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1972-02-16 - Orange Coast Pilot
---, _ _. • ' , ---------------------------------- ,, U.S. May ·Unload Dow~'-9.t, D°=ghes~ -·------ I • • CleJD~nte S-laying Witn~sses Sought • ID Poli~e Appeal • ., ·- ',_,/ t .................................................. .. ) , • DAILY PILOT * * * 1oc * * * WEDNESDAY' AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 16, 1972 . ' ' , .••"" ,' , VOL.. IJ, HO. 4f. 4 SICTIONS.-U 'AGES , ~ • 1 ,-, • , • , .:'t,, '·r•; , UPI T11fsillo!ti : -f'~~~light Slio_;P,i"g· , _-~ , , , , • Britain neared. 11 tota!'industrW sh.utci9wn !Olfay: The 'biock?de of • ·power statipi),s'by, striking toal mi.ner'.sitll{e~' ~edf~power cut,s : m Britlib'.bomes andJndustrY..· Here~~, womah<sho~,l:i)"f!Ashlight at a can<nelit stc:ife.· -l. '·, • .... "'.\ >: . . . .,' ' . Clemente _PQlice Hunt Witn~sse~ in Slayin:g · Sin Clemente detectives t.oaay Issued an appeal for possible· witnesses to the f~ stabbing eaily last week of a Wllm- i~n man whose body was found on the edge of I.he San Diego Freeway. ::AM of Prime concern to officers i!l an ~enlifiea man who phoned the depart· ~ momepts a!ter the stabbing oc-cun:ed1 and gave • report of a white .Chevrolet driving the wrong way on the freeWay in.,the immediate vicinity of the atabbing. • • ·~e man hung up Qi.re olficers could ~tain his :tdentificatiOn. P.olic, already nave three eyewitnesses 1'(.tbe struggle which led to the dealh of J,.-s Httrefa .Jloa, 47, ol Wilminglon. ~l'. alto have a suspect in custody, Jupn S'~r• !'Ilg,, 35, Wilmington. who UJO.y say will he formally charged in court 1)1uraday1with murder. ''We· are'llill extremtly interested in loeating thalman who. called;us at 11 :50 p.m. on the night of the stabbing," s~id De~tive Lt. Clifford Gates. . . The man placed the call at about the same time other witnesses reported the stabbing incident. The unidentified report came from a toll pflone along Camino de EStrella, Gates sai~. Besides looking1'6r new witnesses, local detectives are contlnulhg to work on repOrts in the ~tabbin(. _,,. The alleged murder weapOn has been found along the bank of'lhe freeway near ti><! spot where Roa collapsed aod died from a stab wound to the· heart. The knife is a black-handled switCh· blade weapon, which it is unlawfuJ lo possess. , tt i5 alleged that Pug•1 angry over a car purchas_e he had made from the •lc- tim, itabbed Ros alter a figb\ !hat •(S.. APPEAL, I'll• ti . I , . rs. • WISS ' , " . 'Gang'laml' ~cheme . Huntin:gton Man Nabbed in Probe By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 lh• 0111, 1"!1ot sr~t Climaxing a long, nationwide f r a u d probe, U.S .. authorities indicted a Hunt- ington Beach man and 18 others Monday for an alleged conspiracy to borrow mil· lions backed by church· finanCed capital. Antiwar Group Linked to East Bombing Attack MANCHESTER, N,H, (AP) -The bombing of police and fire headquarters here today W'as linked by a top state law enforcement official to the "Tt1e People 's Liberation Army," an antiwar group which also listed the New Hampshire primary headquarters of President Nixon as a target. The official, who asked not to be iden- tified. said that when a man and a woman were arrested shortly after the three bomb blasts that shattered win- dows, a typewritten news rt9ease also was confiscated. The release said that besides the polic~ station, the Nixon headquarters had been a target. \ Police, however round no explosives at the headquarters nor at city hall, which was ordered searched as a precautionary measure. A fourth bomb was discovered today under the air conditioner in a window outside Police Chief John Slips' office. Detonation ex~ sai~ it failed to go off bec·ause It was improperly assembled. ' . The news release referred to the arrest of 12 demonstrators in Manchester at the opening of the Nixon headquarters last week . George Romney, sscretary of Housing and Urban Development, spoke at the opening. -~ 1 · · However,. Valerie Hawkins Qr Dover. a spokesman for the Lincoln Di..y'-Parado Committee which or g a n i z'e d the demonstration at the Nixon headquarters, said today the group "emphatically denies any connection between the marth' and today's bombing. Our purpo~ wei:e peaceful. We were demonstrating against Nixon, not against the Manchester police." Kathryn A. Holt. 21, with addresses in !See BOMB, Page I) \ The so-called Church or Christ Manors Inc., was a phony corporation existing only on worthless paper, investigators charge. No connection exists with the legitimate Church or cm.ist, but many defendants are accused oi links with America's organized crime syndicate. Louis J. Verive, 43, of t21661 S. Brookhurst St., is among them, aC.COr_d ing to federal gangland intelligence sllurces. Verive and the others were nMfled in a 41-count federal grand jury indictment Issued in Chicago for arrests from coast to coast. Verive was .stopped without incident as he drove along Newport Boulevard and taken into custody by Newport Beach Dectective John Simon. He was . turned over to U.S. Pos tal Inspector H. L. "Bookie " Almond, booked into Orange County Jail without bail and delivered this morning for arraignment beCore a U.S. Commissioner in Los Angeles. Charges listed In the mass indictment Include fraud by mall, wire, inter~tate transportation of funds obtained by fraud and ~I~ consP,iracy. Releasint'the data·ln-chicago, U.S. At· torney James R: Thq_mpson said the case Is one of the largeJl.l of its kind in U.S. history. ' The ~efendants -some Costa Nostra fi gures who surveillance of£icers say visited Verive in Huntington Beach - operated in New York, Chicago, Phoenix, ·Ariz., Savannah, Ga., and San Diego. They 3lJegedly promised to arran·ge loans through what the U.S. Justice Department and postal authorities call an ad vance fee scale. Jhdicted principals -l n c 1 u d I n g Verive's brothers carlo aOcf Charlie. both or whom have been on the Orange Coast recently -are accused o( victim izing at least 70 businessmen. . Claiming control of the actual Church of Christ's $$00 million in assets, the alleged acheme.rs supposedly collected advance fees to guarantee loans ror businessmen styml~ by the tight economy. Investigators explained the loan ap- plicant is usually asked to put up rive to JO percent of tht full amount sought as good f•ith-money when applying through loan· guara~ companies. The advance f~edly never relunded and authorities maintain the guarantee documents they say were (See CONSPIRACY, Page I ) ' ' Dad KifG SeJf 0 -n Son~s Grave CHATSWORTH (AP) -Frl\inds said ':larence Dehnke had been despondent since his 2G-yeal'-Old son, Dale, was killed Jn action In Vietnam Jast May. He visited his son's grave often, sometimes driving to Oakwood Memorial Par~ in this Los An1eles suburb as the sun was rising. The cemetery_ owner. found Dehnke's body about I a.m. Tues. day .by Dale's grav¢.·PO~fe.said he had shot hlmself·in the hlild witj\.a .~alil;ler plstol.J Ieavlni Do notU. U.S. May Unload ' . H owaril Hughes' 'Spruce Goose' LONG BEACH I AP) -Howard Hughes' 1'Spruce Goose" -one of the world's largest alrplaneS and one Which turned out to be a lame duck -may be headed for the chopping block. Twenty-nine years ago, the federal governhient gave Hughes, the bllllonalre industrialist, a contract to build a. giant experimental plywood seaplane. For '4-0 rnillfon, it got the 11,Spruce Goose .'' It flew only one time, for ol)e mile anif reached an altitude of 70 feet. Now, it l! reported the government may try to get some or its investment back by selllng the plane. The Long BeaCh Indei>endent-,Pi'ess Ti!Jegram on TueSday quoted a spokesman for the General Services Adminlstratipn ln Washington as saying the govemment might sell the 140-ton, eight-propeller craft th10ugh competttlve bidding when the lease expire! June :.!. Hughes spokesmen were not available for comment. Hughes, who supervl!ed consttuct.lon and was al the controls In J947 when the Spruce Goose made Its flight, ie;i.ses it for $800 a month. He pays the Long "Beach Harbor Department $38,000 a year for a secluded hangar hl~lng the plane, which has ·a ~foot wingspan . There were no reports of prospective buyers, although on Dec. '1 a vol"-e lden- tlfled as Hughes' said In a telephone con. ver~tlon wUh newsmen: "There's a lot that stm .OU~ Ile 1earO-ed f~ the airplane. and I feel that before anything i• done with tt'that might be in the nature.of_:d_es~iv~ or dama_g· Ing, we should utlllU! It to get the full~t obtainable 4ata ... whh:h 11 a great ~eal more than ·most people realize. ''There are problems which are related to air<rafl siu, .and which vary with siu, !See PLANE, P1ge I) . ' . . ''\ ... , , • ' J I .·' :writer"S'· t • 1 ' Wife Called • 'Fugitive'· NEW YORK !AP\ -Mrs, Clifford Irv· Ing • was arrest'ed at the federal courthouse today~on a chm:ge of being a fugitive from SwJss jUstlct In the Howard Hughes autobiog~•phy ·case. , . The Swiss gOvernment ha! charged her with counter:feitlng, forgery and larceny in connection with her alleged role in her husband's 'clalmed book--about- the billionaire fJ!Cluse , .; Smiling and composed, Edlih Jrvlnf .r. rived at t(le cow:\h!>~se/!ll ll:IO 'a:Jll:.•ID ininutes late,_al"ltl Weri,t directly be/ore a U.S: magistrate. • ,. " She was lingerprinttid,l(lered to tum over her passport and ·Wl"s told she would be released on a . nso.ooo personaJ recognizafice bond. . During the courtroom appearance her smiles disappeared. ~ U.S. Magistrate Martin 0 . Jacobs Issued the warrant Tuesday on a cocrr plaint charging that Mrs . Irving, 36, was a "fugitive from justice of the con· federation ot SwiUerlaod.'' Jt said she is charged with "c;olinterreitlog.and forgewy, use. of counterfeited or forged in· " . See E~J:l]· Page !) .......... '.-· «:oait . Weather More summer·llke Weap,U Is on1 the . agenda for Thufsday, with hig~s in the mld-70's. aiOl!g .lhtj Orange Coast, rollowlng earlyl morning fog which win bum off. Lows: tonight in thi! 4-0't. ' INSmE TOQA \' -.. ' • ., ·• ' • •.• DAllY PILOT 5 WrdntsdlY. ftbtullY 16, nn =--------.----- Nortl1 ' Viets .. Pounded .. U.S. Warplanes Launch Heavy Air Strikes From Witt Servtcet SAIGON -American w a r p I 1 n e !I l&unched substantial air strikes inside North VI e t n am today, U.S. military 10urces said. , Radio Hanoi claimed two U.S. planes were shot down and a number of pilots were killtd or captured. A t}.S. Command spakesman, told of the broadcast. said: "l hive nothing to report." The command tn the past has wlthheJd reporting on downed planes until search and rescue mls1lo01 were completed. Tht North Viet namese broadcast userted that a number of U.S. jf:ts at. tacked populous areas In Quang Dinh and ' From Page J BOMB ••• Vinh Linh, Norih •·Vietnam'• two 'outhemmost provlnce1. ·The U.S. Informant• said the 1trlke1 were in North Vietnam'• half of the demilitarized.. zone that separates the warring Viet'1ams but declined to disclose the targets. They added there also may have been sorne raids north ol the zone, but \o\'lthheld detail• pending an an· nouncement from lM U.S. CommMd. "There were protective reaction strikes and other 1trllces involved," said one in· formant, ·''but I can't give you the number." He said the ra ids were beyond the l'~m Pagel APPEAL ... u1ual one or two ''protective reaction" 1trlkes frequently reported from time to time when enemy guns or radar lock on to U.S. planes. AIUed intelligence indicates 70 percent more North Vietnamese troops will move into South Vietnam or into border areas during the first five months than in the same period la1t year1 U.S. military eource1 1ald. U.S. mWlary oouroe1 In Saigon oald the big U.S. air campelgn Iha) beJan In Soutb Vietnam a week ago would "continue In-- definitely" because at least four fre sh North Vietnamese dlvls1ons1 beefed up by heavy artillery, were movtne into the country. Boston .. Bu!ta1o, N.Y., and Portsmouth ~· and Dover, N.H., was arraigned on two c»unt.s as an accessory to damaging Jlllbll~ buildings. 'she was: listed as a waitress and a native of Salem, N.H. She was held for a F~b. 25 hearing In 125,000 ball. erupted in the back seat of the moving car. The pair and three companions were returning home to Wilmington after a day In Tijuana. . Nearly 1,100 strikes have been flown In-- side South Vietnam in the past week, most of them coming the five days before a one-day cease.fire for the Tet lunar new year that began at 8 p.m. Monday. Durlng the 12-hoqr period ending at dawn Wednesday, American jet-fighters made only 43 1trlkes, and by noon BSl bombers had fiown seven m11sions inside the coun-- try -a sharp reduction from the earlier number of sorties. Jaan· KarJ Laaman, 23, also listed as Kiri A. Laaman, Buffalo, N.V. was arp 'rf{gned later at the hospllal where he wu taken wlth an ln}ured band shortly after hfs 111Ttst. A Feb. 25 probable cause hearing was set with bail 1t $25,000 on ti((> counts of damage to public building. /t. bloodied ·and torn glove was found cutslde the Police slatlon. .In Buffalo, N.Y., Laaman's ·mother Ella &aid she had not setn nor heard from her son in more than a year. ••He was what you 'would caJJ a college ~dical," Mrs. Laaman told a newsman. "Our vlew ii IO much dllferenl from his." · Laaman and Mls.s Holt Were former atudei:its at the' University of New Hampshire. Both wei:e r'eported to have been out of school more than a year. The alate offl~U!I quoted the news releue as 1aylna, "h pigs vlcously at.- tacked them •• · • While demonstrations like thl!: are necessary, we are not go.Ing to get far, always fighting on the pigs' terms." C8lllng Manchester, the state's largm city, 11a known center for right-wing acp tlvity," the release called for "the same fight on a dilferent level. This time on our terms . , • meaning moving fight under the pigs' noses, using 1urprise u our heaviest weapon." The 1tatement also uld lllat "the pig media has been trying to portray this coming et~n 11 a traditionally quiet affair. 1 .. Rep. Paul t.fCCJoskey aftd the rest of the RepubllcaM along with Sen. Edmund Muskie, Chicago Mayor Jijchard Daley . and all Ille Democrats are looking to New Hampsblre and the first primary and hoping thlt comes true. We've shown them what to expect.'' The primary WW be held Marcli 7. Pendleton Race .Problem 'Light' Racial problems at Camp. Pendleton are not as bad as some people are saying and the Marine Corps 11 working to end them, 1ay1 a mem,ber of the aervlct's minority affairs committee. "Of course there Is a raciaJ problem,'' Robert R. Gross 1ald Tuesday after co~ eluding a two-day vlslt to Investigate charges of racism. "But It hu been n· aggerated and I llllnk the Marine Corps is doing one hell of a job to solve It." !lop. Augustus Hawkins (D-Calli.1, said last December that racism -··permeates" the base. But Gross u ld: 0 Alter talking with senior officer• and ·several score of enlisted marines I don·t find that there 11 any alarming racism at Camp Pendleton -certainly no more than there· is in San Diego, San Francisco or any other civilian community." 01.AMSI COAST DAILY PILOT If--· --c ........ OlNtOI C'Oo\n' "11lmt1Mt COM,AICY l oHrt N. W••' P1r..a.1 .,.. l'lillllb.IW J•cl l . C-.tf.., 'f"ce P'mlMlt ... 0-11 ~ n .... , !(,,", ...... ,,.. ..... A. M,rp\IA• ~ Elfi.t" Cli1..C.. H. L.. l !th1r4 r. Nill M:alrllW ........... -ca.'" ... : DI W.-f &IY • ..,.,.. ......,_ aMdlo: 2ll1 """"'' ....,: .... .,.. ~ tadil m FM .. l A-"""9 ....... ~: 11•11 AMO ....,...,.,.., .. ~ • Nc<t• " Qllllll ..... Some r<ports Indicated that the fatal knife blow was struck aher the two men ·fell from the back seat of the car which b'{ then had been parked on the shoulde r · I the freeway a short distance north of the Pico overcrol!ing·. Puga then assertedly fled the scene in the car and sped southbound. · About an 'hour later he assertedly ~·recked that car in a construction zone near National City. Highway patrolmen investigating the Incident assertedly noticed large blood· etalns on the front of the driver's shirt, arousing their suspicion. Moments later Roa was assertedly Jinked with the San Clemente stabblng and arrested as a iuspeet In the killing. Border Patrol Interpreters bave been working th~ case with local detectives because none of the principals in the hr cldent speak fluid English. Huglies Papers . Taken in Home Of Former Aide TUCSON, Arlt. (AP) -Marje!I Jean DeLauer, a former public rtlatlons of· fleer for Howard Hughes Enterprfses, eald her home was ranscaked Friday night, apparently by someone looking for documents relatln1 to !be bllllonaire recluse. She eald a number of documents had been taken, but nothing else was missing. She did not say where me-got documents. Mrs. DeLauer said Tuesday she had been wbpoenaed to appear before a New York grand ·jury Investigating ·author CIU!ord Irving and his purported autoblocraphy of Hughes, and adcled that •ht Wu •frald to aay an)rthlng more. She said sbe once had about 300 document,, relat.lng to Hugbel, and less than 300 were taken when .her home wu ransacked. -.. From Page J CONSPIRACY • • Issued by at least SO fictlUou.s loan com· panles were worthless. Collected between 1161 and December of 1910, the urupeclfled amount of cash wa. funnelled Into peraonal or 1hady gangland use, ti. ii. charged: Federal autboriUes involved in the two- year probe worked with Newport Beach, Anaheim, Orange police and the dlstrlct attorney's office in gathering evidence locally. • They claim the alleged scheme using the Church of Ch r l• t name to Jul 5Usplcious investors netted more than $1 million and waa engineered to obtain much more. U.S. military sources said intelligence reports show four North Vietnamese divisions -the 304th, 308th, 320th and 324th -had either crossed the border in-- to south Vietnam or were pre paring to move in. All but the 320th, which has gone to the Central Highlands, are in Quang Tri province just below the D~1Z, they said. The sources said if current infiltration rat.es countinue through May, the Com· munists will add 66,000 men to their forces, nearly double the 39,000 that came in last year in the same five months. The Communist buildup included in-- troductlon of heavy artillery Into Weslem · Quang Tri province, tbe sources said. Other U.S. officers said earlier that 130mm guns also have beert spotted com· Ino down tbe Ho Chi Minh supply trail. The sources 1aid they frankly did not know when an offensive would come, but they said ()ne unevaluated document CBI>' tured recently in Central Vietnam Jn· dlcated it might be delayed until June or July. Others have predicted it would come next week while Prtsldent Nixon Is In Peking. Fierce Cambodia Fighting Rag.es PHNOM PENH (UP I) -Tile Cam- bodian high command reported day-Jong fierce fighting today as government troops puabed to within three mlles of the east aide of the anclent Angkor Wat temples. 1'l don't know exactly the magnitude of the fighting. It slarted at II a.m. and was 1tllJ ~oinfi oo at • p.m. We have no ~U:~iu~5no~erse8:1ha':Ve~~!! command opokesman Maj. Chang Song said tonight. There is lncreasJng speculaUon in the capital that •ix brigades of government troops are under orders to stonn Angkor to prevent aoine kind of propaganda moves by the Communist! at the temples before the Nixon visit to Peking. ·From Page J PLANE ... which cin be explored wllll llllJ ny1ng boat." In rtcenl yeara, the Harbor Depal't· ment threatened to evict 'the .. Sprue&.• Goose" and return the htngar to more active uses. y .:·~. On Monday, the Harboriml!slon received a request from the es Tool Co. for a one-year extension o current lease, which expires Sepl 4. From Page J EDITH SEIZED ... struments, embezzlement, and then between them. She added, however, that larceny." doesn 't mean there have· 11not been The charges were the first to be made second thoughts." Jn the case under invesligatJon by two "Setend, third, fourth, fifth or one bu. dred thoughts -because when tl]lngs trand Juries here. It involves the authen-happen, you have hundreds-of thoughts ti city of lhe purported autobiography or ... bout wbat happened," Mn. Irvlnt add- Hughes as compiled by Irving. ed. Irving claima the book, which was to A-fore than nine documents said to con- have been published by McGr1w-Hill Ilic. lain the signatures of Hughes have been and excerpttd JJ} Lile . ma·gazlne, was sent to New York from the Nevada Stale assembled from mort than 100 hours of Gaming Control Board. Hughes operate• Interviews he conducted with the a large gambling empire, in Nevada. reclusive blllionalre. Deni&Is of any auch A New York City pofice handwriting meeting• or even knowledge of the author expert has t.estifled before the grand jury have been attributed to HUghes. that be believed signatures were .forged Time magazine ha1 branded the •ork a in correspondence Irving claimed Hughes hoax , pirated from another manuscript. had written.· Irving bas said lllat his wife, Edith, 1 Handwrlling aperts hired by McGraW: Sw1s1 cillttn, deposJt.ed in a Swis... bank Hill have reversed their earlier finding $660,00 in chtt:k1 from McGraw-HU, using that the 1ignature1 were authentJc. a J>•UPort in the name or "Helga R. Extrad!Uon cannot be tllected l!lllil · Hughes." Tile money was lnltruled 11 prool has been eatabtlxh<d , of the pa}inent ror Hughes. suspected lnc!Mdual'• Identity and lllf. Mn. Irving later withdrew the money ficient-evldtntt J!ftsented that a crime and deposited $44.!,000 or lt In another was commJ!ted, · · Swiss bank ll!lder anolller name. Swlu Two -line componlom of · Irvin« authorities said. testifi.d TDetrdly before a ltdtral graild Mn. Irving took lhe ntw1 of lhe war-, jury, prffl!lll>bl1 about their ft<Ollec- rant calmly In her hotel 11111! after ber tlOlls of occasions -lrvillr c1alma be • lawyer, Maurice Nessen, called to say met wlth Haghel. 'she would surrender heneli. But earlier Donlall cabaret Ii.Deer Nini· •1111 w told nporters she did not think sl>O Pallandl said .sbt .liad IOla a fedml • • ,_ • would be extradited. grand jury lhaflrviag DtT« ~aw.Rueb., ·"•.clODl tnow· It'• j~ u. f<elq.J IDDe!'presciioe dlrinc a lrtp the! tool lo i.. ·-~ · · Muloo Jut yur. ~ •> . .,, lni.r.ln ii the llold. aieJ.,...., • ;W llu!U, • ICOlia tllVilla ~ Mrs. lrvlo( llld !be clil!lcidtiot fldn; ; from .l'lotl4a, declined to. -bar, lier and bor !ms-. who liotll !kw here ~. 1'ot It -jlrdUlllOd 16 llPt from -........ 11111\111116 ll1aad o( concemed • tdp lhe lllld ~ .a.a.a; Ibiza, 1114 ~ led lo l*-1 fllOblmll toot to !be """"" 111o'!x!s. ·" • • ··-. . ' , , DAILY Pll.OT r11et1 b ltk~lrd kffllltr Eland With Elun Sh11tdown • Nea1·ly Full • Ill Britai\· By JOSEPH \V. GRIGG LONDON (UPll -Brilnin neared a tolnl lndustrinl shuld0\\'11 today. Twenty n1ill1011 job c \Vere thre:ttt!nod w l th further powrr c.:uls in store for British Jiornes :ind indust ry. The blot•ki!dt' of po~·er stntlons by strlk· Ing-conl nlhlers bit even harder and tlec· tricitv authorities ordered power cuts (or Ot\C·li1ird Of the l'OUU try , With 15 percent htt nt nny sin~lc time. Prevously, only ubout 10 percent h:id been nf fected. Tliat n1en nt 1nost area s which before suffered only six hou rs of cuts a day now "·ould b(' bliicked out for nine hours. The Central Electricity GencratinJ: Board, which opcrntes Brlt&in'1 state-run 1xnvcr industry. said cuts 1nlght hit as · much as 20 percent or lhe country nt a tin1e if gcneroling resour ces conti nue to fall. So far , 10 or Brltaln's 148 power sta- tions have been put out or action by strike pi1·kcts preventing coa l or oil reaching them. At le;u•t a third are work· in~ at reduced capacity, the board said., "It looks as if th is is going to be tho most dr astic day so far. There is no doubt th at power rallonln~ ls becoming n1ore severe," a gencrnting boa rd spokesman said . The nine-hour power cuts were split In· to three groups of three hours each. London't two evenin~ ne,vspapers warned· readers some editions nre likely t.o be late or not appear at all. At L-Ongannet power station .Jn ScoUand. scene of violent clasliis btltween strike pickets nnd pollce in the paet two d"ys, 700 picketing miners turned up in pouring rain to face 800 policemen guarding the facllity. , Picket leaders warned etrikers against violence. . The power shortage also hit homes and railroad services. Officials at Lion Country Safari In Laguna Hills agree this baby eland has plenty of vigor despite being somewhat wobbly of leg. He was born Monday afternoon at the commercial game pre~e..rve and is no\v busy learning the ropes from mom. For the seventh day, tens or thousands of homes and offices were without beat for long periods. Some areas aisO were hit by water sh<>rlages when electric water pumps failed. Cranston Pushes Quake At Bath. in west England, water carts were stationed at strategic points throughout the city for families whoso supplies dried up. 'Prediction' Research M cGo·veru Ask.s Legalized Pot WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen. -Alan Cranston (0-Calif.), has lntroduced legislation calling for a $61 million research program which goyernment geologists say may make pOsslbJe the prediction of earthquakes. The Earthquake Prediction Act he In· troduced Tuesday, would. autborize an in· crease in quake research . by the U.S. Geological Survey, whose officials say that with more money it may be possible to make predictions wilhin five years. OffiClals eaid they hoPe to forecast an earthquake up to three months in ad· vance and pinpoint it within three days. Survey offic~s said !hey a:Iso bope that an existing research program may fead to methods of controlling quakes. They ••wa• .,,, GEM TALK · TODAY by J. C. HUM,HRll.S DrAMONOS ARE FOR WEAR ING From deep within the ground, your diamond came. Unitl it was cut, polished and set by cr~ftsmen who spend their lives making a rough hewn stone into a thing of beauty, that is where it ~longed.- Too many of ·these beautiful stones, mounied in expensive i;et· tings, now lie in vaults and safe deP.Osit boxes where they give pride and joy Jo no one. Why do' people, In effect, "retum their diamonds to the . ground?" Fear of theft, loss oi wear are the dominant reasons. None or these have any real basl1 In fact. A valuable stone should certain- ly be Insured against theft and Jou, but your but lnsurance against wear I• re,,War cleanln~ and ln- spoctlon of both ltcme and 1eUing. --. 6aid experiments in Colorado oil fielda in- dicate it may be pouible t.o trigger minor trefncirs to reHeve prClSSures bUilding toward a· major disaster. Cranston polntfd to the 1971 quake in the San Fernando Valley as an example ot' the need for predictions. , Part of the lower Van Norman ·nam gave way in that quake, the senator noted, leaving only five feet of soil ta hold back 3.6 million gallons of-water. · "More than 80,000 persons were evacuated and estimates warn that up to . 10,000 persoM would have been killed If the dam·.had given way," be said. U an accurate prediction had been available. the water could have · been lowered ln advance to protect the persons llv.ing below the dam, he said. • e . By United Press Jnttrcatto.nal Sen. George s: McGovern ot South Dakota suggested today legalizing marljuana, with thi aame controls Imposed on alcohol. Speaking at a drug counseling c;fnter in Boston, the Democratic presidential candidate said: "Continuing ~investigations on the overall effects ()f marijuana leave unsellled the related but 1eparate questions \o\'hether society can or should attempt to completely ~ hiblt Its use. "The most relevant hlstorical precedent -prohibition of alcohol -produced an obvious, abject failure." For the woman you love, The inilestone watch. · < ..Love Js more predow than Q diamond11 or go ld," ta)t1 the proverb. Dut the milestone QM EGA· w.atch proyidet all three • Dlamond11nd gold. S•laclod COT ' Omega byaem expertlwilh the care of a courtJdwelcr. And Jove. The mOe1tone witch wnt bring to ml!ld beautlf ul though ta about the slvu for lheml of her Ille. • 8o ..... , yVar dlamolld with th• .pride ~ !l"Joymenl "yoa Upetted wl!eo ,oG liou~b{ 11."ThWl!rJJig \l , In to (ti for.regular lJ!Sbectloii ii>if' • cleaning, for ihildt· there I.I no ' 182l NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA COH>UfllNT lll,MS 24 JIAU IH IAMI l.OCl<llOH chaJ;le. .. IANIWlfllCAlo.:.. liWll'A,~ ,_ -. . . __ .. _ . .\ ' 7\' -• I r Sk lo!~ confl He whe shin his I Ski per. , An or s detai mast fin wit K when Cll~I' So dog A Ho retlrh he ha World get " In I ' C Av involv an oc • after pcrinc The · minist . recrui Servlc organ\ . advice , in un ''IE that ·pools ,field c says Sine quest the Le l'lome -'; his ne· assign countr n1onth has se of busi \ The retir pay, husba forelg ing t ~t.' client the fin , penses -In r ~ Turne "I e compll Amer! countr Noli Portug • his nr ·-coun Amert bl tra Emba, rleld, . soon Its Ce 'lions. He :ning o ·as an '}')n La • .. ' • ~ ' , ,, ·I :r -• -· • . • • By JOHN VALTERZA with 1 Santa Fe p11>engtt lt1ln. °' "" O•tty '11" •11tt ~ Sklleh }Ott. Somt: t~~ hid. to come Skllch Is 111 quiet 80rt of alrtdale who out arter that bout. lolls a'round his n1aster's office• with the ·when the aired.Ile l1n'I being fitted confidenoe of a veteran car~lllke.r. with gbld lttlh, hl1 1oVllfl '1'11fSter ("If lie yawns a lot ·In between naps and my patients don't llkt Slltcb, Oley don't when his mouth open~ you can't mlss the get tre.atecP') Is tr)'1nc out a.new dent1t shiny gold canine tooth on the left side of invtnUoo on the wllllna RM.l~t. his lower jaw . Harb1&rt ls not your typical dentist. SkitCh scc1ns proud of the fancy chop-Most of today '1 dental proarams art pro- per. duclng "bfc>k.trs, not er~tamen," he in· .• And his master~ Dr. Walter c. H1rbart alsts. .. of San Clcn1cnll', wl\I go Into Intricate MO!'ll of his time ls apenl In an detail on how tie mounted the elaborate-machine 1hop In tht rear or h\11 masterpiece. . office where flJ'l<ly little devlcta are hon· Horbart. fin inventor. tll)kerer, ma-ster' ed from raw m~tal . • , wil and dentist, decided on the gold tooth One ~ay this week HRrb1rt w111 perfeo- whcn he noticed Skltch had a whopping ting an Intricate dispenser of compressed cai;e of tooth detny. air which would link up lo a tl~y So he w.ent to work on the mouth of a pneumatic chisel. ·, dog who Is a veteran o! combat-i)nCt The rhythmic chlpplna Crom that chl1el • Activ e Retiree . You Can't Keep This , Man Dow,n . ' • By PATRICK BOYLE or 1h• ot11y i-11tt 111n mlaht be 11 better way or clr.anlna lc1•th. he "beUev'e1: ' lt already haa worked wtll on s:~ltth, Tiny drlll1 10· flnt that 'Hhrbirt rnn etth hl11 n1mti with then\ un the edge or 11 penny 1100 sprln& &om th< back ahnp. Many. flf t1·ose devices are 01le or 11 ~Ind. And .ever1I hive w-0und \If) In J1bor1torlc1 In the 1eru1paoe lndu:iclry. Mal'ly ,nore have betn alven frtt to tho Loma Unde Unlvcr1lty Sllhool of Dl'n· t11try -Harb1rl'11 favorite dcnl ul tralnlnf' .cround which rectnll.v received a tt00,000 1r11nt from the SH.ti Clen1c11tu denU11t. , ~fore bcln1 graduated frotn the trsc dentlalry PJ01r1n:i In 1926 the f11cln11tln)( San Clemente resident 1harnd hl1 study between 'en1lncerln11 and dc.ntl1try. ~He a._dmlt1 thal he prob11bly w1111 !he most l111ubordlnate member of hl11 clu~s . He onL't w1s 1u11pc11ded for 30 days fnr "mouthing off'' to 11n lnslrurtor. He 1tlll prize!! blmselt on the sanle ut· titude-lecdd with the maximum ust of the 'Engl111h longunJ{e parceled (IUJ ln " manner remlnll1ccnt of lhr Int o W. C. Field•. · During a recent bcoted dt!bllt.o beforn Snn Clemente cfl.y councllnten 011 tl1n pAglonate lsaue of nuorld1tlor1 o! waltr, Or. Hatb!'rt replle~ to ,1 wom1u1 who 111t• vocatcd daubing nuorlde on teeth but11.11d or adding lt tb w1ter : • . ; "Applying fluoride to n kld11 teeth I~ just about 11 effective._ Ill I wom,n .~!10 wents to prevent conception arlnd~ng Ull 1 plll and rubbing It on hor bell/." I-low docs a man spend his days after The lauahter that followed ended thn retiring from three professions'! We ll, If rancor. he has as much energy left as Leisure Llstcnlpg lo 11arbsrt h1 llkc tn~lng A World resident Richard Turner, he would trip to th e florid corner1 of thC .engll.~h get another job. 11nguage. Jn the case of Turner , who lives at 156-De11crlbing his deeado11 All 1 l,,<111 ' c Avcnida Majorca, hl11 fourth profession Angeles dentist, then a· neMr·fat.111 hcort · involves finding jobs for relired persons, •llment. the plucky dentl11t-lnvcnl!1r ~ an occupation he should be well suited for blamed dUflcult patlent1 for much of his after having had so much practical ex~ physical suffering . pcrlnce. "A dlfrlcult patient ls more or 11. burd<'n . The re l i red editor·professor-ad· for me thon llftlng • grand piano. I'd · ministrator ls now the West Coast much rather IUt a piano than treat suc h 11 , recruiter for the I nlernalional Executlv.e person." Services Corps llESC ). a non-p~oflt Harbarl end his wife. Ollvln, wcrr. mnr· organlzalion which prov\~~ American rled when he wa11 ~7 and In his de11thbcd . advice to owners of fiedgh ng businesses · in .. ~~~d:~~~~~: ~u~~~csYork believe to~e ~r:;, J~:~:0~d~~iJ:~l~rc~~ldb~:~~ th.I , .·,sure world has one of the finest one out. an t crca ter the crotchety old lA; bachelor mHrrled the old maid nod we ·pools in the natlpn of expert I~~ in the got exactly what each deserved ," he s11id, .field of buslness ·management, Turner imlllng. says proudly. Since taking the Job in 1965 at the re· And the flr11t dcchtlon of lhe newlywrd~ quest of IESC founder David Rockefel.ler, ~::it~~ launch R program for •lnrbarl's the Lei11ure World resident ha! recruited A. Home 120 volunteers, mos:tly from among ..., "The flr11t move," he related . "wa11 1n his neighbors. or these, 2o have received NEVER sAYY RETIR'E .~""· j{Cl rl'd' or all 'ThP. tOri!:flS iind ·~rm·orrh1ilii.," assignment~ and been sent t~ foreign Rlchord Turnir of E practice -those dl/flcult p11· countries for periods averaging four tlent ·" months. Since it began.in l!J6\i, the IES:C ,.. T t wo rked for 1 while , then the cou· has sent over 2,500 Ame.ricans tQ the aid year1 before "retirement" were 1pent 18 pie decided to move to San Clemente. or businessmen In 45 foreign countries. an editor of two International bu11lnes11 Harb1rt reached Into a bottom drnwer The volunteers, who he 1ay1 are mostly ma1azlnet for the McGr aw · H I I I of an ln1trument tabln1t In hl1 offle1 and retired business execiltives, serve without . Pabl1Jhln1 Company lrf'New York. drew out the faded pholQJlrAph of hlM or· pay. The executive and hl1 wife -or her After hil IRIUal retlre mMt, he 1ays he flee bull~lna at 110 W. Mariposa, taken husband -receive plane fare to the came to CaUfornla, but wa1 talked Into before he took It over. foreign country and a living stipend dur-taking a profeuorahlp In Internationa l ''I bought thll 1rchuecturAI abortion,'' ing the assignment, Turner explains. The marketing at the Thunderbird Graduate he iald, pointing to the print. costs are pAid jointly by the tESC and the School of International Mana1ement Jn · r 1•· fl · 1 Then he pulled out mctlculously con-nlient foreign company -1 11t: rm is n Phoenix. Af ter ri ve yea rs, Turner agai n the financial position to help pay the ex· •·retired," bul wai soon back at work 11 celvcd drawings of a facade and earpor!. penses. ~~ -·" _,.. the executive director of the Council or "These are seme of thtl idc1t1 I Jolted ti th A I down." Jn recruiting the volunteer execu ves, e mer cas, an ortanlzatlon or 200 Turner himself works without pay. American firms with operations in Cen· He llnally 1ettlcd on 1 plan that In· "I enjoy the job because I fee l I am ttC· tral and South America . ... cludel 1 ·long llne of hanging phtnten1 compllsh1ng something by helping get "Finally. in 1965, 1 retired for Rood," he each autom1tlcally watered by a 1y1tem American know-how to the developing aays with a laugh, explaining that, in a countries," the spry, energetic man says. few month1, he was working for the Noting he i!'I nuent in Spanish and JESC. Portuguese, T~rner says he spent most of As 8 recruiter, he says that volunteer _his life .wollung In the underdeveloped • appllcanU a e Juqged 0 IY p rtJ II In counties of Central and SQuth ..., . r n a a Y America . Following college gradualion · ~erma of their expertise. i Screaming Coed I Escapes, Unhl!-rt bl traveled to Peru to work for the U.S~ '11 look for person11 . with a b1ckgrouncf Embassy. He later entered the bu1lness In the abllltf to teach olher1," he 1ay1, field , working for Western Electric and "the ability to pat111 on txpertlae. to other 'llOOn became the company'1 manager for people. Its Central arid South American opera-"Thl1 It primarily a teaching job. The 'lions. man we send ha1 to be able to 1how the . He returned to the U .S: af the begin-foreign buRlneumen how lo do the ,lob :ning of WWII ahd for the duration aerved better than it ha1 betn done," . ·as an advl"°r lo the federal government lie notes tha t the purpose or IESC In •on Latin American affair•. 111s la1t JO helplnj( foreign bullnt11men 11 bf'! 1 t li 1ummed up In the oraanliatlon'1 motto: • .. ·: • "Give a man a fl1 h and you feed him for one day ; 1how him how to catch a. fish and h< can feed hlm..ir Indefinitely." "The ability to communicate 111 the primary requisite that I look for In ap- plicant.I," he txplalM. "And the 1ecun- dary one would be th< ability of the pr0tpectlve -lESC volunteer to em· pathlze with olher1, to. under1tand the problem of the foreigner." AlthouJh Turner won't 1ay how old he 11 ·-"I'm t0mewhere In my 70'11" -hf. 1ay1 he ha1 no plane to retire from hl1 l11t1t JOb. • "I am iiolns W M.ty 11 lnng 11 ~ they want tO keep·me,"· ht 11y1. "I enjoy the job very much." From Intruder • TACOMA , Waah. (UPI) -A raclllc tutheran Unlver1lt,Y coed ran screamlnl( from her room after a man entered. held a razor to her throat and tnptd her mouth. The glrl, Martha Jane RBndall , 2ll. 11 junior from Sfllem, Ore ., was harmt.>d Tuelfday In the lncldtnt. _.\uthorltle11 said the m@n. de1JCrlbC!d All ~to 40, entered Tingelitad llall, a co. educational dorm itory. and Inquired a11 00 the loca tion of the mtn'11 restroo'm. He walked to the third noor and en· tered the room where Ml111 Randall w1111 napping. Sht managed to get 1why from him and her IJCJ'tam1 chaw! him from the bulldlnc. No trice w11 found of the Intruder. A 1J>(l'ke1man 1u1id the .chool doubh.iJ Ill 1ec:urlty force and tocked :ill dormlttJry door• t.x.cept main entr11nce11. · About 1.800 1tudent11 live In dormlttJr les on the campu.•. Soviets ·order Severe • DAIL'( 'lloT ..... ,..-. l'ramed . ' Sentence to 'Hippies' MOSCOW (UPI/ -A Soviet court decreed de•lh or long prl10n terma for • band of "hlpplt1" who 1Jlegedly lt.erned 1bout tree 1peech and bank robbery from the Voice of America, 1 Soviet new1paper said today. Pr1vda Ukt1lny. publi1hed In Kiev, nid the leader of the youthful group 1hol ind Injured two blnl< tellm during on abortlve robbery In th< Ukrainian city ol Lvov last )'tar. • The court senltneed the leada\ 1a. ·yur<>ld Sdjtl Yulln, lo death "1 lhootlns. Ht. componton. re • • I v • d ltfltencel ol I lo 10 Y••rs In • l•bor c;amp. "Alter robb1ni the bank, they pl1nned lo actpe -""' &av1<1-'llu1dlh I bonier, and then So lo ~ lo Ml up 1 l1mou1 pltar comtio." Pr1vdo llkralnr 1ald. • It quoted the leader, Vulln, u uylnA:: "Our group 1dopled hippie ld .. 11. We 1Jw1y1 wanted to live In the wood1 , far from 10Clety. We w1nte.d to wear k>nl hair, unorthodor clothin1. lo pl•y lht guitar. t.oJllltn ti) Wutern mu1~. "'ex· preu our view• whtn we di11pprnve nr aomelhlna . Tht main thing In h1ppie mor1llty IJ unlimited fretdnm 11nd no nttd to work.·• The report 111ld the lour yooth11 r1n 1w1y lrom home •nd Bvtd In an •Ulc In Lvov, whtreJltlfr1tndt broodlt them fond1 drink 1 other neceultie11. "SUch ktea1 ~ere put Into their ht-ad• tw for•l&n mm1 and .. po<\llly hy the Voice or Amerlc1, whk:h prop1.11tndiu1 lboul the 1wm nr. Ofiifltctn IOCiety •• ' " , WtllllHd~y 'rbru1rv 16, 11171 I· OAIL Y SllLOf :; of vlnstir lll~~. "1'urn 1'll1 one l11ut't'I •nd 11vo doitn or the111 i.t0t wulrrud." hr sAld 11r11uclly 11s hti w11trhcd the water trlrkllnR . 'l'ho offlt'l' 111 tKtrrn1~(~ ·nu.ldt•11I In l'Oll\• ~11r isu11 to lh!• trruUU0111d youu.i dcntl111'1 1ll4idl1ro ro1nplcx. Uut In ·tho rwr lJ wic roo111 fitted wltb -~ . ,. ))Ct.I nnrl 01h11r ro111forlublo /Hrnllure1 II ilK1kii Hkn " 1nodt•11t 11101('1 roo111. • "11hat '1 'A'hf!r11 Ille lonM·ru1llicf lJilllcnt~ l'Mn •IAy'lof thn workrnd," hll 111.ild, $o1nr Uy 0111 1ron1 New York lo 00 lrt•llltld. "I tront only 1>t..:111lfl I llkn .. nt1 vcr too Ullll\Y pullo11t' 111 • tlvy .. lht11l U1ti t'Cst of - ' the lltne 1 .'Jpc1nl oot In lhfl machlnu 1hn11 " · Skllt'h wutrli c• l11t1 fn111t Miid 1'111 I' bo1111 ktllJ\¥ whun lhnru'1 fl vl1\lor. F'ur hl11 1·~w11rd. lhti plnrld ftlN'ldlle Jll\11 h l111ndful ul w11ln11l 1t lu 1·r11ok. " 0l'lurt '11 ht11 f"vnrllti 1trllvlt,y," t11tVI hi" t11J111tcr. "'l'lw wulU loolh n1•kt1 ti tlq." • nA1LV 1111.or llh••• •~ Jtil11 ¥111.,.. SK ITCH THE AIR EDAL E HAS HI S GOLD TDD TH CHEC KED BY HIS MASTER THE DI NTl5T Dr. H1rb1rt It An Accompllthtd Cr1ft-1m1n i nd Wit Who Tl1"1ktr1 nnd Avold1 Dlfflc ult f11tltntt ~'Lily White' Brothel Hit Vegas 'Hon se' Wori 't Acce pt N<!g ro C11 .. ~to1ne r.~ LAS VJo:CiAS, Nev. (AP), -The Cot· lontoll ltunr.h, u trallor·cuurt broU1cl oporiftlnl( ln the dC!!tlr~ or EHn1ornldn Cnt1nly, lllt !I. 1!0111c 11ndcr flrr for olle~cdly turning 11w11y hlnck cu1tW111er11. ·rony McCormick, ex.ccutlvc director l)f the Nevadn Equnl lllght11 Com1nls11lon, 11nld 'l'uc11dny he wn11 I.urned 11wt1y front · 1 .t!~~ll~t~~D£L .. !J.f.~i;r. .ht:. w n~ LhQrc .. W. In· v11J~ gow a con1pla\11t. McCorn1 Jck, who J11 hl ack. ~old tho con1mls1don will lnvc11tlg11te the ii:l lu11Uon, f~nll u public hcarJng and, "If nece111ary, l11sbc ,1 ~case an~ d911l11t ordtlr." "nldfcu1ou'11" . rnnch 'owner e .. erly Jl11rrell 1uld of the matter. "/\ bordel'o 11hou\d hog ,.. cholci In who they entcqt.a.ln," 11he llflld. "And, aftec. all. evcryO!l,l,1hould hava l,he right to decide who to go to bed with.I ( · McCormi(·k ~11/d the lnltlnl complalnt clime fron1 M bl11ck 1·c1ddcnt of Tucscn, Graffiti Jll egal llARRISBUllO , P•. 1ur11 -The •tolo Hnu'sc or Rcpre11cntatlve11 hall Hpprnvr,d H hllt m11klng graffiti HJcg11I . ·rh1! h!JI, which pa1111etl Mo11d11y b,V ~ lflD·l I vote, w1u1 11ent I.I> the 11t11tc Scnnte for c:on· t·urrenco. The rooasure provldc11 ror 11 r1nc of up to •600 for Hrtyone convicted of mflrrlnl( pubttc properly wUh grnffltl. who clalmnd he wn1 turned Hw11r fro111 the ranch, nbout 1110 n1 lk:1t nort/1 11 here McCormi ck 11tld the mt111 fllr1I the coin· plnlnt with tho Amcrl cnn Civil l.lbcrtl,..~ S.up~i.:~sors 01\ Flood Plain Bid Flood p!IO •ludlc1 by !he U.S. C-Orp1 "f l;:p'jll~• ~,ero •PJll:9Vod Tujlday, by th• COunty Supervlit0r1 to 1ncludo 1..Agun11 C1nyon; fJ•n Ju•n, rfllabuco 1nd Oto cr~ek11 the Runta Af11i IU~er frrnn lmp!rlal lllyhway lo Prado Dom, '"" 81~ Dlo~o Croak In th• I rvlne 1ro1 from the SnntH Ana Yruway to the racUlc C-0811 fflMhW•J'. C<1unty Ylood C:Onlrol Olotrlct Chl<of Ji:nglneer Oenrgc 01horne tllld bt:11Jt1I mcmbor11 the current 1tudy of the city of lrvlnc area would b(! cqmpleted July I nnd,new 8UMUC•tlon11 mu1t be mndn ta thn St1J1e Department of W11tcr AcMJurcc11 for Ji)(.:lu1lon In lhe 1tatewlde priority l11t. Thi• 11;1 11 1ubmlttod to the Corp1 of l~niclnccr1. The ln!orm1tlon a:a thernd provld111 dut• u11eful In rl!gulntlng u11e ot land 1ubJect lo flooding, 01borne e1eplalncd. lh1lil!I , whl1·h lorwnrded IL h1 lhfl ('0111 r11l!'"liu1 ht•r1 ' Nrv11dn 111 tl1r only Nlntfl wlll1 l1tAnH·1./\1I priHtl It u1 l11n i\tlt1r the· 1·01npl11l11t WUll f \I 11 ti , M1«:or1n lrk 11uld he drove tu 11111 r1111rli l1111l w1·rkr11rl tn lnve11Ua11ll1 "I 11hl1wr•d to y 11t11tc crl'llrnllnl11, hut I w 1111 t111l 11llow1•d 11111lde," liri 1111ld . ··r 11i111k 11 Ill u 'H11arodlt l11tho11lntc to lt11v1· 11 p1•r1:11n har1•c1! lrotn 11nywhtrr bef•t11ul1• of hhl rACCI, ,, McCOrMk:k added. l'r·o:i!Hutliui 11111 llourh1hnd In N1v1d11 •lr'ic·e th~ tluf" 111 the 1Uvw ,rLillh at the )Dth · century, Althm1~h ·outl awfd -J• acvtiral l~racr counuc.1, oroatltuUon ~ C<'ln11ldered nnly • 11 11pUb1lc • nu\lance" undct' 1lnte l11w. Many rur•I 1COuntto1 ullnw brolhul• ttt npar1te Optal,Y.1 , 1 , '(;,,~· S1 ·hollc Dies tJP;'J'l!JHT t UPI) -Au14u#t . "Ou11·~ S1·h11flr. r11r1nr,r prc1tldcnl of lht! Mlt.:hl,11:11n i\l".l.·CJCJ nutl 11110 ot lhl! 1n<111t PoW11rlul /Jflhlnrl•tha•11c1•n1.1" fl1ll/1 In th 11, •LahJ'• polltlclll hJ~tory , died •ruc•dAy f(ll lowlnaii 1 lnnM battle nuuln1t cancer . lln w1u1 67. 111 .. wJtc, K11Udcen, dlr.11 Jn111t rnOnth . Hcholl<1 · wn• 1 k1nun111ker 111non" Mlchlu11n l)(lrnocr1l1 tnr 30 ytiar1 111· tluencln" cvC1ry major decl•Utn lhe P•rty mu de. GOLD MEDAL ~ml :11111 Folding ~ WUU I DIRECTOR'S CHAIR 11" Nymph Chair ....... Sweetheart Chair 12" Sw.eetheart Headboard . 12" 19" 24" Twl1 D .. Me 9•H• w 4 STI 14SKfTI ,,... z.n WALL SHILYH, TDWI L l4CU 4HD H4Mrlll . ,,.., 2.ff Mtll Ol FU.MIS _ .... _ ''°"' 7.tl CHllTI ....... ,, .... _ "°"' "·"' "'°l ILlrH4HT T41LI ................... . 24.H HllOHT ST4HD ........ . .. 29.tl I T4!04llS . .. .. frOOI It.ti . Du• to fh• doGk tfrl~•. iom• if•"!• lllu1fr•t•d m•y bt ouf of 1fo,~. The Store fo r all 5-ons Reg, $18.00 $14~5 e Clwo1e t r om 1«1lde varlet11 o l '"""" .. rol11 r1 e Q1udlt11 lui r tlwoad fr•mfl• In 11•l ar•I, b loele A "'hit,. ""*'h Jamu Norwood agoni1.eJ his conviction on trum1'ed up charge• in a •pec\al UC Irvine .Ugin~ of "Portune and lrlen'a Eyu.' Th• 1tudent production is reviewed today on Paa• 31. ~:.-~ .... ~-·.,..- li ~ . .. -. . . . . .. . ·••;.-· --:-r . " • • I .,. ~. ' •. ... . . " . . ~ ' • • • • ,f D~ILV ~!LDT \ \ I ~ps By THOMAIJ MURPUINE Of Ille CN!t\I l'llM l!llf ) • Nixon Studies Late for •• WAIJHINGTON CAP) -Th< JlsJrt1 burned latt ln 1 cottage it.op a Maryland mountJin and tn the While Houae 11 President Nixon and his aldu raced aga1rut the clock lo complete prepara· tlons for his historic miuion to China. At secluded Camp David In Maryland's Catoctin Mounteins, where he rlew Tue&- day by helicopter, Nixon worked into the night reading loose·leaf notebooks con· ltllnlng cl111slfied materla~ on China and lta leaders prepared by lfenry Kissinger'• National Security COuncll. At the White House and In adjo1nlng of. flee buildings, an army of 1ide1 ate mid· ....... night snick• at their duks as they coped with the com ple.1 ~gt11ics involved 1n undlng a prtlident and his adviser• into a country with which the L:nJted States has had little contact ror two decades. The details of arranging a 20,395-mllt, 13-d1y presidential journey are many. f'or example, White llouse ass111t.anl! art: making certain that hundreds or_. 11uburban Washington schoolchildren, tiny American nags In' hand, will he on IM South Lawn with congressmen and Cabinet officials lo bid farewell when the .President leaves hb residence Thursdpy morning on the fir.st leg of the trip. They arr making ctrtain, too. that • re1uns o( pr1per which will be fumishtd enough Americ an champagne iJ carried the f7 correspondenU accredited for the IJllO China fer the reelprocal banquet N1~ trip 1ctually reach Chini. on wilJ\&ive hlll Chinese hosts in Peking. And they are tending to the detailed The Are tending to details of presiden-needs of White House staffers ac· lial security and well-being: from seeing companying the President : shipping ii• that the sco res of Secret Service agents electric typewriters for secretaries and a~e ?utf!llcd with warm cl~thing fo_r Pe-making certain that multi-color maps. of king a wintry_ blasts to making certain the China are inserted Into green loose-leaf pre s1dentlal Jet carrles an adeq~ate. sup-fact books being given to everyone mak· ply of blood the sam~ type as ~1xon s. · ing the trip. They also are l~nd1n~ to det~Jls of news The staffeni handling the Washington coverage : a1!'iur1ng 1nl!ltallat!on of 15 end of the logistics maze have been in MUndproof telephone bct(_lths 1n ~e Pe-ronstanl contact with a group of White king press center, male.mg certain the HoU!e aides Already in China. Trip The advance team is 1rran(ing, amoq other things, for lbe Cblnese-.buil1 auwmobllts which Nlion 111nd bll en- tourage will we during the week., While in China, NixM also wlll fiy aboard aircraft supplied by the ChlDeH government. His big, black armor-plated llmou1in1 is being left ~t home -1nother d~parture from past foreign trips. When 1"ixon".i.·as in Bern1uda in December, for in.stance, lhe president ial limousine wu flown there for his use even lll<lugh it had difficulty negotiating the winding, narf'O\f roads. , < Cll088f!RES DEPT. -Bruce S. Hop- Plna: I• one ()f the many resident• <lf L.11un1'1 Art C.Olony wti> could rtahtfully be cla11Jfltd •• a Laguna Watcher. He watchea moat everything. P1rtlcul1rly, Hopping la founder or an or11nliatlon known 11 the K a l o 1 Kaplhol Foundation, which, upon aµ'IOry ex1mln1tlon of Its letterhead, you might naure 11 an outfit dedlc1ted to promoUon ot nude male atatuary. It Isn't, howevtr. Bomb Put Ecuador's Chief HopplnJ'• literature Informs the unUormed that actUJllY K1loa Kagalhos 1tanda for the anelent Greek Ideal of educaUon of youth 14 phy1Jcol distinction and nobUlty of mind . So there. While-Hoppins quallflea 11 a Laguna Witcher Jn aeneral term1. he partlcularly watcht1 the beaches where he has pro- moted water1port1, castigated the City Cowtcll and Police Department for things he didn 't like, verbally naytd high school CG1Che1 and demanded that t h e municipal Ufe1uard1 stop tea1in1 homo- 1e1u1ta. AU. THIS ASIDE, It developt I BNCe recently wa1 also witching e when thl1 comer w11 dl1CU11ing Jema of. htahway safety. Thia: prom him i. wrlfe In thua: "Thoma1 Murphone. our own cracker· barrel Pooh 8111h of precinct pro&· nostlcatlon. recently and hopelcnly ad· milted mucking himself In his own highway fright oi.rleo. "The object of the new1paper blood and gut1, he 11y1, t1 to pacify 'grim traffic offlcer1' who are begging that M>methlng be done about the highwa y traffic fatalltle1; preaa report& ar which have only provoked reader• who have been "dl1turbed" and/or 'unsettled' by the carnaae. 0 WOULON-T YOU think a cracker·bar· rel columnl1t -and a palltlcal one at that -would have been told about what hip. pent when you 1atuf1te people with blood, agony and death ad infinitum? "But the electioneering seer d-Otsn't read It that w1y ... re1der 1urveys, he 14ya, 1ug1e1t horror 1torle11 are the only way -rlsht, Murph? "But rather th.In monitor reader rt1ponse to the m1c1bre, why not lnste1d 1pend some of that survey bread rue1rchlna: traffic accident provocations •.• auch a1 : 1low drivers in the fa 1 L lane : morbid hl1hway curlO.lty seeker•: ',. tho hot rod ptychotlc : the hlah·beam, highway blf hballer, and, the drunk. "Obvlou1 y, moat of the held.(ln ac- cidents occur ln the Inside fast 11ne1 .. : publicize thlk evidence and mollvate drJvera to uae the safe outside lane. Head Over Beefs "OEGLAMORIZI!: the auto-advertised. maacullnlty trip . . . ln1tlll a:eneral awarene111 and encoura,e public put· down of the boob-drivers who are responalble for the a:roteaque atatlltlcs of automobile 1l1u1hter. Patti Pfeiffer, 20, a se:cretary with the Las Vegas Conven tion Author· ity, tries out this apparatus al the All-American Coaches Clinic. lt's called a ''gravity guiding exerciser'' and is designed to help aching backs. Like any good quarterback, Patti convincingly demonstrated how to draw a crowd. "And a priori to redueln1 people to hlghw1ty 1t1Ustlc1, focua on Che nted for lmprovln~ automobile 11rety at the prob- able expense of affronting the lucrative, 1utomoblle trade accounts and provoking the loc1l, hone1t trader h11rry dealer types. "Ralph Nader has Iona: auerted 11'1 a lot quicker and safer lo Improve the motor vehicle than change hum1n nature ... OK, Murph?" So there you are, ~ks. Hopping makes 10me 1ood polnta. But 11 in his L11guna W1tchl111. he blew • couple too. I wasn't trying to suggest that "blood and guts'' toverage was published to paclry grim traffic cop.,. Its main purpose Is to tell you whrtt h11 happened to your neighbors and what might h1ppen to you . As a safe- ty campaign, however, l think this kind er coverage 111 a failure. AND RALPH Nader 11lde. f suspect automakNs wlll never invtnl a motor car that i5 ldlol·proof. An~·ny, Bruce, thenks for elevating me to the rank of Pooh Bah. You folks never thought I'd make it, did you'.' ,• Model Who Testified In Drug Quiz l(illed NEW YORK IUPll -Blockhaired, blue-eyed model Patricia ''Patsy" Park5 testified last June before a grand jury which indicted her n e I g h b o r s on Manhattan's fashionable upper ~ast Side on narcotic s charges. Before she could lesJify at their trial. the chic divorcee dlsappetired. Police tinnounced Tuesday that she had been killed. Twelve days ago . R sRnilatlon worker In f\1assapcqua, N.Y , on Long Tsland. saw smoke r isi n~ fron1 a thlckel of "'oods. He found the smoldering, near. nude body of a young woman. She had bten stabbed 10 llmes 1n the chest, her throat had been cul and gasoline had been poured over the body . Among the 14 rings . four bracelets. five J:Old chains and half-dozen crucifixes on the hody, one cross carried the in- scriptihn: "I am a Catholic. Call a priesl." Tuesday, after two of the four defen- dants indicted by the grand jury to \vhlch ~1iss Parks testified were found guilty of conspirary lo possess· and distribute heroin and cocaine. police revealed that the body was that of l\1iss Parks, 30. Vincent Pacelli Jr.: 29, 11nd Dcmelrios Papadakos. who lived in the same plush apartment building as f\1iss Parks, were convicted by the jury. In August, Elisa Possas had pleaded guilty. and Pacelli's wife Beverly had been acquitted. .-Northwest Soaked by Rain. • c"' ·~· ,,,_ ;'"'~-· .... ~ Winter Ma.intains Hold on Nortliern ~tates -. ' " • • • lJ.S. S 11mmar11 lll•lt1, • l(.•!'91'1,,. ol ·-•rod (I!~ m1lt11tf"td • ""'"''" WH"'-r 11tlt1•11 I C-.t Nrh Of 1"-NM'llHtl 111111 loo cf,t¥. IMJt .. Ir lfllt t ... tfll,., "'lkl Wll• ""•r ..,..,.1111Jd "'"«I•~ mot• "' •~• ...,. ,,....,... ,.,.. '-11 ~ lhf .1 .......... dref!Cfl.td '°Kiii~ NQt'llo..-.1 11.""I,.,. i., 1now lf'l!~ftd lfld t~I ... 11 l1r ...... ,,.,. D.tkol11 A llOrm fnCl¥i'!O 1>11 tto. S.T l •wr..-ct Vtltn tr19ttrtd !""*" llu•r"" ,.,,.,, "" C..-1 L9"" ta "'' ~!K11!1t11. Al'Cllc 11•. lr1 ... !l!lt \., 1•1 .. t111, d-..d lilto ~ Mleoo<onl 111'11 *'-'" -"""' 1-nitur'ft -ot btlO# ,. .. In -''""-T-r1l11ttt ...... N-,,,..... ,._.. I Milow 1-11 l!tlJ Clll"" WI._, It ,, ti I( .... w .... 11111. Coastal ~ "°'*"· lltfor vtr~ "'illlk 111"'1 tl'ld """'I'" l'ltU'\ blt"""I'" --""Iv I It II \"Oti !fl tllt·- todlY ....., f'-lrllllaY, Hiii! "'°"' 11 CO.st.i ,._,,_, ""'" ·-• "' llO. hlltl'ld .....,..,.."'"' ,.. ...... '""" e " Tl. Wtttf t.m-tl\lrt 11. Sun, /lfomt. Tiiie• WIDNISOAY S«'8l'ld l<lltl\ ,, •• '·""· 5, S«Ol'ld .. •:••m. •. , ,,,.., fllWll ... .,, lo--""' ...... , .. 1''4UllSDA'f' , 1•:••'"· 'SI l)J 1 ...... • ' 114'•.ll'I. SJ M llha6»t '"' '"'°'"' J I Ith J l"'"' s... ,.,,.,I" lrNo'I """ 1 11 • "" On BritiSli " Troop Ship BELFAST, Northern Ireland {UPI) - Security forces today found and defused a 40-pound bomb planted on a ferry from England in what may have been a hid to blow up JOO British troops en route to Ulster. An army spokesman said explosives experts sped to the ferry, the Duke of Argylle, when it docked in Belfast from Heysham, England, just before 7 a.m. carrying about 300 British troops and &• number of civilians. The explosives experts defused the bomb after several hours. lhe spokesman said. "ll may have been an attempt lo injuro troops as the device was fully primed, but somehow hadn 't detonated.'' the spokesman said. "ft cou ld also have been an attempt by the IRA (Irish Republican Army) to seek publicity," the spokesman said. "We have no idea when the bomb was placed • aboard the vessel." r The British -army reported a number o(. Belfast reprisals it attributed to the IRA -three men shot in the thigh, a tradi· tional IRA reprisal , and a young man who had been tarred and feathered. Two other persons were found shot during the 1.i~hl. ~1canwhi le, Bernadette Devlin and 25 other persons accused of p r o t e s t marching in rlefiance of a government ban won adjournment of their cases ttr day to the cheers of hundreds of aup- port.ers massed outside the Newry court. f\1iss Devlin, a member of Parliament, represented herself. But lawyt?r John Curran, who represented other defen- dants, demanded the adjournment ''i n the interest of peace in this district" at Newry near the Irish Republic border. Sadat Declares Need to Attain Arms Advantage Ousted 4t·h Time ·-· QUITO {AP I -Ecuador's mil iLary chiefs ousted President .Jose Maria Velasco Ibarra Tuesday night for the fourth time in his career and sent him orf to Panama. The purpose of the cou p .ap- parently was to prevent the election of a radical to the presidency. Brif. Guillermo Rodriguez Lara , who was rewarded with command of the army after putting down an attempt to overthrow Velasco last April. declared himself president. He said he would be assisted by ·a council made up of the three service chiefs: Rear Adm . Renaldo Vallejo, Air Force Gen. Julio Espinosa Pineda and whoever is named to com· mand the army. The new president pledged to respect all e:risting international treaties but an· noft'nced no other plans-or policies. ·= --=-'· ............. .. -.. _ ... 1 , . :.•· ,. .... .. -: ~ .-..'V'>-· -· . -............ ~·;. -·I'-·. .... A--.... -· ·:· --::::::::: .-... -· The presidential election is scheduled for June, and v,111.sco, now 78. had prom· ised to hand over his cffice on Aug. 31 tn whoever was elected. 1"he candidate ol the radical Concentration of .Popular Forces, Assad Bucaram. was believed certain to defeat the conservative can· didate . Carlos Arizaga Vega. ·Velasco learned tbat the bloodless coup was under way 1'uesday ni&ht and new to Guayaquil on the coast, where he tried to broadcast to the country. But navy of· ficers arrested him before he could gel to the microphOne and held him in· communicado until they put him aboard a military plane for Panama . In a 13-poinl announcement, the new president put the country under a state of siege and martial law. ... ' 4 :" • , ' . ~: " . • VEN .. ~: ... ::., <· . > .... , •. ,. .... l c o 1t>i.<e1~· , .. •, J .. '· •' •, ... , :=·· ' PERV .•.,' ......... .·:: .. ·" 8RA211 ECUADOR PRESIDENT TOPPLED, PUT ON PLANE TO PANAMA Mll it1ry Leaders Seized Re ins, Cite Election F1ar1 Genera·I Apathy North Carolina Primary Fails to Stir Interest By NANCY BENTSON RALEIGH, ,N.C. (UP I) -Most ol the CAIRO (AP ) -President Anwar Sadat n11tional candidates have been ignoring declared today that Egypt must develo p• .North Carolina's Ji~stfb. resident i a I sophisticated weapons in order to face prim1ry and thei"e ~ indications the percent of the total support, ghowing he has not lost strength since 1968 when he placed second in a race with Nixon and Democrat Hubert Humphrey. U.S. and Israeli armaments. Sadat told a special meeting of the na- tional congress of the ruling Arab Socialisl Union that Egypt must be prepared to accept big losses and inflict even greater losses on Tsrael. He gave no hint of how Egypt could develop sophislicated weapons, bu t presumRbly they would be supplied by the Soviet Union. Oeclaring that it was a world obligation to bring peace to the ~1iddle East. Sadat added : "\Ve want the force of Jaw. not the la"' of force." "\Ve must prepare ourselve~ for a long po1itic11I and military struggle.'' Sadat 1'aid. "There are no short cuts through "A·hich we can achieve our aspirations." He made no mention of Israel's agrt'e- ment to U.S.-sponsored close proxin11ty IAlk!'i with Egypt on reopening the Suez Cahal. The agreement. awaited here for a year. was made Feb. 2 as Sadat left for Moscow. (._,,..,· Sl1ip Survivors Head for Port PUNT A ARENAS, Chile ilJPll - A Chilean navy transport, carrying 144 persons rescued from the grounded No rwegian cruise ship Lindblad Explorer. steamed towards this port today -the wnrld's 50u.thernmost city -on its long· delayed voy11;ge from an Antarchc island . 'Navy headquarters in "Punta Arenas uid the transpart Plloto Pardo would complete the s.40-mllt: }ournt)' Friday mornin&. The navy reported choppy seas, overcast skies and brisk winds a'4>ng the route from King George Jsl1nd ln the South Shet11nds. The Piloto Pardo and the Chilean Navy Icebreaker Zlplola departed _ Tutsday afterooon. The transport had betD unable to leave tarll~r btcause of a blizzard that rat1:ed ln the northetstem Antarctic for four days. · "'-.r T~e Chtl .. n Navy abandoned Ju salvage efforts Monday night tTter the Ytlcho made 1 lhll'd and fiMI attempt tn free the disabled ship from the rocks near the i!lat11 .. whe.f'f It ran aground F'r1d1~ feeling among voters is mutual . With lhe May 6 voting less than three months away, only Rep. Shirley Chisholm <D·N.Y.). has said for sure she will enter on the Democratic side. The primary could boil down to a battle CAMPA lGN '7:! between two regional contenders as dif- ferent as day and night. Most of the Democratic contenders have visited the state at least once in the pasl year, but the candidates so far have been farther south campaigning in Florid8, and only nne national candidate has a visible campaign organization. The state's hopes for' a new place in the national limelight haven't material- ized. but neither have the hopes or many state political leaders for a new involve.. ment by North Carolinians in national politics . ~mocrat.ic. Gov. Bob Scott stepped oul "-'ilh an early endorsement fJf Sen. Ed- mund S. Muskie (D-Maint), and set up a Muskie campaign in North Carolina. Other top Tar Heel Democrats, including candidates for statewide office, have maintained a hands..off posture. The candidates most talked about are both Southerners -Alabama Gov. George Wallace and Duke. Univeniity President Terry Sanford, a Conner North Carolina governor who btts stature in the national Democratic party and wa:t one. of those considered for vice president at the liSA convvilion in Chlc1go. A survey by tht University Of North C8rollna Tnstltute for Social Research in- dkatt:d Dtmocr1t.s were w dividfd among the candidates, •1ni . Edward Kennedy (0.Mua. I. who I IJ!J he's not 8 candidate, the only o who could persuade. a significant n bt:r of black• to .even cast a ballet. Th< 111rvey showed •trong support for President Nixon ln a state: where rqistered Oemocr•l3 o u t n u m b e r R~publlcans three -to ·on1. and restarchers said It appears lht Pres;. dent . who e&rrltd tht atate ln lSU. can defeal aoy 0em'C1'1l thl1 year. Wall1ce:, includtd 11 a third party can- dJdate ln the 1UJ'\'t)', rtceJved a boot 30 ' • • Wallace is running as a Democrat t.hia year and, to the dismay or liberal Democrats here, is almost certain to in-- elude North Carolina in the primaries he plans to enter. A petition drive is under way in hi! behalf, and there is little doubt he can coll~ct the required J0,000 Democratic signatures. In recent weeks. a strong student-led drive ha~ been launched to push Sanford, a potential cand idate: on the moderate- liberal end , and the drive has caught on with many adults. The stud!nts, led by University of North Carolina law student Willtam Blue initiated the drive on their own but no~ have the backing of old-line Sanford sui> porters and endorsements from Sen. B. Everett Jordan r D-N.C.) and East C;aro~ina University President L e o Jenkins, a man of major influence in eastern North Carolina. ~nford has not said he will enter the Pi:mary. bu~ has not discouraged the. drive, and 1a1d he will meet with students to talk things over after they hive the necessary number of signatures. Sanfor~ supporters say they believe he could win the' nomination if other c1n. dlda~s arrive at the Miami Beach con-- venbon scarred from primary battlu. others hive called the Sanford candidiey anly a ploy to dilute the strength of Scott's favorite, Muskie. Whatever the reason, it 11 generally conceded Sanford could do as .,-e.11 if not sUghtly better. than W11Jace, leivl~I only a small percenta:ge of lhe voles acat tered a1n0og the other contenders. Uoder U1• primary low, the dtieaate votes w~ll be committed ror the first f»llot •lily pniportionately 1mong the tlir top flnisbt!'I and a candidate mult: ha~ at least JS percent or the vote to qualify for any oomn11tted votes Accordi"i i. S<ott, the "1.:.Ue" for North Carolln1 will be President Niion'i re-cord ot perfonnanct. .'l'fM: governor may be rlaht. but the u,.. d~bons are many Tar Heels igree with Stanley Pearce., a R&Jeigh rt!ldent. who ~id "If Ult Democrats don't co,,;e ~ with anybody better than the crop they hive, l might u well j•Jst \/Ott for WallJce." Soi Yvon ex ch ty ja sente groo arme E Bi SACR by mayo make it been intr (D-Arca Richar resulted populous new coun governm Under B LOS Flags Angele death r·rank lead t populat to wres from statt." Bone! St. Fra 65. IW servic f\1ayo nags 0 "' hal Angeles .-• '· -·-.,. --.,.__., ___ ---~ --~~-----------,- ' • W edditag Day Yvonne Kalak, 19, and her Valentine's Day bridegroom, Louie, 22. exchane'ed a few v.•ords through the visitation ~lass at Vent.ura Coun- ty jail Tuesday before Kalak left for state prison on a possible life sentence. 'fhe couple was married in court only seconds before the groom 'ras led a\vay to .begin serving a .six months-to-life term for armed robbery. • asy County Formation ill Unveiled by Solon SACRAi'ifENTO (UPI / - A bill sought y mayors of San Gabriel Valley cities lo ake it easier lo form a new county has een introduced by Sen. H. L. Richardson D-Arcadia ). Richardson said Tuesday the legislation suited from discussions over siilittlng pulous Los Angeles County into f\\'e ew counties in 8fl-.effort to make county vernment more •·manageable." Under the bill, no new coiµities actually "'ould be created, but the measure v.·ould relax current "severe" restrictions so \'oters of an area could create a ne\v eounty easier if they so desired . ''It's nothing personal against the in· cumbent Los Angeles County supervisors." Richardson said. He said the idea behind his bill was merely that ·a "small county is easter to handle than one the size of Los An1eles ,'' noting that Los Angeles County contained 7 million residents. Bo11elli Last Rites F1·iday ,,, Longsl101~e Leade1·s Ask Pact Okay. . SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Longshore leaders have rec9mmended ratification today of a tentative contract to end the crippling 131-day \Vest Coast dock strike, raising hopes workers 11i·ill be back at y;ork by Sunday. The 110 delegates to a union caucus \'Oted Tuesday to submit the agrttment to the 13,000 rank and file members at the 24 strike-bound ports from Seattle to San Diego. "Jf the vote is fa\'orable 11i•e will try to arrange for an immediate return to u·ork by Sunday," said 'Sidney Roger, in- fonnaLion o!ifcer for the International Longshoremen's and \\'arehousemen's Union. IL\VU President Harry Bridges sup- ports ratiflcaUon, saying the contract provides "solid and substantial gairul." The caucus had been Wlder u•ay since Saturday. The union reached the tentative agree- ment with the 122 shippen of the Pacific r..tar\tlme AsSociation la1t week . P~fA members are expected to ratify the pact within a day or so. The strike has caused losses in U.S. ex- ports estimated by the White House at more than $600 million and prompted Congress to give President Nixon power to halt the ~'alkout. The closed caucus y,·as not without its disagrttment, sources said, with the large San Francisco Local 10 saying that part of the proposed contract y,•as "full of fl sh hooks and exemptions." The local also said that "President Nix- on · was sitting with a cocked gun ... pointed at the body· of labor, and more specifically at our head." Gas Refunds Ordered SAN FRANCISCO. (AP) :... Customers of Pacific Ga s & Electric Co. will receive refunds totaling fl.35 million by order of the Ca11fornia Public · Utilities Com- ml111lon. That amounts to an average or about 90 cents for the domestic family user. to be paid during the March billing period. LOS ANGELES (UP!) - Flags flew at balf staff in Los Angeles today to mourn the death of Counfy supervisor Frank Bonelli. \rho helped lead the fight by heavily populated Southern Cali£ornia to wrest more political power from the northern part of the state.·! · most dedicated p u b 1 i c servants.". Bonelli served alm05t 14 yeara on the flve-man bOa.rd of su pervisors for Los Angeles coun ty, an area of 7 million in- habitants. He became state\vide political figure in the early oplitical figure in the early 1960s, when he Jed a campaign to pass redistricting measures that 11i·ould have shifted con- t1 ol or the state Senate to Southern California f r o m agricultural counties to the north. down at the polls, but Bonelli's fight was won in 1965 when the U.S. Supreme Court's "one man, one vote" decision ac- complished his goal -a power. shift to the populous southern part of the gtate. Bonelli died Monday night in St. Francis Hospital. He was 65. Roman Catholic funeral services will be held Friday. lifayor Sam Yorty ordered flags OD city buildings lowered to half staff, saying "Los Angeles county lost one of Its The proposals were turned Crowds Soar ' SAN DIEGO (AP) -Sea World says attendance set records at Us marine life parb in San Diego and Aurora Ohio, dw-ing 1971. SPECIAL INTRODUCTC ~. \' OFFER NEW perm8nent press K1ngaroo I-Shirts end Shorts. Bright-white( 1 knit polye1ter Ind cotton-durable. ' soft and strong. Polyrib T ·shirt neck- band won't ~•ll· Comfort pouch shorts have the exclusive horizon· tal fly. Buy the 3-packs-guaranta•d full two y1:1r~· Wfl'"'· ' Save up to 26% Kt11111roo T -Shlrb-S·M-L·Xl. .. ' K1ng1roo Shon~28-.te (Reg. 3/$4,001 ; f~r$333 munsingPJear ,••••••-COME ~Jiii-Oii NAil YCKM DftOE"-·-. STORE NAME • • ' , .. ~ 1-1 !I!--I ~'" ' '"" ,. ' • ' ...... ' ........... ~~~~~~~~~~~--- ' City Slit• •---: OC'-dl arM.0.Eft!:IOHd CChllf"f"'"Y~ --~------------------·--------------- MA.IOl CllDIT CAaDs - LIMITED TIME ONLY onN 'TIL l 10tP.M. PllDAYI OEPAATlllElfT aTOU 1116 NIWPOn ILfD. CINTIALLf lOCATID AT NIWPOIT AND MAUOI ILftS • • ' . • • • Mandatory Protection Reagan Asks Health Plan SACRAMENTO, Clllr, (AP 1 -Gov. ltonald Reagan has proposed a mandatory htalth Insurance program to protect nearly 18 million Californians against flnancinl ru1n that could rtsult fron1 ct11astrophlc illness or act•ident. \rtre tosufterwhltlstenned after 100 days of a catastrophic: lllnes.s avflf' a ..bospllaltullon, 30 dlys of recovery c11.re and $3.000 al Joni period of tln1e." oulpitlent services such •• To qualify for the unlimited doctor bills, X·ray · a n cl cover•&e provided by the laboratory ser,•ices. Reagan plan, a worker or1----'------ Airli1ie Gets Short Strike the plan. to be introduced soon in the legislature. ''-oufd be financed by a $3-a-month deduction from the Pll'CheckJ of !he state's 8.4 n1itllon y,·ork- ing men and won1en. The..yl~ld would total n1ore than $300 million a year. The p r o p o s c d California B U • health security plan, wtirking 'Y 111011 through privat~ insu rance car- • rlers, would pick up hospital LOS ANGELES (UPI) -and doctor costs where the 1ne1uber or his family would have to be oovcrtd by a basic health Insurance plan such BJ Blue Cross aod Blue Shield th1t ts approvtd by a new state health sccurlty com- mlaslon. The catastrophe Ins urance would take O\'er hospital, doc· tor, drug and nllltd expenses ~'hen the bL!llc plan ran out : Override Okay The Teamsters lJni,on struck average health care plan runs \Vestern Airlines for a brief 'oul. · CAR~1EL (APl -Voters in period Tuesday night -so Jn a broadcast report Tues· the Ca rm e I Unified ·School brief the airline's flights u•ere day. the Republican governor District ha\'e appro\'ed con· nQt affected. said, "If an <'Xlended illness or Unulng an 87-i:ent IHx o\•erride The strike lasted less than a terrible erippling accident for the next four years. See the be1t in m•n'1 w • • r for '721 Th• b•1t 1•- lection in town for double knit 11eck1 end sport coet1. Re!'ntmber, th• be1t 11 elweys et three hours. Picket lines ap-were to hit so1neone in your The vole in the district. pearM at some of the airports family, the health in9urance ~·hich extends up the Carn1el fro1n Minneapolis to California you have \\'OUld not cover the Valley and do\vn to Big Sur, served by the airline. expense and it \\'ould be ex-inclu~ed many new young The airline called tt a ;li;au~s~led~~ve~r~y"q~u~IC~'k~ly;::ll~yo~u~~pe~r~so~n~s~=;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;~~;;~~~~ wildcat strike, tn violation of 1 . ----- the national ·nailv.·ay Labor Act, which also covers airline labor contracts. The union ac-F cused the airline 01 stalling on I 11ee contract negotiations, i..,.lhe hope that the C'i<lllt'il Aeronautics Board will ap- prove Western'• reques~ lo Income rrv-,." merge with American .1 01\. Airlines, before a ne\v con· • tract can be signed. I ~e~tl·Qfl The Teamsters represent r . 1 ~ .I: 2,000 \Vestern mechanics. utlli-· _ ty workers, fleet drivers and I storehouse workers at Los Sai\lie $30 $40 Angeles, Anchorage, Seatlle, -Oii p11>fesslon1J propanrtJon Of )'9Ur 1971 San Francisco, Honolulu. Las California and fedenil lndivldual Income Tax Returns. Vegas, Nev., Salt Lake City, } · "Great Fall•, Mont., and Min-' Dol1't De ay SlanUTJtodar,appolnlmentsare fr1e II you open an neapolis. The strike u·as announced Anaheim Savings account of $5,000 or mora, or for only $5 by opening an account of by l>.1arvin G r i s w o I d . $Z500 or more. secretary-treasurer r ANAl-IEIM §A''INGS Teemsters I; 0 ca I 2707. r • K,, :II airline denounced it as ill er ANO LOAN A8&0CIAT10N 1 _ and said P I I o t s r ANAHEIM 187 W. Uncoln Ave. 92803/TM: 772·1532 stewardesSes were cro~·· · BREA 633 So. Bria Bl'id. 9262l{Tel: 529-4971 Teamster picket' lines lo k ~:·:· HUNTINGTON BEACH 411 Main St. 92648/Til: 536-6591 the llne's planes flying on 11,!;;============================= schedule. -- Round trip jets daily. . To Las Vegas 9:00 a.m., I :50 p.m. and b: 10 p.m. To Phoeni x; 7:45 a.m.and.5:25 p.m . I To Tucson 7:45 a .m. •Service starts February 22nCI. • •. f:. DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Clinic Needs a HoJDe AJt~r a bumpy start, the !,azuna B"ch Free Clint< bu been rolling alone in high e•ar.lor the pall year, providing raedicaJ cat.e for more than 8.000 patient.I. moat or whom would not be able to arrord the servleea they need. In the month of January alone, 672 patients were treated, and they continue to tOme in at the rite of 60 or 60 a.night, double the-number served a year ago. MOst are In their late teeris and e1rly 20s. but there's a quOta of old1Jter' too. and pedlati'ic care ia up 300 percent. An afternoon children's. clinic take& care of check-ups, inoculations and other routine mattert:. and many sick youn~sters are treated in the eveninl se111loru1. The volunteer medlcal staff now includes 27 doctors and 40 nur11e11. along with r,harmaci.s.ts and lab techni· clans. Only the two &e<:ret1r es are paid. Man y La~unan• looked askatt0e al th e free Clinie In its early day11, arr1id it woul~lure brigades of un· healthy lranslenla lo lhe Art Colony. As ll has iurned out. more than. half the patients. are from the Laguna area and 90 percent of tho1e treated are Orange County resldenl3. But noW that the clinic h11 won official recognitioo. Ind even the promise of some ·financial aid from the county, a new and 11ertous roadblock has appeared .. The lease -on it. Glenneyre Street buUding npires 1\larch 31 and.there .. ems lo be no hope for ·extension. A frantic 11earth for new quarter11. has 80 far been Un• ouccessfµI. The clink could u" about 1~ rooms for 11' examining rooms. pharmacy and Jab, al least. hair with plumbing and one large enough to make a spacious waiting room. It must locate in the .R·3 or C·l zones to comply with city codes, ·. . Sa.v• one cli nic orllclal, "II we do have to c)os.c;. the city will know what we've been doing -but that would be a 68d way lo find oul ... " difficpll job lo put It back togeuier acain. for the sake or tho1e who have given ao ieneroll!ly of their time and •kill•. and thooe who 11eed their services so badly, it iJ lo be hoped someone will find a roof and lour walls lo .houoe Ulla worthy project. First Effort a Success The new South Coast United Fund's inaugural cam· ,P~~I\ throughout the Capi•lrano Bay area I• orrtcially ovefthil'i week and the results are good . With more than $18,000 in hand and more ·possibly on the way from the San Diego area, direcf,9rs of the fall drjve agreed that for a first effort, the· cartlJ1aign was a success. · · Cai;npaign Chairmah Bob .Gannon has poinfed out that a project so widespread always ha s a tough pe1iod when it begins, but 11 the United Fund concept beco)'lles better understood in the area. each new campaign will work more smoothly. . The local fund. which serves several ·serviceman· related agencies, now is negotiating for a sh~re of the donations yielded by· the North San Diego .countv area. Before the local fund was formed, all the Caritp Pendle- ton donations went to San' Diego area charitable agencies. The interim period before .next fall 's second· ~rn· paign still will be busy even thouch no org"llized aoJici· tations ~ill take place. ~ '"We're going. to spend' time strearrilining the or· ganization and selling ' th.e conctpt or the United Fund as an institution," Gannon pledged. • ., • . II th"e clinic does have lo br,.ak up, It would be a 1t;i a concept well worth lull support. s '&fAUTlf UL ! >HAll WE SEN~ FO R THt RUSSIAN·-AM BA55AD OR?" P resident .Wfll B ear Bar d . Talk in P ek i n11 • Folly of Others Key To · S,µcce ss Ni x on Not Expecting. Much ' WASHINGTON -Ooe doe1 not knolf for sure what c1used Pre11ident N~xon to be so Im pressed with the sections on China In Andre Malraux's '•Ant I· Memoirs." An educated gue!s Is th1t the French lntellt'ctua1'11 proe conveys to • Nixon better than any other whit he will be up against In Chin a. Thia ~rception u 11 d o u b t e d'I y en· couraged. h.lm to 11ay that there was no cause for optimh1m -or pt's1lml11m, either -at he ex· ploros the ground w I t h Chou En·ll•I and Mao Tse-tung. The 1u1plcLon • can be Indulged th a t Nixon 11ubconi1clous- ly used the word, optlmlam, flrat he-· cause there 11 not much In M1lraUJ to· encouragf! It. The gulf bttween lradl· tl onal Amerlc11n thought and the Mal· roµx version of his Interviews with Chou Eil·lal and Mao Tse.tung and his Inter· prctatlon of the same It very wide. CHOU EN·LAI, for example was not content when he talked with Malraux four years ago. with the Amtrlcw mtrtly rPtur nln.ir frtim Vietnam and all Asia. They h11d to get oUt of everywhere, Santo Domi ngo, the Congo, Laos, Thalland, Paklstnn -anywhere they were or had b<>en. "Let them go home. 11nd th~ world will have peace again," said ChOu En·l•I . Until that happens, Chln1 will not negotiate with the United Stites about Victnam or anything else. f\.1ao's contempt for the Russians tineratd In his remarks to Malraux. He thought the Ru~slans were fotlowlng the ro nt1 lo capltaltsm, no leas .. .Beyond that wert the enveloping mystlclsl11l!l of Mao b11ed upon the legehda 1nd, 'Undoubtedly, the iilythology of the partisan struggle In the Norttt which brought Mao to power and sanctity in a Spartan world. NIXON STARTS from scra.tch and 11alnst deeply inil'ained prejudices in his dialogue· with the Chinese leaders and with lee reasori for optimism thah when the dialogue btaan with the Russians in the Elsenhowtr administration. Mao though\ RuMlan C h 1 I r m 1 n Khrushchev a fool for trying to com- promlae with American capitalism. and a betrayer for abandoning Chlna in the lopi . aio confron\1tlon over Quemoy and M1t1u. With his sense of the continuity of history, Mao ls ·not considered likely to have undergone 1 chana:e of heart by the time he discourses with Nixon. The past Will ttrongly Influence the present. Pl\tsIDENT .NIXOl'I thinks lhal once he seta foot on the toll of.mainland Ch.ina a new Ch1pter will begin, io be marked by nq'otlaUon rather 'than confrontation. There Is not much in Malraux to support that, but. rather, the conclusion that the Chinese In their long view of history will regard the Nixon vis!( as a footnote in the progretslon 'or China' to new level! of treatQtSI outshining the atorlous past. It la not ahnply for their archeological value - that tile Great Will, the Min( tombs. and the ~bidden City have been pre1<rved ., symbol& of past aJories that will come' again. Havtns: crasped this point of view, Nix· on is probably better prepared to go in'to his discussions with the old men, with their long memories, who run Chin,. He . 11 not expeeting much. The fact of the visit itself may be more important than any concrete results which will grow from it. IN A CONVERSATION not long ago, the President emphasiud his long range view of this visit. He was thinking in terms of the next generation when China becomes a nuclear superpower and, in view of that. the folly of lettin& any op. portunity pass lo begin the ·dialogue which might avert a cataclysmic conflict Involving three great superpowers in the not ao distant future . 1Face·to-face meetings or other 11cosmeUcs" of international palaver do t10t impress a President who knows that, more than any other in recent year!, he arouses the Chinese leaders' suspicions. DR. HENRY A. KISSINGER has said that necessity has brought the Chinese &nd Americans together. The necessity in China's case. it may be assumed, being tb.e threat of a Russian showdown. ln somewhat this same context Mafraux It quoted as saying that M8o's flr!t seriou,s question will be if the Americans are prepared to give aid to China. U not, ac-- cordin"g to Malraux. there Will _not be a crest deal more to talk about.· . ' 'l'hougbt1 .at Larae · For eve.ry one man who succeeds in the world because of his own talents, a dozen Sl!Cceed simply because of the folly of others : as in a poker game, where the winr\ers win because the losers . &fe. so foolish, and not because the winners are 10 smart. . . . , The candidate who ~makes the fewest promises stands the least chance of being ..,elected, althoush on ~ that basis alone he would seem to be the superior man. • • • If Marx were alive ~t o d a.)'. , he might be se_verely ,tempted to chaiige &is fa,nous aphor· lsm to·~ad : "Pi:o- f&;si0na1. spdr.ta are the opium of the people." ., • •• • A marriage.vow is a blank check. wr il· ten in a fit of hysteria . filled in for an im· possible sum. and when subsequently presented for cashing, returned for ''insufficient funds ." • • • tf Malraux is right , thi! is a sample or the kind of hard ·talk Nixon will hear in Peldng, and he Js not yet ready to disclose what kind of an answer he would gl v'e. Jn fact. he probably cannot give a ca\egorlcal answer. Nor are there many othet categorical answers on 'the:i major issuf':'s · Mtween the Ui:lited States and China. It is' hard for someotie else to injure us • unless '!Ye have fir st placed the weapon in his bane!: m0$t ill-treated people are in some manner accessories before the fact. Travel Was Once Banned • • • Revolution is always its own rationale: If the American coloni sts had failed . history would call them "traitors" rather than "patriots ." Pre!ident Nixon ·S planned vl1lts to China end the Soviet Unlott have made ~ome people unh11:ppy, but no orit'! .ques- !IC111s hl11 right lo go. Jl w111s not 1lw11:ys thus. For nlnst of U.S. history, incumbent Chl,r Exrcullvr.~ wtre exp«:ted fo atay not only on A1nerlc11n 9011 bu~ also as clo:ie a:i possible lo the naUon'1 capital. r.eorge W11~hlngton, is might be ex· pected , ~f't th e precedent. During 11 trip 10 Nrw En11lnnd, the first President Is reputed to ht1~e Avoided Rhode tsland becnu~ il had not yet signed the Con!litutlon ind 1'enee was foreign tt.r· rilory . When Rhode tsl11.nd did sign i'!hortly lhercafler, Wnshlngton made a spet•lal trip to the new stile. l..ftter Prr:iidents 11cr11pulously observed the forclgn ·travel han. William McKinley, for example, would not set root on the in· tematlonal bridge when ht met with the PresldenJ.,ol Mexico al El Puo, 'J'.txaa, In OltAHOI COAIT DAILY PILOT ,. Rob~rt N. 1Vted.., Pvbll.lhtr· Thomcu K~t"U, Editor Albe rt \\1, Batfi Editorial Pcr;c £ditcir f' Editorial Resf\arch .. • t ' J90J. Benjamin H1rrison had displayed more daring 10 years tlrlier when he ventured at'far as the middle line of the brld(e,_ TllEOOORE ROOSEVELT broke with tr1dlUon In 1906 by traveling to Panam1. Although the trip was· critiCUed by some of TRlt political oppont.nts, It w1s nol seriously question~ or f o r m • 11 y challcnied on legal grounds. Woodrow Wilson, In contrast, encountered massJve opposition ;wh<n he innounc:ed In lit& that he would attend the Paris Peace Conference. "So (ie.rct was t h e criticism," Josephus Daniels wrote. ''that an outsider woukt have supposed lh•t Wilson was breaking all Ten Com• mandmenu at ooce." Wl11011'1 trip w !unlpe, It was polni.d ool, would . be qulte lmllke Roosevell's Journey . lo Panama. For the rtrst tlmt. the Pr<sldent would leave the w .. tern Hemlsphero, go well beyond the direct pi\yilc1J protection of the United States. rem•ln 1bs"'t trom the co40Jry ror 10 uttl!Ued period of time. and engne ·In high-level dlplom1Uc dlocussloOl and penanal negotiation at ·the coofemtee table. I . On the eve ol Wi!IOlt's departure !or Europe, Sen. La~ V. Sbtrm111 (ft. Ill. l lnlnldu!lt4. a moluUoo decllrtna the olllet of Prutdtot w be vocanl when the lncumbonl Jeff the couotry and ·traoslu· rlna his powen and dulles to the Vice Piuident. Sberm1n'• molullon dlfd In COIJU!llUa ·So did a llmlllf m•sure In· troduced Jn the House. WILSON RAD BROKEN the ice, but 1'is successors hesitated to plunge in ·after him. Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge each made only one trip abroad. and Herbert Hoover made none. No Pr~sldent again traveled outside the Western Hemisphere until Franklin 0. Roosevelt. at~nded tbe C a s a b I a n ca ·Conference In 1943. Today, of course, presideritial tr4vel to all parts or the world is commonplaet. The champion globetrotter to ~ate is Dwight 0 . Eisenhower, with I& foreign trip!. Richard M. Nixon, as E\5e11hower'! Vice Prt1sident. vtslled M countries in eight years -also a record. President Nixon will equal Eisenhower's eight·trips· per-term pact when he travels to China. and the Soviet Union. w'ho knoW1 what a second term mi_ghl bring? ls it not poqi~ ble that Nixon, the sports buff, ~'OUld aim for the UUe of Most Perlpa_telic: President! Dear Gloomy • Gus By IUl'l"ln(lng aome pain~ a third l111t lhtoulb Larun• Canym m)&ht SIVt lives by ovtrooming the risk or pWJna Ull)'ieldina road bop. • • -B. S. H. • • • • The most shameful blot on the whole American governmental system remains the appointmtnt , or slating, of judges on a political basis : a man involved in poli.ti~s should ~ by that very reason in- elig.ible for th~ bench. or the w}lole in· deptn~nt judicial process is tainted. • • • Prostitution may be "lhe oldeSt pr~ fession,'' but only because it was preceded by legalized r8')e and supported by arroaant male assumptions of in· he.rent superiority. • • • Whert there is a Victory, even the cowardly shirt: in the triumphal pro- cf:M!O{I; .wh;en there i.s a defeat, even the brave share In the shame. (Thus, even thoogh Lee was twice the general, and 10 Um.ea: the ·man. that Grant was.) • • • • our "tasc1rt1tioft with i•growth" has ablcured the mitacle of ••creation" for rilost modern people: btlt, as Donne said · tn Cine oI his !umons more than three cen~tirles ago : "The distance: rrom nothing to a little is ten thousand times m\))'e than rrom )[ lo the higbesl deg""' in this Ufe." ' • • • Jn ll1Y. r,uan.i soc:lei,y. people who loss beer can• an public roads and parkways would be trbt<d more senrely than thole who like pol privately: bul In our Jyslem, ·the ·t;tu..tossm Oourish UR"" r~otu:ted whlte the pot·takm art punish· ed rar behond the Jerlousnm ol lll<Jr Of· ,.,,. .. Quotes No . Amnesty for Draft Evad,ers • ·To the Editor: '• There seems to be quite a bit of talk in regard to granting amnesty for those who could afford to flee to Canada in order to avoid being drafted in the service. This.of course is a gross insult to all oui-' brave · men who did serve. and Jost their lives or were crippled. also those in our prisoner- of.war camps. Just recently the Secretary of State was quoted on TV as saying, "This is not the time to talk of granting amnesty to our men who fled the country to avoid being dr<!lfted. while our men are still fighting this war, or are in prisoner-of. war camps." · Tbis is very interesting . Just when is the right time to talk of granting am· nesty to those who insult eve ry man who served. or lost his life, anj'f lo the parents of these brave men who elected tc serve their country? THIS IS THE f\-10ST unspeakable war, the most unjust war , the most stupid war of a.II time , but even so there should be no amnesty. · If justice were really done in this case, the man who brought this awful thlllg down upon his fellow Amer icans should be brought to justice and charged with malfeasance in office. I do mean Lyndon B. Johnson. If and when this is done, then we can begin to talk of amnesty -and not before. IT ~JUST BE BROUGHT out here too, that Lyndon 8. Johnson was. quoted as saying, "I would like to go down in history as another Abraham LincolQ., a war President." How does that grab you? Our former President could be charged '>''ilh many other things of course, since it was after he was elected that we had permissiveness, crime in the street, arson. riots and so many other things that Nixon is being blamed for. JAMES A. DUVALL Dlsaiter for Tlae(rs To the Editor : I read with interest the letters publish- ed in the DAILY ILOT from parents of children at the Top the WOrld School. rt must wilrk for-Ole' hildren. For ours it was a disaster. Our children had been happy, sue· ce~ful st"dents at El Morro before ·being tr~ferred to T.O.W. Th~ confusion of class changes every 20 minutes, the clamor of open classrooms and the ex. perimentation with teaching methcx!J proved to be a poor learning• en- vironment. · AFTER A YEAR. we sent them !o a private school. It was a costly decision for ·us but has proved worthwhile. They have developed skills and abilities that had not been touched. I !eel the school board iJ being B11 George --.., Dear George : Thanks a lot for your insomnia cure. Actually. 1 didn 't u.st that Jong.<frawno()Ut CW'e you su.ggect.td, but I rind that immediately upon starting to rtaCI your column l go right to sletp. GRATEFUL Dear Grateful : ~ Km. T)lal's funny. Sioce gelling your Jetter rve been tDalng and lW11ing all night. (Send yoor worrita to ~ Wily cl•lter up the house with old worrles when you could ~out ae~ • Jing lnw br-1-new trouble?) ' • Mailbox I I Letters 1rom readers are welc~. Normally writers should c0tive11 their messages tn 300 word$ or less . The right to condense letters to fit space <ir eliminate libel is~resen>ed. All lft- ters must include signat11re llnd mail- ing address. but names may be tDith- held on requeet if sufficient rea&on is apparent. Poetry vrill not bt pub- lished. ' reasonable and is not trying tc dismantle the entire concept of education. It is my understanding that they are calling into question some"' of the experimental techniques that have failed both here and elsewhere. NAME WITHHELD B each Phone Service To the Editor: During the summer ($) tourist &eason the city of Laguna Beach main~ em~rgency lifeguard phone stations_ at various pedestrian, beach ac(:ess walks througho\tl Laguna. -- After the ($) tourist season: and for the remaining nine months of the ye.ar when Laguna's l"!sidents share their beaches with the city dog population, the city manager, for some strange reason, removes all the beach emergency phones. Obviously. there 's not much sense in saving a few. paltry citizen beach bums when there's no business there for the Chamber of Commerce types. BUT, CONSIDER the conseque nce! · .. , there's a beat:h or ocean erflergen- cy at Woods Cove and the victim need! expert, special service-fast. All the city provides at each beach ac- c.~~. is a list .or official ordinance pro- hibitions the violators o{ which will earn a fine or imprtsonment .•• or both. ~mergency information nr phones? ~y. fellah ... the summer ($) tourist season begins in June or, if you're in shape, a "short" jog to Main Beach will fetch the city lifegUard, or. if there's someone at home. perhaps lhe beach cot- tage ,resident will .lend his phone, or if th.ere s a pay phone ecro!s Coast Highway ... don't forget your dime. NOW, mE CITY MANAGER ls prob- ably pr~g bimseU for saving the -cdy all that nine-month telephone service but J5n·1, lh~t putting a P,rice tag on someone else ~ hfe .•. like the beach city school! that ignore the oeed to certify high school student swunming proficiency ? . Would the city manager sell himself or hia life . !or the pr..,. ol the J65.<lay city ~emergency phone service? Would the Chamber of Commerce :art to anawer that? BRUCE S. HOPPING Right to Work / • Press Commen ' . r * Or1udt S..tllld . .,In the United stato wt have. kmg boeJ t:ODCerned WiJb h•· dividual llberties in other areas. but .. e have wleroted •bull o1 individual liberty 111 the form or comJ!"1S0'7 JIJ1ionlam. 1111 time fot a c1wJ1e. .. ... • ' .. • . - · ... I' ' . .Y , ----·-·-·----~--,,,__ -~--. -~ ---...... -· -• • • ' Sale. Big savings -by the .gallon on our best seUing interior ints.Your choice, 2.99. • Penncratt~ Colorfast Interior Latex. Goes on smoothly with either brush or roller and dries in only 20 minutes to a beautiful, washable finish. Tools and hands clean easily with soap and water. Choice of decorator colors. Rog. 3.99, Sale 2.99 . . ' .-.,.:a ... Q£2$Y- PENNCRJl'- ~-· · /ll'l1mlumqual1/y · .LaTeX :. ·TEXTURE' FINISH · ' ~ • OJ' • • Penncraf1~ Texture Finish Latex . Hides cr11cks and hole.a on brick, wallboard 9r plaster. It's thick and creamy ... you can crei\te the texture you want with a roller, brush or sponge. Dries 10 a washable, mar-resistant l1n1sh. Reg. 3.99. Salo 2.99 • Sal• pric•s •llecllv• lhrough Saturday. ' ·. ... ·• Also tools and accessories at a very , ....... , ... ,,.,.:· low price. . ... I 2 99. each · · ""\,,., ., lh J) •. . • . .4 pc. 9" ro/ler set. 2'.99 • • ~-'. ; 2 shelf revolving .tool caddy. 2.99 Clamp vise ·with replaceable i.aws. 10 pc , high speed drill bit set. 2.99 , . . ' I -~-<-tfJI ' Screwdriver attachment for drills .. 2.t9 F~·~/ I Q,.1··: ·;-O t t> 11 2~'' a·1um.inum leyel_.with 2 vials. 2..89 · 65AI" block plane with 1 i-1 '' cutting widtb. 2.99 · 2.&~ : l. ' i . .. : .•. 1 ' .... · Y't" ~:12' -0&1\.IH tape rule with - power lo~k ~2.98 ; e . -. . . . . . .. Check these powerful values, too! Sale $84 Re;. 99.99. Penncraft 18" 2 1/2 HP reel mower. 21/2 HP, on handle engine con- t rol, on handle shu- toff, 5 blades, 5 spi- ders, 4 section roll· er~. ( • ,, Sale ·sag R~;. 82.99. Penncraft De lu xe 22" 31 /2 HP rotary mower. 3 1/2 HF>. 4 cycle engine , vertical pull. EZ start engine, folding han- dle, no adjust car- buretor, large steel wheels. • ·JePenney "The .values are here every day. .. ' Shop Sur,iday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores: Av•ilable tt NEWPORT BEACH, Fashion l1l1nd; HUNT INGTON BEACH . Huntington Centor . Use Penney• time peyment plen . . ·.r " • •• • -.. .. • Sale· 5911 Rog. 12.99. Panncratt 18" 2 HP powerrtel mower. 2 HP, 18" cu1, on handle engine control;· 5 blades • .S epldera. 3 section wood roller, inverted Thandle. • ' . .. • ~ I • • ' ' • ,, :.\11.Y PILOT ' ·-. , ' ' ' '' '' I , ,, u :r i I 1 • ,I ' " \ • as 1n~ ' , By G~orge,' 'this· ~is a muslin sheet special! l'1oNI print -oMela tllat are Penn Pr'ffte for the •••Y e11r1 of no Ironing. Twlrub:e.Jlat or fltt~d 2.33 Full 1l~1 flat or fftted"3.33 • • Piiiow c•H• 2 for 2.03 •• Penn Pr11t• whit• rftuaNn sheet 1pect1I. Ju11 machine w1ah and tumble dry. Twin size flat or fitted 1.64 F ~ll size flat or fitted 2 •. 14 , \ Pillow cases 2 for' 1.24 ' • *•• ; SpeclaJ 144 < ·, =::i 3 for sac ' I ' J ; j , • ·I • l ·~ ;.( -•'" Men'• eotton/acryNc •wfftahlrta. Choose from solid colors in dark or light tones. Slhs S·M·L·XL. .. , l ..... , loy1' ribbed cr•w 1ock1 of 100% cotton. :Ourlbf, Ind tong·weartiig white and stripes·m·ass·ort•d · colors.Sizes6-11: · • • • ' - ' on'S • '. '• 'Dorado' draperies. Maxjmum decorating, minimum , care. Textured rayon/cotton draperies have. the rm al foam acryl ic backing. Penn Pres,t• for never-iron care. Antique gold or wh it e. 48x84 '. 7 • 44 72x54', 14,44 72x84 ·, 16.~4 96x54", 17.44 96x84", 20;44 12Dx84', 27,44 • / . • • Special 5 pr. 1.99 M.n'• c•iu1I ho11 of v1rg1n acrylic/ stretch nylon. Ribbed top with re inforced heel, Stretch size fits 10-13. Wide ~ssortment of bold and baste soli,d colo,rs. .,.,_; . _.,.,.\ ?7 ' ~~( ·-·~· -~ ,, . ' ' ' _,,,, ' ~:,~·~-' . ~w ; / • "", ~ < ~ -.#', " , ,, ,, ·. -~ ~-~-~ _.,' ' "'•·-~1 • . -·" " ·- . - ' .. ..,. !' .. • ,• ,., ' "" '-+ • • • ' " ' • -· ' 2for 99c Boys' T ·shirt or brttf is soft. at!sorbent.and comlorfable-. White cotton knit Ava ilable 1n .sizes .$(618), M(10112J. L(1'116/. . ~ ~t:~ Go l : Oue ' J l • I' ·-~- • . $hop ~unday noon t~.ln. ' NEWPORT B~ACH, fashion Island. HUNTINGTON BEACH, HYiitingto~ "~ , . •. • Center.1 \ . .. . ... • . ' • ,, --~-~-=-~ --._, -~--------- ' • • Sale. 153 off . a11 -qui"lted spreads~ S-ap~r-sizes - and some matching drapes, too. Come see. . ~-----· -·----·--·--- Siie prtc•1 effective through Mond1y. ;5 ·1 849 . a e . Twin o.r Full Reg. 1f9: 'Diana' quilled throw style spread · • ol acetate w1lh polyester l1 ~l1 ng /po lyester ba cking. Go ld. pink or blue !!oral pattern. ~ Queen or King size, reg . 16.99; Sale 14.45 j • ' ' . ' s;eclal 3 for s1 L•dlo•' fine qudty tll1tlc·leg brlef1. Choose nyloti in wh ite or assorted paStels. Comloftable and easy-c1re 1n s1ze1 S-M-L ' •• ' .. .. ~Sale 21 25 Reg. s2 s. 'Supreme' antique sa11n spread o f rayon/ acetate with polyester fill and cotton back. Beautiful solid colors. T hrow slyle. Full size, reg. S27 , Sa le 22.95 Queen size , reg. SJ?, Sale 31 .45 King size, reg. SJ9, Sale 33 . 15 . --··-... • r ·, 1 ss .special Wom en•• n.tur1f took br11 1n soft, nylon tricot f0r the cu ps ny1o ni lycra~ .!i pande.I( for elast ic se ctions. In while. · • Sale 11!~ Reg.114. 'Prince11 II ' spresd of Chronlspu(J • acetate·w lth polyest er filling / cotton back. Throw style In several solid colors. .Full size, reg. 1"16 . Sal• 13.60 Queen si2"e, reg . $25. Sale 21.25 King .size, re g. $28,.411• 23.110 .. -· ... : ,~.,. • . ·~ ,.,,.t: ' .. . {Ir. ';~f;. • .. .. <t• . • A.~,. . ... ,l ....... k;:,f .. . • • ~ . •• • ' . -. • '•I ~ •, ''"' . ~·· ' . '· ' • . .. .j· I .. .. .,., ... sa1e · 21 111.eg. $25. 'Z•nlth' spread has screfl!n·prinled' flor1/ design, throw styltt. Rayon/11cetate w11h pdtyester flit snd cottqn b-ckin'g . Full size, reg $30. Sale 25.50 Queen 11ze. rt1tg. $35. S•I• 29.75 l<ing 11ze, reg . $40, Sall 134 • SM ... -llO!fHi.t marq,i!Mttt toilofod ...-; 3·· botrom llem. 4Q)f8i " each panel white. ·Jc Pen hey · .tn. at fhe following 'stores: nter. ~ •COSTA MESA , Harbor C ent~r. ·-, . • \. *C losed Sun day • - " I " •• I t • ' • ' -··-·-----. I -. j I l f I I I ' ,, ,j I ' I ! . I I . I l I 1 I' .. ,l0 DAILY ~!LDT • I ·Kleindienst Shifts Law E1iforcer ~1oves To·ward Middle WASHINGTON fAP J Richard G. Kleindienst. namrd lo place his close friend , Jnh itehell. a:oi the nil· tion's c law enforcer, falls eomewlie e between the mid- dle and conservatism tn his views. Or, 80 if would seem. When he arrived t n Washington at Mitchell's b1d- Cling only three years ago, J<leindleMl. 48, brought with him the reputation of a mili- tant conservati\'e. Yet in his days al the Justice Department, where Pre!ldent Nixon would have him become 8ltorney ~eneral, Kleindienst has gained a dif- ferent reputation : th;it of a mid d I e-of-the-roader with some liberal leanin,i:s. A natJvc of Winslow. Ariz., K1elndicnst made his first political move by organizing a coalition or blacks and Mex- ican-Americans to back his candidacy rnr ~chool presf· dent. Ke won. Later, after 1-larvard and Its law school. he returned to Arizona and plunged into state polllic•. Elected to the state House of Representatives In 19S3, he later served as 8 a r r y Goldwater's director of field Ope'\'ations when Goldwater !J .. IT..._... ATTY . GEN. CHOICE Richard Kleindienst won the Republican presiden- tial nomination in 1964. Kleindienst then ran for · governor of Arizona . Un!!Uc· ceieful at that, he renewed hill GOP activity when Riche.rd Nixon ran In 1968. It was then, working once more in fleld operations, t~at Mitchell and Kleii1dien8t formed a bond that brought the Arizonan to Washington as '• Mllchell '1 deputy after Nixon was elected . Kleindienst wouldn't -talk" with newsmen aboul hia view11o arter President Nixon named him as Mitchell's rep!ac&- ment, but he had dlsclosed portions or his o u t I o o k previously. · Wlr.plng has been one ol hla major cause celebres. He call1 it \be '1f.ir1t weapon lhat has bad any real lmpacl on organized crime." · As for race re.lalk>ns, Klein- cllenat, once a mem• of the Nallonal Urban Leap, hu ureed that more b I • c t a become policemen. And he hu prai~ for Pre.si· dent Nixon's handling of Southern school Integration. "He did not aend In foreigners from the North ," Klelndienat said. "The -ruult hi that racism In this country Is dying. There may be 30 million and 40 miJHon racistl left, but. the iruilltution is dying.'' The role of the Justice Department 11 defined simply by him ; ". . . to enforce the laws enacted by qong?Us. to Insure the ,,hort-term ac· commodatkln to the law llO that you ca• have the iong- term capability of soclll reform ." 7.88 get$· you in the big time. And that's special. ... Sliver-tone dtal with numerals ·swiiep-second hind Men's gold tone calendar watch with sweep second hand, silvertone dial. Men's sport watch with black strap, sweei>-second hand . Men's digital/calendar wat~h with goldtone case, sweep-.!iecond hand. \ Ladies' go!Clt(lne fash ion pendant watchw11h cameo, 24~ chain. Ladies' sport 'llllilch with blue dial, goldtone cast. black suede strap. 'JCPenn~y Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following atorea: "" Ava ilablt at: NEWPORT BEACH, F.,h ;on lsl.,d: HUNTINGTON BEACH , Hunt;n9ton C•nl•f • --"' • ) -\ • • c ·--' , • • Sale. Boys' jeans that are tough on everything. Except your budget. • . .. ~ C~ ' ... I · JCPenney _ The value.s are here every day. Sale 2 for s5 su.a.11 reg. ..... - Rea: 3.48 ea. A great buy for a mom witl'I 1 flare for value. Boys' ftare leg jeans are Penn Prest• Dacron• po1yester/cotton. Navy, brown or green. Double knee. • Husky sizes. in 6-12. reg. 3.98 ea .. Sole 2 '°' $1 .. , .. prices effec:Uve through _,. Shop Sunday noon to s p.m. at the to11o'~1na• ator~ , ' NEWPORT BEACH, Fashion Island:, HUNTINGTON BEACH , 1-!untinglon C•nl•r: •COSTA MESA, Hirbor C..,t~. ..... ' ., •Closed Sunday. Chorg• it. -0 • • • \ " •' • _, • \ " .•: • ·. _, ;Feb. 1972 " - COSTA ·MESA 17 50 NIWPORT IL VD. 645-3400 • • . · ANAHEIM ,;,4,\ 2636 LA.PAL,U AVI. NEAR. MAGNOLIA 121°l9Clb ~•Im• Iv••• ,.,rf< .. rder -• !from !;;A, dklt213·160·0458l THE GRANT aov·s HAVE EVERYTH IN G.! . , WE HAVE SHIRTS BY~ o. GANT . '' ·-·. -( ' .. -TONE ON. TONE. THE GANT EVOLUTION. ''NIW!' Style.....,.ow lnr You c1n hel th1st ttxturtd dl1mond nriplftll• like tn· 9r1v1d lttttrlnt 011 tint •ti· tlon1ry. Tltty h1v1 1 "'Y ol111nt look. And 1r1 ltor- 4trtd by oth1r 1trlplnt1 la •subllu1ll tolor· I l"f•· T•llolod fl with Cini ht n0- lrtn fortr•I poly· 01t1r. Trim t1p- ertd .body, •a to .,. ,' lertitiiugtuu. f I' ,' -~ l • 111 riff GIUTHf SflfCTIDlf Of GANT SllllTS AT THE GllANT IDYSI CHAIGE IT AT •HE GllANT IOYS , ) i. IANICAMlllCAID .,_ MASTll CHAIGI Trt1t yountlf t& 1 d11h of PMtthlnt dffftrtllt -Purft111 Pia Stripe Shlrt.lolcl1 vl1ot°..":~.wlt~. a fre1n, no-~barrtil 1plrlt. Deftly styl1ll HANG TEN THE NEWEST styles In norrow stripes, wide strlpet, ind wider stripes {solid colors, too). Stock up nowt THE GRANT BOYS c1rry f1mlly f1vorit11 \\."-J' llkt Gant, Hang Ttn ind ""41'ton 1hlrt1. foch ..t,..1J.,~1 greet ,.CliOll .. nd · Tiit Grant IOy1 corry 'th 'ltrgul Hltctlon. with fvll-f11hk1111tl coll1r, 4-hHon 1'1ck· et. I• t lwud ,111ttt of colors, many off· Hat. Anll ltnlt of 100% DurtM< Lltfe Cotttn for tit 1m1t• lntlY . .Jllke~ ftnlth. AU ru•nAN IHiatl $11-517 * EVERY SIZE * EVERY Sml * EVERY COLO~ . ,,. HJUfG -~:!'ER .. ~~ '• '-'" . Pt::NDLJ::•~N I''" ' •, > ., ,1 .. M•11· or• ~ .,,., •. .,N '"··· ~ ... .-... -oo, tH£ GRANT BOYS CARRY A FULL UNE OF'FINE ·PENDUTON SPORYSWUR •For !ht min who ..,.. enough to weor 1111 ttntlt In loo.!' pure Ylrgln woof. • · · from PenoLeton $1550 ' CAPITOL OF 'THE WEST! • • JACKETS · lfit'I '9·•60 \II $12 ICMOTT llOI. ••••••• •••••• JCUU.T •• 4.91· •190.00. PAc1r1c Tl.llLI .12·$111 Tho , Gron! Boys hive 11wty1 bton the Lov1'1 caplt1I of Southtm C1llf. • • • lut now they'Yt, 1xp~nd1d to become the LtYi's c1p-- ital of the W11tl Over 6o,ooo p1irs In stock s1p1r1t1d Into w1l1t and length sizes for men -women • boys • girl•. ·we've Got It ••• When You Noed ltl ovla 21 mu1 o, P.AClflC Tl.All. JACKITJ JO CHOOJI flOM ' J . • LIYl'r PAMOUI DINIMIACKm PrHlltwll II l ln. TM'll Atf ftt t llt '" .... ., .... """ ..,.. llats H40 u.n. ............... . " n. •• ' LIYl'r LINID IACKilf ' SliH S6-SO .............. $1) ' levl'• for,.,.,. •nll boys tool :n11 Gr1nt IO)'I ltiff IYll:J lflt 1!.d •tyl•l ' STETSON ·HATS . ' . ' T/te GRANT BC)Y$ Ju.Vo ono oft/to largest s'1ecrloiis fn .t/te w••t/ lots of sly/es to c/toose from- High Roller · Vaquero ' Plattt TimberUnt . Big Fork · Wisp Butte Squa,. Rigger Bison Billings Rawllngs •2250 to•3S00 I • • 1' Gront's has tholLargest Selodlon · of Wutem,lootsl OVfR •o STYUS TO CHOOSf 1ROMI IT fRYf, ACMf, IAOY'ACM~}IUUNGO, DAN POST, DINGO AND' GtORGIA. \ IOOTS AllD IROU • GIORGIA $14.11-$30.00 FRYE $34.95°$43.00 ACME $23.50.$2 •• 95 IROWNING $20.50.$31.50 WIYENIURG $19.95-$24.00 WE HAVE PANTS BY • The Grant Boys Carry Famous Brands Like ••• SKELIY IUSK CORD 1ms $1100 Ll11c, lust ind Tift. Slt11 21.36 MR. LEGGS IRUSH CORD IELLS $900 Navy, Tan ind lrown. 51111 21·31 s•nlY to.cur IElts $8SO Dtrk. lrown. Sit•• 21-31 ••.•• , • SHELIY au.noN UP llu1 k1J1h Denim, Dark lrown. $950 Sites 21-36 ••••......••...••• tNCORE WIDE WALE CORD IElLS $800 M1roon-ll9ht Blue, Dtrk: lrtwn. Sb:H 27-34. • MAll \Q.l\Sl JLAllS . $900 Brush Dtniin. 51111 27-36 , , ••• , •• ••. ••••,. · !IE INNSBRUCK flARIS '$900 Burgundy, Tin. Slzts 21-:SI , • , , • , , , •• , , , , , , !IE BRUSH DENIM llllS $8' 00 lrown Corn. Siztf 21.31 ••• , , , •••• , , ••• •,. MR. LEGGS BUSK PANTS · $800 ' llu• il 1n1roon dtnlm. Sl:rt 21·3• ••• , • , , • , , ~~ ... ~~~s:.L~·E·~~~. ~.~~~o~.~~~'.~ •••• •••• $800 SKlllY COTTON SUEDE BILLS $1500 N1vy ind lrown. Sites 21-l4 , ••• , • , , • , •• , .. 1 IUSK PANTS flARIS $1000 Lih1c and Mtroon, Slits 21-l6 , • , , , , •••.,,, .,... ... --.... ·~ ... \, !· .---._ \ .- w \ ' ~ ,....... \ L New :. KnltBits® flare out In patch pocket leans • KnltBlts' je1ns. A Jh1rp look ind right (11n fit ••• but with 1ddtd comfort of ruggBd knit th1t 1 gives and returns , for more. D1y's. 'lf!slt'llli) D1y'1. First in double knits. Now first In w1rp knits. Knit Bits. Your otharil1y'1 Knits. WrinklB resi1t1nt 100% D1cron• p9lytslBr thlfs m1chint w11h ind dry· 1bl1. Meet this greet new knit from D1y'sl Go com- fort1bly c11u1l In Knit Bits. Your Dther gr11t Day's knits. • • " AUO·OTHU FAMOUS IRAN!f INTl•WO'llll LYNETONE F•UJT-Of Tiil ~ l!Cttllll Ill T HAND l!Sll£ TIES ADLIA·SOCXS-MR. LEGGS ' \ DAIL l'ILOI "For The .. ... . ·Record • Marriage ' AllBUllKLll A SON WllSTCUFF MORTUARY U'I !. 111-SI., COi~· Mt11 I -• BALTZ BEJIOIJION FUNEIW. HO~IE Coron• del Mar lll.fl!O Colla Men 14HIH • BtLL 91\0ADWAY ~ MOllTVAllY Ut Bro1dw_,, Cuti M111 u 1-1111 • MeCOMQCK LAGUNA IEACD M0111"ARV t'ltl i..,... Clo)ol 11•. 114-tlll • P~CIFIC VIEW ~WIOIUAL PARg Ot_,, Mom11r1 Claaptl .. Pacllk \'ft" Ori\'t Nl•p111 Re•cll. catU1ml1 flf.r.11 • l'EU FAMILY COLONIAL nlNEl\Al. HOlll lltl ......... w-ruttr •um • SMITllS' MOJTVARY 117 -· ----·- ·- 'ldentiproof ed' Houses Safer? Br TOM IAIU.llY Of ,.._ OlllY l'lltl 11111 TWO ORANGE poUc;e lnveati&ators spent more than an hour In my homo recenUy, l?"rfotmlnc 1 11M1iet 11111 lhooJd, J think, be made 1vallabte to every homeowner 1n our eounty. ll's part or a determined cam- paign by Police O\ief Merrill Duncan to cut the Jones incurred by a climb- ing burglary rate in o.ur community and. Uke all such ideas, it's ab11urdly 1lmple and apparently most effective. We \t'!re warned before the in- vest.lgaton' vllil to have available all the household equJpment that ua:ualJY tops the hou8ebreaker's list or priori· .ties: televiliot'I aet1, tape recordera, "''' rtoOtd players ant), yes, the lawnmower. AU U lakll to get this kind of. protection is your drlv- er'I JlctnH and your cooperation. 'The investigators copied the nurnbers from my driver's license and used their st.amping device to perm411en1Jy record them on each lltm. · 1T WOULD take a major wf:ldlng job lo get those numbers out of the metal lnlo which they're firmJy af. rt.s .. And no buralar Js going to ruin the valuabl es he 's 1one lo IUCh lrollble lo steal. ThoM numbera on our valuables will not, of c."OUrse. prevent' buralarl... But the nollce clearly posted oil our home telll lllf Potential int.ruder that we've had the pren1- f1t1 "ldlnUprooled.11 Oranae Police are already convinced thal tho eylltm la beginning lo pay dividend!. Lut ypr thert were 880 burglaries Jn our city and they COit homeowners $166,000 . In property lo1111es. Only JO percent of the property taken in those break-Ins was ncovered. Cb.let Duncan, Connerly aaai.stant chief in Newport Bt1cb, thlnks burglarle1 will slump and recoveries or proptr1y will correspondlngly cUmb with more \\'!despread Ule or the "ldentlproof" sy11tem. ITtS GOING t.o lake time for his 1nen lo cover every home Jn the community, but they now have the help of te1m1 of volunteers who are trying to cope with lhe public rtlponH to the program. . Lat'1 hope I few more police departments have the forulcht to implement thl11 kind of program. l had my home burglarized and thoroughly cleared or • Jot of personal pas.sessions that hove never been re- covered so perhaps I waa more eager than most to get on thl~ anti·burgla7 btlndwagon. BUT, BELIEVE AfE, I wish J had known about "idenli- proof' before I \vas burglarized. Go "ldenliproof" and rtmember this -it could happen· to you . ' -· Super'7isors Eye· Paramedi~-Te41m the ~bl kind ol equlpmenl estlmales lbal a pilot program dt'Jai,lnJ his study. C..ptrs can stablliu a heart attack "'OU.Id cost $49,500 for I.be fll'lt alsO 1ugested that the pro- -victim's condllloo during the year. That would include 1nm l.'OUld tte in with • c:rtUcaJ. finl IO rnla\lta of an lrliniDa:, supp[t.11 tqUlpmenl ffi.enlly proposed c OU n l'f altlck while the vktlm Is in af\d the n)Oblle lntepaive care htllcop1er pJlrol and ruc1,:1e By JACK BR08AQ{ ol .. ~1¥ ,...., ..... • . SANTA ANA -Ori111i• Count1 &lpttYilort '" iJ>. ltrettld In 11t1bliJhlnl mobile peramtdlc t•ame tltat would provlda ftrat-llna modlcal lid tor lhe cr1tlc1Uy 111, or II> jurad. 'Mlty lndol'lltl the ldH ad- vanced by county Medical Cen ter Administrator Robert White Tuesday and ordered llltthor atudy to deltrmino how much t .. ma -could be orianlud, tral~ and flnanc· Id, Wbl11 11ld mobile paramedics, properly tr1lned and «j•lppe<I, ~Ollld HYO up lo 100 ur.. • Y•at 1n 0r11111 Counw. Whlle suaested that a paramedic program ln Orana:e County might be patterned Sacrame11to • Lob byist's Office OKd SANT A ANA -A full-time Orange County lobbyiala ofrlce Jn Sacramento to be establlah- ed by March l with !he cooperation of the County Supervisor• Association o f California (C,SAC ) was ap. proved 1'uetday by the Board of Supervltor1. Bo1rd Cb1lrman Ro n a I d Ca1pers, who sponsored the enla rged plolf'!nt; said the of· flee would be located at 11th and L streetf, across from the State Capitol within easy walking distance of the legislative chambers a n d assembly and senate offices. 'fed Craig, former speaker of the Assembly and longtime county representative i n Sa c ramento and John Anderson of the Co unty Counsel's office would con- tinue to operate the facility with · the aid of a new secretary selected by SCAC with the approval of the supervisors. The board members air proved transfer of '5.000 from the contingeney fund to the supervisors' general fund to finance the operation. Costs have been estimated by the County Administrative Office at $1,000 a month for of- fice space and $730 a month for the secretary. Arter one now operllting In Los ""'el11 County. It calla for lralnad paNmodlca lo rHpond to emergency rescue calls. For e1imple, White said, a mobile parainedie team with route to an lottnaiv• can unit· uttlt. wut. at • holplt1I. . 1 Cu 1ia· supervllors Ralph Clark The UM of p 1 ram e di c ~ ~t!e d c$• ~mt~ suuested that White'I 1tud:.r t11m1, 11 oppottd 1.o phyal· Supervlaon, iaJd the medical tn1'fll be tied ln to the prue11t ttl•n1. In tmergeocles was ap-administrator shoold c:onsult vrobe of i.."OUnty he a 1 t h proved by the s t at e with cities. the county Health ierviees being tooducted by a Legislature last year. Department and 1i..ft coufl· <.'Oruultltig firm under contract Wbite aaid Ute Santa An<i ·~ tJrt OeP11rtment hit U· tywtde health planning unit Ur to the coun~t)'..iiii . presltd interest in the pro-• sr1m. "Such a deportment would he the logical cliolce becanae of ill proalmJty lo the County Modlool C..ler and bleluaa ol Utt numblr ol poUtnta who origlnate in Santa Ana," Whlte said. The ntedicaJ center chiel HUNTINGTON BEACH ·HOST LIONS CLUB , ~lllllNTS THI S&N5ATIONAL - TRINIDAD STEE L BAND Saturday, February 19, 8:30 p.m. 'Toug her R u les' •t the Hur1tlngtoR Beach High School Auditorium Pollution Problem All Proceeds Used to Buy Eyeglasses for School Children I t•1t yeer the lion1 Club 1pent over ~800 .00 on th <• proieet) Gets Pub lic Airing..,_ Note: Thi s is Lhe 1nost !an1ous steel b11nd in the world -lias appeared on television \Ylth . .. Llberace -Has played in the Caribbean, tn ·Canada, and throughout the U.S. since 19SO. SANTA ANA -\Villia m Fitchen, the tounty's air pollution control officer, says he wants to tighten up some or h.is office's ru1es and regula- tions governing who may put what into the air over Orange County. County supervllort agreed Tuesday to let hlm hive a go at it. They scbedulH; 1 public hearing for April ii on detail- ed changes FJtchtn plans to propose. One ol UIOle chana:ts in- volYes inspection tee1 paid by varioUli industrial p l a n t s . Fltchen alys he y;anta to triple them . The air pollution watchdog said he expects 111plrited debal•11 on a nwnber of changu he will propo1e. One involve1 tlchter rettrlctlons on partlcu11t1 matter In the air. This will affect the\counly's asphalt and gravel plants in particular. Fitchen al.!O wants tighter restrictions on emissions from bulk petroleum plants and tougher measui:es governing BOlvent evaporation. He also ~ts more deba~ on his famous Rule 67, which regulates the amount o r pollutants tossed into the at- mosphere from plants such as Southern California Edison's Huntington Beach generating . Tickets • station. -~-__!~~!!!'~!Ill~!'~ LECTURE . . $3.00 $2.50 $2.00 • 11 MAY IE THE MOST VALUABLE EXPERIENCE O~· YOUR. LIFE. ESP h11 recently been designated a PURE SCIENCE by the sc ientific and 1c1demic. community in lhe U.S. and Russi1. LAGUNA 8EACH This lecture will discuss recent scientific findings in the area of PSYCHIC RESEARCH. DATE TIME ADMISSION l'LACE Tn11rsc11y Fet. JI l l'.M, 11141 I l'.M. n.IO L1911n1 Shor" H1IM Fndly Fe~. II I f'.M. lllf. l'.M. $2... 420 Cliff Drlvt DATE TIME ADMISSION l'LACE SAN CLEMeNTE Thwrld•y F1t. 17 , l'.M. Ind I l'.M. $1.to S•n Cllmtnlt Inn Creators of Psycllorientology and Mind Control (c) Copyright === BUY GEORGE! ALL CHERRIES ON 'SALE- FRIDA Y THROUGH SUNDAY ~ .• XL-100 SOLID STATE LOWEST PRICES ·wEST OF THE POTO ~AC CLOSED MON. ALL sns AT REG. PRICU JUii. • llRICID FROM $425. SUPER SPECIALS_ WHY BUY AT ABC? e. No Finance Charges If. All IC.A ,.,,,, •• 111. ,..,111,ft Dw•I s,..ii., ,... 9 • .,1,, So111ll ""'" ...... • XL-lff , . c.--. .. ,, • .... ,.. N• T•Mt I• Set .. e .. o.t. $ , . BEST f .. $- BUY ••• .. 25 Inch Dlatonal • O.h1•• weM co.i....,,. ..._IC.A .. 11,..111.., "'"""'"' ....... ,~·· TOP OP THI UNI ELECTRONICS YmHOUT EXPENSIVE CON SOLI CABIN~ COSTS Paid in 90 Days or No Down and 36 Mo nths t o Pay <O.A.C.J • 1 Year Free Parts • 1 Year Free Service • 3 Year Picture Tube Warranty Free D•livery and Set Up We Service What We Sell ·AT ABC WE KNOW THE PRODUCT INSIDE . AND OUT ~NOT JUST THE PRICE -... .. . • • w br go tb he Al pr be y br de ac pe tb pu qu l !C ' no no re tb an for pu bo by •g la As Ke ha ext •ts pro y ml lop qui Tb pe ty ne clli ha •• aa wi ml ... • ~++••+ _ __.._ ' Wtdneid•Y. Ftbru.ary 16, J ~n DAILY l'ILOT GOP Dissidents J u· , . ar -ISa(lrie Stone Unearthed· He1 .s;v::: .,: "'m' ~•l&hln& .. much .. 20 FALSE r£frH Cl1allenge Nixo11 ~ ...,. .-WASHINGTON (API -Thf' associite at tht Smithsonian chance fmd 'by· a farmer in and an lld\•i!ltr to lhP NRllnn3\ Mexico of a fragment of 111 Geograp 1r Soc-1r1 .'. large stone monu ment hall "Thtr ~·as always a httle conflrmed Lhe old('~t recorded doubt." Stirling ia1d . "Thl!'i d11te In Ille Nt"' World. llf'Y.' fr 1ncnl deinonstrntell him rl&:ht Tn the llmee calen- dar a bar stood for flvt and 1 dot for o~ The myslery of this ancle.nt jijl:saw was plf'C'td to~ether by Dr. ~tlchael D. Coe. 11 ,.1'1t Unl\'tnlty t xpert on lhe Olmecs, with the atd 1( a din1 photoe:raph taken lfl ht: Trts Z..pole!I ~jail hy 1''r1 nclSC'O Beverido, a fritnd and t'OI· le11gue from the Unl \·erslty of \lt:rllCf Ul. tons . I Worrlu ancl frablem1 , C"nrWd•r a d•nlll"' ada.I"' rA~ \ lrtUlll)' nothing ls knoy.·n of TEl!:TU• Puwd« dn1111 all If l~isl th 01 . I I 11 Halps h.old UPPll'l ... '"""' e Met'S or111: n, 1ngu111g~ lonr•r. lirm•r, •ltadlu . t) tlolC• SACRAMENTO (APl Cov. Ron.ild Re a ga n 'a California campaign to re- elect President Nixon will be met by a group of dbsident conser\tatives who lp'e plotUng an anti-Nixon drive. "The time to remove the in· cumbent President is long overdue ," declared Walte.r Hintzen, state chairman of the United Republ i cans of California , in calljng a weekend meeting of I h e organization . The group plans to draft an del'llles in Ille Junt I primary, Hlntu.n said. UROC cal~ itself "constitullon1Uy oriented" group and claims 1 0 , 0 0 0 members out ~r 3.1 million RepYblicans in California. The organiution alwa ys has been an enthusiaslic Reagan sup-~~ifjt~~~ Porter. t1 Asked about the anti-Nixon campaign, recently, Reagan said. "I recognize their right to do it ." It 1n8tches perfectly the bt~'ond 11 y questio n lhRI our broken stela uneovered by o · · al lt reading was ('(lt· archeologist Pitatthew \Y . Stirl· t a tht stcla predated the lng ¥,.hile on an expedition al "tayss. Tht Olmecs de\'lllrd the same site in 1939 for the thC' bar and dot <'ale.nd:ir National Georgraph1c Society originally Ctt'Chted to tho aOO tbt. Smithsonian lnslltu-.i\layBs." ·lion. T~ piere whirh $t1rhnll: The date equates to 31 BC'. found in 1939 is the botton1 The missing fragment of the par! nf the monun1ent. btar1ng Olmec s1one n1onun1ent y.·as a serie!I of bars and dots . II~ unearthed nea r the small predict ed thr n that if the village of Trt's Zapotes in the missing part wtre t\•er fou nd state of Ve racruz. It delighted it would ha \·p a bar and lwo Stirling. now a r es e a r r h dots . The farmer's find proves Thtt Ol~s appeRred 1'bou t 1200 8 C. "'hen tht1r rehglnus centers -the nrst 1ha~ 11rchNJto~lsts know of In Mid- dle An1t'rita -bei Rn risin$:'. like the cathrdrRI to"'T\S o( 1ned1tvAl l':uropt. The}' rhlst l· ed C'Olossal hehnt"ted hend s, or ulUmalt fa te. Th e Ir lh•m mM-1 (omlM1.11bb .. l l HM.Pi 10ll ffl 1nnN nah1r.illy, W\\)' "°"'Yt c\\•11\ution r1n1e io an In. u .. t'A$TEETH n.ntw. A4• llV111 Pvwdor. O.n111rM tb•t ftt \N t lplicable eond before the blrth -nual 10 bw.ltll. s.. '°"' ckauat or Christ. , . r.r~arl)'. The opposite !lldt of 1hrl---'---------- monu111ent 11•1!h the 31 B r N'EARL Y d1 te dtplcls a flt rre ntonstl'r fRCP and ornatt htadrirrss ron1mon in Olme<· S<'Ulplurr EVERYONE Slnrr thtre \\f'rt no 1n~·1al tools in !hr Area 111 !hr tun1\ th• cordn, "'"'' h"'·' h'"' LISTENS TO done Y.'Llh ~Inn .. nnd 1ll!'rhrqis Mmboo 1nstrun1tnl~ ~and m1v hA\e bPtn u~td •!I 1111 · 11brRsh•e. L.<\.NDERS anti-Nixon campaign for the ---- J une 6 primary. The session will open the day after Reagan appoints his 96 -member Nixon -pledged delegation to the Republican NaJional Convention. Reagan aides have sifted through thousands of GOP names in pic king a represen- tative delegation. said Robert C. Walker, a special assistant to Reagan. "We feel there will be more minorit ies, young people and wo men on our delegation than ever before," he said. The United Republicans will meet Friday through S1,1nday al a seaside resort hotel in Santa Barbara to decide what course its anti-Nixon cam· paign will take. The re will ~ resolutions to back Rep. John Ashbrook of Ohio who has entered some primaries as conservative op- position to Ni xon. Another alternati ve would be lo challenge the Nixon. Reagan California c&l'npai1n wit h an unpledged slate of Brochure Lists Bans On Secrecy SACRAMENTO ( APl - A brochure designed to help government.II· bodiu follow the .l1w on public meetings is being distributed by Californ ia Atty. Gen. Evelle J . Younger. The publication covers the Ralph M. Brown Act and other secret meeting laws. Purpose of the law "Is to prevent ·government t r o m being conducted in secret." Younger poin ted out in the brochure. The law requires 11that the deliberations as well u the actions of local agencies are performed !!l meetings open to the public and to which the public has been given ade- quate notice," Younger said in announcing the publication. It applies to cities, counliH, school diltricl! and other special dislrlcts, Y o u n 1 e r noted. He said the act also covers n o n • p r o f i t organiza tions receiv ing public funds under the Economic Opportunity Arl and non-profi t corporations formed to acquire or operate public workll projects if the board cf directer• is lormed by an appointed by a public agency. !:1empt from the secrecy laws is the C a I i Io r n l a Ass em b I y m a n Wi lliam Ketchum , (R·Paso Robles), has introduced legislation to utend an tisecrecy rules to state lawmakers. Similar legisl ation Wl!s ap· proved in the ·Assembly last year but died in a Senate com· mlttee. The . law exempts certain topics from the public re- quirement, Younger noted . - They include dlacu11ion of personnel milters, the securl· ty of public faclliUes and labor negotiations once a state con- ciliator has Intervened. Yqunger said the courts also have recognized an implied exception to permit a local arie~y to confer privately with it.s attorney oo Utlga~io1111. Violation af the law is a misdemeanor. he llld. Ahwt11...... • MOBILE CHEST XRAY UNIT IN LAGUNA BEACH ........ w.. ............... ~ II·. nc.tlW llHltt. ,,_. .... ,., ......... '"" °'" ... c.-" .... wlll ..... .. .,,..,..tty "" ....... ... ......... ef ... ....,. .. .,.. ..Wle .............. .,. t11e C•Uf ...... C.. J..., ,_., ........... _ ...... ...... ..... ,.. .... , ....... Ltlt ... IMd U:1ttfl4lll k ..... Dltfrkt °"*· ......... "'-'· n.nuJ, ,..,..,, 17. M..,. wll .. t " ... ,. 11" , .•. -4 6:Jt .. 1:00 , ... • ,. .... ,.., .., • ~ Affl· .... ........... ....,. ••• u .... ........................ ~ .... -................... .. •• ~ ... ,.,*"911. ........... ~ .......... ,, .,..,. ., ...... ~hr • _ ........... _ ....... ,, ...... . ''PRISTONE'' ANTI-FR!~~~.,,; .. ~ ''•'•"' , .. n .... i •-rtorn 1,..,. •ncl t" ont. 1 ,....,. ,.. ... -· ~ ..... ..,...h ...... , ... ,,, 1tn WESTERN PANELING Fi"' qtHtllty, 1v1r 1i10' ft. 11 I fl. th••t•. Seloct fr•m f•1,1r [Mpulor th41d••· lc•l'I• emy priced iNt INavtlhll. 99 . •R.1 '"·SHllTS SHUT • AMGILS llG. LOW 'IUCI 2." ~---~---,•j(i(i''-iiJi"ii"iiiiiii-- 1 Yt•YL CLAD 8 8 letltl tcufft '""' Mratch•t. Jut! wo1h it .ff . ellmhtoln pcitn lin9 ,., ..... ,. •n .• an.slims llO, J .H SHiil , "OlD WORLD" SllllT NOTTYCEDAR 88 711GSAUDAYS • REPUBLIC !30GAL. I WATER I .HEATER Glass lined w ith automatic tempft· ature control and safety valve. Popu• lor brand, SPECIAL PRICI 4·1~ -- VINYL PAINT DECORATORS I .,,,.__.,. .... -..... - VISIT OUR MEW WALLPAPER DEPARTMENT ANGIL$ REG. 4.79 .. ''"•••h ·r.···"· "'O 1'111yl ,... ,. ..... w•llo & ••ii;ne• .. ••!ot!.fllllfC• Whl!f .... ,. --"""~· n. x. n. IHIUI. 3/8 INCH tOUTtlllN .· (AU,OINIA •S aOSTCOll'tlTI "JNllfJMO'" ALL BOARD FAMOUS G.P. QUALITY Priced low, low; low. AN OILS 110. LOW ,11(1 1,6t 12 iN. X 4 FT. PARTICLE-BOARD ·. SHELVING Pte•<Uf and rtady te·lnstall. ANGIL$ uo. lOW ,.,,. ... '1ASY.DO" GA,AGI I I I 12" w l4l1. I Ouollty f•ll 11 with 4le1on1 I •f homo Ul•t. I .FEB.17thruFEl.ll lfl•OO ..... -.. .. """ ~ ..... CMIM '"" '"''°' t'-"•t -co.ti fllH. ""'""•• ollff-..... llOllt ""''""' "C•1t 11111 .... . M•O 1 i,, ....... e'-•• loo 1-"'"· C1•I f\11if19a, ;liH.,.Nt -4 llft• OWl,l•h, 1•02 l"•''"t '-tl ........... ..-. "" .... il..t• ...... _ ... .... .......... . M•OJ 1"•10" e••""t'-" M .,-.. ., ......... t. .. liHllltt, ......... , ... ~ ... IWINll. *•o•.10 ... ,, .. .,..~ -11 • ...,.. ......... 1wo111. 88 ••• srlCIAI PURCHAll MADI TO llU JOR 11.15 ··1tACK JUMIO" DRIVEWAY DRESSING Seal• porea In a•· phalt dtlveway1 , Bri ghten• ond pro· teclt, Easy to apreacl with broom or mop. GALLON SIZE .... UTILITY CAN Duroltlo plo1tl<. 'o' th• t•r, t•mpor, lteot. Com,ltt• with ,.1uln1 •!MVI , lO:I ,S~,tOWI l 15 "· IOU 10Ll i 5/8'' SANDID PLYWOOD DOUGLAS FIR S1totl•I price ftr thla NI•, CONITRUCTION lUMllR I ' lONO LASTING llDWOOO OUGLA5 Fl. BENDER 2X6 : BOARD lfT.·10,f.·12 I C l•11hW11 ·ft _ _,_ I ff. l1n1th1. I wllh 11!. _,..., .. J" llM. ,~~ ·,~· 16el •. i . ·~lr~·4 .... , .... e rr rt•\l. n. I t • UN. JT, n, ---------~-----------------------' 6 JT. HIGH o IUSllC REDWOOD FENCi Cemp~t•r lftdu4t1, lt616 ft , , ....... ,.ftCI M.141, 41411 ft . ,.., •• , ..... fl. ,.11 •. c.111., .... 1, rutll ANGIU llG. LOW 'IKI I .to SHELF BRACKET CONCRETE 60.LB •. BAG -l •h•lf vnlt. Saf• IMcl wp I• 350 lh1. ,... 1helf whon •ll•the41 I• 11wnd 1u,,.rllr11 w•ll. Meuntt wllh only .en• tUOW '9f lttotlttt. • -88 IA(N -........ 49 WOiff. e ,_, .• , .. <-•-""''--""' .. , ... ,,,1.11 IA' DOWlllY. NORWALK. flftSTOll ll VI . AT STUlllAUI 'Ui 1 IA Sf Of .OS ftwY GARDIN GROVE 12'61 (llAPMAI leo YOJ IA•t Of NAHCM MVJ ' . • ' • ~' ,., '" • • •• . ' • ' • • • ~OMMUNICA TIONS WILL SPAN PACIFIC ALONG THIS SPACE ROUTE Vehicle Will C1rry Television' R•ports of Nixon'• Visit ' Progress On Rights Declared WASHINGTON <U PI) Defending its ciyil rights record, lhe White House issued a special report cilini progress in seven areas of "civil rights 'and related soelal programs." The report, drafted by the White· tlouse staff. listed forward steps In employment of blacks, education. juslice, welfare, minority business, hOusing and drug abuSe. '"", "This Is to put the record out and let people know there is concern for all segmen ts of · life in this administration." said Stanley Scott , assistant to the White llouse director of communications. "We have nothing to be ashamed of,'· l Communications Satellite The report f o ll owed criticism that Pfesident Nixon was oot vigorously enforcing civil rights Jaws and was not doing enough to f u r t h e r guarantee the civ il liberties of all Americans. . ' Poised for Nixon's Talks . > • WASHINGTON (fJ') -A ntW communlctitions satellite bu .gooi into operation this week-22 ,3 00 miles in e;pace;:..just in Jirf\e to carry televllion and n e w s p a p e r reports of Pre!!ident Nixon's vl!lt to China. 'there will be at least one V,®nd station. and possibly 1~· to transmit live televlsjon 8nd written stories of the visit that begins Febc 21. The satellite, known as Inf.elsat 4, can carry 5,000 t*phone or 12 color television c:ifcuits slmultaneously.,more tha'n four' times the number ·or Jntelsat S which it· replaces. t fl temporary earth station· two moving vans w\th a giant antenna on top-already is set UA in Peking. It la possible a second made-in-U.S.A, ground station will be operaUng from ~nghai, another NlJ:on stop, bfFeb. 24. 'l'he. 1ate11 it es relay teleprinter and television im· ages as well as news pictures from one groµnd station to. another ·via the satellite. The station that will be used in the United states is·in Jamesburg, Cali!. "From there distribution is via land lines. The new satellite w a s launched in January. It links transmitting stations from Australia, Taiwan , Hong Kong, Korea , Japan, New Zealand, the Philippines, Thailand and the United States. In addition to Jamesburg, the U.S. ha s receiving-sending stations in Ala ska , Washington state , Hawaii and Guam. The tl~.ree major television networir,? plan llve broadcasts of the President's lout rrom Peking only. But RCA Corp. has received an "export license for-. a· ~nent 1round sta· · tion' in Shanghai which will pennit 8n expansion of com- munications .between China and the rest of the world; The $13.S-milllon lntelsat 4 is in a stationary orbit above the equator in mid-Pacific. The' Peking ground station built iby Hughes Tool Co. and leased to lhe Chinese govem- JAent will be removed after Nixoii's departure. The Associated Press will have six staff membe rs cover- ing Jhe Nixon ,ttip with. pic- tures and stories. From the groi.lnd st'ation in Jamesburg these storles and photos will be relayed to AP headquarters in New YOrk and will be mov- ed quickly from there to hewspa~rs and television and radiO • stations around the world. The 45,000-mile,-trip from Peklf!i to Jamtsllurg will be acco mplished in less than <:"" a half second. .tlp to Court ' An 8.1-nat.i-On partnership called • the International 'telecommunications Satellite Consortiwn, fntelsat operates the satellite. Comsat. t~e Communications S a l e 11 i t e (;(irp'. which ripresents the United States in the joint ven- ture owns 52.5 percent of lhe l.ntelsat system. §an Djego Waits Rllling • • ··On Busing of Students SAN DIEGO (AP ) -School officials sa"y they probablf will have to resort to busing 12,000 stbdents ir the district ts ·ordered to achieve racial balance in its elementary and H:COndary schools. The state attorn!!Y general's ofiice charged the district with ra,cial imbalance in a 1969 suii. Since then the matter has been tied up in court. At present the district is waiting to hear whet~er the U.S. Supreme Court will hear its a'ppeal of a lower court rul· Ing that the district must stand trial on the state's charges. "If the court orders it. we 'll have two options," says Dr. Howard Crofts, d e p u t y sup e r Jn ten d en t for ad· ministration.. "Move l he schools or move the st udents. And moving the schools isn't too practical. That leaves us with t ransporting lhe students." George W-Smith, a member of the board of education, agrees. But Thoma!! McJunldns, director of in-- tergroup education. says there tnlghl be alternatives. "How else are we going to move those students around ?" Smith said. "If anyone from the President on down to San Di ego can tell me how we can balance the schools and not SOFT SELL SAM bus -students, I wisQ they'd tell . me." McJunkins said, "It depend! on what the court says., If· time is not too tight. there are other ways we mighr dO it." He said the district might be able to double the number of students in a volunteer transfer program to 3-,800 and attract students to ·certain schools by offering career and skill courses. The district's m i nor i t y enrollment is estimated al 12 to..15 percent. lf the Supreme Court refuses to hear the matter, as California's high court did , it will in effect uphold the state Court of Appeal's ruling last Aug. 16 that the case must go to trial. The 1appeals court held in that <fe<!ision that r a c i a I segregation in some cases can be illegal even if it's a result of housing patterns -as school officials here have argued -and not lhe intent or school trustee1. However, the court said"that - the attorney general's offjce would have to prove in a trial that such segregation existed, that it "denies t~ nlinority group equal educational op- portunities" and that the district had means f t o "reasonably" m a k e ad- justments. by Marvin Myers r\ To rebut these crilics, the report listed these h"ighlights of the administration's civil rights record: -Federal civilian minority employment increased from 389,2!)1 in 1969 to 390,051 last May , meaning that minority workers hold 19.5 percent of the government nonmilitary jobs. The President has ap- po in ted seven black ambassadorS. increased the number of black military of- ficers of general or flag of- ficer rank from two to seven and increased the number of blacks in governmeilt "super- grades" jobs from 63 to nearly 100. -The percentage of black childien in all-black schools nat ionwide decreased from 40 percent In 1968 to a n estimated 12 percent last fall. Aid to black colleges has more than doubled from the 1969 spending level. -The Justice Department has increased its staff of at- torneys to enforce the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which bars federal aid to schools that di.Scriminate. from 93 in 1969 to 185 this year. -The number of counti"es not offeringJood stamps To the poor has been reduced from 440 .. in January, 1969, to nine and the nwnber of persops aided.has quadrupled. ., . . ' . . DAILY 9:30-9, SUNDAY 11 ·6 COSTA MESA 333 E. 17th St. .. OJ'I ,.. lor"•t .... '~-··-··· 9JS M )IDfR CANPIPATf, DR IS 7WS AH CO 'PAAG:N ET' RE·RUtl ~" · \ I ORANGE 464 S. Main St. • --- ·You' re lnvit ed to . . . --.,. . Ge> oq1ene A FABULOUS MINI VACATION THAT TAKES YOU IN ONE EVENING TO • • • JAPAN KOREA TAIWAN P·HILIPPINES MACAU THAILAND . HONG KONG 90~ Minutes of Live Entertainment and Unforgettable Color Movies Thursd11.y. Feb. 24 ot 8 p.m. Orange Co 11st Colle ge Auditori um 270 I F11 irvie w Road , Cos l11 Mesa Co.sponsored by Orange Coast DAILY PILOT • Orange Coast Eve nin g College P11 rt of Eve ning Colleg e Lecture Series Fr ee Tickets Av11i l11ble Now ot • All DAILY PILOT. Offices • Or11nge Co11 st College • Golden Wes t Coll ege • Are• Tra vel Age ncies HURRY-TICKET SUPPLY IS LIMITED Program, Free Gifts Presented by EAST ASIA TR~ VEL ASSOCIATION '-. • VALUES JO 14;99 LADIES' VAiUES TO 3~;99 -Go oqiene -" - - - r rw:o""a ru - VALUES TO 32.99 dress shoes ' men .' s' shoes • none over hattdbags ' . . VALUES TO 17.~ • 50% off 1 dnd · · more • \ • ' • I. L. /ti, Bo9d ' John L: Faked Out of Crown ''In tbe battle for etislence, la.leaf II tbe JM.Inch, and tact 11 tile clever footwork." WllM>n Mizner ~t great superstitious fi&tfilhter of yesteryear, John L. Sullivan, never allowed himself to enter lhe ring ahead of his opponent. By never, I mean almost. One fighter, who knew all about old John'a fear of the jinx, tricked him. This cunning character preceded Sullivan to ring: side, then turned back at the la.st moment. Sullivan found hlmself through the ropes nrsl And .21 rounds later ,that savvy soul, GenUeman Jim Corbett, was world champ. Told you, didn't I, that throughout his entire fighting career, Corbett never got a blackeye or a bloody nose? Th.at, too, b1 true. POUND FOR POUND, you can get more cabbage off an acre or ground than any other vegetable, if all grows well . l\1ANY IS the efflcial city fire engine in Paris that' just a motorcycle under two men with an extinguisher. EXACTLY 21 years ago, only four African nations were called independent. Today more than 40 are so de- clared. ' TRAD...ERS -\Veight o! the trailer ought not ei:ceed half the weight of the car that pulls tt. Such is the rec· ommendation of the National Safety Council. How many rigs would be run off the road, do you suppose, It .that pretty little piece of advice were enforced? Quite a many, no? AGAIN A~t asked if any unboril child ever can be heard to cry out loud. Absolutely. Jn one instance, t.he medical records show. such an Infant sobbed for 40 min· utes. ln another case, an unborn baby cried so lou~ly it was heard by nurS4!s on the other side of the delivery room. , Q. "WllAT, in the vernacular. is a dip?" A. A pickporket. Q. "WHAT'S amber?'' A. Petriried resin . CELERY -11adam, Is your celery wilted? All right. slice a spud into cold water, add the celery, and let stand for an hour. ThJ-t ought to crisp It up. AVERAGt!'AGE of U.S. Supreme Court justices upon appointment ls 57 years six months. Of associate jusUces since the turn of the century, 54 years four months. • THAT WOl\1EN tend to be more conservative political· ly than their hiisbands is al50 a fact now est11bllshed by the survey takers. Addrl!!ss moil to L. ~f. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1815, New. port Btacll, Calif.'92660. History Preser.ved--- Last ·Peanut Truck SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - The Board of Permit Appeals has Wiled to protect a vanishing institution-the last Blacks Slate Feb. 26 Meet LONG BEACH (UPI) - Calltomla's 225 delegates to the National Black Political Convention will be named Feb. 26 during a meeting in Long Beach. The convention will be held Jn Gary. Ind., March 10-12. · The Long Beach meeting wW be the last of four meetings in California. Earlier 11esslons were at Sacramento, Los Angeles and East Palo Alto. pe.anut and popCorn truck tn the city. Chrag ltfohammed came to San Francisco ln 1910 and began street vendlng that ye<tr. ' Mohammed had to go before the board because his business was overlooked when the mobile catering law was rewritten last )'tlll' by the Board of Supervisors. Mohammed was told that he would be charged the 17,500 fee for such new permits, but when the case came up the board waived thfl e n t I r e amount. "He's as now and 11 begin· nlng to think about retiring," said his attorney: But Mohammed 11ld be wlll continue operating the popcorn truck for a while although he won't ''Work too hard." ..... 1'1lllk1l AfV1rtlM"*'I VOTER RE'GISTRATION Closes February 17 IThulllday I TO RE-ELECT ROBERT M. WILSON TO COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL . April 11, 1972 • YOU MUST BE REGISTERED You Qu1llfyU: 11 yrs. of agt or old•r. 90 d1ys In C•lllomlo. 90 d1ys In Or1ngt County. 54 dtys In yvur prHlnct. f'f, fW W Ctl'MIMM " ,...ltd 11t.-.n M, WI"" It.,. St-.., Tr .. 11tm1 t2.t ArnMnt, Cttl1,Mtu \ • Women Accuse Berkeley 8,\N FRANCISCO (UPI) - Twelve women membfrs of the academic comRlunlty of the University of California in Berkeley have filed s u I t against the school and its regents, ch arg i ng sex discrimination. T h e plaintiffs. ·Including women faculty members, non- academics and g r a d u a t e students, c It e d unlverslty- gathered @tatlstlcs they said showed dl.scrimlnation against women that .. parallels that ' the State of Mlssissipp against blacks." The women said they do no want to "punish" the unlve . ty nor to seek "future emp Oy· ment 'preferences," bµt hoped by the year 2000 to ha ve a percentage of women on the faculty and In managerial positions equal to the percen- tage or women in the work force. USE OUR :ONVENIENT CUDIT TUMS • AU LABOR CARRIES A · UFETIMll Bacl1elo1· Seeks ' Women's Rights SACRAMENTO <UPl) -nanked by members of the Leg Is I at Ion to end National Organlzntion or ''dlscrintlnatlon n g a Inst \Vonten (NO\V ). as t hey California women has been disclosed their measure. None proposed on the birthday ot or the Legislature's three Susan B. Anthony, a 19th cen· women 1nc1nbers were tury freedom llghter for ·present. women's rights. Karablan said his legislallon "Slxty~lx years " rte r would have wide-ranging el· Susan's death we still find feels, ranging from changing women filling the roles of· the portrayal of women in second-class citizens," 11ald 11tatt school textbooks as "less bachelor Assemblyntan Walter than full-fledged members of Karabian. ()).Monterey Park ). society" to elimination or l!e told a news conference "male only" and "female Tuesday his proposed con· ooly" deslgni.tlons ln help- stltutional amendment would wanted ads. be "a significant step rorward Barbara Leerskor or NOW In the e 11 m In a t I an or said it was "fitting" that discrimination between men Karablan's proposal was made and women." on the anniversary of the Karabian'a amendment_ birthday of "Ms." Anthony, would read, "Equality of who in um was arrested, tried rights under the law shall not and fined for voting In a be denied or abridged on ac· presidential election. count of sex." It was the first time such a Karablan and the Senate constitutional amendment has coauthor, Democrat Mervyn been introduced in t h e Dymally of Los Angeles, were legislature. GUARANTEE ~ ....... -~~ • , • ,. < DAIL V PILOT YOU ARE INVITED ton HAMMOND HAPPENING llcar To1ruuy 'l'hon1pson play your Iav~ orj10 t11 nt·1 on your choice of 1-111.rnmond Or~ao11. 'fo1nn1y 'fhon1pson is an inter- national stnr n{ lhc Hiuntnond Organ, nncl he is hert' lo cntcrta in you nt • slore porly (1 11 l;'riday, Fri•. 18 15 follow11 : s,nta Ana.Store Fri. Afternoon from 1 :00 to 5:00 P.M. 2033 N. Ma in St. Corona Del Mar Store Fri. Eve. from 7:00 to 9:00 P.M. 2854 E. Cots! Hwy. Come one ond all and enioy !he fun. Refreshments. Door Prizes. HAMMOND ORGAN STUDIOS of Orange County and the Orange Coost 547-0351 644-8930 WE'RE CUTTING PRICES ON LUXURI- OUS CARPET A ND THROWING IN THE PADDING AND INSTALLATION BE· CAUSE OUR STOCKS MUST BE CLEARED OUT FAST. IF YOU NEED CARPET NOW'S THE TIME TO BUY IT. 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I tr. 2.00 LOOSE~ULK "Hot" Fancy , WHOLl CASHEWS LiiM~ Salt1i .•• Always fresl 11i Tyt)! ,.,, 1. 71 1 39 1 u. • " ' \ iuMeo Personal File With index folders & moveable divider.-3 33 Recessed handle, loc k &'i<ey in Walnut or Avocado color. Ref. 4159 • Check File 191!14W'J ... Contains monthly inde.t 2 39 folders and divider with lock & key. Wa lnut or Avocado color._ R11. 3.25 • . E~PANDIN& Files · Re1. 1.59 Indexed Alphabetical~ • : . ggc 119 wiili 12 pockets in heayY . kraft pa per. Rer. 1.39 • . Tablets· or Envelopes STUART IW.L-200 Sl\eets151119"1 • ruled or plain sl)le tablet or 100 Cl. -.c9c 31;16W' enve~pes. Ror. Sic \I 11 . 3 Ring Binder MIH6SB•CHll•M11RPKY 1'Val111 Pack" ••• Rich looking 1in~ is sealed over heivy~ ~rd-wi~ 79c chp. .. ,. lie Address Book With indexed sections for recording . birthd~, tnnl- • versaries, ett. Rer. 1.11 37c nuPHoN• FHler Paper List Finder u sruARf KALL ... , _ "*1.,111r 3-Hole •r11clll$,t" -;-UW~ue W'"" or College nile. iiidex w/pel\Cll. 1300 300Sh1tsa11.69t ~:6 2.39 2il .00 . • \ I,. , ,• .. 17 ' "' tak old •Ir to Fa Re ~lig SU~ b<it ho rell lnl wiri rec po Hu .. wit SO I lett but left he th ' bou T foul cha San ed. ma A alt oai Ing an Sal ol of pi w( A .. f • . -~ -·-·------------------. ··-·· --. ----._ Oot FeUd Brewing Betwe·en Olympians • DETROIT !APJ -A bol leud ~ bub- bling between two or Michigan 's three participants in the recently completed \Vinter Olympio Games at Sapporo, Japao. i sh1ila Young, 2G-year~ld Del r o It s~skater who narr&wl y missed a brodze medal Jn the 500-meter race, has pllijlcly criticized 40.Year-old teammate Jea~ne Omelen chuk, drawing a strong re~ponse from Mrs. Omelenchuk's hus- b•nd George. Fagans: ·A Man To Be Adn1ired For · Cou_rage ~1onday night 's St. Valentine's Day basketball massacre didn't change m.Y opinion of losing al all but It surely did give me the impression tltat Clf' com- missioner Ken Fagans is a man of class and~ man wro must' ha ve been a super player during" his YQUth. Fagans showed up for the game with the DAILY PILOT !resh from a trip to Hollywood Where he had a couple of cOr· e LENN WHIT• ---------WHITE WASH ·-------- tison e shots to kill the pain in the knee he 1nj6red in practice Friday.' • "We are going lo 1ue Sheila Young for slander," be was quoted by Uie Detroit News as saying Tuesday. · • T he Omelenchuks don't bother anybody. But the skaters around ht'lre (Det roit ) have been j!!OSSifling about for years. JeaMe sa id she never said a word to Shella . The gos~ip hurt us." The Detroit News said Miss Young, in Detroit brieny Tuesday before heading for Sweden to compete ln the World sprint championships had been quoted as I f ·;, . 1 ~· saying of Mrs. Omelencbuk, "She doesn 'I sprint championships, had been quoted as belong on the team ... she'.11 too old ... she's lousy for team morale and I'm asha1ned she's from Detroit." However , the News said Miss Young clarified her position Tuesday. "I said she wa sn't good enough lD be on the team, but. I nevei called her an old lady. She never spoke to the rest of us. When we were flying to Japan,. she wouldn 't change seats with Lea Poulos of Northbrook. Ill .• IO 'A't'l could sit together. Jeal1he '1 Attitude surprised th~ other kids. ,;l roomed with Annie Henning and Connie Carpenter.'' sbe. added. ''They didn't like her. Annit'l had run-Ins with Jeanne -nothing major -but small spats. Jeanne was most difficult to talk to at any time and the girls stayed away from her. · "She didn 't belong oo the team. In the 3.000-mett'lr, her specialty, she finished 22nd. That was last." The knee was wrapped but Fagans surel y didn't pla y under wraps. He ran, y,•or.ked for his shots and scored nine point s' in the f.irst half. Nol bad for any man . But when you take into consideration that he is 62 years old ·and was risking further injury to an already hobbled knee. you can only come to feel reSpect and admiration for Fagana. Def etads Feather Crown European featherweight champion Jose Legra (right) of Spain lands a right on the head of Scottish challenger Evan Armstrong. Legra defended title with a unanimous 15-round· decision. his * * * An amazing report from the Santa Ana Regi.ster regar.dlng Thursday's Santa Ana High-Hunti,,gton Beach basketball game su~ests 1th~t the newspaper (1) didn't b6ther to send 1 reporter to its own hometown 1Choolts event or 'tt) that It relied on a phone report ol the game for information to write a story or (3) the rePQrter wai" sleeping If one was there. To wit: 111e printed report· of Sa nla Ana's ~-52 wiri is as follows with appropriate co~ rections in pare11thesis: "There was never more than a three- poipt marg in in either direction in tht'l se- cond half (Santa Ana led 44-40, 46-42 and Huntin&ton led 5~7 /. """ ''Randy Heman's 10..foot jump shot with 40 seconds left gave the SainLs a 53- 50 lead (Heman'.s shot with 21 seconds left put Santa Ana back in the lead, 53-52) but Brooks was fouled with 30 seconds left for another one-and-one situation and he convertel:J (Brooks last hit a free throw with 2:24 to play). ''Huntington Beach had two more op- portunities but Ronny Harrell stole the ball (he had no steals in the last minute but he did try a free throw with five seronds to go, missing and Huntington re- bou'ndin~). • The stCJry continues :-"And Brooks was f<luled but failed to convert the fir st charity toss with seven seconds left and Santa Ana ~ot the rebound '(BrOQks miss- ed a field goal with eight seconds re- maining and the Sainta rebounded)." A distressing distortion of accuracy. Disappointed Austrian Whiz Calls It Quits • VI;NNA ~l -Skiing idol Karl Schranz retired Tuesday -just one week after Austria celebrated him .as a na- tional hero out of sympathy for his dis· qualification from the Olympic Games on ctiarges or professionalism. In a letter to Karl-Heinz Klee. presi- dent of the Austrian Ski Federation, Schran~. at 33 one of the oldest and most SUC{:essrankiers ever in Ute history of the sport, said he retired becaust'l of un- fair treafment and promises broken by international sports off icials. Schranz said his decision to leave the international skiing circuit ultimately ~·as prompted by failure of the Interna- tional Ski FederatiCJn (FIS) to stage St'lparate world championships despite previous assurances. At the time the Schranz case was receiving an internll tional airing , FIS of- ficials indi cated they would go ahead '11it h their own world championships ii any skiers were barred from Olympic competit ion. That,·however. never came about, and apparentJy disturbed Schranz. "What tipped the scales," Schran z wrote in his retirement letter. "was thi:it FIS broke its word by not holding world championships. "In addition to the great strains that go along with competitive sporLs. the assaults from all sides launched against myself are too much to cope with." $5,360 in _Bogus Tickets BOWIE; Md . (AP) -Four bogus e.xacta tickets were cashed for $5.360 at Bowie Race C:OUrse Monday by thieves· who had two days to make the tedious alterations. • J\IY Kennedy of lhe American Totalizator Co., who reported the IOS!I Tuesday, said two winning $~() exact.a tickets on Saturday's ninth race were cas hed In the din- ing room and two mort In the grandstand: , Bob Hancock, Bowie's mutuels manager. said lwo valid $10 tickeLs on Templar and Best Charger, No. 5 and 6, still had not been cashed by Tuesday. The bogu~ tickets showed the 5-6 combination from a previous exacta race on Saturday, onto which the correct code numbers had been pasted after-being shaved frnm njntb·race tickets with a razor blade. Kannedy said because delcction was difficult. the American TotalizafOf' Co. would absorb the loss instead of forcipg lhe cashiers to make it up. Meanwhile. Kennedy said cashiers would be instructed on how to detect such alterations. La~olling Along; Mows ·Down Opponent TORONTO -Top-seeded kod Laver and Au stralian Ken Rosewall scored straight~set victorfes"'Tuesday night in the firi;t round of a $50,000 World Cham- pionship Tennis tournament w h 11 e Graham Stilwell of Great Britain upset Arthur Mhe, 6-4, 6-4. Laver beat Brian Fairlie of New Zea land 6-3, 6-4 and Rosewall, seeded se- cond, beat another Australian, Phil Dent, r..<, &-2. The 26-year~ld Stilwell broke Ashe's service in lhe opening game and aga in in the ninth game -.of the second set with three cross-court winners. In another first-round match, Bob Lutz defeated tour newct1mer Terry Addison o( Australia, 6-2. 7-6. ,.... SAN LUIS OBISPO - Former Newport Harbor High ace Rick Sticklemaier hit a layup with 9: 16 lefl to put Cal Poly of San Luis Obispo ahead for good Tues day night 11nd it went on to beat Cal State at Bakersfield , 82·75. ,.... Pete Yoder. iin Rssista nt at lhe Uni versity of Southern California the past two seasons, Tuesday was named head football coach at Cal State (Fullerton), succeeding Dick Coury. Yoder, 32, was a quarterback at Long Beach State before he coached a cham· pionshi p learn at Blair Hig h School in Pasadena. He coached offen sive backs for USC head coach John McKay. ,.... LAS VEGAS -Veteran Denny Moyer. 160. Portland, Ore., survived a first round knockdown to retain his North American Boxing Federation middleweight cham-• pionship with a unanimous · 12-round decision over Gene Bryant, 157, Las Vegas, Tuesday night. The victory preserved Moyer's chance for a crack at Carlos Monzon or Argen- tin11. Moyer and Monzon are scheduled to fig ht at Rome March 4. , Moyer. 32, was down midway thrCJUJZh the opening round for a mandatory eight count from a right hand lead and l@!t hook to the jaw. But he took command in the fourth round and outboxed his ZS- year-old Nevada opponent throughout the rest of the bout to get the verdicts of the three judges 59-52, 57·53 and sa-53. ,.... SALISBURY, Md . -Uie Nastase of Romania, a late arrival in town after a transconti nenta l trip, defeated Paul Ra mirez of Mexico in the second round of the $55,000 National Indoor Open Tennis Championships Tuesday night. Nastase, 1970 winner of the tourna- ment, lost the first game as he. double faulted before settling down to oust the 18-year-old S'outhem California freshman and U.S. junior champion, 6_., 6-1. Jon Tiriac lost his serve while l'eading 5-4 in the second set and dropped-a U , 7- 6, 6-1 decision to Harold Solomon . / ~orl~ Hails Olympic Stars CHICAGO -Janet Lynn. one 'of a lrlo of nlinois girls who ·won more than haU of the U.S. medals at the W,Jnter Olym. picS. was greete(t by a crowd or well- wists Tuesday et O'Hare lnlernational Air rt and ~whlsked off t6 a hometown dtle ration 1n Rockford . ~1ADRID, Spain -Fran cl sc o Fernandez Ochoa, gold merllll winner In the slalom at the Sapporo Winter Olym- pics was given a rousing welcome when he returned home Tuesday. An estimated 10,000 perlO.!!J mobbed him at the airpor~ where he. Wl1 hnisted on the abouldcrs of his fw after ao- compfishing Spaln'1 arut.ut 1kl feat. Spain entered only U!rtt competllors " Ult , tm Winter Gamu rtctolQI com- p!e!ed. · ... Canada's skating sweelhe1rl, re.turned h9me Tuesday wearing a r1re piece or jewelry -an Olympic 11ilver medallion. . The pretty 19--year~ld flgul'l! skater wept ;:is bouquets of nnwers wer<' heaped into ht'lr arms following her arrival at Vancouver International Airport . Miss Magnussen was the only Canadian lo capture a medal in canadt'!I worst showing at the Winter Olympics In 36 years. ' ' . Mrs. Omelenchuk . \'.'ho lives In the-- suburb of Warren, has been on four U.S. Olympic teams . She haa won more skating honors than anyone in Michigan history, including four national titles. in North American championships , and a dozen state crowns . She wasn't available tor comment. Miss Young won the nationa l senior woinen·s skating championship m 1970 and 1971 but was unable to defend bt'lr ti· tie this year because she was in Sapporo. Injury, Illness Sinl{ UCI Fi,·e At San Diego By HOWARD L. HANDY 01 !Ill D•Ut Piiot S!1ll o;i SAN DfEGO -Take an MVP ! Phil :Rhyne! and place him in the stands with other spectators. Add a first-llne reserve. !Garrick Barri bundled in un iform and sweat clothes and leave him on the bench. Miic Jn a pair of ailini:, starters (Ed B~li ngham and Bill Moore l and ynu h<1ve the UC Irvine basketball team that attempted to stop tht'l San Diego State Colle~e Aztec s al the Sports Arena here Ti.:esday night before 1,20.'i partisan fans, but fai led, 109-9~. The loss leaves UCI with a 14:9 season record and gives the Aztf!cs a split in lwo games with the Anteaters this year. It was a frustrating night for coach Tim Tifl's Anteaters as former UCJ coach Dick Davis' squad went out in front at outset and stayed there for the night. UC I came to within three points with 16:40 left in the second half, 55-52, but three qu ick baskels and a frt'le throw for the hosts dispelled any fur ther thought s or catching up. It was 11 rough affair from beginning to end with 56 fouls c111led against the twn tea ms -3.1 on San Diego and 2.1 on tht'l Anteaters. Tift, wh en riuestiont'ld about the con- dition of Rhyne fnr Saturday night's Im· portant eonfrontation with UC Riverside in Crawford Hall, was cautious but add· ed ' . "Both pf his· knees are snre and w~ would be ill advised if Wt'l had used him tonight." Rhyne scored 24 pennis in an Sl- 77 victory for UCt in ~ember. "Yes . we missed him a lot and we are hurting without him i, there to do the m,any things he doe~ so well. Ht'l is outstanding dn defense, in rebounding. and in his ability to run the offense hot to mention his i;corlng. All the little things that are hidden with a player like Phil . UC lrvln1 It!) S•" 01111 Slltl 11ot) ,, If Ill ,. •11 •1' s J ' lJ • I ; 16 s ; 1 n 10 D '70 1 1 ' j l 1 l 1 ' l f It Roi till Pet-~• 0. Blktr 811rllng~1m MOO•I P111ls.., M11111ws e. e1~1r Mosler H1wkl11~· Tt1t1l1 1 ,, fl pf 111 I S ' 21 Wltkl111 .) 1 f 13 Htrrl1 111 221 P1t1 • 20,fJt!nll I ' O 11 McM11rr1y 1J1 f 5mllh J 2 5 n 81r1low I D l 2 M1rklw1 D 1 D I St1~Jly D D 1 D Ott'"" 2! J7 U JJ To11l1 1 0 1 ' D 0 ; D .)f JI l) 109 UCI ~""" rnl l1llpfl• so ll•t• ~,..,~ 11•) M,, ... Mr111l1 Horgfr MltllrJD" , .... 11 Mt Iver &ool1 I~ L~• Tot1ls t t J )f Ht!IU ' ' 1 11 E•rlt J 1 o 1 Strvk:1 f;?n8unU"'1 l t l 10 LIPKOIT\tl 0 I 1 I L1n1tr 0 D ; 0 ' 0 1 1 ' 2' 70 16 11 To,.ls ,. " pf .... 10 I J 11 • f J 11 4 I J t • J 1 " 1 ' J 10 l D I t JO tAJC!74 J.!lnet, 18, who won the bronze medal In \l'Omtn'1 fjgure ak1tlng, arrived home 1 day after the Northbrook apted skaters, D\llM• flolum a[ld Anne Henning. She il~ed In Sapporo, Japan, for 1 IUUni Ulll~ltlon. VANCOUVER -Kmll MlfnlW<ll, ' . Of the 4r Caniidlan athletes ertlered in II ev.tnl>. only eighl placed In U!e lop 10 In Ulelr compeliUOM. OLYMPIAN. JANET ~ YNN RETURNS_ HOME. . ' .. • • ' . " DAJLV PllDT Jt Sports Pay TV Coming - ~ PHII..ADELPHIA !AP! -Pay_ ff television will be an important pa.rt of all spofts within 10 years, say~· 8111 Gilt'ls. a vice president of the Philadelphia Phillies. Giles says Minnesota a:.nd ~ Milw.aukee in Ole American Leaguft h are going mto pay TV in soma degree this year and he 's ctrl.1111 " there will be much more of It in the future. ; Pa y leltvision Is a syste.111 ~ whereby a viewer would pay a fee 11 for the pri vilege of tuning in a game on his set. It's sort of Uke\ '· going lo the movies, only the show is at home . Giles says that he ha.~ been stud· '-ying pay TV and its application to baseball for several months. ;: ··\Ve 've had some proposals front various outfits about this cable TV, and I would say that within 10. years pay TV will be a vt'lry im· portant part of all sports. not only J. of baseball." Giles says. ' •! "I think 1t'5 just beginnillJ tG ~ turn the tide itnd beco111e an i .,. portant part . We are studytng the situation and I lhlnk very shortly you'll be 5eeing a lot more of it." Giles 1snl ' knocking fre e televi sion of baseball, at least not the. beaming home of road games .. "I lhink road television is a great asset to a baJl club," Giles says. "Televising your road games kttp& your players in lront of the public. You reach so many more people with television than you do with the · Jive gate. You're able lo promote your individual players a~d you're t also able to promote your pro-l! motions." Giles isn't is thrilled about f television of home games. "I'm not a great believer ln home I TV." he says. "I think home TV 1 doeS hurt the gate to some degree. We televi st'l our Sunday home games and occasionally a Saturday afterQOOn game and I think it dM.11 r take a little away from the at- tendance .·· Rile y Revels ·As Top Sub In Laker Win ~_ INGLEWOOD -There·waa Tonto,.1J '"' tie Beaver, Robin1 Dr. Walson and Gi b Hayes . ~nd now there's Pat Riley. The sidekicks of lht'l lAlne Ranger, Ryder, Batman, Sherlock Holmes a Hopalong Cassady have been joined · · the guard or the Los Angeles Lake am ong the agsistanls o( the wort h ,, eroes. 1 :-Thus while qau Goodrich, Jerry Wea Wilt Chamberlain and the rest of Lakers were attempting to dispose of , pesky CincinaaU Royals Tuesday nig 8il•Y made hia_entran..._~"""'--"'""'1!; bests for pointa and rebounds in 1 tts:t triumph. Often overlooked, Riley has been 1 ~ factor in lhe Laker11 auetea:s Udi lflll his fifth in U(e l'\lll•d NaUona{ Baal ball Association'. "Of course I wAnt ~ play. more,'' 11 the 6-foot-4 guard trom Kentucky, "but~ know I can't play as much as f want. I'd do anything for that man," be sa pointii:ig to coach Bill Sharman. Sharman admitted Riley played wftJJ Tuesday night but said his super resenft has been consisteritly 1reat off thf bench. · "The key !o R II e y ' s )nay," la'i! Sharman, "la the first two or three shollr If he hi ts them, he goes. So for him to do well, he's got to look for good shots earJ1, bit them and that gets him untracked.'' i: The Lakers led 20-16 early in the game when the Royals scored 14 polnta in l.tO'lf to grab a 10-point lead. In came Riley, to score eight points in ~I minute.a as U,. Lakers closed the gap to six. And wheti they trailed by nine after one pe.rlod. Riley stayed in and propelled lAls Angeltj to a 40.point quarter. ' His overall statistics: 12 of 11 .. ] from the floo r. 3 of 3 from the free . ·~ line in 27 minutes of playing Ume. rebounds. 27 PQ-~~ •. and husUe on the 8\t b~ak. This is Riley's Second fuJI season' ln thf NBA without ll major injury. In his fJrst' season he suffered a back injury, .the following year torn knee ligaments and two years ago ripped "gaments ln 1'1s ankle. · . f1e was then traded from the San OiegG Rockets lo PorUand and when Ult Trail Blazers released hlm on watven, U'll Lakers claimed him . (1!•<'"11111 (1111 . ' ' T V111&rtlft111 I! ... n W1111•'711 I o.o 16 L•t 1y 6 f.4 1' Gllu~~! • J J l t Artlliblld 11 .... .10 Mtf'lllfll I lot U l"n• 4 O·O I Oreetl G 7·3 1 TO,.I\ SI 1611 111 Cll!C'"'llltt Loa .t..1191111 , Lff .A119ti., Ohl '°411PllCll' lol(MUlltn Clltmbtr11111 ~rk:ll WtU ltlltY T•tllD 111• ltllltl-T11111~ • ' T ' u I ... ~ ' "'' ' " ,., ... , ,, n .w 11 l fl.1 ' I •O I I .. t .M ... 115 Sfll H ~ ... HI ~Cl•~-lU • • Oilers ~i~ .for Playoff Spot Viki·ngs Seek 13th • Ill Row Oil City Hosts' ' Rugged Western ~ Loop Crucial lt'1 on the Une t.onl&ht 1t Huntington !leach !llgh. Victory over Weate:rn ind coach Elmer Oomba Ind his Ol.ler1 c1n entertain thought• of CIF AMA bHketball playoff 1Ctlon as the runnerup team In the Sunset League. ·A de.teat and the Oilers wlll have lhelr backll to the wall with a victory over chlmplon-M1rin1 Friday mandatory to 11lv1ge 1 aecond pl1ce nnl1h. ·J~ getl under w1y 1t 7 o'clock and the ODen' 1dversary. Western, la the thorn that first punctured the Huntington btlloon. • Mike Dunn and mates took a 74·71 ded1lon from Huntlngton·Beach in first round pl1y but. Comb1. 1ay1 hi1 team is rtt,dY-lo rever..-that dedalon. 'Tb1t was anybody's ball aame. Jf we Dfued them th1t well over there It'• cer· iaiiily to our 1dvantage to be playing thf:rn at borne. ,''.Ir we play decent defense and work the boards we can beat any team on a 1lven night," HY• Combs:. J:he Oller mentor coocura th11t tonlght'1 battle 1• the key to hi• t.eam'a CIF playoff ch11n cn. A defeat would mean two Waight tetbacka prlor to the Marina confrontltlon Friday.. Al for the matchups It figures to be a carbon copy to first round activity. Huntington's Inside combo or Steve Brooka and Jim Wprthy are challenged by Western'• Dunn, the league'• leading acorer and a~eJlo with a lwo to three Inch hela:ht a e over any Oller. Tom Crunlc, Bre t White and Scott Whitfield round out the atartina: lineup for HU'nUnrton. . Coach Marv Blemker's b a 1 an c e d quintet Includes Brad McKinzie, George Golden, Dtnnls Surak and Dana Nafziger. McK1nz1e i,urt the Oilers with 19 points J1st tlme out while Dunn had hi! usual 20. The l1tter'1 loop average is 21.6. Tritons Drop 71-68 Decision < • • ~ '° Vanguards • By CR"IG SHllP'Y. 7." 01 .. 'Dellf '\H!t ''"' :~~ ns1s tency Is a key factor in b•sket,. ~ 11 and San Clti!mente Hlgh'~ Tr1ton1 l dn't malntaln It Tuud'y night. e result V(IS a 71-68 Crestview ,.League losa to invading El Modena. ,-tie setblck ellmlnated Sin Clementt flJm 1ny chsnce of repreSentlng the J'-gue as tht second place te11im . iColch John Baker's club. after being : +n by 11 much as 12 In the early going, i ed to catch and then pass the ; guard1 with seven minutes to go in • game. ~t that point the score' was 57.55 with t• Tritons on top ind apparently holding Ji momentum. JJut that wasn 't the case as El Modena. ~e back to score 10 polnts1n a. row in ; lit minute stretch for 1 ~57 lead. he Tritons. behind the pla y of Pele · lers and fo.1lke Dowling cut the lead to • ee points three different times in the 1•t two minutes, but could not get any ci1er. ~Ue.rs. hitting some nifty jumpers a}:ound the perimettor and cashing in on a !\fih or two-pointeri off the Triton fast ~ak attack. led his club with 21 poinl!i. ~wlin& hit 16. including eight in the final qprter. :'£1 fl.todena . hitting 73.3 percent of its s In the opening quarter Cll for 15) peel ta 1 commanding lead. But Um (\guards rtpeatedly turned lht ball ever to the Tr itons ' blll·hawking defe:n~. allowing San Clemt!nte to get back in it in the closing stages of the secand quarter. El Modena".~ Larry John~n led his club In scoring with 19. including 12 lsix for &IJ: from the ht'ld ) 1n the opening eighl n\tnute1. II MMt11• (JI) S•• C""*'t. fUI ...... Wl .. ,.un Jdlni+> c,111,.,, 1f)ow.t" Ct·1 It 11 11 '' J l l IJ t I ' II f I 1 It , ' ' , l 4 l 16 I I ~ l DtwoU"' ... .... , a.ti.ro C'!'"'Orlh ~!•ll~ ••11111' 1' 11 1, !1 T&!•h l l ""~"· S,.n (1•"1•'1,'' l tt,. '' 011_,.,.,, :1 ,, " ~ " " .. ff"' i. • 0 '1• , 1 0 l ' l J 11 • l 0 )1 ' 1 ? • ' ' ' l I 0 I J tf 10 ll" . 1•-n lJ-• ( ' Knight s Halt Diablo Playoff Hopes, 59-44 s )Pml. ROSS Of lflt Dl llr """ II.it Mission Viejo's faint hopes of salvagin& 1 CJF .AAA posl!eason playoff berth fad- ed forever Into the dim horizon as foothill 's Knight.a sweP.l to a 59-<14 Crestview League basketDal1 victory oVer the Oiablos Tuesday ni&ht at Foothill. With the defeat, coach Pat Roberts' young J;Hablos (1-6) now trail second place Ef Modena (9-4) by two games and the victorious Knights <8·5\ by a game with only Friday night's contest against invading Orange remaining on the Mission_ Viejo dockel. Foothill used a solid 1·2-J knockl'>llt punch of 6-3 senior forward Stan Hansen. 6-6, sophomore cenler Jeff Weilbans al'ld 6-1 reserve Rob Tuvell to turn away the anxious visitors. , The Kn ights recovered from the doldrums of an icy first quarter /five of 16 from the floor) shooting effort and ended up with a 50-SO 34.3 percentage (23- of 671. And any of "the. hot gunnery on the. Foothill charts could be attributed to the 1bove threesome. First, Hansen constantly thwarted the Diablos with a high.arching IS.20 foot jumper from along either baseline. At the same time. the sprin~ WelshanS, who has to be one of the best sophomores in these parts, wa s johnny- on-spot underneath with 1 plethora of tip ins and follow shots. Then, the husky Tuvell figured prom· fnently in the Knights' second hair show as he came off the bench to keep his side. 'VI top with a decent assortment of long. range bombs. After Mission Viejo had led most of the inilial quarter by as many as six points (al 11-2), the winners pulled even at the: end of that period on a Welshans lip. The hosts then outscored the Dlab\os, 12·2. in the first five minutes of the se- cond period and 1'1ission Viejo never creeped closer than to within t!ight points at one stage midway thiough the lhird quarter. MIUIOI' \I .... ( .. ) ~"r~lll CJtl "'" ..... ~"Cll• 8owt~ lllldlt<!.I! 1'1rt11 ..... (ll'rG 8!tc-•• TGll(\ I• II pl '• ,,,11~c1 J I J 1 W1>t)lo4"• OOJOMll'l>flY 'J~6$!fl!v JI 011 M•"5"1'1 10!1Tuvtll 11 l 11 ~' ffot•I• •co,.. ltY Ov•rt•tt " . M l••lllf'I Vl•IG ,eol~lll 10 u " " " ft ,1 .. 1 1 1 ' 6 J l " 0 t ~ l 1 ' 1 • 1 ' 1 \& r 1 1 ,. 21n1on 11 -'' n -~ Northview Faces ~ Crestview No. 2 North"iew Hi&h wilt host the Cre!tview League runnerup in Tuesd,.y's first round of the CIF AAA blsketball playoffs. Newport H arbor Tests Marina; Lions Favored Champion Marina eeeks ill 13th slt1lght Sunset League victlm ind WestmlnJter's Uo.ru balUe to stay in the running for a ClF AA.AA prep basketball playoff beHh tonight. Tipoff in each case is 7 o'clock and the Lions of coach Don Leavey are aolid favorites to dispose of host Anaheim while Marina is in a similar position against invading Newport Harbor. Westminster must put away Anaheim and Loara Friday and hope for second place Himtington Beach to at least split against Western (tonight) and Marina. That combination would give Leavey's quintet a 'tie for second place and a pro- b1ble ClF playoff berth. . The Lions handled coach Nell Reed'1 Colony five in first round acUon easHy but the latter's capability came to light recently with a 54-53 upset over Loara, anapping a !?·game losing streak, At the time Anaheim was the only quintet in AAAA or AAA classification. without a victory. Westminster has put itself Into the run- ning based on an all·rourtd attack that features four players in double figures almost every time out. ln Thursday's 90-S9 rout of Newport the Lions had a half dozen players in double figures, led by Jay Johnson's 18. Coach Jim Stephens' Marina Vikings managed only a nine-point conquest of Newport earlier. The 18.tter, under coach Dale Hagey, has only three wins in a dozen loop tries. C~ Playoffs Next in Line For Monarchs By ROGER CARLSON OI lttl D•HY ,lie! Sl•ff SANTA FE SPRINGS -It's the i;ieneral theory that three victories in foreign territory will guarantee an Angelus League team entry into the ClF AMA basketball playoffs. Coach Jerry Tardie's Mater Del Monarchs accomplished that goal Tues· day night with a 74-72 conquest of host St. Paul. BOt it took a near miracle to pull it off as the Monarchs roa red from a 19-point deficit 14' post the triumph. Jeff Kiley 's pair of free throws with 19 i:;econds left and then Rick Kniffin's 20th rebound with seven seconds remaining prov ided the Monarchs their most precious moment in the 1971 -72 cam- paign. The win. coupled with Bishop Amat's 47-46 overtime victory over Pius X. ensures the f\.1onarchs sole possession or second place behind champion Servile and entry into the playoffs a week from Friday . "Second hidf rebounding and good defense did It for us ." was '1'111rdie's hap- py remark following the clu!ch verdict. It was an emotional drain on both teams and the officials tandem of Kuester.Bean had to be escorted from the premises when .several irate Swordsmen rooters threatened their safety. Tardie's never-say-die Monarchs trailed the hosts. 61-42, with 4 :25 rema in_i11g in the third period when they caught hre. It was George Herold who was doing most or the damage and he finished with 19 poinls. ri.1ater Dei caught the Swordsmen and passed them at 6S-64 and then . it w~s .a matter of trading baskets until Kniffin slipped inside with 1 shor't one lo tie it at 72 with 2: 16 left. Tardie called for a last shot with 1 :5 t to go and that tactic rl!sult~ in .Kil_ey ~tepping to the free tbroy,· line w1lh 19 seconds left SI. Paul had raced to a 13-poinl ad· vantage at the half and had slzzled the nets \\'ith 21 of 35 from the field . Ml lff Del (14) •t. ,I UI fJ'Jl IC~tff,~ 1-+treltt ·-1(11•~ Acl.,.,, ··~ ""-' ... Oil It. 1'.u! ""'' .. ""'''' 6 10 l ll Ol"lt9• 1 o J 1 7 $ } It ~Inf S J • 11 l•OltM!t.._ 6ll1' l•••Houtll •J0!1 Jlt7Qlll.-.C IJ J18 •J llOMu!ltr 1e s2 "•rllff, 0 0 ' 0 $fewtrl e o 1 e ti !I U U TOl•l1 JI IJ t.. 1l laP't ., 0\1.,,.., ,. u t'J lJ-,. 21 n u 1-n CdM Tilt Tops Irvine Sl~ate. lMne Lt11ue baskethAU swings inlo the final week nf acUon tonl&ht wilh another four·aame ulvo that <klesn 't figure to ch&"i<l aaythlng In reg1rds 10 the league championship. CO«>na del Mar and Llls Alamilns are tied f« the le1d with • four-p:amto. ad· \'lntqe over their neartst rivals. And both IR' bta\·y favorite!! to main· ' ~In lbelr ltltUJ H they Aird for tho UJ> comln( CIF AMA playoffs. I Coldl Tandy Gl111" Corona de\ Mar Sea Ktnp are at Q)lta Me11 JJnd will ht' ltYinl to mtldl •Fi t•rller conquest that found the wtnnm toppin( the century I IQAJ'k In a l\J4.4l.bluli"1- 'l\pol'/ Jn ... h1l}latlnce ts 1 o'clock. Loi 'Allllliloo will try lo match °"'f" • ag•imt inv•ding EsUnci1. Other loop tussles include Fountain VAiiey at Slnts An• Valley ar.4 Edi.on at Maanoll1. Corona del Mar fiaure.s to have thi"is Its way agaiNt coach Emil Netme'1 heiahU™ Mustsng~ The Mesans ' are Erickson to Speak Laker l«Jth Ericnoo •lll be at s1. Joach1m·1 School In Colt• Mesa Thur,.. d~ night to put on a public 1ho•l111 of I.Um ftlms. Admlmon lo the I o'clock e..,.t will be It. St Joocbll!l'I is klcated at JM! Orlllll'· juJt nortll of Jllb Simi. .. wit.bout anyone over 6-1 wbllt CdM has tu likes of Mike Sevier IWI. Joh~ Sumner (5-4) and a host o !other stand. outs. Gillis' crew is ranked ntlh ln Orange <'OUl\lry drdes. nlnlh In !he CIF AMA and hu a flouy llH recon!. . C<llcll Dan Clrllllt's Estsncll lt1m will be iryu. lo ul*tl lhe Los Alamitoa juq111111ut with 1 liusUJng l\yle of pl~ but tt'a the ume alory for Esllncl1 lh•t II Oocl.a M,..'s pllal!L Nol enot11b reboundlng 11trqUt. Coaoll Dave Brown·, F'aualllo <\'.alley qulotet atill bu a possible abol at the pllJOfb u 1 thllll. J>il<e entry providing It can shake oll 1 Iii .,;th Mlgll()lia In th'1ll pl-. < Roadii.1nner s 4.3 Diamond Loss - Breeze Past " Bue Nine, 11-0 WHJTI!ER -Rio Hondo College took advanlage of aome BJ)Oradic play by Ora11ge Coast to poet an 11.0 victory over the visiting Pirates in non-conference baseball acUon Tuesday. Anteaters Lose Again; Can 't Wi~ Away Games The winning Roadrunners scored sia: Umes on only two hits in the second in- ning to win going away. The two hits came alter three walks and a pair ot Pirate trrors. Four of the six tallies were unearned and six of the Roadrunners' total came ac the direct result of OCC errors. Rio Hondo also pounded out 11 hits. Orange Coast's only hitting threat was provided by Clrst basemao Paul Fleming who banged out three singles ln four ap- pearances at the plate. . .Glenn McKinley, Bob Wickersham, Ron Martin and Wayne Ouellette also hit safe- ly for coach Barry Wa).lace's Pirates. Or•-CMlf (fl • Ill• KtoMo 1111 ,, .... ,.. ltlfllrlll E11t1rll"f. 1b , O o II Co1o<cn10. If J ! J I l•m~t. If t O D II Cremer, 1b J 0 I I Pt1m1r. cl 1 O o I Tl'lomMon. et • I 1 t IC11to.1-1. cf ! 0 Q 0 Hl!'l'rl"f· Flt,,,1119, lb ' 0 3 0 100'1, .( • Flt10tr. II, 211 0 0 0 0 N(lollie', Jb Wt!r.on, •t 1 0 0 0 tlca.e. '' 2't116orf, u .,. 1 0 0 0 lllfflfrfl. rf MCICl"leY, Jb • 0 I 0 5PGD(!tf WTtkt•-Smit, 1b 1hem, rl 7 0 I 0 Mort. p 8aw1n, •f 1 D 0 O Jl ulh, r> M1rlln.c 1010 Out lltll•· ( 1 0 1 0 Grimm. o 0 0 II 0 Du•bln.o 1000 HllG,lck, o o 0 0 0 l 0 , 0 ~ ' ., 0 • 2 ' 1 I I 1 0 ' l 1 0 3 l 0 1 t l 0 1 I 0 ~-0 Tottl• ll O 1 O Tot111 ..,. Joi !1 11 In Seo,.. '" h1nln11 . ' . 000 000 CDI-0 7 ' 060 lo.I ll• -11 11 O SAN t>lEGO -Two cosUy errors and a wild pitch proved too much of a handicap for coach Gary Adams' UC Irvine base'ball learn Tuesday afternoon and the Anteaters went down to defeat, <f-3, at the hands of the host San Diego State College Aztecs. The loss ·was the i;econd, both on the road, for UCI against three home vie· tories thb year. Saturday afternoon Bob Barlow (2-0) and Gary Wheelock (1.0) will start a dou· ble header against the University of San Diego on lbe Anteater !ield. •·we seem to have a weak spot in our bat ling order right now," Adams a(}. milted after the game in the Border City. What about freshman Jerry Maras, a combination pitcher-outfielder in high school, who completes · the freshman basketball season a week from Saturday? ''If he can hil. he'll be playing both positions for us this year," Adams stated. The big question mark in the Anteater lineup ls in right field where Clark Schenz and Rex Snyder have failed to hit wilh any degree of consistency in the first five games. Adams was pleased with the early !Cason pitching performance of starttr and loser. Jack Cleveland, a Cypress- College transfer. "I thought he pitched well today,0 his coach said. ClevclaQfi went 7% Innings, allowing four runs. one of them earned, giv ing up five hits, five walks and striking out five. UCl scored a pair of runs in the top of the rourth to take a momentary 2-0 lead on four !!Uccessive singles by Dan Coronado, Jeff Malinoff, Rod Spence and Dan Hansen. · The Anteaters came back to tie it at 3-3 In the: eighth when Malinoff walked and scored on a single by Dave Lyons. Bui the winning marker came in on a walk, a sacrifi ce, an error and a single in the bottom of the eighth. Coronado and Hansen had two hits each. UC lr11lt1• UJ 11" 0 1.,, Slllw Ul MOlll'•, '' COrl!tlldO, ltl M11inor1. lb Sl)lf'lcl. II !-!•"&'"' ·•) L Vons, lb Snyoar. rl .-.nc1er)G~. c Sch&nl. pr S111py, t Clev1l1f'ICI. p 8•'"'"'· p 701111 ell r ~rltl •II rlo,,_I J O I O A~a~e. lb l O 0 O JllGWt•d,:lti 1109 l t I 0 KtlloSOI', '' l 0 I 0 l OllDea",11 •010 i o 1 o R~6"· n o a ' e l a 1 1 Mo"o.,.;-7ti l 1 o o lDOOOt1Cov1n.c '1 1 1 lGlOW1y1nd.cf '111 OOOGHGtgl~ •• I '0011 1Gtl0Harrl""',P 10011 t O 11 0 T"°m11. D 0 II 0 I 1000Lu-1tnbtrg,p 0000 36 J t t T~t1l1 27 • I i $(1rt lty lfl!lhlll . ' . UC lrvrn1 000 :1(1(1 010 -J t f Sall Oleoo S!•I• 000 lOO Gh -' • ' Penneys presents "• .The Wide Ones. ' Scat·trac 70 series nylon .cord. Raised white let· ters. Tubele11 Size Pric9 A70-13 22.95 E70-1 4 26.95 F70-1 4 28.95 G70-14 30.95 H70-14 32.95 G70-15 30.95 H70-15 32.95 J70-15 34.95 Fed. Tax 1.76 2.56 2.60 2.n 2.92· 2.88 3.00" 3.00 Special buy. Ground Gainer 78 aeries nylon cord whltewallL s1 ~, ...... ,... I r:x and old tire) Tubel- SIH l'ric9 878-13 $17 E78-14 $22' F78-14 $22 G78-14 $27 H78-14 $27 G78-1 5 $27 H78-15 $27 56().15 $17 JCPonney heavy duty-aboorboro lo make your car ride llke new. Help get rid of acceleration dip and deceleration rocking. Abo aid in better cornering. J CPenney foreign car shock 1btl0rbtirs. 4" PenlWf'• Shock Aba~rtMir G•rHl11 tf e P91'1,..y'I Heavy Out)' Shock tailil 11\er lnsl*l~ioro by •~ .t.uto C8f\\er. M lo deleethte rna11ri1N l!llt "'°rkm.Nhio Of WMr-OUI wNI• tN oriO!MI purc"-ef OWN IM c:.r, ;,.c CO"lact US~ • PerlMY ..,.c:lmllst "411 r&~ IM deleetlw ,...._, 0YtJ Shock ti !'IC> •*-cMrg9. ' 3 Day Service Special Thurs., Fri., Sat. Your Choice Shock Installation ggc Lube speclil Fe. Tu 1.81 2.24 2.39 2.56 2.75 2.63. 2.81 1.73 Special buyl ,...,.,. '£1 Tigro• 12 ..n battery. More than enough starting power for even 11rge cal'9 with 1 Misvy accessory load. Add thrs to the 40 month guarantee and you have a powerful value! • ~ """' ci'd ~. ' 'EL TtGRE' 40 MO. GUARANTEE Sllallltl 11111 hi.._. "ti flt"'' w...., i.n 1-..,....., dlK..,,.) -.lli\ill 1S -f\I froM .... d.i.. flf "1tfl- ... lv,.. lt 1111. ~Witt it lftll ltll Mtl1Kt4 t ... et~ ..... An ... 1s _,,.,,. Mtt Drlor to IM U.•rWeotl "" .., u.. .,.,......., J. c. ~ Co. wtll '"'l<-9 ,.. ltMJ..., tt'te"illf .,., ,., ... Jllriod of ~ •• lt-..d Oii ,.,., tlll'ftltt ~ • ""' '""'-., ....... ,.,.. ,..... -.. tlltM...,.....~ .. JCPenney auto center . The values are here every day. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P .M. at the following Auto C6nter9: NEWPORT !EACH, F"hl°'' lalt od. HUNTINGTON IEACH Huntington C.ftftr. U1t Ptn~•Y' tim• J>•yment ,.ti~. I ) t " b a I t p I J c n I l• b 5. is sa A c r tr th th pe .. d on BS th I Pi at In (V de Start Yo ur Engines! • By Deke Hou/gate Thif was a long, agonizing winter for Buddy Baker, who ls currently enjoying an early spring in Daytona Beach, Fla. · "The firsl month and a half ,1fter we ran our last race in Teias was the longest lime I ever had to wait," Baker said as he prepared for this Sunday's I4lh annual Daytona 500, his favorite stock car race. The suspense was murderous to Baker, because he didn't know whether or not be was going to have a good ride -or a ride at all , for th at matter -in 1972. Andy Granatelli ended the suspense three weeks ago with the announcement his STP Corp. would support Richard Petty and Baker in Plymouths this season. "I must have called Richard every day, and I did a lot of running around and writing letters, looking for sponsors. I tell you, I've never felt better about the way things have turned out. "I'm back with Richard again, and hejs jusi the best car builder there is, and I'm proud to be aSSQCiated with a com- pany that has been the biggest thing in racing." fFtker claims a ·personal advantage at Daytona, the fact that he has probably put mor~ Ure testing, practice~and racing miles on the 2.S.mile trloval than any other man in stock car competition. "It's just been a tremendous amount of miles," he said. ''Lately I've quit trying to· make so many tests for Goodyear, but what I have done has been real good experience. "So far down here there's three of us wbo have really got it on -Bobby Isaac, A. J. ~·oyt and myseU. I've been on the pole or on the outside._ of the front row the.past four or five years, and I really do like this track." Boker Db.,011tin11ed Testing Baker discontinued testing al Daytona after a horrendous 190 m.p.h. crash Into the turn one wall two years ago. He con. tends ibat lire testing Is a lot more difficult than racing. ''When yo u're testing," he e1pl alned, "you are usin g un- proven products. You've got to .. drive at the course record or raster to be right about them. If you do M>methtng wrong, mis- judge, everybody in racing 11 gonna run oa3bhd tires. Yo u are constantly ·out on a limb." Before the carburetor restrklk>n1 slowed down stock cars on the high banked tracks. many drivers complained that speedi they were running weren't safe, that handling was vastl y differ- ent, (or Instance, at 190 m.p.h. than it was at 180. Baker wasn't one of them. "You can't tell bow fast you are going,'' Baker said, "ex· cept just on the stopwatches. You know onl y when your crew notifi es you. Running bard at 160 11 just like running hard at 190. Yon are going just as fast as You can, and you are bung out just as bard.'' Boker Returll• to Lom·bonked Tro"k After Daytona Baker wil lretum to the rectangular. low. banked track al Ontario for the Miller High Life SOO on March 5. Despite his preference fDr high banked track racing. Ontario i! high on his list of favorite places to run . "I t'! a great race track,'' he said. "It 's real wide and real safe. Ontario and h-1ichigan are the eafiest tracks to get around. A lot of tracks you have to pick a spot to get around, but you can go three and four abreaet al Ontario and Michigan . ·That's really fun i;scing. '' Darlington on the other hand, "has -gotta to the hardest track we run.' Till you learn how to get arou~ you ca'n't win there. Yoo jUst keep hitting the wall. . View Chotiged About B#oks Tbe only book we ever paid ttS for was 1 deluxe edition of tile Holy Bible, bat recenUy we have come Into possession or a couple or $Z5 boo.kt devoted to motor 1port1, and Utt: whole ex- perience bas caused us to change our view about such extra- vagance. First, we never thought the fancy verskl.n of the Bible would do anything: but sit on the shelf and look pretty, but hardly • wet:k goes by without some member of the family leafing · through it for one reason or another, while other cheaper edi- tion s galber du st. The CGffee table motor racln( book! wt now own are getting the same thumbing. The nrst to 1rrlve W'&I ''Tbe Mercedes-Benz Racing Cars" by Ki ri Ludvlg!ien (Bond. Parkhun:t, Newport Beach, 1971), which 11 1 mapiflcent work by tile 1port'1 most tireless detan man. • These are some of the tidbits from the bi1iory· of the mos prestigious marque la ricing: Barney Oldfield, Kiting speed records up to ts miles on the Ind:ianapoll1 Moto~peedway oval oo Aug. 19, 1989, brOJll~l the first spectacul ar lumph to the Bem: CGmpany, although it !tarted CGmpetlt on Jn lstS. It took an American daredevll to bring glory to the Germa• car, not some guy wearing a monocle. Ttvi"e the Speed of Airplane When Bob Burman hit 141.732 m.p.h. on the Daytona sands on April 23. 1911 , he was driving the Blilzen Benz twice a.s fast as any airplane had nown up to then. Newspaper accounb of the day noted that "only a bullet has traveled faster." A mid-engine racer called the Sports 150 was built in the 19303 that bears a startling resemblance lo the VW beetle. Then there was the account of that fateful day tn 1956 when Pierre Levegh Bouillon was catapulted into the pit grandstands at Le Mans, killing !COret of' speclator..s. The story everybody hears is that Mercede! Benz quit rac· tng at that moment. but not according to Ludvigsen. The decision to wltt)draw from the race was not make for several hours, and when it was, the Mercedes driven by Stirling Moss and Juan Manuel Fanglo held a two-lap lead. ~ And Mercede! continued racing. although on a reduced scale, that season and the next. Atttomobl.le Ruing Desuibed The other expensive vol~me 11 a staggering tome enlilled "The Encyclopedia of Motor Sport," edited by G,_ N. Gcorgano (Viking Press, New York, 1972), which carefully catalogs_ ~nd desCribes every (acet ol auf4'.>mobile racing In. half a m1lhon words and 1,700 illustrations covering ti56 oversized _page~. There are biographi~ on every important driver 1n the Area Wrestling Results Gymnastics _, 123 -Funk tS! M ~.._ !Ill.I , .... UO -Sl .. k« fMI M AIT-'6 Ill I- I ' ' • IM -H•I IMI ,_ llt._.... !S I ... 1. UI -J..,.ttt (S I ._ llt_. IMI .. ,. -N~ ($) 0.C ..,.,_ (NI) .._ U7-t'hlll IMI d« ~ fSJ 14. 1(1 .. -~ lMI ~ ~!flt '" 1111 -llt lc:1 IMI ""'*I ._., ISi "'4 -MfrCfWllW IMI ._ PW'°" (SI H . . Hwl -Ill-. fSl dlPC Ifft-(111\l H . .. • Uni vers ity Upse t Bid Falls Short By LAURIE BECKLUND OJ 1111 O.l!r Pit.I Sttff The Golden 1-lawks' un- marred flight to 0 r a n g e Le ague basketball success was nearly tarnished by l he University Hlgtf-School Tro- jans when El Dorado claimed victory in the University gym, 49-46, Tuesday afternoon. Suffering from an acute In- ability Ip make all but hair a dozen field goals the first half for a shooting accuracy of less than 20 percent. El Dorado waged an uphill batUe until the final quarter. C:Oach John Drl sc oll's Un iversity rive clung to the lead most of the way with the Trojans' center, Tom Mullinix, grabbing balls off t'tle boards as SOOl\-e's the Hawks could miss them . But in the last half, es· pecially the last quarter, El Dorado really got it together, making 67 percent of Its shots and improving its defense about 219 percent. After tyi~& up the game~ 33- 33 at the very beginning-of the last period , University watched fjve miOutes and 1-4 golden points go by before em- barking on a comeback course to 11ear victor y. With two minutes left to play, the Trojans were trail- ing, 49-35. 'Then Mullinix and Bil l Llorente eacti made their full quota of four free throws in ' a dr:amatic, hard-played game of consistent s hooting, penetrating offensive moves -and fine teamwork. The team made up nine points of a l4·point deticit in two minute·s. but it was too late and the buzzer sounded just after Llorenle finished making his final free throw. Driscoll was happy with his team, however. "They made a fine effort out there today even after El Dorado had cinched the league lead (I~). I think they could have made it if they'd just been better at the free throw line earlier in the game. They put out a lot of effort." un111.,..11r fl' ,, ... 1 2 l 12 •• ' u ' . ' .. ' • 0 I • 17 16 .... sc-" Chl111.,., El Dorldo t • 16 l._., U11IV1trllly IJ I 10 IS-"6 • New ICCC Officei·s Jrvine Coast Country Club president \Voody Smith (left) con gratulates Mark Soden following his el~tion tq_ the pres id ency of the !CCC board of governors recently. Courtney Owens (center) is the new secretary and C'larcnce "Chick'' Higbie (upper righ_t) is a returning director for '72. CdM Swirnmers Outlast Newport Corona del Mar High's Sea Kings held off invading Newport Harbor T u e s d a y afternoon in non·league swim action when the -Sea King 400 free relay quartet blazed to a 3:28.7 in the final event. Victory in the 16-lapper' gav'e coach Cliff Hooper's crew a 47. 44 conquest over Newport- Mesa District rival Newport. V1rtity CdM f(7J C~l N_,.,., 200 Med'"° Rtl•P -1. Hewpe.rl. l ll'M: 1:.fi.I. 70ll l'rtt -l , .. sh<e CNI 1. W1911tr (DJ 3. H1rr!1 (NJ. TllM: 1:12.6, :KIO 11111. ~I.., -1. P1im.r fC) 1. Lore11i (Cl l, Mlllc:h CC). Tl..,.: 1:11 I, SO Frtt -1. G.liler 00 2. Ono !Cl ). Yoo.tl!ll IN !. Time: 24.2. OlvlM -I, $itr11e<U (NJ 2. M $fCOnd. No Pol11h. 100 Flv -1. KrumllholJ (CJ 1. W•ll IN) 3. F.ilc;h.m111 (NI. 71rM: Jl.l. 100 Free -I. Orto ICl 1. 99tk !NJ J. Woodl1ffd IC). TllTll: 53.6. olGO Free -l. A&M INl 1. W"...,. ICl 1. LC11"1nr <CL TllTll: l :ff.6, lClfV!lat~ -I. 01111111 (N) 2. P•lm•r lc'f l. Woodhead (Cl. T!m1 : 1:01.6. ~00 Bre111 -I. Krumptiolz IC) 1. OuyrN11m IN) 3. MlllOI (Cl. Time: 1:01.1. . «JO"'" Rtl•r -1. Cor""• dtl ""''· Tlmt: 3:18.1. ·-CllM (N) 111) N•-' 200 Mad!tv R11t1 -I. C'oron1 dt! Mir. Tlm: 2:02.1. . 200 l"rt t -1. Boul:l'ltv fCl 1. Pt11· nl11f!ot1 CC) l . S..1rl•• {NJ. Time; 2:03.t. 100 lf'!d. MMl•Y -I. St1Hm1n (Cl 7. McOowtl! CC) J. C1m1ron (NJ, Tlmt: I ;01.J. !iO Fr .. -I. Crimp CC) 2. C•n"r !Nl J. Tur111r CC). Tim" 1,,5. lOCI 1'1' -1, M•rl•11rr•1! !Cl 1, Ctmeron IN! 1. Gr1lllllo CN>. Time : I :0'1.1. 100 Frff -I, Tl-P11111lrivron !Cl - Ho•m111 INI 1. TY•her 1(1. Timi: ~.o. o1110 Frtt -I. llOllOM¥ CC! 1, Mc0-.11 (C) l . ll1rr•ll fNJ. l ime: (;21.L ,. 100 ll1ek -1, St1 llm•n (Cl 2. Wvmtn 00 1. Rtvtl'f t CJ . l lmt : 1:01.J. lOCI &r1111 -I. Crimp {(1 7. W1llOl'I CCI 3, Wvm111 '"'·Timi· 1:11.7. -l'rtt Rtlt y -1. Cll!'ont lkl Mtr. l lm1: l :50.1. ,_ CllM (1JY,I Cl l\'JI N..,.""1 700 -~' Rtl1y -I. Ntwl>Ort. l lmt: t :OJ.). 700 Frtt -1. OllD !Cl 1. Stl11t1b1 (NJ ]. Jot11110n IN). l !m1· l :IM.J. 50 l'rH -l. Rottri CNI 7. Ekltr (N) 1, Mallo!! ~N). l ime; 71.7. 100 hid, -ley -l. lltlf !NJ t. Smit!\ (N l 1. Milrlllfl !Cl. l lmt : 1:01.0. 50 t'IY -I. M1rl;" (Cl 1. 1109171 (N) l . M1lloll (NJ. Tlmt: 31,1, 100 Fr~ -L S!ln1t1b1 fN ) 1, Jorini.on INI J. Fro1t IC!. llmf< jl_t , loll !lilc~ -I, Olc~tv IN! 1. fltll (NJ ], Mtrlno !(). T!m1; l'J.~. 50 flr11$1 -1. Sm/Ill !PH f, Ol!o !Cl J. 1<111rl1n (NI. Tim" JJ,7. :MO Frtt Rtll'f -I. Newl>Ol"I. Tlmt: 1 :41.t. V1r1l1'1' M1rln1 1411 INI Mlr1lnN BaslietbalJ Standings For Preps El Oo•t<to Vt lfnclt llglJf'I fl elCll ·-· $1ddltblcl Unl11trtllv ... ., OCC Sets 3 Marks; Captures Relays Title 100 Mtdlt' At11¥ -I. M1r/M. Timi: , .,,.J 2'00 Fret -I. 1"111.,-fOf\ IM!l 7. F1-bl1n /MA I ). l(lllO !Mii. Tlmj; 1·~.I 200 ll'ld. Mltdltv -I. F r111< t lMI! 1. Wtlt9flbtlra-•r /Mil J, S!1'1ole• IMA). Tl""': 1:Ut, loll Fr" -1. L ¥t1n !Mii ' G..eal1r IMALJ.. Kiner IMA! Tl"1r: "·'· OIJ!llll' -1 G1otn IMO 1 Prlc1. G. !MAI J, D•11l~1 (MAI Tlmt: 11 ?S IDO F iii -l. l<lna !MAJ 2. lt111mer. R !Mil]. ROllNt, J. IMl! l l""'• st?." 100 Fr'l -I. P•tltrlOn /Ml) 1 i.~1~' MAI J. Hlnllfll !Mi i rr--: «IO F re--1 F.i1!en fMA 1 , lv,.,,. IMI! J, l<lno !Mil. Time· 1.141 Orange Coast <;:ol lege' s swimming team set a con- ference record in one event and school marks in two others in capturing the South Coa st Conference R e I a y s Tuesday at Santa Ana College. The Pirates totaled 86 points while second place Fullerton had 72. The CXX: 400 free relay foursome of .Matt Greer, Dan Kent, Bob Wurster and Vince frantom clocked 3:25.9, wip- ing out the old conference sec Edg es Foe, 82-81 mark of 3: 30.2, set by F JC last year. And the Bue quartet of Kent, Wurster, Dick Jones and Doug Moon nabbed the 400 backstroke relay in 4:03.6, eclipsing a seven-year old school mark of •:03.9. The OCC 200 free relay team of Greer. Moon , Jones and Rich Hyland clocked 1 :31.4 , breaki~ the old school record of 1:31.6 set in 1968. 100 8"1:• -I Sdlolrt fMA 1 1 Henl•' !Ml! 1. 8 \lctl111r /MAI Time: 1:01 !. 104 art"' -I, R.....,", J IMtl l· Du"" (M.t.1 J. W1Urnouroer !Ml , Tift'!<!· l :otS. lotl Fo" Jltl1¥ -I. Mlr1lt \lt Tl""; 1.:17.1. •v• M1•1"'9 fJfl !11) . Mlr1l"'tt> 100 Mldltv Rtl•v -1. Mlr11,.11. Tfflll: 7·~1.6. "° t,rtP -1. 11...,k,., rM I\ '· Fdwtr I fMA I l . Erltk1on IMAl. 't!rnt: 1:05.~ .• 100 Ind M..,lt¥ -I Nlt llOt! IM/11 1. Tl"'l•n fMr! J, W11!llnotr !Ml) 11mt: 1:10' jQ F• .. -l. Pt,,MltJO (Mt> ? Wenq1r IMAI J. 0 01•111 fMA ) Hm•: '" !(Ill Flv -I. Pt"Dllh'" IMll ? H~l11Uck IMA l 1. HIHISOf! !M,ld Tim•. ~·Of t di ....cllty' ~IY -1. tc ult.rlon M~~ormftt,'" rMo ~ 11~"'l'w'i'~~1m1;· l So!.t: 1. Or11111e (o.1t.1·01.I; J. S1nl• l•OllO Anl 1·170; I Ml. S1'1 Anlo.>lo1:117. 400 F•et _ I !1••1...-v /Mj\\ 7 400 lrtt relt ¥ -I. OrlnM CCH11I McC~rtllv IMll 1 80GIP1 !MA! Tlmt: IGrftr, 1Ce111. Wurllff 1nd F•1nl0t'h), !:Oll a. J·7~.•; 7 Fulltrtorl J;lLI: l !'>enl• An• IOO Fr.., -I, ll•11r-w l'-16, 7 Jaycee Gol f ]·11.0; I Ml. \i n Alllolllp J ;l1 !. ~~~~rllw IMI! J. llrumm IMll fl-· ((Df'lffenci""'"rtcord, Oki mtt'\ ),lo !. !DO 11.c~ -I l'IO>d<•r Ifft!, HI•'•"" GDI-""'' nn !J11 LI H••Mr ... -< ' .. (II lM v ..... , c ... n.,., CIMI .,.,. .-u ttr!OI\ In 1971!.. !M.t.I l 111.tCormlck f,..11 d..,t• l Of ~. ~IPI' IGIL1, clel Perl HH. f7, 6.(1 400 blCktlr~r -1, Ortntt C:O.•! 100 ll•1t1I -1. "'11"~11 '""') 1 Troll {Hf, '1 Ott. "-hon Hi!,, 17, IJ-s, 1<en1. w url!itr •nd Moonl i:Ol • ;1~~ln~1 0rMl1 J, Edw1ra1 !M"l '"°· Ut1~i1•• Oki occ rec.o•'f"' 'f) •• ·~· In 4111 Ft H P1l1v -' MlliN . Tl ..... : llut:tl fH), 74 Ml Ma••"°" cc:.1. fl!, !""95li. J, Full""" •:0'1 J; J .. 4tnt1 A111 '071 (,.., ::t°':''*''°"' !H), Ii ""4 ll v•" !61, 11, • • OAJL Y '1LOT j9 A r ea Brie fs Ja ycee Cage1·s Battle Loop Foes . 7 Ornnge Coast Cttllt~t' bltl.~ \~or lls sev<"nlh Vll'lory ln ntnt• 'K~nts 1u1d !\addlf.'b:i•·k and • Goll:len \V est hOIM.l to hull lf•<i· Ing slrea ks. in 111111(.11' <~ltl1•J.!<' ..:onfl'rrnt•1• b11~k1•th;1ll /h'l111n toni~ht. 00."s Pirnll'.~ l1usl I '1•n 1t11s In 11 S.,u lh l'oa11t 1'11Tu11 till . ~1ddlrbat.•k's t:11u1·1io-: t:ikr 1111 hn·11d111tt l1alon1ar Ill 1'1l:-.s1u11 ;11·1!011 11nd 1:old1•11 \V r s I lrH\\'I~ lo I.A St1111h111"•I Ill .• Sout ht'rn (' u 1ir0 r n 1.1 l'nn f1•rr111·t' J.(:1111(', 1\ll h1·~1n al H Tht• \'1n1l1·s 1·a111nt.111• \11l!J 11 J!Jird pl111't' tit' II 1th f1~ 1 l111s "'11h a I 11·111r~· IHllll!h! '1"!11• Fall'ot1.\i 1G :11 1!;11 t' ,, 11111· g,11n1• N1,.;r 01•1•r ro;u·li f1 1·rh l,11 't'I 's n 111·s ocr 1l•n1·111·1I r(·rT11t1s , IOU-!12, in :1 first rou11d ltfl 1'1rn11whilr. S:uhllt·h:u·k ~ lo hnll 11 f1vt•·,.;a111" [o,i11J.: strt.«1k al ~1 1ss1on Vu·111 ll 1g!1 ~tJ.(<ll!lSI th1· l'o1111·ts. Th i• t ::111(·hos of l!ov S\\•1't•11s h;11·1· non two ur 11 ~l 1 ss1011 !dts wh1h• l'ulnni:i r Ill :; II S.•1d 1i l1·hnl'k drnppi:d n !i 6 ~ n 1lccis1011 lo thf' Con1f'I.~ itt 1:1 first rountl gu nu• .• l'o:i1·h n 1r-k s1nl'klu1·~ C:nldt'n \Vrst Hustlt·rs h;ivc rallrn four slraight llllll''\, hut ho1)(' to ~l'I ba ck 0 11 !hr 1\•in· n111i: lr11ek :1i;:ainst I h r l'ou1H1rs. 11 te11m thry defc11lt'd e11rl11•r, 96·73. Fulll'rlnn and r;n~I LA ea n wr11p up the South Cnosl and SoCal titles tonight with vie· lorlei1. l".JC ha!! n 10-0 n1ark and ra n chnr h the South ('o:i.~I Ii · II<' wil/111 win ove r v1~1l 1ng 1-.11. San Antonin. And f:ns1 1.A 11l- () 1 can 1\Q likewise n1 llin Hon · do ,,,,,,. rers' f'or SAN1'A MARIA -c;oldr n West C.oll tJle battlrs Ot> A 111.a Hl noon Thursd<iy in the open- ing rou nd of the Allan llan· l'01·k b .11 :<i eh 11 I I tnurnn1n r.11l, here. <.:oach f'red lloovpr's Cnld<'n West llustlcrll Hlso Ii 11 v tr J{arnes wit h llanco<·k al l Fri· day and and Fouttull 11t 9 Saturday n'l0rn111~. If the llui:illt-r:> win thei r bracket they wlll µlay the vic- tor or the opposite bracktt at 7 p.m. Saturday n(g!Jt. Herr. are the first pal rings: 1 2 -G o I rl en \Vest Dt•Ar11t1. 3-l'lr rrr \'!!. Jo'Ont.hlll. t: 11 if'<>r 113 Holl vs. 1'h1• I luntlngton II t El ch l 'n1f'1)r!1<: rollt·d !O thr\f rlftfi' l'011St't'U11\I' \'1l'IOry in the .tJ «null di\ 1s1011 .~f th1• Southern l '11hfor11111 ltu~llv I•' o o t b a I l l 111011 Suniluy \\ti~ 11 12--0 wut 011·r \\'1·~11no11l A1 hlr't1c Cl ub al ,\\;1 r111a 11 111.h S.:houl. ·r tu.1 \\'t>sl1110111 1·luh, wt11ch pl:n s 0111 uf S:u11;1 Un rbari, y1t'ltlt·1I only H IX'111111y J:OOI - l..rl'l.c•tl 11\' l);u\11\ Srhnr1dl'r - 111 th1• l1rsl hntf but 111 th" lu~t .JU tll\111/l t'S Sc'hnt111l1'r k11·t..OO l11U)lhl'r goal ttnd COHVt•rl~'<I ii t i\ ~t·ur1·d by l)H\'•' ~1rN11I S11111lay's "A'l!I br1>u~ht rho I '1111·ur11s· rt.>cont lo 10 2·1 Ono ul 1 h1· d1~r1•11ts 11•11, luflicfl'CI in H 11011 li·agllc t.:Hlllt' HI lJC l.Ai S:11urduy wht•11 tht• UCL.A t: 1"1•yhuun1l~ I hrash1><l th1• I luno 11nglu" He111:h 1·l11h. 3~·4. ."i11il,·1~r• ('~••••pt•fe Ur:u it.:c l'oust :u1d Sad· dll'hlll'k (•o11cRI"" opi'n the l!l?'l tr;1t"k ant.I fie ld :rof/"l.~ln Thur~• 1111\' 11t S:.111 Clf rnl'ntc ll 1gh. Ficht event s ))('i.:1n Ht 3 with tlu• F1r!'l rur'i'nl: t v r n' t sc·l11'tlul cd to ~cl under wily Ht 3 :10. SHddlebRck will use thr· SAn llen1ent~ Hlg h tr;11·k f1Jr all its hof'ne n1eets this season. Cage Scores ... Gold&n S!•lt 101. l\u!t•k• 100 Al111nl• 11), 0.1<nll 10\ l\•llUl'>O'f 11), lllW\llln 9f ""'I"" Ill. l"Qtlt11nd !I)( Onlv 111•n•1 l'h•lltJl"'I (OI!••• l'IVT11•r9 /J, ""'"' /1 L1>111 111 .. MI tt. NortP1•01t..-11 •• k•hl<lf 1111<111 ,.,,_,.,.,y,~ 11 M11.,•cP1u11rh 1n. l'lft\llln •I. tt ll<hlr"' (Oii fO. \I J~l•n'• ... 't, U t~•O. w11Pllf!11l()o 14. I 91rl~PI I I 1tul• ,,.,., •• u ... 11 .. ., .. 1., ll Avl>tJ•n ti, '''"'''• !""'" II l C.U 91, $.MU 14 1••11 '0. 11vlo< 1(1 1••111 l•CPI II),""' I~ 1••11 A .. M .. ll"•"IAI I\ f'IMl ll 14. Al• 1.., •• ti •••11111 (lf>YOt> /IJ. ND1I""'" ,IHll .a O•fllt<lnl•I 101. P••na•"• fl C.P·•LO 11. l••1<1lftkl ~I, II W•lPllle f,1 M , t Plltl tlll I '"'11t .. 1<1.,.1t " ,., 1<1nw1 U low• 17. lllinol1 t•, ovtrtlmt Wll(an1ln 14, PurdYt '1 MIU011•l 1(1, Nl'f)fll.U '5 0. PtlJI /4, NorlllllltJ!frl\" JUNIOR. COlllOI "•»dtn• N, !I C1mlll0 M , Would y ou pay a n ext~a $5 .21 per n1ontb for Full Ne w Car Mainten a n ce? Thal'• All the r xt ra It ctt11t wllh a JOhn•on le Son l"ull Malntcnnn1·e Lf>R11f• ''" any of our brlllnd nrw 197.l Mi:-r1·ury•. Ju11t think .,r'll , .. no more annoying rrr>a l, 11rul>lt·n11 , •• no more uneJCl)('tlt•d vxp<•nu• ar'ld hr•l of all . , , a twaullful 'nrw full 1117.~ Ml"rcury Marqul• or Mnntf'rl"r to drlvr• ln 110~olul1•!y l)(l'rlect condition 1t. aJI lime•. J."1nt11111t fur ynurs1>Jf .1111 th!! brncflta nnd plca•u 1f'I thl• fa11111xth· l1·1111c ,,rol(ram rirov ldcs on all our Uncoln· Mr rcury J'rrx:luct.~. ca.JI BUD BOW!-;N al 540.r,c:10 .••• TODAY! "''"'' ,,.~,,·, .,.,,,,,,,, ,,,. ;,,, ,,,,, . ohnson & son [-$1=-1 Guard Rick Mancebo hit .ioo tM.lt'l1•t1r -1. o •• ...., ,.,.,, M••lu 1111 "'1 Ml•••n•• R-·" rH1. ,.. 1111 Elo•ldM 1c.1. 111. IG•ttr. Mc.A""'"· wu .. 11r •ncl MOlllll ?00 ,~ ... ·~¥ •11·~ -I M!r•IH!f, '' 2121 HAll\BOR llVD •• COSTA MESA • MO~ three fr .. t•-ws ,·n t•· last Tr.._.,. ''G? 0 , • ..=~""'~·:-•":_:••~>~~·~· ':'~· ~·:·:~~·:·~·~·~·~lillll!!'!!!!'!!!!!!!! IUV 11'1; 4:00.J. ~lllr1 ... Ind Ml. kn A"hlt>•O ,..,, "'"' -, Lv1111 fMI\ ' Ml .... .. · t t I t•· •-·th Olsuvell!Wd -•m11...,,,., !MAI J 8ucl'l..,t1111 fMtl m1nu e o prope in:: -NV em -"• r11w-1 FYll«ton 1·.i o: 2. r1.._.,. ?·Ol 1 Califo:-nia Vanguards to an 32-Or•"" CD111 7:S4.2: J. M1. ""'A11ton>o 100 11\d Ml'd1-v -l N iU•r 1M11 ' 81 victory over visit ing Cal •:~1.br11stttr<:lk• """' -1. F1111.,1on ~l~,'"rD1 1 rMA 1 i Aeblnou IMll Baptist Tuesday night in the •·l9o: 1, Or11191 eo.1 4·11.01 1. S•n11 rMl\{}"ru;1t:'(0~~~·rr:.?! ;\ f 1"'u d An.o 4·•.t1 l, Ml. S..n A"'°"lo 4 1J •. SO Fl¥ I R11~l"Oll '~'' 1 Vanguar gym. 100 1,.... r•lfr _ 1. a..,,.. C.c:ot•I cum ... .., r M-~, H,,. .... 11 IMAJ r1,.,... Coach Lynn Tay IC) r . s fGretr, Mi:>ot>, J-• Incl HYlllM! !•)l ' ",'i., Fri" -I L¥"" l'-111 ' (.vlll~llflt 8 h lbrt1k1 ·fldOCCr1Cord a-ll•l!6,H'!ln f"'~l J 8vd'""nn~n•M ll TllY't St • Vanguards are now 9-1 nn t e 1'611: J. F""terton J:ll.J; i. !111•• An• ~ a1ct 1 '-"llt-• rMP , F1rren season and lhey h 0 s t 1 ,,, " '· Mt sin Amon1o 1 i11 1M .o.1 , r,.,, IMn Ti"""· 11 1 T~em "ICOfl l\il -Ormoe (0111 16. ~ 8•tt•I -I H•onu flll l \ 1 Ltclo Pasadena Naza rene Friday Fv11er1an n, Mt. $111 ""'onio JI. 11n11 1111.11, .111.i1 /MA!. 11m1 · 1.11. night a I 8 o'clock . I i'ii•iiM-",;· iiiiiiiiiiii;;;,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"';;:,.'~'";,.'~'~" .. '.-;.,' .".'·"'"'~".";,.'.'m'"•·· I Mancebo 's heroics we r ell preceded by those of team· mate Dan Hoffman, who sank a pair of charity l~sts with l: 10 to go lo break a 77-a\I tie and put the hosts on top by 79- 77. k¥1111t11 C•l+'-11 (9111".; :".:. ... ~.. : I f ~I •INler ' t t It r== 'l t i '?;':.~ ,i /,' 11 tJ Hll"""'; K IO 4 , C.i ••"' t1 1', JC Tennis I DAVE ROSS PONTIAC Lease or .Buy Alt Models DAVE ROSS PONTIAC 241f KAllOit l l fD ... PAii DllYI C.OSTA MIU. .Ph. 546-8017 • OPIN J DA't'S .. Wl'llt 11• ...... ro tt:te """ SIJf'IDAY1 n A.Ill. rot •.M.. ... .... ... , """' from Long Beach to San Francisco 4 limes a day. as Or ttll"e us lo S1 crwnen!o or San Olego. O't'er 110 t114h11 a Olly bth~"n ljf)f1•tr" 1ntj SoJ!'"')•n C•l,fOfnll tnebM {O'J k) ta~ PSA ot1er; Win p 11tll~;.1t -' ~,,, "ti'! tr...w .. ~1 t·r '••n f~r ltl'ttl 19tl•I knaNs wr.a1 s good to:ir yoo PIA gh'M )IOU t Utt • :• • .. DAILY PILOT Wed"'*1, fMll) 16, 1972 Checking Out .. ' 'Ibe return for his senk>r aeuon ol NOWJ>Orl Harbor High lhol put 11.11 Ttrry ;lllbrttton hlahllgh'4 tho start or the 1972 !'track and ffeld campaign tor the 14 Or- ange Coast area hlah schools. I Alhrttton placed second In the state tut year ~hind 1graduated teammate Mark ·Steveris with a~ top heave with the 12.- pound i\eeJ ball. So, hla 1971 ptrronnance makea him' the early favorite for thts year's.top state bonon while 70 feet may not be a too unreasonable target for the Newport liant. Jim Froit (Mater 0.11. Hat Harkness (University), Stan Clark ( F o u n La In Valley) and Dave KWTle (Westminster) are new head coaches ln the area. The .Westminster at Corona del Mar dual meet Thursday marlu: the official ribbon<Utting for the '12 campalg~. · Here's the complete rundown oli' 1U the area track and field teams: . Corona del Mar Corona de! Mir's Sea K!iigs scored the most points in the Irvine League track and field finals last spring but Jost the overall tlUe to Fountain Valley, which beat CdM In a dual meet. - But Corona splke mentor John Blair. would like to see. t.hlngs end up dif- ferently, though -Ulat is, with . his Sea Kings on top tn boll\ categories this sealon. The ~a Kings seem to have-the talent to \llrn ll1o above two-fold trick like a charm. A trio of senior looMh1mpions returns in . the persons of •printer Carlo ToaU (loop 220-y_ant dash winner and second Jn the 100), high jumper George K~nt CS. 2l &) and pole vaulter Todd Vaughn (J.2.6), along with . five other . competitOrs who placed IJj the 1171 league finals. . Returnlnc lntacl ta Blair's 440 relay comhcl or Tosti, aenlor John Mll ... ..ae~ Matt Cox and junior Joe Tosti,' C8rlo s brother. That quartet blazed to a tl.3 ckx:klng 111! spring and a dip into the -41a ls not beyond their limits. C.Ox was third in the circuit in the «O at 50.0 While Mlle; (9.9, 22.5)' was. third in the century and fourth In the furlong and the younger Tosti pieced fifth in the shot put in recording a ~ best. , Senior 880 ace Fred Anderson (1:58) Was. lhJrd in the Irvine in his specialty ln '71. .... ~ Strongest. 1ield event competitor could be · dl&cus thrower Howard" Royster, a senior who's itready tiit 168-0 in practice this year. Supporting the younger Tosti ·in the shot will be JWilor Joe Brown, a 50 footer, while the long jump centen arOuod Greg Ru;tcu (:!lHJ. Colling• ta a ' iow hu~e hopeful alon1 with leitlOr John M C$1. Heading the distance corps are senior ~fike Alvarez and aophomore Dennis Wilson. A mile mainstay. Alvarez w•s third ln the clrcuJt In the four-lap event tn 1970 and 1posted a f :26 best. He's supported by junior Seglo Varaa:as (fi:40). • Wilson. who 1s 1 frosh ran 9:59.9, and fifth in le1gue holds down the top two mile spot and could gel down Into the 9;20s , 'Ibe 880 features juniors John Weston and TC1f Bauer, with Leo LaCaacla (10.5) Jnd the Giron brothers -junior Dave and soph Don -tn the sprints. Fifty-two-foot shotputter Steve Tim- merman, )Z.foot pole vaulter Ken Galpin! and high jumper Collings C>tl) shine.in their eventi, Estancia With lhe possibility that last year's staf sprinter -junior Bruce Girsaole -may transfer back to Estancia from his cur· re'nt academic surroundings at San Diego's Madison . Higti. Eagle track and-- field ooacb Tom Fisher is licking his chops. Fisher says, "I feel we could take several eventa in the league finals and ~ in'1ery good shape with Girasole back ," Tht' Eagles claimed the ClF Class Cee spike crown Jast season, largely on Girasole'r tronman antics. However, whether the fleet-footed 11th grader returns or not, Fisher has a number of other worthwhile athletes to work with. 'For Instance , the shot put is especially strong what with the return of seniors Craig Dennis (SU~) and John Dixon (51· 1). They went 3-4 in the Irvine League finall last spring and, with the addition of ~foot flinger Dave Reed. the Eagles' weight group shines. Too; Diion and Dennis have .discus potenUal, although they have yet to eclipse the 130-0 mark. "Tlfe long jump is loaded, with or without Glrasole (22-6), since Estancia also claims Newport Harbor transfer Doug St.a.tum (20-0), seniors John Grover (21·2) and Lee Joyce (lH) and junior Art Liddle (20-9). Liddle (10.2, 22.9) and Statum (10.Sl anchor the sprint corps. with loop run· nerup Eric Ol!On (48.9 as a sophomore ani1 49.1 Jast year) the key 440 runner. Distance events are weak as two miler Steve Scbui'eman (9:56 ) is the only run· ner with heavy experience. Doug C.onfer (&-0), Kevin Willingham (S.10) Ind freshman whiz Ken Conner (5- 10) ·bolster the high jump and Graig Hays (J.2.6) ii the best pole vaulter. ~. -' . C,oast , DAlt:.Y l"jlOT SlHf .....,_ Teams The Monarcbl welcome back a J>'ir of An&elua loop ~idual 1otd medal win- ners 1nd one ol them 1s high jumper Doog Morten, a senior who cleared H last sprin1. However, the leaping talents of the Monarchs don't end with Morton, since Frost also enjoys the services of seniors Charlie Turnbau1h (1-3) ond Pat Feeney (6-0). • ' Another good field event for Maler Oei Is the shot put .~ there 46-footer Mike Paino placed sixth in the circuit in 1971. For lone jumping, there's Morton at 20- 6. The pole· vault 1111ns feature two 11-C asll'ilnauts -senior Joe Spadafore and Junior Ron Corcoran. 'Ibe squad'• other returning loop champion is m.ile.r Jim Poettgen and he 's jll.!t a junior. Poettgen ran 4: 30 as a sophomore while the Monarchs also have a good 1·2 tv.·o mile punch in freshmen Joe Dowling (1 :33 in cross country) and Mark Terry (10:02). Mission \/lejo So~IObservers may scoff at it, but the fact tands that Mission Viej<l's Diablos have better-than-average chance to grab the Crestview, League track and field ti tle this season. The Dlabjos have good competitors in many events, something which hasn't alw1ys been a trademark of past Mission Viejo spike squads. So, coach Bill Crow says, "the team to beat ii K1tella, which is very strong. But it's a pretty balanced league and we're ·very optimistic about having a good shot at the title." With the nucleu11 of lut fall's loop champion cross country team dominating the distance events, the reasons become mort apparent for Crow's optimism. Ed Radermacher is a do-it.all who'll conctntrate mostly on the mi.le, where he bas been timed Jn 4;%2.4. Radermacher was second in the CIF See 1320 litst season and he clocked 3:05.9 at that distance to win a state meet ex· hibition. The talented sernor also has run 880 yards in 1:58 and two miles in 9:33 in cross country. Other milers include senior Mark H6wer (4:38) and juniors Ken Howen. t4:42) and Chuck Giddens (4 :45) while junior Mark Cangiano and freshman John Cook can run a mile or two miles. Junior Larry Grijalva has been in the 10:15-10:20 two mile range. Fifth in the loop in 1971, senior Marvin Mann (2:01.8) is expected to dip under two minutes, with senior Ed Letro (Z3.0, 51.1) an all-round sprint hopeful. Best sprinters other than Letro are. Todd Llyport (10.2, -23.l)and junior Scott Kipers (23.2). (4:2.1.9, 9:31.61 spearhead&• rtne distance group. Alon' with Holcomb, distance pros.- peels include hall hiler Tim R u d y (1:59.3J, 1nllers Denny Cline (4:34) and Lee Batson (t :38) and two miler Dave Cross (9:44 ). Pole vaul ters Russ Tucker (12·9!, Dave Gundl!'rson (12-61 and Tom DlStanlslao (12-0) join wit h high jumpers Pat Honeywell (6-1) and Gavin Hedrick (6--0) to provide the Sailors with added field event power. As Hailey puts it, "with Santa Ana so strong, everybody else will· probably be fighting il our for second place." San Cle111et1te Coacli Bob Radford won't know much. about his San Clemente Tritons until their first dual track and field meet Feb. 24 at Anaheim. That's because the Trilons are a young team with a-futuristic outlook. •·we have 86 bodies out there now,'• Radford assures," and that number will be over 100 when basketball and wrest!· ing~finish, "An awful lot or our prospec ts are freshmen and sophomores." In addition to trying to find a com- pel.itive squad, Radford also has to con- cern himself· with the added pains of deve.Joping triple jumpers for the Crestview League.'s newest event. "It'll be one of the long jumper! who triple jumps and right now that 's prob- ably Tom Holleran," says the Triton coach. Holleran has already eclipsed 21 feel In practice in the long jump rind he's bolstered by the presence of ~foot senior Pete Ferrari. ~ Also, six-foot high jumper Tom Terry could also figure in the triple jump plans while Holleran is also listed as a sprint and high hurdle possib1lity. While on the subject of sprinters. swift Bob Frye managed only 10.4 in the 100 last season but he's already lowered his sprint bests to 10.0 and 23.4 in 1972 drills. Along with Holleran , sophomore Fred Johnson is rated as a comer by Radford in the hurdles. With Tim Smith put with a broken Jeg. 4:38 miler Brian Peter is San Clemente'• best long distance runner . U11 iver slt11 ~ With a tradition of producing to flight track and field talent at LA Wilso and South Gate high sct>qols behind him. Hal H~rkness embarks on his first journey as spike coach at University High. Garf Weber, a transfer fr.om Riverside's Ramona High, holds the two mile hopes with a 9:55 top mark wbJle ret•1rnee Doug Knapp Is the besl-iniler at f:32. . · · f'onntaln \I alle y Mitt Leonard has forsaken track and field coaching to concentrate on a myriad of business ventures and his head coaching duties at Fountain Valley have been ably assumed by Leonard's top lieutenant of the past four seasons - NEWPO.RT'S TERRY A~BRITTON PREPARES fOR '7'l SPIKE SEASON. The field events are most fortified in thi weights, where transfer Bo b Sahdala's 50-foot shot put bes\ ls backed by holdover Mitt Burda (46-0) and where senior Gary Wood. has a 130-foot discus top mark. ~e , Troj~ns . went through growing pams 1n their f1rst-t!ver camapaign last spring but 1972 is expected to find University's track squa d able to define its priorities a little more easily. Harkness figure El Dorado should virtually . wiilk off with the Orange League htle and adds , '·Realislically, we don 't expect to finish high In the stan· Corona's hurdling ace ·ls Junior· Mark Wynne, whose better race ts the 120 highs, where he's flown 15.!. Cotta Me•a Costa Mesa Mustangs track ind field coach Doug Brown figures his teim will be a title contender In the Irvine League race· thJs season but the Mesans shoUJd be especially atronR ln the distances. ' Brown, with Joe Fisher and Don Bums assisting lflm, has the nucJe115 back of ·a solid squad and the basis of il lies with the distance runners. To begin with, there's 6-3 Doug MacLean, the two-time Irvine mile champion who is an easy bet to J<t.ver his already impressive career bests Qf 4:18.2 in the mile and 9:08.6 in the two mile. ln addlUon to MacLean 's return, the ~tuStangs feature the talents of the Olswang twins -John and Tom, both consistently In the 9:30-9:45 range. And junior Mike Holliday 1 n d sophomore Tim Gollnick also ha•e great distance potential. Re~ularS return ln the sprints and hurdles, too. For sheer speed, there's Rick Desmet. a 10.0 sprinter who was fourth in the loop century finals ln 1971, and Bob Bomboy. The ' best of the hurdle lot are Mason Hungerford and John' German. The field events are. strongest ln the hl•h jump. long jump and discus. Part of the opUmWn in the first two of the above.mentioned fleJd groupings is due tn jon ?.1arc:hior1attt. who. if his knee troubles subside. should be able to match his previous bests of 6-.f and 20-6. Desmet Is a 2(1..foot long Jumpe.r while Hunoerford has sailed &-0 in the high jump. senior Dave Crook Is a strong discus thrower who's already been flirting with 151M> in practice. . Junior Don Johnson ls the only ex· t perfenced shotputter, with the pole vault decimated by the graduation of Craig Watkins and the translu of "Paul Manis to SU Luis Obispo. Ed lao11 • For the first two years of Edison Hlgh'I exlstenct, John Myers con· centrated on rwining the track and fitld program while getting in some football C08chlng on the side. Well. this achool year, Myers relieved hims.If of crldlron duu,. but kept the track job and assumed another new hat -tht( of athletic director. Of course, the tum sltuaUon favors Corona del Mar anc:l resuraent Santi Ana Valley In the trv1nt Ltague picture. But Mytrt: 1ay1, "we'll bt competitive, that's for 1ure. ObviouJ Charger strengths art in the hurdl., and distances. rlrll of!. there's Edison 's stick 1peclaJJ1t -senior Dave Powell. . Pow.U pl•ced fiflh In the loop in both tht JJO blghs 1nd ltlll Iowa last oeoson and bit bolll of U.2 md llU. • lie'• also tlckellJcl ror • mile rel•y ~ lblty..-. • Blcklnl Powell In lb< blahs ta 1.u.r- 111111 11.wtr 1dllla. holtjer of • ll.O top dockliie whilt IW IOlll jump oce RD11 I .,. ·' , .. Slan Clark. . Middle distance races could prove to be the Fountain Valley forte this spring. To be&in with. the derendlng Irv ine League champions return, junior John Sayles. second in the circuit in the 880 and fifth in the ffO In 1970. Sayles' be sts were Sl.O and 1:58.7. Seniors Dave Marx {5.1.0) and Dennis Myers (52.0) back Sayles in t~e quarte1 while Clark is hoping that one or the other will help the junior nash in the hair. Junior loop low hurdles titlist Rich Lenga, with a windy 19.9 lop clocking. heads a hurdling group which also in- cludes senior Gary Hernandez (21.0 ). Pole vaulter Bob Schenk diCl 13-0 in '71 and rates up there in that event with Scott Robuck and Kirk Thompson. Senior all-round ace Tom Casso will compete in the long jump, high jump, low hurdles and one or the relays while Pennsylvania transfer Tom Bowman is expected to help in the long jump and the sprints. Other top sprinters are last year's best Bees .:o. Brad Varney and Matt Mohulski. bolh in the mid-tOs in the 100 and the mid-Us in the furlong . ShotP.Utter Les Becher (47-0) and dlscu! thrower Preston Millier (135-4). both outstanding wrestlers who are still com· peting on the mats, will be Clark's finest weightmen. Bu11tlngton Be acl• Coach Paul Wood surmises that the strongest part of his Huntington Beach Oilers' track and field squad could be overall strength in the field events. Wood isn't necessarily blowing in the dark, either. Evidence begins with the shot put, where the Oilers are fortified by the return of Tony Ciarelli, fourth place finisher in the Sunset League in 1971, when he posted a ~-1 II best. Behtnd -€1arelll Is junior BUI Harbin. who didn't compete last season but wl10 whipped the 1().pound Bee shot 44 feet as a freshman two years ago. \Vhile lU pole vaulter Dave Andelin ha! graduated. Huntington is still blessed with his t>Jckup man -St'nior ~11ke Prendeville, another 12-6 leaper. "Mike has better spt<d and strength than David and he's bigger too,"' Wood say>. Wood bos a pair or slx./oOt -tiigh jumpers in Jim Worthy and Greg Trat>trt, while juniors Bob Butler and John Hanour have managed W. The Oll City mentor calls the high jump the tl!'am's deepest event. Worlhy wilt ilso he tong jumping. along with George Fierro, who has flown over 20 rt«t In praclf"!, - Junior Jim Nl!Uowskl, who did ll·S u • aophomort, hn an Injury keeping him out ol the long jump but he'll be perform- 11111 In the sprints. 11 wta Flmo. Nilllowakl (10.1. 23.1) "'"fourth In the loop In tbe 100 and firth In lhe 2lO IHI · -but he may be rudnlni the 440 . ' , ,while Fierro (10.2. 2.1.0) holds the fort in the shorter sprints. Jim Kiser (10.4.l is also available for sprint chores. Steve Pickford should be one or Orange County's better hurdlers with returning top marks of 14.5 in the 120 highs and 20.0 in the 180 lows. Marc Mitchell (52.6. 1 :59) is a double threat in the 440 and 880, with freshman Robe.rt Angel (4:42) and senior Mark Hill (4:48 ) Huntington's finest milers. Laguna Beach After enjoying an ultra·succeisful track ani:I field season in 1971 on the lightweight levels. Laguna Beach High's spike prc>- gram has balance and depth everywhere ; it's just that the squad is unproven against varsity competition . So contends Artist track coach Len Miller who adds. ''on paper, things look pretty good . At this time we feel we have a chance to beat everybody on our schedule. "While the team situation in the Orange League ravors Sonora and El Dorado. if we progress as t think we should, we could beat anyone on a given da y." For a school its size, Laguna is loaded all around. · First off, there 's Charlie McNair. fou rth in the loop last year with a 12·6 best. But he's 'already flown 12-9 in prac- tice and he has junior Mark Sweeney (11· 6) In reserve. the· high jwnp showcases two ~ l leapers in junior Neal Amsdt:n and senior- Jay Nelson, along with sophomore Doug Case (r.-10). Top two long jumpers are juniors Dar: rel! Driskell (20-7) and Dave Marriner (19-5) while Miller has a cOup\e of weight da ndies in llth graders Judd Binley and Kurt Shull. both around 43 feet in the ti. pound shot put and 14'l-O with the discus. They're expected to be in the 46-47 vicinl· ty in the shot by the first meet Feb. 24 agsinst Servite. ... The Artists have.the makings of'a fine sprinters' collecUon with 10.3 swifties Marriner, Telford Cotfi:m. P 1 u I Klosterman and Spike Atkinson back. Sophomore hurdler David Kiesse.lbacb wa s the league champ ln the Cet low hurdles and his added strength and 6-1 height should makt tum tough ln the: hurdles. along with junion Robert Ahlke and Jeff Winship and senlor Tad Ritter. Heading the Laguna distance runntng group are hrolhers Joe aod John Prlckltl John has a better mile be.st at 4:49.8 but Joe. second place finhher in the loop mlle finals in 1971. has turned in • t :33 two mile best in cross country. Junior Josb Bright. who clocked l :OU two years ago before concentr1llnc on • longer distance last season, Is the top 880 hopt while junlon Karl Webtr and Jtlf Tensreldt are two,mile prospects. M arina Whtn ll"cqn)ta Ume for MlJ'fna'• Dave Okura to tal~ &lock ol hll Viking track and fttld capabilities Iller In the suson. two pl1ct1 that promise ""!. to be dell- ~ c cient are the half mile and burdJes. The 880 Is· strobg with Swiset League ruMerup Preston Campbell, a junior, bac~ in the fold. "Canipbell has clocked 1:58.6 and his con.staqt companion will probably be sophomor~ Jay Rodgers, a ClF Cee 1320 finaU.t 1'!"1 spring. Also, sophomore trlnsfer Steve Redd from Edison is a possibility for either the half or the mile, the latter which is dominated by junior Ken Martyn at 4:30. Capable of 4:20, ·Martyii wu fourth in Ille circuit four lapper as a soph. Senior Gene Taylor makes the hurdles, especially the 180 lows, a definite strength for the Vlkes. Taylor was the CIF Bee 120 lows run- nerup last season after fiying to 14.9 and 19.1 clockings in the varsity category and he's backed by Paul Stenho, a ~igl!s mainstay. · Gtttina; b1ck, to the distancts, excellent two mile competitors include senior Bob Phillips, (1:48), junior Rich Brebrick and soph Gary Bluem. Phillips was fifth in the league in '70. Marty Gresham (12-2) could hit 13-0. High jumpers Gree Lee CS-10) and Steve Kati (~10) could go ove.r 6-0 and Greg Hunllton is the best long j~r available. -/. __ , __ In lhe sprints, where Marina wu wiped out Qy gradu1tion, the lone hope is juniot Randy Hawkliis, ·who's out for the first time. Mater De i Havin& been a hllh jwnper at Chap- man College, tt would only r1gure that the st.ronielt event on the agenda for first. year coach Jim Frost at Mater Dei ffjgh would be the hi1h jump. With de£ending champion Pius X and St. Anthony rated as lht teams to heal in the Angelus Leasue trade and field pic- ture, Mater Dei could be the darkhonie in the race. For Coast Area Long jumpers Tim ... Mann (19-1 1) and Rick Cummings (19-6) also are the DiabJos' be:lt in a new event in the league -the triple jump. In the hurdles, there is senior returnee Aundre Holmes and junior transfer Mark Stoddart. Newport Harbor Newport Harbor's T1rs finished second in the stile track and field finals with shotputters Mark steve.ns and Terry Albritton last year after suffering through a wlnless, Ou-plagued duaJ meet campaign. .Stevens has eraduated and he's taken his 67-2Y• top mark with him. But Albritton is back, and the streamlined (down from 228 to 210 pounds) 1trongboy has definite plans on pushing his 65-5 career best out much farther. Thererore, Tar mentor Bob Hailey and auiatants Bert Donald and Jim Hemsley are not singing the blues. In addition to Albritton, senior Loren Dake (51..QY,) and junior Jim Swick (49..Q) foom as possible weight stars. · However, Newport's usual array of talent doesn't stop in the weight events. Student body president Matt. Hogsett is the all-round ace on the squad. The bespectacled Hogsett has skimmed the 120 high hurdles in 14.S, the· llO lows in 19.4, along with posting 2J·5 (long jump), 49.4 (4401 and l :SU (Siil) JDMks in a recent Jntrasquad decathlon. And Hog1ett's hurdling partner - senior Gary Brace -1lso is back in the fold with 15.1and19.8 bests to his credit. Eric Stricklind is an ample high hunller at 15.5. Junior Gary Litten (I0.3) a n d sophomore Pete Brown (10.4) key the aprlnta ~bile senior John Holcomb ' Top Returni1ig Marks I , dings. . "We'll h~v~ our strength primarily In the 440, 880 and mile relay." In those middle distance races, a pair of transfers have obviously added lustre to the Uni program . They are juniors Bob Bradford and Don Ross and senior Jeff Green. ·Coming to Uni from South Torrance's fine spike program, Bradrord has flown 440 yards in 51.6 and also ,zipped to a 1:24 660 as .a sophomore. ' Ross has been credited with 53.!i and 2:02.5" marks while Green is a S0.8 quarter miler and a 2:02 880 man. With holdover Jim Dykes having clock~ ed 53.9 for the quarter in tennis shoes the potential for a sul>-3 :30 mile r~lay ef: fort is there. The hurdles are questionable while the sprints will probably be· manned by Green fl0.4). Dykes (10 .5) and junior Rick Risse (10.4). Junior Mike Casserly, who's been gel· ting his hips up over the 6-3 mark, is a sure six·foot leaper if he stays healthy, with Risse. Green and Dykes the top long jump hopeful s. Discus thrower Bill Murphy transferred to Ora~ge but Scott Davison (12-5-130 foot range) is still around. Wesh1d11ster With Santa Ana far ahead of the re st of the Sunset League pack In the loop track and 1iela'race, Westmlllster's new 27· year~ld head coach Dave Kurrie bu other ideas on his mind.- In his third year, as a Lion mentor (the first tWo were spent as an aide to Jack Hedges), Kurrie says, "we're just looking for person;il bests In our kids ; that's tbe key thing on a young · team. "We have so mnny sophomores and juniors lhat this will be a building year, .. The shot put is one or the Lions' stronger events with football stars Gary Jennings and Jim Holl1ind in tow. Jennings' b·ack was hurt so he didn 't compete last year. But he's already hit· ting 50 feet in practice . Hollnnd, meanwhile. thrtw 4U ln 1171 and he's hovering pround that mark et present. As for the track events, Westminster has the makings of a very fast mile rtl1y combo with juniors Jim Kuthley and Tom Shirley and seniors Jeff Youn( ind· Dave Stacy. Keathley ii the team's bread·and;blltler athlete. He has sprint bHll of 10.1 (Wind· alde\1 100) and 23.1 (231) and hu clocked the qu~r mile. In 50.i. , Shirley ran a J :21 «iO 11 1 soph l11d Is ticketed for either 440 or llO cklly or botb. Young (l:o7.il was third In the loop \aat 1prlng In th• halt while Stacy (It.I) placed fourth In the quarter. Mike Braunattln (l :04 1 If a Rnlor !Ill hopeful, with 80b Dietz (1:311, JtlOI and Jim/POii (l :U) tlie top retuniHI In the mild and two mile. Tiie polo vault ii poi.ntilly jlJlop point: getting Itta w!M! junlorl Walt S~r (ti. IOI> aod ~ (lU) beck. /or another year. J • r - • I CEMENT CRUISE -This is the 23-foot ferro cement sloop on which two Long Beach men set sail Satu rday for Hawaii, the first leg of a proposed worl d cru ise. - ' U.S. Buyers Receive Customs Service Aid LOS ANGEL;;-IA;)--\he U.S. Customs Servtce isn't just the steely-eyed uniformed in- dividual who searches your baggage and sometimes your person when you come home from a trip abroad. It's also a number of whitecoated laboratory workers who analyze imported goods to verify thal they are what they are claimed to be. 1'-1ajorie A. Rommel is such • chemist and her work pro- Food Stamp Benefits- tects tfle American citizen against mislabeled foreign products. · It protects the American manufacturer too, because Dr. Rommel's analysis 9f an imported product determines the tariff due on it. Last year, customs office~s at the Port or Los Ange les assessed from $2 million to $.5 million a week in tariffs, and across the nalion customs levies amounted to $3.5 billion. liow does Dr. Rommel go about her work ? She held up a delicate crystal decanter lo the light and turned it this way and that to . watch its sparkle. Theri, she smashed it deftly with a hammer. T 0 In crease? "Th;s ;, a part of a large .s h ip m ent from West WASHINGTON (UPI) · _ Germany. It 's· marked lead Rising food. prices soon may crystal. we·n grind this to determine the lead oxide cpn-force the governn1en1 to in-tent:" said Dr. Rommel. ~ crease food stamp benefits for ·'The tariff regulations re-a~: 11.5 million poor ~pie. quire that it be 24 'percent to iue 1971 .food Stamp ~orm be called crystal. tr it f;:ilJs. Law contained a requirement below that in our test, the that needy per~~s be. ~ffercd decanter is just plain glass." enough for . a,, N.utnhonally The tariff rates for imported ad~uate di et with annual crystal and "just plai n glass" ?dJustments to renect changes differ and the U.S. manufac- 1n food costs. . . turer in this field is protected U_nder that prov1s1on. the from unfair competition only basic monthly allotm~nt of by the vigi1ance of Dr. Rom· st~mps-4106 worth -was mel and her colleaguet"' ra~ _to $1_08 last summe:. "Supposing' the f 0 r eign Price rises ~1ncc then make _it manufacturer mislabeled the appear J>OSSJble th~t the ba sic decanter. That would enable al~otment could rise to $1 12 the importe r here to bring in this summer. . the shipment at a' lower duty,'' Needy persons who quahrv Dr. Rommel explained. "The for the pro~am . pay . cash ~rchaser buys What he thinks amounts varying with their In-is' genuine crystal. It's a ~ome. A family of four \\'ith fa ke." income of $30 or less monthly, Pointing a braclet imported for example, currently gets from Hong Kong. she said: $108 worth of stamps free. A "Note the sm311 charm al· family with cash income of tached to it. It is stamped 18- $120 monthly pays ~I for s10:3 carat gold. The tiuyer is under worth of stamps. while a fam1-tbe impression that the enti re ly earning $370 monthly must bracelet is 18 carats. It isn't. pay $84 for the $108 stamp Only the charm has that con- allocation . tertt of gold." The stamps can be used like Dr. Romme l said there is no cash for food, but not for law in the United States that items such as beer, cigarettes, forbids this practice .. All that soap and paper . customs officials can do wh en The Agriculture De~tment . "they spot a wrong~y labeled has pegged stamp aid to an product is to alert the Federal "'economy food pl8Q" diet . Trade Commission. which is s c ~ e. d u I e c a I c u I a,.!S. d responsible for protecting the peruxhcally by department consu mer against such decep- home economists, Rising food lions. prices pushed the ''cConomy" During a lypical day. Dr. diet cost to nearly $110 Rommel and' her four fellow monthly for a family of four chertrists at Terminal Island . including two sc h o o I · age may check the sugar content children in September. and lo in imported candy bars or cut $11 1.IO 'in December. out a section of a motorcycle A department source said helmet from Japan to see if it o[ficiali planned to await a does indeed have an filner January "economy" diet cost fiberglass li ner for added pro- estimate, which is not yet tection, as claimed by the available. before making a manwfacturer. final decision on changing the l,;;;;;;;;~i;;;;~ stamp 'allotment. 11 "We wi ll try to make our adjustment in March and put it in as or July I. We have to give states ample lead time because of the complexity of changing their i ~ s u a n c e schedu1es," the source said. . ROLLER GAmEs Fiii .. Fii. 11 • 1:00 P.M. f . COSiA MESA f AIRGROUNDS LA. "T-Birdo yo. ' I N. Y. Bombers Halftfl!MI Memti ll:ace lo1t1 "Country Boy" Ct••• '" •onnie "Ptvtho" Rein• A~L llAlS 12.10, l ie.ken tMt Mlt 5:00 P.M., hidey ._, ._,"""''litltt .-IMONMllM c:.t •1c11toooo1 •·1171 ' • ) Sets DAILY PILOT Jj ·cement~ Sloop Sails for Hawaii block of cement. She is a lrin1 Harboring · dreams of a gaff-rigged sloop built of ferro- wOrld cruise? cetnent. one of the newest of 'Try it on a 23-fool thunk of boat bullding material&. cement with a gaff-rig1 Romack and N' el I e ma n The Cemenlina carries 206 square feet of sail in her gaff. rigged main and 93 feet in the working jlb. She v.•ill carry 30 gallons of water and 50 gallons of fuel. capable o[ cru ising about SOO miles under power with the Volvo-Penta 10 hp diesel. ment with an overall thickness of one-half Inch. This was achieved by using four layers ol one-half fhch t h i c k ungalvanized welded mesh and 20 steel rods spaced two in- ches horizontally. Ron1ack said many items the teak decking to the ctment on the boat are experimental surfaces, the epoxy binders and will be tested under way. and sealers Jn relationshie to. These include the outside skeg the cement, and swe1Un1 1nd and ballast, th.e adhesion of elcctrolysls conditions, : That is the .mode of travel designed aod built the boat to for Floyd Romack and Ernie prove their theory that the Nelleman of Long Beach who , young adventurer with limited set sail Saturday for Hawaii. funds can do the same thing th~ first leg o! a proposed as the man who can afford to world cruise in Cementina. build a 00-foot sailboat for The deck wa$ constructed in a similar manner. The cabin was oonstrui:ted at--plywood bolted onto nanges on the ce· ment deck . TAKE THE NEWS QUIZ ,~ We . Oare You ••• Every Saturday ? . Cementina is not exactly a world cruisittg. The hull of the Cementina was constructed of ferro-ce- orEN DAILY 10 A.M. TO 10 r .M. SUNDAY 10 A.M. TO 7 r .M. • ..• .-- ..,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,...,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,.. ..... ..,....,..~ _..,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,....,..--t, ' •Any additional parts or 1e~1tes needed but Febru~ry Tire Clearance~· ' -O· • PRICES ON Flru< PREMIER .; ,_ • . "' 36 MONTH GUARANTEEt\ . ; 4-PLY :; POLYESTER CORD WIDE 7 8 SERIES TREAD .. , , .. ' .......... _,. ..... ,,, "" ... ' ., " .• . ·-.. '. ..... '.' •·•· ...... ............ " ....... · ... ., ' ..... ' .... ...... ... -··~» .. ' .. ,.,, ··~· ........... , .. ""'" •~· a ...... .. .... ~ ... ._ .... ~~ ... .. ' -...... ...... ..... . ·~·"' .. .. ... "' •"'"' -~ .. ~· ... , . -,, .. ... . . . ..... "., '""*' .•• '" .... . ... ... ··~ ' . " ... .,, ........ . .... , ......... ,. .. •· '" • •· " ', .. ·~ '"* .................. .......... " ... .,_, .. ........ ' ... ~·· ..... ~ .. .... ·~-~-··-· .. . WHlN rT1 TIME TO II.Tiii IUY FISK ~ " WHY WAlTI USE YOUR ltm1n CREDIT CARD OR YOUR 8AN'K AMERICA RO B.RAKE RELINE MOSt AMERICAN COMPACTS 1288* MOST AMERICAN STANDARD 15.88* D ito; B•8ltl1111.CIJPfld Self-!diu'1•nt B••kH S. Mort MOST AMERICAN . lUXURY 20.88* .WHITEWALLS $17 850-13 Blecltw1ll Tu~-Plw Ftd. Ea. T• of $1.75 TUBELES,Si BLACKWALL WHl~EWA.LL PLUS FID. TIRE SIZE PRICE JI ICE EX. TAX Br•nd Code #3(129 EACH EACH EACH TIRE 650-13 114 117 $1,71 C78-13 (700J 'II •11 1.15 ElB-14 ]7351 'II 121 Z.24 F78·14 (775) 111 •u .... F78-16 (776l '21 •u .2AI G78-14 (825J •21 'H .... '22 •n .... ,. H78·15 (855] •u 'II 2.lt • An oricft plus F.twal hclM T•ir FREE TIRE MOUNTING AND ROTATION WITH TIRE PURCHASE. . " .; . ! ' • ~ • : o"i ~ I . ~ ,• . '• .. " , . . . •. ;. . ' '· . ! ' .. " '• EACH • 10 0\lnt:"f\ l'--------------------'--w• '''''"' TMI l lOMt to UMlf QUAHflflll·----·--..; BUENA PARK BUENA PARK lieoch llvd. at L1ltwelltr Uncoln at Valley View 5301 leach llvd. 5885 Llftcoln Ave. &23-3040 826-5800 • • - COSTA MESA Harbor Blvd. at Wilsaft 2200 Harbor Blvd. • &48-2082 • . SANTA ANA £diftger St. at lri1tol , 1400 EdllllJel' 646-7832 WESTMINSTER 15440 leach Blvd. lleac:h Blvd. at McFadde• 892-2088 ' l I r I ~ DAI\. Y PILOT Wol ... sday, r'""'"' U , 197l Wtdntsia1 , , • .,,,,,.16. 1972 PILOT-ADVERT!SEJI 0 .Ae<;ountant Jo]J Orange Coast Area .Men in .Serv.i~e Increase See11 I By JOYCE L. KENNi:DV Bue are moR ~lgbtl ' lrtm a 1'tW ltudy of tht job @fiuoot of 1• m1de by Job tederal Labor O.portmut'• 8'treaa of Labor Stallsdcs. ••Occupatlonal Mupower and Tralalns Neod,. CCOUNl'ANTS a re ex· ed to increase 43 percent, 500,000 employed in 1968 1ol12Q,000 in 1970. Greater use Gl accounting information ·jn " . Career Corner • estate, which employ lari;e clerical sLaffs, is a major (ac. tor ln the projected demand. Furthermore, as both private in~lry and government con· tinlM to grow in size and com- plexity. paperwork will ex- pand. Te c hnologi c al in· novations in orflces are not el'.· peeled to lim it demand for stenos and secretaries. Typist demand, on the other hznd , which is projected to 930,000 in 1980, up '!I percent from the 700,000 employed in 1968, llloved Up Alrrnan Thomas. A. the Aviation Structural Scltmeckd, son of Mr, and Mechanic School al Memphis. t.1r1, W. H. Schrneckel of 2*906 A v i a t i o n S t r ti ctural Jeronimo Lane, El Toro, has Mechanie.1 maintain byfiraulic graduated al Keesler AFB. systems, Juselages and wings Miss., from the U.S. Air.Force aboard naval aircraft. personnel specialist OOurse. --r The airman, now proficient Navy Seaman Gerald W. in the preparation of personnel Spiur, son of Mr. and Mrs. records and reports, Is being A1bert L. Sei.ton of 6122 assigned to Travis AFB, for ..il;)awnee Road , Westminster, duty wjth a unit of ~if In the Western Pacific Military Airlift C o rn m a n d aboard the Alameda .. Calif., which, provides global airµO. based combat stores ship USS for U.S. military forces. White Plains, a unit of the would be even higher except d for duplicati"g equipment. Edwar C. Stephens, Navy Ensign Dana A. Shaw, &okeeping worker needs son of Mrs. Helen M. son ot Mr. and Mrs. Robert O. Coast Guard Seaman Kelt& --.. U.S. SevenUt Fleet. pleted his U.S. Air Force basic training at the Air Training Command's Lackland AFB, Tex. He has been assigned to Chanute AFB, UI., for training in the 'aircraft equipment maintenance field. the Diviaion's 45th h1edlcal '6attallon near Hanau . He entered the Army in February 1971, completed basic training at Ft. Ord, and was Jut 1ta· tioned at Ft. Sam Houston, Tes. Army Private DoaaJd J. Dlsto1, son of ~1r. and Mrs. ChaTle! R. Diston, 8511 Jenn· rich Ave ., Westminster. recently was assigned lo the lllst Field Artillery i n Germany. Pvt .. Diston is a missile crewman in Battery D of the artillery's 1st Battalion near ed to repair aircraft hydraulic and pneumatic units, is behil assigned to March AFB, for duty wllh a unit of the Air Force Re5erve1. Airman-Green is a graduate of Estancia High School. Na'vy Petty Officer Second Class Robert B. Prultt.,son ol Mr. and ¥ts. Albert J. Pn1itt of 35022 Camino~ Capistrano Beach, has completed nearly two-months o f contlnoous operations in the [ndian Ocean and South China Sea aboard the nuclear powered aircraft carrier USS Enterprise. are expected to increase 19 Stephens, 430 E. Bay Shaw of 12536 Goldeneye, ne&h R. Clrrasco, son of ~1r. percent to 1.S million in 1980 Ave., Newport Beach, Fountain Valley, was com-and Mrs. Robert M. Carraaco Navy Petty Officer Second from the i.2 million in 1968. has been named assis·. missioned in hl11 presenf rank of 237 Robin Hood Lane, CoSta Airman WWlam E. Wileox Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. William W. Wilcox ot 2301 Private Road, Newport Beach, hn completed his U.S. Air Force baalc training al lhe Air Training Command's Lack.land AFB, Tex. He has been assigned to Sheppard AFB, Tex., for training as a medical services specialist. New Ulm. C··"'er demand. ,·, p•o1'ected tant dean of the Med-upon graduation from the MeU, is scheduled to remain Army Specialist Four Gary Airml Mran DeandooMls 1\1, Green, Class Thomas C. Robson, son to'i::C..ease to I.I milliin in ill School of Journal· Aviation Officers Candidate in the Antarctic until mid· A. Rice, son of Mr. and Mrs. soG no 1. 32 Orrs. James A. of Mr. and Mrs. James H. ism at Northwestern School at the Naval Air Sta· February aboard the Coast Chester' A. Rice, 17373 Palm reen o 49 egon Ave., Robson of 221 Geneva st., bu a Ines s management, in-1980. or 51 percent over 1968 University, Evanston, lion, Pensacola, Fla . Guard Icebreaker st 8 ten st., Fountain Valley, recently Costa Mesa has graduated at Huntington Beach, has co~ creuingly complex and when employment stood at Island, homeported at SeatUe. was assigned to the 3rd Chanut~ AFB, Ill .•. from thy pleted nearly two-months of• ctlanging ta1 systems, growth 730,000. Office ma c hine __ n_1.________ Navy Airman Apprentice __ Armored Division in U.S. Air Fore~ atrcra[J.;-Cc-continuous operations in the ifl. lhe si7.e and number of operators are expected t6 in-KllfS LJ.ke ·Richard P. Wrlght, son or Mr. Airman Richard P. Graf, son Germany . cessorles repa1nnan course Indian Ocean and South China b\WneSS corporations required crease to 4e<l,OOO in 1980, or 39 and Mrs. Glenn L. Wright of of Mr. and Mn. Howard H. Spec. ruce is an ad· conducted by the Air Training Sea aboard the nu c I ear to provide financial reports to percent over the 3 2 S, O O II To Ask Andy 15444 Bolsa Chica sp 152, Hun-Graf of 16061 Ballantine Lane,. ministrative clerk. in head· Command. powered airerart carrier USS 21tockholders, and the in-employed in 1968. -. tington Beach, has completeg. .. Huntington Beach, has com--quarters and Company A or, The airman, who was traiD--Enterprise. cttasing use 01 accountingl--::~iiiliiilll;;lliiiliiiliiilllll;iiiiliiil;;;jiiil~;;11~;jii11ii;jii11ii~~iiijiiii~~;;;iji1ii1ii1ii1iii1;;~;;11111111~~ .. ~;lii1;;;;1iji19iiiijj1iiill~1iiii~~~iiiillll~:--~ services by small firms arei the primary f a c t o r s Un· derlylng' thill projected growth. "SYSTEMS ANALYST aod ~OGRAMMER requirements 4fe expected to increase ~~ply in respoose kl the rapid growth in the number of (}.tlroniC data pro c e 111 in g systemri: used by business, goyemment, unJversitles, and 9!J:>er organization.,. Program- iper requirements are pro-- ~ted at 400,000 in 1980, a 129- pircent increase over the J75,000 employed in 1968. An ~YFn ~ore rapid growth rate -:-183 percent ~ I! expected f~r systems analywtJ:, with re- quirements: increasing t o 425,000 in 1980 from an ~polyment it 150,000 in 1968. The fastel' gtAW1h or the more ~ghly trained sys tern s 'j¢,alyst! compared with pre>- ·~~mers is related to the in- m as.ing capabilities of corn- :.>uters for solving complex .scientific, engineering. and business problerris: and the growth of computer ctnteni to .:SerVe small clients. "SALARIED MANAGERS AND ·oFFICIALS, who make -'!P more than 70 percent of all i;nanagJ'rial workers , are ex· pecte;d to grow very rapidly as _,wisinee and government de- iRend increaslngq> on trained •m 1 n •gem en t specialists. . Proprietora are expected to 1contlnue to decline as large firms restrict the growth or "the total number or firms. EX· ·.pansion of $elf~service :.groceries, laundries. and dry- ~&eanin,g shops, and ham- '•bkrger and frozen custard drive.ins, however, w i 11 '·restrain the rate of decline . -CLERICALWORKERS . . .,-echnological developments '1.'ill limit growth ror certain types of clerical workers. To 1llw;trate. electronic corn· ~putlrs and bookkeeping •<J1U\chine1 are expected to •reduce the number of clerks in ·-jobs such as filing , payroll , in· ·ventory control . and customer : •billing. On· tht!! other hand , growing requiremenL"I for ·clerical personnel to preoare Computer inputs will off!'!et s o m e ''ha l labor-saving in- -novalions. Stenographer11 and Secre taries. the largest of the : ¢lerical groups. are expected \9 re8ch 3.7 million in 1980, an i ncrea9e of 37 pe:rctnt over the 'l.1 million employed in 1968. Rapid gro,wth particularly in finance, insurance, and real Teacl1ers Math Set At OCC Orange Coast E v e n i 11 I -: College is offering a spring course entitled "f\.,alh for · Teachers," designed as a ,. refresher course for e\ernen· -J,ary school instructors. Meeting on Monday e\'en· . jngs from 7·10 o'cloc k. the , 4XH1rse will examine lhe real , number &ystern as well as theory and logic. Registration is during January and by ap- pointment only. · Late registration will be at the OCC Records a n d A'dmlnistration office fn'lm 8 • 1.m. to I p.m. Feb. 14-17. .... . 42 .Painting~ ":Go on Di splay Forty,..wo ~lnllngs of well· • 1mo ... Soutlifand P• I n I er 'barwln Duncan are .on ex· 1 hllritlon I~ March 2 in lite corridou of P • c I I I c • HospU.I, 18791 Delaware St., ' llunUncton Belclt. The public ls ,..,...,,. kl this Uhibit, "°f W• o!llclafl 11id. I Approximate inside dimensions l 15"x78" """~ x79". A great saving on one of our forger buildings. O:>mple'.te •li.lrii-l•w~i~th.easy·to-follOw osserribly instructions. 7995 3''x4"x8' 99 12· NCH REDWOOD POSTS ~~~~ F•G!o!,~! ---~ .-Does your fence need mending or do you need a new one? We hd've the stock now ot o special price. WALNUT GRAIN PEGBOARD 2'x4' SIZE 6 .9!. ' H&B ~ "I' fi~ufe$.1-robbits~ frogs, chipmunks 1 and ducks. Ideal for shade gardens oround the pool or U waterfall. Perfect · ~ for the youngsters roam. Westinghouse ELECTRIC, HEATER 1320 WAJri You cOn be sure if it's Westinghouse! • Autematic thermostat control• Fan-forced instant heat• Ther~al controlled safety switch &-.FOOT hffllr cmd oppliOl'IC9 e111e"1ion tord. • • R:etrodable carrying handle II'' BAT ASSORTMENT LltTLE BROTHER FIELDER'S ·~GtOYE " Your choice of linle league bots, baseball bots or softball bats. Special buy with slight imperfections. Some terrific values in thiS assortment. YOUR CHOICE ·1·· IA. IL ,0.0 24391 ROCKf .. LO AT EL TORO R01 •• ' .... n. "" .... ,.. ........ .. • AT GOLD!.N WIST I T. • • '89 E, 17th ST. JJ21 ft, ~ HABRA Bl W.1 Junior size glove of top groin cowhide. . Stitched in nylon for longer wear. , :4'. )jK·fJ ' j1, I'' I BARE ROOT ROSET•E•S Growers over·stock sole! All of the. most popular varieties. This stately tree rose will give' your yard a look of elegance. Sl'IECIAL PURCHASE! Lf.,.lte.r ow-title• BARI ROOT ROSES #1;NON·PATENT ' <\All of the rilfillpiipular colo'5 and ~I varieties. Pocked in a special moist ·mulch to insure freshness. All roses have 3 or more cqnes. SAVE33' I 86~. ' -BEGONIA BULBS Hanging or upright varieties. j AU of the most outstanding colors to choose from . Plant now for blossoms all spring and summer. The colors ore so vivid they.- look artificial. • .47.:. GLADIOLUL BULBS The most outstanding blooming bulb In the garden. One of the.favorites of flocists..All ol the most popvlar colors to choose from. Mix or match. Plant every two weeb for blooms all spring and summer. ,..,. .1212 lRV!Nf ILYO, OflH ILOCK I . 011 H&M"O-.T AV.l COIT A ••••• , .... ••• •••. LA ...... AT ...... SLVo. '----------,.o(',•"'•"•"u"•"•-·=-"'·"··~·.~·"'""'o"•"""•"'c"'o"v"'••"•,-.,·~·L""A'°'~"·"·'::;sc~ENTA • L.Al>ERA Ht:''*"'~ • THOU ND OAKS •iAST L.0$ ~Gil.lS • lilMt • u.. ~, ... .. • •• CHATSWOf'ITH • r.-.. z.,.. • .. ESl!OA • \#'I.ANO ............ UGUS • GOLl'TA • v1c"*Vtt.LI • Gll:ANADA HfLl:I •SAN ""NAIUMHO • COAONA • CAMAfULlO • IAtCE .. Ul!Lb • HACJEM>A HltOHTS e 'iSCONDtOO • IPl'INC VAlll'f • SANTA C1..MA ( . ' .. • ' • ' • , • -r· -• ·-1 PILOT·AD\1£0'TIOER Wfdnesd ay, FtbrlWJ 16, 1972 ~ WrdorSLl•y, Frbruar7 16, lt)72 DAI LY PjLOT 23 FAJtllLY CIRCVS Coast Area.Hen in Ser.vi~e 1111 Bii f(ea11e We l(ill Selves ' -e.oau Guard s e a m a. n Recruit Jay D. Lov\1, !bn of Mr. and Mrs. Jack O. Lovig of 1417 My iners Dfive, Newport Beach, enlisted in 'the Coasl Guard at L-Ong Beach . and is receiving basic 'ftaining at Ala meda. school , and the length of ltis a.;tive duty will be from four to len monW, depending U)l>n Beach, rean cooipleted 16 wee.ks of trai Ing und er the modern volunteer ar my at f !. Ord. I.ht U.S. Air Force. ,_ r 111 Various Ways ~ Coast Guard Se a m a n Recruit Charles R. Kemn itz., son or ~tr . .and Mrs. Robert F. Kemn itz Qf 221 Barctlona, San Clemente. graduated from basic training at Lhe Coast Guard Training and Supply Center at Ala meda. Navy Se<1man Apprentice Richard G. Avery Jr .. son of Mr. and l\1rs. Richard G. Aver~ of 16.141 Duchess Lane, Huntington Beach. has com· pleted lhe recru it phase1of the Navy's "Four·tirTen-Mon th" aclive du ty progr11 m at the Nav al Air Reserve Tr aining Unit, ~1cmphis, Tenn. lie will now go 1o a sp~lized aviation suppC)rt the length of his schoo l. ' ArTQY Private AnthoQy R. Jacinto, son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe. R. Jacinto. 13681 Sioux Road. \Vestminslcr, recently completed parachute packing, maintenance and a i rd r op course at the U.S. Army Quarmmaster School, F t ... Lee, Va. Army P riv a1e First Class Robert A. Park1, son of Mrs.. Dorothy E. Gil\breath, 8142 Penti ington Ave., Hur .. tington Beach. recently con1· pleted paFachute pa c k i n g , maintenance i!nd a i rd r op ·course at the U.S. Army Quartermaster School. f t . Lee, \~. Arm y Private Gar-~ A. l\1arshman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack C. Marshman, 171 11 Rotte rda m Lane, Huntington Army Private Archibald D. Scott ·IV, sOn or Mrs . Bets!' 0, Brewer. 181 Valleywood Drive, Athens. Ga., recently com- pleted 16 weeks of train ing un- der lhe moder n volunteer army at Ft. Ord. The private 's fat he r , Archibald D. Scott Ill. lives at 9828 Continental Drive, Hun· tington Beach. , Sergeant Hobbs, a com- munications e q u I p m e n t repairman at Mi sawa AB, Japan, is assigned to a unlt or ~the Air Force Co mmunications Service. Coast G~ Seaman Recruit Cbarle1 E. Heyden, son or Dr. and Mrs. Max H. Fulto n of 14431 Purdy St., Westminster, enlisted in the Coast Guard at L<:lng Beach, ' 0 ' .. _and is receiving basic training Coast Guard Se a m a n at Alameda Recrftit David T. Jlolland , son · . .. ........... ~ ................ ~ of Mr. and Mrs. William T. --- Holland or 6112 Glacier Drive, Westminster. enlisted in the Coast Guard .11 L L<:lng Beach. and is receiving basic training at Alameda. Bobby E. Hobb!'I, son o( M,.s. Mary F. Alexander. 10071 M11rgo Lane, Westmi nster, has been promoted to sergeant in Navy Petty OHicer Firsl Class Ballard P. l\1axwell, son of Mrs. Arm-Nielson of 312 Adens, Hu,ntin gton Beach, has "Mrs, Delporte says we shoul d g et Ki ttyco l o sp60 e so she won't be havi n' o lot of ki tletis ," .• completed nearly twirmo:iths.---------------------- of continuous opera.lions in the Neni•}y Everyone Indian Ocean and South\Chi ua a Sea aboard the nuc l e a r powered aircraft carrier USS Listens to Landers .lj:nterpriSe. Ol'EN NOAY By Dr. Peter Stelncrohn Each or us hai; a blindspot. Unaware of danger. we go about killing our$Cl\'cs Jn various ways. I recall an incid('n\ that might ea~1ly have been an ac· cidenl. It happened ii fc1v years ago while vacationing in 1',lorida. A [ricnd of a friend was kind enough to invl!c lnur nf us on a s1ghlscting ruir through central regions of !hr slate. lie \\'as a i;cn1al person. Thr previfUS night \ve had hrrn discussinA had ha bits and hr proudlv sait:I ... Alrhou~h 1 nn1 flnly 35; I'm proud of lhr fact that I lake good rare ri f mysiijl. Don't have any bad habits. l don't smoke or dri nk, and keep my weight do"'" ~use 1 don't ovcrca1. J don't ove r\vork I try no! to \vorry myself sick. I J?l'l cnou&h sleep. In o!her \vordi;, 1 am wha t you doctors would ·J HIGH B~Y BOOK.CA WASHINGTON' HDAY UNTIL. ;,M.. SHERW~N WILLl4MS TERI OR LATEX PAINT lflTCHEN FAUCET WITH SPRAY AND AERATOR Sin gle lever faucet odds bea uty ond convenienc.e to kitchens. f..i<iger touch 28"x 1017•"x62" I I Fou r·space bookcase with la rge sli ding door storage cobinet. W·ill fit o ny decor. 'sanded and ready to f inish. ' . ' Th is tough latex finish appli es over wood or stucco surfaces. So easy to apply you con point your entire home ov~r o weeke nd. It dries fast ond clea ns up with soap and wate r. Another Sherwin Willia ms pain t for long lasti ng beauty for your home. ~AM ERICAN ~STANDARD control-forwa rd fo r full How-bock. to shut off -left fo r ho t - right fo r wo rm to cold .. Chrome finished brass. 8" center. Mode in U.S.A. 19 95 ·_CHEST OF, DRAWER$ OZ:ITE'S FASHiONIQUE SHA-0 CARPET TILES II JET SETTER'' SHOWER-HEAD 14''x24''x33'' ' ' ' ·'• l 4 drawlr1, solid con!.truction • Ond ready to finish. • • Q;\j f!·>I;, ' I I • 13 88 ' • SQUEEZE SPONGE MOP Plastic heo d sqlieeze sponge )TIOp. l~•ol for all household cleooi1'g. Assorted colo rt. FREE ... 98c s po nge l ' ref'll include d. 12• i DAYS•J!ASE , 12'' x 12'' • Feature& the luxury Coprolcin all nylon foce. Built-in .foam rubber bock w ith-the 3M bonding · sv.stem olreody·on it. No need for messy -adhesives or tapes. So eCily to install with virtually no woste. 69~. ROOM DIVIDER 2 FT. x 6 FT. Fully a ssembled, embos!.ed patterns of translucent styre ne plasti c. Yo ur choice of d iamond, bottle, Flem ish o r crocked ic e pattern. Avoilobte· in decorator colors. 7''· SPRING1 DOOR S1'4P • By PRICE PFISTER De luxe triple chrome finish for long life. · Self.cleaning head for minimal maintenance. Permits spray a d justment from soft va por m ist through re in rins e, fl ood o nd need le je t. Simple to install. 6'·' S·GALLON UTILITY CAN WITH SPOUT AND 9-P Heafty.rJuty S ga llon \.l.~.,.-;::;:.;:iiiii::"'I plastic utility co n with \ ho ndy spout ond cop. Great for campers, picnics a nd many othe r us es. I'' TOILET BOWL CLE4'tER BRASS FINISH ~~· . ~JJll)J»;))~ PATIO FURNINRE RAIN COVERS f' • ' . ' ~JJIJ11, , The cutomotitbowl cleaner . ' tha t cleans t0:1lets with eve,.Y fl ush. Non-p0:llutin9. ,~ - No m()re slamming door knobs into the wa.llwith these spring 'type door stops. 5 c· EA-. ~ I I T • 1 Jus t the thing to p rotect your (. o~tdoor pa~io a nd BBQ furn iture from the c0:ming showe rs ..• Mode 0:f sturdy, colorful vinyl. '"'"'ROCK""" WllTMlllllTIR .,., WESTM<NSTER .... • ...... PARIC ll60VALLE Y V<E WSt. TUITIN "'' •••••• BLVD. At'EL TORO AO. AT GOLOENWfSiST. AT LINCOLN AVE. ON E 8 L.0Cf( E. OF NEWPO RT AVE .111• e. 110.~T~ , LA NA. ••• · 2221 w. LA HABA• aLvo. •ULLIRT...... 2.es E.qtAPMAN AVE. oaA••• 1343 E. l(ATflL• AVE. ~·f A ·~·A A T SA*NTA ANA AYE. AJ BE'i'CH° BLVD, WW AT STA.TE COLLEGE BLVD. AT TUSTIN A VE, ••"!~NU ¥ • AIVlRSIOi. •COVINA •LA CRi"SCENT A. • LAOlRA Ht:, .. ·~•• • THOUSAND OAKll> •~AST L.OS•NGELES •SIMI • L1 .~1 ~i .. ,. -.e CHAT'SWOPITH • T~AZ..A.NA • AES!06 • 1.1't.ANQ • SAl,JPUS e COLETA • YtCTORVt\.L.I': • Qf'IAHAOA HILLS •SAN BERNARDINO • COAONAI • CAMAR llLO • IAKIRlflELD • HACll ltOA HilfGHTS • ESCONQIOO • PRING VALL.IV a. SANT.A CLARA call a model patient" · Th is day we all &at in iy, brand new powerful roa~ster,,1 Top down. I. 1at oexl to tbJt, drlvcr, the three others \~ 1 back. In the beginning iji seemed like a careful drlv~ Gave pedestriaruJ the right l'Tr way Tooted hls horn in warli.· in.c;. Stayed in hil'I own lanei. · But once out of 1city limit,.. he br.c;an to have A heavy loop. 1·n·rif ili!\i: on the accelerator. On bacltt t'(lUntry roads he swept along al speed of 60 to 65. But that "'as still wf!hln safe limit~ pr11vided some tractor or othe~ c;ir did no t sudd~nly creep oa~ on to the ma i ·ad. • · •' I reca ll that 10 v.·as In tfle rvrn1ng , on our wily bC)ck·1H !hi' c1tv tha t he we nt !!peed-' <"T<li'\' ft would not have beeti ' so risky u he had Chosen a v.•eJJ .t r aveled highwa:v-. Jn i;tead. we were on what wag pr;iclically a dirt road. As the car swayed, I glan<"t ed at the speedometer. M 1 times it was up to 80. My com panions in the back seat ~' hunched up in rear. but did ~1 · say a "'ord. Nobody seemed \5 \Van1 to be accused of "bein!ol •chicken." ·.~~ But I.could take it no long~t'..' Raising the white fca~r : bf not. I said, ''I think you ~· going too. fa st. lt would mal~ us all happier if we got ho~· in one piece. Woul d you mini!· stowing down?" '•·"' . ' He was quite cooperatlV; at1d pleasant. He cut the spef:il rlnwn to the mid·SO's. If I ha~ not spoken up. H. is likely Y:e might all have been killed. ~··· •• One week later I read ttii\l But he found a w o ll111 hi!! esr was in a sma shup. RA was carried out unconscioli~ linJ?:ered for a few weeks a:M died. I recalled how proud hl! had been of being free from barl habits that were life shortening . "I want to live ti{h good old age. I take care of myself." he had said~ ·• himself. Al least 50, mO!'~ do so .every • year on ,the . highways -. some i~, some guilty. • '. tet me-~.---what-.poi,nt Wft' I trying to make.? It 11 thii : Let us not ~ too amug abdiit our good habits .' If we take-tr\.' venlory, v.·e may discot/1!1'1 some kind of bad habit •'e( which we have been unawari. '!hat Is shuffling us: off prematurely. " . • l ha ve discussed these ha bit11: in a booklet. "H.ow .. 'lb Stop Killing YourseU," a!l!B \varning for readers who fU&' be unaware of wh at they .arie doing. If you would like a CQAY \vrite your request to me ,in rare or this ne w!l pap ei , enclosing 25 cents In ctiin and a STAMPED, SELF· A'll- DRESSED ENVELOPE. • • • ' tlear pr. Steincroftn : My husband has had pne\Jmonla about 10 times. He hit brm1 out of work three times ln' tbe . last three months, ·tacb at~k laying him up about twCJ weeks. Yet he has never had X rays or his lungs. His Jev_fr keeps persisting. He CfiJS vitamin C tablets as lho~gh they were going out of gt.yJa and has ~n up smoking . .00 you have any suggestions? :_ Mrs. W. -'· COMMENT , Yes. T ff e diagnosis or pneumonia So ma ny time11 is questlontibie, particularly sine~ your h\!s- band ha s continuing fever. I suggest you seek the oplnfpn of a ches t speclallst. ' New Post Scheduled In Newport An Etplorer Post ls bebiJ formed In Newport Beach fir boys belween 14 and . J7 1ein old who are inltrested 111 learning more abou t law en. forcement. Membe rs wlll altcnd clas,,es and field trips conductkf t..-ite ,._ month by Stein Bressler,' a Newport Beach police ofllcer. They will learn accident ahd scent repnrt"1g, crime )11. vcstigation 11nd ar rest pro. cedure..\ F'leld lr1p.>1 are scheduled to nt11rby mil itary bases, stAte bnrders, hl~hway patrol units. llirpor! custorr:is Art:Js .tnd lhe loca l narcotic!! hure;iu. More ~nfr1rmAtion can be ol> tain('d from Officer Bressler ot 67H211. KIDS LOVE UNCLE . LEN • • • - - ~ .. -!.:... ~ • •• DAILY '!LOT l..efNb Soelet11 Robert Clay or Mis- sion Vie1-' has been in· · stalled b 1972 presi· dent of the Orange County Chapter of the Publ!c Relations Soci· .ety of America (PRSA). -. Men in Service . , captain Ron A. Alltbony, son Gf Mr. •nd Mrs. Walter O. McKlbben of 315 Granada, San Clemente, has graduated from the Air Unlversity'a Squadron Officer School at Maxwell AFB', Ala. t Captain Anthony w a s apeclally aeltcted for the 1'- wetk profeaaional o f f I c e r course in recognition of his potential as a leader ·in the aero1pac1 force. 1be captain is being reas· signed to KJrlland AFB, N.M .. u a pilot. He has 1erved ln Viewm. Airman Joba B; deCastro, aon of Orlando F. deCutro of 700 Marguerite, Corona del Mar, bu craduated at Sbep- J)ard AFB, Tei., from the iralnln& cour.. for U.S. Air 'Forte communicetions gpeclallata. Airman deCaatro, w h o learned to operate teletypewriter equlpment used in the world-wide Air Force communications system. ls retumlni to hla caJllornla Air Nati1.al Guard unit in C.Osta Men.· JoU W. Carlson, son of Mrs. Jean M. Morehouse. 9881 N1wcaatle St., Westminster, recenUy was promoted to Army Speclali&t Four In Viel· aam. Spic. Carlson Ja servlna: I! a suppl)" clerk w I th bead· quarters and service battalion, tlh Battalion, Tllh Artillery of the 101st Airborne Olvl1ion (Alrmobilo). Alrm.an Jerry J. Tbomaa, IOn of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Thomas of 6201 Camphor, We1tmJnster, baa received his flrat U.S. Air Force duty assignment after completlhg haste training at the Air Tr~ining Command 's Lackland AFB, Tex. The airman has been assJgned to a unit or the .Air Force S)'stems Command at Edwards AFB, for training and duty 111 the air traffic con- trol field . Airman Jame1 M. Erickson, IOR .or · Mrs. Phyllis E. Ericbon of 26318 Flora Lane, Hunttnston B e a c h , has craduated al Chanute AFB, In., from the te c hnical trainlna: course for U.S. Air Force aircraft electrician. Ainrlan Erickson, who was I trained to inspect and repair • JP'craft electrical systems, is bOlng assigned to Castle AFB. He will. aerve with a unit of the strategic Air Command, America's nuclear deterrent force of long r'ange bom bers and Jotercontinental ballistic missiles. -""">---' / PI LOT-ADVE~TISEk 8 W!dntsdfY, Flhnlll'Y l~, 1•72 • ! ,OUN'TAIN VAllf'l'-t"'4 Mqirlflll St fl T1IM"1 FOUNTAIN \IALLEY-1•UI H4rtl0r I I ... • fllll'OI• I L TOIO-f.t T-If ltodlllflll ltM<I COS1'4 Mf!o-JXIO 1-U1DOr l lvO t i Wl!Mln ''· CO!oTA ME!oA-13J E 11111 !or .. * * * ,.. * * * * * ~ ~ ·* * * * * * )!- * lf '* * * 11- * * * * * ··* HAllE YOU VISIT!D OUR N!W STORE: 30222 CROWN VALLEY PARKWAY ANO HILLHURST IN LA.GUNA NIGUEL 11UHltMG10N l!iE,.C.M-Mtl "4.ilmi. •I, 9r1*Jtlll't1 ..UNTINGTON llEACt-4-lttCll • EO•rt0tr HUHTt~GTON IEACl'l-W•rlltr &. •pr1n.,.t!t MUHTINGTON &E.-.CH-111'1 llldl l lvd II .-.111~11. lANTA ANA-HOI W. fdlflt9!" 11"11 l ritltl "· weS'TMINSTfrt......U7 W•UmlM!tr •' OolllM W•I No LlqUGr at the W1,tmlnst1r, Village C1nt~11ch Blvd. at Atlanta,' Warner at Sprln9d1l1, Adams at 8r0Gkhur1t Stores.. l ·Prices Good thrv .Tuesday Only at Thrifty! $34'5 Panasonic FM/AM Radio Sol~ ~ot• mlo1otu" with $2288 2 1/" u PM dynomlc tpe<1k- tr, AC jock, battwy, tcr- phon•, cony 1trop. · Jalta Vodka or Castle Gin Fifth Gallon Your Choice $277 Gl"tlO't bargolm ct our ~•rydtty Jaw price --new Df'leed. e¥tn low.r far o limited t ime onfy, So dry-Cttert dry In fact. But. 1uch a thirst q~r: Mak.es You the c~d's Mortin! expert. s1 2' McKesson Axon Time Release Cold Capsules Far t1mp0rcry relltf of nolCll cono••tlan due to c~lds ond hoy PACK Of 10 33' $1'' Kotex $J•' Dristan ··-- - Sanitary Napkins ·-•f 40 ...... s.,., .... $111 ... • $2 Clalrel Silk 'rt Sliver Hair Color fJ 7' Soft & Dri -·· Non-Sting Anfl.Panpirant llYI 11• S....byGlll...._ $14'1 Value! Deluxe 21'' Weekender In Blue .or Drane• s711 111.11 va1111 I' r .. • ,,,.,11, .. u.n Sll,H. V1l11l H•l11• P11!.,1 ••• U.ll Sturcfv, streomllned long bound luogoge In . nM bright colors for corefrM trav•1rng. Nialy lined with royon; Sulit for ,..ors. of uivlu. Feature ,Qu~lity Pittsburgh Glaaal s4•• & sf'' Decorator Wal & Door Mirrors •ti" 11111 .. E' Pl'lllMI Wiii 0\'11 • I.ti 1htt'' I t f111tM Wfll ltct. • .N 21121" MH• rn.t• Wiii hM • ,H 1.tdl'" lntuttfl ,,..... DNr Itel. • 1.llW' .,..... ntmlC ,.., °"' Your Cho let $333 Quality mirrors framed in brosstone, wood, vacuum formed pl0$!ic -each with cl ips, ready to hang. $34'5 Value! Deluxe Mediterranean Style Swag Lamps hrJ:M Glass & Polished Flemish -· Today's popolor "lont• $) 9'' em" kJl'np with 12.' swog chain, hooks. For tnsto!latkn. U.l.. op. . provtd. $19'5 Value! Ut.llb Plastic Potted Plants 51/2 Ft. Tall ~··· Ot!COfCtM otont f fol iog• plm'\tl!rs Jni mo.it pop.ilor wri• sties. t • Doubl• Ped.,tol $1993 • SQua.e Commode In Popukir Sponl1h Ook with mar f:r 'toin-resfstant tops. Easily ouembled. S.,1$11,02 ~s Value 63" High "w==Fltagere Riom Dlvfdtr .,. s24•1 ~::I~ @Tod'......,;,;k ... b..,I .-. ~I wide, 12" dfep, Combine with obov•· Ul'llf. t $349 Yalae! I lll :l!ii'Elil 111l/i u :!!~ liu11 f;!;i! !:!l~ ops ~ -I $2•ta No-Iron · ! · . Men's Short Sleeve ! SportShirts ! s~s10 ~ .-.~ 7 ,., luy 5 & S..vo $4.H : •Easy Caro, No Iron * Polyeater & Cotton .,. * • Prinh, Plains & Fonc1e1 *' 1 • fashion. Styles & Colors ·· lf Outstondho ouortment of liondforn• lfo s.hirts In popular prin ts, solids, novt l··· t ies to swing you Into Spring. S-M·L.· XL at a sale prite. lf-. * '3" Man's Long Sleeve* * Fancy Perma Press* Sport Shirts! Printed & fancy 3 F lf 65 % palyasttr & $) o lf-35 '1> cottoo Jo 0 .._ spring colors, S-M-l ....... L-XL. lf- lf-$211 Men's Long Sleeve* Perma Press * : Sport Shirts! p,;,,,, '";,.,, sor;,u 2 F s5 lf Contrait stitch· O • Ing, f lo p pac~ets, l 1 an g paint canon. * S·M·L·XL. . )!- * * * Double Knits for Spring ! ·$6'' Acrylic ! Sweater : Jackets ·: * s522 i Full fa shianecf, medium w.lght I ~ single & double brtasted atylts ,,..- in fathlonright stripes & solids * new long length witli navtlly · ...._ stitched front, pockets. SJ!rlng """' shadet. )f- *' *' Reg. $ J 2' First Quality J1J * "Townwear" * Cannon Panty Hose!, . * @ Nov.,btfo,....,h.floequol· 63 lt tty, natlO!'IGHy kno'!'m panty C hate of such a low price. In )fo 4 sha?'.-Black M11t, C~· ' . ""- fet, CinnolT'IOf'\, F/'9nCh Beige, "f' . *' • Uttlo Ml• Wllsllrt 11!11' a. .. 1111 PHly H111.,.,., t11 lfo * 40 Qt. Waste .. sket 25'·291 ea. Fire King Deluxe Ovenware * * * * • Ult Drop ·:r.:o $199 J-'Ult&Pntp' -"""'"' -large sil• • up • , \ marbt bogs. Avo- f cadoctGold. • Ywr Chol .. 6is100 • m .. '""'11 • . "'~,,.""' ., ............ •f111LI ........ -· ........... 4.91 to 691 Tip Top Pony Tallers ElfttlcbondsG,.;,1. 36' elcntlu •irh boll. .,.II, car'a eye, flow- '"' Reg. fJ 29 s.t •f • Spark Plugs •zi:e 11 Edward r" •"'"' Box of 80 Olurs ;=•.:...I"'· -...:. Stf 96'@a•:,• Pactety Pmh 1mf'2rio619o' 0 Slow bu•n ln;, .,. --fOf I0,000 "'""' .. • '"'Id.-,,.. ............. !119.,r!~~-..----... .1.i--.. ~··********** ;-. .. I . < -• ' ·" . ,:4-,.: CushlonSole,*hlt; ~ Nur•eJ' Oxfords~ 'Pillow Soft' anhion ~ int0lu & orc:hl&. ~ti* Wtdo• taln. Slzn )fo Sto~ ••• otoprice ! you can't btatl >t- i :I '*' *' *< *' lit •1 10 Ice Cream * Sanllwlches * .... 112 ,,. * Kid' wlll lova C lf- thtm O"Yflme. • • • lf. . stoek ui:il Jt ********** ... \ . • • • 1 ' • • • 3 PILOT-ADVERTISER Wedntsday, ftllruary 16, 1972 Mission Viejo Resident Named to State Board . Don E. McNeff of Mission districts. Viejo has been appointed by 1'he 17-member board was Governor Reagan to the State Board on Mental Retardation . He and four other represen- l1tives will periodically report to Sacramento on activities in Orange County, give advice on· state programs and bring home state proposals for study and experimentation. McNerf is now ch11lrman of spfcial education for Orange 0Junt¥. In this capacity he 'heads education for all types of handicaps and coordin11tes schools and !ay groups that volunteer their time in all Meditation Lectures Coni1nefice Lorin Roche · of Laau na Beach will be one of two lec- tu rers ln a seminar on transcendental meditation to be presented at UC Irvine !his month. Roche, a stud ent in lhe UC! &C>Cial ecology department is currently working on as a resea rch ass istant on several pr oj e cts i n vo l vi ng t r a nsccnde ntal meditation. The second lecturer will be Dennis Roth. admi nist rative coordina tor of th e Students' inter national M e d i t a t i o n Sotiety of Los Angeles. The two-part se minar will be held tonight and Feb. 2.1 at 8 p.m. in the thi rd floor Com- mons lou nge. Lectures will cover techniques and prin- ciples of the medit.ation proc- ess. Retarded Workshop Scheduled created by the Lanterman Mental Retardation Servii:es . ' Act which \vent into effect JU· ly 1. 1971. The 12 other bo81d members were appointed by t he Orange County supervisors. The act provides a systematic community-based approach to the care and treatment of the mentally retarded. McNeff came to Orange County fro m Sacramento a year ago. He is credited v.•ith broad experience in programs for exceptional children arid has bee n a teacher and ad· ministralor for the past 18 FIRST FAN -Eleven-ycar·old Miqhcllc McKnight of J\-1i ssion Yiejo gor a specia l ~vord ;i ~d a kiss fron1 State 'J'reasurer Ivy Baker Priest. ~11cheflet 25842 Via Viento, sent Mrs. Priest her "fi rst ever cam- paign contribution" five years ag6 -six cents. "She's a darling," said 11-lrs. Priest, "if I'm wonian of the year she's my supporter of any yea~"." A workshop class f o r parents or mentally reta rded children ls now being offered by the Huntington Beach Union High School District. The 10-week class is being held from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Thursdays on the Wintersburg High School campus. All others interested in mental retardation are also invited. OUR WAREHOUSE IS OVERLOADED! Instructor i.!I Alan}· Kauf- man, a psychologist a t Wintersburg ~nd Huntington Beach High School. The tui tion fee is $6, payable in the class room . ' NOW IS THE TIME ro : SAVE! ' DAllY PllOT :flJ Coast Area Men i11 Servit!e. l\1clvln Keifer. of ~ O 4 Encina, Nc."•porl Bc;u;h, h.is ind Maintenance Squ11dron-46. br1•n promoted to corp(lral in curry \\', Kir kpatr ick of 423 the El Toro Marine Air . corporal in tht' El Toro Marine Air Restrvts. He is a mtmhtr of the 1:1\l·rescrvc Marine At· tack Squ1dron·l3t \\'hose f11ther, II veil Ill Mil YI. Aler\r, Ol'nard, re c en l I Y rccrlved the bronze •lat medHf in Vieln11m , RC'SCf\Jes. He ls a memher of Flar !)nve, C<lsta MesA, has the aU-reserve Marine Attack . been promoted lo strRt"Ant in Squadron-134 \Ybich f 11 es the El Toro Marine Air Skyhawk jets. Reserves. He ts a men11)("r or Army Spt'clal!sl Five ltobrrt n. Gallant , 23. son of ~11". 11nd ~·!rs. n.Aymnnd F:. c;11l11tn!, 9175 Stahrc L;inr. \\11•sln11rystrr, recently w<t s r1111ll1'rl .!luldll'r 11f the qu<trll'.'r for Hi>arlquiirtri ~ Cotnpany, l~!h M 1I1l11 r-v Intelligence Rtl[(;il11111, V l. Bragg, N.C Ht "'ii.:!! prc11entOO the bron.u ~1i1r rnedal for distinguishing him11tU throuah merlt(lrlou1 Jiervlt:i' ln connection with rnilir nry nperRUnn~ RGalnst hnslJll' forl"rs Jn Vietnam. Thi rlltdal, 1dopted in 19 4 4, rr1·n~n·11.rii nu t s l A n d 1 n g athfr·vrn,rnL~ .l\·lichael L. Gendre11u, of iJ~ M11rvisla, Se11I Beach, h11 s been promoted to corporal in the El Toro Marine Air Reservr.s. He is 11 men1ber of the all-reserve· Marine Attack Squadron-134. Riehiird fl. Watl of 128 21st St , Cosll'I f\1esn, has been prn- n1oted to scrge:int in the El Tnro Marine Air Hc serves. 1'he s~rgcant is a member nf the all-reserve lleadquartei:.s the all·re11erl'e Marine AUack Squadron-LJ4 l{obtrl C'. Jackson of IB222 N!>wport St , H u n l i n ~ to o Bea~h. has been prnmntr<I to scrge:int in the El Toro r..larine Air Reserves. The scri;ean! is a n1embcr of the rill·rco;;crve Hradquar1er); ;in<! Maintenanre Squndron-46. rhillip L. 1~ru i tt of 6600 \Varner Ave .. Hunt in I( ton Beach, has bcCn promoted tn He \Vas !'l'll'\!Orl ror' his sol dierly a p pr a !'a n (" {' . knowled.1:e anrt pcrform.::in re nf duties an<l 1nilitflry rourtc:;y. Arrny Chief \\'i11Tt111l (Jfllrrr \Villlam \', Thompson .Ir .. t '\Vr> '!'hnn1psonfet tivcd the ;iward while 111uugncd As a (/'!'hni1·iun 111 Sth Rall11l1nn, 42nd Art1tlcrY nciir XuAn Loe. H !~ wih·. Nlcol!na, llves at fl~4U St lnliO n La n e , \Vrst n11nst rr. ' CARPET TILES·SA VE $ Feels hke welwet oulwears othe r ( DO-IT-YOURSELF carpet -ea'Sy to instill 12"x12 '' • IRdo11 01"11r • 1 Drc ••it•• c11111 SAVE 2 9c • 1e ''· Wllf lt1 l!d • 100-.. Hylo~ P1lt • 51,1~ •111 1h~t 59c NOW SAlE PRJCID • ....... EA. HIERCULON Hl•LOW 1000;0 Herc1ilnn Ol r!in l'dr, Nrw M1r;icl e rif1er. S1;i1n and Wrar Re· s1stant. Be;iu11ful n~cora1nr Color· .. St, WO. SlYI 299 NOW SALE PRICE D u.oo COMPARABLE RETAIL ••••.••••...• $4 .99 NYLON Hl·LOW 100% Con linuous !ilon1e11t nylon pile. 2" Popular nylon Hi Low tho! coinb nes benuty · and durobility, Mony colors. to choose from. so. Yo, . JAYI NOW SALE PRICED u .oo COMPARABLE RETAIL •.••..••••••••• $,4.99 KODELPLUSH 100'}" .. Kodel Polye·,ter Pile Rich, 499 lux uriou~ly Thick Pile. New Decorator Colors. so. TD. SAVI NOW SALi PRICID......... SJ.DO COMPARABLE RETAIL .. ,,.· ...... $7.99 DACRON SHAG Cosm Mesa Resident 1 Wins Post CL ...... ESE. •.m.EL TRI-COLOR s AVLIN ~l ls 1 l M of fMC Co1p. r?'!._ 1 00~~ Dnrrnn f'ojy ,.)ttr 1'1lt 8eaur1ful New Det1i Shfl'l W1!h /I fulf Deep Pile. Many Ne0·N Oecorotar Colo rs lo 4!?. Mack Wesner of 52.0 DeAnza Dr.. Costa Mesa , has been tlected presiden t of Blue Fl.11.me Toastmasters Club No. 2727. Other newly elected officers Of the Costa Mesa branch are Martin Brux, 401 Atlan ta Ave .. Huntington Beach. educational vice president ; Floyd Har- ryman, 4a7 Abbie Way, Costa Mesa, administ rative v ic e president; Charles Eifert. 3472 Sjln Marino Ci rcle, Costa ' Mesa . secretary; Ch u c k Duhan, 2674 Elden, Costa Mesa , treasurer, and La rry Olear. 1964 Gl en oaks, Anshe im, sergeant-at-arms. The club is designed to im- prove speakifi g and listening abilities or its members. It meets weekJy on Wednesdays ai 7 a.m. at Ka p 1 an' s restaurant~South Coast Plaza. Guesl'I a n d pros~clive members re welcome at meetings. Carriers Tab Ne\\' President Jordan Brnwn has heen elected prufdent of the Letter Carriers As 11 o c i at i o n of Newport BeBch. Branch 3738 N1tlonal Ai;soclation of Lelter Carrler5. The national asMCh1tion, founderl in 1889. hes · mem· bershlp of more than 200,000 post•\ employes In the United State!, Puerto Rico and the Virgin l1l1nds. Other officers 1 n c I u de George Dillon. vice presldtnt: ~ P. Sllb<rsdorff. 8t<retary ; li1d Robert Ham i lton , treaaurtr. . Tht union officers were in· stalled at a recent dinner· dance htld In Santa Ana for 111any Orang• County bran· ... TM( llll(D •·AMI 1• ftlllS 1DD% FORT REL POLYESTER. LUSH, DEEP, LONG·l'IEAR ING AND HARO TO SOIL. STAYS BEAUTIFU L WITH . A MINIMUM OF CARE. VERY RESILIENT. BEAUTIFUL DECORATOR THR EE COLOR SHAG. COMPARABLE RITAIL ...... $8.99 NO\'/ SALE PRICED SO. 'f D, IA'll SJ.00 I KODEL TRI-COLOR SHAG DE Er PILE 100% KOOEL POLYESTER PILE, RICH, DEEP, LUXURIOUSLY THICK PILE. MANY NEW HI· STYLE DECORATOR THREE COLOR SHAG TO SELECT· FROM. RESIST DIRT AND SOIL STAINS. NOW SALE PRICED COMPARAILI RETAIL ................ $8.99 99 SO. 'fD, SAVI Sl.DO DUPONT DACRON TRI-COLOR SHAG 100% DACRON POLYESTER PILE, BEAUTIFU L 'NOW NF\'/, DFlP SHAG. EASY TO MAINTAI N, MANY SALE NE\'/ DECO RA TOR COLORS 10 CHOOSE FROM. PRICED COMPARABLE RETAI L , ••••• $8.991 ~SAVl Sl.00 , (hoo~e I roin, ~ SAYI NOW SALi PltlCID.,. IJ,N COMP,ARABLE RITAIL ............... $7.99 KODEL SCULPTURED 100% Kodel Poly"'" Pile. 3 Pile 5 99 Heigh t Pattern In Graceful Design. Rugged Ourab1l11y. Beoutlful Colors. s~. wo. SAVI NOW SALi rllCID •••• ~,·· SJ.DO COMPARABLI RITAIL .............. $1.99 SAVE $$$ NOW SALE PRICED 99 SQ. YD. SAVE SJ.00 649 N. Eucl id St. 635-7674 3001 ltllllower ll•d. 421 ·034 WEST COVINA ANAHEIM LONG BEACH PASADENA TORRANCE OPEN 26641 .. Colorodo ll•d. 4236 Artuio ll•d. SUNDAYS & 5ofl O<egn fr"'!wny 10 W~~11;,t llll'n off, 6 bll)(.~I Wtst Oil Wtl- ~tre. NORTH HOLLYWOOD 7007 Laurel Canyon Bl•d.-912-2200 HollwW?Od 1r~y 10 ~n Wrr (1111 10.lourtl ttl!'lvon lh;d S<Jn ~rOtno hwy, 11' ( llM1\ .SI. 2 blcx.u No. on (!!flt$ IQ W0t',-m,. CANOGA PARK 21031 Shrma• War 341·2334 i b!IW"~\ N11rth ot Yinm ~IYI ,,,,.. · W"IW orr [U(.hd Ar;,o~' troin C'111f . ,.., HOLLYWOOD 1115 N. VerMo .. t-A•l. 6U·74SS .VENTURA 2101 I. Moio St. 641-S041 S77 ·1900 S42·6H6 f C *'odo ~vd ol !Ion (,obf'lfl l !vd, MONTEBELLO 71 5 W. W .. ittltt llH, na.ou1 I 8'0' 1f~u o• ~hwtJio,111 l lYd lift Aritw COSTA MESA 1114 Now,ol't 11•4. . 645·3020 -· 11.0 ., 17•hll. EVENINGS f{N FRANCISCO MILLBRAE 320 II c .. 1ioo l•I H2·1SSS ... I - ' - 18 OAlLV PILOT • • . ' .. . 'Elephant Story Dogs Litjn L!J,nd e; .RICHARD r. NALL 01 tllt C.lly. l"ll•t Sl•ff Tht story goe1 like i.bis: · An elderly i;chool teacher reUred aft.er many dedicated years of awakenlna: young niinds to the wondertuJ world around them. for a long time, she had admired lifJ.J.e .J'M sporb cars. So the bougtit one. She aJso had an Itch to visit Lion Country Saf.ari In Laguna Hills. So one day while out and ·about in her liUle red auto, she' · deckled to do the safari. Tl1' story gels better ~ the teller · has had at lea&t three martinis or the equivalence. • ~ , ' At any ra\t, the story goe:t, as ttie little Jadf atopped her car Et)Qng,,,tht. jungl~ trail, a.n elephant backed up to her car and slowly sa\ on it. The lady was cixuikt~rably di• ~ ui..L traugbt' but un,tayrt, "'!µ~ was more thin could be said for her new car. However, it wauld • still run. And neglecting In ~er agltliticlil. lG . lodgl a· COO> ·. pllint,1 With. Lion Cou'9-try orficialdom w~ratt!ed away· on the San Dieg<i Freeway. ·l , ~ • • -.. ' • A .vigilant california highWa'y patrolman .$0011 'it.ORt>ed . the lady becau~ the car Seemed .to ·be then And there Jn a ,. bent and unsafe condition. ·s~ told t.t>e. officer an elephant • bac:J, sat On her tar. ~ · · · (The story. can be embellished bere' Wlih Variaijoils about tht officer's reactiop to the elephant ttory). 1 nre end to that yam -bul not ··to ·oori :__ has Llon • Counlry ofliclali picking up th! Jab for all repairs . afler being contacted by' the kJndly officer.,. · · . · ' Queslioned about the cocklall-party slo,Y, Lion' COuritry • ~(l#li MObHN~ !.1'\lt.11( !'I.I. IAVe Ak Oll!t\...tT': • . ' WWI Vets Conducting .. Campaign i lJnltt~. ~~"ylng HChatez Orde · s I . . Farm Sit-do . . . • ~ ' 1 " .ATWATER (UPI) -Farm ' Earlier Chaveii sent a labor lea~er Ce!i~r .Chive~ •. telegram to U,S. Attorney .anJe~ by the shooting of a General John ¥1tchell pro-un1on member by a border . . patrolman last Friday,· ha11 testing the sh~iflk. ordered uoion ·member.!! to The sheriff's oh\ce ln Mer,. stage 1it-down 1trik.es when ced .!!&id ita i.inform.alion was armed men enter the fielcJ,.s. that Nelson wa.s t~k1ng Av~Jos The statement by the <ijrec-In , ~r quest1on1~g at the t f ·th· · U .1 1 1:1' orchard owned l:iy Rhberts .or o . e , me< rarm F he the t Workers Organizing· Com· bearms 1 wh. n 1 hi '"'thpecth . _.11 read f 11 . lhe gan s as 1ng a m w1 e ,.,1 ee wa.s o owing . , • funeral oC'-Romulo >.valOll, 21 , purning .!law. .·Who .was' shot In a peach ~t the lime 111 spokesman orchard near .Uvingston. said Nelson was1 tteat~ for Authorities sajd b 0 rd er cul! an_d was r'l!leased the patrplman &{ward L. Nelson. same day, .. ~· Ji'resrio, was attempting to _ .urwoc ofhcia\s s a i_'d take Avalos into custody a:s 8 witnesses they ~alked to did sutpecte(f illegal ali\fl when not see any ~v1dence of an The Newport~Mesa ··world A'valOs atta<!ked Ne!Sdli with· a • argument prior to the W'ar 1 veterans of Barracks pruning saw· and the officer shooting. 1249 a~. conductirg , a opened fire. · .Th~Y. said A~alos was stan-meqibers111p drive' thi.!1 month. d to ht r t f , QUEENIE ';\Vhy can'l you get interested in me~ I 'm living , nos(algia." Ariy veteraa of World w-a·r11 The unioO said Avalos was ing six eig ee ro:'ll i.!I eligJble· tO join. · Wiv,ea, qot an ille~aJ alien, that he ~:s6frred~en the second shol -------------------- daughlers and sislers or World was born . In For\ Hancock. "To end lhes0 assaults Ne· arly Everyone War I veterans .may· become Te.i:.. and • that the shooting against farm workers it is m~ri of ' the · women',s . was unprov~ed. . necessary that frrOril now on auxtITary. 1 €'havez u1d all union crews we will do a sit-down Tilte'fdted veterans ~a.y. .• are !!Cree:ned for Jlleg1l.1IM!ns whenever armed pefsons enter contact barrack! tommander befofe they are sent QUL on a field where we JLre work - Walter Drew at..54M610. h jobs. . 1 0 Ing, 11 the statemen( bid. • • Listens to Landers ·c· • • D d ral'-. ·._ : " . onua re e s ' ' "• ·•. ' .. ·To Save~ Reptiles , I SACRAMENTO t lll'll' - The slate Department of F'1sh and Gan1e ball announced forma tion of a special uni~·lo protect endangered and !JUI repliles and amphih.ians mg• ing from the Sant'fl Crui Lofii.;· ' . toed Salamander lo tj).e Southern Rubber Boa. ,.,1 Ray Arnett. director o( the department. said that i JR species of amphibians «nd repllles are in "serious tr~ blc." • 1 ~ 1 He sa id !he !ipccial gl'oug will gather information foi' th~ protection of the species y.ri,th t1n eye to designation di prese rves to insure their ~ri~ linued existence. ::.:,. Arnell s<iid th al off-the·roRd vehicles are dam agi ng l.h' "fragiltf' en vironment · ~:9 rnflnY.: p!ac~s in the desert~ ''fosing a threat to populal.lnnft o~repplcs that live there." . .,,n He declared I h a t ~1\.1 discriminate collection of Jll!!PJ ijles for sale through. !pet 9t.or~ also bas ·been a pr..P., reni· .,,1,, . . ' ' ' ill I J"I d1 ! '~ .. '·•' !~. ' 'I! ' ', 31.1perflak JerrY Kot>rlrf $1.id that it did happen but In an- other time and place. ·It was in Kruger National\ ~rk ~tfcit,,Seven or eli;ht years ago, he said., . 1 .... ;. · , · ,The car sat 11pon wa~ a Volkswagen and pa uger1 ' helped make Interim repairs. · ·• 1 . · 'KObrin said th.e st.o,ry has dogged -Lion Co r'y opera-~ ' . . , ····Womaa~to.:Woman Service tiona einoo. There's another Lion Country in' Floftda. ' .' )le staid· tht ~lephanl3 now are alloW¢ µ, ~·abOut · where lhe motorist!: drlve. Llon Countiy· baa cOO.vlneeG. in. mran~ ~rriers that the ~lephants..are suftit:lm\t!Y.' ~~nt to be a good risk. · .· ">·<· ! ·, ' ... "'Kobrin did .have a story about it rillno ~t 'Urted·. a small car a few inches with its born· in a Pli)'fui ge!Wre al °" Laguna Hilb facility. But It. llf'as shOoed away by 'vigilaill guarlls. · · Another ·man got h~ render dented by a ultra 'kick', &aid ,J<obri?I. He stopped by the office to see abMJ& T~ paini. An official asked Jr his insuran~· didn't covtr zebfa kicks. · · · Not to ht outdone.: the-fellow·.aaid' tht pdticy ·&Veted' ·~rebra kicks everywhere except in Oringe'OJlmty. · • " ., :.,l!.S. it~ P~r~I' .. " . '.,. :: Critical Water .Shor~g~: •• : Seen in Next 30 ·Y ears • ROME IAP ) -Wllhin 30 Iloxiadl! wouJif 'h;ve The :.years there m'ay not be water. Natural regk>n. or ~tied "water.shed.·'' cover abou't 50 wat~r everywhere aod there'll percent of the' world and In-· be fewer <Jrops to drink. The cludt forests, deRrls, moun-, · World i.!I running short ot the talos ' and pllin!I. ·This reg~n thing it needs mo.!lt. "·oukl produce water for the Particularly in peril are tW:Q. Qth'er.!I. . . much of the United States,· The Agricultural · area, Europe, India and parU or .. cq~er 45 percep.t o( ~·earth, Argentina and Brazil, the U.N, wouid be a meohaniJed 11nd . food and Agriculture Oraniia· autom8ted are.a. to ijuiJ'piy. (oOd 1 till" w!lms . . f~r th~ third reg!o~·: ~x:iad~ • ·· The F' AO has described the foresees the poj>ulatk)n of th~ water :shortage a11 "the most · agtip].l]tutal h(artl~nd · at \wo · Jmporlant limiting factor ' in billion in a cerltu?-y: ·. 1 the development of. human . The ·urban , ·region . ~uld 1 society." 'The survey will be ce.nter .on• "Ecumeopoli.!1" -• :submitted lo the U.N. Con· universal city ~,'Nr '19 b11116n ference on the H u m a n per.!IOns on onl)" -s: J!e~ent or : _Envilonmenl later this year in the inhabited area. It. wquld Stockholm. get.its ·watef"ftom tbe'Na\ur~ , · To avoid water shortages and food from.t.b:e ·Agr1c:ultq • ttylt would mean the dif-area's .. Doxia.dis ' co;~·s.ti~ fertnce between life and death EcumenoPolis · to · be · -con- ··,to man, animals and plants, centrated on sea ;Shoru; ,river . ~ ttie U.N. body .!l:ubmil! a series banks and around. the·tlkes. : of 1uggestioru, including a The Greek · pl&niW'r ' says re,.volutionary propaS(ll .. Io. such a subdivislop i~one .w~y ... 'r•locate the world'& entire of copir,ig with ~at~~ and ·f~ r•population. shortage in ,the ' .Ca~e:~or .Jh~ The rearra'flgemc.nt idea popµJation explosion... T b-e ·~.~ame from'. Con1tantinos A. world'9-population, ~ Qpec;ted • Doxiadi5, · noted Gree.k: city to increase sltfo1d ·between ;,'planner who would have the how afld. the.midd,lt of tht 21st '• eai'th'.!1 Surface divided into century. · -' · ·three regions._ the Natural. But.'!'a~'!r s~t.1ge would be . Agricultural and Urban. felt sOOner,, ~ paper states, The political Implications of citing the-·current exce.!lsive ' ··.such 1 revision were not men-exp 1o·it1 ti o·n of ·land, tionefS. ·urbanization 11)d pollution, · . . ~ N.o Smoking ··orders ' . , ~ . .. ··Announced .·by ~-F;W , . . WASHINGTON 1 ~P 1 ~The "ll 1• our. ho~ tho! tllio will ')Ulp Departtnent of Heallh, adeqwitely safeguml I h • nd f ha health •nd well.belolt of tbOs< • Education 8 Wei a.re 9 who use our buildinp wlt'.hout ;' Oi'de.red I partiaJ imokifig ban preventing lho"H ·Who 'miy • In lli buildings aero" th~ wish to smoke f!1m' doing '°r •, cOuntry. Rlc,ha~son ·said itn •· lttter tn 'nle deJ)llrtmenl's 107,000 'John F. Bantha«. Ill, ftttd l>f ~.f.mploye." havi been advlsed.o( a pri"1te organization• .called J t.tM! decision !n, 1 memo rrom ... Action on Smoldng.and Hta.lth. HEW Secrelary .Elllol L. . Rlchanloon oaid !be •n10Hng Y Rlchordoon. Jild will not apply bi to&~I ... " • ·'l'bt. new policy prohibits corridors •nd rttt>ro-6-mt amoldng in co1ference rOomsi because "amokini · dOes n o t ... .1udilorlumo, clinics • n pre,ient a !'rflki• JJl'.'!bltm In tltvatora. N..,moldng oectlonl th* pl-"lie~ -Wation . . ..... .. .. .. ... .. . / .:WowdyQuradtertalktOmotherwoman about money? ; ' CatiforhlaFedcrais Woman•to.Woman Senice ' ~ . . . .. ,. lui~dsyoursavlligsneeds. <. -. '( • o a. "I : J . "NC>W'tl;ft;h ~1ha three canfornla • Fecleral oftlp.S In Orange. Coulfti lllbr ~. . ' ' a specially qualified. Woman· IQ-Woman. -• t-••• S.he'U'8ISO ~ happ~ to tell you about.ithf ~ei\t~rtalnlpg and educa· ., ' tional'8Ye!its spo~sored by~llfornl~ ' Eederal throughout th1f year. You'll • • • particularly.like _the special forums !>n money matters'and interior decorati0g, ' '1 ..... ' a~d the fashion shows. All are free. Visit our nearest Orange County oJfite and talk things over with Doris Liiiie, Anaheim office; Betty Stimpson, e<Jista Mesa office; Laura Neff., Orange , qff~oe. ·' ...... counselor lo s8rve you ·when.Ver you'd r.ther talk to a womim. Sheil •rJIW9t' your. qu1!$1loo$ abo\11 savings o kians ·• a~d discuss solutions for apeclal ptqJ;. h•ms you miiy tiav& i& a'wom&rt a&.er . <!~J.if~~l~~~~!11~~gs or 6orrower. 14 ' . . ' ..... " • ::_ •• I ~ . . .'\ '· • .. .. ~OllDI:'' .. 600N.Eucltd ~ ·~ • Dorla tltlle;Counllelor ' , . . - A ' I •• ' " .... t{1t1on'1 \.1tgtal F1d1ral ' ' I ~ . ' ~ ' . ' -· . • • .:• !'C<>&laM..aomce: ' • .r -:~--:-.. ! 27llO Hfbor Boulevard • 546·2:300 . B~tty SUmpilon; Cou~lor •• ' • • O~Offlce: 4050 Metropolitan Or.• 839~ Laura Nell, Counselor ·T •' ( I "" r 't, ,, '" ,, '" I'll r. uol " r • '" i j( J .. ·'"'' '1' ... "" "' ' •M •tt t J I ·Ml ... • ... ,,. l i ~~ • ~ "'1 II I b .... ..Ubli&hed In. 11 1deq\J3te •lld • ~· .,.. ;L ~· eler ., 1,,, workJni areas forcefl)ent 110U\~ 'be .~ dll· ·'< , • • f. :· r ;.ncuab~ ficult, ") .' ... ~ • '1• ~----... -.---.-..:.;. ......... ~-.---.-_-..:..:...:..-;..,'""!'~h-~-,.....~.:-:". --...,.-·~-,-...1.-~~-.... --~~-=--:---'---~ . .:.. ____ .... ~ . ~··:1 . • --. ' "' • \ --------------~----=--.---.. • DAILY i'ILOT \"our Money Paytnents Balance P o'"'ef Panel,1 __ L&G.U.-'---''-1W'ft-cs __ -1'EOAL NOTICE J ,• •tcTJflOUS IUSUMllS lllOTIC• ft Cl•DITOlllS 1'U ~ 'Garbage' Stocks · Ex . NAM• IT&,T•M•NT IUP._llOill COUaT W TM• NOTICI TO Cl•DITCHll To ~~!-.e Thf t1kwlflt "'*" LI 4tllN "111,,.,1 STATI O• CALl•OIHIA •01 1'11'11,0& COUillT P¥ TN• ) aiJ:AU..1.1 N ; TNI tqUNT'Y 011 OillAHG• ITATI ... CAJ,.lllefillllllA POlt CUlT!lt; HEWl"OltT IOAT SALE,, .... A '"41 TN• COUNTY DI' OllANOI , tt' w. C01rt tt....y •• ll.111 .. •· HIW'9tf rstir. 11 MA•n JOHHSOM °""*' ,,,._ A-llln -~ B• F' '"<" nw MOT1Ct ts HlllltY GIVIN .. ""-1.ti.•-• 1tlNHA1'.0 UIMUUl:t lg 'IMnQ Art'IOlcl S. Allt>ll.IM, tU12 .... J1dll'I fAlllllf'I ff "* •boV1 11•1Md fftlldtQI ~. · Diie f 01· Comeback Tumbles a.&,.a~ Cit .. HUl'l~ffOll llld'I !Mt 11f MfMM Mvllll c111nt1 Hllrul flll NOTICE IS HEllEl'I" Gl'll'EN 1e ' Tiii• -.i1tl'lffl .. Mlllt C6ftd!;(.tft U 111 ul' 4tCtdtRt .,., 1-•rtd ti tilt rhtnl, crectl10r1 et 11'11 1bov1 MmM ~ 1ndtYldlJel. • Wtlll 1'f\e l'll(flll,., YOUCh1r,. In .... otrlc1 m11 111 ,.,_ llaYlflt C11lm1 •MINt WASHINGTON (UP() Au10" S. Altl\Ol.l'W > flf ftlt' Cl.,. ., w. •bov1 fl'lt!tlld court, °' NICI Cle¢fd1nt 1r1 rMlll'ttd te !Ht Tl)l1 111lfll'*lt lllecl wltll fflt' Cou11tv i. Jl'tlMlll "*"• -wllll fflt necnu rw wllll 1~1 nKlllUl'Y vOUCMr1, 111 Ille eHI Sen. Fred R. Harris. (0. ,""'.,ol ~·11," ~11 .... " "'...,: '~ u<. ",'!; 'W.ICMr" to flle ulldll'ltfl'IM 1t 2no °' m1(!tr~""111ovt1 •n•!Jttd '*'• t.•1 ~ '")ly SYLVIA PORTER ~'The "garbage" stocks are !titting to come back lnto the ljµ>eli!l'1t in Wall Street. ~.l.R the next few months. we -~·no may see still another upsurge in offerings of new "hot growth'' stocks -shares of!l unknown companies which are placed on the · market at pnices ranging Crom, say, ts to tilP· and which virtually overnight soar 100 percent. ~;;,'.Phase l was wheri the big, ~~blishecl corµorations began ffi t move up in price," ·says -ttichard P. Carney, vice Hf,J?.$ident manager of l h e E<!ie Specie:..!-Growth Fund. That trend started in mid-J97p, :,11'Phase II was when the !'\hal ler gri>wth com-""' ~11ies began tb1rnove up." That trend · ~rted in Q\id.-1971. '"'Phase IUI ~·be on when the ' &af.'bage 'l"ORTIE!t ~.)s begin' to move.'' That d Carney thil}ks will rge this spring. .. How does aR average ulator-investor p r o t e c t seli from the garbage?" l iked Camey and Frank C. cLaughUn. another Edie vice esident, at luncheon last · eek. ''Let's say I \vant to buy e growth stocks and am xeaming for' 'the new IBM,' B~ I want to have a fighting ~nee to \Vin. How do l ~ulate intelligently?" To answer this, Camey, cLaughlin and I worked out · l'.O questions to ask yourself ~. any , speculation in th stocks. bJ Is. this a high quality ~ in its own industrY? "It d be," Carney em· 'ired. "It could be a Qant company in a small ry. Or it could be the ber one but still a small p3ny in a big, fragmented try." Whatever, it should .t the top. Does it have a record of :eaini.qgs even in adverse ? How, for 'inStance, did · ~ke out in 1'69-1970! ~ Tl> Has it a hlstory of •eady, sOHd growth? "Buy a iompaoy with a history," WASHINGTON (AP) -The · nation's balancHf·payments Mcl.aughttn cautions, "unless. deficit slid to ill' worSt. teiel in you're willing to adn,Jlt you're supplying venture capital and his':Ory in lrJ:l .•nd. still r~ gamblin&, '' . ma med a !JllSStve pgure in (4) Is the. f'Olllpany'$ pro-.. the last three montllJ <>I the duct. or servl~e sufficiently ap-year, the govemtnent has ~fl~l~ to make cus~omer,,_s reported. '"- w1lhng to pay a good. pnce for The CommE;rce · Departinenl it? You cao check this one out .. by your '0Wn' willingness to reported that the def1c1t , as pay. measured by the broadest (5) Is the company saddled yardstick. was $29.6 billion, with IQng·term Clebt? "It's the largest in histOry and $19.S okay for it ~o be aggre;rsive in billion wor5ening from 1970 .. sales, but 1t should be con- servative in finance," says And, ~ the last three Carney. "A well managed, months of ~~e year, the gro\vhlg company should be payments deficit was $6. able ~o pay off its debts." billion, an. improvement over (I) Is.ii paying a dividend! the previous quarter-. but still It shouldn't be. A strongly, large in the face of Nixon ad4 growing company can use that dividend money mor' p,. ministration moves to stablllze fitB.blY than you can. A no-the dollar. dividend policy is a plus, 'The Commerce Department \7) Has it a high degree of blamed the 1971 deficit oM the profitability? Its per.share earnings should be rising each year· by at least 9 · percent. Camey puts the lev~J . for pro- fessional selections m u c h higher than that, but for you, the amateur, 9 percent should be the yardstick. · · (8) Are you risking too much of your ·money in one speculation? Don't. The time- honored rule against putting all your eggs in one basket a~ plies particula.rly to· high-risk growth stocks. You .. c·outd be wrong in your decision. Protect youraelf 'bY diversi- . fying. {9) Is the stock already popular or its product or .servite already a: fad? Tben beware: the stock is probably tullY priced by nOw, and you want to beat the mOb, but follow it. (10) ls the company subject to government regulation? U so, aVoid it. Regulatory agen- cies generally limit a com· pany·~ gains, but they Jet it chalk \IP all the losses. "The garbage stocks will be coming out in rising volume," Camey forecast in a reSigned voice. They'll offer no history and sho"""'nodting but losses. "But the~'ll be hot. the gulli- ~:.:.ndt:.~:1ya:0wi!o=· f:; ·price. · "And that will be the signal to tftr rest of us to look out, , for that'll mean \Vall Street is • beading for: tl'-Wble again." natioil'$ Worsening trade posi· lion as. well as -the instability_ of the dollar prior to Aug. 15, when President Nixon an- nounced the United States would no longer r e d e e m dollars for gold. The Commerce Department blamed the 1971 deficit on the nation's worsening trade posi· tlon as well as the instability or the doilar prior to Aug. 15. when President Ni¥On an- nounCed the United States wollld no longer r e d e e m dollars for gold . The deficit mostly reflected transactions that · oceurred before Dec. 18. ll'hen ·the 10 richest non-Communist nations reached agreement on a new set of money-exchange rates designed to c o r r e c t jm- balances between currencis. The administration hopes that the currency settlement wUI help to improve the balan- Ctlf-payments picture in 1972. But it has expressed doubt that the nation can. tum in a surplus on its payments ac- count ror at least two years. According to the · ·depart- ment, Ute deficit as meaSured on the official reserve-transac- tions bas_is; waS $29.6 billion last year. This yardstick take! into account trade. goods apcl' services, a n d · tr.ansactions betwee'n fol-eign central banks and foreign govemmen"'. • V ..,-,, • ..._ •r 111,1 ., """'°' ltvcl., ilU"e JOl, (IHI Mt11, 11 IN" .. tnl • W 11'1 the 1'11*41 Okla.), has an n o u n C e d Cterlt., e.ut. mu 11\'h'ldi 1, !hi ,i.e. o1 11111111"' V<Mldler•. h ul'denl~ 11 TN ,fl'tl(# ••"bl'"-.. ! Of & "C'tt'•·•• .,,,,_ .. •·o-o -.,1 O•I"' ·~:-.. Ill tilt u~t'* In eli IYl1tttrs per. Ol'N lier I l'llW· ltONAl,_0 $. TUCK•lt. :t"° Awa ~llU u.c:.... .... .... ·-.. _ ., . 1•11'111'111 .. ..,, fff•I• Of Miii kedt111, -w1 ..,,., Orlv1. $Ult• N\ll'lllllf l"tltl'\llrY It, 1J, Ind ,..,,,di I, I. wlltllft fol.Ir IMlltlU illtr ttll flt11 Ntw-1 9t.u'I. CeUt.,-111-'2..0. 'oml(fl board of lnqufry11 to examine lm ~ _..,,, Mlketloft tt ttilt notlc1. "" "''" ti ltilsl11t•• crf ir.. ""°"'*'"" 1 DllM ~Ill. :N, 1"2 Ill "1111-Ptrfillllnt .. JM Mltll 1 What he termed the IJ'OWing Mfm" Goolt«lll JohnHll Mid dettOttlt, within Mur l'llOflf!I' .. conceatratlon of political and UGAL NOTICE :=1er._::::1 w111 1111 111t •llov,• "0~~1 :~~;;';, ~~11 noirq. , economic power by America's PIClflTIOUI IUllNlli llllMrt "· ··"-TllOf'tllld .Jt••""*"' J ' ftAMI ltATIMINT •lfWMY" Lii• E~eculrhf of ""'Wiii OI ll'iant co. rNWatJons. ~ · ,.,. •01tow1~ ,et:11111. •1;11 111elflt int ...,... ,....,.., *· ,., '"' •1>0v1 n1rr..c1 Ol(td101. ·, • ...... bullllftS •: . Ctlll Mtw. Clllf. ftut •oNALO s. TUCKI• I Harris said the panel would ,LIGHT ASSOC IATES. 200t Qv .. I 11'~1 ~ JM •w"'1 CMlw Dr ... ,.,, "' .. "'"'· NtWrtOrf leKh. C1lll. ""° AntrMY ,., htcultr HIWl>M't ... o. Clllforlll• nwt t COndU~t hearinis in th C fu"fll M. ,l.,<t' Jr,, «IJl2 $11111 l"ulllltllllll Or anti COl$1 01/!y Pllo) Ttl: llUJ "4-'6IT J , , l~e11, 0t111t1, C1llf. t~6'.$ · Jtnu.JY 2• ,,..., FtOf\ltrr 2, '· ii , itn A"""""" ,., ••!'C'ltrl• • presldential primary states l.oblr• L. TrKY, 1C022 cr1...-kir4 C•11· 1n.12 "ubtJ1t1tc1 Ot'•"l>t' c .... D•l1v ,.uo!j, m 11.d .. hlllt A111, C•llt. ft1CJ Ftbru1tY l, t, 1', 21, lfJl 21••'.i' between now and t b e Mlr)oll ,,,_ Llndtn.,_,,, 1$1112 tEGAL NOTICE DemoCr;Uc Nation a 1 Con· . "~~':t ~'~~·=~~111~', 'J!i~~•rl••l---7.:::'.:::::='::::::'::::::---+--~LE::'.:CW.:ll~~N~OTl~~CE~:__....;' · • H Id •1.-~I .. S1nlt Ant, C1Lll. tt7GI ~ l'ICTITIOUI IUllNISS ~ venhon. t 18 un: group Thi• l!Mf•IMU It 1111111 coiWucttd ltY I NA.Ml ITATIMINT NOTICI 0,. TllUST•l'S SAll: HrtM1'~P. • ' -._,1 ' I _, T.$. ,.._ l•17'4t • Coast Finn Tells Loss In Revenue WOUld be made Up of national ·e ._ ., ) '"1 '"'•1111 Plr•Oll t c1 ... n1 bvslntn 011 Frld1y Mlrcll 'If ltn ·11 11·:: N P ,,. tr' & H Ith uMne ,.., 1rc1 r. 11, , , • tUl,'0-syc,...1a JC ea n<1' 1 al ,;,..,.. ' 61-Tlllt st•l-flf tilM wlltl "'' COllllfV NEWPOfliT CENTEll: ... INT SHO,. .. .M .. Gl8f!ALTAll DIED GOM,AN'( • 8 o;c ilfi,..es rtprese.nu,ui' Clttk tJ Oftnt1 Ct11n1V on : Ffll. 11, lt7'J . .UO N1W11orl Cim.r Orlvt, NtWlorf d~I' tPllOlnl.O Tnisi.t ul!d1r '"" Services Joe., of Newpor\ , 11 f 1v. l•v.,1y J. MlltOolt. Ot'llllV C11Unt'f' • 11, C:•lll ""° pu,..u1n1 To Deed "' Trwt rK:~- B •• ch' !·"owing ' a -.ooo consumers, sma armers, ciirt. , t:f1111111 ,; Jlllriv• "'' 1 •··• Ftbru1•v2,1tn.et.Mst.HA."4,~-llOOli ~ ..,.,,, d 1 d ''*' · · · ... •w. Ntt 31 ot Offkitol •KW• In '3 wrltedown of its earthquake-stu. ents, n de pen_ en t l"u•1t,tlld' 01"1ntt Co11t o.nt l"li.t, ~/:•tw~1:!, ~~b.1~~11~~~'iitd br .rr offltl ti "" Cllliiitr'li:econHr tf"br•n 1 ·bus1nessmen, senior citizens, F..,u.ry lt. " 1nc1 M•rtl'I. 1, a. 1tn 1111uvi~ .. 1. county, ce1n.,.111e, Will SILi, A . d nd l • t • nd . 't' 391.n Wllllll'I\ f Jllfrty1 l'U8LIC AUCTION to HIGHf.$T 'llQO amag con v a es c n l'ivmen, a ~1norJ 1es. Ttilt. stitlmt!ii · 111e1:1 1"' 111 c 1 OEJt FOil CAStf INr1t>k •t'llm. et ••"'1 hospita'I m' Sylmar, reported a ·He said the organization ct1rk ot Or•flff countr "'on· J1~Y.,':";l 1" 1•w1ut moMY flf ri'.11 United $11t•I •t · · · LEG" NOTICE ,, a · rh1 sou111 front enttt~ 1e lhl 01 would act as a "Populist ru. " · •v '"''1Y J. M•ddO•, 0.PUIY Or1no1 C011nfY Cll'lrJl'llllM. 1ocetM '" 1~ net loSS Of $912,000, Or $1 11 --·-County Cler•. 'JOO block of W ... $tlltt• ""' loui.wirJ. per share for the first half of pressure gro_µp, to try to in-,.1CTtT1ou1 1u11N1s1 ''"'" uornM•lv wtst ._ ,.~1 tint• An~ ' fluenct presideJ1tiaJ Candidates NA.Ml ITATIMINf PubtlShff Or1ntt (o•" 0..Ur Pilot, Ci!lfornfe ell rltht.iflllt 1rwJ tn._,fft co fiscal 1972. This co'mpares . ni. followlnt P1r1on 11 001n1 ll/1l11u1 J1nu1rY H 1n1 l"ebru1rv t. t, 1', 1t12 veytd to ind ntw i.14~1w 'lt ul\dlf 111 with · total net income of of both parties. 11: · 20..12 eef'd a1 trY•' 1n nie "'*''Y J!.hlmcl i. h "Our goal " ht e'"'lained T,HE lllEAL E$TATE. LEAD~•s. '•Id Cavntv and $111•dtKrllMd fliJ • $193,000, or 23 cents a' s art, " ' • ' -,.. . • )t)'1 El Tdi"o ltQoltl, El i"Of'11. C•llllH'nle. LEG·· NQTICE lat 146 Of Tr1C1' No.·1122, IS1*"tWl'I oJ · th II iOd will be to raJse theseri.ssues $tttnll .. 1flt, inc. (A c11lfer1111 n.Lo . • rn111 "'•reef ,.-tcor'*I In 80olr; 11-.. JP e..)!e~rner,...J>tl' ,...!--·tn-sucb' .1 Wlnl"'~at the· ...... cprw4f!DnL~1 &1 roro 11: .. 11. 1:1 P••tt 3 10 11 l11C.tuirvt, Mtx1u1_, Revenues for tbe Six months • ~J Ul •r Toro, C1llfar11l1. UM M111>$ r1cord1 01 Mid Ortnte CO\lnlY e. nded Nov. 30, '"taled a didateS' .will l}e forced Jo ~ Thi• IW•lnftl Is (Onfluctfll ity • (01.. suP•lllOI: cou.ay. 0, TMI The ~''"' 1ddr•t.• 1nd 0,,,., ~ w d th. , . . PCll'•llOl'I. tTATI! O" (ALIPOillNIA f'Oa d~'lsrnatlo11, tf 1ny, of Ille re1I .,..,~ record '2,537 ,000 coq'l.pared resf .em. · •J1mts .-. SC11ll'll1s1n" . TMI COUNTT °" OllAHM c1escrlbld 1bow 11 1M1r110rttd 10 INI: 2'0f · h ~ 000 · th f' ! hall Secrit•rv,., . N1. A·J1tU J1cft•lnd1 Av1nv1. Co111 Mt11, Ctllforn"' wit $1,9;i1, lD e 1!5 LEGAL 'NOTICE Thi• if•ftf11tnt···· 111111 Wiii\ .'ii• Coun· NOTICE 0,. MIAAIHG D,. PITITION tu'•· 1 of fiscal 1971. tv Cltf11., Orllltl COi.lnl'I' on J'""'''Y 1,6, l'Olt P•OIAT_I o• WILL AND •O• The Undf(llt~ed Tf'l.rsfM cl1t<:lll"" •n'I . , NOTICE 'C)fl NON·llll,DNtlllLITY 1'72· LET'Tlltl Tl!ITAMINTAllY lltb!lltv for tnY lncorr~netl ol th1 drfff The c 0 mp any s net Nall(I Is l'l«lbV •IYtn tl'lll IPll Ul'I-::1~N :·1sc"r1~!!"0• Al'fl'I. !•l•I• ol MAllGARl!:T G. WOLTE1t:i, lcklttfl Ind"""' (OlnlNH'I dt1lt111lloft. it operating •Joss (or the· half ex .,.,. .. ,__. l'fUI not N. rN1011'1bt• 1or 1t1 w '"'· ., ' Otc••lfd •nr. chown h1r1111. !i ; ' -dt'bb or. l!ebt1it1a contrlCIM bv tn~on: N.,...-t ~. (•, .,,... l<I NOTICf tS ' HEltE.llY GIVEN t1111 $aid Ille Wiii bl m.O., ltl.it Wllll elusive of the wr1tedown, was oltltlt ltlin rnrsell, on CM' 11111 1tllr d•t•. 11111111 0 , 1 c 1 0 ,11 ,.ri~2 l.AYMONO M. WOL TE Its 1111 llled II••• c0Yen1nt "'w1rr,1111ty, ,.Pr•u or lm1ll 112 000 1 ... ent a· share 011..:1 lhJ• 1211111ey o1 Ftbtuerv 1m '" ' °'' r • In • HU!lon 1or oroNI• of wm •llCI lor '"•'di"' 11111, 110•M111o11, o, e '. , Or . "-, ' JoM P, <JNncle!I ' Jiii fll'Y )I, tl'lll flbt\llry 2, t, If, ltn IUUlnc. !' L1t11ra T ... t'1Tf4t!lery '14 'tlll curnbrt"CH, IO NY IPll l'lfl'llllllllf ,,1 against earnings from con-..._.,.,bbl• w•r nt-n "rll!tner, r~rlTICI,. Wlllth is """'IOI' clp11 sum Of "'' "°'' 1ec11t111 lly •• t. · t' f ooo 000 C:od• Mtll. Cellternl• fllr1htr Nrllail1rs, 1n4 !hit ltr• 111'111 1nd Offd ol Tr111!, to<wtlt l27,G39,'5, w!"' I rnumg opera ions o -· , Pullllsr.ed 0 , .... , Cottt 0111,. ,1ie1, 11tc1 ., h11rf11t "" ...,.. '"" -..n wt tar111 ''"''°"• 11 11ro111dt<c! In Mid llOI or 10 cenls a share in the com-F«irue,., 1s. 1.,.-n, 1n1 ,,,.72 LEGAL NOTICE flf' """'',.,. 2t, lt12. 11 1t:»·.1 •. m .. ,1n ,.., •6v•ncts. " 11111. ul'llllt' ll'le terl'll1of1111 · · · · · ' court,_., of D1Hrtm1n He 3 o1 utll O~ of Yr1111. foea. tllt•Mt •1'111 u"'" parable 1Slx-month period Ul LEGALINOTICE ''CTITIOUS 1u111111u cO..rn, et ?Cq,Clvlc c'"i.' Drl~• w1:st, In el 1t11 Tro"ee int of IPll tillstt Cl'Ott" fiscal 1911 . 11 • . NAM• ltATIMINT Ill• Cltv II $11111 ""'· C•llltNll... b'f Wiii Died °'Trust. t • ··•l"TITIOUI ••••••••• Tl'le foll1wtn• Plf~S ,,, dolnt "4!slnes1 Dlltd FllllUltY 11, un '11" btn.tlct1ry UMtf' ,.,. D@ld - En¥ineer' s GetS Grant "' 11; Wtt.ltAM E. SI JOHN. Tru'I llll'llOlore txtc.tJtM •nd dlMver~· ' 11"4'• Sf'AY•M1HT FOil' FUN !NOUSTll:IES, 3t21 Wfll Countv Clerk lo lht undtr•llllld t Wtllltn Dec:ITTtllo ,,;Pit fOlllwln• ..,,.,, 11 lltlnl lt~slnl$5 Wirnlf.,Sintill, Alli, Cillornlt fl~ McK•NNA & f'ITTIN• Of 0.11111! Ind O.mtnd for $111i tl!d Al''°htt c.· lr•Y, IOU llulllll'lll Aotlf, IY1 OrYllle W, MCCttrtll wrlttlfl Nollet of Dlltult tlld flKlfOfl SUMME.llFU" COM,AN'f, It t,l tfiwPOrt lttdl, CtUI, flMt 241" a1 T-allf, 111111 A Sell. Th1 Unctfr1ltllld cauf.td 11111 Holle, 1"111ee Ht. 8, Cotl1 Mt••· C1llf. ' .; ,JOSEPH I. CA•TA:-·2 .... 12 OY•rllk• Tll• m•1 ..,... Of °""'" 11111 Eltc.llOll .. sen tit ~ "*"' D1r11 Glfl'l'l'llll tO.ner11 '°!DrJY1, ~I Toro. Cillfti'nl• L.ffllna MIU" c111,..,1111 n us rtcordtd In Ille countr Vlthlr1 tPll 11 '•f"!nlf'I. lm Mitd)l!ll •NI. 't T111rtn. -"°"'Id l. Anlenecc:I. ltl11 ,lle•lrn """1wlr• ,.,, PtOll-PrOl•rlV 11 loc.11M. CiHf, · .. . • , ·Le11t, Hun!lngt1111 a.ch, Clllf, ,Ulllls1\ed Ot•Me CM't Otlly P.!lct, Gl8RAlTAI O!EO COMPANY Thlf MIMS• /1 Itel~ til'ldOKled II~ I Thi ltuslneS• 11 "'"' <Ond1Kted ltY • ''°'UltV '~· ''""' "" 31'G·72 ,, ••la Trutfff, . • Gt111111I f'lrt!lllrllfl!ll. GIMf .. I. Ptrtn,,Jhlp, " •v: Tlllt ln1Ur•ric1 & fruit ' Robttl 0. G11'll"'lll Ardllt c Irey COmN11y, -111 1 . This lt1l111'111\t flied wlltl tht CoulllV Thi• 11.,.,.,.,rt !lltd wllft Itri C011ntv LEGAL NOTJCl!. Iv LOOEMA G. COFF,..,..N ) F S f t Clerk of .oren1~e C111,1n1V .,: l'eb. 11, un. Clirk ef Or•ntt Count.,-.,, Feb, ,, lt72. "'21 or a e y By llVtrlv. J, Mldclox, Olc>u!'f COlllllr BY ltftr J, 81ttlltn, Olpu!y CountY folOTJCI TO CRIDITOaS 011e: F1br111ry t, ltn • C1trk. ' ' Cllrlt;\ I •• • ' • ' • "? su•••IO• coV•T OP nt• P11blllhecl °''"" Ct11t 0111, I'\"" • • ' t • II~ . , • . '. '. ;.· . • ,,Jn3 ITA'I 0, C.t.llPOllNIA •oil F.Ol'u•ry ,., lJ " Mlrch I, 1'72 11j:i1 A N wporl n. h le l"uto!J~he<I Or1ntt C.d 01flr , Pl!!!! "ublllhecl Offlltl <'"* Dilly ,.Jlot, , TMf COUNTY 0, OUiNOI ) . t . D'C"a~ ~ys ms F11>1i11rr '" i2 •!Id Mlrcti· 1, •· 1'71 f.etrVtry 1'1 7;1 •ncl , ~·~cti 1, s. 1fn NO . .t.-nus LEGAL NOTICr eng1neenng company bas been . I . 31!-12 " ~ff.72 E1i.1 • ., ANlHONY ·Rot.SI, Oi!CMltd. 1-------------J 'ded UM~ ('• al NOTICE 1$ HEll!IY GIVEN lo tilt awar a ~.vuu t;Uer LEJAL N91:1~ . r.iitars ., Iii• 1&o¥1, named oectdf,!11 HOTICI o,. Ull o, } contract .to evaluate the safety , . · , . LEGAL N011CE , 1t1et elt ,,,.ens r.evlnt cl•lms •••lnsl Th• llllAl PAOP•ll:TY AT PilllVATI SAi.• h · t 'st' f hi I' • · 'K:Tl.TIOIJ' IVltHh& . . . ul4 lll(ld•nl 1r1 fl<!Ulttd lo 1111 .i.el'll, Nt. A Jttt4 C arac ert ICS () Ye Cell ID r, NAl,\ll~st«i•fQNT , ·.--.J Tl w1tll tllt'nect's!ll'Y vWctriri Jn 1~1 oltlct Svctrlor C111,1rt ti 1111 Sf11t ti Ctlllornl ··-t' ' h'gb 1..:.L ,. - -..... ' ,.,.,, OUI IUSINISS ol"" lttk..... • tor lt\1 Cp.j111y °' Orallft use on ure na tons 1 ways. Tiit ';fOl"!'"lr,_ l!t?Ofl'·l•_j11olnt1 ..... ~ t ,. N'.I.Ml ITAT•MINT . < *"''•11tll1K coun, or 111 1,,. Mlotttt 01 111 i 111 ., MA•• Ult t I •oo•s; _, : ' -~' :.,711e1-11... I 4ot ... I II 1r111nl """""' Wllh VI• nec"~•<Yc • '. rasys ems nc., ,. Al'!.PL1ro l'l.ANNINQ .DY~~!(~ °q'; ' ' O"'! -"""''I ' "' ..,1 l'llU VtUClit .... to !fl• und1r.i1r1ec1 II "° :nnd UOLIP,·WEJn'L. OICNf.td. NewpoJ'\ Center Drive,. r.eceiv-a 1. tttti .. ~t1eet. s.i.11e 21t ... cflltJ : ·.~u,1TY F"At" S1t• ,111 •trHt s1r111, P.o. ao• 1335, N1w'°" 1111c~. d•~:i!~ 1~1~'~'::" .i'=,1~~~1f• u nd the t t f the N Ml~·CILllfbi'Jli.,l/l'Jl271 \.. · .f• « .. IUI_. •. Ch. c'•'!I t'l'"" -· 'Callforl'llt, ~ Whl<.11 IS 1llt rteu of II I • ~ con rac rom a-rENOHtli:E.AiNG" l'.'I! •~I' c 1! ... Jo... ·.~'-;,,,c_ __ ,. • fl.< , ... • ""!' 11u11n1s1., me undirsj~ In 11 ,,.,,11,,5 • ff ,,,. s111 der 01 F.or11MY, lt12. t. I H' h Saf\y. d. -~~ ...... ,1,,..,_: ..:::.._-.· .__. --Wlll'OIT ""'Jol'llC, ,21s,1,...11 fettle " . 1111 efllce of WlllOftllle • Lii t iona 1g way e an .-........ ~··~ . ...,,..,1,0 1.~,,w.., .'J~ld.un!.,,,., ...s,.Muntlft9too •111;11, 1n111 "'''" •Alli Ncec1tnt, w111111re el'ld., 11'.Wrtv Hut1 c 11119011 Traffic Administration W• •. ~· \4 -~ n• ~'•', ciur ·~-....... · · · witti.111 tour r'llOl'lllla 1fl1r JM llr11 1111111c1· Cor.rntv .,. L• AnMI • ~.~ · -Calltor>1111 ' ·~ • • ~ t .-' ' • • ~ · T1ttt·"1tut1111H1 II' btlnt cOM~lf--en lltol' 11 ll:rl•'NllJc:•·· ' ·' ' C llfolo I tO 1111 lfhM u, 1 division of the Department of 11111 busll'llU• ~ ~v,te.i : \it ·• Clll'· ~yi111w1. , . , ·~ , °''"' Jeou..-r ts, ''°n. ,.!t ,:b~~' 10 " 11 1 ~1on""...' "'-· W •llll"l-" •, "' ~ · rtft'f"lk JOiMa' ' • 1l1ymtnt llte1sl · · «!\ ,,,,. •r Mid 1J ansportation. O.•• 11, I inti~. ·St&.itl"I' ~1 ' , • • • , ;. • eMtutCN" ., ltM wllf SuPlrlor C:011rt, •H !I'll r11111, 11t11 ._,,. 11'1-, "W ill te t nd al 'T'h11 st1t,mtnl wH 1111111 with .,,.,. c~ ltl !ffl(fllflt. !lr.f W1lll tll• .~nlY ef ""' •lllY• !Mrntd 4 " I lttlll of ••Id ftc:NHd If ff'lt tlmt ... . e. W s 8 . ~ yze tv c1ert 'crf °"'"'" C1flrifY: ... .,, P#!r'~ Cll';k,t,.@fl!'"'~-0!1 "': '~ 14• l'71. NOllWIYl. HU11w1n & lll•M';ll e~ 1110"' •l'lll'•ll TM '""''·· tll~·•l'llil '""''"' the safety charactenst1cs of 14 1tn. . • , .. , . •y. •~It ... J •. ~, 0111111Y 5•111r ••,,..,....., lh•1 1t1t "'''•.,Mid .e1.1mt111 .ht• ee-•· b'I bt . ed f d'f. " . : , 1t11.1 ~ rt;• • ' ' . ' ! • • ~· J P..O~ 'M 1W cr~lr1<11 llv IPll'•ffOll "" •-tr othmws11. auwmo 1 es o ain rom l .,.« . , . ·;·1 · .::.i..;.;. ___ 1 , 1, ,,,., N""'""'·lt9e1t cetlftrM 9'1Ul °""' thiln or ·Jn tddlflon .. 1t1e1 °' ''" ferent • clirnatoJogkal ' and '""lthld· Or•nt1 C.:.it '.o.1tY ·_n11, '_..,,.,_ "~ ·CNat ' ot11-I ~i.r. ciw>, .n.,.. ·. , • <I«••·~· 11 1111 "'"• o1 d'41n, 111 ,,.., '' t b. al . I lb Flflrutl"I' 1' » •lllf t\lf~ 1 , '-' u11 ~-.r~rf. '4. U. •llf "'il']fl: 1,.1, m,2,.-0. Anitllli~fw' •..riow 111 ltM Urt•lrt re•I .,...,,.,. lltllt!f "' "" opograp IC reg1oi:is 0 e ' , ' '"" .. " I • ,l.lblllft.d Or'tnit iot$1 D.11 ..... nor C1>11nt.,-ti qr.,,;,, Stiff °' Ctllfornl1, M 'May ~reak Even~ ' . t Fortl '71 Tells United States" Phillip J "·· J•nllll'I' N. •rrd l'ebw.rr 2.·, 1, 1,,; pan1cu11rly dncrtlted ••follows, "-11: Stevens, Ultra;ystems presi: LEGAL 'NbTICE .. I·.··' ',UG.\L! NOTJ~ . m.12 A:~ T~~OIVIOED ~ INTEllllT IN derit !U!lid -I • j llOtu:a e11:· DliSOlU1'1oN . lot ,, of Tr1d Ho. 2t1•. II ,., ""' " ' ;;; • . •tc:i'ITIOUI · IUllHISI · • f'lOllCI , b dlertt<Y ·--.IVll'I, fllll 11'1• LEGAL NOTJCE rlCOl'ded In !loot H ''''' I 11111 t °' Veh.les will be tested to . N~• IT-'T•MEHT ,.,...11""''' (l.,..,olor .. .-wint "twlfn Ml1celt_,,to11..,Mlits. Ill 1t11 o1rtC. et 1111 evalua• t differwces in 'their ~Pit ~r~lnt ''''°" 1" Ooln• "'''"'s' w. 1. 'coffi:t1.4Y· tn1' 1tOlli'tT c/..M,. C011ntr 1t«:Oit1er o1 ''Id Countv, eorr. • ~ ' .••• ' doln• bl.ltln'1• .tllld.• ·fllt fitnlllMtnf tnd NOTIC• 0" IAll 0, monfv know/I IS IDfl Cllfttlllt '~'''°"" safety performances resulting ' SOLIO '>,TATe SJl.ECl"LTleS, nu •l'l'I• .e(,WAl'.1!.1'.UlO 9.i.CUllUI$. 1701 ····~ ,ll~,e:•n ., PltlV,T• IAL• w.~. T11stln. C11if. from , URI! in the urban en-West oe11111ront, Newport 1 .. dr, C•Hf, tldfor(.; \lull, ·~ .-...:..... c.til. . • Ne. t;m"1 Ttrl'll• of .. ,, <•lfl 111 1iw1ui _......,. of • 1 -: '2UO. ~. Writ'",.,. '11)1 •II. #' •P'tltnr•l"I' auwllf C011rt ti flll Sl•I• of ttl!torn11 ttlt unt1 ... ,s1elft, Oii conllr""1r111 •1 1111, . n Motor Mount Recall ' Profits . LOUIS, Mo. (AP.) -The is Post-Dispatch says it calculated that General rs ~ wjll-spend-"for Ulan ffie $35 million that been ·estimated in 1'eplac-,cif repairing defective ne' mounts in a recall o( Jy' 7 · million Chevrolet vailable figures indicate the firm will spend about 14,000 on the recall, the kaid. But owners of e cats involve<f"may pay and its dealers almost ·90~000. , e~ ls even the posalbili- that t$e firm will' a'pproacb bteak-even point .l>J the p. this largest recaU iq. utomotive history is com· lete, the data indicates, the ost-Dispatch said. '"!\1he automaker announced -reca)l Dec. 5,t o ·include tly t965.to 1969 Ch'""°lets )ind Novas with V-a engines. ters to car owners areex- ted to go out this week. The paper said that because GM is ttfusing to pay for placement of defective -nts in any auto not vered by warranty, car -..iners involved "can pro- ably expect to pay out an ·mount equal to at least three- ourths that spent by GM and ta dealers. The Post-Dispatch !aid it ar- ived at its figures this way: Using Wards Automotive earboOk and R.L. Polk Co.s 1'U.S. Passenger car Reglstra· tions by Year Model. it determined the number of such CfrS sUU on the road and no Jonger covered by lhe war- ranty. Using Automobile Club of Missouri test results showing that about one-third of the 81iton Wage . Average Lo'v LONDON (UPI ) -Male manual workers In Britain tamed an average weekly W.oge of just over 171 in If71, · fici>rdlng to statistics publish· td by the Dtpattment, of Emfloyment. Thi average an-· wage •as $4,160, an In~ cr<as• of nearly II • .,eel: over the previous year. • engine mounts ' failed,· i t multiplied the p r o j e c t e d number of noriwarrarlty- covered failures by a n estimated cost Of the repair. based · in. part on a survey of G~ dealers. ' The Post·Diswtcb said GM has refused to fyrnlsh ils figures on the cost of the recall, but the paP."f quoted a spokesman for the' firm as saying: "I know We are not going to niake any money on tbiL Air Force Seeks Aid For Plane v1ronmeot of Chicago. the .-~ Cffll•r, ttl•. W. OCMn '""'· 1m ~ .,Y mbtvit ·tW.nt · ' '°' "'-Coul!IY. 9' LM AM•lon. T•n iterun1 of .-noonc ~d to bt Cfllicil1tea Id .t Ii t ntered NIWl""f. ••1c11.,Ce111, m6Q. sefdJ~r1'u' 111 tn. t\m.i'ri;v.it!I •lit .con-In ''" Mltttr·o1 1t11 1•1•'9'.r MANS IE w!tti btd. ~ ·we1 c .ma e encoµ Th1• IM.i•l1111' ·•• Wl1111 col'llfudd •r .. .ductld bY.toO .n«, Tl!t.~1111,w.e. c. YOUf'G, DIC•••"·· 11<11 or e111n te"' 111 wrtllnt1 ,,,., wut JD Conhechcut the hot-wet ll'ld1vldl/1t. . . Ctn110i/Y .-nd' lo6trt c~ It bittnt Nol let II 111rotbr tl111n tfltt th• Ul'I-lit r«llYtd at 1111 alll'tuld o11ic1 11 inv ·f~' 'and 'lhe' · AOl!erl c...,.1,, lfluolvtd ''""'' ll'lt •;•n:m'• ._ ·k , "d11'11tn.td w-111 1111 1t ""''" Mli, on or t1m1 etttr Itri f111t »11111/atlon MrlOf •nd DETROIT (AP) Th ~ rd ai:ea 0 r· ~a . moun-Thi• tl•ltrfltlll fttid Wlltl tt:-c:,...111'1' Wtttrloo G1R•'*~'· ' ' , t 1n1, •fllr"" 2tlPt MY lf.P ..... ~·1m 11.,lbl.Of· kfor1 .dlle.of _,. .. -e rO ta1nous terrain 'Of M,dptana '!Clerk of .or,•~ CoU!lfY on: J•lllMll'Y ~. Ntwport Blldr.'QlJf.1~ CffKfti~trt. flc1 o1 .'Mrttn c. C111ww. Suitt n1. t41 0.Ptd l"tb. t, im. Motor COrn~y .has ·reported St -=Id -' ltn.. 1---"' J. ,M•~" DIPlltv N4'11"'1 of .. 1c1 .Ml"Mll&)lllt.I ... rallOnsl· Wllllllr• llYdl ........ IY Hllli. tlllfl!'nll CHElllYL ITOM,, ~ l97l f'ls to\al' $657 .evens Sf · coun!YC~ , lll•·frll'ns•ld41l;.r,;,~"'t0111ffM'ftr'11YtOJ12 e111 n1r e1 Lot An•••••· DIANAM.MAHOMIEY pro I Ihg • • ' , ( ,.l)Uf ·1111111. lf1btlllit.' .,: 411111W.~Winl iecurrtd Sl•lt .. c. I I fl r II t •• " ""' hlsti .. t Co.Aclmll'llrtr.trlc:•• ot ""' million for its See'Ond•beSt 1\. 1 ., • r11tllltred Orl!lff Cl!lst ,O•ll(. •llot, under Mid flnn _,..l., iliW 9'\Y.»flPl'l OI' tlld lltlt bldlltr, Ind a!Jttlecl · II con• E1t1ff ff Mid 4tctdelll. Year in history and anticipates . , J1t11U1,., 24, •llf , .. ,...,ry t '· 11. 1m wM'l'l1 e1er1t111t"v1" "*"'""""'I'll. 1tr"'~"' ltr ••tel su,..r1or cwrt, 111 1111 W1M11rMt • l" . S~,!th · u • t ' 11• 01tjlf ·1"111. •· 1'111 ": _., I' . rlfht, tltt1 •l'lcl' lnl•rlfl ti# .. kl =:•"' "'9 WllllllN IW. that salts will continue at JUI . • , fil LEGAL NO'nQ: . ':°;!,,'t(.~ ·, •.Y,.' ~ ;:""!::::·~ ~"i:·!.~' .,t. !:,~ ==~=-:::itn':l:1,1,,1«t . .levels above last·year. • -~ . 1 _ •• ••• , tnr.oc: , ..... •. ,,,, c11e11Md,ti.t 1C111ulrHlw•'"•1tenClf1ew na.oc Fords' per share ·earnings • ,.c11T_1pu1 1u11N11a ' ,111111111M Ol"1na1 ••.wr•r;i"IW'· 1"1\11; or'O'tl!ltWIN. trh11 t11111 w"' Mlllttlon" fl'uMlt/lld °''"" CM1f 0.11,. "'°'· were $6.18, second only to the T · ·· Loan wAM11, sT•n~~ Flli~v•l'Y'•'"· 1m~ .: ···i···:;·, • ·11 •• ,., 11rtt tf. 'ulcf •":''*· "' 111e """' 01 '•t1ru1ry ''· 14-n , ltn ..,72 a es' Tlll'ftltowll'l~.·Perlon 11·4'olrti lluliMSs • )'.•: •)~>f,. dltfh, ln.tlld te •II ln1"«rt1ln rtl! 1r0o:1---'---.;_c;,; ___ :_=:; $6.33 racked up in 1965; when , • -11:· . ; . . .. ·. ' ·"--1 ••rtv •ltu••• 111 'f'!. Cou111Y., or111M, LEG. the -m·pany set 1·ts profil · ~ ~Lrl"ottNIA soc1er{o~ ltO.l.TtN4 ·. L£G-'-1~,. •••t• of c.p1or.-1, p1ntc111eriv d•KrJbld AL,N017CE "" . . • ' • PHYSICIAN$, lMUAllor11!11l11 St., H~ , , ~ -~··,"';~;·~-· II ~lo\h,,to-wlt: 1 ' record of $703 iD.ilUOn. Smith ·International Inc. of !Jntton ••ld'I· Clllt. " IUPIJtlo.t -CoilAT'WTHI lfl •li. •1o;cit I07 •. et ,.,. Clly, •• "' IN THI SU'l'IO• cOullT 01" Ford. last of the Big Four Newpc)d Beacl;l. haS cOncJ.uded · H.H.M.s, c ......... ~A ·c•11teir1111 sTAT• 011 u.'L.tt0alil)l; .. f'01t · :r~1ec:..,~ ,!: . 8~ 1• d '••• 1' o1 TM• sTAT1 o, cAL1,0111N1A ,o •. U.S. automakers to disclose a new' "$i2 ,million JePior Joan· fr:~:!!:.-1~1/i . "'·ti:, 1 11-, '~• CO'fl!TJ,·?J., ~ . , c111rttr.' c.n:. ~mon~°k~ ~~·~t; 1"1 co~'.: ~:.,,"'•• 1971 results, made its report agreement. wlth 1w;-· major--na; c T11~ .. bu•1""!'~1• ~ ~" •r • NOT1ca oir ~N•·~lit .:i1tlT10N ~tn!~',:1.,1 r!.-=:; ~~·~· o1 lloTtca Off •••cur•tX'I IALt ' t. J •• · . lftow11t1 -Ctr_..tton. '" 'flOllrTJ flP Will lio ,01 llll U 1 td S I I .'!?'"'11 D, illlAl P•O,l&T'f AT l"lllVA.ll public this week. Sharply in· 1ona life 'insurance · com-· S•ndr• 111ro, , , 'LnYln TllTAM•M"r.\llT CtDllO n 1 •• ~ 1111 con lrl'lle1i..., of NI•, 1.t.l• ed ' I · p id · t Do' itJd E ~'"' • · W tYI I ' ' or ''" ush l'tld h!ll'ICI '<WldlllCH tr 111 1111 Mlttw fl( 1111 E•t I If IEllNfSt creas earnings a 5() were Gpamhes, _ res ennd, . n · Tiii• sttitement 1ult; .•lltl n. C""MV e:,,,, D., ~EANNtryi · ;OM01'.IN nm,,:.";;::.~· Mort!:;!' r':n T,.,,, ~ MICHAEL HAOE,N, Jll .• :.:., •. repf.lrted by the three other raJm announc . Clltt ot Or11111. ~.on: '""' '· 1m. Dtt••*· . , ; ' "' "' fd ~-·1~ · w "'c•11 Holle• i. ""• 11ven ""' LVCILLE maj9r auto companies. The additional long-term Ir we11er '· ICIM. Dil":"IY ctu~tv ~ie:;, NOT1c:I:! 11 ...e11i.1v. <HY'EN lh1t ll!111r ""as'it. ,! lff1r1 ''lit 1!i"wr1:.'~;,., wllt =~~'is~AGfNi •• f'•ecutrhf °' '"" wfrl ti Ford reported -.4WOrldwide financing includes a $7 million ,l.lb!lthff O•lntl . COid O•llt ·,llot, ~[)\ wt~·.:r-.~~~;:."~11L:.i: ~ .... ~~~~ttr!'.:;:. ~r~:~c~ :~ ffuN.:I, wm ~1A!tL ftf1~~0~.~ •• Jr,,, sales of $18.4. billicln, up 10 nor-IS.year senior note bearthg ~ llW1r1rr '· 1" n. lflcl Merell 1' im , .. .,.,,.,.,...,,. 1' ~""'* Jllll'llt' w11YMI lltt"• Utt ti Ml•. .. 1 11t111m lllOdlr, ul'llllt'.t11e fti'IN lfld"eofl. ,..-· .n"'72 """~• tie. ~IC"-\II l'nM •fol' funtw . O•i..I ,0 , 1, tm. lllllor!t !llrlln'11tr: ll'f.lnllOl)fd, ~llCI re Cent from its $15 billion in tereSt of 81/, p e..r C e 'ii t -_ -•1rtk11!-.' IM•lt\lf•itil .fffM _,-.. IKI .OOADOl\I YOUNG conrtrm1ll011 .,.. 1111 SuHttor CCMillt on 1970, when auto sales lagged. negotiata.t "Mtb Aetna Life LEGAL NCYl'IQ.I °' ,....,1"' 111to· .tt"" Ml','....., Ml , flr '"' CLA"•eNCi YOUNG F.wi11,., "· im " 1t1t "°"' ot •1l:0t 'I"'" • . ·-Mlrth,1, ltJ'J, ~· .':• -.m .. "' ,,.. c.urt-, e11kl.lt«s 11 1111 Wiii t .1'11 .. or ttterfffter wllllln 1111 f!Mt 1llow• Near Record New car sales were up for Insurance Co. and -a$5 milllGb •1CT1T1out ~wttr1•ss· room _. ewirtmflll'f;He.,., 1114 e111r1, .• ..., ... ,11 "'"'tf!· .. itv lew, •'""' omc." ,., l .. Ad•lr, WASIDNGTON (AP) -The the month of January .this note arranged with the Mutual f1AM• 1T.l~1MINT ""100 Cl<flc. c11tv'. ~1ve. w .. 1. in "" Mttt111 c. ce11w•r ~':'~ 0~.,., ';~._ ~"W~'..!: Air Force asked n i n e y"" ear and Ford said sales of its Llfe Insurance. Co under llk:e ~""' toittWtni ""°" 11 •Inf llU~ Cllt' 'tf ,.,.,. AM.I~ 1,.,,,11• 10"' "'• ' ' c:.111or11t1, •H tf 1111 ritf.tt. nti. 11111· 1n. \ •, ••· , , .,..__,, Dlltcl r-.btlllrY, I r 1'71 "'4 Wlllll"' _tJVf., """' tlld tlftte f1f flle dtcetlfd" ....... Ill aerospace firriii;, tn:c1bding 1~ models, which began· 'in terms, Grahant uld. w&sco. •tr fl•nftliN'I• C•1• ..._ ·; ''*'' e. If J9HN, • , .. 111.,1y Nlllio ci111. fttlt °' "'-r1t11tt. 11111 1n1er1.i •Dd """' ti'! 1 Do I Se . A · C1flf, " · . ; • County~· ~ Altt,~ fW .. lltclllttt ,. 1 ' • ,. ' • McDonnell· ug as in Long ptember, are 7 percent ppro1tmately f7 million 1t1cl'l.,.c1 J. 0•1rlil'I. 1~ '".,"' w•••••LAMt :tcUH•t ' mi« •• • • • EllNEST MICfiAEL Beach to submit proposals for ah~,;td of the same span for will be used to reduce Smltb.1 ''·· l'111,1nt•IA "111•v. cinr. Attwn..,,. 11 uw Pub11ltitc1 011"" coa!I 01r1r Poat. J:!G!,"'·j~;::._ ~,.,~ ":'l~ .:'. developing· a new shor1 take 1971 models. oulstandlng sbort·term debt, c~ •1•ti, 563' L•kt• 0'" C:Y•'1"' t!!' 1::..1~!-=::, ,.,"""'"1" 171' '" ltn· ui·n ~'*j to" 111t' ~ 1111 • ._ ..... '' the· ti"" off and landing ( ST O L ) Chairman Henry Frlrd It while the rp,ainder will be ,:~::r~"'" " lltlhl ~e1111 .,.,. • !::!r~1 ::-' ~ ~n LEGAL NCYl'ICE '"r ;,,,.:,\.; .;;u:,= r:::: ,i: "'•cJ:!: transport plane. and President Le~ A. Iacocca devoted ' to g' eneraJ wo1•Jcin1t Rru:.,. J. O'trlorl ' Pll.ffl Mlf.I, Counlr "' Otl/IM, Sttl• ti u ' '"" lhlt 1111tmenl llllid wlllt 1111 ·countv 'ulllllllltlll Of'illlh CMst O•ltr l'lltl, Ctrtfornl•, dtlc:rl!Md •• to11ow11 The STOL project is these-predicted that "retail sales capual 4to financt a con-c11r11., orin•• county 1111: Jefllllrr 21, ,..,..111,.... 14 17;21, 1m 112•72 =~-:~J::; "" .,l'llll'lldld _.....,,.. lnttr.11 In -nd · funded · under' t b e ·could be sub!tantlal1"' higher it templa•.w1 inrnansibn of the 1tn. IY 11Wt1, J, Mllldox, OHUIY '"'v•n ,.,, "',1 P"OPl!'fY •t m su1111t °'""· cit-. "v Y ....,. ....,r; 1 C rrtv Ctlt,lt. of otll Miii, c.tlll'y ff Or1Nl,'lttt. Advanced Prototype Develop. consumer confidence rises company I foreign : ules ac-°" 1111411 LEG•• .. -CE .... .,,.., ., c111""111e, c1ncr11H11 •• fojiowt: beyond P .'. t .,.,..•tlOnS u tivity '"'bllt.titcl Ortnlt C...t DlllY Piiot ft&.11 J'Vaa. Sy1otltl"C0t.rn ti Wll St•lt ti Ctllfor,11!• "''Cll l: ~t111nlnt 11 1 llOJlll 11'1 IM ment Program with which ~ r n ex.......... · · J,11111,.,. 24 •• Ftllru•rv t ,, 1,, 1;rt w tr1t Cou111v et Or•ntt Mrthtrl'I' 11t1t o1 lot lON of NIW»lr!· d St ·-gtve seed ___________________________ , 11J.ji ,.ICTITIOUI IUllflllQ._ In "" Miiler ..... , ""·_;. l!ltlll ., Mii• Trett, •• .i-11 1111. Met.,_.. u ry 1.3 n money ... NAM' ST4T•M•NT (HA!tll$ WllLl)Viil WllTll!l, Jll:.. td In llook·S ...... 1 or MIKtHlfllOvl and a fret hand to design and ' · 1.t IV'l'lll'"~ TPll'Wll1Wlnt1 ,..._ '• 4olnt -.isrntu o. .. Hd. M1111, ltcor4• °' Or•nt• CM1111Y. Ire aJ ST' l!l "D G.A:'7E~ ,r.~i(V LEGIUI Nv&....,.. ••: ' Nfll!c1 It Mrtlly •IVtn lh11 11'11 1111< C11lfontt1, ,M fMI wtJtertv "°"' "" develop prototype • r t J:"JL~ ,a,/ .n... T""' ' CKll:OHOEK eJ.f(TltOHICS, .,. .. dfl'tftnlfl wlll .. u II ,,..,,.,~ 11!1. on or tol11t """"' Mid 11,,. IAttrMCt,t. ltlt with on1y the barest essentials a.AY J. •1cr1T1ou1 1ui1N1s1 1111111111, c:c111e M•~. c1111t"''• ~''' •fl'lr "".i.?111\ c1w or,~ '"'· 111111 of· «nt« oi .MOl'lrtvi. 11r"'· "''""' 120 t f rtb b the ili'tary Tb By • . NAMI ITATIMINT Soler l1Wetorl"'. Inc., 1MorMr'1td llu ol rllliNf•Oe A "-"• "10 Wlllhlrl ftlf' w1tletlY Ailotlf"t1Jd l!Otlhefly llne, Ml 0 Y ffi • e M \'GW' l)ol(r Aditifr c:.;.fit M: Tiii> follewl119 ,.,_ 11 C<ll'll tlll11"911 tri C.llftn'>11; 31•t lleilll'lllt, Clllt Mae, ltvcr .. ltvtrlY HUI .. C.llf,. ftttl!, .Cou111Y "'*' 1( rl,i.t 91111" llS ftlt ftOtfl\Cl'IY firtt involved d.evelopment or y Ac(•""•• .. ,,., £'*no T ••: (1llflr1'111 .,,,, ' " LOI A-•··· Stete ,ff ·C•llfor"l•. lo !tie I• ..... llOl11t If Mt/fll'lf.... UCIJiitlllt a Ch.ap' l;•htwe••bt fl·•tet To ·-·-top·-for--•o•, SU"1M.IT fU!'M.TY co .. lttO N. Mtkr • 71111 tMll•• 11 Clttfllcllll lit I Clit· llttlllfl •nlf kit ..,tdd.,, •M 1!Jfll1CI le l!Mrtlrll!'I !tit ............. llttl, Thi olller -e '-6 &" u.n: •'--.-9 ,__ 1< Sfl'ffl, $11111 .Ahl, ~lflimle t'l1111 Wl1ltn. ~ tellftrf!llllOll W .. If lu1otlor (furl, 111 OWll ..... of Mid PtltPtrfY trt Edrtlt tl1r1 Plal'Wl. tf!GdwordsCl:li1~dingto~ ,9\111'11"(111 L•lllnt c... Inc. fA 0•vl4 l!H1tt11. "" rJttrtr II"•' .,.. 1/llttrttl," "'" Troe!ltl'll, Alic. ~ .... E,.....lt'dlen. of Zodiocbfrthsfgn. Cllllttn1t C0t90f'illlln) 1"3' Wllil'rl't S~ll1rr dkttMf 1l 1tr1 ttln<ff fttl!r tM 111 lh'I 111d MM"lt 0.rtl'lldll lell. The Air Foret wants a new 'fOI •rw .. 11111m 1-111i.. C•n•. '°'11 Tlll• t.1111m1n1 we1 flltlll w1111 "'' c..,... rltllt, ttlf1 '"' t"""'91 lhll fllt .m11 crf Subltd "'r cur~t ''•"• CW1t1tn1e,. J50,000 • p 0 U .n d, JO\f • O()!t 1 h 31 Qthe,., 61 ~· Tllll 'h•lnlft ,,, @Mo.ICtM .,.. • ctf. h'-(ltl'k fll OflllM Cfu11ty t11 DICIMkf Ml4 ll«llMd hll Ktu"Fr• .,.. -rtllon ccrl'llllll-, ftf.tfYtf'llM. flflllt If Wtt. 1.1.... 2YoJ '32 Ttlw 621Wfici'lr ••lltn IC•llfornl1), :it. 1'11 • ., llw tf ""-1 .... .....,, lhln tf !n Id• eutmltllt Incl lll11llllf t!ICl#l'IWlnctt tf transport capable of ma-. • 3 Don't l l Up 4l A ... rcr Jim• '-11trex, Mt111n. P11111 a • .....,.,. dltloll tt lfttt " 1tltl 41cffttd. tt Ill• recon1. 'bort takeoffs and landings .. TMH'1 l 4 F~ 64 s.;i.:... l'tllldlnt 1• '""""" , ... IKt. SUllt ... II~ " 4Mfllo In •fllll "' •II .,,. (ll'ltln Tiit lfl'l'll• •lld eondlllol'ls " M .. - fl'()M undeVtJOptd air fields, 4.. 36 NtlrW 64 "~lj~~ .... ~ ....... 1!'00!:"'--' tf C:tm fll 0t1nff Cll.ll!ty t11 J~ U T•h .... 1... Or•nlf. St1te °' C11110t'll11,, 1'1'11wJtr1¥ Sl•I• fll An'lffltt, or 111rt Clll'I lrflcl Mrt . .sa:-c. ,,,,~ u,.,,,. ""''' .......... ttlt WI• flltd. w1111 t!w!ll.ll'I-l• Artttlff. C•ltl'W'l4e ,..., ,..., -·-l"r 1llu1tt '""" COlllllV ol cnh Ind t.wtul ~ "' flll u~ ~oviets Agree To Air Plan ., FRANKFURT !UPI) Traospon Mint.tor' G • o r g Lober bu inaugurated tbe first commerotal air lerVlco b<tween West Germ1ny and the .Soviet union aince World War U. A Russian plane already comple~ the first Mosco"·frankl!irl lll&ht as par; 9r an air itarfic agree. mojlt signed this November. ' .. 7/4.,.,.. 37/4.t 61Could 'ltn. • ' '""' ftsct!Hd ••'fef!OWs. t-11: , ""'tt. 1111 It,,,,.., Wdl (l'lfllt"' lit'" IOn llhM 61T,.,. · -' 1MQ Mtn AN UNOIVIDEO ..., INTll!ST IH clll'llbte tit ftrt &x1tv1rlx tllf 1-Ille 9Guorcf )9~-. ''G. l"ullil ..... qr•• Ci>t'L 0111Y ,,Uot, •ullllllltll Dfll'tM Goist Dl11y ,n ... AND TO: C:Ol/l't, Tll'l llt'Cltlt ot ffll tl'l*Hll Md.te TOS!Nlrt .OHorM 70 Jtl!M VI 9liit l<lllr1.11,Yf. •• 14. 1m ':l•-ry ,. •l'Hll ...... ,., l. '· 1,, 1tn Lt1 ~,.,Tr~ Ne.,,, .... Pit,., •• ~llV "'' oft.t 11'111 *"' litl•nc:e .. 'll lrt Al o.otllioil 71 211•71 ,,....,, ~ II\._. tl.l"''' • tnd t M 1111 Hid on contltl'lltllon fll wi. .,.. h 12.~ AtYeU 72.f l------~---~c;,;c;,;,.1 ... Ml1a11thtlli.I• Mtl'l1 ltt flll flffkl ff !tit eturt, ll~ 43.. 73,._,.. L£Ciill NOl'lCE' LEG•• NOTICE , eotrnlY atu(dtl' tf ¥1• Ctuflf'(. c.m. All llldti 1nd lfftr• Mull M 111 wtill,,. l(C~' ... ~ 7•Coirol '---.,--,..---------, ___ :__;_ ____ _;, ___ 1 moni.. Mow-11 "1ml (fll,,!111 S,1r• Mid Wiii lit rectfvlfl ti 1111 offiu ot 14. I',._ s T 75 YM I' I• .• 'Wtr: T\rltln. C111f, ' 1.t:E AOAll, '"°'""' for··~ l•tc.lllrl• ' • OCI 76 T'"'4h ,KTITIOUS IUSINISI PICTITtOUI tUSINISI Ttrll" "' Ille c-.fsll 111 l•Wflll """'" " 1t IA! WuKHn Ori.,.. '""' :no. MIWllOO't lj ~ :~ ,, ..., MA.Ml fTATIMaltT NAMI ITATIMIJtT ... Unlftd '''"' ... «111nrrn1t1en el .... lttdl. Cel11ot11l1 ,.,..., ,, '"' !!mt.,.., 11 ··~--4 ,_w 18 /wf The t.llow1M "'*""' ,,. f'olllt Tiii fo/lowlnt MrMll '' ftllll' M lll9'1 Tt1t """"'II '!'MY"' ltld It Ill ffl*lflfl lfll flrtl MllQtlol'I ti' lid• notlt• .,. • 19 Will\llll. .. ~ It; J wltll,.111<1'. MflN the 1'11111111'11 of Ml' .. If. ' lt~ ...,0... IO Poe i & I CONITlllUCTIOH, Ml ltUA AMl llllCAM INT•RIOI t'l"ITIM.. llD "'.rt.rs t. M fn Wrllln• tllf Wl!I ~-""11!tr llllorlO\ltlon 11'111 ltli '°""~ !IDW'..ri ~$Ii~ I 'le.. C.-c:tflt °'" NfWMtt htlctl.... 2ollt 111111• An• AY1. .. c .. 11 ,.,.,..., (lltf ... r.c:•twid •t.,. ,,., .... 111 tlft(I ., ,,..,. ... ,,•I"'-olfltt ti Mid •""1\IP'.,""' U0 .o ™=-Llrt !il Up! ri "•VI lllr.cltrkll ~', .. I •rvu-'1'11 • tlflllt 111.,. llr9 flrtl'filti!ltlllln 1111'..,-lflcf IElftCUtrlL MY~ f Sl~ ,,,.,,,. CreK.1nt oaw, fi~ '*Pi Wlllllf'l'I II, IDiy, tlllt len11 Allt AYI .. Ml'otJ 'lfllt oil •tie. • Tiit fltlll i. l"IWWlil t. rtllltl If# •Ill •. .1 23 Mfrt Sl ~ed J.O ,mrri.,.!-.f.;mltfl, ,,,_, ,,~ C1tt1 JAtt1.c1111.nar o.iit""·f.ft.t.nn, 11t ttklt.. """" ·~... SC To ., fMICllll CtllU'.flt 0r1q;, """""°" 1.-<ll ' Thi• lliUti!lllU I• 1itt111 (tnef\KIM .... Ill cl-f1E1tYL ITOM, £ lV-CILll ll:OSl HA.Glflt "7-"ft.1 l'25Mlrlit S50f <;t.9WO Thl1 IM!ntu ls~ condltcted W • lnftvhtu11. DIAN.AM. MAHONIV lllttulll• crf t11t wlll el Jn i 2'~ 56GoM )0.-PINlllAlll•. . WIU11m !. Otr C ...... ltllttB!t1tls ' · -, l lltHlfT MICHAIL H.t.01"-Jlt 21 °""tlcflld 51Y-.ir '"""" Jtdr.Jt. a,,,11~ Tiii• """"'ti' fn1111 witti 1t1• c..,.,., .. .,. lfte rt\111:., .. 1c1 c1...-nt A. lll Ao.ti•• :2' !no& -SIC..-. 111 Thl1 tlltlff\lnl ~1111 w~ 1t11 C111nty '(111-ti' O•••t• C...nty llf'l J1n1111'Y 1•, WIMP"I .. I lM •1tt1MY .... l~klllfi. ,,......... """' ""'"-" i:, .. ,. ,, °"'"" c~"' •u , ... J, ltn. 1m. I• •ewrtr J, MIC!dM. Owlil't Ctvl'I-"" Wt .... I,. 11'\'f. IJll ... ltlfH Drl\'I 305'1t .OM* '°"" V W1!tw l. Klrit, Dt!tutr Ctl.IMY (ltll, l't CIWll.. lt¥ttff ""f" tellf. tt1U h111 t1t ® ~ 21J1 '1S™ 'IMS4 At!tr!Wt•.., CNIM!fllll"'11$ Ntwllrt lffdl>, Cellt. n'6t • Goo.I.' Mft:lle ...,~ """'""" Ol'I~~ Otllf ,,191, l'Wlr.,.lli OrlnH-C-.. Otlll'· Plr,f, ft)t.OC Tlh C7lt) .... ,,_ 'fllnrtrw .. U. u. .• ,.. ,.....w 1. 1m Je""""" u. w ,....,..,.,..i. t. '4' ltn "11111.,.., a,,,.. ceut 0111, rll11, ._ ,.,~1.,,.. Or•ftff '"" '*'" "•If, •1 m.n ~-.n lt0tu.1J"¥" 11 '"' u. 1m "*"'" 11. 1t. n. "n ~ i! • • I • • • • • OVER THE COUNTER I I Headache N o. 'II' Cartridge TV Units Herbert Stein, chairman of .the Council of Economic Advisers, has rejected a Democratic proposal that President Nixon ~sk Congress to create 100,000 public service jobs a month until the unemployment rate is cut to five percent. This Year Work 'Discouraged' Element Increasing By Bll.L NEIKIRK -WASHINGTON \AP) -The government says the number of "diacouraged workers,'' people out or work because they believe it is impossible lo find a job, increased by 136.000 in 1971. The figure is rontained in a news release prepared by the 11 Commerce Department on lhe • . • , statua of low-income workers Jn 1970. The nation's unemploym ent statistics do not take into ac- •. count those who are not ac- tively seeking work beca use they don't think they could find a job. The Commerce Department s<iid there were 774,000 s u c h discouraged workers in the United St.atu Jaat year, up from 6381000 In 1970. The department said the " ratio of discouraged workers • · to the unemployed decLined to I tn 6 last year, compared lo 1 in 4 in 1967. The jobless rate, which averaged 6 percent in 1971. would have been much higher if the discouraged worker had been included. But. since the early 1960s. unemployment statistics ha~e been restricted lo people actively seeking work and currently avail~blc ''THE WAY TO MAKI MONEY IN IEAl ISTATE IS 10 FIND OUT WHEll 1HE PEOPLE AI E GOING, AND IU Y LAND ltfOI E THIY GfT THERE!" Will 109ff'· LllWfl telHllY 1111 IOW tHI l.tM, '"' peoplt, 1M I ll1ve 1crt•t• •~• Mia. GOOCJ 1tr1111 1nCI tew prk••· >4t.JS1S 1r ..,...,It Eve. for jobs. A Commerce report shows that in 1970 there were 106,000 people below the poverty level in selected areas of the nation lltat could be defined as discouraged workers. These included 32,000 who were not seeking w o r k primarily because of a past in· ability to I.ind work; 6,000 who felt e m p I o y e r i considered them either loo young or too old; 60,000 who felt they lack· ed the necessary education, skills and experience, and 8.IXKl because of transportation di!llculties. Another 1.6 million were listed as wanting a regular job but were not actively seeking work because of f a m 11 y responsibilities, sickness or other reasons. The department said it did not consider these discouraged workers, because lhey were not available for work immediately. * *-* Unemployed Get Extra Benefits \I 'c nrc pleased to a1111ounre tlte oprn1119-of a 11ew branch office at .'iOO ,\'cwport Cen ler Drive Newport Beach, Ca. 926~0 ('"' Td. (71-1) 644-4620. (213) 680-9722 R"l1ard 11. Pid<,,p. Vire Pmidtnl and Managtr Gary\~~ Rollason. Acco11nt Extcutivt: Gerald J. Kohler, Jr .. Account Execulivt * ·"» MORGAN, OLMSTEAD, ~NNEDY & GARD~ lrw:llr,,.,.,HI los~l .. •SanFlltld8co•N-- t..l tmbers New York Stodl: ~•no~. Inc. ~ ~ S!DCk. Excht~ Inc.• Pacilte c.oast St6ck &d•tG* • .. • \ • ' • \ •• ' I ' ' • • ' l l ---~---- • • .l'uesday's Closing Prices-Complete Nelv York Stock Exchange ·List S.ltl ..... ·-----------· ,...., ""' u. c-. Cllf, • lii'~B~E·" 1l 1'1111 :it'k Jlll'll ... '• •:: fl4 1::e 11t: _t .. •:: \<) ll"" 1r ~~ 1 11"' u ' 11 ... , ,, -1.11 Jt r u Il'-=1"' J u!. u~ g ::_ :: I IE~ ,.~ n~ +_,,~ " "'" ,._ . Stocks Recover, Post Slight Gai11 .,, ,, tol/O t "' ~ lla ~ ~ -~ NEW YORK (UPI) -The stock market closed 1r. d"' f ~ =" :..:·-" with a sll~ht gain Tuesday. ~ 1'~' Y~=~ th · bell th Do J ~ 1,.,.. , ,_. iw. _"' Short y before e closing , e w ones .. 1 1 "' 11 + v. industrial average gained 3.61 to 914,51. Standard 'rt :r ll" JJh ~ ~ & Poor's 500 stock index rose 0.46 to 105.05. ,tf :~ ;:"' = ~ ~ or the more than 1,700 issues crossing the • 111'11 r~ 1oio. - 11 11!. 11"' 11~ + 14 tape. advances topC:d declines 823 to 586 . .(11 J1\lo ~ ,, ..... "' " •"'-•1v. '™' .. . Jn the 'news ackground, the Commerce De--'° XI~ X1'4 Jiii'--'h 1iJ :t1o1o ~.~ :.,., :_,~ partment reported industrial ptoduction rose 0.03 .ca 1t'h '"-1""" + v. percent ln January, less than the downward revised 11761'o7 . tJJ 51.,., n 51 -"' 0.06 percent figure for December .. * ,,,... ,, '"" ' . )14 7•1'o U\lo 1fl'o + ~1 .......... ,,, ...... ~B: ........... "' ........................ .,,1, 117: :: l!"' n : ~11 u~~~ l:r. ... 33 Jl/o 11~ JV,, . • A CC> 1 ~ 2t 11 .... 1"' 12\\ ~l#r C>ll I.Ml .l-4 2111'1 21'1'-lU\11 -\6 Tnoro ''' 410 .. It 0\0! U\ot +114 C C I. 12 '.»''4 l!>.. 10' -"" upmk!G .21) », , .. , • .,'°'• Ultloo =·'• T•J<ec\ !." _,,J D\"t lJ"" lJt', + ·~ UMC f11111 . 4 II 1~ "" f~ ' pmk pR.XI ,, ll .. 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El .IO l 22Vo nv. nv. -~ ,i Ool 111 56"-SJ\/, \ii i lV. UOC•I pl1.54 :w n :Mlii w.ii -+ Vr T111c1Y tor• 'ff 4Ato .u """" -\lo T110m111 .,. •) Ji-. 31 "" II) un J>~ Cp J 'l 311/o lot"* 3"~ -Vo T1ppar'!Co .olO 1 :WV. 31\li .M"" + " TllomJW n• (11,1, f2o.jj "3 v, Un,1<; ol.41 IJ\.li l!lfi !JV. -V. T..:Mlcott Cl 1 19:111 lt It -v. T11;11; Or . J.t ""' 11'-'l .. §V. -lit U"iolllm .llO i 3' :M 34 .. Ttklrmf• 3"V. ~ .. :Milt t " '~C 1 21 JI.,. H"' u, -'Iii U"lrov11 IO 11 At\lo "'"' "°' -\lo Tt4~ .10! 1$0 ~ ......, 1!\' Iii T ew0:t~ ~-ll Jl 1o11 u. -'• u"I'°"''' pf I " '5V. ''°' 4'll\i -V. Ttlt J CP 40ol I~ 11~ 17"' \<! j m1 l'K 1, 7 J6.'-lo .,, t •,. Un 11\an .40 lo.I :ttV. llVo l2i.t t 'Ill Teml>lt I .2S J6 2•b 24 74\ii + -t lMlr • J6 .. ,,, ...... V. P'i U11lt ,l.,lr 1.llO 5S 33V. 31'4 J,V. "' Tt 'lflKO 1.32 J·~ Jt,Yo 2m, 2s-. -,, T k•" '· ,, (11.:i· 'i 4l -!.'I V"ll •••lld• n 11 .... 1~ 10'111 -14 Tt"llfC wt.A •'4 1\4 + ~ T!V.R ll~ , ti llj Jtl.i; 1 \I ltllo -,_., U 8td pfl.l'O 3ol 21 ... 11 .... l7V, -l.:i Tt"nK p!S.51) 1 ,, ... HV. '''"' -Pio Tol:>l"Pek . 141/t 14 l•llo -V. Unlt(p .509 • ftbrultY DAILY PILOT ' • ' ' 0 DAILY PILOT . '~"'"11111.,A•. "" "'"l••'<tt' '"""'' ,, "' "MIDNIGHT . COWBOY" AflO Wo~ Di1119Y'1 Dlclt ¥011 Oyclt 14word G. loblM011 "NEVER A DULL MOMENT" CONTINUOUS SHOW SAT .. SUN., MON. FROM 2 P.M. ,.ICES UNTIL 4 ,.M. ADULTS AND JIS. SI .SO CHILDREN 75 ........ -. I_.,,_ 1)1·1111 1J,,Jw17111 ... "' "'"h ,_ (l'"'l••""""""'""" "'D11n MA11yu 11> ·1 ..,. r.Jr u;,.,, "'''' "SOMS OF TNI SOUTlf""(S) ''"' IJlttV-O,\oloC......,1 "fllhll A DULL MDMlfllT" (It. -----·--171·1Mf t•.J,. 11 M•ot II• ,,,,.,4nw/ t ... 1 ...... _.,_ "II Un MAllY" If! ''Sltlll GIJlll" 11'1) l--· w .. 1or•••1t '111lJJ ,111'1.tH/I I It' UI l"~U( i.-•Q•~ :.. .... c .... "Tfll MOSl'llAl" (l'G) .... .., .. ~. • co1 .. "TMll'417T"ll'G) --·-••O.-M1.Wll 1J IO<.l/HlltfS ...... -.... > I. "'WJtO SllW AllWT 100" "'l , :t: "llQ!lllJMAt kll&MIQ!' tr•I 1, "'KIU.M. KHAM AGA\11" IN ---· --"'""" 12.00 Pll UILOAD ........ =•·l.ll'f•l~~4-1 l;•AfllllU 1.IYlllY(OMl"{l 1-"'P,ltO IMIU" (tl . -~••ur - ' • • Theater' 'Notes .Stages Overflowing; Eight New Shows Opening By TOM TITUS 0t tM 0.llr ~Htl Sl•tf Like June In the ''Carousel" number. live theater is busting out all over this week. Eight different producing groups are taking the· wraps of f their latest shows ·-two lonight. one Thursday and the other live on Friday. Leadi~ off what must rank as the most jam·packed week of the 1971·72 season, with five other product ions continuing their runs, are Orange Coast College and UC Irvine, both debuting this evening. OCC is presenting the local premiere of "Who's Happy Now?" while UCJ has a closed workshop production of "Fortune and ~ten's Eyes" (see review, op- posite page). Golden West College opens Its "Black Comedy" Thursday for three days only. Competing for the Friday first nighters this week· will be South Coast Repertory ("The lnnocents"), the Fullerton Footlighters ("Kind Lady''), the Fountain Valley Com- munity Theater ("No, No, a Million Times No" J, the Santa Ana Community PI ayer s ("Mayhem") and the Long Beach Community Playhouse ("The Happy Time"). This weekend also will mark the closing performances of A Rockinq Choir Thcoter BALBOA Balboa 81 .. d .• 1r M.l i., P~o ne 673·•10<18 O pl·n 6 4~ DCLUSIYI HARIOI AREA SHOWING> Tllot Hrerdah1'1 "JHE RA EXPEDITIONS" 'Tiltl flHUt ih1M1211tf rn1e.Jlfe odft11f1u• of oll ti-! given, tonight through Satur- day. at 8:30 in the college auditorium. Admission is free. * A tradilional m y s I e ry thriller that turns out to be not so traditional is South Coast Repertory's "The Innocents,·· the stage version of Henry James'. "The Turn of the Screw.'' Jack Vaughn is guest l director for the sen drama. l DAILY f'ILOT S!lff f'llOl l FUNNY -Carla Dow and Don Hayes share a guffa\v in a scene from the Irvine Com- munity 1'healer's ''The Amorous Flea." • three musicals -the Irvine Community Theater's ··The Amorous Flea," the San C I e me n t e Com m unity Theater's ··vou're a Good Man, Charlie Hrown" and the Fullerton Civic Light Opera Company's "Fid(jter on . the Roof." Continuing in their se- cond of three weeks are "Teahouse of the August Moon" at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse and "The Star Spangled Girl" for ·the Westminster Community Theater. Ann Sienna and Sue Flint are the adults and Charles Curtis and Janel Kirker lhe possessed children in the show, which runs ( o u r weekends. Fridays through Sundays at 8 o'clock. at the SCR theater, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa f.1esa. Reserva· tions 646-1363. Betty Stromquist is Fullerton's "Kind Lady" with Martin Clegg and Marvin Colter the pair intent on vie· f.in1izing her. Mary Elliott, Cheryl Saidi and Robert Men- doza also are featured. Donald Henry directs the thriller at the Footlighters' f.1uckenthaler Center stage, 119 Buena Vista Drive , Fullerton. Performances are Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 reservations 527-4415. * The fun begins when the lighls go out at Golden West College where ' ' B I a c k Comedy" wil be performed at 8 o'clock ~Thursday, Friday and Saturday evenings in the new Community Theater. Charles Mitchell directs the college production w h i ch features Rick. Waites and Marion Trainor, Others in the cast are Sonya Newberg, Von Schauer, Jack }iaddad, Linda Hoch, John Richard and Duane Knope . Admission is free. Musical melodrama is the .John Ferzacca is directing order of the day for the Foun- Oliver Hailey's comic drama tain Valley c 0 m m u n i t y "Who's Happy Now?" for Theater as "No, No. a Million Or.a~ge Coast College. Com· Times No'' opens a two- prtS1ng the cast are J~y w~kend run at the Tamura Theodore, Sa~ ~auder, Chris. Sc'n'ool little theater. David ty Dwyer, W11l1~m Verderber ~ 11aiville is directing. and Barbara Be1ndorf. . . Four performances · will be Becky Forstadt 1s l he heroine. Casey Miller the hero HELD OVER 16th WEEK WINNER OF THE GOLDEN GLOBE AWARD and Vic Gonzales the villain in the old time "meller." Curtain lime is 8 o'clock Friday and Saturday at the school. 17340 Santa SUzanne, F o u n t a I n Valley. Reservations 847-9821. * BEST FILM'--BEST DIRECTOR-BEST ACTOR GfJlt HACKMAN FERNANDO R£Y htenh1ry-Fa1 !ll'tMllll ~ IJlc\,~I r;;. ATTENTION FRINGIESI! A trio or original one-act plays by Santa Ana playwright Robert Paver comprise the evening of "Mayhem'' ror the Santa Ana Com munit)' Players. Paver also directs his own works, debuting Friday and Saturday at 8:30 in the Players Theater, 500 W. 6th St., Santa Ana. Margaret Boyer. A 1 I c e Walker. Charles Pait. Susan O'Connell, Mark Benkendorf, Bobbie Menet . Pete Trama, Lee Ross. Wibc Van Der Velde, Debbie Lynn Gordon and Lloyd Stephens are cast in the trilogy. Reservations 541- 2188. The program changes to •'The Happy Time" at the rarely dark Long Beach Com- munity P I a y house this weekend, with James Brittain directing the Samuel T<i}'lor comedy. Jerry Herb en er , Irvine Student In Production Margaret Dean, Larry Dag- gett. Jack Byron and Andrew Hawkes are featured. Completing the cast are Frank Rutherford, Sherian Piper, Frances Mills, Andy Yulusich, LaurelJa Daggett and Joe Causey. Perrormances are Friday and Saturday at 8:30 in the playhouse, 5021 E. Anaheim St.. Long Beach. Reservations 1213J 4J8.-0536. * The sounds of music fade away on three Orange County stages this weelCend with final performances of "the Amorous Flea," "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown" and "Fiddler on the Roof" in Irvine. San Clemente and Jo"'ullerton, respectively. Richard Dow heads the cast JJf "Flea" for the Irvine Com- munity theater, abetted by. Ellen Robinson, Gino Gaudio, •• day and Saturday al a o'clock in the Humanities H a 11 Playhouse on the UC Irvine campus. Reservations 54?· 7733. "Charlie Brown" trudges In- to his lasl· three days, Thurs- day lhrough Saturday, at the Cabrlllo Playhouse, 2 O 2 Av.enida Cabrillo , San Clemente. Mark M a n n I n g , l;<aren Moe and Steve Smith head the cast under Robert Moe's direction. Reservations 492-0465. The first production or the new Fullerton Civic Light Opera Company, "Fiddler on the Roor' winds up with three performances this weekend, Friday through Sunday. Stan Throneberry stars In the popular musical at Fullert-On High 's Plummer Audito rium; Chapman near H a r b o r , Ful\ert-On. Reservations 526- 3257. Don liayes and Carla Dow •" * with Irvin Kimber directing. Laguna's "Teahouse or the Closing performances are Fri-August Moon'' features a Coming Feb. 19 What Happens to the Pets Nobody .Wants? All animal lovers will respond to this touching and impassioned plea by a concerned citizen on behalf of the thousands of abandoned and neglected ani· mals that roam our streets and countryside. In the February 20th FAMILY WEEKLY cover story, Patri· ci~ Ricord offers a simple solution to a pathetic ai'ld appall ing situation-the millions DI unwanted animals born each year and the deplorable ways otherwise compassionate persons dispose of them. e LIKE PERRY MASON -F. Lee Bailey, the real· life counterpart of fiction's Perry Mason, tells how he picks jurors. That's only one part .of this fascinating story about the -famed defense at- torney. e DANNY THOMAS' VOW -In a story written especially for Family Weekly, Danny Thomas tells about a pledge he made 30 years ago and how it has led to the building of a sh rine. All Coming Saturday in The [DAILY PILOT I .. massive cast of some 30 Helene Briggs and . Walter p e r f o r m e r s w h i 1 e Dudek. Performanei!! are at Westminster's "Star Spangled 8:30 in the spacious playhouse, Girl" has an economic com-606 Laguna Canyon Road, pany of three.· Both are en-Laguna Beach. Reservations terlng their second weeks with 494-0743. Laguna running ton i g ht Gary Saderup, M\trtin Fuclu through Sa tu r hy and and Barbara Garlich comprS. Westminster continuing F'ri-the players in ''Star Span&led day and Saturday. Girl" under Sondra EYens' Hap Graham directs a direction al the Flnley School "Teahouse" cast headed by auditorium, Edwards at Trask, Phil I n t er I a n di , Jerry Westminster. Curtain lime iJ ~1cCulloch, Travis Bryan, 8:30 ; reservations 897-11~. - -• -.;:;T"\ STADIUM ·/ ;ii. ·~~ --' -.:.I.TIO STADIUM 0 l IN ·~ - -' -:X..I::• STADIUM •3 !/,'. ·~ --. -=ir-· STADIUM 04 .,. .. -...:U::!D::Y'C"":"'.'.1 ''8ldl"°\' 11M1 a,.._m Stldl" CO) -115 L...,:1111 a1n "Y1v~. Ml11t1 11111 O.r1'" l•l tot.llftff Sii, IM S1111. "RA l!Xf'l!OITION'' (0) •ho J911n W1~n1 "R10 LCM>" IGI "alLLY JACI(" CG'I ... "MONTE WALSH .. ..,.~, Fr1ncll C1nnte:!lon" tltl ... "V1nl"'lnt P•lnt'' tRI 0..1"91 s.,11 -R•lllrt RMll1N "HOT ROCKY (0'1 .... "THI THOMAS CllOWN APLl'AIR .. THE TIMI. thrv l'r(, J;lll & •:•S LAST Sit., S1111., MM. 1 J:l,J i:lt l :M lt:M PlttuRE SHOW ~1_r MGM IT~ OUTTll SI ... A TRIP TO THE UNKNOWN! f1ttk.S.1fll1K.t• '37-43-40 LOiuJs TITAN Ca:;;~ ~'TI _,___J IN PERSON• ON STAGE FRIDAY! Kenaan Tabikh ot Irvine. a'l:~=====:;===============~!::=====~·~·~-~n~l~CAC~•~·~-~...,.~~=====:."'~' freshn1an at Ka I am a zoo College in l\1ichigan, is ap-~ • ACTION ITARTI tMIMI. ti.I. UATI •1.00 pearing this Weekend in the colleges production of Pirandellos "Six Characters in Search of an Author. Tabikh. son ol A1r. and 11-trs. Ali Tabikh of 5051 Berean Lane, plays the role of the se- cond leading man in the drama. FIND OUT YOURSELF ~ WHY EvERYoNE's TALKING AeoU?. MOWPUYIH WD•Y&· TOGttMEl71 tdO 11»-4i1.S-711S.10.10 NAklD U.DY 1:20 NAmlLAOY260.S,.J)& lill > • .. ..._ .... -• .~ I • P T0-59 MINUT • ' J • "' - • DAILY PILOT 3: 'f'm•t111ae atad Meta's Eyes' • • ' Powerful Prison Drama at ·~UCI ?' •• "" W..tnesday ''°' D Cll ...... "'"' ll!l VIBRATIONS! Premi ert. ' By GEORGE LEJDAL Ot lflt 011..-,, .. , '"" Sal Mint"O conceplua\iz.atlon of the play that critics lauded for Its explicit. nude male rape scene . prison life. tran11formation, key lo ~lost lmpreS$ive of the , production, is made more dlf· "";;;:;;=.::::;~;,;;;;;~~ gene r 11. I nut ~ t -n d I n g flcult since Smitly must also perforn1ance! served up by reflect mtasures of sensitivity the "rortune" cast i.!! turned he adopt.! from Mona. ·" Eveni ng •n,. ftlllUAltt 11 ••8Cll lll-tl•t!ll«ll'll ..... * Mualc Series. Col• Portor by Bobby Short, Mexican Ballet l Mort! f.ll) t11 DElllT Vlbntlotr1 M11azln1 of mu1k: 111~ dance, r1n1ln1 tht 1Ptdrum from cJ1ulc1I inlllie to rotk, folk, po9. blues. countrr 1nd musk:tl camtdy •nd ~m 11\0dtm f11'1Ct to tl1sslcal b11ttt. Host 11 Chicken wlre cages divide the converttd ctr1mic5 studio 1t UC Irvine as audience and actors commune through the almulated prison bar; in a powerful presentation of the pos.sibly controversial John Herbert play, "Fortune and Men's Eyes." • ••• (IJ Ill"- • All lil """ WIW ""' ic.'GI"' n1ntao1111 ;• 1111 Drtil• tf ...... 1::.llM .. lllllf M ....... lfD '" ... ... ~""'..,. NORTH by 'NORTHWEST' erring CARY GRANT nd EVA MARIE SAINT Mtrif: ('C) (IO) "NtftJt Ir Ntrtll· l'lrt I (111SP1nH) '59-Ct 11111t. [v1 Mtrlt Sllnt, Jamts Mt· Robert Stlerm111. 0) ll lilt.I OJ Tiit Yl,.W• G'i)N1bdu !:15 0 Ukm Wt1P·U• 9:30 8 ! I fl CW I Wlttoh1C It ... N1• llf'-tM II• Chick H'*r,i 111rr1!1S tht Mory tJ llM 1972 laktrt 1rnph1· silln1 tlM 11..tnw of 1H-1roulld pl1yer alld winner ol !ht HBA's AH· Siu G1mt Most Yalu1blt...Pl1y&r, Jeriy West. 0 (])(I) aJ TM Pws111dlfs "Flvt ED Ntws Milts tt Midnlrhl,. Smut1iln1 111 Moitll: (t) 12hr) 1oMrt" Amerietri pl\Clt•r out of tt1ly h no Sadly, only some 600 persons will get to see the masterful "f'OllTUNl &NO MlN'I IYIS" A •l•v t>v Jot1" Her1>1rt, dlrtcltod bY WoorktFIOP, l :lO p m Wedneld.ly tlld • Ml•t SJtomky. ti••• m•"••t.• "t-UC!fll c,,,,r,110. dtSllM• L.•<1•• II , • u I I ' P•t.tfl'led by ""' UC lrvl"' Ot•mt e...:t I~ pm. ll>U•""•v. I~ C«tmlts Studio '"l'I. 11_,, ?n. UCI Fl"• .... " Vlll•tt.. Br lf" llo.d, Irv • .,., Admlu lott ls frH, JlotkY M~ 0..Hl't. Gu••O '"''" ... THI CA$T Scott Jacoby J1m11 N11twood Crt19 AIUNltt Rl!Mld ~•n!YtCi JDl'ln M•ng'lt u tern) '117-Pi ul Ntwm1n, Fred· loY rldt te,l rttt and Dinny, despite ------~---- c Mirth, Rlch1rd Boone, Ol1n1 th• 1u 1st1rte1 of 1 J11mourous Kiri direction or senior drama ma- l1nto, C.1111n!ft Mltchtll, llrMrt ptiototr11Wr, Robert Hutton 1nd jgr Mark Sirinsky in .the first ~11. -Join tolilns 1u1st. s6lo D.l'am8 Workshop orfering AlldJ C1iftltfl SflOw O """ Witch Joh n F~lmtf that bows in yet another theat- N1nny Ind tht PrtflltOr m 8111 Colby Show rical fa cility on cam pus . flrtn1 U111 10:001J Cf) M1nnll Lou R1wl1 1t1rs at Three admission free SKclill "~ •IMI lchlob 1 nllfltclub tinier who lnexplk:ab!y performances are set f.or the F1Murt hldM from POiice r1th1r ttl1n l1c1 , W111d1rtldl 1 miMr tr1ffic vio!1tion. WEITAINllNT study In pri90n homosexuelily. An 8:30 showing today will be followed by 4 and 8:30 pm. performances Thursday. Some 300 sludC'nts in the UCI program in social ecology witnessed •the expose or prisioh lffe Tuesday in Science Lecture Hall, a hint by the production staff that the show ma y be prepared to move to other quarters t o ac- e-0mmodale larger audiences. Sirinsky, at a dre ss rehearsal press preview, ad· mitted he'd neve r seen the The Menlo Park senior at UCI eschews the nudity. end the entire Drama \York.'ihop reading dc1nonstrates a maturity of taste in the handl- ing of what for Orange County audiences might h<1ve pro- duced ~ hassle not seen since ''The Beard'' titillated the Purilan rrustrafion tolerance of prominent area legislators at Cal State Fullerton three years ago. l l should be plainly stated that the Herbert text honestly expresses the verbiage one n1 ighl expetl of juvenile refor1natory inmates. It may shock sonic people. But. the overriding virtue of the UC I production is the at- 1cn!ion to the gut-level emo- tions of the five diverse 1.:haracters iinprisoncd wi1h the audience for the perhaps too fa st-paced, two-hour edge of your seat glimpse of mental and physical brutality o( lrttn Ami CJ @! m Nlrtrf l111trr A monsttr, Afldtn•dos 41 i. Cetn11111dld wllh thf •kl a1 spedelefttcb. 1...i Concert at OCC tt1t IHlllll al old·lul'r!Ollld llortot ll'IO'lits t rt conjured 1111 In two dr1· nus, st1frln1 Lois H1ttlttorr. John S1.i:on, Roy1I Dano. hur W1hbtr, Jot! Gt'l'J 111d Howtrd Dufl. o- Oll• 11 .. ••• m NIWI Ptlt Miller, Ken Jonas II) 11 ... Hurl! WftlYms (llS..1! @!) ~ TNltrt "Tht l ion'• Cub" h first 1pllod1 .. "Ellubtth R." i IHCIAL I Ion ti1 Kill Sptci1t tuS tt11 e1pturt and tr1lnln1 ol ! ::-=al ht mu lh1 t llllf whtlt, ind hM ~ 1r1~nc1 1s 1111 JMrlormln1 111110:30 (}) T1tt lolddiuers IJf S11 World. ({) Doc.tor In thl HOl.ltl II Tiii Mo LIM fldory Phyllls Dlllt D Tiiis II Ytur Lit• Bart1r1 Eden .plty1 I "w!ged-out" witch 11 11Jllt IS the 1ulf"ised cutst. c i.ttM al I 1how lbout lpj»kl Ind Q Candid Cllltf1 ': 't•lk-ftl Stitt! to Ad~ ) (j) Tt Ttll lit Tnitfl Ill Atonllfltldl 1tl)1 an.11 tf 1tu1111 8 fll•: (C) """"' ,.,,.. M™"' 1-: (C) (Ill!) -Cl) M-p ' . II ... IN .......... (Clfl'lllty) 11:00 ID (]) UI llltwl -f r1nt Slnetra, Dun M1rttn 0 OJ m Ntws . ' mmy Daris Jr. TWiii rMI aiic.F II ON Sttp lkfend 1np filf\t for ~prtmlCf', ('i) Mtrshll DH~n CD HelM'• MIMI 0 rn &J N•n m (IJ ....... fJ M.... ..... ~ "' MIM!o" ID LWV: C.119 (dr1N) '64 -llobtrt Mltdlu111o l)Tlle frtlldl Qwf · fnl'ICI Nuyen, 8'rry.$ulllw•n. tit ledl1 Ubrt m Tt Tel tM TMll fe It h Writtlfl IJ) LllCHll Jllwn en Nttrtnp OJJ n.. Coant If hr n11111 "([J C.ref IWl!ltt ~M t.n.11:100) .... : ~ lt&ooft" (sd· "net ind KtJI Btllinl rual fl) '50-~n .t.rttier, Warner Andlf· CI m W.nt-t:z "Sub • st1tlofl'" '!11'1. ' Young Musicians Splendid By TOM BARLEY O! 1111 O.llr f'llll Sl•ff This critic has a ready answer for those or us who are inclined to take a dim view of many of today's young peo"pte afld worry about what's going· to happen .to the .world when they lake over the gfobe that our generation , has miraculousl7 kept in one piece. · • · · It i::: "Com'e with me to the concert hall. 1• Maybe some of you did ex- act ly that Thursday night and iI you were present in •he ONlnge Coast Co I.I e g e auditorium then there's no need for me lo say more about the type of people v.•ho will be taking over the making of music. who needs no introduction as UC Irvine's professor of music and a composer who has drawn many words a( praise from th.is corner. He recognized with me · Tuesday night that Angela c~rtalnly· decided to do it the hard way ·when she chose Saint-Saens' I o r m id ab I e Introduction and Ro n do Capriccioso for her .solo of- fering before a thoroug~ly e nl bu siastic-a/nd capacity-audienc~. There arc still, as the British say, a few corners to be knocked off her overall technique. Bul it ~·as a l rem e ndously impressive performance in wh ich th.is capable young lady managed to inject the verve and flair into this glorious Saint-Saens work that so oflen seems to elude many more mature clans. including f\.1iss Juda~ in lhis beautifully b a I an c e d orchestra and we should be in· deed proud that our area is making such a substantial rontribution to 1hi1 very \rortby organization. The balance of their pro- gram included a praiseworthy reacting or S tr a v i n sky's Bcrceuse and Finale from his "f'ircbird" Suite but the pick of the rest or the program w1.s, for this critic, lhe orchestra's airing of Vaclav Nelhybet'.s '' M u·s i c for Orchestra.'' My pre-progr1tm fear that it might -De a little beyond them disappeared after a few bars. Under some fine direction by conductor John Koshak-thal was a great· cholce--lhcy gave us a beautifully delive~d and sensitive reading of thi s remarkable v.•ork. performers. It sho)lld be noted that Miss Tribute. now, to the All in by senior James Nor...,·ood That's a tough act in i: of Saratoga who evokes spine-11.ss!gnmenl, blendtnj.! exttrior tingling empathy for lhe br1tvt1do. brutallty and force, aesthete trapped In brutalizing v.•ith the inner qu1tlilies that 111 surroundings. pla.v's end mu$! screan1 out to As Mona, a r.'enet "Our be heard. l.ady of lhc f."101\•ers" chicken, Craig Allinder of !'alos that 's prison slang ror the Verdel', another sophonl(lrt' 1s defiled sen:sitive you I h, a perfectly campy Quet·nie thr Norl\'ood ekes dram" l i c tv.·o-factd fair y. "E\'t•ry C'rll strength front hurnan fr~tlly . has got to hR\'t 11 Kin~. and His rft·ounting .of h is l'n1 the Quren." shr·he in- railr011ding into prison as the for1ns !he llt'W 11rrh'l1 t. Thr result of a brutal beating at role ra!ls for a broad Teadin~. the hands of a gang of youlhlf. and Alhndrr f1L<1 the bill . an unhesring judge, 11: court Although a bit stiff in dress conspiring attornry end an in-rehearsal, Ronald Santucrl, ll different f:in1il y Is., the IT\(lst lJCI junior frorn SAOIR Ann , outstanding n1omcn t Qf meny comrs nn \'Cry s!rong As the in this UCI producti(')t'I. gastrically <lislurbC'd prison Sophomore Srott Jacoby of guard whose social problems geverly Hills is 11 credible are not restricted to belches Rocky the king who turns fr11111 Iii.~ stom<i('h. slave to the desires of the new 'l'hr Cl'r:unic !-iludio !or:1tion boy in th e cell, Sn1ltty. in r<10111 2i2 of thf' F'1ne Ari s John ~1anJ:cls of Uni~·crsily \'111111-:t Complex is not ca.~1!.v Park, another sophornorc, is found . II 's on the left ju.st r)l1st con vincing as the con fu !led the Art Gallery. stranger to the prison milclu. The r0!!111, ~frordinj( no His transformation to the top stage lighting facilily. is ap· of the prison pecking order is propriate in th is , instance, good, but wa.s not quite strong si nce the O\'erhcad hard lights enough in the pre v i e w si rnulate th(' cold liRhl one im· perform a n c e . Th a t 11Riues bathes prisoners. A8C PCl11lS WI'~ DUSTIN HDFF 2NO II BOTH CINEMAS MIMIW: llmlllfR GEORGE ·--The Delta Factor HELD OVER AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS • • 11'1 KMBOtl IHOPftNG CIKTll • • EDWA .. D& HARBOR,:.T.:.2 HAJltol Ill.VO. AT W1UOtl IT. OITA MlSA '41·0l7 Z MIUI ICMm4 Of llAl'I DI DO rwY. STARTS WIO. FEB. 23 ;::'_. • "DIRTY HARRY" "SUMDA f, KOODf IUNDA Y'" D Cll l1l m"' _,, o411:11 Ill"""" """' ~il'a Flttlw "111 tftt (JI el tMtl:to "'·holll1t' T1111 ~ Tom • Sl e Richard Chamberlain "tottoc !hit """"" "'-* "TWILIGHT OF HONOR" Violinist Angela Juda (a mere 16) was brilliant. Those able young performers who comprise the Orange County Youth Philharmonic Orchestra were no less skilled and between them they made the kind of music that certainly wasn't within my generation's grasp when J was 16. J uda is"the concertmi.slress of District Honor Band which the Costa Mesa 11ig h School took over the second half of orchestra. It should also be the OCC progran1 under theJ --;;::::====:::=:.;;::=::::::::;o;=====::..-.;; noted that cellists Kay Lipman baton of Robert Vagner for and Kim Nichols of that same spirited airin&-' of traditional school orchestra were part or brass ba~d offerings. •· forth • fortuM. Taut dr1ma--a 1V First m "'1 '"""' -On CBS LATE MOVIE CD Tiit VlrPllR II()) CIS Ull Mewit: "'T..tfifltl l:Hlll A Nlllc _~•~Dtdfoll '77 ~et Kontr" (dr1m ... ) '&3 -lllchtrd "'111• Prlrn11Y PU,... Chimbltl•in, Joey tfuthtrton, Hick MN Ad1ms. 9111!1 N.t ..,." nutr..... D @1 e;J WrnlJ C.l10ll f:frtfll dilllle!! IM Witt • 111 Dtlth Do Zlmb1ll1t cuests. h rt'' A ~ wtHI Mt ttrrlfltd O MO'iit: "'O.S.S. • (dr1m1) '46-- r was tremendously im· pressed with the charming Miss Juda. the very gifteQ daughter of Dr. Arnold Juda th e sple ndi d Yout h My preference here was for Philharmonic that so solidly !he s P I e n d i d I Y played supported her in this ma jor "Introduction and Fantasi" by wort Rex Mitchell. 'l:qe )¥Ork °'r- ln fact there were 22 of our ries more than a hiril of the young Orana:e Coast musi· ''Bolero" app~h by Ravel with its r epet.ltive coun- 11 Frtflcisc:e -" HM McMi11tns A11n Udd, Ger1ldin1 fltz11r1hl. • ttie1r orwn hOlftl •ftd 11111 1t w1tt1 0 rn oo m Diet c.wtt SCfltd. thtl 111. ; uled cuem: BUI Ccsbf. Ftll:i Wei'*. rnm m ... ._ m-0 ..,_ -,. _ r .... ntlttll C'.alltu!Y Follilf" Stmt" (mystery) '45-Tod S11ulfl· Ilk 11fllll It ,..ttrlltJ stir· ter, [YI Utter. 1 Altn fl:lnC tFMI toflllrll"I • rm· l:«I Cil OD()) aij""" fl( JlltSts tmost JIOPllltrftY his · ed tht ,.,n froll'I tfll pnc te l:JO IJ Mtiria: •Mftllf Miii" (~) final · Auditions Set By Pacific Theater __-terplays and massive, moving structure. It will , ~·hen we can find it in record form , take a prominent place in our personal music library. A splend id program by young people who bring .to their rousic mak ing a zest and fervor that is a credit to them and which should be made part of a compulsory viewing program for adi,Wts. pr111nj. ... '45---Allyn Jotlyn, P•lff Ann C1r- llkW: (9) "'I_.. (ICl-m net, Mon• Frttm1n. 1-Jert MomM, l11Mr1 Lawnnct, CD All·NPI ltlew: "l\rw lt"9 n f:m•IY· North," "11111 lnll'J Alt" ind •Aao The second and final night of auditions for Pacific Group ' Theater's workshop series will be held Sunday, at 7 O'c lock in the~ "conclusion of lhe 161h weekly ses5IO:'l. For further in- formation , contact Dow at 838· 3455. Right on, kids, I'm with you. IJI 1Mr Wrllt Mpllilflt hrll" the Island House, F'ashion •-----------------------r Thursday DAYTIME MOVIES Folll' M1rx fff'oth111. "T'wo Dolltr M IDI"' (d111m1) '52-Jolln Utt!. Stew Brodie. 1:00 (iJ "TM Ni(llt ti U. tllmt1r" (dram) 'S~llty Win~rs. lft· litrt GWI, llobtrt Mltdlum. ID (Cl "f"~ 111 t111 F.,- (dr1m1) ·s~Jtan Simmons, Sltw· 1rt Gr1n11r. J:OO ()) '1111 F.n-Cookie" Conclu· slon (comfdJ) '6&-Jtcli leml!IO!I. W11!1r M1tth1u. O '1h1ti1 n., San" (drt rN) '57 -Ptvl 1'11Wm1n, Jun SlmmoM. Joen F'ont•lnt, Sandra DH. Island, Newport Beach. "Out of 20 actors and ac- tre88es who auditioned last Sunday, we have accepted nine to the workshop so far ." said Richard Dow, director of Pacific Group Theater. "I was extremely pleased with the level of talent and profesidonal attit ude of the auditionets." Arter making his final selec- tions next Sunday night. Dow will take the following week to prepare the workshop material. 11Jnsofar as possible. 1 I plan to tailor the workshop rr::;~~~==~======i~~;iiilll to the talents and needs of its members," he said. The workshop begins of· • f ficially on Sunday. Feb. Tl - I I ~ Registration is 125. Classes '.I• ·same time, same p I 11 c e . each four hours long, are $5 a- . THEATB . pi'i!':~ific G ro ij p Theater's ~ .itelo; IAIT COAST ......,.., ---~(OltOMA DI\. Ml permanent company will be drawn from the workshop. at I 'The Gang That Hreem~C • .., uldn'.t S~oot [~\~ff) Str a 1 g ht """""'· w llalab . ..... t•rl PIL 11 • •11. JI c.tt ..... h!Mley ......... 2:it .... ~ 1 • For Advertising in Out 'N' About Phone Norm Stanle1 642-4321 I • • EXClUSIVI HOLIDAY SHOWINGS STARTS FRIDAY FEB. 18 · r!IMl!kl INGAGIMINT 2ncl ATTRACTION Peter Sellers In "tH( PARTY" 2ND ALL Wl LT OISN£Y HIT AT BOTH TMEATRES "IN SEARCH OF THI CASTAWAYS" 2ottiCMtlfY·fDK prrsenls TBE .ERENCR CONNECTION IN THE GREAT TRADITION or A'Mt/f!CA!f TffR/lLERS. Gt NI j11 ... c~; r~Y LOl!ANCO The wl'!fe:nll ju .st hoy11. They were all he had. , , () ; 'l\Al'ht.:., Au..., ... ~ rMi "lHE (;/jtj f.>"CR~,.,,, W'lXC L{( r«w. B?'Tt OlRtl .c:o..L££H 11."Wl~r r,; .,.. ·Ml.Ilic bp .ldt1 ~. ~'""t<-*/ lr'r lrW1£ RN>t,J! f. ll1rrd rr.ri,. Jr.Mod \II.., Df'lt ."1-.. ir;·f'iokal ...., i;.,~·"l.l t.,. MM' ~·P-•"f1"T«tnub•·frcm W4rtf'f &Ix.. A.,...,,.., r~ .... liiut-~ ._,... , .,.,, ... .;.. __ ... ~ ~· ---_ ...... ._._..J EXCLUSIVE RUN •2WDlO,HIT• • DWA" 0 a G.oft• Holf!ilOfl· 5119 ll'O" 'En rra, • • ' A MARK R'(O(ll FllM ·~1 .~ ... -11· 1~·~ Al\o. George t-lnn1ilro r1 In "!Vil KNllVIL" (G P) ' • ' , • • • , , ' . i ' : ,, " • ' •· :Jf-DAILY PILOT .... \ WedntsdlJ, ''""'MY 16, l9n, PILDT-AOVERT\SER J' ~~~~-C--C-~'---~~~ ,• . '72 TORINO 2 DOOR HARDTOP . • •• . . . • . .. Cruiseomatic, po'Ntr steering, power front di5t brv.kts. rodio. htoler. special color glow paint, • '63 Chevrolet NOYA SS. . ·' • "'· '"'· '"m .. "'"· s477 h11ter, 1xlrl clNn. OHY 51~ . . '64 T ·Bird "" ,,_. · """' "·~··" ,,., ~477 " . '66 Dodge co~~· ' °"'' "~"'· vo. '"'· 5577 Tr1ns., Pawer SI''""~· Pow1r llr1kn, RH'°, Hl1l1r. (THM JOfll .,, , ' • , 6 7 Opel ''"~ . ·~·" '""'· """' (VOL ·~· $577 . . '66 vw BUG ' 2 Door. Good A1mnert •IAQM Jla) $577 '66 Falcon 2 DOOR, s577 Slick Shift. Runs Good. (ASN 64oll '65 Ch I t STATION WGN . $ eyro e .. ,,, .. VO, Aolom•H< '""' 7 m1ss!0<"1, F~crory Air, Pow. . •r S!1erlno. (PEY 651) 7 '67 F d FAIRL.ANE GT $ 77 ". or VI, Aulo. Tr1n1, l'ower Slrerif>O , Power 7 B•~ke,, Radio, Hfft1r, Vlnyt Rool, Chrome Wheels. ITSll olllll '64 Chevrolet · ,.· . . . ·•. . DEMONSTRATOR '72 . THUNDERBIRD Tlli1 lu1uty 511r i1 1quipp1d with 111 th• luxury ft1f11r11 t v1 il. 11b!1. Including 460 CID 4'1 VI •ngin1." Tlli1 low rr1il11g1 { 6,000 mil11 ) 01,,,on1lr1tor h olf1t•d •t • tr•m•ndou~ di1- cou"t•d pric1. =121062 Pl•s N:x & lkuse • • ' . . • • SUPER BARGAINS '69 FORD FAIRLANE 2 Ooor.H.~dtop. VI, •uto. fr•n1., r•dio, he•t•r. l 549DPYJ. A• i1. '-977 -------~~-~-----~ ~~--. . '69 VW FASTBACK 5977 • RENT·A·c:AR $6A DAY ·PLUS 6• PER MILE • -,_ I • • • • ... - ' .... DEMONSTRATOR. · ;" '71 ·FORD LTD .. ' u ·ouGHAM 2 DR. HARDTOP • • . . • • • • . . Ou.II •ccenr •If!! 11rlp-.. "d " VI ftlll/"'• bl•cfl vlny1 roof. Spin HI • l!tdt . lffll:n H!tl. lltcllnfno •"*'IO•r ... ,. Emlu~ c:!"'lrol, cru!1• o-mthc rr1111m!illon, ! wl'lllt t ldt will lfres, vl1lblllfv fl•Ol.IJ:I, ~w1r $!f!tring, 1fr cond1l""-l110, AM/FM S!treo, body •ldil ll'l"Ol«tlo11 mo1,11d- l119, tlnrlld 11l1u, d1l1111t t..111. wtrnlng llg~t. "°-' .s.k11 w1Mow1, • • IUIO~fit IN I bed! r•le••~· • wry la'# 6-«IO milts . .t"llOtlJ $·3 ·699 ''•••••&lite"•• • .. ,. • ""'-. .. • . . • • • • • '66 Ford ., .. ""'· , .... """' .... ""'"' '66 Olds ·FIS' · · • Con¥trt. Y_t~ Awtomlillc Tr1n1., 9l!•rpl {SSM· s777 '52) j . ,I '67 Must . n·g ·-~~·,~.~~~:,.-::;:~~ 51277 . • Wl)ltt Wills, Vll!l'I Rool. • · • IZSH UU . . .... '69 Ford ·G'.fiLAXIE :soo ' ' 9->• "·~··· vi ...... ''"'. "" 51277 IOrY Ak, .,.._ ''•rlfiO, l'Owlr !lrlkts. IYJCl-1 6'Nl.. . ~o~'t'~""'"• 51277. 1IOn, Factory Air, Power ''"'Ing, Power llr1kes, Aadill, HHler. (VM)( 6Sl1 , ·, , ·' 68 Mercury '68 F d FIOD • . Or VO, 5'1<k """ '"'"'· """'• '°"' '"'· s1477 H11vy DlllY Clm!IW Eouljl98d. U1•711CI '70 Galaxie 500 ·~ ••• , ' °'· """"· ·~""' "'· 51777 POW'1" sreerl119, ...,......, llr•ku . • ltlt ASWJ. . . '70 Mustang Z+Z 4 · VO, "''· '""'·· ''"~' $2 77 Air, Power St11rl119, 11,000 Miies. l"~ctm"v W1rr1nly. ' tJJ~ BIN) '71 Torino VI, Autom.llc Tr1nsmlsslori. l'1e. $2711 tory Air, Po.,.tr Slte•lnlJ, Power DllC 1Sr1ket. Wlllt• W•lll, Under 10..000 Mlltt. (~ DOY ) "' -M~ . LONGTERM . . LEASING AVAILABLE ~ . . FORD -• I . • • ' . -~-' J J PILOT-ADVERTISER N W!dno.day, Ftbtwry 16, 1972 Calorie ' • Avocado lovers often feel guilty about their passion for this callfomia and Florida-grown fruit beCause of its reputa. tion for being high in calories and fats, .but new research ha1 mashed both cha.racteristlcs to the consistency of a guacamole dJp. What's rrlore, thil!I great i1pseudo- vegetable" has been found to be high in lrpn and vitamins A, 8, C and E; it has no .cholesterol, and it is low ln sodium. Half an avocado has a mere 132 calories , as compared to earlier research . wblcb showed It to contain 180 .calories. The early tests were made in the 4<b on an avocado variety no 1011ger sold ln the market, ~laiied Kay Berger, home . economist for the California Avocado Advisory Board. STAPLE FOOD Avocados, which derive their naine from the Aztec name fOl' the frujt, ahliacate, have been a staple food • in . Mexico and the central and northern part of South America for ceJ)turies. · . The advl90rf board ~ports it is ~ 1Ieved that Spanish padfea first planted avocados in California as they traveled from Mexico to establish missions. Avocados were.included ln the picture writings of the ancient Aztecs and sometimes are called "fn.iit of the Aztecs," the advisory board says. Seven Southern Califomia counties pro- duced lM> percent of all avocados groWil~ut the United States and the fruit is picked by hand before being pre-cooled, cleaned and polished. Avocado trees are in the laurel family and are related to the California bay, cinnamon and sassafras trees . Tropical in nature, thelr lower branches often touch the ground. VARIETIES From October through May, the Fuerte variety of avocado is available, and the · · other months of the year the Hass varie- ty, ·avocados with the dark pebbly skin are available. According to Miss Berger. avocados were known as aphrodisiacs to the an- cient Aztecs.' She uses the fruit as a skin conditioner, mashing and spreading the pulp on her face. The mashed avocado should be left on the face for about ~ minutes then rinsed oU with tepid water.m,e home economist also said the fruit is a good hair con- ditioner, espec ially beneficial for damag· ed hair. She whips It up In the blender, addfug a IitUe water for the proper con- si.stericy. The homemaker who wants to have her facial and eat it too can rub the inSide of the skin over her skin and capitalize upon !ta natural oils. SOAK IN SUN Miss Berger said avocado trees are like Souij)em calltomians -they like to in- habit the_ pJeaDnt Coalltal areas, soaking in the warm SW1 and enjoying the cool ocean breezes. . The fruit, which haa-11 vitamins and 17 minerals la 7S .percent moisture and 16 percent oll, can be the basis for nt3rlUous tnacks, desserts, luncheons and dinners', . It Is the job ol lf\e California Avocado Advisory Board, which Is headquartered in Newport .Beach, and Miss Berger, to promote a~ptance of the avocado by in- troducing new recipes and carrying out research to produce better crops. All new serving kteas, whether they be desserts, dips or maln dishes , point to the avocado as the versatile "fru it of the new world ," a CallfQrnia gold mine of good eating. . Here are some new recipes from the advisory board. ' AVOCADO SLIM DIP 2 soft California avocados, mashed or pureed IA, teaspoon seasoned salt 1 tablespoon lemon juice ¥• teaspoon Worcestershire sauce • Dash Tabasco (optiopa!) Mash avocados with fork , blender or pass through sieve. Blend in other in- gredients. Makes about 2 cups. Only 19 . cal«ies per tables~. serve this dip with low calorie fresh Vegetable dlpper3 )ike cauliflower sec- tions. radish roses, celery, carrots, green onions or cherry tomatoes. Try It as a 'Salad dressin&:, Delicious luxurious flavor for only 19 calories per tablespoon ! ORANGE AND AVOcAoo SALAD -: caUfornia a.voca~s, peeled, seeded llld slic<d ' i fresh oranges,.peeled and sliced iceberg lettu~e . DRESSING JM ~ Miracle Whip or mayonnaise 11_ CllP fn~h orange juice \I teaspoon paprika \I teesp>on salt Mil< togeth<r Alternate 1Uces of avocado and orange on lettuce leaves. Drizzle with ~· , Makes 6 servings. · . , FRosTv AVOCADO FONDUE 2 Callfornla a'°"'dol, peeled ond mashed V. cup hooey I /3 cup orange juice. I (2-</Unce) package whipped topping mix \I cup eofd milk Grated orange peel Asso rted frµlt1~y M1J: mosMd avocaclot with hoooy and ttonge juice. Whip topping ml• wllb milk 11ooirdlng Ill paoh1e dlrecllons. Fold whipped topping htto avocado mixture. Chill . untJ\ sel)'lng tlme. Gam!Sb wttb crated or&Dll• peel, II• II{ dip for flllllL Makes -I q1WI. • • ~ . (:owRt · Mas • Slimming dips for vegetables (at top) or fruit (right) . are 91ven a luxurious flavor I • -with avocados. The same fruit perks up a winter ( 1olod (above). _, \ • • • ·DoMtn Avocado lovers need not feel guilty about enjoying a favorife, ' · t • • for researchers have found the calorie -content is not as high as ,, ., t: . originally thought. , A,n f dded bonus ·is' nutritional value. 'I ' . \ ' ' .. ' ,. • • BEA ANDER$0N, Editor Wlll ..... f, 'wverr I .. ltn hll It . -Home News Beefing , Up Menus Cos-tly By DOROTHY WENCK Orl•ite C.U"fY HMM All¥1Nr llave SQ{lring meat· prtCes caused a bi~ · jump in your family food bill lately? Ac· cording to USDA figures, beef prices are higher now than they've been in recent years -and the outlook is for more of I.he same. One way for consumen to light bact is to use less meat and iDJtead, buy more ol the less-expensive meat substltute3, The meat aubstilutes include other animal foods-eggs, cheese, poultry and fish-and plant foodl 1uch as legumes. cereal products, and seeds and nu\3. The least expensive of the meat substitutes, Of course, are t h • legumes-dried beans, peas and Jentlls. While meat prices zoom, the the prices of these products have been rock -bottom due to plentiful supplies. INEXPENSIVE SUPPLY A serving of beans or peas whlch will supply one-third of your day 's protein will cost only 4 or 5 cents, compared to 20 cents a serving for the least expensive ground beef and 40 or more cents a serv· ing for higher priced bee( cuts. What about the nutritional value or dried beans and peas -will they supply all the nutrients you find in meat? Not quite. The plant foods do not have as high .•• a.qua1_1~y protein as anlmal foods . ~ Rrduins are made up of wilts called aminHfcids.. Some amino acids are made by our bodies. The other~lght in number -we · must 'get from our foods. Those which we must 1et from our foods because our bodies do not make them are called "essential amino acids." Proteins whlcb supply all eight of the essential amino acids are rated u com- plete proteins. Complete proteins are found only In foods of a n l m a 1 origin-meat, fish, poultry, eggs, milk and cheese. AJI plant foods supply incomplete pro- teins-proteins which are missing In one or more of the eMential amino ackls. A diet conslstini of a single plant food-such as dried peas-could not sup. port growth. COMBINATION However. when we use a combination of different plant foods such u beans With rl~ or com, or .~anu! butter.. with br.ead,.-.U18 tm:liiii actai of each food-com.1 ~ pllment each other and work together as a complete protein. The foods muat be eaten together ln the same meal for thla to work, however. Another way to utilize plant protein more erfectlvely Is to eat it tn com- bination with a small amount of animal protein. For example, you might add ·a small amount of ·ground beef to chUI beans, add cheese to macoronl, bit!: ot ham to split pea soup, or drlnk a glass ~ milk with your peanut butter sandwich. Agalii, the food! 1hould be combined in the aame meal. In addition to complete protein, .meat provides us with ah bnportant amount of lron and B vitamins. Fortunate.Jr., dried beans and peaa also are an excellenJ source of these nutrients, except for vitamin B-12. Thia essential nutrient 19 found only in animal foods. Another plus for the plant proteins li that they have Uttle or no fat. 1'hf.Y contain quite a lo( of starch, but starch 1 19 much less fattening than fat. Fat gives ua 155 calories per ounce; starch gl..-es us only 115 calortea per ounce. . This probably explains why vegetarians -people who do not eat meat-tend to be lighter in weight on the average thaq the man-eating population. QUESTIONS WE ARE ASKED Q. My doctor told m< recenUy that I was anemic but that it waa no\ due IQ lack of iron~t due to tact o( folic acid. What fa /olic acid and what:fooda should I eat in order to get more of It? ... ' · A. Follc acid, or folacln, ts a wateir soluble vitamin that Is needed for uit synthesis of the component!: that mU:. up red blood cells. It preventJ one type of anemla, and recent dletafy 1tudle1 ~ gest that lnlidequate lolic acid inta* may be fairly eommon. Women usU. 1 birth conlrol pllll seem more prone ID follc acid deficiency. Follc acid Is IOW>d In many I~ Green leafy' vegetab!es and organ meatt., especial1y liver. are good aourca, 1 Tht vitamin 11 easily destroyed by cookln&;: however. ' One stable and good,..,... of loll< ... Id ta orange juice cir lrWI orancea. Ono glass of oratige juice .dally wW provide most "1 the folk: acid needad. Nolt that this !&Mil oran1e julce-<10t syntbellJI producta or orance drtnt. 1 • • ( I -•• J Remedy for Trapped Feeling .. ·,Ground Rules ' Needed • • • Get Some Psycb.i~ Space Stepparent Game • ' I --1 ' I 111 JACQUEL'N~ cnMes ot Ille Dill• l"lltt S!llf Feeling hem.med ln1 snowed under, trapped, are the· walls caving jn? ~ Dr. CarJfred Broderick 's { remedY I.a a little "psychic r space." I The USC profeaaor believes feellngs of lnad!quaJ::y and tn- abllity to perfonn or cope with a situation are ttlleviated if someone gives you "pyschic spaet..." "When you are out of psychic !pace you either run or fight,'' he-said, during a ... lecture OD Oiildren In Divorce and Rel"Df.l'riage, one ill Uie UCI Ei:lertslon lecture series, The Changing Rble of Children In Society. • . . A person is out of psychlc ' space -when he feels in-"People you live with ar• respond better to someone can't hit hlm." adequate -wheJl he Is made going to respond better if you who ·has •turned the other CLARITY to fetl dumb, terrified or is give them psychic space -cheek'." Such destruct ive dialogues completely undercut. assume thtJI, are a good Or. Broderick believes the can be alleviated or avoided FIGllTING • person." r hi Is the b ti hi nd .. ·, concept o psyc c space y crea ng psyc c space a ''Fighting doesn't have to be Someone ha! to take the basis for all relationships clarity and anticipating prob- physical,'' the marriage and rl!!Ponsibtllly to break a .although he utilized It when lems, he said. family counsel<U' pain~ out. vicious clrcle of undercutting dbcuMlng problems of step-"If a stepparent can't runc- Flghflng can be p a s s I v e -inadequacy -undercutting. -parent relatioruihips. tion as a parent, he'll fight or -resistance 0 r withholding l•J don't lhlni. the Sennon the "Asking a stepparent to do a run." A person can gain sorne favors or affection (such as Mount really me1nt for us to job he feels inadequate at will feelings tlf adequacy while marital relations) or it can be turn tbe other cheek," he said, take away some psychic trying to raise children that just. not responding to the referring to the Biblical ttxt. space," he prelactd. Step. aren't hll own lf the rules are other person." he added . OPPORTUNITY parents may feel chUdren get clear, he added. People with psychic space "By turning the other cheek away with too much or that When the rules aren't· clear, are oJ!itn, friendly, giving, not. it means don't r~pood in the the real parent is too har1h. it productS anxiety. "If they wtthholding. According ro Dr. same way. Give the rela· "You have no right W tell don't know the rules, bow can Broderick, the &pace. is given tlonship another <1pportunity to me that. You're not my they perform?" asked Dr. by making one feel adequate. grow," said the father of eight mother," Broderick. The stepparent's "Talk 'to them, bulld" them up. children wllo hu been mar. "My real dAddy wouldn't do · function should be well-known r e I i e v e th e m 0 f a fied for 20 years. "There is that." and it abould bit ouUined with responsibiµ,ty. absolutely no one who doesn't "You don't love him so you love and sensitivity. New Home for Gallery I. ~~:~!.~:S~a~:~rog':: ~~~:~. 1. will be homelus alter March planned by the league for 10 1. a.m. to 5 p.m, Saturday and Its Center street gallery has Sunday, Feb. 26 and 27, at the gallery, 513 Ctnter St~ The been sold lnd league members usual garage sale iterrus will now are looking for a suitable be tncluded. locaUon for elhiblls and The Ieagu8· is:. a nonprofit classes. organization which presenta League membtr1 t h r e e more than $1,000 per year In years ago refurbished the 41). scholarsbfps to area high , year-old house in C.OsUI l\iesa school and college students. wblcb Wu their gallery in Paintings by members are ' return for occupancy, and a exhibited in Costa Meaa 's two · .flm!Jar arrangement Is being librarie! and , ·city hall and sought for a new home. seven Costa Mesa banks and A building fund now h in savirigs and l<1an offices: AN EXCITING LUNCHEON FASHION SHOW By Ewen's ~outique (2300 HAR BOR BLVD • COSTA MESA) ' Featuring fashions by • Stepparents, reduced in that it'• not always easy to In-problem lsn't there." their own pgychlc space, will duct new members into family ChUdren should be taught to cbase stepchildren into a cor-rituals. ''If thef dQn 't try, they lear11 to anticipate remarrlq:e )o&e meny rt'ol'llrding el· upon death or divorce, 111 don't n11r. ''lf you can't eat better pei·iences." believe children should vote.on than that, leave the table." Parents could assist lhe Ulfl prospective mate but they They' undercut, criticize and In adaptation by anllclpatlng should be talked to about It in return, they aet only hate and problems. Dr. Broderlck term· genuine terms." more criticism. ed it •ian\lclpatory soclaliia~ The chlldren may say, "But COAUTION tJon." ho won't be you, Daddy.'' Children can form coali· "The children should talk. "He wouldn't bl!: me/' Dr. tions, especially in lamllies about changes, probe the Broderick tell! hls o w n \\'here two sets of children po6tlbll1Ues and Jace the children. "B,1t he'd be himse.J.( merge . The competition for ttaJUUe11 of the situation," he aM a very lmpartant person affection increases and ,the advised. "Don't pr~tend. the ln your life ." two sets of. children have to·~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ deal wlth a new set of values, I be added . • "Kids can be difficult. They don't always give you the chance to be the wonderful person yoo want to be." Dr. Broderic~ emphasir.ed 100/o •• on thrv Feb. '72 --"r..-_ OFF . . . thru Feb. '72 ''WORLD'S LARGEST" EXCLUSIVE GUARANTEED DRAPERY SERVICE ......, Ot'apery Cleaning. P•rfect regordle11 of the age at your drapery, or 100~. replacement if cleanable. • No Wiited Ht1d1 • Flam1 Proofing • luutlful Detorati>r • Ntw Oraptriu with Pleats Colt's lrclutlft 5 Ytar GuanntH • Ne Shrinkage • Dr1p erlt t i.tmade er • Ptrftct lven Hems Altered • Wattr Stain R1mov1I • Drap1rle1 Rtpalrtd Or1ptry Hardware Installed and Repaired ·VALUABLE COUPON /.?. .:,~f1fl WORLD'S LARGEST VlJtl IJLJ DRAPERY CLUNERS THI II.Alli OJ THIS COUPON IS IHTITU1> TO 10% Off Alff DUPERT CLWllWG OllDIJl CAll 642-0270 Oii 540-1166 TO HAYE TOUR DUPERll.S PICXID UP Aini IEINSTAWD. LOAN DUPES AVAii.AiU AT NO CHARGE sAvE 100/o OFF SAVE OFfER GOOD ONLY UNTIL MARCH 1, 1972 . Day of Hearts -Calls for a Queen OUR EXCLUSIVE SERVICE PROflSSIONAl INSTALlA TION PROFESSIONAL REMOVAL ' ' "0Ji9Jf1 of California A Valentine Queen will be crowned by Harry Bab- bitt during the annual Valentine Ball of the New· port Harbor Area Council of Beta Sigma Phi Satur· day, Feb. 19, in the Newport Harbor Elks Clu b. Your Horoscope Tomorrow Assisting Ba bbitt with his.decision are Mrs. William C. Blackburn and Mrs. Charles K. Higley (left to ri!llr!J, t wo of the candidates. tlT Coif MUtA&l NEW DRAP£S W• llOY9 • tolllpl•le N lfttkHI of fobrla '° pl.alt the fl'IOlt dhcrifl'lil!Olillf to1fe '-- BE Cancer: Pride Blocks Progress 540-1366 642-0270 THUR SDAY FE BRUARY 17 By SYDNEY OMARR AUIES (March 21-April 19): Tu .. doy1 & Thursdays, Noon Partnerships,· special rela· tionships niay be put to test. Mnny preconceived . notions are overturned. You advance through daring, originality, ability to be versatile. Move with limes. \Velcome progress. Reuben·s TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ): Some restrictions ultimately \vork for your benefit. Don't force issues. Steady pace gets you where you're goiqg. Check · facts, figures. ~1aehines now can go haywire. Intelligen t i& quiry can save you money. in Costa Mesa, 1 SSS A,do ms • • GE~1INJ (May 21..JlUle 20): Some friends now exhibit tendency to talk loo mu ch. Be a a erta Prestnf1 IN PERSON TOMORROW Thu.,doy, I :00 p.m. MADY GERRA'RD lnform11 Ch t mp1gn• Showing Come met MADY GERRARO, cre•tor of Le Geltri•• exclu1ivt coll•cfion of <:ustom knl ts ind crochets. Ste her original design for daytime & evtnin9. -':d•pt them iri color & style to your O\lrfn indlvid11el prtferenc11. sure you get your own point across. Ignore one who tells tales out of school. Special message is highlighted. Be analytical.· Take nothing for granted. CANCER (June 21-July, 2,2): Situation at home requires at- tention. DomesUc area is ac- cented. Make concession to family member. You gain through diplomacy. You l<>se if unreasonable. Don't permit pride to block progress. You will understAnd . LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 1: Hold oCC on travel decisions. You re- quire additional information. Long-range plall!I are subject to change. Plice1 is Involved. See in light of reality. Don't become victim of wish!ul thinking. Relatives disagree. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Yau gain insight into financial transaction. You get chance for advancement. But try to delay money arrangement. You do better now by review· Ing, utilizing past experience. Don't jump at first offer. LIBRA (Sept. 23-0cl. 22.): Tear down in order to rebuild. Don't be awed by tradition. Time has come to break from paSt . Futlll'i! ts whnt you tnake it -and opportunity is present. Know this and res- pond accordingly. Artes ls iD- volved. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): You discover new ways or ac- coinj>Ushing. stress original approach, Bring forth creative resources. Be independent In thought, .action. Avoid excess. Remember recent re~lutlona concerning health, diet. SAGmARIUS (Nov. IZ- 0.C. 211: Lover's quarrel oc- curs if you att lmpulllve. 1702 NEWPORT BLVD. 1117th, COSTA MESA Don't create situation which with their valuables. By later will require apalogy. October, you receive break Avoid belng too harsh witb.'._::.w~hi~ch~e~na~b~l•~•_!Y~o~u~lo~01~pa~nd:·~==:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:==~~ young persons. Follow intul· tion One .who taught you much makes reappearance. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·Jan. 19): Business conditions are unsettled. Expansion is due. But there art numero u s details which require personal attention. Aim toward securi· ty. [l(ln't be in too much <1f a hurry. Sagit&al1an plays key role. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 181 : Obtain valid hint lrom Leo message. Some neighbors, relatives are misinformed. Don't believe everything yoti hear. Be thorough. Check repartJ. Avoid becoming In- volved in wild-goos~ chase. PISCES (Feb. !$-March 20): Protect assets. Some WC1uld like to be reckless -with your money. Get accowiting. Get tax returns ln prder. Your holdings require review. Deal· ings indicated with Gemini and Virgo individuals. stick to facts. II'!-TODAY IS Y 0 U R BmTHDAY you are a natural e1ecut1ve. You are at your besl when setr .. mployed. You can set pOUcles. You in.spire confidence. Many tru!t you ~ ii Ji . ',.-5., Th • { • ft•1h loo Ir: • J, f For Sprin9 ~'It At • . • \i·• ~J.., e:~· .• BIDTI0 trn ·~i? • ·-~...:'"&.,.. 1 ~. e ... 11 °""' ' . ' j S4o VIA LIDO . • • lfo.rbor> Cente>r ... ; Coo\u)l{.uo. I 5 ge-ftfn.S o.\l s ri ru.ud ~up! rtemo~e\ti\ So.le .. t.: .... ( . . ... ,r~ kllll.' coohi,cit>e:-6~a,s, po.tt+suih, ~porroweo-r, top111 ~wQ.o.te?,r~. -tlo.rbo r w1:hw - ' MIWHltT t opf ] j 1.0« Irvine Ave. 648-8365 M.....e c:.m,.1nw. ,,_ 6l.Mllt "I " 'llllM111t •A•1lltMW" ~ 2.'.'iOO Norfh lhrbor Blvd .• Cosh~-6>!5·~521 • W_•_•'•_l_ill_Pl_•u~..-N~•-w_p_•"_i_._ .. _k ____ , __ _;Cell=:_•::>::>:"::',:H:.__Jli.1i1~~"'1 ~~ - I . .... _. r r Mardi Gras Moves to Bay Club S~tting It will be Mardi Gras time at the Balboa Bay Club Saturday, Feb. ~ beginning with cocktails at 7 p.m. Two bands will entertain and a Creole dinner @Omma@@fl liJ@o@m The Volunteer Bureau of \Vest Orange County bas a nUmber of volunteer positions waiting to be filled: Call 530-2370. TEEN HELP A licensed plumber and electrician are needed by Teen Help, Fountain Valley to make simple re- pairs that must pass local inspection. CHAMBER OF COMMERCE A perso n to answer lelei)hoiie inquiries is need· ed by lhe Westminster Chamber of Commerce. The voluhteer also would hand1e other types of cootact.S. · . COMMUNITY CENTER -The Westminster Community Center, an arm of the Orange County Probation Department, needs a receptionist Monday evening lrom 5 to 8 .p.m. COLONIAL JUAREZ Second through eighth grade studentS ar~ in need of. help with 'their math and English home- work. Adult and youth volunteers will work from 3:30 to 5 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday afternoons and Saturday mornings. TELEPHONE PROGRAMS Two telej>hone programs are sponsored by the Volunteer Bureau of West Orange County to meet the needs or people who live alone or who are shut-ins most of the time. Cht;ery Hello, is a daily short, reassuring call. and Friendly Chat is a Jonger call made about twice a week. WRITER ltEEDED Someone with a flair for writing is needed by the Volunteer Bureau of West Orange County to create and research special projects. Time is flex· ible. and work may be done at home. All MERCHANDISE REDUCED! SYNTHntc WIGS .S ..... tk -- ...... NOW 495 .. .,.... . MEN'S WIGS '"· s2..,s NOW s24,95 ~UPER 10 OZ. FALL • It'• le.enlbtlt e h'• owr 20 ._.... loitt • lf'1 100.,,_ "*"""' H•lr \ ·~;'.:'J' IT'S ONLY s41, All O~ Ftilh .t,,. W;. Prke4 r .. 1 SPECIAL! ........... -..-..-~ IUlOPIAN HANDMADI WIGS u,.....,.., • Cool JUST sea 951 .... 1240.00 . 07. • • MANY MOii Sl'ICIALS 'tOO NUMOOUS TO MIHTION· OVER 100 PRE-STYLED WIGS AND HAIR Pl ECES FOR YOU TO TRY mal&e; WIG and BEAUTY SALON 250-D Eut 17th St .. Hlllg~ Squore Cast• Me•• · 541-'46 ................. will be served .• Anticip.ating the r_!!:velry are Oeft to right) Mr. and Mrs. William Kennedy and Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Marks,, host couples. • March Wedding Cindy To Join Frazier Brides The engagement of Cindy Frazier to Lawrence Blan- chard Collins II of Newport Beach was announced by her parents, Air Force Lt. Col. ·(rel.) and Mrs. Charles W. Frazier during a dinner party in their Yorba Linda home. Among guests were Mr. and Mrs. Keith Collins of Newport Beach and Orange, parents or the bridegroom-elect. Miss Frazier is .2n alumna of Alhambra High School and California State Collgge at Fullerton. where she was af· filiated with Alpha Delta Pi sorority and Phi B e t a honorary professional sorority. She also was a Little Sister for Delta Chi fraternity and included in "Who's Who in American Co I le ge s and Universities." The bride-elect is a forriier baton twirling champion and was director of the Los Angeles Rametles. She is a teacher at Newport Harbor H ig!:!. School and serves as assistant band director in charge of autjliary units and jµnior class advisor. Her fiance attended NHHS CINDY FRAZIER and graduaU::d from Roosevelt High School in Honolulu and CSCF, where he was a member of Delta Chi frater»i· ty, He served in the armed forces in Korea. A March 25 wedding is plan-- ned in Zion Lutheran Chruch, Anaheim. Two rings fortwO" lovers ••• both ri•gs $88.00 ., .... -.. ~ -... -llll141 .. J4-........ Easy CNdit fMM • lfMetl1 accoun1s OV'Cliloblt. • Up to 12 month• te Pf1I lanUmoricard. Mastotdior;t "THE STORES CONFIDENCE BUILT" • r Esl•bli1htd 43 y.,,.1 HUNTINaTo+t CIN'rll hoc•. 1111,.., H•ttlitttM ..... ••2·1501 • HAllOI SHOPPING CINTll 2100 H•rlMf 11"1. C..N ..... 141-9411 • • DAil Y PILOT :J$ Varied Agendas Spic~d With Lectures, Classes ltOl•I LINOllUI Diversified agendas have been planned by Orange Coast o r g anizatlons. Highlighting gatherings will be a sing-a- long , lectures and courses. PWP · Entertainmen~ by a singing group, The New Unbearables ts planned for the gathering of South Coast Chapter; Parents Without Partners. Afterward a sing-a-long will be conducted. Members will gather at 7:30 p.m. Friday, Feb. 18, in the Carpenter Hall, Dana Point. Beta Sigma· Phi Mjls, exectJtive director of the Services for the Blind. Christian Wome;. Dr. Robert Simonds, p~ fessor of technical mathe,matlcs at Orange Coast College, will addres! the Christian B u 11 i n e s s and Pro(essional Women during a dinner meeting in FriedemaM Banquet Hall , Orange. Members will gather at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 22. Enter- tainment will be provided by a singing group, called Charity. LWV Mrs. Darrtll Klopp will open League of Women Voters of her Huntington Beach home at the Orange Coast will meet In 7:45 p.m. Monday, Feb. 21, for various sessions to evaluate a business session of Delta the state's role in education K- Delta Kappa Chapter, Beta 12. with a review of how goals Sigma· Phi. are formulated and how Mrs. Norman Beko, presi-education is funded. dent, will conduct a ritual of Meeting places, times and jewels degree for Mrs. Charles dates are Virtue and Scheck Hughes. offices, 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 22; University United will _be Mrs. Florence 17)7 f , Ce•1t Hl9hw•v MacGinilie and Mrs. George Ce,0111 c1.1 M•r--Ph. 611.1•10 Stewert. Refreshmnets will be • •••A-k•rtl • M•Oer Cfllftt Wved by Miss Do~ro~t~hyiiD~a~re~. ~~·~·~v~u~"~"~"~""~""~'"'~~ ~ \'IKGINIA'S SNIP 'N STITCH SHOPPE lll4 East Coast Hwy. e Coron• d•I Mar Phone 67).8050 HERE COMES SPRING! Hurry i11 •11d loo~ 11 eur 111w 1pri119 f•b1i1:.1 .• The 1:.olor1 •'• 9re1t. 111d rn1l1ri1!1 ••IV to we•k with! Gl•rnourou1 or C11u1I "•tl1r111 fo r tprift9 ••• her•! Ee1t1r w11k 1wl"' lftd IU"""''' 1hould ha 1+•,+•d 11ow! o ... i ... 1. h im .... d w;+h 9i119h1m ch•c~1. for pl•y 1:.loih11 ... d lon9 clr•11•1 ''' "•rv chic! • e IANU.MlllCAlD S•• You Soon! VIRGINIA Art Affiliates ~elhodisl Chureh, 9: 15 a.m. Laguna Beach Art Affiliates-~ ~ednesday,' Feb. 23; Newport I~§§§§§§§§§§~ will view a di splay by Mrs. Beach ~me of Mrs. A. M. Ii Doreen Sinnett during ttleir 1o1ood, 12.15 p.m. Wednesday, meeting at 2 p.m. Monday, Feb. ~· . feb. 21, in the gallery. Hosting meetings on Thurs. Mrs. Sinnett transforms da.Y .. Feb. 24, will be Mrs. ordinary cardboard cartons in. Wilham Buchma~ in her Costa to jewelry boxes1 candlesticks. Mesa ~ome at 9.15 a.m. -and wastebaskets. plaques and Mrs. Victor Bellerue, Laguna other decorative items. Beach., 9: 15 a.m., anc_I Saddle· back Valley Community Room ·will be the setting for the 10 a.m. Monday, Feb. ZS, session. CM Art League Ralph Ta r z i an , w.ho presently is working with brome will give a lecture-- demonstration for the Costa Mesa Art League at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 22, in Adams School. . Tarzian also is well versed in all phases of sculplure and has won many awards for his work. Classes Childbirth training classes using the La~ze method will be conducted by Mrs. Jan Alabaster, certified instructor, in her Laguna Beach home. Informal c I a s s e s are scheduled weekly s t a r l i n g Tuesday, Feb. 22. at 8 p.m. OES Harbor Star Chapter, Order of Eastern Star will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 22, in the Newport Beach M a s o n l c Temple. Warders 8nd sen- tinels will be honored. 'HB Women Huntington Beach Woman's Club will conduct a rummage sale from 9 a .m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday, Feb. 22, in the clubhou.Se. Proceeds w i 11 benefit the scholarship fund. Las Ayudante\ Las Ayudanles Auxiliary will man a traveling gilt cart at Pacifica H~pital. Town, Gown Mrs. Kenneth Reafsnyder was installed as president of Chapman College Town and Gown. · Serving with her are the Mmes. Rlc!hard E. Senn and Lesll-e Ferrell, vice presidents; Leo Ba r o Id I , trP.asurer, and John Hamilton, secretary. Hoot 'n Holler Vocal music by Mrs. Steven Klechka of Santa Ana and Delta Gammas Mrs. Gloria Rush of Ontario . . will highlight the Sunday, A dessert and recipe sale is Feb. 20, meeting of the Hoot planned !or the Tuesday, Feb. ~ 'n Holler Roost of Newport 22, meeting of the Saddleb~ck Beach Night Owls. Valley Alumnae of Delta The 2 p.m. gathering will G~mma. Mrs. Jon Bo~ch~r take place in the Bethel will host the 8 p.m. sess1on 1n T · her ~1ission Viejo home. ewers recreation c e n t ~ r , Mrs. Donald Sutherland will Costa Mesa. Accompan1st.!1 open her Costa Mesa home for the 11 a.m. Tuesday, Feb. 22, meeting or the Santa Ana· Newport Harbor Chapter ot Delta Gammas. A luncheon is planned and speaker will be Dr. Wihelm de THE BEST ReadenhJp p o 111 prove ''Pelliluts" ia one ot the world's m'ost popular comic strips. Read lt daily In the · DAILY PILOT. End·of -Season CLOSE OUT of RECLINERS and ROCKER RECLINERS Chandler · Quellty Recliner As 1hawn with handle control WH $169 129. B1 Early 30*/e off 111 R1cllntr1 and Racker Rtclin1r1 ·while they last These Chandler values simply muSt be seen to be appreciated. These Recliners and Rocker Recliners are . attractively styled and sturdily constructed with features that mark them dis· tincUy "Chandler's." The Yalues are simply •.. breathtaking. • THE STORE OF FAMOUS NAMES 1514 N. MAIN e SANTAANA e 541-4391 HO\Utl1 MONDAY 11 NOON 'TIL t l'.M, ,ltlDAY tilt A.t.(, 'TIL t l'.M •• DAIL'¥••• A.M. 'TIL I :• l',M, • ~ 'E • .. • • ~ ·' ~ \,(ie\iael ~ Garri,on ·;..'<-• ~ ""' . c,O~ «' g.. 0• ~ !!.. ~-4 (j) ~ ,,. ~ &"'~ 'CJi .. J c.,.,., -· ~ ~· 0 .,. , [('If? ·~\)f> c,o<" " ..;..v:.~ .. /.,f· 'ch••/ G 1:-Orr/s .,o Oo <' 0~ ~ ~ . (}' • ~' Michael Garrison now with richord quellette 1610 W•St coast hi9hw1y n•wport b•ach, 642-1970 •119 •IU t••Y COll'Tllllc1 .... bllu!lqw DllGE 20 Fashion Island, Newport Beach-Phone 644-252! T.HE FABRIC THAT'S ~GOING PLACES Canary Island Trevira~ YARN DYE DOUBLEKNITS by Shirley Fabria I '72 the year of the traveler ••• the multi-purpose wardrobe •.• we•r-1nywh•r• fabrics ••• inter- changeable separate; ••• those are Fashion's responses to today's fast-paced life styles. Go in • wardrobe you've sewn of carefrH _!loublelnils, on ideal weig ht for I Spring ond Summer. The whimsical Canary pal· tern. positive •nd negative d•sigfts •nd sorr~s. : wos the . inspiration for Shirley's Caoary Island . H.Jday-for:two Sweepstakes. 62" to 6'4" wide j 6.Sb yd. Other fun-to-sew doublekn\ls for y,u; ' I travel wordrobe 4.98 lo 15.00 yd. I I; . I Win a Free Shirley Fabrics' Grand 17 ·Day Canary Islands Hollday·far,two! Get your·entry 'blanks at Wtst~rook's today. No purchase necessary. ..... USI YOUR IANUMl.ICAID 01 M.t.Sfll CHAl•I Kids !J.ke to Ask Andy l i I • j I l • . . .. ... .. . • " -... pa DAILY PILOT I PTA' s • Service· . Roll Multiplyi D«ltor'r Nott: A column dtvottd to Newport Beach, CoJUJ A1e,ta, Laguna Beach and MLss1on V1e10 parent· teacher orgaruzation.s will Honorary Afrs. Gartd Smith, 1746 Centella Place, Newport Beach by 5 pm. Tliursday for publication \Vtd11es· day.) thefl pOJter cont.est." Al iso PTA Mr1. Jeff Townsend President ng I appear in ihe DAILY Adams PTA COMING UP: Mn. A. f . Dug- ger. Jr. program chairman arinounces that the as. sociallon meeting at 7:30 pm. tomorrow will be 1hcm- ed A Tribute To Those Who Care. Honorary !!I er v i c e awards will be presented al ong wilh prizes In the anti- COMING UP: An nu a I Founders Day program at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow In the auditorium. A program will be presented by t h e sludents. with arrangements by the band and the Blue Tide Singers. H o n o r a r y service award! will be presented and past reci- pients will be introduced. I • PILOT each week l nfor· mation mu~t bt re ceived by the wome11's departme11t or • . ' J\trs. Clifford Downs President I . .. • . ' \ ' Bear PFO ~1r1. Fred E-Barthe President COMING UP: G e pe r a 1 meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomor- row. Lt. Ge<:lrge Lorton , community relations officer for the Costa ri.tesa Police Department wi'I speak on Anti-theft . . . R o v I n g substitutes for the bowling · league are needed. Mrs. Everett Bieger. recreation chairman may be contacted at 540-1761 for further In· formation. College Pk. PT A Mr1. Robert Marold President Miniature Cars Speed Down the Track A REPORTS: Sgt. Robert Ball- inger of the Costa Mesa Police Department presented awards to the winners in the anti-theft poster contest at last week 's general meeting. Winners were Willy Bequette, Char- maine Crocker, LiL Griffih, Brent Schellhase , Sa m Burgard , Chad Jasmine, Craig Maiwald, Craig Allen and Donna Conway. Honrary 1 er vice award was presented to Dominic Ra cit- ti. Mrs. Carlton Russell. parliamentarian introduced the nominating committee. Mrs. Robert Marold, presi- dent announced that the PT A bad purchased a 66- inch round oak table for the independent study center. Beat Street School students, who have assembled their own miniature race cars will compete in a Pinewood Derby at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, March 16. Both boys and girls will be competing and trophies will be awarded the first three finishers. Ready to send their cars down the track are Michael Hyde and Sarah Lindquist while Scott Shirley hold the trophies. " Fathers, Sons Courted , Father-son Day al \Vilson School promises to be fun-filled. On the agenda from 1 to 4 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 19, are volley ball, baseball and basketball games. Tickets, al 50 cents, v,iilJ be sold at the PTA meeting tomorrow night. Volley- ing for funds are Ocft to right)-&b .\Vest and his sons, Gary and Danny. .. CM High PTSA f\1n. Carl Rotman President COMING UP: Honorary service award will be presented al the general meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomor- row in the L yceum . Madrigals and members or the summer musical pro· duction "The Boy Friend" will entertain. Davis PTA Mrs. James Morrow President COMING UP : Board meeting at 9:30 a.m. tomorrow in the home of Mrs. Richard Riley will reature a film by the Costa f\.fesa Police Depart- ment on the bicycle trail on Arlington Street. Ensign PTA f\1rs. David Cbavts President COMfNG UP: Founders Da y program at 10 a.m. tomor- row in the gym will feature the presentation of honorary service a w a r d s and performance by the Newport Harbor High School band. Harbor View PFO Mr1. William Llgbtcap President COMING UP: Gent 1 em a n ' Start Your Engines is the theme of the father-son breakfast to take place at 9 a .m. Saturday, March 4, in the cafeteria. Mrs. George Fryer is chairinan ... Mrs. Donald Nixon. chairman of Arbor Day announces that Monterey pine seedlings will be distributed to all in- terested students Wed- nesday. March 8, at school. REPORTS: Educational ac- tivity committee was form- ed to study the school board's ideas to alleviate the increased enrollment prob- lems in Corona del Mar. Mrs. William Lightcap and Mrs. Robert Curci will chair the committeee and Robert Miller. principal will serve as advisor. Kaiser PTA Mrs. Charles McGavran President COMING UP : Founders Day program at 7: 30 tonight in the multi-purpose r o o m . Costa Mesa Girls' Ensemble directed by Edward Brahms will provide th e en- tertainment. H o n o r a r y service awards will be presented by fl.1rs. Robert Lindsay. All former PT A presidents are invited to at· tend. Killybrooke PT A Mra. ~Ronald Arnold President Lindb'ergh PTA J\.1rs. Jack Davidson President REPOR S: f\1rs. Fr e d Boehlk was presented. the honor y service award for her tstanding service to community and school. Mesa Verde PTA Mrs. David Chamberlain Presiden~ REPORTS: Honorary service awards were presented to Mrs. Eugene Barlow ad l\1:rs. Daniel Clark. Patch awards were giv en to the winners in the anti-theft poster contest. who are Tif· f al))' Ram seyer, C h r i s Cont.ex, Steve Gagliano, Paulo Galran. Patty Kuder, Dewi Win, Patrick Conaway, Mathew Hess and Mike Peterson. COMI NG UP: Gen er a I meeting at 7 p.m. tomorrow Paularino PTA in the multipurpose room. . · Honorary service award will Nick Han!oD be presented. Winners in the President anti-theft poster contest will '-·COMING UP : Mrs. Roger be awarded silk screen Dargitz. library chairm an patches by an officer from in\'ites all students in third, the police de partment.· Who also will speak on crime fourth and fifth grades to •Prevention. ·Honor r 0 11 participate in the creation of presentation will be made. a series of posters depicting Founding Honored Taste Bouquet Arranged · • A bouquet of v:ines and cheeses wl)J temp i the taste buds of KJwl Club members Saturday. Feb. lli. during a benefit for the Providence Speech and Hearing Clinic. Orange. Antici· paling the 7 p. m. event in the Tultin Meadow~ Clubhouse are (left to right) Mrs. Ronald S. Bennett and Mn. William Fronch. ' Carnival Time Around Corner ( l!:rlitor·s Note: A column devoted to Fou·nratn Valley. H unti11gt.on Beach. Ocean View and Seal Beach Scliool nist.rict parent -teach er organizations will appear h1 the DAILY PILOT each week. I nformation must be received by Mrs. Gilbert Turnbull. 5671 Mangrum Drivt. Hunting/on Beach by S p.m. Ttlt1rsday for pub· /ication \Vedncsday.) Huntington Union Council ~1rs. Lorin Lammers President COf\1ING UP : Seventy-fifth ann iversary of PTA will be commemorated at c o u n c i I meeting Wednesday, Feb. 2.1, at 9:30 a.m. in fount ain \'alley Community Center. Program theme is All You Ever Wanted to Know from Alice and Phoebe .. , But \Vere Afraid to Ask. Members will present a skil;-and an honorary i1erv1ce award will be given. Instrumental and vocal selections will be performed by representatives of Ocean View School District. Nominating committee wtll be elected. \ Host schools are Eader, Gisler Intermediate and Oak View. Eader PTA ~1rt. James Power• President COMING UP : PllM are under ' ' \ \.\'ay for the upc-0ming carnival and anyone wishing to assist with booths may contact Mrs. Ronald Mcveigh at 968-3571. Mrs. Robert Rooney is c,i;il- lecting white elephant items t and may be contacted by donors at 962-3863. Child craft booth will be featured, and articles for this booth may be sent to the school library Fri- day mornings between 8 and 9. Further information can be obtained by tontacting Mrs. Kenneth Leser at 962-6913. REPORTS: Unit contributed $10 to Dollars for Scholars. the scholarship fund for Hun- tington Beach Union Hig h School Distric~ To celebrate Fouoders Day and PTA's 75th anniversary, the. fifth grade ciao has donated funds for~scaping for lhe school. Fulton PTO ~frs. Jmey Jacobsen President COMING UP: Parents wilt meet tomorrow night at 7:30 to formulate. plans for eighth grade graduation . • • Uni t will present an American · heritage program Thursday Feb. 24, .at 7:30 p.m. REPORTS: PTO honored CAivin Cooley, a fourth grade student who won ucond place in the Orange Cc\ln\)' dental poster contut. C.IV1n received a bicycle as his prlu. Fund-raising Down Their Alley fountain Valley Element>ry School PTO'• bowling . club hao purchased an opaque projector for the school. Admiring the new piece ol equipment are Oeft to right) Miss Darlene Fear, Sbclly Rhoades and Mrs. Jay Renolds, preaidont of lhe bowling clu b. the history of libraries. REPORTS: M rs.~ Jack Sikes. wa ys and means chairman reports i!. profit of $170 was realized from the .sale of movie tickets and paper and aluminun1 drives Room mothers prov ide valentine r av ors for classroom parties according to Mrs. Tom Mullen, room representative ... Parents are urgently needed lo vol- unteer their time in the school library. San Joaquin PTA 1\.1.rs. John Snyder President COMING U P ' Assoclaton meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tue!<- day. Feb. 22. in the multipurpose -room W i 11 feature live authorities with in-depth experience in drug abuse prevention programs, Panelists are Dr. Stanley H. Walters, Orange Co u n t 'J psychologist; Dr. Edward A. Taub o! Tustin; James R. Goff, Orange County Public Defender's JJf!ice ; Dr. John Sousa. Orange County f\.1en· tal Health Department, and Robert Semonds, vice presi· dent Hunt-Wesson. Students are encouraged to attend . St . Joachim PG l\1rs. John SUloeman President COMING UP ' Sport. night featurin~ a film and talk by Keith Erickson of th 1 Lakers will take ,place at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the church hall. Tickets at $1 may be purchased at the door or by contacting Mrs. J o h n Stoneman at 548-1348. St. John Aux. Mrs. Anlhoay Becker President REPORTS: A profit of $40G was realized from the Mei· ican dinner. · Victoria PT A Mrs. Do ugla5 Bowler President COMING .UP : 'l:;-,ner,al meeting at 7 tonight. Mrs, Betty Kratzle, principal will discuss recent tests given students, relating to self-Im• age and attitudes to"ard themselves. J A film '1f The&&--Were Your Chlk!ren'' will be shown and music and choral readlngs-wllJ be given by students in clas.H:s of l\1rs. R i c h a r d Penjoyan. Mrs. Rick Wells and Mrs Louis Haselfeld . . . Pape; driv e .from 9 to 11 :30 a.m. Saturday. Feb. 26. in the school parking lot. Mra. Dean Shadle, ways and means chairman may be called at 642-3865 for further Information ... Nominating committee will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow ln lht home o! Mrs. Tom Lutcavlah. • Wilson PTA Mrs. Robtrt 8anke1 President COMING u p : atlon meeting at 7 p. lo~mw In the multi se. room. Don Erlckae 1 class will presint • patr Uc program, Honorary servt award wilt be pr,..nted 111<1 p 11 t presidents honored. Waltz 'Widow' Not Merry OBAR ANN LANDERs: Our fraternal orguniz<1tion has a dilUler dance every ll'Cher month. We have a problem with f~r. or five husband! who can 't dan<.'t'. won t dance, or are recovering from a prostate operation or a slipped disc and shouldn't dance. The wives of these men seem to think il's perfectly all right lo ask other men lo dance with them -,hich of t.'Ourse tneans t~e man's wife left sitting. La st n1ghL I sat 0111 five dances because '.''Orne" ciHi:ie over and asked my husbhnd to dance. \Vhen I told Harry J didn't car€" for that kind ot an evening he said it \vas too ~ad ("your tough luck" is the way he put 1t) and he added, "That's the way the cookie crumbles." Isn't it a husband's du- ty to see to it that hi s wife has a good time rather than so1ne other female '~ \Vhat are your view s? -110PPING MAD ll'I MODEST DEAR lfOPPrNG: That train runs both ways, honey. Your husband apparently enjoys d1U1clng wilb these dames so you h\lgbt as w~I be gracious about it. Who knows when Harn will be the ruptured duck and yo u'll want to borrow a husband? DEAR ANN LA NDERS : If \.\'hat I arn about to say sounds insane please bear \\'ilh me. I'm clutching at straws. This 1night not be feasible, or even legal but n1aybe it's the answer. :P.ly son has had stomach trouble since he was 9 years old. Roy is 16 now and It l1as gotten progressively worse. Maybe hypnotism is the answer. Medical doctors haven't done him one bit of good. The --• A•.4~ ... poor kid has been through every test im- •ginable and has tried all kinds of medicine aJ}d diets. It's a known 'fact that people who are sensitive and con;- scientious are susceptible to stomach trouble. If they could be made to relax) · couldn't that be the key'? How do 1 find a hypnotist who is qualified for medical treatment? How much do they charge? Please guide me -ANDEA OF IRON MT. MICH. DEAR ANDEA: I'm not about to guide you to a hypnotist for stomach trouble. Didn't one of those medical doctors su'- gest that perlmps the boy bas an emotion- al problem? If oot, I am 1uggestlag it. Now you can take It from tber!· DEAR ANN LANDERS: You've said in you r colunin repeatedly that a married couple should J11ot Uve wilh their in-laws. nor should they live next door to them if they can help it. T always respected your advice but my husband and J decided that since his parents were so great we could be the exception to the rule. We OOught a house next door to his folks. The problem isn't the in-laws, Ann. it's my husband's spoiled-rotten teenage sister. She is a screaming, loud-mouthed brat who runs in and out of our home whenever she feels like it. She borrows , .. ' • money from my husband and clothes from me. Ji.tore.than (llce I've looked for somelhing I wanted to wear and then remembered that my sister-in-law took it. Whenever we go anywhere she invites herself along. My hwband doesn't like it any more than I do but he's afraid to say no to her. Fr~nkly, so am I. This monster has us all intimidated by her ·big mouth. She is so vicious I am scared to death of being attacked by her. Don't tell us to sell the house. \Ve can't for financial reasons. What else can you suggest? -smtrED IN· N.D. DEAR STY: Medical science has de"il• eel metbodl ~-for ·transplaatlng con:teaa, khlbey1 , teeth and hair -but to date I have not beard of a backbone transplant. You aod your husband must somehow free yourself from the girl'& clutches and take command of the 1ltuaUon. 1 suggest you start by laylnr down: MW rules. No more borrowing, No more run. nlng in and out: of your house. No more attacblng herself to you without iJl.. vitaUon. If she screams, Jpor.e her. Together you two aboold be 1ble to regain control of your own Uves. lf you can't, I feel sorry for yeu. • VISIT THE . THRIFT·IJ.l.UX NEAR YOU Capistrano Beach ~231 Doheny Park lt"d Costa Mesa 1176 H1rbor llYd. (next to Co111' Offic• Equip.) • • • Wtdnt~ay, Ftbruary lb, 1972 DAIL V PILOT :fl For Advertisi1ig· iii Out 'lV' About Plio1ie Norni Sta1iley PEPPERDINE UNIVERSITY TRAVEL STUDY TOU~ -ORIENT Hawill -Ja,.ft -Hont Kent -Tafwan .--K.,.. Combine n.·av1·I nnd Study Unfvf'ra:lly C111duttt' Credtt ($ht kmfllfl' Mtwr• 111(:"""'" lft P'•CI(•••' 4 W llKS -JUNI! 30 ·JULY 30 1-'nr Br0t·hurf": Call ,fJr. T<'tttt'r -!5'16·3911 -.-:"\., ·( ' .'. . . .. :,. ..... ..-.. '" . \ :, . . . ·r ,-.. (' .".(. ,. _,. . YELLOW ONIONS L 8 s c ~L/jt-4~~:-~. ~~7tx:>t£0~ -::·_·-. ' . ···--· • 608 EAST BALBOA BLVD .• BALBOA REFRIGERATED DELIVERY SERVICE : PHONE 673-8310 sr1c1ALl tHUISD~Y. F11DAY', SATURDAY, Ft:IRU ARY 11, 11, ,, JOE'S PURE PORK SAUSAGE c • c lb DE ANJO PEARS c lb WI llSllYI THI ltlGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES CUT OUR COUPONS ... BEAT THE HIGH COST OF LIVING! THRIFT·D·LUX C LEANER S COOL •· ~a can save you dollars on yo~r cleaning bllls and guarantee complete satisfacl{on, Just use these no·lim!t coupons. Whether you have a $200 suit or a $2 ski rt, nobody can do a better Job of cleaning and Pressing than Thrfft-0-~ux Cle"ners. • Thrift·O-lux, with 120 slores, is the largest dry-cleaning chain Jn Southern Fashion 's Fun of Any Age 'l'hree-year-old Leslie Boyd can hardly \Vait for her mother Mrs. John Boyd Oeft) and Mrs. Bob Baker to start modeling for the San Clemente Junior \Voma n's Club's show. Fashion Is Doing Your Own Thing \Vill be proved when the event 'starts at 11 a.m. Saturday, Feb. 19, iu ilen Brown's restaurant. Powder Room Inside -Kitty Happy JONNY CAT~ Keeps Kitty's Box fresh and clean • At Food & Drug Stores ' Who Cares? No other newwPaper in the woNd CAttS about your com-1 munity lJke your community dally -J)<f-does. Ifs the D,,.,.Y PILaf. . Delaney Bros. Seafoods EASTER SPECIALS Speclalt !ram Feb. 16 • April 2 FOHH •NORTHERN s1 59 PETRALE SOLE . ......... , LI. -. fllSH FILLm • 99c RED SNAPPER . .. .. .. .. .. . . . . LI. ORIENTAL S"ll -CUSTOM llU.DED s1 85 SttRIMP J , .. '" • .. •• ... • •• • .. • LI. SHIP AHOY-PREMIUM-LIGHTLY lllADID s1 75 SHRIMP • u. ........... ••••·•· • LI . 75LI. IXCILLIHT FOi CIOm.HO I FllH IASl s4 00 LOBSTER .TAILS~:... • . LI. WEIGHT WATCHERS -10°/o DISCOUNT On all Fr .. h Fish purchases I wltlo passbclokl 2100 La F1yttt• -Newport ... ch .,,.,._ ., SU.1117 e,.i.1 f .} Mt1t.•hf,1 t •S S... • • Laquna Beach i o4o Snth Co .. t Hl1llw-r (next to Chnt'I M1rket) Newport BHch J06 N. Newport llvd. (1% •locb north of P1clflc Cout Hwy.) '..._ HURRY • ACT NOW TIME - LIMITED Coupons good ., p1rticlpatlng ''"'" ... lnterftted In own1ng • Thrllt·O.Lux agency?· phone (213) 661·1163 Calif6rnia. That means we must have, and can afford. the best. most mode rn cleaning and pressing equipment available. DRESSES (up to 5 pleats) PLAIN DRAPES SPREADS H• limit. 'Tfllt COUPON mu•I be P"Hn1'd wfl•~ !ltm• .rt kit lor c:111n1nc . I . r. •• - t • • c it, C' c.. ~ .. "' .-... "" ... .., r ~ -'"lllll:~~Y~PILOT Wfdnesdl)', Frbruary 16, 19n Alpha .~eta's Man in Blu~1 says: • JIM ILLtNGWORT.H , STORE MANAGeR 241 E. 17th STREET COSTA MESA . ~ MfATS YOU 'LL IE PROUD TO SERVE • ' as • QUALITY AND sATrSfACTION GUARANTEED • DISCOUNT PRIClD LB. IOWA MAID • l·LB. PKG. SLICED BACON c IVTCBEa'S P!!Dt DEPENDABLE QU/.l.ITY JRESH ECONO.PAK 3 LBS. DR OVER GROUND BEEF :mr.~ER;S ' ' -:_~_, ·1· 3c ECONOMICAllY POICID SMOKED SAUSAGE "'-"---==='"'-.;.;;;.;:.:;;'-------' T-BONE STEAK u.nlN FIA'IURU ' ......... tl;QI(' fltOlEN 64' -., 19URLUD TURIOT FILLETS •, ICM9•'MAl .lltD Slnl 89'n. IDLE flll!TI "a....,,; W-lllNIO • !Ml. l"KC. • fWOZEN 48'. Do..-UIE IMILT 48:. CHUCK ROAST "BLADE CUT STANDING LARGE 109 RIB ROAST END LB. c ROUND STEAK 1 '.~ 80HELlS! . TMESE MEAT PilCES EITTCTM TtlURS., FE1. t7 TO WED., FEB. 23 · 'AMILY STEAK LB. r . ' ' ~j ii ' FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY N."" ~ DISCOUNJ PIUC( FANT~ST\C DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY AIJ>HI. BETI. 191 ~ 38·0Z. BOX • FROZEN ~ JOHNSTON'S CHERRY PIE ~ 13-0Z. PJ:G_ • F710ZEN ~ EGGD WAFFLES - ~ SARA !.EL • 9-0Z. • FROZEN ~ CINNAMON ROLLS DOWN'ITUJX _ ~ l,!>1f1-0Z. • F'!IOZEN ~ HOT SLICED BREAD 44• ~ P.ouNcr BOX ~ WHEATENA HOT CEREAL r::D:::::\ 7-0UNG£ BOX ~CORN TOTAL ~ 'l-OZ. BOX• BLUEBEIUIY·Llla ~ JIFFY MUFFIN MIX . OISCDUN"T ""' ~ Jo.oz. !AR. CRABAPPL? 26' ~ SMUCKERS JELLY IS·OZ. JAJI • GOOBER GRAPE .UC SUN KIST ALL ALPHA Bl:TA STORES Wilt IE CLOSED llOHOAY FEBRUARY 1r, fllZ IH HONOR OF PRES19flfT'S DAY NAVEL 19, , ORANGES "· CHECK THESE I . WE WELCOME FOOD STAMP SHOPPERS . lll AllY lOS A...:OfllSj Jllvtll$10[ ' O« OR~NCE COUIHY Ll't!I. IETI. STORE HOURS MOft·FRI. 10 A.M. TO 9 P.111. SAT. & SUN. 10 A.M. TO 7 P.M . BEST FOR BAKING DR MASHING 10 ~: .. us 'l RU'S SET POTATOES 10 LB. BAG NAVEL ORANGES 99!, LOW PRICES "FLORIDA JHOIAN RIVCR" GRAPEFRUlr RED 6 F $100 OR 0 • WHITE 1. SALAD AND COLE SLAW ~oz. PKG. Juic1 ORANGES 1 o~ -a ~i; 77c COACHULA VALL£Y GRAPEFRUIT SUNSWEET PRUNES EXTRA LARGE 79c 2 LB. CARTOft .. HEALTH FOODS lO.OZ, l'll:G. • l'IAT\NW. • Uf01:lAltO HULLED 59-SUNFLOWER SEEDS . STO KS 88!. 1 LI . 'KG.• llOWH • UHl'llOCCSSEll &9-SESAME SEEDS fl•. ,KG.• ROASltO • ICAT\MAL 49-SQY BEANS THESE ffi>OUCE PllCES EFFECTIVE THURSOAY-WRIMESDAY, FEB. 17·21, 1972 fANTA~llC DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY ... IJ.'HA l(TA OISCDUPIT 'RICE • 16·0•. C'"•DRIP."G•tLECTI\lC-PE>< HILLS BROS. @ COFFEE • ...~... 771 B·LB. CAN •RIG. • EU:CTRIC.PtRI US @ SWISS MlSS • 32.QZ. BOX JMSnMT COCOA MIX 111 © 32.oz. BOX • CHOC'OIATE NESTLE'S QUIK 81 1 FANTASTIC DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY ""* in • Dl!ICOUKT ""' @"\&.OUNCE. BOTTI.£ • lil.UAN WISHBONE DRESSING 68' @ ~£t°lioM"i'E"n'iffOORs 371 . © .(2.QUNCF. BOX -· MJB LONG GRAIN RICE 66' @ 8·0UNCE BOX:• 1NS1ANT IDAHOAN POTATOES 261 ©' 11).01. RASPB£MY OR t.MOND ~ 10.POUtlD BAO 111 ~,--.-~ GOLD MEDAL flllUR ©4-0U>IGt~AA DECAF I STANT COFFIE 91 1 ·-.. ~ 7.0UNCE BOlTLJ: ~LAVORIS .... MOUTHWASH 591 -------------- @lio'L1s1t°'i1EMOVER I)« SPRAY ~ VICKS SlllEX 'e::::Y llASAL SPRAY I .291 • 951 • ~ @Vlcits HQUIL I 1" @mu viP.oRu• 491 ·---------...l--- IOX or •• F'Ofl Ht.lDACKE l\EUir _.........,..._ COPE ill'r~°.'.=:JTABLETS ... BOTTU:.01' 100 • 11111.U, 69 1 'd 11111111 RTII -VIJAMlll E. . 23' :U.COUNT • A!tTISEPTJC • REG. Cit CHERRY SUCRETS THROAT LOZEllGES 661 2,-CT. • C0~H CONTROL rORM ULA. "• l'Z-CT. • QECONGESTANT FORMULA Tk .a.oi. &Pl'IAT • SOllE TJ9tOAT SPJlAYl.I• 7-0Z WRAY • REGULAR Oii UNsc;om:o FDS UllDERARM DEODORAllT ----------- . . ----------- SARA LE£ corm RINGS li·OUNCt CAN • fROZEN ALPHA BETR ORANGE JUICE 16.QUNCE CAN • fflOZEN @ 6-0Z. • P&PPERON'I • S1USAGI •FROZEN 691 JENO'S PIZZA ADW g.oz. BOX • CHlCx:tN' • T\1IUXT • BEEf • FROZEN 26' SWANSON'S MEAT PIES @ l:i.-OZ. BOX • W/CHttSt • Y /CH!VtS • FROZEN ·DH BOY STUFFED POTATO 331 ~ l ·OUNCE PJ::G. • f'RO'lEN ~ VAN DE RAMP'S HALIBUT @ VAN Of: KAMP'5 • 161h-OZ. • FROZtN FISH 1 CHIPS :!IRXHOLMS • 4 PACK CHEllRJ.fRUIT BOATS ILhlflfTI • 6 PACK GLAZED Bl!ttnoHk Dtnots •I.Piil IEll • 16-0f.. t.OM CRACKED WHEAT BREAD 2 PACl ~ "C" Oft "tr EVER.EADY IATTElllES • Ml!XICAH • HA.ND MADE 841 54' STRAW HAMPERS 1 '' MIDIW .,.., .... 1.AROE W ~· ~ DUNCAN Hl!JES • \41h<;O'l. 80X 68' ~ANGEL FDOD CAKE MIX ~ 111/:i·OZ. BOX • I VAR ltTltS 351 'iMii( DUNCAN HINES LAYER CAKES ~ 7.oz. JIOX • 3 INCH S?ZE 601 ~ KING CHARLES TAIT SllEUS I POUND PACKAGE'. NUCOA MARGARINE 321 I POUN D PACKAGE'. KRAFT MIRACU MARGARINE 37; . !/,.GAU.ON ALPHA BETA IMITATION MILK 37~ !,"PINT CONTAINDl I 0 DRESSING 23• I PINT CONT A.IND ... ll111• 1£TA 99!.. WISCONSIN CHEDDAR CHEESE 12-0Z. PKG. •SINGO: WRAPPED 79' KRAFT AMERICAN CHEW 4.QUNCC SAR LASCCO HRIMP COCKTAIL 351 '4-0UNGt PACJ::AGF. • SLICD> 621 DANDLA IMPORTED HAM •1.1111 ltll • 16 oz. CON1AINDI. 371 MACARONI SALAD 9.QUNGt CONTAIN£111 •REG. OR ROT 631 ROD CALAVO AVOCADO DIP · t.:i=::\ 15-01/tlC.& BO.I • lltG. Oft UNSALTO> \!!:;:::! SUNSHINE K!ISPY CRACKERS 34 j ----------- • M111fAChON ~ANTl[O Oii TOU!I MOM'!' ltf\JllOf:D • IAUS fAl COUlctto OM ALL TAX.t.lll ITIMJ •WC llillOVI Titl ll:IM TO ttM1 IWI TO COMMtlClAl MAUU. DOlllU DIKOUNlS MU OOUIU - SA.VINOS AT AlPKA llTA o..W. Oi-..ft _,. •dN .nt•p I• M4M. • .. , t'f9t'I.-... 'i-"' priott. n..,. .,. -· ,...,i•1t ., ..... ,...., iwtdww .n.,. .... ,,..,. "' -·"'"'""" """' ,.,. • .-. ..,,.., ~ .ft • ,..., ~ 4 ENVELOPES • AU. VARIITir..S 61 I ~SEGO DIET FOOD ~ 5 VARIETIES 321 ~ LIPTON CUP A SOUP ~·1 ,CT.1ir::G. •BROWN • OOLDEN 27f ~CEDRBE WASHINGTON HOTH ~ LYND&N • 14-0Z. JI.JI 36' ~CHICKEN NODDLE DIMMEll ~-uouNCE CAN . ~ NAUErs BEEF STEW 69' ~ MAAY KITCHtH • IS.OZ. CAN 531 ~ROAST BEEF HASH • ~ U.OUNCE CAN 631 ~ DINTY _MDORC BEEF STEW @ H'D'i'MEL' ~ri "c'irru"" llDT &21 <§ ~~~~t'rtf'W~~iiV'i:Ou 64' • ~ 12Y: .Q'l. PICG. • REGUIAR 36' ~ AP,IAM WAY-PIZZA MIX ' • ~l~oZ~CAN•CUT 21' ~ STOKELrS GREEM BEANS @ ~t8~/l.'fi.J';HELLIE BEAMs261 · ~ l!-OuNct CAN ~ ST DK EL rs RSP CM[RRl!S ~ l!V.~~· CAN• CUT -~ STOKEL rs Wl.l BEANS ~ i&-or; CAN• BAVARIAN 'e::::Y SID Kil T'S KRAUT ~ ~·OUNCE CAN • HALVES • SUCED !L,HR IETA CLIMI l'tlCHES -------------- • -·- !AU. CAN • 13-0Z. S[\MMED 141 PET EVAPORATID MILK @ 200 so roor ~ou'.. DOW HANDIWRAP 45• @ 100 so. rooT ROU. GLAD TEXTURED WRAP 29' 31/.,-0Z. RtGUUR Sitt • GOLD • P1Nl' 16' DIAL BAR SOAP ~ FRESK H' ~LUE •.I.OUNCE JM 49' ~TOILET BOWL CLEANER ' @ 22.oz. SPRAY ctJ:ANEJI FORMULA '409' ti'-OZ. SPRAY , ~ 12-0Z. !Om.t ~ TY-D·BOL CLEANER 691 , ... 71 1 l>OUNCt CAN--36' .. QUICK.FIRE CMUCOAL LIGM1lll "" ' . @ 5-0Z .. C4N • UVtfl KIITT QUEEN CAT FOOD 5-0Z. CAH • IIDNEY 1t.COIJN1 BOX • OVEJUnGHT PAMP[RS DIAPEllS 3>COUNT aox • NtWBOIUC :io.cot11'11' BOX • DAmME ... ' ·89' ... .... ~ fO.<XltJNT IOX • JU:G. • IUPE> 1 JI 'e::::Y KOUX -• - / ' . ~ lJ PILOT-ADVERTISER S Wtdneoday, Ftb'1111Y 16, 1972 l\l•d""""· F1bru"y 16, 1972 DAILY PILOT qf 'Hungarians, Food Go Together' No Recipe T·oo Challenging for.. M·itzi Gaynor Snit• blond Mitt! Gaynor It a By JOHNA BLJNN BEVERLY HlLLS -"When my father came r r o m Hungary, he was a cellist, then the conductor of the 100-• piece orchestra at the Rivoli theater in Chicago. After the crash came, he became a cook !" said -Mitzi Gaynor. ''My father was a very good cook. I've found you could ~a~e almost nothing and make It into something good to eat because 'Of all the spices my ~ather used, He always salted everything before he tasted it. I don 't like~ that! But most Hungarians do it because they're very hot-blooded peo- ple. Hoogarians don 't use butter. except in pastries. They cook with bacon drippings. And then it's very long. very slow cooking. Ail kinds of wonderful things: ragouts and goulashes, or stutfed peppers, cabbage. llungarians and cooking just go together," she said. " Her thoughts about how the libido affects the appetite are inter.esting. ''When -Hungarians fall in love, they eat marvelous foods and drink Tok~y and wo n derful muscatels. - "When they suffer. they eat more·as they talk and sit with friends and have coffee and - cakes. Then when the lovers get back together again. they bring In more food . F'ood and Hungarians go together. You N!ally can't change it!" When she fell in love with her husband Jack Bean 18 years ago, she said. ''I didn't want to eat anything. Jn America you Jive on lo\'e . The French are a little more fini cky, they want something to eat They live on love, with a bowl of soup on the side.'' "Jack's a good eater! He's a very interesting man with very g(!Od taste. Sometimes he says I make a dish better than s~and-so or even better than be can get in a restaurant. I'm not afraid to cook for him . Jn other words, nothing's too big! "I make a stroganoff. That's a beauty to behold, but to me stroganoff means a buffet par- ty. It has to be beef, though, becl!use Jack doesn 't like lamb. I also make a great Mexican pork stew, pork roast in pastry, Swiss steak. but mostly good sitting-around- the-fire kind of food. "I've got a special recipe for you, one of Jack·s favoril~<i" too, spaghetti sauce. The recipe is a legacy from Rossano Brazzi's wife, dating back to the time we made '·South Pacific." Mitzi's recipes follow: MITZI GAYNOR'S SPAGHETII S.AUCE 1 can (28 ounces ) plum tomatoes I rib of celery, chopped 1 cari-ot,' chopped I teaspoon salt \fl teaspoon freshly· ground pepper If• teaspoon fennel seeds · 1(4 teaspoon oregano leaves 1/-1 teaspoon basil leaves % teaspoon roser-ary leaves 1 teaspoon sugar 3 quarts boiling water 1 pound spaghetti (or shells) 1Ai cup bu·tter (or margarine) "14 cup hot. milk Fresh1y grated-Parmesan cheese. Combine in s a u'ce pan : tomatoes, vegetables, salt, pepper and herbs. Bring to '*'il, cov!l/11nd simmer l hour, st~ occasionally. Force through food mill (or blend in electric blender) and strain through a sieVe. Return clear liquid t o · saucepan. Add sugar. Boil, un· covered. until sauce iS reduczd to about :Y.-1.0 I cup. Add 1 teaspoon salt to boiling_ water. Gradually add spaghetti (or shells I so that water continues to boil. Cook, uncovered, stir- ring occasionally, untjl ~nder. Drain In colander. Toss with Travelers Take Note PARIS IUPll -Hallan cooking $till does nol match that or Fr1tnce JM if anything is getting worse, according to the new Mic:helin travel guide for Italy . : . The 11m guide lists no three- atar restaurants -12 are named in Ftance -and only 13 two-star establishments. Overall t 8 9 restaur111nls rdl!llrlve stars -one fflwer than In 1971. • the only new mtaurant in tht lwo-ttar category A ffii MITZI 'S PORK IN 5 dried ·tarragon leaves PASTRY 1 package prepared pie pastry (do uble crust) pepper the roast, place in degree oven about J )lour {or center of pastry. SprinkJe until pastry Is browned), cover tarragon leaves over kip of with heavy paper ( o r roast. aluminum foil ). cook about i., 9re1t recipe fancier. ~ cup of the bttter. Sllr re- maining v~ cup butter into tomato SAUct; removed from heat. Stir in hot milk. Pour over spaghetti sauce in serv· ing dfsh. Serve with freshly grated· Parme$:an. c b e e s e , Serves 4. 2 pounds boneless pork salt, freshly ground pepper Dijon mustard' Prepart pastry according to package Instructions. Roll out pastry t o ,rectangle-shape, large enough to cover sides and ends of roast; spread mustard lightly and evenly on top side or pastry. Salt. lightly Wrap pastry aroun~ast to hour longer. Set1ve cold with cover tightly , seal both ends e n d I v e • avocado-grapefruit closely. ~lace roJ: in baking salad 'i''ith Fronch dres.s.in& pan; bake in preheated~~400'.'__~8e~rv~e~s~6:_. -------~~~!!'.::....:~~'.:__--------- ALL STORES CLOSED MONDAY, FEBRUARY21 IN HONOR OF WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY. ' . . ffliifi s;,~ There's more to phs t ... ~ ... " ~~ ....... just • 1" low everyday prices. There's PUJS/BUYS that save you even more. Chances are. )""1 are reading this section of the paper beca~ you are lnt.erealed. in aupermarbt ipl!tials. Speciab are great.But ~ale: aren't enough. At Ralphs we think you ought to have low everyday pricel, too. Savixi,g money on a few apecials, tben paying higher prices-ft{ thenst of what you buy, i!I non1enae. But paying low everyday price.-and then getting manufacturer'• apecial promotional allowances (we call them PLL.S/BCl'S! on top of itiJ the most aensible Mopping you can do. _ · ' We're goUhmnboth-PLUS/BUYS and low everyday pn-Look for the yellow laJll th=ghout the tlore. LEN11EN SPECIAL NORTHERN ~b. 79 HALIBUJPl~~~~10• , POFF flRAND-GRADIA FRESHJR. 49 TURKEYS ~.• EVERYD& LOW PRICES MEAT MASTER BEEF 7·Bon• Shoutd•r 79 BEEF ROASTS 1b .• Shloln Tip 1 49 BREAKFAST STEAKS ~-• Bone!••• SPENCER STEAKS Center Cut Round BONELESS STEAKS Breaded-Frozen VEAL STEAKS Jb.2,39 lb. 1.19 11>..98 HOUSEHOLD VALUES YourCholce-100 Count or Legal Size 6'11' PJ1tn-1cr Legal $lze 31 ENVELOPES Pkg •• FamllySlze .:.120t. 2 99 SOUP POTS each • ,..e1vy Duty Pl11t1c-w/Ud1 3 99 TRASH CANS 32ga1.s1... • Vinyl, Letther·l.lk• 1. 99 PHOTO ALBUMS each • TEMPORARY REDUCfO PRICE PLUStBUY ••••J .. G•u111•....,.••~•••0•u~c1 " .... ,.nu!·-Clll"' ""': SAVINGS HEALTH & BEA UTY AIDS Vaaelln• Lotion ti-or.. 58 INTENSIVE CARE . bott1• , Ttbleta EXCEDRIN 8ottle~f60 .81 Roll·On -Reg. & Un•c•nted i .S·oi. 74 BAN DEODORANT bottl• • Shampoo In Hair Color NICE & EASY Pkg, 1.54 Plus Platinum Pkg 1 4.1 SCHICK INJ. BLADES011i • Hand Lotion g..01 72 TOUCH OF SWEDEN bottle • Sc!nted & U~1cented l •or.. 89 Dial Anti-Pers. Spray ••• • Colgate ·!"· 7.4 DENTAL CREAM 't~~~ • USDA CIRlDIE A-SOUTHERN FRYING 21~~~rbs. 29 CHICKENS lb •• err•EF-RIB CUT STEAK I~ 1.49 EVETUD& LOW PRICES CALIFORNIA GROWN D•Y• Fr••h1r-Grad1 A FRYERS Whole 3 Ibo. & Up Hot Dog on a Stlck-10~&. pkg. CORN DOGS Majetty CANNED BACON Fresh Fiiiet of PETRALE SOLE Fresh Fillet of TRUCOD Be sure to pick up your free . copy of . Martlla Randalrs newest booklet "Lei's Talk Fresh Fish~ Avaffabla et the meat 1;:ounteror recipe ~enter. Ralphs catering ICE CREAM lb •• 35 .55 1 lb.can .79 Jb.1.25 .~.es '!oi-gal. carton .89 FROZEN FOOD DEPARTMENT Checkerboard Foods Sliced BEEF&GRAVY cHERRv.;Pi~s l·OZ. pkg. .33 7Jn. ,79 Cranbeny Juice WELCH'S COCKTAIL ..... 27 . ... 'Elwell Farms WING-ENS 10-oz. pkg .• 89 Checkerboard Food1-S-or. pkg. Braised Beef & Gravy .33 Swenaon's Fried ·I 01 45 CHICKEN ENTREES pkg: • Whipped Toppin? 2 REAL WHIP 1-or. pkg .• 4 Ole South _,. 89 ·FRUIT COBBLERS 2-1b. pkg .• DELICATESSEN DEPAR TMENT Sflced·Aa1t. • LEO'S MEATS '4x7 Sneed DANOLAHAM 3·oz.pkg .• 33 4·oz.pkg .• 59 Kraft Phlltdtlphi• 15 CREAM CHEESE a·oz.pl!J. • Solt • 1 lb 41 Blue Bonnet MargarinePi.a: • Blut Bonnet Famlly Sile " 41 MARGARINE 1-1b.bow1. 81bJ,Ed1morGoud1 · MAYBUD CHEESE 7-oz.pk11-.88 Bordem Am1rk1n 1 Jru:tlv. Wrapped 1-o 4Q Sliced Cheese Food . p~:. F1el1chmann MARGARINE Hb.pk9 .• 45 DAIRYDEPARTMENT Ralphs SOUR CREAM II Pln1o28 Plni.49 . . Ralphs Butter Milk quirt .18 i;.gar •• 35 BAKERY D;!'ARTMENT BALPHS Whll• orWh~at $1ndw1c&.or. BREAD Spltt Top 1 ·1~ I-oz. loaf R1lph1 Apple or CHERRY STRUDEL Rtlphs ~ CHERRY PIE-~ Atlphs-Plaln or sough Dough ENGLISH MUFANS . ' RatphsGrOIDI COFFEE ' .33 Pkg. 49 oft• ai ... 89 Pkg. 37 ' oll. .89 PANTRY Fll.1.E,RS Jello J PUDDING TREATS H1llty'1 BEEF .STEW Ralphs GROUND COFFEE PEPSi"col:A MJe'wHITE RICE Del Monte PITTED PRUNES 24-oz.eon .69 3·1b. 2 04 CIR I . ' Pkg.ofl .89 42p-::: .55 24·01. 83 pkg •• Jonny Ctt CAT UTTER 10.1b.pkg .• 50 Golden Grtln-P~O· (E~C!J!l1~!.!!) RICE·A·RONI M1XC5 pkg .• 29 '• PRODUCEDEPAFITMEf.fT ' --Sunkist Navel 1. 1 ORANGES lb •• Coachella WHITE GRAPEFRUIT Heh .16 Washington Extr1 Fancy 2.5 GOLD. DELI. APPLES 11>. • •firm Ripil Full aa Cherry Tomatoes suk•t • Fresh Snappy GREEN BEANS 1~ .28 Premium Ouallty-Baktng Slie R~ Potatoes ~ .• 10 LIQUOR DEPARTMENT E1atem Prtmlum -IJ/pk. 124r. 88 EDELWEISS BEER ., .. a -- DJ1t11J1d In Scotla•uf-live 500 Sindy Macalll•t•r SCOTCH Lakeshire Sandra GIN °' VOOKA R1lph1 8'1tcUon German LIEBFRAUMILCH f1l1h 1.59 Cheekerboard Foods 1 "" .. pkf. MACAROPfl .CllfESE.17 HOUSEHOLD NEEDS 8alh81re • PALMOUVEBARSOAP .13 Spr1y Cl11ner FORMULA409 2Z..oi. 89 bolll• • Beth Size JEijGENS BAR SOAP Fumtture-14·or. cen PLEDGE SPRAY WAX ' .10 1.27 Cl11nt/ FORMULA409 ~-:.:1.39 . C119~n Bubble Btth or , ... OL 89 BATH OIL BEADS . pkg .• Dl1h~t1her Dtttrge'nt · 7J ELECTRASOL ..... Pk&. • cRvsrAl1WH1TE ~;.&a. · Frics!l effective from February17 lhru 23, 1972 .. EVERYDAY LOW PRICES ·····-HEll~THA BEAUT'f.AIDS ... • ·FROZEN FOOD DEPART-MENT- t. ..... 111-·llMf. '~ Ol!I HEADASHOULDEAS .::; 1,14 . c,. ... .,,.,,,,...(lt'lel "•OflJ , ~ HEAD &SHOULDERS ';\ 1.33 ........ M--~ ..... ''-°"' ..... -HEAD & SHOULDERS -1.22 MICRIN MOUTHWASH ;,:; ,ff . MAALOX ••-1,09 ........ -NEO·SYNEPKRINE14% _,7t lovo11c-22...,bolllo JOYUQllD DE1BIGENT ......,_ .. CHERRY PIES ..... 11 -M CORN ON COB Plf.9'4 M ..... -.. ~ .... BAKE·IN·TRAYROLLS .. u.21 ............ _ CHICKEN DINNERS -BRUSSEL SPROl/1'$ ...... Kuh BrowftPololoU • Limit 1-0nfy Ont Coupon hr Cullo!Ht C141pon Good ftb. llthruU, 11n HOUSEHOLD NEEDS · .... - AINSO DETERGENT ' -·77 .... • Cot.'DwAmtALL 0wr1.82 ruxr1QUJD :;.a7 ........ ,21 LIFEBUOY BAR SOAP ·-COLORTECNAPKINS :i..11 -..... ~. .TOii.ET TISSUE . HOIJSEHOtO NEEDS-PANTRY FILLERS-·--PANTRY FIL.URS ..... ... .:.11 --J; FACIAL TISSUE BEECH N T BABY FOOD .oa VETS DOCI FOOO .... 1t .,_, .. ~ .... GALA TOWELS -a .. .... -"' BEECH NUT BAIY .JUICI! ,oa ~Oll;.i:Uxts _,.. .. C-AttO<L 0... ':t.21 t.-t.-'i'i:-"'.:.H TOILET TISSUE Muehroom Gr1vy Mix ... .11 S AR KISTTUNA ·-'iiilU'M ALUM! U FOIL .. • .47 --VIENNA FINGERS -·,.q ... ....... PEARHl.LVES --..ta RALPHSBWCH ·-~1 ROYAL PUDalNGS a.tN. 12 .... .. ... TOMATO JUICE --.1a -;;,., =.34 -..::.1. BOLD DmROENT DEL llONTE CATSUP EVAPORATED MILK ' Urn It 1-0nly On• eov,on , ... Cuatomlr •Alfr~ In Treviso, just out ol RALPHS Ve111ce . More than just law prices · c .. ,..-, ••. 17~N·"'"' STORES ARE LOCATED, AT: 9901 ADAMS BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH; 15471 S. BROOKHURST, WESTMINSTER -STORE HOURS: 9-1 0 DAILY, 9·9 . SIJHDAY . The 84-page' Michelin lisls 1ta: 1pecialitiu 11 marrow 11eek and salmon rlaot1o • • • • 17261 17th ST., TUSTIN 401 N. LOARA, ANAHEIM I • • • • • I • • • ff DAILY l'lLOT SAFEWAY LIQUOR BUYS! Imported So Smoothl 86 Proof Whiskey Cold Brook Blend 80.rr, Old Calhoun Bourbon ~ Stanton's Gin v~i!.".'~. BANQUET DINNERS Va~:ties 38t (Except Beef) foci • .. U.S.D.A. Choice Grade Beef ti Bone·ln If lilrl•I• Tl, Buf Steaks "°"'";. $}49 Con• 1• lb. ' 09 Beef Rib Steaks """~"""" 11. •1•9 Boneless Steak :to~~,: .. 'I" Top Sirloin Steak ""'=:"" 1• 'I" Flavorful Beef CHUCK ROAST USIJA Choict 8111 Blade '' 7·BDNE 99c Cut c ROAST II. IL BABY FOODS st WHITE MAGIC D-ET.ERGENI 'forWosh Doy PrideAnd Praise' SAVE MORE AT SAFEWAY DISCOUNT! CHERRY ANGEL FOOD CAKE · • • .(. Mn. Wright'• " •• : "lt"s AH .. veoly 39c Cokt -Debc.iovsl l?·•t DISCDUllTPRICIDI. 1111 DtYl1s Food c!!.W~.:;.•.\r' $]1• R111i1 Bread ~:.. 3 ~ $) •... ,..,. ..... ia.u•n• COUPOIS .. IClllmcTM• lOS ANGIL IS & OIANOI COUNTY I tlll'f CATMJllAI HEAL TH & BEAUTY AIDS RIGHT GUARD • -..tty,''"""" 16, 1'172 N PILOT-AOvtl!TISEI 4 Captain's Choice Serve with lemon USDA Choice Grade Beef Rolled & Tied Chuck Rib Roasts l"'ll• Mooty $) Ot ,,;;cm IL. lb. • Franks Safeway All loof Processed to Peak of Goodne.ssJ . .. 69c Pork Roast .~:::~':'.~:.:;::. rkB9• Sterling Frariks ..!r:;~~:'.. :1::59• - Pork Spareribs 's:'~i.::~;::,';k' 11.79• Beef Short Ribs "2::0-,._49• Pork Sausage ..,J:::;o:;~:,,., ~;~59• Leg of Pork ;;:t.,;~~\!'F'~ · ,.79• ~~~---'~, ("""" Swift's Premium Haddock Fillets .~ .. 99' Lean Ground Beef ,,,""::.89' Sausage .i."':'"""",.-:,::;., .. 59' Beef Linkies •• .'i:cc,,, :::.-35' Sausage '""""'""" ,. a.1• Sliced Bologna!:'::r:;;.'73" Canned Ham Sliced Salami"'k:.;:::: . .':.;:77• 801111111 F•llr ill. $319 Cook .. ... Real McCoy Chili ,.79• Breaded Shrimp ,""" :-:83' Cooked Cod Fillet :~89· SCOT PAPER • TOWELS . .. GRAPE JUICE • Welch's TZ·OL 39c Pure Concoro ca ... . • : TATER TREATS • P~~. ~;~ 45c fl Chopped Broccoli t 1~~20• 8Cherry. Pies = ·~:;34• MAYONNAISE Nu IMdt Bnmcl Creomy-Smooth For Sandwich or Salad. a1:i62c ' • DAIRY DELI -AT DISCOUNT SHADY LANE . BUnER STRAWBERRIES Scotch Treat Sliced 10-0L Pk(. 25t LARGE 'AA EGGS Plump Tender Golden Kemels C· \Q• £AtS USDA Grado 4 to 8-lb. ''A" ''fresh'" Weight Poppy Brand Ra•1· fresh Fryer Wings '""""""" 2 9 c T•Pon-Frm. lb. Leg of Lamb Short Shon~-U.S.DA Clloa Grode Lamb Rib Chaps ::t~;.;: rk $J h Fryer Parts ~~~':'.,:::N;;: ro.69• Safeway Cooked Ham ~;.:59• Fresh PORKSRAKS ClllFromYoa•1Pork 79 PORK '"" 59c C ROAST 'l:;~ tt. IL Extra Large REFRIED BEANS :~~~•29t 29·0L Cu 00 t~ a1c: ~~~~!,ES ·~··c ~!!!!OS 3 ~!i39c Con1 Tortillas L-.. 1~23• • Red Yams "-S..Ko.t-ro. J.9~ ltali• Squash "'I::' .. 29• -Vtfwilyl5wllt OmgeJuice' l-~: 73• Grapefruit T-6111-'1 Btll Peppers ..... "t.;;;.";. ... 10• -... _ Pillsliury Biscuits · ::· 9• Breakfast Prvnes ::69• lll!Cktyt Peas =::: 1::39• TAM , HAWAIIAN GARDEN LIQUID JUNl~ERS ~GIC BARI RRTIUDR Galon 77c s 99c 3.(ulic $) 99 '$1 89c ... .., I . • • • ' • • . ·--. .. . ·- /./ j '<t .1 .. Fr11h Trout .. ~!~· .s. ~Z: .E~~~ ••• 411! Rushed to us from the icy waters of Idaho rivers. Pe'rrect frying size. . .. • ~·-- H1/iblf611611k ... ~f~!f.R. ~u.T ••• 9/lf Al,vays a welcome favorite ••• mild flavor and so n1any \vays to ser\c il '. • . . i ' • . • • • • . . • . • • . • . .. • frBBh C/BB/B ..... s~~~~~' .... 51 Bllll8n1pp1r .... ~~~~ .... DI : Serve them steamed New England style I (Now Ing land Llttlonocks ••• 89c lb.) Delicfous breaded and fried .•• or try Shake 'n' Bake for fish! Lobsters ... ~0~.~~~H~··· $22~. Salmo n ... ~~~E.~~~~:F .... $1 2~. Halibut Fillets ..... 79~b. ~ • Drawn and fully cooked ! Boil for nine minutes, serve! 1\1, to 2 lbs. From rushing waters of !he Columbia! (Coittor Cut Stuks $1.59 lb.) Firm wh ile flcsl1, with cxccll cnt fi<wor nnd texture. ; • Crab Meat .. ~~~s.K~~ .. ~2 8~. Oyst ers .. ~~:T=~~,.~~s."; ... $1~!. Fillet of Sole ·.~ ....... ~1 3! · ! Alaskan King, for flavor! ••. Alaskan (King Crab Logs , , , $1.99 lb.) For a liot, hearty stew, or serve them fried I (W••tom Oysters, 99c) Fresh! ••• with the mild lla\'Ot' that makes it •o popular! Cooked Shrimp ................ '1.991b. Pacific Sand Dabs , .......... !11.39 lb. Mahi Mahi ..................... $1.89 lb. Firm flavorful meat •• , Cocktaihize ! Season, roll in flour, brown in butter! Bring back memori~ of Hawaiian feasts! Smoked Salmon ............... $1.99 1b. ~ Hcd Socl<cyr, flaYorl (Smoktd Hollbut $1.89 lb .) P.D.Q. Shrimp ................... '2.99 River Smelts ...................... 59tb Florida Pompano ............. '1.89 lb. Finnan Haddie ................ $1.29 lb. :1 Peeled, cleaned, devein ed '. • , 1 V. lb. bag. From the Columbia, and rushed here! From the waters around the !a1nou1 Keyes! Scoltish fl aYor , •. ai:; authentic a5 b11.1pipes! '- Dungeness Crabs ............. '1.29 lb. Fr .. h! ••• and large size !or real value! Fillet of Perch ................ '1.09 lb. Fresh!.,. mild flavor to ~lease the family! Scallops .......................... '1:99 Broil, saulce ot· fry! I:! ounce bag. Monterey Squid ............. ( ... 49~ Specially for those wilh adven\ur~etites ! • -. Steak U.S.D.A. CHOICE TOP SIRLOIN Naturally aged for !Javor, trimmed for more good eating! ·Lamb SMALL LOIN $J 7,9b. ROAST •• 1 Y2 to 2 lb. Fresh domestic lamb ••• U.S.D.A. Choice, to assure you quality! • Pork BONELESS ROAST ROLLED AND TIED 99~ · 1 Lean pork, lvith special goo<ln c.ss you find in n1ldwestern quulity! Ground Beef Exh-a Lean ... Bulk or Patties ............ 89t. . Small Loin Lamb Chops Lean, Tender! ........... ~1:99 "· Sliced Bacon EI Rancho's Ranch Sly lo .................. 79 ~ GROCERY SALE! • Swanson Entrees ..... ~~E~···· 39' Choose your favorite main courses from a variety that's sure to please! Crisco Oil .. ~4• ~: .B~~ ••••••••••. 5 9' Fiah calls for frying ••• and frying calls for light, pure Crisco oil I . Del Monte Peas .... 23' Sunshine Cookies .. 59' ' . Sweet, tender Early Garden·! 303 . App!eaauce, C. Chip, Oalmeal 20-oz Tomatoes ............ 23' Granola Cereal ..... 49' Steweil or solid pack, l\o. 303 can. Vita Crunch, Reg., flavored. 16 oz. Macaroni & Cheese 49' Purina Cat Dinner. . 98' Kraft'& Deluxe, easy.fix, 14. oz. Bir 4 ·1b. pkr. Kitty's favorite&! Veg. Casseroles~ ... 39' Wizard Deodorizer 49' Green Giant frozen favoriteal Clear the air! •• , 9 oi. Aerosol! ·Dieter's.Lunches ... ~9' . King Size Cheer.~1.09 Weight Watcher's ••• your choice. All temperature performance! . . ' . Fresh · Asparagus · .... ~A.H~~.~u~~1~~1 •••• 49' Compare lhe quality! •• , aee !hal then really is a difference at El . Rancho I • Wt Will Close Mood1y, Feb. 21 Green Cabbage ..................... 9~ Solid heads lo make crisp •law I l Washl'n'gteoonm"':5"''B"i1 rt' hday Fresh Lemons ..................... 19f, Tangy flavor to en hance •cafoods I '\tucATESSEN SA"i;p ~· . , ' . Su.gar Plum Hams~ .L~~· •4.~z:$.2 89 ~· Fully cooked, ready to cat, fro m s~·iftl Choice oC r incappl e or Brown Suaar glaze. -Salame-Chu.b ·· $1.29 Ga.llo ••• from Sa n F rancisco ! 13 oz. Shrimp Cocktail .. ~ ~~ ... 33' La!5sco, ready 1er\"e (CraD Cocktatl 3fc) Liquor Seafood Sauces ........ 35' Fisherman'• Wharf ... 3 kinds ..• 8 oi. D I Fishtrmin>' 39' ress ngs ...... W1i111 ...... E ight ounce. ( lluo 4Jr, Roquefort He) Values! .. Eggo Waffles .. ." .... 39' Cascade .............. 69' Grant's Scotch .. Quiu .~7.99 Reirular $9.60 value! Save this week! Canadian Whis.key nnH'4.99 • Frozen, juat heat and serve! 13 oz. For dishwuhera I 50 oi. 1il:e. El Rancho's own label (Qt, $J.99) ' ChelTJ Pie Filling .. 49' Instant Coffee .... '1.59 Remember Feb. 221 Comstock. F olger'i, !or full tl&vorl 10 oz. jar. Pie Crust Sticks .... 29' Folger's Coffee ... 111. Betty Crocker lllakea it easy! 11 oz. All rrinda ! ... 3 lb. can • , • '2.23 P rice1 i n •ffcrl Th ur. throuoh Sun., ' Pcb. 11, 18, 10, 20. Cloud. Feb. 21. Qpcn dailv 9 to 9 ••• Suuda v IO 14 7 Rhine Wine .' ... rinH .. ~1.69 Paul Masso n ••• Companion to fish ! Grey Riesling ... r1nH ... '1.89 \Ven~ •.. cxi:elltnt 'v 1ne "'ilh fi.,h . Mateus Rose ... rinH ... '2.89 Cascade Beer .. .. .... . . 89- Dinner wine .•• from Porlui&ll • Carton of ai x 12 oz. cana. ARCADIA : l11n1e! and H11n1,ni.1011 Or !W1I' PASADENA : )!/,\/. SOUTH PASADENA : i11,\t. HUNTINGTON BEACH : i"llil· NEWPORT BEACH : 1171 Newporl Ul1d drld 11 H.o1, t·u r,1,1to.:, J:O W..-.1 Co !n1Jdo Blwd ··· fr!niont .nd Hun11n~lb11 Dr ... Warner and AIRonqu m rUoard.•alk Ctn ler l ,.,. 7~11 f J\lblull llr 'l"IOlull V1llJr.• Cr11le1l • .. l , I , . -• • I • TANGY PINEAPPLE PERKS CASSEROLE Natives Mixed . . . ·rn Main Dish -Believe il or not ... lhe venture. not only in the kit· pineapple is a nati ve of " chen, but also in lhe dining America. Yet It hRs adapted so easily to Asian. Arrican and room. tropical island climates that it COMBO c;ASS~ROLE Is generally fhought to have 3 cups cooked rice originated thtre.' 2 Cl1f¥ diced cooked In Combo Casserole, pinca~ chicken pie ls combint'd With cooked I cup diced pineapple rice, cooked chicken, celery, l cup sliced celery chutney. aheese and m~yon-'r: cup diced gree:n pepper naise and bake.'! tip into a most 11'll cups grated Cheddar delicious casserole. cheese Rice, in contrast to pincHp-t cup mayonnaise pie, st.arled in the hot, 1noist 1;, cup chopped chutney Asian climate. coming lo I teaspoon salt American In the I600's. lt ~-• leaspoon pepper fountLa home_ in the Southern -Gombine rice, chicken, states, and the United States pineapple, celery, green pep.: has since becoine the largest , per and ~ cup cheese. Stir In exporter of rice in the "'·orld. mayonnaise. chutney a n d Geographic orf~ins of foods seasonings. Pour into a but- are fun lo know . But even tc:red 2-quart ca s s er o I e . more interesting is the superb S~rinkle with re m a i n i n g flavor combination two cheese. Bake at 350 degrees unrelated foods can make. for .'VI minutes. Makes six Cooking should be an ad· servings. Streamlining Helps To Heat Eggs Benedict Eggs Benedict is a delec· juice and salt: beat slightly table combination of toasted w:th a wire wtiisk. English muffins, ham. poa"ched Beat in lt6 of the butler ate eggs and Hollandaise sauce. But we've given the classic retipe a new twist by substituting CAnadian b11con" for the ham . E~~s Rcncdicl is time. (If sauce should curdle add : ice cube and stir until smooth again : remove Ice rube ~nless melted). lf sauce should become loo thick, stir indttd delicious for brunrh nr in I tablespoon hot water al a lunch ; the only problem is in time, until des i r e<d con· assembling the ingredients so they ar~ all served hot. However, if you prepare the s1stency. H01la ndaise Sauce may be made ahead and kept warm fo:-about an hour; to do dis~ in the streamlined fashion so place sauce In a wide- ~·e suggesl you should have no mouth vacuum bottle or hold trouble doing just lhat. Make Hollandaise sauce and IXli\Ched eggs ; keep warm as directed in recipes. Pan-fry or broil Canadian bacon ac- cording t& package directions over hot water lbut not over heal I or in a l)eavy sauce dish on a warming tray. Makes about 211 cups -enough for 8 servings. and wrap in fo:I to keep warm. PO~'CHEO EGGS Split English muffins by Pour water to ·a depth nl. ptrrcing them 1111 around-with about 2 inches into an electric fork fines and then gently puJ\· skillet. Briog waler to a boil : 1ng apar1. Toast cut !iide of redu.c7 heal to simmering. muffins in broiler; spread Break eacn egg into a sauce generoui;Jy wilh butter: wrap dish or cup and quickly slip ln- looscl~· 1n rn1I to kee:~ warn\.. ln water at the surface. Cook To ni:.,.rmbJy l'rrch serving. 3 t4'1 5 minutes depending on placf z nluffin halves <"ln ,an in-firmnes~ desired -yol ks dividua l plare. Place 2 slices should be at least partly run- of bacon on a muffin half. ny. !Cook only 3 minutes if With a large slotted spoon lift eggs are to be heJd and ch~ 1 t nd reheated !. .. r PQ8 cu eg~ rom ~·a er 1 To hold egg• turn off heat pltce on bacon. "' Spoon a ~enerous 1,., cup and add I cup cold •aler. ffollanda i~e sauce over e~g. Cover until riady to use. OM muJ\10 h11H 15 served To reheat eggs before ser\•- plain...,.fakes 8 servings. i'ng, lurn heat control to sim· mer just until egg.s 111e healed . HOLLANDAISE SAUCt: To· prepare eggs lo an egg in . cups t three v-..pound puacher. r o 11 o ~· manufac-'.' atk:kJ1 huller lurer's direction. To hold eggs. I egg yolks ir.p 'them into 2 inches of cup 1cmon juice lukewarm water in an ~eclric ---l)oslt-,,f-,.lt-' skillet. ' Qit j:JuUer into 6 equal (.(over until ready to uJ. To pertl. Place tJg yol k.a 1n the reheat before servfn,g, turn ~of, double bo~er over ho~ heat control to simmer jusl nOt boDln1. wit"; 1dd lemon untU •UJ are buted. , , • , .. --·--- MAYFA1R '24HOUR MARKET$ WILL REMAIN OPEN W ASHIN~OM'S 11rtHDA y . MONDAY.FEB.11 TOlllHOUllS OTHERS .. STED WILL~pO . ' STARKIST CHUNK~U.NA LIGHl-MEAT6Y.I QZ.CANS ...................................................................... . f.~l=~::LE COSTA BRAVA 2 ROLL PACK ............................. : ....................................... .. RICHMOND PEAR.HALVES IN HEAVY SYRUP29 OZ. CAN ................................................................... .. : HEALTH & BEAUTY AIDS . · . FROM OUR MAYFRISH FAMILY OF PROUD lllDS . ·~ ~!'!!!.11_·~-~~~~~~t.i ·~ !~f.;!».~,t~,~~~ -················· .................... 69 IRIS WHOU KERNEL CORN s~s i 16 OZ. CAM .,._,, .............................. --··-···-·········· ................ ,_.,,_,,_,_........ I ! !!i!J!~!~~t!!.~~.! ,;~¥·~:,·~~, _$3' ~.!!.~H:P~.~~~~~~~c-~~-~~--·-.... ~ .. 35f ,, . . I I 1 ~. ""'""'"' 8IEAOiDF1· . · FIS.If CAK~~s~c1A1s __ . PIRCH · · .... · · · · lb.69 HADDOCK . . ... lb.79 . ... MA YFRESH HEN SOLE :... ···· ...... 89': FISH Sll ... C ... IC ... s······· ··················lb. 98' TU.RKEYS USDA .3 GRADE A lb. BREllDfO -~!!~~~LAtlo ru· ·na'"·""O. ..:s12,, ...... " or ..... • ......... fb.69r lb. !~,!,!!E~~~-· . •. $ J 29 BONELESS CHUCK ROASTS lEAN-V(Etl TRIMMED ..... -·-------................................................................ -.......................... . ~!!!!!'!!»!.~~ .:'..~!:~~~ .. ~.~~~~ ... !.16 7 , . !!!.!~.~~.~-~.~~~-~~!~~·~···· ~.1 t 9 ~.~!!."~~9~~.:~~~~ ...... ················· 1~. lll8U ' LONGHORN CREIJD'AR 'CHEESE - .;., 9.0Z. ·PKG. ~ !~9!.~~~ .. ~~~?.~~~!~.......... . ~.129 ;~ • FAMILYSTEAKS / BONELESS ........................................... . TOP ~IRLOIN STEAKS BONEteSs ......................................... . ROUND STEAKS 80NELfSS .............................. . • • HotCrDU . ~ BUM ............ 11&.,r; ... •" Dpen·Facd 7t,. glltny Pie .. . 1.1 .. 11. , •• 1tc • • D~ll Nat . , 89' Loaf ............. 1111.~ 11o \IJ"~JJWWW11J1W • ; •. ·' • . • ' " " , } ,. ' • -·-------·-·· .. - . mau : FROZEN FOODS JOHNSTON FROZEN.9JN. CHERRY PI ES c REDDl-WIP TOPPI NG 59• lEAl CREAM 7 OZ. AERO CAN .< .. '. ............... , •••••• TREESWEE~ ORANGE JUICE · 4~s 1 12p Z.CAN 4tc ...................................................... " ............................... 60Z.CAN GREEN GIANT CASSEROLES SWISS CO~N, BRUSSEtS SPROUTS AU GRATIN , BROCCOLI AMANDINE, O~VILED SPINACH, HUNGARIAN CAULIFLOWER ..... •, .. . -CABBAGE 10' SOLID HEADS ........................... lb. ~N~!§o~t!~!~!.~~~-.... lb. 29( 1APPLE S o~~~:~s WASHINGTON STATE, LARGE SIZE ...... .. , .... lb.25' RU:SSET POTATOES PREMIUM SIZE .......................................................... lb. 10 ' l·lb. , .. H89.' l'n~!L~o WT. -•••.•• •OL 43' . ' ~ "' ADVERTISED PRICES EfFIOTIVE 7 FULL DAYS ?-THURSDAY FEI. 17 THRU WED~A Y fEI. 23 z ==· J' • . ' . ' " - 175 E. 17th St. .COSTA .t.iE$A , . . ' ' • ' SAVE40cWHIN YOU IUY 2 ~:~~K PUDDINGS I •• -WedntSdaJ, FebrUlfY lf>. 1972 OAlLV PILOT oi .. FISHERMAN 'S WHARF INSPIRE S SALAD Rice Stretches .. Budget Twice Budget-minded dishes-can make Interesting fa r e , tsi>i:ctally if_you borrQw._ smm: ldeas from West Coast cooka and use versatile rice. Fisherman's Wharf Rice Salad is a fiavorful bot salad, baked In a casserole with such pleasing accents as r I p e olives, celery and sliced green onion. The seafood In the dish can be a blend of canned shrimp and tuqa, or if you prefer, all tuna. Mayonnaise binds the mix· ture and gives It the salad terminology, and quick rice adds substance and B vitamins. The rict takes only rive minutes to prepare or left· over cooked rice can be used U you wlab. Thinly sliCed round steak is the nteat !or another entree that t's economical as well as deli&ut. Ita1ian Beef Is cooked·wlth a savory blend of onion, garlic, basil, beef broth and wine, then combined at the last minute with crisp green pep- per strips, olives arid cherry tomaloeo. Devilish Delight For Diners Thia crab dilh la dtvililh. DEVILED CRABMEA T ~ tabl.,poon1 butter 2 tablespooM Oour l teaspoon dry mustard l cup milk · ' . 2 teas:poons lemon juice l tabltJpoon mtnc.d panley 2 cups crabmeat \0 cup ooft bttad crumbs Make a white utlce with I tab!espoon1 of the bulter, the flour, mustard and milk : atlr in lemon juice and parsley. Fold in crab. Spoon lnto 8 wamlc crab abtbs or tlmllar utenslll. Mi% bread crumbs with rtmiining 2 tablapoona butter rmeltedl and 1prlnkle over crab ml1· lure. Btfote-_lf\f, liakt fi1 I preheated 400-dea:ree oven un- lU hot and topping Is lightly browned -20 minutes. Ma.ku I ,.rvlnp. •We Ul<d twoJ \\· ....,. cans ol klOI crab fn testing tb!J recipe.) Served---over--faat..cooklng ri ce, it'!i a Oavorfuh_ easy and w.elkbalanced entree --one that you can-serve to family or guests. FfSRERMAN'S WHARF RTCE · SALAD 2 cups quic'k rice, cooked 1112 cups sliced celery l can 16 o<Jncel) pitted ripe olives, drained and cut in halves 2 tablcspoona 1Iiced green onion I cup mayonnaise I can (7 01.inceS) tuna, drained and naked. I can (4~ ounce) 1hrlmp, drained and rinsed. C.Ombine cooked rice, celery, olives, a:reen onion a n d 1 mayonnaise; m1x well. Fold ln tuna and lhriri'lp. Spoon into shallow ! 'fNJUart casserole. Cover wtth aluminum foil, crimping it leCUl'ely to edaea: of casserole. Bake at 350 de- grees untll thoroughly heated, 25 to 30 mlilutea. Make• • to 8 1ervlngs. Note ; Two cant of t~ may be subttituted for 1 can of tuna and 1 can of shrimp. rt ALIAN BEEF z poun<IJ round 1teak 2 tableapoona 1hortenJna t "'P alic(d onion J clove garlic, minced 11, cup nour t can (10 ounce) con- denaed beef broth J cup dry red wine '4 cup water _11' teaspoons-bull 1 teaspoon ult 1{4 lea!p:>OR pepper I medium grem pepper I can fl ouncal pitied ripe ollvea, drained and balved crouwlse I cup cherry lomatod, washed 3 cups quick rice, ""'ked. Siieo lteU very thln. [ff partlally froun, .lleat will be ..,;., to slice thin.). Brown meat well in 1hortenln«:. Add onion and prflc and cook until onion II tendtr. Sprinkle wllh Dour : stir to eOat meat Add beef broth. wine, wale!'. be!ll, sail and pepper. Heat to simmer. C.Over and cook slaw· ly until meal II tender, 1 lo 1¥• houn. lltmovo ....i. •nLJ!!!n>-6uno lrom l?Hll .,_., "'t In hall. then in hort llripl. Juat before 1tt11I01. fold In green pepper llttpa, dpa ollv.. and cbmy tomllou and ht•t. Servo .. ,. bot oook· ed rlct. Strva six. ., ,, ... I I , ' ' " 1 I ~· • ' • U DAil Y l'!LOT w-.,. rtbnlM1 16. 1t12 WITH SALLIE EAT ... ALL KJNDS AIL FOODS .•• AIL PEOPLE ..• February the big birthday month , . . A genUe pause . . . Thank you George Washington and lhank you Abraham Lincoln . . . .. America, the land oC ~ brave and lhe free ... Think abqut it as you patrioUcally auberate over a tender· Oal:ed .uperbly juicy cher· ., pi. from the bakery .00 say to youreelf. "I caruiot td1 a lie. This ia the ·best bakery-baked pie I have ever eaten." Pcrhap.15 you'd like to try ~ new Bee Hive • Danlab pulry ' '' ' twisted round and round , filled with cuamy custard making flavor love wlth fruit. February ii also the birthday or the W<ighl Witcher magazine. Four yean old now and beginning on five. It ii alwafB ~ terestlng lo Watch a new mapzln< . . . Weight Watcher's reader irowth has been onward and UJ>' ward. Weight Watchers fro- zen dinners. introduced about two yean ago are here to stay. Jn "Paper Weight" a newspaper pu~ lisbed for members of Weight Watchers . . . and . there are many, with almost a hundred classes in Orange . County ... there's an id ' ' that sei, "Di Bar User~ Are Good Losers" IF YOU'RE WOA ON THE FATS AND SUGARS Di Bar is your cup of tea ... What do you mW mo!l when you're on a diet? The butter on top of things, the gravies, the salad dres:s;ngs. the aauco. the yummy deuerls. Try on some White Goddcs.'i' Dressin~ . over your broccoli or mix it with tuna. Ozzle your let- tuce in Green C.oddes.~. Marinade your steaks in French Dressing. Dunk your celery in 1000 Island. Slother your shrimp in Cocktail Sauce. Spread Blue Berry .Jam on your toast. Eal Ra11beri-}' C r e m e Cheese for dessert or 11. perfect lunch. Chili Sauce, Barbeque Sauce. Italian Sauce ... scrambled eggs. hot do~s. chicken, and fish never had it so good . That ttallan is !!Orne thing ~ Try spreading lt on toast with cheese and melt the whole thing under the broiler. Try heating some mushrooms in the Barbeque Sauce. Add the Chili Sauce to string beans. Have flavor taste fun and know you're eating skinny 85 ra r as ma yon· nai11es, oils. sweets 11re con. cerned . Di Bar Foods. even the delicate mar I na l e d mushroo~ n!t!d refri,l!:era· tion . Please look for them in the Delicatessen. BACK TO THE GOOD EARTH AND NATURAL THINGS In lhe Pretty Produce, Happy mouths are mun· chlng on Granola , mixed with apples. a I m o n d s . raisins or dates. Taste il this weekend, then splurge and buy a package for 15 cents. 'Great idea for the klds to snack on. Once you ,, open the little package and start nibblinJ::, you can't stop till it's all gone . And is it healthy! ... Old fashion · ed oats, brown sugar. wheat germ. sesame seeds. honey. soy grits. lecilhJn. brewer's yeast. sea salt . . . Especially delicious mixed with apple juice. even sprinkled on ice cream. George H. Funk the brain he.hind the Granola one-peo- ple munch package. was president of Laura Scudder who make noisy potatq chips and the good olly kind or peanut butler. They wanted tn send him lo SL Louis and he wanted to stay in California. He realized. in the big swing to rools and grill. nothing had been done In the snack neJd for kids, so he stayed in California and dood iL Richard's Markets. the People Stores, N e w p o r t Beach. whue w~ all sell sq uid 1nd prime .~teaks and black walnut flavoring . \ s~"k~~ Hills Bros. Coffee 1 LB. 79¢ Hills Bros. Coffee.2 La.1.57 Hills Bros. Coffee 3 LB.2.29 KNUDSEN FIRST QUALITY BUTTER 1 LI. 85¢ ' SUNSHINE KRISPY CRACKERS 1 LI. 37¢ PILL~SURY PIE CRUST MIX 11 oz. 23¢ BAKE A CHERR'f PIEi COMSTOCK CHERRY PIE FILLING "0 •· 43¢ 1 ' • •• ihe BIG BONUS IN NATURAL (AND HEALTH) FOODS IS GOOD. NUTRITION , BUT BEST OF ALL THEY'RE DELICIOUS , TOO! On our shelves you'll find whole grain cereals, breads and crackers, like Jack Lalanne Soya Crackers, honey, sesame and avocado oils , El Molino Stoneground ·flours including 41°/0 protein Gluten Flour. There are natural juices, see salt, Grenola, Vegeroni -end, of course, lots of fresh fruits and vegetables -and the freshest ere at Richard 's. See the really marvelous selection of natural foods we have! ;;;:-:-•.. . • '• -'*-.. ---~ RICHARD'S CARRIES THE FINEST SELECTION OF U.S .D.A. CHOICE AGED BEEF, ALWAYS CAREFULLY TRl~MED Of FAT AND BONE . BONELESS I CHUCK ROAST 1.09LB. M•rin•d•s add piquent fl•vbrs to b.ef ro•sti, beiid•s tenderit.ing the f!'leet. Try one! · , 7-BONE ROAST Economical & flavorful. Cut info large chunks, marinate in Teriy1k i end Barbecue it. S&rV• with seuteed mushrooms • CROSS RIB ROAST 98c ... Perfect for pot roasting with fresh ve9et.ables! THE RENAISSANCE MAN ON THE GEORGE H. ENGL. ISH ST.YLE SHORT RIBS 59¢ LB. ~~N~NiE~~~~~~s N~\~~~tiz~ob~.E REBIRTH NOW A HEALTHFU( FOOD IN A DELICIOUS Succulent little ribs that lend themselves to sauce wi1erdry. SNACK FORM-GEORGE H. FUNK DIET WATCHERS LOVE, F .. ooh , lt.•li.,, Thou,.,d STEW ·BEEF , . ' F h ft 39 " • -LHn •nd boneleu. renc e e S1l1d drtuing 8 01. I' CALIFORNIA CHICKENS ARE FRESHER ANO 1.39 LB. Granola Snack ~ •. 2 FOR 25¢ GLORIETTA SLICED ELBERTA PEACHES 17 oz. 4for$1 GLORIETT Ai WHOLE PEAR HALVES 16 01. 4for$1 GiORIETTA PEELED APRICOTS 17 01. 4for$1 A PROTEIN SNACK! LAURA SCUDDERS Virginia Peanuts ~;~ 3 FOR $) PILLSBURY CHERRY, STREUSEL OR PECAN ) Bu.mR COFFEE CAKE MIX GLAD OVEN BAGS COLD WATER WASH WOO LOVE SCOPE MOUTHWASH THE BEST YOU'VE EVER EATEN! RICHARD'S OWN , LOIN RIIS 10 C.l. 16 Ot. 11 oz. 49¢ 39¢ 39¢ 1.09 BARBECUED RIBS 1.89 LB. ARDEN'S COUNTRY STYLE COTIAGE CHEESE PINT 35¢ KRAFT SLICED American Singles 11/1 LI. 1.39 OSCAR MAYER BRAUNSCHWEIGER I 0%. 39¢ OSCAR MAYER SANDWICH SPREAD I OZ. 39¢ LAUGHING COW GRUYERE PORTIONS • 0%. 59¢ FROM SWI TZERLAND, TOGGENBURGER SWISS WAFERS •oz. 3for$1 WHAT IS MOR E NATURAL THAN FRESH BAKED BREADS ANO PASTRIES 7 GRAINS. WHOLE WHEAT, BRAN, RYE, CORN, GLUTEN, SOY GRITS & FLAX SEED Golden Indian Bread 43¢ SEEDED DINNER ROLLS 6 for 29¢ 7" LEMON MERINGUE PIE 79¢ Filled with c1rtmef, pecan• end coconut DANISH ROLLS 6 for 31¢ SEITER.TASTING-THEY'RE THE ONLY KIND WE HAVEi WITH RAISINS, APPLES, DA TES o• "LMONDS. YOU'LL SE AMAZED-KIDS LOVE 'EMI CHICKEN LEGS and THIGHS Hind cut 79¢ DEMO. FRI. & SAT ., FEB. 18, 19 LB. IN CASSEROLES, SAUC ES, MEATS, Chicken i1 rich in protein, minerali and niacin. IEAUTIFULL Y FRESH CHICKEN BREASTS -H•nd cut . 98¢ LB. MUSHROOMS 'h LB. V•ry l••n and cleliq\,tful in gourmet recipet. Richard's BULK SAUSAGE 79c LI. Add 11vor to meat loaf, 1tuffed cabbage or p8pptrs. JIMMY DEAN lfrom c1refully ra ised ho9s l LEAN PORK TENDERLOIN .... ,.u 1.69 LI. FLOWN IN FRESH FROM BOSTON LITTLE NECK CLAMS IN TH' SHILL 89c LI, NORTHERN TURBOT FILLETS • ,,.et fer tlte dl.t C•KIOft 89c ... IMAGINATIVE COOKERY WITH VERY LITTLE EFFO RT STUFfED -PORK CHOPS 1.39 LI. Bre ise in 1/J C. white wine. 1/2 Marinated DUCKLING 98c LI. Orange Wine Sauce make1 this unusual. AD PRICES EFFECTIVE FEBRUARY 17 , 18, 19, 20 CLOSED FEB. 21 -WASHING TON'S BIRTHDAY A RICH SOURCE OF VITAMIN A-DELIGHTFUL IN LUtilCHES FOR DESSERT ANJOU PEARS 5 LBS. $1 GOOD SOURCE OF MINERALS- ALL PURPOSE RUSSET POTATOES 10 B':6 49¢ ~;vJ~~"' STOUFFERS MAKES IT GREAT! Spinach Souffle 12 oz. 39¢ MACARONI & CHEESE 11 oz. POTATOES au Gratin Escalloped Apples Scolloped Potatoes WELCH 'S 11 1/1 OZ.· 12 oz. 1 J oz:. 39¢ 39¢ 39¢ 39¢ GRAPE JUICE 11 0%. 39¢ GREEN GIANT Swiss Corn Casserole GREEN GIANT 1 l ••· Broccoli & Noodles "0•· 39¢ ....... 39¢ GREEN GIANT '• Deviled Spinach e11trcrth• 1 J 01. 39¢ · GREEN GIANT-AU GRATIN Hungarian Cauliflower 1J oz. EGGO WAFFLES I ceunt KERNS Strawberry Helves 16 oz. EXCLUSIVELY LIDO RICH SILKS, COTTONS, RAYONS, El(. QUl~EL Y FASHIONED INTO STUN· N~··· FABRIC Fl.OWERS M1ny vivid col~rs end kinds . ~ 10o/o OFF TWO MORE LIDO EXCLUSIVES-- 39¢ 39¢ 39¢ YACHT SHOP AND HOME & GIFT SHOP '- HARBOR VIEW 1660 Mac Arthur, Newport LIDO CENTER 3433 Via Lido, Newport Beach OPEN DA1LY9 -71 SUN.9 -& OPEN DA1LY9 - 8. SUN. 9 -6 • ' ~. • l • \ ' ' • ' • .. • • • • ,, • _W_.;•c..d'.:_".:_d•".:i..'-r:..:'':.::"":c"c.l:..:&:.c, l:..:97:..:2:_ ____ cA!l y PILOT 5 .. CoinParison PrOves • • • • IS the Lea der with Everyday ~ PRICE · -~ FROZEN FOODS FROZEN FOODS VEGETABLES •••• ".~.~·~:42• FISHSTICKS •••• ~~:so · OCEAN PERCH ••••• ".:':~79• PIZZA ROLLS ••••••.• ~65• PIPPflll)MI & OH5l. s.ws.w:gom, HIM' & OfEBE CHERRY PIE ••••••• ~76• HONEY BUMS ••••••. ~i::36• ' PACKAGED GOODS o-"FROSTING 8ErJA~C:~:41• .,.. POTATO BUDS .::.".',.~"':::t .07 .,.._JOLLY TIME •· •••• ,:35• .,..CANDY BARS ...... :,\'~34' otulicH, PLAIN OtXOtATt, OR A!MCllOCHOCOl..lTt· ' SOUP MIX •••• "'.":'?':'1';~:10• PET FOODS FRESH PRODUCE FRIED'HALIBUT •• ;,e:aa· RUSIET FLAKES • ?:''.~=41• DINNER •••••• ''!'~sm• ""-;:: 57• .,.._ IRAn DINNEl".::..~.\l49• .QRE·IDA POTATOES ~=38• .,.-ROYAL MIX •• ~~rlz":l48• UlGI SUNKIST FANCY ' NAVEL ORANGES ~~: 19c ' Low Discount Priced Health & Beauty Aids JOHNSOl'S BABY PRODUCTS ·HEALTH. LB . U.S. NO. 1 GRAD£ RUSSET POTATOES 10a~G37c BABY .. POWDER ,,oz._94c BABY ~ !!l>Yl !!; lotion LOTIOI • cn: •..••.. 99c FEATURING WASHINGTON STA Tl DtLICIOU'S APPLES 01 ~ -, ..= :r~~ .. -10 0%--~.1 1 • BRECK MICRlll J/ !"~!,!~O M!t!!l"!ASH' ~ .... llM .......... ~.-, ..... "'' Ory or Oiiy $ ·119 gorgle In one. $124 ·!;~f~ 2·1:2:. :..:.!.";'tr!~ .. hair, 11 0% 11 0% t lALDWIN PAft • 11940 ._. •L ._ CANOGA PAil • 7224 M•-Mt. VASELllE HAIR () l •··~R.v.I :O..C::i~.;~·~...:"t: °"· SPRAY /COIOITIOIER WILKINSON ~.'.'::u~·.~.; ~~.:.!::: l:;.. Does two jobs 19 BLADES ~ GUNDAll ·'°'"So.'"'"''"· 'I ot L-ld s 1 A K 29 c ~ lllGMWU> PAb • 1J3 w. AnMt 4J one.a; ~~ S 0% t •'I 81;!l HUNTINGTON llACH • tOS1 Atl•tll Att. and cond1t10ns. 7 'Sovingsl 5 S · u MIUDA. i.. Mina Sii.,,., Cta. • llllWOOO • llkn ... Slri ...... Ow. . TIDE LAUNDRY DnERGEllT LAWHOAU ~ 14411 ~ ·~--"" .;~For whlterwhlte1 ond brighter colors every wosh.171 OX BOX $2ll ::c:l~~~;~:;~~·~ . .. EER tAUllDRY DETERGENT I. lOS ANGttis. 34os I. lftHtjl .... I :· !!!!ula•ed to. ,,;,rk In Hot. Worm or Cold water.14•0:t BOX 5141 :::E~ri.::tl.::!~ - OlANGl • 2620 t at....,. """ , o!!t! .. ~!~ng·!!!~ .. ~~hl!~~}!ltox 5235 ~!~"i::,~~~E:E~-- ,..-.. "V UN 'tDIO • 1•36 • 2St~ St. ~ !,!!.~ ~~!!! fi~~a~h~bl!OW~~! IO~ 87 C ~1~:~l~~~~::~~~ • TOHANCI • ..0 S.,.il"t1' aw, .:!!t~!.~ .. !!!~d~a~jrv~!1~!AB~!!' aox$229 i,"~~~~!'*72:~ . •oy Lln 1u10 PETER GENT ::::::: : :~~ l'.':.:.:·:w. " ~ 81 ( WU.MINGTOM • tm ICt. ,, ... •Gell dlsh~s cl~an rlQht down to tho shine. U Oi 111'1.'. ......... NIW • ,_......., .... ~---------------------llliii"Wl~lli~li'~lliWji. .,...,, te knt• Y • :;f,,? ROUND STEAK ~~~~~~~ s 1 09 QUAUT'I' ll:Ell 80HE·IM . LB CHUCK ROAST .:,r-.w::::, 6 7L~ CENTER CUT .. 75c LB !!~.,!!,~!!!-.: ......... u 99c !7~~.~.t~!~.~~ ... ,-... u $1 49 ~~,.!~!!! ...... ___ .. s 114 f.~Jl!~~!~.~~.~. ~!.~~~s 1 ss FRESH FRYERS USOA G .. o•• 29c WH0!.£100V c-NtCICEHS LB 2V•-.l LIS .. UNCONDlnONALLY 80NDID11 bond 11 your money back guarant.. of cOmplete tatl1 faction, on e¥ery. cut of our meat • . ~!R~.~ .!'.'!.~~~!! ...... s 1°9 ~.~!!!! ,!~.~~···--·-.<• 65c R~J.:~rcv~!~!~ ..... , ..... 34 c LENTEN, SUOGUTIONSI ~ol;!.~~!~!.~~!~~~77c ~!~~.!~~., ......... _.55c !!!;:··:·:::~l·s_.? 1 ~ !~~~.~.!!~~.R. .. ~~~.~.~ 83c !!~.~!!~.!o, ................ Ste ··~··~· ................ _79 !!l~ ... ~~!~ .. !~.!~_a3c _ --~- tuR101 FILLET .. : .. sac PORK SIUSIGE . s 112 T~~~ • BREADED PERCH 79c ,,,.,.. ..... M, .............. _ suers , ... .coot<_••, ...... ····::·······,._. ... __ ..:. _Jllll.DEILSIUSIGE••-c µDY ur BREADED SOLE 97c '°'"'"°'"l'" .. ~'0'.'-=p•:VJ. SIJClD ... .coo•••··············--···'" FULLY COOKED Hll 68c 69c llULLSHANIC~H~K~•MOY•D •• L8 BACON =i:~ If you're b;"ki-~g for a special cut of meat· if you'd like on extn>iorge or extra-small roost ·. just osk for our meat mOI'), He'll glod~ prepare any cut to your own specifications, at no additional charge, of course. .fuclut(!f9 DISCOUNT CENTERS ARE DtFFERENT! · Bigger t n a Supermor et. re t an o Variety store! On-thtMpot shopping for a pan or a pantsuit! •• A rug or a rake I •• A blanket ora bike I And much , much more •• at money saving low discount prices I CHtNI Ut VIL VtT LOUNGER PILLOW 15" x 2A" size, tossel frim, s2•1 foam filling. Asst'd bright .colon. FRESH DELI ITEMS LONGHORN CHEESE1101 "" :::.:''.'.~~~'-~ •• ~~~ .•• 5.".~~~ 73c BISCUITS "",• :Z' ,~~~ • IUTillMJllOISWUYMU ... .... 8 CHEESE .~~,: .. -• UDY UI IMlllCAN, Plllmo, SWl9 ~.~!~~a~~!f~~ .... ~~.~~ sa• ~'!~~~NEES~ .... •oz,.. l S• All MEAT WIENER.S ~l: 83; OSCAI MATll (PUll IUf fUNU ISc) ••••••••••••••••••••••••• ~.!M,!~1!~, .~~1t· SMOKIE LINKS ascu .. ru ......••• 120111089" •• Thia 1ymbaf denoteo those ttems avcriloble ONLY at DISCOUNT CENTERS. NCMRON r<'USLJN PILLOW CASES Choose from on · .. sottmenlof $1~ colorful prints ~ Lo oPER • GUEST ioWiL /v~ 1. · · FUR iu·as 48·c Fringed cot· 19 ¥-~ ,j PLACEMATS tA. ton terry: c { . , :~f Deep-pile modoc:rv11c 01st'd colors. EA..' ,. "fura"; oval 1hope, k : decorator oolors. s221 ANGIL FOOD ·~ Washable, tool CAKE PA It tr-::.11:t:::. ........ ' Chll!bn 86 ' COOKIE ~~;;~vi~ s 1 Ji . ·~, , 'H-~ ~uHtvEETS heavy quality. '!} , ..... ,-u brlg~t plated · steel: 12" 68C MnAL x 18" size. TRIVETS file lnt'et, .,..t resist-6JC ant rubber feet. Asst. UACIC LENITA PANTY HOSE ........................ : .. 66c MIN'S KNiiRTiiil1 RT ~ All out1t®dln9 selec· • tlon of cotton-knits; high crew neck, short sleeves, cholc• of &alids, •tripes ond tone-on-ton• patterns • s.M-l·Xl. . . $2'' NOT AVl.ll.t.lll AT 5AflffA MONICA "OJI P~Cl Pillli'11~ PQUC( GIJAIAH1U5 llllUIJCIS 10 llEllfh."!MltOM WllHSDo\Y. HL l6TW TlllOOGll lU!SOAY. Ill. 22ND 19Jl". ' I . . I 1- 1 '' -. ' . .. ' ' . i I I I y! • r . , ' .. • • • . - '· ff DAILY PILOT .... . -. - \ ·'1-~ iii'i ~'' -<~~ ' 12-0Z .. , 99 c <...L.;;. CANS ,, PACK ROSE', BURGUNDY, PiNK CHABLIS, ___ CJ:IM!JS I Y!.U SCOTCH ••. • -$444 Scots Mist Deluxe ..... ""' .. -W;odbrldge aourb'on .... $3'' ,..,ot QF CANAR• s3 ,,. Con•alan Whisky ..... ""' UEl,ICATESSE:'\'-'l'H EA'l'S LAND 0 ' LAKES K CHEESE e OSf.AR ~I A YER QUA Ll'l'Y All Mut 8olo1na ................ .-.... ssc All Bed BolOl" ................. '"· S7c All Meat aolll" ................ " ... 7'< AU Beef.Bol1fn1 ................ i1 ••. 12c Th ick SJlcd II Mui Bolo1n1 . ,, ... 7'c Thick Sliced All Beel Bologni ....... Uc CHERRY,,TURNOVERS ...... 5 7c Ol' VIRGINIA ·100°/oBEEi' FRANK c .. ------·------_, . . I • N PILOT-AOVERTISEft S FAmlly ·a1scounT TICKETS AT THRIFTlmA.RT 11 :J',i~·~:.:-::·;::·~.;:::;::. ..... :.·.· .. ::::·.::.::.:\t', . ... n11l •.it1i .. ft>tl.-,T1t1Nu •.• __ ........ ;"" :: ... I · Iii/$,. ..... _,, , .. Nlf' .......... _ .. ~ ......... . • JJI' ~1•1• h lit11 ll1 ... lu~1J• ................ ,. It I SEA WORLD . ' > • I ' ... , )•l)t ••ll•llOUUl1•ll ... llt ... ll~., ... .,,,,.,_,,,,_,lt J I Wllll!+.$.lljl llW fl A f ·•llhctihcllht,lt11tt•l11 ...................... 11 . CWI' A CO U °'" ·1 H <I ·" \ I\ I • "" '· """'"" "'·· "" '"'" ................. · " ' \OUU1··roY<k:l't·KA l l.\11\'ll):'\ •l!M .... Jatll11t.l"•uff"U ............... 11: t • 111111111.1 t1J11<1 l1tf .W lna.t1l1K ................ .ll Kltt41 l~f IU111l4• •1til!l ........ , •. .,,,,..,.II I 1uu.,1.hfuh•i ........................... Il l --MISSIO N BAY -SAN DIE GO m ..... '""'''" ...... .. • "' ~I~~.~ i~: ~!~~,·~~···::::.~::.-::.~:::::::::~~ ~ TICKETS £;oo n FEB. 11th thfu 1-'EB. 29th, 1912 11s.1 .... , .. , M•lfl•m• ................. 11 0 Ad ' ' p • II h d E h'b l <Mlh11t ... ,,, ... , ...... '"""H""""'""""" lf ! ne m1ss1on rice Coven A S ows an x 1 its ""' •• , .. 11.t.u1 11, .. ", ................... 111 hlll!I llt(, W11"1'j llolll ............... .., ... , 11 1 TH! BEST ENTERTAINMENT IN THE WEST! Cj»UPON GOOD ANY DAYI I: WI!::.~·~::·;::~~.:::'.'.:::::::::::::::::::::::::.':,', '1'11Hlt'1'1~1All'l''S DISCOL':\'f t •n•;s 11 •'HLTI' '" \'EGETABl.ES U.S. NO. 1 RUSSET POTATOES BAG U~• ,-y.o.r.OL BOWL CLEANER "DEL MONTE " TOMATO SAUCE 8-0Z. IRIS POWDERED ~ DETERGENT f-iREsn1iow£tt sA RRIViN1;0AIL\~l I HOUSE FRESH I I -.-&!:~!.!l!. I BOUQUETS! CALIFORNIA WALNUTS ........... ,..39' ~i.69c ~~~~T 45c ' l 99c ~9c l I 'IN. P~US PLUS · I I POTS r ... x TAX I ·------------------------- CfllO •• , ... (';, -I 01 IA('; 19c CHIO •• , ... Gr -l·ll, l •G 29' BEAN SPROUTS ... •G•• CHOP SUEY ........ , .. •G<• L&tl(";f Sl/f 99 l,Sl!SWftr 8 7 THISTLE PRUNES t~ c· ORANGE JUICE .v~~.:. c E\'l'H .\ lllSC(>t :~T (I' TlllUFTl\IAl('l"S FIUIZE'< f<'(Hll>S BIRDS EYE VEGETABLES "INTERNATIONAL'" 10 oz. MORTON DINNERS .. ~ ~-=-co:--ALL VA RIETIES FROZEN • , <l:ml• f'roMn Dinn'en REG . SIZ E EA. (B~ef, Chic~•~ onrl O.implin_91 <49c) TllRIF'l'IMAR'l''S G<>LI> B()NI> 'fENDER AGEi> S'l'EER BEEF CHUCK .. ___ .... ROAST ·- FULL SHANK HALF e BUTT PORTION .......... 67~ HAM SLICES ............ 'I~! WHOLE HAMS ........... 69~ • • -,.... --~·1 . i~. --. ' -. -Ot'f llll '"'-38' HASH llOWN POTAlOll ..... C>IKO""°.ll'O 23' MACAIONI & CHHll ..... ~:~. 11111CIOl.I) • , 22 ' PICTSWrn PIA! ........... •::. •lll.1v1i111TI1S"'l""tljl\l"Ut•• .. 11'-l 33' CHICllll80ARD llfTllHS , .'.~ .. (;l"IQ'I ~'US.GfO' as · PIPPUOlll PIUA ....... .':::. *tOt<11!40L .. t1t1• • ' $JH lllADED FISH ITKll .... .'.~-. ,~ ""G"" '"o" l'''""''" -"°° ... .,..o SJlt ~ SHOITCAKl-Nn¥1 ~!-. jOO"''"°'"T"IGOU-nitor..... h-. $,If. llUADlll FAllTAIL IHllMP .. ''"bf o a.-sc .. 1t1!N 110 c"uu 36, ' lllCHILAOA INTRH5'.' • ~'-lllfN>T$'\li()••IM!•·1~1to • '2" UlADID FA NTAIL SHllMP ·,. KRAFT VELVEETA LOAF ,! $119 REAL WHIP WHIPPED TOPPING or,39c COFfEE • FOLGER'S WllOERNES!o CMER~Y Pie f.illing JOHNSTON'S FllOZEN 38-0Z. CHERRY PIE 35%MORE68C FRUIT PURE VEGETABLE SHORTENING CRISCO-. ' 3·l8, ·95.c TIN ~~~~.-~::-":~F~lE~IS~C~HM~A~N~N~'S~~~"i;;. ·.~:·:~; MARGARINE IMO • . PT.37c ~· :.'"'."" a ~1.LB. c DRESSING ~---:::::-39 · > ,_.. • ,.1 CTN. ·~ ~•;.ii-. ---.:..:· ·_,... . . 2701 HARBOR .BLVD ... COSTA MESA e 13922 BROO.KHURST, · G~RQEN GROVE ·, A 1308 W. EDINGER SANTA ANA 5858 WARNtR, HUNTINGTON BEACH e 23811 EL TORO, EL TORO ~ • • '• \ 1 • ·- • - Texa·ns' Tricks Delight DEAR. NAN: When we were ln San Antonlo we ate at a hotel where Cbty served a delicious seafood cocktall. It. bad grapefruit, 1hrimp and crab ln It but I don't bow wbat made the sauce so good. Can you help? MARCELLA MACE, OMAHA You're in luck. At Christmas J received a box of some of the biggest grapefruit and oranges I .have ever seen. Right on top was an unusual . and colorful 2G-recipe folder . It includes a Rudy Red Grapefruit Seafood Cocktail . That just has to be it. Cut 4 red grapefruit in half, remove sections with a ae.r- rated fruit spoon, rf¥rving 2 tablespoons of the juice for the aauce. (Drink the r~st.) · Add 2 cups of miied' shrimp and ~rabmeat, well chilled. LET'S ASK lHE COOK by Nin~ Pour over it a "red ·sauce" mixture of cup chili sau~. 2 tablespoons grapefruit juice. 1 teaspoon minced onion, I,\ teaspoon Worcestershire sauce and \4. teaspoon Tabasco. Chill agiln. Now line well drained DOUBLE BLUE CHIP STAMPS -111 WITH THIS COUPON I VOID AFnR .SUNDAY, FEI. ZO I NO MINIMUM PUii.CHASE-NO MAXIMUM PURCHASE . . ONE Oii.DEil ONLY ANY AMOUNT •OOD ONLY AT U.11.ISAIN IA.SKIT :a: NESCAFE INSTANT COFFEE 6 01. Jal' With thi1 coup11l'I, no 111i11l,.,ul'l'I pUrch••• ••q11'r11tl. l !mJI I l•r P•• coupo11 -0111 co upon pt• cu1IOl'l'll'· Vo id •'*•r Sundty, F1 bru1ry 20. ClOOD ONLY AT IA.II.GAIN IA.SKIT HEA LTH ~ BEAUTY AIDS MICRIN MOUTHWASH llt 1 Plitt 2 Fl. 01. lottl• ll .. 11lar SI .St A Ot!Mir StMft CREST TOOTHPASTE EXTU; LARGE SIZE -5 OZ. TUIES REG It~ IACH AT OTHER STORES SPRINGFIELD HAIR SPRAY IJ OZ CAN 98' grapefruit ahells with crisp 1 ,..,....,,,.. ____ _..._.._ ___ ...._,....,, greens, fill wjth S e a f o o d cocktaU1 These would be a spectacular start for any din-GERBER ner party. Strained Baby Food ........ 12 for S 1 Pull-on Pants ........ , ..... 3 for $1 Pull-on Shirts .............. 2 for $1 Pull·on Training Pants ....... 2 for S 1 · Another one I I i k e d especially well w a s a grapefruit glaze for ham. When your ham .is ready to glaze. usually the last ha~! hour or so, insert grapefruit sections into deep . scores in 1.--I a il~l'3 ~:I l·I·l ·J..M-...., BIRDSEYE INTERNATIONAL the fat. bold with picks .. Then bruSh thickly with a mixture of l cup honey, 1 cup brown sugar and Vi cup fresh grapefruit juice, basting often. AU the reCipes l tried were so good I wrote the grapefruit organization asking U. it would be possible to haye enough of the folders to share with you. They· complied al once ao if you would like to have one ol these folders just send me a long sell-addressed, stamped envelope. VEGETABLES e JAPANESE _e _SPANISH e MEXICAN e BAVARIAN e DANISH e PAR'ISIAN e HAWAf.fAN 10 Oz. SARA.!.EE_ PASTRY SALE! ALL REG. 89c AND 98c VARIETIES DEAR NAN: I goofed and ~----............ -.. ____ ._..__~ threw aat a· recipe, one of my ..... · husband '• faYorttes. It wu tor Algtrlan Spinach. Coald you tell me where I have a chance of !indlq HT II had -ut batter 1n IL ~IRS. J. B. TYSON, PASADENA, Md. . ' - l .. CRISCO SHORTENING 3 LB. CAN 79' - • • . • •. t • , • , ' "., "' I -----· -· ALL CONCENTRATED DETERGENT Jumbo Slit - 9 Lb. 13 Oz. Box Reg. 119 Wilk thit coup011, no l'l'llnlmuTl'I putcht•• ro1:1ulr1G. Lim!+ I hw pe r coupon -On1 co11pon p•r cu1lom••• Void tfitr Sundty, F1bru1ry 20. to 7 p.m. Readera. I do love to help when I can but I do need more than s k i m p y descriptions. Recipe titles often mean nothing. Thi• one may have ALASKAN FRESH FROZEN 9 bttn dreamed up by someone _ _ :ii':!~·:;~~ be:; ~i:~a~ SALMON WHc°RLE c ·II Perhaps some.one e!se knows . HALF lb whal the lady 1s talking about. I would love lo hear CENTER SLICE SALMON STEAKS '1" LI. M•11 Wllrt reor•h ltl•t " <•""I'' orOYlds oe-r10111l '"'.,....r' to"""' COOIC·,'---------..,-------------. l"'I outst!Oft1o, 11111 au.stion1 of 11-r• \ -l111trn l wm bt ,.,._red 111 l'itlr col· llf'Tll -.ocirns vour ount!on1 lo ""'" WI,.;, 111 ar1 llf !1!t OAIL..Y Ptl..OT. Flavor Contrasts Chives and cheele add ex- cel.lent navor cantrast. I POTATO CHEESE PUFF 21k pounds potatoes, S large ~ USDA CHOICE . or 8 medium 1 s9 II& .cup milk 2 eggs. separated s T E A K 11,1,: teaspoons salt I Talla&<0 ... UC4' to tule ' ' . . LB. "'teaspoon bakiDa powder PRINCESS BRAND-FRESH •BELTVILLE _____ ....;.._ ________ _ BONELESS TOP SIRLOIN j~j.~.; · ~,tR TURKEYS 49~ ,.....,·=-""· waler 'and boU until tender-XLNT FOR BAR·S.0 BAR 'M "CUM" HICKORY SMOKED r. TAVERN • • ,. :!' ~ ' ••••• r'_ •• SMUCKERS HIGH 'RISE . 'CHERRY PIE 1119 2 Lb. 6 0..-Sfn R ... 1.29 With ff>h ••upo11, 110 1111111..,uM purch11 • ••11-'•••· U.lt I P•• coupo11 -011t coupon ptt •u1to111•r. Void •hit Sw~ty, f•br11ttY 10. -,-~~1'\11 -----·--- -I MARCAL F..tc fal Quality Z·Ply TOILET TISSUE Pkg. Of 2 Roll1 19' WJtk lhl1 co11po11, II& 111l11i111u"' purch•11 rt -ulre4, Lfmlt I Jl:•t · ptr c11upo11 -On1 coupo11 p•• cu1to'"''· Vold tfftr S1,111Clev, F•br11t ry· 10. • I a i] f3: I~ il•l ·1•31-- ·MUSHROOMS ' FRESH DAILY Y2 Lb. 39c ·aROCCQLI FRESH · 19c LOCAL ' SWEET "N" JUfCY NAVEL 'ONION$ MIL-0 -. ~·2~ 9c SPANIS>f ~s ' GRAPEF-RUIT :~rttY 2~29c RUBY " . RED • . ' Pl!T NON DAIRY CQFFEE CREAMER 11• 16 oz. JAl 59' JACK SPRAT TOMATO CATSUP MJB . .,. 20 oz. IOTTLll INST ANT COFFEE 10 oz ..... MJB COFFEE ' It LI. CAN l lcl 1 U. CAN NAllKO nCA.N IHOmUAD COOIUIS 1 u. IA• •••. ,,, IOl'T )MmlAL ·MARGARINE u. 49' ii oz. oom.1 53' Prlc•• lffectkes Th1nday tliru Sun~ Felt. 17, 18, 19, 20- Men . ...,.., te lfOdl .. "-'· WI GLADLY l<ec:IPT U.S.D FOOD COUPONS about 25 minuta: drain. Wilbl---------------------- electric mixer, beat af high ..... M HIClOh' IMOUD . ~ad:W/~1-::'!~Y~ BULK SLICED BACON ~ egg yolks. Add 11tt, tabuoo, boldna powder and chlv .. ,, _______________ _,_ _____ _ mis well. B<at egg whites un-. ' HAMS 1~ I 79~ b1 1tiH: fold Jn. Fold In OUI OWN ••ou•• IHOULDH -7n.u. ~-1nto-... 1nchpiep11i.BEEF f»ATIIES 11 u .oox 11t11 7• U5DA CHOICE 5E-VEN·BONE WHOLE OR HALF and pile high In center. B11<tl----------------'"''------ tn a prellelled 37Mqree oven s Ks ~ mmutu Maka ...... iUiio'T FILLETS 69'u. TEA . - STARS 11-------------------·-"--USDA CHOICE BONELESS LEAN . 8~. STEWING BEEF wmM •UIN f(D IONUUS IOWD . PORK ROAST • , • I • \ 79~ I - "I WI GM 11.Uf CHll' STAMfl'S COSTA M£SA ~lACOOIA ,_ WIGIVI 11.Ul CHll' nAMl'S 19tll and Placentia 710 w. Cbainaa • • ' I ~· • I 'I • ' , I -.•. 4a DAILY PILOT • Hot Salad Slimming - .. Potatoes lnriocent of High Calorie Count 15y BARBARA GIBBONS m I J d I Y· t I avored wiener (any brand) flake s tender but not 1nushy, Peel with the vinegar. HltJe calories.) side dishes, send I 1el,f-ad- 1ehnitzet. 3 tab1e!!poons mlnc.ed onion '~ cup boiling \Yater and slice into a deep txnvl.· Toss lightly and s e rve Low Calorie Potato Pa n· dressed stan1ped en vel ope and Pity the poor potato! At HO.T GEll~IAN p OT AT o u, teaspoon sail h teaspoon granulated beef Add the bacon bits, onion, salt, warm. Makes six servings, 84 cakes, Mock Sweet PQlalo 25 cents to Slim Gour1net Ua· barety 100 calories, he'1 really SALAD 11 teaspoon corasely-ground bouillon pepper and parsley flakes. calories each: (Add some Pudding, Sweet and Sour Cab-ll enrd of Veget1Jble.~. in ea rl quite I harmless f e 110 w I'" und t to pepper '. .d 11' I lb bo ·11 . th h ped . kl r . . l b e. d' d c f o'f lhl>' ,,, ... ., .. ,,Mf, 16 1~1uo1·1 d 11 hls ... __. u po s po ti e~ ~ cup c1 er vinegar :11sso ve e u1 on 111 e . l' op pie es or a p1qua11 age, lo.an 1e arrots -or .... ,.. ,..~ •"' esp e wlc1.C\O reputation i tab.1.,_s bacon bit.t 2 teaspoons dried pa rsley Boil t.he potatoes u n ti I OOiling waler and add, along flavor if you like -they add these and other deca!orized Rond. Cranford. N.J. 070~6-among dieters. ,---''-'--'--------'----'--'-----'-------"-----'--=----'-----'---_;__;_ __ _;_ __________ __c__ lt'1 a case of guilt by assoclatJon -Vt"itl1 deep fat. butter, sour cream, rich gra\lies and all sorts or calorific companions. A Potato really is a "navor sponge" with an uncanny knack of 50pplng up double its calorie count in butter or sauce. Yet who can get very e1.cited about a plain. un- buttered, ungravled, unsauced spud! Slnce the potato ls very fill· ing and no 15louch in the vitamin category, let's take advuitage of it.s spongelike akill al absorbing flavors and turn it into a diJh that seems so sinfully fattening that you'll led guilty enjoying it .•.. hot Gtrman.style Potato palad. Now bot potato salad baa; nothJng whltsoever to do with the bland, creamy, cold stuff that se,ems to go with paper plates and underdone hot dogs. The U.S. Department of ~lcuJt~ "'official " calorie count for' mayonna ise-base potato 1alad !s 164 calories for a four-ounce serving, but I've Ren some heavy • hantled scoopers who can do a lot better than that. Of course, German-style potato salad can be fattening, too, If you follow a traditional recipe that calls ror fatty fried bacon end aome bacon grease throWn In for good measure. • OU. Slim.. Gourmet Hot Potato Salad &Ma no fat at all, because we make use of those' wonderfully-convenient bottled "'bacon bits" that are actually smoky, bacon · flavored slivers· of · auper-pro- lefn soy. - There are a few brands on the market now, and they average around 25 to 30 calories per ta ble spoon , depending on the brand. Thls potato side dish is only M caloriu a serving, and it's a marvelous accom1>11nlment to a simple side dish like broiJ.. ed 'burgers or chicken, or a A Step Saved The pastry does not have lo be rolled out. PECAN TARTLETS 2 tablespoons bulter Yt cup firmly packed dark brown sugar J,: teaspoon vanilla I egg . 1/3 cup dark co m syrup 113 cup coarsley chopped pecans Pastry SheUs, see below In a smell mixing txnvl cream butter. sugar and vanilla ; beat in egg, lhen l'!yrup; stir in pecans. Fill un- baked Pas try Shells with mix· ture . Bake in a preheated 375- degree oven 20 minutes . Remove from pans to wire rack to cool. f\takes 24. Pastry Shell~: Cream ~cup (%-pound slick) butcer with a >-ounce package of cream cheese; work in 1 cup unsifted flour. Chill If very soft Roll Into 24 balls and press each over bot.- tom aod sid .. (up to top) of small muffin-pan cups. each !U lnch<I across top. Produce Helpful Look.In& for low calorie fooda? Looi< In lb< !resh fruit ind vegetable. blna •t your 1upennarkel and you'll find U>tm ••• crisp, juley, •J> pet121ng. f'ruiU Ind Ve~ both frab and proceaed, pn>vld• BACON &9c ·p-..a.....L---·--· '1'! Ofl9fllUU>tt -~ ... ~llDWIL suao.1.u. PKG. ••• Top Sirloin Steaks '=' '11! Choice RI\ Steaks ~ '1 1~ Chuck Steaks ·--= ... 691 Center Cut Chuck ~ 79! f P1 '" I q lf T\ ROCK COD 98 FRYING SHRIMP "' .. ; s149 tool•d~•rrr• 119 "' ·Boneless Chuck Roast c$• $Jo;? ·Rolled Shoulder Clod '=." $11? Boneless Ham ""':g" ... ~~ $)5! Turkey Drumsticks ~ ~ I ~nk .~usage ~~:~"!i.:·~-··-·33' . . Crack"' llrilfY ..... ....... ;.'t 35' TOMATO SOUP HEINZ COM><NSll>. ,...,,., CAN .~ PAPER ; TOWELS · , OilltN .. ,,.,, 1 ,:zo.cr. 1 - .. &n~.2"""'9Thick: aot.L "'· ~~ Festival Grape Jelly Aiax Cleanser 2 "· '" 39' -·16' "GOODNESS KNOWS" White, Wheat .or Sandwich 7-lb. Loaf •••••.•.•.•. Yont Gemwln C'-'oi. COFFEE CAKES ............. a-,... ' 3.PK. 9.0ZS. VONS POUND CAKE 17. ozs. · Mah & Honey Bread 39' 45' NEW,lO't.A.llAKEl,MADlwml 37' awomo MALT flAICES AHO PUlf HOl'Et. D£UCt0Us. 1..U. LOAF •••••• ORANGE JUICE CAL FAME · 12.0L CAN-37' -m-,,_ ... "'"" .... 11.n .... ............. ,. ........ .... VALUABLE C OUPO N FREE 100 BLUE CHIP ST AMPS Wltli PlllCMASl Of' $10 OI: MC*E ' ,....,_ u.,-. r.-. •""ow,,_,_. VODKA ICIO'Mi lllUIUl SPlllTS 19 - •1n l2-0Z. I Son I :""" 10. 6-PACK ~-- ''"*"· --- NIC't', ·~· -- LAR(,f AA EGGS . 35 ' . Peanut Butter f§llilttfS]!!i)iiii:l:!i.iilij.i!.i TOOTHPASTE • • 'C o lgot e ..,..,_ ...... -_ ..... Vo1W l.,lcr lowhb61c ••••••• --SEClll COl8a11 l,.'J('lL.10 DHICAHSSfll BUYS' Ii BOLOGNA oolY I puctnt cf Ille .. Jorie :ump•io,:: 111 ~:'F:!.'iii 10111 Adams _ _A~ .• at Brookburs ffunti_!!gton Beach _ ~~ v ~· ~81lli8ellf Pirk Drive, •no Beac 5922 Edingei:flve., ~: ~(l!ingdale, Huntington Beac!t_ Laguna Hills Plaza, El Toro _ · • t .. • I • -• ' I ( • • - &>ICK TRACY CALL OFF TMB llURll!D 'T1UASURE MUNT? NEVER! TUMBLEWEEDS YA GONNA LEMMo SEE YER llAUGHTER Ef\ All/TCHA? ·.~ Mun AND JEFF FIGMENTS -., By Chester Go11ld -MIS •NO MIRN. -By Tom K •. Ryan OH I A 1\tlUSAND rARVONS I-ONEY Pil'l iOU.~! I WAS MOMMARIL\" i\IEY LEFlrME 6ATE UNLOCKEP f:N11lRAU.ED ~y '!tXJR L<:GENDARY AT fHE ~N'{ FARM AGAIN, VEAR! CAARISMA! PRAY roN'T fjf ~ Wl7H 1--r--'-.,.-, Ml'! 1-1 C00LPrffllfM1HAT! I SHALL SCUMY10 Fflt~ HrY UJCKY SCION! By Al Smith GASOLINE ALLEY , I " GORDO ~/ls A .1-E1"TEI< TO Ti/E ANIM~~ ... COWNVV~ MO.ON MULLINS .._ I • • -• ... ---,.-.. . ---- By By Charles BanoHi "'Blue iS a ViOleT, Reo I~ a Ro&e. /'\Y L<Ne ro« yo., is as 81G <iS '1'lOR Nose' 1V#AT1S 1/15 ).AJSW/#c' • --Rrxa M e l<~ CGrwn •," ~· Arriola ~- "4<'M+ Br Ferd Johnson By Dale Hale r-::==:::::-:----i®il 0HE1te1S .AN OCD S.AYING ARoUfoJt> WM.AT IF l ORDER IT PLAIN JANE . DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by It A. POWER ACROSS 44 Chinese: '"'°" Ytslerday's Puzzle Solved: l Thrust made 45 Division with a pointed of a window lnstrumtnt ~ UnsPtClfltd 5 Speak angrlly plue 10 Which thing 48 -of l.Dodon 14 Corridor 50 Ttlto1l lish lS_Dlstut of 51 City in tht cl!lllral llHnols nervous 53 Passage system through 1• At this llmt 57 Ballet 17 Big 1967 perlormtf Ji.ontttal affalr 61 Ro.,, 8 l ive wildly 39 CombusUon Vl&/72 19 Acquire by 62 Destructive 9 Those who "'sldut l1bor lnsKt of oivoid other 40 Unit of 20 RtJ)Udlatt5 North Allltflca: peoplf spoken 21 Capltal 2 words 10 Cajol! language of Iran 64 Pianist -11 Give con-43 Physical 23 Kind of Te111pleton slderation to ~uine pine tree 65 Record al a U Irish defKt 25 -Seti Ing: sln11le yet11 exclamation •S Have as TV celebrily 66 -souci: 13 Neighbor property 26 Assrrt with· Wlthoul ewe of Ark. 47 9th cent1Ky out proof 67 Make vigorous lS L1tge swaMow B.C. hebre" 29 Pmtnt the again of llquld prophet passage of 68 Ship stcllon 22 Dwelling 49 Unupirate heal 69 Flap vlolently, Plitt 52 Prlnc:lples 34 Patt of 1 u 1 sall 24 Pltasant 5J Place In a mllltNy chaps: Z.words confining dt9l~itnl DOWN 26 Spats palace poslllon 35 Strain, as of 27 Vladimi r S4 A function domtstic 1 Repel without lllch assulll!d by animals allowing Ulyanll'I a pmon '51 JL11IWQ -: penetration 28 Jesse L. 55 State Spanllh 2 lleans of -: No!fd 56 Ocean Frn:lse., tr1r1sportallcri mll't le pioneer fish 11lsslonary 3 Swiss --JO Roman r\llrr 54 ArMI ot~s: 31 Abstract being 4 F).ux pas JI Orderly 2 words 39 M3Ugn 5 Certain angl· arrangellilent • 59 Alm bone '41 NtwTtstamd ,, l11tts 32 QlrettlQl1 d 60 Emotlonal ~~,ijjti. t, I dlsagrtt!'': mMmtnl tranqullity 42 U.S. Ant11Jr. 2 words 33 Roof edges 63 Compass craft mlsslles 1 FO\l'Ut caliph 3ft Annadlllo point: Abbr. 2 ' • ~\;. , • • ' " ' 10 " " " " ··,; " " 17 " ,, ,. " " '" :-:,,,,, . ... " " " ·,. l1 " u .. JO I ' " .. ..... " .. .. ' n N " '. '" .. ~ •• . .. " ·~ ., • IA ·~ •• " 12 .. " '•' * .. ,n - ,,~IN N .. -.. . " ~ " .. • • MER6-IF ')t>l.JW.At.JT A THING !>ONE I' WELi., ORPEJ< IT MEDIUM .• ll II ' By Frank Ba~!ns_k_i ~ ANIMAL CRACKERS By Roger Bollen \,ETI S l~VJTE 1HEM J PEANUTS JUDGE PARKER WO, SAM .• rrs MY AASWER'IWG SEINICE NOT PR'IVATE! SAit> YOU MAD CALLED AND THE C.OUNTV 'S WANTED TO GET IN TOUCH PUmNG A FR'CE· WlfH ME, CMAR'LEV! IS WAY TMR'OUGH •• THERE SOMETHING 'IOU/": R'IGHT THR'OUGH WOOLD UKE TO"DIS-' -T\.IE MIDDLE OF CUSS PR'IV.A.TELV?' TMIS PINER'! MISS PEACH M"VE TMEV I GOT A lEnER. APPROA~ED ve;irero .... Y! lllEY YOU WITM WA.NT TO TAU AN OFFER? WITM ME NEX.T ,,,..-(' WEEK! SM\, Tl<IS UITLE BUSINESS IJ,.}tv,1~15 A.LL I'VE GOT" rr·.,z~ -IN TME-woet.D! ,A1'!THU!r, WOULD IT MUltT YOU!r WEE'D GJ.~DEN IF YOU J(JST PUW.EO OUT TME UGIJEll! ONES? 1 ' I lE ..... i~~ I~ 1 PERKINS \~ * ,.,~ • « By Charles M. Schub FROM. WMA.T nlEY'VE l'U GO &EEN OFFERlt.16 50M.E l'OWN .\NP Of TME PEOPLE FOK. SEE ™EM TMEli PROPEK.TIES, Willi YOU! I WON'T MAVE I'M SUrE WE'U ENOUGH TO OPEM BE ABLE TO .\NOTI-IER Pl.ACE~ WORK OUT "- SATISFA.CTOIN PEA.L! M"°· G"IMMIS, \'IOUtD IT MU/rr 1'ME WOlltLD IF YOU AND i WollE GoN£ GOOP! LUMCH IS ON ME! WMAT'll IT IE, MISS A.&&EV? By MeD By John Miles U'!t.n. ..... J-... .. , .... .,......, ... , OIEI<' 10 Qll<' PAC> THE GIRLS • "J'\·e ju1t bun teRJng our 1penker how eagerly we've beea looking forw1rd to .bis leclurt on diet and exerel.se. '' DENNIS THE MENACE 'TOMMY~ FO..K~ P!AYEO A llUlJY'TRJCI( ~HIM !· INm.40 Of A 6MY ~.lll~Y 5lnJ6llT MIM '!H'fl/ ~/' • • 1 I . , . . ! ' l j • I r I I .. I I ' ' • , ' , . ·' ·. 50 DAILY PILOT Wedotldlr, '•btu.vr 16, 1972 5, PllOT-AOVERTISU 4 ... . ----.. ..... Prices Effective Thursday-Wednes(iay February 17tlr·23rd LB. T : • STAnRBROS. CERTIFIED · 'BEEF GUARAllTIED TO PLEASE YOU -4" • ~ - • -,... " • j " Fu•RYSFRIJUITINJ1'uta,·'rsou·~~~E· .o~~:Es .. . 3 .. -ftc ~~:r:~::~~iiS =~"~:~ 1 . • FRUI , COCKTAIL -............... CANS V 7 ~8&,7: ::ir~~~:r so;;-~::. · FIRES10ECREMEs•Now1CH·•ssoar~Fu.vo1s , 45c ROYALREG.Puoo1NGs _ ......••. 11' I c 00KI11: .......................................... , ..... ~.~iik~· . . . ~~iW~i~~ t~:=~:=: :::1:~~ I CSUNSHRINE KARISPYC KER. s·· . .. .. ·-·.:, '. .. 34c· .. Bit. IPTOSCUINTSSOSU.~P.:~;,,, •• OiiOL<'' .. oz. 39'21' 16-0Z. wn·11 ME.t.T ~···· .. ~··• .. 2-PAIC • . .................... ~ ........... PKG. . ==HOY .... ..,.sac FR910f'S COUNTRl STYLE· INSTANT MASllED . 5. 5 , ROYAL ~UDOINGS ·~ST~., c · 2 ... 25' POTATOES . 1&.oz. PARKAYMARGARINE ............. ll42' . ........ .. . : ........... PKG. '" · KLEENEX TOWEL$ .;.,.,;,. -~-"~~ 37' .. . . MARG ARIN~'""""""" 34' I GOODWINS REGULAR OR LEMON . . • • . . ~ f'ICK VI"""'" --" FA B . IC . 69·C BRILLO SOAP PADS ......... 1us 33' HALF FABRIC SOFTENER ~~0:~·~:1 ... ,. 59' SOFTENER ............ GAL scomLIQUIDGOLo __ , .. o, •1.59 .. -· ICE CREAM GRAPEFR, . LARGE FANCY PfS~T SWEET 8 .·POUND - BAG ·APP1E5· S:XMAu . . -F~CY WASRING'l;°"'IED DELIC1ous· 1 c LBS. WESSON OIL ' VETS•REGUU.R-OflCKEN-VARIETY ' 9. DIALSOAP ___________ ...... 18' DOG FOOD· ..... : ............ :'. ......... : ........ rc~~ E~. ~~~.~~;~~~=:=~:~:~f. GiiiNwaAGE ................. 9c D'A•Jou . GOLD MEDAi: rLOUR --.. s lB. 62'. ~,TINDaCRISP " RM.D.AOSSORTB>LCOlOLRSTISSUE 4 3 SC -=~~~~T$1<A•n'5 •>•<: ,~RROTS,.1SN ......... :. ....... 2,1,c~29c P~~$ · ........... ROLLS .TREETOPAPPl.E.RJICE.':. ::48' :~ROWN ONIONS ····-· 3 LIS.29 ... c 2'"is™3'nr DEALPACKAGE / ' . 37· HOTPEPPERCHEESE ~.:t~ .... .s1· 7· :LIFEBUOY 2 . c FRUITCOCKTAIL o""°""-m SOAP ......... BARS =~~i~~~:--=~~-·~AllDllb-~~ ~ 'ri«4 . FRENCH BEANS Dtl MOffTI ___ ~ 27' ns· H N CHIPS 16 'h-OZ. 7ftc . ==-n«'I'' JOll-,,, • ........................... PKa.767~ TOMATO SAUCE on-. _3·1u .. 33' .CHERRY PIES ............................. , ... 38-0Z. DEL"'1.N.TECAJ'SUP _ ,.,.,,,_24' _.AY•tt-OJ. .. _$1Jtt.•U.OZ.-.u.u .-98. CORN g~~8'.:t:'~---m 23'. RMET SHRIMP •-oz. c : M·-RONI .............. 1"' . . . . ........... PKG. """ GOLDIN GftAIH -~~-1 Ii ·Ol. .... 1l1LlOG4... ~ llOIAllJAAaOflflO LUX UQOID0•1t•G .. T-....... -... >2-0<4f PAITYTIAY$ -~-•or.;r.J° M£llCAllDINNUS _,...4f . ....... , a••o .... ••HBAGS 1129 , .. -... •O< ... lk -............. ··511e -wo •-•AM1LY •«><1 • . OIAll8£.lllCE ..,£Q· CHIUIUlllTOS._.....,_ ,. DRIST AN VAPORUB .fAILJTS 1.l.OUNCI NYQUIL 6.ouHCI LAYORIS · s1.19 59' 1~MOUT PACKM1EOF24 11.0UNU...... IMIUllCf ... 11.11 W' .. "H KOTIX TOUCH OF FOltMUU .. A~ . TAMPONS lllllDlll >.u.oL . ...,. 31-0UNCE · PUREXDETERGENT ___ ..... 13' l0iiilt1110W ,..,61c liiOwiffl.o 47' DRIVEDETERGENT ....,., n' .......... -Uc ....,.. • .., .. w•• _.......,_ " FLUFFYAlLDETERGENT -· Olfll-CHUIOW -•«1"' DAIHSllCMES -••or.- ;t:•n 43' I:. 79' 51.09 51.59 $ J 59 ·sucRETS VITALIS LIQUID ·----12 0< 11.39 BAN ROLL--ON DEODORANT .... ,89' 66( HI-KARATE AFTER SHAVE ... , '1.18 LUX SOAP ;.,. 18' PHASE Iii .. : ;; OiuaE'luici' ...,261 UiOiiETDlllNtls _ .... 3f FINAL TOUCH --12-02.19 WISK LIQUID DETEJIGENT _:.,. 83' iCEci£.llll•DAD _, ... 63' WiiJu'° ' ... ~ DISHWASHERA!ol ..... &9'$11RFDEfERGENT ~-·-7' i'Alwws .... 63' ~iitia¥ 25c ::t 4-WAY NASAL SPRAY _ ·~c:C 87' VESPRE .... ,.... ...... St 19 · • D~T --J.5-0t. ·10 FAlltnll'I .•. • CRESTMllO'TOOTHPASTE ·'"'' < .. ' . , • ' ' - ' .; • "WE'VE 6ot n; ALL tbGETttl!R'' Total living in COLLEGE PARK. 3 bedr0om,s lari:e family room addition with wet bRr. Extra large pool with cofnmerclal heater. 2 baths with. extra % bath for pool .atf'-8, Prime location near &ehools & shoppinJi:. Nn down to VETS-Low down' to aiiyone. CAU. M6·2313 NOW. · .,; ! . • \ !LOWER THAN RENT ••• . . . By ownin&' this fine tri-plex. Shows ~rid!!! ol ownenhlp, in Huntington Beach. Safe short walk for the kiddies to school, n~er a vacancy. Solid income~ Hurry, $41,950 call 842-2535 •.··, lk,'°l ~.; ... ~-· }n .._ ·""'~ .. ~~f"'.1 '.)·)'. '.";..,·~ ,_'t 1~·~ .,r ''WHAT · YOU SEE .IS WHAT YOU GET" AJ'ld what yoo· cet iz a lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bath ho~ in an exce.lh!nt East.side · location, near West Cliff shopping. Large shade •trees aurraund this wdl landscaped o~r sizl! lot. plus 2 patios. Priced at only $36,500. Seller is, wanting to move; So come 'take•& 1ook. CALL 646-7171 FEEL LIKE FAWNG ' In low ap.ln! Hr>re'1 your chance. Channlna: 111and.· 3 bedroom home with Central Air Condi- tionin&-Tinted Gla.u. 2 bi.Ou;. Unique Dulgntd Cul:tcrn. Built-in steps to life guard beach. Don't hesitate, act now. S7t ,500. ca.u, 67~ Wedntsd,Y, ,,11nwy 16, 1•72 * .,. ___ ..,. ____ -DAILY PJlOT SJ , · NO ONE OFFEIS llOIE! TATICR.S · "•· 1 .... ~, ht .. ,.,,,, -..,.,. anti afttr tht ..... 12 tralnM 11111""1' In 6fefflc .. te ffll•w tttiru. ht 'MYfftli l"I -Cem,tete cw ... •1• •"'f tl•t· " . J ; • I ' ' . • DESIGNED BY A WOt,i.AN .. WONDERFUL: HAtECREST '. Situated near thi .new 'Halecrekt Club Houle A Pool,'Thi•,'3°Wr0\1m 21>1.th;,home has lot.I pl. brick pian\ers &;~!:reCI -pati~ sidl! entry to ' ~ ., rear yard ·for 1boat ,or·cam~r .. Bf!ttl!r hurry a t thu.i Pt:Jc< $27,950.:~.546-2313 It this ,xclting 5 bedroom cu~lom desl1tned home ·with pfctui;>e ecean view and aci;es" to private 'beaches -K&ra.slf,.n· W/W earpetinl' t hroua:h· out. 3% hath:i1, m11.rble 1ink tops. Built-In vac- uum system. Heated cu1tom pool. A truly plustl home at $150.000. can for showing 673-8550 ' LUXURY AT LOW COST . TREES, TREES, TREES COLLEGE PARK "BEST BUY!" When you own this plush 3 bedroom home. The floor plan ii 1uper B, an~ lt's 1uper Clea n with upgraded carpet and drapes throurhout. To ~ee ls to bUY. ca.IJ 847-6010. 4 bedroom, 2 bath. byilt·ln kitchen. lara:e, yard . and a nl"ce· playhouse for the children. Near 1hopp!n1 and all schools and priced at only S29,950. For furthl!!r information call M6·2313. TOP SALESMAN • •• JVbY 'SUSA.K . . Jidy ,.1111 -· ....... 111&11 ' ·~ .,,. .... ,,71; •Ml ,.... c.iv• "11 IMrd'• "-IWI,;, lff lltf" ...... llM!l!.111• l tffltle.L .... .Hdy ,.. •• , ...... llft .... nn yMr ltlthlll r '''"' T•1 hltlfl'M• W • .... 17" New- ; ,.,. •1¥11'. Offlc• 11 wen -•• '"' Ill lllt Cl1!1'""1' fer tllll "'°""'· Ctll JVfY 11 ' "4'-1111. .TIRIY PARKER A ,,_., -ttMt _,, T""Yj ·' ...... tr..,..'-ef U"1¥1,...'Y Ill ,S•11 Dllfl, '"' llHll ;wltll 'TJN illNI ll:1t1kr1 ..,ry s .......... ,... •lrff4y lltc9'"'9 -"' -... ,,.. llilc..... Wltll 1 C."'111111111911 "'· lllrt ...... "''h""'"'· •ltll 1 t-14"1 llftl,.. fe ,._111, IM tt•1 lllllrKIH ltlt Nlittlh 111te Ml~ ........ "' I l'f'lfK-llMll~»t Ttrry IMI,,_,. - •Wff'I.. ..,._,..... Y"" f!llY ....... Ill "'' IH(lal+t .. 11411111. l't IS, "EAST$1DE DUPLEX" Finl! for stutinr your inv.estment prozram. . . 2·2 bedroom ae~ate unit.A, one. with a ftr~ place.. Total Price $31,500. CA1J.. M6·231J e Asaume 6% FHA Loan -. e To~ Payments $275 • 3 Bedroom, 2 :Bath • Corn~r Lot With All~ • Room For Large Trailtt • call 546-2313"- VA~NT AND READY Owner !!JOlivated. Lots ·o~ house for the money huge corner lot.. Boat Gate. N,w ~nt l ca.rpet. 3 bedroom: 2 Bath~family room, plj.a .Patlo.~All th.iii only $24,500.00.' C8.U 847-6010, DOLLARS 'M"AKE SEJllSE' When lnvt1tf!d in the right loc1t1on. Thia; t ine ~ bedroom duplex In Corona Del Mar It only a •host wa.lk to thoPI and 1toru. En.lot tine liv· Ing with l!Xt.r& income to boot. Askin1 146.~ EZ 'Tl!rma. Call 1573-M50 IERHITA EILIRTSEN 9'flllll Wll "'9 ..... _ ....... ""' "''" """'"" Ill 1t1! ..... k ... lft fllllf ,.WIN 11W fNll fer 1tl'L SM k ,ll"th't ift Ct"'l_.ty lffl , lflllll .... rl[ • -' Mr "II"' yNn •I I tllll 1114 tk~ efflc1r. lllt' •ltll Mr .._...... ... !hoe • C.~1 11111 Mtr. afl"'llffl 1111 ...... t ,...11111.,,1 Ill C.Nlll tit! Mtr fer 1111 1111 It r••rt a-ll ,,.,.,. t11t1IU1r wnll ,... .. ... , .,. fll9 r.lllllllth "' '"'" lrN C11! 111'1111• 11 '1MJJt. "NEWPORT HEIGHT.S 2 STORY BEAUTY A RARE FIND" Just on the market tor the first time. 5 bed· rooml!I, 3 baths, 65x150 Jot 1 ~ block1 from Har· bor Heights. Great family homf!, .lmmaculatl! large bedrooms a true delight to see. Priced right at $49,500. To 1ee Call 646-7171. SALESMEN NEEDED Learh More -Earn 'Mori! -Servi!· Better you'rl! an alert, dyn&m.lc peflOn who'• looklnr· !or a, l"l!Jlt future, with one of the u t.e1t arowing CompMlee: ·in Orana:• Coun- t See u.•. We need you ~! IT'S COMMODIOUS: Dramatic 4 btdroom, 3 hath with choice bay view. ~•uty and quaJlty b rf!Oeetl"d 111 this euttom de1igned homl!. Spacious lot completely landaca.ped for euy maintenance. Custom de-- Slined pool Ideal for enter1.&.lt\fitS· Lovely Dover Shores location. Asklne $11S.~ Call 673~ • ' ....... 1 • "TRULY FllESHNESS:' Thal you lll"ldt;im llef', Cheerful 4 _brdroon1 homt in Huntini:ton Beach, tutefully decorated; every mnm glltl.l'rs with frelhness. Wllnt to be tueky1' Call 842-~ INCREDIBLE 'VIEW To~njoy thf! finc11t In New.port Bt>Rch livin1t .. !let · this gorgeous 3 bedroom, wtth 111"pAr11.te n111.1tl"r suit@, large family ronm le&d\ng nut In A 1p11irk· llna: heated a.nd filtered pool and the mast,bre&th· taking view of N~"'!J'Ort Bay and Cal.I.Una t h11t could be fnun~. TcuJy a 1em by· the 'Paci!lr , Call 646·7171 for more details. TOP· LISTla • 11 ' ~ . . . IMMACULATE FOUR BEDROOM HOME 1 With family room, d.ih.ln1 room and many1 tt·- tru. Qne of tile bfost l~tion1..ln Tutti• R.oc-lc With ·a lovely perk and playa:round directly acrCNIA thf! street. 'The only true view tn Broed- moor Turtle Rock. Beautiful landlcaplnr with fenced back yard and complete 1prlnkler sy1· tem~ $43, 750. call 673-8550 "PRESTIGE LOCATION" Great hllme tor the l!xecutlvf! plu1 a• drtatn kitchen for thf! houaewtfe. Lara:e .3 bedroom plu1 den with fireplace. U you like t hat Sp&nbh type of exterior don't pus thil one Up. 'r"lt '1 only $3B,OOO. Call SC2·2535 • "HUNTINGTON HARBOR" Gorgeo~s majestic bf'auty In .r abulot.11• HubUnJ'" ton H&rbor. This remark•ble mbdel r(np wiltl pride and et>mmand11 your lnvestl1atlon. Oqly 146,000. All term•. 842-2535 - BRING YOUR GOLF CLUBS 1 ~ This unique home 11' lt'ICltt!d aer01J11 •tr-Ht from, Meadow lit'fi-Golf Cout'tl! In Meadow Lark•fA.. tales. Corner Lot 3 bedtoom,· A."rten, 2 tl~e~lacn.• romitf" model,. Mme. $41,500. Call 147-6010: i l"\l&lff In the Harkr Art.-Pl'Mf "'"'"-1 Tlh 11 wht,.. "The Actltl'll IL .. "LIKE TO SEW77" Here's your own 11nv111tc eustom·d-Oliilli:"llcd 1ewln1 room. plus custom built family room. Brina: your eh~k book, hurry thlii; "'on't Ja~t ~! 842·2~ "NAKED TRUTH" IN MESA VERDE Lar&e 5 bt-dronm t rl-!evrl family home with room to rMm. 0[W'n·bt>Am vAultNI <'"1hna: ln llv- lna: ronm. l"f\111'&1~ /nrmAI dlnlni:: room, eatinc AreA In kltohrn, \\•r l h11r In fl'l mlly room. A.II 1hi:i1 and mlK'h mnrr for ·$49,950. For mnre tn- formallon. cell 548-2:.\1 3. H:.\P!PINESS IN HARBOR VIEW .loin ·the. carf'·free lf!e with <::omn')unJty park, poQ.ls, and Cnurts. Come1 hom e to a portotlno already Jf\lld3Cilprd and !JDlshl!d ""'Ith many extr.a goodleii. Park your boat nr tr11ll,.r nelft ttt lhe house. Extra cJl'!Rta A hookshelve1 solve 1tqraa:e problenis. J tlarge bedroom1, J'Ai bath•, 2600 IQ, It. of luxtirtOus Uvlt\i 'make thl1 a n exec:ut19,e dream,. DON'T MISS I'F! CAU. 546-2813 : ..... ' • .:l ' • • • . l!RESTIGE"lLOCATION .. • Great; b6me for th~· l!Xe<:utlve. PIU1 a dream kitchen for thl! hou1ew{fe. Lar1e 4 bedroom home plu1 .d~n with. flrtplace l1land , 1tove with W11 t1.tinc ana In k.1tchl!n.J Plus ff.Ar: Poot. 147,990. c.u tM.1:6010. "EXECUTIVFS DELIGHT- 3,000 SQ. FT." ·: Sumptuous largl! fh1,. bt'droom plot dtn Uol:tited in ~g:e locatk>n lnJluntlnston Be•ch. You'll enjoy •tb~ 1hort w1.tk to lhll' be1ch. Only 147,250. Call· u1 to ll!C! this peotacularihomt. 8'2·2535 ' :T~B REAL ESTAT•Rs ..... . . . . I ' .. NEWPORT BEACH 1700 Newport B1vCI. 646·7111 COSTA MESA 2790 Harb d ·Blvd. 546-231 ,HUNTl"IGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH CORONA DEL MAR 17931 Beach Blvd. 6014 Warner Ave. 332 Mar9uerite 842-2535 847·6010 67·3·8550 1 . INVESTMENTS 279 0; Harbor ,~lvp. Suite 20 I Co.ta Mo.. · ' 5411-1600 ' . ' - I ' ' ( , I •• , • . , I ' ' ,, I • -7"' -. ' DAILY "LDT PILOT-ADVERTISER l T ~~eryone He1 Something That Someone Else Wants DAILY .P·ILOT CLASSIFIED ADS . ' . You Can Sell It, Fin~ It, Ttade It With "' Want Acl . The Biggest Marketplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results : G•neral General 1---1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii IACK IAY • HORSES! ACREAGE + GUEST HOUSE GI· NO DOWN!! Custnm. rron1 alrlun1 rnlry 10 n11t~ivr l!llonc t1rrpl111·r in giant l1vina room' HCM·k JI I it n t er s ('flrnh111(' .,..11h wrought Iron rail~ to 2lvf' IOU('h of Clr1ta11cf'! f'OR:i.tAL DININC; ROOr.I . Kini.:·kltt ~Ip .. ,,,." -_.,. '• . ,_ •' _, . . . . -' . ' ' . ' ' ·~ ¥ . . ... ht~droon1.11. f''anilly R1wJn1 . I Bruit le. lrailf r Rrra. PLL'S 3 RNlmom GUF:~'T llOUS,.; on l~ORS~: PROPt:RT\'! A . choice buy • Call now 64>.-0303. "SWELLELEGANT" ON BALBOA ISL. THE CIRCULA R STA IRWAY leads you up the stairs where you v.1ill find the living room, dining room , kitchen, l bedroom, I bath AL!. CA RPf.:TI-:D. Downstairs, 3 bedrooms, I bath. Great idea . . . . . .. . . . . . . . $79,500 " l ORl.\l [ 01 \0\ /.I I A ' r O lo' , 4 BDRM., 2 BATH $12,795 Built On Your Land -ll43 tq. It. ltvlnc area . -AU lath &: pluter -Hardwood cabinet1 -Breakfast ba.• -Pullman baths -Spacious wardrobet JUST $9.53 SQ. FT. Plannlng·Dcsign.J.,lnaocing ~ •. Alto Duplexe, and Trlj)Jexra I : CALL 537-0380 10666 Wt'stmlnster Ave, G.G. OPEN 7 DAYS (g~u!A~~Nq : UP FOR ADOPTION An ldl'al atar1er homl' for 11. yo~ng l'OUPlt'. NO DO\VN VETS OR LO \V FHA TF:RMS. Three bdrm. and den home with hardwood flooni, Good Eastillde Costa Mtsa ioc:ftt\on. Larae ysrd IC1l' the kldl • near 1chool1J Md shopping. PrirC'd lo &'!I At only $26,000. Evenings Call ~483 *MOVING NORTH* Q\\·nr.r 1nov\n~ 10 Idaho Mu11t 1e1J lo"·Nl pr1rM 2 :;to11• in 1\·l('MI V('rdc, l.aJll'.P 4 hf.drn1, 1<1'p11r11!r dininR rnon1. (ll'n, :.!Is l)lllh~. ovC'r· l!b:«I Jot wllh room lnr pool. NO DO\VN PAYMT TO ADD A SPLISH AND A SPLASH CO RONA DEL MAR 2 bedroom 2 baths, fire- place, cute modern kitchen, pi cture windows with enclosed side patio, GUEST QUARTERS over the garage. ONLY ONE BLOCK TO THE BEACH . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . $49,900 POINTS to PERFECTION in CAMEO SHORES SPACIOUS and elegance await you in this 3 bedroom , 3 bath CATHEDRAL CEILI NGS, dining room, fireplace, carpets & drapes, GOURME'r K11'Cl-IEN, separate maids fJUar~ lers. Lovely POOL & GAHDENS plus BEA U· TIFUL PCEAN VfE\V. A lasting investment in graciou s living. ; .... , .... ·~: ... 'J-16,750 "PUTT PUri"· OVER' TO SEE US ' NICELY DECORATED 3 bedroom home with lovely .12'x30' Sql.ARIUM, 3 baths, quality carpeting & drapes, kitchen '''ilh built-ins, COMMUNITY POIJL, RE CREATlON HALI. & PUTTING GREEl'j. Only . ' ........ $59,500 ' QUALITY UNITS QUAUTY BUYERS 8 UNITS • IN EASTll.L UFF -SPLIT-LEVEL VIEW APARTME N'l'S. Owners uni( 3 Bed· rooms 11h baths, 4·2 Bedroom llh: baths. 3-1 Bedroom I 12 baths. SO GET LUCK\'. Only ... -..... 1 .............. $198,450 ' REALTORS 644-7270 2828 EAST COAST HIGHWAY CORONA DEb• MAR, CALIF~- VETERANS. ~ !!!!!!~!!!!!!!lll!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!IJ! Call 540-ttat {Oj}('n Eves.l Gtnerel Gener:l1 Cfl" HERITAGE -* 6 UNITS* BALBOA Bl VD. 2 1-Bf!., 2 2-BR., 2 3·BR. furnil'h<'CI, bllns, l'lo!lt' tn I bay & ~!lt'h. CarPorts. \\'Jn· 1 rr l~un1n1cr rcin ral11 . CAii : 673·3663 6(2.£969 Evts. associated BA YSHORES VIEW & POOL Waterfront custo1n hon1e, 4 bedroom & den or 5 bedroon1s. 51h baths. 1'on ouality car· peting, draperies, \Vallpaper & fixtures . \l iew from most roon1s. 87 ' lot. spacious yard y,•ith beautiful gardens. ~240,000. BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 341 lsl•nders Bldg. at Li11d1 Isle B•yside Or.,. S'uite 1, N.8 . 675·6161 BROKEAS-REA LfORS 1015 W lalboo 613·3663 $36,900 J Gener1I General 1 In::: IJ('droorn.~. 'l hlllh~. tam. II.\ i~IO!I], flrrpl11t't. rormal d1n1ni,: n H)H1. f'ritio. Convrr'- i:a Hon 1111. c :or).•T•nu~ ::hn~ 1'1ltl)('IHlj;!. '.:: ~I'S 111'11 '. &-1(}. 17'.:'0 TARBELL Olrot'r. lg 4 RH !I f11111 rm. '.l RA, form 1l1n. iissun1f' In, $39.9M Pric.-nnly 5,.;7·11l2.l. Gener el $30,950 SWIM POOL l.l'll't-1)' r.tt:'SR North homt:' \l'ith 3 sp11c·ioU!'l b('rlroon\!'l, 2 bH!hs. huilhn rlN'an1 klt('h· rn. f1tn11 ly 1'00111 "1!h f1r('· )1l1tre. J,oud.~ or rlr1'king, ratio. F.n~·lo!l:Nf pool -SHrt' for su1all l'h1lrlrt>n. 5'10-li20. TARBELL Gener ii • _ ,,, .. Gener1I G1nar1f Gener ii ONLY ILLNESS Could eaust' 1h111 coup)(' In St'll ! l t'11 a 3 brlnn. hnml!' ~i th a lovr !y panelt"d llvlnir rn1 ., R ~rpar111r> Jaunrlry rn1., 1fi'x2f rrin11ly nn w/Pl Ji?All B-R·Q. All nn 11. Jij P"an1ir fi.'1':11:175' In!. Price $25.!Y.JO, ~II lrrn1s. Nnw . pa_v ;illl'nt ion· Jn thf' trade, 1his ii; "'hilt w, <'1111 a "hnt h~lln~". That mrllni'i it'i!i ~nn11. ,,;rll TODAY ' Brlit:'\'f' rnr' Dnn't fool around • CaH Now: FOR SURFERS A hright and rht'f'rful Mime jui;t a \ll&lk fmm lhr ~urfini:i: hrach. 3 ronm.11 herlrm!'l., 11: frif'ndl.v k1lf'h 1r11.m. rm. anrl 11: f1rerla('C for c·onl ('\/en· iire:!'l. Rrdu1·erl fnr quick salt' • $30,500. 011'nC'rs new hPme i11 rPady, ~uhmi1 11.n.v trrm1. 8('tler nnt ,1•aif ror Sunday . Call now! THE VIEW Al nlO!'.I m11krs you miss J;P.f'· \nit the homt. Aflrr yflu 've finished oh'ing & Ah'ing, you'tl se<' a truly ou!stand- ing J hf'rlrnnn1 hcauly -n \voinan'!I. ki!rhl'n anil !he \1•11rm nn1! fr i,.ndl,v f11n1ily room in a hom(' you '11 lov{' fnr th(' rest of your Jifr . Shown hy rvrning B:P[Jl'linl· n1rnl. s:~.750. and 0\.\'ner 'viii help finan c·('. SUBURBIA PARK 1mmacul11.le 4 bedrm home on ('{lrner )bt, Priced rl'- duc«t to $411900. a.~ owner'• , new horn. ill almost rearly: 1nr~ "°'"n & assumr 6~ V,\ 1011.n. Tt:'rrlhc neighborhood, 1 n11le from OC('Rn. 'Uniqtw'Ho~ THE BEST HOMES ...... ... IN THE BEST AREAS • IN MESA VERDE: S Bedroom B1r91in Five bdrms or 4 and a den! Deep pile shag, park·like backyard and floor plan with noo k and formal dining . Owner has priced this one $4,000 less than comparable properties. PRESENTED AT $42,950. e Phono 546-5990 ---~,--- -IN BAYSHORES : On Vista Drive 3 bdrm, 2 bath and a great buy! Beam ceilings, super size fireplace and a pretty patio. Step into this relaxed life style. Prop· erty is @vajlable for quick occupancy. PRESENTED AT $59,500. e Phone 675-6000 V1\Ci\NT -3 hr<\rnom one 2443 Eeat Coeat H•an wey 2850f'A••• Verda-Drive Coron• <Ml Mer 675-6000 Coste M••• 5416-~990 11tory condo, 11 ~ m\lC'~ lo ocean. Carpel!! & rlrape11, 2 'Dtwport 'Be.adi.·c.o.ml.ug $OOJ1 c 11.r closed ga. r a nd 1 lid i ng I '!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!f!!!!!!!!!!!f!!!!iil!IJ!l!!!!l!!!!!I!!!!!!!!!!! door lo privatr patio. A l~G 1 REAL BUY at $31,500. ener1 General CA~L :.:-:~l~ny~m• __ B_E_S_J--IN_B_L_U_f_f_S __ X CHECK THIS X Lo"•cst priC'ed ~ bedroom home in Cos(a ifr!la MUL- TIPLES, that is EAsl of liar· bor Blvd. Many ru~lom tra- lur('S in(·Juding .sf('p . do,vn }i\'illg rnt \\'ilh 1"0rnrr fir('- pltu'c, clrrtric bltins, shake --UNBELIEVABLE BUY 3 Bdrms .. 2'h baths, 1800 sq . ft. LO~ly green· belt. Move-in condition. Owner's sacrifice at $34,900! FRONT ROW CANYON BAY VIEW _,,, .. I~! _,,, _ General j Genefal Gtner•I ====* * * * * * Macnab-Irvine Really Company CAMEO SHORES View, Privacy, Vt>rsatlllty! ! ! Herbert Brownell CUSTOM Homf!, 3 BR/3 bath + den w/plana for 4th BR. 2 XI.ta lg. BR's -1 w/privatr en· ' trance, 3rd BR can be ma.id'• room. Plumbi"I'. stu~ I bed for pool. f19,500 .. EASTBlUFF Immaculate 4 BR., FR. hnmt.~ I fl1 m e d I a t e O<'CUp&ncy'. S.'i2.500. Jack I-lo"•e!I 6#-6200 ONE OF A KIND Traditional ramity homt> . Vie"· • ree land. l 3 Acre fruit frff..: • pool • 4 BR .• DR • Cf"lunlry kitC'hPn. Lar~e paneled "Eastern Stylt" rumpus room w/wel bar. $79.500 HAVE YOU EVER ThoU&ht about being a. prop- TAYLOR CO. BIG CANYON OFFERINGS Customized 4 BR home near completion. Large family rm, formal DR, exquisite mas· ler suite 6' 3-car garage. $99,500 Prime location. Popular plan w/conversation pit. Lge pool·size lot w/view of· canyon & hills. 4 BR & lge FR. $107,500 New 5 BR . family room~ formal DR . Gus· tom carpeting & drapes. $98,500 Enjoy the prestige of living in thi s area of Newport Beach where bomes surround the privat.e golf course & elite Coun try Chib. "Our 27th Ye1r" WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Reoltors 2111 Sin Jo1quln Hill• Ro1d NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910 erty owner in Corona del .,...,,..,,...,..,,..,,..,,...,..,,~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!PI Mar? Inquire about the ben· Gen•rel Ge"erel efils of this duplex. S735 Po----------NEW LISTING tenllal pPr month. Betty Kerr 644-6200 $25,750 PARK VIEW NO do\.\'11 terms, 3 bedroom. MUST SELL ~ ba!h home. seclud~ liv· I...arte 4 bdrm., 2i,. bath East· bluU view home. Call our office fot complete detail!. Off~rt'd at $49,~. <C BR. 2~ baths, FR. DR • ing .too~ enhanc~. by "I>" Patf'rmo 1'1ocltl. Nexl ln pealing fireplace. Pa1lo. J~. park w/view up length nf , estat~. sized 1 grounds. Air pllrk. Brk. pallo w pond. cond1t.roner. Ne11r schools I.: $6..1,400. shopping. 540.1720 CORBIN- MARTIN CHARMING CHEERY COTTAGE Macnab -Irvine 642-8235 TARBELL REALTORS Turn unused items 11110 quick c11.sh, call 642-5678 benera: LIDO ISLE ESTATE .1 .BR. home (or use 3 BR. for guest suite), with lanar, pool. beautiful grounds & pri· vacy, on 3 lots. Fine buy at $159,500. Eugene Vreeland 60' ON BAYFRONTI Slip f'or 1arge boat. Beautiful pool. Spacious home with 5 bdrms.,-&tudy, 4 ~ baths tam· ily room. Next to sandy beach. $189,0oo. Ca rol Tatum BAYCREST ·FEE LOT . roof, block • walls. crntt'nl driveways. AnxioU!'. O"'ntr i11 offerinll? VA Ir F'HA lcrm5. at only S29.750. Ca.ll nO\.\', lt "'on't Jsst! Large "E" plan END UNIT. 3 Bdrms., 2"' baths. family rm. with wet bar. A buy at $56,500. BUDGET BLUFFS "PLAZA AREA" Lowest leasehold & maintenance dues 4 Bedrooms, 21h baths ............ $33,750 I OIU.S I [ 01 SO\ '" ,.;> l A , . 'A ', ..-1 70 Feel on 2100 LEEWARD, 112 fl. deep. View of Upper Bay fr om rear. Gr~at neigh. borhood. New 2·sty. one lot away. Asking $28,000. Al Fink BUY OF THE WEEKI Vacant & ready to go. Charming English style home. 3 Bdrms .. dining rm. & den. Secluded patio & pool. $50,500. Mary Harvey · ~OATS . WALfACE REALTORS -546-4141- (0pen Evenings) 3 Bedroornt, 1 1h batjl• ........... $33,5 00 HELEN REALTOR General TARBELL B. DOWD 644-0134 GeneraJ Low, Low Down IMMACULATE EASTSIDE C.M. Bta.ulHul r l'drroral!'d 3 bed- room 2 bath homl'. n('w sha.e: THE BLUFFS J SING to your senorita nn !he halcony of lhis 3 bedroom Carmelita model. Y<lu "'ill h11.ve plenty of lime to sing as alt your gardening chort>s 11.rp rlone ror you. Asking $46,000. Call for an 11,ppoint- m('nt lo inspect and bring · your J{uilar! 2545 E•stbluff Drive 640.0020 c-rpts & -rlrp!I, Living & din-l.COl.~&CO.I ing rn1 + i::rpara !r ramily REALTORS rm \1•ilh large brick lire----._ ,._,,.,,.,. plac('. Large lanaj &: p.allo FOR WORKING COUPLE for ent er11unlng. 0 w n er Beller than ne~'. IA) Fnr transferred. Only $33,500. lhe man: 3 car gar &: work J Lachenmyer Realtor shop. <Bl For th(' lady; 3 BR or 2 BR & den + 11ep. fam. or din rm , lovely kitch oft sunny pa.lio. nr Nt'Wpl. ]~ N l its. Asking $37 ,500? We in· """ twport Blvd., C.M. Call 646-3928 Eves. fi73.7S?5 vile you to look! LUSK NEW LISTING 4 BR., 3 Ba., ocean, ca nyon vie\v. Owner transferred. Custom cpt., drapes & wall cov· erings. Woody den. 2 Frpks. Call for app't. Lavera Burns YOUR OWN PRIVATE HOME WITH INCOME Ask your tax man about this little goodie. 2· S.tory 4 Bdrm. colonial w/pool plus 3 Bdrm. cite. $76,500. Mary Lou Marion TWO CHOICE BAYCREST HOMES .3 BR. 2"' bas. 18x36 pool, adult occupied, 1mmac. Only $62,500. Good buy for famil y· 5 BR's., frml. DR, fam. room ; new decor: $55,950. M. C. Buie PRICED TO SELL 3 B~rooms & ~en, Ivan Wells home. w/large pool in a beautifully landscaped setting. Im· mediate occupancy. $72;aoo. Kathryn Raulston ~WALKER & LE,E REALTORS ~WAll<LI! & lll ' real tor s BEAUTIFUL WESTCLIFF HeN''lll ju5t \1t\dl'f' 2.000 li(I, ft. nl rorn fo rt And lu.11· llr) "llh ht1RP hl'ilri10111J, .1 bAth,, m ttRnlftrt-nt ,:hAr: \\ " carp•'l1 ni:. 11nd bf'11 ut1ful (E l'OUndot. 8"11 buy 1n tht> arr11. 111 nnl,v $1ri,()('I(). U yriu hl\\'f' hM>n in mlli· UU')' sr r\'tN', Sfl\r )OUr ('l\oth and buy GI NO 00\\'N flAY~1F.!'<ii. " EASTSIDE TRIPlE~.L A~Olut~ly •• t ~ ~ Jlntd s1rtt1 1n q\Mt ~· \fl k ng_ t•n<IP 10 ell hop-,,\nt;. Bet trr "ttkf''I. lnalt. ·r t\11 F ONT •JUPLIX • , fl or v.af1.rfn;nt .... h ~·olir 0\\ n 3 l:W'drnnm, , l>111h 11pertro~nl O\"t'rl.....,k\n' NI".,.. porl (."ft.n11 I. And enjoy C'IU'nlnts ft1ll'll thP .1 nlhf'r brdrnnn' un\1 ht· ·tO\\. f.J1C('llf'nt in\"i':ltm('n t 11 $62.~. O\.l•nt-r "Ill ('flntid~r.-lr•dr. Newpott 1 .. ch Office - 2041 Wntdlff Dr. et lrtl•t - 646-7711 DpH fH•lnt• J SAVE $2,500 Vl"ry sharp li~·imn1ii1~ pool homt-t 16x32 poolL Lovely Cl.T· pt't!I .l drapea, C('l\lertd pfltlo. GI nn down. FHA low de""'" nr take n,·flr Jn'-'' lnltrest Joa n '4'ith S177 PIYTTl'nts:. Only S28.900. Unbtofit\'Ablt'. $26,000 FULL P~ICE IN HUNTINCOTON HACH 4 hedrrom. :l blths \\"ilh carrel.I • drapH,, 2...ce.r pra1e with ,. PflrtlAllv romplC'ted room ln aarage.. All this plus you clll t11tke. over a 6f'"'r \IA ll'\""· • 2-STORY· HOME WITH MRY\HING HUGI ADDED family room v.·ith fireplatt plus 3 bedroom. 2 bath. Sl,000 und'r m&rX'l. Pa,yments: $163 mo. SH.Utl'! $22,900. WDWll 5 H . PLUS 4,1.nln& PLUS rumpw room. Near achoo!. AaiUQ'le YA lc>&n. J no f'9s. $3&,950. ' ._;.Wiii Kfl1 /'. I ff rcul tr)r :, DOLL HOUSI SHAIP & CWN 3 btdroom home r'ady for your inspection. Ruse enclos@d patio along r'&.r ot tht hom,. Greet yard for klch. Full pr~ $23,500 with $.UX:I down tor FHA r.IUI lmpoundl. No down 10 GI buyen. Tbi.li home 5 s be&uty, call HUO:I POOL Fun hou.u: tor fun·lovhti fmlily. 3 bcdrOom. room. Clnplace.. No down VA $26,~. odd'jl ramit,y ' $19,'50 ·15 THE PllCI foi:; Ul1J v'TY lo~ly 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. The lOll) II hlah tnouah that you ~ •umf!' with pay· me.nll of 11 60 ptt month which lncludn aJJ. Modfnl N••. • "l'W bullt·fns. d«p "41• eorpei.. alto matdllnr dn""' -fl .,. Double gan_qe to boot ! CA1L . . CLOSE TO HACH llACH conA<Of!ll lASHIDE COSTA MIU . 13 bedroom!" u·ith f(lrmlll dlnin~ ·~ and 111.rre. ramil)' room. Alm~t nt'"·· uprrsded ar.rptlt. kitchen. built·l"'-Walk to Rt!nl at $l95 or Ol)tion to bu¥. 3 ~ 2 blth. °'''~r Anxious. Ht-11 \\·ntklnJ: In A1buQ4flrq11t'. Tr)• tor;. I bPaC'h PIJ"mPntl $196 mo. 523.500. double lf8T'31g,, fenced ~· tMW wt cifpeta,. do"·n. / I rrtishly paintl'd. Call Brolr@r ~l Optn ~- Hunti"gton leach Office -842-4455 hl2 !'ingot o, .. rv .. 1"91 540-JI 40 Fountain Valley Office lnll Brookhurot 968-3'371 Costa Mesa Offic~ e>p.n lvonlnt• 2m H•rloor Blv,., o,.n 1..,,,,., S45·9491 545-0465 ~ • • . ' • • I· "' 2 k , • . . • .10 PILOT-AIMRTTSER Wtdnadar Ftbnllry J.6.1'72 -;"tdntsd11. FtbnlltY 16. 197Z [ ~~oblw• .. J~~hw~ }~!!J~I ~ ... ~ ... ~,~~'I..,__-·-__,!~ l..__-_1~1--'' .. _'""'""__,· ]~ 1--l!5J I ---II~ t OAIL Y PILOT C!J l[Il) 'Pt. Univ,,. J65 Apts., Rooms 400 Office Rtnt•I 440 ""-menla 5IO Schools I. l:N7o-w_po_rt;...:.Bt~.-ch--::: __ F_u_m_.,..or_u_n1v_ .... __ 37_o1 ROOM. ·, ~-!.. .... ~~. ~;:;;:;<;;;:;;;:;;;;;".;ru;:-·1,,,"""°"""°'"'"'...,. __ .,I ln1tructlon1 ;;.· • U\HUV W"" ...... ,.., CLOSE TO UDO ISLE DRAPERY Oteani,. Spedal J-,:,,..,-------1 Costo Mo.. MI dd 1 "-" -·=n. ~ ~ &llto • Reuonabl•. Tab clown. tan fold, .......... _P_R_l_V_A_T __ e_T __ UT __ O.,.....R-ARK NEWPORT ' .,..,.,..,_,.r •• 5 49 • 16 7S "/prk I· Udo BJda. (where SJ. 75 Paoel. Uolined to 9' Mod'"' m a J h. read,,,., APARTMENTS "'"· Blue Dolpllln Res11uu,mt ..... '"''· ll<lce $3.IO) Ph. --·study m"hod' etc. ROOMS· US Wk. up w/lclt rsJ.~allorseeJo~aReal~ Allen Weston Sl6 -3S1S All levda. cat! aftt:r t :30 On the bay l30 Wk up Apts. 1!78 s.rv .... oo pnnua8, 33M b<lore 5,30 PM or -~ig, · • Luxury apartment living ov-* BRAND NEW * llowport Blvd.. C • M • Via Licio. 67>ml. alt. 5,30 PM. PIANO l•a<he• hu limUod erlooklng the water, Enjoy S4M7S5. DELUXE 3f1J aq. ft~ in openlnas tor COMClcmtlowi 11511,000 h•allh spa, 1 swim-LA CQSJA APJS. ROOM w/priv .. 1. priv1>a A Col'Oil& dd Mar. Near "°'' 2nd .,. W ,.., lltlldenl ~ pools, 7 lighted ten. ahower, utiJ pd .. part. tum. olfitt -Snack Sbol:J. Private I ""°""' 1~ Mn. Denton~. nis courts, plus miles of H.B.962-857Bevesforappt pa r king; a tr-cond._ .~ bicycle trails. putting, shuf. J & 2 a.droom FOR .. 18 ..... ..__~ RealonmniC!I, Bkr. 615-6700 [ l~ fleboard, eroquet. Junior l's e Bullt·ins e SWimmlng rent to ...,, .,.,.,.......,m from $170 monthly: also 1 Poot e Lanai e B&r-8-Ques on 2nd aoor. can.re. Neu DESK ~ ~le $50 PerlOl\llll 530 ~ ll'lll ._. and 2-bedroo •··· e G•~-. Costa Mesa Park. f)t6...0669, mo. Wm proricle turnltun · - m p..,,.~ and --~ at SS mo. Anlwerina: service ----------1 "•!!111•"'!!~11'!'••• 2-story town ho"ses. Elec· ALL UTll.ITIES PAID llM. Pri. home HB. Nr. Brlt· available 2ZI J"orest Ave, SAODLEBACK Sauna & App: I trie kitchens, private patios . ADULTS. NO PETS hum, Coast hwy. ML oni.v. 1Apna Beach. a-9t66 Masnie tor the best relax. lance Rep11fr or ?alconies. carpeting, dra· 354 Avocado St., C.M. $15 wk. 962·:m9 afl 4 • o~ic~ • ing feelln&. You nM'd us to & P11rt1 penes. Subterranean park-642·9708 . . & r .,.o ,,.,,_...,..,_... ____ _ ing with elevators. Optional TUSJ'lN, Room tn pnvate llO I: 600 sq. U, COSTA lcne&~ ~· Attract i ve AIL refri.a'es t'f'paifflf. Kl"n· maid zervice,;Just north of homt>, Near Fwy's, Pet OK MESA. Ca116t6-!1J). t20~~or'""sco· UNTPrivate.thf'O<\mth•I· rnott, Whirlpool washers, Fashion Island at Ja.mbor. I 'il~! * * 138-0873 * * -i~ WI 5 dtytrs repaired SJ4-4561 ~ and San JoaqU!n ff '"· I• Guest Hom• 415 LARGE 1 room; pvt. entr. ad. Call 6J9.8111. 3411 E. . , m RemoMI & Rop.lr PROF'ES.SIONAL Gardt'orr. J---------ttte -.wk, pruntr.,, sprlnk. Build Repair Remodel !tors, C"lean-up Job&, I~ W, C. KER.MOOE, JR. lt11. Gfarrt, IM6-M93. Colwtruetion ol Maint. e SIS-1961 e * Complete Landscape Sen . S...lna an On.np Ca. Roofing Fonna.1 6 natural JM'\Utinc. I ---------Alto-, ~ ae-nr. 557..s37'. LEE Rooling Co. Rooflna aH t~·pe~. R.erover. l"l"Pflh'll, GREEN MANSION thermo roor ~ti~. whitf' Cardenl.nc A 'Yard Main-.\ eolor. Lje/bOnde-d, a.irx-e tma~. Joe Elmer, 642·1137 HMl. 6-12-1222. E..XP. Ht1.waiiaQ. Gard~r Complete prdr:nini ~ Kama.Jani, 6~ EXP. J11.pancllt' Gardt'M:r Complete Yard ~rvlcc Jol't'-t' est. 54g..s459 f've•. • Bo!J'f Lftwn Sttvict!' * Comp. Lawn J.lalnt"Mnrf' ltomt' or Comn1'l 642-2005 e T. Guy Root\11;-. l>Nl Direct. I do 111y 01vn \l'Ork. 64>271!11. "'3-9'90. Sewing/ Alt•r•iiona t.:urope11.n i:Sman1;k~ All custon1 lilt~d. Personal Fa.shlOll .adv1ce. 673-1849. Altar•tlons -642-5845- N~at. areuralt'. 20 yf'ftN ~xp. ua Newly dee $65 Mo. 543--1290 Cbapman. Orange. Operi Discount Appliance Repair ~~~ho"' (714) 64~l900 BRAND NEW *PRIVATE ROOM* 63116 W. Coast, N'pl Beach lDam-lam. Wuher, °''""" D~hwasher. _ for rental information IDI' ambulatory person. Good ButiMJI Rent11I 445 FULLY lJCENSED GUARANTEED* 54fi..66M Japa~e. Gordenlng Sc.rvltt * 131.AINF:'S 1V * Television Repair * 549-2015 * 21 yrs. exp. F'l"ff Est. ;;;;;;-;-;:;-';""~===-!From $145. Dishwasher, shag food nice cheerful surround· MANUF•-m•"G Sal Renowned Hindu Spiritualia1:. B•bysittlnl Clean-up. Trin1n1ing St>rvit·tna All IJnu\l;I:. Help Wonted, M & F 710 EXPANDJN<l $ .. L Sttkl qualified candidatitt tin thrH' are.a: t. Opttation IMJl&&'llf 2. 'Etcr0w • t'llAIV A l.i...n 4, Conv, nlX7VA 5. Tdl('_r -new account. Come alxi&rd fM tt.t DHft'l' opportunity. Call Ma. MWtt (2'1!) m.-0150 BABYSITTER nM'ded Im· n1ed1<1!r.ly lo aet·ommodate rny tiours. 1tl'!fpoo•ihle Pf.J' ty f0r 3 ~r old boy. Your hon11", c.~t. art'a. ~. BARRER: Mt:n'a 1-llljntyllft "''fiJlled. Nt'W(lOrll'r Inn llot•I nurhf'r Shop. f'otlo"'•lna pl't'('ct. Call for appt., 6·14·2: .... ~. Tue$. thru Sat .. 9-5. ''Jim ... OCEAN FRONT, spacious 1 carpe-ting, walk·ln ck!6ets. in&s: . -.. .. ..,~ 1 ...... es. Spiritual Reading Cl v en ~~:':'.".,..........,.....,___ e 646-5469 e AuthorJzl"<I Sl11gn1&\UX bdrm apartment. Large Forced 'air beat, extra Iuwe * Call 548-47Sl * officf! .tpace. _._. .. na daily. lOAM-lOPM. Advice COLLEGE &lrl will babyAll G~en-.-,-.~1-5~0-rv-1._-1---1 Knov.·11 for hont~ty ~313 BF:F.LlNE Fa11;hkln.'I, no ml~ kitchen on best part of the rooms. Beautiful game room. locadoo. sua to $.9 mo 1 ..... BAYVIEW MANOR FULL TIME Relief & Second Cook- E.'(11et'lf'nced 'Pttferred 642-~ or 540o!i690 beach. Available April 1, heated pool. BBQ'a. enclo.1-SCO'rrS Guest ~ o ~ e. 49M6SS. · · on all matten of lile, 312 N. or wom6n woo works ~--,.,..--....,.----1 Tile le<1\oo or df'UY'M')', hllb Mature aduJts only. $300. ed garages, quiet surmund· Beaut. 5J)llc. sem1·pnvate ----------t El Camino Real, San nighta. Must start im· WINGS by ~foost. Lt. ---------profit, ~ samples, "Call 645.0068, ings &: clOSe to &bopping. J'OQm for ambulatory lady. 1:oo SQ. ~7rt ~'165~!! O emente, .f.92-9136 or medi81 hil. tdefy. VeEqry 'rood ~J•ec· ~·~_J1J11. :~::.'"::. !!,'~i C~~~:~ F~~c t'~~~mafi 6.16-~1 & 968-~739 ... ::;. __ _ Adult living, no petll. 557-4J87. ease or • .,,. .. '6 49Z..0034. w c rtn. perleoced. .... ..-WJ ..... eovs· s:-~ u~~~5 Af!~ EL· CORDOVA APTS. PRIVATE room in North Ave .. C.M. Call 548-8118. PROBLEM Pregnancy, Con-Call J.uinn. 5.11~ aft 6• ,•~t~e.~SC~5--0820~~·~~§"~f l~JO~b•~·~·•~l~ro~o~"~-~-~2~·!'6~. ~~I Agf' 10-1.t. t<> tff.lJver Jl'.perw Cptz, drps, bltns, garb displ. 2071 Chit.rle St. 642-4470 C.M. area. Industrial Rental 450 fident, • y mp at bet t c OULO Catt', experienced & CARPENTRY, painting, ce-In tM D&na Point, San Oo- 1525 Placentia Ave. Ask Near Harbor & Hamilton St. e 557411156 pregnancy oounaeling. Abor· dependable weekdays. In-ment, etc. zmaU jobs 0 .K. I (qtio)"*il_l[Illi I menff' IU'tA~. ahoutour dlscounl.>48·2682. y1 .. 1...,· Rentoli 425 4000 5"' Ff. -tioo -Adoption -rel. lanl to 5 yn.-Lunchea A &b.-~ DAILY PILOT -J~~iYJ5i1Tlf.::-e;~;=1 !!!!!!!!!!!! ... "'!!'!!!!!~"'!!'!!!!!''~~-~~;;;;~;,~ . ' Y• ~ AP-CARE. &li..M;JS. snacks. Fenced yard. Off Hauling 4924420 I. Yrly Dix 2 Br-Beach LAKE Arrowhead, 3 Br. 2 S~pered ~~ Jocation. BE pampettd at>d managed San Ditgo Fwy nr So. Coe.st!~=:=-,.---...,..-, 2 Ba ., bltns., dis p I., PALM MESA APTS. Ba, furn except·linens. $75. _,.,. sn fT . . by attractive w 0 m f! n. Pla.za. 546-7487. MESSY trtti, yard& & Job Wanted, M11fe 700 Bkkpr F/C $150 dshwshr .. lndry hook u P' MINIITES TO NPT. BCH. wk"<!. $150 per Wk. 56-8519. 5,000 't"• • 833-2100. BABYSITTING • Under 5, garages. MovinJ: & Muling. 17 yr, <lid Boy. 11ard work· 1111~ out11tandlng flnn IN'lca gar. 21.'l: 3.S7-2257. FURN. OR UNnJRN. '30 .$650. per month . weekdays or eve•. Rototlll\.ni. $7.50 per hr .., , IJ1g, Allt·r school. Y.'h111 h.Avf onf'n who drtvf'«, C\\\'n rt•pon• *LARGE 3 Br. 2 Ba, "Pts. Unbelievably large apts., R1nt11IJ to Share Roy McC•rdle Rellltor IF you would like to hogt a H ~IV' 1 . 351 Odd Jobs. S48-5863. '"'''· Owo iran-rtat.ion. 11ib ty It want• to actwnct. h I J I lect bit Bibi stud °""UP ln YoUI' 81 uur IC oria area. ~~~---~--.. ..., \'ou'JI havl' tot Ill chl\rte <If drps,. bltns, garage, ~:11 blk . uge poo • acun: e · l would like to share my lrg 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. ...-~. __ ,. ~:·1¥749_ Victoria, apt -«, Victoria YA R D/a:arnge, cle"anUp$. ,"-"",·.,.l;,9:JZ=-, ,..-;;-;,.,--,;:-;;;;;; bonlul A enjoy the ch&llt!J\I'!, to ....... I blk ............ Year! 1115• shag crpts, drps, sauna ttr ho / J J r---,...,,,.,. QI.I.I -•-· CM Re --dirt' · ~· .,._ .. _.. y, etc. Adults, no peta. a . ac. mew a ~ e~ _.,,£.., .,._.,. .. , · · move u"""'1• • ivy. Job W1nted# fem11l11702 Cllll Ann Jo'ox. HJ3.2700, Den- _}280moJease.543-Z820. SINGLES~··•• From Sl.35 rclinedwomande_aar 1ni ~0~1217~~ I.JC'D DllY Catt, 7 am-S;3) Sklpload•r, backhcM', nix A Dfonnl• Ptinorinet 2 BR, 2 Ba .. SIC oven, cpt'd, l BEDRM .••••• From $140 a~ve ave~ envU"Onme.nt. ~ding!~~~-An~ 1 P.O. Ben .. ....,., Costa Mesa. pm. Hot meals. Xlnt catt. "84""1-"°2666=.,,....-=--,,~,..-Jt E LI AB I. E, reapott!iible. Agency, 2062 MicMIJOll Dr, dtp'd, deck & gar. No pets 2 BEDRM .•••• From S160 Priv. drcasmg rm -':.ha. MAN 91 • .L"-..... ~ ........ .uun:l.~~~~-~~~~~~le";ar~bor;f/Baki;~"~""'~a.~>46-~15.19:!:'!. HAULING, Clean-up. local highly exper. couple lrvinf', $300/per mo. Side tie avail. You're righ' they're under-Spac aceom. tor l\"8CIOW! ~So· near Newport.....,,. Frwy. C 1 S I movea, ei<p'd. roile&t i tu-re locatina. Wanta Apt. com· .O.iiiioiiiiiiiiio;;;..,•IOI 673-8249. priced! 1561 Mesa Dr. entertaining. 830-1034. in 1· Sanorla Aoa.la,_ per [ Its llrpt erv ce den t. l..rl;:. truck. Reas. plex to mal\(lae tu N~M Chemlc11I Engr to $f4K (• b"-~ N m·J l -•· _... InO. ease ino. ino. • ~· -J ,..___, ' .~, 644 -~, n A + •1 I t •·· 2 BR, elee 61tns, dispogal, -> IN> uvm ewport vu. BALBOA IMAJa.1: Share 3 Br. Wai.worth Reil Estate .--,_.. .INTERESTED In buying ~1846. t..-, · ~. · · • "onu ac uru,. exp cpl, c1rps. laundry hokk-ups, 54&-8960 bse. w/l ma.le. SlOO. Util. 6J9.4210 . major brand e&rpet at the 0111-~T~T~R~U~CK.~.-H~.-uJ~,~ •• ~& NEED help at !'>Onie! w~ NEWPORT pool & cabana. Children pd. T.V., 11;a.sher/dryer, most competitive price? See auoc:iated taaP. Coast· have Aides • Nunes • Per1onnel Agency OK. $169 mo. 613-6234. HACIENDA piano. 6/Xi.22£1 or fi1S.ll58. ~~ ~~ase:+,_ 2 :;: Found (fr• ads) 550 us! Carpet Warehouse, lnl Valley Hauling 496-l278. Housekttpen • Com· 832 Dover Dr., N.8. OCEANFRONT lrg 'BR' ' HARBOR Avail. 'tit June. E . Edinger, S.A. 541--5071. ...n..... G panions Homemaken ·Up-642-3170 Primt k>c. C.M. C2 or M·l":::C:-:-7:'"-:'0:-:---:--::-J.:--..,._,,.-....,. _____ I , ~ Ir ara1te rlean-up. ~~!'!"!\'~!!!! ... "l"'"!"cl BA. 1 yr lse, $375 mo. 241 AVOCADO STREE:I' DESIRE 3rd man 1o ihare 3 JiOned. 646-4401 a am to S~u.. black ma.Ir dog Carpllt Service da.yz. Free est. Anytime. john, 5-47-6681. ;::-- located al 2206 w. Ocean-Adu1tsonly~NoPeta bdrm home-in Fountain pm :.-/brown marlrinp. Wear-, -S43-5031. LADYwa.ntshouaeeln'awrk. COMP ANY 11rod11clnJ front T eall 64+-tilll Deluxe l &: 2 BR. Pool Valley, with pool $105 mo • , ing '68 N.B. nc tags No. JOHNS Carpet & Upholstery ;,.---.,:--:-----E;ii:~r. Own trans. $3.50 hr. n1ed\cal pro"1'fln~ t11 Ir). • 0 see ' • Garage. Dishwshr. Paid util. iota.I. 968-8796. :o;)O. to $CXI Sq. Ft. 3195, vie. Newport Blvd, &: Cleaners. Extra Dri-Sh&m-Houaec:IMning Art 4 ·pm: 847-3631. trrvlewlna mf'n & \O/t'lmtln Nb~i::. 3 N~ :;:~ '!:h~:;: FROM $150. 646-1204 FEM.ALE roommate wanted, 4001. Birch. Nwpt Beach E. WHaon, CM 646-0127 poo free Scotchguard (Soil Mesa Oeanlng Service MATURE, relinbl! be.byll'll· all"~' whn hevr had Ma.rt live on beach, 2 BR. furn. Mr. Baumgardner 541-0032 , • • Retardant.). Oegttt.ien & Carpets Window Fl tc . Ex diMO:iue, ~IH'N't'r, or major $28S. (2l3)694-US3. e SPACIOUS e 6"2-9527 eves. RENT M·l ll25 Sq. Ft. BRN, & White Pu PP Y all color brighttnera I: 10 Reaid. '1c Comm~i. ~~. ~~;_.De.~f:~:.."1;,;_2862: 11urgt'ry. $25. 1';, 1ho1 r WESTCLJFF area. 2 Well-Designed Aptll $135/mo. 1355 Logan, C .M. w/blaek noee. Vie. 19th&: minute bleach lot white ... .."'_.,.. Sl"ltttW. Call 6.'\ft-1.688 tor Bedroom, 2 bath. Adults or; l & 2 BR. w/ Tern.ces. £MPLOYED gal tO share call -61S-51.J6 F1acentia. C.M. Sunday, carpets. Save )'OUI' money Dedlc11ted Cle1nln9 LT HMl:pr, cook. drivt' for further \nformo.t1on. ly Im •~ ~ '930 From 11'' • ~Imo C.Ondo.. pool. nr OOC. &ti-1167. by u.vi,..._ ·me utra trips. * WE 00 EVERYTHING * 0 ™' ""r50n, good ~fllth . ~=~-===== ' • ~· .,,......,. ' "I\/ .,.,.. RENr or lease front unit .. ., .,_. H p "" COOK -HOllSEKEF.PER Sh ,,.__ $87.50, Util incl. 54~77. • FOUND cat Vi .c in it y Will dean living rm .. dining .,. R. HONE 673-4072 Gf'nth·man pref. S.17-9l:'>7 * LRG 2 br lower apt. frp\c, ag cpts, .... ~. saunas, liJOO sq ft new bldg Costa ==~=~~~~~-1 General Ht~ dutle• + even. bltns. Nr. Lido, Yearly 508 _ pool, _jacuzzi, ~c~ gar. G•rages for Rent 435 · · ., Harbor A Giller. White &: rm. &: hall $15. Any rm. DUTCH Malnt. Service for Help Wllnted, M & F 710 Ina meal. 12 to 1 pm. Own 3.'.ith SI 642--0507 . Quiet Adult l1v1ne: Mesa. '73-l4l7 eves. crey striped pa l e he S, $1.50, couch $10, chair $5. 15 lloors, windows I: carpet Mf-.13U N 8 · ' MERRIMAC WOODS STORAGE Garage downtown SMALL indll.StriaJ unit· West 55l-4Ql5. yrs., exp;. what a>Untl, not cleaning. 537·U08 A car, • ' •area. WVELY 3 BR, trpl. Watk to 425 Merrimac \Vay CM Cof!ta Mesa S2Q, Ca JI 16th St.. Newport Beach. S60 FOUND· Biuk ~ ~:flite method. I d:I work my.elf. Anti Soil C•rpets COOK, male or fem&le, f\l'll A';:~ ~LT~ 642-38511 FABULOUS i BR 642-4228. mo. 646-1124. maio ;,.PPY. Appn>>. .., Good rel. 5,'11--0JOI. Allor CIHn•ng DISABLED VETERAN ::J:,"~r:,:'~! Aclobc, BLOCK from bay or beach, 1 $l50 & $l65 Fum/Unf Office Rent•I 440 Rent•.11 W•nted 460 wb old. Near College Pk C11rpertter LICENSED. Insured, Refs. COMMU!'tAtrdental office It 2 BR w/h\l&f! yard. You won't find a Iarxft'. n1cer MEDICAL/DENTAL NEED SPACE I 8cbcd.. 5416-l541. LARGE OR SMALL 1\U 'Mebm!nanee. ~S-M!e; IS A rwedll )'OUl'ltt perton wLth 675-7m-S orc21:n 926-"1393 apt for less. Beaut. garden Best location. 145 D:7Yu' Dr, Pretu hOne -prc>perty. S.A. SMALL Poot.He, wht or AU Types Work: cut. doon,-_64Z-%9l3. We OO everythlna:, · ritlntaJ offla! a~. 1...c...:.....:..~~-~-~N~,.-, area. pe_tioa;, Quiet dead-end UiO sq ft, oUioe avail Im· Heigfits or Laguna, with 2 champaene cokli'. No tap, p ane I. remodel. finiah Malter Ch~. troot, and bac:k. Mtdlt.tive, • YEARLY.Spacious. Only street. just S. of Newport med. occupancy, CUilom BR. house. Have 1JO lb. wired ribbons. FOO on frame, "J)ain, etc. 9fU.1!16i fJOUSEWOitK BUSINESS ASSET oteMtve, v_~&ri&ft_W. Ooean. 2 BR. Den. Ave. Adults, no pets. ~ interior, obedil'nce tl'a.ined Pl4JP)' Clearbrook SL 962--0138. -2 dais. Monday &: Tunday te onl <t;H-468$. ' $250. Appt, 673-1909. Fullerton Ave., C.M. (Jwt Xlnt ref's. PJeue call . MALE WD.iature brown. -CemMt, Concme • S4J..ll.95 • "P' Y·. San Clemente · 0 • tC ,..__ NU..VIEW RENTALS die, llO collar, Near CONCRETE WORK. Fm Income -T•x erana h•ve IM!tn 1:ratned ln fWft lB. Kmtueky FMe°d E I Bay) 64J.ai!1J ,_ ....... a_ fl'• true. Many di1ablPd vtf· OOUNTER Pi de.¥ bn • SAN CLEM£NTE 'S FINEST OCEAN VIEW Luxurious ne1v 2 br apt• C1n Bluff. Magnificent view or ocean & beach. Fireplaces, closed garages, privacy, near stairway to beach. Adults. $265-1300 1405 Buena Vista 492·9848 or 544-9688 Santa Ana FAMILIES WELCOME! SINGLE STORY South S.a Atmosphere 2 BDRM·2 BATH $11S/mo. carpets and Drapes Air Conditioned Private Patios J-lEATED POOL Carport &: Storage Nr. Schools Nr. So. Coas-f PlitZA HIDDEN VILLAGE 2:m South Salta (enter 2 blks W. of Brlstot, oU Warner on Linda Way, !OUlh to W. Central) H ti ~--ch -•·-673-4030 or 491-3241 Newport Harbor Yach t prices. Free eat. L Jc. hard . to. find Jq)ttialtlH -.le~ -E ~ H un ngton U99 --WANTED . 2 Br nice home Club. 673--0287. bonded, quality wort. CLARK • Toner Tax throua:h VOCAllonal rthablll-o:ro;,:ndej11-;ar.' -'" 'lf'f•i • OCEAN VIEW • From 1200 sq. ,ft. offiu for .... for xlnt tenanb by March BLACK maJ.e Oock-4l..poo 642-.1403. Servlcep 24 YEARS exp. In talion. Dlaablrd vmrnn• off . .,,.:.c.:....:.."'-'....:.:;_ ___ _ $135. l BR. Furn or unfurn. Suti Luse 15. Woold tonslder opt to type floa, wbite chin &: FREE Ideas, advice , and 8ftl. ~ · ~ In er more than operience and COUNTER woma n 11 • 2 • Discount for students. CASA 13)) &q, ft. pl~ of u~le buy. Lew pret <lose to hi· 'Wbialcen. vie. p e t e r 1 o n estimates. All I ~ -h , I =-~o!'.:!t ~ ~ akllls: tJiey ~ve th(! kind of Moo-Fri. Apply 2 tbru 4pm PLAYA, 14th & Walnut, area t.ncl. s pnvate offices, !lehool. One 11 yr old Sehl, H.a 5J6..6152. is• beautiful job at a reu: . John Tenet. ,detennination that makrs dalb'. 899 \V, 19Ui st, CM. i-. H.B. Call 536-8367. recephon "'°m & large disciplined boy. Mark@ting FND· Grf,y & .wbt kitten price. 645-0013. ..-===•' ,--;,--;--them better cmployee11 ••• COUNTER rirl ft1r dry 1 BR. Unturn $13CJ, will furn. general area. $450 per mo. Directions lnc. 4500 Campus mal~. a pprox. 5 mos. ol<f'. CEMENT WORK. no job too ~ H•rt.Mlur r T•x Service with fewer abltncft: t1.nd •c-cleanlna pllll!I. Apply '2200 Ov." ki~ beaut --i-~ 11th St., C.M. P ho n e Dr., N.B. 5t6-911D. v · W -, _ N B ___ ,, ---~ F , lS yn exper. lnVloe al your cldenls .•• wlth higher pro. Harbor Bl. C.M. betoni noon. noo ..... . 5G.1u=• "'"" _.. 1e. e ... ,., · . :aiU1UJ, ·~euoe. ree ...__ .,. ....,. ........ 181 d"~i lly d I patio le pool, Adults, no ~;II).)!. CrlM Apt. Wanted. Unfum. 1 6f6..3J6L Eltlm. H. Stuftick, 54S-8615. .., .. ..,. ror •rY• -• ""'' v • n emp oyer DENTAL a111t, exp'd. Take pets. 1035 Uth St. Across AR.C'.ffITF.CT. Engineer, .etc. BR. ~rn. Top noor. GIRLS bi.cycle belo~ to CEMENT WORKJ -•:::nzl~to':'r_l•.,.1---,...,-loye.lty. X'of'ft)'I. Non rrno!Mr. Prtiftr from Lake Park. ~2692. OfhCft. See to appreeiatt. Ocean VleW. Max $1.80. ''Smie" vie. Mesa Verde. Froe Eat 645-0826 i.Yr -_ t lf1llJn. For help In hlrtnr dl.Qbled ap1 23-35. 5 dky1. Newport Exler. entranoe, S8S mo. Sing~ butineaa woman "I . · ca.rpe · Beach. 844-0880. la gun• Beach S4S.5JOO, OPEN. 444 Old want a p E RM AN E N T 549-0925. PATIOS. wallu, drtve, install poolnc. floor tttippin&" and vetttana. contact your locaJ ·M'"'o'""o" E• RN• "_:_;6~ "t°'.::.:_..,_u" Newport Blvd, HOME". Refs. Res • FND Busett Hound Vic. new l&Mll, saw, b~. waxing, fl'ft eat 842.1996. office ol lhe Vefa'anl Ad-DISHWASHER. day•. .&p.. gcu'""' u..-,.,... Tut Rarlxir View H1lls. 54J..89681or minlatratlon or th11 State tirt Conv. Hosp .. 1161 C..nttt •Pt. 2 story 2 BR, 1% ba. DESK Jp&Ce available $S0 l· l .f. I & 3 6-.f. 4 6 o ' bu • remove. est. Masonry Employment Service. St., C.M. S48-5585. ' sundeck, patio, 1 block mo. WW pnwide tmmture 714/~1440. &M-0094. WINTER Ra.ta:! Concre"te --BIU--.CK.--B-LOCK--1<-- hl'ach, shopping, New epts, at $5 mo. Arn'l!'l'1ng R:n'ice WlLL the lady wm called FND: Sum of. money at 'Ed ftoon, patios. d rt v e a , STONE WORK dJl)s. Adults. Ms. $255. available. 17875 Beach Blvd. my ofc. regarding 2 Br uni Tunks, May 2nd '11. Call It .WewalJQ. Don, 642--8514. 540--0929 or 646--094.5 494-9982. Hunt:ingt&m ~ 6C2-G2I. ptage apt in CdM', pleue ide~. 962-741l. Contractor 1 BR. % blk to Oak SI. EXEClmVE SUlTES ca.U &pin, Ole:, ( 7 l .f.) nm. Little black do!, vie. ,P•plntl"!. & Beach. $150 mo. Newport Cn~ Bldg. 6»-1440 ext 45; Mme (n.f.) Fountain Valley, MJ...354.f. ROOM Add:itk>ns, Eltim&tes, 11pemengln9 *** m-3~ *** Servk!es ind'd 644 U>. QS..4460. FOUND callco cal Vic . plan! It leYoUt, 11.nde: ~ 2 ----=c-ch-:----l4'xl6' Ofc or irtore, mod. WANTED to leaw 3 BR ''Tfle City" 839-3397. 5b:lry. L. T. Comtruc:bOn. Newport Bu bldg, 444 Newport Bvd, NA house oo Lido 181~ by 347~15n. No Wutlflle * WALLPAPER * When )'OCI ca.11 "Mac'' 5'3-1444 646-Jnl lii°""ilii. i185iiiimoiiii. 548-Smiiiiiili.iiiiillii"i-ii;;ii. i1,i1i•imiilyi.i6il$-i1i164i' Lost 555 1 ACK Taula n&oRepajr, RESORT LIVING -------..... .,.,.,·! remod., addlt. 20 yn exp. 30 DAY -~·• T d I p d. HEARTBROKEN!! Lk'd. My Wa,y Co. SIT-00311. .. .. pal~t.:·:~ ra er s ara 1se ':,'!; •. "': .. t::..-::-":.~ ~ .. ~~lhltr ~;..:·t~ .. c Call Wilsbn &: Orange Av, CM 613-6041 * S49--2l70 :P"'A=INTIN='=c,_/,-.,P'°AP=ERIN==c, , .WANTED' 211 AL hi -nr ,,.,.., 115-1'191 or 6f0.3632. El·~ricol 18 H •-I t• o-~·~ G ara en u-... -· u • ...._ _, yrs in arvvrarea. Lie:& 1 aAWUVQ uu.111, .-uu......-area. nr PearbloS!IOm. F.cJ tor car,J'aoEWruCiAoa'i'o;";lor;;::-ft!Um::;;:;;;;;-:;ol;;-S.-;;mo:;:l;:.;;.;.;;.;.;:;;;._____ bonded. Ref'• 1um. GU-2356. Aparlmenta , •• and it's HAVE: wagon, ~an « ? Will dtaJ old male &l)cy' terrier. blk: EL E CTJt JC AL , resid., fun, fine nelihbcn and 4 br, 3 ba.. ~-MG-ml, 1·$PM. bm, O'&)' w/blk leather amun1, Indus. ~I 1 o , ROOMS $20, Aecoua, CcUlng1 prestige livtng in one luxur-Aient 675-1225 HIR 548-2423 Sun. braidl!Wf collar 494-8892 ~ ftmOde-1, ttpail"ll, ifwta.11. sprayed $12, atft' S200 A: »ut package. Tbett's l1 a1 Acfts, Shasta Acres, MOBlLE Home oe s.y, l:'lloltends. · Big/small. Uc'd/ln1. Frtt up, C.ood pWrt. &47-US8. FROM $135 HIRE THE 1>1SABLED vmRAN. HE'S GOT A LOT TO GIVE. THE NATIONAL COMMITTEE JOBS FOR VETERANS A a .. u111v1 ldeo Div of Gt"n1 Foods nttdl JOU. Leam A tea.ch pro( mlkeup techs. Enc. po1. avail. 842-266t. DRAFTSMAN , Grow w/lntm.ttnr cor!IPMf· Xht't benefitA + profl. -.............. romo INS. GIRL FRIDAY ................ .,..rd. Oepcnd)flC Ofl ~p.~+ GIRL FRIDAY 1 Girt ofe. w/emphul1 cie ~ •••••••••• $525 GIRL FRIDAY A/P, P•Y"'ll, Typlog (SJI MJpful I . .. .. • • • • • $CiO Santa Ana • 546-1525 . great ~ area. Shut& 26k12 panrlled rm., lhla,g LOST · Peke . bro & nt. 5*-021.1 . PAINTING, prof. All 'WOrk ACCOUNTING Otrk_, t yr. ~A/Pot A/R. Coaat Catamaran Corp., n'.lU Callt Pnfecto, San Juan C.piatrano. 493-4586. l"t'et' & fee Po91tlonl NEWPORT Personnel AtMCY 3848 Camp!.!$ Dr., lf.B. (Brand> Ollkel Nona W. 1-lotfman 54IMltl35 3 Heated Poola millron in recre~?,,;anl· · Calca.de wonderland. nJ.500 C'l"J>I: thrmut, fully turn. ..,_ k -R·-· mixv· ~-•-J EL ECI'RtCJAN. Ucenaed, guarn. Color • p •ct a 111 t swimming, tennis, wW s, F.q.; tor am. duplex or Reas. pricfd. Take It mod. uac u--; PJp. ic, °"...., bonded. Sm.all jobs, maint. 84~386. 547·1441. LmpCb~du~~~~BBQ healtb club.a, aaunas, pro-home. Bkr. 673-651D, PU u part pmt. l'75-06'12. t11~·=·! ~;~·~s ~3 I: rf'Paln. S48-S3ll. PAINTINC. Guaranteed pro-ASSEMBLERS DRIVE WA y 'aalum: Great new 1 2 6 3 Bdnrui shop, Indoor golf drivir.i: WANT AIRPl..ANE • • • • MULTIPLE zoned land le before 2:30. G•rdeni"I l.euionalLlc'd" .. ~~!,.a~'!!1'. '*'ion. Aucmble electric . m«:hinl· 'lvilubfo exper. Oun 4 From Sl-49 range. dub~, etc. trade ''8 Otf)'ller CroM'I Laguna development acre-u..., v 1;r-o11.., cal devlcn I: 1Ul>aa:~m-brat Apply in P'!flOrl, Boyd'• SOUTH COAST Imperial or "8 VolkJwic-en a ge. J88M 4 $1l.1M equities. WElMARANER. 1 yr, male, AL'S GARDENING FOR clean A iie"t _pd~, blie.s. Interpret. a.wmbly Arco, 490 E, 11th Cero.zoed VILLAS ~ d~t~ ling!es__, or both. ~-641M1191.---TNde 1 ot both -in" home, -• i.--c-Br.ooldunt/Ada.ms, b' p.nfl!niJll" I' -.-m .. 1-t inl«ior or exterior I: reu. draw l 111 •. apecitleatktn l'J'Y'lne) C.M. llOl M&cAJ'lbur Blvd. 1 le 2 BR. Fwuisbed~;~~ A.11:k for John. apll., or eomm. 494-4&5.1. ~vd. Pia cont.act landlcap~-~~~· eall ratn, Okie, 96M06.). print1, pe.rts 11'1:. 1 Yr. prev. ~e~,.-,"'.-w-Off~~ico-r~T~me-~1. 546-3823 fl11"nlsh!d, No lease·~--~ Australia Pri:ie cattle sta· * Ulkr Tahoe kJt. 90Qfh · M0-6198. _, .... ,. 1 .. "'POl1. PAINTING in ious ~lectro mtchln~ Brllflt, quick to kem iftd'-l·w~.~.tc~li~lf.,'-'-----· I Models Ope> Daily to to 1'. ~",;:, ~1.,. ~~.R:! ~d::. !:'!.'.:..~~ Stred ~~ ...... ~lk a bvr·w n ~ ~aa. DoYCT ... ~.. wirt t=-· =:. *!mbl)' e•pa. So vidual detlre-d h' t.'Oi WllJ. -... .,,..., .... v • .., ._ .. ~_, .... ift. Ap-~<.:11MQ1wa1 puppy. 'c : · • refi. Lie'd. PhlJ 49481 tedmiqurs. inc to train. MUtd be amblt.. WESTCLlf"F area, 2 BR, 2 OAKWOOD GARDEN home, $250,000. wJur For P"OX SG:O eq b' boat, car. Huntington St & Franklorl, YARD MAINTENANCE ;ou, & want carttr oppor. BA, em:y trplc, Garden reaJ t'ltate. 673-3811' m ar pllllle er !? m.fil.35 H.B. ~. 5.l&-4006. Law!¥. ~ de&JMJp & YOU aupply the Pa l n t. TELONIC To S&'JO. Call AM Folf. patio . Single story. APARTMENTS Duplex Bl *I U. 4 BR le 2 DELUX lBR 384. 1am rm LOST: bllc billfotd wtim-Cl'Uh t.ullnc. No ~ too Rooms Jllll inte-d SIO ea. Al80 INDUSTRIES INC . m.2100, ~ ._ D<rinlal Soundproof, BU1111. F I A RR houaea Oll l acre. rm fer mt home + income bldr ~ portant papers A Iden· atMJI, Our srk:e1 111.iknd to nterior. Call ~'10t6. Pll!l'90finel ;. I ct 11 t 'lo 2112 heat, Lrg dJn nn, Walk to (P.et:ort Uving for more. in Pcrtland, Ore. Acre w/trnt;ge HW)' II Ran-tttication. Vic. Warntt. H.B. )Wr budgft. Free FAI. NEAT, clnn, 3 )1'11 f'Xp. Lanunl Beach Mkbelaon Dr, Jtvlne. ( Wtstdltf Plua.. act'l'l'5t from Adultl only.) Trade eq lor boat plw, ntrc-Si:cp Pl,00' cq, b' !53&--JTI7 Rowan!. 673-1Jfi6, College Mtw-nh, no drink· • • EXECtmvtl * _<J Coco'~ 1660 Irvine. $19.1. ... ...... y. 81!-9121, 96UJ71. d..,. horn<. 5'6-'llllf °'"""LOST F"""'• Ch!hwlbua. GARDEN MA!n1. Cltol>-up, Ing, St"'· 548-1549 Equal o-. Employ., * SALES CAREER ilf Adlts. &t2-0239. !ttWPORT BEA.QI \.'UMPAlfION Crypt. fiw.. 6 Dt1lW! unttl 1 btk. born Scnall. t.at. bie<'k A: old. ff. roti>tllU,.., new ~~ pnin. Pl11ster, Patch, Repelr St~runa ulaly s>fus dmm. Apts., 16th at Irvlnt dom Court. Fott9t l.a•'ft. ~n, Coronit del Mar. Can Beach. area. 96UE189, inc. tprinklln. Odt Qardas -Ain.rrt ~ woman f'tnt y ., a r eArn[f1111 ol Fum. et Unfum. 310 6CS4XiO or 6CUMO v&Jue $1870. Trade add OCNnlrae! hOUlt, *· LOSI' aJJ _v looe haired SttY. ~ dyt. aft S. * PATCH Pl..ASTERING wanltd t 0 r hoolc! 11t1tt. $12,CO> -phn poulble:, 2 yr for •lmllar In Pacl&t Vil:w. Want 25 unltJ:. up M4-fltt • t~ 1 v5c H.B. &»-85e5. All typet. Free ntimalH ~1 hOuM':bold dutlea ~ tratnllla pn'lfp'am ~century Cort• MP• '15.Qil92 11w Irwin ()). Rel.!torw ?'.'.:!'~~. ca ' Sp R I N KL ER S - N e w call ~ c:ludtna aom~ ClOOkinc. Stu-old national cO. Bualnell I'll" VISTA DE L MESA • vw _,_ .. ~ ~---"-· M No~~-·---Pl bl ,_ -~ I ules ~ bdpruJ. No ~ 2 BEDRooM * Ap.lrtmenis di ne-:7:re. "S;j x"'~~ ~~ ""~.~~Wu) ~-rbiped-1N~·~8on.18 ~&'jr::U~1~"::: um "I ~ :1 Job oK."''UV::. tn.,,.l/lfcmt. eopnnunllltt. Bl Townhoute concept. t A 2 BR. Furn. A Unt Df.&:it.-Trkle for tl'" vw rim• &: h"acl@ ftw boat. beldt •Ml -.-uo;:a ' ..:: ... ....,.. &0-'53.5 PLUMB1NG REPAIR private m:a. tm mo. TED ~D.ER 8::.~"!r. .:" --~ ~.,;,.~~:.. ~1 . U-or of!~ '-S:-""'"~ ~? ..=: ~ cnm a 0 * ~DSCAPING * "°., ~m"!"" m.o!t9 An'= .:;.:111 doa rm. aauna hdla, de. RDJT 1tarta s·155 N la ~kl .... tqe-eb. ASSISTANT m&Mge:r -c.'llJ' .mplt)rrr Mil" Adolta. Our SUnda)t &tttr-lrv'i-I. ...._ ___ Ori.. 1!64 1't)11muth Va!tiln V~. c BR Fix-upper fwu dpb) 9wptierd. '-roby,* R.Pward.. "' WOI. ' , COLE PLUMBING wuh. Will 1n1a. £)u;ellcnt noon JI.a.Q's• rr.. Art *•-S45";jj * 4.,.J t!ldt. H..,..,..ID', tvn.. C.M. SUM..,, Wont , ** -T ** ==SO... lied, :II hr.-· 115-Ull luhn. ""'-"' ......,..Wy ~VE S«r<t°'?,.;.j i..-toslartbtg...._ -~-'l'RADEtir...... <J.6un1t& ... ad1llm.Mr. GREENA,..U...-loet ' R...-1 & R°""lr A-"""lcalapt lt ude , n_,"::!"''·F~~-HARBOR GREENS BAY AVE. -BAY VIEW op, ...... •""" -Schlll,-..iDto., Tl>e vie. ;l9lt ._ TmH.,, C.14. AL'S ..._pl,._ Tree ..,._ -...,.. up.~~~· ~-• 2 BR. Apt. -Yearly .._Pit: 142-1136. i!<ol --~JIOO. 64~ ttmOtlOI. Yard nmo<lellnc-SP &CI A~ I ZED -A I S.le P. O. Bo" tl03, N"'P" FURi< I BR'a, allD UJtlurn 2 ~ OWNER WI!>: Want IW ...... -. c..ta 1);>lh ltaolq, lol -nup. Rei>elr. C.rpcnJJ7, ~. Ultd ~ 11ntt ~";:Time lleoch, Ca. 92CIGl. BR Studi> apt. ~. drpl. Vacandea COit money. Real t c1o,.. bate lo lndl1 Mesa ars: ~ la Vacw ...... cmrt ~ 0 -ReplLJr t:prinklim. m-ua •le. Call Dldc 642-4721 • EXPEJUEHCED l It. I ah t Cl"· s..lm'I [XtOf. N 0 ,_ bout, •pl.. a!Oft !ht ff, ..... -lo 0.-. . -N'pt U.aclL ,.,.. -· 1J/t.; -The lutnl d>P In llte West The ...... , dn• t0 llte Wal .......... 1-_....... "" Jr, dtlldrtn, · m pe<a. ~l<I bide .. •!<. tltru. a.Do111 Pi191 Q!SJ'• 1-""" b» . The lnrill ea. bldr., <tr. tltru. a Dolly Pilot ••• a DoJly Piiot Qullllecl • • a Dally Pilot a-llllN -• _,_,. ~ -,..-;~!led M. . ~ ~ Rftllon ' '41f11 Ca.II-M. M . e' ,A1· -! ,, 2100 -81 ... , ~ I ,, I: 1 ., I I , ' ' .. , • ' ' ' - ' 1'n PILOT·~UTISER 2f & g,ti~y ;1LOT~ _ w..;;;...,. f"""" 16, 1972 •• 1-:.~~~~~~~· ,. ..... ~ ..... ~~~w~-s~·,~·~'ebnt~"'~1~"'~~=~~!ii~~~~~~ 1::· ~~~·. JIHJi!TI-..... l[Il] .__I _~,_··~~J[Il]I ._ ;;(&";;''".';;' ~l[Il]~i• ._1 ·lllll!'-_··-.....,.lftJJ 11111 • 1 I -I~ -'=I -·-... ·-·· .-l~~.-. l,u:::-.11 ~..:=... I~ ;J. --· 1 1 .. ______ Boatt, Po'!'tr f06 .. • ~1HelpW-,M&FnoJHtlpWonttd,Ml F1lO HtlpWanttd,MlF710 HtlpWa..ttd,.MaFnO Furnltun ' ... M1 ... ~1aneOlll •• ,~CK,\ Sold puppy, part • Htlp W-,M A I!' 710 . -~==,-::~~:-·I ¥ __ L_,0,.,S,..T-•'"E"""A"°SE,,--T<Trl<r, abo\lt U wka .. BANK ..._..,loo. 1951-1<1 TRANaU ~·./'P'\,,~ 3 ROOM GROUP °' Atoo:able I< pd with kids. CbriA. iAps\rakt • 1168,, 110 EXP&R. SeJvlce Stal l o, J .C. PENNEY CO. Produ<1!on Supv. w manap SAL~SME.N -~~ -~~ ALL NEW Coul Pawnbrokers 546-30'3 hp --dleoel • 300 \,elp. ""(2) f\l~n p/tirn¢, ~ F11hlon l1l•nd ..U ~t production lint&. Need men who are ready to reeord.s, accurate typilt, e5 FURNfTURE . ii clearlng out. OUT mi,. '-•·-·Uk• -~tt halttd hn. $1,500 or otter.~ W. ~---,...._ 60t •-Newport Be•c:h Supervusot)' e1ptr. estt~ team the car bo.meu and wpm, tuU time, d • y •. lot1une is YoU1' aood fortune. LAN.Mi ...... Coast ll<A"'., New p 0 rt ,.._., u~vro ... n, -o-":" ~ tial. Boat bu.Udlnc f!xptr. are wUlbit to tn1n. ?ttlllt ~rsonntl Of!!ce, Sou.th C0""'"'1 .... af ,'B P< l*1J"°'n-j. Unredttmed itenu ot a.II Germ pointer, mlx. Jem., Beach. " p:iast Hwy., ~ P<'. ... b. ~ oot req'd. Fast ero"·inr co. have &OOd penonallf1. be Coast Comm. Hosp. So. ·-r"'•1 .... 1.... k1qdl will ao at a fraeUon very lovable. ~1 -==,._ __ .,...,,_...,,._,-I 11\pply in ptrtoD. · 1 Require• 1631 eta.centia, C.M. interested in a Mutt, drtn 1 ~-·na. <4~1311. An .-.a1 croop, · pc ....... room ot their value. Watches, Mal 1 ale 14' FG Mlt.chetl, 40 hp ..._.. ""'-.. croup A 5 pc dinlna tet CHARl'\fINC test enl J·•·-n· ·I-Irle. V•~ llltle :XPERI.ENCEO re•fl.uta.nt \\'tU. .salestnlndtd. Btotfit1: opportunll;y t:mployt<r. jewelr)', typewriters, di•· lovin ho "'"-.. "~... .,, I I ·•--" P~ SE." 'NG ,..__ ' •---~-I l . •-kitten. to ' me. ..~.. ~aner, .......A cover • .... er u-er. -PRODUCTION ~uw., group ·-· avaran-* TYPIST~ * ALL' FO .. $299. mo.-. mus ca tru<lnm>en~. • --<OH • • -u ·-·~1700, ••I 513•·8'~.-ni,kl CARPET DEPT SUPERVISOR/MGR teed oalary plµ• commls. • ~-I< cameru, playen, ete. etc. * -Good "'"1<•in.19!0. 6'f.>.1652 pm. • sions. Unlimited income. Ap. Register for ' Rwdl over , for best buys. FREE male kitten, black, 1 JS' CC. CONSTELLATION llXPER. tow truck driver SPECIAUST To dirocl " t'OOfd\nJtil_se. v· PTYly in0 PLDSMenon0•6UNJVERILE, ,..,S!,;. a temporary job TERMS·ALSO 2424 Newport Blvd. fnext to ~· very lovabl~; .. ~~ts. •63. , $22,000• Days (Zl3) · t'-11 ...i. ,__ _,., today AnUque Row) C.?>-1. MS-6318 Incl. scratch post. <m1-•..wo. ,,,,,,, ,..151, eves ( 114 1 -RMCe lit.I, ....... a euuant. rral J'l"OdUCtiu.11 ~perat10ns.1>Harbar Blvd., Costa Mesa. LAY·AWAY PLAN -UOO"'<I ~ Ortta& HWy,'Sµ.Juan Extcllt'nt "·orking condt P.hut have capability 0"6-lntervws: 9·1! . $TA POWER Product.s 3 MO old Cockapoo, female, 67~1399. :apo. Outstal\(llng benefits recllng dUferent tradt 1ktllJ Sales \Ve Nttd All TRADERS 50% Disc. Gen, Dist to good home. , 1~4:C.. :..G=J.A;:SS"'°"'boao::c:-1.-.JO;'-;!U'l."P. V.XPER Florist .. , ..... Peck ·as well u repetitive assem· Personnel Counselor • Ottice Skills FURNIT~RE for sale. 673--8624 * * 646-6283 ** Ev'~de elec. Full cover ;::-~ Appl ln Per-· N Equal Oppor. Employer .Family F'Jo\\·tr Shop, 7801 1g'AM..fPt.'I""" bly. ~pervl3?1:Y ~mgmt No Expt1r. ecess. P.fale &: Female 202 N. Broadw•y, S.A. GE Portable stel't!'O. PLAYF1JL Collie·type dog, wt iler. Xlnt cond. ht '~Ave., \Ve1tmlnater. exper. in precision t me-No Fee. Seeking a career in· Western Girl Inc. 83.5-1305 Open 7 Da)'s •S35. * ~male 1%. yrs. Lovtc'B $500. 557-2158 after 5 pm. -....... tat fabrication &:/or prttis· stead or a job?' Want a fu· 642-1648 alt 5. childre~. 642-5264. &ArER. grocery clerk & 24 FesJJlon Island ion Kill< screening deS'irable. ture w/prestige &: money?' 4667 MacArthur Blvd. **TABLE, dirlingroom, 8', 22' Boat w/marlne engine . .;stock man. Steady or pt. F.cjual Oppor. F;mployer Send reply Classified ad no. Join the exciting world ot Newport Beach SJ>a.nish. cust design, hand * * Sheet acrylic, many 3-Yr old fem dog & 3-mo old Needs work. $00 takes, u :'f-lr·e. 67J...8310 Mr. Smlth.' 33l. c/o Daily Pilot, P .O. persottnel. Never a dull mo-540-0325 mack; $150. 8JS..68Qi, sizes &: rau~s. clear &: male dog, ~all breed, to is. 54S.2Jlf, JIULL or p/time, Mi'ffit KEEP important jab as Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CaW. ment! Jntervlewlna, phone, TY P r.s TI Ree e p tionlst, J•welry 815 some opaque. 646--0TI.5. good home. 4 ·797S Bo.Its, Sill j09 :CfrN, no ~p. nee. housewife & mother. Earn 92626. people involvement! Salts PI time, ThW'S/Sat/Sun. Miscellaneous 7 Wk old mixed pupp1es need 1 -----.,,~~'""'.'-:-::- r .Sal a ry /Comm . Fuller~lnspafttintt..l\1in.age70. EqualOppor.EmpJ.oyer ·personalityaplus.AlsoFee Acctn'e background. Front Want.cl 120 good homes. 300114'F.B.WHERRYw/sa.Uing )rush, 9fi2..0416. Covenlr)' Jewelry . ..,,....,..,,.....,,..,....., JobJ11. Call Lita Watson: ofc appe'afanee. Mesa Vtrde Tlf'FANX SEITINC Killybrooke, C.M. 54~2382. rig & oars. l\take offer or CRO\VING young co! needs 4. °PRACTICAL Nuf'S(', txper. 833-2700, Dennis A Denni• O:>unlr)' Club, 549--0377, Nita , Dia~~~ng WANTED lo buy 1968 trade for small dirt bike. -t:Icrk typiit'w/..que.l.Jflcahons Keypunch Opr $500 for Parkhurst Retirement Personnel Agency, 2082 ,M=0y'~'=·=·=~~~-~ 546-5710 Eve&/wknds Swedish Ro rs t rand• [El CaU aftu 6, 548-2310 lo·malch. Eaa:erneu Jo learn Punch your own ticket tor R.ff:ldence. Call Mrs. Otto, Michelsorl Dr, Irvine-. TELEPHONE Sales. Top rr;-'--7,.,=~,.c.---= ChrlStmas Plate, 644-4687. I Pttl and -J 'L.i COLUMBIA 26, dtluxe int. '1CC>ld~ compensate tor short· thi1 Immediate 11po! w/laree 962-5531 . SECRETARY to Adu It rommi.sslons and bonus. Ap. ¥M_lr-"~'-',.'°~.....,:".:='~':"':'-,8,-ll_ ! ~!lc!t~F~u:r:•:lt~u=r:e~/~~I ;~~liiiliiiliiiliiiii;;;~:: Lile lines. \Vorki.Dg . sails & 1 qe or exper. Phone Collllt well known co. Cati Marion PRINTING-e;qier. stripper Education O:>ntinuation ply in person between 9.00 ~* AUC:rlON * Equip. 124 Germ. Johnson o.b: Mor~ ~Catamaran, 493-4586 for in-Man~, 833-2700, Dennis I-&: plalemakf'r, Exceptional School Principal. Have and 12:00 noon at 8381 ·Boha 854 rage avail. 968--7397. ierview, DeM1s. Peraonnel ,Agency, oppor. \V/Iast 'gl"O\Ving nat'l ability to pass 45 "l>m ~ Ave(lue", Midway City. FRIDAY 7~30 P.M. NA'fIONAL Cash Register· Dogs 31 , PC, with off shore moor-. ~AIRDRESSER \V/to!Jo..vin& 20821'{1ebel11>n Dr, !Nine. co. Xln't working conds. Ing, 90 wpm shQrthMd tests. WAITI_tF;SS. Must be over 2l. FEBRUARY 18th Nine total "'ith inventory ing, Balboa I.stand included . . only. :xlnt \\'Orklri& L'OndJ. & KEY;PUNCI1 OPERATORS w I 0 u ts tan ding fringe Worlpng hours Mon thru l\fexican .food exper, prerd. Bdnn &-dlnin& room sets, control, like new. 2 • Four 2 !>Mui. male toy poodiH:, 67 3-Mll. Joe::. Call 548-4119. 029 A 059, full time. all ben<'fitg, North A.merlcan Thun noon to 9:00 PM. Fri , for ·W~inster reat.i\b'a.tlt. Le.mp tables, Buflets. Bunk totals & 1-Tu:o: adding AJiC, 2~1 mos .. 1 cbam- ttEALTIL.t.o.od .Jlorc Jllhlfta . at&o _p~e & "---palldence_Scbool, 4401 8:00 AM to-4:30 PM. Apply 892-5117.-=-· -· 6eds, Mattres5t!!s, Divans, macl1llK'S -ffi.im $20. Ana us--pagne, l white, dew-claws CATALINA 22', & trailer, mant11,er E x pert en c e "Wlc11di, ~ pay, ~nus. Birch St, N .B. Call Mrs. up'n',"',.,~n~l-hooOm1c0e ea,. 'p1 ','Ira,. c""t ' WAN.TED.. . Dool' to door £11e~;, TVV~cuSumt cleOffle.ner, ~~ ~r;;_stata"r:n~, e qu i P · removed, shots, . t a i 1 s Fully tq~, 0~~ ;!!tor, xlnt ~ · Exper'd Alpha Numenc on-].files, 546-7360. _ o:cv = H tme uo o,cu s. ereos; cc .,..~J t. : • docked, $175 ea. 494-78n. cond. $3.,.-....... o.u-u;;>..>U eves. • ry494-32a3 ly, Ne, o .. c. air P.O rt ' PROFESSIONAL ·phone , ~_:26ach.Victoria, Capistrano . se ers, no ~~~4 . nt. <tqk, &.. cha.it!. Powetkraft 2 DESKS, 1 seeretari.al desk, FREE • Loveable AKC Boats,·Sllps/Dock1 910 ' 54~1984, · ll I o p · r San D<.: '10" radial ann saw.' Side-by. 1 ofc chair, 2 recept. area -..j51e--.1 wire ha.lhia ter--·SfOLOGY -~·NtCJAN, . so e tor • ana oin • WOMAN ti. & .aide '""'frig'o, Washers, ~-v· "• ·~ SLIP .u ti '"' to 50' ---· i c.A..fl Ma hi Ca I trano Secrelary 1 ' energe c neat, ~.... »w chairs. Misc. office equip. rier to good adult home. • aiue es...., · ~" i';tlCP Tuea thruSat 6am-c nist Clemente, p s area. mo.tel maid ·work . a .&MUCHMORE! Phone546-5146. perlt . .Alsodryl!ltorage !12 pm. Soulh eo..i Comm. Nltt Shift Only Work in yQur own "°""· Legel Trne to $650 Pennanoot. 494-U96 . WINDY'S AUCTION 892-Ml.8. w/l•unchtnv tacll, up to .2\'. ff So Le. p Best deal 1n area. Phone Have you ahvays wanted to I..,==~-~~~--I WALNUT desk, 30x42, nearly DOGS & cats love it. Fresh i $23 le $2'1 per-mo. NeWP.Oft ne°:P·Ow~. ~:;311~~~ NC OPERATORS 835-1465 ~tween 9:00 ..i.m. be a legal beagle?' Local at· WOMAN wanted for house-· · . . new, $60. ~ecutlve chair, meat. ~ lb. Cott age • "4JUS.l opportunity employer. & MILL QPRS 1_a_nd_n_ .. _,_·===~--torney seeks sharp individ· cl~ng, Fridays only. COME BROWSE AROUND $15. 644-0~2 or 645-0lli. Cheese, 15c 'lb. Free delivery Marina. 20th St. 839-2'J8l.. • -Exper. only. Top W.ary &: ov· PURCHASJ~G ua1 for thiScareer spot. ·call Dover Shote!. 64&--0169 2075~~ NeWport Blvd. /O 126 ai s~ 111ck-up. ~1--0594, Boat Spice Nr. Lfdo-~RS Empl)-T paya fee. ertime, group iM. Apply in DIRECTOR of ·purchasing. Pat Kennedy, 833-2700, Den· hw"o~M~A-N~10-00~u-.-,,-&,_..pa_c_k-in Behind Tony's' Bldg Mat'Js Pianos rg•ns * Ca.II 673-6(50" * peorg~~enE Byl~~ ~e;· person, Ne,vport Controls wants assistant \villing to nis & Dennis Pttsonnel shipping dept. North Cos~~~aDAI~Y 9 !~8686 WOULD YOU ~:~o troPu:S'c~.:: !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I ~,~J! ;.,~-B . . ' . Corp. 901 \V, 16th St, NB. learn: quick, aggressive, Agency, 2082 ~1iChelson Dr, American CorTespondence "'==.....,=,.-.,,----BELIEVE une. Call <n4). 637-5170. I _.. -111· '1;.~, 1 MACHINEoperatortrah1ees good \vilh figures. Young Irvine. School, 4401 Birch St., N.B. STEREO, 197Z Garrard :..REE ORGAN LESSONS • . -~ · some mech. ab11Ity prefer· -J .... JW, Bu earns. """"" ... v u · ng as you 1 e! o reg· OUSEKEl:PERS fUU & . · ' mal• or female 0.K. Sal"""' SECRETARY "'6-1~ d K -~-1 Elec~phoru·c lull Jo l'k N TINY teacup po o d 1 es• I iliiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiii ~IWn_e. Conv. Hosp exper red. Apply in person Inea opl!n, Call f.fr. Loni? at Coast Would you like to work in a YOUNG· fellow to hE1p in s.ize stereo chcinger bass istration. No obligation. Just ~tend .t: abOts, S75. , tcrey. 64.2-241(). Plullcs, 32972 Calle Perfec-Catamaran 493-3831. beautttul modem buHdi.ng mall room, 18 or over. re t I ex · s p e Akers. O:>me Monda)'t 7:30 !Jm. · 547'-33:51 Aircraft 915 HOUS~gP~~ & Com· to, San Juan Capo. No Reil Est1te Career' f0r a company with marvel· North Ame!' i can Cor. AM/FM/MP.:X. stereo 8 COAST MUSIC 'GREAT DANE PuPs. AKC, 4 -fiildragger 'or .Tricycle , pank>ns •. Pf¥tlcal Nurses . phOoe calls please. Neiv or eXperie)"lced. Jo!_n ous benefits located near respol¥k>oce School, 4401 Im.ck · tape player. Still 642·28Jl wks. Harlequin &. blk. Show Your choice at tJ.lve in or out ' Oood Paying America's leadi.rlJt resident convenient shopping?' Co. B1r h S NB 546-7300 brand new in box, Jen on PIANOS ** ORGANS. &: pet quQlity. 51!&-1038. DI• "DND AV" •Tl'ON \ ,_ ... _· E I •· p -"' ./ Maids, ex~r .. over 21• d F u · . Pa"• Fee. Fee Jobs Avail. c t., ·· ' · • lav-a.-\V'"'· Orll>'inalJy ""Id """' ..I "' ''*'UUll' mpoyer ay1 £;el! ./Also HOUSEBOYS. ial sales lea er. u train-J" aud Kearns . J" ...., e• ""' K:-~-a.1, Steinway, Lowrey, l\IALA1'.1UTE puppiet, 1 blk Low Coit Flying He'lllth k Family Care Applv Ben Bro\vn's, 31106 ing program includes class-CaU Jean Brown, '540.liO'"aS '"!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!ij!!!~I tor $386.95, pay oU bal. of AJen, Baldwin. elc. From & <A'ht, 1 if'eY &. wbt. AKC Student Plan Available wl'¥:y, 1805 Ne>r Broadway, s Coast Hwy, So Gguna room + individual guidance. Coastal Agency ~ ~ $189.47 of. pymnts of. $9.00 $295 up. RENTALS. . 540-1932: ':SA .. , ·• , . \Vt train you to success, 2790 1-Iarbor Bl at Adam!! I -· I"-. mo. U.S.A. ·Stereo Equip. Dail~ 10.S ~un. 12-5 reg. 8 wks. 531.--0128. * * ; i ' ' M&--f&t Man•gementbTrkaind Earn whill! you learn. More SECRETARY $.)5(} . _ V. Watt.house, 179 E. f7tb St., FIELD'S PIANO CO. ADORABLE Peek·Poo &: 1 Campers, Sr1l1/Rent'20 Accounting or ro erage advertising than any other Fee ~imbursed Costa Mesa, 645-2442. l833 Newport Blvd. TERRI·POO JlO. 642-4WI. , .......... ll<>USEKEEPER-Cook. tx· back ....... nnd, Sal. a"" O""n. -altor. OUr full p•o. ada A 1· ............:i • SM-3885 alter 6 pm "' • 1· · Pvt rm & bL ... ¥~ •J ... ~ """ ...... ~ ccurate typist, ite sh. 6 ............ Ant· _,. SWAP MEETER$ Costa Mesa 714/645-3250 · •itft'. 1ve-in. • Call Mrs. Schmidt mak• the •ho"'' dn• with ho ~-··• f iques -G-•"•" SHEPHERDS VANS CAMPERS ~&ulllul "--e 642-9606 CLIFF '' .. on P nes. ...vngen1ou 0 c. --_,,..,,..,,...,,,.,,....,,. Lost our lease, f,abulous buys l\IAJOR BRAND OR.GANS .i:...rw.•i.N~ ,ot"," '"-'f" •, • l>ER~~~L AGENCY tU:.~i.Call Virginia Jones, l}'/8 young men k ladieS. SCRAM· LETS loo n1.1merous to list. Lo\v a.s From $395 inc. Allt."n. Conn. AKC. ch.Rm;>~* 11, wks. .. ~IATE PLA~f:iT 2M3 Westc!Ul Dr., N.B. TARBELL REALTORS .u:iKELso Fe:'.cJ~~y , • , 5c each. Buy one or 1000 H~nd • Wurlitzer, etc. Chevrolet, Dodge, 11, · C'LE,RICA,~ ;:> · 645-2710 A · iteri'Js. All from federal Afso Harpsichords&: AKCBlackLabpuppy,6mo. Ford & Volkswagen ;~ .~~t~~~!, exp. Mature Ho~es Receptlon!f'RY ITI 1819 No:54~~RY· SA. NSWERS :::'"::.:..~, ~:":,:: ~~;: Pi~ULO MUSlC CO. ~~"~· UC. doghou,. we •tock all tho makes with . STENO CL'ERK i "'~1r~r.~s YOU'LL llKE IT! 149 Rivtrsid!~ve., N.B. Palate -Baton -Ditto -clean stock. Public welcome. 2045 No. Main, S.A. SA.'10YED Pup, 4 mo's ol.d , van L'Oiwerslons n .. ~ \.f.it1"1:"'-~ 9()1-' .... ~, .... "'_..~ ... -• • 'Lee 1!• ~t!'l'et'Tt. Cfttain.\y ~·c:·7;;:-;,""-~"'·'--.~'-·~-.;;;vi Fondly -l.NFANT Glopat LlqulsJatora,. 7200 S47...o6&1 ~ '**'"'• Since 1911 Champ. line AKC $100. by CONTEMPO , g · . -Part Time-not !he run of the mill, but Sec'y Exec. to $700 Sometimes an adolescent ls Garden Grove Blvd., West· 6l3-5403. .mK. EYPUNCH CAR &: TYPE~ITDR NEC. the saia"" & benefits can't Internati·on·"" '"ell kn--one who, when oot treated minster, 893-0074, 893-0575, PRIVATE PARTY WANTS ==="""=,,-,==~-in our branddnew-rec:n<ation· 1540 D'E. Ed1n~r. S.A. "J • ,,._ L ' aiv .. u .. ,. ' 1 d "· k ~ 9 TO BUY PIANO FOR B""V"I:'<!> PUPS AJ<C -al vehicle epartment -~Ust have 6-mo's-warking Call 547-3005 be beat.-Try --it! ~u . ynn -co: St!!eks aha.rp looker for llkt!! an ad\llt, acu like an IN· open ays a .. ee uvm \,I.ALA ·~•· COMMONWEALTH 'i!?cper oneltherakeypunch , Todd, 833-2700, Dennis &: ge~'I mgrs right hand. Call FANT. until 7. CASH. 835--2278. CJ'Jampion line k yt,.pe or key disc device' M AT UR 1S rectpt.-typ1st. Dt'nnii1 Personnel Agency, l\farion Mann, 833-2700, Den· WANTED to bu_x, 1 96·8 SfEREO, 1972 C * r r a rd HAMMOND organ, i\13, * 714: 962-8061 ( e " . . · ' Full time. Lip·Wi!co,~bora· 2082 Michel~n Dr, Irvine. nis & Denni~ Persopnet s wed i a h R 0 r 1 t ya n d s mpdel, full stereo chal\ger, $699!hest offer. COLlJE pups, 2 Tri ,males, MOTORS, LTD, 1 ',t'A°(J f:JC MiJ-TU~L:-~1· 646:-393t. lo: appt e R. E. SALES Agency, 2082 M1cjlelson Dr., Christmas Pla'te. 6f4..4687. air ltl!J>enslon . spe'akers, • 675-6684 $75 ea. 1 magnifieent Sable ~ dally bus transport&· Medical Receptionist. MANAGER TRAINEE .Jrviiie. · Appliances. I02 AMIFM stereo radio +· PJANO Cottage up r j 1 h t , female S125 833-1217. 'f;; 4o.i wotk in J..os An· IT'S WHAT'S P.la'n or woman needed with SECJtETARY rieeded by '°"°"'"""--.,.....,.---¥ lapt deck. Still brand new & Terrific tone &: touch. I ·AK""C"'°reg-.-Poodl==,.:::.-;:All;;-me:c.:::, • attn until move •o Ne-.v· UP FRONT ~ managerial polentia1. Our USC profes~r. part time, RECONO . ApplJa.nces & guaranteed. Was 1 er t 644-6331 alter 5 pm.. & cOlors. From m a: up. port. · That counts in thls hand~e expansion plan require'~ tw9 yoor bome or mine. Die· TV's. Guar. I: Delv'd. unclaime4 on lay-a.way. TllOMAS Organ Orig cost 646-0142 or 54s.1022. SEPTE1iflER 1972 young doctors ofc. Answer CU?Tent licensee~ salesm: tation rc~uirid. 646-1143. Dunlap's, 1815 ·N t w port .=nc:orof ~~ t!..:a; ov~~ $25()0, For saie ~. Jntervle,ving Hrs· In phones, mAke apptf & greet or brokers. to groom Blvd, CM .. 548-7780. small pymnts. Collection Cali aftt"r 5. 8J8..6186 ~RT FlNANCIALCI'R . pa.lienls. $400. Call Pat K~n· for offi~ manager in H.B. SECRETARY Refrigerator $40 ' "; Monday •Tuesday nedy. 833·2700, Dennis &: or Anaheim. Planned open-_ Freeu-'t Dept .. 714/893-0CiOl. S•wlng Machines 121 FLASHY reg TB yearllng .di o'elock AM· 2:00 PM Dennis Pt!!MlOllnel ~ency, iJ.1.rs in. March A May, De·· I *"-'Ao M,,.. $40 * .STEREO * . ..,.,·,,,..,.....,,_-:,.-.-""".-colt, very gentle, shOw po- }-On 20821fichclson Dr, lrv1nr. sire m1nlmmn or two.years For Newport Beach Ad Agtn· · · J'OO-;J•w. * 1972 Garn.rd model full ADLER, Zig Zag sewing tential $300. Also TB gelding s.'t Site Of OUr New Bide Mctel Maid Wanted experienCf' but will c;on1ider cy. All skills including SH, • W'HIRLPOOL-1.{ENMORE stereo c ~anger•· air machine. good condition. 8 yrs, sound, jumps good, .. PACIFIC MUruAL * 642-2670 * others based on ability. Ex~ ShB!'P l~!;· 67lon& hours, rpr. man h.as wa.sher8/dry-s u 8 pens 1 0 n speakers, $50. * 644-0554 ribbon winner. Ideal for r Corner Santa Cruz & cellent benefita. Call Mr. good pay. Q,),,)-1 0. en:,· sets. 5'&.5218: 8.19-7620. AM/Fl'\1 MPX stereo radio, beginner $450. 5·4 4-6 4 14 ' N td E t ... ? G t lid tia1 --KENMORE a.uto zig-zag in ~N~ Center Drive • X r• JTftiJney raves 0 r · COO en I SEARS Kenmore 800 washer, 8 tt-ack tape deck opp. Wa.s Call 832-4038. """"""~'!'""""""""JMany Avon saJes representa· f n t er view appoihtment SERVICIE CENTER xlnt cond; paid $300. Mov-IE"l't unclaimed on lay away, waJnut ·consol~, $30. 'l~Y=R~.-ol'°'d~Du'""n"n-go"l"'dm=g, urance Sales tives eam ·a.estimated $40 $5063 & 697-6194 COLLINS AGENCY ing! Sell for·$al. 644-8745 sold for $295. Pay oU b8Jance =84=2--51',.5-9 . ...,.-;,,..--.,.--,.,.. quarter horse &: l\.t1,1sbmg. WE furnish the two things a \Yk or more. Earn xtra &: \VAITS INC. 136.51 Mii$· 01· :sis. CoUection dept. BUY dittct. Elna sale only Needs good J)Stient rider ~good salesman needs, live cl\Sh -& have f11n, loo! F'01• nolia. Garden Grove. Calif. * Trav..1 Agt $450 COi\1:BO gas washer~er, .. ..., lOSO. $269. White-Elna, 48221.ak P~· l'AIV\ w/tack. .,, ,. .. alt 6 ~ t D I 'Js C Jl Philco. $2.5. Must sell by ....,..,... I d . ...vu ~ .,,...,.._ prospects and the ~·vuuc e a1 a . ?.fin. l yr ~xper. mount B v .. ew . r_everyone is asking about. No S4G-7041 * Order Desk ·Clrk Sat. 54.8-2864. LOW~HEAT 2U/4~m. 1.,:pm::;c":.,..,="::-==,.-,= eoliciting, collecting, book· NURSES Aides, all shifts. //) J to$400 KENMORE dryer, ·like new. STAINLESS STEEL Sporting Goodi l30 Q.H. Gelding, l2 yrs. Show <lteeping or route runn~. Expel'. Only in conv. J-losp. f<:..ettben j Accurate figure typist MUSI' SELL. $125. S48-85tI Waterless C;ookw1r• Set or 1Pleutttt. Reasonable. ~00% selli~ and maJung 642_2410, * Acctng Clerk to $450 bet 8 am & 1 pm. Sold homf' demo $365. Take --------..,..· 1 sM" sacldle A bit.·~. money. Peimanent. OvtT 21 Kno1v accounting procedures WH IRLPOOL elec. dl'yer, $89. cash. Boxes never SKl Boots, la.st ye a r ~ 8 .. on old m_an!, sound. 1(~. Cs::r ......._.,.R,..,, Call 497-1345. NURSE~ AIDES Sant• Ana * PBX .,.,,. xi"! ,,.~. 'lust ··U •. ·~. opened. 100% Factory Guar-models. Men's Lang pro-~ rider ..... 1 .. 1 u~i.-0H .. r .bet 9·~30~~~ &: 11::11 a.m. EXPER. 549-3061 ..--v uu " _. ~ an(eed 8 'w, almost new. Ladies' :.".:'7 ... """'" "''"' · -...,. • , .. N 1 · · 1 Some Cord Board " exper. 842-7213. ordl 7" N .·.A-~ ;)'!! ~ .Wed. & Thurs, Must have OFFICE girl p/timf" _ ow ntel'VlC\Vln& or (TI4) 638-1080 leather N ca ;-. 1-"'CU ~~~~~~~~~~ <. 1 * Gen'I Office to $Sb0 Cimeres & ntti S15· Trappeur l ute·a: disability · icense. niliture \\'Oman, Ute typing. Sharp w/flgm'es &: LOW-HEAT very e, · . • ba•k Ari1iun•tic. hil.1 DAY BUS HELP Aceurol• l}'pisl · Equipment "8 STAINLESS STEEL N, l2S. 543-138!. I ~"°Z~..-ll•Jej I INSURANCE paying, payroll, filing, $2.00 *·Clerk Typist • $476 NIKORMAT FTN 50 mm, u W•ttrleu Cookware Sot Stort, Restaurom, . "' . OPENINGS hr. Call ti<l2-5522. . Apply In Person Type ·OO w.p.m .. ~ 10 key ''"'" Uk< new 1225. Call Sold bom• demo 1365. Tak• !l•r · 132 l'fany secretarial & general OPERA'JiJRS, expe.r. s1n;1e Before 3 & J P.M. 642-9168. ' $89. cash. Boxes never DUAL Taylor ice cream ri General 900 f1er_jcal Positions in~\uding need.If! • ~wim1\·car. 3160 Or Before l 1 A.M. 4262 Campus Dr., N.B. Furnitu.r• llG opened. 100% Factory Guar· shake mach. C.Omplete 2 -"'.".~=~~~:-:::,..- one Transcriber to be train-Campu~ Dr .. N.B. Suite 8-4 557·2111 anteed. Hotpoint elec grlll.s &: 1/1 1(£'.TT~NBURG ed for :P.ITSf. ORTHOPEDIC TECHNIClAN 2313 No Broadway Helen Schaffer "PRIVATE member's room (714l 63&-1080 stands "'/work · tbl & ·DANA POINT _ 11iese posilioits are \\'ith full time, days, minimum 1 !·!'.!!'~~~';"'!!!!!O'l'!""!"' .. ! at Yacht club decorated by ~WE=-;:AR=E:-4,-F"IRE="sro="'N"'E counter. 10' s/s tmd & G nd O • Homt Office of r.ta.iol' in· yr exp, req. Personnel Of. Equal Oppor. Employl'T' $ER.VICE Station A tendant, Cannell.ChaWn. red. White 500'8·. G78-14 Wini MANY blowers, 2 Hotpoint e-tee ra pening jiurance company located in fice, So. ~t Comm. J<iosp.. p/Ume eves/\\'knds. Neat &. blue furhiture. Antique l\tILES I.En'! ONLY SlO fr)'trs &: flit~, Globe iJlc-FEB. 19, 20, 21 •' • · b lld So • ·--· •~1su An RENTAL · in ftpPearance •. ~per. o. nly. ·-Ire "'th bevel·• m;•. FOR EACH ONE o u• • eot . PJllZES : Free Drawing ,,,.,,. but moving to new u • . '......,;;u...... ""' • _,,..., ... "" .. F "" UC mach. heat lamps• ~ , Com' plete Y•cht Supplies ~ in N,:wport Beach later equal 9t1portunity employer AGENT Apply 2590 Newport Bl., ror, Wash stand ~·(white WE ARE WORTif · YT! fee ,JllBtker. R~ ~ain-WJ year. Fret commuting OVERSEAS . C.i\f. merble top. New IOfa bed MUdf BETTER THEN b'urgen:, 2144 N~rt Blvd, New Boat Display Fm Huntington Cmter, MORE JOBS THAN PEOPLE Atlrachvc, 'vc~I • groomed SERVICE station attendant. ·and ·other items. Cost RETREADS! 859 Presidio Costa Mesa. 642-7955 AM: . Co~-~e':'er "'-naheim Ir Ne1vport Bea,ch All skills & pmfessiom "~man w/ dyri.~lc ,person· e"Xp. preten'ed. FuU & part $3000. sell all tor $1500, not Dr., C.:.M. -19f.4.540 aJ1!. st r vice ; U•...,.. Boat Brokers 156 Horus 211 t E. First st. Santa Ana 835-6531 CAMPER . 31~ foot half cab. over ·open Road Camper. Sleeps 4. Has two tone paint, stove and oven,· ice box, screen door and carpet. Large closet space and cen- ter dinette, Weighs 875 lbs. Mint condition. Co.st Sl,250., Rll for $800 cash. 1593 Mt. Matt~ountain VaUey, aner 4 P.M. Weekdays. 8!-i' ball cabover Open Road camper. Sleeps: ,4. 875 lbs. total weight. Stove, oven, •ink. large do.et. """"''" ,Jm!'tJl dc19r & many e$ll'u. l.erge boot, two tone pa.int, blue and w!'llfe. Mint Con- dition! Col'lt $1250, sell for $800. 15935 Mt. Matterhorn, Fountain Valley, aft 4 pm. ·n Ford %. T. Econotine Van, Cruisaire camper con- version. V-3, auto, a.ir, stereo, sips 5 'ad.ul!:s. $4950. 833-2448 • '10 DATst}N Camper, loaded wJextru! Very clean. Lo mt. Make offer. Eve s 847--0830. '68 VW Westphalia Camper, full length rack. $1800: Call 673-4678. 8' STARLINE cabover camper w/jacka le tied9wns, $800, 846-71.10 Cycles, Bikes, Scooters 925 hy bus to LA until move is Ill • Lo ality. l\tust have knowledge time shifts avail. Apply at. 801d separately. 6T:>4207. _. 9985 Carl Russell ~ ''--"lete. Low cost luncbes • gher wagTes "-~~1', or leases & l'f!ntal. ............. QUEEN SI.. bed, fit m • -._... • • Dana Point M•rlnr1 --·~ e ax ....:.neu ...... ~~ Shell, 17th & Irvine, N.B. LIKE new-Velvet liv rm seit /hdbd Ke od 600 dio HIFI l967"Hotl ~ s ·~ ... t )rovided. Good ~alary & expen~-.....__'I 1 11 men ts. Good typist. Hours w . nmore m • TV, R1 , , Del Prado at Cuitaa Pl. ~-· :!IJ!nnctr r ...,,,._ benefits. Ftt pa.id by • "'"c • .=LL"~~,~~!r: on 12:30-9 pm. &:_ week-end5. S!WINC machirw operators, sofa, love seat. curved JU.~ "O}Je'n top dishm:sher. AU ~Stereo ~M· EL Pe:1ea&;i; ~k~ & end;-G1rUni tteco IChocks, .£:'..:~:.-. --~ G .. ~~,AA~ Phon• 546-5025 exper. OVerlock, special back 'chain,. pecan It Span. Uke ne\v. See Wtd / Sat /' 1 Reed valve, Webco head. ~~' .. "'":"' & T 1 0 •1 Service uaran mi nee<Ue, single need I e , oak tables. \Vill ·separate. su 645-4325 501 Tustin A· de90late. She des'j'lerate Y Desert ready ! $275 ' "terv1•w .•' •• Y Until empl-ent accepted RN·· LVN. dAvs &: PM. Call Al H ul •• 1 n. ve .. J9n ZENITIJ 4 RCA televis-wants ,to -t out & .catch a. VJ... • ...., ~'Omens wear. Rojel Inc.. so en: on o 11 o a Npt Sch 1 · t .~ 838-973Z .~. •v• I Sat. by appt 0~ SERVICES Administrator at PtA-k Lido 1608 8 ., b cock, ' C.M .. w/m.atc:hm& Jove seat etc. · 'ions. Lowe I pnces n sormi fish or Just cruise. I ;;n.;;<o-'-;;;;:--<;::::-=:-;I it • 1617 E. 17UI St S.A. Suite 3 Conv. Hosp. 642 .. 2410. RUSTY,, used boat mooring 0rari&e County. 3 yr. ,p)cture She'& a 16' fiberglasa. w/FIJ HONDA 305. New ere 6 1 ~ 646-7448. ' ~-=c:"-0'-;===.-=• I chain, 14" mo.tcrlaf. c&ch t.1be, 1 yr, parts. 1 yr. hp Mere mcltor. Won't 90me-elcctrieal 1y1tem. Run s ·,i J{'....uJ. ~Oil=.: PART time housekeeper $2 SALESGIRL-21-40. Tennis &: !510\V Salesman, ex per. KING sz. Posturt'pedjc bed, link 2~i" long, l~'' \\l'ldf, servJoe warranty. No one™ her by cAUina good. Mtl•t stU. Sac., $245 l•;;;'J~;~;-~;;;~1 per h.r .. 3 da)'I • \\ttk. 4 golf shop, Exp. For Colla tamUy shoes. p / 11 m f', coffee &: end tlJl s. 4 mat· SOc PtT tt. Marine Surplus t~ chtu'gH H pai!.'J ln 90 54G-2279 alt 5 ~!Pl-ice tag or olr. 83.1-0044 hts. a da)'. ~t.\V.f'. 0<A'n Mesa stOtt, apply 1927 rnAinly· Sal. llemphiU'a. !>l chln,r ba·r cha.tr•, Co., 3307 S. Main, S.A. days. Zenith -19'' iso~yS850,, . •69 YAMAHA 125 r-.:i\ln). DUSH / BRI71SH r by t b m transportation 10 a.m. lo 2 H~r Blvd. Also tor Palm Fashion r 9 Jan d , NB. lawncha!rs, chrome kit set, $4$-6551. Chfomocolar $.199'. RCA XL-1,.::.:-=::r,="o=..;.:::-:'°"=-::c ~N ·~1i•• pl••-to pi•v Ir sin" p.m. 146-m.1 Sprulgs store.. p hon~ 4'•• """". L'hildrens , clothea & toys. =~~---==-=--= 100 ••~. All avail. models. 16' BOAT fret' w/purchue of Xlnt cond.. Oril.t 31000 mlle11. ,..~ ... ....,..... ...,, " 714-3%>-UBl """'"'.u.J POU: lamp $6. Green 9x12 ,,_, AmericAn bolt tnBer-.1..arge Best otter over $340_ Ca.11 ..nart time '!'/4 man PT/time box ottlce • conse11· . -Single NMCll1 Opr Reaaonablt' 968-6031. 1"111 $12. Frpl«: r.creen S3. j in stock. ABC Color TV, whee 1-111 '-"JJlnch. $250 ~T aft 2:fl0 p.m. ro~1p, "The Bella&t Sina:· .sJon rid. Port 'nleatre in SALES Lady : E.'<Jl"t. 20-4J • .,.._,Jy unusual oppor. Great \\'ANTED: TrUndle beds, Spice rack $2. Towel pole Ora/'liCl County'• largest 1n--.i. .,0 at1 ,,,, c• 4~ H ·• -"Call""l -~117. CdM.•--•t·"·-•·"6pm /lime. Btrostrom 'a iiu 1-~1 h de .. ~·nt ifealfl'. 9021 vo,,-.-. 'vv ~""' o • ....,a.lowntr. *L"" ;J\) -v o1'C'IOl ,. ..... _ .... aa • -. "n'I e•-111& ....... tnltsl. corner it'Cll (7f1ft couc · St 842 7369 '"""" lull ~.. •-· m• ··-I 673.9837 Ch~ns Stort, So. Cit "" '" -• .,.. .. ""' · · · Atlanta, Huntlnctoi'i Beach. 16' Boat, ~ 35 hp Evlnrudo "'~• -... --.-.op ' ' PART t Im~ he IP . Plata. C.\f. Apply 6iiO E1 N~~'i. "M:£· !~°ri:4~:0 n .l"""'AN =~ 2 swivtl FUU.sizt Pool ~!°bit, /ballheavy 96&-&29. , moton &-\trailer. Llc'd. '72. aood. $500. MM867. H-···kee-r. 1 ' d-a... C.mlno Real, I T·u s 11 n • nA' ' ' ala.~ top, COn'IPn:IC w s. Sh\t. &fT-1886 «VU. FOR Sal«: "10 HonCla ~ lQI. """"" 1~ _,,, .....,,, TEMPO ' -k•n. ottoman, .3 tables. ck • Xlnt cond · =c1o_~f'2l •• 646--2832 Mo,....f'rl only. ,...... ra • .cue1. • fl! if' lHBOAJU> tfauer, s\nl\e Maka Ofit;r. For mans iut>. .,,...,.....,..., Temporary Help $240. LOokt t'lf'W. 551--4391 ·-61Wi7'. [ J • """ all st ••""' _., P-GEE INDUSTRIES SALES· HouMlll'iws! Bew/ Tclll'!n • LARGE Octagon custom cofA ~:U.U,N ctau liood Pl ,,.. to You ' :!';"'" ""'' ·~·1 ,...,,l), BO• Y'S •Sch=tl ~r•a~ N.td. Tr.In". fa.mil)' daft, Full I p/tlme: s Waln I< _,d ---..1 • · _.......,.,... ·-" -· ~~ · UNITED STATE tee <nble, ut •-· waltt beater. Good -~ B'k ••• ~'C!I.. ~ 1~ "'"•Vluuc. ·t.o tn· 1,. .,. ~2 __ 3 Lines, 2 Times, $2.00 Boeh, M11nt;/ • • 1 "· ·- $51)1.$650 Ptr Mo. '"'· d•Uv, roi\ect. M6-Gll)l. NATIONAL IANK "$100~.;;34$.,lolii"':.:19~·=,,....,=~I .::;. w'::: .,_ -· Jorvlco tl2 --=~·,.,·=-=-=·,,,·-=·,,.· ...,_.. N_. f'JlENCJI Provincial doub1e nno.. """""' """ KA\VASA.Kl .,... .,.,.. i..... ' Youn; m'" m..,h.,;caJ elt· SALESllAll. r · ...,.... Pm tlmt !<lien. oxp<rienct bad A 6 draw<r -t A JO' Kaye1t 1ype boll S33 l.ABR.ADOR 1e~ 1 ~. BOA'!' Dodoma dt..i.r 2lc :U1. SACR!nci' $500 'b; ' IRYlNE PERSONNEL per. helptul. but not r.q'd. ·~"".::'~New~ desired. Call St>-m~ cetnmodt. l1lO. 96M925' * 51&.9162 .,. .!rlendly, l'lOd "''childr<n. a n , .....,... at w/I. best .,1,.. -, C:tD\,,,...CC: .. An:~rrv Mil" hf 19 or•""'· Ahl•.to • T I l "'-u.k 612-lilll5 all 2 pm. ~-! ..WV~~,,.,........ -·· ti Plan. .Monlhl¥ eon-• .. ~,.. me ~· "'UICK CASH IS" CU.tom -... lit 1'onl ~ • lllBt YAMAHA 1.811 a: 'Nin 1: ~ l I . • slirt :'~rkFim''.""n1 iatciy,~ Dllw'lnee Il<porl..,.. de> Willi Clrblde H .. Oer 'P>... •• or~--~ or Jd>pl lo VW. 1.0YalAL ~ ~~/~ -=· aa"rlno S!ft<I lllllo. 1211). ltO ou.r. 1, • .,...,,... ~,"1..., CM •f<~t~. "' . .'1 To.'.'.~ "',; 11....i. S.O Don O,,vier ti OXPft', XlD'I "'• •llu:Y A THROUGH A •M~'.:.!-;:" ~134S. .m e ...,.. ~-~·~ • ""'.. • 904 .,1~ • & l'iUI <at ·rv 11e) pMSn"mcnts, <:ru uaoua7 " ~ ftoblos Ford. di ll;tnttl .i.. ...-. -.. chUartn 644-0lS!J. E , ""Y --..,-.. • 1 ' • 642-1470 tlll>l pm on!" '·~ ~.1 M. 1-lnu.t •.•••• 54" u50 'DA1~Y PILOT BRUNSWICK 8' Slate bed • --·" •·-'a•-•1 .. ,,1'l"'tu"'S11;:-;:StJl:::;-;;;;,12.,........,=:-;Ji"". 776·8· 551 11 -u~. -• .... NEVER A f'EE AT m1PO w ~ Nt AD Pool T•ble. Ball .. 1um. $3'1S.I ',;.; RAMBLER 440 • ,,. fs. 4 bp ---· r·~' roe o..; ~ COii •AMITOR, lull Umt. c.ov. H•n -•lhllll )'Otl want fO EMPO .• A 4 cuts. ra<k br1dgi A l>OllJt Stlck. "' pink, you lw.ul «Uonl to••litlon, or an 4 pm. M-Dlll, • I' Ca.e1 ~· only. Clll * + ,.ur ~ .91'.: tr T · ...--642•5678 * ~l.U9.· ~ ~.J. "'''· 961-!4'1. .• :mr.litittlor. f.d,.,110; wll!ll bdp ""' ..U! -. -~n -coll llJ)W -·~ Te...,..ary ~ . • ' - ,_ • ' I . I -~--;;.--~'~---. ~--·----~~--~-·---~--·-~ --~-- "~1 .. , en. ..... • oottrs • Motor Homu .ftO Auto Se rvk:•, P11rt1 M9 925 -~-,-....,..--- 1'::::!!11!:-. -::"~ .... ~h:-• """360""'"'M"'x,... . ...,21 * Marvin . Pearce* moos. Plates, 2 sets ~hock. .-~E~ <oft TRADE ' ' ' If• Romito ,. DATSUN '67 Datsun Wagon. Xlnt cond. $735 or best oUer. 548-9'121 -i •'"""· ., .. ,,c ••ndc". 1ork Motor Homes bra.~. much mot<e $593, '66 tl~ley Davidson 250 Fal.'· tory Racer, very fast dirt bike, ex. cond. $ 2 O O, 2 VW slotted chrome rims wttti new tiri'J 5.60xlS $50 or trade for U inch VW t1m1 and tires ot otrer. 54&-5380. ·4 CustOm wheels -tit Ford or Chr)'&ler or adapt to VW. S"IO takes -all. 675-1345. , Autos, Imported · t 70 Sales • Rentals ss6.32z2 _Mi-&m, 646-4631, 642-2544. till S •. Village Way, S.A. EXPERT nM>tol'cycle repair. Trailers, Travel t4S NOW ON DISPLAY Any make, work guar. Free I I~ Sales Service estimates. From 9 lo 5 !\ion ' Autosfor5'1e ~ Parts Body Shop thru Fri. Contact Jim Berry e ARISTOCRATS COAST IMPORTS 646-3304 e NEWPORTS 1000.:cm W. Coast Hwy. ,.,.~ Newpo11 Blvd. N.B. • AlJT0.1'-tATES General .950 Newport Beach • 642-0406 Also, several used S395 &: up · AUSTIN AMERICA fAPbile Homes 935 \VORSJIAM TRAILER SALESI·,-------- { 2709 w. 17th Street 60 PLYltfOUTH Wag o n, . ~57_ FLM1INGO, 2 bdrn\., Santa Ana 1n4) 531-2595 $150. '62 COMET w/'64 eng, AU_sTlN Amenca '69, 16.00J •one ill kjna.size: 2 ~ih .. 69 ,. $100. 6'15-0941. miles, excel cond. $850. See .... N tmi;od Crown Deluxe, • • after 5 pm 462 Magnolia tcil . ker & d,ryer, new sips -5; zip on rm., sfnk, ~nt1que s/C lass1c1 953 Costa Mesa~ • ' ,.. ,h~asher, shecl. set-up 1n stove, &; tbl. Gd cond. $795. HMO Ford 2 dr Sedan. Black, ---~~---~~.park. Pel ok. 8'12-7044 a.ft 3. . chrome wheels,--:ood tires, :' BMW JAGUAR HELP THE ECOLOGY! eur YOUR NEW TOYOTA DR JAGUAR and receive FREE! PERSONALIZED LICENSE PLATES Motor Homes 940 Auto Serv ice, Parts 949 ~~';Z,n'>Ods"ooo'".;x';~',": IMMEDIATE DELIVERY \\t.E ARE 4 FIRESTONE reasonal:ile Offer. 836-5672. 'with thjs ad' 500•, -·G78-1' WITH MANY · 2002, & Olfor good lhru Fob. 136S1 .Harbor, Garden Grove l Blk. So. ol G.G. Frwy, 6.16-2333 J\1fLES ·LEF!'! ONLY $lO Trucks · 962 , 5 Funds to go toward improi.e- FOR EACl:J ONE OF US. • laYGl'.'iG'J nlent of Calif. ecology - \VE ARE WORTit IT! IH. \Vhen you purchase Your MUCH BETTER THEN new Toyota or Jaguar from RETREADS! s;, p,.,,dl, • . Toyotas Dealin Dealer Dr .. C.J\I. International Harvester FLAT head V-8 Mere. -needs RECREATION CENTER cellent shape, never lie'en · 2925 Harbor Brva. 't. ' • Wtdntsday, F~bru1ry 16, 1972 DAILY PILOT Autos, l mpoft..S · 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970' Autos, lmpo,,... •• .t No-co st extras make Datsun America's No. 1 selling import truck. • Full sire 6 foot bed with tie dOWft hook• Around ' 25 miles per gallon Cu5tom cob with heater °'"""" cam n9ln1 "'"""ding. block '" ,.. (tOY CARVER, Inc. ~ 1ftti•U:S bored s3;;. ·1940 1''ord parts Costa Mesa 546-4444 SEE us ABOUT t1l fttfS •n APOLLO motor Home Including hotly. '35 Ford '70 Hilux PickUp, New eng. Overseas Dellv~-· I _t.'i'. Aux. 4000 watt gen. chassis with h ya r a u I i c & tires. Reblt transm. Cam-CREVIER MOTO'R •s . Toyota & J aguar Dealer 1$16,{)90. 644-1630 after 5. brakes S25. 836-5672. per shell, Xln't cond. $1950 900 S. Coast Highway • lo I k fr All =·M 208 W. l';t ·~: ... "anta Ana '"""'"•Beach ""3100 ~u s, mported 970 Autos, Imported 970 or ma e o · er u•• · 83S.3171 ..._..... ,,...,. I~~_,_...:...:...;,;,;;._~;;..:::=::.:::.:::.::.:.::::.......:.:.:. •494-;;;20~18·~=-nc;;. ..,.,...l-A.iOiiiO"""Ei<O;n.o:;;-I BAUER , BUICK , ;;:: Automotiv" ExceHeoce '63 Chevy ;11 ton P.U, $500. The Harbor Areas DEAN LEWIS ORANGE COUNTY HEADQUARTERS TOYOTA--VOLVO 646-9303 1966 HARBOR BLVD. . Cal l & Only Authorized · 646-1275; 642-584:i JAGUAR DEALER 1968 FORD F·250 camper Always has an exceUent se--• specia~ 360 V-8, a uto, radio. led.ion of both New & Used 2 ''"' $1650. 548-6731. ROY CARVER, Inc. Jagu"'. . . Auto Leasing 964 2925 Harbor" Blvd, --~--~~-1 Costa Mesa 5464444 DODGE '71 CAPRI CHARGER SE CAP&t 19TI, 4 speed, red, low miles, xlnt co n d , private party. 968-6295 Heavy duty 5uspenslon with ,double action shocks 4-speed fully 5ynchronl1ed tranwlssion • Chrome bumpers front and rear 6-ply wh1tewoll tlrft ( 5 fncludlnt •par•) ::>Pt">. . Ol'[Oj "'~1 • !-"' COSTA MESA ~,\r su~O~Y \ ' fill Y Pl~ TILl I P.M. ~ auto, bucket seals, air cond., AMffM, cmrtom DATSUN 1970 XKE 2+2 Coupe. Yellow· with black leather interior. Automatic transmission. factory air 'conditioning, power steering &: mkes, Phillips M I-FM· SW radio, etc. Just tt,ie one you've been .looking for. (261BQD) Stepladders. Surfboards. Motorcycles. Whateve r you ha ve to carry, ~rry it in a DatslJll. Pic:kup. It's America's No. I sell ing im port truck, for some very compelling rea sons. Pow· erfu l overhead e'am eng ine. 4-sP,ee d st ick. Heevy duty sus- pension. Plus .the ki nd of durab le vinyl upholstered in teri or you'd exp,ct to pay extra for in other pickups! You'll get around 25· miles per g a llon (low operating cost I. Low initi1I cost too. Now at your Datsun Dealer, of course. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY I I NO ' . • • FINAL CLEARANCE NEW 1971'S! NEW 1972 TOYOTA CARINA • .. 52314 • • • • '; l11cludff pow•r br1ke1, tintid t1l1111 4 ip••d tr'"'·· ~ whit• will fir•1, Vi nvl lnl"'rior." =lt570 • • ;. • • GREAT SEi ECTION . IMMEDlATf DELl,.f RY 1972 VOLVO $97 DOWN . $97 M~~TH IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . OAC 197 ii tolal down P•YmO(ll. 197 11 10111 monlh'V peymenl incllldl11g rail & ?2 lk. & ell llnence cnar11n oo aw•o~ecl crecllt far 60 month1. Otferrecl peymenl price la t.!917 Jn. tludlnfl 11! Una nee cl•1tr11ts, l~fll & . ·1i lie. or I! you PT Iller 10 p1y e•sh, 11111 cash price 11 S~l33 . .C.S Incl. 11x & '72 lie. .t.nn111t percen1111e tlllt 15.'7, LET US ARRANGE YOUR . OVER SEAS DELIVERY! SPECIALS ON FINE IMPORT TRADE-INS . '66 VW 'Fastback " • EKc•lllllt Collllll11onl CVTM '29) $899 - '67 VOLVO 122 2 Door, 11:111 Sharp! !_VCT-111). '67. TOYOTA Corona Air Condf11onlng, Radio, S1k. #61-(A. '60 JAGUAR XKlSOS ll:oedster, A Tri.IC Cll»ic:I {t70 TOYOTA Ma ik II • • ~n. Sl~k Shift, (lCla41 '70 TOYOTA Mark II Stll!on WlllOn. ll:otdlll, Hffllr, Real SM• pl (01• 8L)0 '69 VW 8us AMtFM Radio, mini <.ol'ldltloo. . 11J EJ_F '69 DATSUN Pickup "M:flo, H••ler, IY~I( «Ill $899 _$399 $1299 · $'1599 $2199 $2395 . VISIT OUR ULTRA MOOE RN SERVICE ·DEPARTMENT PAINT SHOPS e 800Y SHOPS DEAN LEWIS ORANG[ COUNTY HfA OOUARTERS TOY OT A·· VOLVO I 646-9303 · , .. 1966 HARBOR BL VO., ·~·•0,.;, ··" · COSTA M~SA .. ,.,,. '"" l I ... • .t l •·-!>"" \vheels, nmote side view --------15295 "Specializing in Quality" '""''"· 1400DZH) '72 DATSUN 510 $1 OD.DO Big Sed.,, 4 •f'O'd dlr. Vioyl WAITING! per. mo. --·--LEASE ALL MAKES AND MODELS A DIVlSION or SOUTHERN CALIF. 1st, NATIONAL BANK NEWPORT NATL . LEASING Roof. Under 4,000 miles. R & H + WSW. Full price $2136. Can finance au. 1#234128) Call ~ alt IQ am 54~ '&& DATSUN PICKUP Low Miles! Clean. dlr. Radio, Heater, 4 speed. {VZT648) Will sacrifice! Call 546-8736 or 494--68ll. . '70 DATSUN PICKUP. $995. 843 Broadway,. Laguna Bch . 494-8084 bef 6 pm BAU_,R 8ulck.Qpel·J•,guar 234 E: 17th St. Co;sta Mesa 548-7765 LOTUS '69 LOTUS ELAM •lard to find, Very Low Mile- age (569CCLt, . $3295 CREVIER MOJDRS Your kind of truck. Your kind of price. COSTA MESA DATSUN . See Our Complete Line Of "12 l;>atsuns •STATION WAGONS• PICKUPS • 2 & 4 DR: S,EDANS • FASQ.ACKS • 240Z l1.1MITED CjlUAN11TY) 6000 SHOW! DRIVE A DATSUN ••• THEN DECIDE. 2845 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 540•6410 " . ' · Fast ~su.IJI· ~ just a phone 21'.>8 W. 1st St., Santa Ana 2022 Business Center Drive call away • ~8 &3>317J _ ~ Irvine, Calif. 92664 n 4-833-8620 Try our lease experts for ~vings • Satls!action • Ser. vice . WE LE ASE ALL POPULAR 1912 MAKES AT COMPETI- TIVE RA'.I'ES. Call Malcolm Reid for h1rther details. THEOO.ORE ' ROBINS FORD 2060 Harbor Blvd. Costa ~1esa 642-0010 Autos Wanted 968 WE PAY TOP CASH tor used .can A trllclqi, Ju1t <:a:ll . ua kc-tree esttmatea. GROTH CHEVROLET AU: for Salta Manapr l82ll Beach Blvd. Hunttnaton Beach 841.Ql87 Kl !1-333:1 WE ~y . all makes of clean . used sport& . cars, paid for Qr not. P leise drive in for free appraisal. . NEWPORT IMPORTS , 3100 W. ~ Hwy .. Newport Beach 642,9405 WE PAY. 'n)p OOLLAR FPR TOP USED CARS If )'OUl' car ts ~ de.an. .., .. -. BAUEll 'BUICK 231, E. 17th St. Costa ?t1esa 54&-7765 IMPORTS WANTED Orar1&e O>Untie1 TOP I BUYER Bl1J. MAXEY TOYOTA 18881 Beach BlVd. fl. Beach. Pl\. 847-3555 WILL Buy your car paid for or not. Call Ralph Gordon 673-0900 -~S-3031. 19'ro Harbor Blvd .. Corta.-.Mesa. Autos, lmpo,,... 91l O...r•I '6& vw -e., .,.,. bar, I rad}() &:. heater, Xlnt. cond. M&-3851. ' • ALFA ROMf,P · 1967 Al.PILI R. 0 M E 0 Spyder, real beauty! Orfg tw~r. fl6(XI. Lo nii\lea. o~ ;17-5832, .... 846-m' ALT A "°'l''° SJ>l(l<f, 196t Creat cond. Qrl(lneJ owner. Must .. n. 871-lijt . •• Autos, NeW 980 Autos, New' ~·Autos, New. 980 AUtos, New • .. Step Up To LUXURY . • • • • ') - ·1971 MARK rn · EXCEPTIONALLY CLEAN. B~autilul light green finish with green leather Interior and matching landau .roof. Fully luxury eq qi pped including full power, climate control air conditioning, stereo tape,. tilt s~eering wheel, cruise control and much more. This attrac- tive car is a must to see and. driv~ today. (348CIE) -. ·~ ALL THESE BEAUTIFUL LUXURY AUTOMOBILE~ ARE IMMACULATE, INSIDE A~D OUT.~~· YOU'LL NEVER F'IND A BmER SELECTION OF PRESTIGE CARS THAN RIGHT NOW! 1969 CHRYSLER New Yorker 4 Dr. H.T, Beautlful Jlme frost finish wi th bla ck interior and landau roof. Luxury equip. ped, full power, automatic tran smission, a ir condltlonlng, poy,.·er 6 way seal, AM/FM radio, etc. (YQW 626) • $2175 1970 MARK Iii IMMACU LATE, Beautiful medium gr@en mist metallic with dark ivy leather \Vlth Landau roof, Fully Luxury equipped, fu ll .PO""e.r. cli- mate control air conditioning, indlvld· uaJ 6 way power seats, radio with 8 track tape and much more. (128AKUJ Sale Priced , • -1970 CADilLAC C-oupt-09Vllle One owner. Immaculate .. Beautiful Bra .. zllian moon dust finish wi th befge •Jeath· er and · la11dau root. Luxury equipped throughou't, full power, climate control ah', tnt-tele wheel, AM-FM 1tereo. surer cle.an. f9644 UV) $44 75 • MANY, MANY MORE FROM WH ICH TO CHOOSE $EE THEM ALL TODAY - Ll ~l<.lll N . COUGl\R CAPfH 1971 MARQ UIS to Pa11tn1•r W•ton Beautiful brown metallic finish with nlatchlng vinyl Interior. Full power, factory air coridltlonlng, power tall p te windo\V; luggage rack. Low mile- age and in top condition. (761 Df'A) $4275 ... 1970 CONTINENT AL COUPE. QUALITY PLUS Dark brown glamour mel&IHc exterior wllh honey beige Interior & matchlna Landau rool. Fully luxury tqulpped. ell· mate control •Ir, full power. 6 ~ pov.•er $eat. etc::. f806i941 $4475 • I HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESI< • 640-5830 • • . , ' I ' ., ' ' I t . ' I ' ' • ' I I ., . -.. -~ • -- ' -• WtdM.day, Ftbniary 16, l9n PILOT-AOVEATISU 24 Autos, Imported 970 .t.utos, lll)POrted 970 AUtos, Imported 970 Aut .. , Imported '70 .O.utos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, u-~ Autos,l,Jnd CORVAIR '90 Autos, Und :'90 MERCURY .; ;.;......-._..,M"'-AZ.,...D-A,.--- • NOW OPEN MERCEDES BENZ AfERCEDES '61 190 SL. Xlnt cond thMJOUt incl fl'ng. Both lopt. $2200. 5012 MacaJee, Torrdn<.'l', Ca. 378-4784 MG PORSCHE OVER 25 Clean, Recoriditlon.d, & Gu•ranteed. PORSCHES 911 '•· 912'• & 91411 1957 to 1971 NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach 642-9405 MEO!ANrc·s six~1a1. '6.1 -W-E..::..=..W:.::A::...N_T_ MG 1100 sedan, minor repalrs, fix yourst.>1! & save. SIG--~;~~m PORSCHES P.fERCEOF.S Beru: '69 280S. -4 dr IM!dan, poY1er, 1un ronf, tan, lmmac. Aikin& $6,150 '68 Opet Kadette Ralley 1900 C.C. OVflrheed cam, F'M radio & 4 i;peed, Gd. Cond. $800. Eves-673-3265. 714183"0066• __ P_O_R_S_C_H_E __ MERCEDES, 220 SE cpe, AT, pg & air. A claiis1c. $3150. 67J..5620; e v e s . 673-0728. POR. '68 912 Targa, Blau., Konis, ne\v tires. Xtras. Very clean. P. party. 'TI 250-CPE. tobacco brwn. 557-5065. stW tn wart" .. all options, ~ ... ~~ro=RSCH=~E~~s~c-.-;,,,-. ~7677 eves/wknd1. maculate. reblt eng, nu Pd1 a little "bit' lJ1 your tires, brakes, Konl's. Best Levis. aeU those bauble.!! far -•~U~e~'·~6Jt>.~1SSZ---- "bllcks" . .._pall Clus1fied If OU SE Hunting! Watch the 642-.$78. OPEN' HOUSE column. lllGHE:ST Of>~rER AVArLABLE DON BURNS ASK FOR GLEN 636.2:i:i.1 '88 POR.SCl.fE 9ll·L. Must Sell, Sacrilice. Tangerine· blk I interior, stereo I rad .• ma.irs. Needs work <>n Trans ~ Tensioner • Otherwise Per Cond, 548-4910 aft 3:30 p.m. PORSCHE '65 SC. One <>( the last 100 made hy body No. & eng. No. 40,cm orig. ml. Orig, kip & int. Mint cond. 64<HI047. PORSCHE '56 PORSCHE S pd st r . Chron1e rin1J1, new top, very clean. 49'-5291 atler 6 pm '61 PORSCHE 1600 Super, Sl6M. New clutch.Oean! 673--0743. TOYOTA YOU'~ WAST INC MONEY!! IF YOU DON'T "SHOP" US TOYOTA '72 CELICA TRIUMPH BARRACUDA :· ---------1 l.i62 CORVAIR. Automatic -------~-I J970 ™""""' GT 6 +, '67 BARRACUDA Run• woU. SlfA MERCURY '70 ;~ 12,00'J miles. $2600. 54.\-7884 •• Ex"'""" d•mo. fad. air. 96.'-2619 alter 6. COUGAR MONTEGO MX car Magg, •kl rack. V"'Y low·l--v-o'"'LK--s'-w=A:_G:_:_E_N_ Conv, E<onomy V·8, Aulo •:to .miles, full factory guaran· Trana, Pow@r Steerlng. Me-1---------1 • ;. talic Blue oxlerio<, in OX· '67 COUGAR A ~ on V8 ~--tee. Call for low p1·lce. lW:O. ,,-1111111., .,...... , •··~,, .. ,,r '69 YW S ba k cellent cond, CUEY2Sl) d~. YeUow ext. bl~k vinyl tap. steering, power brake9t!air ta~uis quare C ir.·lced at low blue book, will V8, ract. air, excellent oond. conditioned (137A.VS) • ...... _.. Auto Trans, new engine, un-=~er:,e5s7-4540 aft 5 ~~l:~ni~~~lan~:~ $1795 ~; ua•W•• der 6 rno. wan-anty parts&: BUICK 494-6811alt11 a.m 546-8736. on CAN LEASE .. =: Authon'lE!d Sales & Service Labor, Car is priced $100 900 S. Coast Hi&'bway over wholesale (ZAlA(l7) dlr DODGE A DIVISION OF : Laguna Beach 540-3100 will consider trade '71 RIVIERA ,so,, NUTAHTIEORNNALC:.L.1!'~ GET OUR 646..1242 days. :;57-4>41) all 5 '10 DODGE V"'Tra""""""· N BAN~ TOYOTA DEAL ;'.,1:X:'!w ~ ~~V: ';:~"":,_<;_;;vi-..:: :;',';:: ~~::~·,;~·500 mt ewport Natl. leaS1Rg BEFORE YOU BUY! Xtra. Auto. $450 down or Huge "'"'",. <•H9ll519l FALCON ""2 B"""eu center Dtjve br!st a/fer & TOP of $1XIO. TERRY lrvlne, Ca1if. 92fi64 N-" $2'" Bill aJt 4 '° TRADE, 1963 Falcon. ~ 71~ ""~ 0"-~urolot u·.~1":.~ .. ~al· Cm···i~u .• ~dlr.' • BUICK r:1=·~r = --,..M=u=s=T~A~N~G~.:-. -I •ar· 'U\'S W ~ -,, StllAWa1nu1.Hunt1ngtonBch ---F~0-R~D---.69 MUSTANG • '" 1966 llarbor, c.M. &\6-9303 spd. $1838 ·(862EAEJ Call 536-6588 _________ 1v.s, 4 spd, power, hfaV)'~ty motets ='-~T-R~l-'-u"M~P~H~--1516-8736 or 494-6811. '65 BUICK Wildcat. tull '69-~FoRD'LTo 2 dr:: vinyl suspension, low mileage&: The Little Dealer Who's Big on Servict' '66 VW $600 power. Xlnt cond. $800 or he.rd top. 1 owner. Air, very sharp. $1000. 'Call Toyota & J1tguar Dealer 242 E. 19th, C~t be t {f """ "n72 R 546-S!tiC Authorized Sales & Service s 0 er.~ · power, ea! good cond. ' 900 s. Coast liighway '69 VW Squareback. Lo 1969 Le Sabtt. Air, P.B, Reasonable Clffer. Call after '69 MUSTANG 428 Cobra frri. Laguna Beach 540-3100 mileage, rack. Trade for PIS, new tires. Good cond. 6 pm. 540-0889. Top cond. Low m~•. 1· pf• SAN NA van. $1600. 675--0987. -·-~--·------'69 Ford LTD Brgm, 4 dr, kind. Must see to &W.ltt· TA A '10 SQUAREBACK. Xlnt CADILLAC HT, a~. '''"'°· now """ 968--0264. •. TOYOTA corxl. Ask for Dina, 962-:XJ85 mech. xlnt. $2075, 847-5007 '65, R/H, V8, Auto, PIS, Servloe dept open 7;30 am or 96S-0628.. LARGEST '~""~·==-o~~~-,,-=-Clean. 1 owner. Pvt ~. :: $695. Leaving s I a:i. e . 'ti' 9 pm MC1nday 1:bn1 Fri-'66 VW BUG. Orig. owner. SELECTION OF 1967 FORD Galx. 4 dr. H.T., 644-5343. :' day. low mil., xlnt cona. $825. CADILLACS I.. P/S, PIB, tac. air. Lo PHONE 540.2512 >ro-1542. ORANGE COUNTY book. &15-0587 or 548-3808. MUSTANG-'6.1, V8, auto,.f.h. 417 W, \Varner. Santa Ana ~-~,------..-..il c,64~vw=-'eu~g-. -s-unroo--1.-Xl-,-, I SALES.LEASING '61 FORD Van. Runs good. bucket aeat.. iharp. Jlnns 980 -AutOS:-Ntw 980 Autos, New 980 concl. 2 new dirt tires. $625. AuntORIZED ~tom int, Mu.st seU. $400. ~at. fl2S. Owner. 67~· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 'cCaU~=Gn-~-71-18~·~---" I ·SERVICE· of be<st ofr. 839-QiJl. 1966 MUSTANG V-8, aQto, '62 vw Bug Great rond. '72 Nabers CadiDac 196!1 Foro van E-100, vs. very good ,,.~,J"°· ~: .. 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New Autos, New - • '12 NOVA FITS EASILY ·INTO .YOUR POCKET ••• ' • MOTOR TRENDS ''COMPACT CAR OF THE YEAR'' ~~BR~AND NEW 1972 NOVA 2 Door. 250 cu. in. 110 ~orse power 6 cylinder engine, AM ....eshbutton radio, white side wall tires, deluxe wheel covers. ORDER YOURS TODAY! $2449°0 ·------- B·~ND NEW '72 VECiA HATCHBA K • IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ONLY $2145°0 llV77112U212295) (IOI --------·-------- DEMONSTRATOR CLEARANCE • 2-1971 IMP-ALA CUSTOM COUPES 1971 MONTE CARLO 2828 HARBOR Bl VD. Aulo1111+it, powtr 1lttri119, pow· er br•~t1, ti11ted 911•1, •ir con• tlitiortl119. r•dl'o •!Id "••'•'· "'hilt w1l1 lir 1, elt. Your d1oi(t . 2 to choo1t fro,,.,, 1'utol'l'l1ti' htM!fli\\io11, r•dio, h1et1r, power 1tt1 r1~9. •ir coo"· J itio11 i119, "i"yl roof, while si ••II tirt1 • .dtl111• wll•• COSTA MESA $ " $ 295 Chevrolet NEW CARS-546-1200 USED CARS--546-1203 ' lags. $3.50. See to ap-26()0 HARBOR m.... automatic, immaculate ~ 1-=--"-=--.;... preciate, 847-2684 James. COSTA MESA side & out. 642-2909 1966 Mu~ 6 cyl, auU>.:~c. '70 V\V Bug, AM/Fl\1, Auto 540.91()0 Open sunday '66 FORD SUPER VAlj, Top concl. LeaviJW ati.te, !rans, Heater, Xlnt cond, '70 EL DORADO gtttn, runs good. $800. Alif-1 .csrn~•----==· __ ,._.;;,.......,, $1375. &44-7786. $5450, for Eddy, 494·3004. '65 Mustang, tmmac, 6 (it: 3 '69 V\V, sunroof, good con. 25.000 mi, Xlnt shape. Pvt JEEP spd, r/h, Id tires, rum dition, original owner. Make prty. 675-7545 daily 9-5 or ---------J>erl. '72 tag1 $475.. 6'1Si147. ot<oc, 496-"32. 642.8953 aJt. 6. '63 JEEP Sta. w._, OLDSMOBILE; '63 VW. New tires, new '59 CADILLAC Sc d a n Chev. eng. Extru. brakes. S5.Xl. ..., Deville. One owner Lu."ury:l--'Xlnt=~ro=::nd::·..:"::11-:,26=90:___ • 646-Snl alt S • "'t»ippod. E2684. J IM LINCOLN '64 VW BUS ~ONS IMPORTS. 2201 -------- 1966 OLDS Delta SB .& .. Dr. sdn. Very clean ~al, original car. Alr, etc. $895. Rvns wen: $550. 67f>.6897 s. r.taln, S.A. 557-5242. '66 Continental, 54,cro miles. Firm ~2083. ' 1966 vw bus. new engine, '68 Cad Sed DeVU!e. AU Wholesale book price, Get- AM/FM, g track tape deck, xtra!I. Best <>Her. 54!>-1515 ting new car. Would rather · bo alt 5:30. 541-7325 days. give to you than to agency. '69 Olds Toronado. Best oUtr O\'t:r $2S)J, Due to det.tb in family ~1558. K:e x, paneling, $1,500 or 546-7117 days, ~3176 eves. best offer. 545-1987. '68 El Dorado. Vinyl lop. Full -,TI-VW--Bu-.-.-Li-.t-e-b-lu-e,-Xln--tl pov1er $3100. Brown. 447 ~ • 650 Lido Soud, ?>.'B ~73--0187. MERCURY PLYMOUTH coi-.., Xtras. SI . * * 833-3986 * * 1961 CADILLAC '68 COUGAR e HOT WHEELS e '67 PLYMOUTH Moclilled tot high performance and : • '67 VW fastback, SlDl roof, radio, excel cond. Original OWflC'r. 646-2102. F AITIIFt.n. '68 Bug, auto. low miles. Good concl. $100J • £4l..8989 TRANSFERRED to Europe. 1970 VW Bug .. Auto stick $1,295. (J} 871-8066. '68 Double-Cab VW TRUCK, roof rac~. new tires, xlnt rond. 4~7491 aft 6. '71 VW bus. 8000 mi. 7 pass. Like new. VW tent I: full· length lug. rack incl. $27'9S. 675-77J8 PRIVATE party must 1e.crilice '67 VW camper, rebli eng. side t e n t • 837-9590 1969 V\V, auto. radio. Xlnt rond, 30.00J miles. Orig. owner. J.1ake olter. GT";,.1480. ·10 VW SuncliaJ. Camper dlx me>del. $2895. 847-785.5 alter 5 pm. '62 VW · Late model eng. Completely reblt. S 4 5 0 , 673-2849 Thurs. ONLY. '69 VW BEST OFFER Xlnt cond • * 833-8814 VOLVO GET OUR VOLVO DEAL BEFORE YOU BUY! SA VE ON EUROPEAN DELIVERY 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 VOL V0--$150 675-3394 Autos, Used 990 Looks & Runs Great! 24.!XXI local miles. Auto trans, $350. 645-tlll. air cond., power steering, CAMARO t>urgandy with black vinyl ---------I t<>p. Absolutely beautiful! '67 CAMARO c'M:~uis Motors 327 Cu In Engine, Auto Trans. Toyota & Jagua~ Deal._r 47.000 actual miles. White 9l.I S. Coast llighway with Black Vinyl Top, Bl&ck Laguna Beach 540-3100 l"tecior, Real Clean through· '69 COUGAR out. tUVV306l $1250 Sharp! Local l owner, lac· tory air. Buckets, Vinyl roof, will consider trarlr PS, PB. (XYT27ll) $2195. ..,._,,42 day•, 5574540 .,.,, Tommy Ayres Chevy CHEVROLET 946 s. Coast Jiwy., '66 Impala .... ~",;...~ 2 Dr llardtop. Yellow wi Blk '71 l\'13:111. B~ugham, 2 dr, Vinyl Roof, Auto Tr&ns, hi, VU1yl, all", pwr, tape Powt>r Sleering. Air Cond, d~k, loo.nge seat., 19.000 New Paint, Must See to ap-~e.s, like new. Ca 11 preciate ( #Bll7) 495-4673 bet .. ·een 7 & 9 pm $1199 oruy. CREVIER MOTORS I ~ ... 7M=E=nco-ceo~1 ... -.,~Park~, 9 pa" wg". Aw. lull pow.,, rack. Xlnt rond. Sacri1ice! 208 W. lsl Si., Santa Ana i\1ust sell, 5-1&-5671 . 83S.3171 '69 MERCURY Comet 29,00J "'63,,...CHEV==-a~,-,-e-n~b-,~, ,-r mi 2 year guarantee. $1300. sppearance! J\.fUST SEU.! .:: 548-7881/1395 ... PONTIAC '69 GTO. Auto door (Qcks. \Vindows, Air, Wrapped•lop, A~'!! ~i!.ll!t..~ru;s il~t. Xl.nt cond, S717'5. 675-7'3'.lO '68 Bonneville, P\1.T wln®ws. PIB, PIS, Air cond, New tires, Great shape. Belt. Clf· fer. 833--0322. 833-1925. '68 Pontiac Catillina, 4 d:r, auto, pb, ps. air. Xlnt mnd. \Viii trade. 67J..6728. '67 PONTIAC Sta. Wa.g. Xlnt cond. Orig. Owner. Air cond., rlh. $U95. ~ RAMBLER '11 MATADOR 4 dr aed&n , R&ll, PIS, auto, air, Cl)ncl. xJnt cond. $2450. Ftnac. avail. 6'12-9511 d a.;1.1 , 545-6140 ~- T-BIRD Camper. Xlnt condition. 962--0612 aft. 6 pm. 1$4 T-BlRD, all power; air 422~ Fernlcat, Corona del Fut results are ju.st a pbohl cone!. $MXI. Mar. call away -&U-6671 Call 544-0043 atter 6 l!fri '70 OIEV. MoJibu, V8 307, Autos, Used 990 Autos, Us.cl '90 auto. Pwr steer, new be.t-·lp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;:;;;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;:;;;:;;;::;;:;;:;;-•I !cry, brakes, Pirellil, H.D. """· 642--093 $2350 BY Owner, 1967 Camaro 283. Good tires, excd moiDr. $!nl. Call 536-l!Di '64 Impala A/C, radkl, PIS, orig. owner. IMM AC. 8JO..OOr55 ~s. 545-JI~ day. 1968 El Camim. 31,(DJ mi. R&H.· air. $15.\0. Cash. Call 64J.92Sfl after l pm. 6 MONTH WARRANTY ON ALL USED CARS . '66 PLYMOUTH St•tlon Wagon $31 Per Month VI, A~lk, p_, St-.rl"", ltacflD, HH!tr, fltlY Ill), $#.11 Down. 131 Pt• Monll'I tM!udn •It TtI .. l~ Ind FtnMc-1 Cllarta. IOACI fol" ,. monlttl. Dirfen"lll P"lce Is ""·"· For 11111 DllY' onl>f $151.JS Wick.di& tll ltI &. 72 lie-. A,fw. 24.ll'llt. : • '69 Kingswood Es1ate Wgn. '66 OLDS Toron•do ......... $54 Per Mcmth lo nu. ·'-1oa•-• full VII, A1,1tomeflc, F4<forY Air, POMr SIH!'ln!I, lrlkft I. WI~ ' au-, """'• pwr. Rtdlo, .,.._lt!r, (WJW 2UI. Sl),fi dO-. W per ftWllt!, IMllJdlll\9" $2395. 67J...46'14. llll .. lk:ens1 ~ l]MtlCt clle'991, (OAC) for 2• .._111t,. Dlft(Nll '10 BUICK Riviera, Clean, .:_c,,7~0-'C~h~•'-v'-.::.1-m-~-1-.--11 prk:• 11 11m.tJ. For usn our-r• °"'r s10.7.7J ll'ICluda •• fft:•;• Loaded. $3100 or lease at ,...-?2 ncenw. Arir. Z".771io. -.. • $109 per mci. :u mo's. e '70 w/Alr. Bst olr. 548-0067. .. Maverick. Very clean, $1515 1.9&l Chevy El Camioo. ,69 TOYOTA 4 Door Sedan ... $56 Par Mo~~ or lease at $59 per mo • $68 Original owner. $895. 187 E. , Cyllr>dtr, Autom11•k, Fee~ Air, 11.c11o. H .. 1.-. fZSlll JIJ). Chevy Custom l m pa I a --=c.St::.·c.CM=·..:64::.5-:..::1.1::17::.. --II oo-. "" per montll 1nc1u11n 111 t•• a. lk9!1w •1111 fl1111'1d ClltflM, · "'"" •----l (QA(.) kil' ii monltls. Def.,,_, prlct It. '*4.06. l"w aM ......,.. CQUpe, &ll', $.u..iu or R:1U1C & 1't '66 Chevy 1\-la.Ubu station only s1wi lnclll<lff 111 11~ • 'n llcllnH. Af#, z .'""" $59 per mo. Wagon. Pis. p/b, air, ne SOUTH COAST tires. $750 . .Ph. 642~189.· CAR LEASING INC • • ~~ "' ....... """" VEGA ·n coupe:, .. epeed, 64~, art 5: , 01~ 850 $!. • e HOT WHEELS e 968-1710 CHRYSLER '67 PLYMOUTH Modified for high ......,.,,...,. and appearance! OIRYSLER 1966 New MUST SEW Yaricer, 2 dr. aedan. All 5'&-'1'8811$895 p>wer equip., plua air concl. ' .. '68 DODGE Dort GT ........ $51 Por Motith J DOor, VS, A,l/l'Omallc, ,._. .,_..,... ~ B~a, Rtdle, Ylolyt IWof, !VTT s.t.J, ut.lt down.. W "4' monlll lntlvdts •II 1111 a. tic- 9"d flrllii'« d\9111eJ, IOA.Cl fw Jl months. Oetetttd ork:t i. 0111..1,. for c.tlll tir.ryen. only 115".15 IM.h10a lur & '71 llunle, AfK, •AW.. '69 PLYMOUTH V•li1nt ...... $69 Per Month 1 DOOf", ' cyl#'IOfr, AirtomYllc, ,.._ Slftfinf, fttdlo. H•tw,~ '°"' Teo,. CYBA 7S'I. W .,_, tff ...,. '""'"'-IM..,._ •I a lk_. end """"°' cfllor-. COAC) flllr 14 ~ Dri.,,., ~ 1r1W.~ ""' <.1'11 llVYW1 only tt•n. 1nciw. tll 11111 '-.m llCwltl. A~. II.er.rt.. '61 Corvair Van $3i5. '31 DB.vs, 54.5-4.i71. eve 1 ' Model "A" coupe. eomplete ~Mll-;::,;21:;9:;1 ·=~~-,=-'"711 l /283 Cbevy tu Best of '67 IMPERIAL 4 Or. Bee.uL '"1,r .... ,.~ "' p, • Con4 ruu, oquipptd. miso. 71 FORD Pinto .•.•........ $65 P•r ~h <1"IT" w. I c.flndlr, 4 .,......,, ltftlo. ....... rm CAXI ...... ....._ ... ~ AMERICAN 642-439\, ~2'189. """" .. -"' In • -... .,_. ""-IOAO ioi>:» . ~ Ottltnd Jlf'lta .. mttAI. ,r., -..,,.... .. s...,, CONTINENT AL · -•• "' • .,, -""· ""''" , American Motors ·n coNT. Mm rn. 1'111 ,,_.rGrem1in• ,.....,Hornets ~~r ~ip., AM./ FM ,...Matadors ,...Jovelln1. ., .... , oJr.<ond., etc. $6900 ,...AmbHsodors m.cr.o ~ Hur:' ~ 01 '71'• ! "l2'• QUICK CASH 81g·B1g Savr~gs . THROUGH A Hc:!:~t Am!"!i~n DAILY PILOT ;,:z WANT AD 19'9 H;;r,;;~-Blvd. , ':42 5678 Costa Mow ~61 I..: • S .. ... 70 CHEVY lmp1l1 ..•...... $19 p.,. Moiiih 4 OW, VI. AutO!Ntlc. """"" AW, ~ S ......... lo .,.._,~ ....,_, llt't "'"· PUii --.. M ,., ,,....,., w_,._ •Ii' & ~ Ml '1r!M('1 dltrta; '°"'' "' • """""" Oifw1'lll .. ""'1 U84JJ ~ 1n IP & '11 A«Na. ,_, ft.not.. ... '' c:;HRYSLER ' . " • • . ...•. ,,, PLYMOUTH '• • • • ~ • ' •• • ' General General Gtntfal --...-.. ....... ~ POOL SPECIAL! 4 + Dining BEAUTIFUL BAYCREST POOL PLUS -+ Family Beach· $34,000!1 4 Bedrooms, 3 ba's., family rm ., dining rm. Beam ceilings in living areas. Service area in home. Soft water equipment. Built-in· cen- tral vacuum cleaner: elec. garage door open· er. Gas BBQ under covered patio, next to pool. New heater & filter & all poo l equip- ment. 2lf.i: car garage. Heavy shake roof. All located on most desirable street in Bay-cres~ & built by Ivan Wells. Fee simple land. Askmg $79,500. Call for app't. to see. Wow! This giant llv!iig room opens to formal dining + very bright goumiet kitch· en! 4 bt.'Cl.rooms or 3 plus den • you decide! Th~n thru arches to mammoth 25'x15' family room with 6' \VET BAR! Outside to this deluxe 1parkling 18'x32' pool wi th pool sweep included!· Don't wait -See this beach town value NIJW! Ca ll 645-0303. CHILT ROBINm ' Realtor Shades O' College Park Coastal Cottage No Down· $31,500!! Country style! See this huge living room Oow to giant paneled family room! For- mal dining! CopJX'r kettle kitchen with NEW range, ()Ven & dishwasher! Then up to Hefner's hideaway a!a Pennsylvania Dutch! Free form patio -Big! P L U S special boat or trailer stor- · age! A careful buyeNl dream • No Down -Call 645--0303. I OHl.\l l OJ.SON . " REALTORS NEW LISTING In fashionable Baycrest On quiet street, with 3 large bedrooms, paneled family room with brick fireplace. Cheerful kitche n with breakfast bar Fonnal dining room $64,500 REALTORS SINCE 1944 673-4400 ONLY ILLNESS cause this couple... to sell! It's a 3 bdrm. home with a lovely paneled living rm., a separate laundry rm., 16'x2-l ' family rm w/a gas B-B-Q, all on a gigantic 65'xl75' lot. Price $25,950, all terms. Now, pay attention: In the trade, this is what "-'e call a "hot listing·', That means • it's gonna sell TODAY! Believe me!· Don't -fool 6«·7958 HIRISl l OISO\ '" ' REAL ro11r THE VIEW YOUNG Almo•t mak" )'OU m;,. ,.._ EXEC UT IV ES 1ng the home. Alter you've finished oh'ing &: ah'ing, 4 BR. 3 BA, 2400 sq. ft. Med- you'JJ see a truly outstand· iterranean style home in lng 3 bedroom beauty _ a prime condition. C.Ompletely woman's kitchen and the re-done inside and'out. Thick warm and friendly family shag crptg, paneling, custm room in a home you'll Jove drps & watersoftenl'.!r. Lo- for the rest ()f your life. cated on oversized cul..<fe. Shown by evening appoint-sac lot, 1 mile to ocean. rnent. $38,750. and owner $4'1.900. will help finance, • COATS **** & VACANT -3 bedroom one WALLACE story condo, 11~ 'miles to ' REAL TORI ocean. Carpets & drapes, 2 • car closed gar and 11Uding Open Evenings door to private patio. A • 962-4454 e REAL BUY at $31,500. cAiL r_t;~tNyt~m• CONDOMINIUMS • 3 Bedrrn 2 Bath. Vacant =======! Best for the $$ .... $21.950. • 3 Bedrm 2 Bath. Choice. Irnmac.·Pool ...... $22,500. • 3 Bednn 2 Bath, GoU course. Mesa Verde.$34,900. Call .545-8424 (Open eves.) NO DOWN GI $29,995. Clean-convenient home with stove and refrig. Large paneled rec. room in back yanl. .I Newport •I F1irvf1w 646-8811 (1nytime) \outh ,.(-oast -~ - ** 2100 SCj). FT. Exceptional familY home fea- turing 3 large bedrms, 24'x 13' family room, separate ""~'!'!'~~~""~!!!!!!!~I dining, pool sized yard, all . freshly painted~ VacanL Anxious owner offers all terms incl FHA & no down VA at $34,500. For details - Call 540ol15l Copen eves:) Extra wide Jot. near N.H.Y.C. Large rooms, 4 baths & huge bayside patio. Slip for 2 large boats. One of New- port's best baylront homes. A1dting $245,000. BAY & BEACH REALTY 67~3000 ONLY $l8,000 Go-LF COUR"SE Sl>arp ""'bdrm. home. Fully carpeted and draped. ELEC. 5 Bedrm 2 story w/panoram. Bil KITCHEN. Dbl. garage ic view, formal dining, lrg -large fenced lot. Perfect family 8r huge master bed-starter home -CALL TO- rm. Spanish decor A: luxur· DAY. ious. • $79,500. Call 545-8424 (Open evn.)· around CALL N 0 W · J .!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I 546-5411 * LARWIN * $30,950 Evenings CaU 642-7438 HAPPY FAMILY ·HOME· BACKBAY AREA 4 Bedrms, formal dining room, large lot with fruit trees & play area. Owner leaving staff!'. Newport II Fairview 646-8811 (ainytime} Exceptional view o( harbor le ocean, with a night view second to none. 3 BR., 2 baths, large leisure room &: Is immaculate. Compare at SWIM POOL Lovely Mesa North home with 3 spacious bed moms, 2 baths, built in dream kitch- en, family room with fire- place. Loads of decking. patio. Enclosed pool -sa!e fur smaU children. 540-1720. TARBELL THREE CAR GARAGE • At- tached to a hMd to find tri level 5 bedroom Republic home, formal d i n i n g , oversizl'.!d family, with fireplace. Perfect Mes a Verde loca!ion (or gro\\·ing family. Owner's transfer dictates immerl. sale. Call 546-5 880, HERITAG E REAL ESTATE, I 0 pen eves.) lfl.ACRE LOCATION! I Country Style Ranch Home. LOCATION! I Recreational room, Wet Bar! Large 5 Bedrm, prime loca- Formal dining! Modern tion. plush crptg, beaut kitchl!n! 3 or 4 Bedroom, ldscpg, fantastic pride of Den &: Pool. $52,350. ownership makes this a Call 545-MU (Open eves) dandy. VA terms -$40.950. Call 5'5-8424 !Open eves.} 15t!B·A500Y· & BEACH CLOSE TO BEACH Large 3 BR. 2 ba. dup!exl""~~~""'!~"""""" REALTY 675-31XO with 3 firfplaces. * FHA .. G.I, * \outh .. (-oast -~ - $55,0Xl • TERMS Vacant 3 BR. 2 ba. Corncr WALK TO OCEAN George Williamson tencect lot, 10 good Costa 4 BEDRM., 3 BATH Realtor Mesa loc. Carp., drap('s. $25,500 54US70 64S.1564 :~~: (rpl., & walk to schools Real sharp beach· ho. m.e. Nice 5 BEDROOMS * ••uvpping. Owner anxkius~ -'-·-b " RIO S29,000 With low monthly ~"'6 carpet, uut·ln Top residential klcation tn paymi., plus di.shwshr., patio. WAlk · Costa Mesa, 3 Baths, new * Broker 642-0177 * to, • .:!""', Call' ':.7"'°""_ ....... ing. All crptg, 37 ft, pool.. ~ .. -~ ~· Owner 'l'nlMl"'"'<l l<0500 BAYCREST CUSTOM SEYMOUR REALTY Balboa Bay Propertie~ Extremely a~lve 4 bd· 1n.c1 Beach Blvd., Hunt. Sch. * 642_7491 * nn. I: formal dintng roo?1, THE BEACH Bl'OW'M.ll ~ Destgned. ~·1th NEAR 4BR,, 1% UA, Formal dini lovely center atrium. glasl! Beat the Summer heat in area. Completely carpeted protected & c-arpetM fun thb sharp 4 bedroom 2 bath &: draped. Covered patio Ir. patio A: heatexl pool. $69,500 home, with • low Interest nic:cly Jond,.,,pec1. Close to BAY & BEACH race MSumable Gf loan, stopping. s c ti .. o 1 s & REALTY &75--JOOO priced at $12,500. for quick fret'!wa.)'1 129,500. Can 1elll-..,..-Ai====';::;::::: aalt. Cail 540-R!M. FHA. or VA. ~7 alttt * BAYSHORES * SHERWeeo REAL TY 5:?.0 PM . 2 BR, conv. den, 2 bo., 2 pa· 1896< Brookhunt. F.V. FOREVER VIEW 1;,,,: dbl. gar.: .,,,1..,_ dee· 3 BR. + ~UITE EniO>' the boat activity a3 or/throout inc. Mutters. Nft'd a separate suite for well u the 11pa.rldinit h11rbor GEM~11-- your tt«!n~gcr, mother·ln· light. at nla:ht, the' Catalina 1610 "'· Cont Hwy., N.B. Jaw, or • ? Thil fine home IUflM:ll .t comfort of this REALTORS 642...f623 la 'Priced vtry low for Cor-nne 4 BR., 2 bath bomt. OWNER MOVED EAST ono. del Mar, at S49,5(X). Aho ktvely powder "'°"'· Mlllt tell 4 BR Paee1ttter BA y, & BEACH Iara• '"""°room 'heated ... Id bit din' Ira tam mu' ~-· J)OOL 177,500. ;_ ' ~Lron &Mm BAY & B~CH :"1ot~ '!~ "'· "-ANXIOUS OWNER REALTY • 1'1$-30XI ROY J, WARD ru:ms. WlU tell V.A., FHA; M down to V ... Cl'ldoot 3 bdrm.. OWNER Trans. I bodn>ona, 1619 W.-U Do' .. N.B. end. lanlll: tlJ>-1op cond. 2 btlhs, entry hall. many &f6..0228 El«:. llll·lns. profcu, tntf. ntru throughout. built-in •' W h It• Elt.'Ph&fits" l'lptt· tcpd, One of the bHt bu)ll r a n 1 e ... + O\'t!ll +. runntna: y0ur boult Tum ln Calta&\~· dilhwubC'r, forced aJr them Into "CASH" -if:U MORGAN REAL TY ht!aW.,. 2K ,..,. "'''" """' thru n.111 f llo t '1>-4642 67~9 Bl'k., U!.000. ~17211. Cluaifiod. ~ ' B•lboo blond UTILE !tland, So. Bay Front, 2 lots, hOuse o.Q onf', 3 BR, 3 BA. M1ddll rwm & bath. liv rm upataiaw/Wt't bar, Shown by appt only. Min 1315,000. Principals only. Own« tm La ere.ta Qr. Pasadena. BalbcM P•n.insul• OCEAN side', Bal. Blv .• cor- ner duplex. $55,000. Marshall Realty tiTa-4600 Oce1nfront Med Villi By Owner 4 BR, 4 BA. $97 ,500. Shown by appt only~ 67S-6296 Coron• dt l Mar CAMEO SHORES $92,500 4 Br. 4 Ba. Poot Sweeping oceanview, spacious & ele· gant Luxuriously appt'd. Exclusive list:il.l& - ;'i~~ {«st ~:;/ J3Jjf ii "> real I y ~:"· 2414 Vista Del Oro Newport Beach 644-1133 ANYTIME * OCEAN VIEW* Terrific duplex; beam ccil 's. in upper unit. F.A. heal. Hdwd. flrs.; one of the best views in town of the ocean & channel. Lo\ver unit 2 bd· rm., 2 baihs. Wc would like to show you this! MORGAN REAL TY 673-6642 675-6459 LOVELY vie\v of Catalina & bay area. Custom built. Woll located. 2 Bedrm w/hld pool, outdoor wet bar & gas BBQ. Beautiful cond. Call owner at 644-1536. Prillf.ipals only. IRVINE TERR. VIEW Charming 2 Br. & den -2 Ba. Ideal for two. S57,500. TED H RT & ASSOC. 3471 Via o 6'7>8500 HARBOR JEW Homes - Popular 2 bdrm + den, pro- fessionally landscaped, large lot. $47,500. 644-1815, Owner . LUSK 2 story, 5 hr, 4 ba, 3 frplc, greenbelt location, fee land. Agent 6~7225 H.l.R. Coste Men Executive'• Dream $41 ,500. Spacious 2 bdrm & den, large master bdrm suite, formal dining plus breakfast room, wet bar, library shelves, atrium, shag carpet, drapes, shut· ters. On cul-de-sac, adjacent to tennis & swi m club. Owner/Wiker. 557-4467. VACA T & READY SHARP EASfSIDE HOME •-3 Big bedrms. * 2 Full baths. * Plush shag crpt. * 55' x 140' lot -. " Huntington S.o1ch Huntlnaton BHdl Irvine lrvlne • Income Property 166 ·-Carano Del Mar A COUPLE OF SHARP 3 BEORM. HOMES Both are Jlear the beach, sueer loca· tions with pride-of--oy,•nership , near Edi· TURTLE ROCK -BROAOMOOR Owner traoslerred Ea1t -anxious to sell his 17 Units lovely 2\.li year NEW 4 Bdrm., !amily rm .... U.•< !Ocat\on !or view&. Ex· scp. dining rm. home. Upgraded lhruout ct.Uf':nt nmtal record. 'ln· ' son High & shopping. with TLC. Corner location, just 1 blk . front coine over s.1l,OOO Ptt Yf:Br. pools & courts. Ollered at $44,900 INCLUD-:;,~:,:1 at S2G9.000. Tty t:il< NO. 1 Rancho La Questa A Darling of Darlings "Your Valentine" $32.900. NO. 2 Fashlon Shores corner Lot Fruit Trees Galore $33,750. . ING THE LAND. Let us show you this ono Best today. Call Jerry GlllHpie 847-9604/Eve. 968-2947 KASABIAN REAL ESTATE 'l l uh ,.I 1i·llil, ---'ill'n llur ''SINCE 1946" 1st \V('~lern Bunk Hid{;. Univt•rsity Park, ll'\ Jue Dey1 833-0101 Nights ~~ll•r~v~ln~e""""""""""""'""~N""'ew""po~r~t~B~e~•~c·h!!!!.,.""' 5'1•% LOAN NEAR tfte BEACH I;;:;====;;;;;;;;;, 2 HOUSES -DBL . LOT Owner Anxious! 3 BR, 2 BA. 4 B<'drm , l Bath, family rm. Golf & Spy Gla11 1h BLK. TO BEACH Spacious living room w/fire-elec. kltch. Tei'n11.grr or , , .h"Orn your patio, you .t:an I .. lk1• nf•\V 2~1y. 4 Bil., 2 t111., Place. New cnrni>ts &. noor spot • ~11 c-ur""ll within n rom1n1 din. r1n., blln~; fan1. -.~ ntolher-in·luw roon1 & bath ~ 1 .~ .v "". tile, new dishwasher. $29.500. separate. Ikst Showcntie 1;.i min. drlv<" of lhts 4 bclr1.11., rn1. Y,'.'\\'<'I ll!tr & BBQ. Owner will cflrl'y 2nd. AU floor plan. $39,900. Call 2 bath Turtle Ho1.:k 111 11~ f'rplc, 2 rar s:.ar.: lt<11111• U1is & good neighbors, toot 842--4466 hom('. OnlY $57j)OO. C(lu!d he rntldt' ln1o rluplr~. 549-0674 iJ A!~1 • 1•ute 2 HR. ('1Jt1 ns:,1» '. " ed h•11 Both only $74,fJOO. 011•'n MESA Verde 4 Br. Owner ;. . : r I "'l'ekcndfl 1-5. transferred. $33.500 mo dn CA\'\\'0()1) REAl.T'i' ~~13-l:tlO VA. 1616 Elm Ave. 5.57-6151. GARDEN REAL';'{ NEWPORT BCH: El Toro Univ. Park Cl'ntcr, lrv!ne KITCHEN Cail AnyHme, 8.\1-t\<20 $29 ,500, 4BR. I* BA. Formal dining PLUS much more awaitsi"'""""'"!"""'."""""""""' area. Completely carpet~d your pleasure in this 3 bed· L1gun1 Beach & draped. Covered patio & room family room homc tn BLUE RIB'BON · nicely landscaped, Close t'o "a prime location. Full price schools & freeways. $29,500. ''"only 131, 750. No down Gr Can sell FHA or VA. t('rrns. SPECIAL &'I0-5057 after 5:30 PM. SHERWeeO REAL TY \VE llAVE A REAL PRI7.F.- 18964 B-khu••t F V WINNER HERF., LOCATED East Bluff '"" ' ' · · ON LAGUNA'S FAr.1Eo FRANCISCAN RIVIERA COASJ'LJNE. l>r· THE BLUFFS FOUNTAINS tailed cnn1empc1r11ry rlC'sil{n ''Limited Edition'' CORNER LOT • Cathedral w/ell wood l'Xterior & ex· STO Y 3 n•-2 b ceilings, 3 BR, 2 BA, xlnt tensive use or i::loss. ONE R J:>U.1u1., a., tl fam./kit., priv, patio • dee· crpts & custm drps. Spo ess Well designed 2 BDRM. & orutor colors; custom shut· thruout • Vacant As!ume DEN <or 3 BDRM.) floor lers & drapes: new shag 6% % loan w/$266. total plan has hcnvy shag w/w carpeting. Special vinyls. 6 monthly or name your carpets thru. 0111. JfUGE Mos. young. Outstanding val· terms. Call 842-4466 MSTR. SUIT~ \V/PATIO & ue at $37,900. ) OCEAN VIE\V , hAs bill-in vanity &. dresser. lll;:N HAS /,·tot.... FLOOR TO CEILING rm>:- 5 ) PLACE. The 2n<l k•vcl fea· «Sf (\ 11 t .. fl' 3 BDRM, $19, 990. ture.,pado"' STEP DOWN Tt./ ~f Lrg lot 60'x100', renced 6k LIV. RM. WIT!r MASSJVIZ:. fi.t·~ rcnll yard w~ bttln B-BQ area. EXPOSED CR.OS.'> ·r1r.1. ~~f 1 2 car gar, all elect kilch: 2 BERS, LGE. SLU Ml'STONE .. '. -m' 7 -old W•th f'IREPLACF. & t'Xll'llf:ive 2414 Vista Del Oro '"'"' ' J'" · $1 ,000. total dn p!ymt • use of glass w/nn our. Newport Beach monthly ts; $196. SEE today! STANDING OCEAN vrr-:\V. 644-1133 ANYTIME 1, StepMver kitchen has hllt·in fo'untain Vo1nev RANGE, DBL. OVEN, 0 1811- WSHR., etc. & o(X'ns to rlin- GI • $1.00 DOWN 531·5800 (:;::) 531·5100 log ace• W/OC!CAN VIEW. 2 baiC(lny VJE\V DECKS. Clean 4 BR 2 BA house. All GOVERNMENT Thll!I unique new hon1e ls elect. kitch, lrg rms. Seller OWNED our "Buy of the Month" nr will pay aU buyers costs: • FHA It VA repossessed $38,500 FULL PRICE paymts just $a>S. per mo. Townhouses & home11. Low SEE TODAY! Ni:.ar Magpolla & Slater. down. No polnts or E!!erow CONE TOMORRO\V! $31.500. ls the VA appraisal fees. Gov't P~ closing MISSION REALTY costs. All price ranges. Call p1i~. Possible early poss. 968-444l 985 So. Coast Hwy .. 1.1.lp,-una l CREST REALTY PHONE !714! 494-0731 POOL & VIEW 100 ( ::J 531·5800 Location I Locatfonf This beaut. 3 bdrm. ho1nc 111!~ >;:::=;;::-:~:-:-;>:'.:::;:---.Near Adams & Brookhurst. ~J&h on a corner 1ci1, which untington-Btach 4 & fam., 1% baftls, w/w g'!Vcs you a view of ocean '--fONTEMPO. carp. & drapes. Built-ins, &·the hills, with completr LAGUNA HILLS dishwasher. Patio. Good privacy around your pool. PrcsUge adult community terms. Only $28.500! Lge. formal dining k family adjacent to U>isure World. ~ REALTY & • Beaut surroundings, all lux· INVESTMENT .CO. ury appointments. Thcra-(714)645 ·4085 peutle pool, aaunas, gym, 4 --~=~~~---1 bUHard table~ MUC H $20,500. nm. with beam cell 's. All Immaculate PJ'OP<"rb', priced at $65,000. '* 4~2800 * MORE! 3 Bedrm. -J 3/c Bath ~ ~ !)1111rp 2 B1•drrn 2 H11!h h1HllC' J'vr pool &r elubhottsl' p1•lv· llt'f{t'11. J,o,., mit!ttl f'nnnrc-. i<l11t C'()1lfl & walk inl{ disl11nrt" to bench. N<'w on rn kt • Call no,v! ~AG-5.'l80 (Open f'Vl'S, \ llER ITA GE R1':AI. ESTATF: JIARBOR View Homrll. f\1ov- lng Eost. must s('ll nh'no~t new Por!Ofino n1odel. Ex- lrli$. $60,fiOO, 644-.R831. ----~~~~--\VATERf<'RONT: Tirt>d of NB prices? Try this, bi'~I Jorl\f• ion Hunl!ngton 1-larbour. 55' ~ Bnyfront acros111 fmtn heh & ya<'hl (;lubs. Brau!. 2·11try, !iv.rm, 3 or 4 Br. 11101 , din, deck, dotk. $110,000. Owner. f71 4J 846-254:• ~lt7A=n=oo=·11 View 11·-o-m-,-- f\1tJ110C..'<l. R1•uut. dt'1..'<Jrat1•d & lundscnpf'd. J11elu~lf'11 l1.1nd. lfi l ,500. fA4-&067 0 1· ti4G-81124, DESPEHATE OWNER 2 Bil +den 2'!.i Bn,good view. Ag:t. 675· 7225 ll. J Jt. CUTr: 2 hr, 2 ba townhouse. S"·imming pool, too land. Agf'nl, 67~7225. ll.l.R. BY Ownrr, $3!1.000. 3 & fami· ly, nu1 ny xtl1u;. &ck Bay nrcn. f..1!"H1SR2. Prin. on!y. Santa Ana $22,750 BY OWNER In Santa Ana, 3 Br. 2 car s;t:&ragt'. Sha~ cpta, Covered pallo, fenced yard. Will eon· i;ider second. 836-$72. San Juan C1pf1tr•no VERY P'EW Thrl't' an.-very few of the AA models of Ca~lta Cnpl~lr11no avallable.. Thi• o n f! 111 Jn Unit •1, ha" grr111 11rlv"cy bu! iA clo!lt to extra parking, Shown by appointment only! Eastside Location 15 Units ,Just jl(l\jfh of Santa .A n " ('1i\1nrry Club, 7·2 Bd Town- housr11 : l , 2 Bd: 4, 1 Bd: 3. Rti.r h. ~:X"Cf'llcnt renh1l t1rr1t. AJI ru1ili'I lcas<'rl. In· ('(Jilli! over $25,700 {X'r y ,.11 r . 1.1.~tcd at 1175,'000. OWU<'r wUJ ei.rry 2nd T.D. 10 Unit Maney Maker Lt-t your equily gt"Qw. t.ornl· ed In prhnc t ustJido renral lll'1'(l, Close lo golt ('.(IUl'l!I'. 5 it1divldu11! 2 bdrrn. homt<s, \\•lUt !>tam ctilinsta and hrlr•k firtptacCl'I, Also 5 hllf'h. Qlltll'fcrs. lrt<'l'ln1e over $1Z,600 prr year. Ll11tl.'d at $119,500. Owner will iirll or trnde tor litrl{l'r property, 114 Units· 6.7xGrass Bl'nutiful unllJJ 1C'u than 1 yr old. Schodulcd ineon:u~ ovu $245,000 per yr, Fllll Jirlce $1 ,GAA.000, SC'ltcr will take $2~.000 rlown, May take hrttt•h pro1)('rty for part of <'flU!ly, 65 Units Near Harbor And Baker Gro~s Income over $140,000. Cross l'lpcndable app. 10% total doll11or Investment rt· turn over 35~. Ll11:ted price 1980.000. CAlJ .• (714) 546-1600 INVESTMENT OfvtSION INCOME UNITS DUPLEX • 2 Brt. fill., n~ place, crpt11. dtp!!,1 11:nrngl!•. $34,000. TRIPLEX 3 an. 11,s l.ln, flrepl, dhl gar and 2-2 BR unil!I, $4!:1.950. 'UNITS on % acre lot. $69,500. I UNITS- Comer location. Sl00,000, Roy Mccardle R'•ltor 1810 Newport Blvd., C.14. 541-7729 lO-UNlTS Pride of own~p 1 Bedtm furnl11hcd apt.11 In top cond. Never ll vocancy. $15.000 down · Owner wil l !tnance. $115,000. Century * Boat access • $27,500 full prict FHA/VA TERMS AVAIL. *FULLER REAL TY* See the "Award • winning" Crpts., drps., fruit trees, flag· furnished model homes ON stone patio & brick. XLNT ~-!--"SALE THlS WEEK, TERMS • LOW 00\VN. 1--~~~~~~-- 830-3900 oc &10·7900 HAFFOAL REAL TY . FRESHL y .!UST 128.000 CAPISTRANO VALLEY REAL TY 31.SOI Camino Cnpi11trano 493-1124 RHltor Sine• 1965 &42-U71 ANYTIME * BEAT THE TAX RAP * Selected Inve11tmenl1 ,,., * 2 Medical bldgs • lull * 22 Unit • 1 &: 2 bcltm. * 26 Unit • 2 & 3 bdrm. * 2 Duplexes 4: home * 51 Acre arove • Ril * 9(kXl Acre ranch 546-0814 •.•••••••••• Anytime WHAT you see is wh at you gel! See this beautiful ne"·· 2 story house loc.1tt-d In Eastside, Costa M e s a . Imagine! 4 BR, 2 BA, Jge fncd yard,) and sc aped, frplc, dble gai:, bllns. crpls & drps & many other features. Call 646-5537 or 642-1336 to see what you must get! BE~ in College P k . VA/FHA or conv, 4 br, 3 ba, 1925' Sell at appraill. 540-831K SALE by owner. Lrg 4 br, 2 ba, cor lot.. rm for boat & trailer. $25,000. All terms, 642-6459. $20,500. 3 BR 2 BA. lrg 60'x100' fcncd lot, crpts, drps, kltch inclds elect bllin R/0, eating bar, din rm, lrg linen closet. Ov· erslzed dbl gar. covered pa· tio. Payments less than rent. I' 1llage Real Estate '62-4471 ( ~::.J 546·1103 VALENTINES AND ROSES Wouldn't please her more than thi1 spotless 4 BR home A covered recreation centr.r patio in the rear yard pro- vfdes year-round enjOyment. Your children can walk to school and parks from its great loca!ion. Century 21 842-4474 3 BR. 2 BA, l5x30' encl. patio, Cplll, drps, brick wall. Close lo everything! $29.!ikJ. IWG-5769. Owner. "'-"°' Eve" M2.s202 DECORATED $ C>OICK S WE BUY HOMES ~~7.%1)4 KASABIAN REAL ESTATE MEREDITH gardens: 3 br, 3 BA. for dining, lmmac. $il4 ,500. Owner, 968-3529 Irvin. You'll Uke It! Don't milJl!i this sparkling 3 Bdrm, 2 bath, view ht>me In 11celudcd area of Laguna Beach. 2 car garflge • df!Ck1'. Bulll•ln kitchen & low main· tcnEtnce makes thlll the ht"11t buy In town at $41,750. (l·IOl AG Ian REAL ESTATE ll90 Glenn~ St, 494.9473 549--0316 ON the beach. Laguna Royale. 2 br, .... 2 ba con. BeautHully upgraded 3 .. BR. domlnium, huge patio deck 2 BA, "Cambrid ge" model with 1url, sea & mns!line Townhouse Jn Un.iv. Park. views, Elevator to pool & P ( I d ~ tr! beach. Consider 2 yr lciue ro , an J!C1,., n . um, pa- tio, xtrsa. End unit / at $625, fumlahtd. A8klng grern belt !or.. near pool, $47,900. 537-4510. 11ft 1 & lennis courts & shopping. wkndli, 400-.3992. $35,500. Lido ltle Call Owner 833-9131 I~ Mobile tfome1 For S•fe CONTEMPO. 125 GREEN RIVER (;rest Family Park MONTf-ILY SPACE RENTAL FROM $69.50! A grf!et family community wllh comfort & luxury tor everyone. Loc11 ted IO min. '-llflt ot Anaheim on new Rlve!nrldl! Fwy. Tlkt Grt!Cn Jtlvcr ofi-ramp edjncen1 to Green River Golf Counie. '1901 Green River l>r. Corona * * 714/'l37-7374 20x57 FLAMINGO. 2 bdrm., flne Is klng-11ize, 2 balh, w as her & dryPr , dh1hwashcr, It nc-w ~hllg carpet, ™!W drapes, &et-up * Sltt11 • Comm. A: mfe. ' EXECUTIVE Real Eltate -lnvHtmeota * (7J4) 83Z.7353 * -~PR""IME UNIT=s--t SIX 2 Bit, 2 BA apta. near Wettcl!U ~Ing Cdnl<r. Bit-In ldtchent. 1rp1 c ••. large Br., Llundry. Seuoned adult lcnanll. Good return + wr 1helteT". $135,600 with llexlble tern\11. howcmb loWllOD J~ aeolt0tt 341.G Via Lido 615-4562 6 Unit• Eu tbluff 2 BR., 2 hulh un rt11. 2 yrs. -0ld. f\1lly carp, A: draped. Coverc<d pnrldl'\i. Beat loca• Uon. $150,000. MESA Verde, 3 BR, 1% BA, $26,750. By O"-'rK.'r, Eves: 549-4225, Days: 644-2501. BY OWNER, clean 3 "BR, Jge fenced yd, Many upgrades. $23,800. 64S-1511 VA REPO. 3 BR., 2 Ba. $29, T:iO. ITJO Dn. $259 Mo. In famlly park, pct ok. 131-mt. FOR sale by owner. I m i. to 4 BR. 3 ba. 70X88 $'125,00) I "°10X20~7• 7M~OIJ7171e-,-ho-mc-,-.-nc~~~ beach 4 Bdrs 3 Ba 2SOO Any day ii the BEST DAY lo 3 BR. 3Mi bf;, tam rm, pool cabana. rurn.. In Adult Sq F. p · ' I I 'onJ d' D • I rm, din nn. 40' \(')f $R9.SOO • c ,75-4050 0 ... ••• ,~ca.. .. 28 .UNl'I' . \ Authori-zed Broker 548-6570 . L rinc p cs y. run an a • o n LIDO REALTY INC. Pn.rk downtown c , M. $39,500. 962-8!l83. delay .. call today 642-5678. 33'1? VIA LICX. 518--5919. 2 & 3 Br. 2 B&. Nr lhOP'I· 8231 Elli• Ave., HB. $42> M. M7.J957. S@\\Jl1A-"'B2/#S" The Punle with the Buiff./n Chuckle I OOTITI ! Somettmes an adolescent i• I' I I I one who, when not treated like on odult, ads like on lr--::-F ""'Y..,.H-0 ..,.O_,.L-...,1-· » II. 0 Compl.te tlie dt\ldtle quoi.d• ' I I' I I I ye.I~::,,!~:, r:,n1=. e pp,~~~~\~stmw Vi J• r 11 I' I' r I 6 u.;~~~~f imus I I I I I I ] SCRAM·LETS 'NSWERS IN CLASSIFICt TION 8~~ ~ 6JJ..7300 H Verct• OPEN HoWJt'.0Wnf'r, Sit lB- 5, Sun 1-5. 4 Br, den, form. din nn, prof, decor A land!lcpd, Xtru. Adde d atorage, water 1 o f In a r, many othcn, 145, 750. 2030 Baltra Pl, 5'40-0)}t. Newport Beach 4 BR, PAM RM Nearly new homf' In prime 11arbor l!Jghl.andr of New· porT 13ch. 4 1p1cloUll BRs .\. famlly nn, 21,-fi B&lha. Liv· Ing rm .11:la.u wall o..ferlookl'I • ~,,.., .. i.;nne pool. Thia hat f'v 1 ng tor the hf>•t In Uv $43,001 Let u11 Jhow Rei l Et111--. Gtntrll l[i] f'OR 111.le R·2 lot, 50d'.lO' with 2 bdrm "°""· S.IH price $21,000, Prin. Ohl)'. Ca.Ii &17-il.289, Commercial 4-Plex, an 2 .Br, l U.. lpc . Property ~ 158 1570 mo. No dn VA. 1.12~. COM Jtl.gti"'w,-y-tro'""'•-taa-,-. -cc-1 , ~N_r_occ~-· _55_7_-<t_!SL ___ _ land & bid.rs. Lots for-So1le 170 l\genl. m-.ms HJ.tt CUOlCE lot 100·x:m·, Jt-2, Oupfextt!Units pav e d alley. S4IJ E. ult 1•2 Rocbetlll'f St., C.M. SOOrt UNITS wantt'd. Haw buyel'll for duplf'Xt'll up to lge unit&. A,cent 0~7225 IUR. walk \o 17th St. ohoppinc cnlr. $21.700. 5tl-t509. Mobile Home/ Tro1lltr P•rb 171 DANA Point -New dupltx. 149.500, Sijv« ~rn at IA l---o-E"'SE=RT.....,CREST.,...--~ Cruta. We:bb-Bkr. ~. Own )'OUT' own Jot l""'lme Property "' c;.u, CLUBHOUSE. Not ylJJ LWa or oth£'1'1 In thla pnc" rtlnJff' al no obllgsllon. &-16-22 DELUX£ u n 11 •, CALL I!\ ,,,.1414 Corona df.l ri-t.nr, N'pl , ~ ~ Beacll, Sell or ~f'tie. al Hot Poota.. S3900._ ea rrm ~ Broct11.1rr. ELOIUOOE R.Ul.TY CO. .Alrd#L 644"1111. .. I.ALTY Thill Irwin Co. IU'1.l!on Httr Nr•,•rt P••f o rrlc• 4f5 Union Bink TO'A't1' BY Owwr: No down • VA, J yr old. 3 Br. 2 ba, % frplc'a, trpU/drpl. dhl J&f, J blk heh. $47,~. 6't2-T:t23, J.tn. i...twlt. " 610 N'pt. c:truer Dr .. N.B. Put • Uttle ''tool' UI your Levi1 • Rll tboM: bfluble:t !(Ir "budcl"' Clll au.tiled 64,,_, ' P. O. b 6'lrO ,J)clr:rt Hlit Sprtno. casu. · moZIHlll Mount•fn, DeMrt, Re1ort ~ 174 a ACRE.'i nr. AIU wtr. t:lec. SG.!!00: sr,:\. 1ln en.mo 1 to U! AM. -PM. Act- I 7 ' . •I • •I - ( • DAILY PILOT 1 l • Wm~. ,,.,..,, 16. lt71 'PILOT-ADVERTISER J8 • ~ .. ,. I .. .:!::1" J lj) [ I. .____ ___ _, \~ [ --k<-\ltJ [\Mo••"'~\~ I ~ow-]~ I A,,,.,.,.~-jf!] I~ • . 1 t I I r. I I r ~ ' • ' I • ' I l I l - HoUMt Unfurn. 174 General Coste Mesa **BIG BEAR LAKE enSJf • l·funt e Ski e Re-- lax. In 1his 3 &Mnn. 2 s.lor)' cabin. ONLY SI0,900. £.Z 1f'rm•. Tt wrin"t lut. OR THIS -2 ~ory FiJcer· Opper i:>r $6, 759. Cau Rosa cn41 536-1733 or write: Spence R!al Eatatt, P.O. 8aJt 2828. Bt1 Bear Lale!, Cali/omia. Real Estate Exchange 112 WANT bt&eh property fm' l homes In RJWnidf'. Owner -llaJ E\l?'Y, 357 So. Va.n NC5S, Los Anples, CalU. RENTAL FINDERS 4M W. 1-. COSlA ...... 11..,...*Apt .. * '45-0111 * '-ob.-1 ...... t-WWb $&'.>·STUDENTS~ ~·urn Bache- lor n~ar the beach. UtU pd. .Ava.ii 3/l. OEWXE 2 BR, JI! Ba nl!; BWFFS. 3 BR. 2 be. Mont~ilo Townhl! &hag lrpl, '325. 3 BR, 2"' bl... vt.• cpt bltn ranee 'ov~d&h· can I, $3;0. • J BR. 2\i ba. w~. PaUG. A: a:ar encl Pool Soper deluxe, view, S50Q. I clubhse. $XlO mo rent or Broker Mt-1133 Anytime ls!. 546--9289. DELUXE 3 Br, fam, 2 Ba, JMMAC, 2 BR, largtr lncd yd, S315. 1807 Port Chari.es Pl. gar. 3i19 Eldtn Ave. $145 IH&rbor View Hm.a) 2ll: mo. 613-5210. 6'7(l....4601. 4 SQ.RMS., 2 Baths. Crpts. HARBOR View homf!' -'4 Br, 4rpa. bltnl. S250 Ytar's din, tam &: Uv, pooJ It club J'eue. Rell req'd.'5.s..o710. privil, U18 Pert Sttrlh11. * ;;--;;:::-===--~·"-,-=-.,.-,-6'1>-077L 1100-PR!V T I ,., 2 BR. cpt/drps, yard. Qul<t,l;-,:=-7e"""'"""'---A E BR, pnr1..., Adult• only. 231F Avoca.do 3 BR 4 4 BR. homea, near turn. Ne• r everythiJ'li. Sr. S48--825t, &4&-l«>5. beach. Yearly Ieue. sm Child /prt OK. * 3 B I I __ , rd 1 d Mo. ~. Aa;en: ~1290. ................ ;, .......... !'!". Apia. Fum. 3" ---------Apts. Fu'!'-:MO Apt. Unfurn • '45 Apl . Unfu•n. 365 Apl. Unfum. 365 • llelboa "' .... BA Yf'RONT cozy 1 BR. Cround ftoor, \liew, pri patio, Jlll'kin&· Wlnttr Qr yrly. «JO So. Bl,yfront, No. 5. • Wl;)MEN-alngle rooms, kit c hens/TV room . Da-Wk-Mc . $60 Up. 6T>3613. LCE 3 Bt, 1 ba, frp1c. Nr So. Bay, Newly f'!dec. UXl mo, 117 Diamond. 615-3288. D•M P.olnt LIVE IN STYLE! Now Open • All Now MARINA INN * Full Modem Kitcber11 * Free TV * Unens rnc.l'd • Pool * Sauna Bat.ha • Phenes • Patios • Maid Service * Utilities Included VIEWS OF THE tlARBOR Bachelor Units • $59.50 wk Some l A: 2 Br Units Jett Clo. lo Laguna &h, San Clemente It. Doheny Stale Park. corona del Mar Eosl Bluff --LUXURIOUS 1"ench R'""" -===:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;I e NEW DELUXE • cy. S bedroom, 1'4 bath, • NEW l BR, 2 BA Apt tor !use. Fireplace, Dininr Rooni, Well l..ocatM Jncld spac. muttr aulte, dln laW1dry. $400. Af!, 675-4930. Carden 11opartmenta nn i dbl garage; auto door Adulis only. F'reah & ne-.\' opener avail. Pool A Rec~ CLOSE to beach, trg. 2 Br, 2 v.:ith pool, eoff~ room allon •rea. Bl. open be.I.nu, frpl<', It. mill'\)' eJCtra features • S215 • bltrui. prlv. porch. prlv. i11.r. Enclosed aaragc 865 Amigos Way, NB •M.• M ., 61~ ,.,..... ca-·· ' drapes t.f&nagf!d By _,.,. arguen e. ~'· • .,...._. WILLIAM \VAL.TER.S CO. 2 BR., Bltns. 'Valk \ to All bulll·in' beach. $190. Orangr Coast 1 & 2 Bed.rooms NEWPORT BEACH Real Estate. Call: ~&48 1'~rom Sl!JS Ptr Month VIiia Gran•d• Apt• • • GREAT VIEW 2 BR. • Frplc .. bltns, sundecks, pool. $200 up. 644--634.f, 67~. Drive by Four bf>rl.rooms with baJcon- 231 1 ·'Eldrn A.vt. I" above & below. Gracious Or caJJ 645-5780 llvlng &: quiet surrounding r, rr '"-" y , cp 11, rps, ==...,.---=,..-,---~ SllO·HARD to &al. 2 BR. atove, re~. Nr. 15th & 'mRU June -$100 + elec. encl gar, Crpt1, drps, fnc::d Tu1tin . $200. &IS...1035. Pard&Uy turn, w/11.t:Ntt & 2 BR., $200 Incl . ulilltie1 Choice location! Wlnlt'r Win1on Realty 673--3331 um...£ lsJand • 1 BR turn, New crpta. $150 Includes util. • 673-7178. PH. (7141 Ofi.2353 34902 Del Obltpo Sf. Dana Point Harbor I ~ yrd, kida/pelt ok. NICE 3 BR houM 2 BA rtlrla. (ZlJJ ~. • * £..tkie, SW/mo, Op1ion t~ LRG-Vacant 3 pr, 2% ba. 2 Belboa Ptnlntule ·• l:iiiiimiiimmiiiiiiii~iiiii:/Sl40-ctrrE 2 BR Cottag! w/ buy,* 642.386l. ) Frplca, crpta, d11>5, J'lear 9125 WK&U"'-~""-·"• _ 2 Br + 1epr guest rm & ba. Pvt patio. ge.r. Nr Sho(>S. No child/peta. 6'fl-lt08. Cost• Meaa DELUXE REALTORS SINCE 1944 tor family with children. Near Corona dtl Mar High School. Fireplace, "'~bar & built·in kitchen appliances. 835 AMI GOS WAY 644.-3991 Coldwell, Banker I Co. Managing Arent 8utines1 Opporlunlty RESIDENTIAL BURGLAR/FIRE 200 ALARM SYSTEM Rare opportunl~ to bulld 11 profitable busi.neu in one ol '~ top cmwth hidu1trie1 All 11. dl1trlbutor/dealer of a revoluUonary, low coat. bur- £larJ!lre &lann 1yatem, en. ilnttr'ed & manufa.clured by Natklnal Presto Industri~s. listed NYSE. Complete trainina. Small invest· ment In Inventory required. No franchise Ice. Writ! George D1UTOw, V.P., or call collect (213) <118-0041, anytime. GUARDIAN SERVICE SECURITY SY~TEt.1S Div. of Cenfuray Metalcratt Corp." '2032 S. Stol'l!r Avenue Los A~les, Cal. 900'J5 A PRESro CX>MPANY • EatabHllhed Bualnesa • ln\leaton tot l 11 m J t ~ d putnerlhlp Cnon-.. "Ork:lngl for furniturt--al!reo-jev.·elry eo, s~.000 obtainl 25~ of buaneM or co. wUt pty 1770 on min. $5,000, 12 mo blalne• loe.n. 1st time of· fered. 638-lliflo aslc for Tony. LIQUOR license. Orange County, oll sale renera.I. No fixtures or blue sky. Btst oUer over $32,500 plu~ \'!ry small baaic 1tock~ 531-4510. Aft 7 & wknds, 4gg...3992. VERY altn.cllve new Foto f'rame ·iln!. N1f1onal ules usured. Need work ; n g capitaL(aecurecl} •. 4!1fr...2500. 220 gar, tncd for kids A "'"· =--=-=~-~~--• -.ch $350 545-8152 .,........, ....... ..,, .... , Huntin11ton Be•ch Vacant. l BR, 1% Ba., Halecrest .,..... · · · • Lovely Bach-1 Br-Rooms • APARTMEN,TS 673-4400 Huntington Be111ch * $1 :15-CLEAN :'I BR, 2 BA, ~·· Crpts, drpe. Nr. ahpg. LEASE/option, 2 br A dtn, Ma.id aerviee-Pool-Util pd J225. Lease. 962-6365. 2% ba, tome view, An:doul. e Call 615-8740 e EXECUTIVE SUITES MOTEL APTS. Air Cond • 1-"rplc's . 3 Swim· ming Pools • Health Spa · I !!!!!!!~"'!'~~~~""'"' Tennis Cris • Game & Bil· YOU NAME IT ON BEACH! shag crpts, klds/pets/1inglH1 ok. · ~ * $200-SPACIOUS 4 BR, 2 BA . dbl 1ar, new crpts, child~n/ pet welcomt-. * ROOMMATE SER VICE· Rentals to share, male or female, from -Slt>. BEACON * 645-0l ll GRANNIS Residential Realty 2629 He•bo• Blvd .. CM Dane Point ~nt 675-?225 HJR Corona •I Mar 2 BR. 2 BA. FRPLC Newport Htightt , FURNISHED Bachelor apt, Nief! houae w/blt.\na, w/w CHARMJNG l Br. house $150 util pa.Id, pool. Slll/mo. crpta, drps, p.rage. Small mo. Allail. Feb. 15th. No Day.1 642-8400; att 6 727 Yorktown Blvd. 194n BEACH BLVD., AT YORK'J'O\VN 536-04!1 STUDIOS FROM $35 ftnced yard. Children or childrtn/pels. 642.-8~. S43--0797 . 1 BEDROOMS AVAILABLE 11lngle1 ok. $225. Santa Ana Heights Costa Mesa e Full kitchen NU-VIEW RENTALS 1 1 "' •Healed pool 673-403D or •94-3248 4e!~d~P:tio: 1c'car~: C~sa d.tl Oro • Laundey facilities Huntf,.ton h•ch $290. 544-ti6n or~ aft ALL tn'ILITIES PAID • i'ree udlltie1 15 VACANT HOMES 6 pm Compare before you rent • • Free linens CUslom des:i&'J'l!(I, h:aturing; • T.V. &: maid 1erv. avllU , Rtnt While You Buy Wtstcllff e Spacious kitchen with in· • Ba.r·B-Que 3 I 4 BR honu!s, IOll\e $1£5 • 1 BR. cpts/drps, bltnl, direct lighting • Phol'I! senrlce w/pools, lat mo. plus $100 beam ceil. Healed pool. • Separate din'g area FREE Ulil., furn . I BR.. nr. dep. MOVE IN NOW' quiet !Ldults, no pet a. e Home;llke storage bch. Pool $130. 201 lOth Sf., · 642-lM..f. • Private patios 5.16-3m / 536-7281 /536-1366. From S195 10 $225 per mo. • Closed garage w/Klorsge Roberts & Co. 962-5511 Houses Fum. or '-e Full length marble pull. BACHELOR UNIT Servinr Newport.Costa Me~ •WE have a large 3election Unfurn. 310 man SlOO mo. Call 646-2687 area. Over 500 rentals avail-of 3 and 4 bedroom homes Costa Mesa • King.sz Bdrms * * BLOCK to Beach! Ar. RENT AL SERVICE 546-8660 liard Room. 1 BEDROOt.1 FROM $155 MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE 2400 Harbor Blvd., C.M. {TI.f) 557.soro RENTAL OFFICE OPEN 10 AM TO 6 PM HARBOR TOWNHOUSE 2217 1-larbor, Nr. Wilson 2 BR on 1 fir. Xlnt cond. Lrg closet.-carport. SI25. • He&ted Pool-Nr Shop'& Adults only, no pets. able NOW! We guarantee that can be moved into • Pool • Barheques • 1ur. tractive 1 BR. $135/mo. Jn. Rrvlce and results. Dur rtt almost Immediately on our LEASE 3 Br, 2 Ba Coll~ rounded with plu&b land· fant ok. (213) 4ll-0264. New Villa Riviera 11 $15.00. If we t:an't find Rent -0 pt lo n p I an . Park. S325 I mo unfurn or !leaping MOVE Jn Today! Lrg 2 Br, 2 Br. 2 Full Ba you what you want, you SHERWOOD RE ALTY , wiU furn, ept/drpl, lrJ>J, lge Adf!_ liv1;' BA~ 's~75t>est a.II xtru, pool. $159. 847·3669 Families Welcome don't pay! Fair! Try u11. 5~555 rear fncd yrd, wtr & ra:e or 968-7510 Sh g l/d 1· c-' ~~~o"--'-='-~--1 -~-pd, n-11 -. • .. , t!rlL. mES FREE a cp 1'J>3, pa 10, ut:am F1.JRN bachelor with i;t'&n11le, 1 ·H 6 .... .....,,..... nc ·~-. ,... L B -il -untln9ton Beach Ap'il 1., .... ~,10, 36.5 W. W1J90n 642-1971 1guna e1ch "'" • nnges. S95. mo. Qui~! studtnts OK. '""""''" 622 Hamilton. CM "·e'rt n~ar II! For ronv('n-2 BR 1Jnturn Fr. $230/mo, i~nce to !he things that Furniture Available count, compare our location Carpets-0.rape...di.!ihwu:her nt!ar the park, library, wo-heated poo1.saW1as·lennia men's club, boy's club, girl's rec room«ean views club and shopping. palloa·ample parkini: • 2 BR, 2 BA, den Security guard,. • p;cture-book kHchoo t-IUNTINGTON * rooi. putti•• """" PACIFIC And more at The Vendom• 1845 Anaheim 2 block of: Newport Blvd. 111 OCEAN A VE .. H.B. (714 ) 536--1487 Ole open 10 am-' pm Daily WILLIAM WALTERS CO. call: 642-2824, Mrs. Philli ps '""'"'"""'"""""'""'""'""'"' I iiiiiiiiiliiiiliiiliiiliijjjiiiiii DELUXE l BR, 2 Ba., HARBOR fireph1ce, cpl, dr11.'Pes. buill· ins. dshwasher; near school, $235/mo. 96Ul40. TOWNHOUSE DELUXE 2 BR. ~ Ba .. cpt. 2217Harbor. near Wilson drape1, J?.ullt·lns , 2 BR, l 'h: BA STUDIO rlishwash!'r. Near school. TOWNHOUSE. $140/mo. $170/mo. 968-0140. • H"tocl Pool-N,, Shop'g 2 BR, 2 BA, $159, Aduflt only, no poh, l BR; l BA, $l 7S. 2 BEDROOJ\f house, $130, J BR nr Edinger & Condominiums * ~ WK. & UP * Stt Mgr Mr. & Mn. Hoban fncd y&rd. b!tn kit. Goldenwesl fncd yr d Unfurn 320 • Studio & 1 BR Apts CITY lights & Ocean 548-al62 Forced a ir heating 3 BEDROOMS. Sl60, hltn kit., crpl/drp!. immac. Vacant'. • e Room $15, WK & Up. Small, bu t NICE. 2 BR. 2 children welcome POOL-$75. MOVE·lN AL.LO\\'. CptJi/drp~. Kids, pets OK. 2614-D Drlaware, 11.B. Mgr. 5J&.5738, 646-9666 pool, playground, children &: $250/mo. to mo or leue Co1t1 Mes• • TV & Ma.id Service Avail Garage & dt!ek. Older pet ---~-.... 1 Hot &. cold w&te.r furn pet• welcome. C·" ... 11 · 1 d · • Phone Service. UtiJ Pd k 1210 _.....__,.UJ' l Bdrm 2 Bath 1••• ...u~03.re1entlBrlBa ··-•All'"'---.a·.-1 o .. • ,,.,... 190 utl pd I BR t/ OK ·-n•· I t ' ' cp ... , -va, m..,.,r "'o:utt c ...... ;S NU VIEW RENTALS -21-r .. -..u and drape• to pet o.>'1"" J owner ag · blt-lns, dswhr, 1 pools, 237fi Newport Blvd, 54&.9755 • " APARTMENTS ...... Built-in 1tove Walk to beach, new luxurious 2 Wks Free Rent .:1:R2r;~, :~~s~;,' ~~M 1;?E 3 Br, 2 Baj l':i lam nn clbhoust, .$235. 546-lnO. ~Ad Worth $5 on Rent 6'1H030 or 494-324S 3 BR. 2 BA .......... $25.5. Carport-stall sho\ver lrg 1 BR, Shag crpt. Bltns, IV nn WI frp . Ins. Nr. CONDO. J BR, 2 BA, compl . drtn 4 Pet Stttion Ntwport Beach 2 BR, 1%. BA •• ,: .... Sl80. Laundry ri>om. drps, patio. lanai area. bbq, S.140 2BR. tncd, kidJJ/pel11. CM McDonneU Douglas 9624339. bit.ins. Mr. Queen, ofc. Unbelievably Beautiful BALBOA It 30th, 2 br, com· <Al.SO AVAIL FURN.) Fmced yard. No pets 111.1blerrancan park'r. gar S~ 2 BR a:ar tot ok C.M. 2 BR un!um, fenced )'Vd, 540-1151, ho~ 539-lll2. VAL D' lSERE G&rdenAplll, p!etely fum. 1 Yr. lse. Up-New adult g•rden Aj:>t1. MES.A VILLAGE Apt1. avail. BalconiH, trplc'11 . $160 pvt hme kid11 OK HB llingle dwelling. Avail Townhouse Unfurn. 335 Adulta -no pet1. Flowers stairs. 1 blk 10 bch. shops 151 E. 21st. 64&.1666 1046 ~I Camino Dr. •A ~~~;~11• 539-1661, 53&-0l09, $165 2 BR w/swim pl, NB March 1. 2l3: &67-4971. e'Vt'l')'Whel"!. Stn!am A: Kl, 1210 mo. 1st A: last + TRIPLEX I Id 2 I 546--7331 1---~-~--~-1 2 BR. ocean \liew, \lac CdM $1.fO 3 BR kJds/pels OK Hone nn.C"" w /acrMge, corralt vark>u1 &reas start· Ing $175. Waterfall, '5' pool Rec. Rm, ' yr o • arge * FRESH AIR 4 BR townhse, $225 mo. Costa Mesa Sauna, Sgls 1•2 Bdrm, Fum· cleanup. Util pd. 673-900.f bdrms. living rm, dining D&y caJI 6~ll26. 2 Br, 1~ ba 1'fonticello Twn-Unfum. fl'om SUS. SEE IT: alt. 6 pm. rm. shag carpet.S, drapes, BAY MEADOW APTS. '\ralk 3 bllcs lo Beach! Eves call 66-.f573 hie, patio. bltna. cpts, dbl ~ Panot11, &42-8670. AT'l'RACTIVE 2 bdrm, 1 built-ins, patio & garage, 2~r, beam ceilings, priv pa· I...g 0 ob 1 3 BR Apt, ~W!y decor. Irvine pr, clbhse acceaa. Adult l ireplace, S2Th. 1601 aundry facilities. $180 mo. tio, rec. !acil., closed gar-&tlRched gar, frpJ c, l" -;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;:::;;;;;;:;;;:::;;;;;\ · UlO MS-92:89 SlOO -MOVE JN Allo~ Bedford, Weslcllff IU'!A. Availab~ March 1. &&--33n qe. Gu heat, cooking & Ba: bllns, excepl refrlg. Investment OpportUftltv .__,_ ........... ____ ~~ 979-1430 AGENT • section. mo. · Shady Elms -Lawn -Pool. 67>4580 or 64rN997 for or 830--0332 waler all pd. All adults, no $225. No angls, no peb. 3 BR.%% b&, ·tam -$325 l:•n-Fore1t . Otildren'1 SectKm 't .. ·-.~ S165 ... ,~. . t EXCHANGES, lnvettmenls & tu Wiien. Home & Invesrment Realty. 675--7225. Money to Loan 240 HOME FOR RENT OR LEASE OPTION 2 BR. 2 baths $2&5 Furn. & Unlum 1 ,,_ 2 Br. app • •BEA11I'JFUL GROUNDS• 387 W..,.'Ba St CM 1---.-·=~·,_,c-:;.,,--::-=-- 4 BR, 2% ba, lam nn. $3.fO LAKESIDE Park, l'l!w, 3 Br, From smtmo. Up OCEANFRONT Ira: 3 BR, 2 SPANISH DECOR ~l ~l . " lRG. 2 BR. $140 3 BR, 2 Ba., &trium $335 crpl(, drpl, air cond., DW, 117 E . 22nd SI. • G42-3G45. BA, 1 yr lse $325 mo. Alr/cond. Gas, wtr. pd. Under New Management 4 BR. 2~ baths, tumish!d bltns, dbl carport. enc. Located at 2.1rd &. w. Garage, Pool, Rec. rm.. MODERN 1 Bdrm. apt. Cpts, ~ about our discount plan Turtle Rock SfOO patio, lndry nn., yd. work Sll5/mo ~ Mob. home, Oceanfront To &« call. laundry. l BR $14-0. 2 BR drps, dshwshr, b It -t n s , &. move-in allow. Oilldren &: r I : 1st TD loans 4 B!dnn in N. Costa Mesa. Shake root. cement drive. Part of rent will 1pl)' to the down payment - WE HAVE OTHERS incl. Pool & lake priv. $250. compl furn, 6td..poa1,_adult ~UL Slfi0.S165-U75. g~. l child ok, All util small peta weloorne. Newly (.213} 3Z7-l851 rolJect. couple, no pets • .f Season's Hacienda de Mes& Apts pd. $150/mo. 307 Avocado, ~od~. Se.. Air Apll. Mob Est, 2359 Npt Blvd DEUJXE] BR apt. St'eps lo 160 W. WWon, See Mgr. No. l Apt 9. C~f. 645-0984. l blk N, ol Adlllru: (oU Be&chl ' ' I • : ' • ' . ' I i l I· ' I ' -~ I. . ' ' •• ' I 6'14 % INTE REST 2nd TD Loans l ';ti int. based on equity. . AJao NEW 954>'S of s&le--price Joana Sattler Mtg. Co. 642-2171 . 545.0611 Sttvin& Harbm' area 21 yrs. Mvnoy Wonted 250 JNVESI'OR wanted. Earn hi&b return • joint venturt' on construction. &33-9595 ALSO 3 Brorm homt. College Paric. Nice ahq crptg. $2.fO. per mo. W..9521 OR 54~31 Nichols Real Estate LANDLORDS! We SpeciaJil.e In Newport Betlch e Corona d!I Mar e LaiUna • & Dana Point. Our Rental Ser\'iCe is FREE to You! NU-VIEW RENTALS 673-40?.Q or 49-1.·.1248 Coron• del Mar NEW . .__-_ ... _-__,\~ 1-3 Bdrm., 3 bath duplex. CAl"-1•••••••••11 1 pE""tt"d. draped, bit-ins: prlv. Housn furnl1Md 300 pa1.io. Co\lered garage. 705 ~nera 1 Orchid. $325 mo., yearly. EAmlDE COSTA MESA ~nt at JIJ5 or cption to buy. 3 bedroom. 2 bath. double p.r&p, f~ yard, MW Mq carpets, treshly paint· P<f. Call Broker 54$-9491 Open Eves. $115 util pd, !BI\. to! OK Stal uU pd, pvt coc 111'.I OK $125 28R mobl. hme, agl OK $60 utJ pd 14!P unit Balboa S90 util pd, bch pad·La.c Sch ~ AGENT BalbcN Peninsula , , &75°&050 0 _.,,, ma.a WANTED: to lease 2 Br hou.sfo. Resporu:lble coupl~. ro child, oo pets. 54.1.J.374 ar 836-130$ eves. Mr, Jon Ciblon NR ocean. 3 BR. J BA. ~n. d in rm. bltns, beam ~il· lngs. frplc, S.fOO 1 s e . 6'13--3.fTT. BEAUT ocetn vWw, l br. 2 bl.. b'plc, pool Incl maint.. wshr/drytt, $350. Adltl. 613-<&!5. BA YFRONT -chok-e 5 Costa Mesa ~---------bdrm. 4 ba, wmmer or yr • ly. f'urn.. Qr unturn. O....>ner, 673->J.19 Cotta Me11 LOVELY 2 Stol)o, < Br .. 2 Ba. ,..i n sinks, 2 rnut bts, (rplc, wash/dryr/di~hes /tiMn1. J.ri. yd, Jnq. owner, 1213\ 4lt-48t'i, or TeMnt. m<rT2l, 916 Denwr Or., C.M. Dana Point 2 IR. FRPLC HOME Modem kildlu w/bit..ln Mr, lra-bath w/J\otnaJl h1b. Good ~IJ Ir a.~. W.IJ.-lrhed, IJSO, NU·VIEW· RENTALS m-q) ... - 2 BR. lr$11<. bltos. 110tio -A •bumlrtt "IJoU •· -· SB.mo.- • \\1ALJ( to .tlP1-.$paC l Br, l/ynt, ............. 1121. ALA Rentalt e 64$-3900 e FIXER u,..._2 Br. hoed yrd, encl pr, Jddl A pet.a. $140. ALA Ront1l1 e 645-3900 3 BR. 1''~\111 Cl']>ts, new ~. new drps. Fncd yard. Quie>I al'Nll. QlO mo. on lea.. No children, nG rl n1 I~•. ~'ii. 2 bdrm hoult:, W/w cp(f, ff'~ )'d, private pran. Adults o~. No pell. 1115 mo 2308 Eldt'n A v e . 6'6-<!16l. 2 BR, """ 6 ...... -· No pets. 2 small ch11dtu. s1.c..;1mo. &&-ms. NEW 2 BR, t 8A ~-£. aide ec.ta Mf'A. Adults Oft· ly. S1J5. mo. &• l&6S c-1 1111 1'I1l'lld . ,'\ I I ---11·11 l11r Newport llNc:h 548-<i332. ~:"in.Sl.18. to June 15. * LOWER * BRAND NEW 2 BR . 729 Apt 6 Utica 536-2796 *ADULTS PREFERRED* HOLIDAY PLAZA GOLD Moclalllon, ""°' 2 a,, FROM $Ill 536-1010 3 BR, 2'Ai ba., bltns. w/w DELUXE Spacious l BR. OCEANFRONT apartment/ patio, encl pr, laundromat Near lhopi, enc:med gar-1 BR Sl.25 up. 2 Br, 2 Ba $160 crpt: dbl. car, pool. $285 furn apt. $135, Heated pool. rooms. $80 or $90 per month. AduJts. no Ptts. $~/mo. agea, buill·ha, encl patios, up. Cpt/drps, ·pool, ree rm, "SINCE 1946" REALTOR 5'8-6966 Ample partcing. Adults -no 673-l24l. or &7>504.8. 66-3515 or su.&t99. attn.ctive lndacp. Adults walk lo beach. Close to fOl,f. lat Westem Banlc Bldg. Duplexes Unfum. 350 pell!. 1965 Pomona Av~. CM 2 or 3 Br d!luxe duplex apt. * s170 * only. No pets. 1970 Walla~ 220 12th SI. 5J6..:0492; 219 Univenilty Par1c:, Irvine LOVELY 1 Br .• 1µrn. apts, IA blk to bch & bay. All nu 3 BR, 1% BA, patio, bltns, St. ~. MS-2209. 15th SI. ~1244. Oay1 IU-0101 Nights B•lbo• Penln1ul• shag crpts, Pool. Close to furniture. 67l-0521i. . crpts, drps. Ask 11.bout our 3 BR, 2 BA. + den, $2'IO. 2 BEACf:tWOOO APTS. stores. Adults, no pets. $160 ** OCEANFRONT 3 Br. 2 discount plan. 880 Center kids, no peta. Blt-ins;·c/D, Brand new 1-2·3 Br. Walk ~j 3 :r·:.-~ .~ .. n~ per mo. Ba. DehDt!. Winter. Adult's St, CM. 642-8.140, 548-J;S'l. W/D hlrup, patio, gar. to beach. Cpt/drps. bltns, 2 BR. 2 ba. • · • • • • • .. " • $300 uvP u . nn-... ~l.S!. • lSU Po A C M 1y N I 673-8088 frpl lZi ]6th St ~7 3957 4 BR., 2~ baths •.••.• $350 ins, crpts, drpa. lrpk. mona ve., · · on · o r>! a. · SPACIOUS J Br, 2 Ba, Sha.g 181-H Delmar. 54M278. · · · · 3 BR .. 2 ba. home .• $3001335 67l-™9 or 673-4314. e REAL Value! Crpts, drps, DUPLEX, turn. I BR apt. crp.:!, bltns, drpa:, patio, "TIIE GABLES" BEACHBLUFF APTS, 3 BR .• 2',i bA ......... S350 Costa Mtu ckbwhr, Pool. 2 BR. $145. l~ blks to ocea.n. $140 mo $155 mo. 645-4647, 548--0324 2 Br. "''/gar. Adults, cpts, Spac 2 Br, 2 Ba, Pool. Patio, 3 BR. 'til Aug .. :: .•.•• $400 . Ma tun &dulls, no pets. yrly. 548-2152. att 3 pm. drps, bltns, fncd yr d , D/W. 8231 Ellis 847·3957. (i eel h CHEER11Jl. 2 br, aeparat~ Quiel. 2295 Pacific A\'e. San Clement• 2045 T11.1tin A~. 2 BR. w/patio, wb" pd. 636--4laJ 2 BDRM. SUS. per mo, 17361 r 1•11 dining, Resp cpl. No 548-6878 or 642.-4429. Beaut. shag crpts, beam 24~ Orang! Ave. $155 Queens Ln. Nr Beach &. ch i ld/p et.54~-1412, SHARP BEAUT. 2 BR. 1 BLOCK PIERI ceil, Ira fncd patio, gar+ SPAC.2A3Br.Apt.S140up Slater. New paint thruout. 642-9139. Pool Adults, llO peta (1 teen Completely furnished &: lm· lndry hook-up, fi46...4l80. Pool, cpt/drp., bltna, Kids ok 536-8526. REALTY D•n• Point er Want ok) $lS5. &f2.95aJ. macu.late. 2 Br's., 2 baths, 2 • MESA Verde. 2 BR., 1996 Maple No. 1 6.f2·38ll l,-;B;-;R;-ac:putc-:-m-,",,,....,2-,.b~loc"!a-I Univ. Park: Center, Irvine SEE & GET BONUS petioll A: gan.ae. A"ail· bltns, garage,-nr, shopping. Zl>6 Ccllege No. 5 642-703S from the beach. !il"!plect & Call Anytime, 83J..-083l SPACIOUS. immac. 2 BR., I AVAIL NOW! l A 2 Br .. Yearly. $200. Adults, no pell. $145. DUPLEX 2 Br. 11ii Ba, dishwasher. Sl.10 mo. 307 ""!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!j DEN, 1 BA, liv nn, din f 1 d l NU-VIEW RENTALS 548--635?. washer d""'t'r, dw,c-. ...., •. :A. 16ih St, ll.B. 536-l88' ~ nn. l&e kil w/bkf.tt her, urn., poo · rec nn .. g oc. 673-4030 or 4M-3248 ·~ Ill" ..-"" Laguna Beach d'wuhr, wuh mach, many No children or pet a. 3 BR, 2 bi, 2 mi children Nice A clean. ~. e CHEZ ORO APrS e ... N'°ORTH END • -xtn.a, storage, view, clo8!d 646-5824. Apt, Unfum. J65 OK. laundry facil ava.11, EXTRA Ira: new 1 Br. Bltn.1. 82J.4 Atlanta. l-2-3 Bt'r. 2 BR. Duplex w/privacy &: gar. $3)). No am a I I 1 Br~ .I: 2 Br $160. Pool A Gener•I $16.'i. 1033 Mission Dr. CM. Shag cpls, drps, enc I POOL. Prlvale closed pr. nice view! New carpel.a &: childttn. ~1197 aft 3 tetn.ce. Ideal tor b&cbekn, 557...1160. • pt1lie. Priv patio. 540-1901. Washer/dryer. 5l6--03.16. ~r. Wuher I deytt. Huntington BeKh no dilldrt.n. 1993 Church, CLEAN 2 BR. no ll'ar. Refi. DUPLEX, ttdec., 2 Br, hi 2 BDRM, sunken J.iv'ing LARGE 2 BR .. 2 Ba .. crptt:, Si'gle & • r a I e . Good 5'8--8611 Sl7S., eoror.. de:l Mar. beam ceiling, prvt patio, no mom, trpic, crpl1, drpt. drpl, encl. patD It. pr. No stcrag!. $2Xl. IMMAC. 2 BR, Crpt, -~· SML ?'!dee. l Br. duplex. ~n 2 BR w/pool, Upper childttn,' 1m pet, ret.. 376 Garage: Sl75. fi73...5629. pets. 1155. ~1575. NU-VIEW RENTALS Bltna. Patio. Lovely fenc@d Bl'lck trpl, beam cell. prlv Be.y area. Sl50. 57Htn att E. lBth St. ~1953. BACHELOR trailer. QuiE't, Irvine fin..4030 or 494-3248 ground1. Pvt dbl garage, patio. Sl.fO. 1 1dlt, no pet. 6pql. 2 BR DupJa acroa from private, $100. +Adults only.I---------· LAGUNA NIGUEL 4 bdrm. 2 Jl60. Rf'!ponsib~ married 336 E. Dh. 66-1317. INek B•y llChl l p&rlc. Stove, refril. ~1809 or 642.-JJ75' · bA, llv nn .t. dinlnc area, cooplr:. 84l-32'7fi e 1 BR ~luxe $139. Nr Westcllft U&O!mo. * PARK WEST !Ami'· nn, fTpl, bW!t-lllS. New--' Boacll p1 a1 Qui< XLNT U>catioo-2 BT. HeAtocl S43-628t Dana Pqlilt APARTMENTS ~ '"""• patfo. tro c pool.~ t. Pool. No ptta. Re.t'.1, JlS)/ 1 6d f $160 c~i..'t_ dra~-fenced A WANTED· ·-·.....,ttul famijv 145 E. Uth St, Apt JD, mo. Call 54MMS,' ** BEAtn'IFlJL 1 A 2 BR. LCE 1 BR ooean view apt, 2 Bdrm. ro2m._ 1.-"IOU'C'... ~ raJ"al:t, · .. __ •• ~ ~. Contemporu)' Garden Apts. •--d. ..-... n 1,. hr rm., -· tmrnac. $310 mo. 1st, last to rent new unt. dlrplo:. Balboa lsl•ncl i.>tU, m -..~. v rm. o.ge From $195 and "-IL 49$-044, Lovely 3 Br. 2 Ba., carp., * WINTER RATES * Patios, lrplc, pool. $151).$165. &: be.. B&lcony. new 1hag cpl .. O<I .. """'"" A 1 s•·1 • ~·• l Lrrn..E Jlland, lmmac 1 Call 546-.ll63. .._ d-. bltm A N!o..t-, J165., ....,.,,, f>l!rkvtew Lane LAGUNA NIGUEL 3 BR, 2 drapes, bltns; elec. prqe ttn.c um •uuD ........... • •,,.. "<& Irvine (J off BA J\v A din aru. trpl bit door opeMr. Sl()O. BR'1 S125.. Adutts, m pell. BR. ttove/ttfrla: .. new Iha& LRG 2 BR, New crpt A 837...J977, 831-5173. 8'.n Diqo FW,. .~~bwver-Rd) ' ' • "C .. Thomu · RJtJ" 54l-S527' 2135 Elden Mgr Apt 6. crpt '-paint. iMlflt~ Grand drapH. SlXl/mo. DELUX 2 BR dupl~ L11; ... Im. cpta. drpe. J-car pr, · . h . $90 t Br . .A.._:_ 1 adull ·c.n.J. $200 mo. yrty My. 1fli 5Q:..72>9 ** <kn Ooe&n w 1650 .... II 21.---~,-7---1 sprnktrl, ~. Jll.\l'td 1tor~ ** Y ffrly S..C tt · uu~ m-0270 • ' -... · LaguN Nlg I qt' ana tor tab\Pft'obolt. $350 B!autiM .f. br 3 ba rm · smoker. Stoft, nf'rir. · LOVD..Y J tr, ba • % pvt ftp.Jc'• I sundecks. Wet bar. ue Immac. sm r;no -1st, 1ut ,...1. tum., ~. 1111j ~ No peta., depO&it. B•lboa Penin1ut. P6ti:>. pool, adull:I. 755 w. S2S5 mo. 714/547-14.57 lagun• Nigu.I Apts • dep. <95-04<. OK 1"'9 w. Bal ... Bhd. Rot 951 W. l!tb, 66J1l1 I BR, l Ba., """'"• """"· 11th S~ Mer 11-D, CM. Eost Bluft l BR, 1 BA + t llJI. 2 BA ----· ~ • Br J ~ ~ * 2 ~ -~1 * J"!OM Jl&I . ...._.,, ,•-'d, IMM.AC. S BR • lam. room. '71-.1.U.1 or ~·r-** Lt.•ru.. ... • • .-. =. Nr. OCf!an l bay. No .,.L~ .-n..a:.L ~.,."' ... ,, 2 BA ., <Pis., -.. bltt.-... pool. Adulls .-35. Utll childno "pels. -""91. l·BR rus up -2 BR JI«! up EASTBLUFF :" J:!;_ :,,,eabit. Wtl.ttt, panoramic canyon view. 1 ._,,,...ow- 11 , 1 >cl Jl<S. 6IM29:I. 51W«rf, COf'ona •• Ma• POOL ** fl)-21!1 , 2 Br. 2 b& upotaln"""' •pl. pOOI seq· . .,..,, htd . $31X1, Q MOWltain VWw ~ l BDRM., qu\et Jocaticm. .... 2 BR. 2 BA sruotO.. Cll.rpeled, draped, bltn.. 2 \..o,1..:_ 8, Pt'Jtl p1Uol A: ' .......t PArldtt1 ....... Ill ~""'-Open lG A.M. to °'·· Tot' al World. -· J105. ..,. M~ R>a!lor, Cri>ts. ...... pallo. POOi. l "D" Atnip. USO mo • P.M. ~ m:zm ' BR. 1 BA, -· J.<ot x;;;:: Fum. W UIO N...,., C.M. :Ml-ml _ child ol<. _._ )'ftlllo. · 2!IOl1 Aloma, ott crow. v.i ......... block ·ln>m hooch. roRl'l'll§!ED 2 Br. opt.· utll Q. CJ .,., * 2 a 3 BR. fi>!<, Bil-Im. 1<> Prtcwy, -0-••1 Pd, JllO/lna. :r:m-B N•pi< ~ • Cooed..,...,""' South es '"'"to O ''M..,..-,-.""v~."'.,~.----1 ~ BR. I BA, ,..,._ rm. Ext<. sL 5!WIU. Cout Plau. ~:zm_ -• a.a J"°'=""=..,...----·I .,..._ <nt A flrl& l29ti mo. l BR llatl apt. ulilltios ... ON T!lf Aa!ES SHARP l BR, ~ to OCC DELUXE 2 A I Br., 2 Ba., $17j3 ... --dfldod. ino. Older -..L 1 a ' BR. """' 6 Ult!tn. a UCI, rus mo. 2 BR. 2 BATHS ...... ' ..... ll.!O ... Rtn1£1 1.a--N""°' Bold New Concept ..,._. rn,i.-I ""'· .. ,... * * ~-'ml * * ,.p, cvpottd • dropod, up-Ole. 3095 )lace A ,. . ._....._ POai, Tfdnfs O:llltali Bkflt. sta1n 'ritw apl. 2 COYilftd st&--1.034. ~ .. •·-3 • '~. n11111m111r ROOll TIME .FOR 2 BR u_. ..,..., -•. --"-IM:-:,-1 ,....1on-..,v---1 ~·--" • _, ruMllllllL IDO s. 1-. Cdl<. _, ropp. °"""· tttr;c. Na -"""'• ~ Gu • "'.. .. i.io ,.,.,,.,, now lor i..a.. 129> to (-or Cout ew,1 lllS. 111-lt>O. S<&-ml. pd. l2IG mo., )'OU1r, Ill uu. Prop<ny MU1<Pm<nt • QUICK CASH Anllp .... N.S. • llltAllD 'NEW! 3 br. I" Dfv Unjo fteal Ettlte .. Monti! to Montb * m.JNNtl'fC t Dr Cardrn ' bl., J &Cory a:wO>. Sbq:, !~, ... -: = = Opclo:i TH•ouaH 1 NEW CPTS ,. PA INT :i; :i· M . .-. $30 _. •7WO:...o ~ =· :~- Newport Boadl ~ ~-2o!:;;, -~ • WILSON fuUll>9<S e • N-rt l .. ch • OCEAHl'RONI' • "'"' * '4 Hour O.U...., , DAILJ PILOT .:,-A,,, SllO • 2'BR.'l ll BA,..,,./..,., md MEW lllO Am"°' "'"" '~'ATl!:ll.F'RONl'. I . • MOVE In !Oday! l Br rum Ganer•l or uni. All uul inc. S110. VERY Cl.£AH. VACANT. ALA Rontols • 64s..3900 BR. I S.,..,. ...... bt primo e RARE 1-.2 Br, h""' lot:. nr, -.. f'amlll.. (nod ynt, idcblpeu. &,ofdt. P114' at PIS mo. A<oll!I JU5, 1>1M14!. ALA Ronlolt e 64s..3900 ,.... bosl ttlU!tal -llQr u. ... allLlt -all •ti! Ind llO. ii NU-VIEVll RENTALS .. tio. llll. Ml<l8U -2 Ir. 211 ba. 1 ' ,., db A_LA Ronlals e ~ rl.C,. _ ~ ---1 so•u -• ~. ~ 2 Ir. J ba. lrplot. -· 1 Br. I Ba., dtn. LAT' _ __.._ ~ WANT AD ••~ or ~. ' a «••• rplo 6 dn Iii ... pocl, l • ... n. Kuy fJ!lru. e NEWPORT ffd&hta! l Bl\. octJJrl """' eltpnt J ClwL AduJtl ~ no ptta. 717 mr pn.ee. m f'I.. l rt U» P"' mo. ~ pet.. Pin' :;:. l/yrd Jor ltldl A ptlA. Sii W. 00, CM -~M.U71 , ~·"t..ui~,:. ~ w:.::~ :.;,;, a.i "'· IW~ ~ ~ tloa~ ~ ."?_ boat. ALA idtntal• • ~ rr .. If, " 55 ..,_ ... , ~· I Pl< .... All--OPDI HOUSE -"ll••atd" ~ ... )Gttl .... -'IU: -. • • • I • • ' I ~ l ": . j PILOT ·ADVERTISER IMMEDIATE . DELIVERY • Wod-ay, Ftbtllary 16, 19n , . WE APPRE~IATE , YOUR · BUSINESS BRAND NEW '72CHARGER lflOdfd ... , ... """Mrw.h \Mtt, hlol .... l11•14 ...... ...NlhilW Wiii~•. dw•lion Jlgneh, full n,.,l "1ttiw", ...Wuiorl contu1I ,,,, ..... -c.h 111\lth ....... O•,Oll. TOD.-YI ' 5199DOWN YOUR CHOICE 1970 CHEVROLET ·-VI,-•utomttic-tr.-nul'll11!011-;het0f'Y •lr-conJ., "'")0Wi""f·tetPi1if,~,,4fo, htt-fei, - ''"''"much rnore, (225CGX) 1970 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill ' H•rdtop. VI, •u+o. fr•"'·• f1ctory air conl:I., power 1f11 rin9, r1dio, h11f1r, whit1w1ll tlr11, l719AZVl ' .·, 1970 FORD GALAXIE 500 Aufort11fic tr1nuni11io11, r1cHo 111d h11~1r, 1'0W1r 1t11rl119, wh11I ce¥1rt. lllSITAl $ FULL PRICE $199 DOWN-~43 MONTH POR 36 MONTHS $190 i1 tot~I dn. pymt. $<4 ] i1 fot1I rno. pyll'lt. lnel. ft• & lic11u1 & 111 c1rryi119 ch1r911 on 1ppr. cr1cHf for ]6 "101. D1ftrr1d pymt. price $17'47 l11cl, ta• & lic11111 . ANNUAL PERCENTAGE AATE IS 11.61 %. I I , ' ~ BRANDNEW '72DODGE TRUCK loaded with hlotw, windshlll6 ..... 41 ""' a11.-. iMuWiol'I ,.kotf, .... .,._. tirts. odmiuion cOllfl'Of 1SaS.S S 11d. diK whtt!s. 0\ 1Al25516S63 IMMEDIATE . DELIVERY $2288~ 5-199 DOWN .. Wodnttday, , .. .., 16, J9n lllANDNIW '72DART • '""' wiltl ~ ~ • t ri, hitll Mc• '''''· ~ttttr, """" ~illlr. 111•"4t .,.;,,.,, , Gt51l.14 rWtt. -.i,...,, <onlrol 1,111111, lll1h 1 ... ,ou •oiftl & ll'IUttlAIC!l-•.U29121 1915~4 52088~ PRICE 5199 DOWN .......... _ ........ "''"'~' 566MONTH FORll i.1,llu11ttW#l~c-.M111..,.c,Mtt . MO"Tlt$ i.r~ .... °""""..,....·'"''s1s1sw.1 .•• & "' " l«MM,NNJAI. l'llCIHTAGl l.lQ 1.11 "- DAIL V "I.Of BRAND NEW '72 CO~T PRICES START AS LOW AS ••••• $11 ORDER YOURS TODAY SEE AND DRIVE THE FAMOUS ."COPPIN'' VAN 11111111-.. BA.RGAIN CORNER CLEANEST TRANSPORTATION CARS IN TOWN '66 · T -BIRD '66 Plymouth '65 V.W. Bug '69 DATSUN l ... IOAMTR 4.,.... ~ ....... ...-. fHlo, llMt.r, Mll'I Wiii Hl.111 ... M"-4 ....,., r81111. •tw, dltWnt tit-. C'AH 11'1 .....,.._ .......,. Ndl:. CYOI. Uf) 5488 5588 '69 PONT. Firebird '68 BUICK Wagon '69CHARGIR 5199DOWN 530MONTH FOR31 MOlfTHS $988 .......... ~ ..... ·~· ...... Auto, troni, foci, o1r, , ::;:'~ :-;!~.:.! = pow1r t!Mrlng. power ,._..,.,,.,,_,,.....,1m wil'ldow,,rMio,lltoltr, · FULl ~-~~'::f",,...,.... XSI' 9SC Pll(f . '70 MUSTANG Mach I '6 9 VW DELUXE . '69 FORD Galaxie ........ -· -........... $788 ............ ..+;;;, ... ;;. '"" $888 dit, heater, my! ilttrier. ••ill .... •vu w .. I'll bodt Mklt MOh. XTN 338 •*1 luu \\l.19«1 • 'IKt . PlKl '69 PLY. Fury '70 DATSUN Sedan '69 CHEV. Pickup """'..,., ... ~ .. '·'""'"'" $J88 41 1A91J Ml .... -·-·~··""'''"-"'" $888 . 207.UW. Ml • PllCI =: $1188.= t • I • • J = . ' I ., •I .. . I I I • • • • i .. •• ·: ~= • ~ ~ ~ .. ...: I:: • ~ • .$. ~ ~ ~ ~ • . . . . . . '" ••• ~ ~ :, :! •• • .. •• • , --- • • •. PILOT BRAND NEW PLYMOUTH DUSTER S· '12 SATELLITE Atlas Service Department welcomes and honors all Chrysler Corporation vehicles requiring service and warranty work, regardless of where car was purchased, We honor Master Ch.arge,. BankAme·ricard, Carte Blenche, American Express and Diners Club. • --· .. , ------- . . PILOT-ADVfRTISER JG WHAT A TIME TO PURCHASE! During this monh we have re duced prices to CJreat savings on 200,000 of new '72 Chrysler- Plymouths and used cars to bring our inventory down to its normal level. ASK ABOUT OUR FREE TRIAL· - EXCHANGE ON USED CARS '69 CHEVROLET KINGSWOOD ESTATE WAG. va 111tom1tic, r1dio, .... ,.,, pow•r ···~rin~. '°""'' brtkes, •ir co11ditionil'lg, .whit• wall tire1. IXSS39l) 51795 '68 CHRYSLER 300 2 DOOR HARDTOP VI 111tom1tic, power 1ttering·br1k•1·win• c10'.,..1•1,,11.door lock1, tilt wh••I, •ir con· ditioning, ¥inyl top. !WPPliSll 51595 '66 DODGE CHARGER FASTBACK VI, tutol'l'lllic, r•dio, "'••t•t, pow•r ,tt•r: Ing, pow•r br1k•s &: window1, WSW, tit conditioning and mort. !SLV91i4l $695 , R HARDTOP VI, 1 utom1tic, r•dio, he•l•r, poW~r iltt~· ing, powtr br1kt1, whilt will tit••• •" . condition iioig, ¥inyl top. IY'!._JI 17) 51495 '68 DODGE DART 2 DOOR HARDTOP VI, 1utomttic, ttdlo, ht1ltr, powtr sfttt· j11g, 1ir conditioninq, 'l'i11yl top ... "'"''' <WSDl221$1295 '69 VOLKSWAGEN llUG R.dto ll'ld heef•r, 4 1pe.d tr•n1mif1ion, !'ii<• ,,,, IXIZ8l31 5995 '67 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 4 DR. H.T. VI tufomttie, pow•r 1t••til'lg l br1lt•1, ,,dio, heifer, 1ir eoriditio11ing, ~in>tl fop, power windo•• l door lock1, tilt wh11I, .. ,. '""'51195 '70 MERCURY MARQUIS COLONY PARK Wtgon. VI, 111tom1tic, redio, h••!''• pow• ,, 1teeti1'19 I br1ke1, WSW, eir cond., roof rick. lll250El 52995 '69 OLDS CUTLASS 2 DOOR HARDTOP VI, 11i1tol'l'ltlic, r1dio, lo.11ltr, powtr 1!~1t· ing, air conditioning, buck1t 1t1!1, •1nyl top. wsws1795 '68 FIAT 124 COUPE .. tpttd, redio, h11t.r, tic. A rttl buy. tXDC6611 5895 ASK ABOUT OUR FREE USED CAR· WARRANTY 4 ...... , ........ IS'llo 4hc_.. .. ports. 21-Ao dhcoMt .. ,.._. Wol'l r. M llottt ., Atl• C""'9er ,.........._ I•· • W!drt!sday, F'tbruary 16, 1'172 THIODO~I . ROllNS St. -Tltne MatmilM fi)uolfty Deal ... ·~·"' ,., 1t71 AMERICAN MADE . Jl:&to · ..... _ IS ALSO PRICED UNDER $2000 B. UT PINTO'S PRICE , INCLUDES . ALL FREIGHT AND · PREPARATION CHARGES ----TEST I QRIVE _PINTO AND COMPARE! WE FeATURE ONE OF SO. CALIF.'S LARGEST PINTO SELECTIONS ' . I SPECIAL · DEMO CLEAUNCE -SHOWROOM FRESH 71 '1°72's Tremendous Discounts on Low Miieage Staff and Exec. Cars that include Pinto, Maverick, Torino and Station Wagon Models! Save While They Last! ' lv1RY NEW '72 IN oull ltuo•, STOCI( 'NOW DISCOUNTED TO \, SAVE YOU HUNDREDS OF $$$1 NEW '72 LTD'1 NEW '72 T0 llRDS PRICI IUSTER DISCOUNTS UP TO PRICE IUSTIR DISCOUNTS UP TO s1101 PROM $1402 ' ' P"!'M· WINDOW WINDOW ST IC Kill STICkll S•r. # ! 2J68 S 1160261 18051 !2J97 Nl 40l•Ol f8751" NEW '72 GALAXIES NEW '72 TORINOS PRICI BUSTER DISCOUNTS UP ro PRICE IUST!R DISCOUNTS UP TO s901 llROM s750 FROM WINDOW WllfDOW STIClll; STICIClll 5,,. # !2J58H 14404tl l IOI Sl S•r.: !2Al0H166279 ) (ll4l NEW '72 MUSTANGS-NEW '72 MAVERICK$ PRICE IUSTIR DISCOUNTS UP TO · PRICE IUSTER DISCOUilTS UP TO ssoo FROM s350 lllOM WINDOW WINDOW STIC:IClll STIC:Klll S•r, # 12F02H1117l6l 1250 ) S.r. 11 121(9 2LI l679t l' (907 1 LEASING., SAVI ON LO,W Ml~EAGE e PH DRIVEN MOOILSI '72 LTD HD TP 400 V8, A/T, pwr. ~teer. & discs, 24 MO. Air cond., radio, tint glass. OPEN ENO '~2 GRAN'TORINO HD TP 302 VS, A/T, pwT. steer. a.nd discs, atr eond., radia, tint. glas1. '72 PINTO RUNABOUT ' $102"Mo. 24 Mn OPEN END 2000 CC Eng., AIT. disc brk1., 24 1\10 . W/W, accent &roup. OPEN END 15 PRl·DRIVIN MODILS AT SAVINGS LIKE THISI 94·t~ 673~ .. WI LllASI ALL POPULAR MAKIS AT COMPUITIVI RATb. BIG SAVINGS ON 21/2 ACRES OF NEW CAR TRADE-INS L.T .D. -Galaxie -T-Bird -Ford Sale!· Many to choose from. '65 thrv '7-1 Modth, Sp«t ,rooh, 1.,,,.,11, 2 d-I. 4 door hardtops & sedans. Full pawer, air conditioning. Warranties available. · El(AMPLE: 1970 FORD CUSTOM . OUR PRICE $I 396 ' . RED CONVERTIBLE $2350 ·10 Ford Torinn G.T. White tnp, V8, auto., R&H, air cond. Lo miles. BLUE BOOK PRICI! $2515 '67 DODGE DART 2 Dr. H.T. VS, auto .. R&H, P.S., air cond., low miles. <UZT667J ' -. '71 COUGAR H.T. $2996 R&i\. auto., P.S .. air cond., Low miles. (957BSX) Vinyl roof. BLUI BOOK PRICE $3610 4 Dr. Sed., fac. aJr cond.. '69 FORD. GALAXIE ~ 396 power steering, radio, heat· · er, Vinyl roof, V-8. fZDX781 ) l"COME ·. TAX R•FUND DUI? WHY WAIT BUY NOW-PAY LATER . '69 TOYOTA CORONA 2 J?r. Hardtop. Radi o, heater, 4 Spi!., air cond., eood mlln, · (YDD720) ILUE BOOK PRICE $1440 '65 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill 2 Dr. H.T. Rl:H, auto., P.S., air cond. Good· miles. CPIT414.) " VB, ~pted, eood miles. '6' 6 C~·MALllU S.S. < Mb) '68 V.W. lllG Loaded. Good miles. CXSR931) ' BLUE BOOK PRICE $1215 '69 CORTINA DILUXI -----------1 Sed. Fully equip..,.. auto., Low miles. (368ASP) '70 CHEVY IMPALA $2150 '71 T·llRD H.T. $ c.ust..R&H. auto., P.S., Auto .. P.S .. P.B .. P·win· 4296 air, vinyl roof. good , dov•s. Aflf.fM radio, Ult • miles. •(475AFXl whePI , t:orxl miles. 1694BZJ) ., . JLUI BOOK PRICE $2520 . . TRUCK SALE! , I • ' 1 • r t ·> . !"~· to, cltoos•,.t'om· ~"'l'· """""· Rcnicllero, l/t t111 and 'I• -· Flot bod. 6 ru7f,._,, '-. . , ,\ • EXAMPLE: '65 FORD 112·TON PICKUP S+•nd•rd Tr•ns., Fully Equipped, Good Mil•s. £5319501 $696 '67 OLDS CUTLASS SUPREME s950 442. 4 spd .. V8, 2 Dr. H.T. ftA;H, alr, P.S., good miles. (TSR640) t ILUl,ilOOK PRICE $1105 , , '65 Sim.+RIC GUN SPOaT· . I ju!i'I< 2 Dr. Jl.T. RI<~ . ' aufo~. air cond., good milts. (ROB561) '65 MUSTANG HARDTOP Fully tact. equipped. VS, auto., P.S .. R.lH, good mllH. <PFF0:24l ~796 • ALL OFFERS CON~IDIRED TRADES ACCEPTID PAID FOR OR NOT! • . . ' ' ' -MAVERICK-PltttO SALE! ,. · 4 1p••~1,) 1p••i1, 11170 to 1972'1 I •utomtti' mod1l1. . EXA~PLj~J -. '70 MAYRIC::K $1:396 '7l P(NI_O tt796 Fully ladory =~· 4 speed, 2000 .ma:Ine, cui-1 -radio, helter.-( · ) tom e.xtertor. Low m1Jesr- (2380FA> ILUI IOOK PllCI $1710 ILUI IOOK PllCI $2US • ~- SHILIY GT 500 MAl<E "\ '70 IMPALA: 2 Dr. H.T. $2196 428 Cobra Jet. Full pwr., Ol!IFl1t·" Au.to. tratu., P.s .. fadlo, air, 17.000 mile11. Red beaµ· ~ter, tJr cond. · ty. ~ to find. (!'J77DLR ) • • 1.AKU) • '71 MIRCURY CAPRI $1996 '6t PIAT 124 COUPE ' Fully equipped. Rtil. aoOd $1896 mJ!e1. (2J!JN'P) ' . I Low ~et.. .. 5 apeed trans Ion. ,(115CfKJ 1• ~-' ' .. ' ILUI -,00!< ,.ICE f20f0 - 'it CHEVY IMP4LA $1796 '70 DODGE CHARGIR $2296 CUa:t. H.T. V& R4H. auto., P.S., P .B., vinyl root, air R/T 2 Or., H.T .• Auto., UH, cond., good mllea. <XTL773) A.Ir., Cond., Vinyl Root. ILUI IOOK ,.,er ,,,,, (118 AGF) ILUI IOOK PRICI '2760 l .. ''6 CADILLAC H.T. $1596 • DeV!Ue. Full J!OWer, tact. 'I• TON FLAT llD ' 51396 air , Gold w/vfnyl root. Chevy, VS, fully fact. <SHB004 > C&'f.P<d· Good miles. ILUI BOOK PRICI $1170 .. ~'.' ' 42'1) . ·~ ' ~ \ ---' ~MUS.TANG· '.SALE! . MOllY f? ~ from. 'U ,,,,.. '71 mMth. C:OUM W,lll•Jll~lftlble end ~ ,.,, ". ~ 2+2· S..1Wllfl4 •i••• .... .,,_. illl11t -'4 le modlll. ~-'. f'J ~ -· EXAMl"LE: '6f MUST _ NG''. HARDTOP ~1d io, h1•t•r, •11tom•lic, •It c.oni itloni119, 9ood ,,.11,,, IU6$0.7) .. OUR PRICI $796 • • . .. . ' ", I I •..• $ALES DEP'F. HOURS ~' AM To 9 PM MON 7 AM To 6 PM TUl·FRI I PARTS DEPT. ONLY a AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS -· • I • .. I . - ' I· 1 • • • • Do\fl Y Pl LOT • • '68 ~:~~!~~~. · ..... (UTP690) <UJI "Kl l ) ..... ,MHtlb• '68 ~-~~~! ...... :.,... s49 :$,' n llucktt MOts. flxtoty OW, power • 17' 1111rinp, (W~294J • NWll nMT, Pfl llMI, (Alll Ptl(lll .. M , •tt1ltlltef'tKI 11t1•.•INlllAl "'lo\lf It_,.: 589 $39 $788 ' . NwttPYMt~ PltMO..) ·Nlt••"' • Olllf HMCllTllS <••• •l'k1 SIJJ .... ,_.,_..., .~1•tttJ. f._.i ""-~It.ti '66 ~!~:"' ' v.1, ,,;, . 536• 536 '688 Irons. foclory oir; power eood '™' "'ll Pltkf Sllll'in;.(Ultf>G'6)0tlLYM...0.nts • PR ... '67 CHEVY . ' s49 s49 $988 ~ WGH. Altlo. 1!'0111. r!WJO. h'°ltf, (VIP 1241 DOWlt •YMf.. '''I!'°-rvu •IKf Ulll PllClt, .. M. 91fl1UO Pll(lltll.Alttll-ll % iAft lt.,tf -PlYM. Wgri. . '70:CUSTOMSU'8UR,BAN. V-8,o•toh'O ... $2488 po1Ver jltering, foc!ory 01r, • , '(Pi¥•S L0019S7J!l SP~C. FACTORY PURCHASE '711'1NTO · '· . " . 2 OOOR10<t. ,;,, <0dio.h•olod3'CFT $1988' _ Auto. b'ons. , SPEC. FACTORY PUR<;H_~s~.:.:a , : -- ' PILDT-ADVERTISEll fa - ·'69 ~g~;~:~.:~~~::~;::. $~9 $)788 (Y1S21111) toWllPfMT:. Pet1!'9-MlHKf . ' t'Jll ,IKI 11•11.tO, DlllUlll~IKllt1Jt. •lltllAl 'liol 111 1.0M.f • MOltfln • FORD FlOO 1/1 TON l'ICKUP V-11, euto. lmnJ~ delu~• 2-KH'lt wilt! step tlifr9tr (7703.tD) '70 ~~.~~~~,,'.'~i.l~fi $1§?5~2 $1 !~.8 CAlll •llCI 1J•11,..;ifflillJ-pfl(lttuT.i'lNiii&t % ffit IS:-Jl. tM.f II MOlltMI PLYMOUTH. 569 569 · '68 ~:.N~~~110R1~11~~~Bp~~.~ •1688 Jteeriog. io<tory 11r roe~ DOWtl ''""'· •1• 11110. (VEHSl7) Olitl. T lO MONTMS '67 ~~~.!~,~~''"" 536 536 ,-, Slt&nng, AMJIM Radio, DOWllPIMf. PlllltO. 'fl'HW'J67) ' • • 0111.Y tlMOlllllS llllL •llCf <Atll •tl(I l) .. IM, 9t'llllt 'llCI llttJ. AllltllAt"" IJfl 1(.11. • CAlll •llCI S:tlst.41. Dt•llHP 'llCl l.TISJ, ANNUAL 1' IATl S1S.11 ' '6. 9 FORD s59 s59 s FORP Wgn. 5)6n ~69 s1733 CUSTOM v.1. outo trori1,. 1188 ' foirto.\1 SOO, 'V·!. auto· Y . ~=~rn::; '""'· 011 """'"'· "'"'· "'"'"' 69 "'"-lo<to<y ''· "".« """'"'· . .,,..,_ """"' . 0111.tJ•MOttlNI "eMf'9..lY'.0-7t>J) ONlTJOMONTNS <,AIM ,.Kl llJl lM, oui:1110 •iicr .,,, •. AllllUAl"" .,,,. U.JJ . CAIN PtlCl $ ltl7.tt.01fltl(O PAIO. S22Jt. AWWUAl %••Tl 11.SI '71 MUSTANG HT · . Y·B. '"" "'""· "'"« '""• m<to<y "'$2688 bucket seots. 214 CAU SPEC FACTORY PURCHASE ' LTD4Dr.HT '71 V-1. "" l<oo•., loo oi< <ood .. "'"w $3088 steer~ r!ldio, heottf, wtlieolls. T/glou, w.·: Covers. l11ndtlu top, vinyl int. !6'.KCK , SPEC. FACTORY PURCHASE . · RUCK&CAMPE 1972 ' fully 1y11chro11 l11d '"'"'• 1~0 (JO KOll•"'f,Mfhte, ntlt1I" ce1ttrtl, Mlf.etlj•1tl111 ~r11k11, The 1lr1tple r1techi111 (91 V107112) SPECIAL ANNIVERSARY PRltE BRAND NIW SPECIU ANNIVERSARY PRICE 1972TORINO RAND1972 RANCHE:R NIW . .. . . 250 CID, eut•. ,,.. .. .., fff•t tlltc ........ MllstiM ,.......,, t118d •Ir ft1tflllotl•11. 0,..,., '"' catok1 ef c•l•r '°'!'' $~~aa· . FULL • • ~,, PRICE -.· KING 0' THI ROA.-~~~OYIR Evt. wit~-stove, sink, Icebox, etc. #2509.RV. .. ~ '..~ ... A ftlW. '72 POl!RD PICKUP ,, ·~ ~, ~ W ' • c ' CUSTOM STYLESIDE ' -, .. · --• I, COMPLETE CAMPER PACKAGE .. USED LOW MILEA<iE Spl it bench-seat, Mi chelin WSW ' radial tire·s, power steering/brakes, landau roof. Less than • 800 miles. (2J87Nl38271 ) • FULL PRICE -r-----______ ..__ -• SPECIAL ANNIVERSARY PRICE I. fijLL · PRICE CUil Pll(ftltl4.4!1, OU I Ult Pll(llllM7.•Mt.811 lfftlWUCltll(t. lllN.t.l 'llt..llift 11.U. BRAND 'NEW 1972 L.T.D. 302 Y·I , cn1i1101notlc , tliu .,.kff. , • .,,... •fffrlfli, l•1wry trlM, H1lttlo11 CM"91 qr41r y~rcelor chokt totl•y. . , : ~ ~ ." SPECIAL ANNIVERSARY PRICE ( . ' • '· --~ ~-=--~ ------~ ~ --~---..._ . San ~lemente • -- Capistrano · • • ED ITI O N .. -·~ • -- Today'li F l•-.1 N.Y. Stoeu . ,OL 65, NO. '40, 4 SECTION~, 66 PAGES ORANGE CO UNTY, CALIFO RNIA WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, '1972 TEN CENTS • an es Witnesses ) . Sought .Freeway Stab Fig11:re to be Charged San Clemente detectives today issued an •appeal. for possible witnesses to the fatal stabbing early last week or a Wilm- ington man whose· body was found on the edge or the San Diego Freeway. And of prime concern to officers ls an ~ntified man who phoned the ~epaJ1· t·'l ment momenta alter the stabbing oc-. curred and gave a report of a white. Chevrolet driving the wrong way on the freeway in the immediate vic.inlty of the stabbing. The man hung up before officers could obtain his idenUficatlon. 'e';'lty Fir1n Sued Clem ent,e Couple Seeks $10;000 An El Toro real estate firm has been iued for more than $10,000 in damages by a 8lll Clemente couple who claim they wer taken to the cleaners when they took over the lease to "The Wash House." Howard Peter Haefner and Ilia wife Joan Marie, name Frank R. Osborne, H. B. Marks, Jean S. Krause and real estate saleswoman Marilyn Sterling of Osborne and Marks, 23331 El Toro Road, as defen- dants in their Orange County Superior ~urf action. · The Haefners claim Mrs. Krause mlireprese.nted revenues and pronts of "'111e Wuh House", 711 N. El Camino Real, when they took --0ver ~ ~jn. OP!!rtted laundry Aug. 1. " They also claim that the busines,, was represented to be in sound mechanical order but they found that 10 machines had broken down and the ifiain water valve was irreparably broken. Mrs. Krause, lhe. Haerners say, told them the monthly take at "The Wash House" wouid be tt,oot to $4.,300 with a monthly net profit of $1,500 to $1,600.- They claim their actual take has been $3,400 a month with profit. of $S50 a raonth. _ Superior Cot.Vt Judge J .E.T. "Ned'' Rutter has signed an injwlttlon which prevents Mrs. Krause taking action-on a f I'l;l!IO 1'f<Jll)Worrnote-peniliJl1 irlal ot th 1--··-' ! • • • e UlllUCo , • I lJ.S~ May Try to Unload . . Famed Hughes Airplane LONG BEACH (AP) -Howard Hughes' "Spruce Goose" -one of the world's largest al.rplane1 and one which turned out to be a lame duck -may be headed for the chopping block. Twenty-nioe yean ago, the federal 2 Laguna Teens Hurt in Crash On Motorcycle Two Laguna Beach teenagers were in- jund Tuesday when their motorcycle col· llded with a car driven by an 83-year~ld sin -Clemente man at the corner of Glenn- eyre Street and Bluebird Cuyon Road iJI Laguna Beach. :Cyclist Gregory Rk:bard Bilbop, 11, of 311161 Ith st.. South Laguna, and bis pam<ng•r. Adriana Watt. 1$, of 30lll Q'esta Way, Laguna Beach, were taken ~. ,llouth COast Community Hospllal fq,llowing the 0000 a«ldent and .. 1euec1 Mt.er esnergency treatment. 'l'n!d NOA'OCld Bigelow, 111111 Los Alamos, San Clemente, driver of the car, was,unhurt, according to police. Bigelow told oflicors he bad made a bOulevaro stop on Bluebird and wu a~ tempting a Id! bra onto Glenneyn Sltoel but failed to ... the motoraycle, Which was southbound on Gleoneyre, in time to avoid the oollllion. government gave Hughes, the billionaire lndustrlaliat, a contract to build a giant ei:perimental plywood seaplane. For $40 million. J~ got the .. Spruce Goose.'' It new only one time, for one mile and ttacbed an altitude or 70 feet. Now, it is reported the government may try to get some of its investment back by ~Ing the plane. The Long Beach Independent·Prll'! Telegram on Tuesday quoted a spokesman for the General Services Administration In Waabington u saying the government might sell the 140-ton, elgb~propeller craft through competitive bidding when the 1 .... ezplres June !O. Hughes-spokesmen were not available forcoJilmelft. . Hughes, who superv.lsed. construction end was at the controh in 1947 when the Spruce GoOse made Ila filgbt, leases It for l800 a month. He ·pays the L<>ng Beach Harbor Department $31,000 a year for a secluded hangar hiding the plane, which (Set PLANE, Pare Z) New Meeting Date Saddlebaclc College lnl$teea will meet at 7:30 p.m. TUeaday, cne day, later than the regular)y 1<beduled IWion. The doU baa -· changed in observance ol the Wuhinclon'• Birthday holiday. The .... 1on will bt held in the board room of the admlnimallon building at the Mission Viejo campus. . 'Countian Held • • • Ill Police already have Ull'te eyewttnessts to the struggle which led to the death of Jesus Herrera Roa, 47, of WJ!m.lngton. They also have a suspecl Jn custody, . . Juan Suarez Puga, 35, WiIJllington, who they say will be formally charged in court Thursday with murder. ,. "We are still extremely Interested 'in locating that man who called ue at 11: 50 • p:m. on the night ot ·the stabbing/' said Detective Lt. Clifford Cates. The man · placed the call at about the same ume other witnesses reported the slabbing incident. Tbe unidentified report came from a toll phone 'along Camino de Estrella, Gates said. Besides looking tor n!l" witnesses, local ,detectives are continuing to work on reports in the stabbing. The alleged murder 1eapon has been found along the bank of the freew.ay near the spot where Roa collapsed end died from a stab wound to llie heart. · The knife is a black-handled switch- blade weapon, which It ii unlawful to possess. It is alleged that Puga, angry over a car purchase he had rhade f,,rom"the ,~lc.: tim, stabbed Roa after a flghl mat erupted in the back seat of the moving car. The pajr and three com pardons were returni~ fume tO 'filniin£19n after a day in Tijuana. - •Some 1reportlliiliaalfd' tb'irihe ~~I kalfe blow Wal4~!Jlt tl"Oir. 1.u 1rom !he 'baci N,it'ot 'lbi )'II! by.~ jlad -j>irlr4lt::O.. lli.,1hou -. I( tbe freeway a lbort dlmnc;e north, of the Pico overcroasi"8. Puga th•n .,.ertedJrJled the ocene· In the car and IJ>ed loulbiio!md. About an liour later be aue.rtedly wrecked that car In· L constructlon zone near National City. Highway patrolmen Investigating the tacldent assertedly 'noticed large blood· stalrnl on the front of the driver's shirt, arousing their suspicion. Moments later Roa was asurtedly linked With the Sau Clemente stabbing and · amsted as a suspect in the killing. ' Burglary Rash Hits Oemente Offices, Stores A rash of burglaries -one of them a repeat performance in a frequently hit physician'• office -are plaguing San Clemente early this•week. Several were reported through the nigh!. A burglar broke into the offices or Dr. Glen M. Todd during the dark hours and ransacked the building at 2411 S. El Camino Real. The take th!1 time was a scant $2 in change, but police said the ransacking cauaed more costly damage. The same offices have been hit several times in the pa!t. and drugs had beert stolen. Reports of other breailna preceded the theft at the p.by1ldan'1 office. The Phillips 66 llatlon II ilG9 ' S. El Camino Real wu hit the hight before ind four new tires valued at $112 were stolen after burglars pried opeil. a door. The Place', a tavern at 1409 N. El C8mino, ktSt SIN In Change from coin machines 10111eUme before Tuesday morning· as well. Scheme • . . • • 'Garigland' Conspirac y Suspect,ed C-0ast to Coast By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 41-count ·federol grand' fury Indictment "' or ,.,. Ollfr l'lflt Sr.ff laued tn Chicago for an'llts from coast Clbuxlng a looi, nationwide f r 1 o d to cout. probe, U.S. authorities lndlded a Hun~ Verlvc_-otopped witbo<ll Incident 81 lncton Brach man and 11 othen Mclllday he drove aloOI Newport Bolllevard and fW an ollegocl conspiracy to borrow mU. taW. Into Cllllody bJ Newport Beach UOnS ~i!f chun:b-Oi>anced capital. Wve Jobn.sau.... ' 1'he Olurch of Oirilt Ml,... He wu turned o,..r In U.S. Postal Inc.. was a PhooJ' cocporatloa ullting Inopactor H. L. "Bootle" Almond. booked only. on worih!ai paper, investlpton Into Orin(• Count)' JoU W!lhout baU and ~~e. connection ailta with t b • dellvuedJltls lllOflllal for ·arrallnmalt to,iUmate Church of Clrlst, but many bdcn I U.S. ~ In Loi defendanta' .... accuoed ol llnb with Angeleo. ~·· orpolwd crime l)'lldbte. Cllarpi lilttd In tile nwi ladldment . Loall J. Vtt!ve, 41, of 11111 S. fncfade fraud bJ mall, win. !ntentale ~St., 11 _,.. tbem, ICCOl'ding tr1111portatlon ol flmdl oblalned bJ fraud IO ,Mderal gangland Intelligence ooar<U. and •!so complracy. Vorive and the othen wtre named In a Role ..... Ibo dota In Cltlclp, U.S. A~ . - , . torney Jamea R. ·ThoinPIQn uld the case la one of the largest ol Ila kind In U.S. history. 1be defendant.I -IOme Costa Noltra" figuru who 1Urv~Wance officer• say vlllted Verlve In Himtloiton Beach - operated In Nflf York, Qllcqo, Phoenix, Arll., Savonnab, a.:, and Son Ofqo. They allegedly promiled to orrance loono throuCh what tbe U.S. Jlllllu ~and pootal 111lhorlllal call an advance lee ICl)e. lndlcled prlnctpall -I n c I u d I n I V<rive'• bn>thert Carlo and Cbarlle, both of wbom have beea on the On!'i' Coast ncently -I" ICCIJled of •lctltpb:ln& IL (See CO PIRACY, Pace U • ' • ammer , Radio Hanoi Claims Two Shot Down Frem Wlre Service. SAIGON -American w a r p I a ft t 1 l•unched •ubstantlal air 1trlke1 inside North VI el n am tnday, U.S. mUllarJ sources said. Radio Hanoi claimed two U.S. planes . were shot down and 1 number of eUotl were kllled or captured. A U.S. Ql:rri"mand. 1pokerman, told of the broadca1t. aakl: ul havt~Mthlng to' report." The cammand In the paot has wltbliald reporting on downed planes untll aeardl and rescue mlealons were completed. The North Vietnamese broldc11t 1sserted that a number or u .s. jetl no tacked po pulous areas in Quana Blnh and Vlnh Linh, North Vlctnam'1 two. aouthemmo1t provinces. The U.S. Informants said the strikes 'Were in North Vietnam'• half of the de mlljtarlzed ione that aeparales the warrlna: ·Vietnam• but declined to dl1clo1e Uie targets. They added there also may have bet!n sorr1e raids north of the uine, but wlt.hbeld details pending a n an- nouncement from the U.S. C.Ommend. "There were protective reaction 1trlke1 DAir..v.,n.or '"'"¥.,,.. and other ~.trllle1 lhvotye41" ~ld one In· B ,.,.! • _, · .-· ,. . formant, but I Cl!) t 1lve !'Oii the e ~--nner,,a ...,o . ' . '' '. number." . ', • " • .} ' • • . ' ~ " , ' ' ' · He oal4 !!!(, ri~ ~· bo7oncl the · Dr, Walter Harb•tl, !!¥!' Clemente dentlsk ma~~s tfre-:t119tif er • -uoual one br tw~ "~tlvt reaciii>n" , nil~ i(~Y· ~ ~Jxel· ~· .ttedal';,.14!+Ut, llU;l1 , 1trlbl Jro<l!lenUy npcrlld from ttmo lo ; lldifl#O!r ii(;a"i'Ol'4 .canll\~ ,foo!!t, or .. ~i ,1 m•rt"0!:1 .. J-Jlmt,Jrlleo ~~- . 111"""1e1rtbl"!llilfllfe.11n11ei;e.t,M"till • ..,, diilm-.. S.7i!li J.or 1o u.IJ_... . a story on -!)la life style and views ranging from flu oridation' 1o "41!·' Allied lntelll1~nce !ndlcatn 'IQ parcenl ficult patients.''. . , · ".:. more Nortb Vlotnam;..t'I troopo,will lllOVI · lrito-soath'"VJilnalii lnlO bomr 1tau - , I o O ( "e !I during Ibo /Jrlt fl YI 'IDOlltM tha ln Ibo C D I D • •' ' . '> '·· ,..., pariod 1111 year, U.!. m1111ary ounty e ay. S ~CISIOU ;<.". '. "~~~~~;,. ... r ... •1nsa1~on•lldthe • '1 • •, b11u.s,11r.,mpal1ntbatheginb!Bouth . ii. Vletnam a week 110 would 11contlna ln- 0 C • R • deflnltely" becauN at ltHI fOllr lre1h n ap1 strano . . eio~g··' North VletnameN dlvl1lons, beefed up by heeVJ artillery, were movinJ Jnto UM Orange County Supervisors today delayed ror five weeks a final hearing on the rezone of 1,200 acres In the north C&plStrano Valley area. Pensaquitos Inc. of San Diego, -b represented at today's hearing by Roy Gohara a! CST Enaineering of Newport Beach. He is a former county plannlna staff member. Mayor Tony Forster of san Juan Capistrano presented· a strong pi:otest to the developer's plans which he 1aid he understood would Include 5,000 mobile home units in the planned . community project. Forster said his city council and plan-- . ning commission two years ago had voted unanlmow:ly to reslrltt mobile homes to 10 percent of the total potential reslden-- tial units in the city. He pointed out that the Rancho Capistrano development in ' , , ' I coUntr)'. , ' Nearly 1,100 lllrlku bave beeo flown 1"' aide South Vietnam In the p11t w .. k. DlOll of them comJq the five day1 btlore 1 -.lay c-Dr• tor llJe Tel lun.r new year that bqan at I p.m. M-Y· During the 11-hour period ending al dawn Wedotlday, American. je141Rhte1'11 made only 41 llrtku, ud by·nooa 8" bombm bad flown oev111 mlulonl lnolde lbe -try -1 1harp reduction, lrom the earllu number of IOJ'Ue1. queJllon bord•n 'the comiftunltJ oo.~the eut ancf,j, I~~\, city's r.one ot loft •. Th• property In qUWlon If.~ 1111• an elongaled ·pear, wtll oi;lhe Seri 01110 ii'r .. way and north of the Dana Point . . area. Gohara urged oupervlson fo viii! other mobile home developmenta bt p..,.. qu!IOI !no., In the San Dl•ID orea .. lie added that the devel°""' wDllld bo"wtll· Ing to stipulate thal no mobile home area1 would 'be developed In the IOUthern two thlrda of the project. Board Chairman Ronald 'JI. Ca1pal'11 of Newport !leach called for Ibo , del1y declalon. "There la loo mticb con!~e and 1tlpulaUon In tJda propola ," be •lated. Mayor Forster agreed and lll'lod the delay to March 13 at t : 45 1.m. U.S. mllltary IDW'CCI 111d lnlelll«onc• report• 1bow four North Vletname,. dlvlllono -the I04th, 30lth, 320th ind 324th -bad either crolled the border m. to South Vietnam or were preparln1 to move In .. All but the 31.0th, which has gone to the Central Hlghland1, ore lo Quang Tri provlnco full below the DMZ. they 111d. The '°"""" 111d U current lnflltrallon r1te1 CD11ntlnu& throulh May, the Com- munl1ta will acid 11.000 men to their March Decision Slawd. " forca, naarly double UM 39,000 that came In lall year In the 1ame five monthl. The Communist ~Ddup Included i... troductlon of heaVJ artillery !ato Wellel'll Quang Tri provlncl, lllO 10urce1 uld. On Pacesetter Tract The fate of a parcel of land that helped launch a development-<.'Ontrover1y in san- Juan Capistrano will not be decided until March. The San Juan City Council agreed Mon- day to postpone a decilion on Whether or not to approve a . PaceHtter H~me1 development until oondltions for approval can be drawn by the planning com· mi111ion and staff. Plano ca II I or the tract to be bulll on 210 acres off the Ortep Highway one mll• nst ol the San Diego Free\roy. The land ii earmarked for 504 unita, tbe ma- jority of whiCh will be 7,200 square foot tots (Roll with a f.,. one a<re lot1 (E-1 ). A controversy erupted When the land WU wntd a ftw months a110 from uncla11ified to Roi and E-1. The planning comml11!on narrowly dealed the ,... and the d ty council ovmuled the com- mlalion. The tract map wu 1l10 d•nled bf the p)annu1 an.! the ded11on appuled Mond11. Becau,. of the ...inc Oap, dvelopor John Klug of Nowport Buch charged that tbe planning commlulon bad . not "approadled the troc! map w1tb ID open mind" and dld not 1lve him a fair hear• 1ng_, ~·~~ Klug told the councU bo didn't tblnk any progr.,1 could he mado U lbe tract ::e:.~• sent back to the P'j' to "I would rather ha,.. you dr.W 11)> your own condltionl for approval than ....i It back to the co111111!nlon," aid Klug. Tbe plannln& commlJllon had denied lhe tract beca-of Ila "lnadaquate" 1y1tem of 1t...U llld ill 1-1phlc dealgn. City E~ Jaek Kubolo uld the llrffi 11Yllem woald be odequate when the entlre trlCI II buJ11, but not before. • , Commlosloner Ari lAVlpllno bad IUI· 1•1ted )hat "dllll<r houftll&" would be a belier uae of the laud than lolloWln& the ridge and valley Uno but Klug dfaolretd, u1ing hla defelopment woulcf lie com- paUbl• with the biflalda It wUI cover. •11 admit u la not the perfect plan !or the property." 111d Klq. "1'111 sure ...... made fl'l'Ol'I. Bui ... led It'• !ho bell our plannen and en~ do do." Councilman J im Thorpe 111d the JllOJ- ect. had man,...'11.t" and bl MW favor seelnJ I 1111 of coodiliDlll llolOn -llderlllJ appnHI. ~·:a Weaaer More 111mrner·llke wutber !t '"' the •lencla for Thlll'oday, with biaJ1a In the mfd·70'1 •loai the Oranae eoa11. 1o11ow1n1 early mom1n1 fOI which w!ll bam oll. 1.<>w1 lonliht In Ibo 4fl'L IN81DI! TOD~\' TM htavle1t tatCk oJ Chi ltO- '"' tn 11""'1/ th<clur fl coming op In 0Nn(ll COll!ltV 11llh 1IQh& _ ,..,. "'"'""'1"'"' golll(I Oft t/14 board.I and fiot oth111 oontln"" fng, Stt Theater NoU1; Paqt 10. I.. M, Intl II ....... .. ...,,.. " ...... ,... . c.•--................ ,. c.-c.r.-n Or--. c...wr ,, c.....n.t 11..U l'TA • c.... ......... hrW ,, ,,..,.....,,. .. ....,,. ~ .... *'lcM ti ... .......... ti ~ , ..... ,.. ...... ..,, . .............. ,........, . ,.._., 114' ....... ... ,.. ....... ,. ......... . hwlll... .. ........ " =-..,_. ': :::r ... ":"' ."ll · ... . ..,.,,.. r ·~ . • ---* • "?-: " % DAILY PILOl S• Sl1utdown N eru·ly Full In Britain B1 JOIEPB W. GRIGG LONDON (UPI) -Brllaln neared 1 lot1I lnduatrlal 1hutdown today. Twenty mllUon Jo b • wtre threatened w I t h further power cull Jn 1tore for Brltl1h hom!I ond Jndu1try. Tho blockode of power 1l11io111 by llrllt· Ing coal mlntr1 bit even hardey and elec- tricity 1uthorltle1 ordered power cuts for one-third of the country, with t~ percent hit 1t any 1lngle tlmt. Prevou:ily, only about 1.0 percent had been 1Uected. Thlt meant mo1t 1re11 which btfore ouflmd only Ill bours of cuu a day now would be blncked out for nine houri. The Central · Electricity Generating Board, whJch operattt Brltaln'a 1ttte-run power lndu11lry, 1a}d cuts might. bit u much 11 20 percent of the country at a time II generating resources continue to fall. So far, lO of Britain's 148 power sta- tions hive been put out of actJon by 1trlk1 prE preventing coal or oil reaching , At lea8t a third are work· lng at r capacity, the board said,. "II Jocko .a U this II going lo be tho moet drartlc day to far. There 11 no doubt that power rationing 11 becomln,R' mort aevere," a 1eneratln& b o a r d apokerman 11ld. The nlne-hour power cuts were 1pJlt in- to three group• of three houri e1ch. London't two 'evening new1papel'I · warned re1der1 t0me edJUon1 are likely to be late or not appear at all. At LongaMet power station I n Scotland, acene of violent cl11he1 between 1trlke pickets and pallet 1n the pHI two day1, 7llO picketing mln'1'11 turned up In pourln1 rain to face 600 policemen guanllna the facility. Picket leaders warned 1trlker1 against violence. The power 1hortase alao hit homes and railroad 1ervlct1. For the aeveath day, ten1 of thousands ol homes aqd officea were without heat for lone perlodJ. Some areas also were hit by water 1hortace1 when electric water pump1 failed. Al Bath. In well Enaland, waler carts were atatloned at lt.ratcglc polnt• throughout the city for famllla whose auppllea drlect up. . Tht at.ate-run Brltlah railroads alashed more thin 1,000 train• from their scrvl~. Hundreds of commuter ·runs were cancelled and those traln1 nannlnc had !ewer and Wlhealed can. San Juan .Sends Mayor to Figlit Mobile Ho11ies The San Juan Caplltrano City Councll· haa affirmed It. oppoolllon to a proposed 303-acrt mobile hom11 subdivision In cou~ ly area northwell of the city ltmlts. The councll agreed lo ,.nd Mayor Tony Forster and member• of the staff to the Orange County Board of Supervtsora meeting today to oppo11e using 1ny part of the 1,200-lcrt Rancho Capistrano plrctl for mobUe home development. It has been approvod by county plannlna commissioners. Forster told the councn that • letter h11d bttn rtctlved fi:m_n Irving Xal'm Oompany of San Diego, owners of the property, plodglng !hat the hillsides wlll not bo <overed with 6,000 moblle home units. Roy Gohara, englnffr for t h • dCl•eJoper, pres~ted devtlopmcnt plans to each councilman Inst week and though the council agreed that the deveklpment trould have lasa impact on the city than first thouaht, they refused to change their llond. OIAllSI COAi? DAILY PILOT .... OMrr ........ OllPM't • °""' ti. W"4 ---""'a. c.tt, ................... __. ,,._,, Ktttl ·-no.. .... M...t.llo ............ Q.111 H. le• lf•••"' P. NtlZ AAlltlMMillllllllll .. !WI ---J2J ...... "'"""" .... ~l ,.0. a.s ''' 12,IJ S. C.. 10 Ofllce ••-6 ~ a..a, tun --Diii .... ~ •• ..., '""' ........,~,~,......., ......... ~ ........... ....._.. ' DAILY PILOT Pllotl., aldltnl l(Mllllr Eland With Elun OUlcllls at Lion Country Safari ln Laguna Hills agree this baby eland has plenty of vigor despite being somewhat wobbly ol leg. He was born Monday afternoon at the commercial game preserve and ls now busy learning the ropes fron> mom. Fountain Valley Slates Fluoridation Vote Date QuleUy,· and without fanfare, the Foun- tain Valley • City Councll Tuesday night calJed for a showdown vote on nuorlda- tloo ol lhe municipal water supply. By a 4: to 1 vote, the council set June 6 as the date on which voters will settle once and lot all whether fluoride com- pounds are .to be added to city water. Only Councilman John D. Harper o~ jected to setting the election. He wanted a study to lnvestlga~e-whether fluorida· tion was necessary, especially since schools bad Ju.st been given authority by the state to nuorldate their own water. "I see lhls as just another delaying lac· Uc," fnapped back Councilman Ron Shenkm~n who prompUy made a motion calllng for the election. The measure, to be placed on the state primary ballot, will ask Fountain Valley voten whether they want the compound added to the water as a means of im· proving dental health. San Bernardino Votes to Quit SCAG San Bernardino Oounty supervisors voted Tuesday to withdraw from the Southern California Assoclntl on of Go,•ernments {SCAG) on June 30. The board's ectlon followed a vote by S!'ln Bernardlno delegatt!s at the SCAG assembly ln Anaheim last weekend favor- ing legislation that would make the rtgional organization mandatory In mem- bership for aix Southern CalltOrnia coun- Ues •nd 1$7 cities . COASTWISE If the answer Is ''Yes," the already rich-with-fluoride Fountain Valley water will be brought up to one part of the com· pound per million of water. The present level ls .6 parts per million. Lnst June, Fountain Valley voters ap- proved a new ordinance which took the authority of fluoridating away from the council. The new law requires that the fluoridation question must be settled by a vote of lhe people. Capo Pla1mers Ref use Action • San Juan Capistrano planning com- missioners refused to act on a request to prezone and annex '!T acres off Del Obispo Road untll Its eftect on Capistrano Airport can be studied. The request, made at Tuesday's meeting, was from Westport Home Builders whose land is adjacent to the C. ~t ichael Company property. Members of the Orange County Pl&n-. ning Commission recently approved a m.. unit condominium complex for the Michael rroperty despite objections by the city o San Juan and the Airport Land Use CommWion. The decision Is being appealed by the city. · Assistant Planner Phil Schwartze said the Westport pro perty is al so near the airport :s flight path and y,·OuJd probably be subJected to the same noise levels as the Michael property. He also said part of the WeslJXlrt land is in the flood plain. By PJ11f J11terla11dl rr~===== "Howr Dott'I Yell at Hw. ••• My Gtrlfl ~·Got Oii! of Hen<i. • ' • • Wife of Irving McGovern Asks Legalized Pot By United' Preti lnler"411ooal Sen. Georae s. McGovern ol South. Dakota suggested tOOay legalizing marijuana, y,•ith the same control~ imposed on alcohol. Arrested • Ill NY Speaking at a drug counseling center in Boston, the DemocraUc presidential candidate said: NEW YORK (AP) -Mrs. Clllfcml Jn. tng was arrested 1t. the federal courthouse today on a charge of belng a ~IUve from Swiss justice In the Howard HUXpe1 autobiography cue. The Swbs government hu charged her wlth countttfeltlng, forgery aQd larceny in connection with her alleged role in her husband's claimed boot about the bllllonalre recluse. Smiling and compooed, Edith Irving ar. rived at the courthouse at 11:10 a.m., 10 minutes late, and went directly before a U.S. magistrate. She was fingerprinted, ordered to tum over her passport and was told she would be re1eased · on a $250.000 personal recognl:.ance bond. During the courtroom appearance her 1mlle1 disappeared. U.S. Magistrate Martin D. Jacobs tssued the warrant Tuesday on a com- plaint charging that Mrs. In1ng, 36, was a "fuglUve from justice of the C0"6 federaUon of Switzerland." It said she 11 charged with "counterfeiUng and forgery, we cI cowiterfe.ited or forged in- strumentl:, embeulement. and theft larceqy." The charges were the flnt to be made In the case under investigation by two grand juries here. It involves the authen- ticity of the purported autobiosrapby of Hughes as compiled by Irving. . Irving clalml the book, wblcb waa to have been publlsbed by McGraw-Hlll Inc. and excerpted in Life. magazine, wu assembled from more than 100 hours of Jnterviews he conducted Wfth the reclusive billionaire. Denial• of any such meetings or even knowledge of the author have been attributed to Hughes. Time magazine has branded the work a hoax, pirated from another manuscript. Irving has 1akt that his wife, Edith, a Swiss cltlzen, deposited !ti a Swiss bank '650,00 ln checks from McGraw-HU, using a passport in the name of "Helga R. Hughe1." The money was intended as Building Ba1i Fades Aivay· l1i San Juan payment for Hughet. Airs. Irving tater withdrew the money and deposited $4421000 of It 1n another Swiss ba.Dk under anotbtr name, Swiss autborlUes 1a!d. Mn. Irving took the news of the wa~ rant calmly in her hotel suite after her lawyer, Maurice Nessen, called to say she would surrender herself. But earlier, ahe told reporters she did not think she wouJd be extradited. "I don't know, Jt'1 just the feeling 1 have," she said. In an interview at the Hotel <;helsea, Mr1. Irving said the cUff1cultiea ~facing ber and her husband, who both flew here from their home on the Spanish Island of Ibiza, hnd not Jed to personal problems between them. She added, however, that doesn't mean there have "not been second thoughts." Prom Page I CONSPIRACY •• least 70 businessmen. Claiming control of lbe ac:IUal Chureh of Christ's $500 million in assets, the alleged JChemera !llpposedly collected advance fees to guarantee loans for busines.smen stymied by the tight economy. Investigator• ~xplalned the loan ap- plicant is U!Ually asked to put up five to 10 percent of the full amount sought as good faith money when applying ·through loan guarantee companies. The advance fees were allegedly never refunded and authorities maintain the guarantee documents they say were Issued by 1t least 30 fictitious loan com- pariles were worthless. Collected between 1968 and December of 1970, the unspecified amount of cash was runnelled into personal or shady gangland uae, It Is cltargod. Federal authorities involved in the two- "C.0ntlnulng Investigations on the overall efiects of marijuana leave unsettled the related but ·1eparate quesU0111 whether society can or . · should attempt to completely pro--· hiblt Its use. "The most relevant hbMrlcal . precedent -prohibition of alcohol -produced an obvious, abject failure." Bertea Named To County Airport Group . . • Richard Bertea, 1 resident of Corona de! Mar and head of the Bertea Corpora- tion in the Irvine Industrial CompleJ:, to- day was appointed to the Orange Count)' Airport Commission by Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers. Bertea will succeed Willard S. Volt who resigned from the commission last week after two years Strvice. . Caspers said Bertea, 4:2, a graduate ()f the University of Southern Callforn!a. was a pilot in the U.S. lifarlne Corps and was based at El Toro and Los Alamitos before being discharged with the rank of captain. : He bas lived In Corona del Mar strroe 1966 with his wife, Hyla and tbelr follr • children. · Voit gave press of personal business aa his neason tor resigning. At the same time Casper1 said he h.ad been told that Voit would probably also resign his position as executive assistant lo Rep. John S<:hmllz IR·Tustln). Prom Page I PLANE ... year probe worked with Newport Beach, Anaheim, Orange police and the district attorney'• office ln gathering evidence bas a 320-foot wlngspan. locally. The.re were no reports of prospective They claim the alleged scheme using buyer1, although on Dee. 7 a voice id!l)o the Chureh of Cb r is t name to lul ti!ied as Hughes' said in a telephone cOt). suspicious investors petted more than $1 versation with newsmen: million and was tngineued to obtain "There's a lot that still could be leafn. much roore. ed from the airplane, and I feel that Federal Costa Nostra~watchers say before ~thing_l! done wilh it that ~.n.t San Juan Capistrano's b rte f Verlve's surveillance goes bacfleverat-'6e iii llie nature ol destrucuve or d~ moratorium on development and zoning years to bis co-purchase with One ing, we should utilize u to get the f~t dled quietly this week. Ant~ony Navarolll of Chicago's Marshall obtainable data ... which is a great deal Instead of extending the ban, the· city Savings and Loan flnn. .. more than most people realize. council set a apeclal meettng to hear the ~ company bought then for $1.2 "There are problems which are related "landowners side or the irtory" on million was Involved In financing the $7.S to aircraft size, and which vary with s!U~ Wednesday. Feb. 2.1 at 7 p.m. In city Jiall. mllllon Sahara North Motel buUt by the which can be explored with this fiylhg· Anyone who Is 111nU•moratorfum" will late Mandel "!liaMy" Skar. boat." , be encouraged to speak at the meeting. _He was executed, allegedly by gangland In recent years, the Harbor Depart~ Councilman Ed Chermak, who h1tmen, nearly seven years ago, a month ment threatened to evict the "SpraCe prepared a n!SOluUon conctrnlng the before . he went on trlal for alleg~ly Goose" and return the hangar to more moratorium and other parts of a proposal skimming $1. million off the profits, active uses made three weeb ago by t4e Alllanee of leading to Indictment for income tax · Homeowners' Associations, asked that his evasion.- resolution remain "classified" until the ' Skar was killed for naming Costa landownen have been heard. Nostra names before federal authorities Satellite Launched The Alllance proposal. had asked for 1 -charging they forced him to steal the moratorium on zoning and rezoning until money -In the hope he could obtain le. the city's general plan could be revised. niency 1n prosecution. The council at that time agreed to a Verive'a savings and Joan firm went three-week ban ending Feb. 14 al which bankrupt alter financing the $7.6 million VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE (AP) -A satellite was launched eariy today from the Space and Missile fist Center here aboard a Titan 38-Agepa · rocket, the Air Force said. No further details were available. ~Uimi;;eiiithiiiey~wiieriieiiloiiiiiiCOMiiiiiiildiieriianiiiiiul<niiiiiiiiiisiiionii.niiLa•siiiiVegas apa and casino. GEM TALK -"'-f- TODAY by ,, ji O!AMONDS ARE FOR WEARING From deep within the ground, t; your diamond ~ame. UQtil It was ~ cut. polished and set by craftsmen ~ who spend their lives making a rough hewn stone Into a thing of beauty, that Is where It belonged . ¥.• Too many ol these beautiful N stones, mounted in e:tpenstve set- tings, now Ue in vaults and safe deposit boxes where they give pride and joy to no one. Wh y do people. In effect. ''return their diamonds to the ground?" Fear of theft. loss or wear are the don1inant reasons. None of these have any real basis in fact. A valuable stone should ctrtaln- ly be Insured against theft and loss, bul your best Insurance against wear ls regular cleaning and in- spection ol both stone and setting. So wear your diamond with the 1. pride and ell)oyment you upected when you bought fl 1ben 'bring II ln to us for regular inspection and clMDlng. for which there Is no charge. ' • I For the woman you love. The milestone watch. · "Love II mot1 pitdout thm diamonds or gold.'" l&JI the 0 proverb. But the mUeslon• OMEGA watch provides all tline. Diamond1 and go)d. Selecltd for Omega bJ sem expc\I wilb tlt8..,. of 1. co art jeweler. And 1 .... The mUeotune midi wm bring to mind beaat!lol \houahla aboat the &l•er lot the mt of her )if., A-J!~lfo.tut,.._.,.._...,,,. ~---• .IMO •-•n h •• .......... .,.....n1..,w .... -**-·'.,, 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA • COIMNl&n THMS IAlllWIWCAJO-llASTll Cl<AIGf ' .. 24 YlAltS IN SAME LOCATION ntONI '41·l40f 7 ~: • • ;. ... • • ·: • • • • . , • • • ,; • -: ) t \ I ~ I f 1· I I --~ ---~ ------------ DAILY PILOT SC \VtdAtsd.llr, ftbrulry }(). 197.? OVER THE COUNTER • • • ' • ' ' •Hn-Nlh<I l"tw'4NW -lat-. al -N~l-ltlY t a.m. '"'91 MASO P!'k.1 ..... IMllMM Rlall "' 1111.af11111a, _, .... ff "'""' ....... NASD Listing• lo• T ...... y. Februo.y 15, 1972 UPI Tt ...... lt Headache No. 'II' Cartridge TV Units 1-lerbert Stein, chairman or the Council of Economic Advisers. has rejected a Democr:ltle proposal that President Nixon ask Congress to create 100,000 public service jobs a month until the unemployment rate is cut to five percent. .. .'Discouraged' .Work Element Increasing ·. .. By Bll.L NEIKIRK WASHINGTON IAPI -The government says the number ot "discouraged workers." people out of work because they believe it is impossible to find a job, increased by 136,000 in 1971. The figure is contained in a news release prepared by the . Commerce Department on the slatus of low-income workers in 1970. The nation's unemployment ;' stati!!ltlcs do not lake into ac- ,.. count those who are not ac- :: tively seeking work because ~ they don't think they could .. . _find. a job. The Commerce Department said there were 774,000 s u c b diacouraged .. ·1 workers in the United States last year, up from 638,000 in 1970. The department said the ratio of discouraged workers to the unemployed declined to 1 in 6 last year, co mpared to 1 in 4 in 1967. The jobless rate, which averaged 6 percent in 1971, ~ would have been much hither $ if the discouraged worker hact' been included. But, since the early 1960s, unemployment ~~ statistics have been restricted to people actively seeking ~· work and currently available .. .. . ,. • • •• • •• • ' . .. .. • '"THE WAY TO MAKE MONEY IN REAL ESTAT£ IS TO FIND OUT WHERE THE PEOPLE ARE GOIN•. AND IUY LAND IEFOIE THlY GET THiii!" Wiii l.,.en Ul.-C-IJI Ila$ '"' A'SI ...... ..... ,..,, .. , _. I IM'le Krea,41 for ..... Geed .. """ •rtl ... prlc:". s.sns w ....-it .-... for jobs. A Commerce report shows that in 1970 there were 106,000 people below the poverty level in selected areas of the nation that could be defined as discouraged workers. These included 32,000 who were not seeking w o r k primarily because of a past in- ability to find work; 6,000 who felt e m p I o y e r s considered them either too young or too old ; 60,000 who felt they lack- ed the necessary education. skills and experience, and 8,000 because of transportation difficulties. Anolber 1.6 milli on were listed as wanting a regular job but were not actively teei.lng wort because of f • m .I I y resporuiibilitJes. · s!Ckness or other reasons. The department said it did not consider the!e discouraged workers. because they were not available for work immediately. * Unemployed Gei Extra Benefits . ' • • We are pleased to amwunte the opening of a new branch office at .. • 500 Newport Onter Drive Newport Beach, Ca. 92660 Tel. (714) 644-4620, (213) 680-9722 R;chard H. Piclwp, Via PmiJml and 1.!aMgtr Gary W. Rollason. Atmunt lixto11ive Gerald ].KD/Ja,]r.Aa:mm: Euali»< JM. ~v This Year MORGAN, OLMSTEAD, KENNEDY & GARDNER ,.., ... ,, . • l.osMgoios•S..Ft•-·-- ;. • ..-. -.-orl<-E>d• .... tne. " • AllllrkanS--tne. ·-Coat-EllU.-• • .. ~ -I Complete-New York St~k List • I .. -o·~-=-• -I (\Plef * . ~ -.. -. / DAIL V PILOT :7 • (four Jtloneu Payments _ Balance Po,ver Panel Ll!QALNOTl~=-~-1-~~LE_GAL--:~N~ur_oc_E~~ "" LEGAL NOJ1CJ: ,ICTtflOUt •uto1a1s MOTICI TO C•IOITOtS HOTIC:I TO CllOl'fOIS ru.M9" STA1'1MIHT IUHIUOll COUit Of THI su,111101 COUIT 01' THI n.. fotlr#ll'll ,__ II ... Ml 1tu1l1111S ITATI O' CALl,O«HIA ,0111 STATI 0' CAl.l,.OlllNIA •OI 'Garbage' Stocks To Examine ' Big Firms •a: CUTTllt HiWl'OIT IOAT $ALES, THI cou::,vA ~r~U,Net: THI COUMTY 01' OUHll 214 w. Cottt H-.. Suite •• Mtw-1 • E " u ..... , ............... _ •• ,.. ""· •• ,..n .. hKll tMfl -r ~~:CE ir HE~Hv"G'We.H't: iii. !.11111 of IEflMHAJID IASMUSSCn, Atnokl S, .t.ltl'llll.IM, 211\I llltd J1tk11 '""'llw1 jll 1tw ~ NJ'ntd ftl;ltCltfti Dee.o~f 15 HE1tl•'I' GIVIH lo !M Cir,. H1,1nt111tlon INC... lhtl tll WMN MvlM Cl1lm1 ,,.11111 lftt N l'IM"'4 6ft:Mel\I 11111 w.1-II 1111111 cona-.crtc1 "~ '" .. i.ii ~ .,, rtCNlttd lo tlle thffll, ettdl"'1? or Ille..,:::;:: cl•lml 11111111 '11• \ndlY'*'-1. wllll HW MCMMl'I' ...oudM••· In ,,.. !All« '"''' ..... ,..... lrtd 19 !!11 ,.,.,. .. Di1e f 01· Comeback Tumbles WASHINGTON (AP/ -The WASlllNGTON (UPI) _ '• Arnold S. Alttiou&t',. C et IN 1:11111 .. tllf 1t1ev1 '1•1\lltd court, or w1~ =~.:.:::,::,"ct,,,, In 1111 ottlc~ h .... _. fUH w ~ Olll'llr to ~Ill IMtl\, with Ille t1tc•~$lrY w n '1 llCI 11 Sen Fred n Jiarris (I> Cler~ OI 0!'111 .. Count~ 91'1' ..... )I, ttn. w~ lo '*'• u"49rt1911fd ,, "'° of l!'lt clef-of Ille lbO~lt ent!hll ~.~~ ' ' ' Ir, ltW•IY J. MMIOI*, Dt,uty C011nly "4ltW •1YI., $Ull4 ):11, CGC"I• Mttl• lo prtstn! lhtm, W I Okla.), has 1 n n o u n c e d Cltr\, ,u .. e.u1. ~ whld'I l• lht 1t1c1 br Dvtlne•~ ~':9:;~i.~~1;-1e"~~~~';'° T~1~:~~ By S\11,VIA PORTER 1'be •·garbage" stocks iire Alllrting to conie back into the ~nn1elii:ht 111 Wall Strtet. 111 the next fe\¥ months, we \'1Cll 1nay St.'f' sti ll another • t~urgc in offerings of new • hot gro~th" stocks -stla.res ol unknown rompanies which arc placed on the market at pric{'S ranging from, say, $5 to UD and which virtually ovtrnight !IO&t 100 percent. ··Phase I was ~·hen the big, established corporations began l.G move up in price," says H.lchard P. Camey, vice president manager of t h e f'Plc Speclt.I Growth Fund. 1'hat trend started in mid-1970. "Phase JI was when the 1ni.allcr );rowth com· · pwnies began • 16111ove up." TiiAt trend started in mid·I971. •"'Phast Ill \ot'lll be on Wbeo the gar b a g e P011T•• stocks begin lo move... That l'J:lld <;amey thinks wlU 1nerge this spring. "HoW does an average •,.-..eculator-lnvestor protect b.irnself from the garbage'.'" I is:ked Camey and Frank C. McLaughlin, another Edie vice president, at luncheon last Week. "Let's say I want to buy Jhe growth stock.s and am ~earning for 'the new IBM,' r: ut I want to have a fighting hance to win. llo\v do I pecuJate Intelligently?" To answer this, Carney, ~tcLaughlin and I worked out Jo questions to ask yourself pbout any speculation in ilP"th stocks. \:•.I) Is tbil I high quality &)Ck _in \U own lndustry? "It t"°'1ld be." C a r n e y em· IJ!lislzed. ·"'It coold be a dd;Dtnant company in l" small l~lry. Or it could be the ~tier one but still a small ll ·lbpalirYny in a big, fragmented . " Whatever, It sbou.ld 1..,. ' ) llMS ff,,. ... -of eamlnp even In ad.Verlt I ? lJow, for instance, did 1t)riake out In 1969-1970'~ I "2) l·tos it a history or Bleady. solid growth'.' "Buy a ~ompany with a history," riatton's balance-of·pnyments Mcl.aughlin cautions, .. unless deficit slid to its worst level in you'rt wlllin& to admit you're hist.or)' in 1971 and sun re- supplylug venture capital and gambUng." mained a masaivi figure in (4) Is tbt company's p~ the last three months of the duct or service sulllcleotly ~ year, the government has pealing to make cust.omen reported . willing lo pay a good prlce for The Commerce Depart.ment it? You ~an check this one out by your own willingness 10 reported that the deficit. as pay. measured by the broadest (5} Is the company saddled yardstick, was $29.t billion. with long-tenn debt? ''lt'a tbe largest in history and $19.8 okay for It to be aggressive in billion worsening from 1970. sales, but it should be COD-And , in the last three servatlve in finance.,,.. says Camey. "A well managed, months of the year, the growing company should be payments deficit was $6. able to pay ofr its debts.". billion, an improvement over (t) 11 it paying a dividend? the previous quarter, but still lt s~ouldn 1 be. A strongly large in the face of Nixon ad· growing company can use that . . ... dividend money nlore pr°"'"' mlnistrallon moves to slab1hze fitably than you can. A no-the dollar. dividend policy is a plus. The Coinmerce Deparhnent (7) Has it a high degree or blamed the 1971 deficit on the proritability? Its per-share nation's worsening trade posi- eamings should be rising each year ~by Meast -g percent. tlon as well as the insla,bility camey puts the level for pro-of the dollar prior to Aug. 15. fessional selections m u c h when President Nixon an· higher than that, but for you, noonced the United States the amateur. 9 percent should would no longer r e d e e m be the yardstick. (8) Are you risking too dollars for gold. much or your money in one The Commerce Department speculation? Don't. The time-blamed the 1971 deficit on the honored role against putting nation's worsening trade posi· all your eggs in one basket ap-tion as well as the instabili~y plies particularly to high.risk growth stocks~ You could be or the dollar prior lo Aug. Ia. wrong in your de c is i 0 n • when President Nixon an· Protect yourself by diversi· nounced the United States fying. would no longer r e d e e m (91 Is the stock already dollars for gold . popular or its product or T d r · I n d service already a (ad? Then he e 1c1t most y re ecte beware: the stock is probably transactions that occurred fully priced by now, and you be.fore Dec. 18. when the 10 · want to beat the mob. but richest non-Communist nations follow it. reached agreement on a new (IOJ Is the company subject set of money-exchange rates to government regulation? If designed lo corr e c t im· so, avoid it. Regulatory agen· balances between currencis. cies generally limit a corn-The administration hopes pany's gains, but they let il that the currency settlement chalk up all the I~. will help to improve the balan· "The garbage stocks will be _ ce-of-payments picture in 1972. coming out in rising volutne." . But it has expressed doubt Camey forecast in a resigned that the nation can turn in a voice. They'U offer no history surplus on its Jl:3Y!11ents ac- and show noablng but Josses. counJ for.at 1,ast two years . ':.SUI lhey'U be bol. Ille fUlli· Ac<!i>MtlfC tli> ·lhe depart· bJe &Dd ~ will grab for-menr. tbe defJcit ·as mNSW'ed theai, tl¥y'D go J:OOm1Qr in . on the offJcla( reserve ti'ans.ac- price. lions basis, was $29.6 billion "And lhat will be the signal last year. This yardstick takes to the rest of us lo. look out, into account trade, goods and for that'll mean Wall Street is services, and transactions Heading for trouble again.'' between roreign centr.31 banks and foreign governments. Coast l<'irn1 Loss Tells In Revenue of lfle u"""""tM41 111 •H m1tH'r' Pt,.. 0 ' ' o 1 5 1i Numtlilt ffO t!!t8bllshment Of I "clt\zeJ\S Pul>Ulhttl Or•ntt Cw!! Ot!ly PllOI, t1111r ... 10 t11t 1ll11t ti ttld Cletf<ltnl. NtWPOrl Gtnlw r "'' U ~ .. ""'"' ,.,,..,,. 16. JJ. incl ,,,,.,"' 1. .. wlllltll ,_. monn" tlltr .... llr•I t~t\l,OO•I 8tttll. C11liornl1 I It bo8r"' of inquir"" to examine 1tn ..,,.,, tub•k•tklll " 1111, ..ot1<• '"' 111ce ot 11ou11-.t •11t unc1t111i11111 1n "' J • 1!1 ,...11111 .,.r11lnln1 lo Ille 11•11~ ol what he terme.d the ffr4\W1 .. ,. Otlt4 ,/,':r, ~hi Johnr.oil MIO dK.Otnt, wu111n hlur mont111 tll~r •• • "'6 • ~GAL NOTICE 1 1h4 111$1 1ub1k:1t1011 et 11111 not1c1. conceotratlon of political and JA:. •-c:utor el 111' wi~,, •M •bov• o .. td J1nua•Y 31 , 1tn. ¥11'\tcl ~..--ThcrflllO 1t1.,nuu.., e<.'(lnomlc power by America's f'ICTITIOUi •USINISi .·.~·.··, !',........ Eaecultl• ol IM Will 111 NAM1! iTATIMINT ,..,..., " tnt 1boY1 "11"'\tO dictlk"I· giant corporations. Ttw lollow1nt "'-•• ,. lllol"9 1'" N...W •tv111 ...... ,., !'ONAl.D s. 'TUCKlll 11u1'nt1$ 111 • Cllll MIM. C111f, "'u .... "--· (pl« Or .. Suitt ,.. Harris said the panel would l"l10HT ASSOCIATES. *" Q\11!1 1114) ...... "'""'""" 111dl, C1lltor11l1 tt"41 S!rHt, HewPort •e1dl. C1lll, t"60 Atttr .. Y lw lxtcllltr T I• (1141 644-HJJ conduct hearings in the li11een• "'· P!..w Jr .. 4062 s11111 '1XIHIMd Or•nwe (H91 D•llY io1101 A~'~"'Y ,., lxKUtrl• Lucl1. Otll\ft, Ctlll. "'6S Jtllll<llY t6 Ind fllbrulrr 2. '• II, 1'11 II O c 11 D !l't' l"ltO! presidential nrlmary states 11o1>ert L. Tr.c:1. 1o:1n Cr1w•o•d <•n· 1n.n F:;~.~e;, , '1~":911. 1,~ 1 21 ti r yon Ao .. Stnll AM, Ctlll. t'JICS '---------·----' • • betwffn now and t be wr1o11 F•1n<" llnt11nt11r1. u01'1· LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL N~ICE De , Adtl.,,lo. Soulll Lte11n1, Ctlll, fHT7 ' ____ _::_.:_.....:_____ V' mocraUc N a t 1 on a I Con-Ttiom11 N. Fo• sr .. Sl'.lt w. w1a11r111· !--------------' U . PL, 511111 AM, Ctlll. '2104 l'ICTITIOUS tUStNlU NOTICI 01' TllUITll'S SALi ven OD. He said the group Tl!il bu1lne11 II belfll CONhlcild l>Y • NI.Ml STATIMEHT T.S. HI. 1·171* would be made up of national 111",,.,..-","· M , The 1o11ow1ne M•llDll 11 oolns 111n!neu o~ F•!o•v M1rcn to. nn, 11 11 :fo Yltnt · l'lt~• r. N : A.M., OIBllALTAll OEED COMPANY 11 and )ocai figures nnresenting This 1t1tto,.>e11t 111111 w!lll me C1111nly 'NEWl"Ollf CENTElt PRINT .SHOP, dulY iPPOlnlld Tru1tff uncler' "~ ,... (ltrk ot Ot1nt't (OOJnlY on: ftll. 14, im. $50 NIWPOl'I Ctnllr Oii~•. NtwllOl'I ll'U•W.tnl IQ,. De.cl ot TruM rw<otd"' consumers small farmers By Btverlv J. Mt-Odo~. Otl)YtY c1111n1y •••di. C1t11. '2MO FtOru••Y 2, 1911. •~ lnir. No."~· In boCll: Beach follow' 'ng a -000 ' ' Clerk. '' WUll1rn F, J1lirty1, ,,,. s. Plrll 9$M. NM 3' ol Ollll:l1I Ret;«Cll In ... • ...,.,., st udents, l n depend e o t . 0 _ __. P~111 0r1v1. Sant• An1, C11u. tt101 otllct o1 111• CouNY 11ecor0tr 'o1 Or•n:r, rl.tedOWO 0£ 1'ls earthquake , • • , J>11b!•tlled r1ntt COIST ..,...,, IOI, Tlll1 l>utlntQ fl lltlnt conctuctld by Ill Cowit•, t11Ltor-•• WILL Sl!LL f w · bus1ne,smen, senior c1t1ze.ns, Fd>n••.., 1,, n •nd M1•ch 1, •· un 1n111~kl11~1. PUBLIC Aucr10N' YO HIGHE'T 1111t· Neu~Psychia.lric & Health Services Inc., of Newport damaged con v a I es c en t women and minorities ' 397·n w1m1m F. JtUrev• DER FOR CA51t fHY•blt '' 11m1 ol 1.i1 ' . . · . , Tfll1 lltlemtnl flied with !ht Counly In ltwlul "'°""' GI tf1ii Ul'\lltd Sftl") )t hospital in Sylmar, repQrted a He said the organization c1r•1t ot Ortn~• cou~1v on : J1nuary 21, the wulh trptit ..,,,,,nc1 '° !flt old net loss Or $9,2,000. Or It would act as a "Populist LEGAL NOTICE 1912. Bv ee~erly J, Mtofdo•, OrPlllY Orano• Coun•Y Court"-''' Itel .. 111 1N ,, . --· . Coun!y Cltrk. 100 1>1oc-ol WtJI $11111 An• taulew1•d rwr share,' (or the first half Of pressure group lo lry to Ill" J'ICTITIOUJ •USIN•li PH4U (11>rmtrlw Wt1I -~ Strffl), l1nl1 An~, ~.-seal 1972 . Thi's -pares fluence presidential candidates NAMli l'r ATIMENT Publl~ed or1n1e co11t 0a11r PHot, c1111orn11 111 11,111, t!tlt tnd 1111., 111 ,.,. 11 '-U'" Tnt 1011owl"' 11tr1011 11 dol1'19 b.itlne11 J1nu1ry 2• •{Ill F1brv1rv 2. 9. 16, 1'72 veved 10 1nd ~ lltld bY It unditr 1~ . h t I I t I r of both parties. 11; ~.11 Deed of Trutl 111 Ille Pl'-••Y ,,,..,.,Id Iii Wit 0 a ne ncome 0 "Ou 1 •• h I . ed THE REAL ESTATE LEADE"S. WiO Coun!V •llCI St•" d..,crlbld 11; • $193,000, or 23 cents a share, r goa • e ellp a1n , 1::361 E• Tpro ttOtd. El Toro. c1111or11I•. Lot u1 Pl .,.,1~1 Ne, mt, u lflft.rwn b m . the vear-tarlier nPriod. "will be to raise these issues Schmlt11ne. Inc. !A c 1111 or n I• LEGAL NOTICE • m111 ,,..,eef -recordld !n locrlt" nt,. ' r-I b that :\ Coro>O(allonl :l'l:Ml El Tpro llotd. El P1te1 J to II loclu1lv1. Mlsc1H1MOf1 Revenues for the six months n II.IC a way C3?h. Toro. c.1aorn1t. .,... M•~· records ot 11ld or1nv• c-ty. ended NO V. 30. lotaJed a didateS Will be forced ad-· Tflti buslnt1-1 II conductJ'.,. I COi• SUf'lalO• COUaT OP TME Tiit tlrett 1ddrtt1 Ind other mmmii1 d lb por1llon. S'TATI 01" CALl~aN\A poa d1•IOM11on. II any, ol Ille rttl ,.._, ... record $2,531,000 compared ress em. J1tn.1 A. SC11ml111nt. TH• couNT'I' 0,. oltANGl OH<rttlo!d tbD•e 11 puroorttd 10 r.: ,. h hall 5tcr1t1rv -N., A·nHi Jectrtndl A~tnut. Cost• Mtw, C1lll01nj. with $1,957,000 int e first LEGAL NO'J'TC~ Th1' 111ormoen1 w!1 111e0 w1111 tt>e Coun. HOTIC• °'" MIA•IHO 0 , Pl!TITION '2611. • Of fiscal 1971. h Cltrk Pl Ol'1noe CounlY Oii J111111ry 24, PO• P•OIATl OP WILi. ANO POii: The uno1r1l1111d Tru11tt Oliclalms 1~ ' NO'TICI 01' HON·•ESPOMS1$!LITY un. L1n111:s Tl!STAMENTAll:Y 1libl!llY' for lllY lncorre-elneH of Ille 11 .. ' The C 0 ID pan y S net ll~I' 1 ~-0 ' o• 0 • IEISMAN & SCMMtESINO. Atty1, Elltll ol MAllGAfl:l!:T G. WOl.TEl.S IOdrr~s ind other tommot1 011!111111lon.1 I r >Ct I ,_re v 11 ve11 nl I un. Ill ~ Of1"9> 11111• ' ' 1ny Voown htrrln operating loss for the hal , ex-d1r1 ltneO will not bt r1111on!lDle for '"Y N•wtort •Hdl. ca. pw ~;;~~E 15 EIEll"' G E ~Id Mii wiu b. midi. but wllho~ I • f th ijed det>ll or 1!1blllllH contr~c:ed l:tY l '\Y<>M PIS.Ut H • 1\1 N ~. n.,n c us1ve o e wr own •. wa.s 111,,1, 11\tll 111~ielt. .. or irler this d•'~ P blw.111 0 •ftllC coast 0 llY Piiot AAVMOHD M. WOLTEl5 h11 1u1o ht• .. cove d1 or w1rr1rrty. exPreu or lmpll~, $12.000, or I cent a share, Dt1t0J1t1111~1nJd1y ~1 Ftbru1rv, nn' Ji~rr 1', ,;.., Febr111rv J, ~. u , ,,n l:w~,:11~L~~.~o;:!:1:1~~:Y~ !: ~="•':.n.'1:!1'"''~~·;~1"1: ,,.;. against earnings from con-"1":1~b11 ~~e :no.n NtttlPMr. r$rtnce to which r, Mtcle 1or (lftl wm or '"' not• $1CurtO tiv s.!d · · ti f •oi:t 000 Co.sit MtW c1ntornli turw-11r!ltvl1rl. trld 11111 lht 11m1 and DeeO ol Trust, to-wit: S21.0>t.•J. wltll i llnUJng Opera OnS .0 """' , Putil!Yl.0 Orinv. CWll Oa\ly Pllt>L llltt of httf(!lll the Sll'nl Ills ~n i t! l•re11 lll•reon, 11 prov ided ln Mid ne , or 10 cents a share 1n the com· Fetiru•rr is, 16. n. n11 lTl-7' LEGAL NOTICE fer' P.twu•rv tt. 1tn. 11 t:JC 1.rn., In ''" id~•ncet. 1 1 1n~. un11 ... tht ttmi1 o1 1 d · lb · · couttroarn el Dep1'1mtnt No. l or wlcl Offd of Tru11, 1_.!i. cMrnJ 1n0 •xP1n1~ parable s1x-mon period lfl I 'IO'll'AL N~rcE PICTITIOUS •USINIESS court. II JI» CIYI( Ctnltr DrlY1 West, In ol Ille Tru1lee Incl ol fht lr11111 cre1tfc1 f I 1971 ~ VI NAMI! STA'T•Ml!MT lhit C!IV II S1ntt Ana, Ctllfotnla. bl' Mid Dtitd of 'TrV11. lSCa · Tne toHow!n1 _ _,, 1rt llolng butlntu Dtltd Ftbru1ry 11, 1911 The btntllcl1ry uncltr .1110 Offd tf E1~gineer·s Gets Gra11t For Safety 1"lC'TITIOUI IU51NEll 1~; WILLIAM E. $1 JOHN. Tru1t flert'lo!ott h:KU11d Ind dt llv1ritl •AM• JTATIMt:HT FOR FUN INOUST•U:S, 3121 we11 COi.iniy Cltrk to lflf unclto1ltlllel I wrllltl Oecl1r111\'" 'The tol10wln1 PM10n It dol"' bu1lne~ W•r ntr ~ Stnle Ani, Ctllornll t21CU McKIMHA & l'lnlM• ol o.ftull and Demtnd for Salt, 1nd (, ••= • ' Arc~le c. ll•tY. lOll ltullind llwd. IY1 Orvlllt W. MCC1rr111 wrlll111 Notltt ot oe11u11 1nd Elt<;tlon ! SUMMEAFUN COMPANY, 1f•1 NtWPOrl Btlch, (allf. '24'0 20 .. •t T-It .... S~Llt A Sell. Tiit und1r1l''lld Clultd 11ld NOl'cl P•IJct NO 8, Cos!• Me~ •. Cilll. JOSEPH t. CA"T"-1+112 Overltke Tll: (7141 ~.J+I· of Default Ind Elec11on To 5111 to ,.. AOO.rt Ottel Ci~mmlll {GentrtT Orlvt. El Toro, Cilllornli l.ltulll HUii, C&llf-11 fUh tKordtd In !ht COl.lnlr w~"' !tit r¥1 Ptl'lntr), 1111 Mitchell No. 1, TYttln. Ao>tild L. Anl<>11act l, 1901 ,.lltitrn Aftw""Yt ltr: '°tltlltntr PIOfltrlY 11 loc~lld. Calif. ,. Lant. H~nllnuton Beach, Cilll, Publl1MCJ Orlnet C~I O•llY Piiot. CitBAALTA" DEED COMPANY\ Thi• llu1ln951 It l>elnt condU<:lad b'J' 1 'T1't buslntH i$ tielnv conchicleO llv 1 ..-t1iru1rv lJ, 1', 22, ''n J90-n ts st!O 'l'ru1IH, f Gentf"tl ,P1rlnlr1h!11. GtMr•I Ptr!nerit>I,, av: Tll,lt 111wr1m:1 & Tru1f ADbell D. 'G1mmm ,l,r(hle c Brey ComP1nv. "'"' T1'1t 1111ern1nl 111111 wllh 111e Covn!Y Tiils lllltmeni tiled whh Int Counf'f LEGAL NOTJCl!. 8y LOOl!MA G. COFFM,AN Cler~ o! Or1n<1t Cnun!y o>1: l'l!b. U, 1912. Clt•k of O•lnvt Coun!Y on; Fii>. 7, 1'11. Ofl12 \ BY 8tvtrly J, M111do•, Dfii~lt COOJntv Ely l1111y J, 81r11 t1n, OePutY Counfv M091CI TO C•l!DITOllS Dllt: FtD!'UtrY I. 1'17 ,, .• \,, Cir•-· Clerk. iU,.llllOa COUllT OF TMI PuOHllltO Orllltt Cwsl D1ilV . ; PIJUI PIS'23 iTATI OP CALll'O•NIA. l'Olt Ftbru•rY 1•. ll & M1rcn I, lt72 17WJ A Newport Beach systems Publblled Orl\n9t t.11p1t Dally Piiot. l'~bll!Moll °'''*' COllJ OtllY ,.llot, TMI COUMTY OP OllANGI ., Febo'111•Y ll. 2s 1no ,.,.,ch I, I. 1tn Ftbruarv 1•. is ~ MttCI\ 1, 1.. 19n MO. A·nUS LEGAL N011Cl' engineering company has been · 31i.n · 3K-n E11111 of ANTHONY ROU1, 0ece1stc1. '----------'---+ rded $400 ~. fed l NO'TICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo tt>e 1 awa a ,vw era LEJ:AL NOTICE a9Cllt«t " 1111 ltloft Nmld dtc:tdlnt NOTICIE OI' SALi! oP , contract to evaluate the safety LEGAL NOTJCE "''' 111P1r10n11>1wl111 c111m1 "'11111 1ne 11.IAI. "•OPll'TY AT "ttlVATI IA\I: h . r h I . P'tCTITl&US •USINE!I Hid ~ ire rectulrld 10 flit !hem. Nt .... 7nf4 J c aracter1shcs o ve 1c es 1n Nlil.ME •STATEMENT w1111 tt>e neceuiry vouaitr!I. In""' 0111,1 ~u111•111r coon o11nt ~t••• ot C1lilor • th l , • h'gh yS l ' , , FICTITIOUS •USIMISI Pl !he I k of !ht bOY nll"td tor Ille COl.lnlY 111 Or1n9t. "" use on e na ion s 1 wa . tie lollowl"' ~$1111 • do1nt b111Ll'lt1s NAME sTA'TIMENT '" • •' " ,..,.,,or In 1ht ~tter ol 111e Ett.r of MJ.ll · Ult t I 5 0 0 t l' ' Tl'le tollowl I OOl tKi I Ill 11"-tf>lm. wllll Ille 11K1tltll•Y CUOLI PP E >ZE ' rasys ems nc • AllPLIEO PLAHHIHO OYHm1cs ' ... per.on • ... • ntU YOUU!trs. " "" uridt••l9"td II 00 ·:uncl w I L.. OKtiltet. Newport Center Drive, receiv· lJt ~ ''"' StrPI. !viii 21J, Cost~ II. VANITY l'AIR S12 3111 Strffl 51rtll. P.O. BOii 1llt Ntwplll'I ll•1c. ... ci::.::~1:.. .. 7'~11'':i:11"".'.1en.on~ ed t •· ~ l I th N M1w. Calllor'nl1 '7621 HIW'Plll'I ae' <ii c' 111 92161 ' Ctnl.,nlt '26U wllldl Is !flt •IKr flf n lrte 11 h d e ' '"" conuaC rom e a~ .e:HGJN'El!'.IUNG s 111 \I 1 t E co~ 1 • • · tK.>ilMu 111 ,,,. lll'llltriitMd ln 111 mitttrs • ti' t •Y ot February, .nn. 1 t . I ffigh a •·'e'" d .... ,, ... , eanr.~ · · 81n11 Wakitl J-t· l 1 SJ I ......, tnl ----'9..Jbl. .._ • Ille offkt or WlllQfrldt & Lff • JORJI • WY iXI' ...,, an ... A :::.l • .. -... 1. np.w •rllCllcl>ursl, NI. 4L Hllltllfll'lon 8••Ch ...... • ,. a1-111 U•Cl.-~. Wiishire 81\'CI aev1•1V '+ltli c tft' '°''!; Traffic AdmJnis•·a''Ao "" .. ""-..7f' .&. ..... ,.,.,,,. ... c1ur. 'wlll'ltn1..,,.....,..,,,.,..,....,",..,Pllbl1c• .. -·n .... __, ... _ • , , •, _ • U WV ,Uflllftll,,,' '•', ~ ....... L,. '· tlorlollt'llll'IOfkt .......... "' .. .,, ,.fl'aU, "'" diVJsiOn Of the Department Of 'nlfto ·~ ~fH _,, t -{a,r. 1ncif~1:11-'" a.I.-. COlldudtd ., 1" 0tf911 JtnuttY 2,s ttn CeUfon\ll, '° tn1 hltflHI and llltt blOO. Tr · llOl't!lon. · 8· . w J ll:tymond ~JI , incl 1uti!ed to conlltmt!lon by ~ ansportaUon. . Cllwlb H, 91r11it..,, "''c''''"' T 1, a1!~"1 I 1~1 l~•tut11r °' ,,,. wiu SoN•lor Covrt. 1u 111t '""'· 11t1t '"" 1 ... "\Ve will test and analyze 1'1111 11111~m .,111 1Utd With 1111 c~ c1,~ ·01 Or= cou:'Y :~!" ,.!:;" 1~";,";; of 111t •lllWe n•med dl!Cedeni '''"' ot 1110 dKe11ec1 it ll!r 11rne e• r h . . ! ty Cltt11 · ol Or1riie (QUiity Ori ' FtllrutrY e 'ei '! J Mtddoo · • C ' MUll:WITJ ffUltWITJ a ftf.ME• dtllh 111<1 tU lht rlth!, lltlr 1"11 ln!trt" the sa ety c aracter1st1cs o '"' 1m. c" ,-. vu r · •· Ot!Hltr ountr •• »M s'1rt11 11111 1~e 111111 ot s11a dece11e0 1111 .-i;. automobiles-obtained from dif· P• U9" ~·. 1 '""' P.O. ,.,. 1u1 <1ulrt0 i.r 0Pt1r111°" ~ 11w or o111t ..... 1~. . . MU.CC N-IWf ltldl CiUlwllkl nul olhfl' tn11n or 111 ldcJ,11 .. lo llltl of 11!f ferent chmatological and ,.tlbllshtd or1n11 Cotl'I 0111+ f>lit.I, FP.:~~ecll.& ~;·"",. ~·;;, ,o;11~,J1:: (1IO •ri.ttH' otc:11se0. et Ille lime o1 de.rti, 111 •l'lll ,, topo.graphical regions of the Pettruery ''· n 111d wrch 1.· t. Im n'-' ' • r ' ' A'""'''' 1.,. 1-l•r 111 111e <•tl•ln r111 pr-r1y1,1111u11t 1,. th• • " · . •n Publlohld Ot11n<>e COISI Oi lly Pl!ol Coun!y qf 0•1"''' Sl1te DI' C1l!lor"I•• GM 'May Breal\. Everi' Forcl '7 1 Tells United States, Ph1lhp J. . LEGAL N-CE J1nu1,,. 2,, •l'MI Febru•rY i. ,, '" 19ri ,,..ncute•rv otsr.•+beO •• ro11ow1, ~,. Stevens, Ultra.systems presi· LEGAL NOTICE ; "'i m.n A~~ ,.~~oivioEo .,.. INTEREST 1N dent, said, P'ICTITIOUi ·U~INllS ' NOTICI OP DlllOLVTIOfll Lot 11 of Traci No, tti.. ,, M<' mte "'V h' J 'JI be l led I · t<Cllk,. ii Mr1by tllliln · lhll ll!e LEGAL NOTICE rato«lld._ln 800!< f) PtlH • incl t of e IC es WI es 0 HAMii ITA'TI: ENT ' pjrlnftlhlo llertlofOre f'XhlLnt blfWftn Mlw:tJ11~M1p1, In Ille office Ill 11'1<1 evaluate dif(erences in their ~h• faltowlno """"" 1' dtlr,. bull"'" w. E. ·coNOLLV '"" •orrEltT CAMP count¥ " r of wid C'!'-f"!. com- Profits ·~ ()n Motor Mount Re~ll ! t f It , 11· 0011\11 bu•inft1 lnlder the 11r111 111mt tnd NOTJ(I 0~ SALi OP mo-nl' biown 111n Chirp!,. $ptno.f sa e y per ormances resu 1ng SOLID STATE SPECIAL 'TIE&. '2~4 lf'fl• of WATEllLOO GALLE It I ES, 1101 ltl!AL ,.ltOPEltT'f AT Pll lVATI SAi.i! W1v. Tustln, :]:"· from use in the urban en-W!!?, Oc..,,,,...,.,, """"'-' aeicn, C••il. 8tdfonl L-, Nnwport atedl. c1111 N•. '"'71J T"""' oi w11 1111 In 11w1u1 """"' ilf . f . n_. t?UQ, w1s on-ftM "" of Ftbrvtr"I' lu1111lor COi.ir'! of Ille Slllt Pl Cllifarllll !!It Unllld $111 "' corif!rmillor! of N !f v1ronment o Chicago, the Jloblrt croi.rer, 2214 w. Ocetn Front, 1tn, dhllllverd bV m1tMI conMt1t. ' ror '"' '"""'Y or Liii A"'tlK. Ten 1trcen1 of 1rnoun1 bid,. 111 6tPCt1lled cold-wet climate encountered ~'?:~.suer:: ~11· 92660· Mid w s1._. 1n u1t1 1u111r1 .. 1u N con. In Ill• M•"" o11111 Estl11 or MANSIE w1111 blo . ,. . ' • ~-LOUIS, Mo. (AP) -The ~?Louis Post-Dispatch !Bys it calC\jlated that General or!i Corp. will spend "far than the $35 million that been estimated in replac· 1 or repairing defective :~biine mounts in a recall of ~rly 7 million Chevrolil ) -;Available figures i~icate · ~ the: firm will spend aOOut ~714,000 on the recall, the ~r sa1a . But owners of Se c•rs involved "may pay and Its dealers almost ; 100,000. here is even the possibili· r that the firm will approach lhe break-even point by the time this largest rteall in IOtomotlve history is com· iilete, lhe data indicates. the· Post-Dispatch said. The automaker announced thf retail Dec. S.t o include ~tly 1965 to 1969 Chevrolets and Novas with V-8 engines. Let ters to car ownen aree.1· Pf'{'ted to go out this week. The p11:per said that because 1Gf\1 i~ refusing lo pay for !'cp1accment o( d t f e c t l v e mounts in any auto not •covered by warranty, car O"''ners inv11l\•ed "can pro- bably expect to pay QUt an amount equal to at least thrce- fourth s that spent by GM and Its dealers. I The Po~·01spatch said It ar· 'i rived at its £igur!S this way: Using Wards Automotive '\'earbook and R.L. Polk Co.s I ''U.S. Passenger Car Rfgistra· lions by ''tar ~todcl. it determined the numbfr of IUCh ca rs .!!till on lhe road and no longer covered by the war· ra.nty. Using Autornobil! Club of Mi590Wi lest results sho'A·lng thal about one-third of tbf \Vagc Average Briton Low LOl'IDON !UPI) -Male manual work.en In Britain earned an 1ver•&e weekly ...... al Juli a...-$'11 in tm. llC<MliJll ID tlllotl•lio publiol> ed bJ the ll<partmenl of Em*ymtlll 1'be avuage 10- f'l)al ""' wu .U.160. an ln-ue ~r n<ari)' II 1 wttk ... , tho proWMIJ y.ar engine mounts railed. i l multiplied the p r o j e c t e d number ·of nonv.·arranty- covered failures by an estimated cosl of the repair, based in part on a survey of GM dealers. The Post-Dispatch said GM has , refused to furnish its figures on the cost of the recall , but the paper quoted a spokesman {or the firm as saying: "l know we are oot going to make any money on lbiL Air Force Seeks Aid Near Record . , 1 ...,.,neu .., _.,_ <Olllf!Kled b~ 11' dueled lly llO -· Tiie ,1rtntr11'1ll' of W.E. C. VOUHG, Oecrtstd. Bids or ot~1 '° be In wrlllllt tl'MI will 1n Corulect1cut, th! hot·W!t 1n111w1c1u,1. c°""°'"r •nd •o111rt c.,,. It brlr>1 folot ltt 11 n1retor ••vllfl lhtt 1t1t u ... tit recelYed 11 1111 1111r111ld ottlel ,1 1ny area of Ariwna and the moun-Thi ~~oz,"',.. , dlnofftd 1n111 111e bu1l11U1. ~ 11 dtrs!ollld wt11 ,,11 •' P•lv11e s111, on or trme lfttr "" ,,,.., li'UD!k111on MrM •nd DETROIT (AP) -The Ford . . 1 1 -~· .. ..,..-w !ti ttie Coul!lr Wlftrklt G1lltfrle1 11 110! lldflrd Lint •lltr 1t1t 2'tttl..., ol ..-n., H7t. 11 1111 or-belort dill"' wie. Motor Company has reported lt11nous terratn of Montana," f~t :' 0~11n.,,. .C!!Untr 1111: JlllU9rv :u, NIWllGl't &ffc:rl, c1nt Wm '"i.e 111 ex ist.' lk• 01 Mt111n c. c111w1y, Svltt n1• 94s.i 0.1111 Feb. '· im. Stevens said ,9 . ,., YC"" .. f1¥'1M'Y '· M•ddo•, Otlll1l"t' Nef llltr of Mid "<"Cini Wlll bit fCIPQ11$1· WUlhlrt 11\'d, 81verl~ Hilb. Cllltorn!• CHERYL STOM,., & 1'971 profits totaling $657 . OOJn .. r... bit from 111d NII of dl1111lu!lon IOI' lnY tolll c 0 u n I y ot \.OI An •• If 1. OIANA M. MAHONEY millioo for 1 ·1s second-best p bll~ 0 c 11 0 .1 "~~ cleOls. 111b1U11n DI' Gblttet10n1 l1101rr111 1111t of c • r 11 or" 1 1 , hi the l'lhities1 Co-ActmJ11htrt'lr1Ct1 111 111e u rt119e Oii 11 Y • vncler Hid firm "'1'1' or bv iny petton pr ind bit! DIOdt•, Ind wblKI to con. Esltlt pf wld clK.tclent. year ih history and anticipates J11n•rr n •nd f'•bf11•rr 2. '' 16. l'12 111•_. 11111r1llhll vfldlr Mid firm ,...,,., r1rm111°" tiv J1lo SuPtrlor COl.lrt, 111 ttie Wl-141 • LM S • h U ' l------------"-•_n_1 Otted Fell, '· lt11. rl9111. !Ille 11111 lnlerelt pf .. Id <IK•t•ld 1111 Wil""ln at.•. lhnt sales Will continue at m1t 111t ·w.E. CO>'lnoUr II !ht tlmt ol Offll! Incl 111 llll t\1111, tlllt 11\'frt't Hlltl, Cllll, "211 levels above last year. LEGAL NO'llCE Jlotitrt Oml •nd '"'''"' m11 '"' ett11e of 11141 .,,.,...,. "' C•A•"'1t1111r1trkH ~ d ' h "31-0C: d«.tiltd net 1et1ulrH by -•llcwi ef llW 9"I« rvr s per s are earnings ,.ICTITIOUI IUliMl!SI llobiilhed Ortnol Co.1st ' 01Uv Piie!. or 0111e ..... l1t, otr-11\&n or 111 IOd!llon IO Pullll...., °"""" (Giii 0111¥ ,.bl. wer'e $6.18, second onlv to the T.•tkes Loan """'' 1T•TEMtMT Fel>tU•rr 16, 1tn .c..n ""' 'llf Mid dK••M'd· ,, t11t 11,... ... Ftbnl•..., 1s.. ,., n. 19n .... ,, " 33 k d · Th• tonltWlnt perlllf'I ti dolnt bu9'nt11 at.Ill, In •nd to 111 1"' t1l'l1)11 t'ltl pro- .;l'J, rac e up 1n 1965, when u: "''~ 111u1te In thl countv ot Or1n91. t.he company set its profit C:ALIFORl'ilA SOCIETY.OF 80AT1NO Lt.'GAL NarICB Stilt of C1lllornl1, p1rlkul1rlr duttllHd LEGAL NOTICE d f •703 '\l' S 'th J I " I J f il'HYSICIAt.iS, 1"'5 ,._l111'1Clvl11 SI, Hun· " lotlow1. fo.wll ; · recor 0 " mt ion. m1 n ernai.<ona . nc . 0 tlllftvn 811dl. CtUf. ' SUPEJl.10• C01l•T Of 'THE Loi 12, e1oct 107, ol Bit City, II ..... IN TMI SUjl'Clt lOlt cou•T 01" - Ford, last of the Big Four Newport Beach, has concluded H.H.M.S. Corpor1t1on (A CtllfOrllll STATI OP CAUllO•HIA POil\ ~:!: ~1-c:oroeO ~" •ct i. ":-It of TMI STAT• Oji' CALIPOtlMIA l'Ofl U.S. automakers to disclose a new $12 million senior loan ~=·~':~~11~1toric1~ it .. Hun-TH• cc~~~!i:,:....,o•AMGIE cour:v.'~~. c:::..nW'-d:O... ~'1'j'j, THI CO:~'I :"zuoltANGa 1971 results, made its report agreement with t~·o major na-T~lt buS!ntSS 11 belnt conduclt4 bY • NOTICI DP MllAlltNG °" ,.ITITIOM ~: ~'·· ~· ,1·~ f''l" to~• . flOTICI °" IXICUT•IX'I Uit.• Publl 'c lh•'s week. Sharply 1'n· •. nat 1·r . C1lllwnl1 ,.....,..,11on. J'o• 1'1.0•ATE OP w...:1. ANO POii: lht ~ 1~ ..• r,' Cl -~.·wtu.~ of 0,. •UL PllDPl•TY AT ,ll:llMl'I 10 I e lns\,lrance com-5tndrt Spiro, L!'TTt:•• TliTAMIMTA•'I" l•OHD n • ti on ...... '"'"'-of "11' SALi creased earnings also were panics President Donald E 51q1t•tY · wAIVIDI · · or ,..,, ''"' enc1 b•t•nct l'tktlnt:M 11~ 111 .,. """"'of tilt e11111 et E1t•EsT reported by the three other Graha~ announced. . ,,.,,,, ........ ,_, flltd wit,11 .11\t'' CllU"ltY E1t1li " JEANNETTE ,.OMOltlN. :::·1111~:::.~ '::"'.!i~ .. T~ll T=!.,,.~ "',.,'c~fL,_ HAGEN, Jll., dtatHCI., ie'rk "' Or1r>11 CovfltY Of\! Fib. 1. 1f72, Otc.Nltd amount bid hi be 11~ l ""' •<Ui " 11trttry 91""'" ""-1 lUICllLI!: major auto companies. The additional long·term B' witttr T. Kint, Dtillltr c~tr ~It~ HOT1cE 1s MEll:lilY GIVEN 11111 Ptter alft pr of1tr1 ,:•:\,. .. ~1:~ .~win ::::,E,~AGIH, •1ElllWfN«1t1t1 wtH., F d led Id 'd J' . ' t d $7 'JJ ' llnl '°· P-1" hit n'lecfl'ilr'el'l'I t Ptllllon !Or Ill t'ICtl¥td ti !ht torfl,ltO oltlc. I S MICHAEL HAGl!N, JI., or repor wor \.\'I e in ancmg inc u es a mt ion Puti1l111H Ott.we t011st 0tnr 1111ot. ,,_11 « wlH •M «or \»U•nt• °' Lffl•r• time''"" JM 11 1' tilletlion tit'~ ·~ cltcNHCI, wut .. 11 tt prl'lll• Nit, tt !lie sales of $16.4 billion, up 10 per· 1!>-year senior note bearing in-Ftllni•rY '· 1'-lJ. 11111 ~rd\ 1• im Tn11mtt1ttl'Y.,. petlllonW 111ono11 w1Jvtc1l w1or1 111111 ol .. 7.. flU ' ' ,.~,,_, blcldtr. uncMr"" "'""' ,.., CV<1< Cent lrom ' 'ts 115 bi"ltlon 1·n te es\ f "" 1 326-71 rtflr•nc• • w11kti .II m.1CM ...,. tur1htr 011H fib. 1. 1911. :.!rt-~ntftitf 1nt1111ontc1, 1Uba..ct 11 r 0 0 ~ p e r c e n --Hr1klll•n. .... !hit ... tlmt tnlll 1)1(1 GORDON YOUNG "!'''"'" ~ "" 11.iNrlor '°""' Oii For Plane 1970, when auto sales lagged. n!gotiated with A!tna Life LEGAL NOTICE of 11e1nr. 1t11 illftl: 1111 llltn 1t1 ror 1nc1 CLAll:l!NCI vouNG :~'." ... '!~ ::i1t1t' hour of n~ot New car sales were up for Insurance Co and 15 ·11· ' ---Mfr'd\ 1, ''"' it t=• '""'·· Ill "" court· Exta11or1" ""'wm .., b., ~ .. · .. • . ftle..ttmt.,111tw· . a ml }()n PICTITIOVS •USIHQS of Dttllottmenf .... ' of lltd court. of Mid d«tOMI. r ew. flf1lct" A.. Lld ...... 1~. \\1ASHINGTON (AP) -The the month of January this note arranged with the Mutual NAMa nATIMIMf II '°' Civic Ce11i.r OrlY• w"'· 111 tilt M•rllJI c. C..llWIY :...=~~~IR ~~IC •• t, ''°1 Air Force asked n In e uear and Ford said sales of its Life Insurance Co under like The touow1n1 petJOn 11 -'I'll hsltles• '1"' ~ S&nl~ An1. c.i1tornr.. .., ... '"· c111ram11 111 ·of""" r1t111t."tr:' lfer'. J • 1$: Oll'ld l't)r'Utrr U. 1f7t .... WllfMrl 81.,.,, ,_,_. ,...; Pl •ill! "" aerospace firms, including 1972 rpodels, which began in terms. Graham said. weKo . .,, Rll'IOlllMI. CO?f• Miii. w. E. st JOH" •twrtr Mm .. c1111. ,.nt "'1111 ,1..,,:,"~:;.,1"~ ~;'!, ~11111111'11 '!cllonnell "'"'••las ,·n '-ng· Seplember 7 t A . t I $7 ·11· c111t. coumr Clerk ... ....,...,. "'lx1a11111 ""' "'''' • ' " M "' . .....,"6 lAl • are percen pproinma e Y mt ion 11.1e11i •d J. O'Brltn< ,...,. l"ond"°'' wA•Nl!I AMO sc111>1fll1 tm.oc tt-'GEH Jll lllHEST MISJiA.EL Beach to submit proposals for ahead of the same span for will be used to reduce Smiths s1., l'own111(1, v1111V, ca111. Attll'f'Nn '' L•• · """"'"ed 0r~n.,. cotst O.llY Pl1nt, 1tw or •lllhe·,!~~ ~,.."'~ """':!Oii J developing & new short take 1971 models. OU'"tanding short-term d bt Jal'wl ll1tk1, K3' L1tl1 o. .. ~ mt s.fllf •~ •• hilt• c11 F~•rv ,., 11, ii. im a1 -n dltloll hi"'''" 1M decff~·.r 111fJ" ti . .., e . C&llt. Let Alllt\n, C11t111t11!1 ,_.9 of till dell!\, 111 tlld ""' on and landing ( S T 0 L ) Chairman Henry Ford JI while the remainder will be ,.~ .. 11u111111• 11 11e1,.. coMIKfecl l7I' 1 T•h 111n ,,...., .,. '1M111 LEGAL NCrrlCE '"1 ,,_,,. 1rw.tec1 ~ ~ :l'~o;,i::a1"111n Ir rt pl nd Pr 'd l Le A I d ed . P1'1ntt&hl1. Alllt'M'I'$ tw '""r-Mff• COu ... • ...._ '' 11111 anspo ane. a es1 en e . acocca evot to general working Rich••• J. 0·1•\en ''"'' c1nf0r1111, ~:Crlbed ,';'~":n.11 " · The Sl'OL projec~· the se· predicted that "retail sales capital to finance a con-ThR 11111mh!l •Hid wlll'I t11e '""""' Publlthed or111t• coi.1• Oil!' "llet. NOT1c1 0" SA\.t o" An und!v!Otd °"....,•rt•r imerMI 1 COnd ruoded U er the could be substantially higher if templaled !xpansion of the f'n'" '•' Ono!lff Counl"f on: Jllllltrt 2._ Ftlll'uery It. 11• 23' ,,.,, ~12·n llllAL r1to,.1•rr AT re11 1nH1ertY 11 m sunlll Df"I.,. c1; • . y 8""'1\' J. MtOclOX, OfCMr lltltVAfE SALi ol COii• Miit County Pl or ...... ·,,' Advanctid Prototype Develo~ consumer confidence rises companys for!ign sales ac-c111111tr C1trk. Ne. Arms of c1111om11. d.tc•lbtcl ,1 tot1owJ: •' ment Program with which in-beyond present expectations." tivity; Publbtild ~ C0tst 0.11, 11~~ LEGAL NC111CE ~u::•~:r;, °&~,!111111 C•!llotnl• ,,;,=~ 1 j1!':t"'t,:f ~t\o: :!ti~°" tti, dustry is given seed money ~;~~;~~~=~~=~==~~==~=~=;'.:=:~~-J1""'" 'H •lid """"""' L t , ''· 1m •1C1'1Y1ou1 tUSINl!il 111 Ille Mitter pf "" e111t1 o1 Mt.-Trec.t, 11 shown .. • ,.., :;t Jli-7' HAMI STAT•MIHT (HAaLl!S WILLIAM Wll'TlEL. Jll:., td 111 I«* J, P-1 of M"-ltl-.U• and a free hand to design and . "I ~ ·-------·----! Ttie 1ooow1,,. ,.,..,. 1a t1o111t1 bu•'"'" Otc"""'· M•111. 1tecord1 o1 o.,,,., cw11" dtvelop ~rototy~ -'-aft g TAR G A"'E~ • j( ¥. . LEGAL N011CE n : Holl« Is Mrm 11v111 11111 "" un. cen1om11. m 11«1 wetlt•IY "'-,..; r-a..u:u ;:::J .llJ ~ ''it CH•ONOEIC ELECTflOHlCS, lllt Wtllnecl 'll'lfl 1tH II tr1Yl1t Wit, ot1 pr IOl11t wll-.. lei lll'IO lnltrwct. fh• with only t It barest essentials l!:!!:!!!.!C!!:!..,;....---lly ~ y 1 l'lc;TITICMJS •USINlll ltld!\111, (llUI MtSI. Ctlllorfllt "'" '"*' IM """ dl'I' ,, Fell. 1'72. •I !tit of· ""'"' ot '°'°"'ovl1 SlrH!. 11111\CI' 121 ··t forth bv the milt'lary The w.... NAM• S'TATIEMllfT So11r 1.tW11Nrlft. lllC.. l!IC""IOl'tTetl tlw ol Wl,..,1<11 & Lff, "20 Wlhtllt'I "" wttltflY ...... lllCI llCM'lllt•r, , .... .,.. • ' )'( Yow DJ1 Adivify c;o;dt }( ~ 'The 1111\o#Jllt _._, 11 tlofllll l:tllll!llU 111 cinfllmlt, 2lff •ld'llll. Coste Mitt, lM!u ltvtrlY HHlo. Ctllf. '°111, C-f'f lhenCI ti rllftt -In lU fttt ...,.,,,_1; nm involved devdopment of T A«wdi111 lo th• Sf.m-y ~-ll It: C1llfWfll• '2"1 "Loi .......... Shi• ot,C1Htort1!1, to tllt te Ill• llllnt DI bttlllfllnt., .. ~,,. a cheap, ligh tweight 11 .. btier To .. __ 1_._ for Th"'rtdoy, ocr~1.a _ 1VMMfT IU!Al.TY co .. 1200 H • .!Miii Thi• tMlllftl I• COf\dl,lctlcf b' , Cll'-hltflt:lf .,,. Met lliddll', .,,. wlllkf•lll ..,.,...._ ,..,. wnttrlY "'"· n.. ~ ... 2~~~~ O!mil"""' ,.___.. "-lt-53-""iJI StrMt. lllltt *'""' Ctllfanltt '2101 ••lion. conflnt'lllilfl IW MW Sucitflor Couf1. ti! _,,, of Mid ,,,_..,, 1,. l!dllh O••• plane. .a l'9Qdwonkw1~dlngto~. ~l;I t.MtlM c. Inc. IA Otvld """'"' 1'11 rlt1tt. title ..,. 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'll.7 ~--~ ,, • " ·----. ------ I Wednesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York -Stock Exchange List • • ) \ SC l t l•• -i11t11.J Hltll Ltw Cit" c:.-. l l l 30 DAIL V Plll\T ' I ' ·~"'1111111\!•' "'"'"'lill•i" ''· l'll<•l!I <I'"' "MIDNIGHT COWBOY"' l WALT 0 1S\MEY'S • $ong of: the South Abo W•lt Dl...,.;1 Dk• YOll D,ck Ed--4 G. l•W..• "NEVER A DULL MOMENT' CONTINUOUS SHOW SAT., SUN., MON. FROM 2 PM. PRICIS UNTIL 4 P.M. . ADULTS ~ND JRS. St .50 CHILDRIN 75; :fflCMl.lHGAGfME.fo,T ·--i...1·~i...o1 ~llOT IOCIC"'f'll -·c-"IOOD, l.lD& TIU Ulll"' !ti) -·~ I"'"'*'-IJt-1211 l'-"' 1•.~-" 11 • .,,,,,,~,_, c1 .. •to .... -•tol .. "OllTI MAllY" 11) • "'SKIN 1-'::"':,"::IP=G=I =~ -·-""-' .. c;..-.-·-.,..,., --·---141-4011 J-1<; I I.AT/ llH -.... -L....OIUW AU•TIOO"IPll 1.~tlWTSCJWlilD",(Pll J, "'KllAM. KllAM AIAOf"' (HJ -·-·-IQ.UIJ tJ,.,,,.11 ~· .... ,. ,_, ....,..,._....,.... ..... ,,....., ... ,. r;,,11. ; -.t111YMA1Dl.W.• A IOW" I'll _ .. -· --.. ~ .. 12.00~1.0M . ~""'~fl"' ...... . . tu!!! ""' <04I'" ;.:; •111 ..... • ' J T heater Notes Stages Overflowing; Eight New Shows Opening By TOM TITUS °' .... o..~ue• 11111 Like June in the "Carousel" number. live theater is busting out all over this week. Eight dlrferent producing groups are tailing the wraps off their latest shows -two tonight. one Thursday and the other live on Friday. Leading off what must rank as the most jam-packed week of the 1971·72 season. with five other productions continuing their runs, are Orange Coast College and UC Irvine, both debuting this evening. OCC i! presenling the local premiere of "Who's Happy Now?" while UCI has a closed workshop production of '·Fortune and Men's Eyes" (see review, op- posite page). Golden West College opens it! "Black Comedy" Thursday for three ' days only. Competing for the Friday first nighters this week will be South Coast Repertory ("The Jnnocents"), the Fullerton Footlighters ("Kind Lady"), the Fountain Valley Com· munity Theater ("No, No, a Million Times No"), the Santa Ana Community P I a y e r s ("May~'J and the l.Alng Beach Community Playhouse ("The Happy Time''). Th.is weekend also will mark the closing performances of EXCLUSIVE HARIOR AlllA SHOWING- TIIOf' Hyerdoh1'1 "THE RA EXPEDITIONS" Tke Most omal"' tr•e·llfe odn•tvre of all time I . ------~ 1'.tfllilDfOl ll ltEWPOIT IEACH • (la.34350 ' • DAILY P'ILOT Sl11f Pho .. FUNNY -Carla Dow and Don 1-layes share a guffaw in a scene from the Irvine Com· munity Theater's "The Amorous Flea." three musicals -the Irvine Community Theater's "The Amorous flea," the San Clemente Community Theater's "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown" and the Fullerton Civic Light Opera Company's "Fiddler on the Roof." Continuing in their se- cond of three weeks are "Teahouse of the August Moon" at lhe Laguna Moulton Playhouse and "The Star Spangled Girl" for the Westminster Community Theater. John Ferzacczi is directing Oliver Hailey's comic drama "Wbo's Happy Now?" for Orange Coast CoUege. Com- prising lhe cast are Jay Theodore, Sam Qauder, Chris- ty Dwyer, William Verderber and Barbara Beindorf. Four performances will be HELD OVER 16th WEEK WINNER OF THE GOLDEN GLOBE AWARD BEST FILM-BEST DIRECTOR-BEST ACTOR GrnE HACKMAN FERNANDO REY mnma '·® CONNECTION v:; John Marley & Ray Milland r~·p;o llalOll ~~mufti'. :tnd Greil Atlt~!-.-"OOODI YE COi.UM.US" given, tonight through Satur· Margaret Dean, Larry Dag. day, at 8:30 in the college gett, Jack Byron and Andrew auditorium. Admission is free. Hawkes are featured. * Completing the cast are A traditional mystery Frank Rutherlord, Sherian thriller that turns out to be not Piper, Frances Mills, Andy so traditional is South Coast Yuluslch, Laurella Daggett Repertory's "The Innocents." and Joe Causey. tbe stage version of Henry Performances are Friday and James' "The Tum of the Saturday at 8:30 in the Screw." Jack Vaughn is guest playhouse, Mnt E. Anaheim director for the SCR drama. Sl., Long Beach. Reservations Ann Sienna and Sue 1'~1int 1213) 438-0536. are the adults and Charles * Curtis and Janel Kirker the The sounds of music lade possessed children in the away on three Orange County show, which runs four stages this weekend with final weekends, Fridays through p e r f o r m a n c e s o( "the Sundays at 8 o'clock. at the Amorous Flea." "You're a SCR theater, 1827 Newport Good Man, Charlie Brown" Blvd., Costa f\.1esa . Reserva· and "Fiddler on the Roof" in lions 646-1363. Irvine, San Clemente and Betty Stromquist is Fullerton, respectively. day and Satiy'day at I o'clock In the i!Umanlties H a 11 Playhouse on the UC Irvine campus. Reservations 547· 7733. "Charlie Brown" trudges in- to his last three days, Thurs- day through Saturday, at ·the Cabtillo Playhouse, 2 O 2 Avenida Cabrillo, San Clemente. Mark M a n n I n g , Karen Moe and Steve Smith head the cast under Robert Moe's direction. Reservations 492-0465. The first production of the new Fullerton Civic Light Opera Company, "Fiddler on the Roof" winds up with three performances this weekend, Friday through Sunday. Stan Throneberry stars in the popular musical at Fullerton High's Plummer Auditorium, Chapman near H a r b o r , Fullerton. Reservations 526- 3257. Fullerton's "Kind Lady" with Richard Dow heads the cast Martin Clegg and Marvin of "Flea" for the Irvine Com· Colter the pair intent on vie· munity theater, abetted by tin1izing her. Mary Elliott, Ellen Robinson, Gino Gaudio, Cheryl Saidi and Robert Men· Don Hayes and Carla Dow * doza also are featured. with Irvin Kimber directing. La_guna's "Teahouse of the Donald Henry directs the Closing performances are Fri· August Moon" features a thriller at the F'ootlighters•lp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Coming Feb. 19_ Muckenthaler Center stage, 119 Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton. Perfonnances are Fridays and Saturdays at 8:30 reitervations 527-4415. * The fun begins when the Jights go out at Golden West College where ' ' B I a c k Comedy" wil be performed at 8 o'clock Thursday, Friday and Saturday evenings ln the new Community Theater. Charles Mitchell directs the college pl'-Oduction w b i c h features Rick Waites and Marion Trainor. Others in the cast are Sonya Newberg, Von Schauer, Jack lladdad. Linda Hoch, John Richard and Duane Knope . Admission is free. Musical melodrama is the order of the day for the Foun· lain Valley Community Theater as "No, No, a Million Times No'' opens a two- weekend run at the Tamura School little theater. David Maiville is directing. I Becky Forsladt is t h e heroine, Casey Miller the hero and Vic Gonzales the villain in the old time "meller." Curtain time iS 8 o'clock Friday and Saturday at the school, 17340 Santa Suzanne, F o u n t a i n Valley. Reservations 847·9821. * A trio of original one.act plays by Santa Ana playwright Robert Paver comprise the evening of "Mayhem" for the Santa Ana.. Community Players. Paver also directs his own works, debuting Friday and Saturday at 8:30 in the Players Theater, 500 W. 6th St .. Santa Ana. Margaret Boyer, A Ii c e Walker. Charles Pait, Susan O'Connell. Mark Benkendorf, Bobbie Menet, Pete Trama, Lee Ross, Wibe Van Der Velde. Debbie Lynn Gordon and· Lloyd Stephens are cast in the trilogy. Reservations 541- 2188. The program changes to •'The Happy Time" at the l rarely dark Long Beach Com·! munity Playhou se this weekend, with James Brittain directing the Samuel Taylor comedy. Jerry }fer be n er, lr~ine Student In Production What Happens to the Pets Nobody Wants? All animai lovers wllfrespond to this touching and impas5ioned plea by a concerned citizen on behalf of the thousands of abandoned and neglected ani- mals that roam our streets and countryside. In the Febru ary 20th FAMILY WEEKLY cover story, Patri- cia Ricord offers a simple solution to a pathetic and appalling situation-the millions of unwanted animals born each year and t he deplorable ways otherwise compassionate persons dispose of them. e LIKE PERRY MASON -F. Lee Bailey, the real- Jife counterpart of fiction's Perry Mason, tells how he picks jurors. That's only one part of this fascinating story about the famed defense at- torney. e DANNY THOMAS' VOW -In a story written especially for Family Weekly, Danny Thomas tells about a pledge he made 30 years ago and how it has led to the building of a shrine. All Coming Saturday in The I DAILY PILOT I massive cast of some 30 performers while Westminster's "Star Spangled Girl" has an ecooomic com- pany of three. Both are en- tering thelr second weeks with Laguna running t o n i g h t through Saturday and Westminster continuing Fri· day and Satu.rday. }lap c;raham directs .a "Teahouse" cast headed by Phil I n t er I and i , Jerry McCulloch, Travis B r y a n , Helene Briggs and \Valter Dudek. Performances are at 8·30 in the spacious playhouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road, Laguna Beach. lleservations 494-0743. Gary Saderup, Martin Fuchs and Barbara Garlich comprise the players in "Star Spa ngled Girl" under Sondra Evans' direction at the Finley Sc,tiool auditoriun1, Edwards al Trask. \Vestminsler. 'Curtain time is 8:30 : reservations 897·1164. ........ •1111 lroo1t1 Stl<k1" (01 plvt LvclM• 1•11 "Ytvrs, Mint Ind Ou",. (0) M1!1nff Slf, Ind Sllfl. ---·.;:!£• SIAOIUM •f 11; ·~ --. -=If • SIAD/UM -! ., .. -~~ ''RA t:XPt:OlflON" 10) Ilse JO!oll W•YM ••11110 1.010•1 tGI "ILLLY J-.CK" COP) '"' "'Thi .. rtllC:~ COlllllCl1911" (Ill) '"' "V111llllll111 Ptl11t" tRI Gt9r .. S1o911 -Rlbllrt 11t..i1n1 "MOT ROCM.'' !OP\ ... "TH£ THOMAS CROWN Al'l'AIR,. TllH. lllru l'rl, 7:• & f :l5 S:al., Sun., M..,., 1 J'lt 5:3' l :IMI lt:OI ATTENTION FRINGIESI! IN PERSON• ON STAGE FRIDAY! Kenaan Tabikh of lrvine, a'I~=====================~======~~~~~~~--~-~~~=====:. freshman at Ka I a m a z o 011 tw of KTlA ct*"""l ...,...... Mont'-... .,. SEYMOUR'S MIDNIGHT' MONSTER MOYIE ~wec.led"'llJ'MW ACTION STA"'9f'b41P& AL&.HATWS•.OO College in Michigan, is ap- pearing lhis weekend in the colleges production of Pirandellos .. Six Cha racters in Search of an Author. Tabikh, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ali Tabikh of 5051 Berean Lane, plays the role of the se- cond leading man in the drama. -----~--~----~-~-~~--~-1 1 FIND OUT YOURSELF ~ EVERYONE'S TALKING Aoofil\. A DIFFERENT KIND OF LOVE STORY z • ' • PTO$MINUT I I I I -·--. -........ ,:.. ... --- Lagu11a Beaeh T._.ay's .Flnal N.Y. Stoeks 4;0L. 65, NO. 40, '4 SECTIONS, 66 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1972 TEN CENTS Ed-Lorr to 8-tand 'On Own · Record' ·in Recall ' . By BARBARA KREIBICH Of "'-rusty PllM Sl•ff Laguna Beach City Councilman ,. Edward Lorr tod.81 filed a formal answer to charges leveled ·against hlm in a recall acUon flied last week by Cltiuns for Good Government. Labeling the grounds for recall listed In the ·official notice of intent to circulate recall pelllions "a total rabricatlon," Lorr 'responds point by point to the charges and concludes, "My record or community service speaks {Or itsell and I ataod on. it."' Arson Eyed· He says that his public statement.I, voting record and diligence on the city council reveal he has lived up to his cam- paign promise.a to pur1ue the_hipple drug cult and beef up the police department, with the resli.lt that drug trarfic has been reduced and arrest.a of large dope ringa are drying up Illegal drug sources. In his reply, Lorr stales further : -"We have a reasonable law con- trolling dogs on beaches, which provides our citizens with cleaner and safer beaches In the summer for people to en· joy." -"I oppoaed the 3&-foot height limit In- Old Main Beach Building/ Ablaze The Laguna Beach Fire Department turned out in> full force at 2 a.m. today when a blaze: believed to have been set deliberately, Woke out on the u~r noor of '.[lll old 'JI•~ Beach building ,1 201 S. Co;ll Hlgliway, temporarily oecupled by · '!hi Laiuna Beach Community JlistOrlcal So<\lety. ~The blaze was confiMd to a five-foot flOOr area ID 1-iacant upStiifj room aod the.re was some amoke .and waler damage to the-downstairs quarters oc-. cupifd by the lllitortcal Society. Fire Marshal Jim Presson saJd be hesitated to pl~ a dollar '1ralue on the structural damage since the building I! scheduled for demollUOn. The.re\also was some water damage to hiatorlcal pictures and d Q c u m e n t s displayed downstairt, Presson said, but ~ded, 11ft 'was 'ery little considering what could have happened." There was evidence, Presson sa id, that tt\e fire had beeo 1et with some type of flammable liquid. and an upstairs door reached by an outside stairway and nomuilly locked, apparently had been left open. THe beachfront buildings, now in the process of be.log vacated In preparation ftr demolition to make way for the Main Beach Park, were described by the Fire Mlnhal as "a terrible nuiaance apd real fire hazard." •City manager· Lawrence Ross uld he lt;ill i! aiming a:t a r,larch i demolition dale; desplle having to comply with btd- dlnr procedures requtred by the·federal {overnment which ii provldfng 50 percent flnancing for the be>cb development proj- ect ;~ ~b~~~ll.e"°?aM~t ~~u:ri=t~~ ~mplishing the demolition, either by a formal bid advertising proctdure or by tecuring clearance to forego this: formaJ. ~ty aod accept an available bid. , The manag.r.,,ald today ht decided to !Ike the formal bid route, whlcll would iequlre only about 10 days, rather than ~ a clearance, which would take about three-weeks. "We already are advertising and I expect we will let 1 bid for demoll· lion in about 10 days," be said. • Until they ~ town down, Fire Chief Jim Latimer aald, the empty buildings will · require constant checking by both 'police and n ... departmentl... • Harry Jeffrey, president of , the lllstoricai Sociely, Fllld today that IMny ot th.e group's more valuable pictures and docUmentl already had been moved out Q,f &be temporary headquarters. Moretti Seeking ·Republican Vote ' • •SACRAMENTO (AP) -Auemhlt Speaker Bob MoretU 11811 be wll1 bypass epublkan leaden and go to Individual G9P leglllaton to round up enough volell tor 1 reapportionment bill ll It is vetoed' Dy Gov. llo"'ld ·aeag ... ' The new plan be will unveil in about bro weeks la designed to glve Democrate 1 IJ.37 td&e In the llO<oember Auembly, ldded Moretti (0-Van Nuys). MoretU needs 15 RepubllclJi votes to (et the S4 needed to override 1 veto. He tald Tue>d1y be would tab the plan to t1aomewhat more than lS members with hopes of winning th.al .,.ny ..u... • ''This -unfortunate flre ," he said, "points Up the nee(I for a permanent home for the'Hlstorical Society. Frankly, Laguna reald~nta have not come forward as I thouibt they w<>uld to assist us in finding a place ~ 1 "'1'""111 and historical center." ) . IL"kll1iitdpg Girl Elud~ Male Driver , Laguna Beach police are seeking a heavy~set, mkidle-aged man who alleged· ly held an 111-year-<>ld girl hltcbhlker at kni!epoint as ' he drov.e. through heavy traffic on South c.oast Highway Tuesday afternoon. . The victim told police she...asked for a ride to Agate Street when the man picked her up at the corner of Thalia street and the hlghway. After driving a short distance. she said, he pulled hlll car over to the curb, grabbed her ~ the throat and forced her head down onto "his lap. He then pulled a knife and held it against her neck u he maneuvered back into the traffic lanes, waraing her, "Don't scream or move and you won't pt hurt," the Victim said. , I Near the earner ol Agate Street she sucoeeded in breaking klo&e and jumped from the moving car, polJce said. The girt, wbo wu not injured, said her auallant was about 40 to 50 yeani old, six feet tau, weighing about 200 pounds, wore a dark browr\: mllltache arid was clad in khaki-overalls. , U a compoglte portrait drawn for k1~ 'Uficatloo leads to his arrest, police said, be wm face charges of )ddnaplng, assault with a deadly weapon and possible rape . Police are a1ao investigating a residen- Ual rape that ~ early Monday, 'Ibe attacker of the 2:6-year~ld mother was a yaung1 man. U.S. May Un'load Howard Hughes' 'Spruce Goose' LONG BEACH (AP) -Howanl, Hughel' "Spruce Goole" -one of the world's largest airplanes and one which turned out to be 1 lame duck -may be beaded for the chopping block. I Twenty-nine yearo qo, lbe federal •IQVetnment gave Hughes, the billionaire lncjultrtali.t, 1 coatrlCI to build a giant uperimental plywood 1e1pl1ne. For l40 mllllon, h got the "Spnnce Goose." It new only ooe Ume, for one mile ancl°reacbed an altitude of 10 feet. , Now; tt Ja reported Iha government may try to get IOIDe o! !ta lnvatmeol beck by selling the pilot. • Tbe Lona Beach lndependen~Prw' Telegram on Tueodly quoted 1 ipokesman far lbe General Services Admlniltnltloa in Wublngton II aylng the government might ..ti the HO.ton, elgblilnlpell<t' mfl throllllt compeUtlve (8-PLANE, Pap I) ltiatlve because of questlona~le legality or the Initiative process in zoning m11tter1 and my , campaign pledge to spread the tax 6ase by promoUng the e1pansion of tourism. -"I supported the council IT!&jority desiring to put the height limit to the democratic proce11s or a vote. Subse- quently, I voted for the council's adoption or the ordinance. -"I have worked ror a sound finance program for the development of the Main Beach Park now under way, -"I promised a !IOUl1d fiscal policy and I feel largely through my efrorts this year's budget ls the first slnct 1969 when expendlturts will not exceed revenues." Regarding charges that he warned of a tax increase that was not forthcoming, · the councilman asserts that ~ council has .. lmP,OSed new ~roperty t a x equivalents" in the sewer '&ervlce tax, propeiiy development tax1 Increased trash fax and parking fines that wiU bring IA half a.million In new revenue. Regarding convention tr!r with his wife, Lorr state!! .. I was the'-mayor'a ap- pointed alternate delegate ropresenting the ctty , .nd the fllll , council wu ' cognizant of the city paylng my wife's travel expenses, and no C}fte ral!ed any objection at that time." It Is up to the ruu council, he aays, to state clear formal public policies on such matters. Hts alleged dlscrlmini1Uon against women In public office fs branded "a viClous lie." "( opposed rcertaln candidates for the planning cOmmission, not on the basis or sex, bUt phllosophles held on planning ,matter1," Lorr states. .Ptiiponents of the recall muat wilt a.e.,Ye.n days after publication of Lorr's . . response berore beglMlng to cll'C\llate their petitions. then wlll have IO days rrom the date of their own filing, Feb. 10, to collect the ·necessary signatures, sllghtly more than 2,000, ·to force 1 recall election. Spokesmen ·ror CJtlzens for Good Government have es~ted peUtlons will be In circulation by the end of next week and expressed hope that the necesury signat ures can be obtained ln 30 days. II sufficient signatures are verified against voter registration rollt by the city clerk, an election could take place late ln aym· mer. ' oar , .. ~ Innovative ........ - ' Education ·Under Fire By FREDERICK SCHOEMEllL Of IM 0.llY 'Ult ltlft A long and often emotional debate over traditional versus Umovatlve educatlon In Laguna Beach schools erupted at Tuea-- day night's boafd meeting after three trustees defeated · a moUon to aetk _, · $102,000 in federal money. .. "We're devottna more tlme to thau " • ; ~ 'DAILY PfL.OT tfllH ' ,...,_. THE'('RE ITUNJNG UP FOR THE ' GREAT DART TOURNAMENT~IN LAGUNA BEACH,'. Blg'Ed Snyder and Su11nne Tre~cher Show Their Form In Prep1r1t!on f~.r Bl~ WMke2d Eveht ,, E'7en• to, the .1Point· 2 L~guna .r~~s 1tfu1: in Cr~Sh · ' • . . On Motorcycle Dart Throwers Vie for $2,000 . ' ' With pril.es worth over '2,0<IO, the third annual Far West Shootout dart tourna- ment will be held Saturday and Sunday at the Hotel Laguna in Laguna Beach. The ev~.!'!!t which was first held at the hotel in aru, la expected to attract dart throwers fronvall over tbt U.S. Accord· ing to tournament chairman Kelly Boyd of the .SJ>OFllOring L8.guna Beach Jaycees, entries have been r~ived from as far away as Canada and New York .. There Is no cover charge for spectators. The event will begin at 1 p.m. both d~ys in the Riviera Room of the hotel at 'US S. Coast Highway, Play ;,, ••pect!<f to continqe until midnlsht each day. Laguna Beach resident .Ed "Big Ed" Snyder,. of 8$0 Catalina St.._ will be" re. turning thiJ year to defena the cham- pionship he· W1Xl in the .'11 tournament. The prize:i will Include. a. '400 cash prize to the winner Jn the singles division and $300 to each player winning the doubles event. . ' Two Laguna Beach teenagers •«• In- jured Tuesday when their mototcYcle col· lided with a car driven by an 13-ytar-old San Clemente man at the comer of GteMo eyt'e Street and Bluebird Canyon1 Road In. Laguna Beach. North Vietnam Pounded ~)'dist Gregory Richard Blahop, 11, of 31163' Ith St., South Laguna, ind hit pa49enger, Adriana WaU, 15, of 3049 Crest .. Way, Laguna Beach, were taken to South Cqal), Community Hospital followlna: the ooon acclden( aDd rele.aaed alter emergency treatment. From ·~s.mce. SAIGON • American warp I an e·s lounched substantial air atrtkes inside North v .feJ01m .tqc1ay, U.S. l)lilllary sourCes said. . ... . , Radio Hanoi cla1m'4 two U.S. planes were shot down and· a •number of pllota were killed« capttnd, A.U.S .. Command spokesman, told of the broadcast, said: "I have nothing to 'report." The command in the palt bu wilhheld reportllig 'on dowMct plane1 uriUI 1eareh and rescue missions were completed. The North Vlelnamtse• broadcast asserted that a number' of U.S. jete a~ tacked populoua arias ii Qulllll Blnb and Vinh Linh, North Vietnam's' two southernmost provinces. The U.S. lnf0!1nlnl1· 11ld tl>e ,strikes were fn North Vltloam't ha~ ol the clemilltar!ud ...,. th.at ltPll'lles the warring Vlelnams but , decllncd to dllclolt the targela. • They added there alao may Ir .. been -.. ralda north of the lont, but wltlllleld . detail• Pf!ldln& •.D, 111- nduncemeot lrom tl>e u.~. ~aM. "Thort'WS'I protective nladloo ttrlile• Ind otbl!r llitttu 1n .. 1...i." uld nae IJ>. 'farll\IEI~ "but I caa't ct.e you the number" ' ~ Ill Ellld the raids were beyond the al\lal 4IDe or two "protedive reacUoO" • '• • strikes frequently ropor!ed from lime to time when enemy 1un1 ur radar lock on to U .s. planes. . Allied lntelllgence lndicalell 70 percent more North..VJetnameae lroOpl •UI move Into South 'Vletnam or lnto border areas during the ~It five monthr than In the same 'peli6d ta1t year, U.S. military sourcts sald. · · U.S. mllltary sourc<'8 In Saigon Hid the big U.S. air campaign that bepn in South Vietnem a week e.go would '"L"Ontinue ln- delin!tely" because at least four fresh North Vlelname1e divisions, beefed up by heavy ·artillery, were , moving, Into Ille country. Nearly 1,JOO strikes have been Oown 1,,.. side South Vietnam In the past week, matt of them. a:>mlng the five days before a one<lly ewe-fire for the Tel lunar new year that began at I p.m. Monclly. / New Meeting Date Fred Norwood Bigelow, 1909 Los Alamos, San Clemente, drlv,t of the car, was unhurt according to police. . Bigelow lotd • olficerl be had nt..sr. a boulev,rd stop on Bluebird. and '!II a~ tempting a left turn onto .Glenneyre street but failed to ,.. the mot«cycle, which was llOUlhbound on Gltnneyre, in time to avoid the collillon.~ H-untington-Marr -'- lndicted by U.S. On Loan Scheme Sy AftUUR R. VINSEL Of .. Dt1tr P"'9 ..... Climaxing a Iona, n1tkmwlde f r a u d f,robe, U.S. authoiltle1 lndlcled a Hun~ ngton Beach man and ti othen Monday for an alleged conspiracy to bomw mil- lions becked by chord>-llnaoced capital. Tbe -ailad Church of Cl1rilt Manora Inc. WU ,1 phony COl'J>O,l'IUoo e.i.tJni only ,on worlblea paper, ln.vf.llta:•ton charl•· No connee\ion •lla? with th 1 • leglllntate ~ of• Cbrltt, but mony . Saddleblck College lntltffl will meet deftndanta 1ro ICOUaed of llnkl with at 7:IO p.m.1'uelday, one day later than Amerlcl'I antintze<I ~· 1yndiClte. the ttCUl1rly acheduled-. lf>ula J, '1ertve, II, ol 21Nt S, Tbe dlte bu been chlnaed In Bn>okllurat st., ii smcq tbem, llCCOrilrtl oblervince of the Washington'• Birthdsy to federal g1n(lland lnlelllgenco llOUl'CCI. holiday. The .... 1on will 1>e held In the Verlve 1nd·the olbert wen Dlmed In 1 boon! room of the ldmlnilthitloo building 11-c:ount leder1! ~nod jlll')' lndfdmtilL IL tbt Mlulon Viejo campus. (S.. CONSPIRACY, Pop I) . • r . • projecto than to luclling,'~ -chlrr<d- Chalrman, William .!l'IM ... !HIM--eli*--i wit'\ .lntsleel Oer1td· IJlnu' Ind Mn. l'nlill Ir • .... .,.., -..._ the flJnilt IO 1tU417 lnd!vJ4uilfzed _...,. methodl ~ at nrurstoo .Jntennedlatl anil Top of the World Elementary Sch0ol1. Tnlltee1 Nor/nan Jl1:wno and Mn. Jane Boyd voted in favor of the 1p- pllcatl6n. • Thurston Principal David Lloyd brand· ed the vote "Incomprehensible" and said, "I can let no JUJtiflcaUon wha~ver for th is decl1lon." ' ·Former board prealdent Larry Taylor, defeate:d in the April school elections, said thet' Thurston had done a "tremen- dous job" for one hla youngsters who earlier had dlfflcultlo In school. ''Al a parent and taxpayer, I don't mjlc~ Uke declslono beled on politics and that'• What I'm charging you with," an irate Uylor told the board. Tremendous applause from the 75 persons attending the nfeetlni, htld at tilt high school auditorium, followed 'faylor's remarks. Thurtton lnatruetm-Oeorge Nettleman said the decision "ls not a rallon.al way of looktng at what'• happening." Mrs. Gillette responded quoting the grant appllcaUon 11 1aylng the preaent federally funded programs "have not provided adequate student achievement. We've had these prograrna for five yM Need we waste more time?." "No one ~ meeting all tilt needa o'r the kldl," rephed Netfleman. "You pull !bet out or ~ntext and forget about all the blood, 1w11t a'¥f. tears that'• gone Into the program." , · "We are al,1y1 trying to~ Improve the program," eommenled Thomu Dugger, who authorized the ll'&nt 1pollcatlon. 0 We stated there WU DO ligniffcant dlf• fm-ence In student achievement, although Tbunton liudeoll ICOl't lllgbtly hlgber than eludeoll under tradlttollal pro- ' (S.. DEBATl:,,P11e 2) . Or:·A~ ... We•dler More summer·like weather II Git the . qenda for Thurlday, wJth hllha in the mld-70'• ..... Iha' Or1nge Cout, tonowm, 11ti, morning IOf Whfcll will burn oft Lowt toallbt in lbe ~·.. ' INSIDE TODAY Tht hecwf11t WHt o/ the 1to- 1on in Htrino thtottr f.I comfng up I• Or011gt Cov.ip M>flA tight ...., p.-CdO!ll going °" Ille bocrdl and /i.,. othtn 6o11ffn,.. Ing, St1,Thtat" No1<1, PG(I< 10. v ' • ----. ,..,..... .... 4. I I Or .... ~ 11 "'" . ,., .. ,..., ,, . ..,,. ,,.. Or,S,.._.... D Ii.ell..,.._ .. ,, Tt4Mt• " -... .... WMftiiW I Wll!ll .... ,, ·---... ,._ 4r tt .. -. ' I --.------ LB Dr. Ullom Honored -lit Laguna In a 1tro111 lhow of support, 111 former Laguna Beach U1Jfied District trustees and aeven membert of varlou1 or1anlza. Uo111 Tuesday booored SUpt. William Ullom wllh lhe Top or lhe World Elemen- lllry J'TA Contlnulnt1 Service Award. During prtff!llo!lon of lhe award by Mra. William Parrl1h, PT A pre11dent, Ullom received 1 standing ovatk>n from the 71 peroo1' altendlng Ill• school board ml'eUJ18. Folmer ocbool board membero Judge RJchard Hamllton1 Robert Tu ro 1 r William WUcoxen, Larry Taylor, oo; Tobin 11111 J1ne L<>pn w<re tn 1tllndlnca for tile prutDiltlon. "I mull pcroonau, salute Dr.'Ullom '• achlevf!lment in fnoovatlve' education " 11lil the Rev. Pilrl<k c.tlanin of SL Cltherine'1 Oburch.· . , Rn. CiUanan alto lbanked uu.., for •ill trrorll In tile cre1tloo DI tile Lquna Btl\'h Oommunlty CounatJJni lierYlce. Mr!. Lucille Whitaker, I TOW !auf ' le!llftt, f)l'eoent.a tho board Wllh petldoJW cqnlalnln1 441 1fgnatum In favor ol • lll!Om IJ1d hla lland for tnnov1tlve educa- tion. 1llll. Leslie lltll of tho Human Nteclt Advllory Board praised Ullom for helping creail tile group which bu been 11JCo ceao!lll In getUng 1 county oervlceo ctiltor loclled In Llgu111 Beach. Ullom'• tlabt )'tan of 1ervice with tho d~ were. also commended by Mrs. Florf!lnce Beane, PI'A CouncJl president: the Rev. Paul Kleuter, Congregational Church minister, and Harlan Bedell, an Emerald Bay resident. , "Former members of the board of educatfon had dre1m.s for our young peo- ple and I have been pleased to work with them al nee l ~olned the cllstrlct," Ullo1n sald IQ n~J'IJng the award. ·\ "I d>uldn 't aay wlth more enttiC.!lllm:t lhot II was the ttarr lhat bUDt tho pro- gram yqu have which provides lndlvldu1J . educntlon opportunlUes for our young people. • , • DAILY ,ILOT P'll1f9 fw Jlkllani l(MlllW Eland With Elun • . . Polke Appeisl ' • • ., • ~ ' Stabbing Event --w1tnesses Song.ht San Clemente detectives today Issued an appeal for possi ble witnesses to the fatal stabbing early last week of a WUm- ington man whose body was found on the edge of the San Diego Freeway. And of prime concern to officers Is an unidentllied man who phone<J the depart- ment moments after the stabbing oc- curred and gave a report of a white Chevrole t driving the wrong v.·ay on the freeway ln the immediate vicinity of the stabbing. The man hung up before officers could obtain his identification. . ' Bertea N amed1 To County • Airport Gro11p Richard Bertea, a resident or Corona del Mar and head of the Bertea Corpora- tion in the Irvine Industrial Complex. to. day was appointed to the Orange Cbunly Airport Commission by Fifth District Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers . Bertea will succeed Willard S. Volt who resigned from the commission last week after two years service. Caspers said Bertea, 42, a graduate of the University of Southern California, was a pilot in the U.S. Marine Corps and was based at El Toro and Los Alamitos before being discharged with the rank of captain. · He has lived in Corona del Mar since 1966 with hi!: wife, Hyla and their four children. Volt gave press of personal business as his reason for resigning. At the same time Caspers said he had been told that Volt would probably also resign bis position as executive assistant to Rep. John SCbmlll (!\-Tustin). Police already have three eyewllnesses to the struggle which led to the death of Jesus Herrera Roa, 47, of \Vilmington. They also have a suspect in custody, Juan Suarez Puga, JS, Wilmington, who they say Will be formally charged in court Thursday with murder. "We are still extremely interested In locating that man who called us at 11:50 p.m. on the night of tbe stabbing,'' said Detective Lt. CUflord Gates. The man placed the call at about the same time other witnesses reported the stabbing incident. The unidentified report came from a toll phone along Camino de Estrella, Gates said. 1 Besides looking for new witnesses, local detectives are continuing to work on reports in the stabbing. . The alleged murder weapon has been found along the bank of the freeway near the spot where Roa collapsed and med f. n1 a stab wound to the heart. The knife is a hlact-hahdled swit<!h- blade weaPon, which it is unlawful to pos~ss. It is alleged that Puga, angry over a car purchase he had made from the ·vic- tim, stabbed .Roa after a fight that erupted in the back seat of the moving car. The pair and three companions were relurnlng ho.me to Wilmington after a day in Tijuana. · Some reports indicated that the fatal knife blow was struck after the two men fell from the back seat of the car which by l~en had been parked on the 'shoulder ff the freeway a short distance north of the Pico overcrossing. Puga then assertedly fied the sCene in the car and sped southbound. About an hour later he assertedly wrecked that car In a construction zone near Natlotlal City. Highway patrolri:Jen Investigating the Incident assertedly noticed large blood- stains on the front of the driver's shirt, arousing their suspicion. Moments later Roa was assertedly linked with the San Clemente stabbing and arrested as a McGovern Asks Legalized Pot BJ U1lllod Ptea Jllkrutloml Sen. George _s. McGovern ol: SOulh Dakota 'suggested today legalizing marijuana, v.•ith the same controls bnposed on alcohol. Speaking at a drug counseling center In Boston, the Democratic presidential candidate said: "Continuing investigations on the overall effects of marijuana leave unsettled the related but separate · queslions whether society can or should attempt to completely pro-- hl bit its uae. "The most relevant historical · precedent -prohibition of alcohol -produced an obviow;, abject failure." From Page I • CONSPIRACY •• issued tn Chicego for arrests from coast to coasl t Verive was stopped without incident as he drove along Newport Boulevard and taken .ill.to custody by Newport Beach Dectective John Simon. He was turned over to U.S. Postal lnspector H. L. "Booltie" Almond, booked into Orange county Jail without ball and delivered this morning !or arraignment before a U.S. Commissioner ln Los Angeles. · Charges listed in the mass indictment Include fraud by mai~ wire, Interstate transPotfation of funds obtained by fraud and also conspiracy. . Releasing the data in Chicago, U.S. At- torney James R. Thompson said the case is cne of the largest of its kind in U.S. history. . l .• The defendarlts -some Cost.a Nost\a figures who surveillance officers uy visited Verive in Huntington Beach - operated in New York, Chicago, Pboe~, Ariz., Savannah, Ga., and San Diego. They .allegedJy promised to arranJe loans through what the U.S. Justice Department and postal authorities call ~ advance ree scale. ··· Indicted principals -I n c I u d I n g "11'1 1 challenge 10'-.rork here In Laguna Beach where every d1y Is really a beautiful day. I1m very grateful for tb1s honor," the superintendent u.ld. ·~( OCllclals at Uon Country Safari In Laguna Hills agree this baby eland has plenty of vigor despite being somewhat wobbly of leg. He was born Monday afternoon at the commercial game preserve and is now busy !earning the ropes from mom. iii Verive's brothers Carlo and Charlie, both ' R e s ann' g of wbOm have been on the Orange Coast eV nUe recen!ly -are accused of vlcllmlzing ·at suspect in the killing. E'ro111 Page J least 70 businessmen . Councl·z Eyes Poss1°b1°l1°ty Meet Conducted PLANE or0~~ ~ro~ffu!~e j~t~~.:;:~ Front Pagel • DEBATE ... • • • alleged schemers supposedly collected A N• ff advance fees to guarantee loans fpr RMI'"'· eur 11uc1tn11 a11o irew 1n prob-t IXOn ome bidding when the lease expir" June :io. bustn .. smen stymied by the t1ebt lem IOlvtna abWUes." Of sh M • A Hughes spokesman said, "\Ve ha ve economy. '1llhlnk we're 1etUQ1 program hippy," . otter eeting Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke and members ot no "COmment because we contacted the Investigators qplained the loan jp--sald Thomas. 0 There'1 not enough the state's Council on Intergovernmental head of the GSA,~~ den~ed ever making pllcant ls usually asked to put up nve to teachlna of bastes. I thoua:bt thla thing Relations met at the Western ~h~uch a stateme~t. _ _ ·--~-1"'0 percent of the ~II amounl ao_ugbLas O.\!er lJ.l)UU:llO tbl1 mom1J)f-Md-l-Ju1l------~ ---------------Hause o1nce complex today to itUdf -the Hughes;-who supel'VISW Constru~fion gOOd faith money when applying throUib couldn't ~Jt. • . . 1 -. WJJIL.1.IJt_~W tor '•* a. ,_1r-01~~~ wr1nll!S fn revenue sharing bat and \Ills at the conttob in 19t7 whetrthe loan guarantee compariiiS. ~'TlilllfilriiOI. feamlfii at one't own routtne 1pproval fn Ila "consent calen-to the keeping of animals Jn a resideollal few conclusions were promised. ' Spruce Goose made lb rught, leases it for pace removea comr;tltton. And 1n my dar '' the.Lapna Beach city counc.ti may zone; consider three requests for lot line The council parcels out federal grant $800 a month. He pays the Long Beach boot. competWop_ ttie. name oe the ' bre k ........... · changes on Nldo Way, Temple Hills Drive funds to local entltiea _ including funds l!arbor Department $36,000 a year for a game ln the world, unlortunately," the see 8 a ~ • .,.bt Jn Its recent routine and Bluebird Canyon Drive; and l! ex-sought by San Clemente for a million-secluded hangar hiding' the plane, whlch chnlnnan uld. · or marathon meetings, dreggln& into the pected to approye an a~eement for con-dollar sewer collector main. has a 320-foot wingspan. Thomaa added, however, that this early morning hours version of the· city bus line to use of pro-Reinecke was set to serve as chairman There were no reports of prospective didn't mean all btnovatlve programs The coment calendar Js a procedure pane fuel. of the talks whlch were expected to end buyers, although on Dec. 7 a voice iden-would be scrapped. "Everybody's lllklng · tod bo tified as Hughe ' aid In •·1 bo doomsday. 11m just a.skin&' we slow down under which routine or non-controversial ay at 5 p.m. A ut 30 delegatea were s s a u:: ep ne coo- end look at this stuff." items may be lumped together and ap-expected to attend the talks including versation with newsmen: Lloyd angrily told Thomas that the proved In a· single council vote, unless a crescent ·c. ity' S representatives from the Leaiue of Cali· "There's a lot that still could be learn- board might as well "suggest 'I'hunton ·member of the aud.Jence or a councilman fornla Citles, the County Supervisors' As· ed from the airplane, and I feel that 80 on a traditional iystem startlni Mon-...... t,i!q.uests separate . discussJon of an tn-soclatiOR and the U.S: Department of before anything is done with it that might day." a1v1dual Item. . Drive-in Filrns Transportation. A White House delegate be in the nature or destructive or darnag- "l want to know lf you're lllpporting The 7:30 p.m. session will open with a also was scheduled to attend. Ing, we should utilize it to get the fullest thli or not. Things might be more obvious continued public hearing on the land use The council already has approved the obtainable data ... which is a great deal If you did your homework" fumed Lloyd ele~t of the General Plan and con-TO Get X-rate,? principle of federal revenue sharing as more than most people realize. 'nlomai said Lloyd "~asn't speaking slderation of the planning Commission's proposed by President Nixon. Spokesmen "There are problems which are related the truth,11 while Lloyd told Thomu not latest rev ision ol the text, with reference for the talks said today's talks WQUJ.d to aircraft size, and which vary with size lo 1Jlve hlm .. that garbage." to popul1tlon projection and hillside CRESCENT CITY (AP) - X-ra ted focus on various bills in Congress on the which can be explored with this nyln£ Several other· parents and residents development. movies have caught the eyes of the Del concept. boat." San Bernardino Votes to Quit SCAG . San Bernardino County supervisOl's voted Tuesday to withdraw from UM: Southern California Association o. f Governments (SCAG) on June 30. The board's action followed a vote bY San Bernardino delegates at the SCAG assembly in Anaheim 1ast we~kend fa V!,- lng legisilUon lhat wollld make lbe regional organW.tion mandatory In mem- hership for six .Soutbun CalUornla coli;,. ties and 157 cities. · spoke out In favor of the etlsUng ~ Other matt~& on the e~enlng schedule Norte County Board of Supervisors and grams during the two-hour debate, bUt Include .a vari~ -liJ:'PI by David W. its chairman threatens to ban them if he the board took no furthu acUon on the Rorlpaugb, who was dented permlsslon to ts.sue. reconstruct a second dwelling, destroyed can do so legally. --w. W:t.«+ 'Pf:r.: "'"°' , GEM TALK ~~iiiDiiiiiiiiii.&i~Wiiiiiii For the woman you love. The milestone watch. · Satellite Launched VANDENBERG AIR FORCE BASE (A~l -A ,aatelllte waa launched early today from '1!le Spice IJ1d Ml&sile Test Center here aboard a Titan 3B-Agena rocket, the Air Fort11 said. No further de'talls were available. • DAILY PILOT ..... COMT P'UM.SIHM CC»U'M'f' ...... N. w ... ---~ J..... .. Vkl ""191N1f .. ._. l110fll•• K11Yil ·~-,,..,, .. , A. M.,,U. Mlllllti..t blllr a..,1" H. t... ai ... ".'· N.n AlaM!ltt~ .... ._ __ i11Z htei"t Aft ... Ma.1i111 •~4rewi P.O.. lea '6fi. t261l hll eta••• 0..... IOI N .... 11 c..loo l..t. 9Un --..... ~~ ,... ,,. ...... ..,. "'-htdt1 aw ,......,.. ...,.,.,.... ........... INS .... .....,.. by fire, on an R-1 lot at 444 Jasmine St.; The movies came to the board's at- J new ordinance regulating parades, and second rtlding of 8 building construction tentlon this week when Clarles Wilson , a tax ordinance. state highway patrol sergeant, tofd ~ The council aJso will attempt to un-scpervlsors that films, lncludlng X-rated f1 movies, are visible on the SC!'ffn of the TODAY Dorotli y 0 Leads H amlicap Fleet To Acapulco Br ALMON LOCKABEY D9lfr ...... '""" lftter ACAPULCO -Bob Btauchamp'a CoJUmbia 57 Dorothy 0 WIS the rourth boat to lln!ah at 2:20 this momlng (PST) and grabbed the handicap lead in the Sao Diego to Acapulco Y1cht Race. Dorothy O saved her Ume over the previous three finishers -Windward Passage, Blackfin and Sirius n -to take the overall and Class A bandJcap le1d. liowt.\"U,. tbert-were Class B-and C yachts dose •"""ih to the finish lhil morning to 'rase Dorothy O's overall 1 .. d. r... )'tan Ii"· Dorolhy 0 wu first to f'tni sh this ra:ct. Pettt Grant's 48-foot sloop Nalu IV from lbe Newport Harbor Yldlt Club eased out of the mist here today IJ1d was the nrlh boat to rtnlsh 1t t :IJ this morn- ing. She rilled lo .... her haadkap limo on Dorothy O by about t ... hours. Nalu rv rln!shad on ID l(<lnlzingty show he1t lhroujih lhe BoCI au.. tnlrllla! to Ae1pul<0 Hll'bor. Baoed OQ Tuesday"• positions. the ylcht with tile btst chance of dropping Dorothy o rrom lbe top spolru to be rom Tobin's Erlcboa 3t Nm..sts from tho boot Son Dlt«o Club. She wu 175 mlleo ,_ tha flnbh T\llscily IJ1d l"I* ... cily IDd ~ boun lhne lflow...,. fnlm IlorolllJ ·o. Otbef '::, slJll In the ninnllu! ft.r """'kop ... Al ..... Toc:llik 0, -·-IDll~ .A U&tt Wlndo nporiod norih ol =-~' . ti.. n, ~!ti~~~ 'l'lladly aboiJ! .. bqur bdtind ~lactlln. [ , Ocean Drive-in Theater htre from two county roads. Wilson told the su pervisors he wouJdn't object If the screen faced Into the woods by ' J. C. HUMPHRIES ' and away from homes and roads in the ~ it.~--::==,,..,=~' -·~· area. Tram Run Set For Winter Fest A special Winter Festiv aJ tram run between downtown Laguna Beach and Irvine Bowl Park will be offered to festival palroru: oo the three weeke!ds during the nm ol the event. Tbtr1rnrns--will-mate~the-Nn.-every 15 minutes from 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on the weekend.!. IC<'Ording to City Manager Larry RQse. The festival is scheduled to be~ln Friday and last until ~fal"Ch 5. During lbe final two weekends ol tbe fe.stival when the antique show and flea market ire being held 1t lbe Boys' Club, the tram Nn will be attnded to tbt club for the convenience of visitors, Rose noled. Laguna Apartment Looted by Burglar A Cqu.1 &ach lifl lllop o,,,,... rdurning to his 1p11tmont lhortly afler noon 'l'UtJ:day reported to police thal 1 t:urglar app.VtnUy had he1l him homo 11111 remo>'ed clothlnJt IDd Vllu1bl01 worlll an ..t!maled fl .ii&. 'Ibo ,vt<tlm, Harold II. 1.lsl;y, J5C7 GlcnneyN St., listtd .. mlsslng .... s:aft. Cl!tS, ID09I ol ~ls nrdrollO, I liq; rid1o. ti«lt!< ...... ""' ' ~t.r. -n.n wu no tvidtnce rL IGttiblt -'-, polke..... _, ,._ ' ~ DIAMONDS ARE FOR WEARING From deep within the ground, your diamond came. Until It was 'l cut. polished and set by craftsmen ;~ who spend th eir Jives making a rou gh he\\'Tl stone into a thing of I beauty, that Is where It belonged. Too many of these beautiful +~tones. mounted In expensive set- t• tings, now lie in vault1 and safe deposit l>o~es where they give ' pride and joy to nci ol')e. , Wh y dn people, In effect. "return i their diamonds to the ground?'• ' Fea r of theft, loss..ar wear are the dominan t reasons. None of these have any real basis ·1n fact. A valuable stone should certain- ly be Insured against theft and loss. but your best Insurance agalruit wear Is "'gular cleaning and IJt. spectlon of both stone and setting. I So wear your diamond wlllt the r pride and enjoypient you eipected . when you bought fl Tben bJint In to us for "'gular IJ!~ and. . cleaning, for which thert";.U no c.1iara.r I \ • ' "'Love la more prtclout than diamond1 or gold," 1aya the proverb. But the mlle1toine W>tch provida 111 three. 0 OMEGA Diamonds and 10ld. Selected for Om ega b7 am txpertl wUh the catw of a court)rtvaler. And low. '1111 mlle1toM waich win bdll.l lo mind bnulllal thoupll &bout tlli l!nr lor thuat of lier lifa. ' 1823 NEWPORT BL'VO., c9sr~ MESA • I • COIMNtEHT TUMS IANICAMERICAAD-MAST!R CHAttGt 24 YlAU IN SAltt LOCA~ l'HONt 14t.)4tt .. .. ' -• • ' ' • • . . • . • J I I I , • ---• ---• • • " ------4 ·------------~· --~----- 9 , ' Saddlehaek . . Today's Flnill N.Y. Stocks ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1972 , TEN CENTS udget, Cit y Chief May Face lryine· Council Renewed discussion by the Irvine City Couocil or an interim budget, the hiring ef a permanent city n;ianilger and plan- ning director are likely topics to be added to tonight's already lengthy agenda. The council meets at 7:30 p.m. in the 111ulti-purpo&e .room of University Park Elemenlaey. School, 4572 Sandburg Way~ • Administrative consullaot W i 11 j a m Woollett fr. said ... todfty he hopes to gain fu.t.:1er information from the aiuncll on cily programs and the expenses th.ey would be required before fixing: a city spending chart. The council delayed action until tonight's meeting or\ the setting up of a city finance organization that would pr~ vide both accounting · and auditing systems and budget preparation assist.- a.nee. At Friday's cowicil seSsion, frequent references were made to a preliminary budget document to be prepared by Woollett for tonight's meeting. However, when the finance organization 1genda iter l was held over', and''\-ter di5Clls8kln of citizens advl~ry commissions and the staff lhey would require were d.lscua:sed, II appeand the budgeting· process would be delayed. , .. , . One 'other item, not-lli!\ed on the agen- da, may be-discussed' to.night. That i! the revised plan for an .. expanded temporary city hall !!)Cation wlUdn q,e Town Center BuikUng, 4201 Campus Ddve,' where the city offices are presently located. At Friday's meeting, Woollett Indicated a 3,400 squate foot area, formally used by . the UC Irvine Faculty Club, could serve the city for "two or three years." The rough sketches provided councilmen Fri- day showed four plans, all of which In- cluded a council chamber seating more than 150. Other aitea that had betn COll&ldered bY Woolltlt. prior to recommending the Town Ce11tef locaUon includ~: -A Signal Landmark building at 1710'! Sky Park Circle, wbue 3,300 squ11re rett of space at from 37 to 40 cents per foot ls available. , -Pl.1cDonnell Douglas property In the Jrvlne lndu11trlal Complex where from S,000 to 4,000 1quare feet could be available' to the city. -Airport Plaza, 2021 Business Center Drive, where 21,000 square feet are av•ll1ble at &5 centJ per foot. -Alrp()rt Business Center South, 1M51 MacArthur Boulev1rd, where $0,000 squnre ffft al from 55 to 12.5 cents a too• are avatlob~. \Yoollett urged select.Ion of the Town Center location bocau1e It 11 near the t.'f:nter of the city and close to both tho lr vlne post office nnd the unlver1lty . Eleven exoeptlona to lhe clty'11 90-day bulldlni.: and grading pertnil {reeie will be llOught tonight One, by F'rank: Ayre• And Son Construclkln Company, ht ror llP" proval ot 11 nlOdel home complex on thit (See ltENEWED, r11• I) Unit Eyes CCI Pullout . Sierra Bonita Grou p Sets Press Meet ' Withdrawal from the Council or Com- munities. of Irvine (CCI) by the Sierra Bonita Homeownm Association wW be announced prior to tonight's Irvine City Council meeting. ~8an!ord L. Freud of 19422 Sierra Chula Road, Slerra Bonita said today reason! for pulling out of the CCI group would be Valencia, Irvine Schools Studied As Year-round e.xplalned at a 7: 15 p.m. press conftrence at University Park Elementary School where lhe City Council meeta at 7: 30 p.m. Fn!ud told the DAILY PII.OT today. that the withdrawal resulted from a vo,.te of Sierra Bonita association ' dlrector1 on M~nday night. The board authorized a letter to CCI of· ficials citing a 31ktay study moratorium on CCI me,mber1hlp by the 260 member Sierra Bonlta aroup. "The study com- mittee unanimously r e c o m m e n d e d withdrawal. "Primary reasom l.Jcluded y o u r organizational structure and your method of repreaentaUon," the letter read. "Our community association la a cor- poration. The board of directors was established to conduct our lnlernal af- the Turtle Rock area. • Freud further chargtd today that CCI ~presents only one community aPOCla• t~on of severol south of the San Dleigt Freeway In the new city. Thnt IA lh'I" VlllaQe Park Community A1t0elatlon, one of three eatabll1hed in the Unlvel'.llty Park area of the city, Group Urges Gr eenbelt Protection Valencla School In Laguna Hllli and falra, not to serve as our external voice Peace and <iulet and orderly preacrv1- I lne School in E t I 1 be th on 'Political' IHI.Jes. !Ion of (he beauty of a University Park rv as rv ne may e "Your group (CCI). desplle the lo-ll t JI hool In the Sa J · ·greenbelt frte of auto track•, drug uaer11~ rs a -ye~r IC . s . n oaqwn nuence or your lltle, Is not truly litter and oolsy tetnacers are belnl& Elementar.y ~l Wtru::t. representative of the communltle1 of this KOUght by 2.2 troubled relidenla o( the city l!oard · al)proval wlll be souil)l'tonlght city. of Jrvino. - _at 7i!o o·~~k I!> the cl tr! 00~ _.,;;...~.i';"~'.E\~~d111 •~<!....."wlll 11le area In queotlon li'f greenbelf'nof ;! . . ·mti-•. '$ii ·~IMf be"ifllcliT !~-f4r-fronrlhe-Alplla Bela lllOrllol -ln- tbiuod stud!" w Jbla !a of . cl"•'•e.I' • ' · ' ' Unlver1Jty Park. The Jlf,Onbell abula • • ' ~ I ,_ ............... lllNm Reliving the P•t ' University Park Elementary School \fourth rraders celebrated 49'ers ,nay; today, mar · g Caill9rnla bistoey .In western dr~ Carrle·Fre an, 9,' sba'fes ho~made 'from scratch' bread she bala!d u part of e baking contest with Bobby Kerr,.11 and Paul Fr k. • .Hun tington Man Ind iCted by ~.s. On Loan Sch f me By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1111 Ptltr Pl"' Si.ff I Climaxing a long, nationwide r r a u d probe, U.S. authorities indicted a Hunt- ington Beach man and IS otbett Monday for an alleged conspiracy to 'bo.Q'Ow mil- lions backed by church-financed capital. 'bie so-<alled Church of Christ Manors Jne., was a phony corporation i existing only on worthless paper, iDVestigators charge. No connection exi!:ts '"W1tli'-t h e Jlgitlmate Church of Christ. but many defendants are accused of linka wilb America's organized crime syndic!ate. Louis J. Verive, -48, of 216'1 S. Br0okhunt St., is among them. accilfding to federal gangland intelligence BOUtceS. Verive and the others were named in a 41-count federal grand jury .indictment issued in Chicago for arrests from ~ast to coast. . Verive was stopped without Incident as he drove along Newport Boulev,ard and Cllten Into custody Ill' Newport Beach Oectective John Simon. lit JU waJ bqried.i over to U.S. Postal Inspector R. L. "Bookie" Almond, booked into Orange County Jail without ball l,.t delivered this momid( for arrall(lllnt!lll be.fore a U.S. COmmi.ssioner •in ~ Aoielu. · · Mc Govern Asks Legalized Pot By Ulliled Prtft Int.national Sen. George S. McGovern o! South DU.ta qgated today Jog1lhing l!WijU1111, .with the "'""' -impooed 00 lf<Ohol. • .Spea'<ing at a dnlg ....,..ung cmttr In Bo!1on. the Democ"alic pruldential condidale said: '"Coollnulng inveAlptions on the ovoraJI ellecta o! l!Wijuana leave -the mated but l<parlle qoatkm wbttber IOCietJ .... « lhoald 1Uempt to aimplelely pn>- bibk 111- "'Tho moot ftlomt bislcrlal ,_.ient -pn>bibitloo o! al<obol -piadoood -........... .abject ldurl." ' I •· orth V:ietnam Ponnded 1 I I In U.S. Warplane At,tack ' l'rOm Wire Setvtces SAIGON -American warp I an es lounched substantial air strikes inside North VI et n 1 m todaf, U.S. military sources said. Radio Hanoi clalmedttwo U.S. planes were shot down and a J:aumber of pilots were killed (I' captured .. A U.S. Command spokesman,. tolcf of UJe:1 broadcast. said: "I have nothing to report." The command in tbe1past·has withheld reporting on downed PJaoo until searCh and rescue missions Y#ere completed . The North Vietp.me.se broadcast asserted that a nurri>er of U.S. jets at- tacked populous areas In Quang Binh and Vlnh Unb. North Vietnam's two 50llthernmoil provinces. The U.S. Informant& saict the strikes were in North Vietnam'• half of the demllUatized ione that ·separates the warring llieinlms but declined to dilclose the tiu:gell. '!'bey aad<d lhere alao may have been 10tt.e r&lds JkX1h of the zone, but Withheld cteaans pending a n an- DOllDC<JllOllt lfom the1J.S. Command. .. "There were protective reaction 1trikes and other strikes involved," aaid one in- formant, "but I can't glve you the number." He said the raids were beyond the uFual one or tWo "prq'tective reaction" strikes frequently reported from time to time when enemy guns or radar lock on to U.S. planes. • Allied intelligence lndica1a 70 percent more North V'ietnaiTiesel troop. wiU move into SOulh Vietnam or into border area.a during the first five montbl than in the sain< period last yµr; U'8. military sources said. U.S. mlUtpry '9Uf.ct•Jn.Salgon ,1ald the big U.S, air campaign Iha! began In South Vietnam a wett Igo woUkt "oontibtle in- definitely'' becaUle' at ld1t 1our -fresh North Vlebiamese·dlvlsloot, be<lod up by heavy artillery, """',"!""Ing inlp the country. . Nearly t,ill> llrlkea ha ... boa> llo1'11 In- side Soulh Vietnam In the pat wetk. most of them-coming UV fin days brlore 1 Ol>Hlay cea~rae few. the Tet lunar new yur ~t be(,an t 1,p.m. Mondly. · R~alty Fi .. m S~ed Cleme nt,e Cou ple Seek $10,000 . An El ll"oro real emte firm baa been lllJed for,..,... than $10.000 in damagq,by a San <lemente couple who cJaim they wer IH!n to the cieanen when they took over .the leue ta '"The Wash""""'·" Howard Pela" Radrter llld bit wile Joan llari<, name Prank R. Osbome, H. B. Milb. Jean 8. Krouse and rul estate .............. Marilyn Sterling " Olborne andl4>rts. mu El Tero Rood, aa d<f .... = ~ O..anp County liupttlnr 1ho Hadnen clalm , Mn. .Knuoe mllrepraalltd ,.._ llld profita " "1'11e Wutl Home", 7U N. El l:umno Rul, -tbeJ took . -Ille -operated llunclry Aua. I. .. • ,. ' " an-arf,,...,.·scbooJ pn>ll"lm Ip July. ..,;ud, an -I ~ ~uili:n strtell Fiii .,.;,1ng traffic ~ tilt Pat ·McDaniel, a l l· y, e.a r. a c h o o l write-in -candki.it, served u he Sierra rtreela, parUcul'lrly <¥hen vehlclet coructe coo~1na:; olsal~ If ~~. boat1 ~pprov~ :~~t/:f;::l~~~~f :. :;a tu~ or end 'up o~ the 1reenbelt, 1l10 c<>ncernJ con nuf . • s ..,, • na paren lello blch bo In the 22 who seek Clly Coul!Cll COll!ldera· vote on whether those two ICho!>ls. 1JJU be uaoc n " repraenta met tlon ol "the needl of yoOth of thl1 arta " lnvofvod \rllJ take place March '-· · "Our recommendation of the two nioa.. nee<1a, Ille leller reque.otlng schools ls baaed On· the parent-interut J • Bo d councU action 1ald, Include provl1Jon of poll " 11tcl°M•Danl I · . Oaqwn ftl . '"1 r.lace approJlllale to devei<>pln& their lieiu11a or' the 'parent poll alid tbe 1kll • wllb autoo\oblles and for ooclallzlng teacher questionnaire from both ·sc11oo1a Facm' g Di· verse with each other rr.. ''°'" adult wlll be jlven to Ille board at tonJibl'a supervision." meeting. The retldenla note If conditions on the McDa~l said anolhtr achoo! which. A d T , h three rt:reeta and the jl!cenbelt are allow. may potlibly be interested In the pro-gen n . omg t ed to per1Jot "they could ·~bstllntlally un- grltm Is the new Loi Alll08 Intermediate dermlnt the quallt~ or the envlr.onrnent In El Toro. Planning la under w11 and A. dlver1< a1end1 lncludlq oniollment ~</1!1naof.,frvlne 31 boon dedicated to pam'.!!'t_polla wW be taken Jn about thr,. proJectlona for nut year wlll be waded In their " i.tter to tilt City Council, lhe ~•uu. . , through by tru...., o! the San Joaquin Id 11 lie be Ill ho ho kl Alao to be presented to the .board wlll Elementary School District board of res en c avy tra c. rn· n ,,ng, be a rummary of the work done to date truiteea: tonight. cunning of motors, loud mu11h; 111 un· · ' nectaeary n0Jae" and exce11lve 1peed of a district-wide compllt;tlm, of pare'!I; pollt 'lbe mfftlna wUJ take plb at 7:30 dr:lvlng·on the ••imall itrettl where there that have been turned m and a cost o'clock In the dlatrlct aMU, 14t00 Sand ,, analysia of the all-year school program Canyon Ave., Eatt Irvine. art many. 1m1ll children. Ith "-al ndat'---1hoy oijject to "beer cans and botllet, w = . rocoml,1!0 -· . . The district. which baa grown f11ttr wine botll.,, pop bottlcs, cigarette butte The board might male .a final dec1s10n than Its facllltles, hat been called the and boxes, remains of plr.za and even on the pilot program at its March 15 rastca:t rowing dl1trlct In the ~tate. discarded automobile tire• .. , 1trewn on meeting. fa1te.lt ll'Owlng district In tht 1tate. 1r111y area1 bordering the street , . , " Enrolfment proJectlooo will bfolp cf&. "In 1bort. the gretnbelt are• and the U.S. May Unload Ho ward Hu ghes' 'Spruce Goose' LONG BEACH (AP) ~ Howard Hughes' ••Spruce Goote" -one of the world's largest a1rp1a ... and one which turned out to be a lame duck -may be headed for the chopping bloclt. · Twent~-yur1 ago, the federal govemn1'nl gave H\IChel, the bllllonalrt lndurtrialllt, .. conlrllCt to bu1ld a Jlant experimental t>l,-.ood ,..plane. for $IO million, n got tllo "Spruce Goole." lt fttw oaly one Ume, for one inlle and rui:bed an altitude o! 70 feet • Now. n 1t reported Ille sav•'!""'ftl may try to. eel ...,. ol tu llllleatmebt bac~ bJ 1<111Dc the plane. The Lons Beaclt lndependent.Preu Telegram on Tueoday quoted a tpok<lmaD for ll)e a-aJ Serylces Admlnlllratloa Ill wulllnctoo .. u)'lnc tho pemment mfCJlt ~ H~ton, eigJlt-propeller crall U!rougli eompet!Uva blddln( when the lease aplru June :io. A lluf)>es IPOkaman uld. "We have no commeot bee,... .,. contacted tho head ol the GSA, who denied ever mllloi IUCb I llltemal." Ruahtl, wbo 111porvbod conrtnoct1on and wu al the eootroll In 1M'I wllen tllo Spruce <!Me llllde tu fllghl, -ff for 11111 I -He pilJS tho Loai Beacb H.vllar lltpartmcnt fa,000 a year for a 8lduded banpr bldinc tile plane, which huaJIO.footwlngspaa. Thera • .,.. no rtpo<ll ol prvepedlve bu7trs. altllouP ... Dec. ' • -"""" Wlod • &pea'"Mld la a leleJ>lww -_ ....... 1Pth btJlllllmeti :• ..,,...,, I lot !llfl llCfD OOQfd be ltarn- (llte l'WiE,~I) -• teimlne the number of portobleo needed r01ldcnt11l area are being 1ubJeded to next year, attendance areu, and ltaffln& treatment directly contrary to their In· requirementl. ~ 4 tended purpote as a healthy quiet, A study of graduation rand promotion natural envlrorvnent, free from urban criteria haJ been goln& on for • year. poUulantl of traffic, notae and litter," the Mott of lhe work la almejl at con-olfllled letter st.ttu. fonnance with the Stull Bill, a 11'te-man-Raldtnf.I allO note 1 _recent drug ar· dated program Which demands that rel!! In the area' and 1ug~at "the rel1tlv1 perfonnance objecttves be specified ind da(kne.o• of Mondo Street at nla~t. met. J>CM!llbly .contrlbutu to It.I deslrtbU!ty u The task, force on ...,.truct.ton and 1 meellni place for clandeetlne and I~ faclllllu plannlnl la • crouP ol pn>-lepl •ctl•ltlct upedally undulrabla In 1 fe11Jonal men in the Oe1ds of law, educa-family 1rea." tlon, aoclology, arcblteclure, and "°"" .-------------otructlon planning. Tiit croili> hlf been exploring leJl]slatlve cba"I" aqd ln- novaUve prorranu wblcb mlallt help solve the diJtrlct's COllllnlctloo atslo. AllO on the aa:encta Is a nport on board meeting procedurt1, lntrocluctl°" o! • propo11I to appoint Wltnlll and ellhtb grade department c h a I rm • tt, cor.. alcloratloo ol • lonc-rlQle JDH!« plln, 1nd the eltctlon ol • boml •lee pr..t- dent. Engirwers Plan Lockhe ed Strike o. •••• Weai.lier '*"'' summer-like Jttllbtr 11 on the¥lgendl for-~y, wltb hlghi In the ml<f.70'• ~lollc Ult Oran11 Cout. followinf eorly momlric Joe whlcb will &uni olf. Lows !4olght In tllo •·~ INSIDE TODAY Th• heavktt ,..,k of tht ,,.. ion In living thta"" u <°""1111 up In Otongt CounfV IDl•h •lf1~t ..,., ,,.oc1~11o.. ooft111 .,. "" boordr and /IV< othtrw <Oft ti.. .. fng, Ste 1hfallr Nol#.1, POf1' at•. ~ ..... : =,,..-= =-c-w J ==t~;:~~:; ~ ...... ,.,. . c..... .. ,,,. ,..,.,. ,, <,......,. .. ....... ,, .. a.. ...... tt .......... . ....... ,. ..... '··~--·~ ... ,........ . ,.......,. .,..,. TallW\ .. " ...... ._.. ,, ....... . ..., • "' ..,..... tr .... w...n • ._.. ..... .. .... ' ...,.. ........ . ,.... ,. """"'* ... , I .. • • • ~ b.lll Y "LOT SS Court to Eye Protest Battin Foe Wins Supremetourt-Hearin-g - ·-·~ == -or;;; -~ --... ~ -----~ -By JACK -BROBACK taJn Valley, wu elfecUvety romovlld'""" Anaheim. He pll!ll lo run 1galnot Jn. or ... D•ltt 'n•t •te" conlenUon when hit reaJdenct was shifted cumbtnt Third Dlltrlct Su p e r v I a o r One challenger aceking lo unseat Firlit Diltrlct Supervisor Robert W. Battin of santa Ana won a state supreme Court hearing Tuesday on his 1errymanderlng protest and another was refused nomina- tion papers because he too has changed his place of residence a1nce suptfvl.sorlal di.strict boundarlu were reviled lut Oct. 29. Santa Ana attorney William Wenke said the state's top court has agreed to take juriadiction on the question of ls eligibili- ty to oppose incumbent Battin In the June I primary. Wenke wu rtfmed nomination papers Monda7 by David Hltcbcock, county registrar or votera upon advice of County Couniel Adrian Kuyper. Ku)'J>Of cltlld I 1931 cour\ ndlng In I almllar cue but ll1d ha waa aympathetlc to Wenke'a cause and that of John w. ••BUI" Hill, Santa Ana bualnee:smant- Both movlld from their tong ltai>dlng places of residence in Dettmber ~fter Kuyper and Attorney General Evelle Younger ru1ed that such moves were legal to beoome dlglble to run for the 11upervlsor11 post. Both men had been 1el'r)'ll1al1dered out of )he Jl'trst Dlltrlct and Into the .Fourth laal October tn moves atlrlbuted to Battin and hls 1tall. A lhlrd potenttal candldate m oppose the one term mpervlsor who lives in Garden Grovt, Ed Just, mayor of Foun- Dorothy 0 Leads Hand icap Fleet To Acapulco trom th6 tirat District to the Fl!th. Wllliam J. Phillips of Fullerton. Hill, when he got the same treatment Conrad wu a victim of the s a m e from Hitchcock Tuesday that Wenke .had red1strlcting moves and had changed his ncetved Monday, called the refusal to place of residence in January to be ellgl· issue nomination p a p e r a "un-ble to oppose ,Phillips. constltutlonal." If Wenke and Hill are not 8UCC6.Sful In He threatened legal action and said he their legal battles, WaUy Davls, a Foun- would go to the Supreme Court also if tain Valley resident and Santa Ana at· necessary. torney and Paul Balch of Tustin, a A third supervisorlal candidate was tormer assistant to Rep. John Schmitz: refused papers Monday. He ls Joseph A. (R·Tustin) will be the only remafnin8 can. Conrad who operates a service station in dldates to oppose Battin. Dad Kills Self On Son's Grave CHATSWORTH (AP) -Frlendl said -:Iarence Dehnke had been despondent alnce his 20-year~ld 'son, Dale, was killed in action 1n Vietnam last May. He visited his son's grave olten, !OJ.Dellmes drjvlng lo Oakwood Memorial Park ln thla Los Angeles suburb as the sun was rising. Tbe cemetery DWDer f o u n d Dehnke's body about 8 a.m. Tues- day by Dale's grave. Police said he had shot himself in the head with a .38-caliber pistol, l~aving no note!. From Pa9e ·1 PLANE ... Bertea Named · To·County • Airport Group Richard Bertea, a.resident of Corona de! Mar and bead of the Bertea Corpora· lion Jn the Irvine Tndustrlal Complex, to. day was appointed to the Orange County Airport Commission by Fifth DI.strict Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers. Be~tea will suceftd Willard S. Volt who resigned from the commission last week after two years ·.service. Caspers said Bertea, 42, a graduate of the University of Southern California, was a pilot in the U.S. Marine Corps and was based at El Toro and Los Alamitos before being discharged with the rank of captain. He has lived in Corona del Mar since 1966 wllh hls wife, Hyla and their four children. Volt gave press of personal business as hl.s reason for resigning. ----~==~ f:OASl'fflSE B11 Pioli J11terlandl - I • -H --- I ,J./ ' I ' ~V1 ~~~~~· "Now, Don't Ytll 1t Me ••• My Gar1si1 5111 Got Out of Hind." Britain Ne ar Shutdown As Power, Jobs Periled By JOSEPH W. GRIGG · LONDON (UPI) -Britain neared a total Industrial shutdown today. Twenty million j o b e were threatened w l t h further power cuts in store for British homes and industry. The blockade of power ataUons by strlk· ing coal miners bit even harder and elec;-- tri~ty authorities ordered power cuta for -. • . Fron1Page1 RENEWED ••• west side of Myford Rond . south of the Santa Ana Freeway. Thul com plex .would " be used JD sell born., in the C1ty_!Jf _ Tuotln, the exception 1ppllcotlo• atalel. · Leadenhlp Hou1lng Systema Inc. 11!0 -will ·seek-council-approval ol a l8.acre tract involving 171 1lngle f11 mily homes on 6,500 square root Jots. They ~'ould be IOC"ated on the north corner of Bryan Avenue and Camp Street In central Irvine. In a letter to the council, Daren A. Groth of the Leadership firm, Indicates his company and Ponder0!5a Homes - another central Irvine developer -have jolntly prepared a master plan f~r the properties the two companies own m the "wlndow area." The w:lndow area prop. erties are portions of the city lhat are not owned by the Irvine Company and thus have not been included in that firm 's comprehensive general plan. Of the total 900 acres in the window area, Leaderihlp owns 2.10 acres and Ponde.rosa owns 250 acres. . The council has indicated the city plan- ning commission will weigh proposed rez.onings from agricultural to residential use prior to the lapse of the building freeze in 40 days. A joint meeting of the city council and the planning commission wW be held at 9:30 a.m. Saturday In the clty offices. Revenue Sharing Meet Conducted At Nixon Home Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke and members of the state's Council on Intergovernmental Relations met at the Wutem White Howe office complex today to study the late.st wrinkles in revenue aharing, but few conclusions were promised. The council parcels out federal grant funds lo local enUttes -Including fundl sought by San Clemente for a mllllon- dollar sewer collector main. By ALMON LOCKABEY CMllY 'Utt lflflllf ••rter ACA,PULCO -Bob BHuchamp'. ed from the airplane, and I feel that before anything is done wlth it that might be in the nature of destructive or damag- ing, we should utilize It to get the fulle!f: obtainable data ... which ls a great deal more than most people realize. H.a1·hor Families to Te st Reinecke was set to serve u chainnan of the lalks whJch were expected to end today at 5 p.m. About 30 delegates were expected to attend the talks, Jncludlng representatives from the League of Cal!. fornla Cities, t)le County Supervisors' >... soclatlon and the U.S. Department "- Transportation. A White House delegate also was scheduled to attend. Columbia &7 Dorothy O was the fourth boat lo finish at 2:20 thll morning (PST) and IJ'abbed the handicap lead 1n the San Diego to Acapulco Yacht Race. Dorothy O uved her Ume over the previous three finishers -Windward Passage, Blackfln and Slrlut II -to take the overall and Cius A handicap lead. However, there were Class B and C yacht.I c1... enoug)I lo the llnlsb thll morning to erase Dorothy O'a overall lead. Two years ago, Dorothy 0 waa firat to llnlsb thll nee. Peter Grant'• 43-foot sloop Nalu IV from the Newport Harbor Yacht Club elled out of the mtat hen today and wu .-thttllth-boat to ·ftnlsb ai-1:20 thll morn- ing. Slifliliid 'Iii savener Jiinalcaflffii! -onDOIOllW1111JilliOiil-~ Niilu IV finisbed on 111 agonizingly SliOif beat ihrciugb · the Boca Cblc1 entrance lo Acapulco Harbor. Based on Tuesday'• pos!Uons, the yacht with the best chance ol dropping Dorothy o from th• lop spot appearlld lo be Tom Tobin's Erickson 39 sloop Nemesis trom the host San Diego Yacht Clu b. She was 175 miles from the llnl!h Tu.,doy and gels one day and three hours time allowanCe from Dorothy 0. Oilier yachls llill ln the running for handicap bonon ore Alegre, Tzchak II, Atorrante a~ Vlxen. Lleht wln<b were reported north of Acapulco today. S~IUJ II, skipper.cl by Bob L)'llCb ol the Newport liarbor Yacht Club, flni5hed Tuesday about an hour behind Blackfin. Upper Bay Tour Set An environmental tour of the Upper Newport Bay area will begin between t and 10 a.m. Saturday, Guldea wlU lead small groups on the one-half mile walk and inform hlkUa about all fonna of life in the area. Groups will galher at the lnteraecUon of Eastblul( and Back Bay Drlvu. For more infonnaUon, call UHI61. Ou.NII l:OAST DAILY PILOT ....... -. .., __ , ......... ............... -y-S.CI 1rt• OIVJIOf: rouT '1.llLISHIMe COMtAHY lo\•rt N. W•.4 ''lllllW IM Pllltlla!*° J•tk I , Cvrl.., Vk.41 """'-'t .... 0-al .......... Tlttllltt ICetd ....... 1lit111•• A. M11rpt.1 .. Mt111ot1flt l!dillll" C1111le1 H. l•.. ll:IP 1r4 P. Nill AIMlllN Mllllt"'9 l.rllft ~ °'* .... : ,. ..... , • .., • .,.. ..... ...._,, IM<ll~ ».n N"""1 lou!ewr-. ~l..ctt1 ml".....rAMvttl•"flar l..01 11171 IMdl ........., -~-Mttll·C......~ {;. "There are problems which are related to aircraft size, and which vary with size, which can be explored with this flying boat." In reQflnt yeara, the Harbor Depart· ment threatened to evlct the "Spruce Baja Retreat Ou ster Edict Goose" and return the hangar to more active uses. On Monday, the Harbor Commission received a request from the Hughes Toot Co. for a one-year extension of its current lease, which expires Sept. 4. l Elctl41 Wi th EIUn .. • Officlal& "at Uon Co1111try Safari In Laguna Hills agree this baby eland hn plenl1 of vigor despite being somewhat wobbly .ot leg. Ha wu born lr0Dd1y afternoon 11 the commettlal gome preserve and l! now busy learning •the ropes from mom. I • \ \1 J • GEM TALK TODAY by DIAMON DS ARE FOR WEARING From deep within the ground, your diamond came. Until it was cut, polished and set by craftsmen who spend their llves making a rough hewn <lone Into a thing of beauty, that Is where It belonged. Too many of these beautiful stones, mounted in expensive set· tings, no'v lie In vaults and safe depo sit boxes \vhere they give pride and joy to no one. • Why do people. In effect, "return their diamonds to the grollnd?" Fear of theft, loss or wear are the dominant reason~. None of these have any real basis in fact . A valuable stone should certain· ly be Insured against !belt ancflbss, but your best Insurance against wear Is regular cleaning and In- spection of both stone and setting. So wear your diamond with the pride and enjoymenl you expected when you bought It. Then bring It ln .to '!Is for regular lnspecUolt and cleaning, lor which tbere ls no chlll'ge. 1jLov1ft10or1 prec'tous tllau dlamonda or aold," 11)'1 th• provub, But the mll1stdn1 watch provldea all three. 'The council already has approved the principle of federal revenue sharing I.I proposed by Pruident Nixon. Spokesmen for · the talks aaid today's talka v.·ould focus on various bill.I In Consress on tht concept. 0 OMEGA Diamonds and sold. Selected far Oineaa by aem experts with the care or a court jeweler. And Jove. The miltttone watch wfD brl111 to mind beautiful though ta 1bout tho giver for tlio r01t of her llfe. A-32 dlflliloftdt. 1llC whltll • )'911fllf Mtid IOfd t>flctl11 WllCll •• h$00 11-21 lllllll'IOl\ft, tllC wlllll Ol')ltltw IOlld tol4 "1iW.M Wltoll,.t1MO 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TERMS IANKAMERICARb-l>IASTU CH/IR8! 14 YEARS IN SAMI LOCATION PHONE 141°l40l I I I I I I I! 11 I I \ ·f I I I l . I I I ' I I I ,! 11 \ I~ ' • I ---'L---~--- s DAD,Y PROT EDITORIAL P .i\GE -Clinic Needs a Home- Arter a bumpy start, the Laguna Beacii Free Clinic has been rolling along In hlgb i•lf f.or the past year, providing medical care for more tban 6,00<f patients. most of whom would not be able to afford the services they need. In t.he month of January alone, 672 patients were treated, and they continue to come in at the rate of 50 or 60 a night, double the num~r served a year ago. Most are in their late teens and early 20s, but there's a quota of oldsters too. and pediatric care fs, up SOO percent. An affernoon children's clinic takes care of check·ups. inoculations and other routine matters, and many sick youngsters are treated in the evening sessions. The volunteer medicaJ staff now includes 27 doctors and 40 nurses, along with pharmacists and Jab techni- cians. Only the two secretaries are paid. Many Lagunaos looked askance at the Free Clinic in its early days, afraid it would lure brigades of un· healthy transients to the Art Colony. As ·it has turned ~ut, more t~an half the patien.ts are from the Lagu11a area and 90 percent of those treated are Orange .County residents. • But now that the clinic has won official recognition and even the promise of some finaJ}.cial aid from the county, a new and s~r_l~s rQad!>l9Ck 1f!as .appearfill. The lease on its Glenneyre Street building expires March 31 and there seems to be no hope for ·extension. A frantic search for new quarters has_so far been un· successful. The clinic could use about 14 rooms for its examining rooms, pharmacy and lab, at least half with plumbing and one large enough to make a spacious waiting room. It. must locate in the R-3 or C·l zones to comply with cit:v .codes. . • Says one clinic official. "If we do have to close, the city will know what we've been doing -t>ut that would be a sad way to find out , .. " If the clinic does have to break up, it would be a ' dillicult job to put II back together aeain. For the sike of those who have gJven so geaerously of their time and skills, and those who need their services so badly, it is lo be hoped someone will find a roof and four walls to house this worthy project. First Effort a Success. The new South Coast United Fund's inaugural cam· paign throughout the Capistrano Bay area is officially over this week and the results are good . \Vith more than $18,000 in hand and more possibly on the v.'ay from the San Diego area, directors of the fall drive agreed that for a first effort. the campaign was a success. Campaign Chairman Bob Gannon has pointed out that a project so widesoread always has a tough period when it begins, but as the United Fund concept becomes better understood in the area, each new campaign "'ill work more smoOthly. The local fund, which serves several serviceman· related agencies. now is negotiating'-for a share of th·e donations yielded by the North San Diego Countv area. Before the local fund \Vas formed. all the Camp Pen~le· ton donations went to San Diego area charitable agencies. The interim period before next fall's second cam- paign sWI will be busy even though no organized solici· tations will take place. "\Ve 're going to spend time streamlinin2 the or· ganization and selling the concept of the United Fund as an institution," Gannon pledged. It's a concept well worth full support. s President Will Beat• Bard Tall~ ita-Peking . . . Folly of Others Key To Success Nix,on Not Expecting Much WASHINGTON -On~ does not know for sure what caused President Nixon to be so impressed with the se.ctions on China in Andre Malraux's ' 'An\ i · Memoirs." An educated guess lll that the French intellectual's prose conveys to Nixon better than any other what he will be up against in China. This perception u n d o u b t e d I y en- couraged him to say that there was no cause for optimism -or pessimism, either -as he ex· plores the ground with Chou En-lat- ~nd....Mao -TA4u.ng. The suspicion can be indulged l h a t Nixon subconscious- ly used the word, optimism. first be-• cause there is not much in Malraux to encourage ii. The gulf between tradi· tional Ameriif.p thought and the Mal. raux version of his interviews with Chou En-lai and Mao Tse-tung and his inter· pretation of the same is very wlde . CHOU EN-LAI, for example, was not conte nt when he talked with Malraux four >·ears ago , with the Americans merely rcturninn from Vietnam and all Asia. '11tev had to get out of everywhere, Santo Doniingo, the Congo, Laos, Thailand, Pakistan -anywhere they were or had been. "Let them go home, and the world u·ill have peace again ," said Chou En-lai. Until that happens. China will not negotiate with the United States about Vietnam or anything else. Mao 's contempt for the Russians emerged in his remarks to Malraux. He thought the Russians were following the road to capitalism, no less . Beyo~d that ,. '" Richard Wilson ~,,, . . were the enveloping mysticisms of Mao based upon· the legends and, undoubtedly, the mythology of the partisan struggle in the North which brought Mao to power and sanctity in a Spartan world. NIXON ST ARTS from scratch and against deeply ingrained prejudices in his dialogue with the Chinese leaders and ~~a...r:eas:on for optimism than when. the dialogue began with the Russians in -lh~dffiiiilsTratlon: Mao thought Russian C h a i r m a o Khrushchev a fool for trying to com. promise with American capitalism, and a betrayer for abandoning China in the Jong ago confrontation over Quemoy and Matsu. With his sense of the continuity of history, fi{ao is not considered likely to have undergone a change of heart by the time he discourses with Nixon. The past will strongly inlluenct the present. PR~IDENT NIXON thinks that once he seta foot on the soil of mainland China a new-chapter will begin, to be marked by negotiation rather than confrontation. There is not much in Malraux to support that, but, rather. the conclusion that the Chinese in their long view of history will regard the Nixon visit as a footnote in the progression of China to new levels of grutnesa ouUihining the glorious past. It is not strhply for their archeological value that the.Great Wall, the Ming tombs, and the Forbidd!n City have been preserved as symbols of past glories that will come again. Having grasped this point of view.,. Nix. on is probably better prepared to go Into his discussions with the old men. with their long memories, who run China . He is not expecting much. The fact of the visit itself may be more important than any concrete resuJts which will grow from it. lN A CONVERSATION not long ago, the President emphasized his long range view of this visit. lie was thin.king in terms of the next generation when China becomes a nuclear superpower and, in view of thal. the folly of letting any op- por.tunity pass to begin the dialogue ~1\1.arort a..calioll<smiuo•Dict involving Uiree great superpowers in the not 50...distaot future. Face-to-face meetings or o t h e r "cosmetics'' of international palaver do not impress a President who knows that. more than any other in recent years, he arouses the Chinese leaders' suspicions. DR. HENRY A. KISSINGER has said that necessity has brought the Chinese and Americans together. The necessity in China 's case. it may be assumed, being the threat of a Russian showdown. Jn somewhat this same context Malraux is quoted as saying that Mao's first serious question will be if the Americans are prepared to give aid to China. If not, ac- cording to Malraux, there will not be a great deal more to talk about. If Malraux is right. this is a sample of the kind of hard talk Nixon will hear in Peking, and he is not yet ready to disclose what kind of an answer he would give. In fact. he probably ~annol give a categorical answer. Nor are there many other categorical answers on the major issues between the United States and China. Travel· ·was Once Bann·ed President Nixon'• •planned visits to China and the Soviet Union have made some people unhappy, but no one ques-- tions his right to go. lt was not always thus. For most of U.S. history, incumbent Chief Executives were expected to stay not only on American IOi! but also as close as possible to the nation's capital. George Washington, as might be ex· pected, set the precedent. During a trip to New England, the first President is reputed to have avoided Rhode Island because it had not yet signed the Constitution and hence was foreign ter. ritory. When Rhode lsland did .sign shortly thereafter, Washington made a special trip to the new state. . ' Later Presidents scrupulously obServed the foreign·l'ravel ban. William McKinley, for example, would not set foot on the in- ternational bridge when he met with the President of Mexico at El Paso, Tei-as, in ORANGI cour DAILY PILOT Robert N. Wred, P~lililn' Thom41 Ktellil, Editor Albert W. Bo:tti Edl<oriol Pag< EdJtor ~ editorial psp or the Dlllly Pllot !IM-kl to inform and 1Umu· 1tle l"l!llden by ~tins tllb nc•'IPlPtt'I opinion& and com· menlN'Y on tople1 of tntel"ftl and Mi;rilUeancc, by prov!dln; a forum for thr expreulon of ' our tttiden• optnlona, and by ptttenting th~ d1vtrst vlewpointt or fnrormed 00. ·~~ and 'pokesmm on loplcl • cf the day. Wednesday, Feb. IG, 1972 .. I Editorial Re~arch .. 1901. Benjamin Harrison had displayed more daring 10 years earlier when he ventured as far as the middle line of the bridge. THEODORE ROOSEVELT broke with tradition in 1906 by travelin' to Panama. Although the trip was criticized by some of TR's political opponents,, it was not seriously questioned or ( o r m a 11 y chaJlenged on legal grounds. Woodrow Wlhon,-in contrast, encountered massive opposition when be announced· in 1918 that he would attend the Paris Peace Conference. "So fierct was t b e criticism," Josephus Daniels wrote. "that an oot.slder would have supposed Uu1t Wilson was breaking all Ten Com· mandmenta at once." WillOll'I trip iD Europe, it WU pointed out., would be quJte unlike Roosevelt's jowney to PIDll1l1. For the first time, the Presidtot would leave the We.stem llemlsphero, go well beyond the direct physical protection of the United States, remain absent• from the country for an eilended period of ttme, end engage in high-level diplomatic discuulooa and personal negotiation al the conference table. On the eve of Wibi>n'a departure for Europe, S.n. Lowrence Y. Shennan (R· DI.) introduced a reaoluUon ct.clarlng the office of Praid<nt iD be vacant when tbe iocUmbent left the country and transfer- ring •his powers •nd duties iD the Vico Prt1iden~ Sherman's resolution died iJI commlttoe. So did a almllar measure in· troduced ln the House. Wll..SON HAD BROKEN the ice, but his successors hesitated to plunge in after him . Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge each made only one trip abroad. and Herbert Hoover made none. No President again traveled outside the Western Hemisphere until Franklin D. Roosevelt attended the Casa b I an ca Conference in 1943. Today, of course, presidential travel to all parts of the world ls commonplace The champion globetrotter to date ls Dwight D. Eisenhower, with 16 foreign trips. Richard M. Nixon, as Eisenhower's Vice President, visited S4 countriu in eight years -also a record . President Nixon will equal Eisenhower's eight-trips. per•tenn pace when be travels to China and the Soviet Union. Who knows what 1 second term might bring? Is it not poasi-- ble that Nixon, the. sport& buff, would aim for the title of Most Peripatetic President? Dear Gloomy Gus By rearranging-1ame paint. 1 Utfrd lane through Loguna canyon might save lives by overcoming the risk of pasalng unyielding road hogs. -8. S. H "'" fl•""'-refltth teMln' .-.. .. -ttMrlt'I' "*t fl "'--..r, M11111 ,_. Mt "9¥t ... ._, ~ Delly l'U•. I Thoughts at Large For every one man who succeeds in the world because of his own talents , a dozen st:cceed simply because of the folly of others : as in a poker game. where the winners wln because the fosers are so fooJi1b, ~use-..the llriftn~ ai e so smart. . . ~ The candidate whp makes the fewest promises stands tbe Jetist chance. of being elected, although on that basis alone he would seem to be the superior man. • • • If Marx were _a.live today, he might ?>e-severely tempted to change his famous apbor- Jsm to read: "Pro. fesaional \sport, are the opium of the people.': . • • • A marriage-vow is a blank check. writ· ten in a fit of hysteria, filled in for an im· possible sum. and when subsequently presented for cashing, returned for "insufficient funds .·· • • • It is hard for someone else to injure us unless we hive first placed the weapon in his hand : rhost ill-treated people are in some mann~r accessories before the fact. • • • Revolution is always its own rationille ; if the American colonists had failed , history would call them "traitors" rather than "patriots.'' • • • The most sbamefuJ blot on the whole American governmental system remains the appointment. or slating, of judges on a political basis ; a man involved in politics should be by that very reason in· eligible for the bench. or the whole in· dependent judicial process is tainted. • • • Prostitution may be "the oldest pro- fession," bu,t only because: it was preceded by Jegili1ed rape and supported by arrogant male assumptions of in- herent superiority. • • • When there is a victory, even the cowardly share in the triumphal pro- cession; when there is a defeat, even the brave share in the shame. (Thus. even though Lee was twice the general , and 10 tlmea the man. that Grant was.) • • • our fe1eln1tion with "growth" has obscUred the miracle of "creation" for most modem people : but, as Donne said In one of hlJ sermons more than three cenluries · ago: "The distance from nothing to a liWe ls ten thouaand times more Chan from it to the highest degree in this life." • • • tn any rational &Ociety. people who tosa beer cans on public roads and parkways would be treated more gevere.ly than thOlle who like pot privately ; but In our · &)'Item. the beer-tossers nourish un-- r.!olested while the pot-takers are punish- ed far be.bond the aerklusneca o( their o(- fense.. Quotes Ralph Mcflonold, rttlrtd S.F. police Ii> 1pector noted for bomlcldt Utvtstlgalloo c1rttr -"forget the g.lamor It's JWt hm work and plenty of It." ' ' -,~ No Amnesty for Draft Evaders To the Edilor : There seems to be quite a bit of talk in regard to granting amnesty for those who could afford to flee to Canada in crder lo avoid being drafted in !he service. This of course is a gross insult to all our brave men who did serve, and lost their lives or were crippled, also those in our prisoner# of-war camps. 1\failhox I I Letters 1rom reader~ are welcom,.. ' Just recentl y the Secretary of Stale was guote'! OJl_ ry_~IDjng,~1s not the ""Dme to talk of granting amne:sty to O)lr-.,,en-w/JI! fted ·111e-eoll!ltrrroa~ btlng drafted, whl/e our men are stltr fighting this war1 or are in prisoner~f· war camp~." Normotly writera should conveu t1l'''" meo:.tsaaes tn 300 word! or lts1. Thr right to condtttae lettet.t to fit 1pnc1 or eliminate lib.el U re1erved. All ltt- 1-trs miut include 1iqnat11r1 and ma.U. -in(I addrtil. but nomu-l'Ji(iv bi ~ held on requt•t tf 1ufJ~11.e ""°'°" U apparent.· Porirv u1'il not b1 pulJ.. li.!hcd. This is very interesting. Just when is the . right ti me lo talk of granting am· nesty to those who insult every man who 15Crved, or lost his life, and to the parent11 of these brave men who elected to serve their country? THIS IS THE MOST uhspeakable war, the most unjust war, the most stupid war of all time, but even so there should be no amnesty. If justice were really done in this case, the man who brought this awful thing down upon his fellow America111 1hould be brought lo justice and charged with malfeasance in office. I do mean Lyndon B. J,ohnson. If and when this is done, then we can begin to talk of amnesty -and not before. IT MUST BE BROUGHT out here too, that Lyndon B. Johoson waa quoted as saying, "I would like lo go dOMJ in history as another Abraham Llncbln, a war President''<ffow doet: that gra~ you? Our former President could be cbarged with many other things of course, since it was after he was elected that we had penni1siveness, crime in the 1treet, arson , riots and ao many other things that Nixon Is being blamed for. JAMES A. DUVALL Dbiuter tor Their• To the Editor : f read With interest the letters publish· ed In the DAILY Pllm from parents or children at lhe Top or the World School . tt must work for their children. For ours Jt was a disaster. Our children had been happy, suc- cessful students at El Morro before bting tramferred to T.0.W. The conruslon of cla1s changes every 20 minutes, the clamor of open cleurooms and the ex. pcrlmentatlon wllh teaching methods proved . lo be a poor learning en- vlronmenL AFTER A YEAJI, .,. aent them iD • privatt school. II waa a c:o1lly decltfoµ for ua but haa proved worthwhlle. '1liey have developed •kllb and abilities lhat had not been touched. I feel the ochoof board ~ bein1 By George ---. Dear George: Thanks a lot !or your tnaomnla cure. Actually, J didn't use that Jong-drawn-out cure you suggested, but 1 find that lmmedialtly upon 11t1rting to read your column I go right iD 1leep. GRATEFUL Dear Grateful : , Hm. That's funny. Since 1e1tin1 your letter I've been lolll.ng and turnln1 ell nJ&ht. (Send yoor worrlts to George. Why c!utl<!r up the hauM WWI old worries when you could be out set.- Ung lntn brtnd·new trouble!) • I reasonable and 11 not trying to dlamantle the entlrP concept of education. It Is my understandln1 that they are calling Joto question some or the expe rimental techniques that have failed both here and elsewhere. NAME WITHHELD Beach PltoHe Serlllce To the Editor : During the summer ($) touri1t eeuon, the city o! Laguna Beach mainlaJM emergency lifeguard phone 1t1tions at various pedestrian, beach acceaa walks throughout Laguna . After the <•> tourist 1eason, and for the remaining nine month1 of the year ..-hen Laguna!•• residenta 1hite theft · beachel' with the city dog population, tho cl~ manager, for 80me strange reason, rcmove111.U the beach emergency phonea. Obviously, there 's oot much 11ense in 11avlng a few, paltry cillzen beach bums when there's no business the.re for the Chamber of Commerce types. BUT, CONSIDER' tho consequence1 . ... there's 1 beach or ocean emeraeD- cy 1t Woods Cove and the victim nMdl expert, 1,,eclal 11ervice-la1t. All the city provides at eacb beach 1c- ce511 is 1 list of official nrdinance pro- hibitions the violators of whlch will earn a fine or lmprlsoMlent . , , or both • Emergency Information or phonea? Sorry, fellah ... the summer Cl) touriat seuon begins in June or, If you're ln shape, a "short" Jog iD Main Beach w!D !eld! the city lifeguard, or. If then1'1 tomeooe al home. perhap1 the beach cot- tage resident will lend hla phone, or if there's a pay phope acrosa Cout Highway ... don't forget your dime. NOW, THE CITY MANAGE& la proj>. •bly ereCnlng hlmaelf for aavJni u..~u, 1)1 !bit nine.month telephone aervlce bul llq't that putting a price tac on aomeone ef..oe'• ur. ... like the beach city a<:hoo!s Iha t Ignore the need iD certify hfcb ochool 1tudtnt 1wimmlng prollcleocyl Would thf: ctty manager MU hhnleJJ rr his ur. for the pr ..... of the ~ dtJ beach emugency phone 1ervice? Would the Chamber of Conunuai tare I.a answer thit! BllUCE S. HOPPIHG Right to Work -. Pres Commente ' Orlando Seollnel . "In the United States we have long been ~cemed _wllb ln.- dlvldu:.il libC!rtlei In ciftie:r treas. bUl we have tolerated •bl1se of Individual llbertf In the form ol compu110ry unlaol1m. ll lJ Ume for 1 chanae." 4 •• •• So11ae Wedding Day -Yvonne Kalak, 19, and her Valentine's Day bridegroo m, Louie, 22, exchanged a few words through the vhitation ¥lass at Ventur.a Coun- ty jail Tuesday before Kalak left for state prison on a possible life sentence. The couple was married in court only seconds before the groom \\'as led &\Vay to begin serving a six rnontbs·to-life term for . armed robbery. • Easy County Formation Bill Unveiled by Solon SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A bill sough! by mayors of San Gabriel Valley cities to · make It easier to form a new county has been introduced by Sen. H. L. Richardson (O.Arcadla). Richardson said Tuesday the legislation resulted from dl1cu11loIU1 over spllttlng populou1 Los Angeles County into flve new counties in an effort to make county government more "man1ge1ble." Under the bill, no new counties actually would be created, but the measure y;ou!d relax current "severe" restrictions i;o voters of an area could create a ne\Y county easier 1f theY so deslred. "It's nothing persona] against the in· cumbent Los Angeles Co u n t y supervisors ," Richardson said. He sai d the idea behind his bill was merely that a "small county Is easier to handle than one the size of Los Angeles," noting that Los Angeles County contalned 7 million residents. Bonelli Last Rites Friday LOSftMIEtES (UPI) - • Lon gsho re Leaders Ask Pact Okay SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -·Longshore leaders have recommended ratification today of a tentative contract to end the crippling 131-$.y West Coast dock strike, raising hopes workers will be back at v.·ork. by Sunday. The 110 delegates to a union caucus voted Tuesday to submit the agreement to the 13,000 rank and file members at the 24 strike-bound ports from Seattle to San Diego. "If tbe \'Ote is favorable v.·e will try to arrange for an immediate return to work by Sunday," said Sidney Roger, in- fonnatlon ofifcer for the International Longshoremen's and Warehousemen's Union. IL\\1U President Harry Bridges sup- ports ratUication, saying the contract provides ''solid and substantial gains." The caucus had been under v.•ay since Saturday. The union reached the tentative agree- ment with the 122 shippers or the Pacific l\faritiine Association list week. P?.IA members are expected to ratify the pact within a day or so. The strike has caused losses in U.S. ex· ports estimated by the White House at more than $600 million and prompted Congress to gi\'e President Nixon pow.er to halt the walkout. · The closed caucus was not v.•ithout its diaagreement, sources said, with the large San Francisco Local JO saying that part of the proposed contract was "full of fi sh hooks and exemptions." · The local also said that "President Nix· on was sitting with a cocked gun ... pointed at the body of labor, and more specilically at our head." • Gas Reftmds Ordered SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Customers of Pacific Gas & Electric Co. will receive relunds totaling $5.35 million by order of the California Public Utilities C.Om- mlssk>ri". That amounts to an average of about 90 cents for the domestic family u1er, lo be paid during the March bllllng period. ~--.... ,l'tftW~ i hitr Jh I» Angeles today to mourn the death of County supervisor Frank Bone!ll, who helped lead the fight by heavily populated Southern CaUfornla to wrest more pollUcal power from the northern part of the atate. mOllf dedkatid-,public Bone!ll wved almoat H years on the five-man board of supervlsors for Los Angeles county, an 8ft.8 of 7 mllllon ln- habltan!J. lie became sta t ewi d e political figure In the early oplltlcat figure in the early 1960s, when he led a campa1gn to pass redistricting measures that would have shifted con- tr ol or the atate Senate to Southern California f r o m agricultural counties to the north. down It the polla, bUt BoneJU 's wu won ifillfWJiftlthe U.S. Supreme Court's "one man, one vote" deciaioD ac- complished h1J goal -a power shift to the populous southern -part of the state. C1·owds Soar I I • Bone111 died 11onday n.lght in st. Francis llospltal. l~e was: 65. Roman Catholic funeral services will be held Friday. Mayor Sam Yorty ordered naas on city buildings lowered to half staff, saying "Los Angeles county lost one of its 111e proposals were turned SAN DIEGO (AP) -Sea World says attendance set records at Its marine life parks in San Diego and Aurora Ohio, during 1971. SPECIAL INTRODUCTO ~. Y OFFER NEW iienn1nent press · Kang1roo T-Shirll and S hon1. Bright-whit• knit polyaater and cotton-durable, soft Ind atrong. Polyrlb T-shirt neck- b•nd won't 1sg, Comfort pouch 1hor11 h1Y1 1h• exclusive horizon· tll fty. Buy the 3-pecks-guirranl•ed full two Y••t~' Wt•r. Save up to 26% K1ng1..,. T·Shlrtl-S·M·L·JQ. K1ng1roo Shon.-28_.5 (Reg. 3/H.00) f~r$333 munsingPJear , ........ ••-• -COltl ~Hl-Ollll MAil""""' CllOI••-•-___,, i STOftE NAME • • • • ' • ' : ...... ...._~~~~~~~~~~~~~- LIMITED TIME ONLY ' MAJOI CUllT CAlDI DSl'ARTlll#T •TOM ~ ... "".frolT ...... ClltflAUY t.OCA!b AT MIW?OlT AND HAllOI ILYH. r ,, . ' 0-'Ill l iHP.M. l'llD.US j I ·-- DAILV P1LOT 5 Protec t ion _ Reag_a!t :'ts k s Health_Plan SACRAMENTO, Calli. (AP) were lo sutter wll4t Is termed afte-r-100 day1 of hospitalization, ~ days of a catastrophic illness over a rtcovery care and $3,000 or -Gov. Ronald Reagan has pro)Xlsed a mandatory health insurance program to protect nearly 18 JllilUon Californians against fln anctal ruin that could result from catastrophic illness or accident. long period of Ume ." outpatient services such as To qualify for the unlimited doctor bills, X-ray a n d coverage provided by the laboratory aervices. Reagan plan, a worker or'....:;....:;....:_: _____ ~ A'irli1ie Gets Short Strike The plan, to be lnlrodoced soon in the legislature, would be financed by a $3-a·month deduction from the paychecks of the state's 8.4 million work:~ ing men and v.·omeri'. The yield would total more than $300 million a year. The p r o P o s e d Califomia B U • he.alth security plan, work.Ing 'Y nio n through private insurance car- .. riers, would pick up hospital LOS ANGELES (UPI) and doctor costs where the The Teamsters Union struck average health care plan runs member of his family would have to be covered by a basic health insurance plan such as Blue Cross and Blue Shield that ls approved by a new .JIJlte health security com- mission. The catastrophe insurance would take over hospital, doc· tor, drug and allied expenses when the basic plan ran out : Override Okay Western Alrllnes for a brief out. ..._. CARMEL (AP) -Voters in period Tuesday night -so Jn a broadcast re)Xlrt Tues-the C a r m e I Unified School brief the airline's flights were day, the Republican governor District have approved con- not affected. said, j'lf an extended illness or tinulng an 87.eent tax override The strike lasted less than a terrible crippling accident for the next four years. three hours. Picket lines ap-were to hit someone In your , The vote ln the district, peared at some of the airports family, the health insurance which extends up the Carmel from Minneapolis to Callfornia you have would not cover the Valley and down to Big Sur, served by the airline. expense and it would be ex-included many new young The airline called it a hausted very quickly tr you persons wildcat strike, in violation or ------------- the national Railway Labor Act, which also covers airline labor contracts. The union ac- cused the airline of stalling on contract negotiations, in the hope that the Civi l Aeronautics Board will ap- prove Western's request to merge with American Airlines, before a new con· tract can be signed. I Free Income Tax Preparation See th• best in men's w e a r for '721 The best s•· l1ction in town for cloubl1 knit sl•cks end sport coats. R1member, th• be1t i1 always at ... The Teamsters represent 2.000 \\1estern mechanics, utili· ty workers, fleet drivers and storehouse workers at Los Angeles, Anchorage, Seattle, San Francisco, Honolulu , Las Vegas, Nev., Salt Lake City, Great Falls, Mont., and l\lin- Save $30-$40 on professional preparatlon of your 1971 California and federal Individual Income Tax Returns. neapolis. The strike was announced by Marvin Gri11wold secretary·treasurer • Te!lmsters Lo cat 2707. T Don't Pe lay Sign up today: appointments are free If you open an Anaheim Savings account of $5,000 or more, or for only $5 by opening an account of IZ500 or more. ANAl-IEIM SAVINGS airline denounced it as ille• .ANO LOAN ASSOQ..t.110N and said Pi Io t • ANAHEIM 187 W. llncoln Ave. 92803{TeU72-1532 stewardesses were crO!''". BREA 633 So. Bres Blvd. 926211Ttl: 5~971 Teamster picket lines to ktcp HUNTINGTON BEACH 411 Mlin SL 9Z648{Toh 536-6591 the llne's planes flying on I 1!:::============.;;;===============o!.I schedule. ' • ' Rouncl trip jets claily. To Las Vegas 9:00 a.m., I :50 p.m. and b: 10 p.m. To Phoenix 7:45 a.m.ancl.5 :.25 p.111. To Tucson 7:45 a.m. •Service starts Febru ary 22 nCI. ' .. . .... ""' ... ,._. ....... -· ,, * • .•. ,,., ' • I ~ ' I I I ' \ I f I I . . Hontingion Beach Fo11ntain Valley • Today's Fhtal N.Y. Stoeks TENC~ • Workers Preparillg Beach Civic Center Site , . . Workmen began ~'tparlng lbe site this week where the $11.1 million Huntington Beach clvk: ceoter will be built. Work crews moved onto the lkcre site norlh of H.untington Beach High School altu..BanLof--America delivered the Sll.l mllUon in bond money needed for the project. • Cily officjalll have set 3 p.m., Feb. 22, as , the time lor ground • breaking cer_emoo.Iea to cek!brate the massive proj· ect· wh.ich1 baa been three years in the talJ<lng sta1 ... U there are no major delaya, the five-- story city · hall and three-story police headquarters' are expected to be open in· October, 1973. At that time it will house abOtl~ 3'(5 municipal emplayes. The Sll.l million price ta& includes tHe cost of the land, Interest payments on the bond money and other fees not direcUy related to construction costs. A savings of some $3 million was made pcssible on the civic. c:enter by a good bond rilarket and good construction bids,, say tity officials. CiVic center architect Kurt Meyer estilhated the construction cost 8.t $7,0'l5,000, ·bot the low bid <from Diversified Builders. lnc., came llJ ~t 16,484,500. When the original bond estimates were made, lhe finance department expected the bonds to sell at 6.75 peroent ln!mst, but Bank of America bid lea,, tbtln .six pereent, saving the city $2,436,361'' in in- terest payments over 2.8 years. The completed ci vic center wlll lnclude two main structures and several smaller facilities ahd b expected to sene the needs of Hwitington Beach through 1995. A five-story city hall will house ~t of the administrative departments now spread out lo •veral cramped buildings at Fifth and Main atreets doWfllown. The 1;,.. departmo!ltt and harbors and .. ~ches depa~t will bl the only ma- jor administrative bruc~ not housed In the new civic cent.er. A three story police headquarters - one story is a semi-bpem•N·-will jut out from the .main 'city hall structure. It will be built with high security restriC· lions, lncludinC:OOllet-prOO! glass in some sections. .. • A separate c~y council :_ehamber1 with Oxed seating for 150 and expandable "atlng for llO, .,111 be built between the two large structures. A small, low level office building will . be but\t parallel to city hall. 'l'hll olflce space will serve the pubtlc areas where residents appl,y for business Uce.nses, con- struction permits and other dally, public activitiea. An underground bonke~ will be built under the civic center to hou_se_tl com- munlcatlo ns center !or use during a disaster. City o!ficlals have also promised that • the re wlll be adequate parking at the. new civic center. While civic center work ls now movlng ahead on schedule, the '3.$ millloo library plannM In the centr11I park bas hit a slight snag. . .. 'Assistant City Admini strator Brander Castle said the city la currently arguing with architect Dion Neutra over hls architectural ree,, · Further work on the library has been delayed unt il the contract dispute Is set- tled. . . . eac an e Ill rau Headquarters Of Nixon Said Bomb Target MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) -The bombing of police and fire headquarters bere today was linked by a top state law -enforcement official to the "Tt,e People's LiberaUon Army," an antiwar1 group · which also listed the Ne.w Hampshire Jirimary headquarters of President Nixon as a target. .. The official, who asked not to be iden- tified, said thit when a man and a woman were arre!ted shortly after the three bomb blasts that sbaUered win- dows, a typewritten ne~ relea~ 8lso WJL.~lsCated. "'fhi ~lease s&ld. that besides the J)81.lce station, the Nixon headquarters had been a target. Police, hoWever-found no eiplosives Ii the headquarters-al tjty hall , wbich was ordered searched as a precautionary measure. A fourth bomb was discovered today under the air conditioner in a window outside Police Chief John Stips' office. Detonation experts .said it failed to go off becaase it was improperly assembled. The news release referred to the arrest of 12 demonstraton in Manchester at the opening of the Nixon headquarters last week. George Romney , sscretary of Housing and Urban Development, spoke at the opening. However, Valerie Hawkins of Dover, a spokesman for the Lincoln Day Parade Committee which o r g a n i z e d the demonstration at the Nixon headquarters, said today tbe group "emphatically denJes any connection between the mareh and today's bombing. OUr purposes were peaceful. We ftre demonstrating against Nixon, not against the Manchester· police." Kathryn A. Holt, 21, with addresses in Boston, Buffalo, N.Y., and Portsmouth and Dover, N.H., was arrcijened on two count! as, an accessory fo damaging public buildings. She was listed as a waitre!S and a native of Salem, N.H. She wu held for a Feb. 25 hearing In 125,000 bail. Jaan Karl Laaman, 2.1, also listed as Karl A. Laam&tJ, Buffalo, N.Y. was ar- raigned later at the hospital where he was taken with an Injured hand ahortly after his arrest .. A Feb. 2S probable cause bearing was aet 1'tth, ball at $2$,000 on two counts of clami• to public buildlng. A bloodied and tom glove was found outside the police station. - In Buffalo, 1 N.Y., 1Laaman's mother Ella said· ah<rhad not aceo nor heard from her son in more than a year. , .. "He__was what you would _call a college radical," Mn. Laalltan told a newsman. (See BOMB, Page !) McGo vern Asks - Legalized-. Pot By United Pren 1-..UOnal Sen. George S. McGovern of South Dakota suggested today legallling marijuana , with the same controls imposed on alcohol. Speaking It a drug counseling center ln Boston; the DemocraUc -PIUidcnUal candidate laid: "Omtlnulng lnvesllgatlom on the overall elfecta of marijuana leaV< wiaetUed the related bot aeparate quelli..,. whether IOclety can or lhould attempt to completely pio- hlblt lta ..... "The most releVllnl hlsWlcal precedenl -pn>bibltk>n of aloohol -produced .. ob•lous, abject ftllW'I.,. ____ -_~ __ ':i4.<., :---- •' . , I - . . , .i J • I DAILY•PILOT •lf"",.,.. : Ut Ther,.e Be l.iig1at . -\ , , · ' . •A 'gi'.0up ~f ~ountain Valley stMOi;t; al ij~. ~,elllentary SchOQl led by .mothers Lucille Keller (righ t) and Sheree fiilkinso celebrate the acquisition of a new traffic signal at the intersection of Magnolia .Stre~t 311d Nightingale Avenue. 'The light came after a long ba tlle by school an ct PT A offic.ials. . , ' ' Fountain Valley Slates . . . Fluoridation Vote Date ll\ilelfy,..md wltliout faiilare , the Foun· lain Valley City Council Tuesday night called:for *a showdown Vote on Ouorida- Uon of the munic.lpal water supply. Last June, Fountain Valley voters a~ proved. a new ordinance whlcb took the authority of 10uoridating away from the council The new Jaw requires that the fluoridation quf.lstioa must be 4etUed by a vote of the 'people ... - U.S. ·Launches Heavy Raids Inside North ·. From Wire Services SAIGON -AmerJCa n w a rpla nes bunched substantial air strikes inside North VI e t n a m today, U.S. military aources said. Radio Hanoi claimed two U.S. planes were shot down and a numbe,r; of pilots were kµled or captured . A ~.S. Q:>mmand spokesman, told of the ~rpadcast. said: "I !iav.e ~othing to report." The com~d in1the past bas withheld reporting on dOwned planes ~Ul search and rescue ml!sJons were completed. 'l,'lli-Ncrjh . Vt.:pe"' b!Vadwt · n~.r.:tr.1: Illa et- ta.-ea p6j!Uw areal In Q\Jillc !llOb and · .. v:JU1' ~IJDJ(· Ncii'th11 vieu..m 11' t w.o ' soutbWnmolt pi'Ovlnces. · -. nie ·u.s, informants said the strikes !fer• ln NQl'th ·Vle1Jjal)1'• half of t~ demlll~Jzed 110ne that ~pa.rates tbe ,watrlng VJetnams but declined to dlacloae .the lar8'ts. Ttrey;added tbeNl also may have been 10D1e raids north of the zone, but withheld detaUs • pending a n an- _oouncement from the U.S. Command. "There were protective reaction strikes and other strij:es involved," said one in- -formant ; "but I can't give you the number." He ••Id the raids were beyond the O!iUal one or two "protective reaction" strikes frequently reported from time to time, wben enemy guns or radar ~ on to U.S. planet. Allied Intelligence lndlcales 10 percent more North Vietnamese troops Mll move into South Vietnam or loto border areas during the first five months than Jn the same period last year, U.S. military sources said. U.S. military sources In Saigon said the bl& U.S. a)r campaign that began In South Vietnam a week ago would "continue in- definitely" becaµse at least four fresK North Vietnamese dlvisJona, beefed up by heavy artillery, were moving into the country. Neally 1,100 strik~s .have been flown in.- side South Vietnam In the past week, most of them coming the fi~e day1 before a one-day ceas~fi.re "for the ·Tet lunar new yelll' that began at 6 p.m. :&fo~ay. During the 12--hour period ending at dawn Wednesday, American je~fightera made only 46 llrlkes, and by noon B5l bombers had fiown seven missions inside the COW\- try -a 1harp reduction from the earlier number of 10rtie1. Nationwide · Conspiracy -~ Alleged By ARTHUR R. VINSEL ot 1t11 D•llY Pllet 111n Climaxing a Iona, nationwide fr 1 u d probe, U.S. authorllles indicted a Hun(... ington Beach man and 18 others Monday for an alleged conspiracy to borrow mtt .. lions baclted by cbUJ'Ch. finahced capital The so-called Church of Christ Manors Inc., was a phony corporaUon exisUng on ly on worthlen paper, lnvesUgators charge. No connection nllta with th e 1.:,,;iilitri-legitimate Church of P>rlll, but manJ ~ • 'derendanta are lcouaed or llnka 1'1111 America'• oraanlzed crime l)'Ddlcate. Loula J. Verlve, 41, of ll!el S. ~SL, la -tbom. acccrdlJli to federal aangland lntilllgence IOUrcu. IU.IL T PIL.OT Stiff ltMft STEPPJ ~O DOWN ' Judp llakor Judge Baker ·Set For Retirement After November OraJge County'• only female judge, Cella Baker, has decided lo quit her post in the West Orange Co u n.t y Judlcfal District effective Nov , 20. Her term of office expir¥ th Jahuary of 1973 and fi1ne lndJViduala hive already filed for her judgeship, I ' , · ' In announcing her retlre~ent '•t the 1Westmlnster court house) Judge 88ker, a Huntington Beach realdent, aald \'it's time to do aomethlng different." She will be 60 Sunday, ' Judge Baker has served ·as 1 municipal court Judge since her appointment to the Huntington Beach City Court In IHI. Silo ts a graduate of the Unlvenlt)' of Bullsto and George Washington Unlver1lty Law SclX>ol. A new judge will be elected during Ille June I primary. Fllln1 for !lie oUlce enda March 10, and write-In calldl~Jea have witll April 4 to enter the race. Verlve and the otber1 were named In • 41-count federal 1rand Jury lndlclmenl · I1111ed In Chlcaao for am1ta from cou l to coast, Verlve wa1 stopped without Incident aa he drove alona' Newport BouJ· 'fd and taken lnto cuatody by Newpol't Beach llectectlve John Simon. He was turned over to U,S. Poalal Inspector H. L. "Bookie" Almond, booked into Oranee county Jail without ball and delivered this momlng for arraignment before a U.S. Commissioner fn Lot Angeles. Cha rges Jlsted In the mass Indictment Include fraud by mail, wire, Interstate transportation of funds obtained by fraud and alao conspiracy. Releasing the data In Chicago, U.S. A~ tomey James R. Thompson old the CAM Is one of Ille lar&en of lta kind In U:S. history. • . ' The defendant1 -aome Cosia Nostra figures who Blq'Velllance office~ "1 vlalted Verive In Huntington Beach· - operated In New York, Chicago, Phoenix, Ariz., Savannah!. Ga .• and San Diego. They allegechy promised to arran,p loans through whal the U.S. Justl~ Department and postal authorities call an advanc11 ree scale. .. Indicted principals -Inc I u d t n I Verlve's brotbtra Clrlo and Charlie, botll of whom have been on the Orange Coaa\ rectnU,y -are acai.sed-of vktlmJ.ilng at least 70 busl11tumen. , Clalmlng control or the actual Chlll'Ch. of Christ'• tsoo mllllon In aasets, the. (See CONSPIRACY, Pqe J) • ' , . <:eut; By 1 4 to 1 vote, the council set June 6 as the date cm which voters will settle once and ~for all whether fluoride com- pounds are to be added to city water. oiilr~an John D. Harper ob- jected to setting the election. He wanted a sbJdy to investigate whether fluorida· tibn' was necessarY, especially since schools had just been given authority by tbe,state to nuorldate their own water. Four~screen Drive-in OK'd • • • 'Weatllv .; ' "I'see this as just another delaying tac- ~~,'~.l. &napped back Councilman Ron . :sneruonan who promptly made a motion calling for the election. Opponents Fail to Dissuade Valle y Council 1'be measure, to be placed on the state primary•bellot, will ask Fountain Valley voters whether they want the compound a~ to lbe water. as a means of Im- proving dental hesllh, If the IOIWer is ."Yes," the already rich-witb-fluoride Fountain Valley water will be brou&nt up to one part of the com- pot.tnd per milfion of watu. The present level ii .I parta per million. Wolves Eating Dog 111\RS, Turkey (UPI ) -The motl ievere winter in memory bu driven packs of 1tarvlna w;olm Into Ihta wt Analollan village. They have cat'" ii slieep ~ In the pen two d.,,, , .. By RVDl N!EDZIELllKI Of IN Dftltr '1• Stiff A cast of doctors, lawyera 1JKI prom- inent landowb<ra failed to persuade ·tlle Fountain Valley City Council to censor plans for a drive-in theater Tuesday night. Delpite a strong showing of protestors, the COUDciJ unanimously gave In 111P- proVed " rating lo the four-ocmn theatat at1Euclld Street and Warner Avenue. The couocll granted i>eUtJooer u.,.., o.t..app both a zone chance and a -dttlonal uae permil to operate the theater for a period of ts ywa. Alter that time, tbe land ta. lo be converted to lnduatrlal purpooe1. . Although councllmen relt that the ~~ patrons could creata aome traf!lc Ill'bfems, the 1Ituatlon was not de.med aerlous "'°"'h to refect the ~)eel , Trafll< cenerated by the tl>oalJr'• 1.-. ~--· ---·- viewing 1pa:ce1 wu the major corfcern of the angry protestot1. Amon& them wu Dr. Jllchanl Ayres, 1lalf member ol Fountain . Valley Com- munity Hospital -ooe of the thesler's neighbors. Dr. Ayera described It as a "11gantlc moving ~ tot.I' which would annoy patienta · wllb • DOllC, '"""' and Ught renec11n1 from' the acreeno. In addition. the phyalclan predicted that traffic oo Wamtr Atenue woukl 1tack up and prevent ambulancos from • r<achlng the boapltal emergency room. "U they (the can) block ort that em<rgency room, there'• golnJ to be hall to P81/' OYI Dr. Ayru. Vll1Cfllt Ran!y, architect. for the the1ter, eontendld ~t the screen towers, when viewed rrom the elooaell 11om ... would ''be .l1U a poslqe stamp held at arm '• Jeaath. w ' But l\Oberi Ruaol!, a resident of nearb)> Sanditone Slreet, a~ that ruldenta not only wlll be 1ubjected to advertising durlna intermlHlon, but l'Olllb\Y also to X0rated movies they may not w1nt to ~· Georce Shlbala, an atloiney repr .... ~ Ing I property °"11er to the .. I( ol the proposed oomplu. 111cl FOW>laln. Valley would have lllUl to caln lrom the project Oilier than lncreaaed tralllc. "All of the sdmlaalon taxes wW p to the llata. The city will only get !He low property 1a1... Even one McDonald'l. hambur1er 1tand would ulte more nloney," argued Shibata. · In appn>•ln& Del.app;, niquell, the clly council dVerlun\ed an urller plannlnc commi11ton ruUng agalnal the tbu141:. lldwover~clty Ptennloi Dlroctor cu .. caJllna: theal<r "ttuooably c!ompol- ( DRIVE-IN, Pap II , More summer-like weather fJ °'; :·. the agenda for Thurlday, with hlgba In the mld-70'• alone the _ 1 Oranae CoUI. following early momin1 roa Which will bum off. : Lowa tonight I the 40'1. INSIDE TODA 'Y .. Thi htctrlut ioetk of the ''°'" aon I• Ii.big U..atcr la coming ! iip in Orang1 Cowa£~ with. t ight ...., prodMC&ni going "" Ute , boardl and /jve oth<rs contlrul-_ fJ10 , Set Thea ter Noti1, Poot IO •. t .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~· • .. OAILV PllOT H • • . . New City Boss Aboard Keep Sn1iling !lowlands 'Getting Oriented' in Huntingwn By TERRY COVILLE Of .. 0.llf .... ll•ff ttbe new clty admJnlatralor of H~ !!J1llG!l Bu.ell occupied bla offlcec for the l1nt time Tu•"'-7. , ''Mf first major problem II just getting oriented," aaid David D. Rowlands. ••1•0 •1$ lhe various depertmenll and held In- ~ cllJeuaal6nl 'wldi department (..~~-ti • ._.,, ' ~wlands, .le, Just llnbhed moving his ~oehold fllOds and lamlly lnlo a t•m· . ' ~ry hem• at 9522 lrullbruclt Drive. ~ find,a pmnanent place ahertly. ~~Y'• new boo wouldn1 asy .mat. Ii'; fir ,major pn>ject mlgbt be but be dtit ne some ·genertl phllotopblea of ·•· ·:' ...... :;: 'From Page J -~~SPIRACY .. t'"'~ idfaed ochemera supposedly collected ~nee fees to gu arantee loans for bustrtessmen iitymled by the tight economy. lnvestlgatora uplalned the loan .ap. Jlllcant ii usually asked to put up five to 10 percent of the full amount sought as good lallh money when applying through Joa n guarantee companies. Tfie adVaoce tees Were allegedly never rlfunded and authorities maintain the guarantee documents they say were i!sued by at least 30 fictitious loan com- partes were .worthless. • DAit. Y l"ILOT lltff ,llot9 MOVES INTO CITY HALL New Administrator Rowl1nd1 ' city management. "I have-1--pretty broad backgrouncttn overall community development," be ex- plained. "And I'm a great believer in in- !trg09lnlJDOlllal eooperatlon.,; He hepet lo lteep tho •111 on a aound relationship with the oounty. Rowlands bas been city manager ln several Jarg6 oommunJUa, the most re- cent being Tacoma, Wash. He bu been pmldent of the Intematlooal City Managers AuociaUon. . He recently !en private Industry In Seattle lo take the Huntington Beach job. .. I've always wanted to be in California, and thls gave me an op- portunUy .to get back into city man,e- ment," he explained. Rowlaoda says he ts lookh11 ahead, several years down the line Jn a city's development. "I think proper 'Planning Involves a l)'llem of goals and objectlve1, something to work toward on a long range," he said. "They can be flexible. And we should have at Jeast a sil:-year capital improvement program." Rowlands bas a strong background in labor-management negotiations and fIBcal pollcie.!. He hopes to stress good com· munication with all sect.on or the com. munlty. "There is considerably more citizen participation now, than five years ag o," he added. "We need the cooperation of all community groups.'' Rowlands/~an his first day with a staff meeting tO ouiline his philosophy to the various department leaders. As cme city employe put it: "He's im- pressive. He doesn't have a negative at- titude. He tells you what he wants to do, not what he doesn't want done." DAILY l"ILDT SllH l"MN 'NEVER STOP SMILING' Beauty Queen Hollerman Dorothy 0 Leads H aridicap Fleet To Acapulco By A.LMON LOCKABEY O.llr P'll.t lt•tl111 E'JIW Beauty Queen Gives Tips By JOHN ZALLER Dt IM OlllY r 11et Sl•ff Karen Hollerman has been in eight bea.u.ly pjlgeants since she was named Miss Fountain Valley last May so she ls entitled to have some opinions about them. "They were really fun at first,'' say• the pert 17-year--old. "l was •lways scared and was never quite sure of myself. But alter a whne tt becomes just a very se- rious business. You find out what the rules are and try to follow them." Miss Hollerman has several observa· lions about which are I.he best rules to follow. "J always try to keep from being either at the front or at the ent of a line," she said. "The judges are ea'fer at the begin- ning and very strict. They're hoping someone better will come ·along, and no matter who you are, you don't have much chance. "And by the end, they're usually a little bored," she continued, "so it's not good to be there either. The best place Is in the middle." Miss Hollerman Is pleased that she will be 10th of about 20 girls competing in the Miss Orange County Contest Thursday: night 1n the Anaheim Convention Center. "I'm sure lucky they didn't go on height," observed the 5' l' beauty queen. "Th~ do that sometimes and when they do, I m always first in line." Which brought her to another polnL ''Judges like taller girls better," she uld •. 111 don't kno\Y why, but they do. lf yod look at Ml.$.s America, she's almost always tall . uMayl>e it's because small i.1rl1 don't show up well on a big stage. A little kid like me can ea!lly get lost on a 9G-!oot ramp," she said. This may be false modesty, howevert because on at least a few occasions MJ.s1 Hollerman has stood out very well She was the fir st runner.up among eo girls 1n the Palm Springs Aerial Tram- way contest in July, and she was among the finalists in the Miss Calilomia World Pageant. Does she have any leCl'ets? "There are two things I mainly keep in mind," she sakl. "You should alw1y1 ttare the Judges righ t in the eye. Always make sure you get in a good stare at each judge, and lf you do, your chante1 will be pretty good. "And, of course, you always smile. You smile and smile and never ltop," ahe said. "And when you come' off the staget you'll find that you sUll keep smiling, because you r face gets stuck In a tmlle. Jt's really funny sometimes." Miss Hollerman has lltUally worn out ~wo formal gowns. "In order to enter the MllJs Orange County Contest J had to !Ind aomeone to sponsor me and to pay for a new dress. J was real lucky to find the rl&ht people. \Vithout them, I'd have been ln trouble." Britain Near Shuulnwn QJllec:ted between 19116 and December or Uno, the un!peelfJed-amount of cash ~·as funnelled into personal or shady ~gland use, lt ls charged. ~Federal aulhorjtlea involved in the two- ylar probe worked with Newport Beach, A{laheim, Orange police and the district at~Qrney'1 office In gathering evidence loc•lly. Mesa Drug Ai·rest Reveals 'Free' Telephone Setup ACAPULCO -Bob Beauchamp's Columbia 57 Dorothy O was the fourth boat to finish at 2:20 this morning (PST) and grabbed the handicap lead in the San Diego to ,\capulco Yacht Race. Dorothy 0 saved her time over the previous three finishers -Windward Passage, Blackfln and Sirius ll -to take the overall and Class A bandJcap lead. However, there were Class B and C As Power, Jobs Periled yacbta close enough lo the linisb this By JOSEPH W. GRIGG morning to erase Dorothy O's overall LONDON lead. Two years ago, Dorothy O was first (UPI) -Britain neared a policemen guarding tl'le raclllty. Picket leaders warned strikers against violence. They claim the alleged .scheme using IJle ... Church of Ch r I at name to lul susolclou.! JnveJtors netted more than $1 JI!Jtlion and was engineered to obtain nruch more . "Federal Costa Nostra·watchers say V~lve's aurvelllance goes back several YCars to his co-purchase with one Ajlth0!1)' Navarom of Chicago's Marshall savings and Loan finn. · '1'he company bought then for $1 .% U>llllon .... lnYOIVed In finlll\Clng the $'1.6 ft\l!llon Sahara North Mole! ,built by the ijle l\.1andel "Manny" Skar. : J!e was executed, allegedly by gangland Jittmen , nearly seven years ago, a month before he weat on tiJal for allegedly Skiinming $1 million off the profits, lea<l!ng lo Indictment for Income tax tvo11on. ·~ar wa1 killed !or naming Co•ta N_pstra names before federal authorities ..:. charging they lorc<d him to tteal the m'oney -In the hope he could obtain 1 .. fllepcy In pr .. ecutlon. ~ :_v,,.1ve•1 1av!ng1 and Joan IJrm '!~nt ~fltkrupt alter financing the fl.I million La• Vegas spa and casino. 1Lfke Verlve'1 lll·fated savings and loan Otln, the Church of Christ Manors Inc., tri~lved fu his current case iJ Chlcag .. ~~ed. , .. From Pagel BOMB ... r.Our view la so much different from his." Laaman and Miss Holt were former ~t,µdents at the University of New Jl!Dnpablrt. Both wm reported lo have Dean out of acbool more than a year. :'~a 1ta'81 oUlclll quoted the news Mllff u saying, "The pip vico1131y at· ed ~ ••• WhUe demonstrations this are necessary, we are not going · get far, alway1 fighting on the pigs' terms." • • OU.NGI COAST •• DAllY PILOT 01'ANOll COAST PlllLllHlNI> aJMPAA'( lob•rt H. We1d Pml:ltnt atld PullbNf' J•ck k. C11rlt"f Vkl PA'lldlll'lf and G-•I MIMPt' lliom•• x ••• 11 Edi IOI' 'lllo'"'' A, MUTpl\f11• M111ttll'9 t:.dhor T1rry Covlll1 Wiii Or.ntt Cllllnl7 64'fttr Hntf•tN• IHc\ Offlc. 17175 l11ch loult••rd M1ltl119 AdtJr111s P.O. Jex 790, !2641 o .... ..- ltfll'll '"di' m ,.... ..,_.. • Cotti MMll :DJ W•t llY' St,_ """'°'1 , .. dll u:o " ........ -.Ulft•" s.i. cim:.i.; as Hlr1' El C»rnlM ••I A trio's arrest !ollowlng an alleged $S0 street.. comer drug deal ha.! led · to recovU, of a hoard of barbiturate pills and . stolen property under study today, including telephone gear for calling around the world free. Costa Mesa and Huntington Beach detectives who engineered the case claim . $6,000 or more in valuables is involved. One suspect in the case collapsed In bl! jail cell due to apparent barbiturate withdrawal later Tuesday and was bospltaJiUd. Complaints charging the men with seven specific crimes were ezpected to be Issued loday by the Orange County District Attorney's OOice. Tommy KeaJihtr, 21, pavid Gipson, 22, bOth of 2316 E1den Ave., Costa Mesa, and Leslie S. KuUerath, 19, of 7672 Com. modore Circle, HwiUngton Beach, could also face additional counts. Bell Telephone System Intelligence agents are checking out two so-called Blue Boxes recovered at the apartment shared by Kealiher and Gipson. Their use is a federal offense. The sophisticated devices -covered with coded buttons -are capable of being plugged into commercial telephone systems to circumvent electronic gear for making and monitoring worldwk!.e communications. By obtaining the complex code, a person could call virtually any spot on earth via communications satellite, from the privacy of bis own living rOOft'\. A national magazine recenfty in· t.erviewed the unidentified male part,)' Paraplegic Due Another Trial On Shooting Rap A paraplegic who successfully defended himself two years ago on murder charges filed after a manacled Hotlywood man died in a blazing garage wu ordered Tuesday to lace Superior Court. trill for hJs alleged role in the near-fatal shooting of another vis.itor to hls Los Alanlltos home. Raymond Graves Jr., 38, ol 12331 Martha An11 Drive, was ordered in West Orange County Municipal Court to face Superior Court arraignment Marc:h 29 on charges of assault with lntent to commit murder. Graves ls accused of the shooting Jan. 19 of Richard J . Garvas 29, of 18101 Gulf Lane, Huntington Beach, In a fracas that ended with the wounded man running from the Graves borne and collapslng at the house of a neighbor. Garvas has now almost recovered from shotgun wounds in the back and testified Wednesday against Graves. Sheriff's officers were told during the lnitial investigation that Garvas was shot by a third man during a quarrel at the Graves residence. Grav• told ln- vesUgalors that the Intruder took $2,500 from him afltr aboottng Garvu. Graves was ldentlfled by lawmen two years agn u the leader of a gang which shackled Bruce B«k, 30. ol Hollywood lo a stand pipe ln Gnves' garage after a dl>pute over B«k's alleged double agent role In • crus smull!llng organlutlon. B«k died 1 few boun alter firemen released him from tbe burning 111Nc1111<. Ile told bla mcu<n that be dellberatel y aet fire lo the pra~e lo summon help In the beJJef that he would be killed when ti!< gang r<turned. Crav~ often on a slrtlcber and)ost as often In 1 wheelcbllr lha~led lawmen lo dnb him "anU-frontlde, • made a dooen . court _..."* before be ... Dnally llenlenctl! .., le-. chirps last AirU t.5 to .a oll montJi l)>tlJ In ~ Olw\11 JaU. • to finish this race. total lnduslrial shutdown today. Twenty who claims to have cracked the code, Peter Grant's 48-foot stoop Nalu rv million Jobe were threatened w 1th causlng millions of dollars aMually in from the Newport Harbor Yacht Club further power cuts in store for British cost losses to communications com· eased out of the ml.st 'here today aJ)d was homes and Industry. panies. the fifth boat to flnlsh at 9:20 this morn-The blockade of power stations by 11trik· He explained bow it works in that art!· ing. She failed to save her handicap time Ing coal miners bit even harder and elec-- cle, although anyone using the system on Dorothy O by about two hours. Nalll triclty autborJUes ordered power cuts for risks a still fine and lengthy prison term IV flnlshed on an agonizingly show beat one-third of the country, with 15 percent If convicted. through the Boca Chica entrance to hit at any single time. PrevouS!y, only Detective Sgt. John Regan, of the Costa Acapulco Harbor. about 10 percent bad bttn affected. Mesa Ponce Department's new beefed-up Based on Tuesday's positions, the yacht That meant most areas which before nartoUcs squad, said today that Kealiher, with the best chance of dropping Dorothy !Uffered only six hours o! cuts a day now Gipson and Kufferath have been· under O from the top spot appeared to be Tom would be blacked out for nine hours. scrutiny atx>ut a month. Tobin's Erickson 39 sloop Nemesis from The Ce.ntral Electricity Generating The trio wls taken into custody late the host San Diego Yacht Club. She WB! Board, whlth operates Britain's state-run Monday alter an alleged sale: of 175 miles from the finish Tuesday and power industry, said cuts might bit as harblt t 111 N 1 nd d gets one day and three boura time ~ucb as 2Q percent of the coWllry at a ura e P s at ew a street an allowance from Dorothy O. time If gene.rating resources continue to Warner Avenue in Huntington Beach. fall. Capture of the men was not lm· So far, 10 of Britain's 148 power sta· mediately disclosed, to allow authorities ~ · d SJ t d tions have been put out of action by . I surprise element jn. Clle any other t.AOme y a e !trike picket& inventing coal or oil -suspects could be quickly turned up . reaching them. At least a third are work· Police claim a search or the Elden At Valley High· Ing at reduced capacity, the board said., Avenue addresa netted 2,000 more drug . "It !ooka u II lhls II golnJt to be the pills worth Sl,000 in street sales, 20 most drastic day so far. There is no plastic bags of marijuana worth $300, "Mary, Mary, 11 a comedy about 1 doubt that power rationing is becomin,i: plus 67 items of stolen property. wisecracking girl who fights with her ex· more !evere," a generating board The power shortage also bit homes and railroad services. For the seventh day, tens of thousands of homes and offices were without beat for long periods. Some areas also were , bit by water shortages when electric water pumps failed . · At Bath. in west England, water carts were ;tationed at strategic · points throu l(hout the city for families whose supplies dried up. The state-run Britis h railroads slashed more than 1,000 trains from their services. Hundreds of commuter runs were . cancelled and those trains running had fev.·er and unheated cars. "The situation is getting progressively worse. Our coal stocks are dwindling," said a spokesman for the Central Elec- tricity Generating Board . From Page J DRIVE-IN ... The goods loclude televliion sets, husband and dates movie stars wUl be spokesman said. , various phones in addition to the staged Feb. 2.1-26 by the · students of The nine-hour power cuts were split in· Jble With the surroundb1.p." suspicious Blue Box93 with which they Fountain Valley High School. to three.groups of three hours each. to C~~:!an th1!°np~1i' t~ U:::~ could be used, and a televtslon tube cad· Playing in the lead role will be Debby . London't two evening newspapers could be an as.5et •to the communi ty and dy 'lojen from a -p·•-an's van one Wilson. others in the cast are Bob Brack, warned readers some ediUons are Ukely Id be ood 1 . ,_. " --P Schul J hn D ell 1 wou a g way o reservma u.uus-week igo. am er, o amr and Paul to be ate or not appear at all. trial proi>erty for fulure use. I t. lo ted th t In I th It Marshall At Longannet power station In His colleague Councllman John Ha-r nves 1ga rs no a s g e e Ticket., priced at '2 for adults and 11 Scotland, scene of violent dashes '~ Ir T '• TV .,_, -·-ed al 1919 I ~·d •-' added that he had persanally visited om eo ' WlllU.I ............. or •w enwi;, will be aold at the theater-in-between strike pickets and police in the eSJd Maple St., near Keallber and Gipson's the-round prior to ea c b I p.m. t two d 700 . k i.... . r . ents living nearby another Fountain home, involved $1,500 worth of parts and pert pas a)l1, pie et .. '6 nuners Valley drive-U. and noted "no concern'' l i~~o:rmance:::::·::~::;::::::::::~~trurnediii;i"iPi;;iiln~pour~1ng~~ra~1n~to~~=ce~11110~~oi,v;er;the~ai1eri;;aic~u~v1i·ttesii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii eqW~ent. Com paints were expected today, follow· ~ .. 1ng the 24-helD' tl!ne lapse allowing For the woman you love. analysis of the pills and pot 1o e.stabllsh > The milestone watch. · that they were aenulne. . . Keallher was que.sUoned Tuesday mon:i· Ing and returned to hls cell, whm I slekening thump and the cries of fellow prt3oners later brought jailers on the run. New Trial Slated In Mate Slaying; Jury Deadlocked A Huntington Btach widow wbost murder trial was abandoned when an Orange County Superior Court Jury deadlocked at 11 lo 1 against her tbla week was ordered today to face a second trial April 19. Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner set the date for Mrs. Maxine Posth, 51, of 8352 Alvarado St., just two days after 1 jury in Judge Kenneth Williams' courtroom told the judge they could not reach a verdict. A woman member of the panel was the odd juror out in delibtratlona that pro- duced tbe deadlock. TODAY by • OIAMONDS ARE FOR WEARING From deep within the ground , ~ your diamond came. Until It was ,,~ cut, poli shed and set by craftsmen who spend their lives making a , rough he\vn stone into a thing of beauty, that is where it belonged. ·'. Too many of these beauUful f! stones, mounted in expensive set· t tings, no\v lie In vaults and safe deoosit boxes \vhere they give pride and joy to no one. .. Love is more precious than diamonds or gold," 11y1 the proverb. But the mlluton• watch provides all three. 0 OMEGA Mrs. Posth Ls accustd of the fatal slab- bing last Jillie IS of ber husband Robert, II, during a fracas that allegedly began over the victim'• clJOlce of hamburger.s for the Sunday dinner. It wu alleged during the trial that Mra. Pnllh accused her hwband of dellbetately defying her wlshea and then ran from the borne to bey the fried chlcktn she bad earlier ordertd. Why do people, In effect, "return their dl~monds to the grouno ." Fear of theft, loss or wear are fhe dominant reasons. None of these ffave any real ba!is in fact. Dlamnnda and gold. Selected fer Omesa by gem expertl with th• care of a court jeweler. She lold the Jury that her bu8band dragged her from the car by lier halr all the way back to the house. Tbe aobblng woman lold the panel th•t she lold him "f t<>Uld klD you" and that be then handed ber a steak lmlle and Invited lier lo do ao. A valuable stone should certain- ly be insured against theft and Joss, but your best insurance against ear Is regular cleaning and fn- Uon of both stone and setting. She denied throughout the trial that ahe wear your diamond with the plunged th~ knife lnlo her busbandj _ 1· prtde and enjoyment you expected chest and maintained that hla death wu I · an accident. • when you bought it. Then bnng ft And love. TheinOutone watch will brina to mind buutJful •houshtt about tht glvv for ill• Htt of htt ute. . -J. C. JJumphriej }.1wefel'J . 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA Deputy District A.tlorney Robert cui.: In to .. for regular inspection and ::-: ~":f ~ho.:.:":.= ~eanlng, for which there Is no CONVINllNT TllMS 24 ...... IN SAMI LO CATION •(alnst Mrt. Posth. Be wW lllJt ..a tire arge. IANJCAMHICAlD-MASTU Cl<AIQl rHOHI ...... ., death penalty. , ___ ...,. ____________ ,..__, __ .:..... ........... _____ • • -·· • -_,_ Wtdntst.y, Ftbr11,,y 16. 1972 Denti~t MaAes Artistry Out of Work ;.,• . : ' I • • By JOHN VALTERZA 01 M c.u, Pl~ 11111 Sk.itch ls 1 quiet sort of aired11.le w~ lls around b.ls master's offices with the confidence of a veteran caretaker. He yawns a lot in between naps and "1hen his mouth open s you can't miss the hlny gold canine tooth on the left side of Jlls lower jaw. Skitch see1ns proud of the fancy chop- And his master, Dr. \V alter C. Herbart San Clemente, will go Into intricate tail on how he rncjunted t h e sterpiece. with a Santa Fe passenger lr11ln. Skitcb. JOit. Some teeth bad to come out after that bout. When the a!redale Is n't being fitted with gold teeth, his loving master ("If my paUents don't like Skltch, they don 't get treated") It trying out a new dental invenllon on the wllling patient. Harbart ls not your typical denti st. Most of today 's dent.111 programs are pro- ducing "brokers, not craftsmen," he In· slsts. arbart, an Inventor, tinkerer, master and dentist, decided on the J:Old tootlt_ . n he noliced Skilch had a whopping Most of hi s lime is spent In an el~borate machine shop In the rear of his office where fancy little devices are hon· ed from raw melal. One day this week Harbart was perfec- ting an intricate dispenser of compres~ed air which would link. up to a tiny pneumatic chisel. e or tooth decay. he went to work on the mouth of a ,,..ho is a veteran of combat-once COASTWISE The rhythmic chipping from that chisel By Phil J11terlu11dl "Now, Don't Y1ll 1t Me ••• My G1r1g1 Sile Got Out of Hand." U.S. May Try to Unload Famed Hugl1es Airplane LONG BEACH (AP) -Howard Hughes' "Spruce Goose" -one of the world's largest airplanes and one which turned out to be a lame duck -may be headed for the chopping block. Twenty.nine years ag9, the federal government gave Hughes, the billionaire industrialist, a contract to b\lild a giant experimental plywood sea plane. For $40 million. it got the "Spruce Goose." It new only one time . for one mile and reached an altitude of 70 feet. Now. it is reported the government may try to get some of its investment back by selling the plane. The Long Beach Independent-Press Telegram on Tuesday quoted a spokesman for the General Services Administration In Washington as saying the government might sell the 140--ton, eight-propeller craft through compelltive bidding when the lease expires June 30. A Hughes: spQkesman said, "We have no comment because we contacted the h'ead of the GSA, who denled ever making slich a statement." Hughes; wtlo supervised construction and was at the controls In 1947 when the Spruce Goose made its flight , leases it for ~ a month. He pay1 the Long Beach Harbor Department $36,000 a year for a secluded hangar hiding the plane, which has a ~foot wingspa.n. Non-welfare Earnings Cal"led Hig4 chy Reagan ·-'. -' By CARL JNGRAM • SACRAMEN'rO (UPI) -The Reagan Administration· disclosed today that 43 percent of welfare mlpients whose' earn- ings were inspected in a dispuled new clea rance system failed to report ... what the ~ipients re'port:ed them to be. · Jn u icases, there was .a "substantial -diJcrepancy," the report aaid. Of these, approxlllJalely half appear to be totally irleliglble for aid. Jn· Sonoma County, 55 cases were crosschecked and 30 were found to have !'substantial" discrepancies, lhe docu· "substantial" amounts of outside income. "A A.1 • . 1 ed . ment s1.,.wcu. 7he small sampung 1nvo v reel~ . ' . lents of Aid to FamiliM with Dependent. > Of those, f~ have been prosec uted for Children ( AFOC) in five counUes and ~ !ra~d. and" nme others were found lo be was made in advance of a controYersW--·mehgible for further aid. court order which temporarily prohibit.I ~ Carleson ·•laid 462 cases were run further checking. ' through a new "earnings clearance State Social }Velfare Director Robert 1YStem•: established by the California Carleson said. 'fl 'm not.accusing all these. Welfare Reform Act of 1971. Of those, of fraud . 283 -or "1 percent -were found to have "But,'' he said, "it raises a big ques-unreported outside Incomes what would tion : either the.y didn't report their in-make them ineligible for AFDC or would come to the county welfare department reduce their monthly grant. or the C<lUi1ty didn't record ·it when they ; In an order that in!urlated Gov. Ronald reported it." · .... 1 Reci;g,n, a Sacramento judge Feb. 1 A report by Carleson's staff sh/MwtJ\at issued a temport1ry order prohibiting the In Freiino County the earnings of 204 re· state and counties from further double-- cipients of AFOC were checked against checking recipients' out.side income. might be 1 better way of cleanlnc tefih, he believes. Jt alread)' bas worked wtll on Stitch. Tiny driUs so flne that Harbart can etch hil name with lhtm on the e<t&e of a penny &190 spring from the back shop. Many of those devices art one .ot a kind, anb several haYe wound up In laboratories in the aerospace industry. Mfil'\Y" more have been glvtn free to the Loma Llnda Unlversjty School ol Den- tistry -Harbert's favorite dental training ground which recently received a $100,000 grant from the San Clemente dentist. Detore being graduated ffom the USC dentistry program In 1925 the fasclnatlng San Clemente resident shared his 1tudy between ed,gineering and dentistry. He adrriits that he probably was the most insubordinate member of his class. He onet was suspended for 30 da ys for .. mouthing off" to an. Instructor. He still prizes himself on the same al· titude-Jaced with the maximum use of the English language parceled out in a manner reminiscent of the late W. C. Fields. During a recent hea ted debate before San Clemente· city councilmen on the passionate Issue of fluoridation of water, Dr. Harbart replied to a woman who ad· vocated daubing nuoride on teeth Instead of adding it to water: "Applying fluoride to a kid's teeth is just about as erfectiYe as a woman who wants to prevent conce ption ~rinding up a pill and rubbing it on her belly." The laughter that followed ended the rancor. Listening to Harbart is like taking a trip to the florid corners of the English language. Describing his defades as a Los Angeles dentist, then a near-fatal heart ailment. the plucky dentist.Inventor blamed diffi cult patients for much of his physical suffering. "A difficult patient is more of a burden tor me than lifting a grand piano. I'd much rather lift a piano than treat such a person." Harbart and his wife. OliYia, were mar· rled when he was 57 and in his deathbed. "I even sent for a jeweler to bring 11ome rings to my bedside so I could pick one out, and thereafter the crotchety old bachelor married the old maid and we got exactly what each deserved," he said, smiling. And the first decision of the newlyweds was to launch a program for Harbart's health. "The first move, .. he related, "was to get rid of all the tonsils and hemorrhoid! of my practice -those diffi cult pa- tient s." That worked for a while, then the cou· pie decided to move to San Clemente. Harbart reached Into a bottom drawer of an instrument cabinet in his offict and drew out the faded photograph of his of· lice building at 110 W. Mariposa, taken before he ~.k it over. "I bought ltila: archltectur:al abortion," be 1aid, pointing to the prinl. Then he pulled out meticulously con· ceived drawings of a facade and carport.· "These are some of the ideas I jotted down." · He finally settled on a plan that in- cludes a long line of hanging planters each automatically watered by a system (If plastic tubes. · "Tum on one faucet and two dozen or them get watered," he said proudly as he watched the water trickling. The office is extremely modest in com· parison to the traditional young dentist'• modern compleL But in the rear is one room fitted with a bed.and other comfortable furniture. It looks like a modest motel room . "That's where the long·r~nge patient• can stay for the weekend,'' he 1t1k!. Some fly out from New York to be treated. .. I treat only people I like ... never too many patients in a 4fy, then the real of the time I spend out in the machine shop." · Skitch watches the front and lets lhe boss know when there 's a visitor. For his reward, the placid airedale gets a handful of walnuts to crack. "That's his favorite activit)'," says his master. "The gold tooth makes it easy.'' 'G us' Scholle Dies DETROIT (UPI) -August "Gus", Scholle. fonner president of the Michigan AFl..rCIO and one of the most Powerful behind-the.scenes men in the 1tate'1 Politi cal history, died Tu~sday following a long battle againsf cancer. He wu 61. His wife, Kathleen, died last month. Scholle was a, kingrnaker among Michi,an Democrats for 30 yean In· fluencmg every major deci81on the party made. 'Lily White' Brothel Hit Vegas 'House' Won't Accept Negro Customers LAS VEGAS. N•v. (AP I -Tiie Ool· tontall Ranch, a trailer-court brotheJ operating in the dtseft of Esmera\da C.ounty, has come under fire for allegedly turning away black customer$. Tony McQ)rmlck. executive director of the N•vada Equal Rlgbll Consnlulon, uid Tul!.Sday he-wa$ turned away from Jhe brothel arte:r he , went there to in- -Y ligate a compfaint McCormick, wi» II black. •tier the -mlu kln will Investigate the 1ftuation, a ll a pubUc hearing 1.nd, "If nece.sury, e a ceast and desist order." "Ridiculous!" ranch owner Beverly \ H.arrell said of the matter. "A bordeUo should have a choice. in who llity entertain," 1he said. "And, alter all, everyone 1hould have the right to decide who to go to bed with." McCormick uid tht lnlllal complaint came from a black resident of Tuaon. who claimed be wa1 turned away from t~'fahth, about lllll miles north (If here. McCormick uld the. man flied the com~ plaint wllh fhe :4.merfcan Clvil ~Tberttu umon, which forwarded it to the com- mission htte. Nevada IJ the only .Ute with legallud prostllullon. ' \ After tilt compl1int was f 11 e d , McConnlck said he drove to the ranch laJt wee.kend to lnvestigale. "I showed my 1tlite credentials, but I was not all(lwtd inside," he uld. "1 lhlnk It ii 1 diJCTedlt to the 1ilte to have a ptrton barred from anywhere ~ause of bb race," McCormick 1dded. Prostltullon ha. OourlJhed In ~evada alnco the days ·or the sliver rulh of the lllh cen1ury. Although outlawod 1n ,.vml • larrer counu... J)n)l(ittltion ii considered only a "public nuta.tnce." under ftllt law. Many rural counttn 111 ... brothtll to operate openly. ' SKITCH THE AIREDALE HAS HIS GOLD TOOTH CHECKED BY HIS MASTER THE DENTIST Dr. Herbart 11 An Accomplished Cr1ft1m1n and Wit Who Tinker• and Avoids Olfflcult P1tlent1 .. Five Kitty Hawk Sailors Seek Churcli Refuge Mrs. l1·virtg Ap11rel1ended, . . Freed on $250,000 Bond·. SAN DIEGO (AP ) -Five sailors from the Kitty Hawk sought sanctuary in churches today as the Navy C<lnfirmed reports that the. _$Jlperc.arrier will sail Thursday morning for Vietnam . Adm. Bernard A. Clarey', commander of the Pacific Fleet, said in a formal statement that the sailing would lake place a month ahead of schedule. NEW YORK (AP) -Mrs. Clifford frv- lng. quiet and composed, w1s artested to- ~ey in the first step toward extradltk>n on Swiss criminal charges stemming rrom her busbend's purpcrted autobiography of Howard Hugh es. At the feder al <.'Ourthouse, U.S. Magistrate Martin 0. Jacobs ordered her released on a $250,000 per so n a I recognizance bond afler hearing that Swiss authorities were "very much Intent on havln& Mrs, Irving present at trial in Zurich." Mr1. Irving was fingerprinted and had lo turn over her pass port In coMectlon with the bond, which for the lime being llmlts1her to travel to New York and Con· neetlcut. ., The early move will help U.S. naval forces "assist In the protection of American lives as the Unlted States con- tinues its withdrawal program ln the face of the current North Vietnamese military buildup." said the. statement issued in San Diego. Clarey's headquarters is Pearl Harbor. The ~year.old Edith Irving was A group of about 25 antiwar pickets charged as a "fugltl~e from j~stice of the with signs saying .. Stop The Hawk" and confederation of Switzerland In a ~ar· "End The. War" paraded quietly on a rant obtained Tuesday by S w 111 street outside. the gate of North Island · -authorities. Nt1val Air Station where the Kitt)' Hawk • Jt 11id she was wanted for "coun· l! berthed. A rally drew abOut 150 terfeltln& and forgery , use or coun· persons to a downtown San Diego park terfelted or forged Instruments, em· Tuesday. Folksinger' Joan Baez sang. bezzlement, and theft (l1rceny}." The Firs~ Church ol the Bret)1ren Scrnard Reverdln, repre1entlng the granted ,eanctuary Monday to two Kitty S~lu governmenf, argued for the bond, Hawk airplane maintenance men Iden-.caylne the Zurich prosecutor "wlsbe, to tlfled by the pastor as Tudd Plsarek, 19, hive all ncce11ary 1ssuran~e1 that 11he or Auburn , Calif., and Roy Hawkins, 22, wlll atay In thla Jurl 1 sdlctlon. . of Escalon, Calif. They were joined Tue&-He 1ald he was 'aware 1he h11 two ·day night by three others Jdentified aa small children.'' ,,... John E. Johnson, 22, of Hawthorne, Calling the amount "Inordinate and un- Calil.: Ernest C. Ryder, 22, Hurst, Tex,, ncce1sary, '' Mr1. Irving's attorne y and Gordon E. Cook, 19, Imperial Beach, argued that 1he came to the United Calif. Statea Crom her home "voluntarily," that The Rev. M. Guy West. pastor of the her assets "have been tied up'' and that East San Diego church which has a C<ln--"she had met every court appearance."' gregatlon of so •. said two of the sailors Mrs. Irving entered the courtroom were 1till on official liberty until mid· smiling, In black jacket, brown pleated night. skirt and patterned red and orange .. ' blou se, but her expression changed ~ the smlle dlsappenrcd whtin one ot seven U.S. marshals approached. "'': "Edllh Marrrllh Irving, J have 1 ..--I',· rant for ynur llrrest." the ' marshal uttl:, '"You are arrested offlclally at thrl time." M11 glstrntc Jecobs set March 8 fof .... prcl lml nury hearing In the case . , '" The. cha rges were the flr11l to be m'1qf: In the cnsc under lnvcstlgatlnn by 'WO° grand jur ies here. It lnvolYe11 the autheg.. tlclty or the purported aultlblography pf Hughes as <.'Omplled b)l lrvlng. . . Ir ving claims the book, which was ti have been publlshed by McGraw·lllll lnc: and excerpted In Liie ma"azlne, w.111 assembled from more tha n 100 hours of Interview! he conducted with the reclusive bllllonalre. Denla\11 of any 11ulh meeting~ ·or even knowledge of the autbOr have been nttributed to •lu&hea. . , Time magazine ha1 branded the wor~ • hoax, pirated from another tnanuacrlP,t •. Ir ving has aald !hat his wile, Edlifi, l Swlu cltlten, .depo1lled In a Swlu blni 1650,000 In checks from McGraw-HW, ~ IN a ,paNport Jn tbe mme of ''HeJ11 !I;_ Hughe1." The money w11 lnlended 1.~ .pa,yment for Hughe1. · , 1, Mn. Irving taler wllhdr..,.. the mmeJ' and dcpo1lted tt•2,000 OJ II In •not~• Swiss bank under another n1mt1 .s\t~ aulhoritle1 1ald. ' More than nlne ·documcnta SJ!ld to COPJ lain the 11lgn1tture1 of l·lughes have heed sent to Ne w York from the Nevada s~tt Gaming C:Ontrol Board. llughes operate• a large gambUna: empire In Nevada. A New York Clly poll"" hlndwrllln1 txpert h~1 testified before the a;rand jufy that he believed 1lgn.autre1 were fora:~ ii C<lrrespondence Jrvlng cl•tmed trucn;a had wrlue111. 'l0Wf£.f;o C:~'tl}trg .. GOLD MEDAL ~ml ,. Folding WUU i DIRECTOR'S 0 Nymph Chair ........ 11 11 Sweetheart Chair 1211 Sweetheart Headboard Twl• 1211 •• , ... 19" I>-24" WASTI IASKITS ...... ········-· fr°'" 2.Jt WALL SHILVIS, TOWIL RACKS AND HAMPHS •............... fr-2.H MlllOI FlAMU ····-·····-fr-7.tS CHms ..... ·················--It.ts fLIPHANT TAILI ············--·········· 24.H Nl~HT STA~D .......................... -· Zt.tS ITA~AUS . ····-·······-············· -n .tS Due to th• dock •trike, some item• illu1tret•d may b• out of stock. The Store for all Se-asons ' • . . CHAIR R99. $18.00 $1495 tl Choo•e from 11110 tlarlec., of eanetl8 eolor• e Quallt1t laarll111••• fra'"e• In ttattfrel, blRh & telllte flnbh ~ DAil Y PllOT , . •• I ~ps By TICOMAS J\llJl\PHIN& ot "'9 .,_ll'r 'Utt lttll Nixon Studies .Late WASHINGTON (AP) -The lights burned late in 1 cottage atop a Maryland mountain and ln the White House a11 Pruldent Nl.xon and hi1 1ide1 raced- againlt the ck>ck to comple~e prepara· tlons for hla historic minion to China. At secluded Camp David In Maryland's Cltoctln Mountains, where he flew Tues- day by helicopter, Nixon worked Into the night reading loo.se·leaf notebooks con· talnlng cla511lfied material on China and Its leaders prepared by flenry Kiulnger's National Security Council. At the White House and in adjolnlng of· lice bulldtngs, an army or aides ate mld· night snacks at the.it desks aa they coped wJth lhe complex loglatla involvtd In sending a presidenl and hil advisers into a country with whicb--ibe United--StaWs has had little contact for two decades. The details of arranging a 20,395-mile, 13-day·presldential journey are fnany. For example, White House assh1tants are making certain that bundttds of guburOan Washington schoolchildren, tlny American flags in hand, wlll be oo the South Lawn with congressmen and Cabinet of(icials to bid farewell when the President leaves Ws residence Thursday morning on the first leg of the trip. They are making certain, too, that enough American champagne ls c1rrled Jnto China for the rec iprocal banquet Nti- on will give his Chinese hosts in P_.eking. The are tending to details or presiden· Ual security and well-belng: from seeing that the scores of Secret Service agents ;ire outfitted with warm clothing for Pe- king's wintry blasts to making certain the presidential jet carries an adequate sup- ply o( blood the same type as Nixon's, They also are tending to details or neM coverage: assuring installation of 15 8()undproor telephone booths in the Pe· king press center, making certain the l reams of paper w~Ch wlU he furnished the 17 corrtspondents accredltld ror the trip actually reach China. And Uiey •re tendln& lo the det&Ued needs of White House staffers ac- companying the President: shippi.ag in electric typewriters for secretaries and making certain that mulll..cotor maps of China are inserted into green loose-leaf fact books being given to everyone mak- ing the trip. The stafrers handling the Washington end or the logistics maze have been in constant contact with a group of White House aides already in China. Trip· I The advance team is arranging, a.mon1 other things. for the Chines~bullt aululf10Ulles which Nixon and his erta tourage will Ulfl during lbe w'ek. While in China . Nixon ilso will fly aboard aircraft 8upplled by the Chinese government. His big, black armor-plated llmousine is being left at home -another departure from past foreign trips. When Nixon was in Bermuda in December, for instance, the presidential limousi ne 1t"a8 flown there for hls use even though It had difficulty negotiating the winding, narrow roads. • CllOSSFIRES DEPT. -Bruce s. Hop- plna is one of th& many resldenta of Lquna'1 Art Colony who could rightfully be classllltd u a Llguna Watcher. He w1tchu most everything. Particularly, Hopping ~ founder of an oreanl1.1Uon known aa the K a I o 1 Kqalbol Foundation, which, u p o n curtory 1umlnation of Its letterhead. you might figure la an ooUit dedicated to promotion of nude male statuary. It bn't. Bomb Put · Ecuador's Chief however. On Britisli Ousted 4th Time Hopping'• lltcfature lnlorms t h e unllormed that actually KalOI Kagathos 1t~ for the ancient Greek ideal of education of youlh to phyalcal dlaUncUon and nobUlty ol mind. So there, i1 Hopping qualllles as a Laguna Watc in general terms, he particularly wa t the beaches where he has pro. moted witeraport!, castigated the City Council and Police Department for things Ile didn't like, verbally fh1yed high school coaches and demanded that the municipal lifeguards stop teasing homo- 1eruals. AIL THIS ASIDE, It develops that Bruce recently was also watching me when this comer was discussing prob- lerm of hlghw•y safety, This prompted hJm to write tn thus : "Thomas Murphone. our own cracker- barrel Pooh Bah of precinct prog· nosticallon,-recentiy and hopelessly ad· mltted mucking himself in his own bJghway fright stories. "The object of the newspaper blood and gut.s, he says, 11 to pacify 'grim traffic officers' who are begging that !()mething be done about the hlshway traffic fa talities; presa reports of which have only provoked readers who have been " "disturbed'' and/or 'unsettled'· by the carnage. # •iWOULDN1T YOU think a cracker-bar. rel columnist -and • political one at that -would have been told about what hap- pens when you saturate people with blood, agony and death ad lnllnitum? ioeut the tlectk>neerlng 1eer doesn't read jt that way ... rtader surveys, he aays, suggest horror stories are the only way -right, Murph? I l I Troop Ship BEL.rAST, Northern Ireland {UPJ) - Security forces today found and defused a <!(}..pound bomb planted on a ferry from England in what may have been a bid to blow ·up 300 British troops en route to .Ulster. An army spokesman said explosives experts sped to the ferry, the Duke or Argylle, when it docked in Belfast from Heysham, England , just before 7 a.m. carrying about 300 British troops and a nurr.bcr of civilians. The explosives experts defused the bomb after several hours, the spokesman said. "It may have been an attempt to injure troops as the device was fully primed, but somehow hadn't detonated," the spokesman said . "It could also have been an attempt by the lRA (Irish Republican Army) to seek publicity," the spokesman said. "We have no idea when the bomb was placed aboard the vessel." The British army reported a number of Belfast reprisals it attributed lo the IRA -three men shot in the thigh, a tradi. tional IRA reprisal. and a young man who had been tarred and feathered. Two other persons were found shot during the night. QUITO (APJ -Ecuador's mil itary chiefs ousted President Jose Maria Velasco Ibarra Tuesday night for the fourth time in his career and sent him off to Panama. The purpose of the coup ap. parenlly was to prevent !he election of a radical to the presidency. Brig. Guillermo Rodriguez Lara. who was rewarded with command of the army after putting down an attempt to overthrow Velasco last April, declared himself president. He said he would be assisted by a council made up of the • three servi ce chiefs : Rear Adm. Renaldo Vallejo, Air Force Gen. Julio Espinosa Pineda and whoever is named to com· mand the army. The new president pledged to respect all existing international treaties but an· oounced no olher plans or policies. . . . --................... ................. -_..._.. .. ~;. ... ~ ·-· o P•(lf t C OCIAN -~ -~ ---.... . ..... . ~ _......... -·~ -- ................ ~~· .---· The presidential election is scheduled for June, and Velasco. now 78, hBd prom· ised lo hand over his office on Aug. 31 to whoever was elected. The c11ndidate of the radical Concentration of Pflp ula r .Forces, Assad Bucaram , w;is believed certain to defeat the conservative can· didate, Carlos Arizaga Vega. Velasco ltarned that the bloodless coup was under way Tuesday night and flew to Guayaquil on the coast, where he tried to broadcas t to the country. But na vy oC· ficerS arrested him before he could get to the microphone and held him in· communicado until they put him aboard a military plane for Panama. In a 13·point announcement , the new president put the country under a state of sitge and martial Jaw. " :-·· ., "" z ' . .. •u I ft RAZ t i "But rather than monitor reader rtsponse to the macabre, why not Instead 1pend some of that survey bread researehlng trafflc accident provocations •.. such 11: slow drivers In the f 111 t lane; morbJd highway curiosity aeekers; the hot rod psyohotlc; lhe hlgh-beam, highway hlghballer, and, the dronk. "Obviously, most of the head-on ac· cidentJ occur In the inside fast lanes , .• Meanwhile, Bernadette Devlin and 25 olhcr persons accused of 'p r o t e s t marching in defiance of a government ban won adjournment of their cases to. day to the cheers of hundreds of sup- porters massed outside the Newry ·court. Miss Devlin, a member of Parliament, represented herself. But lawyer John Curran, who represented other defen- dants, demanded the adjournment ''in the interest or peace in this district" at Newry near the Irish Republic border. ECUADOR PRESIDENT TOPPLED, PUT ON PLANE TO PANAMA Military Leeder• Seized Reins~ Cite Eltction Fe1rs publlctze thla evidence and motivate Head Over Heel• drivers to use the safe outside Jane. 0 "DEGLAMORIZE the auto.advertised, masculinity trip . . . instill general awareness and encourage public put· down or the boob-drivers who are responsible for the grotesque statistics of automobile sla.oght1:r. "And a priori to reducing people to llighway statistics, focus on the need for Improving automobUe safety at the prob- able eipense of affronting the lucrative, automobile trade accounts and provoking the local, honesl trader harry -dealer types. "Ralph Nader has Joni asserted it's a lot quicker and safer to improve the mot.or vehicle than change human nature , .. OK, Murph?" So there you art, ~ks. Hopping makes &Orne good points. But as In his Laguna Watching, be blew a couple too. J wasn't trying to suggest that "blood and guts'' coverage was pubUshed to paclry grim traffic cops. Jt.s main purpose is to tell you what has happened to your neighbors and what might happen to you. As a safe- ty campaign, however. J, think this kind of coverage b a failure. AND RALPll Nader aside, I suspect automakers will never invent a motor car that is idiot.proof. Anyway, Bruce, thanks for ele\•atin.g me to lht rank of Pooh Bah. You folks ne.\•er thought I'd makei II. did you? Patti Pfeiffer, 20, a secretary with the Las Vegas Convention Author- ity, tries out this apparatus at the All-American Coaches Clinic. It's called a ."gravity guiding exerciser" and is designed to help aching backs. Ltke any good quarterback, Patti convincingly demonstrated how to draw a crowd. Model Who Testified In Drug Quiz Killed NEW YORK CUPJ) -Blackhaired. blue-eyed model Patricia ''Palsy'' Parks testified last June before a grand jury which indicted her n e i g h b ors on Manhattan's fashionable upper East Side on narcotics charges. Before she could testify at their trial, the chic divorcee disappeared. Police announced Tuesday that she had been killed. Twelve days ago, a sanitation worker in Massapequa, N.Y .. on Long Island. saw smoke rising from a thicket of woods. He found the smoldering, near. nude body of a young ""Oman. She had been stabbed JO times In the chest, her throat had been cut and gasoline had been poured over the body. Among the 14 rings. four bracelets, five gold chains and half-dozen crucifix~n the body, one cross carried t!Jffi in- scription: ''I am a Catholic . Call a priest. .. Tuesday, after two of the four defen· dAnts indicted by the grand jury to which f\li ss Parks testified "'ere found guilty of conspiracy lo possess and distribute heroin and cocaine. police revealed that the body was that of f\fiss Parks. JO. \1inccnt Pacelli Jr .. 29, and Demetrios Papadakos, "'ho lived in the same plush ~ 11parln1ent building as Miss Parks. were convicted by the jury. In August. Elisa Possas had pleaded guilty. and PaceUi"s wife Beverly had been acquitted. Sadat Declares Need to Attain Arms Advantage CAIRO (AP l -President Anwar Sadat declared today that Egypt must develop sophisticated weapons in order to face U.S. and Israeli armaments. Sadat told a special meeling of the na- tional congress of the ruling Arab Socialist Union that Egypt must be prepared to accept big losses and inflict even greater losses on Israel. He gave no hint of how Egypt could develop sophisticated weapons. bu t presumably they_ would be supplied by the S<>viet Union. Declaring that it was a world obligation to bring peace to the Middle East. Sadat added: "We want the force of law, not the law of force." "We must prepare ourselves for a long political and military struggle." Sadat said. "There are no short cuts through which we can ach ieve our aspirations." Northwest Soaked by Rain He made no mention of Israel's agree- ment lo U.S.·sponsored ciose proximity talks wllh Egypt on reopening the Suez Canal. The agreement. awaited here for a year. "'as mAde Feb. 2 as Sadat left for Moscow. Wiliter Maintai1is Hold on Nortlier1i Smtes Ship Survivors Head for Port Temperatures IJ.S. Su1nmar11 lttln, I tci1ti.,1,,. ell •-•rid cold "'•lftf1IMd • '*llM• wtll'ller ""-"' #(?'OU"'"~'"" Nort11H1111•1•• ·~ PUNTA ARENAS. Chile (UPI\ - A Otr. Dvt NI, t'lll •-r1Uy mlkl wt•· ...., .,..r•!ltd 1t1t"011911 mo11 111 ,,,. Chilean navy transport, carrying 144 """· persons rescued from the grounded Stud¥ r•ln 11111 II" '"" •l•Hdr-dtendlfd P-.c11ic HOl'fllwft1, iurn.,,. Norv.•egian cruise ship Lindblad Explorer. o0 •-1n111nc1 '"" 1Pl'Mc1ll\9 ,, 1,, stea med to~·ards !his port today -the 11st ti """ O..~OI•\. • storm rnovino 11• 1~ s1 L••••"<• \\'(lrld's soulhernmost city -on ils Jong· vaii..-trl-rtd Sll9W """'" ''""' ""' delayed Voya ge (rom an Antarctic island. G,....1 ltlin to lfl• ...._.IK'11tnt. 1.. 1. "r<l•e ••r. 1T1v•llrtt i., rn. .... ~.. Navy ncadquarters in Punt.a 1\.1 enas d!N9d '""• ""' Mlcfwts1 •1111 ._..., said the transport Piloto Pardo would -.,191"1t ~""" "'"" °' .,.,_ F ,. r..-a '" -,,...., complete the 541)..mile Journey rl\lay T-•"',.., ..,.,,.. .._ .,....., morning. The navy repo rted choppy seas. ....... 4 ~ ,_ •I ''" C111 .... Wit.., k I ·-le IJ •' ""' w.,1, Flt, ov,rcast s l's and brisk winds a ong tn~ Coa•faf roule from Kine George Island in the ~ to01... 1.i."'1 ... ,11111# .. 1..,. South Shetlands. "'""'' ,,., .._..1 ... "-" =:.: The Pilolo Pardo and t.he Chilean Navy :r~· T':u!.:'.'°::..!" .:0.., n • lcebre•icr Zapiola dfparted Tuesdly "C-:'~~'i.:":i'!r:.,::~ ,,_! aft1ernoon. Th1 e trbeansport hf ad bttn1. rdunalhble • " n. w1tw .._,.,.tu,.. u. lo eave ~rl er cause o a b l1ZA at S11n, /lf0<>n . Titles roged In the nor1h<a1Jern .Alltarctic for WIDNllOAY four days. Stcetw:l 111•" M:• "·""· s.> The Chilean Navy abandoned its --., """ Tf'!UUOAY ~:• '-"'· '·' 11.lvage efforts Afond.ay nil:hl alter tbt ~: ~= ~=:::: ~ Ytlcho m•de a third and final attempt to """""""" n·a." s.l frtt the dlaabltd ship rtom the rocks 1~ ~ •·• •"' • 1 M:ar the lsl&nd where: It ran •""""1nd b It"'"-I JI • ,., s.t1 S 11 I "" ' -· .,,. -. •bel 1 v •"' 1m '"' ,.,... Friday. Getieral Apathy North Carolina Primary Fails to Stir Interest By NANCY BENTSON RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) -Most ol the national candidates have been ignoring North Carolina's first pres id en ti a I primary and there are indications the feeling among voters is mutual. \V ith the May 6 voting less than three months away, only Rep. Shirley Chisholm (D·N.Y.), has said for sure she will enter on the Democratic side. The primary could boil down to a battle CAMPAIGN '72 between two regional contenders as dif. rerent as day and night. Most or the Democratic contenders have visited the state at least once in the past year. but the candidates so far have been farther south campaigning ln Florida, and only one national candidate has a visible campaign organization.' The slate's hopes ror a new place in the national limelight haven 't material.. lied, but neither have the hopes of many state political leaders for a new involve- ment by North Carolinians in national politics. Democratic GOv. Bob Scott stepped out with an early endorsement of Sen. Ed· mund S. Muskie ([).Maine). and set up a Muskie campaign in North Carolina. Other top Tar Heel Democrats. including . candidates for statewide office., have maintained a hands..()ff posture. The candidates most talked about are both Southerners -Alabama Gov. GOOrge Wallace and Duke University President Terfy Sanford. a fonner North Carolina governor who has stature in the national Democratic party and wu one of those considered for vice president at the 1968 convrnlioo ln Chica.go. A survey by the University of North Carolina Institute for Social Research in- dicated Dernoc:rat:I were ft!! divided among the candidate.s, wllh Sen. Edward Kennedy (0.~tass. ), who insiJ:ts he 's not a candidate, the only one whn could persuade a significant number of blacks to tven cast a baUi>I. The survey showed a:lrong support for PruJdcnt Nixon in a state where registered Democrata o u t n u m b e r Rtpublicans thre1·to-oae , and researchers ukl it appears the Preli· dent. who carried lhe atste In IJISI, cin defeat any Democrat lhil year. Wallact. Included as a lhlrd party can- didate in lht SW'\·ey, rttei\'ed about 30 , percent of the total support. showing he h:ts not lost strength since 1968 when he placed second in a race with Nixon and ~mocrat Hubert Humphrey. Wallace is running as a Democrat thi!I year and, lo the dismay or liberal Democrats here, is 'llmost ctrtain to in- clude North Carolina In the primaries he <;;;.) plans to enter. , A petition drive Is under wa y in hi!I behalf, and there Is little doubt he c;in collect the required 10,000 Democratic signatures. Jn recent wee.ks. a strong student-led drive bas been launcMd to push Sanford, a potential candidate on the moderale- liberal end, and the drive has caught on with many aduJtJ. The studenlS:-led by University of North Carolina law student William Blue, initiated the drive on their own but now have the backing of old-line Sanford su~ porters and endorsements from Sen. B. Everett Jordan ([).N.C.) and East Clrolina University President Leo Jenkins. a man of major influence in eastern North Carolina . Sanford bas not said he will enter the primary. but has nOt discouraged the drive, and said he wlU meet with students to talk things over after they have the necessary number or signatures. Sanford supporters say they believe he C<lUld win lhe nomination II other can. didates arrive .at the Miami Beach con- vention scarred from primary battles . Others hav' called the Sanford candidacy only a ploy to dilute the strength of Scott's favorite, Muskie . Wbate\•er the reason, it is generally conceded Sanford could do as well, if not slightly better. lhan Wallace. leaving only a small percentage of the votes scattered .among tbe other contenders. UDdtr the primary law, the delegate vot~ will be committed ror the first ballot only proportionately among the four top finishers and a candidate must havt at least 15 ptrctnt of the vote tot,. qualify for lay committed votes. Accordlfli to Smtt, the "Issue" for North CaroUna w111 be Pre,.,ldent Nixon·1 rtalrd of performance. The governor may be rlghJ, but the Jn. dlcations art many Tar Heels agree with Stanley f@:lrct, a Raleigh resident, who Aid "If the Dmnocrats don't come up with anybody bettor Iha~ Jhe crop !hey have, J mi&bl u wtJJ just vote fDt Wallace..." Th 11rldor: Ttnntutt. I e I r c ' ti l c n c r ri ' • I f l p DAll.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE (/A TV, a Pilot Project • Th~ picture lube I~ beginning ·.to 'Harm up and from all indicallon& lhe 1 .. 1 pattem ls bein~ viewed with Interest by \V.;lshinglon, D.C'.,. communications expert.I. Focus .of their scrutiny 'is a loca)jfivo-city Commun- ity Antenna Television .(CATV) system .. U the Joint po.wers agency ~uceesafully . enaineors it, CATV cou(d reach 350,00Q local viewers represent- ing 92,000 individual homes· In five lo seven year•. Pro- gramming and service ·potentiil is virtually unlimited. Disunity marred the lnl~ organizational ·efforts. Harmony is· happily more evident Jl4't With hiring of a coordin;itor, plus agreemeilts on f1.¥1d ·contrlbutio~ and distribution. · Veferan video engineer John 'Bateman has a heavy six·month period ahead of him as coordinator. getting it all together in one multi·faceled study package. Electronics and economics are interwoven through- out. Economically, Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, Hunting· ton Beach, Fountain Valley and· Westminster, plus the Coast Community College and Newport·Mesa Unified school districts, could Jiatdly go it alone. By joining In one combined authority, they prob- ably can. ·This is precisely the point that 'intrigues the FCC, which has pledged heavy tecbnicaJ and advisory aid. They for see it as a pilot program in feasibility for nation· wide application. Cost to subst!ribe to CATV computes to about $5 a month. Cost to inst.all just 6ne mile of cable, however 1 is $3,000 and a local hookup would' require many miles. U CATV is approached on a joint-agency basis here along the Orange Coast and shown to be practical we can be proud of participation in " ~ethnological break· through. Similar inter-city CATV systems could be workably engineered then among geographic'ally. socially and cul· turallv·related community clusters across the. country. The. latter point is specifically pertinent insofar as CATV specialists say Is one of.the biJ11est headaches In· valved w programming. What do subscribers want! What type material is locally avallablel Customers in some sectors will want cultur&; others may want community news or education and still others may prefer cartoon com~ies. .,. Television bas greaUy advanced from fuzzy old' Tom Mix westerns. blank screens and showcards' saying: "Sorry ... Due to Circumstances Beyond Our Con· trot ... 11 Circumstances easily within control could make coastal CATV service a reality and advance its applica· tion nationwide. Recreational Trails Huntington Beach has a chance to become a real trail blazer in the field of recreation. The city has been presented an extensive plan for the developrhent ot 132 miles of recreational trails at an estimated cost of $138,000. The plan was developed by an unofficial trail~ co m• mittee under the direction of Mrs. Margaret Carlberg, president of the city's environmental council. It includes 60 miles of foot paths, 60 miles of bicycle trails and 12 miles for equestrian use. , City councilmen accepted the plan last week and passed 1t on to the recreation and parks commission tor implementation. Several councilmen also said trails ought to be one of the city's top priQrities. Mrs. Carlberg was disappointed wh~n the council failed to name an official trails committee. as she had asked. But the council did ask her and her hundreds of supporters to keep the project rnovirig. U properly developed, the trail& system will add a very bright feather to the city's well-plumed recreation· al cap. Let's hope Mrs. Carlberg and her group keep al it -with full support of the city government. H President Will Hear Hard Tal·k in Peking Nixon Not Expecting Much folly of Others Key W . .\.SHINGTON -One does not know I'"--.· "'• on is probably better prepared to go into T s for sure what caused Presldent Nixon to ! I' \: his 1 discussions with the old men, with 0 uccess be so impressed with the section&. on y t Ri~)\ard WiJeoB ~ t their long mem.ories, who run China. He ., No . Amnesty for Draft Evaders China in Andre Madlraux's .' 'thA n tthi.. L ~ .;...,. .... :....\, . ·-•.: .. ,i. ...... i~ ~tottex11pectingbemuch . ~he fartct otr hthe .l'l~ .... ~"'°~"il''.'t'!r'!'...,..,......,..., Tot•· Editor · Memoirs.'' An educate guess 1s at e ~ ·" -v1s1 1 se may more unpo an t an 1111: • · 11 I' t were ••-en•-lopi'ng mysti'ci·sm's of Mao t Its h. h ·u There seems to be quite a bit of talk In French 1nte ectua s prose conveys o "..:: ... any concre e resu w 1c w1 grow regard Lo granting anuic~·y fur lhosl' who Nixon better than any other what he will based ·upon the legends and , undoubtedly, from it. could afford to flee to Canada In orcler tfl be up against in ,China . the mythology of the partisan 1truggle in avoid being drafted in rhe service. This of This perception u n doubted I y en-tlie North which brought Mao to power IN A CONVERSATION not long ago, Thoughts 11 Large course is a gross 1nsull lo all our brave couraged him to say that there was no ~ :sanctity in a Spartan world. the President emphasiud his long range men who did serve . and Jost their 1lV<'i'I or r t. . view or this visit. ke was thinking in For every one man who succeeds in the · cause or op 1m1sm NIXON STARTS from scratch and t r h . h Chi were crippled, a\50 those in our prisoner· . . erms o t e next generation w en na world because of his own talents, a dot.en r -or pessimism. against deeply ingrained prejudices in his becomes a nuclear superpower and, in succeed simply because of the folly of 0 ·War campi. • either -as he ex~ dialo~ With the Chinese leaders and v1·ew of that. the folly of tett;•g any op. Just recenlly lhe Secretary of St11tt' Plore' the ground ... others: as in a poker game.· where the with ess reason for optimism than when portun1·ty pa" to begi·n the di'alom•• was quoted on TV as saying, "This I!'! not WI• t b Chou En Ill!' e-winners win because the losers a-so · the dialogue began with the Russians in which might avert a cataclysmic CMAict foolish , and not because the WIM' e:.'are the lime lo talk. of granling amnegty to end Mao Tse-tung. tbe Eisenhower administration. involving three great superpowers in the 30 smart. -~· our men ·wh(. Otd the country to avotd The SUSP.icion can Mao thought Rus.sian C h a i Tm an not lo dl&tant future. • • • bellJB , drafted, whll~ our 1]1en , are •till be indulged th a 1 . nffilinf t••· w1r, Cll\ .,.., In ~llonal'-pt-Nixon subconscious. Khrushchev a foo~ for trying to com-Face·to-face meetings or o the r The candidate who makes the fewest ;:;-.. r· Mailhox I tetters Jrom Ttndtr1 art totlcom,., Normalh1 writers aho~td convtu tht1r n1t11ao•• (ra. 300 wordl or l1.tt. Th.I riah.t to condtmt letter• to/t 1pact or eliminate llbeJ i1 reserve . AU ltt- ttrs m111t inchtd.1 1ionatvrt and maii.. 1no oddrett. bttt nomt•· ma11 b• IDith- htld on r1qUf1t t/ 1u//fd•n' ''°'°" u a_,...;, 'l'ollr11 WllJJ not b# ,,.,.. UiMdo .·1 • r. Iy used the word, promise with American capitalism, and a !•cosmetics" ol -inteFnational palaver do promise.!! stand.!! the least chance of belntr war ~am,... -optimism; .. · lim-be-: ·~ ---betrtyer for .. 1blndonl~•'£hina·ln ihe· IOJ!I' • J1D1 l\nPl'l'll"~-Presidl?nt who .. kMwr· t11ar,--0 raci;a;· 41QibiiiJi oii ·;;;c;--·-·-·-................. r.f11&-l1-•ery·-lnter .. tlng,-Jus> .whe• ·I•·· cause there is not much in MaJram to ago , confrontation aver ~emoy . ant! qtore than any other 111 recent year1, he that bails alone he . the right time to talk of a:ranllns 1'm· It w111 the 19'71 Grand Jury recom- mend1t\on "that th1 joint board of direc- tors or the Orange CountY. llnltatlon districts revise their dlrktorB' fee 11chcdulc1 to eliminate lnequitle1 ind COJlo 11lder reorg1nlutlon of the joint dl1trirt.1r governina body in order to achieve more efficiency ind economy." encourage it. The gulf between tradi· ~at.su. With h!s sense of ~e continuity of a.rouses the Chinese leaders' a:uspicions. would seem to be nesty to thoge who ln11,1Jt every man who tional American iliought and the Mal-history, Mao JJ!I not considered likely to DR HENRY A KISSINGER h 'd the superior man . Berved, or lost his life, and to the parents raux version of his interviews with Chou have undergone a change of heart by the · . · as. sa1 .. .. ~ of these brave men who elected to l!lerve En·lai and Mao Tse-tung and his inter-time he discourses with Nixon. The past th~ A~stty has ~ougTheht the Ch.1nese If Marx were their country? pretation of the same is very wide will strongly influence the present. Canh_ !11erican~ tog et ber · necessity. In allve t 0 d a y . he / · 1na s case. 1t may ISBumed. being might be severely THIS IS THE MOST urupealcable war, CHOU EN-LAI, for example was not PRESIDENT NIXON thinka that once the threat of a Russian showdown. In the moet unjul!lt war. the most stupid war content when he talked with Malraux four be sets foot on lilt JOil of mainland China somewhat this same context Malraux ii ~empted to chance of all time, bul even a:o there should be no years ago . with the Americans mertly. a, new c;hapter will begin, to be marked quoted u saying that Mao's first aerious I.I~ ~=: a,p:: amnesty . returninli!: from Vietnam and Ill Mia. by negotiation rather {han confrontation. que.gtion will be if the Americans are feulonal 8portl are the If justice were really done In this case, They had to get out of everywhere.,Santa 'tbere ia not much in Malraux to support prepared to give aid to China. If not, IC· ~le." opium of the the man who brought this awfuJ thing Domingo, the Congo, Laos, Thailand, that. but. rather, the conclusiQn that the cording to Malraux, there will not be I " • down upon his fellow Americans should Pakistan -anywhere they were or bad Chinese in their long view of history will great deal more to talk about. • • be brought to jU!ltlce and charced with been. "Let them go home, and the world re.gard ~ Niion v~it as a footnote in the If Malraux is right, this ii a Wnple of t A marriage-vow Is a blank check. writ· malfeasance in of!k:e. I do mean, Lyndon will have peace again," !laid Chou En-lai. progrewon of China to new levels of the kind of hard talk Nixon will hear in en in a fit of hysteria, filled in for an Im-B. Jllhnaon. Until that happens. China will nol ~eatrw:M: .outsbinin~ the glorioo.g past. It Peking, and he ia not yet ready to po&sible sum. and when subsequently If and when thla: IB done , then we c&n negotiate with the United State& about 1s not ·sunply ,for their archeological value disclose what kind of an answe'r he would presented for ca!hing, returned · for begin to talk of amnesty _ and not Vietnam or anything else. thit ~Great Wal!, the Ming tombs, and give. In fact, he probably cannot give a ''insulficient funds." before. l\1ao's contempt for ill( Russians the ~bid~ ~ty ha"'.e been p~eserved categorical a~swer. Nor are there ma_ny ' • • emerged in his remarks to Malraux . He as ~¥3 of, put glories that will come otheibtegor1cal answers on the ma]Or It is hard far someone else to injure us IT ~1UST BE BROUGHT out here too, thought the Russians were iollowin~ agam. issuts between the United States and unless we have first placed the weapon in that Lyndon B. Johp10n was quqt.ed 11 road to capitalism, no less. Beyond\thft Havin& grasped this point of view, Nix· China. his hand ; mo&t ill·treated people are in saying. "l would like to 10 . dtlwn ln Travel Was Once Banned President Nixon'.• planned vl.!1bl to China and the Soviet Union )Jave made some people unhappy, but no one ques- tions his right to go. It was not always thus. For most of U.S. history, 'incumbent Chief Executive& were expected to stay not only on American soil but allO 1s close as possible to the naUon'1 capital. George Washington, as might 6e ez. peeled, set the precedent. D!irlng a trip to New EnglaDd, the first Pres:ident iJ reputed to have avoided Rhode Jsllnd because it had not yet Bigned the Constitution and hence w11 foreign ter- ritory. When Rhode hland did sign shortly thereafter, Wa!!hingl.on made 1 1pecial trip to the new tltate . Later ?residents scrupulously observed the foreign-travel ban. William McKinley, for example, would not Bet foot on the in· ternational bridge when he.met with the President of Meiico 1t El Paso, Texu, in OllAHGI COAST DAILY PILOT llcberl N. W etd, P111>1Uh<r Thor1141 K•nll, EdUor Alb<rt W, !Joi., Edilonal /'ag• ldilor The edltorld -•! the l!al1r Pilot see.kl 1.o fM'onn and st1m11· late ~ by JJ1't9entin1 tbfs ~· oplntonl and ~ mmtary an topb; ot t~t ant afgnlf"~ by pnMdiq a forum far the upMdon ot. our ~ •olnlonl. and by pnomUns the dlwne ~ntl or-tntonned ob- __.. """ -... toplat "'thed<Y. 'Wednesday, F~b. 18, 1972 • ' ' Editorial Re,search ' . 1901. Benjamin Harrison had displayed more daring 10 yean earlier when he ventuTed u far as the middle line of the bridce. · THEODORE ROOSEVELT brol<e with tradition in 1906 by traveling to Panama. Although the trip was criticized by 10me of TR's political opponents, it was not seriously q~stion~ or f o r m a I I y challenged OD legal .grounds. Woodrow Wilson , in contrast, encountered massive Cll'JIOlili® when he anoounced in 1913 that be Would ittend the Paris Peace . Conference. ••So fierce was th e criticism," Josephus Daniels wrote , ''that 111' outlider would have &UpPoied that Wilson was breaking all Ten c.om. mandmentl at once." Wilioo'1 trip to Europe, it was pointed ml wooJd be '1Jite unlike Roosevelt '1 journey to Panama. For the. first time, tbe: President would leave the West.em lltmispbere, go well beyond the dlrect phystcat prolecllon o/ the United States, rmnain ab&ent f1'0fD the country for 11n utlndod period ol time, and engaa• in liJ,ti.1e..i dlplomltic dilalllllons and llOnmal' negotiation at the confemiai table. On the eve of Wllaon'a deplrture for Europe, Sen. Lawrm:e Y. Sbennan (R- IU.) iolnlduced • ,....Mion decl•ring the -of Pmldenl lo be YlClllt When the incllnti,at ldt the counlr)' and tranalu· tina 1U JIDWt"I and dutla lo the V-1<e Pl-L Shennan'1 "'°lution ~l<d In tmnMJttoo. So dld I llmillr -ill- ·- traduced In the House. WILSON HAD BROKEN th< ice, but his successors hesitated to plunge in after him . Warren G. Harding and Galvin Coolidge ea<'h made only one trip abroad, and Herbert Hoover made none. No President again traveled outlide the West.em Hemisphere until Franklin D. Roosevelt attended tht Ca s a b I ant a Conference in 1943. Today, of course, presidential travel to all parts of the world ia commonplace . The champion globetrotter to date jg Dwight D. Eisenhower, with 16 foreign trips. Richard M. Nixon, as Eisenhower'& Vice President, visited 54 countries in eight years -also a record. President Nixon will equal Eisenhower's eJghl·trlpg.. per·tenn pace when he t.raveJg to China and the Soviet Union. Who knows what a .. aecond term might· bring? Is Jt rlbt J>O!Sl- ble lha\ Nixon. the sports buff , would aim for the title of Most Peripatetic PrMldent? Dear Gloomy Gus No corgo 11 Piling up on the dockl in the 11<Yedorea' llril<f.' A alllp lo at doc.kl when it'• moored alooc- lidl? the pier. where cargo JS plllnf up. --Old S.lt -...... f'lftK9' ,....,.,. ....... .. ---'*" --., .. ...., 1 ' .... ,.... ... -... ......,, OW,. D-4" Pl .... some manner accessories before the fact. hlgtory as another Abraharii Lincoln, 1 • • • war Pre&ldent. '' How does that grab you? Revolution iB always its own rationale: Our former President could be ch1rged If the American colonists had !ailed with many other things of course, 1lnce It history wou)d call them "traitors'; wu after he was elected that we had rather than "patriots." permlssivenesB, crime· In the ltreet, • • • il'IOn, riots and so many other UJting1 The most 1hameful blot on the whole that Nixori Is being blamed for . American governmental system remains ,JAMES A. DUV~ the appointment, or slating. CJf judges on a political basis; a man involved in /tlag Be Too Logk!al politics shouJd be by that very reason in· eligible for the bench, or the whole in- dependent judicial process it1 tainted. • • • Prostitution may be "the oldest pn>- fession . •· but only because it was preceded by legalized rape and supported by arrogant male uaumptions or in· herent superiority. • • • When there iJ 1 victory, even the cowardly share in the triumphal pro- cession ; when there ia: a defeat, even the brave share In the 1hame. fThus. even though Lee WI$ twice the general, and 10 times the man, that Grant was .) • • • Our f11cln10on with "growth" has oblcured the miracle of 0 creation" for moat modem people ; but, 11 Do Me 11.id in one of his a:ermona: more than three centuries 1go: "The dia:tan<:e from n«hing to t littJe Is ttn thouund limea more than from It to the highest degree in thl1 life." • • • In any rational soclrly. people who ton beer c1ns on ~public roads and parkways would be treated more stverely than I.hose who take pot privately : bul in our system. the beer..fomr1 flourilh un· r:iolest.ed while the Po1'takers 1rt punbh· <d far behoad the 10rioumes1 of their of· fenat. Quotes To the Editor : Business iA boomlag at 51.5 North Sycamore St.. Santa An•. home of Orange County's government. Bobby Battin 11 grinding out hiJ lhlro- for example. the Litter Patrol and the Freew1y Telephont Syitem. Now nobody could be 1galn11t a litter- free county and elttra a:afety precaullont1 In an emergency, but. If Bobby would sup port 11ugge11tlon& by Supcrvl110r David Baker to consolidate 8flme of the 11upe.rnuou,11 1anitation cll,11trlct11 first, then he would perhaps be In a better posltJon lo 1uggest 1pendlna. UNTIL THAT TIME. where b the money coming from ? Oh, the. \a1payer1, yes, they will cert1inly ply tome. B11 G~orge ---. Dear George Thanks ' lot for your ln10mnl1 cure_ Actually. I didn't u.se that k>ng.<Jrawn~t cure you suqelted. but I find that Immediately upon 1tartlna to read your column J go right to sleep. GRATEFUL De11 Grateful . Hm. That'• funny Since gettin& your lettf.r J'\fe betn LoSlln& and turning •II nliht fSend your worr~ to Geor&e. Ralpll McDoollld, mtrt.i 8.F .. police l• 1ptt:tor DMed for MmJdde lnvtsll<loe carett -"forg" the g11....,, !1'1 )ult ' bard •'Dl'k odt'fl<Dty or 11." Why cluUtt up the hourie wl!b o!d wonif!a whtn ynu could bt out aet.- tlna lnto brand-new tmub!e~ 1 • That may be too loslcAl. CONSTANCE BENEDICT Onager Voters To the Editor: A erand tportlna: event com1n1 up In im will be the "fiahll" •t th• Oernocratic NaUonal ConvenUon, so don't mlu it, folktJ f'm Juat u 11diltlc 11 the next guy In the dealre to witch ldlota pulverize each other Jn their 1trua:&Je to 1et en the payroll and then 1lt on thelr on1ger1 and do nothing ror tht tucker• who electtd them. <Nice picture, huh!) Another ;rand •Porting event' will be the Republlc1n Convention which wlll re- quire tongue-In-cheek appralstl U one l1 to a.uea:• ILi entertainment value at all. But ~ Independent• who tum to theM dudll ,.111 llUI aet nothln1 but I iood 11~ 1ina. THE ONAGER habit 11 o hard one lo break. and the Rtpublicana do certainly keep up With the Dtmocrt1t1. The n.11t·publlc1n1 •nd the Demo- rq1lcra1.1 are both hard prealled tQ offer the kind of mndud promlle1 th1t the onager voter car'l 't gee through . fl'• a 1talemate, man, and the comin4 con- venUom, with or without entertainment value, lhou.kf provide beautiful comedy CODY to tht TV writers, and to the preu oolurnnl1t.1. Should we 1w1tch ti> tomebody llkt Wallace, but wllhoul hla han1uPf1? Yea, man. but wherr. ll 1Ucb 1 man~ tor a woman, maybe?) S G. VNDlljE Right to Work - Preu I Comnlenll' OJ1aedt Stotlnel. "In the United Stalu wt have lo.n1 been ~rned with 1,,.. dividual liberties ln other areas. but w1 havt loltrated 1bu1< or indl•ldual liberty In the form of "lfTillUlaory unl0ftl1m. It II time for • chlnee." Bllomlostoo (!Jid.) Coorler·Ttlbuaq '"Ill< ..Stttaer Nlllon•I RlJht lo Wodl legblation i1 the proper ln1trumeol whereby 1 blah! freedom can be guaranloed tn •11. It cluuve1 the lull 1upport of the Americtn people." ~-fMl1 .1 N._ ''Thi ~tr N1tlonal Rl•bt lo Work leglll•tl•• II Ille """""" ln1tru"""1 wberebj> 1 bula frttdOm cin be 1uarant.etd to 1U.'1• Smne Wedding Day Yvonne Kalak, 19, and her Valentine's Day bridegroom, Louie, 22, exchanged a few words through the visitation itass at Ventura Coun· ty jail Tuesday before Kalak left for state prL5on on a possible !Ue sentence. The couple was married in court only seconds before the groom was led away to begin serving a six months-to-lite term for armed robbery. Easy County Formation Bill Unveiled by Solon SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A bill sought by mayors of San Gabriel Valley cities to make it easier to form a new county has been introduced by Sen. H. L. IDchardson (D-Arcadla). Richardson said Tuesday the legislation resulted from diacussloru: over splitting populous 1.£11 Angeles County into five new cowiUea ln an effort to mike county government more "manageable." U~er the bill, no new counties actually would be created, but th e measure \vould relax current •·severe" restrictions so voters ot an area could create a ne1v county easier if they so desired . "It's nothing personal against the in- cumbent Los Angeles Co u n t y supervisors," Richa rdson said. He said the idea behind his bill was merely that a "small county is easier to band.le than one the size of Los Angeles," noting that Los Angeles County e-0ntained 7 million residents. Bonelli L?st Rites Friday ·- Longshore Leade1·s Ask Pact Okay SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Longshore • leaders have recommended ratUicatlon .. today o! a tentative contract to end the ~rippling 131-day \\'est Coast dock strike, raising hopes workt.rs will be back at \\"Ork by Sunday. The 110 delegates to a union caucus \'Oted Tuesda y to submit the agreement to the 13,000 rank and· file members at the 24 strike-bound ports from Seattle to San Diego. "If the \'ote is favorable y;e will try to arrange for an immediate return to work by Sunday," said Sidney Roger, in- formation ofifcer for the JnternationaJ Longlboremen's and Wl{ehousemen's Union. lLWU President HaJTy Bridges sup- ports ratification, saying the contract provides "solid and substantial ga ins." 'fhe caucus had been under way since Saturday. The union reached the tentative agree- ment with the 122 shippers of the Pacific ?\-faritime Association last week. Pfi.1A members are expected to ratify the pact within a day or so. The strike has caused losses in U.S. ex· ports estimated by the White House al more than $600 million and prompted Congress to give President Nixon power to halt the walkout. The closed caucus was not without its disagreement, sources said, with the large San Francisco Local 10 saying that part of the proposed contract was "lull of fish hooks and exemptions." The local also said that "President Nix- on "'as sitting with a cocked gun ... pointed a't the bod.v of labor, and more specifically at our head." Gas Hefunds Ordered SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Customers of Pacific Gas & Electric Co. will receive refunds totaling $5.35 million bj order of the California Public Utilities Com - mission. That amounts to an average of about 90 cents for the domestic family user. to be paid during the ~18rch billing period. LOS ANGELES (UPI ) -most dedicated pub 1 i c down at the polls, but Bonelli's Flogs flew at ball stall in Los . Angolol today lo mown the death of County supervisor Frank Boneill, who -helped lead the fight by heavily ________ populated .Southern California servants." fight was won in 1965 when the Bonelli IUVfld almost 14 U.S. supreme Court'• "one years od the five-man board of man, one vote" decision ac-superviSors for Lo.s ·Angel ea county, an·area of 7 million in-compli1bed hill goal·-a power habitants. shift to the populous southern He beCame---i(fi"l e w·i·a e·-·-part·of the state:···· · polltical figure in the early .. to wrest more political power from the northern part of the &tate. Bonelli died Monday night in St. Francis Hospital. He was 65. Roman catholic funeral services will be held Friday. oplltical figure in the early .1960s, when he led a campaign to pass redistricting measures that v.·ouJd have shifted con- h ol of the state Senate to Southern califomia f r 0 m agricuJtural counties to the north. Crowds Soar Mayor Sam Yorty ordered nags on city buildings lowered to half staff, saying "Los Angeles county Jost one of its The proposals were turned SAN DIEGO (AP-l -Sea World says attendance set records at its marine life parka in San Diego and Aurora Ohio, during 1971. \ SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER NEW J>erm&nerit pr est · Kangaroo T-Shirts and Shorts. Bright-whit• knit pofyestM and cotton-durable, soft and strong. Polyrib T-shirt neck- bind won"t aag. Comfort pouch .shorts hllVI 1h• •xclusivii ·horizon- tal ny. Buy the 3-packs-guaranteed lull lwo years; wt•r. · Save up to 26% munsingpJear ,~ • • •••• -COMl IN-l'HOHC-Ol'l MAil YOIJfl' Ofl0£11 ""••••-1 ; STORE NAME • 11~ 1-1 e1-1 ·-I • : HttM•~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- ' . • • t C11f Sttt• N ' : a Oi«t f1f M.o. EN:loud n 0-...V• my Acto.nc ~ .. ----·----····--·-·-----.----·--------·- LI MITED TIME ON ~Y DAILY PI LOT 5 : Mandatory Protection Reagan Asks Health Plan SACRAMENTO, Calir. (APJ were to suffer what ls termed after 1 O O d a Y 5 0 r -Gov. Ronald Reagan has a cata,rophic illness over a hospitalization, 30 days 0~ ,proposed a mandatory health recovery care and $3,000 ° Jona: period o! Ume." outpatient aervlces such O!I insurance program to protect ·m1ted 4 nearly 18 mlllion Californians To quallly for the unh doctor bills, x.r~y a n against financial ruin that coverage provided by the laboratory services. could result from catastrophic Reagan plan, a worker or!-:======;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Airlirie Gets Short Strike illness or accident. member of his family would The plan, to be Introduced have tO be covered by a basic soon in the legislature, would health insurance plan such as be financed by a $3-a-month Blue Cross and Blue Shield deduction from the paychecks that Is approved by a new nf the state's 8.4 milllon work-state health security com- ing men and women. The yield mission. would total more than $300 The catastrophe lnsurance million a year. would take over hospital, doc- The p r o p o s e d California tor, drug and allied expenses B U , health security plan, work.Ing when the basic plan ran out : 'Y lllOn. through private insurance car- .. rie rs, would pick up hospital LOS ANGELES (UPI) and doctor costs where· the 'fhe Teamsters Union struck average health care plan runs Override Okay \Vestem Airlines for a brief out. CARMEL (AP) -Voters in period Tuesday night -so Jn a broadcast report Tues-the C a r m e I Unified School brief the airline's flights were day, the Republican governor District have approved con· not affected. said, "If an extended illness or linulng an 87-cent tu override The strike lasted less than a terrible crippling accident for the next four years. three hours. Picket lines ap-were to hit somenne in your The vote in the di.strict, µeared at some of the airports family, the health insurance which utends up the Carmel from Minneapolis to California you have y:ould not cover the Valley and down to Big Sur, served by the airline. . expense and · It \\'Ould be ex-included many new young The airline called it a hausted very quickly If you persons wildcat strike, in violation of 1 _ ---------·---- the national Railwa y Labor Act, which also covers airllne labor contracts. The union ac- 1 F cused the airline ol. stalling on 11ee contract negotiatiorur, In the . hope lha~ the Civ i l Aeronautics Board will ap- prove Weslern's requ .. t to Income Tax merge with American Airllnes, before a new cOn- tract can be signed. I Preparation The Teamsters represent 2,000 \Vestern mechanics, utili· tv \\-1lrkers, fleet drivers and I Se• th• beit in men1s w • a r for '721 The best s•· lection in town for double knit slicks and sport co111t1. Remember, th• best is always at . . . s"torehou'ii workers at Los SaMe $30 $40 Angeles, Anchorage, Seattle, -on professional preparation of your 1971 San Francisco. Honolulu, Las Galifomia and Federal Individual Income Tax Returns. Vegas, Nev., Salt Lake City, } Great Falls, Mont., and Min-' Dofl't D e ayslgn op today: appointments are free if you open an neapolis. The strike was announced Anaheim savings account of $5,000 or more, or for only $5 by opening an account of by Marvin G r i s w o 1 d $2,500 or more. secretary-treasurer r ANAl-IEIM §'A'flNGS Teamsters Lo ca I 2707. r · ~VI airline denounced it as ill er ANo L..CWll ~ and . said Pi Io ts ' AN~HDM 187 W. Lincoln Avt. 92803/Tlh m.1532 stewardesses were cro~' · BREA 633 So. Brea Blvd. 92621/Tel: 529-4971 Teamster picket lines to k. . HUNTINGTON BEACH 411 Main St. 92648!Ttl: 536-6591 the line's planes flying on 111========================================================== schedule. ., Round trip jets daily. To Las Vegas 9:00 a.m., I :50 p.m. and 6: I 0 p.m. To Phoenix 7:45 a.m.a ~d.5:25 p.m. To Tucson 7:45 1 a.m. •Service starts February 22nd • , - I_ For reservations call your Travel Agent or Hughes Attwest at 540-2060. ~:=~ • • MAJOR CUllT CAltl DllPAl'lTMCNT aTOl'l& 1111 NIWPOIT ILYD. ClllTIAUY l.OCAIH Al NIWPOlf,AHD HAUOl llYDI. • OPIN 'TIL 1101 P.M. HID.ATS • ' . . • ' • I Orange· Coa·st VQL. 65, NO. <40, 4 SECTIONS, 66 PAGES · ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNrA • • r Ted.ay'• Final • N.Y. Steeb • WEDNESDAY, 'FEIRUARY 16, 1972 N TEN CENTS j • eac an· -e Ill rau " Nixon· NH Office ·Ta.rget of. Bomb "MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) -The mblng of police and fire headquarters ere today was linked by a top state law nf~ement official to the ''Tt.e People's Ll~ation *rmy," an antiwar group w~ also listed the New Hampshire prftjfary headquarters of President Nixon as ;a large!. tie official, who asked not to t>e lden- tifu;li; said that when a man and a woriian were arrested shortly after the ·U.S. Launches Heavy Raids Inside North From Wire Servlcft SAIGON -American w a r p 1 a n e s launched substantial air slrlkes inside North V,l et n am today, U.S. military sources said. · Radio Hanol clair:Qed two ~S. planes were shot down and a number bf pilots were lllled or captured . A U.S. Commlfld s'pakesman, told of the broadcast. uld: "I have nothing to report." · The'command lo the past bas withheld re~g on downed plapeJ until search ariittescue mt11ion1 'were completed. ~ North · Vietnamese broadcast assuttd..that t.~nutr;ber of U.S. jets at· tacked populous areas in Quang Binh and Vjnb Linh, North Vietnam's two soutliehunost provinces. The U.S. infonnants said the strikes were In North Vietnam's half of the d#mllltarued' zone that separates the witting Vietnam• but declined to disclose the tar~ts. l'bey added there also may have been sefn~ raids north of the r.one, but Wtuiheld details pending a n an-- nouncement from the U.S. Command. ~'Thei:e were protecUve reaction strikes ahd'.olher strikes involved,'' said one in- formant, "but I can't give you the number." He said the raids were beyond the u!'U'ai 'one or two "protective reaction" atrlkes frequently reported from time to ttme when enemy guns or radar lock on to U.S. planes. Allied intelligence indicates 70 percent more North Vietnamese troops will move into South Vietnam or Into border areas during the first five months than ln the same period !alt year, U.S. military IOW'W said. U.S. military sources In Saigon said the big U.S. air campaign that began In South Vietnam ·a week aio would "continue I~ defUUtely" because at least . four fresh North Vietnamese divisions, beefed up by heaVy artllleey, were moving ~to the <OOl!lry. Nearly t,100 strikes have been flown in-- sldO South Vietnam In tloe past week, most of them coming the five days before 1 one-day cease-fire for the Tet lunar new year thai began at I p.m. Monday. I\W'fng the 11-hour period ending at dawn Wednesday, American jeMlg)lters made only. 46 1tr!ke1, and by noon 851 boplbert hid flown seven miss1on1 Wide the COUB- tF)' -a sharp reducUon from the earner ninTiber of sorties. three bomb blasts that shattered win- dows, a typewritten neWI reltase abo was confiscated. The release said that besldea the police sta~lon, the Nixon headquarters had been a target.. Police,\however found no .explosives at th,e headq_uarters nor at city hall, which was ordered searched, as a precauUonary measure. A fourth bomb was discovered today under ~the air conditioner In a window outside Polict Chlef John · Stips' office. DetOnatlon experts said It failed to go off because It was bnproperly assembled. The news release referred to the arrest of 12 demonstraton in Manchester at the ~nlng o!_ the N_l10.n head_qqar~a last week. George Romney, sscrelW)' of Housi ng and Urban Development;· IJ)Oke al the opening. • However, Valerie HawkJns of Dover, a spokesman for the Lincoln Day Parade Committee wh.ich o r g a n I z e d the demonstration at t.he Nixon headq'uarten, oaid today the group "einphatlcally deniea ~ny connectlop between the march and today'a borqblnl. 9ur purpo• w~e peaceful. We were dernonatratlng agalns't Nixon, not agalZUlt the Manchester police." '"' : Kathryn /\. Holl, it, with addr...., In Beaton, Buffalo, N. Y., and Portlmouth and Dover, N.H., wu ah'algoed. on two counts as an ticceiaory to damagJ,jg publlc ooHdlnp. She w1s Hated a1 a waitress and a naUve of Salem, N.H. Sht was held for a Feb. 25 hearing In '25,0oo ball. ' . Jaan Karl Laaman, 23, also ll!ted as Karl A. Laaman, Buffalo, N.Y. waa ar· rai~ed later at the hospital ,where he WaJ taken with u injured haod abortly after his arrest. A' Feb. 25 probable cause hearing waa set with ball at $25,000 on two count. of <lamage to publlc oolldlng. A bloodied and tom glove WU found oul!ide the ~llct llatlon. . Bertea Named To C.Ounty ' Airport qroup Richard Bertea, a~re11dent of Corona del MBr and bead of lbe )lerlea.llorpora. Uon tn the lrvlne If¥1uatrlal Complex, to- day wu ·appointed to the Orange County Al'1\(lri Commission by Fiflh District Supervisor Ronald W. Caspers. ~a will succeed Willard S. Volt who resigned lrom the commission last week after two-years tervice. caaper1 said Bertea, 42, a graduate of the University of Southern Calllornia, was a pilot .. ln the U.S. Marine C.Orps and was based at El Toro alld Los Alamlto1 before being dlacharged with the rank of captain. He bH Uved In Corona del Mar 1lnce 1966 with h1t wile, HyJ1 and their (our children. Volt gave prea of perlOll&l business a1 bls reason for reslgnin&. Bay lJ•es . OAU.V "ILOT 11111 l'Mft Le»ten· Season Starts .... ' • I. I Today.ls Ash Wedn.Sday, the traditlon'1 ·beginning. of tile 40-day Lerltep·HU!>n'~uriq.g 1'!~ Clbrllliill• wo~!awrd'e do penance in Pt•par~tlon.for the'jilyoU. feso.ival 'of Easler. Mb .. in the form of the ct911 are _,placed on the fo,ifhead ~f eac,11 pe~itent/!)1. tlJ•· clerfi'Tllan to 1ymbollze man'• ulllmate return to d!ll~,'l'he.-$1. Jo,~~·1 C~QloMc Cl:illfCh Par!Jl\IPP· ers in Co811 Mtsa are bel,ng,anolnted with the w~rds , "Remember •man \bat y6u ar• dust and unto dillt you 1wW..;r,,turq.." ' • · · ~· · ' • ; rt Newport Eying N11:mber of Dog Bites in City • A sjstem of keeping records of the number of times a dog bites' people wid be rtudled by Newport Beach,clly staff at the wggeston of a Harbor Ylew Homes man whose Soye&Nlld da(lghter was-once bitten by a dog. ~ Walter Bielicki, 1139 Port Barmoul~. convinced councilmen Monday that "one dog oould bite 100 people loo Umes and no one would know." He asked that Instead of the present system of recording complalntt against owners, that records 0 be kept by the dogs biting." Bielicki aald unow there· ls no limit to the number of Umes a dog can bite a person. Under my suggu:Uon. a dog would not be allow,ed to bite ~re tha·n one time. "After that It would be de1troyed 91' removed from the city limits." . • . Coundlman Lindsley Parsona: sakl BieUcld "bas got somethln(S there •bout 1 keep!!'& the ~cord or ~ dog'I htstor1." Agreeing that "this ii a serious pfol>- Jem an over the e1ty" "'' Muan Dostal who uid · the proposal "merJt1 a very serioua cOnaideraUon." 1 Bltllckl lurlher 111ggested that cltal!Oll• be iuued to dofl ownen Immediately and not )1111· on demand of the bliten "1i:tlm as in tbe present system. ... T ·:oorothy 0 Finishes· 4th;- , .. ,,.. Tak~sRaceHandicapLe~d By ALMON LOCKABEY Dt~ ~"" ...,,,. ... .., ' ACAPIJLCO -Bob Beauchamp'• Cola/i>blt '17 Dorothy o 1waa the · fourth boar to finllh ot ~:20,lhU mornlnf (PST) and grabbed lite handl .. p, >ead In the San Die10 to Acapulco '(ocbl Race. )Jorolh)' Q aavo!J i,,r -time over the pr.viOUJ three fllilsherr -Wlndwar<I P .... 1e. Blod<lln and SlrJtJO n ~ to teko t~e overall •!Id ct,.1 N .han<llcap load: However, there were pag 's ,lnd C yacl>tl cloao enouah Ii> the finish thla morning to •rare ll\Jrothy 0'• overall lead. Two yt8r1 qo, ,Dorothy 0 wu first to flnllb th~ race. f • Peter Grant's 48-foot 1loop Nalu JV · from the l'jewpor! Harbor Yacht CllJli eased out of the split here toda)' and Was the fifth boat tl>Jinlab at 1:20 thla morn: Inf. She failed to save her handicap time on Dorothy 0 by about ~O.o Jlourr. Nalo IV finlahed on an agonldllCly show belt ( through the Boca Chtca entrance to Acapulco Harbor . W en~1 \J'.i~ow Dies LIVERMORE (UPI ) -Funeral au· vices will,be IJeld Thursday for Edith L. Wente, whose late husband ma triem- ber of the Wente Brothen wlorry family. Mn. Wenl,e<lled Tuelday •I~ age of It. Her ·husband, Herman l..Ql1s Wente, wa1 the 10n of Calrt H. Wente • German Im· migri.nt who founded, t be IJvermore wtner1 In 1113. ' > • Bued on Tllerday'r porttlhns, the yacht wtth the bat chance of droppinl Dorothy 0 from ,the top rpot ~ppeand to be ·Tom Tobin'• 'Erlcltson • lloop 'l'lemeril. lrom the hoot Sin Dleld Yocht ·ctub. SJ>e. ... ,. in mu., lroril u.. 1u.1tb 'Neadtt •i1d C•te · one ~ •..i · three bOill'I ' time allowance 'lroin~y O. ,~ i ·' ~ ~· ) ,. 'Human Element' • ' 1 ! • I 1 Cited ps l;l~ch • ~ • ~ t • ~tudi~ Meters • Objections that porklnt meten woold tlk6 1way "r&he human eJe,m.nt" on beach puking loll bava c11Ued N_.-t Beach City Cotincllmen to is!L' city· stiff to 1tt¥fy {llOrO mdbod~ ol iflltll'O'lng the status quo. ~ Current PIFklnf syatema qn mw1lclpat lots at Mb a~, Balboa 1J)d C9l'Oftl dol Mar ~: * 11Undapto tn4 Ii'"'" &ale <0!*'911.. · , I , City' Mliiager Roher! L. l\')'11!1 tqid coimcllll>en Monday that lmlalll._ J>ll'~· 1r1, 111e1e1:1 ..ou1d brlnl , 1q the 11110f1 revelllie CO the city and. be the t1Jlai IY~ ~ .maloteln. \ , • An lnile)lebdent ..,allOf clltermlned that meterr would brtu , hi at leaat .191~140 1-Yur II I .• I{,j001 Initial ln-v'qlment, ll'ynh ujd. .. ' M ~Go'Vern Asks . Legali zed Pot Mayor's Views Dr.aw Fir~ LUiing the Iott would brlnJ In about •111,00ll and the present system with ..,.,. modification 'l!OUJcL.brlnf on •tot.l!OO. t \ ' • • Wynri rated tbe alter 11 "poor"' lllllJ>. clally, ool 11ld the council would bave to determine U other fictors are more 1.,. portant. By United Pre11 tnteraaUolllll Sen. George S. McGovern of South Dakota suggested today lqa!Wng marijuana, with the 1ame QOlltrols imposed on alcohol. Speaking al a drug counsdlng · centtr tn Botton, the DemocraUc presidential candidate said: · ,.. "flcnUnulng lnvestlgallonl on the omall effects of marijuana leave · • Ullleltted the related but oeparate Qlltllilllll whether IOC!ety can or sloould ottempl to completely pro- ~ibj\ Ill..._ "Tiit most relewnt blltorlcal precedent -problbltlon ol alcohol ~ prtcluctd an obvloua, abject (allure." • Newport Beach Mayor F.d Hlrth'1 v~lon ol "mu!Uple" UleJ tor Upper Bay today drew Ort from one pf the two men try.Jng to UJ11tat him In 1he April II munlclpol election. Colling for a clampdown on any further development of the Back Bay and federal funds to ooy It IN>lll the lrvlne Compony, Pllth District councllmonlc challenaer Paul ·s. Ryckolf oaid Hlrth'• pro-I would only deteriorate the bay. dredalng and conatructlon actlvlli<• In-t1>e Upper Bay 11 1 pre~e for wUdme compoUble '11th the' n 1 I u r a I en-and wmpatible ..... vlronmont," Rycko!J """tended, oddinc, "Ttoe counly bar already requerted "IUdl· develellment mu.It not be allowed to bllppen." federal ski and tbe city alloald ]obi bt lhll He said approximately, 70 Jl"l'll~t o1 • request," Ryco(I oak!. Newport Bay 11 already aeve!QPed "and City c:ouncllniM mildl,Y rebuJfed Hirth'• the hoetl. homes and commercial "mulUpl• 111e" pJl<h Monday nl(ht whfn developmentl have taken a'large loll of they ordered t1Je1r own policy manual t1>e natural mou.-orlclnally lieu. changed to elllllluate 1oy reltr"""' to "We mull project lbe Upper B11 lro"1 cleve!Oponent of 'ny kind around the COi> 1lmlllr deve~I and dlt«fomlOtl, tmeralal uU..17. I' whlcll WOllld allo mutt In f1irtloer Hirth, hoil'•~fl'· did tl1dorM tht.J1'0V• cleleriMatlon ol the Lower Bly," llyctoff lo strtu tbe .....,,meadlllon of mlclel>- aald. tial use. S. 1D'ged the city to ccopetate with l!lrth, Ryckolf an<! realtar ltarvey D. Members of the Breaker• Drive Com- munity Aaaoclailon, the Newport Helghia Commonity AM«latlon ind tho Balhoe Point Improvement 11-1a11on an ot>-J<cled to lnrtellallon ol meters. ~ on lellhofl•IJl'OWlda. But others oaid that metm -Id tete • ,..,. lbe pCnonal _.,. 1ttendlnt1 ,iv .. to vtlll«I 11 porklng, Information 1114 aenerat aid. , Under the preMnl l)'llWm, Wym 11id, accurate counta of wr and ... coantablllty of fundl ii poor; llome modill .. lln, lllCh u belier car count•11 llld calll rt1t11m,J1ne -oil erted Nationwide Conspiracy Alleged By XRTHUR R. VlNSEL or 111e oe"' PIMt '"" Cllmaxlng a tong, nationwide fr au d 11robt. U.S. authorities Indicted a Hunt. lngton Beach man and 18 others Monday for an alleged conaplracy to borrow mil-- Ilona backed by church-financed capital. The so-callc<I Church or Christ Manol'll tnc., was a phony corporation exlstln& only on worthless paper , Investigators charae. No connection exh1ll with t h e leglll mote Church of Chrlat, oot many defendants are accused of links with Amertca's organb.ed crime ayndlca te. Louis J. Vcrlv11 48, of 21661 S. Brookhurst St., ii among them, 1ccordln1 to federal gangland lntelllaence 10urcu. Verlve and the others were named In a 41-count federal 1rand jury Indictment issued In Chicago for arrests from coast W coaat. Verlve was stopPed wlthout incident at he drove along Newport Boulevard and taken Into cuatody by Newport Beach DectecUve John Slmon. He wa1 t.urned over to U.S. Postal Inspector H. L. "Bookie" Almond, booked Into Oranae County Jail without ball and dellvered thll morning ror 1rr1l1nment before a U.S. Commlulooer ln Los An11l11. · •. · Chargeo tilled In tho mau Indictment lntjude fraud by mall, wire, tntersi,~ trllllPOl'llUon of ftlndl oblllned by lraud and ·aloo conapfraey. Roteallnf !ht date hi ChlcA(01 U.S. Al- torlllJ J.11111 R. Thom-lllCI the CUI lo ~ of the 111'1111 of Ill kind In U.S. -history. , ' The defendantl -....., Coltl Nollra nguru who IW'\'elllanct ofncer1 uy visited Verive In Huntington Belch - o~rated ln New'Y9fk, Chlc1go, Phoenlr, Ariz,, Savannab,1G• .• and San,Dlc110. 1loey alleaedlf promlled to arrange loans throuih wbat the U.S. Justlco Deportment i nd po.tie! authorltlu 'call on 1dvance fee IC'lle. Indicted prlnclpall -I n c I u d In g Verlve'r brothet1 Carlo and Charlie, both of whom have been on the Orange Cout r~ntly -111 accused of vlctlmliln& 1t !tall 70 bllllneumen. eta~ control of the actual Church of Chtill r filOO million In 1.,.11; the allegejl acbemerr "'PJ>Oledly collected ad~anc, feet to 1uar1ntee loans for builne11men llymled by the Ulhl economy. " . fnveottg•tors 'aplal~ the lotn ' ap. pllcant la urually 11kec! to put up ftv1 to 10 "'rcent ol the fun amount 10U1hl •• aood faith money when opplyln1 throuch Joan ausrantee companie1. The advance .faet were allegedly never refunded and authorltler maintain the cuarantee document.I they say were laauld by al l&ulJO flclltloua loao com- panlea were worthlns. Collected 'between !Ma and December of 1970, the Ultlpeeil*i amount of cash wu funnelled Into perlOnaJ or 1had1 .11ngland UM, It ii charged. 1 F•deral a)Jlhorltler lnvolvad In the two- )'ear' probe worked with Newport Beach, A111helm, Orange Police and the dlrtrlcl (S.. CONSPi:RACY, Paa• I) ... .... w ..... .. More aummer·Uke we1ther lt on the •i'!lda for Thunday, with hl(lll-!n-the mld·70'• •lonr the 0r..,, Colli, following t1rly montnc IOI which will bum ofl. Lows tonlr~t In the 40'•· . . INSmE TOD,\\' 7'he heallf<rl wok of th< ,. .. '°" I• lllrlng th1otu fa coming up !ft Orange Countu with tight ....., P,oductlonl going °" Uoc boordl and /llJf olh<rl cont!•"' fng, Ste Thtattr Not.,, Paff JO . "'"4"i »n ...... hMt • ......... ~ .... or...~ ,. PTA a =,.,. w: °'· ,,...,... • r'~=r-. -. -tt ---...... " Ryckoff referred to 1 talk by the may'"' before a Corona del Mu HIO SChool 1)'11lpo1ium In which Hlrlh WI ,the ctty should consider 11mulUple utts" for Upper Bly development. "'Ilolr wwld lnvol•• bultheadtng, <>nnae County In asking for federal help Peete are !ht tlroe tydidotlt tor tbe In d&rmlning the feaslbll!IY ol kffplng Filth District teal. l • -r 1n aaklni 1or fllrthes otudY :.t'bettet methocla of lmf)l'OVlne tbe ~ l)'llem, councilmen alao req-.;ted 1 meeting bl Ml 'IP with lnter'f"I "°""' . munllf -.tlonl, _, • , .._ ____ _. ____ _, • ,.. • i . ! • rt ---I .. ' _, • • Flaslalight Shopping Britain neared a total lndustrfal sh'utdown today. The blockade of pawer station& by striking coal miners threatened further power cuts m British homes and Industry. Here, a woman shops by llashllght at a candlelit store. - Board Hopeful; Wenke Wins State Cou11 Hearing By JACK BROBACK Of ffll Plllf Plitt lfaff One challenger seeking to unseat First District Supervisor Robert W. Battin of Santa Ana wono a state supreme Court bearing 'l\Jesday on bl.! gerrymandering protest and another was refused nom.!na~ tion papers because be too bas changed his place of residence since supervisorial district boundariea were revbed last Ocl 29. Santa Ana attorney William Wenke said the 1tate11 top court bu 1greed to take jurl.sd.lction on the question of la eligibili- ty to oppoae Incumbent BaWn In the June S primary. , Wenke was refUsed nomlnaUor1 papers Monday by David Hitchcock, county ngi.strar of voters upon advice of County Counsel Adrian :Kuyper. Kuyper cited a 1933 cour1 ruling In a slmilar case but said ~ wa1 fYlllF.thetlc to Wenke'• •• , .. and !hat or ~q!m"W· "Bill" HUI, Santa Ana bustnes.sma~ 1 HID, when he got the eame treatment lrom Hltchcock 'l\Jesday !hit Wenke had n!Celved Monday, called the relu!al to issue nomination p a per a · 11un- constltutlonal." He'thrutened legal action and laid he would go to the Supreme Court alllO U necessary: A third supervlsorial Clndidate was refused papers Monday. He ls Joseph A. Conrad who operates a service staUon 1n Anaheim. He plans to run against in- cumbent Third Dl!trict S u p e r v t s o r Wllllsm J. Phillips o! Fullerton. COnrad was a victim of the s a m e redistricting moves and had changed his place al res~nco In January to be eligi- ble to.op-Phl1llps. II Wenke and Hill are nol eucoeulul In their legal baWes, Wally Dav!J, a Fou,,. lain Valley m!deot and Santa Ana at- torney and Paul Balch of TUstin, a fonner a.s.sl.stant to Rep. John Schmltz (R·'l\Jstln) will be the only remaining can- didates to awose Battin. " . CrlJ!• Wot.'•~• Froftt Page J Britain Groping Near Shutdown , CONSPIRACY·· nttorney's office In gather ing evldtnce locally. They claim the aJJeged llCheme uslnc the Church al ch r 11 t name lir ,lit su!p!clous tnvtSton netted more thta ·t t million and was engineered to ·Obtalrt much more. •· Federal Costa Nostra·Ylalchers ' ssy Verive's survelllance goes back ~I years to hi.s co-purchase with Ofte Anthony Navarolll of Chicago's J.ttirshnll Savings and Loan firm . ·• ~ By JOSl!PB W. GRIGG L-ONDON , (UPI ) -Britain neartd a total lndustrlai shutdown today. Twenty mllllon j o b e were threatened w i t h further power cuta in store for British homes and industry. Tbe biocksde or power s!ltions by strlk· Ing coal miners bit even harder and elec- tricity authorities ordered power cuts for one-third of the country, with 15 perce nt hit at any single time. Prevously, only about 10 percent had been affected. . That meant most areas which before 1uffered only ab: hours of cuts a day now would be blackea out for nine hours. Tbe Central Electricity Generating Board, which. operates Britain'• state.run power Industry, said cuts mlgbf hit u much . ..as 20 percent of the country at a time lf generating resources continue to fill. So far, 10 of Britain's 148 power sta- tions have been put out of action by strike pickets preventing coal or oU reaching them. At least a third are work· 'Ing at reduced capacity, the board aald., "It look.t u II thla ls going to be tbe most drastic day so far. 'I'here hi no doubt that power raUonlng ls becoming mOre severe," a generating b o a r d spokesman said. Tbe nine-hour power cuts were split ~ to three groups of three hours each. London't two evening newspapers warned readers .some editions are likely to be late or not appear at alt. At Longannet power statlon I n Scotland, scene of violent clashes between strike pickets lnd police in the-- past two days, 700 picketing miners turned up In pouring rlin to lace llOO policemen guarding the !aclllty. Picket leaders warned strikers against violence. The power shortage al9o hit homes and railroad servlcta. For the .seventh day, tens of thousands of homes and offices were without beat for long periods. Some areas also were hit by water shortages when electric water pumps fa~ed. At Bath, in west England, water carts were stationed at strategic polnts throughout the city for families whose supplies dried up. The state-run British railroads slashed -· more than 1,000 trains from their services. Hundreds of commuter runs .were cancelled and those trains running had fewer and tmheated cm. "The altuaUon is getting progressively worse. Our coal stocks are dwindling," said a spokesman for the Central Elec- tricity Gen~11ting Board. An estimated 1.5 million workers have been lakl off ln addition to the more than million already jobless . Officials said the number of plant shutdowns is li kely to in· crease rapidly. Heads of the Confederation of British Industry (CB I), which represents about 20,000 industrialists, told Prime Minister Edward Heath Tuesday night that the &trike could have disastrous effects on the steel, textile and automotive in- dustries, whic h account for the bulk of Britai n's vi tal e1port trade. They told him th ey supported his ef· forts to fight wage inflation. But they said British industrialiJts: hope for a quick settlement, although not at any price. · Lawyers Cancel Bill for Service In LAFC Hassle Two move! by the ClUes Selection Committee, an offshoot ol the Orange County League of Cities, have qu.leted some of the troubled waters stirred up by last summer's uproar over League reprtsentation on the Local Agency FonnaUon Commission (LAFC). A $3,900 legal bill submttted to the I.AFC and refused payment a s "unlawful " by the commJsslon was canceled by the legal finn of Stewart, Woodruff and Fraue..of Santa Ana. Thomas Woodruff, Fountain Valley city attorney, represented the city selection committee in a long series of legal moves J1st fall. , The LAFC post held by Louis "Red" Reinhardt of Fullerton was In contention in the court battles. Reinhardt was replaced last August on the LAFC by Councilman Joe Hyde of Les Alamitos but a second vote of the mayors selectlon group restored Reinhardt to his position. The $3,900 legal bill is part o! an 118,501 charge to the cities committee and the balance was paid by the 19 participating cities. The other controversial league matter concerns Reinhardt's status on the com- mission also. OAIL '( l'ILOT Statt ,llota STEPPING DOWN Judge Baker Judge Baker Set For Retirenie1tt After Nove1nber Orange County's only female judge, Cella Baker, has decided to quit her post 1n the ·West Orange County Judicial District effec tive Nov. 20. Her term of office expirez 1n·January or 1973 and nine individuals have already flied for her judgeship. In announcing her retirement at the Westminster court house, Judge Baker, a Huntington Beach resid,ent, said "it's tlme to do so mething dllferent." She will be 60 Sunday. Judge Baker has servi?d as a municipal e-0urt judge since her appointment to the lluntlngton Beach City Court in 1~8. She is a graduate of the University of Buffalo and George Washington Uni versity Law School. A new judge will be elected during the J une 6 pr)mary. Filing for the office ends March 10, and write-In cand idates hav e until April 4 to enter the race. A move by so me city representatives to hold a new election for the league's M B ·1 53 representaijve on the LAFC has been I'S. al Y ') ' turned down by the selection committee, according to Ed Just, mayor or Fountain D1·es l.ll Newport Valley and chairman or the convnittee. Reinhardt's ,prevlous term on the com- The e-0mpany bought the~ for ."$1. .. million was invo lved in financm~ l.bt fl.6 million Sa hara North fllotel built by«thc late I\1andel "l\1anny" Sk<1r. · ·" lie '''as executed, all egedly by 110SS.nnd hltn1en , nearly seven years ago, a month before he went on trial for alle~ly skimming $1 million off the profits. leading to indictment for Income 'tat evasion. ~ Ska r was killed for ni'.lming Costa Nostr n names before federal authorities -charging they forced him to stea_I the money -in the hope he could obtain le- niency in prosc<:ulkla. . • Verive's savings and Joan firm _w!ot bank rupt after financing the $7.6 m1lh<11 Las Vegas spa and casino. Like Verive's ill-fated savings .and loan firm. the Church of Christ hlanors Inc., involved in his current case ls Chicago- based. · Fund Requested For Purcl1asing Of Park Sites · • Newport Beach Parks, Beaches an~ Recreation commissioners T u e s d a y unanimously passed a resolution asking th e City Council to establish a reserv~ CWKI to purchase private properties tor park sites. · Commissioners added that the fund could he established from utlli tles users" tax fees or from a special bond issue. : "From time to time . parcels al) avaUable to the city but there is w:ually not sufficient money" to purchase therrc, ·Cal Stewart , PBBR director said today. : "Sites are ·being lost forever by development ," he added. re re r r l n J speclfically to lots on Clill Drive. _ ._ ' "If the city had $500.000, it could ha\1t1 purchased probably one of the grande~t views in the community there," stewtrl said. "And there are other areas ioo-''! The resolution will go to the caaflcU Feb. 28. . r ( . . ~ Hiiglies Papers ~: Taken in, Home· '· ;.,~. mission expired in May of 1971. At that Mrs. Hilda Ba.ily, of 2000 Beryl Lane, . 4 .,,..-, • time he was replaced by Hyde who Newport Beach, died Monday in a loca l TUCSON, Ar iz. (AP ) -Marjell ,Jean Of Former Aide,: represented Santa Ana's position in the hospital at the age of SJ. DeLauer, a former public relations of· Both moved lrom their long standing j)lacei of residence lJ! December after Kuyper and Attorney General, Evelle Younger ruled that such moves wete legal to become eligible to run !or the aupervlsora' posl Both men had been gerrymsndered out ol the First District and Into the Fourth last October In moves attributed to Battin and hil stall. .City Won't lnt,erfere With Cannery. Village fight over incorporation or the city of ficer for Howard Hughes Enterpfbeis, Irvine before the LAFC and the Board of Funeral services for Mrs. Baily• 8 23· said her home was ranscaked Frkf•1 Supervisors. year residen t of Newport Beach, will be night, apparently by someone looklnc.for Just said the mayors selection com-held 11 a.m. Saturday at Westclifr Chapel documents relating to the bllli()nflire mittee voted last week on motion of in Costa Mesa. recluse. .. ~ ..... ..- Westminster Mayor Derek McWhinney to She said a number of documeut&.r"'d drop the proposed election. She was active as an adult leader with been taken, but nothing else was ~g. ln another move May 11 was selected Cub Scout Pack 79 and Boy Scout Troop She did not say where she. got docum.e~. as the last date to accept nominations for 79 at Newport Harbor High School. Mrs. OeLauer said TUesday aht J~ the seat held by Stanley Northrup, San Mrs. BalJy Is survived by her husband been subpoenaed to appear before ,, ew A third potenUal candidate to oppose ttte one term supervisor who lives in Garden Grove. Ed Jm1t, mayor of Foun- ta in Valley, was effectively removed from contention when hl.s res.Ide.nee was ahifttd from the First District to the Fifth. Upper Bay 'I'our Set An environmental tour 1of the Upper Ney,•port Bay area will btaln between 9 and 10 a.m. Saturday. Ga!des will le1d sm~ll ~ups on the onHatf mile walk r~' '-"· . .., hlk.ers about all fonna ot ll!e Sn the area. , .1.11 gather at the intersection of l. · f and Back Bay Drives. For more inforn1aUon, call t94--t161. OIANHCOAIT DAILY PILOT ORNtOI: CQiU1' 'flVM,)IHntO .,.,., le~H.W-' _ ... _ Jt(.'lc R. C11rt.., VA ,,_.... .,... o...t ....,_, n ... ,, KHYU ...... 1M11111 A. M~1-~ t:fltW L P•hr IC_net • ....,._.QrE4111r "---)JJl HewJHtff ... , ... "' M•m., ...WNH: r.o .... 1111, tt••J --c:.ICI "-= 2Jt ... , .... .,... ...._ --.cti: m ,.., •-t411M..,...., a.di• l,.n ._.. ...,._. ... c.--Htrtlt " ~ tt ... -~ - - By CANDACE PEARSON Of 1tte Dlllr fllltt Slttf Development of an arta muter plan by the Cannery Village Association, due in March, will _go ahead without Newpqrt Beach· City Council Interference, despite a Planning Conimisslon request for emergency parking requirements . The commlsslon was concerned that in- creasing development or general retail 'storei in the Cannery area would cause parktng problems. Uses in the area zoned for manufac- turing (M·ll require parking only il they require use pennJts:. Restaurants and of- fices require permits but retaU stores do not. Planners are working on an ordinance to require parking for all the non-in4 duatrial uses, but asked the council for a temporary solution. But councilmen ~1onday decided they'd rather do nothing now and let the village association develop posslble central park· ing soluUons. Bob Kausen, member of the assoc!• tion's board of directors, said .. the pro- pou.1 of an emergency ord.lnance Is too sudden and will :!!top the impetus of r(.vltallzatlon. '' Kausen said the assodaUon has hired an architect to develop a master plan which would Incl ude proposals !or park- ing systems and bow to finance them. "We'll know where we stand in March," he assured the councll, adding Coast Residents Named in Suit Five Orangt Coast realdeoll linked by the plainU!! to the operalion ol the Boon- dock.t bar ; :WS W. Coast Blgilway, New- pon Beach, bave been sued !0< 1 total or $538,llOO In a lawsuit alleatn& brucb ol contract and fraud , The B. B B. Corp. ol Nev1clo Wiiiis U-dlmagea ~ delendsnll idenUlled u C and B Stable1, Inc .. Jam" Ovden, Lee Qiertskoll, JudJ MUlllOD, Lo...U Kirk and Cl1ude Young. • B. B. H. claims lhlt It turned the leue or u.. ~ owr to the de!tndanb 00~)1.1"1, lllld hll)IOlftl received 1111 _ ..,...S OD 11 tllll tlme. 1"Nl llalis I.ID¢ two cbecb sub- mdlod .. the def........ ...... - nQiuild ~ 1111 Nat tiec... ol ID- su!Dclent !Unds. Clemente councilman and LA F C York grand jury investlgaUng .!#er that .. the only hope to save this u the chairman. Selection committee members Robert; son, Scott; mother, Mrs. William Clifford Irving and his purpeited orlglnal waterfront of Newport Beach Is will vote June a on Northrup's post for Falconer of Seatile, Wash., and brother, autobiography of Hughtt, and added that . to have iomething happen there." whlch the tenn expires June 30. Thomas Falconer also of Seattle. 11he was arr aid to say anything more Councilman Lindsley Parsons was con4 l jiiliil;i;;;;ioi;;;;i;i;~i;;;;iiiiiiii'nreiiiiiiiijii>i:iiiii;:Oi~~~ri.:iiij~~-iiiii.ii~nQiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii;;i;;liiii~i!ij cerned that 11ln the meanwhile ll 1peculators will rulh tn and take ad-or the woman you lo.ve. vsntage of i loophole In our planning. GEM TALK The milestone watch. Then no one will want to give up land for parking." ~ ~t Councilman !lo• Mcinnis 1ald one month was not enough lime for that ~ ~sppen and that "this ill the first ttme there la some almosphere going. The CHy ahould encourage their getting together." Kausen said the merchants recognized the parking problem but didn't want the area to !Jerome another downtown Los Angeles, "with parking k>ts in between each stcre." Commlssion's requirements would be one space per "50 square feet of gross floor area. Alabama Place Resi.dence Fire Puzzles Probers TODAY ~ ___ .... _""=""''~'"''"'~"'"'"" ....... by J, C. HUMPHRlll I DIAMONDS ARE FOR WEARING [; From deep within the ground, ~ your diamond came. Until it was 8 cut, polished. and SE\t by craftsmen I who spend their li ves making a rough hewn stone into a thing ·of beauty, that is where It belonged . Too many of these beautilul A my~· fire, in tams of both . stones, mounted In expensive set- what c it and who OWM the home ) tings. no'v lie in vaults an.d safe that susta ned $10,000 damage, was bf.ing h · ' deposit boxes where t ey give probed today In Costa Mesa. Investigators were relu ctant t G ~ pride and joy to no on e. elaborate on &be second element ln the in- cident carried on the police department '• ,. Why do people, in effect. "return overnl&ht log,u •possible anon cue. J their diamond• to the ground ?" "We are Ust1n& it u 'of unkcwn origin' Fear of theft, loss or wear are the at this time," fire department Battalion dominant reasons. None of these Chlef Ron Coleman remarked. He SI.id no one wu home at the house have any real basis in fact; at 3329 Alabama Place when flremen ar- rived shortly before 12:30 1.m. to find tt • A valuable stone should certaln-bel~;o'~ lnDI~suUered •llghl l 1y be Insured against theft and loss. bums In battllng tht bWe, whlcb kept but your best Insurance against crews under direction o! Battllion Cblel wear Is r egular cleaning and ln- Gary Golson on the ICellO !or three boun. gpectlon of both stone nnd setting. Q\lel Coleman uld tht ttlidence has been occupied by Dorothy s.u,rnan. Structural damege wu concentreted In So wear your diamond with the a mmt bedroom and closet lll'ta, In-l pride and enjoyment you expected ...i!gators uld, bul smoke d1map wu 1 wbon you bought lt. Then bring it belvy thtou&hout ~-In to us for regular Inspection and .. Loveh more preciou than diamonds or gold," 11y1 the prove rb. But the mil aatone \Va tch providet all tbrce. Diamonds and aold. Selected for Omega by gem eXpert.I wilh the u re of a co urt jel'o•eler. 0 OMEGA And love. The mile.tone watch wtU bring to mind beautiful though11 about lhe g1v.r for therat of her llli. J. 1823 NEWPORT 8LVD., COSTA MESA . •'· ',"f"-,; :-·. .-~- •, .... •• ·'I •.'. t . ~ .. .•· .,_. ., -' • . _, " ·.:1· . " . . . .. ... --~ o.m.. ..... sprayed lllld ..... trolled within IO minutes iftrr Oremen cloanlng, for which there Is no C:OHVINIEllT IUMS 24 YIAAS IN SAME lOCATIOfi '~,. •. ..· all'htd bol stampq out emb<n and charge. . IAHltAMIOICARll-MASTI~ CHA OGI PHONI ....... . ~kept-.. 1111 Job 1c.-=--=::::0E:11c::=:m!O.Wlm--=::.:::im::::::1,.--------. .. •• • .. • DARY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE CATV, a -Pilot Project ' The picture tube Is beglnninJ to Wll'll1 ue and from all Indication• the test pattern " beln1 viewed with interest by Waahington, D.C .. commun cations aperts. Focus of their scrutiny Is a· local live-city Commun• ity Antenna Televizion (CATV) system. If the joint power! agency succeS$fuJly eniitneers it, CATV could reach 350,000 local viewers represent· Ing 92,000 individual homes in live to seven y .. rs. J>ro. grammlnJ. and service potential ls virtually unlimited. Disunity marred the Initial organizational erforts. Harmony is happily more evident now, with hiring of a coordinator, plus agreements on fund contribution and distribution. Veteran video engineer John Bateman his a heavy six-month peri'1'f 'bead of. him as coordinator, getting 11 all together In one mUllI-faceted study package. Electronics and economics are interwoven through· out. · Economically, Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, Hunting· ton Beach, Fountain Valley and Westminster, plus the Coast Community College and Newpor~Mesa Unified ,, school districts, could hardly go it alone. By joining in ohe combined authority, they prob- ibly can. This ls precisely the point that Intrigues lhe FCC, which has pledged heavy technical and advisol')( aid. They forsee it as a pilot program in feasibility for nation• wide application: Cost to subscribe to CATV computes lo about $5 a montb. Cost lo install just one mile o! cable, however, is $3,000 and a local hookup would require many miles. U CA TV is approached on a joint·a·gency basis here along the Orange Coast and shown to be practical we can be proud of participation in a technological break· through. Similar inter-city CATV sY,tems could be workably engineered then among geographically, socially and cul· r turally·related community dUIWI aorosi the~ount '!'be latter point is ~clfically ~~'!!f ~t CATV speci&llsts ·~ iz one or the e1d1c n• •olved in programming. What do subscribers want? What type material I• locally 1vail1ble? Customers in some sectors wlll want culture; ~hers may want community news Qf education and still others may prefer cartoon comedies. . Television has greaUy ad\'ilnced from IUzzt' old Tom Mix westerns, blAAk ·scree.n1\ and showrards sayin1: '1Sorry ... Due to Circumstances Beyond Our Con· trol ... " Circumstances easily within control could ma.ke coastal CA TV service a reality and advance it• appllc• tlon nationwide. Santa Ana Persists . . In Its dogged persistence In trying to reealn the s& called'P.romlsed land 900-acre, tax rich Industrial proper- ty now safely enveloped within the boundaries or the city of Irvine. Santa Ana his launched a suit certain to make it new friends. By seeking to dissolve the new ci ty on the slim grounds that the incorporation election waa Ulegally called, Santa Ana bas certalnly escalated ill fedllngs with its newest neighbor, the city or Irvine. · With measured restraint. Irvine city ofllci\iz have vowed to defend its rights to self determination. Considering the county seat's history, It's not too surprising that one of the cou nty's oldest cities would so attack the state1s neW11st city. But tt 11 uncon8ci0nab1e for Sanlll Ana to seek to deprive Irvine citizens of their hard won governm'ent when their' questionable battle ls with the Irvine Company over a 19113 "promise\' that courts already have ruled did not bind fu{uro city coun- cils. " • N • Presidetat Will Hear Hard Ta!k in Peking Folly ·of Nixon Not Expecting Much Others Key WASHINGTON -One does not know for sure what caused President Ntxon to be so Impressed with \he sections on China in Andre , f.Ulr~ux's ' 'Ant I· Memoirs." An educated guess is that the French intellectual's prose conveys to Nixon better than any other what he will be up against in China. This perception u n d o u b le d l y en- couraged him to say that there wa.s no cause for optimism -or pessimism, either -as he ex· plor~s the ,Tound w I t h Chou En-lai ind Mao Tse-tung. The 1Uspicion can be indulged th a t Nixon IUbconsdous.. ly used the word, optimism. first be· cauu there is not much in Malraux to encourage it. The gulf between tradi· tional American thought and the Mal. raux version ol hill lnterview11 with Chou En-la! and Mao T11e-tung and bis inter· pretatlon of the ume is very wide. CHOU EN-LAI, for eiample, was not content wben he talked with Malraux four yeara: ago, with the Americana merely returning from Vietnam apd aU Asia. 1bey had to 1et out of everywhere, Santo Domingo, lhe Congo. Laos, Thailand, Pakistan -anywhere they were or had been. "Let them go home. and the world will have peace again," said Chou En-lai. Until that happens, China will not negotiate with the United Stat.ea about Vietnam or anything else . Mao's contempt for the Rll!Sians emerged in his' remark!! to Malraux. He thought the Russians were following the road to capitalism, no leSB. Beyond that were the enveloping my1ticlsmJ of Mao based upon the legends and, undoubtedly, the mythology of the partisan 1truggle in the North which brought Mao to power and sanctity in a Spartan world. NIXON ST ARTS from acratch and against deeply ingrained prejudices in his dialogue with the Chinese leaders and with Jen reason for optimism than When the dialogue began with the Russians in the 1Eisenhower adminlltraUon . Mao thought Russian C h a I rm a n Khrushchev a. fool for trying to com· promise with American capitalism, and a betrayer for abandoning China in I.he Jong ago confrontaUon over Quemoy and Mat.su. With his sense of the continuity of history, Mao is not considered likely to have undergone 1 chang~ of heart by the time he discourses with Ni.Ion. The past will strongly influence the present. PRESIDENT NiiOll thlnU that once he aetl foot on the aoil of mainland China 1 aew cbl[lter wUl'begtn, to be marked by negotiation rather than Confrontation. There 11 mt much In M1lraux to support that, but, rather, the conclusion that the Chinese in their long view of hiatory will regard lhe Nixol! visit as a footnote in the progression of China to new levels of greatneaa outshining the glorious past. a i1 ~· ply for their archeological value that . Great Wall, the)llng tombs, and the blddtn qjty ha-. been preserved as ft of past glories that will come; again. Having er~asped this point of view, Nix· on is probably better prepared to go Into his dilcussions wltl\ the 'old men, with their long memor ies, who run China . He fa not expecting much . The fact of the visit itself may be more _Important than any concrete results which will grow lrom tt. lN A CON VE RS;( TION not long ago, the President emphasized his long ran~e view of this visit. He. was think.Ing 1n terms or the next generation when China becomes a nuclear superpower and , in view of that, the. folly of Jettin1 any op- portunity pass to begin the dlalogu~ which might ave.rt a cataclysmic connlet involving three areat 1uperpower1 1n the not '° distant future . ·race-t~face meetings or o t h e r "eosme.1ic1 .. or inter national palaver do not lmpre1s a J'f-e1Jident who knows that, more than any other In recent years, he &rouses the Chlni;:se leaders' su1plclon1. DR. HENRY A. KISSINGER has said that necessity has brought the Chinese and Americans together . The nec:essity In China's case, it may be assumed, being the threat of a Russian showdown. In eomewhat this aame context Malraux ii quoted as saying that Mao's first RrioUI que1Uon will be If the Amerlc] are prepared to give aid to China. U , •I· cording tO Malrat11, there ;rill be a· great deal more to talk abOut. If Malraus is right, this II a sample of the kind of bard talk Nixon will hear 1n Peking, and he la not yet ready to dl&ebe what kind of an answer he would &Jve. In facf., ~~probably cannot give a categorical ant~et. Not are thtre many other categorlcll answers on the major lssuts between the United States and China. To Success '. Tbou1ht1 at Lar1e For every one man who aucceeds In the world because of hi1 own talents, a dozen 1ccceed slmply because of ~e lly of others : as ia a poker 11me, 1 the winners win because the lo 1 ai't IO foolish, and not because the w!nntrl are IO l!Jllrt. • • • • '11>e ca!)lljdl!f .l!l!o makes tile fewetl prQmf1es stand11 the Jeaat chance of belna: elected, although on that basis alone he would seem to be the superlr>r man. • • • If Marx we re a!Jve today, he might be severely tempted to chana:e hJ1 llmout aphor-~1'<111: "Pro-r ... ' I ..,.111 are the la.,, • • • opium of the A marrtage-vow ii 1 blank check , writ- ten In a fit of hysteria, filled in for an lm- posslhle 11um , and when 1ub11equently presenled for ca.t1hina:. returned for "lnaufficlent fund1 ." • • • ft Is hard for som!One 1111 to Jnjure us unle11 we have flr1t placed the we1pon Jn hit hand : moe:l lll·treated people ire In tome manner accessorles before the fact. Travel· Was Once Banned • • • Revolution 11 alweyll lt1 nwn rationale : U the American colonl1t1 haQ failed, hlstory would call them "traitor•" rather than "patriot•." President Nixon'• planned visit!· to China and the Soviet Union have made. some people unhappy, but no one ques- tions hil right to go. It was not always thus. For nwit of U.S. hist.or)', incumbent Chief Executives were expected. to stay not only on American soil but also u close as possible to \be naUon'-1 capital. George Washington, aa might be e•· peeled, set the pre<edent: During 1 lrip to New England, the tint> President ii reputed to have avoided Rhode Island 6ecause it had mt yet signed the Constitution and hence was foreign ter· ritory. When Rhode Iatand . did llgn 1hortly thereafter, Washington made a special trip to the new ltate. Later Prealdents 1CrIIpuloilSly observed the foreign-travel ban. Wtlllam McKinley, for esample, woutd not aet foot on the in- ternatlonal bridge wbeo he met with the Prealdent of Mexico at El Puo, Tesu, In 'Olt.ANOI COAIT DAILY PILOT l!obrrt N. Wud, hbllliI<T " . ~ Xr..U, tdltor AU>rrtW.Balu EdUorllll Page E<llJor n,, ..ittdlal -ot "'" Da1l7 PDOt -... lnl011n an4 -· lite -by pr-w. NWSpap!'r'• oflil"llMf ml eom--lnmt&rf on topfca of lntttm. •ntl alsn-byPl""idlns•forwn for the: tif" ....son ot · nur l"tltdm" Oilin-an4 by ,._.dnc u. -........... ot t.!Qml<d ol>- ttfftfl and apoka:mim. 00 topb "'"'" ~-Wectnuday, Feb. 16, 111'12 • Edifuri ~ R~,arc 1901. Benjamin Harrllon had displayed more daring 10 years tarlier when he ventured u far as the middle llne of the bridge. THEODORE ROOSEVELT broke with tradition in 1908 by traveling to Panama. Although the trip wa1 crltlciud by 10me of TR'• political opponent!, It was n~ RrlOUlly questioned or f o r m 1 11 y cbal!eopd on legal grounds. Wcodr6w Willon , in contrut, encountered mauive oppos!Uou when he 11111CJU!JCed in 1111 that he would 11\end the Paris PHce COnlereflet. "So rltrce wa1 l h e crlli<:ilm," Jotephua Daniela wrote, "that an outsllltt would have supposed that Wlbon wq breaking 111 Ten Com· mandmrntl 1t OllCf." Wibon'I trtp to Europe, It waa poinled out, .....rd be q<dte unlikr !IOOJ<evet1'1 journey to l'lllama. For the !int lime, the Pmtdeol .....rd lave the Western Hemilpllere. IP wlfl beyond the direct pbyllcal protectloo of the United SI.Itel, remain ablent lrvm tho oountry Jor 1n ateDded prriod ot tlmt, and engase lh ~ diptom1tlc dllc:oaafon1 Ind per>Clllll ~ a1 the eoolmnce toble. Qn the eve of WU.00'• do!Iortun for Europe, S.n. t..wrenoa Y. s&mn.n CR.' m.) Introduced • raorutlon declltlng the ofllce of Prelldent to be vocant whe6 tho inCllnbenI tdt the country Ind trander- ri"I lob _. 11M1 ckftln to the Vice PraidlnL Sbmnan'1 molultoo die( ii cammllloe So did a lllnilar mcuun ill- troduoed In the """"· WR.SON HAD BROKEN the Ice, but bi& IUCCHSOTI hesitated to plunge tn after tum. Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolld,ge each made only one Jrlp abroad, and Herbert Hoover made: none. No President again traveled outside: the Western Hemifphere until franklin D. Roosevelt attended the C 1 1 a b I 1 n t a Conference in 1943. Today, of course, presidential travel to all parts of the world 11 commonplace. ·The champion globetrotter to date is ~lght D. Eisenhower, with 18 forelan trips. Richard M. Nlxon, a.t1 Ellf.l'lhower'1 Vice President, vlalted 54 counltle. In eight years -alao a record. Pretldent Nl>on wilt equal Ets.nhower'• eJ1ht.trjpo. per-term paCi when be travel• to Ottna and tile Soviet Untoo. Who know• whAt • -term might bt1n1? Ia tt not -l· ble that Nixon, the oports limf, would 1lm Jor the title of MOit Peripatetic President? Dear Gloomy Gui No C8l'IO It plll!J up .. lbe docb In the -· lllttkr. A llhip la 11 ~kl "1len lt'I moored •Jone· lldt tile pier, where carp 15 pUln1 up. -()Id Salt • • • The mo1t ahaJl\efuJ blot on the whole Ameri(!an govtrnmental 1y1tem rtmalns the appointment. or tlatlng, ol judgt.1 on a polltlcal bails: a man Involved In poJJlic.s should be by that very realOtl In- eligible for the bench. or the wholt In- dependent judicial proceaa It tainted. • • • • Pr01tltutlon nt'IY be "the olde1t pr&- feaalon.'' buL on!y because it wa1 prooeded by legaJJzed rape ind 1upported by arrogant male 111umptlon1 of In· herent ayperlorlty. • • • When thert ii 1 victory. e.v"n the cowardJ)' Abare in the triumphal pr&- . ctuJonl wben there Is a defut....cu:n the brave share ln UJe ahame. (Thua, even though Lee lfU twice tile 1•neral, 1nd JO tlmtl the man, th.at Grant w11. l • • • Our f11clnaltoo wtth "growth"· hH obecured the mtracle of "crutk>n" for mo1t modem people; but, a1 Donne 11ld In one of his: sermon1 more than three centurk!:1 ago : "The distance from nothing to 1 UUle It ten thowoand ti°"' more than from It to Uw! hJahf•t dearee In Ihl1 ltfo." • • ln any r•Uonal IOdetx, people who tau beer cana on public road1 and parkwsy1 "ouJd be· trtat:ed more aeve:r~y thin \ thooe wbo take pot privately ; but Jn our 1)'11em, lbe bffr-to11er1 n-11h un- 'rMleated while the pot,tokln art punilh· ed Jar bobond tile aer1ou1nea1 Of thrlr of. fllltt. • -Quotes Rllpli McDtuld, rcUnoJ 8.f. pellc• I• ·-11114..t "" -1'wld1•tlol • "'"' -''For1et tha stamor. u·1 J<lll bard work llld pltnl7 of IL" · • .. No Amnest.y for ·Draft Evaders To the Editor· There 1eem1 lo be quite a bit of talk In regard ln granlinJJ amne11ty fl)r l11011e who could afford to flee lo Canada In order to avoid belni drafted In the 1crvlce. Thia of course 11 1 gro11 lnault lo all our brave ' men w~o did serve, 11nd lost their live1 or were crippled. 1!11Q thou In our prlMner· of.war camps. ' Ju& recenUy the Secretary of State w11:quoted o_n TV s11aylnc, "Thls la not I.be 1tlme to talk of ir1nt1na amne1ty to our maq wh~ fied th• col81try to •void bllnJ dhfttd, whlJa our men lrt 1UU fl1htlnr thh1 war, or are In prfMner-of· war campa." This Is very lntere1Jtlng .. lust whtn 111 thi right tline to t11lk of gr1ntlng 11m· ne1ty to tha1e who ln1ult evc::ry m&n whn 1e.rved, or lo1t hie life. ind to the parent• of lheM brave men who elected to serve their country? THIS 18 THE MOST unspeakable war, the mott Ul!Juat war, the most atupld war of all time, but cwen IO there 1houkt be no 1mnt1ty. If JU1tice were really done in thlt c1ae, the men "ho brought this awful thin& d""" upon hb fell°'"' Americana lhoulil - Mailhox l.etier• /rom render1 t'lTI welcom•. Nnrmoll11 wrlte11 1hould convcv thetr nui11aue1 t" 300 word.I or lt11. The rlOh1 io condfftlt l1tt1r1 to ffl 1poct or tHmfnatt !lbtl U rc1erv1d. AU l1t- ter1 mu1t tncludt 1fanau1.r1 and mau .• 't10 cddre11. but namta mo11 H: tmtk- h1ld on rwQ1111e (/ 1uJJla4#ne r11110,. fl appar1nt. Po•lr!J 141/l not &1 ,,.i. lt1hed. It w111 lhe 1971 Grand Jury rtc0m. mend11Uon "that the Joint board of dlr1c. tnr.11 of the Or11njle C'Aunty 1"nltat1011 dlatrlcts revise their director•' fee 1Jchedule1 to ellmlnate Jn,qultle1 ind con. • •Ider rtorlilanlzaUon of the Joint dhrtrlc::t1 governlna body In ordtr to 1chl1v1 more effi(!lency and economy ." · That may be too loA lcal ' CONSTANCE BENEDICT Onagel' Vote1'1 be brouaht to Juatlce and charged with To the !:dJtor , malfe11ance In office. t do mean Lyndon A ar•nd 1portlna event comtn1 up In ' B. JohnllOl1 . 1172 wlll be the "fl1ht1" 11 the If and when lhl1 11 done, then we can Democratic N1tlon1J Convention, so don'& be~ln to i.lk of amnesty -an1 not mlu It, folks! I'm Just 11 udlstlc 11 the be ore. 11 nt#t lllY In Ibo detlre IQ watch ldlot1 ·..1 ' pulverlu eoclI other In lhalr 1trupl1 to IT MUST e..,,BROUGllT out here too, pt on the J>IYroll ond than 111 on lhrlt that Lyndon B. Johnson was quotfd u 01111ert and do nnthlna fnr the 1ucker1 111yln1. "I woufd llke to 1n down in "' Who eftCted them. (Nice plctufe, huh I) history 111 another Abraham Llncnln, • 'nothe d ti II WAr Pre1ldent " How doea tha1 1r•b OU' n r' ar•n llpor n• event wt be Ou · 1 ~ Y · the Repuhlfcan Convention which wlll re. r former Pres dent could be charged qulre Jonpih-c:heek tppral al If I with many other thin•• of course slnct It I to 1 one 1 wa1 afU!r he was el~ that \;1 had uaeu It• entertainment va lue 11t all. 'I But the lndeftndent1 who lurn to UMIH perml11lvenea•. crime In the ltrtet.. duda wJD st!JI a:et nothlna but Sood u .. arson, rlnt1 ind · IO many other thlnp Una 1 1 lhat Nixon I• belna btmed for . • JAM!S A. DUVALL /Hay Be Too Logle1d To the Editor ' BU1lnw 11 booming 1t 115 North Sycamore St.. Santa Ana, home of Or•n11e Coonly'1 aovemment. Bohby B•ttin I• 1rtndln1 out b/1 llh1re- ror r ·le, the Utter Paltol and the Yrr 'elephant System. N1. tOdy could be •111ln.-t 1 Jltttr- free county aud extr11 aafety precautlon.11 In 1n emer•ency, 11ul, If Bobby would •upport waae1t1on.1 by Supervltor David Baker to r.onJOlld.ttt: 1t1me of the 1uperOuou1 11nltatlon dl1trlcll Orlll. then he would perhapt bt In • betttr po1ltion to 1ug:e:.t l])fnd!na. UNTIL THAT TIME, Where & Iha money comln1 from? Oh , tti. ta1payer11 ye1, they will,.certalnly ply IODM:. By GeOf'fe --~ Deir Ceorae Thankl 1 Jm for your lnaomnl1 curt. Actu1lly , I db1n 't UN tnat 1M1--dr11wn«il cure yau-.,,gattd, but I rind lhll lmmodl1tely upon ltlrtlnc to re•d )'Ollr l:Olumn J a:o rt1ht to sleep. 01\ATEf'liL Otar Gr1telul · Hm. 1lurt'1 Jumy. 8tncc,1ettin1 your letter J've bun t.oii1.n1 and .turnlna •U OlllIL ls.nd yoor worrlol to C-1• Why cluI~r up the houH ..tt~ o~ worrlol wt1on you c:ould lit OUl It~ Una Into buJld.tlcw tr01Jhie?)- TllE ONAGER h1blt ii 1 hud on< to bre1k, Ind tha Rapubllc1n1 do cort•IRly ketp up wJlh tho 0.mocnts. The 1te11J-publlC1.. •nd lilt lJ<mo. reAllerata: are bnth hard pre..C. tn offer the kind of ltandlrd prombM'<Ju1 the on•ger voter c1n't lff throuA:h. 11'1 a tltlemate, min, Ind the comlnlil c:nfl• ventlon1. with trr without entertainment ralue , lhnuld provide bflutUul comedy copy to tilt TV wrllerl{lnd to lh1 pr ... eolumn11t1. . Should we 1wllcb to oomebody Ilk• W11lact, but wlttiout hl1 h11n1upt? Yu. 111n, but where' ll auch a man? <or a woman, maybe?, 8. G. UND!NPl Right to Work , CommentA I \ , . ~ . S.ot1ae Wedding Day Yvonne Kalak, 19, and her Valentine's Day bridegroom, Louie, 22, exchanged a fe\v lvords through the visitation ~lass at Ventura Coun· ty jail Tuesday before Kalak left for state pr1Son on a possible life sentence. The couple was married in court only sec6nds before the . groom \\'&~ led away to begin serving a six months-t<>-life term for · armed robbery. ~ Easy County Formation Bill Unveiled by Solon SACRAMENTO (IJPI ) -A bill sought by.mayors of San Gabriel Valley cities to mci~e It easier to form • new countf has been introduced by 5<n. H. L. Richardson (O.Artadla). Richardson said Tuesday the legislation resulted from discus11ons over splitting popUloua Los Angeles County into fh·e new counties in an effort to make county goyemment more "manageable." Under the bill, no new counties actually . - would be created, but the measure would rela:s: current "severe" restrictions so voters of an area could create a new county easier If they so desired. ''It's nothing personal against the in· cumbent Los Angeles Co u n t y supervisors,'' Richardson said. He said the idea behind his bill was merely that a "small county is ea.tier to handJe than one the size of Los Angeles." noting that Los Angeles County contained 7 million residents. Bonelli Last Rites Friday Longsho1·e Leaders Ask . Pact Okay SAN FRANCISCO (AP J -1..-0ngshore leade rs have re<:ommended ratlficatlon today of a tentative contract to end the crippling 131-day \Vest Coast dock strike, raising hopes \\'Orkers will be b.ack at work by Sunda)'. The 110 delegates to a union caucus voted Tuesday to submit the agreeme.nt ,to the 13,000 rank and rue membtrl at the 24 strike-bound ports from Seattle to Sa n Diego. "If the vote is fa\"orable v.'e will try to arrange for an immediate return to work by Sunday," said Sidney Roger, in- fonn ation ofi!cer for the International Longsboremen's and W1rehousemep's Union. IL\VU Pre sident Harry Bridges suir ports rati fication, saying the contract prov ides "solid and substantial a:ains!' The caucus had been under way since Sa turday. The union reached the tentative agree- ment with the 122 shippers oC the Pacific l\Taritime Association last ":eek. PMA members are expected to ratify the pact withln a day or so. The strike has· caused loS!es in U.S. e:r· ports estimated by the White House at more than $600 million and prompted Congre!li to give President Nixon power to halt the walkout. The closed caucus was not without its disagreement, sources said, with the large San Francisco Local 10 saying that pa rt of lhe proposed contract v.•as "full of fish hooks and eKemptions." The local also said that "President Ni:r· on was sitting with a cocked gun ... pointed at the body of labor, and more specifically at our head." Gas Refunds Orde1·ed SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -C...tomers or Pa cific Gas & Electric Co. will re<:eive refunds totaling $5.35 million by order of the Calilomia Public Utilities Com- missk>n . That amounts to an average of about 90 cents for the domestic famil y user. to be paid during the March billing period. most dedkaled p u b 11 c aervant.s." Booelll ..,..eel ahnost 14 yean on the five-man board of supervisors for Los AngeJes county, an area of 7 million in- habitant.!. down at the polls, but Bonelll's tJght wu won i.n J~ whfn the 'U.S. Supreme Court's "one man, one vote" decision ac- complished his goal -a power shift to the populous southern part of the state. LOS ANGELES (UPI) - llafl n.., al ball sWf Jn Los Abltl., loday to mourn the death of County supervisor J.'rank Bonelli, v.·ho helped liid the fight by . heavily populated Southern California to wrest more polltical power from the northern part of the It.ate. BooeW died Monday night In SI-.Francia Hoapltal. He was ~: Rom1n Catholic funeral services will be heJd Friday. He became statewide Political figure ~ the early oplitical figure in the early 1960s, when he led.a campaign to pass redistricting measures \hit would have abifted con-trol of tbe state Senate to Southern California ( r o m agricultural counties to the north. CI'owds Soar Mayor Sun Yorty ordered nags on city buildings lowered lo hall stall, saying "Los Angeles county lost one of Its ' The proposals _.. turned SAN DIEGO (AP) -Sea World says attendance aet records at its marine life parks in San Diego arid Aurora Ohio. during 1971. SPECIAL INTRODUCTC ~.\' OFFER NEW permanent Pf••s Kangaroo T-Shirta •nd Shortt. Brfght-white knit polyester end cotton-durable, soft and 11rong. Polyrib T-shirt ned:· band won't sag. Comfort pouch shorts hl\'9 the exclusive horilon· tel fty. Buy the 3-packs-guarantirird lull two yurJ' w"1r: Save up to 26% keng1roo T-Shirt.-S-M-l -Xt. (Rog. 3/$4.50} K1ng1roo Shorlo--28-48 (Rog. 3/f4.001 f~r$333 munsingPJear -• ···-c;oMt.,. ,..(Wlll~Ml YCIUfl, CllOn---... ..._, STORE N.AME : 1~ -CUllll c:.u.. LIMITED TIME ONLY - DRPAllTllQfT aTOIU 111• NIWPUlf aYI. CIJITUUY t.0Clol1' AT NIWPO«T Alll llA-1 llftl. •i OnN "TIL l:OI P.M. NIDAYS • • . . DAILV ~ILOT 5 M-datory Proteetlon Reagan Asks Health Plan SACRAMENTO, cam. lAP) -Gov . Ronald Reagan has propased a mandatory health insur1DCe prog ram to protect nearly 11 million CallfornJans •gainst fin ancial ruin th.It could result from catastrophic · Ulness or accident. wert toaufferwhltla tcrmed ~f ter lOD day• of horpltall1atlon, 30 da.y1 of a catastrophk: Illness O\'er a r«'QVfr)' care and '3,000 ot lon& perlod of tlme ." outpaUent aervlcts 11uch as To qualify for the unlimited doclor bills, X·rlY • n d COY<l'll&• provided by the tabiiratory servlcea. Reagan plan, a worker or'~=.::..:;....::.------= Airli1ie Gets Short Strike The plan, to be introduced soon in the legislature, would be flnanctd .bY a S3-a·monlh deduction from the paychecks of tbe state's 8.4 million vootlc- ing men and "·on1en. The yield would total more than $.m million a yea r. The p r o p o s e d California B U • health security plan, working membtr of his family would have to bl covered by a basic health Insurance plan such 11 Blue Crou and Blue Shield that ta approved by a new state health security com- mission. The catutrophe insurance would take over hospital. doc- tor. drug and allied expenses when the basic plan ran out: 'Y 11l0 l t through private insurance car- ... ricrs, would pick up hospital Ok LOS ANGELES (UPI) -and doctor costs where the Override ay The Teamsters Union struck average health care plan runs Western AtrllntS for a brltf out. CARMEL (AP l -Voters In period Tuesday night -so In a broadcast report Tues· the C a r m e 1 Unified SChool brief the alrl!n!;'s flights were day, the Republican governor District have approved con· not affected. said, "Ir an extended illness or tinulng an 87<ent tax override The strike lasted less than a terrible crippling accident for the nert four years. See the best in men's w e e r for '721 The best se- lection in town for double knit,sl•cks end 1port co•ts. Remember, th • be1t Is alw•ys •t . . . three hours. Picket lines ap-were to hit someone in your The vote In the district, peared at some of the airports family, the health insurance whjcb u:tends up lhe Carme1 from Minneapolis to California you have would not cover the Valley tnd down to Big Sur, served by the airline. expense and it ,vould be ex-Included many new young The airline called il a ·;h;•u~s~ted;;;'·e;ry;;q~u:ic;k;ly;;lf~y;ou~;per;;;;so;•~·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~i wildcat strike, in' violation of ------- the national Railway Labor Act, which also covers airline labor contracts. The union ac- cused the airline of stalling on contract negotiations, in the hope that the Civil Aeionautlcs Board will ap- prove Western'! reque11t to merge with American Airlines,· before a new con· tract can be signed. The Teamsters represent 2.000 'Vesten1 me<:hanics, utili· tY workers, fleet drive.rs and storehouse workers at Los Angeles, Anchorage, Seattle, San Francisco, Honolulu, Las Vegas, Nev., Salt Lake City, Great Falls, Mont., and ?11in- neapolis. The strike was announeec:I by Marvin Griswold secretary~treasu~r r Teamsttrs L o c a I 2707. T Free Income Tax Preparation I' Save $30-$40 on professional preparation of your 1971 C.llfomia and Federal Individual Income Tax Returns. Don't Delay Sign 1111 lodar, appolnlments are fret If )'OU open an Anaheim Savings act0unt of $5,000 or more, or for only $5 by opening an account of ,..-12,500 0( more. ANAHEIM SAVINGS airline denounced it as Ille'" ANO LOAN ASSOQ.l.TlON and said P 11 o ts ' ANAHEIM 187 W. Uncoln Ave. 92803/Te!. n2·1532 stewarde.s.ses were cro:·' BREA 633 So. Brea Blvd. 92621/Tel: 5~971 Teamster picket lines to k-'P HUNTINGTON BEACH 411M11nSt.92643/T1h53U591 the line's planes flying on J I!::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;::~ schedule. ' - Round trip jets daily. To Las Vegas 9:00 e.m., I :50 p.m. end 6: 10 p.m. To Phoenix 7:4S e.m.end.5:25 p.m • To Tucson 7:45 11.m. ' •Service starts February 22nil. ' .. . . ' • . . ' • ,13 OL SIZE · POLAROID , PAK OF 10 15 oL "Flsli Flavor'' Sfyle Color Film · Contac Friskies COLD CAPSU'ES · HAIR TYPE 108- '75Spetd SPRAY CHC"'UEE Ftr All Nl&H Rtlltf Fram •i•lar. s.,1r11111, olorTrtatd, 5•1 ·~·•111 wlta h Heal Ctlf U11e11tef, 1r hrcust 11 Conaestlon . • New Ult11~1ll 3 ROUS.for • ~.1.1 ' •99c . 2:$1 PAKOF2 - : lady Scott . IATHIOOM TIHUI .• JOHNSON'S Baby Shampoo No Mor• T•1r1 1601. SIZE r~~e ~~J~e Mad. 59c Mad, Taste. P•k of 6 Pill Depo1lt. . ========:' ' PLASTIC 32 GALLON II~ Trash Container "FESTIVAL" .•• Wit!t . . 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Tablets or Envelopes STUAIT NALL-200 SflleU lr.!119'1 3t rNd or ~' &IYlt I.Ible!-tr 100 CT. 3~\> lll'le• . 111-5k ... 3 Ring Binder · Address Book W''1fl ~ lf<tlonl for recor4l•J birtlld.,,, lllOI· ¥et'U'lfS, etc. ll"GllACKEl·MWIPHY "Yal11 Pack" .•• Riclt lookin1 vloyf b IUled -""'1· -:d•ipl 70c .=. ... \J. TIU,NOMI List Finder ., ... 11111" -Unlqoe "'*" w/,.,a. IJOO ·5:2.39 = .., -. • '"" 1.11 s7c Filler Paper mw KW. ... "*""~· }.l4tfe w>« or Colit1• .. 11. • 5.lttlt .... lfc 2:1.00 17 ' \ \ L. M. Boyd , John L. rFaked Out of Crown ' "ta the baUle fur ul1teoce, tale.at J1 the punclli, ud tact 11 the cltvtr footwork." Wllaoa Ml:r.ntr That great ouper1Ullous llatfighter ol yestel)'ear, John L. SuJUvan, never allowed himself to enter the ring ahead of his opponent. By never, I mean almost. One fighter, who knew all about oJd John's fear of the jinx, tricked him. Thia cunning character preceded Sullivan to ring· tide, then turned hick at the last moment. Sullivan round himself through th< ropes fll'lt And 21 rounds later ,that savvy 80\11, GenUeman Jim Corbett, wu world chimp. Told you. didn 't I, that throughout his entire fighting career, Corbett never got. a blackeye or a bloody noet! That, too, Is true. POUND FOR POUND, you can get more cabbage off an acre ol ground than any other vegetable, If all grows well. · r MA.NY JS the official city fire engine in Paris that's Just a motorcycle under two men wlth an extinguisher. EXACTLY l l years ago, only four African nations were called htdependent. Today more than 40 are so de- clared. TRAU.ERS -Weight or the trailer ought not exceed half the weig ht of the car ·that pulls it. Su~ ls the rec- ommendation of tbe National Safety Council. How many rigs would be run off the road, do you suppose, if that pretty Utile piece of advice were enforced? Quite a many, no? ' AGAIN AJ\ot asked if any unborn child ever can be heard to cry out loud. Absolutely. Jn one instance, t_he medical records show, such an infant sobbed for 40 min- utes In another case an unborn baby cried so loudly lt was· heard by nurse; on thC other side of the deUvery room . Q. "WHAT, iil the \'Crnacular, is a dip?" A. A pickpocket. Q. "WHAT'S amber?" A. Petrified resin. CELERY -Madam, ls your eel•!)' wilted? All righ~ !.-slice a spud Into cold water, add the celery, and Jet stand for an hour. That ought to crllp It up. A VEllAGE AGE oL.U.S. Supreme Court ju.st Ices upon appointment i! S7 yean six months. Of esaOClate justices . since the tum of the century, 54 yeirs tour months. ' THAT WO:\lEN tend to be more conservative political· • ly than their husband, Is also a fact now established by the survey takers. Address n1ait to L. 111. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1815, Neur ;"port Beech, Calif. 92660. History Preserved--- ~ . . ' Last Peanut Truck SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Th• Board of Permit Appeal• has voted r to protect a vanishing lnsUtutlon-the last Blacks Slate Feb. 26 Meet LONG BEACH (UPll - Cali!omia'a 225 delegates to the National Black Political Convention will be named Feb. 2S during 1 meeting In Long Beach. , Th~ convention will be he1d In Gary, Ind", March IO.It '!'be Long Beach meeting will be the last of four meetings in caiifomla. Earlier sessions were at Sacr amento, Los Ange.Jes and East Palo Alto. ' peanut and popcorn jruck In the city. Chrag Mohammed came to San Francisco In 1910 and began stl'ffl vending tbat year. Mohammed bad to go before the board because his l1Jslness was overlooked when the mobile catering laW was rewritten last year ·by the Board of Supervisors. Mohammed was told that he would be charged the S1 ,500 fee for such ~w perm.its, but when the c_.e came up the board waived the e n t I r e amount . "He's 85 now and ls beg\n- ning to think about retiring," said hls'attornty. But Mohammed said be will continue operating the popcorn ..... truck for a while although he "·on't "~-ork too hard." VOT~R REGISTRATION Closes February 17 !Thurscloyl TO RE-ELECT ROBERT M. WILSON TO ·COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL April 11, 1972 YOU MUST IE .REGISTERED 18 yri. of •t-or older. You Q~llfy if: 90 d•Y1 In Colifornl1, JO doY1 in Oro,.. County. \ [' ~4 cl1Y1 in your ,...1nct, ' ' N. .... ., '*"""""-.. ~ """' M. ...,... ... ........, ti s a••.,,....,._ CMf9 .... Women • Accuse Berkeley SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - Twelve women members of the academic community of the University of California in Berkeley have filed s u it against the school and its regents. charging sex discrimination. The plaintiffs, including women faculty members, noq- academlcs and g r a d u a t e stl\dents, c i t e d unlversity- gaChered statiatics they said showed dlscr:lmination against women that "paraUels that of the State of Missis sipp i against blacks." The women said they do not want to "punish" the unlversi· ty nor to seek "future employ· ment preferences.'' but hoped by the year 2000 to have a percentage of women on the faculty and in managerial positions equal to the percen· tage or women in the work force. USE OUR . :ONYENllNT CllDIT . TllMS ALL LABOR CARRIES A UFETIME Bacl1elQr Seel{s Women's Rights SACRAMENTO (UPI ) - Legi s lation to end "discrimination a g a J n s t California women has been proposed °" the birthday of Susan B. Mthony, a 19th cen- tury freedom fighter for woinen's rights. "Slxtyfll< yea? a fl er Susan's death we still find women filling the role! of second.Class citizens;• said bachelor Assemblyman Walter Karabian. (0.~1onterey Park ). He told a news conference Tuesday his proposed coll· stitutional amendment would be "a significant step forward in the elimination or discrimination between men and women." Karabian's a m,e n d men t would read, 11Equality of rlghts under the law shall not be denied or abridged on ac- count of sex." · Karabian and the Senate coauthor, Democrat Mervyn Dymally of Los Angeles, were flanked by members of the National Organization o f Women (NOW), as they disclosed their measure. None of the Legislature's three women members w e r e present. Karabian said his legislation would have wide-ranging ef. fects, ranging from changing the portra[al of women in state schoo textbooks as "Jess than full~fie<lged members or society" to elimination of "male only" and "female only" designations in help- wanted ads. Barbara Leerskof of N'OW said It was "fitting'' that Karabian's proposal was made on the anniversary of the birthday . of "lits." Anthony, who in 1872 was arrested, tried and fined far voting In a presidential election. It was the first time such a constitutional amendment has been introduced in t h e legislature. --- Wtdntsday, htwuary J6, 1972 DAIL V PILOT J 5 YOU ARE INVITED I to a HAMMOND HAPPENING Hear Tommy Thompson play your fav· orite tunes on your choice of Hammond Organs. Tommy Thompson is an inter· national star of the Hammond Organ, and he is l1ere to ei11e1·tain you at • store pa rty on Friday, Fel1. 18 as follows: Santa Ana Store Fri. Afternoon from 1 :00 to 5:00 P.M .. 2033 N. Main St. " Corona Del Mar Store Fri. Eve. from.7:00 to 9:00 P.M. 2854 E. Coast Hwy. Come one and all and enjoy the fun . Refreshm9nt1. Door Prizes. HAMMOND ORGAN STUDIOS of Orange County and the Oringe Co111 PURECUT . ELECTRIC SCISSORS 547.0351 644-8930 WE'RE CUTTING PRICES ON LUXURI- OUS CARPET AND THROWING IN THE PADDING AND INSTALLATION BE · CAUSE OUR STOCKS MUS.T BE CLEARED OUT FAST. IF YOU NEED CARPET N W'S THE TIME TO BUY IT. DuPONT NYLON PILE i long wearin g nylon pHe. Greot for hi gh traffic rGO ms in your home. More face yorn for longer wear. Many lovely color$ available.· ' . " COMPU.LY INSTALLED DuPONJ · NYLON, SHAG Deep, springy pile' yarns of l 00% nylon. Sturdy and easy to clean. GiVes a bright luxurious look to any room setting, yet it's practical and carefree. Many beautiful colors to choose from . ' COMPUTELY INSTALLED DuPONT 501 NYLON PILE A textured multi·level b,roodloom in 501 ·nylon pile. Attractive in any setting, modern ortroditionol. Sturdily constructed. Many deep-dyed decorator col ors to choose from. COMPLETELY INSTALLED TRI-COLOR NYLON SHAG CARPET • ' 100% nylon pile •. long lasting, rugged wearing, m'ode~ for years of enjoyment. 17 brilliant breathtaking . ' . · colqr combinations. COMP .. ETELY INSTALLED POLYESTER SHAG 100% Polyester shag. Polyewer pile rei~forced with hotd twist yarns for better performance. Easy to care for texture will w ith,tOnd active family usage. Wide aelect!on Of •xciting c9lars. ' COMPUTELY INSTALLED SHOP·AT·HU!IE SEIYICE If you can't <OtM ht, jwt phane ~ our 1 ,.prei•ntotiv• win coll with o full aomple t.elec1;0n. No obligation. CALL TODAY GUARANTEE~~=~~~ _546-8548 ~ .• I • \ \ I . I I I r I Ora nge Coast· Today's Final N.Y. Stoeks NO. <40, 4 SECTIONS, GES ORANGE CO'UNTY, CALIFOllNIA \YEDNESDA Y, FEBRUARY 16, 1972 c TEN CENTS • • eac an 1n· rau Found . Nixon NH Office arget of Bomb Nll!ESTER, N.H. (AP) The bf.ng of ,police and fire headquarters e ·taaay was linked by a top state law ement official to t)le "Tt.e People's at.Ion Army," an antiwar group aTso listed the New Hampshire.. bTiary .headquarters of President Nixon ~ tariet. . e official, who asked not to be iden-tld. siid thflt when a man and a ~n Were arrested shortly after the ,S. Launches . ~avy Rai<J,s nside North three bomb blasts that shattered win- dows, a typewritten news release also was confiscated. The release said that besides the police station, the Nixon headquarters had been a target., Police, however found no explosives at the headquarters nor at city hall, which was oniere<f searched as a precautionary measure. A fourth bomb was discovered today under the air conditioner in a window outside PoliCe Chief John Slips' office. Detonation experts said it failed to go off because it was improperly assembled. The news release referred to the arrest o( 12 demonstrators in Manc~r at the cipening of the Nixon beadquafters last week. George Romney, sscretary of Housing and Urban Development, spoke From Wire Services at the opening. S.<\.JGON -American war PI an es However, Valerie Hawkins 'of Dover, a li.UQC~~ substantial air strikes inside spokesman for the Lincoln Day Parade .. -.......... - DAILY PILOT tl.tt l'Mtt Lent en Season ·Storts Today-ls-Ash Wednesday, the.tradition)) beglnn!ng • clergyman to symbolize man's ultimate return to of the 40-day. J#nlen,seuon .during ~lricli Chrlsl.~ns ·.dust. These St. Jpach!m'~ Catliollc Chur~ parllhion- North "if 1 et n am today, U.S. military Committee which organized the 'tourcei:.said. demonstration at the NiJ:on headquarters, Radio Hanoi claimed two U.S. !;'Ian" said ioctay t~e group "emphaticajly worl4Wide do.penM~_jn.pr:.epar~'li; \Jlej0JpU• : ' era.In Co•\a'¥e11 are being anolnted wi)h the~ords featival of Eu~~ .. 1!1-~il'i· 11'11i'C!fe!ll'•tp • ~mbirim*it thl~ you are d'.uat'aad unto d'.ust placed Oft the. fQl'ehe&d Of~each ~niteDl by We you Will retilJ'll." , • I wer' shot down ,a'.nd a number of . pilots denies any-eonnectlon bet~p ~march '"'"' killed or captured .. ;..u,s, Command and.Joday's bombimc. °"""*'-were 1pokesman, told of the broadcast, said: peaceful. We were demonstrating ag.wt "l have. nothing to report." . Nixon, not against the Manchester • IT • " •' > I '. '' police." · · ' . . , .. . r The commal!dJn tl'le past has withheld Kathryn A. Holt, 21, with I= in rewrtin& on downed planes until search n _ _._ B··u 1 N y nd · th a~·rescue missions were completed . uuz:iwn, y.ua o, · ., 8 1be North Vietnamese broadcut and Dover, N.H., wu arra1gned. on two a>unts as an accessory to damaging asserted' ~t a number of U.S. jets at-public buildings. Mesa Drug Arrest Reveal ~ " ' 'i taC~etfpu)>ulous areas in Qu~g Binh and She was Jlsted as a waitress and' a . . ' VJnh trnh. North Vietnam's t w 0 native of Salem, N.H. She wa1 held for a 5outJiernmost provinces. Feb. 25 hearing in $25,000 bail The U.S. informants said the strikes Jaan Karl Laaman, 23, .abo ... listtd as were in. North Vietnam's half of the Karl A. Laaman, Buffalo, N.Y. wu ar- 'Free' Telephone · Setµp demilitarized tone that S'eparates the ralgned later at the hospital where he walTlng: · Vletnams but . declined to was taken with an injured hand shortly A trio's arrest following an alleged $50 dl1close the targets. after his arreJt. A Feb. 25 probable cause street corner drug deal has led to ·.lfhey added there also may have been hearing was set with bail at f25 ,000 on recovery of a hoard of barbiturate pills SOD1t". r;d,ds north or the zone, but two counts of damage to public building. and stolen property under study today, wiiEd ~ details pending: a n an-A bloodied and tot;n glove wu found including teli!phone gear for calling no ' nt from the U.S. Command. outside the police station. around .the world free . ' eye-were protective reaction strikes Costa .Mesa and Huntington Beach and..oO!ei' strikes involved," said one in-detectives who engineered the case. claim ~~::fr~·.: "but I can't give you the Hearing Delayed '6,000 or more in valuables ii lnvol~. One.suspect in the case collapsed in bis J:Ie said the rai~s were. beyond . th~ jail ceU due to apparent barbiturate U!'ual ·one or two protective reaction J Ad ti' B • ..l ... Wit'M.rawal later Tue!day and was strikes frequently reported from Ume to n op on ·~ospitalized time w~n eneinx guns or radar lock on -· to U.S. planes, On F le Child Complainl! charging the men with Ained intelligence lndkat.es 70 percent ,.. OS r seven specific crimes were ei:pected to mort North Vietnamese troops will move be Issued today by the Orange County i Into South Vietnam or into border areas Robert and Jeanette Hayes of Costa District Attorney'• Office. . during 'the first five months than Jn the Mesa wilJ have to wait one more week for Tommy Keallher, 21, David Gipson, 22, aame . period last year1 U.S: military an Orange County Superior Court ruling both of 2.118 Elden Ave., Costa Mesa, and IOID"CU said. on their bid to adopt the little girl they Leslie S. Kufferath,. 19, of 7612 Com- U.S. inilitary ~s ln Saigon said the took into their home two yean ago as a modore Circle, Huntington Beach, could big 'U~ air campalga that began In South three-day-old foster child. alBO faco additional counts. Vietnam a week ago would ••continue in-Presiding Judge Bruce Sumner of Bell Telephone System Intelligence definitetyt> because at least four ftts"b Laguna Beach today reset the hearing on agenll are checking out two ao-called Hocth Vietnamese ~iVisJons, beefed up by the lawsuit filed by the couple against Blue Boxes recovered at the apartment • · .• af!inery, were moving Into Ille Orange County Social Welfare Depart-shared by Kealiher and Gipson. Nl"ltl~1,IOO 1trlkes have been flown ln- fde &oilth Vietnam In the past· week, most of them coming the five days before ~Y cease-fire for the Tel lunar I':"" year that began at 6 p.m. Monday. Dur'"-the U-bour period ending at dawn We.doe~, American je~flghteo made ~ ~ .itrikes, and bY nooo B52 bombers had flown seven misslons inside the coun- try :.... a sharp redudloo from the earlier .'ber' o! sorties. . ment after Judge Lester Van Tatenhove Their use is a federal offense: declined to stage the day·long bearing in The aophiJticated devices -~ered ht. law and moUon dJVision. with coded buttons -are capabli ·of The Utile girl they hope lo officially being,plugged into commercial telephone name Cheri LJDD Hayes played with her systems to circumvent e1eetron1c gear toys and chatted with her parenls a n d for making and monlt<riD& -ldwide frienda ou~ the courtroom while mm'""' t•-· I tr _.1 a> wuca w1~. . , t lawyers tor both skies vain Y ir;u to get lly obtaining the · complex code, a an Immediate ruling on the issue. • person could e1ll v~lly any M>Qt on Hloyes, 32, and Mn. llloYes, 33, of ltllO earth via commw>icationa satellite, from Bl!marck W11, point out.in their lawsuit the privacy of ltls'own living room. · that Cheri Lynn was first placed with A Iona! them by soclal workers u a foster child -. nat ma&uine recenU, in- with the agreement that she wouJd ,Jive tervlewed the unidentified male party with them no longer than eight week.I. The eight weeu, the couple slate, became two yean and they uked to be allowed to adopt the inlanl Dorothy ' ' whorlalms to have cra~ked the .code, causing millions of dQllar1 annually tn e«>st losses · to ·communicatiOns com· . ' panies. . . ..:. ·He e1Plailled how It worts In that arli· cle, altho)lgb J. •nYdt\e uslni, ~ ly!tem riw •a flki fille1 and lengthy; prison tl!rm if convicted. · ' . Detective Sgt. John Rtgan, of the Costa Me!a Police Department'•. new beefed-Up narcotlca..aquad, Pid today that Kealiher, GiPBOD aOO. KiJffer,tb .have been Wider kruttny aboul a month. The trio was taken into cu1tody late Monday after an alleged 1ale of barbiturate pills at Newlaod Slteet and Warner Avenue in Huntington Bearb. Capture of the men was not Im· mediltety dlscloled, to allow authorities 1 surprise element in case any other suspect.s could be quickly turned up. Polle< claim a aearch of the Elden Avenue addr.., aettec! 2,000 more drug pill1 worth tJ,lQ In 1treet sales, 20 rlasti.c bag1 of marijuana worth $300, plus rr item• of stolen properly. The gcodJ locllllle television .. 11, varioul phoaea In ldditlon lo the J1USpidous Blue -with which Ibey could be med, llld a televlllon tube cad- dy stolen from a. rep.airman's van one week aao. lnvellligalon noted that single !heft from Too'• TV, which occurred at 1111 Maple 61., nur Kealiher and Glpaon's (See LOOT, Pal' I) • A~ross McGovern As ks .. f..e galized Pot They dalm they have been the target of repeated threats by aocial workers who are determined to take Ille child from them and poislbly allow its adoption by 1 couple who would be lllrangen to the Infant. . . Iii, Uolted Pr .. s llltenlallonal ' SOIJ.. <i<Org• S. McGovern of Soutll OU.ta suggested today lqallzing marijuana, with the -controls Imposed on alcohol. SJ!ialdng at a drug C011111eling ctDter in Boston. the Democratic pmldentlal candidate aaid' "C<ifttinuing Investigations on the over.ii dfecta of marijuana leave Oftltttled the 'rtlated but aeparate -"-wl>db<r oocltty can or ,,...id attempl to COU>pletel7 pro- P,lt JI& -...,,.. most r.levant blstorical ~I -prohibition of alcohol ~ an ob.toils, abject lllhn." • Lawytt1 for Welfare Director Granville Peoples today ,.Id they are determioed to op-the Hloyes petition. . ' ... Wente's Widow Dies LIVERMORE (UPI) -Funeral oer· •lea will be held Thurtdat l<r F.dlth L. w ..... ..-1ate-.dwua~ ber ol lhe Wente llrolhen wlDory flmllJ~ Mrs. Wen!e died 1Waday 11 lhe IC< ti. II. Her hushalld, lkrman Louis Wente. waa the llOll of Carl H. Wente I German im-mlFant wbo founded I b • Livermore -,1111813. . •. Fourth w· Finisli_ Acapulco Race BT AIMON LOCLlBEY °"" ............. ~ ACAPULCO -Bob Beauchamp'• Columbia 57 Dorothy 0 waa the fourth boat lo finish al 2;20 this -.Ing• (PST) and snbbed the hahdJcap lad In the s.. Dloen to A<lpuko Yadll 8-. Dorolh1 0 saved her ~ over the ....,_' lhRe linllbon -Windward P-ce. slactdin and h n -to tal<t the oYrrail ilnd Claal A llaudlcap laid. How...,., Ihm ...... Qau B nt C yacllll ..... """"" lo the llnlsll w. momtng to .._ Dorotl\y O's overall leod. Two )'flln l(O, Dor.a., 0 WD flnl lo llnlsb tblo' l'ICt. Peter Gr&n1'1 '.4l-IDot lloop Nala ri from the Newport Hlorbor Yacht Club eued out of the mist here today. and wu the fifth lioit to lloiall al ••» this morn-in&· She Wied to NV< her handicap time on Dorothy O by about two houn. Nalu fV fuiilbed oa ad l(onlzloeJJ show beat ~h the Boca Ollca entnnce to Ai:apulco Barbor. ' -.. "'-lat• pollllonl, the yaclll rill tho bell.cbaaco of droppq Dorothy 0 """' the lop *' a_...,i to be Tom Tolillf1 -a aloop -from Ille host San Die&'> y achl C!Ub. SM WU Jll ~ fzom the finish 'llleodly and ,.u -., .... -...... time allow*-f(Oin ~ o. .. .. • ' " )Ff '' . ..... l()' Alabama Pmce " ~ . . ' Residence Fi.,re 'r . ; , ' , • .Puzzles · Pr:ob~rs A mY.s~~· !Ir~ 'In le~ . of, both w6at cauaed tt aiid who owna the home that suataioed 110,000,danuJge; WU being probed !Oday ·1n Costa Mw. ~yestig1toi1' m . relilCIOrit t o .ei'aboiale,on the ~l)d ele~,I\> the lii- cldenl carrleil oo the pOlice depa.i;tment'• OVerolghfkitl•U l 'J)llillble mjn caat.l "W~ lie lbli!lg 'tt• II 'of ~ origin' at this 11/ne:." 'fire ~rtmehf Jlaltalion Cl>ief!lon C9\einan femat•ed. ... ' ,:.r He aaid no one waa borne II the house at 3329 Alabama Place when firemen ar· rived shortly before U:30 a.m. to find it heavily Jnvol•ed In Oamell. Fireman Jim Dibble suUered 1ilght burna In hatlllng ttoe blau, which upt crews uhder dlrectlOn nl Battalion Chief Gary Oollj>n oa the llCell< for three boon . Chief Coleman 11Jd the reatdence has been occupied by Dorothy, Sellaman. Structural danlace -cnncinlraled In a Iron! bedroom and clooel INI, 11>- vestlgalon said, but-smob damare wao heavy through!lut the bolJIO, Raglnji o.ma.were sprayed and COD- trolled wttllln 10 Dtlbules aftet Ortinen arrived bul stamping out embers and cleaoop oper1\1ons kepi them on the job much Joocer. .Mesa Hi gh Se ts Win ter Conce rt Costa M ... Hlib School 1111111c ljudenta wtll be blowiof their """ homo Sonday when the Instrumental mUJlc drpariment preaeats Ill annual Wlnter -Scbolarthlp eoncm 1n the Or~ eouc Collea• auditorium at 4 p.m. All PfOC'"da from the event '° toflard ocbolaflhtps for prlvatl! leaons °' lllUllc ~If!'....'.., for the ocbool'a m111ic 'l;i'Treichel will· direct the award- wilmia( Colla Mt11 RIP """*"•• the _. bonll-and tht stap hall¢ In performaaca of claaalcal workl by Mourt, Sir•VlnlkT, Glack ai!d Braluns, populat mlllic lroln the !ibnrlel of. BIJ6. dy Rich, Statt 1lealoa and Dan tlllt, and mmmiulooed ft1li by --David Dlua. Soloill with the orchatn 1!111 be con- -Algcla Juda. TIUeU al ft .,. atllllta and It -for ll!"""la will be avallabk at lhe door. Nationwide e on spiracy Alleged By ARTHUR R. VlNSEL or IM otnt """ 111n Climaxing a long, nationwide fr 1 u d probe, U.S. authorltle11 . Indicted a Hunt· lngton Beach man and 18 others Monday for an all eged conspiracy to borrow mil· flans backed by <'i!rch-financed capital. The so-eallcd Church of Christ Manors Jnc., was a phony corporation existing only on worthless paper, Jnvestlgator1 charge. • No connectlon exlsta with t h e legitlmata Church ol Chrill, but lnlllY defendant• are accused of links with America 's organized crlme syndicate. Louis J . Verlve, 48, of 21661 S. Brookhurst St., Is among th em, accordini to federal gangland Intelligence &0urces. Verlve and the others were named In a 41-count federal grand jury Indictment ls1ued in Chicago for arrest1 from coast to coaat. Verlve was stopped ,without ln'ctdent as he drove along Newport Boulevard and taken Into custody / by Newport Beach Dectecllve John Simon. He was turned over to U.S. Postal lnapector II. L. "Bookie" Almond, booked into Orange County' JaU without bail and delivered thl1 mornlnr for arralgrunent before a U.S. Commissioner In Loa Angele•. Charges lilted In the mus Indictment Include fraud by mall, win, Interstate transportation ol funda obtained by fraud and allo cimspltaey. Rtlea•IN Ult data In Clilcaro, U.S. A~ torney Jamea 'ft ThomJ>IOn uld the CIH 11 0\10 or the largest of Ill kind In U.S. history. . The defendants -oome Colla Nostra flgurea who survelllance oftlctr1 HY vlllted Verive In Huntington Beach - operated In New York, Chlcaa:o, Phoenl1, Ariz., Savannah, Ga., and San Diego. They allegedly promlled to arrange Joana through what the U.S. Just ice Department and postal authorities call an advance fee acate. Indicted prlnclpell -I n c I u d I n g Verlve's brothers Cstlo and Charlie, both of whOm have been on the Oral)ge Coast recently -are accused of vtctfmlzlng at least 70 bualne.,roen. ' Cblln~ control of the actual Cliuroh of Christ 1 llOO mllllon In a"ell, the 1lleged s<htmm supposedly collected advance feu to ~rantee loans for buslneumen stymied by the tight economy. lnvutlgatora explaioecl the loan IJ>' pl leant II' usually 111ced to put up nve to 10 percent of the full lmOUDt sought 11 good t.ith money w~n applying through loan guarantee companle1. The ad~ance fMll were allegedly never refunded and authorltlea maintain the guarantee documtntl they say Were !s1Ued by at leut )o llctltlnus loan com- p1nlea were worthlea. Collected between 1961 and December of 1970, the l!ll!ptCUled amount of c11h w11 funnelle(I lnto perllOOll or 1hady gangland UM, ii II charged. Federal suthortlles involved In the lwO' / year probe worked with Newport Beach, Anaheim, Orange pollct and the dlltricl (lee CONSPlllACY, Pa1e tJ er .. ,. WeaillN" More tunuMr·llke weather 11 on lbe agenda for Thunday 1 with highs In the' mld-70'1 alonl the Oran&e ~ following early morning fos libkh wlil bum off. Lowa tonllht In the 40'•· INS IDE, ToDi\ l' Tht he:avklt totck of the ''"" so" In U~ng thtaUr i1 coming up i1t Ora11ge Count~ with tlghi mw produetloni going on the board.I and Jivt. oth1r1 continu- ing, Stt TheottT Notti, Page 10. L. M. ltftl If .-.... k '':::'. "• ..... '""" . •• ,..., ...... 4, '' c.tt.' C:.-SI OtHIM c-tY ft QMll.... .... ,,. Jf ~ .," lt'wt. ,._.., n ---........ ,,,.. ""'........ • lllf, ............ . ~,. ........ ~ .... .... , ' ....,. ........ JI ....... ,, ... .,.....,.. ... ,., .......... 11 ........ ' ...... ""' .. ....... .... t1 ,..'"-"" ............... .. ....................... ---- Britain. Groping Near Shutdown , I Bologl1 Aslcs Fo1· 'Open'. . ~ . . Selectio11s By JOSEPH W. GRIGG LONDON (UPI) -Britain neared a tota1 Industrial shutdown today. Twenty million J o b e were threatened w l t h further power (\Ill IA store for Brltbh homes and Industry. The blockade of power atatlona by strtk- lng coal miners bit even harder and elec- b-lclty authorities ordered power cuts for one-third of the country, with 15 percent hit at any single ume. Prevously , only aboUt 10 percent bad been affected. That meant moat ams which before ouflered only ab bour1 of cull a day now would be blacked out for nine boura. The Central Electricity Generating Board. which-operates Brttafn11 state-run power Industry, said cull might bit as much 11 20 percent of the· country at a time If geileratlng resources continue to fall. Flashlight Shopping So far , JO of Britain's 1'8 power sta· tiol\1 have been put out of action by strike pickets prevenUng coal or oil reaching them. At least a third are work· lng at reduced capacity, the board sald .• Britain neared a total Industrial shutdown today. The blockade of power 1taUons by striking coal miners threatened further power cuts In British homes and Industry. Here, a woman· shops by l!ashllght at a candlelit store. "It iooka u u tbil la going to be the most drastic day so far. 11tere Is no doubt that power rationing ls bec.omln.it: more severe," a generating b o a r d 1pokesma.n said. . Board Hopeful Wenke Wins State Cou11 Hearing ' The nine-hour power cutJ wete split ln· to three groups of three hours each. London't two evening newspapers warned readers some editions are likely to be late or not appear at all. At Longannet power station l n scoUand, scene of violent cl11hes between strike pickets and police in the put two d1y1, 700 plckettng miners turned up tn pouring rain to face SOO pollcemen guarding-the faclllty. By JACK BROBACK OI 1t11 Ot11Y ''"' lllff one challenaer aeeklni to unseet First Dlatrlct SUperv!Jor Robert W. Battin of Santa Ana won 1 it.ate SUpreme Court bearlnf Tuetday on his 1errymanderlni prottlt and another wu relu.sed nomlna- tloo papen becauae he too hla cha"ied hll place of re1ldence alnce rupervborlal diatrlcl boundarlea were nvlled last Oct. :it. S.nta Ana attorney Wiiliam Wenke said tho llate'1 top court bu a~ to take jurlldlctlon on Ille question of II ell(lblll- ty to oppose Incumbent Battin In the June I lll'lmary. Wenkt wu n!Uaed nomlnalloD papen Monday by David Hitchcock, county reglstr1r of voters upon advlct of C.Ounty Counlel Adrian Kuyper. kuYP91' cited a ll!S COUi'I ruling in a almllar case but l&ld he was sympathetic to Wenke'a cause and that of Jotm W • "BUI" Hill, Snnta Ana bualneeiman. Both moved lrom their Iona llandlnr plnce1 of reatdenee 1n December a!ttr Kuyper and Attorney General Evelle Younger ruled that 1ucb movu were 1e1al to become ell1Ible to run for the 1upervbor1' post. Both men had been gerrymlnd.....S out of the First Dlslrlct and Into the Fourth taat October In rnovee attrlb\lied to Ballin and bis staff. A third potanUll candidate to oppose th< ont tenn aupervlaor who llvea In Gordt.n Grove, Ed Just, mayor of Foun- toln Valley, w11 effoctivaly removed r- c0nlenUon wbe·n hls ruldenct was shUted from the First Diltrlct to the F~th. Upper Bay Tour Set Ni en•lnmmonlal tour .ol the Upper Nawporl ·Bay arta will bttll• bet-" 9 arid 10 a.m. S.tui'day. Gold11 wlU lead smnll groups on the one-half mile walk end Inform hlktn about Ill forma or Ille lu the area. Groups will rather at Ille lnteroectlon of Easlbluff and Back l!oY OrlveL For more lnfonnatlon , call ..._.111. OWIHCOM'I DAILY PI LOT OIWCOI CDUT l'VtL ...... lmfWIT •·"-" ... ..,,.,. rr. ........ ,...,. Je•lr I. Cwl.., Wll PftllO.W ......... ....... 1\lfll•• .. ... ·-l\ellllt ~ .. """'" # ....... ,. et.ed" H. lMt 11Ut'4 P. Mil ~----Ef"9n c ... aa..Offtt.e ,,, w.1 .. , ,...., Mtlltoo U4-. P.O • ._ 1'60, "116 --~ ............. -.............. = .... nt .. ..._ "•• '"' t.ori: '"" ... • -.11c.-..... HW, when he got the same treatment from Hitchcock Tu'3day that Wenke had received Monday, called the refusal to ia1ue nomination p a p e r 1 "un- constltutJonal." He threatened legal action and said be would go to Ille SUprema Court alJo U neceuary. A third auperv!Jortll candidate was refused papers Monday. He la Joseph A. Conrad whO operates a service staUon ln Anaheim. He plans to run aga!Mt in- cumbent Third District S u p e r v I s o r William J. Phillips of Fullerton. Paraplegic Due Another Trial On Shooting Rap A paraplegic who 1ucceasfully defend~ himself two years ago on murder charees flied after a manacled Hollywood man died in a bluing garage waa ordered Tuesday to face superior Court trial for his alleged role in the near-fatal shooUng of another vlsltor to his Los Alamitos home. Raymond Graves Jr., 38, of 12!31 Martha Anfl Drive, was ordered ln West Orange County Municipal CoW't to face Superior Court arraignment March 29 on charges of assault with intent to commit murder. Graves la accused of the ahootinR Jan. It of Richard J. Garvas 29, of 11101 Gull Lane, Huntington Beach, in a fracas that ended with tht wounded man running from the Graves home and col1ap8lrig at the house of a neighbor. Garvu bas now almost rte0vtred from shotgun wounds in the back and tesillied Wednesday against Graves. She.riff's officers were told during the tnltlal Investigation that Garvas was shot by a third man during a quarrel. at the Graves residence. Gravea told ln- vesUgatora that the Intruder took $2,llOO lrom him after shooting Garvu. Graves wu ldentlfted by lawmen two years ago as the leader of a gang whkh shackled Bruce Beck, 30, of Hollywood to I 1tand pipe in Grava:' l&rlle after a dispute over Beet's allqed double agent role in 1 tru1 imuullna: orgal\l.uUon. Beck died a few houri after rwmen released him lrom the burning structure. He told his rt3Cllert that be clellberately ,.t fire to the 1arase to aummon help In the bell•! that be would be killed when lbe gang r<lurned. Graves, often on a stretther and jwit as often in a wheelchair that led lawmen to dub him "anti-Ironside, 11 made a d<11en court appearance.s before he was finally sentenced on lesser charges 1ast AprU 15 to a six month spell tn Orange County Jail. Yo-yo Contests Service Project For Community Coat& Mesa kids are golnf to be bll'Jlnr their upa and downa -· 'l'ralnbC and fint-nound ,..yo contesll Picket leaders warned atrlkers against violence. The power shortage alao hit homes and railroad services. For the aeventh day, tena of thousands of homes and offices were without 'heat for long periods. Some areas ·1110 were hlt by water shortages when electric water pumps failed. . At Bath, in we.!it England, water carts were stationed at strategic points throughout the city for families whose 1uppll~ dried up. The state-run British railroads slashed more than 1,000 trains from their aervlces. Hundreds of commuter runs were cancelled and those trains running hid f•wer and unheated can. · "1be situation ls getting progressively worse. Our coal stocks are dwindling," said a spokesman for the Central Elec- tricity Generating Board. An estimated 1.S mllllon worker• have been laid off ln addition to the more than million already jobless. Officials said the number of plant shutdowns is likely to in- crease rapidly. Heads of the Confederation of Brllllh Induslry (CBI ), which represents about 20,000 industrialists, told Prime Minister Edward Heath Tuesday night that the strike could have disastrous effects on the steel, textile and automotive in- dustries, which account for the bulk of Britain's vital export trade. They told him they supported bis d · forts to light wage lnfiatlon. But t~ey said British lndustrlll~ls bope for • quick settlement, allhough not at any price. - From Page J CONSPIRACY •• attorney's office in gatherln1 evidence locally. · Thev claim the alleged scheme usl~ the Church of C b r I s t name to lul suspicious Investors netted more than $1 million and was engineered to obtain much more. Federal Costa Nostra-watchers say VerJve's surveWance goes back several years to his ~pw-chase with one Anthony Navarolll of Chicago'• Marshall Sllvtngs and Loan firm. The company bought then for $1.1 million was involved in financing the fl.& million Sahara North Motel bull! by the late Mandel "Manny" Sk11r. He wu uecuted, all•gedly by 1ansland hltmen, nearly seven years ago, 1 mon th befort ht went on trial for aUegtdJJ skimming $1 million off the profits, leading to indictment for income ta1 evasion. Skar was killed for naming Costa Nostra names before federal authorities -charging they fon:ed him to aleal the nwne.y --in the hope be could obtain le- nl•n<Y In prosecution. Vertn's aavtngs and lou nnn went bankrUpl after flllancln!! the l'/.I. mlllioo Las Vegas spa and casino. Wke Vulvt'1 ill-fated savings and IGO.n nrm the Cburcli of C!lrlat Manora Inc .. tnvoivfd in bis current case ls Chicag~ blsed. l'ret11"Pa1e J -LOOT ..• b<gln DUI Wttt II nine loc.ttlons. prior to the &NMlaf Duncan Yo-Yo Rdurn Top oompelltlon with a $S110 acboilnlllp the borne. ln\'OIVed 11,500 "°'Ill of parU and ulilmlt• ptl>t. equlpmenl . Bo11 and llrla 11 and under are ~Ille Compalilll wn UP!Cled today, lollow- fi>r !Iii iUIOJ of contuts 1om>1ma lllill In Inf tho ll-lloUr dmt lapae auo..tn!I 10 bPI< ,..10 b1cb. lllll)"lis of the pills and ,..i to tatabllali Compellllan Wltl -·-wtl1 be lhal Ibey wtre pmlne. . ~ -i:a lo s:• p.m. at ltaallber _quu_ ~ _.. Mama, ~ Pvk, It I It y ~rot kt, Inf tnd ...._ to Illa !!Ill• ~~ P ularlno, -. Vlcl«lai WhltUer ' 1!dening thump tnd U. <rleo ,of ......, and Woodland ocbools, plus Conk• Part. , prisonets liter broogl>t lall<rs oa tbe nm. -\ The cabinet's emergency committee met Tuesday night to plan even tougher curbs on industry than the three-day week and 50 percent cutback in power consumption imposed llnce Monday. Ofttclals sa id everything now depend.a on the recommendations of a three-man court of inquiry, headed by Lord Wilberforce, an appeals court judge. The panel began public hearings Tuesday. The court has promised to announce its find ings by the end of the week. Mineworkers union President Joe Gonnley made It clear the miners expect the court to recommend a big ply hike for them and that they will not accept ita flndlnis unle'5 II does. Lawyers Cancel ~ Bill for Service In LAFC Hassle 0,11,IL Y I'll OT 11&11 l'lloll STEPPING. DOWN Judge Baker Judge Baker Set For Retirement ' After November One or 20 COsta Mesa City C.Ouncll cart- dldates today announced his aup~rjtrt will drag the endorsement of f1tv~rltes · from smoke-filled rooms and alr It AUt,ln the glare of public scrutiny. ., ...... Ted C. Bologb rapped behlnd-\he'ICenn backlns of candidates by special Ilrte!ist groups and said •uch support aboul~ &e public. ..1 I Consequently, the Govern m.~ n .a Awareness Committee will operate fts la1arch 21st Meet the Candidates Night along the lines of a political party's na- tiona l convention. "The only restriction ls: No obscene language," he declared. Bologh ls commonly considered to be backed by the GAC, which operate! from his home and lists him as coordinator. The coming event at Newport~arbot High School could concelvably ~ehange that, since the membership will choose whom to endorse for three council seats. Bologh accuses three Bpecific groups, for example. of backing candld~te Dominic Ra citi in his bid to oust in· cumbent Councilman William L. St. Clair. . Two moves by the Cities Selection Committee, an offshoot of the Orange County League of CltleS, have quieted some of the troubled waters s\irred up by la st summer's uproar over Lei.gue representation on the Local Agency Fonnatlon Commission (LAFC). Orange County's only female judge, Celia Baker, has decided to quit her post in the West Orange C o u n t y Judicial District effective Nov. 20. They are the Chamber of Commerce, the Lions Clu~ and the Sons of }~ly, In all of which Raeitl 11 a member .or a rank1ng leader. ~ :· · "I don't e1:ptd the SoM of Italy to en- dorse me anyway," quips Bologh. 0 11te American people are goirtg to lose this beautiful democracy lf they ~on't get oU their bylk,u he added In 11 colorful cap.suli.u),tlon of bis conventlo~ype en- dorsement sessiQn. A 13,900 legal bill submitted to \be LAFC and refused payment a s "unlawful" by the commission was canceled by the legal firm of Stewart, Woodruff and Frazee of Santa Ana. Thomu Woodruff, Fountain Valley city attorney, represented the city selection committee in a long series of legal moves last fall. The LAFC post held by Louts "Red" Reinhardt of Fullerton was in contention in the court battles. Reinhardt was replaced last August on the LAFC by Councilman Joe Hyde of Los Alamitos but 1l second vote of the mayors selection group restored Relnhardt to his position. The 13,900 legal bill ls part of an $11.501 charge to the cities comm.lttee and the balance was paid by the 19 participating cities. The other controversial league matter concerns Reinhardt's status on the com- mission also . A move by some clty representaUves to hold a new election for ~ league's representative on the LAFC has been turned down by the selection committee, according to Ed Just, mayor of Fountain Valley and chairman of the committee. Reinhardt's previous term on the com- mission expired in May of 1971. At that tlme he was replaced by Hyde who represented Santa Ana's position In the fight over incorporation of the city of Irvine before the LAFC and the Board of Supervisors. Just said the mayors selection com- mittee voted last week on motion of \Vestminster Mayor Derek McWhinney to drop'. the proposed election. Jn aoother move May 11 was selected as the last date to accept Mmlnalions for the seat held by Stanley Northrup. San Clemente councilman and L A F C chairman. Selection committee members will vote June 8 on Northrup's post for which the term expires June 30. GEM TALK l TODAY by DIAMONDS ARE FOR WEARING From deep within the ground, I your diamond came. JJntll It was ' cut, polished and set by craftsmen who spend their lives making a rough hewn stone Into a thing of beauty, that is where it belonged. Too many of these beautl{ltl { stones, mounted in expensive set- ~ tings, now lie In vaults and safe ~ deposit boxes where they give pride and joy to no one. - Why do people, tn effect, 11return their diamonds to the ground?" Fear of thert. Joss or wear are the dominant reasons. None of these ha\'e an)· real basis in fact . Her tenn of office expires In January of 1973 and nine Individuals have already {lied for her judgeship. In announcing her retirement at the Westminster court house, Judge Baker, a HunUnglon Beach resident, said "it's time to do something different." She will be 60 Sunday. Judge Baker has served as a municipal court judge since her appointment to the Huntington Beach City Court in 1948. She is a graduate of the Univeralty of Buffalo and George Washington University Law School. A new judge will be elected during the June 8 primary. Filing for the office ends March 10. and write-In candidates have witil April 4 to enter the race. Bertea Named To County Airport Group He Baid five unidentified councll challengers will be invited by registered I mall going out this weekend, plus one in· cumbent: St. Clair, with each getting ·• period to speak. "I will be chalrman. 1 will not-make I campaign statement," Bologh anrlbunced. He hinted he would not hO\\'!ver, be averse to accepting if the •omlnaUng panel should draft him as a fa vorite son. Nomi nators will be four Orange Coast College students, who listen lo-.ach speech and decide on that basis whlcb are the top three among the si~ c;,~ didates. · I The GAC will then give that .tfio~ts blessing and remember them Apfil n at the polls. BolOgh contends. Bologh did not name the five lnvlted challengers, but said Raciti wonfibe amorlg them, claiming he Is · ~by vested Interests. Nor v.i ll any ';ti te wj)o only lives but doesn't own property in Costa Mesa, Bologh added. Office Machines . .. .. Taken by Thiel ' .. '• Richard Berte.a, a resident of corona del Mar and head of the Bertea Corpora- tion In the Irvine Industr ial Complex, to- day was appointed to the Orange County Airport Commission by Fifth District Supervbor Ronald W. Caspers. Bertea will succeed Willard S. Volt who , reslgned from the commiss ion Jut week after two years service. Caspers said Bertea, 42, a graduate of the University of Southern California, was a pilot in the U.S. Marine C:Orps and was based at El Toro and Los Alamitos before being discharged with the. rank of captain. Burglars barged into a ~ .. ~lesa boai-bulldlng !rim and hijack«! f91\C ~ffice machines worth nearly $1,~, n.:•aa discovered Tuesday. " He has lived in Corona del Mar since 1966 with bis wile, Hyla and their four children. Volt gave press ol personal business as his reason for resigning. Speaking through an Inter p re't·frr, janitor Manuel Herrerra told .. <Ji!lcer Harry Hogan what be found at Jensen Marine Corp., 235 Flscher Ave., wbeif he arrived for work. ' ~· .. The front door wu forced, break111.J. the glass In the process, with tw· ill!l!tfic typewriters, a calculator and adding machine stolen, plus office suppUes ~In& acattered about. · j ·. For the wo~ you lo_ve. The milestone watch. .. Lqve ls more predoua than dl1monds or 1014:' 1ap the proverb. But the mileaton. watch provldtt all thrte. 0 OMEGA Diamonds od gold. Selactad !or Omeaa by ae:m exp1tt.1 with tht care o( a c;ourt jeweler. ... -,,, ' . ._. ,, . ' -' . .. ... ,, "·· '" ,; I .... ~.: .. ....... •· ... "· -·.·:. · ..... . -~ .-. - ··" ...... -,,: .,._J•. j A valuable stone should oertaln- ly be Insured against theft an4 toss, but your best in.sun.nee agalllst wear is regular cleanlnl and In- spection of both stone and aett1n1. And !ova. The lllUulone ,,,.Ith will bring to mlod buutlf"1 thouJhil about the slvtr for the rut of her Uft- J. --- • So wenr your diamond with the pride and eajQyment you eJPeCted when you bought ll Then bring It In lo us for 11!JUlar Inspection and cltanlng, '.for ~hlcb there ls no .cha'8•- ' ---~..._,,,.,.,. .• • 1823 ('IEWPORT BL VD., COST A MESA '-. ,. , CONVEHIEHT TllMS 24 'tlAlS IN SAME LOCATI~ -IAHlAMl:ltc.A•D -MASTEi CHAl&l • • ; • -.) • \ • \ I I ) J ' • ' ' ' DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE CAT V, a 'Pil ot Project The picture tube Is beginnln~ lo Wlljlll up and from all Indication• lhe test pattern 11 belng'Vlewed with Interest by Wasbing!on, D.C., commUnfcations experta: Focus of !heir scrutiny II a local flvO-City ·Commun· lty Antenna Television (CA TV) system. U the joint powers agency successfully engineers It, CATV could reach 350,000 loeal · vi~wers represent• tng 92,000 individual homes in f1ve'to seven y~rs. Pr1> gramming and service potential Is Virtually unlimited. Disunity marred tbe Initial organizatiopal efforta. Harmony ls happily more evident now, with hiring of a coordinator, plus agreements on fund contribution and distribution. • Veteran video engineer John Bateman has a heavy l!iix·month period ahead of him as coordinator, getting It all together in one multi-faceted study package. EJectroni~s. and economics are interwoven through· out. Economically, Newport Beach, Costa Mesa, Hunting· ton Beach, Fountain Valley and Westminster, plus the Coast Community College and Newp0rt·Mesa Unified school districts, could hardly /l.O Ii alone. · By joining In one combined authority. Ibey prob- ably can. ' This Is precisely the point ttiat intrigues the FCC, whlclj has pledged heavy technical and advisory aid. T~ey ~ors~e i~ as a pilot prograt1J. in feasibility1or nation· wide appl1cat1on. Cost to subscribe to CATV computes to about $.5 a month. Cost to install just one mile of cable, however, is $3 ,000 and a local hookup would require many miles. U CATV is approached on a joint-agency basis here along the Orange Coast and shown to be practical we can be proud of participation in a technological break· thrOUJ!.h· Siinilar .inter.qty CA TV. systems could be workably englheeied then among geograpblcally, socially and cul· . turally-related commimlly clusters across the country. The' latter point II specilically pertlntnl Insofar as CATV speclalista say II one of lhe blggosl headaches In· volved 10 'programming. What do subscribers want? What lype material Is locally av~llable! · C\lslomers in some sectors will want cu.lture; others may want community news or education and sUlJ others may prefer cartoon comedies. Television has greatly advaftoed from fuzzy old Tom ·Mix westerns. blank screens and showcards aaying: "Sorry ... Due to Cirown•tances Beyond Our Co n· trol ... " Circumstances easily within control could make coastal CATV service a reality and advance its applica· tion nationwide. Santa Ana Persists In its dogged persistence In trying to ·regain the so- called promi!ecf-+lan11 900-acre. tax rich industrial proper- ty now safely enveloped within the boundaries of the city of Irvine, Santa Ana has launched a suit certain to make it new friends. By seeking to dissolve the new city on the slim grounds that the lqcorporation election was illegally called, Santa Ana has certainly escalated Ill fe.elings with its newest neighbor, the city of Irvine. With measured restraint. Irvine city officials have vowed to defend its right!' to self determination. ~onsidering the county seat's history, it's not too surprising that one of the county's oldest cities would so attack, the state's newest city.· Bqt it)s tlncorlscionable for Santa Ana to se~k to deprive Irvine citizens of their hard won government when their questionable battle is with the. Irvi!le ComP-<!nY over a l963 "promise" that courts already have ruled dld not bind future city coun· ells._, c P resident Will Hear Ha,rd Tal:k i n Pek ing Folly of Others Ke y To S1,1ccess Nixon Not Expecting Much WASHINGTON -One does not know for sure what caused President Nixon to be so impressed with the sections on China in Andre Malraux's ''Ant I· a.temolrs." An educated guess is that the French intellectual 's prose conveys to Nixon better than any other what he will be up against in China . This perception u n d o u b t e d I y en- couraged him to say that there was no cause for optimism -or pessimism. either -as he ex- plom the ground w i t h Chou En-lai and Mao Tse:-tung. The suspicion can be indulged th a t Nixon subconscious- ly used the word, optimism, first be-. cause there is not much in Malraux to encourage it. The gulf between tradi- tional American thought and tht Mal- raux version of his interviews with Chou En-lai and Mao Tse-tung and his inter· pretation of the same is very wide. CHOU EN-LAI, for example, was not content when he talked with Malraux four years ago. with the · Americans merely returnin.i:z from Vietnam and all Asia. They had to get Ol!I or everywhere, Santo Domingo, the· Congo, Laos, Thailand, Pakistan -anywhere they were or had been. "Let them go home, an~ the world will have peace again," said Chou En-lai. Until that happens, China will not negotiate with the United StaleJ about Vietnam or anything else. '"' Mao's contempt for the Ruuians emerged in hJs remarks to Malraux. He thought the Russians were following the road to capitali.sm, no Jeu. Beyond that were the enveloping mysticisms of Mao based upon the legend• an<!. undoubtedly, the mythology orthe partisan 1truggle in the North which brought Mao to power and sanctity in a Spartan world. NIXON STARTS from scratch and agaiM deeply ingrained prejudices in his dialogue With the Chinese leaders and with less reason for optimism than when tbe dialogue began with the Russians In the Eisenhower administration. Mao thought Russian Ch •·Irma n -Khrushchev a fool for trying 10·· com- promise with American capitalism, and a betrayer for abandoning China· in the Ions ago confrontation over Quemoy and Matsu. With his sense of the contJnuity of history, Mao is not conside red likely to have undergone a change of. heart by the time he discourses with Nixon.' The past will strongly influence the present. · PRESIDENT NIXON:thlnb t~l ooce he sets.foot on the' sbll 'of mainland' China ·a ..,, chaptA!r Will begin, to be ljlarked by "negotiation rather than confrontation. Tbert ii not much in Malraux to support that, but, rather, the conclusion that the Chinese in their Jong view of history will regard the Nimo visit as a footnote in the progression of \:hina to new levels of greatness Ol!llhlnlng the glorious past. It is not simply for their archeological value that the Great Wall , the Ming.tombs, ind the Forbidden City· have been preserved .. symboti or Put glorlu that will rome again. llavlJJl·IJ'asped thia point of view. Niz. on is probably better prepared to go Into his discussions with the old men, with their long memories, who run China. He is not expecting much. The fact of the visit itself may be more important than any concrete results which will grow from it. IN A CONVERSATION not long ago, the President emphasized his long range view of this visit. He was thinking in terms of the next generation when China becomes 3.t nuclear superpower and, in view of that, the folly of letting any op- portunity pass to begin the ·dialogue which might avert a cataclysmic conflict involving three great 1uperpower1 in the not IO dlltant fu.ture. Faee-t~faee-~meetings or. o t>h er ''eollJletics'" of· international palaver do not impress a President who knows that, more· than any other in recent ye.art, he aroU1es the Chinese leaders ' suspicions. DR. HENRY A. KISSINGER has said that necessity has brought the Chinese and Americans together. The necessity in China's case, it may be assumed , being the threat of a Russian showdown. In eomewhat this same context MalraUI 1J quoted u saying that Mao's first wloul question will be if the Americans are prepared to give aid to China, !~)IOI. IC· cording to Malraux, there will QPt be a great deal more to talk aboti. If Malraux is right, this ii 'a sample of the kind of hard talk NiJ:on will hear in Peking, and be is not y,f ready to dlsclose what kind of an answer he would give. In fact, he probably cannot give a categorica.J answer. Nor are there many other categorical aoswera on the major IS!'iut.s between the United States and China. Travel Was Once Banned Presldent,. Nixon's planned visit.a to China and the Soviet Union have made some people unhappy, but no one q\.lel- tions his right to go. It was not alwaya: thus. For most of U.S. history, incumbent Chief-i:i:eeuuves were expected to stay not ooly on American soil but also u close u possible to the nation'• capital. George Washlngloil, 11 might be U· pe<:ted, aet the pi'!!tedenl. Dwing • trip to New England, the .first Pmident II reputed to have avoided Rhode Island because it had not yet ligned the Constitution and hence wu foreign ter- ritory. When Rhbcte bland ·did lign 5horUy thereafter, Washington made a gpecial trip to !be new state. Later Presidenta scrupulously oblerved the foreign-travel ban. Wiiliam McKinley, for example, would not set loot on ti, in- ternatlooal bridge wl>e~ ho met wltli the. President or Memo at El Pll!o, Te-, in .. CMlANOI COAST DAILY PILOT Rol>m N, We<d, l'l&l>U<h<r no.... itl!lil, - AlbmW.&lff l:di:oriol Pog< - { I Editorial R~rch ' 19111. Benjamin earn.on had displayed IQOre. daring 10 years earlier when he ftDWred as far as the middle linl of the bridge. THEODORE ROOSEVELT brnl<e with tradltion in lll06 by traveling to Panama . Attbou.gb the trip wu criticized by aome ol 'IR't political opponents, it was not &erioasly questioned or I o r m1 a I I y Chillenged on legal growids. W<bfrow W'llaon, in mntrut, encountered tna.S11ive oppolj:tlon when he announced in 1918 that be """1d lltend the Parll Pe8ct! Confertnee. "So fierce wa1 ·th e crttidsm," Joaeph111 Doniell wrote , "that an outsider would have llJpposecl that WIJooo WU bruking all Ten Com· mandmentJ at once." Wiboo'a trip to ·Earope, It was pointed cut, ...id be quite unlike Rootevelt'1 journey to -,.,. the firll time, the Presidoml would leave the Westmi llemilpberl. .. ...u beyood the dir!d phyD:a1 P'-1oo ,ol the United Slates, remain ableut. &am the country fCI' an -period ol time, and .. _ In htel>lovol diplomatic: dioc:uuicm and po....i ,,..-al the oonlmnco lable. ou the e .. o1 Wllaoa'• c1ipart1a-e f .. ~ 3en. Liw1moe Y. SbmnM (&- DI.) intn)dac:od I NOlation ..._, lhe olfice ol PraldaJI to be -when lhe 1-nbent left the OOUllliy and tnnder· till Ida _. llld <Mies to the Y!Clll l'NDdml.tllmun'araohlllocldiedln _.... 8o did • llm!lM Wll'I in- trnduced In the House. WILSON HAD BROKEN the Ice, bul hi1 successors hesitated to pltmge in after him. Warren G. Harding and Calvin Coolidge each made only one trip abroad , and Herbert Hoover made none. No President again traveled ouU:ide the Western Hemisphere until Franklin 0. Roosevelt attended the C a 1 a b I 1 n c a Conference in 1943. Today, of course, preSidenUal tnvel to all parts of the world is commonplace. Tbe· champion globetrotter to date ill Dwight D. Eitenhower, with 115 foreign tript;. Richard M. Ni.Mn, u Eiaenhower'1 Vice Pruident, visited 54 countries in e!ght years -also a record. Prelldent Nixon will equal Eisenhower's efght-trlJ>6-' pef·tenn pace when he travelJ to Chloa and the Soviet Union. Who lcnow1 whJL a oedlod l<rm might bring~ ii rt not poui· ble thal Nixon, the spoiu buff, """1d 1lm for the UUe of Moot Peripatetic President? .. Dear Gloomy Gus -~ -R.M.P ' • Thoughts at Large Fol'-every one man who succeeds In the world becaU&e of his own talents, a dozen sccceed simply because of the folly of others; as in a poker came, where the winners win because the lo&el1 ~ m IO fooli sh, and not becauae the winnen are MJ anart. . . ~ The candidate who n11kea tbt fewest proml!lee stands tfie leael chance ol being elected, although on · that basis alone he would seem lo be the 11uperior man . • • • If Marx were alive today , he might be severely leJnpted to ch1111a hia famous aphor· ism to read· "Pro. . ' fealonaJ sport. are the opium of the people." • • • A .marriage-vow i1 a blank check, writ- ten 1n a flt or hyaterla., rilled in for an im- possible sum, and when subsequently presented for cuhing, returned for "insufficient funds." • • • It is hard for someone else tl'l lnjuu u11 unless we have first placed the weapon ln his hand ; most Ill-treated people are In some rvanner accessories before the fact. • • • Revolution ls always Its own rationale· If the America n colonl1t1 had failed: history would call them "traltora" ra ther than ''patriot1." • • • The most 1hamefuJ blot on the whole American governmental 1y1tem remaln1 the appointment. or 1lating. or judges on a political basis : a man involved in politics should be by that very reason in- eligible for the bench, or the whole ln- dependenl judicial proceu is Wiited.' • • • ProetJtuUoo may J>e "the oldut pro- fession, '' but only because it w11 preoeded by legalbed rape and supported by arrogant male uswnptiont of in- herent superiority. • • • When there b 1 victory, even the cowardly share in the triumphal pro- cesaion; when therUA_ defeat, even the brave 1hare in the shame. (Thus, even tbooJh Lee Wll lW!e< !he CemraJ, and 111 times the mu, that Grant wa1.) • • • • Our !afdni.UOn with ''growth" hu oblcured the miracle of 0 cre-ation" for mott lllOdcnt people; but, u Dono< •alcl In one of hiJ aermona more than three centurtu ago : "The dl1tance from nothing to a llUie Is ten thouund times more than from it to the hlgh<st dqrft In thl• Ule." • • • In any rotlonal aodety, people who tou beer can1 oo public roadl ind partwa,,... would be truted more MVtre!7 tban thole •ho take pot prinlely: but In our 1yatem. the beer·touen f1aurllh un- '"°'"ted •bile the pot.laker• arw"punlsh-ed Jar behood the .mou..,... of their of· r ..... Quotes ' • No Amnesty for .Draft Evaders To tho Editor: There aeema to be quite 1 bit or talk In regard to granting an1nesty for thor.e who could afford to flee to Canada In order to avoid being drafted In the service. Thi• or course Is a grOM Insult to 111 our brave men wbo did serve, and lost their \Ives or were alppled, also lhoff In our prlaoner- of.war camp11. Juat recently the Sccrelary. nf St11t,. wa1 quoted on TV 11 1ayln1 ... Thl1 h1 not ·ilie time tol 1aJk pl gr•nJlng amn<aty to ~~ n:to.""...~·= fJabll·ng .tha war!, or are Jn prltoner.or- war campw." Thia 'i• very Interesting. Ju•t when 11 the rlght time to tllk of 1rantln1 am· n.eaty to those who Insult every man who ae.cved, or lo«t his life, and to tht partnt11 of these br•ve men who elected to Hrve thelr country? TIUS Ill THE M06T u111pe1k1blc wor, tha·most unjust war,,the..mo1t stupid war of all llme, but even IO there 1hould be oo amnu:ty. II Juatlce 1'ere reaUy done In thll case. \he man who brought this awful thtnr down upon hll fellow AmeriCIJll 1hould be brought to Juatlce ond charged with malfeaaance In olflce. I do mean Lyndon 8 . Jolin...,. tl and whtn lb.it 11 done, then we can begin to talk of amnesty -1 and not before. ' , I IT MlJST IE BROUGlfl' OU! here too, Iha! Lyndon 8. J<hnaon wa quoted 11 aayfita, ") ,iroulct tlke to· ~· down ln history •l. anotllrr Abraham Lincoln, 11 war President." How doet that grab you? Our Jormer. Pre1ldent could be charged with many oUlfr thht~ of course, 1lnct It wa1 after M ••• elected that we had perml'df"'!'W, crimo In tho llroct, •non, rlotJ ind IO many other thlna:• ll!at Nixon t1 belq bl1med for. JAMES A. DINALL M•.11 Be Te o Logleal • • To the tilitor : BuaU-11 boominJ It 515 North Sycamore St., Santa Ana . home of Orana• County'• government. Bobb)' Bltllll 11 srlndlnr ou1 hfl ahar&- for eumple, the Litter Patrol and Ufe Freeway Telephone Sylitm. Nowtootxxty could ht ag1 Jn11. • litter- tree COdlJty and extra 11fety prec•uUon1 in an emergency, but, If Bobby would 1upport. atgt3tlo113 by Supervisor David Biker to eon!!Olldale 11nme ,,r the auperfJuoua unltatlon dlJJtrlctl fir1t. then he ••ufd perhaps be in a better position to IU&&efi 1pendln1. UNTIL TllA T TIMl!l, where ii the mooey eorntna from?. Oh, lhe ta1payer11 y.,, they will certalnt, poy aome. Bf Gr.o ... e --.., Dur George TUnb a lot for your fnoomnla curo, Actually, f didn't U10 that lorl&11r•wn-out cure )'OU 1Ugetted, but I find that immediately upon atartlnc to reild your column J JO right to lleep. CRATEYIJL Deat GraWuf · Hni. 'lbot'1 IUMy, lllnce 1eltilll yoor le!tor l'vo boa i-tna ud ium1., au oJcl>I. r&mf :nitir worcJes to Geor1e. Irby cluUor up lho -wlU! nld --)'Gii could be ... 1<1-, rJnc tito br-trooble') - Mailbox l ) L1itt:r1 1rom read~r• ore tDftlcom.1. - Norm.otl11 torir.tra 1hould conuey thtlr mt11ogc1 tn 100 worda or Leta. T~ right to cond1n11 lttttr1 co fjt apoc• or (.'Ltminatt ltbtl I.a r11•rwd. AU Le,... tp,ra m~i includl llanoiv.r1 and fftaU,. .Ing addr111. bui --k .,.. 1N14 ... --IJ lflfl*llltf -II apporml: l'oolrfl ""11 "°' b1 """" fi.!htd. It . w.111 the 19?1 Orand Jury rtcOfD.. mr.ndatlon "that the Joint board of dlreo- tor11 of the Orange county 1anltat1or1 dl11trlct1 revise their director•' fee achedule1 to eliminate lnequltlea ind con. Rider reor11nlr.1tlon or the joint dl1trlctt aovernlng body In order lo achieve more efllcleney ind economy." That may be too logical. CONSTANCE BENEDICT Ott.ger Voter• To lbe Editor: A erand. 1poriln1 event comlna up In · fin will bt lbe "flghll " 11 lilt Democr1tlc NtUonal C"Anventlon, to don't min It, folktl I'm Jutt 11 11dlttlc at the n .. 1 &UY fn !ht detlre to w1l<h ldiotl pulverize eac~ other in their 1truql1 te set on the payroll and then alt on their onaeer1 •nd. do nothlna for the 1ucker1 who eleclod !Hem. (Nico picture, huh !! Af'lother grand •porting ev11nl will be the Republfcan Convention which will r• quire ton1U&-lo-cbeek 1ppral11l If one 11 to a•11 fll 1ntfirtalnment v11 lue 1t 111. But tbe fndependonll who tum In lhoM dud., w!B llllt pt nothtna but 1 good 11~ tine. . THE ONAGER habit la a hud .,,,. to break. ind the Republlcana do certainly keep up with the Dtmocr1t.. The Re11l·pubUcana and the Demo- regalcratt are both htrd preMed to orfer the klnd or llln4lrd promiaN fh1l tho on.ager voter can't IH throo1h . It'• • ltllem1te, man, Ind the comln-c:on- ventlona, 1'itli ft 11lthout tnlertt(nmenl value, lhould provide belutUuf comedy cooy to the TV writers, end to the preu columnlstl. Should We ... itc!t to IOID•hody flh Wallace, but wit.bout hft hanaupt: Vea, m110, but where ls tuch 1 m1n1 for 1 woman, maybe1) S. C. UNDfNE Ri ght to Work • , • Pteu Com.menu -8totrod. "i'n the United 31116 we -..ve lon~ brt!n Cl'lr'amcd •IHI tn- dltlduaf llbettieo In othor or 1. bul ,,. haft lolotated •btJJ< or Individual li berty in the lorm or compullOf)' unloaiom Ii II tlmt far I cfwJae." ---.... (IM,1 Cttiriw·Tri..._ "'lbt 5Ufttr Nllliinal R!pl to Wort legisllllao ii !ho Pfop<i' lna(111111f111 whereby • bode Irttdom can ba ' gU.rinteed to all. It da<rv,. tlie lilll IUppl!fl ol the Amtticao -'<•" J-I I New11 "Tllo 51"«tt Natlonlf Rl•J>t to Work lqililttoo .. tlia -In -whtrrby • • treedlnn call be &Ultaft!ad lo Ill.... • f \ ' S0me Wedding Day . . . vonne Kalak, 19, and her Valentine's Day bridegroom, Louie, 22, .. eJCblDied a few words tbrou1b the visitation l!laoa at Ventura Coun· , IY, Jail Tueaday before Kalak left for elate prT..on on a possible life .~nt.encc. T~e couple w11 married in court only seconds before the ;groom was led away to begin serving a six monthg.to-llfe term for armed robbery. ' .. Easy County Formatwn Bill Unveiled by Solon I ~ SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A bill sought by tp.ayors ol San G1brit1 ValJey,citi~s lo mate It e11lcr to !orm a ntw county bas beeh Introduced by San. H. L. Richardson (D-i\r.adla ). lUcbardson said Tuesday the legislation resolted from discussions over splitting popUloUI Loa Angelea County Into five new counUes Jn an effort to make county eovernment mort "manaae•ble." Under the bill, no new counties actually would be created. but the 111casurc u•o uld rcla1 currenl "severe" reslriclions so voters of an area could create a new county ca!lier if they so desired . ''It's nothing personal against the in- cumbent Lo s Angele s C o u n I y supervisors.'' Richardson said. tie sa id the idea behind his bill "'as merely that a "small county is easier to handle than one the size of Los Angeles," noting that Los Angeles COunty contained 7 million residents. Bonelli Last Rites Friday ... ' Longshore Leade1·s Ask Pact Ol{ay SAN FllAN CJSCO (AP J -Longshore leaders have recommended ratification todi3 ot a tental i\•e contract to end the crippling 131-day \\'est Coast dock •trike, rai!ing hopes v.-orkers \\'Iii be back at work by Sunday. 'I.he 110 delegates to a union caucus yoted TueMlay to submit the agreement to the 13,000 rank and file memben at the 24 strike-bound ports from Seattle to San Dieeo. "If the vote is favorable \\·e will try to arrange for an immediate return to work by !:iunday." said Sidney Roger, in· formation ofifcer for the International Longshoremen 's and Warehousemen's Union . ILWU President Harry Bridges sup- ports ratification. saying the contract provides "solid and substantial gains." The caucus had been under way since Satu rday. The union reached the tentative agree- ment with the 122 shi ppers of the Pacific J\taritime Association tut week . PMA members are expected to ratify the pact within a day or .so. The strike has caused losses in U.S. e1· ports estimated by the White House at more than $600 ~lllon and prompted Congress to give President Nixon power to halt the walkout. Tbe closed caucus w;;is not without its disagreement, sources said, with th e large San Francisco Local 10 saying that part of the proposed contract was "full of fish hooks and exemptions." The local also said that "President Nix- nn \\'DS sitting \vi!h a cocked gun ... pointed at the body or labor. and more specifically at our head.'' Gas Refunds Ordered SAN FRANCISPQ (AP) -Customers or Pacific Gas & Electric Co. will receive refunds totaling $5.35 million by order of the California Public Utllities Com- mission. That amounts to an aver age of about 90 cents for the domestic fam ily user. lo be paid during the March billing period, moil dedic1ted p u b I I c lll'Yaall." .BoneUI mvec1 1t.,..I 14 yean on the ltve-man board of aupervl10rs for Los Angeles county, an ""'" ol 7 million tn-beblllnts. down at tbe poll.!, but Bonelli'• llPI JfU _ ... 1115 -Ibo U.S. SUpreme court's ~·one man, one vote" declalon ac. compllshed bla &oal -a power ahlll to !he populous southern part ol the state. .LOS ANGELES (UPI) - nq, 811' •t lllll lla/f 111141 AnieltJ today. to DIOllm Ille death ' or County supervisor l'ranl: Bonell' who helped lead -tho flJht by heavily populated Southern Cal~ornla to wrtst more political JX>wer from the northern part or the ata.te. Bonelli dlOO r-.tonday ni&ht in St. Francis ltoaplU.1. lle \\'a~ 65 .• K<man Cathollc funeral serlolccs will be held Frldey. He became 1tatewld.1 political figure In the early opllllcal figure In th< early 1980s, when he led a oampaign to pass red istricting measures that would have shltttd con- t1 ol of the state Senate to Southern California fro m agricultural countlr.s to the north. Crowds Soar . t-.1ayor S&m Yorty ordered nags on cily buildings lowered to half staff, ~l)'lng "Los Angeles county iasi one of its The proposals were turned SAN DIEGO (AP ) -Sea World says aUendance set records at lls marine lile parks ta San Diego and Aurora Ohio, during 1171. I SPECIAL I I NTRODUCTO ~ Y ' OFFER NEW S*Tf\lntnt pr111 · Kangaroo T-Shirta ind Shona. Brtght·whila ltnit potyatar and cott:ort'.-durable, 80ft and ltrong. Polyrib T .. hirt neck· band won't aag. Comfort pouch ahortl have thl 1xolusJve 'horizon· 111 ftt, luy the 3..p1ck1--gu1r1nteed frJI/ two.,..,, . ...,.,, Save up to 26% Kl.Wll'OO T-Shlrtl-S-M·l ·Xl (A11. 3/f4.&0) ::=-Kanv•roo Shorto-28-'S (Rag, 3/U,00) munsing111ear LIMITED TIME ONLY bAtLV PILOT 5 'Mandatory Protection Reagan Asks Health Pinn SACRAMENTO. Calif. (AP) -Gov. Ronald Reagan has propoeed a mandatory heallh insurance program to protect nearly 18 mUUon Californians against financial ruln that could result from catastrophic lllnes.s or accident. were to sufler what ls termed after 1ti0 d a YI Of a catastrophic illness over a hospitalization, 30 days 0~ recovery care and '3,000 o Iona: period of time." outpatient services such as To qualify for the unlimited dcclor bills, X-ray a n d coverage provided by the laboratory aervlces. .Reagan plan, a worker or '__:::::::::::.'...=:.:...: ___ _ Airlirie Gets Short Strike The plan, to be introduced soon in the leglslaturt, would be financed by a $3-a-month deduction from the paychecks of the state's 8.4 million work· ing men and women. The yield would total more than '300 million a year. The p r o po s e d California B U • health !eCUrity plan, working member of his family would have to be covered ·by a basic health insurance plan such as Blue Cross and Blue Shield that ls approved by a new state health security com- miulon. The catastrophe lns:urance would lake over hospital, doo- tor, drug and allied expenses when the basic plan ran out: 'Y nio n lhrough private insurance car- .. rlers, would pick up hospital • d Ok LOS ANGELES (UPI) and doctor costs where \he Overr1 e ay The Teamsters Union struck average health care plan runs Western Airlines for a brief out. CARMEL (AP) -Voters in period Tuesday night -so In a broadcast report Tues-the C a r m e 1 Unified School brief the airline's fil.ghls were day, the Republican governor District have approved con· not affected. said, "If an extended illness or tinulng an 17-cent tax override The strike lasted less than a terrible criP.pling accident for the next four yean. See the best in men '• w e • r for 1721 The be1t ••· lection in town for double knit 1Tack1 end 1port coat1. Remembar, th• best is always et . . . three hours. Picket lines ap-"·ere to hit soiheone in your The vote In the di.strict, pured at some of the airports family, the health insurance whlch extends up the CarmeJ from Minneapolis to California you have would Mt cover the Valley and dowp to Big Sur, served by the airline. expense and it would be ex· included many . new young The airline cal led it a ·;h;••;•;ted~;ve;ry;;q:u~ic;k~ly;;lf;;yo;u;;pen;;°"';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;~~~~~ wildcat strike, in violation of -• the national Railway Labor Act, which also covers alrlioe labor contracts. The union ac· cused the airline of stalling on contract negotiations, in the hope that the Civil Aeronautics Board will ap. prove \Vestem's request to merge \!.'Ith Amer ican Airlines, before a ne\v con-, tract can be signed. The Teamsters represent 2,000 \Vestern mechanics. utili- ty workers, neet .drivers and storehouse wor~h at Los Angeles , Anchorage, Seattle. San Francisco, HonoJulu, Las Vegas, Nev., Salt Lake City, Grtat Falls, Mont., and ~lin· neapolis. The strike \Vas annou nced by Marvin Griswold . s ecretary·treasurer r Teamsters L o c a 1 27ffl. T' airline denounced It as illef' Free Income Tax Preparation I Save $30-$40 on professional preparation of your 1971 Callf91Tii1 and Federal Individual Income Tax Return~ Don't Delay Sign up today: appolnb!lents are lree 11 ycu open " Anaheim Savings account of $5,000 or more, or for only $5 by opening an accoont of $2,500 or more. ANAHEIM ,_AVINGS ANO LOA.N~ and said Pi Io ts ' ANAHDM 187 W. Lincoln Ave. 92803/Tth 772·1!132 stewardesses were cro.r· · BR£A 633 So. Brea BIYd. 92621/Tel: 52M971 Teamster picket !Ines to k~ HUNTI NGTON BEACH 411Mainst.92648/Tef: 53"591 the lint's planes Dying on J l!.;;;;:=:==::=;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;====;;;;;;====-= schedule. I Round trip jets daily. To Las Vegas 9:00 a.m .. I :50 p.m. and 6: I 0 p.m. To Phoenix 7:'45 e.m.and.5:25 p.m. To Tucson 7 :'45 a .m . •Service starts February 22nif. ' For reservations call your Travel Agent or Hughes Alrwest at 540-2060. --CAHI ' D!PAltTMtHT •TOM 111' NIWJOIT ILYt. CGITIAUT UXAftJ AT NIWPOIT AIOI HAUOI tkfDL • OfM '11L ectt P.M. NIDA.TS • NJ&EV"' " ' • • •