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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-02-08 - Orange Coast Pilot' • :; I I 7 . ----~ .. o sa DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * TUES DAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUA·RY 8, '1972 VOL '5, NO. lJ, 2 llCTIONS, Mi',.Aall ' • • • State Girl Irving Ref uses Order by Jury PALE AND TENSE Author's Wife, Edith Jo~rom \Vire Services NEW YORK -aifford Irving, com- piler of the refuted Howard Hughes autobiography, balked today for a second day al sup plying a federal grand jury with handwriting samples for comparison with endorsements on $650,000 worth of advance payment checks made to 1-lughes. In his second appearance before the jury, the novelist was accompanied by his wife, Edith, who appeared pale and tense. They ·were taken to the courtroom of U.S. District Court Judge ~1orris E. La sker after Irving refused to submit h;:indwriting samples, and Lasker for a second tiine directed hinl to comply. Irving's attorney, Maurice Nessen. con. tended Monday that submission or the samples would violate ln.ing's con· slitution al privilege not to testify against hln1sclf. Handwriting as well a s testimony n1ight be self-incriminating , Nessen said. 110\\'ever, Lasker ruled that the req uest by federal prosecutors was proper, plac- ing Irving in danger of a conte mpt or court citation if he continues to balk. It "'as not kno\vn lvhat Irving would be asked to write. But one federal authority commented with a smile, i•we might ask him to write 'H. R. Hughes' five times to (Set mVING, Pase Z) First Si1nday Edition Due for Daily Pilot ' The first SU'nday edition of the DAILY ·PILOT will be published on March S, it • was announced today by Robert N. Weed, :president and publisher. . "Addition of lhe Sunday DAILY Pllm to the · aix weekc(ay editk>ns of the l'itwtipaPer rounds out development or the JPCkege 9fe-.feel ·Orange' Co~~· rlslQen~ and businessmen will consider tlie '!Jrea s Primary .news and advertising medium," ... 1aid. '(The &mday edition or the ~AU. Y P,ILOT comes in response to rt(juests by both teadtrS and advertisers for ',full •vti>4Y ,.rvice, tl\e P11blts~ noted. '1, •· Aftei-. more tbaA a rt•r or atudy and' ~ep~riJion, we J)eljfve we now h•~ve :milibled \he r;ghr rombfnatton of new• lftd (e8turmi to. provide' a unique and u.seJu) service to both readers and ad· vertiur11," he added. · Thomas Keevil , DAll~V PILOT editor, teld the Sunday ediUon's news content wlil maintain the local tmphnsi~ DAILY PILOT readers have rome to expect. (rom their hometown editions of the -,..1on· day·tbrough-Saturday 1111ues. '1'1'11& prod•~ will ,l'Onliilue lo be mdstty ~.ad~ wl~·llll lditorial """t•nt • • • " Rre,.nted In a tightly po<'kaged fOf111at In Which µiings are easy to find, easy to read." Ketvll said. Alan J. Dlrkln, former llAU.Y PILOT West Orange County city editor, was selected by Ket•ll for promotiOll' to the post of Sunday editor. .facqueline Ann Com~ of the DA.JLY PILOT women 's section 1taff will eerve as assist11nt to the Sunday editor, Keevll said. Terry S. Coville, who served on the West Orange County staff under Dlrkin and . more rectntly w11 a general atislgnments reporter In Costa. Mua ror the DAILY PILOT, returns lo Huntlnglon (Seo SUNDAY, he• I) ose . Irving Defies lJ.S. Jury On Handwriting Order I • • •• • • • • • • Attacli l(illed • Ill Dorm •otoody Fo11r" Convi~ted \11"1 T1l1pllot1 Four persons \Vho said they poured blood over selec- tive service records in suburban Evanston last April stand together after they were sentenced Monday to one year prison term s. The group, who call them- selves 'The Four of Us,' are from left: John Baran- ski , 23; Mary Lubbers, 23 ; Thomas Clark. 21, and Eileen Kreutz, 24. All remained free on $5,000 ap- peal bonds. They were convi cted Dec. 1 of con- spiracy to destroy draft records. Seven Convicted In Gas Station Repair Fraud By TOM BARl..EY 01 11!1 Dl llJ' l"llet lt1ff The "Service Station Seven" are guilty. That wa s the verdict of an Orange County SUperlor-Omrt jury Monday.nlaht after four days or mulling evidence rack- ed up in the marathon eight·week trial or Jieven Orange Coast residents:. The obvio~ly weary jurors returned guilty verdicts on eight of the nine counts or conspiracy with Inten t to cheat and defraud Orange County motorist.s and they named Jerry Kendall, 35, of 969 Sonora Road, Costa Mesa, in two of those guilty decisions. Kendall hod been named all through the trial with Stanley Davis, M, of 108I San Pablo Circle. Costa Mesa and Edward camey, 27, or 20862 Sh<U Harbour Drive, Huntington Beach. as one of the three 1rchltect.s of an aulo repair fraud linking tt iervice 9:tations ranging from Seal Beach to san Clemente. Judge James Turner ordered all seven to return Pt1arch 11 ror sentencing . The y fare a possible slate prison term of up lo 10 years. Judge Turner &eheduled Feb. 29 for a hearing on a motion for a new 1rial after (S.. REPAIR, Page l) Huntington Seeks Halt . To Bolsa Water Project By TERRY COVILLE 01 1tM1 D1llJ' 1"1111 11111 Huntington Beach will ask state At- torney General Eve lle Younger to dela y the Metropolitan. Wa1er ·District!s pro- JXlsed Bolsa Island water desalting pro- je<:t. AJI seven city rouncilmen agreed Mon- day night to seek help from the attorney general's new environmental actiOn unit. The council req uest came after a Jetter from the Huntington &ach HOPtfE Coun- cil opposing I.be Bolsa project was placed on the agenda . "We must lave 1 total report on the Bolsa prpject," Couocilman Jack Green urged. Jle sugaeoted .,Ing the Attorney General ro delay th< proJed. The PtfWD Is seeking permission to buy 3S acres" of land froin Signal Oil in Hun- tington Beach. ). switqilng station would ho built on lilt~ acm to """ th< 411- acre bland MWD wants to create off Bolsa Chica State Beach. MWD officials also went to secure 1 utiflty ...... ~nl ll<1'0SI Stgnal-owned land in the Bolsa Chica marshlands. Several critics claim that MWD 1uthor1tles have not supplled the c!tY with 1 lull environmental impact report. They want to know the effect the utility easement on the marshlands, and of the island on the beach and surf. "As environmental impact reports go, .lhis one ii falrJy good compared to others." said Green , who ·is executive director of the Regional Antl·Pollutlon Authority in Palm Springs. "What we need Is a total report on the Bolaa pro- ject." "Let's cppose the project now," Coun- cilman Jerry Matney suggested. "I don 't think we should oppose it yet, we don 't know what we're dolng," Green replied. The MWD hopes lo build 1 nuclear factory on 1 40-acre man-made lal1nd. At one lime two other power ag~ciflll con- sldertd a Joint effort 'd'ith ihe MWD, but they dropped out three years ago when the estimated co•ts jwnped from 1441 mllllon to $765 rmJUion. , Most offlclals lhought the island p\11n was dead but MWD authorltiew now say they'll go it alone. Whlle the Island isn't expected to be built for another-tD-20 years, the MWD wants lo buy th< Signal land now while the c.st Is lower. Councilman Norma Gibbs thought lhe IS.. BOUIA, P11e I) I I Dead Coed 3rd Victim lri Oregon CORVALLIS, Ore. (UPI) -An !!-year. old California girl was stabbed to death eerly today on the third Ooor of a donn itory jn th e third attack on a coed on the Oregon Stale University campus in six days. Dr. Peter Rosendal, Benton Comity medic al examiner, sa id Nancy Wyckoff of Glenda le, Calif., a freshman majoring in math, was stabbed in the neck once. He sa id a carving knife with about an eight-inch blade v.·as found alongs ide the body v.•hich was lying on the floor nert to her bed. Rosendal said the girl apparently bled to death. lie ~aid Dr. William Brady, state medica l examiner, was to perfonn an autopsy, Other women residents of the third rtoor of Poling Hall said they heard a screan1 and footsteps at 3:45 a.m. The other assaults occurred in the same three or four-block area on the west side of the camptlll. Both girls were hit over th e head by a man they de. scribed as young , white with short broWll hair. One of the girls was hospitalized overnight because of injuries. OSU officials said there was no infor~ mation uncovered yet by the campua security force to indicate t.hat the slayinc was connected with the earlier atta ckll. ?\-1iss Wyckoff lived on the third floor ol five.story Poling Hall, with men students residing on floors one, two and five and women also on noor four. There are a fire ~ape and elevator (See COED, Pase 2) Oru•e Weatlaer Morie sunny sldes'on the agenda for Wednesday, following early morning low clouds and fog along ~ the coastline. Highs Wednesday SI to 68. L<>ws lonillht 38 lo the mld- 40's. INSmE TODAY l.01 A·ngelt1 ptaus ft coot one JltOr after devastating earth- quak<. But will th< Southr•nd bt as tucku next time? Ezperll 8<lJI anothtr major quake ti due In tht next 30 uears. See stof'll, PaQe 7. "· M. 9"-f ' = 'llllfl ,, Ctllt.rnlt • " Cl111fllMI .. H "''""' .. ,....,. •• Com let " Or1111• (111111'1' ' (t•••wttf " IYIYll ,trlff " Dtt!lt "'""' ' ""'' 1a.1, ••1re r111 , ... • "'" Mtrttm 1•n •"hrti ........ '' T1Mvl11Mr " ·-· , .. ,, ,_,,,. " ,., "'' •MWf • WN-• --·" .. ·-·· ,. ... 1~1• A1111 LM111r-. .. ww• -... , } 1 !' DAIL V P?LOT s l ur\d~7, ftOru.ll') 8 1972 Nixon Pushing Environnaent Measures By !>'TAN BENJAMI ' WASlllNGTON lAP 1 -President Nix· on sent Congress 8 special environmental tneua.ge Wday propotnng hair a doz.en new legislative me."lsures u1cluding a ta.x on air·polluting sulfur errus sions Other proposals made b> U1e f)re111dent would -Ask Lhe United Nations to e5tdblish a 11pec1al environment fund . which wou ld reach $100 1nil1J()n over fi~·r vears and the t:nlted States woul d suppoft "''1th .i fou· share nf !hr fundini.:. -Encl)urage S!<1te.s tn bl.art controlling the locall on of highways and airports b;. lf1S or else slart losing fed eral :ud for auch projects. Frotn Page I SU ND ,.\ Y ... ~each as the new WC'st OrangC' County ci· ly editor. Dirkin, 33, is a native or Sunderland, Et!gla nd. He served his apprenticeship on several provincial British newspapers before going to Athens. Greece, where he became assistant editor of the Athens Ne ws. He later went back to London at'ld lo f<'leel Street as a copy editor on the Lon- don Daily l\1ail. He came lo the United 'states in 1965, served as city editor and then as news editor of the Anaheim Bulletin bt'fore join l n g the DAILY J"ILOT staff in 1966. Miss Combs. 24, is a na tive of LQng Beach and holds a BA degree in com- munications from Cal State Fullerton. Sbe wor ked as a feature writer, society edi tor and general assignments reporter for the Call Enterprise newspapers in Southeast Los Ang eles County prior to joining tbe DAILY PILOT staff in 1970. Both Dirk.in and Miss Combs have won Orange County Press Club awards for ~best page layout," Miss Combs bcin~ !he current first p!ace winner in that category. -D1scouragt c.."1nstru,·11(1n on t I•" dwindling lands borduing lakes. river!! and oceans by restr1c1tng ta x advantagc.s. -Control the Jand--dtJposaJ of toxic wastes through state regu!at lo11 urHh·r fedt.'ral guideline.!! / ... __ .... -Control sod ruooff frorn (11n s1rL1t·11vn proJCt:ts. again throu gh federat gu1d£'l111es and state regulation . In oth er exe,·utJve actions . .\'.!Kun S<11d he h<1s <irdered the de11elopn1e111 of 01· ('l.lpa11on;.il hco lth ~tandard ~ t11 pr<1! <·t farn1 workers /ron1 pesticide p.11s<1ning, an d ord ered the prcparatl(1n of new 111 sulation standard~ !or federall y aided multip!r dwellings to conserve energy He added that federal tax policy is bf>m;: "rlarified'' c·onrem1n1-; t:s~ "x' eir1ption for the finan cing ...... hy industry -.,f fa e1l1t1es to rec·ycle lndustr1al wast.es. Nix on reminded Congress that 18 of h1 ~ 20 rr1aJr1r tnv1run11ier1tal k·g:1~lat1i.e pr'i,.. p.1sal s la:;t ;.t;ir arf.' awaJt J!1g ai·tuon 'Lci ~t )eor. · h<: ~a id , ··wa~, qu11e pro· perly. a yeilr of (.'On.sJd!.'l'<iUl.lfl tJf \Ot'iie mf':1sures hy thf' Con~ress. "f urf't'. hov.1·vt·r. that th is bt a v,.ar nr art111n 1n1 ;il! of th<·r11, ~o that WP r·a n 1nu\l'. on fr11n1 1nten\1on tu ar'- ('11n1 11ll<;h1111•nt 111 the ir11portanl need_~ • 1-!11•\ arldre<.'i '' The President a!Sii urged creat1c1r1 Qf a new Departni t>nt of Natural Resources '., ' .... , . Bu1ich of 'Lonfe1·s' centeted on the present Interior Depart· ment. a proposal Ntxon made last year ;i!onf.: \V1th a proposed realignment or the executive brllnch. The reduction of sulfur oxides, the aim o( the nf'w sulfur t.rix prupos.al. IS already 11nr <Jf 1!1e ch1ff goJl:i of the nat1unal air qu<i !11y slandards ~(-'l by the F.nriron· 1ne111al Protection Agency under the 19i0 Clean Air Act. Nixon·li propo~ed tax wou!cl ta kt ef fert in !976 <Jnd i.1pply to ~ulfur ('fnissions 1n ;1ress "'h1ch rem<t1n in v1o!at 11111 of 1ht-air qu<1lit) standards once they take effect 1n 1!17~. \'.'here pr in1ary standards prolet·tin g public health have not been met, fu el· burners would he charged JS cents for each PQUl\d of sulfur they emit into the air: where se(.'o odary standards pro· tet'ling properly, plants and ae.stiletic \·alue.s remain unmet, the charge would bE> only 10 cents per pound . There would Oe iw ~uuur ch;.rgl' at al! '"here both standard s are being met on a rl•gional basis. The Nixon proposal to co nlrol highv.·<1y and airport locauons would amend his pending proposal of a national land·use bill encouraging the states lo adopt land· use plann ing. Under the new proposal. each stale \vOUld be expected to develop a plan for controlling the locatwns of hlgbway1 aod airports and obtain federal approval of its plan by 1975. Any slate failing to do so v.·ould lose 7 percent of its federal hlghway 1od airport funds for 1975 end an additional 7 percent e3ch year l.lflt iJ it can1e up wilh an approved plan . States with approved ptans V.'OUld share the for feited funds. Wi thout :spelling out his propoials, Nix· on said he would move to disc<lurage ui; necessary development on wetlands witlt legislative proposals "lo limit ap- plicabillty of certain federal lax ben efll3" on construction in sllch areas. * * Protection for P1·edato1·s 011 U.S. P1·opert y 01·clered WASl-ll NGTON (UPI I -President Nixon banned today the shooting, poison· ing or trapping of e<igles, ha\vks . coyotes, falcons and other kinds of predators on federal lands. 'fhe President issued ;1n exe cutive order to put in fort:e im1nediately pro- tection [or nnirnal s and birds 1hat r;-1nchers and f;1rrncrs h111·e been killing in parts Of the \Vest berause they <1tlack li ves tock. Reports or ma ss shooting of eagles from helicopters and small planes. brought out in congressional hearings la st year, created a slorn1 of indignation in some parts of the count ry. In an envi r·nnmental message to Congress coinciding with issuance of the executive order against killing predators on government O\vned lands. Nixon also called for prompt action to identify en- dangered species rather than wailing Un· ti! they .are near extinction. -hoth golden and bald -were said tn have been killed mostly in Wyomu1g and Colorado. F'ixed·wing aircraft also were said tn have been used in killing eagles and other winged predalors. as well as coyote,. From l'age 1 IRVING. • • niake a comparison." l\1cGraw.Hill Publishing Co. gave Irv· ing three checks made out lo "ff. R. Hughes" to be conveyed to the bil lionaire industrialist for his coo peralion in the book. The Sunday product for which they 1-vill be responsible is expected to offer readers some new experiences. It will use some new techniques in &raphics and design. Keevi l promised. I You've heard about the old lady \1·ho lived in a shoe. At the St. Lou is Zoo there is a real colony or 1nice liv ing in a loaf of bread. A unique display in 1he (:hildrcn's Zoo section, the mice live in an eight· pound !oaf nf 1vhole ~1 heat bread. 'fhey eat them· selves out of house and ho1'ne about every two weeks. Nixon expressed concern about dwindl · ing population of some anim<1ls and birds -"starting v.·ith our national symbol. the bald eagle." The executive order protecting eagles and other predators on public lands specified the only exceptions could be "for emergency situations." But in court affidavits identified as H ughe~· handwriting and in a telephone nt ws conference a voice iden!ified a:ii IJughes' denied ever meeting lr11ing nr co llaborating in the book . And Irving subscquenlly adn1ittcd that his Swiss·born wife , Edith. deposited and later \.\'ilhdre w the <:hecks from a Swiss hank account she opened in the name of "Helga R_ Hughes." , "The basic concept of the Sunday edi· tion ," Keevil said . "is that lt will mai n· i8.in its Identity and continuily with the other six days of publication but. tit the same time, it will have qualities unique 'f.o the Sunday edition." The Sunda y package will include a col· or comics section in addition to the F'ami· ly Weekly and TV Week magazines now inserted in Sa turday editions. It will be delivered early ! before 7: 30 o'clock for most hon1e subscribers! on Sunday mornings. La te-breaking sports and news of local Jriterest wtll be an important part of the ..&inday package, Keevil noted. But the Sunday edition also will rely -heavily on staff.produced feat ures and •hllman lt\terest stories for 'the fiavor that ·will make it uniquely the Orange Coast's own Sunday ne ws paper , he said. Hall of Records Electrical Unit Blast Hurts Man It was business as usual 1his mornin11. in Orange County's old Hall of Records following a Monday nigh! electrical panel explosion in the condemned building. The structure. al 211 \V . Rth S1 , Santa Ana, built in the early years of this cen- tury is scheduled lo be !vrn do"'" wi1h 1n the next two years to make way for the realignment of Civic Center Drive \Vest . now 8th Street .Building custodian Bud Hall. ~!i. Santa Ana, suffered a slight eye injury when !he first floor panel expl0dcd as he walked by it shortly afler the 5 p.m closing time. He is in good condit ion tndt1y, The fire in the building 's electrlcal wiring was qui ckly extinguished by Sa nta Ana firemen. Power \\'BS teinporaril,v cut off to the hall of records and the old county courthou se next door. OU.Neil COAST DAllY PILOT .......,.,, ... .. Let••• ... .. c .. te Mot1e QJVr,Nc;E COAST PUILISM1H<; (O,t,\PA.HY "'ol>••• N, W11d l"rftM,.nl """ l'llbl•.,,_. J1c ~ R. C11r!•v Vk1 P'fHiDO!Wll ..... G-eM<•I ""'-nlllW' i lit"'"' Ket~11 Edi tot Th•"''' A. M11rp~;n• ,1,1,....,1,,. Ecfl!Or Cli •rl•• H. l•o• Ric.l.1fd '· !-1.n H.si.11•"4 MIOlot9""9 Ell110rl Offkn Cedlo -..: )JO WRf @IV SlrPf Iii...._.., eNcl\: ll3l "'-'' llou'•vlrd 1. .. -•-"": :r. l'o•tsl "'~• Mll'lh,.._ •l>K"' 17'75 9HCI\ &ovl•vlrd S.,. ~: al Norlll i i ~mlrlcl AMI CrAlt.Y 191LOT, wtitl .... kti " ~ h N-Pr••• II """'',_ ,..,1y •sc•• s ..... dlV WI ~fl!t' ..:lllllww fDf UOYl'>I ... , ... N..,.,I ... di. C.M -., M..,l .... IO'I ... d'I, ,...,It.. Vlltr,', ~" C ..... M/ ~"',_ ..,.. s.ctc11-•, • .,,,.,. ••11"' -, ...... 1 -clltlOfl, ,.rJ...;,_I ,.i..ti"ll ~ • It l» W..I aay l>l•MI. C-11 ,._, r.11,11 ••• 11141 M2-4Jn ci-ff'H A~ 642·1•71 s-c.._.. •• D.p ...... tw ,.....,. .. 4tl-4421 C\llnr1'flt, ,,n, °''"" Cout P....,,..11 ... ~nf. Ho ,.,.. 11Gi'..,. H•w•tt•l- ..,,_ .. J """"'' ., •d-11•-.. ..... ... IN"f lie rt.,...,«.., -.ltt>ovt ajMO.I 111"1"• "''-·-of tllPYl'illll ....,.,., -...,,, tlt• _,..., rotld et N-1 lffltfil 91"111 c .. ,. 11'1-, Ct lllo..,,• ~,.,.,_ ... ,,,.,,_., Sl.H ......,f!llWI 11Y -11 tl,11 .....,.,, • ...i1ft9or7 lu111'1411onf, U.IS ,_,,,,11. Fro1n Page 1 REP.<\IR FRAUD . • • c:om plimentlng de(ense attorneys Al Stok· kc, Frank Moran and George Shib<1 la and prosecutor Richard Stcnron for Lhcir "gcntlen1anly conduct through a long and exhausling trial. "We hear a lot these days about courtroom problems created by the likes of the Chicago seven and Cha rles Manson trials." Judge Turner told the jury. "We have noth ing like th at here and I can·t recall being ln the pre sence of a more devoted pjury or n1ore gentlemanly al· lorneys ." The verdict obviously came as a blow to all seven defendants. Three had openly predicted a few hou rs before the jury returned that !hey would be cleared of charges that produced an Orange County Grand Jury indictment. Convicted with Kendall. Davis and Carney were -Roger Mendenhall, 28, of 26095 Avenida De SC'1. t-.1issin n Viejo, David Concho\a. 22, of 6000 Garden Grove Blvd., Westminster and Christopher Enri· quez. 25. of 75!12 Volga Drive, and Henry Castonguay. 21, of 7661 Commodore Drive, both of tluntington Beach . They were all accused hy nearly 30 pro- secution witnesses of participating in a ronspiracy that included the deliberate p11ncturing of patrons' tires. Lhe destruc· t1on of radiator raps and se<1ls and the performance of needless and costly repair \\'Ork. It was alleged throughout the trial that euslomcrs v.·ere pressured into ha ving their cars hoisted 011 the lube b<ly rack in the pretense that sup(Xlse<l defects coul d tx1 better spotted from that location. FornH'r cmployes and cus!1Hncr s told the jury that damage 1vas inflicted lo their cars and shock absorbers and fu el pumps we.re sprayed with oil to give the impression that the parts leaked a n d should be replaced. AH three defense lawyers annol.inced their intention to appeal the verdict if Judge 'l'urner denies the motion for a new triaL The verdict was seen Monday as a ma· jnr victory for the district attorney's fraud squad in a camp.iign to combat what v.·as stated to be before the trial started a growing auto repa ir racket in Orange Coun ty. Most of the Arco, Mobil. Shell and Tex· aco stations involved in the conspiracy are now under new n1anagemenl. lnvestigators conceded after the verdict that many service station operators in the affected areas are doing !heir hcst to upgrade the ir image in the con1munlt~·. All four oil con1panies arc reported lo have assured Ja"·rn<'n tha t future leas111~ of their stations 11·111 be rigidly super\'iscd in a determ ined effort to elimin;itc the type of practice that led to flt onday's verdict. Ba y A1·ea Yacht Ca1lt111~es Aca1l11lco Ha11dicap Leacl Hy AL!\10N LOCKABE\' D•llv 191101 lo•ll"I Edo!G~ t-.1rll cn1i . a Santana·37 sloop skippered hy Bill .Jnnas of San Francisco 's Corinthian Yacht Club. was holding the handicap lead in the 1,430.mile San Diego to Ac;ipulro rare tnday as brisk winds continued to push the 27-boat fleet do1\•n the Baja California coast l'vlellemi is a Class C entry . \Vhilc the 37-footer led the hnndic;-tp flSp1ra11ts. an entirely separate race for first to finish \\'as {!Oing on at the head of the fleet a1nong three big Class A yac hts. Mark .Johnson 's 73·foot ketch Wind \vard Passage was selling the pace \Vil h nearly twice the miletige under her keel thlln the record holding Si rius 11 had at the same ti nlc in her 1964 recor.d run . \Vith an average of 11 knots for the first 24 hours of sailing. Passage loggrd 264 miles the first day -nea rly RS much as Sirius II had in two days of sailing in 1964. 13ut lhe race was not yet In the bag for \\11ndward Passage. Less than five mllcs 11stem -and also ahead of the old rerord -was Ken DeMeuse's 7&-foot Bh1ckfin with a cha nce to catch up lf the winds go light. Sirius IL now owned and skippered by Bob Lynch of Newport f{ltrbor Yacht Club. was in lh lrd place about 20 miles behind the leaders. Co rrected time stand !n~s: OVERALL, -(I' f\.1eltemi : (2l Vixen, Frank Hope. SDYC : (3l Barco de Oro, E:nrique Braun . Acapulco YC: ( () Alegre, John McAllister. L.ihalna YC : IS) Star!· In~ 111. Norman Ream Jr .. SDYC. CLASS A -(l l Baca de Oro: 121 Vee· tor 11. Herb John.wn . SDYC : jJJ Yt1!ndward Passage: (4) Black!1n : f5J l Nalu JV. Peter Grant. NHYC. CLASS H -I I 1 Alegrr ; !2) Starling 111 : ~3 \ Thalia IV .• Joe Barhee. SDYC: ~~1 \Vindstar, Waller J~ast , SDYC ; ~5) Thcra, James O'tlcrn, SDYC, CLASS C -( 1 t Mcttcmi; t2l Vixen; 1.1) Ne1ncsls, Tom Tobin, SDYC: (4) S1game. Sid Renko1.,, f)RY C: (5) Blitzcn, \Vd!1an1 Corbett. SDYC , Dereli ct Sli.ip F uund. at Sea ; No Life See1i SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The Coast Guard said its cutter Reso lute found no traces of human life when it ren· dezvoused early today "'i!h a capsized 35- foot lrimaran noating derelict some 140 n1Hes southwest of here. A Coast Guard Sf)(lkesman said the pleasure craft, called the "Far Horizons'' was being towed to San Francisco by another cutter. the Jloint }feyer, and that an investigation was undtr way to detern1ine its ltist port of call ltnd ownership. The Resolute and R four-engine C·130 aircraft were as~igned to comb the "'aters nea r whrrc the vessel was spotted in hopes of learning wh11t happened to those aboard. Shortly after the three-huUed yacht was spotted r.1ond ay by !he Montpelier Vi c· l<lry, an American flag frnlght.tr, a Coast Guard search aircraft swept the vicinity but could sight ntlther debris nor survivors. ., From Page 1 BOLS . .\ ... city ought to n1ake three requests: send a represent<tlive before the co u n l y supervisors, request a 90·day extension of study time fron1 M\VD and seek the At· !orney (;cneral"s help. ~i!y Pl an\1ng Direc~or Ken fteynolds said there w~ use 1n asking for a 90· day extension. "MWD officia ls have already said they won't wait past March L" Councilman Donald Shi pley was alarm· ed by MWD plans that indicate the 40- acre island might be doubled in size al some future date. "Maybe I can bel ieve the easement 1ron't tiffec:t the marshl21nd," said Ship- ley, a biologist at Cal Slate. Long Beach . "1Ylaybe, but !hat 40·acre island out there will have horrendous impact." Councilmen authorized the city ad - ministration to sen d an immed iate letter to the Attorney General's environmental unit requesting that office to intervene for the city. Pressures All eued "' LOS A NGELf<~S ! UPI) -A L'nitcd Au!n \Vorkers official charged Monday that political pressure resulted in ;.i rnllba r k or wage scales for aerospace 11·orkers by the federa l Pav Board. Ken Hannon, UAW lnlcrnation.il vice presi· dent. n1ade the charge at a news con· fC'rence announcing lhal the Auto \Yorkers filed suit in a \Vashington fedcr11I court J\.1onday to challenge the Pay Board ruling . The kinds of emergencies '"'ere not full y spel led out. 'J'he executive order on predators reverses a decades·old policy under which lhe government has sUbsidized poiso ning of coyotes and nther animals \vhich prey on livestock. 1'he gove rnment owns vast amounts nf \veslern rangelands which it rents to ranchrrs. Nixon .said in hls message to the I-louse and Senate: "The old notion that 'lhe on· ly good predator is a dead one ' is no lnngcr aeceplab!e as we understand that even the anin1als and birds whi ch sometimes prey on domesticated animals ha ve their own value !n ma intaining the balance of nature." lJuring Senate testimony last yesir, a helico pter pilot testified that he helped ki ll about 800 eagles at the request primarily of sheep ranchers. The eagles Trenior Rocks San Fern<uulo LOS ANGELES I AP 1 -A (!Uirk, dish-rattling aftcrshork of the nla· jC1r quake nea rly a yea r agn has rocked the San Vernando Valley, causi ng son1e minor damClge and prompting anxious telephone calls. 1'he ten1blor \1onda_v n 1 g h t n1easurcd 3.B on the R1ch!rr Scale. st rong enoug h to cau~e ~light to moderate damage . s a i d a spokesman for 1hr t.: a 11 r or n i a lnstitule nf Te r h no 1 o g y · s s<:ismological 1 a ho r a L cJ r y 1n Pasadena. As Irving "'ent before the grand jury l\·londay, the Internal Revcnu(' S<'rvice announcf'd [t filed income tax liens to!al~ ing $490.11 1 against Irvi ng and his 1vife and one for $22.446 against Hit hard Suskind , 1vho helped research the book . A spokesm;in said the liens were based nn lhe $650,000 ]rl'ing receiv ed for Hughes . '"This is a "''ay we may get any taxes due." said Tfd Schneider , an IRS spokesman. "lt establishes a priority for l1s in collecting our money" he said. ad· cl ing th11t unt il the lien is satisfied the lrvings ··can"t sell or touch anything and cannot leave the countrv." The New York Oa{ly News quoted government source.; last week as sayi ni;: Irving attempted to conl'ert all his security holdings lnlo cash but v.·as block· ed by IRS agents. From Page J COED ... connecting !he floors. Miss Wyckoff's dormitory wa s adjacent to the one occupied by Connie Kenned y, a freshman from Portland. who wa s at· tacked early Sunday. Elizabt-th Anne Gleckle r. a freshman from San Mateo, Calif_. suffered head cuts in an attack Thursday night. but did not require hospitaliiation . She wa , struck from behind with a broken chunk nf concrele as she walked to her resi. dcnce ha ll. tilree blocks from Cauthor11 H:ill. Her attacker al so r<1n when she sc ream. ed . • OSU President Roben Ma cVicar sald lhe s~hool was 1nili atini;( ''extraord1narv" secu rl(y operations because <1( the at. tacks. Beat The Clock Usually there is no urgency about getting carpeting in1talled. Moit poeple will wait a whol e week! However, when there is a rush, we can a ccommodate tfiose who re- quire imme diate service. We HAVE sold and installed carpeting the SAME DAY many times . Unless there is a problem obtaining a specific color or pattern, you can count on fast service from Alden's, and we maintain a large inventory to facilitate Cleliveri es. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MUA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon. Thur Thurt., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -SAT., 9:30 to 5 ---..--· .,-.. ,-••• -;1,~ Tee11 s Helcl 111 l(icl11ap Of ~1 01na11 COV INGTON, \a. iUPll -A boy an<l <1 girl. both lJ and bolh escapees from ~ J\1aryland juvenile t1un1e , held an elderly v.·0~1an hostage al knifrpo111t for 12 hour~ during a 300-1111lc ear ride before au1hor1t1es r11pl11red thein ear!v 1odav. The ho~t:1gl' 11as freed unh:1rn1C'd · l'.h·s. lil;1 <.ll s I Tucke1· iO, ol Pr111er < ;eurges. ~ld Jt111,ped out of the ~u~pect•i 1·nr· 11 ltt-n p"Jll<'i· 111rrcd if off the road_ 111 tlus '>rl);1ll 11·cstern Virg1n1.i co111- n1un 11 ~· !!er husband, U. D. Curt ·rucker, 77, \1·as relt';J".>ed unhannrd <ibout fuur n'iles fron1 his hoine a ft•11• hours :ifter tile ('OU· plr was alxlucted al n()()n l'\1und:1y. ·1'ht' 111'0 sus1>ec ts, !:>onald Richman. 13, or \V;1yncsb.11'u, Vri . anti Su.r,.;111 J . Hakel·, 13. of Coving1oi1, ~urrendcrt•d to police peacefully 'J'hev 11·trt: to ix' extradited to t.l ar~1land to fa te kidnnpinl), ch'1rges . fllr.s. Tu('k<'r said ··1he whole thing shirted at abou1 noon \1•hen ther broke in· lo our house and tied up n1y liusba nd r \.\'as shopping :1t thr ti1ne and 11'hen I c:unc hun1c 11it'Y tied rne lip and threatened both of us 11·ilh knives. "They lhPn too k al l our money and our car keys and forced us into our car." she said . "The~· released my l1t1shand shortly later about fo ur 1niles fron1 our hon,e .'' She s<1id the t11·0 youths drove lo Cor· ingto n. \.\'here the girl's parents lived , and then back to Roanoke. Va .. before driving back to Covington 111hcre they 11•cre ap. prehended jui;t after rnidnight. The 111•0, believed to be the youngest persons ever cha rged in a U.S. kidna ping. had 1ralkcd a\.\·ay fro1n the Edgen1ead Trainin~ Center. loc<1!ed nrar The 1'uckers' home. outside \Vashington. D.C. Aul horitie~ said both 1vere undergoing treatment for severe e1notio11al proble ms. Ro1vbo£1t Pair Oulv 2 Mo ntlis Frout ,4u strlllill SAN F'RAi\ClSCO f t.:Pl l -Br111sh advenTurer Joh n Fairfax and h 1 s girUriend Syl1"1a Cooke arc nearing the end of their at1ernpl 10 ro11• across the l'aciflc to i\ustr<ilia . radio re1X1rts ll<"l\C i;aicl Fairfax. 13, told a friend hcrf' 1n a radio inter\'lf'IV that he Pxpcctcd to land a1 Brisbane in t1-1·0 1non1hs II<' nn d ~1 1ss CookP set ou t fron1 hrre 10 111onths ago in the 35-foot Britannia 11 He saitl he 11·:is on a 2,000-n1ilr coursl" out of 1'arri11·a. c·:1pr!al of a cluster of n1id·l'acific co r·al islands. lie also said his bont ran into troublt' on a Tarav.·a cornl reef a n1onth ago. lt 1ras dashed on lhc reef breeching the hull 111 10 places. he said "S1·lvia 1un11>ed into the ~ca and the next.breaker carried her over the reef in- lo the lagoon beh;nd.'' he said. '"She 11·as able lo touch the hotton' aod she hal f- \l'alked. half-s11·an1 ashore. ·'She 1vas \.\•caring a bikini and. 11·hen the local girls saw her \.\·ad1ng out of the 1raler thrv rrruscd to lel her go ashore unlll they.had produced a grass shirt for her 10 1~c:ir .. 1\pparent!) h1kuus arc banned 011 Tara11·t1.'' he :;:;11c1 La g unan {VI ' ll rites Of Poe t's Lif c Laguna Brach resident and author t\orn1an Fruman has recently 11Titten an aulhor1talivr !ih1dy of San1uCI Coleridge. a Romantic poet often accused of stealing his 1deRS and poems fron1 other authors. In "Coleridge, the Damage d Archangel.·• published hy G e o r g e Brazillcr Inc. of Ne1v ''ork, Fru man has analy~ed the notebooks of the poet in an attempt to discover v.•hat led him to plagiarize the \l'orks of his con- temporaries. Coleridge. addicted lo opium much of his life. su ffered frightful nightmares. which he recorded in great detail in his notebooks. Fruman, of 470 f'\ora St .. is a professor of English at Cal State Los Angeles. lie is presently on a t1vo-year leave of ~bsen.ce while tcnching at a French un1 vcrs1ty near Paris. . -' ' . -. • . - . . •• ' . . .. llave ., Nice Day ' ' . Yo u can do \vonders 'vith si1nple things if your teacher kn O\\'S ho1v. Students in Gary I-lacker's fifth grade class at Al iso School in El 1'oro use str in g. alun1inun1 foil. glue. cardboard and marking pen to create art projects. Above Nancy Slade displ ays a happy f~c~ to_ the \vorld. Be· to1v Erin Cardin, left. and Betsy Va ndcnn orl put f1n1s h111g touches 011 1vork. Black LA Gang Bcat:o; I \\'O Jin1a Vet to D eath 'J Love )' ou' 6 'fi1nes LONDON ! UPI l -Over the display of \'alentine cards ,1•ith the 1nessage "I love only you" \Vas the sign: "No1v available in multi-packs of six." Tut~day, Ftbruary 8, 1<:172 5 DAIL V PILOT 3 TV Networl{s Assailed 'A ll 111 Family' Pro:lucer Tells Struggle • \\11\SJllNGTON 1L"Pl 1 -The produ cer of the :.uctcssful "'All in the Farnily '' television cotnedy today blau\c<l tl1u1k~ lank n1entality in both broadcasting and go\•errunenl for kecpiJ1g mor~ sholl's hkl' his off the atr. 'rhe prodUl'CI". r\orinan Lear, said !hl' f1vt'-ycar struggle he had persuadini.: lll'!1-1·ork exec:uti\'l'S to nir his ~ho1v rcflcctf:'d a "idcspread philowphy that .. al..;o lhtla\~'S \.\"hat An,er1cnns 1~1ll 111ear and t!ri\'C and h~ten to. etc-., eli.".'' Ills rt'n1arks 11ere n1ade in t(•stunony prepared for a hearing on press freedo1n~ by a Senate constitutional rights sub- comn1i11ee. •·Sorne11·here, some t1n1e ago, son1eone l'.01ncd the fiction that the n1entahty of the 1\merican motion picture patron averages bet1-1•een 12 and 13 years of age ," Lear st1id. "And in the think-tanks of An1erican business, no t just in the n1ass 1nedia area , but in all of American business, this fiction has been accepted as truth and 1his 'truth' has been ex- tended lo the Anu~rican pu blic as a \.\'hole "An1erican think-tank leadership is out of touch \.\'ilh the American people. ~ly personal feeling is that this is al so tru e in government, in business and commerce, as well as in the n1ass media," he said . Lear told how "All In The Family" tv.•ice 11•as rejected by ABC and once each by CBS and NBC because nehv ork chiefs \.\·ere 'o\'orried that its fr ank treatment of race. religion, sex and ethnic origins mig ht offend viewers, sponsors and sta- tion affil iates. CBS finally agreed to air the show in January, 1971 -but Lear said the network battled unsuccessfully almost until air time lo get him to trin1 segments involving "explici t sex" froin the premiere episode. The show was an instant hit and still is running wee kly. One indication "of ho1v out of touch this think-lank leadership is \1•ith the needs F cunecl La-wyer Services Privllte SAN FRA NCISCO (AP) -At his o\.\·n request. there 11•ill be no funeraJ services for Ernest Spagnoli, colorful criminal la11·ycr \\'ho died Saturday a, thr t1ge o[ 85. Cre1nat ion a n d inurnment will be prir:ite. Spagnoli. a !ife~long foe of capital punishment. defended Robert Stroud, thr fained "Birdman of Alcatraz," and unsuccessfully sought lo save fro m the gas chamber the first \\'Oma n executed in Californ ia) She "'as Juanita "the Dut- chess" Spinelli. executed in 1941. and desires of lhe An1crlcan people," he snid. 11·as 1ht1.t CBS hired ex tra swit ch· board operators at ils ma1or affiliatl'!'I to handle an expected avalanche of irate culls the night lhe !:.how was first aired. "The avalii'liche never came," he said. "No stall's seceded from lhe un ioo. Anii no affihates 1umped off the ne twork line. The phones rang to some degree but tho calls were largely favorable." Ads Called Obscet1e Illt1 st1·a~ed Por110 Re1l o1·t P11hli sl1e1· Gets 4 Y ea1·s SAN DIEGO (AP 1 -The publisher or the illustrated version of a presidential c-ornmissinn's report on obscenity and pornog raph.v has bel'n fined $32.000 an d sentenced to four years in fede ral prison because the adverlisen1ents for lhe book -not the book itsrlf -11·erC' found to be obscene. Jn addillon . t'vo lirnls owned bv publis her \\'i!lian1 L. Hainhng 1vert? fined a total of $55,000. Three persons working for hin1 at the ti1nc of the boo k's publication rrceivcd prison sentences hut in t11·0 cases they \.\"ere suspended. 1-lamling, 49. of Paln1 Springs. is a ma· jor California publisher of adult books and magazines . A jury of nine men and three \.\'Ome n convicted the four defendants D:>c. 23 on I I counts each of placing obscene ad- vertisement s in the mail and one count each of conspiring to do so. But the jury "'as unable to deride 1vhether the Ill ustrated Presidential Report of the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography was obscene. A mistrial 1vas declared on those <'harges and no new trial date has been set. 'The book contains the same text as printed by the U.S. Govcrnrnent Printing Office. bul the defendan ts added hun- dreds of photographs and illustrati ons, many of \Vh ich depict sex acts. Sentenced with Ht1mling l'\1onday were.: -Earl Keni p, 41. of El Cajon. edit.or of the book . U.S. District Court J u~ge Gordo n Thon1pson J r. sentenced him \0 three yea rs in federal prison . -Shirley R. \Vrighl. 46. of El Cajon and Da\'id L. Thomas. 46. of San Diego. Their IS..n1onlh prison sentences 11·ere suspend· ed and they 11·crc put 011 f11•c-year pro· bat ion. l·lamling and Kcn1p 11'ere released on bail after thei r attorneys filed notices of appeal. During the trial, which lasted 39 da~·s. the government argued thal the book was "just a collectio n of obscene pictures" 'vhile the defense contended that the four should not be punished simply becuuse so1ne people took offense at it. Two members of the original presiden· tial 1·on,1niss1on appe<1red as defense \.\'ilnesscs <1nd testified that they believed the p1('!urcs t1nd illustrations enhanced the text by showing 11·ha t was betn~ discussed. Dcaclli11e Nears For Little Leagt1e In Lag una Niguel Sa turday will be the fi nal da y that Laguna Niguel boys can register to play in the Niguel Little League during the 1972 baseball season. The registration .session \.\'iii be held from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in the home economics room of Crov.·n Valley Elementary School. To be eligible for play, youngsters must be eight year.s old by Aug. I. 1972, and mu st not have reached the age of 13 prior to that date. Boys registering must be ac- companied by thei r pa rent or guardian and " birth certificate wi ll be required as proof of age. Registration fee Is $7.50 per boy or $15 for a family of ball p!Ayers. All practices arid ga mes will be held at Crown Valley Elementary School ber,inning ln mid· April and cnrHng in early July. Further information mav he obtai ned frrm Jim Vernon al 83t:Hl38-I or Vince \\'inninghoff at 495--1739. Procluccr's Wife Di es DOBRS F'ERRY. N.Y. (U PI ) -!\\rs. f\tichael Todd Jr. died Monday of heart failu re at her home in this Westchester Count y community. She was 41. Born Sarah Jane Weaver in Irvin gton, Mr:!. Todd married her trusband, the son of film producer and Broadway !howman Mike Todd, in 1953. Her husband is 1 pro- ducer in his own right. LOS At\GELES !UP!f - N J. "Ozzie'' Orr sur\'ived l••:o \.\·ounds as a illartne on Guadalcanal and lwo Jima. lie 1vas ,1·hite. Bul he h:.id a friend 11·ho 1vas black. so Orr dro re into a black neighborhood to ;·isit hun. ohnson SOil About a minute after he s!eppcd from the car. Orr. 52. la y spra1,·led 10 a gutter. dead l)rr, the combat vr!('ran. \\":IS beaten to death by a !een-agc gang air parently just for the thrill o[ 1\. •·Those 1.:hildrC'n , 11 srcrncd like they just can1e out ol no11·here ." said Art 1\lalonc, 11·ho 1v<1s 111 !he car 11·1th Orr nnd sa11· hi111 killed. 11is he.id beaten by a gant: tif 15 lo 20 bla ck youlhs. "Bv thr tiine I 11·as ablt to get uul of the ciir. they had run around the corner." r-.1alone said. He described the a\lackcrs as boys and girls betv.·cen 10 and 17. ~1alone said the gang drove him back into the car 11•ith a barrage of roc ks and beer cans 1vhen he lried to go to Orr's aid. Police suspected today that Orr 11·as the \'ictim of a black youth gang. The street 11·here he was killed Sunday night i:> a neighborhood of south-cen tral Los Angeles \.\'hich has been terrorized by such gangs in recent mont hs. Residents have reported a wave of rob- be r i e s. burglaries, purse-snatchings. rapes and, on occasion. murders. Packs or youngsters have invaded hom es, beating and robbing the families living in them, police said. ANNOUNCES tlte 11ew Cal· ''Go II l, • 1 Moon Stru~k? Effective immediately, every new Lincoln or ?lfercury pro· duct sold at Johnson and Son \Vil! receive the unique. ne\v and exciting "Golden Touch'' treatment created specifically to offer you a new car as positively trouble-free as hu manly possibl e. Starting from the moment a ne\v car enters our "get ready" department rigbt through every step in tuning, pol ishing. adjusting, inspection and our exclusive 20 MJLE ROAD TEST, the "Golden Touch" program is in ellcct. When you see the seal bearing the Golden Touch emblem on the wind shield, you'll know that this new car has met all the rigid requirements we demand for delivery. Come in today and see for yourself how this "Golden Touch" prir grain will provide the i·trouble !ree11 drivffig pleasure you've always wanted. Ca11tbodia1t M ytli Wastes Arnnto PHNOM PENH !AP ) -Premier Ltn Nol says Cambodian so ldie rs \.\'.ho shot up a mythical monster they believed was devouring the moon during a recent et:llpse wasted so much ammunition the army mlghl have run short in case of at· tack. The mRrshfll. who doubles a:s com· mander-ln-chief or the Cambodian army, navy and air for ce, described the hour· long shootout on Jan. 30 as an i\1-<.'0n· flldered a~tion and threat@ned to court· martial officers and men who go on such 1ho0tlng sprees. In an angry radio speech to troops over the "''eckend . Lon Nol !iald th e fuslllad<'. - wh ich lit up the niRhl sky over Phnon1 Penh "·ll h trac~r bullet!'> -took two Jives and woundt'd 8.1 pcr~ons. It cost Cambodia millions of riel~ \'.'Orth or ammunition , the marshal gaid, and was •·a serious blot on the honor of the Khmer Republic.,. The soldiers were trying to drive aYtay Reahou. a legendary monster who is a malevolent brother to the 1un and the moon. Tradition leaches that onl y by making great noise could they prevent Reahou from gobbllng up the moo n dur· ing the eclipse, darken111g lbelr nights forever. For the average Cambodian solider. Reahou surpasses myth. Fabulous bcast111 and monsters from ancient Khmer folk legends sre as. real to him as the calllf' wandering pla cidly through downtO\\'ll Phnom Penh. Omens and oracles piny an importa nt part in drcislon making for m&ny Cam· hodlans . Marshal Lon Nol himself fre~ quentlv sees the &dvice of seers and other ni)sUcs. ' . ohnson & son . ... LINUJI N r.,.~ I ! \{ I I I: Y .CO UG /I H Cl1i'H I 2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 540·5630 ) I I ' ! l DAILY P1LOT Toesda1, ftbru1ry 8, 1972 Pint ~s a Pint • ID Britain Wicks Metric System Moving in But Pub Fa vorite W on 't Change \ \ •· I ~ps How to Stem Carnage Tide By THOMAS MURPJnNE 01 tM o.i1y Piie! STiii GRD-1 RECORDS DEPT. -Orange Countlans have alw&ys taken some meUure of pride in the fact that each year, we seem capable or doing things just a little bit bigger and better than the year previous. We're doing it again this year. folks. Trouble Is, this particular statistic isn't one you can be very proud of. We are killing Orange Counlians at a record clip. So far, we've kllled them at a pace averaging almost one per day. These figure s. however, do not include homicides, suicides, trips-and -falls or Joss o! llfe due to age or physical ailment THE STATISTICS suggestiong a one- dt .. 'h-oer-day average are con fined only to to/>ae persons who have lost their lives on Oran11e County's roads and highways. In truth. you m~hl well point out that th~ new year Is ye t young. But let's just t.R)-e January, for exemole. In the fir st 28 d11"111, 24 persons lost their live5 on our roads. You might note that this is some below 11 one-a-day death rate. But then on the last weekend of the month, we killed six, gJvlng us a grand total of 30 dead in 31 days. And that isn't so grand. 'M>e traffic death toll slllrted out a bit slower this month but then we kj1Jed three on the first weekend in February. Projecllng, the figures seem to suggest th.Rt if 0 r a 11 g e County's pace of hlp,hway slaughter continues. nearly 365 persons will ~ave lost their lives in traffic traP,edle3 before 1972 closes out. That would compare to 241 killed last year, or an increase of 124 deaths for the 12 month period. NOW, IF YOU are what is termed in journalism circles "the average reader." you have quit reading th is already. How do I conclude thus? It's ea s y . Newspapers are always t a k i n g readership surveys. And one thing the surveys all show is that readers don 't like stories or photograpM about traffic fatalities. They disturb them. They are unsetUlftg. Arter all, almost everybody is on the road al one Ume or another during the week. Dad drives off to work and mom motors off to the store and the kids are making it to school through pedestrian crosswalks or in cars or buses or on bicycles. Everybody is out there. So It is indeed unsettling after your day on the. road to pick up the evening paper and learn that some people didn't make jl. GRIM TRAFFIC officers, ho\A-·ever, from every police department along the Orange Coast have at one ti me or another confronted our reporters and told them they must help do something to slow the up'\\·ard climb of the traffic toll. So we've tried most e\'erything. Safety essays. editorial warnings, grim crash pictuns and news accounts of the latest tra"'edy. For a time. we e\'en devoted a couple of pages at the end of the year to list all those who lost their lives. But the traffic killing co nti nues and we still get letters and calls of resentment from some readers. Sometimes you are prompted to believe that notbing wUl stem the tide. Then again. maybe if we 1g110Te it . it will just go away. Dr aft Milk on Tap HIGHA~1 . England (UPIJ -John f'urkJng has installed draft milk along· side the beer in his pub. He said the number of his ~tomers stopped by police for breath tests prompted the move. LONDON (UPI) -Beer drinkers take heart. Liters and meter11 will re.place quarts and yards, but in Britain's pu bs, the pint will sta y. That 's the message -partly -of a government while paper on 1netricatlon published Monday. It said Bri tain will switch from pints, poun ds and yards lo l!ters, grams and 1nelers by I.he end or 1975. The changeover will be gradual, unlike last Fe bruary's "D-day'' switch from Special Delivery i>hllllngs and pence to decimal currency . It \A-'lll bring Brita.in into line oo weights and mearurea with its partners in the European Common Market. The exempt.ions will be for the nation's publicans and its milkmen, the white paper said. But it said pubs could use metric measured it they wished. "The government have no wiJh to discourage the sale of drauJht bttr by the pint," the white paper said. "Equally they see no reason to forbid its sale by measures of 1 liter on iL'I sub multiples." But to avoid confusion, the pub measures must cboo6e one or the other- the pint of lhe imperial system or metric measur~. The Licensed Victuallers Allsoc latlon, to which most of Britain's 70,000 pubs belong, welcomed the ei:emption. "That 's what the public wants ," it said. "They like their pint. And their half I pint ). If a person wl'lo now drinks a half ordered half a liter, he'd get .88 or a pi.nt -'"• __,,,__ --- Kathy Sachs, an employe oC the Philadelphia Muse- um of Art, displays a "Chinese Calligraphy" catalog which vlill be given to President Nixon today. Nixon \vill act as a messenger and de liver two copies of the catalog to Mao Tse·tung and Chou En·lai. Familiar Names Going To China With Nixon WASHINGTON (UPl )-P r esi d en t Nixon will be accompanied to China by such familiar news personalities as Walter Cronkite, John Chancellor, Harry Reasoner and \Villiam F. Buckley. Those four and &.'I o t h e r cor· respondents. photographrs and techni· cians were chosen by the White House 1-tonday from more than 2,000 who ap- plied to make the trip. Buckley, the conservative columnist, Laird Resting Near P h oe1iix \VAS HINGTON /UPI) -Supported by special communications beca use he has no deputy to leave in charge of the Pen· tagon, Defense Secretary 1-felvin R. Lalrd new to Arizona ~fond11v for R week of rest and study at an undisclosed location in the Phoerux area. Laird's trip 111arked a dcp:1riure from standard practices that call for the secretary of defense -second only to the President in the chain of co mmand con· trolling America 's nuclear arse nal -or his deputy to be in the nation's capital at all limes. Pentagon sixikesman Jerry W . Friedheim said Laird would continue to carry out his full responsibilities whUe in Arizona. although it will require "some speciaJ communications facilities." had opposed the President's decision to journey to Peking. Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler said Buckley and two other columnists -Joseph Kraft of Publishers Hall and Richard \Vil son of the Des Moines Register and Tribune - were selected on the basis of circulation and points of view. Ziegler said Buckley, of the Washington Star syndicate, represent~ t h e "conservative" point of view, while Kraft was "non C{lnservative. '' Cronkite, Chancellor and Reasoner are familiar figures on the evening newscasts of CBS, NHC and A.BC respectively. There will be only three women in the press contingent -Helen Thomas. veteran UPI White House correspondent; Barbara Walters of the NBC·TV '"Today" show; and Fay Wells of Storer Broad· casting. Ziegler said the final list was "a substantial increase" over the number the Chinese orig inally had agreed to. "We·re grateful they agreed to this number. I am pleased with the number and I think the journalism community as a v.·hole should be pleased with the fact that all segments of the news media are covered. There will be six wire service reporters -three each from UPI and AP ; 21 reporters representing newspapers and newspaper groups ; three columnists; 12 television network commentators; 6 members or smaller TV and radio broad· cast ouUets as well as the Voice or America: six magazine correspondents: eight still photographers; eight television cameramen and 17 TV technicians. Indian Pullout F ron1 Bangladesh Slated March 25 CALCtmA (AP ) -The eslimated 40.000 Ind ian troops still in Bangladesh wUI be withdrawn by March 25, Prime Ministers Indira Gandhi and Mujibur Rahman announced today. The date is the first anniversary of the Pakistani army's crackdown on the Bangladesh independence movement, which touched off nine months of civil war and led to India's successful in· lervention on the side of the rebels. In a joint statement issued after two days of talks, h-1rs. Gandhi and Sheik ~tu· jib said : "The prime minis ter of Bangladesh paid warm tribute to the armed forces of lndia and the part they played in the liberation of Bangladesh. "The task having been completed, the two prime ministers fell ~hat the se forces could be withdrawn." Authorita tive military sources have sa id India used about 150,000 troops in the invasion of East Pakistan , which. began Dec. i and ended Dec . 16 with the sur· render of 93,000 Pakistani troops and the establishment of the new Bengali nation. Pres ide nt Urges U.S. Executives To Aid Phase II It's Still Cold Out There WASl{INGTON (UPl) -President Nixon has pledged anew to end wage and price controls as soon as inflaUon is halted . He urged America's businessmen, in the meantime, to stop complaining and start working. "I believe in economic freedom -that the best economy for America is a free market economy," the President told a gatheMng of industrial executives Moo. day night. "But faced with tbe choice ot wage aOO price controls or continued in-- nation, I chose temporary controls to curb lnflatlon. I11tense Cold Spreading So utli , East; West Stays Mild 1 . • ' I "I believe in balanced budgets," he ad· decl. "But faced with the choice between budtet deficit.I and unemployment, I chose deficits to create more jobl. "In the Iona: run, our goal iJ to remove the controls and get rid ol the deficits - ooce we have brought about price atabili· ty and full employment. In lhe short run, lhert is golna to be a lot of complaining," Nixon said. Nixon spake to tbt White H o u s e Confuenc. on the Industrial World Ahead, • gotherlng called to project the nation's economy lnto 1990 •nd to make plons lor lndu!ltrlal development In the balance of this century. "Are you going to crawl into a shell and demand protecUon from world com. petition , or are you 1oing to roll up your s.lee\·es and increase productivity?" Nix· d'n asked the delegates. "Are you golng to expand your energies complaining about controls, or are you going to adopt wage and price policies that will tt:move tbt pressure of lnflaUon and the need for controls?" -a lot more than he might want." The Common Mark et -which Britain will JO!n Jan. I -said all member~ should be using the metric system by the end of 1978. The British white paper said where lhere were special reasons why ex· tensions might be granted until 1979 or even later. But it recommended shops and industry not count on extensions and waste no time in beginning using metric units to fam iliarize consumers. "People will become much more aware of it -and more familiar with it -as foodstuffs and household goods measured in metric sizes and quantilies come into our shops from our own manufacture rs as well as from the continent and other metric countries," the while paper said. The government acknowledged the changeover would be costly. "People will become much more aware of it -and more familiar with it -as foodstuffs and household goods measured In metric sizes and quantilies come into our shops from our own manufacturers as well as from the con tinent and other metric countries," the white paper said. The government acknowledged the changeover would be costly -millions of dollars will be spent changing road signs for exarriple -but the white paper peo- ple should "also consider the cost of not going metric." ··1r the United Kingdom were to retain the imperial system, while at the same time having to use metric to an in· creasing extent in international trade, British industry would be less efficient and Jess competitive and the higher costs would be cumulative," the white paper said. The government, stung by criticism that shopkeepers used last year's switch to decimal currency to raise prices, pro-- mised to "lake whatever steps are necessary to protect the consumer'' this time. 2 Troops Hurt In N. Ireland; Di sruptio1i Set BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI )-A machine-gunner wounded two off-duty British soldiers late Monday night in Omagh -a peaceful town almost un· touched in the current wave or violence in Northern Ireland. "'This attack took us all by surprise. Omagh has been ii ke a peacetime bar· racks with hardly any problems in the re. cent violence," an army spokesman said. The spokesman said both soldiers were w7a ring civilian clothes and walking slightly ahead of a group of uni formed troopers when a car pulled up and a man inside opened fire \\'ilh two bursts from an automatic we apon. One of the soldiers was shot in the chest and arm and the other in the stomach, the spokesman said. Omagh, in County Tyrone, is 55 miles east of B e I f .a 1 t and southust of Strabane, the site of several recent in- cidents. Roman Catholic ci"il rights leaders w.ent a.he~~ with plans for a "da y of disruption Wednesday despite the possibility that some of the movement's leaders, in cludin g Bernadette De\·Jin, a member of Parlia ment, might be jailed for taking part in Sunday 's a b o rt e d march. Gun Surrendered 'Will they still go wild in the Statss whtl11 an undeclared war ends? Sarge ?' Nixon Signs Foreign Aid ; Not Pleased \VASlflNGTON <AP) -C a 111 n g it ';below minimum acceptable le v e Is," President Nixon has signed a $2.74-billion foreign-aid authorization blll -$1.S bill ion less than what he wanted for the current fiscal year. "Viewed against the vital national ob- jectives which our foreign-assistance pro. grams are designed to pursue, this act ill a great disappoi ntment," Nixon said as he signed it Monday. The authorization bill is about $308 million below the level menlioned in separate House and Senate foreign.aid appropriation bills which, when settled in ' congressional conference, will actually provide the money for this year's foreign ·· aid . Presumably, only $2.74 billion of the SJ billion n1entiuned in the appropriation bills could be spent. Nix on had requested $4 .34 billion for fi scal 1972 foreign aid spe nding. An au~horizalion providing for spending up to $2.9 billion was rejected by the Senate last October. The revised bill chops U.S. spending In the United Nations from 31.5 percent of the total U.N. budget to 25 percent. It also cuts off aid to the Greek military junta unless Nixon declares the money lo be among the ··overriding requirements'' of U.S. security ; limits aid to Cambodia to $341 mill ion. and halts all $510 million for military credit sales on April 30 unless the President releases $2 billion authorized for domestic social programs by then. Kila11ea Volcano Gush es Steadily HILO .. Hawaii (AP) -Glowing lava fro m Kilauea volcano continues to gush forth with no sign of letup. On Monday night lava filled one nank crater and started to fill another. The eruption began Friday and wa s discovered Saturday. Dr. Don Peterson, In charge of the Hawaii volcano observatory. g a i d spasmodi c bursts of lava from the ma in foun ta in have reached 60 feet with smaller bursts estimated at 40 feet. A glow from the volcano can be: seen 10 to 15 miles away. Kilauea erupted lasl in September. A PhUodelphla gang member prepares lo voluntarily tum In his weapon to Philadelphia police o((icial! aftu a crackdown on l•nr members was enforced . • \ \ ' .... ' ... . . -.. , .... ~-·~ .... . ' . All Eyes Turn to Wallace Alabania Governor See1i as Big Iss ue in Florida By BARBARA FRYE TALLAHASSEE, Fla . UP!i -The big issue in Florida's second·in·the-nallon presidential primary is George Wallace. Sen. Ed mund Muskie of Maine, con- 1idered the national frontrunner, says the governor of Alabama can·t be elected president and a vote for him Is a wasted vote. Mayor John V. Lindsay 0£ New York hes challenged Wallace to a face-to-face debate and talks constantly against •·wallace·ism_" "A vote for Wallace is a V'Ote for N1x· on," Is the theme of Sen. Henry Jackson of Washington . who hopes to cut into Wallace's conservative following with strong stands for national defense, Jaw and order and against school busing sole- ly for racial balance. Sen . George Mt'G overn of South Dakota blasted Wallace as "a voice from out of the past." Of the candidates considered "major·• here. only Minnesota's Hubert Humphrey ha s ignored Wallace, who won 43 counties and 29 percent of the Florida vote in trailing Nixon and Hu mphrey as the third Wicks 'A Gavernor Wallace to see you Mister President!' party candidate for president in 1968. The re's a good chance Wallace's can· didacy and the size or the field -10 Democrats in all -will make the out- Lawyers Okay Abortion Measure, hut Not Divo1·ce NEW ORLEANS IAP I The American Bar Association has given ap- proval to proposed legis lation to legalize abortion, but il refused to endorse liberalized divorce laws which could deprive lawyers of a large portion of their business. 'Ille National Conference of Com. missioners OD Uniform State Laws drew up the proposed legislation on abortion and sought the ABA 's support. The pro. posal permits abortion OD demand up to 20 "'eeks of pregnancy. ·The ABA's House of Delegates ap- pr oved it without a word of protest Mon· day, but later a hand ful of delegates !itipulated that they wanted to be record· ed as voting against the measure. The proposals on marriage and divorce drew heavy criticism. "We a.re dealing with whether the family itself will go down the drain," u jd Ralph J . Bodell of Milwaukee, Wis., Nearly Hooked head of the family law section of the ABA and leader of the opposition. Several other delegates 1aid that passage of such legislation would further weaken American family life and in- crease the numbe r of divorces and family breakups. The proposal would have created a "no- fault" system of divorce proceedings and eliminated the ad versary system in divorce actions. The proposal was defeated by a vote of 170 to 72. The Philadelphia Bar Associa· tion urged passage of a resolution revok· ing the ABA 's approval of federal wiretap guidelines. The resolution would have condemned the use of electronic surveillance in all cases but those in· volving national security. The measure was referred for study to a spe cial committee and reserved for ac- tion at the ABA's August meeting in San Francisco. Judge Rejects Motion -For Own Matrimony CHICAGO (UPI) -Federal Judge James B. Parsons has ruled that he would not accept a proposal from a woman he never met even though she had already arranged for an intimate wedding, invited 50 guests, ordered a cake, iced the champagne and reserved a room in a hotel in the Loop. ''I 'm very embarrassed," Parsons said. "I have never in my life met this woman. I don 't know what she looks lik e." Parsons, 61 and a widower, said he was told Monday that the woman had rented a room in the Ambassador East Hot.el, purchased a $50 wedd ing cake and cham· pagne, and invited about 50 persons to the ceremony scheduled for Monday night. The hotel said it received a $100 check from the woman for a meeting room and the hotel's ca terer has an order for a three-tie.red chocolate weddi ng cake with fudge fi lling, decorated with fresh flowers. Parsons said the woman first called him about a week ago. "I treated her like any other call. I handled her carefully and delicately. "I didn't wa nt to offend her. But then she called oftener and oftener and oftener until it was up to five and six times a day. "Finally, Friday, she tells me it was ordained by God that we marry on Mon- day. I must admit I was a hit facetious . I told her she better get back in touch with God because there was some mistake - He picked the wrong man." Parsons said he finally got bold enough to tell lhe woman "if she really wanted to make me happy please don't call again. She said 'aJJ right' and hung up.'' The judge said he didn't know why the woman chose him. "I guess you could say I'm desirable. hands ome, yo ung enough and a rederal judge," Parsons speculated. BKNEl"ICIAL'S NEWKST Ol"l"ICK 16145 BROOKHURST STREET FOUNTAIN VALLEY PHONE: 531-4470 Loans up to $10,000 oome ol. the March 14 balloting hard to interpret, or even meaningless. "The ~al significance lies in the poten- tial for surprise -a poor showing by Wallace or a good showing by Lindsay," said one Democratic strategist. "Wallace could carry the 'state, or he might well get burled here ." Since it cnly takes a plurality of the statewide ballots to win. the vote could be 80 fragmented it would neither cut the field nor pro pel any candidate to the top. Before Wallace, Florida's ea r I y prima ry, its representative population and 81 delegate votes made it a bellwether state that could "make or I CAMPAIGN'721 break" Muskie, determine if Humphrey can make a co me back and put Jackson 's candidacy on the road or into mothballs. or the 81 votes, 2D go to the candidate wh o gets the plurality of the statewide vote. and the rest to the candidate that gets the plurality of votes in each con- gressional district. Most of the state's political "VIPs" are backing Muskie, Humphrey or Jackson . But the rank-and.file voter just isn't fired up. Typical is the comment of Jay Pilchik, 2..S, a Miami court reporter and a Democrat. who said ''there are so many candidates, I haven 't had time to start watching." Or the politlcally-oriented newsman who said, only half in je5t, that Dade County -where one-fourth of the State's Democrats live -seldom gets excited about anything but the football·Dolphins and the candidate who can win coach Don Shula's blessing would be a shoo-in. The high cost of Jiving , unemployment and environmental protection are major concerns, with forced busing and the space shutUe important in areas they touch. Wallace's attack on ''pluperfect hypocrites" who write busing orders and "bus little children to kingdom come," in· spired }'()Ung business leaders at a i!ltate Junior Chamber of C:Ommerce convention to a cowbell-ringing. whistle-blowing demonstration. And a straw poll at the close gave Wallace 41 percent of the 916 Democratic ballot!, Humphrey 19 percent. Muskie 17 percent and Jackson 12 percent. McGovern, Rep. Shirley Chisolm or New Yo;k, Mayors Lind!ay and Sam Yorty ol Los Angeles barely scored and no votes were reported for the other two Florida contenders, Sen. Vance Hartke of Indiana and former Sen. Eu g e n e McCarthy of MiMesota, who haVe cam- paigned here on a hit-and-run basis. The black vote, representing 14 percent of the 2.1 million registered Democral.5, has not found a borne yet, according to NAACP field secretary Marvin Davies, event though Mrs. Chisholm is wooing it as the nation's first black woman candi· date for president. There are more than 700,000 Floridians between the ages of 18 and 25 who did not vote in 1968. but even brand new teenage voters aren't too turned on. Betty Weed, 19, a Satellite Beach col· lege sophomore and free-lance lobbyist for adult rights tor her group, !aid, "I'm votlng for McGovern . I'm not reaJJy wild about him, but I'm less wild about the rest." The Republican primary is lack-luster. The state Republican party is handling President Nixon's campaign even though Reps. Paul McCloskey of California and John Ashbrook of Ohio also are running. "Nixon is really something of a favorite son." said one source. referring to the President's weekend White House at Key Biscayne. (Tomorrow -Illi11ois ). Som~hln11 new his been 1ddtd to the loc.•I scene! It's 8eMficlal's new office ri11ht here in town -rTIQdern, comfort.Ible, convenient -the latest addition to the workS'1 lar11est system of atflli•t•d fin1nc:t offices -. rMdy to &iv• you Benefici1l 's own special kind of CISh WHAT HAVE YOU OONE FOR HER LAT EL Y1 So41n 1etvfc•-Beneffcltl's Bil O.K. Hrvlctl • You ,,. cordltlly Invited to come In and pt tequtlnted. M••t the Mane1er and his • · Staff. You'll find thtt S.neflcitl (llrr111A.T . • • aooc1 nei.hbOf •• •ood DIC, ~=i •nd • aood place to &it \ r C•ll up or come In and 1.t ()I{ 8ant:flcl11's f1mous 81& O.K. , for ct sh. HOW' much c:•n you t •• u1e rltht nowt We're here to • H Nt )'OU .' , , fodl)'/ Benellclal ~ FINANCE CO. OF FOUNTAIN VALLEYl§g!J Her 25th Ann iverSMy is one of the moat important occasions of Y,OUr life. Make it right. (You don't l>alle to wait for the 26th!) Merquioe, 8750. Oval, $475 • Round. 8350. PMr shape, $625. 01,.. Ac-h 111vltM A-1c11t1 .,,....., a.ntA,...nuN _. _..,.,. ~ .... SLAVICK'S .ywtlen Sln<:1! 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -04~· 1 llO Optn Mon. •ncl Fri., 10 •.m. to 9:30 P·"'· • •• V,.1 T•IWM .. Dead at 78 Sinc lair Weeks, secre· tary of co mmerce in the Eisenhower Administra- tion and a former U.S. senator. died Monday in a New Hampshire nursin g home following a long illness. PROXMIRE HAS SHINER WASHINGTON !AP I -Sen. William Proi:mire is sporting what appears to be two very hla ck eyes, but no one on his staff has mustered t h e courage to ask him what hap- DA ILY PILOT 5 Group Facing, Draft Call This Year Wins Re1Jrieve WASll!NGTON (A P I - r.·1ore than 11.000 young men who have received Induction notices blH haven't y e t reported for duty "'ere given a reprieve today by Selective Service Director Curtis W. Tarr. Tarr instructed local draft boards to place the men who had received the dra;. orders. as we ll as 115,000 members of the 1972 Extended Priority Selection Group. into lhe less vulnerable Second Priority Selection Group. The action means they won'l be drafted un less there is a na tional emergency. Affected are men who se original 197 l induction dates were postponed until the first cc.JI of 1912 or unll! further no tice. as well as those whose postponements we;·e sched·Jled to end on a specific dale before April t. The 19n Extended Priority Selection Group consists of n1en who became eligible for induction in 1971 but did not receive induction n n t ic e .s. These me n had to be at least 20 years old and holding I-A classifications on Dec. 31 , 197!, wit h lottery numbers lo\.\'er than 126. Under Selective Sc r v i c-e directives, registrants v.•ilh lottery numbers lo\.\·er than the highest number reached during the year ( 125 in 1971 l who become 1-A and liable 11> : induction 100 late in the ye11r : to fill draft calls have !hei r • draft l!a bility extended for .the : first three months of the fol· ; lo\.\•ing ye11 r. • Since there will be no draft calls in the first th ree month!! of 1972. there will be no in--l ductions from thf' 19n r:x· .. tended Priority S l' 1 e c t i ., n Grnup. T11rr also set lot:er.\ num twr i 200 as a temµorary ceiling fnt • nien facing possible tnduetu>n during the remainder nf lfl72 (.1en with draft nun1~rs rit 200 and above \Veil he reclassified l·H. a 11 ;id· ministrative holding categ.-it"/, and will rl(lt be procl'.'sscd further for possible induction. May Company World Travel Bureau Everyone Invited present s t he best of Club Universe-CENTRAL EUROPE ' See More Europe for Less Money Thu rsday, February 10-7:00 p.m.-Admission Free COSTA MESA WOMEN'S CLUB 610West18th Street, Costa Mesa pened. 111 .................................... ~~ The Wisconsin Democratl 1 wore dark sunglasses at a sub- committee meeting and Jn the Senate Monday . When newsmen asked about it, WORLQ TRAVE~ BUREAU Proxmire's answer through an SOUTH COAST PLAZA aide was. "No comment." MAY CO. WORLD TRAYn BUREAU 546-9321 MAVCC> HEY GALS ITS TIME AT to 90 ON OUR OFF FALL • HOLIDAY • EARLY SPRING GROOVIE CLOTHES SALE ST ARTS WED. FEB. 9 10:00 A.M. The.lPok L'l Arfan :Jfaum 33 Fashion Island, Newport Beach MASTER CHARGE IANKAMERICARD CASH NO LAYAWAYS ALL SALES FINAL NO SALE THIS TIME AT , • • •• : ' D AR Y P ILOT E DITORIAL PAGE Pre·sident's Solution President Nixon and the more responsible tnem· l>ers of Congress a re wrestling wit h a dichutemy ol nlajor proportions 1u 1 he stevedoring strike. Jt is the in1ba lance under present labor la"" bt:l\veen protection of the national health and safety against dam- aging \Vork sto ppage:; and the prot.ection of collective bargaining i n a free nat ion. The \V est Coast shipping tieup, dragging on for !:':> n1onths. dropped exports by $600 million in JU St the firsl JOO da ys. Farmers, \Vho normally export the output rron1 one .acre out of four. ~a"' their overseas sales fall fron1 $288 million 111 the .J un e-September period of 1970 to $73 million in the same period of 1971. At least 25 mil· lion bushels of \1 heat \Yo rth $40 n1ill ion have not been delivered to Japan. as one exainple, si nce last April. :;etlle1nent this week, as some close to the bargaining believe \\-·ill occur, then that bill would be moot. Still needed. however, is the proposed Crippling Strikes Prevention Act (S. 5601 which Nixon proposed two years ago without getting action from the Demo crat·led f~ongress. It would give the President new authority to deal Y.'ith emergency dis putes in the railroad , airline, n1arit in1 e, longshore and trucking industries. 'f'h e raLlroads and airlines would be put under the 'l'aft-llartley Act, the same as the others. 1\nd 'faft ·llart· Icy \\'Ould be am ended to give the !)resident three ne1v op tions -Extending the cooling off period 30 days. -Require partial operation or the struck industry so that seg1n ents essential to national health and safety co uld be kept in operation ror an additional 180 days. ·- WHAT DO YOU TH INK ABOUT NO-FAULT INSURANCE? NO-FAULT? WHAT A JOKE ! IT 'S A CON CEPT THAT IS FULL OF I AS I UNDERSTAND IT, THE PURPOSE IS TO CUT DOWN ON THOSE BI G SETTLEMENTS THAT YOU G UYS GET O NE-T HIRD OR MORE OF IF YOU WIN THE CA SE . FAULTS! , _____ _ RIGHT! AND THAT'S THE BIGGEST FAULT OF All! -· Exporters of specialized crops -especiall y Cali· fornia agri1.:ulture -and the merchant fleet al so have s ustained heavy losses. Confidence of foreign buyers has been shaken, the balance of payments is threatened, ec· onomlc recovery has been seriously retarded -and many thousands of \\IOrkers not parties lo the dispute have been n1ade to suffer -Inv oke a "final offer selection" procedure involv- ing a neutral panel to encourage the parties lo narro'v their differences (in stead of \videning them as under compulsory arbitrat ion). .. . And. on the Orange Coas t. there are fe\\I if any re· lail stores or rnanufacturers Cir service f irms. ho1,vever .s1nall. that have not lost sales for lack of merchandi:-;e . or component parts or rav.1 materials from forelgn coun- tries. Clearly. the nation cannot cont inue to suffer such economic devastation as it has in a s uccession of strikes in the various branches of th e transportation industry. 'fhe President has suggested a way out \vithout destroy· 1ng free c:ollective bargaining . Such legislation s hould be enacted, even if the dock strike were to be se tlled to1norro\v. BuL it will take the pressure of lots of letters and telegrams from individual c itizehs. d irected particularly to the Democrats in thi:; instance, to prod Congress into action. ( I I l • . I • l ~ Addressing hi1n self to a reluctant Congress, the President has argued that collective bargaining has fail· ed bacUy in this in stance. He said, "I share the belief that government ord inarily should nol tamper \vith the freedom of bargaining, but \Yhen the processes have broken down and the nation's health and safety are at stake, \ve in public office have no right to turn our heads." T\vo Nixon-sponsored bills are before Congress. One would order a halt to the West Coast strike and settle the issues by binding arbitration. If there is a voluntary Ques tion of Money ~ A proposal is berore county supervisors lo add 16 n1ore regional parks by 1990. Most res idents will cheer -and most also \l!ill \vant to kno\v "'here the money \vill come fro1n. De1nocrats Left it& Disa1·1·ay OCWD Shows Pettibone to the Rescue • President Nixon's dramatic revelation of his Vietnam peace offer s nol only stun- ned the nalion. it ca rne within a hair·s breadth of dt'Stroy1 ng the lwo-pa rly systen1 I' An1eri ca. For 1n the 11·cek that foltO"'ed !he 43 Democrai s running tor President can- celed a total of 207 major addresses. 312 press t'OMferences and 1407 kaffcr klatches "After a11 ," glumly said one who was nailed by a reporter 1vhilc trying lo sneak oul of his hotel roo1n disguised as a chan1be.rmaid. "what's there to say?" It seen1cd as though the President had now adopted every solution l he Democrats had offered lo the country·s ills -fro n1 \1·age and price controls to a guarantel'.'d annual in come. They cou ld hardly attack hi1n for that. So eact~ retired behind locked doors lo th ink up something to say. And there each stayed. BY THE TIME the prin1aries began in J\larch. few Democrats bothered to volC' few Den1ocrats be ing ablC' 10 remember the names of the cand1datC's. And so the Democratic Convention open· ed in July w1lh every single de legate un- comn1itted Not lo n1enllon un£>11- lhusiastic. Indeed. 11 1nolton 11·as n1ad e lu Art Hoppe disband the parly and go home. Clcnrly. the mon1ent was ripe for a dark hor::;e to galvanize the throng_ One did -the h1therto.11nhcard-or Hon1er T. Pettibone. Pellibone. an alternall' delegate lrom Dec atur, was given !he podium because no one elsr had anyt hing to say. He elec- tri fied the crO\Yd with a vitriolic attack on President Nixon's deficit spending policies. .. SPEND AND SPEND, elect and elect," cried Pett ibone , "that's alt the Republicans know !"' The Democrats. who hadn't hea rd an attack on ~1r. Nix.on in six months. nominated Pettibone bv ac<"lamation. And he lived up to their roildest expectati ons. In his first campaign speech . Pettibone ripped into the Presiden t's welfare reform plan. "Coddling loafers saps 111- dividual initiative," he thundered. "Let"s get these burns off the Yl'elfare rolls and onto the payrolls~" In his very next speech he allacked r.tr Nison's wage and price conlrols as a '·despe rate. hare-brained scheme or a fiscally 1rrespons1ble ad1ninistration '' and "a clear !hreat lo our free enterprise .system which made this country great." When elected, he promised. he \Vould remove all controls immediately and .. restore our cherished freedoms." THIS \\'ENT 0\'ER \\'Cll \1•1th the public. which was gett ing as tired of con- lrols as ii was of \velfare. Bul 11·hat rous- ed the nation y,·as Petl ibone·s att ack on the Presi dent's foreign policy. First. he talk ed of Mr. Nixon fl ying •·all the way to Peking and ~1oscow to cozy up to the Communists." Then he demanded to know y,·ho had ~old the President hi s "'no-1vin policy in Vietna1n ... And lastly he charged that Dr. Kissinger·s third cousin 011 his mother·s sid~ \vas a known friend of Alger H.iss'. By October . Pettibone 1vas describing lhe Republicans as "the party of treason ." and contending the Presidenl 1vas at the very leas! "soft on Con1- mun ism:• if nol "a conscious tool of the Comn1unls\ conspiracy.·· IT LOO KED LIKE Pettibone in a landslide. But in the last weeks of the campaign. the President balanced th e budget abolished welfare. removed all controls and declared war on China. Russia and Alba nia . Thus was the lwo- parly system saved . ''\Vell. gentlemen ." an angry .Pettibone told the press in his hour of defeat." you v.:on 'l have Homer T. Pettibone 111 kick around any more · The Power of Big Unions lnduslrlal Ntt.'!'S Hevir"· ... dm 1nislrat!on of t.'!'age t'Onit·ols has rais ed a question concerning the po"·er of organized labor that ma y have ~n impact more far-reaching than anyone can precisely visua lize. It will ::iffe(.'\ !he ::ibili- ty of gov emn1en1 lo control inflation. of 1nany businesses lo continue to operate at • profit and quite possi bly the future standard of li ving of 1n lllions of con· tiumers. The problem is. as Business \Veeli ()bserves. that. "In any system of \.\•age controls. the unorganized y,•orlier:; are likely to be the one s who get the $horl end of the stick .·• Certain unions have managed to posh through 15 percent wage boost s "'hile nonunion labor agreements are bound by the 5.5 percent limitation itnposed by the. Pay Board. . .\S BUSINESS \\!EEK comments. ··organiie.d labor, for all lts power. can count a total men1 be.rship of only 19 million -out or 83-mill!on workers in the civilian labor force. Does the Pay Board mean to lell the 6~ n1illion unorganized workers that the way lo get ahead is to OIAMOE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert .N. Wl!1'd, Pttbli&Mr TMmos Ktt viT, Editor Albert W. Bate& Ed.itorl.al Pa~e Editor "tbe editori.11 J'l'J:" nr fhll' !la.Uy Pilot aotkJ to 1nll)rn1 ""d .. umu .. late-rcdt.'n by r~ntin~ thllf nrwll1lftJlCf"~ 11pinlt•t>11 and C'Of1\• mrntary on topla 01r \nt~t •nd algnlllc&nt"", b)' pl"'OVlttlncr a forum ftJr I.hr. v:p~lon or our ttadftn' nplnlons. and by pr!'M'ntlni: the di'~nlf" ,,.,.wpot.n11 o( inlorml'.'l'I ~· "'1'\<f'n and •poketm~n on tns•cs ol ""' ""· Tuesda1, February 8. 1972 ' ' join a union and e!cc\ a tough barg;i1ner to battle for them ?" For years, cha rges of monoi:xi!y havr been hurled at labor unions. It 1\·as said I hat no orthodox fiscal and monetary policies of government could brea k the vicious circle of the wage-price spiral. \Vhelher true or nol. labor. in such fields as construction. took the lion's share or the blame that led to the freeze. By the same token . the monopoly power of labor unions is now being blamed for alleged inequities in Phase IT wage ('Ontrols. ONE OF' THE consequences or this ap- pears to be renewed pressure for labor Ian• reform. Sen John G. Tower of Texas, in 11n article in Nation's Business, presents lhe case for such reform and of- fers proposals fo r fundamental changes in labor laws. He says fl atly: "The major cause of the infl11tionary spiral that has plagued the nation in recent years is the concentration of tC'Onon1ic po"'er in the hands or organized labor ... This im· balance came about largely because the basic labor Jaws under which we operate today are outmoded produ(.'ts or the I~ and 1930s ••• These Jaws have put up a statutory wall of protection for organized labor behind which it can operate with little or no restraint.'· SENATOR TOWER ht'licves thal much of I.be fault for the growth or excessive labor powtr lies: wllb the National Labor Relations Board. !tf!\Cites casts which. in his opiniOn, sho\f the bi<ts of the NLRB in favor of big unions. lie propose s the 1bOltllrrnent oI. the NaUOnal Labor Rtla- tiool Board's .authority to he&r and rule on charges of un!alr labor practices. He Quotes Or. S. J. lllylklw1, prt.1ldent S. f'. Stale -"Once you acknowledge lhe reaUty ol chance. once you recognize your own part. tn delermlnlng the dir~­ tion or that chana:e. you ~ no longer d'5palr •.. you Y(IU find Ibo World vivid wilh hope:." has offered a bill to Congress to ac- conip!ish this end and give federal courts Juri sdi ction over unfair labor practice charges. Another factor of union po1ver lhcil Senator Tower rears has grown to ex- cessive proportions is labo r innuence on broa d legislative trends. He notes as an ex 1'mple. ". . the current hysteria 11\·er the so-ca lled Health Security Act. sponsored by la bor. which would com- pletely naHonalize the country·s health care and health insurance systems.·· Ht: IS CONVINCED that such revolu· tionary legislatiotr has little popular or congl'essional appeal. "Sul because of the polit icaJ clout of organized labor. the Health Security Act is probably receiving 1nore publicity than aJI the other health care proposals put together." Senator Tower readily admits the dif· ficullies of accomplishing the labor law refor111 s he has recommended . He con· eludes. "I( the necessary reforms art going to be achieved . . . businessmen will have to be active in supporting for public office people who will "'ork toward them. You don't have any trouble getting a union leader Involved in µolitics. Ubor goes right down to the wirt -win. lose or draw -fighting for what lt wants." The current inequities in the ad- ministration of wage C'Ontrols could tum out to be the final straw leading to a review or thtinatK>n's libor laws. Dear Gloo1ny e us DAILY PfLO'I' headline: "Jobless Dad Dies in Hijacking." comm~t: Thank· God ! -D. H. (A pilofs 'vife) TY!l1 ..... ,.,.,, ~ ...... .... __._,,,, --.. "" ..... , .. ,... '"' ... ,...... . ....., ........ ,...., I Enlightened Approach By l\11KE ABRA1'1SON f Second of a seri es) There are many veterans or en- v.ironn1cntal pol itiC"s in California v.•ho ren1etnber "'the good old days'· 1vhen bat- tles over reso url'e manageincnt 111 the state \Yere largely <Concerned \1•ith fish. wildlife and rec reational opportunity. This y,·as the case before ''ecology'' and •·environment" became house hold words dealing with lhe total quality ol life not only in <.:alifornia bul the woild·· Itsel f. Notwithstanding the fact that the nation 's hunters and fishermen have now been recognize d as the true pioneers of loday·s conservation movement. most of thclr earlier political efforts were directed lo\vard preserving an environment \vhich made it possible to pursue their sport. EVEN AS LATE as the 1950s one of the major controversies on the outdoor front was th e utilization o( water agency prop- ertifs fo r recreational purposes. Those concerned with public health problems al thal time in history saw most y,·atershed lands. reservoirs and streams controlled by \\'ater agencies blocked off to pubhr access and recreation. No t so today. anti lh0$e sportsmen who spent countless vol unteer hours harassi ng their lawmakers in Sacramento \\'Ould find programs :;uch as those of the Orange County \\later District a!n1os1 t1nbelie vablr. FIRST u~ TllE LINE by the O<:\V[) "·as the A11ahein1 Lake trout fishing facil ity discussed here last y,•eek . No~' the district has even made pheasant hunt ing possible. a sport not normally associated \vith development of water resources . Last year the district leased lands in its Prado flood control basin in Riverside County to a concessionaire who plants the exotic game birds, which don't propagate in the wild in Southern California. thu s providing a recreational opportunity in the southland which matches nature's in lhe north. Wild duck. cottontail rabbit and dove hunting also are available on the property. FAMILY RECREATION for non- hunters and fishermen are also on the OCWD's drawing boards, to be known as the Y.'ive ~oves Beach on the Santa Ana river. Here 75 acres of fresh water - water whose primary purpose is to recharge the district's underground water supplies -and beaches will be developed for bOating, swimming and pic- nicking. Wtlh join! funding by tho district and the city or Anaheim and possible finan- ci•I e.sslstance from the state and federal governments. the project al!IO will pro- \'ide an imp0rt.ant link In a Santa Ana River greenbelL But lhe key to OCWD's program ls planning and the enlightened altitude of the district's ~tor and .lllall. IT IS THEY WHO have devdoped 1 mai;ter plan for enviruunental Mhara- mtnl or dlstrlcl properililt whlcb lully re<olnlzes OCWD'• responslblUly lo pro- vide ®tdoor recreaUon in, 1 metropolitan at<a· which needs II badly. Plllllled for public w.e are wooded areu to bt u9ed as nature study sites; a,.. for water- orle:nled recrcaUon, and conventional p•rk altes-all also tied to tbe greenbelt But tht: base Ingredient which makes 1t all pOSSlble is wattr. and the district's concept that water can be used and reused and still meet a multitude of publlc nCfds in the proc,es.,. Callfora.fa Fnt•rt Sa'vkt The Inner Spirit Is What Counts We older folk like lo prate a 101 3bout the "duties " and '"responsibilities" or young people. bul h~ve \1·e ever thought ur !he obligatio n that 1s entailed upon us by growi ng older'> I don·1 mean the f1 na nc1al c111d social and family obl1ga - 11ons. which "'c all accept and under- stand. but 1he obliga- tiott to become 1nore appealing on the in· side as we t>ecotne less a!lracti11e on the outside. An older person \Vho gets all dried up and brittle and \\Tinkled and full of con1· plaint s is just a total drag, no matter how rich or influential he n1ay be. Mo st people allo1v age to do a\vful thing~ to them. IT SEE~IS TO l\1E that growing older imposes a duty upon us to get more like a peach on the inside as 1ve get more like a prune on the outside: othenv1se. \l1hat's the point of it all? We have to get cuter and funnier 311d 1ne llower and more tolerant and more percepti1·e and wiser. simply to ('Om- pensate for ihe external ravages of the aging process. lnstead. most older people allow themse lves to become more rigid. 1norc disapproving. more psychicall y con- slipated . n1ore narrowly up1nionated, and more querul ously selr-cenlered as thC'y pass from childhood to senesc('ner "'ithoul ever having arrived at niat urity. ACTU ALLY , YOUNG people ha vC a natural love and affinity for oldsters "·ho tu.1v(' n1ainlained !he spirit of youth ("'" -~ .... ··-·"· ' Sy dney J. Hal,.is {:.-~ ' ,1..,./ \1 ith1n thc·ru!)clrl'S: wl1a1 thc1· reject and resent CJrt' old p1•oph· 11110 ha\1' lurgullc.11 \\•hat 1t was lo be ~oung, \~hu have discarded their earlier !)taRes of life 111· :·Head of 1ntor{>flral1n11 ttlern 1ntu lht• lot:i l persunalrry al sorne del'P and pern1<1ncn t le vel. Ou r desperalr quest fur yuuth nal~I be turned u1s1dP out. :in o!d<:r person 11110 lnes to luok and ;1t\ and dl'css li kP. a Ju nlor is si nip\y <Jn ObJcC1 or fun or fH1). '·Youth " is ;in enianotion rro m the in· side , r101 ri cosrnrut· t1rplication. and il 1s thf' innr>r spiril ol the person th:1t youngsters respond \(l, 1101 !he surface ap- pe<1r1'11ce. OLD PEOPLE \\"HO feel alienated frorn the young rend to blame the "changing t1n1cs.'' "hen 1n reality it is their 011·n inab1 l i t~ or unw1ll1ngness tt> rleepen their 1:icrcept1ons and broaden their sy mpat hies. ~1ust of us get worse as v.e get olrll•r . \.\·hen v.e should get bette r -we l:>t'ltll' into ui.11 111tl1\'1dual defornla · lions. instead or ('merging from the hard shell of self to !lll'f'I the new world at least haH-1vay ·rhcre ls no rnorc dcl1gh\ful person in t.llf: wnrlrl than ~ln ottogcn:Jri an who is txith childlike and w1sC'. spirited and su p- portive, more will lng to lt1tlrn t11an he is {1u1ck lo advise. Socra1cs bega n takini: rl ant1ng lessons at 70: rno~t or us JUSt lake dying lessons. POlrl s Held for Ransom \VASHINGTON -Those fami liar v.-ith the details or Henry Kissinger's secret negotiations to end the Vietnam \Var have reached one disma ying conclusion. They are convinced that the 460 Ameri. can prisoners. kno1l'n to be in Communist custody In Vietnam. are being held tor ransom and won 't be released until the full political pr i c e is pajd, The price: to- ta I, unconditional wilhd rawal of America11 forces trom Vietnam. Here's what President Nixon is doing, meanwhile, about the prisoners. -He has made overtures to Hanoi through every possible channel to find out who is being held and to negotiate for their release. Approaches have betn made thro~h diplomats. Red Cross of· flclals. Swiss bankers, trade represen· tatlves, newsmen and anti-war groups. -EVERY AMERICAN, who ls known to be CUina: to Hanoi, Is asked to Inquire •bout the Jrlaoners. He is rumished with Hanoi'• November lt70 POW list, is en• coureged to seek interviews with the prl9ohers and is 11Sked to bring out POW mail. -A special, secrtl tEfort has been made lO find out 'what has happened to U.S. pilots and CIA soldiers who have been lost In t.aos. Visitors to Hanoi are urged to drop by the Lao Popular Front's infonnation or!ice In H~noi and try to pu.mp some prisoner information ou' of Phau Phlmpact1111nh. the Pat.bet L.ao spokesman. ~1EANWHILE , the !>resident's reporl to the nation on lht secret Vietnam negotla· !' ~ '• .~-... "'\,... 'l '" <~ 1 J~cfi:,4itde~n :. 1 .J J ... .!..< ".a&. .... ~· ' ' . .....,..... . .._ . I ' '• ' .i. ' lions has left the families at home a1 splintered as a broken windshield. M~t belong lo the moderate. 2,500-member Nati?nal League or Families. which has pul its trust in the Presidenrs negotia- tions. But_ a m ilila~t minority has opened a W_ash1n~ton office lo campaign against N_i~on .1n 19~2. So1ne are talking about c1v1I d1sobcchence at the White House lo force the Preskienl to get out oC Indochina in ;1 flat exchange ror Lhe pr isoners. THE LEAGUE, incident.ally. j !I operaltng ha nd-lo.mouth after nearly g~ing broke this month. For a time, the ~1yes and m~thers at the Washington of- f1ee were paying out of their own meager al1owance5 f~ stamps ror mailings. The fi~aooal crisis was caused by Jtn 111.<c>nceived, Stk>,481 rund drive. Trips for w1ve;s lo plead in far places with Com· mu~1st envoys completed the treasury drain. Bu George---. Dear George : I used to fetl rundown all the tlrn1t. 1 fi~rted reading your col· umn .. Now t feel wound up tight llll the time. What am t doing wrong? · CONFUSED Otar C.onfustd : liave you tried reading my col-um~ only every dght daya? Mayba you re an eight-day WQrTier. -.. . . ·~ • T11esd.1iy, f'tbn1•ry 8. 1Cl72 DAILY f'ILO':" ------- L. !ti. Boyd Quake ·Anniversary··Row Qui~k to Forget Ho,v Much Space Do You Need? .. It Is always the btst pol icy to speak tbe truth, unless oi course yo u are an exceptionally good liar." Jerome K. Jeron\e Reg ret to report, nt<1dam, odds ru n 33 to one your gentleman friend "'ill lie tu you at least once in the next seven days. Such is the contention of a matrimonial scholar who has 1na de <1 study of husbands versus wives. F'urt her. he. claims odds go three to one you r husband "'iii forget vour bi rthday. two lo one he 'll overloo k your anniversary. Cynical soul , this f CllO»'. EVER SEE a drunk robin '! 'fhey get th at wa y. I'm told . On tartarian honeysucklr berries. Th<il's noteworthy. But even more notev.1orthy is the fact thaL v.•hen so intoxicated said robins are kn0\\'11 to become belli gerent. They pick fight s. \VllAT FO LL0\\'S is the niftiest legal document J ever 1·cad. the Last \Vil! cind Testament of a Tenne ssee. mer. chant, recently departed. Jn its entirety. it reads: ··Being of sound 1nind, I leave noihing, having spent it all on 1ny- self. .. QUER \' -Q. "How did the ·x· come to signify a kiss'!" A. That dates bac k. \Va y back. To old England . Before most people then and there knew how to write their names. it was the custom to seal an agreement by drawing a cross. then kissing ii. much like kissing the Bible wheh swearing an oath. The kiss and the drawn cross v.·ound up mean ing the saine thing therefore. sort of. IN ·rHE BRITISll Parliament. it's all right for a men1- ber to ide ntif}' a colleague as a goose. but not a jacka ss. ONLY RACE or people in human histQiy lhat never owned land is the Auslr;:ilian aborigine. SPACE -Jt"s v.'idely known every mammal requires a certain a1nount of living space to stay sane. Or at least calm. People, for in stance. You can on ly pack so many into any one room without scraping tempers. What's less \videly known is men need more space than do women to relax. Consider a nightclub. Even though more and more people enter. there's no appreciable rise in how many drinks each girl lherein downs. But as the crowd thickens how much liquor each man therein puts away climbs in direct proportion. Studies show that. AND BEFORE it's forgotten . add this to your palin- dro me collection. too. please: '·Are v.'e not drawn onward. l\'e fe,v drav.·n onward, to ne\v era?"' Addre.s.s 1no1/ to L i\J. Boyd. P. 0. Bo:r; 1875 , New- port Beac/1 92 660. "The1e 1.s reosonablt t :r- µtctatio-it rhat btfOf"t the end of tlie c en tu ry 01' carthqua/c.t of much grea t- rr magnitude wilt occur i1t So!1tl1t r11. California. It ron be expected top rod u ce very sfrong s/1akit1g over the en tire Los Angeles met· ropoli tan areu. "-1971 Sa n f'rr11rrndo earthquake co1n- 1111ss1011 reporl. By JACK V. t'OX LOS ANGE LES ~UPI \ The Sylmar high school band played "Hello. Dolly .. and "On \V1sconsin" and then the helicopter be a r i n g lhe dignita ries landed on the bare clearing v.•here t v.·o of the main hospital buildings had stood. Presidential adviser Robert 'Finch officia lly handed over to Los Angeles County for use as a park the 93 ac res which had been the grounds of the veterans hospital and a tiny audience of not n1ore than 75 applauded politely. The 30-rn in u1 e ceren1ony \a$[ 5 !llillioH Woke A l S aine 'l 'ime week was the only public memorial occasion marking the devastating earlhquake which terrified Los Angeles a year ago this Feb. 9. But it was somehow fitting to the fata listic. if not apathetic. ac· ceplance that s ou t he r n Californians take toward their various disasters. Si xty f~ve persons \Yere kill- ed in the quake -51 of them at the veter~ns hospital. A tOtal of 881 persons were injured . 33 of lhen1 gravely. More than 20 ,000 buildi ngs. n1ost or the.in private homes or apartments, were damaged and 150 were totally demolish- ed. For more tha n a month 17 .000 persons were housed in emergency quarters. For a period of four days some 120,000 persons y.•ere forced to evacuate their homes below lhe endangered Van Norman D<tm reservoir. But a year later the earth- quake is looked back upon, ex· cept for the families who lost dear ones and their ho1nes. \\•ith .something llk e amU!e- ment. As with New Yorkers in the city the night all the lights Ne'v Rapid Tra11sit Plan Urged W11tw1rll Ke ... 111 -Wtrf•'s L1111st-I 1.000RnMS111 t111 str1, M11t t1 a1 St1rdu•t Htltl, tifc1s tltt1s 1111 l lritrl I :1~1. : ,.,,••· I LOS ANGE LES (AP1 -A plan for a Los Angeles area ra pid transit systen1 financed by gasoline sales tax. a $255 million bo nd issue and a tax on airline passe ngers is being urged by a Southern California ltapid Transi t District board member. Herbert ll Krauch. former president of the SCRTD . presented his propos<i l_ a~ a.n alternative to the d1s\r1 ct s planned "starter I i n e ' ' between cl o w n to w n Los Angeles and the \~'al ts area. Krauel!. the onl y board 1nember to oppose 1he 14-mlle starter line. sai d he v.·as of- fering thr ne\I' plan as a \\"JY to get Los Angel es City Coun- cil support. community back- ing an d "lo . satisfy most of our critics." The plan. he tol d an SCRTD directors' meetin g. ca ll s for construction of the line to Watts-Willowbrook. as well as others to serve the \\'ilshire corridor. the San Fernando Valley, Los Angeles Interna- tional Airport and the Pasadena area. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN Saturdays in The DAILY PILOT I BBDUCBD l·~i:s; I : WIN'l'BB BA'l'BS!l I Midwttk Sjlecill -Sll!ldoy t~rt•P lh•sday I I On 204 Spttial Rooms Offerelll at lowest Winter Rate: I 1 1 SS!!. s10!~. '12~.~ ... 1 1 .. naua 2 ntrt.1 roa 1 rfOl'll I I I 0'1•' 800 Olh•r Rooms & Sult•• Stirling t i $2.00 Adaillon•I On Fri., Sa\., Holidays & Summer Se1son, Add $2.00 7 ofthemost convenient Banks in Orange County are called a.~ ~&W,rndc lliJj VK.LA P.ARIC First National Bank O f' 0 1'ANOI! COUNT Y A FULL SERVICE llANK • Ul"I Tei.~l>tlt EARTHQ UAKE REMINDERS STILL EXIST Section of Freeway Lies Where It Fell we nt ou t, each Angeleno has hi s O\~'n "earthquake story '' ll \Vas, after all , a 1uorning \\•hen 5 1ni!!ion people all v.•oke up at tl1e same ti1ne. This "'\veil ll didn 't cause n1e any harm" attitude 1:; a rruslraiing b a r r i e 1· lo responsible public officials v.·ho kno\Y without question that Los Angeles is in for another n1ajor quake within the next 30 years and that it may not be so "lucky " next time. The first quake came at U seconds past 6 a.m. Then there was a series of five more quakes over a period or fi ve minules and 11 seconds . The San Fernando earth- quake commission had this to say: "Had the earthquake centered 20 ·miles farther south, close to the center of popu la tion in metropolitan Los Angeles . it would have done much n1ore damage and caus- ed the collapse of many more old buildings. '"Had it occurred three hours later in the day there would have been many more occupants in the bu ildings in- cluding schools that did col- lapse. fl ad the freeways been crowded, the bridges that col- hip.std would have caused many more deaths ;uld in· juries. Had the earthquit ke oc- curred v.•hen more people were on downtov.'n st.reels t h e r e would have been many more casualties frorn falling debri::.. "Finally. the lower San Fernando Datn Van Nonnan Rese rvoir had only four feet of fretboard after its partial failure ; had it then failed completely an area inhabitetl by 80.000 people y,ould ha\ e bef'n inundated.·• One absolutely {:onv1nc1ng lesson was learned front the quake. The I.isl n1ajor ear1hquake in the are<1 occurred in 1933 \lo'ilh its epicenter in Long Beach. That san1e year the legislature adopted buildin~ standards r or earthquake resis tant design of publtc schools a n d subsequently virtually all large bu ild ings came under the code. In the 1971 quake, almost all of the bulJdinls that coll.11ps~ or !luffered major structural damage were built before 1933 . That i!I true of the VA hospital Itself. The t 11,·o v. in gs that collapsed were of 1925 vintage while two others still Old B11ildl11g• Toppl ed O•·er standing yards a\\'ay arr of later design. It is estimated that thl'rf' are 20,000 such pre-193;1 struc- tures still being used 111 Lo~ Angeles -60 pf' r r e 11 t apartments. hotels or 1nu1 rl~. 35 perce nt stor!'s. con\n11•rc1:i l industria l and w a r r ho u s l' facilities and 5 p e r 1· t' 11 t hospitals and n1ecl1ni; or assembly hall facil1t1es. 'I he rn u :s t controversial recommendations of the com-- mission report "'8! that all 20.000 of those buildings eithet' be brou ght up lo moderA earthquake standards or torn duwn by 1980. One or the mf'n squarely In the center of the flak over such an undertaking is county engi neer i"larvey Brandl whll heads a task force which :unoni; other problems ha~ bt.>e11 assigned to deal wllla ''huzardous old buildings." '"Tl1r opposition to that pa rt or lht• 1·01n1n1ss1on rf'eOm• 111tnd11t1011s 11as 11kf' not hini;: \ ,,u hi\\ c ev{'r ~CCII -· Slt)'S llt'.llllll "The \Cl'~ Cl'unum11·s nl 1L 1n thl' first plaec. It 1nvuh·e~ b1ll1on~ of dollars But r11'n rnure you're deal1ni; w1lh JM"t.- plr \\•ho are go111J.: to he disposscsst.>d. \\.'hat do you <lo 1\•111) them'.'" HAMS " . So Good It Will Hount You 'Til It's Gone" Ov~ llt rn\ ore Irie f,ne.i corn fl!d low1 l>Or•••~ -Our >low D•Y (Urlng Ml!mO<I tl!•I W"<.OnJ1n 1>ld10rV l'ld tppl~Woocl \M0~1ng •n<I ](i.llQur ovl!n twkmg non•y 'n ~plct gltl• .,,. .,·,.1qu1 '" 111 !I'll! world So Ol!lrco<>lil i nd 1ppe!•1lng ""' !u11 woulOn'! k now l'low II !m1><0~• in .. P•IKlUC:I Wt'VI bo•n ....... ,., tor l • Y•l•l. 5plr.•I ,1.c..:1 100, !•om !op 10 bOtrom 10 1t>1t H <ft d•ltcl•b!tr ur>l!orm •lie• c:1n b<' rtmo~.o f'ftor11.,..,1v. comp1.r11y Wkl'd •nd •t•Dy 10 •••v• Or- d •• vour >to"""' ll~~ed tt1m 1od1y, •n .Ovtnturt 1n n1m-loymen1 yo~'I! nt~e• lo•Qtl. IETAIL STOllS 3700 f . Coot! Hl9hwo'(, C•r••• 4el Mar -'7l·•OOO 1222 S. lroollhwrsl, .A11eltehw 'J 5-24•1 Can't you just taste it? It's the taste of something hot and delicious from a big old cup with cracks in the glaze. And a hearty breakfast on a cold morning. Down Home Taste. Something to spend a little time with. Simple and pleasurable. Like lighting up a Winston and enjoying the taste of Filter-BlendT,. tobaccos. Real and rich and down home good. Can't you just taste it? Winston :FILTER· CIGARSTTSI • e u 11 •I •11•6'.lt "''' t t&••U••••l• .... PU• •t IJNG, 19 mg:·111·. lJ mg. n•tol•nr. SUPlR !IN~20 m1. ··1•".'ll m~nicotinl.11.p~ <•gor1110. FTC Rep~1 1.UG.71: . ' ' ... "' UPI Ttltp~Otl Burt in Chinutow1i Police officer stands by .John Tsang as he awaits an ambulance. Tsang had cli mbed atop the car of San Francisco Sc hool Superintendent T homas Shaheen during a wild protest in Chinatown during "'hic h jeering anti·busing crowds drove Shaheen a\vay. Tsang was slightly hurt when he fell from the car. . I ' . . .. . . ' -. Cuts Queried Reaga11FacesNew . Aid Tiff; Wins I SACRAM ENTO rAP)-'fhe Reagan administration has won a round in its welfare court battles but face s a report that over hall lhe cut in welfare rolls last year was done by ne w counting methods in one eoi.lnly. Sacramento Superior Court Judge Wilham Gallagher was rc1noved Monda y from a la wsuit involving checks on welfare recipients' inton1e after Alty Gen. E "e J I e Younger said he was "pre· judiccd" against lhe Stale Department of Social Welfare. Gov. Jleagan a c c u s e d Gallagher of "judicial miscon· Waler Pcui el Aide Quits Outside Job SACRAMENTO (UPI 1 The No. 2 man on the state Water Resources Co 11 I r o I duct" last week for ordering a temporary hall to the income dnublechecks. The judge has issued several rulings in re· ce nt months slowing welfare reforms. The Assemb ly's ch I e I 1•lelfare consultant reported Monday a change in welfare accounting procedures in Los Ange les County caused a drop of 20,000 1n its total caseload figures. "Those aren't real people v"ho've been takf'n off \velfare . They're just on pilper, '' said Robe rt Rosenberg. chief con· sul tan t to the Assembly Welfare Committee. H.osenberg said the drop of 71.600 welfare recipients in California between the end of 1!170 rind the end or 1971 in · eludes about 42.200 persons who were counted in two1 categories in Los Angeles' co mputerized welfare setup. . . - A NEW McDONALD'S McDonald's LI UTM 700 WEST COAST HIGHWAY, NEWPORT BEACH !BETWEEN DOVER & BALBOA BAY CLUB! Sheriff Under Gag Rttl e In Angela Davi s Trial Board has agreed lo "divest" himself of his p ri v ate engineering firm to a void any appearance of a conflict of in- Although no double payments were mad e , Rose n be r g sald those categories were added together to get a total ca seload. State y;•elfare chief Roberti~=======================================~~~~~~~~~ Carleson. along with Reagan.I'. terest. Board Vice Chairman E. F. Dibble made !he proposal f\1onday in a letter to state Resourcs Secretary Norman SAN JOSE fAP ' -A Su· answer demands by supporters B. L1vern1ore Jr. and perior Court judge has gagged or Miss Davis for an end 10 an Livermore accepted it. Sanla Clara County Sheriff anti-picketing ban outside the In the "'ake of the con· tro versy surrounding t h e James Geary, prohibiting him courtroom, dropping of charg. resignation of Chairman Kerry from making any further state· es against 24 persons arrested Mulligan, Dibble disclosed that ments about the murder-kid· la st week for violati ng that ban he owns an engineering firm 111ap case of Angela Davis. and greater public access to in Redlands. He voluntarily Supervising Judge Janies R_ I.he trial. submitted documents dealing Sc.Oil issued the orde r during Instead . Athan ann0UI1 ced wit h the b us i n e s s to a chamber conference with Liver more. the gag order which prohibits "ord B Ford ass1'sta t Geary Mooday wh ile atrorneys r · · n far M.iss Da vis continued argu-Geary from making "any resources secretary, said the d I statC'ments of any nat ure re!· papers w•r• e<am'1ned b" men ts on a e ense mot 1°" '"' ... v ative lo this defendant. .. " L" ... d t ·1 d h. challenging the coostilutiona!. 1vermore 1n e a1 an e Fania Da vis Jordan, Miss I ded h ity of J·"ry se lection procedures cone u I ere was no co n--Da vis' sister o.nd co.chairman n· f • l·n the counly. 1ct o interest.' of the J\'ational United Com. Assistant Cou tl}' Counsel By. ..But." Ford said. ''Dibble, millee to F'ree Angel<i Davis, ron Athan ~id Scott also an. sa id she believes Geary has recognizing that there was in· nounced that Superior Court bee" gagged "because of pub--terest in his outside engineer· Judge Richard E. Amason. lie statements he made lwo ing firm , volunteered to divest who has been presid inJZ over weeks ago that Angela should himself of his private business pretrial hearings. wil l shortly be out 00 bail.'' lo avoid any public confusion ba111 all med ia interviews of the Court sources said they be· that might be raised."' accused . She has been permit-lieve rncdia interviews are The company did no ted one interview each week. being ba nned partly because of b11~iness with the state water says the GOP governor's massive welfare reforms la $t year caused the slump in welfare rolls. Carleson confirmed a Los Angeles County bookkeeping system led to double counts during a se ven-1nonth period last year, but said only 6,000 reci pients were involved. Rosenberg said the practice going back several years was to give needy new welfare families immediate grants from general relief fu nds and then process through their Aid lo Families with Dependent Children accounts a few da ys later, resulting in a double count the first month. "There could have been a slow buildup," said Ca rlcson. "It's possible t: · .. maximum of 6.000 cou ld ha ve been dou· ble counted. What it really means is we were ha ving a greater drop in welfare than our figures indicalt'd. '' Carleson said that's becau se the double counting began last F'ebruary wh en the county began phasing out its counting method. Miss Da vis, 211, an avowed the ad vance publicity sur. pollution board. Dibble said. Communist and former UCLA rounding a televised interview But he said it did do work for ------------ phi Io So Ph Y instructor, is with Miss Daris MOflday night the Mojave Waler Agency, charged with murder. kidnap by the Rev . CC'Ci! Wil!iam!'i. which docs busi ness with the and conspiracy in the Aug. 7· pastor of Glide Memorial state Depart men l of 1970, shootout at the Marin Church in San Francisco. Re sources. County Civic Center in which a ..c=...:::c...:::...;=o...:.===7c~~~~--------- h Adv•rtl•em1nl judge and three ot ers were killed . Athan appeared al a 11ews conference with Geary v.·hich newsmen thought was called to Car Misuse Rap Fa ci1ig Safety V11il SACRAMENTO (UPI\ - The stete Division of lndus- trial Safety, st ill burn ing from ch<ir~cs of failu re to protect C;ilifornia "'orkers. now has been 11rcused of personal mis· use of s ! a t e -0wned auto. mQbilC'S. ••f\iany of the violations were committ ee! by super- visory and administretive per· sonnef who should be pre\'enl· ing !!Lich violations." said A !I :s em b 1 y ma n Vincent Thomas, chaim111n of the joint Lel!'.islative Audit Committee The San Pedro Dcmocrat "s charges came f>.1 on d11 y aftl'r a two.volume report \\'as sub+ milled to the legislature. Jn the first volume, the di vi· sion was accused of faitin f:! to deploy enouRh men to protect workers. but lhe prrsonl'll use of state-owned car5 by divi- sion employes, includinR "in· 11ccul'ate 1 n d incomplete" automobile logs, was :singled oul for criticism in a ~nd report. Auditor General William Mcnifield said a "sil{Tlificanl" number of employes have per· manenlly assigned :state cars ''which are used primarily for treve!ing between home and office" and bridg' tolls and parkinli! ftts are pt1id by the stale "l:ven th ough th' em· ploye IOC'Urs these rosts in e commuting capacity '' LET'S IE FRIDllll.Y Jt )'W have new ntlahbors « know o( e nyone movtnc to our arM, pltt.se tell us ., thait "'~ mt.)' ~•tl'nd • frhmdbr 'W'eloome ind help them to bfocome 1cquaintf'd In their MW 1urroundlnas. SI. CNst Visitor 4H-t51' _,361 11arW Ylsitor tl4Ml74 I • Denture Invention For People with "U ppers'' •nd ''Lowers'' The nearest tliing ID havin1 your ol"n t~th 1s possible no• "'ith 11 p!a~uc cream thSCO\'ery that aclU· ally hohl!< hoth •·upptrs" ;i.nd "[o'll·ers" as "'"'tr helore ~1ble. forms ii.11 elastic mcmhranc that hell>' absorb tlie I.hocks of b1llng and chew ing. With F111onrNT many denture 1VC<1rcrs may cat, SP"ak, laugh, with ht tie worry of denture;; com,ng loose. One 11pplicatinn may la!t fn r hours. r>cntures that fit are C""tll· t1a! 10 hcal!h. So:-e your den11 •t rcs:ularl y. Get easy· to·U\.C FtXODE:. T Denture Adhtsl\e Cream. It'&" d1sco~rry c;i.lltd F1x00Ero.1• for daily home use (lJ ~ P;i.L "3.003.988 ) and 1l has rc•·olu tJofuicd denture .. ·a nn&. F 11101>L1' r LOCAL AND \VE LOVE IT! ,L .7.$'. \ ( r9uR HEART'S IN • ORANGE COU,'\TY BECAUSE IT'S LAGUNA FEDERAL COUNTRY ••• Lt!gmiA Fr!dcral, since 71'Cei\'ing Orange County's :tlrat federal chartl'.r in 193..'i, Ms stressed ecrvice to the rommun.ity and surrouodini:t: nrea.. 'Through the Investments d.. our MWR. we have llMitMd D\11.0l' thousands or IU'M cit.iums to bea:me home owner8 end have helped manUcm others to improve &Dd repair their propertieL Lending money to people •Mwiab to build Cl' buy home8 in tbe local Orange County ll.1ftl hu alwayt bren this A.wiciation's phiJoeophy and majorJendinr .}ob. 'The buyer of single family hamm ia 1till our "traditional bornra"l!r;' and the recipient ol our unique "J"l'ducing interT11l plan:· \Ye know U1J1t our growth Cll!l be no (re.Iller than the fin.'l.ncial and ecoomnic rrowth o{ ilie ll1'N. we .ene. lncreiuied saviup Jl'Owth, coopled with welJ.pllUlJlllld, home building, point the w13 io aJlltinu«l eoonmnio ~ty l« 1972. All_.,... 1qtma Federal llttl 1"1.11abte to Y£ID. Far owns'•• tab:mwtlau. mnteiS our hiJhly qua]. Mid. ku -~ J*•••" .tnmrcoe u tasnna Fodnl~-lull..n..-....... --. to--~--"'111aar-1 --. i TAX FEE BREAKTHROUGH Wards, with 14 yeorJ of loa experience, now offer1 o lo• 1ervice w ith ell the•• big adYa ntogeJ • ~01.fD MAXIMU"" '" 1(0 •\ th, "'°"! )OV poy tot pt t\Q<'\o l 1tde•ol 101 e 1 • SIMPUfliO fl( 5CHEOULE f t dt rol p•tpo•o!•Qfl '" •1~5-~10-i l5 orS20 • TAX ff( Q UOTATION f tfld ~out ,CHtflO•Ol•O" fer b.-fo1•hofld-1t • b.-low HUNTINCiTON CINnR Edinger at IMch 11¥4. Huntl,,,,_ leM:h "'°"' m4611 lo m'I Vafenfine SONY'S TRINITRON COLOR TV "Color Bright'' ... vibrant, exciting, true·to- life color, Sony's KV-1212 color TV. Set.and-for- g et ouromatic color ond fine tuning control, oU ioli d slate circuitry. lnslont picture and sound, 12" ldiag. meas.) M y v A L E N T I N E SONY'S PERSONAL PORTAILI Go•• wi!h you ""fWh•r•, Son(• 7" /cllog, "'tol,) 'tlock/w~•lt TV, a!I •OVid ,tatt d•cu!try. OptOonol ,,._ thargobO. boll•')' pad1; Of 011!0/bool cord. $116,95 SONY" /or '"'I Va/•n/i ,.. Dl51TAL CLOCI UDIO Jlte"'f .1y1 .. .._ ,..._ fro111 h• AM, fM,.J..M, rlth -"'· hiud •• 1ew "'' $35.95 'Sb~ •· _ _.,. __ . Qll!LITT 8ERVU:! B E M I N ' E ---· NARD A ~·-ft··--­... -·.H·-,_ .... SONY'S COMPACT fM·AM UDIO itlug ii 111 e! homo .,.. tok• it oul, •ilh•• way 'fOll got lull, rich "°""d wi!h So11y'1 TfM.7200. H;g~ly '""'iii.,. t-o"1i1..,1 lo piill 111 wtok ltatio"t 11\orply. $39,95 Mllll·DIGITAL CLOCK UDIO --trtol 101111d1 •f ~ tlay. w..... Y°" .. bMutllul .,utk 1ne1tico!!y. $29.95 SONY" •• SONY .. • 25 Y e•r• of lrttegrit11 and Dependafrillt11 . COSTA MISA Newport-ch 411 I. S.wtnlMll'th St. D.tlly1 •• ,, Sit. , .. 646-1684 IL TOllO loddl-k Valley 2436& lotkfl1td ltd.1newt to Sn-ot1) D•llr: 10.6. Thur., Fri. 11).f 837-3830 HUNTHfOTON llACH •FOUNTAIN VALUY lrookhurtt I 5arfl1/d ("9d to Lucky Mkt.) Meft., Wtd.., Fri .. 10·91 Tutt.., Thur .. S.t, 10-6 962-5528 UDIO DISPATCHED FACTORY AUTHORIZED TV & APPLIANCE SERVICE PHONE 543437 For The Record ii n: M j ;11114 B J Marriage Licenses Death Notice• Corporate Code V iolatio11 Coast Businessman Guilty By TOM BARLEY or fbe Cl•ltr ,, ... Steff SANTA ANA -Newport Beach businessman R a I p h Benware and hi! lawyer partner were found guilty Monday ot multiple charges of violatlng state corporation code.s by an Orange County Superior Court jury wh ich dismissed grand theft and con· spiracy all egations: against the pair. The panel ended four days of deliberation in the eight· week trial by fili ng back to Judge Lester Van Tatenhove's courtroom to c o n v i c t Benware, 34, of 411 15th St. and Orange attorney Richard Murphy , 41, on five counts of corporate code Infractions. Each count carries a possi- ble state prison term of one to five years. Three counts of grand theft and one of con· spiracy were dis missed . Judge Van Tatenhove set April 6 as the date he will se ntence the pair. He orderd both nl en to rt>turn March 6 for his ruli ng on a nmber of presentenci ng motions. Both men made it clear tha t Milk Plant I nspectio1i Fees llrged a motion for a new trial will be among a number of m(). lions they will prepare or debate on that date. The jury verdict ended a marathon lrial which often erupted into s qu a bbl i n g between the judges and the defendants and which at one time put both men into Orange County Jail on contempt chargt's. They were back in court a few hou rs later on the un- dertaking that they would agree to discuss matters of law with Judge Van Tatenhove in his chambers and not before the jury. bankru pky. But prosecutor R t c h a r d Leusebrlnck insisted that both delendanta bad persistently violated state <.'OrporatJon codes during their administra- tion of the Caduceus complex. Both men are named in a series of civil suits filed folio"·· ing the demise of the l'Ompany. Coast Job less Rcites Show Wide Variation Benware and Mu r ph Y SANTA ANA -Newport is tht' fa ctor l1sed to determine argued througho ut the trial Beach, Laguna Beach. Seal a 1.:ity's unemployment rate, that they were being deni ed a Beach and Los Alamitos had the l!RD office explained . fair and public trial by the less unemployment d u r i ~ g Stanton topped all county judge 's decision to debate 1971 than most Orange County cities with a 8.9 percent legal issues in his chambers. cities. unemployment rating in 1971. It was alleged following a But Huntington B ea ch . Ratings for the balance of long investigation that they Costa Mesa, Westm ins ter, San the 22 communities of more unlawfully transferred $160,000 Clemente, and Fount a i n than 10.000 population . from the now defunct Casualty Valley, were close to or above Brea, 7.1; Costa Mesa, 7.6; Insurance Company to satisfy the county average of 7,2 per· Cypress. 6.3: F'ountain Valley, unhappy investors in the cent unemployed. 7.5; f'u!lerton. 7.G: HunlingltJn Califo rni a Caduceus Company. Tll,e figures are based on re· Beach, 7J; La llabra, 6.0: I Both men were officers in cent labor in fo r m a t ion Laguna Beach, 6. I: Placentia. the Casualty company and furnished by the t e d e r a I fi.8; Orange, 6.4; L os they for med the Caduceus government iind con1piled by Alamitos, 6.4; San Clemente, organiza tion in a plan to prcr the s t ale Department of 6.8; Seal Beach, 6.1: Tustin, vide low cost malpractice in· •l uma n Resou rces Develop-5.9; Westminster, 7.5; and surance for Orange County ment (11RD ) in Santa Ana. Yorba Linda, 5.0. physicians. The coun ty's largest com· ~=-=-=-=====~~'----'=====;I Criminal action was taken munities were generally in the against the two men in a nine-high brackets in unemploy- court Orange County Grand ment. Sa nta Ana showed 11n Jury indictm ent following a 8.3 percent unemployment TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ series of complain ts. among rate; Anaheim , 7.7; Buena W D y them the allegation that the Park, 8.1 and Garden Grove. e are OU·'· DAILY P'ILOi fj U.S. Unit to Occupy Ne w Los Al Facility jew els by jos•pn 10orches for Jewels (NV•rt ............ ,......,. 1lf .,,. ....... 111 CIU! ... Ull N I fir'" Wiiii' kMWllllt•• l•fl""'lN, l !W ~ 11wn1 Y" ~1r1htl I VllllllMe I f .... lllYI Malilft va1tit9, LOS ALAMITOS -The rcderal Department of llea lth, Education and Welfare (HEW) will occupy a new $3 million ''think factory" at Los t\lamitos Naval Air Station A two-story building is under ronstruction on a 12-acre site on the sou theast co rner of the station . The property was declared surplus by t h e Delense Department and turn- ed over to t!EW. William ll Hein, directo r of business and opera tions for the thin k plan t, said the racili- ty is designed to produce and evaluate materials used at all levels of education. The structure will house complicated electronic equip· menl and provide jobs ror 450 federal employ( . who are now housed in Inglewood. lltlrt said. Studen ts frorn elementary and high schools, colleges and universities will be tested with the new system to establish W1 will h 11'11•1111 ,. •••mlM ,._ ''"" •IMI tod~IN , ... rltlllf fM.lr !tit> ..... ~ C•ll Mr. ,... .... •r Mr .... !ti II .. -· 5011th Co••t Pl111 l 1istol •Io,. 51n Oi•90 Fwy. Co•I• M e i ~ 540·9066 the effectiveness of educa·:l,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:.I tiona l materials. I lein addt'd . I WHAT FUNER AL BENEFITS ARE AVAILA BLE TO THE SURVIVORS OF A DECEASED WORK ER WHO QUALI FIES UNDER SOC IAL SECURITY 7 by EUGENE 0 . BERGERON A fum' 111m deettl pay1t1e11t bOMd 11po11 IM Soclol S.c:11rity nrcord of o work•r who din •lth91 hilly or c.1irre11t\y h1tuted "'oy IM payable l o hl1 111rvl,or1. Thl1 111ay be 01 "'..ch a l thrff tln1e1 ti.. wor\01'1 primary ll'l111ronce o mount, but no more than S1S5. l h• lu'"p "'"" "'oV ff paid hi addition to any monthlr 111r•lwor1' fn111ronce b111efln that or• d111. If ti..re It 110 el l9lbl1 w tvl•ln9 1poui.e, the lu"'p 111M bo111eflt ma y be pold lo the ~011 who pold the fu111ro l ••pen1n , or It may be O;f.1lgned to 111 01 o cr•dlt towi:ird h1norol .. ,..,.. .. If you "-•• a q.,..tlon abo11t f11neral Hnlce, pleoh write or coll. q11e1tlo'"' wlll be omwered Jn tl1l1 col11rn11. WIMr11ovor po1s.lb lo, Balt%·Be1·geron Ft111e1·al Home COSTA MESA CORONA del MAR 646-2424 2 LOCATIONS 673-9450 SANTA ANA -Enactment of an ordinance calling for in· spection fees to be paid by milk processing plants has been urged by Count y Health Officer Dr. John R. Philp. $160,000 transfer was a "rob, __ ,~.7~.::0:cl:_ri:<=~~"'::~~d=~E=v=e~ry~~S~a~t~u~r~d~a~y~l~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Peter to pay Piiu l" maneuver. Residence, not place or wor k Both men protested during the trial that they had been the targets of top state of· ficials who were determ ined to dismantle the Ca d u c e u s organization and force it in to Dr. Philp told supervisors that such fees are authorized by state law and that Orange Count y was one of the few that did not ma ke such charges. Insanity Plea Given "We did not collect fees in the past," the health officer said, "because f o r m e r supervi sors wanted to en- courage establishment of the dairy industry in the county . SANTA ANA -An El Toro "But that day is Jong past Ma rine accused of the mutila· and the proposed fees would tion murder of an attracti ve help defray the oost of state· Anaheim divorcee has added a mandated inspections." plea of innocent by reason of Dr. Philp said the dairy insan ity to his earlie~p\ea of operators were not "happy innocent. with the prop:isal but they also Judge William M r r a Y were not protesting vigorous-ordered Navy Corpsm Juan Jy." Jose Moli na, 22, to face trial · EVERYTHING IS MARKED WITH OUR LOW SHELF PRICES. Th .. the eheck .. adds just 10°lo to orrlv• at what you pay. So If you wound up with $10.00 worth you'd 1lmply pay that, plus 10°10 or $11 .00 totol. T~ll 9011 ltr •verylhlnt t•t tPl lht flW 111'"1 co~l,.llld llkt milk •lld 114\lfr. WE MAKE DISCOUNT HOUSES LOOK EXPENSIVE! He said the fee would be March 6. He is accused of the one-half mil (one-tenth cent ) killing last Nov. 2 or Mrs. LOW E per gallon of milk processed. Barbara Smith. 27. whose llenl1mln R, Lowe. AOI: 7S, of ?»01 f' 'bJe savagely Slashed body as Be an expert home mana9er and IGYe hundrl'ds of clol&ars per yHr on your food blll. Don't run all ovtr town look Ing for bor9alns ••• Yau can be cnJUred when you buy at TOP YALU you ore buyln9 at the LOW prices. WE CARRY ALL OF THE FAMOUS IRANDS. TOP 9UALITY MEATS and GARDEN FRESH PRODUCE! R1a9, Ro111t 0r1vr . L••UN t-1 1111. 0111 He gave no 1gures on poss1 ot <111111, F~r .... •1 ·1. i•11. survlvld br annual re v e n u e . The found by neighbors shortly w111. Leo"'' ,11t••, M••-11:u111 1<or· •upervisors ordered the after an alleged visit to her Qutr1n. Soul!! L•111ri.1. S•rvlc" will "' ori~aTr. F-rl....c11 w11o wl1h m•v v111t ,,.. ordinance drawn . apartment by Molina. St>r'lltr L1oun1 BNch Mert111rv, ftll'l-===---------------------..,...,1"9. Fwruarv I, lrt>m 5 to t o.m. St>rlltr L•9U,,. Bt1ch Mllf'!uarv, Olrt<- 111<'1. M\Jltll.lY Murltl Murray_ 0.Tt ol ~tti. F1bro1rv 1, nn. Sarvlcts 1><tndln9 •' Shl'fltr L•· 11un1 eeecll Morluarv. STIETSON Jot>n T, (TeG) $!t110t'I Sr. 111'C W-B•l- Bl'ld , NewPorl ll•tC~. O•lt ol c!Ul!I, f .or'u..rv 1, im. Survived by ,..,,., Anni M. S!tllOOI '"'"' JO!ln T. Sl"ton Jr .• B•lbo.11 1,11nc11 c~ar1tt W. S!ll1'SOrl. F'ou,.. taln Va!llYI 1l11fr. B•rnlc• Kl,...m.-n, M•',.'""'""" !our vr100<:~l10r•"' nl,,. 9 rea!-11•1ndcnilcl•.n. Serv!c~ will bt h.id Wedn•1cl1Y. Fftoruarv f , 11 t.m .. P1cll!c v1,,.,.. Ch•Jttl, lnlt•mtM, P1cl!k View Memotl~I P1rt Pacl!!c VI..., Mortut rv. Plr~lo•1. ARBUCKLE & SON WESTCLIFF MORTUARY m E. 17th St .• Coit~· Mesa '46-<!U • BALTZ BERGE RON FUNERAL HOME Corona del Mar f7S.HSI Cotta Mell 6"-UU • BEU. BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Broadny, C<> ... M- U 8-UIJ • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUARY 1795 Lapn ca.,.. RL IK-Hll • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PAlllt Cemetery M..-Y Cbapel ' UGt PKWe View Drm NeW]llft Beodl. CIHIOnla "4-ml • PEllK FAMILY COLONIAL FllNERAL DOME 1111 Bolll AYt. II'-DIHll • • INSTALLED CHAIN LINK FENCE! Rust-proof ga lva nized , carefree fe nce. You g et fa bric , line posts, loop caps, toproil, ti e wires and Word's expert installation. End /gate/co rne r posts , gates, fitt ing s ore extra . 36-in. HIGH, 9-GA. GALV. LOW PRICE 136 INSTALLED LIN. FT. ALSO AVAn.ABLE, WOOO FENCE & BLOCK WALLS PROTECT YOUR HOME AND FAMILY WITH CHAIN LINK FENCING TODAY! U.S. GOV'T INSPECTED FRESH FRYERS WHOLE BODY FARMER JOHN'S c lb SAUSAGE LINKS 8 oz. PKG. 1 LB. DeCARLO c EA. SLICED BREAD WHITE or WHEAT c LOAF FULL CUT ROUND STEAK BONE IN FARMER JOHN'S PORK CHOPS CENTER CUT BANANAS CENTRAL AMERICAN c lb c lb I RUMP ROAST BONE IN FRESH LEAN GROUND 18EEF ALL SIZE PKGS. NOT JUST A FEW SPECIALS NO ONE SELLS FOR LESS IY SHOPPING IN OUR WAREHOUSE OF QUALITY WI CHALLIN!H ANY MARKIT TO MATCH THI fOOD YOU SAVI ON EVERYTHING. TOTAL SAYIN!H. A NEW CONCEPT CLOSED SUN. & WED. THATS DIFFIRINT IY TODAY'S MARmlNG STANDARDS IUT YOU WILL •Now THI DIFFIR· IY lllN!l CLOSID Z DAYS A WOK AND Ol'IN FROM 10 A.M. TO 1 P.M. THE OTHER J DAYS, WI SAVI ON PAYROLi. COST. SMITllS' lllOllTUARY 11'1lbltl111. BllllJlltlll-ma · DAYS -:. ;. KIDS LOVE UNCLE LEN • Saturdays in The DAILY PILOT • CALL FOR FREE ESTIMA n! •• 111op lllon-81t 'UI 9:00. Sun 12·5 PM L.A C IENl!G.A ..................................... 1>hon~ A 16 n-· Jl'VLLERTON ............. --............... , p t ior>A 7 14 R/') ,"Jfl'l &ANTA ANA ................................ -. nnone "4 I ~.: l. PANORAMA CITY ........................... , I'll'°""! B'J.-: ~.:1 A R09E:Me!AO ........................ , .. _,,,., , nt\0<11! 57" '') l TORRANCK. ..... ...... , ._ ....................... pt>one 5 4;> f-.J-.J NOR*LK . .. _. ·-·•"'"" Dh0r'" B6A ! ,,,-, ' I HUNTINQTON BEACH rihQ"" 71 J\ 8f),.. r.,r, I V IENTURA p~s 485."}11 2 \ • 64~ '""11 CANOOA PARK •. :........................ ptv:n<o 88,. :rr~ COVINA .,,, ..................................... oh(y>r ~ .14 ' A WEEK STORE HOURS : 10 A.M.-7 P.M. \ ~ • ~ ,. • • I l LEGAL ,\'Ol'll'l·: P.,tl .. \t>•o .l•f'""'' .I 1.1·:(;.\I. i\'tlTff!-: Iv I ,•r• Tur1day, f ebru.iry 8. 1?72 l l·.t:'\I, \1J'flC:E I 1\)1, (;1 1•9~ (O~' U• 1. t' • •Q I •o•~•'• I. I ( ... : ... L NO'T•Ct: _I Magazinr r1cr1 r1ov' 1u11"1rss NAMt STAffllolllNl LEI.JAL NOTIC.:t: ·Future 'At Stake' NE\V YOltK ~UJlJ ) -'J'he proposal to Increase postal rates for second class mail means that ·•a small group or people" have ln their hand! the economic fu!ure o I l"ICTITIOU5 I USH1£SS H ... Mf: ST .1.l£ME HT 1'• •olln"'"' "~''o" ,l dll11'fl tl~''"e>l! rnagazint-s some ,,., ,.;,~'"•· ~·] c Mel•. C•ltlOf" o •11• ~·"'• ~ .. : • I nc.11·spapers, Andrc\1' lleiskcH. !lie cl1ai r1nan of 1'ime. Inc , Jlc1skcll '.~ :.tatement 11.';1:-i in reaction lo las! we(ll..S decision by lhe Postal Service to serk: an increase in the rates charg. ed for second class mail, lhrough \\'hich magazines ::;f)flle nc1\'s paper s delivtr!'d. and are Puolis~td Oro"~• t <:.1.r 0.011; F ~t.,v•rY I. !S. n. 11. 1~11 r\OTTCt: LEGAL ~OTICE ~ICTH•OUS fl USl"'E~S H-.ME STATE"Ml!N T •n• 101•0"' r.9 person ;, oo,r t o~ '•·~ .1: I Yf .... ll([l E"lEClP0:11c ~Y~T E·.1s. 11•7 l'l•ol•. P 0. 80• ~1 1. ltvoc•, 1•11.4 \ ~-~ Tu"•" Ye•••l .J•. 5)i7 f.1t l•.• Ir vlnP. p.,, bu~i""• 11 1>el1>11 cono~cted b~ •• ndr~odual. FtPd I . YP~~tl 1~' •l•T•m~nl !ill!'d v, ·~ '"" '' ,,.,, f'•r. ti Or•n;e Covnw on r •t,•v••v • l~ll fj; W•He• T Kon~ O•jl • l ~.111; (IP" F 1\U I Q.I If l"'lnl,1 •1·1'1 LEG~L NOTICE FICTITIOUS tiUiiN1"1"t ---I NAMI STATIMINT ro11owln1 ~r1on h do!,,. bv•lness SAit lJH PICT1T10US I UllNllS NAMI ITAl"IMIHT t.ilowlnt "'IOI! II tlolnt ... 1!M1• I ... • . -~ ~~ ... . ' . ,. 1 ... ·'·" I , , . ., " ' ' ' RIGHT LANE M·UST • lU'RH, RIGHT ,.,, . ' -• t .. ' Signs of tire Ti111es? ' • ' ' .. .. , • • I _, ·-~ .. .;.'Ilk ., .. ~~; !1''----· ,. . ' l \' ' . ' • Y. ••• ~ .. (t ' . .. ' r ·"' .. -· ' -. ---_ _.... .............. ", .. ~ \~ 1 r - R~GHT LANE I I MUST TURN I RIGHT -1~: .. --· . l ' ' .,.;:. 11-.-"'fr .. --""""1 ..... ,~-'; --- 'fhe sig ns tura County they need a 'changin' as motorists are concerned. r<1r as \:en· Every day, drivers have to \rrestlc v.·ith the am big uity offered in thcf:e intersect ion road signs. -------- Peacock's Feathers Picked By ANN ll E!'\CKEN AS)«l•~C r rHI Wriltr NE\V YORK -They called it the Peacock Revolu!ion \vhen flamboyance hi! men 's fashion in the 1960s. But the JM!acoek has tuC'kC'd in 11s !ail fcnthers-a victin1 of 111ha!. one fa shi on lender t'all s '·too.muchisrn .' i\fc n 1\·ho 1vere shocked. then ex('1 tecl :i nd finally fn1stratrd by that flood of ne1v idea s in the 1960s are nO\V getting son1c ca!n1. Something of a purge is 011 :ind alre1rJ·; i!One arc th e eascadin~ scar\'t"i. lr:iiling fringes . enormous belts. c!l'ct ric l'Ol ors <ind giant \1·indo11· pane pla id suits. The gimmfr·ks have 1·anishcd. ;ind the "return lo clt't'ance" h:is bCR11n. Shapes are i-impler Colors are <1u ietrr. L::ir~r patterns hare given 11'ar to the :-in1allrr and mnre precise. The · lhrcc-~ici'f' "llll :1lnn~ 1r ilh !he 11·hile ~hirt and butl 111· do\1'n tollar has he<'n r·csurrccrcd. "Old !;norites" such as m:idr::is. hcrringbonrs and c·hC<'ks arc on 1hc niovcs. .. Tl1e pc:icock isn·t ttearl. He's JU"! stonped scrcamin~ .. , ~aid Ken O"Kerfr. ras hi()n dirert0r o! Ilic ~1cn·s r ashion Ass1eiation of Ame rica \V il!ia m Kce::;:tn. prcsifl ent i1f (;<1 11! ~l1 i rln1akers. agreed . '":'.Ian is still a fashion anirnal. '' Keegan s;1id . "tlc"s not going to go bland. \\'e 11"ent through an era of too-muchisn1 . Rut !hat doesn't mean 11.·c·re going to loo·lit· tli.~1n. ·· The peacock took look shaoc. in the mid·1 9G-Os. acc:ordinq t'.l O'Kefte. 1\·hen !he Camaby Street fa shions hit the l'nilrd States. ft produced such manifestations as the rancv Ed\\'nrdian look . the disastrous :\"ehfu jackt'I and lhe \V ild \Vest im<ige complete 1\·it h leather chaps. ''At that time. you could sell anvthing," said Leonard Ru bin, president or Landlubber. a sporl s\vear firm \Vith a youth market. The impact u•as farflung. Bankers even hrok e the 1vhile collar tradition and turn- ed to bright stripe s. Stockbrokers traded their thin til's fnr \vidcr. splashier vrr!'ion <>. /\1 ! h ,. t''>ll'CITI(·S 1rcre psychedelic ~U('d<'~. nonr·lcngth capes and ~·;ird s of !11n:itlr frin'!e Elf:tren1 ism ;ind !oo ni:iny rhuiccs left ('\'Pl'\"Onc c'\hausted. "The entire industry ha s come to realize that the ma!e customer doesn't \\'ant fa shions that change so rapidly. E,·oluhon not revolution .'' said Ja1nes K. \filson, executive vice president of Hart. Schaffner and ~1arx , a large c\olhing manufacturer. Jo,or 1972. jackets have been sheared of flaps, vents, tucks and pleats. Designers are no longer thrashing around for a radically new shape like lhe jumpsuits, Wa:v tu Elegance shir!-su11s. sleeves suit s, ad infinitun1 "Tl1e suit 11•en1 through a niess ... sai d O'Kcefc No iv th1• silhouette has b c e n stnhilizeft. rct;iining !he Ix-st innov;itinn llF !he J%0s: \l"idcr lapels. shaped 1.\·;.1 1st and str:iight or slightlv flnrcd pant., ·rhe thrce.p1crc suit is returning. <ir· j ·nrdin~ lo designer J\le!ednnri. "\\'hen 11 c go bar k lo the tonc-d·do1r11. e!ce:int 11101'. the \·e~t \\'ill hn1·e to con1e lo the Fore." he snid. ··'fherc ii' ni()rf' empha sis on the <lrrs!-icr tf)(Jk." s:iid \\'i!son. add ing that Ilic dressy dark shades for suits are coin· i I!!~ in · But most of the f·hange is in fabrics !hrrn~rll·es." he ~aid . I lt'rr ingboncs and f1\"Ceds are ba ck not on!v in .,..,ov<'n fabrirs. but also in double· I.nit<; or 11rnvcs 11·ith the slrclch built in ch1'micall r. O"K.eefe Se('s \hr .1·outh market as part of the reason lot the drcss·up look . "l'he you111? are inaking changes and Jnoving the statis tic~,'' he said. "In the Police Seeki n•" !'." llit-r1111 Drive r In W es hnin1Ste r \\'estm instcr police are ::;earching for a hit·and-n1n driver ·who critically i:ijured a pede~lri:>n 1.vho had run out of gas on the G:irden (;rove free11·ay Thursday ni~ht. The r ictim. identified as Joseph R. 'l'arak. 47. of LakC\\'ood is in serious con· di!ion at \\'es trn insler C om in uni I y Hos pi!al. Police ~aid Yarak sutfcrctl a crushed pelvis. concussion or the brain and in· ternal injuries. Traffic investigators claim l1c u·as knocked 30 feet from the point nf impact. \\'e~tn1 1n~tcr pol ice oHicrr. C. "flu~s'' \filler. snid Yarak an<I his 46-~·e:ir-old 11 ifc·. ~!.1rjorie. \\"f'fe \l';t lking al-Ont: C;ir<icn Crove Roulevarc! abnu\ I l ::'\O p nl. 11 hen he was struck fron1 behind illrs. Yarak wns not injured. l;ite "60.<>. it \1·as :i jean~ <Jnd knit market. The hipp ie 1novc1ne11t t•nc ouraged ~ dresscd·do\1 n look. Cot1t.') and suits v.·erc :-.('!ling !C'SS " Nou·. the .1vu11g nrc ~ct1rng dressed up. loo On so nic c:;1n1puscs, thrrc·s a move lo !h<' jc:ins·and ·Sport s coat in1agc . a la H.l'nn O'.\"rnl in "J,(l l'l' St0r~ ... •·,\ lot 111or(· l'nrcluroy Jill'kets 1101'1 . f1irl.v firl1sscd up s1 uff,"' ~illll Oa\'id C()r\'O. il SSO(·i:-i!~ editor or the Da ilv Californi;in ill 1hc U11i\'crs1tv of Californ13 at Berkclt'y. · •··r\\'O yr;1r.~ a~o 11t• t·ouldn 't ha1'e g1\'en a bla,:cr n1.ra.1·."' S;l id LandlubhC'r's Rubin. i'\011.. lll:rtl'r~ tnakc up s:nnr 75 JC:Orccn t o! his outrr11rar !'.riles for fall and sp ring. rcnl aci11~ 1tc1ns .~uch as fringed \'eSI<.; t111d 11 lid striped pan1 • Thr shir1 rnnrkt't 1s fJl1111g 1n 11n". ~lult icnlorcd sl ri~'s and colors ()f 1hc par.I arr ,gir)ng \\"~\' lo sub1lr tonrs Kf'cgan scr " !ht· 11h ;,,. ~h1rt as 1u,t ;u1othcr fa sh1.in rhnirt• !.i•l:11· It \\' ll be offered in \\'hitc·Oll·\l'hi1(' p<lttcrns. and 1n fabrics wi1h surf.'.lcc 1n1f•rt .. t. ~uth as tcx· turt>d brnndl'loth, Tir<> \\'ill r('Jnain at 11briu1 41.1 inl'hr~. snid \\'al1cr Kt'!l1'Y of llut Nerk1vea r C1l. Current big !>iCllc rs arc tX)rcler print s and lhc rnnscrv11t1\·r "spaced " prints. 11·11h :;rncill. repeated sh:ipc~ Since cle jlancc 1~ taking over <'lothe -.. ll01l1C feel lh<it fashion C:<~ression \\jlJ turn up in <1c:cessorif's such as shoes and jc>1clr~· and even underwear. ,\lcn·s shoes sport higher heels-in cou- servali\·c styles. :i s \\'ell a~ 1.rild fi\·e ·t·nk•r surdc styles \l'ith n th re!'-1nch lift ~lcn's ic1.rclry sales have dou bled at Ca rti1>r in !hl' !a ~t vr;1r. Sonic of !he br"t ~cll<'r\ ha\1• bef.n cha in brnc:clet.\, l'f'i kla t·cs 11!lh cnhrlf.:hon rmcralds ~nrl 1·11!.l iq~" 111 l,1 p1 .. ur ~t:l 1.11\h copies (Jf ~(''l•\\ ~ 11111 1•.ill the trend to clnss1e~. f'lega ncr and f.!<Xld !:1Sli'. l"ad to another cxtrc1nr~ l.)('~1"11r>r John \\'cit;: hopes nnl ·I hope \1·e rlorl"t return to the Adolph )lcninu st!f'k-pin irnngc-t hc pf'arl pin, 1h(' .~t li l (·1oll:11 . an d the sl1µh t suspicion t h~1I 11 you 1111b111ton thr vest , the 1.rhole n1an 11111 fall np:ir'!, · h•· c;:11d Jn ~uran cc ExccutiYc Co111pauy Succurnbs P('llicc have no de scription of I.he \'Chi· cle other than that it \\'as of ligh! color '-''ith sharp or pointed rea r fenders and possi bly round ta illights-. "\Ve're really hurting for leads and STAi11FORJ), Conn iU P!l _ R()ger 1\·1•re sC<'king any 1.1·itnesses or ~nyone !lull. chairman of lhe board and chief ex· 1.vilh information \\'ho n1ight help us find eculi~·e officer of ~1utual of New Yor~ the driver." h!' said. f:\'IONY) o of lhe :'.1iller said Yarak 1.vas returning home ' ' ne na tion's largest in- f surance con1p!lnies , dird Sunday in Stan1. from Costa ~·lesa and ran out o gas near ford llosp11;it lie was 64. the Valley View exit. •le "'as looking for !lull spent his cntire career wit h a gas station \\"hen the driver's vehicle i\.1C?NY and had tx·rn its chief cxccutire went oft the roadway and struck him. officer for the past 12 years. ;-----==-~C".'.'.:'...~=-~ Archeologists Find Ancient Docu1ne11t CAIRO (UP I ) Archeologisls digging near Cairo have discovered a papyrus document about 4.000 years old written in Aramaic. the language of Christ. an Egyptian antiquarian h a s revealed. Kamal ~tallakh. a_n authori· ty in ancient languages, said II was "a major diiscovery." "This is a very rare discovery he said.•• The last Aramain Papyrus Wt'IS found 20 years ago on an island in the river Nile at Aswan." Pt1pynl5 ls a retd in abun- d1u1ce along the banks of the Nile. During Biblical times the Egyptians used It to makt parchment for writing and lo con~ruct sea-going vessclsi "The document appears to tell of a plan dalina, from 2,000 years before the birth or Christ ror a Syrian invasion of Egypl and of how the Egyp- tians countered r-ilallakh said. the plan," Experts began study of the d o c um en t which was dlscoVCJ'ed at Sakkara. 15 miles south of Cairo, where a 8 r i t i s h arcbeologlcal Cl· pedition has been searching for several years for lhe tomb of lmbotep. doctor, lmhotep was a philosopher. politician a" d architect who built the nearh}' stepped pyramid or King Zoser. reputedly the oldest structure in the v.'Orld. The excavation was started by Walter Emery ll'ho died la:;t )'ear after digg ing In Egy pt for 41 years. Professor Jfarry Smith and Or. Geoffrey ~tartin ot London University are continuing his work. Houses grow small 8nd cramped without the things 1hat make them home - special rumiture, betterTV, s tereo hi·fl, paid up bll\1 ••• and money left awrr for fun. Avco may help with a homeowner loan on your house, whether 11'1 paid ror Of' not HOMIOWNIR LOANI TO fZI 000 OVER $5+000 ON Af:AL ESTATE AND fl'l!Rl0NAL "'ONMit SOI N. AIHIHf• ltwl., A11•l111 251 $. l.clhl It., AMl!ei111 117f H•rlHtt ltv4., C"t• MM• 617 W. 17tll St., S.te AMI 2011 I. M•I• St., 5-ftt• Aff ' fJS·2116 11 .. 1211 '42·l••• 147-4411 ... ,.,,,, • I t. :I c • , -- --- Tuesday Eve nin g FEBRUARY I '7 1~d1n Kutt!, [Jfllbtttt Astiley, Kenneth Mir!, W1Hi1m Windom. P•t C.r1oll. A 11ch. ulc111ltd stoc.kl11C>k1r bun 1 1ho1t lall'n ind lu1ns 11 into • bo0m1n1 t.:onuv unitJ.kN' ll1GSt wtlo 111ant 1noth1r ch&nt11 to mtke M>mt· lhin1 or th1l1 liv1s. l ;OO liJ D ®l !1l ;n "'' 0 l1\en ll1Uetb111 lo' An1elei Uk1rs met! !ht New Yor\ KnlclU •I New Yori!. m Truth ot Conwq11111Ct1 fD (ill l ltd Jour111I 9 fCIWl Spt(ltl "Chlnt: An Open Door" O {l)CD New1 f) (6) Wild Wild Wtst m Tht flintstann m I Dre1m of Jeanftlt (fi) Zoom! fI) Hod1tPldi• l.o4!J1 :19 M1~11trry RfD CE El Amo l ;JO 0 Mo~it: (C) (61>) "The list Sa- l11i" Concl11!1on (adventure) '61- Sltw1/1 Granier, Ka1 Ga1a1 Cab1ie!- l1 llcud1. Liam Redmond.' A cod.y rr.1lhona1re rollows 1 whr1o hunru wllG decides to 11ve up hr! p1oles- s1on and \rac~ down the 101ue t it · p/\ant !hit killed hrs fri end. @ CIS Hns Walttt Cro11Aite ®) N1tion1I Geov1pllic W Andy Griffith ID N1nn1 and tbt P1ofenor !ljJ CJ1u Mrdinr:s ED Success P11ttiu1 1nd Wrlhout F1ilur1 a_, W1111lertust O"""~ Grein Aerts Schools Cl!) Qulen Cant.I Lill Cancion? 7:00 0 @ 0 rn News @ T1ulh or tci111equentes (j) Dra111et 0 Whi t's MJ Une? m I lovt Lucy ID I Dtt1m of Jt1nni1 (BJ Th• Coury ol Our Times fI:) HltlllfOll:I £E Puente dt All'IOr ®,Kid la!• ff! M•rrtr,p 1:30 6 Qt liltn C1mpbel1 Si lly S!tulh· us. Roier Miller ind Dom Delu1.s1 2uest. D LOVE LOVE! LOVE' * with Robert Wagner, Bread, Helen Red dy, and Mac Davis. 0 ®1 ID I #Jl<1AL I H1tlm1rk Hill !1:00 m Dlwld Frost Show ml Li 1i1t1 CEl N1Ucll• !;lO liJ CAN NON·EXCITEMf NT! * MYSTERY and SUSPENSE! 0 ({) Canntn Keen1n W1nn 1ues!J as 1 sarec11ckin1 e1pe rt RDnt strai11ht ll'ho is blac~m11\ed into mastermind1n1 /he htist ol 1 mil· han·dollar Catal1n1 bank shi pm1nt. 0 ®} g;, J1m1s Guner As Nichals "Wings of 1n Anael" Slltrilf Nichols enlists !he aid ol 1 luckless bun· stormina pilot In loc1!in1 the hid•· 011! ot • 1:1n1 ol c11Uhr~b. IR•· .cheduled flom ~n. 25) (:J New1w1tch @ It T1kts 1 Thlrf ~ lhc Vi1(ini1n 110:00 0 (1) (i) Q) M111:us Wt lbr, M.D. "h ls So SllOn Th•t t Am Dane for -1 Wonder What I W1~ Beaun For" In an allrmpt lo aswage theif arid t0Howin1 !he dea!h of 1htir ba b1. 1 1oun; couple beto!flt! foster par· en1s ot 1no1htr boy. Mithael Callan i nd Sallie Sllockltr Ruest. 0 I SfcC1Al I China ... An Op.11 DDOr? m Hrws Pete Miller, Ken .lones ID FREE "SILENT YEARS" * PHOTO ALBUM AT All OFFICES OF GREAT WESTERN SAVING S ED@ Thi Silent Y1111 "Orph•n• ti tht Storm" This 1921 c.o\or·linled film is D. W. Gri!f11h's cl1ssic dr1m1 of th• frtneh Re¥Olution i~ whic~ two orph•ns. st111r1ltd duri~1 !ht lhl1n cl lerfcr, art finally n umttd. Doroth1 and Lilli1n Gish star. £m Tip Tap a;) F•stinl M11lcano ol F1mt "love! lov1! loYe!" Robert 10:30 6 ~ Th1 Goltldirt•rs Gut1t host Wa1ntr hosts an upbtal muslc1I Lou Rawls weltom11 si~ger John v~lentine 1,atunn1 son15 by H1lt1'1 Rowles and comics Btrktt & Corbett. Reddy, Mac D~vis ind B1t1d muJic.11 0 Manly Nash "Codt Hamt: Di· KfOYP. 1n1" Monly H1sl! his $500,000 0 (}l (6) (i) Th1 Mod Squid switch money thll lht lntem1! Rtvt · "l~e Cave" Julit, l ine tnd Pelt nut Servitt ii offuin1 lo1 1tolu1 •it trapped in • u...e by • mad· c.o1por1r1on books. man who claim, 1t Is th1ir h ull his 0@ Nc'h s.cm was ~•\led In !ht VIII. Kit! S....-tn5on gut~I~. (I) Al IJSijl ral 1 Drt1r1 of Jtannir 0 Calldid Catntfl O Millinn S Movii: (2hr) "ltatnd @II Altormtnlld1 11 the Lost" (adYenturt) '57-John m Call ti the Wtst Wa~ne. Soohia Lor en, Rossano 8ru · ll:OO 6 O CIJ®1 Im.,,, Ntws J•. Kurl ltastnar. Two m,n ind • o::l,:.I 1ur st11d1 tor trtaw11 1nd 1 !oil 0 Hou1 •I Poirtr c•!y in the S~h111 Desert. (I) M1rill1! 0111111 m Hoi:1n's Htiou 0 (I) fD Nt•s (B Orainet D Movit: (C) "Mad• .. I'' (comedy) @ ! $,fc1.,l] Slnltt Plannin1 fLl Currtnl £Ytllll eI) Los Cotorrns CE) Constjer1 Co111011 1:00 ri j Roltin' Clll tht RiYU m Andy lirittitb She• @ Tht Vi11ini1n al Lt Cost Ju111lb (iB N1111 '63-Sophi• U.ren. m To Tc!! tht lrillll ID F11hlon1 i• Sn1111 S Rolltr li1mn (B MoYit: {C) "Thi Ult ol !ht Moh~ns" (ad~enture) '60 -Jost M1rc.o, Luis lnduni, Daniel M1rtln. ll:JO 0 (j) MeA' Crillin O ~IDXI Olympic Wl1t1r Ca Mn IJ S 0 Uken Wnp·llP 0 (fl (I1 EE) Diet Cnttt P11a 1:30 O (i) H1wail Fivt ·O J1wn fvers tiplnn 1ucsh. 1ue1l1 IS the 3ur11v1na p1rlnt1 of m MOYit: "TM llllJ llld ~ 1111• ~not too·lt•1hm1tt re1I eslate com· dit" {1dvenlurt) '51-P1lrici1 Ml· p~ny. Vlhll!.e partners weit victims di~•. Louis H1yw1rd. of a mv1te11ou1 po1'1<ln. 12:00 0 Movlt: "Souli 11 SU" ladvin· Q rfQ) 00 l t 011JllPIC Win lul tu1t) '37 -G1ry Coopu, Gtor11 li1mu H1Rhhahls ol outsllnd1na Rift. evenh. \"~ ~lel\•\t, horn S1pporo. Japan. 0 Movie: (C) (2hl} "Tht Bounty Kil!tl'' (weste1n) ·~-Oan Durye1, Rod Cameron, Audrey Dallen l 0 IJ (61 CE) Movi1 ol !he 11/tek;/ ft ) (90) "Sttond Chane•" (comedy)' I Wednesday bAYTIMt MOVIES 9:00 m ''Dr1pnlly Squ1diwn" (1dvtn· turt) ·s~ -B1rblt1 Britton, John Hod11k !:10 O {C) "lrip dooft" (music.I I) 'SC --Gent Kelly. Van Johnton. 10:00 (l) "M• alld l't lttttll tt KoM" {comtd~) '54--M•rjorlt M1in. 1:00 O Mo't'it: "MKM" (1dven1ur1) '52 -Robert Mi!chum, Jane ifus.Hll. rn o o Cl) ®J l't•in Q.. AM NIPt Sllow: ''Tiit .ltd,et." "F•lhtf W•1 1 Fullb1U1" •0trt Mir· ro1." I l:lO 9 "Dt•tfl V11\IJ" (ll'es\crn) '~6- Robtrt Lowery, Hr11n GJl btrt. "Slnr You Slnntri" (musical) '38-81nr C1osb1, Fred M1eMu1r11. );00 D {C) "Dtnm11'1 ltul" (comtdy) '63-."3hn Waynt, let Muvin. m (C) "P'111trwptr" (dr1m1) '54 -Alan Ladd, Suun Stephen. J;OO Cf) "Nmr .. Suntlq'' (comedy) '60-Mtlint MtrCOllrl, Julu D1S$in. !MJ "W1t1rlot lridp" (dr1m1) '40 -Robtrt TIJI«, Vivit11 ltitll. SU A him by Bruce ('"Endless Summer'") Brown Roted lGl .... ,t.yt., Ntff 1•1 "THE . HELLSTROM CHRONICLE" F•b. 2 throU11h F•b. I -6:45 opon Cont inuout Running Show Sund1y, 2:00 l • DAIL V l'ILOT J J Theater Notes Four New Shows Open on County Stages By TOM TITUS 01 lfM Dally ,.Met Sllll Stage Jighl.5 are getting warmer all ove r Or ange Coun- ly this week as four local !heaters unveil !heir latest of· ferings -t\YO cornedies, a musical and a new conce pt in theatrical entertainment at South Coast Repertory. One of the comedies, open- ing tonight at the Laguna Mou l ton Co mm u nit y Playhouse, is a revi val of John Patrick's most popular story, "The Teahouse of lhl!' August 1\-1oon." The other is Neil Simon's "The Star Spangled Girl." making its debut Friday for the Westminster Com· munity Theater. ·- schedule week!)' for at ll'a::.t :i month, and "·ill also he available for touring. Only one performanre of the min1e thea~r will he AJl<'rl this \\'et'k. \\ledne!>da\. 'l't1urs- d:iv .:i nd Sa1 urd<1y • 11111 Ix· "r-.1other Earth" nights <tl SCR, \\'tth the orig1na! r(lck- ecology rnusical g11•in1: tv.·o performances on Sa1urdAy. Rt 8 o'clock and JO 30 Both prodtH't1011s ,ire 011 tl11• ~h1ge 11f S('H·::. l 'hirtl S!cp ·r11e;11(·r. 1H2i Nc11·1~w1 f\l\d. t 'i)s\a ~le~<J . Resr1•\ .il1!1tls fi~li 13!i:l * c·11n1pletu1i:: ;1 fl\1' 1\1•f'k1·11d n11i at ll1e llt111tu 1gr .. n fl('.11·h \'L1\'ho11't' lhl ~ llt•'"('lltl l'i .. Tl11· 1:1r! u1 llu· l·1t"ud1,111 Slip.' 11h11·h g11t'' ti~ tu1;1J 11111 p1•tl<ir 111;1tl('l'S 1''1 Id.I\ :1 I\ d S;1tu1·d:11· ;11 8 '\il The musical. "~'iddler on the Roof," gets the brand new Fullerton Civic Lig ht Opera off and running Friday even- ing, while sen takes the w r aps off its mime troupe-which will entertain periodically throughou t the scason-<1n Friday also . MUSIC LOVER -Karen ~1oe as Lu cy gazes at pia nis t J 1n1 Sp~1rs (Schroeder) In a scene fro1n th e San Clemente Co in inunity Theater n1usical .. ·Yo u're a Good lvlan , Charlie Bro\vn." !)\l'!'l1l'd b\ !l1•rr11,;n 1'111d n1an. 1\1(' i·nn11•d\ fcatui cs ~!;111 H1·ll. \J ;1r!l1rl Albl'r1 ,1·11. f'\11 l1nl;1~ ~111..;r , {' ll n r I" t I" !'l\iiel1!'ll . l.;1t1r:1 HL1r\.. and Laguna's "Teahouse" is an ambitious offering w h i c h , director ~lap Graham notes. ''will be a real lest of ou r facilities: there is ool an inch of space which is not in use." A cast of more than 30 pcr[ormers, along with a jeep and a goat. is involved in the Patrick comedy. ances Tu esdays through Sat· urdays <1! 8:30. arc scheduled for "'fcahouse" at the play- house, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, La guna Beac h. ltcscr- vations 494-074:1. * Ba rbara Garli1·h is "The the inauguration of l he Fullerton Civic Light Opera Company nnd ticket rcsi:onsc has been strong cno11gh to warrant an extra pcrforrnantc before the silo"' opens Friday night. S\Rn Throneberry and Ed ith f.oodman take the stell ar roles in the Fullerton version or under 1hr direction of Ron ald Bnus:.orn. '!'he n11r11e troupe, iTcatcd by Bnu:-sn1 n follo1v1ng !11~ .~tudif's in Europe durtn~ 1hr sunirncr. hns been developing \he pr0ductio11 since !"o. c1nbtr . The troupe's ftr~L ~h01\• 1v11l pla y lhc SCT 1\1!1 h<11•I ll;111ln11 1'1•rlorrnt1n 1 rs ;u r g11 ('!l ;i! 1 hi' pl.1yhtH1st• 2110 ,\1;1iu S1. ll11n11ni,:1011 l~l'a('h . (ie!;tf\ a11ons s;;~i-88fit * il1us1c<.il c·oniedv c11nl 111ues Rt Jy,·n en1n1nunlly' playhouses rilnng I he Or;ingc l'oa:-1 11·1th !he lr\·iue Con1m11n1ty Thf'uler entering ils second v.·cekcnd 11·1th "1'he Aniorous Flea" and lhe Sa n Clemente Comm un ity Phi! lnterlandi stars as Sakini, Jerry McCull och is the harried Captain Fishy, Travis Bryan plays the blustering col- onel and Helene Briggs is the bewitching Lotus Blossom ln the Laguna production. Star Spangled Girl" wh ile Gary Saderup and ~Iartin Fuchs portray the hippie types whose underground nc1v spapcr operation she interru pls in the Westmi nster Co 111 m u n i I y Theater version of !hr Srmon comedy. Broad\vay's longest ~ runnin~I ------------------------• 1nuslcal. Others in \he cnst arc Walt er Dudek as t he psychiatrist heads a large sup- porting cast which includes Bess Ripley , Mr. and Mr s. George Cunningham, Glad Keer , "1argo Goddard, Phyllis Onstott, Ri chard Stepp and Charles Colgan. Others in the company are Dav id Whitelaw, Del Adams, Mari Quigley, Lisa Harley, Cherie A JI en, .Julie Cabang, Carolyn Anger. Jennifer Bronson. Terr i Vickers, Edward "Tiger" Ash, Jon B!ankenbeeklcr, Robert Temple, Elsa Dietz and Bob Doris Allen has taken over the directorial v.·t.U'k fron' Son· dra Evans, \'iho \Y a s hospitalized late in I h e rehearsal perio<l. '!'he pro- duction opens Friday night for a three-weekend engagenient. Performnnccs \Yill be glY<'n Fridays and Saturdays at 8.30 in the Finley Sc h o o I auditorium, Edv.•ards at Tr3sk in Weslminster. Re servations 897-11£4. !loss Lynn Tepper. ll;ink Sorkin, Ron Cessna , Carl Nelson, Bonnie 011·rn. Leslie ·r1nnaro and Cozclle \\'alkcr. J an Duncan dircTls the musical with Dave .l\·!acl\a1n se rvi ng as 1nusica! di rcetnr Perforrnance~ are plannc<l for Fridavs and Sa turdavs ;i! 8:30 <Hid ·Feb. 20 at.2<tO in Fullerton Hi gh Sch1JO!'s !'hin1- mer 1\uditor1um . Reservations 526·3257. * South Coast 11 e p c r l n r y \Ve!ch. * break.~ new ground this 1\•eek \1·ith thP first ncrlormancc nl the At lllr's ~1 1me 'fhea!er Three \\'eeks of perform· "Fidler on 1hc Hoof' m;irks Ir=:=============================.! ~do .,..'°"" MAO! -..... --"" l• ... !o .. U•• 1oN -Qt, M :t!lt Starts Wednesday -Fe b. 9 EDWARDS HUNTINGTON CINEMA Beach Blvd. at Ell is 847·9608 New York's Critic Award HELD OVER AGAIN THE FRENCH CONNECTION W•l+•r M,lth~u "KOTCH" J,,\ Lemmon "THE ODD COUPLE" Both Color -!GPJ STARTS WEDNE5DAT "THE RAILWAY CH ILDREN" '"' "ANDROMEDA STRAIN" lot~ Color-!G I " ... -w-11inking f•lt•r .•• • "w. th• W•V.I W•,.. 35 f••t •bov• u• .. : • ... 1'1ar• •nd m0/9 sh Hie fi1111 clltfing rh• w•r•r ... - ••• THOllt HEYElll:DAHL You must sN RA! An astounding true ·life adventure for the whole family! ENDS TUESDAY 1o11. a s..1 •·»'" •·"'· •• ewon i .. ,., .. m. We•ltdoyi 7:JD c111d 9:30 Motl11"' Saturday & S1111doy FINAL WEEKS 2 SHOWS SAT URDAY 8 and 10:30 P.M. South Coast Repertory .... rvatlafls: 646·1161 IS!..,. f.l'l.OA BY DE LUXf• 2Q,. Centu11-For ALSO R CARTOON The M09lc: P•or Tree $ong of: the South Dl111•y'1 "NEVE R A DV LL MOMENT'.' IARG AIN MATINEE (\'try Wedneiday. 1 p.m. Adul~ Sl .00 Chltd 7!it lh1th Gordo11 "HAROLD AND MAUDE" IGP I 0 110 s.t. J :JD "LAST SUMMER" IR) .... ''"Jj --CtNIDDME lf •. .. -~·:=:r.:;~ ---~·· STADIUM . I :./ .. .--m~:•~~·~ - - -... 11. $TAO/UM '7 :.:• .. ~-~-:-:a. o-.. c. '"" "KOSPITAL" AIM Prier ~lllerl hi "THE PAftTVM ... tOKNOIS ANO IJIOOM STICl(S" p1.,. lwc:Ull l•n ""t'OURS, MIMS A1'LD OUft'" MHl"'ff sat. 1no1 'v11. Jl'M K UI~ ''INOW JOI" CGPJ •IM -"'LIGHT AT TNI 1001 OJ" TNI' WOftlO" "l lll Y JACK" {01'1 ... "MONTI WALSH" "Tiit ,r..w.11 C.~ftt<llln" c•1 '"d "Yfftl ... !111t ,-tin!" !•) "lffy 11111 IM Trlrnf" !OJ "llfo .k .... "lffl., Art IA (O'l t Kam·chat'ka The $240.000 Alpine capet JPAN·Cl.AUDE KILLY in Jt¥!i>N:K!i13 Panir.-~<i~'J TKtt~ ro:or• f1..,,, ,',"'"r B•l'<,A K'rr<•/Cor-fl~"'I...,,,,. Co-H1I Paul Newman "COOL HANO LUKE " IOlUllA!N w1: lA HAl•A P.I, lA Mll AOA VAlllf 111.1162 WAlM IN ll9·1S00 S21·ffl0 ltl Alt PAULO DJ. STADIUM D,I, rutu#TDM C05TAMl lA DA ANG( 1 7l·~SlS 54S·J3ll 6Jt.1770 Al I they wanted r• ... I "\\'HAI 00 YOU SAVIO A NA~J:D LADY!" was their chance to be men.,. and he gave it to them. A MARK RYDELL FILM Jl>i'• .• •,: "• ,,.,., ri .. A r1.., -... ¥.l(l :~· 1•· P<"./.:rt re ~~1£ l'f 'r•~·i· CJlf''irl!."" 1>-.;.,~•·· 1/,·t.~1 ... ~l.•1-\ ·~ ... ··(>.11 •' ••••r 1 • .. ,, (. ,., .,. 1.,., ·''.....,. ,.., l\o• ··-;o-;. r·,.,. .. ~ ,._, l ·t ·~ t"t ''1·\ />i'l'I • r.1.•·1 •"' ' ~Co-•.rvvt 1 f'•_., '.'., .... P,. ~ ~ -."1 f/r ·1 !ID> fGrn••Al.., .. ~ ,,_,",. I ..... , ... o ..... -..... I . ~·--......... _.. .. ,.._.,,. EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY RUNS STARTS WED, FEB. 9 'l'heatrr niov1nil into Its thin} v.1lh .. \'ou're .11 Good Man, lh11rlH' Brnwn.'' Hrt'hatd IJow hc<1ds thr casl or lhl' lr\·1nc 1nus1cal, under fr v1n I·'. l\1mbrr's d1recnurt, v.ith i-:Uen Robuison. G1ne> (;audio, Carin Dow end Don J!av1·s 111 f eature d 11s~ignrnt'nts Performan<:rS ;u·f' g11·('n at ft o'clock in the I 't' !r1 u1t' llu1nnnllics Ha!I l'li!\hou~(· on Frldit y and Sat11r<l,1\ r1l'n1ngs Reserva· tio n~ ~117/i:I"! l!ohrrt ~l!il' .-. Jlrtlf!ut·tJon uf Ct1.1rl1l· Un •\•n" t' t' ~ l! 111 r~ ·r1i1 1rst!:1v at S;111 r ·11·111t•n1e 11!lh 1!111·c nu1n' pr1ti1nnan1·rc: ,it 1111· t ';1htllo l'l.1\)11111 ,c·. 2U2 \\r1111!.1 l' <1Ii1' 1II 11. s:~n ( 'lt•111r11lt• Fc;11111·ed :irt• ~la1 k \1.11\!1111;.:, K;i1 ·1·11 \hie. ~te1c :..n111h .Jun Borf'n s, ,J,,,\nne .'\pplt•g 1·11 ;ind .11111 ~rc1rs . Ht•-.(•r\ n\1,,n.~ ~~!2·0.\tiS. • COAll •wr AT WA.CAOT""O ... YI "I W"Oll! N A(N • ••< OlfO "THE IGPJ HOSPITAL" 2ft6 . Prltr S1Uor1 "THl PAR TY" "THI GODfA1HIR" STARTS I Y A • • .... C .. WLVI), ... ILLt• • • ••• eo••• .,,,.¥ & ••• IM••o ·-· 847 ·9608 • .. V OlflOIOTON ••.t.e: .. .iii IJ~DS TUESDAY, fl8. 8 Clint Eastwood Dirty Harry ··1~:<!' ' . . " . . ' .. Plu\ · {' , \!< 1 lof'r l.1 •'"'ftJt: In "THE DELT A FACTOR" STARTS FRI. FE8. 18 2 Mlll$ SOUTH f. UA OltGO f'W'I'.. HILD OVIR • 2ND WIEK TWIGGY .. rnruoy fl!lf~D KA-ti.YD .t.T .. UOlll •r. COIT.I. lllU 141·ot1J 1 1111-11 KIUTN Oil Ufl IMI QO rwY. INDS TUESDAT FE8. 8 r<~•, •'"<';•.•JI"!'' II<' •.IA.l t=RIENDS l~d H1r -Fr•n~ 511111r1 "l.l.OY tN CIMEHT" 'T.l.RTS WED, Flit. t 011-1IA Htttm•n 111 "'TRAW OOOS" ... , ... ., ..... , (O!loM•,. "'-141 JlOJ __ .. _,. .. --·--... -... ··-· l(qlhf'<ne Ht1>bu•n \'1>11eswi Rtd<)1e • • THl STRENGTH OF MANKIND )olAJ AlWAVS BEfN ITS WOMlN, 'THE. TROIAN WOME.N" IGP\<C> .,,_,. .. , ...... :. ·~ ""'""" .. "IOMlllMH A 'l fAJ 11101101• IT.I.ITS WIO. Pll.t Jf"-••I" • '"' '" '•JNI (0 lWhl.I' J )l ~NIY ·~• $ongof the Sout Alio • U111fl f)i ulf'Y "HIVU A DUlL MOMIMT" • : ' ' • . ' ' ' . -. ' . "' {2 DAILY PILOT lur.$d<\r, F1btuit1 8, 1972 When you open a checking account at Security Pacific Bank, we offer you a unique package of personal bank services. On the back, there's Ready ReservAccount. Which lets you write a check for more than you have in your checking account. 'lb pay for those extra, special things. Like a special vacation that costs a little more than you planned. Ready ReservAccount can help you pay for it. At Security Pacific Bank a checking account can offer you a whole lot more than just a bunch of checks. For example, you r approved <:redit 1nakes you eligible for our Combined ' f ! ;J Ready ReservAccount can "!, help pay for medical i emergencies. (Including J the cigars.) Or if Junior's teet . 'need straightening, it Check and Charge Carel. IL do esn 't tost .n 1u an yt hin g lo get one, bu t loo k whal it gels you . On th e fron t. Lhere's Ma ster Charge. You know what t hat is. You can charge all sorts of Lhings almost anywh ere. .. . '~k.,~· -· Jffe....,.,. .• , iii;;----1 / -.; . r can take the bite out of t he /,down payment. ;t.,> Ready Resern4.ccount even pays for the cigars. }V; Ah, but that's not all. The combined ~ \I'\ _ --. ' ~· . '_,_ check and charge card IS also a check C......-c;;,_,.-, . guarantee card. Thi s is helpful if you Jive · in Ojai and want to cash a check in Oakland. Or vice versa. It means that Security Pacific Bank guarantees your personalized .--, ··· "·: Ready ReservAccount can help straighten ifnior's teeth. By this time, you've had it with your old J. But that's all right. Because you've al so got Ready AutoFinance. Which means when you're ready to buy a new car, you can get the loan before you get the car. And tell the dealer to forget all about those credit references and loan application forms. bank checks that do not exceed $100. It's like having the money in your pocket. (At attractive bank rates.) . Check Guarantee Card gives him our w&rd f0" your check. Ready ReservAccount. Check Guarantee Card. Master Charge. Ready Aut.oFinance. Aut.omatic 'Il'ansfer. All part of the unique package of bank services we offer you when r,ou open a checking account at Security Pacific Bank. If you don't have one, what on earth are you waiting for. • Ready AutoFinance saves time-and red tape. SECURITY PACl'FIC ·BANK • I . ... ~-·-.,...... ... .. ... .. ..-... .,_ .. .. ~ . ' ...... ~ ~-...... -.................... ... -- ROME RUFFLES Stories From Wire Ser'lices Ro1nan s have prevle\ved a flut· tery. fen1inine look for sun1mer, 1972 Collections feature flared pants. ftu ltering skirts and frill y petticoats peeping out fron1 top-of-the-knee hemlines. Clara Ccntinaro \Yas the first lo appear \\•ith the seven-eighths.c:oats over pleated-skirt dresses \\'hich cut- ting rooms were \Vhispering about before the sho"·s started. .'\ typical costume "'as a bright ;iqua coat, a white dress \\'itb pleat- ed skirt and a white straw hat with turned up brim. A \vhite scarf print- ed \vith aqua wound round the neck and trailed from shoulder to back. • 'fhc same thing came in blue and .. r ' .. ' ,, I ~-_, .. ,~ . .-... . ' ..... ; t. .d.t, .,· . .· .. '•, '; . . .. . ' ,.,_, ~ , 1,.f. .. .·,.::;;:,·;\\'',;;-'''" • .• '·'-l ;" f.'.,i' ··~~","'' ... ~c:. ............ ___._ .... -4.<~ orange. ". ! Tiziani's big summer look was silk dresses. pleated skirts for the city and very wide. very long trousers v.'ilh lank tops for sporl Scarlett O'l·lara lives in the \\·hite organza go\vn !above. far left\ \Vi lh pale flo\vers. ruffles al hen1 and parasol. Designer Ro cc.:o Barotto re· turns to frou·frou look . Princess Irene Galitzine shO\\'S one of a number of gla1nour gowns in \vhite satin Y.'i\h curved shirttail sides. Ruffled navy stoic c.:01npletes tlte image. Ron1ance is theme of Valentino's su1nmery creation (above). It's an evening gown of black and \\1hite checks with hen1 . neck and short sleeves entirely covered \vilh arti· ficial daisies . I ' t~ .. t. ,,, < .:,. '· ... , • ' ' ,f • ... t .. '. I ' . I ~ I Pale yellow in sheer chiffon is Renato Balestra's pi ck for a bail gown \\Pith V·neck (right ). 1'he matching bolero jacket is composed of rO\V upon ro\v of hand·crochetcd cotton lace. all of it ruffled. Balestra intended such <:olorful boleros for evening \\tear. But si mi· lar s ha ped ones and short jackets, above and a\vay Crom the \vai st, came in \vool in his daytin1c dresses. Organza flo\\'S or fits the forn1 this summer. tvlartieri's high fa shi on collection features a yellow organza evening gown with a skirt of 14 tiers. Each tier is edged \Vith navy, as are ruffles around the neck and at wrist (far right). Rhett Butler should have it so good! ; .. , ' ' l . . . ' ., . ,, i.. ' '•' ":to.""'; ! . IS "./ \ • ~--...... ~ '· i ~ .. l, ·• . j • ' I ~ ' • l ' 1 . . ' ·• ·. •. T·' .. . > I • ~ · . " . . ·~1 . ' ' .. . .. ' ' .. . ·, "I • . • ' \, ·.,. l" ' . I ~ • ' • • • '!'" ( . " .. . ' . .. • .. . . ' ..... -- BEA ANDERSON, Editor T""Mfr, ••11att .. lt11 , ... W Paris Pampers Some prefer a sun1mer of si1n· plicity. So n1c look to a seaso n of s1zzlin g- numbers. All Parisian designers arc in- volved in the current iss ue sur- rounding the international fashion scene -is haute couture dead? \VilJ high fashion become a victim of the French pret-a-portcr (ready- to-wear). To bo\V out of the uproar. design· ers such as Pierre Cardin and Ger· ard Pipart arc shO\Ving small col.lec- tions of high fa shion for spring. They plan to combine high fa shion \vith ready-to-,vear at the big French exhibitions in April and October. Givenchy decided to sho\v his summer look -big. straw hats and handkerchiefs. lots of red. white and blue. Bare flesh in unexpected places is for the cocktail hour as well as the beach. Givenchy puts sailor col· Jars an everything from n av y wool jackets to white organza shirts with long black evening dresses. Guy Laroche (sketches at left) tends toward short, tailored jackets and full wide legged trousers. He foresees full sleeves and lots of ruffles. Nina Ricc i reminisces in her ready-to-wear cocktail dress. en- titled "Vague" fright). It's a striped muslim with wide brimmed hat. A long dress made of navy blue and silver satin sewn together a.net worn with matching "boa'' scarf is an unusual number by Paco Rab- anne (far right) . A very pretty series of short· sleeved dresses, in gray flannel or baby blue wool.. that go?s o~er striped cotton, prints or plain white organza shifts has been designed by Patou. I-le also offers a navy sn1ock co~l with white stitching all over that is good enough to stand alone. ···---·--~ ..... 11 ..... . ~· . ~ . ... .. -. Tut~ay, Ftbruary 8, 1q7z ======= Volentine Fleet Soils for Weekend ' .. Regatta . .. -' . . j l .j ... . . ' Inside Secret to Dining Out DEAR ANN LANDERS I have been reading your colun1n for a long lime hop- ing someone would write in with Lhe 15ame problem I have but no one has, and J am gelling desperate. I'm a teenager who can't eat in a restaurant or at anyone's hon1e without vomiting. 'J'her e 1s no1hing y,'rong with the food . Jt's 1ne. I've tried eatrng lightly -like t'Ollage cheese and fruit plate. or a tuna salad -but it's the sarne story. I gel the dry heaves and then I must excuse myself. It's so embarrassing I could die. I'm a little overweight and I love my mother 's cooking. but th is is ridic ulous. Our famil y doctor say s nothing is wrong with inc, that 1 will outgrow it. But J'll be going away lo college in two years and I need lo get over this thing NOW . Please tell me what lo do. -UP-CHUCKED IN FLINT DEAR U.: Go lo artotber doclDr. Get a complete physical. If a second doctor tells you there is nothing wrong with you. tell hi m peop le do not vomit for no reason. If there Is no organic problem jt must be emotional, in which case I urg e you to get some coonseling and learn "·hy yoo cannot tolerate anyone's cooking e>:· cept your mother's. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your column is an education. If people read not only the letlets and your answers but also the hidden meanings between the lines, they "·ou td learn a great deal. I refer to the letter from the mother who was con- cerned bccaus<' her husband •nsisted that lhl·!r young son lcam to fight. Any male who tcathus his child 1o resort to physical violence to prove his rnast"ulinity must have serious sel f-doubts about his own maleness. Our culture does not need any more men who can prove themse lves only through brutality. We arc brutal enough. A history of three wars u1 the la:i.L JO years bears mute testimony to the dan1ning evidence. -ASlt4!\1ED OF us DEAR ASHA!\1ED : How lru~. "f\t1:1n ·s Inhumanity l-0 mao makes countless millions mourn." DEAR ANN l.J\NDERS Your high praise for good psychiatric counselin~ prompted th is letter. During the 1950s I was hospitalized seven lin1es. The stays were as short as four days and as long as live months. Each tin1e I went home my psychiatrisl said, "You'll have to do it yourself." 1 didn't know "'hat I was sup- posed to do. He tried to ma ke it clear. but I didn't understand. Your Horo scope Tomorrow '/'hrc:t )t;ars ai;:o a lr1cnd ~uggested a nrw apprO<JL·h I tlf'ttflc-.t I hatt nothing tu lose so I y,·cnt lo a rneet1ng of ··Reco\'ery. lnl" " l suddl"nly understood what my doctor had bt:l'n say u1g. This ts <t truly rcn1arkablc group -an d free to ;111yont· \1•ho "'<tnts to go. The pco. p!e J n1t'I anti 11~t1·11ed !() g;1v" mP hnpo and courage. I left the rnt•ellng wit h renewed ,-;p1rlt, sure I could rnakc et l'\1e IJeeorne a •·rei;:ular'' and 1111: ~ruup has don.:-.-.o n1uLh for 111 e I find 11 t!1ff1cu!t to express niy ~rat1tude without sounding like a fanal!c. \\1i!l you plf'a~c tell othC'rs about Re\:O\'cry, Jn('. in your colu1nn , Arm . ·rhey have so n1uch to offer, and so many nervous and cn1ol1onaJJy ill people need help th ese days. Thank you. -LA/\SING DEVOTEJ.: DEAll LA:\'SJ~G: I have printed lrt- !crs simi lur lo yours, but it's time ror another. 1'hank you ror providing it. llere is the addre~s for tbose who w1:1nl tG "·rit e lo the natiun;i/ ht·adquarters and learn y,·hcre the ncurcst chapter is: ltecovl'ry. Int·., llfi South J\1ichlgan Al'e., Chicago, Ill .• 60603. Ann Landers di scusses teenage drink· ing -its rny!h s. 1ls realities. Learn the facts by rCittl ;ng. "Booze and You -For Teenagers Only,'' by Ann L<lnders. Send 45 cents in coin and a Jo11g. slarnped, self· addressed envelope lo the DAil~ Y PILOT. Sc·orpio: Hunch Profitabl ~ lo yo u. Lido Isle and Bahia Corinthian Yacht Clubs wilt co- host a two-day Valentine Regatta Saturday, Feb. 12. and Sunday, Feb. J3. A dinner-dance is planned for Saturday in the Bahia clubhouse starting at 7 p.m. with dancing until 1 a.m. to music of the Jack Canderlori grou p. Inside and outside races will be hos ted by the groups. Putting their hearts in the right place arc (le ft to right} the Mmes. Brian R. Carter and Edv.·ard L. Hayes. WEDNES DAY FEBRUARY 9 By SYDNEY OMARR A reader from Paulsboro, N. .J .. relates experiences which reveal that many so c j a I workt;!rs are born under Libra. Conducting he r own survey, she discovered that numerous caseworkers were Librans and that many persons interested in the fiel d were born from Sept. 23 to Oct. 22. This may have something to do with an innate ability of Libra-the ability lo administer lender, loving care. tionships are at s t a k e . ~tember 0 r opposite s e :tr: speaks mind. Be recep- tive-and s y m pa the ti c . Rec o g n i z e your own shortcomings. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sep\. 22 1: Home. property. basic securi· ty are major poinlS. Finish projects. Don 't attempt lo pro- long situation. Conclusio~ 1s necessary. Protect a s s e t s . l)on't give up .-;omethlng uf vrilue for nothing. scenes. ~1ainla1n low profile. Collect facts. Analyze and utilize special informat ion. 11efusc tn be rushed. Set your n11·n pal'e . V1s1l onC' \vho may be l'Pnfinecl !n hon1 t'. ho,-;pilal. GEi\flNI !May 21-June 20 ): i\(~UAltlUS Lian. 20-Fcb. Outdoors Replaces Desk Lie low. Play waiting game. Let others show their hands. emphasis on partnership, mar· riage, ventures which require aid, cooperation or another. You r own judgment now is not as sharp as usual. Take yoW" time. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22 1 Accent on short journey, ideas which can be developed. Sell concepts through enthusiastic approach. Versatility a n d humor make fine twin allies. Leo can aid in creative pro· ject. Get together. IA 1: l::xch.1ngc 1nforn1alion. 0 p po r t u n 1 t y exists lo transrorm hopes. wishes lo realities. Cuupc ratc \Vi th Scorpio individual Pleasant :-;urprise is dur J::xtend hand of friendship. Be rnore nex- ib!r B.v ALLISON DEERR Of lht Ot lly PUol 111 11 On rainy days N a n c y Moore's job at UC Irvine can get a li ttle muddy. She's part of the grounds maintenance crew that has to keep the huge drainage ditch· es clear to prevent flooding . On drier days the tall. slim brunette concentrates her at- tentlon on assorted insects. rodi::nts and pests that afflict the UC I ca mpus. Her official title is pest control trainee - a job for which she was selected from a field of nine. The other eight applicants were men. Nancv doesn't kn o ck Women.'s Liberation but sai d she didn "t apply for the job just to be the first woman lo do it. She just thought it wou ld be great to work outdoors. BUSINESS MAJOR A business major in high school. she held a variety of secretarial jobs before going into data processing. She u·as a keypunch operator in !he maintenance office "·hen the job opening can1e up. "I aly,·ays wa nted to work outdoors and around plants," she said. •·When I applied. 1 never thought they'd hire nte. The men J work with have ac· cepted me and given me a lot of help. I'm now taking a class in pest control at Golden West Elders Bid To Lunch Thursday luncheons f o r senior citizens of the Harbor Area will be hosted by three Newport Beach churches for the remainder of February. The 75-cenl meals and brief entertainment, arranged by Church Women United. will be offered at St. A n d re w 's Presbyterian Church on F'eb. 10, Christ Church by the Sea. Feb. 17 and St. James Episcopal Church, Feb. 24. Each luncheon starts al noon and reservations must be made by the preceding Mon- day with the host church. • Transportation also can be ar· ranged by calli.ng the church. College. ''Although I was raised in Long Beach, I had quite a bit of experience with horses and ca ttle. I raised, trained. show- ed and rode horses for years." she added. "I've always had an ap- titude for thing s which were considered men 's work, like doi ng some of the plumbing repa irs around the house. I don't get any special treat· i ment in my job. except when • it comes to heavy lifting . In hi gh school my highesl ap- titude was mechanics. ~'OT UNUSUA L "They don't let me lift anylhini;: they think will be a strain. They still open doors for me occasionall~'. loo . They Jet me do anything I feel l can. I don 't like to be separated. "l"ve been told that three or fo ur Orange Count y women oy,•n pest control businesses," ~ts. ~·loore expla~ned. "so n1y job isn't really lhal unusual." Her not-so-unusual job in- cludes spraying trees and groun ds for insects. catchi ng gophers. even ridding on-can1- pus housing of meddleson1e pests The freedom to be ou tside most of the day was welcome after JO years of inside, secretarial jobs. she said . ' . . ,. ARJES (.\.1arch 21-April 19 ): CANCE R (June 21-July 22): You get better ideas or posi· ti on, of where you sland. Pisces person could play significant role. Relative in transit may make special re - quest. Do what you can without being foolish. Remem- ber personal responsibilities. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): SCO RPIO <Oct. 23-Nov 21 1: I-lunch leads to ultimate profit You gain by sh a r i n g knowledge. One who kno\YS much is will ing to give yo u a boost. Aqua rius plays pro- minent role. Spotlight on col- lecling needed material. PISC ES !Feb. 19-~1;irch 20 \: You get hack nn ri~ht track. Gual ts focused and you see clearly. Cooperillton indicated fron1 one in posit ion of ;111thnrily F;1mily backs yo u. Situation 1s such lht1l you are grateful i'o1uch pressure 15 remO\'ed. Tr ave I . communications, phi I o so p h y -these are slressed. Think and analyze. Don 't take others for granted. Otherwise. you could be in for rude awakening. Leo and Aquarius persons figure pro- minently. Creative endeavors spell suc- cess. Shake off lethargy. There will be opportunity for greater freedom. Use it wisely. ~1ake necessary changes. Be flex· ible. Perso nal m a g n e t i s m soars. Opposite sex is drawn SAGITTA RIUS !Nov. 22-1----------- TAURUS (April 20-Ma y 20): Emotions tend to dominate. Express yourself, but don't play games. Important rela- May Rites Planned By Betrothed Pai r Dec. 21 ): £mp rove ;:ip. pearance. B r i g ht e n sur- roundings. More persons nnw become aware of you. Kn ow thL; and act accordingly. No time to hide light. Circum- stances fa vor personal efforts. Mount offensive. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-J;.in. 19 J: Work quietly, behind f\1r. and Mrs. Chester Fer· UCSB and was president of rell Salisbury of Corona del Delta Tau Delta fraternity and w~~:,N~s ,:~•1t Mar have announced the a member of Blue Key nn 1. co111 Hwy. BALLOON LTD~~ .->'-"•.t•)O;;_·.~ Thr f1111·-,l ('l .. rh1·s fqr •·h1l<ll'<'!l f1n1n 1hr hr<,l An1f'r1<·a n anrl ~;lll"J'"an rl•·.'·IC/IC'l"S ·~· •••• ~.11.h11.11, •••••• , <hllrl'"•'• U••• I• 1ho -••Ill••• engagement of her daughter fraternity. t•r.;1~~ M•• Ltt Sparling to A. Nicholas He also holds e r..tA degree Huntington Harbour Java ras. from UCLA in bu.siness ad-Th e ••o•• .... tfh 1714 1 84&-1666 11b1l1 of d i1tin,lion. T • Co I Miss Sparling, also the ministration and served as a oy,·n 01 un ry I. I t · th A You' cn1r91 occou~• w•l<c"'' Oran,e daughter of John Robert teu enen in e rmy. "'" p,,~1n; 1>en1~d 11or1 Sparling of Newport Beach, _.:_riT~h~e'.'.y:p~la'_n~lo~m~a'_rry~~~l:_a_y_2_0'._~::::::::::::::::~~~==(l:=l:=<:=1 :=55:=8:=.9:=59:=5:=:=~ graduated from Corona del and live in the Bay Area . Mar High School with honors and was a 1964 National Chari- ty League debutante. She received her BA degree from University of California, Santa Barbara and h e r "We don't do the same thing day after day, week after week. Every day there is a new problem to solve . We come into contact "'ilh the students more. also. Things aren't static. You can always see a little gro"•th." UCI TRAINEE Nancy Moore teaching credential from the University of Califomia, Berk- eley. She is teaching in the Bay Area. Her fiance is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James George Tsirikos of Anaheim. He received a BA degree from Free. another acti vity she enjoys. bored. All of her coy,•orkers Would other womrn like her are men. Landscaping her ~luntington Beach home carries the job home with her. Sewing is work? She admits she 's ne ver l----.,.,-,=-.,.,,.,------------------1 lllJ/f/'f Jiii/ii fllllllfllll·-.. Heaths J ell News Mr. and Mrs. Ira Heath a,. nounced the engagement of their daughter, Marilyn •reath. to Ph i I i p Kunde of Westchester during an open house in their Costa Mesa home. Miss Heath is a graduate of Southern California College and is a teacher at Prince of Peace Lutheran Day School, Costa Mesa. lier fian ce, son fJf Mr. and Mrs. Albert Kunde of Los Angeles, is a graduate of Ca lifornia Slate College at Los Angeles and taught in Whittier for two years before becoming a juvenile court soc ial worker. A summer wedding is plan- ned by the couple. . - Ch eese Of The Ill' eek MONT. ST. BENOIT GRUYERE REGUL•R 7" 20' N 0 OFF w Offer good Feb. 8 Jhru Feb. 13 M~e by. the Benedic tine Monks ol fht Abbey of St. Btnoit . It rs quollty-modt in the Old World tradition for those who like superb cheese. Stop by our store. tostt ond buy this excell en1 cheese. Like many others yoo'll s.oy "Mognifique l'' ff C~~d17 t•!!!S· ~ .. C~!!~. ?Im .... tot., ..... So.. I>•.,.'""'" COSTA MISA ................. "' ...... , ......... For arthritis sufferers. r -----. 1 I I I I I I I I I I Arthritis pain seems worse at night. Because you're all alone with your pain and you can't sleep. Tonight you can re lieve minor pa in of arthritis with Excedrin P.M~. the nighttime pain rel iever. It combines a mild sleeping aid with 3 pa in relievers. So you get hours of relief and extra help to sleep. For your free four·tablet trial sample, simply fill in your name and address and mail to Excedrin P.M. Offer, P.O. Box 254, New York, N.Y. 10046. Name'------------~--------- Address~--~~-~-------------I C1ty ___________ state _____ Z1p. __ _ I I I I I I I I I I I I I l imit of c,,. tot ltmflyor !rQ!lp. Otfl'l'vofd """-._ t••ld. rec ultttd or prohlbjt«J. l".M. 1 I Off1r 1.1p+r1• ~111 lO. 117 , ~ 1972 ltitlol·Mvt•~ Co . ~-------------------~ DICK TRACY ,., " TUMBLEWEEDS CLAUD;; CLAY· . UNDERTAKER '(()tJ Pl \h 't. M -I ·~··M ... _ .,,,. __ '" MUTI AND JEFF FIGMENTS PLAIN JANE . ' ' I I • 'I' ''"'' • •'I ' <r • '" o YO Ll MEAN WE ARENDT MAKE 9EL.IEVE- WE ARE REAL. PEOPL.E? J. ... / . ~"' . ..-.. By Chester Gould WELL, lfl A SENSE, YES! WE ARE JUST AS REAL. AS SANTA CL.AUS I~ MERRY M UTTANDJEFF DAY! By Dale Hale By Frank Ba9inski I ~1 ULL--4_;_'.//_/,_'.I/_' _ _./ w..w~:_f;_~-~-/' /,-~-%1,-'JJ-.I ; GASOLINE ALLEY <iAll J'm a~k1nq , Clovia , 1-.. a few SALLY BANANAS HELlO, HA~TEJUR!J, INC .... ••··· lAPY PlUSHl!OTTOM IS BUSY . WHO S HALL I SAY ,-,.,,_.-, IS CALLING".' ~ !";\~~ ANIMAL CRACKERS 60 AllEAD ! ;;us; iJill.I!' 1/olSIDE AIJD CIEA)l HIS 1l:ET"H ! He'l.1-Be so~ HE WOWT' DREAM Of llARlll!».S ll I IME COO~,-Tl·-'E BUTLEI', ANP "Tile ' UPSTAI~$ 1i.:;:-.., MAID.'! 8ELIE'lf. ME1CAAf\JE.( 11'5 00 Bl& DEAL ! l,QJ1!' A CRocODILE SRI>! 1\Vlil'1S !OH AT ~ IOt!i:e PIJT OI) Oll5 0C EARrt1 TO l>O ! llW.-Ol:AA'- ,. '' . I '1 I' " o~ •11.er If By Dick Moores j1 By Charles Barsotti • ..rv: •• ,tt• ·'1u.ot~ ) --rr \ tJ ') ( l {I . "'} .._.._ ' ?~ ·' ~·, I \ , .""'!'(~ ~ . 1 I By Gus Arriola /, Bv Ferd Johnson AAE )OU l')(l>fCT~ A coNF•~ENCE C,AlL" 1=._,··~~:rv. ?'4\t.J~ .. By Ro9er Bollen ~ -~Ill) OW?UE- JIE: CAREFOL. 4'.JJ coo•r HI\ 1' lnVE! ,. ~ f. I I ~ -I -I DAILY CROSSWORD •.• by ' A. PO WER I THE GIRLS ACROSS 42 Ceortainties; 2 words l ~al! rriar 111~ 44 Old Enqh~h «11mal <tnlit letter S Hairless 45 Arrest · Sl.111q <J Fish •111! .i •& Prim.Jr'/ hoot and 111~ sourte 14 Rivtr of 47 "·-Mar°"'" Flanders 4'J Kind of !ontry lS Olein : Priefi ~ 53 Comts before lb Gave out in lime sparingly ~7 Bushed 17 Expos Of ~a Acttv -- Br1vrs r.rc~n~ 18 Human hPtlll S<l On lop of S!anq bl Roast ; FrP ricn 19 T~a1er hl F,1ulty at1d itnce bl S111g1 ~ 20 Kind of pot't h4 ls~11e w1tn 22 Thty .u1tlior1ty rep1rsr11t b) AdJU~! Jill',. othtrs t.6 Co111 of So11th 24 Duller Africa 2b Me!rlc uni t b7 SenatOl'S 27 lil ilitvy squild Abbr. 2'1 Compilss point DOWN JO Old TfSlamtnt book: Abbr. 1 Asstmbly of JJ Pat of ii rrta1I thi.chrs rst•lishmrn1 · 2 Not•ith- 2 words slandinq 37 lilMlne fliltris~ J First pre<nir1 38 Halley's·-of the USSR JIJ Any Ir~ \Ill' ( Distressing ctnltr condi tions (0 Tilblew;w~ ') Haircut sty1t i\tnl b Brtwtry (l lil ln~als fro"' product s which metals 7 Jumps lor.ard can be 8 Thrtt words t~tr11cttd on a road sign • Yestt rd<ty's Puzzle Solyt(!; ' 0 ' '" 'I St1C ~ fast JS Prophetic s1g11 l 0 Sna1e Jb Possessive 11 In low ~p1l•\S ·~d ll -ll!a1est y. J7 British WW ii Crime a9a1n sl f1ghtrr plane s tl•e stale 40 YUlnq prg IJ "East of -., (2 Ormand 21 Doctrine 43 Rocky ru H 23 Rock well -: 45 Most all1acto~r US attist ( 7 OtlPct 25 Coil.Stal area somrthing hills in automatically Morocco (8 P!iVlt usually 28 Kind of lyric horvin!} ytl1ow ""'' llow~s JO Natural 50 "Ethan -"· satellite ol #h;rton rKJve l the rarth 51 Ptfmil entry. J l "s rasy as l words railing off ·-52 Rrv1sr s -: 2 words 53 Rtsrmb ling 32 Trlr-scopr p;rt wings 33 Vtssrl fDI" 5( City of A !asl ~ transportir19 55 ·-Sl)!alrrr: frtiglit Nottd 3~ Made "" ba~ballrr Ol)!ning by '.>6 Soy's "amt" ripping 00 Agt<I JUDGE PARKER [ U EP HAVING THl5 DA'IDREN.\ .. [ :SEC. M,,-SELF li'EAR$ FRO,~\ t<J~ AT A HV6E 6ANQUIT ... i( '• .,. By Charles M. Sehulz ~~----~~~ THE MA5TER OF CERf,',\ONlt5 1.; INTRODliClNG Tl-iE HEAD TA6LE. MD WHEN HE 6fT5 ro fl\E, I Ai\ INTROOIJCED A5 A ~FORMER 6R~T /1 8Ef()Rf '<ti/ CAN llf A THAT '> f<IRMERERfAT.'CHARLIE W/<AT el!JWN. 'IUV HAl'E "I> llOTttE•< 8EA"6R£AT~. /\IE! ( lll'""=--Q!P'""'=·"· -~=--=·-~-~W-H-,-.-H-,-s,-.-.~~,-o-.-(-,-,• MEAN~I LE .. MISS PEACH NO, $.RA, WI" 00 NOT GNI: C'OMP~TION NOTIS , 'GOl ~CrAW"V; \1011 Pl.AV THAT DID~'T !\WOW J.IOW AGA1W' llTEIZ"L HE. w"s ! TMiN MOW WIL~ TMa WOii.i> KllOW 'i'M C:UllD ~ By Mell ,. ' l.__~..!!.........!!.~====~:!._ ____________ .:J::C::.:::::'.!:!..-~"'~""".'.'. '-"~~ PERKINS By John Miies ,_ -~ Ir Ii ~ )l ~ r 0 0 .. 0 • "' "I ju!lt loi·r: the Nhtrry fur brldJCf' pnrtle~ -Ille lo!St:rs a r• always j11sl Oli'I huppy U!I !ht winner,." DENNIS THE MENACE , ' ' ·~LU-... 2-a • ' IF 'JOIJOA LIVED lflCl( iH 1HOSE 11\VS. llcM, I !!ET 'ltllJ COUUl4 llEEN A l'/lllrtESS 'ST<AO ~A HOOSl:WIFE ! ' • I ' . J DAJLV Pll OT Tuesday, f ebruary 8, 1?72 "-"'~~~~~~~~~~_:_~ U.S. Sl{ating Pair Fourth Behind Russian·s SAPPORO, Japan (AP) -Marie- Therese Nedlg of Switze rland had to ••ercome history and a b I i n d i n g 190wstorm -and she did . Jo Jo Starbuck and Ken Shelley or Downey had to ove rcome an Iron Curt ain troika -but lhey didn't. Now it's showdown time for the United States hockey team, trying to encore one big upset with an even bigger one -a tri umph Wednesday night against the defending champion Soviet Union. The lit tl e Swiss Miss, the Cinderella l.irl of these 11th Winter Olympic Games, c:;..._y.._ • .:.1~ v~-.; Reader's Hot Corner ~~~~~ or-'-t.a itr. White : The following is wr itten with reference to your column of 1125/72 in \\'hich you ask the followin g leadjng and rhelorical question "How many more fi ghts are going to break out between the Corona de! Mar High rooters and kids from other schools before Corona del Mar gets some active adult supervision and control for tha t hyper-enthusiastic crowd ?" Following that lead paragraph whi~·h is eloquent testimony to the fact that you were not even Jn attendance at the game in question, you proceed to indicate that "the ;iltercalion wa s hroken up before an~·fhing more se rious developed ." This was not acco1nplished by lelepathy or the playing of the National Anthem, hut rather by the immediate re sponse of four Corona del Mar Hig h School administrators. the CdM Athletic Director. two officers of the Newport Beach Police Department. and other members of the CdM faculty who were at the game either &s assigned super- ViS<lrs or interested supporters. The other point of your article lhHt hes val idi ty is the final sentence Ln wh ich you state th e obvious "with a jam-packed gym and a tense rivalry. the fight could have erupted into a full-scale free-fo r- a]!." (Emphasis added -mine .! The fact that the •;full·scale free-for- all" was averted should an swer your original question . The supervision and control was there and was more than adequate to handle the activities. I take particular issue with your disparaging remarks about the CdM crowd . In the first place, this particular Incident began when a Costa Mesa graduate who was seated, for some in· explicable reason , on the Costa Mesa team bench, turned and. without warning, punched a Corona del Mar student in the face . Secondly , that "hyper-active" CdM crowd did nothing other than stand to watch as the fight was broken up. They remained in the bleachers and responded very positively to my remarks regarding the emptying of the gym if a further in- cident developed. I find it interesting that the reporters In attendance at the game said nothing re~artling the incident in the ir storie~. It v1 ould seem !o me that in thls day when young people arc taking a critical look at the institutions of I h e f:stablishment that those of us "'ho com· prise that Establishment would do well to base our opinions and statements on ob- jectivity rather than emotion and facts rather than hearsay. Furthennore. the reportorial and editorial responsibilities that you hav e assurned are ill-served by the peevish, gossiP:.monger1ng that see ms to l'haracterize your column . You have c;iused me to examine my personal con- 1·1ctions regarding th e role of the press in a free society. For if a member of the press is irresponsible or biased, what recourse does the aggrieved partf have: 1 suppost' that writing this letter is one ans>A·er to thal question . Dennis L. Evans Princi pal, CdM High LA Faces Knicks In Televisio11 Tilt NE\V YORK -The Los Angeles Lakers hope to continue their latest win streak at seven tonight when they tangle with the host New York Knic ks in Madison Square Ga rden to open a four- game road trip. The game will be shown on television on Channel 5 at 6 o'clock . The Lakers could equal their total number of victories for the 1970-71 season by winning tonight against the team that was the last to defeat them at the Forum. New York won, 104-101 . on Jan. 21. • became only the second wornan In Olym - pic Alpine skiing history to win two gold medals. She did it today in the giant slalorn, nying into the teeth of a storm S-O severe that it forced a one-day postpone111ent ul the biathlon . Miss Nadig , a 17-yea r-old, chubby 5.- foo\·4 whiz, flew through the 1.240-met er ~1t. Tcine course in I minute 29 09 seconds for her second gold, once aga111 beating Austria 's Anne marie Proell as she had done last Saturday in the downhill . • What, she y,•as asked, would ~he have thought if someone had suggested a year ago that she might win a pair of golds? "I would have said you are crazy," she grinn ed . About rive hours after ~Iiss Nadig·~ tl11 'l 'V Tonight Cl1a1n1<'I ·I at 8:30, 11 ::JO !tat carne Jo Jo 's and Ken's challenge, an atlen1pt to dazzle their way in to a 1nedal in the pairs figure skating finals . They went inlo it fourth, trailing the UPI Tt!fP~oro FINISH .FOURTH -Jo Jo Starbuck and Ken Shelley of Downey placed fourth in the pairs figure skating finals today at the Winter Olympics. The Russian duet of Irina Rodnina and Alexei Ulanov captured the gold medal. Sports i1a Brief A11otl1er llono1~ £01~ Blt1e; Lave1~ Meets E1ne1·so11 Vida Blue. Oakland Athletics left· hander who captured a Cy Young award and breezed to the American League 's Most Va luable Player honor. is the runaway choice for California Athlete of the Year. Blue won the !971 honor with 138 JXJints, 87 more than runnerup Jerry \Vest of the Los Angeles Lakcrs, in votlng by Associated Prc:-s n1ember sports editors and sports <lircctors in Ca lifornia. Twenty-two ballot s listed Blue as the first choice on a 5-J-J point basis. Billie Jean King. first "-'Oman tennis pro to win more than SI00,000 in a year, finis hed third w·it h 27 points. • PHILADELPHIA -The Orange Coast area duo of Coron a de! f.-far's Rod Lave r and Roy Emerson or Newporl Beach col· lide ·in the first round of the U.S. pro· fessional indoor tennis tourne y here. Laver is second seeded in th e 32-man tourney while Yugoslav ia 's Nikki Pilic clashes with top seeded Ken Rosewall. other key singles matches opening day have Frank Freehling against Arthur Ashe and Charley Pasarcll facing Australian Davis Cup veteran Fred Stolle. The seedings for the lournament, which runs through Sunday. place Rosewall on top, followed by Laver, Tom Okker of The Netherlands, Ashe, South Af rica's Cliff Drysdale, Bobby lnti, t.1arty H!esscn, John Newcombr, John Alex - ander and Jeff Borowiak. In ttie doubles , Laver and En1erson ~rive been seeded No. L • LOS ANGELES -Tom Gorman and Zeljko Franulovic captured firsl·round matches Monday as the $40,000 lnterna- li ona l tennis tournament opened starting the 1972 Grand Prix tennis tour. Gorn1an used his strong serve to sub- due Adrianne Panatta 6-J, 6-4. Franulovic, seeded seventh in the tournamen t, was extended befo re defeating James McManus , 6-3, +6, 6-3. In a th ird afternoon match, Gerald Bal· Irick downed Onny Parun. 6-4, 7-5. fn the lone singles ma tch Monday night. fif lh-seeded James Connors knocked off Juan Gisbert 4-6, 6-1 , 6-2. • NE\V YORK -Catcher Josh Gibson. the Babe Ruth of the Negro Leag ues, and first baseman Walter "Buck" Leonard were elected to baseball's Hall of Faine today by the spec ial co mmittee on the Negro Leagues. GibS<ln was the unanimous choice of the nine-man s e I e c t i o n committee while Leonard was named on seven ballots - the minimum required for election. Russian duets of Irina Rodnlna and Alei:- ei Ulanov and Ludrnila Smlrnova and Andrei Souraikin and the thlrd-pJaCf; East German cou ple of ~lanuel Gross and Uwe Kagehnann. But Jo Jo and Ken 's twirling , brilllanlly executed routine, accompanied b y thunderou s t•heers from the 10,000 spec· tators at the indoor Makomanai Rink, was for nought as the two Russian pairs and the East Germans held their posi· tions for the gold , silver and bronze medals, leaving the Americans with only memories and a four th-place finish. Pros Scout Medalist Ja11et Ly11n SAPPORO, Japan (AP ) -Talent scouts are trai ling Janet Lynn with the same secrecy and urgency they applied to Peggy Fle·ming four years ago. They have lo be secretive and sly until the llttle ballerina on ice sheds he r amateur status. She wa nts to compete for the World Championships next month. If a pro£essiona l contract were in the works and if the word got out, she could race not only disqualification but also loss of her medal. Representatives of most of the major ice shows -~loliday On Ice, Jee Capades and The Ice Follies -reportedly are here scouting for professional talent. Janet and Karen Magnusscn of Canada are said to be the most desirable pro· spccts. The gold medalist, Trixi Schuba, is no t a flashy free skater and would be ln little demand. Janet couldn 't afford to talk about her professional hopes even if she \vanted to. Asked if she planned to turn pro- fessional after winnin g America's second bronze medal of the 11th Winter Olympic Games Monday night, she replied softly :. "I don"t know." Miss Lynn, the 18-year-ol<_l daughter of a Rockford, Ill., pha rrTiaCls t. ca n't bargain with a gold medal as Miss Flem- ing did four years ago at Grenoble . But she has the reputation of being the most exciting figure skater since Sonja Henie. ''The little girl simply radiates." said Otto Lang, a coach and director ·who helped make an American screen star of Miss Henie. The Norwegian star won the first of three Olympic gold medals in 1928 at the age of 14. Janet was as glowing ~1onday night in f.1akomanai Arena as the hot pink thigh- high skating dress she wore. At 5·fool·I and 107 pounds, she looked li ke a storybook doll atop a music box as she tw irled to a third-place fW..<;h. She tumbled once -as at least a half- dozen others did -but she gracefully regained her composure. seemingly without losing the continuity of her choreography. ··r was coming out of a jump into a sit spin and I just sorta sat" she said. "lt can happen any lime. This is a slippery sport." Nrvertheles>:, she was lhe jewel of !he judges, receiving seven 5.9 marks and two 5.Bs for technical merit and a perfect 6.0 for artistic impression fr om the Swedish offi cial. Other marks for her im- aginative performance that gave he r the free skating title included six 5.9s and !lro 5.Ss. lier weakness, which cost her a silver and poss'ib!y a gold mednl. is the CTlm· pulsory figures th at count 50 percent of the over-all total. In the compulsories she finished fourth . Her coach of 13 years, Slavka Kohou t, has been her instructor in choreog raphy but not compulS<lries, ln an effort to become an Olympic champion, Janet employed Pierre Brunet to polish her figure eights, but there just wasn't enough time. Soccer Ref Killed; Team in Jail CORDOBA, Argentina -An entire soc- cer team was in jail here Sunday after a linesman was attacked and kicked to death during a game squabble, police said. Agustin Bazzo died from internal in- juries. The club is the Sportivo Rudals, a team made up of local nonprofessional players. After one Sportivo Rural player was e:tpelled from the fie ld, his teammates attacked referee Oscar Fragot. When Bazzo came to his aid, the players turned on hlm, police said. It's Frustration Day for Billie Jean FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla . (A P) BUile Jean King wasn't just beaten. she wu massacred. Olris Evert, teenage darling of !he "Net S.t," saw the old pro was wave.ring and moved in for the kill . "MY game ltwlk from the start." said Mtt. KJng, who ,-on '100,000 on the tennis courts *"yeit. ''She ~Id tell it. Chris kepi kiiatklnl Ille ~.!J.~ c k , waiting for mi td'.iiiab Ille mU a. And , baby, I made 'tm." The 17-ycaMld MI 11 Evert, the I I heroine of Forest Hills in 1971 despite gelling smashed by Billie Jean in the semifinals, got herself a rematch Mond1y and it was strictly no contest. "Let's face it , Billie Jean wa.'J never in It," said the ponytailed cuti e, who thrilled a hometown crowd of 3,500 In the finals of the $25,000 Women's Intornational. "Alter three games, I knew she was in deep trouble." Chris methodically buried Mrs. King 6- 1, 6-{I on a day or pure frustration ror the 23--year-old Ca.li(ornian. "I'm anxious to see what happens to her career after all this attention," said a frazzled-looking Billie Jean. "lf she comes out on tour, she'll find out the fa cts or life." Miss Evert ca nnot, according to tennis rules. become a pro prior to the year in which her 19th birthdRy falls. She will be 18 next December, opening the way for tour play in J11nuary 1973. 11I th ink I'll try It," Chris said of the pro circuit. While 99 percent of the turnaway throng cheered for the local favorite, a small knot of spectators kept yelling, "Go get her, Billie Jean." Miss Evert ki:-.,v the rounds. "Those. were fellow tour r yers clapping for her. They stick together." ! Chris' serve, a powder puff job at Jo~orcst Hills, had more zip this time, bul Mrs. King said "l don't think her game has changed that much. Her serve still isn't that hot." ) There was 80ffie slight advancement for the Americans, though. Atellssa and Mark Militano, the brother and sister tearn from Di.x Hills, N.Y .. \vho went into the finals in eighth, moved up one spot. The independent youngsters -they wore loose, mod blue lavender c:ostumes instead of the usually light-fitting, black- and -white outfits despite the knowledge it would lower their ratings in the t'On- servative figure skating world ~ receiv- ed applause greater than any other cou - ple, And when their artistic scores were flashed. ranging from a low S.2 to 5.7 \I the ratings in which 6 is perfect, the crowd loudly booed the judges. Meanwhile world chan1pi on A11dre l Nepcla of Czechoslovakia \1V1k ~ cuin· manding lead in the men's figure skallng after three of the six compulsory figures . Czechoslovakia's high-powered l1Uckcy tea1n r('bounded from its stunning !11on0av night loss to the United State5 with a ·7-l trium ph over f''inland 'fuesda;.r that vaulted the Czechs to the top of the Class A standings, Protliro Criticized Deacon Steaming Over Trade to SD By MlL'fON RICllMAN SAN JUAN, P.R. (UPI J -Deacon J ones is unhappy. Terribly unhappy. The big 33-year-old one-time defensive terror for the Los Angeles Rams isn't so burned up about them sending hi m to San Diego, it's the way they did it that's got him hot. ''I gave Los Angeles a lot of ag::iny and pain, all the footbali I had in me," Jones said. "I'm responsible for a lot of their 1vins. The least they can do is treat me like a professional. like a gentleman . What arn I , just some piece of m<l"£hinery or sun1ething'? "Look. 1'111 not mad abou t being traded. I sort of sensed I would be, and I \\'anted to be for personal reasons I don 't want to go into, "B ut I certainly thought it'd be handled better and that's what got me so mad. I expected to be traded like a man. not ;i tool. A man expects to be dismissed from a ball club privately. I was hired in private; I expected to be fired in pr ivate. They never even gave me that courtesy." Deae'on Jones, seven times all·pro at defensive end, v.•as sent packing a •veek ago Saturday. The ftams wrapped hin1 up in a bundle with de fensive tackle Greg \l/ojcik, a former Orange Coast star, and Lee Vl'hite, a running back off the taxi squad, and turned over the whole kit and kaboodle to the Chargers for linebacker Jeff Staggs and three draft choices. The first Jones knew or the deal was in a phone call from a TV newsm an - "How did he kno\V about it before n1e?" -and 10 minutes later there was another call from Tommy Prothro, the Rams' coach. Jones took both calls at Roman Gabriel's \'-'edding reception . "Prothro used some of the worst tac- tics in the world." Jones ,says, still steaming. "\Vhen he call ed me he told me J"d been traded to Sa n Diego. I just said thank you ve ry much and hung up . That v.·as it. Goodbye . "if they th ink the years are cat ching up with me, that I can 't do it anymore. they've got some more thinking to do. l feel I'm very fortunate to be traded to San Diego, and this is gonna be one of my greatest years. I've been MVP, I've won 150 trophies in the, league the last 10 / years, but I'1n gonna do even better lhis year. "I'm not a negative thinker. You gotta beat me and you gotta keep beating me. That 's right , l"m breathing fire. Just like a damn dragon. I'm acc ustomed to bei ng the best. I feel I still am and I'm gonna prove it. That's not a brag either. That"s a fact." There are a couple of theories about why the Rams let go Jones, once con- sidered the finest defensive end in all pro football. The first theory is that the Deacon is gelling along in years and the Rams have themselves a dandy replacen1ent in newcomer Jat·k Youngblood, v.·ho looked so good in hi s first year. The second theory is that Jones sud- denl y developed a hole in him and that it v.·as becoming easier to run at him and over him . "l can"t buy that al all ," said Kansas City's Ed Podolak, who "'as hitting the ball every bit as good as he runs it last \'.'eek in the Am erican Airlines Gol f Cl::issic in which Jones also participated. "Alan Page and Nick BuonJl'.Onli ca n be run at also, sometimes, but not with any degree or regularity. The same can be said of Jones. The sin1ple truth involvi ng the Rarn!I dealing a\1•ay Deacon Jones is that Prothro probably is buying time. George Allen , v.'ho doesn't believe much in rookies, left Prothro a relatively old club when he departed for Wa shington. Prothro now has to build up the Ram~ again, inject some youth in them, and thal"s "'hY he'd Jet someone like Jones go for a younger linebacker and a couple of draft choices. So the whole th ing could go back to George Allen, v.•ho, ironically o r other•Yise. drew support from JoneS dur· ing the fan1ous Ch ristmas Eve Jiring by the late Dan Reeves a couple of years back. Deacon Jones d()('sn'l want to kno w about that though. All he ca res about now is showing the Rams he has plenty left . All he wants to do is be with a Super Bo1vl v.'inner. .. lt"s the only thing I've never done," he says. "It's the only thing that keep! me playing." /I Bird's Eye .View Jim Creighton of the University or Colorado jumps high In the air to pass off lo a leammale over the heads of Oklahoma State's Ralph Ras- muson (41) an d Kevin Fitzgerald. Oklahoma State's Cowboys won 72-53, for their first conference victory. ' • .~. -;--,•, i •• '1 f I •••1 ' ' . . ,, , .. , ,,,,, .. , ... -··\>• ·< .. ••••• ,_. <e OAJl Y PILOT J1 HB, Lions Vie for CIF Berth I DAILY P ILOT P ho!• ~y Rlcllonil K•elll•• PARDON MY REACH -Huntington B eac.h liigh coach George Clemens crashes through DAILY PILOT defenders Glenn \Vhite (left) and Jim Niemiec while mate Paul \Vood (right ) is shoved out of the way . Clemens and his Huntin gto n coach ing cohor ts fa ce Marin a coaches Monda y night at Huntington in a co-fea- ture with a match between the DAILY PILOT and CIF administ rators. Area JCs Vie Baseball Classic Set W ednesda)' Orange Coasl will host Mt. San Jarinto. Golden West takes on visiting College of lhe Canyons and S a d d I e b a c k meets host Santa Ana in first round games of the first an- nual OCC baseball tourney Wednesday .. In another first round till, Riverside and Cypress clash at TeWinkle Park in Costa Mesa . All opening round games are set fo r 10:30. Second round championship and consolation tilts gel under way at 2:30, Golden West is the pre- tourney favorite off i ls performance last summer and pre-season scrimmages. The Rusl!crs captured the Metropolitan surnn1er league l.itle :1nd opened thtir season Saturday with a 2-1. JI-inning victory over Saddleback. Saddleback's Gauchos have " l-2 record to dale while Wednesday's game will be the opener for Orange Coast. Golden West coach Fred Hoover will open w i t h S<lphomore left-hander Dave Klungreseter on the m o u n d against Canyons. a club that finished 18th in the slate la st year. Canyons compiled an 18- 9 mark ih ·71. Fritz is undecided about a. starting pitcher. but has received s parkling performances from r i g h t • handers Tom Ne.Ison and Mike l\1ae·s. The Gauchos defeated Mt. San Jacinto, 3-1, in their opener. then fell to Rio Hondo (18-7 ) and c:olden \\'est Champion ship a n d con- solatJon bracket games are slated for F'riday and Sa tur- day afternoons at Orange Coast and TeWinkle. Monarchs Host Pius Tonight If coach Jerry Tardie's Mater Dei Monarch basketball team is to gain a CIF playoff berth. a vic tory over Pius X ton ight is a must. The Monarchs host the War- riors in an Angelus League contest in the small Mater Dei gym with tipoff at 7. Jn a first round meeting between the two teams, Pius X copped a 56-46 decision and coupled with a pair of losses to league leading Serv ile. are the only blemishes on Tardie's crew's record . Mass acre Cagers In Action Tip:iff zero hour for the SL Valenljne 's Day massacre a la 1972 is quickly approaching as participants in lhe Monda y night basketball twin bill hone for action. Combatants in the 7 o'clock show at f{untingt on Beach ~l igh , the DAILY PILOT sports staff and the CJF ad- ministrators. will wind up outside action· today as the writers fa ced Marina. The CIF had its final scrum last week against Gahr High coaches "'hich prompted CIF captain land commissioner ) Ken Pagans to say : '"Mike Peck is in the worst shape of any man J've ever seen." Peck is being counted upon to offset the DAILY PILOT"s dc<1 dly balanced scoring. Huntington Beach coaches went into a secret workout to- day following their scrimmage wilh lhe writers last week . Reportedly. they were tryi ng lo I.each Elmer Combs and Paul Wood to play with the use of a wheelchair. And at Marina, the Vikings' quintet was out to best Hun- tington's imposing showing against the DAILY PILOT with Jim Stephens and Leon Wheeler expected to do most of the damage -whether it be to themselves or their op- posi tion. Tickets are on sale at Marina and Huntington Beach High wllh adu lt ducats selling for 7S cents. Students and children will be admitted for 50 cents. Westminster and Huntington Beach clash tonight in a key Sunset League basketball bat- tle that may go a long way to determine who makes the CfF' AAAA playoffs as loop run- nerup. Jl gets under way nt 7 o'clock and the host Jlun- tington Beach Oilers of coach Elmer Combs a re s I i g h t favorites to dispose of Don Leavey's Lions. Tht latter quintet t7-3) is a game behind H u n t i n g ! o n Beach t8-2) in loop standings Upse t Bug Concerns lrvi11 e Duo Clf" AAAA b a s k e t b a I I playofr berths are virtually locked up by Corona del Mar and Los Alamitos, co·leaders in Irvine League circles with 9-1 records. Coach Tandy Gillis' Corona del Ma r Sea Kings and the Griffins of Los Alamitos lead their nearest competitors - fo'ountain Valley and Magnolia -by three games with four games remainin g in loop hostilities. The major concern for each leader now is simply to stay away from the upset bug to qualify for no worse than co- champion.shi p of the Irvin e League, There are, ho w e v e r , numerous possibilities open in the 32-team field of the AAAA playoffs and there is always the chance that a third-place team can qualify for a playoff berth. Thus Fountain Valley's in- vasion of Corona de l Mar tonight is paramount to any chance the former might have of grcibbing a piece of the playoffs. Tipoff is set for 7 o'clock in the CdM confines, a.; are all Jrvine clashes tonight. Other confrontations include Costa Mesa at Los Alamitos. Edison at Santa Ana Valley and Magnolia at Estancia. Coach Dave Brown's FV Barons have proved tough competitors despite four loop losses. The Barons snapped back F'riday to stun host Magnolia after fa lling by only two p:iints to Los Alamitos two nights prior. Uppermost in F o u n ta i n Valley's attack is the re- bounding and scoring strength of 6-9 ~ Scot t Re ider and 6-~ Bill Burns. That duo must contend with Corona's tandem of 6-5 Mike Sevier and 6-5 John Sumner and it was the latter com- bination whi ch proved best in fir st round action. Corona's addillonal guard strength, plus a tough bench, makes Gillis' crew the favorite. Coach Emil Neeme's un- prcdict:1ble Costa M e s R Mustangs could provide the shocker of the night if their fast break offense is clicking. The Mesans' defense is also a major question mark after allowing 80 per opponent in JO loop outings -the most points scored on any Irvine League quintet. Coach Dave C a r I i s I c ' s Estancia midgets are in deep against tall Magnolia \vhile coach Dave Mohs' Edi30n Charges figure to have a breather against winless Santa Ana Valley. Edison's Greg Parker has averaged 19.3 in his last th ree starts and that fig ure may be upped if his hot han d continues from outside, OCC coach Barry Wallace has been getting top pitching performances from r i g h t - handers Dan Quisen berry and Steve Hedri ck, along with lefty Tim Gramm in scrimmage sessions, and one of the th,ree i!I expected to open against Mt. Sa n Jacinto. Saddleback coach D o u g Orange Coa!lt Tourney Pa lrln g' cnr1& round) The Monarch coach feels his team will have to get off to a better start than in the firll"t meeting when nine straight missed fie.Id goals put Mater Dei In the hole hardly before the game 5l.'\rted . The Monarchs n e v e r recovered . Laguna Tests Raiders; Trojans Duel Pacifica (all 10:30 a.m. sames) Mt. San Jacinto at Orange Coa1t Cypress vs . Riverside at TeWinkle Park Canyons al Golden West Saddleback at Santa Ana (second roandl (all 1:31 gamu) Cyprea&-Rtverside w i n n er vs. Orange Coat1t·Mt . San Jacinto winntt at Orange CoaJJt Santa Ana-Saddleback win- ner vs. Golden West-Canyont winner at Golden West Cyprest1-Rlvcrslde loser vs. Orange Coast-Ml . San Jacinto -• loter at TeWinkle J'ark Santa Ana·Saddleback loaer vs. Golden West-Canyom loser at Sant.a Ana. "We wUI also have to stop their big boy, Karl Krug ," Tardie admits readily . Krug SC1lred 16 points In that first game. 14 of lhem in the first half as the"Warrlors mov· ed out to a substantial 29-21 adv9ntage at the lnterrofssion. Al the present time, Plus X leads Mater Dcl by one game with a 4-2 league record com- pared to 3-3 for the MonarcM. Rick Kniffin, Mater Dei's leading scorer with 366 points In 20 gamei; for an 1!1.3 average. will draw the wlgn· ment of trying Ul stop Krug. Other probable Monarch starters Include G e o r g e Herold ( 11 . 41. Greg Green (11 .81, .Jclf Kiley and prob•bly John Adams. Each coming off a def~t last Friday ni ght. the basket- ball teams from Laguna Beach snd University high schools will take different pa'tbs i.n search of victories tonlghl In a pair of 7 o'clock games. For coach Jerry Fair's La~na Arlisl.<. they'll be trying to get back on the win- ning trac k while staying In shaky contention for a CIF AA pasUeaaon playoff berth. They test Sonora's Invading Raiders In an Orange League tu ssle. John Driscol1 '11 University Trojans, meanwhile. w 11.1 d~part from lbe Or11ngc loop slate for one nlJJht when they encounter Paci llca In 1 non· league Ult at the home base of the. Garden Grove League Mariners~ Laguna was blitied M-47 by Sonora, tbe 1971 Clf AA titl ist, in a first round e.n- counter st the Raiders' gym and the Artists are currently operating under a manpawe.r short.age. With just eight varsity players. Artist mentor Fair's mdat recent problems have been trying to overcome guard Jay Nel50n'~ flu bug and the swollen Ankle of 6-3 junior forw ard Norm BedC?ll. Playmaking guard Chuck .Corwin picked up some of the M:Ori ng ~lack left by BedeU's 8bsence In t'riday'5 M·42 set- back at Valencia as he threw In 16 point>. And owns a palr of \•ictorlts over dangerous Western, the quintet that earlier destroyed llunlington's dreams or a Sunset League championship, It's Western which shocked Huntington Beach 74-71 in firs l round play and coupled with Marina 's conquest of t!1e Oilers, the latter f i n d lhemselves two games behind the undefeated Vikings. Westminster nearly shut off Huntington in the fir st round but a horrendous start lone for 18 from the floor 1n the first perlOd I killed the Lions. Leavey sitys he will employ different tactics this time . '"We'll try to be a little mort cautious playing defense. They were 25 for 31 from the free throw line againsl us last tin1e. "\\'hen )'OU send a Hun- tington Beach player In the line he usually connects." Sfl}J Lcavey. Too, \\1estminster v.·ill be trying to derail Hunting ton with the Additional heln of Glenn Lantaff and Mike ~a~r. Case (6-4 ) was a rcserv~ earlier while Lantaff missl?d 27 days because or a foot ln- JUf)'. Combs s1tys he doesn 't ex- pect anything radically d1r- ferent from the West minster atlack. And it 's not really what Westminster's offense Cilll do that worries him . His prin)ary concern rests with his own leain"s rr- bounding and d r f e n !'. 1 \' e de sires. ")''rankl y I ha \'en 't brcn ·All-county T ean1 S elected; Reed Du,e to Lea ve Colonv \Vhen it comes ti1ne lo make all-league. area and Orange County ba sketball selections it'll be a dilemma for sure as il usually ls. Orange County has produced a large amount or ta lent lo work with and it's not just seniors and juniors who must be dealt with . With more than a dozen promising fre sh- men and sophomores running amuck il only seems fitting that an AU-Orange County fresh. man-sophomore basketball team be named. After considerable scrutiny the quintet is as follows : A pair of sophomore blue chippers are Troy -----ROGER CARL.'iON .. ---------=- Hi gh "s "Mark Wulfemeyer (6-0 ) and Foothill's Jeff Welshans 16-6 ). And the Big Five wouldn 'l be complete "'ithout freshman standouts 8-0b Losner of Marina (6-5) and Servlte's Dennis Smith (6-4 ~i). The fifth player lo make it is a fellow whn has never played in a high school test. It"s Rick Dunn of Orangeview Junior High in Anaheim, a feeder school for Western . Rick is the younger brother of Western's Mi ke Dunn a11d Western coach Marv Blcmkcr says he 'd probably be a starter on the Pier neer's varsity if the school accommodated ninth graders. He's 6-2 and Tu stin Boys Club coach Don \Vebb opines he'll be better than his older brother before he's th rough. Webb had both of the Dunns in his program .; through the eighth gr·ade l('v('I, \Vulfemyer, Losncr. Smith and \Velshans all are varsily starters -bul n1ore than th<1t they arc integral parts or their tcani's at . ta ck . Wu lfemcyer n1ight ha ve !he best. nioves of any guard in the county and Losner"s poise and overall abilily is ren1arkabl e for a fresh- man . Welshcins h11s do n1lnated the insidl' game with his size while Sn1it h has shown the · abil- ity to board with an yo ne and :1\ the same time is able to mnvc ou t and hit consistcnlly from outside lhc key. It's a formidable {iu1ntel and il \11ould pro- vide ii heckuva challenge to 11ny county prep contingent. Others who came in for consideration are all sophomores. They are ~1ission Viejo's Steve Black:fr (6-1 ). Costa Mesa's .John Cummins (6-4 ), l,aguna Be<1ch's Dave Kiesselbt1ch l6-2l, Estancia's Budd y Confer !6-0l. Huntington Beach's Scoll Rankin !S-0) and Orange's Jlarry Elliott (fi-51. Also Kennedy 's Mall Porter (~-.1\, Sanl;.i Ana Valley 's R. B. Jamison I fi.2 ). foun ta in Valle y's Tim Hill (fi..4) and Univcr:11!y "s Paul Simon (6-2). * * * Anaheim High basketha11 coach Neil Reed has resigned his position effccllve at the end of this campaign. The Colonists own the only \vinlcss re cord in CIF' AAAA or AAA c1rcltis. It's said that Hrcd Is searching for :111 as- sistant post in collegiate classification At this writin~ Heed's quintet is 0-17 anrl prospects for a victory appear dirn Last year the Sun set LeAgue rulert Rceri had to sit out a year as coach in the Howard Carson/Santa Anal Anaheim squabble. Sunset Hostility Continues Vikings Still Sailin g, Clirnb to 5tli in CIF Upset-minded Santa Ana 's Saints intrude upon the Sunset League-pacesetting M a r i n a Vikings in a circuit basketball test tonight while the Newport Harbor Tars trek to Western in another Sunset contest Both games are slated to begin at 7 o'clock with Santa Ana and Newport victories in either having to be considered surprising if the y happened . Coach .Jim Stephens of the top rater! te:im in Orange Count y -Marina -thinks his Vikings can overcome the San- ta Ana threat without adding anything special to the attack. Marina High 's Vikings con- linue as Orange County's No. l team acco rding to the officia l top JO as selected by the DAI- LY P ILOT. The Vikes upped their win- ning streak to 10 with a pair of Sunset League victories. And their prestlge in CIF' AAAA circles was boosted as they advanced to fifth place. La Habra ( 19-1 ) ls third U ni corns Win, 26-15 behind Verbum Dei Pasadena. Corona del Mar. and Servile moved up a notch to seventh and eighth in the CIF while Huntington Beach remains 10th in the poll by Southern Cal ifornia sp:irtswriters. Covina stays atop the AA A despite loslng to West Covina, 62-6 1. ORA ... QI COU ... TT TOP If "ot. T••m 1'0111!1 1, M~tl"I ll~·J l JO 1, l• 1-1.ll>r• (!t·l l ·~ J, H11n!ln9!on 8•Ac~ !ll·ll J7 ~. lot "'ltmllc• f1 1·•l ?I j , .Sorvl!e (:IO·l\ " e. K"1•fl8 (19·' 10 I, C11r11n1 <!•! MAt (11°1) <; ~. W!!!m lntl•• II•·'> 11 9 €1 Ootn<11> n •·ll 10 10 Tr11v 11J.e1 ,., 0""°'"· G•tden G•o~• 11 ... t J 1. ~vnnv Hill1 Cl 1·101 ''> (I, TH It ... P•1, Tel... l'OIMI l. Verbvm Oe l 111•1! I/) Says Stephens, "we"!I just play our re1<:ul<'r 1·2-2 zone de fense and hope we play the game we're c a p a b le of playing. l . P111<1en1 f1l·ll '" The Huntington Be. a ch J. L• 1-1111•• tU·IJ 111 4, MQt"!nt1l!le t 19·H !QA Unico rn s continued their win-J. M••ln• 1JJ.11 11 1. R1rT't<lnt llO·ll 10 ning streak in the second 1. Coron• <l!I M•r r11.n .so d .. , f th S th I, S.rvl!t (1t·31 •I 1v1s1on o e o u er n '· Lr.• ll••cn w 11101 11().'1 j' C 11.f ' R b U ' 'th 10 O • O•• P~o1 ! 6-•J J pleased with our defense tr rebounding a.IJ year. W •• haven 't been consistent," 11y1• Combs. Lately 11 's been Tom Crunk,', however. com ing to the Oilers' aid in those departmenu. Crunk accounted for 14 re·· bounds against Loara. Crunk and mates Steve Brooks aRd J !m "1orthy ac- coun ted Jor 64 of lfuntlngton's A4 in f!r~I round act inn against \Vesrminslrr -and 10 were frorn the free throv.• line. l(ey Tiffs For Diablo, SC Fi ves l\1 ission VieJn . San Clemente and ~~l Modenil are currently locked up In Or<inge Count y'• best prep basketball race as the Crestview League toughics gear fo r the final four tests ot thP year, 1'hey aren't shooting for tht league championship -that title belongs to undefeated Katella, a four -game runaway cham pion. Second place, however. has its re wards too. And that's a Clf' AAA p!ayof( berth. All three are hoo ked up with 6-4 • loop marks and tonight's agen- da could shake it up. 1'he blggesl headache for any of the contenders i!I at Katella whcr·e the Knight~ await coach John Baker's San Cl emente Tritons. It gets under way at 7 o'clock as does the Mission Viejo clash wit h host Villa Park and Orange's right at El , Modena . Baker 's quintet ~.as won four in a row and turned what a~ peared to be a disastrous loop campaign into a contending one. Katella's 10 circuit "'ins h;ive come by m a r g i 11 s averaging 22 points each and I.he Knig hts won by 24 over San Cleme nte at the la tter's · court In first round action. Coach Pat Roberts' Mission • Viejo sq uad captured five in a ' row before running into the ' Katel!a juggernaut Friday and ' the Diablos coach is hopeful his team can return lo the form that proved successful against Orange, El Modena and Tustin. The Diablos' adve rsary is an , un predlctable one. Ville Park is but 2·8 in leogue play and shares the cellar with Tuiilin . One of their win:; was a 27· poin~ rout of Foothill. Mission Vlejo's forte ha' been in the balanced att ack it presents with 6-1 for ward Gil Norma ndic's inside shooting augmented by the play o( senior Craig Cit ro and junior' Rob Ferguson and M J k e Bowen. And another item lhat must slick in both Mission Viejo and San Clemente I ho u g h t ll 1 despite the immediate pro- blem , is the confrontation at Mission Viejo Thursday night when these two contenders colli de. Cage Scores "Last tlme we met them (a 60-43 Marina win \1 we pretty mucti controlled them up at their place. But they're not as easy as many people have said they are. because they have good shooters. good boards and a good aggressive defense a ornJ a ug Y n1on WI a Huntlni•on eutn lll·Jl 11 26-15 victory over the Cisco ,,~":~~~ HS~~r.v?'T!· ~:~nt.1•&t~1~: ~:' ~~·.'~0''$1."';'."~':.":,.!::1~rw1"• !l's, Manhattan Beach, Sun-Fon11n1. San M•rcot1 At~1mb••, 1'1101 1"4wtton ,,, D•nvtr " they·re certainly not pushovers.'' The Vikings ( JG-0 in loop ac- tion and tS-4 overall ) will be confronting one or the league's best outside shooters in guard Bob Woolsey, a 1,.6 scorer. If Marina is to ma intain Its 10-game win skein it will have to get a continued steady game out of guard Bruce Miller, freshman forward Bob Losner and 6-7 center Dean &gdan. The latter has con- trolled the boards in most Vike conquests. Newport. which beat Santa Ana <>5 1 by a 74-70 count Friday night . owns a 3-7 loop record and has had coach Dale Hagey sc ratching his h~.ad at times. When the Sailors are hot, It's u.'iually southpaw forward BUI McKinney banging ahots In from tM corners. 1e .. ,MM A•w.rl111t l it, .... 935.7777 d t W t T H. h Ver~1. W1rr•n, Mill kin, eur~nk. Mio•-"' II, 1 __ , ''''' 11 ay a es trra~e 1g . ""'• .... ,,... "•I. TN lft .. olnll Ol<!tllGml Sl1I• tt, Colort l!I) » The win brought the 1. co~1n1 "'''l 111 01c11~ n, "'lb•••~• 111 Unicorns' record lo 4-0, mak-3~· K~~111,'1ii";) 110·11 l~: ~:~'::: '!. GP°!"!1'11!~"u" l'ng them the only unbeaten 1 cim1rmo 11' n PJ v1,,1 .. 1. 101, "'''''"' ,_, '' .5, llellflOWfr fl&·~, "I .... club in the 1n team league. • cn1r11r O.k I' ·'I '' ,..,," Ciro•h,. •1. °""''"' •1 V-I S1nr1 M,;,10 I ..; •• Ko1111ick~ 11, Aub<lrn 11 Four players scored tries • RoHln! ""/' 1 • ,. Wttt trn 1<..,111ckv 11, D1'flon " f •. Monte .,, U·JI )J "'· C1ron111 101, H, C•rollN l!O!t ,, or the Unicorns-Jim Huartc . 10 C1111•t1 1111 111.n ?• r..,114111" 11, V•ndlrlll•t 15 J ·1m Lio d D Sch 'd 011"'': 11:19111111. G•rn, D•111rd, C11 LSU 61, M luln •N I "'" .o Y , anny ne1 er 1-111~, G•r(i.n G•OY•· M•rl•lr, a11Mn. d D M • H1 ! Ml C I 11 !!ICIOU l\09 ~IOrki. Sl1!t 10.C, $011111 Altll•-N an ave CNllt -W i I h Mo'...iiom.i•v. ••m•' 11 ~. 1 Al•llemo fJ, Ml11!11l9Jll " Sch neide r converting two and ,r •oio-OiiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOi;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;OiiiOi;;;;;;;;Oii;;;;;;;;i kicking two penalty goals. Cage Resull.s JV ••M•1t1>11'1 111111elt !JU 011 Co111 MMe 01Vrll1 l'l ft lUI ~""1111 Pirtlt IU I' !') Sfl•t1r 8 1111o111141 nu c (4) k"'"'•r "rice (21 G (t i MlllllY $11N<ov 011 O Ill Hl<~m~ri H1ll!lm.; Cosll Mot• :'.Ill. £1l111elt )0 £1l1ri(i. 1corlt11 1ull1 -M'd<kn t, Thorno1<1f! 1, Kl•'>, ~: COllO Mo.._ .Cor· 1,,. Wiii -Dolm" 12, Sllfo'fl .), Allffl 1, IMMEDIATE DELIVERY! PANTERA by deTomasn . , , lmr.ortrd f(tr Uncoln4 Mcrcury, Jtallan COA<'hW()rk cre111.td by the brilliant Chill Studios Qt Turin. Ford dc'i:IJtned lht 351 00 4V V-8 ena:IM. Four wht<el In• d~pentnt au1pen1ion and mid·ahlp ensine place.ment. Fiv• 1~ iC&r box. fully 1ynctlronlzed _ .. "Pantera , •• Itallan lor Panther • , , o,,. (' ··~111 .,,,,,,,,f/ ,,_ ~ on & son I • • I \ • ~·"·"--D_>J_L_V_P_IL_OT ____ -s:_ ___ T ~'W:ay, Ftbr111ry 8, iq12 Yo111· ltJ011ey Wl1at Co11stitutes 'Organic' Food? By SYLVIA PORTER The boon1 Jn orgaruc food s -at prices as much a.s 50 pe1 . ( rnt above their regular (:ounterparls -ls reaching ne" heights dn1ly an(! ate\ er\ le\ el Nearl} I 000 organle lood farn1s are 110\V 1 egi~tered with OrganH· Gardening n1a gaz111P -<ind the grO\\-ing uf o r j,:!,l1\11r foods is rap1dl v btco1n1ng. a key lo the SUf\ IVIJ,] Of n1a11~r small family far!'lls Al lea~l J 400 stores arc no\\ selling the foods and the fat profits poten tial from this ~ategorv 1s also a key to the :>11rv1 v11l or 1n11ny small retail stores As fur vou vour purchases in organic food ~tores thi" year \\ill 1otal $400 m11llon whnlcRale \ alul:' fou1 times 1970 s le\ el Exa('tly what conslllutc:s 'organic ' fcl(>(I" Accordlng to the National Farmers Organ1zal 1on in lov.a 11 1s "food grow11 v.1lhout pesl 1c1des grown w 1 l h o u t artif1c1al fer 11l1ze1 s gro1vn in soil v.hosc hu1n us content is increased by the addition or organic matter" and • food which has not been treated with preservatives, hormones. ant1b1otscs etc But the deceivers and gypsters .ire now crowding 111- to thts explocltng field and making a mockery of the defm1t1on, AJJ kinds of packagers are buying up ordinary foods Jabehng them "organic" and passing them off on naive retailers and an mnocent pub he Says Paul Hawken presi dent of Erewhon Trading Co one of th e nation 's largest organic f o o d wholesalers "Ninety percent of t be 'organlc' apple Julee no11 being sold 1n Cal1forn1a 1s not made from organically grown apples At least ball of the organ1cally grown rice now be.mg sold on the East Coast, isn't " ' I-low, then, can )-OU , a food shopper \\1ho bu) s this type of product protect y o u r s e I f against the pr o f 1teer 1 n g charlatans" By using this ru n down of traps 1n the held put together with the aid of Hawken and New York's Dept of Consumer Affairs DECEPTIVE LABELING· Probably the biggest trap, us. ing an "organic " "natural ' "nature's own " etc . label when lh1s ts not the case Jn the most flagrant cases unscrupulous retailers simply paste an "organic ' label over the brand name of a non- organic product or 1 I s package. Or the •organically grown" food may be merel~ £ood '"luch hasn t b e e n sprsved '\\tth pes11c1des -but which falls lo meet other generally accepted cr1ter1n for vrgan1c food s Ma n y unscrupulous sup- pliers, for instance s e I I "natural ori;:a n1c ' honey (a major health food product\ although they have had no control ove r !he an\Jb1ot1cs which may have been used 1n bee feed or over \~hat types o( sprays a re used around tht' bees' base NON-ORGANIC F 0 0 D S Often mixed 111 \VJ!h organic products tn organic food slore!i leading you to believe they're someh ow special and \vorth paying extra for S~tALI. TYPE · Frequently dried fruits lol'hich are labeled • natural organic" h a \ e preservet1ves hsted 1n tl nv lvpe 1n an 1nconsp1cuous sec- tion of tbe label. EXAGGERATED CLAIJllS: Son1e protein supplements a re. Your best -and most ob- vious -safeguards are to know the proprietor of the store you patronize and study carefully the labels of each product you buy And if yo u feel you've been deceived or cheated, report the dela1ls to your local Better Business Bureau and your Con~umer Protection Agenr) Foo<l Price 'J u.stifie<l' Says Aide FARGO ND Secretary of Agricullure Earl L Bu1z. said re cent in· creases 1n prtces far1ners receive 1nclud1ng record highs for cattle are fully JUShfled regardless of their effects m the super1narket "Prices are strengthening and 1n some instances such as beef cattle prices a re at 2{}. year highs · Butz said 1n a speech prepared for the an- nual Fargo Farm Forum "And they should be " "Butz said "It 's abotit time things ucre getting better Yet I 1~ant to remind ~ou that as vour prices improve and be~1n to renect 111 markups at retail counlers \\le may have a f 1ght on our hands "Sornc of the newspapers back ea~t liave alreadv started con1n1entJng on higher food prices ' Butz said ' \ ou can expect !o see ag1tntion in crease for putting a Hd on rnany agricullural price~ ' Butz added Iha! he intends ' to 11 age this battle for farmei s with everything I've got" ;i nd osked for grassroots help and support Prices of raw farm products are exempted from controls under the adm1n1strat1on s Phase 2 economic p I an • Rela1lers can pass on top con~ ~umers added costs of food product<:. A ueek ago th e Agricult ure Depa1 tment reported that prices farmers gol for raw produals rose 3 percent in .January. 1ncludirtg a rtc0rd high for beef cattle. shattering the mark set 1n 1951 DA VE ROSS PONTIAC Lease or Buy All Models ••• DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 2411 UllOI II.YD • PAii DllYt COSTA MISA Ph. 5464017 Ol'aJf P D&Yt A Waac 11• A,M.. TO ll1H l".M. IUWNYJ 11 A.M. TO t 1'.M. l I • • OVER THE COUNTER • ..,,.._l.il~t lftl«••ltr ~\llt•tll•1 •1 t•rn:l .... ftfr t I 1!0. ..._ NA.'0 '•I«• .. ,.., 11\tl .... r•l•U •r lft1rll11•, ,...,"...,." •r cammlulM.. NASO LJ1t1n9i for Monday, Febru•ry 7, 1972 Firm Anaheim Gets Contract • Complete-New York Stock List ' ' ... ' Monday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List -.. ,-------------CM .. ) H .... Ltw ~ .... Ctit Market Falters; Gains Erasecl • s OAILY •tLOT JJ . ' • • .. • .. ' . 1 ~ ' l ' 1 ' I l I • ' ' • • I .I • l ' ' '. ' ' ' ' ~ .. ' .. , .• , •• v,, . ,. . .-....... • ~ %Q PAIL Y PILOT 1urWy, frbfUUJ 8, i q72 • .. , ' • Everyone Has Something That Someone Else Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trad e It With a Want Ad FABULOUS FOUR VACANT $26,750 This homr 1s in rnuvr In condllion -ju~1 painted in!>idC' & U\lt -II('\\ shag 1·arpf'linr: 1n a ll roo1ns n(•\'C'l' 1!1 I'd on - •I e roomy l)(•droon1s, '1. baths, largr ki1cl1c11 - doublr J,;arai.;e -1·011· V('ni!'nt Costa il1c!>fl lo- c:a ti on. VA 11r f'llA terms. Call :"1011 : The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results Gener•l Gener.11 * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. BIG CANYON . $98,500 !\1ev,1 5 BR home, elegantly dec:o raled \\'ith top qualit_v cpt11g & custom drapes. ~Jany ex· lras. Exclusive ne"' listing in this fabulous Country Clu b area of Ne\\'porl Beach. "Our 27th Year" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO .• Realtars 2111 San Joaquin Hills NEWPORT CENTER Road 644·491 0 ~~~~~~~~~-c~G~e-n-e-,-.~l ~~- General FHA VA OR ASSUMABLE 6°/o LOAN IN COLLEGE PARK ASSUME A $20,400 GI LOAN AND PAY ONLY $187 TOTAL PER MONTH. • 3 Bedrooms ann family Room e Big Yarcl 1 • Close to Schools : e Close lo Shopping • CIOSf' in on this Ollf'. INVESTORS DREAM! UNITS! UNITS! UNITS! NEAR COASTAL WATERS General G .;:neral Gener•) General Ueneral General iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil····················--------------------;;;;;;;;;; Jl1ic/ a J!J/e UNIQUE HAS THE BEST HOMES , . , .••... IN THE BEST AREAS IN MESA VERDE: A SJl .500 3 Bedroom Thi s is a nifty hon1e: NiC'e neighborhood \vith in a \l'<ll k lo schools, shopping. library an d churches. _Family roon1 , cozy fireplace and handsome shin gle roof plus rust color shag. "This ho111e ha s charm. honest:" PRESENTED AT $3 1,500. PHONE 546-5990 ____ .,.!!:!-')<---- THE FORWARD LOOK WITH THIS TRADE 3-4 P!exes all in a ro\v. All uni ts have 2·3 bed · ro on1, 2 bath , 1-2 bedroon1 l·I bedroo1n . SPA· C'IOUS and close !o ;..hopping, in SUPE!l- RENTAL ABEA . .$196.500. "IT'S INCOMPARABLE" THIS CONDOMINIUM IN 'l"HE Bl.UFfo~S, 2 bedroon1 . builtin kitchen , upgraded carpets and drapes lo'r association fees, ON 'l'l·IE GREENB1':L·r. See and con1· pare. Only ... $27 .950. GIVE IN TO TEMPTATION AND BUY 'fhi s three bedroo1n. 2 bath . fireplace and F A~'IILY ROO!II. carpets & drapes. 2 lovel y patios. pool and recreation roon1 . Easy access to San Diego free1vay. In model condition. $33 .500. CAN'T FIND IT?? WE CAN!! PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOME S SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT J Linda Ille Drive -Open Sund•y Beautiful ne\1 5 llJ{ 41,:t H.o\. ho1ne . \\'ater- front living rn1. & !urinal dining. Jlc:p1dsome oak panelled fan1 . r1n . frplc .. ~·ct b3f Large 1naster suite has fi·pl<-. & cozy luun~e area. \•je\I' of Gay ... ~ the n1ounta1n.s rst79.500 . BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 Is landers Bldg . at Lind• Isle Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. 1675·6161 General ---·j -~ General . . BA YSHORES VIEW & POOL \\.'aterfront custo1n hoine. 4 bedroo111 & den or 5 bedroorns. 51'2 bath s '!'op (lualilv t ar- peting. draperies. 'vallpaper & fi xtu res. \'ie\v from 1nost roo1ns. 87' lot. spaciou s yard \Vith beautiful gardens. 5240.000. 341 BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR IJlanders Bldg. •t Lind• Bayside Dr., Suite 1, N.B. Isle 675·6161 /I 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH SUNKEN LIVING ROOM $24,970 You'll be glad you did. e CaU 546-2313 Don'1 1TI1t1s this rare b<1rga1n -l.1"1 1enan1s pay your rrn1! Vrry sp111·1ou!' uruts. Clo:;c lo OC<'llll. Fa1·111 .~lylt' k1l1·h· f'llS fully ('()Ui/IJK'd • O\'f'J\S, rani:t-i; and rrh'igcrarol'~' Dining roorn~: '.! bcdroon1~ fX'r 111111. Gai·dcn J 1 k P g1'0unds. E.\lrC'1nely an,\ious 011 n<·r JU~T REDUCED PRICE: TO ONL \' $27,000: Call al onc·e • 64~03()3 HIRISI L 01.SO~ IN CORONA DEL MAR: A OeliQhtful Home 3 bedrooms. 2 balh on tlazel Drive \l'ith can- yon and ocean vie\vs from sun porch. Super !ar,i.!'e master suite and a great central pati o area fo r entertaining. J)erfect home for a couple u1ho travel or have a tee nage r Th is is a like·ne'v hon1e in a quaint old area. PRESENTED AT $80,000. PHONE 675·6000 AND IT'S FEE IN 'J"URTI.E ROC I<. 3 Bedroonis. fan1 ily roon1 . 2 baths. atriun1. builtins \vith self clean ing oven, sha g carpetjn g an d custon1 drapes. Larg,e covered patio 'Nith super land· scaping. WO!J{,D YOU BELIEVE $47.900. Newport Bay Area " HORSES Guest Hause Custom 1 /3 Acre Plus! ~ Wo~ )our lrcr X: l"ll'ar hon1 t' fur a 1nounta111 lodgr 11 itll a lan- tas11.; 1Jlt."On1r 11·11h ;~; financi-fg a1 rio l't1Sl. Call for furthf:T details . I'"' - •• .. J.{011· about a 1•1t·hly pan· rll'd li\•1111{ roon1. ncal & spacious k itch•·n. r·or· ner i(Jt. exc·cltrn1 lu(·a - 11011. bn31 or lrailrr ;u·. l"t'S!'>, bi ,:: ll"l't'~. Thi!'> is 11 1\ll terms i11ai/a1Jl1'. llurry ! 4 BEDROOMS IN THE COUNTRY Ju~! OUt!>idC' 1111' <'il)' limits, this hun1<' is :; years uld. 11 has 4 b«l- roon1s. :.! bath~. strp- do11·n living roon1. clrc. built·in kilc:hen. forced air heating. bri('k fire- place. Country !>lylc li\'- ina. 4 BEDROOM MESA VERDE WONDER A bcau!Jful pool "rt11nb. cnhancrd "'i1h a 11·a 1er· fall 11.nd niood lig/11ing as l"ie"·pd from an open gJa.o;~ dining roo1n. This is a hon1r you can bf> pruud In u1\'ll. T h t< fourth brd1·oom ran ras- ily I><' con\"ertrd to an orfil'P •tr dPn. :ll()() SQ. ft. in all. ·rruly 11. prt"S- 11..,;iou~. r.'i<'curh·c h111ne. Ta.lku1;.: SJ4,500 ra ther softly. 3 BEDROOM $22,500 1-lf'rr's ) t•llr doll houst·~ Ne11· dt>hl\r c:arf)f't Ill'\'· cr 11.-aJkcd on. r1·1iain1rd & nov.· Vlll'Dnl 11·~ pnrrd iibol1l SlOOO lorli.J11• n1flr• kt'I 1·a lur 11.nd !! 11011'1 last so call uo": View of UC I & Hill1 Unique back bay. 2 sty honir . Na r u r a J 11·ood ('a1hedJ"al t'i'ilin,::-s & <1ntiqur !rad<'d g lass 11·1rnJ011.s. 4 bdnns. & dC'n ,f;, b;11h "u 101;('1' lel'fl. ~pl1! lf'vrl rn- rry, Open s!a,11-..1a) to UPfH'I' lr1·rt 111th largr l1·g roon1. used ))nck ll'pl. All clrc. k11.. bath. ii n 11 d111- 1t1~/fan1 ih roon1 11 1th patiu noor to l:!'xl·I' cl"1·k l·:xtra large yarci . :\la1u1·c If<'~. Co\·cred 11a110. Clvsl' lo grade Sl·hool and P"lpo~crl <1qua1ic park_ S39,j(J{J :l024! Bay\·ir \I' 1cnd o! 1'11'.\a Or.l :l-16--!)9.i6. -~==-=----SUPER SALE '" R£AL TOl?S Sauth Coast Plaza Is hcrr b.v !his rantastic nr11 :! story ·1 bl'droon1. :; ha1l1. fan1ily room. fonnal rll111ni:: 11~1111 . hoinr !l's Ju sh i·;u'JX'IS l!.: d ra1X's-f'.\JJO~f'd lo<.o:tn1 t'<'lhng~-sunrlrC"ks and i;11r(fr·n frrsh l<1ndsc<1p111g. 'f()l:il do11r1 Si.000 and a.~su111r a i ', VA. loan. Pr1t••· oril;. S·l:l,·iOO. Curl ~H&-231] [';0\\'. 2443 East Coast H 1ghwdY Corori.i de1 Mar 6 75-6000 2850 Mesa Verde Drive Costa Mesa 546·5990 ~ HILLSIDE '"!!1!!!!1!!!!'!'!!1!!!!1!!!!1!!!!11c~o~m~;~"o~S·o•o•n ~!!l!!!!l!!!l!!!!!!lll!!!!l!!l l WITH A VIEW 1General ·General ~ - 3 BR .. 2 BA .• IOJ"JJlal din 1'111., --------- hogo 101 . VACANT'. .\I"'' LA HACIENDA-. Anyone For Golf? .se!I! $21i,2JO. for ter111s. t•all 84&-288r • OLE! $34, 950 THE LAST WORD IN STYLE "IN THE BLUFFS" You have a vie1v of the ba y frorn all \\'lndo\vS, 3 bedroon1 s, 2 1,~ baths. bu iltln kitchen 11•ith self cl eani ng oven. F:X 'fllr\ f'A1'10. on the greenbelt .o\ ·lovely buy at 545.950. REA LTORS 644-7270 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. $1. MOVES VET IN 5 BIG BDRt-.IS. ~ B,\TllS. $38,500 --GEM-- RED CARPET Rulton BEACH AREA Th"'·'"'"• golr ,.,.,.,,.ho< ······~···~········ HilO \\'. Coas1 H11 y .. ,'\.B. ...._-:---~-, 1 11 1s 11ght •)ll ,i p10-G G•ne,al General nt''.ALTORS tj.J:! .. t623 • "'.-"\'1'!1ow Page~"' of 3 ~ FORMAL eneral classilied . , . 642-jtji8 1 .. ~ .. ~J11alh n1:1111t ur"'l 1>ut · 1---------.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; DINING 2 ""' ••. ,, .. '" ''" p"' ' ABANDONED I I Gener•I Bt'arh .s f l nC'~I 4·011• • • --------------------•Ser this ~ulJ1('n!i1· Spa111 .. h <lun11111un1 Thrr<' a1·c 1\10 5 -FAMILY -4 llllllllllJl~lllllllllJl!Jl!ll!ll .. 111 entry'. ~ r-0111 lhrrr ~It'll !>II in1 1nln~ pool.-u1 !hrs I <lo\1·n into 1hr sp;_i,·1ous \'aull-d 1 k · D NING ed cf'iling l11·i11g roo111 i1•1lh I g<1r en l ·r co ~n n1 u n l 1) , GOLF C ''' oo•o",.,. r -I • ,. I c9ns1st1ng or :1 .. !lOJlH'S on :; .. OURSE-... ,., ··~ 11 rp ac·r, orma ciin1ng roor11: Tiu~ gourmet-acrrs or la nil. ThC' honie JS \\'o"·~ An ahaodonrd t\!hrn· garden knchen !akrs you ' tlll'rr brclioonis and l\IO ian Vill;;i nvrrlooking on<' nf 011! lo patl<i ~randr! Gi<inr I IJal!is al thl' lo,vr~I pnc<' 0 1·ange Coasts nin~t r'!"rlus. ................ ~: tnaste1' suitr 1\·1 1!1 rt1'l'SS1ni: ci rr Can fl(• Sh 0 11 n , lvr ,golf <'Our:;es: Fro1n Cor- rahlr and 1,;1lk111 1'[0'l<'I + ,\n~ ·1•11r. (';ill !•!t,;..-7\i l. n1th1an iron gatl's to :11riu111 RATED "X" FOR X'LNT OPPORTUNITY ~ sellers high ly rn otivated: Lge . 4 BR, 21: ba. fan1ily hon1e : quiet f-farbor Highlands st. . asking $49,500. ('huck LC\1·i~ TURTLE ROCK -"'BEST BUYS " 4 BR. fan1 rn1 .. din . rn1 cent. a c $4fJ .750 4 BR. den. di n rn1 21i ba $51 .500 ;3 BR. Din rn1 .. 21 ~ ba . c:enl a,r $59.500 Pools -tennis courts. Belle Partch MAGNIFICENT MONACO Travelog? No, but hon1c buyers better log this Ne\vport ~pot ~ Lavish \~·i th deco rator drapes, papers & upgraded cushioney car· pets. 3 BR $48.900 -Pee. Bill Comstock BAYSHORES-$59,500 Choice location near sandy beach. 3 Bdrms. living room \V l firepl<1re & 1% baths; recent- ly decorated. Harry Frederick WATERFRONT BALBOA COVES 3 BR. DR. lanai. fam . rm . + sep . guest rm & bath. Spacious roon1s. Fun for su111mer home or lge. fam . Sandy beach & pier. $85,000. Charlene Whyte BAYCREST ·POOL . $72,800 . OPEN 1801 HOLIDAY RD. 3 BR. den . low mainten· ance garden & patio. Definitely under mar· kel. See it SAT. or SUN. 1-5. Bob Yorke STUNNING Departs from the ordinary. Corner, landscap- ed beauty -in Harbor View Hill s. 3 Bed- rooms plus family rm. $65 .000. Jim Muller ONE OF OUR FINEST BEAUTIFUL BAYCREST. See th is 3 bdrm .. fam . rm .. formaJ din. rm. home. Immac ulate inside & ou tsi de. Cared for by original ou1n· ers. $79,500. Bud Austin IRVINE TERRACE ·VIEW OPEN l lo 5 THURS. & FR!. Feb. 10 & !Ith. 1827 TAHUNA . Lovely 120' view lot. Large 3 bdrm.. 3 bath home. Roo m to expand S74 ,500. George Gnipe PRIME LIDO LOCATION With pier & floal for large boat. 4 Bdrm., large paneled den. Newly & beauUfully dee· orated. Eileen Hudson 833.0700 ~ Coldwell.Banker 644-2430 ~ 550 NEWPORT CE NTER DR., N.11. J "! 11\0l'r kill£: SL/.(' hf'thUU!ll~ ~ r~~-i~~l l !O !hr tllaSSI\'(' enll)" f)p :! h:ilh~' Bikr '.~ l}f'_a1•h nr ~ ~ .~ : • hJ.\f':. :, g1an1 he<h·oo111s :'. 1:1k<' a ,l"i.! Sl.J.:19:1. C11ll --~ ·-_ baths. llugr fam1Jv 1wn1 + \rl.J.o:;o:; ·•· forn1a! dining. l\i•;g sue 20·:0.: FORESl [ OLSO~ '" REALTOR S I Near Harbor High 'Gre111 :; t,rdr!lo111 tami!y hon1r i11 1·ho1cC' l()('a!ion, \1alk 10 \Yr~1t·l1f/ Sltt•pp111i:: I Center. :'\'1c·1• f:unil,v roorn. 2 baths-Spa~·ious l1vini::: n11 \1ith fi1't'place -Bl! in k1tchrri -Pluti \;)x~2 hf'alf'tl pool and ni('(' patio. Asking $36,j(l(). \\'on·1 1a,1 I 673-&'J.j(), \R}THEREAL ".: E§'.f ~T~~.~ OWNER ANXIOUS EASTSIOE -:__ 16· l1v1ng rooni. D<'rora1n1·s POOL HOME toul"h al! ovrr P:irk likf' HERE':-; VALUE p LL: :i . ~rounds + Dll1EL1' COL~­ Th t,'C' lxlrni.~. '!. h!!llls. J~/l l OURSE \'IE\\' . n n I.\' S:ln,.'JOO · 1\ fHn1aS lio• I ahll'~ C<1IJ 11011 • 645·0:lu::. k11ch1•11, l11r;<' st'r1·1cr por1·h a11d 12'\19' plH'IC'!l'd dl'n, uv1!t'Sl1.<·YI hf'aled & fil1en·ci flOCll 1\1tli (!rei.~ing roon1 & ('1Jterlai11111e111 bar. D" I . garage on alley. 1.:01n pletl'ly block 11•all renc:ed and neat roR~:.\T [ OLSO.\ '" llEA I TOl?S as a pin. An excetlcnl buyl-==cc-~~~~=- '1 ooly "''·950 wilh IO'I YOU NAME IT 1lo11·11. COLWELL PROPERTIE S. INC. Forn1 edy l<1fl ,,,d,. Rf 2 20 £.17th St .. C.M . Call 646-0SSS This HouSf' J1a s ll! (!) 6'-~ Asswnablr V.A Loan 121 VA-F"l!A Tenns r31 Cul·Dt>-Sae Street (41 Near Schools 1£ Shopplni (51 E.xcellent Shag Carpets j61 Beautiful Tile Patio rr1 Paneled Family Room l':venings call IH~-183 t81 Heavy Shake Roof 191 S215 total monthly -~-paym•nt [ J All this v.·ith four bedrooms THE BLUFFS · and a lamily l'OOm. Great Family Home. Call 546-2313. 1\loving lo Idaho-Must srll lo11·est priced 'l story hon1e in Mesa Verde. 4 Bl'droon1. ,\RF; you ril't'd ot lholit" separate dining roon1, den, I rndll'SS 11ttkend gardenlflK lnlTHE REAL '·""" ESTATERS 211 baths. o\·ersized lot 1\·lrh chores? 'flli,TI call ua for an room for pool. t~l!A I.: no appoinlment to inspf'ci this do\\·n VA 1ern1s avail. 3 bedroom condominium a11 ==~.""N"o"."o"ow'""~N--- ' -I "' •, f , •• r<'.' CaJI 540-11iil <Open E\'esl t!1e BLUl"FS .. Rooms ~ al'!! To Vets., low down lo all . l~ght Bnd 11pe_e10Ull and lhe owmhig 3 bdrm, & encl. !11~ J>8 1io l!I c:ompl<'\ely laMi: l·V. baths, frplc, P.A. pn,·air. $45,000. ~ hea t; elec .. bit.ins. Carprl.'I ~·00.· It drapes. Nittly lndscpd. I --.:-·~,..... vou ·u lq1'.tt II! .. PATIO PARTY SOUNDS uK·E-_ . TRIPLEX . I . ' Pridt o('oWnersh1p: IQ:(', t.W· cpc;s B-~·Q..,..1n large Pll~ \\'i3hful .thinking. but ii'• 11tr lot for privacy. All 2 ace-o ca~mptr t1w, licrt'I Ille ton1btned Bdrms~ 1. goOd bu:r. bollt. DellJhttul kitehl'n. tl'Bnqu!Uty or "uburbu lfv· MOR~N REAL TY Newport ~ng wilh 'evtry lown ronven· ,73-6642 67>64St •I 1cnc:e, N e • r churcht'11, , .......................... .. sc::hools. Shopping center •nd golf l.'OUl'IC. 3 lklrm1 phis Fiirview den plul two rm!ptacH. Macnab -Irvine •646-1811 1 (•nrtl;,,•l 1 $22,750 BY OWNER Jn Santa Ana. 3 Br. 2 car garage. Shat cpt!I. Covrrerl 8471010 Be1utifill!y o.co,attd s.i'yfront 3 BR, 2 &1h.-, ti~p18~. h<!a!cd pool. J3oel All p ~-~-=~--~-1 1vellable. f"rftnk Ptoml!a, o~·ner, lg 4 BR & fam rm. 642-8235. \-0 T HE REA L ~ ESTATERS ' ... 3 6A, fom1 din, assun1 In, $3!.950. Prine only 5.Sl-1823 Macnab-Irvine patio, fetK'fd yard. Will <"On-Dally Pilot \\raft tridl!'r ~net R36-5612. ' h•1'1{1ln• R'Alono. NEWPORT HEIGHTS Char111ing rrn1ortclec1 ~ brt'I· roon1 ho111r 11·1rh dining roon1. 11r•11 plumbing and \\Lrlnj.!. 11llry alTeSs. Newport ,, Cho !ce Eastside Locatian Thi.~ 1·ha11111ng .1 IJC'dl'\Jillll has ;ill f'lf'rt1·1c· k1l('hr11. l.oads "' 4'Upb0al'<l. In spoUess eondilion. Choice lcx.·a11011 on a qu1f'1 1·ul-cle--sac sln:'f'1. Prier 1011· ror quick sal<' a! only $32.T;ti, Call no"' and SC'e. 673-8550. '-0 THE REAL \~ ESTATERS . . ONLY. 527, 900. NO DOWN GI TERMS for th!A :'I bedroom adul! OC'· cupiOO hon1c: in sho1vca~ ('Olldilion. featuring 15'x1T ran1ily area, professional landscaping, b!'ick B·B-Q and vacant· for qulc:k OC· t:upancy. Call f>40.-8S55. .SHERWeeD REAL TY 18964 Brookhunit, F.V. Reduced To Sell! Only Qot' like ttiill 4 bedroom hQn1t' in ~an Gardens H~t ls availablt. Hua:e masler be<lroon1. w11.lk-in clo!!el 1vUh balfl "'ilh .wnkt'n !Jl1011·<'r art'11. Prircd lo .!!ell al M<l.500. 0vC"rsi7:ed kll. c:•n1pcr or trailer. Sloragt encio.cd and plumblne and wirlfll In for pool. }>'or lnfol'tn•Uon -Call 64&TI71. 'Z Tl!r: Rf:1\L I · .,, .• ·1·1 "!'" ,.11f\ ,\.J ' RXEi U!91'ER 4 BEDRM 'f-2 BATHS Needs lender tw'n caret w /\V crptl A drJJA, id('al holne for lanrc famlJ)'! Try 221 0·2 for family ot 5. or Cl·Jo"llA terrn11 avallablt. Call 847~1Dl. SEYMOUR Rl-~At..T'V 17141 Bcac~Blvtf., llunt. Bcb. \\'011' HOR SE: PROPERTY Al' PLt;S:; bC'droon1 gue~I llous<' lor rt:111aJ 1r ~0L1 ,·11oo~c1 111th d1n1ng 1'00111 and rOl'l'l'rd porrh: lln'" rhr icing-t:Ustom bu1J1 :: t11•droon1-2 h<tlh f's 1 a tr • ~·1 u111 lhr "<'l'iudC'd alr1u1u rn111 to slal<' 1·01-rn·1t fu~rr II 1th \\'l'u(L)::hl 11'•)1\ ra1ls-dt:1ux<'' flugl' hl'11ll-": t\111111, n1a~~11·" ~ 1 on,. flrcplal'<' 1\ ith bu i 11 -t n plan!er~ + r11.iscd rll('k hearth~ t'OP..'.llAL 011\l~C P.00:'11. Fanni) roon1 anci our lo rC'clwoocl cO\Tred [)<1110 II 1th brll·k BBQ~· hnly !0', do11·n: Giddyap -C<11l i}.lj-{)30:1. IORI. \l L 01.SO.\ "' N Elll L TORS --.--LICENSED SALESMEN WE NEED YOU fol our 2nd r<'al r slalr oUk·<' on 171h !lt.. Costa :\les11 .. , opening soon'. 1r· YOU * Ar~ <'ll('rgrtil' & rnrhu~i- as!ir" • i\l u~t ha1·r lugh int.'Q1nr • Enjoy happy surround1ng1; * l.1ke r('s. or r-on1n1 . prop T!l~:N" CALL HOPE GERR IE RL TY. 645-4400 --ONL Y-$18,000-- Sharp 1110 bdrrn. l10111C'. r·u!ll 1·a1·p!'1r1! ;;nci rl r ii r> r rl ·, ELF.('_ 8/1 1.;rrcHE;>: J)l}i g<1ragr -l;u·g<' f<'net'd lul 1-'<'rfecl sta1·1rr' horn'" CALL TODAY. Would Yau Believe? SI0.000 I!! ('\11"fl:-, 2 panm. E-Z l"arr )anl F1rrplace, derp ~h;u.: r aq-'l.•ls, '.l IJrdt'OulllS. :!'~ b.1Lh~. aJJ lhi! .t n}()r<' SJ 1.j()ll 1-fappiness Is Harbar View Likr ''l)rn ~pac(•s. grrr11 p1~rk~. 131111111111ni.: ponls ar.d 1·a~11al !111ng ~ T;1kr 11 look al !111, l'or1ol11'11• .\!rl(!C•! 1•'\1 h :: f)O•ii1 '1>vlll~ and .'\, b<lths. 1111:.::r 1t11•a ~pa.-'i' 1uo111, lull~ 1lf'l'•Jr,1tr'd wllh 1· us Io rn d1·ap1 ·, 11nd 1' a 11 µape 1· l'lf't)11l1<•rf' L•\\·a1io11 ls 11nl11':.ila blr-l~1ghl on Gr!'<'n Bt'h: Call no1\ 10 s~ 1h1s Bcauly. S6i.j00. ~2313. ft.JIB IRVINE TERRACE Spc,~1arular v1r\\ of B:ty & Jr11 r l.1'""Jy, rn .. 1u~rrt yard 111 th fountarn J.11 Ill(! 1\-~ll\ iUli! l11nnal £i1111n1-": arC'a Pr(lf1·s.;1on<1I 11<'1 b:1r \"k•1\'-S1d<' fa n11I) 1w111 •I BC\h-oorll~ .t 4 baths Sl~.000 REALTORS 6!1c:~~oo Evenings Call 642-7438 i' --BrG C ANYON Golf c0...,,. Estate Bar9ai9 Huntin9? BRAND ne11· f1ve bcdroonis.' 'rhcn look at 1his sharp J ran1ily roon1, 3 baths. 3 car Bdrm horn(' 11·ith large CQ\.·, garage, 3 fil'f'places, separ· patio. Localed in good Hunt. ate guest room. view comer Beaeh a1·t!11 on quiC'l t'ul de lol. Less than $100,(0J. Ori~ sae slrtct. Appraised at by 26 lfermtlage Ln.. at $2'7,200 G.I. 847-6010 P.oyal St. Gc:orgC' Rd •. Nr!W· port Beach and lhf'n call 644-11 40. Newport Island Duplex on the walt>r. Beaul. cond. You live in one, rent one out. Keep YoUr boat at fioat by front door . A bet· ter buy at $82,00). CORBIN- MARTIN REALTORS 644-7662 $28,500 4 Bdr. + Family Rm. Ll..rge rooms, 4 twin tizttl ~mi, hi.lit-family nn .. dining rm .• entry hall. bu!Jt- ihfl. 54()..1120. TARBELL ~o~"::o C.:~A";;:' I Latge 3 BR. 2 b8. dU!lil'X "'Ith 3 fiJV<J)lace:c. $55,000 • TER~IS George Williamson Realtor 541-4570 645-1564 1.01 THE REAL \'.'"\( ESTATERS ' ". .. . . . ~ THR~E YEARS NEW Sh8l1> Eu11ide 4 bt:.~m. 2 bath plu1 dining room and enclo&ed pa~, b u i 11 I n klt<.11., llttplacc Ir d!M e:ar DN!p, IK!Cll>Cft.d }Qt on qu1t1 rul-df'o.~c. Ol\·nt"r trarcfe.r- t'ed. ,\lu11 It'll. Prl4.-ed only S32.500. Call~ 4~n l::vH.) t-..~=l Style CansciOllS Lovety 3 ~rm. home on • huge confer lot. Tmmacu· late throughout an<J pr~ at °"'Y S25.95(). Just rlahC for that Or111 homt, New llhag Cl\f11'-I In ('Vf'ty room Ta~ celJ ~7.fiOIO. ' Tht· la.tle•l Wiiw In the wm , . A Dally l'llot CJ.usified Ad. 6''161' ' .. . / Tutsd.a:f, f'tbrulf"J 8, l'il7-Z DAil Y .. LOT ;j1J )~ l.__-_ .. _ .. __J]~ [ ]~[ ]~ ~I -~ ...... ~J~~[~-~ .... ~-~l~~~1 ~I ~-~ ... ~-~J~~e[ ~ __ ... _-~l~i [.___"l!!_::._r·~=i S•n Juan Capi1tr•no fnc:ome Property 1" IHneral Laguna e .. ch Huntington h•ch General 'IHRE• CAR GARAGE . ==;;;;::-==--! 3-CAR GARAGE -----------• SUL OR J.•AS• • lttacht-d 10 a hard 10 11nd VA REPOSSESSION SJ~i.:lou~ l bcdrvoni•, 2 lux-1:/W ~ ~·, :i AR , 11i BA ~ \\'<' ua,·e Sc\e1·11.I .• ,. J:o:STATB 110:\11-; s11·1:.s I Corona Del Mar •·~ lf'\e'l j tx-d1wn1 l'l.l·11ulJ!lc ::iuJll'l' ."illMh Coslci :\ICSll ur1ous b11rhs, ··Kntt-Ottp 1 $250.00 GI GI GI l.g f11n1 rnl . din. 1'n1 .. Jrpl I frun1 ·~ ll<'r<' 10 11, ·~·1~ hlnu•. fo1111al d 1n1 n g, locatiou \\';.i lk lo ::illulh 1 sh11i,: 11all-1~11'11il canx.ilng, <.:pt J.· draP""· bllln~. 11,.1 i''ron1 $13,500 10 S38.000 a.~1·~11.rd lt11n i]). "1 r II Coa:.t Plaza Lllrg(' ll bcaulful custo111 drape_Nt'! 1 e Tot•I cash _ No hidden CO$fl e bai. r !t'. lntrllll• Sli ~~ tall !Or App1 s roc:la_1• 1 17 Units J 1 0.1'!!! !ocat1ou tor vif.11 •· E:"C· ~·('llrnt rrntal rtt'Ol'd. ln· 1'011\e O\'er S:j I ,!JOO pt'r )'"tlr , l l.1-;l1•1l "' l'.."b'!l,000. 1·ry 15~" lfllcplact. Pcrf~•·l \~ .. ~ 11 l)('drovrn. lunl!ly rwn1 011 ~nrl Jir••pi8l~ n•Akf' th1~ a 1 full µrice I t.:APl~'TllA:"O V .\LL!-.\' V'f'n:le loc._.aho1 for ~J'OllJn;,: ri u·•·I iuJ-tlc-~c full but!tinl !l'ITifi<' raniily 110111,. lo srarl I * 4 Bed roo111 s. 'l Baths ~llSSfO!\ Rt::ALTY 4~14-!liJl ttf::1\LTY l~J-11~1 Ii.fill]~ 0\.\11('!' 1" tl'al11"f('r I I, I 1 l' h,. n . ~hakl' roof . ~our ~(!\\ Ye1u Onl} $8.500 * r~irep !acf! L•guna Niguel Santa An• th1ta tcs ln\111t't.I salr Lall flrrpliu·r S7.i0, dv1111 IOI ;uuJ Cl or ~'llA 1 c1·n~ I ::itti-J880 J!J::f{T'L\G~ a.11.1~:1f' FuJJ pri~.,. ()nl> I VIEW 3 BR. :1vailablt' * Di.Sh\\'3Sher l.\\OV l~G lo l.>t'llnuul-Foi·c· $22,750 do11 n. Best Eostside Location 15 Units Rt AL t:ST.\TF. 1 0 p, 1. ~~I. LJtl 1i1·1cNI as 101\ as n1~t 11011-w lk & L * (,.>u1ck Pos:.es::.ion r d ro :.ell u11 tst.o ndu1i.: ~ Bil . "'''~·· ~I \It\\ honl"'· !hi~ l1w1111· a er ee * Pric:ed BelO\I ,<\ppra1::ial '2 DA ~1.(:"tii'I 11 111.-\)f'\\ . BY OW~ER . ----~ --[~llllTAGt orfel~ a .!:nrg('uU~ I II\\ u( I llOmf' $3·1-100 .Jfl r-O:t:r r11 .'-;<to1a Ana . ,\ Bit . ~ ··a 1 • :1 BE:DH00:0.1:3 • R"altors I I i:;aru<•t• :ihaJ; l"pls { <•\j•\r il Ju-.1 11n111h or :ianta A n Ill ---~ tl1ll l111rhur ,\ ot'i'<111. 111u~ lhl' LEADERSHIP REA L ESTATE 142-4466 --0 ' · Top rcs10enl1al 101.;arion In _ '!790 JlarbOi Blvd. al Ada111s iL'odo lslo I pall•) fl•1uf'd .1 111rl \\ 111 ··on 1·011 11!1) Cluh 7"1 Ekt To11n· I , ht'1Hll1hd lil!;h! 1 If'\\ l•I tl1 f' (.'o3a .\ei.a J Barhs, 11r11 CALL j lO-llj l 1Qpcn f'.:\·cs 1 f bo • l I I I·' '.J.15-0tN OJ)l"n ·1119 P:0.1 1 ~ ~1tl1·1 ,,., ... nd ,i\'.liJlii:! l'l'11""" I ': 8<! 4, 1 Bd- erpt ~1 h . "-"'I ' \ 131 1 ll:: 11~ 11'' \lul'~ " • • C M B h I 11 ... ·h k\'.c'l"llt'nl rcntilf 0 ·r . ·-· I lgC' l<'hu rr 1·00111. '! ball1~ i · Builders Del19ht osta esa Huntington eac I "R. ',_., ·, .. ,,, 11.•.1,"''" Santa Ana He ights 1109 1aru;fl"l'l'l"d S~O . .iOU Th~ lasiesl ara11• in the \Vest I 1 0 I 1 " -" v " uvu "'";' \It 1u11 r~ lrasf'd . In '1' J.'lOl'f'llt'I' l.u·hll'!' " U\' I ~"'I ·'"! t B:ilfJOa Bn) Propr1'll<'S 1 . 1 Daily P ilot QassifiM !!> unniaru ;ih•: S '1 · ·' O 41 I 'llJ rtt.'L of Uurv.·a} h-ontagr I NEAR PARK "Custom l AP. ~·; b11, r.il!t 1 .ii, P'«1I \ll 'S'T :'t-:1·: ,..;,},1rld111J.: : HI: • 1011r 111 ,.1 sr1. 700 rcr }C'ar. I • tH:!-j J9\ • Ad. 1).12-5678 0~1 r;,:(~ll~Jvc L.a.gun~.N1gu<'ll A) BR. $l9,900 11111. «1u I'll\ "1 ' "" .!111 1111, u"d hi•'"-Ir[)!. !..-t.·d al i i j,l')(K!. (J\111rr ---675-3000 L<vll coursr. Jkaui1f11l lol .\ear('lli µar•kon E ltithSL Up9raded·Sharp LIO~j7~~·~,L~;~~ INC. ll'ld 1 ~~·1 !'111 .. d!'p· 111,111.1 •111 ··•l'r;. :?nrt Tf'l a111ung •'USlll111 hOi\l f'~., I 1 ':-; !Ill-. \BR As A Razor!!'' 673-7300 lllljll' .. \!'ll•f'f\!'' 1·111 ... 1 1, 10 Unit SZf.lj{)jl \\'tth IP1nls CioJJ l'OSC 0 • r\.\p(ll ' I 111c, lll.'Ol :->pni.·1· ,i, 1:-;, DON'T PINCH r101; f•1r df'la1l1" Call f"IQ\1 '!Ba. f\1 1<.:l1rn l)lt-111~. ~.\ 111 ~111n!Ju;:!ro11 tli•ac!1 1, ·' Rlt i1ll 1111111!(, Money Maker h('allng. n,.11· , p' I d r p ". .l'f'lU" .vuun,i: 1t1H! "11 I .1 J 1 l 1 ! ________ .;. __ t;j:'.-~~. I lal'J.:l" .~ard , ,\ i;•l(l(i 111. s:tl,!i':Y..i!'':: be~trooui tn•sli l\'11.~tM'1 t1r.1·.-r. :'\•·" • 1111 Westminster ·'" 10111 "Q11111· g-1'011 .... 1,;'l I l lrplt·. :.'-va1 J.:111'11 1!•' $.•~ llOIJ "ii 111 r11·1111r 1-:a,f~111r T'f'/lt;il \!'s1111,.111 111'1C'. y dP•'nratf't , aud. 011"1•1"n11 $186. MO. PAY MTS BE A LANDLORD ,\ft ti . ,l'.Ji-IOiti ,,.,.,, l'I.-,.~,. to i:olf •'•>111',<", AND gi·f'i'I! "ha),( ··;u·pi•! Yuu 11 -SS,900 DOWN ~. 111~l11·1d11al '.' lM!rru . 1101111·~ BAY•BEACU REALTY 1N< YOURSELF ('l'ou're Not Dreaming) But You Can YOUR PrENNIES . • ' i I I with a I PILOT I PElliY PINCHER Classified Ad ~3 LINES • 12 TIMES I I I (If mo $2 •. 00 Any Item Priced SSI. or Less thin one Item, the combined total unnot xcoed $50.) '.2-5678 L11f' in a bL~1u!iful 3 11'1"·n 10 hi·•' iiith lhC' 1°11 · Mission Vie1·0 (111 1 111 ~ •, Hf~ lti!ll\t' 1 ... 1.1 \\'e hair n111n) otl1r rs I"' low 1•11.vn1f'n!s. Call .~~:?.:!;;;:;;j ------'-----111!11 hr.u11 •·r1!111~.~ a11d hrwk ru·r11tr1.·r~ :\!,.;o .J h.t• ti l)f'1irooui. ~ halh Pl.l',<;, -DECORATE &-SAVE i1ot1fll be JJlc:asc.J to :.ho11 a1 J .. 11,,~ , '" 1x•1111i,:. i.;111'.ti'li 1'001. ,, .. ,,,. a"<i 1,.,, .. _·,· :~ RI~ ~· <lr n. p11 n1a.,1r1 I I I u ' " ,. bl. · (lr•·1•. ~ 111111g 11~•111 a1h r.11 •IUHllt'r~ 111.01111'" 1'1 rt ~1'.!.1iOIJ rlf'r \ra r. L h1 rrf al ~~!l. ,(kl. 011 nl"r I\ Jll ~rll or !1ad!'.' !or larg('r p1'11prr1y. .~l'para!c l't'llt<1I hu1111~ l•JU' 11\ hlllf' Jl:lin1 l: ('!\Joi•· grcasr ~1\J (I tgal tUll. Mi lli". •"111"1"111 •')!!<: .~· •lip~ u1i:: ii\'•'•' llt l-1t<·li 111okr th1~ Jt's agrl"all'CtHal <tl'l"<.1\ll!li \\lll1·urcth1:>11 1•11bl148P... l'ALL e •••·~414 t'O\'f'l'<'d f)i!llO, .11!' ,.,11,I nrv<'r a i·ctt•an(·~. , 11 fain r111 &· rlr11 t'r\1 . P:H'S('I , 91 .. ,... __ __ _ S:l·l. . .00. H) "'111r1 ~.\j '"'·' 1('1' rnu.li•i. \'a• <J ·,i 11 " r I ---~ DECEMBER BRID-E J::a~tsldt' t\1s1<1 .\h':.11. -.;r,1r1 R •• ALTY New rt Beach t ran~f d 1 ~ blk lu Boa \'1sla 1:. ••••••••••• ,IOU!' 1111·es111l1'Jll r;l<1nn111:,: I & 8C1!ar1·11·, ;\1('.~a \'1't'fll'. i'tar Newport P•il Otlice Jusl bavk fron1 your hont') po I--------~ 114 Units - 6.7xGross r.(:-~1111! po1rn1ia\ is $1,040. a.t l I -· ---I !I I I TRULY E EG NT [ ]~ l:U'I J. \\' . .\P.11 P.LTP.S VACANT & READY inooJL !Ill< llO" lf' flt'il~lll'!' L A Mobile Hon~s ,_,, apn(·('ofonl) .S9i:i1J11 lfrl!J \\rsl••lill Dr .. NB. l !)J IARP EASTSJD~~ l/Oi\!t. uf u11n111,L: .111u1 01\11 ho111f'' . I ....,.. '' Q) )~ \\(' h!ll I' ii ~h<ll /l ~ b\'dr00111 JI .~JM:'(' I!< \I h'al .\Ull 11('1'11, '--------.) ti·1ti· :.:.., • :: Biu bcdJ nu; / ' Brau1iful tu1Jti; lrss tha n Oki. S.·h('dl!lt·rl ll1''f11l\r O\f'I' .S14~.000 pt'r .11• ~·u11 p1·1. r SI ,680.000 ..;,.IJ<'i' 11·dl lakf" S2~.i0.000 Oo11n \lay lakf' hf'a(·h p1'0pc11~ tor part or f'qu11 y. COATS --. I " R;i11ell1J 111111 1.1/l1011s of 111.' ls 11• r11r sp;ll'IJllS ••••••••••• & .l,M1.·:!',.,E,.,D,-. .. ,P,n~~-s.s.·.E5S,,S, I~?.~.'. I: ;:1~~~:1 s~:1,h:·rp1 good1i's :\II elt.,·t . k1t1·h. ll('dn..10.n11~ ·: fu!I ha1h~. Mobil e Homes WA LLACE ... """·' "'" ~f'p, din roo111, fonn<1( 111· for1na! du1111.c: r 11i)111.f F SI 12S BA. l;•'<<i('•/ (lOOls. ;cnnis I* :Xi' :-.. l40' lo! ,,,.11, .~C'paralC' 11;in<'ll1•d fJ 1111l.1 1 or a• I REALTORS , .. ,,,.,, T--".·" '''"·' \'.• 1 .. ,,,_ • &al 11.lTe~~ 1·111. 11/11• ,. r pr s u ""' " u lhJ'uou 1. :! ra1· ~ar •• i;uuart•cl roo111 i111h •·oty 111'\"plal'r, :.io-.~,; r·t.,\.\!1 ~1;c1 2 hdrtll , ,.:__546-4141 --LA RW IN e S4&-S411 * $:l7.500 full pru·e 1 1 J--l'a1 gur;ii:r. shin~ l'lr;u11 ;_1 b .. 111. 11asl1r1'. I.· <fl')'"· (Op•n Evenings) --FHA/VA Tr:Ri\1$ AV . .\ll.. nu a 1ug1> 01 . ·r111s !)('au!) I *FULLER REAL TV* ear1 hr )Ours for JU~I $1800 anll 1as1t•ful!y df't'Onllrrl. a ll rl1:-:h11;1 ~hr1 Front p01·1·h 65 Units Near Harbor And Baker :;:;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;;:;;:;;:;;;:;;: Balboa Peninsula I ' r I lllb j ust fl SIVllf'·~ thro11 11nd 'ht•d ~f'l·ll P UI ~·anu!_, _ 1 • :146_0814 .....•...... Anytitnf' r 11. ,. i:1n·1·y py1111~ o un .' I I l ocr:AI\ side. Ral. Bl1 t"lf·! -----Sl~1. Pf'!' 111() p;1,\'S al\ fl'()/ll Rf'ai·h 1-'li'\l!Jlt• 1•'1111" p;11 k !'t·I (lf\. ~!l.JOIL •ll li' WHY 1 YES. 1 nrr rhiplr\. $.l."i,1).111. • SPACIOUS • I .i l 1.900. ~· B. 11 1 \\'. \lvi'0add1'll ~µa1·f' 60.i YOU WILL AGREE! l :'-larshal! RC'<1ily l:i4.l-46W l 4 BF:. 21~. ~·~· 1~ sq. fl I Walker & Lee ha11a 1i , &!nil< .\.11a. Coinfort. Cli'an, Ch<1rmin,r: ------condo. P1ci;l1ge l<>c. Brau\. ' ·,:;J -i::'.!H Gro~s inconl(' over S140.000. l;ross spcndab\t' app. 10"~ lo!al dollar invf'stnient 1'~­ !urn 01·cr :t:jr ,. I.ii;led price $980.000. ;; Beci1'001)1 , fa1111l) rn1. din.1 Capistrano 8e11ch I park llkf' gr f'" 11 be 1.'.s' .. ,. 546 I Ol P.t•a ltors .\IOBILT.: -Ho 111e .l-Cl:lb8na. 1ng n\1. 2 b;1th:s. !ana ~. ;;-.,,,~ I -~ -Re 1' r ca 1 1 0 _11 . !at:ll.llJf'.~ ~·2 ..... !1 _!_•·•~ ~ :!700 l!a1·bor Rll·<I. at Adan1s on 1hr ha r. rully ru1·11'd )1ll'd. Cor11rnic111 EilS!S1d(' FHA or GI I u~:UITla:;..~~ S;-i.7:ru dolln !(l ''Sheer Ele9ance'' I :l4:r-O~flj 0!11'1\ 'Ill(\ r\! frpls. p<11!u L ido Villagt' 1-0l THE REAL \"\l ESTATERS C. :O.J Cusron1 .: BR 2 B:\ honir on I .i ••• ii.SO ti ~ • Joan A 1 .· 1 . ,, , , P !· .12 HOUSES . DBL LOT I :-,., 1. oou Lido Park Di . (.'Q:O.lL l'.'\-SEE a lrg lo! t:on1 plctrh 1cdc~· 1Y htl t1lll1Jllhl"l<1utl) ... opu<1rl• '' BL K TO BEA. CH 1 NB. ti7::--0GSO 19:.1 B 1 d r 1j o1, k oine "'" pus 1 varl'J('ts an 12 • __ _ __ _ uo.I O l .-l)all} ui,i ~3., Jl~.i° essiona ) '1; • SJ} SIOD ( .,,. ) 531 c. dra ~:;, su111•J'-S lt.Prl l"°cJ. Like ne\\' 2·s!y. 4 BH .. 2 tia HOADCR:\FT R.-;Jj .\lobilc CALL ·ITI 4l 546-1600 pen -;, !Iii: E-·• ·C ET j -""'· •01100 1·001ns. forinal dinini; roon1. fo1·mal din. rn1 .. hlh \s. f:i111. honir. i\lc1~1 a1v11irig . SlOij \ lNVESTrt1F:N1' D!VISTON . ' ,, ·''• .. - Lachenmye R D ARP I BY oii·ncr. Eaststdf". ·l BR ''I scpara1r f111n1ly roon1. Boat rni. 11·111·cf bat· &: BBQ ___ :_tr~:j:! • __ , REALTOR B . .\. rorni rl1n i·n1 . crp,1:-:~ gatf' h('J 'r a nd . , inany, 1-'rplc. 2 c·1u· ~ar : llonu· 10~1{)· \Johil i• hv111r. rn•·los<'d ~ INCOME UNITS 492-9700 d!'p s boa l gate. huge R-4 n1any f''<lr;is. J\n.\•ous 01\n-l'nuld ~ n1ad<' i111<1 dupl<'.\-t·ahani• 111 !'arl\ do11n10"11 DllPLEX . 'l BR ea .. fire-Realtor 1860 i\e\llJQl'I BJ,·cl .. C.:0.1. C;.11 6·16-:J9:.?8 Ev<':.. 61'.~-1.Ji.1 *"MY KIND OF YARD" * Tlif' 111 1n1111un~ -.\los1l) pal111 anrl 11hdl ll Pal1u' Thi<( :: Corona del M11r CAMEO SHORES $92,500 BR , r·a111i1~· Rn1 . 111ukr~ 4 Br . .( Ba. Pool. S11 f'rp1 ni; )<JU f<'r 1 hkf' )Ou rr on 1ae;1-01·ca111·1r11 . spal:IOUS & l'"li' ltlill -''LL \'EAR -L;11<'s ~Ou ganr Luxuriously appl'd. 1l1c )!.rc111cs1 <'ll1rr1a1n111('n1 !'.::..l·lus1vr lis!ing -, .. .. 'I.(...,. !01. '111anv il111n1 c.~lt'aS, f't'S i1·a11t to n101·r :, Subn11 I. Also -i·urr :? 81{ i•n!!:iJ.:"" C .\I (.'.,JI :.1~-.1!11,. plaet', l·rrts. rll'ps. i;ara1:es. . -All lcrn1s ;inrl only $•1\,qCll Both only S74.~~~I 0!1"1! -I $1 950 assun1r ~'. k:illn .or ~·llA.1 l.illl R•1'l·l:J.:)5. ii·r rkf'nds 1.:1 ir,J·i.-.! H!~ Fu1'11 -1113lluJ1 .:~. ~ · VA. Bc~t buy 111 Costa CAY\\'000 HE,\l.TY :i.\.~ 12!"1 ! ,-.,,rk $1. ~10 ~!;::!7. Pn1u·1pa!J1> V n I .\ . ~·111111·1~~~ BY -O"~f't':f{(';tl t' ,, 111 i I' , lt\'/.-f:$t6 ! '; BP.. 11~~~.~~t~!~. rlbl i;::a.1· ----:"II: I linn1,. :'\·r S(·huo1 s X .~tin1)-j I and '/.-'2 BR \lntt!'i, 14'.=. 1-"0R!::CL.OSt;J>.E . BrautHul ~ pi n:.: ··nir. 4BI!. :!' ~Hil ~ 0~ hrdroon1,:? b111h home -~:..---GOVERNMENT Pool !1<1 11<1 nr l ,,,,1 !uu·k 1 fl~~":~~~te, AJ. 6 UNITS t·l"Jlf'nl loca11un l-'1rcplar,., OWNED Vrpl,·. Al l-111 ..... 1i,1i , • I !'""·"" I on ~ a1·1 r ot . 6:0 . ..ow. shiikr1wf.v.·iiled)ard ar\d Fiii\ &· \',\ i·rpo.,o;csst'd !rr s/rt1·apl'1". J,.11 ·1.1 I •n1n1;'lt:ul;i1r "2.JO n1onlh 1n· I I 1'9-" '\' Tu11·nhotts('s &· honH•:o Lo11 an<scapini: ·• ,j,..,, li ~-to.:~i.:\Acreage for sale ISO 1·]11(ll"S 1a.\f'~. \\/!Iii lr.s,, !h"ll I ,,., " I i:1011·n. No points oi· ~;~rro11 "Vrs. or sppl. ·• nc1 .1 I ·---·~-Cornf'r lo1.:at1ul\. $100,fil'rO. SHlOO tlO\\I\ Call .->o\;>"-84:.14 lr·cs. l~o\''l pa_is ··losing Ln, Harbor 1-Iii::hl<Jnds IU ACRE:-\ Rollrng n1t'afl0\\• Roy McC•rdle Reoltor 0Q"Tll COAST R t: i\ L 'i'.:sTAT~ 1·os1s. All prwf' rangr.~. Call Channelfront Home 111 na1iur111I fur('~1 T.•\Kl-~ I l!HO Ncv.•port Blvd .• C.l\t. I UNITS ~poi u1 t0\1 n ,t· ! inH' fo1 ~ol r 11·1111L'. or JUSt 11'atch111g 11\(' bOotrtubC''. D0n·r rakc-111~ I \\'Ol'd for 11. SEE: IT - FOR ALL I *!!!!!\ IR£AS ------fltiS-4441 On R-:! lot . with pirr & floal OVi-:R S:!9. L\IO. %8-0047 . 541-7729 $23.950. S~I09 Pa)s all CREST REALTY Sti-1,000. Fo1· Appo1n1rnr111 Cemetery j .,,.., __ _, __ .,.,,..,., Quaint ~ bcd1w111 ho111<' 011 BU\' 0 . Call: 673.:'.titi:: ll:l6·02"J.11 1·:1·r Lots/Crypts 156 --PRIME UNffi-- large Joi -Pn\•at!' ll'Cf' ll'f'1"H)' fr"On1 Brokrr SIX '2 BR 1 B k Savf' $. Slartcr!': hon1f', 1 · · A apts. lleat shaded su·r:e1. Sub11111 FHA • .f lot.< in li8 rbn1· r.r~· 1 ~'estclilf Shopping Ce'lller. ·'!, •• 1114 VL~la l)tol Ut'O I :'\'r11 port Beach 644· 11 3;: ANYTJi\1£ ............................... --·--* DELIGHTFUL * I Sp1rkling 3 BR . :.!.000 Sq . Fl. Anracli\f' usr V<'ry nu·e .1 bf'droon1 hn111" I of 11oorj, 1ni'.!1dc J out. At:· BAYCREST CORNER 'lilh 1r11dil1onal ;:i.irf' Dining 1•cs5' 11'1 pdvale beat'hf'i< roon1 . <l<'n and brc>aklas1 ' area. $52,90(). PETE BARRETI -REALTY. Salisbury R ~"t1¥ or VA no do\\·n, tci·nis. n1odc111 kiL rlhlr ga1· & \!h; ~trn1or1al Park. c· .\I , .t !2., 1 Blt-irl ktl<:hens. f r p IC . ll . ('•LL o•·,.g4_04 1o.,,..11 :15 s11•i1nn1i11g /)(){)I 11 patio ('llt'll. • :~1&-1:~1·1 . ,, ,,.. ,.. , la1·gl! 81•., laundry. Set1SOll<'d r•i·cs. i SOUTH l' O A:-\ T ror rn1rr!<1J111n~. 0 n I _1 ------------""I 1 Goorl ".'-''L EC'/',•TL' s2:.:.:;oo, .t.'!~•. Pt'I' 111!1 I CommerciAI a'f"!' I t'/lan!~. . t'l"t lJJ'I\ r.i:.11 .., ., i:. • p t 158 + Ill.\ ~hrllr"J' .11 :;.J,OOO 11·1th l~VE~-ron·.-; !)pcl·1a!~ 2 BP.. 1 Robe~t~ & ~0· 962 -5~ FOR-T~FAMI L Y rop•~L-~ M<''<iblf' 1crins t-.:-~i~f (_'.\! Joins C-1. GOV'T. REPO'S \\'ho 11anls l'l·f'ry1hing und<'r CD,\[ l/1gh11a) lron1.11gc. C-! Po!f'nl!al plus :'>1 UST FllA·\'!'1 S·W.000 Pool. playground. land & bJdgs. hOUJORi> loweon , .. Sf'.:LL' :0.l)r'ts. 673-67j6. , 847-9604 boatrug, lc>nui~. IK-acllr.~ Ag('llf bi5-722j JI f T'!. lleol[OIA I K --·-'::<116 Via !.1do 615·4562 ~\'.·\CA--,-.:r 3 sR. REPO-ASABIAN Corne•· 1 BR . :1 barhs. 0111..I Condominiums --. ------PRL\'fl': I-pie:... 1tll J B1·. 1 Huge <·usloni frJll l·. I•~ Ba. RF:.-\L l'.:~'Ti\TE S?.(; •. iOQ. A11pi. Pl<'as('. for sale 160 $23,:JOO Bkr. ~HS--71'\9, I . .. , --.-University Realty Ba, iuc'()rnr S/00/1110. '.'l:o ----t OP._ sa!r b~ 011ner. 1 1111 ._ 1013001 £. c~r 1111 v. 673-tijJO L~:!SURE Living~ 2 BH. 1', ciwu to GJ , Sti~.:JOO. ~r OCC. SALE by 011 !:cr. Lrg 4 bf. 2 l><:aeh, 4 Bdrs J B;i 2;100 1 ..:. -___ BA. Cpts, Orps. bJt .1n:o :l.';7~1:11 Fvcs 67', l:'lbZ ln1. L'Or lo!. rn1 for boat &: Sq . ~·r Pr11;••ipl!'.~ onl). OHPEboN SVA.T. & SUN. Pri1·atf' patio. Lau n(l1') Lots for S•fe 170 642-5200 • • · .. -1 tra1IC'r 642-6459 139.500. 962-1*!)(\ a r r 1ew Homes fal.'Lllll<'s. U:1r <if t-ef·rcau"n ----------- • .,.,.._...,..,,,..,..,...,. __ 1,_i._1 :0.L . .\fl.J;\"~ . .\VE. 6~3-ti00J 1 . . ----------'48 "h • r c • 1 BORl\! lh1n!lng1on Cont. . r. ~ a"' arn rm. ounlry ronn1 11nd largr pool B.1 R/2 LOT $10,SDO. .N. EWPO. RT-H--E-IGHTS BAI.Ho;, JSLAN_'D__ Fount•'•n Volley ' I I 8 I I T11r1hsf', SJj .. i(l(} Bi 01~n<'r rl'l"Jl!'l crt·nr. r.1u! nr~!'Jl 011·n1-~·. :14!\-f-*li·I IOl::AL r·oH INCO:vt ~:: ~r-11 I 1st 11w: on PO\\'Clt ~: 4 BR. :.! bath~. 1800 S<1 . F1. '! usrd hrick (J/'rplace:-: QuJf'I ··ul·d('·S111.' StJ'f.'l"I &: ··lo.~·· (f1 aJI schools P1·1r cd ngh1 I ,,4.~.500 C.\1J. 67.J-;'i7'.!6 LUSK HARBOR VIEW ! NO DOWN GI Pnn. nnly, 96:1-1•11:i. C~101l·1' lo .. S49.:,00. 1.~:-0 Pur1 D-·uplexes/Uni·rs 1 r·11t·ilittf':l &. !!lcii·erl! 1tt! \n1111cd p0~~c ... ~. 01i 1h1s lu\'f'· _ ,. -----llci;rllntu·nr , :'><R 1;44.40;;~. sal• 162 HAFFDAL REAL TV I~ :i Bd1·11i. .t· l<1mJI} rn1 I ~ .BR.fo:atil} -~21 •990· 10 A/ Irvine B\' f)\•11"r Xo do\.\11 -VA~! _ 842-4AJ05 Eves: 541·2444 ho1nl'.:.!hAth~.Canyon\·1r1•. \·el .°'.,:11. S•:iO do_",11 anc.! l ,1r"ld ~Br ."l1a .·.•ro·"i1•'•, OA;-.;A P I X d I I l! S 3:.! L r id ht" v ' ,. ' _ 0.~11 -· "" up<''-010~/ol IOO'x'~"' R-' -Etcc. bl1 -in~. lot~ of Ille; I p}nl ~ .• ' g · )ii · ., I l'r·p1s/!Jr11.~. rthl gar, I blk Sl!},.iOIJ. Srh ·rr Lantrn1 al f.·1 '-i::. .....,., • 2• pools Ii• 11 0111 <'Olll'I~ ard kih•h .. IJ1g n1::i;o;tr1· :'\ln1 Cl'l)I I LOVELY TO I L .. 1 1 .,,,,. ,.,, _ C . ·t 11. b"B" ,1., ,..,,,. pa\'" d 11..l!ev. 348 !::. 'd Cl l 1 I • LOOK AT ,,..-h ·1 ··"-"'· .... :.!-i:1:!.~. ,\Ii • '<'""· c v-"1 o-,--.,-,,,.i. Rh ·1 · · ·c·" oc. \la.\ 11 (' ~1i0,1 .iou Ttu~ jiU<)(l .' r·p~ .• can. l' rar. 1· can , ·i . . . t Li•ii I\ t ,()(' r s <'I :-;1. . .... J< ... rt bui· :..f'r ro.:l:J~. .1 Bd1n1s ..• ba .. la1111l} 1oon1 __ Income Property 16' 11alk 10 11111 Sr ~hopping I MORGAN REAL TY l' ' stp;o·1uc d1n111~ roo111 ... 11 BY OWNER 7 HOUSES If 'Gi~O,_L_!F'2t.7c"'o·u"R'-s'E·J09L OT-673_6642 675-6459 bC'11uu f11lly {!('('Oriire<l. \\ (11 2 SIOl'). ,; BP., A·f/'atll{' S!t'p~ \ ___ 31 51•1 ( .... ) 531 5lll plilllllf'd patio, lant!st·n 1>111~ lo I><'"' hf'a,·ti . L1kr I"'" .. 011 2 Joi-'. do1in1o11·11 Costa BIG CAN YON LOVELY 1·1 .. 11· of Catabna 5 • I ....._ -•. , •• ,.,,,,.,., .. plu·. , ,.,.,, S."0 .·,·.IV\ 642.J::t20i \I ss1· hi _ _ ~ (\; , , ~ " "' NV . l"S(I , ·'· n10111 Y lll· Slr·l"rl 10 Fa11"·8y DUPLEX-$24,750 & bay area. Cusloni bui\I 4 BR. fan1 r111. 3-ha. 2400~q ,\II 1h1 .. ror onl.\ S·l'l.:nl & HAP,BOH-\11{'\\ ll~i\!CW-l'Olllc. SI0.000, do11n, lltur'}, 1;,;4;w: sri f r, \Veil loc-11-rcd. 'l Bedmi \\·/ fl !ll.nll.I 2 blk~ el"n1 & hi lh(' lanci i11 )Ours. ton' Ing East. 111ost ~ell Allnosl 11on'1 last: Only -~-711.1 or li44-7777 Con1·r!'I this ~ bedroom horn(' to duple:... 11·ith authori!i!'~ approv;il. La1-ge R-'2 lot. clos" ro golf !' o u r s ,. , abse11te<> 0\\11f'I'. 1(1'' rio1\•11. Hurry 616-7111. -0 THE REAL l~ESTATERS It's a[lvays I.hf! right tlnie !• al~·ay~ thr 1·igh1 placr ii you 1\11111 RESULTS! Call 612-.Xi78 & place Iha! ad foday! hid pooRBl,QoutBrloor,",",t bar d& i>t•hools. $39.900 0" n r (i d h•11 nr1v Portofino inotlel. r.:.\ $79,500. Mob1'l-e Home/ g<1s . ca111 u L'Oll . 962_,014 r" tra,, •on,•~. 644.00.·,•i . Call O\\n<'r al 644-1536. .m . • re I '""";JI.Ill ""·---PERRON REAi.TY 612·1771 Trailer P•rks -OPEN DAILY 1_5 Beach . TRADF~ for un1L, 4 BR, J Ji!l7 Orang~ AvC"., c .• \L 504 LARKSPUR Huntington ·· _ BA. Newport Shores, Ag1. 21 . UNIT DESERT CREST 172 $ INSTANT CASH S R~ALTY li7~722J. H.l._R " & 3 8 .. , B •. I , 0\1•11 your 01\tl•lol 1 Bcdroo1ns • sharp'. U ~ •. -a. •~r !1 lllp 1:. Golf. CLUBHOU R·2 Lot S42.!Y.i0 lo. lhe eqUliy in yoiu· ho111e. Ill\'. Park Center, Irvine DESPERATf.: O\\'Nf.:R 1 BR 82:U f'.:llis Ave., llB. $420 ;"II St:. N"atur-Call .\113•lim<'. 833--0820 _._ 1 2' a . • 841 '957 al 1101 Poolil. S3990. to Ca.II Par \\rood 548·0201 \\1e pciy all COS\.\. In fore--r ( en 2 1:1.gbuu \'!t'I'•'-··• • 615--11 l p, I~~--~~~~---$7290. Free Brochurt'. &cni1· ProJl<'r!ic~ 67:-r5726 clo!ure ok. Just call • .24 Agt. ''""' · -• BY O"'IK'I'. Cd.\! 4-plf':.., 1110 3 · hou 8'17 8507 ELOR!D<;t; REAL TY (.'(). LUSK 2 story. 5 bt-. 4 ba, :1 rs • day. • l19un1 Bt1ch CUTE 2 br. 'l ba to11•nhllu1e. en·.1~. on~,!. BR & one I BR. P . O. Box ti6ti-O lrplc, grtcnbelt k>calion, ftt ~ S\\·\mming pool, fc-t land. Frp c'11, \X.Ykn ~ide of 1-f\\')", ~sert Hot Sprini:s, C.JL!. land. Agent 675-7225 H.I.R. WHY RENT? Agenl,~7:,...772;,. ILi rt. $99,T.iO. &12-,;.-131. 17\.t1 329-0-144 •• CA~1EO SHORES *• tto$1A11s A,w LAIJD Easiest of term~. Tilis week-\\1ESTCLIFF by orw., 4 Br .. PH.I'.\1E Balbo11 4-plx. 1! blk BY O\\'NER. VIE\\', POOL, 4 " \... _,,,, .... ".. ( ender hJ.S fulure potential of 3 ba. 2300 sq. IL tK"11 Jy heh.. $7~.000/eq . $60,000. Sell tM old 1tUff Buy U. new lllUf/ BDRMS. 673-S6.')l. ~ ton1n1e rcial developn1e.nt. <l!'OOI' S51.000. &12-9989. 'frad('·VacanL 67l-8JZ7. 21, Bdrn11., 2 1·ar garage: 1 -:;;:::::;::::;;:;;:;::::;:::::::::::::::::;:;::;:::;:::;=:=::;::;:::;:;:~=====;:;:::;;:;::::;::::;;:;;j STAR canyon vir\\'S. ~·ith lots of pri\'acy. Full p1·ice $22,500 "·ith tern1s you'll have to 8<'1'! lo beli~~: i 1-31 S©il~lA-.?££~s· The Puzrle with the Built-In Chuckle J ..,,/Otan REAL ESTATE 1190 Glcnnt>yre Sr. n 5'4!Ml.'U6 !'A Y DELIGHT- 2.Story. 5 Tr\IJ., 2"4 balh!'I. Ll\'ing rn1 w/trplc. rorn18I ining n11,, 1~"· kitchen ~ rklaL 1lrt'1 . Go otl 11 " 1 allborhood ; cul-d~sa'· atreel. 144,;;oo. It 49$-2800 * 2 :-i"TORY glw; front '1ew hotn~. 3 bdnn. 2 bath, Bllllcon) iu bf>wn1 li\•inj( roon1 overlook~ 1hning ~&. 2 decks. fl'l\(_.,.d >' 1 r d J. r1N"pl11cf', ¥.'rtb8f', l'!lrJX'18, rlraPf!~. hu1l1-111~. $39,jOO, ~!}4~jXC or 64S-'1.-xit, O l•orronge ltttt11 cf the _,,-..._ roor Krombltd words b•- low 10 fl'Jfm fo vr limpl• wo1d1. I HEYSIR I I' I I I I ROSRY I I I r I I l l t $ 1· I FOHET I 1 ) " I I J • Pugnacious r1rn1rk: ""T'hM's · · --. · one heel w.,o's looking -• rr=~C==E~~N~B~~o~:K~~~1:: c .... ,,. ,,, ,,.,,.,:;!._, 11 '1'1'1 ... .• ·--bi tilling ir< '~• m1.ain9 words L...-J'--L--'--'--'--' YO'J dtvt iop frOfl'l 'ltp No. 3 btlow. fJ Pl1Nl tiu1.18f,£D llTTE'S It J THtSE 'l)UA~[S SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 100 l • ' e ... D.ltLY PILOT Tu~ay Ftbruary 9, 1972 Ap1rtm1 n1~lotl!tnl [9 } Mountaln 1 Otiert, HouMt Unfurn. 305 Hou••• Unfurn. 305 Hou1n Unfurn. 305 I Apt1. Furn. 360 Apt1. Furn. l60 Apt. Untum. 365 'Pt. Unfvm. 365 Apt. Unfum. Re.sort 174 -G-.-n-,-,-.1------Hunlington Beach I Slnta Ana : Coit• Mesa Huntington Beach **BIG BEAR LAKE ---------Co"• Mesa __ • • 1 ALA R•ntal• e 64S-3900 -t BR, J hath. lmmacul are, I Casa del Oro t.nt. ~1· .. •!e s10'"" 2 BR rum 1 -----e rrsH· • 11u111 •Ski • R,.. h ·~ ., DRLUXE e PRIVACY Ar.su1'f'd, I BR lot:. vt ,.:.:triu. 1 !OC'k off apt. $150 n10. No te.i, S50 ii;; la.'(. In this l BMnn, 2111nr RENTAL FINDERS I + Ol!'n. Nf'ar beach. Ullls i\hiin x,, .\lacArthur, S.l!"lO mo ALI. trnLtTIES PAID mov!'-in a!lowani~. APARTMENTS cabfn. ONLY $10.900. F . •>SW. lt ... COSTA Mf.U lnf'I s~ IP&5(" !.~7-Z'l85. Compan befof'll' you N'lll . CREST REALTY Air Cnnr1 -f rplc-'s . 3 S\\lm- lf'MTI! It wqri'• li ... r Housel* Apts. I Cu.'l!Om r1e.!l1gllf:'r1, featuring · n1ing Pnols • Health Spa . OR TI~IS - 2 S!orv f"t:1.1 · e B"ACll o I I A West cliff • <"a I k1't h · 1 * * 9684<'1 'J * 645-0111 * · ,., PUni;:a ow, R, ~ c OU.'1 c en wu 1 In· .._ •• Tf!nnl.'I Cr is. c..;ai:ne & lit!· Up(W'r tor ~.759. ~ !'ttl\f'. N>Jr1~.. Child/pr! 116;i. z BR cp"/dr" bit I direct l ighting e t.10VE IN TODAY! e hud Ronni. Call RoM j714~ 5.36·171A-nr ;,.,..i:,...p,. IO l..taMlJ,.ord.. u · "' ,.s, ns, e c......~ d • • 1Lh1. incl, $125. heam r ril. Heated pool. .... parate in g 11.rea Kids & pel8 v.·elcoml!'. 2 Br.. l BBDROOr.1 \Oorll4': Spencl!'r ~al Es1A!l". ALA Rentals . 645-3900 • rr111rl adult<;, no p ets . • llome-llke ~tora.ge $164. All extra!. Pool. ~ar., FROM fl!m P.O. Box 2'1~. Big Bl"ar Furnished w fi.l2-2j J4. 1 • Private pa!ios patio, 17362-A Keelson Ln., 1 MEDITERRANEAN LR.kt', Cal1fom1a. ' SM-PRIVATE Bat'hl"lnr .,.,,, • r ~ h~;e,a, la,o::e 5('lleellon • Closed l:'.ilragt: w'srorag.. 11.B. 847-3669 or ~-7510. I BIG Bear 3 BR furn, v!,.w. I It. cooktng. nict: & clran. 0 .. 81"' :;-r. room IOnirs Houses Furn. or • l"ull length 1narble pull-VILLAGE Qu 0 ,. thaf can he . mtJVC'd 1nto Unfurn. 310 nian l'REI:: Ur.ii .. furn. I BR .. nr. iel AN!A. All ut1l. · r!OM' h'l Pvery1h1ng. Fnr n111 1 1 1 bch p I l lJO 20 2400 lh1rbor Blvd. C.M. FER! ~i)"f'rs, 673-6T;ii. !ure malr. fl mo~t 1n1n1C'( 1a1e y on our a Kino;-sz Bdrm.~ . oo . 1 10th St. R r n r . n r 1 ! n n 11 I an .! Co•ta Mesa e Pool • Barbequ~ • ~ur-5J6.377715.16-1282 1536-1366. R~~~C5~~~~CF: Real Estate Wanted 184 S'"6--UNRELIE\'ARLF: l Rr SJIEH.\\'001) R £ALTY· JDl:..AL Jo a -" I rounded "'tlh plush land-LUXURY 2 Br .. 2 Ba. Pool OPEN ID A:\! TO 6 r~t 540..8555 r re r...-, mupf' Of" U:apini: Rec. room. Walk to .. _•"h' Cost• Meta SPRING HAS SPRUNG af)d )nl.lr hou.~rdra nin.i; 1~ d<!ne ' .. :11)0)' \OUr g1u·ti r r1 apar!!llt"n! 11·1thoul 11ork' St.roll the ~ardrn.&. rila) s:oll . sun 111 tllf: pool * 1200 SrtUAr(' fet'I, $200 111onthly • CrtH'l<">U~ t'ntrr1n1111n~ <ll"f'll 11•1th f1repltH"f', palln • 2 bel::.lroon1ir., d1•n, 2 baths Ju:11 a fC'V. at Tha Vendome l&I~ 1\Jj,!l1t'llT1 A\l'llUP, Gl2-2.~21 \\'ANT".D by prtv•I• p•rty. h,~,.. !'il'lVt:. rcfrig •T"!( ___ _o_:.:__= i•olr -S II 2 BR ~ , I ,., ... ,. ' ,~ Br ., c'"t•g•r &· ~ "" ,~N!On-ma Adu)( liVI""' a l 11• hl'>I 2"" t21h 0 • , H.B. 4·plcx E-!'ilde Costa ~1C'AA. nu·C' yal'!1 " ~·" • + arrl ... """'J ~ F rt --CHILDREN OK Goo<! ronrl . \V III P•Y ca sh . --· -l.olrlen1t.r~!. fncrf Y r d gar., y , '\\.aler p-1 Large I BR $175 or<1! iur hrat1ni;:- u d SlllO mo. 546-9!165. UTJLmEs FREF Lagune Beach 2 ch1 ldrt'n .... ·eloome New Villa Riviera J\·lus1 have at 11'.a!'it orw 3 nfurnishe <"rrrs/t1rp!>. ln1ri1ar. "=\\' · !Int ,r., colr11t.'a!rr !urn 2 Be. 2 Full Ba P I ll ~E SIDE 1 B C V;,, .•• , l~/mo ,. n•· or Condom1'nlums 1.,.,.. · \Vil~n &1 2·l97l I d' BR. unit. r1nc1pa ls on y •.r I' ncy r ol ,.,, t..J<! " .. !'ilu 10 \\'f!'ieparate bd1•n1 3 Bdrm. 2 Bath . .-.u. SI d •- jl36·6774 \\1,. e k rl ;oi y ~ 1 a~,f'. lo\'rly yarrl w I rrrr!'i trai.r . Call RJJ-!Hl.l res1d('n-1 Un furn. 320 * $30 WK. & UP * 1-l BR. All f'lec, rarlian1 Car....,,ts a"d ,_:.,~, ' iac i·pt rp!'i . plllln, •rt·am I e s ,.~ w .. ,... {·r1I , gara.c:r~ \\'/detal\l';, Jrtca tor ntaturc couple. rr ~>-16-97).l owne-r/agr. tudlo & I Bl? Aprs h{'a!, O«'an vir11•, l hlk to Bu ilt-in 5love r.1o !n !\lo. From $1115 *\\'ANTED * I --3 BR, 2'~ Rathi., lamily Costa Mesa 1 •Room $15 \YK k Up. l:ieach 8.· do .... ·nto wn. 58.l ! Cal"JlOrf-!'lta\J Mower ti21 Hamilton, C'.\I llou•• '" c-•• '.lo••, f-m i $14S. 0 DOLU!OUSE. 2 Br ,1·/ h f I , . e TV & ~1a~d Service Avail Glenne ........ -193-3039. Laund"'' room. ... = .. , v~ " .... '" 1 C d r<V)rn ...,•11 lr('p aer ; !wn. MESA \:erde V1tJa, _Bra.nd • Phone Service. Util Pd J•' ., Set> 1•lgr /'llr. &• /'ltrs. Hoban owner wl!h 101.\! down pa)'· I "n~ £:id rpts. rps, fncrl n<'1.1:"hlnrhood. /1Par a 11 fl('W 2 bdrm. rear unJI 1t.•Jt h 1 • e All major CTedit Carrl! STUDIO $87.50. O Ide r M f.~nced yl.d. No pets 548-2062 men!.· Call after 6 pn1.1 yr · 1 nk. :-.eh~"IOIS anrl heach fu>oot nr yard & par10, cpts. drps, 2:l76 Newporr Blvd. 548_9755 salarial man, no pe ts I E A VIL AGE Apts. •B~AU111''UJ. G~R~,~,,-,,~N~D~S~e 548-5!:lll9. ; $l:il·tn LAGUNA . 1 Br. year-lrase $2;1!"1/n\rl. 0 w n r r · garage, washing fa cll.ities. I Thi! Ad Worth $5 on Rent 434--8170. 1046 El Camino Or . •A SPANJSl l Dl'.:C'OH. LIST IN GS '"llnlf!d. We ha11r ly ren!a1. Blork lo hrach. Ai::r nt. 961-1\118. , CR.10.i;('& lo 1sc~~s & twys. 1 Children & Pet Serl ion N•wport Beach I 546--7331 Air l~'fnd . \.a~. \\'Ir. pd. buy en; !or home!';, R2. R.1 & ~·rplC'. Patin, U!ll prl DELUXE ·I Br , 11~ Ba Con I ec poo facJ.Jilics. $135/mo dr.;-~fb-ho~ l:<1.r;1gc. Pnnl. Rl'L'. rn1,, rom . Agrnf!'! ,,.... • ..., tin l~;illrt1 in rnrnmun1ty · .,n;r t'Ollipl , hid J'IOOI. ar!uH A B A & 30th, 2 br. conl· •111n° r~'. · · Huntington 8each * FRESH AIR \\'rtlk l hlks to Bt<11rh! I~" 3 RH Apl , nto1,1!y de¢>r. Dhl atl<1Plif'li i;:ctr, fr11!r', I ~ fl~. hllr\c, r~r·f'rt rrtlg. $225 No sngl~. no ~l.\. 5Jl.i-l 7 l I. TR1 LJr-i-:,-,-,,~,-RcR~.~,-3-A-. SlBO. 11ri C.:111~. drpt.. xio!, n't" 1'!11 \\'11Jk f(1 h~C'h Ci·J~,. ,., F:nlt :!:.m 121h St .. :1:l4'-iH!l2 219 lS1h it , , ;,:~;..1~11 ---• ('llf7. Of!O ,\rTS a S:!'',I All<tlllfl J-2-3 Ar"~.Pool. Pr 1 ~ 11 t r 1·l(l~rrl gar. \\'11shrr/l)t"}'<"r 53ti-IJ.16. -BEACHWO OD Ans-:- Branrl ne1t.• 1-2·3 Br. \\'alk tn h••ai·h. rr1 rlrp!'i, blt ns, frpl. 125 161h ~r. s1;::9J7. BEACHBLUFFAPTS~ i'inac 'I. 111-, :! Ra Puo . Pa!lo. !); "'· j12Jl F:U1!1i 8477644. 2on~s 1:io. rp1~. dn5. s1nv .. Nn p1·1~. Frlll'Cd , <hlld OK. 1<·!7-iOliol. Irvine 'f 67"7~ >ffR ' · I 1200 o.-1304 ~ o " . nle, B L 0 I I 1 RR 1140 2 BR $1 115-SPACJOUS 3 Br, 11, Bil, r!hh.~r. ponl.~ & p.1rk. Nr 'Fount•in Valley couple. no ts. <l Seasnn '.!i plctC'ly furn . I Yr Is.-lUeBliBJ1U $1 fiU·~l65-$1ii '~~~~~~~~~, ~~1 : ~;:;~;,,;;."''· drp•. '""""" <o ·hMI' < ''"· °"~c 7~ 1 Z BR 2 BA+ 420 sq rt ho Mnh F.s!, 2359 Npt Blvd Upstairs. 1 blk.1o bch, shop~ -21-lS!/11~.~·1~,~:~~:o~.<';;~~i.::igr~~~-1 PARK W'ST ri'f"s. $210/mo. fi.\5···~ .. · nus S.1R-6332. t'l c, S210 mo. 1st & last+ APARTr.fENT" __ _ __ _ _ APARTM9"TS f'lna nclal -rvf'~. I rni. Al! hltns Jncl upirrar1Pd . clea nup. UILI pd, 673-0034 I z B ,, 5 BRANO NEW 2 BR. I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~ $:?'25-POOL + 4 BR. 2 Ba !!ipl!I ---crpts & drps pool tennis • J\10VI:: IN TODAY~ a aft 6 P R. I" BA ........ Sl!IO FROM $ll5 Bdrm. Fran $160 level. Crpl!'i, drp!'i, hHns. T \\,' N /H S E ·, iv h r Id r yl, clubhouse i' al! ~ainh·~· Kids & nets Wf'lcon1e. 2 Br .. G 00 m. 13 BR, 2 BA ... " .. ", $:?55. N I I d 2 Bdrm., : Ba. Family or singles, Pt'! ok. r~ rig rn~~· rp/crpt. poo ' I paid. Close lo heach $256 $164. All extra~. Pool, gar.. R, V'! 2 BR, great patio, (ALSO AVA IL. FURN.! rar s1op!'i, rtn· osc ,i::ar· From $'95 8usine11 200 BEACON * 645·0111 rlhhse, l ,:.i Ba. wtr. pd. 3, mo. By owner 968-40CK, par10. 17362-A Keelson Ln .. 56 from beach, Seashore 1 New adult garden Apts. ages, built-ins. Pnrl pal 10.~. JAA:i ParkvuJY Lane Opportunity Br, S19a. 2 Br.. $170.' . 11.B. 847-3669 or 968-7510. Dr. $2'25 mo. incl. util. Thru 1151 E. 21st. 646-8666 at1ra1·tive lnd!'il'fl. ArluJts lrv!nr. !Jes! or! L;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;' $90 1 BR .. E.tove, ttfg., lot 54B-14-05, 537-5384 Huntlngtan Beac'1 June 675-0884 only. Nn pets. 1!170 Wa llacf' San Dirgo f\i•y • CuJ,cr Rd) OK. LRG. l BR apL partly !urn. · · BAY MEADOW APTS. SL 548.{)80.1. 646-2200. DISTRIBUTOR'S $lOO I BR .. kidEi, pets OK. TRI-level exec. home: 3 BR, 3 Br Condo.1 ~~ ha. Use of 21 $125. Furn., $135._ Adults. 3 VERY1rg Bdrm's, l blk to 2 ~r. beam ceilings, priv pa-1 --'--~:..:C.. ~----1 . _________ _ NEEDED Sl.25 epto;., drps, fenced yd .. 3 BA. fam rm .. 2200 ~ft. pools & playgmd. Kids l.ndry, .l:'ar. Quiet, nr. ht:a c h . New c rp ts . 1 110, rec. facil., closrd gar-~. $170 * Laguna Nig..,.J ttonal Marketing Company C.l\f. gardener. Private party. ok/n.-i pt>ts. $200 mo. mrkfs. 1922 Wallace No, 8, S 225fwinter. $325/year!y. age. Ga.o; heat, cooking & 3 BR. 1 2 IlA . patio. bl!ns. NEEDS NOW, reliable men $140 !rncffl ror In!, prt CdM. $'.ISO mo. 5.16-4.!!72· 536-786l 548-i;518. 642-1 403. I water all pd. All adults no rrp!.~. rlrrs. Ask Rboul nur Laguna N tuel Apt1 or wo en In thi to I · =o=~~~~-----l ~~oc==~=--·---pets F"rom $16.5 ' rlisrount plan. $S0 C<'nt<'r 1 BR. 1 AA + 2 BR, 2 BA m s a~a SM 2 BR, pvl. home. va<". rv1ne San Juan Capistrano L VELY 2 BR. furn. apt., R l\1Y l BR apt 1n Bearon I ·· · st .. CM. 642-&140. 5-18-2682. •service fut movln2 ("(lm o~ $120 2 BR, fencd for kid!'i !'ihag crprs, pool , close !o Bay, $190 mo. 387 W. Bay SL, C.f\1. F'flOl\1 SIN. frpl 'd, drp'cl, ·~ratf!d producli . NE\V multi $\ilO 2 BR .. fencd for kids 2 BR, 2 ha. furn $llO. FOR RENT OR LEASE j slorf's. Adults, no pets. Sl60 ee 673-3914 Art 6 p.m. Call 646-0073 • WILSON gas pd., TV cable. v.·ater, million_ dollar adverlisin~ I pets. ' 4 BR. 2\.1 ha. lam rm $.~40. 2 BR. 1 bath, new condo. 1 per mo. 1941 Pomona, Costa BACH all 1 .· 1 Park-Like Surrounding GARDENS e alt blln!'i, Indy areas, htd. campa1211. llUNT SNA CI\· $14-0 2 BR. cpts, gar. tot pt'! 3 BR. 2 BA, Atrium $33S. Carp, drapes; w a I er ' ~Tesa · e ec, !'i\\ lm poo • QUIE"T . DELUXE 2 BR, 11 1J BA, cpl drp~. pool, BBQ's, priv patios & PA~K. Company 11ecured lo-ok, H.B. SJ7j/20() · encl gar, 1 blk ocean. s140. 1 2 Encl pa tio, $140, 642-6811 balconies. OJ!n ID A.M. to cation•. commercial and tac· $14j 2 BR ga.r lot OK C\I ~ ~~: i :: .. ~~;.ileh;:k ::: Capistrano Valley J S.\IJAL~lfurnished apartment. 210 Cedar 548-1131. Prv .pa7i~ !R1~:~~\s D p . 9 P.J\t . 495l2n, 499-2277. tory. PART or FUU. tlmt. ' " " · ' · Realty 493-1124 a uu Hies. no children or 2 BR, 2 ha., frpl., heam N a na <'Int 290-11 Aloma.ofl Crown VaJ-6to10 houn: pet week. $170 older hme. 2 Acres, \VE HAVE OTHERS I pc t.s, Ill adult mobile home ceil's: clo~e to brach. Mr shop'g * Adul !s only 1-----------!C'y Prk11'y, NO SELLING ho~ir; OK Townhouse Unfurn. 33$ park. Ideal for retired Lease. Adults only. &1z..3850. artinique Apts. LGE 1 BR ocean vieii· apl. l--'--'--'-"-------1 '979 8430 AGENT !Tl bar, din atta, l1v rn1, lge br Mesa v ~ SH REQUIRED $600 lo 1 • . perwn. $1 15 mo, $35 securi-7 San ra Ana Ave .. CM er~ '2.995. For more information Eastside Cost• Mesa Hu~trngton Beach ty Call 646-8464. 21%rbfk B~ :1::x; :~e~t~~ M-,;;.,-~·~A~p~I ~1~13=-~~·~!6~-s;~·~":I :-~;~s~~l~~~Y& ~;ri~~a$gl~~ DELUXE 2 t 3 BR 2-ia. ~te: Quick Kup DiAl.rihui-Rent at $195 or option to huy. SEE IT TO APPRECIATE $100 ·MOVE IN Allowance furniture. 673---0526. 3 Bdrm * 2 Bath 837-3!l27, 837-5178. encl gar f50 up.' Rental lng Company, 1111 W. Rob· 3 bedroom, 2 bath, double 2 Bft. 11; Ba, frplc. shai;::: Sh11dy Elms-Lawn-Pool Ll Ofc 3095 M A {nhood Dr .. Stockton. Calif.. gan~ge, fenced yard. nrw cl'pl.~. drp~. pool!"> & Children's Section * * OCEANFRONT. l -2-3 ·vlng room with cath@dn.J NICE 1 BR, cptsfrl1•ps. In1· :>.!&-'.JOJ4 ace v e · 95207. Give namr , addrr~.~. !'ihag carpets, lre!'ihly paint· "SINCE 1946" plH:,-rround. ,!:l/O. 431_~j6(l l'ui n & Un lurn 1 & 2 Br. BR s \V1nfer .\dults only, ceil ing & trplc. Separate nu.-d1ate 0ttupancy . $12). , a nrl phnnl'. numhrr. rrl . Call Broker 545-9491 l.~t Wt<stem Bank Bldg. ) --F-om Sl3"/m U no pets 673-8088 I laundry ana. Encl patio. mo. 496-9218. 2 BR .. Carp t!'i, r!rapcs, built-** BIG BEAR LAKE OJX'n Eves. Un1vC'rs1!y P~rk, Jr.,,ine lake Forest 177 F.1 22 d ; .o. ~i:?fi.4-LRG clean 1 BR.Be 1 b . Swimming pool&: children's -E---~1-6-'-1 ~11=-----in.~. <"XrC'~lll lo{'11t 1nn in 1 ---D ays 833-0101 ~·· hts · --· n '-"' ::i !'i ay playground. $200. as u ).Jr~ VertC' $ l 5 O I m o , LJC'IUOR STORF. f oi· Sa le FOR RENT ";~~=~===·:'g;:= I Lakeside Park, ne1\', 3 H!1., 1 lil' $130 & z Br $l60. Pool & beach localion. 1 child OK HARBOR GREFNS ----------!lii2-!ll!9-I. !Nl!'ts approx. $50.000. yr. 3 BEDR00~1 HOr.fE ti · I crplg, drps. a ir cond., d /1\, lt'ITaC'C'. Td<'aJ for bachelors, $145 mo. 673-2164, 6i3-0072 5404353 NEWPORT BEACH , O\vner will carry financing. 2 hath.1, Z-car garage. car-2 BR. 2 ba ............. s:ioo blcns, dbl carport. l'lll'. no ('hiltiren. 1993 Church. N H . ht .. .. .. _ Villa Granada Apts. Newport Beach ·Opportunity of a l i fetim<"~ peted. draped. fenred, pa-4 BR .. 2i,, barhs ..... , S350 pa tio, lg. ~Josets, !miry rn1 ., ;,.is-9G33. ewport etg s GABLES & SE''lLLE'' Four bedroom~ "'llh balcon-PARK NEWPORT APMTMENTS !Ca11 Rolls (TI 4) 536-1738 <">r tio, super sharp. $250 per 3 BR .. 2 ha. homt .. $300 1115 ,ycl \\·ork incl . Pool &· lake CLEAN 1 or 2 BR Dl '!'i. no l 2 Br. WIJ;ar., adults. c pl ies above & below GracJOus ,write: Spencer Real Esta re, month. 3 BR .. 2\1. ba ......... $350 1 pr11'. S250 (213) 32i~IS:"il rol· 1 BACHELOR ApL, :ompl. J><'lS lg kit Sl25-$lj(). 2471 drp9. bltn.!i, fncd Yr d . Ii Vi Ilg & quiet surrounding : P.O. Box 2828, Bii;:-Bear Walker & lee i lect . furn. $90 mo. Util Jlflld, 53Z E 16th St 'Ne 646-1801 \\•{patio, wtr pd_ 636-4120 for family with children. Lake, Cal iforn ia. . . · d h·11 Cen ter Sl.. C.r.1. Mgr, Apt ' ' . ' 24.JS-"C" Orange Ave. $155 Near Corona de! Mar High lT ALIAN Restaurant. i\1ust -. .: re I N•wport &each E. 548-3076. Apt. Unfurn. 365 2619-"J" Santa AnA Ave . $155 School. Fireplace, \\'fl bar & Rt<altors b i.l · k' , gell. Retiring. Short hr:<. 842_4455 * ADULTS PREFERRED * * STUNNING l-2·3 Br'is, 2 Balboa Island J\lODERN 1 Bdrm. apl. Cpts, 8J~ ~~;G~Sch~nA•Yppl~a.~,!!;I ; Good income. 2131921 -9115. I -~~~;;:..:.;::~~--3 BR. 21·~ ba , hllnli, w/w Br Furn & Unf. Like n~w. drps, dsh .... ·shr, b ! t -1 n s, ;;. , ......,.~"" Money to Loan 2.tO LANDLORDS! Univ. p:~~~~r. Irvine crpt, Z carports, pool. $275 $140 Up. 645-5530. $30 with SPACIOUS 1 br w/ba.lrony gatBge. 1 child ok. Al! uti! Col~; ell, ~anker &: Co. i.;.;.;:.cc.:_;.:_.. ______ I \Ile Sp!:'t'.'i,:i.lite In NC''.l"POrl Call Anytime, 833-0820 REALTOR 548.fi!(.6 Ad. New paint & crpt. Stove & pd. SISO/mo . .107 Avocado, anaglng Agent 1. t TD loans I Beach . Corona de\ !>far . BLUFFS new dL~ 2 BR 2 I) SHARP BEAUT. 2 BR. rt'frig. Yrly only. Adults Apl ~-C:'>t. &15--0!JIM . EASTB~UFF : S Laguna • & Dana Poi n!. Lagun• B•ICh BA Bay vu, J.Ae . Rt'!, Av! I Pool. Adult~. no pets (1 teen only. $200 1no. 2081h Grand QUIET garden selling 2 BR 2 Br. 2 ba upstairs v1ew ap!. fi31i % INTEREST Ou'" r,. 0 R 1 e 11 otal Service is FREE ~ ....._..._______ now. $495 mo. 546-4607 . · or infant ok l Sl5.5. 642,9520. Canal. 673-5Z70. carport, crpls, drp~. b!t ios: Car[)l'trr1, dr.aped, bltn:o;. 2 2 BR & FIREPLACE SEE & GET BONUS SPACIOUS I Br. w, 1 h $l·lj to 116'. No '.'.°~~red p~rking !pacl'.s. ~16 2nd TD loans Nu-VIEW RENTALS ' Duplexu, " """ D Am• 1250 _ Stove, carpels, drapes, Jnrd 355 :ii BR \O.'/lrg patio. Com-lmlcony, new prunt & <'Pt. 642-~4 or 839--0959. . yl'.arly. gos. mo, 613--10.10 or 494-3243 d !'Ill ho Furn. ?r Unfurn. 1 1 & fri' y· --• I yar. cozy 1 e use, rcas. ----------ortah!y furn, PRIVACY! !'iove re II:· edl1y or1_y. SPACIO US 3 Br, 2 Ba, Shag ten!. $140. Also pan'I otfi<"e Newport Beach Adult.!i. 768 Scott Pl. 01. Adults only. $200 mo. 2081; crp1s, bl tns, drps, patio. , , &75-&050 o 8% Int. bllM!d on ~Ty. Also NE\V 95"."~ of gaJ~price loans S•ttler Mt;. Co. 2-21 71 54S-0611 Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. WAN avallabl~ for bu~iness ·t xp a nsi o n , operatin't :. capital, etc. J\lr. Oine • 303: 232-181 4. Corona del Mar HALF hlk trom CdJ\1 Bch. lmmac. 2 Bdrm .. 2 bath &. £UE'St h~e. Couple only. No doj;s. $375 mn. Avail. mid l\larch, 836-9853. day! or 673-8178 eves. f','R ocean. :t BR. 3 BA, den, din rm. hltns. beam cril- lnt?S. frplc . $400 ! s e . 67.l-3477. HouM1 for RW ~\ f 2 BR. 1 Ila., rorner. 2 hlk EJ hC'h Frplc. Nt1 .. ga.r, No I!---------' t'htld-pe!~. Lea~e S2R5 mci. 300 C.oldC'nrorl fi7.1--.1!317. Houses Furnished 300 Cost• Mesa General ava\1 w/ ha. he'd mlg. $30. 646-2323. Grand Canal, 673-52'70. S16j mo. &l;)..Jf6'17, 548--0324 "'"' · NU-VIEW RENTALS 3 BR. Z .ea. frplc, dshwhr. a 1 BR dC'luxe $!39. Priv NE\Y delux:t 2 er apt. Bay aft 3 pm . WllAll'r=TCI..& 673-4030 or 494-32411 ocean view. $300/mo yrly ' · · . t dr d h '~J e NEW 1 204 l3n:I St 642_2020 patio. tropical pool. Quiet. Vil crp . ps. s \O.T, .,., c, :'BR, Crpl.S & drapes. Choice DELUXE e Laguna Nigu•l av~114 ' 145 E. 18th S1 , Apt 10. ~ar w/auto door 11pener. !oc. in :-.tey Verde. Jmmed . 3 BR, 2 BA Apt for Ieai;e. -"-'--'-'...::~----1 or · 64~5'129. $300. yrly lease. 547-5667. occupancy. $1j0 ""r mo. Incld spac. ma.,ter suire d;o J BR. 2 BA, hv & din art"a, ~~~~~~~~~~.. '' ' LARGE I BR furn apl. l l2> Bal•--Poninsula 962-9894. Tm & dbl garagt : au10 doo r lrpl, blt \ns, cpts, drps. 2-car ' .,_,. nldr · mo. util pd. Adults only, no ,\!ESA Verd• "''" 2 BR opentt avail. Pool&. Re cre- ga.r., 6pr s. v1e1t.". Im-[ ]~ 2 2 • •--• I pe-ts. 642-4422/646--1730 Bij., Ba. frpl, yrl,v disll\~·shr, •h•g c-i. dr",·.· at1on arra . mac. SZ85 ~ls!. la.st & ....... 111•11tsfarRent -'-~=-:----"-"---1 !Balboa Blvd. & "F " Sn .,, ,. • S275 • den 4!Y.H'l44 l BR furn apt adul'p pa l10. infant OK S l J\ <; 865 A ,.. · " ...,, S265. No f)l'.ts / children. j.16--()21JJ. "' migos \Va \'. /\'B m !""'~-687 Vic!ori11. Beiur \1.1. 6i3-Si35 l\fa nagC'd R-v Apts. Furn. 360 * 548-61~ * z BR 1 ba newly redec. S2Z5. • LRG. pnv. patio . GaragP \\'ILLJAt'-1 \rALTf.Rs CO. 4 BR. DE:"l'. :l bath lovely · 1 ----------2 Rr, Ii: ml.1, pool, nr shop!. ... & b N 1••/.,..-orkbrnrh, 2 BR ' a:. Fo I · V II h A ·r F b JI General I pd .~r OC'f'lln ay. o r pl/d rp &. 1 160/mo . un a1n a ey ome. vat e, to uy. ______ ut1 . Adults. 1884 ~1on-l.ii-ii-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I childT't'n or pets. fi73-9591. 673-3690. $600lm9. f>.31-2220. 11 rovia. CM. 548-0336. I c-:--,,,===~----r.;1cc Arf>a f\'f'wly paintf'lj. Mesa del Mar A 1 1 RR furn apt. utilities 10. Corona del M•r * * BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. Lar~c 2 Br., 1':1!. bltns .. Bold New Concept ;1,~d~.$110. Older tenant.liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiti ContC'mporary Gardt:n Apt.s.,_','·'-5_,. "M_o_,·,-~.:C::'::".:"'.::"-c_l:,:704_: 4BR, 2BA. Dou hle garage. tJ"IVO-'<'V Panos, frplc. pool. $J..50...S165.1Huntington Beach Lido Isl• • COZY Fireplace -2 BR . Large frn<"rd y11rd. -Calf 54&-5163. $100 1 BR. J-2 '°gls OK. cpts, drp•. encl. gor. N;co 540.9127 FURNISHED 2 B,, •Pt. urn ta;!_ fI.00 "ohUr hm,, ''"""" y"·d. 1175. FURNITURE RENTAL pd. 1110/mo. 22Tl-B M•ple "' OK. C.M. I ALA Rentals e 645-3900 .JBR, 2BA. Double garage St. 548-5913. 's1;:.o Util pd, tpl, sm1t!s OK Lan:<' le~ yard ,.. J\Tonth io Month • SPANISH O,cor . ,ml 1 ON BEACH I Br. duplex, lrplc. be-am eel. • pvt. patio $150 Ad ult no pets :SlSO Pvt. hme. .sngl OK. I & BRIGHT &· CTIEERY .. 3 ____ e_>i_0-_9_177_•___ * lOO'iC Purchase Optlro 2 BR, Crpt & drps. ten<'t<d ON TEN AatES ' BR 2 BA & boa * \'"d y.an:\. No pPbi. $16.'i 2658 t A 2 BR. Fun> A Untum. Cd:'>t. . . camper t Mesa Virde ·vJ e Selecr!on. . E" ~~ A 54 -1=7 · 187 21st St. 645-1317 2 BR Unfurn Fr. $230/mo. SPAC. 2 & 3 Br A t Sl40 Furniture Available Pool · P · up Carpet.;-drape:~-dishwasher $fiO Batch apt., unl pd .. Bal spa('(', s200. Style-Colors . v'"'"'e Vt':., :>-<N ' Fireplaces I priv. pat.loL Isl. ALA R•ntal1 e 645-3900 3 Br ~lesa Verde home with * 24 Hour Delivery BATCHELOR apt , rum. Ubl Poola Tennls Contnt1 Bkflt. , cpt/drp., bltng, Kids ok heated pool-!aunas-tennl 2'Di Collei'e No. S 642· 7035 ' $110 Ut1l pd .. 1 BR. sng OK. REDECORATED 1~ & pool. • pd. No pet.!i or children, 900 Sea L&ne, CdM 6#-2611 979_ .. .,.,11. AGENT 979-0909 ~ ~ $100/mo. 642-4014. tMacArthur nr Cout Hwy\ -"" our, 4 br J 3' bath, 2 car Bl'lboa lsl•nd i;:-arage. $200 mo. 548--0259 Newpart Beac'1 Am Dana Point NEW dftys or 645--0263 eves. e BE C ~ -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;; 3 Bdrm., 3 bath dupl·-. C••-4 RR homl!' ~'ith lge. patio & 1 -cO-=~~---~--A HCO MBERS! Grnt • ...,. ..., 1994 Maple No. 3 642-3813 rec room-ocean views patios-ample parkin1: NE\V 2 BR Condo. Met.a Verde, crpls, dtp11, private gar & patio. SG-8739. St-curity KU&rdJ. HUNTINGTON PACIFIC •pier with beautilul view & * LRG. Priv. patio · Gange bach, Oceanfront . Utils incl. S17 W. 191.h, Ci\1: 548-3481. LIVE IN STYLE I petl!'d, draped, bit-ins: priv. * 2 WEEKS FREE! * So B vf 1 1450 \\'/workbench, 2 BR 's. $~. 2756 N. ~fain S.A. 547-031 4 Now Open _ All Now patio. Covered garage. 705 1 BR U25 up -2 BR $140 up 7ll OCEAN AVE., H.B. . a. ron . . mo. 0 $3"" (714l SJ6 1•-~inlon R.E. 675-3331 c P I/ d r p 1 . $16 0 Imo . ALA R•ntali e 645-3900 rt.hid. ""' mo .. yeuly. POOL '*'* 64.2-2181 -w • 673-3690 , Balboa l1land MARINA INN :2~B~~-~_;_;___::::_ __ 1ore open 10 am~ pm Da lly Feb 18 til t<nd or Junt'. . e ON THE BEACH. l BR. • , 17M050 0 r. l~ Ba studio, encl WILLIAM WALTERS CO ' BR ,15. (lf :ii Br xtra nice. R.eispon. 8 i:-~·:;.;~~tiii: patio. end ot cul~ac. 339 · , p11t10. ..i mo. 1 ktrls/pet.~. All ubl5. incl. AYFRONT cozy 1 BR. I -..... .... '·bri!I "'"'93J Ca!l 21 3: 761-il96 I cp . No child I pets. From Ground floor. view, pri * F'HI Modem Kitchens ........ o. '""""" . 2 Wk Fr R IC,,_o_s~lo_:::;M:,_:e;.:uc_::.;__...:.:_:___ $175. 54~12. 642-9139. l~~ Rentals e 645-3900 petio, parking. Winter or : PooF"f *TVSa•unLi•."Ba""'th•lncl'd 3 BR. 1 BA. New paint, crpts 1 BDRM .• all bltns. ahag \\'a\k to b.P:~ch r!:1 :U' SHARP & Clean! 2 BR .,,.] ~""So Ba·-1 N 5 cpts .-1 ..... , cloAed .......... •· ' ux s TI 'E BL .z• Y. 'flN • , ... un • o. * Phone•* p,,;...-. & drpa, beam ctili ...... , trplc, ' .... _., ' --~ "' lrg I BR, Shag ,rpt, 811'"''" toVEL \' 2 Story, 4 Br .. 2 ir;hare .... ·il h couplt: or guy. -. ur~·s. Holiday on .......,, ~·., pri patio Clean! 540-1901 d "'" ·~ T · k 2 t l l2-570 V I · CM the Cott' d'A"'"· Pool, 3 * WOr.1EN-single rooms, * Maid Service range, refrig, b a Ic on y , ' ' .. rps, patio, I.II.fl.al atta, bbq, , -11'ln ~lo ~. ma.s . J mo. ic or1a, 1 • k 1tc hens 1 T v * Utili!ie!'i Included garage, Qcee.ngide or Hwy. J BT". 2 Ba, cpti, drps, !ubterranean park'g, '" ' r!'i. frplc. 1o,u~h/1l r.vl' di~hes U 1 "-h 1 A BR . 3 BA It clen. 50' deck ro 0 m · bl · d •-·i Bal n urn. °"'<' e or pt. o a. -wk -Mo . S60 u VIEWS OF TilE llARBOR Adil non-smokers. $Z85 ..... r t-1115, sw1u , 2 pools, 11.va1 · conies, frplc's, "t"llnf'ns. J.rc: ~d. lnrt 0.,.,'Tltr, llOO / N ovcrlook1ng !.ht" hay below. P· ~ clbho lnd f -1 539 ;.1131 ·IJ~!'.;r,. ''r Trn'lnt. • · ~.-•7·_.,1.,00 pt"ts. Shorr lrnii rentAlonly. $39S. 6~13.1 Bachelor Units -$59.50 wk mo. 6'2-55.11. use, $235. 546-3710. ry II.Cl , -1661,536-0109 .,., Some l & 2 Br Units left LUXURIOUS 'C'-__... "·mon-'* 2 BR Duple.x w/=rage & 536-50!5. ' J79--072.1. fl76 !H·nve r Dr .. -=---~----49S-2974, &14-.'>736. Sl\1ALL Studio type apart· 1 ~ •~"-'" n.e.,~ .,-~.~t. 3 BR house, 2 ba., E-11ide. l-IARBOR View llomc. 2 BR. ment. No cooking taciHties, C ose to Lquna Bch, San cy, 3 bedroom 2'4 bath. bit-ins. $140/mo, 26 S 3 LRG. 1 BR. $140 ,iast Bluff $245 mo. Nt:ar schools. den. 2 BA. lrg: garden kil 6T>-1238. Call before 6.30 ~::;:;ente A Doheny Stale Fireplace, oinin, Room, Orange Ave., No. A. C.M. A Under New M.anaat:ment Phone 642-.3853. i Nook A: din rml .$400. Incl. p.m. · lawxlry. $400. Aat 6'75-'930. $135. 1 BR. Util., 11tove & sk abou_t our discount plan • BLUFFS TO\''~!I OUSE 3 BR, 1 ba, l'rpt, \\'Ater furn. ,_....i.... PH. (714) •96-235l Adults only. rtbi&:. fumlahed. No kids, no & move-1.n allow. Otlldren .& , BB d 2 B 'J • -"'""'~ner &. Pool mem-LGE. 3 BR, 2 BA, frplc, nr. 34902 Del Obispo St. NR N '1 ,.~ _,1 "'" "7'. "'lS09. sma.11 pets w.elcome. Newly · . ~n. 11 .• ratio!!. End ·-""". Ckl6c t o ~-r.•~ ~"'r So o ... N 1y _, __ l300 -an •w d ·-2 uo. '-.ti.I ~ ..,...... ,..... '"'"'"111P· ~'~''" · UGJ· ew 1~· Dona Point Horbor ......... · · ...... redec. Sea Air Apl•. ,;tltwly decoratf'd , Q UI~ an'& I t:vt"rvthing. $210. 54&-0469. 117 a· nd s-.,.,.,.,. leffi 2 BR. 2 BA bta. r 1~-I ~,,_;:· _.::.__;__.;.c._:..::__cc_:.:c__ TJfE BLUFTS. 3 BR. 2 ha. mo. · tamo . ,.......,_,.,_ "'!!!!""""""""""""""""'"' • • m S.,,_fL 1 BR duplex v.·tgar. blk N. of Ada.ma toff &sch) :!!!;, .!:[:. 6~1-8435 or 213-J BR 1 BA , gar, tt:nced yard I I I'~ 3 BR 2' ha 8 1•--p • !!' cell., frplc. bltns. SDI lllt'. patio. 1 adult. no pe l.A. $132. 729 Apt 6 Utica '"'.,..-.... ~'~"""'"' rp. """· · 1' .. a uu. entn1ula Huntington Beadt 673-34n """°'''"" ., . $Di. mo. v11("8nl , U.;() 3 BR 21.i ba. _. ' 388 W. Bay St~-536-7070 "'wport Be•ch 646-8811. Su per ~llL~~. VIC'\\.: S500, • $25 \IJK" Up-On Ocean . EXECUTIVE SUITES m~ view. el~t 3 2 BR, l~ Ba twnhse. Blt11li. 2 ' 3 BR. S140 up. Pool. U do !\and~ !urn 3 br 4 BR, 2 BA and• pool Btoke.r 644-Ull 11.n)'llm<' I 1.Dvely Ba.ch-L Br-Rooml MOTEL APT$. bedroom, 2 baths, f1~laet:, 1 garagt" &; 1>9tio. 2649 No. E Childttns bonus. J\fora }(;Ii 1it bL $350. Unfurn 2 Ar apt . $~./mo. CaU-BEACH home for lf'a.se:. O~ A~~=:: pd n1 Yorktown Blvd. ~ing room. ~~Y· <>ran&'e· S16.l. ~1809 Apt&, 18881 Mora Ka.I Ln, % ,ooeta fl.ft-A Sl6n. 00-1073 AGEl'lii , 646-#11 tlon to buy. 3 BR. 2 BA. mn BEAOt BLVD., per mo. . 2 BR apt $l.35/mo. Crpts. blk E. of Beach. 962-8994. ~:.,....~~~~~~=2~( i Huntington Beach newly d«mil!ed. 200· from HO~fE like 2 hr duplex. quiet AT YORKTOWN Q.OSE to bNdl, lrf. 2 Br. 2 drps. bllN. child ok. no 2 BDRM. Sl3S. per mo. 17361 Unfurn. lOS ocean. Sl25. mo. 646-21.'lO. n>sidentlal atta M'M' beach. SJ6..041 J Ba.bl o~n bttmah 'r1 trple, pets. 568 W. WU10n, C.M. Quftr. Ln. Nr Beach " OUR Home for ~nt . Be~n-2 Br. 2 bath. ~an bay. $21S wfnter. 613-?&lS STUDIOS FROM $35 tm. pnv. ixx:c ' p v. pr. LRG 2 BR. New apt A drps, Slater. NC'w pa.int thruout. rel nltli April 1st. 3 BR. 2 BA. frplc. Nice. $250. 6i'J...2937 or Corona del M•r 1 BEDROOMS AVAILABLE 330-A Marguent~. 673-0037. $130 mo. 1 ,c;$'5l6;,:~"· =-~~--~ ~ r•u • V•CANT erp11, drps, awnina cowred •M-1852. 11'" ~1 tu . I e FuU klt-"'-n *GREAT VIEW--2 Br, trpl, ** 548--** LGE. 3 BR .. 2 BA, studio. y ~· • ,. 4 i•-·~ ,1-"" ,.., uxe m ting' u~ bl -•-~ pool -'""' 1 BR 2 Story bome in prlmt j ;iPft;;;;-m:''-'~=,_,·,,•o:•·""'~~--,--LEASE/option. 2. br & di!n, ~leer, rentJeman l!X• • lfe11.1~ pool tnl, gu,.,,..,ciut, · -LJ.RGE 2 BR. bllln l!ln~. ~. fenced )'Cl ., enc I 'toe. nr. ac~. Famlliea ·S240 mo .. 3 BR. 2 BA F'tplc, 21.~ M. !IOml! viC'w. An.~ioua:. eeullve tittplace. Quie-t. •Laundry tacilJUn up. &44-6344. 67S-S)4. cpta:. StJS. No ptl'-787 w. garage, IWZ-45't9. onl.Y at $'65 mo. Aae.nt bltn&, crpt. med. Afr 5: N:tnl 60-7225 HIR m-4859. e f rtt 11rlll~1 2 BR.. Bltns. Walk to Wilton. 6T.\-7l'TI!. UNF1.JRN 2 Br. 1111 extrU, ""-'l'l. ;-~;;;;c.'=,.· --~~-~ N rt H • • ====~~----• F!"ff llnen11 beach. SD), Orange Cont OLX 1 BR. pr., qu '••• .-... St.10. Kids le tml -.. ok. rv-"· .. twpo •tgn•t FURNISHED Bachelor apt. e TV •· --'-' U Call 611 1"'18 ---~-3 BR w/w I d h .. • u!4KI .e". •VA. • Real EJ!Ale. •: O'I for -•utts only. No -". Pool, cu 7.3669 or .v. mo. 'e .,.,...,. t"--..i-t ume A • crp s. rpt.. rar ulll ... id ....,..1 $130/mo e B B ,.,,___ ft&.! ,,..... O'I i1UV"" ... ....,. DI' ,..,. ...i .. -•• dlspl. pr. Call ftt'I ..::rs tor 3 BR. house v.·/rull ba.R-. ..... , ......... • • ar-. ..,..... Cotti MeM &1•&11 I.he rt&hl .-... .. Into. " l .PJlt to~ pets. ment, lgl'. yard v.•/nri:tanlc . Call a.ntr 6. 548-0'197. e Phone arvic:w tu5. 150 E. 21st. &i&-fi016. 2 BR. SI.JO. CpU.. drps. sfnve, ~ want RESULTS! Call fruit ln.'H. No <'hild~n or Don't &lve up the lhfp! * * Biock to Belich! At-2 BDRM. aunlttn Uv rm, LOVELY 2 br, ba &: 1 ., pv1 l'fo ~ri. Ftrm. Oilld O.K. I0-$18 • ,a.. tllal Id f'ut rmtlta art just a phone pell. S24S. 6t6-7'0it· A&k •1.Jtt"' II ltl duaified, Sbtp tractivP. 1 BR. f13S/mo. ID-fl"Pk, cpts, drpa. ~ patio. pool. adults. 1» Y,l.1.c:"'.:.. 7 _· 7064=-· ---~=~ todl,,yl call awa.y • M3--SfM GearJ't. to Shore Ruultl! 6u.a71 f•nf ok. (2Ul 41l-0264. S175. &J3.-02ll5, Udi Sl, l\of.&'r S-0. Q\f. We1J ht.Ip you sell! &U-5671 I • ' on the bay Luxury 11.prtmcni liv1n~ OV· E'rlook1ng the water. En10y $750.000 hRlth i;pa . 1 swim- ming poo;:, 7 lighlccl tC'n- ni!'i courh, p!u.'I milc.!i of b1cyclf' tral!'i, pu1t111.i:. ~huf­ f!rhoard. C'Ogllf't. Bachelor~ from Sl70 11")(1nlhlv: also 1 a111I 2-hrdnon1 1ilans and 2-sinry loin hotJ!'if.'S. lice· 1r1r kllrho s. private patios or balco11111, carpet ing, cl ra- perle!'i Stll<'rTanean park- 111g 1,1•1th tC'va rors. Opllonal ma1rl scr\'C<". Just nor1h of 1'~ash1on lland a! Jambor- tt and J!n Joaqilln Hills Rnad. TC'l<'pho rt 1714! 64"·1 900 for rer11.l !nform11tio n SPA C!t US Yearly "PENTH•USE APT." 2 BR & Dc-o . A•all In n1::ht parry f-eh. 2:ilhfnr only S'250/mo. Call 6iJ-M!J. SEACLIF~' ~1ANOR Aptli-2 Or . Sl60 Uni. Sl7.1 furn Cp t.!i, drps. bltns, ga.rb d1spl. 1525 P lac-n1 l11 Ave. Ask about our tiscount, 548-2682. 22fl.I \\" OCf.ANFRO?'JT 1 BR. $00/mo. )"early. Cp!s, drp.'J 1 tt ndeck . &l-1-5307 2 Bn 111 Npt "Its, Pvt patio. Encl ~ar. Stovt comp[ crp1d. $160. ~969l. NE'I\' APT. on the Ptnirnsula. S2Z:l Pf:"l' monlh. 2 Story, I Bedroom. 6i3-J!).\7. WE S T CJJI FF l'l'ea. 2 Bedroom. 2 hath. Adi.Us Orl- ly. sm. Ag-t 675-f930 * * DELUXE 2 Br. 2 Ba, crpl.!i, drp~. bltns, ertl gl!.1', pa!io, $175. Adults. ~ti-37M • 1-RR. VIE\V OF' B!Y • SI.50 month · Yearl Ownr/Re;iltor 541-m70 1 BR Adull.!i, no prtJ. no children. util P'l. gar, $150 675·29.10 aJt •:30. FAMILIES WELCOME SINGLE STORY South SH Atmotphore 2 BDR?.1-2 BATH SJ7S/rna c.a~ts and :>rape, Air Conditb~ Private El°' HEATED L 0oman A • Nr. Sc~_, Nr. So. Cnlllf Pllll1.11 HIDDEN VlLAGE ~ South Sa1!11. (tnltr 2 blks W Cf Brilttll. ott Wllt"nn' on~ Way, tOUUi to w. cmnJ) Santa Anll f 546-1525 T11f1d11, Ftbrutr'18,11fn DAILY PILOT , ... -. ........ a~1 c· .. ~ 1~1 1 ....... 1~1 r_ ~-~ .. ··~l~~c ... ·~·-1a ;1 -*-·1 ~1 1---... ---1-~1 !·~~1~~,~,l ~-~~ A t Summer Rentals 420 '1 I ~ P •.. . Industrial Rental 4SO P 0 ertonal1 53t. Lo1t Furn: or Unfurn. 370 WlU.. trade use oJ tuml.llW NOT Rt•i;porunble lor 11.ny P•lntlng A LARCl whit<' tht.alO' poodle. CO~'P. mobile h1rlllllt'll tar 1--P-•,;_po_r_h_•_n;:.g-lng.:;.. __ _ 1•8-.-1bo-.-P---1n-,-u-1·.---' 3 Bdrm., 2 Ba. home in I Edinger.Santa Ana I tlebts oth<'r than 111y 0 ...,11_ ..,, Tol(yo from mid J une 10 2500 SQ. ft, unit, lfil:. f_mrit Jlobt>rt Allan \YesllakP, 2 b ·rh cnrly Aug. for beach homt• afl\(·e, near Ne ... ·port •~~'Y· --an::1~~~al. pragto, year slmilar inu-in So. Callf. in So. 51.Lnta ,\11&. $250. 1.11;r I Social Clubs S35 • 83&-1887 \Vr11e a1rma11, tncld'1 photo mo lt"n5C' or i_no. rn n10. FOJO. DATE ..... -----------to Geoorge R l n g \V al d, Wa.bwort.h Rt>ttl Eal&tt! Costa M esa Kasumii;:aM>ki u u 11 d 1 n g 639-0JO ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1 Rooin 1528, 2·5, l<i:asun1i~ 1 2800 Sq U, :Z olI1t~s. Jrg relt.f , g._ki J..chome, Chlyoda·ku, · door. 1240 Logan St. I Tokyo, Japan. 0.1&--0681 e\'e&. 646-5003 days. * BRAND NEW* Renta ls to Shore 430 Storogo 455 t Jlt-ct ~ur com. anion from lOO's o! rihoto referrals 1hal \Ve mall lo you. NO CONTRACTS 24 h.r. l'e<'Orded meMAp:e 714/SJS.22-.rJ, 213/426.1122 lluntlngton }!arbor. T • i: hom,11ndu•1ry, !Ht-manu., * PAINTING-PAPEJUNG ttade: "rawcpe1, C , S , bna1 /au10 repair. Nt>w riro-Interior E.xtei1or .P"lnch, Salt I.Ake CUy, dut't rtl'v,..lopn1'L ~T-157':1 Lie. Inc. Guantnh...,.' Utah." Largoe r II!! ward , F . Cnll }farT\a 642-4!!M 8-1~1.)7). '--"-'-"_11_"-'-·------1 --1· PAlNTlNC. pro!. All v.mk L'1ST mt'lal b<>x ~un Vie SPECIAL? Avg. chair or au.am. Color ape c I a 11 11 SOO blk. Superior ' N.B: rock(•r strlp{>t'd $b . Clutna;. MJ...1386, MT-14.f.l. PH(>(.'r11 valu.abl<' only to bra!• p0llshl.,j. 6-1[>..()8(i6. )t8-<l'ltL ownt'r. cat.I t..Ul'll Petenon. G•rdenlng YOU 5Upply ll>e Pa In ' ~2--0169. RoonlA paint~\ $10 f"B.. Al~ ~--- EVi R THIHK Y~Ul 'D Fl! GC?OD AT S '.1LLING l r..':SUM NCE? FL'tlDS? I S11JDENT STORAGE Spa~. $Jj 1no. 1 LA COSTA APTS CSC!J3 '"1"r. =ks ""'· · 21><20 """0 "" room. 11 f(g] 5~11\Ll.. Cat vit Del11.ney5 Sea AL 'S GARDENING uterior. ('"JI !tt!:)..1f»ti. Shanty, Blue gi,.•y & ocht't" for gardening A: s m a JI ----- eyt•s, 1tns. 10 · ·BI u e · · . land:.capinit 11er\'ir<'~. r 0 1 l ENGLJSI/ ~Paper 11!\lljttr & V~R IA BLE ~N NUITIES? ' , 1dl'i«1.dy J1v1ni:: on Br1!. Is. 1 6-l~J.559 lost Mid F<MMW:f 2 Bedroom Av•il. I \hat "·anti; to :-harf' ntl'C, at-R11ntals Wanted 460 ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:; • BuUt-ing e Swimming t1't1{'. 1 bdr ful'n. hsc, or apt. I• Pool e Lanai e Bar-Jl-Que• & •'XJ1t•11. Will share \~'! HELP! F d (f d } 550 e Garaae. l!l-~ op!'n, !r1end\y & pe.-Js: !h1.•r.-n f.dnd p<'rson in the I oun rH " 1 . ALL UTlUTIES PAID 111 ·111 i\'1 or r. Ht"nl no! over OC arl'n 1na1 can olter a j FND: n1cd llZ.· choco!att" 'hm ADULTS, NO PETS $1 25/nto/u!il. Ph. i\1\ke at la-...• stdn1. a nicd . 1 lxlr. & bt'IRC Poodle. beige bar 354 A vocl'ld o St., C.M. ! S91-779 l all :. and talk. furn. apt. 011 Bal ls! S«>k a on <"hcst, beige legs. \\'hi 642·9708 ~ fJJ\'t•ly honie in clean, ftl!l'Ut. apL not OVl'r t')'ebl'O\VI!. t •ound 1/22. Cdi\l, No s 1n 0 kc rs, $125/ino/ulil. \\!ant yrly -71·1/893-6616. refi'Tl'nces. $!JO. P''l' 1110, sun1r? \\111! do liOnll' rl't11'CO cL~A~R~GcE-. ~.~,,-,~,-.-,-,'h-,-.,-,.-.,-i. 671-4!69. lor l'Onsidcration. J'h. !\like ilog, JXlSS, l,.ah & Dalmarion 6A 34()...~198. Sen-in, Newi>na'I, Painter .•. \0 yrs. f'!'CJ)(>r. CaU ':J.. 2391. Ed 96S-IG I Cdi\1, Co.,ta :'llt•.'lfi, Dover --·~· --"----S~IAJ.I. Y.'hitc 1: ll\n \\'tlch ShoreJ \\lelltcllfl I C\:11·g1c rrou1!r pup, aM. to ' · P ••ter, P•tch, Repair Sally, v1c. 21st & ·rusHn. GARDF:N f\.latnt. Cl<'j!.~uri. I.I * PATCll PLASTERI NG C.:'ll. Rev.·IU'd . 5'18-8553. m lol ling, """' lav.·n pn,iu. AU typt:o1. I-TI-I' t11l1n1ates LOST "'•"' G-•t DA.... 1ng, sprinklf'no. Oda G11n-lf'n c-•1 «• "~ " '" ""'' Scrv. 531-4446 d)'ll, art 5, w ....,,.,...,..,,..., "'/v,•hilc spa! on cheat. 83 l----'---'---"-----1i t' w Ii rd. 213/592-1635, !)..g;,RS. ___ Plumbing 71·1/34&-5065. PH.Of". Gardener, Tl~'t' \.\ul'k . ___ ...,;. _____ _ PLUMR ING Rf.PAl!t BROWN .satchel full of Pn.t~lng, sprlnklrn;, <·!c,in· No job too 11111&.ll school book• vie Shal1n1ar, ~p ]Obs. ~~"~9; c 11 P 1 "" • • &12-31 28 * aNVESTMEr..'V C O~t#S~LIN G? Or did you ever co uld wish sell you all four? a! W.17·77!H aft :'!. I \\!ILL share niy h 0 n1 e niu.:, vie Co.~la 1\l I' 11 a I v.·/anolher bu$inf.•si; \\·onian. UNFURN. apt. wanted l-11gh-So. Coo~\ Plaza area. Pvl. bath, $11 7.50, 6·16-08:>9 Balboa Pen!n aren. :? BR ~0--0508. Frorn $14.i. Dish"·nsher , •h•g •-r !Oam frplt'., garagc. Lea .~e -c,.~N.~l -b-l~k~~,----,,,. . , . Ref 61" "16 " J: llC Ill • ]1Uppy VIC. carpelinll'. walk-in closcl.s. _ permanen1. S. .>-~:. I ' k & '1 11 Force>d air lleat. extra lar<;e \VANT •"lnployl'd l\'nm;in lo or 615'-8484. .ru· :o1pui· 1' a g n ° a• rooin" Beautiful .{:time room sha1't' niy ho111I'. Pr1\'atc \Vt•~llnlnster. Very af- heared pool BRQ'' f'nrlos ' I roo1n & bath. Call af\cr 6 \\I ANTED: Cd!\1 house or· I fl•l'1101111!c. 8!»-6!>74. " · I 96" -'1 apt, l 01· 2 BR. Frplc bltn~. ~ . ed garages, quiet sUJTOund-pin v-v<N • N. t l 300' R r· (,l·.l{~IAN Shepherd black & . . let'. up o . es. Id 8 9 h 1nf:-s & close lo shopping.! FE!\.1Al.E Roo rnmate \\•anled,, S40--lm anytime f.'\J • approx or mont s, BRAND NEW c.~t. Rev."ard. ~4 s-366 9. rori,:I'. · 1-----'""'-"'-"---- 5.'i7-6GOR. AL'S l..andsC'nping. Tr c ~ Roofing ~~~~~~~~~~~' rt>mov11L Ynrd n:n10flt'hn11:. ---"-------LEE RoOting Co. RoofinK nil Trull hauling, lot cleanup. [ ]~ Repair sprlnkl~rs. 673-1166. type•. lli'<~\·rr, r~-'11"1 r-. C lhf'rmo roof coo1ln{i:o1. \\•hl!t s.nrk:n •nd"~" .. ~ •Complete Landscape Setv &-color. l.il:'/bonde<I, g1nN' Appli,nce Repair & P•rt1 ~ing all Orange Co. 19-17. 642-7222. , 1-'ormal & naluraJ pn1nl11g. • T. Guy Roo!inK. 0,..11.I Also, l1tt serv. 5!17-9379. D!rec·t. I <lo my ov.•n \\·ork. 64~Z780. 5-18-9590. \\'f··rP. {lnP. nf thr few \vho offer •II fnur. And \\'t'r'" rca dv lo offtlr I.he r b:ht 1na n nn cx"t'll• tivo sa~C'~ o.prort11nlty. Selling broa d spec· trun1 fn1 anc·1i\l pl11n nlng to inclividunls an<I b""ines:o::c:o::. ltepre,<;rnling a firsl·rate $3· b1tl1on ron1pnny. \Vlth a traini ng s11 lary up lo ~fl!lO a n1nnlh p!u~ opportunltie!i fo r a<lditional 1nco111e. And pro.spects hlgh in the five·flgure t:ingc. Ad ult living r10 ne•~. · Livi· on beach, 2 Bl1 /urn. · · . rnnli:-. Vic. Annhcim & 19th, El CORDOVA APTS. ~2-95?7 e\·~s. TEAClfER d~stres quaint. 1 Cosla Meful . ~18--49S.'i 2077 Ch~rlf' St. 642-4470 . bdrrn apl or house W/Y.nr. Genero1I S•rvlc1s Discount Appliance Repair If thi ~ soun<l.s of lntere.11tt to you, ralt U1J at \Ya.sh.er, Df)'<'r, Dishv.·asher. 'MIINGS by Moowe, Lt. Sewlng/Alter•rl ons (7 14) 5 42-!'i623 ext. 321 or write P.O. Box 4338, Nellr Harbo & II mil SI F'El\1A.LE roomn1ate !l('{'1Jcd, in quiet beach area. 675-7524 r " Ion ' yrly rental on 1l'att>r!ront. 673--0!)0.1. }'ND Siamese c11r. Small t'lf'cl .. plun1b, f~nce, ti1h\ .-...... _., __ ..._ · ---S male \VL1h. nca <.'Ollar very GUARANTElD * M6-6694 1-.:urorean ~8.11maklng anta 1\na. ('a 92702-\Ve 'd like to hear fro m ti~. in5tln11, carpentry, palnl All cu,rom lltl"'. p,---• yo11. • 673-1624 • '------COLLEGE Professor & lanllly seek 3 Br .. 2 Ba. home in CdM or Npt. Hghts. Lease or Sale. 548-310.l 1 .... --------.. , \\'OR KING "·oman \\•Ill share lonesome. 1.105 Alaba ma St., 1 • abysltttng etc. 545--0S:ll. "-" '""'\al HB. 536-3062. I--.:..-_:;.._____ Fashion arh•i1·e. £73--1849. , .............. !!!11!11!!1"111!!11!!!11!!!11!!!11!!11!!!11!!!!!!1l l FOiJNDIB:rgc, long haired, BABYSIITING our home GREEN MANSION Alter•ti0ns .:._ 642:5845-I -'T'"'' r··.-.~ .,,. I home w/same. Pool etc. PALM MESA APTS. ; University Park. 8JJ.-8055. MINUTES TO N\IJPT. BCH. SEF:K 2 resp. 1nales for lux. .\ BR, furn., fr1il .. vie"·, nr. ocean, $1 35. 49S-4329. male rlog, tan & blnck. Pa.rt 3000 sq f!, h.ot lunc h. x.ln'i Ganl~nlng &. Yard ~lain-N~al, accurate. 20 years exp. ~~~~Wanted, M •. &_F 7.~~ • 1 ~-Want•d, M & F 710 play facll. Certified teacher. t~nance. Joe Elm~r. 642·11371;_.=::..:==:::::.-=.:.::::.:.::::!:: _ _ _ Collie/Shepherd. Friendly, Next to So. c.1. Pia>•. EXP. lla1o1•ailen Gard~ncr ralevl1lon Repo1lr BOOKV.EE PER F /C F /( Bkl:pr to S70f HOUSE 01· duplex with f('nc· loves children. 644-0139. 1~ Th FURN, OR UNFURN. Unbelievnb'y large apts, huge pool, Jacuzzi, elect bltins, shag crp!s, d111s. sauna. etc. Adults, no pers. f'd yard which alloii·s pets. l e==~-~-~---,-557-1!Mi9. Cnrnplt>!e gordening service ~tu~l ht" pl'r!IOnr•h!(', fo'ull ru T. D. !\ft1nulaclurlnJ' 1-"0UND 1\·hilc fem a I e K ,~ .. 16 * ELAINE'S 1V * I' exJ)Crl tn('r 646-4346. DAYS_ Girls only 3 .,....,, .+ nmalani, .,...,,.._, . 1m .... Xln'1 1111l11ry. · Garages fo r Rent 435 StM:>phcrd pup \l'ilh brown .,.~ Serviclnir All Brands Gannt'nl Mn'11'fnrlurY>r Call IArrfltnf' GARAGE $15 per mo. 642-l<!Ol <".Jlli!r. Vic Ba y sh 0 re 11 . Lrg. yard, lwc & alterrtlon. Ho1ulln9 Authorized Ma1naw:ic 642.3472 WF:STCLffo.F 644--J3Ll lrom 9--.i. l blk oU Harbor &: lllth, Kno..,,•n for honesty 540--013 Pf'r80nncl Af(t'l1('y C.M. 6'5-7513. WANTED: Messy tTl'C& T s I BOOKKEEPE!t I Sr-1·r1·1nry, 2043 IV 1 11rr Dr NB BLACK curly, female P"PPY· 17=---';;:__ _____ y-~ & ga-,., 0 ·n rae erv ce ---' Im · Cll c ·• · · ENG. Nflnnie "'lll c·~~ for 1Uuli '" -m v1 g ------·--------a ... ,., owltd~e olrlct• pm-645-2770 SINGLES ...... From $135 ' t BEDrM ...... From $140 2 BEDRM ...... From $100 Not v.·eaned, 11("ed11 morher. ""' & h !In 1150 h -·------" I I t t 11 • )·ou1· l'hU{t ren v.·hUc yo" au g. · per r. + TR!:\1.r.1 1!'.'(:, """riallz111"' in 'f'f 11N', x" Ofl"'Or un v )r •1c Bookk .. ~, .. You 're ri,g:ht. tht'y·~ undec"· priced! 1561 J\olesa Dr. Off ice Rental 440 South of Warner on Bristol, "' odd ''b uo'""~ ,.. "' I 11 71 t )"'' "l'l ' ~ \'acation & Practical nurs-J" ~ . .,..,,.. <JU.). fruit t1'<'r.~. (;rn. Clrnn-up, r r, 1 llf't'sfln. :.. · · ~,.,-,, · ·-Announcements 500 Santa Aoo. 546-4340. 8 R~tnul'$nl t1xpcr. prtt'd. MEDICAL /DENTAL inR. ;,1g..3116. YA RD/garaa~. ch."anup1. Reas. f''rCf' "~!. ~lli-8318. & \\! l.ah ·rt'c"l1n1r·lnn, Mu .. 1 El75-ITI~ 15 hlks from Newpon llh·d.J 5-16-9!!60 FND: vl'I'" friendly niature .,_ •-di t · -.:-.... ,~-I II · 1 f , ____ ... .,.,.,...,.;;;;;,J Best locatlon • 745 Dover Dr, ANYONE SC'<'Jng \\'Oman !all " LIC'D Day CaJ't', 1 am·S: 30 ru:mov~ ""'~&. r · ivy. REMOVAi.. & 1rin1ming, flm 1 "" " , .. '· n 11 P uit:f',. 0 1350 sq It. office avail. Im· I l /'l8, lt a.111. on Nl'wport duck. Species unknown. Vic. pm. llot meal11. Xlnt care. S k IP I o a de r ' back/)()f'. i1roorl aJJo..,,·ancc. 642-715.l or I bl k & wtdlt• r r ! n l l n ~. '(;\rl f"rl ·ln1. med. occupancy, custom B!,·d.. nr. 22nd SL !aun-Marincr8 Dr., N.B. &l6-IJ3S. II a r h 0 r / e 8 k er area. 8.47-2666. 642-1403. P.1r lure. Apph· 1"'1wn 9 & 11 Src'y/Dkkrr·Con11r interior. dromat, plea.~c <·all S.Kl-!'D89, I -~"~'"'~·~'°-"~'"':.;__"~''"-·---~ 54&--1~9. JtAULING Clean.up. \ocaJ -,. ... , only. l'l'i,1 l.bv.nn Avro, Ext'c. &r'y.("on,.!r F'NO: Lir11P Junny bruwn & ' .. 11 r. WWW.. ~ W CM. <:I r! rrlclny·I-:t Toro ' • 0 CHILDcare,Chrlstianhome. moves, <'XP"•· W t,i:r. 11tu-IJJ.] :: 75-IO:ilt v.·ht dog. Vk'. Orange Ave., d t L 1 k R 1 BOYS ~t'C'y.Bank = ~ Creative play, c r a f 1 l!I , 'll!!IT · rg. rue · ra · t:rr.,loy1n1ot -I I • C.M. 646-2603. 5.'W-1846 A1;:e 10.14 ro dtllvf'r p.1 .. ,.Nl C:rn'I Ofc-ln11uranl:'t' 'W' ••ra.& I Ptr1ooal1 ---~~ itnrnes. Gtl. attn. $ 20 . __ · I Clerk Ty•l•l • }'"OUND 2 male dogs vicinity ~. n thr n11na Pnln1, .~ .. ,,Cle· ,, . _ 646-3429. • l\.lt,Sit &: Green i::lean.up J , 11 .. ~A"l /'r .. nl•t * LIDO BUILDING * Ornngc> County Fa!rgrouncbi~=~~-------d F' 1 '••ti ob W•nted M•le 700 ml:'r .... ~ ~~. '''•· ' co S700 SG.IO 10 srirJO S600 S!:ZS to $500 to S475 l<!!O I * -~~l~BEDRo=~o~M~-*7 I ;li Ra To..,,.·nhouse co:iccpr , Bt'am ceilln,i:s, extrn lrJ? bcrlrms, encl I tlo. recrea· lien r m. sauna baths, etc. Ad ults. Our Sundiy aJrer- noon B·B-Q's & Frtt Ari ~rf'l'J!I; .rtr rttn"' ~~ HAR BOR GREENS I INFAN'f night I•-· ,.,, In 8.)'ll ree ea · ·~v me. ' DAILY P IL OT NEWPORT 1 In.:: & l 1Jml suite no1v avail· Thursday. No mgii; J.t&-6255. ""' ...-" I ' p I 530 my home. Exp. molher .>IS-503t. Cl!ll'OPRACTOR 4!'1:0: •l '~'IJ P ortonnol Agency ab,"· Cnll to M!f''. JONES ersona .. J F"ND black sha~gy puppy, " RI:..ALTY s ~rvi c c on v · •0 & C 1 11 Ages 4 mo. & up. Excellent lY:a T TRUCK. llaullng & Llc. ~ yrs. Rt"kl employ· BEELINE neerti.-;111rn•·tl ve 133 Dov"'r Or., N.B. HAC IENDA HARBOR --~· v · L.d NB Guarantee d To In· l{'. rang!" oas wy., ~f $25 kl nca ""~~ a11&0elated t1l11k11 Coast premises, .:><NJ UI r o, B 1. NB 6'6-Jl36 · \\' y. ~. · · men1 . &15-1276. \\'On1tn. l\1"•n! f)fl['l<lr, 1•r.,.. ~2·3870 ,,-,1, of 81 ... Dolph,-n Rc•I.! crease Your u st •n• · · -· _ ENGL!~! , F __ __, Valley Haullng 496-3218. 1 1 """""~~~~~,...,,.! -" I ->< nanny. er ... ~ Job W•ntod, Fomolo 707 \v.~n rn >r. F'Ar! or f/ll·n~., 241 AVOCADO STnEET Adults only · No Pl'ts Dcluxf' 1 8.: 2 BR. Pool Garai:t;e. Dish .... ·ah.r. Paid util. f'HO~I $150. &46-12CM '7'3711 . I Nn f'Xrn·isc, no crt'ums, nr Fl'D. Sn1all grey Poodle, ·-....i I GU S ~ J'""'"· Hot meals. Craft11. Housecleo1nl-ll1>-S•10 wk. f\~&·034?,. ARO • gimmirks. Kathy Alls Cu:s-fml. Vic. Beach. & llf'il. S ••• NEED •-1 '3 ' DESK spa.Ct! avatll\ble. SS() 10111 lir;is. Call Wilson &l7-3!1.6(i. ·wing !iCI, 44&-8786. •~ P at home'.' We :>. ~~.14:15. : PATROLMEN I mo, \VW provide tunun:re i 83? .. J 177. BAHYSJTTlNC in my OOme DUTCH Main!. Serv!ct-for have Alde1 • Nur11e11 • i --CASHIER Perman<.""lf aa11!1mmenl. C.M. .' tt mo. •--.. -ring •.• -n.-I-7'.'D. ml. )0Uf"' Irish Sl:':tt'r · floora, wlndow1 ~ carJ)t'I Housektt.-rs e Com a"' Mil -• I hi .., .tU111 .. ,. '''" ...... .,.. Pre nigh~. _Call aft 1:30 .... leanln•. ,,1_1508 ,~ · AlfracllvP ll'111al!", mid 20·1 · · ""f°I· ,..,,. ra ""· avaUable, 17875 n"ach Blvd. P R013LEY! Prl"gn1111~y. Con--apP rox. 2 \\'PCk!I ago. Vic. r~ •· ..., panlon!I Homemakers Up-Full" nnrt tlm• Pr•m &I" ..,.. ....... Cart!, 557-5634. A'ltl Soll Car n.ts t..hn ;,1 """!. • !or full time po~ltltH1 In nie:w .-~ '" ' ·pay, Hunllngton Beach. 642-4321 !ident, s y m p a I h c Ii c 1 Mesa Dr., CM. ~l&--1370. C b. k l ,..-JV , ,,., "-9<>0 fantnfttlc sell aerv .ervlct Life In•., Bonut, Pak! vac. DESIRABLE Or'·,-, 600 ~" ~rc-gnancy counset. Ing. Abor-1 LARG'' =>' cat. Vic 1600 a 1netm• ng After Cleaning LITE bookk 1 ho 1 tlo A 1 A ,1 Apply Suite G F B '' ,,... tJ & Al 1 f "-e-·~ ----17.==-------eepng my m~. sa n. ppy, uto-.. at. 523 ~ UJ.OUS 2 BR I f t, nevf'r occupied. Air l'On-A~n..C~RF. ~I~~~ r e ·: block, Baker, C.~. Call CU STOM BOAT WORK LICENSED, Inaurtd, Rcf1. Exper. In cor11lr. bkkpn~ &-19th Ir: Piar'ent!a, C.M. , _ No. Grand, S.A. $150 & $165 Furn/Unf ditioning & utill!i('s in-1 ' " · 545-8739. Patios. Rm addit. 648-U19 R&:S Malnt~a~. 548--9456, data J!T'OCf'l!lllna for CPA : Cl-llLD rnre wOo d 1~, lfELIARC w~ Ider , _,,,. Yot~ won't find a Jarr:er nicer 1 clud!!'d. Cf'ntral Costa ~1r!tll ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. PARAKEET, \'ic. Outriggrr C•rp•t Service 642-2913. We do f'verythlnr . firm. Ca!J 6-14--7923. School 01111 2 r,l rl.ri 2 A, 6. 4 pe'l'ienced In 1talnleh •Ifft apt !or leSI. Beaut: ~&rd~. area.$140 mo.5'1~9days ~h~ne 542-1711 or wrl!e Dr. Corona de! .\far .-·-· _ Mas!erCharge. RECEPTIONIST • Afaf\Jre <la~ wk. M:z..r.9.1; 5411 _39iio Ir aluminum, Alto lhoutt1 arta, patio&. Quiet d~ad~d or fi45.-0263 ew. · · Box 1223, COl'lta Mesa. ~5544 . JOHN'S Carper & Upholttery CLEANING . Lq & C.M. • v.·oman for doctors, df'n!ltl <'Y<'. Mvt-fO(Kf k1)1"Jwltdge of street, just S. of Newport o c;SK l'J>3l't' available S50 SADDl.EBACK Sauna I< trl--i fml Cleaners. Extra Dr1-Sham-Huntln«ton Beach. 541-&Ml ottlce. Bk·kpna.. medical. .--COOKS mr.rlne h11.rd'NIU'e. 1 2 4 Ave. Adul!!li, no pets. 2020 mo. WW -".1e turnltlln! ?>1AMage, For better health. FNO: light-grey 5 ~ · poo free Sco!chguard (Soll or S-0·3826. By the day, Insur. bac"-und. fi42...6794. Con Tu,:ln Av,., N.U. IWs-.1520. F II 1 C •I CJ 1 v•v•ou JOUng cat. Vi<', NarciM\lS .. .,,v valrACenl Ho11pllal & u er on Aw.. ' ' w-at $5 mo. An.~oering service through better cir('U!alion. 240 Retardants). Degreuera "Mesa Cl~an1ng &>rvlce-STIJD~ Prrl--·· "-'ld•ntlal Cnr· ~n•!lltl•.1. 'JIJ.'m)I1)GY TF..OINICIAN, E. of Bayl 642-8690. •v·"abl•. -Fo-•t A·-, Orv heal, barh & sa!! g!O\\'. St .. Cdl\1. 6T>-7 · II I b -h & 10 "''~' ""' ~ .. ' " "' r ' " Tu .., ., u.s ·~ • ., • ., a . co or ng !eners Carpeta, Windowt, Floor f'lc. Mo~Frl. Sale•. type file, 6Q..J505 or 540-~90 exp, P.I lhni Sal. fi am - e SJ>ACJOUS e Lamina BeaC'h. (94..94fi6 1 Female 1 e ch n i c i a n!'.. fNO. grey k1t1rn \•ic. 21st St. minute blt'ach for while Reild. &: Comm'). S4Mlll. llOITle SH/acctng. su.'.l3tl. 1~ pm. South C.011.'t C.Omm. \IJell ·Dcsl.P.ned Apts DELUXE-650 sq. fl. Off ice 639--8111 :0~111 E. CJ111pr11an, & Orang<'. C.,1. &16-5UI. carpets. Save your money ----__ ~ DENTAL Al1i1tan1, CXJ)f'r. Jfo•p, So. L.nguM , P•rlllOn. 1 & 1 BR. w/ Terr:u:es. 42c/sq. ft. Corona <lei Mar. Orange. 10 A\1 to 1 A.\l. Lost 555 by 1avlng me extn. trlpa. Dedicated Cleaning H•lp W•nted, M & F 710 chair •Id~. l.q-una lk'lch nel Off!Ct'. 499-1311. An Fm1n Sl<IO -SZ151mo Near po1t oUice -Snack DISCOVER DISCOVERY . Will clf'an living rm .. dWng • ~~ :i:~'i:vr~j~~ * ......... --·-artla, f94..85TI. equal opportunity emplo)'t'r. Shag cpls, drps. saun&3, Shop Prlv park a'ir -nd Find YOUl'~L'" ,, Son,~~ .... BLUE & white Panikt>et lost rm. "°' b.all $15. Any rm. A Bf'ller Poltllon E N V l R. 0 NM ENT Ar. f!OllSEKF.~.PER for -- pool , jarun:i, e nc"! ~ar. Real~nomi~8 • a~'. GTS.:6700 ...,{.'is~ -,. ...... 1 vicinity llarbor View 1-i\ll!. $7.50. couch SlO, chair $5. 15 EXPERIENC~:o Pt'DOnnel Afency ha.• open. Jkaftfch oU1tt de 1 I r f', valescent "irvlne a~a . ~;;; , ('l ·•i,., t ·' 1' 1 • ·~ -LGE, air-cond. front office,~ Call now . ~o obllgation fkv.ard. ~· yrs., exp !.. what count.I, ool DA YWOHK FR ing for aC"C"Ompl11Md \n. I ~ry pultlme, mulllf Ix-lhru F'r1 R 1,, 6. 879·2640 nr MERRIMAC WOODS ne\\: cpts, drp&; i;ub-lse or (7l'J 83.~~~j (2131 387-3393 i DOG Lost, wh1tf' German method. l do "'·ork myaell. • 541-41171 • _ dlvldual wl!h provf'n 1uc-flPXlbll!! to work full """" ~3274 wk..cnd• &. alttt 5 _4Z'i _,_1rrr1n11H' "'ay, C.\t ino/mo. 113~1 i\lo. Dov('r l KATIO~,\LL'l" f;!Kj.lhc>rd. Rc\.\11rd! Good rel. 531-0101. 11oui;;r::w OHK r e111 in the pr'f'f~111lon. ""'!>en work loe.d dentand•. pm. Oano1 Point Bldg., Newport Beach. RECOGNIZED Call 644-41.36 or 832--1029 C•rp•nter ON i\IONDA'i'S Profits htgti It &hared. Call IAiri ar &.1!)..•,:;21 In JIOU.c.~,"1<~.-P~R-.-P~rr-1-""'--f,.. &1!'>--3320. BE pampered & ma~g<'1:! CALICO ca! Jost vie. Avocado • 46~~f.kl • Ll7. RF:JNDER'S Orana:c. church. Chee:r1u1 dlspo1\Uoo I & 2 ER. l'K-a:ed pool, 2 min 1 & c II Cd 3 Id LARGE OR SMALL Pl!rsonnel Aa•ocy ~ECUTJVE S'"IT'"S by al!rart1vc frma cs. 11 wy m. mos o · lnco 0 To • mu11 catr Frl AM only 10 Dana Harbor. morlen1 ~" >v L ,~ 6.,.. o........ All ""-Work: Cut doors, m X' 4500 C11mpu1 Dr .. NB EXE CUT IVE · N rt C tr "·-' rr Rid 811--2100 .... 0!!52 '"·""""· •.-rr-<" ----------1 ""-"" fnr lnrervw. 673-4704. lrxJrv. Don't 1nii;s thlfl one -~wpo n -,.,,_..__,e t'r g. panel -model r1· '·h P I A ., I . •• • '~ . Sm1'ley Tax Serv1'ce ' -. I "'10""0 g•ncy 11ous~"ER ,_ •. !rs ni tt _ rea~ble too. Sf>l"\I C'f'S incl't'f &H-~. rram~. repair• etc. 962·1961. ! , r.n.L.i:.r ~ 2-t:ll I Sant:l Cl3ra. 49}-:10:l9. ; OFFICE $60. per mo. * * * * * * ALL t)'P's of carpentry by AN OHIO OI L CO. offcrt op. Acc:tng . Cl1rk te $600 wllh rtf11.. 5 dlly ~ at ' Newrort B-ach Ca.f1)eted & !urn. Ut1l pO. I local man • 14 i'f'an LOCALLY e portun11y ff/T' h\VI inronw f lnanc"lal •ta!emf'nl,,, Burti·,t Nwpt ~ach homr, llve OUI. ~hopping Center. 3J3 1-:. lilh 536-J&iS ftt Schc<lull" PLUS ~gulllr cuh bont)M'~. flnaly•!I, Ct>11f Acr•01 1nt(n~. Gn.-Jw.;. VIST A DEL ME SA SI, Costa ;'11esa &15-2"1.'JO. MaJltd On RtqUfllil 1'Qnv~ntlon trlp11. amt ahun-EXP'JllUrT lo ln•. "P'l.vmll. H ""lr/h'lhy•Jl 'cr for fl) 11 Apartm•nt5 C ORONA DEL MAR Cem ent, Concrete W.A. SMILEY, C.P.A. dnnl lr\ngf' bene1'1111. to 410 W. Ola111 llwy, NH yr, olrt hoy. 3.4 dn.y .. wk. l & 2 RH. Furn. & Unr. Dish· Deluxe bu~ of!i('l'S. Private Trader's Parad1'se CONCRJ:.JE WORK. Fair &42-ZZ!l Anylime 646·96M mature man In hfoach area. Sult!! II &i5·2716 ' H.B. til'(>a, Ctill Sar/Sun, \\'a.~her • Srovf! &:-RelriJ{ . 1 bath. CpiAidrps. 673-67.';1. pr\cf'll. F~~ et!. L i c. Cl.ARK & Toner Tax Regardlea• of e:icpe:rlence, 962-11712 "1>ai: c .... , .... [ • .:. l{cc rl'ntcr. I 1>o·•-<1. -··'lly ... 0 , k . Servlce. 24 YEARS ~xp. In 11!r m•IJ M. r·. R,.A,. ~1., l EXTRA_ lncom~. P'uU or pl . .,. ' --• 0·~1 cE-• • I "'"' 'I"""" .. llSKPJlS F:mplyr p&ya ftt. "";."'T' :-'"'"'~ 1··· 1-.. _._ ~ r "r ;::__ >I Ii' nes 642--1403. area. Pefl(lnal service tn American Lubrlc1nlJ: Co., f1me, Sha.ldtta OrltAnlc Skin GeorJtf! Allen Byland Aitf'rto Irvin• & Mes• Drive 1...,,,, ""'wv llf. t. ....,,,ia' esa. your home. Call for appt. Bo.IC 696. Dty!on, Oh io. Cani Product• lhn.i ho·n# * 545-4855 * Call &1&7130 FREE Ideal, advice and 546-7735. Howard Oark Ir i&WJ. pa.r1 lf'11, BW or B ob cy lOO-B P:. 16th S.A. -14'x.16 ' Ofc or store mod. t• eM:ima\f!I. All 1 ckarg~ for John Toner. A ful Id-~2825. • MT~. OAKWOOD GARDEN I bldg. 444 Nev.'J)Ort Bv~I. r-.".B. I mes ls a beautiful job at. reas. h•utl •a HOSTESS Apartm•nti Open. $85 mo. 5"'3-5300. price. 645-S<m. PROFESSIONAL penonalb.-Div of Gf'n 'I fooclla need1 , F ULL or p/ll'T1e. M.itmt P /tlme Wttkt'nds (Rt'. ?r t Livi 1-: fQf' l.>d l<l.X i;cr111oe 11ince 1982. you. U:&rTL I: ltsch pmf I b'nt, no exp. n • c , Call Ivan AduJr11 Onl vl 3345 Newport Blvd. NB dollars CEMENT WORK. no job too Forni•r IRS a1ent H.B. makeup 1ecl11. Exec. pol. Sa. I a r y f comm . Full.,-Bob Burn'• Rfttolurant NEWPORT BEACH Acrost/Clty 1-laU. 67!'J.1601 am.all. reuonable. fr e ~ 9til-20l5. avaJI. M2-:lf364. Brush, 96i.-Of11. &f4.2m0 Eatlm. J-1. Stuflick. 54&-8615.l--'--'-"''--------1~==='--~--- 16th. at Irvine CORONA DEL ~1AR PATIOS,--••-, drl·-, •~··" lroninn AS.~ISTANT, full time. mu1t H I 64.J.ff,J50 or 642-8170 Deluxe grd Door ornce. AfC, .......... Y-' ",....., -~·;.:...··------·! be ~nlll!!d be 1 u t I c ! an . • P Wanted, M & F 710 Hein Wa"ted. M & P 71 ABOVE ALL! Ne.,, port xlnt Prk& 644-fiOO:l. '69 OODGE Coron.et, auto, SAN Clmiente ocean/bluft· new lawni, sa.w. bt'eak, PARTICU~R lronlna b R!ohard Ou~letl~ Sil.Jon, ,-.-••• -.-•• -.------iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijj Tawera. from $350. Bay LARGE 1 room office. Pvt PIS, PIB. Landau top, a!er. front mult. rts. oor. Jot 1501 !!_rnt:Ne· S4&-t68S for est._ partlcula.r peot>I•. Shirt.I. 1610 W, C.0..l Hwy, N.8 . tront. 2 Br .. 2 Ba., dockl. entr. Newly decor. $6S mo. eo tape. Trade :.>r late mo. Buena Vlsta. Over % actt. CEMENT WORK llne:J'll • apecLa.lty. 66-lOll Banking JUl W. Coast Tl w y • j MB-U90. N.B. dri camper tully equipped. Trade for Ne....'POfl. Value Fr~ E11. &'.a.M28 Janltorlal Pl•tfortn Secretary Tl4/'4l-zm". !Business Rent•I 445 675-3258 <:Jr 839-07Ch S57,950. 673--4928 WINTER Rate•! Concttte Minimum t yea.r ~e M<YfoRHOME, 77 fl, only 21"! Ac. hi Jceoe-rt'".-,..-p"'lne<-,-, Doon, patiol. d r I ve a , SPARJO,E Jf.llltorial Win-Call 1213) 174..f600 -----~--., ~ I~ FOR Rent : Deluxe ottkel, 7500 miles, like MW! Load· nr Pearbk.s&om. Eq tor car. tUJewalb. Don. 642--M14. dowt, an, crpi.-rttld. I--SE AN AVON-- lnduatrial amt. New bldg ed. Heavy duty motur and Wtl.':(>n, Vlrl or ? Will drtl , :ttrador ~·1. Free •If.~. REPRESENTATIVI nr. San Olego Frwy le frame . Equity $8500. Trade l(en('f'OllSiy. 646-8313, l -5PM. Pelnflng & Let me lflow )'lJU how ~•"'' I Crown Valley P a rk• •1 .1 for prop. or ! 714-.321-3401 ~2429 sun. ;Ant!, •. *•--~----• Peperhanglftl It It to ,MU money£. havt , 400 &n-1400. IIAVE: 'Qt Sach1125cc, like Ladl~ antique gamet ri"I ~" • _... .. wv.-f\ing tun In your tr~ hrs. P'or a 1----------MANUFAC'TURIN'G, Sales. new. Want ; Ol&r pickup or In lBK ~td v•Jued at V,00. contr&ctor tam. Dniin, ,.:o v.·11..:.:i•,., pl!!nonal lnlervlew. ca I/ Rooms , ROO~f W/pr1vate bath "°' kJt-office IP'Cf. Good Laguna van. Have; '69 F'tnTy Ill, Will trade far anli4UU, o~ carpentry, de co r • l I n I • '* WALLPAPER * ~7041. lchf:n c~I i dworkO~K ~"';:ni loca.Uon. s100. to $390. mo. Want : tralle.r <:1r '!? Ject.1 d'art or rubmil. plumbinf, wtrt.rw. etc · "flhen )'O'J call "MAC" -.·:,..:::.O_"_K_E_"-·PER 494-4653. ** B30-ao93 ** f73-{8J2 ALTERATIONS aipeclalt)'. 541-lut 141-l'lU """ rt. ~ ;"!'°':O~~n ~7 IU'e.;: OEUJXE ffi>RE, J600 Wf. -v~.-n'-o~r-T;::.:ruc-=k=-Wc•_n_t_od~ Have largll', resldent\al 24 Yts. in ~rwa. I.Jc. Ii PAINTJ?'lG fnterv1ewtn« lioun ...... , bu E lTh SI c },-, .. _ """' l)Cf'311 vi('W ~I. fret Ir horded. !38-16CS. • Inter A t'XI, 9e.m-1hm. lpm..tpm 5, ?.IJ t., on sy . ., .. . Tra""' "10 Cougar, 71.vvu rtu. n ta1, woric suarnld. Worti: 'IJhtn A whttt ' .. ' 2S wllh Id he'll I A.(t.-Ev~ 64:i..91M, 6U-16U. mlles. in xlnt cond!Uon. :lear; PaJ011 Verd~. Want ROOM AddlUoM, FAlimllte1, Loci.I ret., lk. p h I I , ~!Ata~ryto -'vi-. Alt~ 2 industrl•I RWo1I 4.50 r---*-6'15-_7304 __ *__ bowe. duplex. NB. CM. plsns Ir layou!, sltlJ\e or 2 tS4-4M1,, ~ ~· ~· * , -• T-~ ,_, th i+f.6ll1 Irwin C.O. RJtn. ~tory. L..T. Conltructlon, -0:..R;_c::;:::. _____ _ pm, call 66-1310. -'--e .,.....,. IVI, .:iu M7-llU. P' clun Ir nut SMlntlJ"iC, 4 000 CJ'\ FT skle, level. clMnd. Strttt MVL TIPLF. IOnf'd land ' ,..,..,,..,,,-o=--,.--=--,-1 1ntltt'lor or ewttrlor '-n:u. flJRN'. room. Idea) for ltU-1 .. ,,. .. fr all improvmi~tt in, Ap-1.a'"URI devtltl1'f'M"t a.en--JA CK Tau I• ne-R.epalr, ,..la, Pick, l68-40S5 f"Vn. ~·,; ~t. ~ ~:;.. s~: :non~ loald& ~:::,: ar~?~: ~~M: i:t~~;1~'!: [;;'~ify~~f ~-~-=.' P~?fc . C\W'U\lffd pro. A~!.'· H.B. I 5,000 sq. FT. lll),000 equity In C-1 """''· ..... or romm. 49<-"6.1_ -Addi--llo.;;-. tu.;,.,.-11-... -~:;'.:"'~~:: prlon. ROOMS . Ill Wk. Up w/kit. $6:!0. ptt month N'pt. &aeh; $1.00 Mo. Inc. Ltr'.URY ¥1 Slf'ph. Yacht: ~I: Son. I.Jr. PA_,_.._,,. I p•-•NG S30 Wk up Aplt. 2276 I Roy McCardle RHltor + no.ro:i papn-.. t $'100 mo. PU-1 SPnCS 7J mt'lb. home 673-«>41 * 56-7170 ,,.. I li~U --~,..., ' flfWPOrl BS\'d., C . M · 1 l810 N-Blvd., C.M. Want vacant prop 0 . Cnty. on GoJl l pool ; llf'IU .Y\VO ;;;; 13 yn ln Harbor ~a. Lit" A ~. ~~int "it l!J..9595, 548-JJe. lilnt "'""'kit; 15·: lat Tf'I: it.lecfrtul bonded. Rltf'a tum. 60-DM. >"OR rent to illldy, bedroom iiAVE 110' twin diesel Any.llll ino:lm~or !m-rn El~ECTRICAL , mkt., PAPER-HUNO_po_ on 2nd floor, prare. nmar 1 1300 -s. fL )1·1 sp1or, lront )'11Ctit. $115.000 c 1 ea r. What do you ti.av~ kl tn~? romm1, lnchu. A I 1 o. Any ""-+ parwr. &'6-2..ifi CM ptrlt. 646-0681. t T"ll!!ar door. $167 . mo. 1787 •\\'ANT lncon1e property-Aa1. U11 11 ht~ -In ~""' r1modtl reya!n , WW:. SIDING • Far ia $129. 2 .-ory ROOM "'lpriv ent, swiv b& A Whlftitt St, Of. ~5003 CAll Coul'lty's l•rv.'"'' ~..d trad· BIR/small. Uc'd/11'11. rree tm. E11ter only. &U-275' or lhoftr. utU pd, put. rum. days, 64&-<1681 n"ft. TI4 548-00C ln1 poJI. 6"!2-M71. et!. ~II. ~"~l-="-'"·------ H.8. 11624311..., fer 1ppt. Uh to tnd<1 Our Trodn'a * * * * * * F. L EC'llUCl.v<, llmnaed. PllOF. polntlni-lnt"/tXln" A FOil Wlllll .s • • ctlOd Ps.ndl91! o:Mumn b for you! bonded. Sm.an jobs., mtlnt. Honest ..oric. l. I e I 111 1 . Investment 5 llne1. S days Jar ~ budcs. 6 ttp&ln. ~ 541-27".il M0-1«1 ----- you ward! Interi m Perwr111el Senfce 771 W. 10th, C.M. I ~7S1J 5#-2592 BUSBOY Mon thru f'r1dlly liPM·3PM Apiply Jri P,......, THE R:GGER 1' FHhiOft ltl•nd Nowporl Bo •dt •• BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB CLUBHOUSE OP !NS ABOUT MAllCH 15th, Im Now Accepting Appllc0Uon1 For The Following Quallfled Peroonnel : • llu1boy1 e Cook s • lecbr Room Attend•nt• • Kllchot>mcn Apply In Per'°" • c.,.. ..... ·- • p..,1ry • W•ltretMI 8[6 CA':Yr" cnm:m C~UB I Bit C•nyon Drive, Newport &each DAILY PILOT ( --· ][IT ~!·#••ltd, £1 ! ~ !~! INVEST IN YOUR FUTURE BE YOUR OWN BOSSI Men or Wom•n lease A Yellcw Taxi Cab Call for Appl 546-1311 Al.k for llernwl ,!RV!NE PERSONNEL SERVICES "AGENCY Exec. Secretary $600 Technical propos;:il rxrrr A/P Bookkeeper to $550 3 Year11 i:ircounllng rxprr. Secretary to $550 B11sy of!u·r. hhilrp ((1rl. Typist to $500 Arr-urio!r 70 Y.'.p.m !vp1ni.: Girl Off ice $500 + I Jnvestmrnl Pxpcri!'ncr General Office to $500 Congenial Group. PBX Recept. $433+ Re1.:ent experience/typinr.. Doc\,lment Clerk $433 Englneeriniz clerical r .xnrr. Cl•rk Typist $400 : 2 Y'ani grneral office c...-r. ,ii• Clerk $325 No rx~rirnN' rpquirP<I. . Frl'r/FPe Position.s 488 E. 17!h fat Jrvinel CL\! 642-1470 KEEP impo11an! job as house11•1rf' & morhrr. E.11rn 1n .spa.re limr. :O.i1n. ag-f' 20. Siir11h Covf'ntry JP11·rJry >40-061.\. LEGAL Sl'.:CRETARY Ncv.·por! Br.11r"h arr.:i 642-9440 WVE-ln 11.~pkr. 2 Srhool 81?<' children. Lilr mokin1<. prrf. drivl'r. ~l!-4147. LOT ~fcA~,--­ .Nr11!. clt>an 11ppr11rsncr. ~ . pt>r.-onAlity. stAhlf'. r h\J!"I(' .:tW-fl66.l. MANA_G_E_R-TRAINEE- Man or .... ·ornan nC'CdNl 11·ith 'n111na/,l'C'ril'll potential. Our exr111nsion phtn r«JUirrs 111·n currrnf lic('Jll"<'f'l'. Mll'!iin1rn or hmkrrs. lo hr J.:roomr<I !or ofhl"I" man11~rr 1n 11 .B. or An11.ht'1m. Pli:inllN'l op<'n· ing;!'I 1n ~!arf'h & ?-.lay. Of'· sirf' minin1un1 of f\1·0 yrAT'l' l!Xp<'l'lt'nce hul \.\•ill ronsirlt"r 'Olhl'rs ba~rl on ab11it.v. Ex· cellent ht°'n£'fits. Call r.tr. Gr11v('s tor ronfirlt'nlial 1 n I" r vi r 11• aproointmrnl. ss.1·5063 & 6!17.6194 CT'ILLINS AIRLINE AND TRAVEL CAREERS FOR MEN AND V.'OMEN •Travel Agent e Ticket Sales • Communications • Reservations • Air Freight Cargo e Operations Agent "DAY AND NIGHT CLASSES" ACCR EDITED: N41ion•I Auoti•lio n Tr4dt l Ttthni· ctl Schooh • Appro~•cl for V1+1 reni. Eliqibl t in11il11· lion under lht Ftder1lly ln 1ur1d Slude nl Lotn Proqrtm. Airline Schools Pacific 610 East 17th St., Santa Ana 714-543-6596 "But, Mommy, everyone goes to Yamaha Music School." I! Y•l\1 h8\T 11. child hrt11ren \hr ac£'s of four And f'li!hl. <:un1e ~rr 11~. ~tus1c is TOO 1n1portant In lC'11ve 0111 nf II. child's hfr 0 YAMAHA MUSIC SCHOOL; 109 E. 18th, COSTA MESA PHONE 642-1844 & \\'ATTS JNC. 1:1651 ~1Ri·I~!""!!""!~ noh11., C.Ardf'n Grol'r. !~ J[Il]I Li~·,-· Employm.1t Man•gement T;;:;e- 2 Yrs f'Ollri;:r. r.rl pntrntial Call i\·1rs. SC'hn11dt \YF:S'rCLJ~"F Pl-:RSONNf.:L AG~Nf'Y 204~ \\'t"!<lrl1ff nr .. N.R. 645·2770 H.:;;;;.,•p•wiiiiii.•.,•.•d•.•Mi&~Fiiii1\~o [.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; [ H•lp Wonted, M & F 710 PBX-TWX OPERATOR i\IAN-pt'rn1ane111 p;u·1 !11nr for CBJ'ly A:-01 tlf'll1ir;JP< ,. it<'IV. 1n N.B. S200 111('1 :O.lu~! ha\·r d<'pt>ndablf' car !..· '"'i rrhahlr f..12-4~ Ex perienced with PBX Mature Hostesses board 608-A & teletype TO JNTER\'IE\\' machine. NE\\' RESIDENTS -r.11rt T11nr- CAr. & TYPE\\'RITF.R NEC \j.\O 0 E 1-~<luu::rr. :-; A CAii ~j.'.\(Y.15 ;\IECHANIC. N"r1·1('{' ~111!1nn f'<1roM rlcl \1Rr .11r r11.. ~lary to $1000 rrr n11i Altt"nn1f'n! &· 11tr·mn<l . r :-:p r"n"I. Rr'ft'rrnC"C~ ri:-qu1rt"d PhorW" 6D-il11 f!'lr 11pp!. Apply In Person 3333 H arbor Blvd . Costa Mesa SYSTEMS DIVISION Equ;:il Oppor. En1ployf'r ~, &· r NEED full t1n1t-~f'r1·iN' sla· Uon ui(!f;.m&n. Exp'd pl'f'f Apply 1n pe!iiOn. Airport Tl'XllC'O. 4678 Ca1npus Dr, i~-!!'."!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!' [ N.B. Ask for Roh. PT t1n1r hox ofhcr ,r,, ronSC'l'i· ""'""=CC:.--'---~--1·.SIOn i:lr! Port Thl'a!rr in NEED t'X1rA nlQnf'~., Bttl1n(' C<ll\1. &<-:O.l.11na~rr a.fl 6 pm rashions rK'('d ti-111)1llf'n. G<I. 673·9837 mone~. Ko colle-c.-t .. Ot>l1vf'r)' PROF"""'-=IO' .. ~A'-L---- ·Or invest. ~"9 or . "-'-"' ~hon" 193-231· !'10hc1tor • Dana Point, Sll.n '· Cltn1l'nU'. Cap1srrnno area. RESTAURANT HELP ~1nrl11·1ch & grill !r<11nrr ror lunch sh1fl. 10·3 !'>Ion thru Fr1. ,\pply in prr::c.on ;:if!rr- 11ovH1!ii [)f'(l Sh<'f, l...agun11. 1!1 11~ Shopping Crn1rr. El To"' ROBINSON'S e NEWPORT e BEACH ) lilli nprn1n~ fnr Full Time GRILL COOK Anrl.v \n f)f'rson 10·5 p.m. • 'J Fa.shinn 1~1.. N.B. Eq1111I f1ppnr!unily rmplflyf'r --SALESMEN-- • • .. • ~ •• .. ,J .. -. ... ,,. ' • •• • • •• - Schools and Instructions Anna's Pre-School Kindergarten, 1st & 2nd Grade REGISTER NOW Ages 2 thru 2nd Grade SEW-KNITS SPECIALIZING IN STRETCH & KNI T FABRICS ood LINGERIE All Brands Str•tch Patterns Vogue & Butterick Patterns Original Knit Fabric Store Jn The lfarbor Area \Vith Finest Selection Of Knit 1'"'abrics On Orange Coast. • Full Learning Program e Phonics Stressed STRETCH SEWING CLASSES e Arts & Crafts • Music 2110 Thurin Ave., Costa Mesa Ph: 646-1444 Morning-Afternoon and Evening * Newport Air Associates Flight School & Flying Club LEARN TO FLY $500. I FlnoJM:ll19 Awollobl• I FAA APPROVED Course Includes: * 2199 FAIRVIEW ROAD COSTA MESA 540-3268 caRlberG montessor1 schools ACCREDITED A.M.I. MONTlSSOltl TEACHlltS h1dlvlduol h11truttlo11 I• 1mall tlftlM9 Door·to·door llus aenlte 35 Hours fli ght time in Cessna ISO's with 20 hours dual instruction. Club membershi p. ) Month's free dues. Individua l instruction, to!!i lored to YOUR o!!bil it y. Open all doy, ,,,,., doy, 7 a .m. to 6 p.rn. 2 to 5 doys per •ffk 10 AIRCRAF! AVAILABLE AT LOWEST R.ATES IN ORANGE COUNTY Learn to fiy now - -and have fun I * Fly Mexico & Canada A9n 2 thr• I (hi9~1 r 1l1m•nl1ry •~•il•bl•I Call 17141 546-4531 * Special Rates for Commercial or Instrument Students. for furthe, inform11tlo11 Other locations Serving For Complete Details Call NOW Full1rton 673-0313 Interested In A REAL EST ATE CAREER? Prepare For State Exam In Four Weeks Licensing Preparation For • Real Estate Salesmen & Brokers • Sales Success Training • Employment Placement For Graduates • Day And Evening Classes For Information-Brochure-Free Guest Lecture Oran9e •.• 648 No. Tustin, Suite A .•. 633-5032 Newport ..• 325 Old No. Newport Blvd .••. 548-1192 EDMOND F. JACKSON Real Estate Education Since 19o4 ACADEMY REAL ESTATE CONTRACTING & INSURANCE SCHOOLS This variely of fine schools could introduce you to a new tomorrow. For further inform•tion re91rdin9 the D•ily Pilot School1 •nd ln1truc+ion Directory CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325 DIAMONDS , COLORED STONES & GEM IDENTIFICATION CLASSES Beginning February 14th \Ve (urni~h material & equipment. identification & appraisal of dian1onds, rubies, emeralds etc. 6 & 8 Week Evening Course• Graduate Gemologist Instructors ?\lax . Class Size· 26 FOR INFORMATION CALL 962·6195 JOIN THE LEGAL WORLD SPRING ENROLLMENT FOR LEGAL SECRETARY PREPARATION .A.lso classes in beginning & ing & shorthand. Evenin2 classes -3 hours a ings a \veek. advanced typ· night, 2 even· CALIFORNIA PROFESSIONAL COLLEGE 1101 Newport llvd., Cost• Mua, Callf. 714 /645-2922 OUTDOOR CAREERS Entry level Positions • Environmental technician e Pollution control tech. • \Valer quality technician • Landscape improvement • Fish & wildlife aid • Tree farm asslslant e Private patrol For Free Brochure Call: 635-9300 or "'rile NORTH AMERICAN SCHOOL OF CONSERYA TION 11 00 S. Claudin• Place An•heim, Calif. 92805 NURSES. p1'I. duty. till \\'ork in your 011·n home. l.)l><"s, 11.ll shifts. Lt-scou!i" Best deal· 1n Al'f'a. Phorl(' Nu('!;(>S RI' g isl r y, 351 83;).1465 bet...,·een 9:00 ...l.m. Hospital Rd .. N.B. and noon, ~2-99j.) \)f ~!19S4 R"E°'c"'E°'PT"°'-"M~E~D~l~C-.<~L-,A-,-,~isl r-.:rM mrn 1\·ho ""' ttad.v to ll'Am lht> car businf'SS and arr 11ilhn~ !Cl tniin. Must ha1·e Jl:'OOrl pe~na.lity. be lntrf'('strd in a futurr. drt"ss I J[Il] [ J[fI] [ J[fI] [ 11•el\, salesminded. Be~tits: ~yn•ot i f ["1'foyment I J Lnpfo)ii&lt I J Df'mo .. gl"Olip ins .. guann· ~-----__). -------'· '-· -------'· -I[§] I llw0..6 1 Intl'l"\'it\1·~ ~~ :-01/F NURSE~ ,\!Of: T' am · :'I pn1. 8;:ip!1sr Conv. Hosp. 661 Cl'nter St., C. ~I. 5'&8---\58.\. ,, doc-for tn this p\u~h pro- ft'~IOMl olft('('. '\'ou 11·dl hC' rf'spons1blf' for 11.p-- pointmt'nts v.·1ftl \if'f)' im· portl\nt pAt1enl~. Sr11n $-IOO. CaU Jl?'an Brov.'Tl. ;,t(H;0.)5 Coasl11l Agt>OC'~ ngo H11rt»r BL 111 Adi:1 n1~ lf"ed AAlary plus m m mis· sions. Unlimil~ incom,. Ap. ply in Person. UNJVERSI· TY OLDSMOBlLE. 2850 Jl11rbor Blvd., ,f_osta f.ff'!I&. SALES~iAN. NN'rl aggrt"• s1ve h11rd .,.,'Orlcirig Nt!W Car ~lf'sm"-"· Ll~ral ~ PIAn, ~lonthly Bonuses k lnSUT1tJlM'. D:pt'rif'TK'e de- s1rrrl. &'t' Don C'r<'virr 111 Throdott 'Robins f'ol'fl. :l'.l60 ll11rhor Blvd .. Cos!.s f.lrsa. SALES SEC'Y For Procn'ssive Co, Sil "'· Typl"' .. NEWPORT Personnel Agency ~ Campua Or .. N.B. 18ranth Offkt'l NoM \\', Hollman 540-06la -SECRETARY- t"or Nr"•por1 Bti•eh Ad Avn· <"y. 1\l! ii.lulls iocludLng Sll. Sh11rp ~. kH'c how's. rood f*..\'. &J,l.lfiiD. The f.utHI dl'll'O' UI I.hi! Wes! . • • Dally PUoc Cl.a.a.ltied Ad. 6n.om Help Wanted, M & F 710 SECRETARY ~~llrnt shorth11.nrl &· I~ ire skills f"l'Qtlired. AllMI<"· th"r sallll)' & bc-ncfits. Please Confect Teres• W•las UNION BANK 610 N<"Wport Ct'nt~ Drive N~'J)Ort &ac.ll An ~ opportunity employer SEC'Y $600 SH RO, Typing 60 f"'ronl offKT UM:al Call Lomlil"lf' ll'ESTCWIT PERSONNEt AGENCY 3>4..1 \\le.11!cliff Dr .• NB ~277(1 SU:'\': Invmtory Billina • Typing. on!~· Got~. NB. Control· """'· SF.A)43t'RESS I Altrn1.t10ns "wn•n for dry dt'll"!l'rs. f"/thne. Exper. flPttS.S. Call 6#-2511 Help W•n·~-M & F 710 Antiques IOO Help W•ntod, M & F 710 •-. _......; _____ _ SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS Appliances I02 Fumitvre +...,..--,-.,,.---Major Appli•nce Sate TV'•, 1tereos, r'frla: .• Wll5henl &. dr)'ers. Cos! + lO'i'-. C.OOVenient t ' r m • • 110 SERVICE Station ma n , i;:n1'f'ynrd shift Mu.s1 bf> ex· [lf'r. Appl~ Chevron Station. rornf'r Harbor Bl '1 S.D. 1-N)•. SERVICE Statlon A11einde.n1. p tlmf' l'vrs \\'knds. Nell.I in 111ppeAranct", rxper. only. Apply 25-!ll Ne\.\'J)Ol'I BJ .• C.M. SERVICE statXJn attend&nl. np. pr't'f,rred. Full & part time shifts &\.-ail. Apply &I SM.II. 17th & lrvlnt, N.B. SERVlCE S'tlrtion Help, l!X· per. F\IU &Prnme. 900 E. Coast Hwy .. N.8 . TELEPHONE Sales. Top rommissions Md bonus. Ap. ply in pen;on bel..,..'ttn 9.00 111'1(1 12·1)) noon Al 8381 Bolr.A A~nllf". Midway City. 7 PC. NAUGAHYDE DEN GROUP MiS('ry -Sorty -Offen r lresione Store. -475 E. 17th roraistlng of lay-back aor.. Btdron -FOR a roc!<. St., C.M. &t6-2444. ~sltttypa: 2t, dntir. In heavy Pugnacious r e m a " k : u Mugabyde. end table&, ··~·· °"' httl who's look· RECOND. Appliancra l oofftt t&.blt' • lampg.. ing FOR a SOCK... TV's. Gu.a.r. &. Oelv'd. TYPIST /Re ceptionilt. Dunlap's, 1815 Newport All FOR $169 p It i m e. Thurs/Sat/Sun. SOlD ~ home, furniture· Blvd, CM. 548-rn!O. • Accln'f: backiround. Front too big for apt. Din rm tab~ ~.:::.:.WlllRLPOO:::...:::.:..,cc.:.J:......cKENMc___O_R_E_ TRADERS ofc •~OC'f. Mesa Ve~ It ' chi.in. hutch. bullet rpr. ma.n bas wutwn!dr)'· FURNITURE =~ Oub, 5G-Oli7, Nita ::0,~$ae="=·:: en. sets. $t6-5218; BJ9.7U>. :i:· BroHwey, S.A. drH8tt $900. 549-JS'l1 af1 7. 13 CQ ft "l>ttpfftne" cheat Open 1 Daya WANTED, Mbysitter, live-in tvn.. t1ft'za' ..,,.. IMPORTED • ·---·-·-... y~ ·~~· Scanoitl<~-~-on ~lrmda. for ~ yr old ~ ... ,. _.. .... ,. ~ Solid -....u rirl. Call 675-2432 alt t pm. SA]M:;ttf Hunttt, mount~ · trek. BH.ut. eond Gt'r!Ueman lDoc -Rolllng TAPPAN gu ratl&"'· 4 ~==-MSO .. Stu s 11s : WANTED Maful'I'! lady for Hills 6 Es,t&lt'. fi"llmed, gill bumen plus oven. Good ~ kitchen .t d1nino rm. 7 &m.J --' -6'"7114 2 PC • . ..,, with black Jin@n liner, circa u,.,..., uu. .-· arctn I blue cwch m. pm. Sav.'}'e'I' llotnf'. ~6. 1 ~ ll lJ JMO. ~l. GE REF'RIG, avocado, <I wks m111 c r .S. l pc bdrm \:~"'~f:.5 ~°:er~t~~p1~ DAILY PILOT ~it>esi 0 ' 't r ~~s.• F.;'ry1"bi!ljruoo~ "'"""'· " .... w..s. 17113 CLASSIAED ADS Furniture 110 ~n. Mu$I he l'XP'd td.h truck I Supt!rior. C.M. $AC R A f ICE eota. "7lnn .. ~...,,...,. 1'D1' •· • ~ • ~ 1 An>.., w lb< BEST DAY to FOR ACTION. • • BEAUT roll !Op"°"' ..-""'"' "'",... """'' -i1RE CHANGU- '"""' bondils. S'> do> -"'" an od I) o". I C &LL L .. 2·5678 t« sate. ,,.nt•wd. lJ40 .• maldUng ..,._, l'll. ... &<>•no 11ei.r . .coll 1oda1 ~ '--"---'"----·' ___ ,,..._25118_;._5*"_' ----cta=m=•::....:.125."--s:tOQOI=-=:..· -- • Schools and- This variety of Hu e sc hools could introduce - you lo a n ew 101norrow. TV, Rodlo, Hl~I, Instructions For further Information r•9ardin9 the O•ily Schools a nd ln,fruction Directory Pil ot Stereo ISi ZENITH il RCA Blaclc .t .,., h!le &. color TV at the i..,.,.,r~I 11flrt1 In Oranae C'ot1nly 3 yr pkture ruoe.-:1 CALL 642-5678, EXT. 325 I i'""iOi""""iiiiiiOi""""""~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~[ ) r l'l<l l't .... I yr 5f'tviee war-nu1h c .. J .. r •rtlcl'flll lr.-~lt1\l~·;t 11.! 110 \'(lf(l l'l'fall oon- ,.,,1,., ('uM1 00 or 110 down A NEW PRE-SCHOOL TO MOTIVATE YOUR CHILD IN HIS MOST FORMATIVE YEARS! • A Tola\ Readiness Program • A Learning Environment • Morning/ 1\fternoon Teaching Sessions THE EDUCATIONAL READINESS CENTRE 2070 Maple Ave., Co1t11 Mesa 646-4334 646-3062 " I t "~ • If•~ ., •• ,, CO.Tll Miii>. Clo~IP, •••. w, "' ~; 11111. !lntnl(·tne;. ABC ('nl"r T\' !lil'll All.ant•, J1!1111u1~h11; l3t'11r·h , 968-l.12!1. • IU.'A -Jl ·~1~r-;1vA-i ,.,,n,1 1111111 S 1i'~ -<'Ontoll! 111<1<\t·l • I \u·knr~t l~ll '21" hlal'k ·'5 1111 111' A-1 ,·.,r)flllk'ln. $&.\. C<•n ... ,,lr n1"' d ,. I -l"'lw:inl! 'o-1 '\-l'.l'Vo [ ·~· 1°''"__, lli J Lin"', 2 Times, $2.00 !;ll!Nl·:i\ 111 ~. i;:·-><I "1:u·. hl111·k v./ln•"''I 11111rk1111o:11.. i.;t MMI hi•alrh, 1:u1nc•11 l 'l~. ~ ~1v ('ll ~•·/!1101!. li\1•k 11 /hrv.11 111n1·k1n~~ GOOl'I luiilth f;IX-11·,1. Amazing Opportunity Tomorrow At YOGA C ENTER! r K l I l'!'l'l'll·::-i . ._i 1, 111fl~. ol~. Yogn is fun! Hhar;1t i Ile\'! (le t i ,'\:. ·n 1ra.~ lfni·h:o;hiin!I ,i:. pflo dl•. Laught 470 students 111 'ii ' ,....,1udent" r:1\'1• :d 11~ul. \V .. ndt'r[ul ror c•hild '1 P<'L feeling belier. succc ..... s 1n l1fr. pP1'.'>t 1n <1l f11\f1\l-: .. 1:~11167. menl & rclflxi n ~ for \hr f1rsl \1t nt~ 111 ~·l'ars. YClll_N_r:-.--1,,-"-"'-,,.--,,,-,..,., e 2 Cl111es Start Tomorrow-9:30 AM & 7 PM C'o1·k1t\1M 11rr<I~ i;:rwxl horne. Com• Ear ly Or Phone-646-8281 t;ood v.•/!'h1ldrr11. !lfi2-:l631. BLACK lr111111;(:01·k11poo. 4 YOGA CENTER 1110'11 nre<ll'I "OOll homr-. Call 445 E.17th St., Costa Mesa 1r1&-:1:!.fifl. LEARN TO EARN IN 1972 AT l Children discover great things at our school. Themselves. ~--·--;:.,..:::; ~ --1 YEAR nld nrutrrrrl m~ .-;:;:,,~ -~~~·?~·~ ~ CUL l)e(·i11 Wf'fl, Ill! r;hola A ! r\~./;~ rFJ't i,\~,i) ' ~~~!J wrll tra111r1I. R47·!6111 ; . ""' 2 ~ ---4 l.1!!lr l'upp1ea , , 1 I" \ Nrrrl ~I hornell. LAWTON SCHOOL Medical & Dental Assistant Training Enroll now for 4 to 7 months New Spring Classes Starting Our school. Early Achievement Center. Unlike most pre-schools, we do more than keep little hands busy. We keep little minds busy. With science. Math. Language. Art. Social Studies. Things like that. Impressed? Don't be. It's not what we teach that's so special. It's the special way we teach. We encourage children to discuss things. MARCH 13th Touch things. Act out things. So they wil l better know their capabilities. And them selves. Sunllov1cr Early Achievement Center 25 15 Wes! Sunllower Ave nue An Eligible Institution Under Federally Insured Student loan Progr.1m. (Which is just about the greatest lesson of all.) Santa Ana, Cahlornia 92704 714/540-4750 ' . Also Veterans Benefits Available ACCREDITED By National Association of Trade & Technical Schools Ok, like to discover more about us? Call or write for our free brochure. Or drop by our Sunflower school. CALL TODAY 541-4461 623 W . 17th Sf., SANTA ANA '-'.: We're open year 'round. So parents can come in anytime. And children can be enrolled anytime. r CHOOSE A~~ PROFESSIO~AL CAREER --.~ .... ~~ /" 0 .. t'i~~ CONCERNED? !ill~~ -W®!illfu~ VJ · - • Mtdk•I A11 l1t1nl e O.nlll AuhUnl e lnl!•i.lloft Tl,.rt'Y TKl!,.k lln • l!mtrttMY Mtdl<91 TKl!nlcl•n • EKG T.Cl!fOld•n • Maicl'ltll •Ktltflonl1! By a re-cent aequlsltlon of Newport Buslnns School, Callfornla Profes51onol Coll~• now offers: • Typ!llt • l00Nkeep1!19 • $1Mr1Pl•nd • l.. .. •I s .. :r•I•,., P""'rl!+ltfl DAY AND EVENINw CLASSES Enroll Now For SPRING SEMESTER CALIFORNIA PROFESSIONAL COLLEGE •.. about your school child? Is he or she doin g work in pu b- lic school you believe to be substandard for his or her own abil ity? Is the class too large for learning , too noisy and un- d isc ipl ine d for proper concentration? Is th e teacher per- sonally interested in your ch il d? Do you approve of prayer and the Bible in the clauroom? Do you want your ch il d to learn patriotism? You can make a change for the better for as little as $32 .50 a month at Neumann Christian School, Corner of Santa Ana and Magnolia Streets in Costa Mesa. Call 548-2840 or 548-1,733 and osk for Mr . Conklin g. 1101 Nsw,.rt lhd., Code,. .. , c.ur. 714/M5·2t22 51......,1 "'Y"*" "la11......0rM••H "IK"""'1 fos~i.'llllU Own .. & Operllllf 9y M•"*4n 9f IM .. ..t..- C•I! 9f' Wr"-fir "r" c.at•'" --J[§J ~I ----J[§JI ~ -_____.][§] Furniture 110 Mlscellan.ous Ill Miscellaneous 118 Ill Miscallan.ou1 118 Miscellaneou1 111 2 KING !>Ms. relria .. kitchen table w/frte chn. etc. 4815 Bruer. Crnenl, N.B. Ill SOFA S25; Dinelle R I, $15: ~111.l1TH&e1; drtAen; nite 5{a nd'I; bookcaise : n e w tttrir:. S145. 557-8400. ~fOVING • ODDS ' ENDS BARGAINS! 642-65'14 Mlscell•MOUS COUOl, rocker, desk, lamp, stroller, bowiifla' ball &• i GOU> NaU&:ahyde d!va.n. !ihl:les. mirrors, carp e 1 Pttllll coffee !bl., 2 swt'e'Jl('r, clothn, picture,, fruitwood atep tblr.., 9x12 673-3220 all 5. area rug. Wroua:ht iron POWER. Mower Sl5. EJtttric &"Wag chandeher. SJ3....2722 Buihin Ov~ A ~e. SJ5. d1 6 pm. 642-5f>E6. ~21~"~RC"-=-A~~Co~..,.~-=rv~-w->t7h RABBIT HlJT(l{ 4 fiOL.ES I remot.e conlrol, Ir 12·· OJSTO~t BUli.T $60 Zeniftt 1V. 2 Ii\'. rm. chain. e 540-2590 e "'-rough\ iron dining g.ct 11.1th ~19 Bruce Creteenl, N.B. TIFFANY SETTING tea earl, twin bed•. etc. ~!j..1461. 2 KING bed1. Cheat& tablf!I. '-i Ca.rat ttlr elt. Yamat. Enduro. Di.anEnd Ritw GR.EAT Books We• I er n 4815.,Bruce Cftsct"nt, N.B. ----SL-IM_-C_Y_M-"---Wor\d, S4 YO(. set .,,.11h 34 .1 5 \'O\. IA.IPP-mater ial , Jewelry s:io. ~" ~~ r 1 531-T.l!M Ll<l<W>ca.e, •'-"'· r rn . FEBRUARY btrthe:tone. l! -=-~~~~~-96Z-4Jl71 . matched a!Tll!'thyit stontt LIKE ntw GE CDlor 1V, wuK _:.:EN.::_:M:.:O:_R:_E __ --,-.-.-..,..-, ~I m 18 kt 110lk1 iold 5*>0. No~· $400. Baby rum ' SIOO: Girla btdm1 Itel $75: bracel•L SJ~. 642-7239. all ~ip. $50. 545-143'?. l.1e-c:t lla•mno"''l!r S15; Call Machinery 116 WALK-IN 7x7. Meat cues. alter 6 PM. M7-4116. ----"-----JO' Ir: 12·. SllCC"r Ir: own. '65 , UBLOSDE lathe 17" 1 ~11 Cadillac. 54~~ 5--8 pm. I ROUND antique wtute mar· or tn.deJ 1 cyl. dine.I ena. hie' top co!ftt tabLe, m. Jo.!ach. rurlace p I a I e . Put • Uttle "lrof tn your j "64""-~===·===""'=-= ~,.ctw.n~ ti:Xll toaii~r. ~ Ll!:vh" • sell ume baubiu 1 ~·1r· SURFBOARD SJS ruu r1 dWI t1:f'f'I l&'' "'h I •' I for "bucb". ean OuADed 1~ngth wel auit • boou $$. 6'2-t6l0 642-5678. Xlnt cond. s.16-108). RUSTY . used boat mooring chain, 1~" rN.~rial, each li nk 21,.z" long. l 'li;." widll!. 50c per tt. Ma.nM Surpha C.o.. 3:m S. Main. S.A. 54 5--6.Xl l. POPCORN Booth ori(inally uAed at U:>ng Beach Pike. \\'ould makt! rre•t pa.tin bar. .AllO ve-y cl~an '60 Ford 1, ton pickup. Make olfer. r..1us t aell. 49-1--4977 after 6PM. NU~fEROUS janllori&J equip incl Advance UI'· CooVl!'rta· matte, garden, pv.T ' hand tool•. antiqun, aquarium1. camping equip. Call 1714) 11:92-9TU for 1oni lit! or evl!'lj1.h1na:. 100.B \\'arnrr fi~tric pla•ti<' laminating mach.lnt'. C.ot.1 S780 wf l)8.J'tl & supplit>1. l.isM '"''i« to cahhralt> ~I . Will M!lJ !or $400 . !14~2783. WHEEL CHAIR $Jl • ~2!60 . S TEREO : un c lai m ed lAyaway , 1911 model, Car- ran! 4 spd changer, air 1u11pPn1 \on 1peaken, w/m u)tiple emu o ver n e 1 wo rk , A.\!/FM/MPX nu:ho &: lap@ dttk. Still brand I}('~·. Or t 1 1n 111 y $41.9.97 pay off 1 ma 11 heh nee S197 .38 or pe.ymf'ntJ ol $8 25 monthly. U.S.A. Sterno Utulp. Wareht>tuiP, 179 E 171h St, Cofita Meu 645-2442. *AUCTION* F'ine furniture le. Appliance• Auctlont Fri day, 1:30 p.m. Windy's Auction Barn J'J73l,\ N t'WpOr1. Oi 646-86A6 8fohlnrt Tony'1 Bldg Mat'l CARPETING Carpet your hQ\1se in luxur· louJ nylon Jhq for 1611 t,twl h&1f price~ H.av" fUll one roll mntain1.na 7'2 tquatt ya.rd.11 of IJr&M M"4' carpM- lnc at only S299. c..u Sll-039 STEREO. 1972 G a r r a r d model, full stereo chanllf'r, a_1r 1u1peruuon lpi!&ken, AM/F'M stereo radio +. tape deck. Still brand new It iuarant~. Wu Ir f t unc-la.lmPd on lay-11way Sold fCJr S..."'25, pay olf b&J..ancc of $95 or take over small pymnt•. Collecti(ln [)('pt •• 714/89l-U'J01 , Book Stoll Ovlt1I ~. bookcut"S, NCR c-Uh rekJSlen , U.btn, rt.de•. bu t 1 .. r. ofc ~uip. ' tum. All btlrgalns. 333 E;. 17fh $1 , C!tf $48-4611 U.5 PM. NEEDED BADLY J)Quble or King S~7.t Box Sprtri,c ' Mallrei-. lloptoful 130 • \..rt . cond. 348-i"l 111 G p.m . fjARAGF: M.ip , l971 1-tonda 70 11.nd Ml~t S~ QI" bt!1t CJI· l,.r pn"'"t l1:1111·n ~r J,l.1, lum1h11't' •nrl much m<"Jl"f . 6532 ~Uhop Dr , Hunt Sch, '41·"123 ,' SCHOLARSHIPS ~"'"""' CM '"-' ' \ . PUJ>Pll!:S, 6 wfl'f!ks old, 1·1·1~1 ! ~,1~· ~1 lxed hreed, Rmall, fem.;. II 11 1 I • &46-~715 . 'I are now offered by I 1~11, 11 FflEI·:• 7 arlm'Rhle k lttel'll!. ' 11 1 d B ~I,' Rrl!f! 1n Nrw York . 121 :Wlh 1, 11 111 , Armon s eauty , 1 , s1.. , .... 'i 1 1 ;, ( College, Inc. i,',:1, \~~~~ ,,ii [ '""""Su-11~1 1:,11,1·, s d Qualified tu ents • :1'1,1 learn a fun filled, '[I' Cati l\.111\ : hi9h poyin9 profession. ' ' 11 I 111'.:AUTIFUL hlu,. err11m Penilftn •I 1no. oll'I. Ch11.m'P ~t1l('k. ;\,l\Vltll( !lf'(•f'~ti.\lalt'll rwll1 n~. $100 !IAA-5~12. -Call or vilit Armondl Be11uty Colleg1, Inc . for progr11m and regi1tr1tion inlorm1tio n Dav• N()V!Ct: !Jot 0 hf! d I en 1· 1: Cl;iMi 11t11.rtlnq: Tutl., Feb. Rt h, 7 T'.M. MARTINCREST l\f.:NNt:t .. <.;. 546-00AA. ., 496-9436 34052 Lo Pla111, Dana Point wAn.M & cuddly n1'1niatuh Schrvn1~.rr puppleR AKC f"f"lil:. All 11ho11. JoanM after 6 prn . 847·R929; M2-M4J. GREAT DANE Pup1, AKC, ~ ;!!;~;~:2~~;~~~~=:~~~1 wk11. l~arlequln It hlk. Show & pel quaH1y. 586-7038. AD~11RAL Air c:onrl. 10:Al BTU'.!i, 3 .11pd. \V1ntl•1w modrl. Excel r'(Jl1<'/. S7'1. R.16-8.133 aft 6 pm. ,\18;\'!Bt'.R.<;llJP lrv uY' C1_,1u;1 Country Club. S97'.i. • • R'.12·947~ • 1t Mlscellaneou1 828 AKC 011.J)Ml Jfound. maJe, MODEL :no new horn,. 7.11;· Champion Rlred, S&crlflce Zait M"Wln;t n1ach. W11lnu1 S50. 8:\().00.ll. ('ll~h. !,()l')IJ conrl. s 5 l)A _c,,.~G~ll-A~N~S-. -AK.C~c-. -,-.,.,-.-. -,.,,-1 67 . ..-821 .1. nr 1Uvtr. Mua;t aeJJ . RUY rhl'f'r l. Jo~lrV; !<.1d1• 'lnly Sl'25 3'46-5365 S2'1i9. V.'h11f'·Elrt<I, <1R22 P11rH. BOXER pu1~s AKC re1. 1111,11111 Rlvd., 1..;ik,.".-~'d. Ch11 mpi'ln IJ~ ~l:l/<1~:\.-(Jii7. • 71 4 962-8067 Wanted 820 Sporting Goods 830 ENGLISll Setter, lema.le, :; ----------1 . mo'• old, 4A t•hampt, 4 In· NEEDED BADLY l.f..fT llan11 11hoot rr R, trm nrl champs $200 [Ji)ubl<' or Kini.; S1z,.. \~·•·a!ht·rhy 257 rn n J.: n u nt 67:Hlll71. ' · PAix Sprini.: & .Vlitllr'f'MI f.1·11f1C1ld :~x'I v111·11dil•• H111•!••rl ~~=~~~----1 111•11JO!,, hre."<I "f'W l'.f"' ,~ •. s c It NA u z 1·: n I' u JI .' /!of)f'ful $'.lil. Gd. 1"0nd, " " .,., "' o 1•• 1 V.'•·alh~rhy :m ni;i"!\•Hil ll<JUM'hrr1k("n, 11tir,t•. s rud : .. 1 ..... 1111111 t 6 pn1. " G f£1qnld :~x9 verui hlr flu••ll•r iief Vl('•', 'roon11na. terma:. Muslcal ln1trument• 822 nviunl!! t ;t80.00. 919-1:~1'.j, M6--0R39. CONN TRUMPET Ji.Bl1JADINO eq u Ip rn ';-;;f. DALM_A_T-10-N--,-K-C-P-,-,-.-,' with ,-11ar S50. Pianos/Organs 826 !\\AJO!t BRAND ORGANS 1'"Mm S.395 Inc Alli'TI . O:inn - 1111.mrmnd . Wurht1.t'r, f'1C. ror lhr ('h11rch & h01nr A/1'1) J111.rp AJrho r d11 & Pl<l,.-1!'\. GOU LD MUSIC CO. :inlS No. Main. S.A. 547~1 • • Sllll'" 1~11 *HAMMOND ORGA-NS ~l'ie:lll 6 oldest dealf"r In U.S. All model.I new-UAOO. Beft)~ )'OU buy • a:lve UI II <ry. PENNY OWSLEY CO 17141 892-3314 11:\..,2 Bf!a("h Rlvd (So. of KalelJa ) PIANOS*'*-ORGANS Kr 1 a1, Steinway, LnwA'.y, A1len, Bal.rlwln. etc. ).-rom $295 up. RENTALS SlO up. o .. uv 10-6 ~"" i2.s FIELD'S PIANO CO. JJ.33 Newporl Rlvd Chilli Men 71-l/fi.t5·:l:Cil WOULD YOU BELIEVE • ttF.:f; OitGAN 1.r_:S..WNS ... V'm.1:; u you liM ~ No rer· Uitrat.ion. No obll11:allon. Ju1t Come Mnnttay1 7:30 pm. COAST MUSIC W."1!;1 PRIVATE PARTY WAA'TS TO BUY PIANO YOR ~A~~-•._~ms_. ___ _ BABY ({r11nd p1am, 11~11rrt. ~IY)ny /inilh. rood ~ro11!lt)t) $6."il. $]~. B.1d:i"--o""".9-.-"-M-.-.-, s~H 827-4152 or 631-31~ Nl::AP./ .. Y ,..,..,. playrr ~ • !kl rolla. plu• c.•blllft SllJJ.I, .\ft 4 ~~ Jlertc111 f>rr~11• ItCHS. Vlr~ 11how or /,.'I r11111 Jlty. f>lico>d , (•1r 270, ;JOO wliy, M·l lo sell . 6~?~ tvc,;..wknd,, <'itrbinc, 243 win, 4•1 mni.: BOX ~~n PUPS 0.SI' trlmm,.r, R c· AS I~ & Up. Call Atr,.r J'ov.l'lt>r mr1UJ11rr. 111" n y 6J.rl p.111. :J611.-7827 bull,.U, bra.1~. P r I m e r 11 . fAOOJt ABl .. 1'; r i £ K--:-:;;. much ll!QUlpml"nf. Sl50. for POOS. SlO _,.~rythln;c . 979-1319, fi.4Z-48HI, Jo:vf'a. ;,J4...3AAS GUN ColleclJon H.cming ton STftlKI NGLY rrvu-ked tifk • pump. 270 win Sl 10. Cha.rel whf Shlh·T7.u 4 mo. oki. Nt> ll 11!y VPfll 11ra <;r11f!,. 12 1:11 paper' S25. 92,._5632. 26' harn'JA J2()1'). flt\A1·11 ~~--------! MOl'.lel 37 pumr> 12 a11.. 30" GREAT D&J'lll!', fti!m., AKC, hatTf'I Sll'J. !ffl·l.119. 9hoYo' qwtl .. 7 IT'K:*. Tra.df: or SURFBOARD , 6'l " "'"· """""""' ...... :m. Nc_ow, ViO :)46..~ I~ RE:'UAURANT .equi pment; N:111<1~J C3"h n.eac111~. 2 General toO llotpollll tryc1i.. It ~. l(r1l11 . 6" 1talnle11 atttl RESPONSIBLE Jl4lrt)' w relrt&., double head Taylor ID miM a rra,.ementl with ahllke m11ch1nt, Scotchman holll owrM!r. 42' IX" l&rpr let m111·hlflf'. Corey colftt dk>11el c r u I s• r . WUJ maker. Ru111 11 .. mhurit ra, nc10U.t•. 1llp, m.lnt~ 214-1 Newport BJ vd., C.M. ' 11.111?1 1*'1.1Qrs. 61$-5154 or 64i..1T.JJ. _~:i.-"-1_1_n_·~-~----I 8' DINGHY (ii)od cond. SSQ, ~3&34 TV , Radio, HIFI, Stereo 136 FOR SW-or tr.'1f. 1.969 Q)I'\-&oats, Malnt./ aol,. ITlfxSel Olyrnple 23" c.'fJI. Service or TV. 'Ntth UHr Sl'r.i Orl=.::"'."::-:'."':'.--.,...--,::-1 b.-11! offeT. ~5668 •!ttt ~ BOA'f Bottom& cJ.uru.nc: pm. • 11. Ltnrtb a t w/1. TICKTOCKER Thrlf! Shop.,_-_r.s_n_. ______ , f"1th:'r •mpllfiPr, Rt.'k...rrlo.Jt Boe ts/ Marin. turni...h\r. C,..f)I\ W(lrk1nw, Equip. fVJnd $7;) ~ w 19th C:\f 1-.. --,,--, .. -.. ---E---------------y,A,,,.,.~ qu l pm,nl MAC~A VOX :e" Ci>l?r TV M'rcury Pf"OPI· !J(t H.P . to r.tt•rf'() flfNnrl, pt'C'an el!h1net, 120 JI P Wrap ulund Tiunt.-Afr d<JJn &t~l ""'I n ii 1 h I , Id All rww rr--&ll/JR-1V :-ILk.t rww f~UfflU!>Jf.. ~ ttJT'W'l Sl,'/J 6 JIP Joh.n•.>tl outboud rnc. -=--· _,.,_,,,.,,,__ • I ,, IUf'l Wik, 1 yr old Utt)I! \\'hltt El'J)hant OlzM.A.-Une UM', \llll. rn..U'M aft 6 pm. ' .. lu~~dily, rtbrU~t~ 8 1'°172• 7 ·t·. DAil V PILOT ----]rQl '--I ._ ........ _ ..... __,l§J [ .,. .. , .... ,. I§; =I l-..iiiiijiiiiiiiiii!~~ I~ L_I ,_.~"'~_""'"__,J [i] [ Boltl Md M.--E...,_.t [ ........... •-••••--• Autot, Imported 970 964 Autos, lmporfH 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Used Bo.ts, Power 906 16" BOS'"l'O:'\ \\ "·"t'I. 1 I I' ,11<1. ror"'11.rd 11,h111i;: n ... h. full l1fr ri;il~. 11.i Jll' Jol111" .. 11 ,.,1ft••111d 1u11 t'l\1'1, $1~4 1 t1~: II ~"' ,di io JIU I ;1;· f)()],J'!li' C';1L:ri. 11'.:1;;; l:l! 111>,:r ~!Ill•·\ lw.111, 1·•1111 1111•'. S ~ ll.t1d111 " I I !dw ·1 ..:If<'' $100I• i~I ti\I, ·~1!1, 11r11•1 "1 IHI\ • Ii; T l~!).I \,, ..;J\I Ho11 I ."Ml llP, \" ~. \Ill! 1·1111d. ,!.•1:~i \\ill f 11;,11<,. lj'j , !1] •I ••I 1,7· .... ·: t:.'i Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 CATALINA 27' SLOOP Brand JH'" hn.1• \u\ l>"'l•·r. !!IN°j)S SI\, s "1.1d10. f{I)~ I 6'2" hf'arln•1111. , •1!i1 •·1111•111 Nl"\\port ,1111 11 1111•1111 .. 1° park10K. Cluli r111o·, f,., 1uf., call ~~-1i-!'ICJ11; 111! to .:~! Boats, Sail 909 HOHit'. C'.1 1 Iii ] 1110,. ,,Jt! Lirn1• !..:n'rn hull .. \••11011 I (r11n1l)flhll<' ~1 11\", ri.1111<' ;1fl<'r " 1•111 q 12 ·17":7 O"LJA Y .\l.11·11u·r ho:'<•cl. :: SHll-.;, !li11~1·rl 111;1-.t I & lr;,ilf'rHlolr l.:t::i~L Jti~!-.i7'MI Boats, Slips/Docks 910 :)LIPS, 11(" '" •I:!'. f1nr,.1 ut L\pt l/;1rl"1r. B.~~1 ra,·11111 •. ~ ~-j"('(' lli•l"~l!l).!, fii~ ~71 ! till 10 p Ill. * BO:\T S1>a1·r 111'<1r Sidf' !If',{. ,.1111. A1 t'Hlll ID fL l10at. 1;7:\-'il:lll Boats, Speed & Ski 911 12 fl ~1011 l\'h.~l"r 1~ Ill' .!ohnson, f'f'llll'I' ,.i.~rnri,.:. I"'' lllOll' ron 1rol.~. h,J,lf 1~>\"f'f. I 11;;:-h1!i Ol'f'l' Sl.iUO 1111···~1.~d. :O:acnficP. S79: •.. \f11•1· 6 11111 .i12-3737. '70 GLA:-i:'l"HO:\ Iii'. 7;, lip Evin. V1111so11 1rl1· ,\-,..quip R. ·ravlor, dv. filli-il'l."i <'I" ti7:'.-697l . I 1:r t".(;, Ski hn:11, :i:, J1 .p., )-:vinrud<', r1111~ J:: rt <1 11 1railf'r S'.l:l:i :i4:l-:f.110 ,.r1f'1' Ii I) ill. II 1111 1() I! I' Cycles, Bike$, Scooters t·'I .\Ir,• 1 ..... 1 , ... r .. I ~17·, 1;7 ~ j 1~1·1 Ii I 1 <'l ·' Mob ile Homes 925 !111111 '1 'l"'"d ~ 2 ·"' f• Ill 935 Auto Leasing JAGUAR 1.; \1~1-I .' ('111. ("hr 111 "'1 •··. ,\\J,1~'\I/:-'\\. \111J1 ·r1.1 u1u· lo•.1,1· "'1w11~ !•or' 1111,, \lrir ,.,,,.,1 i:~uo i1 .. 1~ :-i .. 11nJ:,. :-;,1<1,r ... 11011 -·"''J I ·,1; l'lOh . ,..,,,.,, 1'17 ;:-i•r~ · \'ll'o•. _ \\I·. l.L,.\:-\~. ;\LL PO!'l 'l.A!t l t•'' XI\/-, :!:!. ''''• aul••. 1'!7<i '\l ~l~I· S A'f' (.J l\lf't.~!'I .'\ \11 ~ \l. 11 If,. 11 Ii" t I~, 'J"l\'t: n .\'l'l•.S, 111111.;undy, ('\1°f'I \.!O n rj C.i !i \!.d1·•1l111 l~•'hl lor S, > ·{l, ii l/X·ll'-:lt:l7ii. ----kt. \('JI 1nuh1!(-!111111•' .1 .. 1i1,Jr f111 l!if'r' 1l<'l.1 il'. LOTUS 11 ,i .. 'l Bit, l H \ ··111, THEODORE 11111'. •·ti.I.I 1~11.!1. 11(·11 1" ROBINS FORD ,111111 11111 \.Ill" \,h :..~~~t Harbor Rilol ,\I\ l)/•J \Ink•· 11 I I• 1 , ("fli-1:1 .\1,.~a •dl (~1111 '69 LOTUS HAN ·l'~t-u ,, Aut~$ Wanted 968 J L11 •I '" ltnd \"111 ! '"1' .\11 1,. Motor Ho~es--940 . WE PAY ToP I ·•l.'I' .-~,!1(5~-795 *Marvin Pearce* CASH I CREVIER MOTORS Motor Homes Sales • Rentals 558-3222 111! s \'Ill 1.C!f' II .11 1::1;::1 JJ.11 !Jut, \ ;,11 df'll ( :1.,\ l' l J;Jk, -"'• ... 1 1; t:. l"r11_1 . 945 ·rt-:.'T lra 1h•r,. lird1p, ,.1,~·1•~ ·I \l!1! 0·•11H! ~o;:~I !~ •. ~-I ::i7 Auto Service, P arts 949 Buy, Sell, Trade ·-I ,l;o,'\ 1 ·, ';~'!I '(, 1:hllXI~ $:'~•.~1~1 I ;(;0:\ 14 ~:.!:I '(i 1 '.S, .\!;1!:_' <;J.-, ,,-, J 11 .l.11 l;i'• .· ~::1. iil 11~1 \l/•11 P.bl:i!l•" '111 !'.11• I \; ~\.;' I >I\• ~~tS \\, 1s1 SI tor ust'd car~ Ir tnJcl\11, just 835-3171 CllJI 115 rUr frt't' t'Stimatt'I, 1-------- GROTH CHEVROLET MAZDA A.~k !or ~.:1leJ 'l:1nai;t'I' JS-111 Beat h Blvd. NEWPORT IMPORTS ~ll~l \\, ':;.1~1 11111 .. ,\•'\\ jW""I J\"·" h 642-9405 \Y~: P.\ Y "J"U1 ' POI.LA.rt r·or. ·rnr usr.n CAl'.S • NOW OPEN r~:0:;: ~;-~,_1~ ei..lr1l C'le'11J,1-MeRcEDeS seNz 1-~:\l'l :tc Bl'ICI\ ~ 1·1 -~ !'Ml .-..:.,,1au (" l H ~ s I,. '.!::: !-:. 17 th S:. I \\I ~r;;\ )I.I 111, I! Ill' lt•.ill\•~· Cnsl;i ,\lf'~I :..ill-'iill.J 1111 . ''''" '''•l"P•·l~. Run.~ ()1";111gr ('u11111 11's "J'UI' ~ HllYl<f{ 811.1. \1.\.'\t·:Y TOYOTA JS.~S\ /;!e;u·l1 Blvd. JI. Brai·h P 'i. ~17-i!~.W II II .I. n111 ,1r•11r •·ar f><1 ld l••I 01 11 .. 1 i 'nl l 1;:,lpll G.ir.11,11 f..i':~l1!Jj~) -:.i!l .:11::1 . 1!1001 i~~,~:·:· 11:~~r::~1~,;~0 \It'll, .\io.(1 l!l\'h11lf'1! (lt'f' 'l•dll' IHlfl ~-l'll):lllf' 11!01 k, 11-,,11,1 •. h.'I""· ,c l.1,.s, ""nlf' 1i,1(1.1 par·I.~ ~ .. 111i~c. f'll~l!lf' t ""l"f~1rlt'•ll.~ 1111 Pl :Z,••H'I \\•'lk,11:.,: Or'd<'I ', .')t> •(I., l'~f-11 !:: l I ' 11 1J I .~ I l 11 11 n lll(ltor !· lr;ul<'r 11'ilh '' 1111 h UiO. 531-72!~1. 1'1.~) ~, .. \\ i\"I ', ('~ ! I BMW I Oran9e County '-s Lor9e11t Se lec t io n New & Used Mercedes Senz Aircraft 915 'l";uld ca&~fl' •·c Trt• ·" h• ,-nur 1·h<•1•·" "' DIAMOND AVIATION Slu<lf'nt l'lf•P \\1111;,!•lt • :i 1n 11r:~ • \1\ \ t /: I ,\ )( 11:,.i_ IMI'" j ~1'1·1 6 (1'/1;~1! ~ •!llJ, I.'."' 1 /·!•ll·LI "Ii S ~! "!' 1!'.idf' Ip~ _\Ii I lj ,,..f ,, !f1r \"\\ flt o,/ I•' d~-•.,\I' ·.,.I II '"' f'tl:;111r. t-":t~i~ -.uu: ~I :_·, [ l§l Campers. Sale/ Rent 920 Trucks 962 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 1 2002's & Bavaria's Jim Slemons Imps. W arner & f-"-1 in St. an fa Ana 546-4 114 '';I "! .u-c·. h>har•'Q l.1n•1 11. 11 Ill.II.I 11111•'-, Jn1,l\11.1·ula 1r 1111h 11111 1;.11\f'I' S,. ,.:rn'n l·"\I .. ·~· ,t "kn~!~ MG 'Ii\ \I!; 1100. r:rhlT, JlCillll, ,1111 o·und, S IOO. ... ~11: ... ~~;::• ... MGB rlf'I' TOYOTA GET OUR TOYOTA DEAL BEFORE YOU BUY ! .,,Pw LewiA W TOYOTA l'li)ti Jliu·hnr. ('.~1 -.70-TOYOTA-i ( 'nrun;i Df'l11i..r, Harlin, 1 lrat-' rr, A111n 'J'r<ins. 1•1,"ltif:I."\\ 1 Sli!t!I ~ :i. COSTA MfSA • J49·JOll U.t ... ·61·61 -SANTA-ANA-! TOYOTA I ~f'J'\ir e drpt. oprn 7·30 111n '1>' 9 pn1 ,\Jon<la y thru :1-'ri- d<ty. PHONE 540-2512 -1 !'i \I'. \\':in1r•r, :-\;1nla J\1111 TRIUMPH VOLKSWAGEN '70 VW CAMPER POP TOP 1"1•nl. ft<11!10, S1df'1<lf'p Bu1ll 1i <'I" I ;litl!'rl~ !00' .. \~'11cr:1n1~­ i 197ASJ\l 1 $3199 CREVIER MOTORS :!OS \\', 1~1 S1., Sanle Ma 83S.ll71 •""5 6~V~w-p-~A-N~E=L- Rrillly nra!, fill lirf'.~. 1·us1on1 111-.i.t<', # !096. HURRY ~ Mel 1 COSTA MlSA • J4t-JOll 1~1.~-61-•& 't..9 \",\\'. «a1111lf'r \\'t'Slphali,. \\' pop lufl, rrnl , A l\1-~'J\[, lapf', 011 Prig .. i:!tfl5 or brst ~11/rr. r 11on!' &16-ti94:t. * • 4 \'\\" A.'iTf~:\ .\1A{;,'i. fol' salr .. \lake HfrC'r. • 64·1-Sfl!l:J • VOLVO I GET OUR VOLVO DEAL BEFORE YOU BUY! Tl{-I :'p1li1H', llf'\I 1~·11 r1 .+n~rn1~ ... 10P ~A\'E 01\' 1~UROPl:'.AN' DEIJVl-'.P.Y • 'J>WtllW VOLVO 111 .. 1 .. 1 ru.ru •. t~0111 1·r110I.. \1 11 h 1:.l'Ji l!arhor. <.".,\!. li41i-!l?.0.~ 1nr11Jt•1111 tlf'\I l•111·l.r1 ,r,1:~. O!lf' 011111•1. $1~,"1 '1'1·y 11. Yo11'll l1kr .1 <'11 11 l.afUlll'l I Br;"·li, ~!1'4-~S:!:l 1• ,.,.krnd~ or ---Autos, Used 990 e HOT WHEELS e '67 P LYMOU TH ;1 ft1·r ti pl!~ . ,\tn<l1fif•rl IOI' lll;!ll 197 1 IJ;\[.)" !l:'.:lt) 'llLJ-.. ..; ·r1·;u1..:. lilll Hl l' J'S, A.\J ~':\< "l'O !:Y F.\!. /{.&(h J!:ljUll.flK"t. 'i.11 11 AJH CONl.>ITHl~l/'.t: fU '•" (';di hll .!'l.~J l\l'l•n• ~'LILL 1.1'.:ATH~.:R INTl::Hron ~1'1_ -~ Bt>nutllul C11sHblan1·1:1 11ory * CHEVY'S * "'ith blark lop Ir bht<'k inll'r, J :\IJ'Al..\".~ • .\1AL!HI · S dual 1·on1lort fron1 .~<'lit, ~1l'l'· l,11 1n1/t'11g,. ffl !Rpl', !111 & 1rlr,..,•rJpl" HERTZ CORP Stl'l'l"llll:, ~j(M'}l' ICH"kS, lif(:li1 • !if'nl 1nrl, •Tiil.Sf' 1·unrrol !\Tosi r1 •'I)' dclu.\r "'"'« & absolu!~ly 1111\\lcs~ 1l11·uu11r. 10J:!C'X\\ • $6444 NABERS CADILLAC AUT! IORIZF:D DEAL~'.R 2tiOO llARBOH BL., t 'OSTA !\·11:'.SA 540-9100 ()fll"n Su11tlay !.rg .~l'lr1·11on :\11111,1 ,·,.11•1 !i 1714 1 778-4050 --7 -* S650 * ti:• l111p.d:1 Su1,rr Si'"' ·:,~: •l ~pd. I' ·"· \:('11 , 1111, I. ,\ l •1·k~. J7.0Ult 1111·~ ·1 :111" .1, .. h I ;()(JU t '(li\ I). ~I:' .1'~,f, f,'J -li11p;,!;1 -SS ~~pl <'Ill ' 11·~' !11.111 Hl1w H11ok I~,. 1 s::., -.o;:; •. E1 ··~ .;.1:i-1:!X:i. . CHRYSLER '72 CADILLAC-· -,,-,-,-\f-P-1-:_f(_fA_l._I -[I-, -,-.. -.a-'" El Dorado c· .. nd ~·1111.1· •'lru1111•rt1 . \11:111 1; l~-'1;:!1 I , l~l:t-:11i;~1 l'illf' :'\111<1 Pal111, \'1n_vl Tup, _ Lf'aillt'I' Jntrrior. ~·uu Pn11 -CONTINENTAL- f'I'. ~·;h·lury Au· ('01111. T••lf• ----------- Tilt \Vht'<'I. Uon1· 1.1-:11·!;s, 'f.I !.l.'('OL.'>:, hJa,'k, !ll()I,, AJ\l Fi\·! Srr1'N) 8.· Str·rN ,.11.11·p• ;\(•t'd~ 1<•1111r 11nl'I; 'J"apr , ('ru1sr Conlrul. '!"null< \1dhi· ul ft·1. Call .l l">-1~l~:l l..01·J..:s, ;1000 nnle l0t·<1I J 01111 . d_is :11::-!16."1;: f'1·f'~. er. (95\EB\V i $8666 NABERS CADILLAC AlJTllORl7.ED DEALER 26()() J !ARBOR BL., C"O.'i'TA ,\J ~:S.'\ 540-9100 01wn Suurl;JV LARGEST __ _ SELECTION OF CADILLACS IN ORANGE COUNTY SALES-L EASING AUTHORIZED -SERVICE - Nabers Cadillac ti'.: l 'ONTli\"1-:NTI\/.-- (:(X)r1 l'tlllf11l1011 \."Jl.)fl. CORVAIR 1------!~;.-. ('(IP.VAii! ., ck;or /111l'd top. SIOO. IJ;~~s 1·11JJ l!ll-:r11 :,, lf'\of'S S30--6:\7(i. CORVEnE _, _____ _ 't,li \'E1'T l .01 ~ of i:••WIL•'' SJ.i/)(). or po~~ibll' rr11dt<. 6!:!4i.'lli "ti7 CORV~li'E:--1 ~pd~~~I hp. vinyl lop. p /~. Sl!.">I :~-..7-:'1974. I.' 'I I , 2600 11ARBOR BL., S11Al:P-!~'i! 'I"!~ t>-. -\\1/~"\l I pf'rrorn1ano•f' anti s11·11'<>. _, ~" 111 1 . 111-appl'aran!'f'. 111.·n·1 il11t•" r :ono. tiii-ltil!J I\IUST SELL' COSJ'A f.tESA DODGE __ f'\<'~, ---_, _-.. lil -7S8t.$tl!(• 540·9100 Opt'n s~~day ~ 1)1{. '70 Dodgr Llll"IH't. I (;ood l'Ond1r inn CADILLAC 1970 P ·S. PB. :\11·. _'\1111 1p11d. ·, 'I J:ti . .-\\1/f·"\1 't"n'11, ----------- M l,(l 1111 , ~:!:!'lfl. 67' 7q~· hr;i11rt Ill'\\, 1,:.i~w) 011 \l11sl A ERICAN SEDAN DE VILLE !llil-4."1:!:1. ~· ,.,J HI' ~11 1 .. ~::~~i.__:~·:_-1 1111 _ 7 _, rA{-J'OHY VOLKSWAGEN I American Matars ''" ''"'"'T""''·'G <;1,.~! r111ullnJ: 1 (•!lrl1r1,,n. ~I V"'Gremlins vHornets 1F111I J.t1111rr rq111n1nrnr . pad· Sii· • 1iu;...1u12 '69 VW i.-"'Matadors ,......Ja ve li ns d··d tnjl. 1·10111 & lr:ilhrr 111· -7 .-7--~-- \\rt'k rnrl :-; ..... , 1al , .... ,,,,.,. vAm bass ador s I ",1·101,· slrrrn 1\,\1F\l1·11c11u, ·n;: [)QIJGt: 11ith /"l'huil! ,.. .,,, ~ ~ 1 r ! I r11g111f' 1%6. '.';1-,11· hrr.~ & K SEYSaSuBYs FROM l!Bi'9·~Bik9· "'s.'ar~i~9-~!s I . .'1.·. ~·1.-.~.~S;3t,19.,,,9, .. 9. S!t'rnni:. ~''''..'..',·~. 1 1:1~ •. &l-1-6h1< il,, ;. l!lf.."· OQJ)(;J-:-D11r1~t;-,.~I Harbor American I 111110. R.t11 . gooo 11 r<'~. Huns li7Dru.mt:a I ll.)1l1''r~~!~~~~;n1 rn l NABERS CADILLAC .::~~;~·l:~.-~~l:;~~IJ·~:.:11,.~~N:. COSTA MfSA 1969 Harbor Blvd. Al'TllOl'.IZED l)t:ALE!t nr tw.~1 0H1·i·. or 11·;11!" for S.t9-JOJ1 1~1.00-117-68 Co sta Mesa 64&-0261 :1~:6~~·~8~~:-\~L., l•'•'•',.,.,";.'.,.fk.;,;,f ,.'~''~".;··~'~·o~.~f~l -· I '66 Fastback-BUICK ''°"~~--'?" '""'''' '60 Dodge Seoeca t:1·r111ngs ti·lti-71).~4 '67 BUICK SKYLARK • 69 Cadillac -7 1 Cpe De Ville FORD -7 'til ooot;~~ IJ.\lrr * MUSTANGS '11 llAHDTOl'S * Lo rn1 l1•11i;r HERTZ CORP. J.1g 'ch••·lun1.;\li<n1. 1•11!orA 1714 1 778 .. 0SD 'tl'l .\.tU.'{l'A:\t.: \" ~. •l 'Pd IN•ll'I', hl'ii\,I rlu l~ SIJSJl!'rl~ll>ll, hi\\' lllill'il_G" 8.· I l •'ll 'li!U'f•· Sl :l()IJ. Call .olt..-11 ltl I "11~;, \1111'1'~. \111,1a1fl.;,-:! f)1"., 11 .. 1111111• \' '· I'!", di"(' 111'11~ U 1, 1.dlv J•il1 I. -:llli 1·.,11.I \,\ IJ <'all 11.1i;~l.!l l. ... J:1•l1.1 l1I• 1o11·d'.1!!l. ~~·\ l~f.ll . .1111 ... S1i7 •· t ' ol 11 I' I"•' I I' II ! \ll"T\\t, r ... ' ;nr •.1•1-·1,:.:1,111 h11111 .. r Sun h 00 \!.i•t.111i.;:. \\ ;<\O IH, t:illlfl· 1111·~, OLDSMOBILE '69 Olds Custom. Taranado \ 111_1 1 "lup, lh'lil\t• l1llt'1·if>r . l-'lllJ )'<"1111•r i'a('!OI) I\ i r C"1uHl , At\I F\f .'\ii'•'" ,\lulti- l•I•·\. 1'1tr \\l11·l'I. l)tM'I' Lock:>, tX:\ ,\f:::l!I • $2555 NABERS CADILLAC 1\l "TllOHlZf-:I) IJE,\L~~R th!IO 111\RBOR BL., l"0:-."1"1\ \TES,\ .·i·IO-~HOU OJtt"ll S11ruh1~' '71 ~~ Olds Delta -SB ('u~1tJ/ll l"Pf'. t\11lnn1<i l•t l!"ans, r~·11 r1". \'1nyl Roof. Jj.()()'.J n11l1 ·s. -;~,;: C'QS $3595 MacHoward .~;:!l-•l!i()O 11/' ."1::J .06Q8 ( "cor111•1: 1~1 & !larbnr / :-i;1nl:< 1\na 11Mo<i •lul'.JI" IJJ-:LT1\Ri p1 ·rf1'l'I 1·0111!. L11ad,.d' 1968 '•.~ ~ ii•M•I. li11111.u · 1·und. !~oad,•d' You r , 111110 r S18JO 6-12-il~tl or .1 !S-~~l~I. 'fi!I OLDS \'1 ,111 1·1111-.1•1 r1~ 'tn•. nu h .. 11 1~! l1r«~. \l~r 1·ond. .::: IMMJ 1111 .S.!!15(). OJ:"i~-\'"1" C-1111,.r r, 9 p;,~-. t'ull p11 1·. i:i11 . Good '""11•1 !'11/pl~ !)(j~-1;oi;,, '67 DE LTA 88-- 'i lll)I), .... J.",7-lllil\ ·'' (/LIJS, L:<>Nl-lr·,.n~porta­ !1t~11. ll!'t'fl~ h;.111'1".\. ,\j(I --7 !!'1 6:? :,;1-:n 1\:\, ~nod APA('f[~; · ll"ht't·I \',LIJl)Jf'l' • ·rl'nl Trarlt•r'!I. '7 1 1·:11· l11f1!l I salr • Sn111c fr1·1xJ1I da111;1c•· ·, Nr1' ,~ 11se1I fru111 S~'!l."1 11p. ATTENTION TRUCK BUYERS ~l·'.l« l "...; ABl11"r Overseas Delivery CREVIER MOTORS ·1;7 >11;n--i:T ('l11·.,111i• \\'11'1t l\'IH•rl!I; ("all 11f1 :,, 07:1-ffi?li lla.l'k l•li1r f1n1.~h. E\r1·ll,.nl 1•n11fli!lt•tl. \:r11 -~ h1;1kf'~. ~ sr11•t•i!, 1·ai11n, hrill•·i·. !SQY- li~~l1 $11~1.'i. dll". l 'lirf \l'~)d1-op :.tO-.il!i( ll1:!-U!;'.:1, Z Ur ll111·d1,-,p. !':rd. /lo11r1' Slf'f•1·111i:-. Aulo T1·an~. A11· Col\'1. I v t :C0;;61 Sal(' PJ'l\'f'd Full Po11 ('I". :\ir < ond. 1 YC\\'- 9i2' $3995 '65 FORD WAGON I tr~.11~1..-•1·1.111•111 . 'il .0. Call u/trr ·' p11L '.1 16-::0~; •. ALPINE T RAI LER SAL ES ~:~;.:1 c:11r<fr•n c:n•1·1· Hl1d. 1;arril'n (;ru\f'. c;.11r. ~l:!lill I jJ<l 1 :1:t4 fjfi~i; ~~-7 19;0 \II\" Arh•,,n111rrr 1·,.111p1•1 ("11~l(}rtl 11111rlf'. l:<.OOO 111 111·, 14 ~al p1'f'S~un1.rd 11;1tr1 lank, \lai::1r· C'hl'I liuilr-111 ~1111·<'. \\"11J !radr 111i f1o1 111ntor holl\(', r~12--0.-:.·.x * SHELL TOPS * ~.I. \,\\11.\;() • H •\'.l/('JIJ-.1!0 1 U:\"r.'L''.11 P11 ·k Ups R t. ,I :-1ALE~ 111;:0 ~ ll.1rh11r, S.\ S.'~<'I z:,1·, Cyc le s, Bikes, I Scooters 925 \ll\f hlk• ;:•, 1111. ~.'\1"<'l lr-1\I '..'11!1 \\. 1~1 SI Sa11!;1 ,\11a 835-3171 -------7-5-- '72 GMC l TON P.U. l~\.1\\' 'io. 1i1•·"c:, •• £!'""11111 ,..-.11ot OPEL ('io-.(•I S.! M~I ror n I 1r 1 T 1nl•••I (!Iii '-~, 1·ft11ll"'f 111111 .. •', ~·, ht·d. 111',!l.1 1ht1.1 lr••lll ,.. ·:11 H,\!\I :?i.:1)(1 l••alhf'r. (' . ..; a I I' .\ \l/F.\1 '70 OPEL GT )' 1'11<11\ 2'.t.f)()lJ \"(l\l 1 11 11f1 Rl;i1I, lntr11•H". ~··111111 111111·~. 112~ ll'iH' "l>l'lllJ.:.,, 11111<1111;1!11 , a 11· 1·(011<1 , J iidlll, I •11111!"1' I\ II 111).:. t1•1I I•!\, ;:.illl:f'•, 1~•11r•1· d1...,· h1 .1 k•·~. 'lllJ•'I' <'ll'!unL ~C~J\ 11;,: •. )<, 111.1 ll!f'S, Th i.~ I.~ 11•'1 ,. ~1 11 1i1J.1. !111~ !'a •«1111plr1" h,.,,1 _1 rlil!.I llll'I l''I UIJll"'.J tu h.111•!1•• l!lf" l;i1 ~,.,r • .11111• •'r '"· ~..ir,-,lt\ H.u.1 1111• tn .1.11 1111· SJ999 P11'r ,111 t .1n1111 ·r• ,'(, I< 1•1·+..~ .\1 ,11lnhli· Mike McCart hy GMC _,11111 • ... r. 1'1 1 pl•. ~h-~) .• 16-tilllO Autun10 1•1~ E:xcC'llenc;-- 0 ROY CARVER , Inc . :!!'I?~ I Ia rbor B! 1 cl. ('0~1a 'l••,a .=olti-4·14•1 DATS UN '68 OPEL ";"~f)-( ' . .\1\1J'J-:f'!--7p707p7•71707p I /\ \1/1-"\l. Xlnl ("(l!lrl. li.000 1 111i. .\JI ... ,11".:1.~. s 11 9 o, I !H'.!-1"1';1; l'.\I. )'171 \"\\ 1:11 ' 11 11 1, , 11rta•11S ("hr11,1 1·11nd . {)11J.1• ~fll•l 111 11<'~, \111,.1 l'-rll. .\~k /or nu \:, llM1 e Ii 1 !-~•l:o!'I '65 VW, Good Cond. \~~ill. $1399 CREVIER MOTORS q::9.9600 or ill~ Lornrr lsr & llarhnr .'\.101;i An;. ~~--~~ 19'1!1 Lr S.ilw" .\1 1. T' R. ['/..;. !\<'II lll'f''. (,q1)d ~.-.... ~~<) ··ond ~ ~. COSTA MfSA 5"9-30J1 f.t.M.-67·61 --'65 DeVille Coupr. Full fa1 lury po1vl'r. la<'~o1·y a ir '·nori111on111Ji:. po11l'r 11111110"'· tPRP.l831 S!l!l:,. dll l"hH \l'aldrop :vw.:,164. 8420!~;1 n1:0 c'Rd7ilflc l·:J lNrado, i:.:x- rr•ut11·r 1·:u. l\1r c·nr1CI, PfS , r t R, P111 \\ltld<lll" P 11r lo<·k~. a•t;11stahl" t1lr 11h1•1•I , Clll!" 11 ·1111~ F\I '"'1'0•11, 111'1\ rad ;ii 111 ,.,, lo•a1hr1 1111, '111~ I n«•f , J.o 1111, Xlnl •'<11"1 !{1111~ .\ l1·•k" l1k1• Hl'I\ ~LI .. \fl ~! ·:n, cor. Beach & McFadden, Westminster 1;0 11.\"ISI".\ S1.111<111 \la..:"11 lillll" h1':ih·1 11;. \!:1· \I'!,> .ll\1 '-;I !·'\II\,.-: 1\1 1'/11 :1""-, ~~I ii"'" \I:"".'-; I ''·' \ II .v·d111•. :"1 !11~1 ..,,IJ ~ ,,., 1·<i 111J, hi:/1 A1111i.:1111 \\.,.), \'!iii 1{11 1f'l'>t S ll A r. P ' 1 ,\ H. fi4:!-9:).l!li. 1~'"d1·i1· .-\1r V11ll P'"'',., ~ :11 111 ·,o ', ,: ,,1 L' 1..!.1 IHl fl ---;69 VW-Best \1111 ··ond. 'i lit.U. C;.11 .1~~"11.:1. ·:,'l i ,\!Ill.I.fl{' ..;p rl 11 n hi Ht I T \C!l l~•H 1!11 100 1'1' l·.11•11n~1on • linn1h1'r' 111 ·11 111 1'' 1~1111< prl'h•< I. 1175. (lj<1 I"~ \.I 111\11 11 0,\ll \ CB 1 r-ht111T 1"!1).:!llt'. 1'(1!1d l".111 11 flf'1 'Ni!-t·~~l\ :t.".fl '"" ,.,, .. 11.•111 JIU!. \1 1·:-1 _,,,l1;-t~r1d .. ~OO \h11 1· .. n.t. r ..... 111.i ... ~:!x:, \h1~1 ~l"i'' 1.1_1·:;,.1'1: Ji 11<1:-..111\ -..1. 12 .• ,,..,, ,,.;;J I" 111' 7 Ill'" 11ld, lllli ~!' •1f 11·1 • ,, : 11 ,\l \,\ ... ~~. I!•• Ii nr 11 '<11. \I , <"\I '11'i ;i.~l'!. l.11..• ..;. •r ~ •I l'! 1 ~' I i;9 RS1\ 1,:~1 l.•t:.111 111111!. 1>11111 1·onrl. :--.1·11 rni.: II ••Tiii \lil.•I J~I $!(111 l.i~•·~. Iii\, :1!!11 "I ,., 'l ~O 11(1,,IJA 1011 111111 H,i,, .• + ll'l<llt'r'. l.1k1• Ill'\\. \",.1·~ lflll 11!111'' ~i!.\ .i1. 7:21, ~;XP~:f!T 111ntllr1·~1·I<' 1rp.1 •1 J\11~ 111.1hf' \\ulh j!UIH ~111 · -f':t!lnlair· Fr11111 11 1,1 , \I"!! _ thru F1·1 1 •1111:11 r .11111 J\1•1 1"' l 6-16-:::~11 1,\1; ,\'1· .. Po>I I 1:11 d. :-.. B. ! fiil"""JION!)A ;-~! 11 111\~1 felrini:. 111r l1h1 n~ "t• \'r1·,• da.n Sl :t"iO. 1;4:, r,•12 894-1336 531 -2450 • 1.0 I 1 \ 1-.1 ·, I Hild l\1•,I 1' I:.! :>l':S -"LI II C.11, \1111 "llr•1 r.1h"'' ·1;; l!;i1 -.11t1 \\,1:,:•11). \1111 '''"'t. <;< <:o Ill' lol'-.1 Hlf1•I", l~iR Of'IO:L S111 \I ~n. ;_..11 n1ill'11J!r, gu1~J 1ort'", I()f\•I 1•01w!. l{,t·H .... J.'.'!-.!11~~, Offer .'!."\'.! .'1~14 ------• •-.6 \'\\' "4ti-U.ii1 day.~. ~l!~-4<1~ r 1·<'s !Ir. 11·knds 1· .. r1rl1uo11 .. 'P11 tirr s, FUil P/R. P/S 1.l.'10. ~l'!:i--6.'iO.l ·1;4 Rl:ICt\ Skylark Sra l\'gn . .-'1r sr-0. 1.;on.-1 <·ond. HI. ~..!~'I!:!! ---1 PORSCHE il IJt\TSl'•' ,.1,1 11•"1 1 .~.()(~l e1 11 .. I 11 /~'\t \1;1~•111,:------------'6BFA STBACK-1 •·16-:io-.,._ ----- Rtur 111lh \\'lu1r. inll'nor.1 CADILLAC fn\ernalionaJ llar\'es1er S:tOO .~· OVER 25 T:l::CBEATIOX CE~TEf: 1ah,-,.·111111111'. 1·~1-·I'.:.'. 1.-..,1;~ ,t· run~ i:rr,,1, 1\l'A\1- ROY CARVER , Inc. --FIA·, Clean, Reconda;oned, '"'' & Guaranteed. KEY •uys 292:3 !Tarbor Bh·d. ~FROM c.,1, ""' "'""'" BILL BARRY PORSCHES '6-4 CHEV.¥ .. TON-91J 's.91 2's -914's -• . -:plir nn111. h {' R i · y ~1111.1 PONTIAC -GMC-F IAT 19S7 to 1971 111111J11ttlt.'.1 "PIHl.l!S. l'adiv, h('ah •I'. '"2S:;·· HHAN IJ ~!-;\\' COSTA MISA 'j1 L"f,•1" ~~-·" •,'•',f),\,," ~49•J0l1 f•t.06•6l -6t \'~. ;: i:J)<'P<i !rans,, !! I f' II r ., "' .,r - F fl I I rl 'f·Jt1• I "li6 V\\' Ru.~. '·PllS.~ II 11·1n-1 n11111 1wr. Clnl.11 S700, By 01\'flf'I' 11 .\' II<' nry <'l'JlllPP•' . •· .1. 548·8778 pl11~ 111\ .~ 111·. + tin•· frr. do11·s. Rehl! rnginr . XJnt ----200f) 1-:, ~"lll~"I', SA:\TA ANA c:on<l. i\l;1 kr ofrpr· . ."i4:....&14i l'l•I Vf}l{I) 6 e~!.. 1 1, Ion --~ llJl.'() ---- 'T•·p ian. nc:1r !lf'l'I S pl~ ____ _::·•,1, :JI!!()\\'. C1lHs! lh1·y . 1 ·70 V\V C11n1j)f•r, hl'1ght I I ' I I I JAGUAR .,.,,,.,,., 1,,. .,.1, yf'llo1r, . ..:1111 rond., $2iOtJ. II •''-. l!l>;l) <I l"I 11 •1'.J! jJHrlf' -" 1-~c" 1111: . .i1.111"'· rh-. •• $29."1. -----------641·9405 • foiH:ll4 • I 1.-i.:, \lvlll"!,)ll<t c .. \l . BAUER BUICK l-.GS-71'7()7R-SCHt: 911 -L. _\lust "57 V\\I B;;-;;, xi;:;!in~ch (.'Ollfl. AUTHORI ZED DEALER .• 1.~-~1~~:l 'T'ht !h1rbo1· Arras St·JI . :':11Tlfu•f'. Tan"'l'ri11f'-Nu lirrl<, S300. or b~I Olfll' I -llARBO ., 642 S.QJI """"' R BL.., ,J ll!JIX:E Vf\11 H200. VR./ Onlv Aull1or11l'1I blk 1n1t•nnr, .~lf't'ro rfl1L , !::_r s._:_ 7·--__ COSTA r.fESA 1 ·11~1111 1n11,·11w ,t· i>ainr. A-I JAGUAR DEALER 1111 .. i.:~. N1·rdi; 11"0rk 011 'fr11 ni; 'GJI V\\'. 20.000 n1i Sell belo11>· 540-9100 Open Sunday ,,,"ti. S~'l~~J. ~111-JOl:l 7;1nl-Ah111ys hall "" rxrrlh•n! SI' & Tr11 ,1on('r -Oi1)('1'w1~r Prr Blur Book (ff hcst offrr! 1 :, ·~J 1,111." ll'<'linn flf 1"1th Nf'11• "-l".<1:••d t.'nnrl, :.1S--l!l1() al J .. 10 fl 111 . ~:l-17"2. I CADILLAC 1968 \(•1? 1·10-:vr l'tt'k t ' p 11 h ;1111p•·r ,hrll in '\Jnr ,.,,,11). \IJ.·, :!'.:!:: Or11rl~C' Air ('\I. ---- ·.-.-. ('h,,11 p1•·k11p 11fc·ampt•r• 11hl'IJ . l'llllllJ11'1•', !1('1\" b1•k.~. ~t ""' ~•1t11! ~1-,!J 49 1~/JlJI ~;1 ~·01u1 ''"l.-1·n-\11rw~ ,/[!j?ll:tl"S. 'Iii l'ORSC'll ~: ~i12--4-~1KI, 17fi1 , ·fi;, \II\' IJu.~. UsNI lor c11m-CONVERTIBLE 1971 J AGUA R Vil Air rondit1'Jninjl;. ,.u1011u1tlC' 011ly 11 ,000 111ilf'!1. lfl2ji!);\·IN • $7?.Y.i 1·11~. ~·;11'1ilr} n1 a i.: ~, p1nJ!. SJOOO Alt leather inl~rior. full po1\'- .\,l/t":'ll/SI\, Xlnl l..-.n1I. 646-]4&1 aflrr 6 lll'f"kriays er, A~l.IF:\1 slt'rco, lill sttcr- ,\l11sr :<('(°'. S.12.":iO. ti-l·l---li31. ~'OR S:\lf', 'Iii \'\\' Hug, '.'<1"1 ine: Wht"ei. ~ lo rvlly llJ>'" ~fJ.-1'.':1:1 Sti-k fot' Rill i"OT"l<I. :-.,r11 bnikt'~. t\1ust prN.:i11 tr. IVZD300l 'li!i l 'or~l'lll· !l1:l .-. .~pil. 1nag~. .wll Rf'~1 offl'r. 6-12-3192. $2111 1970 XKE 'l+2 !{0111..i, lo\•f'rr•I P I rt 11 1 ~. "jl) V\\" c-0 1111,..-'I'", f;oplop, 1r nt. NABERS CAO'ILLAC C'o11 pr. Yrl1011· 111lh blArk S:.:99.l, :HG-:rt).11. ,odnl n11wt. s:uoo. Srll or raT suita.:1 x " 1111~1u·1 w/'69 ~11):11lf', :-..1n1 '"'n'. ; XJnl cond. S:J9"'i 01 lllH~I' uh· ! !IQ..1!00 or 6·16--341~. • l'Rl \JMPll Tt~Jllli,\ 1,~1 \,111. :-.·t-11 l'h111 h •'-s1;11·1ct', \r1Hhf'r lnl!'r1or . Auton1alt1• TOYOTA tr~d•'. Pl.I. PL). 962--0197. !r11n!i111issio11. l11C'IOry Air -----------'il-V\.;;-ll~lioin~ flverlM'.'u. Vert clt:an. f'11n ,. "" 1111<1! 11 l1t•<'I~. i:••wl 1'ond. ~ rany1ime al 39:i':r ('11,1:.i 11.-~J. f,i; •. ~1:.:t e M"' sc. CM. Ii! ~uH11 1·:(,,,M.11 ;;--r, .. ~ ; 1mHONOA1'RAIL QQ. S1 ~ill ! II· l'rrlr·jr •~n1d1!!011. C'.d l ~ TH• rfnrl· 1.i1-t•1.:i Ml\\ 11tl11'. e S.C1-611!t • tn <"lw1 ,v 1,~ 1 .. nf> P. S'.ilO. , MUS1' tt:U lmmed! 169 CZ 1';111 ' '~· Xlnl o;>ncl. .$J.i0. _ 'iUi-1:l7 •. 642-:>M:; ~all 5 pm. wkd)~ «t lloil~r \"a:1 . 17.' \\'B:-;/h An\! clay ii (be 8£ST l),.\Y 10 l~pr. p.:111rl!"<L ~11u1 !11~1tfr I t"ondit1011ing . ))l)\1l'r !tlrf'r1n~ &-hr11krs, Phillips A!\1 ~'i\1 S\\I r1Hho. ti(", Just 1hr our ~·11u '1·e IX'f'n lonk111~ for t261RQ IJJ "~Jlf'1·111 l11lng 1n Qu11.l1ty" BAUER Buick·Opel-J•guar 1'.{4 r;. 171h St. Cos la !llt"'" ~'411· n~ L·. -•1 ~·' 11 S:.911 or i)flrr. 61.1 nlll. O'ft AD .au ~------( f¥-ll,J'1 ,cad tocfra1 DATLY PILOT lqr •c·t1ot1! 1 ~·or ~r r@~ull,;! M2J.Jl671 WE HAVE 'EM '72 LAND CRUISERS lilr! 11•t'1liS u m.t•n AuthnnJrli Slilf's & Strv1C't' 900 ~-COA.~f J.1if[h1''AY Llliunli 8t-A<'h ~.JH'X"J j '66 Square back Sun l31"'8\'h Car 1716CX\V' $799 ])f'\illf'. ()111• 111\rlf'I' LU\111) PljUlf}/)('d. !O:"lt;R,1. ,/ I ;\J Sl.F:,\10NS 111/'QHT". 2201 s .\la in. ·'A .-,'17 • .-,2~~. CAMARO 9 PAsS<'ll~f'/". \"~. 11 11!nrn;iti<'. 1t 1r 1·on1!., J'(l\\'f'r Yir rnnc. 4 f{DV;i7:'t St>!(1. rllr. l 'nll Cl1lf \\'a\rl1~1p 5·10 ~111>4 111· 'ti~ ()I.fl:' Ttl!t111ad0-:-Kr~I oil' t•l'•i· S:tf;UO. D111• 10 dt>11lh 111 fR11). !)j"',-J."1,"•; 1'••1: ni.n..; 11.-11~~nr ~~:' l)ti'\ 1. --cc.7 ---1 ,.,1 11. \''"' •l('i!ll 'Tl 1.TD'S ,.,1 1,,:UIHI ~ ,,1· ,\11 1'11· 1 ...... 1. .\~~--1 liAJ.,\X!ES &· T01~1;\{l';o.: t'11n1 -,r .... !11x:: Al.-;(1 ·;1 lo11ntry Srdan \\ gn 111 nHlf"i<.j.!<' HERTZ CORP. PINTO * P INTO'S * l'..17\'!'., \\'1th or wilhour au· Ln rnllr11gr HERTZ CORP. --'69 Valiant Run~ i.:ood. Blue •11111 11 hitc vinyl top. 2 Door. 6 (.vl1nrler auton11111r, radio. hr;i1rr. 1YBAThtJ Sl2!ri. rtlr (lirr l\'aldrop ~-:i164. 8•12·06.11. 1970~ PLY:\t{il!TI! D11~trr, 11u1on1at11· 1ra11s1111s~iun . POI\!'!" i!l('~Tllli<, LU,. kc I ."f';tl.~. ronsolr radin & hc1lll'I'. Lo 01111'~. Sl.ij(}. 9fi:l-.1."1ii. PONTIAC 'fi7 Bonni, 2--1lr. Loaded. 70,lf.(l n1i, X!r11 1•on1!. SIOOO or hf'~r o fft't. Mo-41128. IWZ-14Sl. , ' San Cle111ente Capistrano VOL. 65, NO. 33, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ~ _.., ...... -·-- EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORl~IA Today's Flaal N.Y. Sioelu TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1972 TEN CENTS Dana School Threatened if Override Fails By PAMELA HALL.AN Ot lh• 01111 P'lffll Sltft Non-varsity sporL'i progran1s, one full period of high school classes, re1nedial reading, English as a second language programs -alt might get the ax if the 50 cent tax override fails March 7 in the Capistrano Unified School Distri ct An e\'en more drastic cut -not Opt'n· ing the new Dana Hills High School -is still being C()nsiderecl. Responding to a request by "Arvy 's • ~·nf'11cis," ll1c conunittee to pass the override, trustees of !he di strict pondered b1Jdget cuts for several hours Monday. After a lengthy di scussion on the \V Ording of its budget statement, the board voted unanimously to cut between $800,000 and $900,000 from the budget in specific areas while leaving the door open to other areas if assessed valuation pro- jection s are lower than expected or enrollment is hi gher. 1\rcas that mighl be reduced or IXOll s Facing Priso11 Seven Convicted In Repair Fraud By TO~t BARLEY Of 1111 Dl llY ,_Hot Slttf The ·•scr\'icc Station Seven " are guilty. That v.•as the verdict of an Orange County Superior Court jury ~tonday night after four da ys of1nulling evidence rack - ed up in lhe marathon eight-week trial of seven Orange Coast residenl'i. The obviously weary jurors returned Massive Pla1u1ed Community La11d Get-, Rezone Eye llouline rezoning of the land for the first phase of a massive planned coin· munity on acreage inland or San Clemente 's city golf course will come before planning commissioners Wed· nesday. The roriing, a shift from U (unclassi- fied) to R·l and 'PRO (planned residen· lial development) was a condition im. posed on the project last year when CITTTl· missioners and cily counciln1en wrestled with a controversial and complex access issue to the project developed by the Douglass Pacific Corp. Wednesday's application. described as routine by the city staff, will invol ve only the land where the firsL 67 condomin iun1 units will sit on lhc total 250-acre parcel. Planning Director Gene Schult e said that in coming weeks co uncilmen \Y ill receive the fin al ma p for the projeC"l along with other documents which. if ap. pro\'ed, will allow the actual slart or con- struction. The locally-based firm will only be able to build and sell 100 units in the major project before returning to city hall lo find an alternative access route to the in- land acreage. For the first 100 units t.'OUncilmen agreed that a narrow extension. of Avenida Magdalena through the links ~ould sufHce. as access. But a wider road wlll he needed for the ulti mate. development which v.·ill blend the condominiums with a string of estate· sJdez Jots followina: the ridgelinc of a hill. The entire project will be known as ''Presidential E1tate.s." It offers a view of La Casa Pacifica, the Western White House. Hall of Records Electrical Unit Blast H1rrt s Man tt wat business as usut1l this momil'lg Jn Orange Cwnty'a old Hall of R«ords follawln& a Monday nlaht eltdrtca.1 panel explosion In the Condemned building. The structure, at 21 I W. 8th St., Santa Atta bullt in the early year1 of this cen· tury' ls scheduled If he torn dowri within the next two years to make way ·for the realignment of C!Ylc Centtr Drive West, now Ith Street Building cuttod lan Bud Hall, 49. Santa Ana, suffered a t11lght eye Injury when the: flr1t floor panel e1ploded as he walked by It shortly after Ilic ! p.m. rloslng Ume. He ls In good condition today. The fire In the building's elcctricaf •lrtna: was quickly extinguished by San_la Ana firemen . Power was te.mµora r1ly cut olf to the hall of records and !he old county courthouse. nexi door. I I guilt y verdi cts on eight of the nine counts of conspiracy with intent to cheat and defraud Orange County motorists arld they named Jerry Kendall, 35, of 969 Sono ra lload. Costa ~1esa , ln two of those guilty decisions. Kendall had been named all through the trial with Stanley Davis, 34, of 1086 ~an Pablo Circle. Costa f\fesa and ~-:dward Carney. 27 . of 20862 Shell \{arbour Drive. Huntington Beach, as one of the three architects or an auto repair fraud linking 11 service statio.ns ranging lrom Seal Beach to San Clemente. ,Judge James Turner ordered all seven to return March 13 for sentencing. They fa re a possible state prison term of up to 10 years. Judge Turner scheduled Feb. 29 for a IH~aring on a motion for a new trial after complimenti ng defense attorneys Al Stok· k(', fo"rank Moran and George Shibata and prosecutor Richard Stenton for their "gentlen1anly conduct through a long and exhausting trial. "\Ve hellr a lot these days about courtroom _problems created by the likes of the Chicago seven and Charles Manson trials." Judge Turner told the jury. "\Ve huve nnthing like that here and 1 can 't rec::ill being in the presen ce of a more devoted pjury or n1on:~ gentlemanly at- torneys .. , 1'hc vC'rdic l obviously ca me as a blow to ;1Jt seven <lcfcndan ts. Three had openly predicted a few hours before the jury retur ned tha t they v.·ould be cl eared of f'harges th11t produced an Orange Counly Grand Jury indictment. Co nvicted with Kendall, Davis and CArney were Roger l\lendenhaH. 28, of 26005 Avcnida De St.'<>, ~1i ss ion Viejo, Oa \'id Conchola , 22, of 6000 Garden Grove Blvd., Westminster and Christopher Enri· quez, 25, or 7592 Volga Drive, and Henry Castonguay. 21, of 7661 Commodore Drive. both of Huntington Beach. They were all accused by nearly 30 pro- seculion witnesses of participating in a conspiracy that included the deliberate. puncturing of patrons' tires, the destruc· tion of radiator caps and seals and the performance of needless and costly repair work. It was alleged throughout the trial that customers were pressured into having their cars hoisted on the lube bay rack in the pretense that supposed defects could be better spotted from that location. former employes and customer1 told the jury that damage was Inflicted to their cars and shock absorbers and fuel pumps were sprayed with olt to give the impression thal tile parts leaked a n d should be repla ced. All three defense lawyers announced their lnienUon to appeal the verdict If Judge Turner denies the motion for a (Set REPAIR, Pase 2) Land Tax Exemption Boost Bill Offered SACRAMENTO (AP) -A 11 ,2l4 boost in homeowncra' property tax exemption would take effect In fiscal um.74 under a bill by Ammblyman John Brt(p. The FUU•rton Republican Aid Monday hi!! measure hiking the exempt.Jon from 1750 lo n.ooo o( -valuallon "would provide 'mmtd1ate relle.f and , •how Ille p<0ple of California lhllt the leg\sla1ure clearly Intends to reduct ~ pe.rty taxes." The blll 11 AB 331. ? eliminated if the override fails include : -Capital expenditures including tquip· ment. site improvements, building inl· provements and library books $125,622. -Maintenance inc I u d In g three maint.enance men, their functions and replacement of equipment, $69,068. -Custodial service including two custo- dians. two groundsmen , one warehousemen and supplies. $43,693. -Instructional, administrative, clerical ernployes including three administrative l'lerks, Jay readers, aides, library clerk. attendance clerk , one d1stri1.:t ad· ministrator and one vice pr1n<:1pal. $241,123. -Reduction or addllional assi 8runents for teachers, providing only varsity athletics and el iminating girl s' athletics. drama and music performances outs'1de the classroom. -Transportation including one vehiclt maintenance mechanic, field trips and athletic mileage and increas inl? wa lking distance:-> 111 grades four throug h 12, $32,176. -Reductio n of teaching sluff by operating high school on a fi \'e·Pl'riod day ($171 .000 ) or fi \'e <1nd a hair period day ($90,<XXl ). -Reduction cir C'l11ninalion of Engl lsh as 11 second \anguug~. mini-groups, one music leachcr, c11rriculun1 ptannln~: remedial readini;. su1nmer sc hool. Nava l Junior lleserve Officers Training Corps, summer counseling, $326,069. -lnstr111.·t1ona t supplies; $28,342. 'frusiee l~t.'Or&e White at first proposed i'lirnin<1t1ng nt'x l year':s optning of Darua f1 1!1s ll igh School. "ll \vouldn·t be fai r to the students there," :said \Vhite. "lf the override rails.'' So1ne board 1ne1nbers. \11beling White's prnposa l as a "bombshell," suggesttd rh::i l the projrcted cost of opening ths :-chool. $285.000, would not be entirely (See BUDGET. Page Z) s uar s 'f'011r of lls' Four persons who said they poured blood over selec· ti vc service records in suburban Evanston last April stand together after they were sentenced Monday to one year prison terms. The group, who call them-- selves 'The Four of .Us,' are from left: John Baran· ski, 23; Mary Lubbers, 23: Thomas Clark, 21. and Eileen Kreutz, 24. All remained free on $5,000 ap- peal bonds. They were convicted Dec. 1 of con- spiracy lo destroy draft records. Solon Seeki11g Wealth Limits In California SACRAJ\.1 EN1'0 fAP) -Multi-million- alres ha\'e recei ved unhappy news from a DemocraUc Jav:maker. Assemblyman John Burton, chairman of the Assembly Rules Committee, in- troduced Mooday a bill that would forbid any Californian to posse ss mo re than $2.5 million in wealth. The San Francisco Democrat's "share the weallh" bill would make it illegal to inherit more than $1 mill ion unless the heir was a widow or widower. Similar legislatiOfl by Burton last year. nicknamed the "Robin Hood bill.'' was killed in the Assembly Revenue and Tax Comrhltlee. Burton claimed Monday that 4,000 CaJ. ifomia multlmllHonaires eo11trol $10 bil- lion Of the llate'1 wealth. "Such a concentration of wealth, In my opinion. is not compatible with the whoJe idea of democracy a11d is not healthy for the ecooomy," Burton said. Money skimmed out Of multi-million~ aires' bank accounts would be used for a variety of anti.poverty proirams. Burton said, bot he mentiooed r.o specific proJ· ect. New Principal Aide at Dana Phil Grignon. chairman of !ho science department at S a n Clemente High Sc:hool . has been named assistant principal of Dana Hilla High SChool. Grignon has boon with tho dtatrJ.ct mort than five year1, com· Ing from the Anaheim High School lltllrk:t. 't1Je science teacher inlttated the hilh 1Chool'1 nallonally known oceanography progreu and the auccwful whale .,.khi111t trips. Dana HUis is eJl)eCled to cpen in January of 1173. \I i First Sunday Editwn Due for Daily Pilot The first Sunday edition of the DAlLY PILOT will be published on l\1a rch 5, 1t was announced today by Robert N. Weed, president and publisher. ''Addi tion of the Sunday DAILY PILOT lo !he six weekaay editions of lhe new.!lpapcr rounds out development of the package. we feel Orange Coast residents and businessmen will consider the area's prim~ry news and advertising medium,'' he said. The Sun<iay edition of the DAILY PILOT comes in response. to requests by both readers and advertise.rs for full seven..<fay service, tbe publisher noted . "After more than a year of 1tudy and preparation, we believe we now have assembltd tbe right combination o( news and features to provide a unique and useful service to both readers and ad- Ti~keis '- Dtlll(llrl ve rl lsers." he added. Thomas Kee vii, DA ILY PILOT editor. said the Sunday edl11on'a newt content will maintain the local emphasis DAILY PILOT readen have come to expect from their hometown editions of the Mon-ts.. BUNDA Y, P110 %) Selling 'Oklalioma' Produced by Students Tickets wcnl on 1ale this week for San Cltm•nle High SChool'1 full·•cal• pro- duction or "Oklahoma" early lo March , and drama aides predict another atllout for the annual mut1lcal effort. Lut y~ar·1 production of "Sound of Music" was a complete sellout. TJdteta for performNlei!t over a tour· ntgh\ nln m available thrutigh the 1111- dtn\ 1ctlvl!Je1 of nee a\ the high 1Chool or al Houso of Mu&lc at &I CamlhO Real and .Ave.nlda Del Mar. Phone resenstlons •rt avaU1ble by calllnl '\12-1645 or <llU761. Perf'onna~s for the Rogers and Ham· mersteln clauli: wtll ·be given on the ev.hlnp of March 3, <, JO and JI In Triton C«iltr. Publldly cHalrmen Jan John300 Hid !hft ll!llaup~t !.'•r'• productlon f"ld ' • over. Oklahoma wlU not, and 1e.at1 will bt reserved early. Lea'dlng rolt1!1n the production will be filled by Portla~lnterboorne as Laurey; Nick Man(redo as Curly; Ruth Garwood a1 Aunt Eller; Bob a.felore u Jud and Cindy J ohnson as Ado Annie. Other• In the cast Include Oreg Parker, Chuck Oto.hi, and other 1tudenla: active tn a ca~ pdla alriglng. dr;ama and madrigal singing on call1j)UI. Dan McOan<, who bu dlrect"1 pro- ductloOJ In Hollywood and locally for tho South Coasl Choral and Light Opera Company. wW be arti1tlc director for tM productton. High School A-1usic D e p 11 r t rn t n l Chairman Dick Dastrup wlll dlrtret the musical pha.se of tbe produc\km. Mark>n Sykes. drama Instructor, will serve u production coordinator. Tough Stand Revealed In Message By STAN BENJAMIN WASHINGTON (API -President Nix· on sent Congress a special environmental message today propostng half a dozen new legislative measures including a tax on air-polluting sulfur em\s1ions. Olher proposals made by the President ·would : -Ask the Unlled Natioos lo establish a special environment !und, which would reach $100 million over five yeara and the United States would aupport with a !alt fihare or the fundtna:. -Encourage state.a to start controlllnt !ht IOCll\Jon of highway• 1nd alrr,rta by 1171 or else star\ loslnc ltdtr• old for such project3. -Db5courage conatrucUon on t b 1 dwindling landJ bordering Jakes, rivers and oceans by restr1cllng tu 1dvantag11. -Control the land-dlspo.sal or toxla \Yru:tes through state regulation under federal guidelines. -Control soil runo ff fro m conatn.ictlon projects. again through federal guldeHnes and state regulation. In other executive actions, Nl'.lOn at1ld he has ordered the development or ~ cupa ti.onal health slandard:s to protect farm workers from pesticide polson!ng, and ordered the preparation of new in• sulation standards for federally aided multiple dwelllngs to conserve energy. ~le added that federal tax policy 11 being "clarlfled" concerning lax el· emption for the financing -by industry - of faciJitie:s to recycle indu9C.ri1I wa:stes. Nixon reminded Congress that 11 of hl1 20 major environmental leglalatlve pro- posals last yenr are awaiting actlon . "Last year.'' he said, "was, quite pro- perly, a year Of conslderal.iOR ol the:se measures by the Congress. "1 urge, however. that th is be a year of action on all of lhem, so that we can move on from Intention to ae· compli11h ment in the Important n~ they addres11." The President also urged creation of a new Department of Natural Resource• centered on the present Interior Depart· ment, a proposal Nixon madt last yeJr along with a proposed realignment of the executtve branch. The reduction of flulfur 01lde.s. the •im of the new sulfur tax proposal, is already ooe of the chief goals of lht nallonal air quality standards m by the Envifoo.. lilee NlXON, Page ZJ 0r .... M.,. runny lkl" on tho qenda for Wtdnuday, followlna early morning low clouds oncl foS oJona the coa1lllne. Hlglis Wedneoday II to 61. WWI tonight !8 In !ho rnJd- 40's. INSIDE TODAY Los Ange.let pla111 ft cool orw 11ear ofter dftxUtaUnu earth- quake. Bui will the Southland be as lucku ne,;t Cirnt? Ei-ptTta •011 another major q140ka Mi dale in the ne~ 30 11ear1. See atory, Page 7. t.., M • ..,... • -" C11Uf1"1111 • /IWi.t .. ..,.. " Cl9"11IM .... ... , ... ,..., •• Ctmkt " Orttllt CwMJ • c,.u_111 " •mi. ,...,.,. " ... ,. !Mlle" • ._ , .. ., l•llWl•I , ... • ·-flMfMlt\ a.1• l n!trUllll'M.t " ·-" l'ln91!Ct , .. ,, _ .... " ... , '" .... • . .. _ • -.. ................ l>-1• ... ..-. .. -· -.. ·~ .) " I DAJLY PILOT SC Rec alli11 g La st Year's LI)' ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 !~• 0 •111 1'1111 lr•U C~cnerally , people ;:rre 111 h<-d right i1ruuod thf' lime !he most important, nllcrcsling. men)orable or ne1>.s\.\•lrthl' p~·ert ts 10 thf'ir li ves oc:cur , led bv the Big Three · being born . 1>.·edd1ng and d;-ing People are also generally most 1 ulnerabl(' there. One yrar ago lod;.~. 197\'s most memorable <;ahfurn1a evrnt of 1971 caught mosl of us Jn bed , in thf' sho .... ·er, s1U1ng at 1he breakfast table or silting somewhere else Son1e of us figured il was the (;real Quake on the San And rc:is Faull. which has given son1e prognos!1cators- Jn-prin1 a ration OF fame and fortune. Some -the loll 1>.·as fiS finally -didn"l Jive to learn it ·was JUSt a local one ccnlercd in the San Fernando Valley. t-.::arthciuake s are perhaps the tnost awesome re- n11nders to mere mortals that we're Just pretty 1nuch help- less visitors sitting here on planet Earth. Just like a per<;on frorn Peoria whose c<ir breaks down in Pismo Reach, we're totally helpless whrn one of those roller coaster rides !hat regi.~tr.rs on lhe llichter Scale raltlcs the l:1nd . This helplessness is probably what makes quakes so frighteninf:. My clock radio said it was about 6 a.m. when I reached ror il a yc;:rr ;:rgn. ~uddenl y it jumped away, jitterbugging oul of reach H.ealizing wh at was happening. I did a strange thing neg lected for a long time. I prayed. God. please make it stop! He kept right on rattling my beach shack. Perhaps he didn"I rccognize my voice after a!! those ye;:rrs. The old limbers creaked and groaned: the rusty nails holding them to- gether continued lO grind and wtune \.l'ith stress. Whoever is in charge of such geological maUers mercifully shut oH the seismic roller roaster ride about two seconds after I fltd bed at rather high speed. He, or whoever runs the system. may have realized how it would em- barrass the boss if one of his reporters was apprehended for running around nude on the beach. Bul that y,·ou ld have bePn preferable to being buried under a pile of weathered wood and shingles ignited by a broken gas line or downed electrical wires. The slil!ncss al the end "'as literally deafening. The first trembliDg voice on lhe radio was that or a KRLA announcer who declared lhe studio"s steel and concrete wa lls wobbled the way his kne es were now doing. Mc sounded on the verge of tears. Peering uround outside all seemed serene, except for the frantic harking o( what so unded like every dog fr om Sunset Beach to south El Monte. Many houses, however, remained dark, ns though nobody even noticed the awesome forces shuddering through the carth"s crust. So mehow still sensing it was California's biggest news story of 1971. I shakily plugged in the coffee pol and got ready to go help cover lt. Seliimologisls say there is a much bigger story still coming and hopefully I'll ride that one out well enough to help cover it. Like most Californians, I can't seem to convince myself to leave in search of firmer terra firma . The last time J gave it much serious consideration "'as at 6:02 a.m., one year ago. Glendale Coed Mu1·dered ·At Dormitory in Oregon CORVALLJS, Ore. (U Pll -An 18-year- o\d California girl was stabbed to death e?rly today on the third floor of a dormitory in the third attack on a coed or. the Oregon State University campus in six days. Dr. Peter Ro senda l. Benton County medical examiner. said Nancy Wyckoff of Glendale. Calif., i'I freshman majoring in math, wa s stabbed in the neck once. He said a carving knife with about an eight-inch blade wai; found alongside the body i,•:hich \\'as lying on the floor next to her bed Rosendal said !he !:11"1 apparently bled lo death He said nr \\11ll1am Brarl\'. s1a1r medical exa1n1ncr , .... ·as !o pC'rform an autopsy. Other \.\'Otncn rrsidcnts of lhc third floor of Polin~ llall 5a1<! thl.'y heard ;;i scrcarn :ind foot steps ;1t :1 45 a n1 The 01hrr as~;iulls oc·rurrrd 1n !lit" same three or fo\Jr -blo..:k ll!l'.'ll on the .... ·est side of lhc campus B<•lh girls \'.'ere hit over the head bv ;;i rnan they de- scribed as vouni;:, Y.'hrl c w11h short brow "' hair. One "or the girls \.l'as hospitalized OUNG>f COAST DAILY PILOT ~Ge: COAST PU&l ISH1HG COMl'AK'r Reh.rt N. We.d ,., .. .....,,! •nd f'WljM'llf" J•t\ R. c,,..t..-, Viet ~.,_,, ~ <i-ewf1J ~ n.,.,., "'''"' El<lor Tii0,..•1 A. Mw~lroin• MMliL~ EdLJOr O..r1•J H-t.ot '1.it~•rd ~. Nin AWiltnl Mall"ll~ l.llklo ..__Ollke 21? f41rett A...,~u• Mait151 •"d,..n: P.O. 11111: 66"6, 92652 s.. ci.-te <>ffk• JO$ Nri e c.-.i .. ,...~ ,2,12 .,_......., °"" ..... JJll Wftf ....., "'"' ........_.. ._,,! :un 1'1.-1 ..,.....,., ...,...---=w.1 -........,. overnight because of injuries. OSU official:i; sald there was no in for- mation uncovered yet by 1he campus :i;ccurity force to indicate thnl the slaying was C0'1 necled with the earlier attacks. ~11ss Wyckoff lived on the third floor of rive-story Poling Hall, with men students residing on floors one. two and five and women also ori floor four. Then> are a fire escape and elevator connecting the floors. ~1iss \Vyckoff's dormitory was adjacent lo the one occupied by Connie Ken'1ed~·. a freshman from Portland, who was at- taC'k('d earlv Sunday. E!l?'.llbeth 1\nne C.lerkler, a freshmtin fr c1n1 Sall i\1ateo, Calif.. suffered head cuts in an attack Thursday night. bu! did nnl require h«ipita1J1.ation. She wa <1 s1ruck from behind W)\h a broken chunk of toncrete ris she walked lo her resi- dr.n cc hall. rhrce blocks from Caulhor1 H;iH ll rr al!a(').;er ;ilso ran y,•hf'n shr ~C're11rn­ e<I i)SU President Robf>rt ~1:1rV1car s;i1d the school \\"as 1n1tlalin11 '"f'ttraord1nary·· .~ecurny operations because of Lhe a (. tacks. From Page 1 NIXO N ... n1cntal Protection Agency under lhe 197n Clean Air AcL Nixon's proposed tax would take effe<"l in 1976 and apply to sulfur emissions in are;is which remain in violalion m the air quality standards once the y take effect in ]975. \Vhere primary standards pro!ecting public health have not been met. fuel - burners would be charged 15 cents for cat·h pound of sulfur I.hey em it into the air : where secondary standards pro- tecting property, plants and aesthetic values remain unmet, tht charge would be only JO cent s per pound . There would be no sulfur charge at 2111 v.·here both standard s are being met on A regional basis. The Nixon proposal to cont rol highway and airport locations wou ld amend his pending proposal of a national land-use bill enC'01Jregi ng the statts to adopt land· use planning. Under the new proposal, tach state wooJd be el'pecied to develop a plan for controlli ng the locations of highways and ai rports and obtain ftderal .1pprova1 of Its plan by J97S. Any st;ite fail ing to do so would lost 7 percent of it s federal highwar 11nd alrport funds tor 1975 and an addihonal 7 percent each year until it camt up with an approved plan. Sla te.!! with approved plans would 11hare lht lorfeited fund s. \\'ithout spellini;: out his prnpoeals. Nix- htl said he would move to di~courage uo- nttes$ary devtlopmtnl on wetlands with ltgislative prOpo!al.!1 "to limit ap- pHrahility of certain federal t.11 benefJts" nn COMtruction in such area~ ' J'rorK Page I SUND.i\ Y ... dii \' lhroogb-Saturd.ay iWJec ""rbt ~Cl will cont1ntJt to bt mostly briit>t and local with all ed1tor1al content presented m • lightly packaged formal In whlch lhing.s are easy to nnd, euy to read," KeevJI sald. Alan J. Dirk.In, 1ormer DAILY Pll.oT \\1t'~t ftr~ni;r t..'ountr r!!y rd1tor, \\'llS Se!et"led by• hCf'\'I) fur J)riJ ITIO!IUn !O the post of Sunda y editor ,lllrCJUf'llne Ann Lomh~ or the r)A ll.Y l'll.01' 1>.omen 's .se<"t1on st:cif[ wilt sc r11> il'I a.ss1st<1nl to the Sund<1y ed itor. Ket>\ 11 s~1<1 Terry S \01il1Je. wbo served 011 the l\lrst Orange Coun!v staf( under 01rk1n and , 1nore rel'ent·!~ \.l'a" a _2encr<1I ;issignrnents rt>port ('r in l 'o.~la fvle~a fur 1he lJAILY PILOT. returns to llun11ngt()n Bt•il(."!1 as the 111.'\i.. \\"(•~t Clr<1ngr Cnun!y ti- t)' ed itor. Dirk1n, :tl . is a !l<J[l\e nf Sunderland. i-:;ngland He served his apprenticeship on ~rveral pro\•int:1<1I Br111sh newspaJ>('rs before goin~ to Athens, C.ree('e, where he bcc<1me assistant editor of the Athens News. Me later went back to London and to Fleet Street as a cflpy editor on the Lon- rfno Daily Mail. He c·ame to the Unllrd Slate.~ in 1965, served as city editor and then as news editor nf the Anaheim Bulletin before joining the lJAlLY P!L01' staff in 1966. Miss Coinbs. 24. is a 11atlvc of Long Rc:.u.:h and holds a BA dcgrt·c in eorn- munlcations from Cal State F'ullerlon. She worked as a feature writer, society editor and general assignments reporter for the Call Enterprise newspapers 1n Southeast Los Angeles County prior to join ing the DAILY PILOT staff in !970. Both Dirkin and Miss Combs have won Orange County Press Club av.'ards fur '·best page layout," 11.1iss Combs be1nj! the current first pla ce v.·inner in thal category. The Sunday product for v.·hich they 1\·ill be responsible is expected lo offer readers some new experiences. It will use some new techniques in gr;:rphics and design. Keevil promised. "The basic concept of the Sunday edi- tion," Keevil said, "'is that it will main- tain its identity and continuity with the other six days of publication b111, 111. lhe same ti me. it will have qualities unique to 1hc Sunday edit.ion." The Sunday package will include ;i col- f)r comics section in addition to the Fami- ly Weekly and TV Week magazines nnw inserted in Saturdav editions. ll will be deliver 0 ed early (before 7·30 o'clock for most home subscrihers1 on Sunday mornings. L21te-breaking sports 21nd ne\\'S of local Interest will be an important part of the Sunday package. Keevil noted. But the Sunday edition also will rely heavily on staff-produced features and human in!erest stories for the flavor that will make. it uniquely the Orange Coast's own Sunday newspaper. he said. From Page 1 BUDGET ... eliminated if the doors remain closed . Trustee Bob Dahlberg said he estimated that only $00.000 would be saved because there would be additional costs at San Clemente High School if Dana Hills remains closed. •· 1 thiMk we have to hold this open a.~ one possibility. I can"t see opening a new school on an austerity budget," said Trustee Donald Inlay. "There's no ques- tion that we need it, the question is can we afford it?" Trustee Dahlberg suggested naming the amounts to be cut from the budget withou t decichng specifically which pro- grams \\'O Uld go, thus giving the board latitude. But Charles Drirgan, member of Arvy's ~~riends and n past chairman, told the board a strong sta!crnent JS necessary. "When people itsk questions. they \Vant 111 know specifically 11'hat the loss of the 01crride W<Hllrl mean 10 1hcn1,'' agreed Tru5!ee Fred Ne whart .Jr. "''ou have Ln be .specific or you won't \vin ,'' ~;iid D<1rrC'l ·raylor. pr1nc1 pal o( Sa n Clrn1en1e High School. "If you're vague, yo11'1l lo~e ." ''I don'l like Lhe lerling that the board thinks this IS going til be a c11kewalk," said Dargan. "ll 1sn·1. There is lots of apathy," "Don 't be wishv-wa!'hv. F'ish, Qr cut bail," he added. · · Vandalism Marks Sta11f ord H eari11 g ~'TANFORD (UP I\ -Vanda lism, in- cluding a fire bombing, marked the re.~umption of a disciplinary hearing of four Sta nford University studeri ts who de 1nonslrated aga inst war. Damage from two fire bon1bs, wh ich had been placed in lhe wreckage of a prevlously ruined <lffice, wa s held to a mini mun1 1'-fonday because of quick discovery. Flre Capt. Ken Carleton described the bombs as being two large so ft drink bot- tles filled with flammable fluid . They had been left in the office of the Mania.nits Trailer Park office which was ruined Jan. 17 in a $40.COJ fire blamed on arsonists. Diane DeMarco Home Looted by Burglars llOLL YWOOD (UPI) -.Burglarii have ransacked the West ltollywnod 11partment of Diane De Marco -one of the three iilnRing De Ma rco sisters -somf!tlme during the weekend and stolen $7,500 worth of clothing and other articles, sheriff's deputies rf!porttd. Mls.s Dt Marco told deputies tht lhit:ves took $5,000 worth or clothing. ·a televislon set, a tape recorder, records and wig~ ,. UPI l tlfploolt PALE AND TENSE Author's Wife, Ed ith lrvi ng Ball\.s At Handwriti11 g Sa111ple Test Frorn \Vire Servicrlii NE\V YORK -Clifford lr1·ing. t·on1- pi!er of the refuted Howard lfughes aulobiography. balked today for n second day <tl sup p_Jying a federal grand Jury 1v1th hanr.lwr1t1ng samples for comparison \'.'i\h endorse ments on $650,000 worth of advance payment checks made to Hughes. In his second appearance before the jury, the novelist was accompanied by his wife, Edith. who appeared pnle and tense. '/"hey were taken to the courtroom or U.S. District Court Judge Morris !·:. L<1sker ;:rfter Irving refused to subnut handwriting samples. and Lasker for ;:r second time directed him to comply. Irving's attorney, Maurice Nessen, con- tended Mondav that submission of the samples would violate Irving's con- stitutional privilege not to testify against himself. Handwriting as well a s tes1in1ony might be sel f-incriminatini:. Nessen said. l-lo1vever, Lasker ruled that the request by federal prosecutors was proper. plac- ing Irving in danger or a contempt or court ci l;:rlion if he continues to balk. It 11'as not kno1vn 1vhat Irving would be ;:rsked to write. But one federal authoritv commented with a smile, "We might a~k him to write '1:1. R. 1-lughes' five times In make a comparison." ~lcCraw·Hi!l Publishing Co. gave Irv- ing three checks made out to "H. R. Hughes" to be conveyed to the billionaire industrialist for his cooper;:rtion in the book. Florence Yocl1 Dies in Carmel Miss Florence Yoch. 82. member of a pioneer Laguna Be;:rch famil v. died recently in Carmel. · ~1iss Yoch was the last of six daughters of Mr. and 11.1rs. Joseph Yoch. who settled in Sllnla Ana in the 1880s and played a n1<1jor role in the development or Laguna Beach as ;:r seaside resort. For n1any years. the '{och famLlv l)pcr;:iled the original Laguna Beath I lot('l. on the site of the presenl Hotel Laguna. Miss Yoc.h \.l'as a widely recognized landscape arch1trct rind. shortly hcforr her death. c11mplcted lhe destgn or an 11ld- ftlshioned gardl!n fnr the historic Dnwd /l('l11se 111 Monlerev. Shr harl made her hnme in Car1ncl in recrnt years. Mal~ing Rounds Rec ycle Center Wins Truck Bid A cily--0wnod truck and recently hired drivp r thiii week will begin tht. rounds Qf <'tlllcl·!1ng donated news1>ilpers fnr \he San {Jementc Rreychng Ct'n!er under 11 re1·ently authort?.('{! rental agreen1rnt \.l'hlt·h 1vjll hl'lp tut ::>ome rccyrling costs HJ half. l.1t•t1t•I R11rt lh(' nriginat11r of thf' cPnll"r "h1rh bci.:an l;ist \ eur, 1>.·011 the :;ctc1od half 11f his '"'o p<1;:t request of th,-. t•itv \.lhrn coun t·1lr11t·n last week agreed to furni sh thf' lnu·k :ind dr1vr r at S~ an hour 'fhe \\t'Ck\y t1111c . t·ouncilml'.'n agrl·rd \.\'11Uld bt• <tboul l.'lghl hours . Burt s111rl thr pn·kups fron1 the bins lne<1it"'d at 111.:lJOr shopµlng ;1rcns w1!1 hr>g1n wn1et1n1c th1.~ "'eek \\'Ith the nt>w tnu·k anrl c·11y cn1ployr. 1"hc lru1·k. dri1·rr and thr nnn11nall.Y- pr1c-ed lease of a surplus forkl!ft all wtll Tre 1nor Rocks .S ll n F er11ll 1ulo I.OS ANf;t·:L~:s (AP\ -A quick, d1sh-rat!ling aftershock. of the ma- jor q11ake nearly a ye<ir ago has rockt•d !he S;in Fl'rnando \lallf'y, t'llUsi ng so1ne mi11or cl;1n1agc and pfl)1nptiog anxious telephonl'.' calls. 1'he ten1hlor l\'londay n i g h l n1C':1~ured 3.8 on the Rich!er Scalr. ~trong enough to cause slight to rnoclrratf' d;:rmagc. s ;ii d a spokesman for the C a l i f o r n i a lns!itute of Trchnology 's scismoloi::ical I 11 0 or a! or y ui Pasadena. R e11fro .S ele cw<l To He<1<l .Scliool Citize ns Group Dana Point architect ~larvin Renfro has been sc.Jce\ed lo head the new Dana Hills High School Citizen ·s Advisory com· mittce 1>.'h1ch \\'Jll mnkc long-range cur- riculum and l:Oais rCC()mn1endat1ons for the new high school later in the spring. Renfro will head a citizen's committee with represcntal1on from all the areas \\'hich \\.'ill he scr1•ed by the new high school which is lo open its doors early ne -:t ye ar. i\ Iota! of 53 voluotC'crs for the com- 1n1ttcc atlended a recenl formative 1neet1ng. The membership will include parents !rom Lagun11 Nig uel. Dana Point. Snn ,Juan Capistrano ;:rnd Mission Viejo. Several subcomm1ltees will be sel up to deal with specific curriculum areas, Chairmen and their committees are: Ar!. Renfro : business education. Steve Spelman , counseling and guidance. Mat- thrw Fogarl}. English. Ruth Buchheim; foreign language Hhondc Fleming ; home cconomirs to be se lcl'tcd soon: industria l arts. J1n1 Neville. lib rarv and multimedia rf'nler, Pl'JilgY Toth; rn ii I h cm at 1 c: s, )~11·hard Banister, n1t1s1c, Bever I y Ortega , girls find boy"s physical t>duca- t1on , Bill Crapo. ~t:icncc. \¥1!liam 'rhon1pson ,Jr ., soC'1:il s!udies . Bob Bernhagen , student <1ct1v1tlcs. Jim Har· r1 s. Others "ll l1ng lo work nn the sub- cornn11\lcrs are welcome and ran volunteer by calling Dana Hills Principal \\'alt SpC'nccr at 496-1215 between 9 a.m. and 4 p.m. weekdays. help the center sh0w a profit, Burt s11id, 1'he crnter. whil'h processes tons 11! glass. paper and alur111num cans earh n1unth . 1s bc1n/.( Opcrat«d on a paying ba~is. Burt said And he added that he hopes ti1 1nercasr that 1n;)rg1n in l'Om ing n1onths before he !c111·cs !lit• area and tr11nsfers his interest 111 the proJctl 1o sorncone else 1ntercstf'd Ill ('('OIOg) Rurt <1<1ld hl' pl1t11 s lo leave :->;111 ('lr·rnentc and take up residence Jn the .\la1n1noth area. ·rne center rl.'ce1ves r l' c:: y c I a b I e matt"'rials fron1 private 1nchv1duats or organized groups, lhrn pr()('f'SSf'S the iren1s for transfer to recycling plants. Scvl.'n bins for can and paper have been srt up throughout the city. Rllrt requcs1cd 1hc equipn1rnt fron1 the city three weeks ago in 11n f'ffort lo trim expenses paid out for cxhallSting hand transfer of the bundles of papers anrl glass. Youth Fails 111 Death Try A t Courtroorrt Orange County's sensation-packed "tire puncturing trial" ended with a bang Mon- d;iy night when a convicted" defendant broke free in a neighboring courtroom and atternpted lo leap fron1 the seventh floor of the county courthouse. Karl Godbey Stanford , 21. of Tustin smi1sl1ed his way fro1n Judge Robert Corfn111n's cour1roon1 immediately afte r lhe jurist found him gui!ty on charges or infl1cl1ng 00d1ly harn1 on his former girlfriend Arms fl ailing, Stanford galloped pA st Judge Turner's cour1room, leaped over the oustretechcd leg of it 11AIJ.Y Pl!.O'r reporter and sn1ashed into the shoc k proof i,:lnss windo\.\' al the eastern end of the corridor. Slanford would have fallen 300 feel Jf he had srnashed the window. The burly yout h bounced batk off th e glass and into the arms of pursuing bailiffs Bruce Brazecl and Pat Brunner. Deputy Jerry Pierson ran from Judge Turner's courtroom to aid his colleaguts in hand('uffing the berserk Stanford. Stanford faces sentencing Feb. 25 anct f'Sta pe chnrges will now be added lo hi, file ll wns successfully alleged in hi.• trial that he 11ttaeked his fnrme r ,i;:irlfriend outside a Sanla Ana bowlini;:: ;:rlley and inflicted injures that put her in the hospital for a month. .A, 1-1 ,Fron• P119e 1 REPAIR • • • new trial. The verdict was seen Monday as a ma- jor victory for the district attorney'.!! fraud squad in a campaign lo combat what was stated to be before the trial started a growing aulo repair racket in Orange County. f\1osl of the Arco. 11.1ob1!. Shell and Tex- ::ico stations involved 1n the conspiracy ;i.re now under new managemen1. !nvesligalors coneederl after the verdict rhat many service station ope rators 1n the affected ;:rreas are doing their best to upgrade their image in !he communily. All four oil compan1rs are reported to have assu red lawmen that future leAsin;;: of !heir slat ions will be rigidly supervised 1n a delerm1ned efforl to eliminate the type of practice that led lo Monday's verdict. Beat The Clock Usually there is no urgency about getting carpeting in.tailed. Most poeple will wa it a whole week! However, wh e n th ere is a ru sh, we can accommodate tliose who re- quire immed iate servic e. We HAVE sold and installed carpeting the SA ME DAY many times. Unless there is a problem obtaining a specific color or pattem, you can count on fast service from Alden's , and we ma inta in a large inventory to facilitate del iveries . ALDEN 'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 l'lacentia A'l/t, COSTA MESA •• c .... M ... 646-4838 HOURS: Moo . Thur Thurs .. 9 lo 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -SAT., 9:30 le J \ I I '.I ' j . . ' ' ' I ', •. • • .......... ~-;, ' l I • -DA ILY P'll.OT ....... ':11 111,11•_. Kffflltr PARDON MY REA CH -1-luntington Beach lfigh coach George Clemens crashes th rough DAlL Y PILOT defenders Glenn White (left) and Jim Niemi ec \vhilc mate Paul Wood (right) is shoved ou t of the way. Clem ens and his l-luntin gton coaching cohorts fa ce Marina coa ches Mond ay night at rluntington in a co-fea- ture with a match between the DAILY PILOT and Cif administrators. Area JCs Vil" Baseball Classic Orange Coasl will host ML San Jacinto. Golden West take~ on visiting College of the Can)'ons and Sa d d re b a c k meets host Santa Ana in'iirst ro und games of the first an - nua l OCC baseball tourney Wed nesday. In another firsl round tilt, Riverside and Cypress clash at TeWinkle Park in Costa Mesa . AJ) openinit: r oun d games are set for 10:30. Second ro und championship and consolation tilts get under way at 2:30. Golden Wes t is the pre· l.ourney fa vorite off \ I !' performance last summer and pre·scason scrimmages. The Rustlers c a pt u r e d the Metropolitan summer league title and opened their season Saturday with a 2-1. 11 -inning victory over Sa.ddleback. Sadd\eback"s Ga uchos have 1 1·2 record to date wh ile W~nesday's game will be the opener for Orange Coast. Golden West coach Fred Hoover will open w i t h sophomore' left-hander Dave Kltmgrcseter on the m o u n d against Canyons. a club that flni~hed 18th in the stale la!t year. Canyons compiled an 18- 9 mark in '71. Fritz is undecided about .11 starling pitcher. but has r eceive d s par kl in g performances from r l g h t • handers Tom Nelson and Mike Maes. The Gauchos defeated Mt. San Jacint.o, 3-1. in their opener. lhen fell to Rio Hondo t 18--7) and Golden West. Championship a n d • con- solation bracket games are sla ted ror friday and Satur· cla y afternoons at Orange Coast and Te\l/inkle . Monarchs Host Pius Tonight I( coac h. Jerry Ta rdie 's Mater Dei Monarch b:isketball team is to gai n a CIF playoff berth. a victory over Pius X tonight is a must. The Monarchs host the War- riors In an Angelus League contest in the small Mater Dei gym with tipoff at 7. In a first round meeting between the two teams, Pius X copped a 56-46 decision and coupled with a pair of losses t.o league leading Servile, are the only blemishes on Tardie's crew's record. Mass acre Cag ers In Action Tipoff ze ro hour for the St. Va lenline's Day ma ssacre a ta 1972 is quickly approaching as participants in the Monday night basketball !win bill hone for action . Combatants in th e 7 o'clock sho w at Hunti ngton Beach High, the DAfLY P ILCYI' sports staff and the CJF ad· mi nistrators, will wind up outside aclion today as the \4•riters faced Marina. The CJ F had its final scrum last wee k ag ainst Gahr High coaches which prompted CI F captain i<1 nd coinmissioner ) Ken Faga ns to say: "Mike Peck is in the worst shape of an)' ma n I've ever seen." Peck is being cou nted upon lo offset !he DAILY PI LOT's deadly balanced scori ng. Huntington Beach coaches went into a secrel workout to- day following their scrimmaJ,?.e with the wr iters last week. Reportedly. they were trying to teach Elmer Combs and Paul Wood to play with the use of a wheelchair. And at Marina. the Vikings• quintet was out to best Hun· tington's imposi ng showing against the DAILY PILOT with Jim Stephens and Leon Wheeler expected to do most ot lhe damage -whelher it be to themselves or their op- position. Tickets are on sale at Marina and Huntington Beach High with adult ducats selling for 75 cents. Students and children will be admitted for SO cents. Tut1d.ay, F'tbruary 8"-. :..1•:.c7::l _______ .;.o_•.c.IL'-V-P_l_Lo_r~,.,.., HB , Li ons Vi e f or CIF B e rth ~ Westminster and Hu ntington Beach clash tonight in 1 key Su.~t League basketball bat· tie tiiat may go a long wiiy 10 determine who makr~ the CJI-' AAA A playoHs a.s loop ru n· nerup. It gets under way nt 7 o'clock and tht host llun- tington Beach Oilers of coach Elm er Combs art" s 11 g h l ravorites to dispose of Don Leavey's Lions. The latter quinte t 17·3! 1 ~ A game behind H u n t 1 n g I on Beach lS.2 J 1n loop standi ngs Upset Bt1g Con cerns lrvi11e Duo CJf'' AAAA b a s k e t b a I l playoff berths are virtually Jocked up by Corona del Mar and Los Alamitos, co-leadrrs in Irvine Lea gue circles w\lh 9-1 re<.'<lrds. Coach Tandy Gill is' Co rona de! Mar Sea Ki ngs and the Griffins of Los Ala n1itos lead their nearest competitors - Fount ain Valley and Magnolia - by three games with four games remai ning in loop hos tilities. The major concern fo r each leader now is sim ply to stay away from the upset bug tn qua lify for no worse than C<r cham pionship of the Ir vi ne League. There are, h o we ve r , nu merous possibilities open in the 32-tcam field of the AAAA pla yoffs and there is alwa ys the chance. that a th ird-pla ce team can qualify for a playoff berth . Thus vasion Fountain Valley's in-- or Corona del Mar tonight is paramoun~ to any chance lhe for mer migh1 have or grabbing a piece or the playoffs. Tipoff is set for 7 o'clock in the CdM confi nes. a;; are all Irvine clashes tonight. Other confrontations include Cosla Mesa at Los Alamitos, Edison ,~i..,S<1nta Ana Valley and Magno lia at Estancia. Coach Dave Brown's F'V Barons ha ve proved tough competitors despite four loop losses. The Barons snapped back Friday to stun host Magnolia after fall ing by only two points to Lo~ Alam itos two nig hts prior . Uppermost In F o u n t a i n Valley's attack i~ the re· bou nding and scoring strength of S-9'12 Scott Reider and 6-j Bill Burns. That duo must contend with Corona 's landem of fi-5 Mike Sevier and fi .. J JGhn Su mner and it was the la tter com- bination which proved best in first round action. Corona 's addi tional guarrt strength, pl i.is a tough bench. ma kes Gillis' crew t h c favorite. Coach Emil Ncemc's un- predic table Costa l'\1 e." :i. Musta ngs could provide lhe shocker of the ni~ht If thei r fast break offense is clicking. The Mesans' defense is .il so a major queslion mark afte r allowing 80 per opponen t in 10 loop oulings -the most poinls scored on any Irvine League quintet . Coach Da ve C a r I is I c ' s Estancia midget~ are in deep against tall Magnolia while coach Dave Mohs' Ed i:;on Charges figure to have a breather against winless Santa Ana Valley. Edison's Greg Parker ht1s averaged 19.3 in his last th1·ce starts end that figure may be upped U his hot hand continues from outside. and owns a palr of vlctorit s over dangerous Western. the qu ullrt that rarller dt:stroyed lluntlngl-On's dream.:s of a Sunset Leagut champ1onsh.lp first perlud1 killed the Lions. l.eavey says he will employ different tactics th[! time. l'arUer while Lantaff misstd 27 days because of a foot oil- Jury. It's Western \11hich shoc.'krd Huntington Beach 74-71 in flr:-t rournl play ·and toupled \\'it h Mar ina's conquest of the Oilers. the latter f i n d themsel ves two games behind the undefeated Vik ini.;s "We'll try to be A little mort cautious pt11ylng defe nst ThPy wert ~ for 31 from the free throw line against us last 11ml'. Co1nbs says he doesn't er.· peel anything radically d1J- ferent !ro1n the Wt slm1nster attack And It's not rea.11)' \\"hilt \Ve stmlnster's offen'it' r an do that worries him. ·•\\'hen yo u send a ltun- li ng lon Beach p\Ayer In lhe line he usually conntcts," sa).i 1..eRvey . Westm ins ter nearlv shut nff Huntington in the first rouud but a horrendous start !one for !8 from the fl oor 1n the Too. \Vestrni n.s ter will ht> tr ying to dcrtul Hu nti n~tun \\'1th the add itional help of C.:lenn Lantaff and ~1lke ca~e. Case \6--4 ) was a reserve His prlnuu·y COlll'Crn rests \\"llh his own ltlttn 's rt- bou.nd ing and d t f f' n S I \' t~ dt'si res. '"f rankly 1 hil \"t'n't bt'fn A ll-cou,nty Teani Selected; R eed D zte to L eave Co lonv When it con1cs lin1e tn n1a ke ;ilJ-lcaguP. area an'1 Orange County baskclbatl sclcc lions i!'ll be ii dilemma for sure as il usua lly i~. Orangr County has produ c<'d a largP a1nnunt of lalenl to work with and ifs 1101 just se niors and jun iors who must be dt'all with. With more th11n a dozen pro misin,1: fre sh· men and sophomores running an1uck it only seems fi tti ng that an All -Orange County fresh- man·sopbon1ore basketball team be named. After considerable sc ru tin y the quin tet is as follows ~ A pair of sophomore blue ch ippers are Troy ---ROGE R CA RL..'l ON -------- High's Mark Wu lfemeye r (G-0) and roothill's Jeff \Velshans ~ &-6). And the Big five wouldn 't be complete without freshman standouts Bob Losner of J\1arina (6-5 l and Servite's Dennis Smith (~4 ',~ ). The firth player to ma ke It is a fell ow who has never played in a high school test. It 's Rick Dunn o{ Orangeview Junior High in Anaheim, a feeder schoo l for Western. Rick is the younger brother of Western's l\1ike Dunn a11d Weslem coach Marv Blemker says he'd prob ab ly be a sta rter on the Pio- neer's va rs ity if the school arcommodated ninth gr<1ders. He's G-2 and Tustin Boys Club coach Don Webb opines hl'0ll be heller lhan his older brother before he 's through . Webb had both of the Dunns in his progra m .I lhrnugh lhl' t'ij.!hlh i.:rarle lrvtl \Vulfemyer, Lo~nC'r. S1n1th :-ind "'r1shri rlS a ll Jlf (' v arsi~y st11 rtrrs -bu! n1nrc than that they art 1ntei;:ral p;irts 11/ lhr 1r 1e11 n1'$ Al · tack. Wulfl'mcyer n1ight have the hPSt rnnv cs r"1( an y guard in the county and Losntr'!J po1.~f' and overall ability i!i rernarkablc for a fre sh- m1:u1. \Velshans has dominatr.d the ins1d(' J:an1r with his size while Smith has sho.,.,·n the ab il- ily tG board "'ith anyone and at the san1c time is able to nlO\'I' out and hi t l·on.~islcntly from ou !side the kl."'y 11 's a formidable quintet and it would pro.. vide a hec ku va challenJ,?.e to any cou nl y prep con li ng ent. Others who cam e in fnr considf'r;:i \ion are all sophomores. Th ey are l\1i.~sion Virjo's Steve Bl;icker (Ii-I ). Costa Mesa 's John Cummins \G-4 ), 1.aJ,?.una BeRch's DavP Kiesselbach (~2 ). F.stancia"s Huddv Confer i fi.Ol, Huntington Beach's ScoU Rrt nkin 16·0! And Ora nge's Barry F:!liott '&5!. Also K ennedy ·.~ MB !! P11rtrr l#i...:1 1, S;i nfa Ana Va ll<'y's R A .J amison lfi.2)', Fountain Valley's Tim }11\I \G-4 \ and Un1vrrsity's Paul Si n1nn (6-21. * * * Anahein' High b<1sk<'tb11ll cn<1ch Ne ll Recd has resigned hi~ posit ion effecti vP a1 the rnd of lh is campaign. 1'he ColonistS: own lht on!y win less record in CIF AAAA or AAA circle~. It 's said that ll cNl is searching fnr an a.~­ sist<111t pnst in l'nllcgia1e classil ica.l\on At this writing Hccd"s qui nll•t is ll-17 it nd prospec ts for a \•ictory appear <l1n1 Last ye ar th e Sunset League ruled Hrcd had to si l out a year a~ rnach in thr Howard Carson/Santa Ana /Anahei m squabble. Sunset Hostilit y Vikings Still Sa il i ng, Clirnb to 5 th in CIF • Continues Upset-minded San ta Ana's Saints intrude upon the Sunset League-pacesetting M a r i n fl Viking~ in a circuit basketball test tonig ht while the Newport Harbor Tars trek to Western in annther Sunset contest. Both games are slated to bt!gi n al 7 o"clock with Santa Ana and Newrorl vic!nries in either having In be conside red surprisi ng ii they happened. Coach Jim .Sle phens or the tnp rated team in Orange County -Mar ina -thinks his Vi kings can overcome lhe San· ta Ana threal without Add1 n.c: anything special lo the <1 ttaclt. Says Stephen~. "we'll just plity our re~ul ;:i r 1·2·2 zone defense and hope \Ve play the game we 're c ap ab I e of pl aying. "La st time we met lhcm fa 6().43 Mar ina win 1, we pretty much controlled them up at tttei r place. But they're not a~ easy as many poople have sa id they are, because they ha ve good shooters. good boards and a ~ood aggressive defense. they're certainly not pushovers." MBrina ll igh's Viking.• con· tinue as Ora nge County's Nn. I team according lo the ofricia l top 10 as selected by the DAI - LY PI LOT. The Yi kes upped thei r win· ni ng strea k to 10 wi!h a pair o{ Sunset League victories. And the ir prestige in Clf AAAA circles was boosted as they ad vBnctd In fll lh place. La Habra t 19-1 1 is th!rd Unicorns Win, 26-15 behind Verbum I>e.i • n d Pasadena . Corona del Mar. and Servile moved up a notch lo seventh and eighth In the CIF' while Hu ntington Beach remains 10th in the poll by Sou the rn Ca lifornia sportswriters. Covina stays atop the AAA despite losing lo West Covina. 62.-01. OllAHOI COU NTY TOP 11 '"'· '""' '""" I, M~rln1 fl,.,, •0 J La Htbr• l1 •·1l •A . Hvnllng!Qll 11•4<" 111-H j> • la1 Al•mllo1 (If-f l 1 I Servlrt !~ll )) 1· ~:::~: J.ru •• 11•-n ~ I We11r·,.,1n1ter {1 ~·11 11 t El Oor1do 11• JI 1n \~ Trny (1J-•l )" • 0 1ow,. Cit rd1n Grovf (11-•l 1, Svnn• f-llllt !1 l·!Ol 'l"I Ct, f lfl It ... pltased with our defense er reboundlna 1U year. w • haven't been conalstent," say~ • Comb.'! l.all'ly It's been Tom Crunk, ho wever, coming to the Oiiers\ aid tn lhost department.!. Crunk 1tccounted for 14 rt-. bounds ti gain!lt Loa ra. t runk 11nd mate3 Slevti Rrooks and J im Worthy a~ 1·ou11ted 1nr 64 nf 11untlngton's 114 111 first round "ttlnn agaln.t. \Yes1 rni11st~r -and 20 we1''l rrnm !ht fret throw line. Key Tiffs Fo r Diahlo, SC Fives Mission Viejo, San Clemente1 11 nd El Modena art c.·urrenll)' l(ll'ked up in l)r:i11~e County't' besl pre p ba.skethRll race. al' th e Crciitview Leni.:uf' loughies ~ear for the fin~I four tests or th<' .vear. 1'hey aren 't shooting for the lcRgue cha mpionship -that' fille belongs lo undefeated Kate\la, • four-game runaway champion . ., Second place, howe ve.r , has• It!! reward3 too. And thal 's • Cit-.. AAA playoff berth. All three art hooked up wllh &-.\' loop marks ~nd tonight's aaen·: da could shake It up. ? 1'he bigges t headache tm1 any of the contenders is ati l\atclla where the Kn ighlll nwalt coat h John Raker 's Sa nr- Cle mente ·rriton.'I. It gets under w11y 11t 7 o'tloc k as docs the M!ssinn Viejo clash wil h host Villa.. Pa rk and Orange·~ fi ght at E~ Modena. .1 Raker 's qui ntet ~.as won rour In 11 row And turned what 11p- pea red to he a dl~astrous loop campaign into • conte nding" nne. Katetla's 10 circuit win., have come. by m a r g i 11 ~ r1vereglng 22 point! each anq the Knights won by 24 ovt.r' San Clemente at the latter'( court rn first round action. " Coach Pat Roberts' Mlssiori' Viejo squad caplur~ five in a· row before running lnlo th'11 Katella juggernaut Friday 1fldt the Dlablos coach is hopefuf his team can return to the form that proved successful · against Orange, El Modena· and Tustin. The Dlablos' ad versary is an unpredlclahle one. VIila Park is but 2-8 In Je11gut play and• 1;hares the cellar with Tustin. One of their win:s was a 27- polnt rou t of r oothill. Ml3 sion Viejo'11 forte hall been in the balanced atta ck it presents with fi..I forward Gil Normandle'.• inside shootln1 augmented by the play o( sen ior Craig Citro and juniors Rob Ferguson and M I k • Bowen. And another item that mutt stick in both Mission Viejo and Sao Clemente th o u g ht 1 despite the immediate pr;. blcm, is Lhe confrontation at Mission Viejo Th urM:lay night when th ese two contender• toll Ide. Cage Scores The Vikings (10-0 in loop ac- tion and 1>4 overall J will be confronting one of the league·~ hest outside shooters in gu11rd Bob Woolsey. a 17.6 scorer . If Marina is to maintai n its IMME DIATE DELI VE RY! OCC coach Barry Wallace has beoo getting top pitching performance11 from r i g h t · hander11 'Dan Quise nberry and St.eve Hedrick, along with lefty Tim Grimm ln scrimmage ses3ions, end one of the three is expected to open against Mt. San Jacinto. Saddleback coach D o u g Oraa1e Cont Tourney Pairings 1nr11t round\ The Monarch coach feels his team will have to get off to a better 1tnrt than in the first meeting when nine straight missed field goals put Mater Del In the hole hardly before the game started. The Monarch$ n e v e r recovered . Laguna Tests Raiders; Trojans Duel Pacifica JO-game win skein it will have to gel a C<1ntinued steady game out or guard Bruce Miller. rreshman forward Bob Losner and 6-7 center Dean Bogdan. The li1Uer has con- trolled the. boards In TTlOlt Vlke conquest~. Cage Rea u Its '" ...... ,. ... •1t111Cll CHI 011 t.11t Mf.M O.Vrlt t lt l f' !1Jl $w1I" :~i::1~~1 (ti) ~ /~~) t,·~~::.· ,.,.,,, !1l G (t1 M•llov I ........... !U! 0 Il l Hlc.km1" Ht lhln\e. c .. 11 Ml'M JI, f 1llMl1 .W E1t1fl(l1 ~llM .._.. -M1ddt" t, T!\otYIPtot> 7, l(l1b¥ •I C .. 11 MIM •CV· PANTERA fall lt:3t a.m. 1ame11) Ml. San Jacinto Jl Orange Coast Cypress vs. Rivetaide at Te.Winkle Park Canyons at Golden West Saddleback •t Santa Ano 11eeold roald) (all Z:JO 11me11) CypreP.Rlverslde w I n n e r vs. Orange C.oast-Mt. San Jacinto winner at Oranae <A>ast. Santa Ant·Saddleh~ck wln-- ner vs. <'..olden W~t-CanyoM wint1tr at Golden West. Cypress-Riverside loser v1. Orange Cout·Ml. San Jacinto Joaer at TeWinkl• Park Santa Ana·Stlddleback lc>m' v1. Golden West-Canyons IOKr 1t Santa Ana. "We will also have lo stop their big !!oy. K>rl Krug," Tardie admits readily. Krug scored If points in thll first game, 14 of them In lbe first h11lf as lhe Warrior!! mov· ed out to a .11ubtlantlil 29-21 ad•antae:e al the lnt.ermltslon. At the present time, Pl us X leads Mater De.I by one game with a 4-2 lugue ttcord co~ pared to 3-3 ror lhe Monarch11. Rick Knillin. Mater Del'• · !eliding scorer with 3M polnt.s in 20 game!! for an 18.l 11veragf!, will draw I.he assign- ment of trylng to stop Krug. Other probable Monarch 1larters inc lude G e o r I e Herold (11.4 ), Greg Green Ill.I). J•lf Kiley and probably John Adams. Eech coming off ·a dt.fut la~ Friday night, the ba•kel· baU teams • froJn Laguna Beach and Unlvcrilly high school& will tale different paths in search • o( vidorJes tonld't 1n a pair o( 7 o'clock g1tnt1. For coach Jeff)' Fair's Laguna Artists. 'they'll be try1ng lo get back on the •In- ning track whUe slaying In •"'ky contentloll for • CIF AA J>O>lle•,.n ~layoff berth. They test Sonora 1 Invading rui lder11 in 1n Or•n&e Lea&Ue tussle. John Drl.11COl1'1 Unlver1ity Trojans, meanwhile, w 111 deput from the Or1n1• loop slate for one nigh\ when they t.ncounter P1clrlca In 1 non- lea1ue tilt al the home but of I the Garden Gro ve League Newport , whi ch beat Santa Mariners. Ana 15-$) by a 7.._70 count Laguna was blitzed 86-47 by Frldiiy nighl. owns a l-7 loop Sonora, the 1971 CIF AA record 11nd has had coach tltllst. In 11 first round en-Dale Hagey scratching hill counter at the Raiders' gym h~ad at tlmes. and the Artist!! are currently When the Sallor11 are hot . operating under a manpower It's usually southpaw forwar~ shortage. Bill McKinney bangi ng shots With just · eight varsity in from the corners. pllyer1, Artist mentor' Fair'• --~ illliiiiilllii most recent problems have been trying to overcome guard J11y Nelson's nu bu~ and the xwollcn ankle of 6-3 junior forward Norm &dell. Playmaking guard Chuck Corwin picked up !;Orne of the acorlng slack left by Bcdell "s absence In Friday's ~2 set· back at Valench1 as he threw In 15 poinll. Son1y Stand-by Sec:rnary to 1' Serve alJ You. , ... , ..... ~ .... ,... 815-7777 Int IU'ot -Dntl>fl 12, Sl'\9r1 J, Allln I, by deTom.1ao , .. Imported rttr Unoo.ln-Mtteury. l!allan coachwnrk crea lcd by lhc brilllAnt Ghia StudlOI or 'J'\1rln. Yord de1laned thP M l CID 4V V""8 ._n&lnt. four wheel ln- deptni!!'n l 1u1pe.n1ion and mld-s tup enalne p~ement. 1'1ve •P<'td 8't•r box. fully 1ynchronlztod ..• "PAntrra , •. Italia n for Panlhtt •. , 218 HAl'l.IOl'I. ILVD .. COSTA M(IA • ... tat ) I DAILY PILOT SC Your /tlo1aey Complete-New York Stock List , Wl1at Co11stitutes OVER THE COUNTER RtJOr .... llflVI l~lolr ...... ..,..,,-., l'I IHr••O-twtY t I 111 IY-111.UO l'•k u .. •I 1n<C1..-'"'"u .,. 111111iu1, _..~,. "' c.mm1ui.,. .... .. 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N•!ll)tli l li~wrllll"t .-,..,, .. ~f '~ 1 ;11n!n 0 L • j";~ J~ •10... "4, A! ""' !' I ~ ~ lt<; '• ~"" ..,,1 ·R'lcrt1~ 71' .. ..., "' ~ -" ~••H 1 20 N, jE, ',.,,"\"' ,fl: ~ u.,MI •J• 16 ® 4)-~ -o ''!'-,"',',.~.·.~, ,w,:' ... lfi.'...'~\ !l':":~~to.;r'p ,·~~~ 0~~1n"D ,, '1\ii •ID • J~~,,. .. :~'!"11 Jl:ll.:"11 Rihon1! 1to t:~ Hvt+vt 't'CIOllO I~ :.l. ~ n..:o ~il lfAA'Ci..ldi:J: UIM 101\'110~-llo '01·ga11ic' Food? By SYLV IA POllTER The boom 1n organic foods -at prices as much as 50 per cent abo\e their regula r counterparts -1s resc hing new heights daily and at every lcvrl Nearly I 000 orgun1c food fanns are no~ registered with Organic c;ardening niagoi1ne -and the grov.1n~ fJ r organic roods 1s rapidly be1.:orr1-1ng a key to the sur.1val of many sm a ll family fa rnls At lrnst J 400 stores are now sel ltng the foods and the rat profit."> potcn tie! from this category 1s also a key to the survival or 1nrinv s mall rela1\ stores As for ,011 your purchases in o rganic fo<>t.I stores this year ''111 tot~! S400 1n1l11on Y.hotcsa\e value four limes 1970 s le~cl Exac tly what constitutes ' 9rgan1c" food ? According to the Nat1onnl Farmers Organ1zallon in Iowa It 1s "food grown u 1thout pesticides grown w I t h o u t art1f1clal fertilizers grown 1n soil whose hun1us content 1s increased by the add11ion of organic matter and "food whic h has not be:en treated with preserveth e s hormones anlib1olics, elc But the deceivers a n d gypsters are no\V c rov1d1 ng in to this exploding field and making a mockery of the definition All kinds of packagers are buylng up ordinary foods labellng them "organic ' and passing them oft on nau e retallers and an mnocent public Says Paul Hawken pres1 dent of Erewhon Trading Co one of the nation s largest organic f o o d wholesalers ' Ninety percent of t he 'organic' apple JUiee no111 being sold in CalJfornia is nut made from organically grov.11 apples At least half of the organically grown rice no\v being sold on the East Coas t 1sn t ' llow then can \OU a rood :shopper who bu)s this ty pe or product protect y o u r s e I f agalnsl the.prof It re r 1 n g charlatans' Bv using this run down of tra ps 1n the field p ut together w ith the aid of Hawken and New York s Dept. of Consumer Affairs DECEPTIVE LABELING Probably the biggest trap u s 1ng an • organic 1 "natural ' "natures ov;n" etc label when this-is not the case. ln the m ost nai;irant cases unscrupulous retailers simply paste an • organic" label 01 er the brand 11ame of a non orgnnic product or 1 t s package Or the • or gnnlcnll y grown" food may be merelv food which hasn t b t" e n spraved with pes t1e1des -but .,.. hich fails to meet other gener ally accepted rr1ler1a for Off<:lSn!C foods ll1 a n v unscrupulous i;up phers for instance s e I 1 ·natural ori;an1c honev (!'\ rna1or health food product \ although the) ha\e had no control over !he ant1b1ol1 cs which ma) hn1 e been used 111 bet' feed o r 01 er \\ h::il l) pes nr spravs are used around the btts' base NO~-ORCAJ\1C F 0 0 D S Orten mixed 1n Y.1th organ1C" producl" in or ganic food stores, leading ) ou to beheve they're somehow special a nd worth paying extra for Sf\.tAU. TYPE Frequenllv dried fnuts '1ihtch are labeled "oalural organic" h a ' e preservatives Us ted In tiny type in an inconsp icuous sec· tion o( the label. EXACGERATEO CLAIMS Some protein supplements are " " '!111<1 ''•'•~,:flnl'd :;t. 1''1 uo1•P 1r..:1: :~lt>n '•1•lltf l P ?ll :» °'11 lcfop!' J 18 I !!'.t -ll& YPl'\4Mn! 3l -r-lft .,UMOl>~lj )9'lt~92V.fllo -J being :;<>Id with the promise i~;rr~~~\1 .. lndu• 11g~ira ,,., J 1 1 °" c;1r ,.. -Y tlron \.I 1•11 n J. '' a~ • v1r N.t. ~ ": ~J::1ch,~ '° ?t ~ ~ -"t..... -~ -0-ull on r 30 103 :z..11, 2Jl, '1" J '' I ' • -·• "f 1111 t PntC O!.. I~._ (omt Sil n 1J Ptlnl 9'1 IOl'o 1n R f1 I 1 f\'o "'~'' Br 1tl'll 'ttlo A'fO >->I t1 ll 1!\:o 1fi'\ r:"'°" Co111 ~ .il 111> )?'11 -•~ G~t1,•,•,,••,.<•_ 113 7'• 7'h "' '• thul they II improve nul on y ,, ~1~ s~·-•'.!'~ 41. : .... H 11>'• I ~omw P1 ,. ,..,, rln t~ >' ' 111.n j \o t"" P1 < G 11.o .JI~• .)9 .o..u•om'-0111 n ""' ,, .,..., -\'II I n Rlv•r 1 '~ ,.,. ~ l'4 Gii .., 1 10~~ IO\'I 101\ •• your ph,s1cal rltne85 l)ut even 1!~t!",..,~ ~. ~t; 1~:;i;,,. jf~ ·"'·,. • .,_mPt c... f ' ... !..., ~~' \~b ~ 'i ! 1:~1.·~1 w ~,; Y'" ~:~~00~ 1!i: 1~: ~~~f'~~~rlll Ji ~ 1m ltl'o ! u o:~rl~ 1,/J I lm u~· ~=\lo 11i:1*J11r1~ ~ li ~~ I:~ I:~ :j 1 ! ~l(I! In ' )J\o :;s 1 •1M!1 F J 1:1.! l;;;;:,,•~it 1 • JP•I El 1Ulo 1 old Cr1• I, ... 20"' P1•i..t ti !"1• ,•,,~ .t..VCG Co WI )&! ' J>.;. ~ -I.lo r:rl NI pl 2 10 !l """ -\!,; u!l~U PU~ 1!10 IM 6" Po )OUr appearance •"•w Bo• 11 , ,1.,. ... mrlt '}'' ~, !°" P,p •J 1 2•\'> bt ~1·1 '"°' Hli 1c1 1"' • • P•••w ~• "' ••Avco PU 20 , ~ ~ lf. + '9 •(p(p 1 11 ,», " "" jl~ .,. ,. ull W11 .a m 3J19 ~ I\ ~ " u Vo B~> )'; l""• 1!1••11 Ml 1•'• ?5 • en Roel J3> l :J2 I~' ,,'ol t l ~ O• EFln l1 l'l\IJ P1•lw l'1 13 • I•~. 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'"" ) "•••II• 16,,. , .. , •• AZ!KOll I 20f m ~ 20... 20 'ill+ \o -,,m',c,i l • ~· ~ i•·· ~ -1 (~ Gul!on Incl 11 '°"" le If -lo J~ IS <> >'"o>>•'·>o 1>0 •-JO> ~ ~01"' Yrl '1, I ~ 1~1, ~ •-• ,, • '!~ PtY l l'IW ) -,. .... •> >• U f .t 'nnoc•nl old•r ~opl" .. ,..1 cP.. ~ 1 10 • 1.,,~7· ~2 , J • '""" co 1t 1i " ' ,;;'ps 1 ll'\' ,. •t• "Iv u ' 1 1 PHrl Mt lj(• u~ -B -o.1 Mt11t 1 10 ii is>. ~ ~ ~,,.: -+.. -....... - -• ,. l" " "FA Pt5 19 '° lie• H•ll• J6 •)I rcu Co 2t • XI~} Mrov • • 1,.,, rove 1 o 1 • Pttflls 'f 1 1t 8i bCkW JO UI J~1 n 11o ))lo g:n1 .t..lr ~ 16' SJ\' ,11f.1 ~J + ""' Ht~l!;W1I 210 •' JJV, 3~ J7'\ ~ '' .. t ·-·• v ~ • •I • .., "'""" 0 I .. ..-1 ,',.' 01• 8tll GE 1 tt ft JHo JO&o ,1 -lo ll'Onl Cof'I flt llo\1 33 1 35 t 'o 1 " S } 1 '• 7~._. 7J -'• \\ho art' constantly ,1orr1ed!11o,'",!.. •,, •, ~oo'•'•'•' ,,:,!~--~-~.u,1•,•,~!.. 1,1 .• 0,• ",',."',,, ', >3,. ut1~1n101 ~,,• • ~enn~,PI/" ,'.•,•,•e•-•OIT XI SI u ""' u t.+•'t 111e1n1 76 9\t t ••-I•""',,',.,"''-,,"", 11 ""• u;. •3 .-• ~boul their health Some ""M Cl> \j • l• • B••Otn ..... 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H1•P~r R 1~·· 1~:\o Pto1 llW ... l , 811! pf B•.lO 120 61\\ 'fo\1 "'1 OHHI Ml• .60 31 3' lf+. ll'I• + I• Hrmll Wtl t '\o ' • • .0.(U•l>nl "}t , lG , llr1no1 t l • a.I ' 1 1n1l1b ,\, °"" oulv 0 t 11~• l:l\'a Htl tlll 1•, I'• Pe UPI 1 tl~ 1,t2 ll•ll G pl Cl PO •1 l• ,1 \'I 611 1 -1 Ofl'lnM!u pf 1 t 29'J> :19\'J 19...,, H1mm P111 1 ~ 17"-11 • 17\4 -• health food Store Opt'rat\Oll~ Adm"f I• ~,fl,~•Sca n,J6 1 g:~~~c:'°: ll"'lj\ f.11I~( l~.,..,.1 ~•1" 1t<Jc: u1 ,•;\~~!!/~ j,•11, llin'l(lr PUii! 14 ll''t IJ~ IJ>4-U.O..wovlh! °" 0'26 ~ 10 0 11.-\;Hammnc1 •O .s..i n .. 111, 11"1 1 • Id t •do '" W 1'' 5 B1wno l>r ) D I , ,~ "O ~<o 1 , >' •o , 0 0 P"o>o" > ,'I>•' Oo-P f ') J I 0 II<• ~• ~ ~ 01110-11lylnt \ JOl\2'1 '"'"" Q • .... + !o Ht ndlmn 61 361 -, ~., -+ , flJlC'f thCV'\ C '>0 :\ (US omer .t.ov It o' • > I o Br11> Woll 71 • I • ot• Olin -•.. • ~ " "" "' Oo pf A 1 10 l'O 10 I HAncl l'11r 12 11 17 #,!!~·S A 10 .11 ,B~c~l>M ,".",'.•.1Q•,··.2~." 66.61 •b t~ ) 3• In 3r , ,,Pltdm!A O'o l\•BlotC• 1J.I IOI 2*1'> 21 ... l1.+i;.0:•0 pf (I • JO "'• "'·=~~H .... •CP )II 1,7 1""' 1• lt o::.: n ••\\le >•I 11\nnl>nS OrA•I ·~ l 3o But~••~ " ... l•/lf,l'arovn E 6 1 7 rn 1 1 81,Plnkrtn !J,l.i BtnkofNY2 ?l •0 1 M'.> M'.l\•..-"-o~'•col • '''"'j1, 'l l•nno Ml>O ''''I> UC lllJ "' 1,, 3 ,o,,,, Fd 03, ,3 ''' 1 , 55 ..... , '' ,5 0 '' 10 '' 11 I" 1111 '• lone .., .. S1 -+ • II Albto 1<0 • ' o Bu11111i1n • • nd •Y • or 11;1 -,,, ,',',',"< • In r ~ • ,-\ -" Ot ell 1 .io 14 ? to , :i \ + \'o tl1rcoYrt I JO :ll''a l1 ~ 31\lo _.., 1n111urals utll then try to se A1bt•I$ ~·. lj. Burn ~Im :n ~l~> O•t•n lr11 I~' H "!"' 0•• • • • •''l ... H ns. ,.,., B1rDOll Ill 2 <W'4 <WI• "'""'-\'lo 0 I !n' 1'932 190 111 111 11.r.> l'1Ar11hcn1, I IS 11\lo 71. 71\<'o -• ( ,t.. (O tc • 1"11 !' W$• 7' o 11:;. Ot \IX C 6j" f "O•i'lt :19\• )'I G Ht •Ito Proc Pl 11'• 12 • B•rcl CA 751 S '6~• 116h 116"-+11 o!i d ~I~· l5f(I lWl-, 10,io IQ.f\'a t '" 1'1orrl1 tnl 1 60 S6 > S6, S6'A inotherto bnlnntl"'thc irst.o..lll<!,.Et 2:u) ••bttl 6'4 ~\0.cor l n 1 ' •4FitJo•t •r~!ljl 11<1 36 l!l\:iProGo • si. 6•B111c 1nc ~ s •v. 9,,. •~•-hoet dpfS~ t a.i M M -\.'IH•ro~oCpl 31Jo~• n 2J' :1ne ::1::1a~~ ;ii l . !~"!; ~ ;i ~. g!~:?t1; l~ ~ tl~ ~!~#n:~~ ~.: } ~;: 3f.; 1!:~ :~~~"~rc q~ iiU ::::: ~f11p1 , ii li~ l~ • l~ t -i. ge:11lln.~ .so \, \~ 1~ ltt: + \,~:~~A~~· ,MJllJ 1~ ,.,.. ~~ ~.~ + .~ .t.. lcl EQ ul ~ 0 / • 60 Ml1>~ 7t , 2&l..o l)f ! C•n1 11 !/\ Fl k 7.'•• •• I rp Joi\ J I p 1 1~ 15°"' 8•1h Ind fl Jl\o J6 J6 • -"" 0 1m!nrl 1 IO •1 41\o 41~• • '• -'H•wll El 1 U 16 2'\~ 1•~, 26'1. OV•'RPRICINf. The 50Allvn lleclj l:t~1 .1~1'"' •••t••ttlnBr'lt 79'f1~"f,.'j 7!i 1 11 11 14~1 j\;Pu'B:nnit ~ ~1,B•"'chLb lQ 1t•llll'lll1 1111'r1 6l,.0 1m5html :.i:i20•1 1fl•10• H1v1SAbn1 lt~:I0\'120'>\-• "" Al~ e n .. '• 11, •Pin A!r l :i:-.o .. we~ El 1 'o l it Fl• WiTU j 1• l )ge SW 12 l Pu!O (op s· 5•hB••I L•IJ H lit llllo 36•~ JI\\ Olt SnPIC 2 '32 31•• l1 ... -~1'1••e!rlnt j9 10I• "11 10' ........ 1 -rc ent markups on \ ll:lmln "lpln G~o J•o l •r ~P l"'< J\o •lo lam C:rv lllo lt 1 Food f• P 5 , ~· (p l o 14' ~u•I CM 91: to.;.. Bl~ll Clg JO 11 11._ 11•• 11""' -~I Ol1S pl 0 1 20 16 11'<• 111 o 17~1 -• HC:A Ina U I 1 I 1<1 ·~ \m B""P 2•o?tl1 CA1 Co I ~'o r'llot!Ao l l•1for11I O 17>o 17 o 1 N .. clr l'llo "l ~lT S~•· 5 , J<0 Bt1rlno1 !1 I lt• JI~ :11 ... _'00lcltl>llone 17 10'1 lG • lt1'4 -\•Hl1"-l•• Ooll l§A 4S d:lo '-'lo-\i Piiis and Protein supplements , El L•b 1 , •1• .,,. e11 ,,", ,',: o,•,•,"~,"' l l ) F ..... 1,11 ~ , s , 1"1cr inc 10 , 10 1 ~111tn Pr JI>., 11, B111fd1 1 11 7J •7''1 111• '11'1 + ·~ OJebokl "' i5 "' 4 1 • H.cl1M ~ » "'• 11 .. 111 .. ->• '"' E•P 1l7"1ll& • (1rt Gro ,, 1'• l Foti Grnl ,.,,.. 3~ •n•o 01"• " '1• R1n111 c 111, 1~, Bec~m1n JO 7• •~• •c1 •I') -• 0 Glor; llCI "" 16''t 1611 10.-1 -'• H1!n1 1'1J 1 •2 ~ '3\'J .,., -, ' "Finl LS \Cl>o 11 , C~vneh C 8'o t o ln!•m• In 1'-Raven CD 1541 167 6eec:hAr 600 JI :rl\• 71'> ?2, ~Ill! E~lo Mt M l:J 1 ~. -1 H1l1rw1 C\lrl 11 7~0 ~ Pio -, ore csimmon t.toreove.r most .,,.,., F 111 JS'• l6:\o 1C~•c NG 10" 11 o ~n C>u ll'o lt \ Fotom11 7 ,,, tn1ra 111<1 J~• ~ Atn>bll E 'sv. 11 B1<:1 01c1< JO 111 J9'4 :Je>'i lit~+~· 81Gloro pf N 1 2& 1.1~ v ... +"' Ht ltntRu 76 72 311~, JJ\, JI., + ·~ ''( the \It "min (; nOW being "m Fur!\ l/,>o 11 (en VI PS 1 1 0 0 • ',,",', lnlfmt G lll' 1"-1 1 1vmnd 71 7 72 , Btlco Pel SI) 3' 19~• 19 > \t 1 0 llln9'1'<"' ii) 1 ll ll\1 1J 1::A. + 1 I H•lltr In! 16 76 :HI 0 77~1 ,,.,., -l, 0 A.m Grtet V 111, CenY lob ln8k W•h \'o 1 o Re<O!I E<> 1,>:o 13 • B6lc1Hem 6-lt 101 7J ~· n + \~ 0111 no pf .0.. 2 1 l9 • '9'• 1'.4 -(,.; H.imt PO ii) 5J 21"2 2l"" 7Jh + '• ,.;old a s 'n<itUral" COnSlSfS A. Prot'!CI .il.. ~01Cnencr A 79,,',~,-,, lf.!...-;.>t'"''..,'fll •1 '\~.,.'7"'., .._"C(JHl!'ILll$ Ca 11 "\' IKI )'9l;X118t ll lklW 60 :CO 60 $"' ~>0 -i'oOllkln(o IO 15 3'>0 ).C 3' -1~1'1elmrhP 20 97 21~ 21 11'o4 -f '• "m Ttlt"J 11i, I )• ~l\etl 0 I !nl $y)lm tit ~) ltw> Env 2 o l 1 6u11l1 (O 40 ~.<I 10 )<llo 2Q t lo 0 IMY ~ 2u 156 ls.I 1.\6 +1~ Hl<l'\llpl> C•o 17 I• • \ • 'o ~1Jmost entirely or ascorbic A.m W•lcl I ••• ~nm l•~ ,~, "•" MUTUAL ntrw•• 11~· ll~ ll:o.w:t Ex J9 :it I B•nd\X I 60 116 •s~ ~ 1 u"' \.lo 01,1 5.1-ag ,, )JI. ~ l5o 4 + ... Hemlnc GS.. 1 , .... 1 . 7\o -fl -.n.Ollt 1 • J •10hl ll In ,. Ionic• Inc 1 r.. I• o Rabin M 1~ • I )t , BMO ~ p! J l3 le"< 611 ' 611~, -!~ OlvU!ld Ind 2' J>~ J'4 Hl -11 Horclllel 251 37 WI ffilo 56\,.o 1 10 acid -the same stuff you ftnd •n~1u1 ts 61 , 6j~• • e1~ VI l' 11 1,•,',',' ",1 JO ;io 1 Rot>trll J o , 11 , Bene!\ Cp 66 •1 ~. ~I •1 • .o \\ §lvMtu 7loe 9'l 28 ~," ?t + ~. H1r1~F 1 10 1 11 • 21 111o + • , .t.nkon 1,, s;-,o "I "I Btlclo lSt 11~1 \ b ._ •, J>o ROblno L 11 1~ '> llen<!f .,uJO 170 HJ 61 41 + \:, rPoPPtr ii) 10 J9\o l!~'o C19 -, .. Hevb\eln ll •1 !J • !1''> S1\.0 -, in unnatural ' v1tam1n C Arc1 Ind ' • 6 • h 11on 11 • 11 • JaQuln c n • 11 Ro.e101 J 1 , Berw111 o•• :io 1 tJ.>• 9:JI.\ t3"\ -~ om1Mn1 llO 11 6-1\fJ '31'1 6-1 -'l +Pi. Htw P•c~ » 111 !!'I ~. SHo t , ~ NUTRITION NONSENSE Almost e verybody is try ing to climb on the health food b andwagon and make a healthy pror1t 1n the process Of questionable nutr1llon value surely are •organic" var1a lions in toothpaste refined oils re fi ned sea salt syrup DIET PACK ED FRUITS AND VEGETABLES These may ht> labeled as 'natural organic but acluallv thev re rhe s ame as all cl1et packed food, Your best -and most ob- \ 1ous -safeguards nre lo know the proprietor or the store vou patronize and study c11refulfy the labels or each produc t you buy And 1f you feel you've been deceived or cheated report the details to your local Better Business Bureau and }Our Consumer Protection Agency Food Price 'J iis ti f i eel' Says Ai<le FARGO ND (AP ) Secretary or Agriculture Earl L Butz said recent in c reases 1n prices far1ners receive 1nclud111g record h1,ghs for cattle are fully iuslihed regardless of their effects 1n t he supermarket Prices a1 e strengthening and 111 some instances such as beer caltle prices, are at 20 year highs" Butz said 111 a speech p1 epared for the an nual Fargo Farm F orum And they should be B utz said • Its abou t time !lung:-; 11ere gett1ng better Yet I w ant lo rem ind you l hnt as \our prices 1mpro'e nnd begin to reflect 1n mnrku1>s at r et111I counters ue n1a} ha\C a fight on our hands Son\e of lhe ne\vsp:ipero:: back east have already started co mm('nfln!l on higher fond prices ' Flutt sa1d •You c:in expect to sec ;ig1lnt1nn 111 C're;ise for pu!l1nf! a h<l on 111an\ agncultur11I prlces Tiu17. 1dded that he intends •lo 11 a ge this bottle for far1ners Y.1th everything 1 \C got and asked ror grassroots help and support Prices 0£ raw farm products are exempted from controls under the ndm1n1stratton s Phase 2 econorn1c p I an Retailers can pass on top con sumers -added costs or food products A v.eek ago the Agriculture ~partmenl reported tha t prices farmer! got for ra'" products r ose 3 percent 1n JBauery 1nclud1ng a record tngh for beef c attle shattering the mark set tn 1951 .t.rdM•v 10.11 ,1n<+1Se 111 1..io !1mWtl l j >Rouse ::?9•r)010 B1n!l 5Pl 250 PIOJ6o3.I l6 -v.oornFnOISt :Miµ;, e,., fl.li+•H111nvotoe ?ln•lo l? 12 • 4.r~WTG Jl 'I 11 •' rznUt A J S'• "4 • FUNDS J'ml DY 11 , 1 •o Rowan In ? , 1V:i lleongv1I )SI •~• t, •~, + ~ Oonr1• l•v u 11 ~, :z,,>o 2•'"' -"1'1llon1'1ot1 1 ' 'S'-'• 5} 51 _ , -, 1111r, F01 21 , Ru• Stov •I H\ lltflltvtl fn .. e n o I Doric Cp J? I ~ 20v. 20 + v, Hoblrt 110 t 65>.< 6!'• 6!'" + ,•, '<'M'/",_"!: 1'9•1 !9~1•dll1r 1 0 J , Be•kty Pho 10.. ~·• 17,-. 11/>.:o + i. !)err Oliver J1 l6'o \J4t !°'• + "'HoernWtl '° '>J JO JO :)0 -+ ,.., ll• I\, c~n 01t ll o 11 > lltth St1 I 70 11' »'14 JO ~ -'' Ooroev lG !IS \~o 1S l~ -"-1'1011 Elt<!r~ ll08 ?Siio 71':0 11\o -t '• CTr ;?lj ;,.•-"'?,,......,._~~· Kt01•,~11St01r 11 • l'"" c•nln El ~ , l~~ Bo ~hree l? l'ZO °" • 4l~ 13'1• + ~ Dever C1> IS l• .S.S ,1.l\~ 5J + \:i Ho!l<hhtn 1S t!! Sl•o .il•i $111) .._____.--.:-o t<oiv•r l: •• l,1~1;r1°11cP1r~ ~~ 5~ g111rfrJ~~· J ,~ ~~ ~'i ~ti = U ~~~I IO ~ ~ •• Tit.: ~tt :t ~ ~:~~M":''-o 1~ 111,.0 i;;: ~. ! : NEW VOA:I< fAP)Jl'1•nck 1lj '"6K•m~n.t. lt r 70 cra111 H n~;36•1'r;11111 1~ ?\'U "l'lo 71'1> 1Jr1vp(pl.il) l ~o lMo JIQo'o HonYVr111JO ,.,1J.Ol'r l'1 1 "° 1' lno !oli'1"'1no llUO-Jof<n$1n 7S • 1J ,, Kale Gre jl'• l '• Cf1P!O 3 • ,y, B1ocll HA: .?4 ll lT'o ~1' • 31V. -\, OrtHlncl 1 .0 JS ,...~ ]?'.~ ll ~ + \\ u~·rBI > -II -· -•o ~ i l 4 erl""$ iv[lleo by K1vt1on• l'vnctl IC1v11"' '• • !'"''cl Po 30\• »11 B U• Bell 60 1D1 •\~ "'6'4 1.1 '4 o < 1-•> -·· -1 " + • ,.,_, "' ""' "' ""' -• tie lf•llon1 AllOCI· .t..POllO ll 13 1/i 11 ICtl r 'fr 11'0 ll eorl' p f 77 11\> Bobt>le Brl1 l ei 16\l:o l111o I~ °T \lo reu I> "' ...,.,. ""' ... \ Horllon CP 165 SN ''J'4 SJ\4 .01 •lion of teur !lei !\It Bl '31 7(1 ;o (Hnt (p 13~ 13 ~ l•h Com IJ'1 1~ {Boeing Co ii) 1n 25 2•~ '"• Oruir P!B 1 I l5 .. 35 :Ht, + \i HMo!JCP Am 69 -"ll• 11'1 ., :>eolt tl Inc •ft Ul e1 10 .se m ~ K1llett 1 ~ 1'• !•"Kl F '"' 5 , 'WlsC11 1Jb llO 1.,, 18"' l"'lo + t, ~.'° ... ,°',' CF.,\ S 16\o 21V1 26 • 1'1Dll ln!I .J6 .l1 oO"'-~ Jill\ -'• lie Prlcu 1t Wh cl> ui B4 f 11 10 o. IC•llwO ).C , '.\..j>,;, even U 'l \• •l 8ond Ina 1 10\o 10'h 10\lt _ \' ""'-"' '"" ll\l ''"" l l \4 l~~. + ·~ HOU<ltllle 60 JO I"" ui, 1'"4 -• ~••e 3tcur1Tlt$ u• Kl I Jl f 10 Kllf't' Svc 3'"' l!'ol. 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Ellnli llutl'\ 105 1'6 ltS -3 .. lnlerco ,• fj 5l"ll 50>., ~~ -~, critlc1ze N1xons progr a m t oe.vrl Fd •.SJ :nMJF Gth S \IO 6l8~~1 en,• 11• .,.,~.unv,•", , •• S\'oC1!111\nMnl I llt• 1n1.1o 11-.-•\EQUlmk 1121 ,: :1~1.' ,,•,, ,., ..... ,·.1:·,Mc'',-~"!i, llJ 1l!)~~~~~Jl,l.';~ ''· I l I l BeYrt Gr ! 1S 6 2j M OmoG • -> >> '"""''' ln>1 \'o Ja .,, ""-T'~• emPRl-~ bl 21'h ,.,.., :19'-+ ... 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( ub '1'4 .t:>'I• 11.itro ?~ • 10 C1nalA: 10 ,1s1 17 ~, !1 II• + l e•:txl n l lO ,:> 1•1 " l~O > ,•, + '> lntMlnC~ 10 Ill 19 l 19 ~ l~o -a str ongest program to reduce,'~,,,",",,,,',," rn Ji•1,ricvr 11 j;12 l,::;:~~~1~r ,. 1Ji,1i .v1~tron ?1 .2, ... c,.o cBdcto s2 ~·· ~i e'ro"'2 Olf ,, 1 • ,_'I> c M"' 81 0 ~. 10 +, oc ncl 519 S l ·V 7 '•W1<I• Pu 11'~1!!,,C"pl!HolO ~4 71 '3"' (j, 4J~I~ •Elh~: Q. U )> 16'1.. 161t ~'4 -''o ln!Mull f 110 12 21 ,. 16 ! unemployment that there h as eu11c~ is JO 1, 91! 0°1 .. ,, , -, ., •,cc 1nr1, 9\, ',., w. ' Bd 1J 1''4 C••brun 1 50 11J ~ 6 .. ,1 ~ - , , v on e1 '1 • ,, .n -'• inr ,1,~.1 1 ' -• Ci~cl" 109572 '' ~· -••~a o ,...\ .. ~WAP1<!1 1'4' Ca•l~le e0 61 t'/14 72'7 ?1~~ \ vani Pcl JO JS 2~o 21< 7'<'•+~1nt l-•;;o 1JO ~· l I JOt' ~d ' "er been 1n this count"'-ON Iv~~, , io' !! ,•, ~ 1•w!h1, ", ~ '•' 3'"•'•'•"o'•o~ ~· ~ • w.~ N" 1 < • l~ • Cito Frq! 36 111 !l)'>t 19'.I 20 + • o E•C• 0 80 14 187• 1 • 1e~. -,., nt PaP ft" ,,'.,' ~,•, f, ' 2 3 ' 'J ,,., ""' ,v ~ ...,. l lfl\'o 10 1 Wetill Rt 6 ~ /,Alo C1rm Pl! 116 1Sl 61\ 2.5"4 26,\ F~!Pndc1t" 15 "I 1$ i 75~ , " I " "en surpass1ng the pum~ ,,","'· vF"o' ',',~! 1,!',j ~','-, ,",, •,,',"•••H~", ; 1, we""' w 1• ~ '° '"'Ple-<: t 10 :n 2141 11 , 71 4 _..., F•be•;t 40 10t 91' 19,,, l' -1o 1 n1 ""~ 1 1• 1r, l!'l.o ' 11 ' -• t' " ...., ~ ~ .. 48\1• .ii~ Wtl<'llrn •"' 1'0 Ct rr le•CD 60 19 '8"'11 a .&I~ f i ,!orA IAlb 1 6 36 ' ~ I"'~~~:~ r1&r 1 ~', 1 ~ 1fl~ 11; 0 it ~. -1', Prlmtng prograrTIS of FrankJln 6co"' ,M,•c 0 1> ,',' 11 1 •"< ~:: SfJ: i1 ~ 1>'I '•'j •, ,',','",",!. 131 11' Well"" M '' ' ~ CrrrG~I IM 1 16'0 16"' lt~o Ftlr(h Com 17900 J7 1 Jl\) 31 ., 'f'" ,~ 11 & t 1,('1, 50 111' ., 1 0\'I 110 , _1 ,.., ,, 1-0lo l"''}JWell>F M 1:0..71'1.Car!Wa! ..oa to n• 71~, llo -<liFarlnd lOll !3 ..... 13\o ll'li !nlff ptJ ' IOll"'ln Jl.S -!• D Roose\ ell of the 1930s C•P•m ''1 9n""""" C•f 1 '° '' Ntt 511v• 6'• 1 w,u C.•• •· 1u c .. ,u~~' •O :no 19"7 111"1 u , -1 'lo F•lrmcont 1 CJ,1 "• 'j'• 1 , ln'T r "'f' J6 1~ 1 \.'z oolt Glh JI• , fl llllUW Fd 11 2t IJ 4l N f11GGF 11 ~ 1t7\ 1111 NA ll~ 11 • Calt r 1 '0 112 •tVo -'1\0 4 ><l. f ilil•!'f 10. ~• \.'z 11! _ \.t "l o>C bll F. 11~ loo, ~ > -t Ste in ap'""'ared before the aar Sh 6191#'1~•,:i~kl 111,~,,•,•,~,'•'•~o"'F ltt.1•~ •'nMQ 1 J~!Ct orP 1n3 "' f' .. 6 ,-,•l'amivFln '° 3' 11 11'1.. 111, JTTPIN 5 f ,,.~ ,.., ~!-1, """ 1a,.rln 1•7'0\'I' -· j c,,1n n l1'1iW•tnPb 17•.':'ll CIC:1>1>t 2u1 1 1,21 -•frnS!eeltnc 1d l'"o l1 11 _,_nrt&Tft s •!OJ.JC. W•i " 110,lse Sen•le Econo1n1c Con1 entry 511 11 7'0 , > 1c~ S!rg n 1' n ~ 'lltl1n .o. •• ., "' •t ~' Co 1~~ ? e<oCato t i 10 ll 3,,, 3.., • ,, Fir Wtsr Fin 37 i1 .., 11• 11, 1 , ""' • '';) •• ,, .. ,, •· , " Chi<nnll'<ofvncll No•eail 1S911.1t1 N11!1n e •\\1 M ellpal ••!' elane1eCp2 ~•••M\•69"-""rehMlo"6 lll lO :l'f ''.1'1..!='~1~1U11t.o.."" • ;":v,;:1,s.,.";:_, m1tlee as Labor Secretary Ral•n n 10 ~.,, tanur • 3' 9.:u >!,.,..., "'~ ,, l~ w.11..-<1 ::tt , J Cf nco Int ::io 111 l' s~·· S• ..... ,, Feoo,,, 50 102, ~ 41 1 '2"" _ ~ ntuu ptl i i ~ JI l l JI , • I) CamSt 11S1t10m'J'1 7:lJ1U "'Eur011 3\1•~ ln~Wl'>I ~-~s•~C:enlt•Co•o 21 :l':\lol.1JMo ~~.F~••1 :10 'Jl ,3 l ntc ri;ac1\ 11S21> 1•~ J> • James Hodgson told a Grwth 6 St 7 u 1w und 1~ $1lS 91,l "'w "'~ c;. 11 ~ 11 ' .,.,,, PL "'"" ,.., • Ce~ Hud I "" 11 2•W ,. 7• -'o ~~':i""' ! llO 1'9 JO I JI'\• lO • ln!l>l>GP l(le 10 18 I 111: l't = : ln«>m l 69 8 10 01 Fuod t 6110 SI NW P< Sv 71•., 1•1• "'d'wn:l l 3'I J :IO Cenllll t l Sol lS ~6 ?J~. 2a ..._ 4 'M 1 'IO 710 n • "'"' 9'Vi -1•o ln1n1t1nd 96 lS ~1..1 2 ... ~.• g1 OUp Of top bUStneSS e.X SPt(I 7 32 JU~· WmS 16 69 !6 Of IJo•~I (p 41 ~ ~· 'rlctw I::: ,.., ~~, C:nlllll pto JO JlD && 66 6o1 I Ffdt.IMli wl 4JI U~ ~ 7.l'!i _ it 111ler1 w I 21 4 11.\iO lf'h Ii>! ecutives lha t public op1n1on h,!J~cr R0~n" "'p·:~" .~~0~1!~fi!..vRM l~4 ~~~~:d~~';' 1~:1~,.~=~~~~ l~~ di ~r• ~~~~ ~~!;= ·~1::p11Rj-o ~i4~.'1~: 7;;:=1~ ~;:;•rB:~r· 1 !~ ~~~ i11~ 1'~;_:.: f Co t Fri Cap 816 t79 PP AIM 1321~1ll0hlo Ari I'~' ?anUI B ?lo.;,72,CtnMPw 11(1 JO 1!'• !7\'> lJV.= ,Fl"d!l~n'Sfl ,! l1il :M ~ 7~,, ~;, ~ OW~EI IJO '19,._ •• •-1 \\OU)d SOOn Or ce ngre.SS 0 Shrhld 9Jt10 d PPCen II lOtl11 I C:1nS0Wt 1~ 19 •J, '5 •J -•iF..i.ro>• ,:", 71 )61 :µ, 1~ 'lowallG• 13! 31 19•• l''' 19 1 SPet! 11" T SIC l09t 11 9• Ctnl 50~1 1 la 1~ F •• I! 6 S~o 5' -.i.: O Bf-ow l it() U m4• •• 2 • -change COlleclJVe barga1n1ng olonl~I l r11TJ M I ill 9 6l C:tnTelUI fl t i ,,& 1 11'\• 1"", 0, + • F~,o,~,,ts).[.0> ·~, 4'9•i 49 4'9 : ::j: .'!", lowaPSv 1 # 13 '• 72>1 12'1.o I llod d th l S Cnvrt 11011]1 tP•~I RYr ,• .. n >'".. Cerro(p 10 56 19'1 10 ,.,,,,';,,C_..,.._ 6 0 10 O lpc:a')OJ l.od 139 1 1 1~~ II •-o "son sat e v. ay I 1 E'<>ut~ 1 6J 1 o.i Penn s11 c 1 t-.d 16 • lS>.l ~ '" 31 l.ll4 »'4 J.11 JlE mo 60 'l "31'-. JR• 3"4 4 1'.'t ' h h Fund 1 Jl1~Jo!PtMul '0l '6l NEW YOllll( l"P/ 'futldaYI comolt1t c'' Ut '3 q, •11 1 1n,->oFlbf1brd 1V 11.'i "'' 711• 11 'i "' tell: orp .st <.), '3 l0~•+1' .. now big labort1eups urt I e G•wln 100 110Ph11 1f1'!7 69New Yorl Slocl xc1>ano1 Ptl<'• c~~~~:" .... ,""., s •t .in.~ •1VJ -4t~1,•,un11n l" ', ~· •• ......... .._ ", -J-K- h h It, tnu>m 10 \61 110PIJt rlm J 11 1271 r 5a Jl »'• JO-o-.; e <1ctM Cl 3''4 1 ,,_ ~ pubhc more. t an l e slr .. ing Vent 5 ti 6 5' "S SI ]I 91 11 91 l•ltt Htl (htdbrn In< 7l • N J'o Flllrol IAO 16 :;>.IV. ~ -»;;" -.... ltevtr Md\ 1 I I • -I\ ~amo Gt 1.Q '11 P ;n1 t 92 t TS lh•1 I Hiii> Uw CIOM C:h• CCnidDrn pf 1 ''• •'• ''--<• "In F~rf!n Cl l'f"l. lt It ... -.. • J1me1 F l2 11 .!Q\1 .t ; 501\ T '• \Vorkers "omo As •tS 761Pon no 1110138'! NmPS 11• u ''~'IN •511o i 1~Fr••t-IJ S6I ....... "'"" "'"•Jantztn 60 t ~., 2IJ.>., ,...,t . (OIJlO (a 7 • I XI Pion Inv ll 31 13 15 A (ll1rte.-~y? I! W I l.1 ll\' + 1 F•lC•"t I Cl 11i ~ ?S-\t ~u. Jl p .. nfO ,J)e Jrlll l\\:o \!I>\• 111.o ..,. 1 President N I x 0 n v; as corno 11<1 • JJ 10 1~ Pllar111 13 95 lJ ll - -Cll•••Man1> 1 SI JJl<o 5'.., .is + 11 FllC:hlC 1.50 m 3'"7 lS ~ JpnFo In ~ "' 11 1 " lt'• 1(1n'\p Fcl IMIOJ0Prlc1 funo~ "bKUIF l•g 26 11~· , •• 11\· C:h11MT IS.. 1J! SS'o 5' 5' -1\'I Fl!Mlp 723o 151 1fl~ 15 .. ~-}Jtl~Pllor .If. "'05 4 ... U~-' i;cheduled to s""'ak f\.1onday onco•n 111~12 1• Grw111 JOJTlO J1 Al>blL1J 110 St 6 '4 'l\9 6 1.+ .c"•l•e1 2• "1•• 1µ1 1•v•+4t F•iN11.tBot l li 66, 6s~ -'1IJ1 P u!f ,.. 1•0111 11' 1u r-..... 1n .. 1!?S!1 00 Nfrt 1or110 72ACI' lnd2.icl ltSlll l\'1 S11 -:t.oChtmt1Tnoitl :r'11''4ol'l'h n'l.+'•frlfN(IVI» 291#1..;.,.,,~+""J• PLtpl• ''°J.6>.·~ 36'0 tl t>Vening {O the same group a Con>!~! G 6 t..S t 21 N Horii 39 7 lt IS AcmlC l~v IO 1 111o IS 1$'4 -, C"emNY 2 U SJJ 36\(o SJ\, l6l.lo '• llNSIBnc ? l )6 J5l.:o 36 -'o Jtw.i cy I '° jll "1 1 59..t -~ Con! Glh 11 ff 11 1t Pro FYnd 11 5111 sa Ac;tne Mkl 21J '3 ' ~ ~~ -·~ c~ •• v. 1 60 J J1i,., 30'4 w. -1!NSlr 2St J9 JO 29 ,..., + ~Jim W• • so I ' l5\' • )44 -... White I-louse conference onco•P ldr lS 11 .ic1 ro Porll 101 101 Ad•111Er, 1'9t 39 11 · ll'·• ll · Ches Ohio 131 SJ'• 5,"" 531:-,'~F,itPenn ti' 19 '1~ 1'" -l,JmWpf 1.60 I 'l ff"~·-• Clr't'C•P 15 Sl•l6'0Vlcl J.l0.119.0..clMlll iXI il)lo11~•11"'-""Chesbohl0• :1'60 59 ,o -5PtM 1 97o Jf07",_:~R~"6+..,Jl'1~nlnJS.. 5a11 o \\t • business tre.nds 1n the next 20 Crn wo1.. • 11 6 l!cl 0111n1m Fund• A<klr,·m, 15. HI Ja~• l1'11 :JI~ + '> cni E••r 111 1 10,..., 101\ fn1\ ! 1 ~ ~~'"•Bk' ,~ ,.s .t,04• .!jJ lQl• .!. 1' ',~~~.!11 .!ii~ 1•!7l 1~'(; 1j1'.! <o " _ ,,' Crn WO•I 176 l "" E<1ult to I• 111~ Adrl'> r• HIS 10"4 21}1• ~ -h ChlMllw Co ~· in. 11h 11 ' 1 FflWl1( 1.... "" .......... )1 "'' "'' llO J.l'I\ .. )'t'::Jrs ~y,::~,. J:;:p' :19 g~~ \~"lll1n ~·n:;~7~~.'·,!.o ~ m: r~ ~;11 t:~~\~l1lws~~s l~ Ii~ ~~11 ,.ih =· Fl!~~~~:, ~-~I '8'1.1 "'"".:'_ ·:J:. ... oi;c llO 11• 5$~ si'h ).I~+! f n Ott t! Ii 11 iJ J(I ln(om I 91, A " Inc: 16 .... I ~•• 1, I ~-C:l>I Mlt SP of ).l"'t :i:-,; !,l"li \ '' FFl1~r 5cl 16 ~ lf\, !I\\ 18'-' -JonLtu 2Se .)9 1814 1 I~ f'i lo Sen \V1lhnm 'roxrn1re-(u-o eiaw ll'n l'll tnv1u ''110C11"'P•od Xii 1 12 ~1 , 61> 11 c,,1Pneur1 t~ Al ~ ,1A 1,,t • M•En1 12 Jll ~~ t.'t' 10~-,Jontl•"'"'s :rl60 » SI ~ se•,-1 , ( I t 0~11~ ! " , v11•1 10 ""' 11 , Al11:01n ;oe 11 n • 23 2l -'• c1111:ir ct ltP 11 16 ., ,... -• fltml~ 50 <J ... -• r,'"' -•1 Jorgn1n I Jilli 70 15 1''• :ll ~ -\\IS ) Chairman 0 t 1e JO In g11 C:tp 1 SS • 1 Vo~1g ' Sl 10.39 AJ ltl!IU•lrlei 1 ••• • • ,,~ Ch R Cl NW • '~'1 ~r: ,1~\L -'. Fll nr•e I I • ~'.J ia•, + .. Jo1ten1 10 .. :n :r. • :II'~ -• ~ Co [l odo (CX 16 ?I U 71 !c<Hldtr fund$ Aktona 11 179 3'lo :n•, iJ > -! ~ Cnoc:Full 10d l.i 10 IG • °'.j: ' ~!Into .0. 1 50 J.o10 79 ... 79'1o -• Joy Mfo t to 31 6e 6nl. 6N -o i:.CQnOmJC mm1 ee prO-gre><el !SOi l$~ In! Inv 1~ 111 '-'.t..11 G11 110 6 lP.o I~ Ill.+ •Cl>rli C:r•fl 1!6 ~ li~ 6._: I leE" Co.et 41 ~\O t"' .. .,._,,.1<111Alum .SI) 19 1t1 l~• 11"1 ed I SI th t N go reylul G•P !Pe<t l6 oO ~ 1111 Alt!oli;• l11t•r1 IOI 731'1 1j~ ll\ .. -, Cl>rl•Cf! C\lpl 1 lj>.. ll\io lJl,:; .,_ ~ f l1 (';ft! 60 n 1n, 71 ~ 1w > f l ,1 ,',' ~I ~~~ lj ,..,> l'> ' 3M \! "5\1 ,,' pos o e1n a 1xon 0,. , "JJ I>,, Bilon 16 73 10 IJ .t.tberlcC l, ti 13'1 1 ' • -'• t llrliCrt 0,11 1 , , + ,• Flft Pow 1 u 81 ,5 s • I 1!~ .. 1 11 11 t h v c $111 Alberl•n$ 3' '' lllo 11"' ••-"cnrorn•ll 60 'J •Frr PwLt 1?0 116 >' '• •1•-,K11rCt"' SI'.> 231 1'11 1•'• 1~, • on tele\ 1s1on to announce e Levue 1• "1; ~ 5 om,, F :'ill l 11 AJ•:g.t..iu to u 1t 1. 19''1 u 11 C"••m• •, •,s 71\• "'• , ., "" 5,_1 , 31 6 " 61 • ''"' +. , "'1m on 50 • '9 1 39\'I lH1 -1, Sollnc ... 1SltV•~ UI ····-·-.. , ... , •• ,,, " 91 9~,,, -•T JI" ... ,, ,,,, ',, •• k ~ ( E &1'1 d Eo IV l • l S "" "" ...,. ,.... •• > (hrv,lt 60 36 1 .......__ fluorCr 1 Ott 5' "' 1 .,. -. -1t 1 m I> ~ 9 • 1 t .. \~as as 111" •onuress or a,•~1•,"••1•,,,,,,, '""",,, ,,, ,,•,•,",',0..',•,•,..16 1 .r.ss. SJ\o .5''•+'•<· , "",,.~. »>• ~-•f1 ... , '' 7-.~ ,,,.,_ K1ncMI• !r.e 6l 16 1s1. 16\9 -. ' ' • I...... JS] 11 11('o l~ ""''* .... , 76 ... 1,,,.. 1' .... _.,,uor .., J ,,•, J l'A Sl"O Sl it -··~i·~PLI 1\1 Sl ::w ]3>,:, _,, __ ,, le'l"iat1011 lo c,e-t· 100000 GtWlh 1$SS l699 Ul!r• 10 1\11 l'Al"'I 1# '' ',. ,,,, CIM!o 2070 11• ,•,s .... 1•>.;. 1• 0 lvTJ~tr 71 .j ....... ·' " ~ tnrom '!' 1 20 Sp!e-clld f vncls Al eo 0 20! st 1J ! 11 1 ,' -1 C111n11c11 1 30 • ..., '' • 1• ~ .,_ , Fl~ llocr wl 1 .o•, '3~ L pU » VO 6-1-'\ 6'" ~ Jobs 1n government rate falls Soec1 11Js11.i ~1.0..m l~ll l1 '1.o..11r-oLud1m 11 Xl'o 19 , ll1,_ •''""GE 154 41 1~i.. 1•\\ 1•1• FtvTor 1>fl20 53 :19..._ 194 ""--..\K scv lnd ? ?O 61 "' 'H~ .llV. '• Stoc~ 1l1'1 •J" J OPP 166611fAlll!ILv<f P!l 5 j911 '.19'1 ~e., C:lnG pltJD FM C co as ,J; J,?. ,:r.o""' "•-'•,""N','l u,, n ',',, 7''1 "' =1 r1 om 1tc: current fl 9 percent t o Ebr•1a1 1• 511 H e soi 1113 19 l.! AllevPw 1 3' n• 1• , ,,,, 21•, = .: c• GE 11010 111 11e.; 11' 14-" !:MC !>!'I JS 1 _,' Ji' ~ I _ '• i.:;!~"~' 1 :ll 1~ .,~: ~'~; ~ti:= ; EPIE ~~·,. ,,111 S."I G!h •#<1 10'!'1 .o..111nEIE Ill 11 11. 19"1 19\o ..I. I n er • 1n ""~fl'> 11'~-i ,~Ood F•lr 0() 16 1"• IS•, 111• 'IC•lv Ind 10!> 1~. ll•• 1, '~icenl -the adEFCM~nluf'linl Slll'\!rvF 1.5 831 71A!ol'll C~l70 8IJl 4 .JO,..J1 -C!~MHllC1«1 20•Nn1 •• ,,,. Foo!1CR.o ,,, '' ,,,. ··-1l '' I''"· Ea G!h fl?lO~IS~tm F'd 944 9# ... !IOM•n •5 ;n ''' ••'1 ,.,~+,CIT Finl; Ill •l'4 '1 ~7 '1 1.. ,~fo:o!e M!n 1 11)>,, I&>. -e¥ P ~ \'1 ]S ... -~, 1111n1st,al>ODS)ear-endgoel Eo Pro •XI •,1Shf1t~old\'rs V11 AIOMls 1~ 11 19 • 11• lt'·-~•cc',',",svc 1io '' ~l• 43 •J•+ ,Foo1tMln or 11 11 ' ll)I;, 11 ,t :K•u•Brd 10 :11<1 ~J•• "•l ·-o • Fd Am • b'I • Sl '""''~ j •s • a.; Al !t<J Pd 68 JO ?I ) ?1 .. ,, .. '( n~.t 51 9711 )I) • 19'• 2" • -• l'"o•d M '... JS '°) "' ' ,...,,., -' Ke •PCll•I XI 11 !"-'• 1'\.o, ~ -.... .. S d h I ld E9rpf C,I 1l07 15l• ~n!rP 7JO l9t A!llll<IPdplJ •t C\lvlnv I rt 9"9 .,., "15 7J o n•, n 'K1vHrRo 60 7.l 7'!lo j•'<o 2l\O le.1ns:i1 sue apanv.ou lllvn lr '°' 1e1 Fd 6:n 680 ,,,,-.,, ''' s ri o ~9•-'<"r~I ':"1!11 ,1 M 9~ 9)-o Fo MeK• 80 ns 11 . ;~·-2 .. .,-:l(eebTer 10 1 37'• 1i... J71o I o! b I 91 -16 12'o 31\'o 3''• -lo Cl "" " .. Jf\1 JI • t > l'"l.\rK Dll 10 16 l•l'o ,3 i •"4 :;-Ktller 1!\d l6 '-' ll'• ?1 '° ?'l'lo -• add $12 b1lhon to lhe $29 b1\ r->•• ec 6 1 S7 '' ' 9 " Al1111<1$tr nl 4 160 w ' ~ 56 -r r 11V ')1°11..l' 1 ''" '1'• •l • + • FO!l t wn1 IO 11n ,.,., r• , "'.. 11(111099 1 1JS '4:'4 ~ n•·o~ 1'l ll111•1 L.,,~. 6"6 I06A11i.o .illotr llt I\ 7''1 T'~-. IV rs 1 a ... 8 .. 8'o FOllWnlpl' • 11 ...• ,. ,,;:-1,•KooevH 1311 59 Jl ~-!iV•-' l'one•pendotu,esplannedloroy11vFt«11011P1c1 ll..J611'1 At11icntl5' 1~11 , 1:w.1 .... , c 11r~Eol .io 14•,.•J1.'o .cp;i.4 .F'-.,,_ ... -.,.._'Knd !•IO 1,.,.,,, "' fO CtP 1,1n1ve!I She~fson Funcl• "llrl;t.O..ut Ml • .,... -• (l1rk OU 40 71 11 1~ JN oY...,rn ...... JO 111/, lW. 11 1, .o...., • e ..... • ' -~. 'h's Year O••tr \he 1971 le\ eJ f1 lr1!~ I '1 11 11 APO•t 7t ff l! •• .,~, p C•m lJ 11'\o "'' :l'\''1 -o (tev (")II I IO 'n '' u 6' -~ frft n~ Sir ID I 19'\"t 19 ' ,.... 1 li(enn..,tel I" > j' ,_ ,, • U '.lo • Fer..,llu 10 4'0~ !~om 1•0170111 "" l 1/Q<o 1111 11"+ •c•evE1tll )7t u JI .)U~ ."161.l FrttnY.ln IO 312 10,, 1"' 10;,.,-,._l(tr>nteott 7'l2 ~I,:,, :?l\'> ?J>t -•o f I I l I th Flclellly Group !nve-11 11 n 1'01 Alco.o t ., I• •llo-J '1" •)\, +11, (IVElll on IO 150 10'.'Vi 10") IOl\'o FrurM l 10 51 l9 38'6 J9 :;-~Y U!ll 1 6ft 11 :Hl\o Jl ~' I " Or S1mua 100 0 e Bond OJJ 107~51>Pr"'O lt JO lt 1~Am1 ISu9 l60 I ll•\ l'" 1,,.,-htlorox ?St '6 ~1 61~ 6l ~-'~FllQUl!11 llf IJ G''~ lJl'r 71 +~! :;~~c~U~ 1~ n"'• r,'Z '°ll"h 1 : econon,y. E•Pll 1J011•l? lat Fcl 1c t1110JAM. B"C so,_ •" ',"' ,',,'• lS •-"ctutnP~·,,, ?II 1:n.:. ,~1. '!V,-l, --·~···<~• . ,. 1 '• onlfd t•J!Qlj51\m• Fu11d1 m1r E1 •v JI 6 'o ?F.i -t lV.flv•llPQfl J ;n., 111'r 11Y,.._\, i!ny 7 62 IPll 10.4Jl1olO.t..mEspf160 9 .. 1, '3• '''lli +l •(N.t.1"\11150 ")3? 1''> 1~\lo 2l ll 0G1bl1!ncl 16 ~ 79'~ l'I\'> Kl eCo 6tf 56 l,l"" l.1 n·-' 'fWOUJd th1nk lh8tWOUJdbe Eue~ 1S11 1•10 nv11t 1 !to 11)01 AmH~1 .:ioct !113•7V. ..... ~I -CNAolA110 17l1V.l1 J1 .O..CCoro l1617\~11\l.1J ... -:;,Klck!IPlll• ?JS'r.~ ~ ...... ~ .l'ltlee'cessl 'e' Stein said Evt1t llll l•lt Trv11 •:121on.t.m~Hr,rl-50 16 10.t lOJ\,JOJV.-1 '°"'t SI G•• 10s n st, Jl.lo -'?gAr~oo! I 1 1,,,., l11'r 17">+~1\~tJil-1?8 1~ ~.1 ~.,, ...,,_ 1 Fld\01 161611~ mllh B l?6T12•!AA\rfl lr IO 13 7~ 17 ..... 17\'l-111o~1!SG1 Pll lt 11 .s..iti .5'1.1 "--"r:A~ O•P Cl .<11 illJ 771ow '11.~-·i. ,,.,0$11t 1'017\0 1,.. .. 7"11 +,,, He said the $29 btlhon In r~1~:: 1f~1,l;r :1~nt.~ '1 ~~ ;~!~.~:11°05. 3ll ft!: i~'; S~-.. ~:.:i?/,1 ~ ~1J~1~1 !~1J;~~1.o1.G:m~to1 t°:io 1TI o-~4 "' __ ., lnntYSY ?S "3 JOV. J!I,,, :Jt'o +. h I red I d , rrend Sl6 11 1 over Inv 1 Of1,3l ABrncl11 l9 1'-' •Ho •l&t •2""-\f"D[d'wl Bnkr_ ~ l'~" l' -•,GlfT150I 1 15 1 Oh "3llo .. J.-'h Jn1>11't' 1>1'Jl 1ltl3\',1(?3\~1Jl'l'r -l 1 tg 1er era spen 1ng is a fla•nc111 p,r11 Sp1etr1 1.M t J<i AmBclat 1 20 "' 571, s1 !1V> _ ., ~o 1Ko1nc1 °' 1 sn. n~ + v ..... s Pl i 1111 , .,,,11 n:1o ~-· n"'v 0 1 I• 18 11 n · I( t I vn1 4.l!I 1 1'1 Sl•tt llllltl!Gt .t..m(l!cluM ts 10 16V.. ~'lo 4.1 4.;. <r o a Pal l '~ 11' • 6 l'f f,1~ -1'• G1nl'<l'll 4 70 '3\'I 11 ~ + 11' ~lftfh 1111 t .ft\{lo "'616 "6V• -'4 large e ec1vc amp e ITtOu11 •oe 441 ct"' F 515 61"m C•n 170 2s1 Jl'l\ n~ .n _ ~ ol~P ll'fj!Q J s.tVt Sl\~ -~G•n:lO.n 1JO 23 "6 :~ ~~=~ ;ii'nt~rl\~ S/ ~ ~ :g::-l't 't •mulus" ITt(i>m 6l'Otlt Ov "'[ l~'''"'C1np111J 15 241'1 26~ 2&•/.l -'l-lcn!ll111~!''•"•" .,' ~, •• ,'',• ,,'~+~1 o01fklc.k ao 11 iw,. i•v. l''.<o -" °"'1'"' 209 ., n\'t Zll'I 22.,,.,, 'I'"' '$2 'ls Pro. 7,3.j Am Ctm Jll 'n 1\'o 1 1 ( •o "' ., -'' 5~c l 11 16 ITl'o 11'1! t>.ii omtrt 1.f(I 1$1 •1'1> •IV. .,..., _ ~ ho F11dV•lll6 1Jl~IFrm '•t 461 A Cheln 160 ) , ..... ,.~Ii~ 'OO'I 1""3a ~]"'I) 4•~ '1 .... -V.(';tew•~ll'ld "u 1,... lJ'•+V.K!'f"ftcor"Olnd 10 l).\lo 17 lJ -\ ' YOU may have to eat { 5e F11 t11 .. t1lor1 l" t SI ft 7 ft #'! .t..CrvSu1 ! 40 'l 'J11o 11 !o 11\~ -W o lnllt J~60 «I 1tl '9\\ 7tl'> -~ GCA Corp 412 11... 101'o 11\li -1\lo ll'r1ltco I 11 !ii ""\lo dllo ...... _ ... Dl1co IM96t lfld!T'ln Fu""s A Cv1111Z 2! l6 :15\\ 3' +I ""Incl .., ,. lt\lo , •• , lU'o .O.•L r:.m1n!CtD ,1161.1 ,, ... !'I IC' SS JO l! --"ords" Proxmire shot back Grw111 1ot011tS Am Ind ,.., •HAm 0111111 1 n•. 21""' ,1 .. -•L co11 lnel•J' 7 SJ~~ SJV. 1'\lo -¥-GnAlnv 14641 ll ... ,L _, '+ rr,oe ""tl!:i.t. ~ t " , S!ock t 6' 10 t0 A1to I" I J3 l 33 AOl1tTtl IOI 62 ~1 62~ 6N i; ('~II In M'\ "1 1• t'I 21"" y 114 0Am011 llOb ,,,tt ,_,., '~"' 1"" ~ l'rotlll..-:Kia l Vt )o"-Vt '• He said Nixon had • stolen F, Mutt 10 JO '}M, Fkf u<:. 1,xi 1.JJ Am ov11v111 11 t:1\ ti\ ,,,., = i ?Ri ~1"r' "R H" ~' ""' l :-G"T•in 1 '° !:"' :11 JI Kt.- 1 30 1 ' 7 3 n 4 11"° >"" -4 F1t Nil 7 21 t5 1~1n RM 11'1 AOUVI pf Me 10 m. ,,,. 11""' ~ vG l1\1a r\Alr" p12 XI 2 "3 :i"' Z -~ -l-the Democrats' e J e C t I 0 n Fii S~•r 6 i6 OI •1•11 ii Gl fJ 01 Amf,,l-1 1• f l' '29~ ~ 291'1 ~u,l,P 1.U 1il Ulo ~11~ ntt = ~ Gll'<ll•..c 711 • '''{o ,, lM .+ Vo lKI o., I'' XI 111' ~\ jl'lo -•,•, JSSUeS, Jeav1ng them Only the ~=r· ~tit.:I l§~~: l~~ll~r! A •• ~m, 1,i: 1~110 1 = ~~V. = ~ ~¥, n ~I >ll1 t ml n .• -i.. 2:~1li: 1~ w ~ lt ~;,.=~:.::::er!",~ J: ,._ ~ t ,,, 89."' ji) ~ ~ Jtl'I l ... t ~c of q ! r: r: +I r.~ .... ~I 'II n 16~ ~~. ,~ + "IA!r~hl It . 7 3l1., :n,~: v. economic issue ~., 1 1~ ~ 'l ff rwtr 11 16 11 :I .o. c1 ..l)t 1166 ~ ~ :i.llo -\, om tv s,,. ,,. .~ ..... _ "' G"' DY~•"' l6S 7t~ •• ~"" + 11o •.11rs1., 10 l:Jll 11'1l *1~ _ ~ SDK, il IO Kii 1 13 l:J A lf1ln1 ..S1 16' 10i1o 1''~ Xlllo + 1~ omlSal t'ilo l \lo 11".4 -V. r1nl!:1~c 1 .oo "9 ~ ~ '4') + .., l 1rr.SO o;n U :W ,.. 1,') -i., Democrats Eco11on1ic Bid Nixed DAVE ROSS PONTIAC Lease or Buy All Models ... )~(Xll!:SOn loJrJ the bUS10eSS Fourt<i 10 \I ~ ) VII( GI~ 10""' 11 ~l A Gnl11 ffl IO 12 "" l3 ~ + 'II °"'"" I' 1 n 6 17\l '"II .t?;-'.J ~ Fl~"rf'Q t 8'Vo .... J!! ~I !!~OO oC!![l1>0 "•' Ila" fil ~ :-\1_ l th l , b) de FtenkHn Gru MR APP 1! n 16tl Am nals .icl ll l~l4 l'l'V• lllltl -'4 !omwEd, '9 11?l 3~ ll ltr._ -II, f\eiFooct 1 • 10'N ]l~ ~ .,,.,... .,.._ " 16 ·~ _ • eXt"Cll JVeS a pll IC ON'tC l .«tll.«t f ttcl!lr 111011'-IA Homt 117 105 f»lo 92'1~ 'lV.+~• omw!;d rt Jta 1·1 316 J 6 G.n Hml lll 11"° ~ ~>A +I"" ,,_av tD Mo\o 1/o -~l d l th h ( I bo Grwth .u ·~ jKhnl~ 1 n j " A Home pl 1 1 13f,. 1:itl4 13" i. -" om Eel A wf I'" 'l\\ 11v. -Vo fi" 1n11 g, "j ~ ' + :it. Hd1H .If 111 !WI >\ + "' man no e w1s es o a r 1 • , • u Am H-26 101 '°"' "° -+ "" om~d 11 wt 1 ~ 1 1' .-In•" / " fi "' '"'""' .n l2 IS'" ,.,, ''-' u111 =:c •• ,p ~Am!nv•~ 1~6 1:a 1, 1l"' 1~-,,..~om .. _.11:n4.c 1011r.:?112 11ra· -V; .. n~dl<• , ... \' v.-"11 ··~~·"'-'"° 14 1>"' 11.:i l"·-1' or management Is the: force U~°3'oY 1f fi 1J D fnl i~p 1 11) i u A M~ICll ·!.i m ., •• ~ ~1 ... -Vi omwEd pf 1 ~ ' .... '"' '" ... !... 'A'filll~ t'. '? it • ~ '~ ... ~' ehVat '"" :.! m :u .... -\\ that w11l shape future changes~~." ti'..'! 6-1 r~i H~ 1l 'l,M,ra~ :W21~1C~l:ii ! i! .. tu ~ + ~ F:::~ ~I~ l W" t~ ! :-.! .. ,PQ~ •1 10~ -~=·rnc: ";, ! 'ri' 1ff ~.,. '' ~ '" •• M • • lo• m 'Jr. '" '" + '1 ~•JOll ~ \I" •• '"' -" o< "'j -• ~~"" Cw ' Jl• ,,., '"' :;-'• ln t'OLltCflVtibarg&ining" )'"~; 1\r,\llfi f.!c ,,.1 n,A~tl •1'?'9 ~ •l'l l1b om.ut"''.1• l.fl 'o e"" 1:l't-l'-tflf)1 .0 tVFlf'IC 7.S. t" 111 !J""" -'\ About t 500 corporste eJ: ~'l'i'ot 1'°' 1: ft r,, ~:AG~l, '\:i~ \i ;; ~~·•t.r 1'1 11' !ill t5 t~ =:~ s:li1ti 'tl i'~.._ ,~,~ t + ~ ~~: ~' ~ ~ ,Ji: ~ ~ ~:r:,:~~r-~=:1.r;SO 606~U 1~ 1~ 1ir~ -J+: ~.' r DAVE ROSS PONTIAC J4M HAUOI llYD • ., ll.All OllYI COSTA Maio Ph. 546·8017 ...... r DAYS A Wll• e,a '-#...TO 11 • PJ4. IUllDAl'1 II A.Al. TO f li'.M. .... "'' - '°1tives C<'(l(l(lmu1t! and other ~!.t9'Cc ,,!~ 'i' u~lh:t"' \l li l?~ .:r~~ lfllbi l'v. 1111o ~~~ +i" ~~." '-11i"' ... ' ~. ,1c1ni pf 4 1 1 1~ L titi0 d .d\41 u. _ ,, delegste."tattendedlheopen1ng"~~11rs.c 1l un1:_d!vc 1 ~::1,,..:~i°1)r 11 ""'....,. _.,. "-~ i -, !. VJJna .,.., "°+"!-~ .. C?1,fi 4.,, ~ -+1 session or I The \Vhlte I louse ::r;,. '\~ ~· ]~ G·t.1:'# 1!61 1?~ :ms~fi~~,; '' ti~ ~ fi \! + l'o : f~l! ri 1~ ~ ~ H .. _, .... ·i,,~f '.JtYo tlt:trV~o L-! Im ~l:i I ~ conftrtllC'e 0n th~ JndUStr\Jl ~&')'dSl l, .. 1 !1u:tr':rFU~I~18.1(1 ~ir.. ltfll Sl 4 M:i. ~ = ~ on(dl ' tl~ '« 11"' ':-" + \lo ' I'\ Y'1r:'\ )9 lJ~ ll~ liB !1 =; r1:::-~~~1.?f 4 h? a + :'~~~~·~,,A look at ·l~~~~:ll;;r~~ f~~1t~ai1~it.;~~~~ :;' ,.. t~;-~~g: :tr.,,:, ill~ =•a --' 1,,r,~,~!1i~~%bJ. ~', ~ ij ~i~ ',. I I l1 ~d(tl'I .. O.A~n I t ""+ !! °"' r,_ .... , rt.,"""" -\) ll. 1 .. --=~ l~t'I c~' I J~ 'iu flt -~ ' ~ ~w ,, ,,,~~ ~IM ff• •=r, ll'IC -,a F. ~ ' n ~ + " _1,, -~ c11ronlllcl :r 4\'I ·~ -Anaheim Finn ~IN° .al ff ~· ' ':ti !~ ~'""n<M"' .: "')' I ,..ll'fltJ I n• ""=',~ r."'Ji!i'llir. ~ '\; ' +"' ton Ille ~ - ,,1 •• :6i M ""-'"'" ... 4\ N or 11 1 11 1 1 I~ '~''i Am!Ha ~..,... )\\ ~ !I a Ge•~ Contract ·~...:..-•• H! 1~~ .. 111 ,:~J'fl t~.;;.,;l... 1;, if!:.~:'./ S;;: MONICA (UPI) -l~~ :,:_ ~}:t.i" :1t1!1 v~ no '! g l§ ~~? Ill i ~• t ~ f~ '~ JI i:t + i ~~f ~ 'f 1 ~ ~ ~j ~~~'\ ij ~ 1~ '~ ~ ~i Lear stegler lne hl1s reported j!S't ,':! '1 ' v~1i, ', ;9::...1;.'l ~ "'':0.' fl If i g 1:~~ ,.~·~ ~r:: ~ =i',. • 1 p,d rA ~· ~~ t ~ f" "!.' -"~ • •· U, :z,, ::,~ It bu rttt1Ved I contract ln ~;,,:.,.• I •P!!.. M 1'/ ~ R ........ ~ :fi1 l :in Iii :!: 5 .~, ~ \'I ~ -Vt ,., !J!!I "t= a "" .:~ r,-t•'J17. I J1 ~ I~ J\t ~ :t eXctM of $15 mUllon for ~lGN 14 1 :rm: ,,.. 6',li""'l•liii AIU 1 1 m + " ooHr"J'i_.1:2 \i+'U 8:t,.'iCJ._J .: ~ +"' 1 ~ ~~ 1 14 .a fc ~ ~1 + ~ classlfJed mllll.8ry equipment !~ ~,"lf< le," \6lJ ~v f~ ;! tt ·H ~JrcC:f ._ + °" ~ 11 w It n: ~ ~ -"' ~~~A t« ' -..: = ! ~:.'...~ ~ ~ "" #"' ::t'' f rom an Anny procurement I""'? 'iO. l' ;, ll n .r;; u'1 '~ !31.a ~!!!.: .i4: f tt !II \ ~5:\r. •I J 1' ft~ f;~ t 1:: s:~~r• 0 "i ~~. r.. t:'t -.... ~· d!':'t 1 °'(\to 21 pr, }J~ ~ .. .t ·: agency 11'1'!~,S~ ~Ol"lilfJi'' ~f~~fll n '1li ~r'.a.,l_YC1~1I l 1~ ~ \~~fl~ $-w~'" I n Ji~ ,tt~ tdt? =,~ ~;:;ii~ . .ti ~ f '" p t~ = f.! ~!:~ c~-:.., ,., 14 a 1': -\'II Prod J>-Ill •· do t 1 w ,,. I!, '~'.In 1 •'Ii -"c ~ U 111, ~~ 1Gh -,. !'lfr,.1 w 1,., n '·~ "'"' , ... , -" L~ .... "11e !If 171 !))4 71 ~+I'll U1,:1,.1U11 W ~ ne I ::\ W 11i'r f A l;l'<t~ \to _:t U. f.!!1.. r~173o tf '"~ .._ #"l\IJ -t~ "•~vf'rtl 1 JO :: • \ f, ~ r.•\ ~' lnY' ,.Sr a /:' • ~\ »I~ ,r + ,_~ ~tru=~tl~ J ~fv~~~D '.~ :~r.:: ~ f: jf "rr~zd ·tff .~ r "'f:Jfv 1f4 ~u ~ ~~r~~= il #? t: R.~: i~;t;''S 11: ~1 !i".: ~:1-: ;;:;~~.r ff ~1:t 1~ 1;:t +l\41 AnAhtim. ~'WI , 1ll''° "~ 'i6:.l1tll ::=~ .. ,.· :t ttmlt -'c~IC .. ~1t1t-iit.+u.GHHM•1M w-n 77\4 •Mldt•C..• G1""W.~+4' I I ' I I ~ ) l ·' l 1 I ~ • " . " ,,. ,. "' '" ",· '" . ' " 7•\o ' . " " •• ·~ l• • ' l' ~ ll l , • '" • .,. • 1'•7 • ' " . .. " .. . " .. ,.. ir" " " . .. " u " " .. " " 11 l"lo ,,, ' " ' . 11 :16"' lt JI .. ~ ., .... 60 ., •• " . . ,. ... 1 ..... ' .. • 3Sl 11110 ~ I j j I SS 1'• 11• 1'11 ' ". , ... 0 10] . ,. n J ' t<JO 1? tOO !J\o 12 I " 110 I ! I 0 66 1 I .o(I Sl S U 'I" tJ •• . " 1' 11,;, lU •~., u l'O "i ~ .. .. " • " .. ' . ~ ' " " •• ' .. ~ >M '~ ,. • • ' , .. • • ' ' • " , .. • ' " ' " ~ '" . , " " l: ... >Y l••· " • " J • • " . ' " . • " •• • "" '" " " '" " " . .. ,. " " ,. ' .. . ' Tuesday's Oosing Prices-Complete New York Stoel{ Exchange List .... .., .......................................................... , CW..I Hlfll U. QM.-0.]' Mru~ket Closes On Mixed Note NEW YORK IUPI) -rhe slotk market closed on a mtxed note Tuesday 1n fa trly active trading on the New York Stock Exchange Shortly before the closi ng bell the Dow Jones Industrial average or 30 selected blue chip stocks rose 1 89 to 905 86 ll had been off more than a point at the outset Standard & Poor s 500 stol:k in dex gained 0 11 to 104 65 Decli nes held n1ore than a over advances am ong the more crossing the tape 100 ISSUC mar~ln than l 700 lSSUCS Investors ""'ere ch erred near the bell b~ nev,rs a setllement had been reached on econom1c issues 1n the 123 day West Coast doc k strike the longest dock strike 10 the nations h1sto1 y '" '" . " ' " H~ '"' " . ' " • ~ " • ~;+ " ,,. '" '" " ..... ..... , ...... '~ "' ' " " 't. • ' ' • " " " " ~ • ". ' " ... • ' '" •• "' •• "'• ,. '" ' 71•. " , .. '" 1' ~.: • I) • ·~· 'IO-l ., ' I "" " ""' " •• • ,,, » '" "' " • " • " ' ' " "' ,, ' " " '" , ,. H •• •• ' ' . •• ' " '" • ". , .. • • .. .... ., . .. " " . ". '" ,.., " ' '" " • " ' . " '" " • • " "' ' • ~ "' '" • -~ • ,. . / j )" U I • II ot ~· l• Jo 7 I I \ ~,... 11•. j lO l' ' . . } I} Sl • II 11 7 • ,, . . . ,, )l , ' . . ~ : ~~ l l(I • 10 ~· I 1 l -10 ' ? -W X Y Z-• •Wo~l>1><0 w.c~c~ 10 W1d11>lltl ... I'. "" ~ • W $9 er~ I • • ' • . " " • ' • " •• " ' " " " ,, .. 11. t .il , I ,. .. - " ·~ '" " '" " • ' •• • • " r· • •• • " " . • "' • ... • " ''" ' ,, " ' • • ,. ' • " Complete Closing Prices-An1erican Stoel{ Exchange List ·- ,.,., - 01d1 I HI ... Lew ClfM Cl!I ,j "' ' . ~ • ... ' " ' ' ' • ., ' • • .. .. ' •• .. • • ,. "' ,. • • " "" "' "' ,. ' " ,, .. • .. " " .. ' :JOI• "" ' l• ' •• 1~ )d ~,, 35 73 139 J ' " » 6] 7 lo " • " ' • ' • ,. ' " .. • • " " • "' " .. • " " .. • " '~ ' " ' ' " .. ' ' • • ' • ' " ,. ' ,. ' ••• ' • '" " " '" .. '" " '" ". • • " " .. ,. .. l •C'o ... •• .. ,,. •• .. ~ ,.. ,.. ' ,,. '" •• Z > "" ... ' ,. ,. '" , .. , .. " ... "' .... ,. '" ... •• • • ,. .. , . . ' .,. ... '" ' '" ... .. .. 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JV. l•l 11~. 17~ n '"" tt<t ' f. ·~ • ,. h \t· lll ·~ •Slo lit ..f.'~ " " zt ,.,.-, l l!o 1~ .~. ..... J 1~, lOV, 116 v:i;, 1 Of.I Ot/J '13 11~ ! ll • s ~ .,., M ' JO ~~,~. ,, »· 30 }I ,, "" .. I 1111 11 2C¥1 10 ., 61 ""' 6 -y;>., 311,, n " " ' • • • ,. • " " ' • ·~ ' " • ' " • , .. '" ' "' • "' " ' " ' • ' " ., " ?i • ~ ' n• • • • ,~. ,,,. 'J'l'o IJ • • • l'o ,,. ~"' J ... . ' .. ' ... 7• ,, .. ?Oo 13"> " . ' ... l• Jl ••• Po 1'71o ' ' k .l~ 'll" ' • ... S+'o 4 ' " m " 18" . ' 9"-9\; ' .. • • ' . iz " '' ' " ,. 10 ' :tolo -N-C- • • •• " ... l •\o .lo '" ' ' . ' + " '" ... '" " , " •• " ' "" ,. I ...., •, ' I • " . ,~ ~ + .. 16 ... I • ' . ' ' ' . " " ' . " • " ' ''" ' '" "" ' ,, ti llt {l>tlt ) Hltll Ltw Cl911 C~t ; r· 00 6) • ,.., 6) . .. " . 'i ~ ~ ' ' .. 1? ll l~ ~ . " ' . ,, ' l~ ,: . lO II o ' .. ... ~ ~ I ' . 70 7 • • •6 11,,. . " ~ " . " u • • • • .. ' ' .. ' "' ,: • • ,, . '" • '" " " . • .. .. • •• • • ' * • • I• ,, " . • :I • ,1, '" ,. " .. • " ~ • • .. ' ' " '. .. 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"' JSl,i, Jj _., ... s j,. -• ' ' " 1 • tl ls'"' 15 "' "• . ,_., 17 .,._ ,, • 11 -.... •• ti 11--1 11 ,,.. h "' 1 Ho • 1~"" ,'~t : .... .... _.,, " I" S 4 J l lt--' ~ u .. -"• J\o l ., 1' 7\.1 -,, • •, " ); " " '• I ' ' • ' ' • I ' I I ' ' ' : ~· : ~­: ~ • . . .. . . . . 20 DAIL V PILOT Tutsdcly, r tbruary !, llf72 Everyone Has Something That Someone · Else Wants DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can ,Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results FABULOUS FOUR VACANT $26,750 'rhis hon1C": b. 1n n1u11r In condition -Jll:.l painted insidt> & out -n1•11· shag cRr1:ictini,: 111 all roon1s never lived un - <l e ruoiny b('droun1,,., ~ baths. Jargl' kit1·hr11 - double ;::aragc -1·un- vcnicnt Costa i\lr·~n l·•- cation. \'A 01· Fl li\ tcims. C.11.IJ ·""'-''' • 3 BEDROOM, 2 BATH SUNKEN LIVING ROOM $24,970 lfo1v about a richly l>CH1· ('Jed li\'ing 1·oom, ru·a1 &. spacious ki tch1•n, ("f>I'· ncr lot. cxc-rllC'nl l"''H· lion, boa ! or !railf'r ai·- <'rss, bij::" rrrf's. Thi~ 1~ il. All tcnns <1v1:1ilt1hl1• Jlurry! 4 BEDROOMS IN THE COUNTRY Jus1 u1t1 sid,. 1111• 1·1ty limit~. lhL~ homr is J years old. It has ·I l}c>d- 1'1\vn1~. 2 b;icti~. ,.,1rp- du\\"ll Jiv111i.: 1·oon1. <'IC'1". buill-1 n kllchC'll. forced air hC'Atu11:, hriek firr- 11lllt'f', Coun1r) ,,,tylc ll\- in~. 4 BEDROOM MESA VERDE WONDER A li,.au11lu! 1•uOI ~r111ng. C'nhanvcd 111 1h ;i 11t1 lrr· fall and rn<Yld ll!!hl 111~ as \·1c\1rd from an •·1~·n g!11.~s dining 1·00111. Thi~ i~ a hunir yvu can br proud 1r1 o" n. Th ,. four1h bf-drnom ran ra~­ lly lw cO n\rrted \(I an office nr drn 2100 :i:q. ft in all. 'f'ruly a nrt'!l- tigi ous, cxC'1:11ti\"C hon1c. Talki n~ S5'1 .300 rathl.'r so!Uy. 3 BEDROOM $22,500 Hr:rt""s your doll houSf'~ N~w delu.'\I': ca rpet ""'"· l'r \Valkl'd on. rl'1>ain!td le now \'llC8nt. J f~ prier<! about $1000 brio\\ niar- kf'l va.luf' and it 11·on't last so call no\\·! ( Houses IOI'" S~I· * * * * * * TAYLOR CO. THE FORWARD LOOK WITH THIS TRADE General General 3.4 Plexes aJl in a ro1v. r\J! units have :t'J bed- room. 2 bath, 1-2 bedroon1 1-1 bedroon1 . SP1\- CIOUS and close to shopping. in SUPER- RENTAL ARE A .SI96.500. PHA VA OR ASSUMABLE 6°/o LOAN IN COLLEGE PARK ASSUME A S20,400 INVESTORS DREAM! UNITS! UNITS! "IT'S INCOMPARABLE" THIS CONDOMINIUM UNITS! NEAR COASTAL WATERS 'liniqm 'llom~ UNIQUE HAS THE BEST HOMES IN 'l'l-1~; BLUFFS, 2 bedroon1 . buillin kitchen, upgraded carpels and drapes lo1v ass ociation fees. ON THE GREENBEL'J'. Sec and corn- pare. Only S27 .950. GI LOAN AND Dorf! 1nis~ this r1u·r l)al'J:a n1 -U.•L ll'n<i.nls pay your rrnl'. Vc!'y spa!·1ous un1ls. Clost' IQ Ol'.can. t'arn1 st.vii.' kilch· cns • fuliy 1'(]u1pl)f'fl · ovens. rani;es and refr1grr·ators! Dining 1uon1s~ 2 bcdruon1s rx>r un il Garden I i k r grounds. E.x!rrn1rly an.-.;iou~ 011nr1· Jt;~-r HEDL"CED PH/CE TO O."\"LY .527.000~ Call at or11·e • ti45--0:l0~ • , , ...... IN THE BEST AREAS IN MESA VERDE: A S31 .SOO 3 Bedroom 'l'his is a nifty ho1ne! Nice neighborhood \\'ilhin a \l'alk to schools, shopping. library and <'hurches. f'arnily roo1n , <"OZ.Y fireplace and handso me shingle roof plus rust color shag. ··Th is ho1ne has charm. honesc ·· PRESENTED AT S31 ,SOO. PHONE 546·S990 GIVE IN TO TEMPTATION PAY ONLY SI87 TOTAL PER MONTH. : • :: Ef'UH,.,111~ i•Ud F:11111l.\ Houn1 • Big Yanl ' e Close lu ::khooJ.~ • Clo.~c ro Sl1oppu1g I e Clos(' u1 on this unr. You "IJ hf> .£:lad you d1U. e C;dl :i~G-2~11:; -View ot-UCI &HiTIS Lln111ur IJac•k ba). t ~I) roRt:Sl [ OJ.SO.\ '" REA l T ONS -----~~~/' ----- AND BUY 1'his three bedroon1, ~ bath. !'1replace and FA!\·JI LY ROOilI, ca r pets & drapes. 2 lovely patios. pool and recreation roon1 . Easy access to San Diego free1rav. In 1nodel condition. . $33,500. CAN'T FIND IT?? WE CAN!! AND IT'S FEE IJ"'I 'J'URTLE ROCK. ;3 Bedrootns. fa1nily room. 2 baths, atriun1, bl1iltin s \vith self cleaning oven, shag t.·arpeling an ~ custon1 drapes. Large covered patio \\"ith super land- ocaping. WOULD YOU BELIEVE $47,900. liuu\r :>.. it I u r a I \100!.l South Coost Plaza IN CORONA DEL MAR: A Delightful Home 3 bedroon1s. 2 bath on J·lazel Drive \l"ith can· yon and ocean vie\vs fron1 sun porch. Super lar_ge n1aster suite and a great central patio area for entertaini ng. Perfect hon1e for a couple 1vho travel or have a teena!!er. 1'his is a like-ne1v hon1e tn a ouaint old area. PRESENTED AT $80,000. PHONE 67S-6000 THE LAST WORD IN STYLE 1·nll11"lral ~·(•dln~s .~ antlt/tlf' Jr,ulf'd gla!>.S 11 indo11·~. 4 tulru~~ . .\· d<'n ,\, halh Ori !01,C'I' l!'\!'I. Splil lr1cl l.'11· It)' Qfl('ll Slll il'\l;).I lo llflfll'J" Ir·\ o·! "1th lar:..:r h·~. rooni. usrd bnt•k frpl. All ('le~·­ k ll halh, an r! d111- 111g/fa111il) !'Will 111111 pauo (JBlr Iii 1:!"'1 I" drck. l·,\1111 larl!r ~an.I. \laturr tr('es. C111 rrrd 11a1111. Ch•~r 10 ;:1'<Hi1• ~cl1onl itll•I p1"l!J.1<1~•'d aquatw 1111rk :'i.~9.~llO. ~0:.!·11 IJ1111 1r11 1('nduf\IC',,,.1 Uri :11(':..9~l lii 1 ~ ht•rr h~· !bis lanlasric nr11 :.! li11Jl"Y 1 hf•lliUOJll. ;; lk\111. fan1ily n.10111. forinaJ cl1n1ng rJ1Jn1, ho111r. lt"s lu s h 1·;.11·pr1s ,{ llrapr~-<'XPO!'ecl l)L~un 1·r1l111J:i.-surwl<'cks and ~11rdt'n frrsh land.~l'.aping. Tu1;1I down 1i.OOO and "IN THE BLUFFS" l 'ou have a vie1v of the bay fron1 all 11·indo\\'S. 3 bedrooms, 2'-:! baths. builtin kitchen \\'ilh self cleaning oven. EXT RA P.l\'1'10. on the greenbelt. :\ lovely buy at . S4 5.950 ll~SUlllC' fl j•. V.A, Pt'I("(' nnl.\ S 11 .. lOO :,IG-2'.JJ:: NO\I . 101111 C<1ll 2443 Eas.t Coast H ig/"lway Corona def Mar 675-6000 2850 lvlesa Ve~de Drive C.osta Mesa 5•h3·5990 'llrurport 'Beach. ,-:;;:-~1~1111!!!!!!!!!!!!11!!1!!!!!!!!!!!1.;;c~o~m~;;"•::.;:s;o~o~"!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .. ll!!~' -HILLSID1;_ - WITH A VIEW General-------G;neral REALTORS 644-7270 -SUP_E_R-SALE SL MOVES VET IN j Bil; BDn:\IS. :; BATll.S. S38,SOO -GEM- : l:lH, "1 BA .. forn1al din rni..\-------------------- """' lo>. VACANT' "'"' LA HACIENDA-Anyone For Golf? ~\~~7 .. :ljll ~-or 1r-"t·n1s. ealt OLE! $34, 950 I 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF. lti10 \\' C"oas1 H11 y •. :-..B. HE1\l.TOHS 1>4~·4621 RED CARPET Rea Ito" BEACH AREA Th""""'' goll <ouo>e. b"' ••••••••••••••••••• 1t rs righ1 on a pro-G I General -~ve1iu1v Page~" or l"lass1ficd ... 642-.-'678 J -4 FORMAL fC'~S11J11al!y rn1n1curl'<l pUl · 1-•-•_•_•_•_______ ·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; DINING .l 2 ""• gm<o '" N'" p 0 ,. 1 ABANDONED ! ! " General General -------------------1Ser this a1Hh£'1Jlii· Spanish <·ntry'. Fron1 lhrrr slf'p I do11'n into 1hr spac·ious \·nul!· cd 1·c1Jing l!\·1ng rou111 111rh l ... .-i1i1,..-1i1rr,.lilol. n1a.s:>1vr r1rf·placr· t·orn1al I I ~lining J"Ollni'. Thi ~ gn11rn1f't· i::-ardr n J.;1t1•hrn takes .vou , ou1 to patio i.:randl': Giant j I I n1as1('l" SU!lf' \\ 11h tll"f'.~SIJ\j:: 1ahlr and \1<1111111 ··lnsr: I B c ilch "s l1o<'sl eon· do1111niu111. Thf'rr .;1r(' 1110 ~11·1n11111 ni; puob in 1111.~ g:u·dcn l1k!' co n1 rn u 11 i I~ . 5 -FAMILY + DINING <--Orls1st1ng of 33 hom('ll on j ·GOLF COURSE- a('rt'S of land Thr hon1r is \\"oii·'. An abandonrd /\lhl'n· lhrf'I ' bc1froorn~ a r1<I 1110 inn Villa Q\"('l"lookln.c: 011(' of halhs at lhr lu11·e..,1 p1·1cc Orange Coasts mos! ext•lu:;. f'1•cr Can Bl• S h o 11 n i\·e i;:oU eour!'rs'. l'"rorn Co1- 1\ll,'tlrnr. Ciill 1.;16-Tiil ni!hi;in ii·0n g;i l(':' tn a1r1u111 NEWPORT HEIGHTS Channing r{'n1od{'l{'d : bf'rf· roon1 hon1e 111th rl1n1ng l'oom . n('11 plun1li1ng and II 1r1ng, a!l1·.~· at<-'CS~. Newport ,, RATED "X" FOR X'LNT OPPOH'rUNl1''' -sellers highly motivated: Lge . 4 81~. 21:: ba family home; quiel Harbor Highlands st. <iSktng S49 .500. C'hur k Le"1is I 2 t11orr king i<1t.r' hf>dt.,)()111~ . 'l halhs' B1kf' to h":t•·h or !Bkt· a ing .52:0.9fr, Call ti45-roo:: lo the nias~l\C l'ntr.1 -Dr· lu.xr~ 5 g:1an t bf'rlroon1.~ . ;: I bath:;. lhigr famih· ro..1n1 + __ . __ '1 for1na! din ing. ),;;.,)::. ~llt' 20'x f•irview 6'46-8811 (•nytime) TURTLE ROCK-"BEST BUYS" 4 BR. fain rn1 . dill. rni. cent. a r S4!J.750 4 BR. den , di n rtn 212 ba $51 .500 3 RFL fJin r1n ., 21 :: ba. tPnt a/c $59 .500 Pools -tcn111:;: courts. Belle Pa rtch MAGNIFICENT MONACO ·rravelog·.1 No. but hon1e buyers better log this Nc\1'porl :-.pot! l .. avish \\'ilh decorator drape:-.. paper~ & upgraded cuslli oncy car· pets. 3 8/{. $48,900 -Fee. Bill Comstock BAYSHORES-$59,500 ('ho1ee 101.:ation near sandy beach. 3 Bdrnt1:. l1v1ng roorn \\'fireplace & l·'l/~ baths; recent- ly deco rated. f-larry Frederick WATERFRONT BALBOA COVES 3 BR. DR. lanai. fatn. rrn . -1-sep. guest rn1. & bath. Spacious roon1s. f'un for sum1n er home or lge. fam . Sandy beach & pier. $85,000. Charlene Whyte BAYCREST ·POOL . $72,800 ·OPEN IBOI HOl.IDA Y HD. 3 BR . den. low mainten· an ce garden & patio. Definitely under mar- ket. See ii SA'f. or SUN. 1·5. Bob Yorke STUNNING Departs from the ordinary. Corner. landscap- ed beauty -in ~!arbor Vie1v Jlills, 3 Bed- rooms plus family rm. $65.000. Jin1 ~luller ONE OF OUR FINEST BEAUTll'UL BA YCREST. See this 3 bdrm ., fam. rm., formal din. rm . ho111e . flnmaculate inside & outside. Cared for by original O\VD· ers. 179,500. Bud Austin IRVINE TERRACE . VIEW OPEN 1 to 5 THURS. & FRI. Feb. IO & 11th. I827 TAHUNA. Lovely 120' view lot. Large 3 bdrm.. 3 bath home. Room to expand $74.500. George Grupe PRIME LIDO LOCATION With pier & float for large boat. 4 Bdrm., large paneled den. Nel\'ly & beautifully dee· orated. Eileen l·ludson fORf\l E OLSO.\ '" REAi. TO/I S , Near Harbor High C1·ral :i t.rdroo111 lan1il) I ho111r in 1·ho1cr l(11•at1on, 11 alk !o \\"rsrl·l1 fr ~hoppu1g Cl'nlcr. :\n·r fan1rly roon1. ".!I baths-:jpat.:1u11~ l11•1ni:: r111 '1ilh !lrepbu·c -Hi t ii1 kllt·hrn -Plu,.; 1.i.,.;;2 h<'.ill'd pool aod nice pal.lo. A~kin:; .5::6.:iOO. \\"011·1 laS1 6 73-8.). 'JO. OWNER ANXIOUS .\loving 1o Idaho-Must sell lo11'e!I. pr1ct'd 2 story horn!' EASTSIDE -Hi" l1v1 ng rouni. DeC"ora tors POOL HOM E l 'OUl'h an O\"('t". P;i.rk IJkr l!"~'<E'~ VALL"r: p L 1 · s ~round~.+ _oJ_P.~:CT GOLt' Th rr•· h<lrr11s., ~ liit1h.,, s1i: t:~~UP..~t. \I~.\~, . o ri I.~· k11;:hrn, .argf' M'l'I fl·r porcli i $:~ .500 · .\ _r11!11~'.:s~,1r \ .iluc. ,it1<! 12 .. ,1~. p:ltl('l<'<I den.I Call no1\ • tila-03ll, •. f•\('t~11.cd hcaie<l & ftl1errd1 p .. ot 11·11h rlrf's.~1ni; roon1 & 1•nll'l"la1nmf'nl bar. D h I . i.;arage on all!'.'y. <"Ompletely block \1all lcnccd and neat I ORt\I L 01.SIJ\ " RfA Lr ORS as a pin. An r :>,t:f'llcnl huy l-~~~~--- " 001·' ""·"'~ "111' io·: YOU NAME IT rlo1\n. COLWELL PROPERTIES, INC. Fo·merl) loBord•' R E 220 E.17th St., CM. Carr 646· 0SSS TI11s House I/as It: fll 6r( Assumable. \/.A. Loan 121 VA-F'llA Terms !31 Cul-De·Sac Street ( 41 Near Schools & Shopping <SI Excellent Shag Car~ts !61 Beautiful Tile. Patio 171 Paneled Family Room Evenings call 645-4483 (81 Heavy Shake Roof (91 S215 total n1on1hty -~-P'Ymenl LJ All this "'ilh four bc<.!roon1s THE BLUFFS a_nd 11 fan11ly room. Greal in .\lesa V<rdl'. ·1 Bedroon1. ,\RE you l1red of those separate dining room. den, 1 endless 11eekcnd gardening 21:.r balhS, o\'ersil:ed lot "·i1h l"ho1~s'.' TIH:'n call us for .en Jo am1ly Honie. Call MG-2313. room for pool. FHA & no a11poin1n1en1 to inspecl thU; do"·n VA ten11s a\·ai1. :i bedroom condominium al 1===;N~O"'=D"O"W~N~== CaJJ ~llj\ 1()pen t-:\"es• t~1C' BLUFFS .. Rooms arr To Vets., loiv down 10 all. h:i:b1 and spaC)t)US and the ..... --in" 3 bd • I I ~• 1• • 1 ., ...,,...,·111-,. nn . .,. enc . rt~.., pa 10 15 comp f't,.,y laf'llli; I~ balhs, frpl c, r .A. private. $46,000. heat: clec, bit-ins. Carpets ~&CO.I Ir drapes. Nlcdy lndscpd. · -----------.:-•=m."" You 'U kn.-e II! .. PATIO PARTY SOUNDS UKE Pr;"" or ~.::..'h!~1, •. ,,,,. Cas B-B·Q In 1~ pallo. j \Vi,.;hlul thlnin.... bu1 ii' ntt Jot for pri~~. AU 2 Plate to park ca.mpt'r and , .... '6. 1 --, bolit ~UW kitchen. 11·u~. lfere • the (.'Omblned Bdrms. A good buy! lranqufltty or ~11burlmn !iv· MORGAN REAL TY NewPort Int with ~vt"ry town eonven-67~2 47~59 i{'ncf'. N f' a r churchea. 1-.0.ii.iOiiiiiiiiii;i;i,.i;iii. j "<'hools, shopping L'enlf'r and . , F golf COUMPC. 3 Bdrm!! plua •irview 1l~n plus two" firepla~!.. Macnab-Irvine 646-8111 ' M7-6010 Booutlfvlly 833.0700 (inytime) DKOr•hNI layfront -'I•!!!!!!!!!!'~~~!!!!~ 3 BR, 2 Bathl, littplA~. .......---~ I, ! Ma1ro pool. Boal slip Coldwell D--L.-$22, 750 ~=======::r •vallabl<. Frank Poralla. Macnab-Irvine .,,..._. llY. OWNER I O.·ne•, Ir 4 BR~ lun rm, &IU23;, 64-4·2430 ..... EALTO•S 3 B• lonn do'n a 1 Jn Santa AM. 3 Br. 2 car ·~· • !l."!Um n, rarage. Shag cpl!.. Covt.r1!'d S38.9;i0. Prine only 557~1823 Choice Eastside Location Thi~ eharn1ing :: lx-dnxl!n has all r leC'tric k11chen. Loadi; or t'upboard Jn :o:pol lF,;s cQnd11ion. Choi('f' Joca1ion on a <1u i e1 1·u l-dr--~al' st1'C('1. Price lo"' for quick salr at only S3t,7:il. Call 11011 and src. ti7J....8.5'JO. 1-0· THE REAL '."'\.. ESTATERS ' ONLY $27,900. NO DOWN GI TERMS for this 3 bcdroo"\ adult OC'· 1:upied ho111e tn lho\vcase 1·ondition, ft'aturing l5'xl7' family arPa, profP-'J.'lional landscaping, brick B·B-Q and vacant for quick oc- cupancy. CA.II 540-855.'i. SHERWeeD REAL TY 18964 BrookhUnil. F.V. Reduced To Sell! Only one likf' this 4 bedroom homf' In Dean Ga..rdcNI Iha.I lg available. ~luge rna..ster bedroom, walk-tn clottt 1vith bath with !Ullkf"h 1hol1·cr ll.n.'a. Priced to sell al S44,.i00. Over!llized lot, camper or trallf'r. Storage f'nciosed and plumbina; and wiring in for poot For information -C&.ll 646-71TI. 0 THE RI.AL "\.. CS TAT I :FS FIXER UPPER 4 BEDRM + 2 B•TMS NHdit tender lov'n t:nrt. . \V /W c;rpfs A drpt. ideal hnme tor lazie tamilyt Try Zll 0.% for family of 5. or GT·Fl-IA terms available. Call 84,.ml, SSO NEWPORT CENTER DR,. N.11, pallo. Ion«<! yard. Will ,...,,,. , D•ily Pllol Wail AdJ """' '42.ft3S +44-'2'0 ~""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~' . .!''i(jd:';cr~lc<'On<l~~· _!136-~56~72::_. __ bar"K''dns plore. 1,..,..,..,.,....,.,...,..,.., SEYAIOUR REAL TY t71•1 Beaeh Blvd .. •runt. Bch. ( , PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT J Linda Isle Drive -Open Sunday Beautiful ne\1' 5 l~R ., 412 13A. llon1c. \\'ater- fronl li vi ng rn1. & ro 1·111al dining. 1--landsonie oak panel led fatn, rnJ. fr plt.:., wet bar. Large 1naster suite ha s frplc. & c.:ozy !ounge Jirea. ,·ie\v of l~a_,. & the n1ounlain!' $179 .500. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Islanders Bldg. at Linda Isle 341 B•yside Dr., Suite I, N.B. 675-6161 Gene-;; I (3eneral BA YSHORES VIEW & POOL \Vaterfront 1.:uston1 hon1e. 4 bcdroon1 & den or 5 bedroon1s. 51 :..i baths ·ron oualitv t·ar- peting. draperies, 1r:illpaper & fixture!' \"1e\v rro1n most roorns. 87' lot. s pac'1ou.s yard 111th beautiful gardens. S240.000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR lsl•nders Bldg. at Linda Isle 341 Ba ysi de Dr., Su ite 1, N.B. 675-6161 Newport Bay Area ·• HORSES Guest House Custom 1 /3 Acre Plus! \\"011 ! HOR.SL PROPERTY ,\J: PLLl!::i:; l.K'<l1·001n gursr house 1or rental 1r )uu ("hQOS('I ll'lfh <.lilllll~ 1\>Vlll and l'O\"f'l"f'd p()r("h' llrr .~ !he 1.:ing-cus101n bu1!1 :: !ie1J1·001n-2 ba11i r s 1 a ! r : fJ"Q111 lhf' srt·ludcd a1nun1 ('n(J) IQ ~lair l"tl\"f'red roycr 11 tlh 111'0ugl1f iron ralls-clt."'l.u:..{'· HugC' !1\'Ulf:: 1uon1. 111a<t..,1\r ~ r tin r f1rrpl<1.~·c 11 l!h bu I ! I -1 n planters + ra1sC'<! r<u ·k hC'a1·1h: ~OR.\!l\L IJ!Nli\l; P.00.\!. Fa111d.v ")(Jn1 a n4! OUI 10 lf'tll\OOf! M 1rre1t patio 11'1!11 br1<·k 88Q' Ord~ 10'1 do1111' G1cldJar1 ~Call ti IJ.--0:.:0:l. IORISI E OJ.SO~ " R £JllL TOR S LICENSED SALESMEN WE NEED YOU f'or nui• 2nd rral cslatr ofriee on 17th SI., Costa ,\J csa .. , OfK'n1ng soon' If' YOti * Arr encrget1,. & rn!hUsi- ast1l· • i\lust ha\"{' lugh lrl4"'01l\C' * En)Oy happy surroundings • Like re~. or c·on1111. prop. Tl!f::"ll CALI. HOPE GERRIE RLTY. 645·4400 -0NLY-S18,000 - s11arp l\\O lxlr111, li•i111<-Fun) , arpell'tl an•! cl r a pr rl . r~LEC B/f 1-:JTCllT·:>: Dhl ~11 ragc -lar;i;r f<'nt:r~I )f)I Pl'rff'('I ~la r'!{'f hu1t1(' CALL TODAY BIG CANYON Golf Course Estate BRAND ne\v five bedroon1s, ramily roon1, .1 baths. 3 car i;aragc, J fireplace!<., scpar· ate guest roo1n , vic-.v corner lol. Less than SI00,000. Dri\'e by 26 He.nnitagc Ln at P.oyal St. George Rd .. NCI\'· po11 Beach and tht'ri t·aJI G44-JJ40. Newport Island Duplex on the "'ater. Beaul. cond. You live in one. rt'nl Ohl!" out. Kttp )IQl.Jr boat at noat by front door. A bet- ter buy at $82.000. CORBIN- MARTIN REAL TORS 644-76'2 $28,500 4 Bdr. + Family Rm. Larrt room1. 4 twin Alzed bedrooma, hugt tarnlly rm ., dlning nn .. tntry hall, buU1- l111. st().-173> . TARBELL a» flarbor, C~ti Mesa CLOSE TO BEACH J....a.rrte 3 BR. 2 ba. 'dupln wtth :1 ftrtplJcet. l!iG,001 • TERMS Would You Trade )our fl"C'<' ,{-1·lear hon1e f1Jr a 111ot111taln lodgr 11ith a Jan- 1as11t· 111t11n1r \11th 7•, l1na111:1n:; HI 110 i·Q.'I. Call for rurt/l(l' d<'tads. Would You Believe? .\10.001 111 C.\lra.', ~ flld1Q~. E-Z e&rr )ard. ~·11'C'plder. drrr ~tu·~ 1•;1rpr1~. :i bcdl'oon1s. ".!'~ ha1hs. all this &.· 11101"<' s:: 1,.:UJ Happiness Is Harbor View L1k<' 'lf1<"t1 !!>J>ilf'(''. grrf'n f1arl;~. ,11 11111n111t: 1-"'°I' awl t"'1Slli<I l11·111g~ T;1k1· a look a1 111 1~ Pnr1•1lu111 \[()(!('! 11 ll h .~ h1•d1"ooms and :: bath~, llu;;" 1rl1'a ~P·•~'f' 1'00n1 , rull) rlt't'1>1".1ll'd \I 1111 •' U ~IO 111 ,:, "I"" and II a I I 11 a pf' I' e\r11,1h•·r1· L;i.·a1 1on 1ir u11h .. ,11ah!1'-lt1~ll! ••ll t>rr'ru B1,J1 ~ C;11l 11011 t•• ,<'I.' ll11s Beaul~. S67.:iot:l. j l6-:l3J::. IRVINE TERRACE :itK'<·la<"t1la1· v1r'1 n( Bay & .lf'lly Lo\"rly. f'n1 •tn~f'rl }ill"fl "i!h ff>un ta 1n \~11 111g l"OUlll a111I k•n1u1J llh11ng a.i·ra Pl'otrs~1onal 11f't h~1· \'1,.11 -~1tlr fan11l,1 100111 I Rrcll'fi<1m.~ .~ •1 ba!h . .,: s l80,())fl REALTORS SINC t; 1944 673-4400 Bargain Hunting? Th{'n look al lhis Sl1li.Jll 3 Bdrm home 11•ilh largr cov. patio. l.oeaterl in good Hunt. Bl'nch arra qn quirl ··ul dr S3l' ~lr('('I. Appraised al SZ7,200 G.I. 847-'0JO !-i>l THE REAL ~ ES'_I'J\J'E~S THREE YEARS NEW Shal'p Eastside: .t bt-\:ll'Oom, 2 bath plus dining room and encJo~I patio, b 11 I I I i n kitch .. llreplru:e & clbl gar. ~P. 8Ccluclf'(I IOI on qUiC'I eul-dE'-sac. O"·nf'r trans:fcr- r-.xt. Must 11ell. Pl"l\!t'd only S32,500. Call 546--assG <Open E\let. l I~~~ Style Conscious Lo\lely 3 Bdrm. homr-on 11 huge <-'On"lf!r lot, lmm•cu· lat.f' throughout and J)riCttl at only $25,950. Ju81 right tor lhat fir111 homr. Nt-,..· Ahal ca.~t in r vcl')' room. To ~ call 847-61UO. O T H EREAL ')<. ESTATERS . . . George Wllli•m1on The lutttt draw tn the Weit Re1ltor ..• • Dally Pilot aa..1&ct 54MS70 '4S-I .164;..:...:.:••:....:.~c.;::,.:.:•-+--- I I _.. . . ~ ~ -- Laguna Beaeh Today's Final .N.Y. St.eeks VOL. bS, NO. 33 , 2 SECTIONS, 2b PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1972 TEN CENTS, Greenbelt to Laguna Crime, Disease? By FREOl':HICK SCllOE~1Elil. 01 t~t Otllw Pll01 51tlt A greenbelt around the c1l y of L<igu1u1 Beach "n1akcs sense. both cconon1ica! and sociological," a study by a UC Davis systernti ecology professor ha s co ncludt>d. The study by Kenneth E. F. \Vatt main- tains that tax cost for schools and city services increase rapidly with urbaniza- tion . He claims that crim e and disease rates also climb as an area becon11e s 111ore populated. • "All through history. an argument for developing an area has been that through broadening the tax base. there would be more people to share the costs of an urban area, and the tax rate would go down. "In fal'l, there is no evidence lo sup- port this view at all, either from theory or from analysis of the financial data ()n all the urban areas ()f California," the Davis profess()r noted. Vtratt based his conclusions on computer IXOll Jury slrnulation models. funded by t~ Ford foundation. lo determine how the state ·•ope rates. and will operate in the future under additional population growUl ." As more people move into an area. \\'alt wrote. an unusually high number of young people in the public school system results. "This means that a high rate of populalion growth leads to an imbalance in the ratio of tax consumers to tax pro- ducers wh ich crushes the middle class taxpayer." Verdict 'Service S£ation Seven'· Found Guilty By TOl\1 BARI.EV 01 ll!t Ollly Pl!ot St1tr The "Servi ce Station Seven" are guilty. Thal was the verdict of an Orange County Superior Court jury ri.tonday night after four da ys of n1ull1ng rv1dcnce ra ck· cd up in the marathon eighl-\11eck trial of 5even Orange Coast residents. The obviously "'ea r~· 1u rors rclurncd guilty verdicls on c1gh1 of the nine counts of conspiracy with intent l.o cheat and defraud Orange County motorists and they named Jerry Kendall. 35, of 969 Sonora Road. Costa Mesa . in two of those guilty decisions. Kendall had been named all through the trial with Stanley Davis, :14. of 1086 San Pablo Circle . Costa h1esa and Edward Carney, 27, or 20862 Shell ll arbour Drivr. J~unt1nglon Beach, as one of the three architects of an auto repair fraud linking I I service stalions ranging from Seal Beach to San Clemente. .Judge James Turner ordered all seven to return l\larch 1:1 (or sentencing . They f::i1·c a possible slate prison term of up to 10 years. Judge Turner scheduled Feb. 29 for a hcanng on a molion for a new trial after complitnenling defense attorneys Al Stok- ke, Frank l\1o ran and George Shibata and prosecutor ltichard Stenlon for their ·•gentlemanly conduct through a Jona and exhausting trial. "\\i·e hear a lot th ese day1 about courtroom problems created by the likes of the Chicago seven and Charles Maroon trials," Judge Turner told the jury. "We Lag1111a Lalvn1a11 Injured By Berserl{ Drt1g Si1spect A Laguna Beach police officer suffered a broken rib and muHiple bruises ~tonday while allemptlng to subdue a kicking. yelling man who allegedly 'A"<'IS und er !hr influence of narcotics. J\fotorcycle patrolman Arthur DcLuca is expected to be off dul y fri r al least a \\'eek as a result of his inju ries, authorities said today. The lank y suspect ""'ho allegedly caused his injurie~ "'iHi iden!ificd as Frank Albert llopkins. 21. a tr;insiC>nt. He was booked on charges r1r being under the influence of drugs. re~1s1 1ng ar- rest and assault on a pol!ce ofl lcer as a result of the \Voodland Drive inc:ident. Jn addition. police claim they found a small quan!ily of mari juana on l·lopkins when he was booked inlo city jail. He al so is wanted by aulhonlles for failing to ap. pear in court on a traffic citation. police added. According to DeLuca 's report, lhe police office r accosted Hopkins on Woodland Drive because of the suspecrs ··unkempt appearance" and asked to see his identification. DeLuca claimed the man was having difficulty standing up and allC'mpted to place him under arrest for being under the influence of narcotics. The suspect allegedly tried to resist, kick ing Deluca in the groin, police said. so DeLuca s!ruck the man in the legs \\'llh hls baton. Hopkins. assertedly shouting obscenities. then tried to turn over the policeman's motorcycle. DcLuca ;isscr ted. Officer Willbim Heiden arrivt'!d to give assistance ri nd the two patrolmen finally succeeded in handcuffing the ki cking, yell ing suspect At one point in the strug- gle, llc1den said , the.v used chemical mace on the man , but without any re- sults. Hopkins conti nued to struggle upon ar- rival al ci ty jail and had to be forcibly placed Jn a holding tank, authorities said. He was later transferred to Orange Coun· ty Jail pending arraignment at South Orange County Munici pal Court. Planners Amend Limif,S On Laguna Population Laguna Beach planning com missioners Monday night ag reed lo amend the city's land use element by stressing that the figure of 20,000 as a population ho]djn~ capacity Is not to be ronsldered a "limit or 8 statistic that would on A given dale create a clo!K!d barrier to new residential populatlon of the city." A propo!ia1 by Commissiorrer John fl.1cDowell to keep the 20,000 figure in the text was accepted by tht commission with additional wording that the figure must be restudied annually In li8!!t or changing economic and socia l condilion.o;. Q:immls11loner.5 also agreed to include a 1peclfic justlflcaUon for the 'Z0,000 .figure prepared by r:halrmen Carl Johnson. . Wayne Moody, director of planning and Mvelopment, 1aid he would combine lhe McDowell and J ohnson sta.tc:menls and present them to the city councJI for public hearing at Its Feb. 16 mcetini;t . 1'be commission also nodded approval to "' statement encouraging planned residential development on hillside lands, with clustering, mlnjmum g ~ad Ing. preservation of natural features and opt.II l?>C<. ' Tn justifyin,e: the 20,000 figure , Johnson said there is a possibility for 10,m dwell- ing units in the city und er present zoning with an average of 2.3 persons per unit. By including a 19 percent vacancy fac· tor: the populaUon the city can hold is 20,542 persons said Johnson. "I believe we want the population figurt'!s to remain unchanged ," Johnson concluded. Johnson pointed out that the 2.3 persorui: per unJt Is based on present ocaipancy fact.o rs and that it11 "unrealisUc" to use future projections. ''There ls 1 great !>0-"iblllly for error In projecting bousthold size," he said. Bloodmobile to Visit Tile Red cro.. Bloodmobi le will be al the Laguna Beach Co mmunity Presbyterian Chureh Monday from 2:30 to 7 p.m. accepUng donations of blood from residents. Persons desiring lo donate may make •n appolntmenl by callln1 191·3889 or SU. 1381, have nothing like tha t here and I can 't recall being in the presence of a more devoted pjury or more gentlemanly at- torneys." The verdict obviously came as a blow to all seven defendants. Three had openly predicted a few hours before the jury returned that they would be cleared of charges that produced an Orange County Grand Jury ind ictment. Conv icted with Kendall, Davis and Carney were Roger Mendenhall, 28, of 26095 A venida De Seo, Misi;ion Viejo, David Concbol1, 21. of 6000 Ga rdeq Grove Bl vd., Westminster and Christopher Enri- quez, :S, Of 7592 Volga Drive, and Henry C.itoriguay. 21 , of 7661 Commod ore Drive, both of Huntington Beach. They were all accused by nearly 30 pro- secution witnesses of participating in a co nspiracy that included the deliberate puncturing of patrons' tires, the destruc· tion of radialor caps and seals and the performance of needless and costly repair work. It was alleged throughout the trial that customers were pressured into having their cars hoisted on the lube bay rack in the pretense that supposed defects co uld be better spotted from that location. Fonner employes and customers told the jury that damage was inflicted to their cars and shock absorbers and fuel pumps were sprayed with oil to gjve the impression that the parts leaked a n d shoul d be replaced. All three defense lawyers announced their irrtention to appeal the verdict if Judge Turner denies the motion for a new trial. The verdict "·as seen Monday as a ma- jor victory for the district attorney's fraud squad in a campaign to combat "·hat was stated to be before the tria l started a growing auto repair racket in Orange County. Most of the Arco . Mobil, Shell and Tex- aco statio.ns involved in the conspiracy are now under new management. Investigators conceded after the verdict that many service station ope rators in the afrected areas are doing their best to upgrade their image in the community. All four oil companies are reported lo have assured lawmen that future leasing of their statK>ns will be rigklly supervised in a determined effort to eliminate the type or practice that led to Monday's verdict. Solon Seeking Wealth Limits In California SACRAMEN'l'O (AP) -Mulll·mllllon. airea have received unhappy news from a DemocraUc lawmaker. Assemblyman John Burton, chairman of the A!sembly Rules Committee. in· troduced Monday 1 bill lhal would forbid ftnv Californian to pmea more than $2.5 million in wealth. The San FrarlCtsco Democrat'• "share lhe weallh'• bltl would mak• ll ttl•gal lo lnheri l more lhan $1 million unlet1 lhe heir was a widow or widower. Similar teg!Jlallon by Burton IHl year, nicknamed the "Robin Hood bill." waa klDcd In the A>iembly Rl!venue and Tu Commllt.e. Burton .. lllmed Mond•y lhal 4,llOO Cal- lfomla muttlmllllonalres coolrol $10 bl~ lion ol the olalt'• weallh. ''Such a concentration of wealth. In rny opinion, ii nol cornpatlbla with lhe whole Idea ol democncy and i.. nol hea lthy for the economy." Burton said. Money 11klmm~ out of multl·mllllon- alre11' bank accountJ would be wied for a verletr of anU~poverty programs. Burton 1ald, but he mentioned i:.o specific proj- ect. I Communities growing at 0111.c percent 1 year, \Vatt pointed out <.:an expc<.:l taxe:i for schools to increase by a factor of 1.27. A co1nmunity growing at three percent per year can expect to have the educat1ou tax rate increase by a factor of 2.24. (Laguna's most recent rate or grow!h according to Wayne Moody, director of planning and development. was 1.7 per- cent.) Watt maintains that as Laguna Beach grows in numbers, crime rates for murder. rape, robbery and assaull v.·iil also begin to rise. "The people of L;1guna Beach should decide if thi s type of <iccon1n"10dation 10 popu lalion growth C'lnd urban1z.alion 1s \VOrth the obvious social cosls,'' .!iaid WatL Tite compult>r analysis of municipal 1:ix rates. shows that , for instance. a r1tv gaining 35,000 persons can expect 11 $24 per capita increase in taxes. A slight rise in the per capita t·ost o! police protection IA'-OUld also oceur, Watt's fig ures show. 1'hi' researt·her al so rxiints: out that "the rate of lnc reaiie in Incidence of the pollution d1 se,"lses (emphy~ema and Jung cancer \ seen1s lo bt jlreater than the stale <iver11ge in CQunlles that are urbanizing rapidly." 111e systen1s ecologist points out that ln the period from 1967 lo 1968 emphy~n1a death r11!e~ increased 41 percent In (Src <)llEENBELT, Page Z} uar s LAGVNAGHINS BY INTERLANDI "I Love l•gun1 Too, But I Don't H•vt to Frown and Growl Every Time on Out-of-Town Cir Come1 In." First Sunday Edition Due for Daily Pilot The first Sunday edition of the DAILY PILOT will be published on March 5, it was announced today by Robert N. Weed, president and publisher. "Addition of the Sunday DAILY PILOT to the :>ix weekday editions of the ne wiipaper rounds out developmenl of the pa ckage we feel Orange Coast residenl s and businessmen will consider the area's primary news and advertising mediun1 , '' he said. The Sunday edition of the DA ILY PILOT comes in response lo requests by both readers and advertisers for full seven-day !ervice, the publlsher noted. "After more than a year o! study and preparation, we helieve we now have assembled the right combination or news and fea tures to provide a unique and useful service to both readers and ad- vertisers." he added. Thomaa Keevil, DAILY PILOT edit.or, said the StJnday edition's new1 content will maintain the locaJ emphasis DAILY PILOT readers have rome to expect from their homeUiwn ediUoM of the Mon- day-through-Saturday issue!!. "The product will continue to be mostly bright and local with all ed ilorial e-0ntent presented In a tightly pac'kaged format in which things are easy to !ind, easy to read," Keevil said. Ala n J. Dirk.in , former DAILY PILOT DlllKIN COM al West Orange Cclunly city 1;ditor. was selected by Keevil for promotion to the post of Sunday edllor. Jacqueline AM Comb:s of the DAILY PILOT women's section staff will serve as assistant to the Sunday editor. Keevil said. Terry S. Cclville, who served on the We!l Orange County st.ff under Dirkin and. more recently was a general assignments reporter In Costa Meu. for the DAILY PILOT, returns to Huntington Beach as the new West Orange County ci~ ty editor. Dtrkln, 33, ls a native of Sunderland, England . He served his apprenticeship on several provincial British newspapers before going to Athens, Greece, where he (See SUNDAY, Pa1e %) Es~ape Try Fails Man Restrained ort 7th Floor Orange County 's seNltion-packed "Ure puncturll!I tt1a1·· ended wllh •bang Mon- day nigh{ when a convicted defendant broke fru· in a neighboring courtroom IJld attempted to leap from the seventh Ocior of the couoly courthouse. Karl Godbey Blanford, 21. of TOiiin ama1hed his way lrom Judge Robert Corfman'• courtroom lmmedlattly after the jurist found hlm gullty on ch•rgea or lnOJctlng bodily harm on hi, former Slrlfrlend. Arms llaUJng, Stanford &•11npcd P"l Judae 1\rmer11 courtroom. leaped over Ille -eleobod ltg of a DAILY PILOT reporter and lllllUhed Into lbe shock proof g1a.s• window at lhe ealtem tnd" of the corridor. Stanford would h.lVt fallen 300 feel If he ~ad 1maahed lilt wlndow. The burly ywlh bounc<d back off lhe glass and Ink> lhe arms of punulng balltfCs Bruce Br~ and Pat Brunner . Depuly Jerry Plenon ran from Judge Tumer'a courtroom to aid his colleague1 In ho,ndcuf.fl"i the ber .. rk S\llnford. Stanford faet1 aenttnclng Feb. 25 and escape charges wlU now be added t-0 hla file. It was succeufully alleged In hls trtat that he attar:ked hb forw.r gi rlfriend oul.!lkie 1 Santa Ana b•wll ng alley and lnfll•lcd Injures that put her in lhe hospi\111 klr a monlh. ' Tough Stand Revealed 111 Message Dy STAN BENJAMIN WASlll NGTON (AP) -President Nlx· on senl Co11gres11 a 11pcclal environmenbll n1essage today proposing half a dozen new legislative measu re!I including a tax on air-1:iotluting sulrur emissions. Other proposals made by the President "'OU}d : -Ai;k the Uni ted Nations to establish 1 special env ironment fund , which would reach $100 million over fi ve yur1 and the United States would 1upport with , fair share of the funding . -Encouraa• If.ate• to at.art controlllna Lhe location of hlghway1 an4 11rportl by 1975 or else start losing federal aid for such projects. -Discourage construction on the dwindling Janda bordering lakes, rivers and oceans by re1trlctlng tax advantages. -Control the land-dispo.!lal of toxic waste1 through state regulation under federal guldellne11. -Control soil runof( from con11truction projects, again through federal guidelines and state regulation. In ()lher executive actions, Nixon said he has ordered the developm81t of oc- cupatJonal health standards to protect farm workers from pesticide pol80ning, and ordered tha preparation of new In· .sulation standards for federally aided mul!iple dwellings to conserve energy. He added that federal tax policy ii being ••clarlfled" conce rn ing tu ex- emption ror the fi nancing -by Industry -of facllities to recycle Industrial wastes. Ni xon reminded Congress that JI of his 20 major environmental legislative pro- posals last year are nwaltlng action. "Lasl yea r,'' he said, "was, quite pro- perly, a year Of consideratJOtl of these measures by the Congress. "I urge, however, that this be a year of action on all o( them, 8-0 that we cen move on from intention t o ac· complishment in the rmPorlant needl they address." The Pre1ldent al80 urged creation of a new Department of Na tural Reaourcu centered on the present Interior Depart- ment, a propoaal Nixon made l••t year along with a propoltid realignment of the exei:ulive branch. The reductk>n or sulfur 01idea, the •im of the new sulfur t11x proposal, 111lready one of the chief goals of the na tion11l air quality atandarda r.et by the Envlrm- IS.e NIXON, Pap I) Weadler More sunny 1klea on I.be qendl for Wednesday, followtna urly morning low cloucb and foe along the coastline. Hlths Wednuday M lo 611. Lows lonfihl 38 lo lbe mJd. .fO'•- INSWE TODAY Loa Angele• play1 ti cool on. year after devoawting earth.- quake. But will lhe Soul~ b• QI lucky nezt time1 e~ri. say another major quot. ii dtu in lhe ne:ri JO 11eor1. St1 •'°'V. Page 1. L, M • ..,. r C•llfer11I• I C1•ttlflM •·H C-itt 11 Crtltwltl'• 11 OHtll ._•ll<tl t ••ll•ri.1 l'•H • •11tan1lflfflt11t n ,._c. ..... ,., "" ll9dH • -.. ...,,. u.ten ,4 -" ..... , ... ,, "' tt .,.,, ...... "''.. ... 0,..,.. ,..,,.,. ' ,, .... ,.,,., 11 •...m •• , '''"" ,....,.... , .. ,, Tffr ... ·911 11 Tiil t 11 Wo < -....... ,.,. ... " ...... w I r. z OAtLY pA._or LB T _,.,., F '°""'Y 1, I f12 Recalli11 g Last Year's Earth Sl1aking Event By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 mo 0•11¥ "lift Sion Generally, people are in her! right around 1he time lhe most important. interesting. nlemorable or nf'wsworthv events in their lives occur. Jed bv the Big Three: being born, wedding and dying • People are also generally most vulnerable there. One year ago today, 197J's most memorable California event of 1971 caught most of us in bed, in the shower, sitting al Lhe breakfast table or sitting somewhere else. Some of us figured it was the Great Quake on the San Andreas Fault , which has given some prognosticators- in·print a ration of fame and fortune , Some -the toll was 65 finally -didn't live lo learn it was just a local one centered in the Sun Fernando Valley. i':arlhquake.s are perhaps the most awesome re. minders to mere mortals that we're just pretty much help. Jess visitors sitting here on planet Earth. Just Uke a perSQn from Peoria whose car breaks down in Pismo Beach, we're totally helpless \vhen one of those ro!ler coaster rides that registers on the Richter Scale rallies the land. This he/plessnesi: is probalJ!y v"luit makes <1uakes so fr1ghlen1ng . My clock radio said it was abou t 6 a.111. when I reached for lt a year ago. Suddenly it jumped away, jitterbugging out or reach . Realizing "'hat was happening. I did a slrange thing neglected for a long Lime. t prayed. God. please make it stop! He kept right on rattling my beach sliack. Perhaps he didn't recogniz e my voice after all those years. The old timbers creaked and groaned; the rusty nails holding them to.- gether continued to grind and whlne with stJ"ess. Whoever is in charge of such geological n1atters mercifully shl1t off lhe &:eismic roller coaster ride about two seconds after I fled bed at rather high speed. He, or whoever runs the system, may have realized how it would em- barrass the boss if one of his reporters was apprehended for running around nlfde on the beach. But that would have been preferable to being buried under a pile of weathered wood and shingles ignited by a broken gas line or downed electriCaJ wires. The stillness at the end was literally deafening. The fir&i trembling voice on the radio was that of a KRLA announcer who declared the studio's .steel and concrete walls wobbled the way hi s knees were now doing. He sounded on the verge of tears. Peering around outside all seemed serene, except for the frantic barking of what sounded like every dog from Sunset Beach to south El Monte. Many houses, however, remained dark, as though nobody even noticed the awesome forces shudde ring through !he earth's crust. Somehow still sensing it was California's biggest news story of 1971. I shakily plugged in the coffee pot and got ready to go help cover il. Seismologlsis say there is a much bigger story still coming and hopefully 1'11 ride that one out well enough to help cover it. Like most Californians, I can't seem to convince myse lf to leave in search of firmer terra firma. The last time I gave It much serious consideration was at 6:02 a.m .. one year ago. Glendale Coed Mu1·dered At Dormitory in Oregon CORVALLIS, Ore. (UPI) -An 18-year· old California girl was slabbed lo death e?rlj' today on the third noor of A dormitory in the third attack on a coed or: the Oregon State University campus in 1ix days. Dr. Peter Rosendal. Benton ·county medical examiner, said Nancy \Vyckoff of Glendale, Calif .. a freshman majoring in math. was stabbed in the neck once. He said a carving knife with about an eight-inch blade was found alongside the • body which was ly ing on the floor next to her bed. Rosendal said the girl apparently bled to death. He said Dr. \\'illiam Brady , sta te medical examiner. \\'as to perform an aut opsy. Other ~·omen residents of the third floor of Pnhng Hall said they heard a scream and lootstcps al J·45 a.m. The other ass:auHs occurred ln the same three or four-blf)Ck SN'S on the ~·est side of !ht> campus. Both girls wtre hit over Lhe head bv a man they de· scribed as: young. \\'hJte u1ith short brow11 hair. One of the girls was hospitalized OlANCiot COAST DAILY PILOT ~ COAST P UILISHlHO COIAPA'/IY Roi>ert H. W 1 M rr~cu ~ Pllllll&W Jat\: R. Cvrlrr VICI Prw.~ •rd ~.r M111i111W l1a••• K...,iJ ....... TbO:..,,, A. M1~lli•• ""-"9 ... Ed!JOr 0..-1• H. Looi R;,1i,,,, P. Nin Alilst.nt ~11$ Ed;..,.. u,-.... ~ 221 Fot11t Aft1111• Malt., -'d,.11: r .0.101 6~,. t2652 ' S-Ck:we Offke 30$ Nortll E CM1leo R11I, t26Tl .,_.,_ Oldl -... ~ w"" ..., S... ~ •..o: :un ,,._, ...,_,., t' II , ~ W J ._. '1 a•lll l overnight because of injuries, OSU officials said there was no infor· mation uncovered yel by the campus security force to indicate •hat the slaying was COflnecled with the earlier attacks. f\1iss \Vyckoff lived on the third floor of five-story Poling Hall. with men students residing on floors one, two and five and women also Otl floor four. There are a fire escape and elevator connecting the floors . Miss \\lyckoffs dormitory was adjacent to the one occupied by Connie Kennedy, a freshman from Portl and. who was at· lacked early Sunday. E!t1.abeth Anne Gleckler , a freshn1an fro1n San Mateo. CaliL. suffered head cu1s in an attack Thursday night. but did not require hospitaliza!lon. She was struck from behind with a broken chunk of COllCrete as she walked to her resi· dence ha ll. three blocks from Cauthor• Hall. Her attacker also ran ·when she scream- ed OSU President Robert ~1acVic!ir said the school \.\'as 1nitiat1n2 "extraord inary" se<"urity operations be-cause of the a\. tacks. From Pnge J GREENBELT •• Orange C.Ounty, 78 percent in Riverside County and 62 percent in Marin C.Ounty, while the ra te ror the entire state rose 11 percent. ·• . , . As the pollution builds up in counties which have been previously relatively unpolluted, we notice car· responding buildups in the death rates for lung cancer, as well as emphysema :" ad· ded Watt. The Laguna Beach study is almost id entical to a study Walt did on ~1alibu, said Roger Lanphear. attorney for the Laguna Greenbelt. Inc .. which published the study. "Bolh of the communities are faced \.\'ilh similar problems." said Lanphear. Although Watt's study was released in July. it has not be-en unit! recent discussions of the General Plan and the Sycamore Hills buildi11g f~ that ii has been referred to. "Thi! study was dtveloped with the taxpayer ln mind," commented Greenbelt president James Dilley. "It effectively answers their questons about the cost-; in· volved if we allo• the canyon land to develop." Pressures Alleged LOS ANGEL.ES (UPI I -A United Auto Workers official chargC'd Monday that Political pressure resulted in a rollbadt of wage 9Cal~ for 1erospac. workerr by tile rtd...,.I P•y Board. Keo Bannon, UAW lntem.tional \'tee presJ. dent mRde tht chargt at a new.s ~ f~.rence anoounclng that the Auto Workers filC'd suit in l!I Washington redcral court Monday to chAIJcnce lhe Pay Board rullnc. ·' f'rom Pege J SUND . .\ Y ... became a.uistant editor of I.ht Athen! News. He latu went hack to London and lo fleet Street as a copy editor on the Lon. don Dally Mail. He ca1nt to the Unltat Stalt..11 In 1965, served as city ~!tor and then as newa edit.or of the Anaheim Bulletin before Jo I n Ing the DAILY PILOT .staff in 1966 . f\1i.ss Combs. 24, is a native of Long Reath and holds a HA dcgrc-e ln coni· mun1r:at1ons fron1 Cal Slate Fullerton . She \.\'flr ked ;is a feature "'riter, SO'-'!ety edltor and ~eneral ass1i,:nments reporter for the Call Enterprise news~pcrs 111 Southeast l-Os Angeles County prior to joining the DAILY PILOT .staff in 1970. Bolh D1rkln and Mlss Combs have won Or<1nge County Press Club awal'ds [or "best pa~e J;iyout." ~l1ss Cornbs being the i:urrent first plate wu111c·r in t11a~ i:atcgory. The Sunday product for "'hich they "'tll be responsible is expected to offer readers some new experiences. It will use some new techniques in graphics and de sign, Keevil promised. "The basic concept of the Sunday edi· lion." Keevil said, "is that it will main· tain its identity and continuity with the olher six days of publicaLion but . at the san1e time, it will have qualities unique to 1he Sunday edition ." 'J'he Sunday package \Viii include a cnl· or <'Otnics section in addition lo the _Farni· ly \Veckly and 1'V \.\'eek magazines now inserted in Satu rday editions. It will be delivered early (before 7:30 o'clock for most home subscribers\ on Sunday mornings. Late-breaking sports and ne"·s of lo<:al Interest 1vill be an important part of the Sunday package, Keevil noted, But the Sunday edition also \V ill l'el.v heavily on staff.produced features and human interest stories for the flavor that will make it uniquely the Orange Coast's own Sunday newspaper, he said. Masked Gunman Shoots "r aitress In Long Beach LONG BEACH (AP ) -A niasked gun· man shot and critically wounded a cocktail wai~ress as she returned to her home here Monday night, officers said to-- day C ;ce Camp. 37, was reported in cri co11dilion at Long Be a ch Mer d Hospital after undergoing surglry to ren1ove two bullets fro m her ('hes\, Officers said ~lrs. Camp, a divorcee \.\'ho lives with her parents. was driving from ber job at Los Angeles International Airport when a man wearing a red ski mask approached her and said, "I'm going to shoot you." She told police he shot twice with a ri· ne when she started screaming and blow. ing her automobile horn . He ned, and Mrs. Camp ""·as found by her mother, Mrs. Frank Nadashny. Officers said they had no motive or suspect in the shooting. Painting Class Begins Monday In Laguna Beach The Laguna Beach Recreation Depart· menl will sponsor an all-media painting class beg.inning Monday. Instructor Nelly Allan will \t>ach the JO-- lesson series from 10 a.m. to noon on Mondays In the Rt>creat1on Departmenl building, 175 N Coast High"'ay. Fee for the course Is $15. Classes "'ill include-instruction in still life . landscape and design in oil , aC"ry\ic, "'ater color and pastel A list of m!iter1ats needed will be pra-. v\ded at the first session Mrs . Allan, a graduate of the Prague Fine Art Insti tute. has taught for several years in the L.aguna area. Registration will be limited to 15 students and is now open at the Recrea· tion Department. For further information call 494-1124, Ext. 45. Benjanrin Lowe Succumbs at 75 The Rev. Paul Klueter of the Neighborhood Congregational Church will official~ at private services for Benjamin R. Lowe. 23301 Ridge Route Drive, Laguna Hills. who died 1tonday at the age of 7S. Friencis who ~'ish may visil the Shfffer Laguna Beach Mortuary today from 5 to 9 p,m . Mr. Lowe is survived by his widow. Leona, and a sisttr, Mrs. Ruth Forquer1n of South Laguna. A native of Winsbury. England . be bad lived in California for 43 years &nd, for 25 years. was a warehouse superintendent for Republic Steel Company. Diane DeMareo Home Looted by Bnrglars llOLl.YWOOD (UPI) -Bur,lors hove ransacked the West Hollywood apartmtnt or Diane De Marco -one ot the thrtt singing De M.lrt'O sl.aers -JOmetime during the weekend and stolen 17,500 worth of clothing and othtr articles. shtriffs depuUet reported. Mm 0. Mam> told d•P"ll<:! th< thieves toot SS.000 worth of clothing. • te.J.erillon atl, a tape rtCOrdu. rtt0rds and wi(I. • \ I Tremor Rocks Sa 1t Fernando LOS ANGELES IAP ) -A quick, dish-rattling aftershock of the ma· jor quake nearly a y'ar ago has rocked the San F'f'n1ando Valley, causing some ll'Hnor dan1age and prompting anxious lclrp!1one calls. 1'he lt:1nblor r-.·londay n 1 g h t measurtd 3.8 on the Richter Scale. strong enout:h lo t·ause 5light to nlodcrate dan1age , said a SµOkesman for lht> Ca 11 [or 11 i a lnstllute of Tr r h n o I o g y · s seismolog1cal I a b o r a lo r y in Pasadena. Laguna Slates Little League Bids Feb. 26 Prelin1 inary tryouts for play in the 20th season of Ll!tle League Baseball in the Laguna Beach ar·ea wi!J be heJd f'eb. 26 at the high s«hool alhlelK' field. Boys from ages eight tn 12 livjng \Vithin the La guna Beath Unified S<:hool District will be eligible to play. A youngster must be eight years old before July JI and rnust not ha ve eached his 13th birthday prior to Aug. I. League director Larry Campbell. in an· nounc1ng the tryouts, noted that this season ·will mark the 20th anniversary of the league in this area. He said he is frying to organize a reunion of past little leaguers for the opening day of the season. SC'heduled for mid -April. "When it started in 1952," Campbell said, "the league in the Art C.Olony was one of the first on the west coast." He <rdded that some 2.000 youngsters had participat.ed in the local program since its inception_ This year's tryouts will begin at 9:30 a.m. f'eb. 26 for boys ages 8·10 and at I p.m. for boys ages II and 12 . All boys who have not previously played in the league must take part in the tryouts with the exception of eight-year-olds, who need not try out for minor league play but must stl1! register. \ '--' r .arents or guardians must accompany their boy at the tryouts and bring a birth certificate as proof of age. The tryout and playing fee is $6 to defray equipment wsts. If the youngster is selected for ma- jor league play, the parents must pay an additional $6 fee to cover uniform costs. Maximum oirarge per family is $25. Campbell noted that uniform s will be furnished to youngsters participating in the league, but the youth must furnish his own shoes. Registration forms may be obtained at the time of tryouts. Campbell also said th.at parents wishing to volunteer to help with the leagues may do so at the time of registration. Florence Y ocl1 Dies in Carmel ~tiss Florence Yoch, 82. member of a pioneer Laguna Beach fa mily. died recently in Carmel. Miss Yoch 'W'as the last of six daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Yach , who settled in Santa Ana in the 1880s and pla yed a major role in the development o(Laguna Beach as a seaside resort. For n'laoy years. the Yoch fam ily operated the original Laguna Beach Hotel. on the site of the present Hotel Laguna . Miss 'loch was a widely recognized landscape arch1lect and , shortly before her deat.h. completed the design of an old- fashioned garden for the historic Dowd house in Monterey. She had made her home in Carmel in recent years. Charm Threatened: Pair Criticize Design Review By FREDER ICK SCllOEME}ll. Of Ille O•Ur l"IM! Si.II A design rcvlt.'W ordinance Intended to 11rornotc "!lie t.11:st t'o11tt'1nporary and professiona l de sign prattires" in Laguna Brach was moved to se1·ond public hear- In~ f\1onday nighl hut not "'lthout tT1t1t·ism from lll'o 1n cn1bcrs ol the B011rd 11f Zoning AdJus1n1enl . "I dun'! think we "'OUld attetnpt to in1- posr a single archlli!{'ll1r<1) style,'' com· rnented Arnold Hano. 1565 Bluebird Can- yon Drive. who sits ON the BZA He pointed out the ordin<1nte calls for a "cornp<1tibility of materials, fornis. color, texture and scale throughout the com· mun1ty. " "Much of the charm of Laguna is the hodge podge nature of the architcclure,'' he said. l-1<1110 also objccled lo a phrase stating simple palettes of toh1rs ancl materitilS should be used tfiroughout e-;irh develop. menL "Somctin1rs yes , so1netin1cs no." (.:O!ll- n1entf'd Jl<J110. Chri stian AbeL of 5.1G Legion St.. also a BZA nien1ber, strongly OhJetted lo parts of the urdlnance 1>.'hirh allowed for pro· JlCrty owners surroundi ng a developmen t and members of the public to attend and participate in the design review met:'lings. "It \11oul d be totally in1possihle to revlew the number of buildings we'll have to review and still listen to the comments of all these other people," said Abel. "We \vould never finish." ~lano, however. said the open meetings "are the democratic way to go." Commissioner Carl Johnson suggested that members of the public might be allowed to attend as observers. but not participate in public hearings. Design review, under the ordinance, would be mandatory (or a!J buildings ex· cept slng!e family homes, interior From Pnge 1 NIXON •.. mental Protection Agency under lhe 1970 Clean Air Act. Nixon's proposed tax 'W'ou!d take effect in 1976 and apply to sulfur emissio ns in areas which remain in violation of the air quality standards once they take effect in 1975. Where primary standards protecting public health have oot betn met .• fuel· bufn'ers would be charged IS cents for each pound of sulfur they emit into the air: 'W'here secondary standards prcr tecting property, plants and aesthetic value.s remain unn1et, the charge ~·ould be only 10 cents per pound. There would be no sulfur charge at all "·here both standards are being met on a regional basls. The Nixon proposal to control highway and airpo rt locations would amend his pending proposal of a national land-use bill encouraging the states to adopt land- use planning. Under the new proposal. each slate would be expected to develop a plan for controlling the locations of highways and airports a11d obtain federal approval of it s plan by 1975. Any state failing to do so ~·ould Jose 7 percent of its federal highway and airport funds for 1975 and an additional 7 pcreent each year until it came up ~·ith an approved plan . States "'ith approved plans v,·ould share the forfeiled funds. \\litlwut spell ing out his proposals, Nix- on said he would move to discourage un· necessary development on we tlands "'ilh legislative proposals "lo limit ap· pl1cability of certain federal tax benefits" on construction in su.:h areas. modifications to existing structures and n11nnr exterior alterations. 1'he five goals listed 10 the ordinance are , -To create individu31 identity. -Tu create con1munily Identity in lint v,·1th the \'Jllage alniosphere. -To enhance property values th!'ough tile use of high quality design and long last ing, low rnaintenance materials. -To pre.~erve natural features and en· \'lronmental qualltles. -'fo 1n1n11n1ze visual, psychologic;il and social slress by reducing garish anU conflicting relationships. A second ordinance dealing with men1bership of the review board will have to be adopted, following approval of lh! standards. t Js believed that lhe present Board of Zoning Adjustment will assume the revie\V ta sk but the size of the BZA will be increased from three to five menlbers. Trarisit Unit 'Not in UCI Bus Lawsuit' Clayton Parker. chief asslslant county counsel said today that the Orange Coun• ly Transit District is not legally involved in a complaint filed by South Coast Transit Corporation with the state Public Utilities Commission (PUCJ alleging that the new UC! free bus service is in violA· !ion or state Jaw. Parker, \\'ho servt>s as counsel for thr: transit district , said the district ls not im· p!icated, as charged by South C.Oast, beca use it is not directly participating in the operation of the UC! hus service. ·rhe county transit agency dld gra nt UCI a $6.000 subs idy to help defray cost or the experimental project which began Jan, 10. The universily put up an ad · ditional $6,000, half of it from student funds. South C-Oast Transit also names in !I s suit the univeristy, Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr, and Pink Bus Lines of Buena Park which operates the buses in lheir hour ly service to UCI from Newport Beach, Corona del Mar, Costa Mesa and Santa Ana Heights. South Coast has asked the lransil district for a $3,000 a month subsidy to continue operation of its buses from San· ta Ana lo Balboa and Laguna Beach . Bus line offlcial s said in December that the line would be forced to quit opera· tions to the coastal communities within the next few weeks if the district did not grant the subsidy. No action on their re· quest is expected for another month. Jn the t'.imp laint to the PUC. South Coast claims that !he ucr operation parallels its routes to Corona de! Ma r and provides scheduled passenger service along _regular routes vdthout PUC perm1ss1on. The South Coast firm operates one bus to UC! daily from Santa Ana at 7 a.m. The PUC has taken no action on the complaint which demands a temporary cease and desist order. a full hearing and a permanent desist order plus damages of $:;()() a day per passenger. The UC I free bus service has received great acceptance by the st udent s. faculty and staff. UCI !)('an of Students Jame.! Phllhps told directors of the transit district r..1onday. "Many or the students have said that the} would be willing to pay JO cents a ride," the liCJ offieial said . Patronage has grown from 1,242 students the first "'eek to more than 1,500 at the end o! January, Ph illips said. Beat The Clock Usually there is no urgency about getting carpeting installed. Most poeple will wait a whole week! However, when there is a rush , we can accommodate th'ose who re- quire immediate service. We HAVE sold and installed carpeting the SAME DAY many times. Unless there is a problem obtaining a specific color or p&ttem, you can count on fast service from Alden's, and we maintain a large inventory to facilitate deliveries. • ALDEN'S CARPns • DRAPES 166J Placentia Awe. COSTA M!SA 646-4131 HOURS: -· Th..-Thun., t to 5:30 -~rl .. t to t -SAT., 9:30 to 5 • I ) ' ' I . I I \ I . . -• • Saddlehaek EDITION Today's Fln•I N.Y. Stoelu VOL 65, NO. 33, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1972 TEN CENTS Irvine Council Advisory Boards Swell to 17 By GEORG~ L~IDAL 01 Hit Dtlty !'Ii.I ll•H 1'he r• t.'Qtll1nissions and advisory t:om· mlttees proposed several weeks ago by Irvine Mayor William F'ischbach havr been augmented by a proposal for three more for consideration Friday. Councilman Gabrielle Pryor o f University Park, has presented to coun- cilinen for study a detailed proposal for the advisory groups that would Involve Irvine residents in city government. • Mrs. Pryor added comrnittees for hous- ing, open space and municipal 5ervices to the mayor's listing. . · Mayor r~ischbach urged council con- sideration of a "flow chart" showing how advisory groups would relate to the city council . Subcomrnitltx!s to t.hc yet-to-be-legally established planning commission sug· gested by Muyor Fischbach include one each for master planning, environmental quality, parks and recreation and public IXOll s Harbor District Supervisors OK Court Borders New boundar ies of the Harbor Judicial Di.strict were formall y approved by the Orange County Board of Supervisors to- day. The enlarged di.strict ,yjlJ include all of Seven Convicted In Ga s Station Repair Fraud By TOl\1 BARl,EY Ot tl'lt Dilly l'll'ft Still The "Service Station Seven " arc guilty. Thal was the verdict of an Orange County Superior Court jury Monday night after four days of mulling evidence rack · ed up in the marathon eight-week trial of seven Orange Coast resident!. The obviously weary jurors returned guilty verdicts on eight of the nine counts of conspiracy with intent to cheat aod defraud Orange Qronty motorists and they named Jerry Kendall. 35, of 969 Sonora Road , Costa Mesa, in two of tho~ guilty decisions. Kendall had been named all through the trial with Stanley Davis, 34, of 1086 San Pablo Circle. Costa Me~a and Edward Carney , 27. of 20362 Shell Harbour Drive. Huntington Beach, as one of the three architttU! of an aolo repair fraud linking 11 se rvice .stations ranging from Seal Beach to San Cleniente. Judge James Tu rner ordered all seven fo return March 13 for sentencing. They fare a possible state prison le.rm or up to JO yea rs. Judge Turner scheduled Feb. 29 for a hearing on a motion for a new trial after compliment ing defense attorneys Al Stok- ke. Frank Moran and George Shibata and prosecutor Richard Stenton for their "gentlemanly conduct through a long and exhausting trial. "We hear a lot these days about courtroom problems created by the likes of the Chicago seven and Charles Manson trials," Judge Turner told the jury. "W~ have not.hlng like that bere and I can l reeall being In the presence of a more devoted pjury or more gentlemanly at- torneys." The verdict obviously came as a blow to all seven defendants. Three had openly predicted a few hours before the jury returned that they would be cleared of charges that prcxluccd an Orange County Grand Jury Indictment. Convicted with Kendall, Davis and Camey were Roger Mendenhall, 28, of (Set: REPAIR, Pqe Z) lrv.ine Burglars Net Equipment Burglin 1truck acatn In tht Irvine aru Mondoy night carrying off bllsl,,..s eqolpmenl valued al near17 fl,000 from .,, &astmon stnet nnn . Oran1e Coonty 1herill'1 olflctrs uld Intruders 1ma1bed • plate glus window 'IA> gain entry IA> !ht preMlsu of lht stelganf ~allon, It.Mt Eallman St. They IA>OI: business macblnff and an elec- lti< typewriter from !ht olllce aru. Los,.s 1uf!md by finN In the area from almoll ldenlkll bllrglarlu now It.and 1t over p.ooo. Ont: Irvine flrm. Llth-Kem-Ko, 1121 Duryu Ave.. ~at ~ twlco In one weelc, deputies pld. I Costa Mesa, Newport Beach. and the new city of Irvine, with an estimated current population of 152,457 and a 1990 popula· lion of 343,000. The vote on new boundaries was a unanimous 4 to 0 with Supervisor Da vid Baker absent. New boundaries were necessary with the incorporation of Irvine last Dec. 28. Part of the new city was in the: old district and slate law requires that all or an incorporated community muat be in a _,ingle judicial area. Only tw1> correction& were made on the former district lines covering C.O&ta Mesa and Newpart Beach. The southeast boon· dary was revised to parallel the Newport city limits on the south &ide of Corona del Mar , and a small bulge on the southeast was e!imineted tranilferring that parcel to the Soulh County Judicial Dh1trict. F'ormal accepta11ce followed presen· talion of legal description or the new court.s district by County C.Ounscl Adrian Kuyper. Land for a permanent court s building i! now in escrow. It is on Jambortc Boulevard. south of Campu s Dri ve in Newport Beach. The cnunty searched for a new \."OUrts site for more than two year!L after purchasing 5.2 acres from Newport Beach in the proposed civic center in the Newport Center west of MacArthur Boulevard and north of Pacific Coast Highway. The city agreed lo buy the properly back from the county when voters !Lhot down by a wide margin a proposed civic ce nter buildi ng program last year. Upper Newport Bay Di sc ussion Set Wednesday A public di.lawion on Upper Newport Be1y and its future uae will be conducted Wednesday at Corona de! Mar High School. Scheduled lo s~k are Fells Smith, a U.S. Department of lnterk>r blolo&llt ; Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hlrth: Roger Desautels of Archaeologlca1 Relearch Jnc.; George Osborne of the Orange County f'lood Control District, and Leslie Marks , author of "The Frail Oce.an" and ."Man and Hls Environment." The one·hour symposium, set for noon In the boys' gymnasium, was organized by 16-year-old Margar~t Sett.erholm, president of Studenta for Environmental Action at the high school. She aaid she has invited represen- tatives of the Irvine Company to attend and al!o has Wued invitaUon1 to Joan Irvine Smith and !ht Fr1endl of Upper Newport Bay. The ditcuuion lJ aimed at prnenting all sides of the Back Bay b.sue, ac.cordlng to Miss Setlttholm. It wu organhed for lluden1'. but ls open "' tho publle, the said. The camp!ll Is locai.d at 2101 Eaalblul! Or1ve. Auto Crash Kills 4 -PORTOLA IUP() -A !_.,., coUillon on Calffornla 70 eall ol Ulb Plunw Co u n I y community haa klDed lour pmons. The California Highway Paltol Iden- tified the vlctlms: as Richard L. Welch, <t, of Alpine, his wife , Sharon Lee, :II; their IJ.ytar-old daughltt, lih<lly, and Ronald Llo)'d Hall, 21, ol Clill-1. ' • highways and transporta tion. Councilman Pryor did not di scuss ap- pointment or a master planning con\· mittec, but did comment on all others proposed by the mayor. This Friday, in a 4:30 p.m. meelini.:: 111 ci ty offices, Room 238, Town Cen ter, 4201 Campus Driv~. the council will consider the advisory group proposals. Thty n1ay also establish a sumnler recreation com- mittee to begin work on city wide pro- grams this year. Othrr commillecs noted in lhr nuiyor 's flow chart involve one each for univer slly :1ff11irs . youth oppo rtunities. puhlir cdu cn· lion, art!! and culturRI affairs, cillzf'n.~ ;.:ouls, 1>ublic safely and charttr govern· n1ent. Al one lin1c in the carlv discuss ion uf these bodies, ,_1avor 1-'lsCh bach sutd Ill' hoped son1e cou\i.I fun ction without the :o;trirtu rrs of lhe Ralph l\1. Br(lwn Acl - c:alifornia's antl·:sccrecy law. Since thrn , the counc il ha!i learned any officially c11l11blls hed con1m1ss ion. cornmittee or 11ny other group Is l"O\·ered by the l\rowu Act. n1eanl11;.: n1L>ctint:s nio~t be held 11ubllcly with pr11Jr nntir!" of llmr 111111 plllCf, The 14Llt "co1111111ttec " con~idl!rCd aloni.: with the !\1ayor'!i iultud prt·sentat1on I!'! 1n11nlclp11I liul.~on . At lb; .Ju11. a ni<'t·tini;. 1.:11unt·1hnf'n nnn1 cd Juhn Uurt on nnd E. nfly lJlll~ley Jr. to represent Jrvlne In mceth11o:s '''ith cuun· 1.:ll1nen from nclghbori11g cilie~. f'nr 1111 lhf' propo!!t'd rnmmlttee11 th•t \\"Ill IHivll'lt' the rhy rouncll, Mayor Fls\•hhnl'h hn11 11:1ked lnlt'rf'stt'<f r~sldcnt1 In 11uh1111t 1nfor1nal rt•sunlf'.'S lndlt•atlng their prt•f1·rt'Hl'e11. !lo !llllo:KtSt.3 people llxt .~t'\'t'r11I 1111 y,•hl\:h thry'1I llke to ~erve ln 1irder of 1·hol1·r. l'nunt·ilnuin Pryor ~nlrl, "We .sh(luld get 11tnrtrd 1•11 our citizen~· ('(lllHllltle:ea , or i"OtlHll[!ISIOll!I, Ill'! f'IO(ll1 /IS ~lllblC'. ()ur' y,•11rk. 1011d w111 be t'(111~\tlt•r11hly 11ghtC"r 1r \SC't. AUVlS01t\·, P1ae !) uar I • . DAILY r1LOt ti.ff r ittt• Wired iti at City Hall Irvine adminstrlitive consultant WiUiam Wooll etl Jr .. left, and Steve De Lapp, administrative aide. spend much of their time an11wering telephone in- quiries about the new city. Desk doubles as council table when city council meets tn temporary city offices in Irvine Town Center, 4201 Campus Drive. across from UC Irvine. Officials Drop All-year School Plan for '72-73 F'ive schools in the San Joaquin School District have ruled out the possibility of instituting the controversial 4:>-15 year· rouod plan for the coming 1972-73 year. according to William Stockll, assistant superintendent for educalioo se rvi ce!'!. Reportedly unin t erested in participating next year but considering the plan for 1973-74 were .sWffs and prin- ci pals at El Toro Marine, O'Ntlll, Turtle Rock and ~I Cerro elementary sthools and Rancho San Joaquin Intermediate School. Originally the school board would have been authorized to deve Jop a yea r-round program to go into effect July I, 1072. Parent opinions are being sollcilcd by schoola whose staffs decided to consld,r Implementing the plan for ne1t school year. St.ude.ntJ would go to 1ehool 45 days and. have 15 days off continuously during the year. Enrollments would be rotated IO schools would have a uniform number ol student! all during the year. Irvine, Valencia, Cordillera and Linda Vista Elementary schools all wlll send letters this week to parent.a, \ndicaling the staffs want to con1kttr development of the plan far u.se ne1t year. Included Jn the lnfonnallon that will be 5ent to parents wlU be the calendar for the lJn..73 acbool year for the schoolt that choo,. IA> accept the U-11 pattern. Other achools in the dlstr~ 1tlll are considering !ht quutlon and '!iii decide lndJvklually within Ute oat It• days, Slocks ,.id. He u.id one reaton answm have not been available IA> all parmil Inquiring about lht plan It thal .. c11 school would put II Into !'fled lndlvldualiy, rnulltng bl 1ilghlly dliltrml ctrcumsilneos Jn each .,..., lie pJd be lhouCht ochool1 that rfttlv- td parental 1Upporl woWd be able IA> develop an effective plan before March JI, wbel! !ht Boord of Trus!tt• will like adlon ICCOrdlng IA> !ht dec:il Ions of each llChool. Thtre have bttn objectk>nll to thf plan on the groundJ that it would not reduce co1il, educational quality would not be lmpro.-ed and there •re "too many unknowns'' about the plan. First Sunday Edition Due for Daily Pilot The first Sunday edition of the OAJLY PILOT will be published on March !i, It wa~ announced today by Robert N. Weed, president and publL'lher. "Addition of the Sunday DAILY f'IU)T lo the :iix weekday editions of the ncw:oipapcr rounds out deveJopmenl or !h" package we feel Orange Coalit re11ldenl,, and busine11smen will consider the are11 '11 primary news and advcrtiBing medium," he 11aid. The Sunday edition of the DAILY PILOT comes in re11ponse to reque11t1 hy both readers and advertiser• for full M:ven-day service, the publisher noted. "Afttr mo re than 1 year or study and preparation. we believe we now have assembled the right combination of news and features to provide a unique and useful service to both reader• and ad - vertiser•," he added. Thomas KeevU , DAILY PILOT editor. said the Sunday e.dltlon's new11 content will maintain the local tmpha1lll DAfLY PlLCYr readers have come to expect from their t.Jmet.own editions of the Mon- day-through-Saturday i!sues. "The product wlll continue to be mostly brlght and local with all editorial content COMIS presenl.Cd In a tightly pa~a&ed format In which things are eaay to find, easy to read ," Kcevll 1sld. Alan J. Olrkln, formu DAILY Pu.oT We11t Orange County city editor. wu .elected by K .. vn for promotion IA> tho poll or Sunday edllor. .la<quellne Ann Combo of the DAILY PILOT women'• 8tclkm 1tafr will Krve a~ a1sl1lant to the Sunday editor, Keevll gald. Terry 8. Coville, who llUVe.d on the West Orange C.ounty 1tlff under Dlrkln and, more recently was a general (Set SUNDA. Y, Pa&e 2J Younger Names UCI Prof To State Research Group Dr. Vincent P. GulM, professor or cheml.Jtry al the University of CllUoml.a at Irvine , ha1 been appointed IA> lhe CllUornla Council on Criminal Jullla by Attorney General EveUe J. Younge-r . M a member of the Reae.1rch ind 'Developmenl Tuk Foret ol the •Jolf agency ror crlminal jUJtlce pl•rmtng and ClOONllnatlon. Guinn wltl aur..1 the CCCJ In thJa area and review 1peciOc pro)ect appllcallons undor the ftdtral Omnibus Ctlme Confrol Mt. Allar wlnnln1 hr. dodora1' decree In phyllcal cbemlttry In llH9 from Harvard UnlYtt1lly, Guinn h e 1 d t d the radlocheml1tty ltOUP ot 01' Emtryvllle R ... arcb C<nfor of Sbtll Development ' COmp•ny. He alJO headed lhe actlvlatlon 1n11ly1l1 program at Gulf General Atomic In San Diego. lie joined !ht UC lrvlne flClllly In 1'70, laachlng the field of radlochemlatry and forensic chemltlry. This yea r, Dr. Cuhm wW be chalnnan or the Second lnterutlmud Conferenc.e or f'ort n•ic M1.lvalion A.n1ly11J lo GWgow, sc.lland. Dr. Guinn Ns wtltttn more than 140 pobll•~ papen ind report• 1bout ra.dloehtmt1try and lcltntllk crime In· vestlgatlon . Ht J>fodUctd a film for U.S. Atomic E11<rgy Commlulon whleh has bttn u1ed re1ut1rly by the FBI •nd other law enforctment. •&mela. Tough Stand Revealed In Message Uy STAN BENJAMIN \VASlllN(iTON (AP/ -l'realdcnl Nix· on 11tnt Coriure111 11 Hf>ecln l env1ronmentll nle11s11ge today proposing hair a doien new Jegt11latlve mea1J1ure1 lncludln& a tu on 11lr·pollullng 1ulfur emls11lon11. Other pr11po11u\g mude by the rre11ldenl woul1I; -AHk the tJnHed Nutlona to e11labll11h • 11pt'<'tu1 envlronmenl fund, which would rcat·h $100 mllllon over five years •nd tho Unllc1I St11te11 would aupport with 1 ratr ahere of the fund ing. -Encouraae at1tt1 to start conlrOllln& the locatJ un of highway• 1nd airport. by 197& or else 1tart losing federal 1ld for •uch proJect.I. -DlM:ouraae conJtructlon on th 1 dwindling lancls borderlnf lakei, rivers and oceanJJ by rutrletlng tax adv1ntqe1. -Control the land-dl1poul of to1lc waxtea lhrou1h 1tate reau latlon under federal gukt11Jnes. -Control IOll runoff from COnJtructlon project11, 1tgaln through feder al guidellne1 and state reeulaUon. In other executive acUon1, Nixon 111d he has ordcrtd the deve lopm11nt of <»' cup3tlonal health 11tandard1 to prot«t 'arm worker• from pesllclde pollOnlns. 1tnd f1rdered the1,re per1tlon of new I~ llU/allon J1tancf1r I for rederal/y aJded 1nult lple dwelllng1 to cnn11erve ener1y. lfe added that federal tax policy ll beinR "clarUled " cof)(ernlng ll;t ex· emption for the flnttnclng -by lnduttry -or h1c!l!tles to re ycle lnduatrl.al WHlll~ll. Nixon rernlnded C.Ongreg1 that ti ot hi. 20 ma jo r envlronmental le111t1t1ve prt> posal1 la1t year are awaiting action. "l..1u1t year," tie 11ald, "wat, quite pro- ptrly, a yeftr o! con111deratl0ft of thcae me11.l!ure11 by the C.'ongre M11. "I urge , however, that this he 11 year ot acUon 011 tdl of them, llO thlt we can move on from Intention t o •<> c:omplhi:hment Jn the Import.ant nffdJ thr.y 1ddre111." The Pre1ldenl elto ur1ed creation of • new Department of N"tural Raourcei cent.fred on the f'jesent Interior De-part.- ment, 1 r.pOU Nlson made lut year Blong wit 1 proposed reallinment of tbt executive branch. The re.ducllon ol .ulfur otldu, the aim of lhe new 1uUur tax proposal, Is aJrudy one of the chlet 10111 of the n1tlon1l air quality st>ndards Kl by the llovJron· Ill<• NUON, I' ... II 0r .... ........ More sunny tkiel oo lht qtnda for Wodn..ctay, followJnc early momlns low clouds and fOf • ..,. !ht coulllne. Hl{ha Wednadly Ii IA> II. Lows tA>oliht :II IA> the mJd. 40's. INSIDE TODA 't' Los A11'1tl" ?IA>u• ft tool ou uear aft.tr dcvaatatfng earth- qoakt. But urlll lh< Soulllland b• .. lucku M•I u ... t l!crpm. '41/ another mojor quaJu t. due In lht nc:it 30 t1tar1. Stt l torf/1 Paut 7. L M. 9"'I 1 c.-• Cl9ttlfl.. ..,. c.Mlt• •• (,_. It .,.... JNollol.. , ••1"'11f ..... • .... ,..,..,...., " , 'IMllC!t .. " ............ f ......... ,, ..... U...-t t• ... .• I I r I I I ' DAILY PILOT 56 T-. ,......,.~ ~ :Rental Fees for Harbor Courts Released By JACK BROBACX Of .. IHI"' ~lllM Ji.II J'iluNI, lncludlnll mi1aJ COll.t lo Jhl eaunty for 2~·yttt and 4Mi·Yt•r per\odl , (or ln1er lm l1>1:1111onll or thr H11rt>or Judk:1al Duitrk't cnurlli wrrr rrlc;i;scd lo· cloy. MacArthur Boulevard and Campua Dr1Y1, and tbf·McDoftnt:ll Dol.IJ l&t Corpora llon '1 Altropower bulldJnt Gr> tha nortllealt cot· nu of C.mpu.a and MacArthur. OJ> a JG.monlh btalJ, tha C<>Uinl of- terlnJ will coll the county fll,M.1 a ffiQnth with a ?-year option, 11r Jl8,J(l7 !I mont/1 tor 41"l·ye1:1r1 Tht ~hortrr pt'!rlod !ot11 J f1iure11 It M45,0.1J ind the lonl(cr al $988.57.~ nfftr U wtll CO!Jl !ua, Ob\ 'OUllY. for the »n»nth pcrkld , bul the McDonntll Dou1la1 offar LI much more reat0n1 bla lf It lt auumad that 1 new courta bolldlnr wl ll not bt ready lor fou r and 1 hair or fi ve ye1 r1," said Stanlry Krause, county rc1tl pr•iprr!)' ..'!tr\'ll'"' dtf't'r\or Counl y 11uptr\•i~1r'I will r1•\ lf'W the pro· po111I, now bolltd dnwn to twu 1utt~ from an origi na l 15, Wcdnf·sda y a1 10 :, 1n Sllll In lht runn1ni:: to prvvirlr. tern· por1ry <1u1rter!I for thr nYrrrrn1~1dtd 1•our1 11. f'IOW l1M't1led In l-Olll• J\1e'la, are Jhe Collins R11dlri Comp11ny nfflr·r btHldlnlil, •trl ol J&mtx.rce Road b t 1 w r. e n Tht McOunnrll l)oul(ln.~ prnpo.~al woulr! cost tht county Sl!t,OOb nn a str<lti.:ht :Ju. month baJl.!1 and $738 .• 1011 on 1 41ri ·)'tAr Je~l'lt. r·acll1t1e.~ in e1Lht·r t'.t.~t~ will ~ the J1a1ne w11h fou r i.:ourtr0<lm~. J u r y a~sernbly rnorns Jtid i.:cs' rh11rn~rs , nf· fir·c.~ f1Jr the d1strtL't anorney. puhl11· <ll'fcndcr ad1n1nlalra li ve .~litlf plu~ detrn!lon facilities and rest roorns flnlh firm s have agrcC"d tn lurru~h c1rpets, drapes. ~nd pay utlll ty and Youth Fails At Deutfi Tr y In Courtroom Orangt. Count y'• tt'!nll1Uon-pet'kcd "tirr, puncturing lr iA I" cnd rd wit h ii hanJ,l Mnn- di:ty night when 11 1·nnvi(·fcd defenda nt broke free In " ncl ~hhorini.: courlroon1 41nd attemptec:l tn lcnp frorn !l'!t' seventh floo r or the county courthouRf'. Ki ri God bey St111 nfr1rd. 21, or Tu1t1n ~11m hed his way from J udge n obert Cor an's <.'Ourlroon1 imm<?dlalely 11(lt?r 'th jurl~ foufld him 11:ullly on ch11rges of i<?tlng bodily ha rm on hiii former 1' 1irlfriend. Arma na!lln(, Sl11nfo rd 1alloped pa st :Judgt Tumtr'ii court room. Jeeped over the oustrcteched le11: or a DAILY Pll.O'l' reporter and 5m1.u1hed into the shock proof glttsa window al the eastern end of the corrldt>r. stRnrord would hsvt" fR l!rn 300 feel if he had smashed the window, The bur ly youlh bot1ncC'd bat:k oH thr. ,i:ila ss and into the EH'ml!I of purl!ulng b11 lllff1 Bruce Brazee! And Pti t Brun rif'r. /)eputy Jerry Plerl'lon rnn from Jud,R"I'! Tur ner•,. courtroom to aid hi.~ eollcague."f Jn handcuffing the bt?rscrk Stanford. St.an ford faceii 11entenclnR Feb. 25 encl escape ch•raes wilt now be 11dded ro hill rue. Jt w11 succcasfully 1J1e11ed in hill" trial that he attacked hill former J!lrlfrlend 4lUtsl dt 1 Santa Ana bowtlnl{ 111Jey and lnfll cted Injure!! th11t pu! h<'r lr1 the hosplt11l (or 11 mont h. Ft'om Page 1 REPAIR. • • ~ Avanld11 Dt Seo. Mission Viejo, David Canchola. 22. of 6000 GArden Gro ve Blvd., Westminster 111nd Chr!~lopher F:nrl· quez, 26, o( 7~92 Volga Drive, 11nd Henry CaatonMuay, 21, of 76ft l C4lmmodore Drive, both or Huntln f{lon Bc11ch They were all llCCU!l<'d by nt.arly JO prll· •ecullon w11nessc8 (Jf p11rllc\p11tlng ln 11 con1ph·11cy thnl inrllldl'd !he dellberAtc puncturlna or p11lron~· tires. lhe dest rue· lio n 4lf rAdl11tnr r 11p!i 11nd !leMls and thr perfo rmanc<' of nredlc:is 11nd co~tly repair work. It was 11\l eged throughout the lrlRl lh 11 t customers were pres15ured into ha\'in~ their c•r• hol1lcd on the lubt: bay rAck In the prtlen1e lhRt supposed defrct.!I could be better 1polled from thal loc11tlon Former employes And C'Ustonl<'rl'I tnlrl the jury th1t dan1nRe wa s inrlict rd In the.Ir earl 1nd 11hock ab~orbcr.:1 11nd fur l pu mps wtre sprayed \\'ith <lit to Ji!ivr 1hr inlpr('Sl'llon that lh<' parl~ h"'kl"d 11 n <1 should bt replaced. All th ree drfcnse 111wyc1·1 Rnnouncerl th f'ir Intention tn 11.pptal tht ''C'rd lct If Judgt Turne r denie!l lht. nl011on fl'tr 11 new trlRI. Thr ,·en11c! w11s !l~('n ~lonrln~· 11~ 11 inll· jnr \'lctory fnr th<' dls lrl<'I 11 ttnrnl"\''' fr11ud ~qu11d 1n a Cll n'lpnl iin l(l conib.it wh~t "'RS ,1111Nt lo be brlort !ht rrl11I Atllrted II )il'.fOWlMR llUIO repair rllC'kel 111 Or11nRr County. OIAN•I CO.t.l r DAllY PILOT .. ....,... ..... "-'•" ..... c.u. ..... OMPoiOI 1'.0AIT l"VI Ltl "'l,.O COMl"'-N'I' l •~•r • N. w.,; ,.,.,..,..,. """ "v""''*" J •• ~ • c,..1 .v Vlf9 l'rft..,'"'f """ V..t l ~ 111."'"' l.'. •••• u l lfl ... 111 • ..,., A. M.,,,,1,;,,, MM91flftt I••"" Cl>ult t H. I••• •:~t.••d '· N,IJ AN1ti.N ....... ._i.,, l t •.,.... °""" C'•'a -·· UI _, .,,. ,,_.. t11 .. _, ·-~ JJJJ ........ ,..,, ·~" .. ,.._ L_.-I~· m ,_, ,., .. ~.,. ....... ,, ...... l ff<I• ll'IJJ lltK~ lt~·~••/11 S.. C*'-"t.; ... N.,.W\ I I ~ 1. .. 1 , .... ~ 111•1 641-'Jl l Cl~ A4~ ••1·1671 '-C ...... A•D•fl•'~ ~ ,.n.. .,....... ('.~ .......,... ... "ff the auper"l50rR ch1~•sl? the Col!1n9 Federal La1td1J Wildlife Guards Issued by Nixon WASlllN(;TON (UP I 1 Prf'srd{'nt l!;inchers in the Wt.flt h;i vr bern k1ll1ni:: thrse an1n1al s and birds becau.~e ll1ev al· Nixon 1oda y h11nntd lhe poi!lo n1n~ of e<l~le1 . hawk !l, C"oyotea, falcon.'! 11 nd other prcdator11 on fedt?ral hind~. ;ind proposl'd !C"gisls tion lo prevent shoo11n~ or trap- ping them 1111 well. Tht: ban on pnisoning wa.~ rut in force immediately by an cxec·ulive order. Nixon Gi ves 20 Parcels of Land For State Parks WAS•IINGTON iUPl l -r resident Nixon tod ey gave 20 pa rcels of fedt:rAI l11nd worth S4.3 mllllon to stales 11 nd /ocalllles for park and recrt:a tlon use . The la nd glfts brou ght to 113 the numbt'r 4lf 11Jtes donated by the ft:deral gove rn· ment for loc al and sta te park.!! since the program befian lalJt year. Altogether. the Whit e House said. the 113 parklands Jn 31 .::ta les and Puerto Rlcn total 14,.SSS acres and art worth mort: lhan SS6 mill loo . Many o( the 11ltes were lormerly military bases. Tht sites annou nced t0011y Included 51J acres, formerly used the the Natio nal Guard, &:lven to San l .. uls Obispo County for a park. Tht: property l1 between San F'ranclscn 11nd Los Angeles . five miles southeast of Morro Bay. Also Involved art 703 acre1, nC'~ San Diego State Coll ege property and former· ly parl o( the U.S. N11val Re!r;1 inin~ rllrnmand. Camp Ell iott. i.:i ven !(' S11 n Diego. In 11 speciRl env ironment.al rncssase ~11- rlny to Congress, lhe President also Ji n· noune('d seve ral measur('s t<i C'realt or prnlcC'l p;irkland~ and wildernt?ss ,11re11J11. Nixon proposed tcgisl:i t;on lo establish 11 <:oldC'n C:atc NMtional llecrealion Are<1 nn San Franci!lc'n llny, rncon1pa.~sinJ.": sonic 24,000 n cre~ or ex isting p11rks, n11litary rese rvlltlonfl 11nd prlv111e lilnds nlont.i JO rnile8 of eo1tstllnt. The l'rrsiden\ Riso prnpost'd rslAbllsh· mrn! of lR new wilderness 11re11J11. Nixon directed the J1et rrt11riel'I nf i\,t?rrrult ure And Int erior to ,,pt!:ed !heir 1<1f'n11flcatinn nf Ar('A.!I lha1 ml 11 h1 hi' pr<'srrvrd a~ \\'1ldcrnrss In thr E;i st<'rn :'l at es PT A to Di sc uss Sc hool ( :ro\\1ding At Feb. 2 3 Mee t \\':iys lo t>nd 01 l't'1't'11wdC'd ~(honls 11nc\ doubl r srss1nns l\'L11 ht d1s(·11sscd 111 a t 'n11·t'rs11v P.11rk l'.:lcn1e11!11rv .SC'hool P11rcnt-Ttache r Associ1tl01i prOgram srt for 7 .JO p.m ~·eb 23 in the iichool's n111!tipurposr rN'lm. 45i2 Sllndbur~ Wa~ Ir\ 111e 1\ d1!C'usi;Jon pant:I will inr tudr Frf'd J Krn.-h, A!i.l'IO<'iAI C supe rlntendt:nl nf thr OrAnr;:r ('oun t.v Oep11rlmt1ll of F.d urA· lion. to.tr.•. ChArltnt Brrg. fltld ll.!l~l~tA nl tn St•tt Scn1tor Otnnl!i E. Carpenter ! R· Ne"''port 8e11chl; William f\1C'Courl , dtpuly roonty counsel ; 11nd P • u ! Tonkovlch. mtmber ot !he S.n .Joaquin F.ltmrn11ry Dl8tr!C'l educ11tlon lll!k forrr. Mr!. Bcl.!ly f'nl kensletn. PTA pN>Jfra n1 c·h:i ir1n1n. SAld. "I have 11skrd !hrs" rlrrlrd oHirilll s to f'ICp lnln 1o1•hat lheir of. fi efs Are doing to strc11 n1l int school cnn· 11ruc1lon IO thA I ou r childre n do no! r x· perlenct f'rOwd C'd schooll'I for !he net t 13 In 2'0 ytars. ·• Prc::;t"nt Sl'hool ('(lll:Hrul•tlo n prot'edurrl'I n<'t"es.~itnlf' A tin1e lai.t of 1pprox1m11trl.v l\\'O yeA r.s bet"''etn lr1c1 devtlop1ncn! 11 nd the opening of a ntw .t<'hool. P.tr9, Falkenst~1n l'ISlld Sht added 1hsi1 the> 11U.yr11 r S<'h<•ll plS1 n -4>1~ -bt1nr;: ronsid<'rtd b~· lht> di8lrk1 wou ld rt.suit in onl)' 11 .1'I ptrttnl incre11~e In l \'alt11blr t'lassroom !lpi('t. ·'The lrvi~ II rt A Is no"· txpt:rienclng A 5ll ptrttnt lncrt "tt In tht number of chil dren eacfl year." 1M said. Topi<'s tn bt conaldeJ·«I In lht dllK'Ullkln ln<'JUdt . -Posslblt M'll' fl11 te le11l1laUon r,.. qultt~ buUder1 lo share rt.~naiblllly (nr s('l'!(xll r.on~lrurllon -Propeny !AX rtUtl. t:ir k Jiveslock · "We 're extreme ly disturbed ~bout lhe polsoo!'! In public !and.~." lnler1nr Secret.ery Roger., C. A. Morton told reporters. Heporls nr rna:s~ shootin~ 11r ragll·.c; from helic.·oplcrs ;ind srn;il! planes, hroughl out in congressional h<'arings last year. created n storm n( indignatlon Jn some pnrts of the ('oun try. Jn Rn en vironmental me.\lsa.11e lo Congress coinciding wil h l ~.suanct: nr th e erecutl ve order against kl lllnR predAlor,. nn government owned Jand.!I. 1\'i xon 111.'lo c11Jled ror prompt acti on to ldeo!Jfy en. <!Angered specie8 rather thao wa iting un· UI they are near ex1inctlon. Niron expressed co ncern 11bout dw indl· Ing population of some enlmelii and bird."f -"sla rli ng wit h our natlonal 11ymbol. th e b11ld eagle." The executive order protecting e11gles a nd other predator~ on public l11nd.~ specified the only exceptions cou ld be "for emergency 11Huatlnn~." The kinds tJf emergenclt!:s were not fully ape!Jed out. Fro11a Page 1 SUNDAY ... assisnmtnl reporte r in Costa Me11a for the DAILY PILOT. rei.urns to Huntington Beach 111 the new Wes t Ora nge Cou nty ci· ly t:d ltor. O!rk\n, :'\J. '' a n11tlve of Sunderland r:ng!i1nd. Hr S('rvrd his 11pprentlccshlp o~ :;;evt>raj. provinci11 I Bri tish new.itp11pe r.~ before goi ng lo /\t he n~. (;re <?ce, whe re he bC'C.'R Tne 11ssi.c:;tant ed itor of the Athens NeW!'I. Ht l11!er went bac~ to London and to Fleet Street A~ 11 copy editor on the I.On· don D11 ily i\ol ail Ht? came to the lJn!tcd ~!!!If'.~ in 1 96~. S<'rV<'d ;i~ city ('d!tor and then as n('ws editor (lf thl' An:1hrin1 RullC'1i n bf'fo rc j o I n in ,:: th(' DAI LY P ILOT staff Jn 1966 Ml8s Combs. 2~. I~ a native or Loni:? R('Hl'h nnd holds 11 BA dcgrrr in l'Oln· 1nun1cation.~ from l '.nl Stall' F'ull<'rton . Shr worke(! as ;i fe eture \\Tilf'r, soc1rtv tditor l'lnd ji!t:nerRI 11 ssii;::nn1ents reporr rr for !ht Call Enterpr1."c ne\vs pa pt"r~ 1n S(111l hra.;1 Los Angrlr." ('ounl.\' prrnr tn Jn1111ni;:: the OA JLV 1•11.n1· .<;!;1 ff in 1970 Roth Dlrkin and ~·l isl'I Cnmb.it hMVt. W!ll\ ()r11nge Count y PrC'ss ('!uh 11w,11rds rnr "best piJ.":t lA.rout ," M is~ Con1 b.~ br !n~ !hr current first pl 11ce winner jn th11t r 11!rgory. Thr Sunday rn1du c1 for 11·hlel1 the~' \1'111 hr r<'.~ponsi hl r 1J11 expect<'d ln nffrr rr11dcr~ ~m !' new r xpcrienc!'i:: 11 1.1·111 U~f' ~ll1nc new l<'C'hniqueii in J{r11oh!c·s 11 nd de.~i~n. f\('evil proinlsed "Thl" h11~ir i·onrt·pt of the SundRy ecli· tlon." t\eevil f;Ald. "Ill 1hHl 1! will main· taln i\3 ldrnlltv and t•ontlnultv l!.'Hh the n!hcr !li ~ dllyll . of publicRHon but , 111 thr .itijmt time, it will hllve qualll ie1 11niqu11 10 the Sunday edition." Thr Sund11y pe C'kagr will Includ e 11 col · 11r ('Omicll !lection In addttton to the Fami- 1.v Wt."f'k lf end T\.' Week mag11iint:.s now ln:\trled 1n SRt urdav editions II 1.1•i!1 he d<?livered e11rly tberore 7 .1n o'c loc k for mn!lt horne ~ubscribers l nn Sundll )' morn inli(s. l.11 tf'·brr11kinR .. port~ And new! of lor11l lnter<'st v1lll ~ 11n important fmt! of thr Sund11y pAckR Re. Krtvll noted. Ru! \hr Sund11 v edition also will relv heavily on .!ltaff:produced fea ture~ 11nd human lnte rt st stories for lhe ll11vor thnt \\'Ill mnke It uniquely lhC' Or nnJte Coast's n\\'O Sundity ne\\'~papcr. he !lAid Uni High Gi ve n Accreditation l lnj\•erstl\' ll1gh School In lrvinl" hR! hten granted full 1ctrtd1tation by the We3tern A ~l atlon ot School~ 11nd Coll eges tWASC I for a ptriod through June 30, 197•. Prlnclp..I Vlcl4'lr Shf'rreltt sa id the 1\1.!;tln High School Dlltricl 's nt'wesl school "'as \•lsiled last Nov. 17 hy A tc1m lncludlng the superintendent or the Coron1·Norco Unified School Dis trict and Jamu E. Dunning, de1n or 1dmlulonii of UC lr\'1nt. (:t ......,.. "" M ... , ..... , _,,.,..,, .. ,_Ill -·-., .... -.. ...f ... "''" .. ~ .... , ...... --· ,.... -·-. ,,.,. ... -· ...... , .............. 11 •' ,._. ,,..,., -c... -· ......... .......(' a#f 'I .. _..,..... ,:n _.. .. , '" -· ll'I ~ '1 .. 1 ·-· IJ U ,,_ .. ,. -lnterdl.llti('t •ireements btlween Khoot dlslri<11, t'ltits and the county -\\1A.)"J of C'Ultin1 tM 111 limt between J!Opll pmduclna home conatruc:Oon alld ochool bulldln,11. Aecrtdilation mf'ans Jraduates of Uni,·t:ri;lty HiRh \\'ho plan to &O Oo to col- \e,_e will have. by virtue ot the !l t'- erediUna •tandards. liken courses lh11t mett college •nd univtrsit)· tnltance re- quirement.a • • Tht mttuna b o~n lo I.bf' publk:. Mrs. f'"alken.c;teln Hid. Unh•trsily }li&:h will 11radu11te h.i tint rl1~' 10 June of this year. rn1 J11tenanc1 coe:ta. ""'Ith U1e exce1>lion 1Jf ltJephone.!I lncluded are park1t11 .ueu for 180 c1r1. The Harbor DltlrlC"t cou rt, now on Wut 18th Street In Cost<1 r..icsa in one amall buO'dtne and se\er;:il rr;:illers, has !hr<'~ judsl"s A fourth '-"':!! be added in March. Krau!'!f' .said 11c·crs~ to thr Collinl'I ~1te i~ cxi 'ellent and In the AstrOpo wcr building . aderiuatr· 'I'he former is offering 211.310 '<1uarc fc~t in 1n unoC'cupied office i;tru('- turr whil r the latter involves 27,150 fre t 1n l'I fa c1 l1 ty which hAs been closed for ~ever11 l yea r~. T re,,io r Rocks S an Fer na ndo 1.l)S AN(;~L~S IAP1 -A quick. rl1sh·ratllln.11 a ftershock of the m11- jor qu akt nearly 11 y~Br a~o ha.!1 roc ked !he San ,..ernando Va lle\', causing 5ome minor da m11ge 11 1;d promplin)il a nx iou~ telephone c11lls. 1'he ter11blur Monda _v n I Ji h t m<'asured .1.8 on the Richlrr St•alf', ~1 ro ng ('nough lo e;1use slighl t11 modrratr d:·irnagP, s a i d ;i ~pukesma n for the ('.a I i r o r n i ii ln!'!titult nf 1'ec h nolo i;;y '.!i ~rismologlcnl l n h n r " t o r y 111 Pasadena. l-'1·1"" Page J NIXON • • • menlnl Protcc·lion Agency unrlf'r the 19i0 Clean Alr Act. Ni xon's proposed tar would lake effect In 1978 and apply In sulfu r em issions in 11rtas which remain in vio latlon or 1he air quallty standards once they lake effeC't In 197.t \'t'hrre pri ma ry s~anderd8 protecting public health have not been met, fuel· burners would be cha rged 15 cents f(lr e11ch pound or .!lulfur they t:mlt Jnto !he 11ir : where secondary .!tlandards pro- tecting properl y, plants and aesthetic val ues remain unmet, the charge would be onl y JO cents per pound. Thert: would be no sulfur char&I': at al l \l'ht:rt both standa rds are being met on a regional ba si s. The Nixon proposal lo control high\\·a~· and airport locations v.·ould 11mt:nd his pend ing proposal of a national land·U."e bill enc ourag lng,the stale8 to adopt land· use planning. Under the new proposal. each stat e wou ld be expected to develop a plan for e-0 ntrolling the locations of highwa ys and airports and obta in fecle ra! approval of its plan by 1975. Any state fa lling tn do so would lose 7 percenl or ii s fed era l h1gh w11y and etrpo rl. funds for 1975 and an additional 7 percent each year until It. came up with an approv ed plan. State1 with Rpproved plan.~ would share lhe forfe ited fund.!I. Without spelling out his propoaa ls, Nix- on .sa id ht: would move to discourage un· nect?ssary development on wethtnd:s "'ilh le,i::isl atlve propo!ials "lo li n1il ;:i p- pticabil ity of certain fede rel tax bent?fit .s" on co n.•tniC'tlon in such are&s. Di an e Dcl\far co Hon1 e Looted Burµ:la rs l/(Jl.LY\\1000 1u r1 1 -Rur,l!l<trs ha\'r r11nsarked the West Hollywood a pert men! nf ni11ne De Marco -on@ or the thrre .~lnfl1ng 1)1' J\1arco sistC'rs -sometJITII' d11r1nR the wee kend 11 nd sto!C'n $7,500 1.1•or1h nf eJothinR ;ind ot her articles. ~heriff's dr pu ties reportf'd 1'.o1 1s~ [)(' M11 rco 101 <1 deputies thC' !h1 rvcs took $~,()()(I \\'Orth Of CJO!hing . .Tl. trlr vis1on set. 11 tape rccorrler, record.~ and wi~s. Rtmodelln& ill es11ma1ed to l.akt: $4 d.1)'!1 for the ColllN bu 1ldJng 11nd 60 days tor McDoMell JlOUil••· II •tU COil lht formtr firm an estimated '270,000 and the l11tte r S.1111.000. Ctiun tv su pervisors told t\r~u se to redut't' thr number of s1!tS lJnrier 1•on· !trlrr:l!H1n to thrl"r on J11 n 25 Tht'Y ~('l· tied on !ht· Colhn~ off{'t. the Atr porl Au.s 111ess Ccnlrr, oWn l•d by !he Irvine f'ornpt1n\I at 18662 \1i1C1\rthur , and lhf t:lpac lnc buildlni.?. !8651 Von Karm1ln Avenue. Thr n·al properucs director said the latter l'-"'O did not nuke final bids on thr proposal, bu t th<1t McDonnell Dou glas entered the comptt11lon last "'etk. 1lie county is Jn the pt()(·t ss of f)Urrh;r.~ lnf 1.2 acre1 from Colllnt on J1mborre Boulevard aouth o! Campua Orlve for 1323.000 Cou r1ty 0H1cl.tls hope 1hr pt>rn1anen t 1·11urt bu1ld1nf! can b(' co rnplC"trrl "·11f11 n 21"? \'('llf~ ·rh;il 1n1·l111lPS 1hP [1(1\I" necessary lo <·omplcle thr dt;.it w1l h Collins and 20 tv 24 months /or con· slrllt'llOO 1'he Collin .~ ~lllf' 1s s11bJ1·c·( lo 1l sa11sfa<·· torv setl lcr11('11t with lht' lrv1r1r Cornpany "hiC'h O\\'ns the ln nd and has lrascd if to ('r1ll1ns ror 99 years Eighty-four ye 11rs re- mains on the pa ct. 1\DVISO RY GRO UPS URGE D • • • wt ean h11rnr~l'I som e volunteer labor and pu! l1 lu work " In hl'r rf•n1;1rks 111 fellow 1·n11nr1lmeo .~he nored, "Th!'rt ill a mo.~t ohviou ~ 11 nd irnmerliAte need for rommittees "'hich will advi.~!' 11~ on pnrk~ 11nd recre11tlon. bran<"h llhr 11ry cm,~truetinn , bike tr11tls and h0usl11g " Mo.~\ <"ounc:ilrnrn agree th(' ei 1y.;:ip- po1nled Ctinun1t l1·~s shou ld hnve sorne s tair assi.~!ance f1·on1 the city govern· 111en!, although c11 1estions of ho.,... n1uch eost would be invoh•f'<I ha ve bee n ra is ed. Counc1ln1an Pryor's rct·ornrneodat ions 11 re to dale thf' nnly .,...ritlcn reco m+ rnendet lons of(rrcd by a ('{)Uncilman. Fol1111ving i.~ ;i sumrn<1ry or her \'iCw~ on ea('h of the cornmittees: -1\rls nnd l'ullu rnl nff;iirs: To prumnte <Iris 1n Irvine Jnl'luding fine nrt.s. musit', dance. dran1a, libraries and museums. \Vould begin enrly neJtolintions .,..•ith the t•ounty nnd the Irvine Comp;iny for ii library J!s location and .~ize . invenrory con1mun1ty cu l!ural offerings and begin n talend11 r of events . '!'here would be nine men1ber.!I and liaison with parks and recreation. Univers1!y aff~irs and youth oppo rtu n!li<'s cumff:itlees. -Ch:irtcr guvernn1cnl : 'J'o begi n \\'{Irk nn a ('1ty ehnr!rr extracting present general l:i ws ;iffec!ing the cit y nnd con1- pil111g eflmmuni ly a.~socia llnn by-laws, in- ves111.:ati11g their constitutionallty to ;:isse!ls possibilities for lwo-le vel form nf gove rnrncnt ba:;ed on the <:orporate <"om- m11nity associcrlions and •or ! a r g r r villages of fro n1 30,000 to 60,000 people. There 1.1·ould be seve n me1nbers and no Ji111sQn lo other con1mHLees. -Cilizrn's gnnl': To assist council in 1naster planning. survey e<>m rnunitic!l lo learn about population. int erests and prioritit's anc\ publish results, and drler1nine needs of whole city. Would in- vr ntory homeowners' a.ssociMtions, con1- munily service organizatio ns and soci al club." 11nd pro"ide a demographic profil e of the city \Voul d have 15 mrmb('r.!I, one rron1 each tract and one 111 large and would have linisnn to every other com- mi tt ee. -Env irl)nn1cntAI qu;i lity : To advisr on ai r and waler quali ty, use or nt1!ur11I resources and how they arc aff<'ct ed by devclopmC'nl I lc!p prepare an en- vironn1 cnl11I in1pacl law, research si lts· !inn, fl ood plain and seis mic regulations and advise plnn ning commission on con· servation. ('nvlron ment al quality and n11t ura! resource t?lcments of a city RC'neral plan. \Vou ld have seven members \\'llh haison to transportation aod open 11pace cornmlltees. -Hou.sing . Tn explore ;:i ll types of housing for Irvin<'. rcderal subsid ies and 1he11 1mpac1. Wnuld immediately look af leasibili!y nf joi nin g Orange County Housing Authority and determine if Any d!>vel (lper!I are seC'klnJ.": Hou.sing and l:rban Developmen t federal runds. Nlne members, !1a1sn n to trnnsport a!lon . 1Jnivcrs11y aH<11rs ;ind public education ,Rroups. -Municipal srrvir cs To look at ~er1'ices nlhcr than police. fir e 11 nd health. de1erm1n t> cquftablr l11xation. in· \ rntnry prese nt county and commun1t_1· asso<'1:i!ion SC'rv1ces, and ;idv1s!' on ron· tract services. Seven members. liaison to pub lic l'IAftty l'lnd p;:i rks .i1nd recrca'.ion ('nmn1HIC<'~ -Open .sp11 ct · To find \\'a)'S of preserv· ing open spA<'<' 1hrn ul!h zon1n11:. c1ry purl'hH~t: or o!hrr rneanq : investi~ale ernnomie~ 11nd study publtc purcha~r. Five: to seven members. ll11lson to pB rkll and reereMl ion ilnd rnv!rorirnental qualify ron1 m1!tees -1';1rk s and !'l'('l'rn111111 '!'o ac\vi~e l'Ot1ne1 I on purch:1sr :.ind 1na1nlcn<H1re <'o:;ts of pilrk.s . as we ll as types of city p1·ograrns, l'r'l'lgh lll't'd for permR nent recreation department. A summe r pro· gr<tm, inventory av Bilable IAeillril'~, survey adult and chHd 111te resl. begin negoti;itions for pnrks in nor thern Irvine. Thirteen members. liaison to youth orr portunities, pub!i" C'du cat1on. nr1s nnd culture, open spa1·e ;ind !r;1nspor1a1ion. -Public education 'l'o advis<" planning commission on anythin~ affecting public s<.:hool districts. rrvte\\' nt•\\' dcvelopmf'nt ;ind nd'/1se council on ho\\' it n1 ay hcl fl sc hool districts. Seven members. liaison to youth oppor1 un1rie!I. housing 11 nd pa rks and recreation eornn111tcrs. -Public safety: To look al police. fire and heallh protection serv ice~ !o !){> of· fered by the <.:II}'. explore innovations 1n these fields and "re1>0n on systrn1s whic h arc both hu mane and Cl'Onom1<'al for the t'ily." Early cont·t•rns would in. volve ;in inventory of hc;i lth services and a cost ;innlysls of contract pol it·(' and l1rr se rv1ees vs. c1t y-0pera ted SC'rv1ccs. Ninr rnr mbcrs, li.'lison to 11n ivcrsi1y 11ffa1rs and municipal sc rv1t·es comn1ittecs. -Transportation : To look at ·•artolfl'I means of tra nsportation i n e I u d i n R pede.striao and bicycle ways, rapid and mass 1r;1nsit and roads. Explore location, routrs and C'OS!s. ~;ar ly t·once rn.s 111<.:lu<I,. drtrrmining .. .,..·hnt happened to $100.000 of eoun!y funds for bike !rail s." the sut·· erss of the l;c 1 bus proJCl'I and search fo r available funds . Seven rnember.!I. with l1<1 1soo to universi ty affairs. housing and parks ;ind recre;itioo comm11tees. -L:niver.sity affairs To advise count1I on un1versi!y a ffai rs Including stuc\C'nl · faculty housi ng needs. cll y servicC'!l, transportation. Rnd to c o o r d in a I e unive rsi ly events. both nthlet ic and cultural. with the .,..·1dcr con1muniry. l':nr- ly J·once rr1s would incl ude an inventory of university facil ities ava il;ible 10 the city, coordination of cornmunily-st ~dent bu~ needs, and inves tigation of stude nt hoos- iog nccd.!I . Seven members. Hai.son lo transportation. housing and arts and cultur<' committ ees -You!h opportu.1ities To ad vise C'OUM· ell on citywide recreiltional , ed ucation.'11 and civic Activitic:'I which art: Rvailable to children and young people In Irvine, assemble and pu blish information abo ut youth ch;bs. UCI even ts, iicholarships and a\\'l'IN'.18 avail able, speriAI education pr<>- j('('!.s and C'Ounsel1ng services availa ble 10 !ht young. Seven members. ha1son lo parks and rccrCRlion. art.!I and culturr. and public education comm11tees. Bra ~~ in ~cw Zealand \\'l::LLINGTON . New Zealand 1AP 1 - Gen_ \Villl am C. We!ltmorelsnd arriv ed at Oh akeB m1l1tary airf1 eld today on 11 thr ee- rl11y \'1:sit tn New Ze11 land 11ml d tight S<"C'Urd~. Beat The Clock U1ually the re is no urge ncy about getting carpeting in1talled. Most poe ple will wait e whol e week! However, wh en the re is a ruah , we cen accommodate those who re- quire immediate service. Wo HAVE 1old and in1talled carpeting the SAME DAY many times. Unleu there is • problem obtaining e 1pecific color or pattem, you c an count on fast service from Alden's, e nd we maintain e large inventory to fac ilitate 'de live rie 1. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1 663 l'lacentla A"'· COSTA MISA 646-4831 HOU~S: Mon. Th.,,. Thun., ' to J,30 -Fri ., ' to f -JAT., "JO to J • ' ) I • I I I I I ! I /' 1 Huntington Beaeh Fountain Valley . • I • Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 65, NO. 33, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUAR Y 8, 1972 TEN CENTS Council Deadlocl{s on By TERRY COVIi.LE 01 "'" 01111 ~llot ~!Ill An anti-parking lot petition moved nowhere ~londay night. as Huntington Beach Councilmen deadlocked 3-3 on whet.her to accept it. Co uncilman Jerry "iatney, absent for the early part of the meeting , refused to break the deadlock when he arrived because he hadn 't heard the earlier discussion. The petil ion seeks to establish a city ordinance which would require a public election before city officials could build a downt own parking lot. If approved, it could block implementation of the Top of the Pier f'lan. f\'lal ney said he v•ould listen to tapes or the couneil discussion, and cast his vote at the Feb. 22 council meeting. An angry Jack Green exploded "'i th criticism or supporters of the initiative petition. ''If it goes lo a vote and is turned down. I really have no interest in helping !he downtown," Green growled. "We should just pull out and let it die. 111e leader of this has nothing in mind but his own self-interests, not the people." The petition circulators were Robert Terry and C. E. Loftis, Sr. They gained more than 4,500 signatures of registered voters. enough to force the council to put the measure on the April II ballot. City Attorney Don Bonfa ruled that the v.•ording of the proposed ord inance is not legal and that the council did not have to accept the initiative petition. "You have three actions.'' Bonfa told Bolsa Delay Sought Beach Seeks to Block Water Project 11untington Beach will ask state At- torney General Evel\e Younger to delay the Metropolitan Water District's pro- posed Bolsa Island water desalting pro- ject. All seven city councilmen agreed fvton- Due Mareh 5 day night to seek help from the attorney general's new environmental action unit. The council request came after a letter from the Huntington Beach HOME Coun- cil opposing the Bolsa project was placed on the agenda. Daily Pilot Preparing First Siinda.y Edition The first Sunday edition of the DAILY PILOT will be published on March 5, it was annoWlced today by Robert N. \Veed, president and publisher. ··AddiWon of the Sunday DAILY PILOT to the six weekday editions of the ne\\•!>pape.r rounds out development of the package we feel Orange Coast residents and businessn1en will consider the area·s pri mary news and advertising medium," he said. The Sunday edition of the DAILY PILOT comes in response to requests by both readers and advcrlisers for full seven-day service, the publisher noted. "After more than a year of study and preparation. "'e believe v.·e now have assembled lhe right combination of ne\li'S and features to provide a unique and useful ser\•ice to both readers and ad- vertisers," he added. Thomas Keevil, DAILY PILOT editor. sald the Sunday edition's news CQntent will maintain the local emphasis DAILY PILOT readers have come to expect from their hometown editions of the h-fon· d<"y-through·Saturday i~sues. •·The product will continue to be mostly bright and loca l with all editorial conlent presented in a tightty packaged format in "·hich things are easy to find. easy to read.·• Kee vii i;aid. Alan J. Dirkin. [orn\er DAILY PILOT \Vest Orange County city editor. was :;elected by Keevil for promotion to the post of Sunday editor. Jacqueline Ann Combs of the DAILY PILOT women's section staff will serve as assistant to the Sunday editor. Keevil said. Terry S. Coville, who served on the \Vest Orange County slafl under Dirkin and. more recently was a general assignment reporter in Costa ~1es.a for !he DAILY PILOT. relurns to Huntington Beach as the new West Orange County ci- ty editor. Dirkin , 33, is a native of Sunderland. Jo:ngland. He served his apprenticeship on several provincial British newspapers before going to Athens. Greeci!:, where he became assislanl editor of the Athens News. He later went back Ul London and to tS« SUNDAY, Page ZJ Coville Returns To Head Bureau 111 Wes t Countv J Terry S. Coville, 'TT, today has returned lo a news beat he knows well as he takes up offi cially his new duties as West Orange County editor for the DAILY PILOT. During his more than t.hrec yPars on the DAILY PlLOT staff, he ha s spent 1 211 years reporting activities in Hunting- ton Beach, F'ountai 11. \r"alley, Seal Beach and other parls of • •. "' West Orange County. cov1u.E He left the West Orange County beat. in fact. only about eigh t months ago to do a stint as a general assignment reporter \~:orking out of the DAILY PILOT'l'i Costa ?-.1esa office. A native of San Diego, Coville graduated from the University or Missouri in 1966. During service with the U.S. Anny, he was aMigned to the military intelligence orfice in Panama and later worked on the staff of the English language Panama Ci- ty daily newspaper, the Star and Herald. ''\Ve must have a total report on the Bolsa project," Councilman Jack Green urged , He suggested using the Attorney General to delay the project. The MWD is seeking permission to buy 35 acres of land from Signal Oil in Hun- tington Beach. A switching station would be built on the 35 acres to serve the 40· acre island MWD wants to create off Bolsa Chica State Beach, MWD officials also wa nt to secure a utility easement across Signal-owned land in the Bo!sa Chica marshlands. Several critics claim that f\.t\\ID authorities have not supplied the city with a full environmental impact report. They ~vant to know the effect the utility easement on the marshlands, and of the island on the beach and surf. "As environmental impact reports go, th is one is fairly &:ood compared to others." said Green, who is executive director of the Regional Anti-Pollution Authority in Palm Springs. "What we need is a total report on tho Balsa pro· ject." ''Let's oppose the project now," Coun- cilman Jerry Matney suggested. ·•J don 't think we should oppose ii yet. v.·e don't know what ~·e're doing," Green replied. The MWD hopes to build a nuclear factory on a 40-acre man-made island. At one time two other power agencies con- sidered a joint effort with the MWD, but they dropped out three yea rs ago when the estimated rosls jumped from $444 million to $765 million. ~fost officials thought the island plan was dead but MWD authorities now say they'll go it alone. While the island isn 't expected to be built for another 10-20 years. the M\YD wants to buy the Signal land now while the cost is lower. Councilman Norma Gibbs thought the city ought to make three requests: send a representative before the co u n I y superviso rs. request a 90-d;iy extension of ~tudy time from MWD and seek the At- torney General's help. City Planning Director Ken Reynolds said there was no use in asking for a 90· day extension. ''MWD off icial11 ha\•e already said they won 't wa il past March I . " Councilman Donald Shipley was alarm- ed by MWD plans that indicate the 40- acre island mighl be doubled in size at !Orne future date. "A-1aybe t can believe the easement won't affect the marshland ," said Ship- ley. a biok>gist at Cal State, Ulng Beach. "Maybe, but that 40-acre island out there will have horrendous impact." Councilmen authorized the city ad- ministration to send an immed iate letter to the Attorney General's environmental unit requesting that office to intervene for the city. ' 7 Convicted in Repair Trial Feb. 29 Hearirig Set on Motion for New Trial By TO~f BARLEY Of ... o.I,., ~· $IHI The "Serviee Slalion Seven'· art guilty. That was the verdk\. of an Orange County Suptrlor Court jury Monday night alter four days of mulling evid~ rad:· ed up in the marathon elghl-week lrW of sel'etl Orange Coast residents. The obviously weary Jurors returned guUty verdict$ on eight of the nine oounta of conspiracy with Intent to cheat and defraud Orange County mot orists and they named Jerry Kendall. 35. of 969 Sonora &ad. Co!lt.a Mesa, in two of those guilty ckci>ions. Kendall had be<n named all through lbe trial with Stanley Davis. J4, of U.S San Pablo Circle. Costa ~1esa and ' Edward Carney, 'rl, of 20862 Shell Harbour Oriv,, Hunt.lngton Beach, 11 one of the three archlttt.ta or an auto repair fraud llnkin& 11 1<rvlce 1tatlonl raiclng from. Seal Beach to San Clomtnta. . Judge Jamei Turner onler<ll all ..... to ..tum Muell 13 for ..,.tencmg. They face a poaible state priaon term ri up to JO years. Judge Turner sc:hodulld Feb. a for a hearing on a motion for 1 new trial aft.tr o6mpllme:nting defense attomcyJ Al Stok- ke. Frank Moran and George Shibata and prosttutor Richard Sttnton for t.heJr "gentlemanly conduct thnJu&h a loog and eJ.haUSting tt\al. "We hear 1 lot lhtse days about eourtroom problems auted by the likes of the Chicago sev'n and Olarles Manson trials," Judge Tu . .-ner told the jury. "We h.av' nothing llke that here and I c.an'l recall being in the presence of 1 mora devoted njury or more gentlemanly 1t.-tomey1.',- 1be verdict obviouaty came a.J a blo" to all ..... ddendanta. Three had opeoly prr.dicttd a ftw hour• before the jury returned that llley would b< ctaarld of charges that produc.d an Orange Counly Grlllld Jury Indictment. Convicted with Ktndall, Davis and Carney "ere Roger Mendenhall . 21. of 211()9$ Avtnlda DI! Seo, M111ion Vitjo, David COncbola, 22, of SOOO Garden Grove Blvd, Westmiluta< •nd Christopher 6nri- 4S.. REP AIR, Pqe %1 Anti-Parl{ing Petition eouncilmen. "You can accept the Pf'lillon and put the measure on the April ballot. You can adopt the proposed ord1na11c,. Or you can ignore it " lie.> explained that if the petitio n is ii;:- nored, 1ls ba ckers \1·ould huve to go In L'Ourt lo prove its legall!y. '"I'm not advising you which acllon lo take." Bonfa said. "Bur 11 wttl have to be tested in court. EithC'r before or after the election, and it doesn't n\atler to nic ,'' Councilmen Green. Al Coen and ri1nL No1111a Gibbs did not want to accept the "Fo111· of lJs' petition. Their voles were offset by Coun- <'i lmen Georg e lo.lrCra ckrn. Ted Barll l•lt and Donold Shiplty \\'ho wanted It on the April ballot. "I lhink the council hns to n1orall,v allow the people to vnte on this,'' »lcCra.cken Sl'l!d . "IF "'e flrPn 't up here to 1111tke dccisiQn11, \Vhy nre we here?" asked »trs, l:ibbs. Green challenf.:cd the other counc1ln1rn lo let the people vole on civic ccntC'r bonds. library constnict1on and other ma · jor LSSUt'~ ··1r 1111y1111t• h.1d brous:.ht a ptlll1on we prub11bly l\llt1ltl lei thern lll\t•,'' rtplied UMrtlt•tl . (~rct>n v.·urn td MrCra.r ktn 11nd ShlpltY lhnt !hr pt•IH1011 ""ould ht<·ome 11n eleo- t1on 1.-.:-111· U11lh McCrflt ken 1uid Shipley :1rr uri fuJ' re-election ill April. Green 1s tltll. lk111fa tn!d eo11nciln11•11 FPb, 22 Is lht. last dHle th11y 1·1111 act on !he 1)("tH!on and s1i11 Eel 11 on the April I I bnllot. Four persons who said they poured blood over selec· tive s.ervice t e<:ords in subµrban Evanston Jaat .f.pril stanil together alter 'they were sentenceif Monday to one year prison terms. The group, who call them· selves 'The Four of Us,' are from left: John Baran· ski, 23; Mary Lu bbers, 23; Thomas Clark, 21 an d Eileen Kreutz, 24. All romai nod free on f~,oo'o ,p- peal 'bonds: They were convicted Doc. J of con· epiracy to destroy draft records. Melterni Leading Handicap Fle et In Acapulco Race By ALi\fON LOCKABEY 0111, ,.u.1 •••llrtt 1011.,. ~le ltemi. a Santana-37 sloop skippered by BJll J onas of San Francisco's Corinthian Yacht Club. was holdin~ the handicap lead in the 1,430-mile San Diego lo Acapulco race today as brisk winds eontinued to pu sh the 27-boat fleet dOll.'n the Baja California coast. Meltem1 is a Cla ss C entry. \.Vhilc the 37-footcr led lhe handicap :is p1ran ls, an en1irely sepa rate ra ce for firs! to fin ish \vas going on at the head o[ the fleet an1ong three big Clas.<; A yachti;, ~1ark John son's 73-fool ketch Windward Passage wa s se tting the pace with nearly twice the milrage under her keel than the record holding Sirius 11 had at the same time in her 1964 record run . With an average of 11 knots for the first 24 hou rs of sailing, Passage logged 264 miles the rirsl day -nearly as much as Siriw: 11 had in two da ys of sailing in 1964. But the race was not yet in the bag for Windward Passage. Less than five mile s astern -and al!O ahead of the old record -was Ken DeMeuse's 76-foot Blackfin with a chance to catch up if the winds go light. Slrlt11 11. now owned and skippered by Bob Lynch of Newport Harbor Yacht Club, was In third place about 20 mileJ behi nd the leaden:. Corrected time standings : OVERALL -( JJ Meltemi; (2) Vixen, Frank Hope, :DVC: (3) Barco de Oro, Enrique Braun, Acapulco YC; (4) Alegre, John McAllister, Lahaina YC: (5) Starl- ing Il l, Nonnan Ream Jr.1 SDYC. CLASS A -(I) Baca de Oro: 12) Vee· tor If, Herb Johnson. SOYC; (lJ Windw1rd Passage: (41 Btackfin; CS) Nalu IV. Peter Grant, NHYC. CLASS B -II I Alegre : [2) Starllng llf; 41) TI!alia JV, Joe Barbee, SDYC; (4J Wlndsta r. Walter East. SDVC; (~I Thera, J..,,.. O'Hern. SDYC. CLASS C -(I) Melteml · 12) Vixen : (I) Ntmnts. Tom To b In I SDYC: 14) Sigame, Sid Renkow, DRYC; (I ) B\ltun, Will~ Cor1Jett, SDYC. Auto Crash Kills ·4 • PORTOLA (UPI ) -A lwo-ear co\l~lon on CaUfornla 70 ta.sl of lbla Plumas Co u 11 t y community hu killed four pt...,,.. The Clltfomla J1lghway Patrol kien-- Ufled Ille "1cti,,,. ., f\idlard ! •. Welch, 41 , ri Alpine, hit wife. Sharon 1. ... 36: lll<tr ll·yf9r-old daughter. Shelly, and Ronald Lloyd Half, It, of Chll-. , Nixon Calls for Special Laws to Co11t1·ol Pollution By STAN BENJAMIN \VASHINGTON (AP) -Pre!ident Nix- on sent Congress a special environment.al message tOOay proposing half a dozen new Jeglslallve measures including a tax on air·polluting sulfur emissions. Other proposals made by the President wou ld : -Ask the United Na!lons lo establish " 1pccial environment fund , which would reach $100 n1illion over five years and the UniteO Stales would support with a ra1r 11hare or the funding. -Encourage states to 1tart controllin~ !he location or highways and airports by 1975 or else start Jo1Jng federal aid for such projects. -Discourage cons truction on t h e dwindling lands bordering Jake.s, rivers and oceans by restricting tax advantagu. -Control the land-disposa l of to1.ic wastes through gtate regulation undtr federal 'guidelines. -Control llOil runoff from construction ptojecta, again through federal guidelines and state regulation. Jn other execullve •ctkln1, Nixon aaid he h11 ordtred the development of oc· cupatlonal health 1tanc18rd1 to protect fann worker11 from ptatk:lde poltonlng, and ordered the preparatlon of ne:w ln- l'iulation 1tandards for federally aided multiple dwelllng1 to conserve energy. He added ttiat federal tax policy l! being "clarlfled" concerning tax ex- emption for the rlnanctng -by industry - of fa cllltlt• to recycle indUltrlal wa11ta, Nixon reminded O>ngrHs that II of h11 20 major envtronmental leglllatlve pro- poulA last year are awalUng action. "Wt year," he aa·Jd, "'wu, quite pro- ptrly, a year of ccmtderatiot1 of thete mta1ure1 by lhe. Congrea. "I urge. however, that th1s be a year of action on aJI or them, 80 thJt we ca.n move on from Int.muon t o ac- oomplit hment In the lmportant need.I they addrto, •• Tiie PreJldent abo UfJed crullon of a new t>e:partment of NeturaJ Raourca centered on the pr.-! Interior Deparl- ment. • propoul NIJOn made lut r••r along wtth a propoMd reallgnm<nt o the executive branch • The reduction of sulfur .. ldtl, !he aim of the new aa.lfur ta1 propoul, I.I already one of the chief goals of the national alt quallly 1tandardJ let by the Environ· mtn1'11 Protection Agency under the 1970 Cle3 n Alr Act. Nixon'• propoMd ta.x would take efftcl In 197! and apply to sulfur rm1Uio011 in 1reJ.S which remain In vJoUilklll Of tht air • quahty standards once they tako tfld ht 197~. \\'here primary l!ttandarda protect.In& public health have not heen met, fuel· burners would be charged I~ cents for each pound of sulfur they emit Into lht air; whl!re secondary standards pro- lrcling property, plent8 and sestheUe values remain unmet, the charac would be only 10 cenl.J per pound. There woul d be no 1rulfur charge 1t all where both slandard11 are htlng met on a regiunul bas\11. Th e Nncon propo~al to control highway and airport location! wou ld 1:1mend hla pending proposal of a natlonal land-1.1se hill encouraging the state11 lo adopt J1nd~ LJ!le planning. Under the new proposal, eac;h slate would be expected t() develor, 11 plan for controlling the locatloru of h &hw1y1 and airports and obtain federal •pprova/ of its ph1n by 197&. Any l'itate falling t.o do 10 would Iott 7 percent of It 1 federal highway and airport funds for 1975 snd an add!Uonal 7 percent each year until it came up with an approved pl811. St.atea with 1pproved plana would lhart fSec NIXON, P11e Z) ~fore JUnny 1kles on the ap:ndli for Wedntlday, folto1Nliil fll1y morning low cloudJ and for •Jone Iii< oouUlne. lfigl!s Wedneaday II to la. i....1 U>n!ght 11 to tlle•mfcf. 40'1. INSWE TODA 'l' Lo. A"ll•l<!I plaj/a ft cool ... uear after deVOl14tfno '°""" quake. BMt will the SouthJond be °' luck11 ne.rt time? Ezpnta 1411 another rn.afor qr.iake ti du. In tht titzt 30 11eor1. Ste 1tory. Page 7. L. M. l9t'f r (•ll!Mlfll• I c1.,,,,,.,. ,..,. C-.kt 11 (lfl-· 1• 0.•I• "•"•'" f . .. ,.,,,, ,,,. . l~"fllol-ml It ···~ 1 .. ,, .., -llMw• ' ,,,._ .. ...__ ~ )4 l ' • ! . -' \JAll 'f PILOl " His Good Deecl Ra1ig tlr.e Bell A 6--year-old yt'.lungster fro1n llun· tiqton Beach Mooday rugbl waa -for Avinl lhe bell from'• city ftre englnt. The cit11lion, issutd by ti.1ayor George McCracken , pr a i s rd Christopher f\'ace, 610 lnd1anapoils St .• for "doing a good deed for the city." La!!! Dec. 2J the boy saw a part or the bell ra!I off a firr engine. He retrieved the piece and polished it before returning it to the fire depar tment A card of thanks promised to the youngster by riremen never ar- rlv~ becl!:use of an oversight Monday night's comn1enda11on by the mayor and the city councH befor an applauding audience "·as hi.!! belated reward. President Bans Use of Poison Against Birds WAS~IINGTON (UPI 1 -President Nixon today banned the poisoning of eagles, hawks, coyotes, falcons and other predators on federal lands, and proposed legislation to prevent shooting or trap- ping them as well. The ban on poisoning was put in force t~iately by an e1ecutive order. Ranchers In the West have been killing these animals and birds because they at· tack livestock. "We're extremely disturbed about the poi.sons in public lands," Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton told reporters. Reports or mass shooting or eagles from helicopters and small planes, brought out in congressional hearings last year, created a storm of indignation in some parts o( the country. In an environmental message to Congress coinciding with hisuance of the executive order against killing predators on government owned lands, Nixon also called for prompt action to identify en· dangered spec ies rather than waiting un· Lil they are near extinction. Nixon expressed concern about dwindl- ing population of some animals and birds -"starting with our national symbol. the bald eagle.'' The executive order protecting eagles and other predators on public lands gpecified the only exceptiorui: couJd be ''Jor emergency situations.·• The kinds of emergencies were not fully spell-.! out. From Pagel NIXO~ ... the forfe ited fund s. Wiiut spelling out his proposal s. Nix· ~n s he would move to discourage un· nece ry development on wetlands with legis lflive proposals "to limit ap- plica!fJity of certain federal tax benefits" on ccptruclion in such areas. Diane DeMarco Home Looted by Burglars lrJttOq, teonlllf 8, 1972 Beaeh Trial Story-changing Alleged fl.lurder suspect Maxine Posth W<tS ac· cused todlly as her Orange County SuJ)trior Court trial !llO\'rd 1ntu 11 ~ final hours of changing the stury ~i1e allegedly told Huntington Beach police shortly after the killing or her husband !11st June 13. But .".-!rs. Posth, 51 , who hrokc du11·n repeatedly during her testimuny ttus rnorrung, denied that she had ever told police that she chased her husb11nd Robert. 41 , from lhe kitchen to the fami ly Trails Boosted By Councilnieu. In Hu11titigto1i Recrealional trails received a boost from the Huntingkln Beach City Council Monday night. Councilmen unanimously ordered the p~n~ing. commission to make trails a top pr1or1ty Jn designing the city master plan after some councilmen argued against doing just that. "I support the recreational trails pro- posal," said Cou ncilman Al Coen. "But jt 's not proper for the council to con- tinually change the planning com· mission's priorities. We should meet with them first." After contiderable discussion Coen supported a motion by Cou~cilman Norma Gibbs to boost trails to the top of planning priorities. Mrs. Gibbs' motion followed another council direc ti ve which ordered the recreation and parks comm ission to im· plement a four-point trails plan outlined by the unoffi cial city recreational trails committee. Mrs. Margaret Carlberg, chairman of the trails committee. indica ted she wa.!l somewhat confused. Councilmen adopted her recommendations -one of whi ch was to establish an official !rails com- mittee -then asked her to keep her ~nofficial committee working on the pre>- Ject. . ~he four points requested by the unof- f1c1al tra ils committee: -Adoption of a set standard of miles of trails per populalion. For its current population of 130,000. the committee sug· gested Huntington Beach needs 132 mile.!! or tr~ils. including 60 each for bicycles and hikers and 12 for equestrian use. -Authorization of $138.000 in the 19n. 73 city budget to build a 132-mile trails syslera. -Creation of an official recreational trails committee. -Adoption of .a general philosophy rega rding the need and desire for trails in Huntington Beach . More than 70 residents su pporting the trails concept attended the council session. Mrs. Carlberg's committee was rapidly formec! l~st Ap~il after. th e city Planning Commission said a trails system is not a high priority for inclusion in the rity's master plan. Dr. Ralph Bauer, chairman of the l~un· tington Beach Union High School District Board of Trustees. helped present some of the trail plans. He urged the council to adopt "what we feel is a philosophy that lries to enhance the quality of life for people who Jive htre." Councilmen generally favored the trails committee recommendations. but were not surt how lo implement them. • Ill Case room before plunging the k111fe 1ntrJ hls chesl. And ~he dl'n1ed prosrr;utrJr Hobert <.0h<11lertun'l'i .;uggesllnn that !'he s:ud ··r1a sty lh ini.:s" to her spol1:;e as the c·ou pie quarreled over the han1bur~er!I he brought into the home al 8352 Ah <lr<tdu St for Sunday <l lnnt!r. '!'he silver-haired drfendanl rtpc;1ted lu Chatterton h1:r earl ier testirnon~· !hilt tier husband brought the hamburgers h<lnle "Just to be ornery .. And she testified through her sobs that she went to her car w1th the intention of going out to get the chicken she had originally ordered for the meal. f.·lrs. Posth said her hu~band follo"•ed her to the car, dragged her from ii by the hair and pulled her all the way back to the kitchen. She then told hiln, she 1old Chatterton today, "I could kill you" Chatterton insists that she did exactlv that He alleges that Mrs. Posth pursued her hu sband into the f;imily roon1 and stabbed hin1 in the chest. Chatterton told Mrs. Posth lodav th<1! she had earlier told l·luntington 'Beach Detective Gene Pool that neither sh e nor her husband were drunk at the time he re ceived his fatal wou nds. Mrs, Posth told Chatterton today that they were both drunk and that she could not recall any details of the stabbing after her husband placed the knife in her hands. Mrs. Posth has earlier testified that her husband freq uently beat her and she today told the jury that he also held a llghted clgaret to her hand. It is expected th at Chatterton and defense attorney Leonard McBr ide will deliver the final arguments late today. Mrs. Posth is accused of first degree murder. The prosecution is not seeking the death penalty. Small Business Lectures Slated At Golde11 West The first lecture in a seven-part seminar tor small business owners begins T~esday. night. at Golden \\'est College "'Ith a d1scuss1on on ''Crime Prevention -Some Recommended Procedures." Officer Jerry Webb of the 1-lun tington Beach Police Department will speak at 7:30 p.m., jn the college center. Businessmen may register for the seminar at the lecture. There is nn fee. Six other sessions in the Chomber .(If Commerce sponsored seminar include: -"Employe ·Customer RelaUons : Advertising and Sales," J~ o w a rd !\1atheny, general m a nager of Montgomery Ward . Fch. 22. -"Purchasing Technifjucs-Pricin~ - Inventory -Mark-ups," Laddie Reday , president, American '\later Products Corp .. March 14. -"Sources of Finance for the Small Business Owner," Albert Eccles, Jr , financial consultant, April 11. -"Credit Management -Accounting and Tax Con{rols ," Rov Schriver. tusiness division chairman, Golden West College, April 2..5. -''Personnel Recruitment -Training and Motivation" \Va.Iler f'. Young. personnel n1anager, f\1c0onne1! Douglas Astronautics Co .. Ma y 9 -"Business Insurance Prngrams.'' Stephen llolden, president. South Shores lnsuraJ11ce Agency, Inc ., May 23. HOLL VV.'000 ! UPI l -Burglars have ransacked the West Hollywood apartment of Diane De Marco -one of the three singing De fo.1arco sister.! -sometime during the weekend and stolen $7,500 \\'Orth of clothing rind other articles, &heriff's deputies reported. ~llss De l\1arco to!d deputies the thieves took $5.000 worth of clothing. a television set. a lape recorder, re cords and wigs. OIANGl (;0.UT Irving Again Refuses Sample of Handwriting DAILY PILOT CllWfttE COAST l'UILrsHIMI> COM7NfV loliel"f N. w •• , ..,..IMlt Md '"*lllllr' J1cl •· C.rlt'f Wb ~ .. '*-111 _. Ttr.-11 -=···· EllllW n.'"11 A. M11rp~ia. M~lng Edl- A11• Dirki" .,., Or ..... c:-iry Ed1tllr tt • .-.J ......... OMc.e 17176 ••• ,. ••1111•..-4 M1iti.-, A.olldmi: r.o. 1u 7'11, t2641 .,,...,,._ Uf9'9 a.di: Zit Ferwt A.,... C•'9 "'"91 m ..... , .. , S'"'-t .......,, ~~ -,.._, ........ a.. ~ as *'1l 1U C:.W .... DI.ft.,. Pll.O'I", ... ...,. ~ ~ .. ........... Ill~"""..,. s_. ... ,. ....... """""' .... ~ ... ci.. ,,_,_l ..... C..tlo -... ..... ...,_ 9..o. ~ Ve._,, .... C...._..., ~---.... ~---­,....., .. """" f'Tk..., -~ ..., II ., -..., .., ...... ea. .,,... Tar.,••• (7141 '4Z-4m Cl ........... I I 4U~l471 ~ """ """-' ~ "'llllMt'W c...e..,., ,.. ...,.. ••""'-llt.1nlt:M,, ......... __. .. ..,._..._.,,. ......_ ..,. ............. ..,,_, ~ .... ...... .,.. ....... . ....... _ .......... .._ ... C.• ...... Ce ........ ~-.. .,. .. ..., _,,, ,. -• a . ., .....,, .......,. .., ... ,,.., iUI .....,,. f'rom Wire Services NEW YORK -Clifford Irving. com- piler of the refuted Howard Hughes autobiography, balked today for a second day at supplying 111 federal grand jury with handwriting samples for comparison with endorsements on $650,000 worth of advance payment checks made lo Hughes. In his second appearance be(ore !he jury, the novelist was accompanied by his wife, Edith, who .appeared pale and tense. They were taken to !he courtroom of U.S. 'District Court Judge Mor ris E. Lasker after Irving refused to submit ha ndwriting samples, and t.asker for a second time direc ted him to comply. Irving's attorney. Maurice Nessen. con- lended Monday that subm ission of the samples would 1 violate Irving '" con- stitutional privilege not to testify against himself. llandwriting as well a s testimony might be self-incrlmlnaling, Nessen said. However, Lasker ruled that the request by federal pr03ecutors was proper, pl1c-- ing lrving Jn danger of a contempt of court citaUon if he conUnuu to balk. It was not known what Irvine would be asked to write. But one federal authority commented with • smile. "We might 1sk him to wriU 'H, R. HU&fles' five Umei to m11ke a comparison." McGraw·ltill PubUShl.ng Co. gave Irv· Ing three chtclu made out to "H. R. Hughes" to be conveyed to tbt billionaire industriaUst for hl1 cooperation ln tbt book . But In court 11ffida vits identified II! l~ughes' h.andwrltin1 and In 1 te.lephone nt.w-1 conferencf! a voice ldenUfied as \ U"ITtlWfltlt PALE AND rENSE Author'• Wife, ldlth Jlughes' dtoled ever meeting Irving or collaborating In the book. And frvlng subsequtnUy admitted that his Swl.ss·born wife. Edith . deposited and later withdrew the check.! from 1 Swiss bank account the opened in the name of "Helga R. Huah ... " , Band Blou;ing Burger Bcisli The sounds ot music will nllngle wl!h lite smells of hamburgers, !l:ihburgers and French fries when lhe lfuntlngton Be:ach High School Oiler Band plays al McOonald's tlamburger! Wednesdav afternoon. Band men1be:rs . with ctn as5 1~t f1 u111 lb~ Oi!e r drill te-a1n, will perfur1n Jor the public from 4 p m, to 8 pm.. Wednesday , at McDonald's, 20362 li<'ach Blvd. 1sourh of 1\dan1s Avenue •, to ral se funds for tile booster i.:lub '!"he rna1u1gemeri1 of fl.1c0ona!d's hn:rr agreed to .split the day's proJits with the band Thts is the second ;1nnu31 5U-50 dav for !he band at 1'-.l<"Dnnca!d '.s. · Band rn crnhcrs w1Jt pn1~·1de l'On· llnuous music during their fnur- hour stint~ Angry Teachers Study Impasse In Pay Dispute Angry teachers lhre<itened tu declare ;in in1passe after trustees of the Ocean View School District Mon da y night turned down their request for a 7.6 percent pay inrrease erfective F'eb. I. •·unless the board changes its posi· hon," said Linda Dozier. executive di rec· tor or the group lhaL represents Ocean View teachers, "J would say there is a probability that teachers will declare an impasse." If an impasse is declared, law requires that a fact finding panel be appointed lo propose a compromise solution. "[ look very fa vorably upon the teRc~ers' request." said George Logan, president of the board of trustees. "If il \\'ere made at a different time. under dif· ferent cir~u mstances, we might be able to handle 11. ''But the real question is \vhere the money is going to come from? We just don't have 11.'' Logan said. A key element in the controversy is now much money is involved. Administrators of the district said that the teachers proposal would cost the district $1.5 million if non-teachers are given the same pay and benefit in- creases. and if the contract is continued over the next school year. Teachers. on the other hand, insist that !hey ;ire asking for a 7.6 perC'l.'nt raise only through June 31}, 1972, and o"ly for themselves. "ll is unfair to say our pro- posal will cost $1.S million," said Mrs. Dozier. "Our proposal will cost $242,000 through the end of the ye4r -~!us a smaller amount in fringe benefits -and that·~ all they shhuld IOOk at." Superintendent CI a r e n ct Hall disagreed. '"fhe board is in the regretful position of wanting to give an increase. but not having tbe money to do so," said Drt Ha!!. '"We have a policy of giving everyune th e same raise. and we must took at t~ real cost." F cimed Director Wolter Lo1ig Dies PALr-.1 SPRINGS <AP 1 -Ylalter Lang . y;hn directed ''Cheaper by the ~zen." "Call ~Ie Madam ." "The K in~ and I" and more than 50 other mol'ies, has died at 75 He succumbed r..1onday at Desert Hospit al. Spokesmen didn 't disclose the c:iuse of death. L:iru(s films inclurled '"There's No Rusi ncss Like Show Business." "~1 oon 01'cr Miami." "Slate Fair.'' "Tin Pan Alley" and "With a Song in My Heart ." Fro• Pqe l REP .<\IR FRAUD • • • quez, 2$, of 7592 Volga Drive, and llenn C..stnnguay , 21 , of 7661 Commodort Drive , bolh of Huni ington Beach. ~utloo wltnH.wa of pa.rutipat1ng lJ'J ' 1·onsplracy ~t included the delibtralt puncluring of j>atronJ' tires, the destrucr- 11un of radi11Wr Cilp,5 alld seals and th; performance or needless and costlj. repair work. · They were all accused by nearly 30 pro. 'S<1f e' Pier Zoue At I-/ u11.tiugto1i Nixe<l by Council J··1shcrmen and surfers are going to have to get along with e-ach other at the liuntinglon Beach Pier Monday ni~ht. L'Oiln<"iln1e11 ref1ised to 1·reate <t "s;ife '" zone around the pier fur f1::.hermcr1 -a zone where surfers and swimmers could not approach the pier p1l1ngs. 1'he request came from J a m es DeGuelle, a council candidate and longt1n1e fisherman at the pier, "The verbal abuse from some surfer s lu1s dri ven fishermen away from Hun· tington 13each ," DeGuelle explained. "Lines have been cut, poles lost and peo~ pie insulted ." "Obscene language is already covered llnder crl!ninal J:iw." Counc.i!n1an Al Cue11. an attorney. pointed oul. Der.t1clle asked the f'OUntil lo create ;in area 50.75 feet out from rhe pier near the sho:el~rie, where fishermen c~;1ld drop their lines and not have any interference- . "You'd be lPglslating ag8inst one grouP Ln f<1l'ur of another .'' said Vince Moorhouse, director of h<1rbors and beaches. ""'hat Jt boils down to is that during the Corbina run , fi shermen con1e closer to shore on !he pier. But that area is also good for surfing. But durin-'J: those n1onths you can't surf anywhere from J l a.m. to 5 p.m. Summer surfini:: is restricted to early morning and late afternoon. ··or 14 piers in Southern California. 10 allow surfing in and around the pier. It's realty 11 matter of cooperation between the two groups," Moorhouse said. From Page 1 SUND,<\ Y ... 1-~lcet Street as a copy editor on the Lon- don Daily Mail. lie came lo the United States in 1965, served as city' edilor and !hen as ne"'S editor nf the Anaheim Bull etin bt'fore joini ng the DAILY Pfl.01" Slaff in 1!166. t.·llss Combs. 2t is a nati ve or Long Rca1·h and holds a BA degree in com· 1nunications from Cal Stale F'ullerton. She worked as a feature \\'tiler, society edilor and general assi gnments reporter for the Call Enterprise newspapers 1n Southeast Los Angeles County prior to joininB the P'\IL Y PILOT ftaif jn. 1970. Both Dirkin and Miss Combs have won Orange County Press Club awards Jor ''be.rt page · Jayeut . '';Mt£! t0lim~ being the currenf first place winner in that category. Tbe Su nday product for which they will he responsible is t:?xpected to offer readers some new experiences. ft will use some ne w technique.~ in graphics and design. Kecvil promised. "The basic concept of the Sunday edi· ti on.'' Keevil said, "is that it will main- tain its identity and continuity with the other sb: days of publication but . .11t the same time, it will have qualities u.nique to the Sunday edi1ion." The Sunday package will include a col- or comics se<:tion in addition to the Fami· Iv \l,'eekly and TV Weck magazines now inserted in Saturday editions . It will be del ivered ear!v !before 7-!l-O o"clock for most home sUbscribers) on Sunday mornings. Late-breaking sport s 11nd ney,•s of local intrrest 11·111 be an importanl part of the Sunday package, Keev1I notPd . But the Sunday edition also will rely heavily on staH-produced i'eatures and h1iman inlerc st storles for th!' navo r that Y.'i!I make it uniquely the Or;:inge Coast's own Sunday newspaper . he said . lt l\'ilS alleged throughout the lrlal th.a t C'Ustotners were pressured into havin t !heir t'ars hois!ed on the lube bay rack Hl the pretcll.~~ tl1<d l'i Uppu::ol!tl J~fCl'l.'l (.:(IU!4 be belier spoiled frorn that location, f'ormer employes and rustornf'r~ told the jury that darnllge was inf!leted to their t.:ar5 and shuck <Jbl'iurbers and fuel pun1ps \\'f're spr:1yed w1!h oil to g1vr th9. ilnpression that the part! lcAkcd a n ct should be replaced. All three defense lawyers announced their lr1tcn t1011 to appc;il the verdict 1~ Judge Tul'ner denies ttie motion for • nc\I' trial. The Verdict was set:?n fl.1onday as a ma-: jor victory for the districl attorney's. lraud squ<td 1n a campaign to combat y,•hat was staled to be before !he triar. started a growing auto repair racket i~ Orange County. f.1ost of the Art'<J, Mobil, Shell encl 1'ex• aco stations Involved in the conspiracy are now under new management: lnvestigalors conceded after the verdict. that n1any service station operators ui !he n!feclcd arr.as arc doing llicir hesl to. upgrade their i1nage in lhc (·ornn1uni1y. All four cul con1panies at·e reported tn have fissured la1vme-n that future leasing- of their stations will be rigidly superviseq · in a determined effort lo eliminate the . type of practice that led to Monday ·~· \'erdict. ·(:( i::r i::I Defendant Fails In Bid to Jump From 7th Floor ,· Orange County 's sensation-packed "lir~ puncturing trial" ended with a bang l\1on-· day night when a convicted defendanf . broke free in a neighboring courtroom. and attempted to leap from the seventh' floor of the county courthouse. ' J\arl Godbey Stanford, 21, of Tustin' srnashed his "'ay from Judge Robert' Corfman's courtroqm immedia tely after, the jurist found him gui!ty on charges of: inf!iclrng bod ily harm on hts forme r girlfriend. Arms flailing, S!anford galloped past Judge Turner 's courtroom. leaped ove r the oustreteched leg or a DAJLY P ILOT reporte r and smashed into !he shock proof glass y,•indow at the eastern end or lhe corridor. Stanford would have fallen 300 feel if he had smashed the window. The bur)y youth bounced back off th e glass and into the arms of pursuing bailiffs Bruce Brazeel and Pat Brunner. Deputy Jerry t Pie} son ran fram Judge Turner's courtroorn to aid his colleagues in handcuffing the berse rk Stanford. Stanford fa ces sentenc ing Feb. Z5 and escape charges will now be added to hi!I file. It was successfully alleged in his trial that he attacked his former i.:irlfriend outside a Santa Ana bo wling alley and inflicted injures that put her in the hospital for a month. Crasl1 Kills 19 Higl1 i11 Andes BOGOTA, Colombi a fAPl -All 1' persons aboard a Colombian airliner missing sincr Saturday were killed whtn !he plane crashed into an B,DOO-foot mQuntain in the Andes. av iation offlcial s have reported. The wreckage or the plane was spotted Monday on the side or the mountain near lhe Venezuelan border. Flown b,Y.· Transportes Aereos del Cesar, the !win.' en;?ine turbojet was en route from Bogota to Vallcdupar , in lhe northern part of the country. Beat The Clock Usually there i• no urgency about getting carpeting instoned, Most poeple will wait o whole week! However. when there is o rush, we con accommodate those who re· quire immediate service, We HAVE sold and installed carpeting th e SAME DAY many times. Unless there is o problem obtaining o specific color or pettem, you can count on fast service from Alden's, end we maintain o large inventory to facilitate deliveries. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 Placentia AYI. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOURS: Mon, Thur Thurs., 9 to 5130 -Fri,, 9 to 9-SAT., 9:30 to 5 l Recc1lli11g Last Year's Ec11·tJ1-sl1al\:i11g Event , By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of It!• D•ll1 '11•1 Sl•fl . t:encral!y, people are in bed right around the time the most important, 1n.h'rest1ng , 1ncrnorablc or ne,,·s~·orthy events in their u .. ·es occur, led by the U1g Three· being born. u·edd1ng and dying. Poople are also generally n1ost \•ulnerable there. One year ago today. 1971 's most memorable California event of 1971 caught most of us in bed, ln the &hower, si tting at the break.last table or sitting somewhere else. Some of us fi gured it v.·as the Great Quake on the San Andreas r·ault, ~·hich has given some prognosticators.- in-print a ration or fame and fortune . Some -the toll was 65 finally -didn 't Jive to learn it was just a local one centered in the San Fernando Valley. l~:irthquakes are perhaps the most a1vesome re- minders lo mere mortals that \\'e're just pretty much help- less visltors sitting here on planet Earth. .Just like 11 pcrso11 f'rom Peoria \1·hose car breaks dov•n in Pismo Beach, 111>1·e 1'11ally hl'lpless \\"hen one of th ose rol!er coaster rides lh:lt registt!rs on 1l1C' r: {"hll'r St:ile r<ltl!es lhe land. Thi~ hclplr.1;~11C's" 1s probntil .v 11·h:ll rnake:-i quakes so frightening. ,\fy chx·k r11dio s;.ud Jt 1vas abuul ti a.in. \Vhen I reacht'd for it a year ago . Suddt>nl y i! jurn1>ed <111·11y. jitterbugging out of re;ich. Be;ilizi ng 11hat 1~·as happening, I did a strange thing neglected for a long lime. ! pr:tycd. God. p!l'nsc n1ake it stop! lie kept right on rattling 1ny beach shack Perhaps he didn 't recognize my voice after all those year.!!. The old lin1bers creaked and groaned: the rusty nails holding them t0- gether contin ued to grind and whine 1vilh stress. \\'hoc\'cr 1s in charge of such geological matters mercifully shut orr the seismic roller coaster ride about t"·o seconds after I fled bed at rather high speed. He. or "'hoever runs the system. may have realized how it would em. barrass the boss if one of bis reporters was apprehended for running around nude on the beach. Bui that v.·ould ha\'e been preferable to being buried under a pile of v.·eathercd \\"OOd and shingles ignited by a broken gas line or do\\11ed electrical \\"ires. The stillness al the end \\'8S literally deafening. The Hrst trembling voice on the radio v.·as that of a KRLA announcer \\'ho declarr.d lh e st udio's steel and concrete \Valls wobbled the \\·ay his knees \\·ere now doing . lie sounded on the verge of tears. Pee ring around outside all seemed sert'ne, except for the frantic barking of \\'hal snun dl'd like ercry dog from Sunset Beach lo south El J\fonle. r.1any houses. hO\\'c1·cr, re111ained dark , as though nobody even noticed the av.·esome forct's shuddering through the earth's crust. Somehow still sensing it \11as California's biggest news story of J97L I shakily plugged in the coffee pot and got _ready to go h_e!p co~er it. Sel~mologists say there is a much bigger story still coming and hopefull y J"tl ride that one out \\·ell enough to help cover it. Like n1ost Califomians. I can't seem to convince mys elf to leave in search of firmer tcrra firma. The last time I ga\'e i! much sC'r1ous cons1derat1on \\"as at 6:02 a.m., one year ago Treruor Rocks San F ernl11i<lo LOS ANGELES l1\P 1 -A quick. di sh·ral!!in g af!crshock of the ma· jor quake nearly a year agn has rocked the San Fernando Valley . causing son1e minor damage and prompting anxious telephone ca lls. The temblor J\.f onday n i g h t measured 3.8 on the Richter Scale. strong enough to cause slight to n1oderate damage. s a id a spokesman for the Ca Ii for n i a Institute of Tee h no log y· s seismolog1ccil I a b o r a to r y in Pasadcn1 Solon See l\:ing Wealth Lin1ils In California SACR.i\'1E\ITO IAP) -~1ult1·million. a1res have received unhappy news from a Democratic lawmaker. Assernblyman John Burton , chairman of the Assembly Rules Committee, in· troduced fo.1onday a bill that would forbid any Californian to posseM more than $2.S mlllion in wealth. Tiie San Francisco Democrat's "share the v.·ealth" bill would make tt illegal tn inherH more than $1 million unless the he ir \\'as a widO'>\' or \\•idower. Sin1ilar legisla!iori by Burton last year, nicknamed the .. Robin Hood bill." was killed in the Assembly Re venue and Tax CommiUee. . Burton clai rned '.\ionday that 4,000 Ca!· iforn ia n1ullimll\lona ires coJ1trol SlO bil- lion or 1he state's wealth. Nixon Gives 20 Parcels of Land For State Parks WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon today gave 20 parcels of federal land \\'Orth $4.6 million to states and localities for park and recreation uge. The land gifts brought to 83 the number of sites donated by the federal govern· ment for local and state parks since the program began last year. Altog~lher, the White House said, the 83 parklands in 31 :.tale.!! and Puerto Rico l<Jtal 14,585 acres and are worth more than $.)6 mill ioo. r..1any of lhe sites "'ere formerly military bases. The sites announced today included 513 acres. formerly used the the National c:uard, gil·en to San LUIS Obispo County for a park The proper1y is between Sa n Fr<inci.!ICO and Los Angeles. fJ\"e n1 ilt's southeast of Morro Bay Also involved are: 703 acres. near San Diego State College property and former- ly part of the U.S. Naval Retraining Command, Camp Elliott, given tr San Diego. In a special environmental message to- day to Congress, the President alJO an-- nounced aeveral measures to create or protect. parkland.!! and wlldtme11 areas. Ni:ion Pf'?posed legblalion to establlllh a Golden Gate NationaJ Recreation Area on San Francisco Bay, encompassing some 24,000 acres of t1istlng parb. military reservalionJ and private lantb along 30 mi les of coa.!llliflf". The President al!o propoHd establish- ment of 18 new wilderneS! treas. Nixon directed the 11ecretartes of Agriculture and Interior lo speed the.ir identification or areas that might be preserved as wlldemtss in the Eastern ~tales. Moon Stru~k2 Cambodia1t Myth Wastes Ammo PHNOM PENH. (AP\ -Pffinler Len Nol aays Cambodian soldiers who shot up a mythical monster Lhe.y believed wa.!I devouring the moon during a rectnt eclipse wasted so much 1mmunilion the army might have run short in case of at~ tac.It. The mar!hal. who doubles as com- mander·in-c hlcf or lbe C3mbodlan army, navy and air force, described I.be hour- long shootout on Jan. :tJ as an ill-<XJO+ 1r;ldered action and threatened to court- martial officers and men who go on 5ueh shootini sprttS. In an angry radio !Jpeec:h lo troop."! over the weekend. Lon Nol said !he fn~illade - "hich llt up the nil(ht sky over Phnom Penh with tracer bulleL-; -look two li\"C:ll 11nd 1\·ounded 85 prn:on:1. ll tc1st Ca mbod ia millions of riels worth or ¥mmun1tlon, the man:hat :st1td, and WU "a serious blot Oft the honor of the Khmer Rtpibllc. '' The toklier1 wtre tr)'in& lo drlvt away Re:ahou, a legtndary monattt who I.I a mal•vol<nt brother lo the 11111 and the moon. Tradition te1<hos that only by maldng great noile could Ibey pr<venl Rubou !tom 1obbll111 up !ht moon dur· Ing the OCllJ>I", du'mlnl !heir nllhb forever. For the average Cambodian tolide:r, Reahou wrpa.,.. myth. F1bulow belsla and monster• from ancient Kbmtr folk legend.I are 11 real to him as the cattle wandering pl1eldly throup downtown Phnom Penh. omens and orteles play 1n important part In decision making for many Cam· bodians. ?tfarshal Lon Nol himHtf rrt-- quently SttS the adYice or aeert and otb6 1ny1tic1. \ TV Networl{s Assailed .. 'All • in Family' Producer Tells Struggle "'ASHJNGTON iUPI ) -fht producer might olfend v1cv.·er:s. sponsors and sl<i· or the successful "All 1n the f'amily" lion affiliates. telt\·ision comedy todny blamed think CBS finnlly :1greerl 10 :ur thr ~hn\\' 111 lank mentality In both broadcasting and January, 1971 -bu! i.l"ar srud !ht government for ketping n1orc sho\1·s like network battled 1u1suc('essfu!ly nln111:.1 his off the alr. until air t!n1 e lo get h1tn iv 1r1111 The producer, J'\ornie1.n Lear. s11 1d lhe :-rgn1t'nls in\'oll•lng '"t•icpl1e1t sex " f1·0111 f!\'c·yt'ar struggle he had persuading th" prern iere t1>1sode. uel\\'Ork execut ives to air his show The shO\Y was an Instant h1t 1111d still 1:s renecled a \\'idesprtad phi~phy that rt.nning "·eekly. "also dicta!es '>\'hal Americans wlll we11r One ind ication •·of ho\v 0111 of touC'h U1111 and drive and listen to, etc., etc." lJCI 8115 ll«1ssl1• th1nk·!ank lcl1drrshlp Is with Ille nttd$ Hnd dt•s!res of l hr An1rric:an people," he :inid. \1•u;oi th11! C l~S htrrd rxtr:a ~\vltrh· bo1trcl 0 1~r11tor::. :it ~Is lllllJOr affiliat~!I 111 luHl(li l' an l'X!K'L'h 'd a1 nlnn1·he of lra1e c:1ll s thr 111.,;ht lhl' ~hvw v.·os first aired, "'ThC' nl"nl:1nrhr nr1·l'r ciin1e," he .!laltl. ··'-:o ~l ntt·s s1•£'('1led fron1 thr unioti. And uv 11fHl1<1 lt·s 1u1nped of t till' n~twork line Tht' phonrs rnn~ !o wine dep;:ree but the l'311s "'f'rc lnr.,;ely favurablr:." llis remarks "'e.re made in tes timony prepared for a hearing on pres.!! fr etdom.!I by a Senate constitutional rights sub- committtt. "Somewhere., some time ago. someone coined the fiction that the mentality of the American molion picture patron averages between 12 and 13 years of age," Lear said . "And in the think·tanks of American business. not just in the mass media area, but in all of American business, this fi ction has been a ccepted as truth and this 'truth' has been e1· tended to the An1erican public as a 11'hole County T1·a11 sit Di strict '"An1erican lhink-tank lead ership is ou! of touch with the American people. i\.·1y personal feeling is !hat !his is also true 111 government , in business and con1n1erce, as v.:cll as in the n1a ss n1edia," he sahl . Lear told ho1v "All In The Fan1ily'' twice was rejected by ABC and once each by CBS and NBC because network chiefs v.·ere '>\'orried that its (rank treatment of race, religion. sex and ethnic origin!! ,,,. Clayton Parker. rhief assistant c·oun!y rounsel said today that lhe Orange Coun. ly Transit Districl Is nOI lep;:Blly 1nvu!\'l'd i11 a co1nph1int filed by South l.)1:1~t ·rransit Corporation v.•ith the stai r Puhl u· Utilities Com111ission iPUC.:l all t'ging th:1t the ne1v UC I free bus service is in 1•iol:1 lion of state la\\·. Parker, who serves as counsel lor th (' lransit dist rict, said the district is not im- plicated . as charged by Soulh Co1u;t, because it is not directly participating in Advisory Panel Urges Coast Control Agencies SACRAMENTO (UPI) The California Ad visory Comm ission on Marine and Coastal Resources has recommended establishment of state and regional agencies to control coaslline development . Bruce E. Jones. the commission's e>r - ecutive secretary, said r.1onday the panel's recommendations were worded broadly, but "'ere genera!ly consistent vo'ith provisions of a bill introduced by Assemblyman Alan Sieroty ( D-Beverly !fills). But the commission's recommendations did not specifically endorse Sieroty's coastline protection measure. One key difference involved the mea ns lo control devel opment along lhe un· mediate coast. The commission guggeste<I ! h a 1 regional coastal boards have a veto power over proix>sed developments. L<ical governments ~·ould be required to notify the board of proposed de\'elopments, but iI lhe board did not act negalively the project could proceed. Under Sieroty's bill, howe ver, clPvelop- menl would have to be arfirn1ativcly acled on by the board for the project to proceed. In its statement of coastal ma nage n1ent princi ples. the commission said. "The planning and management o( U1r coastal 1.one are primarily l h c re.~ponsibility of local govC'rnment." The com mission recon1mended that 11-0 lawful development on the coast h1' ··~enerically prohibited," but :. a 1 d •·special considerat ion'' should be 111vc11 lo forming criteria co n c e r n 1 n g developments that niight havt" an 1r· reversible effect. The panel also declared that tT1ter1;1 !'hou!d be developed to •·faci lit at e an op. timum combination of all htv.·ful u.!le~ in the coastal zone by a consideration or t1ll private and public benefits and costs resulting from them." rlu' opcnu 1on of th(! lJCl lius srrv1re. Th£' tou11ty lra11~1t 11Rrnr.y did ~r1-1nt l /L'I n $fi,OOO :1.uh.~idy 1t1 hrlp drfra y c:o~r 11r the t'xprr1n11•111:1! prn1rc1 wh1 rh beg1111 .Jnn. IU. Thr 11111\rrsity put up :1n nd· d1t.1onn l $6 .000, half or II fro rn stud£'nl tunds . South <..:oal't 1'ransi! also n:1n1C'S 111 11:; :-.u1t the uni\leristy. Chnnt.:ellor Oan1cl G. i\ldrlch Jr. and Pink Bus L111es of Burna Park '>\'h1 ch opera tes the buses in their hou rly !'erv1ce lo UC I fron1 Ntwport Beach, Coronn del !\Jar, Costn l'\1es11 and Snnta Ana !!eights. South Coast has asked the tran~it district for a $3,000 11 month subsidy to continue operation of it~ buses from San- ta Ana to Dal!xla and Laguna Beach. Uus line offlcinls said In D~cember thnt the line would be forced to quit opera· lions to the coastal communities withi n the next few wcck.'I if !he district did not i:rant the subsi dy. No action on th eir re· quest is eicpcctcd for ann!her month. In the elmpli11nt to th e PU C, South C-011.~t clalins lhnl the UC I nperatlon paral lels its rnutc.~ lo Coron.1 dcl Mar and pr ovides schedul ed passenger liervlce along regular routes v.•ithout PUC pcrnilssion The South Const fir m Op<'rntes one bus lo UC/ rlaily from Sa nta Ana al 7 11.m. Th(' PUC has tak en no arlion oo the complaint which i.lf't11and~ a 1emporRry ~CaS(' <1 J1d desist or1tfr. n full hearing atld ;1 pcr1nancnt desist order plus damages uf $500 a day per 1>assc11grr The UC I free bus serl'icr has received great n«t'eptn ncr by the. .~tud<'11t s. facult y :ind s!aff, UC! Dean of Students James Ph1ll1p.~ told directors ol the transit d1~1 nct r.1(1nday. "Ma ny of the .!ltudents have said thnl they \Yould he willlng to pay 10 cents a t•irle," the UC! officla l soid. Patronage has gro"'n from 1,242 studenl, the first week to more than J.500 at the end of January. Phillips said. ohnson&son ANNOUNCES the new car "Go ) P1Jetr11 IJ1J1t1'tf•r )(11.-::si:in pnt't )'cvi:rny l 1cvl11 - :-.hc11ko ... :1\:-0 the l l S ... hould pro1notr p~ict ry j u ~I Ilk<' tooth· pa:;te on ·rv and radin. li e 1s louring 0 11 hchalf or his book , "Stolen 1\pples." 1-lall of Records Electrical Unit Blast Hurts Man It was business as usufll this morning in Orrtnge Cou nty 's old llnll of Hecordt following a Monday night elt•clricnl panel exnlrnilon In the cond:omned building. ; The. structure, at 211 W. 8th St., Santa· Anll, bu ilt Jn the eorly years of thl1 ctrl-' lury Is .~chcduled to be torn down wlthlrt the n('xt t1vo yt'a rs to mnkt WRY for th& rc;dignmcnt of Civic Ccnh'r Drive West; no1v 6th Street. · llu!ld lng e11s!odlan Bud 1111 11, 49, Santa Ana, suffcrC'd a sllght eye injury when the first floor pnnel exploded Rs he walked hy it shortly after the 5 p.m. closing lime. lie is in good condltlon today. The fire in the building'.!! electrical wiring was quickly e.xllngul.!lht>d by Santa Ana firC'nten. Power wn.!I trmporarily. <'Ill off lo th e hall of record., and !ht old county courthouse next door. Pro1l11 ccr 's \Vifc Di es DOBBS FEl\ftY. N.Y 1ur1 1 -r-.tr~. 1\Hl'lu1c l Todd Jr. died Mondoy of heart fallu re at her home In this We:itche11ter County co1nmunlty. She wa s 41. Ron\ Sarah Jane Weaver In trvin,l{ton, Mrs. Todd married her husband, lht llOn of· film producer and Broadway ahowman Mike Todd. In 1953. Her husba nd Is a pr~ ducer In hlA own rip.ht. II t, ' ' ' ' f.ffective immediately, every new Lincol n or ~Jercury pro- duct sold al Johnson and Son will receive the unique . ne1v and ex citi ng "Golden Touch" treatment created spec1flcally to offer you a new car as positively trouble-free as humanly possible. Starting from the moment a new ca r enters our "get ready" department right through every step in tuning, polishing, adjusting, inspe<Uon and our exclu•ive 20 MJLF. ROAD TEST1 the 11Golden Touch'' program i.s in effect \Vhen yo u see the seal bearing the Golden Touch emblem on the 1,1:indshield , yo u'll know that this new car has met all the rigid requirements we demand for delivery. Come In today and see for yourself how this "Golden Touch" pro- gram wil l provide the "trouble tree" driving pleasure you 've alway s wanted. • • ohnson & so11 .... ~ ..... ~ . -... I INCO I N . r .. ~ 1 1 ~ c 1 11 v CO llG/\H • 2628 HA~R BLVD., COSTA MESA • li40-&eJO ) • • } • ' ' ' ' • ' . " .. " ' '• ' 1 I • • I ' . . . ~ . . ... ~ ,.. -. . . ... i DAILY PILOT Tutsdar. Ftbruary 8, 1972 P int ~s a Pint •• ID Britain Wick• Met ric System Movin g in But Pub Favorite W on't Change ----./...- \ \ •' I ~ps How to Stem Carnage Tide By moMAS MURPHINE 01 Itri. DlllY P'llet l"ff GRIM RECORDS DEPT. -Orange Countlarui have always taken some measure or pride In the fact that each year, we seem capable of doing things just a littl~ bit bigger and better than the year previous. We're doing it again this year. folk s. Trouble is. this particular statistic isn't one you can be very proud of. \Ve are killing Orange Countians at a record clip. So far, we've kJlled them at a pace averaging almost one per day. These figures, however, do not include homicides. suicides, trips-and-falls or Joss of life due to age or physical ailment. TJIE STATISTICS suggestiong a one- dt>:-'h·per-day average are confined only tn 1'1,..se persons who have Jost their lives on Oran11e County's roads and highway s. In truth, you ml~ht well point out that the: new year is yet young. But let's just ta!t'! J;inuary, for examole, In the Cirst 2a da•·'l, 24 persons lost their lives on our roads. You might note that this ls some below a l'ne-a--day death rate. But then on the last weekend of the month, we killed six, giving us a grand total of 30 dead in 31 days. And that isn't so grand. The traffic death toll started out a bit slower this monlh but then we killed three on the first weekend in February. Projecting, the figures seem to suggest that If O r a rt g e County's pace of highway slaughter continues. nearly 365 persons will have lost their lives In traffic tra,R;cdles before 1972 closes out. That would compare to 241 killed last year, or an increase of 124 deaths for the 12 month period. NOW, IF YOU are what is termed in journalism circles "the average reader,'' you have quit reading this already. How do I conclude thus? It's e as y . Newspapers are always t a k in g readership surveys. And one thing the surveya all show ls that readers don't like stories or photographs about traffic fatalltltt. They disturb them. They are unsetUing. After au, almost everybody ls on thfl road at one time or another durlng the week. Dad drive& off to work and mom motors off to the store and the kids ar'e making it to school ttlrough pedestrian crosswalks or in cars or buses or on bicycles. Everybody is out there. So lt Is indeed unsettling after your day on the road to pi ck up the evening paper and learn that some people didn't make It. GRIM TRAFFIC officers. however, frora?every police department along the Orange Coast have at one time or another confronted our reporters and told them they must help do something to slow the upward climb of the traffic to\L So we've tried 1nosl everything. Safety essays, editorial warnings, grim crash pictlJ.reS and news accounts of the latest tra~edy. For a time. we even devoted a couple of pages at the end of the year to list all those who lost their Jives. But the traffic killing continues and we still get letters and calls of resentment from some readers. Sometimes you are prompted to believe that nothing will st"l'Yl the tide. Then again. maybe if we lgrtore it. it v.·i!l just go away. Draft Mil k on Tap HIGHA~1, England (UPI) -John Furlong has installed draft milk along- side the beer in his pub. He said the numbtr of his customers slopped by Police for breath tests prompted the move. LONDON (U PI) -Beer drinlcers lake heart. Liters and meters will replace quarts i.lld y&rds, bt1t in Britain's pubs , the pint wiU stay. That's the message -partly -of a goverrunent white paper on metric.ttion published Monday. It said Britain will switch from pints, pounds and yards to liter.i, grams and meters by the end of 1975. The changeover will br gradual, unlike last February's "D· switch from Special Delivery shllltnas a.nd ptnce to decimal currency. It will bring Britain into line on weiahts and measures with its partners in the European Common Market. The exempUons wlll be for the nation's publicans and ita: milkmen, the white paper said. But it said pubs could u.se metric measured if they wiahod. "The government have no wlah to discourage the sale of draught beer by the pint." the y:hite paper said. "Equally they see no reason to forbid its sale by meuures of a liter on Jts aub multiples." But to avoid confwlon, the pub measures must cbooee one or the other- the pint of the lmperl.al system or metric measures. The Li censed Victuallers ASJOC iatlon, to which moat or Britain'• 70,000 pubs belong, welcomed the exemption, '"fhat'! what the public wants," It aald. "They like their plnt. And their half (pint). lf a person who now drinks a haU ordered half a liter, he'd get .88 of a pint UP'I TtltPlttlt Kathy Sachs. an employe of the Philadelphi a Mus .. um of Art, displays a 1'Chinese Calligraphy" catalog which wil l be given to President Nixon today. Nixon will act as a messenger and deliver two copies or the catalog to J..fao Tse-tung and Chou En·lai. Familiar Names Going To China With Nixon WASHI NGTON (UPI)-P res Iden t Nixon will be accompanied to China by such familiar news personalities as Walter Cronkite, John Chancellor, Harry Reasoner ~nd William F. Buckley. Those four and 83 o th e r cor- respondents, pholographrs and techni- cians were chosen by the Wh ite House Monday from more than 2,000 who ap. plied to make the trip. Buckley, the conservative columnist. Laird Resting Near Phoe1tix WASHINGTON ruPI\ -Supported by special communications because he has no deputy to leave in charge of the Pen· tagon. Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird fl ew to Arizona Monday for a week of rest and study at an undisclosed location in the Phoenix area. Laird's I.rip marked a departure rrom slandard practices that call for the secretary of defense -second only to the President in the chain or command con- t.rolling America's nuclear arsenal -or his deputy to be in the nation's capital at all times. Pentagon spokesman Jerry W. Friedheim said Laird would conUnuf! to carry out his full resp0nsibilities while ln Arizona, although it will require "SOlll.e special communications facllities." ... had opJXlsed the President's deci.!1\on to journey to Peking. Press Sec retary Ronald Ziegler said Buckley and two other columnists -.Joseph Kraft of Publishers Hall and Richard Wilson of the Des Moines Register and Tribune - were selected on the basis of circulation and points of view. Ziegler said Buckley, of the Washington Star syndicate, represented the "conservative" JX1int of view, while Kraft was "non conservative." Cronkite, Chancellor and Rea&oner are familiar figures on the eveoing newscasts of CBS, NBC and ABC respectively. There will be only U'U'ee. women in the press contingent -Helen Thomas, veteran UPI White I~ouse correspondent ; Barbara Walters of the NBC· TV ''Today" show; and Fay Wells of Storer Broad- casting. Ziegler said the final list was "a substantial increase" over the number the Chinese originally had agreed to. "We're grateful they agreed to this number. I am pleased with the nu1nber and I think the journalism cQmmunity as a \11hole shou!d be pleased with the fact that all segments of the news media are covered. There will be six wire service reporters -three. each from UPI and AP: 21 reportf!rl representing newspapers and newspaper groups; three colwnnists; 12 television network comnrentators; 6 members of smaller TV aod radio broad- cast outlets aa well as the Voice of America; six magazine correspondents; eight still photographers: eight television c1me.ramen and 17 TV technicians. Indian Pullout From Bangladesh Slated March 25 CALCUTTA (AP) -The estimated 40,000 Indian troops still in Bangladesh v.·ill be withdrawn by March 25, Prime Ministers Indira Gandhi and Muj ibur Rahman announced today. The date is the first anniversary of the Pakistani army's crackdown on the Bangladesh independence movement. which touched off nine months of civil war and led to lndia·s successful in· tervenUon on the side of the rebels. In a joint statement issued after two days of talks, Mrs. Gandhi and Sheik Mu· jib said: "The prime minister of Bangladesh paid wann tribute to the armed forces of India and the part they played In the liberation of Bangladesh. "The task having been completed. the two prime ministers felt that these forces could be withdrawn." Authoritative military sources have said India used about 150,000 troops in the invasion of East Pakistan, which. began Dec. 4 and ended Dec. 16 wlth the sur· render of 93,000 Pakistani troops and the establi shment of the new Bengali nation. President Urges U.S. Executives To Aid Phase II It's Still Cold Out There WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Prelident Nixon has pledged anew to end wq e and price controls as soon as inflation iJ' halted. He urged America's busin•men, in the meantime, to stop complaining and start working. "I believe in economic freedom -that the best economy for America is a rree market economy," the President told a gathering or industrial executive• Mon· day night. "But faced with the choJce of wage and price eontroll or continued in· flatlon, J chou temporary controls to curb lnflatlon. Intense. Cold Spreading South, East; West Stays Mild ' I I I • tl1WOltLC4N• OW / 2~ llOfMD--'-""'--mlAnt IZZl••ow ~aetoWf· ..... t~ "I believe in balanced budgets," he td .. dtd. "But faced with the choice between bud&et deficlll and Wlelllploymoot, I chose deflclta to create more jobs. "In the long run , our goal is to remove the controls and get rid of the deficits - once we have brought at>out price ltabilt .. ty and fu ll emplOyment. ln the 1bort run, there Js going to be a lot of complall}ing," Nixon said. Ni.J:on spoke lo the White H o u 1 e Conference on the lndu.stri*1 World Ahead, a gathering called to projocl the nation's economy Into 1990 and to make plans for Industrial developmtnl In the balance of this century. "Are you going to crawl Into a shell and demand protection from world ocnn· petition, or are you going to roll up, your sleeves aod ftl(rease productivity? ' Nix· on asked the delegates. "Are you going to expand your energies complaining about controls, or are you going to 1dopt wage and price pollcle• lllal will nmon the preaun ol JnllRUon and the need for controls?" \ -a lot more th.an be ml&ht want." The Common Market -which Britain wlll join Jan. 1 -said all members should be using lhe metric system by the end o! 197~. The British white paper said where lhere were special reasons why e1- tensions might be granted until 1979 or even later. But it recommended shops and industry not count on extensions and waste no time in beginning using metric units to familiarize consumers. "People will become much more aware of tt -and more familiar with It -as foodstuffs and household goods measured ln metric sizes and quantities come Into our shops from our own manufacturers as well as from the continent and other metric countries," the white paper said. The government acknowledged the changeover would be costly. "People will become much more aware of it -and more familiar with It -as foodstuffs and household goods measured In metric sizes and quantities come into our shops from our own manufacturers as well as from the continent and other metric countries,~' the white paper said. The government acknowledged the changeover would be costly -millions of dollars will be spent changing road signs fo r example -but the white paper peo- ple should "also consider the cost of not going metric." "If the United Kingdom were to retain the imperial system, while at the same time having to use metric to an in· creasing extent in international trade, British industry would be less efficient and less competitive and the higher costs would be cumulative," the white paper said. The government, stung by criticism that shopkeepers used last year's switch to decimal currency to raise prices, pro- mised to "take whatever steps are necessary to protect the consumer" this time. 2 Troops Hurt Iii N. Irela1id; Disruption Set BELFAST. Northern Ireh1nd (UPI)-A machine-gunner wounded two oH~duty British soldiers late f\.fonday night in Omagh -a peaceful town almost un- touched in the current \\'ave of violence in Northern Ireland. "This attack took us all by surprise. Omagh has been like a peacetime bar· racks with hardly aay problems in the r~ cent violence.'' an army spoltesman said. The spokesman said both soldiers were wearing civilian clothes and walk ing slightly ahead of a group of uniformed troopers when a car pulled up and a man inside opened fire with two bursts from an automatic weapon. One of the soldiers was shot In the chest and arm and the other In the stomach, the spokesman said. Omagh, in County Tyrone, is 55 miles east of B e I f a s t and southeast of Strabane, the site of several rtcent in· cidents. Roman Catholic civil rights leaders went ahead with plans for a "day of disruption" Wednesday despite th e possibility that some of the movement's leaders, including Bernadette Devlin. a member of Parliament, might be jailed for taking part in Sunday's a b o r t e d march. Gun Surrendered 'Will they still g0 wild in the States when an undeclared war ends? Sarge?' Ni xon Signs Foreign Aid; Not Pleased WASHINGTON (AP) -Ca 111 n g tt "below minimum acceptable le v e Is," President Nixon has signed a $2.74·billion foreign·aid authorization bill -$1.5 billion less than what he wanted for t~ cu1Tent fiscal year. "Viewed against the vital national o~ jectives which our foreign.assistance prO:- grams are designed to pursue, this act is a great disappaintment," Nixon said as he signed it Monday. The authorization bill is about $300. million below the level mentioned irt separate House and Senate foreign-aid appropriation bills which, when settled ili"' congressional conference, will actually. provide the money for this year's furelgn aid. Presumably, only $2.74 billion of the $3 billion mentioned In the appropriation· bills could be spent. Nixon had requested $4.M billion for· fi scal 1972 foreign aid spending. An authorization providing for spending up to $2.9 billion was rejected by the.' Senate last October. The revised bill chops U.S. spending ln the United Nations from 31.S percent of the total U.N. budget to 25 percent. It also cuts off aid to the Creek military junta unless Nixon declares the money to be among the "overriding requirements" of U.S. security: lirnits aid to Cambodia to $341 million, and halts all $510 million for mllitary credi t sales on April 30 unless the President releases $2 billion authorized for domestic social programs by then. Kilauea Volcano Gush es Steadily HILO. Hawaii (AP) -Glowlng lava from Kilauea volcano C-Ontinues to gush forth with no sign of letup. · On Monday night lava filled one flank crater and started to fill another. The eruption began Friday and was · discovered Saturday. · Dr. Don Peterson, In charge of the Hawaii volcano observatory. said spasmodic bursts of Java from the main fountain have reached 60 feet wittl smaller bursts estimated at 40 feet. A glow from the volcano can be seen 10 to 15 miles away. Kilauea erupted last in September. U'IT ....... A Pblladelpbta gang member prepares to voiuntarlly tum tn his weapon to ·PbUaaeJphla police olflclw alter a crackdown on gang members was enforced. ' I ) I l 7 . . Orange Coast EDITION ' . Today's Flnal N.Y. Stoeks VOL. 65, NO. 33, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1972 N TEN CENTS Hauge Firm on Zoning, But 'Heart Goes Out' By CANDACE PEARSON "1hen 1he !hree li ttle pigs built their homes of straw, wood and brick, all they had to fear was the big bad wolf. But if they'd bullt them in Newport Beach -and violated the zon ing code - then they 'd also have to fear the big bad 1nan -who blow s houses down in his own legal way. "Yes. I'm a bad man ,'' jokes r-.1el Hauge, Newport Beach zoning inspector, adding that his role is a highly unpopular one. Hauge's offi ce receives up to 30 oral and written complaints per week of il- legal occupancies or other code viola- tions. He mus t sc reen each one. The final resolution of a case can often involve telli ng an elderly woman or man they can't rent an extra room to make money. "Your heart goes oUl to thoae people." Hauge admits, musing th!t "My wile tells me I've become gray in the la s! year." But he says thal there are other. not· so-innocent violators, many of whom tell him ''there are ways of getting around this code." Although the z.oniog code .also covers trash in yards, pet sn akes and setback encroachments, Hauge 's biggest prob- lems .are with three families per ulli t in R-2 zones .and garage rentals. Despite some residents' claims of in· Stril{e Nears End Tentative Dock Agreement Studied SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -TeP!lative agreemenl to end the crippling 123-day str ike on West Coast doc ks was an. noonced today by negotiators for ship. pers and longshoremen. Sam Kagel. a private mediator, said lhe settleinent will be submitted to a committee representing union locals and that this committee would decide the date Due Ma~lt 5 of a membership ratification vote and if there would be a return to work pending the vote. , The committee will meet in Sa11 Fran- cisco on Feb. 12. Approval by negotiators for the ILWU and the employer Pacific Maritime Asso- ciation of a new contract came as Con- gress pressed toward legislation to force Daily Pilot Preparing First Sunday Edition The first Su nday edition of the DAILY PILOT will be published on March S:, it was announced tQday by Robert N. Weed, pr<oident ohd· publlaher. "Addition of Ille Sunday DAILY PILti'l' to the six weekday editions of the newspaper rounds out development of the package we feel Orange Coast residents and busi nessmen wi ll consider the area1s primary news and advertising medium," he said. The Sunday edition of the DAILY PtLOT comes in response to requests by bol h readers and advertisers for full seven-day service, the publisher noted. "After more than a year of study and preparation, we believe we now ha ve assembled the right combination of news and features to provide a unique and useful service to both readers and ad· vertisers," he added. Thomas Keevil, DAILY PILOT editor, &aid the Sunday editi-On's news content will mai ntain th e local emphasis DAILY PILOT readers have come to expect fron1 thei r hometown editions of the Mon· day-through-Saturday issues. "'The produc t will continue to be mostly bright and local with all editorial content presented in a tightly packaged format in \l;hich things are easy to find, easy to read.'' Kee vii said. Alan J. Dirkin, former DAIL Y P lLOT West Orange County clty editor, was ~elected by Keev il fo r promotion lo the post of Sunday editor. .facqueline Ann Combs of the DAILY PILOT "'omen's section staff will serve as assistant to the Sunday editor. Keevil said. Terry S. Coville, who served on the West Orange County slaff under Di rkin Bnd, more recently was a general assignment reporter in Costa Mesa for the DAILY PILOT. returns to Huntington Beach as the new West Orange County Ci· ly editor. Dlrkin , 33. is a native of Sunderland. England. He.ser.ved his apprenticeship on several provincial Brlfuh newspapers before going to Athens. Greece, where he became assistant editor o( the Athens News. He later went back to London and to (See SUNDAY, Page !) DlltJl:IN COMaS Mercy Flight Patient Dies Despite Help Surgical patient Eli Brabant died early today at Hoag Memorial Hospital, just 24 hours after helicopter police of two coun· ties fle w three mercy missions delivering rare blood for transfusions. They eve n searched their own rank ~ via Southland police radio networks and found three on -duly office rs al5 donor!i, in case more type 0-negative transfusions would be required. Brabant, 61 , of 1586 Santa An a Ave., Costa Mesa, rece ived 21 transfusions Monday. One Anaheim hospital sent the wrong blood shipment during the swiftly-moving drama, but the error was discovered in time. Newport Beach Police Department Watch Commander LL Kelson McDaniel dispatched the craft piloted by Jim (i(llfos and Jim Bradley off a !lecond time to pick up the proper type. During its ab!lence, Hoag Memorlal Hospital issued another appeal for aki as Brabant's condition worsened. A Los Angeles Police Department helicopter was dispatched rrom the downtown Wilshire Division to pick up six CSee MERCY, Page 11 an end to the walkout. It has bee11. the longest strike of Pacific ports Jn history and was the first sinee a 95-day walkout in 1948. for merly the long· est on record. President Nixon had said the strike cost $600 million in U.S. export losses and economists said the total cost was near $2 billion. The ILWU struck 24 West Coast ports last July I. returning to work Oct. 6 aft er Nixon successfully sou ght a Taft-•lartley injunction. • But the 80-day cooli ng off period im- posed by the injunction expired Chris t· mas day and the dockers resumed the str ike Jan. 17. Negotiations res umed Jan. 31 and Kagel was called in by both sides to assist. The tent ative agreement came as in Washington Democratic leader Mike Mansfield asked, and received, unani· mous: consent to bring lhe bill up at mlcldoY. . The fillit vote. on • a move by Stn. Robert Packwood (R.,Ore.), to add Presi- dent Nixon's permanent strike settlement proposals to the dock measure, v..·ould come early this after noon with final ac- tion on the bill due an hour later unless other amendments are presented. In the House, meanwhile, th e Rules Committee was considering whether to force the issue to lhe floor. Mansfield moved up a plan lo bring the bill up in !he Senate later in the afternoon after conferring with senators who will ma nage the bill. He had told a nearly empty chamber shortly after the Senate met today that aides should tell senators the bill would be called early this af- ternoon. Under the la tter plan. that's when the fi rst votes would take place. Mansfield made his announcement afte r criticizing th e Senate record for a bsenteeism .and inaction so fa r this year. "Ifs been a lousy January and so fa r it's been a lousy February," Mans field told newsmen. Asked if he thought the House would be a ble to act before Congress quits Wednes- day nig ht for a l~incoln Day recess. Mansfield said his concern is to get the measu re through the Senate by then. The House Repu blican leader, Rep. Gerald R. Ford of Michigan. said "I thin k "'e ha ve good reason to be hopefu l for affirmative legislative action within 48 hours." There was concern that the measure might become snarled by l{ouse-Senate differences, however. The Senate bill was the version ad- vocated by Pre!ident Nixon, to subject both sides in the 123-day str ike to binding arbitration. However. the House Labor Comm ittee had before it a different proposal - merely to empower Nixon to seek a go.. day back-to-work court order and to re- quire the striking longshoremen to handle all agriculture and military cargoea, as well as all shipments destined for Hawaii. The administration called the proposed House bill "clearly unsatisfactory." 7 Co nvicted in Repair Trial Feb. 29 Hearing Set or& Motion for New Trial By TOM BARLEY 01 1111 Dlllr ,llef llt"ff The "Service Station Seven" are guilty. That wa~ the verdict of an Or•nge County Superior Court jury Monday nl&hl .ifter four days of mulling evidence radt· ed up in the mar•lhon eight-week trial of seven Orange coast residents. The obvlo~ly weary juror• returned guilty verdicts on eight of the nine counts of conspiracy with Intent to cheat and defraud Orange County motorlats 11nd they named Jerry Kendall, 35, of 1169 Sonora Road.' Costa Mesa, In two of those 1111Ity decl•lons. Kendall had been named all through the trial wllb Stanley Davis, 34, of 1086 S.n Pablo Circle. Costa Mesa and ' F.<Sward . C8mey, 27, of 2*% Shell Harbour Dri ve, HunUngt.o('I Beach, 111 one of I.he three archltecta of an auto repair fraud llnltlng 11 service otallons ranging from s .. 1 llea<h to 6"" Clemente. Judge Jamet Turner Ordered all !lflven to Mum Mirch II !or aenlenclng. They face a pogslble ltate prison term of UP. to io years. Judge Turm:r ocheduled Feb. ~ for a heartng on a moUon for a new trial after complimenting defense 1ttomey1 Al Stok .. ke, Frank Moran And George Shlbatl and prosecutor Richard Stenton for thetr "genll<'manly conduct through • long and exhausting trial. "We hear a 1ot the~e days about oourtroom problems created by the like• I or 1he Chicago seven and Charles Menson lrlals," Judge Turner told the jury. "We have nothing like that here and J c1n1t recall being in the presence or a more devoted pjury or more gentlemanly al· tomey1." The vtrdlct obviously came as a blow to all seven de!endanb. Three had openly predicted a few bours before the jury returned that ~they would be cleared of chargea that produced an Orange County Grand Jury Indictment. Convicted with Kendall, Davis and carney we re Roger Mendenhall, 28, of 2809\I Avenida De Seo, 1111'5lon Viejo. David Conchola, 22, of 6000 Garden Grove Blvd., Westmin•l<r and Christopher Enrl· (Soe REPAIR, Pqe II creasing incidences of communal living. Hauge doesn't find a lot of It going on - at least not illegally. Under Newport Beach zoning, a related grou p of any sizt. and up to five unrelated people can Jive in a un it. "Most people complain abou t such situations because of bad parking." liauge says, ''but the only thlng in lhe code ii bout parking is that you have to ciear the garage for cars." Hauge's problems intensify by about 50 'Fot11· of Us' percent in summer 1nonths, but even now he says that there are 1nore than LOOO possib le code violations 1n the city 's three '·hot spots." Older Corona del Mar. Balboa Island and West Newport along the seashore are the main trouble areas. "It's the influx: of students at the col· leges," Hauge says . ''There are more and more coming and they'll take anything, any little pl ace with a bathroom faciliry nea r the beach " The code i::ets complicated on this point and rr-qu1res 1hat a student renting a room from a f<1rnlly must have complete run of the house and its faci lities, not just pr1v1lege.~. r.-1any !an1i11cs rent their guest rooms with a bathroom and Je t the student use a hot plate. This 1s illegal. \'iola1ions are dif ficult to prove, h(l\vcvcr. and 1-lauge is often told the !See ZONING, Page !) U'l Ttlwflett Four penons.wbq said they poured bl~ovor selec- tive service records id suburban Evanston last April stand together after they w.ere sentenced Monday to, one year prison terms. The group, who call them· selves ;The Four of Us.' are from left: John Baran- ski, 23; 1llary Lubbers, 23; Thomu €lark. 11, ud Eileen K~eutz, 24. All remained free on $6,000 op- pea.I bonds. They were convicted Dec. 1 of con· spiracy to destroy draft records. Meltemi Leading ~Nixon Calls for Special H a1idicap Fleet • In Acapulco Race Laws to Co11t1·ol Pollut10.tl By AL:\.fON LOCKABEY D1llr P'llot ao1t!11t1 1Edllor- tt1eltemi, a Santana-37 sloop skippered by Bill Jonas of San Francisco's Corinthian Yacht Club. was holding the handicap lead in the 1.430.mile San Diego to Acapulco race today as brisk winds continued to push the 27-boat fleet down the Baja California coast. Meltemi ls a Class C entry. \Vhile the 37-footer Jed the handicap aspirants. an entirely separate race fo r first to fin ish was ~oing on at the head of the fleet among three big Class A yachts. r-.1ark Johnso n's 73-foot ketch Windward Passage was setti ng the pace with nearly twice the mileage unde r her keel than the record holding Sirius If had at the same time in her 1964 record run . \Vith an average of 11 knots for the first 24 hours of sailing. Passage logged 264 miles the first day -nea rly as much as Sirius II had in two days of sailing in 1964. But the race \l.'as not yet in the bag £or Windward Passage. Less than five miles astern -and also ahead or the old record -was Ken Der..feuse's 7~foot Blackf1n with a chance to catch up if the winds go light. Sirius ll, now owned and skippered by Bob Lynch of Newport Harbor Yacht Club, was in third place about 20 miles behind the leaders. Corrected time standings: OVERALL -(I) Melle.mi ; (2) Vixen, Frank Hope, SDYC; (3) Barco de Oro, Enrique Braun. Acapulco YC; (4) Alegre, John McAllister, Lahalna YC; (5 ) Starl· ing 111. Norman Re am Jr., SDYC. CLASS A -(I ) Baca de Oro : (2) Vee· !or JI , Herb Johnson. SDYC; (3) Windward Pas1age; (4) B\ackfin; (5) Nalu IV, Peter Grant. NHYC. CLASS B -(I) Alegre ; (21 S1"rling Ill; (3) Thalia IV. Joe Barbee, SDYC; (4) Windstar, Walter East. SDYC; /SJ TherB , James O'Hern, SDYC. CLASS C -(I) Meltemi : (2) Vixen: em nis, Tom Tobin. SDYC: (4) e, Sid Renl<ow. DRYC; (5) Blitren, om Corbett, SDYC. Auto Crash Kill s 4 PORTOLA (UPI ) -A two--car collision on Qallfornia 70 east of th is Plum a! Co u n t y community has killed four ptt!IOM. The C811fornia J~lghway Patrol Iden- tified the vlcthru as Richard L. Welch, 41. ol Alpine, his wire. Sharon Lee, 36: their ll·y•ar-Old daughl<r, Shelly, and Ronald Lloyd Hall , 21. of Chilcoot. " By STAN BENJAMlN WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix- on sent Congress a !Special environmental message today proposjng hal f a dozen new legislative measures Including a tax on air-polluting sulfur emissions. Ot her proposals made by the President would : -Ask the United Nations to establish a ~pecial environment fund, wh ich would reach $100 million over five ~a rs and t.he United States would su pport with a fair sha re of the funding. -Encourage states to start controll ing the location of highwa ys and ai rports by 1975 or else start losing federal aid fo r such projects. -Discourage construetion on t he dwindling lands bordering Jakes, r ivers and oceans by restricti~ tax advantages. -Control the land-disposal of toxic wastes through state regulation under federal guidelines. -Control .soil runoff rrom construction projects, again through federal guidelines and slate regulation. In olber executive act\ons.. Nixon said be has ordered the development of oo- cupaUonal health standards to protect farm workers from pesticide poisoning, and ordered the preparation of new in· Masked Gunman Shoots Waitress 111 Long Beach LONG BEACH (AP) -A masked gun· men shot and critically wounded a coc ktail wal:ress as she returned to her home here Monday night, officers said to- day. Constance Camp, 37, was: reported ln critical condition 1t Long Be a c h Memorial HOl'pltal after undergo.ing surgery to re~ two bUflets from her chest. Offlc81'1 iald Mrs. Camp, a divorcee who llves with her pattnts, was drlvlng from her job at I.Ml Angele11 International Airport when a man wearing a red ski mask approached her and said, "I'm golrtg to llhool you." She told polt ce he shot twice with n ri· fie when she started screaming and blow- ing her automoblle hom. He fled, and Mr11. Camp was found by her mother, Mr11. Frank Nadaahny. Officers said they had no motive or 1uspect in the 1hooting. • sulation standmis for federally aided multiple dwellings to consenie energy. He added that federal tax policy ta being "clarified" concerning tax ex. emption for the financing -by industry -of facilitie11 to recycle indu!trial wastes. Nixon reminded Congress that 11 of his 20 major environmental legllllative pro- posals last year are awaiting action. "Last year," he said, "wal5, quite pnr prrly, a year Of consideratio. of lhe11e measures by the Co ngress, "f urge, however. that this be I year or action on all of them, so that we can move on from intention to ac· com p!ishment in the important needs they addrel5s. '1 The Presi dent also urged creation of a new Department of Natural Resources centered on i!he resent Interior Depart- ment, a pro Nixon made la st rear along with a· posed realienment o the executive branch. The reduction of 1ulfur 01ldes, the: aim of the new sulfur tax proponl, 111 already one of the chief goals of the national air quality standard!! set by the Environ· mental Protection Agency under the·lt70 !See NIXON, Pore II Orange More sunny skfes on the. aceftda! !or Wednesday, followtn1 early . morning low clouds anCI foe t1on1.,. the coasUlne. HJgl!s W~ •t to 68 . Lows tonight 33 to t!Jt mJd.. 40·11. INSIDE TODAY Los A.11gl!lt1 pla111 it cool on•~ uear o/Ur deua&ta,fng f(lfj.\. quake. But will tht Souw.md be 111 lucky nti:t tlmf? £%ptrt.I !011 anothtr major quake fl d"' in the nezt 30 11ear1. Set ltort/, Paoe 7. L, M • ..,. ' -.. " Ctll,.'1111 I Mlfltal ........ " ,,.,,111e4 lf.M N1ll•l'ltl ,.._, .. C..-nk • .. Or•'* C""'"" • ,,., ....... .. ,,,.Lt ,.,.,.,. " oe1111 Nolle" • ...... M-1.1 1:•1 .. r111 , ... • .... MMtrm 1~1t l l!Mr11111tntllf " T_ .... " '"""'' , .. ,. '""'"" " "ff ftl9 .f( .... • WtltMr • ---.. ................. ,>M .... u .. .,... .. ... -.. \ •• -DAILV Pll~I " TutJdU, fobt\lll) B, 1972 Irvi ng Ref uses Order by Jury from Wlrt Srn·lcrs NEW YORK -Clifford Ir\ tng, con1. piler of the refuted ~IO"'ard Hughes autobiography, balked today {or a seeond day al suppl ying a federal grand Jury Y outh Fai ls At Deatli Try On 7th Floor Orange County's sensation-packed "tire puncturing trial" ended with a bang Mon- day night when a convicted defendant broke free ln a neighboring courtroom and attempted to leap from the seventh floor of the county courthouse. Karl Godbey Stanford, 2!, of Tustin 11mashed his way from Judge Roberl Corfman's courtroom im mediately after the jurist found him _IZ"uilty on charges of infllcting bodily harm on his former girlfriend. Arrtl!I flail ing, Stanford galloped past Judge Turner's courtroom, leaped over the oustreteched leg or a DAILY PILOT reporter and smashed into the shock proof glass window at the eastern end of the corridor. stanford would have fallen 300 feet if he bad smashed the window. The burly youth bounced back off the glass and into the arms of pursuing baili!ts Bruce Brazee) and Pat Brun•er. Deputy Jerry Pierson ran from Judge Turner's courtroom to aid his colleagues in handcuffing the berserk Stanford. St.an!ord faces sentenci ng Feb. 25 and escape charges will now be added to his file. It was successfully alleged in his trial that he attacked his former girlfriend outside a Santa Ana bowling alley and inflicted injure.! that put her in the hospital for a month. From Page 1 REPAIR ... (!Uez, 25 , of 7592 Volga Drive, and Henry Castonguay, 21, of 7661 Commodore Drive, both of Huntington Beach. They were all accused by nearly 30 pro- gecution witnesses of parLlcipating in a conspiracy that included the deliberate puncturing of patron!' lires, the destruc- tion of radiator caps and seals and the performance of needless and costly tepair work. It was alleged lhroughout_th,e trial that customers were pressured into having their cars hoisted on the lube bay rack in the pretense that supposed defects could be better spotted from that location. Former employes and customers told the jury that damage was inflicted to their cars and shock absorbers and fuel pUflPS were sprayed wilh oil to give the im{tession that the parts leaked a n d •h~ld be replaced. three defense lav<yers announced the r intention to appeal the ve rdlct If Judge Turner den ies the motion for a new trial. The verdict was seen Monday as a ma- jor victory for the districl attorney·s Craud squad ln a ca mpa ign to combat what was stated to be befor e the trial started a growi ng auto repair racket in Orange County. Most of the Arco, Mobil. Shell and Tex· aco stations Involved in the conspiracy are now under new management. Jnvestigators conceded after the verdict that many service station operato rs 1n I.he affected areas are doing their best to upgrade their imagr in the co mmunity. All four oil companies are reported to have assured lawmen that future leasing of their stations ... •:ill be rigidly supervised in a determined effort to eliminate the type of practice that led tv Monday's verdict. I OIA.H•I COAST DAILY PILOT OUrllO! COAS'f rtJIUSMlllO etm'Nn" aol....t N. WoH ~41fld PllDI..., Joe\: •. c m.,. Vic.-l"nlld ... t ellll co-~ ........ l\om•t ICttnl Edl!OI'" nofll•' A. t.t.,,,liTat lt\.llr>111•1111 EdllW L ,,,,, I(,;,, """""' l..cR Cll)' Ed!_. ,...,..._.,,... l l l l Ntwport lou1..,,,4 M•m.t Allidnus: r.o. loox 1175, fl"J ...... .,_ ~ -.: DI WMt MY ftt'wt ~ a.di: :n: F-! A-ll••--a.a.. 11111$ Medi ~ .. a. .. -ktfl t.IC.... ..... ~ wllh h3ndwriting samplu for comparison lV1th endorsements <>n $850,000 worth of advance payment checks made to Uughes. In his :i~und appearanee belore lhe jury. the novelist WM~ accompanied l)y his 'h'ife , Ed1lh, who appeared p8lt and tense. The y werr ti.lken to ~he courlroom nf US. Distritt Coui·t .Judge Morri s r:. Lasker arter lrvu1g refused tn :u1hm1t handwriting samples. and l...a sker /or a second tune direeted hin1 tu comply _ Irving's attorney, Maur1cr Nessen , tnn· !ended ~1 onday that submission of the ~amples woul d violate Irving's con· stltullonal privilege not to testify aga1n.~l himself. Handwriting as well a s testimony might be self-1ncriminetlng, Nessen said. 11nwever, Lasker ruled that the request by fed eral prosecuLors was proper, ptac· ing Irving in danger or a contempt of court citation if he continues lo b;ilk. I L was not knO\\'n what Irving v.·ould br asked to write. But one federa l authority comme nted with a smlle, "We mighl ask him to write 'H. R. Hughes' five times to make a comparison." McGraw·Hill Publishing Co. gave Ir v- ing three checks made out to "H_ R. Hughes" to be conveyed to the billionaire industrialist for his cooperation in the book. But in court arfidavit.s identified as Hughes' handwriting end in a telephone news conference a voice identified as Hughes' denied ever meeting Irving or collaborating in the book. And Irving 11ubsequently admitted that his Swiss-born wife, Edith, deposited and later withdrew the checks from a Swiss bank account she opened in the name of "Helga R. Hughes." Hoag Hospital's Employes Hailed For Servi ces Seventy-four employes who have given 500 years of combined service lo patients at Hoag Memorial Hospital have been h011ored at the recent 14.th annual em- ployes' awards banquet. F:mployes who are retiring and those V.'ith rive. 10 and 15 years of service al the 19-year-old hospital are recognized with pins. Heading the awards were Dorothy Compton and MarguerHe D'Alessio of Costa Mesa and ·Esther Welc h of Balboa , who have retired. More than 200 people attended the han· quet at the hospital. Awards were pre- sented by administrator William R. Hud- son and ·by A. Vi11cent Jorgensen. board of directors president. Receiving IS·year pins wtre Hclrn Buckma ster, Hiroshi Hattori and Char- lol1e Zielke. Ten-year recipients were Elea nor Blis· ton, Jacquiline Hall. Eleanor Harvey, Luthera Johnson, John Jonkers , Barbara Linden. Anne Kavu\ic. Ma ry Lou Ryder and Beu lah Sweesy. iFve-year winners were earned bv 59 employes. including Anita Alvarez. Carol Ames, Arlene Bauer. Catherine Bailey, Alberta Been , Qu eenie Br<YWn, Louise Budviti~. Elizabeth Buffington. Eri ck Carlson, Joan Chamberlain, Josephine Cobert, Shiela Cooper and Kathryn Dan- niels. A!~o Charlolle Davis , Rita OeBilzen, Dorothv Dismukes. Evalie DuMa rs. De- lores Eifler. Elizabe th field. Theodore Foutch Jr .. Jarlie Hemm inger. Lill1ame Hester, John He ying, Dennis Henderson . Keith Meads. Bea trice Mertnes. Donna r.Jorris. !\1arg.aret Morris, Matilda Mui - heron , Cecil Nelso n, Margie LaPerle a11d Catherine Levril!e, Others honored for five-_year servicC' were Ruth Lewis, Peggy Little, Thelma Lockhart, Lawrence Loughery, Williarn Loughery. Mary McNult.y, Joan McNaugh· ton , Victoria Penland. Marion Pernie, Joseph Platt. Rooe!d Plett, Joan Poirer , Evelvn Raab, Kathleen Ra ines and Shir- le y Rhodes. ·Also Janet Robu ck, Mer cedes RusseJI, Kenny Sal ude!i, Mary Serrano. Frieda. Shook". Ruby Spangler. Robert Spellmey~ er. Ma ry Vehrs . Patricia Wallace, Ann WiMett, Margaret Alaesky and Mary Lee Skinner. From Page 1 ZONI NG. • • renter ls "just a guest." Some people lnsl.811 !iecond ranges in a unit and a few go so far in the !ummer as to put ba th room fa ci\ilies and bunk beds in garages. The procedure to establlsh and then correct vinlations is a time-co nsuming one-. J1auge is cu rrently working on 30 I C· tive cases. The complalnt comes in. usually from a neighbor, and an exterior investigation is madt by Hauge to determine a Possible Violation. Then the property owner l!!i informed by letter and an interior investigation Is requeste<J. 1 floor plan drawn and a cor· rection suggested if one ls required. Correction ma y involve taking ti range out or evicting a third family. J!angups in the procedure occur when people get ''hostile,'' Hauge Admil:i, ad· ding that he expects the llle g&I occupancy probl~m to incre1se as area college enrollment.a also grow. l~e doesn't blame some of the violators -at least nol In a way. "With taxts the way they are -s()llle people will do anything to pay the taxes <ln their heme," he !l)'li. He m11y under1land, but he's careful kl add, "It 1s il legal." PALE AND TENSE Author's Wife, Edith P resident Bans Poiso1i iug U.S. W ild Creature s WASHINGTON (UPJ) -President Nixon today banned the poisoning of eagles, hawks, coyo tes, ralco ns and other predators on federal lands, and propose d legislation to prevent shooting or trap- ping them as well. The ban on poisoning was put in force immediately by an executive order. Ranchers in the West have been killing these animals and birds because they at- tack livestock. "We're extremely disturbed about the poisons in public lands," Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton told reporters. Reports of mass shooting of eagles from helicopters and small planes, brought out in congressional hearings last year, created a storm of indignation in some parts of the coun try. Jn an environmental message to Co ngress coinciding with issuance of the executive order against kill ing predators on government owned lands , Nixon also called for prompt action lo identify en- dangered species rather than waiting un- til they are near extinction . Nixon expressed concern abo ut dwindl- ing population of some animals end birds -"starting with our national symbol, the bald eagle." The executive order protecting eagles and other predators on public lands specified the only exceptions cou!d be "for em ergency sil.uations." The kind s Qf emergencies we~ not fully spelled ou t. F rom Page 1 NIXO N • • • Clean Air Act. Nixon's proposed tax would take effec t In 1976 and apply to sulfur emissions in areas which remain in violation of the air quality standards once they take effect in 1975. \\!here primary standards protecting public health have not been met. fuel- hurners would be charf(ed 15 cents for each JXIUnd of sulfur they emit into the air: where secondary standards pro- te cting property, plant~ and aesthe1ic t'a\ues ren1ain unmet. the -charge would be. only 10 cent.~ per po11nd. There 111ould he no sulfur charge at. all \\'here both standards are being met on a regional basi5. The Nixon prorosa l to control highway and alr port locations would amend his pend ing proposal of a national land~use bill encouraging the sta tes to adopt land· use planning, Under the new proposal, each state would be expected to develop ;i plan for control\lng the locations of highways and airports .and obtain federa.I approval of its plan by 1975. Any slate. failing to do so would lose 7 percen t of its federal highway and airport funds for 197S and an additional 7 percent each year unt il it came up with an approved plan . States with approved plans would sha re the forfeited funds. Without spell ing out his pro posal s, Nix- on said he would move to discourage un- necessary development nn wetlands with legis lative proposals "to limit ap- plicabil ity of certain fede ral tax benefits" on construction in such areas. From Page 1 MERCY ... more pints at Litlle Compan)!' of Mery Hospital in Torrance for local delivery. Police contacted by hospital officials wert told Brabant was undergoing cardiac. surgery when be suffered a rup- ture of the main Artery supplying blood throughout the body. Fu neral services were pending today for the vlctim, 11 self-tmployed ele.ctrlcal engineer who8e firm l! Jn Santa Ana. Brass in New Zealand WELl,INGTON. Ntw Ze•land tAPl - Gen. William C.•We/itmoreland 11rrlved at Ohakea millt11ry airfield today on a thre'°" day vi!lt to New Zealand amid tight security. . -. . -. . . • Bo·ard to Study Plans Collim a nd Do uglas Court Sites Studied By JACK BROBACK 01 .... o .. ,., .. 1 ... l!tfl Fiaures. tncluding rental cosL, tn the. county for 21,1-year and 4l.,.year periods for Interim locauons Of thf' Harbor Judicial Distri ct court" were relta.sed !er day. County supervisors will rt\'if'\\i" !ht= prcr posal. now boiled down to l\\'O 5iles from an original 15. \.\'ednesday at 10 a m Still 10 the runrun~ ti') prn\'1rif' tern· por<iry 4u;1r1ers f1)r the O\errl'r1111drd 1·ourtS. nov.· !orated in Costa \le:>a. are the Collins Radio Company o!l"!ce ou1ldinR Wf'$t of Jan1boree Road be l ..-. t= e n f\.1a cArthur Buule11ard and Cam pus Drive, and the McDonnell Douglas Corporation's Astropower building oo the northeast cor· ner or Can1pus and MacArthur . On a JO.month bssis, the Collins of· fe1·ing v.·i!l cost the county $18.5t1 a month with a 2·year option. or $18,307 a month for -4 1.,·vear!. The shorter period total figures al $-445.033 and the longer at $988.575 The McDonneU Douglas proposal would l"OSt the countv $19.00~ on a straight 30- month basis a·nd $736.308 on a 41.-,.year lease. "![ the superv isors choose the Collins offer it will cost less , obviouslv. for the :JO-month period. but the McDonnell J)ouglas offe r is much more reasonable i£ it is assumed that a new courts building ~·il l not be ready for four and a half or five vears," said Stanley Krause , cou nty rea l Property services director. Facilities in either case will be the same with four courtroo ms, j u r y assembly rooms, judges' chambers. of· fices for the district attorney. public defender. administrative staff, plu.! detention facilities and rest rooms. Both flrms ha ve ageeed to furnish carpets, drapes. and pay utility and maintenance costs, with the exception of telephones. Included are parking areas for 160 cars. ·rhe Harbor District court, now on West 18th Street in Costa Mesa in one small building and several trailers, has three judges. A fourth will be added in l\.1arch. Krause said access to the Collins si te is ex cellent and to the Astropower building. adequate. The former is offering 28.31 0 square feet in an un occu pied office struc· lure while the latter involves 27.150 feet in a facility which has been closed for several years. Remodeling is estimated to take 84 days ror the OJ!\ins building and 60 days for McDonnell Douglas . It will cost the for mer firm an estimated $270.000 and the !alter, $318,000. CollntY supervisors told Krause to reduce the num ber of sites under con· sideration to three on Jan. 25. They set- Upper Newport Bay Di scussion Se t Wedn esday A public di scussion on Upper Newport Bay and lts future use will be conducted \\lednesday at Corona del Mar High School. Scheduled to speak are Felix Smith . .a ti.s. Department of Interior biologist : Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth: Roger Desautels ol Archaeological Research Inc_; George Osborne of the Orange <.:oun1y Flood Control Distri ct, and Leslie Marks. author of '"The frail Ocean" and •·Man and His Environn1enL" The one-hour symposium. set for noon in the boys ' gymn asium, v:as organized by 16-yea r-<ild l\.1argaret Setterholm. presi dent of Students for Environmental Action al the high school. tlfd on the Coll Ins <>ff er, the Ajrporl Business Center, owned by the Irvine Com pan)' at 18&62 MacArthur, and the l-:Jp1H' Inc, building , J86Sl on Karman A1•enue. The real pr()pert1cs director said the lalt('r two did not make. final bids on the f>ropusaL but that McDonnell Dougla s entered the eompctJt1on !a.st week . The eounty Is 1n the process ol purcha.s· ing 8.2 acres from Collins on Jamboree Bou]e\·ard .~outh of Campus Drlve ror IJ23.000. County oJflcialJ hope the perrn11nent court building can be con1ple'fd within 2!.: ~ears . That includes thl' time ne<'essary to complete the deal witK Collins and 20 to 24 months for cor>- struct!or1. ' The Collins sale is subjc<'l to a satisfaC' tory settlen1rnt with the Irvine Compan)' v.•hieh own s the land and ha5 leased it t~ Collins for 99 years. Eighty.four years r'" mains on the pact. Official Front New port 'O n Collision Course' Stepping into busy traffic debate on a proposed two·way traffic frontage road - as a Costa i'.1esa cltlzen -J\'.ewpor t Beach Public \\iorks Direelor Joe ·r. Devlin almost got run over i\tonday 1ught. He lo()ked up to find a city rounciln1an \1'ho dri ves a van striped like a red-while.· and-blue barber pole bearing down on him. Mayor flobrrt r.1. Wilson flagged down Council man \V illi am L. St. Clair·s iug- gernaut. in his role as the council's con- versational crossing gu ard. The ex change came du ri ng discussion of a pending 90--da y study initiated by east side business property owners who want two-way traffic when Newport Boulevard becomes a Ne wport Freeway frontage rqad. Siate Division of ~lighways engineers and rity technicians are currenlly check· ing into feasibility of the request whic h would re<'!uire major changes In de sign, cost and constructio n timetables. Various factors were outlined at a sludy session a week ago. attended by combined staffs and promoters of the l•\'o-v.•ay traffic plan represented by eqllipn1ent rental agency o~ner Bill Hoff. man _ Hasicallv the backers think 30 days is a more re~sona.ble period to. study the complex plan which sta~e engineers. tend to discourage if a study ts even required. "\.1r. Mayor. I don•t think everyon e here knov•s our side of it," explained Hoffman , bri 111ging Dev lin to the podlum to offer his own thoughts. Devlin, of 354 flafl()ver Drive, declared the freeway and frontage road desig n changes being pushed by the businessmen ar'e of vital concern to all Costa Mesa residents such as hi mself. .. He under~tands traffic about as well as any man around here," Councilman St. Clair commented in ident ifyi ng Devlin by profession and post. Devlin deviated then from what some listeners would like to hear, declaring such traffic changes at this point would be unfair and against the interests of the total community. He mentioned higher costs and a loss of tr affic service to moto rists_ C-Ouncilman St. Clai r called for some el aboration. . · "In my opinion .• ," Devlin began. "Can you give us an estimate?," St. Clair shot back. . • The Newport Beach street·eng1neer1ng speeialist hedged a bit. ··Then whv are you here before us".'' St Clair prC~ed. ".Joe , thi s bothers me a bit for you lo corne 1n here and say you haven't studlcd il, but you're full of aOvice:· he con· t1n ued . . " '·Bill , we've on1y heard one s1d~, 'l\.1avor V..'ilson interrupted. regarding De~lin's criticism of the. tw o-wa y traff ic plan east side landow ners have pushed .. Is he speaking as a11 engineer?'' HoH· man demanded. Ma yo r Wilson remarked that Devlin spoke basically as a Costa Mesa resident. lie als0 drew the analogy that If some~ one is injured and needs lmmediatO. medical <ittention ii is nice if the f1rM citizen "ho pasSt'S by ha s an fll,D, clrgr ec- Hicyt'le shop o"•ner John Sipple sud- denl y joined the debate, saying as a twQ· way traf!lc su pporter he has been I~ seven meellngs about it and never S2\V Devlin there. '·Nobody has shown up before to say anything but wha t 11.'as supposed lo h(l said," Sip ple snapped. : Coun cilman St. Clair criticized the 90· day study, suggesting it was just impos~ to get by the April t l election before the two-way traffic issue is fa ced. "I'm not sure 1 like thal," he added. , City Manager Fred Sorsabal pointe4 out the council can tell the slate it wanta twcrway traffic -which in 1966 existe~ on the boulevard before the change t; one.wa y -without any study. Frotn Page 1 SU ND AY ... Fleet .Slreel as a copy ed"1tor on the T..-0n.. don Daily Ma il He came to the United Stales in 1965, served as city editor and then as news editor of the Anaheim Bulletin bf'rore jo ining the DAI LY PIL01' staff in 1966 Miss Combs. 24. is a native of Lo0.i; Bra("h and holds a BA degree in con1- municalions from Cal State Fullerton. She ~·orked as a feat ure writer. society editor and general assignments reporter for the Call Enterpr ise newspapers in Southeast Los Angeles County prior to joining ~he DAlLY PJLOT staff in, 1970. '' ' ' Both O!rkln and Miss Combs have won Orange County Press Club awa rds for "best page layout." Miss Combs being the current first place winner in that category. The Sunday product for wh ich they will be responsible is expected to offer readers some new experiences . It will use some new techniques io gra phics and design. Keevil promised. "The basic concept of the Sunday edi~ tion.'' Keevil said , "is that it will main· lain its identity and continuity with the other six days of publication but. at the same time. it will have qualities unique to the Sunday edition.'' The Sunday package will include a col· or comics section in addition to the Fami - ly Weekly and TV We ck ma gazines now inserted in Sat urday editions. It will be deli vered early fbefore 7•:W o'clock for most home subscribers ) on Sunday mornings. Ll'lte-breaking sports l'l nd news of local lnlerest will be an important par! of the Sunday package . Keevil noted, But the Sunday edition al so will re.ly heavily on staff-produced features and ht11nan inte rest stories for the flavor that will make 1t uniquely the Orange Coast'• own Sunday newspa per , he said. Beat The Clock Usually there is no urgency about getting carpeting installed. Most poeple will wa it a whole week! However, when there i1 a rush , we can accommodate those who re - qu ir e immediate service. We HAVE sold and installed carpeting the SAME DAY many times. Unless there is a problem obtaining a specific color or pattern, you can count on fast service from Alde n's, and we maintain a large inventory to facilitate deliveries. ALDEN'S CARPETS • DRAPES 1663 Placentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4838 HOU~S: Mon. Thur Thun ., 9 lo !:30 -Fri., 9 hi 9 -!AT., 9:30 hi ! I ' \ I - Orange Coast EDITION Today's Final N.Y. Stocks VOL. 65, NO. 33, 2 SECTIONS, 26 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1972 c TEN CENTS Pact Reached With State on Assemblyman Rober1 Ii. Burke (R- l-luntlngton Beach i and Costa r.1esa Mayor llobfrt J\1 \V 1lson ~1onday an- nounced a c1ty·slate agreen1enl for creating a \\•ilderness park on 300 acres adjacent to Fairview Sta te Hospital. Announcetnf'nt of the agreement a11- pears to end a tug-of.war strelching over some 28 years on ho11' the property will be used. Burke and Wilson indicated ii will now become a regional park, probably leased lo local governments for $1 a year but operated for use by all the people of Californ ia. The 300 acres has been eslln1ated to have a value of $10 million if H y,·ent into private development . Part of the site in- cudes a prehistoric Indian burial ground. A team of 13 stale. county and local of- ficials met Friday to work out "'Ording of the announcement. Top priority is development of plans for submission to lhe Legislature as asked by the state's General Se r v i c es Administration, current controlling agen· cy over the surplus hospital sit e land. Strong local supJX>rt has already led to a variety of basic rough-design plans being drawn up for use in formulating a ix>lished product on paper for submi.!lsion to Sacramento officials. ~1ayor Wil son said during Monday night's City Council session that Burke and Assemblyman Robert Badham (R· Newport Beach) have guarantees that the Nears End Tentative Dock Agreenient Studied SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Tentative agreement to end the crippling 123.day strike on West Coast docks was an- nounced today by negotiators for shi p.. pers and longshoremen. Sam Kagel, a private mediator, said the settlen1ent vd!J be submitted to a comn1ittee represenling union local s and that this committee ~·ould decide the date Due Marelt 5 of a membership ratification vote: and if there would be a return to work pending th e vote. The comn1ittcc will meet in San Fran- cisco on Feb. 12. Approval by negotiators for the JLWU and the employer Pacific Mar itime Asso- ciation of a new contract came as Con· gress pressed toward legislation to force Dail y Pilot Preparing First Sztnday Edition an end to the walkout. It has been the longest strike Of Pacific ports in history and was the first since a 95-day walkout in 1948, formerly the long- est on record . President Nix on had said the strike cost $600 milli on in U.S. exporl losses and economists said the total cos t was near $2 billion. The JLWU struck 24 \Vest Coast ports last July I, returning to work Oct. 6 after Nixon successfully sought a Taft-Hartley injunction. ~lut the 80-<ta y cooling off period im. posctl by !he injun<:llon expirf':d Christ· mas day and the dOckers resumed the st rike Jan. 17. Negotla!ions resumed Jan. 3! and Kagel was called in by both sides to assist. The tentative agreement came as in Washington Democratic leadf':r Mikf': GSA Will then hand it O\'f':r to son1e publtc agency for development. The property is considertd too small for a state park. The most likelv alternatives to such direct disposal of.the vast, vacant parce l include lhrtt n1elhods outlined by Badham and Burke: -Purchase of the land at 50 percent of il11 market value. -Nego tiation of a long-term. low -co:>l lease such as that leadin2 to creation fou r "Fo1ar of Us' Fairview Park yea.rs ago of lh@ adJactnt Costa !\.1esa Goll and Country Club's 1..-·o 18·hole courses. -J.,ormation of s ,JOint-jXlWf':rs authority involving either the t'ounty alone or such surrounding entit if':S as the cities of Costa Mesa. Newport Beach, Huntnngt.on Beal'h and Fountain Valley. One qualifying factor in what the site will ultimately include is pending re- quests by thf': State Divisk>n of High "·ri.rs and the Department ol ~fotor Vehicles for use of a small portion i\arro"·· t:Ur\'tng Esta11C1a Dr J v e , to\vard U1e rear of ii, was pav~ when litigation o\·er o"·nership and control datin~ back to HH4 was still entangling it~ fut ure. Demands for acquiring more r1ght-of- "'ay lo make Es tanc ia Drive -site ot several fatal arcidenls -safe r have bf':en loud and continuou.!I on !he loca l scene. Condemned orl.S?ina!!~ in a total of 7f0 (See F AJRVIEW, Page %) The first Sunday edition of !hf': DAILY PILOT wll\ be published 'ln March 5, it was announced today by Robert N. \Veed, prcsidenl and publisher. "Aclditlon of the Sunday DAILY PILOT to the six "'Cekday ed itions o( thf': ne"·~paper rounds out development of 1he package we feel Orange Coast residents and busi nessn1en \~rill consider the area's primary news and advertising mf':dium," he said. Man sfield asked, and received. unan i- mous consent to bring the bill up at .midday. The first vote, on a n1ove by Sen. Robert Packwood (R-Ore. ), lo add f>ks.i· dent Nixon 's permanent strike settlei11ent proposals to the dock measure. would come early this afternoon \Yith final ac· lion on the bi il due an hour later unless other amendn1cnts are presented. Fou< perspns who "\.d they pour,d ~lood Qver ••lee· tive service 'records 0 suburban Evanston last April stand together after they were sentenced Monday to one year prison terms. The group, who call them· selves 'The Four of Us,' are from Jett: John Baran· •kl, 23; .l\llfY Lubbers, 23 ; Thomas Clark, 21 , l!ld Eileen K'featz, 24_ All remained free on $~.000 ap- peal bonds. They were convicted Dec. 1 of con· •piracy to d,otroy draft records. The Sunday edition of the DAILY PILOT comes in response to reque~ts b.v both Tf':aders and advertiser::. for fu ll &even-day service, th e pu blisher noted . "After more than a year of study and preparation. we believe we now have assembled the right combination or news and features to provide a unique and uselul service to both readers and ad· vertisers. '' he added. Thomas Keevil, DAlLY PILOT editor. ~aid the Sunday edition's news content will maintain the local em phasis DAlLY PILOT readers have come to expect from their hometown editions of the r..ton- day.through·Saturday i:sues. "The product will continue to be mostly bright and local wi th all editorial conlenl presented in a lighliy pac'kaged format in which things are easy to find , easy to read ," Keev!I said. Alan J. Dirkin, fo rmer DAll..Y f'/LOT \Vest Orange County city editor. v.·as selected by Keevil for promotion to the post of Sunday editor. .Jacqueline Ann Con1bs of the DAILY PILOT ...,·omen's se<"tion staff will ser\e as ass ista nt to the Sunday ed itor. Keevil said. Terry S. Coville, who served on the West Orange County staff under Dirkin and. more recently was a general assignment reporter in Costa ~fesa for the DAILY PILOT . returns to Huntington Beach as the new \Vest Orange County ci- ty editor. Dirkin, 33, i.!I a nati ve of Sunderland, England. ~le 'served his apprenticeship on several provincial British newspapers before go ing to Athens. Greece. where he became assistant editor of the Athens News. J-Ie later went back to London and to (See SUN DAY, Page %) DlltKIN CDMIS Mercy Flight Patient Dies Despite Help Surgical patient Eli Brabant died early today at Hoag Memorial Hospital , just 24 hours after helicopter police of two coun· lies ne"' three mercy missions deli vering rare blood for transfusions. They eve11 searC'hed !heir own rank!' ''la Southl and police radio networks and found three on·duty officers as donors. in case more type 0-nega tive transfusions would be required . Brabant 61, of 15116 Santa Ana Ave .. Costa l\tesa, receJ ved 21 transfusions !'vlonday. One Anaheim hospital sent the wrong blood shipment during the swiftly-moving dran1a, but the error was discovered ln time. Newport Beach Police Deparlmf':nt Watch Commander Lt. Kelson McDaniel dispatched the craft pi loted by Jim Go/fos and Jim Bradley off a gecond lime lo pick up the proper type. During its absence, Hoag Memorlal lfospital issued another appeal for aid a! Brabant's condition worsened. A Los Angf':les Police Department helicopter wa.!I dispatched from the downtown Wil.l{hire Divts!on to pick up six (See MERCY, Page!) In the House, meanv.•hile, the Rules Coinmit tf':e \Vas considering "'hcther to force the issue to the floor. 1\.1ansfiel d n1oved up a plan to bring the blll up in the Senate later in the afternoon after conferring with senators ~·ho will manage the bill. He had told a nearly empty chamber shortly after the Senate met today that a;des should tell senators the bill v.·ould be called early this af. ternoo11 . Under the latter plan . lhat"s when the first votes would take place. Mansfield n1ade his announcement after <;riticizing the Senate record for absenteeism and inaction so far !his year. "'ft's been a lousy January and so far it 's been a lousy February," Mansfield told newsmen. Asked if he thought the House would be able to act befor e Congress quits Wednes- day night for a Lincoln Day recess, Mansfield said his concern is to get the measure through lhe Senate by then. The House Republica n leader, Rep. (iera!d R. Ford of h1ichigan. said "I lhin k "'e have good rf':ason to be hopeful for affirmative legislative action within 48 hours." There was concern that lhe measure might become snarled by House-Senate differen ces. however. The Senate bill was the version ad- vocated by President Nixon, to subject both sides in the 123;.c:lay strike to binding arbitration. liowever, the House Labor Commi ttee had before it a different proposal - merely to empower Nixon to seek a 15().. day back-to-work court order and to re· quire the striking longshoremen lo handle all agriculture and military cargoes, as well as al! shipments destined for IIawaii. The administration called the proposed House bill "clearly unsatisfactory." Corol'ta del Mar Route M<1y Get Priority Status Orange County supervisors today urgf':d that const ruction of the Corona de l Mar Free way be given first priority status by the State liighway Commission. The board action was spurred by re- quests from b:>th Nev.•p1rt Beach and Costa h1esa. Ma vors Robert \V itson of Costa Mf':sa and Ed Hirth. Newport Beach, agreed that for the two nei,ehbor- ing cities to supJX>rl the same stand on a freeway was a "historical n1omenl." \\'ilson told supervisors that early CfJn- !'truclion of !he vital link between the San Di ego Freeway and University Drive was urgenlly needed. "We are slymied and !'t1fled by traffic congestion now and it is ~rowing worse..'' Wil~on warned. lie noted that South Coast Plaza, the Irvine l ndu.~trial Complex. the count y airport and fashion Island in Newport Beach all contributed to the overload problem. Wilson said he planned to lestify befor& a legislative committee on the subject in Sacramento next "'eek . Mayor Hirth added hi s strong en- dorsement and pointed to the upcoming deve\opmc.nt of the Emkay property as another re1son for speed. "Whit will happen to the increased now of traffic in Newport Beach when this freeway segment i! completed~" asked Fifth District Supervisor Ronald CasperS. 7 Convicted in Repair Trial Hirth replied that the Newport citizens committee study would be completed by that time and hopefull y would offer solu· tions. After hearing additional statements or support for the freeway construction from Henry Segerstrom, representing south Coast Plaza. Gordon Jones, diret· tor of engineering and planning for the Irvine Company and Frank Thill of the Oraoge C.Ounty Chamber of commerce the board adopted a resolution by a l to l vote. ·Feb. 29 Hearing Set on Motion for New Trial By TOl\1 BARLEY Of lltf Dtll?' 'ltwl S!tff The "Service Station Seven" are guilty. 1bp.L was the verdict of an Orange County Superior Court jury Monday night 1.ftet four days of mulling evidence rack- ed up In the marathOn eight-week trial of seven Orange Coast ruident.a. The obviously weary jurors returned guJJty verdicts on e1ght of tht nine counts •f conspiracy with Intent to cheat and defraud Ornnge County mototists and they named Jerry Kend all , 35, of 969 Sonora Road. Costa Mesa , in tw o of thole guilty decisions. Kendall had been named all through the trlat with Stanley Davis, S4, 'of 1086 S~.t• Pablo Circle. Costa Meu and Edward Carney, 27, of 20862 Shell llarbour Drive, Huntington Beach, a11 one of the three architects (Jf an auto ~epatr fraud llnkinl 11 service 1t«Uon1 ranfln1 from Seal Beach to San Cltmtnte. Judge Jame.!I Turner ord~red 1U Hven to return Marcb 13 for sentencing. They laco a poaslble sta te prloon ttim ol up to 10 years. Judge Turner scheduled Feb, 29 for a hearing on a motion for a new trial after coni plimenting defense attorneys ~I Stok· ke, Frank Moran and George Shlblta aod prosecutor Richard Stenton for tbelr "gentlemanly conduct throu1h a lon1 and cxhoustlng trial. "We hear a lot these days 1bout courtroom problems crtaled by lbe likea of the Chicago seven and Charles Manson trials," Judge Turntt told the jury. "We have nothing like that here and I can't recall being In the presence of a more devoted pjury or m91"e centlemanly 1t.-torneys." The verdict obviously came a11 a blot, to •ti stven defendants. Three had openly predicltd 1 few boUl'1 belono the jury The-resoluUon also urged that the ft.ewpy , M rede•lined to meet the pro- blem• "'lldtnl· In the Orange County Airport llkeoff area. Auto Crash Kills 4 returned that they would be cleare<I ti· PORTOLA (UPI) -A two·cnr C<llli>lon charges'that produced an Orange CountY ' on Cal!fornla 'Iii east ol this Plumas Grand Jury indictment. CJ 0 u n t y community has killed four Convicted with Ktndnll. Davis and peraoru. Carmy were Roger M~denhall. "8. of The Califom·la Highway Patrol lden- 26095 Avenlda De Sto. Mission Viejo. titled the vlct.lms u Richard L. Wel ch, David Conchola, 22, of 6000 Garden Grove 41 , of Alptne, his wife, Sharon Lee, 36 ; BlVd ., Weatmlnster and Christopher Enri· tbelr 11-yesr~ld daughter, Shelly, and CS.. REPAIR, Pa1e ZI Ronald Lloyd Hall , it, ol Cbllcool 'I I .. Nixon Calls for Special Laws to Co11t1·ol Pollution By STAN BENJAMIN WASHI NGTON (AP) -President Nl:r- on sent Congress a special environmental message today proposing half a dozen nf':w legislative measures including a tax on air·polluting sulfur emissions. Other proposa ls made by thf': Preside nt would : -Ask the Un ited Nations to establish a special environment fund . which would reach SlOO mill ion over five years and the United Slates would support with a !air share of the funding. -Encourage states to sta rt controlling !he location of highwa} · and airports by 197f> or else i;tart losing federal aid for su ch projeets. -Discourage constn1clion on th e dwindling lands bordering lakes. rivers and ocean! by restricting tax advantage.!!. -Control 1he land-disposal of toxic wastes through atate regulation under fed eral guidelines. -Control .!JOll runoff from construction projects, again through fe.dera l guidellne.!I and state regulation. Jn other executive actions, Nixon said he ha.!I ordered the development of oc· cupatlonal heallt\ standards to protect fann worker11 from pesticide Po.isonlna:, and ordered the preparation ol new in. Masked Gunman ' Shoots Waitress In Long Beach LONG BEACH ( APl -A ma•ked gun- man !hot and. critically wounded a cocktaU .walJ'e11 •• she returned to htr home here Monday nichl, officer1 uld to- day. COnstance Camp, 37, Wll reported in crltlc1I cOndiUon IL Long B ea c h Memorial Hoaptlal all>r uncler&olng aurgery to remove two bullets frm1 her chest. Officers 1aid Mr1. Camp, 1 divorcee who llvet: w1th htr parent., wal driving from her job at Los Angeles lnternatlon11l Airport when a men wearing a red ski ma.!I~ approached her and &Ald, "I'm going to shoot you." She told police he ,;hot twice with a rl- ne when she stitt'I~ screaming and blow. lni:: her automobile Mm. He nf<f, and Mrs. Camp W8!! found by her mother. Mra. Frenk Naduhny. Offlcer1 said they had no moUve. or '"'poet In the shooting. ., . - "' sulalion standards for federally alded multiple dwellings to conserve energy. He added !hat federal tax policy 1:t being "clarified" concerning tax ei- f':mptlon for the financing -by industry -of facili ties to recycle Industrial wastes. Nixon reminded Congress that 18 of hill 20 major environmental legislative pro- posals last year are awaiting action. "Lasl year." he said. "was. quite pro- perty, a year Of considf':raliofl of these measures by the Cong re s!'. "r urge, however. that th is be a year of action ()n aU of thf':m, so that we can move on from intention to ac· complishment in the Important need! they address. 11 The President also urged creation of a nf':w Department of Natural Resourcts centerf':d on the present lntertor Depart- ment. a proposal Nixon made Ja11t year along with a proposed realignment of the executive branch. The redudlon ()( !ullur 01ide11, the aim of the new sullur tax propo!al, Is Jlready one of thf': c~ler goal4 of the national air quality standards set by the Environ- ment.Ill Protec~lon Agency u'ndtr the 1'70 (See NIXON, Pa1e II Oraa1e Weadler More sunny zkles on the agenda , !or Wedneoday, lollowtni tar!)'• morning low ~loud• and ioe. ·along ' !he coaJlllne. l!lghs W-.,Y M " to 118. Lciw1 tonlgHt 38 lo ult nlld- 46's. INSIDE TODA 'W \. Loi A·ng1le1 plav1 it cool ~ year after deV<1$ta&lng earth-'' QUGk<. But "1111 the Southldnd be °" luck11 ntzt timc1' Ezpcrll. 1a11 anoihtr major quake ii dtu" • In the neit 30 uear1; Ste 1U>ru. l'ooe 1. l , M. ...,.. J (•lll•itl• • (l•Mll!... ..,, ,_1(,1 IJ (,..tlO•••• II D••ll1 "'•lie:" t •• 'Wltl ,... ' r ~t.r1•1rtnKllt 11 ll'lrtl~Ct , .. ,, ,,, .... ·~ . ,..,._... 1• ha L..,..... 14 ' 2 DAIL v Pl\ or c Irving Ref uses Order by Jury P'rom Wirt Services NEW YOllK -Clifford Irving. r.nrn- piler of the refuted Howard Hughe~ .tutobiograpby, balked today for a second day at supplying a federal grand jury Youth Fails At Death T ry On 7th Floor Orange Cou nty's liensation~packed ''tire puncturing trial" ended with a bang Mon· day night whe n a convicted defendant broke free in a neighboring courtroom and attempted to lea p from the !leventh floor of the countv co urthouse. Karl Godbey Stanford. 21 , of Tustin smashed his way from Judge Robert Corfm an's cvurtroom immediately after the jur ist found him guilty on cha rges of inflicting bodily harm oo his Jormer girlfr iend . Arms nailing, Stanford galloped past Judge Turner's cou rtroo m, leaped over the oustreteched leg of a DAILY PILOT reporter and smashed into th e shock proof glass window at the eastern end of the corridor. Stanford would have fa ll en 300 feet if ht had smashed the window. Tpe burly youth bounced back off the glass and into the arms of pursuing bailiffs Bruce Brazee! and Pat Brun11er. Deputy J erry Pierson ran from J udge Turner's courtroom to a id his colleagues in handcuffing the berserk Stanford. Stanford faces sentencing Feb. 25 and escape charges will now be added lo his file. It was successfully alleged tn his trial that he attacked his former girlfriend outside a Santa Ana bowli ng alley and inflicted injures that pu t her in the hospital for a month. From Page 1 REPAIR ... quez, 25, of 7592 Volga Drive, and Henry Castonguay. 21. of 7661 Commodore Drive, both of Hunti ngton Beach. They were al! accused by nearly 30 pro- liecution witnesses of pa rtici paling in a conspiracy that included the deliberate puncturing of patrons' tires, the destruc· tion of rad iator caps and seals and th e ·perfor mance of needless and costl y repair work. It was alleged thro ughou t lhe trial tha t customers were pressured into havin g their cars hoisted on the lube bay rack in the pretense that supposed defects could be better spotted from that location. Former employes and customers told tke jury that damage was in fl icted \() their cars and shock absorbers and fu el pumps were sprayed wi th oil to give the impression that the par1s leaked 3 n d should be replaced. All three defense lawyers announced their intention to appeal th e verdict if Judf Turner denies lhe motio n for a new trial. The verdict was seen Monday as a ma· jor victory for the district attorney's fraud squa d in a campaign lo combat y.·hat wa s stated to be before the trial started a growing auto repair racket in Ora nge County. Most of lhe Arco, !\1obil. Shell and Tex- aco fitations Involved in the conspiracy are now under ne w management. Jnvestigators conceded after the verdict that many service station operators in the affected areas are doi ng their best lo upgrade their image ln the com munity. All four oil companies are rep:irted tn have assu red lawmen that future leasin~ of their stations will be rigidly supervised in a determined effort to eliminate the type of practice that led tv Monday's verdict. OIANfil COAST DAILY PILOT OIWI!;& COAST PUILTSHrtfO C0MPMY l •li•rl N. W.H Pt•lltlnt llnd Pulllialllr J1c" L Curl"' Vkll ,,.~, .,,,, "-•J M.....- Tho""•' K11vil E<li!ot" lho"''' A. M .... 1i;11• ""-'911-. £<1110!' 0.1rl11 H. l oo1 R::cJ.1,.,, r, Ni ll ~it.ran: ~"'9 E<1Jf0f'I; c .... w ... OMM l l O W11I l1y S"11t M1iliRt AdJ,..,1: P.O. lox 1560, '2l?' .,...._ ~---:= .. .....,... ............ ....... ~: :m F--.t ·-.... " .... .....,,, 11'1'1 9..cfl ....... . -~-.... .,'"-.... !Mlt..Y P"IU)T, Wllll -.tdr: h _,......, ... ,._,...__ iii ,.util~ "•ltf ~tOI \,,_ .. , ...... ,... -If~ -~ 1 .. (,,. .. ......., a..cfo, °""" IMw. ,.._lnftM ~. ~In V1tiw. S... C"-""f C.•111•-.,,. ~·~(k,, '""' •lfl'I -"'lieftaf •1t• rm.cio.1 .,"""""' ..._ 11 •• -W.t .. , Jir-. "'"' .._. T1f111' 11 (71 41 641-4121 Cl ............. '41-N71 c...,.,i.M, .,.,,, or.,. c-t ~t:.e ~. Ht -••'-'• lfi..tno-.., •I-loll _._ _, ..s¥ .. 1'-•••'1 ....... ......... ~ ............. ~ .... "'"' .... .,...,.: -· ...... ~ ....... ""' .. ,...,... 9-" ..... Ck•• ·-· Ct~ll. 1:11 ..,._ .., ~ a.a -9!1Y1 w -11 a .11 --.ru •"""'7 ..,N....._ tt,21 -9111'f, i>- wlth handwrltin~ 1amples for comparison with endorsement~ on $650 ,000 worth of advance payment check~ made to 1-Iughes. In his second appc<ir<tn('e before Lhe jury. !he novelist was accornpanled by his wife . Ed ith. who appeared pal e and ten~. 'fhcy were taken lo !he co\Jrtf!)l"lln <1f tJS. Dislrict Courl ,Judi.;e Morr1~ I•:. L;:i sk er af1er Irving rrlt1scd lo suhn11t hand"-Til1ng s;imples. and La.'lkcr fur a second lime directed him to comply. Jrving 's allorney. Maurice Nessen. ton· tended Monday that submission of the samples would violate Irving's con- stitutional privilege not to testify against himself. ~/andwriting as we!! a s testimony might be self-incriminating , Nessen said . Hn1vcver, Lasker ruled ihat the request b.y federal prosecutors was proper. plac- ing Irving in danger of a contempt of court citation if he continues to balk, lt w11os not kno1vn 11•hat Irving would be asked 10 \vrite . But ooe fed£1 ral authority comrnented with a smile, "We might ask him to write '11. R. Hughes' five times to make a comparison," McGraw·tli!l Publishlng Co. g;ive Irv· ing three checks ntade out to "H. R. Hughes" to be conveyed to the bi!lionalre indus trialist for his cooperation in the book. But In cou rt affid avits iden tified as Hughes ' handwriting and in a telephone ne ws conference a voice ide ntified as Hughes' denied ever meeting Irving or collaborating in th e book. And Irving subsequently admitted that his Sw iss-born wife, Edith, deposited and later withdrew the checks from a Swiss bank account she opened in the name of "Helga R. Hughes." I Preside11t Bans Poisoning U.S. Wild Creatures WASHINGTON (UP I) -President Nixon today banned the poisoning of eagles, hawks, coyotes, fa lcons and other predators on federal la nds. and proposed legislation to prevent shooting or trap· ping the m as well, The ban on poisoning was put in force immedi;ltely by an e1ecutive order. Ranchers in the West have been killing these apimals and birds because they at· tack livestock. "We're extremely disturbed about th!'! poisons in public lands." Interior Secretary Rogers C. B. Morton to ld reporters. Reports of mass shooting of eagles from helicopters and small planes, brought out in congressional hearings last year, created a storm of indignatio n in some parts of the country. In an environmental message to Congress coinciding with issuance of the execuLive order against killing predatnrs on government owned lands, Nixon also called for prompt action to identify en· dangered species rather than \.\.'aitlng un· til they are near extinction. Nixon expressed concern about dw1ndl· ing population nf some aninlals and birds -"slarting with our national symboL the bald eagle ." The execuli\'e order protecting ca glei; and nther predators on public. land~ specified the only exceptions could be "for emerg!'!ncy situations " The kinds or emergencies \.\.'ere not fully spelled out. \ From Page 1 NIXON • • • Clean Air Act. Nixo n's proposed tax would take effect in 1976 a nd apply to suUur em issions In .areas which remain in viol ation of the air quality 5tandards once they takt effect in 1975. Where pri mary standards protecting pu bl ic health have not been met. fuel· burners would be charged 15 cents for eB<'h pou nd of sulfur they emit into th e air ; where secondary standard~ pro- tecting property, plan ts an d aesthetic va lues remain unmet. the charge would be only 10 cents per pou nd . There would be: no .sulfur charge at all where both sta ndards are being met on .a regional basis. The Nixon proposal to control highw11y and airpo rt locations would amend his pending proposal of a national land ·use bill encouraging the states to adopt la nd· use planning. Under the new proposal. ea ch state would be expected to develop a plan for controlling the Jocalio ru of highways and airports and obtai n fedtral approval of i~ plan by 1975 . Any state failing to do so would lose 7 percent ot it s federal hlghwaf and Airport funds for 1975 and an additional 7 pcretnt each year unUJ It came up with an approved plan. States with approved plan!! would share the forreittd funds. Without spelling ool his proposals. N"'t.1· on said ht would move to discourage un- nectUar)' development on wetlands with leg1&1aUve propoS1ls "lo limit ap- J)Ucabllity of certain Ctderal tax benefits" on construction in such arta1. PALE AND TE NSE Author's Wife , Ed ith F rom P age J SUND,<\ Y ... F'!eet Street as a Cl)py editor on lhe. Lnn- don Daily Mail. .He came to the United States in 1965, ser ved as city ed lt0r and then as nrws edll or of the Anahein1 Bulletin before j o i n in g the DAILY PILOT staff in 1966. Miss Combs, 24 , is a nati\'e of Long Reach and holds a BA degree in com- munications from Cal State Fullerton. She worked as a feature writer, society editor and general assignments reporter for the Call Enterprise ne\\'Spapers in Southeast Los Angeles County prior to joining the DAILY PILOT staff in 1970. Both Dirkin and Miss Combs have won Orange County Press Club a\vards for ''best page layout ," Miss Combs being the current first place winner in that category. The Sunday product for which rhcy \\.'ill be responsible is expected to offer readers some new experiences. It \\•ill use some new techniques in graphics and design, Keevil promised. "The basic. concept of the Sunday edi· tion," Keevil said, "is that it "-'ill main - tain its identity and continuity with the other six days or publication but, at the same time, it will have qualities unique to the Sunday edition." The Sunday p<ickage will include a col· or comics settion in addition to the Fan1i- ly \Veckly and TV \VeC'k magazines no1v inserted in Saturday editions. It "-'ill be delivered early ! before 7 :10 o'clock for most home subscribersJ on Sunday n1ornings. Late-breaking ~ports 11ond news of local Interest will be an: important part of the Sunday package, Kee vi! noted. But the Sunday edition also y,•j]I rel v heavily on staff-produced features and human interest stories for the flavor thal. will make it uniquely the Orange Coast's own Sunday newspaper, he said. l'ro1n J•nge 1 FA IR VI EW . • • acres, the property has shrun k by 350 acres sold off as school sites, in addition lo that . occupied !)y the hospital and residential facility housing re!<irded pa· tien!s. Selllemcnt with the origin;il nwner and heirs -who tried to re~ain control of what \.\.'<I s rLiled surplus 13 .vrars ago - 1~·;is rcact1ed in 1970 for ;i $1 m1lllon sun1. Park plannrrs stress Iha! ihe ~la!P i;;n't e1·cn con.~1dering di sposal nf the land (r)r prllatr de1rl<1prnrnt a! thi~ tlnie. "Recent dt>\'cln pmPnts clearl v 1nd1c:i1e lhJ.Jt np! flnl~ !Ire the ren1:un'1nJ? acres 'surplus' hu~ the. property definitely rt>· mains t'arrn;irRed for publi c: recreatin11 and park 11s£1," explains Assemblyman Burke. He emphasized again the GSA is mere- l.v waiting for submission of plans. "As soon as these are received, J will do everything that I ca n to see to it that the slate implements the proposal ," he pledged . "I'm confident that what£1ver means or lransferrin~ jurisdiction over the re· maining surplus fron1 1he state to local authorities the proposal calls for it can be worked out •.. · .. Burke concluded . The final parcel declared surplus fnr state needs back in 19a9 incl udes the various school sites purchased during the last decade. Newport·fl.lesa l inifif.'d School Distrlct officials -faced with de cl l n in g 1 enrollments in the general area -may ne\"er need Lhem. One of the sites became Estancia ~Jigh School. whose ecology club and faculty advisors have tirelessly promoted the wllderneks park concept. Mayor Wilson singled out the young en- vironmental activists for special praise in revealing the status of park plans Mon- day. Orange County ofricials anticipate the final product will flt ln perfectly as the coastal termlnus of a greenbelt and regional park chain stretching up the Santa Ana ruver to the Santa Ana moun- tains. "Thi~ park has been a dream of many council~ ove r the years, but certainly not the work of t1ny one of )lbcm," Mayor Wilson declared after the 11nnouncement. Brass in New Zealand WELLINGTON. New Zealand !APl- Gen . Wi lJ iam C. W.~1moreland arrived 11t Oh1.ke.a militaiy 1irfield today on a three· day visit to Ntw Zealand amid U&ht IK'l.lrity. I ' ··Board to St.udy Plans· Co ll ins and Do uglas Court Sites S tudie d By JACK BROBACK 0 1 '~' 01ih ~11•1 111!1 Figures, including rent~I cnsts ln the. tounty for 21i-year and 41°i•)'ear periods for interim locat ion., of tht> Harbor .Judicial J)istrict <·ourts Wf're released ln· day Cn un!y stJpervi.~nr.~ wilt f'l'lliE'w 1he llrO· po.<;11!, now boiled down to tw o site~ from an original IS, Wt!dnesday at 10 am. Slill in the running lo provide tem- J>firary quarters for the 011crcrowded (•nurts, n11w loca!Pd ir1 Cos la r· .. fe sa. tire the Collins f{ad10 Con1p;.i11y offite build ing •.vest of Jarnborl.!t' rtoi1d h e t we e n ivlacArthur Boulevard and Ca1opus Orive, 11od the J\1c0onnl'll Douglas Corpora tion's Astropo1ver building on the northeast cor- 11cr of Campus and MacArlhur. ()n a 30..ntonlh bssis , the Coll in!! of- fering wtll cost the county $18,543 a inonth with a 2-year option, or $18,307 a month for 41-'.i·years. The shorter period tota l figures at $445,033 and the longer at 1988.575. 'fhe McDonnell Oouglas proposal would cost the county $19,005 on a straiii;ht 3~ mnnth basis and $736,308 on a 4 ln.·year lease. "If the supervisors r:hoose the <'1Jlli11s offf'I' it \\•ill cost less. obviously, fnr the :in-month period, but the J\1cDonnell f)ouglas oFfer is much more reasonable if it is assurned that a new cnurts building \\'ill not be ready for four and a half or rive yea rs," si1id Stanley Krause, county rccil property ser\'ices director. Facilities in either case will be the same with four courtrooms, j u r y assen1bly rooms. judges' chan1bers, nf· fices for the district attorney. public defender, 11dministrative staff. plus dct.ention facilities and rest roortis. Both firms have ageecd to furnish carpets, drapes. and pay utility and maintenance costs. with the exception of telephones. Included are pa rking areas for 160 cars. The Harbor Dist rict court, no1v on \Vest 18th Street ln Costa Mesa in one ~mall building and several trailers. has three judges . A fourth will be added in March. Krause said access to the Collins sile is excellent and to the Astropo\ver building , adequate. The forn1er is offcrlng 28,310 squa re feet in an unoccupied office struc- ture while !he latter involves 27.150 feet in a fatility •Nhich has be.en closed for several years. Remodeling is estimated to take 84 d(!ys for the Collins building and 60 da ys for McDonnell Douglas. it will cost the former firm an estimated 5270,000 and the latter, $318.000. County supervisors told Krause to reduce the number of sites under con- sideration to thr£1e on Jan. 25. They sel· tied on the Collins offer, the Airport Business Center, owned by the lrvine Company at 18662 Mac.Arthur .. a nd the Elpac Inc, buildi ng, 18651 Von Kllfman Avenue . Upper Ne wport Bay Di sc ussion Set Wednes day A. public discussio n nn Up!)('r Newport Bay and its future use will he conducted \Vednesday at Corona del Mar High &hool, Scheduled to speak are Felix Smllh, a l ' S. Deparhnenl or ln1erior biologist; Newport Beach Mayor Ed Hirth ; Roge r Desautels of Archaeological Re.search Inc.; George Osborne of the Orange Counlv Flood Control nistrict. and Leslie r.1<irkS, author of '"fhe Frail Ocean " and ".Vlan ;ind !!is En\ironnient.." The Gne·hour symposium. set for nonn in the boys' gyinnasiurn . "-'SS organized by 16-ycar-old ~1argaret Setterholrn. president Gf Students for Envirnnmental Action al the high school. The real properties d1rrctor taid the l;ottcr two did not make final bids on the proposal. but that McDonnell Dougla~ t"ntcred the competi!1on last week. Thr cc1un ly is in the process of purchas· tng 8.2 acres from Colllns on J:ambor•ee Boulevard south of Campus Drh·e tor 1323.000. Cou nty officiaJs hope the permanent cnurt bui!din1t can be compltted wilhul Zl..i years Thill Includes the llm,- ne(·essary to complete the deal with. Colhns and 20 to 24 months for con:' ~trucuon. Official Front New port 'On Collision Cou rse' Stepping into busy traffic debate on a propose d lwo-way traffic frontage road - as a Costa Mesa citizen -Newporl Beach Public Works Director Joe T. Devltn almost got run over Monday night. He looked up lo rind a city councilman who dri ves a van striped Jlke a red-white· and-blue barber pole bearing down on h1n1. !\1!-l.VtJr l~obert M. \l/ilson flagged df!Wll Cnuni.:1lmrin Williarn L. SI. Cla11·'s jU.':· gernau!, in his role as the council's con- versationa l crossing guard. The exchange can1e during disc·11ssi11n of a pending 90-day study initialed hy east side business property ov;ners 1vhn \1•ant two·way traffic when Ne1vport Bou levard becomes a Ncv•port Freey.·ay frontage road. State Division of l·lighways engineers aod city technicians are currently check- ing into feasibility of the request which would require major changes in design, co st and construction timetables. Various factors were outlined at a study session a weck ago, attended by combined staffs and promoters of the t1vo-way traffic plan rep resented by equlpn1ent rental agency ow11er Bill Hoff. man. Basically, the backers lhink 30 days is a more reasonable period to st udy the c-on1plex plan which state <'ngineers tend to tlisrourage if a study is even required. 1'Mr, Mayor. I don 't think ev£1ryooe here know s our side of ii," explained ~loffman, bringing Dt•1•lin to the podium to offer his own thoughts. De vlin, of 354 Hanover Drive, declared the free"•ay and frontage road design changes being pushed by the businessn1en are of vital concern to all Costa Me sa residents such as himself. "He understands traffic about as well as riny man around here," Councilman St. Clai r commented in identifying Devlin by profession and post. Devlin deviated then from what some listeners would like to bear, decl a.ring such trarfic rhanges at this p:iint would be unfair .and ag ainst the interests of the to!al community. He mentioned higher costs and a Joss of traffic service to moto rists. Councilman St. Clair called for some elaboralion. "In my opinion ... " l)(lvlin began. "Can you give us an estimate?," SL Clair shot back. The Newport Beach street-engineering specialist hedged a bit. "Then why are you her!'! before us?," St. Clair pressed. •'Joe . this bothers me a bit tor you to come 1n here and say you haven't studied ii. bul you're full of advice ," he con- tinu('r!. "Btll, we've only heard nne side," r.-Jayor Wilson interrupted, regarding Devlin's cri ticism of lhe two-way traffic pb1n cast side !andO\\-'ncrs ha\'e pushed. "'Is he speaking as a• engineer?" Hoff- man demanded. M11ynr \\'ilson rematked that Devlin spoke basically as a Costa ~1esa resident. He also <lrew the analol'(y lha l if some· one 1.~ injured and needs immed1a1e mC'dical attention it ls nice i[ the first citizen who passes by has an fl.l.D. degrcc B1c:ycle !ihnp owner .John Sipple sud- denly jnine<l the debate, saying as 11 two- way traffic supporter he has been 1,,: seven meetings about i~ and never :iiaw, Devlin Lhert. ··~obndy has shown up before to say ' anyLhing but what was supposed to be. said," Sippl e snapped . Couneiln1an SI. Clair criticized the 911.: day study, suggesting lt was just imp:ised. to gel hy the April J l elec-tion before the.' lwo·v.·ay tr(lfric issue i.~ faced. "I'm llGt sure I !Ike that,'' he <1dded. City Fl'lilnager Fred So!"sribfJl pointed; nut lhe counril ca n Lrll the state it want.'. tw0.w;iy traffic -which in !9Sfi existerl: on !he boule vard before th e change. In one-way -without any study. Hoag Hospital's Employ es Hailed For Service s Seventy-four employes who have given 500 vears of combined service to patient~· at Hoag f\.1emoria l Hospita l have bet!!\ hoflored at !he recent 14th annual em-_ ployes' awards banquet. l·:mploves whn are ret iring and those v.·i th five. 10 and 15 vrars of !Crvice al. !he 19-year-old hospi°lal are recognizeQ' v.·ith pins. l-fcading the il\\-'llrds were Dorothy" Cornpton and Marguerite [)'Afes~in ot Costa Mesa and l'.:sther Weit h of Balboa; who have retired. More than 200 people attended the bari. quet at the hospital. Aw;irds y,·ere pre- sented bv adminislr<tlor Willia m R. l~ud"­ son and ·by A. Vint:tn t Jorgensen, board of directors president. Receiving IS·yc;ir pins were Tlclcn Buckmaster. l-liroshi !lritlori and Char- lotte Zielke. Ten·year recipient.~ were Elea "or Bus~ ton , Jacquiline Hall. Eleanor Harvey, Luther~ Johnson. John Jon kt'rs, Barbara Lindeq,\ 411ne KJivuJ k\ Miry Lou Ryder and Bealah Sweesy. IFve-year winners were f'arned by 59 employes. including Anila Alvarez , Carol Ames. Arlene Bauer, Catherine fiailey;, Albt!rta Been. Queen\!': Brown, Louise Budvitis, Elizabeth Buffington. Erick· Carlson, Joan Chamberlain . .Josephin& Cobert, Shiela Coop('r and Kalhryn Dan·· nlcls. Also Charlotte Davis. R1la DcBilzen . Dorolhv Dismukes. Evalie DuMa rs. De- lores EiOer. Elizabt!th Field, Theodore Foutch Jr . Janie Hemminger. Lltliam e Hester, John Heying. Dennis Henderson, Keith Meads. Beatrice Mertnes. Donna Morris, Marga ret Morris, Matilda Mui· heron, Cecil Nelson. Margie LaPerle and Catherine Leveillc. Others honorM:f fo r five-yea r servicP. were Ruth Lewis. Peggy Little, Thelma. 1..ockhart. Lawrence Loughery , William Loughery, Ma ry McNuhy, .Joan McNaugh· ion. Victoria Penland. Marion Pernie, .Joserih Platt. Ronald Platt, Joan Poir(!f, Evelyn Raab, Kalhleen Raines and Shir- ley Hhodes. Also .Janet Rob11ck, ~1f'rcedes Rus.~cll. Kenny Saludcs, 1\fary Serrano. Frieda Shook. Ruby Spangler, Robert Speltmry. er .. \1ary Vehrs. Patricia Wallace. Ann \V innett, Margar£1t Alaesky and Mary Lee Skinner. Beat The Clock Usually there is rro urgency about getting ca rpeting installed. Most poeple will wa it a whol e week! Howe ve r, when th ere is a rush , we can accommodate those who re· quire imm ediate service. We HAVE sold end in sta ll ed carpet ing the SAME DAY many times . Unless there is a problem obtaining a specific color or pattern, you can count on fes t 1ervice from Alden '1, and we maintain a large inventory to f ecilitete ·del iveries. I . C••t• _. .. ALDEN'S CARPETS e DRAPES 1663 l'lacentia Ave. COSTA MESA 646-4138 HOURS: Mon. Thur Thurs., 9 to 5:30 -Fri., 9 to 9 -SAT., 9,30 to S 1, \ I I