226. AUER Unbelievable. See at 2201 S. Call Chl'is, 67;)..33Ui 1969 Le Sabt'i» Air, PIB, Lo niileage
Buick-Opel-Jaguar Main <XNH492) Dir . FAITHl''U L '68 Bug, au1o, Jo P/S, new ttres. Good cond. CHRYSLER HERTZ CORP.
234 E. 17th .St. 557 ... 5z.i2. mL Sl,100. 67;...8309. L.:·g sC'lectio11·J\.1nny t'Olors
Costa Il1esa 548-7765 ~R~~~.N~A~U~L~T~. ~,-_~1,-&~&-tv-ieto a 6'12-S9S9 1!167 Rivie!'fl. s HA R p ! '67 IMPERIAL 4 Dr. Br-a1J!. (714) 778-4050
'67 JAG XKE. Aulo Trans., & Paris. JJr-.1 SLEMONS 1--,6-5_V_W_,_G_ood--C-on-d-.-Load«!~ Air. 1'~u.ll pow\'!!'. Cond. Fully equipped. $1950. --.69 i\lUSrANG--
Air Cond, 0 u Is 1 a n d i n g Jr\1PORTS. 2201 s. l\1ain, $500. Aft G pn1 642·6748 1 _l_l_l!50_._c_a_ll_,._>-_l_l3_1.___ s-12-1:i9t. 642-2789· V-8. 4 sp1l, p;>11·er. heavy duty
price. i\1u.sl MCrificl', $2995. S.A. 557-.5242. n·= V\V "'-'64 SKYLARK. Excellent CONTINENTAL SllSpC<nsion, low mileage & lTRH--02Gl. Dir. No dealt?!' °" =-dan, good cond.
M t 11 $575 condition. New tires. R/H. \"f'fY ~h1u·p. $1900. Call
calls. 557-5242. SAAS us se · . 645-0420 P/B, PIS. $550. f>45-6505. '71 MARK 111 Whi te/Blue f,l(j:.9Itil
'67. XKEAM 4;M Csnv. ~r~ '69 SAAB sonnet!. Xlnt t.'Oncl, '69 VW-Best Offer CADILLAC roof, b!ue Jtht· int.. n1any ac-'69 Co·,-,71.-a7lt-· _'°_""_·_""_"'_I
wu-es, I . I W. 1 1c • $~' XI t d cess, Lo mL Jmmac. 17:10 trans, PIS, disc brks. ~Heh.
tires. Xlnt ro·". $'000. D'Y' ~J..AJ, n con ' 833·8814 n., w N B rru ~ ,-vrl estboul'ne, . . tires, $1G50, 645-1500 or
647-1906, eve" &17-3498. * "'8-8667 * '68 FASTBACK LARGEST 644-2152. s:J7-'•'30 SELECTION OF 1 =~--~---MAZDA
• NOW OPEN
SPITFIRE
'66 Spitfire, MK II. A classic.
J\.1ust sacrifice. TFA 35'!
Dlr. No dealer ca 11 s •
5.57-5242.
SUNBEAM
T I GER .
Blue \vith While interior, CADILLACS IN '63 CONTINENTAi.. '65 r\1ustang, V.I!, auto, good
looks & runs gre<1l, (WAV· ORANGE COUNTY Good condition $500. c'Ond., new tires, n1ags.
420) SALES-LEASING 675-m8 .. 642-140.1 ssoo~. ~S..1=s--O="~"·~~--
AUTHOR!ZED CORVAIR 1!)67 FASrBACK W/2'9. U.S.
• SERVICE . ------·-· _.___..... nuigs, mf"<'•l1 p1:rfc't't , Xlnt Nabers CadiRac 1965 CORVAIR 2 door hard cond, $1 100/n[fer 492-0295.
2600 HARBOR BL., top. $400. Days cal! 494-9515, 1966 i\tus!ang 6 cyl, auto, etc,
COSTA MESA eves &31)...6370. Top con<l. Ll'aving state .
$2295 performance new
Radio, lleater, overdrive, /llilli&lll / tires, niags.
Dune Buggie• 956
Campers, Sale/Rent 920
h igh
paint , '57 V\V Bus. Xlnt meeh cond.
Nu tires, $500. or bst offer
eves. 642-8931.
540.9100 Open Sunday '65 CORVAIR !11onza, 2 dr., $875. 546-2562
-4 spd, good cond. s275 0-~L~D-S~M~O~B--IL_E __ ,
CPE DVL '70. Extremely oc b"'t ol!er. 64&-8508
APACHE -Whee.I Camper -
Tent Trallers. 'TI car load
sale -Some freight damage
-Ne1v & used from $2'l!i up.
ALPINE TRAILER
PARTIALLY completed dune
buggy, Maroc body, Reblt
eng & transax!e $400 or best
offer. At1 6: 645-4488
675-5681 only 27,000 miles, lmmacu· ---==-=~=-=---
late, silver blue with cus-TOYOTA
low miles, AM-FM stereo.
crui" con1ro1. 1..eather in-CORVETTE '71 Olds Delta 88 '56 VW PANEL
lom interior.
Trucka 962 Newport Imports
3100 \\/, Coal!t lhvy.,
Ne\vport Bea.t'h
642-9405
SALES
8352 Garden Grove Blvd.
Garden Grove, Calif. 92641
(714) 5.14-6686
ATTENTION
TRUCK BUYERS
'72 GMC 1 TON P.U.
'&I JOJO MK JI orig. 0\1•ner,
clean, sharp, good c.'Ond.
Sl Vil. 540-3498. 1970 VW Adventurer camper.
Cusrom n1ade. 18,000 mill's,
14 gal pressurii!E'd \Valer
tank, Magic Chef built-in
stove. \Vill trade up for
·motor home. 642-0358.
Tinted glass. caznper niirror, BMW
81h' bed, heavy duty front & ----·------
"'"' 'PCing" ootnm,,ir. air IMMEDIATE DELIVERY cond., radio, camper wiring, ·* SHELL TOPS -*
EL CAJ\'f!NO * RANCll1.!.RO
tool box, gaugei;, JXllver disc
brakes, super custont. 950x 2002'5 &
DATSUN Pick Ups 16x5, 8 ply tires. This is not Ba • •
a strippy, thls is a C(lmplete var1a s • B&JSALES
1030 S. Harbor, SA 839-2515
Cycles, Bikes,
, Scooters 925
'67 BULTACO l.oBito E.x.
pansion chan1b('r new til'ei;.
Rum perfect. $300. 979--1319.
'TI SUZUKI TS 125cc I ow
~mileage. $425. 979-1050 vr --.
heavy duty unit, equipped
to handle the largest camp.
er. No. 505526. Buy this to-
day far
$3999
Over 40 Campers &.
Trucks Available
Mike McCarthy
GMC
MUST Sell! Honda CL lOO. cor. Beach &
Xlnl cond. tow miles ,285. McFadden,
;Must see! 642-3..154 N.B. W•stminster
•n HONDA SL 125 new cond, 894-1336
lo mi. 7 mo' old, make oJ. 531-2450
fer. 557-1143.
!IONDA '69 CL :!50. XJnt '64 CHEV. ~ TON
cond. Used for touring & Split rims, heavy duty gprings, radio, heater, "283"
, 5ehool, $500. 833-8532. VS, 3 speed trans., step
MAN'S 26 inch 10 spd, Like bumper, Only $700. By owner
·new $50, 815 Sonora Rel., 548.-8778
'C.M. 546-1692. 1951 FORD 6 cyl., l Y.r ton
'70 HONDA Trail 90. Xlnt step van. near new s ply
cone!. $300. Ures, illSulatl'<l woOO pn.oel-
673--0289 ing, drapes, etc, , • ,$295.
'69 BSA 650 Ligh!nlng, mini 1765 i\•Jonrovi11, C. M _
cond. New l'ng. \Vorth $1050 548-5332.
SEE US ABOUT
Overseas Oeliverv
CREVIER MOTORS
208 \V, 1st S' . '""nla Ana
835-3171
Bi\1\V '70, biege, guoci cond.
Clean. $2,800 or o f I e r .
84£--3257.
'70 BM\V 2800 CS, a i r,
11unroof, leather, AM/FM.
Pvt. ply, $6500. 546-6020.
Automotiv., Exi:1!lleoce
0
ROY CARVER, Inc:.
2925 Harbor Blvd.
Costa l\1esa 546-4444
DATSUN 1st $950 takes. 646-7040 eves. 1 ~19~,,~-CH=E=v=,=,-P-i_r_k_U_p
2 '70 HONDA 100 Trail Bikes \\'(camper shf'IJ ill xlnt •,6'.'.'.7_D_A_T_S_U_N_S_la-Ji-o"-ll-a-g-o"·
+ trailer. Like ne1v. Vf'ry cond. $~25. 2343 Orange radio, hcatrr. 465 AGC.
lo\v miles. $725. S.16--7326. A\'e., C.M. $795. Jli\1 SLEl\lONS 11\1·
68 500cc. Triun1ph Trophy. -'5-8C_h_r_ry_p_lr_k_"_P_'_"/-,-.-m-pe-r PORTS, 2201 So. r.lain, S.A.
Xlnt cond. $500. shell, complete, OC\V brks, 557-52·12.
646--8526 or 642-4395 good cond. $450. 494-0134 '67 DATSUN Sta \Vgn. xlnt
EXPERT motorcycle repair. '63 F ORD Falcon \vindow rond. Best oiler takes!
Any make, .,..'Ork guar. Fr('(' van. New clutch & starter, 842-5138
estimates. From 9 10 5, Mon mag \vheels, good cond. ·sr Sports 1600 Convcrt, Stick
thru Fri. Contact Jim Berry $750. 675-8153. shift., RIM. top cond. l m-
646--3304 '62 FORD Econoline Pick mac. int. $975. 968-0159.
4S8 Nt~'PQrl Blvd. N.B. Up. Perfect condition, Call
·n HONDA 750 "''/\vixom 642-0037 anytime.
fairing. a ir horn~. etc Very '63 Cl 1 • t p u $5-00
clean $1.150. 645-4592, ievy 'Ca~n · · ·
'67 SUZUKI X·6 HusUer 646-1275, 642-5845
wf'£9 engine, Xtra paMs.
Xlnt cond. S395 or make orr.
962-1850 or 646-3443.
'71 Dodge Van, 127 \VB, r/h.
tape, panelled. beaut in.!ikle.
$2900 or offer. 675-ms.
•
FIAT
BILL BARRY
PONTIAC-GMC-FIAT
BRAND NEW
'il FIAT 850 SEDAN
Fully factory equipped. $1295.
plus tax &: Uc. + doc fee.
2000 E. FIRST. SANTA ANA
558-1000
.1958 190 Sedan Cla ssic
w/gray paint. b!u1' lca 1hcr
int., new carpe!s, Runs
well, AlSQ included <J re
spare parrs-cngine hlock,
transmission, glass, son1e
body parts & miS<'. engine
components all in good
working order. $ 6 5 O,,
496-4123 (Capistrano
Beach).
Oran9P County's
··· '"L chon
N •l1"' ~ Used
Mercedes Bent
Jim Slemons Imps.
\.'Varn~r & Main St.
Santa Ana 546·4114
'71 25(}.C, tobacco bro\rn,
]1.000 miles. Immaculate
with full power & srerro
FM. 543-7677 aft 6:30 &
wknds.
MG
'70 MG Midget Rdstr. Bright
orange low miles. $1495 JL\l
SLEMONS IMPORTS. 2'101
So. Main, S.A. 557-5242.
'64 MG 1100. Rehl!,
paint, xln1 con<l, S-100.
* * 545-5637 * *
MGB
)l('\V
'64 MGB, ne1v p.<i int, top &
C"ng o/haul. A{ll/Fr-..L \l'1rc
whls, S795. 673-8261
'67 11GB-GT
Chrome \Vire \Vhf'C'!s
Call aft 5, 6T:r0726
'65 MGB wht convt.
Good cond $750. 675-7£1~9
OPEL
'70 OPEL GT
Yellow
23.000
VIM)
with Black Interior.
actual miles, (228·
$2199
Mm. COSTA MISA
S49-3031 b1.'6~67•68 968 TRJU~fPli Trophy 650.
' Very clean. Can s ~ e
anytime at 300~ Costa
Mesa St, CM.
'69 BRIDGESTONE dual
twin. Rood & dirt .. 5 speed.
Xlnt rond. Sac! S2 SO.
G<&-3062.
·IH.
Intemattonal Hiu'wsttt
RECREATION CENTER
'68 OPEL __,_J_A_G_U_AR ____ 1 St•tion w._. Radio. Roof
'70 Jaguar 2+2 Rock, 4 '""· CXVT<89'1l
ROY CARVER, Inc.
2925 Harbor Blvd.
Homes Costa Me-sa 546-4444
$4995 $l099 •
Auto Trans, Air Cond, AMI ~
FM Radio, Chrome Wheel~.
Burgundy with tan intuior, ~ H"-. CXTA202l 1171~1Ullllll .• .... J COITA MISA
GET OUR
TOYOTA DEAL
BEFORE YOU BUY!
~mle.wiA
W TOYOTA
1966 11a rbor, c .ri.1. 6-16-9303
'70 TOYOTA
Corona Deluxe, Radio, Heat·
er, Auto Trans. (456BSW)
$1799
~ ~. COSTA MlSA
\, 549•JOll bl.66-67•N
SANTA ANA
TOYOTA
Service dept. open 7:30 am
'ti· 9 pm Monday thMJ. Fri-
day.
PHONE 540-2512
41°' \V. \Varner. Santa Ana
-WEHAVE'EM
'72 LAND CRUISERS
Immediate Dctivery
lill'!l ll•ttuis Um.ten
Authorized Sales & Service
900 S. Coast Hlgh1\'ay
Laguna Beach 54-0-3100
'68 Corona <klr sedan, au!o
Radio, air. Xlnt inside &_
out. Pvt ply, i\lake offer.
S33-1:rn
'70 TO\'OTA Serlan. Radio,
heater, stick shift. VNN879.
S!!c.io .JIM SLE~fONS Jr'o-t-
PORTS, 2201 So. i\1ain, S.A.
5.17-5242.
TRIUMPH
'69 Chev l/4 Ton
Pic:kup
\18, Heavy Duty Camper
Equipped. Split Rims. CU$-
tom. # 38724.
$2195
MacHoward
839-9600 or ~l-0608
Corner 1st & J-Iarbor
Santa Ana
Triumph/Fiat
New & Used
Stales-Sorvice--Pa rt1
Auto Sport Ltd.
537.7777
9625 Gord('" Grove Blvd
Garden Grove Open Sun.
Really neat, fat tires, custom
inside, # 1096.
HURRY
~ ~. COSTA MESA
549·3031 lx!.66-61-68
terior. All magn if icent ------c Fl am i n go R·'. Wo'll '!i6 VETT Lots of goodies ustom cpe. Automatic trans,
<:1.1 • • po1ver Vin:vl Roof 15 000
sacrifice, Dir (798 AZI). No $1500. or JX>SSible trade. miles· 793 CQS ' '
dealer calls please. 557-5242. 642--6817 ' $3
Ask for Sandy Sanders. '67 CORVETTE, 4 spd, 350 595
'69 Cadillac: hp. vinyl top, Pl'-smo. MacHoward 557-597·1.
Cpe De Ville COUGAR !39·9600 ,,. ""·OOCltl
Full Po111er, Air Cond. (Y C\V. I------------Coiner 1st & J-iarbor
972J '67 COUGAR 31\,000 n1i. Santa Ana ___ , $3995 Orig, oy,·ner. like ne\1'. 1969 4 door Dl'~LTA 88.
KEY BUYS FR Air & pv,·r. 675-2~~'11) perfect eond. l.o..'ldcd~ 1\)68
Dark blue finish. Excellent ---D-"O_..:.__:_c .:..:..:. __ I 98 4 door. In1mac rond.
condition. New 2 brakes. 4 DGE Lriadcd? Your choice $1850.
'66 Fastback
speed, radio, heater. (SQY-~ :--=-,------·I 6'12-7491 or 54S-29n. 117DllAllDlllVD .• 4 DR. '70 Dodge Cornl'I, 654590l51l64695.0~2Ir. Cliff Waldrop 549 3031 cbos66<A 6M71SA P /S, P /B, Air. Xlnt rond. '40 OLDS 6 cyl., 3 speed.
· , ""' -0631. -1• -·6' Xlnt shape, $550. '40 Old., 8
C Lo mi. $2'290. 675-7985 or .., TURBOCHARGED '68 V\V AD. Cpe. Dvle. '68 Full 9G2-452S. cyl. Runs $100. 962-1760.
Camper w/pop top. Extra pwr., air, tilt v:heel, 8 way ,64 DODGE D,\RT OLDS '66 Vis!a Cruiser, 9
set Michelins. Chrome rims, leather seat. exc. tires, Full · Good AM FM beautiful powder blue with Good running condition. pass. . J)V.T., air .•
1 I ·many extras. Very 1175 * ,,101072 cond. Pri/pty. 96s-6065.
clean. $2475. 540-4240 or v.'hite padded top. Priv. Pty. vu-
557·9867. $2600. Call anytime 546--7827. '63 OODGE with rebuilt \l/AGON '67 Cutlass. P/S,
65 V"I engine 1966. N"w l;""S & Pl_B. a ir, rack. 4) l '70 CA~fPER pop-top ' D I ' •• R J NB6 ' A~1/FM. Xlnt rond .. 17,000 e I e battt;"ry_ $425. 641--6647 af!. 5. 1vcrs1< e, ·I • -5 I 8 3 ; ---------~18--9798
mi. All extras. $ 3190. Coupe. Full factory power, I96::i OODGE Dar1. 6 cyl.. --------1
6-12-1536 PM. factory air conditioning, auto, rl&J1, good ti1·es. !luns '67 DEL TA 88
'69 V.W. Camper Westphalia pov-·er windows. (PBP983) x!nt. S39'5. £75--07~7. SllOO. * * * 5.17-1.1179
\V/pop lop. tent, AM-FM, $995. dlr. Cliff \Valdrop '63 Dart Runs, Tran:oip. $145 '69 OLDS Vi~1a Cruser every
tape, OH eng. S2675 or best 540-5164, 842--0631. or best offer, or trade for xtra, nu l){'l!ed fires. xlnt
offer , Phone 6-46-6942. '1~97~0-Ca-d-ill_a_c _E_l_Do_rn_d_o_, -E-x-etc. 281 Del Mar No. H. rond. 33.000 nii $2950. 1----'-~~~~· :c:;.;_:.c::__ 6i5-7746 ** 4 V\V ASTRA MAGS, for ecutive car, Air cond, PIS. FORD
sale. Make offer. P/B, P\1.T windows, Pwr '57 OLDS, good transporta---.,.--------1 tion, needs battery, $50 * 644-8993 * locks, adjustable tilt wheel,
* 'li6 vw
646--0571 days,
968-4714 eves & wknds
'66 V\V Bus. 8-pass w/win·
dows , Reblt engine. Xlnt
cond. Make offer. 545-6447.
'70 \'W Camper, bright
ycllo"'. xlnt cond., S2700. * 675-4314 *
'69 vw
\Vcek end Special (961BXB
$888
~ ~. COSTA MESA
549•3031 bt,66-67-6J
VOLVO
GET OUR VOLVO
DEAL BEFORE
YOU BUY!
SA VE ON EUROPEAN
DELIVERY
·nto1t LtAN
-VOLVO
1966 1-larbor. C.M. 646-9303
Autos, UIOd
auto trunk, FM stereo, new
radial tires. leather int,
vinyl roof, Lo mi's, Xlnt
co11d, 1624 Antigua Way,
N.B. 642-9980.
'59 CADILLAC Sed an
Deville. One o\\'llcr Luxury
equipped. £2684. JIM
SLEMONS 1r'o-1PORTS. 2201
S. fl.1ain, S.A. 557-5242.
1970 CADILLAC Coupe
DeVille. Loaded. Xlnt cond.
Pri. party. $4650. $46-6562.
'10 CAD C.D.V., fully equip'd
$4700. or best offer. Mm;t
sell. (213) 5!!2-3Jji.
CA MARO
* CAMARO'S * 'TI Hardtops * to mi's
HERTZ CORP.
Lrg seleetion·Many colors
(714) 77M050
CHEVROLET
'70 Chev Impala
Custom Cpe. 12,000 miles, air
cond., J>OWe!' steering, pow-
er dlsc brakes, vinyl roor &:
interior, heavy duty suspen.
sion, new tires. 398CAX.
$3195
'65 FORD Evt'S. OIS-3096.
WAGON 1962 SEDAN , good
9 Passenger. VB, automatic, transportation. $150. Call
air cond .• powu !'!leering, after S pm, 546-3025.
(ROV572l $695. dlr. Call 1966 OLDS Delta 88 4 Dr.
Cliff Waklrop 540-51&4 or sdn. Very clean local,
842-0631. original ca r. Air, etc. S895.
'71 LTD'S
GALAXIES & TORJNO'S
Also '71 Country S!'dan \\i'gn
Lo niilea.i;e
HERTZ CORP.
Lrg selection-Many colors
(714) 778-4050
t•irm 5-L'l--2083.
PINTO * PINTO'S * l!l7l's, \\lith or w11hou1 air
Lo milragC"
HERTZ CORP.
'70 Galaxie 500 Lrg ~rll'ction-r\111n11 colors
2 Dr. Hardtop, y .g, Auto. {714) 778-4650
Tran,., Fortnry Ai' Conti.. PL YMOUT.~H~-
Power Steering, Radio, l-IC"at-1----------I
er, Vinyl Roof. (172ABB)
$2395. dlr. Ctif( '\laldrop.
Cal l 540-5164 or 842-0631. '69 Valiant
'67 F ORD Galaxie 500 conv Runs good. Blue \vith ~hite
Du 1 -1 · vm:yl top. 2 Door. 6 cylinder e o unns er wtco. must automa!ic ra<lio h 1
St>ll caMy apple red. wlb!k (YDA754)' s1295. «nr. e~~
top. Custom :ntcr. Like nu '\laldrop 540-5164, 842-0631.
<-'Onci.. lo mi's Will takel'°'=-~~=="'-:c.:.=c... reas. otr. 538-749i 1970 P~YMOUTH Duster,
autoin atic-tran~n1ission,
'69 FORD LTD. 1 Owner. po\vcr steering, h u c k et
24,000 mi. 429 Eng. Dlx. int., seats, conwle radio &:
vinyl top, air, full pwr., heater. Lo miles. Sl.750.
good tires, 50.000 mi. War-962-35n.
ranty S2495. 548-3388. ,,:;~~,;:;,=:__~I e '67 PLYMOUTH e
'68 FORD LTD Brgm., 4 dr. Modified for high
HT, alr-ste?'e'O, new ti res, perlonnance and
HOT WHEELSI
• '61 PLYMOUTH • MacHoward
mecb xlnt. S21SO. Consider ·appearance!
trade tor-newer model P.U. $1000. MUSf SEU.!
truck & camper. 847-5007 548-7881 Modified for high 83$.9600 or 531-0608
performance and Corner 1st a: Harbor appearance! Santa Ana 'JJ LTD Brou9h1m,
MUST SELL! $1000. Full pwr & air, lo miles, .. .,,,,--------
548-7881 '71 Camaro 35055 Ivory w/wblte landau top. 59 PONTJAC. 4 dr, clean,
0 I TruJy a beautiful car S3295 runs "'c ll. Orig owner .
PON1iAC .....
'*Marvin Pearce* I
.Motor Homes
Sales · • Rentals
558-3222
'67 Chevy \' ton, 8' bed with
camper, r/h. C.ood cond.
$1,500. 832·7920.
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' •
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' '
I
7
7
. . . t • -·· ... • .... • • •
-
San Clemente
Capistrano EDITION
,
VOL. 65, NO. 32, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES
• I
Relocation Move
Railroad Funds •
Said A vailahle
Directors of the Sa n C I e m e n t e
Chamber of Commerce Tuesday will hear
a respome to local inquiries from the
U.S. Department of Transportation on the
availability of grant fuods for relocating
the Santa Fe Railroad.
And the answer is yes -that funds are
2 Stragglers
Seen in Gua"i
TOKYO (AP) -A pollce in·
spector from Guam said today that
two more persons believed to be
World \\'ar JI Japanese soldiers
have been spotted in the jungles of
Guam .
H. G. Scharff told a C<>mmittee of
the Japanese Parliament the men
were seen in July and October,
1969, and again last Dec. 20 a~ut
71,~ miles east of Agana , the capital
of Guam.
Sch.arff came to Tokyo Thursday
to report to the Japanese about the
finding of Sboichi Yokoi, the former
anny sergeant captured Jan. 24
after living in 1 jungle hideout on
Guam for 28 years. He is recup--
teraU"i tn a To~ ~¥-
Irving Appears
Before Jury
In Hughes Case
NEW YORK -Author Clifford Irving,
star witness in the Howard Hughes
literary mystery case, went before .a
federaJ grand jury today to tell his
version of the dl.scredited Hughes
autobiography.
Irving entered the jury room at
Federal Courthouse on Foley Square
shortly before 7 a.m. (PST ) accompanied
by his attorney, Maurice Nessen, and
Philip Lorber, a lawyer representing Irv-
ing's wife, Edith.
Irving refused to answer newsmen's
questions.
He did pose briefly for pictures before
his Jawyer hurr~ him up to the 14th
noor grand jury room.
He left an hour and 40 minu tes later,
smiling btlt still silent.
Neither he nor his Jawyer would say
whether he actually testified and what he
aaid.
"l don't want to ~ in!pollt.. but l
want the proceedings to go along in an
orderly way," Nessen said.
Nessen managed to delay Irving's ap-
pearance bf.fore the jury for nearly two
wetts by pleading more time to acquaint
bJm.elf with his .client'• case.
Jn the meantime, a Mam of witnnses
provided testlmGny wb!Ch has further
compllcatod the bizarre """' Oilier llgures In the m)'llery are achadWed to appear btlore !he· federal iltand jury 11 the panel enters Ill le<ond
week of la'esUgaUoh.
IrY!nii'• Swlu.bom wile Edith and
Richard ~' a ruearcher -wbo aaid . (h '!llVING, ..... I)
Big Pot Case
Su$pects Held
!dJ,U\l B&ACll. Fla. (AP) -
.u.S. 0......., .... II~ clown .oo a q-l'!OI fel?ood cruJaer today
""' ...-two tons ol li!P vade ialiiJl!!la Iller llld . wa ~ ~ ... , ..... O>lombll.
'!Ina mm abolnl the er•!!, Tbe
111111111.,,.,.. cllarged with viol•ltnc
U.S. er.ems laws. They were
ldeallllod 11 Keith lleigp, 24, of Miami; ~ Ingham, 29, of Long se.ic:li. ~;, and S t e p ~ • n
McC.rtJi1, ii, of Loi Angeles.
CUstoml -b aid the marl·
jur·•• had a -.. 1ue of 14 m111• n. ne boat. ooon.cated
wide• lc4eral In, -ftlued al ... ooo.
available to local entitles for a complete
planning study on the feasibility and ex-
act costs of moving the tracka from the
seashore to the inland hills.
The chamber will meet Tuesday noon
at Omar's Restaurant.
Paul Presley, a member of the
chamber railroad relocation committee,
has received responses from an ad-•
ministrator of Transportation Secretary
John Volpe. The response urges that tbe
Orange C.Ounty Planning Department
handle the application for grant fund!.
The letter. which arrived last week:, is
an answer to personal contacts made lo
the department officia ls during a recent
conference al the Western White !-louse.
John W. lngram, administrator for
Volpe, issued the re ply to local queries on
the chances for relocation and said that a
similar project tr.d recently been com-
pleted in the East at a cost of about $4
million.
He suggested that the initial lhrust
come from local groups which would re-
quest the county office .to apply for
government planning erants ..
~al eU~rJ$ lor rdoc!ili•n .Pined new
momeQtum several months •10 •ftu
more ~ a year's lull. 4JDe Mor•tnAetieca1t· surp In wort bi the dlamber committee "u the pair
o1 ratanu .. fast year·oo the tracb iJt one!
near the City of San Clemente.
Several major problems remain in lhe
relocation effort, inc luding the lack of
funds to buy the existing rigbt~f-way and
the purchase of new land In inland area.
Some antagonism by large landholders
in the El Tqro and Mission Viejo area has
been noted.
Ingram mentioned that in some cases,
where the old right-of-way would be used
for pubUc r ecreation purposes, federal
funds are available to help 1n the
purchase o! the strips.
Santa Fe officials, according to the
chamber committee, are receptive to ~he
relocation klea, as long as someont! other
than the railroad comes up with the
funds. I
Tentative ideas call for switChing direc·
lion or the tracks somewhere in the Sad-
dleback Valley or El Toro, then stret-
ching across the hills then linking with
the existing tracks in the Camp
Pendleton area.
FBI Seizes Four
In Del Mar Death
DEL MAR (UPI) -Four persons
wanted in·the slaying of a man who plc~
ed up hitchhikers were arrested Si.mday
at the Del Mar Motel, the FBI bas
reported.
All four were charged with unlawful
flight to avoid prCsecutloo. for murder.
The warrants were 1asued 1n Lee County,
Ala ., where Michael ~y, 34. Wu slain
and his wife, Sharon, 29, wounded.
Tbe Froneya, who Uved Jn Marquette,
Mich., wera driving to a construction job
awai~ the buaband at Tallahusee,
Flo., whOn .Ibey plCted up bltclihikdm.
'!lie ·1or amsled are Stephen D. Chase,
20, a M .. oaltvo abooal without leave
from a Marini Corps -near Albany, G!L.i..Rooald It. Ccmtll, lt, Albany , Ga.:
Pruwp R. .Roynlca, ll, """ JOle, and
Kmn E. Jordan,.lt, 1-borg. Ga.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1972
• ne1n
CIA1\.Y PILOT Pl'I010 Ill JollTI \'1111111
ONE MAN WAS KILLED AND TWO WERE INJURED IN FLAMING SAN CLEMENTE COLLISION
Mike Correll, Wr•cker Oper•tor, Scr1tches. Hi1 He•d •t Appalling Aftermath of Crash
Probe Ordered on Zone
Clemente Phmnt!Ht' Give Hard Look to Apartments
A zoning designation In San Clemente
that allows ror construction of garden
apartmenls as high as three stories and
which ha.~ been commonly doled out in
the p.!!st yea r will come up for a hard
look by plann ing commissioners soon.
The probe of the R-3-G zone comes on
orders of the city council, specifically,
Mayor Walter Evans Jr.
The zoning recently was granted to the
Chapman Management Corporation for a
Fire Destroys
Junior High's
Locker Room
Fire destroyed a $60 ,000 girls locker
and shower room at Lathrop Junior High
School, 1100 S. Main St. in Santa Ana ear-
ly today. A classroom building at the
same school was broken into during the
night, police reported.
Fire and police investigators are prob--
Ing the blaze and break in today. Th ey
hinted that arson may be involved. A
police patrolman spotted mull<• pouring
from the building about 1 a.m.
The Lathrop school ha s been the sce ne
of disturbances i• the past ~w yean. Its
main building was demoli&hed two years
ago because Jt failed to meet earthquake
safety ,standards.
Four firemen were injured, none
Rrious1y, fighting the blaze .. Si1: fire com-
panies with 28 men under the direction of
Battalion Chlel John Mahany fought the
costly fire for an hour.
Both ·u.e locker room and classroom
are the relocatable type,· prindpal Dr.
Pat Keni>edy sald. He reporl<d that utm.
ty -to the school has· been cut of!
but that classea are being held•aa uaual. .
176-unlt apartment development on
Camino de Jos Mares. It also Is the choice
of E, W. Rathbun, the owner o( 20 acres
of Pal isades land now being considered
for annexation to the city.
Evans specifically has asked for a
redu ction in the allowable density and
height in the zone.
Under the present city practice each
garden apartment must have at least
1.500 square feet and each lot can have
no more than five dwe!Ung unils, Three
stories are also permitted.
The Chapman project involves four
apartments on each lot sold as a single
property to an investor.
Such garden apartments have wider
setbacks and generally, city planning
staff say, provide a quality usage of high-
density land.
The zone designation is one of two mat-
ters which councilmen last week dropped
into the laps 'of planners.
The second involves a strong request
by Councilman Tom O'Keefe for com-
missioners to consider setting up an
architectural review board lo deal with
esthetlcs of proposed commercial and in-
dU!ll'ial projects.
O'Keefe launched the request after
angrily assailing city-condoned plans for
a concession stand at North Beach.
That structure will be built by the
lessee, but O'Keefe maintained lbat the
buldlng ls a box with no decoration
whatsoever.
Commissioners have the Power Lo set
up such a review board but thus far have
not agreed to do so.
O'Kecfe, buoyed by an unanimous vote
or the council, wants commissioners Lo
reconsider.
Capo Trustees Taking Up
Budget C11tting Scissors
Budget cuts in a wide range of
categories will be spelled out by trustees
oC the Capistrano Unified School District
at tonight's 7:30 o'clock meeting at Serra
SChool, <Alpistrano Beach.
The board will decide where cut,, will
be made if the SO.Cent tax override elec·
tlon March 1 fails.
Charles Dargan of San J u a n
Capistrano, a member of the commlttee
supporting the override, urged the board
Thursday to decide where cuts would
come to citl7.eM will know exactly what
they will be voting !or.
1'rustee Bob Dablberg argued that the
decisions are often not final because of
emergencies and changes of opinion thlt
mull durl"i the course ol lhe year.
Sam Chicu:, asalstant auperfntendent
for business services, has prepared a
preliminary budget without the SO-Cent
override. The total for the 1972-73 year
would be $8,938,951 -representing a losa:
of $825,137 to the district.
If the over'ride passes, the preliminary
budget would be '9,764,088. Even U the
override is successful Superintendent
Tnunan Bened1ct bu Indicated substan-
tial cuts would have to be made in capltal
outlay, maintenance, and the cash
reserve, In order to continue the etistl?Jg
level of educa(tonal aervtces next year.
Benedict had orlglnaUy requested 711
cents. But the board, be:Ueving the
pol!Uc1I climate adver1e to paulng a
higher override, agmd to req uest the
same amount that it has used for the last
two years.
-sadd.lelJack C:oUege Plan
School Liais·on Permanent?
' '
"" :.~ .commlltft pmmotq
comDiunlCatlono bei-n IChool ' cllstrld
~,and the' Seddlehack Com11111111ty
C.Dqe Board ·may become a permaoenl
!JJluno'tn' lhO <oDege dlstrlct.
SUch a eommlttee wu formed recently
to otudy and advlle on a mllhocl of rtap-
portlontng the hug1 oollege dlatrlct. At a .-q Thunda.y ol the omnmlttoe,
m<mbm Indicated that llUCh a IJ'OUP
olO>uld set tocether at "lular lnl<rVals.
"I woyld nolhor Iron our mutual pro,
-oUI at a -lie lil:e lbio," ;.id
. .. .. "j!J"' -.•
.-...,, Qillep ,-llan!I· VO(!el,
''than· nad .aliout them tn t h e
)ll!Wlplpel'I..
COiiege ]ln!lldalt Fred B.remer el·
p!atned that ·the boanl ...... hu "' ad-
vlllry commiU.·made up or community
mem'bert, but that the commtttee has
never met wttll the. board for legal
reaaon11.
Dr. Bremer Mkl the county coonsel 's
olflcti was ol the opinion tha.t metUng1
between the hoard and tile community
advJIOr)' conwtttee would COfllltitu te a
oonlllct o! tnltr.st on tile -· part,
' •
sinco --ld'labo ~ (!J com-
mittee dellberallono. -
However, be ll<itod that under recently
enacted lqlalatlon, each ltUlleo would be
allowed ·to appolht and med with hi• own
committee.
"We need more. direct Input rrom the
community!," Vogel noted. "l would like
to aee thll group become 1n ongoing
oommlttee and meet quarterly."
Vogel agreed to brinjl the matter up at
the Feb. 22 metllng of lh6 ·lull coU•g•
hoard !or conslder1llon.
'
' Today's Fina)
N.~. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
Tl1r ee Die
In Co1111ty
Accidents
Three perSQns, lncludlng 1 Laguna
Beach 1ncdical ~retary were killed in
Orange County tr affic over the weekend,
the coroner's office repOrted.
A Sunday night crash in San Clemente
killed one man and injured two others as
flaming gasoline spewed across the
freeway.
The dead :
Kathleen Suianne Collett, 22. of 2052~
S. Coast Hig hway, Laguna Beach.
Harry D. Johnson, 56 of Los Angeles.
Chee Woody, 41, of Prewitt, New Mex-
ico.
Mrs. Collett, secretary to a Newport
Beach physician, died at South Coas t
Communist Hospital at 9:30 a.m. Satur--
day following the 8: 10 a.m. accident in
which her car went out of control and
crashed Into a power pole on El Morro
curve. just north of Laguna. The
California Highway Patrol reported thal
sh'! was ejected from her small car.
Johnson was kll!ed inst0ntly Sunday
evening v.·hen his car traveling south on
the Sa n Diego Freeway at the El Camino
ove rcrossing In San Clemente went out of
contro l and careened across the unguard-
ed center strip.
Highway patrolmen said the auto slam-
med into a northbound car driven by Ray
i1. Spriggs, 21, of Beverly 1{1111 and the
for ce of the crash ripped out lhl Johlll0l1
car'• gu lank and aent tt •ldddin& clown
the freeway, spreading burning 1uollne
over a wlde area.
Spriggs, Sin Clemente polloo...W,..wu
pinned In his small compaict coupe for
s e v e r a I minutes. A Pl"'"ltl' Jn
Johnson 's car, Ezequiel Garcl•Rlco. 40,
ol Tijuana, waa ejected. The cruh oc-
curred al 7:'5 a.m,
Both survivors suffe red severe cut.s and
other major injuries and were treated at
. _Mission Communi ty lfospltal, patrolman
said.
The blazing crash occurred at a chronic
traf!lc trouble spot on the freeway, where
no center protection is provided. State
engineers are studying the area on r6-
quest of local authorities.
The crash obliterated the main section
of Johnson's car, leaving It an empty
shell.
Woody. an American Indian from the
Borrega Pass Trading Post, New Me1:ico,
was killed ln Placenlla Friday night when
he ran int.o the pa.th of a car driven by
Donald i{. Neal, 33, of Anaheim, J',!C:
reported. The victim was a tra
with the Santa Fe Railroad.
Blaze Damages
Oceanside Dock
OCEANSIDE (UPf) -Fire hu cauaed
an estimated $.'I0,000 damage to a
sportrlahlng boat •I Oceanside Sporll
Fishing Dock.
No one wu aboard the •easel, the 15-
foot America, which ii owned by Plero
point Landing o! Long Beach.
The Oceanalde !Ire department and the
Coast Guard tnveatljaled tho blne bul
said the cause wu undetermined. The
fire apparenUy 1lartod SUoday la tbe
engine room.
Ce•• •
Better plan on gett.!nfl, ~•!""
mJnulel earlier Tuadliy ._...
the lite evenl"i toe IGnlcbl will
tum tnlO early momln& 10(!. Olhor·
wise moatly IRIMY 1ldel 1-l'
with highs aton1 ~ couj at M
rutng 10 flt Wind. Lon 3ML
INSIDE TO•AY
LltU• Tonw C0114llo .........
/lncd lo hll room, bvl /lomoorlc
McConl<11 rc>omed thf lt!•etl /07'
autograph< during tM qvl1t doil
rightl march Sundav In Ndf#rJI,
North lrclond, See 1'°'11 1'og1 4.
... ~ ........ '11 ................ ,,
••ttMt ., ..,,.. , '' C•llfttlll• I •Ma.Ml NtWI .... I C!•nlllM n..n .,...,. ,...., I• t CMftlc• ,. ,,._. ,... 11
c,._., 1• '""" "·" Olllll Mltm .. llMll ......... ••t• ,,.,.,.... ,... . .,...,.... " ... ert.i.-.1 ,, ,.._.. ,,
l"f-. "'" ··==r.~:·· .... · . ~--"" ltlCW ,. ........... " .,.,. ..
(
'
2 DAILY PI LDT SC
Pa v Raise
•
Denials Get
Court Test
WASHINGTON lAP) -The United
Auto Workers today announced details of
11 Jaw su11 against the Pay Board to try to
recover a 17-cent-an-hour pay raise
denied to aerospace worker~.
UAW President Leonard \Voodc:ock sai d
the suit, the first court test or a major
Pay Board decision, LS based on allega·
tlons that the Pay Board acted bfyond its
ltgal power 1n denying the ra1S(·.
The UAW suit involves about 31.000
employes at ~1cDonnell-J:>ouglas Aireraft
Corp., LTV Aerosp<!ce Corp. and North
American Rocku.·ell Aircraft Corp
Also today , the International Associa·
lion of MactIJnists said it ""·ould file suit
next week to recover the same pay raise
denied to another 70,000 employes at the
Boeing Co .. Lockheed Aircraft Corp. a nd
McDonnell-Douglas where the two unions
share representation .
The UAW law suit , which Woodcock
said would be filed toda y in federa l court
here , contests the action of the Pay
Board Jan. 5 in rejecting a 12 percent
first-year pay raise for aerospace
workers. Winter Wonderland
Irving Cat1e
Mystery Blonde
Next to Surface
NEW YORK (AP) -An other mystery
woman. this one a blonde scuba driver,
has surfaced in the Clifford Irving-
Howard Hughes saga.
The v"nn1an. ident ified only as Ann
Baxter, fle w wllh Irvin~ lasl December
to St. Croix in the Virgin Islands and
ga ve h1n1 scuba lessons white he was
there in what he sa id was an attempt to
contact •lughes. Life magazine said Sun-
day .
In a court paper filed last n1on lh.
novelist Irvi ng, 41, swore he flew to St ,
Croix fro1n t.1ian1i la st Dee 10 on in-
stru ctions of a Hughes aide. who told him
!he billionaire would n1eet hi m there fo r
a final session about H u g h e s '
'·autobiography.''
Irving said he stayed on St. Croix un ti l
Dec. 12, but when no message came from
llu~hcs. he left.
was quoted as saying she knew o( no way
Irving could have met with Hughes du r-
ing that tnp.
J\trs. van Pullandt . estranged wife of a
Dut ch ba ron. lives un the Sparu sh
~1edtterranean island of Ibiza , where the
Irvings also reside.
Life, which pictured ~trs. van Pa!Jandt
on ils cover this week, quote~ an Ibiza
resident as saying "whenever Nina's
na me was mentioned, Edith climbed th!:'
wall."
Capistrcino
Adult School
Signups Set
Pay Board later said it would a~
prove that 12 percent raise if the unions
and companies agreed to delay part Of it
until the second year of their three-year
agreements. but both the !AM and UAW
have refused to do this, choosing instead
to sue for the full amount this year.
Picture of Jack Frost's delicate handiwork looks as
if it might have been taken in the Midwest or East.
It wasn't. It \Vas taken in South Laguna in th e yard
of landscape architect Fred Lang. Lang said that
someone forgot and left the sprinklers on overnight.
Nature's landscape architecture -temporary in
this in stance -Lang found most impressive. So
did we.
Hughes . who hasn't been seen in public
for a decade <rnd is s:iid to live as a
recluse in the Baha1nas , has den ied ever
meet1ng Irving and labeled the Irv ing·
prod uced "autobiography" a fa k e .
•lughc s' disclai mers came rrom a voice
identified as his in a telephone news con-
ference. and in court affidavits allegedly
l:iigncd by Jlughcs.
Registration will be h1kcn today and
Tuesday for the spring semester of the
Capistrano Unified Sc hool District adult
education program.
Prospective student s will sign up for
their classes between the hours c1f 7 and 9
p.n1. in the San Clcn1en te lllgh Sc hoo l
library or between 6 and 10 p.m. in the
adult school office. Woodcock said that his workers are
being paid the portion or the rejected 12
P,ercent raise that the Pay Board said it
would approve this year, but that com·
penies are holding up the rest of il pend-
mg Lile outcome of today's law suit .
The 12 percent raise totaled 51 cents an
hour on the average, but 34 cents of that
'fa5 a cost--0f-liv ing adjustment called for
jn 1968 agreements with the companies,
Woodcock said. In the case of LTV , this
adjustment is 35 cents.
Woodcock said this part of the raise
was beyond the power of the Pay Board
to deny. The rest, 17 cents for McDonnell
Douglas and North America n and 16
cents for LTV, is well within the board's
5.5 percent-a-year pay guidelirie, Wood·
cock said.
Furthermore. he said , the aerospace
agreements should ha ve been approved
because two ol the firms testified in
hearings before the board that they had
raised their prices in anticipation of the
pay raise.
He described the denial as inconsistent
With the board's approval of large raises
tor coal miners and railroad workers.
"We allege that the orders were taken on the basis of politi cs and administrative
convenience. rather than fact.3 and
reason," he said at a news conference.
The union chief argued also that the
aerospace re jection was a denial o( due
proceM or law because hearings on the
contract were private instead of pu blic,
because at least two members of the
board 'Said publicly in adva nce of hea r-
Jngs that they should be rejected, and
because the executive director of the Cos t
of Living Council, Donald Rumsfeld.
predicted publicly that the contracts
would be trimmed.
Solicitors Get
New Environment
TwG Alhambra women who allegedly
solicited Tustin homes during the
weekend in aid of an organi1..ation known
as Citizens for a Better Environment
were glven a brand new if not better en·
vironment in which to contemplate
charges of illegally soliciting
Orange County sheriff 's officers say
they did a service for ecolog:y by load ing
Irene Ellen Means, 19, and Irma Drusilla
Richey, 18. in Orange County Jail.
Both women were :irrested af ter
homeowners complained the y were urg-
ing loca l resident to contribute funds to
what is alleged to be a myth ical
organization.
01.AHGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
'CIMli!CI! COAST PLIBllSHIM~ ct111'.MY
Roff" N. W_, Prl:SldllU .,.. l'lltllltlllr
1
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n..,._., K:11•il
Editor
lltOtn•• A.. Mvrpl.lu ,,.,._WI Edl)Df
Q1r1n H. lo&t Ric"•nf P. Nin AuWIN .,....... E4iJora
Log-.... Ot'fM
222 for•ll A••ll•• 6'.1.11i19 •ddr ... ~ P.O. 1111 666. t2l52 s •• a-.. Offtce
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-bf!I.., °"' ,,,_,. • ""' e., ''"" • ...._, 'i:!'~F' Hft'POt" eouln'ft h••• ..,,.,........,.
Union Asl{s Court Actio11
To Approve S11ace Pacts
WASHI NGTON (UPI) -The United
Auto Workers asked a federal court today
to force the government Pay Board lo
reverse itself and honor in full the union's
contracts covering 30,000 aerospace
workers.
Another union. the Internal io n a I
Association of t-.1achinists. said it would
flle a similar suit next week for its nearly
200.000 members working for aerospace
firms .
UA \V president Leonard Woodcock told
a news conference that the Pay Board
Partial Clamps
On Strike OK'd
By House Panel
WASHINGTON (AP ) -A House labor
.subcommittee voted today to authorize a
partial 60-day injunction against the West
Coast dock s!rike.
The subcommittee voled 5 to I to allow
a major part of the strike to continue but
to allow a court, upon pctilion from th e
attorney general , to halt st rikes affecting
the shipments of military a n d
agricultural cargoes and shipments to
and from Ha"·aii.
The subcommittee rejected on a 5 to 3
party line vote. the eme rgency strike
legislation requested by President Nixon .
The Presidenrs proposal v.•ould ha\Pe
com pelled th e v.·orkers lo retu rn lo their
jobs wh ile the ent ire dispute. resul ti ng 1n
a slrike now in its J22nd day, ls sub-
mitted to con1pulsory arbitration. (See
earlier slory. page 8.1
All !he nrn1oc r<1t.~ !)n lhe suh-
cornmittee, headed by H('p. Frank
Thompson (D·NJ l, voted for t h e
subs titute, which \\•as offerrd h y
1·hompson. llep .. John I J Ocllrnl)a ('k f ll-
Ore •. voted ag<1inst 1t and two llthcr
Republicans, Heps. John Ashbrook of
Ohio and Ogden Reid of New 't'o rk voted
present.
Thon1pson estimated his proposal
would get 80 percent o[ the \Vest Coast
cargo n1oving aga in.
lie said the measure ,\·ill go lo the full
House Labor Comm ittee Tuesday :ind
C<1Uld be passed by the llouse Wednesday
if it agreed to suspend all its rules
against acting so quickly.
Quake 11isurance
Largely Ignored
By Horneow1iers
LOS ANGELES <UPI ) -Earthquake
insurance, which was largely unavailable
after a quake jolted the Los Ange les area
a year ago Wednesday causi ng death and
widespread damage, is being offered
again but few homeown ers are in-
terested .
The Western Insurance Informa tion
service reported that underwriter$ are
offering the protection Al almost the
same rates availablt prior to thr, esirth·
quake last Feb. 9, but there has been no
great rush to oblllln it.
Homeowners rushed to buy it in thl!:
days hnmcdla lel y following the disaster.
but most insurance firms suspended sell·
Ing It until th! major aftershock!! subsid·
ed. By then, time 11pparently had dulled
the memories of the tra~cdy and Interest
In the insurance declined,
George Watt11 . executive director of the
information service, said the pAttcm wAs
lyplcal of those following dis11stcr s.
"Some people rush to buy coverage at
first, but Ulen at renewal time drop It,"
h' said.
acted "unfairly and irrationally'' ln de-
nying the two unions the full 51 cents-an·
hour. 12 percent pay raise during the first
year of the three-year cont racts with the
aerospace companies.
The board denied the full rise but said
it 111ould approve 34 cents·an-hour (an 8
percent increase l the first year of the
contracts and delay the additional 4 per-
cen t until the second or third year.
But \Voodcock said th e 34 cents-an-hou r
increase was actually part of the
previously expired contracts. which pro-
vided for that murh in a cost-of-living in·
crease over the past three years payable
whenever the old agreernent expired.
He contended the 34 cents was not su b-
je('t to Pay Board control and should be
:idded to the old average hourly pay or
$4.30 before computing the add itiona l 17
cents-a n-hour increase provided as part
of the new contract.
With the new base of $-4 .64 per hour,
\Voodcock said the 17 cents-an-hour in-
crease was we!! below lhe board's 5.5
percent guideline, whi ch would have
allowed an increase up to 26 cents per
hour.
Air,vest Strike
Settled: Ne 'v ,
.1\g reement OK'd
Hughes Airwest and !he Aircraft
r.Jechanics Fraternal Association have
reached a tent ativ e agreement to end a
sr ven-weck strike.
Lee Pitt. Inform ation orficer for
Air\11est, and 0. V. Delle-f emine. nationa l
director of A~1F A. ho th stressed Sunday
the agreeme nt is stil l :-;ubjecl to back·lO·
vuirk procedures being sett led ;inc.I
ralif1cation by the 570 s!riking union
n1cm bers.
Pill also said the agreemen t 11'as suh-
jecl to approval by the Federal Pay
Board.
No deta ils of the settlcnicnt were
di sclosed pending the ratification vote
t-.1eanwhile, Airwcst will continue to ny
its limit ed schedole which it has n1ain-
tained si nce the strike began Dec. IS.
The dispute involving niechanics and
aircraft cleaners has been over wages,
fringe benefits and work rules.
Airborne La,vmen
Tra11sport Blood
In Mercy Trip
Airhorne lawmen mobilized early today
lo make repeated helicopter nights bring-
in.11: rather rare blood -21 pints h1 all
by mid-n1oming -in a bid to save the
life of a patient at Hoag Tt.1emorial
Hospital in Newport Beach.
The vi ctim requiring Type 0 negatlvl!:
lransfu si ons was li sted in critical con-
dit ion rollowlng abdominal surgery.
Newport Beach Policl!: he I i copter
crewmen deUvered two loads or the blood
picked up in Anaheim for Eli Brabant, 61,
of 1586 Santa Ana Ave .. Costa ~1esa .
A third shipment of six pints wa s pick·
ed u·p at Harbor General Hospital In Tor-
r~nce by a Los <Angeles County Sheriff'k
Office helicopter thflt landed about l a.m.
In the ~pita! parking lot.
Hospital spakesmen said Brabant, a
t;elf-empl oyed electrical engineer whose
business is located in Santa Ana, wa s still
critical this morning but in stabilized
condition.
Complications resulting from th c
emergency surgery required the a~
dltional Type 0 negative blood. •
Bri1bant ·had received 21 pints of
tr11ns£usions so far.
Gree11-thu.1nbed
Tliief Absconds
With Large Latvn
It's well known that there are just two
way s you can start a lawn.
The cheaper but more difficult is to lay
your own grass seed and work up from
lhe inevitable patchy beginning: the
ea sier but more costly is to buy turf and
si t back to enjoy the blooming of your
readymade lawn.
An iratC Tustin homeowner told Orange
Coun ty sheriff's officer during the
v"eckcnd that he had learned of a th ird
v•ay.
Someone mov ed in during the night to
cul out his enti re dichondra lawn and
move it to the intru der's apparently
grassless locale.
All 60 feet of Raffi Frant'ian 's dichon-
dra spread has now gone to apparently
greener pastures leaving the Francian
frontage at 1081 liyde Park Drive, barl!:
and brown.
"Sorne body had a green thumb and a
sharp tool," commented a deputy.
Tu1iaboat O,wners
Ig nore Advice,
Obtain Licenses
SAN D l E G 0 (A P) -American
!unaboat owners in increasi ng numbers
are ignoring the advice ()f the U.S.
govemn1ent and are purchasi ng fi shing
l1C'f'nses from Ecuador.
F'iftcen of 3~ American seiners fishing
off the South American coast ha ve done
.so th is year, the America n Tunaboat
Association says.
'fhc llnited Slate s recognizes only a 12-
inil e offshore lln1it -not 200 miles as
cl:i1n1cd by Ecuador -and therefore
d i s c o u r a g e s a c t i o n in1plying
ackno wl edgcrnenl. of the larger boundary.
Tu n:o1boat owners are reimb ursed by
lhr gove rnment for fin es !evi<'d against
them when Ecuador seizes thei r vessels
inside th e 200-mile territory.
But this year, Ecuador ha s doubled the
fine for boats it also seized last year.
Another beautiful woman. Nina van
Pallandl. a 39-yea r-o ld Danish cabaret
singer. said last week she wa s with Irv·
ing when he went to Mexico la st
February.
His story that he met Hughes on that
tri p "flabbergasted" her , she said. She
Frotn Page 1
IRVING ...
in a sworn affidavit that he witnessed a
meeting between Hughes and Irving, are
among those who have been subpoenaed
h.1 te stify in the probe.
McGraw-liill pa id Irving $650,000 in
three checks for transn1 ittal to Hughes.
But Irving co nceded two weeks ago that
the chec ks made out to "H. R. Hughes"
were deposited and later withdrawn from
a Swiss bank by his wife who opened an
account as Helga R. Hughes.
On Sa turday, Swiss authorities issued
an arrest warrant for Mrs. Irving in con-
ne ction with possible fraud and forgery
charges.
Suskind, lert Spain aboard an Iberia
airliner for New York today to appear
before the grand jury. He was served a
subpoena at his Mallorca home Friday
and ordered to appear with all his notes,
tapes and other mate rial he might have
collected for the book.
On I.he Spani sh island of Ibiza, police
searched the home of a friend of Irving's,
Gerald Albertini. Albertini, a wealthy
American, told newsmen last week he
once kept Irving's manuscript of the
Hughe s book for the author for about 10
days .
Albertini's wife said the police "found
nothing at all."
Su nken Ship's
Oivner Hunted
LOS ANGE LES l AP i -Autho rities
\\'ere altcn1pting to find the owner of an
unmanned ca bin cruiser found awash at
sea of f Marina de] Rey.
Harbor Patrol offic ials said Sunday
!hat apparen tl y someone tried to scuttle
the boat. whic h had holes punched in its
hull and its spark plugs removed,
The bo at was spotted w1lh JUSt the bow
and the top or the cabin above water by
Charles L. Mendola of Van Nuys who
towed it to Marina del Rey and told
authorities.
ONE FULL CARAT DIAMONDS
Fine white coloI,
American cut
brilliant.
Select the mounting
of your choice from
our stock.
$
i\Iore than 800 ad ul ts are expected to
attend the cla sses which are usually he ld
one evening a week for two or three
hours.
Princi pal A. ~t Valent ine ha s
developed a variety of classes. Many can
be appl ied lo a high schoo l dipl oma
~·h i!e others are designed to develo p
vocational, practical or cultural skills.
A $5 fee is charged to help defray
osts.
This year 's classes include : nrt,
sculptu re, ceramics. interior decoratio n,
oil painting, mctalcraft. photography,
psychology. contemporary world pro·
blems, U.S. history, citizenship govern·
n1enl, group guidance and counseling,
Engli sh, ma ss rnedia, wri ting for publica-
tion, speedreading and Eng lish as a se-
cond language.
Others are : Spanish. bookkeeping, tyr-
ing. shorlh and . refresher math, natural
history of California, astronomy, boa ting
education and sa fety, clothing. crewel
embroidery, sewing v.·1th kni ts, rug n1ak·
ing. cooking fo r the family. automotive
tu~up, "'eld1ng and metal shop, and
woodshop fundamentals.
Classes will be added if 20 or more
adults express an interest
2 A11aheim l\f en
Among Victims
Of Plane Crash
Federal aviation ~fcty experts today
were probing the c:rash of a rented plane
into Lake Arrowhead Saturday. 1·he plane
carried four men. including two from
Anaheim to their deaths in 30 feel of
water.
Bodies or the occupants were dragged
from the bottom of Bl ue Boy Bay by
di vers for the San Bernardino County
Sheriff's Office .
Ludwig V. Stein , 49, Anaheim, was at
the controls when the single-eng ine Piper
Cherokee crashed.
Killed with him were Joseph Liles, 39,
also of Anaheim ; H.icha rd Jasinsky, 30,
Fremont. Calif., and Ardell S. Drilensen,
49. of Minnesota .
The vicliins were flying lo a Colorado
River resort area in the pl ane rented by
Tri Aviation Services of Fullerton, in·
vestigators said.
No flight plan had been filed for the
trip, according to the FAA. Stein harl
tak en off from Corona Municipal Airport
shortly before the crash.
GEMOLOGICAL
Al'l'RAISALS
Wo hove all qualiti" and sizes of Dia....,,.is In stock roody lo. .,.ur ln-
t ion. Choose from Gem qualltlM 1t Mntlbli prlcet. Or choose Dia~ u
low 11 $1 .00 i point. All Diamonds c1rry our money Hck 1uar1ntee.
We will 1ppr1IM In
writing yvur v1luable
Jewelry for penon1I
or ln1ur•nce purpose ...
Quick, effklent HrvlcL DMllllOnlil c ... ter for 0r .... ,, c-..i·
Find It Here First • 1002 Items to ChooM From
COSTA MESA JEWELRY & LOAN
Open Daily 9 10 8
1838 NEWl'ORT ILYD.
DOWNTOWN COST,(Mls,t.
'Comf In and Br0t011 Around
l'hone 646-7741 ~n Hor~ •"4 iroodwoy
EXl'ERT WATCH
REI' AIR DONE
ON l'REMISE
'
•
.... . '· -. '
Monday
Evening
FEBRUARY 7
1:00 8 &11 Ntws Jerry Dunphy rn l ilt Hudctr Rtport CJ ANIC Nm Tom Sn~dtr
0 Ntwi BtnU. Schubttlt
O @ Wild Wild W11t
@l NIC Nt•1 m Tht Flinbton1s
Q) I 0111111 If JtlnRll
new, wmp!1t1ly 1utornal1d Grand
Pa!au ot Circus, • unlqut end
thorou1MY rnodu n clrcui bul!dlns. m Andy Gllffitfl Shtw m 1111 Ylr1lftll• fD (!j) Sptc:iat of tlM Wtt• '"U.S.A.,.
A to~ieal rnu1ic1I b•~d on th• John
Des P1ssos trilory of novtls eovtrln1
J90Q.J930. Peler &ontrz, lahn Dri·
ldson, J1mu f1rtnt1no, Joan Hick·
111. Shirfty l(nl1M i nd Mlchtl1 l•t
l llf.
£Il LI ll:1cccid1
Cl:>Hlno
(j)) N£T Playh11,111 BloanphJ
Ell) Hod11pod11 Lodp
8:30 (D Trvtll t f Conlf4111flCU
fE Notidt10 l4 m 0.iirt Report
@ M1ybtrry RFO
CE U Amo GJ Nin Jim H1wthorn1
ti:lO 0 Pl11u Don't Ut 1111 D1ld1t
Q MOYlt: (C) {Mi) '1h1 UJf
Sal11i" P1tt I (ad~enture) '67 -
Stewart Gran11er. Kaz Garas, Gabrltl·
11 Licudi, Ll1m Redmond.
([!CBS Ntws W1lter Crankltt
®l Tiit Moust F1ctory m Andy Grltlith Show
(!) Nannr ind th• Prolt"°r
E1IJ Pl1yln1 tllt Gultlr m W1ndu111st
9 Grttn Ac res
ail El Prol. S.&:lb rlo
tl)New1
7:00 6 CIS Nt'll'I Wal!ei Cronkite rn ABC £venin1t NtWI
0 m HIC N"'' John Ch1(1(1llcr 0 The Rln1m1n
(i)Trulh or CGn11qutMtt
(}) Dr11net O Wti1r1 My Lin11
QOl Ad111·lZ m I Lovt Luq
ID I D111m el lt1nnl1
ED K1thl)'G11 Kathleen Hltchcoc' fII Putntt dt Amor
Q! FHm: (CJ ''Tht Htpptnlnc:
1t11rin11: Faye Duna'll•Y ind Antl\ony
Quinn.
9:00 iJ Cl) Ht1t'1 Lucy Robert Cum·
min&:l &llfSb 1s Bob Collins, 1n un·
principled woll who 1lm1 lo add
lucy lo hh list of conQUtsls.
0 e!) H8C Mc nd1r Mll'l'if:: (211r)
"A Ritt to Livi" (dr1m1) '65-Su·
zanne Ple~htt!e, Sen C1u1r1, Br1d·
lord Dil!rnan. A debu11nt1 who en•
gag~d Jn wild esc.a~ades befor1 mar·
riage beRins a 1om1nce with an old
beau who 1eturns to town.
0 (J) IJ) G) ABC Mrindty MO¥!t:
(C) (90) "let stttion Zt bn" Condi.I·
sion (drama) '68 -Rock Hud5on,
[rnts\ Bo!1nine, Patrick McGooh1n,
Jim Brown. Tony 8111, Lloyd Nolan.
Chilli nc 1dventure ol !ht d1n1e1ou1
voy11• by 1 U S. nudtaf sub un~er
the A1c11c Ice cap.
l1Q} Mo~i1: (Cl "A Vtry Spedal fl•
vor" (comedy) '65-Rot'I: Hud10/I,
Leslit Caron. m O.vid Frorl Show
@I) Lt Gib
~Th• Virlini1n
CE N1tac.h1
fl) Tht Ptmitdtl'I
S:lO 0 (!)Doris D11 John Banner
aues!s 1s prt\entiou~ butltr who
dupes ma111zin1 writer Doris M1rtin
by m&Mtuaradin( ts th• ruler ot
1 Medit1rr1ne1n princip1lity.
g lroktn Arraw
O N1wS1111tch
ID It T1ke1 1 Thief
!IlJ 8DGk Bell CiE) b:utll dt Modtlo1
(l) M1ntr1p
10:00 fJ I]) Sonn1 alld Char Mika Con·
7:10 0 Stand Up ind CIN1r Louis N~e nois an d JM!\ Sllpltlon iUt!t.
a:uests. g Nns Geor11 Putnam
(]) Dr11ntl 0 &11111 G1mt
0 Dr. Simon loc~t "September" m Nnn Ptle Mllle1
Di. Sellers and 111 old flame. Ellen a> Ui Crilll1 llfn Crild1
Hewitt. ruumt lheir old rom1nct. EEJ El Tornlllt
Dr. Simon Lockt dltc:ovt rs th1t CIJ M1ntr1p
[11111 Is 1uf11rin1 from 1 l1rmin1t
dls1&s1 'M\!h on(y Ollt yeu to live.IO:lO Q (i)@ C!J !IPIC1•li M1r ·r
O Movia: (C) (2hr) 'Tilt leunlJ Ftld1111n ~madJ M1thln1 A hall·
llllltt" (wts!rrn) '64-Din Durytl, ho~1 pr1~1.ew o! ~ n1w tomtdy·
Rod Cuntron, Audrey Dalton. ~anely !.t/1es, l lurmc M1rty Feld·
man, tht buc·eytd. sh11c "h1h1d
@ To Tell lht Trllfll comediin from Eng11nd. Guests 111
(j) I Or11111 If lt1n!tlt Art Carney, Lonnie Shorr (ccimedi1n),
{:) MilUon S Mtvit: (2hr) "Dr1nio" the comedy team ol Skiles and
(dr1m•l ·s1-J1tr Ch1ndler, Jo1nn t Hendtrson 1nd the musit.i! 1raup
Dru, Juli• London. M1fo1 , 1u l1ned Honey Con1.
lo rover n • small Ceo11ia town h1 O Candid ta1111r1
had r1v111d dufin1 tht Civil War. (!) Naw1 Huah Williims
tries lo do It with 1 llelpln1 hand lnslt•d of 1 111n. (111 Mamr,i«t Th11111
@l l.11'1 M1k1 1 Dt1I EI;) film OdJUtJ (R) "M" m Ht11n'1 Huou eIJ Atltr1111nttdl m o,.plt Qt MoYit: "Htllt1ts ti th1 Mny"
(\]l In tllt Spotll1ht 11:00 8 Cll g) Mt••
m Cit)'w•tc1i111 o ~ m "'"'
@D ~Rt·MI 0 Rabtrt It Doman SllO• m Liu~ @ MarUtal Diiion
a!J Ml1u11lt1 V1ldu. Shn 0 {]) Q) Mews
Cl) Movl• G111tt 0 Mo'o'il: "Sthlnrtl'I 111 the Cit('
(d11m1) '62-Robert Gentif1, ~ml·
\o Del11d11 . 1:00 fJ (]J C u n Im I t I Jamts Stacy
slan in lh1 11111 role of "Y1nkto","
who swtl!l ¥tllit11Kt 111:1\nst t
"e"ltlty 11nchtr wllo has bealtn
him badly In 1 poker 11m1.
0 ~ il:) Wlntt1 Oly11plc CtllU
0 From BEST FOODS ...
*The BUDAPEST CIRCUS
FESTIVAL w/Bill Bixby
& Brandon Cruz
0 (I) Cil a> I l"IC1llLl l ilt l i1br
ind l11111f1111 Cruz tl th• l ud1ptll
Cl!tu~ ftsliv1I The Budlptsl Circus,
m T1 TtH tllt Truth
QJ Tonite-Luci ile Rivers * starts you sewin&
(!) Fashiont In St'irinr
11:30 iJ (}) Mtl¥ lidUin
0 !NJ m W!ntu Olympic
0 (]) 00 GJ Dick C..ttlt
.....
m Movit: "Yellow C1b Man•
(tomedy) ·~Rid Skelt~n. Gloc!1
de Hive ~.
renown ed throu11:hout 1h1 world, wel· 12:00 O Miv'e: "Ptl11 lbbehGn" (dre·
tom•d Bixby ind Cruz, who ur..ed ma) 'J~try Cooper, Ann Hlfd!nJ.
11 hosts lo th• finest Hun11rl1n
circus p1r101me11. Tht 1x1r1v111nz1 1:00 E Mevit: (C) ~Miulon to O.th"
1ervtd 11 tht openin1 11\1 lot lht (drama) ·66-Jim Biewet,
Wuren. "'1of1*r ltware., (ccm1· Tuesday dy \ '38 -H1101d Lloyd.
1:00 0 ''tallinl Northsi6t nr (mJI·
. ~. .
••
• I
. . . ~ ~.
DAIL.Y ,.IL.OT 1!atl ,.MIO
I
t
I
CURSES! -Gino Gaudio rhapsodies about his la dy
love unaware that Richard Dow , who al so seeks her
hand, is doing a slow burn in a scene from the Ir-
vine Community Theater musical "1'he Amorous
Flea."
Ozzie, Harriet Return
With New Video Series
By VERNON SCOIT
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
"The Adventures of Ozzie and
Harriet" Nelson are far from
over despite their departure
from weekly television in 1966.
Ozzie is busy p ut tin g
together a pllot fil m for a new
series which will depict the
couple much as we saw them
last, but without sons Ricky
and David.
"They've rebuilt the sets
just as they were during our
old series," Ozzie said happily.
''The exterior and interiors
will be exactly the same. But
the fo rmat is al together dif-
lerent.
"There comes a time in the
life of every married couple
when the children are in col-
lege and the house is like a
bus depot. But after the kids
move out they are Jert staring
at one another.
"That's where we begin the
new series. Jnstea& of rattling
around a big house alone we
decide to rent out a room to a
college student.
"We wind up w'ith two
coeds. one wh ite, one black."
J,iterns
'Stabbed'
DETROIT I AP ) -All
went well on Channel 7's
4:30 movie until. 15 min-
utes into ,;The Nev.· In-
terns:· the young docto rs
stepped into an elevator.
'!'he next scene showed
a lurid stabbing. wilh a
knife plunging into the vie·
lim and gallons of blood
gushing out.
The Channel 7 switch-
board lit up as viewers
called Lo protest.
Station officials are try-
ing to find out who picked
up a piece of film edited
OU~ of "Night o[ the Liv-
ing Dead '' and spliced it
into "The New 1ntems."
The Nelsons never wandered
into controversial a r e a s
before. If this pilot sells at
NBC they will be confronted
by a generation gap plus the
problems inherent in racial
dif[erences.
As he did with the previous
Ozzie and H.arriet show. the
former attorney anct band
leader will direct all lhc
segments.
Since leaving the air the
Nelsons have traveled around
the country appearing in stock
productions. They starred in
"The Impossible Years" on
the road and discovered tha t
retirement "'as not for them.
"The Adventures of Ozzie
and Harriet., became a part of
Americana two decades ago.
It was a radio hit ror 111 years
and survived 14 years on
television during which time
the s eries appeared
simultaneously on b o I h
mediums for three years.
Listeners and v i e w e rs
virtually watched the Nelson
boys grow up. lt may come as
a shock to learn that young
Ricky will soon celebrate his
:list birthday.
"Our sons have families and
careers of their own now."
Ozzie said. "I think it would
be demeaning to ask them to
come back to a ramily show."
Ricky is still m a k i n g
personal appearances as a
singing star. David is involved
in motion picture production.
Ozzie has dire cted two
episodes of •· Adam-12'' and a
like number of "The D.A." He
has devoted sever11I weeks to
find ing the right girls to play
the coeds on the new pilot.
"\Ve inlervie"·ed more than
70 girls of college age." he
said. ''and we tested a dozen.
None of them wore makeup
and we \el them do their hair
themselves. We want the
series to be reali sti c, the way
college girls dress and loo k
today.''
i I
DAYTIME MOVIES teiy) '48-James Stew1rt. m "TM Gtn1 Krupa Sttr(' (blOftl· ljiiiiiiiiiiiii
1:00 m ~Dalq K11ron" (rom1nct) '47 Phr) '60--Sll Mineo, ~n Kllhnt1. II
-Joi n Cnwtord, Dini Andrews l:OO ([l'TIM Wlll"'(dr1rn1) 'Sl-'llch·
l :JO D "My Coulhl 9IKMr {dr•m•l •rd Robtr. He nry Mot11n.. '53-0Hvil de Hi'tilt•nd, 9 (CJ ''l\t b lucttat Otbutllltl" ,, , (t0mtdy) '58-Ru Hulison.
10:00 CV NT•rrrt Urrtntn ~dr1m1) 51 4:00 B (C) "1111 Jl)'flnrttl'I" (1dwn·
-M1rll: Slrw ns. Alu Nicol. ture) '59-Jtff Chuidler, Ftis Ptr·
11:308"klb et San Femudt" (td·I ker.
ventun) '.t7-0nn•ld Woods, Glolll 4:30 Cil SIM 11 10 AM llatin1
"Must be seen by anybody
who really enjoys movies.''.
' . -HM ldtl.btDk.t.UC-TY,
A film by Bruce j"Endless S..mmer") Brown
ml•• ,1_,1.. retM (G)
"THE HELLSTROM CHRONICLE"
Ftb. 2 through Fob. I 6:45 opon
Continuous Running Show Sund•y 2:00
...... ,,.,. W•,.. •inlidng l•6t•r .....
·~·th• w-• w•,. 35 l••t •boV• u• ... ~
•_mo,. •nd mo,. •h•rk fin• cutting th• w•t•r ... ~
···THO ... Hf.vtRDAHL
You must ... RAI
An astounding
true·llfe edventure
for 1ho whole lomilyl
ENDS TUESDAY
South c .. 11 PIH• I
llt. & .... l·:l-.. l-1 •·""'
WMll Dlf'1 .. 7.f '·""
. . . --.._._ -----·
Mondar. February ?, 1972 DAIL V PILOT J
lrvl1ie .ltl11sical Co11ied1;
'Amorous Flea' Rich Farce
By T0~1 TITUS
OI Ille O.lty 1'!111 '""
When Jerrv De vine :ind
Sruce MontgOmery hit upon
the idea of turning ~loliere's
"School for Wives" into a
mu.Sica! comedy they fell
several leagues short o f
creating the modern miracl e
which Lerner and Loewe pro-
duced "·hen they tackled
Shaw 's "Pyga n1a lion" -but
then, they never really needed
lo.
"The Amorous Flea" tl'r·
tainly is no "~\y Fair Lad_y";
it 1s doubtful that you'll le;1\e
"THE AMOROUS FLEl" "m11~lt•I comeav I» J•"V Or.int ~·I~ 8•.,te Mon1uome•v. r..•ed on Moh•••• • S<.lw:x>I Ill< W•ves:· dif .. <1td I» '''"" E. Komt>e•. >r! at119n bv II E•11man
Dow. Droducrion '""'"11tv and •ound cv ~n1rvn Case. !i1~tlnv t>v Bill Eu~n. ~~~s:,~~.., F ,~; •• ',n• 1n1.,S"."iur~~~,m~~ ''~
o"clock In !nt Hum1n1t1ts "•II
Pl1vhOul• on IM• UC l'vlne c~"'""' fhrouuh Fett. 26 11.e•erva r~ns 5~1·1113.
l HE CAST
ArnolPMt 11.icM••<l Dow At nts • Ellen Ral>•n•on
1'0•1ct • • . • Gl.-.o GAualo Al1on ......... .,... Don H4rt• Georgene .... ., , c~r1" oow C~•v•1ldt ····•••••··· Bill 0111ave Oronl~ Pett r.~111qh~• £"rlQ~I Bl\I Et$"
the theater humnling any of
its lyrics. But it is more the
essence of Moliere than the
other is to its creator -it is
resilient enough to surv ive \he
rigors of adaptation \\lith its
original elcn1ents intact.
The Irvine Com m u nit y
Theater. which in a very short
time has elbowed its "''ay into
the forefront of local amateur
playhouses. is offering the
farc lal "Flea" as its maiden
musical. and in doing so
sidestep s most of the pitfalls
awaiting the community grou p
emba rking on such a course.
Irvine's production is excellent
in ;1!1no~t all rcspt'cl~
l"11l1ke n1an~· slagt• rl1rc1·lor.'i
11·ho:-.e prunarv for!e 1s 1nu ... 11·,
Irvine r.. Kimber ha~ 11ut
sal'.rtftced !he thcatril·al n1l'.1t
of thC' )ltTIPI 111 ta1or 111 a
presentational appro;1ch dur
1ng the snng and da111:e
nurnlicrs. Con1edy rC"1ncuns
part1n1011nt 1n the trv1n1• pru
durt1on. \\'llh charac:ten1.at1t1n
on ;1 high µlane K11nh(•r''i
dirccl1on reflects :1 n .1d·
mirable arnount o f 11n·
ar.:11u1t 1on and ingenuity.
Hichord [>t111', v.ho h;1s
directorially lrd ICI' 10 \tS
pro1n1nen\ place in the ~1111,
dons the grl'ascpaint this lun1·
around to enact the rrn1r~1I
ni!e of Arnolphe, the cl;i:;s1c
dir ly old 1nan. Dow re\'els 111
the part. taking full corn1c
command. \Vh ile his voc·aliz1ng-
will no t evoke visions of
Ri chard Kiley. he ta lks his
way successfully I h r o u ~ h ,
stumbling only in his final
number "•hen by rushing his
lyrics he minimizes their inl·
pact.
The cpituo1e. of Innocence
"·hu1n he has chosen to play
:\lay to his Deccn1bcr is
superbly portrH~'ed by Ellen
Jlob1n~o11. 11 hv nHltl'hrs a
sup('n0r su1~1ng voice wllh 11
fu lly U11nen!ii011al
Jll't'furni:inc:e. ~t1ss f{1Jbin:-.on
allows us !o l'<lh:h the dl·' 1l1~h
!"·111klc bt·htnd the blank Slil rt'.
\\\!"llll\A \l'hal \.'OU\d 11'\.'\l be [I
bl1111d rn lr 11110 <1 grn1
1:1no l:aud10 1;; a fi11l' lhuit·c
for 1hr ~ntinl! li11 1•r 1!11rt1('f' .
I' h \;:. i l"<lll) pt1'pt•S:O.('S:-llt1;.
1.111'l'r1u1.: tl('arly <1 fu.11 O\ 1·r
\'\111· h(' US('S h1s SI/(' lo 111\\
.id1 anlabe in tht'1r c11n111·
h)pla~· Arld1tion<1ll.1', 11 1 s
h1.1cn11 111g-\Oil(' l"Ul!i )t "!{I('
~11·ath at·n.iss the :-.t.1gc
l\lnliere ·s :-('r1·ants ;1!11 .1~ <:.
tc11d to upstage their n1il~trr~.
;\nd lhe p;nr \)1)!'1rayrd bv
Carla [)O"' ;111d rll1n Ha~r~
l·rrt1111ll.V .ire no rxrrpl1011
~11s~ l)1nv as !.he 111·e1·hcar111g
<111th1>1·Jturian and lll1• n11und.
chc1·ub1l' lla1·cs as jl(•r' nln·
:;\ant fni\ a1~d pl'rcnnl· h;id
hoy µlay splendidl y toge
\'1 rtua!I~' f<1!ling 01'cr 1111
<11111lhcr 1n slaps1iek dcligh1
131\l Oal\a\·o 's \'OUlh bctra1 s
h1111 111 hl!i role ;,~ ArnolphC 's
1·ornpa111 on, !hough h1!i 11ct111g
S\\lC IS first rail'. l't•\C
l ;~!lagher and Bill Egan ennl·
plele the easl b.v tying the
loose ends together at the I
close.
'French Connection'
Wins Golden Globe
Musically. Kimber has corne
up \Vt!h an innovation of sorts
by dispensing with a live ac-
companist in favor o[ recorded
n1u sic. which lends a more
professional background but
occasionally dro;vns out the
soloist. 1'he high point of the
sful\\''s score \s undoubted ly
f\1iss Robinson's solo offe ring
of .. The Other Side of the
\Va ll ."
There 11re n1urncn\s \\•hen
the performers become a bit
tnu enamorr<l or their o\1'n
stvlc, for TI\any of the ron1 ic
sequences lose thei r puneh
hcforc thty are con1plt'.'Lcd.
1·hrre also are delicious oc·
ca'i1ons fo r ad lib comedy .
~uch as Do1v·s franti c senrch
lur his lost handkerchief on
upcning 11ight. or his Jaek
De nny take. an inside joke
HOLLY\VOOD (AP )-''The
French Connection'' was the
big winner in the Golden Globe
flln1 awards of the Hollywood
Foreign Press Association.
The 20th Century·Fox movie
about tracking down heroin
smuggler3 scored as best
dramatic. motion pi cture in
Sunday night's presentations
before a film colony audience.
Show," and Ann.Margret,
··carnal Know!ege.''
English·language f o r e i ii n
Film· "Sunday Bloody Sun·
day."
Best foreign I a n g u a ii e
f or e ign [i\rn : ''1"he
Policenlan," Israel.
The foreign corresponents
also presented a\vards to Sean
Connery, Charles Bronson and
Ali r..1a cGraw as the world's
most popular performers.
Desf A'rn;i7: .Jr. of "Red Sky
at Morning" and ·rwiggy v.•ere
named as !he most promising
ncwcon1crs.
Gene Hackman was chosen
best dramatic actor of 1971 for
his performance as the dogged
investigator in the film and
William Fricdkin was named
best di rector for "The Fiench
Connection.·• I cill:dliD:~tlim~ Wal .. r Mcrttha11
"KOTCH" Jane l"onda was named best
dramatic actress, fo r her role
as a prostitute In "Klute."
Jn th e musical-comedy
di vision. "Fiddler on the
Roo f" was named best motion
picture and best performa nce
al10
"THE
ODD COUPLE"
awards in the category went w .. kdayi 7:10 and •:lO
to Topol of ''Fiddler on the Matlli..., Sohifdwy 1 s11ndoy
Roof." and T"•iggy of "The 1'===========JCJ Boy Friend ." f-
Other awards:
Screenplay : Padd y
Chayefsky. "The Hospital .°'
Song : ''Life It \Vhat You
Make IL" from "Kotch.°'
Supporting players: 8 en
Johnson, ''The Last Picture
lido
....ol'I' tUCll -« ... -"' 1.W•n UM lol• -a l. ).f)!8
New York'•
Critic Aw•rd
HELD OVER AGAIN
THE FRENCH
CONNECTION
1!!1-
IXlOIBV "lllXE"
2oo c.t11rY·fa
The $240.000 Alpine copec
J~·Cl.l.iUDE
KILLY
in
J~l!ro
- -• -"•f) SIAD/UM . 2 :.:·
'....,,,...,~ --_ .......
SFAUIUM •3
'~ ....... ~----,, SIAD/UM d
' -..i.:., ..... ' -
"l•DKNOIS ANO IAOOM STICKS"
pl•1 l.IKllll Ill\
"YOUllS, MINE ANO OUlll"
Mllln11 111. Ind Sun.
Jllln Kiiiy
"SNOW JOI" 101'1
ti• -"LIGHT AT TllE EDGE 01' THE WOllL.0"
"llLLY JACK" (01'1 ....
"'MONTI WAL.Situ
"'T ... ,1'911d1 C""lll'(t1'"'" (ltl ...
""Ylnlllllr!I l'•lflt" tRl
"'lNY 1rtt1 tt11 T .. rn .. ' CGI
"RA 1-.,..sttlM"
AU Ill C:.lef'
retalllng an (•artier Irvine
shov..
1'he ulilquiluus Do w also
doubles as set designer, scor-
ing a techn1cal co up with a
convertible 1vall w hi c h
m11111111zes \he tune allotted to
frcqtJent SCt'11c chang 111g. The
sC't 1s br1g/1l 1:111d art1st1cally
a1traet1ve. 1 ncl ud i 11 g a
.\pe1·1<1lly C'r('Jted prosccniun1
'1l'l'<• i 1\ h1i·h r1ppca rs to hang
1i, ,1 f r·a~11C' thrr:irl and "'11!
n"l \\ 1\11..,\;1ntt too n1 u c h
J t11'll"<1I l'Ollt,u ·[ •.
'The :\n1orou:-Flra .. is ,,
\ ,1,,,fl> en1 ert :u11111g ,., l'n111~
1\l1tch ~ucCe:isfull• hrc,ik~ nt>11.
i.:n1un1! for !he j1mb1t1uu ..
lr1 111r thca!er ! 'f•t f11rn1an1·('5
1·111111n11e F rid a\' s ~nd
S.1l1urlays fur thre..: tnorf'
11r'l'kends at the Hun1anit1r!'
1 !:ill Playhou se on the UC
!111ne carnpllS.
.. ..
• ,001! MW• O! -...CAI ! .... 1\ ...
~tW1'0•1 ll•C• • W• Olt(I
"THE (GP)
HOSPITAL"
• • •t.ICH •~¥0. "If •lUIJ • • •••· e•••• _., 1 ••• IM••o ..--. $A7·.eo41' HV"'n .. OYON ••AG"
• IENDS TUESDAY , FIB. 8
Clint
Eastwood
Dirty Harry
~Ml<2" '"' •. -e•' , .. , ••• • • ' •••"' .. ,.c~ •• Pl11 ~ · Ch.,~torihf'• (..,.or9e
In "THE DELTA FACTO A:"
STARTS FRI. FIB. 18
J IO!lfM Of .,. OMCO ,.,,., .
ENDS TUESDAY FIB. 8
Ot.o,t; L.0"'101< • 11"1<<1!• O tlill
2"d HI! _r~~f?.S
"L.l OY IN CtiMIHT"
5TAlllTS W•D. I'll, f
D111tln H11tm111 111
"l~~~DOG5"
THaAT ..
-......... ( .... ~ ... ·-~•tl l01 _ ................ ·-···-........ . KQ!~r.no M"'Pllol!n.V-l1<1 Rt41i"v1
THf STlfNGTH Of MANKIND HA5
ALWAYS UEN ITS WOMIN,
'THE
TROIAN
WOMEN'
lfil'l-'•••A ... r~ C"\v;o •~Hl HIWlo!."'"-
wlOflllfllolll A l•l.t.T rfOTIOtl'"
t TA•TI WIO, fll, t
10.,•1w~·11 1•1"T
A/10 -Wfllt DitNtY
"NIYll A DUIL MOMIN!"
I
'
J8 Dlll~ PILOT SC Monda,, Febru•tY 7, 1972
l.EGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
11111 M• •t~ Fl("t lTIOU• IUS\111111
r 1CTl1'IOUI 1u .. •11•1 lllAMI llAflMINf
l\IANll ITATIMl!lllT Tlw Jronowlnt HNOl'll ''' -OUM,..P
YM '°1io.IM ---fl '*nt OU•ll'••" 11 U • HAMS(RAl'T toAT MLfl, :WSl)
MOSILI" ITE"EO '')tlM) M l 1.mo.roouo ,.1.. oa... p 1 I" I. , • ...,_. °'"'-Hu11fl,.iDr1 l ,..OI, C1 C11lt0tn11 nut
,,... loiorl!I Nf\1fl~11 Mir!"' $1! .. !roe: IA
S....,,.,, l Tl;lllln <IOfl F1;.ro clrclt C11lfornl1 c "' • a,-• 1 I on I WlJ ~unl!llt1<111 ••Kii Ct. Ef!lb4'•(.90ffo Pl ' 01111 ,. 0 I II ' •
-inla blltl,.. .. 11 <otlOll«M 1:11 111 1n C1ll lornla f'M1t
41vl~tl 1'1> a buliMU If lle!M <iOflduCl-0 1tV I
$!9't!.,., l Tobin t.orPOt1•ftlft
Tilll 1111 .... ~nl WI\ tiloNi '"Ill! Ill~ ''""' llOMI" 0 Dl,lllC.fll $<t(:•tlfff N Cltlt; ol O•••,.. Cc..nrv Oft Ftb•v•t-") 11111 111r1tr,.nr In_. whl! '"" Count'/
117! CJ••• al 0 11ne1 Co..,nly "" J1nu•rv ,.,
••IU.U.JI • t.CMMllSSllllG, a.th 1'71 b1 ....... y J. M~, Oel>t.llY Covr>-.m Q.t..,., Otl~t, k ll• f ·~ C!e•l tl.....-1 &e.tdl Cl .,... l"IJCJ7 ,.,,,111111\fod Qr11111e Coel! D•il~ 11'1101 1"1,11111.n.-f Ortl'l9e (Ofl•f D1h~ PJll)I,
Fetw ... ry 1, 14, ll 11 Un JIJ IJ J1n111ry lt, JI tr>d F~111rv 7 h ---------------l1tn 1~n LEGAL NOTICE ------------1 l.EGAL NOTICE
l'Ulll LEGAL NOTICE
P1,1bl1J/'led
J1.,u1rv 1•
19/2
Oren(le CotSI Diiiy P11ot.f---------------I
Jl, "'d ftbr111ry 1 \i
!91 ll
,.ICTIT10US IUSINl!SI
NAMfi STAT EMENT
'" '"
LEGAL NOTICE
,-iCTITIOUS IU51NESS
NA.Ml ITATf:MENT
tal1Dwll'l9 H •SO<I IJ dolr19 bu1ln•H
SID~AEET FOil )lAIA STYLING
" 130 E 1111'1 SI , Cotti Mtuo C1lllornl1
JOh(I E Mllrt' Jr, P 0 801< 7).j 30$61
C1!l1 Aqp!tfldor, S•n Jul n C•ol1tr1no
C•lllornl•
Tiil• llulll'lffl I• belnt condud..O llY an
llldlvldual Jorin E MllrY Jr
Thl1 st1remen1 rn.ci wlll'I t he coun!v
~!1t1l ot D••ng• Counlr on J•n 71 lf11 bY ••~erly J Mmddo.>c, Oei>utv Cotinlv Cltr~ F1541'
PubUshld Orl ftM Co11l O•ilv Pllo1
:l1nu1rr 24, 31, I nd f=tb•u1rt 7 ll
1'17 !II 7l
LEGAL NOTICE
LfOAL NOTI C~
NOTICE 15 HERESY GIVEN !ha! the
lollowl"' ltem1 01 lound <:lJ" saved proPCrtY
h1v1 bqn held by lh'! Pollet Oepartmtnl
Of lhl (lly of CQ.!111 M•s• tor I otrlod !n
U Clll OI nlnl!y 19(1) daYi
!'our blut biket one black bike ""'
JtufPll O!kt .,,,. Whitt bill• ""' green
bike ""' pur'" NOTtC!" rs FURTHER GIVEN 11111 If
flO <>wiw;r I Pl>et 'I '"d proves hi•
-n.r!hlp 01 1h• oropertv wllhln seven
(7l d•r• foliowln1 Ille 'PUbllct llon ot lhl1 Na1ic1. thl 1111• TM•t1a ~.n VIII ln !ht
fl!'lder It ll'lt rt ht -· or In lht Cofv of COl!I Mesi, In W~lch CI H !ht pr(ll)t!fly
INH be IOld 11 p1,1bllc tvctlon ti • l!mt
•rid d1la la bt 1n1>011nc"'
The lo!lowl"i ptri<lnl trt do nv
bUl'"tt1 ti I I. G CONSTRUCTION COMPANY
H1rb<lr G•e111• Olflte noo P1tfr1on
Wlf Co1i. M••• Ct lllorn" '2626
Johll A Grlm1l1d 2100 Peltr)Ofl WtY
COMI• Me$1 C1 ll!or11la '1676 Ro~rt F 8t"<Jcf11mo Jr 1100
P'!lt r'°"' W•V. Cos!1 Mt» C1l!lort1 t
·~~ Rl~••d L ltlU(l'>1 mp 2700 Pt teri.on
W1y C.~111 Mi it Ct lllar"lt •2626
Or ltobt•I F llt111c~1mo 210ll
P tl1r1on Wtv Co1t1 Meat, C1lllornf1
92626
Tnl• b1nlM1• 11 b""' conducttd bv ~ GeMrtl Parr.,erlhlp
John A Grom1ttd
Thl1 1l1lem1m! ! led with •h• Cwnlv
Clerll ot Ortnllt' CounlY an J1nu1ry 2$
1'12 bv Beverly J MlddoX
F135IO
P1,1bll1hed Ortnge Cot •I Dally Pllol
J•nuary JI, a nd Februarr I 1' ;1 i•n 2'' n
LEGAL NOTICE
l'"ICTITJOUS IUSINESS
NAMl STA1EMEN1
Tiit fplll)wlng oerlOMS 1rt dolnt
bu11nt\I "' GREPACO, 11291 Irvine 8oult•1rd
l~'11n Ca lotQrn,. P~lllo F C11e un1 S•lver M•1>ie
W1y S1n11 An~ C1hrornl1
John 8 Flnnlt ll6 Monlt Vl1!1
Aven1,11 Cost1 Mesa Ca!lfornl&
E!tanor M Cr!)nln 1)(11 Car'Kll~od
Street An1/Je!m Calltornl1
This buslne•• !1 btJnt umd1,1cttd bv I
Gener1I Ptr!Mr~h o
TMs sr11otm1nl llled wllh "'' cou"IY Cltrk 1)1 Or1nv• Coo.mtv on J1nllarv 21
ltn bv !ltvtr!y J Mt<klot Deputy Coyn
fy Clerk DA TEO F'!brvt fY 1 Un
R E NETH OHlliF OF l'OLICE
"ubflshtd Ort nff COISI 01)fy
f ebr<Jary 1, 1t72
,US7'
l"ubll"11td Or•rtH c~ D1Ur Pila!
o rto! J1,.,u1rr 31, '"d Feb•u•ry T 14 u
212 n n1t 253-n
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
N01'1t l TO CAEOITOllS SUl"E••Oll cov•T 0 1" THE
SUl"EltlO. COIJAT 01'" THI STATIE 01' CALIFORNIA l'"Oll
STATll! 01' CALll'OltNtA FOi: THE COUNTY OF ORANGE
THI!. COUNT'!' OF OltANGI! No lo 7U41 NI lo 71~2 NOTICE OF Mll!AltlNG 01" l'ITtTIOlrC
Es111• ol Grl (• 0 T•1ve., D•c11sltd FOR l"RODATI! 01' WILL ANO FOii:
NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN lo lh~ LETTERS Tl!STAMfiNTAltY (IONO
c•edll<l•s ol !ht 11)0¥• ntmed dKedt nl WA1VEO) 1'>11 111 H •tonl hav!nt cltlms at1ln11 lht E1t1!1 ol ERNEST PAIGE Oece1Md
tlld CIKldir>t llt r1<11.1\rtd lo lll1 lhtm N071CE 15 HEREBY GIVEN Thi!
w l!h lht nKeu •rv V011cht1 1 In tne-olt•c• Sht llt Pa1<r11 h•s tllHI ht'reln • Petlllon ef the cltrk ol !hi 1bav1 t nlllled courl or IOr prob~!• qi wltl 1/>d tor •SSut nce-o!
to Pru enl them with th• ntctniorv Lt!"'" Telt1mt.,t1ry lo Pttl!loner (llond
"011C.11tr1, lo tht 11ndtr1l1ntd •I lht olllct Waived) reltrellC• lo whlcn 11 miode fo•
., his AltorneY Selim S Fri nk.II" i1t f'ur1her P•rtlcultrs tnd 111•1 lht limo 111d
f 111 Ofll Slrt t !, Ca1t1 Mt11, c 1t11orn<1 Pl•ct of nttrl"' 1111 11me ~•1 be•~ ••I
f 7627 which 11 t!M 1>l•ct ol bYsl~ll of for Ffl:ir1,11rv 1$, 197? ti• )0 • m lft lh~
"1• undtr.lolled In •II m•!ttrs oerl1lnl110 cu1,1rlroom of Deoarlm'!nl No J or 111<1
to fl'le 11l111 a! 1ald <1ft.tdtl11t wltMn tour court t t 1()0 Civic Ct nlar Orlvt W11r, In
monlhs 1tt1r l!it 11••1 P1Jbllc11!0.. QI !his th~ Colr o! Santio Ant C1ll10rnl1 \
riatlce Ot!"-<! Janutrv 21 1'77
01r.d Jt"uerr 1@: lf72 W E M JOHN
Git"" E Tr1v~r1 E1rtuTor CouotY Cl•r~ ot ,~. Wiii ol !ht fi)OVt Ll!'VlW AN D POKlt .. l
1'141mf<I decedtn! 2f4t Cl1rk Avtnut
l•llm l J'ranklln Lont l 11th C.alllarn!I
•1• 1!'111 11'111 Slrt tt. Tel UUI •111177
Co1l1 Miii.i, Calli,Or~l• •101 AlltrntYI for P•llllontr
Ttl 1714) .. , ~.. Pu1>ll11\P<I Orang• CO•ll DtllV P lo!
Atror"tl' tor l.a-tc1tlllr Ftbru1rv l 1 7 lt12 172 n
Published 0••"9• C911t 0111~ P <ll'.PI 1------------LEGAL NOTICE J anuary JI •~d Fabr1,11rv 7 14 21
lfn ?S' 11
..
LEGAL NOTICE
FICTITIOUS 8UUNESl
NAME STATEMENT
lollO'* nt pttS!>n " 00•"'9 b\rl1""'''
•
Wives Fight Back
B ee f Prices Hig liest Level i ii 20 Y ears
By JOHN N GREGORY
UllllH l"rn~ l11l•r11at10MI
Beef 11nd pork price~. reac·
Ung to the law of i;uppJy .and
demand, hovered this week at
or near their highest level in
to yea rs
The American housewife ap-
peared to be. hght111g back by
passing up steaks and chops
and turning instead to stew
meat and chicken
A UPI survey 1nt<> factors
.affecting meal prices in·
d1cated, )iowever that buyer
resistance may not succeed 1n
dr1v1ng prices down substan-
tially be!ore spring And with
demand for chicken butldlng,
food economists said poultry
prices may start cl1mb1ng.
too
An Agriculture Department
food economist Jn Washington
predicted that beef prices,
which hit their highest point 1n
2Q years last week, wt!! bold at
current levels or even increase
1n the next few months
They ma)' show a "very
slight downtu rn ' bv late
s pring, he said and then level
off for the resl of the year
The high prices resulted
largely from a low supply and
a high demand The. reason for
the demand 1s simple
Americans Jove their steaks
chops and roasts
The decline 10 the i supply,
the survey 1nd1cated, stemmed
from a variety of reasons -a
harsh winte r 10 the nations
m1dsectlon. drought 111 some
areas, fears of another siege
of corn leaf blight which would
cut feed supplies
11Tb1s rise in meat partly
Your Money
reflected the p e op I e '~
preference for beef and pork
and lhe1r willingness to pay
for it '' an Agriculture Depart
men! offi cial in llouston , Tex ,
said He added
"There 1s a point where you
get bu yer resistance and I
thu1k that-pomt has arr ved ''
0 911 f\1<1gdanz oi Ornaha,
Neb, txecutive secrc'ar y of
the r-.<ational L 1v es toc k
Ff:eder~ Associat ion said bad
"'eathcr 1n the midlands in
Decen1btr and J a n u a r y
dis rupted feeding and P' o
cessing
l"eedlot manager To1TI Sim
mons or Lubbock, 1'cx , said
"Normally, \Ve replace·cattle
f1 om a ~00 mile ar~a -now
we're looking up lo 1,500 miles
a\vay and its hard to fLnd thr.
number we need "
Samuel Kahn, manager of a
processing plant 1 n Har-
r1sbu1 g, P a • , compla1ned·
· They 're not shipping beef
Organic Foods Boom
Makes Big 'Racket'
By SVLVlA PORT ER
A few weeks ago. a
volunteer shopper for New
-York's Dept of Consumer Af·
fairs found these gaps between
prices of regular goods and
their "-0rgan1cally produced''
counterparts
"~ ,.,l>PI• lu '' at
G•tP• luftt QI
Pean1,1I bullc• lb
t-l!)lltV lb
Egg• dot
Oned pr1,1M! lb
Cider vinegar <1J
W~tef br1ad lb ioat
"'' o n .. 1lc v1r(•IV v1rleh'
$37 sM " ~ 9~ 'O! " ~ 53 1 1 s
•9 l l)O
J) l l)O
~ ,PS
The same shopper found
these gaps between prices ()f
regular vitamins and their
''natural'' counterparts
V•llmln
C. ~ Mt 100 l1>b\
e.c:o"""1~"' 100 1ab1
E 100 I U 100 ca~•
Multlvlt•mlns IOC UbJ
...
Ylr\111
SI 91
' " ' " ,.
H1tur1t
Vl fltlY
u ~
'~ '" "'
yogurt makers, organic seed s
for planting Among the newer
customers are co 11 e g e s ,
un1vers1ties, comm u n e s.
re l t g 1 o us organ1zallons.
bakeries
Pho11e Post
Complete-New York Stock List
I
I
I
--
_Mc•::;odlf=.c.•::tbr.:.:""'::.:...::' .:.19.:.:7::;2 .....:Sc:'.C'-.. ____ o•ILV PILOT !P
Monday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Mai·ket Falte1·s;
Gains Erased
lS .....
" '" " " '" ''"
• • .. ' .. " " • ' '"
~~
ll ...
"" ,
~· ,, • • " " f. • 1: •
"
•• " j,' • " " . '" " . '" ~~~
Complete Closing Prices-At11erican Stoel\. Exchange List
•
I • ti M l
llld1 I H 111 Llw Cr.ttt (J\t So 11 "" 0141 ) Hlth Law (1111 Cl'll l lftl ""' llldt I H tll LtW (1111 Cht
•
I I 11
U1ih ) Hltll
Stitt ~.,
t111h ) Hllll L.tw ( .... C• ...
' ' • • I
I
. '
%0 DAILY PILOT Monda!, FtbnlarJ 7, 1~72
LEGAL NOTI CE LEGAL NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUS t Ulllol•SS
/CAMl STATIMlHT J..EGAL NOTICE
TIM fol..,....lnt llt'rMM'I II dolnt bu1l~'i--------------I ··= COMPOSITES UNLIMITED COM·
PANY, 211J6 S. Grind SI . Sanlt Arno,
NOTICI' Of-1'1tUITl'l''I IAL•
No. 14JIM
c ll!ornla 0.. Feb<uarv 1!. 1911. t i ?:llO o'clock ~oil u ittttMr, 1!11 fltu!l1nd lto.d, P.M., 1r IM Nortn Fton! enlrlr>c:t to I"<!
New-1 8tK!'I, C1lltornl1. Ort nM County Caurt Hou... 100 c1 ... 1c
Th is bull11en la bel119 cOlldlld«I by 1n Cenlrr 0.1~ Wnt, lormerlf Wnt ltll
h•cU ldu1I S1rff!, In tl'>e City ot S1nt1 An1,
v R~ll Ullfrittr LAWYERS TITLE GUAltANTY COM.
Tlll1 •llll'!Nlll Iii.cf wlllo "'' Counf"tf PANY •• C1l1torn11 COl"POl"llla"· II th•
Cle111. ot Orl"'4! c ou"f"tf on JlllUlfY 21. PreHnl Trustee under ltM Dttd of Trutt
lfn bl' 89'19!'1¥ J M..OdGX Dt PUll' cwn-mllde bl' H1190 U, F•rn1111Mi-S1lnz, •
1y c'1trk · ' 1lnOltc m1~ Ind rKOrdld Aprll t, 19'1 In
• P'IS4JO Book IS66. PIH l'*S ot otl!(lal Rec:o•d• of
Publlil>tcd Orenoe CD611 oallv Piiot Or1noe Counll', C1Htornl1, olv111 to Mcure
J1m11ry 24, Jl, 111d ftbrll•!'Y 1 1/ In ll!debl..01141•1 In favor ol Gltnd1Jtc 1t1' it:i.-1i f-11 Slvl1191 &. l.Ol11 AliO<llllon, I
Unl!lld s11111 (orp01"1llO!'I, bl' •••a.on ot ----,.,-.,,--,,-,.=-,----,Ille breKI! ot cert1l11 obll11!1°"1 tteu•l!d LEGAL NOTICE ll'lert bl', 110llc1 ot wtlltl! w11 recorded Octolltr lS, 1f71, In Baell 9toll. P111e M. ot
uld OtUcl11l R«ordl, Orin" County, will HOT/Cl' 01' TltUSTl!l''S SALi' »II at PUbllc ell(!lon 10 tl!e hlohesl bidder
LNn No. noun t tor call! oav1bl1 Jn lawful montl' ot 111a
T.I. Ho. 71-U76 United Sl1!e1 ol Amtrk l 11 tl!t time ol
0 S l SEltVICE COMPANY 11 d uly 11· aalt . wUllout uivenanr or w1rranll' t•·
POlnlecl T•wlee under Iha lol1Cwln11 preiied or lmpliecl, 11 to lllle, 1><1tleu1on
dei.erlti.d d""' of tru11 WILL SELL AT or tncumbrancil1, tllc lnlere1! (O!'IV•Yl'd to
P UBLIC AUCTION TO THE HIGHEST ll!d NM t!tld bl' ulcl Tru1tee under st ld
l lOOEA FOA CASH (~vtbl• at !Im. of Ptfd ol Trust. In 1nd to tr.. lollowlnv
u i.e In 11wfvt money ol 1111 Unlled Stt1e1J cfelcrlti.11 orooerty, to-wit:
•II rltlrt, Ill~ 111d lnlertsl CO!'lvtved lo Cltv ol Cmra MQ1, County ot Or111ge,
end now lltld b)' II under 11ld Oeed ot l ot 1ff and 1 IJJ:J.1111 ul!dlvldtd lntt'r•sl
Tru11 111 tllc pr-rty htrtlnttttr In common In tnd 10 Lot I o! Trtcl
dti.erlbed: si.o, 11 per mto recorded In book 111,
TRVSTOlt: KtnM1'11 E. 8r1bll1 t lld 1110" «I, •I tlld 42 ot Mli.eell111eou1
J1111 W. erebllf, IW~l!d end w;te M•PI, Jn the office of !ht Counry
BENEFICIARY: CtrUll~ Mor!N.. RKorder o1 ulcl OrtnM County.
Go., llllC., I t«POl'tllon. TOGETHER WITH nor»l<(lu1lve
Recor-OM Odobtr JO, 1'70 11 Instr. No. t tltme11ts 11!d AOf>.IXCIU1lvt •l11hh of
lf777 In book ru7 PIH ff1 of O!fl<lt l Wll' cw~, unOtr tl!CI upen Lot 1 tor
Rtcords In IM etflce of tlle Recordtr of neusst rv or d.,lrtbl• l1111reu t rill °''"" Counlv; u ld deed 01 1ru1t eor111, ftlevlslon (tbles, l'Ofts, wlrt1 detcr!bes IN lollcwl"9 Pf'Optrfl': tnd col!dulh tor t lectrldlV, telepl!ont1
Lot 5 'of Tre<l tY.S 111 the <llY of '"° ofller P11rPOH1 tlld 1ctoutrem1n"
COllt Mtu, «!YlllY "' o ....... •t•I• of lllMelo, H'Wl'I, dr1ln1, Wtftr, 011 l lld
C1lllornlt, 11 Pf'I' mtP rac;Mdtd In slttm pJ~s, and t ccoufremMb ttiereto,
Book 16J, ~ffs 13 Ind ll mlsctllarwout tlld for such roof 0Yerh1nv1 elld other
mtoi In !111 olllct ol the county encroathment1 ot a llkt or dl11lmllar
rtcOl'dtf of ltld (Ol!nfy kind; end e151menh on 1dl1c1nt Loh
1134 P1ul1rlno Avtnut, Co1l1 Mtst, of said Trad 5160 lo• root overh1ng1
C1lllo!'nJ1 (If 1 strMI addr111 or ((Im· •NI onier 1ncre1cl!m•nll, ol 1 Hkt or
mon de1/1nell0!'1 11 •how11 tbovt, no diu lmU1r kind.
w1rr1n1Y J1 1/v"' 11 lo lit compl•ltlll$1 Al$D known as: ISi Ltdn11on L11111.
or (OU8CIMHL Cost• Miit. Ce ll!. Unit 119.
The blntllc:l1rt undt r 11ld Oted ol fOI' lht PU•Pll•t Qf PIYlno oblloallo111
Tru11. by rttllOf'I of • brttcll or dtltull In 1ecured bV 11ld Oeed ol Trust lrw;ludi11Q
tl!t obl lo1rlon1 steurld lhtrebY 1.,.s, chtrott end e•P1n1e1 ol "'-Tru1ltt,
llere'lofort t JKUled tlld delivered !o 111t td~ll!Ctl, If 1ny, under tl!e ltrm1 ol 1tld
undtr1l1nlld 11 wrlf!tn 0.Claretlon ol Oetd ot Trust. l11tert•I lhtrl<ln •nd
Oeltutl efllf Oin'\tnd tor Stle, a11d wrltl<!n 113,SOf.119 h'I unoald pr!ncl1>1I cf the nolt
notice of brtt<l'I IM of t lec!IO!'I lo ctu .. oKUrll:I by 11ld Otld ol T•u11 w!lh In·
the und1r1ltntc1 to NII 1tld prcot rty lo terrlt thereon from July 15, ltn. 11 111
utl11Y &eld obllt1llon1, Ind lhtrtttlfl" tl!t u id l!Olt arid bl' lew 11rol'ldtd. ul!dtr•lll>td CIUled ltld llOllCtc of brttcl! 01111(1 ; J1nu,ery 11, 1912.
I nd ol llK!lon la be Recordtd Oclobolr 21, LAWYERS TITLE
lf71 lll lnf1r. Na. 21f00 In book "17 PIOI GUARANTY COMPANY, m . ol ulcl Oll!cl1I AtcO!'dl. T•U$lel
S•ld 1111 wlH bt mlde, but wlrll<)o.rt gy S. A. 81uill, P rHllHnl
cover.tnl or w1rr1mv. t•Pl""I or lmpU9d. Atte1t $ylvl1 8 . H11w11
reo1rdln1 11111, POl~nlofl, ar ten-Aul. Stue11ry cumbrtnc:tl. lo Pll' !tit r1m1!11ln1 11rln-MHJ
(IPll _,, ot lllt nolr f1) 1ecur~ by 111d Publll!'I~ °''"" Coe&t Otll l' llllat. DHd of Tru1t, wllh l11ttr11t II In 11ld J•nutrv 2~. 31 and Ftbruerr 7, 1912 lfl-12
note provided, ldv1nc11 JI 111y, ulldtr llW1 =::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;;I t1nm of 11ld 0-ef Tru1t, lets, cllar1111 1,
1nd Ppt1111t1 of tt.. Tru1ttt alld of tilt
tru1h cr11t~ br 111d ONd of Trust. LOCAL
EDITORIALS
StMI 1111 will lie tlf!ld on Wedntldey,
l"lflnlery n,. 1'72 tt ll:CID A.M., 11 tht
Soutl! (frontl 1n1r1rw:1 1<1 tl!t old (OUflll' Clltl,....,.., :NO l ledr .... .....,. • .-,.,.
Boul1Y1rd, S1nt1 A111, C1llfOl'nl1.
Otte: J1nu1rv 14. 1912.
0 S l SEii.ViCE
COMPANY
11 11ld Truuee, BY l. 0 . SEii.ViCE COMPANY,
Avent
Bl' J1mn A. BKkllrom,
Vlct Prnldent ""'
The DAILY PILOT
P ublllhtd' Or1n1e Co.•I Otllr Pllol,
Quite O#en
Fights City Hall
J•-!'Y 31 Ind FtbrutrY 7, U, 1971
~2'-n -
•
We know you're tired of
jumping up and doing the
DASH-AND-DIAL
every half hour just
because your newspaper
doesn't list all the TY
channels you can receive
The DAILY PILOT Lists
Them All •••
SAN DIEGO, TOO
Ewery
Saturday
, 'c:ilid in daily IOgs, too
DA ILY PILOT
•
' .. " .,
l/N-IROOK~
HARDWARE 4114 I.UMBER
HURRY! SALE PRICES HONORED TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY ONLY!
GradeNo.1
PATENT ROS~S
B re Root Roses! "Bit savings on Our Better a .
• Ch •l•r Imperial, Tropicana, • All the favorite variehessuch ~· ;t I
Americano--every ono a pr1xe--w1nner
• Your choice of bu•h or climber types. 1·1 •
•Finest quality, Co I ornia
field grown roses.
REG.$2.59
TUES. & WED. ONL YI
HURRY-
WHILE THEY LASTI
WOWI SAVE BOc flRST COMEf FIRST SERVED!
Auto
BIKE RACK
• Place your bike in this rack and ii travels with you.
• Steel rack .attaches easily to c:ar bumper.
RIG. $$.BP-SAVI OVD$2.00t 79
Set
TUES. & WED. ONLYI
Deluxe Electric
CAN OPE-NER
"With Bullf·ln KnHe Sharpener!"
• Removable cutting assembly for easy cleaning.
•Magnetic lid lifter-cord
storage compartment.
• Added convenience of a
bottle opener.
REG. $8.99
SAVE $3.501
$ 49
TUES. & WID. ONLYI
Junior Size
SLEEPING BAG
• Perfect for all your camping trips.
• 3 lb. fill -durable mountain cloth cover.
•Mildew ond wate, resilfant vinyJ bottom covering.
REG. $ $6.49 99
Famous ''Speakman''
SHOWER HEAD Scluors Type Ames•
"Perfect for Any fired Bodyl"
WOWI
SAVE $2.001
• A tu m of~he lever
cdjusts from needle lo
sol! flow-<;1reat for
water massage.
• Swivel-typo ball joint
adjusts to any angle.
nm. & WD. OHi.Tl
Special Purchase
DISH DRAINER
•A handy homemaker's helper.
• Heavy duty molded plastic 2 pc. stl-
bright kitchen colors.
REG. $1.59
79'
GRASS SHEARS
4' Mode ly Vlllog• l/acbmlthl''
• Quick & easy-reaches
the spots your mower
misses.
• 5" tempered steel
blades.
tu& & WD. ONLTI
-.,~
PRUNING SHEARS
''Made In U.S..A.1'1
• Best qualify drop forged stul blades.
• A professional type
pnmfng 1heol"!.
RIG.
$1.39 99c
TUd. & WU. ONlYI
~ lene·HatllH
LINK DOOR MAT BALLCOCK SHAG
CARPET RAKE • K1•ps the cflrt out & 1C1Y11
your carpet.
• 13"x21" mat.
uo. $t.49 89.c
• • Op1rot0t ..ith lfg!l er low
water prusorer.
• Easy fo tnatall -
fil1 all atandard
tollek.·
uo. $i.79
• Wooclert1hendlecf,
Jlght, durabl• rak•
Mok• boutel<Hping
.a1ier. u•.-
.
. . .
. .
~;:
I
7
·---• •
Leguna Bea~--
ED ON
VOL. 65, NO. 32, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
•
.. --.•--
MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1972
Today's Final
N.V. Stocks
TEN CENTS
_.ras I 8 una oman
1
2 Stragglers
Seeri in Guam
TOKYO (AP) -A police in·
spector from Guam said today that
two more persons believed to be
World War II Japanese soldiers
have been spolted in the jungles of
Guam .
H. G. Scharff told a committee of
the Japanese Parliament the men
were seen in July and October,
1969, and agaln last Dec. 2<I a~ut
71h miles east of Agana, the capital
of Guam.
Scharff came to Tokyo Thursday
to report to the Japanese about the
finding of Shoichi Yokoi, the fonner
anny sergeant captured Jan. 24
after living in a jungle hideout on
Guam for 28 years. He is recup-
terating in a Tokyo hospita1.
Fir e Destroys
) unior High's
Locker Roo1n
Fire destroyed a $&0,000 girls locker
and shower room at Lathrop Junior High
School, 1100 S. Main St in Santa Ana ear-
ly today. A classroom building at the
same school was broken into during the
night, police reporttd.
Fire and police investigators are prob-
ing the blaze and break m·toc1ay. They
hinted that arson m1y be involved. A
poli<:e patrolman ~led·-pourlnl . / from lbl 1"1Udlng aboUI I a.m.
The Lathrop school has been the scene
of disturbances In the past few yean. Its
main building was demolished two years
ago because Jt failed to meet earthquake
safety standards.
Four firemen were injured, none
seriously, fighting the blaze. Six fire com·
panies with 2& men under the direction o{
Battalion Chief John Mahany fought the
cosUy fire for an hour.
Both the locker room and classroom
are the relocatable type, principal Dr.
Pat Kennedy said. He reported that utili·
ty service to -the school has been cut off
but th•t classes are being held u usual.
Vote Register
Stations Open
In Laguna Beach
With a Feb. 17 deadline for registration
of voters wishing to participate in the
April ll municipal elecUon.s, voter
registration stations have been establish-
ed In Ibo Laguna area as follows:
-Lagana Federal Savings and Loan,
1'0 Ocean Ave ., I a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Morr dlT lllrqh Friday. -Oo1Uce n.staurant, :t08 N. Coast
•Hlgb ... ,, 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. dally. ,
-Bank of America, 291 ~n Ave.,
Mpnday1 onJy, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
', -lllll TiiOU.u Clmeru, 211 FOtt!I
Ave., S.llirdays only, U a.m . to % p.m.
, Clly Hl\11, I06 Fortll Ave., Feb. 15, JS
and 11.onJy, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Votm 1"'o ba .. changed their ploct of
'relidence or changed their , names by
lllln'joge since last voling are required
:IO .,..iater. New votm ..00 will react\
·thelr.11111 birthday by elecllon day may
'reg11ternow.
Lagunan• Gripe
' Aliso Camping
Protest Looming
A delegation of South Laguna residents
will appear before the Harbors, Beaches
and Parks c.ommission Tuesday to pro-
test development of an inland portion of
Aliso Beach Park as an overnight
campground.
The commission will meet at 1:30 p.m.
Sen. Cranston
Lauds Nixon
Mideast Plan
President Nixon drew praise Sunday
from U.S. Senator Alan Cranston for
what the California Democrat said was
the chief e1ecutive's "extremely skillful"
handling of the explosive Middle East
situation.
But it is vital, Crasnton added at a
meeting of the United J~wilh Wellare
Fund or Orange County I that "Nlmn
mu.rt insure that Israel is given full
tllplomllle IUJljlori to 10 wUh the
.-eaPons she needs to maintain the
Mideast balance of power."
Without that, Cranston warned at the
day-long Anaheim session, Russia will
abandon her behind the scenes support of
Egypt to take on a more active role and
step in to crush Israel.
"Israel will never get her retogniz.ed
borders without America's full diplomatic
backing," Cranston said. "She needs that
plus our continued ecOnomic and military
aid until a sound peace applicable to
Israel and all her neighbors J s
eslablisbed.
., America is the hope of the world and
it Js tragic that we are not doing all we
might," Cranston told applauding United
JeJVish Welfare Fund supporters.
Turning to South Vietnam, Cranston
~·arned his audience that It is hardly
possible to compare the Southeast Asian
co'nflict with the simmering Middle East
crisis that has already produced two
wars.
He said history compels us to support
Israel whereas no such traditional link
should lead us to back South Vietnam.
Cranston characterized South Vietnam
as a "purely civil war" in which more
than 55,000 Americans have been killed.
No American lives have been lost in
Israel, he said, "where the beleagered.
Israelis are our allies and not, as In South
Vietnam, a corrupt m 11 it a r y dic-
tatorship."
Cranston said the Vietnam conflict has
cost the U.S. more than •150 billion and
(See CRANSTON, Pas• I)
'Rock, Register'
Vote Party Set
A "Rock and Rqister" Vaianllne's Da'
party wUl be given .Hy the Laguna Beach
Democratic Club Feb. 14 for young
Lagunans 18 and over who would like to
ce1ebrate their debut as voters. :rtie club hu rented the Laguna Beach
Woman's Club for the affair and will pro-
vide ttlri!shments and muaJc for daoclng,
aloa& wtlh del'Oty rqillrars ·to sign up
new Voters.
at Harbor District headquarters, 1901
Bayside Drive, Newport Beach.
"Campgrounds and permanent reslderr
ti al areas are not compatible," argues
John cravens, 31381 Monterey st:, In a
statement to the commission. "We feel
quite certain that no one would want a
campground in the middle of their own
neighborhood."
Cravens also states that construction of
a campground ... will attract transient
youths. "This element brings with il the
drug problem, both use and selling," he
adds in the argument.
Residents are eipected to request the
commission to restudy development of
the parcel and examine a multipurpose
park use, including parking, open space,
tennis courts and playground equipment.
Cravens believes such a park would
beneUt in-county residents. while a
campground would cater to out-of-county
visitors to Aliso Beach.
Tbe 57-space campground, a cost of
$120,000 to construct, was originally in·
eluded in an Aliso Beach Park feasibility
study written in 1967.
Money for the projeet was included in
thi• xear.. budgel .~ Hat!JllJ;, Coto·
mi!stiia at It. ~ .. eOl!fig
autjtoriied the staff to pr,pare fina1 plans
fOt. ihe cunparound. Protests from local
ftttdentJ, however, have again brought
the subject back to lhe commltllon for
reconsiden tion.
Lag una Planners
T ackle Land Use
Elem ent of P lan
Laguna Beach planning commissioners
will again tackle the thorny issue ol the
land use element of the General Plan at
tonight 's 7:30 o'clock meeting at city hall.
Cotnmissioners are expected to again
study what the 1990 holding capacity of
the city should be. They originally agreed
to 20,000 persons which was recom-
mended to the city council for final adop-
tion.
Mayor Richard Goldberg challenged
the 20,000 figure and recommended it be
changed to 27,500 persons. The council
finally agreed to send the element back
to the commission for restudy.
Also included on the lengthy 16-item
agenda are four variances, two con-
ditional use pennits and three property
subdiviskm requests.
Blaze Damages
Oceanside !Jock
OCEANSIDE (UPI) -.Fire baa caused
rn estimated-'50,000 damage to a
sporU!shlng bolt at Oceanside Sport.
Fishing Dock.
No one wu aboard the vessel, the 85-
foot America, whJch Is oWned by Pler-
polnl Landing of Long Beach.
The Oceanside fire department and the
Coast Guard lnvesti(ated the blue but
said the cause wu lUtdetennined. The
fire •Jll>Uent!y lllrted Sunday In the
englnl ioom.
.
: ! .; .,\,l' PILOT,.... ..........
1.AGUNA BEACH WOMAN KILLED IN COAST HIGHWAY CRASH
-~II on ·Gro,und LMka S.dJy.Of.lt_of.PJ.a.At Acc'W.M to.at ~..:.
Author Irving Faces Jury
In Hughes Bool\: Mys tery
NEW YORK -Author Clifford Irving.
star witness In the Howard Hughes
literary mystery case, went before a
federal grand jury today to tell his
version of the discredited Hughes
autobiography.
Irving entered the jury room at
Federal Courthouse on Foley Square
shortly before 7 a.m. (PST) accom panied
by his attorney, Maurice Nei;seo, and
Philip Lorber. a lawyer repre!enUng Irv-
ing 's wile, Edith.
Irving refused to answer newsmen's
questions. ,
He did pose briefly for pictures before
his iawyer hurried him up lo the 14th
floor grand jury room.
He left an hour and 40 minutes later,
smiling but still silent.
Neither he nor hls lawyer would say
whether he actually testified and what he
said,
"I don 't want lo seem Impolite. bul I
want lhe proceedings to go along in an
orderly way," Nessen said.
Nes~en managed to d_elay Irvtng'1 ap-
pearance before the jury for nearly two
~eeks by pleading m9re time to acquaint
blmself with bis client's case.
In tbe meantime; a· stream of witnesses
provided testimony which has· further
complk!ated file bizarre <:II<!.
Other · flgunis in the mystery are
scheduled to appear before the federal
grand jury as the panel enters its second
week of 4fivestlgatlon.
Irving's Swiss-born wife Edith and
Richard Suaktnd. a researcher who aaid
In l Rom· aH1dav1t that he witne1sed a
meeting between Hughes and Irving, are
among .thole wbo have been subpoenied
tu test.Uy In the probe.
McGraw·Hlll paid Irving $850,000 In
lhree checks for transmittal to Hughes.
But Irving eoncedecl two weeks ago that
the checks made out to "H. R. Hughes"
were deposited and later withdrawn from
a Swiss bank by his wile who opened an
account as Helga R. Hughes.
On Saturday, Swiss authorities Issued
an arrest warrant for Mrs. Irving In con·
nection "'-'ilh possible fraud and forgery
charge!!.
Susklnd. left Spain aboard an Iberia
(~e IRVING, Page !)
Concert Group
Seeks Members
The Laguna Beach C.Ommunity Con-
certi Association, now In lts 27th year,
launched Its annual membership drive to-
day with a bruncb at the Hotel Lagtma .
Tho drive wlll last through this woe!<.
Membershlpa at •to ror adulbJ and $5
for atudentl will help fin8.DC.'e four Con-
certs during the 111'/2.73 ,....,n, begl-g
with I pr...matlon• 00 Qct, 30 bf the t2
muslclani of· the JohaM S tr au s 1
eMembiO of Vienna. lluo-planl!ts Howard
and Patric!& Barr wW be praented In
JamJai'y, be.SI bar1tone Raymond
Mlchalsl<l of the. New York Metropolllao
ln February and organiat Joyce Jones ln
April.
Headquarters (or the drive ls the
Lag1111a Shores Motel, 4%0 Cliff Drive,
phone 4114-7200. Membenhlp It limited to
llllO, the capaclty of the Laguna Beach
Hlah School auditorium wti... concerti are held. The Moolllhlne, .popular arouP led by
Lagunan Petor llertler, formerly at The °'1>111••· will play from 7:30 to 11:30 p.m. Adm!-la !roe. Sflddlehck College Plan
' ' .. . .
To~ Sclleduted
Of t;.p.&: ,ifigh
A special tour 0
of Laauna Beach lltgll
School WW be preaented Wednesday for au tnterested members ol the com-
rriunlfy, Mn. RobOrt Peacock, president
d the hlldi achoo! Pmot • Tucber
Aaocl•tlon Dao llllllOUllCOd. •
The 'tour wtU liell\11 'In lhO boan! r<>om
ol the 1dmlol1tiiit1o11 1>ulldlng, Park
AYemM and B-Street. at l :IO Lm.
with ID lnlrOductcJ olldo preoent.tlon ••
v111i. to each .,.,._t o1 the scbool,
tadudlnl -............. teplat
IHllon, wilt follow. -
'
-~~~h.oQI Gtf!.\Jp .P ·erm.anent?
I \. 'l : ~' ') •• I • , •
~ 'couege trusteo Hans Vogel ,
"than , ~ · abo<it them In th e neW9P1pers.•
College p ... ldent Frtd Bremer u-
plalned tbaf the board now hal an ad-
vtaory committee made up of community
mlmber11 but that the cOmmlttee has
oover niet with file board for · legal
reuom.
Dr. Bremer said the C01Jnty cou ... l's
office wall ol tht opinion that meeUngt
betweon tbit board and the community
adVIBory committee woold comt!lule 1
conflict of lntertlt on the lruste<I' part,
since truslee1!·would i.~ ·port In corn-
mfttee deltbtr1Uo111.
However, he noted that under recently
enacted legillatlon, each trustee. would be
allo.,ed to appolnt and meet wlth h1a own
committee. ·
"W• netd more dir.ct Input rr.m the
communJiyl," Vogel noted. "l would 8b to ,.. lllis group become an 0111olna
committee ind mett quarterly."
VC111el 1gr<ed to bring the 1111tter up at
the Feb. 22 meetlna of the lull collta•
bolnl for conalderll\lon.
)
Th1·ee Die
In Cou11ty
Accide11ts
Three persons, including a Laguna
Beach medical secretary were killed in
Orange County traffic over the weekend.
the coroner's office reported.
A Sunday night crash in San Clemente
killed one man and Injured two others as
flaming gasoline spewed across the
fretway.
The dead:
Kathleen Suzanne Collett, 22, o( 20521,-\
S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach.
Harry 0 . Johnson, M of Los Angeles.
Chee Woody, •1, of Prewitt, New ~1e1·
lco .
Mrs. Collett, secretary !o a Newport
Beach physician, died at S:iuth Coast
Communist ll.ospltal at 9:30 a.m. Satur ..
day following the 8: 10 a.m. accldenl in
which her car went out of control and
crashed into a power pole on El Morro
curve, just north of Laguna. The
California ~llghway Pntrol reported that
she wa s ejected from her small car.
Johnson was killed instantly SUnd.ay
evening when his car traveling_ south on
the San Diego Freeway at the El Camino
overcrossing ln San Clemente went out of
conlrol and careened acrou the unguard-
ed cent.er strip.
Highway patrolmen 1ald the auto 1lam·
med into a northbound car dJiven by Ray
M. Spriggs, 21, of Beverly Hlll1 and lht
force of the crash ripped out the Johnson
cat'• pl tank ·and aent It stldcHns down
the freeway, 1preadlnc' burniog paoline
over a wld• m:M·
Spriggs, San Clem~nte poll .. sald, wu
pinned In hi• small compact coupe for
!I e v e r a I mJnutes. A pa1senger in
Johmon's car, Ezequiel Garcla·Rlco, to,
of Tijuana, wu ejected. The crash oc--
curred at 7:45 a.m.
Both !urvlvors suffered severe cuts and
other major Injuries and were treated at
Mission CommunJty Hospital, patrobnao
sald. •
The blazing cruh occurred at a chtonle:
traffic trouble 1pot on the freeway, where
no center protecUon la provided. state
engineers &n9 ltudylng the area on re-
quest of local authorities.
The crash obliterated the main secUon or Johnson'• car, leaving It an empty
shell.
Woody, an American Indian from the
Borrega Pan Trading Post, New Mexico,
was kllled ln Placentia Friday night when
he ran Into the path of a car driven by
Donald H. Nea1, 33, of Anaheim, pollce
reported. The victim was a trackman
with the Senta Fe Railroad.
Co llege Trustee
War ren Dies
HAYWARD (UPI) - E. Guy Warmi,
chairman of the California State College
Boan! of Trustees, died S.tw'1ay Ille' a
long Ulne11. He wu 11.
Warren wu In hla leCOnd term u
chairman Ind bad been 1 It""-alnca
1962.
He was the owntr al &be Warren
Transportatloo Co. of Hayward and blcl
1trved twice u pnoldeal ol Illa
Ca!Uomla Trucking Aaaoct.tlon. ·
We•dler
Better plan oo getttnr up a ltw
minutes earlier 'I'Dlmay becauN
the late tvllllnf fOfl. .. wtll'
tum Into early momlna fOfl. otlier-
wlse mo1Uy Nm)' akles TueldaJ
with hlgha •loor Ibo coast at II
riling lo • Inland. 'Lowt -·
INSml! TOD.tY
Llttk r .. r Co11<flo ..., con·
fined to h'1 room, but Rostmarlc
McCanJt" roamtd the 1trcetr /01'
aueograph1 durfng the qule t civil
riaht1 march Sunda11 In Newry,
N01'th Ir eland. Stt 1tor11 Page •·
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UM llltl --..
' I
....
'
.. .. " . ' . . '
J DAILY PILOT LB Momlq, Ftbnwf 7, 1972
Hou se Pa11el Irv ing Case
OKs Partial
WASflTNGTON (AP1 -A J·!ou~e labor
subcommittee voted today to authorize a
partial 60-day lnjunicl1on against th(' \\'e~t
Coast dock slrikC'
The subcun11n1!l('C \l•!cd 5 111 I !•' <1 1!111v
a major pa rt of the !'!rike to t:ont1nue t)u t
to allow a court. upon petition from the
at torney general, to halt strikes :'lffecung
the shipments of n11J1tary a n d
agricultural cargoes and shipments to
and from fl a"•aii.
The subconunitlee rCJCC::ted on a 5 (Q 3
party line vote the emergency strike
legis lation requested by Presiden t Nix(,n.
The President's proposal would have
compelled the workers to return to rhc1r
jobs white the entire dispute , resulting in
a strike now in its 122nd da y, Is sub-
mlrted to co mpulsory arbitratio n. (See
earlier story, page fl)
All the !Jeinocrats on lhe sub-
committee, headed by Hep. frank
Thompson (D-NJJ, voted for the
substitute, wh ich was offered by
Thompson. Rep. John D. Dellen back ( /{-
Ore . i. voted against IL and t1,110 other
Republicans, Reps. John Ashbrook uf
Ohio and Ogden Reid of New York voted
present.
Thon1pson estimated his proposa l
v.·ould get 80 percent of the West Coast
cargo n1oving again.
He said the measure will go to the full
House Labor Committee Tuesday and
could be passed by the House Wednesda y
Jf it agreed to suspend all its rules
agalmt acting so quickly.
Under the Thompson substitute, a
district court could issue an anti-strike
injunction only upon finding that fa ilure
to ship mili tary and agrlcullural supplies
and all products to and from Hawaii
would jeopardize the national health and
liafety.
Thompson told the subcommittee tha t
Harry Bridges, the West Co :i r t
Jongshoremen's le ader, was une!'l·
Uluslastic about the sl!bstitute, wishing !o
continue negotiations.
Mrs. Oln1 stead
Rites Tuesday
Senrlces will be held at 2 p.m. Tuesday
in La Jolla Mortuary Chapel for Mrs.
Virginia Rose Olmstead, daughter of the
plonner Rose family o( La Jo/Ja, who died
Sunday at the age of 7 I.
Mrs. Olmstead is survived by her hus·
band, Ray D. Olmstead; a daughter, Mrs.
John W. Sampson of San Diego; two sons,
R. Dan iel Olmstead of Laguna Beach and
Peter C. Olmstead of Los Angeles;
brother William ·James Rose of New
York City; eight grandchildren and three
great grandchildren.
A native of Chicago, Ill.. Mrs.
Olmstead came to California in 1913 and.
in 1916, was graduated from the Bishop 's
School In La Jolla.
She was the manager of the Rose
brothers estate. major real estate
develo pment company wi th l a r g e
hold ings In the La .Jolla area.
Mem orial contributions may be
directed to the American Cancer Society.
From Page 1
CRANSTON. • •
the total is likely to exceed n1ore Lhan ~I
trillion before it is O\'er.
"Israel pays for her economic aid,"
Cranston said, "and she 11sks only !hat "'e.
provide it to help her <lefcnd wha t are
also American interests in the Middle
EasL"
DAILY PILOT
_,,,.. COAST PUM.UHIHO COMPMY
1tolmi N. WMd
Pnlldllll llllS ~
Jecl: R. OttltY .va~-.1~1.....-
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"""' ~'' A. M1r,,,,i11• ~~ EdlJOt
Qatfn H. leo1 ltlclitP'd I'. N1t1
A»llMAt ~q E<:lllDB
LepH '"'' omc. 221 f•r11t "'''"u'
Manf19 •ddrt lt.: P.0 , l o¥ 666, 91651
S..C ....... OHk•
305 Nwti fl c.nino P.•1/, fl672 .,_.,_
OPttt -..,. a w .. 1 •rt l'lrtlt ........,, 1-ctl; »D Nt""""" l oulwlftf ..... 1-.az 1111J ..... ....,..
Winter Wottderland
Mystery Blonde
Next to Surface
NEW YORK (AP) -Another mystery
woman. this one a blonde scuba driver,
has surfa ced in the Clifford Irving·
Howard Hughes sago.
The wrirnan, identified only 11s Ann
Baxter. flew with Irving last December
to St , Croix In the Virgin Islands and
gave him scuba lessons while he was
there in what he said was <in attem pt to
contact Hughes. Life magazine said Sun·
dc.y.
In a court paper filed last month,
novehst Irving, 41 , swore he flew to St.
Croix from A1iami last Df'c. 10 on in·
structions of a Hughes aide, \vho told him
the billionaire would meet him there for
n final session about H u g hes '
''autobiog raphy.''
Irving said he stayed on St. Croix until
Dec. 12, but when no message came from
llughcs, he left.
His story that he 1net Hughes on that
trip "flabbergasted" her, she said. She
was quoted as saylng she knev; of no way
Irving could have met with l·lughes dur·
ing that trip .
t-.lrs. van Pallandt, est ranged \l'ife of a
Duteh baron. lives on the Span ish
Mediterranean island of Ibiza , \\'here the
lrvings also reside.
Life, whi ch pictured t-.1rs. van Pallandt
on its cover th is v.·eek, quotes an Ibiza
resident as saying "whenever Nina's
na1ne was 111enuoncd, Edith climbed the
v.·all."
Low-income
Families Eyed
In New City
Picture of Jack Frost's delicate handiwork looks as
if it might have been taken in the ~1id wes t or East.
It wasn't. It \\'as taken in South Laguna in the yard
of landscape architect Fred Lang. Lang said that
someone forgot and left the sprinklers on overnight.
Nature's landscape architecture -temporary in
this instance -Lang found most impressive . So
did we.
Hughes, "'ho hasn 't been seen in public
for a decnde. and is said to live as a
recluse in the Bahamas. has denied ever
meeting Irving and labeled the Irving·
produced "autobiography" a fa k e .
1-l ughes' disclaimers came from a voice
identified as his in a telephone ne"'s con·
ference, and in court affidavits allegedly
signed by Hughes.
An Irvine citizen's ~roup has proposed
the appointment of an official housiilg
comn1ittee lo aid in e st a b I is h in c:
r1eighborhoods for lo"·-i ncome families in
the new ci ty.
Winter Festival
Seeking Help
On Mail Costs
Ex-cycle Gang Leader
Held in Beach. Slaying
Another beautiful woma n, Nina van
Pallandt. a 39-year-<ild Danish cabaret
singer, said last week she was with Irv-
ing when he we nt to Mexico last
February.
The suggestion "'as made at a city
council mceling by Guy S i r c e 11 o .
representing the Irvine T omo rrow
citizen's group. The establishment of
such a committee has already been urged
by the Irvine tlousin~ Council.
Sircello told the counci l the committee
could aid in providing homes far such
low-income groups as UC Irvine students,
blue-colla r workers at the Irvine
Industrial Complex, employes of coin·
mercia l establishments and reti red senior
citizens.
The Winter Festival is see king help
from Laguna Beach business firms and
individuals to help match it'> slender in-
come to rising costs of printing and mail·
ing promotional material !or the annual
event.
Al though most of the work of the
fe stival is done by more th an 2,000
volunteers from the community, there
still is some expense for promotion, says
festival director Pete Fulmer, noting that
the number of brochures printed th is
year has had lo be reduced to avoid a
deficit.
Festival revenue to pa y for current
costs comes from donations and from its
few income-producing events, he points
out.
··we are not selling up a committee to
seek donations th is yea r," says Fulmer,
"but we are appealing l.o merchants,
hotel owners, r!!altors and others , who
benefit from !hi.'! e_ffort to crea!e a
healthier winter season to volunteer some
finan cial help."
Contributions niay be sen t to the
Chamber of Commerce, he said.
Burg lars Steal
TV Sets, Stereos
Burglars who broke into the Sears
Roebuck store at 24262 Calle de la Louisa.
Laguna Hills, during the weekend left
with te levision sets and stereos valued at
more than $1 , 100.
Orange County sheriff's officers said
the intruders broke in to a !ra iler used to
house merchandise and removed six
television sets and one stereo system.
Th e breakin, believed to have occurr£'d
Sunday night, was under investigation
this morning.
Buildi11 g Tak es
Rise iu Lag u11a
\Vith the issuance of 4-0 building
permits by the Laguna Beach buildi nf?
department in January. 1972 moved off
with a slight edge over the same month
in I97l, when 39 permits were taken out.
Valuat ion of the January construction
this year was $273,712. con1pa red with a
January, 1972 figure of $217,582.
The first construction for 19n inc ludes
five single family dwelling:>, one five-unit
apartment building. 16 residential and
commercial alterations ind a variety o(
miscellaneous .structures including a
garage, walls, fences. repair of fire
damage and one li ly pond.
Wa ymon A. Grisenti of Huntington
Beach, a 38-year-<ild former president of
the Hessians motorcycle club, today is
being held in city jail in conn ection with
the Friday night shooting death of a
visitor at his home.
Crisenti, of 19402 Jerrilyn Lane and
members of his fam ily have insisted that
the victim, Rusty B. Cook, 26, ol Lomita,
was shot in an accident.
Huntington Beach pol ice. howe ver, are
seeking murder charges against Grisent 1.
He was scheduled for arraignment late
today in West Orange County Mun icipal
Court .
Grisenti was taken into cuslody Friday
about three hours after the 10 p.m.
shooting in his home. Homicide officers
had questioned his wife, Anita, 31 , and
the couple 's fiv e child ren.
Investigators said Coo k had been shot
once in the upper throat with a .357
<:aliber magnum slug.
When police arrived, the victim was
still slumped in a chair, his head on the
dining roo m table. tie was rushed by an1·
bulance to Paci fi ca Hospital where he
was dead on arrival.
In recounting the tragedy, police said
both of the elder Grisentis told in ·
vestigators that the gun went off ac-
cidentally while Grisenti was showing it
to Cook.
Police, however, allege th at the slayi ng
was the result of an argument between
Grisenli and Coo k over some tool boxes.
The death weapon. according to offi·
cers. was ou tfitted to be worn in a shou!.
der hols ter and featured a seven-Inch
barrel.
liuntington Beach police declined to
identify Grlsenti v.·1th the Hessians cycle
Burg lars Take
$700 in Loot
Laguna Beach police are invest igating
the thefts of $700 in 1ev.·elry and an ex-
pensive telescope from t\\'O unlocked
homl'S.
James Crawshaw, or 1030 Temple Hills
Drive, reported the jewelry missing when
he returned home Sa turday evening.
Investigators determined thieves ent ered
the unlocked rear doo r of the house.
The te lescope and stand were reported
stolen from the home of Francis
Behrendt, 1096 Flamingo Road, by a real
estate salesman. The home is for sale.
police noted . and the telescope wa s being
displa yed in the front window of the
house.
The homeowner was not 1vailable to
give poli~ a descript.ion or esUmated
value of the telescope.
Union Asks Court Action
To Approve Space Pacts
WA SHINGTON IU~ -The United
Auto Workers asked federal court today
to force the govern ent Pay Board to
reverse it.self and honor in ruu the union's
contracts covering 30,000 aerorpact
"-'Orkers.
Another union . the I nt t rn at Jon a I
As soc iation of Machinists, said it would
file a similar 'suit next week for its nearly
200.000 members working for aerospace
firms.
VAY{ president Leonard Woodcock told
a news conference th at the Pay Board
acted "unfairly and irrationally'' in de-
nying the two unions the full SI cents-an--
hour, 12 ~retnt pay raise during the first
year of the three-year contr1cts with the
aerospace companies.
The board denied the full ri,. but said
fl would 1pprove 14 ctnts-1n·hour {ail I
1><rcmt Iner..,.) the !irst year of the
contracts and delay tht addlllonal 4 per·
cent until the second or third year.
.But Woodcock '81d the 34 cents-an-hour
increase was actually part of the
previouslf expired contract5. which pro-
vlded ror that much In a cost-of-llvtng In-
crease over Ule past three ye1r1 pay1ble
wlienever the old agreement erptred. .
tie contended the M cents was not sub-
ject to Pay Baird contror and should be
11dded to the old average hourly pay or .
$4.30 before computing the addltfotw 17
cents-an-hour Increase provided as Part
of the new contract. '
With the new base of $4.&4 per hour,
Woodcock sald the 17 ceni.an·hour In·
crease was well below lhe board's S.5
percent gukleline, which would have
allowed an Increase up to 21 C..11 per
hour.
club. Costa r-.te sa detective J i m
Strickland , however, today confirmed
that Gri senli \Vas a past president of the
grtiup.
~le has been questoned in a 1968 Costa
Mesa case in which a Hessian, Frank \V .
''Wild Mouse" Rundle. was convicted in a
beating. chain·whipping and shooting
case. Grisenti wasn't charged in the
earlier Costa r-.fesa case.
Solicitors Get
Ne 'v Environment
Tw o Alhambra women who al leged ly
solicited Tustin homes during the
weekend in aid of an organization knov.•n
as Citizens for a Better Envirohme nt
were given a brand new if not better en·
\'ironmcnt in wh ich lo contempla te
charges of illegally soliciting.
Orange County sheriff 's officers say
they did a service for ecology by loading
Irene Ellen Means, 19, and Irma Drusilla
Richey, 18, in Orange County Jail.
Both women were arrested afte r
homeowners compl ained they were urg-
ing local resident to contribute funds to
what is alleged to be a mythical
organization.
S unke1i Ship's
Owri er Hunted
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Authorities
were atte mpting to find the 01,11ne r of an
unmanned cabin cruiser fou nd awash at
sea off rvtarina de! Rey.
Harbor Patrol officials said Sunday
that apparently someone tried lo scuttle
the boat, which had holes punched in its
hull and its spark plugs removed.
The boat was spotted with just the bow
and the lop of the cabin above water by
Charles 14. Mendola of Van Nuys who
towed it to Marina del Rey and told
authorities.
From Page J
IRVING ...
airliner for New York today lo appear
before the grand jury. l-le wa s se rved a
subpoena at his Mal!orct1 home Friday
t1nd ordered lo appear with all his note s,
tapes and oth er niat erial he might have
collected for the book.
On the Spanish island of Ibiza, police
searched the home of a friend of Irving's,
Gerald Albertini. Albertini. a wealthy
American. told newsmen last week he
once kept Irving 's manuscript of the
Hughes book for the author for about 10
da} s.
Albertini's wife said the police 1'found
nothin g at all.''
Tunaboat Otvners
I g 11ore Ad·vice,
Obtain Lice1ises
SAN DIE G 0 (AP ) -American
tunaboat owners in increasing numbers
are ignorin g the advice of the U.S.
government and arl'! purchasing fishing
licenses from Ecuador.
Fifteen of 35 American seiner! fish ing
orf lhe South American coast have done
so this year, the American Tunaboa t
Association says.
The Uniled Stales recognizes only a 12·
mile offshore limit -not 200 miles as
claimed by Ecuador -and therefore
d i s co u r a g e s a c l ion im plying
acknowledgenicnt of the larger boundary.
Tunaboat owners are reimbu rsed by
the gove rnm ent for fines levied against
then1 when Ecuador seizes their vessels
inside the 200-mile territory.
Bul this ye;ir, Ecuador has doubled the
fine for boats it also seized last year.
Some boat owners apparantly are [ind-
i "~ it difficult to pay the hi g h e r
penalties and then wa it several months lo
get the ir money back from a special con·
gressional appropriation.
ONE FULL CARAT DIAMONDS
•
Fine white colol,
American cut
brilliant.
Select the mounting
of yolir choice from
our stock.
$
"Our initial subcomn1 it lee reports sho\V
that sign ificant dem and for such housing
may exist in Irvine," Si rce!lo said, "and
that \O\\' income housing ran he built
which more. than meets the aesthetic
standards of present !mus ing tn the city."
The resident said that in addition l o
helping establish low-cost housing in the
community. the comn1iltee could also
serve as li aison betwf'eA developers and
the school distric ts. lie suggested com ·
millee members include representatives
or UCI. the Irvine Company, the Irvine
Industrial Complex, the Tus\Jn Union
High School District an d the San Joaquin
Elementary School District.
Deadline Given
For F estival
Scl1olarsl1ip s
Laguna Beach High School geniors
wishing to be considered for festival of
Arts scholarships this year must apply
not later than f\.1arch 15, the festival has
announced.
Scholarships in arts and crafts. dance,
drama productio n and performance.
music and writing will be awarded to
qualified June graduates.
Interested students may obtain further
information and pick up application
forms al the festival office. 650 Laguna
Canyon Rorid. bctv.•een 8 JO a.m. and 4 30
p.m. any lime after Feb. 15.
In the 15 yea rs the festi\'al schol;ir!ihip
program has been in effect. sori1e $fi0 ,000
has been av•arded to high school
gradua tes. f-'or rnany years, th e
scholarship program \1•as for art students
only. Its scope has been increased
recenlly.
Last year, 13 high school seniors were
awarded a total of $3.500 for advanced
study a"d $3 .500 was granted lo four
former Laguna Beach H tgh School
graduates for second or third year col·
lege work.
• GEMOLOGICAl
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We wlll appr•IM In
wrltl09 .;,:. YOluable
J-lry for peroonal
or ln1ur1nce purpoMt..
Quick, 1ffk:lerit Mrvlce •
lion. Choow ,....,. Gem quolltlio ti -111111 prlcOo. Or chMM Dlt-4s H
1,...,. $1 .00.t ,.int. All Dltmonclt corry our monoy bock guartn!N.
.Dla...ul enter ter Ora119• C••"'•
Find It Here First • 1002 lnms to Choose From
COSTA MEIA JEWELRY & LOAN
Of)fn "'1il¥ f fo e Come In and Brow" Around
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DOWNTOWN CD'1' A• MISA .. tw_ Hart.or '!"I ~wty ' . .
" EXPERT WATCH
REPAIR . DONE
ON l'REtiflSE
Saddlehaek
VOL. 65, NO. 32, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES
"' ;;;;;;~·I 1" . I
1 I
LAGUNA BEACH WOMAN KILLED IN COAST HIGHWAY CRASH
Doll on Ground Looks Sadly Out of Place at Accident Scene
County T1·affic Carnage
Continues; 3 More Die
Three persons, l:iclui.{ing a Laguna
Beach medical secretary were killed ln
Orange County traffic over the weekend,
the coroner's office reported.
A Sunday night crash in San Clemente
killed one man and injured two others as
flaming gasoline spewed across the
free"'ay.
The dead :
Kathleen Suzanne Collett. 22, of 2052 'h
S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach.
Quake Insurance
Largely Ignored
By Honieo-ivners
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Ea rthquake
fnsurance, which was largely unavailable
after a quake jolted the Los An geles area
a year ago Wednesday causing death and
widespread damage, is being offered
again but few hon1cov.·ners arc in·
tcrested
The Western Insu rance Information
Service reported that underw riters are
offering the protection at almost the
same rates available prior to the earth·
quake last Feb. 9, but there has been no
great rush to obtain it.
Homeowners rushed to buy it in the
days immediately following the disaster,
but most insurance firms suspended sell-
ing it until the major aftershocks subsid·
ed. By then, time apparently.had dulled
the memories of the tragedy and interest
in the Insurance: declined.
George Watts. executive director of the
information service, said the pattern was
typical of those following dlsaiters.
"Some people rush to buy coverage at
first, but then al renewal time drop it,"
he: said.'
3 More Sho_wings
Of 'RA' Slated
There will be three more benefit
performances rof Ille "RA E>pediU0113"
this week at Orange Coast C.Ollege in
c.oita'M:eu..
In the college auditorium, tickets win•
t>e $1.25 1t ••a.ID. Tuesday and $1.50 for
Ille 8 p.11>-1fld•Y showing. Proceeds will
10 ta the eOU~1e·t stladent body fund . • :
Alld.-" I -S.lw'day In lhe Sc~ce Hall, Ibo' II ~lof\ charge will benefit
the lllal'liloortdl aub. ·
A ViliU,,. ·•rcbeolotlst and three OCC mstruerots 'wID ·conduct a p a n e I
d1$C111~on op lhe !Um •I I p.m. We<h
nesday lrl the Sludent Cent'er Lounge.
'Boy ·Friend' Slated
Unlvenlly High School studenlA will
pr.-! lhe musical, "The Boy Frlond,"
al I ,.m. March I, 10, and 11 In lhe
achoo mulU-purpose building.
----
liarr.Y D. Johnson, 56 pf,l~ Angeles.
Chee Woody, ti, of Prewitt, New 1'ei·
ico.
Mrs. CoUett, secretary to a Newport
Beach physician, died at South C.Oast
Communist Hospital at 9:30 a.m. Satur-
day following the 8: 10 a.m. accident in
which her car went out of control and
crashed into a power pole on El Morro
curve, just north of Laguna. 11le
Ca lifornia Highway Patrol reported lhat
she was ejected from her small car.
Johnson was killed instantly Sunday
evening when his car traveling south on
the San Diego Freeway at the El Camino
overcrossing In San Clemente went out o{
control and careened across the unguard-
ed center strip.
llighway patrolmen said the auto slam-
med into a northbound car driven by Ray
M. Spriggs, 21 , o{ Beverly Hills and the
fo rce of the crash ripped out the Johnson
car's gas tank and sent it skidding down
the freeway, spreading burning gasoline
over a wide area.
Spriggs, San Clemente police said , was
pinned in his sma ll compact coupe for
se ver a I minutes. A passen~er in
Johr1son's car , Ezequiel Garcia.Rico, 40,
of Tijuana. was ejected. The crash OC·
curred at 7:45 a.m.
Both survivors suffered severe cuts and
other major injuries and were treated al
Mission Community Hospital, patrolman
said.
The blazing crash occurred at a chronic
traffic trouble spot on the freeway, where
no center protection b provided. state
engineers are studying the area on re-
quest of local authorities.
The crash obliterated the main section
or Johnson's car, leaving jt an empty
shell.
Woody, an American lndiao from the
Borrega Pass Trading Post, Ne"' Mexlco,
wa!I killed in Placentia Friday night when
he ran into Uie· path of a car driven by
Donald H. Neal, 33, of Anaheim, police
reported. The vlctbn was a traclanan
with the Santa Fe RaJ1road. •
Big Pot Case
Suspects Heb!
0MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (APj . -
U.S. Customs 1genta noopocl down
on a C.fQOt teakWocid ~ """1. 1nc1·grab~ two• iiHlll!\·~· mar!Jl*M ' Ibey· ·1ii4. •wu ·,liillt;
1111ug1'!1Mnifl'om Colo!Ula,
'Mne men aboard ·Ille craft, The
Ndrml, "'""'cllatl<d wllli>vtolltlng
U.S. CUstonll l1W1. 111ey ... .,..
Identified 11' Jrelth Meiggs, SI, of
Miami; Dennis Ingham, !9; of Long
Beach, Callf., and SI e p hen
McCarthy, 3:, of l.os Anples.
CUstori\s 1geilt1 iald the ma'rl-
juana had a -nlot of f4
million. The boa~ conr11caled
under federal llw, was valued at
~,000.
•
·~.
• .... -...
Today's Flaal
N.Y. Stoeks
ORNl6E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FE8RUARY 7, 1972 TEN CENTS . ,
Irvine City Eyes Loan
Money Needed to Pay Bills, Official Says
The city or Irvine, with $25,000 in the
bank of which only $4,000 can be spent for
general purposes, may borrow as much
as $100,000 at a special low interest rate
afforded to new cities.
Last week, the City Council authorized
acting city manager William Woollett to
borrow up to $100,000 from the Bank of
America Town Celllter Branch at a rate
not to exceed three percent.
The money ls needed, Woollett said, to
Irvine to Send
Council, Panel
To Conference
A California League of Cities seminar
on planning scheduled Feb. 23 to 15 will
see both Irvine city councilmen and
future planning commissioners: represe..n-
ting the state's newest city.
Last week, the Irvine City Council
author~ expenses of $50 for the con-
ference, $11 for hotel rooms and travel
costs to San Jose for all lo attend what
was described as the state's top planning
institute.
Acting city attorney H. Rodger Howell
said the ~ Jose institute was an oir
pcrtunity that was offered by tbe League
of Cities only once every four years and
that it offered lessons the new city of-
ficials should not miss.
During interviews of 25 prospective
plaonin( ... ~ ........
if they would be available to attend the
S...1-~
All 'lllid Ibey c:ould.
Mayor William Fischbach lndJcated
last Wednesday it was hi! hope the coun-
cil would ordain the city's planning com+
mission. An urgency Jaw that would have
done that failed on a 3 to 2 vote, however.
It takes at least four yes votes to pau
urgency ordinances.
Thus the city COWlCil, which still sit.1 as
Irvine's planning agency, will go tu San
Jose, at city expense, along with the
seven who will eventually be seated u
the city's planning commission perhlps
as early as Marth 13.
Although Cowx:ilman E. Ray Quigley
argued against the ei;pense of city funds
for all to go, the motion to approve the
expense item was passed unanimously.
Airwest Strike
Settled; New
Agreement OK'd
Hughes Airwest and the Aircraft
Mechanics Fraternal Association have
reached • tentative agreement to eod a
seven-week strike.
Lee Pitt, information officer for
Airwest, and 0. V. Delle-Femlne, national
director of >.MF A, both stressed Sunday
the agreement is still subject to back-to-
work procedurea being settled and
·ratification by the 570 striking union
members.
Pitt also aid the agreement wU sub-
ject lo approval by lhe Federal Pay
Board. 1
No details of the aettlement were
discl08ed pending Ille ratlflcatloo vol<.
Meanwhile, Airwest will continue to fly
llA limited schedule which it bu main-
tained since the atrite began Dec. 15.
The dispul< involving mochanlca and
aircraft deaners bas been oYer wagea,
fringo -and wwt rulea.
~&ln PJDol city bills (or aeoeral e1-
pe!'lses: Qf the money now in the city
treasury, 111,000 Is from state gasoline
tues ret~ &o the city. These can only be spent:!._ hlghway projeclA. not buying
office suppUes or paying salaries.
Last Week the council also approved
payment or bills totaling $5,041.71 and
.sa}a.rleg Of $2,580.
The largest single expense in the list of
bills was for three days of legal services
2 Stragglers
Seen in Guam
TOKYO CAP) -A police in-
spector from Guam said today that
two niort persons believed to be
World War II Japanese soldiers
have been spotted in the jungles of
Guam.
H. G. Scharff told a committee of
the Japi.nese Parliament the men
were seen in July and October,
1989, and agaln last Dec. 20 about
7\~ miles east or Agana, the capital
of Guam.
Scharff came to Tokyo Thursday
to report to th e Japanese about the
finding of Sbolchi Yoko!, the fonner
· ariny sergeant captured Jan. :24
afler living in a jungle hideout on
Guam for 28 years. He ls recup-
terating in a Tokyo hospllal.
Airborne Police
Rwh Rare-B~
To -6oast Viclim -•
Ahilome police and othtr lawmen
lhroucl»ul Orange and Loi Angela COW>-
ties combined efforts early today on
mercy m.isSlons to collect rather rare
blood for . a hemorrhaging emer1ency
surgery victim in Newport Beach.
HeUcopler pilolA working In sblJll n ....
three blood runs, or.e ¢ them a return
trip alter a hospital in Anaheim sent the
wrong bloocl type the first time.
A desperate hunt via IOUthland police
radio networks turned uP three o?Hiuty
Jaw:men wi~ the same ifPt O.negaUve
bloOd, but their dol'tatiofl! were not need·
ed.
The drama involving patient Ell Bra-
bant, SI, of 15815 Santa Ana Ave., C.Osta
Mesa, began about l a.m., when lloag
Memorial .Hospital ~ spokesmen called
Newport Beach police for help.
Brabant was undergoing major surgtry
when his aorta, the body's primary
.artery, burst, according "to Watch Com-
mander Lt. Kelson McDaniel.
The .!Omewhat uncommon type Q..
negative blood had been located at two
Anaheim hospitals, but the timing waa
critical.
Dispatched at 1:10 a.m., the
department's Adam 2 helicopter with Of.
fictr Jim Golfos •t tlle controls headed
Inland lo malte the blocid pickup and
delivery aided by Anaheim police who
bad II walUng al headquarters.
Life apputed to be ebbJng for Brabant,
who 11 self~mployed •• an electrical
engineer 1n:Som. Ana .
Deil..,ln( Ille blo,ld upon landing al
the Hoeg ·Memqrial Hoopilal porkln( lot,
Ofika' Gofloa ·w11 relieved by a oecond
pilot. -Jamea Bradley.
Shor11)', •.,n.r..ard, Boas Hoepllal of-
llclab booed a aecond ·defJ>Orai. ~
when It was dilcovered one of the two
Anaheim ~al· bad -lhe wrong type of. blocicf.
-The Adam s.chopper raced ba<:k to pick
up lhe C01Tect ahlpment,'but Brabant -""° . hod ·.,_ived 21 pllill of . blOOd
-••· ·(loo MllSION, .. I) .
SaddlefHl.ck College . Plll11 -·
from the Rutan and Tucker law firm of
Santa Ana which is acting as the city's
legal counsel. Those three days resulted
In • bill of $3 ,385.
'lb.at amount promJ>!:e<l Councilman
Henry Quigley to note that three weeks
ago lle'd asked for an ~timate of how
much the law firm was going to cost llJe
city ''on a monthly ba~is."
Q\llgley objected to authorlting the bar--
rowing of money without knowing exactly
Council Cancels
Tonight's Meet
As Plans Unit
Til9 Irvine City Council was to have
convened tonight as the city's planning
commlulon, but has canceled tho
meellng.
Last week the council selected an ad·
vi!ory commitltt of seven persons who
eventually will become the city's fir st
planning commission.
Since the city may not have two plan-
ning agencies functioning at the same
time, Items that might have been con·
sidered tonight will be held over for the
formal .creation of the city'a planning
commission.
A second reading of an ordinance
creatlng such a commission ls scheduled
at a meeting of the city council called for
4:30 p.m. Friday in city offices, Room 238
Tfll"'.JI Center, ~L Campus Drive, acroas
from UC Irvine. ·11 tho ·~U al'1"'9"es the aecend ~·...uier ............ ...,..
befofe·the eemmt.uJon can be eeatod.
-· mould at ·l-lo!!!'. coun-c!lmeii -11 llln(ent tliO(~t
up.,_ ~g cdjnmlMh>~, llley
niJghl al .Fric!fy's me_elh14 ,_ an
"'urgency ordinance" which would lm-
medlate.ly cre1te the planning com-
mlsskln and allow the aeven appointees to
be swom ln.
AcUng City Attorney H. Rodger Howell
told lhe council lut Wednesday It Is
routlDe procedure for new cities to adopt
urgeoey onllnances crealinC planning
commiarlons.
Whmever an Irvine planning com--
misal<*. coines oUlalally into being, 11 wlll
have before lt llvt rezoning matters in central Irvine. Approval cOuld mean the
constrbction of as many u 6,115 new
homes.
A 50-acre parcel rezoned by the county
from industrial to CJ>!!1merclal en the re-
quest of McDonriell-Douglas Aircraft
Corp. also hangs in the balarice due to a
90-day building and IP'ading permit frteu
enacted by the city councU Jut Dec. 28.
If an urgency ordinance creating the
planning commission la: not adopted, the
earliest the planning commission could
legally meet would be March 13 -just 15
days before the 91).day moratorium on
building in the new city of Irvine expires.
C.OUncllmen promlaed the f i v e
developers and McDonoeJJ..Douglu full
rehearings of lheir rezoning requall that
had been. •pproved by \>Olh Ille county
Plannlng Commlaslon llDd Ille Orange
Coonly .Board of Sopervlsors In the !alt
few day1 prior to incorporation of the
De'W city.
Huge Emenada Fire
Destroys Shop Area
ENSENADA, Mexico (AP) -Fire
blamed on the electrical 1 y s t e m
destroyed • downtown lboppln1 C<llter
which bad opened for bullnta only five
monthll before.
The dam•sa·lo a grocery, boutique and two ·~I lllpply llGra ..., put al
MOO,OG01 Later llf'lll<n Ol'dend two oilier
b1llfDalielc domollolled.
Scho~l GrQu p. ·Permanent?
An.~ __ ........ ... ,, . . ... J-·
commulllcatlona bet•--dlltrld
-and lhe -Community Collqe Boml may -. a permanmit
flxlurt In lhe collqe dlllTict.
Such a commllt<o -formed recdly
lo study Ind advilo Oii a method of l'Hi>'
portioning Ibo huge ...Oqe dlitrlcL At a
meell11f Thundlr ol tha committee,
mtmbera Indicated lhlt IUch a IJ'OUP
lhou1d gel together et rqular lnlerTab.
"I would rather Iron our mulUI·,.,..
b1eme out 1t a __."I UH this," Mid
, . I
__ .,..., ......
•• I ;.. : It •
~~.-Jlw.Vosd. .t~ •lfwin In th• -~H••• ' -w •
Q9,i!ece pnoldant Jl'red BnlDer U •
plOliild lhiit ·O. boOnl ·-has an ad·
Yiaory commlliff made ,. of community momben, but lhal Ille c:omm1ttee has
nev<r met '!flh tho boardi, for Jqal r....... . . .
Dr. Bremer' lllid Ille. <q11111y CO!lns<l'1 em.. WU of Ille ·opinion that meetinp
--Ille board and ,Ille community advloory commHtee would C011111Me a
co11fllct of lntereat on Ille lnlllMI' part,
'
-' .
..,. __ laUportlncom-
-clollboral!*· Howmr;heoQOlad :lhat under recently
enacted llilJlalloo, eo<ll lnlllae .Wld be
allowed lo appoint and meet with 1111 own
commltteo.
''We need more dlnlct lnnut from Ille
comniunfty1," Vd(lil nolld. •11.-ad Ute
lo -lh1I gro<ip be!:ome 4" '""°Ing committee and meet quarterly."
VoPJ ·a.,...i lo briol Iha mailer up al
the. hb. 22 .-In( of. Ibo full 00Ue1•
board for co111idlralloo.
. ,. ·' ..
what kinds of expenses the city might ex·
peel.
An earlier proposal by \Voo\lett to bor-
row only up to $75 .000 was inc reased to
!he $100,000 figure following debate
among co uncilmen.
John Burton and E. Ray Quigley were
concerned that if the city needed more
money, it could not borrow it at the same
low rate which ls offered by banks on a
one lime basis to new cities.
Councilman Gabrielle Pryor objected to
the higher amount for "psychological"
reasons. "If we know we have more
money to spe nd we'll probably spend it."
Mrs. Pryor and Henry Qu igley emerg-
ed as the new council's self·admitted
"fiscal conservatives."
Both urged an early look l!lt a detailed
budget plan whlch Woollett promised
would be ready by th.e councll'a next
regularly scheduled meeting on Feb. 16.
He estimated monthly expemes at
$10,000 a month and lncorne from clgar-
ette taxer at $2,500 a month. To date the
cigarette levy returns are the only unen-
cumbered tax revenues the city bas
received .
By June, however , Woollctt contended
the city will have receh·ed enough othe;
state tax income to pay off the bank loan.
Building Freeze
To Slow Water
District Growth
The Irvine Ranch Wat.er District, fresh
from a record setting 19'71, experienced a
high number of service connectlona dur-
ing January but expects the city of
lrvinl'I ~ lMtUd1nt ...... IJlli llo'lr
fllO'llth In lilt first qul1l'ler of. Im
General Manager William F. Hunt
said water and sewage connections In
January totaled Iii compar<d lo 108 lhe
previous Jah)llry,
ffiWD, a pc\bllc ageocy, tel'Yff 108
square mllea of the Irvine ranch l811ds
in cludlng the new 111,000-acre city, '
The dlstrlct'a monthly growth rates
"may be a fair reflection of the city's
growth, Hurst ooted. "Probably 80 per-
cent of our present projects rest inside
the new city's boundaries."
Consistent with the building permit
freeze, the IRWD board approved no new
subdivision contracts in Jan u a r y,
although previously contracted con-
nections were completed during tho
mrnth.
Two new labor contracts to lmtall Ines
in the Irvine Company's Walnut Village
E~t development were insured, Hurst
said. The two contracts totaled $12,698.so,
up 1l'8htly from the 1971 average of
$11,332 in 11ew cootract.s.
January additions brought total wattt
services provided by the IRWD to 4,624
customers. ·
Irvine Seeking
Seal and Motto
The Jrvlne Junior Women•a Club la
sponsoring • contett to create an officlat
eeal and motto for the city of Irvine.
All enlrles !Or Ille conl4ot, which enda
March IS, shouJ.d be on 811 by JI paper
with the entraD\'1 name, addresi •n4
telephone number on the f1Vertf!! aide.
Each Irvine mldenl Is enlllleil lo sul>-
m.11' a city seal and a motto entry. •
Contest enll'lea llhould be adcfreaed to·
Contest, 5827 Sierra Siena tmne. '
Orange
Weatller
Bett.r plan on c•llinC un'I ff"
minute• earlier Tueeda,y-b.Caue
Ille 1a1o "'"""" roe lonfPI will tum Into early momlng for. Otber-
wl!e ltlOIUy Mllllly · *'°' 'l'ueoday
with highs ato111 Ibo coast al •
riling lo 08 1n1...i. Lows lMI.
INSIDE TODAY
LllU. TOllll Co1kllo w «>n· c
fln<d. lo Irk room, b.i Ros1mar1< 1
·McOanle~ roamed the 1tTttU for 1
autogropht dul'ing the quiet civfl t
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,2 DAI LY PILOT 56
Costa Mesa
Entertai11er
Gun Victim
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of t~t 0•11, 1"1_.1 ~t•I!
A pop music duo drawing crowds to a
C.osta Mesa night club "'here they began
·only two weeks ago wa s trag!ca!Jy broken
up early Sunday, "'hen a dispu te Jed to
the slaying o( one member .a t hi~ home.
The kilting of John J. Brent, 28. whQ
bled In dca!h aHer being shv! in the groin
BS his horrified "'ife watched. had no
local connection. invesllga!ors said today.
One man among several Brent cha.~·
tised for crtaling a disturbantt at lhe
.four.unit llighland Park apartmenis he
managed is in cu stody today, booked on
murder charges.
He was identified as Wilhan1 Riddle. 21,
also of Highland Park.
Brent and his artner. Jerry Lambeth,
have been playing at the Black Knight,
330 E. 17th St, as the Jerry Lambeth
Duo.
Wi11te1• Wottderland
Irving Case
Mystery Blonde
•
Next to Surface
NE\A,' YORK (AP ) -Another mystery
woman, thi s one a blonde :scuba driver,
h11 s surfaced in the Clifford Irving-
Jioward llughes saga.
The wornRn, identified only as Ann
Baxter. flew with Irving last December
to St. Croix In the Virgin Islands and
gave hiin scuba lessons while he was
there 1n what he said was an attempt to
contact 11ughes, Life magazine said Sun·
do.y.
In a court paper filed last ntonth,
novelist Irving. 41, swore he fle w to St.
Croix from Miami lasi Dec. JO on in·
struction s of a liughes aide, who told him
the billionaire would meet him there for
a final session about H u g h e s'
''autobiog raphy.''
Irving said he :stayed on St. Croix until
Dec. 12, but when no message came Irom
Hughes, he left.
ing when he went to Mexico la,st
February.
!·!ls story that he met Hughe~ on that
trip "flabbergasted'' her, she :said. She
was quoted as saying sbe knew of no w11y
Irving could ha ve met with Hughes dur·
ing that trip.
fl.trs. van Paliandt , estranged wife or 11
Dutch baron, lives on the Spanish
lt.1editerranean island of Ibiza , where the
Irvings also re side.
Life, which pictured Mr:s. van Pallandt
on its cover this week, quote:s an Ibiza
resident as :saying "whenever Nina's
name was mentiont:d, Edith climbed the
wall."
The victin1 and his wife Mickie, 22,
returned to the Los Angeles suburb after
the club closed early Sunday morning and
were drinking hot chocolate Jn the kit ·
chen be.fore going to bed, investigators
iaid.
Several men apparently winding up a
party at the old tenement.like structure
began creating too mu ch noise outside,
according to homicide detectives.
Pic·ture of Jack Frost's delicate handi\vork looks as
if it might have been taken in the Midwest or East.
It wasn't. It wa s taken in South Laguna in the yard
of landscape architect Fred Lang. Lang said that
someone forgot and left the sprinklers on overnighL
Nature's land.~cape architecture -temporary in
this instance -Lang found most impressive. So
did we.
Hughes, who hasn't been seen in public
for a decade and is said to live a:s a
recluse in the Bahamas, has denied ever
nieeting Irving and labeled the Irving·
produced "autobiog raphy" a fake.
Hughe s' disclaimers came from a voice
iden tilied a:s his in a telephone news con·
ference. and in court affidavits allegedly
:signed by Hug hes.
Sen. Cranston
Lauds Nixon
Mideast Plan
President Nixon drew praise Sunday
from U.S. Senator Alan Cranston for
what the California Democrat said was
the chief executive's "extremely skillful'"
hand ling of the explosive Middle East
situation.
Going out to investigate, Brent tried to
quiet the group and became involved in
an argument which gradually grew more
heated , police said.
Detective Sgt. Glenn Bordemann. of the
LAPD homicide division, said Brent {.hen
·returned for a .22 caliber rine and his
German Shepherd dog.
Ex-cycle Gang Leader
Held in Beach Slayi1ig
His wife. meanwhile, was calling police
.to ask help in quieting the noisy gang
outside.
Waymon A. Grisenti of Huntington
Beach, a 38·year-old former president of
the Hessians motorcycle club, today is
being held in city jail in connection with
the Friday nighl shooting death of a
visitor at hfs home.
"He poked his head out the door and
"to]d them again to ;make it,'" Sgt.
Bordemann said in recounting the fatal
feud.
One of the men allegedly involved drew
what investigators believe was a .38
caliber pistol and fired once through a
window , striking Brent in the groin area.
"We ha ven't recovered the gun yet,"
Sgt. Bordemann said.
Brent collapsed and bled to death on
the dining room noor.
A spokesman at the Black Knight said
this morning that Brent and his partner
bad just been booked about two weeks
ago for entertainment six nights a week.
The two-man combo had been drawing
crowds and was well-received by patrons
who enjoyed their music for dancing.
"Isn't it somethimg else'! What a
tragedy .•. " their employer aaid today
of Brent's murder.
Burglars Steal
TV Sets, Stereos
Burglars who broke Into the Sears
Roebuck store at 24262 Calle de la Louisa.
Laguna Hills. during the weekend left
with television sets and stereos valued at
more than $1 ,100.
Orange County sheriff's oflicers said
the in truders broke into a trailer used to
house merchandise and removed six
television set:s and one stereo system.
The breakin, believed to have occurred
Sunday night, was under investigation
this morning.
Student Di es in Auto
SAN BERNARD!NO 1UP!l -A car
plunged 30 feet down an embankment off
Interstate 14 during the weekend, killi ng
its driver. a Long Beach State College
student. The victim, Richard L. Bonnell.
19, Barstow. wa s returning to school
Saturday night at the time of the crash.
OIAH4il COA.51
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Grisenti. of 19402 Jerrilyn Lane and
members of his family have insisted that
the victim. Rusty B. Cook, 26. of Lomita,
was shot in an accident.
Huntington Beach police, however. are
:seeking murder charges against Grisent i.
He was scheduled for arraignment late
today in West Orange County lo.1unicipal
Court.
Grisen!i was taken into custody F'riday
about three hours after the 10 p.m.
shooting in his home. Homicide officers
had questioned his wife, Anita. 31, and
the couple's five chil dren.
Investigators said Cook had been shot
once in the upper throat wilh a .357
caliber magnum slug.
When police arriv ed , the victim was
still slumped in a chair, his head on the
dining room table. He was rushed by am·
bulance to Pacifica Hospital where he
was dead ori arrival.
In recounti ng the tragedy, police said
both of the elder Grisentis !old in·
vestigators that the gun went off ac-
Green-tliu1nbed
Tliief Absco1ids
With Large Loivn
It's well known that there are just two
\Vays you can start a lawn,
The cheaper but more difficult is lo Jay
your own grass seed and work up from
the . inevitable patchy beginning: the
e~sier but niore costly is !.o buy turf and
sit back to enjoy the bl oo ming of vour
readymade lawn. ·
An irate Tusl 1n hon1eov:ner told Orange
Countv sheri(/"s officer during !he
weekend that he had learned of a third
v.•ay.
Someone moved in durin~ the night to
cut out hi.~ entire dirhondra lawn and
move it to the Intruder's apparently
grassless locale.
All 60 feet of Raffi f'rancian"s dlchon·
dra :spread has now gone to apparently
greener pastures leaving the F'rancian
frontage at J ... llyde Park Drive, bare
and brown.
''Somebody had a green th um b and a
sharp tool ," commented a deputy.
2 Anaheim l\f en
Among Victims
Of Plane Crash
Federal aviation safety cxprrt~ today
were probing the crash or a rented plane
into Lllke Arrowhead Saturday. The plane
carried four men , including two from
Anaheim to thei r deaths in 30 feet of
water.
Bodies of the occupants wer e dragged f~om the bottom of Blue Boy Bay by
divers for the San Bernardino CoW1ty
Sheriff's Offlce.
Ludwig V. Stein. 49, Anaheim, was at
the controls v.·hen the sinile--tngine Piper
Chero~ec crashed.
Killed with him were Joseph Liles, 39,
also of Anaheim ; Richard Jaslnsky, 30,
Fremont, Calif., and Ardell S. Oritensen,
49, of Minneso~.
The victims ·were nylng to a Colorado
River resort area In the plane renled by
Trl Aviation Services of Fullerton In-
vestigators said. '
No fli,'1hl plan had been filed ror tht
lrip1 according to the f"AA. Stein had
liken off from Corona Municipal Airport
shortly before the cruh.
cidentally while Grisenti wa s showing it
to Coo k.
Police. however, allege that the slaying
was the result of an argument between
Grisenti and Cook over some tool boxes.
The death weapon, according to offi·
eers, was outfitted to be worn in a shnul·
der holster and featured a sevcn·inch
barrel.
Huntington Beach police declined to
identify Grisenti "'ith the Hessia ns cycle
club. Costa Mesa detective Jim
Strickland, ho"rever. today confirmed
that Grisenli was a past president of the
group.
lie has been questoned in a 1968 Costa
Mesa case in which a Hessian . F'rank ,V_
"\Vild f\1ouse" Rundle, was convicted in a
beating. chain-whipping and shooting
case. Grisenti wasn't charged in the
earlier Costa Mesa case.
Tunaboat O·wners
Ignore Advice,
Obtain, Lice1ises
SAN D I E: G 0 r AP l -American
tunaboa t owners in increasing numbers
are ignor ing the advice of the U.S.
government and are purchasing fishing
licenses from Ecuador.
r~iftecn of 35 American seiners fishing
off the South American coast have done
so this year, the American Tunaboat
Association says.
The United States recognizes only a 12·
mile offshore limit -not 200 miles as
t•la1med by Ecuador -and therefore
d i s co u r a gt' s a c l ion i1nplying
acknowledgement of the larger boundary.
Tunaboat owners are reimbursed by
lhe government f<lr fines levied against
them when Ecuador seizes their vessels
inside the 200..milc trrritory.
Bui this ye ar, Ecuador has doubled the
fine for boats 1t al so seized last year.
Some boat owners apparantly are find -
lniz 1t difficult to pay the h i gher
penalties and then wait several months to
get their money back from a special con·
gressional appropriation.
From Page 1
i\flSSION ...
lransfuslons by mid-morning -was still
in severe nted.
A call to the Red Cross Blood Bank in
Lo:s Angeles Jed to location of six more
pints of type 0-negative blood at Little
Company of Mary Hospilal in Torrance.
Newport Beach's Adam 2 helico pter.
however , had already been dispatched
back to Anaheim.
Coordinated by the Los Angeles Police
Department's Wilshire Division head·
quarters, one LAPD chopper was
dispatched south to pick up the six ad-
ditional pints and fly them on from Tor-
rance. 1
"There was excellent cooperation
throughout." Lt . McDaniel said after tbe
one hour and 50 minute s~rles of me'rcy
flights.
Brabant was still listed in critical con-
dition in the hospilal's intensive care
unit, but mCJre stabilized after the
predawn crisis.
liis wife said this morning after the
overnight ordeal that she has always ap-
proved of police helicopters in Ux. Harbor
Arca. but feels even more strongly now.
"They wert: so kre1.1t .' •. the police and
the pt<>ple at the hospital1" she said,
"just marvelous -lhty really went all
out ." •
She Quit Movement
LONDON (UPI) -An lldvertlsemenl
Jn ·the South Londoner new1paper read:
"Harry. Have civen up women'1 lib.
Please come hick. June.''
Fire Destro ys
J turior Hig h 's
Locker Roo1n
Fire destroyed a $60,000 girls locker
and shower room at Lathrop Junior High
School. 1100 S. Main St. in Santa Ana ear-
ly today. A classroom building at the
sa me school was broken into during the
night , police reported.
Fire and police investigators are prob..
ing the blaze and break in today. They
hinted !hat arson may be involved . A
police patrolman spotted smoke pouring
from the building about I a.m.
The Lathrop school has been the scene
of dislurbances in the past few yta rs . lts
main building was demolished t"·o years
ago because it fa iled to meet earthquake
safety sta ndards.
Four firemen were injured, none
seriously, fight ing the blaze. Six fire com·
panies with 28 men under the direction of
Battalion Chief John Mahany fought the
costly fire for an hour.
Both the locker room and classroom
are the relocatable type, principal Dr.
Pal Kenn edy said. He reported that uti!i·
ly se rvice to the school has been cut off
but that classes are being held a:s usual.
Solicitors Get
New Enviro11ment
Two Alhambra women who allegedly
solicited Tustin homes during the
weekend in aid of an organization known
as Citii.ens fnr a Better Environment
v.•ere given .a brand new if not better en·
\·ironn1ent in v.·h1ch to contemplate
charges of illegally soliciting.
Orange County sheriff's officers say
they did a service for ecology by loading
Irene fJlen Means, 19. and Irma Dru5iJla
Ri rhey, 18. in Ora nge County Jail.
Both \v on1en were arrested arter
~01neowners complained they were urg·
1ng local resident to contribute funds to
what is alleged to be a mythical
organization.
Another beautiful woman, Nina van
Pallandt, a 39--year-old Danish cabaret
6inger, said last week she was with Irv.
Irving Appears
Before Jury
In Hughes Case
NE W YORK -Author Clifford Irving,
star witness in the Howard Hughes
literary mystery case, went before a
federal grand jury today to tell his
version of the discredited Hughes
autobiography.
Irving entered the jury roo1n al
r·edera l Courthouse on Foley Square
shortly before 7 a.m. (PST) accompanied
by his attorney, ~Iaurice Nessen, and
Philip Lorber, a lawyer representing Irv·
ing·s wife , Edith .
Irving refused to answer newsmen's
questions.
He did pose briefly for pictures before
his lawyer hurried him up to the 14th
floor grand jury room.
He left an hour ind 40 mlnulea later,
llmiling but :sti!I silent.
Neither he nor his lawyer would say
whether he actually testified and what he
said .
"I don't want to seem impolite. but I
want the proceedings to go along in an
orderly wa y,'' Nessen said.
Nes sen managed to delay Irving's air
pearance be.fore the jury for nearly two
weeks by pleading more time to acquaint
himsel f with his client's case.
In the meantime. a stream of witnes ses
provided te stimony which ha s further
complicated the bizarre case.
Other figures in the mystery are
scheduled to appear before the federa l
grand jury as the panel enters its second
week of investigation.
Irving's Swiss-born wife Edith and
Richard Suskind, a researcher who said
in a s"'orn affidav it that he witnessed a
meeting between Hughes and Jrving, are
among those who have been subpoenaed
l.u testify in the probe .
McGraw.Jiill paid Irving $650,000 in
th ree checks for transmittal to Hughes.
But Irving conceded two weeks ago that
the checks made out to "H. R. Hughes"
were deposited and later withdrawn from
a Swiss bank by his wife who opened an
account as Helga R. Hughes.
ONE FULL CARAT DIAMONDS
Fine white colol,
American cut
brilliant.
Select f.he mounting
of your choice from
our stock.
•
But It is vital. Crasnton added at a
meeting of the United Jewish Wtlfare
Fund of Orange County , that "Nixon
must insure that Israel is given full
diplomatic support to go wilh the
weapons :she needs to maintain the
Mideast balance of power."
Without that, Cranston warned at the
day-long Anaheim session, Russia will
abandon her behind the scenes support or
Egypt to take on a more active ro le and
.step in to crush Israel.
"Israel V.'il! never gel her recognized
borders without America's full diplomatic
back ing," Cranston said. "She needs that
plu:s our continued eco nomic and milit<1ry
aid until a sou nd peace applicable to
lsraC'l and all her neighbors i s
t'Stllblished.
"America is 1he hope of the "·orld and
it is tragic that we are not doinl': all we
might," Cranston told applauding United
Jewish Welfare Fund :supporters.
Turning to South Vietnam, Cranston
v.·amcd his audience that it is hardly
possible to compare the Sou theast A:sian
conflict with the simmering Middle East
crisis that has already produced two
wars.
He :said history compels us to support
Israel whereas no such traditional link
.should lead us to back South Vietnam.
Cranston characterized South Vietnam
as a "'purely civil v.·ar" in which mnre
than 55.000 Americans have been killed.
No American lives have been lost in
Israel, he said. ""•here the bcleagered
lsraehs arc our allies and not , as in South
Vietnam, a corrupt m i l i t a r y dic-
tatorship."
Cranston said the Vietnam conflict has
cost the U.S. more than $150 billion and
the total is likely to exceed more than $1
trillion be[ore it is over.
"I~rael pays for her economic aid,"
Cranston said , "and she asks only tha t v.•e
provide it to help her defend what are
also American interests in the !11iddle
East."
TV Producer Dies
AMITYVILLE.NY IAP l -Television
producer John A. Aaron, 51, died Sunday
after a short illness. Aaron co-produced
the Columbia Broadcasting System's
"Person to PC'rson" program starring the
late Edward R. Murrow.
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·----'
Huntington Dea~h
Fountain Valley
~-----
Today's Flnal
N.Y. Stoeks
YOL. 65, NO. 32, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 197 2 TEN CENTS
4-way
By JOHN ZALLER
01 1111 Dl llY l'llel Sllll
Supporters of the four-wa y unification
plan today chall enged the state Depart-
ment of Education's recommendation
against the pl an.
"One of their two objections to the
four-way plan was based on incorrect in-
formation,'' said Charles Palmer, deputy
superintendent of the Huntington Beach
City (elementary) School District.
"If a!I the tacts are considered, iL
Man l(illed;
Motorcycle
Figure Held
Waymon A. Grisenti ot Huntington
Beach, a 38-year-0!d former president of
Ute Hessians motorcycle club, today is
being held in city jail in connection with
the Friday night shooting death of a
visitor at his ho1ne.
Grisenti, of 19402 Jerrilyn Lane and
members of h\s family ha ve insisted that
lhe victim. Rusty B. Cook. 26, of Lomita,
was shot in an accident.
Huntington Beach police, however, are
seeking murder charges against Grisentl.
fie was scheduled for arraignment late
today in West Orange County Municipal
Court.
Gri senti wa s taken into custody Friday
11bout three hours after the 10 p.m.
&booting in his home. Homicide officers
bad questioned his wife. Anita, 31, and
lhe couple's five children.
Investigators said Cook had been shot
<Jnce in the upper throat with a .357
caliber magn~m alug.
When pc:ilice arrived, the victim was
still slumped in a chair, his head on Jhe
4ining room table. He was rushed b)' am~
bulance to Pacifici Hospital where he
waa dead on arrival.
In recounting the tragedy, police sa id .
both of the elde r Grisentis told in-
vestigators tllat the gun went off ac-
cidentally while Grisenti was showing it
to Cook.
Police, however, allege that the slaying
was the result of an argument between
Grisenli and Cook over some tool boxes.
The dea th wea pon, according to offi.
cers, was outfitted to be worn in a shoul-
der holster and featured a seven -inch
barrel.
Hunti ngton Beach police declined lo
kl ent ify Gr isenti wi th the J{essians cycle
club. Costa Mesa detective Ji m
Strickland. however. today conlinned
that Grisentl was a past president of the
group.
He has been questoned in a 1968 Costa
Mesa case in which a Hessian , Frank W.
"\Vild Mouse" Rundle , was convicted in a
beating. chai n-wh ipping and shooting
case. Grisenti wasn't charged in the
earlier Costa Mesa case.
Tunaboat 01.vriers
Igno re Ad·vice,
Obtain Licerj,Ses
SAN DIE G 0 (AP) -American
tunaboal owners in increasing numbers
are ignoring the advice of the U.S.
government and are purchasing fishing
licenses from Ecuador.
Fifteen of 35 American seiners fishing
ofi lhe South American coast have done
go this year, the American Tuna:boat
Nisoclation Says.
The United States recognizes only a 12-
mUe offshore Umlt -not 200 miles as
claimed by Ecuadgr -and therefore
d isco ura ges action implying
acknowledgement of U}e larger boundary.
. Tunaboat <JWners are reimbursed by
the government for Qnes levied against
them when Ecuador aelze1 their vessels
inside Ifie 200,-mlle tarritory.
But this year, ·Ecuador has doubled the
f1ne for boa ta It also selzed last year.
~· boat OWllel"I apparanUy are find· loK It dJl!lcult to P.IY the h I g h e r
penaltles and then watt several mo·nths to
get their money bact from 1 special coD-
sre111onA! &pl>fOpnatlon.
Beach High Trustees
To Study Boundaries
Trustees of the HunUngton Beach
Union Union High School District are ex·
pected to adopt new tthool attendance
boundaries at their mee.tlng at 7:30 p.m.
Tuesday nl&ht In tile ,HunUngton B<ach
High School cafeteria. •
Rt•IMd Doundarles a"' being con·
eklutd u a murn-ol . alleViat lng
°"""'rowdfnl at FOWl!ala· Vallq High
School.
Unification
throws their argument into a different
lighl."
Palmer said he has forwarded to
Sacramento what he considers the cor·
rect Information. The state Board of
Education is expected to rule on the four-
way plan Thursday.
The four-way unification plan would
d:vide the Huntington Beach Union High
School District into four separate unified
districts, each serving students from
kindergarten through twelfth grade.
I'
j
--
Law's Long Arni
The larger high school district would
then cuse to exist, and its property
would be divided among the four new
unified districts.
In a formal rerommer)<iation sent to all
members of the state Board <Jf Education
las t week, state Superintendent of Public
Instruction Wilson Riles said this division
of high school property would be in·
equitable.
It is on this point that Palmer has
challenged Riles' information. •
!
UPI Tt ....... 19
SomewhPie along the way little Jay Gulledge,5, of Dallas lost a wheel
on his late-model tricycle -something any motorist can relate to. But
he got help when the long arm of Lhe law intervened. Three-foot nine-
inch Jay found the helping hand was that oi Jim Wright a six-foot
six-inch Dallas poli ceman . '
Beacl1's HOME Council
OpJlO ses Bolsa Project
The ijOME Council of Huntingto n
Beach has joined the list of opponents t()
the Metropoli ta n Water District's pro-
posed Bolsa Island water project.
Directors of the HOME Council, an
organization that represents many of the
city's home owners associations, have
urged the city council to likewise oppose
the Bolsa project.
Their main objection to the plan is the
lack of a thorough environmental impact
report, explainlng what the project might
do to the Bolsa marshland.
The MWD is seeking pennission lo
build buy a 400-foot lflde causeway
across the marshlands to 1erve the 40-aae island which would be created in the
future.
MWD officials pla n to build a nuclear
power plant and a water desalinization
factory on the man-made island off Bolsa
Chica State Beach.
Two other major power agencies back-
ed out or the Bolsa Island project two
years ago when projected costs began to
double.
Last week the Huntington Beach Plan-
ning Commission and the city en-
vironmental council both opposed the
project. primarily becau!f! of an in-
adequate enviromnental report, they
said.
The Bolsa proposal Is not on tonight's
city council agenda, but it still might be
discussed.
Challenge Riles
According to Riles ' figures, there are
two high schools within the boundarie!I of
the pro~ Huntington Beach Unified
lligh School District, each with a capaci-
ty of 3,000 students. That would give the
Huntington Beach district seal!I for 2.,900
students more than it has. At the same
time, still according to Riles' figures. the
proposed Ocean View-Fountain Valley
Unified School District would have
seating capaclty within its boundaries for
6,000 students, while it is estimated that
it will actually enroll 8.000 students next
fall.
RiltJ said that this division of facilities
does not meet lhe provision of the state
Educatlon Code for equitable distribution
of property.
Palmer challenged Riles on several
grounds.
"Huntington Beach Hig~ School has a
capacity or only 2,200 students, no t
3,000," Palmer said. "Or that's what
s~hool officials told me when I asked. So
Trails Plan
t don't understand v.•hy the :;t3te report
shows 3,000.
"And that 's only part or the story,''
Palmer said. "Huntington Beach lligh
School is very old. Abou t hai r of its
buildinl( must be either rebuil t or totally
renovated by 1975 to meet the standards
of the Field Act. So It's very unfair to say
that lfunting tcn Beach High School bas a
capacity of 3,000."
Counting ll u n t i n gt o n Reach High
IStt UNIFY, Page 2,
Due
Proposal Allots .132 Miles for Recreation
By TERRY COVIILE
01 lite Delly PLlet Sl•ff
An extensive plan for building 132 miles
of recreational trails in Huntington Beach
will be presented to the city council
tonight by a special citizens committee.
Committee members are asking the ci-
ty to put $138.000 into the 1972-73 budget
to build the widespread trails system .
The plan submitted by the city's
recreational trails committee includes 60
miles of bike trails, 60 miles <Jf foot paths
UAW Reveals
Pay Board
Suit Details
WASHINGTON (AP) -The United
Auto Work~ ioo,ay annoUDced details of
o lsir·oull .... die 1'117 Bolnl"le""ii'ylO "
recover a 17-cent-an-hour pay raiie
denied to aerospace workers.
UAW President Leonard Woodcock said
the suit, the first court test of a major
Pay Board decision, is based on allega·
lions that the Pay Board acted beyond its
Jegal power in denying the raise.
The UAW suit involves about 31,000
employes at McDonnell-Douglas Aircraft
Corp., LTV Aerospace Corp. and· North
American Rockwell Aircratt Corp.
Also today, the International Associa-
tion of Machinists said it would file suit
next week to recover the same pay raise
denied to another 70,000 employes at the
Boeing Co., Lockheed Aircraft Corp. and
McDonnell-Douglas where the two union.,
share representation.
The UAW law suit, which Woodcock
said would be filed today in federal court
here, contests the action of the Pay
Board Jan. 5 in rejecting a 12 percent
tirst-year pay raise for aerospace
workers.
Pay Board later said it would a~
prove that 12 percent raise if the un ions
and co mpanies agreed to dela y part o( it
until the second year of their three-.vea r
agreements, but both the IAM and UAW
have refused to do this, choosing instead
to sue for the full amount this year.
Woodcock said that his workers are
being paid the portion of the rejected 12
percent raise Uiat lhe Pay Board 58id it
would approve this year, but that com-
panies are holding up the rest o( it pend-
ing the outcome of today's law suit.
The 12 percent raise totaled 51 cents an
hour ()f1 the average, but 34 cents of that
was a cost-of-Jiving adjustment called for
In 1961 aa:reement.1 with the companies.
Woodcock ta.id . ln the case of LTV, this
adjustment is 3S cents.
and 12 miles of equestrian trails.
··we don 't expect all of the money lo
come from city funds," Mrs. Margaret
Carlberg, trails committee chainnan, ex-
plained. ''There are federal and state
tund s available."
Some ol the 132 miles of trails might
follow the same path -where off-street
lanes are available for both hikers and
bicycle riders.
The trails committee was loosely
organized last April when several
Bt19hes Case
rseidcnts were alarmed by statements
from the planning commission th.at trails
were not even on tlle city's priority list.
Mrs. Carlberg said several civic groups
belong to the trails committee.
''We reel liuntlngton Beach, being a
recreation oriented community, needs
these trails to provide a good network
linking many important areas Of the
conununity," Mrs. Carlberg added.
A nine·psge report. outli nin11i the goals
lSee TRAILS, Page %)
Author lrvii1g Appears
Bef 01~e U.S. Grand Jury
, .W:W YORK (.\Pc) -'!be lnternaU!ev-
.mie S<rvke lllod lu lftili'to"lal!Dlt niote
than '490,000 againt!lt nove!Jst Clltford
lrvJRg and hlJ wife. who allegedly banked
l&0,000 In roya lties Intended for bllUoo-
alre Howard Hughes for a disputed auto-biography.
The IRS acted as Irvin~ went before a
federal grand jury investigating possible
traud in the sale of the book to McGraw-
Hill, Inc.
Tai !leas for $246,993 against Irving
Md $243,1111 against his Wile were filed
with lhe county registrar.
~ .spokesman said they establish "a
pr1onty for the IRS against <Jther cred-
itors, tying up the assets or the persons
against whom lhe liens had been issued."
A lien of $22,446 was-also filed against
Richard Suskind, who says be worked for
Partial Strike
Injunction OK 'd
By House Unit
WAS~IINGTON (AP) - A House labor
subcommittee voted today to authorize a
partial 6lklay injunction against the West
Coast dock strike.
The subcommJttee voted 5 to I to allow
a major part of the strike to continue but
to allow a court, upon petition Crom the
attorney genera], to hall·strikes affecting
the shipments of military a n d
agricultural cargoes and shipments to
and from Hawall.
The subcommittee rejected on a 5 to 3
party Jlne vote the emergency strike
legislation requested by President Nixon.
trv~ Al a Tf!5earcher on the lfugbet
book.
Irving entered the jury room at
Federal Courthou1e on Foley Square
shortly be.Core 7 •.m. (PST) acOOmpanled
by his attorney, Maurice Nesstn, and
Philip Lorber, a lawyer representlng Jnr ..
in g's wife , Edith.
Irving refused to answer newsmen's
questions.
He did pose brieny for pictures before
his lawyer hunled him up lo tht 14th
floor grand jury room.
He left an hour and 40 mlnutd later,
smiling but still sil ent.
Nei ther he nor h.i s lawyer would ny
whethe r he actually testified and what be
said.
"I don 't want to seem impolite. but I
want the proceed ings to go along in an
orderly way," Nessen saJd.
Ne ssen managed to delay Irving's ap-
pearance before the jury for nearly two
weeks by pleading more time to acquaint
himself with his client's case.
In the meantime, a stream ot witnesses
provided testimony whlch has further
complicated the bizarre case.
Other figures in the myatery are
scheduled to appear before the federal
grand jury as the panel enters Its second
week of investigation.
Irving's Swist!l-born wire Edith and
Suskind, the reaearcher who said
In a sworn affidavit that he witnessed a
meeting between Hughes and Irving, are
among those who have been subpoenaed
to testify in the probe.
McGrow·ffill pold lnhlg !650,000 la
three checks for traiwnlttal to Hughes.
But Trving conceded two weeb ago that
the checks made out to ''H. R. Hughes"
(See IRVING, Pqe, I)
or ... e
Income Taxes.-Kid Stuff
Th.e Pre1ident's proposal would have
compelled the workers to return to their
jobs while the entire dispute, resulting in
a strike now In IUI 122nd day, is su b-
mitted. to compulaoty arbitration. (See
earlier story, page 8)
All the Democrats on the sub-
committee, headed by Rep. Frank
Thompson (0-NJ), voted for t b e
substitute, which was offered by
Thompoon. Hop. John D. DeUenback ( R-
Ort. ), voted against It and two other
Rtpubllcans, Repo. John Ashbrook ol
Ohio and Ogden Rold ol New York voted
presenl
Weadter
'Fou1iwin Valley Youngsters Learn About 1040s
By RUDI NlEDZIELSKI
Of -Dlttr .,....., hMI
Rein, parenta. Your lf71 lnoome Ill ~
so simple it'• chlld's play.
At leaot tllot'1 what tile olllcial pooltlon
or tbe Internal Revenue lltrvlco lo this
year. Even a fifth grader could und er.
stand the lnstructlons, according to the
tax men.
By April t7 nearly half ol the 3'l5 lourlh
..tbrough eightb graders at Fountain
Valley 's Arevalos SchOol will have proved
them right or 1"rong. They are now tak-
tng a course called "Under1'8ntllng Tax· .. "
The atudents a~ aiming to show that
the annual Fonn 1040 ritual need not be •
ma ]or' heodache, provided you know
simple arithmetic. .
Mra. Georgla llotstram, tile ochool'I
I
upper level learning coordinstor, Sa.!'1 tile
two to four week course should be an e:t-
cellenl way of combining lnstrucUon in
mathematics with other disciplines such
as llOClal science, blstory and reading.
"The materials were fumlshed to us
free from the IRS," she aaid. ''They
begin by telling them the purpose of the
tax system, the history of tuatlon, how
Congress raJses the taxes and !or what
purposes' they are uaed."
Mrs. Erin Stewart, another Jeamln1
coordinator who will teach the income
ta1 course to the tower grade students,
said 5tudent interest bas b e. e n
overwhelming.
"l was surf!ised how jazzed they
~re. u •he 1a1d. 1'0Ut or 1ao rtUdenU.
1117 wanted to start the COUTse. But we
cut the number down to 80."
I
111 think the: reason la that they've all
...,, ~ parent. ·nu ou1 and 111e their
n:tuml. And It's eo timely now because.
lhll 11 what all tllelr parents are moaning
about," lhe added. DarlDc tbe not few week! the 120
Ami1o1 1tud..U la tbe program will be •tudJlac tar tables, .. emptions, Joint
returns and deductions. As a final uam
they will be ltsued w.2 forms from which
they wlll be 6pecled to compute their In-
come tax.
Arevalos Principal James Freda 1ald
lhe program ultlmately may be In·
troduced at other fountain Valley
schools. '41t seems like this shoUld be t!ll
~ulrement. Every kid should know bow
to llgure hll lnoome Ill by tbe time he is
In high school," be commented.
Thomf*WI estimated his Pl'Ol'Ol"I
would get IO percent ol tbe West Coast
carao · moTlnc apJn, If• aald tile measure wtll go to tile lull
Hou,. Labor Committee Tuesdoy and
C011ld be paased by the House Wednesday
II It agreed to suspend all lta rules
against acting ao qulcllly.
Under the Thompoon aubelltute, a
district court could illOI an anU-strike
injunction only upon nndlng thet tailure
to •hip military and agricultural suppll"
and all producta to and from Hawaii
would Jeopardl!e the national health and
1afety.
Thompson told I.he subcommittee that
Harry Bridges, the Weal Co 1 i t
Joncshoremen's leader, was unen-
thualullc aboot tile aubetltute, willbing to
conUnue ne1o1Jatlona.
.
Beller plan on gettln( up a 1 ...
minutes esrller TueadllJ' becaUM ll
!be late evenfnl log ton1*hl wlll
tum Into early morning log. Other-:
wise mosUy sunny ikJes Tuesdq 1 with highs along tht coast at II 1
rising to !a Inland. LoWI SMI.
INStDE TODi\ Y I
Litttl Tonv C01teUo wci con.-
f intdJ.oJiU room. but Rottmorie
McCanltU roamed tht .rtrt•tl for
autograph! during tht quiet dvil
rlgohU march Sundag fn N1w711,,
North Ireland, Ste itory Page '4.
l . M. ...... 11 ···""' ,, c:1u1or1111 ,
c11"11... n.n (lmlh 11
C:tKt'"" II OMIJI •tkts II lllllltrill ..... •
ll'lltt!llll-t 11 ••ne-1•1•
'"' Ille ...... 11 ......... ..
"'"" L.-. 11 Mfflitl ,,
N1llonal .......... on• cw11ty 11 1.,,., .. ...,. 11 '""" ,,.,. lttc'" .... ,.,... ,.,.
T.itvillM 11
Tlltltt" 11 ,._ . w..._-, ..._ ,,.,, .... .... ...
\
'
• 2 DAILY PILOT Mondi)', Ftbruar)' 7, 1972 ----'-
Educated Con
William Heirens, 43. who has served 26 years of three consecutive
life sentences for murder. marches in with his classmates to graduate
from Lewis Co!Jege, Ill. The Stateville Priso n inmate wore h is cap and
gown to become the first prisoner in Ill inols to receive a bachelor's
degree.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Mrs. Sperline Elected
By Young· Republicans
A Newport Beach businesswoman ac-
tive in the drive to register the 18 to 21·
year-old voters was elected chairman ol
the California Young Republicans Sun.-
day.
1tfrs. Elizabelh Sperline. 35. president
and founder of lnternationa\ Produ ct
Management l nc., a New)Xlrt Beach im-
porting flrm, received 130 of the 235 votes
at the CYR convention in San Francisco.
She is also treasurer of Coast and
Sperline, a machine parts company in
Los Angeles and resides with her hus-
band, Vergil . and their four chlldren in
Hu ntington Park.
She ran on a conservative slate and
defeated Terry Harper, 32, a J-lanford ln·
surance man.
Both Harper and Mrs. Sperline had
pledged support for the Nixon-Agnew
ticket on the November ballot.
But Mrs. Sperline, who said she is half·
Che rokee and concerned wilh Indian af-
fairs. emphasized makil._: the Republican
Party "more attractiv e to the 18 to 21·
year-olds.''
She ha s been co-ehairman of the youlh
committee for the Los Angeles County
Republican commitlee for l\.•,.o years nnd
wants to expand her act1v11ics s!atcy.·idc.
She also said hl'r prograrn would in-
clude "candida1e dcvc!opn1cnt, establish-
ment of scholarships to the natlonal and
regional Republican lcildC'rship training
conferences and a registration dril'e
among non-college students and school
dropouts."
Those elected along with Mrs. Spcrlinc
included Maureen Reagan, 31, of Los
Angeles. daughter of Gov. Ronald
OIAllGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
~ COAST PUBUSKINO CXWJ'AX"f
fl:oe.r+ H. Wo.d
..,...,"" -~ f'lltlili..lw
Jo,k R. C11fo'f va ,.,..,,.,,, and ~·r MantQW
ThO'"lt X:••Yil Eailor
Tlto.,.11 A. MurpJ1i11•
M1M11lo11 Ed!Nr
A!111 Dlrki"
Wiit D1111g1 Qutity £dn.
H 111t{ .. t911 .._. Office
17176 e.1,h lo11lov1rcl
M1i1i119 AddrMt! P.O. lu. 7'0, 92MI ..... ..-
....-~ ...... ,..._
0:.1 ""-• --== '""" ......, 9oot911 .. 7 5 ..
a.~----UC.-....
°'tt." l'TU)T, .,... 'M'lld'I " COl'l'tl ... "'-...,...,.,. .. '' ,.,..,,,.,., Q ny .... c..:it '"""' •r ""' _.,.N t'lll'loft9 for UOIM• 111(1\o H..,..,i l4Kh. C...11 ,..,.._, t11111T1rtu""
a.di, 1'°"'"101'1 Y1!~, ""'n ("'"*'I'll
C.pll,,_ Piii hddleti.CI(. oi..o "'111'1 -
t ll1Ma5 lidlt*'-l"•lflC IPtl ~lr\TI"' PIW i.
et a w.r ..., '""t. c..ra .........
, ........ (7141 '4J:-4J11
Cl••.,.,. MntflM1t '42·5'71
C\IHI'-""" °""°" Cont l"lltllhllllt ~ .... ~ •!Or\t\, 111 ... 1ru......_ .. ,.,.r ,.....,. or .........,,,_" '*'"" ..., ... ~ .. 1.,.,.. l!l*lil ,..... ..................... ................. " ..... ~
... c.a ,...... ~ """'°"'"" w _...., .. !""""' .., -11 a.n _.,.,...., ~ lUf .....,.,
Reagan.
~1 iss Reagan was elect ed a national
committeewoman.
Conservalives "''on all but one of the
major state offices.
Michael Dahl of Redd ing, runn ing as an
independent , defeated Lewis Wiener of
San Francisco for Northern California ex·
ttlltive vice-president by a vole of JlS to
107.
Gov. Reagan spoke to the convention
Saturday night as asked CYR to "explode
the Democratic myth."
lie said the "myth" was the idea that
the Democtatic Party is the "party of !he
common man. the liberals. and the defen-
ders of indiv idual freedom."
He also called on the members to sup-
port the President's upcoming China trip.
Authorities Say
Driver Threatens
Officer at Beach
Huntington Beach police today "'ere
holding a Garden Grove carpenter who
allegedly pointed a concealed revolver at
an officer Fnday \l'hilc the policeman
y.•rote hi1n a traffic tickel
(;ary D. Cross, 33, w&s scheduled for
;.irraignment lodciy 1n \Vest Orange
County Judicial Dist ric t Court. He was
jailed Friday night on suspicion of
assault with a deadly weapon on a police
officer, possession of a concealed weapon
and assault with intent lo commit
murder.
Officer Rodger h1altby and Off icer
Gary Kircher, who provided backup
assistance, said they disarmed Cross: at
gunpoint after discovering he was: car·
rying a loaded, .22-caliber revolver in his
jacket pocket.
Maltby said Cross had his hand inside
his jacket pocket. The weapon, the officer
said, was cocked and ready lo fire .
The motorcycle officer said he had
slopped the carpenter and was citing him
for an excessive am oun t of iimoke being
emitted by his: pickup truck when he
noticed the wea pon.
2 Anaheim Men
On Plane Killed
Federal aviation safety experts today
were probing the crash or a rented plane
into Lake Arrowhead Saturday. The planfl
carried four men, including two from
Anaheim to their death& ln 30 feet of
water.
Bodies of the occupants were dragge:d
from the bottom of Blue Boy Bay by
divers for the: San Bernardino County
Sheriff's Office.
Ludwi g V. Stein. 49, Anaheim , was 11t
the controls when the 1lngle-engine Piper
Cherokee crashed.
Kiiied with him were Joseph Lllcii, JD,
al so of Anah eim ; Richard Ja_s\nsky, 30,
Fremont, Ca lif .. an d Ardell S. Drltensen,
19, or Minnellota .
The vlctlms were nying to a Colorado
River rel!Orl area In Ule plal'lfl rented by
Tr i Aviation Services of FuTierton, ln-
vegU&aton aid.
Costa,.Mesa
' Entertaine1·
Gun Victim
By ARTHUR R. VINSEi.
01 lh• D•Uy 1"11111 SIU!
A pop JTiusic duo drawing crowds Lo a
Costa Mesa nlght t:!ub where they began
only two weeks ago was tragically broken
up early .)unday, when a dispute led to
the slaying of one member at his home.
The killing Of John J . Bren!, UI, who
bled to death after being shot ln the groin
as his horrified wife wa tched, had no
local connection, investigators said today.
One man among several .Brent chas·
tised for creating a disturbance at I.he
four-unit Highla11d Park apartment& he
managed is in custody today, booked on
murder charges.
He was identified as William Riddle 21
also of Highland Pa rk. ' '
Brent and his artner. Jerry Lambeth,
ha ve been playing at the Black Knight ,
330 E. J7th St., as lhe Jerry Larnbeth
Duo.
The victim and his wife Mickie, 22.
returned to the Los Anf(eles suburb aft er
the club closed early Sunday morning and
were drinking hot chocolate in the ki t-
chen before going to bed, investigators
said.
Several rnen apparently wind ing up a
party at the old tenement-like structure
began creating too much noise outside,
according to homicide detectives.
Going out to investigate, Brent tried to
quiet the group and became involved in
an argument which gradually grew more
heated, police :said.
Detective Sgt. Glenn Bordemann, of the
LAPD homicide division, said Brent the n
returned for a .22 caliber rifle and his
German Shepherd dog.
His wife, meanwhile, was calling police
to as k help in quieting the noisy gang
()utside .
"He poked his head oul the door and
told them again to 'make it.' " Sgt.
Bordemann said in re counting the fata l
feud .
One of th e men allegedly involved drew
what investigators believe was a .38
caliber pistol and fired once through a
window, striking Brent in the groin area.
"We haven't recovered the gun yet,"
Sgt. Bordemann said.
Brent collapsed and bled to death on
the dining room floor.
A spokesman at the Black Knight said
this morning that Brent and his partner
had just been booked about two weeks
ago for entertainment six nig hts a week.
The twt>-man combo had been drawing
crowds and was well-received by patrons
who enjoyed their music for dancing.
"Isn't it somethimg else? What a
traga"ty ... " their employer said today
of Brent's murder.
Fro1n Page 1
UNIFY ...
School at a maximum capacity of 1,100 in
1975 howe ver, the proposed Huntington
Beach Unified High Schoo l Dislric t still
has more than 1.000 more seats than
pupi ls. according lo Riles' fig ures. while
the other dislricts included in the plan
are a Iota! of 1,400 seats short.
Officials from Fountain Valley and
Ocean View School Districts hail ed Riles'
recommendation_
"We finally have a report from a
responsi ble party," said Founta in Valley
Superintendent ~1ichacl Brick . "The
State Department of Education has done
what the county committee on School
District Orga nization failed to do. That
is, they have conducted a survey and
\'erified the facts."
In hi.~ recommendation to the state
Board of Education , Riles said that "none
of the proposed districts meet the criteria
of the slate Education Code" on the issue
of financial support.
Riles reported that the proposed ~lun
ting lon Beach Unified School District
woul d have an average a_ssessed valua-
tion of $16,946 per child, while the pro--
posed Ocean View-Fountain Va 11 e y
district woul d have an average assessed
valuation of $7.037 per child. The iitate
Education Code sets the maximWTI
allowable deviation at 10 percent
"Finally, someone has come along who
can add two plus two a11Jd not come up
with 24," Brick said.
"The recommendation of the state
Department of Education supports what
we've been saying all along." said
Clarence Hall. superintendent of the
Ocean View School District. "It (fourway
plan ) serves very Well the purposes or
the people who propo!ed it, but It i!I
devastating to the overwhelming ma ·
jority of the people in the old high school
district.
"It is inconceivable lo me that the
iitate Boa.rd could approve a plan that IO
drastically fails to meet the requlrt:mentl
or the law," Hall said.
Sunken Ship's
Owner Hunt;ed
LOS ANGELES (APl -Authorities
were attempting to find the owner of an
unmanned cabin cnliser found awash at
a_ea off Marina de\ Rey .
Harbor Patrol officials aald Sunday
that apparently someone tried to acutUe
the boat, which had holell punched In Ill
hull and its spark plugs removed.
The boat was spotted with just the bow
11nd the top of I.ht cabin above w•ter by
Charles L. Mendola of Van Nuy1 who
towed It to Manna del Rey and told
authoriUes.
UPI T•lophOll
f)iffere11t Dr11111111e r
'fhe ;'different drummer" cited
by Henry Thoreau may be wi th
the Leamington, Ontario RoyaJ
Canadian Legion Bagpipe Band.
As the New Orleans festivities
got under way, this drummer
had fellow veterans in step with
h im, except perhaps in hair-
styles.
Airborne Police
Rus1i Rare Blood
To Coast Victirn
Airborne po!ice and other lawmen
throughout Orange and Los Angeles coun-
ties combined efforts early today on
mercy missions to collect rather rare
blood for a hemorrhaging emergency
surgery victim in Newport Beach.
Helicopter pilot! working in shill<; flew
thret blood runs, 0!1e of them a return
trip after a hospital in Anaheim sent the
wrong blood type the first time.
A desperate hu nt vi a southland police
radio networks turned up three on-duty
lawmen with the same type 0-negative
blood, but their donations were not need·
ed.
The drama involving pa ti ent Eli Bra-
bant. 61 , of 1586 Santa Ana Ave., Costa
Mesa , began about 1 a.m., when Hoag
Memorial Hospita l spokesmen call ed
Newport Beach police for help.
Brabant "''as undergoing major surgery
when his aorta, the body 's primary
artery. burst, according to \Vatch Com·
mander Lt. Kelson McDaniel.
The somewhat uncommon type 0-
negative blood had been located .at two
Anaheim hospitals, but the timing was
critical.
Dispatched al I: 10 a.m., th e
department's Adam 2 helicopter with Of·
ficer .Jim Golfos at the controls headed
inland to make the blood pickup and
delivery aided by Anahe im police who
had It waiting at headquarters.
Life appeared to be ebbing for Brabant,
who is self-employed as an electr ic al
engineer in Santa Ana .
Delivering the blood upon landing at
the I loag Men1orial Hospital parl<lng lot,
Of1fcer Golfos was r elieved by a second
pilot, Officer James Bradley.
Shortly afterward. Hoag Hospital of-
ficials issued a second de sperate appeal
when it was discovered one of the two
Anaheim hospitals had sent the wr ong
type of blood.
Irving Cue
Mystery Blonde ·.
Next to Surface \
J\'E\V YO llK ! AP J -Another 1nyste ry
won1an. this onE' a blonde scuba driver.
ha s surfaced in the Clifford Irving-
Jl oy.·ard Hughes saga
1'ht• v.01nan, idcnllfied only 11.s Ann
Ba .~tt:r, f!cw l'o'llh Irving last December
to St Croix in the \1irgin Islands and
gave him scuba les sons while he .,,,,as
there 111 what he said was an attempt to
conta t·t Hui.:hes Life magazine said Sun-
d;,y _
In a L'Ourt paper filed last monlh,
noveli st Irving . 41. sw ore he flew to St.
Croix from l\1ian1i last Dec. JO on in-
structions of a Hughes aide, who told him
the billionaire would meet him there for
a final session about Hu g h es •
"autobiography.··
Irving said he stayed on SL Croix until
Dec. 12. but when no message came from
Hu ghes, he left.
Hughes. '~ho hasn't been seen in public
for a decade and is sald to live as a
recluse in the Bahan1as, has denied evrr
mccl1ng !rving and labeled the Irving·
produced ":1utobiogri-lphy" a fak e ,
l·lughes' di sclai1ners can1e fro1n a vo ice
identified as his in a telephone news con·
feren ce, and in court affidavits allegedly
signt'd by Hughes .
Another beautiful woman. Nina van
l)allandt, a J9-year-0ld Danish cabaret
singer, said last week she was with Irv·
ing when he went lo Mexico last
February.
His story that he met Hughes on that
From Page 1
IRVING ...
were deposited and later withdrawn from
a Swiss bank by his wife who opened an
account as Helga R. Hughes'.
On Saturday, Swiss authorities issued
an arrest warran t for Mr s. Irving in con·
nection with possible fra ud and forgery
chargcs.
Suskind. left Spain aboard an Iberia
airliner for New York today to appear
before the gra nd jury. He was served a
subpoena at his l\1allorca home Friday
and ordered lo appear with all his note s,
tapes and othe r material he might have
collected for the book.
On the Spanish island of 1biza. po lic e
searched the home of a friend of Irving·s,
Gerald Albertini. Albertini , a wealthy
American, told newsmen last week he
once kept Irving's man uscript of the
Hughes book for the author for about 10
days.
Albe rtini's wile said the police "found
nothing at all.''
trip ''flabbergasted " her. :.he said . She
was quoted as 5aying she knew of no "'ay
Irvin~ could have 1ne~ with Hughes dur·
in~ that lr 111
fltrs. van Pal!andt. l'!i1r:ui~cd wire or ll
JJUll'h baron. !1 vt·~ on the Span1 s/1
fllcditerranean island of Ibiza. 11·here tbe
Jr vl ngs also reside.
Lire, which pictured i\lrs 1ein Pal!;indt
on t!S co ver this wcC'k . quotrs an Ibiz a
resident as :.ay!ng ··"·hcnevcr l\ina·!I
name \l.'il.S ment1on1::d, Edith clunbed the
wall."
~
Hug h es-1narked
Transc ript Said
18 Years 01(1
NI-:\\' \'OHK I ~P l I -A lra11f'Cr1pl "'Jlh
n1argi11<1l no!('s 1n Ho11'<1rd llu~hcs'
handwriting Cliford Irving used as prool
that an autob iography of the billionair11
11·as au!hentic n1ay h(· 18 ~·C'ars old .
Ney.·sweek rnagazine l1as rcporlC'd .
An agent of lntcrle[. Hughes' .In-
telligence network, clai1ned t he
lranscripl originally may have been us-
ed as the basis for a long profile an
ll ughes that appeared in Look magazine
in 1954, Newsweek said Sunday.
Stephen White, who wrote the LOOk
article. confirmed that tape s aiid
transcripts were made of hi s Hughes in·
terviews in 1954, Newsweek said. and that
he thought he remem bered that Hughes
had made h a n d w r i t t e n corrections.
material however. said he thought all lhat
maicrial had been burned years ago.
Ir ving. who showed the transcript to
h1 cGraw-Hi!I Book Co. to prove that he
met .,.._·ith Hughe s in a series of in-
terviews, appeared before a federal
grand jury today .
Mcanl't'hilc, a filrn ctocun1cntary in
1rhich lr\'ing appeared in 1969 on French
television y.·as shown Sunday night on the
CBS-TV progran1 "Sixty ~1inutes ."
The film .,.._.as made on the subject of
maste r art forger F.lymr De Hory on
"·hon1 Irving based a book called
"Fake." Irv ing said in the fil1n :
"All the world loves to see the experts
and the establishment made a fool oL
And everyone likes lo feel that those who
set themselves up as expert s are really
just as gullible as anyone else."
Another character in "Fake,' art dealer
Fernand Legros. is suing Irving here for
$55 million, claiming he was libeled in the
book.
From Page I
TR_A.ILS REPORT
and objectives of the trails committee,
has been subn1ittcd for the council's con-
sideration tonight.
h1ajor points outlined in the report in-
cluded :
-All local trail plans shou ld be
coordinated "''ith county plans and those
of neighboring cities.
-Bicycle trails will link major educa-
tional centers, parks. the civic center and
recreational areas such as the beach.
-Foot paths should provide a variety
of terrain and be connected to high
schools and Golden West College , with
considerable use or larger parks.
-Equestrian trails should link stable
areas in J·lunlington Reach with !he coun-
l.V trail system along the Santa Ana
River . using off.street easements where
possible.
-T\l'o or three phases of development
<tf'(' proposed .
The $138,000 and 1.12 miles cover the
first phase of the trails plan. ~mmittee
members have not outlined details of
future phases. though a major portion
wou ld jnvolve the central park.
• ••
Committee members determined th-e
need for 132 miles of trails by
establishing a goal of 25 miles of bike
trails, 25 mile s of foot paths and five
mil.es of equestrian Ja nes for each 25,000
residents. Current city population ls
about 130,000.
The trails committee al so revealed a
few interesting possibilities for financing.
For instance : slate gas tax funds might
be used to build bicycle lanes, if such
lanes ca n be considered for a highway
purpose.
Or : impose a tax on bicycles and bicy-
cle parts sold w1th1n the city, then use the
funds for !he bike trails.
The report cstimates some R0,000 bicy-
cle owners live and ride 1n Huntington
Beach. that nearly 500 cross count ry run-
nC'rs could use the foot pa1hs (besideo;
ordinary hikers 1. ;ind the city contains
700 horses and 2.00U riders.
Committee members also are asking
the council to formally establish a
recreational trail s comn1ittee to carrv
out the master planning of the proposed
lrails system .
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EXl'!RT WATCH
REl'AIR DONE
ON l'flEMISE
l
I
''
Nixon Inks
Campaign
Fu1idBill
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
an today 11igned a federa1 election spend·
Ing refonn bill designed to plug finance
reporting loopho les and curb rising cam-
paign costs.
The measure, Nixon said in a state-
ment. "is a realistic and enforceable bill,
an important step forward in an area
which has been of greal public conet'm."
In his three-paragraph statement, Nix-
Cln noted the legislation limits the amount
candidates for Congress and president
may spend on advertising, and requires
full reporting of both the sources and
wes of campaign funds.
"By glving the American public full ac-
cess to the {acts of polilical financing ,''
the President said, "this legislation will
guard against campaign al:uses and will
work to build public confidence tn the in-
tegrity of the electoral process."
Nixon vetoed in 1970 a bill intended to
limit spending on political broadcasting.
e said in today's slate1nent that his ob-
• ction was that the 1970 measure applied
Jy to radio and television and did not
it over.al! costs. But he said the 1972
t is a better bill because it limits spcn·
ng through all con1munications media.
Under the legislation, the limit on a
11 hite House hopeful's radio-TV ad
dget this fall will be set at $8.4 million.
is the first such White llouse campaign
nding ceiling in history.
Limits. calculated on a formula of a
e per potential voter, are applied on
candidates for the presidency, vice
esidency, Senate and•House for their
ding on television, radio, newspaper.
agaz.ine and outdoor advertising and
·cl-telephone campaigns. No more than
Aix cents of each dime can be spent on
broadcast ads.
There would be no over·all limit im-
posed on a candidate's total campaign
spending. The legislation would cover, in·
1tead, what are considered to be the most
expensive and enforceable categories.
Fire Destroys
Junior High's
Locker Room
Fire destroyed a $60,000 girls locker
and shower room al Lathrop Jwiior High
School, 1100 S. Main St, in Santa Ana ear·
ly today. A classroom building at the
same school was broken into during the
night, police reported.
Fire and police investigators are prob-
'ng the blaze and break in today. They
hinted that arson may be involved. A
police patrolman spotted smoke pouring
from the building about 1 a.m.
The Lathrop school has been the scene
of disturbances: i11 the past few years. Its
main building was demolished two years
ago because it failed to meet earthquake
safety standards.
· Four firemen were injured, none
teriously, fighting the blaze. Six fire com·
panics with 28 men under the direction of
Battalio n Chief John Mahany fought the
costly fire for an hour.
Both the locker room and classroom
are the relocatable type, principal Dr.
P at Kennedy said. He reported that utili·
ty service to the school has been cut off
but that classes are being held as usual.
Wititer Wonderland
Picture of Jack Jo~rost's delicate handiwork looks as
if it might have been taken in the Midwest or East.
It \vasn't. It \vas lakcn in South Laguna in the yard
of landscape architect Jo~red Lang. Lang said that
someone forgot and left the sprinklers on overnighl
Nature's landscape archi tecture -t emporary in
this instance -Lang found most in1pressive. So
did we.
County Crashes 3 Die • Ill
Traffic Carnage Continues; Lagunan A1nong F awls
Three persons, including a Laguna
Beach medical secretary were killed in
Orange County traffic over the weekend,
the coroner's office reported.
A Sunday night crash in San Clemente
killed one man and injured two others as
flaming gasoline spewed across the
freeway.
The. dead:
Kathleen Suzanne Collett, 22, ol 2052 1h:
S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach.
Harry D. Johnson, 56 of Los Angeles.
Chee Woody, 41 , of Prewitt, Ne\\I" Mex-
ico.
Mrs. Collett. secretary to a Newport
Beach physician, died at South Coast
;-__ ~; fl ospital at 9:30 a.m. Satur-
day following the 8: 10 a .m. accident in
which her car went out of control and
crashed into a power pole on £1 Morro
curve, just north 0£ Laguna. The
California flighway Patrol reported that
she was ejected from her small car.
Johnson was killed instantly Sunday
evening when his car traVi?ling south on
the San Diego Freeway at the El Camino
overcrossing in San Clemente went out of
control and careened across the unguard-
ed center strip.
Highway patrolmen said the auto slam·
med into a northbound car driven by Ray
M. Spriggs, 21, of Beverly Hills and the
Nixon Eyes Manpower Bid
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on today renewed his request that
Congress enact a S'2 billion manpower
revenue-eharlng program, contendint
that the decade-old federal job training
effort suffers "from a hardening of
governmental arteries."
"We have not bridged the gap between
the promises and the performance of
federal manpower programs," Nixon said
in a message to Congress. "Something
better is needed ... "
The President urged approval of
legislation he proposed last year to
replace the dozen separate manpower
training programs with a single umbrella
program which would funnel $1.7 billion
to state and local governments I.he first
year.
Another $300 million would be used by
the Labor Department for national ac-
tivities.
"All those represented in the current
array of patchwork manpower programs
-the schools, private employers, public
acenclea, non-profit goups. not to men-
tion the unemployed workers -know
that the present system is not delivering
the jobs, the training, and the other man-
power services thst this nation needs,"
Nixon said.
The federal funds would be divided
among state and local governments "us-
ing a formula based on the size of their
!abor force and the nwnbers of
unemployed and disadvantaged," Nixon
said.
The program would authorize such
services as remedial education, on·lh~
job training, short-term employment for
teenagers and the elderly, and transi-
tional public service employment at all
levels of government, he said.
force of the crash ripped out the J ohnson
car's gas tank and sent it &kidding down
the freeway, spreading burning gasoline
over a wide area.
Spriggs, San Clemente police said. was
pinned in his sma!I compact coupe for
s eve r a I minutes. A passenger in
Johnson's car, Ezequiel Garcia.Rico, 40
of Tijuana, was ejected. The crash oc~
curred at 7:45 a.m.
Both su rvivors suffe.red severe cuts and
other major injuries and were treated at
Mission Community Hospital, patrolman
said.
The blazing crash occurred at a chronic
traffic trouble spot on the freeway, where
no center protection is provided. State
engineers are studying the area on re-
quest of local authorities.
The crash obliterated the main section
of Johnson's car, leaving it an empty
shell.
Woody , an American Indian from the
Borrega Pass Trading Post, New Mexico,
was killed in Placentia Friday night when
he ran Jnto tbe JJ'th of a car driven by
Donald H. NeaJ. !!, of Anaheim, police
reported. The victim was a trackman
with the Santa Fe Railroad.
POLISH JOKE?
SUTI'ON, England (UPI) -Evelyn ·
Gale opened a new jar of pickles to find a
note inslde written in Polish. Thinking it
was an SOS, she called a P olish
translater. The note was from one Polish
woman worker to another in the factory,
warning that a man was trying to seduce
her daughter in the pickling 11hecl.
~.-.. --... --
MondiJ, F"tbl'Llary 7, 1~72 H DAILY PILOT :J
'Aiding Enemy'
Viet Peace Bid
Critics Attacked
By Uait.ed Press la&.ernatlonal
PresldenUal aide lf. R. Haldeman said
today that some critics of President Nix·
on's Vietnam peace proposals were
"consciously aiding and abetting" the
CommunlsLs.
Haldeman. one of Nixon's key advisers
often described as "chief of staff'' at the
White House. said, "I th ink I.here is the
question here sometimes of pulhng
partisanship above peace."
Haldeman did not mention names but
left little doubt he meant M>me of the
Democratic presidtnliaJ candidates when
he said:
"Parlisan critics are consciously aiding
and abetting the enemies of the United
States ... \\'e have a very clear offer
out.
Sen. Cranston
Lauds Nixon
Mideast Plan
President Nixon drew praise Sunday
from U.S. Senator Alan Cranston for
what the Califo rnia Democrat said was
the chief execut ive's "extremely skillful"
handling of the explosive Middle East
situation.
But it is vital, Crasnton added at a
meeting of the Un ited Jewish Welfare
Fund of Orange County, that "Nii on
must insure that Israel is given full
diplomatic support to go with the
weapons she needs to maintain the
Mideast balance of power ."
Without that, Cranslon warned at the
day-long Anaheim session. Russia will
abandon her behind the scenes support of
Egypt lo take on a more active role and
step in lo crush Israel.
"Israel will never get her recognized
borders without America's fu\I diplomatic
backing," Cranston said. "She needs that
plus our continued economic and military
aid until a sound peace applicable to
Israel and all her neighbors i s
established.
"America is !he hope of the world and
it is tragic that we are not doing all we
might," Cranston told applauding United
Jewish Welfare Fund supporters.
Turning to South Vietnam. Cranston
warned his audience that it is hardly
possible to compare the Southeast Asian
conflict with the simmering Middle East
crisis that has already produced two
wars.
a. Mid hJnory compela "' lo _.
Israel whereas no 1uch traditional link
should lead us to back South Vietnam.
Cranston characterized South Vietnam
as a "purely civil war" in which more
than 55,000 Americans have been killed.
No American lives have been Jost Jn
Israel, he said, "where the beleagered
Israelis are our allies and not. as in South
Vietnam, a corrupt mi I J ta r y dic-
tatorship."
Cranston said the Vietnam conflict has
cost the U.S. more than $150 billion and
the total Is likely lo exceed more than $1
trillion before it is over.
"Israel pays for her ~nomic aid,"
Cranston said, "and sbe asks only that we
provide it to help her defend what are
also American interesls in the Middle
East."
•·Jt makes all the points that the critic!
have sought except one -putting a Como
munist government in South Vietnam.
The only co nclusion yot1 can draw now i!
that the President's critics want to put a
Communist government in Saigon."
Haldeman repeated under questlonin~
l~e .<'harge of some cri_t1cs "Cilnsciously'
atdtng Communists "1n this particular
posture.·•
He was interviewed on the NBC-TV T(;
day Sho"·
The 1nterv1ew was rerorded sevtr; I
da_ys ago hut reflected slrong ad
m1n1stra1ton reRclion to criticism of th••
Jan. 25 Nixon peace plan, much of it bv
Sens. Edmund S. ~1uskie of ~1aine anit
George S. ~·lcGovern of Sout h Dakota.
Senate Democratic Leader ~I 1 k e
1-lansfield criticized l/aldernan's state.:
ment .
"Tbe First Amendmrnl sl1ll stands and
freedom of speech is still aJlowed ·• ~Iansfield told reporters. "As far as I a~1
concerned, 11ny senator w·111 be protectert
in hi.~ ri,(!ht of frcr express ion.''
Sen. Alan Cranston ( 0-Calif. ), told :1
reporter, when asked about Haldeman'l
remarks
. ··it sounds li ke the old Nixon re·emerg·
rng for the 1972 campai~n.
..Nixon fttls on the defensive about a
possible enemy attack coming up 1n
South Vietnam." Cranston said. "So he's
taking Lhe offens ive here at home. That ·3
typical of Nixon.'•
Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott
however. said that "some of th~
Democratic candidates are using strong
language'' and they cou ld ezpect strong
language in reply.
Scott said that except for Sens. Hubert
H. Humphrey and Henry M. Jackson,
Democratic candidates had b e e n
violating .. the Vandenberg tradition that
politics stops at the water's edge."
He was referring to the late Sen .
Arthur Vandenberg (R·Mich. ). chairman
of. the Senate Foreign Relations Com-
mittee and an architect of the nation's
hipartisan foreign policy after Wo rld War
JI
One of the Democratic Candidates, Sen.
~enry M. J~ck~ of Washington. con-
tinued to cr1tlc1ie party rivals ror at-
tacking the Nixon peace plan. while
Eugene J. !\.fcCarlhy chided Muskie for
his record with respect to Vietnam
policy.
2 Stragglers
Seen in Guam
TOKYO (AP) -A PQ!lco /lJ·
speetor from Guam said today ttiat
two more per110ns believed to Mo
World War II Japanese llO\dlen
have been spotted in the jungles of
Guam.
H. G. &hartr told a committee of
the Japanese Parliament the men
were seen in. July and October,
1969, and again last Dec. 20 about
71h miles east of l\gana, the capital
of Guam.
Scharff came to Tokyo Thursday
lo report to the Japanese about I.he
finding of Shoichi Yokoi, the former
army sergeant captured Jan. 24
after Jiving in a jungle hideout on
Guam for 28 years. He is recup-
terating in a Tokyo hospital.
El Rancho has the hottest price in town!
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2 DAILY PILOT Mondly, FtbrU1ry 7, 1972
·-•
Educated Con
William Heirens, 43, who has served 26 years of three consecutive
life sentences for n1u rde r, marches in with his classmates to graduate
from Lewis College, Ill. The Stateville Prison inmate wore his cap and
gown to become the first priso ner in Illinois to receive a bachelor's
degree.
~~~~~~~~~-
Mrs. Sperline Elected
By Young· Republicans
A Newport Beach businesswoman ac·
tive in the drive to regi."lter the 18 to 21-
year-old voters was elected chairman o{
the California Youn g Republicans Sun-
day.
Mrs. Elizabeth SpcrlinC', 35. presiden t
and founder of Jnternational Product
Managemerit Jnc., a Newport Beach im-
porting firm, received 130 oft-he 235 votes
at the CYR convention in San f•'rancisco.
She is also trea!>urer of Coast and
Sperline, a mach ine parts company in
Los Angeles and resides with her hus-
band, Vergil, and their four children in
Huntinglon Park.
She ran on a conservative slate and
defeated 1'er ry Harper. 32, a Hanford in-
surance man.
Both llarper and Mrs. Sperline had
pledged suppo rt for the Nixon-Agnew
ticket on the November ballot.
But Mrs. Spcrline. who :;aid she is half.
Cherokee and concerned with Indian af-
fairs, emphasized maki1._; the Republican
Party "more attractive to the 18 to 2t-
yea r-olds.''
She has been co-chairman of the youth
committee for the Los Angeles Count y
Republican cnn1mi!lec for l"•o years and
wan ts to expand her ac!1vit1rs ~late"·ide.
She also said h('r progra1n '"'·ou!d in-
clude "candidate development. estahlish-
menl of scholarships to the national find
regi ona l Republ ican lc<1dership training
conferences and a registration drive
among non-college student s and school
dropouts."
Those elected along with r.1rs. Sperlinc
included Maureen Reagan, 31, of Uts
Ang eles, daughter of Gov. Ronald
01.AMI COAlf
DAILY PILOT
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M•"'9il>9 (.-.:lllllr
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H•llfl' .. to11 .... Offk•
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Reagan.
Miss Reagan was elected a national
committeewoman.
Conservatives won all but one of the
major .state offices.
Michael Dahl of Redding, running as :in
independent, defeated Lewis Wiener of
San Francisco for Northern California ex-
ecutive vice-president by a vote of l-'.5 to
107.
Gov. Reagan spoke to the convention
Satu rday night as asked CYR to "explode
the Democratic myth."
He said the "myth" was the idea that
the Democratic Party is the "party of the
common man, the liberals, and the defen-
ders of individual freedom."
tie also called on the n1embers to sup-
port the President's upcoming China trip.
Authorities Say
Driver Threatens
Officer at Beacl1
Huntington Beach police today "'ere
holding a Garden Grove carpenter who
allegedly pointed a concealed revolver Rt
an officer Frid;iy \.\'hlle the policem11n
\.\TOie h1n1 a trafl1 c 11c1:et
c;a ry J). Cross, 33, was scheduled for
Arraignment lodfty in \Vest Orange
County Judicial Disl rict Court. l-le was
Ja iled Friday night on suspicion of
assault with a deadly weapon on a police
officer. possession of a concealed weapon
and assault with intent to commit
murder.
Officer Rodger f\.laltby and Officer
Gary Kirch er, who provided backup
assistance. said they disarmed Cros.!I at
gunpoint after discovering he was. ca:-
rying a loaded .. 22-caliber revolver in his
jacket pocket.
Ma ltby .said Cross had his hand inside
his jacket pocket. The weapon, the officer
said. was cocked and ready to fire .
The motorcycle officer said he had
stopped the carpenter and was citing him
for an excessive amount of smoke being
emitted by his pickup truck when he
noticed the wea pon.
2 Anaheim Men
On Plane Killed
Federal aviaLion safety erperta today
were probing the crash of 11 rented plane
into Lake Arrowhead Saturday. The plane
carried four men, including two from
Anaheim to their deaths in 30 feel of
water.
Bodies of the occupants were dragged
from the botlom of Blue Boy Bay by
diver!; for the San Bernardino County
Sheriff's Office.
Ludwig V. Sttln, 411. Anaheim. was at
the controls when the single-engine Piper
Cherokee crashed.
Killed with him were Joseph Liies. 39,
also of An11heim ; Rlrharrl Jasinsky, 30,
i.·remont, CAiif., 11.nd Ardell S. Dritensen,
49. of Minntsota.
The victims were fl ying lo 1 Colo r11do
River resort area In the plane rented by
Tri Avl1Uon Services of Fullerton, bl·
vestlptw "Id.
Costa Mesa
Entertainer
Gun Victim
By ART HUH It VINSl<.:L
01 1nt 0•111 ,116! Stoll
A pop music duo drawing cro~·ds to a
Costa Mesa night club where they bega n
only two weeks ago wa s tragically broken
up early ~unday . when a dispute led to
the slaying of one n1ember at his home.
'I'he killing of John J. Brent. 2ll. who
bled lo death after being shot in the groin
as his horrified wire watched, had no
local connection, investigators said today.
One man among several Br-ent cha!l-
tised for creating a disturbance at the
four-unit Highla11d Park apartmenrs he
managed is in custody toda y, booked on
murder charges.
He was identified as William Riddle , 21,
also of Highland Park.
Brent and his artner. Jerry La mbeth,
have been playing al the Black: Knight,
330 E. 17th St.. as the Jerry Lambeth
Duo.
1'he vi(•Lin1 and his wife Mickie, 22,
returned to the L<:ls Anji!;eles subu rb af!i::r
!he club closed early Su nday morning and
were drinking hot chocol ate in !he kit-
chen before going to bed. inv estigators
sa id.
Several men apparently winding up a
party at the old tenemenl·like structure
.began creating too much noise outside,
according to homicide detectlves.
Going out to investigate, Brent tried to
quiet the group and became involved in
an argument which gradually grew more
heated, police said.
Detective Sgt. Glenn Bordema nn, of the
LAPD homicide division, said Bren t then
returned for a .22 caliber rifle and his
German Shepherd dog.
His wife, meanwhile, was calling police
to ask help in quie tin g the noisy gang
outside.
"He poked his head oul the door and
told them again lo 'make it.'" Sgt.
Bordemann said Jn recounting the fatal
feud .
One of the men allegedly involved drew
what investigators believe was a .38
caliber pistol and rired once through a
window, striking Brent in the groin area.
"We haven't recovered the gun yet ,''
Sgt. Bordemann said.
Brent collapsed and bled to death on
the dining room floor .
A spokesman al the Black Knight said
this morning that Brent and his partner
had just been booked about two weeks
ago for entertainment six nighl.s a week.
The lw<r-man combo had been drawing
crowds and was well-rect ived by patrons
who enjoyed their music for dancing .
''Isn't it somethimg else? What a
tragedy •.. " their employer .s•id today
of Brent's murder.
From Page 1
UNIFY ...
Sc hool at a maximum capacity of l.100 in
1975 howeve r. the proposed Huntington
Beach Unified High &hool District still
has more than 1,000 more seals than
pupils, according to Riles' figures, while
th e other districts included in the plan
are a total of ~.400 seats short.
Officials from Fountain Valley and
Ocean View School Districts hailed Riles'
recommendation.
'"\Ve finally ha ve a report from a
responsible party." said Fountain Valley
Superinlendent Michael Bri ck. "The
State Department of Education has done
what the county com mittee on School
District Organization failed to do. That
is, they have conducted a survey and
verified the facts.··
In his recommendation lo the stalf
Board of Education. R ile~ said that "none
of the proposed districls meet Lhe criteria
or the state Education Code" on the issue
of financial support.
Riles reported that the proposed Hun-
tington Beach Unified &hool District
would have an average assessed valua-
tion of $16,946 per child, while the pro-
posed Ocean View-Fountain Va 11 e y
di strict would have an average assessed
valuation of $7.037 per child. The atate
Education Code sets the mai:imum
allowable deviation at 10 percenl.
"Finally, someone has come along who
can add two plus two a11d not come up
with 24," Brick said.
"The recommendation of the stale
Dtpartment of Educatio n support! what
we·ve been saying all along," said
Clarence Hall , superintendent of the
Ocean View School District. "It (fourway
plan ) serves ve ry well the purposes of
the people who proposed it, but It is
devastating to the overwhelming ma-
jority of the people in the old high 1chool
dis tri ct.
.. It is inconceivable to me that the
state Board could approve a plan that so
drastically falls to meet the requl.rmnenta
of the law ," Hall said.
Sunken Ship's
Owner Hunt,ed
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Aulhorltl ..
were attempting to flnd the owner of in
unm&nned c&bln cruiser found awash 1t
11ea off Marina de! Rey.
Harbor Patrol officials said Sunday
that apparently someone tried to acuttle
the boat, which had holes punched In Its
hull and Its spark plugs removed .
Tht boal was spotted wllh just lhe bow
and the top of the cabin above water by
Charles L. Mendola of Vin Nuy1 who
towed It to Marina del Rty Ind told
authorities.
UP! l•l•Jl>Olt
Differe11 t f)r11111111er
'fhe "different drummer" cited
by Henry Thoreau may be with
the Leamington, Ontario Royal
Canadian Legion Bagpipe Band.
As the New Orleans festivities
got under way, this drummer
had fellow veterans in step with
him, except perhaps in hair-
styles.
Airborne Police
Rush, Rare Blood
To Coast Victirn
Airborne police and other lawmen
through-Out Orange and Los Angeles coun-
ties combined efforts early toda y on
mercy missions to collect rather rare
blood for a hemorrhaging emergency
surg ery victim in Newport Beach.
HeUcopter pilots working in shifts new
three blood runs, 011e of them a return
trip after a hospital in Anahe im sent the
wrong blood type the first time.
A desperate hunL vi a southland police
radio networks turned up three on-duty
lawmen with the same type 0-negative
blood, but their donations were not need-
ed.
'fhe drama invol ving patient Eli Bra-
bant , 61, of 1586 Santa Ana Ave., Costa
Mesa, began about 1 a.m., wh en Hoag
Mem orial Hospital spokesmen called
Newport Beach police for help.
Brabant was undergoing major surgery
when his aorta, the body·s primary
artery, burst. according to Watch Com-
mander Lt. Kelson McDaniel.
The somewhat uncommon type 0-
negative blood had been located at two
Anaheim hospitals, but the timi ng was
critical .
Dispatched at 1: JO a.m., th e
department's Adam 2 helicopter with Of-
ficer Jim Golfos at the controls headed
inland to n1ake the blood pickup and
delivery aided by Anahetm police 111ho
had it waiting at headquarters.
Life appeared to be ebbing for Brabant,
who is self-employed as an electrical
engineer in Santa Ana .
Delivering the . blood upon landing at
lhc Hoag Men1oria l Hospital parking lot.
Ofifccr Golfos was relieved by a second
pilot, Officer Jan1es Bradley.
Shortly afterward, Hoag Hospitt1l of-
ficials issued a second desperate appeal
when it was discovered one of the two
Anahei m hospitals had sent the wrong
type o! blood.
Fine white colol,
American cut
brilliant.
Sele<:! the mounting
of your choice from
our atock.
Irv ing Case
Mystery Blonde
Next to Surface ··
/\1l::W Y<HlK (Al') -Another n1ystery
wornan, 1his one a blonde scuba driver.
ha s surfaced in the Clifford lrving-
lloward Hughes sag<1
Th<' "·11n1:1n, identified only as An n
Baxter. fll'w with Irving lasl December
lo St Croix in lhe Virgin Islands and
~ave hin1 scuba lessons "'h1!e he \.\'aS
there in what he said was an attempt to
('Ontact J·lughes . Life n1agaz1ne said Sun-
d<.y
In a court paper filed last n1onth.
novelist lr\ling, 41 , swore he flew to St.
Croix from !<.1iami last Dec. 10 on in-
structions of a llughes aide, who told him
the billionaire would meet him there for
a final session about H u g he s '
··autobiography.''
Irving said he stayed on St. Croix until
Dtc. 12, but when no message came from
Hughes, he left.
tlu ghes, who hasn't been seen in public
for a decade and is said to live as a
reclu.~e in the Bahamas, has denied C'ver
1ncel ing Irving and labeled the lrving-
produccd "alltflbiogr:iµhy " ;i fa kc.
Hughes' disclain1ers caine frorn a voice
identified as his in a telephone news con-
ference. and in court affidavits allegedly
signed by Hughes.
Another beautifu l woman , Nina van
Pal!andt, a 39-year--0ld Danish caba ret
singer. said last week she was with Ir\"·
ing when he went to Mexico last
February.
His story that he met Hughes on that
From Page 1
IRVING •..
were deposi ted and later withdrawn from
a Swiss bank by his wife who opened an
account as Helga R. Hughes.
On Saturday, Swiss authorities issued
an arrest wa rrant for Mrs. Irving in con-
nection with possible fraud and forgery
charges.
Suskind. left Spain aboard an Iberia
airliner for Ne w York today to appear
before the grand jury. He was served a
subpoena at his Mallorca home Friday
and ordered to appear with all his notes,
ta pes and other material he might have
collected for the book.
On the Spanish island of Ibiza, police
searched the home of a friend of Irving·s.
Gerald Albertini. Albertini, a wealthy
American, told newsmen las t week he
once kept lrving·s manuscript of the
Hughes book for the author for about 10
da ys.
Albertini's wife said the police "found
nothing at au."
trip "flabbergasted ·· her. ~he .s<i1d She
was quoted as ~ay 1ng she krH·w of no wa.y
lr\ling could have rnet with Hughes dur-
ing that tnp
r.1rs. \an Pall<1ndt. cstr<ingcd 111te of "'
Dute:h baron. l1v11s vn 1hc Spa nish
l\'lcdnerrancan island of Ibiza, \\here the
Jrrings also reside.
Lile, which pictured ~\rs. \'an Pallandl
on its cover th1.~ 11·eek, q1111tes an !bit.a
resident as saying ""·heneve r Nina's
name "'as mentioned, EdJth clunbcd the:
wall.··
H ughes -1narked
Transc ript Said
18 Years OJd
J\'E\V VOBK 1l'Pll -A tran sC'ript w1lh
n1argi11al n(i!cs in llowarrl Hu ghct.'
handwriting Cliforrl Irving used as proof
that <in autobiography of the hilliona~re
was authentic 1nay be 18 years old,
News1veek m:1gazine has reporterl.
An agent of lntertc!. ll11ghes' .in-
telligence nel\\'ork, clauned the
transcript originally may have been us-
ed as the basis for a Jong profile on
l·lughcs that appeared in Look magazine
In 1954, Ne wsweek said Sunday.
Stephen Whit e, who wrote the Look
article, confi rmed that tapes arid
transcri pts were made of his Hughes in-
terviews in 1954, Newsweek said, and that
he thought he remembered that Hughes
had made h a n d w r i t t e n corrections.
material however. said he thought All t.hal
material had been burned yeilrs ago.
Irving. "'ho showerl the transc ript to
McGraw-Hill Book Co. to prove th at "he
111et 1v ith Hughes In a series of in-
!ervie"·s, appeared before a federal
grand jury today.
Mcan1~h1lc, a filtn ducu rnenlary in
l\'h1ch Irving appeared in 1969 on French
television was sho"'n Sunday night on the
CBS-TV progran1 "Six!y t\1inutes."
The film "'as made on the subject or
master art forger Elymr l)e Hory on
"'horn Irving based a hook catled
"Fake_" Irving said in the film :
"All the world loves to see lhe experts
and the establishment made 11. fool of.
And everyone likes to feel that those who
set themselves up as experts are really
just as gullible as anyone else."
.Another character in "F'ake.' art dealer
Fernand Legros, is suing Irving here for
$55 million, claiming he was libeled in the
book.
Frona Page 1
TRAILS REPORT
and objectives of the trails con1mittee:,
has been submitted for the council's con-
sideration tonight .
l\fajor points outlined in the report in-
cluded :
-All local trail plans should be
coordinated with counly plans and those
of neighboring cities.
-Bicycle traits will link major educa-
tional centers. parks. the civic center and
re creational areas such as the beach.
-Fool paths :.huuld provide a variet y
of terrain and be connected lo high
schools and Golden West College, with
considerable use or larger parks.
-Equestrian trails should link slahlP.
areas in Hunt ington Beach \.\'ilh lhe coun-
ty trail systen1 along the Santa Ana
River. using off-streel easemenls "'here
possible.
-T\vo or three phases of de velopment
;ire proposed .
The $138,000 and 132 miles cover the
first phase of the trails plan. ~ommittee
n1embers have not outlined details of
future phases. though a major portion
would involve the central park.
• • •
Committee members determined the
need for 132 miles of trails by
establishing a goal of 25 miles of bike
trails, 25 miles of foot paths and five
miles of equestrian lanes for each 25 ,000
residenls. Current city population ls
about 130.000.
The trails committee also revealed a
few interesting possibilities for financ ing.
For instance · slate gas tax funds might
be used to build bicycle lanes, if such
lanes can be considered for a h1gh"'ay
purpose.
Or . impose a tax on bi cycles and bi cy-
cle parts sold w11h1n the city, then use the
funds for the bike trails .
The report estimates son1e 80,000 bicy-
cle owners live and ride in Huntington
Beach, that nearly 500 l'ross eountry run-
ners could use the foot p<1th.~ (besiclec;
(lrdinary hikers 1. :ind the c1!y con tains
700 horses and 2.000 riders.
Committee members also arc :isking
the council to formally establish a
recreational trails comrru!tee to carry
out the master planning of lhe proposed
trails system.
GEMOLOGICAl
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EXPERT WATCH
REPAIR DONE
t ON r,lEM!SE
!
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Nixon Inks
Campaign
FuridBill
-'
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Ni:t•
en today signed a federal election spend·
Ing reform bill deaigned to plug finance
reporting loopholes and curb rising cam·
paign costs.
The measure, Nixon said in a state·
men!, •·is a realistic and enforceable bill,
an important step forward in an area
which has been of great public concern."
Jn his three-paragraph· statc1ncnt, Nix·
on noted the legislation limits the amount
candidates for Congress and president
may spend on advertising, and requires
full reporting of both the sources and
uses of campaign fWlds.
"By giving the American public full aC<-
cess to the. facts of political financing,''
the President said, "lhis legislation will
guard against campaign abuses and will
work to build public confidence in the in·
tegrity of the electoral process."
Nixon vetoed in 1970 a bill intended to
limit spending on political broadcasting.
He said in today's statement that his o~
jection was that the 1970 measure applied
only to radio and television and did not
limit. over-all costs. But he said the 1972
act is a better bill because it limits spcn·
ding through all com n1 unications media.
Under the legislation, the limlt on a
White llouse hopeful's radio-TV ad
budget this fall will be set at $8.4 million.
It is the first such White llouse campaign
spending ceiling in history.
Limits. calculated on a formula of a
dime per potential voter, are applied on
all candidates for the presidency, vice
presidency, Senate and •House for their
spending on television, radio, newspaper,
magazine and outdoor advertising and
paid-telephone campaigns. No more than
six cents of each d1me can be spent on
broadcast ads.
There would be no over-all limit im-
posed on a candidate's total campai~n
spending. The legislation would cover, 1n-
1tead, what are considered to be the most
expensive and enforceable categories.
Fire Destroys
Junior High's
Locker Room
Fire destroyed a $60,000 girls locker
and ~hewer room at Lathrop Junio r High
School, 1100 S. Main St. in Santa Ana ear·
ly today. A classroom building at the
same &ehool was broken int.o during the
night, police reported.
Fire and police investigators are pro~
!ng the blaze and break ln today. 'Ibey
hinted that arson may be Jnvolved. A
police patrolman spotted !moke pouring
fr om the building about I a.m.
The Lathrop school has been the scene
of disturbances i11 the past few years. Its
main building was demolished two years
qo because il failed to meet earthquake
safety standards.
Four firemen were injured, none
seriously, fighting the blaze. Six fire com·
panies with 28 men under the direction of
Battalion Chief John Mahany fought the
costly fire for an hour.
Both the locker room and classroom
are the relocatable type, principal Dr.
Pat Kennedy said. He reported that utili-
ty service to the school has been cul off
but that clllsscs are being held as usual.
# • • • • . -, ~
Winter Wonderland
P icture of Jack Frosl'!i delicate handi\vork looks as
if it might have been taken in the Midwest or East.
Jt \vasn't. It was taken in Sout h Laguna in the yard
of landscape architect Fred Lang. Lang said that
someone forgot and left the sprinklers on overnig ht.
Nature's landscape architecture -temporary in
this instance -Lang found most impressive. So
did we.
County Crashes 3 Die • Ill
Traffic Carnage Conti1iues; Lagunan A111ong Fatals
Three persons, including a Laguna
Beach medical secretary were killed in
Orange County trafiic over the weekend,
the coroner's office reported.
A Sunday night crash in San Clemente
killed one man and injured two others as
flaming gasoline spewed scross the
freeway.
The dead;
Kathleen Suzanne Collett. 22. of 2052 1k
S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach.
Harry D. Johnson. 56 o[ Los Angeles.
Chee Woody, 41 , of Prewitt, New 1i1ex-
ico.
~1rs. Col!ett, secretary to a Newport
Beach physician, died at South. Coast
:--_,,_ .. ,~ Hospital at 9:30 a .m. Satur-
day following the 8: 10 a .m. accident in
which. her car went out of control and
crashed into a power pole on El Morro
curve, just north of Laguna. The
California Highway Patrol reported that
she was ejected from her small car.
Johnson was killed instantly Sunday
evening when his car traveling south on
the San Diego Freeway at the El Camino
overcrossing in San Clemente went out of
control and careened across the unguard-
ed center str ip.
Highway patrolmen said the auto slam-
med into a northbound car driven by Ray
M. Spriggs, 21, of Beverly Hill!! and the
Nixon Eyes Ma11power Bid
WASHINGTON (AP} -President Nix-
on today renewed his request that
Congress enact a $2 billion manpower
revenue-eharlng prognm, contendina:
that the decade-old federal job training
effort suffers "from a hardening of
governmental arteries."
"We have not bridged the gap betwee n
the promises and the performance of
federal manpower programs," Nixon said
in a message to Congress. "Something
better is needed ... "
The President urged approval of
legislation he proposed last year to
replace the dozen separate manpower
training programs with a single umbrella
program wh.ich would runnel $1.7 billion
to state and local governments the first
year.
Another $300 million would be used by
the Labor Department for national ac-
tivities.
"All those represented in the current
array of patchwork manpower programs
-the schools, private empJoyers, public
•rencies, non-profl& groups, not to men-
tion the unemployed workers -know
that the present system ls not delivering
the jobs, the training, and the other man-
power services that this nation needs,"
Nixon said.
The federal fu nds would be divided
among state and local governments "us-
ing a formula based on the size of their
:abor force and the numbers of
unemployed and disadvantaged," Nixon
said.
The program would authorize such
services as remedial education, on-the-
job training, short-term employment for
teenagers and the elderly, and transi-
tional public service employment at all
levels of government, he said.
force of the crash ripped out the J ohnson
car's gas tank and sent it skidding down
the freeway, spreading burning gasoline
over a wide area.
Spriggs, San Clemente police said, was
pinned in his small compact coupe. for
seve r a I minutes. A pa ssenger in
Johnson's car, Ezequiel Garcia-Rico. 40
of Tijuana, was ejected. The crash oc:
curred at 7:45 a.m.
Both survivors suffered severe cuts and
other major injuries and were treated at
Mission Community Hospital, patrolman
said.
The blazing crash occurred at a chronic
traffic trouble SJX>t on the freeway, where
no center protection is provided. State
engineers are studying the a rea on r&
quest of local authorities.
The crash obliterated the main section
of Johnson's car, leaving it an empty
shell.
Woody, an American Indian from the
Borrega Pass Trading Post, New Mexico,
was killed in Placentia Friday night when
he ran into the p11tb ol • car driven by
Donald ff, Neal, !!, or Anaheim, pollce
reported. The victim was a trackman
with the Santa Fe Railroad.
POLISH JOKE?
SUTION. England (UPI ) -Evelyn
Gale opened a new jar of pickles to find a
note inside written in Polish. Thinking it
was an SOS, she called a Polish
lranslater. The note was from one Polish
woman worker to another in the factory,
warning that a man was trying to seduce
her daughter in the pickling shed.
I
Mond.,-, F'tbrUll'J 7, ]972 H DAILY PILOT j
'Aiding Enemy'
Viet Peace Bid
Critics Attacked
By Unl&ed Pre&& lnWnalioul
PresldenUal aide f{. R. Haldeman said
today that some critics of President Nix·
on's Vietnam peace proposa~ were
"consciously aiding and abetting" the
Communists.
Haldeman, one or Nixon's key advisers
often descrlbt'd as "chief of staff'' at the
White House. said, "I think there is the
question here sometimes of putting
partisanship above peace."
Haldeman did not mention name.s but
left" litlle doubt he meant ~me of the
Democratic presidential candidates when
he said:
"Partisan critics are consciously aidlng
and abetting the enemies of the United
States ... \Ve have a very clear offer
out.
Sen. Cranston
Lauds Nixon
Mideast Plan
,
President Nixon drew praise Sunday
from U.S. Senator Alan Cranston for
wh at the California Democrat said was
the chief executive's "extremely skillful"
handling of the explosive t-.1iddle East
situation.
But it is vital. Crasnton added at a
meeting or the United Jewish Welfare
Fund of Orange County, that "Nixon
must insure that Israel is given full
diplomatic support to go with lhe
weapons she needs to maintain lhe
Mideast b&h1nce of power."
Without that, Cranston warned at the
day-long Anahei m session. Russia will
abandon her behind the scenes su pport of
Egypt to take on a more active role and
step in to crush Israel.
"Israel will never get her recogniz~
borders without America's full diplomatic
hacking." Cranston said. "She needs that
plus our continued economic and military
aid until a sound peace applicable lo
Israel and all her neighbors i s
established.
"America is the hope of the world and
it. is tragic that we are not doing all we
might," Cranslon lold applauding United
Jewis h Welfare Fund supporters.
Turning lo South Vietnam, Cranston
v.•amed his audience that it i! hardly
possible lo compare the Southeast Asian
conflict with the simmering t.tidd\e East
crisis that has already produced two
wa rs.
..., Mld hlotory compel< us lo _.
Israel whereas no auch traditional link
should lead us to back South Vietnam.
Cranston characterized South Vietnam
as a "purely civil war" in which more
than 55,000 Americans have been killed.
No American li ves have been lost in
Israel, he said, "where the beleagered
Israelis are our allles and not, as in South
Vietnam, a corrupt m I l It a r y dic-
tatorship.''
Cranston said the Vietnam conflict has
cost the U.S. more than Sl50 billion and
the total Is likely to exceed more than $1
trillion before it is over.
"Israel pays for her economic aid,"
Cranston said, "and she asks only that we
provide it to help her defend what are
also American interests in the fwliddle
East."
WEBER'S BUTTERNUT
16 OUNCE LOAF!
"It makes all the points that the erltici
have sought ucept one -putting a Com.
muni!t government in South Vietnam.
The only conclusion you can draw now it
that the President's cr1t1cs want to put a
Communist government in Saigon."
Haldeman repeated under que!llionln!
t~t .charge of sor:ie critics "consciously'
aid ing Communists "in this particulat
posture.''
He was interviewed on lht NBC.TV To.
day StxH'"
The int erview was rrN rded sevtr.-.1
da_y~ ago bul ~eflected strong ad·
nunlStratton reaction to cr1 lic1sm or th~
Jan. 2.5 Nixon peace plan, muclt'l)f it b\I
Sens. Edmund S. t-.1 us kie of t-.1airle a nd
GCQrge S. t-.IcGovern of Sou th Dakota.
Senate Democratic Leader M 1 k e
~fansfield criticized Jfaldeman's stiile:
men!.
"The F1.rst An1 endmrnl sl ill stands and
freedom of speech is .!illll aJ!owed ''
A'fansfield told rejXlrters. "As far as I a~
~n~erned . <1ny senatnr v;1\I be protected
1n his ri,ght of free expre~sinn "
Sen. Alan Cranston iD-Ca lif.), f/'lld a
reporter, when asked about Ha\deman '3
remarks:
. "It sounds like the old Nixon re-tmerg-
1ng for the 1972 campaign .
"Nixon feels on the defensive about a
possible enemy atlack coming up ir1
South Vietnam," Cranston said. "So he's
taking the offensive here at home. That's
typical of Nixon ."
Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott
however, said that "some of th~
Democratic candidates are using strong
language" and they could expect strong
language in reply.
Scott said that except for Sens. Hubert
H. Humphrey and Henry M. Jackson
Democratic candidates had bee~
violaLing "the Vandenberg tradition that
politics stops at the water's edge."
He was referring to the late Sen.
Arthur Vandenberg (R-Mich.), chairman
of the Senate Foreign Relations Com·
mittee and an architect of the nation's
bipartisan foreign policy after World War
11.
One of the Democratic Candidates, Sen.
Henry M. Jackson of Washington, con·
tinued lo criticize party rivals for at-
tacking the Nixon peace plan, while
Eugene J . ~tcCarthy chided Muskie for
his record with respect to Vietnam
policy.
2 Stragglers
Seen in Guam
TOKYO (APJ -A pqUce Jn-!peefor from Guam said today tliat
two more persons believed to be
World War II Japanese 10ldiera
have been spotted in the jungles of
Guam.
H. G. Scharff told a ('Om mittee of
the J apanese Parliament the men
were seen in. July and October,
1969, and again last Dec. 20 about
71/z miles e.ast of Ag ana, the capllal
of Guam.
Scharff came lo Tokyo Thursday
to report to the J apanese about the
finding of Shoi chl Yokoi, the form~
army sergeant captured Jan. 24
after living in a jungle hide.out on
Guam for 28 years. He is recu~
terating in a Tokyo hos pitaJ.
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
G ~ve them sandwiche! they'll love! And sandwiches that will provide flavor as well as nutrition. Rath ·5 meaty tasty bologn p ·1ed · ire.sh
shces of Weber'& Butternut bread will be so inviting. And at El Rancho's lowest price in town price the combination is W:' ~ ~nre&fat l
Anjou Pears ... ~' .... 19~
The kind they'll welmme In a lunch or enjoy after lchooll
Lamb Chops~~.~ .. 99~
Loan, deliclou1 chops, cut from U.S:D.A:, Choice qu&ll\)'. freoh lamb.
Lamb ~chops .. ~~.~ .. $·1!9
Dom..tie lamb ••• f....,h I ••. not imPorted and frozen I
Stuffed Breast of Lamb .......... m It.IDT ..••••••• 49~
The work's all done .•. all you have to do ia cook it I
Lamb Stew Meat ............. YALU! TRIMMED .•••••••..•• 29~
Make a shepherd's pie thi!I week and gurprise them!
Pricu in effect Mtm., Tiu1., Wed.,
Feb. 7, 8, 9. No •ala to deakri.
Napkins .... ~.~!.... 1!1'
Colors •o brl1rh t, textu1<1 '° ooft, and priced BO low! ••• 60 ct.
Sunshine Hydrox Cookies ._ ....... ~ oz. PKG. ••••••••• 53•
The chocoh1.te zandwich Cookie th.at just about everyonti loves!
Glad Sandwich Bags ........... 'IO CJ, rKG.. • • . . . .••. 'J.9•
You put flavor in a «andwich, why not keep it there ?
AR CADIA : I·" " '"·' 11,,,,." ! Ill Or ;1;,11~· PASADENA : ;:11,11·'· SOUTH PASADENA : i:ll'll I' HUNTINGTON BEACH : l:l I I NEWPORT BEACH . 1717 N' 1° s'1' I I f I R i ·'r r10 I 1 ,,1. . J • , , i ( f I 1111 ' . 'wpo r vi tnr ~ J,1 ii 11.1J1!i11110 Hl11, • fr tinont 1111! Hunt1nr,to11 Or t' 1nf'• .1•1d A1;onr1u1n Ro11!1wi"k Cr11t1•: .. ]"iJJ (,1,rhluff [l r f.i\lhlnlf Villap.r. Center
I
'
FIREBRAND BERNADETTE DEV LIN LOO KS OUT ON CROWD OF MARCHERS
Large Parade Was Swelled by Many Sympathizers From lri1h Republic
6·ho11r 'Confrontation'
Ireland March Bloodless
By OONAJ...D O'llJGGINS
NEW RY. Northern lreland ! UPI)
11is parents banished Tony Costello, 11. to
!us hcdroorn because they feared ror his
Ii'· But liny llosemarie McCanley roan1-
c:;"lhc streets for autographs as iC she
were al a football game.
About l,000 yards away. a British
21oldicr waited for minutes with his Sten
gun poised. then stepped from the bitter
chill ror a welcome lea break in !he
.A. ,,
B elfast Leaders
Se t Wednesda y
For Disruption
BELF'AST, Northern Ireland (UPI)
Roman Cathloic civil rights leaders today
proclain1rd \Ycdnesday a "day of disrup-
tion·· throu~hout Northern I re I and
despite a police crackdown on leaders of
Sund11y·s mun1n1olh prolesl n1arch by
20.000 persons in Ne"·ry.
Police in Bclfasl said 30 persons. in·
("!Uding .sonic members of the British and
Northern Ireland Parliaments. will be
prosecuted for laking part in Sunday's il-
legal c/vll rlghls march in Newry. the
biggest in Norlhern Ireland history .
"The sun1monses 11re in the course or
bring served." R po!icf' spokesman said.
•·son1e of the s1Jn1n1onsc!I arc against
t.,.\Ps and prominent 1ncrnbcrs of the civ il
rights movcn1ent. ..
l'olice said the alleged otfendcrs were
'·being ordered lo Rpprar in Ncv.·ry Court
1:cb. 16. Convictio11 of \"LOlating the
govcrnrnenl baJl on parades carries a
•""n1andatory s1x-n1onth prisnn sentence
' 11!though 1nugistrates can susprnd se11-
~. trncc if I he re arf' exte111u:iting c1rcum-
·.,, 6l8nCC'S.
, ~l arch leaders cl1cl no! ;ippear worried.
Rory ~1cShanc, chainnan of the Ne"·r~
<.:1vi! Hights Association. 11·hich organized
... thc protest n1arch .• ~aid. "\\'e CX\lt'Cl
... '-. I s1unn1onses and are not parlleular y \\'Or-
l'll'll it thcy St'lld us 1o prison. 1f that 1s
Jil111nA \(1 ,i::t~l nrross 011r pol1tieal \"l('\I':< ·•
._ l;1'IT\I Fill. leflclt'r uf !lie ~ix Norlht'rn
, lrl'lan;l P:1rlia111t·nt llll'Ulbl'!"S \\' h ti
111arclied in thf' par;1dc. s:11tl. "l ::i111
proud 111 s11~· ll'r will t'('~nrd any purn:'h·
1ne11l 11·hich I h1' Storn1ont 1 Northrrn
• Jrel1111d) adn1in1 sl ri1t1u11 <·Hrcs111 1nfl1l'1 nn
~ us \rith h u nor •• , \\'i' 11·!11 11111 1w 111-
~ tu111d.1tcll ."
·• Fill is a n1ember of thc Briti sh Parh<i·
n1fnt, along 1\·ith Ulster na!innal1st ~I P
Her111ack'lle Devlin, "'ho nl!lo marched .
\\.l.'dnesdav is the :six-n1onth <1n-
n1 vt'rsRry ~f the British governn1en!'s
d~ii;ion to intern terrorist suspects
"'lthou1 fri:il.
police headquarters 011 Edwards Street.
The marchers n1arched and soldiers
built their barricades and when the six
hours were gone Sunday, Rosemarie hud
her autographs, the soldier had his tea.
lhe demonstrators had their march and
security forces had their show of
strength.
\Vhen the hazy aftcmoon of paraders
and whirling army helicopters was over,
there were few answers to the. questions
raised by three years of v1oh::nce in
Northern Ireland.
A week ago, a demonstration in Lon-
donderry left J3 civilians dead. "Derry,''
as it is known to locals. and Ncwry. six
1nilcs from the border wi1h the Irish
Republic, are siinilar-largcly Roman
Catholic, high unempJoyincnl and histor-
ies of violence.
Thus v:hen the Nc111ry Civil Hights
Association announced it would niarch
fro1n the heights of Catholic IJe rrybeg
housing estate to the center of Newry 111
deriance of a governn1enl ban against
processions. 1'ony Coslcllo"s father. John.
told him to "sl11y at hornc <1nd not lo
leave the house.··
But young Tony Costello, · sneaked out
the bedroon1 \Vindow whrn his mother's
back was tur111ed.'' his father sald. lie
joined thousands of deinonstrators from
both sides of the border who swarmed
across the slopes of Derrybeg Sunday.
Confrontation was the goal of neither
side.
The msl'C'hers met In • small
auditorium the night before to chalk their
placards. "Li11.ie (Queen Elizabeth ) call
your pigs (so!dirrs) home.'' some read.
Yet march orga11izcr Charles ~1agher
said if thr processio n "'ere stopped "\\'C
\\•ill probably call ff off."
The army called in 1.000 of lhc IS.000
troops now st~tioncd in Northern lreland.
Linked with !he local police -the Roynl
Ulster Constabul<iry (RUCl-they set up
lhe first major roadblock or concrete
'Jfe we're going to
Ireland f or the weekend.
but S idney couldn't fuul
his helmet!'
Cold Snap Grips Midwest
S 1101v E111erge ucy De clarecl
1 '1"111pe r11t11res
l~mHllllirtl "" r>rK<IJHl llOn "' ~· ;•·"°'1• .,.,>bd •"<1•11~ 11 •• "'
M•lh Lt" ~r..,;
lill"!~V, tflO" " " ~
loll'>o>llu-ut . ' llf " ~
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• •• UflW1AltltfOHJC ~.
...,_ Yort,, C"to)uef'I » " " Okie C!h', ,_, » " ........ -" ... C•UfoMtl•
~, ..... .,,i.. ""'" ,, " " -. .. .., • u
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•
• in Ne w York's Worst Storm
Mo!.tt'I t\llWl'f ....,.. I.JIN ~
•"""• nleflt MW --~ .._. lftt -tff"I'( It • II """"' Iii ..... IWo•
NN'I •I'll T.-..1'. t-lltft '""'· ...
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d t$ "-Wtftr I••• ....... .$S.
----·--
Offer by Nixon 'Dead'
• Petris Red Bloc Demands Own T erms i n
By GEORGE SIBERA
PARIS (UPl l -f>elegationa from
North Vietnam, the Viet Cong, the Pathet
Lao and the Cambodian rebel movement
flew into Paris today to demand peace in
Indochina on their own terms. They said
President Niion's latest peace plan was
dead.
The four Communist Indochina delega-
tions flew in from Moscow on a Soviet
plane to take part in a three-day, Com-
munist-backed international a n t i w a r
assembly in Paris later this week.
Spokesmen said they would not consider
any portion o( President Nixon's Jan. 25
peace package.
J1oang Quoc Viet, the North Viet·
namese Minister in charge of relations
with Parliament, said he and the other
delegations were ready to denounce the
Nixon plan at the meeting and said,
.. This meeting will be a great en·
couragemenl for our struggle against
U.S. aggression."
•·The U.S. attitude is still obstinate -
and it clearly appears in President Nix·
on's socalled peace plan which a!\ peace-
\oving peoples have rejected." Viet said.
The I-lanai minister said South V1etnan1
President Nguyen Van 1'hieu's resign<i-
tion would not be sufricient to lead to
direct talks with Saigon and he insisted
that the South Vietnamese police system
be dismantled.
The Communist group arriving today
included members of the Pe k i n g
government·in-exile or Prince Norodon1
Sihanouk who was ousted as leader of
Cambodia a year and a half ago.
French Foreign ~linister Maurice
Schumann conferred meanwhile with
Communist negotiator Nguyen Van Tien
and said he had found •·some new points"
in the latest Viet Cong peace proposal put
before the Paris talks on 'I'hursday.
··1 gave Schumann some additional e:x.
planations on our important declaration
of Feb. 2.'' Tien told newsmen after leav-
ing the Quai O'Orsay foreign ministry ,
"The minister was very interested and he
found some new elements in the declara-
11011."
'fhe new Viet Cong proposal urged
President Nixon to set a firm date for
total, unconditional U.S. mi Ii tar y
withdrawal from South Vietnam . It of-
fered to open direct negotiations with the
Saigon government if Presidi!nt Nguyen
Van Thieu resigns and the South Viet-
namese government changes drastically
its policy and dissolves the police.
South Vietnam rejected the Viet C.Ong
plan. The U.S. peace delegation said it of·
fered no changes from previous pro-
posals. Simultaneously, the Vietnamese
Communists hammered at the recent
U.S. peace offers. calling them unac-
ceptable.
North Vietnamese Premier Pham Van
Dong Saturday condemned Nixon ~s plan
as "a piece of trickery."
Dong said the eight-point package Nix-
on proposed Jan. 25 \Vas an example of
the ··obstinate. bellieose and perfidious
character of the American ·imperialisU."
··Jn spite of ever heavier defeats in the
battlefield in Vietnam . Laos and Cam·
bodia , the chiefs in the White liouse ~re
slill cherishing dark designs, and they
continue to consider n1ilitary and political
adventures leading inlo a blind alley 1n
an attetnpl to h<1ng on to South Vietnam,
Laos. and Cambodia.'' Dong said in
Hanoi. Jlis L'Omments were made public
through Lhe Hanoi delegation to the PartS
talks.
In !lanai. French Communist legislator
Jean de Broglie .said the North Viel·
nan1ese and Viet Cong want not only
Thieu's resignation but the South Vlel-
nan1ese police force dismantled. Ji is
remarks were brought out Saturday by
Le Tranh Khoi , vice president of the
Union or Vietnamese in fo~rance.
"The question is not to make Thieu
policies without Thieu." De Broglie was
quoted.
Viet Cong seeks the prior dissolution of
the police 1nachine."
The French legislator was on a five-da y
\'isit to Hanoi with other Communi st
parli:in1entarians. '!'he visit ended Satur·
day.
* * * ~ * * Red Negotiato1· Tells
Of 1970 Peace Offer
•
political and military problems as a
single question. Thuy replied :
"As I said. the two crucial points, the
l\110 key points, should be se ttled, and the
set.tJement of these two points will
facilitate the settlement of the other
points."
CBS followed the Thuy interview, taped
Friday, with live questioning of Secretary
of State William P, Rogers in Washington
Sunday.
Asked 1vhether Thuy had ever offered a
prisoner-for-pullout trade. R og e r s
replied :
"'There was never any discussion or
that kind. In every ... session that we
had \\'i lh the North Vietnamese. they
made it clear that they would not talk
aboul a 1nililary solution. except in the
context of an over·all political solution
, ... , .................. ...
-~-
'
---.,.. I " •'"' •• . .
Orange Coast Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
VOL 65, NO. 32, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1972 N TEN CENTS
Copters Mal{e Emergency Flights to Newport
Airborne police and other lawmen
throughout Orange and Los Angeles coun·
ties combined efforts ea rly today on
mercy missions !o t.-'Ollect rather rare
blood for a hemorrhaging emergent')'
surgery victin1 in Ne v.•port Beach.
ll elicopter pilots working in shifts fle11
thr~ blood runs, 01.e of them a return
trip after a hospital in Anaheim sent thf'
wro ng blood type the first time.
A desperate hunt via sou thland po lice
radio networks turned up three on-duty
lawmen with the same type O·negative
blood, but their donations were not need·
ed.
The drama involving patient Eli Br;.i
bant, 61, of 1586 Santa Ana Ave., Cos1;i
Mes a, began about l a.m., when Hoag
f\fe1norial Hos pital spokesmen callctl
Newport Beach police for help.
Brabant was undergoing major surgery
1vhen his aorta, lhe body 's primarv
artery, burst, according to Watch Com·
mander LI. Kelson McDaniel.
The somewhat uncommon type O·
negative blood had been located at two
Anaheim hospitals, but the timing was
critical.
Dispatched at 1: 10 a.m., the
department's Adam 2 helicopter with Of-
li cer Jim Go\fos at the controls headed
inland to make the blood pickup and
delivery aided by Anaheim police who
had it waiting at headquarters.
Life appeared to be ebbing for Brabant.
who is self-employed as an electrical
engineer in Santa Ana.
Delivering the blood upon landing at
the ilo<tg Memorial Hos pital parking Jot,
IRS Sues Irvings
Couple Facing $490,000 in Liens
NEW YORK (AP) -The Internal Rev-
enue Service flied tax liens tolaling more
than $490,000 against no.,.elist Clifford
Irving and his wife. who allegedly banked
$650 ,000 in royalties Intended for bill ion·
aire Howard Hughes for a disputed auto-
biography,
The IRS acted as lrvlng went b~!orc a
federal g•·and jury investiga;ing poss ible
fraud in the sale of the book lo McGraw-
HHl. Inc.
Tax liens for $246,993 against Irving
and $243 ,118 against his wife were filed
with the county registrar.
A spokesman said they establish "a
priority for the IRS against other cred-
itors, tying up the assets of the persons
against whom the liens had been issued."
A lien of $22,446 was also filed against
Richard Suskind, wh o says he worked for
Irving as a researcher on lhe Hughes
book .
I rvin~ entered the jury room at
f'ederal Courthouse on Foley Square
Wife Watches Shooti1t9
Costa Mesa E11te1·tainer
l{illed in Wild Melee
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of ! ... D.111)" P'll•I 11111
A pop music duo drawing cro\vds to a
Costa Mesa night club where they began
only two weeks ago was tragically broken
up early Sunday, when a dispute led to
the slaying of one member at his home.
The killing of John J. Brent. 28, wh o
bled to death after being shot in the groin
as his horrified wife watched, had no
local conneetion, investigators sa id today.
One man among several Brent chas-
tised for creating a distu rbance at the
four.unit Highland Park apartments he
managed is in custody today, booked on
murder charges.
He was identified as William Riddle. 21,
al so of 1-lighland Park.
Brent and his artner. Jerry Lambeth,
have been p!:iying at the Black Knight,
330 E. 17th St., as the Jerry Lambeth
Puo.
The victim and his v.'ife Mickie, 22,
ret urned to the Los Angeles suburb after
the club closed early Sunday morning and
were drinking hot chocolate in the kit·
chen before going to bed, investigators
said.
Several men apparently winding up a
party at the old tenement·like stru cture
began creating too much noise outside,
accordi ng to homicide detectives.
G<>ing out to investigate, Brent tried to
quiet the group and became involved in
an argument which gradually grew more
heated, police said.
Detective Sgt. Glenn Bordemann. of the
LAPD homicide division, said Brent then
retumed for a .Z2 caliber rine and his
Gorman Shepherd dog.
His wife, meanwhile, was calling police
to ask help in quieting the noisy gang
outside.
"He poked his head out the door and
told them again to 'make it,' " Sgt.
BordemaM said in recounting the fatal
feud .
what lnvutigators believe Wl.!I • .31
caliber pistol and fired once through a
window, striking Brent in the groin area.
"\l/e haven't recovered the gun yet,"
Sgt. Bordemann said.
Brent collapsed and bled to death on
the dining room floor.
A spokesman at the Black Knigh t said
this morning that Brent and his partne r
had just been booked about two weeks
ago for entertainment six nig hts a week.
The two-man combo had been drawing
crowds and was well -rece ived by patrons
who enjoyed their music for dancing.
"Isn't it somethimg else? What a
tragedy ... " their employer said today
of Brent's murd~r.
Qiwke l1isurance
Largely lg1iored
By Honieowners
•
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Earthquak e
insurance, whi ch was largely unavailable
after a quake jolted the Los Angeles area
a year ago Wednesday causing death and
widespread damage, is being ottered
again but few homeowners an i&
terested.
The Western Insurance Information
Service reported. that underwriters are
offering the protection at almost the
same rates available prior to the earth-
quake last Feb. 9, but there bas betn ao
great rush to obtain it.
shortly before 7 a.m. (PST) accomp&nied
by his attorney, Maurice Nessen, and
Philip Lorber. a lawyer representing Irv-
ing's wife , Edith.
Irving refused to answer newsmen's
questions.
lie did pose briefly for pictures before
his lawyer hurried him up to the 14th
floor grand jury room.
He left an hour and 40 1ninutes later,
(Stt IRVING, Page %)
UAW Reveals
Pay Board
Suit Details
WASHINGTON (AP) -The United
Auto Workers today announced delaill of
a law suit against Utt Pay Board to try to
recovtr a 17..cent-an-hour pay ral!e
denied to aerospace workers.
VA W President Leonard Woodcock said
the suit , the first court test of a major
Pay Board decision, is based on allega-
tions that the Pay Board acted beyond its
Jegal power in denying the raise.
The UA W suit involves about 31,000
employes at McDonnell-Douglas Aircraft
Corp., LTV Aerospace Corp. and North
American Rockwell Aircraft Corp.
Also today, the International Associa-
ti on of Machinists said it would file suit
nexl. week to recover the same pay raise
denied to another 70,000 e1n ployes at the
Boeing Co ., Lockheed Aircraft Corp. and
f.fcDonnell·Oougla s where the two unions
!hare representation.
The UAW law suit, which Woodcock
said would be filed today in federal court
here, contests the action of the Pay
Board Jan. 5 in rejecting a 12 percent
first.year pay raise for aerospace
workers.
Pay Board later said it would ap-
prove that 12 percent raise if the union s
and companies agreed to dela y part of it
until the second year of their three.year
agreements, but both the JAM and UAW
have refused to do this, choosing instead to .sue for the full amount this year.
Woodcock said that his workers are
being paid the portion of the rejected 12
percent raise that the Pay Board u id it
would approve thb year, but that com-
PMitl are holding up the mt of It pend-
ing the outcome of today's law suit.
the 12 percent raise totaled 51 cents an
hour on the average, but 34 centa of that
was a coA-Of.Jiving adjustment called for
in l!IA agreements with the companies.
Woodcock said. In the case of LTV, this
adjustment is 35 cents.
Ofifcer G<>lfos was relieved by a second
pilot, Offi cer James Bradley.
Shor!ly afterward, Hoag Hospital of·
flcials Issued a second desperate appeal
when It was discovered one of the two
Anaheim hospitals had sent the wrong
type Of blood.
The Adam 2 chopper raced back to pick
up the correct shipment, but Brabant -
who had received 21 pints of blood
transfusions by m..id·morning -was s!ill
in severe need.
A call to the Red Cross Blood Bank in
Los Angeles Jed to location of six more
pint5 of type ().negative blood at Little
Company of Mary Hospital Jn Torrance.
Newport Beach's Adam 2 helicopter.
however , had already betn dis patched
back to Anaheim.
Coordinated by the Los Angeles Police
Department's \\'llshlre Div ision head ·
quarters, one LAPD chopper was
dispatched south to pick up the six Ad·
ditional pints and fly t.hem on from Tor·
ranee.
"There v.·:is excellent C'OOperalion
throughout ." Lt . ~icDnnlel said after the
' The Lady Take• a Walk
one hour and SO minute ~rrirs or mercy
f!i~hts.
Urabonl WlliJ stHI listed 1n (•rit!cal con-
dition In the hospilitl's intensive car11
unit, bul more sl:tbilize<.1 after the
predav.·n crisis.
His wife said this mornin~ nrter the
overnight ordeal that !'he has 11lways ap-
proved of police helicopters ln lhfl 1-larbo r
Area . but feels even more :i1trOnftl Y now.
"1'hey were so grent ... the ))Ol!ce and
the people at the ho11pi!(ll," she s11id,
"just m11rvelous -they renlly went all
out."
Silhouetted by the winter sun, a lady -only as old
as the fresh sea breeze makes her feel -tramps
the shoreline near the Newport P ier Jn the company
of sea gulls.
Partial Injunction Ol{'d
In Docl{ Strike on Coast
WASHINGTON (AP) -A House labor
subcommittee voted today to authorize a
partial 00-day injunction against the West
Coast dock strike.
The subcommittee voted 5 to I to allow
a ma]Or part of the strike to cont inue but
to allow a court, upon petition from the
attorney general. to halt strikes affecting
the ship ments of military a n d
agricullural cargoes and shipments to
and from Hav»a ii.
The subcommittee rejected on a 5 to 3
party line vote the emergency strike
legislation requested by Presldent Nlxon.
The President'1 proposal would have
compelled the workers to return to their
jobs whlle the entire dispute, resuJtlng in
a strike now in Its l22nd day,, ls sub-
mitted to compulsory arbitraUOn. (See
earlier story, page 8)
A11 tbe Democrat& on the rub-
commiltee, headed by Rep. Frank
Thompt0n (0.NJ), voled for l h e
substitute, which was offered b y
Thompt0n. Rep. John D. Delltnbock (ff..
Ore.), voted against it and two other
Republicans, Rep s. John A!lhbrook of
Ohlo and Ogden Reid of New York voted
present.
ThompJOll estimated his propo1al
would get 80 percent of the West Coast
cargo nioving again.
lie said the measure will go to the: fu ll
House Labor Committee Tue.aday and
could be pas!ed by the If°""' Wedneoday
if It agreed to suspend all Ill rules
against acting so quickly.
Under the Thompson aubalitute, a
district court could il!lue an 111U·slrlke
Injunction only upon finding that failure
to shJp mUltary and agrlcultut!ll 1uppHes
and all products to ind from Hawaii
would jeopardize the national health •nd
safety.
ThomptOn told the rubcommlttee that
llarry Bridget, the Weil c 0 I. t
long1horemen'1 leader, w a 1 unen-
thutla1Uc about the ll!blU!ult, wilhlna lo
continue negotiations.
Tunaboat 01v1ie r1
I g1iore Ad·vice,
Obtain Licenses
SAN u I E G 0 (AP ) -Amerlcon
tunaboat owners In Increasing number1
are ignoring the advice ot the U.1.
government and are purcha1lna: fllhln&
licenses from Ecuador.
F'irteen of 35 Amerlcan seiners flthlnc
off lhe South American coast have done
so this year, the American Tunaboat
J\.!11oclatlon 1ay1.
The Unlltd States recogntze1 only a a.
mile offshore limit -not 200 milCll .,
claimed by Ecuador -and therefore
d l1 c o urage 1 action lmplYln&
acknowledgement of the lar1er boundary.
Tunaboat owntr1 ire rehnburted bJ
the government for fintl lnied aaalnlt
thtm whm Ecuador 1tlz.e1 thetr veuell
lnalde the ZOO.mile ttrrtloty.
But thl 1 yeer, E<wodor bu doubled 1111
line for boat1 K 1lt0 tel...i l11t Ytl•·
er .. ,.
One of the men allegedly involved drew
Pmsage Takes
Acapulco Lead
Homeowners rushed to buy it ln the
days immediately following the disaster,
but most insurance firms suspended se11·
ing it until the major altenboc'u subsid--
eci . By then, lime apparenUy had dulled
the memories of the tragedy and interest
in the Insurance declined.
George Watu, eucuUve dittdor of the
information service, said the pattern ""
typkal of those following dlu.i.r•.
Free Sleep?
FBI Seizes Four
In Dixie Death
DEL MAR (UPI) -Poot perton1
"anted ln' the 11a)"tna of a man "bo pick-
ed up hltchbllcm ...,. arr..W Sandly
at the Del Mar Motel, the FBI hU
reported.
w ......
•
Mart Jahmon's Windward
Pwage .toot the lead in the 1,QJ-
mile San Di<fo lo Acapulco yacht
r~ today.
Windward Passa~ nported a
posltlOo ·:i30 mJJ .. !tom San Dt.go
at I a.m. tod•Y· She WIJ five miles
ahead of her arch rival, Ken
DtMeme'1 Blackfjn, and 2S miln
ahead of Bob Lynch'• Sirius II
Crom lhe Newport Harbor Yacht
Club.
Sirius IT holds the elapsed time
record of eight days and nlne
houn. Wlnd1'anf P81S1ge'1 JJO!ftloo
after 20 hours of sailing places hf:r
well alJ<od of Siriul 11'• first day
run In the 19"' record race.
s.e todar'• boating par• '"' cf<tailtd &lofy OD the start of the ,,__
.. some people Nib lo buy coverqe at
fin~ but then 1t rmnral time drop lt,"
he said.
Blaze D,amages
Oc-eansUk Dock
OCEANSIDE (UPI) -Jl'ft bas cauoed
an estlmai..f '50,000 damqe lo a
sportlilbina boat ot OceaDlide 5por11
Fishing Dock.
No one 1"ll aboard the veuel, the as.
foot America, -"' -by l'l<r· point Landing of lOllfl Beoch.
,,,. Ocunsldt llre department Ind the
Cout Guard ioV..Upled the blue bul
said the ---,,,.
llre ~ -SdndlJ In the q1ne ......
Man Facing Court in Car Slumber
A man booomlng known around the
Jlarbor Atta u Matllon the Martyr tor
hfl blwn campalp for freedom of
•ieet> hU pleaded "-<ill lo the Ont
of three count.I of illegal •lumbering in
a vthkle. Willllm F. Malllon, %7, wbote lddro11
II apparenUy -Iner Nowport Buch
municipal parting fol be haJIPtlll lo "'-< for the nl&llt,. will hi•• 1 March a trial In Harbor Jucud al Dlllrlct Court.
Re 1111 IO flll' been arr..W ihree
times,. on Jan. 11, 2' and apln early
WedneodlJ on cllarJ .. of viota llng the
city -lor1>tddlng lllfOlle to tloep In a pubUcly pork<d velJJcle.
A Jud«• wlB hear the cue lnttead of
jury, 11 Mlltl<ll 1J1Ut1 uglllst the 115
bail lnlndloo "" Ir challnt,lln1.
'Ille defeodantrS-be bu Uvtd In hit -1.. pidvpumpor "'-'" llaJboo tfnct Mln:fl and doeon L
Intend lo all« hit ~ llYle lo crm/onn
to 111y cJly ordinance.
Mailloft c<ilM>dl lt ft I man'1 bull,_
when! be tietl'I -DOI the clty'1 -al)d
dlatpa the anlkleti>io( !aw ii 1lmcd
prfroartly al yoonr Ind looJ·h•ired vl>-
ftort.
Patrolling pollcemen waged a cam·
palgn of lilfomt1.I la" enforcement for
-pounding ... hil llhlnsJed , Dutch· ~ camper at 1111 hours to remind
anyone lnskSe that it ii llltpl to sleep In
a vehicle.
He flMJJy went to police htadquart61
Jan. II and madt a formal complaint to
111ptrvlsor1 111"t he l•lt be "'" being htrUled. ne teriet of arrett. and booklnc tn10
jaU began lwo dlJI Wu. alonl with
polite flni>O"Jldl .. al the ruttic rla the
"""""' and tblrd tlmt It ... ralcled.
An four ...,.. dllrged wtth Wlllwfal
nl8'JI lo nofd P'-.illon for aumltt.
The warraatt ,. ... IAued Jn Loe County,
Ala., where Micblel ,Proney, M, wu lllln
Ind bit wile, Slwcn, It, --· 'Ille ,.....,,, who Uved tn M.I""'""",
M.ich., ...... dtlwtna" to I COOllnlctlon job
a"aJtJnc the hullJond Ill T-.
f'IL, whon they plcUd up hltcbl1Jkckn.
'Ille for orntt.d .-. 8ttpllen D. a...,
20, a Maine natl•e abtent wttbout Juve
from 1 Marine Carpi but near AJblny,
Ga · Ronald K. Connell, It, Albony, 01.:
Phllllp R. Raynb, 21, Son JoH, t nd
Karen &. Jordan, It, J.eal>orl. Go.
She Quit Movement
LONDON !UPI) -Ao ad-
In tM: South Londoner newspaper rud: "Kln'J. ltaYe ctvm vp "omea'1 lib.
PleaM come bact. June."
•
Better plan oo -ell'11C ap 1 fOw
mlnptta t1rller ~ "' w the fate ....... r,. loafClit ..,..
tum Into early moniioll tot Qtllto.
wlte mooUy IUllllY --n.1a1
with htJl» alootl the -at • rftln1 lo • Jnllnd. Lowa .....
INllJH!l T8DA Y
Little TO!lll Co.ltllo ..., ..,,..
fined to hu room, but lloo<1110rU 1 McCanU~ roomed the We•lll /ot
autogroplu durlno 11>1 quiet d.U
rlghtl 1114rth S.ndar fti N"""I/,
North l rtltutd. &11: ~ Pllf}t 4.
~..,. ~ ::..~ l: ...... ,..,... ................ ·~ .. ~~ ,. c-k• u ., ... ,...., ..
~ ,......,. ,..,,. .,.. . ...,.. .. ~ ........, .• ,,
I ......... ,..,. ' ,..,.._ 11 .......... ti ,,.....,. ,, ........ ....., .__. . ............... ......, .... , .. ..
Ma c M ........ ...
•
•
I
N ~ DAIL V PILOT MM.by, 1tbf1.llpY 'T, 1912 -----~-
Man l(illed;
Motorcycle
Figure Held
Waymon A. (~rlsenti of lluntinglnn
Beach, a 38-yl'ilr-old former president of
the liessians rnotorcycle club, today 1s
being held !n ci\y jail in connection vn1h
the F'riday night shooting death of a
vis itor at his hon1c.
Grisenti, of 194D2 Jerrilyn L;.1ne and
members of his family have insisted that
the victim, Rusty B. Cook, 26, of Lomita,
was shot in an accident.
Huntington Beach police, howeYer , are
seeking murder charges against (;r1senti,
fi e wa s scheduled for arraignment late
today in West Orange County ~1unicipal
Court.
Grisenti was taken inlo custody Friday
about three hours after the 10 p.m.
shooting in his home. llomicide officers
had questioned his wife, Anita, 31, and
the couple's ri ve children.
Investigatori;: said Cook had been shot
once in the upper throat with a .357
caliber magnum slug.
\\'hen police arriVed, !he victim V.';l.S
still slum ped in a ehair, his head on tl1e
dining room tahle. He was rushed hy an1·
bu\ance to Paci fica llospilal where he
wa s dead on arrival.
In reCounting the tragedy, police said
both of the elder Grisentis told in-
vestigators that the gun went off ac·
cidentally while Grisenti was showing it
to Coo k.
Police, however, allege that the slaying
was the result of an argument between
Grisenti and Cook over some tool boxes.
The dealh weapon, according to offi·
cers, was ouUitted to be worn in a shoul-
der hokter and featured a seven-inch
barrel.
Huntington Beach police declined to
Jdentily Grlsenti with the Hessians cycle
club. Costa Mesa detective Jim
Strickland, however, today confirmed
that Grisenti was a past president of the
group.
He has been questoned in a 1968 Costa
1'1esa case in which a Hessian, Frank W.
"Wild Mouse" Rundle , was convicted in a
beating, chain-whipping and shooting
case. Grisenti wasn 't charged in the
earlier Costa Mesa case.
Ne\\'-port Police
Report Thefts
In Cars,, Boats
A series ol burglaries involving boats
,and recreational vehicles, resulting in a
·loss of more than $4,000, was reported to
Newport Beach police over the weekend.
. Largest sjngle burglary among them
occurred at a storage garage owned by
Prime Properties. 861 W. 16th St., where
intruders broke into several house-cars
and boa ts.
Police said nearly $2,000 worth ol
assorted items such as radios. tape
decks. fishing geRr, camera equipment
and other loot was taken from parked
vehicles and boats.
Redlands attorney Arthwell C. Hayton
also tol d police someone broke into his
cabin cru iser moored at Ken Niles'
Bayside Marina, stealing television sets ,
marine radio gear and a tea kettle.
Haylon's $1 ,000 boat burglary was ex-
ceeded by a Sl.100 break-i n reported by
\Villiam J·I. \Vomble, of 2900 Cliff Drive,
1,1,·ho visited his 24-foot yacht at 717 Lidn
Park Drive Saturday for the first time in
6e ve ral months.
Checking the interior he found someone
had broken in and :-tnlen six sails from a
st orage compar1n1ent.
TV Producer Di es
A~1!T\'\11LLI-'.. NY 1APl -'felevision
producer John A. Aaron, .11, died Sunday
after a shorl. illnc~s Aaron CO·produced
the Columbia Aroadcast ing Syslem"s
"Person to Person" program ~tarri ng the
late Edward R. J\1urrow.
OLUIH COAST'
DAILY PILOT
OUJIGI!. C».l"f f'UBl..mmtO CDM'PAJn'
l•Mtf N. w .... ,,.."*' •• ,.., l"ubllllliW
Jtc\ R. CIJ'i.,. vu ..,..kMn, .,.., 0-•t ._
Thomlt Ktnil
£ditar
Tl.o"'•t A. Min,.\11• ,..,.,.....,. Edl!Or
L ''''' !(,;_, ,....., 8-dl CJty ~
,...,.., .... Oflb
l lll N"'JMHi S.0,.1•••"'
M.1ffi11 Addr•ss: r.o. 1o1 1175, t2•&> --Cll'9 -.: !DI Vl'M .., .. ~ ~ m""'"" A-
-·-...,I 11111 ....,., .........
419 --IQ~--
........ P1U7T" .... ~ .......... ,.,,.
............... """ ...... d•ity -C"'1 ,_. .., ... ...,. ... " ........ ~ htdl. ......... ..._,.. C..•• .,,.. •• l'I ..........
...... ~· v •• ..,,, "'" c............, <• • ............... ~ ...... '""'~ .... ,......... ~ Ptlrl(IOtl 1"111111'11 ...... ...... "'1 ~ CMlt M-
falsplill (1141 '42--4J21
CJ lftlllf .M ........ 6t1-S671
•
. '
•
Hong To1ver Goes llv,
Irving Case
Mystery Blonde
Next to Surface
NE \Y YORK (AP ) -Another mystery
woman , this one a blonde sc:uba driver ,
ha5 surfaced in the Clifford Irving-
Howard Hughes saga .
1·hc "''r1n1an, identirled onlv 11s Aon
Baxter. flew v.·ith Irv ing last -Decembrr
to St. Croix in the Virgin Islands and
gave him scuba lessons wh il e he \1·as
there in what he said was an attempt to
contact Hughes, Life 1nagaz1ne said Sun-
d•)'.
In a C'ourt paper filed la st month,
novelist Irving . 41, SIA'ore he new to St.
Croix fron1 A1iami last Dec-. 10 on in-
structions of a llughes aide, y,·ho told him
the b1llionatre would meet him there fo r
a final session about fl ugh es '
··autobiography .''
Irving said be stayed on St. Croix until
Dec. 12, but when no message came fr om
Hughes. he left.
11 ughes, who hasn't been seen in pub\lc
for a deeade and is said In live as a
recluse In the Bahamas, has denied ever
' . '. . '
meeting Irvin~ and labeled the Irving-·
produced ··autob1oi::n1phy'' a fa k f',
Hughes' dise l:11rners c:ime frnn' :i vo\co
idt·nt1f1ed 11'\ hi, 111 ;1 t1•t(•phri nc 11t'l\:S r·n11·
fcrPnt:{'. :ind i11 l·uurt ;irl1d<1v1ts <tll<'gcrtly
Signed by I lughr•s.
Another beautiful won1an. :\1na 1 an
Pallandt. a 39-yea r-old Oan 1sh r:1b<1rel
singer, said lasl \.\f"C'k she wa s with Irv-
in~ 11hrn he lll'nl to '.\h·:\1l''I la~t
f'ebruary.
His ~lory that he rnet liui.:hes nn that
trip "flabbergasted '' her, ~he said. She
.,,,·as quoted as saying she kne"' or no "'ay
lrving rould ba1·e niet "''1th Hughes dur-
ing that trip.
~!rs. van JlaJl11ndt. csl rangrd 11ife of a
Dut eh barnn, h1•cs 011 the Spanish
t.·led1terranean island of Ibiza, "''here the
Irvings also residl'.
Life. 11·hich piclurcrl J\lrs. vnn Pa!landt
on its cover this 11•cck. quotes an lbl7 a
resident as saying ""whcne\"cr Nina's
name "'as 1ncntioni..:d. Edlth clunbcd the
II all."
\Vork is under \vay on tlC\V to\1'cr addition to 1-foag
Memorial J-lospita l in Ne\1'port Bea ch . The I I-story
buil di ng will contain 243 beds, bringing the hospi-
tal's capacity lo 472 bed s \vhen the nc111 facility is
completed in late 1973. The to\ver "'iii cost $11 n1i1·
lion -abou t $1 mil!ion per story.
·. (
From Poge 1
IR,rl NG.
• '1 "
Hug hes·inarkcd
Transc riJll Said
18 Years Old
• •
Airwest Strike
Settled; New
Agreement OK'd
Lush Dichondra Law1i smiling but still silent.
Neither he nor his Ja\I·~ er v.·ould say
1,1,•hether he actually testified and what he
said .
Finds Greener Pasture
''I don't want to seem impolite. but I
•·ant the proceedings to go along in an
orderly way,'' Nessen said.
Nessen managed to delay Irving's ap-
pearance before the jUf)' for nearly two
weeks by pleading more time to acquaint
himself with his client's ease.
Nt:\V YORK (UPI ) -A transcript 1,1,·Jth
niarginal notes in I loward Hughes'
handwriting Cliford lrY1ng used as proof
that an autobiography of !he billionaire
11•as authentic m;iy be 18 years old,
!\"e ws1Yeek maga1.ine has reported.
Hughes Airwest and the Aircraft
Mechanics Fraternal Association have
reached a tentative agreement to end a
seven-week strike.
Lee Pitt, Information officer foe
Airwest. and 0 . V. De/Je-f'emine, national
director of AMF'A, both stressed Sunday
the agreement is still subject to back-to-
1,1,·ork procedures being settled and
ratification by the 570 striking union
members.
Pitt also said the agreement was sub-
ject to approval by the Federal Pay
Board.
No details of the settlement were
disclosed pending the ratincation vote .
Meanwhile, Airwest will continue to rly
its limited schedule wh ich it has maln·
ta ined since the strike began Dec. 15.
The dispute involving mechanics and
aircraft cleaners has been over wages,
fringe benefits and work rules.
Winter Concert
At Harbor Higl1
A midwinter concert will be presented
by the music department of Newport
Harbor High Schoo l al 7:30 p.m. on Feb.
IO in the school auditorium,
The Sailor Band, the Newport Harbor
High School Orchestra, girls' choruses,
Harbor Chorale and the Chantelles will
be featu red.
Tickets may be purchased for SI at the
door or from any Nev.·po rt J1arbor High
mu sic student. All proceeds will be used
for scholarship awards to be presented on
~1arch 17th.
ll's well known that there are just two
ways you can start a lawn.
The cheaper but more difficult is to lay
your own grass seed and y,•ork up fr om
the inevitable patchy beginning: the
easier but 1nore costly is lo buy turf a nd
sit back lo enjoy the blooming of your
readymade lawn .
An irate Tustin homeowner told Orange
County sheriff's officer during the
\Yeekend that he had learned of a th ird
""'ay.
Someone moved in during the night to
cut out his entire diehondra lawn and
move it to the intruder's apparently
2 A11aheim ~Ien
On Pla11e Killed
Federal aviation safe ty experts today
were probing the crash Of a renled plane
into Lake Arrowhead Saturday. The plane
carried four men, including two from
Anaheim to their deaths in 30 feet of
1,1,•ater.
Bodies of the occupant s \Vere dragged
from the bottom of Blue Boy_ Ba y by
di vers for the San Bernardino County
Sheriff's Office..
Ludwig V. Stein, 49, A.nahc1m, "''as at
tl1e co ntrols \vhen the single-engine Piper
Cherokee crashed.
Killed with him v.·ere Joseph Liles, 39.
also of Anaheim; Richard Jasi nsky, 30,
F"rcmont, Calif., and Ardell S. Drilensen,
49, of Minnesota.
'rhe viclims .,,,·ere flying to a Colorado
River resort area in the plane rented by
Tri Aviation Services of Fullerton, in-
vestigators said.
Mrs. Sperline Elected
By Young· Republicans
A Newport Beach business"•on1an :ic-
tlve in the drive to register the 18 lo 21.
year-0ld voters 1,1,·as elected cha irman of
the California Young Republicans Sun-
day.
Mr s. Elizabeth Spcrlinr, l.'i, president
and founder of International Product
Management lnc .• a Newport Beach im-
porting firm. received 130 of the 235 \"Oles
at the CYR convention in Sa n Francisco,
She is also treasurer of Coast and
Sperline, a n1achine parts con1pan~· in
Los Angeles and reside s \1·ilh ht'r hu s-
band. Vergil, and thei r lour children in
Huntington Park.
She ran on a conservative slate and
defeated Terry flarper, 32, a Hanfi1rd in-
surance man.
Both Harper and Mr s. Sperline h;;.d
pledged support for the Nixon-Agnew
ticke t on the Nove mbe r ballot.
But Mrs. Sperline, who said she is hal f-
Cherokee and concerned with lndian af-
fairs, emphaSized makir • .; the Republican
Party "more allractiYe to the 18 to 21-
yea r~lds."
She has been co-chairman of the )'Outh
committee tor the Los Angeles County
Republican committee for two years and
wiinls to expand her activities statew ide.
She also said her program wouJd in--
elude ''candidate development. establish·
ment of scholarships to the national and
regional Republican leadershi p training
conferences and a registration drive
among non-college students and sc hool
dropauts.''
Those elected along with Mrs. Sperline
Included Maureen Reag11n, 31, of l...o-'I
Angeles, daughter of Gov. Ronald
Gov. Reagan spoke to the convention
Saturday night as esked CYR to "explode
the Dc1nocratic myt h."
He 3ald the "myth" wa-'I the Idea that
tht Democratic Party is the ''party of lhe
common man, the liberals, •nd the defen-
ders of individual freedom."
'
UPlt ........
LEADS YOUNG REPUBLICANS
Businesswoman Sperlin.
He also called on the members to sup-
port the President's upcoming China trlp.
Reagan.
Miss Reagan wa s elt<eted 11 national
com miUeewoman.
Conservatives won all but one or the '
major state offices.
1\-lichael Dahl Qf Redd in,;. running as 11n
Independent, defeated Lewis Wiener of
San Francisco for Northern California ct·
ecutive vlee--presldeot by a vote of 13$ to
101.
grassless locale.
All 60 feet of Raffi F'rancian's dichon·
dra spread has now gone to apparently
greener pastures lea ving the F'rancian
fr ontage at 1081 Hyde Park Drive, bare
and brown . ,
"Somebody had a green thumb and a
sharp tool," commented a dep uty.
JI a1idals Cenient
Relatio1is With
Coast l1iventor
Newport Reach inventor Albert L.
1'1aloney called police Sunday to report
some inven\lve pranksters had come up
"''ilh a novel new way to ruin his day.
Checking the so urce of some
mischievous predawn whisptring and
snickering outside his home at 3806 Inl et
ls!and Drive, l\faloney found what they
thoug ht wa s so fun ny.
"\V e Love You, Karen," had been writ-
ten on his driveway in large letters of
fresh concrete.
The message today remains for
posterity, even though l\faloney managed
to scrape some away before the concrete
completely hardened, ac("()rding to Of-
fice r Vince Antista,
The inventor who estimates SIOO worth
of malicious mischief damage is still
wondering if the pranksters wer~ also
rather inventiYe or just hit the y,.'rong
home.
Nobody named Karen lives at his
house. or anywhe re else in th e
neighborhood.
Student Dies in Auto
SAN BERNARDINO ! UPI \ -A car
plu nged 30 feet down an emban kmen t off
Interstate 14 during the 1,1,·eekend. killing
ils drive r, a Long Beach State College
student. The victi m, Richa rd L. Bonnell.
19, Barstow, was returning to school
Saturday night at the time of the crash.
In the meantime, a stream of \\'itnesses
provided lestimony "''hich has further
complicated the bi7.arre case_
Other figures in the mystery are
scheduled lo appear before the federal
grand jury as the panel enters its second
"''e<'k of inl'cstigation .
Irving's Sv.•iss-born 14'ire Edith and
SLisk1nd. the researcher "'ho said
Jn a sworn affidavit that he 1,1,·1tnessed a
meehng bet v.·een Hughes and Irving. are
among those v.·ho ha\'e be.en subpoenaed
tu testify in the probe.
Donna Duffield
Ftllleral Service
Slated Tuesday
Funeral .services will be held Tuesday
in Ne v.·port Beach for .\1rs. Donna
~l agu ire Duffield . .,,,·Jfe of local develop€r
Marshall D. Duffield 1\ ho died Saturday
at the age of 54.
?-.1rs. Duffield resided v.·1th her husband
al 34 Linda Isle. Ne\\'port Beach. ffe is
the de veloper of the Bayside Trailer Park
and a former All-American footba ll
player at USC.
r..-lrs. Duffield y,·as active in civic y,.·ork
with the National Charity League, Big
Brothers and tbe Newport Harbor Art
1'1useum.
A Christian Science reader, \Varren E.
•lov.·Jand v.·ilt conduct JlOl)n sen•ice at
Pacific \:iew ~lemorial Chapel. Burial
1,1,·ill follow at Pacific \'1ew ,\lemor1a/
P:irk .
The family has suj!;J::ested memorial
contributions to thr Ameri can Cancer
Society or any other ehanly.
In addition to her husband. '.\Ir~. Duf-
field is su rv11·ed by a son, Marshall D.
Duffield .Jr . of !\"ev.·port Beach: two
daughters, ~lrs. John Gabriel of Costa
~icsa and ~1rs. Robert ileffernan of \'I .
J\1 edfo rd, 1\-!a ss.: her n1olher, Mrs. John
Charles Maguire and a sister, r..1rs.
Patrici a Maguire Shirley, both of Los
Angeles.
ONE FULL CARAT DIAMONDS
Fine ~'h.ite colol,
American cut
brilliant.
Select the mounting
of your choice from
our stock.
$
An agent of lntcrlel. Hu_ghes' in-
!elligencc network, cla irncd th e.
transcrip t originally 1nay h;nc bern us-
ed as the basi.s fnr a long profile on·
Hughes that apj)('nred 111 Lo11k n1aga7.1ne
in 1954, Z~c"''s weck said Sunday.
Strphcu \\"hilt', V.'lio 11·n1te lhe Look
article, confirrned thnt tape s an s
transc ripts Y."t'r~ rnade of hi s Jlugh<'s 1ri"-
ter\'iev.·s in 195•1. NC\l"S"''C'4'k !'irnd, arid that
h'.:' th oug hL he remen1bere1l that Hughes ha~ niade h a n d .,,,. r i t I e n eorrt>e!tnns.
niaterial ho11·ever. said he thought al! that
material had bee n bu rned years ago.
Irving, \\"ho showed the transcript to
~fcGraw-~!111 Rook Co. to pro1·e lhilt he
met "''ith I lughcs in a Sl'ries of in-
ter\ iev.·s, ;ippeared before a federal
grand jury today.
Mean.,,,·hilc, a film dncumcnlary in
which lr1·ing appeared in \!!69 on French'
television "''as sho..,, n Sunday ni~ht on the
CBS-TV prog ran1 '"Sixt y r-.1ii1utes."
The filn1 v.·as n1ade on the subject 'll
niaster art fnrgl'r El)'nlr Or I lory oo
.,,,·horn Irving ba~cd a honk called
"f.ake." lrl'Jng sa1<I in the filni.
"1\ll the \\"Ci rld loves to sec 1hc experts
and the estabhshn1cnt n1ade a fool or.
And everyone likes to feel th at those \vho
set thernsch·es up as experts are really
just as gullible as anyone els~."
Another character in ··Fake,' art dcaltr
Fernand Legros, is suing Irv ing here for
S.S5 millio n, cla1mmg he v.·as libeled m the
book.
OCC Continues
Registration
Re!";i!lr;it inn wilt 1'ontlnur ;it Oranp;e
C(tast College frnrn Ra.in 1118p1n 1nday
through Thu rsda~· :ind Feb 14-17 111 the
Adrnissions Building .
Day and Even ing l"nllcce ~!tidrn\~ rnu~t
fil! out an admiss ion ~ ::ippl1('fll1on pnor to
regi.~trat1on. ,l\ppl11 :it 1011s 11 ill b e
arailable 1n the Adn,1ss1ons nu!ld1n~.
A variety of i.:ourses nrt· still al'a1l<1ble
and students should re gister as snnn as
possible. F'or rnnre infor1nat1on, call 834·
5733.
GEMOLOGICAi:
APPRAISALS
Wo ha.,. all qualltl• and shel of Diamond• In stock ready for your ln-
t lon. Cft.ose from Gem 41u11itin 1t tenslble prlcn.. Or chooM Diamonds aa
low 11 $1 .00 1 point. AJI Dl1mond1 carry our money Nck gvarantH •
We wlll appr1iM in
writing your v1lu1ble
Jewelry for perton1I
or Insurance purposes..
Qu ick, efficient service. D'41MolUI Ceater fer Or• .. ., Cew11t11
Find It Here First • 1 002 lte1111 to Clloow fT"Om
COSTA MESA JEWELRY 6. LOAN
Open Dcilr f lo I
1838 NEWPORT ILYD.
DOWNTOWN COSTA ~·
Come ln and Browe Around
Phone 646-77 41
Botwoon Hart.or and tlroadwwy
' EXPERT WATCH
REPAIR DONE
ON PREMISE
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O:range Coast Today's Final
N.Y. Stock8 EDITION
VOL. o5, NO. 32 , 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1972 c TEN CENTS
Copters Make Emergency Flights for Mes an
Airborne police and other lawmen
throughout Orange and Los Angeles coun·
ties combined efforts early today on
mercy missions to collect rather rare
blood ror a hen1orrhaging emergency
surgery victim Jn Newport Beach.
Heliropter pilots working in shifts flew
three blood runs, 01.e of them .a return
flip .after a hospital in Anaheim sent the
wrong blood type the first time.
A desperate hunt via southland police
radio netv.-orks turned up three on-duty
lawmen with the same type 0-negative
Pay Raise
Denials Get
Court Test
WASHINGTON (AP) -The United
Auto Workers today announced details of
a law suit aga inst the Pay Board to try to
recover a 17-ccnt-an-hour pay raise
dC'nicd lo aerospace workers.
CA\V Pre"i<!cnt Leonard Woodrock said
the suit. the first court test of a nu1jor
Pay Coard deci sion. is based on allega-
tions that the Pay Board aeled beyond its
Jep.:al power in denying the raise.
The UAW suit involves about 31,000
employes at ~1cDonnell·Douglas Aircraft
Corp.. LTV Aerospace Corp. and North
American Rockwell Aircraft Corp.
Also today , the International Associa-
t ion of Machinists said it would file suit
next week to recover the same pay raise
denied to another 70,000 emp\oyes at the
Boeing Co., Lockheed Aircraft Corp. and
McDonnell-Douglas where the two unions
share representation.
The UAW law suit, which Woodcock
said would be filed today in federal court
here. contests the action of the Pay
Board Jan. 5 in rejeeting a lt percent
first-year pay raise for aerospace
workers.
Pay Board later said it would ap.
prove that 12 percent raise if the unions
and companies agreed lo delay part Of it
until the second year of their three-year
agreements. but both the IAM and UAW
have refused to do this, choosing instead
to sue for the full amount this year.
Woodcock said that his workers are
being paid the portion of the rej ected 12
percent raise that the Pay Board said it
would approve this yea r, but that com-
panies are holding_ up the rest of .it pend-
ing the outcome of.today 's law suit.
Tiuiaboat Ot(Jtters
l p:uore Advice,
Obtain Lice11ses
SAN U IE G 0 IAP) -American
tunaboat owners in increasing numbers
are ignoring the advice o( the U.S.
government and are purchasing fishing
licenses from Ecuador.
Fiftee n of 35 American seiners fish ing
off the South .American coast have done
so this yea r, the American Tuna boat
Association says.
The United States recognll.es only a 12-
mile offshore limit -not 200 miles as
claimed by Ecuador -and therefore
d iscourages ac t ion implying
acknowledgement of the larger boundary.
Tunaboat owners are reimbursed by
the government for fines lev ied against
them when Ecuador seizes their vessels
inside the 200-mlle territory.
But this year, Ecuador has doubled the
fme for boats it also seiZed last year.
Passage Takes
Acapu.lco Lead
Mark Jobnson'1 WI n d ward
Passage took tho lead in the t,430-
mlle ·San Diqo to Acapulco yacht
race today.
Wlndwml Pwage "ported a
position 2311 miles from San Diego
, 11 • a.m. tncray. She was five milea
• ahud or her arch rival, Ken
DeMeuoe'1 Bla<:tlln, and ZI miles
ahead ol Bob Lynch't Sirius 11
from the Newport Harbor Yacht
Club.
Sirius rr hold> the elapsed time
rtcord of eight days and nlne
hours. Windward Passage's posiUon
after 2.0 bouts of sailing places ber
well ahead of Sirius D's nm day
run In the 1154 record ra<e.
See today'• boaUog page for
detailed atory on the alart or the raoe.
blood. but their donations were not need·
ed.
The drama involving patient Eli Bra-
bant, 61, or 1586 Santa. Ana Ave., Costa
J\.lesa. began about I a.m., when Hoag
J\.1emorial Hospital spokesmen called
Newport Beach police for help .
Brabant wa.s undergoing major surgery
when his aorta, the body's primary
artery, burst. according to Watch Com-
mander Lt. Kelson McDaniel.
The somewhat uncommon lype: ().
negative blood had been located at two
Anaheim hospitals, but the timing was
critical.
Dispatched at 1:10 a.m., the
department's Adam 2 helicopter with Of-
ficer Jim Golfos at the controls headed
inland to make the blood pickup and
delivery aided by Anaheim police who
bad it waiting at headquarters.
Life appeared to be ebbing for Brabant,
who is self~mployed as an electrical
engineer in Santa Ana.
Delivering the blood upon landing at
the Hoag Memorial Hospital parking lot,
Ofifcer Gollos was relieved by a second
pilot, Officer James Bradley.
Shortly afterward, Hoag Hospital of-
ficials issued a second desperate appeal
when it was discovered one of the two
Anaheim hospitals had sent the wrong
type Of blood.
The Adam 2 chopper raced back to pick
up the correct shi plllt!nt, bul Brabant -
who had re<:eived 21 pints of blood
transfusions by mid-morning -was still
in severe need.
A ca ll to the Red Cross Blood Bank in
Los Angeles Jed to location o! six more
pints or type 0-negative blood at Little
Company of Mary Hospital in Torrance.
Nev.·port Beach's Adam l helicopter.
however, had already been dispatched
back to Anaheim.
Coordinated by the Los Angele!! Police
Department's Wilshire Divisio n head-
quarters, one LAPD chopper was
dispatched south to pic k up the six ad-
ditional pints and ny them on from Tor-
rance.
"There v.•as excellent cooperation
throughout ," Lt. McDaniel said after the
one hour and :;o minute serits of mercy
flights.
Brabant was still listed 1n critical con-
dition in the hospital's intensive care
unit . but 1nore stabilized aftt'r the
predawn crisis.
His wife sald lhls morning after the
overnight ordeal that she h;is aJ·ways ap-
proved of pollce helicoptrrs In the Harbor
Area, but feels even more strongly now.
"They were so great ... the police and
the people at the hospital." she said.
"just marvelous -they rea lly v.'ent all
out."
Entertainer Slain
Perfor1ner in Mes.a Nightclub Shot
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By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
A pop music duo drawing cro\vds to a
Costa Mesa night club where they began
only two weeks ago was tragically broken
up early Sunday, when a dispute led to
the slaying of one member at his home.
The ki lling of John J. Brent. 28, who
bled to death after being shot in the groin
as his horrified wife watched, had no
local connection, investigators said today.
One man among several Brent chas-
l 21 Hopefuls
! May Appear
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Law's Long Arm
Somewh•re along the way lilUe Jay Gulledge,5, of Dallas lost a wheel
on his late-model tricycle -something any motorist can relate to. But
he got hj!lp when the long arm of the law intervened. Three-foot nine·
inch Jay found the helping band was that or Jim Wright, a sµc-foo t
six-inch Dallas policeman.
Partial lnj1mction 01\.'d
In Dock Strike on Coast
WASHIN GTON (AP) -A HOW!< labor
.subcommittee voted today to authorize a
partial 60-day injunction against the Wesl
Coast dock striU.
The subcommitl« wt.cl 5 to I to allow
a major part of tht Jtrite to oooUnue but
to allow a crurt, upon pditioo from the
attorney general. to halt 5trll«s allecting
the sbipmenta of military a n d
agricultural cargoes ml ohipmellto to
and from Hawaii.
The suboommitltt rei«l'd on a I to 3
party line -tile .... ,_, ltr'.U
legi51atlon req..e.t.d by"'-!fDIOO.
House Labor Committee Tuesday and
could be passed by the House Wednesday
if it agreed to SU!pend au its rules
again!t acting so quickly.
UDder the Thompson substitute, a
di.strict coart could issue an antHtrike
injtmction on1y upon finding that failure
to ship military and agricultural supplies
and all products to and from Hawaii
would jeopardize the national health and
safety. .
Thompson told the subcommittee that
Harry Bridges, the West C o a s t
longshoremen'• leader, w a 11 unen-
Uwsiastic about the scbsUlute, wishing to
cm&ue negoUaUons.
At Meeting
A packed house -even if only the field
of 1caodkfates for the upcomiq,ApriJ Jl -> • mlir*JpaJ eJeetJon appear -la an-
ticipated for tonight's C.Osta Mesa City
Council meeting.
The 21 would-be councilmen who met
lhe noon Thursday filing dead.line to
assure nomination and a place <1n the
ballot are likely to be in the audience t!)
begin sizjng up the situation.
Concern over a current oo.<lay study on
a proposal to a!low two-way traffic on the
east side of existing Newport Boulevard
when it finally becomes a Newport
Freeway frontage road may also bring
out a crowd .
Some local sources said today that con-
cerned property owners interested in
speeding up the stud y to 30 days plan to
pack city hall chambers for the tl :30 p.m.
session.
Representatives or lhe landowners, led
primarily by equlpment rental agency
owner Bill lioffman, are reportedly anx-
ious fo r stale and city planners studying
the two-way traffic issue to hurry it
along.
City officials meeting in a fifth·Mooday
study session last week on the fronta ge
road plan, plus its impa'ct on lhe closely~
related Newport and Corona de! Mar
freeways, were told such a change would
stall construction by two to four years.
And William llashimoto, assistant
right-of-way engineer for the State
Divisio n of HJghways' District 7 office in
Los Angelea told them in a briefing he
doubt& two-way traUic would be that
beneficial.
Members of the affected business com-
numity -much Of it fronting on the
boulevard's east side -lnltfated the
plan, hoping it might assure more com-
mercial activity after the lrttw1y1 are
bull I.
A public hearing m rentW&l Of the
(S.. COUNCIL, Pase I)
The Presldeol's propooal would have
compelled the -to mum to their
jobs while the enllr< dispul<, molting in
a striU now In Its l2Znd day, is sub-
milted to compibory -(See
W'ller story, -I)
Free SI~e p?
All the Danoctats .., the sub-
committee, beaded "' Rep. Frank
'lbompoon (D,H.1), -for I b e
..-.. --allered by . 1bompoon. llcp. Mm D. Dellei-(ft,
0...), -...... It ml hlo -R<plN!c-II-. Jolm ,........ al
Ohio m1 opm lldd al 11ew v.n -
!"=pion ,._ 1111 -1
-pt • ....-"' Ille -OOMt '?..::::.:. will .. to the lull
Student Dies in Auto
Man Facing Court irt Car Slumber
A man bemJ!ln1 -· around the Harllor Area u Ma tl.son the Martyr for
hll bJzarre campaign for freedom of
-has pltaded -I to the fint ol three counts o( illegal •lumbering in
1 vehJcl~.
WilUam f', ahttaon, rt, wbolo acldms
Is apparently whaltver Newport Beach
munlCJpol J>arkJnJI lot be happens to cboooe for !he nlglil, wm have a March
3 /rlal in Harbor Judicial District Court.
He bas ao rar been arrested three
ti.ma:, on Jan. 11, .as i nd 1a:aln 1!&r1y
Wednesday on charges of v1ol1Ung the
city onllnance forhiddlng uyono lo sleep
In a pubUcly J>Uked vehicle.
A judge will beor the cue lnatead of
Jury, ., Mattaoo arguea aagl"'t the 115 bail lnfniclion he II challenging.
11ie dcleodanl uy1 he has lived in his homemade IMI Dodie J>}cku)>Qmpor rig
In llalbo. slnco la& -Md doesn'I
...
lnlend to alter bi1 Ille atyle to conform
to 1ny city ordinance.
Alaltson cootonda JI lo a man'a bu.llnen
where be slftpl -not the city '• -and
c11a,... the anU-sle<plng law II abned
primarily at rouni and llXlf·halred v/.f.
llor1.
P1trolllng poUctmtn wased 1 cam.
91ign or WormaJ J1w ~rorcement for
-1tl pounding on hi• •hlnl/ed, Dutch-
doorfd camper 1t 111 houri to remind
anyone Inside that It 111 llle1al to sleep in
a vehlclt.
H& finally went to police headqu1rter1
Jan. 1e and made 1 fonnal complaint to
JUpervisors th•t he reu he "&.! being
hara.ued.
The aeries ol arrest, and booklna lnto
J•H beaan t•o days tater, along . wllh
police fmpoundl•R ol the ru1llc rig the
.......S and lhinl dine II WU raided .
Used for creating a disturbance at the
!our-unit Highland Park apartments he
managed Is in custody today, booked on
murder charges.
He was Identified as Willia m Riddle, 21,
also of 1-l igh!and Park.
Brent and his artner. Jerry Lambeth,
have been playing at the Black Knight,
330 E. 17th St., as the Jerry Lambeth
Duo.
The victim and his wife Mickie. 22.
returned to the Los Angeles suburb after
$40 0,000 Total
the club closed early Sunday morning 1nd
were drinking hot chocolate In the kJt-
chen before going to bed, investigators
said. .-
Several men apparently winding up a
party at the old tenement-like structure
began creating loo much noise outside,
according to homicide detecth•es.
c:oing out to Investigate, Brent tried to
quiet the group and became involved in
an argument which gradually gre'lt' more
(See SLAYING, Page Z)
Author Irving Facing
Internal Revenue Liens
imnoiur'!'.il>J = n.r'lliieiiiil'M.
.... Service m..i tu u ... totallna -e
than 1490,11/)Q aplntt novellsl ClUlord
lrvliit-fnd his wile, wllo allqedly banlted
$650,000 in roya\Ues lntendea for bllllon·
alre Howard Hughea for a disputed auto-
biography.
The IRS acted as Irving went be!ore a
federal grand jury investigating possible
fraud in the sale of lhe hook to 1dc:Graw-
Hill, Inc.
Tax liens for '246,993 again11t IrvJng
and $243,118 against hi11 wile were filed
with the county regl.strar.
A spokesman said they esllbll1h "a
priority for the IRS agaln.lt other cred-
itors. tying up the as.stls of the per11ons
against whom the liens had been i!llled."
A lien of S22,44a wa11 alllO flied ag11tnst
Richard Susklnd. who says he worked for
Irving as a resean::her on the Hughes
book.
Irving entered the jury room at
Federal Courthouse on Foley Square
shortly before 7 a.m. (PST) accompanied
by his attorney, Maurice Nessen, and
Philip Lorbe r, a lawyer representing Irv·
ing's wife, Edllh.
Quake Insurance
Largely lg1iored
By Homeowners
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Earthquake
lnsuranct, which wu largely una11UabJe
after a quake jolttd the Los Angeles area
a year 110 Wednesday causl.og death and
widespread damage, ls beinJ offered
again but few homeowners are in-
terested.
The Western Jnaurance Jnfonn1llon
Service reparted that undenrrlters ire
offering the protectkm at almott the
same rate. 1vaU1ble pMor to t.be earth-
quake last Feb. t , but there bu been no
great rush to oblaln II.
Homeowner• l'Ulbed to buy It In the
day1 lmmedlai.Jy following the dlsa1ter,
but moot ln1111rance f1m11 •UIJIOlldtd ..U. Int It until the' major allenhoclll 1Ublid-
ed. By then, llme apparenlly bad dlllled
the memorle1 Of the tragedy ml lntonat
In the lnllll'10Ce declined.
L Oeora:e W1~. eRCUt.tfe dirtc&or ol the
Jn/otmltlon ..,..,Ice, lllfd the patlam WU
lyp!UI of t-fOUO'llial dlwlers.
"Some people null to buy coverage al Ors~ but then at renewal il'me drop It,"
be uld.
Car Seats Stolen
Ronald 0. SI/cur told CO.la Mesa
police be dropped by the Kon• Unc1
bowling 1lley1, ,_ Harbor Blvd., about
12:45 a.m. S.lurday for • nljhtcap before
ao1ng homo to u1 .Joonn St., to bed.
Someone 1tole the two front 1eal.I
valued 1t $100-out of blJ cir durina the
brlel lnierludo .
I
Imrif refum to • ......,. newamen'f
questlon1.
He did Pott briefly for picture• be.for,
hi1 lawyer ~rltd him up to tbe 14th
floor grand jury room .
He left an hour and 40 min utes laltt,
smlllng but 11111 sllent.
Neither he nor his lawyer would say
whether he actually testified and wb.al he
aald.
"I don't want to seem impolite, but r
want the proceedings to go 1lona: ln an
orderly way," Nessen said.
Nessen managed to delay Irv1ng'1 ap-
pearance before the jury for nearly two
weeks by pleadlng more time to 1cqualnt
himself wilh his client's case.
In the meantime , a stream of witnesses
provided testlmony which has further
complicated the bizarre case.
Other figurea in the mystery are
scheduled to appear before the federal
grand jury as lhe panel enten Ill &econd
week of investigation.
Irving's Swiss-born wife Edith ind
Suskind, the researcher who uJd
in a 11wom affidavit that he witnessed a
meeting between Hughes and lrvinj'., are
among those who have been subpoM.e.td
"' testify In the probe.
McGraw-Hiii paid Irving $650,000 fn
three checks for transmittal lo Hughes.
But Irving conceded two weeb a.go that
the checks made out to "H. R. liughea''
were deposited and later withdrawn rrqm
1 Swl11 bank by his wile who opened aa
account 1s Help R. Hughet.
On Saturday, Sw!ll authorll!ct lnl!Oll
1n arrett warrant for Mn. lnlnj ln con.
necllon with poaoibla fraud ml foratrJ
charges. ·
Suskind, Jell Spain aboml an "'°Ila
(/lee DIVING, Pap I )
0r .... C.sd
Better p!Jn O!I getUnc up a few,
minute& earlier Tuetday becau.t
the late evening IOfl tanf&bt= tum lnlo early momlnc fos,
wlae mo.Uy aunny tides
with hiiJis •Ion& the coat at II m1n1 to ea Inland. Lows !Ml. •
• INSIDE TODAY
Little Tonv Ccntctlo 1001 ctm-
Jhied to hil room. but Ro1emorlt
McC011Ze11 roamed th,. 1irett1 for
outo0rapJ11 dllring the quiet thrll
riylita nwrch S11udoy in NtWTJJ,
Norih /rclond. Se, ator11 Poge 4.
" .. • , .. ,
~->'. ..
""" L•-• I) w.~1l•u 11 111·1:c1ttil Nein u
Of~ .. tnllt'Y tt s ,,. ,.....,.... It '"ff'I• ,, ... 11.U ,._ ...... , .... ,,
T ..... hlit11 tt
T\t•l•n '' ""''"'-' . W1-•1 llftW'f 1).\1/
WwW N""' ..
c MOl!d.!iy, FtbrlllrJ 7, 1972 -----"
Fron1 Page J
COUNCIL ...
city's spec.la! street ligbtin& assessment
district. as required t\'Cry (lve years by
•lite law. Is also blgb on tonight'• JO-
page agenda.
City officials recently explained fo llow-
ing a \.11ave of public concern and specula·
lion that no tax rate incre:l!'!c !!'! invoh•t"d
at ail, only a!.llhorizauon to ronrinue pro-
viding street lights as in the past.
The action to keep the assess n1ent
district alive is basically a formality.
Supporl of patr1ot1sm at home and
abroad also has a place on the City Coun·
Cil's agenda, under written and oral corn·
munications sections.
Several individuals hare w_riltcn to
commend a controversial City Council
re solution introduced by M;:iyor Robei'l
M. Wilson protesting a U.S. policy of
withdrawing from Vietnam without win·
11ing the war.
Primary among them is the Laguna
ftills Leisure World chapter or the
Military Order of the World Wars.
Chamber of Commerce officials also
plan a formal appearance befo re coun·
cilmen to outline the g r o u p 's
American is m Committee program rrir
erection of flagpoles with night lights to
display Old Glory 24 hours a day.
The first one was installed last v•erk at
the Cham ber of Co mmerce office to allow
flying of the American Flag around thr
clock as permitted on the condition tl be
lighted during dark hours.
-{:{ {,:, {,:,
Ironic Request
Meets Council
A note of tragic irony ls included in
the Costa Mesa City Council agenda,
with consideralioo due for a yearly dance
license .Ss the Black Knight restaurant.
Sam Falzone and Edward Needham,
operatiilg the nigh tclub as Harbo Inc.,
began on ly two weeks ago with entertain·
ment by the Jerry Lambeth Duo drawing
good crowds. ...
Police and fire departmeY1t inspectors
are recommending approval of the dance
permit, but the Black Knighl's entertain·
ment act wa s broken up early SundZy in
Highland Park.
Lambe th's partner, drummer John J.
Brent, 28. was shot to death while trying
to quiet a dist urbance at the apartment
units he managed rhcrc.
He and his wife had just returned home
from the local Saturday night engage·
ment.
Donna Duffield
Funeral Service
• Slated T1:1esdl'}-y
Funeral services will be held Tuesday
tn Newport Beach for Mrs. Donna
Maguire Duffield , wife of local developer
Marshall D. Duffield ~ho died Saturday
at th e age of 54.
Mrs. Duffield resided with her husband
at 34 Linda Isle, Newport Beach. He is
the developer of the Bayside Trailer Park
and a former All·American football
playe r at USC.
Mrs . Duffield was active in civic work
with the National Charity League, Big
Brothers and the Ne'>"'port Harbor Art
Museum.
A Christian Science reader, Wa rren E.
Howland will conduct noon service at
Paci fi c View Memorial Chapel. Burial
will follow al Pacific View Memorial
Park.
The family has suggested mcinorial
i:ontributions to the American Cancer
Society or any other charity,
In addition lo her husband. Mrs. Duf·
field is survived by a son, Marshal! D.
Duffield .Jr. 1)f l'lcwport Beach: twn
daughters, Mrs. John Gabriel of Costa
r..lesa and Mrs. Robert Heffernan of W.
Medford. Mass.: her mother. J\.1rs. John
Charles Maguire and a sister, Mrs.
Patricia Maguire Shirley, both of Los
Angeles.
DAllY PllOT
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lloflg To1ver Goes lJJJ
lrv itig Case
Mystery Blonde
Next to Surface
;-n-'.\V YORK (AP 1 ~ Ano1her myHtcry
'>"'nman . this one a blonde scuba drive r.
has surfacf'd 111 1he Clifford Irving·
ll nwnrd Hughe s :.ag a.
1"he <.1'on1an, idcnt1f11>d only llS Ann
Baxter flew with Irving last Dcrember
to ~!. Croix in the Virgin Islands and
gave him scuba ll'S5011s while he Wi:IS
there in what he said was an attempt to
C(lntact J{ughes, Life magazine said Sun·
d'Y-
In a eou rr paper flied la st month,
novelist Irving , 41, sv.·ore he flew to SL
Croix frorn r-.tiami last Dec. 10 on in·
structions of a l-lughes aide, \\/ho tol d him
the bi!linnairc would n1eet hin1 there for
a final session abou! H u g hes '
''autobiography.'"
!1·ving said he stayed on St. Croix until
Dec. 12, but \1'hrn nu n1cssagc t'ame from
]{u~hcs, he left.
meeting Irving and labC'led the !r\'1nit-
produced ·'autob1ograph,v" R (a k e .
Hughes' discla11ners carne fron1 ;i \'111t·e
1~entified as his in a 1elep lH11H• !lt'llS t'O!l·
fercn ce, and 1n court a/Jidnv!ts allrg1•dly
signed bY Hughes
Another beautiful wornan . 1\111.1 \'all
P<i llandl. a J9-yea r-<Jld J)anish <·itbilrl'L
singer. said last week she v•a s 11•11h lr1 •
HJ~ "·hen he 1l'Cn t to _'.t,lf':-;1c11 Ja:-t
February.
His story that he met Hughes on th:i t
trip "flabbergasted" her, she said. She
was quoted as saying she knew of no way
Irving could have met with tlughcs dur·
ing that trip.
t.trs. va n Pa!landt. cs1 ra ngrd \1·ife of ~
Dutth baron . lives rin the ::ipC1n1sh
Mediterranean island of Jbiz;i, v.·hcrc tho
Irv1ngs also re~idc .
Li(('. ~·hith pictured ~!rs. l"Clil f':-illandt
on its cover this \\'Ctk , quntcs Cln lb1tii
resident flS sa~1n_g "11henel'rr N1n;i..;
nanH• was 1ncn\1oncd , l;~dilh rl1n1bc d tnr
\.\'<Ill .,
\Vork i.s under \vay on nC\V IO\VCr addition to lloag
l\1~n1?r1al t-l ospita! in l\·e \vport Beach_ 1'hc 1 l·slory
building v.•1Jl contain 24:1 beds, bringing the hosp!·
tal 's capac1L.Y !n 472 bc<ls '\hen the ne\v fattlity 1s
('Olllpletcd 111 late 1973. The tO\\•er \\1ill cost $11 mu.
lion -about SJ million per story.
l-l11 gh4'.~. 11 ho h<l.<.n't hr·rn srcn in public
f(1r a derarle: and is said to live a~ a
recluse 111 th e Balu1111a.~. has denied evrr
)~( 'f<
. '. . . • •
II u o·J1c s· inaTk ed i"I Fro111 P11ge I
Gree1i-thuu1becl
Thief Absco1ids
Witli Large Laiv1i
Ex-cycle Gang Leader
Held in Beach. Slaying
IRVING ...
airliner for New York today to appear
before the grand jury. He was served a
subpoena at his Mal!orca home Friday
and ordered to appear with all his notes,
tapes and other material he might ha ve
collected for the book.
Transcript Said
13 Years Old
NE W YORK (U PI) - A transcript with
marginal notes in lloward Hughes'
handwriting Cliford Irving used as proof
that an at llobiography o( the billionaire
\~as au thentic may be 18 years old,
Newsweek magazine has reported .
It's we!J known that there are just two
wa ys you can start a lawn.
The cheaper but more difficult is to Jay
your own grass seed and work up fror11
the . inevitable patchy beginning: th e
easier but more costly is to buv turf and
sit back to enjoy the blooming nf your
readymade lawn.
An irate Tuslin homeo\vner told Orang-e
County sheriff's off icer during the
weekend that he had learned of a th ird
'"'ay.
So meone moved in during the night !.o
cut out his entire dichondra lawn and
move it to the intruder's apparently
grassless locale.
All 60 feet of Raffi Francian 's dichon·
dra spread has now gone to apparently
greener pastures leaving the Francian
/rontage at 1081 Hyde Park Dri ve, bare
and brown.
"Somebody had a green thumb and a
11harp tool," commented a deputy.
3 More Showings
Of 'RA' Slated
There will be three n1ore benefit
performances of the "RA Expeditions"
this week at Orange Coast College in
C<:ista Mesa.
In the college auditorium. tlckels will
be $1.25 at 11 a.m. Tuesd ay and $1.50 for
lh e 8 p.m. Frida y showing. Proceeds will
go lo the college's student body fund .
And at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Sc iel'lce
Hall. the $2 admission charge will benefit
the Marine Tech Cl ub.
A visiting archeologisl and three OCC
i~struc~ors wi\l conduct a p a n e l
discussion on the film at 3 p.m. \lied·
nesday ir the Student_ Center Lounge.
\Vaymo n A. Grisenti of rrunllngton
Beach, a 38-year-(Jld former president of
the Hessi an s mo!(Jr cycle c!uh. today is
being held in city jail in connccti(Jn y,•ith
the Friday night shooting death of a
visitor Cit his ho1ne.
(jriscnti, of 19402 Jerrilyn l~anc and
n1cmbers of his fan1il.v have insiste d that
the victim. Jt usty R. Cook, 26. of Lomira,
was shot ln an <1ccidcnt.
llun!ington Beach pol ice. ho1ve ver, are
:-;ceking murder charges againsl Grisenti.
He v.·as scheduled for arraignment late
today in \Vest Orange County t.1unicipal
Court.
Griscnli v,.·as taken in to custody Friday
about three hours after the to p.m.
shooti ng in his home. J-1on1icide officers
had questioned his wife, Anita. 31, and
the coupre·s five child ren.
Jn vestig ators said Cook had been shot
once in the upper throat with a .357
caliber magnum shi~ .
When pollce arrived, the victim was
still slumped Jn a chair , his hea d on the
dining room table. He was rushed by am·
bu!ance to Pacifiea Hospital where he
was dead on arrival.
Jn recounting the tragedy, police said
both of tile elder Grisentts told in-
vcsUga!ors that the gun went off ac·
cidentally while Grise nti 11'as sho\ving it
to Cook.
Police, hov.•ever. allege that the slayi ng
was the result of an ar,i;:ument bet'>"'een
Grisen ti and Cook over some tool boxes.
The death weapon . accord ing to offi·
cers. was outfitted to be worn in a shoul-
der holster and featured a seven·inch
barrel.
1-luntington Beach police declined to
identify Grisenti v.'ith the J~essians cy cl e
club. Costa rvtcsa detective J i m
Strickland . hov,.·evcr. todav confirmed
that Grlsenti ~·as a past prCsldent of the
group.
Mrs. Sperline Elected
By Young· Republicans
A Nev•port Beach business'>"·oma n ac·
ti ve in the drive to register the 18 t-0 21 ·
year-old voters was elected chairman of
the California 'Youn g Republica ns Sun·
da y,
Mrs. Elizabeth Sperline. 35. president
and founder of Internationa l Product
Management Inc,. a Ne '>"·port Beach im-
porting firm , received 130 of the 235 votes
at the CYR convent.ion in San Francisco.
She is also treasurer of Coast and
Sperline. a mach ine parts co1npany in
Los An geles and resides with her hus·
band, Verg il. and thei r four children in
Huntington Park.
She ran on a conserv;itive slate and
defeated Terry Harper, 32, a Hanford in·
surance ma n.
. Bo.th Harper and Mrs. Sperline had
pledged support for the Nixon-Agnew
ti cket on the November ba llot.
But Mrs. Sperline. who said she is hal f·
Cherokee and concerned with Indian af·
fairs , emphasized makh • ...; the Republican
Party "more attractive to the 18 to 21·
year-olds." '
She has been co-chairman o[ the .touth
co1nmittee fo r the Los Angeles County
Repu blican committee for two years and
wanU! to ex pand her activities statewide.
She also said her program would in·
elude ''candidate development, establish·
ment of scholarships to the national and
regional Republica n leadership training
conferences and a registration drive
among non·college student s and school
dropouts."
Those elected along with Mrs. Sperllne
Included Maureen Reagan, 31, or Ltl!'>
Angeles, daughter or Gov . Ronald
Gov. Reagan spoke to the convention
Saturday night as asked CYR to "explode
the Democratic 1nylh."
He said the "myt.h" WBS the idea that
the Democratic Party is the ''party ol the
rommon man, the liberals, and t.he de.fe.r>-
ders of individual freedom."
Vl"t Tsi..hei.
LEADS YOUNG REPUBLICANS
Buslnesswom1n Sperlln•
He also called on the members to sup-
port the President'i; upcoming China trip.
Reagan.
Miss Reagan was elected a national
committeewoman.
Conservatives won 1111 hut one of the
major state offices.
Michael Dahl or Redding, running 33·an
Independent. defeated Lewis Witner of
Si:&n Francisco for Nor thern Cali(ornla Cll·
ecutive vic~president by 1 vote of 135 to
107.
He has been questioned in a 1968 Cosla
Mesa case in whic h a Hessian, Frank W,
"\Vild Mouse" Rundle. was convicted in a
heat ing. chain-whipping and shooting
case. Grisenti '>"'asn't charged In the
earlier Costa Mesa case.
Fro1n Page J
SLAYING • • •
heated, police said.
Detective Sgt. Glenn Bordemann, of the
LAPD homicide division, said Brent then
returned for a .22 caliber r ifle and his
German Shepherd dog.
His wife. meanwhile, wa s calling police
to ask help in quieting the no isy gang
outside.
"He poked his head out the door and
told them again to 'make it.'" Sgt.
Bordemann said in recounting the fatal
feud.
One of the me n allegedly involved drew
\l'hat investigators believ e was a .38
caliber plsto! and fired once through a
1v1ndow, striki ng Brent in the groin area.
··we haven't reco vered the gun yet,"
Sgt. Borden1ann said.
Brent collapsed and bled to death on
the dining room floor.
A spokesman at the Black Knight said
this morning that Brent and his partner
had jusl bee n booked about two weeks
ago for entertainment six nigh ts a week.
The tv.•o-man combo had been drawing
cro111ds and was well-recei ved by patrons
"·ho enjoyed the ir music for dancing.
"Isn't it somethimg else? What a
tragedy ... "their employer said today
of Brent's mlirder.
Se u. l\far~are l S111ilh
To See k R c-clceli o n
WASl!lr->H-;TO\ iliPl 1-Sf>n ~·lnrgaret
Ch;:is c Srn11h, 74. announced on tile Srnafe
flnor Monday that sh e 11•ould be a can·
chd atc f(Jr re-election in l\ovcmbcr. There
had been speculation that 1V1rs _ Sn1ith. a
men1bcr ()f Congress since 1940 ;ind the
Senate since 1949, mig ht retire this year,
particularly after her close friend and ad ·
ministrative assistant, Gen. William
Lewis . .suffered a serious heart attack.
On the Spanis h island of Ibiza, police
searched the home of a friend of Irving·s.
Gerald Al bertin i. Albertini. a wealth y
Ameri can , told newsmen last week he
once kept Irving's manuscript of the
Hughes book for the au thor for abou t ID
da ys.
Albertini 's wife said the police "found
nothing at all ."
Air,vest Strike
Settled; Ne'v
Agreeme11t OK'd
Hughes Airwest and the Aircraft
Mechan ics Fraternal Association have
reached a tentative agreement lo end a
seven.week strike.
Lee P itt, information officer for
Airwest, and 0. V. Delle-Femine, national
director of AMr A. both stressed Sunday
the agreement is still subject to batk·to·
\vork procedures being setlled and
ra\.ification by the 570 striking union
members.
Pit t also said the agreement was su b·
ject to approval by the Federal Pay
Bo11rd .
No details of the settlement were
disclosed pending the ratification vote.
Me anwhile, Airwest v:iJI conti nue lo ny
its limited schedule which it has main·
ta ined si nce the strike began Dec. 15.
The dispule involving mechanics and
aircraft cleaners has been over wages,
fringe bene fits and work rules.
S u11k e11 ShizJ's
01 vne r H11nl e<l
LOS Al"·."C:F:LES (AP1 -Author1tlrs
"'·ere attempting lo find the owner of an
unn1anncd cabin tTui ser found awash at
sea off r.1arina <lei Hey.
Harbor Patrol officials said Su nday
that apparentl y someone tried to scuttle
the boat. v.:hich had holes punched in its
l1u!! and its spark plugs removed.
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American cut
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$
An agen t of lntertel. Hughes' in·
lclligcnce network, cJain1rrl I he
transcript originally n1ay hnvc be<"n us·
ed as 1he basis for a Jong profile on
Hughes that ap1X'ared 111 Look n1aga1.inc
in 19~4, Ne"'S\\'Cck said Sund11y .
Stephen \V hite, \1·ho wrul~ the Louk
art icl e. confi rmed !hat t l1 pr 'i and
lranscripts were n1adc of his Hughes in·
tcrv iews in 1954, Ne <.1'S \1·eck sn1d. and that
he thought he reme1nbcrcd that Hughe s
had n1ade h a n d v.• r it t e n corrections.
materia l however. said he thou~ht ;ill tha t
materia l had bcei:i burned years .ago.
Irvi ng, y,•ho sho11·ed the transcript to
1-IcG raw-HHI Book Co. to prol'e that he
n1et wit h 1-lughes in a series of in·
te rviews, appeare d before a federa l
grand jury today.
t.1eanwhile, a film doeun1cntilry ln
which Irving appeared in 1969 on French
television wa s shown Sunday night on the
CBS.TV program "Sixty Minu!es"
The fib-n v.·as made on the subject of
master art forger Elyn1r ne Horv on
whom Irving based a honk Called
"fake." Jrving said in LhP liln1 :
"All the world loves lo .see the rxpc!'IS
and the establishmen t made a fool of.
And everyone likes to fe el th;-it those who
set themselves up as expert.~ arc really
just as gullible as anyone el se,"
Anothe r character in "Fake.' art dealer
Fernand Legros. ls suing Irvin g here ror
$55 mi llion, claiming he was libeled in the
book .
OCC Continues
Registratio11
J1rg1str:ilion \\'il l ('Onl1nuc :it Or::inge
Coils\ College frr.m f! ;i 1n. lo R p.m. toda y
!hrough Thur sdav ;ind Fch. 14·17 in the
Admissions Building.
Day and Evening Colleg e st1td f'nl<; must
fill out an adrnissi nn s ap pl1rat1nn prior tn
regi.~tration. Appl1cat1ons ~·i ll be
available in Lhe Admi ssioJls Building .
A va riety of courses are still available
and studen ts should register as soon as
possible. For more information, call 834·
5733.
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