HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-02-18 - Orange Coast PilotI
•
'
-.
Wounded Tea~her
•
Batters A1ta~ker
•
In El Toro
DAl·LY PILOT
* ·* *toe * * *
FRIDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY '18, •l972 • VOL. fiL NO, 0.. 4 l((TK)NS, a P'AOIS
•
The New Hero
. f ~ •.
~ UP'! Ttl.,,Mf*
"Rhoda Rafaelli models "the latest fad -a Howard. Hughes .T shirt,
"at a New .York boutique. Hughes' Rosemont Ente.rprISes hav~ asked a
court injunction against the people who are making and selling these
T shirts and buttons.
•
Hughes Rents 8th. Floor
l . ' .
Of Big Nicaragua Hotel
By CHARLES GREEN
MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) -
Howard Hughes was presumably holed up
today on the tightly guarded eighth noor
er Man•(lla'I Jptercont\nental Hotel,. and
1 lpokt!man In the United States sat~ he
would rema1n ln the Central Amencan
cotintry indefinitely.
~president Anastasio 'Somoza's of· f~ and Hu11hcs spokesmen In the Unit~d
St.Ates confinned that the eccentric
blUionaire new to Managua T~IH's.day
after 15-months of living In secluswn in a
hoteJ In Nissau.
Be came on bu!iness. the government .. ~.
ln Las ve~as, 1 .spokesman for the
Hughes Tool Co. 1a1d Hughes' stay In
,NiClragua was Indefinite -"we ar~~·t
••Jing bow long he'll be there, but 1n-
dollnlla' ~Id Indicate a certain degre<
Gf tpermanence." . . He added thal Hughes is considering m·
vi:stmen{s In the country and "considers
the economic and political situation
aood." Hughes reportedly left Nassau after a
dtipute with Bahamian offil:ials over
work permits for the staff that lnsulatu
'him from phyolcol contact with tbe
0
outside world .
He'll have no such trouble in
Nicaragua, whiGh is run by the oldest and
one of the most secure dictatorships in
Latin America.
"This was not a sudden . thing." said
another Hughes Tool source in Las
Vegas. "Hughes did not just fly out of
the Bahamas at the last moment with no
!See HUGHES, Page !)
China Stories
Begin Today
The DAILY Pllm preaenu to-
day the (lrsl ol I 1trl .. of lpecUI
pages of pictures and atorles on
President Nixon 's historic trip to
China."
The material was gathered by
photographers •nd reporter1 of the
Associated Press and United Press
lnt<matlonal.
~ Today'• cGverage appears on
Page 6.
•
President
In Hawaii
For Rest
By BELEN THOMAS
KANEOHE MARINE AIR STATION.
Oahu, Hawaii (UPI! -On ground sacred
to liawaiian antiquity as the meeting
place of kings, President Nixon rested
and studied today for his historic trip to
meet the rulers of modern China .
Nixon, accompanied by his wife Pal
and official staff, flew from snowy
Wa shington to sunny Hawaii Thursday
for a tranquil rest to adjust to changing
time zones and for further study before
his departure for China Sunday.
The President stepped off the pr esi den-
tial jet "Spirit of '76" into sunny 7>
degree weathe r at this Marine Corps
base to the cheers of a crowd or 5,000
persons.
Draped with a colorful red flowered lei,
Nixon got into a long, black White !·louse
limousine and went to the home ol Brig.
Gen. Victor A. Annstrong, commander or
the base, 15 miles from Honolulu.
The Nixons will spend two nights In
Hawaii and another on Guam before ar-
riving at Shanghai on Monday (China
lime ) for a week of conferences with the
leaders of the People's Republic of China.
The two-day stopover in Hawaii and the
overnight stay on Guam Saturday night
were recommended by Dr. Walter Tkach,
Nixon's personal physician, to overcome
the fatiguing physical expense Of chang.
init time zones.
Nixon seemed deeply touched by the
warm th of the bipart isan congressional
sendoff he received in Washington. Thurs·
day, and a traditional aloha welco me on
his arrival in Hawaii.
Kaneohe is built on a peninsula still
called "Mokalu " -sacred because
Hawaii's first king, Kamehameha the
Great, chose it as a site for a royal
meeting place.
"It's nice lo spend a day in Hawaii
before moving across the world ," he told
the airport crowd as he moved among
them shaking hands. "I want lo sit in the
1un and get a tan."
With an entouragf' of aboul 150 persons,
Including White House aides and
members of the press rorps, Nixon will
arrive In Peking via Sha nghai at J I :30
a.m. local time Monday (7 :30 p.m. PST
Sonday).
Premier Chou En-Jal will head the
welcoming reception for Nixon at Pe·
king Airport and planned to acco rd lhe
Orst American president to visit China
full ceremonial honors.
The President fjpCnt most of his time
en route to Hawaii Thursday conferring
on the pla1't wlth national se<.'Urity affai rs
advlw1 Henry A. Kissiner and Secretary
or Sute Wiiliam C. Rog•rs, his two chi<(
(See NIXON, Pare !)
'
•
~Flogging Judge""
Dairy Defendant
~trike B _argain
•clipping~ Judge --.
Time OH for Haircut, Shave
Ry TOM BARLEY
01 lh• D•llr ,UOI ltalf
Orange County's "flogging judge" and a persuasive prisoner made. a
, bargaln in court Thursday. The judge agreed to cut the prlooner's jail scnlcnce
provided the 27-year-0Jd man got a haircut.
Jt all began when Superior Court Judge Wllllam Murray, who once
senlenced another county jail inmate lo a flogging, firmly sentenced Michael
Thomas Joyce of Costa Mesa to one year in jail for the Jong-haired prisoner's
violatioo or probation. Joyc.e had been on probation as part of a sentence im·
posed two years ago for a burglary conviction and narcotics ofrenses.
''Wow, man, that's a lot," winced Joyce, shaking his shoulder length
hair.
"Get a haircut and I'll knock or! 60 days," grinned Judge Murray.
"Right on, man. Where's the barber shop?" replied Joyce.
''Okay," commented the judge. "We've got us a deal." '
"Say judge ," commented Joyce as Judge Murray got ready for the next
ilem on his calendar. "What about my mustache ? It ought to be worth a llttle
something."
"I'd say 30 days," Judge Murray responded,
"Judge,'' announced Joyce, "you've made yourself a deal."
"I'm sure glad you don 't sell magazine subscriptions, Mr. Joyce,"
chuckled J udge f\.1urray to the delight o( courtroom onlookers, "you're a very
persuasive prisoner."
The happy Joyce lert to begin his nine-month spell In Orange County Jail.
"There's a method in my madness," Judge Murray later told a news.
man . "It's going to be pretty hard for that well-trimmed young man to step
back lnto the drug culture."
Judge Murray's famous flogging sentence was never carried out because
the county sheriff refused to administer the punishment. The sentence later
was changed to a more modem form of p_unlshmenl.
l(nif ed Teacher Batters
Husky El Toro Attacker
A plucky Garden Grove teacher Ignored
the blood pumping from her Slashed left
hand and the knife he.Id at her throat
Thursday night and managed to fight her
way free from a husky male assailant
Mailme1i Taking
G. W. D<iy Off
Regular mail won 't be delivered on
W1Shl111ton'1 Birlhday Monday. Only
special delivery 1ervlce and collections
from white-topped 1ir mail mailboxes or
thoae designating a holiday coUection
scheduJe will continue.
But post ofnce lobbies for mail
deposits, lock box access and tell·strvlce
stamp machines will be open.
All Orange County eleme ntary and high
schools and junklr colleges will be closed
Monday alao. Only Chapman College and
West Coast University will remain open.
County orrloe• and mo•t Orange County
city halla will close.
Most banu will close on Feb. 31.
who leaped Into her car at an El Toro In·
teraectlon,
The 28-year-old teacher at Mark Twai n
Elementary School In Garden Grove, told
Orange County sheriff's o[ficers that her
attacker leaped Into htr car while she
waited al the lnte~ection or Valencia and
Avenlda de Carl-Otta .
The 1llghtly built woman told deputies
that he-shoved a knife against htr throat,
told her to drive on and clearly Indicated
with an obscenity what she could expect
a litlle later .
Witnesses told deputies that the victim
proved to be mdl"e tha t a match for her
burly 1dveru.ry, They 11ld he ran from
the car doubled over after hll potential
victim delivered 1everal kick•.
"That gal took care of herstlt," 1
wltnm Ibid dej1Jtles. "I'll bet those kfd,
at her tchool don't dare step out of li ne."
lnve11tlg1tor1 are today hunting the
young a.s~llant.
They a•ld it Is po11ihle that he could be
the man who kidnaped the woman driver
or a catering truck In the El Toro area
two weeks ago 1Dd forced the woroan to
drive him to the EncinlllJ are11 of San
Diego County before 1he ran to freedom.
6-1 Ruling
By State
Court Told
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) The
California Supreme Court ruled today
that the death penalty is unconstltutional.
informed sources reported. The vote wa1
said to be 6-1.
The decision affects 100 men and five
women under sentence or death in the
state's prisons.
They Include Sirhan 8. Sirhan. con-
victed slayer or Sen. Robert F. Kennedy,
and Charles Manson, convicted Jn the
Sharon Tate murders.
The New Jersey Supreme Court
overturned the 1tate's death penalty Jn
January. The court said the Jaw wa s un.
constltutlonal because persons convicted
after pleading Innocent were subjected to
. the death penalty while those who pleAd·
ed no defense were subject lo a max·
imum of llfe imprisonment.
Several stales have outlawed lhe death . P
penalty through leglslatlve action.
On Nov. 18, 1968, the Callfornia high
court ruled that juries in the slate can
decide constitutio na lly under their own
discretion whether the punishment ror
murder shall be death or lire im·
prisonmenl.
That deciJlon was returned on an ap.
peal wh ich stayed all exe<:utlons 11lnce
(See DEAm , P1ge %)
Orange C:oan
Weather
More hnzy !IUnshlne 111 forecast
for Saturday, following morning
low clouds and fog. Tempera•
lures will be mlld -In the 80'1.
Lows tonight In the 40 'JJ.
INS IDE TODA\'
Riveraidr. Countu'a National
Date fe1t1val II bringLnQ Old
lJayhdad to Southtrn C.'al1/on1'4
for 10 dat11 1tarting todau
through reb. 27. A 1tor11 in to-
doy'J Wetkendrr give11 the de·
Uut1.
L. M, ...,. 11
lol!lftf 11
Cttllttllll II
Clau.lllM lJ.SJ c-1c1 u Cm1\ll'fr• U
1>11111 Nelle•• u l•Herlll ,,.. i ,.II(. 1).11 ..... ,,.. ••tnl " ..__ II
A1111 Lt!lftrt 11
Mil .. • • Mh'lil1 If.II
MoftlMI l'llWft If
NetliNF NIWI M °""" C...11ty '' ..... "''''' 11·1'
'''"'• l'trttr ,. '""" .. ,, llllC-Me1'th 14"1.f ,............ It
'flleal'" ;tt..at WMl!lw ' I ...,__., ..... ,,.,, .. ., .. ,.... ...
Wfftl...., 1W4
•
2 DAttY PI LOl frldliJ, FtbruJry 18, 1'172
Worst Drug Woe
Alcohol Abuse
Soaring
By CRAIG A. PALMER
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Akohol is the
moat abused drug tn the United States,
the Health, .EducaUon and Welfare
Department told eonarw today In th•
government's fir1t •nnual report on
alcohol and health. . There are nine million alcoholics or
problem drinkers in America -almost
10 pe~nt of the work force -and
alcoholbm i! an eplde~ among
American [ndians, according to ~e
report submitted Wider a new w
draltod by Sen. Harold E. Hughes (0-
Jowa) a rtlormecl alcoholic. .
It ~Ml the problem causes 28,000 traffic
Newport ·Beach
Man Out on Bail
In Pot Sale Case
• Ill U.S.
deaths in a year and drains the economy
or $15 bUIJon annually.
The report contained these observa.
tlons from Dr. Merlin K. DuVal, assistant
&eCretary for health and &dence at HEW:
"While we are horrified by the abuse of
such drugs as hallucinogens, narcotics
and stimulants by our youth, we pay little
heed to the most abused drug of them all
-alcohol.
"When Ulla: nation became concerned
a bout drug use among the young, the
pubUc WU flnally f<>n:<d 10 re<ognize
that adult use of alcohol -a central
nervous system drug which we uae as a
socla.I beverage -la 1actually the major
drug problem in this counlry and that
young people ]earn from imitation and
identification with a~ulU."
Alcohol does have medicinal value, said
Dr. Morris E. Chafetz, director ot the
new National Institute on Alcohol Abuse
and Alcoholism, in an introduction.
-
,,
Miners Get
Pay O:fe1·
In Britain
By JOSEPH W. GRIGG
LONDON (UPI) -A throt,mq
government-appointed Court of Inquiry
today recommended a $293.8 million J>l1
boost tor co,ai miner1 whose nearl1
aevon-we.k atrlte bu thrulelled Britain
with economic dJsaster. "lbe miners nld
fl wu not eaough, but did not formally "'ject the proPoLSal.
n recommending an increase aver1.1·
Ing 2Q perc.ent for the 280,000 striking coal
miners, the government commisaJon
ovtrrode the unofficial I percent limit on
pay hlkfs on ground! the miners' case i!
"'exceptional."
The miners' rejection followed a one.
hour meeting of mineworkers' union
leaders with the National Coal Board.
Th e ~ard had said it automatically ac>
cepled the findings of the board of in·
quiry but sai d It would not go beyond
that.
A Newport Beach. man who police
allege was dealing marijuana wholeslae
is free on bail today, following bia arrest
and the confiscatio n of 110 pounds of
weed believed to be worth $15,000 at a
Cliff Drive residence. "
Jt may be prescribed as a mild relai:·
ant for aged and convalescent patJenta,
used 11 an occa11onal remedy for in-
aomnia or u a stimulant for lagging ap-
petite and dJgesUon, or even for the' relief
of pain, he said.
Bon Voyage~ Kitty Hawk
Employment Secretary Robert Call'
cancelled 1 statement on the crlsil he
was to have made to the House of Corn·
mons and called reprtsentatlves of the
two sides to his office.
The strike has blacked out Britain and
left thousand! of persons uncomforta!)je
in chilly homes m1d offices. But al cohol abusers shorten their life
span by 10 to 12 years, DuVal added.
The attack carrier Kitty Hawk, leaving a month
early to support U.S. forces in withdrawal opera·
tions In Vietnam, moves away from the North
Island Naval Air Station quay wall Thursday as
relatives and wellwisbers wave lo the ship's S,000
crewmen.
More than three million penons are oat
of work because of industry shutdowns
and continuation of the strike threatens
the jobs of 2:0 million persons. His wife was also arrested but re!ea~
on her own recognizance, proruising
appear for arraignment later.
Gordon T. Connolly, 28, and Joy L. Con-
nolly 'l1 of 3000 Cllff Drive, were ~·
From Pnge 1
DEATH ••.
Nov. 14, 1967. • rested Wednesday following a short in-
vestigation. · f They are charged with possession o
marijuana for sale. nded
Just.ice Marshall F. McComb was the
lone dissenter J the latest 45-page opin.
Jon. "
NAACP Disavows
Race Bins Figlit
Over Bordello Newport Beach police recomme
biil be set at $25,000 for CoMolly, who
faces ari:aignmen_t ~ext Wednesday in
Harbor Judicial D1str1ct Court.
His bail was reduced to $2,500 when he
appeared Thursday· 1 Narcotics Detective Sgt. Leo Konke
said the alleged contraband would be
Worth about S150 per pound on the illicit
wholesale drug market. .. He did not explain what led to 1usp1c1on
of Connolly and his wile but noted it was
not a Iona: probe.
From Pa11e 1
NIXON ...
foreign polley advisers on the trip. ~ ·' '
While the agenda has not been set, the
secret meetings in China are expected to
· cover 8 range of controversial problems
which have separated the two n.atlons,
particularly Formoaa and the Vietnam
war , Tt;c phllosophlcal part of the con--
vcrsallons were expected . to dwe\1 on
"''ays to relax tension between the ~~un·
tries after 22 years of cold war bostahty.
Ebullient about the trip for week.!, Nix·
on nevertheless told a recent news con·
fcr ence : "This trip should not ~ ~ne
which would create very great optunism
or very great pessimism." .
"t.1uch of the trip, including the arrival
in Peking and Niion's visit to the great
port city of Shanghai, will be broadc~st
live to the United States by re~ntly in-
stalled satellite televi!ion facilities wb~ch
will give an open view of mod.er~ OUna
for the first time to mtlUOru: of
Americans. ~
Nixon had no publlc appearar!C!s
scheduled in HawaH and everything at
the air base was done to protect his
privacy.
On the flight from Washing)on Thurs-
day, Nixon told newsmen be is adept at
handling chopsticks and admonished
them that Chinese wine is high-powered
stuff "like brandy.''
"Fortunatelv 1' the President said, 111
like Chinese f~d. l can eat Chinese food
v•ithout gaining weight. Of course, the
cuisine rs so varied."
OIAJrtlil COAST
DAllY PILOT
OAAHCl5 CO.UT r'UlllSHINCI a>MP'ANV
i':ob t1! N. w.,i
.. , .. 111 .. 1 .... 1"11111~
J1~\; I!.. Cu1ley
VIC9 ,,.,,ld~nt ~ G«!fr., Mllwfll"
Th""''' Kte~il f.1Utor·
1ho1T111 A. M urp~i~•
M..,..tlntl Edl!OI"
Chtil tt H. Looi" Ri,h1ri fl. Nan
Au.ii.iii M1111111ftt f.tll!Gtl
"""" c.t" MHI: DO W..t 111' Ii.wt
NfWllOrl l"cf\~ ll.J! /rl1'9'P'>11 l cu•wart' L..,_ INC+o: m FMKI A-"""11~ lff<h• 11115 lttd'I '91/lt"• ... kl" ~,.; * lltrlll ii Ct/l\IM 1t .. 1
•
The U.S. Supreme Court has before It
several cases on the death penalty but
has not ruled.
The last execution in the United States
was in Colorado in 1967.
The California court, the state's highest
tribunal, heard oral arguments In
January on the question of whether
"evolving standards of decency" have
outlawed the death penalty.
Anlhony Amsterdam, S t a n f o r d
University law professor arguing for the
American Civil Liberties Union, said the
death penalty is spottily applied to 11the
miserable and socially unacceptable."
Because of this, Amsterdam said,
atrocities can be committed which socie.
ty would not condone if uniformity ap-
plied.
He contended that "the death penalty
has been repudiated by enlightened
standards of decency."
Deputy Atty. Gen. Ronald M. George,
arguing for the sta~. said capital punlsf>.
ment has been recogniztd as legitimate
during the entire history the United
States and C41lfom!a.
George said the issue Is not whether
the death penalty is socially or politically
desirable, but whether there is a specific
prohibition in the Constitution that
forbids Jts adoption by the Legislature.
The case specifically concerned Robert
Page Anderson, sentenced to death In the
1965 killing of a San Diego shopkeeper.
Also argued was the case of John Brit·
ton Miller, condemned to death In the
1967 slaying of a deputy sheriff in
Modesto.
In Sacramento, Gov. Ronald Reagan's
press secretary said a decision had not
been made on whether to appeal the
court's ruling.
"We won't have any comment on the
decision until we have seen it and read
it," said Paul Beck.
The Death Row inmates in California
represent one-seventh of the nearly 700
condemned men and women in the United
States.
Twenty of the San Quentin Inmates ex·
hausted almost all oUier appeals and
were pinning their hopes for life on the
Supreme Court decision.
Since 1938, 190 men and four women
have been executed in San Quentin's ap-
ple.green gas chamber, blllU in 1938 and
scheduled to shut down by the end of
1974. A new one was to be constructed.
GOLDFIELD, Nev. (UPI ) -Beverly
Harrell, madam of a remote bordello
several miles from this old mining town,
thinks the Nevada Equal Rights com-
mission shou1d have more important
things to do than worry about a bawdy
house.
Bertha Woodward, president of the
Ren~parks branch of the National
Association for the Advanctment of
Colored People, agrees.
She called the commission's conctm
about the Cottontail Ranch at Lldo Junc-
tion "a grandstand publicity stunt" which
ignored more serious problems of
discrimination in jobs, housing and
education.
The controversy began last week when
Tony McCormick, executive director of
the commission, said a bl ack man from
Arizona complained to the state he wa s
refused entry at the Cottontail ~ch,
The ranch, trimmed in red lights,
Is a well-known house of prostitution
with a cluster or trailers parked near
U.S. 95.
The operation ts legal because state
law ts silent on the subject of pro,s..
Utution.
Fertility Chair
'Works Wonders'
SOUTllBEND, England (UPI) -
There's one empty chair in the telephone
exchange here.
"I wouldn't be seen dead in it," Glynis
Mann said. "The last three girls to
alt in that chair all had to Jeave because
they became pregnant."
June Longbottom, the last girl to use
the chair, said she had been trying
unsuccessfully for three years 1o have
a baby.
"As soon as I moved into the fertility
chair, I became pregnant," &he said.
"But I don't blame the others for boycot·
ting the chair. It certainly seems to
work wonders."
CocaineShip1nentBlocked
By French, U.S. Officers
FORT DE FRANCE, Martinique (AP)
-U.S. and French narcollcs aaents aJ1o.
nounced four arrests today that blocked a
shipment of $1.4 million worth of cocaine
into the United States.
Arrested at a beachfront luxury hotel
here was German Urrego, 44, a Colom·
blan. The French called him a major
figure in the narcotics route between
Latin America and the United States.
A second man, ldenUfled as Rogello
Gomez, 36, a Colombian national, was
seized simultaneously with the arrest in
f\Iiami of two other Colombians, Gerardo
Moreno. 36, and Ptfaria Lucia SaJaw, 45.
Sources close to tht investigation on this
French Caribbean island said Urrego ind
Gomez were arrested Wedotsday ln the
Diamant Roe Hotel. They wtre erralgned
today on charge1 of "Infractions co~
~ming the legislation on narcotics."
"We JUll wall<ed tnto thtlr hotel "'°"'•"
an mest.lng officer said. '1Thm was
ab!olutely no resistance. Tbey didn't
know we would be coming. tn f1ct..,thty
were waiting for their money and we
sbowtd up."
Urrego wu described u a major
operative In the system of transferring
COC'aJnt and heroin by private plane. car
and other meaM to the United StaC.U
ftom Central and South America.
.
'
The heroin Is lranaformed from a
morphine base in the Marseille area of
France, but is transshipped to LeUn
America with. increasing frequency to
avoid stiffened customs controls on
America's Ea.st Coast.
French narcotics officers a a I d
American officials had been trying to ap-
prehmd Urrego since 1955. Recently, U.S.
officials learned that Urrego had taken
up residence in Fort De France.
The United States was planning to ail
for his extradition when U.S. narcotics
bureau agents said they received ln-
fonnation that Urrego 'wu about to
transfer about 30 pounds of cocaine -ap-
parenUy In short supply In tht United
States -to Mlaml.
Then, botb the French and American
agents moved in. A French officer made
contact with the Colom~ians. paW.na:
himself oU .. • buytr. The arre!ll
followed.
The kingpin of the Latin Op<lrat!on has
been ldentiflod by U.S. autboriUes as
Auguste' Joseph llJCord, 1 Fr!ncbman
wh05e organliation reportedly has ban·
died up lo IU bilUon In narcollca 1 ,..,
from hb headquartera In Parquay.
Rlconf ls ln a Paraguayan Joli, but
Paraguayan 1utborit1tr blv1 ftfused Co
extradite him to lbe United States.
From Page 1
HUGHES HOLES UP . • •
real idea of where he was going. Hughes
owns properties in Nicaragua and is con-
sidering further investments."
He added that Nicaragua is now the
base of Hughes' operations, and that the
66-year~ld industrialist almost certainly
will not return to the Bahamas.
There was speculation among
Nicaraguans that Hughes might be in·
!crested in any one of1 several deals, in-
cluding establishmenf of a casino and a
large land purchase.
U.S. Ambassador Turner Shelton told a
reporter that two Hughes B..ides arrived
Wednesday and made arrangements to
rent all 17 rooms oii the next to the top
floor of the Intercontinental. which is on
a bluff overlooking Managua.
Hotel officials refused Thursday night
to say il Hughes was there or even to
acknowledge that the sud~enly m.
accessible .eighth !Joor was reserved Ior
Hughes and his staff. 'The elevators were
disconnected to that floor, and the fire
doors were sealed.
Hughes' flight came while court hear·
lngs were in progress tn NeW York on the
purported autobiography of Hughes writ·
ten by Clifford Irving, a book Time
magazine has called a hoax.
A spokesman for U.S. Atty. Whitney
North Seymour Jr, declined to say
whether a subpoena had been issued for
Hughes to appear before the grand jury
or whether any statements were sought
from him while he was in the Bahamas.
Managua, steamy capital of this coun-
try of two million people on the Central
American neck between Honduras and
Costa Rica, i.! Hughes' third port of call
since he left bis Beverly Hills mansion in
1966.
For four years, he live in a tighUy
guarded penthouse at the Desert Inn in
Las Vegas, then slipped out on
Thanksgiving eve 1970 and moved into a
ninth-Door lllite in the Britannia Beach
Hotel In Nassau.
The Miami News said Hughes "M-·as
ordered to leave the Bahamas because be
stayed beyond the eight months allowed a
visitor before he mw:t take out a
residence permit or leave.
The residency requirement was not en-
forced previously, the paper said,
because the government could not con.
firm that Hughes was actually 1n Nassau.
The unprecede11ted telephone news con·
ference the recluse gave to deny the
autbentlclty of lrvlng'a book estabUsbed
for the fir&t time that Hughes was the.rt,
according to the paper. ·· i
But the Balwnlan mJnlster of llome al-
fairs, Arthur D. HaMa, denled that
Hughes bad been asked to leave.
''During the course of a routine In-
vestigation," HaMa l!laid, "it ha5 been
discovered th.at non.Bahamians allegedly
employed by Mr. Hughes were in the
Baham.u without proper immigration
status and were escorted out of the com·
monwealtb by lmmlgraUon officials."
Cameo al
The strike brought PrJme Minister
Edward Heath close to political disaster
and he won a close 309 to 310 vote in the
House of Commons Thursday night on'
British entry into the European Common
Market.
The narrowness or the vote reflected
growing dissatisfaction with bis handlina:
of the coal crisis. ·
Even if the miners accept the package,
the coal shutdown could continue another
week be<:ause any final settlement would
need either a ·secret rank-and-file ballot
or show~f-hands votes by miners locals.
Further delay would come before they
actually could begin producing more coal
and shlpping it to gene.rating 1taUon1
shut down for lack of coal.
POW Ransom
Efforts Fail
PHOENIX, Ariz. (AP) -Com ..
dian Bob Hope says he has met
with a second rebuff by the North
Vietnamese in his proposal to
ransom American prisoners of war ·
for $10 million. ·
Hope said · he was advised by
North Vietnam again this week that
It would not grant hlm a visa to
vlslt Hanoi to dJscu1s the plan. He
tried first during a visit to Laos In
December.
"I don't think I should pursue the
proposal in view of what Mr. Nlxon
is doing," Hope added Thursday in
reference to President NiJ:on's trip
to mainland China.
•
11i•s• fin• tebl•s from Herit•g• Fumf·
ture ire just • p1rt of our ••citing mid.
winter 1111 which is now in full 1winf.
Selected groups frorn such well known
lines 1 1 Henredon, Herlt1911 Drexel end
much more ire av.Jleble et 1ubst1ntiaf
Mvings.
Sin: D04-H22
.... "" SALE $135
C.meos extensive teble coU.ction of.
fen classic Italian 1tylin9 created for
• furniture connois1.ur. These fine piec.
es feeture burl wood tops end stein
resistent pufl'' trays for y04.lt convtn·
ience.
. ...... _,
• .. 11n SALE $135
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON DREXEL -HEJi.iTAGE -KARASTAN
7td11111 .
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 WHlcllff Dr., 642-2050
OPIN NIDAT Tll t
-INTER I O,RS
LAGUNA BEACH TORRANCE
345 North Coo1t Hwy. 494-4551 23649 Hewthol'flo 11...r.
' (JlJJ J71·117t ~,...., ... t P,1f1af11_, ,....._ ._._.. ANQdif1 .llD-HllD
-----•
" "
-·
ne
to
of
ap
ho
" sui
an
se
· to
wh
th
Te
lo
n
p
mi
fo
ag
wit . s
ler
OU'
inj
his
L
wh
•he
ma
gre
you
are
you
and isk ... -.
A
~ro
car
Dis dist
Ing
F
dis
and p
plic
the
llli
T
Unif
Uhl!
all
Hlg
Tust
Ele
F
"
I
"
'
·~And New Cha11apion ••• '
-· -
UCI Lili1·ru·y
Cites Fu11d
'Ailments'
By MICHAEL GOODRICH
Of tfl9 Dlll'f' PH .. 111"
Js UC Irvine in need of a heart
transplant?
"Categorically no." says UCI unlversl·
ty librarian John E. Smith.
Speaking be.fore a meeting or lhe
University Forum Thursday a!ternoon
at the UCI Faculty Club, Smith compared
the university llbrary to a human heart
and discussed the f,asibility or a c.11r-
onary replacement for UCT.
11 WhUe heart transplants are rather
simple and successful, the n1orbidily rata
Is high." said Smtih, "and I wouldn't
wont this foc tbe. un1vcrsily."
The library's ailment like that or the
university' as a whole ls flnanclal. During
the l8'72·73 llscal year UCI expects a
JO percent Increase In students and
faculty while tha boo~ budget will io-
c~ase only one percent, according to
Smith.
Aside from the budget being Jn.
adequate, lntlatlon and the devaluation
of the dollrar have also eaten away
at it. There was a 2{) percent increase
In book prices frorn 1970 to 1971 and
the devaluation of the dollar abroad
has redu ced the purchasing powrr of
the foreign volumes budget by $13,250.
s DAJLY PJLO;
• • •I
A worker at the Wolfsburg, Germany, Volkswagen
factory holds up a model of Henry Ford's Tin
Lizzie as he stands beside the 15,007,034th uBeetle"
produced by the West German car manufacturer.
The 5().borsepower 1302$ broke the world produc·
tion record held for 45 years by Ford's car.
Presently, according to Smith, the UCf
library is trying to pr-0vide re search
material tor all acRde1nlc fields but
due to the eeonomic problems two types
of transplants have been suggested.
So Ne11r, a1id Yet • • •
'l'heir reunion delayed. sailor Dnryl Brookjns talks lo his wife N.ancy
and daughter Lorene through tJ1c porthole of repair ship A1ax. 'l'he
ship was to have docked earlier, but offshore fog kept It from port
for several hours.
.
·Jackie Appears Harbor F an1ilies to Ch eel\: >
A computerized llbrary hes been sug·
gested where ell reference materials
w~ld be reduced lo a highly indexed
m1crotape level and everything would
be available at the touch of a button. I 1i Own Defense
Against Pliotog Status of Homes in Baja Labeling this. the ''black box
sy ndrome,'' Smith does not feel that
the library could afford such a conversion now .
Jordanian llelcl i11 Slaying
Of 3 IIospital Cl1ildre11 NEW YORK (AP) -Jacqueline Ken-
nedy Onassis' eyes flashed from lawyer
to lawyer to judge as hour after hour
of legal wrangling interrupted her first
appearance on a witness stand.
Poised as on1y a woman who is at
home almost everywhere could be, she
sat bolt upright in a black knit Chan.ti
suit -which she wore both Wednesday
and Thursday -and clasped her bands.
Only occasionally did she lose her
serious mien. either to retort spiritedly
· to a question or to smile gratefully
when Judge Irving Ben Cooper, hearing
the case without jury, gave her guidance.
'l'en years ago1 Cooper was appointed
to the bench by President John F. Ken-
nedy, Mrs. O{iassis' first husband.
Mrs. Onassis is being sued by freelance
' photographer Ronald E. Galella for $1.3
million. Galella claims the 42-year-old
fonner First Lady and Secret Service
agents guarding her children interfere
with his picture taking.
· • She and the agents claim in a coun-
lersuit that Galella employs "demonic
l!iurveillance," and asked for a pe.nnanent
injunction to make the cameraman keep
his distance.
Laughter erupted in the courtroom
v.·hen she testified that she is not aware
she is a public figure . Even Mrs. Onassis
managed a grin.
"Aren't you aware the public has a
great interest in your doings . . • in
your comings and goings and who you
are ... that there is curiesity about
your behavior . the clothes you wear
and your family?" Galella's lawyer
lsked.
--"No, sir," she responded politely.
• . · ..
By L. PIITER KREIG
Of "'9 D1HJ f'llltt lt1ff
Half a dozen Harbor Area families may
be going to their weekend retreats in Ba-
ja California for the last time this
weekend.
The Mexico Supreme Court bas
literally yanked the/ leases out from
under their homes in Campo Lopez, a 12-
acre cliflside village midway between TI·
juana and Ensenada, on the Pacific
coast.
"We're going down Saturday to find out
what is going to happen," said Alvin
Hutchinson, KaJser Middle School pfin-
cipal, in an interview this morning.
"We were told verbally we'd either
have to pay an enormous rent or we'd
have to get out," he said.
The Hutchinsons, Mr. and Mn. Ray
Trautwein, Mr. and Mrs. Thatch Warren
and Mr. and Mn. Geora:e Curtis, and
others from Newport Beach and Costa
Mesa, had no hint the upheaval was com-
ing.
In an action last summer, a Mexican
judge granted title to the land to Enrique
Machado, whose rather had once owned
the property many years before.
Its liUe had since been claimed by
Francisco Lopez, who had lived on the
parcel with live other rantiUes since 1927
and who 20 yean ago began leasing small
Iota.
Today there are some 180 cott.ages and
trailen at Campo Lope:r. -all built or
belonging to U.S. families.
Lopez, who charged only nominal rents
averaging $100 a year for each lot, never
told any of hls tenant& of the court
-.Tustin School Voters
To Elect Three Boards
Along with the June 6 balloting on a
Proposed three-di.strict unincatlon plan to
carve up the Tustin Union High School
District, votets in each of the proposed
district! will select five-member govern-
ing boards.
Filing for the total of 15 unified school
district trustee seal.!I opened this week
and closes at 5 p.m. on Friday, March 10.
Prospective candidates may obtain ·~
plicationa and inlormalion on filing from
the: Orange County Reiistrar of Voters,
1119 E. Olestnut St., Santa Ana.
The vote on the plan to create Tustin
Unified, Irvine Unified &!Mission Viejo
Uhlfled school distiicll w be d«lded by
all residents of the presen T1m1n Union
High Scliool District wblcb , Includes the
Tustin, Trabuco and Sin Joaquin
Elementary school di!tricts.
Those districts would cease to exist on
July 1, 1973 if the uruflcatlon plan ls ap.
proved. Their property would be divided
between the newly created unified
districts.
Only voters in the proposed new
dl!trlcts will ,.lect their school board
members. Each distrlct'a board of educa-
tkm would be swom in on July 1 of thiJI
year. That would gtve tru1t.ees one year
to organize the new unlfled districts.
Unified districts serve grade• JOn-
dergarten through IJ.
If the unification issue that has been
· endorJed by the boerdl of all four pruent
diltrict.t should fall, the Tustin High and
Tustin, Trabuco and . San Joaquin
Elementary School D!Jtri<t trustees
would remain In office.
Festival Slate
W eeke1ul Highlights in. Laguna
The Patriot's Day Parad~ will kict off Laguna Bettcb'1 annual Win~
Festival Saturday, marchlog oft through the dowutown arta at 11 a.m. Other
weekend highlighll are: -
SA1UllDAY
-Surfing ~feet, Thalia Street Btac;, 1 a,m. t.o noon. ,
-Arts and Crafts Exhibits, FOllival ol Aris ~. JO:!Q a.m. lo 5 p.m.
-Par West Dert -~ Rol<I Laguna, l p.m. lo m1'1nlght. -Lawn Ari Show, Laguna Beech Glilery,.nooo lo 5 p.m.
-Lion Coontry Safari Show. Forum Tbealtt, J:!Q p.m. lo I p.m.
-"Teaboust of the August Moon,'' Laguna Moulloo Ploy-. l :Jll p.m.
SUNDAY ..,
-Swflng Meet, Thalls Stred Bad!, 7 a.m. to ,_,,
-Arts and Crafts Exhibit&, Fesllval "'°"""'' tO:JO a.m. lo 5 p.m.'
-Far We!! Dart Shoolout, -I Laguna, I p.m. lo mldnlibl.
-"Musical Foretl" by JWllor L7r1c Opera. Fonim '!'beat..., I ::IQ p.m.
and 1:30 p.m. • .
•
decision, however.
·"Now this new guy wants to charge us
$150 a month -nobody could afford
that," Hutchinson said.
He said that tigure came from
Machado's lawyer two weeks ago and
he's heard nothing since, but expects to
when his family drives down this
weekend.
He said he didn 't understand how the
court could have ruled the way it did.
"I know the Lopez family has been
paying federal taxes each year and we've
been paying state taxes," he said.
Hutchinson said several leaseholders
have hired attorneys -on both sides of
the border -in hopes that at least they'll
get their investment back.
"None of us really wants to sell , .
thougb,'' he said, "it's such a beautiful
spot."
The Lope:r.· and the other Mexican
families have already been evicted from
their born.ea. how~ver.
The second type of transplant discussed
ht Smith was that of . a speclnllzed
library where materials would be con·
centrated In certain fields of academic -
study. Additional materials would be bor·
rowed froll\ the other libraries of the
University of Callfoml8 system.
"But each of our campuses is strained
now by a sharing program, especially
UCLA," said Smith. "f don't really see ·
this as the answer to reducing costs.
A second form of specialization would
be to concentrate only on the acqulstlon
of current volumes while hoping that
the current body of material In the
library would suffice for extended
research.
Even at the chance of being forced
into a great mediocrity, Smith feels
that the UCJ library should continue
to buy in all fields. .( ·
"A library has to serve lts con·
stltuency," he said, "and if we speclallu
we can't do that. We'll continue to do
as bett we can."
BLACKPOOL, Eniland (UP I) -Po\lre
today charged a Jordanian eye speclalh1t
at the Victoria llospital with the murder
of' Deborah Carson, 4, one flf three
children killed In a knife attack In the
hospital children's wing .
Ahmad Alami , 32, nppeared In court
hand cu ffed to a police officer. In <i
three·minute hearing, he w1t11 ordered
held for another court appearance on
the charge Feb. 25.
Defense lawyer Baron Wood! !laid he
had no applications t-0 make on behalf
of Alaml , whose place or birth wus
llsted as Jerusalem.
The charge 1heel lifted his address
a1 Vlctorla Hospital.
Hospital staff found Martm Langhorne.
2, and Nicholas Scott, 2, dead 'fhursday
In the same children'• wing In which
Oehor:ih dled.
l1011 pilnl stnlf snld D11rren Quamrr,
2. ulso sufferer! severe s\1111he11 und two
nurse! were critically Injured
Therr "'ere 45 other chlldl'en In uthcr
roon18 in the \Vnrd ,
Police Chl,r Wlllla1n PnUrey 1111ld lhn
slnyingll were "bM,1tal and hQrriflc" und
the en~ w1111 "one of the wornl n1urdf'I'~
In which I huve been involved clurlni;
my 45 years of police service."
<.:arnel Crash Fatal?
LONDON (UPI) -An In q u., I
determined thot...J.revel •ient ErW"I l~amberl dleiJ on a vfslt to the f'erSlan
Gulf 11tate111 when the car he wa1 drlvlna
hit a camel.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ..
Continental
MARK IV
• IN ALL OF THE 70's ' THIS Will. BE THE
UNIQUE AMERICAN CAR!
Mercury
MONTEGO ~~TlIE ALL NEW
PERSONAL SIZE CAR!
•
•0rangt Cou11tv'1 1'amfl11 of r lnt Cm"1•
ohnson & son
I ! '~ r r 1 [ r, r.1 f l •f !Jf· '-I
' 2929 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 540-6630
-·· . -
--
f D.11\Y 'ILOl
•· I ~ps
'Soup' Slicer
Really Ro.Ding
lly THOMAS MURPRINE
OI' .. Dalftl ..........
etrlTING UP DEPT. -Alu, lhtre
wm a few Wrm1·nitnku1 who scanned
this 1poce the other d1y l!ld figured lt
WU all 1 big pu\.oo when I dlJc1wed the
otate'1 FOi Culling Machine.
You remember the Foa Cutter. That'•
In operimenlll device being operated
by the Stile Division of Hlghw•)'I for lbt
purpoao ol cuttln1 holes through the fog
•long OW' roads and byways.
Jt 1pny1 electrtcally-cbarged juice tnto
!01, c1uatng the for to gatblr In cl•\nJ>!,
ret lielvy, l!ld then fall lo the ground.
Indeed, aome folkt did figure thla was
all a bis f1brlc1Uon of my meotal weetnne.1
* SO,, FOR THE asturance Of flltl>l\11 lollowor1, you will !Ind jllll nut door to
this 1J>8ct today a photograph of tbe Fog
Cutter Jn acUon upon tht highways of the
San Joaquin VaUey. There it is, Mika.
pJyJng lts way among the mists. Spraying
away, confusing fog and causing it to
clump up and drop dead.
In thinking about the Fog CUtt.r, you
may ha\fe culled up an image or this
giant sophisticated compultr·like device,
with twinkling Ughts, reels of tape, spin·
nlng wheels .flld the like.
The phot~.r you will note, looks
1uspicJoUBJy like an old stakebed truck
with a couple of nozzles spraying out the
back end.
Sorry to ruin all your imagu, folks.
Bui tblt'1 it.
* DRUMBEATS DEPT. -J UJt 1
reminder that Laguna Beach'• bit Wlnter
FerUval get. under way Saturday at 11
a.m. with a JOO-unit ))lrade winding
throu1h the downtown streets of the Art
Colony.
That parade has come a long way over
the yem sinct the first Patriots' Day af· .1
fair tootled iU way down Part Avenue.
Units new arlve from all Over Southern
CslltornJa to compete for troph!e1 and
entertain U1 coastal folk. I'd gueu Jt's
JroW11 lnlo being a 11<ar-match to Hur>-
tlbgton Beach's big extravaganza on the
Fourth qt July. Weil worth seeing, folk!.
Walch out for tbe special ' No Parking
zol'lea, now.
* NO FLUNKIES DEPT. - 1 aee where
the faculty out at UC Irvine wants to
eliminate falling grades and just go to a
system of High Pass, Pass, or J -
whatever that ls. For you traditionallst.s,
1 guess you can interpret that to be A or
C and nothing else.
* GOOD NEWS Dl!PT. -Up to now,
about everybody that own1 a pickup
truck bas to buy a commen::laJ license
plate but that m•y all change for you
camper fana and oQMn. The Dept. of
Motor Veblclea ii Conllderlng a syatem
where non-commercial UJen won't pay
as much for licensing thti small trucks.
Right now, as or1• official put it, about
the only way to a .. otd the cornmertlal fee
Is to promise "you won't carry anything
i• it except golf clubs."
* FINAL NOTES: Up Statue way.
they're gal.rig to auction off the giant
mockup of Boeing Aircraft'• ill-fated
supeTBOnlc jet transport. lt cost $10. 7
million. One wag wants to tum it into a
restaurant.
Maybe 80tne school district down here
could use it for classrooms.
Wou1dn't that turn on the kids?
F'rl day, Frbl'uary 18, 19?:
HA. SO YOU THOUGHT THAT FOG CUTTER STORY WAS A PUT-ON, DID YOU?
Spr•y ~n·mounted Truck M•kes 'Clumps' Out of Fog-It Rl•lly Does
3 Lo~donderry
Centers Bombed
By IRA Gunme11
By COLIN BAKER
BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPIJ -
Gurunen bombed three shopping centers
in Londonderry today and set fire to a
town hall near the border with the Irish
Republic. But in Belfast a shopkeeper
hurled a bomb back at raiders.
In Dublin the Irish Republican Army
reported "unprecedented police activi ty"
against the organization, involving the ar·
rests of a number of IRA members in the
republic.
An army spokesman said gelignite .
bombs exploded wilhin 30 minutes of
each other in three shopping centers,
causing extensive damage but no
casualUes. Gunmen who plantOO the
bombs gave cwlomers .and employes in
the centers 30 minutes to evacuate the
atta, the spokesman said.
In Newry, where Roman Catholics
st.aged the largest civil rights march in
the province's SO..year hi.!tory Feb. 6, in-
cendiary bombs planted by four armed
men damaged the town hall.
In Bellast David Corbett, 54, grabbed a
briefcase .Containing a 20-pound gelignite
bomb 'and hurled it into the street
minutes after a gunman planted the
devtce in hia newa agent's shop in the city
center.
"The gunman said we had five minutes
to get out," COrbett said. "I ran and
grabbed the briefcase and threw it into
the middle 9f th.e street as the gunma,n's
car was puJllng away."
Army bomb disposal experts later
detonated the device. The blast wrecked
three cars and smashed windows in the
area.
"l suppose I took a chance," Corbett
said. "But when a man secs his livelihood
about to be destroyed, he has to do
.something about lt."
Bernadelte Devlin, and 12 other civil
rights acUvists were sentenced today by
a Belfast court to serve six months im·
prisorunent for taking part in an Illegal
protest Marth Day. AU 13 wre released
on $260 bail pendlng their appeals againsl
the sentence. •
She had faced similar charges on
Wednesday for taking part in an illegal
Roman Catholic march in Newry. Thal
case also was postponed..
Russ Craft Orbjting
Moon After Journey
BOCHUM, Germany (UPI) -The
Soviet moon probe Luna 20 went into
orbit around the moon today, Heinz
Kaminski , director or the Bochum
Observatory said.
Kaminski said his instruments tracked
the moon probe as it went behind the
moon. It emerged on the other side again
at 47 second!! after 4:35 PST today.
Uncertainty on J(ennedy
Fogs Nebraska Primary
By JAMES R. QUINN
0~1ARA, Neb. (UPI) -There is no
lacJt: of candidates in the Nebrl!lka
Denioqatic prtsidentiaJ primary and the
possible deletion of one or them might
make little difference.
Or would it:'
The man in question is Sen. Edward
Kennedy, an avowed noncandldate who
nevertheless is listed among 12
Democrats on the state 's May 9 presiderr
tial preference ballot.
Under the law, those selected for the
primary by Secretary of State Allen
Beermann have until ~1arch JO to get
lheir names off the list by filing affidavits
of noncandidacy. The candidate must
swear he or she is "not now and does not
intend to become a candidate.''
But in Ken~dy's Case it may not be
that easy.
The Nebraska law also provides that,
even though an affidavit of ooncandidacy
has been filed, if the person "subse·
quently beoomes a presidential candidate
I-CAMPAIGN '72
in any other state by any mean.!!
whatever. he shall be considered to have
purged his affidavit in Nebi:ask a and such
affidavi t shall have no force and effect."
This quirk could throw the option to
Oregon, a state which has no disclaimer
clause in its primary law and ·whose
secretary of state has not decided
whether to put Kennedy on the Oregon
ballot.
If Oregon does, Nebraska may .
Beermann. a Republican, will then
decide.
If he ke£ps Kennedy aboard, it could
throw the Massachusetts senator into a
Demo c r a tic donnybrook with
Sens. }Jubert Humphrey of Minnesota, 1
George t.lcGovern of South Dakota, Ed-
mund l\'luskie of Maine ; VanCi! Hartke of
Indiana; and Henry Jackson of
\Vashington; Reps. Shirley Chisholm of
Ne\Y York and \Vilbur Mills of Arkansas :
Gov. George Wallace of Alhambra: t-.1ay
ors Sa1nucl Yorty of Los Angeles and
John Lindsay of New York, ahd fonner
Sen Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota.
It is hard to elicit predictions from un·
committed party leaders and delegate
candidates without firm word of whether
Kennedy will be on the ballot.
It is generally understood Kennedy will
not campaign in any case. But observ ers
agree he could siphon off votes from the
others in a state in which his brother.
Robert. grabbed off neRrly SO percent of
the primary vote in 1968.
Those Democratic observers at the
higher levels who wil1 venture a guess m-.
dicate a close fight could develop
between ri1uskie and McGovern, with
chances for Humphrey and Jackson -
again, depending upon the Kennedy lac·
tor.
On the Republican ballot. President
Nlxon wilt be opposed by RepS. Paul
McCloskey Jr. of California and John
Ashbrook of Ohio.
The sentinment of leading Cornhusker
Republicans. however, can be summed
up in four words developed in previous
campaigns: "Nebrai:ka is Nixon coun-
try ."
Although Democrats claim Nixon is
vulnerable in the farm and ranch coun-
try, Republican seers hotly dispute any
waning of the President's popularity here
and expect the h1cCloskev and Ashbro:ik
candidacies to cause little more than a
ripple.
Nixon rolled up some of his best
percentage margins in Nebraska in 1960
and 1968.
(Monday: Maryla nd)
Mounties Captu1·e Suspect
In Wisconsin Bo1nh Blast ·
By TOM SEPPY
\VASHINGTON (AP) -The capture of
Karletoo Lewis Armstrong by Canadian
police reduces the FBrs list of most·
wanted fugitives to 12, more than haU of
them political revolutionaries.
Armstrong, one of tour men wanted In
connection with a fatal bombing on the
University of Wisconsin campus on Aug.
24, 1970, was arrested \Vednesday night in
Toronto.
The arrest left on the FBI's most·
wanted list seven persons w i tlh
backgrounds as political activists or ter-
rorists.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police
said Armstrong, 24, was arrested without
a 1truggle in a rooming house. He is
being held for an immigration inquiry.
Blizzards Rip Minnesota Armstrong was sought as a result of an
explosion that ripped through Sterling
Hall on the uruverslty or Wisconsin cam-
pus, a building that contained the Army
Mathematics Research Center. The cen.
ter had been a target of antiwar demon-atrators. Wi11ds Gusts Reacli Velocity· of Hurricane
Temperat11re• ~AJl()Hlol WIAIHll 1ottVl(l 10tlCA$1 1t 'JAMl)l t • IS'p71
A graduate student. Robert Fassnacht,
was killed in the blast. ·
Charged with Armstrong .in the
ei:pl01lon are his brother, Dwight
Armstrong. 20; Frederick Burt, 23, of
Darby, Pa., and Davis S. Fine. 19, of
WllmJngton, Del. The three are at large
and Are on the FBI's list of most-wanted
fugitives .
The four are charged with conspiracy,
sabotage, destroyinp: government prop.
erly and civil-rights vjolafioru:, all
federal counts, and on a sfate charge or
murder.
150 Strikes \.
U ~S. Planes Hit
Enemy
By ARTHUR WGBEE
SAIGON (UP!l -U.S. B52o and jet
fl3hter-bomber1 carried out nearly 150
strikes against Communist targets in
South Vietnam todsy, following up two
days or rakb acroas the border in North
Vietnam. Tbe Air Force slld the eight-jet
BS%.s cBrrled out 10Taid1 over South--vitt·
nam in the 2-4 hours ending at noon today.
During tbe same period, It reported, tac-
tical flghter·bomber crews Oew 139 air
strikes.
The heavy bombing came on the beets
of 29 Mura of strikes against targets in
North Vietnam Wednesday and Thursday.
Intense missUe fll'e over North Vietnam
brought down three U.S. Air For~ jet&
during the bombina north of the
'Demilitarized 1.ooe (DMZ) l!ld sit
Italian Woes
Seen · De8pite
New Leaders
By ERNEST SAKLER
ROME (UPI) -ltaJy got a new
go\'eQlrfient today, but the cure may be
worse than the disease.
The new government ls a ruling body in
name only and politicians said \vorse
trouble may lie ahead.
After 33 days witl:\Out a government,
new Premier Giulio ~Andreotti defied
former coalition partners Thursday by
setting up a one-party Christi an
Democratic cabinet without a majority in
parliament.
Political experts said the minority
government could last three months at
best -which would -bring ~t up to the
time to hold national elections. They said
the deepening rift between Christian
Democrats and Socialists may plunge the
country into the worst crisis since Com·
munist-led riots overthrew a similar
minority government 12 years ago.
The new cabinet was being sworn in
before President Giovanni Leone today.
Andreotti .' 53. served as minister for 13
years in 17 cabinets. He accepted the
premiership Thuniday -13 days after it
was first offered. He annojlnced a ~man
cabinet list composed e~irely of Chris·
tian Democratic party colleagues.
Andreotti and his -predecessor Emilio
Colombo, earlier failed to overcome dif.
ferences between the C h r i s t i a n
Democrats and their Socialist and Social
Democratic coalition partners. The
disputes, over Issues ranging from
divorce to rising unemployment, caused
Colombo to resign as prentier Jan. 15
after 17 months In office.
Lend Lease Debt
Talks
After
to Resu1ne
T e11 l'-ears
WASHINGTON (UPI) -In a move
which could lead to increased trade, the
United States and Soviet Union have
agreed to resume negotiatinns afler a
lapse of more than 12 years on Russia's
outstanding World War II Lend Lease
debt to the United States. -
During the war, the United States sup-.
plied to the Soviet Union civilian and
military goods vaJued at $10.8 billion.
After the war. the United States at·
tem pted to settle this debt and similar
debts owed by other allies, charging only
for civilian related items which could be
used in peace lime.
Thus. the Uqiled States initially sought
from the Soviet Union $2.fl billion and
through negotiations from 1948 through
1960 dropped this fi gure to $800 million.
The Soviets, claimlDg that some
material was detective, finally offered to
settle for $300 million before the talks
were broken of( in January, 1900.
•
• Ill South
crewmen were lost, milltary spoke1men
said today. ·
The North Vietnameae claim they shot
down seven U.S. warplanes and captured
"several" pilots.
The aln:raft, according to the-U.S.
spoktsmen. were hit by surface-to-air
misalles during the 125 combat strikes
flown Wednesday and Thursday against
the new Soviet-built 130mm field guns
brougbl Into tbe Dr.tz area by the North
Vietnamese.
In another development, a Navy pilot
on a missk>n over Laos traded missile
fire with a surface.to-air site inside North
Vielnam but tbere was no report of
damage. And the ca rrier USS Coral Sea.
whose pilots participated in the strike in·
to North Vietnam, pulled out of its posi·
tion oU the Vietnamese coast for an un-
disclosed destination for maintenance and
to give its crew &bore leave.
MlUtary spokesmen 1in Saigon said the
aircraft downed over North Vietnam
were two F4 Phantoms and an Fl05
Thunden:hlef "Wild Weasel " jet which
carries sophisticated electronic tracking
equipment. Each carries a two--man
crew.
Unofficial statistics showed the Onited
States bas lost 1~950 plaile! in air action
over North Vietnam since Aug. 5, 1964.
U.S. command spokesmen said the raids
Wednesday and Thursday destroyed or
damaged seven of the 130mm guns, five
85mm antiaircraft guns, two SAM sites,
five SAA1 missile transporters, two
missile launchers and two trucks.
t.1ililary sources said Navy gunners
· Thursday fired on North Vienamese
personnel carriers moving at night
through the southern sector of the DMZ
and th~l at least five Communist tr09J>s
were killed. 1
The four--day cease-fire proclaimed by
the Communists for the Tet lunar New
Year hoUday ended today and South Vlet.-
namese military spokesmen said the
Communists inJtiated 166 actions during
the truce period and that 41 persons were.
killed, 63 wounded and one reported mis~
ing.
The spokesmen said that during the
government's 2f.hour truce when ended
at 6 p.m. on Tuesday. 13 South Viel·
namese were killed and 21 wounded in 42
incidents initialed by Viet Cong and
North Vietnamese forces.
Murder-suicide
• Includes Top
U.S. Cost Aide
WASHINGTON (AP ) -The murder·
suicide or a top official of the Cost of Liv·
ing Council and his wife apparently wa.s
spurred by domestic troubles arising
from long hours on the job administering
President Nixon's economic program,
neighbors or the couple have told police.
Earl D. Rhode, 28, and his wife,
Delores, also 28, were found Thursday
night by police after a neighbor asked of-
ficials to investigate. •• •
Police said Mrs. Rhode shot her hus-
band once behind the right ear with a .22-
caliber pistol which she took from a
neighbor's house and th en kilted herself
in the same manner.
.. . Police, arriving al the house in
suburban Silver Spring, Md., saw Rhode
through a window sprawled on a living
room divan and discovered Mrs. Rhode
wrapped in a blanket on a bed in the
basement with the gun beside her. They
said the shootings occurred about l p.m.
\Vednesday. l
Friends and neighbor~ ol the couple
said Mrs. Rhode wa,s dl;stresscd that her
husband was working a seven-day week
in his job, listed in a council directory a.!I
"director, executl•e ~retariat.''
Rhode's name wa.s listed third after
Secretary of the Treasury John B. Con·
nally's and council Director Donald M.
Rumsfeld'1.
Informed of the shootings. Rumsfeld
called the death,, a "terrible tragedy."
I I
l I
I
1
(BtAiH ·~~.ftlj}iMOW """' ~ ... Lc.l.:.JMIOWI ll -~ t IOW
More than a year and a half ago, the
1'Ten Most-\Vanted"' list had 16 narnes.
Seven Of those named were wanted for
such crimes a.s murder and bank rn~
be.ry. The other nine "ere a ae\\·er breed,
:JOUght from crimes ranging from saOO..
tage and terrorist acts to conspiracy.
Captured since then have been black
nctlv1st Jl. Rap Brown and Armstron g.
The FBI put Anl(ela Davis on the IJst
Aug. 18. 1970, and took her in to custody
Oct. 13 burreplnced the black ·l<Bder the
following dny with Be:rnadlne Dohm, M
leader of the \Veatherman faction, wbo ls
•Ult JOU(ht lor conspl>acy.
De_eis•ons, Deelslmis
" '"' Wt-'lH11 f0.0C.UI.
•
Poor Charlotte Rampllng. The 25-year-old actress couldn'I figure oul
what to do. She loves Bryan Soutllcombe Qefl), her manager. And
she also loves model Randall Laurence (right~ The trio lived together
in happy bliss. Now Charlotte bas married Bryan. Randall. who wu
th• best man, ·wo.so't too upset. The three or them will continue to
share their London IU!le together.
'
no
tod ..
\\'Or
spe
"
Sin
dial
Chi
frie
this
for
II
tent
\\'Ith
Nati
this
)'tl
{\VO
mod
aga
"tw
Th
"h as
pe op
''an
re so
Ta tw
• .
,
••• -1 • ·---· ,
F'ridq, F'tbrull')' 18, 1972 DA ILY PILDT /S
Bugles, Planes Silenced
Nixon Spending Quiet Interlude in Ha waii
By R\JTll YOUNGBLOOD
KANEOHE MARINE
CORPS AIR STATION, Oahu,
llawail (UPI) -The bugles
were stilled tod11y and the
night lighters &rounded at this
i1arine Air base where Presi·
dent Nil.on is spending a day
the demorulration was aimed
at callin& "attention to the
increased b o mbln1 in
Indochina and the
deteriorating d o m e s l I c economy."
On past \'isits here, Nixon
has stayed in a hotel and
no uplanatlon was given !or
his choice of Armstrong'•
home thi1 Ume. However,
Armstrong knew Nl1on durlng
his vice presidential days
when the Marine was senior
presidential helicopter pilot
for Presldent Eisenhower.
and tv.·o niahts in relative~--------------------.
solltude before hb lrlp to
China.
' The President occupied the
home of base aimmander
Br ig. Gen. Victor A.
Annstrong, a sprav.•ling two-
Jevel , four-bedroom yellow
clnderblock house on a bluff
overlooking the Pacific.
From It, the President and
his wlfe Pat had a spectacular
view of an extinct volcarllc
crater rising from the sea,
and cllffs shrouded In mist.
It was this land that
Kamehamha the G r e a t ,
flawail's first king, chose for
a roya l n1eeting pla ce. The
peninsula became the sacred
land of Kamhameha. and to
this day ls called "l\fokapu,"
Hawalian for "Sacred Land."
Shaggy Gift?
Ni:-ron Eyes .Musk Oxe1i
SAN FRA NCISCO (UPI) -President Nixon v.·ould
like to give-Chinese Phemler Chou En.Jal two young musk
oxen named l\lilton and hfatllda, the City Recreation and
Parks Department disclosed Thursday.
Department general manager Joseph Caverly said
negotiation' were under way between his agency and the
\Vhlte House ror the tv.·o shaggy oxen bred at th e San
Francisco Zoo.
If the bargaining Is successful, Caverly said, the l\l'O
an imal s \Viii be flown from Travis Alr Force Base to
Peking \Vithin the next few days.
r-.-tusk oxen reportedly are found only in Canada,
Alaska and Greenland.
Caverly said Nixon \Vas partlcularly interested in" ...
ftfilton and l\1aUlda because they may well be the onlY
pair born in captivity 1n the United Statu.
Bugle calls, so much a part
of Marine life, were cancelled
during Nixon's stay, a
spokesman said, from 5:30 1.....--------------------'I a.m. reveille, to laps.
Jn1aoce1ats Abroad
Arn1strong, "-'ho now C<lm·
mands Kaneohe's Jst 1i1arh1c
Brigade. moved out or his
house and turned It O\ er t{)
the Nlxons for their stuy. 111
preparation for the arrival
Thursday, ne\v curtains v.·ere
installed in the JI-year-old
home, the carpet 1n the
master bedroom was cleaned
and the lawn and garden v.·ere
tldl•d.
The house, 15 miles fro111
the bustle of llonolulu. oc·
rupies 4,030 squnrc feet uf
Jh·lng space, is furnished 1n
cool shRdes or green and
yellow and is kept cool by
the breezy trade v. inds on
the bluff.
The water belO\V the hon1e
is considered too rou~h for
S\1'in1ming. and the spokesman
said boats entering the area
would be intercepted.
St>cretary of State \Vill1a1n
P. ltngers and Dr. Henry Klss--
inger. assistant lo the Presi.-
dent for national secu ril y af.
fa irs. were also staying in
officers' homes on the base.
The rest fl( the Nixon's staff
and the 87·member press
corps were at hotels.
PRESIDENT RICHARD NIXON RECEIVES TRADITIONAL HAWAII GREETING
Chief Executive Rests, Studies, Enjoys Spect1c:ular View of Cr1t1r
There would also be no night
flights to disturb the
President 's rest, the
spokesman said, and the
number of daylight Phantom
jet Olghts: scheduled for today
was reduced.
Four a11tiwar groups planned
a demonstration at the
base's Cront gate today, but
it v•as unlikely the President
\vould see them since he was
not expected to leave the base
during his stopover. A
spoke sman for the groups said
Watch Chinese Wine,
Nixon Warns Newsmen
S•e th • b•st in
m•n's w •a r for
'72! The best ••·
lection in town for
doubl• knit slacks
a nd •port coats.
Remember, t h e
best is alweys •t
.
Clti1ict De1iounce s
Nixo11's Policy
01i Eve of Visit
•,,faois111 Allia1ice' HONOLULU (AP) -Presi-tral Intelligence Agency·• on
dent Nixon took time out the rover, he was asked jok·
Russ Allies i11 Most Part Thursday Lo offer som~~dvlce ingly by a newsman v.·hether
to newsmen accorripanying the Chinese \\'OOld let the
him on the first leg of his party into the country wHh
journey to Communist China. th.at kind of material. ·
TOKYO (AP) -Communist China de·
nounced President Nixon 's foreign policy
today as it prepared ror his vislJ.
Share Dim View of Trip HowMa1iy
Chi1iese?
Wlio K11oivs
"Remember that Chinese Nixon, who apparently had
wine is Jlke brandy _ It's nol seen the atlas before, ex· amh1ed the cover, then not 12 percent," Nixon cau· laughed lot:dly and said: "This
tloned nev.·smen during the 10. "'iii probably show how much "\\'e firmly support the peoples of the By T~ Associated Press
y,·orld in their st ruggle against U.S. im· The Sov1el t.:nlon is adopting an aloof
the Socialist community.
Hov.·ever, some or lhe So\•iet press has
portrayed China's role in the meeting as
part of a "J\1achiavellian" policy of mak-
ing China dominant in Asia. ln doing so,
according to the official line, China has
abandoned any claim to leadership of the
Communist movement.
hour night from Washington __ "_:"•_d:.'..:"="J-"k="="='=a=:bo;O;u;:l=Ch=in=•=·'=' ==========. to Honolulu. r----
Nixon spent most of the l
non stop flight reading and
meet¥Jg with aides, ·news
secretary Ronald Ziealer said.
But shortly after the presiden-
tial jet took off, the President
and Mrs. Nixon went through
the aircraft chatting and shak-
ihg hands. .
peralist aggression." said the official "\\'ait and see" attitude toward President
Ne-.v China Ne~·s Agency in a long com-Nixon's trip to China, but the reaction is
mentary .. -0n Nixon's State of the \\'orld rnostly hostile among f\.1osC<)\v's Coin·
report and Defense Secretary ~felvin R. munist allies in Europe.
Laird's report to Congress this week. Commentators in the official press or
Tbe commentary made only one Poland, Czechoslovakia and Bulgaria see
specific mention of r\ixon's trip. saying: the visit either as an alliance of Maosim
"Referring to his visit to China and and American imperialism against the s· us 1 Soviet Union or as a vote·catching gim· ino-.. relat ons, h~ said: "Our ne \V mick by Nixon for the presidential elec·
dialogue \Yilh the People's Republic of tion.
China will not be at the expense of But in Yugoslavia, commentators \Vere
friends, Nevertheless, we rerognize that without exception more restrained, and
thi s process · cannot help but be painful some even cautiously welcomed the
for our old friend on Taiwan." move.
It added that Nixon declared his in· In East Germany and Romania the trip
tentlon to maintain U.S. diplomatic ties y,•as reported brieny ~lthout comment.
And in Hungary a sardoni c report about \\'ith and de!ense rommitments to th e the "Nixon Caravan" and the sudden U.S.
Nationalist Chinese govemn1ent and said fashion in things Chinese carried no
this shows Nixon 's government "bas not political comment.
yel relinquished its idea of 'one China , The most authoritative political com-
mentator, Yuri Zhukov, wrote in the two governments'.'' But this \\'as a Communist party newspaper Pravda : '-
modification of Peking 's usual complaint "The Soviet Union regards as natural I
against governments wltich pursue a steps toward s normalization of relations
"two-.Chinas'' poli cy. between the U.S.A. and China." He in·
The Nallonelist Chinese government dicated final judgment would be reserved
•·has long been spurned by the Chinese until Nixon returns to Washington.
people," the Communist agen cy declared , But, he warned, the Soviets could not
"and no force on earth can change the disregard evidence that Peking and
lt'icks
(
-
1-1,1u
·'Excuse me, sir. Our
Chinese chef insists on
being rei:ognized. '
WASHINGT0:-1 (AP)
China, as et·ery schoolboy
know s, has more people than
any other country · in the
world . But how many? Not
er en the Chinese kno~·.
The estimates range from
'153 million to 871 millon, says
the Populallon R e r e r e n c e
Bureau, Inc.
Writing in the gr o u p's
Population Bulletin, Leo A.
Orlearu, CWna research ex·
pert of the Library o f
Congress, says there is good
reason for this uncertainty.
"The ooly Chinese censw
that even approaches modern
dernographic standards was
taken in 1953 and the re.!lults
or thaL exercise are highly
questionable. Birth and death
registration, another means of
estimating population. h a_s
been made only sporadically,"
Orleans says.
"Isn't tltis exciting?" said
an ebullient Mrs. Ntxon 11 she
joined her husband In greeting
nev.·smen in the plane 's press
compartment.
Asked if he needed to prac.
tice with chopttlckl, Nixon
said he did not. But he pointed
to Mrs. Nixon and said, "But
she does." ,
Mrs. Nixon was asked what
clothlng she had brou&ht
along. She replled she had
one suitcase rilled with boots
an "Joor.es."
She said that she would prob-
ably be seen over aad over
again in the same dresses
because or a llm.Jtatlon on
luggage and stated that the
only purcha11e 11he had made
for the trip was a heavy coat.
resolve of the Chinese people to liberate "certain quarters" in Washington want to
Orleans writes that China
appears to have gone through
the s a m e medlcal-pubUc
health revolution that has
brought down the death rate
dramatically in many un.
derdeveloped countries alnce
World War 11 . To~a~lw~a~n~.";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~u~se~t~h~e~c~on~t~ac~t~s ~a~ga~in~s~l~~~·~~-m~le~re~s~IB~o~r;;;;;~;;:::;;:;~iiii,iiiii~~~~~ I ~'"li1m'i7~1:;r;:;¢3»~~~...., '1<t'~<f'"m
Nixon was shown a copy
of a China atlas prepared by
the Central Intelligence Agen·
cy. Pointing to a legend "Cen-
• .
' ,
THE SHOW-OFF
!!IP.tD!!!011n1 "=ft!l't' lll!!!111n=t !1!!1!!1•·--· . ·=-~ ----Eiiy iiiil&IN-'PC 11::.ii"ili •• :::::=r.11 ···=•1111 ··==: w ==·=·== ...
SALE
·--~-----I '-> "'*'--I .SWEATER
TOPS
s200
BIKINIS
.s2so
CA PRIS
$1 00 ' $ro
Fri. Sat. Sun. Mon. Feb. 18, 19, 20, 21
~
THE SHOW-OFF
2t ~ASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH • HUNTINGTON CINTIR
HUNTINGTON BEACH
•
•
Artist of the Month:
DONNA FRIEBERTSHAUSER
Exhibiting al our office now thru Much I ~
The works of Dona Friebertshauser, a distinguished craltsman
in our community, will be on display dail y at our office. Come
meet the artist and see her unusual exhibits of stitchery, weav·
ing, macrame, papler mache, batik and other cralts. Mrs. Frte-
ber'?f'u•er Is President of the Costa Mesa Art Leaeue and
instructs ·for the Cos(a Mesa Recreation Department.
California Federal SavinCJs •• •M I.NII ~tHClttlM • M•tf'I 1¥1t 11.f 11111111
2700 Harbor lllvd., Co1t1 Mou
2500 sq. ft. bag
SJ77
Give your mi~ed dichandta
and 4r1ss lawn the fa stest
shot 1n the Wesl •.. of solid
1rcen frow1h . Apply any
time o ie•r ror the moat .. wtnled lawn oa lhe block!
5000 sq. ft. bag
szg5
Atmovm1i'.rJr. ..
New £vv#fl'.w
/IM'~!
DICHONDRA &
LAWN FOOD
Thne fine dealers feature BEST Plant Food Savinp:
AREA WIDE GARDEN GROVE
• Ace Hardware Stores e Hasty Lawn & Garden
• Builder'• Emporium Supply • Build n' Save '
• i fontgomery Ward stores 1e1 Garden Grove Blvd.
• The Handyman Stores • TG& Y Home Center
• True Value Hardware 12491 Valley View
Stores • Two Guya Dept. Store
• IV. T. Granla 121110 Halbor Blvd. ANAHElll! • Lin-Brook Hardware • Ward & Har~gton
2!'4 IV. Lln<:oln IA!mber
• Payle" Dnig 771Y7 Garden Grove Blvd.
l!IO IV. Kattlla HUNTINGTON BEACH
• White Frant Nursery • Tw G ~ t Star 2222 S. Harbor Blvd. 0 uys ~p · e 9882 Adams Avenue COSTA MESA e Willia Front Nur1<ry LA MIRADA I e Woolco 3088 .Br111<> 153110 Mirada Blvd. El TORO G e Green Thumb I.A UNA NIGUEL
23712 Bridger Rd. • Niguel Harware 21a17 Gelty Drive
FOUNTAIN V A1J.EY NEWPORT BEACH
• Lln·Brook H1rdw11re • J. c. PeMey's
172<X> So. Brookhurat Fashion Jaland
• IVoolco SAN CLEMENTI!;
16061 Brookhunt • Bay Cllles Hardwue
FULLERTON 108 0.1 Mar Avenue
• w •rd " Harrlnaton TUSTIN
Lumber • S. S. Kresge
801-S. Slat..-cotlege·B·L1.~d.--:ioo-E:-"~street---
•
. ' •
--•
a DAD ,Y P llOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Movin g the Railroad
The 1trongest momentum in recent years js driving
the effort by South Co .. t groups to relocate the Santa
Ye RJ.ilroad from iU seaside route to an Inland area.
And in the driver's seat is the committee from the
San Clemente Chamber of Commerce which in recent
weeks has contacted -face-to-face -top state and
federal officials to seek support and advice.
And so far the U.S. Department of Transportation,
the California Department of Parks and Recreation and
several other powerful agencies have pledged help and
support.
San Clemente residents Paul Presley, Ed Chaflee.
James Slaven and several others are responsible for the
new drive.
Federal funds are available to finance complete
studies on the proposal, the committee has learned.
The next logical question is what agency should
apply for the grants?
Orange County planning aides this week hint that it
gbould be a county request, but only after months of
•tudy.
The request for grant funds for a formal study
should be made immediately to take advantage ·of the
momentum.
Disheartening Regression
Long·simmering differences ln educational philos·
ophy erupted into a full•scale .rill ·at this week's Laguna
school board meeting when three conservative trustees
'defeated a motion to seek federal funds for evaluation
ol the diltrict's~ individualized learning programs.
This may well mean the beginning of the end of an
innovative system that has won national recognition for
La,iW!a schools. ·
'The tr4ditionalists, firmly convinced their way is
the right way, seem to have no use lot the new teach·
Ing methods supported by the two more moderate mem· . .
bers of .tho board and are clearly opposed to any. further
attempu to achieve educational progress.
The three who voted against it are Board Chairman
William Thomas, Mrs. Patricia Gillette and Gerald
Linke. Voting for the grant were Mrs. Jane Boyd and
Dr. Norman Browne.
While a few parenta have reported problellll! with
the Laguna system, it has had vocal and widespread
acclaim from large numbers of parent3, as well as
teachers. But. as Laguna has discovered in recent years,
it's hard to argue with a built-in 3·2 votin~ majority.
Tied into the controversy over" teaching methods
was a remarkable show of support for district Supt.
William tnlom, led by a distinguished group of former
board members who in the past had backed the develop-
ment of the Laguna school program.
Ullom -and-h~Wf worked hard to achieve the
quality of education Laguna now enjoys, and it will in·
deed be disheartening for them to see their efforts
swamped. For the parents whose children are thriving
under the Laguna system, the idea of returning to a
McGuffy reader approach to education is difficult to
conceive.
But apparently the inexorable results of a careles5
election are only just beginning to be felt.
Something for Everyone
The curtain goes up today on Laguna's ninth Win·
ter Festival, a unique event th at has grown : to involve
almost everyone in the community in one way or an·
other.
During the 17-day celebration, there will be quite
literally something for everyone -more than 50 events
percolating · morning, afternoon and evening, and many
of them free.
The sleepy seaside village of past winters is nG
more -now it's festival time almost all ye~r in Laguna. s OVERl>UE
<;matemptuous Political Attacks Homebu yers
V ictims of
Overchargi ng
Social Policy Not They· Help the Communists
WASHINGTON Hbtorlcaily, It 15
necessary.·to p back a Jong way to find
~ent for lhe.contemptUOUJ political
attacks qo President Nlxon'11 peace ef-
f°"' L\>«ilcally, ther• Is r., prtcedent.
Domts\lc dbcontonf with the War of
IW, cr;ticfsm of the '1uncondltional sur-
render" ·doctrine ol
President ltOOsevelt
bi Wgr!d Wsr II -tbt.!lt are precedents to show that war
pCliCier are not .al·
Wlys popul1r.
But in the preserft !nit.nee. the •dil·
ference is ~ear. An
enfniy •tr~elY is ba5ed upon the collapse, not J"'~f
annies 'in ·the · field , but of American
putillc support of President Nhi:~n·s pro-
gram endlne· tfte war. ·A presidentiaJ
peaCe·plan, ·judged widely over ~e world
as 'fair,· reasonable and cbnoiliStory, is
und'er as strong attack from the
Preaident's pQlftical enemies aa from the
coiJnlry 's enemies.
THESE A1TACKS benefit the enemy's
strategy; and Ulal is as true now as it has
been •for -aeviral ,years past when op-
poiition to the war has gained ascen-
dancy. PreaidenUal Aide H. R. Halde-
man's unfortunate use of the words "aid
and abet" corresponded to the constitu·
tlonaJ definition of treason. thus upos-·
lng Haldemin 's crude innocence in
theae matters.
But the . anary response of the sur·
render.a.t,..any.pflce elements, t h a t
Halden\an 'was •ccusing Senator Edmund S. Muskte and Senator George McGovern
of tre_ason, la equally as crude and
dismally as innocent. Innocent because
these elements attribute to the Conunu·
r-·-........ -..... .,.... ~ , . .. : . .
Ri~h.ard WU80n' . ( r
' ' ·-
nist skle humane motivations which do
not exist.
It might conceivably be different if
either Muskie or McGovern had fpund a
formuJa bridging the gape in the
President's peace plan. But they have
not.
AT LEAST . MUSKIE hH not.
McGovern'• ·problem is a titUe different
in that he cannot bridge the gaps for
Americans who do not relish 1urrender
and humiliation in what began ·u a good
cause.
.Muskie's plan offers the · Communist
side litUe it could not get from Nixon. It
is to be doubted if the Communist side
trusts Muskie more, but maybe a little
more, than Nixon, which is not saying
much.
The Communist side knows that it is
dealing not alone with an individual in all·
powerful control of a naUon's policie~. It
knows that there is a historic continuity
of ·American policy, and it knows that
there is a difference between a man who
is running for office and one who has
been elected. That difierence lies in large
part with those who advise him after he
is elected and with the sudden dawning of
information he had not had and
responsibUlty he had not 1hared.
SO IT JS NOT conceivable that
~tuskie's proposal directly contributes to
a solution but may in fact delay it. as the
~esident contend!. But there ia another
passibility. Muskie·s vagueness on the
most essential point of c<mtlnued support
to a Saigon government supplies an ele-
ment of uncertainty which the Hanoi
gove~ment will wish to weigh in view
of the fact that Muskie has already
changed his mind about U:e war and
might change it again.
Hanoi might conceivably make a
clearer cut deal with Nixon at this stage
than if it toOk its Chances on Muskie . who
will not, in any case, be in ~ position to
act for nearly a year. Muskie then might
be able to claim an indirect responsibility
for ending the war through having chiv·
vied Nixon into mllking new concessions.
This Jcind of interplay shows what ill
wrong with a candidate for Presi dent
trying to be President before he is
elected in such a serious matter as end·
tngawar.
IT IS NOT A MA Tl'ER of treason or
patriotism. It is a matter of judgment nn
the course of action best calculated to
bring the' war to an end at the earliest
possible date consistent with this coun·
try•s interests.
Haldeman·s oversimplification has now
been defined and redefined by President
Nixon and Dr . Henry A. Kissinger, and
even Vice President Agnew has ex·
pressed the. thought in Jess blunt tenns
than Haldeman's.
Agn~w's use of the terfl). ''un·
dermining" the President 's peace efforts,
is regarded by some of the instant peace
advocates as too strong. and it may be.
But it should be evident by now that all
the politically inspired or patriotically in·
spired or humanitarian inspired attempts
f.o bring the war to an end by circum-
venting the President of the United States
are exercises in futility.
America's Expectation Gap
A patient recovertnc from -a nervou!
breakdown is Ukely to be introspectiv(!.
So it is with 1 n1tion. Social com·
mentators are busy trying to describe
whit went wrong in the United Slates in
the last decadl! -and what we must
guard against in the SevenUes.
Although the terminology may differ, it
aeem• to boll down to one thing : an ex·
peeiation 1ap. Collectively and ii·
dividually we have been led to expect
fuJfillments of national and personal iden·
tity that , H actually realized, would
si111al arrival of .the millennium.
With the Invaluable aid_ or hindsight. a
reasonable man can see that it was
foolish to nurture such great ex·
pectations. But ollr iMocent faith in the
1blllty of the United States to maintain crder ·abroad and spread affluence at
diAHGI COAST
DAILY PILOT·
/lobe;t N. Wetd, Publisher
Thc,ma.s Xetvil, Editor
Albert"W.: Batei
EdUorial POil• Ed<tor
Editorial
Research
home was easy to maintain In the heady
days of the early-to ·mid-Sixties.
SOCIOLOGY PROFESSOR Herbert J.
Gans notes I.hat when aspirations rise and
people begin to h6pe for a better way of
Hfe, they are only hoping. "But when eii:·
pectatlons heighten. people become mor'-
impatient, more critical of their society
when expect.atlons are not realized. and
eventuaJly, more active politically." The
American malaise. argues Gan s, has
come about because of the realization
that "improvement is no longer as easy
as It on~e was."
even more damaglng has been the In·
dividual aspiration gap. T. (;e()rge Har-
ri!. editor of Psychology Today. com·
plai'ns that "lt's as lf some idiot had r11!-
ed tht ante on what It takes to be a
peraon, and the rest of us accepted It
withOut noUclng." Al an example, Harri•
taie& 1 look .at the demands placed on
loved cnea : ;
"Family member! 1ssume thal they
ought to love t1Ch other. understand one
·another. or at least 1et their hoslllitles up
ffO.D.~. A1 1ny veteran of the Vlctorl1n
novel lnl!C>ws, Jn the J>Vl, few mothers
and almost no tithers lbug~t such emo-
luxurtes. A wlte Who OiK:e con·
1idettd RX a mariill duty now expectii: to
be an «8Hmlc pl8311\ate. lntolleclual
companion, and sn>wth partner, 11 well
u an emotionally Independent per.son. a
crnu behveu Madame PoJJll'ldour and
Madame Curie."
UNFORTUNATELY. lt Is easier lo
111rouse expectations than it is to turn
them off. Professor Gans. for one, wams
that even ii the Vietnam war can be end·
ed and the dilliculUes that came In its
wake removed, "there remains the prob-
lem or~ which and whose expectations
can be achieved, and whose not.'' And
editor Harris concludes that we may
have become "the ,victims of our own
sense of inadequacy -and easy target&
for the worried minds to whom nootalgia
is an ideology."
While reallsm may have set Jn on the
economic front, new expectatJons are
being created every day on other l~ve\!i.
Young people hope to transform society
now that they can vote at age 18.
Womeri"s Lib has turned housewives and
secretaries into tigers prepared to fight
for shared housework and eciual pay.
' .
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Lagun1 '1 pollUcal pot boUs •8•in
with the Lcrt rttaU ll'lO\t'.emenl
We should ll&ton i.. both !idea,
lben make: Jt 11 decisive vote one
Wll' or· the· otbcr.
-.J. K. D.
'nit ... _ ,...... ,...,... ....... ..,
-11>t.4rf1Y ftllM ef ._ MWMO..W, s.llf
....... _.,. " ·~ ht. D.tlllPJ ,, ....
W ASHJNGTON -Homebuyers arf!
overcharged S78S million a year by title
companies and title lawyers. Yet an ef·
fort by Senate reformers to end the
chiseling has bogged down.
The inaction of his coUeagues has so
frustrated Sen. \\'illiaril Proxmire, D-
.Wi~.. that he has
accused Senate
Banking Chairman
John Sparkman, D-
Ala., of stalling .
In an exchange of
letters meant for
one aoother's eyes
only, Proxmire told
Sparkman :.hat his
delay of hearings
\\'iii cost Alabama voters St• miUto.n in
title abuses.
"1 BELIEVE IT is vitally important.''
wrote Proxmire , "that the Housing sub-
committee take prompt action to reduce
real est_ate closing costs •.. " He asked
for hearings on his reform bill so it could
be taken up in February along with
Sparkman's omnibus housing package.
Sparkman wrote Proxmire a courtly
response. "I prefer to go ahead with my
original plans ," said the Alabaman.
But hi s meaning was clear: the title
company scandal would be swept under
the rug.
SPARKMAN1 ONCE a' reformer
himself, didn't lnention what has become
an open secret in the Senate. For years,
he has dmonstrated a special affection
for the banks which, in turn, control
many title companies.
As a result. all but the mo.5t pro-
gressiJe b<\.Q,ks are opposed to Proxmire's
reform plan. Proxmire, fully aware of
1Sparkman's allegiance to the banks, shot
back 11 "Dear John" Jetter to him on
January 13.
"I was disappointed,'' he told Sparkman
bluntly. For Sparkman had already put
off executive sessions on the omnibus
housing bills for six months. Another
week's delay. Proxmire felt, would cause
no legislative pinch.
ON THE OTHER hand. II Sparl<man
didn't allow the title reform hearings,
this was "equivalent to delaying any ef.
tective C.Ongressional actioo on the cJo.s-
ing costs problem for at least another
year,"' Proxmire. said.
atoxmire cited an in-depth Washington
P(!if strfes on kickbacks and other titJe
11c1nda1r in tlie Washington area. On a
nationwide' basis, the a v e. r a.g e
hom@buyer. said Proxmire, is overcharg·
ed $211 on closing costs.
"I es\lmale that home b1.1yers In the
Sttte Of Alabama were overcharged St 4
m!lliori for re1l estate closing costs dur·
Ing illil.'l Proxmire odvlsed Sparkman,
•who ts rwi'ning for reelection this year. . .
SPARKMAN REFUSED In chonge his
mind. In I se<!Ond. equally ttiurUy letter
to ·Piotmlre a few days ago. Sparkmln
stuck wtth the bankers and title company
e:xecullve.s.
Corporation's Jc,~
There Is an enormous amount of talk
these days about the · · s o c i a I
responsibility" of corpora tions. But a. Car·
poration. actually. has only f "' n
responsibilities: to show a profit. a.nrJ to
do nothing that is
injuriaus to the so-
cial fabric .
Environmental. cc·
onomic. and human
problems are not lhe
proper concern of
corporations. except
in a negative sense:
they must run their
.bus iness with a de-
cent regard for the overall good of the
society. _/
BUT THIS IS VERY difierent from
saying that corporations should. or must,
involve themselves in social policy. Who
decides which social policies a re
desirable? Once the corporation plunges
hip-Oeep into such matters. the dangers
outweigh the possible benefits.
If a corporation behaves as a good
citiien behaves. it would be fully
discJiarging il!i duties to the society. If its
product is sound, its merchandising
honest. it3 advertising reliable, and if it
refrains from injuring the environment
beyond reparation, then it has fulfilled Its
role .
Becaust society at large has abdicated
Its basic responsibilities. we keep asking
!pecific institutions to do jobs for which
they are not equipped .
WE DEMAND THAT educational in·
stitutions, for instance, take over a host
of tasks they cannot handle. All an
~. . . '
Sydney J. Harris •
' )
ordinary school i:an do is teach JI ch ild to
read. "'rite. count, and acqu ire a few
creative skills. Instead . v.·e expect the
"l'ichools lo provide moral, psychological,
vocational. and every nther kind of
training that the family . the church and
other institutions should be taking care
of.
In the same way, JI corporation is part
of the market mechanism of our
ectlnomy . Its function is narrow and well·
defined; if it Performs th;it function well,
we can ask no more. And If we ask more,
we are liable to get both greater cor·
porate dominance over our lives. and
greater goverrunent dominance over our
market mechanisms.
CORPORATIONS ARE rush.in~ into the
11rea of "social responsibility" aS a v.1ay
of making amends for their previous
transgressions. and to impress the public
With their "good citizenship." But the
way to make amends and to impress the
public lies Inside the b u s i n e s s
mechanism, not out5lde it. It consists in
turning out the best produ cl, at the
fai rest price. with the maximum of com·
petitibn and the minimum of en·
vironmental degradation .
Government. at all levels, are the
proper instruments for effecting changes
in social policy. We mµst make our
goveniments more responsible to these
needs, and not pass the buck to business.
'Get Out of the V.N.'
To th~ EdilQr:
Once ag:ain, the United Nations has
failed to fulfill the objectives set forth in
its charter -I.e ., to prevent wars, in!ure
peace and further the economic progress
of our troubled world.·· 'l
Yet, in spite of such high-sounding
phraseology (with endless rhetorical
debates) at no time has any consideration
been given by either the Security Council
or the Genera.I Assembly to trying to
come up with a Mlution to the years of
strife and destrucUon Jn Indochina.
Mai lbox
l.tttrs ~ ,.fd.,, 1,. wtlc•"'•· "'l""lllY
wr1ter1 U!tulll '*""''' 111111• 1111tMMt 111 lOe Willnl•
... leu. Tiit •11111 ,. <ellfffli.t '"'''' " 111 H•IW Ir 1111111111'9 llbtt It rlll'r'<'llfl. All ""''' llllllf Ill•
,, ..... ~1111-.... ''"'""'' 1tllf1•"· 1111 llll''ltl ""' ... Wllllflllt' ... re11111tl It llllliclHI rtlMn II '""'•Ill. PMtry Witt Ml M l\lbll91td
endeavoring to find a solution to the ln·
EVEN WITH TifE recent "!II out '' tolerable political And military con--
peace plan of President Nixon , not one frontatioDS In tndochina . In so doi ng , ca n
member of the U.N. advan!ed any cnm· it be that l~se-same members of the
t:Denl3 on the merits of this proposal . Thts U.N. endor~ tlftpfesent POW blackmail
fur~ lack of c:oncern cU_maxes the and ransom tat::tics or Hanoi ? maQY"years of Jnd.1fference displaytl"'by .. H h th 1). N. -from lhe violation~. «11! ere t en , is furth er evidence as to
{lt°ilJva-C<lnference by H.!-~Uo ~ why ui U.S. should get out or the
current complete disl1far°Pof • U.N.-and the U.N. should gtt out of the
venUoos of tbe International Red Ci1ls. U.S.!
as regards the treatment af priJOners of AL N. SEARES
war.
The continued "me.ntal blindness'' and
1'1lns of cmUsslon" by the U,N. were
further evtdmctd by the recent junket of
the Security Council IQ Addlt Ababa. Tbi•
was done 11t a C08t of approximately
•$150,000. thereby adding· IQ t~e pre~nt
oj)eratlng deficit cf $§8 rnlllion dollars.
According to the report of Times writers,
"Over 100 resolullor\3 were made In
vt:rbal escalations, with nearly nothing
aOdlmpllthed."
B11 George --~
Dear Gtorlj:e:
M;v brnlher·ln·l&w "'~11ts ,,, 111et
ln the newspar,er b111ont~.'\. Jle
does nolbing but han't 11roond the°
corntr saloon 111nd drink. howl'ver.
Do you kMw any n"W.8!'1tiperm~n
who would be wlllil'll lo help him "
E. R.
Deor E. R.:
•
EiecuUve Viet President Witll•m ' AND LET'S NOT forget either how the
McAutlffe ol tho American LandJ'itle majodly ol lhe U.N, mcml><rs voted the
AAoclation, tho ricll •nd powerfUI UUe U.S. down (with glee! on our resolution
lobby, hotly disputes ProJmire'1 view ol requeaUng a "two China" policy! •
Yes. A gre111t ml.l)y, On (ecr1nd
thought, r. lhJnk ltU run ove r 10 the
saloon and help him drink myaelf.
(Wlitn problems pile up on yoo,
tum to GM>t~ for aki lhd rrrmfort
ond -neverm· d. He Jllll lost bis
1hovcl.1
tM Industry. McAullffe told us the So, once •gain. tbete members of the
rt.fnrm prolfam ml,;ht wind up adding to U.H.. ,who 1..have bttn rt.Oip ienu of over
homeowners' com by cutting tbo.IUpply 'iii1 billion of U,S.-Am-h>v• exire&.~
ol 1DO<ip&• money. lootb their diJdoln snd lack ol concern ID . ~
\ •
'
' ' '
• t
• •
A
A
Ii
R
wi
th
it
fa
(o w
· St
m
I
tol
" • "d
pu
wi
trn
ed
ch,
••!_---''-------'------'~~~~~~---~~------~·------------'---~~~------------------------------------'·'~'----~·~·--------------~--~
.. '• '
'
L. M. Boyd
Most of Cast
Gone With Wind
"I bave JotJM 11iuol, CynUI ! 1noe wltb &be wind,
"Flun1 roae11 kaal, 1'kttou1I)' wl~ the tllr(1111."
!mttt Dowson
consider the ea1t of m1Jor aotora and actresses Jn
that classic film •·oone With the Wind." Am asked who
among them , if ariy. 1urvli1 loday? Only Olivia DeHav.
ill~nd . C.one are Clark Gable. Vivien
Leigh, Leslie Howard , Laura Hope
Crews, Paul Hurst. Harry Davenport,
Ward Bond, Hattlt: Mt!Oanitl, Oeorge
Rttves. Olin Howl1nd. Gone al~
writer Margaret Mitchell, sc~arist
Sidney Howard, director Victor Flem·
ln1. dNi1ntr Wllll1m MenllN. Heo'•
In lhem 111 -olln~I And tn Miu Dt
H1vlll1nd, too, the pretty l1dy .
• All TO Jfs number of earthquakes
no doubt }'Ou know Japln ranU No. I In the world. But
can you "•me the n1Uon th1t r1l11 Nn, I? N1lther couJd
t. It's Italy, tums out. '
THI RARD FACl'8 -Jy lh• lime they're 25, hall
th e min In this country ll'fl l'l"l&rrled. The 11me c~ bl
said lf'lr only 1 quarter of the men in Europe.
41..L RIGHT. one million doll1r1' worth of SlOO bills
in 1 1toek would bt l!I lllchll hllh. remembor lhll.
THOllll LADIES in Women'• Ub m1y bt fil d lo hear
th1t flrls definitely are better pearl divera thal\ men.
1'h1t's been proveri .
11" A W0~1AN is lo comm it murder . lldds run three
nut of four she'll dfl Iha! lhing in her own home, most
prnbiiblv in her kltchtn. if a man commits murder in his
hnme. he'1 mMt 1pll"to ·rift. il in the bedroom.
QUER IES -Q, ''How thick l1 th11~ ice over the
Arctic Ocean?"'
A. &•ven to 10 feet in mo!t pl 1c11.
Q. "WHAT'S the smallest sLlte capital?''
A. Carson City. Nev.
Q. "HO"' mi:iny ~l..!rting college freshmen actu1lly
iet their rlr,erees'.'"
A. About 45 pe rcen t.
ONE WOMAN in 12 lrist vea r lost some ROrl of cash.
Only one man in 20 did like~·ise. By "lr>!t.'' I mean 1aid
currency nr coins just disappeared fr om her purse or his
w1lle t. Hnw do you account for the fact lht womtn in
lhe:te unfortunate situations considerably outriumber the
men?
Nh i\1AiTER how tricky the inachine might be, it's
i Ot to be based on one of si x mechanical principles.
N~e them. Sprin~ that test query 11t the diMer Llbl1 on
your f11mil y mechan ic. He hasn "t C'Ompleted his C'Our111. if
he rtoesn'l say the levrr. the "'heel anrl 11111, the pul11y,
tht inclined plane. the wedge anrl the screw, Tomorrow,
bAsic chemistry. Don 't miss it.
Alidrca.• mnil tn L. M. Bo11d, I'. 0 . Box 1,15,
Newport IJench , Cnllf. 92880. ·
Merger of 2 Airlin es · .
Flayed by Continental
WASHINGTO N fAP I
Continental Air Lines says a
m1r1tr -0f Amer ican Airlines
and Western Air Lines would
tri11er off a series -0f other
mer11rs and u I ti m a I t I y
elimlnate the smaller trunk
11irlln1s.
Continenlal was the first of
11 1lrlinP.s to be heard in the
concludln: da y or oral argu-
ment before the Ci vi I
Aeronautics Board in op-
po11ltlon to the pr n po s e d
American-Western merger.
. Let M. Hydeman fnr Cnn-
tinent1l said the merger was
Nader Sees
[,eg·ali ze d
Mari juari a
OGDEN, Utah !UPI I
Ralph Nedtr ••:r marijuana will bl legalize ln America
before 1971i.
"I am not advocatin$!: thal
there 1Muld be no controls but
it. should be legi:iliw:I and. in
fact, will ~ within the ne1t
lour years," Nader 11 a i d
Wedn11d11y night al Weber
· State College.
' "N1Utnwide studies !how
-marlju1na <f.G be le'ss hatmful
today than alcohoL"
The cnnsumer advoc;tle also
told a cheering crowd of 2.000
student.a that the hot dog. car.~
' and pO!lution are among
''dtadry fra uds" foisted on the
public.
He 1aid processed food like
wlenert ar~ often "nearl yj rot-
ten" mea t \taken form diseas-
ed animals and injected with
ch.emical1.
clearly 11 b11d tµ'le . entirely in·
Cflnslsten! with CAB prece-
dent. 11nd should be dis.11p-
pro\'ed as reCQmmended by
the board 's examiner.
Hydeman 11ld lh.llt to ap-
prove a mercer of airlines .11.s
h1rge .11.s American a n d
Western would be "1Uicidal.
particularly where there is
absolutely no need f11r the
merger ."
He said the 11irlines are just
startinfl to recover from ~e
shock of rece1sion , ind the
pi:oposed merr~r wouh! be •
major set b1ck to t h a t
recnvery.
Hydeman 1ald the merger
~1ould both 1timul1lt and
force other mergers.
He 111id Continental's pre!I·
dent. Robert Six. has made it
clear that Continental would
be forced In merge.
Northwest h;is 11 I r t a d y
reacted Ul its proposed merge'r
with N1tiQnal, and even Trans
Wnrld1 Pin American and
UnlllCI h1vt 1hown 1erlnu1
advent effect• lhat would
j\111tlfy their merg ing . h1 si-iid.
P lan Voi ced
For Gambling
LOS BANOS I AP )
Legalized gambllng alona 1 !;.')..
mile st.rip of centr11I Californie
has .been• propoeed by • Los
Bano\' J'han whn 1aid petitions
will be circul1ttd lo put the
idea on the Nc>vamber bal!()t.
The meas4re would limit
c11sino-style gamblfng to 11n
11rea along the San J°'quln
Valley'g western f on l h 11 11
roughly from San Lu I 1
reservoir Miulh to Cotlln11 .
said Vernon Frttm11n, 1 real
11t1t1 dev1l"ptr.
*SINGLE ADULTS*
FOTO DATE
If 'f'Oll w 111I •11 •nur•d
W•'f' fo l'IOOI li11t f1 poo~IO
willrt wlllll'l'I 'l'OU Clll ld~11fifv
-ltl FOTO DATE toll ye11
litow '(Oii C•ll •1t 1iv1 I 00'1
ef...,ltfu•ff dotto ••l•rt•lt lir
t1lli1111 1714) 111.1110 .,
f11JI <416·11?1
24 hr. t•o'4ff ........
No .w.-•11 -N• e .. ,,_,
--·-.. :o.--•
~f>.(;tlAVOX STER~o
• • •
"AJLV PILOT 7
SAYA~IA
During . this once:e-yeer ev~~t. nio1t
Magnavox models ere sulistooitolly
price-reduced: Sove up ·to $15 ~ on
Color Stereo Theatres ... up to.$ I 0 I
on fine furniture Color TV ••• •Up to
$102 Stereo consoles ... up to $80 on
Stereo Component Syst ems.· Sove on
Monochrome TY, Tope Recorders and
Radios, too. All have the bu ilt -in per.
lormence end reliability that hove
mode Magnavox o leader in the field
of !inset qual ity electronics for over
60 yeors!
, a ci v.i JJ11 .. 1 r.
Stereo FM /AM R~o-.-· '· ston1-model 9290 offers
SAVE $25 great Magnavox sou nd plus wonderful ver11tility. 20-Watts EIA
music po111er, an Air-S uspension. System with two High-Com-
pliance 6" and two 3.Y.i.''..s pi;iakers, plus the J)rec ision Automatic
equipment and headphones. Dust cover included. Now $22495 Mark I re cord player. There are even jack.5 for optional tape
SAVE $51
NOW $248
Astro-Sonic Stereo FM /AM
Radio-Phonograph-in beau-
tiful Med iterranean styling.
Model 3673 will bring you the full
b~1 uty of mu1lc-wlth ~O-Watts
EIA !TIUSic pOwer, two H igh~
Efficiency 1 O'" Bass Woofers and
two 1,000 Hz. ~xponentl1I Horn1,
plus the Micromatic player. Mod~
em, Esrly American, l1al i1n Classie
and French Provincial 1tyles, too.
SAVE '51
SAVE $21 on slim and trim por·
teble Color TV model 6112 with 12•
d iagonal measure pic1ures, tel11 coping
d ipo le anlenna and convenient retractab le
c!rrying handle. Perfect on tablea, shelves
or bookcases-lnywhare I
I'
NOW '248
NOW s329
SAVE S10 on FM /AM Rad io/
Cassette Recorder A.C/DC model 9041.
FM /AFC, a uto level, t.e.lescoplng FM
antenna, battery and level meter•, ton1
control, ca ssette eJecl, record monitor,
end ol tape al arm . Batteries, ca311Ue .
NOW $8 995
Compact aolid~atata stereo 'F.M /.
AM llldlo-l'tlollf'!-ln 11n1ty mllld
E1rJy American atyllng. A.lthougf>.
modestly priced~ qua lity hes not been
socrificed I Model .3422 will delight
you with it1 big tound and tonal quality.
15-Wans EIA mutlo poWtr/four high
fideUtv 1pea~ers, plu1 Automttlc Merk'!
rtcord pl1yor. Contemporary 1ndf.1•d·
ltlt'l'lneen ltYtN 11re 11lso available.
Yolircl'loic& of three gl"Ntvalues.
Magatcavox. ' .
.,
• VE Slo S1mul11ed TV plolure. SA on superb porform-
in g porta ble TV modal 5011 with pt16t o·
sharp 1 2~ diagonal measure pict u~11, pre ·
set VH F Fine Tuning and a deta chable sun
shield for glare-free viewing in brightly·
lighted or sun-filled rooms.
portable rtcllo
modol 1008. Only 4l!' high, tt offOll big
room-filllng ~ound . E!t!y to read &lid .. rvtt
dial with Log Scale and Vern ier Tuning,
built· in antenn-a. Earphone '1id battatl ..
included. Ttkt It wherever yo~ go. $8995 NOW $ as· " 7 ,
l
46 YEARS OF DEPENDABLE SERVICE I
GOLOINWF'T & 401 MAIN STlllT lllOOll:MUllT & ;
WA llNllt WAlN.11
HUNTINGoTON IEACH HU NTING.TON llACH F-OU,..TA1N YAl.llY
'Un 0 11ly s.,.Jto & s.1,, lol•• Only •
142°15'' 5J6·1$61 ''Z·l4S'
1 ..
'
'rJd11, Ftbnwy 18, 19n DlJL.V PC.tf --
< ,. . '
••• . . •
\ p E, .••
'
/ ··SHINCTO
. s :\ .
• • •
BIRTH BAY FREE!! ••
SA A FREE CHERRY PIE
•• TO TllE FIRST 600
SAT.· SUN.· MON. PENNEY CUSTO.MERS
19th. 20th. 21st .. SAT. MORNING
FEB. 19th
<JNE PIE l'ER CUSTOMER ·
.. Sale Starts Sat. Morning, 10 a.m •
YELLOW TENNIS ACRYLIC
, WOMEN'S
TENNIS BALLS • RACKET XNITTING YARN
DRESS SHOES
WOMEN'S
WIGS
$1 2~AN OF 3 :
$)22
-... , le 92' • $422
• English import •
.. • Ertr1 tough cover
Imported wood
Orlon® Acrylic Sayelle®
Spring Colors Machine Washable .. .L00 %0ynel .
• Limit 2 C.ns
light weight Composition Heel Full Range of .. Modacrylic
per c:ustomer Sizes S.9 Colors ·A1it.orted iColors ·
Adjustable Cap
WOMEN'S
ALL conoN WOMEN'S MEN'S
SPORT SHIRTS PAJAMAS FASHION C.ASUAL SOX MEN'S '
I SHORT Sl.lEVE .
BLOUSES
J
$122 -~PR.$,92 DRESS SHIRTS ·
$18 2 92< .3 ,?502
100 % Virgin Acryr.c
Short Sleeves Assorted Prinh
'
Many Colori
Stripes & Prints ' Machine W .,h r Long Sleeves O~• Si11 Fits All Aasorted Stripes
Machine Wash Sizes 32-38 Solids ·& Polka Dots
. ' "
. Long Point CoU1r
Sizes 8-1 8 Sizes 32-38 Sizes 141/r 17
. . .
' ' ' ' . ' • ·f~ , . . . . ,. . ..... .. ~"" .
-WOMEN'S ·MEN'S
MEN'T KNIT CROCHET 1 . BEmR
DRESS SHIRTS
MEN'S DOUBLE KNIT ..
' J.ONG PLAY
S"AWLS :SLAC·K.S SPOIT · SHIRTS .
-RECORD ALBUMS
.$222 $ 22
. '
$ 22 $262 l'& $]22
• • •
' '.
Solids & Fancy I 00 '/. A cry tic
Long or Short
Lt. Blue, Navy, Grun & • Long Sleeves
. :Your F1vorite
Spring Colors
•
Sleeve s • One Size Fits
Brown. Stripes & Prints • Recording
Machin• W 1sh1ble
. ..
Sizes 141/z-I 7 Al.
Sins S-M-L-XL Artists.
• Si 3o-40 Latest S....nds
-• ' . •
;;: • IN OUR COFFEE HOUSE
' SPECIAL
' CHEltRY CHEESE CAKE
• ~ AND COFFEE .• • ONLY~i2~ .
-·
• STORE . HOURS: . .. '
I
SA?U DAY. 10·6 -~ ._ . 1 . . S&l,.D~;t' 12 • 5 ' ' ... MONDAY 10°9:30 •
• • •
I
1
\ JCPehneY
Thevel\IM are he1* 9"ryday. .
---r-~ __.._
: 24 FASHION ISLAND .
NEWPORT EACH
-1
.
.
I
•
PRE·~ ••
A·S.Hl.NGTO:N ·
B.l.RT.HDA.Y
'
At!·
' :,· • I •• I ~-t-'
I' I ',, .
' ' . , ,..
CASUAL
·PANTS
, ~ J .. JJ w-
,._, w •• , .
11 ... t1
Jt 0111,
122 I 22 ' 4
.UOPAID PllNT
SLEEPWEAR
Hy ... Tricet & · A.ldfM® Ill .
... !" .. w ..
"' ,
~:~r,=;.;;m~
AC9Ult YARDAGE . TOWEL ...... ...,..
ENSEMBLE , ..... .
.,. . $1.22' ' 42
•• 62¢ ~:h_ 1 _yd.
. •••.· 32¢ ~
BIKINI
J PANTIES
I 1H% N,...
~ Ihm 4.14
~=';;;;;;;:.J
fu!2«
,
..
,SMOllf Sl-111'
PllllOYER SWEATERS .
',~
. "" BUTCHU ·srn
1.,i ...... ·--
ccfl,_OT
PANTS
111%C.....
, ... PMll ...
•
I,
'
--SHOP THE EASY WAY
-1USE YOUR
PENNEY CHARGE CARD
I
MIN
LON• CULOm.
LOUNGER
... &'WlllM .. ....
~ .sa-·P.S.M·\
. 1""' Mirrer , ........
"-lti'-Klt .. .., ......
62~ .
'"'"" c..,.. ··-
' ... ........ ,.
Ceftla I II a
.•
' '
•
A FREE CHERRY PIE
TO THE FIRST 600
PENNEY CUSTOMERS
SATURDAY MORNING
FEBR,1.JARY 19th
,.... ONE PIE PEfl. CUSTOMER
SALE STARTS SAT.
MOR"ING, .10 .. A.M.
SU.NDAV .. AR.Ir ' llOMAY
WHJLl: QUANTITIES LAST!' ·
' ' '
WE ARE CELEBRATING . .
'
. ..
GE~GE ~WASHINGTON'S BIRT~DAY
WITH A -.l;RUCK .LOI D
,, . . ··-'··. . ~-·.. .... ' , .. . EV.ENT .
' ' STANDAid>· . '
BEDDING · PLANTS
PONY PACK
.RO Si
77' & UP
WOMIN
GOLF SHOES .._ .....
A.ti , .. c:......
...... 71'• ~ 4¥2'
·\ ....
WOMll''I
fOW .. CUrT
WATCHES
w .. ' Shc.k a..;.,.
17·21 .,_... L1082
...... ' t..11 .... ,_ ...
" -2c :
l =-.1
JCPennev
The values are here flViry day.
~
24 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH
,
"""BOil1s'"'' I ----. -.... I 422~1
---~ -··
.,.w.,, ,,......, 11. an OA/l Y "LOT 9
MAftlLL
GLIDERS .... ,,. ,, ... ,..
., ..... 11111
... le .
92~
o C1tm1 , .. 0,.,,-'
JUMPER
· CABlES Otle ,., . c .......
0111•'> AU...UfHll
COATS .., ... _... --.... c.4on
132~ L -.. ~
"~W&':t' I
I Cih I
··~c~
T -
I 622 t _J
-·.
( 60NLf l 1 '4 " DRILL ·
lhitl• ,,_.
' De111tle
1111111 ... , •
---WALNUT 1
END TABLES
V1°I" ieclcel
w/l q het &
l tf•lltleM 1822
WOMIN 'I
.,., ... VILOUI
JACKETS
D•11IJI• 1, ... ,14 .. ,,,., l eek ,, ..... ,,
"'-•-1 ~ t14--J ... 1J W JIM 01
POLYESTER STRAWBERRY I TIRES I I PLANTS 11222 ;) '" : 'et•~1) I 2 ~ 122 r.1,,\I '
/ 4 . \..,' ......;,.-..;;;;;~
tM91io ei.u .. !, ·-21116
OMIWI
TENNIS
DRESSES ·--..... -22
MON •• fll. 10·9:30
TUE.S .. WED .·THUllS. 10·9:00
SAT. 10·6
SUN. 12·5
I .
' • : ..
ll'AI~ Pll~ ··-·-'"•
.
I •,.f;:+<r 61" t
• • • • •
F,,d1y~ Frblouary 16. 1972
·' • ' '
•
It's All You~•
Carole Kalley or Salin11 hai her hands IUll with
mother11 pet boa -conatrlcto~ It Hfl1"11 that '161nor· ·
ila." the 10,PQWld llrptnt. (rtwltd under duh nl ·
ramlly ctr and was trapped>ror thrH d1y1 before
rescue work-ets ·could pry it out. Carole can hardly
'''ail t9..Jtand it over to mother.
~----·
··I' ' • .. ~
U11derworld Linked
'f o H ot~l in Vegas
LOS ANGELES I AP I -The
Frontier Hotel i:1nH g~mbling
casino In U.s VegRs was built
in part wllh . "nonkosher or
black money" by a group
""hose "real boss" was
Anlhony Joseph Zerilli, an
alleged Detroit underworld
leader, & government witness
his testified.
Louis Feil , in charge nr
financing the hotel project for
a New York holding company
in 1966-1967. testifi!d Thursday
LA Gangs
To Halt
Fighting '·
LOS ANGELES iAPI
Nine gang leaders ( r o-• .m
predominantly M e x I c a n •
American East Los Angeles
ha \'e decided to h111l fightina
and 8eek better social con·
ditinns in the area.
Lee Cortez, president or
newly formed Federation nf
Bt1rrios Unidos . said the group
will y,·ork specifically Inward
incorporating the East Lits
An~eles area so it can
organize ii.~ ov.'n police force .
''\Ve have been forgotten
people," said Loren1tl Ybarra,
amther feder.:ition mcmhf'r.
"No~y did anything fnr the
kid on the slreet. sn Wf' decid·
!Ct. lo Oo for our!lelves. ''
forlez said hi~ _Rroup \\'111
\\'Ork to end drug abuse find
what he termed polkC• hara~s
menl and inequities in public
education.
Pie said one nf thC' first h1sk!!
the federation will undertake
1s to draw in other gangs in
the area and seek Rn end to
the righting.
in the federal court tri;il nf
six men and the Empri~
Corp. or puffalo. N.V .. ac-
cused of conspiring to lake
over the hot.el secretly to skitn
gambling · profits. The plot
allegedly occurred before the
hotel was &old to billionaire
Howarl:I Hugties.
A~ one New York meeting
as the hotel was nearing com·
pletion in July of 1967, Feil
said he demanded payment
of exlra-cost5 incurred.
He q1.1oted the promoters as
saying they had the cash but
could not produce it im-
mediately because it ' was
Ynori,kosher or black money."
The remark was nol further
explained, bot observers said
this refers lo money obtained
Jrom illegal sources ..
~ii ~id those attending the
mteUng were Zerilli; Jack
Shapiro, casino executiv!!, and
Maufice H. Friedman, a. Las
Veg,1s d.eveloper.
1ile six defendants in ·lhe
trial are Zerilli: Shapiro:
Mic:hael Santo Polizzi. 47: of
Grosse Point Shores, 1'-fich.;
Anthony Giardano. 57, of St.
LoJis, Mo.: Peter J ame.s
Bellanca. 37, of Detroit. and
Arthur J. Rooks. fi7, of
Detroit.
Al ioto Trial
Will Resun1e
\1ANCOU\1ER. \\1.11sh. 1UPll
-Trial of the $2.3 million civil
la"'·suit ageinst Maynr Joseph
AliQto of ~n Francisco and
two others will take up next
Tuesd.11y whert it left off when
the trlal judg!! died .
\Judge Stanley· C. Sodcrland
ruled Thursday tha t "justi~
clemand.!i that we proceed"
end denied motions for a
mistrial.
P~ifie Goldfish · Farm
POND Fil TERS
IMPOlTID
fl.OATINIO
Hf rrotei11
KOi
FOOD
5,000 GAL.
PER HOUR
J•p1n111 Matllf. pUlftJll,
cl11n" li9hh, •nd prllltth
f vtn1• pend lar v••u, Fi+. •l-
ma1t ~nv pnnd b•c1u11 ii
1••nd1 an 1djull•bl1 1191. Na
plu111bin9 n1t111•fy, 1111d1 1f
lau"th l11n9 l11tin 9 pl11lic.,
r11dv 111 u11.
~' Choose from Southtnl
CollfOrll)a'• ia<9HI Hit<·
!I•• of Ktl • T)oplcot fllll,
°"" DAIL 'f 11·1
Cte ... T.....ur ..... 893·7105 '
14842 !D~ARDS Sl, WESTMINSTER
'•
-. -
Trial Set-at -Last-·-----~
For A11gela Da vis
Adiilt-consent -1t-U-OODWILL
Sex mll .. Sougn-t --3-1-ndustries
SAN JOS~ 1API -After
the lonjlest pretrial hearings
In Callfornl.:t history, a
superior Court judge hR.!1 .set
a Feh. 28 starting date for
the trial of black revolutiOR19'
Angela Davis on murder, kid·
nap and conspiracy charges.
Judge Richa rd E. Arnason
sel the date in a close hearin~
with prosecUlion and dP.fense
attorneys Thursday afler de-
nying defense requesll'i to
move the trial fnr a second
time and hive the state p::i,v
the costs of Miss Davis'
defense.
Arneson also re j e ct e d
defense motions challeng1n.i::
the process of jury selcctiOrl
in Santa Cla ra C.Ounty and
11teking information from the
prosecution about poss i b I e
electronic surveillance.
But he did order the pros·
tcution to give the defense
Information on prospective
jurors although he said the
prosecution doesn 't have to
disclose thf' source of any ln-
formatlon that Isn't already
in ll..; posses61on.
"We 'll be ready the 28th.
i\1 1ss Davis is ready In Jit'l
it under wa y. She w11nts her
frttdom ,'1 ~aid chier defense
attorney Howard r..1oore Jr.
,\11s11 Da\ is, a 28-ye11r-old
11vnwccl Co1nmi:nisl a n d
fnrn1er UCLA philosophy in
~trurlor. has been brh 1nd barl':
.~1nce her ;:irrr.~l in Octobrr
1970 Shr i~ tharged in con·
neclion "-'ilh Rn Aug. 7. 1970
shootout at the Marin County
Civic Center 1n which a judge
and three others were killed.
Au1hnrit1es have said the
shooting s'te1nmcd from a plol
to free three San Quentin con·
victs appearing al A court
hearing at the civic center.
!\fiss Davis was not present.
but she is accused of purcha s·
ini;: four guns used in the
shnntoul and helping plan the
escape attempt.
DOCK TIEVP
VOTES CAST
SAN FRANCISCO fAP 1 -
\Vest. C n a s l \oni;:shoremen
decided todaJ=i!»~r to end
their 133-dRy dock strike.
longest ever fnr the U.S.
malnland.
Results of the b.11llol by
11,08.1 Fegisleredfu11 ·Ii me
longshoremf'n and ships clerk.~
are expected to be announced
Saturday morning al lnterna·
tional Longshoremen's and
Warehousemen 's Union he ad-
quarters .
SACRAMEN'TO . (UPI 1
Legislation has bee n in·
lroduced to l•gAhze all {ormi;
of sexual conduct -1ncludi]lg
homoseiuaUty -between ron·
sentint adults.
Tht meas ure b y
Aiil'lemblym1n Will ie Brown
Jr. 10.Aln Francl1co ). "·as re-
jected by Ole A111mbly last
yea r 11rttr npponeniii rer1d
frrim the llbll -nd ••a rncd
"the capll1l nf thi s st11te is
S;icramento -nnt Sodnm find
Gomorr11h." The blll died on a
26-41 vote, 15 1hort of the 41
votes n11edt1rl fnr 111pprov11L
Brow11 111ld Thursda y he Is
"more nptlmh1llc" th is yc;ir
becau11e nr lhe "•erious al·
tcntion" It reoelvod last vrar.
He c1tutlnned. hnw~ver . ·~hat
"in !crm1nr111u1t h1bits, the
hnncsly or moet pc op I e
d~rcasu IS tt Iii.I closer to
time to vote."
During ' l h e lmpa1111ioned
floor debatt 111t ~ e 1 r .
Assemblyman John
Vasconcellos ( 0-San Jost!.
s;iid a ''government that has
tn livf' In people's bedrooms
can't be defended and can't be
justified."
But Republi can Assembly·
man 'Robert H. Burke or
Huntington Beach de clared
''homosexuality doesn't serve
any-purpose whatsoever ." He
warned his colleagues l•we
Should not elevate ourselves
above God ."
!-le was ~upportc<l by a
rnrmer Navy c ha p I a i n .
Republican Assemblyman E.
Richard Barnes of San Diego,
who read from a huge, gold·
cmbQssed Bible and cited
Leviticus: "Thou shalt not lie
with a n1a11 as with a woman .
It i.~ an abomination."
The bill is ~trongly . sup-
ported hy the Gay Liberation
front and other homosexu;i\
organizations. This marks thf
fourth straiaht ye11r }Jrown
h;is introduced the meRaure.
FEBRUARY SALE! .SUPER
WIDE!
$ or .. -Size 6.50-13
Fits most compact cars.
No Trade Needed
4roi 75 4ro~ 85 4ro~ 95
2 ••• 139'°
Sizes 7.75·14 & 7.7s.is
Fits most intermediate cars.
2 '" 144'°
Sizes 8.25-14 & 8.25-15
Fits most standard cars.
2 ••• 149"
Size 8.SS.14
Fits many larger cars.
No Trade Needed No Trade Needed No Trade Needed
Tubeless whltewall prices pluis 51.78 to 52.53 Fed. Ex. Tax per tire depending on aize.
FEBRUARY
STARS 'N STRIPES
SPECIAL!
A lunch box for a!l members of your family!
Rustproof bo~. steel c a!l ing & pl.tsfic i41clret.
E•}Y to optl'I &: close! On•-pint plastic-jaclrettd
Thtrmcs lor hot or cold beverages, with drink·
in 9 cup lid & handl1 . In patriotic 1ter!I 'n stripes
de!lign.
SALAMI SANDWICH
NOT INCLUDED!
DELCO'S LOW PRICE
General Tir~
BRAKE SPECIAL
'
1 This week only. ..
any American car! 111 4= 1tr, RI:
DISC
BRAKE
RELINE
C Front DnJy l
INCLUDl5:
N1w frant br1\1 pidt .• , only
ln1p1el e1l•o1•1 ,,.J ' s 95 ........... , ... ;.,,.
I aul1 • fra"l -~te l
b11d,.91, •• ln101tl 11 11
••'•· br1k1 1;11;,,9,,
M1sttr Ch1r9e Don Swedlund
COAST GEN ·ERAL TIR .E
\ ,
Belted-Raised
Wnite Letters
"60 SERIES"
F60-14 or 15
$35.95
11 .lf.T. 1.fl.J.M
G60-14 or 15
$39.95
,,lf .T. 1.H-t.n
SNOW
CHAINS
ALL
PASSIMCill
TRUCK ', .... , ..
5185
TIUCK SIZIS:
10.1 •• 5
12-16-5
700-.5
• • •
750.11
100.1 ,.s
750.1116
Take Your Pick!
USED TIRES
lots of non-skid trtad s5ts
U,S. INDY
MAG WHEELS
~OID-CHIYIOLn
'LYMOUTH-DAT5UN-
TOYOTA
SET OF 4 •••••
59900
Cl'!llt Clflf .... lltllt)
I llele tl'left snll•tll• fir 1/f ''" c."',.,. e114 'klrof!K> •lltllfly 111911«.
COMPLETE
CAR
CARE
Since IU5D
·Hours: 7:30
to 6:00 Dilly
PHONE!
540-5710
j
Geod Willy Se1: Dis1bil -
ity is the problem •• ,
Community suppo'rt is
the answer , • , And tet1I
rthabiJltation is tnt re·
suit. Support the work
of non-profit Goodwill In·
dustries.
590 W. 19th St.
Costa Mtta
Open Mon . thru fri. 9.9
Sat. 9 WI 5,3!)-046-2479
Your Dollar
Buys More
At The
GOODWILL
STORE
•
1f'fCIAL THR U JAN . 25tlll
BOX SPRINGS
& MATTRESS
$379~"
R.ECONDITIONID
511191. ,, o •• r.i.
FOAM & FIATHll
PILLOWS
2 '" $349
$1.79 ...
l.J -I
FflltUARY
SKIRT
SALE
22'·· ' -
WOMEN'S
DRESSES
79'..
-BABY
MATTRESS s99s
MEN'S
SHOES
$1.55 UP
MATTRESSES $1995
BOX-SPRINGS $1795
Please Use Th11e
Booths In Your
Neighborhood
Coll 646-2479
For ickuFJ S.rvlte
s •
T
I
a
0
~
s
d
n
0
' t
u
0
t ,,
t
it
t
v
0
f
b,
' m
A
fi
•
QUEENIE
ELECTIO N
YE.AR I IJIJY !/OW,
Love Fades
Jltan, 101 , Sheds Wife .
STOCKTON I AP 1 -Roy
Rawlins, 101 years old. has
~·on an uncontested annulment
of his fifth marria~e arer tell-
ing a judge the six-month
marriage never wa,c; con-
summated and that his wife
had departed with their furn-
iture. clothing and pet cat.
··I 'm through with love,"
Ra~·lins said aft.er Superior
Court Judge \Villiam Dozier
ordered annulment of hi.s mar-
riage to the former ~fargie
Celestine, 44 , on gr.ounds of
fraud.
1'he slim, balding Rawlim,
dressed in a tweed suit,
testified that shorlly after !he
outdoor wedding last July in a
city park, he suffered auto ac-
cident injuries that left him
bedridden.
Rawlins said that while he
was bedridden his wire and
another w6man hauled of( the
furniture, a freezer and the
cal.
Rawlins, whose first four
"''ives are deceased, lists his
birthdare as July 10, 1870, in
Memphis, Tenn.
'Bankruptcy'
Holifield Assails
e ~
Environmental Bill
\VASHINGTON (UPI I
Rep. Chet 1-Iollfield. 1 D-CalH 1,
sa\'5 enactment nf a "rlP:in
en.\'ltonment'' inil1a!ive lo .11p-
pear on the California primary
ballot "·ould bankrupt the
ft * ft
Club Ducks
Clean Air
Act Stand
SAN FRANCISCO IUP I 1
Th~ Sierra Club !lays it has
taken ""' position either for or
ar.ainst the proposed "Clea n
En\·ironment Acl" initiative
on lhe .J une election ballot.
Execulive Director f\.1ichae l
~lcCloskey &aid the con-
ser\'alion _R"roup's board of
directors this month set up a
ne\Y legislative committee and
ordered 11 to make :i detailed
stud y nr !he prnposed act and
to report back at a later date.
Jn a di.c;patch Wcdnc~da.v.
United Press Internat ional
quotPd Daniel R. Rosenberg of
the Sierra Club's professional ~taff as"havinlj: said previously
that leaders of the club would
not back the propoEll because
it was "politically and
technically unrea!Onable."
At thal time, Peter B.
Venuto. a San Jose State
College professor co-
ordinating the iniliali~·e drive
for its sponsors. Peoples i..Qh-
bv. Inc .. called con-
sfrvation1sts who opposed the
measure ''the B en e d i cl
Arnolds of the conser\'alion
field ''
stale and lead to the worsl
derress1on In its history.
'"It is such a radical ap-
pro 11 c h to environmental
prohlem!I. rhat, if enacted and
implemented· our state can-
not e s c a p e bankruptcy,"
Holifield said.
Hol ifield's comments were
aimed itt the .so-called "Clean
Environment Act." w h i c h
eome 500,000 California voters
asked lo. be ~ut on the June 6
ballot by signing petitions.
Holifield, the dean of the
C a 11 f o r n I a congressional
delegation. said the signer s
did not have "the 11lightest
idea" of what the initiative
11"ould do to the slate'!!
economy.
The congressman's com-
ments were made in a sum-
marv or an analysis of the in-
itiative to amend California's
health and safety. motor veh i-
cle, water. pu blic resources
and agricultural laws.
The analysis, wh ich Holif ield
said was prepared with the
help of the Library o f
Coni?ress. said the initiative
would shut down fa ctories that
did not meet tough clean ai r
standards.
it also would halt oil drilling
' in state tidelands and up to
one mile inland. and wou ld
declare a f iv e -yea r
moratorium on construction of
nuclear power plants. he said.
Many agricultural pesticides
wnuld be banned u n I es s
specifically authorized by •11
four-fifths majority of the
State Legislature.
Holirielr:I said a provision to
Jet local governments regulate
the chemical content or motor
fuels could result in 60 dif-
ferent ~asoline standards in
Los Angeles County alone.
SOFT SELL SAM by Marvin Myers __ · __ _____
"'"( ';;2Z.~--.. ,;;;;~;:;/"'=:'t1n _ _...--.
~ll~rf
/ " , I.AW
•MY UTE HUs&ANI>'~ fSTATE IS JN SVC~ A
MESS ~ . SORT or WISll HE '1> NEVE~
r>RoPPE~ ~EA~.' ~
•
..
.. •
DAil v "Lor lj
--t~· -dt -~-_ .. ---· ·--·----HB,SD-1.D~-0-D~-S.---·---·-·--·-----·-
B.
)
'
ANAHllt'
44t N. btlld
17141 llMJtl
•
-
birthday
sale
)
• pretty pnnt
coolers
22.99
A printo'1sii!I of sprinq's newesf
ookle .leng+h, to weoc oll doy long ond
intn the night. Fabulous values! W1
sket ch iust two from the group in
Arnel® trio c.ell'lte jersey or 100•/.
polyester, sizes 8-16: A. Whirling
P"neled noral over ,.,hort-~horts.
ye llow green. B. Polkodot longdre>S
with matching shllwl, navy/white/
red or red; while , n1tvy. Mail s nd phone
order5 invited. W;ndsor Misses' Dressea
A.
eris~ seersucker
• two-piecer
17.99
The cus"tom-size woman witf love tfiis
fresh, little two-piecer, lt'1 co ttol" ac-
etate seer5U'Cker. W.,sh able, of ceurse.
In bla ck-wnite or brown-whi te stripes
w;th white trim, •izes 14'/i·241f2,
Ma il and 'phone order' invited.
W indsor Women's Ores~••·
•
> •
ai· the broadway
N£W,.Olf
47 ~ •• ~ ..... ttl•"'
11141 •<1<1.1 r 12
OIAM&E
1)00 Ne. Tvttl11 Sk-111
1114) ••t.tlll
.SHol' 10 A...M to f JO'·""-• MONDA( THIOUGH F~IOAY, S.ATUIOAY 10 AM. It• P.M. SUNDAY 11 NOON Jd t l'.M •
Ct•llTOS
100 i •• c.,,, ... Jt•"
l tlll "°"'°"''
, ..
• •
'
•
lJ Di\ll Y PILOT Frld17, February 18, 1972
•
• -·at-Sears -·eosta Mesa;~ay,
•
"""'ears ·a· ration it·.
.
Costa I
•
• • . \ .
e from Hundreds Of Items On Sile But.In& This Great ....,.._...__u.C...-.. ·~_,..._~~~_......._~_... • it~ ~ ~~~:i.:.!·~·
Boys' Denim Jeans
Low 4 $5 Priced! for
Ruqed deflim jtan11 in •u-
thenti.c western stylinf . .Blue,
llrown, green. 8-12
Boya' Wair Depl.
CUT'3 to 'S!
Mens' Sport Shirts
Were 3 $5 $4.99-$7 for
or $1 . 77 eaclt
Boy's Penna-Prest•
Sport Shirts
Low
Priced!
Penna·Pte!ll" sport shirls
Jn assorted plaids and 10lidl.
I to 1%.
Bey1' Weir Drpi.
SA llE '4 to 'IS!
Fashion Jackets
$35 Ru<btr Suede Front
eon1uii>y •••• 11.u
•FREEZERS
•WASHERS-DRYERS
•VACUUM CLEANERS
•TELEVISIONS
•STEREOS
•SEWING MACHINES
•REFRIGERATORS
•AIR CONDITIONERS
•
Penna-Pr~l .'"' sport lhirU ... Cotto• Conluny ~~~~~~~':::==~~~~~-==*~;; ln a wide geJection of sius ...... -;:
and colors. Hoeller Jacket 15.83
ftteas' Fanilskl11 Dep1. Men' ca..i ~·ear
i)A VE 24%! Men 's
Casual Jeans
Regular
' $6.50 497
Siinforlled, rv11ed denim
Jt'ans in authentic western
•trling. All sizes.
Me11'1 l\'ork Clotllin& Otpt.
~
Family Shoe
Assortment
Regular 2 $5 IZ.99-$9.99 for
or$%.77eacb
Wide choice of canva~ and
1ummrr sandals. P.lany
shades and colors.
Sboe °'Pl.
£ltT •20! Extra
Heavy Duty Drill 34s1
1 (2-i dri II; mollr develops
U4 jtP; 100'1> '!'II aqcl ~e bielrinp. Rettlllblt
Htrft-.re
S4r£'3 .l2!tL
Men's Double Knit
Slacks and Jeans
Regular 797 SI0.97to $1Z.91
Double knit polyester sl;ick~
.and jeatl3 in fla re leg styling
30 totO-i n. waist.
t.teu' C.1.W Wear
SA llE'3 to '7!
Cblldrens' Dres~ Shoes
Regular 297 $5.99 to $9.99
Boys' and girl5' school
and dress shoes with ru1-
&ed PVCsoles. l lll to3.
•
SAVE *50.95t
Automatic
Water
Softener
Regular $279.95
J;or v.·ater ur to 60
hardeness grains per
gallon. Keeps things
cleaner, eliminates
bathlub rings. A
practica l applianr-e to
meel your ramily·s
soft water need s.
EXPERT
IN STALLATIOi\
AVAILABLE
SA J"f '2! 3-Pc.
Plier Se L
¶l<ly 46 9 $7.3;
fraflsman. Shp • joint
phcn ''•·ID long. lllru rrw·
plated, and 1t1orf'
H1nlnre I t.
S4 1'f'l ! Sears
Dry Wall Panels
Reg ular
$1.99 99~.
Ury wall p;inrls, bS-fl. Sl!f'
ldt'al lor r m additions,
'
FREE
Superb Perma-Prcst w
Sateen Lining with
Purchase of Our Best
Selling Textured Drap-
ery Fabric "Pago",
SAVE33%!
"Pago"
Drapery
Fabric
Regular s3 1~-5-0 yd.
Yard
Beautifully textured
drapery fabric in 20
decorator colors. Buy
now and take advan-
tage of free lining
offer.
S 4 llf 80c ! Sears
Planter Mix
Regular
$1.19 99~
~ially made for planting
nut11ery 11.oek or r:onlaintr
grown fltJWtf$, 2 CU, ft.~£.
G1rde1 Shop
I
l
Offic1a l size and 11o·~icht sottrr
kidcball. 6uynow arwl YVt!
SporUI,( Goods
CUT 80%! Support
Panty Hose · ·
Were
$3.99
Smooth filling mesh knil host.
Pitoc:h.11 ind cray. In Petite and
Avtr1gesiies.
Hosiery lkpl.
SA llE'2-'5 Women's
Nylon Shift Gowns
297
Qilorful 1o~ns in many styles
y,•Jth a1S0rttd trims. Small.
Medium, Large.
U1gerie ~pt.
, . "•
·~ .. 1
SA llf '6 Boxed
Gill Sets for Baby
R4egu;~l9.9'-3$~~
and
Assortment -or beautiful gil l
sets for baby. Many styles and
colors .
l1fant1'-C1illclttn'1 Dtpt. -. . .
' . . ' .
' .
SA llE 333-49% Brighi
Zippered Luggage
Regular
$4.99-$7.49
Colorful print lu&gagt in n~
t~l shades, Jn sizes JS.in to
21-in.
SA 11£'30! Personal
Electronic Calculator
Regular I 6999 $199.99
CUT 48%! All-Stretch
Thi-Top Hose
\Ver~
!U9
Seari"llrss. elastic top ho~.
B~r& beigr, Sunset, ~focha
shades. Petite, averi.gt, llill.
'-Hosiery Dtpt.
Women's Pants
Clearance
Reg. $6lo111
3~0 or3p~ I 0-
Sa\t on e\tryday pants for
11oo1nen. In 1ssortt!d fabrics,
st~ Its and colors S.18.
\l i~ses Sportswear
SA llE 37%-40%
Assorted
Ladles Handbags
Regul•r244 597
Hto$10 -
T,rrlhc handbags •t fanLt1-
t1c savings. Some 1boulder
strap ~!yles.
At'CtSIOry Dept.
SA llf'?,50-'5Volupte•
Powder Compacts
Regular 250
Sl-$7.50
ll1gh fashion compacts in 7
~tyles. Gold or silver finish.
Powder and rt:fill.
Co1metlc Dtpl ..
I:
SA 11~'5-'/.1 \Vatches
For en, Women
Rep1ar } } 88 111.n.nf.H
17 hwd walcflira for mm •nd
•OJDf'lt In lpOrl atld drt:a 1ty~.CtT1tbuy!
hwtlry
. COSTA MESA 3333 Bristol St. Phone 540-3333 PARK FREE
• •
• •
...
I
•
''!
1
0
I
r
s
0 • si
e
a
0
y
B
w
m
lh
lh
* • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • -
-
• erv1ce Booms · •
.. --Firrn-s--petts. W£ii1 --srreei -Suecess --·l-... torv •
Ill' DEAN C. MILLER
NEW YORK (UPI) -Death
and tai:es, it is said, are in·
evltable.
Had in vestors comldered
that inevitabUlty 10 years ago
1:1nd put SI0.000 into 11·R Block,
Inc. stock (NYSE) tbey would
be millionaires today ,
Gro,vth of that income tax
service company has been· one
of the \VaU Slreet success
stories o! recent years.
Figuring split s which come
to 15-to--1 over that period and
dividends, $10,000 in ll-R Block
stock bought at the high 10
years ago would be worth
\
Si.45 million today. Bought in lions were thrown in free then at the low that year the stock would be worth si.57 million a as a customer courtesy.
fantastic 150 percent annual The Bloc.hs eventually learn·
Increase. ed there was more interest
Such growth is even more and Profit in tax returns. In k bl h 1955, lhey dropped book· remar e e w en you consider keeping to dtal solely in tax
that the Kansas City-based returns and changed the com·
company produces only about pany name to the present one.
105 days of the year. when They took in $20,300 from one
Americans are worrying over office that first year. tnx bills.
Henry and Richard Bloch In 1971, the comp a n y
(the last name spelling was prepared tax returns for 6.98
changed for easier corporate million Americans. or about
recognition) hove come 8 Jollg 9.2 p61"Cent of all those return--
way since 1946 when they i~g ta~ forms. It ~ad 5,284 of·
opened United Business Com· fices 1n the United States,
pony , a bookkeeping service. Canada, G~am, New Zealand.
lndlvidual tax return preparn:{ ~~to Rico and . Wes t · · · .,.. -oen'nany. Thls year 1t works
,1 out of 6,000 offices, including
Res taurant '"'"I in Australia.
Last year ff-R Block took in
S8.9 million. Net earnings rose
Ch • T lls 37.6 percent over 1970. ain C Brother Dick handles peo-
Earnings
ple. Henry, the business 01ind
of this dynamic duo. is reserv·
ed. conservative and direct.
"Did you have some trouble
.COiony Kitche ns Inc., chain \vith the Federal Trade Com.
or 42 company owned, u~ission a few months ago?"
franchised restaurants, has enry was asked. ·
reported earnirJMS of 26 cents a "Yes," he said. "\Ye had
shore on 624,684 ! h ar e s so~ differences of opinions
outstondln,g as of Dec. 31 o ab<1ut advertising wordage and
.sales of $6,796.032 for the fir t we signed a consent ~egree in.
six months of fiscal 1971-72, December, 1971."
ended Dec. 31. Tt\e FTC thought HRB
This compares with 19 cents advertising suggested that the
a share on the same number company would pay all the tax
of shares and $3 792 580 sales a bill in case of an IRS
year ago.· ' ' • cha\leng~. H-R Block con-
Ai;cording to pres l dent tende~ it mea~t only the
Bruce E. Demers earnings penalties and interest. The
before taxes v.·ere $268 486 ITC also thought Block's
compared with $224,322 'the advertising sug.gested that in
year before . Earnings after case of an audit that an ll·.R
taxe!li-ww.e.--$l.60J.16 aeainsi .Bloc;.k Ja\\'VC[ would appear 1n $l 19 160 the client's behalf. The com·
' · pany said its advertising
meant only that HRB an Okaye d representative would plead for
the client. HRB advertising
RE AP) -The now defines such situations.
Loa n
has granted a $9.5 ''We've found that the com:
for expansion of generally has pany an ac·
sity of Sing~pore, ceptable record in responding
ent, announced. lo customer complaints." said
11 1pokesman for the Better
Bustne!S Bureau of
~fetroPolllan New York.
Jt was flenry Bloch who
called the 1969 Tu Rt.form
Act the biggest hoax Congre$.'I
ever pulled on the American
people. That was in connection
with stat~ents that the Act
would simplify the tax laws.
He spoke jwt as loudly a
few months ago when JohMle
M. Walters. commissioner of
the lnternal Revenue Oepa11-
ment, stiid that this year's
1040 form was $0 simple "your
daughter In the' fifth grade
could fill it out."
"An enterprising reporter
queried a fif th grade class,"
lienry noted. "and the pupils
didn't know what loxes \\'ere
all about let alone the first
thing about. flillng out a 1040."
I
• •
DAILY PILOT lt•ll tll1l1
By LEROY POPE
NE W YORK (UPll -tn
looking !or • 1ood Job, tho
"don'ts" are morf! lmportant
than the "do's," lhe 1utbor of
a new book on the subject
reports.
Richard A. Payne o !
Prlnctton, N.J., ls the author
of "flow to Get 1 Better Job
Q u I ck ' r." (T1pllnger, New
York ) and al!o conducts class.
es in varlo\11 clllts on sophb~
tlcated job hunting. He enrolls
ar:ound 20 persons in a clnu
and ch1trges them $60 to $7$ ror
services for which he says
some career oounsellor.!I ask
as much as '3.000.
'Achiever' H i gla 01a Hori%01a
Since resumes ire thf'
obUgotory way of tlndlng a job
opening In most businesses,
Payne sny11 a good resume Is
equally obllf{atory and right
there Is where the don'ts
become v I la 11 y important.
Jlere art the don'ts he llst.s:
-Don't attach a photo to
your resume. A photo just
gives the employer another
reason to toss your res11me
aside. He's no longer curious
about what you look like.
Nanied 2nd
In Contest
Susan Beth Hochman, senior
·at Corona del f\.1ar IJ!gh School
and daughter of Mrrand Mrs.
The first high rise building In Saddleback Valley
is under con-tt.J:_uct'io n -eying a June completion
date. The Roy:t'I Savings and Loan Building, a $1.5
1nillion enterprise, was· designed by o .. K:. Earl Cor-
poration of Pasadena. Th~ six-story building should
be open for 6usiness in September .
-Don't state your salary
objective, let the employer try
to guess. Of cour11e If you're
S.M. HOC'hman oC Costa Me sa.
received the sccon~highest
honor from Jun ldf Achieve-
ment and was selected "Best
Salesman of the Orange C.Oun-
. ty South Center. '1
E xecutive to Make
· applying to a joi):ffri(ffng agen·
cy, you may ltave to state
your snlary aim.
-Don't reYel l your curre nt
s!!Jary. Keep .'em guessing
about that as long as you can.
,
She is preside nt 'or Ingenuity 25 New Millionaires -Don't llst your references .
It may subject them to arr
noyance. Also It's better to
pinpoint re!erences for a Unlimited, a Junior Achieve-NEW
ment Company wh ich markets YORK (UPI)
manufactures and markets Ja1nes Willis \Veller, a self·
candles. Its ·sales volume was made man with old fashioned
$322, the hi ghest in the Orange ideas about the flag and the
Coun ty South Cttlter area.... free ' enterprise system, wants
Don Spray, a student at Sad-ii> rJa~e milliona ires out of £5
dleback lligh School, w<is bright you ng entrepreneurs selec-ted runner-up for !\is
sales volume for Serco. his .around the co.untry.
Junior Achievement Corilpany . ~Valter, .who rounded and
which manufactures a n d lx.11lt the Jun Walter Corpora-
markets a nashlng Jamp. lion ot Tampa, Fla . into a $700 . . mfllion per year home building The two ~l.nahsts will com· and allied prod ucts company, pe~e f~r the,. Best Salesman ?f will spend the next 10 months
the Distrl~t ,Utle among six trying to fin~ the 25 .young
other achi evers in the South men and women with the best
Center district.~ potential tor succeeding in
Miss Hochman and Robin the business world.
Layman, a junior at Foun~in _ _Jt's his idea_ of celebrating
VaI~gh-SChool. received lhc 25th anni versary of the
the Junior Executive award com pany he slarted with $500
or orga n1z1ng an ope ra tng a I d t' of his own money and $400 in
business vent ure. Mi s s borrO\Yed capital.
Lay.(llan is president of Initial Each or the finalists . and Industries. they 1nust be bet ween 18 an~ They are now eligible for the 25 years of age, will receive
ExecoUve Award, the hlghest $1,000 at the company's annual
individual award offered by meeting next December. But
J.A. that's only seed money.
\
"The cash reward is really
only a token incentive.'' said
Walter. "The opportunity for
these young people to receive
nlltional attention s h o u Id
ultimately prove the greatest
reward of all.'.'
Loca l o r g a n I z a I ion s
th rougliout the 50 stiltes wlll
U.S. St~el
Gets Fi11e
nominate candidates for the PJ'M'SBURGII (AP) -U.S.
company's Youth Enterprise Steel Corp., alr~ady fined
Award . The company already $15,000 for excessive .11moke
has. written 70 associations emissions at several of its
such as Rotary clubs and plants, has been rlned for U8-
Youth Acl1ievement groups to ing contaminated water to get the ball rolling. Even-tually, every area of the coun· quench hot coke.
try will be polled by phone and Magistrate John Chandler
letter to ext ra ct nominations fined the ~glanl flnn ~plus
in 25 business categories rang-costs this week on three
ing from architecture-and~..®Wla. of • ylola!!on n f
agriculture to transportation Allegheny County'• air pollu-
and travel. lion code at the Clairton
When all the nomination!! or
nre gathered by Oct. 2, they'll Wit ne 1s es , lncludlng
be culled by an Awards Com· chemists, testified the water
mittee of seven to nine judges. used to cool the coke corr
Prominent business and flnan· talned·, phenol, cyanide,
w ks
cial executi ves with diverse chloride and ammonia and the
views and economic Interests resulling steam was polluting
will do the judging. the air.
f rld-.y, Ftbruary 111, ltn
:1peclflc Joli 1fttr you att 1
nibble.
-Don't list all your
prevklus jobs and everything
you can do.
-D<>n't give your age.
-If you're ~lack or belong
to some otht:r minority, don 't
mention the fact ln the
re1ume.
-Don't Include much
personnl data In a rt1umc for
general m1IU111.
The do's, Paynt :1nld, are
simple: Conctntrate on a
single stated Job objective nod
devote 40 percent or the rest
of the resume to your pa·e11e11t
job and your achievements In
It.
In olher \VOrds . lend \.\'Ith
your 1tre11f{ths. Don 't mention
any possible weaknesses nnd
-----·
uter Co 11i
Blo·1vs It
DILLON. Moot. tAPI -
A co1npoltr errur In NC\Y
York City gave a retired
DIJUou Jew eler a taste of
Instant "'ealth recently -
to lhe ILUJC ot $,<*) ahare1
of a 1najor bani!:. The
,, h ll r 0 s \YCff' 't\'Ort..b ... >
12!11.000.
Walter Stnmm had or-
dered a SS.~ lnvcstment
bond through a New York
ln\'f'sln1ent unn. adding
lhat hi' IYlUI "tomplett'ly
11n111itd" to rectlYe the
5,000 sh11re11 or slock In
thr blink.
Slnrnn1, ~·ho \\'Ol1ld not
nnn1r !he b:tnk or inve1t·
1ne nt flrn1 , aakl he thought
It 01·er for a few 1nlnutes
nnd thrn 1n111led the !llOCks
~<'k 10 the firm .
regard tverythlng else us only '-----------'
1nnrglna lly rrlcvant Your oh·
jeet Is to stir any f'mployrr's
cu[lOSit)'. Once thn t's ur-
romplished, the t11ctlt's to n1ul
down tfte job can be executed.
Pt1yne's book 111 " detnll('d
expositio n of steps lo take
after the resume ha11 brought
In replies. 'Fhe first coin·
mnnd1ne11t In this p11rt of the
gan1e is 11lway1 try for :1
salary boost over !hot of your
present or last job or at le11s1
20 to 25 percent.
Cliin.a Tour
l1i Japa1i ?
TOKYO (UPI) -China will
send a l3·man te c hni c al
mlsskln to Japan In March to
in.!lpttt Japanese automoblle
p\11nts. the Kyodo news agency
has a11nounced.
Kyodo said In a di11pal<•h
rrom Peking the Chinese In-
tention of visiting Japnn v.·nK
relayed to Teijl lluglwnrn.
ma naging dlrtctor of lht
Japan lnternatk>nal Tr Ad e
Promotio n Association, a 11
organization set up to fostrr
trade between the two coun·
tries.
The Japoneite news ngencv
sold the Chinese n1i!i:ilon, if
orgnnlted :iurcessfully, would
be the first lar ge scale delega·
tion Pelc:lng-tmtt sent to Jnpnn
since 1965 when a group came
Ai r Crisliio11.
l 1 eliicle Se t:
For Design
CllULA VISTA (APl -
llndt r 11 SS.million contrnct
:1\1·111'1lrd by the Urban ?i.in.!ls •
/llltninl11trntio11, noh r
l ndu~lrles. lnc., wlll build an
r x 1) t rhnentnl 100-foot-long
\'chlrlt de1lgned lo tr1tvel on
11 <'U3hlon of ,tr 111 11peedl up
to I ~ miles an hour.
lloh r's design developed un·
der n federal <.'Oulrnct t(lven
Inst July, calls for the vehicle
to corry 60 pnssenger11 and
travel without wheel1. It 11 to
he Powered by a pollutlon-!ree
t'ltictrlc motor.
Serretnry of Trnnsportatlon
.lohn /\. Volpe tiuno unced !ht>
11econd-phnse ('()lltrnct, ealllni.i
for llohr to build a prototype
\vhlrh w\11 receive lt!I lnltlal
te,111lng at the Rohr p\nnt.
/\flt'r that It will receive tx·
lf'nsive tests al the trnn11porln·
11011 departmenls test center
11rnr Pueblo, Colo.
Vol1>e snld the contract t1
purl or the lnt'i.tf'r $1 11 1nllllon
urban lransportntlon reiw.arcb
nnd development pro R. r u m
ft'(leTitty 'Rnt (o congress 61
I 1resldenl Nixon.
tn inspect n11sembly plonlll orl----------
Toyota Motor! and N18SUll . ---
Diesel Company, MA•LI HI •Otl•Tt
Kyodo quoted llnghYara as HOUSE or
saying th•t the C h I n e .!I e DISTINCTIVE PLANTS
decl.1lon would not 11uggest a ,.,.,,.ltlt DKo,•ll\lt "kllllll'lt
11hlft of policy on part of Chinn To (Oll'!flllNflt YIWr Offlco, HolN & IMI l11Nrle'1,
toward the Japanese con1· J:::•· Clltl Nltllwt ,....,
panies. " ..... -... ...,, -
•
-·
"' fl • r • 11 •t PtLOT s f'tldlJ, ftbrUM)' 18, 1972
SALES • RENTALS
___ l--i1::tt:::ro:JS-ff; --
UTE. LINIR
IALIOA-PACE AltltOW
LOCATID ON THI NIWPOAT
PlllWAT, JUST SOUTH Of
THI SANTA ANA F•llWAT.
TA.kl THE McJlADDlN TUIH
Off. TUIN l(FT ON YILLA.01.
WAT.
0
N ~ > k~ ~ f • ""''"'OOt:N • • ~ • > , • ; ' u .,If •
f O!NQll'I i
AUCTION
of
PERSIAN RUGS
~LUS MANY OTHH ORIENTALS
NEWPORTER INN
1107 ,,_...,....hod
Nowpart lleGdl. Callfonlo
•
Sunday•-.,.feb. 20-2p.m.
VIEWING AND INSPICTION rlOM
12 NOON UNTIL TIMI OP' AUCTION
ll'ill -.uttful nUf!C1Mn el rvp Wh ...-.,, e T ....
nnc•rft, _..., w• •uemw.rd •wt • ,_...,. •f many ,,_,...
•trkttJ fw ••hlWtt. IM"J•·• N9M h.9n ....._. ..._ ...t. MMtr ef them ,,. .n....-lly .._.,tfvt nllKNr'a
ltwM. l1tf'O\lllh wtf...._ ffNnclal illMcuttt. they _...
........., te the Unit.II Sf1t. te .. ..W et ,....k aucffMI .ttfrtevt r9Sel"l'A. ~
1•t""-ll .,.. ttM flnHt ,,... .t IClllMANI, fMPlllAL
KASHANS, IMPDIAL CROWNS.. SAIOUKS, IOYAL
PAUCl QUMU. IOYAL 80KHMA -AiMi. HUNTING
CAJlrET5. VASE AND GARDIN 0, FLOWUS CAlt-
Pn'S. PltAftR RUGS, KAZVIN. HANIOAH,. INOO
CHIN Ut. INDO ll:lOUCHUTAN. SHIRA%. Ala.HANS,
SAODllaAO.S. ME.SHIED. TUaltlS.H, AIADfH. NAIN
wtdi 111 bett ,_. ....,-e hw:I\, 'QT SILK QUMI •nil
HDlZ.phn ,...,......., la .n .-.
Allo 1ocludft! are co21f!'Ctor't "'"" C'CWUitdn& of some '"M>'
r.tt ~ ol Silk R\lp..
18t1 MISS THIS f ABULDUS AOCTIOtl !
•
~· Codi .. a.di
Business
AUl Here
•
I
• \ • '
... -"'" ~" +·"' " .. "' ~ ;t-••
+\• " '• ~ + ~!
ii .. ~4
···,~ " :t ~
;: '
' "' .. .. ''" .. +:Z a· ~· " ~ '• ...
" ... " ,, ,, ••• ,.
'" :t;. , ..
"' ~ ·,., ...
::t "' it.
l". . .. .
tt '
....
' '
.... ~ ... ·~ ·• ·• ......... .. • •
' ,,,,_ 1972 s DAILY ,ILOT
•
Thursday's Oosing Prices-Complete Nelv York Stock Exchange Li st
t
'
•
•
\
•
f8 OAILY PILOT
Fo1~ The
Record
Dissolutions
Of !J!'!:.':!!!'fle
I loi, £u-(.and ON CMI•
l"'lt"l'll-111. '°"• A111111 •ncl waci.w , ...
Owycr. Kilf# Mm tN JG!ln .IOte'llll
l!ttfl. IYIYI.. E. tl'f ,t.rdllt H~, 0... tftf 1.41 ... Hiii
llolfr, J-H. Jr, •nd .V..•Hvn H1111tler, &hlrlrl J, llllCI J-H.
111\ll!IH. Wrttrtt E. •rid EOdY I .
lh•lll•v, P1rrlcl• Lllld• Ind llot>erl L" Mwray, LMlls A. •lld pan.io A
lmlll\. v..-11t1 '-''' •ni Flor• /.dell 81tlr, Glafla JNll Ind Jol'lll C. °"''*"' s.t\arOll L.. and w,.,.., G, MllllW, MlfY Fr1Mll !Jnd Glon Jil,,.tt
Frlcll,, llOO.rlt Oonn• 1..0 J1dl
Edwerd Yaclr..y, "ilnl LYM Ind li!g!Mrl Jtm.1
IPtwart, Merit L. Ind Jilmft l .
K1rr, Jl*t E ... rdlne tncl JI-Id Attrld a-, f>oMe Jtan ilftCI K~U LYie a1-. sie ..... How1u ,.,., L-•
81111/llllO
M•Y11i110, Jtrty I(, tllCI O.IN11 litlen
Vf!lt, Aflt M. ~ DoMld E.
Vtr"'r, '""" K. lflCi Robert 0. Htlt, WUUtm Loul• tncl JMrde F!Gfl«!
Hl,lf,1, o.i,wild M . ..W BtYtrlY Jttll
Ktll ...... OI'"' Elia J . .nd Rober! J,
V1nd1rnN-." ~rv MVltl tnll TMDdort .. .
klllNlll, Marvin v. Jr. and Hiney Svt
··-· Lt Vert• M. Ind H-w. Hfl!I, J-H, •nd Rllbv E. II-•-C1rolyn Marie ind Jl'I'
St111lq
Jo\IC1, Teri L. ind Geor .. E,
I "'lo. filhCI llonll1 Incl D•I• Vern
CrDllo Thamll T. Ind Mtt'I' T,
, ..... r. Carol L. 1nd Ron.Id R,
OfnlOll, John P, Ind G10rl1 J. ....... •.1~kt ~~~ .•r~ .•no. ~•fl'.
Rubio, LuPS Ir.cl Rodrlto
G1val, IC1r1n 5. 1nd llot>erl E.
ll:t~m, Ret>ettl L. 1nd ROMld I".
Price, KathlHn R I nd Albttl M.
Bi&l\otl, llobtrl H. 1nd M1rllvn Je1n
Arnold, Ger-Ectw1/'d •rid l!llubetll ,,, ...
S1nh!rcl, l'IOVCI WllU1tt1 Ind Elltn Rulli
IClllh, AOI If'., Ind Leon1ro 5.
DKkef'I, Jr,, Am1ll1 ll, 11\d Dile ·-Hlllle!'I, DllM J11n 1°'11 Delbert ··-lontltY. 8el1'1Ct 1rld J t'I' R. Enltr..i f'tt1ru1,., r
Mount. 0t1or11 J. arid LIO'l'd Ertklne
Todd. Jr. and Vlr1lnl1 L'l'n,.. Ind Cllf·
lord Altlert
Mu•kt1, 11111'1' A. Ind Jot 8.
Dobro. 1~111 D. tnd Mll1n
F1vr11U, Tffrl J. 11111 Tt•om•• J.
Hull, Rcrv Atdtn IP'ICI ArleM llullt
AIJ!t. G«lroe L. '"" IMZ Thom11t<1r1, Betl'I' Ann ll'ld Robtr1 M~·
'" Stone, D11t1lt1 I!. tnd Gin' II.
HudSCWI, Ktr*" Lrn11 Trfl\I 1nd lOll]I
NIQlotl1
York, OoNld Gtt'I' 1114 SlltH'I' Anne
M.uQ!;, Pl'IUl11 J. M11:1 Clltrryl A.
VICIOr. Joan M. Ind Tl!Omt• M.
J1nu11. Wlllltm FHrl 1n0 Btl1n11
Ow-n11. HtrDert MtllOl'I tnd Vlr1lnl1
l .. Wut_,
Lom1,k, Ell11btllt Adi Ind Miiton
Ltsnl1k. "S.n>clr1 J"'I' I nd Frink 5.
E11t.....i. '•llnl•t'I' I
M1hler, M1>1lllt Jtnt 1nd llern1rd
Albtrt
P11t1r1on, Jo """" Ind llOMICI Ltt P1rk1, 0 11,.. IC. Ind Jahn II,
Seal!, Burm• LH trld Chlrltt Wtllt'I'
Cl•r•, P1ul Ectw1rd &nd S1ndr1 N~I
Gll'IC!, e~.llld Donald G.
Gill•. Leori H•rir'I' Ind &flVtr
Wtl1!nttr, HINIY Ind I( I I Ir 111 I
1'r1nc11
Tonk, Albert C. 111d Mtrt.flt II, Wli,1011, C1nltllt L'l'nn Ind WIUl•rn
IC,uhn, Pl!rld• A. lt1d Phllllp L1crvd ''1! Rotlert Chtrl• Jr, Ind Ctrlt
F1111 tMtr. ROii Ltl Ind L!oYd L.
Morrt tlno, Allee M. 1nd Simuel P. e~1ep, s .. nl)•I Let Ind J1me1 Gltn
Smith. StH>/14'n OU!n1on t nd M1rtll1
eu111>e1h
Htll, Dolores """' IP'ICI K""ntth W1ynt Hoov1r, Ol1n1 Lr1 IP'ICI ""fhon'I' Gtll
Andtrl<N\, Wlllllm COllrtnt'I' Ind L1ur11
Ell1t1>t1h 5wlnll.....,, Jiii llH Ind DIVld Edwtrd
McWIUl1m,, J11,..1tt M. 1nd Wilbur 0.
Jt1lm1r, Vlckf>Sut Ind Rld'ltfG Jotfilh Kuvktn~~·t. Jtol1nd Ptlt ind Alm•
E1rl1n1
COll, Jtrrv P . 1nd C1rl1 e .
L11vlt1 , Ooro!IW C1•ol and Kirk N.
Kr11t, Ltllfr N, 1/>CI 81!1Y NtM
Rl1ko. Jr11111vn O.wn.lle 1nd Htn"I'
!' ~·d
Siivey, Oon1kl D. Ind Judy E11tn
Arr: 1. K""ft Ann Ind G1"1' LH
5rtwftrl, Jt lch1rd Nel1011 1r>d Sut•n (' ··1.-1
Jtudt. Thom11 c . 1r>d SheN"I' ""n
I:: 11r, Cl1rl1 0111 tr>d Jdln Wtlln'
Horii, Ch1rln M. Ind C1rol Jo
Hcguro, M••IYI D. '"" J1m11 L. Shum1~t. Con111nc:e Lei Ind Glt'lfl
o .. vld
Pttk, M&rlhl ""n Ind GeorH Averv
Denth l\'o tices
ARsliCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
U7 E. 17th Sl .. Ceslr MeSI
llMlll • BALTZ BERGERON!
FUNERAL HO~IE
Corona dfl ftlar i73-MS41
Costa rtlr.u '46-2'14 • BSLL BROAD IV A\'
MORTUARY
llt Broadway, Costa 1t1wi
"" • LI· 1-3'33 . -. . Mc:CO~CK LAGUNA
BEACJt MORTUARY
1715 Ltgiba Canyoa Rd. ·" .,...,,,5 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
~ M111'11111']'
Chpd
-Padll< View Orin
Ne.wport -· Califonll
\
-• PEBX FAMILY
COLONIAL PUNEllAL
llO)!E
7111 Bohl ""e.
ll"eft·-llSWl!S • DIJTllS' MORTUARY
lllMlllSI. . ",..._
Pl-
'
..
Friday, February 18, 1972 • '
Report Battin Foes Wa.it on State Ruling
' 'Vandal-proofing'
Schools Proposed
By JACK BROBACK or the first district by bas ruled that tne word m,eans
Of "" o.11v PINI.,.., supervisor Robert Battin last a num bered political entity,
SANTA .ftiA -A State October. Kuyper stated, but a majority
Supreme O>urt decision Js an-Since then thev ha;'°e moved deciskln of the court in 1933
to pay !or the litigation IJ>.
itiated by one oI the can-
didates (Wenke) who was
refused n-0mination papers."
ticipated early neit week " which will determine whether back into the newly-aligned held that It applied to territory
two candidates tor Ii rs t district, but O>Unty Counsel Involved.
district county supervL!or are Adrian Kuyper ruled last Fri-l·llll appeared at th e
SANTA ANA -The hea vy acts of vandalism In all county eligible to run. day that they had not Jived .Supreme Court session In San
di let d · th t Wiltiam Wenke, a Sanfu Ana cost to the taxpayers for str a ur1ng e wo-year long enough tone year) in the Francisco Thursday to enter _ _. k -1-..1 .......V attorney and John W. "Bill" repairs to acbools in Orange periuu, Luec reporloe\I. 81A11Ct-, .,..11 Hill, a businessman, claim district to be eligible to run. his plea along with Wenke's.
Courity damaged by vandals, He offered a long list of they were gerrymandered out The Supreme Court justices' Another candidate for the
•·one need but look at th1
distr ict boundaries on a map
to clearly see that there waJ
but one reason for that section
of Santa Ana to be 'e1cluded
from the first district , that Is
the elimination· or potential
candidates," Davis charged.
was nported to the county possible means of prevention decision binges on how the first district post, W a 11 y
Th .. --..1 lnchxtlng more night custo-11 Board of Education w-,,uay. dians, better alann system!, nine members interpret tbe Davis, a FounLain Va ey al·
Board members endorsed a 4 s fs F T • J word "district" in the state torney, today jumped into the
suggestion by Dr. Robert ~o:.1~ •• l·.~\1gh~·r~: uspec ace r1a law conoernlng elections. legal dispute.
Peterson, county su,..,.rin-' Kuyper filed papers Thurs-Davis, a Mexican-American, -aDd intrusion alarms, eleo-d r tendent of schools, that they tronic burglar alarms and SANTA ANA _ Four men William Joseph Schnell, 3S, day with the court In answer charg~ "the 'thboar o be furnlshed regular reporta h to a petition filed Tuesday by su pervisors w1 gr o s s eat rise detectors, extra accused of involvement in Hollywood r b 1 · on such activities, which have · WeNke. mismanagement o Pu J c lights, and fencing alarm i..-t d' t · t tt ' f All f I ded I t t K 11 th · t t b . I <.'Ost county· school districts Wuo IS r1c a orney s o · our pea _ nnocen o uyper a eges at 10 a non· rus y u n n e c es s a f 1 y
more than $777,000 in the past systems. ficers clain> was a tape grand theft and conspiracy partisan race, the effective creating legal proble1ns caus-
Lueck said electronic alarm d t r th 'd ed b th d 1'ng of two years. duplication racket that netted charges contained in 8 n a e or e one--year res1 en• y e gerryman er
Bob Lueck, director of fiscal systems are effective, but cos-the Coo G d cy is the June 6 primary, nol the s.upervisorial districts."
services for the county Uy, running up to $50,000 per m at least $750,000 a year Orange nty ran Jury in· the November general e.lec· The candidate added, "By
.Department of Education, aaid school. Sophisticated new have been ordered to face trial dictment. tion. ' arbilcarily_ cutting out a see-
the goal is to try to build systems boast. alarms which June 26 in Orange County They were arrested Dec. 14, The County Counsel agreed tion of northeast Santa Ana,
future schools with rewervan-are triggered by a change in Superior Court. 1971,' after lawmen raided a with Wenke's factual data in the board created a situation
dalism problems, the light, noise or even move-• Judge William Murray set number o( locations In the attorney's writ of mandate where two potential can-
He'sat'd this __ ,,,d be done In ment in a room. to the supreme court, but, he d!dates. (llill and Wenke,)
r..vuJ The schools official's report the trial date and an April 1 Riverside ahd Orange Counties added, "the point of issue is were forced to relocate their
a number of ways Including had one favorable note -the pretrial session for John to crack what they claim was whether the word 'district' place of residence into the new
elimination of windows and cost per pupil In Orange Coun-Edward Fairfa1, 44, Norco; a consipiracy in which the mea'tls a political entity iden-di strict in order to enter the
covering air circulation vents ty for vandalism is $1.86. his son, Donald Ray Fairfax, group illicity reproduced tapes tified by number or one defin· r ace."
Co~emporaryF urniiure
i!j,kiV.!1
C ONT l;MPO"A"'I'
17837 IUCH ILYD.
Ml·UIJ HU~T. UACH W·mt Wtllcd•n 11,.;; Mon. & r'rl. 11.t
hoch ll'l'd. -~o"ll of Tol!Mn
..,,,OH ''°"' H.I , lnl1r-Co111munlly Htiplltl
2 Mll4$ Soltlll tf llft Ditti ,...,.. with Iron grill. Lueck s·aid That's below the national 23, Mira Loma ; William 0 . manafactured by established ed by territory. Davis charged that as lax·
chUdreln crawl into school average, Lueck said. Fraley, 70, Orange and recording companies. The state Attorney General payers "we will now be asked rooms through the vent open-,...::.:.::~::__~=:::_:~~~~~'.:.'.:~'.:........'..:'.'.__:::_~::_...:.::,::~:_::~:'.'.:!~'.'.'.'.!!:'.'.'.'.:'.:,,,~""~--;:'.:::,;~~:'.'.'.'.'.:"'~".".'".".:'.'._~'.;:'.:~...'::..'.:'.'.'.'..~~'.'...'.:'..:::'.:!~~~~~~~~~~~
ings •
The education official of·
fered a breakdown by elemen-
tary . high school, unified and
community college districts of
the -cost Of vandaliim from
January 1970 to December
1971 .
He said the economic status
of families living in a district
was not a factor In tbe total oI
damage in !UCh ·districts.
"The kids · from well -to-do
families are as pi'one to van-
dalism aa those In deprived
areas," he explained.
On Lueck's breakdown sheets
the Fountain Valley elemen-
tary district suffered 1,158 acts
of vandalism with a repair or
replacement cost of $35,000.
Others listed included Hunting-
ton Beach elementary, $9,015;
Ocean V i e w elementary,
$17,210; San Joaquin elemen-
tary, $2,500 plus $109,500 dam-
age suffered In a library fire.
Huntington Beach U n I o n
High School District, 208 acts,
$75,000 including a $.'»,Ml fJse;
Laguna Beach Unified. only
$600 ; Newport-Mesa· Unified,
$8,295; Coast Co (ll mun it y
College, $15,622; Saddleback
Community College, none.
There was a total ol 6,272
Trial Set
For T alent
Agency Men
SANTA ANA -Four men
accused or .extracting
thousands or dollars from
parents seeking allegedly non-
existent movie and modeling
jobs for their children have
been ordered to face trail next
Tuesday in Orange County
Superior Court.
Judge William Murray set
the trial date for Orange at-
torney Richard Murphy, 41 ;
brothers Jerry, 42, Santa Ana
and Don Hegg. 40. Garden
Grove, and Robert McGinnis,
38 Santa Ana.
Judge Murray rejected pleas
for delay of the trial and
ordered all four to show up for
jury trial on charges of grand
theft, conspiracy .and violation
of state corPQrate codes.
They were indicted by the
Orange County Grand Jury
after an Investigation into the
operations of the "Take One"
talent agency in which all four
defendants allegedly were
cipals.
principals.
vesligators allege the four
men sold "public relations
contracts ranging from $645 to
$658 a year to parents in-
terested in placing t h e i r
children in movie and TV
commercial spots. The opera-
tion was closed down following
civil action against the en·
terprlse.
It is also alleged that the
four sold $11,000 of stock in
Take Ooe without registering
the stock with the slat's cor-
porations ~mmissiooer.
;turphy is awaiting sen-
tencing following his con-
viction on five counts of cor-
porate code violations.
. He and Newport Beach
businessman R a I p h_ K.
Benware, 34, were found guilty
by a Superior Court jury
which heard allegaUons that
the pair illegally transferred
$160,000 in funds from one to
the other or two insurance
companies they owned In what
_, described U I ''robbin&
Peltt to pay Paul" plan.
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
SATURDAYS IN
.THE DAILY PILOT
-·
_ Our new28oSE 4.5 costs
al•nost three titnes as much as the'mrerage~ar.
But we think there are 10,oooAmericans
who can appreciate the difference.
The avenge car buyer could be taken aback at
the pria: of our new Merced,.. Benz 280SE 4.5.
At over $10,000, it is not only well above average,
it is some $2,500 more expensive than the highest
priced domestic luxury sedan.
Wherhcr it's worth that differcrice to you may be
answered only by what you cxpccr of a motor car.
Th• 280SE 4.5;, a touring sedan in the best Euro-
pean tradition. . I
Designed to provide every motoring cdmron for ·
a party of five. And enginemd to cope with driving
s,jtuations that vary from the descending switchbacks
of an Alpine pass to the 100 mph cruising spctds of an
Au1obahn.
A concept so different from that guiding the de--
sign of a domestic "luxury'' car you may find driving
somcthillg to do..,lmtcad of somcthillg that must he
done:
Its engine ii unlike any )'l"l'.D find in 111 Americ:m •
car. An overhead-cam, fucl·ini"\ed 4.5 liter V-8.
11 has ~burctors. Instead, a computer moni-
tors engine speed and load, temperature and altirudc,
then eleccronically meters fu~l to each cylinder. This
precise method of fud delivery is the most advanced
way of providing efficient, high-speed touring capa-
bility.
The fully independent suspension was designed
for ruts and bends, not just boulevards and rum pikes.
It's so roadworthy, Road & Track contends that "no
domestic luxury sedan is even in the same ballpark:'
And to match its pcrf ormance abilities, Mercedes--.
Benz engineers have equipped it wilh four power-
assisted disc brakes, ventilated in front to resis t fading,
The result is an automobile that can pcrfonn with
equal aplomb on the 174 curves of NUrburgring, or
'the unwavering ribbon of a thruway.·
!Ind an automobile that isfwthcrendowtd with
:almost every aimfort.:PoW<r brakes and steering.'
Electric windows. Air oonditionii>g and tinted sl=·'
ElecWalJy heated rcarwinW>W. An AM·FM receiver.
Even a central locking sy>tem. that sccu'"5 all four
doots, the trunk and even the gas pon at th-; touch of
a button.
In addition to the 280SE 4.5, Mercedes-Benz '
builds two other V -8 touring sedans in similarly min-,
iscule quantitia.
The 280SEL 4.S is 'identical to the SE except that '
it is longer. Longer in the Mercedes-Benz sense-an
increase of four inches that is translated directly into
rear-sca1 leg room.' -·
The 300SEL 4.S adds air suspension· lo the llst .
of performance features unavailable on any domestic
automobile.
Jn total, these three high-performance touring-
sedans "''ill account for less than one of C\'Cf)' 400 cars
sold in the United States th.is year.
lfyoucanaa:eptacarthat"dilfercn1;1 ®
take a thorough test drive. Discover the real i
'di.fferences ia a car built to be the best-
' not the best seller. •
Mercedes-Benz of North America, Inc.
'.
"'"''~ "; --r-"'""'l'li''''"7""'"""'~;.··..I· ... ,_,,.. ......... .,..,
. <
.{ ' ' I .. -1 • , , • 1 • .. . , . "' '
•
j ·* • j • • •
•
·1 t
'.
' 1. ' ~f' ' p .
•"
•
Jim Slemons Im.ports, Inc. 120 w. Warner AV\!ltue,Sant.a Am, California 92707 Phon•= 714·546-•11•
•
-~.
' •
1
•
,
Future--Built
By ALLISON DURR
Of 1111 O.+ty l'li.t "'"
Buddies Company opened for
business last October and has
already made a name In industry .
JI ls lht. first Junior Achievement
firm In the United State s operated
\ by studenta with impaired hearing.
The comoany mana~ement, labor
force and aales staff are Orange
County high school students.
Junior Achievement is t he
American free enterprise system in
miniature. Students form a com-
pany, sell stock, manufacture a
product from October to May. then
liquidate their holdings In the
spring.
Goals are to provide the youth of
America V.'ith e:t~rience in the
businus system, to mot I v a t e
leadership.demon s tr a t e rela·
tio'nshlps between 'busin!ss and the
community, to supplement formal
education and to preview career
opportunities in business.
VJT AL PROGRAM .
All of this is important for the so-
called "normal" student. For those
with impaired hearing . it is vital.
cemed, a lot of talk and 1 lot or
worrying Buddies Company was
founded last October. Sponsors
were North American f\.Oekwell and
the corporation's Management
Club.
Facilities were provided, (or in·
surance and sa fety reasons, in the
training l.ib of the corporation'•
electronics diviston In Anaheim.
TRAINING I.AB
Advisers are company emplo.ves
R. S. McKtelmle. Anaheim: Len
Levell, Huntington Beach : and Clif-
ford Anderson. Fullerton . They
communicate With the 13 students
involved through a !Gurth advise-,
13-year-old Jrf'ne Perez, whose
brother John is a member of the
company. Eight boyS and five girls
participate.
lrene is the first student In the
U.S. ever to advise a JA company.
Her experienCe in manual com·
munication links advisers1 and
students. Communication is
unusual. but it's there: The ad-
visers already have picked up a
great deal of manual speech tech.
niques.
The communications link must be
good. The quality and ·quantity of
goods that.have been produced are
phenomenal. Smile face beanbags
and keyohains wilh eltetronlc com-
ponent designs noating in colored
Doors to employment have been
long closed to the dear and hard-of .
hearing. except in rare Instances
for 'small numbefs of workers .
Industry simply did not know what
these people can do . .. !".'.mo~es.UJs Are manufactUJec!. Soon the
• company plans to dlve!s1fy. The success of Buddies Company
has begun to swing open doors for
these students and those' with other
handicaps -the blind. those con-
fined to wheelchairs and lh06e with
other physical impairments. .
It wasn 't, and isn't easy.
The students themselves,' theit
parents. s c h n n I administration,
Junior Achievement and industry
all hid serious doubts.
Stuclf!nts weren't' sure JA was
•hat they wanted .
HAO DOUBTS
Parents were afraid this pro-
gram, like so many others. would
be dropped if quick success wasn't
achieved.
Junior Achievement was con·
terned about obtaining insuranct,
getting advisers, finding facilities.
Industry wa s willing tn try but
held doubts abnut communication.
How could ad"<"isera communicate
with students who could not bear
their explanations?
_.
After letters ·to everyone con-
Keychains are
ass embled by John
Perez, Jim Litch-
field end preside nt
Steve McDonald .
'
ADVANTAGES
For the deal or hard-of-hearing
teenager the advantages are as ob-·
vious as their enthusiasm. Tbe
students are intent, meticulous
workers · with exceptional con-
centration on their wQrk. And they
____ Jik.e what they are doing .
Steve McDonald , Buddies Com·
pany president, enjoys his job. He .
said that he likes to work . enjoys
making Buddies Co. products and
likes to teach other students.
Carol Lembea'i.s, who serves as
corporate secretary. takes pride in
her job and meticulous minutes of
business meetings. She said that all
of the students liked working within
the electronics plant and that she
hopes to work with another firm
next year.
I Set FUrURE, Page Ill
:
n·~•..z..s.-
-
•
on Company Time -··-··
• • ..
• • •
Ha ppy faces are
put on super size
bags by Pam
Robins on, sewing ,
whH e Lin da McCo y
bags th e beans.
~men
BEA ANDERSON, Ed itor
l"rl4t Y, J'tlil""ll"f U, 1t72
'"' 11
!· .. ...... . ..
Ire ne Perez uses
manu al communi ca ti on
to conduct election
of officers at
business mee ting.
' '
Ann Landers
Advice Passed Out =ii
For Bottled Spirits .:
-.. J DEAR ANN LANDERS , I'm llO
ashamed of my problem I can 't talk to
anybody about it. My husband and J are
both 31. We have had our disagreement.I
-but nothing 11erlou1. The basis of the
trouble. Is hi1 drinking. He doesn't 1et
drunk very often but when he does he ls
llke out of hl1 head.
La11t Saturday 11ight we went to a party.
There was a lot or liquor around and Cll!f
got awfully drunk . We got home about 3
a.m. He wa11 In no condition to drive and
could not have npened the (ront donr wUh
his key if bis Ille depehded on It. The 11t.
ter was aaleep on the couch. She had ar-
ranged to 1tay all night becauAe we knew
we would ~ getting home very late.
Cli!f pasltd out on the bathroom-Aoor
arid l deckled· to leave him there and let
· hfm 1Jeep tt oil. (He weighs over 200
polmdi and f couldn.'t have gotten him 1n bed ~ I had wanted lo ).
·At about 6 a.m. I was awakened by
what IOUnded like an ar1ument. I went
into the livtn1 room and found my hus.
baJid trying to ki1s lhe 111tler. She wa1
half hysterical -and he was atill very
drUnk. AM, the girl i1 only 13. I helped
ber dreu and 1 drove her home.
By noon Cliff had sobered up. He 11
be1ide hlm1eU with 11hame and grler. He
haa 'never done anythin11 like this before.
1 am worried 1lck that he might be men·
-tally ill. Now I wonder If our own
daughter& are safe with him. They are 8
and 11 . Pleaae lell me what to do and
liln mt (. NEEDLES AND PINS NO
OTHER IDENTIFICATION.
DEAR FRIEND' I hope yoar hutband
ls 1Wflcltntly lfleved and 11bamed to Jd
professional he.Ip. If llq11or h.11 IDCb a
dev11talln1 effect on blm , be 1boufd Ht
Nve '°" mu(b 11 1 t-ta.-poon. IJ Qltf
doesn 't be:lleve )'IJU1 pletise 1bo• him tbl1
ailumn ud let'1 bope It pertu1det blm
to cet 101111.
DEAR ANN I.ANDERS. rve "1J0Yed )~r column for many years In th~ Lub-
bock Avalanche and wa• 1Urprised at
your rectnl advkt which mikes you out
1 female chauvin11t
When a tetn.aae &Lrl wrote t.o 11y rhe
"'as terrified of becom1n1 old and ~
kled and asked bow to keep her ~
youthful. you replied : "The texture ~
durabllily of a woman '• 1kln 11 prlm.a4fi
a matter of Inheritance.. If your motN"
had a wrinkle-free skin , YOf.lr 1ldn ~11:
better chance of holding up."
Obviously you blocked from your
the aenetlc compo1ltion of every h
which in~lude1 male 11 w1i1 11 femi'8
genes. In my Cafe, 1 Inherited V'.il
~~ .. ~
\-.....,i;1
'.-~ -:
'·: :-• father '• skin .. In 1 1ubaequt.nt col~
will you plew acknowledae the fact utii
men count? Thank you. -T!"-'J
LONGHORN .:
DEAR TEX' MM coual. !Soma cu~
11 hl&h at 1011 Th.uJI yoa ft1r ca~
the error. Some sfrl• do tnbertt uttf
fathtn• 11dn1 aod not tbeir modler1'.~3 .,
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I like lllls sUf
very much. I'll call him Brad. When Wj
go to the movies be jU1t sit-, there 11"
a lump on a Joa:. l don't cani for ~
who try I<> put lll• makt on a aJrl alt.o
one date. but Brad and r hive been oat
l<>&•lller at !tut •lfhl 11m ... I lhlnk II'~
about time tJe put bls arm around ma 1l
lhe movie. ~
Do you lh1nk It would be O\Jl ol plllC<I fl
I took hit ann a.nd draped It over mr
1hou1dtrs, 11 a hint? Ple:ue Jlv,a ~
aome advice becauu J don't want blm to
llllnk I am puJhy. Tlwt111. -Cl!llLY IX
BAKERSFIELD
DEAR BAKE: llud-boldln& 11 1110r1
dlscnet. Tell Brad )'otr Ued ls Ma~
and aak Blm U bt'd mind lloldla1 -• 1whlle. 1 , ,,.
Wha1'1 prudi1h' Wha1'1 O.K.? !! ,... • •ren 't 1ure. you neM iOITle htlp. Jt~
1v1ilsble 111 the; b!ooklet: ''Neck1n1 and
Pellln1 -What Are tbe Limit•"' M4ll
your reqllflt to AM Wnd<n In car ii
lh• DAILY PIUl'T. •nclo\lnl 50 cent. ln
<?.'• l1ld a tong , 1tamped::O-U.addn#od
tavtlope. •
\
• , 8 DAILY PILOT Frldl,1, Frilnlm 18, 1972
Groups ·Off er Opp9rtunities for learning
_____ JI.,~ and ........ L.eof<io Ho~...-+·
are ahead for member• of HoUywood for .'14 orientation
'\LwM ~ MTr.• •5outh,--'Rwlng ~·~l\!f. "'lt-i
DorOtJiy Huber, president of fabric shop. ~lwQJ m.alte ii
AWARE, and Dr. Genevieve ha ff slip arC dlscuu knit
Stack. COUN1elor at UCLA. fabrics and how to use them.
6rtieh r Oranae Coun1y
gather for dinnerin Lorenu>'s
restauran\,. Santa Ana Satur·
<;Jub. Preseri~ the f1tmWu1 Tbe Key to Happiness. March
be Ea.ti staiar.s, n1Uonat , 25; The Development ot lhe
,J!i\ector .olfhe Soar.lnt ~lety Vldill!b Lln&U'll• and Some
Executives
Orana;e C.0.1t or11nJzations. session Wednesday, Feb. 23.
S~ Auxiliary
Luncheon will be served in
El Mob< de C.pl1trano will
bl the M:ttlna: for the aMual
luncheon of the A\1%lllary of
.. South Cout Communlly
lfospllll at 11 :311 a.m. Friday,
Feb. 15.
the Hospllllity Houae follow·
lni the 9:..S a.m. tnffting.
Attending will be the Mmes.
LeRoy Milta, Alfred WLU,
William Coskran. Leon
Whetltr. Louil Zulk11 William
Dorwlly, David Dratkowski
and Robe-rt Wllkln. training
chairman. In k .. plng with the spirit or
the upcomJn1 Sw11low1 Day
Fteat. members: are Invited to
wear Spanlah costumes. AWARE
league Tour
Provlllooal membe.r1 of the
Aulltlnce Le11ue o( Hun-
tln(ton Beach will travel UL
·the N1Uonal A11l1t1nce
Two speakers will describe
their travela during a fund·
ra.isinc dinntr sponsored by
AW ARE, the AuociaUon for
Women 's Active Return to
Education on Erlday,fih..._~.
in the Revere Houae. Tustin.
"#
To avoid disappointment, prospediv•
brides are reminded to have their wecldlng
stories with black and white · ~louy ~ho~
erapbs to the DAILY PILOT Women s D,,.
partment one week before the wedding.
Pictures recelvecl after that time will not
be used.
For engagement announcements it ts
Imperative that the lltory, also accompanlecl
by a black and whlt• glossy picture, be sub-
mitted six we1k1 or more before the wedding
date. If deadline Is not met, on!y a story will ,
be used.
To help fill requirements on both wed· d.Jng -and ·-enragement stories, forms· are
. , • iivallable In all of the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questJons will be answered by
Women's Section staff members st 6424321.
Your Horoscope
Virgo:, Advertising
Helps You Get Going
SATURDAY
FEBRUARY 19
By SYDNEY OMARR
Taurus t1nd L I b r a In·
dividu1J1 harmonize. both
afgna are a1sociated with the
"pl&net Venus -and these ln-
dlvldu11s, once they g e t
together. can make significant
advances. Libra performs
valuable urvlces for Taurus.
Tri return, Taurus can play 1
key role in elevating financial
status Of Libra. These persons
can open new horizons for
e1ch other. IL! an excellent
combination~
write, advertise. F u t u re
beckons. ~1ove ahead. Strive
for gr ea t er independence.
cirigina/lty. Backing co u Id
come from one who once
dlsagrttc\.
LIBRA !Sept. 23-0cl . 22 \:
Avoid quick decisions in con·
n e ct f on with partnerships,
loans or investments. Refuse
to be stampeded. Hunch Is
likely to be accurate. Share
kftOwledge. Bu t don't give up
something ror nothing.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 \:
Mr1 . Huber recently returned
from 1 trip covering nine
foreign coontrles and the
United Slates and Or. Stack
visited HUJliary, Romihia and
Ruuia .
A 8:30 p.m. aocial hour will
precede the 7 p.m. dinner.
Homemakers
Knill Vs. Wovens -Tht.
Battle Was Lost Befort It Was
Begun will be the title for the
Friday, Feb. ~. meeting of
Happy Homemakers In the
Fountain Valley Community
Center.
Spe.aker for the 10 a.m.
gathering will be Mrs. Pat
CdM HIGH
Jennifer Quick
Girl Scouts
More than 400 Huntington
Beach Gtrl Scouts w1JI gather
at Village View School at 1
p.m. Saturday. Feb.~26 for the
annual Thinking Da hemed
international Friends ip.
A.!I planned by Cadelle
troops, Br014'TI.ie and Junior
troops will present songs, 11kit11
and dances. and international
refreshments will be served .
Demo Women
~1r!. Louise Mount of Youn·
ta.ln__Y.alle.¥-will receive the
gavel when J!e m ocr at I c
ESTANCIA
Anne Powis
da y, Feb. 26.
Others to be seat
lhe 7 p m. affair wil .
Mmes. J . A. McHugh · ·
Jessie. vice presidenls:
Vion and Sam Br u c k •
secretaries, and R l ch a rd
~1ichaels. treasurer.
Installing officer will ~
~1rs. F'rancis Rood. Fullerton
councilwoman.
The Orange Co u n t y
0 em o cratic Woman-of.the
year award will be presented.
Yacht S:lu~
A movie on sky sailing en·
titled "Whispering Wings" will
be :screened at t p m. Friday,
Feb. 25, in the Salboa Yacht
From Poge 17
W America. The program' wa..s • . . arr,Hied by Mr. and ~rs, of Jts L1tera!'Y Giants , .April
Etecut!vea' Dinner Club .al
the Oran&e Coast will meet In
lhe Newporter Jnn Thunday,
Ftb. 24, at 6 p.m. k Coulter. 29. ·A gut.st lecturer .14·~11 ~
" featured May 27. Admission IS
Temple Sheron
Mrs. Jiarry Gartler. lecturer
and Hebrew scholar, wlll
present a series of
philosophical lecture! a t
Temple Sharon. COst.1 Mesa.
under sponsorsl\ip of the
Temple Sisterhood and Men's
Club.
The first lecture. entitled
The Conscience V1. t h e
Intellect, will take place at 8
p.m. Saturday. Feb. 26. Coffee
and cake will be served at
7 c311.
Sub.sequent topie3 will be
fret.
Grandmothers
Business Executive!' Wives
will be the toplt-of Ms. Ro:ie
Dorrance who has conducted
seminars on Modern Business
Life. A mu11ical progra..m will ~1ernbers of Ne "-'po r l be presented by a vocal group.
Harbor Grandmothers Club c•lled The Salutrs.
will offer a variety of goods"----------
during the club'11 aMual rum-
mage sale Friday and Satur·
day, Feb. 25 ind 26. from lD
a.m. to 4 p.rn. in the home of
~!rs. Earl Schetne, Costa
Mesa.·
City of Hope
~~~ Jt l
S•• Th •
A slate of officers 'll'lll be Fr•sh Look
presented by the nomin~ting For Spring
committee, chaired by John 1 At ..•
Kelly, when the City of Hope's c:;-i
1 Stanley Mitnick Ch apter -......1.h.L<o
meets at 7:30 p.m. Salurday. BIDTIQUE ~·
Feb. 26. Q aa1A-M•1t•~ c,..,.,. l ~(
A1so featured al the gather-a~tu Ch•ro• ~
ing in the Harbor View recrea-J ,.., v11. LIDO
tlon bolldlng will be a game ·' ~ Nawl"o•T ••ACH J • Future • •
Carol echoed the feelings of
several students \\'ho 14•ould
like to see more companies set
up for the hard-of-hearing so
that more students ca n
participate. They would like
more students, more com·
panies, more and "''idely
diverse products.
From industry standpoint
Interest matches that of the
students and their parents.
"It is an experimental
thing.'' McKechnie said. "We
are learning and they are
learning what can be done, at
what pace and 1vhat the pro!).
lems are. All of us. j ncluding
the parents. arc enthusiastic.
''The most important thing
we have In do in industry is to
reach and communicate with
young people. They are learn·
ing responsi bility, fa c i n g
challenges and get t i n g
recognition for their work,
something all of us need."
night and lox and bagels par· \ •1:a.4s11 I'
mented. ty , hosted by Mr. and Mrs. ~~
Jules Jaffe. ~ When the company liq·I----~---~~ uidates In May the profits
realized could be in more than
cash.
Industry and b Us i n es s
throughout the coonty have ·
expressed a willingness to get
involved.
BLANKETS •711 ,,' ._ i,.,,.,
KING SIZE , ~11,. ~ c,,~1 WE AlSO HAVE FUll ANO TWIN SIZE ·· ... ,;,
MANY lOVEl Y COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM!
01"1,,. WASltlNOrON'5 l lltTltOAT
Company repruentatives in
different industries have of·
fered field trips enough to last
rhe school year, t() introduce Bed II Bath f8Shlon Shnps studenls to potenlial careers. ~"" ,.,;r Guest speakers have 11H1 MAIN ST .. I I s l"olnl1 Ctn!lr -HUNTINGTON llAClf
volunteered to attend Buddies ••l'lkAmtrlc•rll "'1111' Cll•";;.' l!ltill
Company meetings to speak · ~
on job opportunities. 1..:~~;;~~===:~~~~~~=:;;;;;:;;;:== North Amcrlcan·Rockwel!]
11nd other businesses, large
and small. hall! agreed to
sponsor. JA firms. Nort
America n envisions five for
next year.
Students with hearing Im-
pairments have been invited to
management gatherings to
meet business leaders and sell
the ir products.
"Normal" JA students and
other student leaders have
suggested integrated firms.
with those who can hear and
those wOO can·t, for future
years as a valuable learning
experience to both.
1 FREE CLASS
(Offer Expires 2-29-'72)
· • Paper Mache • Macrame
: • Decoupage • Tole Painting
.:; •Paper Tole • Tallleau
~.' Painting
Perhaps the most valuable
part of the program is the
\\'Ork situation. Employes and
advisers must pass inspection
of a security guard, wear
company badges and be
eSC'orled through the plant to a
spacious, well-lighted \\'Orking
area . They already have had a
good taste of "''hat working is
like.
Buddies Company plans to
send a representative to
regional meetings of JA com· The company con d u ct s pany leaders.
HARBOR HOBBY CRAFTS
NH HIGH
Nancy Wolfe
business on Tuesday evenings Tour through large industry!====~~;;,=;;;;~~~~=~~~~~~= from 7 to 9 p.m. in the may be arran1ed w I th
Anaheim facility, employed deaf persons giving
Coeds Named
"There is no question in my the guided tours.
mind that this will open doors JA and industry are en·
for future employment. These visioning the feaslbility of
students have proved bow similar programs for other
hard-working and enthusiastic special studenls.
Good Citizens
they are ," McKechnie added. Having opened one difficult
Parents have expressed door. everyone involved is
their feelings that the students looking ahead lo the nert.
take the company seriously. More jobs and on-the-job
"I feel they are getting training prograrrui for the stu·
ARIES (March 21-AprU 19):
Money arta Is activated. Ques. tlo'ns concerning po&Sessions.
spe<:l1l data, flnsnclng ire ut·
mhst. Avoid r1sb actions.
These can be costly. Ultimate
gain indic1ted. Be daring, not
reckless.
If not wary. you find yourself
in situation which is disturbln&
ind could be tension-buildlng .
Key is to be immune to
threats. Foolish response now
creates aura or loss, delay.
Hold off on legal, partnership
cornmltrnent.
va luable experience here that t dent who cannot hear but is
can only help them in the willing to work and work hard, Four Harbor Area high futurt, ·• one mother com· ts the goal.
school seniors have beenlmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;i;;;i;;;;;;;;;iiiii;i;;;;i;;;i;;;;;;i;i;ii..iiiii;;;;;ioii;~-----;;;;;;I
Share a
bottle with
a·fuce
ulected for the Good Citizen •
Award given annually by the . .)
Col. William Cabell Chapter.[
Daughters of the American
TAUllUS (April »May 201:
Study Arie.a message .
Cirtumstances fa vor your ef·
forts -bul excess speed could
create collision-course situa·
lion. Temper requires control.
Be AS polite to fa m I I y
membtrs as you probably
would be lo strangers.
GErtfl NJ IM,.y 21.June
20) A-fuch action occurs nnw
behind scenes. May be dif·
ficult to be discreet. but
necessary. One who is militant
could Issue challenge. You art
not with allies. Know it and
act like you know 11
CANCER (.June 21..Juty 22 ):
All11nce:s ue quick -both lo
be formed ind dis~lved . De-
pend on yourself. Others now
may be gentrous with prom.
ises. but little else. Sl.lck to
familiar ground. Gel desirts in
line wl!h re,11Jity.
LEO (.July 23-Aug. 22)·
career m .. tters get boost. ''ou
aaln added in«nl!ve. Take In·
JU1Uve. Obstacles now bf«ime
construct ive chal!t.ngeg. ''<'lu
have pl,nty goinlf for ~u . Ob-
tain hint frnm Ge m I n I
me~s.1gt Ont fn · 1111thorily
pays tribute.
VIRGO I Allll. 23-S.pt. 221
You want to gel going. And
you can do M if )'OU call.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21 ): Study Scorpio
message. Avoid extremes.
Don't l'.lVCrrespond. Kee p
hf'aJth resolutions. Co r rec t
safety hatards. Be aware of
details. Look for fine print.
Slress practicality. Red tape
"''ill untangle.
CAPRICORN Ille<:. 22·Jsn.
19 1· Emotions Oy high ; you
tend now to be impulsive.
Properly channeled, t h i s
energy can become part of
creative proctss. There v.•il\ be
changes. An announcement
could be r!Ceived v.· hi c h
changes lift-style.
AQUAf!!US !Jan. 2fl.feb.
181: Conflict of interest should
be settled. ln\·olves close
relelive or business associate.
DlplomAtic approach ca n
bring desired r e s u l 1 s .
Hnwever, don't g iv e Im·
pression of being weak.
PISCES I Feb. IS.March 20\:
T11ke special c1re around
m1chinery. 'lectrical out.ltts
and In traffic. Tendenty
toward accident& can be
('lvercomt. But you must be
aw1re -and re5pond ln In·
telll1rent manner. De v e. Io p
artas. St selective.
Revolution.
The coeds and the ir mothers
will be honored during a tea In
the Corona del Mar home of
Mrs. Willlam L. Fisher at 1
p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 23.
Honorees are the Misses
Jennifer Quick of Corona del
Mar High School; Catherine
Langston of Costi1 t.1esa High
School; Anne Powis, Estancia
High. and Nancy W o I re .
Newport Harbor High School.
Their parents are t h e
Messrs. and Mmes. Paul
Quick. William Langston.
Robert Powis and \\'illiam
\Yolfe.
Presenting pins and
certiflcales to the award \\'in-
ners v.·lll be Mrs . Henry 1 Crawford. 10th District Good
Clth:eo chairman , and giving
corsages to their mothers will
be ~frs. Edgar ~t Cox Jr ..
regent.
Te.a hostess 'll'ill be ~1rs.
\Yilliam Tritt., and on her com·
mittee will be the ~fmes.
Joseph Ray, Howard Key,
Howard Roberds, E I v i n
Wil90n, Hart Hickman and
Arthur Gru11.oell.
The awardees •re selected
nn lhe b.\s!J of their depen·
d1blllty, service. patriotism
and grades. Senior girls at
1 eaC'h school nominate three•
1irl1 and the faculty makesl
!ht final decision.
A BIG NAME SnroE tN5
JJiXlfXJlll!OOJJl11~
OA1lPEr AND D
I UALJT'f
W. lullbl Up wttb t.b BEST 'li,;;n>N
1438 SO. MAIN al EDINGER• SANTA ANA• PHONE 5-47-3993
Low · Prices!-We Compete!
Tremendous Selection!
We Excell!
HIGH FASHION KNIT FAIRICS FOR
THE STYLE CONSCIOUS WOMAN.
6000 sq . ft. of Koit f•brics -You mu1t ••• to beli eve. Imports, be1ic 1•lid1 ,
designer prints, entire color lin •s, •II in bl•nds of Polyest•r, Lin •n, Fl1x, Wool,
Alpec•, Nylon, Deersk in, Pe r••u•d•, Trevire, Oiolen, in top n•m• brends.
OUR EXPERllNCED STAFI' PROVIDES
GUIDANCE AND ADVICE
WE LAY OUT PA nHNS AND HILP YOU SELECT NOT MOU FAHICS, IUT
THE RIGHT FAHIC FOR YOUR INDIVIDUALITY.
NEWPORT STRETCH " SIW TECHNIQUES
We teech it in our mod•rn pletsant classrooms by skilled prof•ssiantl t11chert
so your stwin9 •xperi1nct becom•• self.satisfying end ctn be compl•ftd ilt
sO much l•ss tim•.
HIGH FASHION IPFICTS -YES!
Our Stretch & Sew technique• corrtl•te your b1sic: creativity with our fine lint
of Vo9u•, 8utterlck es well et St,.tch l Sew pt1tttrns ftr the couturier• t l\d
h;gh •tyled look.
FUI DIMONSTRATION -RSVP
HOSTESS WRAP-AROUND SKIRTS -SATURDAY, I :~ P.M.
EtMlJtl ~ FOR 0£MONSTRA !ION CtAlllS
PIHAIO llOlttU.flOtt llOUlltlD
I BAS IC EIGHT
t Ml. CLASSES EACH WEEK
FOR I WfEKS SIJ.00
Tu••••v. F.b. 22 .• t :JO A.M. WH~•M•y, M•tth a •• 7:10 ,,M,
CHILOREN'S WIAR
THREE 2 HR . CLAS~ES $6
s,.,.. ... I, -Ni1htwo1r -Drt11y
M•"4•y, M•rch IJ •• 1:11 P.M.
I MEN'S ATTlllE
'•11f. Or••• Slrtlr+i, J•tk•k, N1~tff•1 FOUR l H._ CLASSfS Sl.00 SIX 1 HR. CLA,SSlS St2.00
WM119Ml•t. M•rd I., l tlO ,.M, W.4M14•¥· M•tth IS •• t :ll A.M •
TE EN CLASS
.
LINGERIE· ~IVE 2 HR CLASSl!S SID. 'tUES., MAR . 14. • ,7 :30 PM . .
NEWPORT S-T·R·E·T.C.H & SEW
FAIRIC CENTER
2121 W•tdlff Dr. Coe-171h & Irvine !Nut to Coco'a)
--..,ltL t A.M. TO ,, lt.M.
MTUIDAY t 4Jit. ft 4 lt.M. 84&.11~.
Spacial
Combo
Offer
$J50
you love.
Share a bottle of Bonne Belra
fam()IJa Ten-O·Six LotJon with th•
f1ce you love. Now durf"g ll'lls 1pecial
otter, buy an 8 oz. bottle at the
regular price and get a 2 oz. bottle
free. Share it with your boyfriettd,
your brother, sister. or l'IOW abol.lt
dear, sweet Dad.
Tell them how Ten-0-Sfx helps to
keep faces clean, c'9ar and honest
Because it cleanses beller than IOlp
-unclogs pores and tightens them.
How it's a d11p,t"tiseptlecl1&nMr
th•t helps to clear up blemllhee
end keeps them cltar-•ltd how
it normalize; olly or dry &lcln
conditions. Teff them to uu ff fl rat
thing In the morning and lul thing
et nlOhl
'BMt'Bft
T....o-s!1 Lolilft -• lot ol -lo give. Aocl to -!ft.
JCPenney
..
FASHION ISLAND • NEWPORT IEACH •
•
,
•
J
Ii
B
p
th
a
of
pu
Fr
pu
ch
Ci
de
in
SIU
fil
m
A•
Te ,,
du
"'
"D
is
A
fas
d'3
Tra s
ma
loo
Pa
deli
sha
dow
bla
'
READY TO ROLL -All details are in place and the Orange Co unty Trojan
Leagol!'s"rirst benefit is ready to be sc reened Tuesday, Feb. 29, on the USC
campus. Ready for the film sho wing are (l eft to right) ~1rs. John M. Billings
and Mrs. Willard Wade.
• ·--•
DAIL V PILDl__Jlf
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEG AL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE --~-~=:---l---,==--===-~1---==~.:.:.::::___1 -----1----.,----"''"'''•0UI IU$1Hlll Pt(flTIOUI •u1111111 ,ICtltlOUI •ut1111••• ,ICtlt lOU I I USINtlS ..OTIC:t 01'
NA#lt 11.t.TIMINT N4lilll 11 .. TIMll'tT HAMI ITATIMINT NAMI ITATllillNT NON•lll,ONlll ll.ITT
T... loll0w•"9 p«-ere .... ti.. i.l'°'*I ...... f\Oft Is ..,,,_ .......... fl\f ftll ... ! ... .,.,_ 1111 Mine ..,.,,..., T~· kll_L..,. Hrtlll\ lo ....... butll"" "111'<-f l• l>I•-., ... ,. IMI lllf ~
1111•1""'' ••• •• ·~· •• ,,, ...... 111 ""' ..... _,~ ....... .. (lllEATIVIE ENTEltl'11:1$f!., 10lS2 l l 5£0\/11,.1,. \.o, Uj( t~ti ofl "'•• llA ll TMOltl llfAVTV COLl lOt \_ l"ltOl'Wl l'f o ... ,. P'O '°' n11 ................. '"~··" ........ , ..... ~.
Cfl>t•o. f(ll.jll!f ll\ V•ll•Y .. • ... t ........ •>rtt. JOI Hwtn ~ .................. A• ... 11'1! •a ..... lMI• M•u •>tl• ""' ~·
Dot.... (. s.m,.111, lOISI ll C...ir... Jin! L "•'""" ~ 1 ... ,.., """ ,..,., (i lllf>lnli ,..,, t"1t1.,., loM ''"'' (li ra, C1u11 o.w "'" llltl .,.y tf '""' , ..
'""'nl.0111 V•ll•., "'"•· .,~ s-.-ll••lll• ,.,,.,.,.., .. , !fl( 1111 ""••• ,,.,. ••II• 1111100
Yv-.. c;1_,.nln1, 1•Jf l 1 1.. '"" llu1"''"' 11 "'"' '~'"' 111 •II c •Ill ( OI<> 1 Q )(I WolVllr• Ao.ii.•••• '"" .,.,.,,_" 11 11•"119 t°""W!H I • •" 1 .... N.....,1>1, '11,..,
r111, l<°"nt••" Y•l1f> ll\CllVICtu•I ~-•11Mlt• Ct l"fWll+t tellll 1'111,.lllu•I CO•ll ~ Ct lll
lllh lloltl"'u II 11111'1 (OftOu<llod llf • J•lft l ltYt ll Tiii\ ov11,..., "c-~i.tl II• 1 ~ '"'" Ct tl"' "vlf•\11«! (11.o-l&otl Deify Pl,.. Nr1...,.~1, 1111, 1111t•n•111 111N1 w1111 '"' ,,... .. ,., i uott.. '"'' "•'-+11.,. _.., '"" r..,...,. ""'""',.,.-11. ''· JJ, tt1'1 en'-
""-Gl_I.,. Cl-If Ort~f (OVfUJ l'l'I l<lt ' nn KO,.I 111 lrt,VtY fll!TElll'lllSIS (I••• tf O••n•o (1Mmt•.,. ~•II l 11" __ -
Oonl\.o c Smilll IY ltn• J 111.,,,,.., °"""Iv Coun1y INC , • (tl•.ot••1611. I• llt•tfl• J, M•ddt•, O•v!v LI""" LEGAL NOTIC~ 'flloi 1t1htn ...... 1 fllto:I wolll I"+ c ..... h (ltf' •• MIVO< ~......... l It•~
(llr• ot Ot.o.,,.. Covntv OI' F.01 ... ty t, 'IUt l P!t li<I•"' P l ... 111 --------------UIJ 9 Y e•llY J . l 1r111.,., OtoUl\I County P11•UIJ>ooll 0<•11110 r N•t l).o!I\ PllG I HJ•·OC p ,,&1 .. 11.,1 01 1nH ( "" P.•IY P llpl 11"1
Cllor•. "•ll•u••• 11, "· u , •ncl M••(ll ,, 11'1 '"'" ~•O•W••• .. It. It.. 11 ttn H• /1 ,..,, ••• o . COU•T o • TMI
'IJJtl ) .. ~) l"<1llll\llH 0••111• (6#111 O••!Y l''<<>I ------11.t,fl 0 , CAl.IPO•l•ll • •Olt
P1tOlltllld 0<.ont• Co-•' 0 .11. l'llOI l----------------l ,..ww•r1 It, 11. u •nd M••(ll J. 101 L1';GA1. N01'1CE '"' COUNf 'I' o• OltAMI•
Feoni••Y 11, U, lS. M•re11 l, 11n LEGAL NOTICE .Mf.lff--------Ht. A·ll•t4
J.11 JI HOTl(:I OP Nl ••IH• 0' PI TlllOlf
LEGAL NOTICE ,ICTITIOUI •UllNl11
N.t,MI STATIMIHT
'~ .. !01towln1 H nllll lo ooln1 tiu11ne11
f"tCTITIOU1 1,U1!Nl11
NANll STATIMI NT HAlleOlt SlOlt,t,CI! OUTLET, ll)
Tiie follOwl"• ,.ettofl 11 lloin1 1N1lnt1-l11t 11111 11offt. Catt• M•••
11. o. .. 1a ICt v J""''"• Ul1
SVt.iSWE•T e u IL 0 I N 0 M,l.IN ···""'· t.1<1oee T ENANCE, 1 .. 12 8'1llt1t l t nt N&. j . Tn'" lluohwn i. ... I ... COl>l!Yfl fd I• t n
Hun!I"""" &etc:I>, Cflll0t,.l1 ll\Cll•ldwtl
E••I M , "•11<1...+, 1 .. n ••""" L•11t, o ... in II•• J"Wr
I.lo }, Hunll""°" lflt•Ch, (e llfl>t"I• flllt •l•t•n1tnl lllfd "'"' mo
Tnh 0Uo!nt1• 11 bfln1 COlld11Ut0 •• •n (I••• Of Or•ntt Countf °" F•D.
Lnal~ldu•I. II• e.ir, J, •••11•111 011wrv
Ettl M , Ft11+1wtl (lor•.
Thlt t!•t....,..,t hi"<! w11" lfl4' Co.1n1¥
Cit<' 01 0t1"9t Co.1111v. on FOO II, 1tn PuOll111e<1 O••f\•t
8¥ et •••!• J. M•lld<I•. Ot py!f '°""'' r-w•IY II, II, U C1t•f\
Coo•1 0•11• l'll(ot
I nd M•t(f\ l, 1tn
"'" f'IS'4tl------
P11ltl1"'9CI O••n•• cot .. 0.11 .. 111i.i• LEGAL NOTic·· , ........... II, 2• •1111 M••cll '· 11. ttn r..
LEGAL NOTICE ...
f'tCTlflOUS IU11 Nl 1S
NAMI.! 1l ATIMIN1
SUll F$10( f!f•Hl, '401 '•••hot •
l>t 1.,. H• .. llOt1 e ••Cll. C tlll"'"I•
1100.rr )••w••I IGtl,.••I l'••lno•\
u(ll 5•,.•llO•t 01 rvo, H•wuor1 llO•CA
l •!Olornlt
111" 0<1>1nou 1, "°"'" c+u11111tltd IY •
tlmlttct ,., .,,., "''"
Rl>t>etl Sl•wotl
1 .. 1, •l•l11n•nl hied w•tf\ '"• ceu .. 1r
(I••• ol Ot•n•• Covnly on J •A I• !tll
Jlrt,Ml1 C I001H
•nor11ty Al L•w
11M N.,t_ Miii\ 1trMt, S11tlt ..
l •nl1 1rt,111, C1lll..-101t ntM
•11111
Cll'I O• POUHl,1.tN Ylrt,lll''I' "01 P•O••t• o• Will ANO •o• HOMIHl l:I ,.01 "liillllC 0"11'tCe Llllll l Tl\TAMINlAI Y
lllQl l(ti IS llLRl!ll Y GIVIN !11•1 !Ile l"•l•l• \;! MILOlllO •. HOLOl ll:I .. Hlllu...1 ...... ,,llflt ..... l;Hlltll ...,, .. ,,.., .. , o ........
l<N lh• Otl•<• ""'"'"•llO< ...... u_<t ·~..... NU llt r I\ ltt lttl 'I' OIYIN 111•1 Jlllll
l•llNj •• '"• c. ...... i M11 .. l~IP•! l"IHllOI• '" r tou1n•••f .... 111..., "''"" ... tllltn"" IH "•Id !" "•• 'II• 01 ""'"'•lll, v1ii.v Of! .o•nll~•• M .. 111 •'"' 1or ltow111t• •• l 1ltf>t 1 '"'"''~ 1110 11111 n•• Of A~•lr "" !•"•"'•"!••• lo Ill• IMtlllln.,•r, ,.,ttr111r1 FOi M•'"""' fl/ Ill• (11, (lktMll: Vol~ ... "M•h i. '"•!>• 16' ,.,,, ........ ll(YI•••·
K>I fwl I l l lroCI 111•1 1110 !11110 ••Ml •I•<• nf hltfln• I~ Me1~ln I' •nlot •~••••I•••"'•" ••+ "" I •II'"•" 1' !tit,
(1e11n<o 1: I ••~tr •I~ tie '" " !!•• '"''"'IKI'" nf .,..,.,+.
II•• 0 ll l<"•rdo '"'"' ro.'1> I "' •~"' <•'ull •I /'!1111 (!YIC:
l'ful ,. '•••• h"I l ""'•' n,.,, I\•" ''' lno '"• " S1n11
•••nlo " '"•'•'•d "'"" \ olOuo.,<•
J•n woinoi.o O••t<:I 1 """'"'" t It/I
Mot• f 11'1• WlllJ"M. lo! Jl'ltlN I 1t, l IO•O <;>I lho l •t. nl ,...,n+•-" V•"•• ().o1.,, I •b1u1<y I ll'f
,..,.,. • .,.,," O••n•• le>o" n •• 1.
f flll ""' II, 19 !fl/
r nn1
\•I II
l 6U'11W I IOtlo
ll0 1t•1t 1 N WHITMOlll
l lf t.i•w•.,I '•"l•r Dr , l 11U• U1 NO• .. t l llo•c•, (1111, ., ... T••• 11111 ..... ,. •>n,1---------1-------=-,,------I LEGAL NOTICE
.• ,
•tCTITIOUI I UtlHe t t
Nol.ME llAl l MIHT
Pultll!f•"" o ....... ,., • .i O••ly P•IO!. l.t<:r:AI. N.l•TICE -J•'"'''' • "'"* ~-w••• •, II. U ---
Al1M ,.. .... , 'tUI-•
l'ubl"""" 01 e11110 Cn•oi ll•ll• I _...,,.,.. 1! Jl II ttn
l<ICTITIOU1 I U1tNl15
N,1.ME' ITilTllllllENT
!o!lowl"f P.,flOll II CIOllll Ou1J,.t n
HElll.llMAl.I McGJI EGOll C0Mf'AN Y,
11(1 J1na Slrt tl, NPwPOtl l•tCll.
C•lllo1nl1 t'l66C
lt•IPll "4. &1k•<. ?ll YI • Nit••
t.i•WPcttf f!flCfl. (•lil()fni• t'j"°
l hls bu•!n~u It Otlnt coM~tlf!d b• •"
lncll •lduM.
ll•lol! N. B•l<~r
l f\!1 •!•!un~n! !ilf'd wit~ !~t County (ltr~ al Ot1n11• (ounh "" F•b. 11, lt11
B• fle•••lv J, MIOddO>l, Oe1>vlY (cwnry
Clfr~
, 1 ltJf
Publl•llf'd O••not C<11•t Ot!IY Pilot,
F.-tlt'111ry II, 16 I nd M•rch ,, ]!, lf11
ltn '" 11 ... LEG AL NOTICf: l H£ ltlMOltf (OMP•H'I. Ill Oavtt
0•, ~ .. u. !O, "'• .. POtl &•tell. Cell! 1----,-.CTIYIOUS tU11Nl11
,1..0. Nlrt,MI 11,l.fl!llll NT Jlvsll P. WllH•m•. i.l I.I , Lin,01n
r l..ct. Mo1uO•••. C1llt t1Dll
Tiii• OU•ln""' It 11o1111 co..nuct•d II• '" IMl•lclu•I.
Jiu•!\ P, Wllll•mt
11\h 1111 .. n1nt lll•d wllll !111 Cou11h
Cl~•• 111 Ottn<1• County on: Feb. I. 1•n,
OOHAl O N. llll lVIAL
At1erney 11 l •w
Tl!• IOllOwln• ,.., •on• I! I otolnil
lullnlli •>.
lOWt.I ANO COUNlll 'I' l(NIT ~ttOP
llYI ft••<h l'l!vd , H11111Jn111<1o1 1101(1\,
Colll.
M•lvl" F \w11111r11•0 St, 1111\ <»•1101Y l~nt. !Hmllnw!o" ft•••"· (t ill
LJIU1n M ~c>ulhwJrd, "'" (\••O!"~ Lin~. 1+un11roo1on ll••<l'I, ~•lit N I OIY•( Or., 11111• II
NtW•orl ••• ,~. Cllll1r .. 11 ""'· TM, tlu•ln•u It lltl11• c0t•dut!M b• •
.. IMIJ P•rtn•r>lll~
Mt l""' r i9u1nw1ro )r
,
Pullll1hed Or1n11• CD•ll 0 111, PllOI . ~1111 ... M Suuth ... •rd
~IC TITIOUS I UUNl•I
H,l.MI 11.t,flMlt.11
'"" '''""""''" "'"'""' ~·
........ ,. ... ........
)0Ultt <"OA\T !t.IVflfMlo Nll
l\llt U l"v••hnoH"1 H/J \lwu11 .. 1 '""" J!J, N•Wl>O! I l'•Of ll t)M•
I"~""' l!lbQlol lll•l lloc•1 ~••· 1t.1.,. c.1,r •lt6•
IQ"'"" I lull•. l lfl) I'••"" "Ito rl•od
i•n J""" t.tPl11to11n
••ll••• 11111n1t1 1,, 11111 en•''" "'"•I. Ion J"on (u11>!10101>
11 ... nu'll!IOU •• h•ln11 <OOOu(lld llY •
l'1rrn.,,1,1w
t "w•n• I rlh1110t
1h1• •!•l••n••>t nl~d w11n "'• ("""I•
ti.,• cl Or•nw• raum~ pn '•h ' 1t11
lh "•"• J ll•••J!•n f}otf>Lll• ( "'""' ( 1 ... .,.,,, ___ _ ~'"''"''"' '· !I, 11, 11, 1111 1'11 n 11111 1111•m•nt Hied wlt11 m1
------l c111• 01 O••nY• CDr.1nrw 011. ,, ..
(n1mh
), ltll
C•ounly
, I I/ti
Co.it 0.1lr P11<11, '"" M•• cl! ), lt/1
'"'' n
1..EGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE --"--c-,---'-c--,---l--
,,CT1Tl0US IUltHl"11 'ICTITIOU1 lllU1tHe1•
e. llov1tly J, M•dOoo, 0 .... 1,
c1 .. •.
P111>ll1l1"<1 0t8"H '"" O•llY
Ftbtu••f •• II, 11. ,J, 1111
"l"lt l'llnt ,.. n
Punu.ned o.,.,.,,
rtt>t"••Y 11, !I, II
N,1.MI: STATI M(Nl N"MI 5flrt,T I MINT Ll-.:GAI. NOTICE
lollowl,,. "'""' 11 +10.n1 OU1ln111
11;
lHJf EE 'M' £Nlf_ll Plil tSE5, "11
(;r•ce ln. Cool• Met.~, Cttllotn!• '1foU
Marlin W. KorSOll, 2(1)j lt11rt , Cott•
Mt11. c,.i uo.nl• 9112 ..
This b+ntneu 11 oe1 ... cOfldu+:'ltd 11, 1n !n+llvldutl,
M•rlln W. IC Dl'SOll
'f~l1 1t1lt mtn1 /ll@d wit!\ 1111 C111111h
(l!!•k ol 0<1.,.1 County "" FtO<ut rv 11,
1972. I v llrw1r1, J. Mtdaox, °"""'' {00/AIY Cl1t•.
'~ ... 10U-!t11 '"'°" It +101"' 01111"'-••
COMPUTFll PRO~. \IS J(t!I Slr~t1. LEGAL NOTICft:;
N-llOl'I e t1(ll 11,.
'ICf!llOUI I U11NI\$
Nlrt,Ml $fAf lMl.NT
1011uwl~~ P11t>011 h dOln1 ltff l llfl l!L Dow•ll•O. HS ~th S1t~e1 · f'l(Tl'flOUI I U1lNl.11 1,
Svlr• ot., Nt""'"°'I lllCh ' NA MI STATl.MINl ~Gii fl>ll1P•nv, IOI l wlllll!<• VI, JQOI
l hl1 llu•lfllll 11 1111 .. , COfldU<1-cl 11, •n Tiii h!llOW!ntl P•ir •On• ,,, doln11 11•+1 lt!ll "~ ....... tool• M•••. n 111
1""1 .. 1i;iv11, but '""" "" ~!•w••t •· Hlf"'"'"oe1. 1t00 "r•••••• lt,,IMI E. Oo.1tll ti lrt,&LE P.t,INTll.IG (OHIAAC IOlt§, I•"• 1 ( l!vl"•· tlW• •
Thi• 111t1men1 t!llld wlt!I 1111 Clktnlv P O. llo• 10'>', 111• T11t1t whMh 111 1 .. 1, ll"'"'•U ,. t..•"• ~''"""<"ti ti• 1 Cler• ol Ort n•• Co.111tw Ofl: Jt n. II. itn. Nt-1 •••ell, Cllll. Ll•nl!...i "•n11ottf\1n
I v lflt v•tlY J. M•cltto•, Dll>ll!~ CO\intv J•tl W1 11t1 (l~r•, 11)9 l••d•wln•h ll•w•ll &, Ml+tinu>lld
Cl•rl . l n • Nt .. Pnrl &t•<h, {•Ill, Tfll' •t•l•monl tll~CI llrfl!h mo C11<1ll!J
"·lltn •nnt <lt0t•• £tlw••d J•Al ln1. "'01 11111 c1 .. 1i. -of 0 ,,11,, Co.I"'"' on J i n 11, It/I
PuhlliAed Orttt.91 (llflll Dilly Pllo!, Publl•""" Or•"" Co11t O•llV •llO!, Avo • API {11. Hw,.lh,.IOll II••<!?. (t ill, I Y lltY.,!¥ 'J, M•dOO• OtflVIY ''""''
Ftoru..-r 11, '' •nd M•rcti •· 11, un J•,.~••• JI, •"<I F•lltu1ry 1, 11. 11. Tfll • llu•l,.•u It 1111n1 (on+l\l<t•d oy • CJ•r•.
l..f~GAL NO'flCE
l'~l>!•I "•., ln10 .. ,11 bo h•lo1 llV lhf
I "''• Meoo ,.111111111• C11•mo1l\1I(,~ t i th f
t•i. 11•11 II ••11 Otlvo CllU• M••o,
'~"''" '"" •• I ltl • 1n o• •• '""" •1 l'UUilll• !!l.,~tllf< O" ... •" oj t y o
I oll'""'' 'If, ltf), ll•w•rm .. , '"• 1~1111.,..
'"~ °''"111 •hllf\•
I ltu~"' P11u1.., Ht 11 ·'1·11, t~r
11,,,.,,, I M•• .. (0 l'l•I• I. !nw••>••·
I'll I<~· '"·fl Mflfol• 1 0111 . Mr
''""'"""" ht ''"'"' 11•o+1•t1y ., <!••r • llo"t lri Ill• INll!l"n ••>fl lt11.•ttll ol
71/1 tlothoH l lY•, (pol• M•lt, (•Ill , lo'"" "'I "'~! C1 IO flll'
I ll•1t11• ~1111... Nt It "II. le•
110111•1 I Ul•rw•I••• /Oil NOl!h I •••••
•••""• l uo ilt1t10!•0. l tlll , If>• ''"""l"•IH• la •••11<1e 11t~•·•• •• do" r<loe<l '" II,. Nilll&n ••Id 1"'•'111 1'M
II OAll 01 I"' '""•tttl!on e• \fUlll
( ,. • ., lt 11e<l ..... ••l••<tw lil M ll, Clllll
Mt••. (ol<!, lr111n 1rt,1 10 111(1'
I ,_ I I Clfll'-" PIHl'Ut N1, ll" 'J•
fl, '"' WllH1111 1., .. .,.,11, 0 111.\ "'"'w"'" •1111 Au&c , llOlll hYlno 11....i.
lu•hM, rtUI . fOt ,..,,..+u1on 111 Ulf'o
tl1u+I ll•t l~l lt111l•1•0 lllr1o l11•tt• 1111
• .,11 111 ~ !(lltl tn on•tl 1,.. t f' ,,,.,.
ll•Hh 611 m flo6ltly !lKll•d ... th• e10! "/J• ul Of•n .......... fl Otl• •flll It !"
l'l•••• ( OOI• M•11, Cllll , In t lll •(ll'
·~.,.
4 I-ll<t .. 11111 f'tt111U Nt, t l •IJ.
H , Int l<~O'I I( l -1•. •?ell lt.ol""'f or ... , t.ltllrlllfl•I •••<"· (1111. i..-
P•,..,1.,1011 le .... AP IOlllMI IH'61M•I~ !<'Ir t•t~•nUtl IU•rl(lt•I, IWI -.-rty llC•lo4
et 1161 Plf(l"ll• "''·• Cotlf Mot11, (1111
League S~reens
For Premiere
Plans •'Ul ''11 1'4·11 ~•rt11trthl11,
lp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I J.cl\ W. Cf~rk Thi' •l•l•m•"' lli•d "'llh '"' (nun(• (ltrk of O••"V• Coun!f on• J.011, 11. lt/l
l'ublhlo.-d
l•<'uflY 2f
1~11
01•"w' (O•ol
l ,M) fo~""'Y
P•n• 1·11~1
•, 11. It,
1 II /1
.. ,_ •• ..,,lf+O h nlllf "''· "l•·n>
M, '"' 1 ll o A. Ou~tlo, JV I . 1f1n ~·•••I. t"•I• Mot•, I.t ill , l llt P•• lll•nlnn In -11• ./l 1u •·O.:hlllll IOf O
'"~''""'"' ~r t (l\llllrl n, •U•I UI Ill '
•••••· +n .... 111111•. "" 11tQ1>•r•v lllC•I..,
•I 1'10 I, lflh \tltlM, 1,11"• M.o•I, (•Ill.,
In •ft 110 IOfl•
Benefit
The Osca r Award.winning Special r;:uests will be the
rilm. "The Resurrection of presidents of the Los Angeles,
Bronco Billy." \11ill be screen-San Diego and San Fernando
ed during the first annua l Trojan Leagues. and Or. John
Orange County Trojan League Hu bbard president of USC.
benefit Tuesday, Feb. 29. Buses <ft•iJI leave Jrvine
ftobinson's, Anaheim, al 9:45
a.m. I
Ass isting-with arrangement~
arc the Mmes. W 1111 a m
For tner, Kenneth Ross and
Willard Wade of Newport
Beach. The 11 a.m. eve nt , honoring Coast Country Club a n d
patronesses. will lak e place in ,-------'-------------------
the ne"' Heritage H 11 11
auditorium on the University
of Southern Ca lifornia Ca m·
pus.
Proceeds will be given lo the
Friends of the Libraries for
purchase of books.
Dr. Bernard Kanto r .
chairman or the School or
Cinematography and associate
dean of the School of Perform·
ing Ar ts, will show the
student-di rected and written
film and discuss new methods
in the teac hing of cinema.
The reci pient of the Dart
Award for In novative Ideas in
Teaching. Kantor has in-
troduced noted directors. pro-
ducers. actors and actresses
to the USC Cinema Division.
He is co-author of the book
"Directors al Work '' and now
is co mpleting twu others.
Beauty
Gets Nod
•
season eye openers
for 72
e custom fitted
sw im e he ng ten
1vits
e reedy to
weer 1uif1 e cover upi.
e nd t his years hottest idee1
"mix 'n' match"
bikini tops end bottom1
select your ow n per1on•li1ed
• top
221-221 '/, MARINE AVE.
BALBOA ISLAND
SAL
NOW ON!
DRASTIC REDUCTIONS! HU GE SAVINGS!
WE MU,ST MOVE . SKI MERC HANDISE TO
MAKE ROOM FOR NEW SPRING ITEMS!
Nea~
Sl'OtlTIHG GOODS ... , .. "°" ., ,,,,.(IJ
-
3 SUPliR SPORT SHOPS
• htif• a-. 21f L 4tt. ,,\~ IO 7-SMJ
• ,..,,.,......, .01 '· 1-11.i . •11.s•.••
• ,.....,_. c..itw, r 21 •••hit" hi..-.! ..w.2121
POl'f HO+.llttr
'9tlllool ltle-11 ""OOt I~•• '" 10 OIM! 11)..6
..... Ml ...... ,.,!!f•\Of' ...,. ' ,., • JO·•
t ..... ""'~~ t~,.. •• Sor< • J0-6
IANICAMH l<AID
.. STt l Qfd Ot
DINRI
I '
THE
FIGHTER
He is ROBERT S. ALLEN
He is the newspaperman's newspaperman.
He is a slugger with his typewriter.
Allen Carr ies a pun ch in his column$. Once he gets
in t he ring with an j$$Ue he swarms all over it. He's
a real investigative re p9rter with the inside wor d
in many high places.
He makes his jabs quick, but fu ll of impocl. On
"The Selling of the CBS controversy surrounding
the Pentogon" Allen soid:
Simple stotemen t. Full of impocl.
When th e trouble arose in Panama Anen delivtr·
td his bl ows with deodly directness.
"CBS escape d pro•ecutlon for
c onte mpt, but that'• all"
'"Tiny, but cr11c lall.y 1trate9ic
' Panama, w ith a /on9 h btory of
t urbule nce and military powe.-
se izures, appe ars l1eade d •for
t h e une n tlloble role of bei111J
the ne .rt country
coup a ttempt."
to w4tn e•• a
Another stroight forword punch.
is co lortul, fo rthright tnd inde feli91ble.
Look for his co k.mn , • frequen t future of the
ed itori el page in your
DAILY PILOT
"'
ey 'll••••IY J, M1ddot, OtPUlf Counh {lltk. ,.,Sil
Pulltl1hld O••llf• Col li O•llv PUol, J•nu1•y :II, •nd l'tOrvt ff '· 11, 1,.
1'12 • Ill · 7
""
LEGAL NOTIC~
~ICITIOUI I UllNllS
NaMI 1TATIMINT
loll-I"' ""Of' h lloln1
lllAllTMOlllE e EAUl'I' (0LLEGIEI,
lU S(llilll lHnl>ll ~lrerl, An•ll•lm,
Ctlllotf'!lt.
k -&••ul• e .. t.,p•l••t, Inc I•
C.ollf, CotP I • ..050 Wlh .. lr• B1111lt•••d. lo. Af!flelro. (All!ntnlo tOOlf
Thia llu1lnou It C-UCll'd llY I (Of.
or111on,
scorE 8EAU JY E.Nll!:ltP!tlSliS.
INC.
e. M•Yot Lvt11 .. ,
P••tld•nl
lllll al•!l!m•nt w•o tll"" wllA Ill• (0011
1• Cl1rk Ill Or•"t• COlllllY on FM, t, 111' .,,, .. " •u m PullUthH! Or•.,11 ("ol Otllw PllGI,
FMtu•tr II, II, )!, M••dl I, lfn
liO-/J
MOOll•toi Ttt• ~•tYILL HI CM. ,.... "4.... l 11-••«.,
Llrldtt• ltM11 G"'""'' U~ """'_.. •t••· LffvM .. .ell 'ftilo Ml...,.. •• _,.. ~f+I ff &n
'""'·~· Lif'w:I-• r~v......
Thll i•.01-• ,, .... "'"~ IN
(ifo"f Of Ot•-fwnty ... "" ·~ ....... Jy J ~. D•"'IP ,_
•
LEGAi. f\'O'l'ICJ<;
4. 1<111• l•tl f'lllll f'ormlt NI. 11•1J•
ll, '"' l•n111 (, ll11~.,1lth. 1101 c11.,. '"ft" -~ .. ,y., 01•nt•. (•Ill , fflf
OlOl"'itlltl" Id COllOllUlt I& Vllilt on
l • ~·o '" n IM l•~d "'"" 11 111111 ,..,
'110 •ll. II, .. l•NI •'"•!, Of\ 1r111Hrty
IOl •!eoJ ti //J (111111• .. \llN I, (!It!• M•t•. (•Ill , In 111 It? ,_
I "' lyttl\I< llllOUn•lllH• 611 lfll •lfleY•
1noll• •llont, ltl•pl\o11• 111 1Ju 111 r •ll 1t II•• O""' IM ,,,. Pl•11nl,.. Otlt1tlm1nl,
i4110111 100. II f'll• Dt1vt. Ce•I• Mew, (•llt0t~•~
<0,1.t, Ml.llrt, PLAHN INO
<OMMl,,101.1
(HAILfl 8 ft(IC., l llAlllM.1.N
Wllll•m L OwnH, \•Cffil •Y •"4 • o .. o(lor ol ........ 1 ... ""~"'''"' Ot •ntt Cao11 O•I~ ,.,ltl, l<•b•u••• II, 1n 1 •Jl•IJ
LEGAi. NOTICE
• ----
• If 0.\11.Y '1L~ f-. ,.....,, II, 1.,.,,
M.arquette
Cage Star
Is Frank Robinson Worth $150;000?
•
Inks Pact
·MILWAUKEE -Marq..U. Unlvenhy
cmttt Jim 0-1 bu alaned 1 oontrld
to pl1y for the N.., Yort Neb of the
Amtttcan Baakelboll Au«lltlon, the
-·· prealdont llJd Htly llldoy.
Tho Rev. John Raynor, oald the l-fool-
11 junior C<llltt had informed Warrior
eoo<h Al McGuire of the ldlon lat<
Thursday nl1ht.
By MILTON IUCllMAN
NEW YORK IUPI 1 -How mucli u a
bollpllyer ldullly W«th?
How much la lll)'ont worth, 1ptaklng
11.ridJy ln doUus md cent.a"!
Ci>emlc:llly 1peaiir11; the bumlJl Cody
ha.a been appraiMd al f7 centa. That
O(Urt WU tmblished I kJn& Umt 110.
But no one evu has -rt.ally atabli!.hed
what 1 major Jugue ballplayer ll worth .
Not Jo hlo Wile or hil mother·ln·law, but
to hlo bill club.
Frank Robin.Jon 11ys he'1 worth
SU0,000 and lhat'1 what he'• ukln& the
Ood1er1 . , . Juan Markhal ls uklng the
Giant.a for the umt lhlng . . • Tom
Seaver 1ccepted $120,000 from thee Mets
•
and Richie Allto uy1 he1l •aree to the balJptlyer ii oat ....-th mor. tbao llG.000
same tiiurt with the White Soi. Vid.t or SlS,000 a 1t1100. Anything more than
-Blue Sol 111.!lm from-the-.\'r1ut THt-illal Is !wed oo bow IIWlY liCkeU people
and he llYI all it11 take for them to aet liDf: up to buy to aee him perform.
him blck Ibis year ~ 1115,llOO. "Bobe Rulli comes to mind lmmedlale-
Everyone in bueball feels atronvy . ..,. 11. Slody Kouln also drew people Into
way or the other, over today'1 rising the ballpark. V-wia Blue wu another
11larie1, but no one fee.la that strongly e.1ample last Ataaon. He probably drew
enou&h to come out ind uy anything that somewhere 1rGUnd 400,0oo I.ans for
can bt challenged. Nobody wantt: to be Oakland. I'm talking about on the road a.s
the one to lie the ball around tht e1t well .u at horM. I know Blue w1a worth
Nobody e.ictpt frank Lane, t b e 12.CO> extra admi&'!:ion in our ball park."
Milwauket Brewen' director of baatball Marvin Miller, e.1eculivce director of the
oper1tlo1U1 who hu 1lway1 been .tn in-Major Luguce B1sebaJI Playen' Auoc.ia·
dependent thinker. lion, goces along with Lane on Vida Blue
He'1 not afraid to speak up, "On but disagrees cll'Tlplcetely with Lance's
phy1lcal excertion alone," ht says, "1 "physical exertion" fieure .
"How do you meuun •bat pltysic:al
e1trtion lJ worth~" Miller aW. "Even U
you cu rnusurt it, I don't JH. ILi rt:l•
tioaabip to the amount of money anyone
gcets paid. Thee quation of .-bit I man LI
'llfOC'tb and what ht &tts paid for is I very
complicated matter. '
"Let's like 1 doctor. for ex.ample. If bt
Is ' rceuon1bly good one, he bu a ha.ncbome income. Clearly th.ls has liltle
to do with pbysical exertion. He's bC!iog
pa.id for aomeUUng. What ii that? Ht'•
being paid for what ht !mows and bow
weU ht applies it ia diagnosing ailments
and treating people."
To this, Lane uy1:
"I still stand on my origina1 figw'e. lt
ii supported by 1 lot of buebalJ poopla
who for1ot more th.In I'll ever know.
Bra~ Akkey waa-f)ne. Larry MaePhall
is aDOlhtr. No mat tu what has bttn u id
abotJt him . he wu a trcemendou.s judge ol
ballpl1yers and their worth."
M1rvin Miller woold Uie to know
wht!:re Frank Lane got his figure on bow
much physk:al ei:t.rtion is worth.
"I got it through long years of u~
perience." l..ane says. "It isn't a frivolou1
figure .either. Braoch Rickey was one ol
thole bascebaU people whose opinion I
respecttd, and bf: sub6crlbed to that
ligun. I've heard others claim the
physical uertion of any play.er _!s wortb
only SI0,000. rm willing to cooctde it't
worth SIS.000." Chontt h11 1ver11ed 20,I point• and
tl.t rebo,uoda a l•ln6 lo Jeadlnc seconct.
ranked Marquette to 21 atral&ht vlct.orie1
t~it HUOD. .
••wt at Marqqett.e w11b Jlm every auc·
ct11 1n hi• new wnturt," Rlynor 11ld.
"Jim hu reprtHnud the unlvtratty well
both on and off the court."
.SuperSonics Get Another Jumper Open Secret:
In N.., Yori<, J1clc Dolph, ABA com-
mwloner, Aid Cllonea WO<lld DOI be eligl·
ble to plly thll tellOJl because the leaiue
bu 1 rule prohibiting a ptlyer from
playing botli pro 1nd colle1e blll In the
ume 11110n.
SEA ITLE I APJ -The SeatUe
SuperSonlc1 of the National Buketball
AllocilUon, alrceady enriched by one
player who jwnped from the rival ABA,
appan:ntty are richer 1tlll P'rJday with
the addition of another jwnper. 7-foot
roolde Jim McDanicel1.
Thus, Cl>onta ~ oow lndllible to play
both pz:o and colleae balf until next
MNOn. Dolph 11ld the. Neb would lole
lbelr No. I draft choice In the 1172 colle1e
draft 11 a rault of tJsnina Chone1.
But a 1pokuman for thee Carolina
Cou11r1 ol thee American Buketbl:ll
Association, from whom McDanitll fled ,
said thee team "wouldn't be too aurpri.ttd
If we remedied the 1ituation." The
Cougan took the first lea:1l steps towards
that remedy with a 1ult flied in Los
Angeles 111lnJt an attorney.
,,,
LONG BEACH -Ninlh·nnked Loni
B .. ch Sllto bretzed to an IS-51 vlclory
ewer San Joie State Thursday nlaht ind
moved back Into flr1t place ln the P1cUJc
Cola! Athletic Aaaoclatlon bltkelblll
Tiet. ·Ramos Tabbed Chuck Terry led the bllanced Iller 1~
ttck with 28 polnt1. The 11me was decld·
ed quickly 11 Lona Be1ch jumped Jo 1 21)-
11 .. d In the flrat 10:57.
San Diego St1t<'J 3H2 UPffl victory
over UnJver11ty of the PacUJc give. Lona
Be1ch a one-aame lead ovtr UOP Soinc
lpto a 1ho,tdown betwff.11 the two te1m1
here Saturday.
The ffer1, who hive won 53 1tr1l1ht at
home, domln1t<d the bockbo1rd1 with M
rebollnd1 to the Spartan•' 40. Terry had
II rtbounda Ind N•t< StophtlUI h•d II to ro with hit II polnt1. ,,,
INGLEWOOD -New York'a Vlunt<d
1011-a·,ame llne outdid lt1elf by com·
btrdna or four flr1t period acore1 Thurs-.
d1y niaht 11 ltl leader Jean Ratelle. aet 1
club record ind tied another In leadina
the Renaera to a M victory over the
1lumpln1 Lot An1elea Klnga.
In 1endJng Loi Angele• down to ill
alxth 1tral&ht defeat, New York com-
pleted a 1111on aeries sweep over the
Xlng1. out1cortng them 36-9. The Rangers
now have not lost to Loa Angeles In their
la1t 14 meetJn11 Jn a string that began
J111. 21. 1970.
?bt .Ran,err, Jeadlnf acour, Ratelle.
connected for a 1011 and two 111l1ts In
lhe openlnf pertod. while llnomste Rod onbert did llkewlae against exasperated
rookie 101Ue Gary Edwards. ,,,
SALISBURY, Md. -Manuel Orantes,
the :l3-yt1r-o)liprote1e of fabled Sp1nl1rd
ll!•nolo S1n'llna. up1et No. 2 seed Cliff
Rlcbey Thurad1y In the fourth roun<I or
tht '5$,000 N1tlon1l Indoor tennis chem·
plon1hlp1.
The 1tyll1h left·h1nder. using 1h1rply·
angled volleys ind spin 1erves. beat
Richey of Sin Anselo, Tex .. h1ndlly 1-1,
M.
Otfendlng ch1mplon Clark Graebner
of New York 1dv1nced to the
quarterfln1l1 with 1 6-1, 6-1 victory over
rlorldl1n Brion Gottfried. ,,,
DETROIT -Bobby Unser, 1 former
rndlan1polls &00 winner and holder of the
10·tlme speed rec<>rd for USAC ch1m·
pi'onshlp c1r1. has been n1med to drive
Dan Gurney's O\sonlte E1gle on the 1072
USAC ch1mplon1blp clrcull.
Unser ... 111 compete in 111 12 of lht
echeduled USAC races. tncluding the trl~
pJe crown events -the lndl1n1poll1 500,
!he Pocono 500 and the Ont1rlo 500.
Over Carrasco
In· Title Fight
LOS ANGELES (APJ -Their lint
ficht his been officially erased from the
record1 but Sp1in's Pedro Carrasco and
Californian Mando Ramo1 remember it
well 11 they face .each other 1g1ln tonight
at the Loa Anjele. Sports Arcena.
At 1take will be the World Boxing
C.ouncl1'1 version of the llghtwcelght title,
ind JS,000 fans are expected to pay
$170.000 to watch the rematch of a bout
which caused International controvcersy.
Ramos goes Into thee ring a 3-l favorltce
off his 1howlng in thee initi1I meeting at
Madrid. Should he win, therce will be im·
mediate effort. to match him against
Scotl1nd'1 Ken Buchanan, thee man
recognized by the World Boxing Associa·
tion 11 135-pound king.
The WBC withdrew its recognition of
Buch1n1n when he failed to si(n for a
bout against the: •year-old Carrasco,
who boasts a 124-1 record, not counting
the llaht with Ramos. Ht has knocked out
71 foes . Ramo1 Is M-4 with 20 kayoes.
Ramos decked Carrasco rour times In
lhe M1drld bout. yet lost when ht was
dlsquallfitd by the Nigcerian rtferet in
the 12th round. The WBC countermanded
the verdict and declared thee fight no con·
test.
Now, for the rematch , the Spaniard
&els $60,000 and Ramos $53,000.
The 23-year-old Rlmoa, from Long
Beach. fcelt he had won the first fight and
predicts he'll win again and get thee
chancce to rcecapturce the undisputed title
he held 1s a lid of 20. He stopped Carlos
Teo Cnu three years ago to the day -
Feb. 18, 1960 -to win the crown.
He lost It to Panama's l•mael Laguna
on March 4, 1970, ind Llguna Josi it to
Buchanan. Mceanwhile, Ramo:i ran into
per10nal problems -a divorce and a
drunk driving conviction.
But when Buchanan refu~ed to sign for 1
fight a1aln1t Carrasco, Rlmos quickly
1ccepted the offer of thee Madrid tx>ut
which he felt would put him back Into the
litlce picture.
The hard-pun ching Ramos stunned the
Sp1nl1rd In the first round and Carrasco
said he fought by Wtlnct the rcest of the
bout.
Mo1·an Ho_pes Same Traci{
Will l\.eep Hiin in Lead
PHOENIX (AP \ -P1ul Mor1n. who
ha& had 'OO~ini but problem• on the pro
pf tour, !!JI 1 bre1k tod1Y In the se
aond rOUnd of the 11:15.000 Pboen!J: Open
1olf lountament -he 1et1 lo play on the
same course 111tn.
"I hid rul 1ood first rounds In both
lhe Qolby and the Hope," the sloclcy. 33-
ytaN>ld Moran 111d Thursday after his
HV•under--par 56 JIVt him I share of the
Oral-round IHd.
41Then they switch me around on 1 dif·
Wolfe's Son Hurt
TORRANCE -De1n Wolfe, 16, son of
USC tua and field coacb Vern Wolfe b
U.lAd 11 In !•Ir condition II Tornnco
Nomartll 'lfolpltll todlY afttt belrt& Jn.
YOlvod in 1 cOlll~on with •n 1utomobilt
whllt rldlrt& hil molol<)'clt Mondoy mornlna la Ille Pa!OI Venita 1n1.
Tiit 11ttnt of-tnJurt11 to the )'Olllfer
l\'olt., 1 Ml11l11l1 Hi,h 1tudent. &t'l not
!)lily known •ad toll .,. allll belns
,.rrormld Jn an 1ttompl fo ro1cb 1 prof>
If dlllDOllt.
It bU bHn dllCloled by 1 horplul f!IOlteanln, bowlvet, !hot lhe youth'•
~ w been Wtlporartl>' allected.
ferent track. and maybe. with different
partners and 1 don't lcnow what I'm doing
ind J missed the cut both Um.es.
"At least, this Ume ." l'U know whcrce I
am and whit I'm doing."
The form1t for the Bing Crosby Na-
Uollll Pro-Am and the Bob Hope Desert
Clusic call for the '}>I1yer to compete
'o•u three or four different courses for
tht{ nrst three or four d1y1.
Moran WIS amona the flrst·round
ltldera in both of those. before f1dJni
bock and f1ilinf to qu11lly for Ute finll
rouod.
Moran, who has never oome clOH to
wiMina a major event ln his three year1
on the pro tour, won only $10.971 lasl yur
and fl,llt the ye1r before, lw lhln ex
penses. He hid to qul!ifY l\lood1y to Set
Into thla 1out111ment.
He Wll lied for the leod with cbunk1
Jimmy J1mleaon, 1bo .utnc h11 flrat
lour UUo, 1nd 10111 Dale Dooal111. 1 10.
year tour veteran. Doua:lass.. wbo SttJDS
Jo hive 1 llklnl for desert !~'Olli" -
on Utt 11me,' l,lll·ylt'd, p1r 71 Pi-tilt
Country Club course two ye1n qo Ind
mlmd the Ulle In Tllclon by 1 aln(l•
stroke lut...-
The: situation also roped in McDaniels'
alma mater, Western Kentucky Univcer11·
ty, which laid it had no reason t6 believe
Mc.Daniela 1igned a pro COtJtract while
1till playing collegiate baskcetball.
Mc.Daniels, mceanwhtle, was to be on
the baslccetball court ror the Sonics tonight
whcen they contested Gold.en State for sec-
ol'ld place Li tbt NBA Pacific Division
The big cent.er was not expected to play
against the Warriors, but player~ach
LeMy Wilk.ens aaid McDanicela likely
would let action Sunday a g a In st
P6rtl1nd.
McDanicels, who has been avceraging
'
26.8 poinls and 14 rebo1Inds a gamce for
the Cougars, declined . to outline hil
reasons for qWtting the ABA club.
The Sonics would say only that he
1igned .1 sil-year pact. No other contract
details were announced .
McDaniels joined Spencer Haywood as
the second man to jump rrom thee ABA to
Seattlce. Haywood, an all-star rorward ,
.emigrated to Seattlce from Denver last
year in a movie that touched off a
marathon court case and had an impact
on drafting of college talent.
The Cougars went to court in U>s
Angel.es, asking II million damagces and
an ordcer ~topping U>s Angeles attorney
. ' --..
...
Al Ross from .allegedly interfering with
McDanitls. Soviets Are
• Rosi was thee attorney who represented ,
Haywood when he came to Seattle, bul
McDanicels would not admit Thursday to
any connection with Ross. Shan1ateurs Thee Cougar suit contends the former
Westcern Kentucky star first aigned with
the ADA club in November 1970. The Ill·
ycear contract was for Sl,357,000 in salary
and a s:'J0,000 bonus, with the salary to be
paid ovcer 2.5 ycears.
The suit also contends McDaniels
wanted to rencegoliate the contract to
sprcead the salary over 15 years with an
additional $50,IXIO for aggravation .
MOSCOW (UPJ) -The Olympic con-
troversy ovcer amateurism Is 11ot much
discusstd in thee Sovicet press. It could be
unbarrassing.
It is an open seer.el in the Sovlet UnJon
that lhe nation's top sports figures art
"shamateurs," highly competent expertl'
who devote full time to their sport and
gcet paid fur it with ·a head)i mil of
money. ca.rs, apartmenls and travcel.
Ovcer it all Soviet officialdom maintains
A facadce of amateurism that is likely tit
remain as long as Olympic rules remain
as they are. Yet many Soviet sports
figurces would be glad lo remove the
facadce and bring honest professionalism
openly Into Soviet sports.
"I think tilt time will comce when It will
be ph1inly announ ced that sport is a pro-
fession , like the ballet or .the circus ,''
former Olympic weightlifter Yuri Vluov
once wrote in the newspaper Sovicet
Culturce.
"Sports is a lawful occupation, a call·
Ing," he added. ''Major sport is a
separate rcealm and its practitioncers are
not likt anybody e.lse . For some, it is life
Itself. Sport at this levcel requires thee en·
·tire life of a man ."
Under thee present Soviet 'porL~ system
there is no such thing as a profcessional.
Every sport& .enthusiast is a student or he
holds down an ordinary job such as
engi~er, policeman, economist, welder,
soldicer or sailor. In theory he works full
timce at his job or studies and he pursue.t
his sport only during free time.
That is true. Sometimes. At the btgin·
ning of lhceir carters sports figurces must
make a living outside sport!. But ii they
hit thee big timce, they may go months or
even years without seceing anything of
. their "joM" but tht paychecks.
•• J.r Thcey. may also find lhemselvt! receiv·
a 1~ng fringe benefits that their coworkers
A GOALIE'S VIEWPOINT -Youngsters In the St.
Louis area don roUer skates to play hockey, even
when the snows !all. The city's usual mild climate
doesn't afford an ice surface
roller hockey a favorite sport.
too often. inaking
~don't get and sometimts the subsidizing
of ama tceur sportsmen reaches the lcevel
of scandal.
In 1971 an angry Soviet press .exposed
And denounced an Odessa soccer team
whose members -o s tens i b 1 y
shipworkers -lived high on under-the-
tablce paymcenl.1 of as much as $2,IXIO or
$3,000 paid over a period of a few months,
a sum double the annual salary of an
Average worker.
Death at Daytona
Allison Will Reme111ber
Friend's Fatal Mis~p
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla . I AP ) -
"Every lime l racce past that spdt." said
stock car hero Bobby Allison . ''I'll re-
member it ..• that's whcere my pal
H1sslcer aot it.''
Allison began lo choke .
"Friday and me began knocking around
tace tracks In 19$9," he said. "Surce, our
business I! risky. Somcetimces. folks gcet ' . killed . But you never gel used to it."
An, ttrle gloom shrouded thee garage
area at Daytona International Speedway
a.!l Thursday 'a sun f1ded . Pro drivers,
men noted for their bravery, wept OP.!!nly.
H1uler, a 36-year~ld Ttnnesscan with
lour sons. WI! 1mashed to dtalh in once or
Thursdicy'!I 125-mile qualifying races for
Sund1y's $178,000 Daytona 500.
His wife, -Joannie. was amid the hor·
rlried crowd of 40.000.
A blowout on the Dodge driven by
David Boggs of Morrisvllle. N.C .• trig·
gered the deadly chail} reaction that gob-
bled up H1ssler's car and a dozen more.
Alll!On buued to victory in . the 1f·
ternoon's second 125-mller. but said. "I
was thinking atx>ut ole Friday, especially
when I raced past the spot where he was
kHled. J Wl.!l winning, but r felt sick Jn-
slde. 0
Bobby l111c captured the rvcnt lhat
cl1lmed Hassle.r's life. covering SO laps 1t
the slowed-down speed of 127 miles an
hour.
The front twosome In Sunday's lineup
w1s settled lut weekend when Isaac's
tomato-red Dodge led pole qualifying at
ti! m.p.h. 1ollowed by A. J. Foyt In a
Men:ury 1t 114.
1a .. c Ind Foyt r1n for exerdie Thur•
d.ay.
Allbon ottlft!Med t h r 1e • ti m e ln-
dl1n1polls lllO champion Foyt In... 1
Cbe."'Olet In Thlll'ICilY'• second hel~
1vorq:.C 171 m.p.b. Qwlle Glotzblch
.... lbll\1 in • Dod~e.
flnlshht behind f111e in the Ont r1Ce
"'"' llln1 Cbevroleta hlndled by CIUton
I
• .
FRIDAY HASSLER
•
. j
"COO COO" Marlin, Richard Bro)l'n and
Jim Hurtubise. Mark Donohue was fifth ' In an American Motors M1tador making
Its big track debut.
Thret·time Daytona 500 w I n n e r
Richard Petty, socked with a virus thee
night btfore. !ell thee first he1t with a
bum fuel pump and will be forced to start
in the back of Sunday's 40-ear field .
PeUy's mate on the STP-Petty rAc·
Ing team. Dodge driver Buddy Biker.
also crept off 'the track with a busted
cylinder and will have to wiggle out ol
lhe pKk in the 500.
Hasaler's widow will receive $10,000 Jn
·~ NASCAR lnsur1nce plus lhe G05 he
earned In the race lhll took his Ille.
Jimmy Ct11rfont of College Park, Ga.
w11 the only other driver hurt in the big
smashup. Ht suffered 1 fractured jaw
Ind !1c11l l:uts.
·'
Laver Tough
In a Vacuum,
Says Taylor
TORONTO (AP) -The next time
Roger Taylor faces Rod Laver across a
tennis net. you can bet Taylor will be
hoping it will be outdoors .
"He's a much better player indoors
than outdoors," Taylor said after Laver
had .eliminated him &-4, fl·2 In a
quarterfinal match in the $50,000 Toronto
Intcernational tournament Thursday night.
"You need a little wind to blow him
around a bit," addtd the Briton, who beat
the classy Laver here six months ago in
the Canadian Open by frustrating him
with high Jobs into a crosswind.
But Thursday night's match was In-
doors and the top-seeded Laver. nf
Corona del Mar, boomed: his first serve in
with rcegularity and clipped the sidelines
with winners on his ground strokes.
Lave.r's victory set up a semifinal
match .Saturday with Tom Okktr of thee
Netherlands, who ousted ninth-seeded
Roy Emerson of Newport Beach, 7-6. 6--0.
The other semifinalists will be decided
tonight when unseeded Fred Stolle of
Australia plays loth-seecled Charlie
Pasarell of Pucerto Rico and second..sted·
ed Ken Rosewall of Australia meets
seventh-seeded Marty RJessen o f
Evanston, Jll.
The singles and doubles finals will be
played Sunday.
Thee winner of the singles gets 110,IXIO
and the lom' ~.000. The winning doublces
learn apUls $1,800 ind the Jose:rs divide
181\0.
In quarterfinal doublet play Thursday,
the fiftlt...,cded duo of Arthur Ashe of
Richmond, Va .• and Bob Lutz of Tiburon,
ca111.. ellmln1t<d the Utird ... eded com-
bination of Stolle and Ro.!ltwall ~7, 7-6, 6--
~ -
Jn l!lnother quarterfinal, unseeded
Pasartll .ind Frank f'rothling of Fort
Lauderd1le, Fl1: marehed toi the semJs
by downln& the 18ritish combination of
Grahlm Stilwell 6;,d Mark Cox 6-4, 7-$.
i. tonlgill'1 . doubles quarterfin•I
matches, top-scedtd L9ver and Emerson
pl1y unseodcd J•!f Bonlwlu of Berkeley,
and Terry AddilOll of Auslrl!i1.
••
They also had a luxurious country
camp, many of them drovce private car!
-1 rarce luxury -and most had private
apartments and modern furniture. In at
least one case a play.er rceceived a new
apartment and furnitu~e as a lure to get
him "way from another "amaleur" ttam
Jn another city.
Such buying and selling of players is a
common Soviet praclict.
lo the end, though, it was not plush liv.
Ing and high pay for amateurs that
roused tht ire of. the Communist press.
The newspapers attacked btcause the
men caroused, btcame publicly drunk
and -worst of all -lost so many game!
they were dropped to the second league.
The alleged payoffs to a J J e gt d
amateurs was not the issue.
"The seaport or Oyichovsky paid
W,000 to thee men of the team," the
ncewspaper Komsomolsk1y1 Pravda said.
"God knoWs what for ."
Soviet sJ!Orb officials treat the ,subject
of pay and professionalism gingerly,
when they treat the subject at all.
' . 2 Games Tonight
In Pac-8 Action
By tile Assocl1ted Pre~s
Claude Terry should become Stanford'•
all-time basketball scoring leader tonight,
and he doesn't havt to worry about
UCL.A's No. 1 r.anked Bruins stealing the
Pacific.a headlines ..
The 6-foot·S Terry, a senior guard wlll
lead the Indians against Oregon St8te in
a game at Corvallis. Cllifornia is at
Orea:on in the only other ronference gamt
tonight.
UCLA. 7.0 In 'the Pac-I and steamroll·
Ing toward 1 sixth str.al&ht title, play
Washlniton in Seattle Slturday af~ '*""""' ~ ram• will be regionally telev18ed. • • Tell')' needs just nine Points to break
Tom' Dote.'1 Stanford career mark of
t,Ot polnl3 He has 391 polnla, f0< a 20.t
average, 10 far this se1soo.
Coach Howie J?allmar says, "Terr1
cootlnues to be oor .leAder week alter
week IA 1pila ol tVtf10ll" tl!kin1 1hool
that scoring rte0rd.
"Of course, Claude really doesn 't pay
1ny 1tWitton to that. as anyone can teU I by ••tclini him pa.. off."
Anteaters
~pen Golf
Cimipaign
Sophomore Gary S I n & e r
head$ 1 list of 10 players cur·
rently on !he UC Irvine golf
tea.m lhat began play Monday
against United States Intuna.
tlonal University on the Santa
Ana Country Club coune.
"\Ve ire a young team and
need a few matches under our
bells," coach Jerry Hulbert
says.
''I'm sure we will improve
11 the season goes along but
when you have five freshmen,
It takes a little time."
Hul bert pinpoints Mike Mor·
rii!1, a first-year player from
Tustin, as the surprise in early
action.
Another freshman, R ic k
Mayer from Newport Harbor
High, is the son of former U.S. •
Open champion, Dick Mayer, now the head professional at
Torrey Pine.s Q>untry Club
near San Diego.
Other freshmen Include Tom
Queen, David Bull from
Brawley and Bruce Mallory
from San Marino.
Richard Sogn, after missing
last season, ls back with the
team and along with Ron
Hooven , make -UP lhe most
erperienced doo. Both are
seniors.
• . .. . ~· ........ ,.,,... ~-.
•
Juniors include Dan Bibb, a
transfer from Orangt. Coast
COiiege, and Al Fehling, a
transfer from Chapman.
Singer is the lone 90phomore
on the squad.
Highlights of the schedule
a~ home-and-home matches
with USC and the All-Cal
tournament at Berkeley.
ALERT LION -Jay Johnson (right), shown here with teammate Jeff Siemens
(22) and Marina's Dean Bogdan, has been a key Westminster basketball play·
er since the start of his junior year. The quick, 6-1 senior leads the team in
assists and is also an outstanding de fender.
F"•ll. 11 -Lovo!• and Ptl>Hl'dl,.. •' S1n11 A111 CC !11:)1'1!,
Ft&. )1 -U . ..r Sin 01.,0 11 •
Sttrfu" CC 11).
"'"· JS -c11 $11!t (Fullt•IOfl) ••
S1nl1 An11 CC 11).
Mtrcll J -UC l:lv1r1ldt 11 Ot.1111
L1k1 n1.
M1rdl ' -s111t1 81rb1•1 1nd Leve11
•• LA Hor!!\ 1n.
Mlrcll 10 -Ct l Stt!I CFutlt rllll'll 1t
F"ullerton fll :lO).
Mtrc!I l'O 1nd 't -All·Ctlllernlt
Yourf\lmel'll If a1rtt11ty.
Marc!\ lO -M1v1111 !L11 v.,111 ti
S1nt1 Ant C 11 !
Guard Duties Only Part
Of Lion Hoop Flash's Job
Mire~ ll -C!\1""11n 11 G•ltl'I t:lw r cc 01 By PHIL ROSS have who doe! this (crashing
I.he boards l consistently." .t.orll l -C11 s11t1 !Lei Anllf!l.-Sl ti
s~n!1 Ant CC 111
Ol tt11 D&lll' Piiot Si.ff
.t,prll 1 -MtYMll !Lii v.-a111) ,,
Nev1<11 Dun11 r11. A~rl1 I -Ntv1cl1 !L11 Vt•sl ti
Ntv1cl1 Dunes (l :lO 1.m.I.
,\pr!! 10 -U. of Sin [)111110 t i lrvl,..
Cea~• CC Ill
Aorll n -Ctl Sltlt CLDI A"994tl) •t
L0t .. n,...111 111.
April 11 -U 5 fn!untlll1"1I Uni· '"•••llY ti W!ll11>1rl1111 1'1lm1 !1). "'prfl 11 -use 11 w111111r1 cc rn. Aprll ,, -use 11 Irvine Cot11 cc
Ill.
Westminster High ba sketball
coach Don Leavey stans his
ace -6-l senior Jay Johnson
-at a guard post. But
Johnson 's duties go much
further than that.
In his second year as a
varsity starter. Johnson is
described by the J 9 6 9 -7 0
Sunset League coach of the
year as, "just an extension of
me on the court. H e
epitomizes the total dimension
in all aspects of what J expect
from my players.'' April 11 -UC Stn Dltte 11 Lnm11
''"'' "• {1). '-"Y 1 -Cl\Hmtn I I lrvl11•. c~,,
CC Ill.
MIYA -.SCu!t\trn (1 l<l1t •"l 1
ln1.,.cou,.r11e' •' l11rrtw !"lne1.
Maw .JI , Ju111 1 -Yril!an lnwll1!11>r111!
Says Leavey, "even though
Jay is guard, one of .the
reasons we have him go lo the
boards so much is his tremen-
dous reach. He has the ap-
pendages of a 6-3 kid in spite
of only being 6-1 himself.
As the primary playmaker
for the Lio ns . Johnson has
tossed in buckets at an 11
points per game clip in spite
of the fact that he'd much II !"omont N1llf1MI. "Jay is the one guard we
Rustlers' First Six Games
Slated for Orange Coast
Golden West C.Ollege will play its first six
football games of the ·n seaS<m at Orange
Coast, Rustler athletic director Fred Owens
announced today.
The Rustlers will play a l~game schedule,
opening wit h district rival OCC Saturday
night,· Sept. 16. That's Orange Coast's home
game.
That will be followed by non-conference
tilt..s with 1'.ft. San Antonio and Compton and
Southern California circuit games wlth Los
Angeles CC, East LA and LA Southwest.
Coach Ray Shackleford's learn then hits
the road for a game with Cypress, followed
by circuit tests with Santa Monica, Rio
Hondo and LA Harbor.
The latter two tilts are away while the
I
CRAIG
SHEF'F
home team for the Santa Monica affair haa
not been decided.
:o All are Saturday night game~ with the ex·
ception of the Compton tilt. That's set for
Friday, Sept. 29. , ;---
Golden West had plaMed to open the 72
sea.Mm at Phoenix, but that had to be
changed when the RusUers were told that
they would sta y ln the Southern Cal cirlcut
instead of moving to tlie South Coast Confer.
~e looked lnto playing ;hoenir • week
earlier (Sept. II), but then we would not have
had any scrimmage!." says OWens.
Golden West plans to scrimmage cerril°'
prior to the sblrt of the ·72 campaign.
• • •
0ran1e Cftatl 11 expect«t to f1tt El Cambte
nerl football aeaton, 11\bough UN:rt'I IHI ol·
llclsl werd on It yel. BoU1 te1m1 have the
tame bye date.
El C1naltto won the 1t.1tt large tcltool1 Crid'
u1111 11111e1r. •
West College roster, reports Rustler coach
Tom Hennstad.
Rocky Ross, Rob bie Robinson and John
Maltby all checked inta the Rustler campus
at the semester break.
Ross graduated from Rancho Alamitos
High last June and Hermstad rates him as
one of the most versatile swimmers on the
squad. He is equally talenl.ed in the butter-
Oy, breaststroke or freestyle events.
Robinson and Maltby are freestylers. Rob-
inson pi-epped at Marina while MAitby at-
tended Huntington Beach High and spent last
semester at the Air Force Academy .
Golden West, third in the state last yea r,
could be even higher in '72---especially with
the Rustlers hosting the state meet this sea-
'°"· • • •
OCC's Dick Tucker and Saddleback'1
George Hartman were just nm of nine bead
flWltbaJI coache!I who received awards this
week for excellence in film analysis a.nd
training.
The award ~tresstd the complete ultlization
of film In the training program. They were
presented by the MoUon Picture Sportsfilm
Prncesson of Southern Callfornla.
Other coachtt honored Included Dennis
McLaughlin (Bishop Amat ), Fred Workman
<Oomlngueil. John Hangartner IKennedy).
Roy Benstead (Ulwndale), Marty Bh1ck1tnne
.(Rio Hondo), Bob Rltchcock (Temple City)
a.nd J im Everett (Western ).
• • •
The Metropolitan Conference in the south.
11nd the Golden Gate Conference in the north
have betn awarded the top seeds for the '72
state JC basketball tourney at Ventura C.01·
le1Ze. March t-11. ,.
Each ol the state·s 12 conferences ls al-
lowed one entrant i.n the state tourney wilh
1n additionaJ two spot.s available in both
the north ind south re giona ls for co-cham-
pions in the 16-team bracket.
The South C.oast C.onferenCt' has been seed-
ed second In the 90uth. stlthough ('ircuit
ch11mpion Fullert.on will probably win it all.
The Hornets were the fir:rt to qualify for
the lt.ltt tourney. FJC has a byt In U!e
re,lionaJ round.
rather get the satisfaction of
hitting a teammate with a
crisp pass.
Furthermore, using crisp as
a proper adjective to describe
one of Johnson's passes Is a
marked understatement, aC·
cording la Leavey.
Says the Lkln cage tutor.
"Jay possesses great court
vision. We've had kids drilled
in the ear and in the ba ck of
the head on his passes because
they simply didn't expect
them. After awhile he makes
some fine assisls because some
of the other kids just start
looking for a pass out or self.
preservation.
"Jay will give up a good
shot to give a teamma te a bet-
ter shot."
A natural lefthander who
can handle the ball deftly with
either hand , Johnson is within
shouting distance of breaking
the school record for assists in
a sing le season, which was set
two years ago on the Lions'
Sunset championshi p quintet
by little Rick Mann at 130.
At prese nt. Johnson has
recorded approximately 120
assists and. with one loop con-
test remaining, Leavey is
hopeful his 6-l backcourt star
can eclipse M&nn 's mark.
"Jay usually gets at lea st
five assists a game," Leavey
says, "but the difference
between he and Mann is that
Jay is more of a scorer.
"He picks up extra points
going to the boards ~nd he's
become an exceptional outside
shooter who likes.to drill them
in from about 20 feel on either
side of the key.
"In comparison, last season
he had more of a driving-type,
lay-in oriented game .··
Playing a role which has
seen him operating as a swinR-
man between the backcourt
and a comer slot at times,
Johnson's defensive work has
not gone unnoticed either.
In Leavey's mind , "Jay is
our best defensive player 11nd
his defense has been a major
factor. although his nffense is
Catching up to it rapidly.
"Wlth his qu ick hand! and
lonJt arms, we always give
him the toughest defensive
assignment." •
As example11, ·the
Westminster coach notes, "for
instance. he held George
Golden nf Western to on ly four
points at a time when GoldeA
was ripping the basket with
points. And thal wa5 the key
to our win over Western.
•·Also. I coold probably pin·
point at least three or four
other games In which hit
defenst has bet.n a major fac-
tor in our success.
Aoother plus sign o n
JohnliOn's side has bttn hi!!
lmwovemerft in the mental
swing of things.
In regards to this Leavey Ht undtfitand El Cimino bas It• eatlre ef.
fen1lv1 Une back 1e1t year, IWI tht7 l'boold
be pttlty loop. Bat l.btl'I I.ht kind ... lfkt,"
11ys OCC defensive coordlna&or Jack Fair.
• • • •
Three more top Mtch 1wtmmer1 have ~
1ddtd lo ·I.be 1lre1dr. talent-laden Golden
Rt.re art the reglnnAl pairings (if there
11:re no co-ehampions): North-Golden Gate,
bye; Central •t Golden Valley; Camino
Norte, bye; C'.oast at Va.lley ; South -Weat-
em State at Mi1Sfon : South coast. bye:
Southern Cal al Desert; Metn>Polltan, bye.
• • •
Oran•e Coast"• Skip WllU.ams 11 the Jeth
top ca1e scortt In the state wttb 1 tL 7 1\·u ..
1ge. Df1e11'1 James WJTIClt 11 No. I (Jt.J,.
tad FJC's Bra• McNamaro 11 HCODd iU.41.
. 1ays. "Jay had to le.am ho• to
·control his emotions after his
topbomort year since he mov-
ed right intu a varsity starting
berth ~ff lhe oophomore ltam,
"l'd llY he'1 rel1tivtly
ltdlltd Olli I.her' I.bl• ....., ....
.. ----~
DAIL y •ILDT I I
Vikes, HB Clash • Ill Finale
Tr1dillonal rivals Marln1
and HunUniton Btlch clash
ioru,bt with prutlce the only
thine at Mike in 1 SUnstt
League bl$.ketball lest
lt sets under yay at a
o'clock and coa~h J I m
stephens' champlon Marin•
Vikings invade I.he Huntington
premises 8etkin,g their 14th
alraight k>op conquest and
locking up the No. 1 title in
Orange County prep ci rcles.
The Yikes are Na. 4 in lhe
CIF AAAA and own a 52-50
win over Huntin&ton Beach ln
Lions Aim
ForCIF
Playoffs
Westminster High's Lions
will be trying to gain a CJF
AAAA basketball pla;yoU berth
tonight in the final salvo or
Sunset League warfare when
coach Don Leavey'1 crew
hosts dangerous Loara.
Tipoff is a o'clock and a
Westminster win coupled with
a Marina triumph over Hun·
tington woqW place the Lions
In a tit for second in the final
Sunset standings -probably
Insuring a CIF playoff bid.
Host Newport Harbor and
cellar dwelling Anaheim wrap
up the campaign at the same:
time.
Ltavey's Lions could make
thl!! pl11yoffs as a third place
team if room permit!.
''Third place is really a
matter of grasping at straws.''
says Leavey, we just hope
Marina remembers b a c k
about 54 weeks ago~ when we
beat Huntington Beach to put
Marina In a position of tying
for the league championshi p.
"We hope they ha ve a good
memory," says Le a v e y.
Leavey's ~emory is clear
about tontRfit'i adversary. a
foe that extended Westminster
before falling, 67-66, in first
round action.
"We made a mistake and
went to 1 delay type offense
with about a 14-point tead. It
killed our momentum and we
just went dead in the water,"
he says.
Coach Dale Hage f's
Newport Sailors will be tryjng
to wrap up a disappointing
campaign by ha n d l n g
Anaheim its 20th loss In 2l
1971-72 starts.
It's the final varsity game
for seniors Bill McKinney, and
Denny Cline.
IUHIRT LIAOUI LIADlllS
l"l•fl•, ldla.l TP A••·
1. OU<'ln. W•lf1'11 ]74 J'l,1
1 llrl!Ok,, Hunllf191111'1 U! TJ.l
J. WaolttY. S•l'llf An• m 11.f
•• M(:l(lnf't¥, Ht-I <»O "·'
S. p,,,., 511111 "''" IS.f
Artists,
In Final
Hoop Tiffs
Coach Jerry Fair's host
Laguna Beach Artists have
one final chance to finish
above the .500 viark in Orange
League basketball hostilities
tonig ht as they get the last
crack at unbeaten circuit
leader El Dorado.
That clash is slated for 8
o'clock as are the Brea 1t
University and Sonora at Sad-
dl eback battles. .
The Arti sts 16-S l were blown
out in the second half in drop-
ping a fir1t round, 69-49
verdict at El Dorado to the
pacesetting Golden HawU. So.
.a Laguna victory tonight
would be considered 1 m1 jor
upset.
All fi ve: starters for the
Hawk! (11--0J are averaging in
double figuret with forward
Mike Farra the highest scorer
at 15.1 per outing.
Guard!! Nick Gille11>le and
Chuck Corwin have been the ,
most consistent ArtistJ as of
la te and they'll have lo com-
bine their tbootlnR with Rood •
board play from Norm Bedell
and Vinet McCl!la to upend
El Dorado.
The University Trojan!! 1Jf
coach John Driscoll gnt ektd.
49-46. by El Dorado last Tuet-
d11y and beinJ! in the holrs
role. they're fa vored to bop
wlnleu Brtl.
Brea featur£1 the loop'• lop
scortt Ill .Ii In 8-4 center
Greg Tripp whllt 8-2~ Tom
Mullinix 111 tht Tr o Ja n•
leading light.
fir1t round 1cllon. They lead
the Otlers by thrtt iames -
th~ the sta.f'ldin&s won't be af-
fected tictpl that coach
Elmer C.ombl' Cir playoff·
bound Oilers i:ould fall ~nto a
seeond ~let tit w I I h
Westminster if they lose.
··11 ·s not a matter of wor·
ry\ng about tying for second.
we just want to vdn. Yes, I
think a wi n does help }'()(.Ir
momentum prior to &olng into
the playoffs:· says Combs.
It marks the ninth time In 12
years that a Combs-coached
quinltt ff'om Huntington IS lr11 pl•n to k>Mw ''
the pla_yolfs. His &tarina qulnltt his betn
HJ&D.1.l0t.14n's four los.se.sln a_rtvamped Jnme"·hll with f"4
fuiilor 'Mffl. f-'ord st ill nur5in& 20-4 r~rd have bffn by • srralned kntt I 1 g a m e n ts
lotal of tighl po1nlli and Rogtr S~lk!I l•kts ovtr al
Combs rtOects, '1Look1ng back tu•rd w11h MArk Adams and
I think if we'd bet.n a litlle Brurt: Miller n1ans t he
mort hungry we "d have won forw11rd post alnng w It It
all or them ." frtshnuin Hob l.osner and
Steph~n~· crew flgurts la ht center Ot11n BQgd,110 tl-7).
loose and · easy with tht MunUngton'a lr1.1lde tandem
ctu1mplon!1hip wr&pped up nf Sttve Brook.s and Jlm
and tht Viking mentor agrets : \\'nrthy rt.rnalns the Hmt
·•tf we had lo win it would along with mates Tom Crunk,
be another matter but the kids &'Ott Whitfield and Brttt
are confident • , • we don·t "'hlU.
Veteran Netter Sea King s
Ne.-,Win
For Tie
Prodan Chosen
NewNBTC Pro
Tony Prodan. who cnre
played An exhibition "'ith Biii
Tilden in Phoenix, "'as the
doubleit panner of UCLA ath -
letic director J. O. Morgan
when the l\\'O were sludenl s at
UCLA and participated in 37
championship doubles matches
with partner Earl' Foote.
But only recently has he
achieved his lifetime 11mbition
at the ripe young age of 54 -
that of ru nn ing a full t i me
tennis club.
Prodan will take over duties
as tennis director for the
Newport Beach Tennis Club
next wetk accord lng to ownl'r
George M. Holstein, Ill.
··This has to be the No. 1
tennis commu nit y of the
world ," Prodan enthused while
talking aboul his new assign·
ment this week. "It is
something I ha ve alw ays
wanted lo do."
Prodan will supervist 11 slaff
of four teaching professionals
and describes his job in tbis
manner :
"I'll be running around 11s
the public r elations.
diplomatic, take-It-all guy. l"ll
be more of a supervisor thRn a
teache r with Doug Smith,
James Morrison, Mark Elliott
and Gail Hansen doi ng most or
the teaching."
Prodan has been associ ated
with Newport B e a c h ' s
Oakwood Gardens t e n n I s
facilities for the past three
years and owns 11 home in
Newport Beach. Ht has also
Pirates Bow
To Gauchos
In Spikefest
Barry Atwood captured
three events and Rick Geddes,
Marv Francis and John Mac-
key were double winners in
leadiJ1g Saddleback College's
track and field team to an 80-
64 victory over Vi.!Hlng Oran1.e
Coast at San Clemente High
Thursday.
The to p performance of the
da y came in the javelin when
occ·s Randy Cantrell tossed
the sphere 197-9.
Four other javelln throwers
were over the JB(}.foot mark .
OCC's Alvin Wh ite had 8 top
toss of 1$-8, and Saddleback's
Bob Milton and John Fletcher
went ·182-8 and 180·4.
S1Hl•ll1cll.JNI I"') Onon" CNtl 100 -1. ~ 0•1 $1. 1 a1eoo (0), J. ,..1r111lll ! l. WlnnlnJ !Im•: •.• HO -I. fdll•1 IS), 1. ltood (0), J.
Vtn Nolt C I. Wl""ln1 II'"": J!A. •.IO -1. l/1n Holt IOI, j J.c:•IM
(S)1_J. l:ul!ln" !01. Wl11n1,.. lm1: '°<'" ..., -I. L t:r~.,., toi11. G1rc'i! ( I. J. ltnclfr (01. Wll'lnlnt Im•: J: .0 '!Ill• -I. f'r1ncl1 15). 11 lib " 101, J. t.111i..r11 fOl Wl""'l"I , ..,.. ' 1'D. ).mlit, -1. f'rt ll§:l1 4SJI 11 L1U1Mrl1
10!( J, Ou1rot (Ol. W """' ti..,.: _,, j,l .
UO 1111111 -1 Al'!'OOCI IS/ 1. 81H•l1 IOI, J. ont1 fOl Wll'lnlfHi fm1· 11 t.
1st;a ...!"1i.1;;..1w't.'~1~11/~·. \:..7.IKWOOd
uo ••t1v -1. ~lllbK-ll:t1T1lr1J· GeckM1. Cordtf'Y Ind JKW,;"· . °''"" Cotll. Winni,,_ 11""': .. MUI rt/tp -1. S1d<:lllbl'k CorOtrv.
l ocOflO, Jl fk'°" Incl GtcldtJI, 1, Or1,,.1 (NI . WIMJnt tlmt: J;JO,J. Sllot ""' -1 IC•r:r;r cs1, f,· Hirt !fJ· J. 8tcktr 101. w nn~ 11 1l•nc1:
Oi'\"' -I. loulP IOI, t. lunwr !~·, • 8tcktr (5). Wll'lflit>e f llllntl l H°fJ. f11m11 -I. Atweocl 111 1. llOllO 1~). a. MICkn ISi. Winni ... h.i11111. J.
LOM 1um1 -'· Ml (l.-,. 111. J. G0tm111 IS!. J. 11111'11 401 , W nnl.,. "1••nc1 : !l·)V,.
'
..
•
' TONY PRODAN
be en a jun ior tennis tnstrucWr
at Conlpto n College for the
pa st 10 ytRrs.
What are his early goals al
thr Newport 81!'8ch Tennl~
Club'~
··No. I wtll be to im provr
our social tennis program with
more and better n1ixrd tennis
co mpetition. V.1t \vill al.~o work
ha1·d· on the junior progran1
and hope to ha\'e an arti\'e
group playing r very day dur-
ing the sum1ner. ··
Prodan reasons th11t the big-
ge st contributing factor to
success of tennis in this area
(Newpo rt Harbor is CJF
champion and UC Irvi ne
NCAA cnllege division I i 1 1 e
holders for two Y<'ars I L~ the
avRil ablll ty of t~nnis clubs.
"You go ou t and play on a
public C<1 urse once and fori;:et
It. In golf you play on nice
green gras!I with a pleasa rit
atmosphere and you return.
·i1 lhlnk the tennis clubs Jn
this area make a big con.
tributlon to the success being
enjoyed presenUy by these
younssters. The kids ha ve a
nice place to play and they
'want to play 11s a re1ult of the
surroundings. '1
At UCLA as a n Un·
dergraduate, he and Mcrgan
qua!Uled for the NCAA cham-
pionships io do u b 1e1 but
didn't make the en suing trip
to Haverford, Pa . for the com·
petition.
One junior he points to with
pride is 14-ye11r..,Jd Steve
Maro1i. "I started him playlnlil
and he has bttn a winner,"
Prodan says.
He also wa~ a doubles
pa rtner with My ron
McNamar11 nf UC I when they
played with Or. Bernard Finch
and Jack Wall at the Loa
Angeles Tennis Club Jn past
years.
And his most recent doublt!I
conquest came Jn the Pacific
Southwest tournAment a t
Newport Harbor a year ago
when .he teamed with Glen
Turnbull, ltnniJ director for
the Balboa Bay Club.
This tandem may control
the dest inies of the area tennis
clubs for years to come -not
only In the offlce but on the
et1urt as well.
\Y 1lh i:assuring them or no "'Or 1 tie for the
C'hampi w I t h Loi
Ala mitos, e Cornn11 del M111r
Sea Kin~s tmbark nn thtll'
fir111I Irvine League b11;skl'lb11ll
journl'y of 19n tonight when
thry lrtk into the lerrllory nt
thr upstl·mlnded F.!lanc1•
C1ti:le~.
Ait is the c11se with all of
lon1.1:ht "s Irvine tussles. !hft
Cdh1·Eagles mat<'huri Is slattd
to 1>cw1n at 8 o'c!Of.·k.
In ol htr loop 11ction, Foun·
lain V~llcy·a Barons ,.,.111 111.
len1pt tn retain lht'ir hol d nn
lh1N place and a pn:'ILl"!ible CJP •
AAAA postseasott' p I a yo ft
htrlh with a fhu1Je win over .
JH'<'hriv11I host Edison, Santa
·Anll Valley host! the Costa _
Mesa ~1ustangs 11nd Magnolia i
iit at I.os Alam itos. AU games :
art at 8.
t"111·uua's road till Rl Est11n·
c111 is 1nteresll11g since the Sea ,
l\ings got thtrn~rlvrs inta fout .
lrouble \Vednesd11 y night at
Mes.a before r~'Ord ing a nar, -
row 80-76 eM:ape over "
quintet which they had
clubbed· 104-48, In lhe first
round
Ccl1H·h Dave Carlls\e'll llnv
F.aJ,?le., will probably u!le 1he
sa 1ne dlamond-Rnd-onie
dt>frnse and contrnllt!d tMnpt
offensr which thry ahowted
Tandy Gilli.'-' Sfo:o Kings in An
earlier 54-45 setbRck at CdM.
r>;ve Brown·1 Young J."nun·
h1i11 Valley Barons (8·5) have
an opportunity of finishing
with a be:tte.r reco rd than l•st ·
year's M mark which vaulted ·
them lnto the CIF AAA l
pJ1yof/s. ,
Out the Edi~n five er D&ve
Mohs always poae11 11n obatacle
fnr the 811rons, who won In the · fir~t round at Fountain Valley '..
by a 84-50 margin.
ll:VINI Ll .. OUa LIAOll:'
l"l•Ytf, ldl"I 0 Tl" AW9,
I. Oul""• L.n Aftml+at 17 771 lt~
1 Arch.,., (Olli Mtot ll 7X Il l
l At•••fl, M11N1Ht IJ 1') IT 1
• MUlt r, LM Alt"'l!ot ll Jlt It.I
.I . .llWIOk, ldh1111 1J 10t IJ,I •.
Rustler Nine ·
Falls, 5-2
SANTA MARIA -Gold•n
Wel"lt College's baseball team ...
hoped to tnd a four-i:t:ame loa·
Ing streak toda y against Allan
Hancock College In the 1econd
round cl the Hancock NaebaU
tournament here.
Co8ch Fred Hoovtr's Golden
West RusUer1 dropped 11 ~:t·
decision to De Anza Thursd1y
in the nr1l round ol th&
tourney, deJJpite banglnfi: out
12 hllt.
Golden West took A 1-n le,,d
In tht Ur11t Inning on a double
by Phil McC11rtney And Blaine
Calder's single. but De Ani a
pushed acros11 four run1 In the ·
second and one i.n the lhlrd.
rhtll lumo -1, Mt~~tY l!I· I
l:onntY !DJ, J 111 1,flmtn COi. W Mln• iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiim•••• <1t11•nct: 4 ·lt. '°"t'" -I (fnlr~U ID!. 1 WllH• Ji'I.~ .. ,Miiien· !5). w1"nlt1t ol111nc•·
! .
'
"°'' V~llL• -1 •tweoo (~I. ' Garmi n jS), l . Vt liit k/i (Ol. Wl""I"'
"•""': 1 "'·
I
Would yo u pay an extra
$5 .21 per 1nonth for
Full New Car Maintenance?
Thaf1 a.II lhe ,.xlrll It ~t \\"Ith a Johnaon A Son Jl"uR
MAlnt,.nanr,. l;tAM' on 8JlY of our bntnd NlW Jt72
Mcrrury1. Just think of It ..• no more 11n.naying repair problem• .•. no morll! unf"Kfl"Cll'd tl(J>"nPft 11nd be1t of
all ... " br111111rnl nrw full •iir M,.rcury M•r<tufa or
Mon1"r"y lo d r1v~ in 11 Mt>lul~I)' J'l"rfrct condillon at a ll
rlml'!I. f'\od oul rnr ~ 11111"!1fllf all !hi-~n~fi!J 1nd plea1urli'I
thia fAntutlr 1,. .. ~,. pro~t:m provides on 111 our Lincoln· Merrur)' PMdurts.
Call BUD 80\V~:N at 5<10.5&10, .. , TODAY!
o,.,.,, Ct••tf1-Pi1•il11/Fl~1 ,,,.,.
ohnson&son
[-$Im-I
•
·.
'.'
•
" '
'· . .
• • ..
f DAILY PILOT Fr!dly, FtbrUll'Y 18, 1~72 . --
-' Eagl es' Co nfer Sea King
Spikers
Trip Lions
•
A Guard's Tour
Anwng_Timbers
By PIDL ROSS
Of tllt D•ll'f rllel tllfl
Wben you 're only 6-l and
you play ~nter on a high
school's varslty basketball
team , you had better be qui ck.
Estancla's Doug Co nfer
knows It and he proves It
nearly t very time he steps on
court for coach D a v e
Carlisle's Eagles.
While the Eagle! are nearer
lo the bottom of the Irvine
League standings than they
are lo the upper echelon,
they're d e f i ni t e I y no
pushovers.
And by a strange quirk,
there is somewhat or a
possibility that _confer is one
of the better reason! for this
intent fear of the pint-sized
Eagles by the league's hoop
powers·that-be.
With Carlisle harboring a
plethora of playere under 6-2
/the tallest is inexperienced 6-
2 Todd Collins), C-Onfer's role
in the post has b e e n
magnified .
Carlisle says, "Doug is our
regular center because he's
the biggest boy I have with
varsity e1:perience.
"He-plays the post normally-
but we also run him as a
swingman in our man-to-man
offense. which has a passing
game without an a ct u a I
center.''
Confer currently I ea d s
EStancia in both scoring and
rebounding and has been the
most consistent Eagle in a
season which has be e n
earmarked by inconsistencies.
He has been able to pump in
points at a 12.4 per game rate
while also being in position to
generally grab between 10 and
IS rebounds in each contest.
"I'd have to say that Doug
has about equal offensive and
de(ensive ability, although he
may be a little better on of·
fense because of his scoring
potentia) ... carlisle claims.
Confer Is a good driver with
quick inside moves but he 's
proficient from almost any
spot within IS feet of the
basket.
According to his coach.
"Doug Is not blessed with a lot or real basketball ability but
he does have very good
coordination. He's had to work
hard for everything."
Con I er inadvertently in·
herited the center position
when las! year's postman -6·
DOUG C\)NFER
1 ~ Hank Moore -was lost to
the team.
"We went to Doug for board
strength after Moore was
out ,'' Carlisle says . "He was
the only size and experience
we had carried o:ver from 1.ast
yCar, when he started every
varsity game.
"He's our team leader and
we 'd be lost without him ."
Estancia 's stellar s e n i o r
came up through Costa Mesa 's
Rea Intermediate School but
didn't play on the hardwoods
there.
When he arrived at Estan-
cia, Confer started out on the
freshman team , then moved
up to the junior varsity as a
sophomore and was promoted
to the varsity last winter.
As for his future, Carlisle
says of Confer. "he can play
junior college ball and he can
probably play guard ... he's
a fair dribbler who is ex·
ceptlonally quick.
"He doesn't have the moves
of a Gary Orgill (former
Estancia ace now starring at
Goldeo West Collegel, but
Doug is a lot quicker than
Gary. With his quickness, he
can make up for mi stakes and
can recover fast on defense."
Jf it 's an y consolaiion to
Carlisle, when Doug graduates
the Eagles will still have a
Confer on their side si nce his
sophomore brotber Buddy is
also currently a v a rs i t y
starter.
Prep Cage Results MD Cl oses
J11nlt< V•r11tr •t tketllell
CtlM 1441 (It) Ct1lt M•u
Wl11l•m1 (6) F Ill S1g•r
A .... lev 001 F 1111 S1l1tar
CJ••k ltl c on kliruP!'
Sllwll't (15) G (11) Deunel
G-r {JI G (0) Hldm11n
CclM 1cor!119 tub~' S•~•ge '· Jet-tries 4, Will 4, 01uk11 2. Slcktll 1,
,ti,111tsev 6. CM 1oeorlnt wbs: Vt...,tlne 4, ,ti,llen
4, Olllnllv111 2, !>mlth J.
H1lfllfM -CclM 41-D,
•I Mot11 ... IHI l") Slit Cltrt1ltftlt POWf!r• (161 F (11) Vadt<
S1m1K«1 II) I' 11•1 Hotlmtn
Whal.., 1)1 C Cll) Fo•1ma11
81•1~ UOl G (?! Wl!IOfl
W/lll1m1'!ll G ('l Hats!
S.n Cl••T11nt1 .corln1 111b1: H1rn111-
t1r:t ,,
H.tttl""; Sin (lemet1le. t•-!l.
Officer s Set
For Anglers
Hunllnllton {J11
THI (91 F
lttetan (II
Cerlton lt)
Nt!tl 1171
Baudloer ( 61
' c
G
G
H~nrlnoton •utls;
,ti,hr1n1 (It Htft•lme: 14·14.
CqJ Wt1lfnl
(IOI Chrl1te11sen
411 Krell
Ill) CMkev
(S) We>tlrl9!'il
!61 Robe"1
Boudl•r {6),
Mltt1.., Vlllt (UJ till 1'•111111
H1rrl1 (7) F O•l Muri>tw
Et•lon (10) " (i) C1p0n~I
GrHfl 161 C 1111 Pl~erton
H8111'V (ll) G ('I ScholdrMy,r
Moffltr (61 G U> Welng1r!
MV .corlnt tU'bl' Romm•! ~. l0!!1 l.
H1ltrlme-Footnm u-n.
M11tr D•l 1421 (41) SI. Ptul
Wl•l•l'lcl 116) F 16! W1roo Otl1.-.ew l16l F (11 Wlnnlnoharn
McC1utt>ev (l l C (•l T..,..,
Grothe11 Ill G (10) Gen:rner
N1l1r1 Il l G !101 '°°"''"' M11tr Del KOtlntJ wbs: 1Crt11.,1 1,
C..,111 2, Sdlt<1' I.
H.tlfllmt: Ml!tr Del :w. $1. Poul 13.
So-nM•t ••WlbtU
Ml11lltft Vltlt (191 (5Jl '""' 11111
Hol•I !1ll F 111) 5c11u111
O'Brien ('1 F (Ill Hu'°"
Meuerll!'r tDJ C (5) A.tmSTtlMI
Ett<ISM (151 G (1) MurPllY
COMallw (ll G (61 Comb1
With Sain ts
No one could blame coach
Jerry Tardie's Mater Dei
Monarch basketba 11 team for
looking ahead to the annual
Cl!" playoffs when it en-
tertain:is St. Anthony High of
Long Beach tonight in the
final Angelus League game of
the year (8 ).
The Monarchs have already
qualified for the playoffs with
second place in the fina l
league standings a s s u red
Tuesday in a 74-72 win over St.
Paul.
Ml11lon VloilP 1corlnt sub1: 81le~ newly elected president of the •. w1111e 1. G11111 1, c,,.,, 1, Mlle• 2, Follrm.tn 2
Dr. W. W. Nelson is the
In the last game with th e
Saints. Mater Dei won, 56-S.1,
but only the starting five
dented the scoring column
with George Herold (l~l and
Rick Kniffin (13) leading the
Pacific Anglers SPQrtfishing _ H11111me: Mts11of! v1e10. 41.1,_ way.
group out of the Balboa Bay
Club following recent elections
for the 1972 season.
Serving with Dr. Nelson will
be Lou Janssen as vice
president, Eugene W. \Vooten
as secretary ar.d Al But·
terworlh as treasurer.
Newly elected members of
the board of directors include
Tim Tate, Troy titiller, Robert
0 . Johnson. Howard Ashby
and Paul McVay.
ROLLER
liAmES
FRI., ffl . 11
1:00 l'.M.
COSTA MESA
FAIRGROUNDS
LA. T-Birds vs.
N.Y. Bombers .................
T°"' .. C.1111try ley'" c,...,
•• l*'lfli• .. ,~ .. ••i••
ALL sun "···· -·-IM P.111 • ....,
•
LEASING? LOOK!
NEW 1972 OLDSMOBILE
TORONADO
2 DOOR HARDTOP
MONTH
24 MO.
OPEN END
INCLUDES: AIR COND., FULL POWER INC. DOOR
LOCKS AND SEATS, AM-FM STEREO, VINYL TOP,.
TINT. GLASS. TILT WHEEL1 BELTED W /W, AND
MORE.
We lease all papular
make cars and trucks
LEASE DEPARTMENT
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
\
2150 HARIOR ILVD. COST A MESA
CALL NORM I REEDLOVE, '47·6750
' MV, Tritons Put Lid
On Crestview Play,
Pro Skaters
Back at CM
Ar1er ffiore than a three-
Crestview League basketball
v.•arrare closes ool the 1971 ·72
campaign tonight with Katella
the clear-cut champion and
both" Orange Coast art>a
schools out of the running for
a possible CIF' playoff berth .
However, that doesn't mean
the y will have a letup in
Fly Casting
Clinic Set
games t9night against foes yc.<1r Absence from this area.
tower in the standings as thev National Skating Derby roller
s:truggle-loL..impto.\remenl~ games ·relw:n 1D the Orange
the final tabulattons. County Fairgrounds in Costa
Mission Viejo has defeated
San Clement e twice I h i s
season but holds a one-game
edge over John B a k er ' s
Tr!lons. Tonight the Oiablos of
Pat Robert entertain Orange
High (8) while San Clemente
journeys to Villa Park to \••rap
up league play.
~lcsa tonight.
'J"hc action begins at A
o'clock with tlie Los Angele~
1'hunderb1rds and New York
Bornbcrs doing batlle.
11's the fir st nieeling of 1972
fnr lhe two trams, wM
ha ven 't mel each other at the
fairgrounds slnre 1963.
J hc. Nev.· York. team ls
coached by vOlaiile skater
Ronnie Rains.
Little Ralphie \1alladare5
Mission Viejo could mo~ h>
a tie for third place with a vie·
tory, barring a Foothill upset
of Katella. Should the D1ablos heads the T-Birds men's unit,
lose, h-Oweve r, a San Clemente which includes Country Boy
victory would tie these two for Cre\\'S and Bulldog Brien,
fourth place. a1nong others.
ti1ission Viejo and Orange The T-Birds g i r Is' 11g·
st:1ged an overtime struggle in grcgatio n is headed by ca ptain
their first meeting with the Terri Lynch .
Oiablos posting a 55·52 win ------~
G1l Normand1e. the ,team's
leading scorer , was high man
in this one "•Hh 22.
San Clen1enle had· an easy
tin1e in disposing of cellar
dy,·eller Villa Park last time
out , 91 -55. And in the last
three games against top foes.
San Clemente has been in
every gan1e lo the end despite
three stra ight defeats.
In the las! Villa Park out ing ,
11 players shared in the scor·
ing with Danny Nau's 23 hig h
for the game.
INVENTORY
CLEARANCE
IUDGn
TERMS
SAVE
socro
CUSTOM lOMG M\lER
4-PLY tiYLOli CORD TIRE
AS LOW AS
13 73 .... ~ ..
1w n11ll fl\111
FEl $1 95
l!ld lfl~•·Jll,
MANY_r W AYS TO BUY
-~
-SAVE ,_{
40% "SAVE
.
5~~"!'!!.~:~.~~ S 0%
. DYNACOR· RAYON CORD RADIAL 990
AS LOW AS RADIAL TIRES 1 Al LOW, LOW PRICES
DELCO a.
HI JACKERS
3450
WHEEL
BALANCE
HIGH
PERFORMANCE
=:?=~r~:\!::J:~t~Sc,;,-=~
l 2: L'.i!P-
HEADQUARTERS FOR TRUCK
& CAMPER TIRES ...
MAG & CH ROME WHE ELS
MOST CARS SUPElll
DISH OR SPOKE WIDE
!llKkw11\ olu
FEl \l"
11>4 U.O•~.
SHOCK
SALE
HfAYY DUTY
INSTALLID
2 for 518
NEW
CAMPER
"" $149 MAGS "60 " SERIES CMANO• OVElr
Wei9ltts 4for99' TIRES
.$33 WHEEL
ALIGN MENT .... $555 v.1 .. lrAISED $12.50 WMl'T• LEnElllS
Jl .... IJ Pi.t Tt• ..
2049 HARBOR BLVD. lat Bay!
COSTA MESA
Phones 646-4421 \
540-4343 ;
•
TIRES
SIZ•
10. 1_6.S $33
PLUS Tit.XII
I
f
•
I
I -=-• , ... "!... •
I
• ,
'
• j
t
p
r
In
B
fi
In
co
w
c
s
• H •
Z4
HEAR FOUNDATION GETS 14·FOOT SAIL BOAT
-· Yacht Firm Donates Saiboat In Festival
Catalina Yacht Firm
Gives Boat to HEAR
A sleek. trim, 14 foot
~ aallbolt , with white flbrealas -;r bull and red and yellow sails,
f h., been donated to th! HEAR
~ Foundation by the builder,
Catalina Yacht Company of
Los Angeles, for the forthcom-
ing Artists & Models of 1972
Festival to be held March 9,
10, and 11, at the second park-
ing"level of J.W. Robinson's of
Pasadena, according to John·
W. Hllpert Jr., Administrator
of HEAR Foundation.
The boat Is the most unique
and unuauaJ donation ever
received by the Foundation, it
will be given away Saturday,
March II. at the Festival.
"Artists & Models of 1972"
Is the second annual combined
auto and art show produced
jointly by the Pasadena Auto
Dealers Association. t h e
leadiQg artists or the state.
and The HEAR Foundation.
Profits from the show will
go to help HEAR Foundati on's
work with deaf and deaf-blind
youngsters. Along with a
dazzling displa y of new cars.
several antique or horseless
carriage autos will be shown.
The art being displayed for
sale will number into the
°'°usands oI pieces. a speci11l
display being offered for sale
has been donated by artist-in-
mates of Folsom Prison.
HEAR operates f o u r
branches In California with
national headquarters located
at 301 E. Del Mar, Pasadena.
The show is open to the public.
free of charge. A gala
Premiere Night is planned for
Wedne!da y, March 8.
Admission by ticket only. For
information and reservations,
call 681-4641.
Cal 33 Celerity Takes
Fort Lauderdale Race
Showing the way to boats
twice her size, celerity' a Cal
33 owned and skippered by Bill
Huff of St. Petersburg Yactit
Club, became the smallest
boat In history to win the St.
Petersburg to Fort Lauderdale
race.
In this longest of the gruel-
ing SORC bluewater races the
Bill Lapworth desl&ned Cal 33
finished first overall and first
in Class E. The race was sail-
ed. in typically varying wind
conditions with 20 to 25 knol
winds holding to Rebecci and
12 to 14 knot winds on to the
finish.
Coatal Weather
H•IY 1M111Sllll'I lodl~. Lltllt v1r!1bl1
wll'llll •111111 11'111 mornlfll ""''! llfctm· 1119 _. ... IY .5 !ti IS lu!O I In I ,.,.,,....,,
tod1V jMI S1tvrd1~. H'9h !tell~ 70.
CINlstl '""""''"'" r1111t l•Om U to ~i111d llmP1r1h.1rr1 •11111 trom 44 hi
ttt.11r ltmPl•llurt 5'.
Sun, Moon, Tide•
t=:l':.11
,..,,1 111911 1'1"11 IN
Sec~ low
il'l"lt 111111
l'lrs! 1-
SKond 111111 ........
l'lltDAY
11:411,,,., '·' IATUll:D.~14 '·""· 0 1
lt·t~,m JJ •:» •. ,,.,, o.s
J· J1 ll ... 1.4 SUNDAY
17:11 • .... 5.J
1:.S.S 1 m, 0,,
t :DI ll.m. t .I
""" ...... !:15 ...... .,.._. ., .. , 1:11 1.m.
6:1l ll,,,., 7.0
Ith J ;1J '·"'· tttp 10: 14 1D.m •
Celerity's outright win of the
370 mile SORC race came as
80ll'lething of a surprise to
some observers who had an-
ticipated the first spot going to
one of the larger, custom-
designed gold platers. Second
overall in the race was the 68
foot Chance-designed Equa-
tion.
Celerity now has two wins In
the first two races of the
young SORC season. She also
won the One Ton Division in
the .January 28th St .
Petersburg to Venice race.
Cal domination of Class D In
the SORC was again the order
of the day in the St.
Petersburg to Ft. Lauderdale
race wl htOtseketa, a Cal 39,
taking the first in Class gun .
Otseketa was the overall
SORC Class C winner last
year.
The new Ca 1 33 features a
very long water line. a wide
beam. a new short rather deep
raked keel and a ventral fin
and skeg which fairs smoothly
into the rudder.
These are refinements of the
basic features whi ch have
made the Lapworth-designed
Cal hoats consistent race win-
ners for t I years. The Cal 3.1,
like all Cal boats, is built en-
tirely hand laid up fiberglas by
.Jensen Marine Corporation of
Costa Mesa .
. ' DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
• ll ',
Lease or .luy All Models .. ;
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
...
2411 HAllOR ILYD . ., PA{-llVI COSTA MIU
Ph. 546 .. 01 -
Dl"•Jf J DAYI A .. IK t i• A~, TO 111• fl.IA. IUNOAY1 II AM. TO f P.M.
·I No. 1 on the Coast
'i' our Hometown N1;1peper 11
The DAILY PILOT
••
.... . ~ ..
Mow 01!1
frtt Stcurlty'1
GUARAllTll
If 1 Security Tlrt R•tr11d
f1U1 for 1nr r111on ••·
'''' r•p1ir1lll1 Pllil(!Url or abuu wh ll11J16th of
111 lfth of tr11d r1m1ln1,
yoi.1 1•t • ntw rtlr••d frtt.
.. ~ ._,. ,. -
Friday, Ftbru.try 18, 1472 DlllY PILOT 2J
UNIROYAL
ZETA 40M
UNIROYAL
ZETA JOM
INTERSTEEL !IRE
Guaranteed
30,000 Miles
CLOSE-OUT!
Slight Blemishe~
GLAS-
BEl.T
Polyester
Cord Plies
Glass
Belt
NO TRADE·IN .
NEEDED
N
FASTRAK
E78-14
BLACKWALL
WHITIWAllS ADD
$3.00 MORE
5 17~~
F78-14
Only '2145
G71·14 $22.95
G78· 15 $23.45
11.21 .... 11 ...
H78-14
On/1'25 45
H71·15 $26.45
L78· 1 5 $28,45
•Sll1hl OPP'ltf•• .. bl•M11h .. whl<• I" MO woy ar,.ct p.tf1r111111<1, 1 ... ,.,. lllf <•11lu U•hty.I
<•OU t1 <•:Jll WI Ul!IOlf. •
fobu\0115 1 UNIROYAL
e 8111· 4 PLY
fir POLYESTER GET QUICK·STOP
ACTION TREAD DESIGN OF
IlJltaiOJilJ.
ANY SIZE!
Tubeless Whitewall or Black
Retreads on sound tire bodies _
NO ·TRADtlN
NEEDED
•
560.14 BJ1ekw1ll
Only s159s
6 ~LY 71)1).14
BLACKWAU $18'' Only .
rh11 $2 JS ,,(.T,
UNIROYAL
Tubeless, Blickwall
$ 95
650-13
NO
TRADE-IN
NEEDED
ea.
Plu1
fod.
ell, tax
$1.91
P•r tire
7.75·14 •13 llatkwall ea.
Only
"
l.00·14/1.25·14 •15 7.10·15/1.15·15
llackwall ea.
Only
7.60·15/1.45·15 •11 llackwall
Only ea,
"111 Ptd. £.-.To• Sl.14 111 $2.tO P1r Tlr• Dt,.nd l"t ff Sl1e,
WHIJIWALLI ADD $2,fS MOii
~-
Plu1 F.£.T. of
$ T .81 p•r tire 45 ;··~,~~'.
each 22 45 F7S.14 2545 G7S·14
F7S.15
G7S·15
H7S.14
J71·14
H7S.15
J7S.15
2845
Plut ftd. Plus Ftd. fJC. Tox of $1.92 lo $2.96 p•r tire.
WHlnWALL ONLY $2.95 MORE
----------·----------•M••
°"' ··-i .... ~••!<' ""'"'' .......... . l>tr, 1"·1~ ••4 IH ·•lll I• ••e11led11r•t'a
!~~::!F,~E $5 55
MOIT
AM1•1CAH
CAll:S ti.to l• V•lw
!! LUBE & OIL SPECIAL •• 11 HERE'SWHATWEDO:
111 Y" $ ci!,, Q11at1r Slot• (up lo) I """'Clion l• 111-• '
•UY 3 IHOCK'
A•IOR•IRI· .
Al At ''"''--' 1 .. Ptk .. IVTalw.67,fl-lrl
~:~:~~ 1oc· only
'""'°"' ......,. tMOCkJ J ,.It IJUT,f,WflOH
COIJ~ 0000 llHfll '9. ''• lf7t
ANAHEIM 8961 lrookhunt ............. 635-1870 SANTA ANA 1211 W. W1rnor AH.
WESTMINSTER 7135 W0&tmln111r 11,d. • •• 893-3521.t>. TUSTIN 131 E. hlllrott. .... , ............ 544-9431
G,ARDEN GROVE W0&tmln11w 11. ......... 893·3S9S \COST A MESA· ·
HAwAllAN GARDENS 11f73 '"""st. 865-0227 NEWPORT BEACH 322 t 17th St ......... 642-4131
-----
OPEN DAILY 8-7
SATURDAY 8·5
--HUNTINGTON BEACH 19411 loKh 11! H,, 536-1571 CORONA 836 W. 61h St ............ : ...... 735-6010
SANTA ANA 115 N. Horllor •. , ••....•.•••.. 839-3700 SAN CLEMENTE 927 H. El Comlno lHI •••••. 492,5543
\
, • ---·-
. ' f<f OAJU'-tlUJT ••
Groovy Free'v~ys Daily ~v.~ni~ Take News Spotlight ..
-.-
• -"t c· urh' F. ·a,t:a·, J 1"t1"es.: _ .. ,:_. ~~--,·fj· ~.:~., .. ;r "'I~~t!~~. ~,q N~W '~iix tAP) -II," Goµu~ said in his ... ternatlonal event. .uu cap-He aMOUn<td t be in-11a1... ind i; ,\ipbL!ticated >l,.''i. Y : ···: I:"'· ·~: • ·,· A-""'·n 1~·-e~ in••· -s nual ,._ '· the As·-•·~ I •-• •-Id t.t ""'-'._ .. , .. , ·~ i.na.-~-,.... •• "" ~\Vol tured attention, but the da lly .staUation and operailon of tethnolop o~jteral.llU ln~ .o.
"' -!'--..mlfted to....the-problerm-Olaai-Preas membmhip ~ ~ priorl.tfer~loser-urhame;--erg!if o a pliiined nine com;-~anlc.t-Problemt ~,.,_rnm""-~
1 ~~ · .6, .;~ft-.. :· :1 .. ~ :.::; ly living In 19?1 aft~r 2S years Th l1 was not an lsblaUonisl he a·a1d. " putu cenlers dUring l'71. The i~g ~PY acrou 11.t•U:, bar-
.. IACR.uitNTO (AP) _ """"Ves but cycle• ""'Uip,.... ;"~ l v.Q ~:.. '; of preoccupation with rorelgn trend, Gallagher pointed out, This sbi!tlng interest lo local r1ers, Oallagber u.td. News
iThoM tiny grooves 1 0 ;1u; street-type tire• "~re .i;;t {~·~Z'!: .• •.. , ~ ~·~ a.flairs, AMOCiated P re 11 but the rewlt of the pre111un state aod regional newa· was last center was to be com· of inter~t ·to two , or more
danllrOUtl 1 t;f:t.chi 1 of iffected . . . .none bad a :·'·A~ I ('JC;l·e·:·:·· ·:: General M a nag er Wes or daily Living where inflation, shown in the play by members pleted jn early 1972. Comple-l'itates wit.hip • hub now ~Id
·c.ulomll freeway'l'bave If.cl 1tnsitlvity level aufficient to ~·11\ftl M . fit :·'.·:·.i Gallagher says. higher taxes , education, crime of stories telling how naUonal lion of the cent~rs was mai:k· appear ·~ .those state wtrts
/ lo 1 dramatic reduction ' In Cllm a conlrol proble.m. ;: .. ; : •: ·~·:;~·.;:::;·~;· "News of l,ht U.S. economy, and many other problems or state government policies ed by operation and tn-a~moa:t simulta~eously, ~ O~I
'traffic 1ocJdentt lnd dtathJ. "On wet grooved pavement. ~l;i:"B·llJt.>.1 -:·:~:-~~:·.:~.q in 11 at ion, unemployment, ~r:;c~upi~ili~e 'aver a I e affected the average man's stallation ot the largest simple electrontt o~hon.
lite Stitt Public Work 1 1topping c~aracteri.stics of J>>·;.: :·: ;" .:; " 'f:::>s.:··.-.:-:·• -ecology.-and--k>eaJ-pr-OOlem-8-rlCan.. fl.-_ ~·--axes: -his cosr of ltoillg hls-system .. of cathode ray tube.! "Such nexibility, ,. Galligher
Dtpartment has reported. mntortycles wereprovedin be :~.f!o·' ·n.;~·T"wA-._~ took first place in .reader and The Vietnam war, India· etQlogy, his school sYsiems ~n ~se for. editing and writing said, "fostered the d~~elop-
A lltT'VtY qf the safety Im· definitely belier than on wet ~·::f:'.' .:~f'.' IJ .~ _:: liste~er i~tere~t, perhaps for Pakist~n, the Pr~ident's trip and his persona.I well-being, In 10urnaltsm today. ment of much speci!1c.~1
pUc1tlon1 of the groovu, _u_ng_r_oo_ved_P_•_,._m_e_nt_.'_' ----'-~ .,.=·~c.. .. ; .. =!;.~=:. ·~"'~· :~:-.~=-~ ·~.:=' .~:;.= .. ':~:.:.=.;.:=·: ·=·: ._· :_t_h_e _,,_,,_t _llm_e _.,_nc_e_w_o_r l_d _W_a_r _1o_Ch_in_•_•_nd_o_l_h_e_r_1_n-_G:.:a:.:il:::ag.::.he:::r:.:r::e.::.po:::rt::ed:::· _____ ":::Ea:.:c:.:h:.:h:::ub:.:s:.:•:.:".:.ed:.•:.g:::ro:.:u:.:p..:•:::' _.:_'e:;,g:.:i•:.:na:.:l _e:...n_t_e_r..,;p:...r_I_•_•_· _ revealed a 50 percent reduc-1
tion in (1(11 ICCfdents, A 2C)
percent cut In total accidents
~ 70 percent (ewer wet
pavement accldent1, Publlc
'Worka.DlrectOr James A. Moe
.... ,.l'.d in a report to the
U:altl1ture.
Tht study 1lto 1ay1 the
lf'OCVtt m I k e motorcycle
rldlnl 1A!41,_ d(!plt•_ rider
complalnta of 1 "1tr1nge f,etl·
lna" whtn' cycling over a
notched roadw1y.
1 Englnter1 directed their at·
1hltion on 34 lane-mile!! of
ar.oov~ P-,avementa at 39
separate loeatlona, comparing
accident1 at the 1ite1 during
the two year!I before and the iwo ye1r1 after grooves were
cut Into the Cflncrete with dia·
mond 11wblade11.
"Grooving was mo11( ef·
fective 111 en accident deter·
rent durlnf( wet weather." Moe 11ald. "The wet pavement·
rtlated accidents were reduc·
ed from $.~ to 15'1 and total
actidenl.! frnm 1.133 to 904.
There were 21 fatal accidents
ln the before period and only
JO In the •I'!! period.''
. The S tate btg8n iti'ooving
payements in the early 1960s
•fter accident report! rtveal·
ed some older 11ectiona of
fr~"°'ay were recordlnli( 11 high
aumber fl( wet we 111 th er
mishap~. More than 750 lane·
rn!lea of 11tate highways have
been grooved to date, et 1 cost
of about '3,000 per mile.
OrooVe1 are about nne·
eJghth Inch wide and deep. 11nd
about three-rourth1 Inch apart.
They provide a constant
"ditch" for rain to drain
away. e I I m I n at Ing the
"hyaroplanlng" of skidding
tires on water. They also pro-
Vide greater traction tor tires
-everi tlrta !ilth. litile .or nQ ~ad, the rl!!port nott11.
1 Regarding mQ.torcyclts, the
report·t•t•= "At the 39 loca·
lions It was found that cycles
equipped .with knobby o!!·ro•d
tlrea are more 1ensitlve to the
. ·La iv maker
Denounces
Ra.nkirig
, ~ACRAMENTO IUP!l -
Dtmpcratic Assemb lyman Len
T. Ryan. declaring "J'll bf
damned If I'll sit atlll and
Hat.en · to 110mebody 111y l'm
Slit In doin1 my duty In tht
legislature," h11s angrily de·
nounced a ranking n f
lawmakers' voted on key
ls!ues.
. Jn 1 floor 1peech, the Burl·
t11r1me leg\sla.tor 11aid a rank·
lng th(ll r11ted him 51st out of
80 a11semblymen was ''tf!rrlbly
unfaJr.''
''l have been bere late 11
night and early in the morn·
tng," he 11ld, noting thAt he
served on four committees .
Ryan was applauded b y
leglsl1klr1 at the end of his
•pee<:h. "I'll be damned I! I'll sit
stUI ·and listen to somebody
say I'm Stst In dning my duty
ln 'the LegislatJre:·· he eaid.
He said he was present for
the clnst, key vntee in the
Assembly. and 1t11ted he did
nOt know of one which failed
bec1use of his absence.
Corrections
Director
Under Fire
SACRAMENTO I UPll -
"-•1emblym11n Floyd
Wakefield bat urged f,ov.
Ron1Jd R~1g11n 10 -firt st1tte
Corr'fCt..ions Oirtctor Raymornl
Procun.Ju btcaust he said
Proc:unltt w.11 doins "an in·
el(tctive job" de11i111 with
-. erlmill•ls.
•'Conlplolnts from P'l'DI• of·
ftctrs hive f.IOltrtd in fnlm all
~tr the state as t o l'rqt'Wl\er'• policies." l h. Sooth, Git• R.pobllcan said.
~·it ll unform11e •h•t tht
,._ bu rd md -...,..U."
'!lit l~Wlllll<en ••t•d "-" .......u, sold b< hid
11 _...... ti !lrlo1
l'rodmltt. "11-~-... wbo lul 19'"'. -iec1 ..... .......
.. pemi11 u.te1an1 .. be -~ .. Wattfidcl "II trU
Jlol1 """"""" who hai ~,.i...mied J'WIJ -L .....iooo • .. , .. ,.,_ ---Ire. ::.~-'~ a;s :-:
,.,.~ t:Qe ......
. .
..
CANDLE CRAFTING
BOOK
with
16-lh.
Slah
Candle Wax purchase.
FREE SPRAY JAR
FREE .
with
Liq aid
Fertilizer
Purchase
or ... ~.· w!!i0JU<?0
PISTOL NOZZLE
with Any
Rose Purchase
FREE V.B.
PRUI@'
With Hedge
Shear or
Lopper Purchase
I
-.-
(but don't anyone tell the newspaper-salesman.)
FREE TOILET SEAT
'\'"
FREE
TURTLE
CHROME
POLISH
with any
auto wax
purchase
FREE
PAIR
BRASS
with
Any
Toilet ··~~~..)
Purchase ·
.FREE
PANEL FRl;E
ADHESIVE ROLLER &
GUN 'TRAY
with any with
purchase any gallon
ol 3 panels paint
or more purchase
Ca'n't say It enough tlme1, and In enough
language1, Sure, you got 1omethlng to buy
with it. but the price Isn't jacked up to ·
cover the· free ·atulf and, best of all, the
free item: 11 something you would want to
buy to go with that purcha1e. (Not like lb•
time we offered a Freeda1clt with purcha1e
of every Gammi1. ·The two ju1t ·don't go
together.) Hope you get In to ~CIT• on
•ometblng. Harre .
FREE
PRICE-Pn5TEB
FAUCET FREE 33 GAL. with any TRASH CAN pullman LINERS, 8 PAK purchase with any trash
can purchase
Bm BINGES
FREE SHADE
, REM GRIP
with every
window shade
purchase
FREE OIL
DRAIN· PAN
with any
case oil
purchase
·.
with any
door
purchase
FREE CONTOUR
GAGE
with any
lloor tile
purchase
\ ,
..J
FREE OIL
PAINTING
with any haa&
carved picture !rime·
La Mlrodo: cmd
Hunlin!J1on hach.
StorH Oal1.
•
TREE
GRASS
CATCHER
with lllf
mower purchase
~ HLY.
1
FREE
Bimms
1rrith.af
OasWlglat
prcliae
"
l
..
'
'
\
•
La
ine
Fa
leg
ti B'
ca
Fa
Fe
Tll
wil
Fa
of
Lil p
u ..
Otis
de
Uca
itol
., -=----------
'
.. . . . . ... . . .. .. . -----..... ___ _ •
C4Jl,Y 'lLOT
•· to go ••• A Complete Guide ••• Where What do to • ••
' ·QUE.EN· SCHEHERAZADE ·
Lindo Norris of Blyth•
Patriotism Party
Set -at Knott's
• Myron Floren, assistant director ,of .the
Ul~nce We)Jt Orchestra, the U.S. Mar-
ine COD>s. and the 50-man ·'"Voices ol
Faith aild Fretdom" from Pasadena Col-
lege will combine to supply the enter-
tainment at the annual Washington's
Birthday Party sponsored by the Ameri-
can Revival Committee It' Knott 's Berry
Farm. 8039 Beach Blvd., Buena Park.
The pro&ram will be held on Tuesday.
Feb. 12 at 7:30 p.m. in the John Wayne
Theater. Guest speaker&.. for the evening
will be Walter• Knott, -founder-of the
Farm. ·and Mrs. John Simon Fluor Jr.,
of Santa Ana, who will speak on, "Tilt
Life of Geor.ae WashiJ'Jgton."
Proceeds from lhe s•le Of ticket. are
used to sui>port the Ariierica n Revival
Committee's program "()per~tion Patri·
oWm, '' which includes ceremonies at In·
dependence' Hall in Philadelphia. the rep-
lica at Bu!na Bart and In the state cap.
Jtols of 50 slates.
WEEKENDER
JNSmE FE.\:rtJRES ..
LUCY BELL, ~tor
Frld1y, February, 11, 1171
A yoong bul uperleoced com-.
pany will g.i•e a perlormance 1(11
"RomeG and Jultet'' at Newport
Harbor .Hif:b School auditorium
Wedn...iay .Feb. 23. A 11Dry on.
Page 26 1ivu ·ttie ·detaill.
Gulde &o Fun Pa1e U
Ill Ill< Galler!" Pl(t II
America"' lllllel , ... .,.
M ... Ceoiewt' • • ,P ... It
Ovt .N' Aboo~ Pq" t; • II
P~o Giii ~ · Pjlp It
Gleu Mllt.4 • · ..... It
Golde lo lolevte1 PlJe II T~ Los •P~1•·ll :
"' ....... """" ~•-0) IJCll Jlriml r .. e ii
U\'I Tll<oltt P. ii.
W)'lll Earp Pop it
Sin Ddoplut P ... II
•
-Date at Indio
Arab Fete-Opens for· 10 Days
' '
'Nowiday1 there seeD'l.1 to be .almost · A high.light of the opening holiday
universal pressure for progress, but weekend will be the big traditional Ara·
Riverside County's National D a t e blan Street Parade starting in downtown ·
Festival at Indio has been busy pushing Indio at 10:30 a.m. Monday , Washington's ·
ba,ck . the clock lo a mystic time when Birthday.
genie,s came in cork bQttles. bandit Free stage sllows will be held at 4 and a
brigades 1,110.ved rocks by shouting "Open· p.m. on the !oUowing days: Susan Raye
Sesame': and a magic carpet was the on· and David Frizzell, Feb. Z2: Myron ly·w~y.to fly'. Flo~n. Feb. 23; Charley Owens' Senlla·
lt' brings Old Baghdad · to Southern tional lnk Spots, Feb: 24 : and Al Eaton
Ca!Uornia. This year's festival, with its and the Young Californians, Feb. 25.
colorful ".Arabian Nights''. theme, will Other free daily attractions will feature
run for 10 days from today through Feb. band-concerts, singing and musical 27. d A modern Queen Scheherazade and her groups an amateur per!ormers. The
court wiU reign over the event. There will Popcorn Theater Marionettes have three
be entertainment daily. free shows daily. The zany music of the
"Watercloset Band" of Laguna Beach Free performances of the Arabian also will be featured in this show. Nights Pageant will be presented at 6:4S p.m. eve1" evening on the outdoor· 'stage The two special days for senior cit.U:ens
·lh 1 00 are Tuesday and Wednesday, Feb. 22·23.
wi near Y 1 sin1ers, actors and Costumed models will be on hand for the dancers participating.
"Tale of the Light that Walk8 Alone'' is two Photographer Days, Feb. 19, and
the title of this year'a·production. There Feb~ Z7. Orange County Day is Feb. 20.
will be two pageant performances 011 Feb. 27 Will be stlute to Mexico Day.
SitUrdiiy eveilings, at 6:4.S and 8:20 p.m. The exhibits will include elaborale date
The.National Horse Show, most colorful and citrus feature displays, a
equestrian show on the West Coast, will photographic salon and exhibition of fine
be one of the big attractions each af· arts. · •'ti'
ternQOn in the main are na, beginning at 1 A gem and mineral show will be housed
p.m. ln on e big exhibition hall.
The festival's famous camel and A moon rock from the Apollo ti
ostrich races also will be held around the mission will be on display in the Taj
_•_r_en_a_tr_a_ck_a_l_abo_ut_3..:.p_.m_._d_al..:.ly_. ____ M:...•..:.h•:...l .::b:::uU::d:::in:::g· _______ ..:__ __ _::U:.::N::_P_:R:.::E_::D:.::I C~T'..'.A:'.B'.'.L:.::E:_:C:::AM:.'..'.'.E:'.L RACES WI L L BE DAILY FEATURE AT I NOIO DA Tl f ISTIVAL
Rex . Brandt on Rex Brandt
Watercolorist Still Stage Struck With Arts
By CANDACE PEARSON-
ot Jltt Diii' '1111 l !tff
"! sneaked lnlo 1art by telling block
prints for $2 apiece. I couldn't 1!.ll 1 pain-
ting for soUr grapes."
Uading California watercolorist Rei
Brandt slb in his comfortable Corona del
Mar home and remembers the early
1930's.
Since that tlme things have changed.
He has won almost 70 painting awards,
written 1even books. taught at colleges
and had )Vorka di!play1 in countless e1·
blbitions.
But he verbally plays down his 1ucceu
by saying he believes "talent eer ae
doesn 't exist.
"Artistic aucceas is based on a foolish
stage struck enthusiasm and determlna·
Uon to be an artiat," he says. "I'm sUD
stage-struck wJth the arU."
He adds thal Intelligence must come fn.
to the picture and 1peaks with the e1·
perlence o( his 57 yeara when be UYI
thal coll!Ciously developed style la 1 "ler·
rUying thing." •
Brandt"• own at y le his
'1iconogr1pby" a1 be calls It -1how1 a
love for Ille hirbot, coutlln• Inc! lhe 1u.
But there are 'Po new Brandt works belnc prepared !or • wlnt<r thow. "Ho, tbl Is my show for lhls winter.'!
ht says, fondly holding 1 ilender whit ..
l•cldled book lmprlnted simply, "Ru
llrandt."
Edited and d"lgned bJ Jerome !(.
Muller, It ii porUolio of rtctnl worl<J
<mllDtlDOrltlng Ille first ~yurs of Ult
Brandt Workshop in Corona del Mar.
"We were horrified, shocked and pleas-
ed to find that we 'd been here for 2.S
years," Brandt says · of the summer
school he and his sculptress.painter wife,
Joan Irving, manage each year.
The Brandta began · the five-week
workshop at their "Blue Sky" home in
1946 with Phil and Betty Dike. Dike
retired In 1954.
For the lruit few years, the Brandts
haven't even adverti&ed their school. The
waiting list, replete with many "JeCOnd
generation artists'', is too long.
"We're proud of ttte way Newport
Harbor has treated us," Bra~dt aay1 .
"The subject matter 1nd * place has
drawn the kind of students that inspire ua
lo do Ihlngs."
The Brandt's home, built on 1 lot tht.y
acquired in l!Ml for nso, speaks elo-
quently ol their life.style.
Only a few Brandt pictures hana:: most
have been H.nt to a publisher for ln-
clusiQn Jn a new watttCOlor technique
boQk due in Dectmber;
. Joan lrvlna'• painllng, bronu ocnlplure
al)d t<ak cirvin14 ar• evident. Brandt
Jptaka of his wife's work admiringly and
1dmonl1h<o lbal "she'd ht even better
known for htr. p&lntina u she didn't do
the acutpt:urt well tllo."
Brandt, who beEformal art clu.ce.1 In Los Angeles al inard Ari lnstlwi.
ot 13, will have hi ntrl local lhowlng in
Sept<mber ot Ille Cb.Uis Gallery in
La1!1N B<ach. \
For the 8raftdt1 plan to be tr1vehnc·1n
th& nat•.-.ew mont.ba, Lo At:IJ¥1CO•
\
Houston. Puget Sound, New York -with
some ·of .the trips combined with guest
teactUng.
But whatever he speaks or now, ha
.11lway1 seems to return to the book with
his name. He calls it a "commemoratory
monograph , a souvenir, a memory."
He refl~ta. ''We seem to ha ve dooe a
certain thing well over ttJe. years -the
11ummer replenishing.''
But the balding, dynam ic artist cau·
lions, "I don't teach art -my hair Isn 't
Jong enough." ·
Instead, he teachel'I and practices the
"artistic anatomy of nature and tilt craft
of pa!fitlng."
The ''Rei Brandt" book is avaUable at
the Newport Harbor Art Mu&eum ,
Laguna Beach Art AssoclaUon and
Challis Gallerles in Laguna Beath.
CrawfordMo Play
The Naked Ape'
NEW YORK IAP)-'-Johnny Q'awlord,
who llarred oppoalle Chuck. Connon In
t<levlalon'• "Tilt Rifieman.'' wlll ploy the
title role In •'The N1ktd Ape" for
Unlver1al.
Crawford, !.I, will porJroy 20 rol .. lrom
prehiat«ic to modtrn hl1n in the IQ'MD
"Vtraioft of Dtamond Morrll' bat 1tUtr.
Tilt mm will ht directed )>y bonlld
Driver with 11rly filming In Flnrlda.
Loatlons ln Cllk:llO and Loi An;el ..
•ill follow .
'
'Laugh-111' Star
Set to J>erform
•
At Golde11 West
Lily Tomlin, " sl8r of tclevl11lon'1
"Laugh-In '', whose nh?ibll!•wltled, la~t·
talking Ernestine the telephone operator
creRted a pop heroine. wlll perform 11t
Golden Wcsl College, 15744 <:oldr.n We!ll
St., HuntJnglon Beach, Saturday, fch, 26.
She hss been booked for lhe colle$(e'111
pavillon 1111 a 11peclAI 1ttr11ctlon hy the
associated 11ludent11 ln coP1ntctlon with the
dedication fe11ttval of the.new community .
theater and gallery .
Her comedy performance wtll he 11t a
p.m. On the 11ame pro1ram will be a 11oft
rock group, "The Pe<>ple Tru," who rely
on two guitar11, a fender; b11111 and four
'Volce11 for their speci11I sound.
Ticket11 are $.'1.50, and may he obtained
11t the cflllege bookstore, WaUlcJ1'11,
Bullock'a, Buffum'11, and moat ticket
agencies.
Called by some critic~ the fine11t and
most influential comedienne to come
along in 20 years, Mtaa Tomlin'• hour·
long routine offera a wide repertoire of
voices and face1. She pl11y.s a telephone
supervisor, Su11ie Sorority , 6-ye1r-0ld
Edith· Ann·, 11 womsn rubbcr·addlct ("On
.rainy .day.11 , I 111arted to hang out around
gr11de·11chool cloakroomA") and the
world's oldest beauty expert.
Far from the trad!Uonlll stand-up
Jo~tsler, 1he Jumps qulckly lnl<> •ew
characters With almoat complete about..
faces In th lnklna.
, , • AND THIS IS LILY PLAYIN~ A SILf.(ENTllllD "'Y~lt-OLf
•
-. • • • . . . . -. .. •
f DAJLY 'lLOT )
Your GMlde to f'un
~aguna Willter FCsti!~l"'_Q!~~s CraftS,_ Big Events ~-'"'
... Ft:" lt •MARCH S #.,' ~performed by thfchildr~n ·s 1'he.at(~~ny of Cali· ,. of th~ ~rtbe'n,.1.tghts ·v.·ill close the &how which Is fr~ to 26. On the same program -,UI &• 1111i1 P~pie Trtt,'' a atft ,
WUrn'ER rUtlVAL -l.qunt Buch Win ter Festival opens fomia SU.le CoUege at Long· Beach f'r!l~ugh Sunda y, the pubhc, but reservatJons must be made. Phone 547·9581, rock group. Tickets, '3.SO •t C.011••• Bookl!ltore.
today lbmuth M1m, t. Craftlnun's fair and art F~h. 18·~. in the Llttle The~ter on C8mpus. Performances Ext. 314. FEI. JI . IT
exhllrit on l1tllv1l fl'O\lftdJ dilly from 10:30 am. to 4:30 p.m. will be g1ven at 7:30 p.m. Fruiay; 10 :30 .a.m .• 2:30 an~ 7:30 FEB. %S. a.tARCH 4 DANCE CONCERT _ ''MUIJe Midi Famous by Glenn
No admi.ufon t:ha ..... Olflft event.I, jncludlng a parade at p.m. Satur~ay, And 2:30 p,m, Sunday, T1cket Information at UCJ DRA~1A -Shakespeare's "Othello" will be staged by Miller" will be a dance concert prlllftted by Ted Beneke
ll •. m. Sat., Feb. JI, lrt aafarl abow. Junior Repertory the box ofhce. 213·498-4033. the School of fine Arts al 8:30 p.m. Feb. 2.5 throu,n March and the Modemaires at a p.m:-'Saturday and Sunday, Feb.
Opera pro£ram;--goU and lawnbowllng tournamenls, .!and· FKB. 18 • 27 4, in the Village Studio Theater on campus. Tickets , $3 at U.27 in the Hollywood Palladium on Sunset Blvd. Tickets
castle sculpturing contest and an antique shoY!'. Others are NATIONAL l>ATE FESTJVAL -H1verside County's Nation· f ine Arts bOx office. 833·6617. are $4·$5.50 on Saturday, $5.50-$6 on Sunday.
8 home and garden tour. film leslival, folkdancing exhibi· al Date r~estival begins a 10.day run tnday, Feb. 18, ln
tioo , ealamaran races, flea market . ballet and concerts. A lndJo. Events include an Arabian Nights Pageant, daJ!y F'EB. 25 FEB. 26 • 21
brochure is available al the Chamber of Commerce, 205 !\'. horse shows, camel and ostrich races, a parade. free stage YOUTH CONl:t~RT -The California ChamJ>er Symphony CHORAL CONCERT -''Hommage a Igor Stravinsky."
('.o.ast Hwy .. Laguna Beach. 494-1018. shows and exhibit!. Grounds admission , $1.50 riJr adults. Orchestra will present two 4(}.minute concerts at 10 and 11 performa!Tl::es or Stra vinsky 's "Les Noces'' and "Mass'' ~y
FEB. 18 • 19 50 cents for children 1).12. free under six, $l for students. R ni . Frida.v, Feb. 25· in the Ne\vport Harbor High School. the UCI Chorus under the direction of -M~rict Allard \\'Ill OC r · d Sutth ~rade and inttrmediate music students v>'ill attend C PLAY -Orange Coast O'Jllege; 2701 ~airview Roa. FEit 19. 26 from Newport f.lrsa School DlstrlcL AIJ tickets available be presented at 8:30 p.m. Saturday and . day, Feb .. 26-
Cc!la Mesa wiJJ be producing, "Who'! Happy Now?'' in the STORY HOUR -Costa Mesa Library, 566 Center St., Costa 27. in the Village Theater on campus, Tick ts, $1 at Ftne •--J d't · F b 19 t 8 30 Th · h through schools a\i.ending. SCiwu au I or1um e · 18 • a ; p.m. ere 1.!J no c arge Mesa, offers a children·s story hour each Thurs., at 10:30 a.m. Arts box olfice. 83J..6617.
for admission. Feb. 19 two movies ".\tagic Sneakers" and "Tales of Ft:B. %5 · 27
,, -.FKB. 18 . lt Hiawatha" will be sho"'n; f·'eb. 24, "Caterpillar"; Feb. 2~. 11\'.0JAN SHO\\' -The Arnerican Ind ian and Western Relic
GOLDEN WE'iT COMEDY -Opening or lhe new theater Laurel and Hardy in "Busybodies." Shov• \\'i ll take place Frida.v through Sunday, Feb. 25-27, in
on Golden We.!Jt COl!ea:e can1pus. 15744 Golden West St., Hun· fo~t:B. 20 the (treat \\lestern Exhibit Center, Uis Angeles. A gathering
ttns:ton Beach. will get under way with the presentation of SCHOLARSH p CO of tribes for a Pow \\low is featured on Saturday and Sun· -"'Black~ CorffeaY" Feb. 18 and 19 at 8 p.m. in the theater. t ta! 1 . NdCERT -t Cos~tJ ~iesa Htigh. Schoo1,} tin· da,r. including a dance feslival and contest. The show in·
h s rumen muSJc epartmen w1 presen lls v in cr eludes 100 exh•.b•'ts of Amer•·can fnd•'an art and hand•·craft. No admission c arge. Free reserved tickets on first come s h I h' Co 1 f' b 20 · h o Co Cott basl.!J, c 0 ars 1P ncer ' e · m t e range ast ege General admission Is $1.75. Costumed Jndian dancers ad· auditori um; 2701 Fairview Rq,ad, Costa Mesa. \\'orks by
FEB. 11 • %~
PRE.SCHOOL STORIES -The Newpo rt Beach Public LI·
brary has scheduled pre-school program! which will take
place at 10 a.m. in the foll owing locations: Mariners Li·
brary, 2005 Dover Drive, Tuesdays: Corona del Mar Library,
420 Marigold St., CoronR del Mar, Wednesdays: Harbor
.Vle.w ctubhowe, 1871 Port Charles, Newport Beach , Thurs·
days. and the Balboa Li brary, 100 E. Balboa Blvd., Newport
Beach, Tuesdays.
FEB. ti · %0
CHILDREN'S THEATER -"Liltle R<d Riding Hood" will
In the Galleries
Cowboy Artists'
Work on D.isplay
Mozart, Stravinsky, Gluck and Brahms "'ill be performed. mitted (rec.
Angela Juda, concertmislress, v.•ill be featured violin solo·
ist. Tickets, $1 for adults, SO cents for students, at the door.
FEB. 25
FEB. 22 • MARCH 2
PLANETARIUM SHOW -Tessman Planetariu1n al Santa
Ana College, 1530 W. 17th St., Santa Ana v.•HJ present a
special show. "Winter Sky Spectacular," each Tues. and
Thurs. at 7: IS p.m, th rough March 2. Through the eyes or a
major observatory the audience will examine the Orion
Nebula, the Plelades, the \.\o'hirlpool galaxy and the Leo
clusters of galaxies. A trip to Alaska to witness a display
GUITAR CONCERT -George Sesoko, classical guitarist wiU
perform at a p.m. in the ne\v theater on Golden West cam·
pus, 15744 Golden \Vest St .. Huntington Beach , Feb. 25. Ad·
mission is free, reservations for seating may be made at
College.
FEB. 26
LILY TO~fLlN -Lily Tomlin of ''Laugh·In" \\•ill be heard
in concert in the Pavilion on the Golden West Colle1e cam·
pus, 15744 Golden \Vest St., Huntington Beach, at 8 p.m. Feb.
FEB. 21
FILM LECTURE -Dr. Cla ra Hill will present a film lec-
ture series, sponsored by the Bower·s Museum of Sant.a
Ana. in Lhe auditorium of the City Ha ll Annex in Santa Ana,
52Q 'N. Rose St. Comfortable theater seAts should provide
audiences with more comfort and viewing pleasure. Free
parking in rear Jot. The programs all will be seen at 2:30
p.m. On Feb. 27 "Morocco," Ancient and New will be seen,
There is no admission charge.
FEB. 27
CONCERT -Orange Coast College Community Symphony
Orchestra. directed by Joseph Pearlman and presenting
solo violinist Wlili am Kurasch will be heard at 4 p.m. Sun-
day, Feb. 27, in the college auditorium. 2701 Fairvie"' Road,
Costa Mesa. There is nG admission charge. The program
will include "Sibelius Violin Concerto." "Symphony No. I"
by Tchaikovsky and the overture. "School of Scandal" by
Barber. There is no admi11sion charge.
American Ballet
Sets Performa11ce
• • • • •
"'35 Ytar1 cf P1oduc1
Know HotD"
"Whcrr qunlit~ u tit•
Ordfr of the Homr"
474 I. 171h ST., COSTA MISA-646·2116
' . -'\"\ . '
•
. '
i
t
t
p
" f
c
a
b
p
0
I
s
i
Jo
st
$
h
m
$
Jo
ch
,
.. .............. ~.,. ....... ~ ........ . . . ----· .. -• ' -
frldt\Y, rtbru.ur 18, 1972 -----
•
WEEKENDER OUT ' N I AB OUT
ORANGE COUfirY'S RESTAURANT, NIGRITIUB AND E f ~iAll:JM'EN
The Dry Dock
. Out 1n' abouters looking -these early even·
1ngs -for low prices on fine food at a top-notch
restaurant need sojourn no furtller than Newport
Beach. Because all those elements arc present al
lhe cozy little Dry Dock on the Coast Highway.
The special attraction offered nightly, Tuesday
through Sunday, from 5 to 7 p .m., is the restaurant's
"Daily Double." Under this thrifty setup any dinner
on the menu goes at two for the price of one.
A VIEW
Beyond this enticement, the Dry Dock also
provides a striking and romantic view of Newport's
waterways. Combined with the overall intimacy af·
forded by size and the pleasant decor, this can ac·
count for a memorable evening that's quite easy on
the pocketbook.
The early-bird dinner hours also coincide with
another appealing feature. This originates at the
bar where jumbo drinks are poured at a standard
practice under the two-for-one deal, the Dry Dock
offers a small but well-balanced selection. They
lead off with the tenderloin of beef "Dock·A-Bob,"
served with rice pilaf! and mushrooms, $3 .95.
From tbe Charcoal broiler comes choice top s~oin mini· steak, $3.95; top sirloin, $4.95; top sir·
loin steak, teriyaki; $5.25 ; New York cut sirloin
steak, $5.75; broiled double French lamb chops.
$5.50.
SEA FOOO •
By way of seafoods there's grilled northern
halibut steak, $3.95; filet of mah i mahi, Kameha-
meha, $3.95; broiled whole Australian lobster tail,
$7.50; Dry Dock combinatiorl; top sirloin steak and
lobster, $7.50.
A la carte vegetable offerings include arti·
choke, 75 cents; fresh mushrooms au sherry. $1;
SAM'S SPl;CIALS
Served Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thurscit /
dinners include salad, garlic cheese toasr.
choice of baked potato or rice Hawaiian
RED SNAPPER ................... 1.95 ' . MAHI MAHI ••••••••••••••••••••• 2.25
TOP SIRLOIN •••••••••• , •••• , ••• , 2.45
CHICKEN BREAST HAWAIIAN ••• , •• 2.75
NEW YORK STEAK ........ , ••• , •• 2.95
LOBSTER TAIL ••••• ••••••••••••• 3.95
STEAK AND LOBSTERS ••••• ,., ••• 4.95
·~~
16278 PKific Cont Hfghw•v. Hun1ington Buch C2l3) 692·1321
luncheon • dinner • banquet:
A guide to tht best in entertainment
•
ISADORE'S
)]] l1y1id1 Dri'tl -N1wport l11ch
1
I
'
fresh asparagus hollandaise, $1 : baker Idaho potato,
60 cents.
Located at 2601 West Coast Highway, New·
port Beach, the Dry Dock is open for lunch and din·
ner six days a week, Tuesday through Sunday. Only
the cocktail lounge ls open on Mondays.
Marquis Luncheon
When you finally get around to carrying out a
past promise a certain sense or accomplishment
takes hold. ~1ore often than not there's still a touch
of guilt to overcome for your failure to act sooner.
~·
We found ourselves in one of these mixed-emo-
tion situations again last week. The rewards for up·
holding our pledge were easily distinguishable. but
so were the little misgivings for having postponed
this particular event as long as 've had.
The occasion \\•as our first luncheon visit to
Cos ta Mesa's splendid Marquis restaurant. To dis·
pel our unease for the tradiness v,re decided a pro-
mise delayed is better than one forgotten alto·
gether.
BACK AT LAST
'fhe VO\v to return for a sa mpling of the mid·
day \\"ares was made nearly four months ago -at
the time of our initial outi ng to the Marquis. This
was a dinner call. shortl y after the restaurant op·
ened. which resulted in one of 1971's most memor·
able meals.
In addition to praising the superlative food,
kudos n•ere extended for the extensive remodeling
program that had transformed the premises into
one of the area's most attractive spots. Our judg·
ment on both counts has since l)een confirmed by
the laudatory comm~nts 9f scqr~s of out 'n'
abouters.
Located in the quarters formerly occupied by
the Caspian, the ~!arquis sports a polished decor
which spells elegance and refinement from first
HOUSE OF SEAFOOD
NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH
11 :30 to 2:30 TuH. thru Fri.
Nightly Dinner-Cocktail' 4 'lo I I p.m.
Sunday 2 to q:]O pm-Cloied Mondays
1814 N. Coast Hwy. !El Camino Real!
SAN CLEMENTE 492-6571
496-5773 499-2626
detail to last. As a· consequence the setting goes
hand in hand with the food served therein.
SEPARATE DINING ROOM
Beyqnd all the changes in the old dining area.
the new proprietors also added another large and
separate dining room . Elegance prevails in it too,
along with intimacy accented by graceful crystal
chandeliers. fresh flowers and Oriental and Vene·
tian wall hangings.
It was in this room that \\'e took up a sump·
tuous booth for our luncheon repast. The next or·
der of business, naturally, was a thorough perusal
of the me nu so no likely prospect \vould escape con·
sideration.
SPECIALS O ... IL Y
Every day. we quickly learned, the bill of fare
leads off \l.•il h three speciaJs. On the Tuesday of our
visit these were cheese enchiladas, $1 .95; cold
prin1e rib of beef sandw ich. $3.25; pan pried sand
dabs, almandine, $3.25.
Other hot entrees offered every day Include
ground sirloin steak, $2.25; jumbo fried shrimp.
$2.35; baby beef liver, $2.25: low calorie lunch
(ground sirloin, cottage cheese, fruit or tomato),
$1 .95 ; choice New York steak sandwic h, $3 .25.
In the salad department IQ)ere's the house spe-
cial green salad (artichokes and avocado), $2.75;
shrimp or crab Louie, $2. 75, chef's salad bowl
(Julienne ham, turkey and crisp greens), $1.85;
fruit salad bowl (with cottage cheese), $1 .85.
SANDWICHES TOO
Five sandwich specials range from the bundle
or ham (piled high) with lettuce, tomato, dill pickle,
Russiian dressing, potato salad or cble slaw, '$1 .45,
the Monte Cristo, triple' deck barn, cheese and tur·
key, $1 .95. Others include deluxe hamburger,
served open-faced on bun with French fries and
THE BLACK KNIGHT
· RESTAURANT
DINNER • COCKTAllS
ENTERTAINMENT
LUNCH 11 :JO TO J
Open Dolly· 1: A.M. to 2 A.M.
Now App;aring
JERRY LAMBUTH DUO
330' EAST 17TH STREET
COSTA MESA 548-7791
.J
.. ----------... TUESDAY NIGHTS
GINO LANZI I
I -----. Now Appearlnt
mE CHOSEN FEW I
SCENc
<a lad. $1 45; baked ham and cheese. $1.35; club
house. $1 .85.
WE CHOSE
The first. of our t\\'O r hoiC'es netted a truly fin e
f>and\\'irh -sliced \vhitc n1cat turkey, served with
a choice of potato salad or tole slav.'. $1 .85. In both
quantity and quality. fron1 the extraordinarily fresh
:ind nicely tf·xtured d:irk hrc:td to the generous por·
11011 of n1oist turkey, it \\':\s a '''Inner.
The second nod '''l'nt to an equally pri'list·
'''orthy selccl1on -rrtrl' rortst beef. arcon1panicd
by a t.tangy horseradish l'a lll'l' and offered v.•ith 1
rhoire of French fries or 1nashrd potatoc~. $2.35.·
'l'his superb hot cntrcl' sho\\'Cd exacting skill in th~
roasting process. the n1eat's peffcct. shade or pink.
providing strong ('Vidcn('e even before the first bit•
\\'as taken.
Each selection also incl udcd a <'h oicc of soup nr
salad. \Ve both voted for the salad hut went sepa-
fate \vays on the dressing -a rich and creamy
roquefort, and the flavo rsornc 1ni:i:ture that constl·
lutes the house specia l.
Our noontilne app<'tilcs ruled out any thought
of an appetize r or dessert. but those \Vbo can travel
the '"hole route n1ay '"ant to explore these areas
too. By v.•ay of examplcS. a half cracked crab, serv·
ed '''il h mayonnaise and cocktaU sauce, is ~2.85,
and cheese ca ke goes at 75 cents per slice.
GET ACQUAINTED
Lunch. ncrdlcss to say, only reinforced our
conviction thal the t\.1arriuls stands the test of com·
parison with ()range (·aunty's hi ghest-rated dining
establishments. If yo u're still a1nong those who
haven't corn e by the kn owledge first-hand, ro u bet·
ter start ma.ppin g plans for ;t voyage of discovery
as soon as possible.
Continued on Page 28
JOIN ''CLUB 2· 1 ''
Me-etlnq at the Fteur de Lia
Monday thru Friday, 4 to 1 p.m.
i-iors d'oeuvrn and
GARGANTUAN DRINKS
• LAGUNA
FLEUR DELIS
LIYE ENTERT"1NMINT
AND DANCING
7 NIGHTS A ·WllK
1460 S. COAST BL VD.
LAGUNA BEACH
FRll PARKIN• IN IU.l
Arr':f:rN<> RICK ROBINS
WednHday thru Sunday 8:30 to 1 :JO
SUNDAY IRUNCH
Se"" ,,."' 10 A.M:1te l P,M.
IANQUIT FACILITllS
J17 PACl,IC COAST HWY.
HUNTINClTON llACH
OPEN 1 DAVI ,
536-255& * AMERICAN HEAD BAND
•
GOURMET DINING
OYSTER BAR • COCKTAILS
ENTERTAINMENT
LEON PE
1
TERSON I 1._,.-c· CKTAIL HOUR-JUMBO DRINKS DAILY 11~~==========~~~~~~ ~ ~~~~;;OS S:~:H·E::AY IRUNCH$ __ 17s~ •• REUBEN 'S -NEWPORT
251 E11t Co11t Hi9hw1y-Newport l11c.h * JOHNNY SHERIDAN DUO
•
THE MOON~!<ER
11542 Mic.Arthur l oul1v.ril-S1nt1 An1
;::~.~l~~Y .. ,d DIANE
·-~ REUBEN E LEE
ISl'E11t Co11t Hi9ltw1y * ARMSTRONG BROTHERS
•
REUBEN'S -TUSTIN
151 J T u1tin Av1nu1 -S111t1 Aila * SCATMAN CROTHERS
• '
REUBEN 'S -COSTA MESA
I 5155 Acl1m1 ""'· -Cotti M111 '* BOBBI WALTERS
•
REUBEN'S -FULLERTON
50~orth St1!11Coll191 -FuUflto1t . * TWIN P I PE~S
•
REUBEN 'S -~GUNA HILLS -
24001 ""' cl1 11 C1rlot1 -L.9un1 Hilli · "* TIM BURR
' •
REUBEN'S AIRPORT
4•47 MacArthur loul1•1~ -Naw,.rt l11c.h * DOUG KENNEDY
•
i EUBEN'S -SANTA ANA .
2111 Nerth l 111cl'lflY -S1nt1 Ant
Jc SHANNON
•
' ,
Tu•sd•v thru Saturdty, 8:]0 f o 1:30
BRANDIE BRANDON DUO ------Th11rscloy F.shlCHI Show 12:15
Open Seven D•Y•
LU CH a DINNEI e SUNDAY IRUNCH
11 e.111. 4 p.111. t :lO •·"'·. 4 p.111.
32802 COAST HWY.
(ti (.....,. Vtllty ~t111"'tYI
LAGUNA NIGUEL
2. STEAK & EGGS I ]. EGc>S BENEDICT • I
(Abalone Fl•h or Canadian lacon)
I Try Our "DAILY DOUBLE" 5 pm·7 pm I 1~===============:::=:=:'11 Two Dlnn•f'1 for tho Prlco of One I 1-260 I Wait Coast Hwy., Now port Baack .. 548-1166
•
'----------~
THE UNDERGROUND
FEATURING DANCE MUSIC BY THE
RED NECK QUARTET
Nightly Y(ed. thru Sat.
WAYNE:··tABRIEL
"' IN THE LOUNGE
Tuesday thru Sat. -9 p.m. to 2 a.m.
_, ..._ SUNDAY . AFTERNOONS
•
MARK DAVIDSON
•
From .3 .P..m .. on
SUNDAY
CHAMrAGN! IRUNCH
11 to J
LUNCH • DINNER
COCKTAILS .. DANCING
NEWPORT IEACH
0 642-4291
. ..
,
I
~-Chinese Cuisine
Celebrating BAMBOO CHI NESE TDD.CE NEW YEAR
11' 'it Tuesday, Feb. 22
frf!e Pair or Chof)lltlckt
To All Our Guest&
Im -11 ""'· r.nKf' rj--
PHONE •••• 64G·SS50
IH EAST 17TH ..••
NOW UNDIR NIW MANAGIJ.UNT
IUSINISSMEN'S LUNCHEON fROM $1 .SO
S•r••cl From 11 :JO A.M •
Fet Ow S,.CMI E..ty llr4 "'""" C~pMr. ~e•r~ DI......-I te 1 P.M. -SJ.ti
HAPrY HOUR COCICTAIL PllCIS-ll :JO A.M. t• 6 P.M.
I 11.,t V t lut lr1 N•wpott •••Ch I
c • .,., ..... New Go•orlM't Dh1Mt Fte111 -SJ.ti
s,,¥,d With Our Ft .,.ou' Splfttch S..ltcl
f•tt1i1ri"9 E"tr''' Such..,, Prim• II.lb •f lt•I.
M•lty1it1t Shrl"'P· St••~ & l11:1 b•i•r, Prim• S1,, .. ,
• DANCING 8:30 r .M. to 1 :JO A.M.
<>RIA T LAS YE GAS IANDS
NOW APPEARING
MA TI LEWIS TRIO
1'617 WESTCLIFF DRIVE
NrwroaT 1EACH 645-4111
•
fl VJ W• f romlso' Yoo hod
ol..i ~. 1.;;.e;1lauranl oor~ WEEKENDER
•nd AMERICAN CUlllNI
TROP ICAL COCKTAILS
MUSIC
Fri. •nd Sit.
Nights
. . . '
1961 ADAMS. 'Ave: (11 M1gnoll1) 968. 5050
HUNTINGTON BEACH •
BlfM.1 Q"""'r . NMI~ M~ F~ di'~
1
Opo 1 Dcryt
Now A.ppt:•rlnt
"ZACARRO"
cOo.t,•ll-l11t.rt11l1tmf11f
w.-1y w.,.l'S: 11 rJO A.M . ,.12:Jt
ftidoy •1111 s.t~r~•y: 11 iJO.A.M. ~· I :JO J..M.
A new Afri ca n-motif resta urant called the Rondavel
(o r round hut) opened recently at Jjon Country
Safari. the cafeteria-style facility which seats 450 is
5111tthry1: -4 :00·1J MIDNlctHT
9093 E. ADAMS
HUNTINGTON, ,_E:ACH 962·7911
PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES
HAVE CHANGED A LOT·
SINCE THE ..
Ok.D D4.YS
Now Me 'n Ed's '1f0blle ov1ns speed dttlcious
plpin1·hot pim1 to your dobr Jrtmlnute•~
~: ,f;or,pr9'l1P\.H"icephone646·713~ ~-;;,; '·'';}
• (Newport S11ch/Costa r.1 ..... 1tth.1ndtusHn) » ·.
1
/
er 847-1214 (Huntingto~ Seach-Beach.•nd Hiel). ,ft;
Get the Piua with Pizzaz .~;: ~
'100•8$ ~~---~~-
..
,
PALETINA'S
~:
! '
POLYNESIAN
R:EVUE
No Cover-No Mhtlmum
FRIDAY & SATURDAY NIGHTS
AT
DON THE BEACHC~MBER
3901 E. Coast Hwy.-Corona dtl Mar
Reservations 675°0900
MONDAY THµRSDAY
ALL TH i LIYll 99c ALL THI CHICKIN
To• Coe fet Tei C111 fet
0 TUfSDAY FRIDA\,-
TUlklT DINNll 99c ALL THI FISH
AU Ti.. Trl•.-kr'1 ,, Teu Co11 lot
BRADFORD WEDNESDAY SATURDAY
.
HOUSE All THI CU.MS 99c STEAi PINNll , .. c. ... '*'" '•• c .. , ....
.-OIAIZA SUNDAY All THI CHICKEN , •• c • .., , ..........
99c
99c
'1"
99¢
GRANT
PLAZA • IROOKHURST
AT e HUNTIN~l'ON ••
ADAMS IEACH
DAILY 9:30 TO t ·
SUN. lf' TO 6
•
TOURNEDOS
OF FILU
MIGNON
Sauce Madl"'ira
tnppcd ""it h
Brarna1se
AMONG 20
SflECT
DINNER ENTREES
VINA
HARMER
DUO
!Llilt
. 'I'll!
PRESENTS
GINO LANZI
Mo11dor tftru W91:1""dtrf
l\ND-FROM HAWAII
LEROY~ to 10 p.m.
JOHN GLORIA-JO to 1 •.m.
Thursday thr'u S'7nday
FU.TURING DINNERS
111 .th1 San Fr•nciu:o Me nn•r
IACIC OF LA.Ml
STEAKS e SU.FOOD
5 TO t l NtGHTL Y
IUSINESSMAN'S LUNCH
11 :00 TO S
SATURDAY-II to 5
LUNCH< OR BRUNCH
Llq•or 011d Food
C•t•ri11t Fo r Portlet
SUNDAY-BRUNCH
OPIN IYllY DAY
ON "41 OCIAN AOJAiC.l"'T TO"HI Wf'Oltf I U(H ,, ••
210_6_\y. OC:U.N FRONT
NEWfORT HACH
OUT IN I ABOUT
•••
~-:~::::::::::;::.:;:::.,,..:::;....,~·~-·· ==-=· r;ca;;;;;rn11riiWUUliJICTmi'Dlttt:naa.:rt:.=---
located on the park's scenic Lake Shanalee and its
large picture \vindows provide a colorful vie\\',
Dally
Lunch
Specials
99c
R('laxed
And Casual
lntimacy
• .. •&•e~ :•o;;A;':.
•o (!j/Y _,,,,•i. ~~v-~•"'°
<j!,&@A~a
THE CUISINE
OF C£NTRAl ANll HORTN£RH ITAlY
seried b1ysi~t
En!<'rtainm<'nt Ni~htly
Corner of Pork and Marin•
Balboa Island 673-4530
In Newport Be1cll eve1~ e9tnln£
642-7880
3131 W. Ca1il Kighw1y
CONTINENTAL CUISINE e SEA FOODS
CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS
Now Ap~arl911
NORM PANTO DUO
OjNR Dallr Mai. tllr• Sat. -11 A.M. fo 2 A.M.
CIOMd S,u11d.-,
1670 Newport Blvd .. Costa Mesa 642·8293
Fine Italian Cuisine Cocktails
2325 E. COl\ST HIGHWAY
673·8267
Rncf'f'atlo111
Opn Dailr -s .p.111. to 2 a.111.
CLOSE!> MONDAY
ORANGE COUNTY'S NEWEST
DINING & NIGHT CLUB SCENE
PreuJly Pre 11 nh tl.1
BILL MALO TRIO
Fe~!~rin9 lh1 Voluptious SonCJJlr•11
GERMAINE
Tut.'"thru S•t.-9 p .m . to 2 a.m.
MEXICARi REST AU RANT.
"FINEST MEXICAN CUISINE
IN ORANGE COUNTY"
FOR YOUR DINING & DANC:INCi PLEASURE
MARCOS
AND THI
LATIN
~~KS TRIO
Fri. ao4 Sat. Nlthts
8 p.m. to l o.m.
547-W. 19tft STREET
COST-A-MtSA~2-97'4
• •
The Marquis is localed at 1670 Newport Blvd ..
Cos ta Mesa. You have to jog your way off the main
flow of traffic on Newport Blvd. to the smaller
parallel stretch on the east 'iide of the divider~
The restaurant is open da ily, Monday through:
Saturday, from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m., for lunch, dinner_
and cocktails. Closed Sundays.
StufL Shirt Special
It was bound to happen sooner or later. The
moniker being so obvious. the only wonder is that
Ne\vporl Beach's Stuft Shirt didn 't come up with its
use long ago.
Pay no further n:iind to the belated reason~.
because the restaura nt has just made it official.
You can now latch on to a dinnez; here appropriate-
ly called th e "Shirt Stuffef."
· That's the tag ge nial Stuft Shirt president War ..
ren Roberts has placed on a ne w house feature. Al·
though we haven't tried it as yet, \Varren's latest
attraction sou nd s li ke a wi nner.
The "Shirt Stuffer" is offere4, in addition t&
the regular menu, every Tuesday, Wednesday and
'fhursday evening. It's a co mplete dinn er, providing
varied entrees, for the ultra tow asking price o(
$3.75.
The Stull Shirt is located at 2241 W. Coast
l1ighwa y, Ne wport Beach. There's also nightly
dan ce music by the Tony Lobo Group.
TEMPLE GARDENS
Cj-flNS~Restaurant
RICKSHA
COCKTAIL L,,cheo' & D;,,,. Deily
~.~~.~~E -BUFFET LUNCH 11 :30--1 :30
Mot'Mll•y thru frld•y
1500 AC"AMS (•t Harbor)
COSTA MESA
f ri. &. Sat. I te l
Featuring Exotic
Tropical Drinks 540·1937 540-1923
MAGNIFICENT ADVENTURE
IN FRENCH CUISINE
P_ARIS INN
HungryTiger
would like to have you ,,,
~· ler dinner !Open 7 ni1hts 1 wetkl
lor laaoll ~· fer late nppor
l•r claamp•an• ltraaell :,.'It
:,;,, lor d•nctn1
LIVE MAINE LOBSTER ••r CMkcaU flour :.•
FRESH DAil Y FROM ffi&tt·Siztd drinks and complimentary hot's d'oeuvres)
THE EAST CO.A.ST >.II l!ll}or crldll c1rd• 1cc-sil.cf
hungry tiger :~~T~~:~;~ •AR
Call for Reservations: 014) 673-5534 Your Host: Jerry Webb
353 East Coast Hfahway (1t Bayshora Drive) in Newport Beach
·MEAD~WLARK
COUNTRY CLUB ,
LARK RO.OM
DINNER SPECIALS
Choic1 of Soup or S1l1d
B1•1d Poli to ot Rice P'ilef • Gerlic l reeJ
l1v1teC)I • D1111rt
WED.-Top Sirlo in Steik
THUl.-Prim• R.ib I
fRl .-Seafood Newburg
SUN.-Lobster Ta il
INTHTAINMINT -WHM14-y tti,. l1111ffr
$2.ts
$3.10
$2.'5
$4.l5
The Only · c;>nes ., .. '"" .... ,, • .,
IUDDY & HELIN.I-Wed., Thur. & Sun.
le"qu'et F•cllitlet up lo <450 '•eple
16712 GI.AH.AM AYINUI I.At WlfrHfl
HUHTJNeTON llACH (-fl41 1<46·1116 121JI ltl0 lfH
1
.,
•
-·~
----. .... ~· ... • • • ... ..... ... .. ~ .... --
Writings
Presented
To Pad1Ja
.' •
•
F'tldiy, rrbruary 18. 1m
Glenn Miller Music
At Paladium Event
DAILV PILDT }9
I ... A TRIPTO THE UNKNOWN!'
·1 .J
Nostalgia· "ill be thiell: as recreates the tounds of the
pea soup Saturday and Sunday 1940'.s,
-~'' ~!!>< JlresldOIJl _or I ~texku. ER!iort -M.a·tr"'S!tht1 r ~
Zuno de Ech..everria.. pc~ntly
presented a gfft · to Padti'a· • ~
Institute. n ea r Claremont..
Senora Echeverrla1ll gift. a
collection or books a n d
p~hlicati41ns on art . architec-
nl1ht1, Feb. 26 and 27. when Ttx, Ray and Paula were
Te.a Bene.ff and hts tw>d\ Ra y f.iilh!r malnstay.s . Utilizing
:.!,;....!:;....:_;:_,..__!Eberle .and Pnl~ly--and-· origii\irattan~em'e'"nts nf
the MOdtrf\llrs 6r1n1 their bandleader who died in World
"Music .Mid,! F~ous" by War II. they i1ing and play I
Glenn M11ltr co¢e.rt-dance "Mu sic in the P.1'iller Manner "
to tht Hollywood Pl\ltdlum. -the music to which America I
ALAN REMINGTON ORCHESTRA TO PLAY
Musi c Wil l Be F11tur1 of Newport Art ·Preview
Art, Musi<; and .Soup
Entwined at Museum
A preview or arl. work s ty at 7 p.m. Saturday, Feb. 26,
available for rent will be com· In the Newport Harbor Art
bined W~th a soup tasting par-Museum, 2211 Balboa Blvd.,
·Newport Be~ch.
X CELLENT
CITING
TRAOROINARY
Roscoe Holland
E.nl<'rl.:11ns Mon thru Sat.
LOUNGE
KONA LANES
2699 Horbor. Co~-,~ Ml-sa '
RIVIERA
Sponsored by the Museum's
Sales and Rental Council, fhe
affair provides museum mem-
bers and guests an opportunity
to peruse paintings, prints.
lithographs. sculpture a n d
work! of mixed me d i a
available fo r rent or sale.
The rental progrMf! allows
people to "live with" an
original work before investing
in a purchase. Rental fees are
as low as $5 for a lwo-month
periotl .
Guests "'ill be served clam
cho"•der. bread. fruit and wine
"'hile listeni nR to the soft rock
music of Alan Remington .
Tickets. at $5, are avallable at
lhe door. For infor malion,
phone 675-3866. "
hlre nalural h I s t o r y ,
economics and po.lilies In Mex-
ico Is a fine sampling or
writings about t~e arts and
other activities in modern
Mexico.
The gilt was delivered to
J;Jerman H. Gamer, Chairman
Qf the Board or Padua
loatilute. by Dr. James E.
MacWhlnnev, of the C111i!ornia
Bantist College or Riverside
/llind a trustee of Padu111
Institute. He Is a long tlme
personal friend of President
and Senor,111 Echeverria.
The government of Mexico.
thr<tugh the Secretary of
F.ducation. as well as the
president and his familv . ex-
pressed great Interest in the
Mexican F o I k Theater at
P11dua Hill!!!. r.amer. founder
of Pad\IR lnst.itu te. has been
previouslv honored bv Mexico
for his lifelon.'t wnrk toward
.'tr e R t e r undr.rstandini;:: be-
tween the oeoples of MP.xicn
DAILY PILOT Sllff Pllohl
Monkey for P e a ce
t1nd the ITnited State!!. This.in-"Peace, love, groovy and right on." T~e latest
eludes thl'! presentation of sequel to the "Planet of the Apes'' is be ing-filmed
Authentic folk musir, dancei:; 'at UCJ's Humanities building. Giving the. high sign
and customs 1 in the .,ye:ir-is one of the actors in the 'forthcoming film. Around folk plays al the ______________ _.::. ______ I
theater. For 40 yParll this }l;:ic;;
been a wav in w h i ch
Amerirans can know . apprP-
ci11tP anrl 11dmirf' the Pf'Oplp
Of t\1exico . Pven thou2:h their
l~n~uaar and backgrounds lire
di<rereo!.
The collection of bnoki:; from
~ E' n o r ,111 Echeverria is tin
Saddl eback Planning
Anoth er_ Art Roundup
riiso!ay at the theat.er. The The Saddleback Inn. Santa Reynold Brown, Sid Burns,
trustees of Padna Institute Ana, is planning its sixth an-i&.wre nce Coffelt, J oe De
tu:STAURANT
urge everyonf! inl.eresteri in nual Cowboy Art Roundup for Young. Robert Draper. David
MPxicn to visit P11rlua Hills Feb . 21 through M11.rch 20. Halbach, John Kit t I e s o n .
anrl tour thP. RrOP"d.c;;. i:;hops Paintings by more than :io Harold Hopkinson, Tom Knapp
ffjjj lo W i•ite arid theater lnbhv . 'T'hero is nn western artists will line the and Walt La Rue.
Sunset Boulevard. d11nced 1hree decades ago.
lt will be-I.be third annu11I Tlcketll are priced at $4 11nd 1
Los Angeles appearance of $S.50 for Saturday nighl and at I
this musical packqe, •whic h $5.$0 and $6.00 fQr SUnday.
Oeon Mnrl.,
"SOM ETHI NG
BIG" <PG'l
• SAT., SU ., MON .
12 :00 AND 2:00
LIDO · NEWPORT
673-8350
ALL SEATS 75c
... ·!· ••• ••
Continental Cui1ine
Cocktails
SerVfflQ
Luncheon and Di nner
A-fonda11 through Saturdau.
charge excPnt for the thf'ater walls of the inn's Welltern Art AlsO. Robert Lee. Ted Lit-
nr in the dininp: room '"here Gallery at First Street near tlefield, Ted Long, George
"F1·eedom Trap' Mexica n 11.nd Amer~can '!lenu!I th~_&!ntl!..Aria.£r.~~'Y·.-_,M.~rks ... _~ar~McClur~.--V;;•:ett=·==-==~-=-=-==·"· =='--'-----"=-=-..,;,,. ___ ..c·.::-;,;· ·:;-~::· =-=-===----· ··· -····-·-·-·· :11tf nrrerea-·i'ii'Kl:-tuerP 1r en: Gallery director Mrs. Betty Miller, William Moyers, f rank
C!osed Sundays
NEW YORK (AP) -Walter tertainment by the Mexican Miller sai d that the exhibit Polk, Dan Polland. Dan Put-
l~ill has been signed by P\<1yers. will be more broadly represen-nam, Bill Shadd is:, Ra y
Warne r Bros. to wrile the Psid1111 Hills The;:iter ii:; tational of the Old We.st than Swamon. Robert Wagoner and·
screenplay of "The Freedom lnc;.terl thrPe milel'I ll b n v e any of the fi ve previous shows. Gene Zesch.
Trap," based on Desmond Fool hill Bl vd.. on Padua . Among artists exhibiting Western Art Gallery hours
Bai?lcy's novel. Ave'lUt' in Claremont. Persons will be Olaf Weighorst, an El du ring lhe show will be 11:30
We art located ne•t to
the M•y Co, in South
Coast Plata.
Hill recently completed the infE>reSted in r ectivini? infor-Cajon resident who has been a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Monday.
screenplay for "The Thief m;:ition can write to P a dua acclaimed as the greatest liv-11:30 a.m. to JO p.m. Tuesday
Who Came to Dinner," a Bud Hill s The ate r . Claremont, ing portrayer of the Old West through Frida y, 3 to JI p.m.
".ork-i n-Norman Le a r pro. Clll if. 9171~, or call (714 ) 626-Others include Joe Beeler, Saturday and 5 to 9 p.m. Sun-. Jlll S. IMstol
C..Stti M... 540_3140 duction which goes be!ore the 1288. Bill Bencler, Jodie Boren. da y.
~~t:llJ~t::!!::J"~~~i';'~mie~rais~lihi~sis~pr~in~g~.~ij,~"----------------------''---------I
1lit1 FLING GALA BENEFIT PREMIERE
•
ENTERTAINMENT -7 NIGHTS A WEEK
DANCING MON, & TUES, ~ * Larry Like
Singer Guitarist ___...._.......
* HAP HALL DUO •1111 Gt11t Wtlll .., ,.,,
Wl!O. THIU SU ....
pflll Jl111 G•-· Tr11mlllln1
For E1rly Risers and Late Pleyers
Open Daily From 6 A.M. Jo 2 A.M.
R.ler·Mesa Th11ter MESA
SOU•RE Costa Mes•
l~I I. 1tth St. Jnt off Ne"'°rt IJyf .
VISIT OLD fAPA N
Lun t hcon Dinner Cock111ils
P:\St\01:,.\'A 1a9 S. Lo.~ Roblt:s • 795-7005
Of\.'\:'\GE JJ 'J"o\vn & Country • 5~1-3303
'fORR.o\.'jCE 2~ o~! Amo f;:i shion Sq.• 542-8677
Intimate aod Delightful
FRENCH RESTAURANT
OPEN FOR LU NCH
I 1;]0-2 e Tue1d•v thr11 fric4ty
DINNER 5,30 ·ID P.M.
Tue1d•y lhr11 S1111dty
CLOSED MONO.._ Y
C•rMr of l altdolpli eH lnstol
Coste 1111 .. S40·l641 ·
Real
C1nlonese F11od
e'it hJre or
take home. 1 .
<tSJ AG I
CHINESE CASll(O
11 1 2ht pl.,· Newport Buch ORlole 9560 o,.. '(.., ltr.•IMll D.tfy 12·12 -M. 9411 5-h. •ta)•·
• Nightly Dinner
Specials $J.9S
TAtE cf J,WHAL~
.~DO.MAIN. IALIOA. PENINSULA
,UNTV OF !'ARKING I 673·4633
-~--
TUES. MARCH 14th
'
..
• o-;c.i .... 616•1()11 "C1iJll( _, •• ,,
"''1>"-lOIO IJll!TIO tlfllTI .,CC-DS 1"11 t >ot1
Et:<l11sir·t Or•"I' Co11111y
R111.n1tdl.t11 t E11g11gtmtnJ.
•
on the screen
l•ICIAL ARRAllOIMlllTI
POROROUilll
OP2SORMORI
• FOR INFORMA l!Ofj ™I • ~
8£VERLY SPRAY 532-3797
•
. .
•
Disneyl an d
FEBRllARY 19-21
A red, •htte and blue celobrotion of Lincoln's and Washin(lon's birthdays, fe1turln1 ... "I AM ·AN AMERICAN" A !lirrinr musical sal.ule.to lhe.rroatne~ that was and ts Amenc1. Pr1s1drnr at this
ceremony will be 1 host of concert bands and a choir of more than 500 slnaers.
Guest narr1lors: Joe Campanella -Salurday
SIM Fones!-Sonday
twr Romero - Monday
Carmen Dr11on1 Musical Director
Performances each day at
4:30 PM.
..........•............•.•••.. . . . . FREE ADMISSION TO
: ''GR~T M()MENTS'WITH ~ MR. LINCOLN"
. • • • Excitin1 "on st1re" shows
eveiy d1y I\ I, 3 l SPM. . • ...................................
' ~~!3\J1RJIM!i1wfi f .. .. ~ • . U1!JJ1ii ijlij!ll@lih•V''
FEBllUARY 19 & 20.0NLY
DC SEVERINSEN
· & The Now-Generation Brass
. with Today's.ChHdren :i·~~~:n;,~·
HAMILTON, JOE FRANK
&REYNOLDS
Portorm1-1t 8:30l10:30 PM.
Plus "FANTASY IN THE SKY"
A brilOant 1erf1I f<ewotb disj>ll)' 11
9:00 PM, Febrv1ry 19 •lid 20 only.
DISNEYLAND Open 11nu1 Midnit•
on SllU1,d1y & S.lld1y, febru1iy 19 &20.
Open until 7 PM on Mondi)', Febrvari 21. ·
• ._....,_
'
'
·:
' • • ' l l ' '
:: ..
:.
~
--. • ~
' •• \
l • l
l • • '· • \ • • ! . •
• -• .
• • . • . • • . . • • • • • .
\
; • '
Friday
Evening
v---mmJIJIY"J.1
•
I
'"'I CJJ ••a•e .... (I) Wiii WM Wtid .,..,_
I, ...... "'"" -·· """ • MMt1,..il11 l..ldfl
.. ,,_.,, lf'D ....
""" j111 H1wthor1tt
l 1JG 8 l'ltUI DH't Lit tilt Dtltlta
D WALTER MAITHAU In
*"A GUIDE FOR THE
MARRIED MAN"!
0 U.•lt: (C) (tll) "A &.rde ftl 11111
M1rrild Mat• (t.el'llHJ) '17-W11!1r
M1tth1u, lllftr Slevt•t, SUI Ant
llncdoft, lkltllrt MOIH. CIJ •-
ttj "•••"till ... mWr """'' ... Q) N11ay 1H Ula htl1mt fD llllft7 N111u1tt Wit-..•
@! Wall4etlvtt
ftlrt11 NI• m o...e11 .. ,.ftill ..
m~i .... 1:0011 moe-e TIM llflt11111
(J) ,,~ " C.""'!llllUS
lt)Dn ....
G Wfim't MJ LIH! m I LM LllCJ
Saturday
Morning
--~•~n~auw 19
1 l:Oll ())TV I U.W...
1:.111 fJ kt ~ m Ltt'• •• ,
7:00 8 Mrite S..0111
0 1§1!.lD< ... , ...
0 (])""7 ........ .
CJ) Slrnrist S.Muttf ID T-u11de"i11!11 Ill s,u.,. ••
7:IO B lklltf• Ttttltotnt
Cl m Df!l'wtr Dnr gc...,w ,tttil• 0 Cl) Cil loN l llllfltf
()) 1Y I Cl&IMM• 19 ....i.: ..,.... ...,.... (drun.11)
'5t-lto GtM, KM!rfMI Moort.
(fl Ulde Int m 1tt1t1et 11112
at lwtle ••ikf
1:001J ()) lup lu11ny
CiJ m w..11 WM4Jtdi;11t
• ,,.,.,. •114 frilrtd1 fJ (I) Cll ,...., P'i1M111
GI A.Ill. ..... : .... I• .., "•rt-
_.. (dr1m1) '57-Waller Brtl'll'llll,
.1ot111 tfOtft. "J11111t Ct14" (ldvtn·
turt) '66--AJJ111 ltM, m"-,,,.,,CIJ ._., .... aam,.11• ,.,~
• Cl) Cl) JKUoll fiw1
• • . QI I Dnl1• II Mn1le
(fl) Tiit c.r,or1t1 Vltw
EE) HlltlfJ If Art
1:00 9 (J) ""'-• llllMtrett•n
Ollt&llllt Joboa e Mtwlit: "lllwr Stir" (wtSttrn)
'55-Jimlll)' W1k1l1, M1ri1 Wllldso1. l '
'
'
'
•
0) P11111tt 4t Alllll'
9 MIN: (C) "'Ito""'' ,..,...
7:l0. Cirt• ''Cirelli of !ht n,.n ..
9 1111i,..i ._11tn1
8 Mlwil: (Cl (1lh h1) '1IN oa,-
(dr11111) ·u-S11p11t1 ~
11 mrn -CIJ ~ C.ntlw1I a Mftlt: .,.. .... 111111111 t11t
1111• (wtlttr11) '52 -R1ndolpll
Scott. P'1lrlc1 Wy!Mft.
GI Atlertlltll Hlllltlr'I Slloli
tl'I CN ff SI C.u
CJ) Te Tell tN Jr.HI l ·JO II ftt Hair "'' lltld ()) I Dtt.111 tf Jta11ll ' D di iD llnitr IHI
Cl Milhl $ Mwie: (C) (2\1) '1• (I) TijulM: WI.._, II tlll SMtll
fft.U.. tt 1 Cu11ll~ (•ldtnl) G (]) udarwffM
'14 -y~ lt)'fl111r, .latlca ault. 10:00 fJ ()) P1bWet aM II•• 111111 m ... , ••• Htnn • 0 m Till• I l lalll ltlJ
CD Cll "'"" G CD@•-"'' (JJ) win Str•ll ••• IO:JO 8 (f} Ardlll'• 1Y f11111111u
GD Cllrtellt E•ttltl • ''"" ,.,.. e t.n to.•d,•• 0 ..,. . ...,... t111 DaltDlll ....
UIMM WlfW (westtrn) ·.40-Ralldtllpll Scott. ~ m •• Si11fill1 .111bllte a:oo Cll °""" .Jt.s._. JIWUl'J i:00·e ·l1rs.•n• lfl. Sufeti 1M loll D l]j m Mr Wb:1rf
CJ) ('j) fB Tiie ltldy lulldl CJ) Ital ht.k Jl1nflb
AAdJ' trtfllOt lblw fJ Cf) Jo1111J Quest ;r...J'""'"~ .. hi Jlnln Q) klltJ WlllH ,;;;::: 111 l»dla UIN'1
~ G!)Nllll 11:30=~=-n:."'.:~ dJ ! IPIC!&4 I Dl•rt Alldletl C1lltry U NHL Atlilll ,. '"'1. -... -··· ·roi:na····i.. . . f:JOGU_Cfti .Hi,ti idiollw•• M111tm1~ Tn111s Ci.111plo• fJ Cil (IJ Tiie hftrill(t f111ily 1111 ~ "Prombt H!~ Anyttil11r lut Gift m"'y;;.,: ..,..,,.. l••r" {ii-tysttry)
Hlf • P'undl 'liO--&rr, Sulli11n Robert l l1k1 a m "" frid•1 ....it= 1c, cnrJ ·
"'t:fil 1., SIMI" <com.dr·•lll•mJ Afternoon
'71-Jolln Aslin, Mic~., aoon.,.
Diet Shawn. H1t1ry Gilli.ton, Edit 11:00 8 (I) n. .... klff
Mims. 1'111 Austil\. CJ Hip kM11 IHUtlttll II• ti ~ m Tnn. tr C.1111f!lllflOll tN Wlff:
" fD.GJflt11..,.., ••a..i.rty tnd IJTllit W1tk ii .. NIA
~ lht ltnt" (1146) (j) llllwtir: ., a.I ,.... Ja11tt"
1:00 fJ ()) Cll frW11 MM: (C) f'O) (wnttrn) '(t-Joll11 lrtlantf. t: "lf.11 11 I 1tl11(" (dflMI) '71-fJ (}) Gl) Alltriul lloidlH Tht
!( ChriJfoplitr Georrt, Wll!il111 Sdltl· Addrili lro01tri and tltt fl'H Movt-
ltrt. Joel City, Jack '#ttdtn, m11nt l\lbt.
D rn (I) .... m: 11111.n.t• llollln l'llMb• m Dnltf frttt. lhtw (fj) l;MW Ytllf llbll
·~ m La cm m s,.n.to111 t ~ 8 TH Vlri1111M Qfl Uncle Waldt •
"'( Eli) Nltlclui ll.:JO 11 (I) lt11 Al• TMrt ~ •:• • Cll C1J t1M Odil c.vp11 8 8 Cel\111 •••t:Nn Clel'MOll · I ""' W1tdl .Jclln Fulhntr Tiltr• n . Uniw. of Mtry\1nd.
1111 CMbJ 0-9f Motil: "Flllftn IHpm• tit 10:00 1'lllltrl If tlll ltati (comtdJ) '52 -TOllll [well, Julie ~ am...... Ad1ms.
' 0 (]) (j) Ell "" -· ""' Ill """' ..... ~Lav. •rwl '"'Instant F1thtf, .. '1.M I tDAirialltlll• USA
1ntf l..Mri' La11t," ·10V1 11111 tht 1~ II CJ) en DllWNR'1 Fil• F1stiv11
Spllt·U,," "low and !hi L~•~ .. Evt· • D (J) c.a.,. laabtkll Urt1¥. of
nlnl'' 1116 "lbw and !ht Alibi. l'tcific II Cit St•tt Loni INCh:.
~ 0 c..ldt Dtbltt (il NIM IUek Carter ~ ID News Hu1h Wmlami g;, tusmer's WtrW
fDTYMniul !llC._..,
EI!) Ucb U•t1 1:30 Q Mllil: (C) "'-f If tM TritM1• ~~ Jl:JG 8 {[)Din lldltl SM• ( '·Ii) '63-ffow~ KMI, Jticoll \4 t11 S.11 Dlt11 P'1nDf11111 :
(I) S.l1ri ti ~~nturt ciiut.:!wtt Hetllt Sllff
(IJl DOIJT Vlbrltifft CJ MIV!t: (C) "Q11ttn If 01119f
I!) SHI! ·-~ :lf. Sp1et" (scl·fi) hi lu Gaber, Eric U1 Monlttft~• r-1 •
Ill Of Si l..ockt r1t1111n1.
• """ Lh m11BCl4l1Dtdpn '72 (t CN1tur1 Th11t11 (2111 ti Q) Morie: "Wit el t111 P'11111ta•
11:(1() f) CiJ ()) ®J OJ m fill.. (Ki·fi) .67-Tony ltussll. D °"' n., ..,.1111 mt £Jlto111etr1 ~ M1nhiil DMll1 m -" .,_,1..,
" ! •
0 (J)Q)N1ws '"'1111 ..., ... l CJ Mo.it: (C) "'ltllltt Ktutt" 1:00 11 DntJ's T1Hllo1111 ..
•
(dram•) '63--Susan Ha)'Wlrd, Cil Ne'rit: "(J*l tf tlw S.Un m T1 Tell !H Tr~ (1dvt11tu.rt) •6Q..-.Curt JurpM, Lil
• Q) LllCllll IMrt P'1doY1n1.
11:1Dtll .... Mi:. (C) "T111t11 If Cltt(' (f\YMllll hefilt'1 C..rt
(ir1m1) '6G-Altc liDlllMSS. ~ WerW " Sflrta lllllttnW
• 11:1s 111 CIN11• J4 m ""' Trai•
'-ll:JO 8) Cine 11 la T1rff ~ II "The Fearless Vampire a> *"'Y Qvtr'. "· * Killers," Sharon Tate 2:.10111n14tf/Oirtslli1r A looll 11 ft· 1 Roman Polanski 1hr lenses 111•inst cn1111 tor worntn.
• '
•
On CBS LATE MOVIE 0 9 Ell"""' I """"' I) CIS lilt Mll'lll '. "Tiie ftlrlw UCLA Bruh\i n. Wish. H11Mlts et
Vt111pi11 Kll11ri• (comldy) '67 -Se1Ult. .
Sh1ron Tat1. ltom1R ~nski. OJ S,.rta Actiel ,,..,..
8 ®J m w."" ea,.. Schtdultf J:Dll Ben Coif ctmic .
r1.111h a11 P1t loon1, Bmy DI Wolft. 0 HOLOCAUST! F1rt Safety
O Mwlt: .. ,."' Cl«J" (dram•) * in forests and Hames. On
·~·" L1dd, Oo""' llttd. Award-Winnin1 Acricul·
D (J) (JJ ED Ditl C...U Sifl•tor . turt·U.S.A. Serita
B1rry Golcht1t1r flltlh.. 0 A(rlttrltvn USA
m M~e: .,Jffllwy Alltllfl• {lllp· (I) fir Out Flkh
11ry) ·~~IOrft ltd!, NllM fodL 0 Mlrir. (C) •w11 et the W11t•
fD Dtl1 h (WISlt l'll) 'S&--1:1,., Con,tr, J11rlt (
CIJ N!ptaani Q C.ltMt, llwlitC
1:00 rn e a di ..,.. LonOllll. LH 1 Cobb. -OfilMI: •tJ West .,_,. (fl Scinc1 flctiM TllNftt
".r ~ (6r1ina) 'IZ-M111 Udt m Mtilil: "'llttlt cm.• (ilrlma)
•
f t:U f) Mwlt: (CJ "'WIWrlrl'" (1r1Sltn1) '!IJ-4f1Rllflllttr Bot•rt, J1.1111 AllJ·
'4'--ic» St ... Stt rtil.I ltpl)ow.,. IOI\ lfflllll W'ynll.
' 1:JO 8 llNN! .,....,..,. (•rtft'll) Q) Tiit 111 Vlley
'4t.-&lotl!y lall'l«!I, o.~ OvrJN.1 J:)I ! 0. c..,.
~...,a-= .,_...,.. """'>1 oow.,,, _ , ..
'5J.--MIR SIMm.._ SICall JtllT
For Advertisi1ig iii
Out '.~: About
Phon,e Norm Stanley
6424321
'
.. . . .
l'~ur Gtcide to the Movies · ..
Liz Taylor's X r and Z Equals R
• •
Ed i tor• r Nott: ThlJ New York 's lower East side. farmhou&e of his bride's birth. Based on Norton Juster'5
tnovit 'auide f.s p~tpartd JoVan Fleet eortrays wl!!!. Here he comes to gflp !"ith modern chlldren'1 cla.ss1c.
by th t film~ ~omm1ttt-rnL -<l.Mnkktg--Mam..-·h+o n t 1 ~t~ det.!ods .the RA Expefll&m-tG~:-..lfnnr \ *
Harbor Council PT A., Mrs. . . home against the rape Al· Htyerdehl filn1 about true-life
Hvrry Mellor is prtsidtnt Stander 15 underworld kingpin templ3 by farm hands who adventure of his crossing the The letter immtdiattl1'
and ,\frs. Rru.ct Nordland who worships plastic statues have laughed at his cowardice. Atlantic Ocean in a paper raft. after the title indicote1 the
is committee cli-0irman. Jc of Mary and Robert De Niro is Together (XI: Clinical close-amidst :!>fool waves .and rating given the picture by
is inte11dtrt as a reference the conniving bicycle racer up of the sex act. sharks. th• f.fotion Pictur1 Code.
i11 dttertni11i11g s11itable Vanl1blng Point (PG): Stars So,ncr of the South (GI : The Code A1td Rating pro· immigrant. a I ., film 1 for certain age Barry Newman as ex.cop, ex· Disney feature of Southern life gram may be OUhu on one
groups a11d wilt appear Hollpltal (PG): George Scott race driver who speeds from with Uncle Ren1us and his of Che motion pictu~t page.s.
wetk.l11. Your t>itwt art Portrays hard-drinking doctor Denver to San Francisco with-;;;:;::======:;:~;:;:;:::~::;:;::::;-soliciitd. Mail them to Mo· who copts with aa unsuc. Police in pursuit encouraged] MICPC!tRSIXR'inwu
vie GuUU . care of tilt c-es:ilul marriage and the by blind Black radio disc DUSTIN
DAILY PILOT. emergencies of 10 un· jockey against hard rock mus-F
ical backgrnund. HDF * derstaffed, overcrowded. big XYZ (R): Elizabeth Taylor
ADULTS city hospitaL and Michael Caine star in
The Lal( Picture Show (RI: story of inlidellty. passion and Allee'• Restaurant I R I :
Semi-autobiographical account
of rock st11.r Ario Guthrie's at-
tempt to "find himself."
Shows hi!! pot-smoking,
uninhibited friends buying a
cllurch and tU'rning-it into a
restaurant and commune.
Story filmed in black and ruthlessne:is.
white showing last generation
of film making and the part
movies played in our lives.
Depicts dying Texas town of
the 1950's, the sex and
dreariness ot its inhabHanl:i.
Stars Doris Leechman and
Timothy Bottoms .
nSMIJ'(O>f'IWS ,.,.
•sTFIAW
DCE;s•
Diary of a l\.1ad Housewife
(R t: Story about the disin-
tegration of a New York at·
torney's n1arriage. Richard
Benjamin portrays the pom-
pous husband. Ca r r i e
Snodgres!l plays lhe l;><lred wife
who lind!l an affair a terTI-
JXlrary antidote.
The French Co nne-e llon (RI:
Suspense mystery starring
Gene Hackman and Fernando
Rey. Brooklyn police detec-
lives move in on the American
C<lnnection to F r e n c h -
American heroin ring in a
chase story of violence.
The Gang Thal Couldn 't
Shoot Slralgbt (GPJ: f i Im
version of comedy about
bumbling Italian gangsters in
Roll Over
Midnight Co'wboy ( R ) :
Dustin Hoffman and John
Voight star in study of
loneliness and survival in New
York.
Tbe Owl and the l)ussycat
IR l: Barbra Slrei:iand and
George Se~al star in film
version of Broadway comedy
h a v i n g "prostilute-with·a-
heart-Of·gold" theme.
The Party (RI: Slapstick
comedy occurs when di:iaster-
prone East Indian actor is ac-
cidentally invited to chic
Hollywood party. Stars Peter
Sellers.
Straw Dog:i IR): Timid
A mer i ca n mathematician,
Dustin Hoffman, takes sab-
batical year in C or n i !I h
Lillie Clay O'Brien gets the hang of it as he tries
to throw a critter \Vith John \Vayne holding the
rope in a scene from "The Cowboys." The \Varner
Brothers film is the saga of boys reachi ng man·
hood , co nfronted "'ith brutality and revenge.
You'll beWJT(lBt.U·"
WAIJ DISNEY P11JlllGl1fl11t
lllil
R .. __ ._..... ----·-· _,_.,. ... &1 •.tUH .. 0.. rw:aMJ ;.:;..: ..... Siii nwl •-.it I KIMI .... MIStM.
W'i"Uir ;;-.;;;.~ ._.~....._ TECHIOCOtOR""-[gi-:.=.:--·--_..• ... ,.,................ . --· ....,-..er_. ell' ""A •CC-0.
,.fATURE TEENS
ANO ADULTS
CAwboys (PG): fin d ing
regular co'ft'boys unavaUable,
John \Vayne hires band of pre-
leenage boys to drive the cat.
lie 400 miles to market. Saga
of boys growing into manhood
and their encounters with
brulAlity and revenge.
Evel Knievel (PGJ: George
~lamilton's . JXll'trayal of rug-
ged stunt cyclist Eve! Knievel.
Flashbacks sh o w ram·
bunclious childhood. courting
days. Jtaps over canyons and
hi:i hero·worship of Elvis
Presley and John Wayne.
Actual footage of Knievel
performing.
FAMILY
Bedknobs and Broomsticks
.Z ll!Lll SOUTH Of SM Dif.QO fWJ0
STARTS WED. FIB. 23·
"DIRrt HARRT"
IBJ.a>
2ND AT BOTH CINEMAS MIMIRJ( llfWllRIXO!ll ·--The Delta Factor
(Gl: Angela Lansbury houses !-~===================::; three homesick co c k n e y
children in her seaside cottage
during World War II. Because
she is taking a correspondence
course in witchcraft. her
charges become involved in
her marvelous adventures .
Music and dancing in .aclio·n
and animation.
Never a Dull Momeni (F'):
Disney slapstick comedy about
a struggling actor who is
mistaken for a motorio us gun-
man by gangsters. Dick Van
Dyke stars.
The Phantom Tollbooth t G J:
Director Set
HOLLYWOOD (UPIJ
Producer Ross I A i rport I
Hunter signed Charles Jarrott
to direct his musical version
of ''Lost Horizon" with Jar·
ron's recent credits being
''Mary, Queen of Scots" and
"Anne of the Thousand Days."
MOVIE RATINGS
roR PARENTS ANO
\'DUNG PEOPl£
TM o~~'"'' ol IM n1m,1 h tfl lt!tor• ,..,...,. "°"' ,,,. .... ,.wr, fll
~ "~ ,~ ~,,, "*''hllfftt1.
---------------·---
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -.i.a 11m-rm--__ ._,., .. __ ..,....,._., .... _
All they wanted
was their chance to be men ...
and he gave it to them.
A MARK RYDELL FILM
• ( "'•1l.' Ct>':.,,., "'""1.TI l :< ~I(
8"lll rf c'l•rrt ;<•:f-\'.' "'··"''•••l' -,~,.,..r.'I. -ot
~'l"'"I>_, t.. lr'"'f. Pr..,.~ .t I.-• I •""'.Ir il'<l '" • .., P.• --~r; · p._ .ro.I ,-d
O.llC'.!!! r.1 1.1,1r1' ~ • r· • ..... , .. ·~· ,.,.....'4r .. e-.., ~ ; ... -... ~
-~w"'--·-r.·-.~-.. -·--1 -~· • .,,..,_.., L ...... ,..__ .... ,.._,.....
fXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY RUNS
Jomes Garn"
"THE SKIN GAME"
SHOWING NOW!
J()1N .,.,..,.t "A Mio~ fi'ptllll F6'11-n<_ (X)rMl)'S' c,,.n~ IQ:l'1.. LU l'fUW«. • ft.ct ~ • 00..UTft OC.-US I\ .......
"""11r..wwi-.... . ~---..... " ·~ f/ri ... ~ Drtt~ • ~ .... OW'90 fir~,,,. "-·.-~•r...,,..._&.,A~~
[ PG J--..:=.:; -. 161fa+.::'::":"..~..:. J
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY SHOWINGS
f!ALL THEATRE
FOR SECOND
FEATURE
•
.. ...e.,. .<DA.<41, rmu w t' -u.,i•DI ... _ ...... ___ .. .,.. __
H (If DlliO m.
"Tl1E BEST
MOVIE MUSICAL OF 1971." IOCW~DAY • Jon..,,11 [,9,..;.
"ONE Of. THE YEAR'S
BEST FILMS."
-
..
. . . .. ~ ....
'Othello' S lawd
Fot UC Irvine
•
Gal for All Seasons in Theater
Shakespeare's ''Othello" will
be 1l.lged at UC Irvine In a
continUOUl_ -m~y r u n
afiilTn(WodiY. Feb·. 25 ..
The production by the UC!
School of Jo~lne An s will be
under the direction of Robert
Cohen, 11ssociale professor of
drama. Staging will be In the
JOO.seat Studio Theatre In the
Fine Arls Village.
Larry Chatman of San
Bernai"~iM will play the title
role. Other major roles will bt:
enaC'ted by Ann Givin playing
Desdemona; Ashley Carr of
Laguna .Beach, Iago : David
Manson. Cassio, and Fran·
cesca L'hoir of Irvine, !:melia.
Others in the caat 11e Eric
J~i:eg-SUlla..-l.atll"'Wft .. 1--
Aeach, Chris Munoz. Robert -
Schneider. Raul Garu, Robert
Costello, David Wollos, Ted
Koch. David Olaver, Greg
W11lker, Michael Hans, Irvine:
Andee R11byne , Stu a r t
Duckworth, And y Ordon, Duke
FAgAn, Henry Kirker. Ro~er
G<imez, Donald Johnson, Gary
Graham and Dan O'Toole .
Performances wlll be 8:30
p.m. February Z.S.March 4.
Admission la $3 for adults and
$1 for students. For in-
formation, call the Fine Art&
8-0x Office, 83.1,Mt7.
•
•
the turrtnt ae1aon. durlna: whlch &he's assS1!~ 1l the Civic Playhouse w11
, allo .fu~UMtd-~P.&iflt bll ,1.Ytt~---"'h"el -.crtpt-{oa ··ne tttttrttut'.._
Only In community tbe11er will you and u.sher for t~·o other the1Ler Jl'OUJ>!. In I .
8)' TOM TITUS
Ot.b, ptl!X f !lll l!tlt
find an actress who will do makeup !or THE \\'ESTMrNSTER ROLE. her most l,OCAL AUDIENCES FIRST sllmped
one show, lake a starring role in the next, 1mprt11lve tO date. la Barble'1 latest ln 1 her on lh" Costa MesR stage 11 the rn1ld
a blt part In the third', pelis out pivgrams lnng series of v1ried onstange and In "fhrPe Rsgs P'ull," the p11yhou.11e'1
in the lobby for the fourth and star In the backatage assignments. She may be best newt Ww. Sht follnwed thlJ with aup-
flfth . And, even so, there aren't too many rrmembered far her performance~ as Potting rolel' ln "The Irregular Verb lo
or them around , Ellrn In "Any Wednesday" and Linda In Love," "Mlddl e or !ht Nlfi:hl," "Roelng,
All too orttn v.•hen a performer reaches ''Pl11y It A,11a ln. Sam'' -but lt\0°se in the Boeing" anrl "The Man Who C11me to
a certain level or cast of CostA Mesa's "Dream Girl" wan'\ nin ner" 111. Costfl M'sa whlle contributing
talenl. he nr she Is eRs1ly for(let her work behind the acenes. 1 good l'hArr bat'kl'taee:. lnclurllng a 11ttnt
reluctant tn back-heading up the prop crew (er an ln· 1s ~tcrrtArv nf the theater's pilrcns
track from that credibly ccmpllcated mulU-set sh<lw aroup ""'
point for rear ct Versatility 111 her stock In tradt, In This !lf'R.5()0 Jlarb1e 1s glvtn,11 fuller rein
poss1hre "type cast-more ways lhRn one . While most In h"r t1lent 11 . Aflf'r A v.•eek's run Rs the
In~· in a more men-· perfcrme:rs either ire Identified v.•ith a femal!. learl In "Play It Ag11 ln, Sam" 1t
I a I ;issignment. alngle theater or none 1t all, Barbie Lido Isle. sht v.·n.~ 11nagged by the Irvtn,.
Those ¥.•ho c;in , and travels both roads. retaining her lny11tty Commwiity Tht11ler for ,. var11ted bit
¥.'ill. "de it 1111" us-tn the C.O,t11 M.esa Civic Playhouse 'A1hile part In Its 11ward-wlnn1n.s: "DeRth l'lf a
ually may be found "'Orktng with other group!. And sumding Salesman." "'h1rh npened th,. foll(lwing
among the finest , .... , .... .., 01.•L1cH a shade under five feel. she c1n con· "·eek Th,. rurrrnl "Sl11r Spana-ltd Girl''
lalcnts -and the smallest egcs -in vlnc\ngly play 1 gal markln, her :wth rtu nites her "'llh ,. couple old fr iend~.
lhe business. hirthday one season and a teen-age coed ~11rty F'urh~ of "Sam" and (iary
A prime example is Costa Mesa's lhe next. Saderuri of "S11lf'11m11n ."
Barbara Garllch. who ~an be: seen this A Missourian by birth las a five-minute Undoubtedly n1rire such 11lell11r roles 11,.
v.·et!kend and next as "The Star Spangled ccnver11tlon with her will reveal ), Barbie ahe;iri for htr. h11l ll's a safe bet you'll
Girl" al the Westminster C.Ommunlty came It! Cost• Mesa the Ieng w1y, vl .!1 still be 11blt lo f1nrl Barb.llra Garllr.h han -
Theater. It's her second leading role of Phlladephla and Santi Monica. Her first ding out prnp:rArn.~ ncrA.~lonally,
Live
Theater
"~1other t:arth"
~~~c__~-,~~~ ~~~
THE ""'' lfl•• ,.l'l, ,,)II ' •1~1
0111lr1rn1 1ic1rd e ..,11t1r ch1r11•
Ecclogy rock musical on
stage at South Co a 1 t
Repertory. 1827 Newport
Blvd., CostA Mesa, at 8 p.m.
Feb. 24 : March 2 snd 9. Reser•
vaticns -646-1363.
'7 f1,hio11 ldtnd, 111wporl c.1 11l1r 644·5070
2oac.n.,.fn """'' THE FRENCH
CONNECTION
IN THf GREAT TRAomoN
OF AMERICAN THRILLERS.
PllMIHI ENGAGEMENT
211cl AnRACTION
Peter Sellers lo
"THE PARTY"
00.00 BY CE LUXI'IB)O
2MD ounTAND .. NIT
George C. Scott
n..lastRun ~
"The Amornu11 Plea"
A musical b;ised on ,.
Moliere comedy, on stage at ~
Irvine Community Theater,
Humanities Hall on the UCI
cam pus, F.'ri.-SaL at 8 p.m.
through Feb. 19. Reservations
-547-7733.
"Teahou11e of August Moon"
A con1edy cf po s l w a r
Okinawa on stage at the
Lag un a Moulton Playhou11e.
600 Laguna Canyon Road ,
Laguna Beach, 11t 8:30 p.m.
Tu~11.-Sat. through Feb. 26.
Reservations -494--0743.
"Star Spanl{led Girl''
A comedy on stage by
\\'estminsler Co m m u n I t y
Theater at Finley School,
13521 Edwards. Westminster,
Fri-Sat., at 8::10 through Feb.
26. ReJervalions -897-1 164.
"The Innocents"
A mystery on stage !!.l South
Coast Repertory, 1827 New-
pnrt Blvrl., Cost11 Mrsa , Fri.
,..... Sun. al 8 p.m. Feb, 18 -
Marrh JI . Rcaervatlona -
646-1363.
SHOWDOWN AT O.K. CORRAL
Earp Brothor> ond Doc Hollldoy Shoot It Up
Corral Fences Down
For Wolper Gunfight
Ttlft..111 .. ""'· ,,,..,,. ,,,., .......
M~. J1»'•••·• '''".
.ltlnt/ 1 CfNIURY 21 t • I t 'f 'If D ; : I
£'ldoNf WPOAT HI AC lt "' ''•r
.. ntrarH •· lo th•· lnhul<'.lu\ l ulo l•.lt· OR J H J'..0 ..................................... -.
HELD OVER AGAIN
NEW YORK CRITICS AWARD
TOP 10 IN LOS ANGELES
llST THRILLER OF THE YEAR
DON'T Miii IT
Wyatt Earp -hero 1>r
villain? The legend cf the bat·
Ue al Tomb!tone's O.K. Corr11l
-how much of what l'tas been
!f.lld before \1 fact and how
much 11 fanta sy? Should
history label the Incident as·'"'~"'
.ATTENTION FRINGIESll
IN PERSON• ON STAGE
TONIGHT
•
,.
'
famous er Infa mous?
These and other question1
are closely ~rutinlT.ed in
Da vid 1.-. \1lolper'1 production,
"Shf>wdown 11t O.K. Corral!,"
airing M()nday, F'eb. 28 on
Channel 2 as the third in
Wolpe.r's highly acclaimed
"Appointment wlt.h De1ttny"
11erles. After seeing lt, the au·
dience will be ahle to decide
for itselr. And for many IL will
come as an abrupt awakening .
PrevioUJly Immortalized In
both motion plcture.11 and
tcle vl11ion, the names of Wyatt
Earp, Virgil E11rp, MQrgan
Earp. Doc Holliday and Ike
C1anton have taken on 1n
almost mythical aura . Now,
for the fir1t time, the story 11
presented blsed on palnat11k-
lng In-depth research and
doeumented by f')lle or the
foremost authoritle!l an the
subject.
John GUchrieu, f I e I d
hl11tnrla n •t the: Unlvenlty of
Arluina and a ACholar wht>'a
1pcnt 30 years researching the
Earps, wa1 the technical ad-
v\1er for writer Ted Strau11'1
scri pt. Gilchrlese, prob1bly
more versed an thl!l incident
than any other llvl nc aoul. lJ
currently writing a bank.
"Wy11tt Earp Th e
Tombltont Years."
Chmnlcled and presented u
It would be covered by tod11y '1
ntw11 media. Wolper'• film
mi:ikf!S no atltmpt to 1lant the
atory or whitew1t1h any of lht
riart)clp11n1~.
SOUTH SEAS
TROPICAL FISH
o, ..... c .. ..,-. "'"'
N'9ctle11 •' ,,.,k:.S fhll
•4 Ge14fftll
• AQUAllUMS
e MAINTINANCI SllYICI
• LIYI POODS e LIVI rU.NTI
tlt W. W'ILIOH, COITJ ~IJ.l flft ,.!nil..., .,., ...._,,.,
ILttl -'"~II, MUNTlllOTOll ll~CM
llfLr•I i.> """ LuO" ti _,.
..
/!Jf'tu \ TITAN
t · ~ ''' • n · ,
For Advertising in
'Out 'N' About
Phone Norm Stt;Jnlet
642 -4321
\
•
llCLUllYI HAltot
AllA IHOWIN•
ni., NyNMJ11'1
"THE RA
EXPEDITIONS"
TH ftl•tt •!Mil ..
tft1•ll'-.... ,...,.
•f •II tlM I
AIM W•lt H •
Dltk Ve11 Dy11t
14w•nl •· •••l•Mit
"NEVER A DULL
MOMENT"
CONTINUOUS SHOW
SAT., SUN .. MON.
FROM l P.l*-
'111c11 UN11L 4 ,,M.
ADULTS AND JIJ. SI .II
CHILDllN 11•
. . ~ ... -I • •
OAILV PILOT
DOI= SEVERINSEN. BLOWS AT DISNEYLAND
He'1 Become Equally Famous for Far.Out Fashions
llCKWICK_ H ' Chief Role
Ul"Mll~ lJ.lG( 5!0C( ~
ilOOKSHOPS -. ' HOLLYWOOD IUPl l -'THf en,. ,,,. . ·o. ... ,. • 1714'! 639.noo Chief Dan George, the old In·
:sourH co•sr Pl•l• 0 .. ~ dia11 actor who won an Oscar ·c.,,,. ,.._,,. • 171~! '"°·21fl. r....... no min a ti on f o r his
:·KIDS WVE
:.UNCLE LEN
performance in "Little Big
Man" last year, \\'iH appear in
an episode of "Cade 's Coun·
ty."
Big Stars ~
' To . Shine
At Park
The three-day \Vashington's
Birthday holiday wiU bring top
name en t e r't a i n m't n I lo
Disneyland. Feb. 19·21 . with
the staging of "Star Spangled
Holidays."
Headlining the 9 and 11 p.m.
Saturday and Sunday 15hQ_ws on
the Tomorrowland Stage will
be trumpeter , band leader and
lelevlslon personality, Doc
Severinsen and ''The New
Generat ion '' featuring
''Today's Children."
Patriotic ceremon ies featur-
ing Carmen Dragon and actors
Joseph Campanella . Si eve
Foresf. jlnd Caesar Romero.
will be held in the Town
Square each day at 4:30 p.m.
Over 2,500 choral singers and
musicians will participate.
One actor will read an essay,
"I Speak for Democracy" dur-
·ing the daily ceremony.
On the Tomorrowland Ter-
race at 8 tnd 10 p.m .. Satur-
day and Sunday, Hamilton,
Jqe Frank and Reynold will be
entertaining while "The GreaL
CroWd" may be heard at the
Plaza Gardens from 8 p.m. to
midnighl.
"The Young Americans''
will perform on the Tomor-
rowland Stage at I. 3 and 5
p.m. in sunlit festiv ities.
Fantasy in the Sky
~
POW WOW CHIEF
Francis SwHtwater
fireworks spectacular will be ~~~~~~~~~~:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::~~~~;;;;;~ seen at 9 p.m. each night. & § In honor of the .holidays~ 1 0 0 0 hours at the park are 9 a.m. to
-
~: . Indians Set
'Pow Wow'
Next Week
.•
. ----. . . . ORDER ·-~\ <"/
YOURS (:
Beautiful ' Stic:k·on LABELS -·----· . -;:...'
TODAY! ~ .?'ONLY 'I
$)25 .
~AX INC~
Personalized • Stylish • Effic:ient
Order For Yourself or • friend·
May be used on envelopes •s return address
l•.bels. Also very h1ndy .• , identifiea;tion
ltbel5 for m1rkin 9 person1I items sue h •s
books, teeords, photos, etc:.. labels stiek on
gla5s and may be us1td for me'rkin9 home
cannicl focd items. All labe/5 .. re printed
with stylish Vogue type on f.int quelity white
gummed peptr.
r-----------------~----, Fiii !ft t~il tou,(,n , cl!p i nd m11l wlltl 11.U lo: I J ,.1101 Prlnllnt L11111 Div., P.O. Jex 1UO I J Cost• ~·· C•llf. '1H6 ~,
I I
I I t l I I
I · I L ____ !~L-~!-~!~!!~~----J
midnight, Saturday and Sun-
day. Feb. 19-20: 9 a.m. lo 7
p.m. on Monday, Feb. 21.
Roles Cast
For Ramona
Tribes will be gathering
again for an Indian PfF Wow,
the featured even at ~the
sev~nth American Indian and
Western Relic Show, Feb. 2.>
27 at Great Western Exhibit
The 1972 Ramona and Center. Los Angeles.
Alessandro. both young and Utes. Sioux, Ch e y e n n e.
experienced players, ha v e Navajos, Mission Ind i a n s ,
been selected for the 45th an-Apache, Pima, Zuni, Papago,
... '!.1:!!-~~!P_!>_na. _Pag~~n_l .. ~~Y.JQ_,.Ropi._.Cber.C1kee-.-and -members
Eieg1n 1n April . of many other tribes will
-Performances begin at 2:30 participate in the Pow Wow
p.m. April 22, 23. 30 and ~fay 6 which is scheduled for Satur·
and 7. Ticket cost S4, $3, and day and Sunday only, Feb. 26-
$2.50 may be ordered from P. 27. Up lo 650 dancers. from
0 . Box 755, Hemet. Calif., toddlers to grandmothers will
92343 or by calling (714 J 653· compete for titles and cash
311 1. prizes in a dance festival.
Sandra Marie Kales will Francis Sweetwater, Indian
play the title role. dancer from Oklahoma will
( direct the event. acting as the
XCHLENT
CITING
TRAORDINARY
Roscoe Holland
Entert,>in~ Mon_ 1nru Sat
LOUNGE
KONA LANES
2699 Harbor. Cost a Mesa
traditional "caller." All types
of ,dances will be. performed :
hoop. snake, eagle, war and
straight dances.
The show itself will consist
of more than 100 ex hibits of
American Indian art and han-
dicraft, including intricately-
wovcn rugs and blankets, bead
and quillwork , pottery, ap-
parel. silver and turquoise
jewelry .
Collections of m u ~ e u m
pieces also will be on display.
Among them will be Indian
masks, dol\s. paintings, war
bonnets and examples of early
Indian and Western fron-
~ FIND OUT YOURSELF ~ ..
WHv EVERYONE'S TALKING .Aoofil\.
tiermen weapons such as
Winchester repeating rifles
and long guns in working con-
dition dating back to the mid-
dle ISOO's.
Show hours are : Friday.
noon to 10 p.m.; Saturday, 10
a.m. to 10 p.m.: Sunday, 10
a.m. to 6 p.m. General ad·
ll}ission is S!.75 . Ind i a,n
dancers in costume will be ad -
mitted free.
Travel
It's Havoc
By STAN DELAPLANE
HONOLULU -There's an airport freeport
here if you are headed for the Orient or South Pa·
citic. But it's very small for such a busy lot of traf·
fie. Perfumes. A few watches. Cigarette!. Liq uor.
If you are for the South Pacific, the freeport on
your stop at Fiji is MUCH better.
Be prepared for one irritation: ALL packages
are wrapped in the same paper. identified only by
a numbered tag. They put t hem aboard the plane,
and you dCJn't get at them until you are INSIDE
Customs at 'Sydney.
When you come oft a 74 7 and have :'50 pas~
sengers milling around· looking for their pa.ckag~s,
it's chaos. Everybody with two cartons of c1gs and
packages alike.
* Same thinJ happens· if you.J.Qad up at Fiji. Fiji
has cameras, tape recorders _and a lot of other
things Honolulu doesn't have.
Freeport at Honolulu only applies to people
going ONWARD to foreign countries. NOT to peo-
ple returning to the mainland U.S.
* For people going to the mainland, teU the taxi
driver to stop at the lei s~Uer§.' huts__M_ tbe ~it.ir~rt.
A lot of t.i.ttle grass shacks with gir~s making and
selling leis. They pa ckage them for you in plastic
bags -about $2 for a plumeria lei that will last
two days . (When not using them, keep them in the
refrigerator.)
There's a flower shop in the airport. But prices
double those at the lei sellers.
* Bu ying in the Virgin Islands: You are allowed
to bring back one gallo n of liquor from here. !One
bottle from other foreign countries.) So everybody
on the cruise ship buys. ASK for ten percent dis.
count -you'll get it. If you don 't ask, they don't
offer it.
* ''What are tht best frHport buy• in the C1rib-
be1n islands?"
The freeport islands /most islands except Puer·
to Rico) _have got .EVERYTifiNG. Swiss watches
and German electronic gear. Japanese TVs. Hong
Kong sil ks. British raincoats . Jewelry. Mill ions of
imported cameras. Pearls.
But, you MUST know the price at home for
comparison. I'm getting way off these freeports
after comparing some prices. Many times WAY too
high. The poor tourist wanders in believing firmly
that··"free·p·ort~ ... -me·ans a barg~in~is-bonanza of
trust has bee n too much for a lot of stores. They
jack the prices up. If you don't know prices, you've
had it.
* "Should we bar91in in tht freeport stores?"
''ou said it! And weep. And ask for discounts.
Particularly true in East Indian stores. (As in Ja-
ma1ca.) They have a lot of room between the mark-
ed price and what they'll take. Almost an y reaso n
\vill do. A ca,1J1era~ Say . you take pictures profes-
sionally. DowK come the prices.
* If you are showjng credit cars, try cash. Al-
ways good for seven to ten p,ercent. A press card
gets me a discount. Membership cards of big Crater·
nal groups often pulls the price down. Airline em·
ploye cards. Rent car employe cards. Ship com·
pany cards. Most times good for discounts.
* . his won't apply to all:""stores -many are
old p ople "'ho hold a good and firm price line.
But si ou don't know one from another, try
getting a price reduction . Works often enough to
be worth"·hile.
* "Is it worth it to buy clothing in these islands?"
I never fou nd any. Shops in Jamaica are sel·
ling sports clothes made in Hong Ko~g. Looked
good on the rack. But 1 found my sports coat had
been poorly tailored. Button holes not fitted to the
buttons. Materia l didn 't hold up very well under
cleaning.
* F'or clothing buys. Hong Kong. If you give them
five days of fittings . This "we make in 24 hours"
comes out looking like it was made in 24 hours.
London's good for men's. clothes. Madrid for wo-
men's tailoring. Both Spain and Portugal are EX-
CELLENT for children's clothing at good prices.
Scotsmen in Southland
••
NOWPlAl'IHG
WKDAYS· TOGITHll 7 & t 1SO l:l)..•115-7: IS-10:10
NAKED LADY 1:20 NA"°''°''''° l•JO "''° 2
The regimental band, pipes.
dru'rri ·and dancers of Britain's
famed Scots Guards are com-
in g to Southern California .
They will give perfor'l'lances
at The Forum. lnglewood ,
Saturday. March 4 al 8 p.m.
and the Pas11den11 Civic Audi-
torium M.!lrch 5 at 3 p,m.
The last time the contingent
was seen in the U.S. was in
1955. The Gua rd5 are cur-
renUy on a 12-week tour of the
U.S. and Canada.
formed in March, 1642 by
t>rder Of King Charles I. the
Scots Guards ha ve se e n
5ervice in all major British
engagements. TO<jay. as one of
the live regiments of Foot
G u a r d.s or the Household
Brigade,-the Scob Guard1 are
responsible ror g u 11 r d I n g ·
Queen Eliuibeth II and car-·
rying out ceremonial duties.
The music the Guards will
perform on their tour Includes
contemporary all well as tradi-
tional tunes while marching in
intricate patterns. Included
will be the skirl of bagpipes
and d ea.. on stra t i on s of
Highland dancing.
Tickets from S3 to '5. ~.·art
Available at 11ll agencil'!s.
,_VILLAGE WEST FINE ARTS & CRAFTS CENl'ER . .
' Pa inting, Sculpture, Wood & Glass Carving, Leather, Ceremics, Candles, Jewelry , Wonderstone ..
I ,_
• Wt1Nf Dey
~ J••le Chttte
Cttlt&)GfftMn
• Pl• «.....,,., ' .
• • . • • .
. ·-t • . • . • • . • •
STUDIOS
1'9r•Otto Stott!
CH1t1Me Yen C•rnp can 1...-ru
Ne11c, Doyle
' Year 'Round
Art Festival
Jot & Vltcfft J•rtkl
Petti lttck
l•bll•• ••
,.. ....... ,. lr1tflfll•
••
l•rtehtl
H•l•11 lrbfeloff Ore,.,., .,.,.,,.
Del Ml11e
11«1 Df•mdJlcrtt •
Mlc.hetl helktbff
ltelp\' Gott.
NoJtCf Hieb
Ckrla H1"'phrift
fr•• Jeh••t9•
Nllllt I.ff
GALLERIES
lorff Mfftlet
Welly Sclr!ew.,
M•rv SHel
ltutll n.rn,.•• w.n, '••"t
Atl4e V•• hret
GHeYIM•IHHtt
hftye lrew1
Jlt11 0..1 .....
Yidf Dlt.Mll
Dec D•tr.t
OPEN DISPLAY AREA
.... , ... ff
Art Wk•l•
793 LAGUNA CANYON ROAD
49..4.:23
I
•
:
Jeb HCHth
le,...,.., •• .,. ...,...._
'
'
LAGUNA ·
BE CH
'What's l Tp'
Premier Se t
NEW . YORK (AP) -I
' . .
' 1~.Ru'1~t1tU'al\"J11U ... ~••IO> •~··~
l lllJD• C'llll'<
;,MIDNIGHT
COWBOY" ' "What's Up. Doc~" starring
Barbra Streisand and Ryan
O'Ne&I will ha ve it.! world l
__J)ieml~r u the Easter screen
pre.!entatlon at the Radio City 1
Music Hall. 1
@ COLOM .. ~~" "°"'1. M•1••t . j
The action-filled comedy
was lllmed in Techni color on
locaUOn in San F'rancl5co. It
was produced and directed by l'
Peter Bogdanovich. The film
teams Miss Streisand and1
d'NeaJ for the first time. I
"ALICE"-1:00 & 1:10
"COWIOY"-7:00 A 10:41
o .. ,,. '· ktlt "HOSPITAL'' IG~I
SNEAI( l"llEVl(W
"OWL I l"U$5Y CAT"
"DIAllY 01' A MAO HOUSIWllll"
---' -:u:;:;:. "llA EXl"EOtTION" IG)
1l1t Jtl\n W1ynt
•'RIO L080" IGJ $TAO/UM ' I /!.',
·~
"Ill.LY JACK" IO"l
'"' "MOHTI WALSH"
---'.J::llr::t. "Th• fr.,.ch C~11111CllCHI" 1111
'"' STADIUM •3 !'' "VlnlJhlnt 1"1lnt" Clll ·~~
---,. -1."l1rl GHrt• Se111 -lloMrt ......... SrAotuM ,, ::: "HOT ROCK" (GI') ...
''fHI! THOMAS CROWN Al'l'Allt" ·~~
.
IRVINE COMMUNITY
rlESENIS
RICHARD DOW
An1o}'Ous ·Flea!"
a bawdy mus ical comedy show _,..,,
adapt ed lrom Molu!•e·~ "School for W•~e~" • e/
d"0<1..:I tit
lri•i n E. l\imheor "···t"°d uetl~1' !~ .. ~-·ll ~'"···'n"'~J :"e'O•lr~ r·•:t~'Jcn~ ••·• v••\·!·• enl.e~t1 :r.'.r., eot n,nll' ... ~--1'!>'1 Tltu•. D•t:1 ~!lo~, ·~o-.rlnr; ~ol!e re '""""··•~ ver".· "ln!I •~L:•tl; •o~·.··. , --"•,->r. P1~1,.•1'. T·• ~•.;\"t~.
CENl IDM.$3.00STU!Ol1 2.00
CURlllN 111 PM , fir.& Sil.
HUMANITIES !Ill PllYHOUSE U.C.I. CIMPUS
PHONE 54rllll FOii RESUil!IO!S
"··~* THEATER
'-----:J .,905. EAST COAST HIGHWAY ~~ (OltONA. Dfl MAit 6}')·62~
"T.he Gang That H,~:.~M=~oo.:, ..
Couldn'.t S~1oot f2C~ fd
Straight ~ .. .,.,,..n11 11e1JocoOr.
ltrt•d IGP) Fii. 16 · FEI. 22
Ce11tl11•11ts S1111d11y Sho.,,1119, 2:00 p.m.
COMING NEXT WEEK "SUNDAY. ILOODY SUNDAY"
: a1cl "WHERE'S POPl'A"
"BRILLIANT AND
ELECTRIFYING!"
"A BRILLIANT FEAT
OF MOVIE· MAKING r•
-TIME r.o•GAZWE
"It nawleuly OIJJrossea Ibo
belle! !bat manhood requJres rite sol violence•
-EW$Wllot
. "' •''--11 11t ... -~?K;..,,,.•W!O< CG.~ Di!lle,1fl!l'-Jlf\IJ.!llll.-.. I••• THaAT"• 01111acTo,1uaa POR and PaATU"•• j
NOW PLAYING!
WHITTIER ~ITIWOOO f43·1312 LA HABRA CINEMA #1 ~gJ.4617
lONti BEACH llNITtO ARTISTS •37·1267 SANTA ANA l/HtTEO ARTISTS S4l-1217
LON& JEACH LAKfWOOO •25·2~ COSTA M£SA liAllBOR TWIN~2 64$·0573
W£STMINST£R CINEMA WEST #1 892-1493
"Wh.11 a n1o•ic Brook ha' m.ulc!
A film ror even noa-Shakeepcareaas to revel in!
Jmmacul.1;te performanca. Orama of the
hi1he.t order?" -Judich Cri1t, New "IOrk Mat•z.inc
"Dynamic ... Scofield 11th< h<ialit a1
hit l•leal• .. ;lndeed. the enlire mwmblc Khievn
,. M"el o( pcrf'~nnan« that would of it1elr ti.mp
.thi• the mo1tt ..ot.lble 61.ur' of our time."
-Arthur Kni4h~ S.Jurdoy Rm.w
"A'filmofreal poetry and power!!
A uniq1W addi~on to . .J.e hittory al the dnema't I
cOll&oDt.atioa with shaketpeatt."
-JHk lto:oll,.New1w•k
· uJrravely conceived ... Mapi6~t11
... ...... ~ .•i hio .... ic best. 5cdieJd.,....
tM Ii-11 irth<)"d Ju•t .,_, aut..i," ·
~Vincnt C•nby, N. Y. Tim.1
PAUL SCOFIELD
PmRBROOK'S ... ~ ...Ul.111 SlllllfmM£'S
Klnglear ... .......
!RENE WORTH _.....,
NOW SHOWING MUSIC 1e!!P. .. t o.i!r 7:20 .....
..... .... l Mon. 2:30•4:55
7!111 .... 1'111
'
"" ~-
.. \
F
p
1
l
10
I
14
15
16
11
18
' 20
22
23
24
26
21
)0
34
35
36
31
\
./
'
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
IT WAS NICE: OF
FATHE R 10 LET /llE: ~ RIPIN6 WITH 'itlU
ON YOUR ~IR1HPAY
WASN'T ITJ.1Ml'll7
' Ll:Z:Mv ?
Mun AND JEFF
•
YEH,JOESB
HIRED·METO
BOOST
SIJSINESS!
' FIGMENTS
PLAIN JANE
.z.-\l
• ~
I j
j
I UU6T MADE UP
TlllS S141N I 'M·
GONNA .PUT IN croi;s WINDOW!
I
,,
[DAILY CROSSWORD' ••• by R. A. POWER I
ACROSS 43 --hind Vl!St@rday's Puzzle Solved:
and foot:
1 Cardinal 2 word s
compasTpotnt 45 S111all i'rfc:y
5 Mass ive block fruits
of the firth's 47 Youn; tJOMfll
crusl 48 Cricket neld
10 Hook ~ to p1rts
land fish 49 One rect lvl,.
14 Seawel!d monty
l S Ho ld a belret 50 Distinguish
l!i Asia!\ f11 \.'0l'1 In
• ,
,
By Tom K. Ry•n
SOUND OFF1 MeAT HE;A·D l!
...
By Frank Baginski
J
"
PEANUTS
mont tMy unit the mooth
17 Long n<11rrallvt 53 Mt !1ncholy
18 Unnecessary S4 Relating to
rl!petit ion birth
Z11sn 2 t~~~~~~~~~ 6 R emov~ .t5 Item of sports
obstruc tions equipment
t . --~ ---... ·' '
20 As gentle ~8 Prrsonal
as --: status
2 words 6l 197C Hl!pbum
22 Neighbor Df starring ro!t
K1nsas : Abbr. 62 Loud dtep ay
23 ~t1y1d ·1 part -63 Dlrectly
24 -Weelc b•low
2& Baktry '4 Causl!S to
product decompMe
27 H1vi119 a ~ Makts 1
pracll,1\ mistake
purpose 611 w•epi~
30 Al -: Noted 67 If not
Cal'lldJ111
DOWN
from J9 Pronoun
7 Horstmari •O Smart aleelt
8 Slight by 12 Having ftW'tr
lgnOl'ing Impurities
II Ttnor: Abbr. •4 -comtt
10 G1 ... e 4b Pai-ts of
beauty to ll'leci\lnlttl
11 ls not: Dial. de vices
12 Be turned fl NatiV! er
Jn the Northern -
direction of 49 Bearlike
13 Left Jn 1 hurry mammal of
19 Each 24 hours Tibet
21 Send forth 50 A.I.to lcteSSOry
25 Insects 51 God of Love
26 To some 52 Pole U$td u
golll!I'
34 Expooge
35 Inter 1 "Wheo 1--extent a bow~prlt
36 Eltctrlc1l 1.111t
J7 Put ln-a
reeumbenl
position
)8 U -: SLM'mtst
diplomat
40 SufflK ustd
with stem and
glas s
41 Rink sttflct
42 FlutlttJno
movement
yOOllg 1111n": 27 ~ 53 A gradual
2 words 28 Absence Of declining
2 Miid e1th hostll ltles 55 Instrument
3 Powdery 29 OAt·'lltio YO'b 56 Pi eces cf
sllrcll ustd diligently at legislatron
IS I food • trade 57 Rid
thlckenl!f 30 Tight roll onese lf of
4 Ha'llo; seen of h•lr '9 lnterftctlon
much of tht 31 Angry of annttyln(t
world 32 !<Ind of 60 4 certain
5 Blb11cal alcohol attl'llb':
mOU'ltlln 33 V11lrys Suffix
•
JUDGE PARKElt
PERKINS
. . .
GASOLINE ALUY
SALLiY IANANAS
! Qv.AAf,~~, /~· .--(-ot-.Q-~-.-.. --<le-~-..,
~cm~ \'ve~ ... fk,,,,,,. ...
. m.cveP.,. . . H.....,.,,. ...
GORDO .' ·
ANIMAL CRACKERS
, 0
" 0
,.
' ~ r • , \ ... .
.'·,,. 0
'.o • ...
By Charles M. Scliulz
,.~
ly Harold le ~oux
VOii •EC06NIZE~ 11.Y VOICE! 11.L MAY!
TIU. 11.E, l>O voa MAVE "'"' •IAOY SOME MICE CARW"no,.isl . JOI... YOU, J'C) LI KE' A. t:JOZEN ANP Ml. OtllNNl I\L PIC.K TWEll\ UP ~
FOUi O'CLOCJC !
ly John Miles
I'IA dlOlll<!! 1'0 9rlR
A\ll.llKe I -IM ~11<3
TO SKIP MQ lll.P I
0
..
ly Gus Arriola
By Roger Bollen
.. .'CQJl!'6e, :t 010 Olli.II
CATc:M 12 V, HOU~
Si.a;p LAST lll•in".
..
THE GIRLS
,
'
l .
l
. •
: . j
•
• • •• . . •'
.. . • • .
.. .. .. .. .. .. ,.
' . . , , • ·~
~
? ~
~
f
('
t
' I• ' . , , • \
"
• • • •
i
' I • • ' l • • • • • • • I • • • l • • • • • • • • • • -
•
' t--
BRAND
NEW '72 PLYMOUTH
DUSTER
'72-SATELLITE
Atla1 Service Department
w1lcom11 and honor1 •II Chry1ler
Corpor•tion vehicle• requirinv 1ervlce
anCI warranty work. reg•rdless of where car
w•s .purcha..ct. We honor Master
Cherge, BankAmerlc1rd, Carte
B(•nch1, Amer ican Express
and Diners Club .
"' .. -. •
_,
'
WHAT A TIME
TO· 'PURCHASE!
During . this monh · we have re
duced prices to great savings on
200,000 of new '72 Chrysler·
Plymouths and used cars to
·bring ~ur:)nventory down
to its normal level.
ASK ABOUT OUR
FREE TRIAL -
EXCHANGE
ON USED CARS
'69 CHEVROLET
KINGSWOOD ESTATE WAG.
~t t 11fo1t1 t lit , rtdio, ht tlt r, power 1t11r• in~. powti brtk11, 1ir condititnint , whilt
w oll tt"' 517 95
. '68 CHRYS(ER
300 2 DOOR HARDTOP
VI . t 11iol!'ltlit , powtr 1t1trin9-br1lr11 ·win·
dow1-11tt1-door loclr.1, till wloit1I, 1ir con· ''"'"''.·· s1··595
'66 DODGE
CHARGER FASTBACK
VB t 11lom1tic. rtdio. h11t.r, pew1r tleer• in~. power br1ke1 l window1, WSW, t ir ""'"'"'"' $695"'
~69 FORD GAL.
500 2 DOOR HARDTOP '
Vt •11+omt hc, rtdio, httftr, power 1!11~· in~, pewtr br~lr11, whit1' w1l1 tir11, •tr
<0Miti'"''$1'49 5"
' .
, '69 -VOLKSW~EN
BUG' .
~' •of-Jo,
'70 . MEICURY
MARQUIS COLONY PARK
w190n, VI, ;11tolftttic, rtdio, h••!•'· ,__
t r 1t11rin9 l brtli:-11, WSW, tlf cond.,
,.,f "'''52995
·-'
'69 OLDS CUTLASS
2 DOOR HARDTOP
'68 FIAT
124-COUPE
4 1p1td, tlidio, h1t .. r, t ic. A r1tl J.uy,
IXDC6'-I)
'68 DODGE · PART ASK ABOUT OUR
FREE USED CAR
WARRANTY
2 DOOR HARDTOP
' ............ ,,.,. ~ .. .......
JltA. ._.... M s.Mr. Werti: N .. ._ .t
' ...... ar,.llr ,., ...... , •.
I
'
' .
'
r
'
DAil Y I'll.Of
··DRANDNEW
ELllO;RADO . •:::D TllUCK & CAMPIR
KINe O' Tiii ROAD CAaOVIR
lvt. wltlo ''"'• 110 .. lctloea. .... ltMtlY)
ON A NIW ~72 PHD PICK·UP FROM OUR 1971 NEW CARS CUSTOll lnlUIDI. OIDll YOIH TODAY
' COMPLITI CAMllllR PACKAOI
11' AZTEC _$
Equipped with.fuma~1, 1tov1,
dbl, 1ink, icebox, drap11,
plenty of closet space, tltc.
outlets, wood paneling. #
011437
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY FULL ·p~ICE FULL PRICE
RAND NEW BRAND NEW
1;912 FORD F-250 KING O' THE ROA·D
CAMPER 3/4 TON PICKUP
s21aa
.
FULL PRICE
ORDER YOURS TODAY
BRAND NEW 1972
RANCHERC»
$·
250 CID, a111to. trans., front
TRUCK & CAMPER
NEW 8' CAMPER
Full cabov1r complete front di·
ne"lle, icebox, stovt, sleeps 5.
Z507RU
ON A '69 FORD f · 100 V-8, fact.
air, auto. (31166J) COMPLlTE I CAMPER PACKAGE PULL PRIC
'72CABOYIR
lqulpp1d with 1tov1, 1lnk, le•
box, drap11, etc. ca·rp1t.
!1117021RV
$
BRAND NEW ELDORADO
C-AB OVER CAMPER
11'SHAWNIE
~ 111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111l11111111115 ' ~'!:£E.!~!=~a:t~; = WEEEKEND RENTAL SPEC LEASE II A NEW 1972 : •'"'"' •"''"' ••".w"' ,,.,,. •
= RENT A 1972 FORD PINTO • FORD LTD at '71 PRICES E: '"· 120241
-from 2 P.M. Friday to 10 A.M. $116.95 PER MONTH = M nd C I t W k ndO I 24MO.OPENENDLIASE · tlisc brok11, 1111issioR ct•·
trol, d I rt ct air ventilation,
" all new Toria• 411i91.
#2A47L191417
FULL PRICE -0 av omp' ' " ' "v "12" GRAN TORINO 2 dr. H.T. : $ 15.95 + 6c per mile = Fint 100 mil•• FIEE $101.71 P'EI MONTH
24 MO, OPEN END LEASE
$
$AVE
N!!W1972 . $ V£to ..
FULL PRICE
4 speed trans, 1600 cc eng, bucket seats, entissiCNI control.
ORDER YOURS TODAY.
· Fo Ga ·aioe·soo . '70 '•"'·~";..v;!;;';!!. $21 ~ter. wtWfewulb.
'1/g1C1St. W/uMfS. \andou
· , . inf. 901 BMZ ............. 8
I '' lPorr IUBURIAH ·W!lN • ' PLYM. $1688 . ' V08. auto. trans. fott. OJI' 68 ~:~;;,·..,:;,-;;~· ·'
' '
--
FULL PRICE
FtlJy synchronized _trans, 170 CID economy en9in1, 1mi11ion
cotitrol, 1elf adjusting brak11. Tbe s1mp11 mac,hfne.
91¥107113
I PLYMOUTH $ 10 w,. '""""' '""'""' 2588 _ _\l...J,...Auto Trons.. Pow« , --:
Steering, Fotfory Air,
{PM4Sl00195738} ..
'69FORDF-100 $1788 , V-8, oul~ tron1, deluxt
• 2-tone wifh 1tep ~-
77034D
'6. 9 FORDF-100 $1888 • 1/2TanPit ,V-1, ;~~;ons'1octory oit,
'69 a~~;r.!~$1288
$
HARDTOP
C"'IKt-tlc fnl••• •II 11-T•rl·
11•4td111, fr••f llhc ~r11k11, 41·
r.et 11lr rt11tll•tl1111, 1111tl11I•• ct~
tr.I, OnltrYMN Tff"Y'.
'L9!£.!l~: -u 1to11. ZAC 652
FULL PRICE
CYCLONE '68 G.T.""' '°" V-!, ""°$1 '188 Irons, budtt '*!IS. foc:t,
oir, power stetring. WXH ,..
'71PINTO 1600CC $1 S88 2 dclor. ludltt .... .
.Lie. #(J«PH) ..
'69For4Cuitom $1088 Y·lr·Cllllo, tram, P/.slw,
rodio, htofw, all •Jlllnol
l'WHSSO
I Gord Galaxie.~
1988 -7 4 Dr. Hdlp.,Y-.1, 01110. trOfts, focr. orr toftd,
pow1r slttring, rodio,
fleof«. 9'1 AGE •
•
' ---,_,
==-· ......... -._ ... _ -
NIW1972
~~~!~R~lp
'.itr ,.,,,...; •11•'''"' Dtm:t •Ir rt11tl!1tlt11, •11th1l111 ctlftrtl.
Ort11ry111r1 l11 tltt c1l1r I f rt1r
cffk•.
$
FUUPRICE
,71 f?.~ ............ ~ $3088 flKt. olr cond .. 11ow1r ~----•1111':: r · htoltr, ~ ' ltwoTis~1oss. w /covtr1,
lol!dou '0111¥'.,,i int, J6KCIC
. 17nord Custom '°$1·8 ,88 u ~~::~:.":;;: 1~1:S .
'69 5~~~.R ........ $1988 · Jou, a#', PfW" tl•Jno,
vhtyl roof. XX1 11 ! ·
FORD . '70 i~:!.m.~.~: $2188 rodiO, htol.,, wtirltwolh.
, I~ W/UMfl. IOnCICtJ ' '"'""ii-'--------
.. ---
~ ...
•
' '
SI OAILV PIJ.01' Frld.V, F....,, ia, nn
---'•--'-l:veryone Ho•·
Something That
.Someone Else Wants
DAtlY-91 ·1 OT E:iASSIFIEJ>-=AD~~i:~-~~~!~t
·The Biggest Mar~fpface .oo the Orange CoaSt 7-l>1a 642-56/lffor Fast Resutts ___ wuh 11 W.tnt ~:..-
l --.. l~I _,,, ..
General
"SWELLELEGANT"
ON BALBOA ISL.
THE CffiCULAR STAIRWAY )jlads you up
the si.Jra where yoliwW find the living room,
dining room, .kllcben, I bedroom, I bath
ALL CARPEl'ED. Downsuira, 3 bedrooms,
I bath. Great Idea .. . .. .. .. .. .. • $79,500
ADD A SflLISH
AND A SPLASH
CORONA DEL MAR 2 bedroom '2 bath s, fire·
place, cute modern kitchen, picture windows
with enclosed side patio, GUEST QUARTERS
over the garage. ONLY ONE.BtOCK TO THE
BEACH .. .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . . .. $49,900
*DRIVE BY*
tht•t hom11, thtn call
us for information
3 BEDROOM HOMES
lOZ! S. DRIFTWOOD DR., so. SANTA ANA, and a
pool too. Onl.v $26. 150. Get
out or that chair & a-o 11te
thh1 one! • 200-1 NATIONAL, COSl"l'A
MESA. 1'ht' "Differenl"
home. Drive by, a !roe 11111'·
prlM awaits, Only $24,500.
* 1186 GLENEAGLE, COST A
MESA. • Our "View" home.
Drive by in the evenin1t and
you'll race to a phone, a
Banaln at $19,500.
4 BEDROOM HOMES
19881 GLOUCESTER, HUNT.
BCH. 2 patios, a flrepl tn
family mi. A pleUUtt to
see, a joy to dream of own·
Ing. $32,950. Anxious owner
has bought.
* 20681 ELIZABETH LN ..
HUNT. BCH. A POOL and
one of the ;realest floor
plarui. Live wtthout the kids
being forever under foot!
$38,000. Owner has bought POINTS to P&~FECTION • home. Submit your oUer
In CAMEO SHORE$ an11 start packing.
SPACIOUS and elegance await you in this 22002 MAUB; HUNT. BCll.
3 bedroom, 3 bath CATHEDRAL CEIUNGS, Pack '"""'" t. walk to th• dirtlng room, fireplace, carpets &: drf'pes; beach. A 2000 1q ft Rambler
GOURME'll KITCHEN~·seJ)l!t<lle-irla1drquar--. fiat mu•f .. "'''· A•~lng
lefll, Lovely POOL & GAJ!DENS plus BEAU· $37,000, Submit, subml~ sub-.
'.fl!'UL OCEAN VIEW. A la•IJnl llivestment mil. • m gracious .llvlqg ..•..... , • , .... '116, 730 YE lu--·BCI! 10041 ED , nvl'( 1. •
r "l'UTT PUTT'' Newly pal,.ed >JOO aq tt "'Suburbia Park" home. A OVER TO SEE us "must" to .... Ro~uoed
NICELY DECORATED 3 bedroom home with ~i~·0~::;·:~ ~;~~ ~
lovely 12'xSO' SOLARIUM, 3 baths, quality read,.
Cl!'Petlng & drapes, kitchen with • built-ins, CALL 546-5411 Anytime
COMMUNITY POOL. REC~TJON HALL & e ., LARWIN • PU'ITING GREEN. Only .......... $59,500 ·
Cj)UALITY UNITS
QUALITY BUYERS
8 UNITS • IN EASTBLUFF -SPLIT·LEVEL
VIEW APARTMENTS. Owners unit 3 Bed·
rooms 1¥.i baths, 4·2 Bedroom H '• baths. 3·1
Bedroom 11> baths. SO GET LUCKY.
Only . . .. . . . . . .. .. .. . . .. . .. . . . $198,450
OPEN HOUSE •••••.•• Sot. & Sun. 1.5
1819 Port Kimberly (Harbor Vu Homes) N.B.
3 B.R. $47,900.
OPEN SATURDAY, SUNDAY, MONDAY 1·5
3611 Hamilton, Irvine, 3 BR & tam. $33,500:
~ MDASSOCJAT!S
REALTORS
644-7270
2821 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF.
·-----·-
--·-s . • OPEN SUN. 1 5 •
1934 Port Carney
ir. V, Homes. N.B. Porto£ino
3 Bdrms., family mi .. bon·
us rm. Lgc. patio. Fee land.
$65.900.
2307 Eastbluff Dr.
3 Bdrm. trt-level, lowest
maint. &-leasehold in Blutts.
$32.7~
OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-S
1325 Santanella Terr.
Irvine Terr., CdM: 3 Bclrms.,
family rm., pool. Xlnt cond.
$5.1,500.
DON V. FRANKLIN
REALTOR
• 673-2222 •
EXCELS FOR
ENTERTAINING
FHA/VA TERMS
Four bedroom plus 15 x 22
bonus room, Turly a place
to f:!ntertain your fliends and
family. Over 2,000 aq. ft.
New paint, lush Fffn cfl.r-
pets. l..ru'a'e bedrooms. El'lt
in enC'losed outside patio.
Full price $37,500. Call
546-2313.
-·----- --- ---------
* *
Gontr•I
* * * * TAYLOR CO. * * BACK BAY AREA · $64,500
Jmpressiv~ custom built home on nice. cor-
ner •ite. 3 Spaclou• BR, formal DR plus huge
recreati6n rm (convert it to 2 bedrms). Cedar
panelling, Mex . Ille entry. Enclosed !rt court-
yard. 3-Car gar. Rm for boat.
2000 TUSTIN OPEN SAT/SUN 1·5
' LINDA ISLE • $155,000 EACH
Two NEW bay!ront homes ready for Imme-
diate occupancy. Unusual design by well
known architects. Spacious open plan, high
ceilings, sun deck. 4 BR, FR, DR & stucfy.
Owner will consider exchange for land, apt
bldg, smaller home or TD's. Hurry!
8 LINDA ISLE OPEN SUN 1·5
HARBOR VIEW HOMES -$68,500
4 BR, 2¥.i ba home w/view. Master suite has
charming living area. Formal DR. Family
rm has {!replace & wet bar. Prof. decorated
with luxurious cptng' & draperies.· Garage
has many custom features.
1741 PORT SHEFFIELD OPEN SAT/SUN 1·5
BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB
Exclusive and beautiful! Enjoy the luxury
and prestigious living In the heart of New-
port Beach where homes surround the golf
course and private country club. Also a gtJ.ard-
ed e~trance. See our new offerlng of a lovely
NEW 5 BR, FR & !orinal DR. Fine cptng &
drapes + many extras! $98,500
16 PINEHURST LANE OPEN SAT/SUN 1·5
BiG CANYON • $107,500
Prime) location ! Large pool-size ,Jot w /view
of canyon & hills. PopWar plan w/conver·
sation pit. 4 BR, lge Flt & fooiial ·DR. Car-
petllig 111cluded. Near completion. ·
DOVER SHORES· GREAT VIEW!
Like new! Looks like a model home. Located
on beautiful corner site with view of bay &:
mountains. Lux. cptng & drapes. 3 Bdrm,
lam rm & study. 3 Car garage. $79,500
2042 GALAl(Y OPEN SAT/SUN 1-5
BAYCREST SPECIAL· $58,900
Sharp 3 bedroom home with new carpeting
& cu1tom drapes. Lge. LR. Owner will con-
sid\U' !'xChange: incopie prop. or Jahd.
Dnve by 1717 Terrapin Way & Call Us
BRAND NEW -LINDA ISLE
Fantastic! One of a kind! Contemporary
Mediterranean home with 5 bedrooms, den,
huge billiard room, formal dining room &
41h baths. Rich wool carpeting, expensive
wall papers, marble baths & Del Piso tile
entry. Superb quality thruout! ! $250,000
FABULOUS 3 UNITS
On the water in Newport! 2 Brand new spac-
ious 3 BR & one 2 BR remodeled. l·'!j Lots.
Dock, fireplace & great location. ~169,500
LA QUINTA COUNTRY CLUB
Beautiful custom bit desert home on 13th
fairway. 10' Ceilings, formal DR & den w /
wet bar. Sep guest house. Fully air-cond.
Pool, jacuzzi & sauna. Will consider exchange tor Newport water!rt home. ~185,000
CHOICE WATERFRONT LOTS
Dover Shores· $49,500
Linda Isle· $69,500 • $75,000-$85,000 -$100,000
Office Open Saturdr, & , Sundey
1 '0ur 27th Y t1r''
General Gener ii G1n1r1I
3 BLOCKS·
OCEAN
$39,500111
PRIVATE BEACH!
Shocking but true! Cu!lom
home with PRIVATE
BEACI-r, POOL + TENNIS!
?t1nssive b r i c k fireplace
adorns this huge livlng room .
Formal dining. 4 king size
bedrooms + 3 delu.xe pa.
tio11! Walk to beach, only 3
blocks! PLUS only 10%
down! Don't miss this Ne\\·-
port value • Act no"''! Call
{:~~0303.
Buyers-Sellers
DO YOU WANT
to buy or sell A House, Income Property, Va-
cant Land, A Business?
DO YOU NEED?
I Olli.\ I L 01\0\
Cash flow, tax shelters, exchange of proper-
ties?
We are a new aggressive Real Estate . " REAL !ON!.
S I S I• Le Company. Pwase let us know what you want! pan sh p It-vel
W /Pool ..-;.~~,
This is probably one or the A, ~
mott beautiful homes and I•
pools to be found in this la
price ranee. Features 4 bed· ••
rooms, family room, fonnal ~~~~
dining room, 2¥.. bath,~ and ~~_,.
dramatic, 22 x 42 S\vimming
pool, Motto luxurious im·
provements are upgrading
than may ~ described here.
Located in choice neighbor-
881 DOVER DRIVE 6 4 5 •4040
NEWPORT BEACH
hood, two miles 1rom beach.1-:--=::::;======:==:;::=====:;:===;:====='"1 For additional information General General Glner1I
and appointment to 1 ee,1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;= I iiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil
P••as• ""'"' 546-2313• Full SEA LOVERS J 1 price, $55~000.
\:;"-.,THE REAL ~ESTATE~~
CAN'T FIND IT? * WILL BUILD your dream
home, Have staff for com·
plete home package.
Put your confidenee Jn our
49 ~ears of quallly custom
home building.
Ste example ot product at
2006 Galaxy, Dover Shores.
Ivan Wells & Sons
• 642-2511 •
HARBOR VIEW
HOMES
MONTE GO
Ca!J us quick about this ex·
ceptiooaJJy sharp 4 bedroom,
family room, formal dining
roonl home with profession·
ally built breakfast room ad-
dition. The \t,'annlh of the
decorating and lhe proxim-
ity to pool and recreation
make this an outstanding
value at only $54,500 • Fee
Just listed, that hard·tc>find,
large 5 bedroom J.ome locat·
ed only ~) mile from the
ocean. Huge fam rm, for.
mal dining, marble entry
way with step down living
rm. This artist·mvned home
has unique wood pane ls and
many hand carved treasur-
es that can be yours for
$43,000. You must see this
home to believe ils value!
COATS
&
WAL LACI
REALTORS
Open Evenings
• 962-4454 •
NEWLY LISTED
SPECIAL
Assume great 6% loan or
put only 10% down. This
home is super sharp &: ready
to nlove into. Qose to Saint
Johns. This home features
3 bedrooms & family room.
Room for boat or trailer
with alley access and a
beautifully landscaped yard.
Priced right at $31,950. tor
tut sale. Ask tor Dutch,
phone 546-2313.
. THE REAL \R_ ESTA'J'[RS
' ' land. Call 673-ll!ir.o. 1-="'o"Prn""'=·11=o=u=SES=="=
i-o THCREAL
''."'-l:STAT ERS
' ' ,'
Sat &: Sun, 1-5
3600 Parle Gnen Dr, Cd?i-1
5 BR, 3tl BA, view
J •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ3507 Finley, N.B. (Ttiplexl
PERFECT LOCATION CALL: 6~1225
MACNAB-IRVINE
FINER HOMES
EXCLUSIVE SHORECLIFFSI
Steps to the beach. Charming 2 BR & den.
Lovely garden, bearing fruit trees. $105,000
Fee Simple. Helen Hartley 642-8235.
BAYCREST -POOL
Perfect family home. 4 BR, 3 bath, FR over-
looking pool. Formal DR. OPEN SUNDAY
1·5 p.m. 1609 Antigua, N.B.
1 TWO BAYFRONT LOTS
Balboa Peninsula. Use large old house as is
-OR ...o demolish & l!Uild 2 new Bayfronts.
Sandy beach -2 slips permitted. $235,000
Convenient terms.
CURE Tl!OSE TAX BLUES
Enjoy this cozy triplex and build another on
this super large loL Lois Miller. 642·8235.
NEW BAY VIEW HOMES
Final opportunity to own-a new Ivan Wells
custom home. Still time to choose your de-
cor. From $89,200 to $151,000. Furnished
model OPEN DAILY 10 a.m. • 5 p.m. 2006
Galaxy Drive, Dover Shores. . .
VIEW HOME -$47,500
4 BR • 3 bath. Walnut paneling. Palos Verda •
fireplace. Beautiful landscaping • separate
entrance to 4 the BR & bath.
CAMEO SHORES CUSTOM HOME!
3 BR -3 hath & conv. den . Plans for 4th
BR. Only $79,500. Walter King or Laslio
Sharkany 644-6200.
General General \-0 THE REAL
''.'\.. l:STATr:RS
WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., Realtors SOOres, theaters, sctiools, all
within walking distance to
this lovely 3 bdrm. with
rumpus room home.
FHA.IV A terms Cln this 3
bdnn., famify nn home.
Owner \'('ill paint colon ot
your chosing. $3.1.900.
PORTOFINO PRINCESS
EASTSIDE COSTA MESA
'Out.standing, custom 3 bdrm., 2 bath home ,
-l>uUi around a pool & ~ourmet kicthen with
everything you need 1ncluding a warming
oven !! Call for app't. to see.
LOVE IT· FORGET IT
DelighUui Bluffs 3 Bdrm .. 2¥.i bath, on green·
belt, in secluded area . When you leave town
i -Just close the door & \\•alk away. Offered
at f42.000.
NEW LISTING
Eaatbluff 4 Bdrn1., 21,~ bath , vie\\'. Offered
at •49,600.
PARK BOAT IN FRONT
... r,our car in rear . rent out an apt. &
you II have It made! Newport island duplex
at $82,000. Owner \vill carry paper.
CORBIN-MARTIN
REALTORS 644-7662
Newport 4 Coron• del Mir· Cott• Mtn
NEWPORT ICH.
•TOWNHOUSE •
ONE YEAR
YOUNG
Low, Low Down.
IMMACULATE
EASTSIDE C.M.
Be&utif!.11 ~lecorated 3 bed·
room 2 bath hQme, new shag
crpts & drps. Uvlng Ir. din·
ing nn + s~parale Wnily
rm 1.,.ilh large brick flrt·
place. Large lanai & patio
for ent('_rtaining, 0 w n e r
trnnsferred. Only $33,500.
Lachenmyer
. Redlt or
JR<lll Newport Blvd., C.M.
Call 646-~ Eves. 673-7575
YOU ARE ONLY
$29,950 AWAY
F'ron1 that dream home,
most hn111Aculattt home in
an!:a. Loc8ttd a minutts
lrom the beach upgraded
c~tJ. dnlpea A ftrtp1ace.
Tu llff ii to blJ.y ceJ.I
841-<iOIO.
\-0 TI II: REAL
\'.'\.. CSTATERS
$2',500.
9\arp ~ Bodnn 2 Bath home.
P\1 pool I: clubhouse prlv-
tlern. Lew.• n1Alntmanc..
Xlnt cond • w8.lklnc distance
to beach. New an mitt,
Th1l' nv .. ncr It ln Sltudi A1'2lbiA ---1v_2 ___ A_C_R..:E=-==
and says he muJJI ~II this
Call 546-.l!SO (Open Eves.)
1~~1
OcHnf""'t Duplex * OiomiJnt ............ 1~ °""'
boom .. u .. Jo..!)' jpl. -lf"'POrt loaltlonl
1115,!IOO
Balboa Bay Prop. * tct-72fl *
h0n1c now! This lo1'fly 3 Country Style Ranch llome.
btdroon'l JtACKET CLUB RtcreaUr,inaJ room. Wet Bu!
home has imprtulve, ct1.IJ\fd. Fonnal dining! Modem
fAl c • i I i n gs, prof~na.1 kllch~l'I! 3 Ot '4 Bedroom,
11\hdJcQlni with automatic Den -' Pool. . $52,3.50.
sprldtlen 'llld • ~t nclah-Call $f.S.M2t (Open ewt)
borhooct. 'VACANT NO\Vl
IAaae,, letse wiut optkm, or
buy tt ror IU.950.
'
COATS .. ,
WALLACE
REALTORS
-S4•4141-
IO,..o Evenf1191)
\outh {-oast
. -
$22,750
BY OWNliR
Vtty nict. l Br., 2 ear
-· Slv.g cpl$. ())\'tftd paiJo. t•nt'ld yard. -n,
2111 Sen Joaquin Hills Rood
NEWPORT CENTER '44-4'10 * ** **·*--General
Pete Barnll Reaft'J
rre6enu
l'OOL-BEACH-YACHT
BAYSIDE DRIVE CUSTOM -Spacious 4
bedroom home with heated/filtered pool
pier & slip for 50' sail or Power boat plus
sandy beach . Many elegant features. $165,000
507 Bayside Drive, N.B. Sat i. Sun I 2..S
DUPLEX
NIAR BEACH -Owners unit ready to move
in. 2 Bedrooms each, large patio, part for
six cars. . ...................... '$53,950
~506 WHt Balboa Blvd., N.B. Sot & Sun 1·5 . ~· IMMACULATE ·LAURELHURST
SOUTH SANTA ANA -3 Bedroo111 2·J>ath
with convertible den, easy walk to au scifocis.
Exceptional buy at '27,950. -;:
1927 Secret! Wo, S.A. Sun l..S
BWFFS
MODIFIED FRANCISCAN MODEL -Aw-.y
from noise on lareest ereenbelt. Former
model home -3 bedrooms & dlnlnlt room ·
with many xetras. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $48,500
HOMESITES
OVER 9,000 $0. FT. -North Laflllll blll·
side. Well estabilJhed area -O~an •iew.
................ : • $35,000. J!l!ll ternu.
ONLY $12,500 -fnr spacious re$idential lot.
New Zealand owner 'lnllls action. .
Offleo °""''Safvnlayo .. $unNya l PETE BARREIT REAL TY t! 1605 Mi.iir. lU.
----------------
Home & lnv11tm1nt
Newport Realty
3425 E. C...t Hwy., ~~
•I NEWPORT HEIGHTS
f1irview 4 Bedroomi-$43,500
646-1811 Fantastic 1amlly home on
• cul de sac street Spacious
(1nytlme) &-cust. blt. 4th Bdrm. could
~:::::=:::::=zm::z.I be ideal den. 2 used brick ii frplca.; sep. play area 'for
DON'T MISS
A SLEEPER
In NEWPORT BEACll: 4 lg
BR + lg din rm + liv rm .+ la lot 79'xlll', room for
pool or play. Priced $46,500.
Open Sat &: Sun' 1·5. 423
Frindsco (above 21st St-
oll Irvine)
kids.
OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-S
61C POWELL PL .
(NEWPORT BEACH) * 61&-5726 *
..-i::s_ -,_.st.iii ,,, """
!fE.1~:™ ..a-~ THE BLUFFS .
' ' POf>uLAR 3 bedroom, 2',I
** 2100 S,.. FT ,\b'ilh ~iscan moc!.i 1n ' ,,.. ' . sv . COll(ilticm. Large
Exceptlonal family home t , · Idle'*\ tor mom.
tttting 3 Iarae bednns. 2' x ,Loca on a wide green-
13'.. famlly room.• aperate belt W&lk: to a::hooll A aho)-
dining, pool liud )>aid, all pine. On\Y $411,500.
!mhly polntedl Vacant. 2545 EHtbluff 'Dr!Vo
Anxious owner otters all 640-0020
tenna 1ncl ntA A no down
VA at $34,500. f ... dotall.s -~&CCl.
Call 5«).U$1 (open evtt.) --..:-·=.,....
·.;;; lllllTAGll .ANXIOUS OWNER
-,. Will ..U V.A., J11A. oo dml
U IA'All to Vel Graclota 3 bdn'n.. l....!~~~~===~="'l •nc:I. llllol; Up.top cot>d. , $36, 900 'Doc. blt·Jns. pro1.... """
•bis bedtoonuo 2 batM. tam. acp<1. 0ne o1 the best ......
ily """"· 11roJ,i.ce. Formal h!M~RG~ .... REALTY dlnlnc room. Patio. Omvft.
Z.story -3 large BRs - 2 baths/Powder -
formal DR. Plumbing & slab for extra room
$51,900 Lois Egan 644-6200.
BALBOA ISLAND
Used brick fireplace. Charming C.l Bldg.
on Marine Ave. Room for another unit.
6.5% Joan can be assumed. Now leased.
$62,500. Harriet Perry 642·8235.
BAYFRONT LOTS
50'xl00' lots, fee simple, 45' slip privileges,
Split level accommodates dramatic architec·
tnre. Existing long term financing may be
subordinated. From $121 ,000 -1641 Bay·
side Drive -OPEN DAILY.
SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO COUNTRY
ESTATE
BeauUM home high above the San Juan
capistrano valley on over 9 acres of choice
view property. Corrals, guest cottages, white
rail fences. A view from Catalina to 'Mt.
Baldy. Truly spectacular location. $270,000.
Joel Smith 642,8235.
REDUCED $5,000 FOR FAST SALE
Gorgeous Ivan Wtlls home w/formal DR,
pool "& plans· for 4th BR. Desirable Baycrest
location. •79,9~0.
DOVER SHORES ~iDPHISTICATED
. ' SPANISH
A really striking ho111e .. Private courtyard
that would delig6t a Spanish Don. Sparkling
pool Sweeping view. 3 BR, DR, FR, garden
room, sundeck, high beamed ceiling. We of·
fer this graceful residence with pride at
$139,900. Laszlo Sbarkany.
MACNAl·IRVINE
REALTY COMPANY
644-6200 642.an5
Htrbor View C•ntlr
1644 MacArtflur Blvd.
901 Do .. r DrJ ..
NEWPORT BEACH
satlon !<L (lora<ot1I shag •7~ '7U4$9
.. rpet!nr. 2 )'1'11 newt ~ * SES. WI choice IOI!
1120 ....... -Joi. El N1guoJ '~!!!!'!~~
TARBELL Goll COW.. O•n•r.1: =~ "'"" 1°1o quJcl< Daily Pilot Classified Ads White Elephant otm .. A·Ltne .uh, call ~
:._'• ,.._ r
..
•
rrtdq, February 18, 1'72 * DAILY PILO.f :f1
I -·w. l~I -·w. I~ I I~ I -..... l~I _,.,.. I~ I -. ... w. I~ l._-_t_ .. s.ro.......,J~I ........... I~ ._I -_-.. __,]~: E _ ....
'Uniqut 1fomes
HAS THE BEST HOMES, IN TH E BEST AREAS
IN THE BLUFFS : A 3 Bdrm Condominium
On a greenbelt with views in several direc·
tions. Ne\V paint, rich shag carpets, built-in
bar and quality condition thruout. The Bluffs
is one of America's foremost condominium
developments featuring outstanding layout
and maintenance program.
PRESENTED AT $45,000. e Phono 67>6000
IN BAYCREST: A 4 Bod room
Pool, carpeted family room, secluded master
suite and heated and filtered pool with one
meter board. Quality home designed for ac-
tive family living.
PRESENt ED AT $77,900. e Phono 675-6000
'Unlqut Officu
Corom 6t! "Illar 'lllu4 "\ir6e.
2443 E••t Co.at Hi&hw•Y 28 50 Mea• Ver~ Drive
Coron11 del Mar 675-6000 Coata M••• 54&-5990
'lltirport ~-romlJlg $OllJl
Genera .
$100 Total
Down Payment
General
*FHA . G.I. *
Vacru:it 3 BR. 2 ba. Comer
fenced Joi, in good Costa
Mesa Joe. Carp., drapes,
bllns, !rpl., & walk to schools
& shopping, Ownt>r anxious!
HlRLSl E 01 .SO.~
'" RF'A I iOR S
DUPLEX
OPEN HOUSE
If you like s-p-a-c·~. check in·
to thlS exceptional proper·
erty. Two big 4 bedroom
units, each with 2~ baths
and formal dining. Give us
10% down and we will show
you approx $120/mo. after
principa1. interest, taxes and
insurance <based on estab--
lishe<l rental lneome or $770/
mo.) $79,500. 714 Goldenrod,
CdM. Sat. &: SUll. l to 5 PM
673-8550.
\Vith many years.experience, not only in sell·
ing, listing & servicin'g real estate -she can
add equal experience in construction -de·
velopment -financing & management
rounding ·out a background that has pro-
duced an envi.able sales record in local real
estate. Let her help you. She knows how.
OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1·5
430 HAZEL DRIVE
Ocean and Canyon View -Beautifully main-
tained 2 BR: 2 bath and den home in mint
condition . 60' frontage lot. You'll love this
secluded hideaway. First time li,steg-$62,500.
A REAL JEWEL
One-<>f·a·kind home, upgraded and detailed
to the "Nth" degree; 3 fine .bedrooms, 3 baths
and a splendid large private family room,
study or office. In excellent Corona del Mar
area -$76,500.
HARBOR VIEW HILLS -fj-MONEY MAKER Owner says "Sell!" so let's make an offer on this lovely 3 BR, family roo m home. $28,$00 Beautifully decorated, loads Qf extras, close
2 homes ~n one lot in New· to Corona ,Pel Mar's best beach. $57 ,500.
port Heights. 2 bedroom
()wner's unit plus 1 bed· 675 3000 room bungalow to pay the •
taxes and help . make the
payments. 3 single car gar·
ages. Good rC'ntal area. llur·
ry on. this ()ne!
1032 Bayside Drive
475.4930
•~·CQ· ....r IUCI ..... l ll·l t ll
We 're a good group. Would ·you like to
join us? Talk to Walter Haase.
Hll!L\.I [ OISO\
'" NCAl 10J.'.i.
BUY from -0Wll('f & Savt"
$$$. Selling several hon1cs
in CM, below market value.
3 & 4 bedrooms, lireplal't.
sunken livinr roon11. 1116
Carson & 1132. Double
garage. .Fenced. F r o ni
$27,000. 3 bedroom • fire-
place • 2 story. Drlvc
through garage. Idelll
for active famUy, JU..lt
Carson $32,900. 1 bedroom
JlnJa -:%Je
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY AP POINTMENT
· S Linda lilt Drive -Open Sund•y
Beautiful new 5 BR., 4µ, BA. home. Water-
front living rm. & forn1al dining. liandsotne
oak panell ed fan1. rm., frplc .. wet bar. Large
rnaster suite ha s frpl c. & cozy loun ge area.
view of Bay & the mountains ...... $179,500.
58 Linda Isle Drive
5 BR., 4lf.1 ba .. on lagoon. Lge \vaterfront
fan1il y rm . & living rm. For1nal dining rnl,
custom decor, deck & sJlp ........ $189,000.
92 Lind• 1111 Drive
Beaut. 5 BR. 4 ba . home 'v /formal dln . r1n.
& family rn1. 3 Frplcs. Outside stalr\vay.
Built-in gun cabinet & bookshelves. Reduced
to $145,000.
W11t1rfront Lots
No. 76: 3 Car garage. Faces South .. Sll0.000.
No. 56 : North Lagoon exposure .... $llO,OOO.
For Complete lnfor m1 tlon
On All Homes & Lots, Ple111 C•ll :
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 B•ysida Dr., Suita 1. N.B. 675·6161
Shaclt
College Park
Coastal Cottage
No Down ·
$31 ,SbO!! I
Counlry 'tyle! ~ lhl• htta1
living roon1 flow to w;latl' •
pu1.eltd faml\y room! For·
mal dlnlnrl Coi>SW'r ktlllt'
klt1·h~n with N'EW rana~.
O\'en &: di.Shwruiher! TI1en up
to I lctncr'a hidrnwa,y al•
Prnni.11lv1lni1t Du!rh! FN>f:
form patio • Dia! PL U J l
llpt"clnl holll -Or lrallf'r .!ltor· ,.
ll,l?t'l A ('IU'f'ful buy1'MI dN'Am
• Nu [)own -Call 645-0303. I
Hll!LSl L OI \ON
'" PEA t r~lt(!:,'
"Eastslde .Duplex" I
1-"'lne for ttafting your in·
~mrnt J)l'Ol{rrtn1. 2·2 tx-11
n.10111 •"PArllle unit-'. ()tl<"
•1·llh n firephu.-.i. 'r(ilnl flii4 ·1·
$.11.500. CALJ, 546-2313
Condo. New carpets, bit-in ~""'"'!"""'""'""'""'""'~""'""'"'"'""',...""'""'""I wa•hcr & dryer, t"'""' Gonoral Ganoral _N_E_A_R~T~H=E-B~E~A"'""C~H~-
patlo, pool $12,950. 540-5492 --------1----....,-----~-or 646-8959. YOUR OWN ISLAND BAYSHORE S B{'nt th'! Summf'r h<'nt in
OWNER Trans. 4 bedrooms, Finest 2-1.9 acre Canadian VI EW & POOL thh~ sharp 1 bt.tlroom 2 lmth
2 baths, entry hall, many Sa1mon fishing lslatld, aose \Vaterfront cu~I. hon1<'. 4 nr horn~. with IL lnw inh•rf'111
t Pc d H r•-tlo11•c 5 bd v· r t ral4• 0 ~1111mab\(• Ct lo11n, extras throughouL built.in o n or a uuur. . , rms. lCW ro1n nios "
range + oven + tractor, 5 deer & \Vild gnme. roon111. 87 Ff. Jot, 11parlous p1·it t•d nr $32,5110. for quick
Ol•'y 1115 000 ya~ R·• to 12'" 000 suit'. Cnll 5'10-~Yl5. dishwashef, forced a ir " · • · '"· t:u. 'fl.I, •
heating, 2~' years ne .... ·, Bill Grundy, Rltr. Biii Grundy, Realtor SHERWeeo REALTY!
Brk .. ~26.<XXl. 55()..1720. 341 Bayside, N.B, 6T'.r6161 341 Bayside, NB 675.0161 18964 Brookl~urst, r. v. I
Generi1I c;;r;ral Gen•r•I G1ner1l
plus (:]06ing cb.~ts vets or
FHA. Sure beats renting. 4
bedrooms, 2 bath!, added
panelled family room, cor-
ner lot in Costa Mesa.
$24.000. Call
129,000 With low monthly DOLL HOUSE General General
paymts. SHARP & CLEAN. 3 bed-1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;:;:;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;~~~~?;;:;:;;;,ll * Brok"' 642""117 * room l~me ready tor yo"r FASHIONABLE BAYCREST Walker & Lee * BAYSHORES * inspection. I-luge enclosed
2 BR. conv. de:n, 2 ba .. 2 pa-patio along rear 'or the New listing, OPEN for your inspection, this
tlos: dbl. gar.; profess. dee· home. Great yard tor the weekend at 17 18 Marlin Way, Newport RcaJtors
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
545-9491 Open 'til 9 P.M.
or/thruout inc. shutters. kids. Full price $23,500 with Beach. 3 spacious bedrooms & baths plus --·GEMwi---$100 dov.•n for FHA plus im-formal dining room, paneled family room
4BR, 1%. BA. Formal dining 1610 W. Coast Hwy., N.B.
area. Onnpletely carpeted REALTORS 642-4623
& draped. Covered patio & CLOSE TO BEACH
nicely landscaped. Clo~ to Large 3 BR. 2 ba. duplex
shopping, a c h o o I 11 & with 3 fireplaces.
ftte"'-'8.YS $29,500. Can sell $55.000 • TERMS
IBA. or VA. 830-5057 after Georg• Wllll11m1on
5:30 PM. Realtor
Turn unused Items into quick 548.6570 64S.J564
cash, call 642-5678 1 Paradise column is for yau!
pounds. No down to GI buy-with brick firep lace, lovely enclosed yard,
ers. Thi• lx>me is a beauty. immaculate thruout _ see it this weekend.
Call
W lk & L $64,500. a er ee IRVINE TERRACE FAMIL y HOME
REALTORS
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adams
545--0465 Open 'HI 9 P.M.
WORK OUT OF
YOUlt LIVE IN
Spacious & cheerful wi th nice OCEAN VIEW.
4 Bedrooms, enclosed pool & patio; low main·
tenance landscaping. $92,600
LIDO ISLE
0.ntral O.ner11I -..__ Cozy 3 bedroom home with 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;,ii~.,;;;.. crackling fireplace ZONED
Well located 3 bedrom home on street to
street lot, with walled yard; booklined living
room, formal dining room. $62,500. JI c.2 apartment and bath for
I. employe. OU garage makes
I I I
ideal work -5hop. Lovely
fenced yard in quiet neigh-
borhood but a short block
DANA POINT
R-1 LOT-$21,000
HARBOR
LIDO ISLE $55,000 • $195,000
2 BR, C. den, St. to St. loc ......... $55,000
4 BR, decorator's remodeled , , ... , $63,000
2 BR, immac. 2 ba, lg. lot & rms ... $77,500
7 BR, pool; 3 lots. top loc ......... $159,000
®THEREAL INVESTMENT
· ~§T~X~.~~
COMPANY
REALTORS
oU 17th Street, East Side
Costa Mella. All for $28,500
Hurry! Won't be here next
week. Call 64G-71TI.
5 BR, quality home on Zurich Circle
M. Harvey & E. Vreeland
TOPS IN EVERY RESPECT
$30,950
SWIM POOi:
Lovely Mesa North home
with 3 spaciou." brorooms.
2 baths, builtin dream kilch-
en, family room with !ire·
"SINCE 1944"
673-4400
Ktt• this lia111ly cUr.cffry wllti ye• "'" wellt•ll4 • Y•ll t• h•lfM·h1111t1119. All tN l•c .. l•n llttff lttil•• •re
t1 .. crlbe4 I• trffttr d.t.11 tiy edwertltl .. .twwMre I• today'• DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. P'otreM Mewl11t •pt•
liolllft fer Mio er to NM .,. wt-4 ff ll1t ncli hdormotl .. 11 thl1 col11 .. 11t HC• Prlday and Sot11r491,
HOUSES FOR S4LE
(2 Bodrooml
20392 Birch, Santa Ana Heights
642·5200 $44,050 (Sun 1·5)
tl Bodroom & Family Room or Don)
134 Shorecliff Rd., Corona de! Mar
642·6235 $105,000 (Sunday 1·5)
(3 Bodroom)
1819 Port Kimberly (Hbr Vu Homes) NB
644-7270 $47,900 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
347 -62nd St., Newport Beach
642-1525 $36,500 (Show n by Appl)
221 Milford (Cameo Shores( CdM
644"·6200 $69,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
2307 Eastbluff Dr., (The Bluffs) NB
673·2222 (Sun 1·5)
**2718 Shell (China Cove) CdM
675·2914 $65,000 (Sat & Sun)
***#106 Linda Isle, Newport Beach
642-8235 $129,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
(3 Bedroom & Family Room or Dtn)
, 3611 Ha milton, Irvine
644-7270 $33,500 (Sat, Sun, Mon. 1·5)
4818 Cortland (Cameo Highlands) CdM
673-1362 (Sat, Sun 12:30-4 :30)
2312 La Linda Pl. (Back Bay) NB
645-0682 $38,000 (Sat & Sun 12-5)
2614 Basswood St. (East Bluff) NB
(4 Bedroom or F•mll y Room or D1nl
2927 Cassia (Ea<tblufl) Newport Beach
644-1133 (Sun 1·5)
245 Tulane Rd . (College Park) CM
$33,500. (,sat & Sun 10-4)
1807 Port Abbey Place, Corona de! Mar
675-0123 $61,500 (Sunday 1-5)
1317 Mariners Dr., (Baycrest) NB
642-7491 (Sun 1·5)
***507 Bayside Dr .. Newport Beach
H42-5200 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
94q5 Jasmine Circle, Fountain Valley
531·4167 (Sat & Sun 10.5)
*2025 Baltra !Mesa Verde) Costa Mesa
540·0979 $47,500 (Sun 1·5)
*2737 Sandpiper Dr. (Mesa Verde) CM
5485990 $52,500 (Sun 1·5)
3061 Capri (Mesa Verde) Costa Mesa
540-4324 $96,500 (Sun l ·5)
*4539 Roxbury Rd, (Cameo Shores) CdM
644-7270 (Sun 1·5)
* 1600 Glenwood Ln . (Baycrest) NB
675-4392 $96,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
tt8 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) NB
644·4910 $155,000 (Sun 1·5)
1741 Port Shemeld (Hbr Vu Hms) NB
644-491 0 $68,500 {Sat & Sun l ·S)
16 Pinehurst Ln. (Big Canyon C.C.) NB
644-4910 $98,500 !Sat & Sun 1-5)
994 Sandcastle. Corona del Mar
833·0700 $60,500 (Sun 1·5)
I
1,
Owner Jiving out of area & must sell this
Ivan Wells 3 Bdrm. & den home. Extra
large pool in a beautilul landscaped setting.
Immediate occupancy. $72,800 Edie Olson place. Loads o( decking.1 .,.,,....,.,..""'""'""'""'~~""'"!"'""'""'""'"'""'"'[ll patio, Entlosed pool -safel'--G I l~r small children. 540-1720. Gene ral el'!tri1
2024 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) Nil
6481550 $120,500 (Daily 10·5)
644-4086 $45 ,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
520 Seaward, Corona del Mar
WATERFRONT. PIER & SLIP
4 Bdrms .. beaut. paneled study plus fml.
din. rm. Sep. maid's quarters. Lge. pool &
deck. Jdeal home for entertaining, in most
desirable Joe. $190,000. Kathryn Raulston
OCEANFRONT OPEN SUN. 1-5
4012 CALLE ARIANA, CYPRESS SHORES.
Turn off S.D. Fwy at Calafia (State Park)
left on El Presidente to end of st. Inq'Uire
at sec. gate. Beaut. 3 BR .• rec. room, 4
baths. $160,000. Fee
FIRST VIEWING SUN. 1-5
1833 SANTIAGO. Baycrest. 5 Bdrms .. encl.
pool; 2 family rms., formal dining. 4 Baths.
3 Car gar. View upper level. Fee land.
Mary L. Marion
BIG CANYON • 5 BEDROOMS
Gracious living behind the gates; soon to be
completed home '"''ith ove r 3,000 sq. ft.: fam .
rm., 3 ba's., form . din. rm., 3 frplcs. $98;li00._
M. C. Buie
LAGUNA OCEAN VIEW LOT
Block from lovely swimming beach. Large
building pad .. Perfect for family living.
Clear. $35,000. llarriett Davies
IRVINE TERRACE BEAUTY
Special this week only! Submit an offer on
this bright, cheerful 3 BR. home. Decorator
kitchen; cozy !pl., great patio! $53,950.
LaVera Burns
LARGE BUILDING LOT
With view of Back Bay from rear of lot. See
at 2100 LEEWARD. Notice grading & high
location. Owner wants an offer. 'Asking
$28,000. Al Fink
133.0700
644-2430
~
Coldwell,Banker
~EAlTOR~
--------TARBELL A Rare Find
Newport Heights
$l 9,950 2 Story Building
IS THE PRICE Ju" cam• on the market tor
for thls very lovely 3 bed· the first time. 5 bedroom, 3
room. 2 . bath home. The baths, 65 x 150' lot. 1'14
loan Is high enour h that block5 h~m Harbor l~i.
)'()U can assume with pay· Great family home, lmmac-
ments of $160 per tnonth ulate large bedroom1.. A
which-includes all. Modern true delight to set'. Priced
built-ins, deep pile carpets. right 11.I $49.500. To see call
also matching drapes. Dou· 646--7171.
bl..: garage to boot! CAIL 1,0' THE REAL \~ESTATERS Walker & Lee
REALTORS
~9491
'-U•• '• 1 '•ij 'Prt
CUSTOM "4"
Bedroom and family room
and paneled rumpus room
and 11eparate laundry room
and Ea11t1ide Co!rta Mesa at
an Unheard or price! The
srparate radiant heat con·
6ft>l in each room doetn't
even comfort the owner.
He'a living In the fr~g
11now and 11aylng SEU.,
SELL, FHA. VA, ANYWAY!
A isUper hou~ at " ii:uper -sa2.soo. can 64G--n11 TO-
DAY!
1-0' THE REAL '"'° ESTATERS ....... '"' . . '"· 3 CAR GARAGE $30, 950 Attaohro 1" • '4vd to find WHY RENT?
SWIM POOL tri level 5 bedroom nepilblic Y.'hf!n yau can own this 3
Lovt'ly Mt>sa North home home, tcimal dlninj:. ovel'· Bedrm home with pu.ymb
with 3 ....... ...v.us bed rooms, 11ized family, wlih fireplace. l~s than renf? Owner anx· ·~-p rf 1 •t-· Verd• loc• ""'· 110 submit aU oUers. 2 balM. built in dream kitch· e ec " ..,.,.. .. · ti-tor -wing tamlly 'l°•ll •...t.-t" $23.000. GI • l'IO en, family room with fire-"" ... -· ,...~ place. Loads of decking, Owner'11 tntnsler .dJctat~• cloll'n term.!I. CaU 540-8555
patio. Enc~ pool_ sate tmmed. sale. SHERWeeo REAL TY
for smaJJ children. 540-1720. Call 546-~ (0Pf'n Eve..) 18964 Brookhurst, F. V.
For Seit or Trade
TARBELL I 7tt HOllAGIJ tndl•n Well•. nr Eldondo
_ ~ IUl matt . Cntry Cll:>, spac Condo, ell). 'I ................................ ..:;::::::;;;;;::::;;;::::;;;;;;::::~I h.se, te-nnl"· aolf, pool, 11 -OP EN SUN. 1:5--"'"""· 3 hr. 3 ba. trplc. GOLF COURSE 406 LENWOOO DR. oor. own,.,. SS.1.SllO or t"'d• for Nwpt Bayview home or 5 Bedrm 2 •tory w/panoram. See thi. chnrmlnit 3 bl.Inn., 2 du p J t x. 714: ~3256;
le view. fonna.I dining, lrg bath, (a.mlly nn. born~ In 833-874.1.
fomny &. huae mA-ier bed· choice Co5la ~ft'ta loc. 2 --~--~~~
"rm. Spanl•h d=r. ,,,.,.,. ""'"··· ...... "'"''"" """' PRICE SLASHED
lous. • $79,SOO. to 11hopptng & tehool•. on thi11 txcelle:nt 2 bedroom
Call 5'1>8424 (()pcm eves.) $38,'J'fJO duplex In Corona. rltl Msr •
\outh ~(· oast
---
Newport Stech Realty Now at only S4G.2SO • tt1p
2621 Newport e1 ... rt. Vi\lllt' • Cholt'4" convf'lllent
Nt'WpOr'l &oath 6"1!>1&12 loc:a!lon • \Valking dlstAnccl
For • down payment to f!Vel')l'1hlng • Call fOr &-.
~'°"THE REAL
\' ESTATERS
~""''""'""'""'""'!!!'-I leu than one mon ths latl.t • 613-8S61), rent, you can own your
own 3 or • btdrm.
h4ma. Av•nt-540-IUS
-"H~·anl'" when: are you!
"" '· ., .. ·-========
no NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.11. Lost --·•""'' t1nd 1,
·s.,,""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'I """"u..S! GU-!5671.
673·6510 ((Sat & Sun 1-5)
*305 Kings Place (Ciiffhaven), NB
642-5200 $58 ,500 (Sun 1·5)
1601 Tradewinds, (Baycrest) NB
642·5200 $55,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
* 1820 Irvine Ave., (Baycrest) NB
642-5200 $53,500 (Sal & Sun 1-4:30)
1927 Secrest Way, So. Santa Ana
642-5200 $27.950 (Sun 1-5)
1718 Marlin Way (Baycrest) NB
673-4400 (Sat & Sun)
21142 Lockhaven, Huntington Beach
642-8235 $34.950 (Sunday 1·5)
2313 Redlands, Newport Beach
642-8235 $48,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5)
2036 Galaxy Dr., !Dover Shores) NB
6481550 $69.200 IDaily 10·5)
1915 Tradewinds IBaycrest) NB
648155-0 $66.500 !Sunday 1·5)
4521 Roxbury Rd., !Cameo Shores) CdM
644-6200 $79,5-00
(Fri, Sal. Sun. Mon 1·5)
1934 Port Carney (Harbor View) NB
673·2222 (Sun 1·5)
*1325 Santanella (Irvine Terrace) CdM
673·2222 ISat & Sun 1·5)
**4012 Calle Ariana, Cypress Shores
833·0700; 644·2430 ISun 1·5)
*1801 11oliday (Baycrest) Newport Beach
. 633·0700 $72,500 ISal & Sun 1·5)
1018 SandcasUe, Corona del Mar
833-0700 $54,950 !Sun 1·5)
3111 Coolidge Ave., (Northgate) CM
545-6174 $33,750 (Sat 1·5)
2042 Galaxy, Newport Beach
64>H910 $79,500 !Sat & Sun 1·5)
2000 Tustin (Back Bay) Newport !leach
644-4910 $64,500 !Sat & Sun 1·5)
(4 Bodroom)
**1305 East Balboa Blvd., Balboa
67f>-6296 $97,500 (Sa t & Sun 12-4)
*4545 Orrington (Cameo Shores) CdM
644·1133 (Sal 1·51
501 Evening Star Ln. (Dover Shores) NB
673-9043 $135,000 ISat & Sun 1·5)
614 Powell Pkce (Newport llgltU) NB
875-5726 $43,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
*1609 Antigua (Baycrest) NB
6481550 $80,500 !Sunday 1·5)
29 Augu sta Lane, Big Canyon
642-8235 $89,900 !Sat & Sun 11·5)
**1641 Bayside Dr, (Ychtsmn Cv) CdM
675-1935 !Daily)
2901 Catalpa IEastblt1ff) Newport Beach
644·6200 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
15 Bedroom & F•mlly Room or Ct n)
3607 Park Green Dr:, Corona del Mar
675·7225 644·7787 !Sat & Sun 1·5)
142t Port Barmouth (Harbor View)
644-7662 ISat & Sun 1·5)
2006 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) CdM
6481550 $151 ,000 (Dally !0·5)
**309· Evening Star (Dover Shore8) NB
642·8235 $169,500 ISat & Sun 1·5) * 1833 Santiago IBaycrest) NB .
833·0700 644-2430 !Sun 1·5)
DUPLEXES FOR SALE
420 ?.1arguerite. Corona de1 Mar
673·8550 $59.5PO !Sal & Sun 1·5)
(2 Bedroom E•ch)
406 Dahlia, Corona del Mar
644-8034 $52.950 !Shown by Appl)
4506 W. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach
642-5200 $53,950 ISat & Sun 1·5)
(3 Bedroo m & J Bedroom)
309·311 Heliotrope, Corona de! Mar
673·6510 (Sun 1·5)
(4 Bedroom) -
714 Golden Rod, Corona del Mar
673-8550 $79,5-00 !Sat & Sun 1·5)
• UNITS FOR SALE
(4 Bedroom/Family Room & 3 Bedroom)
Corner Larkspur & 4Ul, Corona del Mar
633·0700 $76,500 · !Sun 1·51
TIUPLEXES FOR SALE
13 Bodroom & 3 & 2 Bedroom•!
3507 finley, Newport !leach ,
675-7225 (Sa l & Sun 1·5)
Waterfront Lats For Sale
**1641 Bayside Dr., (Ychlmnt Cv) CdM
675-1935 (Dally)
'
\
l[i]
-G•Mrlt -Otner•f . ·-;-Cot.,,. del Mar JtylM frvlne ll'YIM Mff---V•rd• .5.antA..Anl o:~x~~/Unlfs ~ tit
-CONDO_M_l_N_IU_M_S TWO ON A LOT _*_D __ E ... Ll""'G""H""TF-U-L_*_,_..__..;,;;,_________ OPEN Houoe-Owner, Sat 10· $22,750
pftkUneJ Bil _____ , 1 'YL~AJ110: 5 Sun 1-5. ! Br, den lorm• NER FOUR UNITS-BALBOA
•11"-m 1 Gl"'NO -.n-!-2'"',000C'C"Sq1• Ft. Allractlve .,..-I----------lt"m -·· -""' _prof. decor · 3 a 2 ,irnD Bm for the $S •••• Ul.900. f lood INJde A Ac ~ CR.EAT fe"irurii ofl'h1i 1andscpd. Xtras. Added Very met", r. car .2-2 BR. 2-1 BR. neo.r beach.
• S ~.2 e.tb. 1~~· Better •tt thlJ rare Ya.lue :,,: to Private ~ • --~ lovely 10\\Tlhouse. 2.<HO Sq, 11torqe, water 1 o1 t n er, ganige. Sb&a" cpU. Cov'l!ttd 1405 W. BallJ?a BlvJ.
lnimae • ....--• ••••• •·-· tocb,yf 3bedtootnplUJ1 bed-• -ft., 3 btlrmt., 2 baths; 18 x many others. S4S,150. 20XI patio, fenced yard. 836-5672. Shown by app't
e 2 Bedrm 2 Bath. Col! room home on R·2 lot. S mat 30 bonua rfu.. Ex1ra Iarat. Baltra Pl, M0-0204. San Clemente OWner, 673-8.127
oounie, Me .. Vtrde.~.000. bf!clroom llOI" vacent atld 'W1 low ntalntf!nnnce lot. com· ... UNITS wanted. Hav~ buyet'I
\outh,, (-oa st
Call ~ (Optn evrs.) reudy for immedlat• OCCU· fff .. af: pletdy spri.nJdertd. Offeffil O\VNER. 3 BDRM, 1 % bath, unu11uaJ, deluxe 3 br, 3 ba for duplexes up to 1 .... units.
pancy, 1 bedroom rtnled at at $39,950. bHns, pa.ntling,. be-autitul honic, PLUS h\'O I hr and .. ~
$120 pt!' 1M'Oth. Kttp u 315 J.tARINE AVE. J13.l362 yard, l)Allo, fish pond, one bachelor apta. R3 xofle. Agi!nt 6~1225 H.LR.
mital or uw u Mother-in-BALBOA ISLAND ~ .. ~ carpeted, tlrapes close to $82.500. ttaitor/owner. Income Propertv 166
law houM!. Only $24.,500. Sund 1 · F'"..-0 ~. schoo!s, $28,500. 54G-2461. olga viola Janaro rltr
Won't ho lllOWld tong, Open •Y ·5 · FHA-GI, 3 br, 2 ba, tamn, "'3-b n •I camJno real Corona Del Mar . -
"TURTLE ROCK" Walker & Lee ll07 Port Abbey Pl. room, la''!!< lot, for sale by ..,, clement< 492-4502 17 Units
Ouutandfng llarbor View ov;ner. S.~llll:i. Sf10RECLIFFS: By OV.'JKU' 4 Home. • BR, 3~ BA, formal l:E;:cl:-::T--------,..,,H:-:-;1--~8=-..,,,-,--. wall Be.U lQcaUon tor viewii. Ex· Ju1t on the market, lh11tle to
tee 1hlJ •J)kdoul a bedroom.
2 ba.th home with KOl"leoUI
vlc..ii. •·:unlly room & mu-
ler bedroom lOOk out into
your own private atrium.
Enjoy outdoor Jlvlrm with 2
patlos lookll'l;J out to u.c.r.
and 111111. Prleed to ttU a1
$35.900! CAU. 546-2313.
WALK TO OCEAN
4 BEDRM., 3 BATH
$25,SOO
Real llhoJ"J) Mach home. Nice
11hag carpel, bullt·ln R/0
plui dlahwahr., patio. Walk
to achool• & '•boppln;. All
tenni. Call 847~1221
S£YM:OUR REALTY
17141 Btach Blvd., Hunt. Bc:h.
COME HOME
TO A TRUE
Presllge aiidreu when yoo
own thil home located in
Rea!loni •• 2790 Harbor Blvd. at AdatrUI
545-0465 Open 'tit 9 P.1.f.
*LIDO ISLE*
OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-S .
111 VIA KORON
J Bdnn• .. 3 ba'a. Dlnlne rm ..
family rm. tee. 1undeck
with view: 11reet to •In-ti.
Only 8 )'Tl. old. $19,500.
SPACIOUS HOME
Cu.atom 4 BR. home on Via
Nord, with lge., attr. pa.tk>,
f11m!Jy kitchen. Only isD.500.
Walker Really •7S.5200
3336 Via Lido, N'pt Beach
HUGE BONUS ROOM
$33,900
2000 1q. fl. home. 3 muter
11!ze bedrooms, 2 bath1,
richly paned family rm.
Sei>&rate Jauodry room . 28
ft. covered patio. Bullt·in
raoa:e. o.ven. dl.lhwuher.
:>40-1720.
TARBELL
the pre1Jlige area Of Hun-1 ~-----~-
tingttm Scach. Two story B•lbo• Penln1ul• home with 4 bedroom• _,,_-;.,;...;.;,..;.,.,....,..,.,,,,_
upstaln, extra large kilchen Oceanfront Med VIII•
with breo.k!ut &rea, plut • • By Owner
fonnal din, room It den. 4 BR, • BA. $97,500. Shown
Fantu11c b~nted A: ftlt~rtd by appt only. ~75-6296
poo1, CaIIM7-oow. =a~e-yc~r~e-11--'-----
3-CAR GARAGE
0PEN
SAT./SIJN. 1·5
dinin& mi • family room,I;,...,...•"-,...;..-----~ unt ngton 1 "SINCE: 1946" Mission VJejo br, 2 be., exp(.'nsive cellent rental reeord. Io·
plus pool. Only S6'1.500. 4Bn, 1% BA. Formal dlnlng ---------bt Wntern Bank Bldg. paper, drpt:, etc. Pvt. bch, come over $31,000 per year.
KF.N BRIT11NCllAM area. Complettly carpeted '
1SH·H·H•H·H-H1
' Unlvenity Park BY OWNER: 3 br + retreat, ocean \dew. $42,000. Prln-Listed at $2&9,000. Try 15%
Realtor * 675-01.23 a: draped. C.overed patio & We've Found A SlN"per! D•ys 13J..0101 Nights 1rg cul-de--sac lot. boat or cipals only. By appt. t"Ves. down.
BE THE nloely laodact.Pfd,. Oote ·to Family transferred and "\lll:m::Zj trailer space. $3-1,500. 22801 &H-8138 or 493--0lBB. Days
BEST ADDRESSED tcbooll It lreew*"I. i29,500. n1usl leave this !lU!XT :1 ~ El Vaquero Cir, ltf • V · i;'="-:..1::611:::..:e:::x.ct.;81=38-:-. ..,...--~ .. , c-11 d l d . METICULOUS! {Seville) 83(>.9227.
Best
Eastside Location
15 Units
Jn this fine below hwy. home. Can sell F1lA or VA. ""'"' l'OOin v•: i 11 ' ocarc in n · 2 3 bd ( be San Juan Capistr•no
45 ff. Joi, lge. ""'Uol. 3 BR SZG-51)57 aft.er 5:30 PM. a prime area Jn Jluntington us story, ~·m. can 3 BR &: den, priv muter
,.. Bcadl, and with a prl«' you four) t~ Is unmacu· aulte, C\llt crpts" drps, oov FAMILY 1-101\lE + office, 2 battlt, $64,$00. E•1t Bluff cnn't heat: only in,99S Call late inside and oul. Great patio, air cond., il4.500. By In family area. Near schools Just south ot Sunta An a
App't. pleru1e. 1---------S42-2S3.i view of the hills. $36,500. Owner. 837_7845_ and l\la.rinil.·4 bedrooms, 2 Country Club. 7-2 Bd Town-
Unlverolty Rulty EASJBLUff i d h•11 •BR 3 BA . -~ • -P bath" lamil> room and gar-hou,.., 1, 2 Bd: 4, 1 Bd' '~l E Col H~ 67' "'10 re • • air .. vi .... ""' az 3, Bae!>. Excellent -·la! oAN • • -.r· ;r'<I./ I ~•t •-I vi f den kitchen. Completely en-.. ~. DUSE "l'.. n::ve , ew, Pro area. All units leased. Jn. OCEANSIDE ol Hwy. OwMI' OPEN H i-·-8 ~ .,916 clooed rear yard ;, w e Ii uu . Y owner ~ . come over $25. 700 per year. IC!lllntl'. at lot value, turn 1 landscaped and even boasts
BR houte, eompl l'nCd on SSIA REALTY Newport Be•ch 8 tree house lor the. kids! Umed at Sl75.000. Owner
:'.Ox118, Jt.2 lot, $31,0C.O. 2927 CA Univ. Park Center. Ttvine 4 BR Ready for quick occupancy. will can-yl o2nduT·?·
Principals °'""'· 67;.;:)59, $15,500. Call Anytime, 833-1>!20 • FAM RM REDUCED ro 135.500 nit
496-2355. SUNDAY 1-S FHA 211.02. $000 down, lotal ~~~~~"""""'""''IN•arly new home In prime CAPISTRANO Money Maker c=-0,-t"'a'-,Me~l-A-----14 Bdrms., 2 baths; family payment incl taxes and SACRIFICE 'by owner, nr. Harbor Highlands of New· VALLEY REAL TY
R-4 LOT WITH
INCOME NOW
Channln& 2 bedtoom rental
cottage with mammoth
brick fireplace, buUl·in ap-
pllance1 in Iara:e family
kitchen, and easy access to
build more units. Good ~
catlon close to local park
area and only 2 miles to the
beach. Full price $27 ,:;oo,
nn., l·sty. Gorgeous vle\\", maint i158. Xlnt condo., n€W 4 br, 2 ha, faqi r1n, port Bch. 4 spaciotl! BR.s It 31501 Camino Capistrano Leedt :your _cquitEy gro_wd. Locaall·
Family home, freshly pnint· close to nlajor shopping forme.l din rm. $42,500. family rm. 2% Baths, Liv· 493--1124 in prime astsi e rent
ed; lush landscaping, Pric· ccnL Jncls crpts, drps, 833-8864 ing rm. glass wall overlooks Realtor Since 1965 n.rea. Close 10 golf eourse.
ed to sell, $51,500. y,•asher. dryer, refrig. Pay-a sparkling pool. Thla has 5 indi\'idual 2 bcinn. homes,
t t h Legune Beach eve~thlng for the best ,.. 'vith beam ceilings and
•
',·'.11..' ms c ieaper t an rent. ·.r b I ba ,.,..... LOCATION + living. $43,000. Lei"' show 11·~·1 riok ll'eplaces.Also5 ch. &. ·~","l".i J3&f' If you this or others in this M>il• Homet quarters. Income o v er ''( ~ '.°t. Shingles, glass, privacy &: price range at no obligation. $12,600 per year. Listed at " ~.· .. :' U 962-4471 ( ::~.J 546.·110l value are orily a few v.-ords $89.500. Owner will sell or
that describe this l bedroom CALL Ci) '''·~•Jt trade for larger property. i 'I r ealty wtlh convertible den, 2 bath ;1,;.,~ ... Mobile HomH 114 Units•
2414 Vlst~ Del Oro $24,500 home overlooking Woods 71~ For Sale 125 6 7 G
Be 4 Queen bedrooms Cove. Huge muter bed· Nt•r Nt•pOrt Pe1t Offlte O\VNER transf rred st • X fOSS "~ll33ewporANt YTalcMhE 2 Tile baths room, 30' living room, built· NEWPORT HEIGHTS 1968 -··~ -n11'. mutal Beautiful unJts less than 1 yr
v..... in kitchen are typieaJ or the sac. • .wA<U '""" nen old. &hedUled income over ---C::~'.".'::":" .... _JEAsr Shill on the pnrk. Gourmet kitchen n1any attractive featllJ'es to 2 Sto-• F!CoNElonsrlal 4 BR ~"?°use, ~ br.,2
2 OO., i245,000 per yr. FuU price
IJ.tak bull 3 b 2 ba fam Stone fireplace t $43 500 (1 7) •.r skirting, a\.l'lllngs, ~torage $1,680,000. Seller '"'ill take ~-t t r. ' All this ' for S205 per mo. compare a ' · · ,v/sundeck looking over rms., Sp. 66 DriltwoOO , ........ 000 d-"n. May •·•e rm. Lease/option. $45.500. I I I 1·11 d / .,,,...., ""' ~ Stree ...ove Y rear yaN 1 e '" ,.,40 20'x42' crystal blue H&F Beach, Club on golf course. beach property for part ot 26l4 Basswood 1• N.B. fruit fl'("('S & lu~h. lndscpg. 0 I~~ J>OOL is now offered for.!ale 214U2 Pac. est. H,vy., Hun. equity.
&U-4086. By owner. Close to ocean. Easy terms e,.,,.,,,11,,1 to those of exquisite taste. tin[ton Beam, $8900 or of. 65 U,.
Fount•ln VllllY for th(' gro,ving Iamily. REAL E,STATE Imported firepl. & chan-fer. 114/536-8743 or nits
TRY ITI Hurry, call now! delier adorn the formal !iv 536-8871. Near Harbor
YOU'LL LIKE IT Roberts & Co. 962·5511 494-941:° Glenneyre ~9-0316 nn. Truly a "gem by the 20x57 FLAl\.llNGO. 2 bdrm.. And Baker
,.RESH DAISY P_,, __ < BR t NEAR &Le BEACH ~=~=~~==~ sea" one ls king.size. 2 bath,
SKY'S THE UMIT
Watch the •tan throu&:b
the tlldlnr roof of thl.s
beautiful executive home. •
BR, 3 BA, pool, formal din.
Jnr 4 uvtrw. i96,500. Easy
terms. lAOO Glenwood 1.a!'lf'.
HAL PfNCHIN & ASSOC.
•t • .,,._.... . am rm Tn BIG OCEAN VIEW Dick Berg Realty 962-2421 wa•h•r & dryer, Tht1 4 bedrm, family rm, Meadow .Home close to 4 Bedrm, 3 Bath, family rm, N bll 3 BR 2
Mesa Vf'l'dt homi!, newly achoo!• and shopping. Great elec. kltrh. Teenager or ~· C";81~m " "' 2 HOUSES -DBL. LOT dish"''asher, & new shag
Gross income over $140,000.
Gross spendable app. 10%
total dollar inve1tment l't'-
turn over 35%. Lilted price
$980,000.
decorated, in tip i'Op condl· kitch w/blUn range &: dbl mother-in-In iv room &: bath bails.; &hV>frpngl rmLg. ha.olbe~mly 'h BLK . TO BEACH carpet, new drapes, set-up ce c, e. ami · f u k ...... t ok Uon. Many xtras. Owner ovens for your cooking en-separate.· Best Showcase rm. w~am ceil.: a good Like new .2-1ty. 4 BR., .2 ba., in
1
_
7
am Y par , r-•
movin&' IOOn, uklng l'l3,300. joyment. Large roomy floor plan. $39,900. Call ocean vi ew from almost formal din. rm., bltns, fam. ~53~,:'2!>17"-.,.,,,,,.-=-==c-:;
Want otters •All terms! bedrooms. 842-4466 every room in the house. rm. w/wet bar & BBQ. 10x20' 1tobile' home, eoclosed.
67"""4392
College Pork
SpacJoua 3 bedrooms, 2 IWC·
ur!OUI balhl, "Knee-Oetp"
•haa" wall-to-wall carpetlnr.
bcn.ulltul cu11tom dr1:1perle1
and fireplace mnke this a
teniflc tn.mlly home to 1tart
)'Our New YC'o.r. Only $21.950
Md Glor 1'1fA tenn11 avail·
able.
Walker & Lee
Can 540-llSl (Open eves.)" Century 21 842-4474 Buy now & choose your 0,vn Frp!c. 2 car gar.; Home cabana. Furn., In Adult
FOUR big bdmu, 2 ba., colors & carpets. Xlnt neigh· could be made into duplex. Park downtoivn c . M .
Spaclom living rm with f~*I kould be 5 Bdrm, 21,~ bath, borhood. A good buy at Also • !'Ute 2 BR. cottaj'e. f>.IS-5919. CALL <n4> 546-1600
INVESTMENT DMSIOM Ren lion
2790 Harbor Blvd. at Adsms
M.').()465 Open 'LU 9 PM
$25,750
NO (10\\"n 1mn1, 3 bedroom,
2 be.th home, ~eluded llv·
In£ room enhJnccd by ap-
pealil'll flrt1plnca. P3llo. Jr.
et1t3te ab.e<I Jl1'0W)da. Air
conditioner. NetU' echools &
1hopp1n;. M0-1720
TARBELL
*MOVING
NORTH*
Own~r moving lo Jdllho
Mu~t sell lowest prlred 2
ltory In Mc1111. V~rde. Lf1r;ite
• be(:lnn, 1l!'para1e dining
roo1n. dtn, 2~ l>Qth1J. over·
1lztd lot with room for pool.
NO DOWN PAYMT TO
VETERANS.
Call 5ol().lJ51 (Open Eves.) y HIRITAG!
~· • MAI. ISTAfC
HAPPINESS IS
OWNING YOUR
cu.a:tom fin'!ple.<'f' p I u • 2 itory Westmont. Large ---$44 500 Both only $74,900. Open ~~~~~~~~~
formal d in I n a. Ct>tl! 1.~~;i~~;;;•;;;•;•~ I paneled family room. qual!-· $186 Per Mo · -it 499 2800 * weekends 1-5.
•l""""e. SJ.1,500. 2-15 Tulane ON BROADWAY -:>"' ... ,. ' • .U."":;C~ \VATERFRONT: Tired of NB General Macnab-Irvine e.-vwhert & 1 up r r ty drapes, fixtuJ'(:>s & • CAYWOOD REALTY 548-1290 l.81 ·~·.r ...... -1-1-. th -o u gho••I Total payment · Vacanl • -~~ ~1al£tt1t1. v·-Prlva·te cuJ...dc-suc. Cash to l'\-1ow in today! Lovely ~"'"' ~ ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;; Rd. Qu iet Eaatside street: 3 loan. i194 mo. 5%. 70 FllA or starter hon1e. "park 1 i n g ~\;,ifi/ prices? Try this, best Iocat-Realty Company
Coron• del Mar bdrm1., irnmac. eo n d · your tine.ncUw. 531--4167. kitchen w/1no<lern gas =~ ~ ion f-Iuntington Hn:OO~ 55' MUL Tl PLE UNIT ,.
OPEN HOUSE na. " oven, crpt. & bl!.m, 1ncd yard w/patio. ~·lhlto_,.,..,c-Bayfront across rrorn·beh Acre•&• for sale 150, INVESTORS
dmper. Alley a cc e • 1. Huntington Be•ch Near beach • Priced to sell SOUTH LAGUNA & yacht clubs. Beaut 2-atry, ENT 18 Units • choice Costa Mesa
SAT. 1·5
CAMEO SHORES
s:n 500 ··H GTO this weekend al $24,900. Call !iv.rm, 3 or 4 Br. fam, din, INVESTM location. Less than 1% va-. · UNTIN · N R b C 962 SSll OCEANFRONT deck, uock. 1110,000. owne-. DPPDRTUNITY CAL~L '-"~ 646·1•14 HARBOR'• 0 erts & o. • Beaut. 4 BR., 3 be. split level -(714) 846-2543 • 5 Acre! near Pillmdale lnt'l. cancy. S26,460 Gross. 12
\:I O t / A' XI I wth t t Units -Cosla Me.sa.. Vacan-~ .~.., F R sale by owner. l mi. to urn. home w priv. sfai.rv.·ay DUPLEX, 1 blk to beach. \V . irport. • n gro po en·
M ......., Got'ieota me.jestic beauty In beach. 4 Bdrs. 3 Ba, 2500 to St>cret Cove Beach: form· NEWPORT 3 Br 2 B ial. Only $35,000 • tenus. cy fac!or less than !~% for
Nier Nt!p~:,L't.~t orrire :~°:.!::.:~:n :~rj Sq. Ft Principles only. ,!~ho~e oClf .~,ha;lie ;haplin. ea unit, frpics, waJI~ patio~ Bill Grundy, Real,to~6 ~:e~= Cross, Torn
$39.500. 962-8983. =a Ju r., Y appt. fee . siJnple land. Good in-341 Bayside, NB 61>M1J. 1 BY O\\ner. Del Cerro Model rings with pride and com-REDUCED $10.001 iG5 OOO O C • I 4545 ORRINGTON
$92,500
-t Btlnn'1, 4 Baths, pool,
ocean view, custom built
C..nllfomla Ranch. ExqUl!f-
jtely decorated. Hl&h beam
Cf'!llng~. spaclou• room1.
Abounding in quality featur-
es, truly a presUge homto.
1-lorne at 1968 price; 4 BR, 3 ma.nds your inves!igntion. ''PRESTIGE EMERALD BAY LOT ~~ii· , . w n er omm1rc11
bn, 2 ittory, tam rm .. Only S46,000. All Terms. LOCATION'' Largest View Lot J. Property 151 642-8235
$30,500. Will Jeau lV/Optlon 842-2535. 1lZ1 Emerald Bay, .. 190.000 BY Chvner: No dOY.'TI;. VA, 1 -----1
Macnab-Irvine
644-6200
to buy. 595 Grand Havt'n Creal homC' for the executive F.,,r '"IS ,i;, hoir"s ,..,11 : yr old. 3 Br, 2 ba, 2 frp.lc's. HARDSHIP CASE. ?lfUST
c 1rc1 e. (near Paulo pl us a dream kitchen for the Bill Grur1dy, Realtor crpts/drps, dbl gar, .l blk BE S 0 LO! Commereial
TI1eaterJ. ()pen 1-4 pm SUn· house\\'ilc. Large 3 bedroom 341 Bayf';rte, l\""''t Beach bch. $47,500. Fee . Sunple. bldg., C2 zone. Large black
day. plus den with fireple.ce. If 675-6 161 642-7523, Mrs. Lewis. top pe.rk.ing area. Make of·
you like that Spanish type or =-,,-~'.:"..'~---11 --liB"yi7oiiwiiNM<E'iR,--fer. Rltr. 543--0588/673--6534. VACANT & READY $20 500 exterior don't pass this one ON the beach. Lagun a CDM H' • fro tag ~1 SHARP EASTSID~ HOME ' • · n-ya!e. • br, 2 ba -,,. hto.-y,3 BR, A·lram. e. Stepa >guway n e, ~ * 3 Big bednns. -~ 3 BR, 2 BA. l.Jlvely shng up. It's only $38,000. Call P» • '"'" I be t be h Lik land &: bldgt. ~~ * 2 Full baths. crpta., real clean home, 342-253.5. ::~inlsu~' ::e r:as~: ~.500~ 642.~ e new. Agent. 67~7225 H.I.R.
G"· f t~· ~ * Plush shRg erpt. elect, kitch. din. rm. Lg. views. Eievator to pool & HARBOR View Home -Condominiums .., * 55' x 140' lot fncd. yd, $:l,OOO dn. pyml!l.. beach. Conslder 2 yr lease Monoco. Beaut. decorated & for t•le 160 * Boat a~eA8 S196. total. at $625 furnished. Asking lan&caped. Includes lane!. ---------
,,,; :."'\,, rcn ty· * S27,500 full price If ~::;:::::;:;::::;::::::;::::==== 1 .,7 900 .. 7 •510 alt 7 & •·,1 500 ... -or ''" •8,4 BY CN.ner. 3BR, 2 BA. V FHA/VA TEfil.1S AVAU. FRANCISCAN .,.. ' ' '""'-. ' ~ ' . U"rf-(IW• !;1"\U-0. • Frplc, cpts, drps, patio: 2
2414 Vlota Del Oro *FULLER REAL TY* 5'1·5111 ( l:J 531·'100 FOUNTAINS wkn<ll, 49'-3992. HARBOR View Hom". Mov-car gar. Gd lo c a lion
Ntwport Be&ch 546-0814 ............ Anytime • " CORNEn LOT • Cathedral 2 Story. 3 BR, 2 BA. vie\\' ing East, must sell almost S48-83IO.
644-U11 ANYTIME ,Sl/•Y• LOAN WALK to the BEACH ceilings, :.i BR. 2 BA, xlnt home. \Vrought iron, ne'v Portofino model. Ex-D I /U 't
* DUPLEX * Owner Anxious! 3 BR, 2 BA. from this near new 4 bedrrn crpls & rustm drps. Spotless shingles, beamed ceiling, tras. ;60,600. 64~1. up exes n1 I /
CORONA DEL MAR -
2 Duplexes, ea. ~.-/3 BR., !
ba. downstairs & 2 BR., 2
ba. upstairs. Priv. patios, ·
cov' d. parking. Less than 2
yrs. old. lmmac. cond. iro,soo Each.
• , . •1s.ioso 0 '
IW"WFI IL&
10 UNITS
Pride of ownership I Bedrm
furnished apts in top cond.
Never a vacancy. ilS.000
down · Owner wW finance.
Own quA.Jlty home. Thi~ flln·
tulle home has evt"rythlng
for coinfort & qualil3-'.
}"ormnl din. room, 11t<'p
dO"''n llv. roon1, 4 lorgf'
bedroo1ne, lx'AutUul eoclos-
td fKlliO. Plu11 t11any more
txh·ns. All fl)r only $3t1lj0.
847-6010.
horn I turl blti R/o th""'"' Vac"nt As•ume lrplc, \Vet bar, cpls, drp,, DESPERATE OWNER 2 BR sale 162 Beaut. nl!'W owner's unit; 2 Spacious living room w/flr't'· e ea ng n , • · " ·
& den, 2 blalhs, blt·ln l'lven, place. New carpets & floor dshwshr &. nice shag crptg. 6\1. % loan , w/$266. total bltns. S4l,500. 494.~ or +den 2~~ Ba.good view.
$115,000.
\-0 THC RE.l\L
~ I:STATERS
LOCATION II
ranae & dtshwashl!r, carp .. Hle,ne\\•dllhwuher.$29,500. Fullprice $25,500. GI&. FHA n1onlh1Y or name )'Our 646-1"":'62. Agt. 675-7225 H.I.R.
drapes & fi'plc. PLUS Aharp O"'•ner will carry 2nd. All terms. Owner will help pay te.rmi. Clll 842-4466 SUPER ocean front 180" BY ~·ner, $38,000, 3 & f.nmi-
2 BR. home In rront for In· this & coed neighbors, too! buyers costs. Call 540-8.555 vu 2 BR. 2 BA O\VN· ly, many xt:ra.s. &ck Bay
eo1ne to help~ thf! ,vay. &19-0G74 SHERWeeD REALTY YOUR-OWN APT. Pool, 24 area. 645-0682.-Prin. only.
?!fay \VC &how you tJiift'? HY Anxlout ownt'r', 4 BR. 2 18964 Brookhurst, F.V. hr guard serv. $48,500 . ,
* OCEAN EW * "'/20% dn. Owner \vill fin. HA'RBOR Vie"'· Decorators VI \." JlA, t.rg Jt.2 lot 156 X 55, * 001.L HOUSE-3 &dm1.. GOVERNMENT Bkr. 499-3005 or 2ll:849-5l2S custom 4 bdrm Pale rmo. TetTl!lc duplex; bea111 Cf'll'g. block y,•all 1ences w/alley. l"-bath, new shag and OWNED Princ:lples onl)'. 6'4-431'.M.
STEPS TO OCEAN Century 21 2 Duplexes located in good
rental area in Newport
Beach. 3 Bdnns., 2 baths
each unit. $65,000 Each. Fee 1 :642=-ll=TI-===~ANYT=:.:.:Ill=IE:::I
land. 6-16-22 DELUXE un its,
Newport Beach Realty Corooa. de! Mar, N'pt.
2627 ~ewport Blvd. Beach. Sell or c."l(chanae. ,
In upf)t'r uni!. F.A. hc11t. Prie('(f to sell, 270 Palmer kltch carpet. Redecorated Fl-IA & VA reposscR$Cd * OCEA1'~ VIEW * N H . h Nelvport Beach 675-1642 64~. '
The lrwin Co. Realtors
445 Union Bank Tower
Hdwrl. flrs.: one or the best St., C.l\f. W&-4354 inside & oul QoS(" to schJs Townhouses&: homes. Low 3 Bdnn. contemp, Joe. on •wPort eig ti ALMOSTlle\vduplexesLrg.3 l'lewii In town of the ~•n BEST in COLJ..EGE PARK. & o c e & n . down. No points or Escro'v Laguna's famed Riviera fuR" "&.J; or ne'nt. .. 2 "*sR br, FR &: 1 br, frplcs, FAU,
It channel, t . ..ower unit 2 bd· 4 lrg br, 3 Ule bl. Huge llv BROKER/O\VNER. 536-1525; fees. Gov't pllys closing coastline. Frplcs, open house. Npt Hghts area. pvt garages, patios. Rents
rm .. 2 ho.tits. We \\'Ould like nn, fam nn, dream kit, E\."es, 53&1955. costs. All price ranges. Call 00a. .ms, bltns, view d~ks, Block fence. blt·in barbeque. 1450 •M 950 / 1 2 0 0 0 12 0
610 N'pt. Center Dr., N.B.
LOCATION II
l..11f8'C 5 BC'drm. prime IOCA·
tlon, plush crptg, l>enut
ldllCJIR'. fanta.1tic pride of
ownt'1.,hip makf'a this a
dan<ly. VA lcr11111 -$40,950.
Cnll 54.$-~4~4 (Open cv,.1.)
to l'.h<)\V you this! 96S-444l dining area $38 500 _ · ., '""' · w , ELUXE C.M, units. 2 ,/ti!~AN RE!~~S9 !:~. S::~ Ap::;~~';: w: ~~l~~M:S CREST REALTY MISSION ROOIT '494--0731 ':;:8261 for app'I, Fri-Sat· t,';;·,.=r/builder Mr. :~ 8:; 2,;;;\~d=
y EXQUISITE .2 atv, 3 BR, 2 ri.m. KASASlAN g47.9G04 Location I Loc•tionl lMMAC. 3 BR & fant. room. The fastest draw in the DANA Point -New duple.x, $160~t. 15% dl\ Prine.
C O • Z • UA, 24x27 rumpus room, KASABIAN Ntoar Adams & Brookburst 2 BA, ~pls, drps, bltins, \Vest •• a Daily Pilot $49,500.SllverLanternatLa. ~543-<!-'-73.:.l:..· _____ _
Is the \~'Ord for thia comty Sl.'l,750. Conv. or VA . 4 & lam., 1% baUis, v.•/w panora.mi$38,500. 3030c C::tainv~~~ Oassifil!'d Ad. 6(2...5678. Cresta. \Vebb-Bkr. 642-4905, Like to trade! Our Trader's 11'1 2 BR. COftl\i'e. frplc.. Owne.r. 545-6174. • _.__ Built I 1-:;:::;;:::;;:::;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;.:..::;:;;;:;:;;::;:;;;:::i;:::i;:;;;;;;::;:;;;;;;.!.,i::;;;;::;;;:::;;;;;;;~;;;;;:1
* 6 UNITS* I' BALBOA ElVD.
\ l..UR., 2 2·IlR., 2 3-BR.
Furnl11hed, bHn~. 4=1~ to
~ le beach. Carports. \\1ln·
tS"/suntnirr tt11tt1!~.
C&ll: 673-3663 642.{)96:9 E\.'f)l.
associated
DROKE Rs-REALTOR$
:02s w l olboa •7l·l6lJ
hd carp. • wei.pcs. • ns, D T World 4~ I \\'d . Ors., brick plllto. Al-BY O\VNER. Lowest price REAL ESTATE dishwasher. Patio. Good r., op Of · '
so haii a modt:m llJ!')Und .... _ ,,,. .. BR horn MUST ,.. fo . t B 0 $28 500 Lido 111• floor l ·BR. unit. fd,.al for 1vi· q, -> e, N1nv . npprecia e, y terms. n1y , 1
pa.tnl, xtra Ji. lot, fruit owner 3 BR. Fam nn. 1 % 1------N..,... ..... -· 1
"" "'""'1 °' just !Ired · IJ'Oes, Id· Joe. ~. BA, C>pt'd, L • n d • e p • d, 14 REALTY & 220 LIDO ORD of PAyl ng rent. T'Y 145.000 I ~=,:..C:.--~~~.., N 1y o INVESTMENT CO • $5,000 dO\Vn. SALE by o~r i::rtA br 2 e\\· po.intcd in"' OUL n (714)M5·4085
Unlv1r1lfy Realty bl cor··iot ~ for bollt' & C'all cul-<Jc...a\c. \Vnlk to ---==o-==:---Bl"llnd new watmront home.
SOOl E. C•t. Hwr. 673~0 ,,,;lltr. ~000. All terms. A<h. 133.900. 96Z-7001. $20,500. 5 Bdrms., <% bolhs. Lovoly
• "59 3 BR /'· ho walJpaper &: carpeting. LOVELY \•ie"' of Catnllna & $4_.. · quiet :1~:..._7 r..u!1~i~: 3 Beef rm. -1 ¥.t Bath Trplc. 2 St11.lrways. Dtck &
bn.y Jft'll, Cu.slon1 built, lifESA Verdt, 3 B1t, l '6 BA, lnl. Prot: lncls~pd frnt .\ Crpts., ~·· fruit tree'!!, .fll'lg, dork.
\Vcill klcllted. 2 Bettnn $26,150. By O\\'Tl(T, Eva: rear Walk to beach Atone patio &: brick. XL.NT Biii Grundy, Realtor
v.•/htd pool, outdoor -.-et bM !W'9-«225, Days: 6'4-2501. acJxd.. AMUme 6~~ c:;j TEl\AIS • LOW 00\\'N. 3l1. ~Ide. N·p1 Beach
< .. , BBQ. Be•utllul cord. MESA Venle 4 Br. OWntt $3.1,000 968-1991. HAFFDAL REAL TY 675-4161
C111l owner at &W-1536. tn.nife?Ted. $33.SOO rno dn *BY O\VNER 3 BR 2 BA. 842-4405 Eves: 842-8202 -~,-=8~E'°D~R""OOM"°==5,--
PrlncJpa.ls only. VA. 1616 Elm Ave. ~7-6151. 11ew crpll le 0patnt.' 4 Yn Irvine
II ARBOR VIEW Jf0Jne11 -VERY thftI1> 4 bdrm. Hu new. Auume 61X ~ VA IOGn, j-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Pop11l1U" 2 bdrm + den, pro-SM,500 VA a.ppn.bal. O;\--ner vaca.t)t! 64J.-OU7,
f<'S8ionally land~apcd. llll'p anxious. Agent 6-12--5851. L\Bt·ACULATE, 3 bedn:lom, You'll Uke It!
Close to dubho111e. New
tumace I: water better.
0v.71f.r will redeconlle • or
nlAk~ YoUr otter A dcJ it
lot. Ul,500. 644-181~ owner. Oo-r Sho-1 2 botha, -.500, •mnnt lfEl..P! Anxious owner, 2br, •in-1 ·-" d .... 1.. •• •• ..., ~ .., 1 t me. on~~. ..._x, 5" ~ lo&tl of Jt5,940. 7102 B<'autlfully upgrndt'd 3 BR . ~-$5,\000.
2 BA, "Ct\mbrl<la<" model boWclRI> lou>GOD J!a. ~~·_;~ -~r~n~ll· :'!a,:!,~~ 2co~.!!e,te~~ DOVER, SHORES F'cc'd Dr~. u.a. &11-Etm.
O''""trtt 1 .. t BR • lam -. =""='h~"~"~"~· 132"-',_9.lll_._G_I~~~ &aulltulty appointed )..stocy B£ACJt HOO'le: 2 My. S br, ~'"t"'' .. ,. • .... home on "-'•ttr. Prl. mm-2~ bl. F. din. fd rm
3 BA, b'm din., UIUrM ln, BEAUTIFUL locttion 2 mini be6cb adJactnL "'9.n-~/b'plc_ + Xtru-owner.
Townhot11t. bt Univ. Park. .ea'Cc;llt
Prot landtc:pd •trlum. pa· 3>11& vi. Udo
tfo, xtras. End unit w/prime 1 3~BR.~-. ~3-11-.,.,--de-n-lt~--
gretn belt Joe. ntnr pool, -500
1!9.000 Pri<'< •nl> 157-11123. afory, 5 br, 4 bo, 3 fl1>lc. dacu tlle tnlry, formal -· TIME FOR . ... .. 615-'121S.HIR 1>.R.. woJlt,ln bar, 4 Br. 31'l~<ERED"""=rm~.-_.--, -3 br-.-3 Pool .............. $125,ooo
" K C SH CHINA COVE VIEW Ba, + ~ nn. ltleol,... BA. tor cllnq lmruac. LIDO REAl TY INC •
ll"nnls eoum • "lbopp!ng. p]ayl"CIOnl •••••••••• -· 5 BR. $ ba. •Inda comer. ps,:;oo,
.,.UIC A mi lhl1 * 11W91C th• ni.r cirltillfd family. •u ~ ~-..;, ·-c.tl Owner 83.1-SUI ·-••· Lido u B.
THROUGH A H Ottmd at ms,ooo. !IOI ,,.,_ ~·~. ~· ~" ·~ • "·
ARBOR VIEW HOME EV<nuw stor IA OPEN lll!ll SQ Fl', 4 bl' 1 afo'Y. ~~~~'"!"~'!:!!!If! 673-7300 DAILY PILOT 2 811 6 dtn • .• 644-lOlO SAT. A SUI/, 1 tllru 5. f'rpc, tam rm. N • w ;;,. last I drtw In Ille West ='M>t:-:,..,..,.,,...,1"d""ra-w"'1n"'""lht'""=w""a1
WANT AD -ll!lnMlf Wal& Ille PETER OOB.8S, REALTOR ~· ~.IOO. lllllllO ..... Doll)I Pilot Cmll<d Tum •nuHCI lltm• lnlD qulcl<
OPEN HOOSE <domL llWOClfm.~64. -$!ti P 6 I. ~?.ma. M. 60-l6ll cub, coll &U-lim ________ _,:, __ _;;,;;;:::....;;;:::......;_ ---------
• • ' •
$@ll~}J.-~£~s·
Tlit> Pun/e"witlr th11 Bui/f.fn Chuckle
:1 UNSCIAMBlf AIOVf lfTIUS 10 GU ANSW!I ' I I
SCR.AM·LErS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 700
I
I
•
pla
$3'
J 6
an
"'
Co
Ro
ISi
2 B
old.
Cov
lion
Ill
S.\1L
Gre
sea
"" O\·,
2.
8231
847.
fo'OR
•\\"i lh
pri1·
Call
4-Ple
$.170
Nr
2 8
1·cnt
to s
ffi1
gara
Lots
LAG
Level
Coa.~
dO\\'
Mo bi
Tr
Golf,
al
$7290.
ELD
Dese
Mou
Re
** e FISI
lax. I
ca bi
''""' OR T
Uoi" C.ll
l\Tite:
P.O.
5 A
16,"
10 A
Real
Ex
\V,\N
bom•
-H
l'\c~s.
~eal
HO
\\"f' I
em pl
Mu~l
""" Com
day ·
Vogel
Ne" ,. .. ,
'\~in
th~'
"""" ''"" facto
"'"' coin
seHin ""; 100%
BOY
ii th
'" di.~tri
pr\n\
l'I dl'
hOn.
Ol\11
111~w
""" up.
lervl
~
1ll62l
I.I ,J
Coull
fl'<t
~lter
i1;mal
All
-I
• ·I
--· -
DAIL V ,ILOT ~
I['--_~:.."_..::··__JJ [j] l I~ I -"'-I~ I -"'-
Income Property 1'6 365 Apt. Unfurn. lnv•1tm1nt Houlft Unfurn. 30~ Houses Unfurn.
=~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;.I Opportunity 220 INCOM E UNITS -;:-~""".,.-"""--..,,-J Geno<ol Huntl119ton BHdt Costa Mes•
• tdt.~1-lied 8\1~ • .,._..:._ ______ , :;--;;:~-::-;:::::::----:
t>UPl:EX "7 r BR ea., fiN'-ln\'l'ill.Or'S tor I i m It,. d s9o l Sn 11r F.dlna:tr t p.la('r . crp1s. drt»1. garagrs. till pd l BR tot/pt!t OK :ol
D4.!r.i0. lpartnl"r'Mlp (no~l'l'Clrkillal I t BR fll('d Tot il pet Cd~I (.' ,"'/dn"est,I 1"'~ V)' r<l ,
J USf n:,,1odrl4.'d 2 Br, l &,
f.-ph;, 1·J~(" 11.l 04.'f'atl. Adull<i
$300. 317 1,..tkspur. 6-;l--.1.11:i.
TRIPLEX
3 SH. 11r Ba. fircpl, dbl i::ar
Md 1-2 an unil!. $19,950.
6 UN ITS
on 1 i i'l'l"e lot $69,300,
I UNI TS
Corn,.r location, SI00,000.
Roy McC1rdle Re1ltor
1810 Nr\\'pot1 Bl\ U , C.)1.
543-7729
6 Units Eastb.luff-
2 BR.. 1 bath unils. 2 yrs.
old, ~·uuy t•arp, & draped.
Covel'C'd parking. Best lOl'B·
lion. $150,000.
'75-6050
lllJl!I MAll.llUlllll Cl .. M<
S~1L units u1 xlru ~--:-B. Joe.
G1-eat opp. fot· beginner.
seasont-tl lrnaJlt!. Gross inc.
5-6,000 11/~m l invest.
011 Til'I'. 5·18-96!t5
or fum1 tutt--sll'reo-jf>\\-e ry rrp t'p.i. mnU&~'. lilcant.
co. $20,000 obtains 2Ii"'e o( SlOO 2 BR, kids/ptt& OK S'.b0/1110. lo 010. or IP.asr
busiJ1f'Si or eo. 111U pay 17<;6> S140 lBR. lm'd, kids/pets, Ctll CaH &."..l--1 103. rf' •id,_ 11 t
()n n1l11. Sj,000. 12 nlO S155 2 BR gar tot ok C.~I. 8~714:i 01\ll{'r/agt.
busine!!I loan. 1st hn1P of-Sl60 p\'I hnlf' kids OK IIB BHOOKHURSr&·"-,~lan_u_l-lru-1 Costa Mes•
Condomjniums
Un fur n. 320
_f,..rt'tl_. """-1080_,_sk for Ton.~: $16S 2 Bil 1\/1lll"tlll pl, NB ft!'Ca, 4 bdJ'ln. :I bath, drapes I·-~-·-------
EXCJtANGES, iJ1vestment'J 2 BR, ocran view. vac Cd~I le e9rpeti11g, nf$I' 1chools. 3 Br. :! B..i. i·pt~. CiJ1"'·
• '
•. I II II e • (·--· ·-~ ·~ mo c 'I bl 1 .. LIL<I;, dsv.·h,r. :! poo1 .. --" I If! rrR. ·om $140 l BR kids/pe!JI OK ...,.,"TI.I ,-~ ... ~ • .., Jnvestmenl Realty. 67~7225. ~ &ft 5 pm. .'..:_lbhouse. S235. 54&-3710 Horse ranches w/actta.Cf'. comls various anu atm-I.GE 3 Br, 2 Ba. Jrx tani rn1 CONDO. 3 BR, Z BA. <-'On1pl
irll' $1n;. liv nn \\ft trpl. Bllng. Nr. bH-ui.~. i\fr. Que>1•n, ofc
t79..U30 AGENT i\JcDonnf'U Dougl11.s 9fi2.!i:l!t. 540-.11 51. hon1r !\'3-2132.
Money to Loin 240
Corona del Mar
for rent
Spectacular views for your f amlly. From
thla Harbor View hilltop above Corona del
Mar.
Dramatic architecture. Handsome inter-
i ors. Privacy. Pool, gardens, play areas.
Close to schools. shopping.
Two and th ree bedrooms, two baths. 1st TD Loans
6% % INTEREST FREE i! 2 BR unfurn, ft>1l('f"d )art!,
i;;u1gle 1h1rlling. A1•all
~la rrh !. 213: J;jj7-49~l.
Huntington Beach Apts. Furn. 360 Apt•. Furn. From $245. Gas and cabtevision included.
2nd TD Loans
8% int. ba!lied on equity,
Also NE\V 95r.,
er sale·prict lo&ns
Sat tler Mtg. Co.
642-2171 545-0611
Serving Jiarbor attl 21 yra,
'----"_ ... _ .... ___,JI ie l
Landlords-Owners
\Vr 1vill r efer lcnanls lo )'OU
FREE of charge • , • f.Ia11y --1 BR fo11·nhsr, $225 .. nio-. -
desirable lenanta on ow· Day call 6·16-1226.
wa.iting hs1. Eve~ cw.11 64[)-1j73
ALA Rent•ls • '45-3900 .4 BR. ran1 nn. Nr. t'Ollegf',
College P•rk park & shops. 1700 sq ft .
$300. ls! & last. 847-9ij2.
2 Br Condo, cpt/drps:, frpl,
patio, dbl gar. nr bch, pool
privl, $200. &i:i-1115{ -
CPT drp~. :1 HA . 11 <1sh/dry, .,..----------
reh·/l'ng. pool, t·lhhsc. 11·ir Costa Mesa Coit• Mesa BAYVIEW APARTM ENTS
H"'r1. " en. sm l Bit. SJ9j: :i Casa del Ora l ooo""'--, -.-,-d-,-p1-.-,.-, -.-,-"'' C $170. ~IS-140."i, 537-53.'ll. non • amoker. StO\'I", retrig.
San Joaquin Hills Road. east
of MacAnhur Boulevard
-1 BH, cit-a.ii. ~·rph:I, drp.<~ ALL lJflLmES P.\lll
$150. n1onth. <'on1p.1rt" btfOrt' you T"('!lt • * 9(i8..600:!' * Cuslom designed. /l':itur1n.1::
=T_o_w_n_h_o_u_s_e_U_n_l_u-rn-. -3-3-5-•e Spacious kitchen 1111h 111.
direct liahtinc:
Newport leach • 5epal'll.tr dln·~ 11rt"a -".':'-=------.1• llon1e-h~ s 1ora1;e * ADULTS PH!'.:Fl::RRED * e Pril'ntt' patio!!
3 BR, 11, I.la .• h!t11~. 11 /11· •Closed garage " srora,g,.
t·rp1; dbl. car. pool. S2.~'i • Full Jcni;!h rnarble pull-
Drapes. No pet11, depo111!
R<'f. 954 \V. 17th, 64$-3787 For Information, call 644-5555.
:->PACJOUS I BR blchelor -·~~"':'"'!'"'!'!!!!!!!!!!""'.'.°'.".~'."'°~--~===~
r1C•11 \\/\1' crpts. drps, elt~ Apt. Unfurn. 365-Apt. Unfurn.
buns. lli' lrn·ya • aboppg, Corona del Mar Costa Mesa
i\orthrast c.r.1. ~-ljiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I
t'UB.NISHEO 2 Br. apt. util ]I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
NEW NEW NEW
VILLA RIVIERA
pd. SliOfino, 2271'-B Ataplt
28. U'N~I T~---1 Hou••• furnished
Z & 3 Br, 2 Ba. Nr "hop'g. 8231 Ellis Ave., JTB. S420 ?of. beneral
300
RENT/LEASE 3 BR. t.am
rm, 2 BA. bl.tin RIO. brkfst
bar. 2 bltin de~ks & huge
bookshelf. lirepl, dbl gar,
huge bk yd &: pafio--fenccd.
By a ppt only. $250. mo.
557-1111.1
Coron• d•I Mo1r
LOVELY 4 BP.. 2 HA, [rpl.
t-pt/drps. l!Hnl!. gar. fncd
}'d. Xlnr I<><·. s~. &l:l-F.029.
Irvine
REALTOR a.!S...(;9Gli 111~.111 --~-------· -e h:1n.1:-1z Bdt111~ Duplexes Unfurn. 350 e Pool • Bsr bcqut's _ s ur-
Corona del Mar roundf'd with plush land-
1capl11g
So_ .. _><_8-0~'-"-· ----~~-I BR, Ne11· ~Ila& erpl, lr,1:
£·loser s. 11r shops. Adlt11. Uttl
pd. 18.'14 !\lonrov111. ~S---0336. ON 'TEN ACRES .11 :.;T FINISlll".I)
Families Welcoma!
1101 2 BR , 2 FUL L BA ------347·3"'7· EASTS I DE
!'OR '"'" R·' loo, Oflx2flll' COSTA MESA' "'ilb 'l bdn:n hoUSf'. Sales
NEW
3 Bdnn .. 3 bath dupleX'. C1r-
petE'd. dra~. bit-ins: pnv.
patio. Covettd 2aragr. 70:,
Orchid. $..125 mo., yearly. pri~ S2l.:io<I. Prin. only. Rent at n95 or option to buy.
Ca.II 8.'.li--028!1. 3 bedroon1, 2 bath. doublE'
4-Plc:-., all 2 HI', I Ba. Inc. garagt', renced yard. ne1v
$570 n10. No dn VA. SJZ,500. shag t'arpets. freshly pa.int-
Nr occ. l'i7--6 Wl. Pd. Call Broker 54,Si.9491
Open Eves.
,1 17WOSO 0
-··rs1T11..&
:! BR house 1\'/atldl I BR
J·ental, nr11·ly drf'. prl<"ed
1D Sl'li. Call 830-41::1.
cm1b-;-ffi\.IX'r Triplex :? Br,
l'~ Ba. rrplc, bltns, encl.
garagcs, pool. 644-6.~. ----Lets for Sile · 170
LAGUNA NIGUEi.. SHORES
~vel vic1v lol , ocPan side of
Con~\ 1-ilvy, $26,500.. JO'";,
t101\ln. Jn<'k Good11·in R:'l0-5050
Mobile Home/
Trailer Parks
DESERT CREST
011 n your 011 n lol
172
Golf. CLUBtfoi.;sr.. :"\atur-
aJ !lot Pools. $3990. to
S7200. t-"rce Brochure.
ELDRIDGE REALTY CO.
P. 0. Rox 6G6--0
Desert llol Spring~. Calif.
f7!4) 329-6-1~·1
---~-Mountain. Desert,
Resort 174
**BIG BEAR LAKE
e FISH 8 llunt e Ski e Rl'-
lax. In thiiii ~ Bedrn1. 2 slory
cabin. ONLY Sl0.900. E·Z
trrms. Tt \\'On·1 last.
F R--E=E~l~I----NR octan. 3 BR. 3 BA. den.
Lendlords·Owners <fin r1n . bltn.~. beam c.-P.1!-
\Ve v.·ill rrff'r lena11ls to vou ings. frJl/c, s.t-00 Is e.
FREE or chargr •.. ;..1any 673--:'.4·=77~· -------
dcJtirahlr l!'nan111 011 our BEAUT ocean vit"\1. 3 bl', 2
1\·ai!in~ !isl. Ila. frple pool incl nia111t..
ALA Rentals e 645·3900 v.·~hr/d!J·~r. $3j(). Adlts.
Sl l5 util pd. IBP., tot OK 673-6635.
$120 utl pd, P\1 c'<l! sgl OK 2 BR, rh-apes, range I:
$125 2BR mobl hine. sgl OK refri& .. $225 mo. Util pd.
$60 utl pd IK'P wiit Balboa See Sat/Sun,· 9 to S.. 671
$90 ufU pd, bch pad-Lag Bch Ja..mi,ine Ave.
979~8430 AGENT ~c~0-,,~.-M~.-,-.----
* ''EARLY RENT.AU;-;.-L....
f''inf'r Homes in Beach Area •. Llttl!"~l-1 Br, tncd
f',ron1 $3.iO Pilonth yrd for kids &: pef!. $125.
Bill Grun<ly Rltr. 675--6161 ALA Rentals • 6(,S..3900
Balboa Paninsula
BA YFRONT d10ict> 5
bdnn. 4 ba. summer or ~r
ly. f.'um or unfum. Ch1·ncr.
Ciil-20.~9
Can• Point
2 BR. fl'plc, bltns, patio -A
charming "Doll" rouse.
$1i0. mo. 496-2002.
•!lard to beat? 2 Br. sto1r.
':frig, fncd yrd. encl gar,
kid/pets. S150.
ALA Rentals e '45·3;
.l BR. Nr1v l'rpts, nrw t';
nr111 drps. F'ncd yard, Quit'!
81'f'I\. S200 mn, on traSt>. No
t:hild1Y'n, M SI ne: 11' s.
:~5-.-~l\.i(l.
2-tXJ~m housP., 1l/W cptg.
fenced }II, privatr ga.ragf'.
Adults ()nJy. No ptts. $175
mn V.OS l':ldt'n A v e •
6-16--076:!.
3 BR. ?\,, ba, tam -S325
2 BR. 2 .baths $265
4 BR, 2% ba. lam nn. $340
3 BR, 2 Ba., atriun1 S335
4 BR. 21, baths, lurnishf'd
Turtle Rock $400
WE llAVE OT1-IERS
"I] fl h "I \ill 1 I.
---'llrnllur
"SINCE 1946'0
i st \Vei;lern Bank Bid~.
University Park, 11'\·ine
Deys IJJ.0101 Nighil
2 BR. 2 ba ............. S300
4 BR .. 21,;, bathiii •••.•• SJ:.)()
3 BR., 2 ba. home •. $.100/335
:1 BR .. 2•).. ba .......•• S:t')()
3 BP., 'ti1 Aug ......... $400
(ired hill
RF.AL TV
Uni\·. Park CentPI', l"ine
cau Anytim"· 8.U-0820
Lagun• Beach
SHARP 1-BR .. ground floor Adult livi~ 111 ll!i bes!
B!tns. retrig. &, patio Large 1 RR S l7~• s:r.o i\1onU1 Agt'nl 67J-."ii26 llTILJTIES ~·REF:
C-I M 36.i \V. \Vil~n &l2·19TI os a esa
CHEERFUL 2 br, S('parat.-
. dining. H1~sp "Pt. N o
rh i ldfpcl.5·1;i-641'!.,
&12-9139.
Dana Point
LIVE LIKE A KING
At Budget Prices!
Jo'URN ISl!ED-
lJNf.""URNISl IE:D
• 111 NICE l &-2mt·r~iluCr'S. l .. 2 BR. Furn, I Unturn.
S';"S &. UP. Mature adults. Firepla~~ I priv. patios.
Child OJ..:. G-11-1:.'W. Poolt Tf'nn!s Contnt'I Bidsl.
ON \\0ATER-BeaUUful_:Z_8R 900 Sea Lane, ..:'d~l 644.:2'1ill
furn apl. $2.30 P "" 1110. IMacArtbur nr COA!I H11·yl
11·/frplc. 673-2861. -~ __
Dana Point ALL belo11 C1x1~1 1111) .. nt'.u
Hie: Col'i'lnn B<'111·11.
;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 1.'itudio. i111'.. in•-. tH1L $1.\0
LIVE IN STYLE I Lg<'. I BR, i:nruRr Sli(1
Now Open. All New Lovely 2 BR hotnr. !gr. 'l'l\nl
& pa.ho, r1bl. ~a r;lJt 4' sr~c 1ous. 11111nii··· 2 BR .. *• :~~t~s E MARINA INN unu,.,.1111 s29.• DEN. 1 BA, 111· n11 4hll 0 I J ~IVl~HSIT'' l:l'.:.-\1.TY
rm. lgr k1I 11/bklsl. b.ii'. GARAGES , * Jo"ull ltlodCl'n h:1tcht ns ?.001 Jo'.. (·.~1 11111 b;::..{~·,1fl
cl'11ashr. 11a~h 111;ich, n1iln1 *CONVENIENT *free TV * LlMnt; Incl'd LUXURIOUS-Jo"'rt.:rn::hl{rgcn.
x1ras, sloragc, 11e11·. 1·loS<>d TO ALI. BEACHES * Pool * Sauna B'aths cy, J bedroonl, 2~ bath,
gi.r. S200. i{o ,; 111 a JI FROM $1 35 MONTH * Phone!!* Patios Jo".treplacr, Dining Jtoon1,
chilrlren. 499--11!11 a fLa ADULTS PLE ASE * t11a!d Service i11.unt1ry. }100. At:t. 61:t-t930.
H I. B ch * lltilities lncludPrf Ad 1 _,
un ington ea VILLA POMONA VIF.\VS OF' Ti-IE llARBOR 1;;:-;ou;;;";,.'c.0"''"C''".....,--,.--..,=~.
MODBRN 2 BR, Bltn!!. Crpt. PHONE 642_2015 Bachelor Units • $59.50' wk CLOSE lo beach. lrg. 2 Hi-.:! D g •-· I c & So111e I & 2 Br Units len Ra. cpen bfoan1~. ll'pl1·. rp.. r rp c. .arpor1 . ( !760 Pon1ona A\'t'.)
laundry f;-i('il. S J:{~i. Coupli• & "'!~~!""!~~~~~!\!!!!I Clo!\£:' to Lllgun11 Bch. San bltn!. priv. porrh. pri1. ~ar.
l small child. Oh:. No pets, ......... * $JO WK. & UP * Cle111enle & Doheny S!atc ::30-A i\!arguf"rl1!'. Gi.;..-09:!7.
842-4664 afl 5.30. e Shidio & 1 RR A 1 Park. OCEAN view, t'itgan1 '.l
1,1\1 ( ---• P. P ! PH. (714) 496-23S3 bt'droom, 2 baUis. flrt"l.1rc, , . A '. 2 BP.. t:rpl, Dtll~·. .00111 S1:i \\'K & l'p, 34902 D I Ob' S " Bltns. Palu:.. Lo1 rl.1-fenced e 1"V S.· .\1airl Sc rvic·r A\•ail e 1spo f, dining roon1. AduHs O•)l). ~1'0Utl<.!~. P\1 tlhl g-<1 rage, • Phonr :-=cri.•ice. Utii Pd Dana Point Ho1rbor $300 J>C'r 1110._A_,_1_. 6~-"-'°-
.S160. RP:Sponsible 1narned • All rnajor ('red1t cards H , Z BR., Bltniii. \\'alk tn
couple. 842-3276 2:l76 Nrwport Blvd. ~AS-975.5 untington Beach l>f'ach. S190. Ora.ngr Cna~1
3 BR )•' be x•-• lg 1 __ _, Th~. Ad \Vorth SJ on Ren1 EXECUTIVE SUITES Real Estatt'. Cult: 6-lt-IS·lf\
' .,. ' .. e "'--.... Children & Pt't Srrtion ---------yan1, <Ible gar .. v.·slu'/1lryr, • MOTEL APTS. * GHl'.:AT VIE\V '! Bil. *
l.A(:l!NA NIGUEL 4 bdrni. 2 cp1i;, 1lrJ)li. 536-2G.'H . Unbelieva bly Beautiful 727 Yorktown Blvd. ~·1~l..: .. bllni;:, sund,.rks. pool.
ba. liv rn1 & dinlng arf'a.' NewportS -.-a-ch v:~ 1D' JSJ-:RE: Ga1·dC'n Apl~. 19471 BEACll BLVD., S100 up. 1~3 1.r; li7:>-j21'J.1,
family rm. lrpt, buil1·1ns. t 1111' -no pets. flowers A'r \'ORK'J'O\\'N 2 Br + st<pr ~Uf"~I nn & ha
<'311>1'1!1, dra~s. fen1'f'd & \\'ANTED: 100\Jgblful family ('~'rrywhrrr. Strearn It S3~0411 P\'\ p;.110. 1;:1r. Nr Shops. :\u ll:prinkler~. 2-c•ar garagf', lo rf1111 n<'\Y uni. duplex. ~\~atrriall. 45· pool Rtt. Rnl. STUDIOS FROM $3S child/J>f"!S. 4i73-llO.~.
immaC'. $.110 mo. 1st Jas1 l..ovel" 3 Br 2 c .. ,.,,, ..,..una, Sgls 1-2 Bdrm. Furn-. -' ·' · • ....... .. ·• unrum tro .,.,"' l BEDROOMS .AVAILABLE 2 BR . PooC $2l 5-/-mo. and df'poAJI. 4g;....c244, drapes. bltns: f'lec. garage .,........ p · m ,......,_SEE IT:
LAGUNA NIGUEL 3 BR, 2 door operMT. $300. ~ arsons, 642-8670. : ~~f~te;:,~ 642-8400; all 6, 548-0797
e SfM'•·1r1 I 1·1tblnl'I spat't' e IA" k i::a1·11~ll'S v. It: ,;1or
• B111 • .. 11 e l.HLlr;.· e Paru111
e r1 \\' f)i,poi>al e Ort1fl<'!
• IJ1·t"1• :.! ivlur !!ha(:: "Pit
• S1M'1•111I 80Undproo'ing
• Nt•. S~UI Dlrgo fo'1'11·y, lfa.r-
hor Bl\·d & schools;
t;i\s llf'RI. CH:ci Cooklnr
Hnd \\'nlr r-All 1>1u1I.
Month to Month
622 Ham ilton, CM
S.•f" \t.i:-r-,\lr. & 1'll':t. f/oban
548-2062
('011~11trr h'J1v l01p0rtont thf'se
•ll'hul~ 11rc 10 your v.·1,rry.
11·rc 111•111:-~tylr: locllabte
~:irt1~1·s ••• gUt"~I Pttrkinz
..• pull1na: ICN'l'11 ..• shuf.
lh· hoard, )'OUJ' 01v11 fitY'ploce
• , • t"lt •\·lri(• kilo hrn .•. 2
IJflth~ , • , 2 bNll'OC'111111 p)WJ
rlrn , •. 1111\qur IQt'lltlon.
l,11 ,. 111 11. F'n'lll'h ronntry
~;.irdrn al
The Ve ndom•
1X4!"1 Anuhrun Avr.
ra11 ,\1 1·~. Ph!ll1p:c, &tJ-2824
BAY MEADOW APTS "B ,,_ , ~ . • r, ut·IUll rt!l111~11. prlv Jiii·
110, tr'!-. fac1I., 1;l0tit'd gar-
:IJif'. l:nJt hen1, t'OOk~ &
11alt"r nil pd. All aduJt11, no
J.H·t~ Fmn1 $165,
387 \V. Bay SI., C.l\t.
Call 64G-007l
OR Tl/IS - 2 Story 'F1:..er-
Ur>pc1· !or $6. 759.
Call Ross 17l4J 536-1738 or
11·ritr: Spencer Real E~latr.
P.O. Box 2828. Big Bear
2 STORY -J BR, 2 BA. Kear
bay, Balboa Pt n in 1 u I a .
\Vinttr sm. sn-9467.
Houses Unfurn. 305
BA. J1v & din art'a, rrpt. bl!-"C" 'rhon1a~ HH1· ~l.~J.i27 . HOLIDAY PLAZA e Laund..,.-factlitu:." Coste Me1o1
l BDR:>.I houM". l'\o pet~. inJt, 1·pt~. drp~. 2-ear gar. ** Vet11 rly Beich ** DELUXI-..: Spet·ious l BR. e :f'l'ct utilities $18~, mo. $75. ck-aning tee. xprnklr1. vie1~·. paVed star-$350. Bt'autirul 4 hr. 3 ba, rurn apl. $1.?.S. JlP.alP.d pool. e Free linens
194.0 Pomona Ave. N r age arra for <'amPf'r·boaL parl. rurn. fit't'placr pet Ample parkuig. Adults -no e T.V. &: ma.id aerv. av;uJ.
NEW
\VCll UK·11.t,.rl
'l'RIPLEX. 1 yr old, 2 '•rvo
hdrm~. !Ivins: r1n, dining
r·1n. sha: curpt>t~. clr&Pt'I,
bu111-1n.~. riallo It gum.re,
laundry faclllUf"ll, $180 mo.
Av11.l1able 1'1arch 1. 645--3377
•1r 11?,o...()J,!2
Gen•r•I
Lake. California.
schools & market Jmmac. S285 mo -1st, last OK l<>IV> \~r B Jbo<t ·BJ d pets. 1965 Pomona Ave. CM e Bar-B-Que
J!\t;\IAC-:-2 e·-R-,-1.,...,--,-oe<l-yd-,' & dcp. <(95.-4244. 6n.:.2223'';,r 57;,...1~. v . $100 -AlOVE IN Allo1vaJX-r e Phone JM'.!rvice
Garden uparh111·n1.,
r~re1h &. nC\\'
5 ACRES nr. Anza. \\1r. ele<:.
$6.500: $65. On 633-7TIO 8 lo
10 A.1\1. 538-3288 PM. Agt.
gar. 2619 Elden Ave. $145 L\fMAC. 3 BR & flllll. room. Shady Elms -La\\'n -Pool * * BLOC'K lo Brach! At· 11•1th pool, 1'0fftt roo1n
nio. 673-."i2iO. 2 BA .. c:ptJ:., drps .. bltins., Children's Section tractive J BR. $135/mo. Jn. "-many PXtra features •B~AUTIFUL Gf<OUNDSe
Real Estate
RENTAL FINDERS
415 YI. 1MI. COSTA .. 14
HoutH*Aph.
4eoRI·-------panoramic canyon v1e1I', r ]/VI 1'~urn. & Unfurn I & 2 Br. fantok. (2131433--0264. EncloKcd gara~c SPANISJ r DECOR ~ S .• 2 Baths. Crpls, 1300. ..,.,.,,.. 1'·1-·n'·'n Vo"e•· ,t.pu1menu for R!flt from 11 "/noo, Up "·-• d drp!, bltns. S2SO. Year'! ,JVJV l•"" ....., , ..., Newport Be1ch ......... pe!a .., rapes Alr/cond, Ga11, "Ir. pd, lea~. Refs req'd. S48-0110. Dr .. Top cf Wcrld. 494--6984. 177 E. 22nd SI. e 6-12·3645. All butlt-ins Guraict. Pool, Rt'c. nli., Exchang• 182
\VANT beach property for 3
homes 1n Hiver.~idc. 011·ner
-Hal E\'ry. 357 ~. Van
Ne~s. Loi; Angeles, Calif.
* ~Ill * ol..oio-F,.. • ,_,,. 3
BDR.\l Newport B••ch $135/mo dlx 1'.fob home, BALBOA &: 30th, 2 br. ccm· 1 &: 2 Bedroom!! laundry. 1 OR $140. 2 BR
· · 2 ba. fenced )'d, Apts. Furn. 360 ccmpl furn, hld ~l. adult plelely !um. t Yr. Isl". Up-From $155 Per l\1onth Sl60·$16S-Sl75.
Slro-l'>'TUDENTS! t~urn Bl\rht>-
lor near the beach. ULil pd.
Avail 3/1.
neiv cptg, partly draped. BRAND NEW coople. no pets. 4 Season's slalrs. t blk lo beh. shops Drive by llaclendtt de r.ICAa Apts
• "'-'°"-:'_._1_200. 4i46-4662 All Ut1'llt1"01 Pao'd iGieineiirioiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiil 1\-lob Esr, 23.59 Np1 Blvd tct. $Zl mo. 1st &: last 1-'2 01rllca1Elld!~" ~7v80t". 160 \V. \Vllson, Se" Mgr. No. l
CUTE 2 BR. fP.nced, gara~. 548-6332. cleanup. Util pd. 673·9034 ........., * $170 *
nr shpi;:, Sl&i. 322 Ogle, 20102 Birch SI. lnr O.C. air-A • REAL V 1 alt. 6 pm. 3 BR, J% BA, ••!Jo, bl•--. Real E1tate Wanted 184
* 642--6747 port, S. of Palisadrs RdJ , a uc! Crpt11, drp11, ,.~ ...,.,,
2 BR, 2 BA w/ priv. patio. Bold New Concept dsl11vhl'. pool, 2 BR.. $145. BACHELOR ap1; <'entrally <'f"J'l'f, drp1. Ask about our HOUSES WANTED
\\·r nN'd 10 hoursf' for
~ployces of local factory.
1\tust Ix' co n1 n1 u 1 in A
distance of Irvine lndustnal
Complex. Up to S50.000. 30
day eSCY"011•. Princ1pals only.
Vogel Co. No. 10, 20~2
N ewport Blv<l, C'.\I.
548-93-lG.
-·---------NICE 3 BR houlif', 2 BA. rum. N e a r f'verything. Child/pct OJ\. E--sidf'. S2451mo, Option 10
SIOO-PRIVATE l BR. partly Billiard rm, Jacu7.zL Nr. UC l\1ature adults, 110 pet!. located, ldeal for lady or discount plan. 880 Ctnter
I
· n..1e1 .........,. p 1· A i;:cnUeman alone (}''rom 45 St, Cl'\-f. 642-8.:WO. 548+2682. * buy. * 642-386.1. • 1';~1'5_s7.~~ Reasonablr? FURNITURE RENTAL ~8-6878 ~;.164~~'.c Vt'. & over). SiO lr: S~. 675--0780. l\10DERN I &/J·m. apt. Cplt,
TOWNHSE for sale or rent-SHARP BEAUT. 2 BR. CHAR.,fINC Ccltqe! REALTORS drp!!, dsh"·shr, b 11 -1 na , Sll~llARD lo Beal. 2 BR. 2 Br, cpt/drp, quiet, adJtiii
encl g1'r. Crpts, drps, fncd only, no pets. SIBO. 231-F
yrd, kids/pets ok. A\'ocado. !">-18--8251. 548-1405.
S285. 3 Br. 21;. Ba, frpl, 2 * 11onth to 1.·fonU1 Pool.·Adu:lls, no r>ets (!teen $140/mo. Including 11 ti I . SINCE 1944 garaae. 1 child 'Jk. All utiJ * JOO~(. Purchase Optio:1 'Rfanl ok 11~;; ~~" \\'alk to beach. J2.U \V, 673 4400 pd. $150/mo, 307 AvoeacJo.
car gar. encl patio, pool * \Vlde Seleclion. or I . l . ,..... O'U·9520. Balboa 81'"1, NB. • Apt 9. CM. 645--0!llW. ' * 3 Br. t.TPl/drp, fncd yrd. privl. Nr Jloag l l os p. SEE & GET BONUS •• 673-9183. Style-Cclon; 2 3 B d I SETTLE DOWN 1 &. 2 BR I 11~& II 2 * 24 J-lour Del.ivery I AVAIL NO\V! J & 2 Br., or r I! uxe duplrx apt. -ap '· ., 5 .50.
furn., pool, rec rni .. gd loc. ~~ blk lo bch & bay. All nu TO SERENITY Freshly pa ln!e<l, 1• r f'I f s. •-·ME ~ ~.~ ·."'~'~il.drt'n or peti. furniture, 673--0526. whrre other11 found 11. qui('t, drps, bltn~. 1·uvered
$140-ClITE 2 BR Cottage '"! Cov'd patio. $200/nio. 2o:>4
gar. rncd for kid! lz. pets. NationaJ. 61.>-1827. 6i3-626i. NEW 2 BR, 2 BA Vacant. $18.i. 3 BR. fir ep lacl". * Ea.stside. Call 543-6489 after 20432 Sanra Ana A1·e taef'Olls
fl"Om Santa Ana Go I t
Courar•. Brand New furni·
11.J.!'l'. He11tcd Pool. Rt'ason·
able Rent! Mgr. 9'19+1268.
THE BLUFl-"S. 3 BR, 2 ba.
lrpl. $325. J BR. 2% ba .• va.
cant, $Jj(l. 3 BR, 21-, ha .
Super deluxt. vie1v, $,jOO.
Broker 644-.1133 Anylin1e
~ -- -.,.....,..,.,~., •• OCEANFRONT 3 Br, 2 estbl. way of lire. J)f"()plt' <:&.rporll, chlh.lrl'n & pe!s
ho C ' Ad OK. 830 CcnH'I' S! !>IS-4014
Financial llil $155-CLEAN 3 BR, 2 BA, 6 P:>.1.
shag crp1s. kid!/pcl!' singles c.7.~~=~~--
LOVELY 2 Br .• !urn. apu, Ba. Deluxt. \Vinter. Adull's w earl'. ompart. • ult
shag crpts, Pool. Clo~ to only. No pets. 67l-8088. living fealures: $1%; MO. Lgc--:---iBR, v./v.
ok. DELUXE 2 BH, 11 2 Ba * :\.1onticello TownhY. shag
517 \V. 19th. C•M ... "'81 I Ad ""'====~-----1 • Spa~. living-3 BR or 7 + cpl, drpll. ll'IOVI', reln" . .,., • ..., s Orf'S. u.lts, no pets. $150 OCEANFRONT apartmrol/ don -gur•I rooon • ~,•.o N >fa" SA '17-0314 "' " Newly dtror Atlulr.,, -
Bus ine11
Opportunity 200
$:ZOO.SPACIOUS 4 BR. 2 BA. 1·pt, bltn rangl"/ovtn/dsh-
dbl gar, ntw crpl!, children/ whr. Patio &: gar encl. Pool
ii"!!'!JN~~-~'!!i'~"-!iiii!!!!!!ii'!ii!!ijil Pf'r n10. rooms. $80 or $90 per month. • (;raciou11 touchcK, t .g. petg, n..1 .... 1091 NC\\'POrt·~. :; ls..JJ Pomona AvP., C.:'11. 673-1241 or 675-5048 ..,~,, ...,73•-.· • Sparkling V~ Beach · F'ircpl11.ce!1: V"f?'o.J
pet \\.'elcoml'. & clubhsc. S200 mo rent or
DISTRIBUTOR NEEDED * Jse. 546-9289.
front Bach. All .. ,,1 ,· n ·.·I ! Br $130 &: 2 Br $160. Pool le ~2 81.J{ to heh, 2 br, uW pd, e Lg closets + Jndry/work· :3-"""R-==~---=--1 " • I Id al J c. irpl !"' .. 1 " • 2 BA, + den, $'200. 2 Yearly. llJO. CtTatt'. c or OOchelon, c, ..&J 46th St. 772.8046. m10p k
Reliable pt'rson t n1an or R00~1l\IATE SER VJ CE. 3 Br, I Ba. choiC'!'! loc. Big h.,, ]993 Ch • 2 Bd Id•, l'lO pclll. au •. 1-CID.
ALA Rentals • 645-3900 ;:8-~1. ren, urch. Apt. Unfurn. 365 THE ;A(R\V~Ymv~~8tA \V/0 hkup, patk,7' "1·
"1\'Cln11.n1 1~i.ll be selected in Renta l!! to ahare, malt' or frlt'd }Td. Clean &: Vacant.
1hL'\ Hren to nmrket our NH-frmale. h"Onl SOO. S225/mo. l\lo to :'>lo °'. lse.
t))M.! ad,·ertisei:l ll('('C'SSity BEACON * "5-0111 8J3...t10::. home 962-2270.
products U1 local business. GRANN-IS CIIEETIFUJ. 2 ur:-1iOW,"
laC'torleiii t'I<:. \\"(' n1erchan· gHfagC'. drftpeS, stovt/re-
dise our produl'I! through frig. $150. 773 \\". \\lilso11.
coin operated equipment. l'\o Resldentlo1I Re1lty 64&-li2S
~tiling or (;'Xperlence is re. 2629 Harbor Blvd., CM ~~-----. \' • . 1t *' 3 BR, 'l BA, bltn.!, Cl'}>!!'.
quired. ou' mv.,lmoot " RENTAL SERVICE "" too<;.. SECURED. ch, r •uus &: pet OK.
BOYARDEE "Hoo FooM' 546-8660 6'1&-l'34
LOVELY Watt'Mron! 2 br, 2
ba, den, cpl~. drp!l, 1900 sq
fl. ":el bar, frplc, boftt slip.
a\·1i1. :year lease S400 nlCI.
67J..502'l
BLUFFS 3 Br .. 3 Ba .• <lt:.-'tl &
50' SUIXf.ttk. Short. term ren-
tal •ws you over $100 per
mo. Oney $400. 499-2974,
~736. is the choiee of 1\llllions in Serving Ne"'Jl(lrl-Cosfa l\fl!!l:ft EAST SIDE 3 BR, den,
the t.:SA. \re n I'.' t' d art'l'I.. O\'er 500 rentals avail· Children & pet.'I' ok. \\'all!r I =o~E7.L~U7.XE=~3~B~,-. ~,-.,-,-. -,-.-,.
disu·ibufon; to ~rrvice !hest t1blt N0\\1! \Vt K\lllrant~ pd. S22a. mo. 646-401i. $375. IMl7 Port Charles Pl.
prim!" account!f. 11 you have !'if"f'\'irt' ancl results. Otir fee 2 BR. 1~7..C f'harl~ lllarbor V1r1\• lhns1 213
a dC~il'f' !o sut-ceed in an i~ S15.00. Jr "'I' ran't find S1-ta/mo. 1'o dog!!. 642-22.ii!I. 67M601.
• Spaciou~ & ~'ice .. Stt'ps S:'llL redrc. I Hr. dui,ilcx.
10 v.·tr, U11I incl d. \early. Bnck [rpl. Jwam c.'Cil. priv
Sl 30 patio. $140. I adl!, no pct.
ALA Rent•ls e 645·3900 3.".6 1-.:. 20th . G..i;;..1:i:1i.
Balboa Is land __ .__ I eRapt, all u111:-01drr
BA YFRONT co~y l BR adults, no pcl!I or childn.11.
Ground noo,, · : S\15. n10., si; security vu~v.·, pr1 64&-8464
patio, parking. \V1nter or "°'""°"'=,.....~---yrly. 400 So. Bay(ronl, No. BACllELOR apt, nc1v crpts,
5. psin( A1tltx. Sl25. 1213)
* \\'Oi\.ll-~~-~in1:lt' roon1s,
k i l c hf'n t'/TV room.
ll a :"\\' k ~ :'II o. S60 Lp.
6r ..... 351::.
597-181!:1 or 11ee Sat & sun at
2860 La Salli·
1Rr.~rulnS1 20/rno, Gas &
\\tr pd. Adult~. 110 ~ts, no
1·1u1tlrrn 616-70~ aft j Ir hontst sohd bus iness of your yo11 "·hat you "·ant, )'OU 6--16-iOli. 11.'".BOR v••w 1-m•-4 s-,, ------ --
h d --------.u-. .,-.., LGI'.: 3 Br. 2 b11, frnlc. ~r So. O\\'fl 111t I r ~ m " n o u a don'! pay! >·air? Try 11$. H .. -.~ o· I • I I • cl ''' knd ,,_1 _, . ~nt1ngfon Beach in. am iv, poo • ub Bay I\('11'ly 1Trlt'f'. S300 mo.,°""-c--="=--..,..,~~,.~~~ gro1\•th potr11 ....... a, ... , can m-FUP..N bachf'.lor 11·it.h ga.ragP, pl"ivil. 1819 Port Strrlina. ' vm" minimum of~ and $95. mo. n.•ltl itudents OK. 67, •771 lJ7 Diamond. 6i>J288. • I BR dt!u . ..:e $139. Pnv "'" 2 BR. elect b'tin RIO. FA .,....,, · """"-.........,, al I ~.-t up. \\'rite to ut for an in· 2 BEOROOPtf hcusc. $130. hl., c-ta. newly paint~., _BA_V_CR-~--,-~-,--.-, Be, 2 BR .• $200 incl. ulLlit1e.a ,............. .. .. ,. c poo • -1e •
teMtw, include phol)(' num· fncd yard, bltn kit. dbl g~~ fiO'xlOO' fl'nced hl u.;,• ..,,,., '"" Choice location! \Vin1t'T 14~ ~ l8lh SI. Apt 10.
ber. S. M. Company, P . 0. 3 BEDROOMS, $160, bltn kit., Move in toda.>'. $l95 ..-21 ~ Ba, lgt'. D/R, FIR, \\'inton Really 67;)...3.331 ,-"'-;;·,.r,.. -·;---:--:---.,.-tfox" 1887, Colla Mta, Ca p0o1,p11.ysrouDd',dltldmiA ..... fil>k, O\'erszd kit. Abo B Ibo p LRG I br upper .
9?82&: J)tl-'.-""=~'flcom:;:o;'c.· ===;--·I ~ti.AGE REAL E~A~ avail. Furrrls~ 642-4589. ,..!_.a enin1ul1 C r r1 I I b I t.ns/dishlva.tbcr.
iJ . ..i-OR license. Ora~ LANDLORDS! ~M-171 .\46.JllOl LEASE/option. 2 br &: den, • $2;i \\1K &: Up.-On Ocean • Adul1,, no Pf"U;. at! 6,
County, off al~ rcneraJ. No :Z1i bla. l!'Omr \'l"\''· Anidou~. J.()1·f'Jy Ri1rti-l Br-P.oom• fi.~2--1().11.
fl..:f\IJU or b!Uf' sky. Rest \Vt Speclalfz. In Nf!WpOT't WWE ha\•t a l&rJ:e ~clti-11011 Aatnt ~i.)...itt"t lllll :'>h~kl .t:f"M.l <'i!-l'ool-C11I pd * \\'l/\.'T ~~rt H,\TEf\ .-
.II.,. -·· .... '""" .Jus v_.., Bu.ch • Coron11i dtl ~ft.r • c f 3 and 4 bedroom homt! - - ------e call t1i:~i40 e ..,, .. .., -.-r ~·~ ......... e • Daoa Poinl Iha! •--" I l RI< /, 4 Br homf'!I. l'Mlr __ __ A!Ut1r (11r11 :o;tudtQ~ $1 J.i, 1 ···-'I •··Jc ,~k. ~ «J" , • • can U'C' mo1.-n> nto A" 11~ 1 ,..,.., -.. '"' ;w,.....,,,.. n..~n-••• ~..i~•-~...,. btA('h. \"f"Ariy lra.."t'. $3.Ui Beicon Bo1y ... ~ '·'· l\rlul,, no pt'1,
Ar' l L •·kndJ. •!&-3992. vu.-nc:n ... .,....v .... ir ... rnL~ Al.moll lmmedlalel,y on our , • lo You! R,. n 1• 0 p 1 I•" p 11 n, mo. •11.d\, Agf'nt 548-1200. 213:) Eldrn. 'h::I'. l\Jit fi VERY Pr1\'llf". ruon1y I -----.-,--
TIME FOR NU-VIEW RENTALS SHERWOOD RF.AL TY, Newport Heights bdr p\ 1190 I roll Adu!"., . ., :t;. N•wly 67Jo«>30 or 494·3U3 $40-IS5S nl, 11 • }Cary. decor X-lrn 2 BH 2 BA au1cK CASH OlARMING J Br. hcuM! 1150 67:J..3914 a.lttr Ii pm. uhl .P«J .• rool. Slt1. 5.c&-2407:
"I' ",:.~ ~ ~~,,,: 3 BR. 2 BA, fleet bltin RIO, mo. Avail. l"•b, 15th. No Coron• dol Mar 1 BR. nr occ. laundry
THROU GH A "'WIS .,., f'A Jrr .. <-TPt.8. newly chUdrr:ntpe:l.1. &12..3233. b:. nr. 1Chool1. E'amUiea painted, 60'xl00' rencd ~ •• 7:"=.;,:;;.;:::::....::::...:::::.._ 1 F'UR..'l/ISHED Bffchfolor apl. facilit1t~ & r:1rf1Crt. Sll5.
DAILY l"ILOT only a t l>l'; mo. Aa<nt dbl far .. ldscpd, WHlcllff uoil palil. """· !IW/mo n~>11lh. ~"---~
WANT AD
546--41-tlr vr.caS-<nO\'e 1(.1 toda_v. $2%J S163. 2 BR, cplll/drpt, bltnt, Day~ &11-30!; arr 6 BACllF.l.OR a.pt. utilltk>o;
AnyQay ia llle BEST DA\" to per mo.. btam ctil. lh~atPd pool. !14s..<!i9i f$-l!I, ~i-D E 2l't SI. \1
642-5678 run •n ad! D on't VIILACE REAL ESJ'ATE quit! MJultj,, no ptl s , 1''a.sl ~•u:ltJ M't iuct a pl'll;;t Sll-0 P"r m,, ~~~:;. -------~-'-"'"tl."l"'"""-'' .. ;;;;;;nc.;.;1oda.::;>;..' c.6'2-.:.cl671 ....... '-........ 002-4.,..... ... m._ ____ :,);.:16..;81::;:03 ~1'.14, t11ll 11.wi.y -64J..j6"18 U1\ILY-PILnTlor ac:r10n'
I '
Gener1I 20122 Santa Ana Av~. ~15 181•1l Delmor, S48-8278.
D LRG 2 Hf{, Nl'w crpt lt
CLEAN 2 BH. no ~11.r. Ref's. ELUXE drape1. $130/nio. s11:... Coro'11l del :i.1ar. APARTMENTS * * s.1s-7209 * *
Clean '..! BR "·/pool, Uppl'r Air. Dlnd, · J.~rplc'~ . J S"•lm·
Bay area. St.:il. 673-4171 alt m111.J: I 0011 • HclllU1 Spa • • 2 \VEEKS 1''REE! •
tipm . Trn11l3 (.'rtt • Vo.me & Bil-1 BR .S12:i up -2 BR $140 up
;:---:--::-------·I liard Roon1. POOL *'* 6'1~2181
Back Bay l Bt:DROO'?>t
F'ROM .$165 2 BR., ""'1 blow .. -· MEDITERRANEAN cplll, drps, laud. hook·UP,
h<'olcd pool, chHdttn OK. VILLAGE
SJ&;. mo. 61H234. 2 OO I --_ 4 [Arbor Blvd .. C.~t.
Belboa,. l1l1nd 11141 567.s<a! ~
LITT~~~ .. ,;,a~~ 1~n;~c ""1 or~~Nl~A;ri~~t~f
BR. t:tovr lrt'fns: .• ntw Wg N°L\V 1-&-2-8-db.--
CrJJI I: pa.In!. n1., Grund r ilPU &
Cant.I. $1.95. mo. )'tb' only. townhou!lf'!· POOi, d"iu'.
6-""""' Frun Sla.l, 324 E. :nth ,,. .... ,v. 6+5-4161.
UNF1JRN. Dow n al1ir1, **BEAUTIFUL I Ii 2 B
Carpeted. 3 Bdrm., 2 Ba., C.O 1 R. South Bay Fron!. .$150 per n empon.ry Garden ApL'I'.
mo. ByO\\•ntr &K-2922-Pa 11 0 1, frp tc. pool.
• · • $1~165. Call· 546-S183.
Balboa Pentn1ute ATI'RAC. f'~tt!l:ttly paJrHCd°7
BA\'t"RONT flpls. I urn , Br. crpt/ncy,. drp~, blln:",
y,.11rl). Pr1\•. tii;·~·h •perk-1l!h"hr gar, no f)l'tl. $160 .
!ni . Uttl Jiff. I Hr. S200/mo: ~I
2 P.r, 2 bii. S300/mc. DUPJ.F.:x:-~<itl'~2-8;:-h1
6~1 -hf"arn ccullna. Pr"I pa 11o. no
2-BRI Ba. ne•dy C'f'dec rhildrf'n, •m JWI, rtf1. 316 $225.' Nr. ~an le bay. N~ t . ISU1 SI. '4~1.9."iJ.
chlldt"fn or pets. 673-!'.159J . 2 BR Du:pli0:1 11.crnu from
QUIET 2 Br 11.pt, i\Undttk. 11thl ~ PJrk. S1ovt, refrli.
SD> ~r mo. Cltan. no ptts. Nr \\ ~tc!Uf. Sl60/mo, •
Ct.II ~(1Q.·! ~l.l.Cn'. _M_ll-Q.I __ . _____ _
Ha\? !llJmtthlnr )'OU v.·anl to An)' day 1, I~ BEST DA\' to
M'll-cta.••iflfld adi rlo Jtl run an •d' D on' l
1'1'11 ·rail /\t>W 6f2~SI. dPla,J. .. call lodly 5u..56ilt
* 2 & 3 BR. t 'rplc. Blt•lrll.
CIOled garage. Near Sou.th
Coast Plaza, MS..23ll..
SJ.IARP 1 BR. 0oae lo 0CC
1r. ucr, $135 mo.
•• 557-7768 • " .
~=-2 lilt Uppct, cirp~. dr'ps.
ran:;e, o~n. refrlg. No pea.
$1L . 963-14:.t."1. 54~7729.
;-STUNNlNC_2_8r Gi7.rden
Apt. Pool. $16S. &&5-5530. $30
with ad.
e \Vil.SON GARDENS e
2 BR, J~i. BA, crpt/arps. encl
pa.llo. St«t. 642·fi8lt
1 BPfutf, ~love &: re:fJ1&.
Cl('an. AdUlll • no pet& n7
\\lc1'f 18th SI. $12.J o'IO.
E'IRA lrit nt>\\ l Hr. Bltrui.
Still.IC cpt11, drp1. ,. n c I
l(anllft'. Pr1v palio jl0-19)1
-UnGto~ 2Hrt Condo.
l 'a Bath. $150. Carpcrt
Call 637-~ll
2 BOR\1, wnkcn Jrv1na
n)()m. frplc, C"f11lll, 1.lrp•.
Gani;:,., $1Tj 6'7l-!.62!l.
j'i,\i11j .. LOR-tnJl.-.,.-.~Q.,~i<1~.
prh·u•"'· $100. + A11ults only.
, ....... \~•Ir &tl-:;37~
f1 llnt-"1 .i ~,[II"-~ ~
..
/
• •
\ • • .....
---____ .. ____ ,_ ---------
Looking For Someone
·To Take An Order?·
We're Good At It
We'll even ... pay the · 11ostage to get you to give us an orcler. Get
ready for some quick profits by mailing in your order today. Put
a hard·working DAILY PILOT classified want ad to work for you.
USE THIS ORDER FORM
. .
USE THIS HANDY ORDER BLANK. WE PAY POSTAGE!
5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE LINE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES
l
TIMfS '
-
suo
SS.SO
S6.IO
PAYM ENT ENCLOS ED 0 . SEND_ BILL 0
"" OR USE YOUR •
CHARGE CARD
Pub!i1h for , •• ,, ., , , .. , d•v•. b 19:~~'"1 • ·• •• .. •• •• • • •••••• ,,, .. ,,,,,
c 1.11;fic1•icn ................................................. .
• N.,., ............................. , ........................ ,: •. , .
Aflfl ••u ••••••••••.•.•••• , ••••• ,,, .•• ·•·· •· • • • • • • •• • • • •••·•• •• ••
C•lv , , , , •• , , , , • , ••. , , • , , , •• , , .. , , • Ph c~• •. , •• , , •.•.••• , ••• , •• , • ,
M•1ier Ch•r1J• Number ••••••• , ••• ,, •••• , Expir1tion 01!e , , , , , •• ,
l1nkAm1 ric1rd Nu mber , ,. , , , , •• , , , , •• , , • Exipr1lion 01!1 , • , • , , , ,
• , 12
l!Mf 5 TIM f S ·' TIMIS
---
'S7.40 . SI 1.70 Sl7.70
$8 .28 . S14.SO S22.l0
SI0.76 Sl7.JO S27.JO
TO f t6URE COST
Fuf 0<1!" ""• '"'"" '" ,,,J,
'''cf .bo"•· Include y11ur
t dllr1n o• p~one nu"lbtr.
Th, cc•! of YOU• .J •• ,, .~.
en,/ of th1 lin, on wh•ch f~t
le1I .""•"( .,f your t el i1 wrd·
It•. Add SJ.00 p!111 J ljn11
••+·~ if "ou '''"' '"' of 0.lllY PILOT 801 ,., .. ;,,
with frl t i11d rtpli11.
-~---.............................. CUT HERE -PASTE ON YO\Jl IN\lll:01'E!-~----
BU SIN ESS REPLY M.All
. -
Or•nge Co•st DAILY PILOT '
P. 0. Box '1560
C'os!• Mes•, Cel i/. 92626 -
Classifi ed Dept : . '
'
\ ..
Or· ·.Give ·Us an Or.der by Phone
'-I ' '
L
'
• ~ ~-... --
,
-. ..... :
•
'
'
" "•
,. ....
: .
. ,
' ,
.
.. :· ""
,
, " '
. ;, I . i ., .·
., 1.
At· ::642•5678, The Direct L·ine to
-DAILY PILOT
•
' ..
. ' . \
..
-\
+ t
. .
·~ ..
-~ , ' . .. Classlfiecl Want Alf'
. . ..
RES'ULTS
I
I :
~
'
i i • i
I I
' .
..
---
. .
----· -------
l •01rtmt1111 for«tflt ~I lrtl [
•
_ ... _
I
. . . ~ • •
DAILY l'ILOT (J
I~ l._A_ .. _ ..... _ ... _ ... _._ ... _,][•l I A,.,,_ .. -~ ... ll•l L.[ Ap_._ ..... _._ .. __ ._ ... _, ._~_._ .. _ .... _._ .. _ ... _._ ... _,~! ~~;JI•!
Apt. Unfum. :165"R_t. Unfurn. 365 --"-pt-;-Unlum. 365 "Pt. Unfurn. 365 "pis., • · • Aph., . , pis., -2£ Aplt.,-·-
_::::::=~~~~~~~i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;~~~ Furn, or Unfvrn. 370 Furn. Qr Unfurn. ~70 fur". or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. · 370.. 1_._,____ IJlid llHcb-•.• .Jio.w-'..lleadL · ft . ~H~u;nt~in~gt~on~~lle~~~-~;;i;,fl;•ii;:M;ki;":'.-:";-~""~__,,::'.j,_.,,,i'IJ[il'\i' w~:-=-~·-:_--;;::::=.;.~~;;;~~=-=;;;;;;~~'~"8':~·;;::::="'·<J------· -H. Y Pl("IR N-E. ·wPORTERS -"2-att:·2-a-"T"' • UIA.IMla.....~ --·3 Ufil:.M.._ ___ ~;::i;~;::f;;;:~:::ai::::~,.::~:::·· ;;;~::::··;;;_::;~;::;):;;•~;;:li!!!!;;~::;~;:;:·· ::;=;:;..-;: .. ::...~:l --
I I
i • i
I
c
L
-A--
f 1"~
• ,,
I
. .
5
5 ·
I
F
I
E
' D
6
4
2
•
5
6
'I ••
' ' ~
'
•
a .....
."l ,
'
.. t\tllycllrpetf!dlrdraped,up-ON BEACH! ~----"._.)I r: ••I(!: '7zl[!} .-~-~
STAY HOME ON :,~. ":t::~··~.: ..... :::: 2 BR Untum Fr. $231?/mo. THE EXCITING ;])on i mjjj :Jfz11 &jt .. WEEKENDS. pd. """ mo .. year\y. 816 FUrnltu... Available 1 Bedroom, 1 Both
WOULDN'T YOU? •ml•~."':;~~:oso Q ·~~=::;? PALM MESA APTS. 2 Bedrooms, 2 Baths
Jt's aJl bere for you to enjoy Saturdays and -··• 'IL& Pl~~ ... ~m.,.pl=..~kl •. n• FUN IN THE SUNI,
S d d II k I t ._,, ... , .. ~cuu • Ct'11tra l alr rnndillnnins; & hratlug un ays an a wee ong, oo. e NEW DELUXE e HUN·TINGTON Minutes to New~ort Beach • Charmini; flN"plat'.~t. 3 •111u:lou• floor plan• $750,000 health spa, 7 swimmi,ng pools. 7 3 BR, 2 llA Apt tor , .. ,.. I Jigli,(ed t~nnis courts, bicycle trails,· putting lncld lf)ac: fnUte .uite, din PAC· FIC Unbelievably large apts. ecorator furnish· • tJnu•u1l lar~r rloM"t• & 8loraf1:~ on p1do
green, shuffleboard. rroquet.;Spacious junior nn & dbl aan.ee; auto door TU ociAN AVE.. H.JJ. ed. Huge Pool, jacuzzi. e.lectrir. built-ins, shag \• • 2 1111·in1u11n1t pool&.1hrr111rut lr 11001, ••un111
l's from $170 monthly; plus 1 or 2-bedroom opener avail. Pool Ii here· '(TI4) $36.Jm ' carpets, drape~. ~auna & more! • Cym. bllll1u·d~. tlrivin.ii r11.ngf'. pulling green
plans and 2-story town houses with 2 or 3 allon '"'"· Oto oe<n 10 am-6 pm D•lly ADULTS......NO PETS b e sm e \\'ILlJAM WALTERS co. ' All tttiHtir11 lncludrtl
bed1rooms. Alltwith electric kidtchens, priv5atb-e 865 Am;go, way. NB SINGLES .. , .... , $145 r•'•v•~11ll' • l/~!UtMo\11!0 a cony or pa 10, carpeting, raper1es . u M ~ R -----
terranean parking. elevators. optional maid \\'IU.J~~ALTlRS co. Whet do you w•nt 1 BDRMS •.. · ..... $155
service, Gourmet food market, dry cleaner, NEWPORT BE"CH in •n •p•rtmont • 2 BDRMS •........ $175
beauty saJon on grounds. See beautifully fu.r· Ville Gren•d• Apts. Huge "''•lk in f·toset! Dish-Unfurnished Aptt. Av•·ilebl•
nished models today. 9 a.m, to 6 p.m. ·other F ~~ waMPrs!' Sf'par11.Te. dining From s•• ••. $"Lr ... t~ . ____, ·~ our UIT\l.i..\Nmc• with ""'"'"4--.ttas!-Pl:iol!'1-Be11.·-·ren.----__ .. __,,,_ ~ ~ ....__ ~-.1mes uy appointment. vust north-61 raS 1li~ Jeii above & ·below, Gracious "'llU YOU t RE RIGHT Island at Jamboree and . San Joaquin HilJs living &-quJet .surroundlni vironmen1! For all ,thl, And -.
Road. · . tor ramily wuh ohud,..n. m•;:~ -B.hl• Puorto THEY 'RE UNDERPRICED!
Near Corona del Mar High 156 I MESA DR ., CD1t1 Mia. T1l1phon1 (714) 644-1900 for rentel Information. School. Fireplaoe, wtM bar & 2'110 !?th Strttl at OelA"'11rfl, 5 bk
H B All · · c~ I s So. of Nowport Blvd. built-in kitchfln Appl!~. · • rem1un1ng one lJl1·
PARK NEWPORT APARTMENTS 8.15 AMTGOS WAY 644-2991 ""' ""'"· $l40. "'""'" 546-9860 on the bay CoJd,vell. Banker k co. ;;>16-!!!!!i"""!!'!!·!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!IJ!!J
6551 Warner, Huntington Beach
714/847-8526 .... ~
Managing Agent "'! ~LJ;~~~~~'.J~'g"====' Huntington Boach ;!'. FRESH AIR :: " I fu "I l!!J
\\1aJk:rblks to Beach1 Apt1.,. Apt1 ,,
Apts .. ,
Furn. or Unfurn.
Apt1.,
370 Furn. or Unfurn. Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 1--------365 370
LRG . 2 BR, $140 Lie 3 BR Apt. newly d~r. Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. qr Unfurn. 370 Costa Mes• Coste Mes• . ·'
Irvin• Irvi ne
Forced air hPating
2 children welcome
Hot & cold "''Hier tum
J Bdrm. 2 BR!h. $150
·carpels And rl.rapes
Built-i n stove
Carport-s111U shoy,·er
Laundry roon1.
Fenced yard. No p!"ls
MES" VILL"GE "pis.
1046 El Camino Or. •A
S4~7331
HARBOR
TOWNHOUSE
2217 HArbor, Nr. \\''ilsnn
2 BP on J fir. Xlnt Mnrl.
Lrg t losels-carrort. $125 ..
• Heated P(IOJ.-Nr Shop·a
Adults only, no pets.
IUCSliBJIU
-21-
APARTMENTS
3 BR. 2 BA .................. $255.
2 BR. 11, BA .......... $1110.
TALSO AVAfL. FURN.)
f'llew adult garden Apts.
ISi E. 21st. 64~8666
"TllE GABl.ES"
2 Br .. \\'/J?;ar. Adults, cpts,
drps. bttn.c;, fncd yr d .
\\'fpaho, \\'tr pd, 636-4.120
2439--C Or11ngP Ave. $1 ~1.i
HARBOR
TOWNHOUSE
2217 Harbor. nc11.r Wilson
2 BR: 11,, BA STUDIO
TO\VNHOUSE. $140.'mo.
• l-feated Pool-Nr. Shnp'g
Adults only, no pets
S93 1 BR '.l'/v:rgr . 1 11.r:lult
non-sm:>k~r. St'lv(', l'<'fri,i:i: ..
rirafK;'S. No pPts, rlrposil.
Rf'f. 9:.4 \V. 17th 64.'>-3787
SPAC. 2 & 3 Br. Art.. $140 up
Pool, cpl ldrp., bl tns. Kiris ok
1995 Maple No. l 642-3813
22!Xi Ccille.':'P Nn. 5 .642-7035
2 BR. unf., Cl ean, Cpts.
, Ne"'' pain1. $13.1 mo.
70 Shalimar, 538-4741.
2 BR. ll,-2 BA .. carJ)Ort &
laund ry facili ties. SlfJI.
Avail. h1ardl 1. 546-859~
' flME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAltY PILOT
WANT AD
842-5678 · •
SPACIOUS l ·Br, 2 Ba, Shag
crp·..j, bltns, drps, ))Alio,
$155 mo. 645-4647, 548-032-4
11ft J pm,
2CH5 Tustin Ave. 2 BR.
Bf'llu1. !!hag crpts, beem
ceil.. lrg tncd patio, gar +
lndry hook-up, 646-43RO.
3 BR, 2 ha, 2 sm children
OK. l11undry tacit · avail,
S16:J. 1033 ~fission Dr. CM.
557-311)0.
DUPLEX 2 Br. 112 Bil,
\Vil.Sher dryE'r, dWshr, patio.
NicP & cll'.'an. 548--0844. ·
"•2. BR ... 2 BA STUDIO.
Crrits, drp~. patio. POOL .. 1
chilrl ok. 616--019fi ..
2;BR .. 11.lr ba .. pool. No pets.
U1i l. prl. Nr stores
Fortin, Realtnr
Dan• Ppint
LGE 1 BR OCf'an view 11.pl,
bar, din arl!a, !iv rm, lge br
& ba. Balcony, new sha~ cpl
& drp.c;, bltns & refrig, $165 .. ,
S,37-3927. &17-5178.
East Bluff
Under New Manaiement Dbl at1¥hed gar, trplc, 1%1 ~.,.;,.· -----------...;. _____ _
Ask about our disrount plan B,11,; bltns, except refrig, Costa M11• Coit• Me ..
& move-in' ano'w. Childre'rl 6 S225. No lna;:ls, no De,ta.1--------------------
small pet! wP-lcome. Newly 536-lnt.. , ,,--......
rfldec .. Sea ~Ir Apts. 2 B \ 1 hlkN.ofAdamo lofi Bo"h) R, 2 BA, $159,
Tl9 Apl 6 Utit• 5.16-2796 3 BR, 3 BA, $175. ~ -.
536-7070 POOL-$75 .. MOVE-IN ALLOW. \,.t"~ ~ Qu iet and
Serene
Atmosphere
for Adults .
DELUXE 3 BR, 2 Ba.,
fireplace, cpl. drape!, bull!-2614-D Delaware, H.B. _,
ins, dsh"'·11.shl!r: near school. Mgr. S36-5Ull, 646.9666 · _,
S235/mo. ~140. 1 BR $125 up .. 2 Br. 2 & Slfi() • ( ~
DELUXE 2 BR, 2 Ba., cpt,
drapes, built-ins,
dish,vashe-r. Nl"ar school.
$170/mo, 968-014Q:.
2 Wks Free Rent
Walk to beach, new luxurious
11'11: 1 BR, S~ crpl, Bltns,
drps,' patio, lanai 11rea, bbq,
11ub!erranean park'g.. gar
avail. Balronir.11, frplf''Jli,
lndry f11.ci\. 5J9.1661, 53&-0109,
536-5015.
2 BR. crpts. drps, frnt yrd.,
childI'l'n ok . no pet!. $l35.
mo. 1147-70&!.
Cl. :IM en1
1-BDRM. 11.pL. carp, drapes,
up. Cpl/rlrps, pool, rte rm. I J
::kl~hbf!;~h.~9~~ ~~ IVING 1.'ith Sf. 53&-1244.
BE"CHWOOD "PTS.
Brand new 1·2·3 Br. \Valk
10 beach. Cpt/drp~. h\h'ls,
frpl. 125 16th St. 847·~957.
e CHEZ ORO A PTS •
82.14 . Atl11nt11.. 1-2-3 Br's.
POOL .. Priva!e f'lo.~rrl gar.
Washer/dryer .. 536--03.16.
LARGE 2 BR .. 2 811. .. crpta,
drps, i>ncl. patio & gar. No
prts .. Sl5.l. 536-1575.
LARGE, cif>Rn 2 BR. Sltiw.
~arage. $165/mo, 5J6-.6027
before 4 p.m ..
at Merrimac \\7oods offers so many arlvan·
tages. You'll enjoy truly lovely surround·
lngs "''ithin in your o"''" apartment and a
host of recreational filcilities are available
\\ri thin the apartment comp lex .
1 & 2 BR Apts w /Terraces
Furn . & Unfurn.-From $140
Shag carpeting • drapes • self cleaning
ovens • di sposals • Joads of closet space
• closed garages. Much more!
Apt. Unfurn. · 365
Newport B•ach
SF.ACJ .. IFF Ml{M!",•I RR. 111
R11 Sh.1rlln, 2 F\R , 11~ fl"
rOOL. Crits, rlrp~. hltnit.
$1fJO to $17;,/n10. A~k 1'1111"11!
nur riisoo11n1 , 15T.J fSls rr ntu1
,\\'f>, 5-1R-2AA2
OCEAN rRON'I', 11p11c1011,~ \
hdrm 11partn1,.nt. \. 11 1· i:, r
kilchrn r>n hes! par1 ol thr
hr11rh. Av11Jl11blr April 1.
f.1Alllt'f' Arltill.~ nnly. $:l00.
1;~5.(l(',AA, 'gaA & \\•aJer pai1, SUIO Visit our model unit today to see how happy
NEW 800 Amigos Way. 2 Month. Call 536-68117. 5.'lJi'.3192 l•gun.: ·ee,,ch living ca n be yours at .. . . -11~-nh00• 2 b• 2• ba 1 San Juan C•plstr•no .,~.,. •· ~ ' l BR, Xtra n\cP, $125. Hot
duplex 2 hr 2 hA frplc.c; 2 BR, 1 BA. Oldrr couple MERRIMAC wo· ODS A · · • · · water & heal paid for . Child partm•nts NF.\I/ 2 Rll . C11pi~tram Cnn-rpts & draprs. hltni;, pool . 2 prt'f .. No pets. Avail. Mar, 1.
t1lV\ OK, 5-1&-71*i0. $1~2-3902. s1_i:.i:. mo. 544.mq 425 Merrimac W1y, Cost• M•s• rtn, •IOVf', rrfrtg ,.If'. $170.
car gar~e. ..,.,.., ea. 1 yr -'-"~":--c:'-c:--:--:::c=-;;::::c. I ·-----------'-'--~-----1 • fi7:'l-21fi2 • lse. RrfrN>ncf's. 67!'.-t3AA. · BEACHBLUFF APTS, VAc11ncies cost money .. Rent ~-~
Th r I d . th Sp11c 2 & 3 Br. 2 ha. Pool, Pl!.· "'"" ho"'' ,,1 111orl! Apt. Unfurn. 365 'pt. Unfurr\. 365 S1nt1 An1 e asesc r11w 1n e l . . .. • ·• ..
Iv t D .1 I' I I t 110, D/W. 8231 Elh11 ~47-3.q57, bldg e!c thru a Dally Pilot L N" I ----------es· -.. a 111 Y o ·· · •aune 1gu• Newport B•ach Cla~si!ird Ad. 642-567R. I DAILY Plwr lor action! ,~C;:l•~·~·~;u~·'".'.!.A~d':.. -----1 17.::::::;;;;;::::~0:.::-"' FAMILIES -----leguna Nigu•I Apts
Apt. Unfurn. 365 \pt. Unfurn. 36J Apt. Unfurn. 365 1BR.1 BA + 2 BR, 2 RA 2 BR Twnh11e, llh Ba, dhwhr. WELCO' ME!
F"OM $'°" C I'd d 'd wsh/dry hook up, eOC'I g11.r. Irvine lrv1·no lrv1"no .... .Lt).'}. rp • rp · pd TV bl I Nr. Ho;ig hosp. Sl 9 fl .
Quick to reserve an apartment ••• ln our new adult secU,on. (The
quicker you are, the better your chances of getting the floor plan
and location that fit you best.)
Park West apartments tend to flll up fast.
With junior executives. And secretaries. And engineers. And
everybody else who likes our location . (Close to employmentcenlers
and freeways. Near .•h9pping, schools, chur~hea and the UC Jrviite
campus .. )
With lady golfers. And everybody-else who likes living across the
street from an 18·hole puQlfC golf'cOUrss. '
gas ., ca e, wa er,
all bltns. lndry are11.s. hlrl. ~3666.. SINGLE STORY
pool, BBQ's, priv patios & 2 BR, 2 Ba., SIC ovtn. cpt'd. South 511 A•mospher1
balconies. Open 10 A.M. lo rlrp 'd, deck & gar. No pelt 2 BDRM ·2 BATH
9 P.M. 4.95-4272. 499-2277, l300/per mo .. Side til!' avail. Sl.75/mo.
291'.Ml Aloma, oH Crown Val. 673-824B. Carf)e!a anrl DrAfW!I
ley Prkwy. AJr Cond;l]on•d 2 BFt. rlec bltnF, dl11pC'l!lal,
Lido lslo
BE"UTIFUL
B"YFRONT ~ Br, !ltutf!o 11pr, 2 ha. All
elN", Incl dbl door N.'lrig,
eltt. r&ng(', rli11pn1111J. ri11h-
wshr, wa!!h dryr. 2 G11ra.er
spatl"'ll. Elec, rlnnr npenl"r8.
Ntwly T'MPr. S425 mo. Min.
I yr Jea11e. No sm11.11 chilrl -
re.n. Can he ~,.n F'rh 19 &.
20 only, 417 Vi11 Lidn Souri,
Apt B. Aitk tor Mr. Golden.
For furlhPr inro phone
17141 642·11261
DELUXE 2 t, 3 Br .. 2 & ..
P.ncl. g11r. $150 up. RPntaJ
Ofc. :'\095 Mace Ave ,
546-1034.
Mission Vi•io
cpl , drp11, 111.unrlry hokk-Upi'I, Private ·Patla«
poOI ~ c11ban11 . Children HEATED POOL
OK $1"" 67, 6....,~ Carport & Storai'e · "" mn. · .. ,.,,.., Nr. Schonl111
WE,$. TC LI f" F Arl't1. 2 Nr, &i. Cn11~t Pl11za
Bedrpo~, 2 b11th. Adul!s o~ HIDDEN VILLAGE
ly, $275! Agt 67>49.'m. 2fiOO South SaltA * 1:.RG 2 br lnwer 11rit. frplc. {f'ntr.r 2 hlk11 W. nf Brt111tol.
bltn1. Nr. Lirln .. Yearly 508 nfr W11.rnrr nn Ltntla W11y,
351h SI. 642-0507. 110uth lo W. Central)
Sllnt11. An11. • 546-1;,25 I..OVEt.Y 3 BR, !rpl.. Walk to ~ch. J..C/IHt", 3 Heat~ Poola
ABBEY REALTY 642-3850 Lari:;t'I CTubhouse elc .. BBQ
ChUd Care Center e YEARLY·Spacioo11. Ni>Ar Great new l 2 & 3 Bdrm1
Ocf'll.n. 2 BR. Oen. Only Fmm $1<19
$250. Appl . 67:t-L'Ml9. SOUTH CO"ST
OCEAN vie"''· hugf!' newtr 2 VIL LAS
BDRM 1 Mth $250 mo. yrly. 1101 MacArthur Blvd.
A11:t. 675-1972. MG-882.1
-~-~-~~-1
A.pt1., Apts.,
· Furn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. 370
Apt .• Unfurn.
We&tcllff
\\'f.S'l'C'Lrf'r aJ't"ll, ~ BR, 2
RA, Cor.y frpl('. Gardeh
rHt ln. Sln-\f!11fory ,
~11f'l<tproof, Rltn11, F' I A
hr11.1. l.ri:: riln rn1. \Valk to
\\'r~trlHI Pll\7.8, llf'm~a f'mm
Cn1••""1-1665 lrvlnr. S19~.
Arlll~. li42~023!'1.
Apts.,
Furn. or Unf(lrn. 370
Back Bay
1 & 2 RR A.1'tl'I. F'urn f)r un·
rurn . S111.rt1ni,: at. S\l.'l/1nti.
f'f)(l1. nn ptt•, re t '1 '.
5·18-~ft4ii.
Costa Me1e
BRAND NEW
Ff'l'lm Sl.45 .. D\11hwa.~her. •h"I
f'1trpettnz, walk·ln Cloaeta.
~·nrrod alr heat, extra. la.rat
rnom 1. Belutiful 11me room,
hl')11tf"rl r»ol, BBQ'1, ~ntlOlf
tod gor&J1?1, quiet auITOundl
ln.Q'l'I k cloJe tn 11.hoppln1.
Atlu/1 llvln.r. nn pe111.
EL C,ORpov" "PTS.
2077 Ch,rte St. 642·4•170
Near Harbor & J-l11mlllon St~
* 1 BEDROOM * 11.~ R8. Townhouaf! con~pt.
Beam collinJt!I, 11xtrn lrl
hrdrma. enf'J J. · tlo. mcreit•
lion rm, 11auna hath,, etc.
Adu!ta. Our Sund11y &ft.-r.
noon B-B·Q'11 & 1'Tec Ari
Uuon11 ct1rlina ICIQn,
H"RBOR GREENS
' M6.!Q25
ro: RESULTS .YOO C'&n 0.
pend on, Call the Supeor-
s a I e 1 man •. DA.Uy PUot-
C\a•r.dtled 6"Z-5t78 -placs
your Ad 4 cha~ Ill
Apts.,
Furn. or Unfurn. 370
With weight-watchers. A nd welght·111ters. And everybody else
who could gain (or lose) somethi'hg from Park West's fabulous re c·
reation, (Swimming and therapy pools. icomplete health club with
trained attendants. Night·llJ~hled tenn!.~: Vo~ybaU, handball. Large
turl area for jogging and touch footbaU. Ptus lounges, game and
card rooms in the handsome two-story clubhouse.)
e BRAND NEW! 3 br, J t,y
ba. 2 1tory condo. Sha.it.
bltns, patio, pool, rncl.
garagt. $250. mo. S30--0871.
S1nt1 Ana Santa Ant Santa Ana
.. Park West has many other attractions, too. So ·even if you're not
an executive, or a golfer, or a Welght·watcher , •• you'll' atlll flt In. If . ' you hurry.. · ·
(Families: you'll fit in here, too. SP.eels/ iectlon1 w ith toi. lots.
Special facilitles: Pre·school.JuniorOlyntplc alze pool. Te,en center.)
PARK WIJS,. ..
3883 Parkvlew Lane, Irvine. Just off the San Diego Freew1y at Culver Road.
One bedroQm .. from.$110. Two bedroom. two baVl.frorh St95.
---------------------------
•
N•wport Beach
WATERFRONT. lrJ. rilx
Townhse, !! Br., 3 Ba .. den,
1700 aq. ft . MllnY rxtrl\11 .
145'1 per mn , Nn pt'I~, Plt'r
& floe.I 11.vll!I for lrg. hnat ..
.l507 Fin!P.y A v t . Ap-
po!ntmf'nl 714: 67:\-.1124!1.
'NEW DELUXE R fA C H
APARTMENT. $.125 mnnth·
ly ann., rittl'!. 51.l Wf'llll Bay
AvP.nur. Nt"wporl Beach .
YRLY • Oup1PX, nr. bell .. ~
br., 2 ha .. frplc., d.!hwahr ..
laund. $325.. f Am I l y. I 675-<128.'l.
Yrly Dix 2 Br·Boach
2 Ba .. bltns., rll1pl.1
d11hwshr .. lniiry ho ti k up ,
-gar .. 21.1: 387-2257.
'*'!..ARCE 3 Br. 2 811, Cl'f)tfl.
dl'pll. bltn1. a11r11.ge, 1-'i hlk
tn My, I blk llCf"ll.n. Yee.rly,
$280 mo lel.M". MS.-2820 •
3 BR.. 2 BA, A ~n S:iOO .. A11k
fflr Anita, Jt1l'W'l'l Realty,
~7:t-G210.
LGE. 2 Br, 2 Bil. YNI IMJ.
S190/rM. 215 Pl'Oflpl'Ct Avt ..
Ni>wport 9hortlll. 49'1-9502.
DELUXE 2 BR. apt w/frplc.
Bt-111 Eu! Bluff looetion,
SZlO. 844-~7.
BLOCK from bay or bt•cb, 1
' 2 BR w/hugt yii:rd.
615-7515 or f213l 926-130-1 .
Pu! a llltll' "IOOl' ltl YoW'
Levl11. ttll l~ b8uble~ tor
"lxlcb'', can Ou1lt1td •s.:J.-667~.
ONE PICTURE 15 WORTH A THOUSAND WORDS
le ocfv•nturou1 -Come dl1c:over for your1elf oil th•
fonto1tlc fechH•• of our "Mountain Grt•nery Aportmtnlt."
3050 5. IRl~TOL, SANTA ANA •/, M•• Noor• o• 1our• ro.ur •WA
1 & 2 bedroom 557-0586 Aduh living
PNftt1t.MTfr M•,..t•• lit1 h . C•'"'*l•t """''' <•·
•
'
/.
•
! •
'
DAILY PILOT ,....,,,_U,1912
• ...,-:.: ...... l~ .'.";;I _ ...... ·~1~;;:1 ._I iiiiii··_.· .. ·~l~~I u.•~'-llS111 Utt .... -I --·-J[5J 1-· .. -l[5J .__I _'" .... _ ..... ~][{] :-1 _.,......_ ... _. ~I
Apts. Rooms 400 Bu1lnH1 Rtnt1I 44J ~Liiios~r~---;;~SS;l~·C~t:m~ni=~=r,c;~: •• ~c~ri=l:t!m~~~~~~;;~;;~~;;;;~;;;;~~~Holp-W1med, M lr'F-11
;,.__., Unfum..._ 270 . • "TIIE fM:f R " in Can· ~~~ (frM .•4~>. JSO CONCRETE WO'\J5i:.· ~T~air!!j.H::;°";;;';;1;:'~11;;1;";;;in;;jg;:6;;;;;;;:::j.H_t~lp~W-•-n-ttd~'-M_.&_F_7_10.~coo1<, male or female, first
"' •·.·. _ ---·-··-···· ROOMS• t1!I ';k. "Up Olntt • nt"' ~· a new -t OUND: ~rtoiina • p -1. ~-., ~ I ..-.-::--.. ---.,, -..., ....... ., l.ll'1 ...... ndl ,,.,. "·-c ,-,85'8 '" aunnt;-)!t :Adotle, I m.tl "" "J' Apr. ~"' lnrifilJ n ihOpt, Sell' r.rtY ~ whit.e fluffy at. 0 •·• e mlot-w/Wftt-chllf. '"bol'Md uallt)' work: Carpets, \\'indowi, Floor de. A Be1utlful1 dtl Sa.n Ju1n Capi3trano.
1l•wport BJvd., .f · ~ · llO appreciate. $10tmo UP , Whir• paw1, flOH, Very Comer ot Oranr• i: Pac. su.tfOi q RA!tid. A c.omm •J. 54.Mlll. ---~+-=----!
**NEW**
LA COSTA APTS.
I & 2 lodroo"'
• 8 wJt·llt• • Sha,: earpet1
• Drape& • Walk ln clotet•
• Swimminr Pool e Bar-b-Quta
• EncloMd C•ra1e
All Utilities Paid
AtluJtt. no ~'
Walkins dl•ta..ncr t"
ahopplnc c,.nttr
Sl4 Avocodo St., C.M.
'42-'701
541-fTM, 4~ .'l/\1h St. N.B. 673-9500, 1e.atle & atttct. Rfd colh1r Cat Hwy. Mlutna rrt 2111 • D di 1., Ci I Div of Gen'! Foods nttds COOK lbfll 833-3166 I at midnta:hL Need• mltdicaJ FREE Jdeu. advke al>d · 1,'. ca _. ean nt you. L.eun A teach prol S!Jpen·i~·Muat know dlet. TUSTIN, Romn tn private ~fANUFAC'TURINC, Stlei, w • tvlnf' ar,.a, i '" * \ E 00 EVERYT!nNC * mll.keup tec-ht, Exec. pos. homt. Near fwy'a. ret OK :\fALE 1 1ttenOon. $100 reward, nn e•t mate•. IW l charse tor ... HR P'IO,NE ...... ..,...., tJ.~30 thl.tt • • 838--0813 • • olflt=-1!. t))lca. Cood t..acwa i -it'll'Y cur Y med quKtiota atktd, M5-Ml64. I• • bHutlluJ job a! a rta.1. oV'I , ~ ll,_,_.,,. ava.U . 842-2664. Parkhurst Rl!tlrt!ml"nl
locauon. SlOO. to $390. mo. Jiu dot. Vic. Trudy 1,.n. and LOST· , _ -~ J-'-.. ..... prlc~. 64>-5073. DUTCH l\.~nt. S<'rvice for ACCOUNTING Clerk. t yr, * 962·S531 •
ROOM w/prtv ent, priv ba &. 434-'65.1. Ya.rm l1J•. H.B., 846-~ · · .... '""' , ,.., •i•ntlr & tloon;, windows le carpet · /P AIR ---,,.:;~;;;,,..:--
•hcwtr. util pd. part. turn. I d t I I R t I 450 84?·9614 •mlt German po Inter CEMENT WORK. no JOb too cleaning. 537·1Yl'I e'X-pf!rte~ A or Co . * COOKS
H.B. iU-3573 eve• for appt. n Ut r 1 In 1 Bl.ACK m.\le CoCH-po11 ~·/bead1. Male A: ,leml. Vic amtU, rtuonable. Free Anti Soll Cir pets ~~t ~:i;~;~to. ~~ Res1drntial C11.re Fiu:-ilities
FOR t'ttlt to lady. bedrriom type do;, white ('hln & Artam• •Beach, Its. Small Estim. H. Stuftlck, S4~l~. After' Cleaning Juan Cap!Atrano. 493-4586. • S45-30l 3 •
on 2nd noor. cara.se. Ntar 4,000 SQ. FT. whLtkers. vie. peter 8 0 n I Rewmj. 536-3533. PATIOS. waUu. drh-e, in•t&ll 1 COMi'11UNAL df'nt11J oHice
Cott• Mesa Park~ 646--0669. Sprinkled • Good location. Sch.I, H.B. ~152. new lawne. uw. break, Income IX nerd11 ;>·ovng perso" with
G t H
'll $450. per month. SMALL Black male doe. Vic , . ]~ remove. &4.s-.1663 tor e•t. CLARK &. Torier Tax AccountAnt df'ntal office experie~.
U.I om• .. 5,000 SQ. FT. MM.ton V~jo. L'ovt • lnttruetlon ... WINTER. Ratel! C.Oncrete Service. 2' YEARS exp. in ACCOUNTS front and back. Meditative.
*PRIVATE ROOM* S650. permol'lth ehUd~n. Someont plta.se noon:, patior, drive•. area. Personal fflr'Vtce in RECEIVABLE crct1tive, \'l'gmrian life
tor emhulatory peraon. Gl'IOl'I Roy McC1rdle Realtor claim: 837~9681. •idew-.lks. Don, 642--8514. your home. Call for appt . CONTROL CLERK styJP (Inly. 494-4685. t~. nice cheerlul·1urmund· 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. FOUND: Black & "'hit!'! School• & Contr•ctor 5'16-7735, Ho..i1ud Clark & N~..i•port BeAch firm 111 stf'k· • * * • * tna8. 54~7729 J 1natrucflonl 575 . Jol\tl Toner. lng An acrountll_nt w min. FATHER t.. Soni>-~'Orkm&
• Call "-'•-~""3 * mll ~ puppy. Approx , 6-8 ROOM AddlU0111, E1tima1e1, ---------3 Yl"5 tx""r. Musi kl! txprr. ~--,,.~,....,I!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•! ~1·ks old. Near Colle;e Pk P Ironing •N ronrr11.c·tor tf'am, Of-sign, Edinger·Sinta An• School. 54&--l.547. R.IVATI TUTOR. ple.n1 & layout, t ina:le or 2 ----------ln all phases t1! grner11.! 11c· . <'11.rprnrry, d f' c n rat 1 n g,
2.';0fJ ~·ti, unlt, Irr. b'ont SMALL Ptxldl Modem math, readina:. 1tory. L.T. CDnstruction. EXPER. IRONING t ('t1t1ntlng, Allillly tl"I rom· plumhtng, \\•iring, •.tc.
olfl,.e. ,,('llr NtWpOrt Yrwy. _.___ ,~·-wht or aclence. •tudy methodt, tic. 847-1511. $1.00 Hour. 548·6793 p!ete AIR thru Tri11tl Bal· ALTERATIO~S ,.~ialty.
111 So. Santa Ana. $250. Ptl' <;.UO.Jup&i'ne COIUI-. No Lags, AU ltvell. CaJJ after •:30 J~A~C~K~~T~a-u-1-.-.... -R~•p_a_lr J1nitorl•I 11 nr,. a nttesslly, ArcuratP 11 Yrs. jn buafnet.s. Llc. k
Rental• to Share 430
ROOMMA'T& wanted t n
tl'IAre -4-br-hou-.e w/htated
FA.ULOUS 2 BR pool. Inttrview r t q 'd ,
~tudenll co"' 1 d •" d. SllD & $165 ~urn/Uni 531-1131, 531.1121 .
YtlU won't tlnd • Laratr, nicer :ri=.-'.,,C'-"F~--,ept tor lew. Beaut. s•rdtn SJ.fARE Ca n d o m 1 n I u m
•Na, petlo.. Quiet deed-end w/\INJm1n, prl rm • bt, N.
fitrtlt, Ju•t s. or NfW]Xlt1 Cotta Mt'll. S&O. M:l-.,913
mo. lf!a!WJ or mo. ln mo. 1v/r@d r!bbqn1 .. fo~nd on 645-5176. remod., addlt. 20 yn exp'. typing & use of 10 key arld· booderl, R.1S-354S.
\V11J1wnrth Real Ettat• Clearbrook St. 962--01.18. LE..c;sQNS in F'renoh b" Llc'd, Mv Way Co. 547-0036. AP'I' deaninR -ca~t aham· Ina: mach!rH! req'd. Xtn't "'" '"10 !'ND s ' ' . fl ,,·orking mnrl" & en, bene· COUNTf.R "'Oman l l -2,
i;i.-T : um of money at Ed rrtnch native expeTie~ Addition. * Remodellna pooina. nor stripp ing and fits. Call 644.,'\25R. M(ln-F'ri. Appl y 2 thru 4pm RENT or Jea.w, l ottlCf!I,
1
unks, May 2nd '71. Call & in private tu tor In i . Gerwick &: Son. Lie. waxing, free est. 842-1996. dll ily. S99 \I/. 191h St, CM.
Ave. Adults, no pet1. '°11
Fullerton Av•., C.M. CJu1l
r;.of&ylMU630.
HACl!NOA
HARllOR
2<1 AVOCADO ,sTREET
Adu.lt.11 only • No Pr.ts
Deluxe 1 &.. 2 BR. Pool
Glraie. DhJhwahr. Paifl uW.
YROM mo. ~HtU '
1-how room + 1torut. dtntlfy, 962-7471 Children, 11dultw.·fi46...m. 67~1 + 549-1170 Masonry ACCOUNTANT JR. COUNTER ,1::ir! fnr dry
Prime loc, C.M. C·2 or M·l FOUND c11.licn f'al. Vic. PIANO teacht'!r has limited Drlvtways Be ri"ht hanrl man ln ron-rleanini:: pla.11. Apply 2200
lOr;('d, 646-4401 8 am to 5 "The City" 839-3.197. ...,...,.,,. .. , for conaclentlou1•~--------BRICK, BLOCK & ~ ~.-·-• 1-STONE WORK troller of gro\\•lni:: mfi::. ('(J. llarllnr Bl. C.M. be fore noon.
pm . SMALL black male doi 2nd or 3rd year student. ASPHALT PAVING. C.Omm . g rir &16--0945 Thi~ p 0 5 11 J 011 oUPr~ ORE AM JOB
2000 to 9600 Sq. r1. 1.1·/brown marking&. Wt&r· Mr•. Dtnton 548-84!M. &. Reaid. fte.iurl, patchina. unlimi!ed opportunity for Y.'t flC'f'd JO 1.1•om11n rn traln NE~ 3 4001 111!lrch, f'l'"""t Beach Inst ·~ N.B, Ile ta•• N... .wal.eoatina. frff est. Call NEA · clean, 3 yrs exp. (\o1...-• rt'!. mnmmate to .. " P Coll tud tt · d 'nk adval'ICf'mf"nL St. $600. as rrofrssio n11.I m1tkt'up \n.
1h1,re beach howe. can Mr. Baumaardnl'r !'141-5032 3195. vie. Ntwporl Blvd. & I ....... ]r21 JM, fi75-51!t3. . e~~ 5 ~~54;o n . Call Jtan 8-rown, 54~55 ~tru .. tnrs. Earrun,t:" rangr
EMPLOYED 1al lo 1Mre
Condo.. pool, nr OCC.
W.SO. !Jt!I tncl. M~77.
673--6976 ll'WS. RENT M-1 1125 Sq. Ft. E. WUaon, C.M. 64>-0121. •nd "''*" ~ Eltctrlcal ing, eve, Co11.1;tal A11:rncy $fi00. tn $900. pPr mn. Ex· ~G~.-,-.-0-1-1 ~,~0-,~R~.-n-t-~4~35 $133/mo. 11~5 Los::an, C.M. F'ND. small Ge rm an '! =~~~,...,..,...,..,..--,.,.,fl'•inting & 2790 Harbor Bl At Adflm~ E'('utivr po~i!inns av111l, For
Cll.ll 67>511 6 Shrrherrl mixed puppy vie. ELECTRICAL, reil " P1perh1n9lng appl. ra11546-1it15.
OOIJBIJE r'raa:"' in 1·omml'r· L1rlo Theater NB. Ro•• Applle_nc1 Repair romm'I, tndus. A 11 0 • ---------A/P Construrtion to $600 • RENT or le11.~e fmnt un11, & P ••model r• "r ;•st·'I No w.,., .. .,, DRESS & Sport!wtar Mf.,., claJ area, nr, lJ!h & Ntw· OptJrala 673-3632 f ound •rt1 ' · p11.1i, u• a.i. "''"' SPcy'1.Constr Wll'I e• 1000 gt'!. fl , l'l*'W b!dg .. Costa MOl'l<'la.y. Bia/small. Llc'd/Ins. Free *WALLPAPER* GPn'l Ofc 1 ln~urance $500 F:x!)f-'r. cutter. Exper. oprs.,
port, S30. MZ.~'i/13. Mcaa. 67~1417 eves. et!. 546--0211. \Vhen you call "Mae'' 1525 St~. llt'ed. Ovt!rlock, bu1.
Olli R I I "0 Dl claphnnt Sec'y
PVR.N 1 8R'1, tl'° untum 2 c• en I ..., Storage 455 BROWN Dach1hund, prea· ALL relritea repairf!d. Ken· ELECTRICIAN JiCf!nsed .548-1444 646.Jnl f rC Bkkpr/Con11r S5.'l!I ttinhnlr, huttome1.1', p~:oi.Sll't. ~ __ ...._______ nan!, M colla.r or LO. cou. more Whirlpool walher• ' · Rojrl In('., 1603 Babcock . • !; StU:,~ ~pt. ~· drpN1, -~tEl~l=:'L/DENTAL ~(i)RAGp; •pace w11ntttl: ple white ipota on head. dryer'r repaired SU.4561 , ~ndf!dlr. SmA!l .JlO·obs, malnt. 30t DA". ~pec!Local. ,tnter/Ex· ~~~n~ll~~:~~nstrg :: C.:'11. 61.;...7~'1. _.. w1m I .......,.. o ocl ocauvn • 7'5 Dover Dr, approx. 400 IQ'· II. as i;run Vic. UCl Campu!. 833-686l. · · ""ttpa 1. 54o-.i 3. er. pa1nung. a refs. 30 ,,.v gm • -----chUdrt", no p1ta. Quirt 1350 IQ' ft, office av1tll. 1111 . Oi11count AppIJanee Rep.1.ir Gar~enlng )Tl. exp. Free eit. Call Clerk Typist/Advert, S475 DRIVE ~v A Y salesmen
nelthborhood. M2-8G42. med. OCCU[)Ancy, custom .tl'I. f!Oll, Costa Me1a area. F0UND: Female Samoyerl, Wa!her, Dryer, Olahwa1her. Chuck, 645--0809. Rtcl!ptioni11:t $400 \\'/lubl' f>XJJf'r. Clean &
Huntlnoton ileach Jnt~rlor. 5.l~7411· '1 Garden Grove area. Call & GUARANTEED itr 54&-66M At:'S GARDENING PAINTING I PAPERING Ins. &-crt!tarie1 In S700 nral. Arply person, Boyd's
Rent1l1 Wanted .f60 ,103e1n!i~·. 63s..5046 alt 3:30 or Bibyiittlng fnr gardenina: k If ma l I 18 yrs in Harbnr Al't'll . Lie&_ Secretarirs to $600 Arro, 490 E. 17th (Crossroad
-.w.i 1 nd 1 l all NEWPORT lrvinr1, C.M . • MOVE IN TODAY!
Kldl I refl wt1ccme. 2 I r.
trom SJ.39. All txtrtS. ~.
'''" pe.tio. Tijtnlturt avail. lTa&i·A KHllM Ln, HB.
U7 .. 3889 or 9S&-7510.
e OCEAN VltW • Trom
S1$5. 1 AR. Turn or unturn.
' Dttcount for •tudlU)tl, CAM
PLAYA, 141.h It Walnut, II.a. Call J1!6.13117.
1 Bft, Unturn $1'>, wW furn,
0vn"look1ns beaut, 1arden
patio At pcoJ , Adultt, M
pelt . 1035 Uth St. Aero.,
trom lAki! P11.rk. SJS-2992.
Laaun1 le1ch
•1 .·nuo~o 0 _ .. , ......
1200 1q. ft. offlct for
Sub Lt11t
12'XI 1q, It. plut of u1e1ble
atf!'l Incl. 5 prtvate otrtces,
reception room & lar1e
llllf:r'lll area. $4.Ml per mo.
17th SI., C.M, Phone
646-116.1L
CLOSE to LIDO ISLE
Room or SuJte · Rea11t1111ble.
w/prk'r. Udo Sld1. r~here
Blue Dolphin Re1taurant
It). Call or lff Jones l\t"lty
SeNIC',, on premi1e'I, 335.5
Vi11. Lido. 67~3711 .
~VANTEO . 2 Br, nlCe home BL.ACK feml cocker.type l sca p l'g 1erv c.es, c bonrled. Ref'g turn. 642-2356. ,,.,_~=~--I
for xtnt tenant• by Marrh pup. Vic M8inolla nr. CHILD ca~, experie"""·" •-~198, Strvin1 Newporl, ROOMS S'20. Accous. CeUina:s B~le~onnelDAge~c~ ESTIMATOR.
l:'i. \Vou!d consider opt 10 Slater, F.V. S42-9049. • ... C\I "" CdM., Q)sta Mesa, Do ver st>tayerl SJ 2, f'Xler S'200 & over r., • • Constr. l.Anrt1C'11.ping t"xp. buy, Lea~e rwef. Close to hi· dependable ...Wekday1, Jn-Shott:I, Wettc.Htf. ,.. __ _. . 642·3870 Call l.llrra.in,.
'" GIRLS bl i l••t to 5 r L eh • up . ......,."' paint. R47-J.3z.a. ·~~~!!!!~~!!!!.,... \l'E.~Cl .IF'f' achool. One 17 . >T old cyce belnF\6ln& to "'' y 1' un es"" YARD MAINTENANCE =7==cC--~-~--·" rll.,,lpltn·• ~y. M•ck•tlnr "8uzie" vie. Me1a Verde. 51"18ckl. Fenced yard. Ott,. . l & PAINTING, prof. All work APT. Mgn .• Prtf. mahlre Prrro11nPI Agl'ncv ~ ,,. 0• 0 . ~... So ..... .....wn1, prunina, c ean-up C 1 1 11 ~.3 11, · · ........ Olrectlorui rnr. 4500 C•-pu• 5'49--0925. ,.,..n 1ea-n •":I n.r ........ 11 h h Ii . guarn. o or 11 p e c a t I or ~eml-relittd couple •V't p~trl1ff Dr .. 1~0
..... Pl a 546-74!7 tra• au na. No Job too 842-4386. 547-1441. bl f l 6« 2··0 Dr .. J\l.B. 5'1~9110. POUND, Collie mix, youna: az ' • 1mall. Our price• tailored to ----------ca pa e ,., romp · manll;t· ,,. 11
WILL th. lady Who e
_,,_,, !emale, tll11 & black, y,•ant11 DAY Care Home. Lie. pen-your budget. Ffte Eit. PAINTING-Guaranteed pro-mf'nt. lncldg. I!. maint EXECUTIVE Secret11ry ~= d' ~ hoot ~ 1 I · I k t 1 · · rt'palr k hsr. cif'lln ing. Nri 8 kk F C 'al
my 01". r•i•rdl"• "Br uni to &o llome. 546-6277. ing, rn•·IC m:ve op. 673-1166. e1inon11. wor a air prices. Oil repPr. / thru Tr1 ~ ,,.. • · M -.:.OC..C.--..='7"~~~ LI 'd • I 675 '7«J l11wn work. Apt. & 11ala.ry to B I 1~ nd Q:arage apt ln CdM, pll!aae BLACK & tan, lge. femal e men!, vanE'ty mea!s. esa COSTA MESA 534-4821 r. "" ns. .,, ' rlghl parry. 548-2407. 8 · """op. Se tfsume.
t'all again, O!r, I 7 1 4 I riuppy, approx. 3 mos. Vic Verde area. 561~190. Newport Bch·Lagun11. Ni&uel FOR clean & neat painting, ........... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii P. o. Rt'lx 2203, Ne\\'J)Ot'I 630-1~0 ext 25: home !n4l f\.1e1a Verde 657-7908. LIC'D Day Care. 7 am.5:30 Lawn Mnw\ng k interior or ex!erior & reas. Brach. CA. !12M~.
£36-4460, rOUND: Brown & wht. pm. Hot meal1. Xlnt care. Com p. Srrvit',. ra tes, Dick, 968-4065. ASSEMBLERS EXP. Floral de!"i.mer want·
Crli\-1 Ap!. \Vantl!'d . Unturn. l femllle doQ". vie. Me.u View Harbor/Baker area. M&.1539. Japanl!&e Ganiminr ~rvice PAINTING, int lt'!xf. Rea11. rd full llml'. Call 492-7123. o.h l H B oz I '" k Loe AssE>nibl~ •\Petric · mr.rh11ni· San Clrmcntf' BR. modrrn. Top floor . = oo · · · s4,,... l!M. C1rpet Service AJ11tt Clea.~up. F~e Est. ra ell. "'or .1n1ar. a.I cllf df'vi{'tl k sub·assPm· · , ·
Or!l'll n vlr11., l\.1ll."< $180. Lost Sll e 5484.019 alt 3 PM e refs. Lic'd. Phil 494-~591 EXPER_ Strvict" St a t Ion _, "'""'""'""""":::,~;::..-=--hties. lntl'rprll't~ t1.11.\U'mbly s1n.i;:-lf! hus1n"s" 11·nmAn "I JOHN'S ca ...... 1 & u ho! t r~GARDEN M . Cl Plaster, Patch, Repair , . hPlp. (1 1 Me-n p/timl'. Ra~·
MOOEJ\N &U'd~n townhouse
apt. 2 1tory 2 BR., 1" bt. ·
aundeck. patio, 1 block
beach, al'IOpptns: N•w ei;t1,
.,,.. Ad\lltl. Rfrf1. $25.5.
494-9981.
NfV.' W11t1rtront Ort1cea
P'rgm '380 111onth
PrJme Loc1t!t1n
341 BA.Vtid~ Dr .. N'pl. Be•ch
BlU Grundy A.Hr. 67~6161
11•11nt a p ER l\.1 AN EN T 211.5. vu~ 18lh St. l:H!l>Men , ~ p I ery 11nt, ean-up, rt r a II' i n Ii:,:, 5JM"<'lficallnn CarPy Che11"0n, f,(}t So. 1-IO~tE" ORt-!'11. R"". ~angr &. Fullerton Avl!, Cieanprir, ~ E1ctr1t Orl·Sh11.m-rotoruttni. 'lltW lll~'l'I prun-* PATCH PLASTERING prints. par1s list. 1 Yr. prf'v· Cnast ~h~:y., LAiuna Beach.
l l 116 3 Ii -4 4 ti 0 bur stl ver & t&n short ha i~rl pon free ScotchfuArd fSoil lng, aprinklen1. Oda G11.rdl'n All fyl)ta . Free eatim11te1 ious t>!eetro mtchanlcal llS· Apply in pcr,;on. 71416~0-l,MO • labhy kitty, 6 moa old, Rtt1trrl11n1sJ, Derreaaer• & Serv, 531-4446 dy1, alt S, Call M0-6825 atmbly exrtr. Soldering
· · 646-0198. all color briRh!enier1 & 10 11.JS-~S. -techniques. FllLL or p/time, Mgmt
\VANTED to leMe 3 BR REW R minutf' bleii.ch for 'vhite S p RINK LE RS-New Plumbing trnf', no exp. n e c . Mu~e nn Lido J~le by A Otorreturn .of4mo. carpPls. Save )'Our money 1. 11.wn1-Rotottll!ng-Trees PLUMBTNG REPAIR TELONJC ~alary/comm . Fuller
DELUXE 360 mq. fL 2 rm. l'f'Rpol\\ibll"' fan1ily. 67S-t7M . old ma.le silky temer. b!k, hy saving me e)(tra trlpa . and Shrubs INDUSTRIES INC. Brush, 962--0416. Nowport lt1ih •
FROM S1J5
' ; ' ft'a Oilrwood G a r d t n
Apatb'nent1 ••• and ti'•
tun, tllle nel4h~rJ and
Pf'lftltt Uvlnc In nnt luxur-
ious paCk1.re. ntre't SI
million in recreation •••
rwtmmln1, ttnnl•. billiard1.
he1lth club•, .. una1. pro-
ahop, lndoe.r rolf drivinr
r..._e, dubhOuse, etc.
Cuttom deoonattd llftlltt.
1 6 2 BR .. FUrnilhed A Un-
funsllhed. No l•aH required.
!4odelo Open Dilly 10 to T.
OAKWOOD GARDIN
APARTMINTS
liUJle, 48c iq, fl, Corona del brn, if'llY \l.'/hlk l~athfr Will f'lean living rm., dining ~t'l rem ov ed No jnb too 11m1.ll GE N'L ACCTG CLERK
Mllr n.r . .._, oUt'co, S•·ck ~ braideit collar, 494--8892 e•ves rm. & hitll SIS. Any rm. · .. * 642-3128 * ~ ·~ ] & k d * LAN 5 L19un B h Rr>11 : rxpPr in aC'ct~ f'f!e / Shop. ~v. p••, Air~·•. Announcamt ntt w en s. $1.50. eouch $10. c.Mir $5. 15 D CAPING * COLE PLUMBING 1 tic r.-1 ,.. ""''"' arcli> pyhll'. knnwl ot !Z'rn'!
.,..,, .r• .r• '"-"q•••I Op~ E I r arr ~ nP<'. Must t..,P" 35-50 Realonnmlcl. Bkr, 67"7001 9iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~--l\VEIMARANER, l '-"', male, '-"'I., exp 111 what counts, not New lawns. Spmklrz .. deck!, 24 hr. srnticP. 645-1161 1
DESK i paee •~111'.ble i50 \•l e Br'ookhurst/Adams metnoct, I do work myteU. des~ru:. cle1t11up. State lic'd, Remodel & Repair c. ,,.Jr, mpoye 1vpm (rice!!, 10 k'~v adrl ing
'
"DI Announcement• 500 H.B. Re~·ard. Plt contact Good. ~t. 531--0101. bonded, 536-1125. mach tby tourht , Prnn f'l'lt). .,
1
pnMd1 furn lhtre A.'ITUTE Plea•ant ~'t'lrnan 11 S.'i mo. Anlwerlna aervtce ;;;;::;:;;:;:;;:;;-r,:;,:;;:.;-o;:::;::;l ,~96~8-~300~!:,. --~---Carpenter GREEN MANSION Builrl Rl'pl'l ir Remodel "'a.nit<! f 0 r house 1iitter. rl'";idPnt, only, PIPase <'all av4~1ble. 222 l'ottsf' •ve, DRAPER\' Cleanlnc Special LOST, all rray Iona haired Garrlrning & Ya.rd Main-\I.'. C. KERi\tODE. JR. Light hOU.!=ehold rlutits in· for in trrvir\\' appt, Mrs.
" Tak~ down. fan fold, tt·hanr f 1 . H t J El Construction & l>1aint, G l 71 Lt111na Beach. 49'-N66 Sl .7$ Panel. Unlined to 9. ~~~ma e cal, vie .8. CUSTOM Wood'\.1-wk Panel· enance. ot mer, 642-1137 • 5<18-1961 • eluding &0me Cl'lOklnfl. Stu· nnz11 e;:, 4·492·115.l
14'x16' Ofc or rtore, mod. Jona. IN!i· prlce SJ.:IOI Ph. ing. For m t ca . ~·1 EXP. Ha1.1•illt1n Gardener ~==-~:;,;:c_.:.__ dent or Pf"l'SOn "With part GIRL Fri<l;iy -Openin.i;:-tor
bid&. 4'4 Nev.1>0rt Bvd, N.B, Alle'l'l Weaton 53 6 _3 5 7 5 Repai~. Alt !S, Ph: Duke Comple te rardenlna terviet' S PE Cl AL I ZED House timt" day job OK. Live in, inrlividuat who rl es Ire a
01tf'n. $85 mo, :MB--6.100. ~fore 5:30 PM or ~25 TIME FOR DaDurka. 6~~1~. Kamalani, 646-4676. Rl>pair. Carpentry, painting, private room. $115 mo. \'llrird N>SponsibilitiPs &
II 5 30 P
'I EXP J G·-" Pie. CaJI DiC'k 6~2-472'2. 673--0149. 1\'hft.M" gkill5 include typing.
a ' ' ' ' UICK LARGE OR SMALL · apooe" ~u•n•or Q CASH All TyJ)f's \\'ork : Cut doors: Complete Ya.rd Service Roofint ASSISTANT manager -car S.H .. fil ini:-. to work with pan~ 1. remodel. finish. Free est. ~8-8459 tvez. _L_E_E•Roo--fl------\1·ash. \ViJI train. Excellen! !iiAIP~ man.11.i::C'r t-prMirleni
ARCHITECT, Entlnee r. etc.
Offica, Sfe to 1pprecl11.te.
Ext•r. entrance, S85 mo. l
~8--S300. OPEN. 444 Old
---~-----
ll•l ng Co, Rooling all lutur" Pl"""' -cronaHty In Nt'11'P"rt APHC'h. Si>nd frame, N'p!l.lrs. etc. 962·1961. • Bob's !.Awn SE-n1i~ + ty-s. Rt"COVC'r, -atr~. ,.. h f r ,~ ·~r & ma:hanical apt j tu de. rip rf'sum" o past PXp.
ALL typt"s or carpentry by Comp. lA\vn Ma intenance tht'rm" roof roatings, y,·hite ~2-445.1 1hrtd in ron!irtf'ncel. m Box
D!:Sk 11;pace available $50 DAILY PILOT IOC'al man. Home or C.omm·1 642-206.l &. color. Lie/bonded, since 2'2!17, N.R. ~2663.
mo. Will provide larnlturt Ptrson1l1 530 "16-1648 * 549 2015 * 1947. &IZ-7m. ATTENDANT " Shell .t .. ====~~~-at S5 mo. Ansv.'erln& service . WANT AD • tion & Hertz Rent--a..Car in HAIRDRESSER "'/fnllowing
available. 17875 Beach Blvd, f'ULLY LICENSED MINOR homt ~in. Plum· 21 yrs, exp. Free Est. • T. Guy Rooting, Dtal Laguna Btiach . College stu· nnly. Xlnt 11.'0rking cond!t. k
Hunttnsmn Beach, 642-Wt Renov.11ed Hindu Splritualist. 642·5678 .!:f~.c~n~tina· J~.-P-..,,..-'--,~G~ard.:..,•.:ru.:.n.:.co..:s.rv=-ice ~~7~tSo~ ~~~~wn "·ork. rlrn•. Over lR. :-.'l'I long 1111.ir. Inc. Oill 54Mli9.
81y View Offices Spiritual Read ing i j v e n Clll'itn-U(I. TrtmminJ Perm. '20 hrli v.·kly. 494-9003. HlSTOlff.Y TECHNICIAN. ~luxt, •ir·condll!Onl"d daUy. lOA.\t-lOPM. Advice e 646-~9 e Sewint/Alter1ii on1 BARBER: Men ':\ Ha.irstylist .-s:p. Tut's thru Sat. 6 am -
LidO area . 50c ll'I· h. on all malters or lile, 312 N. * * * * * * PROFESSIONAL Garden~r. EuropelU'J Dressm;ki--;;g-wanted, Newporter Inn Hotel 12 pm. South C081l Comm.
Re.\Jonomlct, Bkr. 6Th-6TOO El Ca.mi.no Real, San trtt work, pruning, 1prink· All C'll!ltom fitted, Personal Barber Shop. Following Hnsp .. Sn. Laguna, Petsnn-
SUITE of OHict!. 1.'.!0l'I aq. ft. Clemente. 492--9136 "r 1------------------.. I Jen, clean·up joba, landscap-Fa1hion ad vi~. &73-184.9. prpf'd. Call for app!.. nrl Office, .ffl9-.1311, An
I
492-903t · G ,,.,, ~ ..... ~ 644-2580 Tues •'-ru Sat 9 s Prtual opportunity em ployer.
or eS!. ~a1e or Rent . 1~7G ----------in.a. earge. ~. Alt 1· "2 5845 · · .,, " · ·
0 A PRO.LE\, Pr C ere ions --• ''Jim." HSKPRS Empt-. ,.,., 1-.
Newp:irt· Blvd , Ptrto111l1 THROUGH A
(P.ttort 1.Jvlni tor
Adults cn.ly.)
r11.ng' ve, CV'lrntr ot • • egna.ncy. on-T d ' Pa d • AL'S Landscapi11f. Tre e N 20 ·" •• Roch•$htr. C.'f. ~8-3118. t1denl, s y mp 11 Ih t1 1 c ra er s ra 1se removal. Yard rtmodelin.a. eat, accurate. years exp. BEELINE FJthions, no col· C..eol'l?P Allen Bylanrl Agen·
(tEA1 tatate broker ll:ants rrern.1ncy coun1!'!lln;-. Abor· Tnl!h hauling, Jot cleanup.T ·-•-'•-v_l_•_i•_n_R_•_P_•_lr__ l('('tfnn or delivery, high cy 1111>-B E. 16th S.A.
amaU t1tfiN! spite!' about 200 don k Adopr:ton r • r. Jt.pair aprin.ldert. 673-1166. * BLAINE'S TV * profit. frt'e N mplea. Call ,"='-0=39~'.l·==~----1
N!:WPORT B£ACll
11th at Itvtllt
641-0MO .. 64Ul10
•w .... 1111 Wl.1 ...
Sperleut l A 2 BR. Bltns,
catp9t1, drapea, ht1ted pool.
Nr Mop's art&. Adult.
,
Atk About Fret Rtnt
llOO Wettcliff Or, NB
'4U!!I
BAY AVE. -lAY V1£W
2 ft1t . Apt ... Yearly
6-OWNEft
iq. It. In do"•ntown !.rsuna ·AP'='--{:-'-A'-R'-E'-.-'64_2:..-'.:.~cc's:.·___ Jines •Complete Land,ecepe Serv. Ser.,.icing All Br.11.nds 63&-4()5.1 & 963-5739. HOUSEKEEPER-Ox>k. ex·
Stach. 493-3151). OPENING for 2 boys (non. 5evina: all Oranie en. Authotired Magn11\-o~ Bo1t Carpenters pt>r. Hvr-in. P\1 rm k ba.
e OF'flCES e hippy I H.S. Junlort on trip t 1. mes Formal A natural prunln&. Known for hone1ty 540-4313 Experien~ journeymen lor Beautiful home. 642-jl611fi.
300 ,ii> too 1q, ft. COSTA to Eunipe this rummer. AIIO, tree urv. S.57-9379. Tiie yacht work. Min. af !i .vrs
M!SA. Call ~1130. App, lUOO. ~.. Chntr•I Strvlces bo11.ty11.rd experienrf'. Prem· INSURANCE
EXECU1'IVE SUITES
Newport Cl'itl"-Rodetler Bldi.
Slrvfctt locl'd ~.
••Wh it a El•phant1" over-
run.nine your house ~ Tum
tMm lnlo "CASH" • sell
them thN Otlly P I I o t
Culifttd. MW6TI.
'
BE pan1pered and mapqed d 11 CERAMIC tile ne~ & lum "'all'l'S &: excelltint ht>n· OPENINGS
by attractive women . 0 ars THINGS by MOOff, Lt, 1"1!!moclel. Free est. Small erils. Only qualified nrt'rl ap. .,. "100. I -• b t ·u job l "'"" "'"" ply. Send resume or call; Many secrPhuial It generR.l Oo).J-,41 e ect., }Hum , enc•. ti e, s we oomt . .....,..Po.ro. 1 · al ·
1r you \l'tlold Hk1 to hoat •
Blblt 1tudy CT'QUP ln )'OUr 2 V\\' I.lotted chrome rlmt
home, call 893-1149. 1\1th n~w ttru !S.60 x 15.
ALCOHOlJC$ Anqnymou•. ~rAdf' tor 13'' VW rim• •
Phone 5'2·121T · or \\Tlte tires or offer.
P.O. Box 122.1, CMta ?.ieu. M8.sll0
Auatralla Prl.z11 cattle tt•·
tton nr Gttal Barrfer Reef,
145,920 ac, 000 cattle, new
hoftlt , ~.000. value For
real eltate. 6Ll.J817
Duplex 2600 sq rt, 4 BR ! 2
BR hOURI on I lCJ"f, nn klr
morti, ln Portland, Ore.
Trade eq. tor boat, plMe,
property. W ·9llZ, 9611-0117,
1964 Plymouth V11lant V 4,
4 spd 1tick. New "ah'i' job,
runs Cd· · TRADE tor plrJc·
up, panel ar larp station
\1'1.iQn. Ph: 542·"35.
10 House• on on11 lot: ex·
change tot be1ch triplex
i:ir f.p\t1)(. TORTIN ()).
REALTORS M2-st00
17U.C \Ve1tclitt i>r .. NB
T f Acre&, nJc. e1bfn attes,
rtnUy ft)Utnc: filhlnl:. hi.mt·
11\1: nr. Univ, MCll'lt&11a: tor
So. Calif. units.
Fortin. Realtor
IVAA'TEI>'
Unlta, Hatbcr artL
HAVl'
4br,lbL
Aatnt m. ms Hilt
* * *
tie, lnstlm. catptntey, paillt M.iss Rillel: 714/224·82ll c me po11tlcnt In.eluding Kett enburg Marine, Inc. one Tra.nscri))er to bt train·
e1 c. 545-0320. ' ~ · ][{] p 0 Bo • r MTST 21' Ac. hi dtlert, nr p1ne1. #0 .. &"'""'"""RY .nil i I · · x 6448 ('" or · · nr PearblOuom Eq tor c&r ~.c.i, • • Piil nc. ce-f.wfWJmtAit f SA.n Diero. Calif. 92106 These positions are "'•ith
waion. van or ·! Will dtai mertl. etc. small 1oM O.K, -Equal opportunity employf'r Home Office of Major iJl. lf!Oerou~1y. 646-8.113, l·gM. Bob 666-6'4'. BOYS l!Ul'ance company located in 543-2429 Sun. "T OVffUtEAD prqe doorr. Jeb Wanted, Male 700 LA but moving to new build· Age 10-14 to <leliver papen i~ in Newport Beach later
M081LE Home on Bay, Operators · &lrvlce 1t~. SCRAM-LETS in the D&na Point, San O~ thls yt'ar. Free corrirn utin& ~12 pllnelltd nn., ....... E. Harri.on, Ph. ~. mente arta.111. 1 H 1 --. DAIL y PILOT rom unt na:ton Centl!r, crpt thruout, fully tr.aro. H1vtll'll Anaheim & Newpt)l't Beach
Reas. pticed. Take It mod.'!~~"""'~"°',_,....___ ANSWERS •924420 by bus lo LA until move is PU •• ?Art pmt. '15-06'12. -•CO~L!:TE c I ea n ·U P · BE A U T Y opt: rat or, complett'. IA• cott lunches
MULTIPLE &Oned land A Rel'ft('lvt asphalt. dirt. trffs. ~b'opic -About -Aid~ -ruaranleed • cornmiu1on. providft.d. Gond salary It
Laguna df'Vfllnpml'!l'lt acre-ooncret4 «tc. f'ree fft Uc'd Napkin _ ~t.AKEUP Busy H.B. salon, r.taJe or fringe benefitll. Fee paid by
qe. SSBi\t & SlllM equities. &> rn1 . S4<>-0l97. ThinlS . of bta}l~Y c;iften l@male. Full or part, time. employer.
Trade 1 or both far home, Yard, ca.rap. cleanupt . Iha.kt men .. up "''llf"n u·~\' ,-=.,...,.,·.,,"""=~'.,' "'54S-3440=-'C.::'-'-I Interview & Test Daily
apts .. or comm. 494·&1. ~lTICIW trfft; dirt. ivy. view them minut' f.tAKi:t.. '. C H A LLENGING poaltion. Wed. eve ~Sit. ~y appt
,. LAke 'l'ahoe Jot, eouth S k Ip loed'e r, backhoe. Job Wanted, Female 702 better tha.n avg earnlnas. 1< ,
aide. level, clfattd. Strfft r~M'-T-'-:166<5,;,,..~· ------Eltttrolwc. Div. Qmlol. .f:.• 1 t1ah'Mt Dr.
•all improvements tn. Ap-HAULING, Oun-up. loal NEED help at home'!' \Ve f'Olld1. By appt on 1 y, ym In-IN• W.12'1
pr<'IX S4500 eq for br>At, car, moves, op'd. c:olleje ttu· have Aidet e Nursts e ~
TO or pJMt ¢f ~? 613435 del'lt LrJ, truck. RUt. Houtekeeptn • Com· CNIL Ens\ntmi. dtst.iiwrs tnsurance s.Ja
4 BR f'ix·UPJX"r (WU clplx) ,;~::;,,:::INt.;,:::~---~-pauiont Hcmf:m.tlcen • U~ or dr&ttamtn iti.temt.d In WE fum~h the t-t.'O thinp e "
hme. C.M. $13 M ~· Want MESSY • tr.1. yard.I .l ,:lohn.:,:::o,:;M;T,;~;::::;.......,..--= ffioc:afu<t: lb a new civil or. rood Mle&rll&Jl nHdJ. live
f.6 units. cal'! add St~. Ml'. ..,..,... MO\'b\a A hlul.illi. CLEANING Lad y. Ex· flee in Otnvtr. Colo. Raub. prosfll'Ch Ind the product
Schiff. lnvtstm:ent Div., ntt ~. St.SO w hr. +. t>aienced, dept rid" b l t: Bein. rt'Olt A Asloc.. 1.16 e"\·cryone is •lkinr 11.boot.
RN.I 'tltatm. ~ l:Odd •Jok ~ Home, ·of!ict, or apt. \\'Orie Roche 1 t tr St., c _M, No • tolidfir\c. colltdinc.
Wsnl It..! .. .,.. -.,Ceola ill 'I' .TRUCK. H..U.C A by tile dly. -1.. 518-1"123. -or mule """
).f .. am.: uchaJ:IP 11 auodlttd tub. Oout· LADY wants bowleclft'r •Tk. CLEAN.up JM" to u.st&t nine· ~. llflllna and mak·
unitl. ~ = 0, Valley Hlulln& 83211. -£.)cPtt. Own trana. $3.50 hr. wtldtn. t .k.'f-.t:U pm. 5 ~ttmon.~~~.e ~I
ltoal!on . i4uJn 'J'.ltASH 6 Goop cl-up. Aft 4 1"1" '41.J6!7. cl&,. 1 Wttlt. $11-251!. 497-Llti. bel 9,30 a .m. A
t •••-••·•-oolloll '-"'".-nt. -..J _•;..IM_W_•_•_•_od..;,_M_&_F_704.._. cmo~ • .!'.~~~~·~~ u :30 ..,, .. w.i. aTltlln ~,.. f""" ....,... ~ '"'4Jq.I r•-.. -·-111 u.r-Mud hive ti.hi &! dlaabWl)t
U> ~ 11111. moc.U>c.h.._,.:..:..;;;;;_~":1-.. ..:.·t\l.,-"8----* ENGLISH ttrvi•w\111 men a """""" '""""'· ;;'p,mf.;;:.:.Ot,! ':,".";: .. , • -COUPLE* alluu_ba,.lwlbffrt ---.----.-I
erllmltf'r &U..tm.. LICENS:t01 Inlured. Rtfs. Rtiocttlnl. d@llJ'I ~ diseue. cancer, or 111ajor V1candes cctt tnnlll')'f Ren! Ms Maintnanct. 54s..M36. mt11I ai .~kflt']'.ltr and JUfl'lY· $l5. m tho• e )(!Ur hou!<I!, apt., '*' * * * w.:an Wt do 11...,.uiina. buUer. 1:xpert.,,...i1 td«ll'\I, Call 8!6-ltiU for bid& .. etc. thnl a OaJly Pi1o
--------. -.. _i.1a._ .... _ewio.._=-______ c_A_L_L_4l_~i_-OS_K_ ~!Ur1Mr:o.::::=-='"~'"""~~~~t1o~·~·--·-a~·~u~Ul_edA_d_. __ ~
•' . '
p
•
M
rl • A
H
N
T •
N • • m
"'
a
c
c
0
"'
fi
v
llil
D
•
. ""' ~ . .. '
DAILY i'ILDT -J:J
I~ I ....... l......__INwl•_, ... __,l[Il]( ......__ _ .... _-~l[Il]I .____ _"""'_·-·~llill ..__I _-_· .. __,!~ I I~ ~I ~-iiiiiiiiiiiiiiil~~~/.;I ;;;"'"~""' .. ~l§J~l;;-;;;"';;; .. ~· l~;;;I
111· P l•noo/Org•n• -124 Autos, lm110rliHI -'70-Agto1, lmp<lftod 970 o1pwiiiliil;""M & 1"710 -Antlquos ---.oo ~.,-Soi. ~
t;UTlC a.r&"«iw! .Bt I
family d1ys, Full I Jll !!.i:rte
rv1>1.""rtie .. wardrohr, r.n in·
Vf'i'll , df'llV, Mlll"fl. !rt6-&41J7.
l ANTIQUE ehalrt" anMq~ COIJ..FX:'t'OR'S S..lie. War I
<J6k.!1, ~ hf'<f!'Pl"'fl. . . ...... ,.flt"' ""'"• OHt-f'\tt
~7~P~C~.~N~A~U~G~A~H~Y~D~E~ -~-*:;:-:T~A~X;-:;:*:--~·1.;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;::;;;::;;;;;;;;::;;;;:::=;;;;::::;;
DEN GROUP 1fr'-Ct;FA~ANCE SJILE @ --~
Jnjectlon tnoldlna: DPf'rtilor8
nr tr1.in"1!s. Gr•vf'yard
Mu!tl ~ """' llntl dflP'rni· 11hll'. Ff'malr preff'm-d.
Muat he ablt to "'Ork SAi
Or Sun .
SALES & CASHIERS
-Y.':-1"tr,-~Al>'t .• .rtt.Ua MIJ!en,l PN''n•·tl.
6*-6323. Indian Mono alonfo1. ThrH
;;;-===-...,.--,,--.,-,~J ha.rT!-1 rock t u m b I • r ,
WANTED ro buy, 1968 o..hmin Toff> (°.(let, Wknde
S wed i 1hRor1 1rand1 ~.%:i83SAntaAna,CM .
Christ.ma• Plate. 644-WIT.
------ioo, 1""""" ,, N ••• ,,. SPECIALS <.,..n.!.11tin1 or l•Y·bAtk 111'.lfl Or'Jit•M m u~• ..,. rrdur~ ~
(~l"'@P.• 21, f'h•!r, In hf'll vy lnr'f' !hf' M11rrh l•t I ~ dPad·
duty n8ua111hydP, f'nd taDlt•, ltn1>.
GRODINS * GARAGE SALE-
Cfltftt tAblt .\ llmps. • SAVF; l 'P TO S~
~NE PERSONNEL
SERYICES "AGENCY Apply 11:30-11 :311 AM
Coata Meaa. C11.llf.
1151'.1 We11I lllfh SI.
• Or11n&f' ~111 Plast11·!1 •
Ord•r De1k to $SOO
Mlture. hf'avy ~1tp1"rlf'rW"'
Glrl Frld•y $500+ I i!!!~ ..................... ~
Lite Dkkpna:-Gen'I Offl~ PTrrlmt> <1r 11! mp or a r y,
A1st, lkkpr/E.DP rl,. .-i It n• r l d r11 fl smr-n,
Productlrin shtt'l mtlal ex-
to $6SO pPr rt'q'd. ~·1 l.>.flil:'r, Aeci AnAly~18 SEJ 979--0«0
l'!C Bkkpr/Soc 'y Open
1 Girl Of(', Pmf\t ' ] LIM
FrH/Fee Pn.11irinn11
4M E. 17th tat lrvirteJ CM
'42·1470
INVEST IN-
YOUR FUTURE
Ill YOUR OWN BOSSI
Mtn or Women
lt•s• A Yellow
Taxi Cab
CAii tor Appl
546·1311
Aak lor Hl"'tman
J. C. PENNEY CO.
fashion Island
Newport Beach
Requires
CARl'ET DEPT
SELLING
Sl'ECIAUST
ExctUPnt wm-kin(I'. 1'(lnd1
Out11tandtnr bfonPflta
Apply In PPrMn
JOAM·~PM
PF.TTTION circulator -"" r xp, Own 11rf'11. Own houn .
Dflily pay. Ph. 5.57-1446.
PRODUCTION
SUPERVISOR/MGR
To rHrN.'I "-NWlrdin111,. ~f'V·
f'ritl production Opf't11tion1:.
Mu~t hAvf' f'l!.f)llbllity of di·
tl"rling,difrE"rf'nl tr11dr .11kills
11!1 writ 11.11 rf'pl'lhivf' llS!lf!m ·
bly. Supf'rviMry or ingmt
PX()f'r. in prN'l~ion "hf'f'I mP·
ta] fAbrica.lion &/or prf><:is-
lon 11llk llM'f'Pnlng drsir11blf'.
Send reply Classified 11.d nn.
111, r l n Daily Pflot, P.O.
Box 1560, Cosla Me:u., Ca.Hf.
92.fi:E. • .Equ11I Oppor. Employf'r
Productkin Supv. 10 manage
Mil bnat pmduC"lion lin•.!!.
Supf'rviMry l'Xpf'r. ff!'l"n-
tilll. Roal buildin~ f!Xpf'r.
nnt ttq'd. 1'11.sl gT'l'lwing co.
lf\.11 Pl11c-enti11., C.M.
PRACTICAL Nur~f'. exper.
fnr ~rkhurs! RPtirement
R"«idi"nc,. Call Mr8. Otto.
962·!'i531.
PROFESSIONAL p hon t
~nlicitor • Dan11. Point, San
Clemente, Cnpistrano area.
'"'rork In your own home.
Rest deal In 11re1111. Phone
24 iri11hlon lsl1nd !!~.t~n~"'"ten 9:00 .t.m.
l l!!Eq!!!!ua~l~Op!'!!po~'~· ~E~m~p~l~oy~•~•.., J Reil E1tate Career
JOB OPPOR.TUNJ-,=y--Nf'~' nr experiPncPd. Join eoa.111 Cat11.mllr.n nf'f'di •m· Am,.rir11.'11 h~•ding re11idenf·
i11I 1111IP11 !P&drr. F'ull h'Ain· b1tious younr mf'n for ing pmtnm inclUdf'!I <'la~•· flWrrJu11 boll! buildin1 . mnm + individu11I guldllnN".
::"'!u,or IT~~~.rli~; .. ;,~~~ ,,,,. tr11in you 10 s:UcC'e!l!I.
F.arn while you !tarn. More
dUly al 10 AM. Apply in 11riverlising lh11 n 11ny othf'r ~rton. 33012 Call~ Perf~to, rf'altnr. Our full p11ge 1u1s
S.J.C. m11ke thf' phones rinit wilh
KEEP important job 11.11 buyf'r5. C11ll Virginia J ones,
housewiff' " motho!or. Ell.Tn ~2-55111.
in spatt timf'. Min. a~ 20. TA RBEI4I. REALTORS
San.h Coventry Jewelry.
54<>-06!4.
MACHINE opt'nlar lr1intt!1,
IOl'lle mtth, ability p~ler·
!'f.d, ApPly ~n p1>non Jnr"
Plutic11, J2972 C..lle: PerfN'·
tn, S.n Juan Capo. No
phl'lnr callR pl1"11.1f'.
MECHANICAL
Expemnced with hanri &:
power tool11. CaPftbl' nf
accurate Wf)rit, 54~1178
TOPATRON, INC .
e R. F.. SALES
MANAGER TRAINEE
}.111.n or ""om&n n~ed ''"i!h
11111.nagerial potential. Our
expansion plan requirl"ll h1'{1
C'Urrt'nt licen1'ets, .salcsntf'n
or hroker11, lo be groomt'd
for of.fjre manager in H.B.
or Anaheim. Planned open-
ing11 in Mll.n.'h & :\lay. De·
11irf' minimum of two years
experience but will ronsider
olhe:rs ba~d on a bility. Ex·
cPllPnl benefitL Call Mr.
Graves f o r confidential
l n t e r v i e w appointment.
893-5063 &:: 6.97-6194 COLLINS
k \VA ITS INC. 13651 Mar-
nnha , G&rden Grovf', Calif.
Appll•ncos I02 CLOSING ESTATE All FDR $169.
Exper'd <'lothln,i u.lri1mpn Ii FRIGIOAfRE fro«l tr t e Ant~'•. b<'IC'-a-bra,., furn,
NV.le rs n~t'dPd. Sll_lcs C'lf':rk• n-lri.it"rator/!?ftzer. Cop-bikts. Sat l Sun, 10..m·"4pm , T RADE RS
& •tot'kmta alao, C11 JI per!OM, perfttt COlld.1tion. No p.-..s1le. 2817 Sh11n1Ar FURNITURE
!l.40·9440 IS. Co•ull P!au) or SlOO. Call :>16-9284. Dr., C.1't 202 N. B roedw•y, S.A. l~Tlll ITht-Cilyl. !l'l\.I~ O RECONO. Appli&nCf'll &. CARAGF. Self': F'rl-Sun JO-S , Pf'n 7 011.y~
SECRETARY ~de-cl h y Tv·1, gua.r. & de l v'd , Tandem blkf', furn , 11 n-LOST LEASE--
USC profr1sor, PIU'l timP, Dunlap's, 181~ NP .,,,. p 0 r 1 hque~. w\11, Pl"'M l'Ui l•r Coast Pawnbrokers
your llOmf' cr m i~. Die. Blvd., C.M. S4R-7?80. "'lamp, mlllf•. 11AA l..11 I.In IJ i·lr•ring nut. Our mi~·
larion ~u ittd. 646-11-43. e \l,'ff[Rl..POOJ....KENMORE de 1011 2lnt blwn &inta AM rortune ill ycur lMCi fortunf'.
SERVICE Station AUend11nl. rpr. man hkll w11.Ahtt'lt/dry-t Irvine. N.8.J Unrf'd~mM 11rm• t>f 1111
p/timP tvts/wlmda. NP1 t er!!, sets. 546-5218; SJS.7621'.1. fAITTAS'l'lC R'•r11.ae 91111: kind!! "'ill s:o 111 • tra~lkln
in appearancP, l!')cper. only. 19n M•ytllr Gu r.-:t;-Antiqu•s. furn.. llnuM-hlri nf 1h4'i r v11 lup, \V111rh,.s,
Apply 2390 Newport BJ., Deluxe Model S~2_;. ittm,... clorhi,., 2731 Gan-Jl""-'"lry, typewrtt•r8. rll11-
C.M. • &t&.9:lSO • ne1, C.M. mnnd8, n1u1lral instrumrnt~.
Sttvtce Station h 14 <'11.mera!I, Plll.."f'I~. l'lr, l"I<'. SEARS KenffiOf'lf'--800-wt!"""-, Hou1t_ old Goods 1 .. .Rlllh ovPr rnr bt-$1 Au,.,.. P/timt l"mplOyf'1"1 , f'Vf'!I &-"''"'"' -l4•kndii. Exp!'r. only. Apply ~Int ('Ond: paid $300. Mov-F.STATF. SALF:: 9'A" x _Jfi' 2414 Nl'"'port Blvd, f nP.~f to
In pf'rSon. Xln't 4'$rni111: 1ng! Sell for $1.50, ~745 Krrman Oril!nf&I nll _ Ap-Anlique Rnwi C.f\I. ~-6.l lll
poteruial. GelT)' P11.rfu1..m, Cameras&. pra_isM $1295, 11.~kinR" $1000. 2 A"fTIQUE cani.111tr Ja_mpi>1.
Mf'Mi Vf'rdt ShPll Service-, Equipment 801 494-7755. Early A n1" r. M"l!Pf'.
JJ31 H11,rbor, C.M. J I y 115 F'l'Ofll frPI' rt[rt,1:/frl'f'7.rr 14
MA1'11YA S..knr JOO DTL rwe r cu IL Tllnk \'l\f'UUOl <'lf'llnf"r SERVICE Station heJn, P&rt ..... _. / h I' ..... mer11, perif'r.I c o no . TIFFANY SEITING "'!11111: 11t rer h. ;\1aaPt1IR timt, J1Wlng 11hifl. ExpPr. w/(\ h ttwld! 1 1 I I ..,_.. n . M 11. · · 3 5. 1,; C11.r11t v"' Vfll ve llOCf' & rirllPf'.~.
DIJlJ aullll Enco, .l 0 0 l "' ... 11-B .... > .,.,, Di11mnnd Rln< 1 'x8', 2 Pr11. Turqtlli/if' Newpnr! BJvrl. 111 Rfl.kPr ~1. d NrKORMA1' FTN 50 mm, 1.4 .546·5710 F.vl'i1/wknrt~ t"J>«, 16'x8' & R'xA', T~•in
Sl·IOE Salesm11.n, ex per. JP'l'ls, like new $225. Call M•chlnery 116 mA!lrf'1111 /.t llprini;:i1. All in
family shoeJ1. PI I Im r , 647-0168. (flOfl condition. 644-65411.
me Inly Set. Hr mphlll's, a<t I ~vE -MAMIYA C2, 2%, 1'LR. wilh RADIAL a rm •aw, Cr&fti1· -"-' LY nld f'xPeulivl' d!'!!k J.'11stiion J s la /1 d, NB. · 135 mm ~& 250 mm lenitP m11.n comml. 12". NewtJlf >A'tlh <luk bro"·n lea thf'r
"6'ro4-4CT<2%1R:. M;;;-J;;;,jp;;::--;;;;;;; 1;,•l~";"~"'~"'~'·~-~::1~5'~2:·_= modi"!. Brand nf'w. 5"45-ln4. !l\\'lvf"I rh11 ir. S150. (';f:
5TOCK Ronm H1>lpr-r: SomP Furniture 110 Miscelleneou1 111 rPfrilit \\•ilh top trf"l"7.Pr.
heavy lifting It p.A int1ng. whilf', S125. 2 smAll rl'd IRr·
Mu10 havf' R'OO<l driving PRIVATE member'• room STEREO, 1971 G II r r II r ri q urr Chinf'M' C'O r k I 11 i 1
rt'CONI . Apply In per90l'I, al Y11cht club dttorll.14!<1 b)' ~I Eleclmphonic full hlhll"ll, S20 N . 1'111.g-nAvox
Mon-Fri. Crown Mfg. Co., Ca.nneJl-Chllttin, red, wtiilf' 112, llf'r@O <'hangrr hll1..~ C'&binl"I h1.fi, $40. 67~207.
•48 Prod""""· N.B. • bl r • t I •x k * AUCTION *-"" ue: furniture. Antique 1 Pe " "r 1 ,
STUDENT, p11rl timf' to (lo 11.rmoirf' >A'ith l..\•tl....a m '"· AM/F'M/MPX. 1lt'TM II •--I · "" qi " k }·;ne F'umitutt ....,.., c f'an1ng k pnlillhi~. ror. Wa.sh stand w/white Inc l11Pf" playl"'r. Still
Apply 3-5 pm only, 2744 W, mfl.rbl~ top, Nrw aofa ..... brand flf'W in bnx, li!ft on & Appliancell
C -1 Auctions Friday, 7:30 p.m. <>ast Hwy. NB. and clhtr ilems, c 0 1 1 11y-11-w11y. Ori,(inally 1<>ld
SUPERVISOR P/tim,. for $3000, ult 811 tor $1500, 001 for S386.95, pay off hal. of Windy 's Auction Barn
1norning nPW/ipaPf"r t!Plivf'ry 110IO Sf'paralf'ly. 675-4201. Sllt!l.47 or pymnts cf S9.00 20Th!Ai Nt\\'porl, CM 646-8686
mule!!. Mu.5l provide drop LIKE new-Velvpt Hv rm SE"! mn. U.S.A. Stereo Equip. Bt>hlnd Tony's Bldg Miit'!
loc11.fion Ill home It vrrily ~!11, lnvt R ef, curvf'<i hi· Warehoui1P, 179 B. 17th St., LOW-MEAT
1h111 carr1f'n: hav, pick.-.-J up hAck chairs. pec11.n & ~plln. C01!!11. Me/ill, 6~2442· STAINLESS STEEL
f>llpf'f'JI. 5 D11ys Jl"r "-'k. Oflk lable11. \\'ill !t'Pfl.rBIP , SWAP MEETERS--W11t1rl111 Coo~w•rt Set
ShoulO havf' Oeliv. roulr t'X· A[go H1>rculon R' 1 n t 11. Lo!!t our lf'llJll', f11hulou11 buya Solt! hnmf' demn S.165. Takf'
per. Call F:d Klt't!I, (714 ) "'/m11trhing love Sf'el t'IC. too numerou11 lo Ii~!. Low 1111 Sll9. cash. Boxts nPvl"r
529-4420. &It or ?am-9pm 645.-1701 ~ f'ach. Buy Ol'lf' '>r HMXI 0!>4''ned. JOO~ Factory Guar-
wkdy•. ~=~-=---~--itrmJ.. All from l•"•c•f •"I•·• KJ NG S7.. P11sturPpedi<' bfod. " " cu.
SWITCHBOARD oper11.tor It coff<'r & f'nd Ibis. 4 mll t· bankruptcy court• or inlf'r· 11141 li~l()M
fy.i"", full timt. Send h I nal r'vrnut!' !lt-izurea. Ntw, WE ARE 4 FIRE-ONF. .. ,.. <' n g b II r <'hair s clf'11n 11ork. PubHr wtlcomf'. · "'
J?sumP P. 0 . &x 224R, !11"·nchair8', chrome ki!. "f!I: Globil! Liq1i1idalora, 7200 500'11 • G7A-14 WITH MANY
La5n1n11 Hill11. rhlldrf'n~ clorhe~ &: toys. Gllrdf'n GrovP Blvd., ~rri1f . MILE~ LEFT! ONLY SJO
TELEP H 0 NE SurvPy-~asonahlP ~.i0.11. min~ler. 1!93--0574. 119.1.0575, FOR F.ACH ONE OF' US.
\l,1E ARE \\'ORTH IT'. p/lime 11.ftf!rnoon11, nur of. 4 PIECE walnut bdrm llt't open 7 days a wttk lrom 9 -
fiC'e. S.111.ry + comm. ind. sprgs &. mafL CDlil'O until 7. MUCH BETI'ER 11-fEN ~1 143 1 l ~-I • f -RETREADS~ 859 Pretklio · · car .. "'~ v~. ~a900ll.b e. STEREO, 1972, Garr 11 rd
642·9908. mod.t i, full stereo ch&niter, =0='·~· =C~.M~:· ~-~~~--
RATTAN furn j 1 u rt : air RUspen1ion 1pe11k,rs, SILVERTONE F. I"' C I r 1 c
Ttllers
UNITED ST A TES
NATIONAL BANK
P1111. tlmt tellers, f'XJ>Pritnce
dtsin!!d. Catt 540·5211 .
TRANSCRIBER, txper: ln
all aspects ol medical
re('Ord11, 8CCUf"llll"' !ypl.!i!, 65
wpm, full lime, day 1 .
Pe~n~ Oflief', So u I h
CDa1t Comm. Hosp. So.
l..aguM, 49!>-1.111. An equal
t>pportunil)' employf.r.
TELEPHONE Seles. Top
a.mmissk>ns and bonu.~. Ap.
ply in penon bf'h•t't-en 9.00
11.ncl 12:00 noon at 8::111'1 Bolsa.
Avenue-. Midway Cily.
\VAfTRESS EXPER. e BLUE DOLPHIN e
AM/FM I d. Olol'd nr .. n. Seldom llliffl lrPfinillhf!dl chail'!I, lamp &r s rreo r11 IO +
rabll"!I, 2 two bed matt, Sat lllpt drck. Still brand new & Like Tll'W. Be.by furn. Ctle
& Sun. 6Tr 295i. guaranlttd. Wai1 J e ft of drawen, mapJP, Ga1
unclalml"d on lay-11w11.y. fireplace logs & .creen.
PAIR loungf' chaini f,lt'Oldl Sold far S325, pay olf 842-5687.
S10. ta, <.uuch 8'. rradilional bala nce or 19!'i or tll.kf' ov•" ~~--------
• • AM ANN A refri11:/frl!t!zer rn, $75. or bs! ofter. 1195 small pymnts. ColltcUon p I · combo, h"l!P.'Ler hnlda over au 8.TUIO, C.M. 549-1>45. Dept., 714/893-(X;()J. 200 Jl:)S. Chl"'11p: Salon hAir
M'A1'CHING lovHeel & IAl-7.-* STEREO * dryer. work11 grl"1!. S20. GE
Boy redlner. brown naug. 1972 GaITard modl!I full romhD 1tCTUbbtr/polishP.r/
Llkl' ,_, Mf'. 545-1714. i1ltrt'O ch 11 n g "r , 81r •hempooer, -SIO, 548-47R.1.
RATTAN ul-!K>fe, 2 1rwiwl sutpe n•ion 1pe11.kPrJr, RUSTY, usM boat mooring
roc-kers. ottom&n, J tables, AM/F'M MPX "'"rM radio, ctwn. 1~" m11.ttrlal. each
S240. LookJr new . .ii?-4391 I track tape-deck opp. Wu link 2~" long, 1%." wide.
LARGE Octagon custom cot-lf'1t uncl11.lmM on 111.y away, 50c per ft. Marine Surplus
ft!! table, Walnut &: ro!d. told for i295. Pay oft Da.111.nct Co., 3307 S. Main, S.A.
$100. 543-UTg. of S81. Collection dept. 54~l. MARJNE Mtch11nic, lif:ll!I &
t1n1 1enrn1.I &etts!IOry in-
1ta lI a 1 ion . Y ll ('hting
AMOrialtR, 2500 ~7• Coll.st
Hwy.
Meture Ho1te11e1
TO INTERVW.V.1
NE\V RE~IDENTS
-Pvt T1mf'--
RESPONSlRLE P11rty I o ~1a1url". :t~ Via Udo, NB
hf'lp morning,( in Thp Laun-\\'AJTRES.'i'.. Muat Ill' over 21.
===~-----·I 638-l(WJO. ~=~-----DIVORCE fOl"Cef! salf' of r-n. --;-;o.~. -;;:,-;coo;===---,--I 75 YDS AVOClldo rm crpt. t~ house" tull cf furniture. g 6 DAVENPORT, x Ir• VP.lvtt loveaut "1afa, u~ed
XJnt ronditk>n 642-71rl6. widl', n' t d • r?cnVl"'rini:. TV, nf'P.d8 T'Pp.Air. S..111 nfftr.
===-~----'--1 Twin 1i 11JCPper davenport. 6'16-4750.
VELVET JoveJ1Cll.t S 9 5 . Lr& upright ribl tf r ----------
Ve:lvPt hi-heck chair S4T.50. fr,."' 7. er 1 rt 1r i 1 , i iso. WALNUT 9Pintl pi•no S41ki.
CAR. .\ TYPEWRITER NEC.
litO D E. Edinpr, S.A.
Call 547.3095
M!lCRANJC; Blcyd• W/l"X·
p«. J'\111-Ume tmplo~nt,
Miuion Schwinn loon 1
~aNey P11rkw11.y ,
Lquna Nliuel. ~10-4861
NEED sitter In Harbor VWw
School Difll, 1.((U l &. 6, 9:30
..., 6. Mi--5763.
NEED new ftwh f11.~ for
T.V. romml"rci11I. 111tr11ctiw
le ('Urvaciou!I girl brt>A·f'l'n
22 It lJ yt.!!, Nn 1'..xperienct
l"ltCt5Sal")' !14~ ill'\4.
rirom"I. 6 l'\ay!I. JZV! E. Ml"xican f(l(l(j txper. pttC'd.
Cbe!ll H>A)', Corona dPI Miit. tnr \l'f"ldmingte:r reataurant.
6?3-6,;00. 1192-571'7.
Bnth likP 11Pw. 549-~. 644-2900. Wa!lht>r $40. Twin hPfl
13 >A·11lnu r l'\h11" rirt'R£"r I. nite
~~~~~---~~ WANTED. Door In
. . SECTIONAL S50. 4 WASH Mach $.'l\. Dryer, I"", door ch1ldn!!n beds, S7.50 each, "' •lanl'\ S."iO. 962-523.l. 1lef'(I ti 1 h' 19:1, P. J.wn. Mwr. $.'"JO, Shnp
Sant• Ana
Now lnterviewin1 for
DAY BUS HELP
Apply In Prrson
Before 3 & S P.M.
Or Before 11 A.M .
lol"llrni, nn invrstmenl.
642-2814
WOMAN F~O~R~
APT. CLEANING
LARGE COMPLEX
MuJ1t bf' th<lroughly l'Xptri·
tnced in rommrrcial clean-
ing.
Call 54&-5015
WOMAN, en!'rgetic Ir nf'lll,
motel ml\i '1 wnrk .
Permant'nl. 494-llflli
re n 11 1"1· 54:>.3580. Smith S125, SltrM 5 yrll.
"'ANTED: Trunclle beds, Sl95. Marblf' tablt $15.
corner section&! couch. 549-DJ5 ..
646-34?1 SERRA 11JRIFI' SHOP
*"'TABLE, dining room, 8', 11.1 Mft in St., H.R.
SpA.nish, cu~ dl"'~ign, h&nd H 11 v i n g a. S p p c I a I
m11.df'. Sl:iO, 838-6866. \\iaithini;rton'11 Birttwl11y %
1V2• GOLD COUCH PMce SAil>! Thi11 Mon., t"eb.
Gd. rond. $50, 545-0154 Zl.111. 9: :W. a.m. In 2 p.m.
G•rage Sale 112 8' GAS he:skr. nPW $:,0, Hl'ad
:-:-:::--,c.,--.,-----·I 360 ~kill. !'·.'f'v. blnd inr11 sro.
SAT. Only Garagf" S.le: Toronedo ~ii hoa t. M11.kt
dl'pf'f"Skln glasa, ant'iqul' offf'r. 642-)4TI.
GAS ni,,ge, nict $65, ..-J". 8
k W TV 23" cablMI $50.
\Ve.8her SJ.\, Mini-bikP, 6%
hp S7~. 711"4 C.Ontintntal,
OM
CAR P~E~T~&-.,R'"°·EMNANT
INVENTORY SALE :
Sunday, Allm·"4pm
A-1 Apllrtment Supply
1652-A Nf"Wport BJvr1 , CM
WOODF.N rtf"fs, v 11 r i o u 11
11ize1 S.l and up, AM for
Dan. 646-3951 w k d y •
•'ON PI ANO~
• $.AVE: ur 1'0 SlllOO ON SF.l.F'.{;J'F;O CONS(H •. 1>: 4 ~f'ld. Radin, Hl'A.tl'r, tte. • 1191.
'71 Squareback ..... . . . .... $2499
ORGAN.< UP TO 1000 ON '70 VW 8U.9 $1499
SMA.Lt .. F;R ORf;AN~ :'1!;17 \f\' • • • • • • • ' • ' • ' ' • '
Don't Del•y-Buy Now · · ' ·
At Trrmrndous '69 VW , ..... , , , , .. , .
D i1count1 A11 1 ... 1'r11 n1 , R11.d1n, H .. A!"'r ~\\''I' tro . Y • n111 h11·Ch11•k l"rhu:. ~ '1il' •l\"'r
$1399
Kohl" A C•m•""" pl•oo.• '69 VW Ghia . , . , .. , , , . , , , . $1599
T .. A ,.,_ -1\\'"' h•,,. i; ri!h"'I' 'l\1l t rri rh°"'~ fl'i\m l, Y:'\:\ 219. 11vm11:t-LUnn-Y11mah11 nrt•n•
NEW• u<en '68 VW Convertible COAST MUSIC
SERVICE
lR.19 Nf'wpnrl Rl\'d., C'.~1'
• • ~2·~1 ••
Ol'f'n Sunday 12 tn !'! pn1
19 rithf'r 'AA ~ 1n C"hnn~• rrnn\ 1 826 CQQ
'67 VW BAHA Bu9
lJ JG :\:ul
$1399
$1199
PIANOS** ORGANS '66 VW Purple ..... , .... , . $1199
Kr1 111, S1,.tnway, !.JJ111Ty, Spi•<·1111 s~s !M.
A.lr n, Ra ld.,.,·1 n. r!r. ~·rn111
S2!1!'! uf'I. n~~NTA I~<:.
0Ailv lO·f! ~11n 1:,i.5
FIELD'S P IANO CO.
1113.1 Ne.,.,·por1 Blvd ,
~IA Mt"Sll 714164~.12;;()
MAJOR ARANO 0Rf;AN.<:
e BUSES AND CAMPERS e
(3) 1970 ·MODELS
From S3!lS inr. Alt"'1 . Cnnn .
HRmmond • Wurh11,.r, "'Ir.
AlllO H•rps lc h nr rl s N
(2) 1969 MODELS
(1) 1968 MODEL
Ph•no~.
c;ouLD Mtr~1c ro.
204!1 Nf'J. Ma in. ~.A .
!'~1?-0681 * • S1nr"' l ~l 1
•• 1965 PORSCHE
~u nroor. (' f'nu pe iYCC323 J
$2599 ln\l.·RF.Y Churrh Mfl{lr l. 2
manul\l, lull pf'fiAI, llfW'<'111 I
l"lff'cl~. "'"·!'find. $22fl0 Pn ....
pry. ~27.
PRTVATE PARTY WANTS e VW TRADE INS e
To euv PIANO roR '70 Toyota ... ............ ' $1899
CASH. 8.1.>.mll. L1n11 mil,.~ 456 BS\\'.
HAMMOND orgAn,
$699/belll otff'r. Ml , '69 F' t IG ...•• , . , , , •• . .....
• 67~ Rpcrnt Pnitlnr ovtrh•ul YPS 247.
PIANO Cott11gl"' Up r l a h 1 , '68 Fiat .. , , ........... , ..
Tl"rrlllc tnnP t.. !nurh. XTr l":'I
M~t11 11.ftf'r 5 pn1. •• ·
·UPRIGHT p,.;;,, 1:i:,O-'68 Opel Station Wa9on .....
BPst orr,.r. R11d ln, Hr.!I t,.r, l1111 g11~~ rl\ck, low miles XUK.
.. 967-1909 .. s"',-w"71n_a_M~oc...,h"7tn-,-,-~12"'1 1' 6 7 Opel Kadett
~::,--'0---::::---c--IVllV 7J fi. BUY rilrec1. Eln11 iia l"' nn!v
s26.q. Whit.--Elna, 41122 P11r~-'65 Cadillac .....
mount Al vd., l..11kP>A'noti . Ct>n\,.r r. l.A11d"'d HOG 922.
21J1"473--0m.
. . . . .....
....... ' .
$1999
$1599
$897
$599
$1299
$1099 ""spo-r~ti-ng~G~ .. -..,~,--=130 '67 Toyota ... , ....... , ... .
o-,:-:--------111 Or. Au1nma!1r !rA.n.-., R11din. xtrA r.lf'l n ZXH 9.16.
SKI Bnnta l111rt v p 11 r ' .\ m°""'"· ,{.,-. u.;, •~"' '67 Town & Country . . . . . $1299
II "'· alnlOlll ™'"'· l.11tlif'.\. SlAt1nn \V11qnn , Ch ryc:Jf'r .\ fin*'•} XTr. AA4.
lt1ther Nn'Ntlr11 ?1~ N 1111,.lf -·
vPry littlP, $15; Tr11ppf'ur 7
N, S,25. :i.1~?l8R.
SKY Dtvf'n Sport P11.raC"h11fl'
l'QUlpml"nl, v•rioua itl"tn1.
SIOO/be•t offer. 645-07fl7,
Store, Re1teur1nT,
B•r 132
DUAL Taylor iCf' cniam k
.lhakt m•ch. Complele 2
Horpolnl f'lf'c grills 4 1/11>.
AlllrwlA w/work thl It
munlt>r. 10' "'" hood Ir
hlower8, 2 Ht>tpoin1 4'lf'I'.'
fl')'f'rll I. 11/terJ., Gl<1hfo •lit>
CHICK IVERSON
1970 Horbor Blvd.
Costa Mes•
S49.J031
Ext. '66-'67·'68
441 E. Cout Hwy,
Newport leach
549-3031
~~ @
;;: m~c:,.~'." ~,:; ~::: [ J[I L l~ burgeni, 2144 Nl!'Wpor1 Blvd, frM to You • r.t• md ~' 'L.,
C011t11. Ml"~. 642-19.1~ AM; 1~-------'· 1 ;-····----~~"~1 "4~1540 an11. """ r v \ c e : 3 linn, 2 Times, $2.00
494-9985, CArl Ru.•11,.ll. Dogs 1.54
TV, R•dio, HIFi, ROBUST, Pl'rf LAbrildor.
Stereo 136 mA.J.-puppy. tl rnoiii.1 rwd•
rnhu11r 4t. loving c h 11 d ,
1972 ZENTTlf It RCA 1,.tevl~· M2-7~
ion!I'. l.t>wf'al prir'"'!I ln l~~~~~~~~~~ Or11nge CO\Jnty. J yr. picturf'I~
t.1bP, 1 yr . partA. l yr. [ rets Ind~ j[ ~ j ll"rvi~ w11rr•nt y. No _ _ ~
finance eh•ra:t1 If pei<l In 901 ~------~
da ys. Zt'nirh 19··J••••••••••1
Chromocolor Sl9!1. RCA xr.,. Prt1, Gentral 150
100 S4~. All 11va 1I. modt-J•l:::,,,,::-:0:".':-0 . ..,..----·
in 11tor·k. ABC Colt>r TV, TROPICAL h!lh £; nrw" u~
Or11ngf' County•1 IAfl'Pll In-~ •quarlurm, Up In 100 iill.
ricpcndent tll'all'r. 9 o l 1 AU act'e!l110rif'!I, WholeMle
Atlant11 , Hunt1naton Beach. nr belnw. fi?~l
968-3.129. TWO P iaf'(ln1, $.i-ftir the
C 0 M BTNATION P11.ck1u1'-J>fl ir.
8'11 COJWIOI.-21 " T V , *" Ca II !J.46...~1 •
I TERRIPOO SI D. Arfrlr11.hlf'
hfnnd c or k 11 p nl'I SU.
fi.42-4318, 5.14-.~i "''"r 41
pm.
GERMAN ~h r ph"'r ~ 5
months. m11lr, , hot 1 ,
Pt1n!bl'f'd/no ptper1. $.l5.
~1289.
NEEDED • Compvrion NI
~arty IHn YNn t or
p h y , I ~ • 11 1 hen<ttcappPd
mf'nt111y hrithl, 1-4 )'T. nid
(irl, Prim111rlly wH'k-f'nriL
CaU ~t t11. M cCI r 11 en ,
m-3497.
2312 No Broedway
WOMAN wanleil for honse-
cle&ni"R". F'riday1 only.
DoVf'r Shorn. 646--0lfi9
YACHT SALESMAN
dilllhe9 k ailve:r, 1...shaJ)f'd BRUNSWICK I ' Slllle bed
~f11 . M">Ai ng me.ch. cabinet, Pool 1'&b!t. Ball rt'ntrn. $l 7!i.
dP11k, miM:, ~ Jnsh A\'t ., 4 Cut>!I, rack, bridge " bfiJJJr
AM Int Midk'I t.. h i · I I Oog1 154
rttord pl&yrr SAO. 642-7549. ::~:o=-,,-,,-..---Mi1cell•MOU1 Wanted a20 Hl·F'I, walrtul cahlnl"L Ntl!!. CHAMP, ~r. &-mArrl male
----------Jixing. Portahlt TV. Ofll>r . ~Kh 0081, Ju1r h;mf'li .j
Sal rs
MONTGOMERY WARD
Mu11t bl' f'.Xptr. in both po>A"
tt & Mil.
Robf'rt \'. 5'11.ats. Inc.
2001 \V. est H>A')', NB
54Jt.1t'll
GlRL for litr h~kpini;: &
bfabyattting exdwlrcf' for
room. hoerd + •m. *ftllU")'.
11'\eal tor •tudent! 6f'J-2!MO
M.rs. Bera'.
AntJque1 IOO
Antique Sale
In 1torace llPN" 1119
9442 B~alcw•ttr Clrclt,
Huntington 84!tirh
JOsmto S pm
Sa1urd.y only
CdM. s«I. fi'7!>.1329. "'ANTED lo huy I 9 fi ~
S"td i shRo r st r11.nd 1
Chr1slm111 Plat!", 6"44-46R'i.
Musical ln1trument1 IU
&46--Kiffi. )'nl. Xlnt lt>r 11rur1 Xlnl
"-' I ehllrlrrn. Goof'\ 'watrh· SPEAh"ER F'.nc. j P•r•lf!'~ Mt. A Duy .ti S500 in·
IYP' I ••/all •14'!"1'0 ,...,mp ("tudlnt •II Pflprr!I t.. rit..
119;,, nr hr.i Dfrrr. ~~~. 1)1}~. Al>A'•rtt, 6?:.--1l:i.l.
DIVINCI IJl hA.u accorrllan 2l " PACKARD Bi-II .'TV. 2 h.P11ut.-l'Nllf!-lt))'-pmd i(;,
>A'lllnul e11hinl"I. UHt ~ A.KC 2'· mo I h . 11.•ifh f'll tra.11, S300 or bP111 of· ,,r. !148-"Jni.
HARP, full ai7.f', from Vf!na
Cru7.. Perfrct cond . S2:25.
M;;..JTI4.
VHr S75. P h· M'Hw.lfi . , 8'' (' •m . . . . P8J™", l ., .. hltl", d<'>A--c:lll>A'J.
,.,.. le You
•
. .
11.U.X 'ILOT ,,1da}. '""""' 181 1'11-'
r ~-~ 1~ 1 .....::"~ 1~r ....::-!!"!!!i:.=....~1~~~ [ T-.. ~ lril 1 T-""" .-. ...... 1.-.
906 Aire.rift ---~~9U Campers, S•1•1Rtrtrf20 Mobil• Home.----.:15 Auto Service, hrts -_._...,... ____ ,...... 't" ·General -900 U1n1r1 ulotrt mperfod -m ' ~~~;J~~~~~~;,ii<:;;';;;:;:;;;;;;::;;~; TaJldr•atr or 'J'J1cycle ---...f.-.l;lilTENIURG-~UMM t: K.. upl!'"'\on '861 XI' ""' dloi'l'• •'
--+-·l>AH,._P0tfl"·1' --+· , >•wl. I l ~ 1S!!.JID DIAMOND AlllAIJON
l't.AT head .V~ M"'· -'' ~ Aifi iQiij[
,,.buildtnr,-Ir tn-a.r-~-~ -i~';;~~i;~·~·;;~~;;;i cellf-nl~.-~--~-~--~""1t - -
~ ¥ll caibove,r Open ~rl Jlx57 FLAMINGO. 2 bdrm.,
-SJ 4 ~ ,.__ onr-11 kft1l"Slzt:--"2 bath. .... mper. ttpt . o"' w .
•
l
•
!Q:ll'61. hp Mf'~ d'esel • JOO 1hN 0ott Flyinc
Grtnd Optnlno Boats, Mtint./ ,, hrs. $7,500 or oltrr. 2506 Y.'. Student Plan Available
FEB. 19, 20, 21 Strvlc• 902 Coast H11o•y,, Newport .. ~19.U • P"IZE~ • t•rrf' l)rawlrlK Bf! h
ComQ/,.lr Y11r/11 ~upplJC"I' BOAT Rrflntihln11;. -. lie •. ~=-~-~~ Ctmpers,Salt/Rtnt920
N11w Jlolit Dliph<y • v I hi I . ,._ 14 t C Mllche'll. 4t'l hp arn 11 ng, pa n!lnic. v•.:n, J h •• • V I' J Bi•rtr11n1·1'mj11 n CIMnu . t7~7'6l• f"Vi!'!r. o n80n ... ectr1c, er')' It! e
Coltm1bla·l:>ef't v1:"r P u~. Trailer, 800d ro11Pr.
1Jlt"d.Bo11 B"1kpr11 894t,/Marln• Ql(J(f Wrgaln. 1950. fl7~J6;,2
D•'l• Point Marin• Equip. 904 Bo•t&, Rent/Chart't 908
Of>I Pr111.io ar Cas1l11H Pl. ~ hp S1'fliull !l'mg th<tfl, f'x -1---------·1~ rrll(.:Q(f(~Jiidryrk};·krd& celltnt coMilion. $1.)) Cit LIDO 14 Nn, 940, 2 wt11 1Rll11,
VANS • CAMPERS
Chevrolet, Ood9e,
Ford & Volk1w•91n
dr~l'll8!t'. Shf' <tr111X'rH111Jy be11!, 963-1494, S7~. &!bot $200, 7 I 4 ;
w1n1,1 10 1,.1 nut •· .. ,,,.,, 637 3004 Y.'r. t1tock all !he makes "•ith " ' a .. 11, Power 906 -· · llomt> tl~h 1Jr • jUst C"nliM'. /'Bc--c---=6-,.,_, -----,= va n ronvr.Nnnn~ "h . ,,. I -· ..... -11 9il9 by co~TEMPO o ,. 1 11: • I brn::la•11 u•/60 ~· fa1rllnrr Cu11rnm SKl11n ---------<•
hp Mttc molor. \l.'ori'l !Vllnt'-Cruill#'.r-1:>.;coelltnl t•onchtion AURORA 21 _ l.oadM llnrl In in nur hrand fll'w rl't'reallOn·
Otlf' n!llC'ftl'' hf't by c:11JHn.: 1hru-001~quippt'd k. ready "N'BI llhApe. Sll'epS 2 fn 4_ al Vl'hirll' r!rp11r!m('nt ;,1~2'179 11'1 ~pm'!' Price ts~ ro 1;:0 $6.iOO. 546-34:"!7. ExcPI. N~·port 11l1p 1n·1ul. COMMONWEALTH 111 or»y $!15(1. Ji'-,\fonk cruiier, flyhridge, . Only Sll.50 mn. Good Duy ar
16' BOAT Ir~ Purc~u•1t1 nr Al('f'J>ll 6, Plenly ol Pxtru . $2,250. Call 644-R6M.
American toAt lraUc>r-Lllrgt> Exc-cl cond, ~1 u 11 1. Mll. €AL 20. Sllrrl-rl"'-· -,.-"-"' MOTORS, LTD.
• ~_f_f 1-! l l l•w.iflCh... •'YJ\ 14""" D~'I ·1-...• ~ <~1 ~ M 675-~. , . . ~ .-.--.,.., ,.....,," · ~,.,.,......,, ., .. ,495 nr ~f of. 2114 £. First SI.
14' GLASS boat, 30-H-:-P. fer. 646-4508, fi73-2716. Musi Santa AnR 8.15-65."ll ITT"'rioT hoat. tr11.llcr and 7.5 F:vlnru<le elf><'. Full t>OVf'r 11ell.
hp OUlbo6w'd, i195, w/1nai~cr. _x1n1 rond. 1~1 ~14-· ~ .. ".e'".~•=·1"1=E=n=n=v-.-.,-,-,;=11-.,
A47·0'179 $500. 557-215A after 5 pnt. rii:: & 011r11. Makt> oUrr or
16' Boal. 2 3& hp Fivtrtn1de 22' Roal w/mo.rl.ne · cna:inc. ll'l.lrl11 for 11m11U dirt bike.
n1n:or• Ir 1rn1J.rr. Llc'd, '72. NCf'ifs ~·ork. $60 ftik rs, 11~ Call Rrtrr 6, :-All-2310
J795, R47-JR66 rvet. I °'"'134 ~ . .,,,._, · _ __ ENTJEAVOR • 26' F' /G ~loop
QYICK CASH '#\9 GLASPAR 17' Cill1lion n .R. t>qulp'tf. Jo'ull r11.l'c, e . THROUGH A 1/0 Mert•, lj?(I, ·rnp Dail T. Rftth. 6'F.>-Ol.12 11.ft ~-
·rrlr. Xlnl. S:550. A32--4661. :11 · PC, \vilh arr short moor-
DAIL y PILOT --14,..WHJTE-STAR--'"" "'"'"" 1.1 .. .i '"""'"· WANT AD TIH trailer with '72 he, $275 67:1-24.ll. 642-5678 or orfer. 968-8-011 . s"'A"e;,crr;;;o--_-,Nc:~--,.-,,ccl.-c1il=1,-,,
We 'll help you sell! 642-5678 let-board. Oft.rs. Call 5.'i7~267
Autos. Imported 970 97() _1tr1cr '1 P..,"-'·~----1-----:,-.:....;.:..:;:..._.;.;..:.;.;;;:;:::;_::.:;!::;~:_-:.:..: lcA TA LIN A 22', & Ira i Irr.
• :;; DEAN LEWIS
,;. ORANGE COUNTY HEADQUARTERS
TOYOTA--VOLVO
646-9303
1966 HARBOR BLVD. 11;1 I< 'l"I I<
l•lll" :JI.,·, COSTA MESA 'Id '·1l'HJ~Y
, j l J •. ?11• M T '1 ( • I',\'
'FiNA.L ~LEARANCE . '
NEW 1971'S!
f ully 1•q111p. OB n1ntor. xln!
rond. $39:,0. 1132-0930 rvr11.
Boats, Slips/Docks 910
SLIP, 11ide Ill"• 40' lo 50', $2
per It. Al50 rlry 11 0 r II. Ii(,.
\1•/launchlnr faciJ. up to 21 '.
S2l & SZ7 jM!r mo. Nr~·port
Marina, 20th St. R."19-mJ.
BOAT ~lip !or 20' or IP~~
pcnW'r hoal. Penlnsula arC"a.
67H 7!IO.
Boat Space Nr. Lido * Call 673·6450 *
Bo•fs, Speed & Ski 91 l
•72 GMC Truck/Camper
BRAND nf'w 1!1i2 G.M.C. 1i
1nn P.U. Fully fA t·lory
rquirirw'd ill!'lu<llng 6 c·yl. t''1·
ginl' plu~ he11ulifnl R' cab-
nl'rr c11mprr th11t .~lt'rp"' six.
Scri11I No. TC~1427.506820.
Was $4643.56
SAVE Sl 348,56
.f"ROJ\.1 ~ICl\ER
Now $3195.00
&: Tax. lir. & fjt)f', fee
BILL BARRY
GMC-PONTIAC-FIAT
!ISi SI. ar S.A. Fl"\\"Y'
2000 E. L<;I St., Santa Ana
55.'1-1000
C~A-M_P_E_R_· 8'2 f-oo-<~h-,~ll-,-,,,_~
over Oprn Road j:an1per.
SleeP! 4. Has 1\1•0 !ont> pain!,
stove anr! ovC'n, icC' ho....:,
sereen rlonr tinrl l'&.rpet.
Largr l'IOS<'I !lpat'f' anrl rrn·
trr d1ni;orte. \Vl'ighs R75 lhs.
~fin! con<lit1on. Cost $1 ,250.,
llC'I! ror .SllOO cash. 1593 Mt.
~1at lrrhorn, Fountain V111-
~y. Rf1rr '1 P.M. \VC'rkilay~.
'62 OIEV Trk. & '69 Open
Rit camf)C'r. RPbl!, gorxj
ronif. $U7::i/hest off c r .
962.-87A6.
'70 DATSUN Camper, lna<lrtl
w/ex rra~! Vf'ry rlcan. Lo
m i. Alake otftr. .E v es
!ota.J ~·eirht:--Stove;-oven, .wisher k--drytt, n e
·" I I I dlah~·asher, shed, set-up in bored $3.5, 1940 Ford partJ Try oor i.ase ~. tor Spyder. rMI btuty! ar.-
inc.luding body. '35 Ford Savinrs ~ Satiat.actlon • Ser, ('wner. .SUOO. Lo ~-
chassis wilh h Yd r au 11 c vice.-· · • Days 5417-5132, evu 14&--2(.19
111 ... , arge c Olt', carpet!!,
5C!"ETn OOor & many extras Jamily park. Pet o k .
Laoi:e boot, hl'O tone pain!, 53!-72l}.1.
hlue and "'hill', Mint Con--J BR mobile home, ocean
dlllon! Coril $1250, sell for view. Laguna Hills Park.
S*)(I, 1593.'i Ml. Matterhorn, * • t 4rJ-l682 t * *
.f'oun1aln Vall'">'· sft 4 pm. I ·M~ .. -.-r~H7o""'m-e-s---~940~
b"'" 12>. 836-5612. WE LEASE ALL POPULAlt· AU"I
\VE ARE 4 FIRESTONE 1912 MAKES AT OOMPETI. If socrs -G78-14 \VITH MANY TIVE RATES.
MILES LEFT! ONLY $10 Cali Ma.lcoJm a,1d for '71 AUDI' 11!<1 ~ Oii blk,
auto, air c!Ohd, rtill under
warranty. Call aft ' pm
673..7'96. VACATJ ONEER
It's NICE -SEE
THE BF.S'T AT.
Scotts C•mpers
91 -4 N. Harbor Blvd.
Santa Ana
Cycles, Bikes,
Scooters 925
HON DA 30.'i, New f'ng &
rlectrical liystem. R u n s
goori. 1\lusl .srll. Sac .. $245
or ofr. 83.1--014il
HOD AKA 100 J\.1oloN'yCll'.
Gnocl Mnd 1tlon SI7S/or best
OtfPr, !>62-A786.
=~--"62 VESPA.
Xlnt fi'inrt. Sl 25.
* &16·56!15 ""'' 5 pm
1969 YAMAHA JM cc Twin
Street Bike. SZ70. or offer.
.l.'17-4605.
* * •59 BSA Victnr. 44 1 CC,
xlnt condit10n, best oller.
~7-1007
* M~rvin Pearce*
Motor Homes
Sales • Rentals
558-3222
FOR EACH ONE OF US. further detallJ. \~'E ARE \VORTH IT! THEODORE•
MUCH BETTER THEN ROBINS FORD
RETREADS! &;!! Presidio ~ Harbor ffivd.
Dr .. C.~f. Cotta Mesa ... 642~10
SELL OR TRADE Auto& W81\tld HI
WE PAY TOP
CASH
BMW
IMMEDIATE .DELIVERY
2002's &
Bav11r~'s
SEE US AJlPU't
Over11a1 Dellverv
1940 Ford 2 dr Sedan. Bltick. WE buy all makei al clean CREVIER MOTORS
ehrome wheels, good tires. used spor111 ca.rs, pa.id for ~ W. l~t St .. ~anta Ana
3.12-V8 body In excellent or not. PleUI! driye in tor 115-3171 '
condition $900 or b t' st fTl!il appraisal. 1 --A-u_tom_o_tl;-'v-•~!<~c-eU"t-.,..,..--1
reasonable offrr. 836-5672. &
Trucks 962 . .
'71 APOLLO motor Home HI.•
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
25'. Aw<. ·•ooo w•lt •••. 3100 w. Coast, H,.,, ROY CAILVER .. lac.
$1~.(0'.l. 644-16&1 after 5. Newport Beach 2925 HarbOr Blvd.
lntt'rnaHonal Harvester 642-9405 Colt& Mm 546-4«4
. 1970 SHASTA RECREATION CENTER WE PAY TOP DOLLAR CAPRI
Mini. "''" Home SeU l~n· ROY CARVER, Inc. FOR TOP USED CARS t;Ained. 12,500 miles. Reason-
11.ble. An ... hi"" of Vlllue in 2925 Harbor Blvd, U YOl.ll' car la extn. dun
J' ·~ Costa l\h!sa 5'16-4444 •~ ua flnl ' tr11.de. Uc, 167BQR. De11.ler, BAUER BUICK 642·347-4, """~""'""!'.,;.""!'..,~~ 231 E. 17th St.
T; .1 -)968 DODGE camper truck. Costt Mesa 5'8-n6S ra1 er1, Travel 945 10\i Tr11 velease. Air Cflnd .. 1--.IMPO;;-;;;;;;;-;;;-==;.:c=
e .AR.ISTOCRATS 4 spd, V-8. $2995. Dealt>r, RTs WANTED · 642·3474 . Ora.n1e Counties e NEWPORTS TOP $ BUYER
CAPRI 1971, 4 ..-J, red,
low mile1, xlnt c o n d ,
private party.._ 968-6295
CORTINA
'69 CMtln•
Station Wego"
'67 TRTUMPH 500
S.l~. l'lf'f'<ii; nil pump
runs. 494-1:13.i.
e AUTO-MATES Bll..L MAXEY TOYOTA
hut Also, .~vPral used S395 & 11p 1970 Ford E340 18881 Beach Blvd.
WORSHAM TRAILER SALES ff Be b
8,000 miles. Aut.o Tr11.ru, T"1'
taatic Second Car, like n~.
t535ASWl
.66 CR 450 Honrtii., I ov.•r!('r.
ftl ll rin'.'s!I , low ml., excep
s::oori. $."«!. 5411-4667.
2709 w, 17!h Srref't Auto. r11dio, pa.ssengt>r JJeat, · •c • P.ti. 147-8555
Santa Ana (71~, 5.11.2595 new tires, dlr, Xln! con. WILL Buy your 0ar.,p8.Jd 1ot
rlit ion. "'Ill r in tin c e. or not,. Ca.U ~Ralph Gordon
NEW '72 NOMAD !9!170LEI $2'195. Call before fi7l--0900 _ 549-3031. m6
l\ffNT BIKF. .112 HP. 19' Shower, toilet, refrig.. II PM 644-2!)5(). , l:Iar~.Jllvd.,. Costa Mesa. !'lt~1f ~O:i~iR ~ f,l295. Sro!l!'i Campf'rs '70 Hilux PickUp. New eng. Autos, Imported 970
914 N. Har1¥ir Bl vd. k. tires. Rthll tTAnsm . Cam· ;::---:------
"70 KA\VA SA KI trail boss Santa Ana per she'll. Xln"t cond. S193J Gener•I
100. xln1 condilifln, $300 or/ o;,.-,==;-c=---=-,--or m11ke ofr, After 6P!M .l ;::=-:~-:------best Off Pr. 847-99J7. • '69 Nimrod Crown Deluxe, 494-201 8. '67 Daimler Soverign wire
$11!S
Ward.S.Lee
Amllbn ...... ,..
.147-51.2', i
1234 So. M~n st.
Santa. AM
DATSJ,IN
NEW 1972 TOYOTA CARINA
$ 2314 -
SKI boftr. 15' Gl111u1par, ,\1f•re
6.'"JO. F.xCf'! t'Onr!. Sperrlo,
tad!, horn. running light,_,
12 .11:11.I OOw IRnk , 12 Jtlll •lf-Tn
l11nk. Coa~t Gu11.rrt C(!ulp. &
lull moorinJt rover. Sl .15'1.
67f>..5457 10.·kd11y11 all -4 : JO
pm.
M7-M30. HONDA :50 Mini Trail, run!! ··~AA°'"v"w,-,w"",~",.•'"•,~1-"-ooc,-m-...--. I t?OOCI. Good cond. $175.
full ll"nglh rack. $1800. Call 6'16-1362.
sips 5, zip on rm.. sink, /,,~,--,-,,,-,-='"""'=-I "'tlttls, Auto Trans, Air
srovt, & tbl. Gd cond. $795. ·53 Chevy ~ mn P.U. $5()0, Cond, white .walls. JIM ·~z • ~ Call . '71 DATSUN .....,.. , .... .,.... ..
842-7044 11.fi 3 Sl..EMONS IMPORTS. 2201 Sllver wfblk inter., chrome 64~1275, &12-5845 So •
-----
lnclUiiet powe~. b•••••· tinl•d 9l•t1. -4 1petd tr•n1 ..
wliit• wt ll .tlret, Vln.,I lnl•rior. =31570
CllllAT SILfCTION
• 1"4MIDIATI Dl!LIYl•Y
' 1972 VOLVO
$97 DOWN
O.lC $97 ...
MONTH
IMMIDIATI DILIVllY
ttl II !ot1I 11!1-1)11.....,.1'11,• itf II kll•I "'°"'~ly llllYl!l ... I lnchidfr'9 ~• I. .,, lie, I. •II lln1nc• c~1,.,..., tA •09<o~ld
c,.H for 60 "'°"'~• OrtltrrM IM~~ Pl'k:t LI S!'11 1,,. ct\ldlnci 1lt ti""nc<I t hfr1'ft, If••~ I. 7f lie. 01 If 'l'Oll pret.r
ID ~ c•111. 11111 c"'1 Pl'lc:t 11 t•lft q IM.I, 1,, ' f1t tk. A""""°' M•c•nt•O• ti•ll 1$ n
LET US ARRANGE YOUR
OVERSEAS DELIVERY!
SPECIALS ON FINE
IMPORT TRADE-INS
'64 VW Bug Eictllff" ONA-U
'66
'67
'69
'67
'62
VW .F11tback
EMt tll ... I !;tl'llllllllonl (VTM "'I
TOYOTA Corona
A.tr COMllto111""'· A,dlo, St~
FORD Cortina
St"lo.> W~ ,t.ulo"'lllt T•1n1m.u1M.
lll••t Ec-¥1 !lVC •it!
VOLVO
1)') 7 llorlt. ltldlf>. Ht•t•r, "'Ct cllflll.
~VPl'G1
VOLVO P1800
lMllo.1 I. "'"' la.1 ntW lolt(XO)
'70 TOYOTA Mork II ~·"·Slit~ S"U!. l ldtoAI
'69
'69 DATSUN Pickup •I'll• Mt~I" IYZl(.01
$399
$899
$999
$899
$1077
$1299
$)599
VISIT OUR ULTRA MODERN
SERVICE DEPARTMENT
PAINT SHOPS e BOOY SHOPS
'70 CLASSTRON 18' ~ hp
El'in. VAn9()n trlr A: f'fJUlp
R. Taylor, dY. ~742-t evt"
fii.1-6!173.
~-•n""'<-ury-J"87' ~,,."""'h-p-. -
gl11iu;. 126 hn . RI-::AUTY!
0"'111'1 548-2479
18' Lf,vey, SK Chev)! pwred
mlnl c."Ond, ~'/Custqm 111.n-
dem trail<'r, $3,800. 832-9478
673-467~-. -~-* KA\V',.A'°'S~A7KJ.=--c!i00=-,.°"71,-,~l-ow
8' STARLlNE cab 0 v er mil. SACRIFICE! $500 or
c11mpcr 11• /ja ck a & 1 _00<_1~'.,'~''"'·~"~'""-'-'~--
tled0\1'n!I, $800. 846-71 10 '70 BSA Victor 441
• • W h J t e Elcpnanl!i" over-~11nt cond. Only 1300 ml.
runntng your hous~'!' Turn SiOO/bsl. offer. 673-6539
them into ''CASH" • sell '71 KAWBSA}d 500, Mach Ill,
them thni Da.lly p 11 0 t Wt\rJ'1\nty. .., \
Claullled. 6'2-5618. Phonl' (71~! R97-7!i!'{I
Autos, Imported 970 !·A.-u'""to-s-, 7lm_po_rf-c-edc---,9"'7"'0 Autos, lmportea 970
TF.NT trailer, \\"llf"ds '68, ... 1ain, S.A. 557·5242 mag v.1httls. Radial tln!rt.
.iee,,. 4. 2 roll oul bed>. 'fil LINOOLN Cont. Coov.1-A=L-=F~A~R~O~M~E~O~ Alw&¥• ..,.....i. XI,. cond.
S300. 842-4187. S?.00 .. 6-4 GMC Pickup, " T. n:m: 5.57...f9Cfi..1 ~
Trailers, Utility 947
4x!I Utility triiler, good tires.
$100 firm .
548-72.16
For that item 11ndl't
lry' lhe Peony Pincher
$50,
44~'~pd~.~S850:"""_.~TI~<~,~~~7~.J004~~·-l ~~Aii:'D::::::::"~-1 -Alf• Romeo ·n 240Z, Orange/Blk inter.
1968 FORD F-250 camper lOM m1'11; a.ir. mags +
SJ)f'Cial. 360 V-&. tiulo, radk>. Mock tiru .&: rims. lmmae.
2 tone $1650. 548--6731. ' $4T::i0. Firm. 642-0843.
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED Al>S
Autos, lm~i;ted · 970-Auto&, .Imported
' 970
'69 DATSUN Sta. Wa.a:. Low
mi'a. RAH, ..alr~r i nrw
tires. :xln'I ' oond: $1300.
644-2504, N.8.
NOW ON DISPLAY
Sales Service
Parts &dy ~p
COAST IMPORTS
1(0)..UXI W. Cout Hwy.
Newport Beach 642-0406
Motor Homes 940
'70 OATSUN PIO..~. $995.
843 Broadway. Laiuna .Bch.
~M-808.( bet 6 pm
'67 D.ttsun Wqon. X1nt
CMd. $735 or best Ouu.
541-9721,
Mof!'r Hom'* ,f40
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 1972 INTRODUCTION
OPEN ROAD
ADAMS
VICTORIA .
f
•
FROM OUR
HUGE
SELECTIONf
• ALL COLORS • BODY STYLES
•
T
•
HAL GREENE'S
MIRACLE
MAZDA '
. '
2158 HARBOR Bl VD.
COSTA MESA
.645-5700
r
•
' 25' CENTER BATH
BRAND NEW
25' M·oroR HOME
:ONLY $JJ,599
OIDll YOURS TODAY'
°"" .... ··'"' .,... ~ ....... , .... """" """" ~ , Wlf'*" ctll'IWll'lllM. Tith f"IJ" Mfll-c9811i.till •"l' _...,' illMt
-"'lw'lll tllt¥t fl ~ ,. drift tM "'*• IN ,.,._. ..... 1111 Q.
t1k1tte111l•lflt ·l•i"'Y ~ -tit' ,_. 111 11.,..r, _,,. ••·
"""'" mtter IMtnellMMttr•m "Cll11k'T Mfll!•llM t\rit.TRI .,._/ff~lt .. lley/ClflWtf'th ftnrl,.. fHlttMf.hW l.:e.,_
wUfl fllll ' ..... t 'liiMl')...,._.1 1~ fw _, .... , Mlllfl. 0-..
,,."' ""••111•1fl'it-TP'·~r HMllrl. lfM -..ct n• •• "--
!fl• U' aldMllMll•, ftlt U' f'lltf NJll, • a-1-. I ,....,. ...
11ctt911 .. "''"'IH!I tlrMr~,..,.11 Sl.,...•N -·~·-1 .... 1 • 1"111111 ~-tMtl\Wltll •lt"n'I ,.. ... ..., '"'1 .......... . ..... C\'"flltt • ~ M>lfl ... 111 IK™l.lft 111!.t~ .....,..,. ~-·· _..,....., mt•• ............ fft ·llklMii-*'IN("" ......... ""• •Ir .......... "" .............. ,... ,.,.,...., ........ ""'" . ,...,. """"' ............. ..,..
""Us ""-It""' e ·lbcllMIW ......... tlMfl'•llW n.
1 'RA• J1NANCiN6 AYAILAILI
•
13'31 HARBo!! BLVD., GAltOJiJ<I 0110VI
' I ILOCI 19, 0, •.•• NWT. 6)&.UIJ
r -
•
Lo
H
IV
"
"' " cl
te
be
m
1
Fl
(
2000
Ste
to
selli
rfu
en
OU ••o co•
. ' Lo'f Miles! Cleap. dJ.r, Radio,
Heater, 4 ·~· IVZT648l
\Vil! u.crifict: C...U 546-8736
er 4.9-1..o&ll.
FIAT --•. •
_JJ ". i._.~·11 . I • 1 ' '"
NEWPORT .
IMPORTS
3100 \V, Coast Hwy.
Ne\VJDrt Beach
642-9405
WE WANT
PO RSC HES
lUGHEST OFFER
AVAILABLE
. '
rr!day, rebruary 18, li72 DAILY '1LOT fS
4 1pttd, R~dlo, Heater. "'hlte
wall tins, tinttd elu:s.
<•7161841
22
AddlUOnAI 0em01'.
·n·1 & '72'• at
SAVINGS
You y,•on't Believe
Low Down P•yment
On Any New or Used TcyotR
I§] I
1966 Harbor, C.?o-1. 646-9300
TO\'OTAS
'68'1 thru '70'5
10 Down, :Vi monH1s nn """
1:1ne. 100~ auarante.. !or
30 dRys or HlOO milf'll. on
f'n.gine , brakrs, f'le<:!r i<'al &
front & rf"IU' axle Alisf'm·
blies.
FLEXIBLE F'INANCING
AL t.1ARTINEZ
321 E. Isl, S.A. 542-1831
1971 VW Sdn. $1StS.
Uc. CS IS8S. Oe&ler,
833-.1359
'67 RENAULT R 10, a l'f&].
C'n'A.m putt, like ?If!'!\'. JU,{
S1..El\10N!' IMPORTS. 23J1
So. ~lain, S.A. 5.57...5242.
V\V Squareback '70, autom .•
fut'l, etc. Very nice car,
driven In Europe. 30802 S.
ON-eURIS Bill MAXE ANfk-A-NA-
TOYOTA '70 V\V 8111, AM/FM, Aulo
Iran~. Hee.ter, Xlnt eond,
Service dept, cpen 7:30 am c$:.::ll:c.1'::·..:64cc4c:·77116=.--~-
ORANGE COUNTY~S
LARGEST
FACTORY AUTHORIZED
. TOYOTA SERVICE DEPT.
WE WEL<;OME ALL TOYOTA WARRANTY WORK
With • staff of factory trained technici•ns no job too small or too
large •. ·Electr:onlc Dy•na~~rf·r tun~n' ~& fr~nt end alignment,
FR .E-E
LUBE & OIL CHANGE
WITH T-HIS COUPON
Slnke hpt. OpH 7:10 A.M. 'THI f r.M-. M.olldel ttln1 frict.y
SANTA ANA TOYOTA
Phone 540·2~12 417 ~ W, Wamer, Santa Ana
Autos, Imported .
'64 Renault Station \Vagnn, 1
cwner, low miles, i'.1ichelin
2480 Harber Blvd. tire~. t'IC. $895. JI M
Costa Mesa 546-8017 SLEMONS ll\1.PORTS. Zlll
.,. O I So. i'.1a.ln, S.A. 557--5242. -pe Kadette Railey 1900
C.C, Ovf:l'head cam, FM REN.AULT. Sale & Servicf!' &
radio & 4 speerl, Gd. Ccnd. Parts. JIM SLEMONS li'.1-
$800. Eve~73-3265. PORTS. 2201 S. Main, S.A.
557-5242.
OPEL CT '69, geld, auto. --=-----
Xlnt rond., low mil«. $1950. TOYOTA
Pvt. prty. 846-4735.
'63 100 SL. 2 Tops, Becker PORSCHE '69 Ren11u1t R 16 ~an
Radie, Stick Shift, '63 was --------Wagcn, The E u r o p e a n
tht' finest year cf production •61 PORSCHE 1600 SU Dream car \l.'ith tmnt whttl
for _the lOOSL classic. JIA.f ~1650 Now 1 1 h ,.., PE'T; d rive , I n d e p e n d e n I
St.EMONS IMPORTS 2201 • • cu c ...... ean. suspension with torsion bar,
S , ' S 551 52 ' ' .:.67.:.3--0.:.7:c.43:c.· -----I . I f d. . Main, .A. -42. 1-rec 1ning sea s ront 1sc
, '64 PORSCHE SC. im· brakes, X> to 35 miles per
MERCEDES ~1190 SL. Xlnt maculate, reblt eng, nu ,gallon canary yello\v, com·
coni:t thruout ntcl eng. Both tires, brakes, Koni's. Best pact buy of the year, 70 HP,
tops. $2200. 5012 Macafee, offer 630-1~2 $1295. JIM SLE'MONS IM· Torrance, Ca. 318-4784 ·
'57 Mercedes Benz 190 SL.
$1900. Xlnt mechanical con-
dition. 494·6042.
MERCEDES Benz '68 ~
lo nti's. lmmac. like new. Pvt. party. 644-23.12.
Put a little "loot' 1n your
Levis • sell !hole baubles for
"bucks". Call Classified
842-5678.
Autos, lmpo'rteCI 970 . ....
6aATS ' . ' AWUK
tA.&TO ', ......
SU•AT , ......
teTlt.M.·
TOYOTA
18881 &ach Blvd.
Huntington Beach 847-8555
YOU'RE
WASTING
MONEY!!
IF YOU DON'T
"SHOP" lfS
The L!tlle Dealer
Who's Bia on Service
llif!l lllft\l\S
~;'-meton
Toyota 8' JagUAJ' Dealer
Authoriud Sales I: Service
900 s . Coast Hl.a;hway
Laguna Beach 54().~100
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
'~ 9 pm 1\1onday thru Fri· ·71 VW Convertible
day. tmmac. cond. Best otter PHONE 540..2512 o\'f'r $2Z:IO. 67>20n
4.1'' \V. \Varner, Sant11 Ana
'71 Toyor<1 Comn11, 4 Or
Sedan, Aulo Tran~. Air
Cond. unrier 7000 mile~
S269.'l. Jll\f Sl..Ei'.10NS lt.t-
PORTS, 2201 So. to.lain, S.A.
557-5242.
'68 Corona 4 dr, l'IUttl, clean,
whlsle $850.
548-6731
TRIUMPH
Triumph/Fiat
''ew & Usf.KI
Sa I es.--S ''" ito-p .:a, t 1
Auto Sport Ltd.
s31.1n1
·n.9 V'I•/, sunroof, st>Od con·
dltlnn, orlalnal owner. Ma.ke
ct/er, 496-9432.
'70 V\V bur, ,AM/FM $1,195.
896-3Th6 deya~ 846-1982 e\lff
& ~'H'1<end1.
19£6 V\V bus, new en,me,
AM/F'M. I tn.ck tape 4eclr.
lee box, 119-nellng, $1.500 or
bMJT l'llf!'r. 54>7'987.
'69 VW Bue will' aacrUicf',
11tt at JIM ·sLE~ONS IM·
PORTS, 2201 So. Main, S.A.
557-5242.
•n VW Bur, Lite blue, Xlnt
cond, Xtraa, $1650. ** a.u..~ ** * '68 VW. 1 pua. Van. 36,(0)
in!. o..,,, lClnt medl.-"9fld.
Make~er~ 961S G<>r<Jen Vrovr 91.,,d.
G1Jrden C.rove Op\'n Sun. "IO VW Bur fl)p cond'.. lo
milE:'ll;:e. 1 owner. n650. Pvt
'69 TRr6 •. Red . l owuer. Full Pty. 968-9872.
servi~ recordl. Only 19.odo ·oo Va.n ~per, reblt eric.,
mi: Jmmac. Sac. Will tsko New clut.th, titts, braktt.
trade or fin . Prl. pty, (TI4) '$625 Offer. ~.
673-3110 eves. '69 vw Pop-Top camptT, lo
Sell the cld stuff mile•. Perfect, fully equip.
Buy the new stuff SACrili~. 548--7Sl6.
Autos, New 9~ Autos, New 980
. 'OPIN--
7DAYS
AWllK
PRICH
EPFECTIVE
THIUSUN,.
fH.13tk ;
No~cost extr:as make
Datsun ·America's No. 1
selling impo .. rt true~. .• ' • .. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST CHEVROLET · DEALER
Ful ilto ' foat· bed • wi,. tie dawo boks ' ·•
I
..
.....
. --:r:ri .. ~ ,...,,..n ..
•
'1 ' ' I ' .. ..,. " ,, ' ;:..,,,;;· .,.., -, ..
•''
•
/;
/ I
'
flowvy d•ty
........ 1 ..
wllfl clavltlo
.. 11 .. illocb
4-spoed 1uny
1ywchronl11d
transmlufOfl· c•rome bumpers
frOftt and rtar . ' . ' . . ~ ..
Stepl•dd•rs. Su:fbJo•r~s .. Motor~ycl•.1.., ~h1te~e! ~ou heve
to c•rry, c.rry it '" • D1tsun P1cl:up. 1r, Amer1c:1 1 No. I .
1ellin9 import trvclr, for some v•cy compelling reesons. Pow. ~.
rful overhii•d ceri'I' eogine . 4-speed sticlr, Heevy cfuty sus-
ens ion • .-.us th• kind of dureble vinyl P"'lholstered ir•terior
you'd expect to p1.,...kfr•'for fn other piclruf'· You'll 9•f
.. round 25 mites per 9ellon (Jow opere·ting eos I. Low initiel
cost too. • ' ._~ ·
Overhead
cam entlne
6-pfy whltewan tfrn
( 5 fncl udlnt spare}
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY!
·NO
WAITING!
Your klnCI' of ·truck. Your kind of price.
SH Our CClf\lplet LIRe Of '72 Oatsuns
'~~~ ~~
lllOOJC<i.t>t UllOStdln 5102·0..Sodl!l f Jio4-D<_,.n 510-Pidlup
COSTA ' MESA DATSUN
6000 SH.QWI DRIVI !.. DAmN ••• 'IHIM DICIDI.
2145 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 540·6410 .
•
)
•
TOTAL $··~~,;INT TOTAL $5 JBS ,llMQllTH . 4JMONTllS IMMIDIAtl DILIYIRY
Largest Trutk Selection in Orange County. Dozens to "'"' '"' l li..t~M ,
Orlltt .,_-1 -• 09,_ 111 dlotott""" ...i:lllMg 1111 •-...:t,ehor9tt ori ,.., ...... tr.eit iw flllf .ti
-""· fhs lull (1111,,r:t •I 11)Slas """ ,.. 'Ir:, Dtltn-..s,.,.... ,, ....... 11166.it l11d. #lltffl( IN& J.t-,-""""" ~·-~••11,.11 ".1J tt % JMMIDU'JI lllfYllT.
chooa8 from. '
Order Yours Toda , s Tax & Lie.
'69 PLYMOUTH Belvedere $988, =:~~=-=='-'--· _•_us __ ,._ . ..,. _$1-'-'58"--'-8
:_~-~-"~_!_.D_.~L-' !4_-_~_ .. _,.,,.,_._''· ___ '"_-c•_$_1_3~8_8 _:~_!._.J_.~_c:..._u_A_~_.~_!._!_. "" ___ '''_·'"__:$2::::..:4:.::8:;..8=. •
$888 :: ~~~:~.. ..... ·-$688 '66 CHEVROLET
'li 0TON PIC•UP'
--------------------'66 CADILLAC
coun D• YILLI
,UH ....-. •Ir Clllip!Mf .. ,,,""' root.
'70 PL YM. Raadrunner
VI, _. tl•lnf,. 11111""' ...-.-_e. • ......,,...,, AM.If"'-''""' wlftt
ttlll ,. --lll>HMI( -·
$1588 '63 FORD '388 PAllUNI Ht cr1. V.c, ~tit. tllJMf' 1'-lfll. 1it-OiW
'1988 '62 CHEVROLET $488 . •• IMPALA sum llOIT
V ... •lllrltMllc,. rw•, ,_,..., ".. 011'0.W
Dl'Ell6 DAYS A WUICtUL TO 10P.M.SlllllAT1tUL 107PAI.
SE IMBU ESPANOL TOLL FREE 83N
'
• •. .
Frld.ly, ftbruatJ 18, 1'172
AulOS IOt Jiii .__'"_"'1_""_1• _,J§] I M..... 1§1 l.__M_ .... _ .... ~,~ I ....... _ 1§11•-....
Autos, Imported -ffO A!>t~JmJ!O(fod '7o -A="~t~o=r,~U~Md:. ~~~_;;,::1-Autor.-U:~~~~-=~!!~~= Autor,u...,-
-"·•1--::F:L:Ell:::PRLC E,S:-__ -__ -1.t-_-v_~·-K~~~~EH--~~~:=-_=_A:::''IO_A~~:::1:;:::::n-;::IC:::;::.,t:.;;:on=· i==~~BU~J.:.~K=_:...::::::::-_ ~;:'.::-:~:....:'-C.DHE"'~"'~ .. o ... LET"':-_
Two lo '"°""' !rom. eull '70 Impala Sta. Wagon
'88
'67
AVAILABLE-ON ALL
NEW BUICKS & OPELS
AT
TERRY BUICK
111 YOU DON 'T SMO, Hlll
YOU'LL P'lOIAILY P'A Y A
GOOD DI AL MOll FOl YOUl UR _
USED CAR VALUES
Cll"IL W.le>CH
4 I~. roflO, rj)Of •t•~ l!IH I >f<-rtr to,. 1111 11,,.,11v. 1sei:i.1..i1
IUICI( LI! S.1111" M,t ,
F1d. 11" P 5 , PI , rt<!•~. t•t
CIM~ t~ ~pl"· (TZL·.\lll
S647
SJ247
...,; """ ·'" ... x,. ~ ' ' . ' 'i ' ~
Since 1933 • Sth lo Walnut
Huri.tintton S.•ch
536,6588
\IW '66'J thro '69'11
JO"~ J)n"'n, 36 mon•h~. 100'1
Gu&fanrt>e lnr UI da.v1 nr
\fl(lt') m1IP&, on tns;:-1nP, brl'lk·
P~. PIP<"trir1.l It h'f'lnl It
!'":t r axlP 1tAM'mhlir11
FLEXIBLE FINANCl~G
AL l\1ARTINE7.
JZ1 E. 1111, S.A. 5'12·1~:ll
Rt'IJ:I', AM F'M Radio, 4 Spd,
I Ml'Til'r, 100% wtrr&nly,
1991AGE1
$1599
CREVIER MOTORS
208 '4', 1111 St., S.nla Ana
835-3171
1970 vw 1969 VW, .!!IUIO, ra.dio. Xln•
9 ri,,.,.!lf'ng;l'r hu~. ltrrl & L'Ond, 30,000 mil"'· On,11'.
"'hl11'. S2295. 1.r<·. n~ BZQ. rtv.·nrr. Maki' ofter. fi7~14llO.
Draler .. ~.l'l-.U.19 .,.~...,...,~ ... ~.,...,., 1rAITHFUL ·~ Rug, auto, "°------low mile! G<'iod oond 'j;S Renault R. 10, .li milts Sto00 e 642.R~g
pt>r gal , \flchPhn t1r,.11. _
Rsrrrl1n, Hratf"r, S6!t5, .JIM '69 VW BEST OFFER
SLEt.10NS IMPORTS. 1all Xlnt oonrt • * AJ.'\.AA14
"'.;~·~"a~~ VOLVO
-~"•.t-m•~..,._. GEl-OUR-.V.OLV.0-
itprl. Sl!\.111 tAA2EAEl C811
~!f).~716 or 4!'.14-AAl 1.
'!iii \\1-07T. W ' 11quarrl>ark,
lf.00. 4 ~pd. Exci:p11nrmll,.,,
dean k ,good Ct)nd. 5995.
CaJI 111! 3 p.m. ~3878.
'61 V\\I SquAn.'tlack. Xlnt
!ihape, Nf'w til'f'.!I k hrake~.
Low mi. S300 unrter
Bluebook. S!IOI;. 96HtS1.
DEAL BEFORE
, YOU BUY!
SAVE ON EUROPEAN
DELI\'ERY
lfiPwi. Leuii& W VOLVO
1966 Harbor. C.M. 646·9.103
·71 V\V b~. 8000 mi. 7 pa~~. A U d Like nPw. W ' tPnt & full -utos, SI 990
JC'ngth lug. r11rk incl. $2795. '70 ~UICK Riviera, Clean.
675·7718 LoartM. S.1100 or lea~ al
VGremllns VHornet1
VM•t•dors VJavellns
VAmb•ss•dors
Huge stock ol '71'• I. ·n·s
Big-Big Savings
Harbor American
Home til C4)nvenienl
Payments
1969 H•rbor Blvd.
Cost• Mesa 646-0261
BUICK
BAUER BUICK
T)'IP Harbor AN!M
Only AuTMri~
BUICK DEALER
J)O\l'f'r, Alr Conrl, Bolh EX·
trf'meiy clean, Mu1f 5ff and
dnvp 10 appreciate.
FLEXTSLJ: }"INANClNG
AL MARTINEZ
321 E . ls!, SA ~2-1831
'69 RMERA. fully Jofldf'd,
A~!/f'M radio. pow f' r
bnkea, pn\l·er a I f'~t In a:,
Jl0'4't'r w1ndow11, new til'f's.
'72 18g'.&. $2,650 nr bl'al olJl'r,
S6.R -1 3flO a.lter 4 :30
'4'tPkrll!)'ll .
'62 SPECIAL Wagon,
good, 4 Jood lire~.
tran.•, flt'\\' ignition,
~2-B-4.
CADILLAC
Ru"'
FU-hit
S245.
AlwRyi; ha.• an e:o:cf'llen! Rf'·
l~ion of bnfh New 4 Used
Buicks. "Sp.cial~;&in.11'-in Qu.OJH!y•~"-1 ..... -::::;_-;A;;f{;;;;GE~St:;:-::=
BAUER S£LECTION OF
Buick-OpeJ.Ja9uar CADILLACS IN
2:14 .E. i7!h s1. ORANGE COUNTY
Costa MP~ll. ~·711i.l SALES-LEASING
'66 Le Sabre 4 Dr. ·~~~~~?
HArrltop. ~. 11utnm11!ir, N b C d"U
JlO"'er lllfr,.ring It brakP!!. a en: a I GC
black vinyl lntrrinr, ~h11.rp 2600 HARBOR BL.,
rar! !523ASKI S1095. COSTA MESA T A Ch 540-9100 Open SUN'lay ommy yres evy t9n cA01u.•c c.,,,,., n,
Factory air, PS, Beautiful
Irwin whllP with saddle in.
terlor 1257BSY ~ S.2695.
Tommy Ayres Chevy
946 S. Coast llwy.,
La.run.11 Brh
494. 7744/546·9967
'65 Chevy lmpR\a S.<;
Two In choMP trrim, Air
C'onrl, Powpr St<"erina . Aull'l
Tran11, :127 Enrin~. diRtinr-
tivl' paint with <-nntrastlnr
interior, lf ;you apprr.ci11.lf'
tint eani see Anri drivr bf'.
ftJrf' ytJu huy.
fLEXIBl.E f'INANCJNG
AL MARTINEZ
321 E. 1~1. SA 542-1&11
'611:hevy-lmpal
H11rrltop, Auto Tr11ns, PnwPr
~lf'f!ring, Air Cnnrl. Must '""'
lhi.!I gem II) Appreciate. Sllle
'Pricl'd, I UZM7251
$1099
CREVIER MOTORS
2()R \\', )st SI., SanlA Ar1a
835-3171
'66 ChPvy Tmp11.!11 ~~
11641 IHch Blvd,, ~llnllngton Boeh
DIVORCEO REPOSSESSED BANKRUPTCY
EVERY BODY RIDES •
'47 l•rr•cv«i• (OIO EIX) $2ff
$1695
$995
''6 C•dlll•c (YOB 0151
'6' Econollne Vin (T 914241
OR RENT WITH OPTION TO PURCHASE
AS LOW AS $7 PER WEEK!
847-3842
CHEVROLET
'66 Impala
2 Dr H11.rdlop, YPllow w/ :Blk
--Vinyt--RMf.---Auf.& ....!j'!nil'l11,
Pn1vl'r Sll'ering, Air Cond,
NPw ?11.int, Must See ttl ap-
preciate 1•81111
$1199
CREVIER MOTORS
208 W, 1111 SI ., Santa Ana
llS.ll 71
CHRYSLER
-ol~9 6'"'9,....,,.C"'H"'"R.Y'"'"S"""L""'E. R
COMET
'62 COMET w/'64 er11 ..
•ulom11.tic, new U-joinfl!I,
ra.dio, ~ter. $100. MS-a!Hl
· QR.YAIR:--t
CORVAJR LOVERS! 12 I
'6.'i'~. 1 run11 gtta1 ! olh,r
f)Hd1 aomf! 1uork. $500 ltir
hnth. CA.II S48-47R3.
COUGAR
'67 COUGAR
\'ellow eict. black vinyl ttip.
V8, fart. air, excellent cond.
Sm11.ll down. Will finance pvt
pty. dlr. (VCl.0281 C a 11
4&4·61111 art ll am 546-A7l«.
-·-·-----
946 S. Coa.'11 Hwy.,
Laguna Brh
494-1744/546-9967
Ville Exe r. c11r. L.A.
hu11ineAA \\"OmRn . .14,000 mi.
l-ll'llll e\·Eorythin,11' i n e. J •
leRther, 1teN"O, lull pwr.
Pri. pty. NPwporl Beach.
Call Sal. 673-2914
4 SpePrl, 396 Cu In Enginl',
BeJtf'rl Wide Ovals. turquniff
tinilllh, rPfl~I exceUl'nf care.
f'LEXTBLE FINANCING
LE BARON Coupe. VA, autn-
mati<", ractory 11.ir condition·
ing, power .ltl'f'.ri flJ, pow~r
"·indows, vinyl roof. IYVT·
:187)
DODGE : Autos, New 980A.utos, New 98<1 Autos, New 980 i100 Jlft' mo -24 mo·11. • ·1n !-----------------.,------------MaVPrick, VPry cll'an. S1~7.1 '68 Sport Wagon
SOMETHING ••••
EVERYO.NE!
FOR
IRAND
NIW
1971
COUPE
rr19 l f60014o l'
5259324
FULL PRICE -------· -------llAND NIW '71
VENTURA II CPE.
fl7Jl {)t 504l )
5254884 FULL
PRICE ------· -------
'71 FIREBIRD DEMO
LOADID INCLUDING FACTDllY A.Ill CONDITIONING
1151 1!04,691
53789 11
FULL PRICE -·------'71 BONNEVILLE
OEMONSTRATOR $436989
Full Powe•, F~clo•v A;,, loeded. {661 130,9671
-------·-------
'71 GRAND PRIX DEMO
FULL POWER-FACTORY AIR COND.
$4461 31
FULL PRICE
DAVE ROSS
fl PONTIAC v
7 480 HARBOR Bl VO Al fAIR OR GOSJA MISA PH 546 ·8011
'I I J Miii SOUTH OF THI SAN DIEGO FRIEWATI
'1f•·, ' 11 , ,\ V. · ~ R l!l AM Jo 10 00 P~1 'iun I 1 Art1 lo q rri.,
'
nr lear.e at s;,9 per mo • S68
Chevy Cusfnm 1 ro JI 11 I 11.
coupe. 11.ir, $1250 or ltase .111
$59 pt>r mo.
SOUTII COAST
CAR LEASING INC.
64~2182, 11fl 5:.'lll. fi73-8269
e HOT WHEELS e
'67 PLYMOUTH
Modified for hi,ll'h
performance and
appe11.r11.ncr!
MUST SELL:
54~-7881 /$8%
'61 Corvair V11n S375. 'JJ
ModPI ''A" cou pe, complete
w/2RJ Chevy setup. Best of·
fl'r, 644-742t
AMBASSADOR
'69 Ambassador
SST St•tion Wagon v.s. Auto 1'r11.n11, PnwPr
St~ring, Air Cond, woort-
gr.11in sidt.>11. 1 tJ\\'nrr car,
<XEZ827l SeP tn apprttiate
$249!.__.
WardS.Lee
Al9lcln Molial'l n
547-582,
12.14 S. M11.in St.
SllntA AnA
Aulom•tlc, f11.clory alr, pow-
f'r atH.ring &. brake11. BPllU·
tiful silver gray, cXN~ 1
S2095.
Tommy Ayres Chevy
946 S. Coam Hwy.,
U.guna &h
4~-7744/546.9967
'66 Riviera
Full PowPr. Air Conrt, Splll'k·
Hn,i: grt>en fini~h. J ownPr,
]O<."A] rar. Hurry!
fLEXJBLE F"INANCJNG
AL MARTINEZ
321 !'.:. l!!t, S.A. 542·1&11
'64 BUICK Skylark, com·
ptelely rPbuilt.
• 548--7~
TRANSPORTATION ~ar. "6.1
Skyl11.rk, '72 phllf'S $125.
968-3264 al!er 6 p.m.
** '69 Le Sahrt>, air, ps/ph.
tinted ,i:la!IS, good tires,
s~. !163-1211
.JO J}iviera .Load.f:<l ! Lo"'
milf'age., Rl'ld\111 tirf'lt $3495:
540-S492 or 646-89.'i9.
'fi.i Spf!dai De LuxP Stetinn
Wqon, air, p/K, p/h. Xlnl
cond. $750. 499-3492
1960 Bukk, good cond. power
~ttt'!'ing, brakes k window~.
842-5687.
Autos, New 980 Autos, Ntw 980
'70 EL DORADO
$5450.
15.000 mi, Xlnt shape. Pvt
prty. 675:7545 dllily 9.5 or
642-895.1 aft. 6.
'ml CADILLAC Sf! d a n
Of'villP. One o\\•ner Luxury
PQuippe<l. E26M. ,f t M
SLEMONS IMPORTS, 2201
S. Maln. S.A. 557-5242.
'6S C11.d Stoel DeVlllP. All
xtra111. Be.c;t offl'r. 545-1515
Aft 5:.10, 541-7:\25 rll'ly~.
1961 CADILLAC
Looks & Runs Gn:at!
Sl.j(), f\4!'>-41.10.
* 'AA E'L DORADO +
Full pwr, vinyl fop,
brown, $3700. 673--0487
CHEVROLET
1972 VEGA W11.gon, 4.000 mi.
4 spd.. llir, ~ Pri. party.
6~7240.
'10 Chev. lmp•I•
\\'/Air. Bst ofr. 5411-0067.
VEGA ·n coupe, 4 Spt'!ed,
Sl.8.iO.
!168--1770
'63 Chevy $225,
xl nt cond. 675--54311
AL MARTINEZ
l21 r.:. 1llt, S.A. MZ· IR.11
'65 Chevy lmp•I•
2 Door Hardtop, INGI-5Ml
$195
WardS.Lee
Amirian lllOlllrS ,.
547-5126
$2699
Good lbru 2/29172
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
2480 Harbor Blvd.
Ctt8tl'I MP!'!& 546-M17
l 968 CHRYSLER
1234 S. M11.in SI. N,wport Coupe. V8, automa·
Sllntll Ana ijc tran1., factory air rondi-
'70 MONTE CA.Tio, Air, V~ tinninf, power Rleerin&,
bucket aeAf.!I & 'op. 'Nflted vinyl roof. ~VTD8.15)
"'""'· PfS, AM f FM, $1 J99
Rl'J.-2!134. Gt'll)d rhro 2;29172
'67 ImpaJ1t s.c:: DAVE ROSS
Custom golden grf'Pn paint. PONTIAC
327 Engine, Ai r Cond, Auto
Tran:ot, Power Steerinr. 2480 Harbor Blvd.
M Ch · Co11:ta Mt'sa 546-8017 11.i!I, rome plPf!!I, SU·
Pf'r sh11_rp, MECHANIC'S 1peciAl. '6.1
FLEXIBLE FINANCING Chrysler convl'rt. Aody in
AL MARINTE7. excel rond. Nttdl'I eng.
321 'E. 1st, S.A. 542· 1&11 work. H1111 '72 tag11. S300
'70 CHF.V. Malibu, V-' :«17, firm. 557-5394 after 7 pn1 .
.a.ulo, .Pwr steer, new bat-'67 IMPERIAL 4 Dr. Beaut.
lf'ry, brake11, Pirelli!, H.D. Cond. Fully equipped. Sls.50.
fihks. 642-4193 $2350 642-4391, 642-2789.
'64 lmpalo AfC, ndM>, P/S, CONTINENTAL orig. owner. IMMAC .
1
_________ _
8:\().-05.').') l'Vl'5, 54~7~ day,
'69 Chtv. Jmpala. Auto·Aif'-
Very Clean! Law Book.
54().5492 nr MS-~.
'71 CONT. Mark nr. Full
power equip., A M I r M
•~. air·cond., etc. $6900
675-6050 673-6770
Autos, New 980 Autot, New 910 Auto1, New tlli
Step Up To LU·XURY • • •
•
'BA Charger, power •fePrirc
/, hr11kf!llo;, atf'l"f'l'J MPP. .;lttk,
a.ir rond., rM"W f i r ~ •,
Red/white vioyt top. $1.461t
67>1070
'59 CUSTOM Jtnyal Dodp
aie<Mn , T f' • t fl d , IOftd
workhor~ $165. 1st «WM ht
·~. 54&-.6997.
'70 DODGE .Van-Tta~.
Auti>tnn11, fi cyl. 19,500 ml.
Private Pty &42--0842
'70 Challerwl'r tull pwr. air,
xlnt conri, rwJ tires. 8st Gl-
(l!r. 67.1--80711
'M DODGE Polan 2 tlr Sn'J.
7700 Pelel"80n Way., No, }D.
c. a4&-15RO .alt 3:00.
'69 ~ ~. air mnd,
auto, vinyl top, 1\&H. Beau(
cond. S1495. 546-0152
FORD
'64 FORD Galaxie 500 XL
38,000 mil~. 11.ir, AM/FM,
loA~d. S695. &17-1447.
'66 FORD SUPER VAN.
rrun, nin1 aood. SllOO. Aak
for Eddy, 494-30CM.
'69 FORD Torino Squirt
War. AM/f'M ndio, 1ir.
644--0258 a(lf'r 6pm. ** '60 !'ALCON ** SW. 675-433!' aft 5
Autes, New tiO
• •
1971 MARK III
EXCEPTIONALLY CLEAN, Beautiful light green fini sh with green leather Interior and
matching landau roof. Fully luxury equipped including full power. climate control air
conditioning, stereo tape, tilt steering wheel. cruise control and much more. Tbi11 attrac-
tive car is a must to see and drive today. (348CIE)
'
ALL THESE BEAUTIFUL LUXURY AUTOMOBILES ARE IMMACULATE, INSIDE AND OUT.,.
YOU'LL NEVER AND A BETTER SELECTION OF PRESTIGE CARS THAN RIGHT NOW!
1969 CHRYSLER
New Y.orker 4 Dr. H.T.
Beautiful limP frn~t fini,o.h u ·i 1h black
lntt-rior and landau rnof. Luxury ~uip
ped, full powtr, autnrn11.tic tra.nsmissjon.
Alr rondltioninR. JXl"'Pr 6 v.·a.y 1eat,
A~f/FM radio. etc. ( YQ\V 626'
$2175
1970 MARK III
IMMACULATI \
6Pautif-ul mt-dium Rt'tf>O mi~I me!Allle
\\'ith dark ivy ll'8fhl'r with La.ndlltJ T'(l('lf.
Fully Luxury PQUipped, full P""'Pr. cll-
mAtl' cnntrol 11ir c,anditioning;. indivtd-
uaJ 6 way po"·er 1ea~. t'9.din \\'I th 8
trac.k tape 1nd much more. 1l28AKU1
Sale Priced
1970 CADILLAC
Coup• DeVlll1
Onl' O\\'nt'r. lmm11cul11 lt'. Bt-.11ut.iful Br•·
'Zilian moon dust finish "'ifh btiie lelllth-
er and landau rnnr. Luxury equipptd
throughout. full pn"·~r. climate control
air, tilt-telP "'ht!l'l, AM·f M •~!WI,
~uper clean. (96'4AUV'
$4475
MANY, MANY MORE
FROM WHICH TO CHOOSE
SEE THEM ALL TODAY
1971 MARQUIS
lt ,,, .. n1•r Wai_,.
Be&utiful brown mf!Ullic flnlsh with
ma~hina: vinyl lnterinr, Full power,
ltetory air condltioninJ:, powf!r tail
111.e window, IUll'l•i~ rack. Low mil~
age and In top condition. (7gl DFA)
$4275
1970 CONTINENT AL
cou, •• euALITY ,LUI
Dlu'k brnwn Rlatnour mf,t&llic 4tX~rlOf
with honty beitP lnt~rlor .l match!n1
lAJ'ldau l"Of\f. Fully luxury equipped. cH·
mitt: N>ntml •Ir. fl.Ill power, 6 wa:i
power seat, t:tr_ C9087H)
$4475
I
2821 HAl!BOR BLVt>~ COSTA MESA • MO N30
• •
'
I
f
i s
•• I • I • ' I ' .. ~
.' Frld•.Y, ,tbrLIMY 18, 1972 DIJLV PILOT f7
-PUT 1'0GETHER A •
'
. '
VOLUME SAVINGS
ON
OLDS!-
YOU ' ....
'GET
EXTRA
Savings• Service• Satisfaction
THRU OUR VOLUME SALES
ONE OF SO. CALIPORNIA'S BIGGEST
1972 OLDSMOBILE SELECTIONS
TO CHOOSE FROM.
. TEST DRIVE YOURS TODA YI
• LEASING?
LOOK!
NEW 197t OLDS
CUTLASS
MAR DTOP COU PI
Vt, •ulo1111tic h 11111T1i11lo11, r•··
J io, ht 1l1r, power 1te1ri119,
~ ,,,..,, br1k11, 1fr coru:Jltio11i119,
$9535 ...... .
INO. U MO,
WE LEASE ALL
POPULAR MAKE
CARS AND TRUCKS
.~WINTER SPECIALS
' RENT A _,GMC CAMPER
FULLY SELF CONTAINED
1
for FRI.DA V . $ ·9 5
I SATURDAYS . .
• SUNDAY ENTIRE 3 DAYS . '
·FIRST 300 MILiS ARE FRIEi '
I
.
-
'
SPECIAL PURCHASE
·'71 MINI HOMES
f.ULL Y EQUIPPED , WITH ALL
Tt:IE TRAVEL CONVENIENCE
EXTRAS PLUS FACTORY AIR
C 0 N D IT I 0 N I NG. PRICED
FRO·M ••••
-·-··-·-· ------
--
' •
USED. LICENSE NUMBER 657DSK
MANY . T-0 CHO.OSI . '
1970 SUBARU
360 Mi11i V111. f76SASTI
5695
196'6 CHRYSLER
N•wport. VI, •ufom1tle, 'tcli•. ht•f1•,
powt r 1f••ri119 & hr1k•1. f•tfory •ir.
1427611)
5595
1969 BUICK SKYLARK
2 cir, H.T. Aulom1tic., •1dio. h11f•1,
powtr 1!11 ri119 & brt~ll , WIW, 1ir
eondi+io11 i119, fZOH2&6 1
'52195 •
1968 OL!'.ISMOBILE
DE LTA II
Cou,1111 r•cl io, h•1t.r, 1ulom1lic., •Ir
c.ond., whi11 w1ll1, Yl11yl roof. (Wl'I·
66 1)
51495
FROM •••••
1969 DATSUN 510
S18111 . Equ ipped 111d r11cly to dri"t
hol'l'l t loi1y, !Y RF90l )
5975
1967 BUICK SKYLARK
VI . 1utom1li<: tt•111mi11io11, rtdio,
h•1f1r. ~TVF5J7 ) '
5675
1967 OLDS WAGON
Yi1!1 Crui11r. YI, 1ulom 1Hc., r1clio,
h111 !1r, pow1r 1lt1ri119 l b r1~tJ, fie.I,
' t i• c.oncl .. roof •1c.L f FOZ.o!65 )
51595
1969 OPEL WAGON .
l •cl io, h11l1•, 4 1p••d h1111mi11io11,
E1e•ll111t 211cl c.•r. !YQCI07l
• 5710
COSTA
MEIA
1969 PONTIAC
CATALI NA
C1u111. ll:1dio,•~11t1r, 1ulom1tie, full
p•w1r, f1ctory 1ir, Yirtyl roof. !ZSY.
116)
51995
1968 CHEVROLET
IMPALA
J Or. H,T. Ait Co11cl .. .oulo .. P,S., P.t:,
rtcl1o 11111 h11ltt. (XSVSS•I
51295
1970 GRAND PRIX
YI, •~lom1li11, rtilo, h11l1•, power
tlttd119 I b••lc11, ftc.lory 1ir, pow•r
wi11clow1, Yl"yl roof, 10 54,..0Y)
53195
1969 TORONADO
CUSTOM
Full power, l1ct1ry ti•, yJ11yl 'o•f. !<12·
17651
52795
1970 PONTIAC
FI REllRD
Et•"omiC1I 6 cyllnclt r, •f•rtcltf'll
tr ""'" r1 dlo, ht1f1r, Yil'lyl roof. (flJ•
AYS I
51875 •
1966 CHEVROLET
STAT ION WAGON
Aul• .• rtdio. h1 1ftr, p1wtr 1t.1rl11ft
P•w•r br••••· ITEYIOJ l
5695
. 1967 OLDS DllTA
' Cou.&•· R1d io, h11ft1, 1ulo ., p•w1r
•'••ri119 I br1lc11, .,i11yl rtof. IWPI·
66 I)
51388
1966 PLYMOUTH
SATEL LITE
Rtcl io, h11 l1•. 1ulor111tic, pew1r 1tt1,..
i119 & br1lc11, ITR.4.7761
5795
.
. •
"
•
•
' ,. • ' I: •· ' ..
" le • I;
1:
I
..
' :
I I'
i ' r-
I
--~
I
: DAJlY PILOT Fl'lddJ, F'rbruary 18, 1972 '
NEW 1972
COMET$
lWOilOOR
(570563) • -FULL PRICE
..
COMP~RI O,UR
SAVINGS-SERVICE ;$ELECTION
BEFORE YOU BUY
WE ARE PROUD OF OUR FACTORY AW+RD.;\vlNNING DEALERSH.lf .AND
THE FRIENDLY PEOPLE WHO RUN IT. COMEIN 'TODAY AND PROVE TO
YOURSELF THAT SANTA ' ANA LINCOLN-MERCURY' DOES O'FFER "A LITTLE
EXTRA".
NEW '72 MONTEREY NEW '72 MARQUf S
CUSTOM 2 DR. HDTP 4-DR. BROUGHAM
Allie. lnm, air cond, ,.,.... di1eti. l*ted W{W'1, el•. tlotk. ~iny1 roor Pwr. st~ifiil. discs. seats ond i~kt. AM..fM. vitlYI roo, outo
snli1110r1(SSllS7) ltll'f. ,oir. cond, SJ1ted cont~ belttd W/W's Mf "1i!lrt. (S49 IOO)
WINDOWSTKR WINDOWSTKR $64"i6.7t
OVR"PRICE u,n»RtCE $53'11·
• DiStOUNT ·. $1 ·1:05 DISCOUNT
~--------------------------~-----------~--------------------
· NO SHORTAGE OF
·' CON'JINENTALSI NEW 172 Cougar XR-7 NEW '72 MON.TEGO
LARGE SELECTION OF
COL9~S, OPTIONS, AND
BODY STYLES TO CHOOSE FROM •
, 2 DOOR HDTP
,l.ulo. lrm1~ pwr. liter, o...d distl. rl!G. and lllfllO lap1, no. 1• wrw wid• ovol1, air, tonsole, tllC, tlotk Ofld mor1. (51 •~31)
WINDOWSTKR
OUR PRICE
$4597.80
$4060
4 DOOR SEDAN
351 V-8, oulO. trons. pwr. S1eering, W/W 's, di.:, whet! r.INlll'
radio ond more.
WINDOWSTl<R·
;OUitPRICE . ·
$34·77.06
$29'1'2 ..
DISCOUNT $53JBO DISCOUNT $506
OUR·YEAR·AR OUNO LINCOLN ·CONTINEN·
TAL 1.NVE~TORY AVERAGES ALMOST .40
NEW CARS READY FOR IMMEDIATE DILi·
VERY.
OUR PRE·DRIVEN SELECTION OF CONTINEN·
' TAI$ AND MARK lll 'S AVERAGES OVER 20
CA~S.
LET US SKOW YOU HOW OUR VOLUME
SELECTIONS ADD UP TO VOLUME SAVINGS I
Just Arrived! .Big Shlpme'nt
SEXY CAPR.I FOR '72
READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
'70 MERCURY Cust 4 Dr. - . r -
V·8, nuto hoos., fot10<'f' oir cooditiiming, pow,.-!T!Mr-$ 2488 irog, power (dost) IM'akes, radio, htoler, wh1tewo!I fires,
tm!ed gloss. wheel covers. 561AfZ
NOW ON DISPLAY
FROM EUROPE!
'68 MUSTANG 2 Dr. HT. '69 FORD Fairlane
V-8. slick ~hill. 1~io. heoter, ~hitewo\I li;es. tinted $.1288
gloss, wheel cove(s. WBH777 • ·
V·S, ooto: tr1N1s. po..,er steering, powef (disi.) broke5. $18 8
rodio, hea ler, XYL724 ·
'70 MONTEGO 2 DR H.T. '69 FORD MUSTANG
PANTERA
By de Tomaso
V-8. loclOt'Y air condllionftJ, powtr S!tff"'Q. power
brakes. radio, h(IOllr, whitewolt fires.. vmso. Only
37,SOO «klal mil ~L • •.
'70 OLDS : Cust: 4 Dr. H.T.
ooto. trans.; loc!ory air condiliooing, power stee<ing,
power (dist) hfok~. power windows, power uort:-AM-~ 9 8
FM.Stereo. rodoo, heott";whitt1¥oll !irel. viny1 roof tinted -•
gloss, wheel co~eri. 7l2Af:A. · .
'10 COUGAR
..-..
01110. lloris., po wiir steen1\!l .. pOwer {d1.c)"brokes. wl111e. $19 8
wotl rires. t1n red gloss wht'1f coYers. 1 S,000 octuol ·
moles. 975 BIL
-S, slick shill, rod'io, heoler, while~! l1res, wheel $148·8
OYerS. Real SoOlly. YCM 686
V·S, Ollhl. Irons., foc lmy ~_!r tO!id1l10ning, pOWJf ~leering, ~7· 8' 8
ptiy.oer (dist) brokes~fqd_io.~ter, whitewolrlirts, 14,-, -
I ·1 7 9·BNN -· ' '
. -
1969 MARK Ill
An imn1ocu!aJe luxury cor coniplelely equipped
'Wi!h ·full power, AM -FM ~!ereo, vinyl roof, oir
tondifioning, etc.
I 0 PRE-DRIVEN
MARJ< lll'S IN STOCK
All
PRICE SLASHED FOR
QUICK CLEARANCE!
'
'70 DODGE Sportsman Bus
V-8, oulo. 1<1111s., pl)"~' ~tee.-iqg, JH!Wer {disc) brokes. $29 8 rod1n, hearer, whlrewnll hrn, 1111ted glos1. wheel covers.
vinyl i111erior 10 passenger voc:1111011 spetiol 046.BNQ
'69 llNC. Cont: 4 Door
outo. tro11~, factory air cond111oniog. lull power, radKO. $29 he~tei, wh1•ewolt lues, l•l'lted gloss, whe-el coven. rtf-. ·
01'
'71 MARQUIS 4· Dr.
ou!o. 110111., !octary 01r condrtl!!i1irig, power steeiing.$
power (d•sc) brnkes, powl!'I wmdows. A~-FM s:ereo ro-36 8 8
d•~. h,nt~r. whit1wol! T11es, hllled gl~ss. wheel to.vei s.
lnn~m1 in 11 ,6?f! lltlunl m1l~s SS7-CCG
'66 MUSTANG 2 DR. H.T.
V-8, oulo. 110111., rndm, heo!er, white:...011 tires, hnted gloss, $9 8 8
wheel ccv"s. Xll.M02S
'70 LINC: 4 Dr.
oulo. !rOT'IS .. foc!ory 01r cond1!i<l11;n11, full pcv.er. AM-fM $46 8 stereo radio, heoier. wh1!tl'>Oll lires, vonyl roof, tinted
g•nsi. wheel coven .. vony/ 1nier1or 18,641 otrucl moles.
479 .
'66 llNC. Cont. 2 DR. H.T.
10, heater, whit1wa!l 11res, ~inyl roa r, l1nred gloss,
whrel co Yet 1. Set & Or1Ye to opprtc<0tt SAi'/ 734
'71 FORD Pmto 2 Dr.
4 spud, l11Ctory oir cO!'ld1rio111ng, radio, heot,.-, whflr#oll$218 8
lores. tinted qkus. 444(1(
'70 CAD. S DeVille
to. Irons.. foctof., oir condiTIOl'ling:. lull powtr, powff"
stltfing, powtf {di$!:) brakn. power winclows, power $4
s.all. FM. vinyl roof, tintrd gloss, wheel covers. A buy of
l1le timt. 369 AER
loc:1ory oor cond1homng, lull power, power steerino,
power (d•st ) bro~es, power window~. power seals, FM $39 8 8 radio. heo!er, whiiewoll tires, vinyl roof, 1in1rd glosi, ·
wlleer toYers. Oreom cor mu 476
'67 CAD Cpe De Vile
loctary air ·cll!lditianing, Ml power. 11ower steeri119, $2 power (disc) bfoke1, power win!low1, power 1eo!1, ra-
dio, whi1ewo!I !ir es, vinyl roe I, 1inted glass, wheel
covers. e•Cf!>l101111I Condo!~. UES 134
V'~ ~omet Dr.
•:afli1~ftt$~ng. radio. heoter, whit1wcll $
tirft1Wt1 .. ]rllll&iia-1, 54'2·(18
B. auto. lions., focto1y oir cond1r.on~g. 11'11 power, ra-$148 8
All Sale Prices fffecf(Je l; 72 Hours After Publication •.
SEARCH GHT .TO
'67 FORD Country Squire
10f o!s.ou1o. Trm'IS., foctory i:rircondi!iorur'ij,power slttr-$138 8
ing, power (d1si:) lifok1s, rodto. healer, wllitewoH 11res, • •
t11'1trd g10ss, wht,el covers. ()l)e o_. New tor loft TQW. ' ' , .... 77 • -. ' .•
'71 CHEV Vega Wagon •
,, OPIN
•
SUNDA~S 1301 NO. TUSTIN , SANT A ANA
USED CARS -547-0 707 •• ,,. •• • \ ··········i •• ••. ,. •••• •. I B11 ~i ····"~ .. NE W CAR 5-547·'H83
____ ., ... --
•
• ,,
'70
pl ...
...
ii
air
'16
1
V..!,
'"' ..
SIS-
'65,
Clea
1695 ....
1968.
"'w
"'"" ...
•
••
l
•
•
• •
l
•
. .
I~ I AUIOlfwlM I§] .__[ _A""'-'~"' .. _
A •. 1¥¥--:~'~~~~~!~~~~!!990~~~~!~~~~--
A11to1 for Sale
... ?;;;l!i!D! . ; -MUSTANG
2•'70 L TD'1, 2'Dr & ' Dr '65 Muotana• •n · 1 Fl b U>e~dt lnunaculale! dlr. Two to chtme Imm A t Pont ~c re lrd
priced from sm. f7458l.BJ TraM. lUck "1.ift. V-'. :; BR.AND new 1972 P'ireOtnt.
&: (589AQJ)· ca.J.l before 8 Cond, Very CINn intmor, PS, PB. radio~ ·nt:attr, WS\\'
PM 644-2950. exceUent pa.Int It tir~. must tJres, elec. ck>ck A:' many
'69 F-~ L ~ and drivf'. rainy extru, auto. tranll,. .,..., TD Brim. 4 dr, conttr Jt. console. Serial No. HT, air, atereo, new th-ea, FLEXIBLE FINANCING 2.S87D2N5228o7.
-·
Auto• for Salt
'12 Pontiac Le Mana
Brand new 1972 Pontiac lA
Mana 2 dr. 1'ulty factory
equipped. mu&t 1te to be-
llev~, Serial 20272Pl 43.126,
1--T-BIRD·-T·BIRD
'64 R•Mbl1r Am~rlc•n ~ T·BIRD. fUU 'j)O"tW'J', lo --------Air Cond, EXetlltrl Trant, mi'1. lmmac. Uke new. 1969 T·BlRO vd th .la..ndtu top,
Orlvtin b)' a tUttle.o&e lid)!. Pvt. party. 844-mJ. P>d nrn, full po~. atr.
(KDY016) '"' • Cf>OOIUont.n,, e.xffil~nt -n-
$495 1964 1 ·llIRD, 1111 JJCl"'tt, air """ dlUon. 39,.;oo mHes, $2.375.00
\ DAILV 'ILOf ,.
T·,IRD T·llRlr
"1968 THUNDERBIRD, 4-dr ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;1
Landau. lmmae, cond. thru·
..... full pwr.. llr. cond., .•
A~I • Jo~M 1tttt0. Bwyundy •
w/blk. top, Siu. bk. Private
Pty. ~7·9479
1964 T.-811tD
1195. Uo. 321 Dl1I.
De&Jer. 6G30'4
mech. xlnt. $2075. 847-~T AL MARTINEZ W•. I l:"-091 .62 t!Vll!!IJ. 3Zl E, 111!, S.A. 5t2·t&11 'f-"I'
WAS $3651.60
SAVE $652.60
fROM STICKER
NOW $2'199
,IT_ .....,..s L ~· ~3 arter s pm Rr.dlllnd!I 79J...4&l5.
ff CU'U'; .. ee Autos, Usod 990 4ut.l,. U11Kf 990 Autos, UHd -9l0 Autos, UMO "° .
'"' roRD c.w. .• ru-. H.r.. 1910 Mus:rANG ~ s~~.:J~~o
P/S, P/B, lac. alt. Lo V8. lt.nd11.u. Auto. factory A.Ir, . I Now 'SJ391 .62
book. 645-0537 or 54~. radio, dlr, Nf'w tirf'll, 24,000
il ,_ It tax~. lie. ,& dor. fH
1969 Fom van E-100, , vs. m "· •.Clory warranty. 'BILL' BARRY automatic, immacul11.te · in-Thia ·Cat abMl11t111ly I I k 111 • . •
1iM & ouL 642-2909 new, will flnancr? 1839AKQ!
•70 RANCR Wagon, A/C, aaking pri~ Sl495, Call PONTIAC-GMC·F IAT
p/i, auto, lil<t1 new, s2,175 -""~'~··~·~•~P_M_644-._,2950~·-· _ llst St, at S.A. Fwy.I
or offer. 5.i7~. * 1965 MU!ll'flnr Convmibl.f!, 2000 •E. l8t St., Santa Ana
+ Tax, lie Ir do<'. fee.
BILL BARRY
PONTIAC GMC Fl:AT
il.11! SI. at S.A. Frwy.)
2000 E. l&t St., Santa Ana
s.sli-1000
AmerlcMMotON,.
5"7,5126 '
1234 S. Ml'iP SJ. .santa 'AnA
'70 Ambassador
Wagon ,
. 558-1000 '69 GTO, Auto door Jocks, ,
gold, auto top. $420. Ovmer. --------Windows. Air. WtBpped top, 9 Pauens:er. Gold w Ith 64~1~. '72 Pontfo1c. Bonneville Auto tn.na, Polygla!IS rtre.i. matchln1 in~ri<\l'.1 Automa· JEEP
OLDSMOBILE .DEWN TO~>ie,. than Xlnt com'I, S217'fl. 675-7:Dl tic, air cood:. po..ter steer·
'6.1, "'E'O'E~P~i;-sa;·;s'w:r;·~~~· .. L+,.....;;:;;::~;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;-J-!:~'~ . . 1ng &.:.....btaku.-1-009-ASW
-·oev. eng. Ex~a1.-'65 4 dr Jet Star Olds brand nevU!t!•?t!Dr· H.T_. ~pe., P.S., RAMBLER $2695. : x'"' 00"1· .'1'"'"'90, ... di , • P,a, "-"'"'0
• pow" Tommy Ayres · Chevy .. . "'w '· "' • "'· & new wir?ow,. ci>rdova top, WSW .,,......,-,.,..........,...,..--· LINCOLN ·b ... k••· <»m• ovrJ &"4 ""'·' laotory ""' condil., ¥ makr. llfl offer. M9-2754 , pllJl..n\IJlY .lxtrui Serlal·No. ~ '67 Rambt.r Re bel
'fi6 Continental, 54,COO mllei. 1966 OLDS Delta 11 4 Dr. 2N5'7Vtc,100937 •. , • Dr, Bucket Seata. Auto
Wholesale-booJc pritt. Get· .:In. Very clean }ocal, W.AS $5.546.S5. Tram, Excellent Cond,
946 S. Cout Hwy.,
Laguna Bch
494. 7744154f!·9967
""" now e.,. Wo"ld ""'" orllinal ear. Air, •le. 1895. SAV.E .$940'.16 $595
give to you tban to areney. Flnn 54>2083 I 'IT. d s L 546-7117 days; 646-3176 toves. . · .. 'FROM~ STICKER ff a:r: • ee '66 Olds Luxury 91 :. NOW U606.39 MERCURY 46,000 mi .. Xlnl eond. &•lox,.lie. & doc.'"' AmerlcanMoto!s~
""""' m" "'"""' Bill BARRY
·n MAT AOOR 4 dr sedan,
R&H, PIS, auto, air, oond.
xlnt cond. '$2450. ' Fin•c.
awi il. 642-9511' d ay1 ,
54f>.6140 e'Ves.
'68 COUGAR '60 OLDS. Good "'""·
24 000 1~11.I milMi. Autri trans. $175 PONTIAC·GMC.-FI AT
fl~t St. at S.A. Fwy.)
20001 E. lit St,, Santa Ana
553.1000
547·5826
1234 So. Main St.,
Santa Ana
Need a "Pad"'!' •Piate:an ad!
Call 642-5618 Now!
air cond., PQWl!ll' 8let1ri~, M~7]J
bura•rc!Y with black vlnyl "'66~1'85~. -.-,.,-,-'--R&'-H-.-$600-,.,-
lop. Absolutely bellutUul! u <-RI fXCZ609l o er. "'lV• vt'r, N.B.
61>2016.
Marquis Motoi;s 1968 .. , °'"' "" e11. Pts.
Toyota k Jquar DeaJer poci-tn.c. Sha.fl>? UlSS.-1
900 S. Coast Highway ownf!r. 61'5-Sll6.
Laguna Beach 540-3100· -~~~----
'69 . COUGAR PLYMOU.TH
Sharp? Local t owner. tac-e HOT WHEELS e
tory air. Bucket!, Vlnyl roof, '67 Pl YMOUTH
PS, PB. {XYT27!1 f tzl.95. Modified for high
Tommy Ayres Chevy "'~;:..=.~
946 S. Coasl Hwy.,
Liiguna B\h
491-7744 '546-!1967
1'1UST SEU..!
54A·7AA1/$A95
'fiO PLY 2 dr WJTI, slant~.
stick shift, vA.!ve j ob ,
w/pornp. Sl.50. 645-ll941
PONTIAC
MUST Sa~fice. '67 Fittbird,
326 V-3, auto, P S, stereo,
mU:e off~r. n4: ~791.
1967 Bonneville
CnµP.e. v~. automatic traQt.,
fat;lory air conditionlng,
power rteering. (VEK614)
$999
Gobd thru 2 '29/72
.:~E· ROSS .
· · ~TIAC
24llO H11.rbor Blvd.
C~ta ;Me'M 546-8017
1969 FIREBIRD
V3 enaiftf': 4 ape~ tranmil• &icm. . (ZXXJ99)
'fi6 MERC Colony Park, 9
pu11 \l'gn. Air. full po\l·er,
rack. Xlnt cone!. Sacri!kt:~
Must K'tt, 548-5671.
'69 MERCURY C.omf'l 29,00'.I
ml. 2 year guarantee. $1300.
962-0612 alt. 6 pfn.
•n Pontloc Vent. II • · .S l 699
• G<ixt thru 2/29m BRANO new 1972 :Pontiac
Vent. TI 2 dr. Fully factory DAVE ROSS
"luipptd indudlnr 6'yl. on-". ':~NTIAC
gj.nf'. Serial No. 2Y27D2L-. 2480 'Harlior Blvd.
UM31. "ecMt. ~efll. . S46-8017
Was $2951.94 '68 GTO,· 4 spd. nu brk11.
MUSTANG .
Autos, New 980 Autos, New
AMfRIC4fi ' £ . . . ' MOTOR$ .,' ..
DEMO ·'
SALE
• UllDH lllW M lllG.IMElft ' • · '
CIAL CLURAllCI SAL£' . '
1966 Musting conv.
1"15'
SA.YE $500.00 1625/ofl M Int. fM Yomoha ~ "', .. , I s 'HVAUAllT $99 From· Sticktr ~:u. -8 lt>r · p.m. si.1too w•i••·' cyl .. "''· .
'6t (lrln. Vu c..,.,
R•oclvf"' 111• lro». 6UCFW ·
'67MUSTAJllG '
980
Llc. P£L 16.1
Otale.r 642-3474 Now $2451.94 1969 . PONTIAC "'""' ·.,~,~;,,,,,,;,
l IBaxl.Lllic.BkARdocRY. fet CATALINA \,:~~1"·,::~: .. h:~:;: ~=: v.11,01110. Iron•., po Wit"'"'!~~.
rodoo,ht_,_ T~Ti.12 '
c.u,.. Vi,' '"tom.ik lr•n<., •1oom"'"'"' ....... .....,•;•"'· factbry .air conditioning. C""'"•" • •11••"· 22,000 rnli.t, v.1, aU'l11. '"'"'-" olr • p,...., • ...... 35lJiUA. ,... ,<odio,M.,,.r, 0.4S
'65 Mulltan1.•inun9c, 6 cyl, 3
1pd, •lh, 'Id ""'· "'"' PONTIAC.-GMC-FIAT
pert '72 tags $475. 675-m<IT. fhf SL al S.A. F'wy. I
SEPARATING. lll68 MUIJ. m E. 111 & .. Santa Ana t.A"'. COn\leri. V-8, A·l =-;:"'C-7,sss.,....,1~11110-~,,_
pc:rA'tt .i~.rpower w..u1· '11 •f40r. • .. 0 . t.
dows, (YUP"';& . l "'""'radlo,llH!lr, 17$ OFC Oar! C:T. Y.t, outo i-.&..·M rfflo.,
·Good s!t~J29/72 t-:,:-.. :-.. :-,:-.. '.'1 • .,ir,ll .. ~1111 •• r-•• -M-.-••• :-•• tt~~fln·:~·· T .,." ••• 1 ..... : ;2· 2. s .. · .. , .... trl!Hrllot,
Dlo\VE ROSS ' ' '67 AMIASU.DOI
cond., make offer. 5$-6921. '68 Bonneville, Pwr windows,
'70 MfflMt 2 Ir. , '69 MUSTANG PIB, PIS, Air cond, New
V-3. 4 lpd. JX)\l'e.r, heavy duty tire1, Gre.at shape". ~t of. PONTIAC , "'· "·'· ••· ·--· .. """• o!r, NII -r. rltd wtlh >Of\119 WtYI 2480 Harbor Blvd. I . Vtt788
.!illlo. "ona.. p..,..., II....,, -"· h.o!tr.ll,JiU
suspension, low mileaee.' .1: ff'r. 833--0322, ~1925.
""' •huJ>. 11900· ean 1968 PONTIAC 546-9164.
Cos~ ~~ ~7 HOYo l dr.e :~~tront.,roc!lo,
... MUsrANG <is Cobn '"· EXEC UTIVE
'fop cond. Low milf'i. I of, Cnupto. VB, aufomatir tr,11n!I.,
kinrl . MuM 1tt tn apprtt. lactory air conditioning,
197-0 ·Grand Prix ·-""" .',.,Ml!
Yw; ·automatic trllfl!I., tac· C1011!c 2.s..011r fijflr lood•d . ,. ' 9, !ory· air conditionihg, pow.
tt llteerirlg, power windows.
'67 T•t• 2 Of. N.T.
tod, o~to, iron1., rodlo, h"'''· UOH~ .
'10 ·~ .. ,., ..
968--03;4, powe.r afttring. (l.ZX709 ) • Ot.ttilo!I. oU'lo Iron•~ •od!o,h-•t. 27.000 ..,llH, l\I 1 •
Hi.,...f.,..,,onc1 Huri1 l -o~ Ito -.IN:
(tl6fd>EJ • 135-0fA .
'"Clwr.40r. '65, R/H, VS. A""" PIS. $1299
CleM, 1 owner. Pvt party, Good thru 2129m $2999 cOOd 'thru 21'.!lm
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
Y.t.. 1111to. ,....,..._ f~ air,,_.,.
"'"'Wto,radio, "-er, l'Vlo$lt
S695. Leaving 1 1 I I e . 2480 Harbor Blvd.
M4-53<3 . DAVE ROSS
1968. ' cy1, pow..-,...,,,,.. PO,NTIAC
new tires It brakeii, excel COSla Mesa 546-8017
cond. Gold. S1,29ol. 6T"~I070 .66 Le Mani. OwDf'r' IN
'fi6 Mmtang como, 389 V-1 DISTRF.SS. V-8. auto, p/1,
eng., 3 1pd, Michelin tire!, Yf!f'Y clf'an. $750 / o I t e r
•, 2'bm Harbor Blvd.
aood cond. S6m. 673-7<119. 548-5889i 545--0487.
Cot:ta,Mpa 546-8017
'67 PONTIAC Sta.. Wag. Xlnt
con<t 'ciH,. Owner. Air
C"' ld .. r/h: $1195 .. 642-:ml.
1969 Harbor Blvd.
646•026 I CALl FOIFlll CllDITCNICI
0 n Dail 9.9. Sat. & Sun. to 6 ·
Autos, Imported 910 'uto1, Imported '70 AulH,.lmported 970 A~tos, Imported 9700\utos, lmpon,td
OPIN
IUttDAYI
OVER 150 'NEW & USED
vw·s . TO . CHOOSE FROM
'63 VW NOTCHBACIC' ............ .' $Jff
lt«ett"' overtle~l«I fftl, lie. \IZ.N 402.
'68 vw sQuAREBAc~ ............ s1m
lltflt blvt, lllldl l"1.,1e1-. rtdl1I !Ira. S.l.i.I 19CS, •
'63 VW LOVE BUG ............... $4ft
O.tlt bit.II! wttti '-•M llrtt, witem -'-· Lil. nc ... .
'71 VW SUPER BUG .............. $1749
bn ,,..... •1bl..cll '"terler._rtd!e, .ic .. t1c1 . ...,,,...,n,.,, Lie.. 11J c1 1
'68 VW BEETLJ ................. Sitt
W!tlft, W/~ H!leriar", ~-II. l ie.. WYO U2. '
OPI ..
SUNDAYS
LARGEST SELECTION OF
VW-BUSSES & CAMPERS,
'70 VW BUG . .. . .. .... .' ....... $1 4sv
A.~l!c. Atlt ''"" w/blld< 1~1e!'10-, l ie.. Jl• ecv. •
'65 VW BUG . -· .. ...... • ............ ,,,,
Mtd!..,lcallY 9oad -l'IHd• -_.., llC. DSl 711. •
'65 VW SQUAREBACK ............ $m
GrM I ~ (fr, lk. 1111'1' f11.
'68 OLDS CUTLASS . .. . .. . .. .. . $1Jt9
I doof" lltl'llllOll, Auto., lull -·· rtcllo. WSW 'lrn l ld air cOfld Lie. l:X.V ~1 •.
'69 CHEV. MALIBU ............... $149'
l .,... htl'illl•, t UIO. fUH -Lk. Y•C 0$1.
'58 ·VW VAN ................... .,;; '68 BUICK" SKYLARK ............. $14ff
I.Ali ~ q lM. nw ....,., Lk. OLE..... • t ... tit"'""· rtclll. NH -r. tt.llOmmc.. &ODO lf:MI '"1.... I •
~
'70 VW I.CA AN GHIA ......... . v.i..,.., r.ot.. lk., ff'.I ldll.
'68 VOLVO 425 .............•••• •tJ'.e
!1 ... Mdlf'I, • ....i I•-. Lk. ?AD ttJ', '" t'f,
'61 ·VW1UG / ....... : .......... .' SO' ,'69 DODGE VAN ................ ~11 ~·-"'_._._,.....:...•-__ ... _.':...""..:.'':...'-.cc.:..:.'·..:.' .. -"-"""....:.."',;.,_· _____ ,ll_ IMt••=· W I .. 2M>•1M. • • T ,., .•
'66 '.VW1 DELUXE BUS ............. S1....,. '67 OLDS DELMONT 88 · .......... S1otf
Lie. 16' O•t. , . ) ~ ~J J"vll ....,., ,...._ tlr c:eNtl!lenlnt Lie. 41 (~.
'69 POP TOP CAMl'ER • , .......... QJtt '6B OPEL RALL YE ............... S1010
LI(. Ml AG~. a.-wfletlt. IK ... ttt"'-, ~ Lie. WU ttf, '
7o AUSTIN AMEllCAN ••••. ". .• , . $l0ft
~ _,.., _.. entll, L.ko .. (tG, f', , '71 VW,BU,S .-................... ;n..
Y ..... W/IMct,,,.,..., ........ ~ •rT•ltlt.cl.k.. f.111. '\ ":;;";: <! •
. t
'70
BUY FROM .:ORANGE
COUNTY'S
No.1 CHEVY l>EAtER1-
BUY:
WHERE THE
GOOD
USED CARS
ARE!
• TRUCKS
'67 CHEV. 'h·TON . ......
"ld:u.,, VI, r1dl11, 1111t1., ,,,$.,•Ir. CUii till. fL Wllt!
'70 FORD 112 -TON .......
"ldr\ISI. VI, 1lr, P.S., I UIO .. Cvsl. c1ll. fPMo&OI
• $1999
$3099
'68 FOR!:\ 3/4.TON .....••. $1999
I cvt., 4 tPted, ,...,, 1r11<e truck. Rltdki !"~l
'70 CHEV. 112-TON ....... $3199
IO!tkup. ltldle. 1lr CD!ld., VI, 1uto .. P.S .. t uil c.tb fl>16Ul
'69 CHEV, 112-TON . . ..... $2399
VI, • ~. pidilll). Ci.rslofl'I till, tldlll. (l'?UJ'l .
'69 CHEV. 1f2.TON . ...... $2299
I tyUlldt•, 4 1PH11, 1!r awod .. rldlo. lil'Ml6l
'71 CHEY. l/2-TON -....... $2799
Vt , l IP!ed. plt~uo, ·~die. llSJ1JHI
'70 FORD 1h·TON ........ $24 99
r>1c11u11. Rldl!t, J IPtlld. YI 9119ln1, !!rn1Al
'70 CHEV. l/4. TON ....... $2599
Pkltup.' ev•lnd••· 1tkk "'lff fSll»Al
'70 CHEV. l/4.TON . ' ..... $3299
Pk:kuP. 111.0lo, P.S., 11110., 1lr, CUii. c.it. IPMIO
'70 CHEV. 112-TON ....... $3099
Pk:kllP, lltdfo, P.S., I ulo., 1lr (Ofld, 11'141!1
'70 CHEV. 112· TON ••...•. $2599
V\, rtdle, t utome11c ,,,., •• 1n1SA1
'69 GMC 1h ·TON ........ $2099
,, bed llkl<lftt. YI, llk k, r.Olo. ltllAKTl
'69 FORD 3/4·TON ........ $3999
11 .,.., fl. Holldev c•'""''· 1uto., rtdlO. IJU61C)
'69 FORD 3/4.JON ..•....• $2699
1'/t II. tt1k1 VI, • 1,,..r, 11r tOl'ld fPlSill
'67 DODGE 1h·TON ........ $1399
PlctcuP. UI. •Miio, 1uto.....Uc. fV1n711 f
'68 CHEV. 3/4·TON . . ..... $2799
\II, rtdlo, 1uto., l 'IJ ff. SI"'' C1mP1•· '6l4'Jil
'68 CHEV. 3/4·TON ....... $2099
'°lcli;llP. 4 t llffd, &I;! t Cy!. ""I· {tl .. IAI
'71 MONTE CARLO '69 MALIBU COUPE
llfdlo, tl.llD., "'lfll'I rf)t)f, _,,,,..., VI , I ulo , "'"VI ~. r1dlo, P.1., •-lllf, 1!• «IN! • low mlltt, 1fr, low ,,,u.,, I .......... ,, !YWT·
Nrp ur, 1"91011 ... ,
$3599 $2099
'70 MONTE CARLO '66 IMPALA COUPE
Ylnrl rod. IU"O ' r.aio. tlf)Wtlf llHIO, •Ille., P'W"• llHrlrtt, •Ir
1..-t"O a. 1W1t.,, "'''"' "lee· mrrd., Ctetfl, llJ8152) (111.1.lll
$3199 $999
'70 KINGSWOOD :&8 CAMARO
WAGON
• ,_... lllH!e, pO\O'tl'" llM'ltlf, lttdlo, • '"'lridtl'". 1•1<11'. t'llf",
•IJ'fO , a ir cond., '"'°""'°°'" l•all. vltlyl l90f. Gener1tiol'I (Ir. (W'YJ•
(ZWV21i1 J 9111
$3199 $1699
'70 MALIBU S.S. '67 CORVETTE
CM. .)N ci.. Ir!, VI, •ltdlD; • STINGRAY
1Clffll, low mllts. {1•21011 • '°""'' tldlo, m VI, Mlllf!' 1P11rD, C"lOOZl
. $2499 $2499
· '66 CHRYSLER '65 NOVA COUPE
N..,_, ~ Or. ltlf. •.I. it.I .. W, _... 11-lr'IO, llUlo , r111io,
•4• tl!ll'OI .. tt,111.,, rMlo, ~ tNrt1 I c.tl'9M -· Orlfll'lll ltV\r u r. IUJC:•U out. (H0tllfl ••
$899 $999
BUY:
WHERE YOU'RE
TREATED LIKE A
CUSTOMER BEFORE
AND AFTER YOU
BUY!
'67 FORD ECO.NOLINE •••• $11 " Pltlflll). 11111110, 6 tYlllll!lll', 11k k tltlft tZHMJtl) • VANS • '69 CHEV. 1°TON ......... $3699
OU.I •N•, 12 fl ••urn "'" 1t1dle, •v!O fH'1D>fl
'69 FORD 3/4·TON VAN ••• $2599
VB, I U"'. t.clle. 16J211(1
'66 FORD t/2-TON VAN •••• $999
EconoH~t. it.din, a!lck 1t11t1. /.U2'M)
'69 FORD 3/4 ·TON VAN ••• $26tt
i tYI, t lllO . •1dlo !P?J111
'69 DODGE 1/2-TON VAN •• $239 9
VI. tulo..,..!lt. •ldlo. IS'121CI
'68 CHEVY SPORT VAN • • $2299
"' tllft ' "'''"'VI. I U!onvll(. PottfC:l
'71 CHEVY SPORT VAN • • $409 9
9
J su1i. •,oco '"'~ 1t1dlo, \II, •ufO. ruocuo1 '!k 4 WHL DRIVE ........ $4Jf
s 11. vt, P.1., • ..,,....., Ilk .. !MKXWJ • EL CAMINOS • '70 EL CAMINO $3299 ..........
~lo, •uto., •Ir, llO'"" 1lfffl"11, vlny! {00!. 11.-1 '
'70 EL CAMINQ .... ' •••• $2799
\II, rtdlo, P.S., "''°"""ttc tr1n&mfttl!lll, lf'74H'.l
'69 EL CAMINO ........... $2599
\II, r'41o, P.I ., 1uto., •Ir cotldltlo!llnt. Gold C4Mll!)
'67 EL CAMINO ......... $2699
SS.tH. Aulomltlc.. •Ir cn ., ... S , r~lo. o ... ,... (1.._0l
'69 EL CAMINO ........... $2699
VI, 1u-...11(, radio, 1lr coN . ."1uPer "k•. lkllt. flllUCJ
'69 EL CAMINO ......... $2899
Air concl, \II, 1"11., WIO,. l".1.,.•k' CllN., 09" io... llw f!Mn'I
'68 EL CAMINO .......... $2199
ll1dlo, llOVl'tf'l llWlllll, l lr CAll'ldltlMll'l!I, ltlld • .((~l
'70 FORD RANCHERO • • • . $2599
VI, rltdll, 1vtomtllc, pOlftr •'-lrlf, I N' cond .. Ylnyt rMf. (lnUl'I
'71 FORD 10 PASS '66 OLDS CllTtASS
c-1ry ...,,,. WatM l.1.111t. radl:, CouM, tlldlo, •utel'IMtfc. ,...,
r.ale, 11119., P.1 .• 10.000 mi, ur, 'f'l~y! "°"'· CSTDNJ o..d tt\.trp. !"'1011
$3699 $899
'67 MUSTANG '66 Cad Cpe de Ville
llMlt, "·*"· IUIO,. •Ir (Ol'td., vi,,.,,
Gouoe ' crl•lltdtr, ~r ,,_. "*• 11' .... h .. wl ..... •II lptl
"'9. 1llllt, rMIO, IOod mlltt. OOodltL HMd1 ,..111t...-it • ,_,
(VEFJftl 1trooog ur. Htl87Ml. ~ty ••
IOllll; """''· llJOO $1499 $1299
'67 MERCURY '68 PONT. LE MANS
' ~'"""'' ~ AJr, l'.t., t uto., C111!elft c ... 2 Dr· M•"' -. .....
~r wl"°°"'1, ""'"' f'OOf, 1ur• IUlo.. Ill.I., l'Mlo, WMf ,... ~le.I u r. lUVT».4) IXUC.l'l
$1299 $1499
'69 TOYOTA CORONA '69 NOYA Cllll'E
' Or. Avlo., I I•, fldlo, ¥1"_.t N/llll, tt.dlt. ,.,,., •lwlf'll. """""""'
lcr<f. i.. rntle•. 111w iow "'"'· '~· (XTUTIJ iUG•>
$1499 SIM
''66 YOLllSWAGEN '61 CAPRICE ~lfE . WA.ON
... ra.ct. ..,lo, '"'*· .... Ml ........ AM.#~W.
.,. •Ir .... (JC "lu. CTOP»l .
$1099 $ISM
_.._ -
CONNELL CHEVROLET
2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA •
546-1203
•
•
r
.fri.,Feb.18, 1972
CADILLAC NINETEEN . SEVENTY-TWO
EXECUTI\'E CAR
LISS THAN 1100. MILES
1972 CPE. DE VILLE
Viny l roof, leather interior. A,\J.f\I stereo radio, 1oft
ray glllls, 6 W8)' front seat adjuster, automatic climate
control air cooditioning, po"·er door locka, tilt·lele
steeri ng wheel, lwilight !Clltinel, remote control trunk
lock, etc. ( 135269)
ON DISPLAY-READY TO GO
1972
ELDORADO
CONVERTIBLE
Less Than 5600 Miies
Factory air conditioning. fu ll leather interior. full poY.er,
po"•er door loc~. tilt & tele steering v.·hee~ crui!e control,
power trunk opener, stereo with stereo tape, light sentinel,
rear window defogger, light monitors. Every conceivable
extra & looks and drive! just like the day it" as delivered
new. (Ser. 412866)
•
$8287
LEASE A BRAND NEW 1972 SEDAN DEVILLE
Fully equipped· with viny l roof, A.A1.fM stereo r1:tdio, ~ofl ray glass, fulJ po1\·ered 6 1vay seat, door edge guards, automalic climate air cond ition ing, til t & lele slcering 1vheel1 ty,•iJigl sentinel. (Sloe!.. ..f2325)
ONLY $185 PER MONTH 24 MON1'R
OPEN END
'71 El Dorado SALE PRICE F.ctory air cond,, full lc•lher interior, very low loc.J milc~. t"ull
puwtr, vinyl top, tilt & teleecopic 11tcering whttl. A'.\f.f '.\I radio, $.7 2 2 2
po"·er door lockt, cruiac control. J u1t 0."']e!ltl and priced 111 ~11
1oday. (439CZI). .
'IO El Dorado SALE PRICE .
ment. Al\1-F&I 1tereo m.lll.tiplei: radio, tilt l telescopic etet• ini; '"""" ,;, <0od;tiooU.~ foll Juth" "'"""· Fwl ''"" ,q,;,. $ 4 999
11·btc:J. fijwtr door lock!, pidded lop, 1n1ny other detu~c ura~.
{l36AS I) •
'70 Coupe De Ville SALE Pl.ICE
_ 1·~"" ok oonditloom~ '"''' top, foll luthu ;,.,,;," oil """ $ 4 5 5 5 incl. door Jock .. tilt & teleecopic 11ccrin1o 1lcrco, mo11 all dl1.
citr•~· (716ASI> -·
'70 Sedan De Ville SALE PllCE
''""' •fr roodhio.U.1, Ml pow""'"''"""' µ•dd<d !Op, do<h $ 4 3 3 3 l leather interior, •t.ereu Al\f.f!tf multiples radio, tilt & 1eleM:opic
11eerin1 wheel, ind more of Cadill1ca famou. fealurca. (168 ASI)
'67 El Dorado SALi PRICE
F ~'"" ,;, cood;olooio~ foll loHlm '"'"''" p•dd<d !Op, '"" $ 2 6 6 6 power. till &. tcle vbeel, Np:al .eekillc r1dio, all d,Ju1e eilras
and ''TY low mileage, Shows the ultimate ill. care. fTUR850)
'67 Coupe De Ville SALE PRICE
"""'""' '"";"' wh;., w/whi" ,;o,-1 top & rtoh <<d l•Hh" ;,. $ 2 3 3 3 1erior. f ac:lory air conditionina. ruu power, lilt & tNeacopic ateer-
ina, A~l·F~l radio. Absolutely bea11.lifuL (389ACC)
'65 Coupe De Ville SALi PRICE
F1..:lury 11ir •·unJitionini;. f1.1!1 pvwtr. Beautiful l'IOtb & ft1tlirt s1333 interior. A.\l.F~I r1Jio. etc. An e1ception1l buy. See lo 1ppreci1tc.
1 llOF3941
'71 Corvette SALE PRICE
Spon h"d''J; <P'-Ooly 11.621 m;J.,, R•mo.,bl• !Op ''""'· '"' $ 5 3 3 3 •orr 1ir l:on itionin,. 350 \'8 enginr. power 1teering, br1ke!, c]cc.
uic "•indow1, A~f/f ,\f radio. etc. &oauliful Olru1pic Brunu finiab
wtfuUy \inyl interior. f\awleM. (506CXW) •
'65 C11tl11111I Cont. '61 lulck lltctra '61 Chny '!J Too
l'l•~·· ""cl 0..1. ~J.llOO k>t•I
Io• I•'• •" <~•dl1i~•l•1. loll r•~· ':!.i • ~ d""t •<~•·· l••tq" '"· •"'" 1..,01 •h•<I bu<.• nllad••.
••· l•ll l<••btr l•10•I••· ••!•. Iron>., "•ll ,..,,,.,, po••• "'"'"~ • '"" •h•h. uJo" V•tet. <••I••
\\J.f\4 <0d!., ~"''~'•"'"lit ... A• b'4kto. aut~ttn\i, U••• .. ''~'" ol .. b. '"I"""· h,.,, oluir •qu!ppf'<I ~·0111. •l•!l 10~. "'" '"" •I" . .. \1h ,\•lu" ''"'P"' .~.n. \iu11 ho r1<fphuo1I "I••' <' LJol l• '"< •• ,. •••. !\t.'f\1.1:1 •••• ' .i. .... '" r .. u. •l'P'""'"'·
s999
i 109:1.)
s1999 51999
•
•
LARGEST
SELECTION
OF
LATE MODEL
CADILLACS
IN ·,_
'" ,I ' f I Orange 'C'bunty
• CHOICES1' INVE NTORY IN
SOUTHERN CALIFORMA
'71 Fleetwood Brougham sALE PRICE
r·1ctof1· air ronditionini. full po•-..rr. "in)l top, 'terw ,.·ith ~tereo $6444
tape, tilt & lelc wheel, power Joor locl&. crdiNI conlrol, twilight
senl., powrr trunl.: opener, rear window dc£og(cr, bu c11cry rol'I·
ceivable delu1e citra C.dillac makr.!1. ('49.JDf'C)
'71 Sedan De Ville
Ol'lly 9..320 mite11. Farlol"J •it ronditioning. £ull le11her i11tl'rio1. SALE PRICE
Leautifu[ C1s1hlllflca ivory with bl1 ck lop & blael.: intrrior. Dual $ 6 3 3 3
r .. n1£011 £Mn! ~"•I. •tereo with ,.terro taf)f'. tih·!rle "-'h<"el. power
Joor 1.,.-•lo. cruiM" control. 1\IOPl tH•ry J"1ul<1 r11Ja & 1lo!!Olu1ely
fiawlcu throughout. (012CXWI
'71 Coupe De Ville sAu PR1cE
,
Fa~\ory air ronditioning, padded top, fu ll power, lu1uriOUJ cloth $5999 & le1thcr interior, tilt & lelt.copi" ,.·heel. ~lcrco radio, puwrr .
door lock!. mo1t every dclu:i;e ettra. Local low n1ileage beauty
thai'~ !till ~l1owroom fre~h. i 306DJ Ct
'70 Cadillac SALE PRICE
Convenilile. f.'1c1ory •it eonditioning, t1ec111ive bl1ck exterior, $4 2 2 2 hl•cl.: r11erior. black lu11 lcatber and black lop. Full power, slereo
~ radio, rill & telc ete,rin(, po"·er door locl~. lo1dcd with e.1tr•s
and aale priced. ( 199888}
'68 Coupe De Ville SALE PRICE
raclory air conditioning. vinyl top. full P""t r, J11.1urious Llpt5try $ 3 3 3 3
'1 lcalhrr interior, tilt &: tcleiicopic ~\erring. 11.Ct~, door locl.:s .
Loc1Jly dri1<tn ~auty. (Stt. 27422) •
'68 Sedan De Ville SALE PRICE
Factory •ir conditioning, full power, "inyl top. Choice of cloth s2999
or leather interior, tilt & telecopic 1teerina. 11creo. door locks. e1e.
Choice of (2) 1a.ke your pick. (ZRS834) (WEX92"1)
'66 CouP,,e ,p, Ville sALE PR1cE
factory cir ~Int. f11U F. incl. electric windo•«• & !t'll, $1666
plu~h clotV,• lealher int .. 1Mf.ed w/e.\'1ras. See & dri•c Lu ,
\ 11pprcriatM (1SH07tq ... /'_,. t (i. , ' ·r .. " ... ~ -
' '70 ~Y,.~P,i·~~ ;•\Ai; ,.ICl,s I\, ~
Lux11riou1 ~· ~ ·~1witb f1ctory 1ir condi1ion.ina, •inyl s2 7 7 7
lep, lllpe!"!_<!..,~~.plt, ~ ~ brakca, auto. trans., r1dio,
healer, .:tc. ~~ m.iJie. IJOAUKI -~'J ,, I -.,
'65 MerclltJ w ....
C•lo•f 1'1'l ' ,•un1u .C.I~••
r. .. ul "•II"• •ilk locto., ""' oa•· .tilio•lq. p-"""t•f· pon• ... keo. olcotrk •l•tlow., •k••-"-
1""''' u<k, l"ll •l•1I i11or!.r,
lo .. l I•• •lleor. fPIJ(llt4)
, '66 Old1 Wa9H
'"'• t"og/,., t •-•1•• "•I"•· Y1<tory •"' <O•.thloo;•I· Pop•I••
htr.t •• 11.od l••\11 "•I"•· Po•~•
-l•J. p•••r b .. ~... ol~"fo ..t•w. '1111 ~layl l.ittlo:>r, luw•c
r ... k. a11001•il<. ,.d;o. h•l1•• ..._
•••Y low .. .-fol .. u .... {Tl ll::jll -. 51333
. •
'6t Old1 91 Holhfoy
Hu~'"' Cpt. fool"" t i< n.M .. hill
~"•'· !Ut •!••rl~J. 1oputr1 1.,., .
lo<, •lo•l •~,. Ill '"'' J.,.h~••t
.\\\·fll ,..r.,, 1/\,6ft:1 ,.
52666
Your Authorized Cadillac Dealer Serving the Orange Coast Harbor Area
• .. ..
NABERS
2600 Harbor Blvd.,
Co~_ta Mesa
540-9100
SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN •
•
8:30 AM to 9:00 PM Mou. tbru Fri. • 9:00 AM to 6:00 Pl\f Sat, and Sun •
• '
.~-
NABERS L ASING
LEASE DIRECT
lmm1di1te DeRvtry • bc1ll1nt Se1Ktion
frn Pickup 1nd Dtlivary
. '"' loan C•rs While lust Cir St"iced
fo."!' "~d •n•·holf acres of totol authorlaed
Cadillac focllltlu tl•tlgnH to better self
anti service Cadlllac automobiles. 10 {work
1tw111) •nd 45 f-ry train•-technlc)on1.
' •
•
•
BRAND NEW
'72CHARGER
loodfd wi!h ~il!yl "1th SIOb. hllltr. ,,,,,,. litM. willdshltlll
wo.hlrs. din.min sig!llllt, lull
~ inllriar, ......... ton11111
IVlltm + muth much more.
OIDEI TOUIS TODAY
TAKE YOUR CHOICE
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY '
5 1388~ PRICE
5199DOWN
543 MONTH ~~1N~~s
. '70 FORD
GAU.111500
Auto. truns.. rodia, heo1er, pow.
er slttrii-9, Nil wt..el cover!
335 BTA
FURY Ill HARDTOP
\1-8, OJIO. lfcllll~ foe.I. oi" coocL powll"
1teerP;J, radio, heoltt', lflltlitewalls. 719
AZV
70 CHEVROLET
SIDAN
V-1. auto. trans. lcxtory air cord. pow•
1r1ering, radio, heater, much much
more. 225 CGX
I I
BRAND NEW
'72DODGE
TRUCK
Looded wi!h Ma!w, wincWM!d-ther, 41
~ olltrnalor, .-iwlotion patkogto, good-
_..
yeor 1ir1" oclmission coritro1 15xs.s s \Id. IMMEDIATE
diK ""'""
011
""""" DELIVERY $2288~ $199 DOWN
Friday, February 18, 1712
lood.d w1tll wo•chhoeld wu•"-•
trs. hi9li loatk •ta11, htoll•,
11"0l1I htodlll!ll'. oi.r\ldt """0t·
G'l~• 14 '"'"· Ddrninion tontral
1y1ltm. hi9h 1mpoc1 po ... t a
mui.h nu:h mort. Ll291211l~1~91
S 1 ff i1 IOIOI dti pymt. S60 •I rota! mo P\'lllt 111tl
IO•, lceri>t Olld oll torTYino chotg11 on pppr, cr..iit
l0t 36 llWll, Oitft<red Pl"'ll-P"tt $2~/~ wd. IOJ I.
licfflW. ,_,NNUAl 'IKEHTAGl RAii 9.93 ~
5199DOWN
566MONTH :~:~s
1972COLT
ORDER
YOURS--
DAILY PILOT
TODAY!
PRICES START
AS LOW AS $1799
SEE AND DRIVE
THE FAMOUS -
"COFFIN" VAN
............ rlrlllllllliJIMr
BARGAIN CORNER
CLEANEST TRANSPORTATION
CARSINTOWN
'66 T-BIRD '66 Plymouth
Y·I, auto. •s.. ractoty air cond'~ i.111 power,
rodicl, hlot«, wfWewcrll tirtt. wfM co.,.,. ~I~
SAY357 $488fUU PRICE
'65 vw
y.3, ovto trans. power s!Nriftt. rsdio, h9aler.
O'N41E622_19442)
$388 FUil PRICE
'69 DATSUN
-BUG 1600 ROSTR. i •etd. Sfitk ifrift. n:rdlo, '*'•• whitewall tffr, hord!op soh top 4 speed. radio, htater, throm•
whit! tO'Rf1. rid, PAH17'9 wM111,, luogog1 ruck. Red YOE63'
$588fULL PllCI
(
!71 PL YM. 2 DR. H. TOP
5199 DOWN 553 MONTH ~0o~i~s
'69CHARGER
5199DOWN 530MONTH FOR 36
MONTHS
$1688 :.::·.::_·:;::~:J\~;~::
, & irli (orryirlg C~I Oii oppr, Y·I , a~to Iron~,, rod_10, ~ea t-crtdil tor 311 11101. Oeltrred e~, wtut1woll tirt1, Y111yl ll'!fe-pyllll.pflCt s 2101 inll. to~ &
rior.47301P Or:-. ANNIJAl PEJICENTAGE
RATE l l.116 .•
Auto. 11on5, foci~ oir, 5988 s1ttisi.1.,.,.,,~~· s10.nott1 ower tee · .... '""'· ;..._r. 1 ••• 1,, •• ,. & Glf p . s ri~g, power • ,..,., .. """~" on-· ,,.,~ 1.,. windows, radio, l!eater. FULL J6,..~ OtC1rnd,.,.... J>O~• '''" XSf'954 PRIC! .,,..,,,r.;..,,.AA>f..,ol.IPt~lN-·•Gf•uf IJ•l'!I.
'69 PONT~ Firebird '70 MUSTANG Mach I '69 DODGE VAN
""'"'"" """"'-"""' lO, $I 088 000 ml1s 113, JUll
P•ICf
lSIV-8,pow"""''"'·P'W" $1588 $988 broke,, rodio, ht111er. whilewoll FVU 1Dr.~ V~ heater, whr1.. flU
tires. hood shaker 9980DX Pl lCI lllall tim, S8036A t l lCI
'69 VW DELUXE '68 BUICK Wagon
~~·i::·r~~ ~~=-.~;:~: $788 fUll
lu~I Wl.1940 P•1t1
inl~ lli bock W:~et \e!Jll. XTff 338 fUll · """· """"· "'"' " ........ ,, $88-8
Plttl
'69 MERC. Cougar '70 DATSUN Sedan
lire,, full whtel covers. block. ruu Au(o Irons .• rodlO. hea!tr. lleody to V-8, '°"'· '"'"· wh"'"'" $1 088 . . $888
2US513 Pll(I fO. 207ANM. p~~~
\
'69 FORD Galaxie
SOOHT.V-t •. "!~-""''""'·''"'"-$988 powtt' Slffnng. POWlf brokts. rod'ID, IUll
Motif. ZBJ 673 ••tel
'69 CHEV. Pickup
r.:a: $1188.::::
I
I
•
TIME
• e
EVIRY NEW '72' IN OUR HUGE
STQ~K NOW DISCOUNTED TO ,
SAVI YOU HUNDREDS OF $$$1
'
NEW '72 LTD's
PRlt.I -l~STEI . .DISCOUNTS UP TO
tHIQOOll
1011"' ...
n-11..-.. -"'-Aw.N ,_, 1971 110 ~!~c~:' =------.-~~~
Ser.# 12Ji t$.ll,,6.ol6),(10ll 11Jl1Nl-40J90J' '11751'
AM IRI CAN MADI ..
, IS ALSO PRICED
UND ER
$2000 I
SPICIAL DIMO CLIARANCI e·u1
TEST
'DRIVE
1'1NTO
AND
COMPARE!
W& FEATURE
dNE OF
SHOWROOM
FRESH
Tremendous Discounts on Low Mileage
Staff and Exec. Cars that include Pinto:
· .. SO. CALIF.'$
. LARGEST
PINTO
71 's·72"s Maverick, Torino and Station .Wagon
Models!
· SE ~ECTIONS
~~T.D. • Galaxie • T .. Bird • Ford Sale!
i . M91y-trchooso -· '65"tln '71-Modols;·Spon·-fs, fOftllClls, 2 dOor ·& 4
dow ll'cwdlops & Mdrs. hi poW., air. coodltlao1"9. W-ln ..., .......
Sa ve While They Last!
INCOME
TAX REFUND DUE? ..
WHY WAIT
EXAMPLE: 1•70 FORD CUSTOM BUY NOW PAY LATER . .
4 door, Vt , MllM11ti .. >.;tW"H , ..... 1., •. 1.ood fftil.-. ll57VU1:
OUI . PRICI $1396
71 FORD 10 PASS. '3896' 'H V.W. CAMPER entry. Squitt.Full pwr., atr, · s~. 4 speed, radJo,
roof ~~ (2$5CFN) • hea~r. recond. engine.
ILUI IOpK fl'llCI $4115 ~ , •• , qood. m.'les· CYEW848J
.s2396
'U V.W.·IU<i
Loe.Md. Good mlJea. 0 (XSR93lJ ,096 '71 COUGAR H.T. $2996 R&H, auto.. P.S., &Jr: cond., ·
Low miles. (957BSX)
-. Vlt\yl roof.
ILUI IOOK PRICE-$U10
~ (Y0D720)
ILUE IOOK PRICE $1440
'65 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill ~Dr. H.T. RIJI, auto., P.S .. air
cond. Good miles. (PIT48t)
VS, 4 speed. &ood miles. '66 CHEV. MALllU S.S.
I Cxwn40) \ S*/96
• ---------1-----.....,...,.._"!!"I , AU OFFERS CONSIDERED
. '67 DODGi D,ART -,96 '69 FORD GALAXIE $1'396 TRADES ACCEPTJD
2Dr.A.T:vs. auto., R&H. .. ·~~~r:-.:'!r.~~···-PAID FOR o·R NOT. P.S., alr CODd., low miles. (UZT667) er, Vinyl_ roof, V-8. (ZDX781l
• '6t CORTINA DELUXE ILU! 15>0K PlllCI $121J -----------, .:,Sed. '.Fully ~uippetd,'aq~
'71 rO:D ·H.r: $4296 '70 CHEVY JMPALA ~so Lown.!les:(368ASPI : Cusl R&H, auto., P .S., ..,, ·
Auto, . P.B., P-win· air, vinyl root, -'61 . OLDS CUTLASS SUPREMt dows. . -FM rad.lo, tilt miles. l475AFX)
wheel, ~miles. (694BZJ) ILUI" IOOK H.ICI 12521 442. 4 spd., VS, 2 Dr. H.T. .'!_ UH, air, P.S., good miles. (TSR640)
&L4E IOOK PRICE $1HS
TRUCK SA LE! ·
Many to diOoot "-·.C~,·Datsuo, Ronchoro, 'I• ton and "" taos, Flot bod.
'67 ..... '71' an!Mtt\i: . . . .
EXAMPLE: '65 FORD .1h ·TON PICKUP . ' St.,.d•r<ITroM .,;folly E~u;pped, Good Maes. (535950 )
. $696 .
• ,.
-~
16· 5 ·slr{LARK GRAN SPORT Buick 2 Dr . .H.T. R&H,
auto., air cond,. good miles.
• (ROB561)
'65 MUSTANG HARDTOP Ful1y fact. equipped. VS, auto.,
P.s .•. RA:H, rood mlles. (l'FP024) • .
r7~~wtl9Rft"lftr--. . 'It, INC&; ALL ADV.
PRIClS.
NEW '72 GALAXIES
PRICt;USTER DISCOUNTS UP TO 01. FIOM
WINDOW
STICKll
NEW '72 .TORINOS
PRIWSTER DISCOUNTS UP TO T1SO ~rfc~~ ..... ~ .
!•r. # C2Jl t Hl44041 1 '(1015)' 'S•r. tt 12AlOHl66279)·11l4l,
NEW '72 MUSTANGS -
PRICE IUSTER DISCOUNTS UP TO s500 ·. -w.~·:o~
NEW '72 MAVERICKS
PRl'f IUSTER DISCOUNTS l/P TO 350 ~r.·r.~~ STICl(ll
St~ 3 12F02HI 117161 12501 Sir.$ f2Kt 2Lll6791l' 1907)
SAYE ON LOW MILEAGE
PRE DRIVEN MODELS!
'72 LTD HD TP $I 02" 400 V8, A/T, pwr. steer. & discs, 24 MO. 1\.1'0.
air cond., radio, tint glus. OPEN END
l(!ijl . .
'72 GRAN TORINO HD TP
302 VS, 'AJT, pwr. steer. and discs, 24 MO 94·~ ..
air cond., radio, tint. glass. OPEN END
'72 PINTO RUNAIOU7 6735
~~-~--~~ . -W /W, accent ~UJl! 1 • OPEN END
15 PRf.~RIVIN ·MODlLS fi.T ·s AVIN<H LIKI THISI · ·
WI Lit.SI ALL POPULA R MAKES AT COMPITITIVI RATES.
MAVERICK-PINTO SALE!
EXAMPLES:
..
.
'70 MAVERICK $1396 Fully factory equipped.
·radio, beator. (688BEPl
'71 PINTO ~96 4 speed, 2000 engine, CUS•
t om exterlor •. Low miles.
1238DFA)
'LUI IOOK PR1Cl $1711
SHELIY GT 500 MAKE
•28 eo,... '•'· Fuu pwr., OFFER aJr, 17,000 miles. Red beai.j·
ty. Hard to find. (57?0LR>
ILUE IOOK PR ICE $2JU
'70 IMPALA 2 Dr. H.T. $219·· 6
Auto. trans .. P.S., radio,
heater, air cond.
(091.AKU)
~\zyM.:~=-YR:"!..$1996·' •tt FIAT 1;%4.<tjO,~l'E $1896 mlie$. (218BNl") . · ' \ Low rmles, S spetd •
transmission. (185CFK)
J. ILUE IOOK PRICI $20tt ;
·-------------------'" .CHEVY IMPALA s179·& CUsL H.T. VB; R&II, auto.,
P.S., P:S., vinyl roof, &ir
cond .• good miles. CXTL.773)
ILUE IOOK PRICE $1t75 ' .
'6' CADILLAC H.J. · s 1 -59 DeVJlle. Fun power, ·fact.
air, Gold w/vlnyl roof.
(SHBOO<I
ILUI IOOK PRICE $1170
'70 DODGE CHARGE~ $2. '29· R/T 2 Dr .. H.T.,. Allto., Rl&H, • ,
Air .. Cond., Vinyl1 Roof.
(118 AGFJ
BLUE BOOK~PRl(E $2760
'67 'I• TON FLAT iED $1450-Chevy. VB, fully fact.
eqWpped. Good miles. (Q95421) .
MUSTANG SALE!
' M...y .., ...... ,.,.. ••• 6'°'tlw.v '7~ modtls. c .. pes, hardtops. -lllM . .,.r
2+2 fastbacks. Somt wlli 4 spoods, aho air coodlt10ftl"9·•d outonlotic.-tls. -
SALIS DEPT.
HOUIS
I AM TO f PM MON.NI
I AM TO 6 PM SAT
1 D AM .TO 6 l'M SUit
., PARTS-SERVICE
HOURS .
1 AM To 9 PM MON
7 'AM-To -6 PM 1UE-RI
PARTS DEPT. ONLY
8 AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS .
•
I -' . -·
I
T
day
A
me
sy~ am
d
fa'v
J
St
df
!lie J stud
B
ilgn,
clin
and
for u
Mar
"WO
lift)
or i
B
~ and
grad
Ja ch .
Co
new
Be
prov
equi
they
An
• •t
des Cohe
said,
G
"' Mo
Wes
Co
city
M
"
II
0
-
San Clemente Toda 's Fin --
VOL. 65, NO. 42, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNT'(, CALIFORt~IA FRIDAY. FEBRUARY ·re, 1972 · .TEN CENTS
Hospital Expansion Ol('d in Stormy Heariiig
A bitterly fought public hearing stud-
ded with allegatlqns of "over bedding"
and "profiteering'~ ended Thursday night
with the approval of the Orange County
Health Planning--€ound!'s-h-e rl t-tr
facilities review committee for an BS.bed
ei:paruion at lhe Mission Community
Hospital
The Committee voted 12 to 2 after five
boura of debate in the city of Costa
Mesa's council chamber for an expansion
that will hike the Misaion Viejo hospital's
bed capacity to 213.
But the final decision rests with the
organization's 90-member council. They
will meet Feb. 24 in the Santa Ana county
courthouse-to delivenhlrtlna1-Vm!ta-ol\
the controversial Mission Community ap-
plication.
Almost all the opposition Thursday·
night came from the rival . Saddle back
Community Hospital, currently under
construction and scheduled to add 150
beds in May, 1973, to what was described
during the hearing as a "vastly overbed·
ded" central valley area of Orange Coun.
ty.
Mission Community Hospi).al is a
privatefy owned facility, The Saddle back
hospital was described Thursday night as
a nonprofit facility backed by the
Lutheran Church hospital organization.
Saddleback C-Ommwlity officials, led by
secretary Edward L. Olsen, repeatedly
challenged the Mission Community plans
to lhe accompaniment of boos and cat
calls from an apparently hostile 1u-
dien<:e.
Olsen warned the cowicU that popula-
tion density predictions prepared by the
state clearly indicate a slow down in the
popu)ation shift to tbe central valley area
-generally d~ined by most speakers
Thursday night as lnc;ludtng Mission Vje-
jo, El Toro, Leisure World, Laguna Hllls,
La~ Niguel and Capistrano Highlands.
Speaking before the approval of the 89-
bed e1panslbn1 Ols~n told the council that
the area would be saturated within the
ae:r.t five years by 418 beds in four
hospitals with plans for still further con·
struclion.
Olsen said that was more than double
the number of beds thJt shou ld be pro-
vided under state plaMlng char!.$ made
available to the council for consideration
prior to Its decision Thursday night.
He pointed out that his own hospital,
which received planning approval twa
years ago at a time when the Mission
Community application was denied by the •· now defunct Health PlaMlng MsoclaUon,
would be adding 150 beds to what he said
were Mission Community's 126, South
Coast Community HospJtal's 163 and Saa
Clemente Community Hospital's 116.
The San Clemente hoapltal ls presently
under construction. And South Coast
Community Hospital lll South Laguna
plans to add 118 beds to ita: cUJTent com·
(See HOSPITALS, P1ge 2)•
~our . ans ena
UC Irvine
Drops Boom
On Gra~~s
By THOMAS PALMER
Of tlMI ~~.!_1191 Sl•ff
The UC Irvine Academic Senate Thurs-
day traded ABCD and F for DHP and J .
At a _ _lively two and one-half hour
meeting complete with m o t i o n s ,
1q'lstituJL!!!Qtio~ ~a~-amendmen~ to_
amendmenls, tlie faculty m e m b e r s
damped tbe tradiUonal grading system in
favor of DistinCtion1 High Pass, Pau and
J notatlo111. •
. Students w1ll no lOnger fall couroes.
qf -I _.... II not made for
ll)e student to be given credit W. ...,..,
J will recorded 1deoolla1 "&..tinlllna ati.ldy... <C
But hero~ the system Is 'put into ac-
tion, It must be •pproved by the nine-
catnpw:, universify·wide faculty senate
and then go to. the UC ~mbly in June
for ratification.
UCI . Senate chajrman A I e x e I
Maradudin said (he larger UC senate
"would be the primary hurdle,'' but that
Jillie opposition was expected either there
or in the Assemblf. •
Before its final 65 to 15 decision the ~ate rejected other more co~rvative'
and more bold plans for altering the
a:rading system.
Jay Martin,· English professor and
chairman of the Educational Policies
Committee, made the motion to adopt the
new system.
Before it passed, the Senate bad ap-
proved a motion to eliminate the grade
equivalents of D and F from any proposal
they considered.
An amendment to that motion to allow
a student to aceept a D grade if lie
desired was defeated twice. Robert S.
Cohen, assistant professor of drama.
said, "A student should not have a say in
(Set GRADES, Pa1e !)
Mailme1i Taking
G. W. Day Off
Regular mail won't be delivered on
Waahlngto~'s Birthday Monday. Only
special delivery service and collections
fi'om white-topped air mall mailboxes or
those desi~aUng a bollday collection
schedule will continue.
But post office lobbies for mail
deposits, lock box access and self-service
1tamp machines wlll be open.
AD Orange CountY elementary and high
schools and junior colleges will be closed
Monday also. Only Chapman College and
West Coast University will remain open.
County otfice1 and most Orange County
city halls will close.
Most banks will ciqse on Feb. 21. ,
'Dolphins' Pick
For .Dana Hills
' SludenLs 11 Dani Hills High
School wlll be known as the
"dolphlnl."
During .a recent election, JWdenta
Jlvlnc In tlie Dano Point, Laguno
l'ii!luel, San Juad C.platrano, and
Mission Viejo attendance areas ol
the C>plstnno, );Unified School
Dlstrlct chose ~dolphJn al.their
olficlal mascot. .. ..
School colors will be dark blue,
Ught blui"l!llt allvtr.
A continuing atudy b being JMde
on the ocbool coootitutlon, bud(et
odlyitia and elections.
'
'Clipping!' Judge
Time Off for Hair cut, Shave
By TOM BARLEY
Of "-!Miil' Plltl Sl1ft
Orange County's 440ogging judge" and a persuasive prisoner made a
bargain in court Thursday. The judge agreed to cut the prisoner's jail sentence
provided the 27-year-old man got a haireut.
It all began when Superior Court Judge William Murray, who once
sentenced another county jail inmate to a flogging, firmly sentenced ~1ichael
Thomas Joyce of Costa Mesa to one year "in jail for the long-haired prisoner's
violation of probation. Joyce had been on probation as part of a sentence im-
posed two years ago for a burglary conviction and narcotics offenses.
hair.
"Wow, man , that's a lot," wintm Joyce, shaking his shoulder length
"Gej_a haircul.J!!),<!. !:JI !<nock off 60_days_'.'. grinne<LJudge.Murray_ -
"Right on, man. Where's the barber shop?" replied Joyce.
"Okay," commented the judge. "We've g9t us a deal."
••say judge,'" commented Joyce as Judge Mumy got ready for the next
=~·cal!l"lf.· ':w!"! ~ l"Y, mustache! II ought ~ . Ji!(lh a ijttjli
"I'd say ,. days, ft Jlldp l'dllrny _.i!<f,: ' t, -.
-,..Jlld8', ... ~ JO)'Ce "yi>u'vemwfe 7'>iinie1fa -'· ··'
"I'm llUl'1I &lad 1"" dell'\ ..0 maguine aubocrlptions, Mr. Joyce,"
dlUckled' Judge Murrl1 lo U.. 4elilbl of Cilllrlroom eii-.... "you're • very
Persuasive priloner ."' .
Tile happy JoYce left to begJn his nJne.monlb spell in Orange County Jail.
"There's a method in my madness," Judge Murray later told a news.
man. "It's going to be pretty bard for that well-trimmed young man to step
back into the drug culblre."
Judge ·Murray's famous flogging sentence was never carried out because
lbe county sheriff refused to administer the punishmenl The sentence later
was changed to a more modem form of punishment.
Airpor.ts'
Noise Woes
Rejected
By JACK BROBACK
Of t1M DeltY Pilet 11•11
Meadowlark, Capistrano and Fullerton
airports do not have noise problems 11
defined by state law, the Orange County
.-8irl>ort _Lan<LlJse . Commission.....tuled-
Thursday night. ·
The commission had been asked by .
county .supervifors. to·repoJ1 on.th.e $.lUJ
of all 1"'11¢1 lirllll<ll ln.r~.lo U., ~· ---"'fl'!lll!llll!L OlllT •. ~hu, .... pr.i. ~J!ln:.,u.t -p .aia. ~, ' .
llut M k .lJI. HlDlttncloo~h has· other p.Nblema. p1aon111 dlrector Ken Reynolds and]Jlmdnr _l!gj_
Roger Slates of that dty sllld tlielrplan-·
ning staU was completing a land use
Study of area surrinmdlng the small
private airport. Commissioners decided
to withhold action until the report Ls com-
pleted.
Labor Secretary James D.
Hodgson · testifies before the
House-Senate Joint Economic
committee that since July em·
ployment · has risen 1.3 mil·
lion, a trend he .predicts may
6to1 Vote
Affects 105
In Prisons
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
California Supreme Court ruled today
that-the death penalty is unconstituUonal.
The vote was 6-1.
The decision arrects 100 men and five
women under sentence of death in the
&tate's -priaons.----
They include Sirhan B. Sirhan, con-
victed slayer of Sen. Ro~ F. Kennedy,
' Ind Charle• MalllOll, .Onvkled In Ibo
6hll'Gn T1te murdln.
'!'ho. ""! J~. 8uprt\llf • Court
over\umed the lllte'r deatb·-lly.JI
Ja,nuary. The court Bild the Jaw wu ... .
co111111utlonal lieco,. paroona cnnvlclod
aft.r pleading Innocent were 1ubjected lo
the death penalty whlle thole who plead. • ed oo defense were aubject to a mu·
imum of U!e·imprlsonment.
Several states have outlawed the death
penalty through legislaUve action.
Knifed Teacher Batters
Reynolds said the studies have two
premises -that the airport COJ)tinue to
operate indefinitely and on the other hand
that the airport is removed and the prop.
erty developed to homes.
Slates r.eviewed the many problems the
city has encountered In the past .in cob.-
nettion with Meadowlark regarding
noise, safety and envl.r:onment. He
predicted that the facility would be
remQ.ved eventuallr. ·
On Nov. 18, 1988, the California high
\!court ruled that JW'lea Jn the atate can
-------------\ decide constitutionally under their own
· "soon begin to' have an impact
··on unemployment."
Husky El Toro Attacker
A plucky Garden Grov"e· teacher Ignored
the blood pumping from her slashed left
hand and the knife held at her throat
Thursday night and managed to fight her
way free from a husky male assailant
who leaped into her car at an El Toro in·
terseclion.
The 28-year-old teacher at Mark Twain
Elementary School In Garden Grove, told
Orange County sheriff's officers that her
attacker leaped into her car while she
George F. Clark
Rites Saturdav
J
Funeral rites will be. conducted In
Laguna Beach Sat\U'day for George F.
Clark, U, of Dana Point. He died Tues-
day. ...
waited at the Intersection of Valencia and
Avenida de Carlotta .
The slightly built woman told deputies
that he shoved a knife against her throat,
told her to drive on and clearly indicated
with an obscenity what she could expect
a little later.
Witnesses told deputies that the victim
proved to be more thu a match for her
burly adversary, They said he ran from
the car doubled over after his potential
victim delivered several kicks .
"That gal took care of herself," a
witness told deputies. "1'11 bet those kids
at her school don't dare step out of line."
Investigators are today hunting the
young assailant. .
They said it ill possible that he could be
the man who kldnaped the. woman driver
of a catering truck in the El Toro area
two weeks ago and forced the woman to
drive hlin to the Encinitas area of San
Diego County before she ran to freedom.
Land use comm1S5ioners asked Slates
to inform them immediately if the ~ty
planning staff determines the airport
should be eliminated.
Commissioners reaffirmed their op-
posllion to a 332 unit condominium pro-.
ject 1,500 feet from the Capistrano Air-
port runway.
They had previously reoommended to
the county planning commission that a
rezone to allow the development be
denied, but the planners approved It sub-
ject to certain conditions.
One of these cond.itioM called for COD·
nection to the San Juan Caplstrano sewer
system. San Juan city officlal1 told com-
missioners that the project was approved
over their objections and that the city
would not. allow a sewer connection
unless the property l!I aMexed.
They added that if annexed they would
not accept county approved zoning which
would allow the condominium.
.Capistrano planners also cited a U.S.
Ctlrps of Eng~rs 111'70 report which stat.cl that about 65 of tht<332 loll Jn the
subdlvl!llon could be subject to tevere fioodlni during periods of heavy rainfall.
(See AIRPORT, P1 .. I)
Hughes Staying
On Eighth Floor
Of Latin Hotel
By CHARLES GREEN
MANAGUA, NiJ:aragua (AP)
Howard H~ghes was presumably holed Up
today on the tlghUy guarded eighth Ooor
of Managua's Tntercontimfntal Hotel, and
a spokesman in the United States 1ald·he
would remain in the Central American
country inde!lnltely.
Both President Anastasio Somoza's of-
fice and Hughes spokesmen in the United
Stc.tes • confirmed that the eccentric
billionaire flew to Managua Thursday
after 15 months of living in seclusion in a
hotel in Nassau.
He came on business, the government
aaid.
In Las Vf1a1 , a spokesman for the
Hughes Tool Co. said Hughes' 1tay in
Nicar1gua· was indefinite -"we aren't
saying bow long he'll be there, but 'in-
definite' could Jndicate a ctrtaln degree
of permanenct."
The services -will begin at l p.m. In
Sheffer Mortuary chapel In Laguna
Beach. Sblpinent will follow to Illinois for
burial.
Mr. Oark, who Jived at 33lm Castano,
Dana Point, was a member of Masonic
LOOge 149 In Elfingham, Ill ., and the AJ
Malaikah Shrine of Los Angeles.
Waste Proposal Unveiled
Regional Plan for Coast, lnla11,d Areas Aired
He leaves three sons, Andrew Clark of
New York, Anthony Clark of-Virginia and By o!!~1:~~!!;A
Steven Clark of Washington, D. C.; 1 Details were unveiled Thursd~ for a daughter, Christine Cart, also of ch Wasblngton ; two brothera, James Clark major rqiooal appn>a to Sou Coast
of Pomona and Robert aark of Oregon: and Inland wute treatment which could
two sister•, Kathleen Ru.hliq of Florida involve the blending of sll separate ageo-
and Jean Snodgr.,. ol nlinoll; •long wltli cles Into a rqlonal authority qualifying for mUllolls of dollars In government many nlec<I and nephews. gronu.
Friends who wllh may mate memorial tho plan, aired during a meeting of the ~oqtrlbullonl to tho Hurt l>~nd. Bo!l!ton Niguel Water Dl!lric~ )rould ln-
'U !~. ,o.,r . , . = ~~~%:::lllr:J Z,'1,; Ac tor'8 nw..· .Jiws8' &f'',ut1iilll~ ·:· • · • Y'; · . ·
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A requiem
mua wu to be Bild today ror M11rle
CassanUI, the mother-in-law of en-
tertainer Danny Tbomu. Mn. C.111nltl
died Tuadly at Glendale Adventll\
Botpltll.
The concept la nearl,Y, '1<1.!ntlcat to Ille
plan which launched tliO 1-.Iul SE!t'
RA venture In tbe C.p~ Valley and
Laguna Niguel wbtre»,llllo,en1 111eacta
l>onded logeiber to wor • '(laJi. ·,..O.
lems • & reliooal The city of Laguna
~ • • • ...
massive waste trealment problems, will nearly every member agency.
be asked to join the new authority next The new authority, tentatively named
week. Besides Moulton Nlgutl and Lquna the "Aliso Water Management AJency,"
Beach, other 11enc ... wekome to join could build ~Ion -ol fm.
lhe -authority are the Irvine Ranch provemtnLs wltli tbe pooelblllty ol ao.per·
Water D.latrld, Sl>uth Laguna Sanitary cent government flnanclnc over lhe next Dlatrlct. El Torcr Water Dlltrlct and the Y01r'1 period, Kymll 111geo1od.
J.,os AlllOI Water Dlltrlct. The re1lonol approach to, w11te ~~
'Moulton-Niguel ind )ti Toro diucton menl alrtady h'' the bear!)' bl..,.lng or
1lrefdy llavt liven Jn.principle 1pproval the R<aionol Water Quality Control
of the Idea. boards of the San Diego and Santa ·An•
~remallld.,. of the ·agend" will be reglona. •
COlllaCled :Iii a '!'ltl<r of dl)'I, 1ald The 1vallabl1lty of state ind !edttal
Moulton-Niguel Manoger <;arl KJ!llla. clean-water gronll iJ 1 definite oe11Jni
The · 1dv1111a1eo of the rtglonal IP' point 11 well. Jll'9"ch were ll\lde clear rectntly wbon OperoUnc erptDJea o! the new·•&ellfl'
SERRA, the So\111> East Realollll · would amount to 1bout $4,500 • yur Will>
llecl11111Uon Authority, obtained -era! Ille perpetulllon ol the bol!l6'Nle ...,.
mlllloa doll1r1 In 1overnmtnt snmta lo cept.
lmjwtff I wut.lrealu>eal planl<IG_.. • (See REGIONAL, Paie I), •
• I
7~ .. " ... ;: \ . ,.,;p
• I •
dlscretton whether the punl.shment fol'
murder shall be death or life Im·
prisonment.
That decision wa1 returned on an ap-
Pt!al which alayed Ill executions alnce
Nov. 14, 1967.
Justice Marshall F. McComb was the
tone dissenter Jn the lateat 45-page opin-
ion.
The U.S. SUpreme Court has before ft
several cases on the death penalty but
has not ruled.
The last executJon Irr the United States
was in Colorado In 1967.
The California court, the state's highest
tribunal, heard oral arguments In
January on the question of whether
"evolving standards of decency '' have
outlawed the death penalty.
Anthony Amsterdam, S t a n r o r d
University law profeuor arguing for the
American Civil Llbertle! Union, said the
deatli penally ~ apottlly applied to "the
miserable and socially unacceptable."
Because of thls:, Amstudam said,
atrocities can be committed which socleo
ty would not condon;e lf unlfonnlty a~
piled.
He contended that 1'the death penaltJ'
haa be.. repudllted by enlightened
atandarda of decency.''
Cout
Weadier
More hazy sunJhlne Js forecad
for Saturday, fullowlng IT\(lminr
low cloudJ and fog. Terilpera·
lures will be mll<t -in the &O'L
Ulws tonight in the 40'1.
INSIDE •fODAY
R'verlidt Counfw'• Notional
Date Fu«VC1I fl bnngi•o Old
BO{lhdad to SoutMm California
f or JO davr 1tortfno toc1ov
thro•oh Feb, 27. A atory m to-
do1111 W ttk~ giuc1 Cht dt·
t111l1. 'l!'
r
...
2 DAJL Y PILOT
' --
st
Road Plans , POW Ransom Presuknt China Stories
egiri Toda.1---1 1-,.--:.-:,..-;~=""'~i::n;" __ .~~~~~~~;;::t-<fl'l'ba-lh\JL.Y. PILOT-,.-~
pagea ol pldllftl and stories "'
Prealdent Nlloc'1 hl!!Prle lrtf 11
-~«!_half ~n~~~l:-Ji'p!:~~~-eome.--t-, __ -........... a-Jvaii
tila ~ .. ,.. .• bu met
Cited by Solon· [*:~i:.r.~~:: For Rest
t
Council 01{ CbJnL
The material was gathered by
photographers and reporu:rs of the
b 'Id' Associated Preu and UnJltd Press Eltemtve-itlans for major rt 111 ing lntemationa1. Jf alcohol wu dlJC(lVer«i today as ~ part, It CJlls for $50 milllon to f1n.ute
and IW'facln& of San Cltincnte's Norlh El T .. _ 1 ""'west drug, ii' would never be J•gallud, research and •--a•-•nt progra-· for C&lnlno Real _ including 1 fonnal bicy· ouay s coverage appears on ·~ u-.: 1o111 .....
cle p11.th-won hearty approval from .city Pages. U.S. Senator Hmld Hughu (0-lowa ), alcoholism.
councllmen thlf wer.t and next will go to chairman of the Senate Subcommltee ·on Hughet said Thursday 11Thls task wor-
tbl COU.nty ol Orange. Alcoholism and Narcotics, said Thursday rles me because, 1f the systeru works,
Tho city and COll!llY plan to split the From Page l In N•wport Beach. alcohollCI In every state wW be looking
estimated COiis ol the pro)ec\ from I Al'enlda Plco to Camino San Clemente. HOSPITALS • Hughes is a recovered alcoholic. or counseling. And we haven't got one The total bill is projected at $251,IMMI with • • He emphasized the "devastating" ef. perttnt of the counselors we nttd.'"
\he clty'a share about $1.25,000. fects of alcohol during a seminar on He told the auditnce cf about 200 that •-J'IU I alcoholism In Ind .. ~~ at the Balboa Bay •--·----pan1 -·~ ...., The .split might 111:1 1 1 e ower, plement of 163, Olsen said. .... .. 1 w.w--.m.'1:: com ea u1Uill~ ••• e coverage
however, because councilmen believed """-tUon apeakers warned the council Cl~ p--wu ~sponsored by for the disease and all hospltalJ muat WedneadllY building a wblte wood guard "'t'Y""" •v'"'...-treat a1cohollcs. · rail between the roadway and the Santa that the area is expected to hold aome Raleigh HillJ Hospital, Newport Beach, "We're not 1 tt:ranp group whlch
Fe trac•--·Id no! be wor111 the ei-100,000 residents by 1977 bul preoent and the University of Portland oregon'• needs to be abandoned. ae~gated and ~ .. v.. ln!titute on Alcoholl!ln. · •....11 J"-lnhum 1 ~ • Id "--. plans that could nnt more than 700 trea..::u 1M: an ID mah," be aa , .--•-Hugh.,, 50, called alcohol the most In"•• 1 "·t th -•-t~ The rail once served to protect cars ..,_ital beds Into the area by that Ume ~ .• ~ dru In th try po ..... ou "~ "° are an ~~·a -fttm swerving onto the track8, but that ......... auu~ g e coun • 11 million 1Jcobolics in America,
wu before the San Diego Freeway took were far in excess or the state's hospltal· The Iowa senator sponsOred the Com· 11Aloohol doff reach into every family
much ol El Camino's tral!lc. bed·per-resident ratio. prehenslve Alcobolllm AC! of ll110. In In · America," said . the senator, who
. Clly:Eqioeer Phil Peter said the plans Orange City Councilman Max Reynolds *· :k * . served u rovernor Of Iowa far lbr<e call-for\~pplnr-Jhe-t'OfKl..,ay..!.and in-stepped into the debate to warn the coon. • terms.
stalling etgbt.loot·wlde emergency park· cil that the plans being mulled Thursday Alcohol Abuse An $8 billion economic loss occurs each
Ing Joel cycling shoulders on -each side of night "were certain to considerably add ti year due to absenteeism caused by
the rour-lane Highway. • to the acute problems of an already alcobollsm and at least 28,000 highway
Alobg the pOrUona of the bluffs where overbedded orange County." S 'll G cleatha a year are alcobol·related, he
soil and rocks 1'1!gulal'ly fall , Peter pro-!leynolds read an Orange City Council ti reateSt, said. d Poet a mlei of tubblar aluminum walls resolution in opposition to the Mission "If it was poS!ible to pull a string an
to contain the falling material and to Community app. llcation. He urged the l8-A S , ellminate alcohol, I would and I'd prob-,_ It from U'•• -to "-roa~ay and g-en· cy ays ably make a lot o1 people unbappy," he M'<'p ro ....... vu . 1.1.111:1 uw member health council to ''carefully ex· · aa.Id.
£boulder. the amine a situation that 11 also certain to But, be added, the people of Iowa 0 ac-
Cycle and pedestrian trail!! along considerabJy add to the already high By CRAIG A. PALMER. t rd! h be. " stretch have been sought for years ~y hospital costs suffered by people in this cep me as an o nary uman mg local groups because of the heavy traffic area." WASHING TON (UPI) -Alcohol is the despite the history of alcoholism.
of youngsters on bicycles. "I think that for you to oome here and most abused drug in the Urrlted States, "That's a grtat step.," he said .. i,rt;'"a1~f an cy~~d 1:-tell us what we should do is more than ll -th~ -J!eaith, Education and VfeUarct_ . tl~e audience gave bun a standing ova·
8~ c es Utile insulting " Santa Ana Municipal Department told Con,greS3 today in the At a press conference earlltt, Hugbfs 61~ deb:~~ty road department will C.Owt Judge P~ul Mast interjected to the government's first aMual repOrt on 1aid he supports Senator Edmund Mwkie
detennine iC the plans are acceptable then astonis~ent of Reynolds and the cheer• alcohol and health. . (0.Maine) for president. 6u~ woulsl be called upon to of MJss10n Co~~!~ supporters. There ar~ nine million ~~ho)~ or
-ilfocate-fiil!ili'for tJio oroject. TM Cilji's-MbslDn COmmllnlty-i>Janner-Gordon-problem drinken In America -almost
· share cf the costa woufd come from state. Brtcken told the C0W1cll that his ho1pit.al 10 percent of the work force -and
gasoline tax rebate& which can be used is already operating at lb: 124--bed c1pacl· alcoholism ts an epidemic among
for maintenance and construction on ty and ls tum1ng people away due to Iact American Indians, according to the
many typea of streets and highways. of beds. report submitted under a new law Brlcken aald the overcrowdlng fs drafted by Sen. Harold E. Hughes (D-
seriously and adversely affecting hla Iowa), a reformed alcoholic. "'
ho$1tal's apeclalizatlon plans. With pa· It said the problem causes 28,000 traffic
tients who require isolated and special at-deaths i!1 ~ year and drain:rtbe economy
tention having to "double up" with other of $15 billion aMu~y.
patients to the detriment of their treat· The report contamed these observa· ment. Uons from Dr. Merlin K. ~Val, assistant
Newport Beach councilman Donald "We predld a population of 200 ooo by secretary for health and SCJence at HEW:
Mcinnis, a commission member, repea t· 1977 in the fastest growing ,;ea of "While we are horrified by the abwe of
ed bla sta teme1t that boilding homes Call!omia " Bricken said. Asked to ex-such drugs as hallucinogens, narcotics
Within 1,500 feet of any' airport ,runway ptaln--tbe 'difference betweea that figure and stimulants by our..youth, we pay little
is not ~~ pla~g trom a safety stand-. and _ the atate's projection ol 100,000 heed to the most abused drug of them all
pc>int. Low f~rm.r pl~es are !Jlevltablr resiBents for the Mission Viejo area be -alcohol.
111 such are~, ~c~ a pilot ar~ed. commented: utbe state is wrong." _CaR~~lJed i!oice,~dilli..il--.eppositlon 1peam• reminded -the -·-
From Pqe l . -
AIRPORT .•.
Speedup Urged
For Freeway
Divider Fences
San Clemente city councllmen this
week urged the state to slap 111 emergen-
cy label on U1 plana to inltall 1750,000
worth of freeway divider fen«.a thro\lih
the city.
The fences, whlch might be completed
Hope 1ald he WIS 1dvJ1ed by
Nor111 Vietnam again lhla week that
It would not grant hlm a vlJa to
visit Hanoi to discuss the plan. lie
tried !lrst \luring a visit to Laos In
O.ctmber.
"I don't think 1 lhoutd ·punue the
proposal In view ol what Mr. Nlion
II <lolng," Jlqpe added Thw'14ay in
reference to President Nixon's trip
to mainland Chloa.
Ft'Om P419e l
GRADES •...
whether or not a grade I! recorded tor
hlm." .
A simplified ay1l•m of grading. apecl-
lylng only l!llfks of Dltllnct!oo, Pass and
J, was reJected 52 &o 30.
· Professlonal l!chools will not be af-
fected by the decision.
UCI ls the first ,of the nlne UC cam·
puses to step aw1y from traditional four
passing and one falllng grade system.
The araduate school program la not
automatically covered by the new
system, but may vote to adopt It.
A IUbltitute motion by William H.
Parker, associate profes,,or of physics to ·
use the terms A, B and c, instead of
Distinction, High Pass and Pass, was
defeated 45 to 36.
The Senate voted overwhelmingly to
assign the numerical values of 4, 3 and 2
r<specllv<ly to the DistlncHon, High Pass
and Pass evaluations for the P\lfPOSe of
computing I &rade IVttage.
Speaklilg in favor of a simple pass or
no-pass ayatem, Robert M. Saunders,
dean of englnming, sald grading has no
meaning regardleas of what the grades
are called.
Wlll'n!n L. Bostick, dean of medicine,
said college would be unrealistic if it did
not denote failure. "I propose we keep
the cunent ryatem," he pid. "If we
want to escape our image of quality by
eliminating grading, we'll pay the price."
Educators Meet
In San Clemente
By HELEN THOMAS
KANJ!OHE MARINE AIR STATION
Oahu, Hawali (U PI) -On ground sacro.i
to Hawaiian antiquity as the meeting
place· of kings, PrtsI4ent Nb:on rested
and ·atu4led today for ~ historic trip to
meet the rulers of modern China.
!lixon. accompanied by his wUe Pat
and olflcial staff, liw from snowy Washil;lgton to sunny awaH Thursday
for a tranquil i..t to jual to changln(
Ume zones and for f~ lludy before
bis departure for Chlpj Sunday,
The President alepped off the preslden-
tlal jet "Spirit of '78" into aunny 75-
degree weather at' this Marine Corps
base to the cheers of a crowd of 5,000
persons.
Draped with a colorf1ll r«l Dowered JeJ,
Nlxon got into a long, black White HOO.se
limousine and went to the .home of Brlf,
Gen. Victor A. Armstro9g, commander of
the base, 15 miles fromJfonoluJu.
The Nlxons will s~d two nights tn.
Hawail and another on'Guam before ar-
rivlog at Shanghai o~ Mooday (China
time ) for a week of coQferences with the
leaders of the People's Republic of China.
The twcrday stopover in Hawall and U\lt
overnight stay on Guam Saturday nllht
were recommended by Dr. Walter Tkach
Nixon's personal physician, to overcom~
the faUguing physical eipease of chang-
ing time zones.
Nixon seemed deeply touched by the
warmth of the bipartisan congressional
sendof{ he received in Washington Thu~
day, and a traditional aloha welcome on
bis arrival in' Hawa ii.
Kaneoh'e is built on a ~ninsula still
called "Mokatu" -sacred because
Hawaii's first king, Kamehameha the
Great, chose it as a site for a royal
meeting place.
"It-'s nice to spend a day in Hawall
before moving across the world," be told
the airport crowd as he moved among
them shaking hands. "I want to sit in the
sun and ge t a tan."
Wit~ an ento~rage of about 150 persons,
lnc\udmg White House aides a 11 d
members ot the press corps, Nixon wilt
arrive in Peking via Shanghai at 11 :3()
a.m. local tlme Monday (7 :30 p.m. PST
Sunday).
Premier Chou En-la! will head the
welcoming ~ption fo"t" Nixon at Pe:Z
kiJ1g ATrport and plaMed to accord the.
first American pre sident to visit China.
full cere monial honors.
~~ .. ~~s.U:~ion :i~ ~L the Mission Community •i> Comicil to Eye to remarb made--ibJt Orqe 1 OJuntJ p . eomes at a time when over~ ___ ·-___::-.. ~=.~~~: . .e·1.m1 =•'ti!iifa-J:~lr;."di~1£:r!" C'on.a~~ifiiurn~ ,. ·
aallor " . ~ March 2.
toward the end of the year, would High school educators 1 n d ad·
allevtsle -~ deadly 1lfOl>lem-oWau-mlnblraton ftom' I:.os Angel<.-County
center strips along the San Diego began a two-day series cf conferences in
Froeway from ClmiDo _ de ~..ct•niente today -. talks which wilt
southward. ----:....-include a tour of President Nixon'•
State officiab last week unveiled plans estate.
to build th• fencea. Original plans had The Soulhtm Caillorala Council of
called for no pro~on until \be ~way Invest In America, a group adunclng
11 rebUIJI later In the c!Ol:ide. • f,......taprtse •educauon; will' foctia •n
-Pressure from Jaw e-nJ or -c em en t the concept of economic plamung tor the
The President spent most of his time
en r-OUte-to Hawaii Thursday o:infming
on the plane with national security affairs
ad visers Henry A. Kissiner aDd Secretary
of State William C. Rogers, hit two cbiel
foreign policy advisers on the trip.
While the 'agenda has not betn set, tht:
secret mettings in China are expected to.
cover a range, of eontraverslal problems
which' ha'(e separated_jhe_two. natlbns, -
particularly Formosa and lhe Vietnam·
war.
.,
~
\I ·.
· casrn last Tileaday ol;)ecft!d to 'the Thal tilal belore Judge Herbert
Navy astdng the ~ .lo di<!illfl' j !lfrlaod1 11 to determine the validity of
moratorium on· 811 develbPment ~ charges by tbe Cautornla Health Care
the facility. · Providers Association that five Orange
capt. Boice also objected to remarb County hospltals currently under con·
by land use comml.aslon member stroction oblalned building permits
Laurence Sctimidt, a Garden Grove coun-through false pretenses. cilman. Missioti Community and . Saddleback
Schmidt said, according to Boice, that hospitals are not Included lri the list of
the prDpOsed moratorium was IS to 20 defendant hospitals.
years too late. The naval offlcu remind-CHCPA lawyera claim that annual
ed. the Garden Grove councilman that at hospital costs to the orange County
a 1969 city council meeting Schmidt bad public could cllmb by as much as $200
endorsed a buffer zone around the air million a year if construction that will
station. add at least 100 hospitals in California la
Boice added that se"Yeral hundred acres allowed to continue.
in Garden Grove near the airport are not Mission Community officials explained
yeLdoY•I~ ~ _ _ _ -· Iha! costs at their-lacilitY-Jl"" range
The lan<l'use cbmmlaslon voted to Ii> from $60 to 1115 per day for general
vite Capt. }Joice to ,appear ·at the next serVice rooms with charges of $135 a day
commission meeting. and $1~ a day respectively for intensive
care and coronary care units .
Belly Not Obscene
LONDON (UPI) - A London appeals
court acquilted farmer Anthony Evans
of a lower court conviction of "obscenely
exposing his person," when be bared hi•
stomach to a woman.
The court ruled that over the year•
''person" no longer meant atomach. -. . -·
OIAMll COAIT ,_ L
DAILY PILOT
CllMGI! COAST P\llllSHINO «MINN
Jlo1i•rt N. Wttd
fr•ldlrlt and l'llflll.w
J•cl: R. C11tlt't 'ftlt ,,.~ Ind Gws&I ......,
11io11111 Kte..U
.liltot
,._;"''' A.. M.,,,tif1• MarllllltKI Ell11ot
a.d• H. Leo• IU(h•"' P. N4JI Mlllanr MINVWI Edlton
............ Offb
222 f•,.1t ATtllllt
M1ili•1 •ddr•11r P.O. ••:1166, f2612 s.. Cl•-•• Oflk• ~05 Notril ll CaalH .... ~ ,l,72 °""-°"" ..... ,... Wiii hr """" ...... rt •Hehl :QD M.--t 9ou1-Yltt ............. w, ... ........,
' . •
Those charges were defended by a
physician who ·told fhe council they were
lower than those of comparable hospitals
in Los Angeles .County.
In other action, the health planning
council, •pproved the addition of 89 beds
requested by . the Tustin Community
Hospital.
Ji'l!om Page l
REGIONAL ...
Joint efforts in capital expenditures can
be worked out among any combination of
members with those only directly benefit·
ted actually taking part.
Membership or withdrawal would be
available at any time and the new agency
would not be a "super-taxinJit' agency,"
Kymla emphasiied.
-Cosls would be reduced sube:tantially in
projects or a joint nature and merging
the projects to serve more than a single
agency eliminates costly duplication of
efforts .
At present each of the six agencies are
conducting their own CQstly studies on
future growth and facilities.
The main thrust of the new treatment
"club" would be an emphasis on water
reclamation rather than discharge, but
one passible project involving all all
"'ould be a single, joint ocean outfall to
cope ~ith effluent until the point ln time
when the waste water could be used for
irrigation, recreation or ground-water
recharge.
Thus far, Kymla told hil dlroctora, the
plan has bad widespr~ad endorsement
SERRA was launched two years ago
with • memberabl p lncludlnJ the Clly of
Sen Clemente, Moulton-Nlgu•I. the City
of Sao Juan Clplstrano, Dana Point
Sanitary District, Santa Ana Mountain
Water Diftrtct, and S8nta Margarita
'\Vatcr District and the Capistrano Beach
Sanita ry District.
S1nce then the agency has lnuncbed 1
massive expansion of the San Juan plant
to 1trve tour members -etch ahartng
capacity In the single facility.
In reooit weeks the croup has drnfttd
plans to actually purchast the Snn Juan
plant and admlnlstu the operation.
•
Final ·Details .
Doi.ens of final detall.s in the con-
domlnlwn project to be built inland of
San Clemente's city golf course wW come
up for a thorough city council study
Wednesday lo an effort to hasten the
start of construction.
Another attempt tbll week to launch
the project before final maps and plans
were approved failed before tbe councU. Developer John Douglas Jr. had pro-
posed that councilmen grant him
permission to s!arl grading the site of
"Presidential Estates"-the project
which figure<_! in a bitter access oon-
troversy last ear;--·
But Douglas' request was rejected 3-2
alter City E11ilneer Phil Peter said that
despite such approvals in the past, some
important details in Douglas' final tract
map still needed negotiation.
The initial phase of construction on the
project is for 60 condominium units. The
acreage ls planned eventually for more
than 300 residences in a planned com·
munity, plus 75 estate lots nearby.
The special ?:30 p.m. study sesslon
Wednesday would give city officials a
chance to be briefed o·n all the phases of
the final map, then have a vote >t. a
regular meeting a week later .
In the meanume, the city staff will el'·
amine yet another Wrinkle in the intricate
fabric of the project -another access
problem.
The latest twist in the access Involves
the use of Calle Bahia as a temporary
service road for construction vehicles.
Some expansion of that road might en-.
croach on the golf course and approval
will ·be be needed from the Bank of
America, whlck'aerves as the trume of
the Jinks.
'l1le aame bank earlier created delaya
when main access to the units along a
road extension across the links was con-
tidered ·by the council.
· That rciad , an arm of AverUda
Magdaleo1, finally was appro"Yed.
Clemente Eying
Freeway Acreage
The city of San Clemente has agreed to
plunge into real estate this week -sub-
mitting an -offer to acquire 8'veral
surplus plecea of state property alOl!i the
edge of the San Dl•go Fr!Oway.
'lbe laod, officially dt<lartd surplus,
Uts 8Cl"OU from the civic center and near
the Pico ovtr<l'OISlna. 1bo latter, city
councilmen agr<ed, might be beneOclal
tor occasloDll use u a bellcopter 1"1dlng
pad.
Cbnppera have landed on the property
In the P••~ occastmially durinl vtslll by
Presldt.nt Nixon.
Plann ing commlasl ... rt alreaey ap-
proved or the Idea of purcbQJng the lond
for nominal SU1lll tram the state.
Tho next •lei> II notlfYlnl the llate of
the city's offer to buy and determlninf
the temll.
authorities and other entities along the 1970s in the conferences to be held at the
South Coast brought the project closer, San Clemente Inn. , however. Among the speakers and delegates will
The council action reinforces a similar be Uoyd Dennis, public affairs executive
appeal made 18'1 weeJcrby the planning Of United eamornla Bank; Robert Pat·
conuntssloner. • ten, tralnin81Hrect.or for Dean Witter and
The philosophical part or the con~
versations were expected to dwell on
\Vays to rel ax tension between the coun-
tries after 22 years of cold war hostility~
Councilman Wade Lower said although Company; Robert McNair, Joan officer
a relaUvely speedy constructlon tlme wtlh Coast and Southern Federal Savings
already ls promised, a resolution by the and Joseph Cordova, an Invest-in-
clty "can't hun at all.'' America director.
Ebullient about the trip for weeks, Nix·
on nevertheless told a recent news con.
ference : "This trip should not be onl
which would create very great optimism
or very great pessimism."
-~ ·--·
Cameo
Ibo! -
.... ,,,, SALi $135
C.meo1 exten1iv• tebl• coll.ction of.
f•rs cl•ssie ltelien tfyllnq cr•eted for
a furniture connoisseur. lli•s,e fine pl•c•
•• f•eture burl wood top• end steift
~1sistant pull tr1y1 for y.vr conven•
••nee.
-----~-~
al
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON DREXEL • - -
INTERIORS
LAGUNA BEACH
Thes• f ine ti1bles from Herita9e Fumf ..
ture •r• just • p•rt of our exciting mid-
winter sale which i1 now in full 1win9,
Select.d 9roup1 from 1uch .,..,u known
1ines "ti1 Henredon, Herite9e, Otexel and
much more •t• evailebl• tt substantial
1avin9s.
..., ''" SALE $135 . .
HERITAGE -KARASTAN
TORRANCE NEWPORT BEACH
1727 Wuldllf Dr., 647,2050
OP'IN NIDAY 'TIL f
23649 Hawtho,.... Blvd .•
fllJJ J71·127t 0,. ~ .,., '
f\ .. 1.a1all ........ ...,_.. A ..... ,, AID-'tSID
345 North CNtt Hwy. 494~51
-t• -Moot ot --Hf.nu
•
I
I
1,
I'
I
I
l
T
T
0
1
1· I
I
l
I
• . -,, ..
14 DAil V PILOT SC Ftld111 February 18, 1972
itlo11ey's 1l'orila
' ' Rehellio11 Brews
By SYLVIA PORTER
Once again, you, AmerJea's
~hoppers, show signs of stag-
ing a coast-to-coast rebellion
agalnst rising food pricts.
The 0~tticoat rebellion'' or
1966 , In
which con·
sumers
across the
nation or-
ganized
march~ llnd
boycotts
against rood
storea· was
only a pre..
view, says William Ringler,
editor o f Supermarketing
magazine. "The rebellion did
not end, Jt only went un·
derground, to suiface again -
stronger, more powerful and
much better organized."
The petticoats are now but-
tressed by consumer groups in
every city and town. They are
backed by powerful anti·Pollu-
lion and pro-nutr ition forces.
They have the spur of an elec-
tion year and the support of an
increasingly c o n s u m e r -
oriented Congress.
A NEW SURVEY or an
enormous 250,000 U.S. house-
holds by Supermarketing, to
be published in e.!lrly March,
underlines the feelings and dis-
satisfactions or today's fUpe r-
market shoppers. It drama-
tizes the dangers in the
typical shcltlper 's mistaken be-
liefs about who's responsible
for recent price incr~ses.
For instance, a hefty m!!.Jbrity
thinks the food retailers them-
selves are directly responsible,
\Yhen in fact the bla.me must
go all the way back to the be-
ginning <lf the line: from farm-
er through 1111 the middlemen
to the retailer. The following
questions and summary of an-
s.,.,•ers in the surYey will illus-
trnte the points:
Q. Is shopping In food "dis-
count:' stores an Important
SALES • RENTALS
11 ft .•• 28 ft .
• UTE LINER
IALIOA-PACE ARROW
LOCATID ON THI NIWPOltT
fltEEWAY, JUST SOUTH OF
THI SANTA ANA. fltEIWAT.
TAKI THE McFADDEN TURN
OFF. TURN LEFT ON YILLA•l.
WAY • •
0
N
> • ~
EDINOlft C
AUCTION
of
PERSIAN RUGS
, PLUS MANY OTHEI ORIENTALS
NEWPORTER INN
1107 Jam born Road
Newport looch, Ca111D'111o
Sunday-Feb. 20-2 p.m.
VIEWING AND INSPECTION FROM
12 NOON UNTIL TIMI Of AUCTION
Thi• btl•utlful coll.ctlon ef n11• ••• nmtd lwy • T.t.nn
cont•rn, •nd was •'""'bls4 •v•r • perhll of m.1ny , .. ,..,
strictly for 11.hlbltlon ,u,,...... Nono Mwe ev•r Men
VMd. M•nf .t th•m ,,. Unu1u•lll bNutlful col~•
lt.m1o threugh unforuton fln.ncl• tllfflcultf•• th.y ...,.
, ttilppocl Ito tho Unitecl St•'-' te lie fflll et pultllc •uctien
without 1,...,.. ..
tnclud_. •re tM flnut trffe 9f KIRMANS, 1MPllltlAL
KASHAN.I, l~UIAL C.ROWNI, SAJQUKS •OYAL
,ALACI QUMEI, •OYA.L IOKHA.R.A -...... HUNTING
CARPITS, VASE AHD GARDEN 01' PLOWIU CA•~
PETS, PRAYER 11,UGI, KA.IVIN, HANIDAN, tNDO
C.HINESI. INDO llLOUCHISTAH. IHlllA%. Af0HAN5,
SADDLEIAOS, MISHID, TURKISH, AIADIH!. NAIN
wJtft 700 kn1t1 pw MtUfi~ tnc:h,. PART llLK QUMI 1M
HEltlt.. ph11 m•n; otMn In all lliu.
Al~ Included are oollector'1 items consbtln& ot some vtt1
fllnl pl~ or Silk Rup . \
DON'T MISS THIS FABULOUS AUCTION !
AUCTIONllR1 14w•~ K•lll
TllMS: Cuh er Chick
' \
I
Ol!ER THE COUNTER
·--~-... -Complete-New Y9rk Stock Li~t
Business
•
. · . '
--
Tax Service Booms.' ------:---.,t0...f"*
Fir1n· S~Us . Wall Stree~ Success Story
By DEAN C. MJIJ,ER
NEW YORK !UPI) -Destb
and ta1ee, It is said, are in-
evitable.
Had investors considered
that inevitability IO years ago
and put $JO,OOO into H·R Block,
In<:. stock (NYSE) they would...
be millionaires today.
Growth of that lncome tax
service company has been one
of the Wall Street succea.s
stories of recent years.
Figuring splits which come
lo 15-t4>1 over that period and
dividends, $10,000 in H-R Block
stock bough! at the high 10
years ago would be worth
$1.45 million today. Bought in
at the low that year the stock
would be wot1h $1.57 million a
fantastic 150 percent aMUal
increase.
Such growth is even more
remarkable when you consider
that the Kansas Clty·based
company produces only about
105 days of the year, when
Americans are worrying over
'tax bills.
. Henry and Richard Bloch
(the last name spelling was
changed for easier corporate
recognition) have come a long
way since 1946 when tbey
opened United Boslne.ss Com-
pany, a bookkeeping service.
Individual tax return prepara·
lions were thrown in lret then
a.s a customer courtesy.
The Btochs eventually learn-
ed ther~ \Vas more interest
and profit in tax returns. In
1955, they dropped book-
keeping to deal solely in tax
retutns and changed the com·
pany name to the present one.
They took in $20,300 from one
office that flr.!t year .
In 1971. the company
prepared ta:s: returns for 6.98
million Americans, or about
9.2 percent of all those return-
ing tax forms. It had 5,284 of·
fices in the United States,
a sPokeaman for lhe Better
Busjne11 Bu reau of
Metropolitan New York.
It was Henry Bloch who
called the 1969 Tax Reform
Act the biggest hoax Congress
ever pulled on the American
people. That was in connection
with statements that the Act
would l!limplify-the tax laws.
He_ spoke just as loudly a
few months ago when Johnnie
M. Walters, commissioner of
the Internal Revenue Depart-ment, said that this year's
1040 form was so simple "your
daughter in the fifth grade
could fill it out."
"An enterprising reporter
queried a fifth grade class,"
Henry noted, "and the pupils
didn't know what taxes were
all about let alone the first
thing about filling out a 1040."
'Achiever'
Named ~nd
In Contest
Canada, Guam, New Zealand, Susan Beth Hochman, senior
Puerto Rico and We s t at Corona de.I Mar Highl&c:hool
Gennany. This year it works and daughter of Mr'. and Mrs.
out of 6,000 offices, including S.M. Hochman of Costa Mesa ,
Restaurant
Chain Tells
several in Australia. received the second highest .
Last year H·R Block took in honor from Junior Achieve-
$8.9 milli-0n. Net earnings rose ment and wa.!I selected "Best
37.6 percent over 1970. Salesman of the Orange Coun-
Brother Dick handles peo-ty South Center."
pie. Henry, the business mind She is president of Ingenuity
QAILY rlLOT Stell r11e11
High on Hori~on\
1
·
The first high rise building In Saddleback Valley
is under construction -eying a June completion
date. The Royal Savings and Loan Building, a $1.5
million enterprise, was desi~ed by O.K. EarJ._Cor.
poration of Pasadena. The six·story building shollld
be open for business in September. --_____ ..;,
Executive to Make
25 New Millionaires
•
EarnlD• · gs of this dyna~c duo, i~ reserv· Unlimited, a Junior Achieve-
ed, conservative and dll'ect. ment Company which markets NEW YORK (UPI) "The cash reward is really
"Did you have some trouble manufactures and markets James Willis Wa!ter, a self· only a token incentive,'' said Colony Kltcbens Inc.,1chain ..... with the Federal Trade Com-Walter. "The opporturu'ly '•r candles. Jts sales volume was made man with Q)d fashioned 1~ of 42 company owned, un-mission a few months ago?" $322, the highest in the Orange these young people to receiye
franchised 1re.staurants, has. Henry was asked. Counly South Q:Jlter area: ideas about the flag and the national attention sh o u Id
reportedearpingsof28centsa "Yes," he said. "We had free enterprise system, wants ultimately prove the greatest
share on 624,684 sh a r e I sorn'e differences of opinions Don Spray I a student at Sad:-to make' miliioi:taires out of 25 reward of all."
out.standing as of Dec. 31 en about advertising wordage and dleback High School, was bright young entrepreneurs Local o r g a n i z a t i o n s
sales of $6,798,032 for the first we signed a consent degree in selected runner-up for his throughout the 50 states will
six months of 'fiscal 1971-72, December, 1971." sales volume for Serco, his around the C{)Untry. nominate candidates for the
ended Dec. 31. The FTC thought HRB Junior Achievement Company Walter, who founded and company's Ylluth Enterprise
. This compares with 19 cents advertising suggested that the which manufactures and built the Jim Walter Corpora-Award. The company already
a share on the same number company would pay all the tax markets a flashing lamp. tion of Tampa , Fla . into a $700 ha~ written 70 associations
of shares and $3,792,580 sales a bill in case of an IRS The two finalists will com· million per year home ~uilding such as Rotary clubs and
h II g H R BJ k and allied-produ<!ts company, y · t'-A h' t • ro· year ago.· -c a en ~· -oc con-pete for the "Best Salesman of ou n .c . .ievem_en groups tended I nt I th will spend the next 10 months t Jh b JI 11· E According to P r e s I d en t . 1 mea. on Y e the District" title among six ge e a ro 1ng. ven· JI nd I est Th trying to find the 25 young t JI f th Bruce E. Demers earnings pena Jes a mer . e other achievers in the South men and women with the best ua y. every area o e coun-before taxes were $268 486 FTC also thought Block's Center district. try will be polled by phone and
COmpared WI.th 1224,322 'the advertising sug.gested that in potential for succeeding in letter to extract nominations
r d ha H Miss Hochman and Robin the business-w&ta. -· , · ~ year before. Earnings after case o an au 1t t t an :R in 25 business ca_~egor1es rarig·
t -----,1,..21 .... --. -t--Block lawyer ¥'0Uld·appear-in Layman, a junior at Fountain ll~ hi!t-idea--of celebrating ing from architecture and $~~:~60were • w , It agains the client's behalf. The C{)m· Valley ~lgh School .• received the 25th anniversary of the agriculture to transportation
' · pany said its advertising the Junt~r. Executive a'."'ard company he started with ~ and travel..
meant only that an HRB for ~rganwng and operat1~g a of his own m?ney and $400 in When all the nomi~ions Loan Okayed representative would plead for busmess. vent.ure. M~ ~ s borrowed capital. are gathered by Oct. 2, ~ey'll
the client. HRB advertising Layman is president of lhihal Each of the finalists, and be culled by an Awards1Com·
SINGAPORE AP) -Th~ now defines such situations. . Industries. · ___ lhe:Y. musj ~ bet_weeo,_18 and , mittee of seven to.¢ne Jidges.
---World·Bank-ala9-grented-a·$9:S---"We've~found that the-co]j;" -;-:-Theyare new eliglble for tl\e 25 years of age, will r:ecelve_ Prominent business and f.lhan-
milllon loan'Uor e~pansion of pany generally bas an a'c.,.. Executive Award,· the highest $1,000 at the C{)mpany's annual cial executives wlth diverse
the Universlty of Singapore, ceptable record in responding individual award offered by meeting next December. But views and economic interests
I
I
I
the government announced. to customer complaints," said J .A. that's only seed money. will do··the judging. :-
. ~ l
•
4 • • • • ...... . . '
fnd.,, f•bnwf 18, 1972
Expe~t -Good Job Resume Vital
••
By LEROY POPE spectllc job a!ttr; you' get 1
nibble, NEW YORK (UPI) -In -Don't llJt all your
looking for 1 good job, the previous jobl and everything
11don'ta" m IDOre important · you can do.
than the "do's," the author of. -Don't give your age.
a new book on tbrsubj!Cr --J!~u're-blaek-.,. belong
reports to some other minority, don 't
~"-~..... mention the fact in the Rl1;iuu u A. Payne o I resume.
Princeton. N.J., la the author -Don't include much
of "How to Get a Better Job personal data in a resume for
Q u I ct er." (Taplinger, New general mailing.
York) and al8o conducts class. The do's, Payne sakl, are
es Jn various cities on sopbis-simple: Concentrate on a
tlcated job hunting . He enrolls single staled job objecllve and
around--20 persons in a class d t ,. r he and charges them $60 to $'15 for . evo e w percent o t rest
services for which he says ~f the re.!ume to your. prese~t
some career counsellors ask ~b and your achlevements m·
as much as $3,000. it.
Since resumes are the In other words, ,lead wllh
.DAILY PILOT j3
Co11iput,er
Blows. It
DILLON, Mont. (AP) -
A computer error In New
York City gave a retired
Dillion jeweler a taste of
instant wealth recenUy -
to the tune of 5,000 s~~s _ or a mi]0rl>im1t. The
shares were worth
$280,000.
Walter Stamm .had or· •
dered a $5\000 investment ~
bond throu1h a Ne\v York
ij1vestmeJ}t firm , adding
that he was "completely 1:-
amazed" to receive the ·
5.000 shares of stock in 1:.
the bank.
Stamm, who would not
name the bank or invest-;
ment (lrni, said be thought ~
it over fol' a few minutes ~
and then malled the stocks
back to the rmn. obligatory way of fmding 8 job your strengths. Don t n:ientlon
opening in most businesses any possible weaknesses. and
Payne says a good resume t~ rtga~ everyjhing else as only '----------'
equally obligatory and right i,nargmally relevant. Your oJ;
there is where the . don'ts .l~ 1s to stir any em~loyer s
become vital l·Y lmportant. curmslty. One~ thats a~
Here are the don'ts· he· lists: CQlnplished, the. tactics to natl
-Don't attach a photo to down th~_ job can _be executed.
your resume. A photo just Payne s book Is a detailed
gives the employer anotbe exposition , of steps to take
reason to lOS! your · res~ ·' afta:: th~ resume hi!' brought
aside. He's no longer curlou5 in . replies. The lint com·
about what you look like. , mandm~nt in thil part of the
_ Don~ state yoµr salary 1;ne IS always try for a
objective, Jet the employer try s ary boost ove! that of YOJU'
to guess. Of course if you're present or last )Ob of at least
applying ~ a job-finding ageJl. 20 to :>.I percent.
cy, you may have to state
your salary aim.
-Don't reveal your current
salary. Keep 'em guessing
about that as long as you can.
-Don't list your references.
China Tour
Jn;. Japan?
Air Cusli.ion
Vehicle Set • ·'
For Design,
CHULA VISTA (AP) -
Under a ~million contract
awarded by the Urban Massf..t
Administration, Rohr ·
Industries, Inc., will build an
experimental 100.foot-lon(f.
vehicle designed to travel on
a cw;hion of air at speeds up
to 150 miles an hour.
Robr's design developed un· It may subject them to an-'
noyance. Also it's better to
pinpoint references for a
U.S. Steel
TOKYO (UPI) -China will der a federal contract given
send a 13-man t e c h n l c a I last July, calls for the vehicle
mission to Japan in March to to carry 60 passengers and
inspect Japanese al!l9mobile travel without wheels . It is to
plants, the k'yodo news·agency be powered by a 'pollution·free
has announced1• electric motor.
Gets Fine Kyodo sald in a dispatch Secretary of Transportation
. from Peklng the Chinese in-John A. Volpe .announced the
tent.ion of visiting Ja'pan was second·phase contract, calling
PmsBURGH (AP)._ U.S. relayed to Teiji Hagfwara, ·ror Rohr to build _a protoll'I":
managing director of the which win receive its initial
Steel Corp., already fined Japan International Trade testing at the Rohr plant.
$15,000 for excessive smoke Promotion Association, a n After that it will receive ex·
emissions at several of its organization set up to foster tensive tests at the transporta·
plants, has been fined for ·US-trade between-'the two coun-tion departments test center
ing contaminated water to tries. near Pueblo, Colo. :
quench bot coke. The Japa'nese news agency Vqlpe said the contract ls,.
Magistrate John Chandler said the Chinese mission, if ~art of the lar(ler $115 million ·
fined the giant firm $300 Pl\IS organized successfully, would urban transportation research costs this week on three f I J d counts of violation 0 r be the irst arge sea e elega-and development p r 0 g r a m tion-Peking had sent to Japan recently sent to Congress b1 Allegheny County's air pollu· since 1965 when a group came President Ni:s:on.
tion code at the Clairton to inspect assembly plantS of :;iiiiiiiiiii::;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~
Works. T~yota Motors and Niss,an Ir 1 W i .t n es s ~ ~, Including Diesel Company. · · MAllL•N• •o•••rs
chemlSts, testified the water Kyodo CUJOted Hagiwara as HOUSE OF •
. ~1 ill~ cg_ke con:_ saying that the Cb in es e DISTINCTIVE PLANTS
talned phenol, c·y a'1rf d e , decision would not suggest a comp1111 D1cor111ve P11n11n1
chloride and ammonia and the shift of policy on part of China 10 .;o;:1~":!1 ~r;::;,f:.~
resulting steam was polluting 'toward · the Japanese com-· • w. cea.1 .. .,_,_
the air. · --panits:--. . · _.....,_.•..a..-MMtll--
• _l_
I
l
I
(
. . -"'-' .._., ...,. ... -..... -'!~"'"--"-
DAILY I'll.Of J6
' I
•
-----
...
I
Ill DAILY PILOT
Bauin Eoes Wa .it on_ State Ruling
'V andaJ .. proofing' !Y~A~~!.o.~ci 01 the 11n1 c11.trict by haaruledlhatthewordm••ns
For The
Report Unveiled
SANTA ANA _ A Stale Supervillor Robert BatUn l1$t a numbered political entity, Record Oct<>ber Kuyper stated, but a majority
S I P ed Supreme Court decision is an-• h tJcipated early next week Slnce then they havt moved decision of the court In 1933 . -c 00 s ropos whk:b will determine tlhether back Into the newly·aligned held that it applied to territory
, two candidates for first district, but County CouMel involved.
to pay fpr !he litigallon In-
itiated by ale of the can-
didates (Werik:e) who wu
refused nomination papus.•
"One-need but look at the
district boundaries on a map
to clearly see that the.re was
but one reason for that section ' n·i I t1 distrlcl county supervisor are Adrian Kuyper ruled last Fri· Hill appeared at t h e
SSO U •~S _SANTA-ANA..--TlM-l>ea~-Ol-11aAdall5m.Jn.all..-tyr-...,..,..;....; Mf<tl--'~il>le...14.JOl/l.. _____ di>'i-'hil-lhaY-bad .. 1 lived iu~ ee!!ion ht San cf SautrAna --i,e-txcludet!'----• 01 Ma iriag' e cost to the taxpayer, for dJstricts during the t~year William Wenke, a Sanla Ana long enough (one year) In the ·Francisco Thursday to enter
ed attorney and John W. "Bill" •Ill.,.. "9'nlm • repairs to schools In Orange period, Lueck report . lllll, a businessman, claim district to be eliglble to run. hls plea along with Wenk.e's. ~i:!':i::-~·."" !:, °:.:: w.ci.w County damaged by vandals, He offered a long list of they were gerrymiiiaered out The Supreme Court Jµstlces' Another candidate for the
~:;~. 1(.,..,. MMY _. Johll Jotfl'lt was reported to the county possible means of prevention decision hinges on how the first c!,islrict ppst, • W a 11 y
eion. '~1vi. e. 81111 Archl• Board ol Education Thursday Including more night cus~ ru·ne members inte'ili:t the Davis, a Fountain Valley al·
Hartlolll. o...i •nd L8'9ll Hn1 • dians better alarm systems 4 s F T •a1 Fotw,-Jlfln H. Jr. •nd M8rll~n Board members endo-~ a ' . ' ls word "district" in state torney, today 1'wnped into the
l<l•1111ff, ll\lrlrt J , 81111 J81MI H. lo:)C\1 extra police patrols, bars On uspec ace r1 :=/: ~1~1~ t.:':'J::..~i L.. suggestion by Or. Ro~rt windows and skylights, fire • law concerning elections. legal dispute.
from the first district, that is
the elimination of potential
candi,dates," Davis charged.
Contemporaryfurniture
Mwr•v: LMlle "-~ o-111 A. Peterson, co u n t y supei-1n-and intrusion alarms, elec--Kuyper filed papers Thurs-Davis, a Mexican-American, ' ~?;!:·GV:r." J'::!".:;'J::~."'"u tbeendf~'~!A~ls,I that ~! tronlc burglar alarms and SANTA ANA -Four men William Joseph Schnell, 35, day with the court 1n ·answer charg~ "the board o {
t DllrtMlvt. lh8l"Oll L. _. wirr.,. G. w-•u:mcu regu ar repo1... heat rise detectors e:rtra accused of involvement In Hollywood. to a petition filed Tuesday by supervisors with gr o s s • ::f:· ~~"'::: G=. J~ on such activities, whic~ ~ve lights, and fencing ' alarm WeNke. mismanagement of p u b I i c ~.\ t:owtn1 coat county schoo l distncts systems. what district attorney's of-A11 four pleaded inooeent to Kuyper alleges that In a non-trust by u n n e c e s s a r i 1 y
v1c11.,.. Dl•N Lv1111 end Robffl J•IMI more than $777 ooo in lbe past ficef3 claim was a tape grand lheft and conspiracy partisan race, the effective creaUog legal problems caus·
Slewtrt. MM'I• L • ..-d JMNt L · ' Lueck said electronic alarm d t f th 'd ed b th d . f ::.r;.:.olt~~~= = :::~ c::.• two years. . . systems are effective, but cos-duplication racket that netted charges contained in an c; ~ ~;e J~n~"~~~~~~'. : the s~pe~i~~~8s"tri~~F. 0
-. 11~,.!•1-.._.11 end L._,.• Bob Lueck, director of fiscal tly, running up to $50,000 per them at least $750,000 a year Orange COunty Grand J_ury in-the November general elec--The candidate added, "By
M.J'fflekl. Jerrv ic. •nd oilHn H11en services for the c ~ u n 1 Y school. Sophisticated n e w have been ordered to face trial dictment. tion. arbitrarily cutting out a sec-
Vttt!. Al1• ""· •!Id 0-"9 E. Department of Education, said systems boast alarms which June 26 in Orange County They were arrested Dec. 14, l The County Counsel agreed tion of northeast Santa Ana, rt!r~.;;1~:,:i ~1~":r!~:J!· FlorlM! the goal ls to . try to build are triggered by a change in Superior Court. 1971, after lawmen raided a with Wenke's factual data in the board created a situation ~~.;.,.°:1~~ ~~ .!T~'r dfut11;1l"e !ICbooblls with fewer van-the light, noise or even move-number of locations 1 n the attorney's writ of mandate where two potential can-
V111C18n1Hv. Mtirv M:v111 •nd Tlllodor• awn pro ems. . ment in a room. Judge William MuJTay set to the supreme court, but, he didates, (Hill and Wenke,)
s!i1P111, ~rvln v. Jr. •nd N8!1CY Sile He said this could tJ;e don~ in The schools official's report the trial date and an April 7 Riverside and Orange Counties added, "the point of issue is were-forced to relocate their 1~. L• ver11 M. •1111 Homer w. a number of ways including had one favorable note -the pretrial session for John ~o crack what they claim was whether the word 'distriCt' place of residence into the new ~~~= ~1~'t:u_:1~~ •nd J•Y eliml~tio:ir of1 w~ws arr! cost per pupil in Orange Coun-Edward Fair!ax, 44, Norco; a conslplracy in which the means a poillical entity iden· district in order to enter the ~ 51~n1n-covering c rcu a ion ven ty for vandall.sm is $1:88. hls son, Donald Ray Fairfax, group llllcity reproduced tapes lilied by number·or one detin-race." ,.. ~~•.T:'~.T.:f,.G::n,~, v..-11 wt~ iron grill1. Lueck ~~ That's below the national 23, Mira '-~11·.a; William O. manafactured by established ed by territory. Davis charged that as tax-
CO NTeMPOftA.ft Y
17817 IEACtt ILVD. ~
~S HUNT. ll!ACH 14l·1tl't
Wtekdlyl 10-61 MOil. & l'rl. 11.f
leeteh 11.,cr, -Hortlt •f Yafai.rt Atnu fnl'll M.a. In..,_.
C11'11m1nlty Mo&Pllll
Cf"Oh, Tflonl•• r. •1111 ~rv T. childrein craw into SC ave.rage Lueck aaid Fraley, "IU, Orange and recording companies. The atate Attorney General payers "we will now be asked 1 .• 1,.-r, c11Q1 L .• ,. Rl)fttld R. rooms through the vent open-1_::.::.::!:•:...::=::.=::.· ____ .:::::o:,_::::._:::.::!::......:.::..;:..._.;.::::=~:::::!:::::::::: _____ .:,:::,:::::::_::::::::>:...::::::::'.:::.....!:~::.._::.:::::.::::::..::.=.::~~~~~~~~~~~~ Detrton, John P, •l)d GIGI'~ J, •
KJNlorf, l•rlNir• lrocki W G1rr 1ngs.
R.:!t.0tupe 1nc1 Rod•loo The education official of.
c;.Y11, K••lfl s. •nd A-1 E. fered a breakdown by elemen-
R111m. AHIK(I L, •nd ROlllld "· high --•--1 'fied nd Price. K81hlffn R.. 11'111 Albert M. tary, i:IUJUU , Unl 8
e lJtlolt, 111-• 1<1. ind INrllvn Jun community college districts of
.t.rnold, Geroge EOw1rd 81111 EtlUbllh th st f ndal' fro irtne • e co o va ism m
S•nlofd.-F1cwo Wll!I•"' ind Ellen ""'" January 1970 to December K1llh, Adi M. Ind L-..nl S.
Df«8rt, Jr .• ~II• 1111:. •nd 011e 1971. °"'"' H .d the ' ·stat.
! Mii• SOlll!I If S.11 D1891 l'rwy,
. Our new28oSE 4.5 costs
H1meo1 011iw J1•n •nd oe1toert e sa1 ecooonuc us
t eu..;,. of families living in a district
Lotttln, '::,:..: •,.n:,,;.::rv111•1 was not a factor in the total of almost three times as much as the'average'car.
'
Mollnr, Deiote1 J. •nd Lloyd Er11i:1... damage in such districts. T':d J;it.-;;c' Vlr•lni. L'(nM 1na Clll· "The kids from well-to-do
Mulk•.,, Belt'f A. •nd J08 11. families are u prone to van-Ootwo. lmootM 0. 8nd MU1n • d • ed F•vrMll, T.,-r1 J. 1nd Tt.om11 J. dabsm as those In epr1v
H111t, llar Alden •"" ..,, .. .,. Ruth areas," he explained. ~!:;;:=;:.~;., 1Z:.n1~ Rob..-1 M«· On Lueck's breakdown sheets s::.. o.111 .. E. •1'111 owv R. the F~untain Valfey elemen-
HllOIOll. X.r~ L~r111 Tr111I •nd lo!.111 tary district suffered ],158 ICf.8
v!~o!!.ld O.rv •rid SMll'f Anne of vandalism with a repair or
H•llck. Pll!lht J . ind t11trry1 A. replacement cost of $35,000. ~•'='· t:riri.~ ~:,r=•:1r.~.. Others listed included Hunting.
0w.,.._ H11'i..-t Miiion •nd v1rolnl• ton Beach elementary, $9,015; ~-~·=th Ad• •"" ,.,,11,"" Ocean V i e w elementary,
Leuillk; s1nor1 Ji; •net Frink s. $17,210; San Joaquin elemen-
MMiler ~~ J":::8':r1111 Btrn1rd tary, $2,500 plus $100,500 dam· Al~;, aee suffered in a library fire .
P1tt1r.on. Jo ..,,,118 •M 11:-ld Let "Huntington Beach Union P1r~s. 0 1•118 IC. •nd John It. ~o1t. a11rT1111 Lee •nd t111r111 wn\" Hi~h School District, 208 acls,
Clerk, P.ul ectw1rd attd S1l'Mlr• N1ornl ..,5 000 1·nclud'mg a ... 000 fire · ~8CI, Elr•nor Ind DCNld G. •• , .....,, •
Ganr, L•°" H.,,rv •nd S.•ver Laguna Beach Unified. only
Wtllln9'ef, H• ......... attd K. 'Ir I". • .. NI. N ·-"'·M u '"ed Fr1n<llf <fUIN. e .. .,..,....-esa n111 ,
Tllllk., Albert c . ...o M.ri.111 "· $8 295· ~--st Commun It y Wllho", CVllllll• l.l'M •nd WlllL.r?I • 1 '-"1a · K~1tfklli.A. •nd ~uw .. l10Yd College, $15,622 ; Saddleback
Sm,:; R.ob8r\ CMrln Jr. •nd C1rl• Community College, none.
Fou1dl8r, ROM L•• •nd Lla'fd L. There was a totaJ of 11,272
Morretlno. AHC8 M.. •nd Samuel P.
E11911. S.ndr• LH 1nd J-1 Glen
Smith, S!ellMll QuJnfoll 1nd M•rll'HI
Ellzlbetll
tt111, ODWn A-".., ICeri..erll W•rM HOOYer, D1811i1 L .. 8nd AnlhonY G1H
.,,.,.,_, Wllllefn COUrtnW •lid L•11rl9
Ellz•betll
Sw8rwll'Onl, JUI 11: .. 1rtd 0.'<'ld EdW•rd
McWl!Ham1, J11nt1l!I Ni. •nd Wiibur 0.
Reimer. Y!~811d Rldl•nl JONllll kuvk1ni:.11. ll:l)l•nd P1t1 •!Id Alm•
Elrl,ne
Cox, Jerry P. •nd C•rll E.
lt111Ut, Dlrolll'f C1rvl 1nd Kirk N. Krall, Ll!lltr N. 8nd &•llY tit\!
ltfJkO, ll:oul'fn 01wnel11 1nc1 Henrv
• trd Sl1Voe't', Dotttld o. Ind Judy Ellen
A!'r· r. l(rol!11 Ann •!Id G•"J' Lff Stewart, Rkh1rd NellOft •nd su .. n
,_.,\7'9
l'lude. T11orn11 C. 1/ld Sllrrrv Ann
R ~:~r. Clcrl1 Dell and John W111rf
Horn, Cll1rlrl M, •1'111 C1rol Jo 1<1~01rd. M1rlv1 O. 11'\d J•mtl L
Sll'1f"8k~ C°'11l8ntl Le1 •nd Olettn
Oav\d
P1rk,.M1rlhll Ann •!Id G-Averv
Death Notices
I ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCLIFF MORTUARY
'21 E, 17th St., Coll\' l\1tsl
'411-4888 • BALTZ BERQERON
• FUNERAL HOME
Cotona del Mar 67J.H50
Calta Mesa 646-2414
I •
BELL BROADWAY
: MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa l\tesa
LI 8-3l33 • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACB MORTUARY
· J'19S Laguna Canyon Rd.
191-9UI • ' . PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery )fotbwy
Cllapel
S5lt Paclltc View Drift
·Ne"l'Ort sea ... CaIUornJa
fll.%71t
I
• PEEK FAMILY
COUJNIAL FUNERAL
HOME
' 1&01 Bolla AvL
·We1tmJa1ter OW5%5 . ' SMITHS' MOll'l'UARY
111 -Ill. a._.. ..... .....
' .
Trial Set
For Talent
Agency Men
SANT A ANA -Four men
accused of extracting
thousands of dollars from
parents seeking allegedly non·
existent movie and modeling
jobs for their children have
been ordered to face trail next
Tuesday in Orange Couhty
Superior Court.
Judge William Murray set
the trial date for Orange at·
torney Richard Murphy. 41 ;
brothers Jerry, U, Santa Ana
and Don Hegg, 4-0, Garden
Grove, and Robert McGinnis,
38 Santa Ana.
Judge Murray rejected pleas
for delay of the trial · and f
ordered all four to show up for
jury trial on charges or grand
theft, e-0nspiracy !Uld violation
or state corpar ate codes.
They were indicted by the
Orange County Grand Jury
after an investigation into the
operations of the "Take One"
talent agency in whic,h all four
defendants allegedly were
cipals.
principals.
vestigators allege the four
men sold "public relations
contracts ranging from $645 to
$658 a year to parents in-
terested in placing t h e i r
children ii\ movie and TV
commercial spots. Th' operl\·
tion was closed down followJng
civil action against the en-
terprise.
It Is also alleged that Ute
four sold $ll,OOO of stock Jn
Take One without registering
the stock with the stat's cor-
porations cOmmlssioner.
Murphy is awaiting sen-
tencing following his con·
viction on five counts of cor-
poratt code violations.
He and Newport Beach
businessman R a I p h K.
Benware, 34, were found guilty
by a Superior Court jury
which heard allegations that
the pair illegally transferred
1160,000 In funds from one to
the other of t,.o insurlJlct
compani., they owned ln what
was destribed as a .. robbing
Pel<r to pay Paul" plan.
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
SATURDAYS IN
' ' JHE DAILY PILOT
'
•
But we think there are1opo0Americ-ans
who can appreciate the difference.
" The avttage w buyer could be taken aback at It has no cirbiltttors. Instead, a computer moni-
the price of our new Mera:d.,..llcnz 280SE 4.5. tors engine speed and load, tempera tun: and altitude,'
At over $10,000, it is not only wdl above·avcrage, then electronically meters fµcl to each cylinder. This
it i.s some $2,500 more cxpcns.ivc than the highest precise: method of fuel delivery is the most advanced
priced domestic luxury sedan. way of providing efficient, high~specd touring capa~
Whether it's worth that diffcrcnoc to you may be bility.
answered only by what you expect of a motor car. The fully independent suspension was-designed
Tbc280SB4.5is atouringscd.aD inthebestEuro--for ruts and beods,not just boulevards and turnpikes.
pean ~tion. ! It's so roadworthy, Road & Track contends that "no
Designed to provide: every motoring cdmrort for · domestic luxury sedan is even in the same ballpark::
a puty of five. And enpnecred to cnpc with driving Andtomatchitsperformanceabilitics,Mercedis-
situatioos that vary from thcdesc;cnding swi1chbacl<s Benz engineCrs have equipped it with four power·
of an Alpiuc pasa to the 100 mph auisiDg spcals of an .assisted disc brakcs.vcntibted in front to mist fading•
Autobahll.'. .-.. · Theresult isanautOJDObilelhatc:mperformwith
'A concepuodilrerait limn that·guidingthe de-1 ~ual aplomb on.the 11• curves of Nilrbutgring, or.
'iigii'of a domestic,"JUXUIY': car ~0111nay find driving 1 [UJe unwavering ribbon of a thruway.-(
-something to do.-: instead of IOlllething thal must be And ill automobile that is further endowed witli
_gone.' . _ _ _ .-almost_eye<y ~J'-Jml<e$ and steering.'
JtsengineisilnlikeanyyoiflllindinanAmcrican' Electric windows. Air conditioning and tinted glass.1
car. An ovcrhead<am, fuel·inic!l\ed 4.5 litcr v.s. El«trically heated rear window. An AM-FM rocciver.
Even a central locking system that !secures all four
doors, the trunk and even the gas pon at the touch oC
a button.
In addition 10 the 280SE 4.S, Mercedes-Benz i
builds two other V-8 touring sedans in similarly min--1
iscule quantities. ..
The 280SEL 4.5~identical1othe SE except that
it is longer. Longer in the Mertedcs--Bcnz sc:nsc:-an
increase of four inches that is translated directly into
rcar-«at leg room.' ·
The 300SEL 4.5 adds air suspension to the list'
cf perfonnancc features unavailable on any domestic ;
.automobile. . ~ ,
hi total,' these three high-performance t~
sedans will account for less than one of every 400 cars
$Old in the United Swes this year. . ·
Ifyoucanacceptacarthatuciiffettnt;'@ ~
;ta1ce.! thorou~t <!rive,D~vtrthe r<al
differences in a car built to be the best-
, not the best seller.
Mercedes-Benz of North America, Inc.
··;;··· --•w•••• ... ~ •.•..••. .,,,,,,-.• -. ~ ...... ···~ ·• ·-,..,.-~
}
.tone' has to P111hrouab lht~ for1hc best~but for l.botc Who can .&rd it.:. tbt 290SB wlih-tbe 't -1, lb cilbcc the f'tl\llar ar tJH: L ft11ion1 b the beat a...ailtb1e -.,.n Rood'& Trd' . '
Jim Slemons Impoz:ts, Inc. 120 W. Warner Avtnue, Sa.~t• Ana, Callfornla 92707 Phone: 714-546-4114
•
-.
•
•
17 r I ' .
..
da
m
'" ""'
fav
J
tlie j
•tu
tfo
"' an
for
Ma ·'w
lit ti
or i
B
sen
and
gra
~
ne
B
pro.
eq
the
• s
des
Coh
sai
L
s
·F
for
who
mu
She '
er
1949
tom ...
L•
Ora
sev
M
Byr
Mrs ,.d
s
A
A
ill
It
0
1erl
incl
Val
Ft.
Ver s
Am
Sa
Arg
•
Lag1111a Be~ch Today's Fhlal
• •
N.Y. St.oeb-EDI TION
VOL 65,. NO. 42, 4 Sf,CTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, FEBRUARY "18, 1972 TEN CENTS
'
Hospital Expansion Ol('d • ID Stormy~ Hearing
A bitterly fought public hearing stua.
ded with allegations of "over bedding"
and ,.profiteering" ended Thursday night
with the approval of the Orange County
Health Planning Coiincil's he a Ith
facilitie.s.i.review committee for an 89-bed
upansioil at the Mlssion Community
Hospital.
The committee voted 12 to 2 after five
hours of debate in the city of Costa
Mesa'1 council chamber for an expansion
that will hike the Mission Viejo hospital's
bed capacity to 213.
But the flnal decision resta with the
organization's 90-member C()UncJI. They
will meet Feb. 24 in the Santa Ana county
courthouse to deliver the final verdict On
the cootrover&ial Mission Community ap-
plication.
Almost all the -opposltio.o Thursday
night . came from the rival Saddle back
Community Hoapital, currently under
Construction ana &Ched11led to : add 150
beds In May, 1973, to what waa described
during the hearing I! a 11vasUy overbed·
ded" central valley are.a of Orange Coun.
ty .
Mission CommunUy Hospital Is a
privately owned facility. The Saddlebacls,
hospital was described Thursday night as
a nonprofit facility backed by the
Lutheran Church hospital organization. -
Saddlebaclc Community officials, led by
secretary Edward L. Olsen, repeated!!
challenged the Mission Community plans
to the accompaniment of boos and c~t
calls from an apparenUy hostile au-
dience.
Olsen warned the council that popula-
tion dens.i!Y preQictions prepared by the
state clearly indicate a slow down in the
population shift to ,the central valley area
-generally defined by most speakers
Th.Ur111a.Y night as including Mission Vie-
jo, El Toro, Leisure World, Laguna Hills,
Laguna Niguel and Cap~trano l!ighlanda.
Speaking before the approval of the as-
hed-expansion, Olsen told the cauncil that
the area would be saturated within the
next five years by t18 beds in four
hospitals with plans for stJll further con-
struction.
Olsen said that was more than double
the number of beds that should be pro-
vided under state planning charts made
available to the C()Uncil for consideration
prior to Its decision Thursday night.
He pointed out that h1s: own hospital,
which received planning approval two
years ago at a time when the Mission
Community application was denied by t.ht
now defunct Health PlaMing AJsociatlon1
would btl adding 150 beds to what he said
were Mission Community's 126, South
Coast Community Hospital's 153 and San
Clemente Community Hospital's 11&.
The San Clemente hospital is presently
under construction. And South Coast
Community Hospital ht South Laguna
plans to add 116 beds to jts current com-
(See HOSPITALS, Pare Z)
_..our ans ea _ ena
UC Irvine
Drops Boom
On Grades
By THOMAS PALMER
Of Ille o.ttr Pfftf Sltff
The UC Irvine Academic Senate Thur!"'
day traded ABCO and F for DHP and J.
At a lively two and one-half hour
meeting complete with m o t i o n s ,
substitute motions and amendments to
amendments, the faculty m e m b e r s
dumped the traditioµal grading system in
favor of Distinction, High Pass, Pass and
J notatiom.
Students will no longer fail courses.
. U sufficient progreu is not made for
tiie·studenHo·be-glven credit Ut a counE,
J ~ill ~rded denoting · "cooUnuinl
study." ¥
But before the system Is put into ae-
t!On, it must be approved by the nine-
campus, university·wide faculty senate
and then go to the UC Assembly in June
f9r ratification.
.UGI Senate chainnan A I e x e I
Maradudin said the larger UC senate
''would be the primaty hurdle," but that
little opposi\ion was expected either there
or in the Assembly.
Before its final 65 to lS decision the
Senate rejected other more conservativ#!
and more bold plans for altering the
grading system.
. Jay Martin, English professor and
chairman of the Educational Policies
Committee, made the motion too'fl.dopt the
new system.
Before it passed, the Senate had ap-
proved a motion to eliminate the grade
equivalents of D and F from any proposal
they C()nSidered.
An amendment to that motion lo allow
a student to accept a D grade if he
desired was deleated twice, Robert S.
Cohen, assistant professor of drama,
1aid, "A student should not have a say in
(See GRADES, Page Z)
Lucille Paulus
Services Held
· Funeral services were held In Orange
for Laguna Beach rJ!Sldent Lucille Paulus
who died Monday at South Coast Com-
munity Hospital following a short illness.
She was 74 ..
Mrs . .Paulus, who Uved at 187 Lower
Clill Drive, came to the Art Colonyi
1949. Her late husband was promioe~ •
tomey otto Paulus. She was 1ctive
aeveral years in the Opera Qulld,
Laguna Beach Art Association, the
Orange County Philhannonlc Society and
several literary groqps ln Los Angeles.
Mn. PauJua ls survived by a brother,
Byrd Tucker of Portland 'ind two slaters,
Mrs. Perry Welles of Independence, Ore., ,oo Gail Tucker or Palm jipringa.
f ot Luck Dinner
' '
Slated at Legion
A pot luck dinner for members of the
American Legion Poat 222 and its Aux•
llllry Will he held.'l'hunday at t :!O p.m.
at th'e Ugion Street clubhouse.
O. W. Price will present his color slide
aeries "Freedom Trail USA." The slides
include scenes of Boston, New York,
Valley Forge~ West Point, Philadelphia,
Ft. McHenry, Washington D.C., Mt.
Vernon, WllUanuhurg and Yorktown.
Special gueall at the dinner will be
American Field Su.vice students Nawja
Saldeh ol Jordan and Jose Trucco of
Argentina.
·clipping!) Judge
Time Off for Ha ircu t, Shave -
By TOM BARLEY
Of JM Dlll'I' Pllft ll1tf
Orange cOunty's "flogging judge" and a persuasive prisoner made a
bargain in court Thursday. The judge agreed to cut the prisoner's jail sentence
provided the 27-year~ld man got a haircut. •
It all began when Superior Court Judge William Murray, who once
sentenced another C()unty jail inmate to a rlogging, firmly sentenced Michael
Thomas Joyce of Costa Mesa to one year in jail for the long·haired prisooer's
violation of probation. Joyce had been on probation as part of a sentence im-
posed two years ago for a burglary conviction and narcotics offenses.
"Wow, man, that's a lot," winced Joyce, shaking his shou1der length
hair.
"Get a haircut and I'll knock off 60 days," grinned Judge Murray.
"Right on, man. Where's the barber shop?" replied Joyce.
''Okay," C()ntmented the judge. ""We've got us a deal."
11Say judge," C()mmented Joyce· u Judge Murray got ready [or the next
it.em on bis caleridar. "~t about my mustache! Jt ought to be worth a little ..... _ " ' ,J ' ,~ .... torne'"'""g. , · ., t ' '· ''I'd say 30 days," Judge Murniy responded. ' ~ ·
· ''Judie," anhounced·Joyce, "yob've made yourself a de4*f1< ' it,·:
.''I'm aure pd )'Oii don't sill magazirl~ subacripUoo;, Mr. JO)'Ce ," cbuckled;Vddge~y~ the deUglrt o!'courtroolh on!OOken, ."you're a very
persuasive prismer." ·
The happy ioyct Wt to hegip his nJne.month .pen In Orange County JaU .
.. There's a methoct in my madness;'' Jbdge Murray later ·told a news.
man. "It's going lo be pretty hard for that well-trimmed young man to step
back Into the c1tu1 culture ...
Judge Murray's famous Dogging sentence was never carried out because
the county sheriff refused to administer the · punishment. The sentence later
was changed to a more modem fonn of punb:bment.
Council Seek s Li.tnits
On" Tenure of Planners . .
In response to a request by codttUman
Roy ~Im. the Laguna Beach city council
this week instructed the city attorney to
' draft an amendment to the municipal
code establishing a specific period of of-
fice for planning commissioners.
"Since the code is silent on the mat-
ter," said Holm, 0 J would suggest a
tenure of four years for persons ap-
pointed to the planning commission."
Mayor Richard Coldberg n o t e d •
"Usually the planning C()mmission serves
at the pleasure of the city council or the
mayor and since the makeup of the coun-
cil changes every two yean, Perhaps a
tw~year period would be better."
· Holm noted that member• of the board
of zoning adjustment serve three-year
terms, which are staggered so all the
tenns do not expire at once. "Four-year
terms on the planning commission also
could be staggered in this maMer," l}e
said.
The planning commission issue was
spotlighted immediately arter the 1970
council election ·when four members of
the existing five-man commission were
ousted by tbe new council majority and
replaced by new appointees.
Following thia week's discussion, It was
agreed that city attorney Tully Seymour
should look into the policies of other
cities and draft a tenure proposal for
council approval.
Twelve Turn Out to Hear
Waste Managing Report
By PATRICK BOYLE
Of 1t1t Deity Pllet l~ff
Despite the importance or the f.wic ,
less than a dozen Laguna .. Beach residents
turned out 'J'huraday night to hear cily
manager Laurence Rose oulline the · new
waste management operation and l~ sup-
porting tax. ·
"Waste management concerns e)"ery
stngle human being that live1 in Laguna
Beach," .Jlooe said In prefacing hla
remark!. "WC are talking about the
closest relat'4>nshlp between that In-
dividual and bis city."
imposition of the new tax .
The tax, which will be $3.50 per month
for the owner of a single family home,
will cover mandatory collection of all
trash, sewage ' dispo'sal aervices, street
and bea'cli cleaning and maintenance of
atorm drains. In addiUon, each resident,
at'hls rf:t1uesf, will be provided with trash
bags and a wall·mounted bag holder to
replace his existing garbage cans.
Rose said he hopea the use of trash
bags will eventually replace trash cans
throughout the community.
New Waste
Treatment
Pl~t Eyed
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of "" Dally Plltl Ili ff
Oetalls were unveiled Thursday for •
major regional approach to South Coast
and Inland waste treatment whlcb could
involve the blending of six separate agen-
cies into a regi,onal authority qualifying
ror millioll! of dollars in government
gr8.nts. · ·
~-~i-~~1i'Oin IriJijO, ' Lagana. . . • •· .
The ,concept It nearly Identical. lo the'
plan which lallllChed the .~ SER-
RA venture Jn !bO Capistrano Valley and'
Laguna Niguel ' where aeven agencies
banded toge~ to W1lrk out waste pr~
Jems on a reaional format.
The city o1 Laguna Bea~h. beset by
massive wilte treatment problems, wilJ
be asked' to join the new authority next.
week.
Besides Moulton Niguel a'nd Laguna
Beach; other· agencies welcome to join
nwi new authority are the Irvint Ranch
Water lliatrict, SO'Jth Laguna Sanitary
District, El Taro Water Dlatnct and the
Los. Allsos Water· District.
Moulton-Niguel and.~ Toro directors
(See REGIONAL, Pare Z)
' Demoliiion F ete
To Rai.se M one v " For Laguna Fes t?
POs:slbility of a udemolltlon party" a!I
an added attract'6n for Laguna Beach's 1m Winter Festival -and source of a
little extra revenue -was mulled lightly
by Laguna Beach city councilmen this
week.
"Since we're almost ready to start
demoliUon of the Main Beach buildings,"
1J1,ld Councilman Roy Holm, "it occurred
to me we might raise a little money by
aucUonlng off the fint swipe -the peo-
ple could pick the building they"d most
llke to see knocked down~"
"Maybe It could he part of the Winter
Festival," quipped · C.Ouncilman Peter
Ostrander. . ~
Councilman Edward Lorr said the
whole thing could he kicked off by the
council, armed with sledge hammers "to
hit the building•, not ~ch oJher."
Automobile-hater James Dilley said
he'd be glad to put In a bid !or the first
1Wlpe at the asphalt parking lot.
·oty Manager Lawrence Rose said he
....uid attempt to devise an· appropriate
"demollUon ceremony."
,
SflflS, lefis-Vp "•
· LabOr Secfetary J ame&· •D.
Hodgson testifies before . the
House-Senate J'oirit ·Economic
Committee that 'since J uly em·
ployment has risen LS mil·
lion, ·a· trend he predicts ~·ma·y
"soon begin to have Ill impact
DI}.. U~e~plo~e.pt. n ..
. '
Design Review
J
Ordinance Due'
For Second Look
Tbe second public hearing afitl'approval
of a design reYiew ordinance heads
Tuesday's 7:30 p.m. meetin.g of the
Laguna Beach Planning Coinmlssion.
The ordinance, if. approved, will provide
that all new multi--unlt and commercial
developments will be reviewed by a
<Jesign · committee. It ls upected the
Boilrd of Zoning Adjustments wUI pick up
t.be new task and be expanded to five
members.
T~ design review policy 1 accordinfi to as~ on inte'nt and purpose, will 'en-
C!>urage site .a{id s~ctural development
whipt. exemplified/the best con,temp,orary
1;nd1>rofessional design practices-. '
Following planning oo~~n ap-
proval, the ordinance V(ill be forwarded
1" t))e ,city council for fin.al adoption.
Commissioners will also be asked lo:
· -Merove .a.c:ondltlonal· uae pennlt Jo
allow "'ll.Ve iflf!ttaimDent Uiree nights a
we~k at the Sandpiper loUJ1ge, 1183 S.
Coast Highway.
-Grant .a varlaAce to Earl W. Milla,
472. High Drive, to. lllow an exiJtlng lot
with an encroaching-driveway and swim-
ming poo): be declared a legal bulldinf
alte. ·
-Approve a varia~ to Leonard C.
Gamble, 381-393 Agate ., to-encroach
(See PLANNERS, Page Z)
Bonte Closed .
Thi n>.1la cl Laguna'• Patriots' Day Parade Will be dooeil IO traUle al
10 a.m. S.lurday ,the pollce department announced today, and whld"
parked on the parade route at that time will be to'lfed away,
"Citizens from the Top of the World' area are urged to use Temple Hiiia
Delve and Thalia Street to avoid tral!ic congestloo ," nld CapL Frank
Schopen. "Retldeota of the Mystic Hills and Skyline area wlll he directed to
6to I Vote
'.Affects 1•05
In Prisons
SA~ FRANCISCO (AP) -The
California Supreme Court ruled today
that the death penalty la unconstitutional.
The vote was S.1.
The decision arrecta 100 men and nve
women under sentence of death In the
state's prisons.
They include Sirhan B. Sirhan, con-
victed slayer of Sen. Robert F,.Kennedy,
and Charles Manson,· convicted 1n ·the
Sharon Tate murden.
··-· N .. ~ ew , J eroey· SUpre1111_ Court
, • oV'J'\umed the 1tate'• death penalty In
January. The col!rl llald the law wu an-
consUtuUonal because Peno111 convk:ted
after pleading Innocent were subjected to
the death penalty while those ·Who plead-
ed no defense were subject to a mu·
lmum or life imprlsonment.
Several states have outlawed the death
penalty through leglslaUve action:
On Nov. us, 1968, the California hlgb
C()urt ruled that juriea in the state can
decide constitutionally under their own
discretion whether the punishment for
murder shall be death or life im-
priJonment.
That . decision waa returned on an ap..
peal which stayed aJJ executioru alnce
No.v. 14, 1116'1.
·Justice Marshall F. McComb was the
lone dissenter in the latest 45-page opin·
Jon.
The U.S. Supreme Court bas before ft
~veral cases on the death penalty but
has not ruled .
The last execution In the United States
was in Colorado in 1967.
The California court, the state's hlihest
tribunal, heard oral argumenta in
January on the question of whether
"evolving standarda of decency" have
outlawed the death penalty.
Anthony Amsterdam, S la n f o r d
University law profesaor arguing for the
American Civil Liberties Union, said the
dealh penalty ;, spoltuy applied to "tho
miserable and socially unacceptable."
BecaUBe of this, .\msterdam said,
atrocities can be cpmmltted which socle.
ty would not condone U unllormlty ap.
plied.
He contended that "the death penalty
has beeJl repudiated by enlightened
standards of decency."
0r .. ,.
Weailler
More hazy 1U111b1ne is 10,..,..I
!or Saturday, lollowin( Dlomlnl
low clouds .and fog. Temper ..
tures will be mild -In the 60'1.
Lows tonlght ·ln the 40's.
INSm E TODAY
Rivtr.rldt Count21'1 National
Oat• F111ivol Is bringing Oki
BQ11lulod to Southern .C.Ufomio for 10 davs starting tpday
through Feb. 27. A 110'1/ In to-
da11'1 w ttkc-nder ofvts Ch« d,..
tolll.
And if the new waste management
operation ls as IUCCUS!ul aa llooe hopes
It will he, that relallonabtp will be a
warmer one. Uda will be put back on
traah cans, there will be no S.turday
morning collection In resldenllal areas,
all of the 1arbage -even that in boxes -
Will he collected by the trashman and
property taxes mlihl go down.
"There Is nolhillg more dismal than a
row of dented , crumpled, bange<klp
rarbage cans, tt he noted. ~ the new
plan takes effect on AprU I, raldenta: at
Top of the World will all be asked to
participate In the bag program on an a•
perlmental baai!.
.A'he city manager aalil tM Pr<>P.trlY ~
<ould potentially be redUced by '23 cOntl
beca111e ·Uiat It the·pOrlldn ol the tam '
which curtenllY' g°"' towlirli ""'*'
falllng under (he tte'f wute management
the uae of Wendt Ternct and SJ. Ann'• Dflve to '.l'halia .Street.", . ·
Tho lwo-hour pai;ade Wjll 111a~ otr from lht sli.C!IPa --at the ltlgb tchool'ai!!)etf• ()eld..,1\11 a'111•' ~ Jldlm >Park All!nue lo :01enneyrt .stfee~ lou;,,. 01~ ID Yotdl' ~vtnueCana Fontt to-..X..ay. Whero ~ , • .L,,,...,.._, ' .. ,r.· ' The property lq reduction will be a
question decided by the city COU\ICll, Rose
noted. hut he said that the la1' rate could
potenllally be reduced by 23 c!tnta per
flOO cl -.led Yaluation followfne the
' I
Jar. ·'-R~ saJit the o""°" ol • "1,IOO homo (See WASTI, P ... I)
Wu..-"-\~~..... • L' J. ' ' ' 'l'ho judflllf and,rtY1twltw otand Wfll lie !!ocaled on Foreli Avenue 41
S.C00d Slteet 1114 a~'ltlll 'be p""°ted on the ~nllval :ti Alla groun6"
.. Dowinj ~ llfJ'ljd•. ·-l
'
•
:J OAILY PILOT L8
Rose U1·ges
Trash· Bids'
Tunaboat War
'lo Continue
~
Qlll'I'O, Ecua<IO( (API
•
~ w1D ... -lo dllm •
1111).mlle llmll lo Ill latltorlal
.. lur, AY1 Ill DOW ~
Brtg. Geo. Gulllenno llodrlgud Re·ection --Lan, lndleatJng the tuna war wttb
\he United States will continue
mabated. IAiUD• Beach city manaKer Larry
Rose nld Thursd@Y lie would reconunend
thal Ibo clly councU reject the lwo bids
recelvtd for the new trash contract.
Spea~lng to 1 handf\11 of resldenll con-
c:mUnc the ltd wute ·management pro-
gr1m. Rooo WI both of the bldl were
ddldan~ thll II. they did not m'6 the
opedllolUons ouU!ned by the city prior to
submllW ol bldl.
The two submitted blds were from John
Lllldl<y of the Laguna 11 .. cb Disposal
Service, the present city tra1h collector,
and Tom Trulls of Solog Disposal Com•
paQ.Y. 'J)rte other bkh were submitted
tfter the Tuesday deadline and ret1'rned
W!Opllled to lhe bidders, !lose noled.
'1 _wW recommend that the bids be re-Jected and that we ao to negotiation,"
Roee said.
Al an example of the deDclency of the
bids. Rose sald that neither bidder was
prepared to provide trash bags and bag
holden to residents, a requirement under
the strict 1peclllcatlons.
Uthe ~U chooses to follow Rose's
.recommendatloD, the contract could be
=gotlated .. with . aeveral contractors
wlthoul bidding and !ti. clly could choo>e
the tr11b colleclor providing the besl
servloe.
From Pagel
WASTE •••
now pays about $2 per month toward
aewage services and street and beach
cleaning. With tha addition of the present
$2 per month garblge collection payment,
cost-of the ..services ii now about $4 per month, he said. Thllll, the new tax could
be a potential savings of 50 cent& per
month to most homeowners providing the
council chooses to lower the property tax
rate.
He said all property owners will
receive their first trash bill within a few
days, along with a complete explanation
of the 11ew tax structure. Bills will be
sent every two months and wU1 be
payable in advance, he added.
In order lo Insure proper aervlce lo
resldenll by the city trub collector, Rose
noted that the new plan provides a
method whereby the city can "flne" the
contractor for poor service. U the con-
tractor falls to collect all of a resident's
trash, Rose said the complaint should be
relayed to city official!, who will im-
mediately ,.. lljll lhe re()lse Js,coll!ded-
He aald the contract will also provide a
$200 per month bonus to the contractor if
Ibo cily JiS«.lves no complaints from
reatdepll Within thal month regarding
1ris11 c.;necuon.· •
Teacher Battles
Abductor, Flees
After Slashing
A plucky Garden Grove teacher ignored
the blood pumping from her •lashed. lefl
hand and the knife held at her throat·
Thursday nlghl and managed to fight ber
way free from a husky male as.sallant
. who leaped into her car at ah EI Toro in-
tersection.
Tbe 23-year-old teacher at Mark Twain
Elementary School In Garden Grove, told
Orange County aherif!'s officers that her
attacker leaped into her car while she
waited at the intersection of Valenc\a and
Avenlda de Csrlotta.
The sllghUy bullt woman told deputies
tt.at he shoved a knlfe ag1lnst her throat,
told ber to drive on and clearly indicated
\\'Ith an obscenity what she could expect
a little later.
GIAll•I COAsr
DAILY PILOT
G11,MfOt CQiUT PUlll&HIMll ('/JlqNfr
"'"'" H. w ... ---J•e\: J;. Cini.., YU ,.._IMnl Ml a-ti .......
T1a011111 K••"11 .. ,..
no"' •• ,._ .. ...,,.,.e
MWlltlllt &tllw
Q•f• H. l•os llefl1r.I P. Nan Aa.Z.a.ni~ IEfttw. a--..-222 f.rMt >,,111111 M~Ttt 1 .. tlrt1•: P.O. 1111: 666, fl6S2
S..~Offlce aos H.,* a c..i .. "'al. t1•11 --()llfl ._. q Wnl ..., l"-t
~ t.oll -"'"'"*" ........ ,.. ._ ._..ws~..,.....,.
Rodriguez told a C<>lo111blan
)roadcastlng compnny Interviewer
~at relations wlth the United
)tates wllJ follow "along lhe same
Bnes kept until now."
Doz.en1 of American tunaboats ~aVe been seized and fined by
Ecuador for fishing in What it con-
liders its territorial waters. The
United States recognius only a 1~
nil• llmlt.
Marine Life
Said Rich
Near Outfall
Tbe undersea area around the Laguna
Beach sewer outfall la "very beautlful,
and rich 1n marine llfe," Chief Lifeguard
Skip C.Onner told an interested audience
at this week's City Council meet ing.
Conner presented a colorful array of
slides taken during recent inspection of
the outfall to prove hi!I assertions.
City Manager Lawrence Rose said that.
as a result o( the new attitude of water
quality .authorlUes regardin& omall ocean
out!allJ versus the large, regional varie-
ty, 110nce we get our plant up to par it
wUI behoove the state to think once again
ab;out what we have here -a very
-unique outfall." -
Former city director of public worb
JOlepb Sweany prefaced the presentation
by esplalnlng thal lhe 3,IOIHoot outfall,
wblcb wa• lnstalled In 1951, underwent. Ill
first tn.ipectlon In 11167, alter It bad been
expo!led to earthquake movement . This
inspecUon, and another made In 1969 by a
compierclal diving firm, lhowed the long
plpe lo be In good cond!Uon, he said.
By 1971, lhe llleguard department WU
able lo make an lnspecllon wlth !ta own
divtn and this, aald Sweany, waa ad.
vantageou.s because the Laguna guantr
are famlliat w\th local water conditions.
Conner told the audience he hid not
welcomed the assignment b e ca u s e
previous experience• In lnspecUng large
oullalll JD the Los Angeles area bad been
quite unpleasant
"What we found," he said, ''was that
while 1a1 Jarge oattill seems to damage
the underwater area, this small ouUalJ
aeema lo produce~ust enough nutrlenta lo
encourage a very rich growlb ol marine
life. A. comparison of otll' pictures wlth
those taken In earlier Inspections shbwed
a marked increase In marine activity
around the outfall."
His slides showed plentiful marine
plant growth around the pipe and quan-
tities of starfish, eels and assorted small
fish.
The pipe, he said, seems to be fUnc-
tionlng weU ond·only lwo of Ill I.I diffus-
ion Ports needed adl"ustment.
"It is our conclllll on," Sweany told the
council, "that this small outfall is reall y
a good one and we would welcome any
sort of research on it this time."
Ross concluded, HTbe Environmental
Protection agency and the Water Control
Board now recognize that the regional
approach to this matter may need aome
qualification." .
From Pagel
GRADES •••
whethel or not a grade Js recorded for
hi " m.
. A slmplUled system ol grading, speci-
fying only marks of Distinction, Pass and
J, was reitcted 5Z to 30.
Professlonal schools will not be af·
fected by the decision.
UCI Is the first of the nine UC cam-
puses to step away from traditional four
passing and oqe failing grade system.
The graduate school program is not
automatically covered by the new
system, but may vote to adopt it.
A substitutt! motion by William H.
Parker, associate professor or physics to
use the tenm A, B and C, Instead of
Distinction, High Pass and Pass, waa
defeated 45 to 36.
The Senate voted overwhelmingly to
assign the numerical value!! of 4, .3 and 2
respecltvely to the Dlstlnctlon, High P.asa
and Pass evaluations for the purpose of
computing a grade average.
Speaking in favor of a simple pa.sa or
no-pass system, Robert M. Saunders,
dean of engineering, said grading has no
tneaning reganUess ot what the grades
are called.
Warren L. Bostlck, dean of medicine,
said colleie would be unrullstlc if It did
not denote failure . "I propose we keep
the current system," be uld. 11lf we
want to escape our Image of quality by
eliminating grading, we'll pay the price."
Arnold Binder, professor of psychology,
said giving Fs does not eve.lue.te every
poor student. "It penalizes those who
don'I manlpulote. who donl find the
loopholes." ,
Supporting retenllon ol lhe A, II Ind C
terms, DaVid A. Brant. associate pro-
fessor of chemistry, said, "We netd a
system with famlll11lly, one that ii In-
telligible."
Bui other foeulty members dls.'lif'ed,
.. ylng all connojaUons of the clasolc.t
ayslem shoul~ be thrown ou~ so other ln-
1liluUons would nol be confuaed.
A studeol observer, aenJor 1n biology
ond psycholou Jim Page, said he was
disappointed rn the change. "One remote
1Yftem was replaced with another mean-
fnglea OM," be aaid.
•
M_,or Oflfeeu . President
,.~aguna .Sets Ta* t
N emesil Fin.al . ,
y acht:·winner·
S;idll lo .. DAILY I'll.or
ACAPULCO -Nenl..tr, Tom
Tobin'• !:tic\,.. 3' oul of the ·san
Diego Yacht ciUJ,. ft the correcled
Ume winner of the !Ith San Diego
to Acopulco Yacht Race.
In Hawaii
...
On·~-construction . . -For.Rest
By BARBARA XREIBICll
Of 1tw INH' Plitt '''" Over the strenuous objections of Mayor
Richard Goldberg and several members
of the audience, the Laguna Beach city
council has vQ_ted 4-1 to adopt ao
ordinance that will levy a construcUon
tu on ne\l' buildings in the city.
The tax, which will pl'Qduce an
estimated $25,000 annually for tht city,
will levy a once-only fee of $225 on each
new single family dwelling or duplex:
$100 on each unit In muJU-farnlly uruta,
Prom Pagel
HOSPITALS. • •
plement of 163, Olsen said.
Opposition speakers warned the council
that the area is expected to hold some
100,000 residents by 1977 but present
plans that could put more than 700
hosplthl beds into the area by that time
were far In excess of the state's hospital·
bed-per-resident ratio.
Orange City Councilman Max Roynolds
stepped into the debate to warn the coun-
cil that the plans belng mulled Thursday
night "were certain to considerably add
to the acute problems of an already
overbedded Orange C.Ounty."
Reynolds read an Orange City Council
rtsolution in opposition .$0 the Mission
C.Ommunity application. He urged the 11-
member health council to. "carefu11y ex·
amine a situaUon that is also cerlaln to
considerably add to the already high
hospital costs suffered by people in "this
area."
"I think that for you to come here and
tell us what we should do is more than a
little insulting," Santa Ana Municipal
C.Ourt Judge Paul Mast interjected to the
astonishment of Reynolds and the cheers
of Mission Community supporters.
Mission Community planner Gordon
Bricken told tht council that his hospital
is already operating at its 124-bed capaci·
ty and is turning people away due to la ck
of beds.
Bricken said the overcrowding is
seriously and adversely affecting his
hospital's specialization plans. With pa·
tients who require isolated and special at·
tentlon having .to "double up" with other
patients to the detriment of their treat·
ment.
0 We predict a population or 200,000 by
1977 in the fastest ,growing &{ea of
eailfornla/' Brlcien said. Asked to ex·
plain the dHference betweea that figure
and the sllte's projecUon ol 100,000
resldents for the Mission VleJO area be
commented: ••the .s'tate Is wrong.''
Opposition speakers reminded the
council that the Mission Community ap-
plicaUon comes at a Ume when overbed·
ding charges are being aired in Superior
Court during a trial which will resume
March 2.
Thal trial \)efore Judge Herbert
Herla.Dds is to detennine the validity of
charges by the Calliornia Health Care
Providers Association that five Orange
Cotmty hospitals CWTenlly under con-
strucllon obtained buUdlng permlla
through false preteoses.
Mission Community and Saddleback
hospitals are not included in the list of
defendant hospitals .
CHCPA lawyers claim that annual
hospital costs to the Orange County
public could climb by as much as $200
million a year if construction that will
add at least 100 hospitals in California ii
allowed to continue.
Mission Community officials explained
tbat costs at their facility now range
from $60 to $115 per day for general
aervice rooms with charges of $135 a day
and 4150 a day respectively for intensive
care and coronary care units .
Those charges were defended by a
physician who told the council they were
lower than those of comparable hospltalJ
in Los Angeles County.
In other action, the health planning
council approved the addition of 89 beds
requested by the 'l;u•tin C<>nununlty
Hospital~
Administrator Charles Dyer's ap-
plication productd no opposition. It wlll
go before the 90-member council Feb. 2f
for final approval or rejecuon.
Beach Railroad
May Be Moved
RtlocaUon Inland of th• S&nla Fe
Railroad tracks which now run along lh•
beach could be a reallly by 1978, op-
timistic Chamber of C'A'.>rnmerce officials
have said ln San Clemente.
Relocation committee CbaJrman Paul
Presley said Wednesday that the. state is
backing the plan and mlght e~en provide
funds to"ard the relocation.
Although no specific new routes for the
line have .been determined, one whk:b a~
pears on several trial maps tnvolves
picking: up the route in El Toro, then
traversing the Trabuco watershed area to
the drainage course known as Canida
Gobemldora, which evenlually leadl lo
San Miiteo canyon south of San Clemente.
Frotn Page J
PLANNERS· . • •
Into front and 1ide yard setbaclli.
-Allow the Standard 011 Company, IOI
S. C<>lsl Highway, lo Install large "llahl
boxes" over gasoUne pumps to pn:ivlde
better llighl llshllnC 1t Ibo otalk>n.
\
j •
plus '50 for each bedroom ovu one; '25
per room in hotels and motels; $100 per
pad In mobile home parks and 10 cents
per square foot of flood area in com-
mercial and lndustrlaJ buildings.
Goldberg, who had voted against the
ordinance with Councilman Peter Ostran-
der when It was passed to second reading
•t an earlier meeting, said his original
objections had become even stronger.
"We allocate funds every year to en-
courage people to come to Laguna
Beach," he said. "Sboald we continue to
enc()Ul'age them to come, then tax tlwn
when they get here? The amount we will
receive will be llll8ll In comparison Jo
what lhb will do to Laguna's Image, I
c;:an't see thLs for Laguna."
Ar<:bltecl Ostrander said he still
regarded such a tax as "immoral." New
homes, he said, not only cost more
because of stringent building codes, but
are ta-xed more heavily than older dwell ..
logs which do litUe to improve the com-
munity.
"'l11e bullder of a new residence," he
nld, "must put in curbs, gutters and
sidewalks -a person building a new
residence is really beauUfylng the com·
munity while paying double or triple the
tax on an old property. U this should cut
new construction we wouJd Jose more in
taxes than we'd gain in revenue."
He also objected to a provision that
wouJd allocate the new tax money to
financing firehouses aod olher needed
aatety equipment, but eventually agreed
to vote for the ordinance, saying he woul d
seek u amendment at the next meeting
to allocate the money to areas that would
improve the aesthetic quality of the com-
munity, such as undergrounding utilities
and improving sidewalks and streets in
the commercial areas.
Realty board president Robert Turner
l!laid the tax would place an extra burden
on developers and result in an increase in
rtnts. John Elden, 494 Hilledge Drive told
the council "you are taxing the wrong
people -new construcUon helps create
the kind of city you're trying to build and
hotels and motels conb'ibute so much to
the clly they should have a subsidy Jn.
atead of a tax."
City Manager Lawrence Rose said
surveys indicate such taxes have no el·
feet on the pace of construction and that
these fears were comparable to those
that accompanied imposition of the bed
tax. Tht tax, he said, would be added to
the total cost or a residenci and amor.
tlzed over a period of many years. A
similar tax bas been effect m Newpin't
Beach for flv! years, Rose said.
C.Ouncilman Edward Lorr commented,
"We have to tum to new sources of
revenue to meet the demands of different
gl'O\JP'· Al: the community grows,
demands for services grow. Even this
$25,000 wouJd represent four cents per
$100 of assessed valuation Oil the pr,operty
tax."
C.Ouncllman Roy Holm said it was true
the amount would 'not save the clty
budge~ )lut tt woljld help fill 1 need. "We
ire all talking in matters of principle,"
be said. Holm's motion to adopt the tax
ordinance was seconded by Cotmdlman
Charlton Boyd.
Three Newport Beach yacht•
wound u.p in aecood, third and
fourth places. Burke Sawyer's
Atorrante. was sewnd. B o b
Beacuharnp'a Dorothy O was third
and Peter Grant'J Nalu JV was
fourth.
Yacht. still al .sea today . were
Alert, rt miles; Sangrita II, l3S
miles,· and Rainy Day, 192 miles.
None of these could affect the
overall standings, according to raee-
ofliclala.
Fro1n Page l
·REGIONAL •••
already have given b>prlnelple approval
of the idea.
The remainder of the agencies will be
(?Ontacted in a matter of days, said
:Moulton-Niguel Manager Carl Kymla.
The idvantages of the regional ap.
proacb were made clear recently when
SEl\RA, the South Easl Regional
Reclamation Authority, obtained several
million dollars in government grants to
improve a waste-treatment plant to serve
nearly every member agency.
The new authority, tentatively named
the "Aliso Water Management Agency,"
could build $40-rnillion worth of im·
provements with the possibility of 81).per.
cent government financing over the next
year's perlC14., Kymla sugge5*ed.
The regional approach to waste treat.
ment already has the hearty blessing of
the Regional Water Quality Control
boards of the San Diego and Santa Ana
regions.
The availability of state and federal
clean·water grants is a deflnlte selling
point as well.
Operating expenses of the new agency
would amount to about $4,500 a year with
the perpetuation of the home-rule con·
cepl.
Last Rites Held
For Anna Tappey
Anna M. B. Tappey, 387 Cypress Drive,
a l~year resident of Laguna Beach, died
in San Diego Wednesday at the age of 61.
She Was a member of the First Church
of Cbrl3t Scientist ol Laguna Beach and
of the La'4111 Beach Art Association and
Community Concerta Association.
A naUve of Massachusetts, Mitt Tip-
pey had lived In catllotnl! for 34 years
and was employed as a bookkeeper by
the county of Los A~etea for 30 years
prior to her retirtment four years ago.
She Is survived by two brothers,
Wllllam H. Tappey of Pico Rivera and
Leopold C. Tappey of Lebanon, Conn.
Burial was at Pacific View Memorial
Park. There were no funeral services:.
af
I
Cameo
By HllLEN TDOl\IM
KANEOHE MAllINE AIR STATION,
Olhu, Hawaii (UPI) -On ground ncred
to Hawallan anUqulty 11 the meetlOg
place of kings, Prea!dent Nllon mlAd
and etudled loday for hll lllstorlc trip lo
111eet the ruler. of modern Cbinl.
NiJ:on, accompanied by hi.a wift Pat
11nd oCficial staff, fl ew from 1nowy
Washinglon lo f1ll'llY Hawaii 'lburwdoy
for 1 traoquU rest to adjust lo cbanrUii
Ume tones and for fln1hlr study befott
bis departure for Cbinl Bunday,
Tbe President stepped oll the pm!~
llal jet "Splrll of '71" Into 1111111)1 n.
degree weather 1t thll Morine COtpa
base to the cheers of 1 crowd of 1.ooe persons.
Draped with a colorful 'red nowered lei,
Nixon ~ot Into a long, black Wblte Hou11
limousme and went to the boDle of Brtf.
Gen. Victor A. Annltronr, commander ol
the base, 15 mile!! from Honolulu.
The Nixons will spend two nights in
Hawaii and anoth,er on Guam before ar·
riving at Shanghal on Mcnday (Chlna
time ) for a weeklof conrerences with the
leaders of the People's Republic of China.
The two-day stopover ln Hawall and the
overnight stay on Guam Saturday nlght
were recommended by Dr. Walter Tkach,
Nixon's personal physlclan, to ov~rcome
the fatiguing physical expense of chang.
ing time zones.
Nixon seemed deeply touched by the
warmth of the bipartisan coniresslonaJ
sendoff he received in Washington Thur~
day, and a traditional aloha welcome OD
his arrival in Hawaii.
Kaneohe ls built on a peninsula still
called "11-fokatu" -sacred because
Hawaii's fi rst Icing, Kamehameha the
Great, chose i~ as a site for a royal
meeting place.
"It's rtice to spend a day In Hawaii
before moving across the world," he told
the airport crowd as he moved among
them shaking hands. "I want to sit in the
sun and get a tan."
With an entourage of about 150 persons,
Including White House aides a n d
members of the press corp<, Nixon will
arrive in Peking via Shanghai at 11 :30
a.m. local Ume Monday (7 :30 p.m. PST
Sunday),
McGovern Party Set
By Laguna Democrats
A "petition party·• for Democratic
Presic{ential c·andidate Sen. George
~tcGovem will be held at the Hotel
Laguna at 9:30 p.m. Tuesday, under the
spoosorship of lhe Orange County
McGovern campaign ·Committee, Mrs.
Tommie Gunn of the Laguna McGovern
committee armounced today.
Petitions to place McGovern's name on
the DemocraUc primary ballot will be
available for signing at 12:01 a.m.
Wednesday, Mrs. Gunn said, and voter
registrars will be on duty untll the mJd·
night signing hour for new voters, at
those who must re-register In order to
vote in the primary. Refreshmenta: will
be wved.
•
n..,. fine tabl" from Herit•9• Fumf·
fure ere juit • pert of our exciting mid-
winter 1ale which i1 now in full 1wtng..
Selected 9'\"'P' from such well •now•
lines as Henredon, Herit19t, Drexel and
much more are 1vti11ble at sub1t1ntl1I
11vin91.
Sin: D24-H22
.... ,,., SALE $135
C1mto1 extenslYt fable collection of.
ftl"I cl111ic ltalien 1tylin9 created for
• fufniture connoi111ur. Th11·e ftn1 plec.
es feature burl wood fops and 1fain
resrstant pull frtyi for your conv.n-
i•nc•.
DEALERS FOR: HrNREDON -DRfXEL -
7Nl11111
INTERIORS
LAGUHA BEACH
Sin W22+02Mt21
.... ,,., SAl,E $135
HERITAGE -KARASTAN
TORRANCE NEWPORT BEACH
1727 W11ldlff Dr., 642-2050
OHN PllDAY "TIL f
345 North Cot1I Hwy. 494-6551 23649 H1wthome Blvd.
1211J s11~1m o,.. Prw.r 'Ill t
,..,_. ............... ,. A..n .. 11 A!t-H'SID,
-, .. """ ....... -.,_.., .... 11 .. '
-..
•
•
•
h
Co
I
s
:A
lnl
lhe
bre
ing ..
sea aay
be
s
ba.
dl•
I«
•
' Saddlehaek ·. .
Today'~ Fln•I
N.Y. Stoeks
l
VOL. 65, NO. 42, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1972 TEN CfNTS
• '•
Hospital Expansion Ol('d • Ill Stormy Hearing
A bitterly fought public hearing stud-
ded with allegations of "ovef bedding"
and "profiteerlng'' ended Thursday night
with.Ute approval of the Orange County
Health Planning Council's he a 1th
facllities review committee for an ~bed
expansion at the Mission Community
Hospital.
The committee voted 12 to 2 after five
hours of debate in the city of Costa
Mesa's council chamber for an expar_ision
that will bike the Mission Viejo bOspital's
bed capacity lo !13.
But the final declalon rests with the
organization's '91).mernber council. They
will meet Feb. 24 in tbe Santa Ana county
.. courthouse to deliver the final verdict on
the controversial Mission Community ap-
plication.
Almost all the opposition Thursday
night came from the rival · Saddleba.ck
Community Hofil)jil.J,~ -~ntly under
construction and scheduled to .add 150
beds in May, 1973,.to what wu descrJbed
"Clipping~ Judge
'Time Off for Hair cut, Shave
By TOM BARLEY
Of Ille D.llb P'li.t ll•ff
Orange County's "flogging judge'' and a persuasive. prisoner made a
bargain in CQUrt 'Thursday. The judge agreed to cut the prisoner's jail ae.ntence
provided the 27-yeir-old man got a haircut.
It all began when Superior Court Judge William Murray, who once
sentenced another cowity jail inmate to a flogging, firmly sentenced Michael
Thomas Joyce of Costa Mesa to one year in jail for the long-haired prisoner's
violation of probation. Joyce had been on probation as part or a sentence im-
posed two years ago for a burglary conviction and narcotics oUenses.
''Wow, man, that's a Jot," winced Joyce, shaking his shou1der length
hair.
"Get a haircut and 1'11 knoc5 off 60 days," grinned J udge Murray.
"Right on, man. Where's the barber shop?" replied Joyce.
"Okay," commented the judge. "We've got us a deal."
"Say judge," commented Joyce as Judge Murray got ready for the nerl
item on his calendar. "What about 'my mustache? It ought to be worth a Utile
something."
"I'd say 30 days," Judge Murray responded.
"Judge," annoW1ced Joyce, "you've made yourself a deal."
"I'm sure glad y1>u don't sell magazine subscriptions, Mr. Joyce ,''
chuckled Judge Murray to the delight Df courtroom onlookers, ''you're a very
persuasive prisoner .''
The happy Joyce left to begin his nine-month spell in Orange County Jail.
"There's a method in my madness," Judge Murray later told a news.
man. "ft's going to be pretty hard for that well-trimmed young man to step
back lolo the drug culW...." .
Judge Murray's famous flogging sentenet was never carried out because
tile llOUllly sheriff reluse4 to administer "1e ~~ ·thp ¥111-!&!er
was changed lo a mono modinl form of punlsbmeoL
To :Draw Lou
New Irvine Planners Set
Organizational Meeting
The seven-member Irvine Planning
Commission will formally organize. and
draw k>ts for length of terms of service
at a meeting set for 9 a.m. Saturday in
city offi~!I Town Center, 4201 Campus
Drive. ..
City administrative consultant William
Woollett Jr. will serve as the temporary
H ung ry B urgla,.
I nvades Vie jo
School Eate ry
;}t. sloppy burglar who can't resist
snacks broke into La Paz lntermediate
School in Mission Viejo Wednesday night
and indulged in what was termed a "free
for all" with ice CM!&m and frozen ham-
b\D'gers.
Don Hickman, principal of La Paz, said
the vandal entered the snack bar by
breaking glass in the wjndow and unlock-
ing it.
"About $100 worth of lee cream was
scattered all om the .Coor. It's hard to
say how much was eaten or carried off,"
be µiid.
cbainnan of the planning commissioo un--
til a permanent chainnan ii nominated
and elected.
Theo, at 10 a.m. the Irvine City Council
will join planning commissioners ror an
hour and a half presentation by James
Erick.son, assist.ant acting clty attorney.
He will brief councilmen and com•
missioners on the legal aspects or plan-
ning.
Next week both the council and the
plaMing commission will seek a broader
planning education.
Woollett, the five councilmen and seven
planning commissioners, will go to San
Jose Wednesday where they'll attend a
thretHiay California League of CiUes
planning inslitute.
All will fly at city.expense for a total of
$457 and stay at the San Jose Hyatt
House for a total cost of $340. The con-
ference tab, which include! meals ls $50
each for a total of $650.
'Ibe plaMing institute ls the most com·
prehensive training program for planning
commissioners offered in California, ac-
cording lo Aeling· City ~ttorney H.
Rodger Howell. ".'II... • •
Saturday:S organizatlou.at meeting was .
to have ~tuded a presentation by the 1 Irvine Company on Its general plan for
the city.
However, it has been put off until alter
city orticials return lroql San Jose.
during the hearing as a "vastly overbed-
ded" central valley area or Orange Coun-
ty.
Mission Community Hospital is .a
privately owned facility. The Saddleback
hospital was described Thursday night as
a nonprofit facility backed by the
Lutheran Church hospital organization.
Saddleback Community officials, led by
secreiarY Edward L._ Olsen. repeatedly
challenged the Mission Community plans
to the accompaniment of boos and cat
calll from an apparently hostile au·
dlenct.
Olsen wa_rned the council that popula-
tion density prediction,, -prepared by the
st.ate clearly indicate a slow down in the
population shift to the centnl valley area
-generally deftned by most .speakers
Thursday night as including Mission Vie-
jo, El Toro, Leisure World, Laguna Hills,
Laguna NJguel and Cap~trano Highlands.
Speaking be.fort the approval of the 89'-
bed expansion, Olsen told the council that
the area would be saturated within the
next live years by 418 beds ln four
hospitals with plana for still furl.her con·
strucUon.
Olsen said that was more than double
the nwnber of beds that should be pro-
vided under state planning chart! made
available to the council for consideration
prior to its cteclsion Thursday night.
He pointed out that his own hospital,
which received planning approval two
years ago at a tbne when the Mission
Community application was denied by the
now derunct Health PlaMln& Asaoclation,
wou1d be adding 150 bedJ to what he said
were Mission Community's 126, South
Coast Community Hospital's 153 and Sam
Clemente Community Hospital's 116.
The San Clemente hosi)ital il!I presently
under construction. And Sou.th Coast
Community Hospital iJI South Laguna
plans to add 116 beds to its current com-
(S.. HOSPITALS, Page I)
Death Penalty l(illed
State Court Decision 'Spares' 105 Inmates
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -The
California Supreme Court ruled today
thal the death penalty is unconstitutional.
The vote was 6-1. r. -
The decision affects 100 inen and five
women under sentence of death in the
state's prisons.
They include Sirhan B. Sirhan, con--
victed slayer of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy,
and Charles Manson, convicted in the
Sharon Tate murders.
The New JerRy Suprtme Court
overturned the state's death penalty in
January. The court said the law was un-
constltuUonal because persons convicted
after pleading innocent were subjected. to
the death penalty while those who plead.
ed no defense were subject to a max·
* * * * * ·ti
McClellan Hearing
'First' Under Option
Copvicted killer William Westwood
"The Man" MCCiellan loday became. the
llrsl occupanl of de~~"fl,lo f~ ~ •cliolt take• ln the 4f lbe ~lf
Court's njection of the death pen&Jty.
McClellan, 301 ol Alllambra ""
onlered by Orange County Superior Court
Judge WWiam M!l<ray to return lo his
c;purtr.oom ~ II for wbal Is lenlaUvely
acbeduled .aa a pretrial bearing.
Jt ls Just as likely, Laguna Ntguel al·
torney Tom Keenan said, that McClellan
wUI be formally sentenced on that date to
Hie imprisonment for his killing In 1967 of
two patrons at the GaiLight bar ln Stan-
ton.
McClellan was to have gone through a
rerun of the penalty phase of the Superior
Court trial in which be was defended by
Keenan.
The Alhambra man was one of a
number of death row occupants who got a
second crack at the penalty phase when
the C.alllornia Supreme Court ruled that
trlal judges had unfairly barred pros·
pecUve jurors opposed to the death
penalty from deliberations.
Keenan today predicted s i m j I a r
resentencing to life terms for two other
Orange CoW1ty occupants of death row -
Gary Phoenix of Costa Mesa and
Frederick Saterfield of Santa Ana.
Phoenix, 28 drew the deatll rap last
year on multiple counts of forcible rape
and kidnaplng while he was employed at
a Huntington Beach health spa.
Saterfield got the death penalty for the
killing of his commonlaw-wife and her
daughter at a time when he was on
parole from an attempted murder con-
viction.
Reaction among Superior Court judges
and lawyers today to the news of the high
Actor's Kin Mass Set
LOS AljGELES (UPI) -A requiem
'fnass was to be said today for Marie
CassaniU, . the mot.her-in-law of en-
tertainer Danny Thomas. Mrs. Clssanltl
dled Tuesday al Glendale Adventist
Hospital.
Teacher Battles
AhductOr, Flees
After Slashing
A plu<:ky Garden Grove teacher ignored
the blood pumping from her slashed left
hand and the lmife held 1t her throat
Thursday night ind managed to fJgbt her
way !tee from a husky male aSsailant
who leaped into her car at· an El Toro in--
tersection.
· The 28-year-old teacher at Mark Twain
Elementary School in Garden Grove, told
Orange County sheriff's offietrs that her
attacker leaped into her car while she
waited at the inter.section of VaJencia and
J\,venida de Carlotta.
The slightly buill woman told deputies
that he shoved a knife against her throat,
told her to drive on and clearly indicated
with an obscenity what she cou1d eipect
a little later.
Witnesses told deputies that the victim
proved tD be more thu a match ror her
burly adversary. 'They said he ran from
the car doubled over after his potential
victim delivei-ed several kicks.
''That gal took care of herseU," a
witness told deputies. "I'll bet those kids
at her school don't dare step out of line."
Investigate~ are today hunting the
young assailant. .
They said it ls possible that he could be
the man who kk1naped the woman driver
of a catering truck In the El Tol'O area
two weeks ago and forced the woman to
drive him to tbe Encinitas area of San
Diego County before she ron lo freedom.
imum or tile lmprlsonm~nt.
Several stales have outlawed the death
penalty through legislative action.
On Nov. 18, 1968, the California .high
court ruled that juries in the state can
decide constituUonally under their own
discretion whether the punishment for
murder shall Qe death or life lm·
prisorunent.
DAILY ,ILOT lf.llf Pbtlt
FROM DISNEY TO IRVIN E
City, Secrot1ry SchandoL
H()usewif e First
Permanent .Basis
I rvine Employe
By GEORGE LEIDAL
ot ffle DlllY Plllt Stiff
That decision was returned on an ·~
peal which stayed all e1ecuUons alnce
Nov. 14, 1967. ·
Justice Marshall F. McComb waa the
lone dJSStnter in the latest 45-page oplDo
ion. p
The U.S. Supreme Court has before tt
several cases on the death penalty but
has not ruled.
The last execution Jn the United States
was in Colorado In 1967.
The Callfornia court, the state's highest
tribunal, heard oral arguments in
January on the question or whether
"evolving standards or decency" have
outlawed the death penalty.
Anthony Amsterdam, S t a n f o r d
University law professor arguing for the
American Civil Liberties Union, said the g:-
death penalty is spottily applied to "tbe
miserable and socially unacceptable. '1
Because of this, All\Slerdam said,
atrocities can qe ,copunlt!ed which oocl&-
ly would not c~ il unllorml!J •Po
pll<*I. .
He contended that "lite de1th pen11t1
has . beea repudlatad by enllclttened
1tandards of d«ency."
DePl!ly Ally. Gen. Ronald M. G.Orge,
~Pini for lh• stale, said copllal punllh-
ment baa been recognized u Jqltlmato
during the enUre history the Unlled ·
States and Caijlomia:.
George said the islue Is not ·whether
the death penalty ls socially or polltica11y
desirable, but whether there Is a specillc
prohibition In UM! Constitution that
forbids its adoption by the Legislature.
Thl case specifically concerned Robert
Page Anderson, sentenced to death In the
1965 killing or a San Dtego shopkeeper.
A1!o argued was the case of John Brit.
ton Miller, condemned to death in the 1967 slaying of a deputy sheriff In
Modesto. •
In Sacra.mento, Gov. Ronald Reagan's
jtreaa· secretory said a decision had not
been made on whether to appeal the
court's ruling. •
"We won't have any comment on the
decision until we have seen Jt and read
ll," said Poul Beck.
The Death Row Inmates In California
represerit one-seventh of the nearly 700
condemned men and women in the United
Sta lei.
Twenty of tQe San Quentin Inmates ex-
hausted. almosl all other appeals ind
were pinning their hopes for Ille on the
Suprtme Court decllion.
Since 1938, 190 men and four women
have been executed in San Quentin's ap-
ple-green gaa chamber, built In 1938 and
scheduled lo shut down by the .end of
1974. A new one was to be constructed.
Fish-crushed Man OK
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Ferman
Gusman, 48, was reported In fair con-
dition today after a 200-pound tuna
carcass fell on him in the bold of a
flJ:hing boat where be was workiJl&.
Orute Hickman said 'no damage waa done to
the refrigerator because II Is purposely
kept unlocked.
"It was a horrible mess for the snack
bar manager and custodian/' he said. Waste Proposal Unveiled
A trillngual hoosewire lrora UnlVtnlly
Park wbo once pkled Frellclt and ' Gtr..
man 1peaklng visitors to Dl.~land
through Fanta..yland Is the first perma ..
Pent employe of urban America's tomor4
rowland -the new city or lrvlne.
Mrs. Anlt' Schandel, 35, an attractive,
blond motlter of a seven-year old
daughter, bas joined t.he city staff as
Weat•er Because the school Is on double
11essions, Junchetl are not served on the
campus. But Hickman "" said many
students use the sna '< bar and were not
ajlle to purchase anything but juice and
milk until about 9:30 a.m.
The principal said the matter has been
tumed over lo tile OrlJ111e County Sher-
Uf'a Office for lnveatlgallon.
C f la, d A A• d secretary to administrative consull\Dt Regional Plan for oast, n 1i reas ire w~11~1v~~116~,;!;~.y. Mrs . Schandel 1.
nearly every member agmey. a nafurallzed American cltlun and Is
More hazy sunshine 11 forecast
ror Saturday, follow1n& mornlog
low clouds and £oc. Tempera·
lures wlll be mild -Jn the ll0'1.
Lows tonight in the 40's.
A similar break.in occurred a few
.weeks ago with the vand1J showing a
1tmllar lack of will power.
All thal .... mining were potato cbipa
and cookies.
$60,000 in Diamonds
Stolen in Oakland
OAKLAND (AP) -A young pnman
h11 made 1orr with $60,000 worth of cul
diamonds ID the robbery or an Oakland
je,..lry manulacturlng firm, poUce ny.
• The !tarry Kahan Jewelry Monufac-
turq Oo. waa robbed ~Y belon _,
Tltunclty.
I "
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of .. DllJ ........
Details wt.rt unveiled Thllrllday for a
major regional approicb to South Coul
and Inland wam trealmenl Wblcb could
Involve the blendlrc of oh aeporata agon-
cies lnlo a reaionaJ authority qualifying
fm-mlillona of dollan In aovernment
grant.I.
The plan, aired durtnc 1 meeting of the
Boulton NJguel Water Dlslrlc~ would In·
volve sil treatment aUUes Jn drainage
ottu str1tcblng .from Irvine lo South
LaRUDl.
The concept Is nearly ldtnllcal lo the
Plan which launched the IUCCOOUI SER·
RA vent~ In the Cap!Jtrano Valley and
Laguna Nlsuel where aevm • age~lts
banded torelber lo wort out waste prol>-
lems on a realonttl fonn1t.
• The. city ol Los-Beocb, bext b1
•
massive waste treatment problems, will
be asked to join the new authority oen
weet.
Beakles Moulton Niguel and Loguna
Beach, other agencies welcome to join
the new 1utbority are the Irvine Ranch
Water Dlstrlc~ South Laguna Sanltory
District, Et Toro Water Dtstrtct and the
Loi Albos Water Dlstrlcl.
Moulton.Niguel and El Toro dlrtclora
already have given In-principle approyal
of the Idea.
The te(nainder of the agencies will be
contacted In a mailer of d•y•, said
MouJton-NliUel Manager Carl Kymia.
The advantages: of the rcglonal ap-
pro1ch were made c:lear recenUy whtn
SERRA. the South East Regional
Reclamation Authority, obtained oevual
mtnlon doll1r1 In 1overnmenl 'llJ'lnll lo Improve 1 woste-lreobnenl. plant lo aerve
•
-• I
The new authortty, tentaUvely named married to a Pacific Telephone Company
the 0 AJbo Water Management ~ency,'' eucuUve. They have lived ln u .. iverslty
could build $40-mllllon worth-of Im-Park for lhne years.
provementl with the pollibWty ol ~ Following training at ~ Berill! school
t en! "··-•·· ... nm of lanruages In 'Franldtirt, Gtrman1, ctn govemm ....._. ....... over -= Ao11a . wu granted In Interpreter's year'o period, Kymla lllllflest.d. ,, J I "' ,_ lo ' k th The ff•Jonal a--i. to w11te. lrea~ uiploma qua u,,ng ·~• r wor at e · -•r-· tlnJted NatlOns. • men! alM!ady baa the hearty bleaalna o( ' She op~' for International ' relations
., the Re1ional W•ter Quallly Control dulles 'it' Anaheim's "United ·Nolions"
1 bo1rd1 ~f tbe Sln ·Die&o and Santa ~ entertainment atlracUon, Disneyland.
· regiona. For a )'.ear, Mrs, Schandel Was a hoeteu, The 1voil1billty or state and federal an experience she says, "l loved."
clean-waler llJ'IDll b 1 definite .. 111ng For the post 4hree yea.,, she haa been
point as well . a legal HCretary for the Rutan and
Operellng expe-or !lie new agency Tucker law !Inn In Santi Ana -tile !Inn
would smoont to aboµt '4.500 • year with which b act1n1 as ftvlne'a legal couDJtl.
the perpetuation of the bomwule con-Sbe met lrvlne'o temporary clly manager
cepl. Woollelt when he vi.siled the municipal
Jolnl effort. tn capital expenditures CJJI • la11~<1.,.rtm1nl Woollett wooed her
(llei-llBGIONAL, Pqo I) • (lleo EMPLOY!:, P11e I)
• • ' I • '
INSWE TODAY
_Riuerride, Countv'1 Notional
Dote Fuliool ll 1'"llgb1g Old
Baghd<l4 to So•~ni Collfornf<J
flYr 10 dau1 s!arting lodaU
l~ro•gh-J'eb. 27. A 1lofy In to-
da11'1 W tlktndtr Qlvt& the dt•
tail&. • .
MwfHI ""* 14 "•11911111 " ..... Of'lllM C-v11" 14 aftl111r•"" zr,,,
SWl\'lt Pwttt 14 '""' .. ,, Si.di w,.qtt 1 .. lf "*"'.... • _..,. ....
W•lllW 4 ...,,.... ....... '"" ---.. w-....
1
·.
' .
% OAJLY PILOT SI
DUJing 'V'
For V andalisnt
An ir.1ne ·11nn 11 •llbJnc today
tllal Ila llOdunial Ind wnrut.d --·1 lllJu&bl " aslq Dl4!. For tile vlalt to th< firm'• park· q lot at o.hlqulsl and Yearllng
' Tb!ulday night ccm 1be Dial Elec-
tric Company more lhan ll,000
wOrth Of oopper and aluminium
11'irintl and drillJns ~ulpment.
Orange County lheriff'1 oUicers
said the intruders smashed the
locks pn two parted truckJ and
tbeD .emptied tbe vehlcles of con-
1..ta •hlch IDclud<d more ll>4n
1,000 (oel ol coppe; wire.
Nature . Walk
Set Saturday
In .Canyons
A pilot program of natllJ'e walks
through normally closed areas of the
Irvine Ranch begins Saturday when
aludenl1 from ·University Hlgh School
toh lbe first tour.
Wll)Jam R. M...... lrvlne Company
praldent,· said D1tiin walk Pl'Oll'llllll
through Bommer, Shady and San Gan-
yons will provide acceu to flora, fauna,
geologic formations and areas o f
archeoioglcal Interest. Until now, special
ptrmlts for such study tours were grant·
ed to limited numbers ot scie~tlsts.
Archleologlcal Research Inc. of Costa
htesa, a flnn awarded a grant to
cocrdlnate sdentlflc erploraUon of Irvine
Company Widl, baa been ccmmlssioued
to IUpervile Ille natur. walk program,
MHon aald.
'!be tour>, led by qualilied guides, will
be conducted twice each Saturday during
lhe term of !be pUot program. Each par-
ty will be limited to IO persom drawn
from 1tudent groups, ARI olllclal1 said.
The experlmental program Includes
atildy of methods of moving groups of
people through areas of lhe ranch without
• disturbing points of Interest or Irvine
Company cattle operaUons.
"
Irvine Company planners say Ibey hope
to aee the Joc!usion of a network of
eq...irian and hlklng traJIJ In Ille Irvine
General Plan.
''We hope tbe e>per!ence gained during
the pilot project will allow upanslon of
the nature wall< proJect to Include lchool
chlldra and orpnized groups and even-
tutlly U,, 1eneru publlc," 1>1uon 11id.
l!ni IJigh'~, ~s.
Program kud~d
By City Council
'!be Irvine City Council this w.U
prahed the American Field Service pr1>
gram al University High Schoo' and
formally declared the week of April 2 to 8
as AFS' Week In Irvine.
Mrs. Ralph Davies of 4186 Sandburg
Way, Irvine, aought the cowteil resolutiOn
and told th< coun<ll the AFS hopes to
trlng two foreign students to Unlvenity
lllgb nen. year.
Mn:. Davies aald e•entl planned during.
AFS Week to rllae f1llldl lnclude a dinner
and fashion show al lhe higb &Choo! AprU ..
She described Ille AFS " having
sprung from a group of World War I am-
Wlance drivers wbtch launched the first
exchange of studenta between families
and scboola of dllfuent nations more
than 50 years ago.
?-ln. Davies said funds are needed also
to beip pay the cosla of two Uni High
students awaiting sunu:oer uslgnment to
foreign countries.
OUMel COAh' -
DAILY PILOT
OIWfOI! COAIT P'UILJSHllfO c.'CM~NfY
lel.erl N. W•H
Pr•IHftt • ...i Pl#IW.
Jttli: 111. e.,1.., Vb .,...... Md 0...1 ,.,,..,..
liM1•1 K•tdf ~•nw·
late1n11 A. .M•?'-l•t ...-.ir. 111 .....
C\1rl11 H. L... 11~"·" "· Ntn ~M-.~ ,....,. 0-°"" -•: DI W•t ..., ''"" .....,.... IHit~I ,UU M.....,. .... !evm ....... llMfri: m l'..wt A-... 1111* hedlt 1M 19«1 ... ~, ... a. CIMWllti M Mtrlllc II QilnlM l't ...
. .
Fnm r.,. 1
HOSPITALS. • •
pleme1il ol l&I. Olaea uid.
()ppoalttoo tpeaken wll'lled th< COWlCU
1hat the ..... !I .. peeled to bold llOID8 ' . . 100,000 mideMa by lJ'l'I bal -I
plam that coold put mar. -700
bospltal beda Into tile ..... by 11111 -
wm far In ....., of the atate'1 hospital. ·
bed-per-resident 'tlllio.
Orange City Councilman Mai: Reynolda
stepped into the debate to warn the coun-
cil that the plana being mulled Thursday
night "were certain to considerably add
to the acute problems or an already
overbedded Orange County."
!leynolds read an Orange City Council
rtS-Olution ln Op(>(lsitlon to the Mlsskln
Commun.lty application. He urged tbe JS.
member health council to "carefully u~
amine a situatJon that is aJJo certaln to
COllAiderably add to the already high
hospital costs suf£ered by people In this
area."
"I think that for you to come here and
tell us what we should do Is more than a
little lnsultJns," Santa Ana Municipal
Court Judge Paul Mast interjected to the
·astonishment of Reynolds and the cheers
fl(Misslfln Community supporter•.
Mission Community planner Gordon
Bricken told the council th.at his JlQspital
is already operating at its 124-bed capaci-
ty ind 1S turning people away due to lack
of beds.
Bricken said the overcrowdlng ls
aerlously and advenely affecting his
hospital's specialization plans. With pa-
tients whfl require Isolated and special at·
tention having to "dfluble up" with other
patients to the detriment of their treat.
ment.
"We predict tr population of 200,000 by
l!m In the fastest growing area flf
California," Bricken said. Asked to ex·
plain the difference betwee11 that figure
and the State's projection of 100,090
residents for the Mission Viejo area he
commented: "the state is wrong."
OpposJtion speakers reminded the
council that the Mission Community ap-
plication comes at a time when overbed-
ding charges are being aired in Superior
Court during a trial which will resume
March 2.
That trial before Judge Herbert
Herlands is to determine the validity flf
charges by the Callfflrnia Health Care
Providers Association that five Orange
Count'Y hospitals C¥JTently under con-
strucUoo obtained bulldJns permits
through false pretenses.
Mission Comm.unity and Saddleback
hospitals are not Included in th< list of
deiendanl hospitals.
CHCPA lawyers claim that annual
hospital-costs to tbe orange County
public could cllmb by as much as $200
'miUlon a year ii coutrucllon that will
ed«;it jtls!,J.111, ho'pttals ,111 C.lilornla " aJlilwed to coiitliiue.
· Mlsllo• Community 9fficlals uplslned
· that cost! at their facility now range
from l60 to Ill~ per day1 for general
service roMU wllb c;!lar!IOf of 11111 1 <lay ol!a' f!llO a day respOctlveiy for Intensive
care and coronary care wiits.
Those charges were defended by a
phy&lcian who told the councll they were
lflWet than those of comparable hospitals
in Los Angeles County.
In other acUon, lhe health p~g
council 1pproved the addition of 89 beds
requ...ted by lhe Tustbt Community
Hospital.
Adminlatrator Charles Dyer'a ap-
plication produced no opposition. It will
go before the 96-mimber councll Feb. 24
for final approval or rejection.
I.rvine to Delay
Pepperdine Plan
For Night School
A Pepperd1ne University plan to flpen
an evening college program in the Irvine
Industrial Complei:, once held up by
county government officials, has been
further delayed by the Irvine Clty Coun-
cil.
A zoning technicality on permitted uses
within the industrially zoned area was
cited by James Erickson, deputy acting
city attorney. He urged the council
Wednesday night to table the Pepperdine
request until he had time to review the
propos.aJ's legal implications.
The matter was raised when Pep-
perdine University asked for a building.
permit freeze exception to make interior
improvement! of the Signal Landmark
Building, 1780! Sky Park Circle, in lhe Jn.
dustrial park. The same building had
been considered as a possible locatJon for
a temporary city hall.
John Wolfe, county planning depart-
ment staff member assigned to the newly
incorporated city, explained why county
flfflclals denied the permit.
\Volte said that if the college served on-
ly people ln the industriaI comple.z: it
would quality for a permit since lhe
building in question ls in an industrial
support atta.
Pepperdine. which hopes to offer eve--nlni ciwes in educatioo psychology and
bus.hless, was told by coonty official. to
seek a tone change.
Councilman John Burton uked staff to
prepare an Impact report Oii the poesl-
bte zone change, should lhe council be
wed to coosider IUch 1 ciwlga to allow
lhe university evenJns progr1m to
operate lo lrv1ne.
W. Pence Daau, Pepperdlne . vice
president for university etlMJns, said the
Signal Umdmark bulldr,,. might 1trve
lhe temporary evtning colirg1 for from
three to Ove l"l!'-
Peppenflne Unlwrslty operates a law coll"' campus in santa Ana. Dacus lald,
"we are ~ lddilional la<!filieol lor 1
profminnaJ "9icd In Orq1 County." •
-
,,,., ,, ... ,.
Says .Jobs Vp
Labor Secretary James D.
Hodgson testifies before the
House-Senate Joint Economic
Committee that since July em-
ployment has risen 1.3 mil-
lion, a trend he predicts may "soo n begin. to have an impact
on unemployment."
No-fail Syst,em
~ains Support
Of Senate Panel
By THOMAS PALMER
Of flll D.lllY .. , .. , ,,.,,
The UC Irvine Academic Senate Thurs.-
day traded ABCD and F for DHP and J.
At a lively two and one-half hour
meeting complete with m o t i o n 1 ,
substitute motions and amendments to
amendments, the faculty m e m b er s
dumped the traditional grading system in
favor of Distinction, High Pass, Pass and l notations.
Students will no longer fail courses.
If sufficient progress Is not made for
the student to be given credit in a course,
J· will recorded denoting "continuing
study."
But before the system is put into ac-
tion, it must be approved by the nine-
campus, university-wide faculty senate
and then go to the UC Assembly in June
for ratification.
UCI Senate chairmen A l e x e l
Maradudin said the larger UC senate
''would be the primary hurdle," but that
little oppcsition was expected either th'ere
or in.the Aasembly.
Before it!: final JS to 15 decision the
Senate rejected flther more conservative
and more bold plans for altering the
gri,ding system.
Jay -Martin, English pro£ts110r and
chalrnlfJl 'of the Educational Policies
Gomm/ttee, made the motion to adopt the
new system.
Before it passed, the Senate had ap-
proved a motion to eliminate the grade
equivalents flf D and F from any proposal
they considered.
An amendment to that mfltion to allaw
a student to accept a D grade if be
desired was defeated twice: Robert s.
Cohen, assistant prflfessor Of drama,
said, "A student should not have a say in
whether or not a grade is recorded for
him."
A simplified system of grading, speci-
fying only marks flf Distinction, Pass and
J, was rejected 52 to 30.
Professional schools will not be af.
fected by the decision.
UCI is the first of the nine UC cam.
puses to step away from traditional four
passing and flne failing grade system.
The graduate school program is not
automatically covered by the new
aystem, but may vote to adopt it.
A substitute motion by William H.
Parker, associate professor of physics to
use the terms A, B and C, Instead of
Distinction, High Pass and Pass, was
defeated 45 to 36.
The Senate voted overwhelmingly to
assign the numerical values flf 4, 3 and 2
respecltvely to the Distinction, High Pass
and Pass evaluations for the purpcise flf
computing a grade average.
From Page J
EMPLOYE ...
away from the law firm to aid the 11ew
city.
"I am delighted to work in our new
city," Mrs, Schandel said. Besides being
Woollett's secretary to whom she de-
scribes as being "a great boss wilh a
wonderful sense or humor," she will soon
become lhe deputy clerk, relieving Act-
ing Clty Clerk Mrs. Noris.sa Brandt oC
some of the tasks that she has handled
since incorporation.
J\1rs. Schandel conresses she has the
"travel bug" and l\as travelled ei:·
tensively and lived in Great Britain,
Brazil and Venezuela.
An avid gardener, she daily brings
fresh arrangements or Uowers !rom her
backyard lo brighten the city offices 1n Town Center.
To prove her interest ln ecology, Mrs.
Schandel is buying a bicycle to use to
commute the two mUea to and from
work.
H'r olbtr interests include waterskJlng,
danclnJ and sailing a comblnaUon that
partly accounts' for her sunny disposition
and healthy Californi1 comple11on.
Mrs. Schandel atttnded both P&1adeT11
City College and Orange Coast College
and maintains an interest Jn psychol<'lgy. ·
Until the City Council passes Its
penonnel ordinance, Mro. Schandtl
,....., the city on 1 conl1act basl1, 1l-
I011'ed under a ruoluton •uthorlllng Wool-
lttt to hire two s«retarial <mploye1 1l'bo
•lll coolimle to oerve the city afler a
perllllJlel!I clcy muager Is naaied.
lWeq»!! t Talk I
' .
AlcohoI .·p~ngers
·Cited by· Solon
U alcchot was discovered today as the
newest drug, It would never be legallied.
U.S. Senator Harold Hughes (D-lowa),
chairman of the Senate Subcommltee on
Alcoholism and Narcotics, said Thursday
In Newport Beach.
* * * Alcohol Abuse
Still Greatest,
Agency Says
By CRAIG A. PALMER
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Alcchol la lhe
most abused drug In lhe United State.,
the Health, Education and Weltare
Department told Congress today in the
government's first annual report fln
alcohol and health.
There are nine million alcoholics or
problem drinkers 1n America -almost
10 percent of the work foree -and
aJcobollsm is an epidemic among
American Indians, according to the
report .submitted under a new Jaw
drafted by Sen. Harold E. Hughes (!).
Iowa), a reformed alcoholic.
lt said the problem causes 28,000 traffic
deaths in a year and drains the economy
of $15 billlon annually.
Tpe report contained these observa-
tions from Dr. Merlin K. DuVal, assistant
.secretary for health and science at HEW:
"While we are horrified by the abuse of
such drugs as hallucinogens, narcotics:
and stimulants by our youth, we pay lltUe
heed to the most abused drug ol lhem all
-alcohol. ·
"When this naticln became concerned
about drug use among the young, tbe
pub!Jc was finally forced tfl recognize
that adult use of alcohol - a central
nervflus system drug which we use as a
social beverage -is actually the major
drug problem ln this country and that
young people Jearn from imitation and
identification with adults." ·
Alcohol does have medicinal value, said
Dr. Morris E. Chafetz, director flf the
new National Institute on Alcohol Abuse
and Alcoholism, in an introducUon.
It may be prescribed as a mild relax-
ant for aged and convalescent patients,
used as an occas:Jonal remedy for in-
somnia or as a stimulant for lagging ap-
petite and digestion, or even for the relld
of pain, be said. , .
Bui alcohol abusers sborten their !He
span by 10 to 12 year>, DuVal added.
Both he and Chafetz are medlcaJ doc-. tors.
The . ~I-page report deiinel aloohol
abll!O as repeated ~pisodes of In,
toi:Ication or heavy drinking, or con-
sJstent use to cope wlth life's problems.
An alcoholic "needs to drink, even
though he may know the potential
destructive bebsVior of h J s con-
sequences," tt said.
An 11-member task force headed by
Chafetz and including six persons who
deal regularly with alcoholics, reported
these other findings:
• Hughes ls a recovered alcoholic.
He emphasized the "devas\aling" e~
fecb of alcohol dUring a seminar en
alcoholism in Industry at the Balboa B~
Club.
The program was CO-']>OllaOred by
Raleigh HUia Hospital, ·Newport Beach,
and the \JniveraUy of Portland Oregon'•
Institute fln Alcoholism.
Hughes, IO, called alcohol lhe most
abused drug In the country,
The Iowa renator sponsored the Com-
prehensive Alcoholism Act of ltl'IO. In
part, it calJ5 for ISO mJJUoo to 11o .. ce
research and treatment programs for
alcoholism.
Hugbea aaid Thursday "This task WOflo
rles me because, lf the eystem work!!,
alcoholica In every 1tate will he looking
for counsellg. And we haven't get one
percent of tile counselors we need."
, ife told the audience of about 200 that
~ranee companies mast give coverage
for the disease and all 00.pltals must
treat alcoholics.
"We're not a strange group which
needs to be abandoned , segregated and
treated llke inhuman animals," he said,
pointing out that there are an estimated
11 million alcoholics: In America.
"Alcohol does reach Into every family
In America," said the senator, who
served as governor ot Iowa for three
terms.
An $8 billion economic loss occurs each
year due to absenteeism ~aused by
alcoholism and at least 28,000 highway
deaths a year a.re alcobol·related, he
said.
"If it was possible to pull a string and
eUm.Jnate alcohol, I would and I'd prob-
ably make a Jot of people unhappy," he said.
But, he added, the people of Iowa "ac-
cept me as an ordinary human being''
despite the histflry of alcoholism.
"That's a great step," he said.
The audience gave him a standing ova-
tion.
At a press conference earlier, llughes
said he supports Senator Edmund MuSkie
(D-Maine) for president.
RuJing Delayed
On Trailer Park
A request to construct a 25Jl.unil piobile
borne park In Laguna Hllli h81 bien con-
tinued by lhe Orange County Planajpg
Commln1on until a nolle study can ~be
prepared. , J ., •
The fain.Uy part on tbt nmtherIY side
of Ridge Route Drive approximately 700
feet westerly of Moulton Parkway is
being proposed by Newport Investment
Company.
An official of the county planning
department said the commissifln re-
quested a noise study because flf the
park's proximity to the El Tflro Marine
Corps Air StaUon. 'llle study will he available at the March 14 meeting of the
planning conunis!lon.
China Stories
1legi1i Today
The DAIL'( -PILOT -.11 to-
day Ille lint ei a ltriet of 1peclal
pages of p(cluru and •tortes on
President Nilon11 historic trip to China. •
Tlfe"1baler!al -,.a, gathered by
photographen and reporter& of the
Associated Pre .. and United Pre" Internatlon1!.
Toda.y'a coverage appean OQ
Pa11e 6.
f'ront Page l
REGIONAL ...
he worktd qui among any comblnallcin ol
memhero wllh tlioae only directly benefit·
led actually takJns part.
Membership or withdrawal 1l'Ollld he
available at any time and the new agency
would pot be a "super-tazini 11e:nc7."
Kymla emphasized.
Costs would he reduced 1Ubo~u, tn
proiects of a jolnl nat~ and merging
lhe proJecta to strve mora. lhan 1 aJnsle
agency ellminates cosily dupUcaUon er
effflrts.
At pre!ent each of tlie alx agencies are
conducUng their own costly atudles on
future growth and facilities.
The main thrust flf the new treatment
"club'' would be an emphasis on water
reclamation rather than discharge, hut
one possible project involving all six
would be a single, joint ocean flUUall to
cope with effluent until the point in time
when the waste water could be Used for
lrrigat19n, recreation or ground-water
recharge.
ThUI far, Kyml1 told his directors, th<
plan has had widespread endorsement.
SERRA was launched two years ago
wilh a membenhip Including the City or
San Clemente, Moulton-Niguel, the City
of San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point
Sanitary District, Santa Ana Mountain
Waler District, and Santa Margarita
Waler District and the Capistrano Beach
Sanitary District.
Voter Signup
Campaign Set
In Viejo Area
Mrs. Mary McKnight and Michael
NaSCln, GOP chairmen of the tt1ission Vi ..
jo area, will launch an evening and
weekend "fl\er registratifln drive,in the
Mission Viejo, Laguna Hills and El Toro
areas to accommodate businessmen and
women. :they will also build a preciru;t
Orgal!liaHon In theseeaxpandlng resideri-
tlal areas.
Mrs. McKnight, flf 25842 Via Viento,
has worked ror the Republican party for
many years, most recently in the Sad-
dleback Valley Republican \Vomen't
Club. Nason is presently Youth Chairman
for the Orange County Republican Cen-
tral Committee and lives as 25242 Ca~
pina Drive.
They can be called at 830-3260 or 63().:.
2670.
•
These fine tables from Herit•ge Furt1l-
ture •re just • pi1rt of our exciting mid~
winter 1i1le which is now in lull 1win9.
Sel•cfed groups from such well known
lin•s i11 Henredon, Herit•9t, Drexel i1ncf
much more ire availebfe •t 1ubstanti1f
si1vin9,.
Sin: D24-H22 _,.
.~. II~ SALE $135
c,meo1 ··••niive t•hl. collection of-
fers cl1sSic ltalien styling cr••ted for
• furniture connoisseur. These fin• piec ..
e1 fe1ture burl wood tops etid at1itt
resistant pull tr1ys for your conven-
ienc•.
s1 .. wn.Dl1Mft1
... ,, .. SALE $135
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE -KARASTAN
7td11111
NEWPQRT BEACH
1717 w .. tcnlf Dr. '42·2050
OPIH P•IDAT 'TIL t
INTEllOIS
LAGUNA BEACH
34S North eo..t Hwy. 4f4.65Sl
"·
TORRANC&
2364' Ha-me Blwd.
11111 J1t.117t -,_ ... ' ,,.._._, ......_ ...... Ao• tit AJ......wD
• _,.--.. ~~ -.....
• '
' I
•
., •
pecta
divld
lulli
lily
Bigl!I
WI
!USO
loon
pecta
abilit
oil!er
• l
' !
.L
{ •
• DAD.Y pJLOT -EDITOBIAL PAGE
•
M6ving the· .Railroad -' .
. .
~-· Th• ltnlngestiiiomentu'iiilii recent yean is c!riVlnc
· • · Ill• effort by South . Coast croups to relocate the Sill.la
• f Fe Railroad from its 1easide route to an inland arei.
. .. .
And in the driver's seat is the committee from the
San Clemente Chamber of Commerce which in recent ween bu contacted -face·to-face -top state and
!ederal Qfflclala to seek support and advice. .
And. so far the U.S. Department of Transportation.
the California Deparlment of Parks and Recreation and
several other powerful agencies have pledged help and
onpport.
· San Clemente residents Paul Presley, Ed Chaffee,
. James Slaven and several others are responsible for the
neW driVe. · Federal · funds are available to finance C'Omplete
·studies 'On the proposal, the committee has learned. -~t
The next logical question is what agency showd
apply for the grant&-! . •
Orange County planning aides this week hint that It
1hould be a county request, but only after months of
study.
The request for grant funds for a formal study
should be made immediately to like advantage of the
momentum. •
~ D,isheartening Regression
• l.ong·simmering differences in educational philos-
ophy erqpted into a full·scale rift at this week's Laguna·
school boird meeting ".'.hen three conservative trust~es
defeated it motion to· seek federal funds for evaluation
of the,district's individualized learning programs.
This may well mean the beginning of the end of an
innovative system tl\_at has won national recognit!on for
Laguna sdlools. . : .. .. . .
• •
bets .of the board and are clearly opposed ·to · any further
attempta lo icbieve educational progress.
•The three wbb voted against It are Board Chalrman
William ''l'holl)•'· Mrs. Patricia Gillette and Gerald
Linke. Voting for the srant were Mrs. Jane Boyd and
Or. Norman Browne.
While a few parents have reported problems with
the Laguna sy,stem, it has had vocal and wideepread
acclaim from large numbers of parents, u well as
teachers. Bµt , as La(una bas discovered in recent years.
it's hard to argue with a built-in 3-2 votin~ majority.
Tied into the controversy over teacbmg methods
was. .a remarkable show of support for district Supt .
William UUom. led by a distinguished groul' of former
lbOard members who in the past had backed the develop·
ment of the Laguna school program .
tnlom and his staff worked hard to achieve the
quality of education Laguna now enjoys, and it will in~
deed be disheartening for them to see their efforts
swamped. For, the parents whose children are thriving
under the Laguna system, the idea of returning to a
McGuffy reader approach to education is difficult to
conceive. .
But apparently the inexorable results of a careless
election are only just beginning to be felt .
Something for Everyone
The curtain goes up today on Laguna's ninth Win~
ter Festival, a unique event that has grown to involve
almost everyone in the community in one way or an· •
other.
r '
•
TJie.. traditional,i.sts, firmly conv:lnced tbell' way 1s
the right· 11<ay, seem to have no use for the new \Mch·
ing metftods supported by the ·two more moderate mem·
During the 17-day celebration, there will be quite
literally something for everyone -more than 50 events
percolating moi-ning, afternoon and evening, and many
of them free. '
T.h.-sleeP.r sea5ide village of past winters Is no
more -noW 1t s festi~al time almost all year in Laguna. s OVERt>UE
Contemptuous Political Attacks
•
They· Help the-Communists
.....
WASHINGTON -Historically, il is
necessary to go back a Toni way to find
precedent for the contemptuous Political
attacka on Presi,degt Nixon's peace ef-
fort. Logically, there is no precedent.
Domestic d.iaconteot with the War of
IU!, c:ritlcUIJI ofUie "'uocollditional. sur-
render" d~trlne of
President Roosevelt
bt"l\'.orld War Il -
thelt are l>l'ec:edents
to ilkr!' that war
~icies are not al·
ways popJ.lar.
But Jn the preSf!nt
lnllance, (ht -dif-
ierence is clear. An
enemy strategy is &led upon the collapse·, no{ ~of . the
armies in 'the field, but of American
public support of Prf:sident Nixon's pro-grarit ending the war. A presidential peaCe plan, judged widely over the world
es fair, reasonable and conciliatory, is
mnier u itrong attack from the
President's political enemies as from the
country's enemies.
·THESE ATTACKS benefit the enemy's
ftrategy, and that ia as true now as it has
been for several years past when op-
postllon to the war has gained ascen·
da~. Presidential Aide H. R. Halde-
mans unfortunate uge of the words "aid
and abet" corresponded to the constitu-
tional definition of treason. thus expos-
ing Haldeman 's crude innocence in
th<,. matters.
But the ~~ll'I response of the ~ur
rendeT-aN!lf-prlC.· ·element., th a t
Haldeman was accusing Sell8tor Edmund
S. Muskie aM Senator George McGovern
of trtuon,. la ·equally 11 crude and
dismally as tMocent. Innocent because
these elomema at~lbutt to the Commu·
~---.. .,.. .... w.. .,. .... .......,, , . .#, •'J . '\
... • ~ ,j
t Richard W1lson· j . ' . ., i
...... --··"-· ""
nist side humane motivations which do
not e:1ist.
It might conceivl!-bly be. differ~t if
either Muskie or McGovern had found a
formula bridging the gaps Jn the
President's peace plan. But they have
not.
AT LEAST . MUSKIE bas not.
McGovern's problem is a little different
in that' he cinnot bridge the gaps for
. Americans who do not relilh 1WTettder
and humiliation in what be4an 'as a &ood
cause.
Muskie's plan offers the 'Qlmmunist
side liWe it coOld not get from Nixon. It
Is to be doubted if tbe Communist side
trusts Muslde more, but .maybe a little
more, than Nixon, which b not saying
much.
The Communist side knows that It is
deallng not alone with an individual in a.lJ.
powerful control of a nation's policies. It
knows that there is a hJstoric continuity
of American poltcy, and it knows that
there is a difference between a man who
is running for office .and one who has
been elected. That difference Iles in large
')>BJ't with those who advise tum after he
· is elected and with the sudden dawning of
information he had not had and
responsibility he had oot shared.
possibility. Muskie's vagiieness on the
most essential point of continued support
to a Saigon government supplies an ele-
ment or uncertainty which the Hanoi
government will wish to weigh in view
of the fact that Muskie has already
changed his mind about the: war and
might change it again.
Hanoi · might conceivably make a
cl~arer cut deal with Nixon at this stage
than if it took its chances on Muskie. who
will not , in any case, be in a position to
act for nearly a year. Muskie then might
be able to claim an indirect responsibility
for ending the war through having chiv·
vied Nixon Into making new concessions.
This kind of interplay shows what is
wrong with a candidate for President
trying' to be President berore he is
elected tn such a serious matter as end·
ing a war.
IT IS NOT A ft.IATTER of treason or
patriotism . It Is a matter of judgment on
the course of action best calculated to
bring the war to an end at the earliest
possible date consisten.t with thls coun·
tty's interests.
· Haldernan's oversimplification has now
been defined and redefmed by Pr:esident
Nixon and Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, and
even Vice President Agnew }las ex·
pressed the thought in less ~lunt terms
than Haldeman's. ·
Agnew's use of the term, .. un.
dennining" the President 's peace efforts,
is regarded by some or the instant peace
advocates as too strong, and it may be.
But it should be evident by now that all
· • the politically inspired or patriotically in-
SO IT IS NOT. conceivable that spired or human itarian inspired attempU
Muskie's proposal directly conbibutes to to bring the war to an end by circum-
a solution but may in fact delay it, as the venting the President of the United States
President contend!. But there ii another are exercisea in futility.
America's Expectation Gap
A patient' 1ecoftrb. fr9m a nervous
breakdown b UkelY-19 be introspective.
So ft is with a nation. Social com-mentators are ·busy · trying to de!Cribe
whit went wrong in the United States in
Uie last decide. -and what we must
IUlid agalnll Jn'll)e Seven!Jea.
Although the -~inology may dilfer. it
11eem1 to boil down to one thing: an ex·
peclaUon gap. C.Ollectively and Jn.
dlvidt\llly we 'bavt bO<n led to expect
fulfillments Of nOtfonaI and personal iden-
tity that, · If actually realized, would
siP!al anival of ~ millennium.
With the invaluable aid of hindsight. a
rMIOnlble man can 1te that it was
fooftlh to · nurtqre/such great ex-
pectaU0115. But our lrinocent faith Jn tho
a)>Wty of the United States· to maintain
orller .ittoad. llid spread . affluence at
DAILY PI LOT
l!obeTt N.·W•od; Nlioh<t'
ThMnOI ll'.iioil, Editor . . '
Alb1rt "·· Bat<r Edl~rfdi ~ Edltor
'
•• -. . Madaipe Curle."
' • . ,
. Edit.Orie / UNlrORTUNATELY, It Is euler to
arouse expectationa than it is to turn
them off. Professor Gans, for orie, warns
that even it the Vieb:lam war can be end-
ed an4 the diflicu1ties that came in Its
wake removed, "there remains the prob-• ~-·
Research
' home was easy to maintain In the heady
days of the early-to mid-Sixties.
SOCIOLOGY PROFESSOR Herbert J.
Gans notes that when aspirations rise and
people begin to hope for a better way of
life, they ar-e only hoping. "But when ei:-
pectatlons heighten, people become more
imPatient, more critical of their society
when erpectaUons are not realized, and
eventually, more active polltically." The
American malaJse, ,,, argues Gans, has
come about because of the realiz.a.Uon
that "im~vement ii no }oqer 111 easy
as it once wu."
Even more damaging has been the in·
dlvidual asp~atlon gap. T. G<orge Har·
rla. editor of Prychology Today, com·
·plains that.~1lt'111 if some Idiot bad ra.if..
ed the ant. on what U tal<e1 to be a
perlOll, and the ,..,t of us a<'Oepted It
• Witmut noUclnc.u AJ an example, Harrt1
laltu a look at tht -•bds plat«\, oo l .. ed onea: '
"Family members usume that they
ouabt to love each other, und•ntand one
another."' at l•••t c•t Uie~ hostilities up
(ront.' As any Veteran . of the Victorian
novel knows. 1n tM past, f!W mothers
and aJmoll no fathers IOUgbt such emo-
tkJnal Junriet. A wile wbo oDCt coa-
1ldered ... a marital duty now erpcls to
bt an ..-gumlc playmate, lntelleatual
companloo,_ and grcwlh partner. ar well
as an emouonally lndepeodenl persoo. a
croa between Madame Pompadour and
•
•
lem ol which and whose e1pectation1
can be achieved, and whose not.'' And
editor Harris concludes that we may
havt become "the victims of our own
sense of inadequacy -and easy targets
for the worried minds tb" whom nostalgia
Is an Ideology."
While realism may have set In on the
economjc front , new expectations are
being created every day on other levels.
Young people hope to transform society
noW that they can vote 11t age 18.
Women's Lib has turned housewives: and
1ecretarits into tigers prepared to fight
far shared housework and equal pay.
..
Dea'r
Gloomy .
Gus
Lquna'• poUUcal pot bolls 1gajn
with tht Lo~ recall ttiovement.
We sliou!d llalen to both std ...
then make tt a ded.Jlve vote one
way or the other.
-J. K. D.
nit futw. "'*" ,....,.. VllM.. ""
lltUIMrtff f9I-. If fflt .:..WtMr. lt"'1 ... "" ...... " ..... , .... °"" .......
"
Homebuyers
Victims of ~
Overcharging
Social Policy Not I
•
Corpor.ation's Joh
WASHINGTON -Home buyers are
overcharged $785 million a year by title
compani es and title lawyers. Yet an ef-
fort by Senate reformers to end the
chiseling has bogged down.
The Inaction of . his colleagues has so
frustrated Sen. William Proxmire., b-
Wis.. that he has
actused Sen ate
Banking Chairman
John Sparkman, D·
Ala., of stalling.
In an excha nge of
letters meant for
one aJtOther's eyes
only, Proxmire told
Sparkman that his
delay of hearings
will cost Alabama voters $14 milliori in
title abuses.
"I .BELIEVE IT is vil&l.Jy important,''
wrote Proxmire, "that the Housing sub-
committee take prompt action to reduce
real estate closing costs ... " He asked
ror bearings on his reform bill llO it could
be taken up in February along with
Sparkman's omnibus housing package.
Sparkman wrote Proxmjre a courtly
response. "I prefer to go ahead with my
originaJ plans," said the Alabaman.
But his meaning wa!I clear : the title
company scandal would be swept under
the rug.
There Is an eno"'ous amount of talk
these days about the ' 'soc i a I
responsibility" of corporations. But a cor·
poration, actually, has only t w o
responsibilities : to show a profit, and to
do nothing that is
injurious to the so-
cial fabric .
Environmefttal, ec·
ooomic, and human
probleiru are not the
proper concern of
corporations, except
in a negative sense:
they must run their
busines!I with a de-
cent regard for the overall good· of the
society.
BUT THIS IS VERY different from
saying that corporations should, ot must,
involve themselves in 10Cial policy. Who
decides which social policies a r e
desirable~ Once the. corporation plunges
hip.deep Into such matters, the dangers
outweigh the possible benefit!.
If a corporation behaves as a good
citizen behaves, It would be fully
discharging il.'l duties to the sodety. If Its
product is sound. it& merchandising
honest, it.!l advertising reliable, and U It
refrains ~om injuring the environment
beyond reparation, then Uhas fulfilled lta
role.
Because society at large has abdicated
Its basic responilibilities, we keep as.king
1ptcific JnstitUtions to do jobs for which
thty ~t equipped.
WE DEMAND TR.AT educational In-
stitutions:, for instance. take over a boat
of tasks they cannot handle. All an
' ~ ..... ,....,,... ............ ....; .... 11.. ....
ordinary school can do 111 tcech a child to
read, write, count, and acquire a few
creative skills. In.stead, we expect the
schools to provide moral, PIJ'Chotoglcal1 voc ational, and every other kind or
training that the family, the church and
other lnsUtutlons should be taking care
of.
In the same way, 1 corporation is part
of the market mechanism of our
economy. lls function is narrow and well·
defined ; if It perform• that func~on well,
we can ask no more. And If we ulc more.
"·e are liable to get both greater cor ..
porale dominance over our lives, and
greater government dominance over our
market mechanisms.
CORPORATIONS ARE rushing Into the
area of "social responsibility" as a way
of making amend! for their previous
transgressions, and to Impress the publle
with their "good citizenship.'' But tht
way to make amends and to lmpre.u the
public lies Inside the b lJiS I n e s 1
mechanism, not outside It. It consist. ln
turning out the best product! at the
fa irest price, with the maximum of com4
petition and the minimum of en-
vironmental degradation.
Govemment, at all levels. al'fi the
proper instrument.a for effecting chan1et
in M>Cial policy. We must make our
government. more responsible to theM
needs, and not pau the buck to bualnesa.
SPARKMAN, ONCE .a reformer
himself, didn't mention what has become
an open secret In the Senate. For years,
he has demonstrated a special affection · ·
'Get Out of the U.N .'
for the. banks ~ch, in turn, control To the Editor··
many title comparues. Once again: the United Nationa bu
As . a result, all but the most .Pi;>" failed to·fulfill the objectives set forth In
gress1ve banks are oppased to Proxmire II Jts charter -I.e .• to prevent w.ars, insure
reform pl~n. Pr~xmll'e, fully aware of peace and rurthtt the "'°nomic ,progreas
Sparkman s aUeg1anct to the banks. shot of our troubled world
back a "Dear John" letter to him on y t . 'te of • ch hi • ndl January 13 e . tn 11p1 1u g1,..sou ng
" . · . ,. phraseofogy (with endless rhetorical twas d1sappo1nted, he told Sparkman debates) at M·time baa any consideration
blunUy. F~r Spar~an had already .put been liven by either the Security council
orr ~xecut.1ve 1ess1~ns on the omnibus or the Gtneral A!Sembly to trying to
hous1!1g bills for s1~ ~onths. Another come up with a eolution to the years of
week ~ del~y, Promure felt , would cause strife and destruction in Indochina. no leg1slabve pinch.
ON THE OTHER hand. If Sparkman
didn't allow the title refonn heariogs,
Ulll was "equivalent to delaying any ef-
fective Congressional action on the clot-
ing cost.a problem ror al least anolhtr
year," Proxmire said.
Proxmire cited \n In-depth Washington
Post aeries on kickbacks and other tlUe
scandals ln the Washington area, On a
nationwide basis, the a v er 1 g e
home buyer, a aid Pronnire, I! over charg-
ed '21 t on closing costs'.
''I estlmate that home buyers In the
State of AJabam• were. overcbar1ed $14
million for reil estate. closing coat.a dur.
tnc 1971," Proxm~e advl!ed Sparkman,
who ii runnin1 for reelection th la year.
SPARKMAN l\tFUSED to change his
mind. ln a aecon<I. equaUy courtly letter
to Prounire 1 few days ago, Sparkmin
1tuck with the bankers •nd tltJe compafl)'
executives.
Execullvt Vice Prealdent William
McAUTiffe of the American Land Title
AliodaUoo, the rich •nd powerfUI UUt
lobby, hotly dltputes Pro,unlrt'I vl•w of
\he fndu1try. McAulllle told us tht
• rtform program might wind up addin1 to
homeow!ien• coall ~Y cuutna the supply
o! mortaace mooey.
EVEN WrtJI THE recent "all out''
peace plan of PreSident Nixon, not one
member of the U.N. advanced any com-
ments on the merits of this proposal. This
rurther lack of concern climaxe11 the
many years of Indifference displayed by
the U. N. -from the violations of the
Geneva Conference by H1not to their con-
current complete disregard of the con·
vtntioM of the lnteruUon•I Red Cross.
aa retards the treatment of prisoners or
war.
The. continued "mental blindness" and
"alns of omls.tkln" by the U.N. were
further evidenced by the recrnt junket of
the Security Council to Addia Ababa. This
was done at a cost or approximately
•tso,ooo, thereby adding to Ille present
operaUng deficit of W million dollar•.
According to the report of Tl.mes wrlttrs,
"Ovtr 100 resolutlon1 were made in
vtrbtl etealatiOOJ, with nearly nothing
accomplished."
AND LET'! NOT lor1•t either how the
m.Jorlty of the U.N. memben voted the
U.S. down {wJUl gl~) on our ruoluUon
requesting a "twe Chln111 policy!
So. onct agaln. theH memben cl the
U,N. who have betn recipients of over
'212 .billion of U.S •• Aft>-have VIJ)reuod
both their dladaln and lack of conc:ero Jn
Mailbox
J
a..tttn .,..,. ,......,.. ,,. W.kemt. ...,...,.,.
wrtttn ..._Ill cell"' tllelr met .... 1 Ill M """"'
tr lttt, TM rltflt " CllldtftM fttttn " !It ~
.,. tllmln.'9 lllllf It rMtrwf, .tin lltt1r1 "'""'' "'" cklft ll1111tuff •fMf 11tal011t .,...,,., '""' 111-
11t1Y M wUl!lltlll • '"""' If wttlclttt ,..._ • HHl'Mt, ,Mlt'Y Wiii Mt M M!ltl!M
endea\•orln1 to find a tolutlon to the In·
tolerable poliUcal and militaJ1 con.-
frontatlon1 In !ndochlna. In ao doina. can
it be that these same memben of lbe
U.N. endor,. tht pr ... nt POW blackmall
and raMDm lactlca or H•nol?
Here then. Is further evidence ·11 to
why the U.S. should get out of the
U.N.-and the U.N. 1hould ret O\ll of the
U.S.!
AL N. SEAJIES
..---Bv Georye ---.
Dear George:
My brothtr·ln-taw wanta lo set
in the newspaper bultne11. He
cloea nothln1 but hana llOUnd the
comer 111loon 'and drrnk. however.
Do you know any Mw1paperman
who would be willlntl to belp him?
E. R.
Dear E. R.:
Yes, a great many. On 1econd
lhouaht, f think 111 run over to th•
saloOn and help him drlnk my1ell.
(Whtn problem1 pUe up on you,
turn to Ceorce for 1ld and comfott •
and -9•vrrmlnd. He Juat I01t hil
1bovtl.)
--
•
Frldlf, Febnwy 18, 1972
......... ,
J
DAILY PILOT §
Bugles, Pl~nes Sile~ced
Nixon Spending Q u~t l nt,erlude in Hawaii
By RUTH YOUN(\BLOOO
KANEOHE ~I AR IN E
CORPS AIR STATION, Oahu,
..itlawail (UPJ) -The bugles
were stilled today and tbe
night fighters grounded at this
Marine Air base where Presi-
dent Nixon is spending a day
the demonstration "'·as aimed
at calling "attentiDn to the
increased b o m b I n g in
Jndochlna and the
deteriorating d o m e s t i c
economy."
On past \'isits here, Nlxon
has stayed in a hotel and
no explanation was given for
his choice of ArmMrong's
borne this time. However,
Armstrong knew Nixon during
his vice presidential days
when the ?ttarlne was senior
presidential helicopter pilot
for President Eisenhower.
and two nigbts in relative..---------------------,
solitude before hls trip to
China.
The President occupied the
home or base commander
Brig. Gen. Victor A.
Armstrong. a sprawling two-
level, four-bedroom yellow
cinderblock house on a bluff
overlooking the Pacific.
From it, the President and
his wife Pat had a spectacular
view of an exUnct volcanic
crater rising from the sea,
and cliffs shrouded in mist.
It was Utls land that
Kam.ehamha the G r e a. t ,
Hawaii's first king. chose for
a royal meeHng place. The
peninsula became the sacred
land of Kamhameha, and to
this day is called "Mokapu,"
Hawallan for "Sacred Land."
Bugle calls, so much a part
of Marine life. were cancelled
during Nixon's stay, a
Shaggy Gift~
Nixon Eyes Musk Oxen
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -President Nixon would
like to give Chinese Phemier Chou En-Jal lYiO young musk
01.en named l\·lilton and Matilda, the City Recre.atlon •nd
Parks Department disclosed Thursday.
Dfpartment general m&nager Joseph Caverly said
negotiaUoos y:ere under way between his agency and the
White House for the tv•o shaggy oxen bred at the San
Francisco Zoo.
If the bargaining ls successful, Caverly said, the two
bnimals will be flown from Travis Air Force Bue to
Felling within the next few d~s.
Musk oxen reportedly are found only in Canada,
A1aska and Greenland.
Caverly said Nixon was particularly interested in
~111ton and Matilda because they may well be the on1y
pair. born in captivity in the United States.
spokesman said. from 5:30 '--------------------"'I
a.m. reveille. to taps.
ltanoeents Abroad
Ar1nstrong, who now com·
mands Kaneobe's 1st Marine
Brl&ade, moved out of his
house and turned It over to
the Nixons for thelr stay. ln
preparation for lhe arrival
Thursday, new curtains were
lnslalled in the 3l·year-0ld
home, the carpet in the
master bedroom was cleaned
and the lawn and garden were
tidied.
The house, 15 miles fron1
the bustle of Honolulu , oc-
cuples 4,030 squA[e fti!t of
living space, ls filrnishcd in
cool shRdes of green and
yellow and is kept cool by
the breezy trade winds on
the bluff.
The water below the home ts considered too rough for
swimming, and the spokesma.n
said boats entering the area
would be intercepted.
Secretary of State \Yllliam
P. Rogers and Or. Henry Kisg..
inger, assistant to the Presi-
dent for national security af·
fairs, were also staying in
officers' homes on the base.
The rest of the Nixon's staff
and the 87-member press
cnr}>' were at hotels.
PRESIDENT RICHARD NI XON RECEIVES TRADITIONAL HAWAII GREE TING
Ch ief Executive Rtt ts, Studies, Enjoys Spectacul1r Vitw of Cr1t1r
There would also be no night
flights to disturb I h e
Preside.nt 's rest. the
spokesman said. and the
number of daylight Phantom
jet fl ights scheduled for toda y
was reduced.
Four a"thvar groups planned
a demonstration at the
base's front gate today, but
it was unlikely the President
would see them since be was
not expected to leave the base
during his stopover. A
spokesman for the groups said
Watch Chinese Wine,
Nixon WarnsNewsmen
Se• th• best in
men's we a r for
'72! The best s•·
lection in town for
double knit slacks
China · Denou1ices
Nixon's Policy
On Eve of Vi sit
TOKYO (AP) -Communist China de-
nounced President Nixon's foreign policy
today as it prepared for his visit.
'Maoism Alliance'
Russ Allies i11 Mo st Part
Share Dim Yiew of Trip
By tbe Associated Press the Socialist cnmmunily.
HONOLULU (AP) -Presi-
dent Nixon took time out
Thursday to offer some advice
to newsmen accompanying
him on the first leg of his
joumey to Communist China.
"Remember that Chinese
\.\·lne Is like brandy -it's
not 12 percent," Nixon cau-
tioned nev•smen during the 10..
hour flighl from \V ashington
tral Intelligence Agency" on
the cover, he was asked jok·
ingly by a newsman l\.'helher
the Chinese would let the
party _into the country with
that kind of material.
Nixon, who apparently had
not seen the atlas before, ex-
amined the cover. then
laughed lordly and said: "This
v"ill probably show how much
we don 't know about China."
. and sport coats.
Remember, th •
best is always at •
"We firmly support the peoples of the
world in their struggle against U.S. im~
pe.nllst aggression ," said the official
New China News Agency in a long com-
mentary on Ni1on's State of the World
repcrt and Defense Secretary Melvin R.
Laird's report to Congress this \Yeek .
The Soviet Un ion is adoptirig an aloof
•·wait and see" attitude toward President
Nixon's trip to China, but the reaction is
1nostly hostile an1ong Moscow's Com-
munist allies in Europe.
However. some of the Soviet press has
portrayed China's role in the meeting as
part of a "~tachiavellian" policy of mak·
ing China dominant in Asia. In doing so,
according to the official line, China has
abandoned any claim to l;aership of the
Communist movement.
How Many
Clii1iese ?
Wlio K1io ·ivs to Honolulu. ;::;..;:===================. Nixon spent most of the[
nonstop flight reading and
meeting \Vlth aides, news
secretary Ronald Ziegler said.
But shortly after the presiden-
tial jet took off, the President
and ,.,lrs. Nixon went through
the aircraft chatting and shak· The commentary made ' btily one
apeclfic mention _of ~&n's trip, saying:
"Referrinl to his tJl't to Chi~ and
Sioo-U.S. r~lations, he said: "Our new
dialogue with the People's Republic of
ChJna will nol be at the experuie of
friends. Nevertheless, we recognize that
th11 pr~ess cannot help but be. painful
for our old friend on Taiwan."
ll added that Nixon declared bis in-
tention to maintain U.S. iplomatic ties
with and defense commi nts to the
Nallonalilt Chlnese governmen said
tbla sbow,1 Nl1on's government • as not
yet rellnqajshed its idea of 'one China,
two 1ovemments'." But this v.·as a
modification of Peking's usual complaint
against governmenta which pursue a
"two-Chinas" pollcy.
The Natlonallst Chinese government
"bas long been Bpurned by the Chinese
people," the Communist ag~cy declared,
''and no force on earth can change the
resolw of the Chinelie people to liberate
Taiwan."
e<>mmentators in the official press ol
Poland, Ctechoslov~ and Bulgaria see
the visit either as an alliance of Maosim
and American imperialism against the
Soviet Union or as a vote-catching glm·
mick by Nixon for the presidential elec·
ti on.
But in "\liugoslavia, commentators were
without exception more restrained, and
some even cautiously welcomed the
move .
In East Gennany and ~ania the trip
was reported briefly without comment.
And in Hungary a sardonic report about
the "Nixon Caravan" and the sudden U.S.
fashion in thinis Chinese carried no
political comment.
The most authoritative political Corri-
mentator, YUri Zhukov, wrote in the
Communist party newspaper Pravda :
"The Soviet Union regards as natural
steps towards nonnaiiza.Uon of relations
between the U.S.A. and China." He 1n·
dicated final judgment would be reserved
until Nixon returns to Washington.
But, he warned, the Soviets could not
disregard evidence that Pekin& and
"certain quarters" Jn Washington want to
use the contacts against the interests of
THE ·SHOW-OFF
l t'lclu
r'IJ_
'1 ,. "' I _, ~ ?
..;u.
·'Excuse me, sir. Ou r
CltiMse chef imists on
being recognized.,
WASHINGTON (AP)
China, as 'every schoolboy
knows, has more people than
any other country in the
'vorld. But how many? Not
even the Chinese know.
The estimates range from
'753 million .to 871 millon, says
the Population R e f e r e n c e
Bureau, Inc.
\\1riting in the gr o u p 's
Population Bulletin , Leo A.
Orleans, China research ex·
pert of the Library o f
Congress, says there is good
reason for this uncertainty.
"The only Chinese census
that even approaches modern
demographic standards was
taken in 1953 and the results
of that exercise are highly
questionable. Birth and death
registration, aoother means of
estimating population. h a s
been made on1y sporadically,"
Orleans says.
Orleans writes that China
appears to have gone through
the s a m e meclical·public
health revolution that has
brought down the death rate
dramatically in many un-
derdeveloped countries since
\Vorld \Var 11.
ing hands.
"Isn't this exciting?" said
an ebullient 11rs. Nixon Js she
joined her husband in gr,eetlng
ne\.\•slrien in the plane's press
compartment. '
Asked if he needed to prac-
tice with chopsticb, Nixon
said he did not. But he pointed
to Mrs. Nixon and said, "But
she does."
Mrs. Nixon was asked what
clothing she had brought
along. She replied she had
one suitcase filled with boots
an "longies."
Sbe said that she would prob-
ably be seen over and over
again in the same dresses
because of a limitation on
luggag~ and stated that the
only J>Utchase she had made
for the tiIJt'\Vas a heavy coat.
Nixon wakhown a copy
of a China atlas prepared by
the Central Intelligence Agen-
cy. Pointing to a legend 0 Cen·
Artist of the Month:
'111'l'n'"lle?IH!" RI!!'~!',
"
En •••••• -•• ··=·····=· =·--·-·---------~-... .. .., . ..., ..... --······~ SALE .
DON NA FRIEBERTSHAUSER
,
'
TANK
TOPS
s200
BIKINIS
s2so
• ._,
SWEATER j
TOPS s200
CA PRIS
$100' $ro
•
Fri. Sat. Sun. Mon. Feb. 18, 19, 20, 21
THE SHOW-OFF
22 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH • HUNTI NGTON CENTER
HUNTtNGTON BEACH
Exhibitin g at our office now thru Morch M
The works of Dona Friebertsbauser, a dlstingulsbed craftsman
in our community, will be on display dally al our oCflce. Come
meet the artist and see her unusual exhibits of stitchery, weav-
ing, macrame, papier mache, baUk and other crafts. Mrs. Frie·
bertshauser is President of the Costa Mesa Art League and
Instructs for the Costa Mesa Recreation Department.
Califomla federal Savings
•IMI Lfflt .--i.11111 e Al .... .ol!IW tl.t l lllM
2700 Harbor Blvd., Colla Mesa
•
I\\\ liiti11d-Ull,·
1 for Dicbond~a or nrass \iawn
, · 1ne '&sl The Vd\esl Brand ~ ... m
2500 sq. ft. bag
SJ77
Gh·c your mixed dichondra
and 4rass lawn the fastest
shot 1n the Y.'cst .•• of solid
green frow th. Apply any time o year for the mott
.. wanted" lawn on the blocll
' 5000 sq. ft. bag
szg5
. hmovmmg-. ..
New £verJilcW
ltJlf 11-ices!
DICHONDRA &
LAWN FOOD
These fine dealers feature BEST 1'11nt Food Savtnrs:
AREA WIDE
• Ace Hardware Stores
• Builder's Emporium
• Build n' Save
•Montgomery Ward Stores
• The Handyman Stores
• True Value Hardware
Stores
• W. T. Granla
ANAHEll\I
• Lin-Brook Hardware
2144 w. JJncoln
GARDEN GROVE , , ;
• Hasty Lawn & Garilfn ;
SURPIY • ,:
1G3Sl Garden Grove Blvd.
• TG&Y Home Center
12491 Valley View
• Two Guys Dept. Store
12100 Harbor Blvd.
e Ward & Harington.
Lumber
e Payless Drug 77<n Garden Grove Blvd.
1660 W. Kalella HUNTINGTON BEACH
• White Frant Nursery e Two Guys DtpL Store
2222 S. Harbor Blvd. 9882 Adams Avenue
COSTA l\IESA e White Fron! N»~ LA MIRADA -·-, • Woolco 3083 Brlltol lil300 Mirada Blvd.
El TORO LAGUNA NIGUEL
• Green Thumb e Niguel Harware
23182 Bridger Rd. 2eOJ17 Getty Drive
FOUNTAIN VALLEY NEWl'ORT BEACH
• Lln·Brook Hardware • J. c. Penney's
17200 So. Broolchurat Fashion Island
e Woolco SAN CLElllENTE
1806!• Brookhunt e -BAy Cities Hardware
FVLLEllTON Ille Dtl Mar Avenue e Ward & Harrington '-.Tl!Sl1N
Lumber ' ... s. s. Kmfe
IOI s. Siil• Collea• Blvd. !00 E. !st Streot
•
I
'
;
"
I
•
r
I
d •
ti
• h
a
an
an
u
so
~
ep
to
Huntington ReD~h
Fountain V all~y
. ' •
TodaY's Final
N.Y. Steeb
VOl. 65, NO. 42, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, FEBRUARY ·1a, 1972 .TEN CENTS
Huntington Teachers Blow Whistle on Board
By JOHN ZALLER
Of 1'lt D•llf l"ilol Sl•H
Huntington Beach City (elementary )
School Distri ct teachers are seeking the
arrest o! their school board for violation
of the Brown Act.
Linda Dozier, executive director of the
West Oran'e C:ounty United Teacben,
Thunday request.ed that a criminal com-
plaint be flled. against four members of
the school board who discussed givin1
pay raises to administrators In executive
sess;on without lisling the item on the
meetlng's agenda.
Maximum penalty £or each member or
the board who is convi cted would be siJ:
months in jail, and a $500 fine.
Those named as suspects in a report
filed with the Huntington Beach police
are trustee Jack Clapp, Louis DaHarb,
Orville Hanson, aid J'/an Llggett.
Asked for.comment on tbe cue, the. at·
torney for the plaintiff teachers replied,
"Oh, I didn't expeet that the news would
get out this soon."
The attorney, Donald Odell or Los
Angeles, continued saying "I wasn't con-
templating any public information on this
until we had a chance to talk with the
district attorney."
He said that he had requested a
criminal ccmplalnt through the police
because "that was the procedure _,. -.. '"fl
~our ans
Report Says
Drugs 2nd
To Alcohol
By CRA!G A. PALMER
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Alcohol is the
most abused drug in the United States,
the Health, Education and Welfare
Department told Congress today in the
government's first annual report on
alcohol and health.
told we had to tollow ll we wanted to
pursue this tbJng."
The police report, which is expe<:ted to
be forwarded to the Orange County
District Attorney nut week, states that
"thi above named complainant (Llnda
Dm.ier) accompanied by an attorney ..•
flled thls report and alleged that a viola~
tion of the Brown Act had occurred and
that a crlmlnal complaint was desired."
Mrs. Dozier wa1 not available for com-
-·
6to1 Vote
Affects 105
In Prisons
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI! -The
Califomla Supreme Court, in an historic
decision, struck down the death penalty
today in the state with the nation's
largest Deatp Row.
The decision came on a 5-1 vote with
Justice Mars.hall F. McComb the
dtssenter.
A 45-page majority opinion was readied
for publication in San Francisco today.
McComb filed a five-page dissent.
menl on the case this morning. But she Is
employed through the Huntington Beach
Teachers' Association, and presumably
has the backing of lhat group tor her ac-
tion.
The complaint centers on a discussion
of pay raises for administrators that was
undertaken by four members o( the
school board and execuUve sessioa on Jan, 11. The fifth member of the board,
Stephen Holden, did not attend that
meeting .
The discussion did not appear en the
agenda for that meeting and Mrs. Dozlet
believes thal the Brown Act requires thal
It should have.
On another occasion, Mrs. Dorothy
McClure. president of the Huntington
Beach Teachers' Association, added 0 We
want to stop the board from discussing in
closed session what must by law be
discussed in open session."
ena
•clipping~ Judge
Time Off for Hair cut, Shave
By TOM BARLEY
01 11!-t O.llr l"lltl Sl•ll
~r~ge County's "flogging judge" and a persuasive prisoner made a
bargam 1n court Thursday. The judge agreed to cut the prisoner's jail sentence
provided the 27-rear-old man got a haircut.
It all began when Superior Court Judge William Murray, who once
sentenced another county jail inmate to a flogging, Cinnly sentenced Michael
Thomas Joyce of Costa Mesa to one year in jail for the long-haired prisoner's
violation of probation. Joyce had been on probation as part or a sentence im-
posed two years ago for a burglary conviction and narcotics offenses.
"Wow, man, that's a lot," winced Joyce, shakinir his shoulder leoirtb hair. • •
"Get a haircut and I'll knock off 60 days," grinned Judge Murray.
"Right on, man . Where's the barber shop?" replied Joyce.
"Okay," commented the judge. ''We've got us a deal."
"Say judge," commented Joyee as Judge Murray got ready for the next
Item on his calendar. "What about my mustache? It oudtt to be worth a ·UtU. There are nine million alcoholics or
problem drlnl:ers tn America -almo!t
10 perceot Qf the work . force -and
alcobotiSm is an epidemic among
American Indians, according to the
report submitted under a new law
drafted by Sen. Harold E. llugbea i D-
Jowa}, a reformed alcoholiC.
The· rulin&. came on a Nit filed by the
American Civil Liberties, Union and
"' :.:-the 'si!ford ~!'Ji'ti:
pro!ilior who delivered 1 l'm. l I a r
arguments agatt;mt capital punishment'
before-the U.S. Supreme Coor! Jail. 11.
~:~y IO da!"," ~tffe )!~ responded. ~Judi*," auqiaunced'\1°13,· 0~·ve made yourself a deal."
It said the problem causes 23,000 traffic
deaths in a )'ear and drains the eeooomy
of $15 billion annually.
Tbe report contained these observa·
tions from Dr. Merlin K. DuVal, assistant
secretary for health and science at HEW:
"While we are horrified by the abuse of
&ach drugs as hallucinogens, narcotics
and stimulants by our youth, we pay little
heed to the most abused drug of them au
-alcohol. "When this nation became concerned
about drug use among the young, the
public was finally forced to recognize
that adult use of alcohol - a central
nervous system drug which we use as a
social beverage - is actually the major
drug problem in this country and that
young people learn from imitation and
identification with adults."
Alcohol does have medicinaJ value, said
Dr. Morris E. Chafetz, director of the
new National Instil.Ute on Alcohol Abuse
8nd Alcoholism, in an introduction.
It may be prescribed as a mild relax;
ant for aged and convalescent patienls,
used as an occasional remedy for i~
somnia or as a stimulant for lagging ap-
petite and digestion, or even for the rellef
of pain, he said.
But alcohol abusers shorten their life
apan by 10 to 12 years, DuVal added.
Both he and Chafetz are medical doc-
tors.
' The 121-page report defines alcohol
1buse as repeated episodes of in-
toxication or heavy drinking, or co~
slstent use to cope with life's problems.
An alcoholic "needs to drink, even
t)>ough he may know the potential
destructive behavior or h i s con-
sequences," it said.
(;east
l\'eadler
More hazy sunshine Is forecast
for Saturday, following morning
low clouds and fog. Tempera·
tures will bt mild -in the &O's.
Lows tonight In the <O's.
INSIDE TODA y ·
·· R.i\'l'rsfde Count:u'.r ]!aticmol
DdU F"tival ;, bringing Old
Boghdad to South<m CoUfornio
for JO day• storttrig today
through Ftb. 21. A •loTl/ In to-®;¥'' We ekender givt1 tht dt-
tat!t.
'
It Was Inevitable
Rhoda Rafaelll models the latest fad -a Howard Hughes T shirt,
al a New York boutique. Hughes1 Rosemont Enterprises have asked a
court injunction agail1st the people who are making arid selling these
T shirts and buttons.
CocaineShip1nentBlocked
By French, U.S. Officers
FORT DE FRANCE, Martinique (AP )
-U.S. and French narcolics agents an·
nounCed four arrests today that blocked a
shipment of $1.4 mi!Uon worth or cocaine
into·the United States.
Arrested at a beachlront luxury hotel
here was German Urrego, 44, a Colom-
bian. The French called him a major
figure in the narcoUcs route between
Latin America and the United states.
A second man, identified u Rogello
Gomez, 36, a Cclombian national, was
seized simultaneously with the arrest In
Miami of two other Colombians, Gez:ardo
Moreno, 36, and Maria Lucia Sa1a1ar, 6.
Sources close to the lnvestigatiorron this
French C&rlbbean island said Urrego and
Gomez were arrested Wednesday· in the
Diamant Roe Hotel. They were arraigned
today on cbar&es or "iniractions con-
cerning the legislatkln orf narcotics."
"We~juSt walked tnto lttr;fr'botel room,"
an arresting officer sald. •1'Jbtre was
absolutely no resistance. They didn 't
koow we would be coming. In fact, they
were walUng ror their money al\lf 'l'e •ed up."
• Urrego was ..,.lbed u a ivaJ<ir
operative In the system of tra·nsterring
cocaine and bcroln by prl•att plane, car
and other means to the United states
Crom c.lrtr1I and South Amerl<1.
The heroin 13 transformed from 1
morpbloe base In \ht 1'4aneil\a .,.. ol
Fnnce, but ·13 traosshlpped to Lotlll
America· with lncruslng lreq\)eney to
avoid aUllellfd C11Jtom1 controlt oo
America'• Eaat Cout.
•
French narcoUcs oili~ s a 1 d
American officlala had ~n tryfpg to, ap-
prehend Urrego since I~. RecenUy, U.S.
officlala learned that Umgo had taken
up residence In Fort De France.
The United States waa planning to ask
for his extradition when U.S. narcotics
bureau agents said they received ln-
form@tion that Urrego was about to
transfer about 30 pounds of cocaine -ap.
parently in short supply in the United
Slates -lo Miami.
Then, both the French and American
agents moved in. A French ofrtcer made
contact with the Colombians, passing
himself cff as a buyer. The arrests
followed.
.China Stories
Begin T o<lay
The DAILY PILOT pr~ts ~
day the first of a aalea of ~I
p1_gu or 1llctureo and stories cii
.P!tsident !Ilion'• hls!orio hip to
China.
'l'l1e mat<rW .,.. !athe!ed by
photollflp/Mn'W tnil rtrtOfters of Ille
Alloolatcd fh• and United Pr ...
International.
T~'1 ~It ap~1' on Page 5.
.I-
The . nation'• b.igbeat tribunal is et ..
peeled to deliver Its own i'ullng within
two months -while 890 condtmned men
and women in the United States await
the ruli11g, more· than a seventh of them
in California.
'l'bere has not been an execution in the
United States for more than four years.
At San Quentin Prison. acroM San
Franci.sco Bay, Associated Ward t ·n
Joseph O'Brien reported hope and ei:·
pectaUon sweeping the huge Death Row
'Which houses 101 condemned men, in-
cluding some of the nation's most famous
murderers.
''The Death Row prisoner!, of course,
ha ve beard radio and television reports
and are happy to hear the good ntw!,"
O'Brien said.
Gov. Ronald Reagan, a proponent of
capital punlsJnnent, was in San Francisco
for a meeting of the University of
California· bOard o! regents.
"I will not make a comment on the ex-
pected Supreme Court ruling regarding
the death Penalty until I've seen it,"
Reagan said.
The California case involved In today 's
ruling was the death penalty imposed on
Robert P. Anderson for a 1965 killing. In
his arguments, Amsterdam, a soft spoken
36-year-old former prosecutor, sakl :
"For man deliberately and needlessly
to take life -which he does not un.
derstand -and to inflkt death -which
leads he knows not where -Ls an act
that eclipses every other cruelty. humant.
ty can mete out or bear." .
McComb said he did oot agree with the
view of the majority decision that death
Ja cruel and UDU5Ual punlshme.rlt.
"I happen to believe the death.penalty
is a deterrent to crime," he said. "Swlrt
justice for murderers, Including a speedy
(See DEATH, Pip I )
"r°'-...Jlll'e &lad you don t ~d magazine sublcripUoos, Mr. Joyce/'
. chuckled Judge Murray to the delight of courtroom onlookers, .. you're a very
pettuaaive prisoner."
'lbt happy Joyce left to be1ia hl4 nln .. month opell ln orange County Jill. 0Tfiete'• .a method fn my madness," Judge JdurrqJJater told a ne"a.
m1n, "It's going to be pretty bard for that weil-trllnmcd ,....., man to 1tep
back lrito the drtll culture."
Judge Murray'• famous nogglng sentence was never carried out because
the county sherill refused to adm.ini.ster the punishment. The sentence later
waa changed to a more modem form of punishment.
Negotiators Declare
Teacher Pay Impasse
Teacher npreaentatlves T b u rs d a y
declared an Impasse In negotlationJ for
salary Increases with administrators of
the OCean View School District.
As bargainers from both aJdes aat
locked in a closed meeting In dJstrlct
offices Thursday, an estimated 150 to 200
teachers stood outside to demonstrate
11upport for the demands their rtpresen-
tatlves were making.
Teachers say they are asking for a 3.8
percent l.ncrea.se that will cost the district
about 1242,000 In salaries through June
30, 1m.
But admlnlstrators say that tbe
teachers total package calls for a 7 .6 per-
cent increase through June 30, 1973, and
they say that, if the same raises are
given to all district employea, not Juat
teachers, the cost to the ~let would be
fl.5 million.
The board of trustees has taken the
position that the request of the teachers
is reason~ble, but that the district can't
arrord to grant It.
Teachers have charged that the post.
tlon of the board ls inOex.ible. "Up to this
time Jt bas remained the same," said
Dennis Smith, chainnan of teachers•
negotiating council and a San Joaquin
School District trustee. "Their answer is
simply no. The simple fact is that the
board is not willing to offer us even one
dollar, Jet alone the s.a pen:ent the
teachers have asked for l '
Declaration of impasse means that a
neutral panel, consisting of one teacher,
one district administrator, and one
person agreed to by both individual!, will
lie charged with linding ccmpromJse pro-
posal acceptable to both Parties.
Night High School Weighed
Poll Shows 1,249 Teens in-Westminster Dig It
By RUDI NIEDZIEl;SKI
Of 1t111 o.ftf l"lltt Stiff
About 1,24.9 teenagers In Westminlter
are williag to ati.nd a nlaht high achoo!.
according to the ruults or a 1urvey
released this morning~
The survey ol eighlh through lith
graders by the Huntington lle11<h Un!<ln
Hlih School ~let wat, deslpiod to teat
• )'i)tlhu, an etenln1 high lchOol cculd he
•mploy!<I. ~ rtll~ qvercrowdlnl. .
Aitlioiigh l,'l'l'I st•denlt air they do not
'Wish i. attmicl blgll 1ehool .In the evealng,
1 W11tmlnater .Jllah Schoo) ~clpatJ"er,
' nn r. C>rllteNen said. •11.•!JPUr• to U1
thal the ea<ended da.Y coocepl IJ dellnlt .. i Iy 1 viable an<! worthwhile olternative to
relieve tho overcrowdlnl we presenuy
e~enc:f. and will eocounttr nut
)'el?o" .
'l'be -· .d.rr~tec! ,-.. 11\<:Lloaa
,_
• I
campus and at Johnson, Warner and
Stacey Intermediate Schools, Is the brain·
child of Westminster resident Robert M.
Gordon.
Gordon bas In the past opposed bond
elections to finance new hl&h school cam-
puses. He beUeves other altematlves
auch as the e•tning hJ&h school concept
and year-around schoolt cculd 11tisl1 ln-
crea1m1 enrollments.
Indlcatlons art th1t the intermedhtle
school 1ludenl1 ore less llkely to accept
the concept-lince their tabulated retum•
1how 7ll students against tho propoaal
and ooly 315 for.
On the high !f\1001 . level, pupils were
more ru<ly to accept the plan which
wnuld provide another hlih achoo! on the
Westmlnlttr campus from 3 p.m. to IO
p.m. In alldJUon to the exlrtln& one. The
,.
returns show 1,066 against and 934 for the
proposal.
In a memorandum to Dr. William
"Joy" Settle. a5'0Clate high school
dlstrlct superintendent, Christensen urges
that the other five campusea ln the
district conduct similar 1urveys.
OVen::rowded conditions at several of
the schools have prom pt e d ad-
rninistratOrs to stody the ei:tendtd day
concept and other alternatives as a
method of curbing overpopulation-.
Som• studen!s1'01nted out lit the survey
that they could work d11rlng ti\e day and
still attend classes lit the evening.
Among tho concerna of the students
were possible 1osses ol extra-curricular
actfvitles tn lht evtrilng divl1kln aad the
po'81ble 1011 · of opportunities t •
putlclpale in athletlca.
! DAILY PILOT H
Miners Get
frJd.V, F*-7 18, 1m
PJJW Ransom
·Efforts ·Fail
'
Win Suppor~
--
• President
••
Nemesis Fi11,al
.Pay Offer
In Britain
Valley ~arents
i~~11~-~Wanlto ··secede.....,, __
Yacht Winner ·In Hawaii
~ lt.llit.l'AM P.IL!'(L_J.._::. ---·-----~-ff
By JOSEPH W. GRIGG
LONDON (UPJ) -A tiu<e-man
1ovemmen~appolnted Court ol lnquiry
today recommended a 1293.S million pay
boott ''"' coal miner. wJiose nearly
aeven·weet atrike bu threatened BritaJn
with econOmte dlauter. 'Mle mlnel"I said
Jt was not enoueJt, but did not formally
reject lhe propooal.
ln recommending an Increase avttq•
Ing 20 percent !or the ZI0.000 1lrlklng ccial
mlnen, the government commJ1s1on
overrode the unofflcl1I 8 per(!ent Umlt on
pay hikes on groundl the mlnen' case la
, "excepUonal."
Tht miner•' rejection followed a ooe-
, hour meeting ot mhiewofken' union
; Jeaden with the National Coal Board.
for $10 mllUon.
Hope said be wa1 advised by
North Vlelnam a'aln thll week that
It would not grant him a visa to
visit HMol to discuss the plan. He
tried first during a vlsit to Laos la
December.
"l don't think I should pursue the
proposal in view of what Mr. Nb::on
II doing," HoJi<.>dded Thursday In
reference tq Prelldent Nixon'• trlp
to mainland'Cblna.
Hughes Staying
On Eighth Floor
Of Latin Hotel
• The board had aald IJ automatically ac· By CHARLES GREEN
, cepted the findings of the board of in-MANACOA , Nicaragur (AP) -
• qulry but aald It would not 10 beyond Howard Hughes was presumably holed up 'that.
' Employment Secrelary Robert Carr today on the tlgbtly guarded elghlh floor
' cancelled a statement on the cr:i.Sl!: he of Managua's Intercontinental HoteY, and
w11 to have made to the Hollse 'of Com· a spokesman tn the United States 158ld he
An angry block or parents from
northeut Fountain Valley ii still fighting
to secede from the Garden Grove Unilled
School District.
Thursday night they oblalned a prom·
be from trustees of the Fountain
Valley School District to belp wage tbe
war over school boundaries.
The parenU, whose homes are within
the city limits of Fountain Valley, send
their children to Garden Grove schools. A
petition to transfer their children to
Fountain Valley schools was tabled for
the secood time Wednesday night by the
Orange County Committee on School
District Organization.
"The paramount ls!Lle ls neighborhood,
walk·ln schools for our children," said
Bart Smith. "A~ the present time our
chJldren are being bused to flve dlfferent
schools, some ol them 45 minutes away."
Tru!tees of the Fountain Valley School
District, whQ have already ofriclally said
they suppart the transfer of territory to
their district, undertook to help prepare
the ca!le of the petitioning parents.
"U the C.Ounty Committee keeps put·
ting this matter off because they don't
feel they hive. proper lnformat1on1" aid
William Crane, acting board president. "I
guess we'll jwt have to do their
homework for them."
The Garden -Orove School Dbtric! bu
oppaeed tbe treOller on several Srowi<ts.
&.iperintendent David Peyiiter l\as said
that the .fOO acres Whleh the-paients pro-
pose to transfer would adversely affect
the master plaJ\ for the Garden Grove
Unllled School Dls!rtcl· Th• land lnclude• two future school sites.
In addlllon, Paynter has aaid tbat
transferring the partly developed area,
which at present bu less than 150
student!, would upset the ethnic balance
in his school district.
"I flnd It incredible and d!!gustlng that
a district that has 56,000 students such as
Garden Grove has would spend so much
time hUsllng over so few people," said
Mike Brick, Fountain Valley Superin· tendent.
"I belleve that the right of parents to
choose their own school district is more
Important than any master plan," he said.
ACAPULOO -Nemesis, Tom
Tobin's l!rl<k.\On.30 oul ol tbe· San
Diego Yacht Club, ls the corrected..
time winner Of the 11th San Die,~
to Acapulco Yacht Race.
Three Newport Beach yacht1
wound up In 15econd, third and
fourth places. Burke Sawyer'•
Atorrante was second, B o b
Beacubamp'1 Dorothy O was third
and Peter Grant'• Nalu IV was
fourth .
Yachts still at 1ea today were
Al ert, 37 "'milea; Sangrita II, 135
miles, and Rainy Day, 192 miles.
None of these could aUect the
overall standings, according to race
officials.
U.S. to Assist
Union District's
Library Project
' A $1.38,511 federaJ grant has been
1 For Rest
By HELEN 'l'llOMAS
KANEOHE MARlNE AIR STATION
Oahu, Hawall (UPI) -On ground sacred
to Hawaiian antiquity as the meeting
place of kings, President Nixon restea
and studied today for hla historic trtp to
meet the rulera of modern China.
Nixon, accompanied by bl1 wife Pat
arid offlclal staff, new from anowy
Washington to sunny Hawaii Thursday
for a tranquil rest to adjust to changing
time zones and for further study before
his departure for China Sunday.
The President stepped off the presiden-
tial jet "Spirit of '78" Into sunny 'I>
degree weather at this Marine Corps
base to the cheers of a crowd of 15,000
persons.
Draped wlth a colorful red fiowered lei,
Nixon got into a long, black White Howe
Jlmousine and went to the home of Brig.
Gen. Victor A. Armatrong, commander of the base, 15 miles from Honolulu.
Tbe Nixons will spend two nights In
Hawaii and another on Guam before ar·
riving at Shanghai oq MoDday (China
time) for a week of conferences with the
Jeada-s of the People's Republic of China.
mona and called representatives of the would remain Jn the Central American two lldel to bll olllce.
The lllrlke bu blacked out Britain and' country lndellnltel y.
left thou.unda of pertona uncomfortable Both President Anastasio Somoia's of.
In cbUJy home1 and of[lces. fi ce and Hughes spokesmen in the United
More than three mllllon persons are out Sh.tes confirmed .that the eccentric
ol worti beca111e of toduetry abutdowns bill! Ir fi t M Th d and cont1riu1Uon of the strll::1 threatens ona e ew o anagua urs ay
the jot. of JO mlWon ptr'IORI. after 15 months of livln& in seclusion In a
Tha , llrli• brouehl Prime Mlnlll<!r hotel Ill Nauau.
McClellan Hearing
'First' Under Optwn
awarded to the Huntlngton Beach Union
High School Dlstrlct for a model library
projtct at Fountain Valley High School.
The grant will be used to establish a
mulU·m~la center system which will
also serve the district's five other high
schools -Huntinston Beach, Win-
tersburg, Marina, E d l s o n and
Westminster.
MuIU·medla center• are a new concept
In the education of high achoo! students.
They go two steps farther than tradl--
lional achoo! libraries by o!fertng Japes
and films u well as printed materlals,
and st!rve IS a place where teachers Can
produce audlo-vl!ual teaching aids.
The two-day 1topover 1n Hawaii and the
overnight stay on Guam Saturday nlsht
were recommended by Dr. Walter Tkach,
Nixon's penonal physician, to overcome
the fatiguing physical expense of chang.
inJ? time zaoes.
Nixon seemed deeply touched by the
warmth of the bipartisan congresslOllal
sendoff he received in Washington Thurs--
day, and a traditiona l aloliB welcome on
his arrival in Hawaii.
Edward Heatli close to political dlaaster 'He came on business, the government
and he won a close 309 to 310 vote In the said. .
House of C.ommons Thursday night on In Las Vegas, a s~kesman for the
Brittlh entry into the European Common Hughe& Tool C.o. said Hughes' stay in
Markel ' Nlcatagua was Jndeflnlte -"we aren 't
The narrowness of the vote renected saying how Jong he'll be there, hut 'in·
1rowtng dJssausractlon with his handlln&' definite' could indicate a certain degree
of the coii crisis. of permanence."
Even 1f the mlnen aete:pt the package, He added that Hughes is considering in·
the eoal 1butdown could continue another vestments. in the country and "considers
week becauae any final settlement would the economlc and political situation
need 'e!Uter a HCret rank·and·fUe ballot good." ,
or sbow-of·handl votes by mlnel'I Jo:call. Hughes reportedly Jeft Nassau after a
.F'urtber delay would come before they dispute wllh Bahamian officl1Is over
actu ally could begin producing more coal work permits for !be 1laff that Insulate•
and sblppln1 It to 1eneratlni slaUona him lrom pbyslcal conlact wltb tbe
abut down for lack of coal. outside world.
1be court of inquiry proposals meant He'll have no such trouble in
that the minel'I would 1tt lncrea.sea: rang. Nicaragua, which Is run by the oldest and
ing from '11.70 to •t&.IO a week. one of the most secure dictators hips ln Some 15,000 surface workers would be LaUn America.
raised 15 percent to a mlnlrnum of $59.80 ''Tbls was not a sudden thing~" said
a weeki '10,000 underground Jr0rker1 another Hughes Tool source ln Las
would 11~ an lnciHM of SO percont'to '6& v,.~'I. "l!uallel did not Just JlY out of
a wee!<, one! 'anctbsr 115.000 woi'lcert<·~t lhe Banamai at tlle'lul momenf wllh no
the coal face woWd be railed 15 per<:ent real idea of where be was going. Hughes
to $89.'10 a week. owns propertles ln Nlcaragua and ls con·
The mineworkers union orlglq1Uy alder Ing tu~er investments." de~ed 47 ~ f blch It f•l~ to • <lfl',dded !Ji'1 Iftaragu1 II 'lltlw the 25 ~t. tit 1 r~I ' !J" ~,fl tlaiw.1it•l!Qgjiea operations, and l\ll•I tbe
The ... 1 board flnl olltred '·' ~I et:y0ar-old Industrialist almo11 eerlalnly and then save 12 ,pereent U Jtl 11ftnll bf.. -wlll not ~tum to the Babam11.
fer ." There ~as !peculation a m o n g
Nlcaraguan1 that Hugbe• mliht be Jn..
terested 1n any one of several dfalS, In-
cluding estebl1-flment of a casino and 1
lai;ge land purchase. Mailmen Taking
G. W. Day Off
Regular mall won't be delivered on
Wublngton'1 Birthday Monday. Only
special deli very 1ervlce and collecUons
from while-topped air mall mallbom or •
tho,. d"lgnaUn1 a 'holiday collecUi>n schedule will eontlnue.
But post office lobbies !or maO
deposltJ, lock bol' access and Hlf-terVlce'
stamp macblnu wW be •open.
All Oronie County elementary aad .hllh
schools and $mlor collqes wlll be closed
Monday also. Only'Oiapmllll College and
West Coast University wW remain open.
County olficesalid moot Orange County
city halls wlll close,
Most banka wW clote on Feb. 21.
OU.Nell COAST ••
DAllY PILOT
ClltAHGB com PVILISMIMO C'OMP>J('(
Roliott H. Wotd
Prltldtlll W l"'*ltlW
J•c.\-R. Cvrl.., \'kt Pnl•t .,_. GsMnl M..,..
'l\orn•• K11\'ll .....
1"011101 A. M""\lft•
M.,..glnf Etll!W
T ,,,.., Covl'l11
WW ~ CCM!b' E411ot
Hntf .. tM INt\ Offl'Cl9
17171 l11ch loultl'•rtl
M1ltlnt Adilr1h: P.O. l ox 790, '1141
U.S. Ambassador Turner Shelton told a
reporter that two Hughes aides arrived
Wednesday and made arrangements to
rent eJl 17 rooms on the next to the top
floor of the Intercontinental, which is on
a bluff overlooking Managua .
Hotel officials refused Thursday night
to say if Hughes was there or even to
acknowledge that the sudd!n:ly In·
accessible eighth floor was reserved for
Hughes and his staff. The elevators were
dlscOnnected to that Door, and the fire
doori-wert sealed.
Hughes' flight came while court hear.
tngs were ln progress in New York on the
purported autobiography of Hug.hes writ·
ten by Cllllord Irving, a boOk Time
magazine bas caUed a hoax.
A spokesman for U.S. Atty, Whllney
North Seymonr ,Jr. declined lo say
whether a subpoena. had been Issued for
Hugbes to appear beloro the grand jury
or whether any statements were aought
from bim wblle he was In tbe Bahamas.
Managua, steamy capital or this colrun·
try of two million people on the Cen al
American neck between Honduras and
Costa Rlca, is Hughes' third port of call
since he left his Beverly Hills mansion In
I~.
For four years, he !Ive In a llgblly
guarded penthouse 1t the Desert Inn ln
Las Vegas, then slipped out on
Thanksgiving eve 1970 ana·moved into a
ninth-floor suite 1n lhe Britannia Beach
Hotel in Nauau.
<)
Ho1neow1ier Unit
Officers Elected
New officers of the Golden Wat
Homeowners A.mclation wW be installed
1t the assoclaUon's aMu::d banquet
Saturday nilht at tbe Gold Ancbor
Restaurant.
Offictn for Jm art: Rosalle Rehling.
P"'S)dent; Gary Miiier, lint vice prtJI.
dent: Albin Petl'SCIJ, second ''iet1 preri.
dent; Nancy Corcoran. tre8'urer; and ~ynne Dewhlrs~ ..... tary. Hun~ S.adl Councllman Jack
G.-a former Golden Wtsl prosld•nt,
.W aierve u muter of ~nles for
the blnqutt.
Softball Signup Set
Sa~ b the lat cbance.llit stria ..
14 to sia:n up !or 111111mer ~ a the-
F'ountala Vallq B.wi, Sa &oC!MU
1..eagoe: •
Slpupo win be op111 !nmi ID un. to l
p.m. at Voa '1 ldJttet, Talbert A..,..
and Mapolla Str..i.
Convicted killer \Villiam Westwood
"The Man" McClellan today became the
first occupant of deat.h row to face court
action taken Jn the light of the Supreme
Court's rejection of the death penalty.
McGlellan, 30, of Alhambra was
ordered by Orange County Superior Court
Judge Wllllam ~urray to return to hi3
courtroom April 14 for what is tentatively
scheduled as a pretrial hearing.
It is just as likely, Laguna Niguel at.
torney Tom Keenan said, that McClellan
will be formally· sentenced on that date to
JUe lmprlsonm~nl !or bis killing In 1967 of
From Pagel
DEATH ...
and public trial followed by quick ap-
pellate revlewt and ,execut1op1 will help
curb the cllmJjmg crime rate."
He said executions are part of clviliza.
tion's legal and moral heritage.
"It bu been a legltiniate form of p_unl~h.qient 1'11 SOO y11rs," he ~·
Last monlh, tbe New Jersey Slate
SUpreme Court also struck down capllal
puniBhment.
In addJtlon, nine state leglslatures have
repealed it. But in one of them, West
VJrginla, the upper house of the
legislature voted last week to reinstate it.
If\ Sacrl¢lento, the State Department
of COrrecUons said prisoners condemned
to death will continue to be bandied in the
same manner until the questi on of capital
punishment has been decided through the
appeal proeess.
"We suspect there'll be a lot or ap-
peals," to the California ruling, a
spokesman said.
In the California Legislature, Stale Sen.
George Deukmejian, (R·Long Beech),
prompUy introduced legislation allowing
the Legislature to determine which
crimes would be punlahable by death.
The change would require a constitutional
amendment.
Assemblyman AJan Sieroty ({)..Beverly
HUis), author of a bill to repeal the death
penalty, called the decision "a victory for
the dignity of man."
In the last 79 years, California executed
503 persons. 308 by banging and 195 by
gas in San Quentin's gas chamber. Four
were women.
San Quentin's Death Row, expanded to
three cell blocks because of Its con-
tJnually increasing population, includes
Sirhan B. Sirban, assassin of Sen. Robert
F. Kennedy ; John Unley Frazier, con-
victed mas.s killer, and Cult Leader
Charles Manson. Manson wu &eJnl
porarlly in Loa Angele!: today for a court
bearing.
Shooting Range
To Open Sunday
In Huntington
The new Hunu.,too Beach Polle. Of.
ficen Assoclatlon shooting range near
Gothard Street and Talbert A vtnue will
be opened to the pobllc at 10 a.m. SuJ>.
da1•.
A> part of the opening day celebration
police ha .. called on expert marksmen to
five shootlns demonotntlons. A I I o
leatund wW be wupoos displays aod
... rns1imente.
The ronge wae built aod financed by
pollct officers ao tbal the.1 would have a
place JocaJly to keep thelr shootlns skills
sharp, according to Pollet OiJd Earle
RobllaWe.
Rangemuter Phll M~ aa1d the looc• will be open tbroogb l'eb. 17 !or
free shooUnf ... "lhanlt ,... to '11 "bo
ha .. "'""1>t pollct allow tlcbls, circus
tldels aod otberwlse helped nlat ......, !or the range. •
Aller Feb. 17 Ihm 1110 be a llllall lee
to ue the raoge. ()ab hmlcuna aod l2
collhlr rllleo 111&1 be med.
'
two patro"' al tbe G8' Light bar In Stan-
ton. •
McClellan was to have gone through a
rerun of the penalty phase of the SUperlor
Court trial In which he W8' defended by
Keenan.
The Alhambra man wu one of . a
number of death row occupants who got a
second crack at the penalty phase when
the California Supn!me C.ourt ruled that
trial judges bad unfairly barred pros·
pectlvti Jurors opposed to the death penalty from deliberations. ·
Keenan today predicted 1 Im II a· r
rosenlenclng to Ille !emu !or two other
Orange County occupante of deatb row -
Gary PhoeniB ol Costa Mesa and
Frederick Saterfield of Santa Ana.
Photnir, 28 drew the death rap last
year on mu!tlple counts of forcible rape
and kidnaplng whlle be was employed· at
a Huntlngton,Beacll. heallli IP'.<
Sa!erlleld got tbe dealh penalty !or tbe
killing of his commonlaw wife and her
daughter at a tlme when he was on
parole ,trom ap atteme.~1f'iu;<lei f'IO-
vlction. 1 , /, ,,JI
Reaction aJl!Ollf 8uJlerldr Court JllQges •
and lawyers todlJ' to the ..... of the lllgb
cow1'1 abollUon of the death penalty ran
about nine to one 1n favor of the ruling.
Sheriff's deputies told newsmen of at
least one unanimous reaction to the news.
They said pruo-conflned to tbe
Superior Court boldlng tank loudly
cheered when aomeone passed the word
around.
The district's media center will en·
compass, a professional library for
teachers and a career guidance ·center.
C.onference rooma will be provided for
small meetirlgs. ,
Since the medla·center will play an im·
po~t role ln the development of the
school educational program, it will also
house the ofrtce of Clifford Hepburn,
assistant principal in charge of cur·
rlculum.
The 15,000 square foot multi-media
center will be grouped . around the ex-
isting ll)lrary on the southwest comer of
the campus. Construction will begin
sometime thls year.
School officials said the grant would be
used entirely for "software" mate.rials
~tb wh.ich to equip the .media center. Rem~lin« work, l~IJ!re and PIJl.
ilbeUon Oqiii)>-t lflltl!e'tial<Hiir bfthe district.
Seua.~,Offa.·1''}W ~af
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate
passed and sent to the Hou.se today a
resoJullon authorizing the President to
designate lhe week beginning March 16
u National Week of Concern for
Phsoners of War and rnllltary men m1s,s..
in« In action In Vietnam. Mardi 16 would
be designated H a natlollll day of prayer
for the men.
Cameo al
I
Kaneohe ls built on a peninsula ltlll
called "h-iokatu'' -sacred because
Hawaii's first king, Kamehameha the
Great, chose it as a site for a royal
meeting place.
"It's nice to spend a day in Hawaii
before moving across U1e world.'' be told
the airport cro1~:d as he moved among
them shaking hand s. "I want to sit in the
sun and get a tan."
\Vith an entourage of about 150 persons,
including White House aides a n d
members of the press corps, Nixon will
arrive in Peking via Shanghai at 11 :30
a.m. ·local time Monday (7:30 p.m. PST
Sunday),
Premier Chou En-lal will head the
welcoming reception for Nixon at Pe-
king .Alrport and planned lo accord the first American president to visit China
full ceremonial honors.
The President spent most of his time
en route to Ha"•ail Thursday conferring
on the plane with national security affairs
advi.sus H;enry A. Kissiner and &ecretary <l &.\e Wllllam C. Rojers, bis two chleC
!&reign l>ollcY-att?:lserS on ttre trip':
While the agenda has not been set, the
secret meetings in China are expected to
cover a range of cqnt~versial problems tJjc:bJio~~tel!othe lwO'Wtlons,
Jitrlll:aiarly IJl'nrmosa and lhe Vietnam
war.
The ph!Josopblcal part of the con·
versatiOill were expected to dwell on
ways to relax tension between the couu.
tries alter 22 years ol cold war hostllily.
Ebullient aboi.Jt the trip for weeks, Nix·
on nevertheless told a recent news con.
fe.rence : .. This trip should not be one
which would create very great optimism
or very grut pes.simiJm."
•
Tl'lese fine fab~ ·from H•rlta91 Fvmf•
t11re are just •1'~rt of our exciting mid·
winter sale wJuch is now in full 1wln9.
Selected groups from such well known
lines •s Henredon, Heritage, Or•••I and
much more ere available et 1ub1t onfi1I
11vin9s.
•in.-
.... "" SALE $135
C.meOJ extensi•• f•ble conectton of ..
fer1 classic ltan11n ttylin9 cnatff fot.
• fumiture connoi1seur. Thhe fine pi•c..
es feo1ture burl wood fops and 1t1in
resistant pull tro1ys for your com ...
ience.
liio-.i>IMnl
... .,., SALE $135
DEALERS FOR: HENREOON -.ORE>Ca -HERITAG!: -KARASTAN
7ul11111
INTERIORS
LAGUNA BEACH' TORRANCE NEWPORT BEACH
1727 W-Hff Dr• '42·20SO
onJI l'llDU 'm f 345 Herth c-Hwy. *4-6551 --Howthom• Blvd.
llUI 17 .. 117' -...... 'II I PIA f .. ...._ -.,.;, s:a A~ID
-Toi !loo -<I ---!JU •
I
I
' '
. 11 ;,
a
of
at
• l_
lJCI Proposal
' Senate Supports ----------~----· -~-
No-fail System
By THOMAS PALMER aradlng system.
or ... oatlY '""' lhlff Jay Martin, English professor and
Tbe UC Irvine Academic Senate 'nlurs-cbiinnan of the iiduc1tlone.l Policies
day traded ABCD and F for DHP and J. Commltt~. made the motloo to adopt the
At a llvely two and one-half hour new system.
meeUng complete with m o t J o n s , Before it paued, the Senate hid •i>-
substJtute motions and amendments to proved a motion to eliminate the grade
amendments, the faculty m e m be r s equivalen~ of D aOO F from any proposal
dumped the traditional grading system In tbey considered.
· f1vor of Di.!Unction, High Pass, Pass and \ An amendment to that motion to allow
~ J notations. ' a student to accept a D grade if be
Students will no longer fall courses.
ll sufficient progress is not made for
the student to be given credit in a course,
· J will recorded denotbig "continuing
1tudy." ,
But before the system Is put lnto ac-
tion, It must be approved by the nine-
campus, university-wide faculty senate
and then go to the UC AJsembly In June
· for ratlfication.
UCI Senate chairman A I e x e I
Maradudin said the larger UC renate
· "would be the primary hurdle," but that
little opposition was e.rpected either there
or In the Assembly.
Before its final 6S to 15 decision the
Senate rejected other more conservative
and more bold plans for altering the
Tunaboat War
To Continue
QUITO, Ecuador (AP)
Ecuador will contlnue to claim a
200-rrtile limit to lls territorial
waters, says its new president,
Brig. Gen. Guillermo Rodriguez
[.ara, indicating the tuna war with
Ule United States will continue
ma bated.
Rodriguez told a Colombian
>i'oadcastlng company Interviewer 1'1¥ reJations with the United
)tftes will follow "along the same
lines kept until now."
Dozens of American tunaboats
iave been seized and flned by
E:euador for fishing In what it con-
1lder1 Its territorial waters. The
United Stales recognizes only a U.
nile limit.
desired was defeated twice. Robert S.
Cohen, assistant profeuor of drama.
a:ald, "A student should not have a say In
whether or not a grade is recorded for
him."
A simp!Uied system of griding, speci-
fying only marks of Dislinctk>n, Pass and
J , was rejected 5% to 30. Profess onal schools will not be af-
fected by the decision.
UC! is the first ol the nine UC CIJll·
puses to step awfy from traditional four
passing and one failing grade system.
The graduate school program is not
automaUcaJly covered by the new
system, but t1lltY vote to adopt it.
A substitute motion by William H.
Parker, associate professor of physics to
use the terms A, B and C, in!!ltead of
Distinction, Hlgh Pass and Pass, was
defeated 45 to 36.
The Senate voted overwhelmingly to
assign the numerical value1 of 4, 3 and 2
respecitvely,·to the Distinction, High Pass
and Pass evaluatlon1 for the purpose of
computing a grade average.
Speaking ln favor of a simple pass or
no-pass system, Robert M. Saunders,
dean of engineering, said grading has no
meanine regardless of what the grades
are called.
Warren L. Bostick, dean of medicine,
said college would he unrealistic if It did
not denote failure. "I propose we keep
the current system," he said. "If we
want to escape our Image o! quality by
eliminaUng grading, we'll pay the price.''
Arnold Binder, professor of psychology,
said giving Fs does not eva1uate every
poor student. "It penalizes those who
don't manipulate, who don't find the
loopholes."
Supporting retention of the A, B and C
terms, David A. Brant, usociate pro-
fessor of chemistry, said, "We need a
system with familiarity, one that ii in-
telligible."
UCI Librarian Cites Need
For Financial Assistance
By MICHAEL GOODRICH
Of .... DMIY Plltf 11.n
Is UC lrvine in need of a heart
transplant?
"Categorically no," 1ay1 UCI mtlversi-
ty librarian John E. Smith.
Speaking before a meeting of the
Univenity Forum Thtaaday afternoon
at the UCI Faculty Club, Smith compared
the university library to a. human heart
and discussed the feasibility of a cor-
onary replactment for UCI.
"While heart trat11plants are rather
, simple and successful, the morbidity rate
is high," said Smtih, "and I wouldn't
· want this for the university."
The library's ailment like that of the
university as a whole is financial. During
the 1972-73 fiscal year UCI expects a
10 percent Increase in students and
faculty while the book budget wW in-
crease only one perrent, according to
Smith. ·
A.side from the budget being in-
adequate, inflation and the devaluation
of the dollrar have also eaten away
at it. There was a 20 percent increase
in book pricts from 1970 to 1971 and
the devaJuation of the dollar abroad
has reduced the purchasing power of
tht foreign volumes budget by $13.250.
Pre..,,Uy, acxonfini to Smith, the UC!
library iJ trying ID Jl"'•ide research
material for all academic fields but
due to the economic problems two types
COASTWJSE --
----
-;-i -~ --
of tr~plants have bem suggested.
A computerized library has been sug-
gested where all reference materials
wwld be redu«d to a hl1hly illdued
miCrotape Je veJ and everything would
be available at the touch Of a button.
Labeling this the ''black b o 1:
syndrome," Smith doer not feel that
the li!x-ary could afford aucb a convtrsJon
now.
The second type of transplant di8CU&led
by Smith was that of a speci.allzed
library where materials would be con-
centrated in . certain lleldr · of academic
rtudy. AddJtlonal materials would be bor-
rowed from the 1rtber libraries of. the
University of Callfornia system.
"BW, each o! our campuses i1 strained
now ~Y a 1haring program, especially
UCLA," said Smith. "I don't really see
this as the ans,.er to reducing tosU.
A second form of speciallzatlon would
be to concentrate only on the acqui1tion
of current volumes while hoping that
the current body of material in the
library would suffice for extended
research.
EvP41 at the chance of being forced
Into a great mediocrity, Smith feels
that the UC! library should conUnue
to buy in all fields,
"A library bas to aerve Us c:m-
stituency," he nid, "and U we rpeelallu
we can't do that. We'll ccaUnue to do
is best we eln."
/ -'
H
Hospital Fight Bitter
---------'Pane OKs Kxpansion at S. County Unit
Sa11s Jobs Vp
Labor Seeretary James D.
Ho4gson testllies before the
·~J HoustN>enate Joint Economic
Committee that since July em·
ployment has risen 1.3 mil-
lion, a trend he pr.edicts may
"soon begin to have an impact
on unemployment..,
Teacher Battles
Abductor, Flees
After Slashing
A plucky Garden Grove teacher ignored
the blood pumping from her slashed left
hand and the knife held at her throat
Thursday night and managed to fJght her
way free from a hll6ky male assailant
who leaped Into her car at an EI Toro in-
tersection.
The 28.year-old teacher at Mark Twain
Elementary School in Garden Grove, told
Orange County sheriff's officers that her
attacker leaped into her car while she
waited at the intersection of Valencia and
Avenlda de Carlotta.
The slightly bullt woman told deputies
tt.at he shoved a knife against her throat,
told her to drive on and clearly Indicated
wilh an obscenity what she could expect
a little later.
Witneues told deputies that the victim
proved to be more tha11 a matcll for her
burly adversary. They said he ran from
the car doubled over after his potential
victim delivered several kicks .
''That gal took care of her1eU," a
witness told deputies. "I'll bet those kids
at her school don't dare step out of line."
Investigator1 are today huntlng · &he
7oong usallant.
They said It ls possible that he could be
the man who ~ped the woman driver
of a caterlna truck: In the El Toro Mea
two w~~ a·ao1 and, for.ce4 the woman to
dtlVe him tO the Ericlrut8.11 area of San
Diego County before she ran to freedom.
A bitterly fousht public hearing •tud·
dtd with alle111tlons of '1ov~ bedding"
and "profiteering" ended Thlirsday night
with lhe approva l of the Orange County
llealth Planning Council's he a 1 t h
f1cllltles review committee for an U.bed
opansion 1t the. Mission Community
Hospital.
The committee voted 12 to 2 after ll\'e
hours or debate In the city fl'. Costa
Mesa '1 council chamber foe an expan&lon
that will hlke lhe M1$slon Viejo hoapltal's
bed capaclty to 213.
But the final decision mts with !ht
organization's 90-member council. They
will meet Feb. 24 In the Santa Ana county
courthouse to deliver the final verdict on
the controversial A1ission Community ap.
plication. ·
Ahn03t 1ll the opposition Thursday
night came from tbe rival Sadd1eback
Community Hospital, currently under
construction and scheduled to add 150
beds in May, 1973, to what wa.s described
during the hearing as a "vastly overbed-
ded" cehtral valley area of Orange Coun·
ty.
Mission Community J.lospHal ls a
privately owned facility. The Saddlebllck
hospital was described Thursday night as
a nonpFoflt facility backed by the
Lutheran Church hospital organiwtion.
Saddleback CommWlity ofHcials, led by
secretary Edward L. Olsen, repeatedly
challenged the Missio n Community plans
to the ..accompani ment of boos and cat
cails from an apparently hostile au·
dience.
Olsen warned the council that popula-
tion density predictions prepared by the
state clearly indicate a slow down in the
population shift to the central valley area ·
-generally defined by most speakers
Thu rsday night as including Mission Vie-
jo, El Toro, Leisure World , Laguna Hills,
Laguna Niguel and Capl.Blrano Highlands.
Speaking before the approval of the 89-
bed expansion, Olsen told the council that
the area would be saturated within the
next five years by 418 beds in four
hospltals with plans for still further con·
1tructlon.
Olsen said th at was more than double
the number of beds that should be pro-
vided under state planning charts made
available to the council for considera tion
prior to its decision Thursday night.
He pointed out that his own hospital,
which received planning approval two
years ago at a time when the Mission
Community applicati on was denied by the
now defunct Health Planning Association,
would be adding 150 beds to what he said
were Mission Community's 126, South
Coast Community Hospital's 163 and San
Clemente CommWllty Hospital'• 116.
Tht San Clemente bos pltal I• pr...,,tly
under constructJon. And South Coast
Community Hospita l b1 South Laguna
plans to add 116 beds to its current com·
plement ol 113, OIWI Slid.
Qpposltlon speakers w~rned the council
that the area Is expect~ to hold IOme
100,000 residenU by 1977 but present
plans lhat could put more than 7tlO
hospital beds Into the area by that Ume
were far 1n exctsa of the state's hoepJtal·
bed·per·ruldent ratio.
Orange City CoWlCllman ?-1ax Reynolds
stepped Into the debate to w1rn the coun-
cil that the plans being mulltd Thursday
night "were certain to considerably add
to the ncute problems of an 1lrtady
overbtdded Orange County."
Jteynolds read an Orange Ci ty Council
resolutJon In oppo<lon to the 11isslon
Cummunlty application. He "f'8ed the JI·
member health council to "rarefu~y tx·
ami ne a sltuaUoo th1t 11 al!O certain to
conslder11bly add to thr nlrendy hlfftl
hospital coats 1uffertd by people In this
area."
"I think that for you to come here and
tell us what we should do Is more than a
IUtle lnsulllO.C." SnnlA Ana Munlclpal
Court JudJ!e Pnul tlf ost Interjected lo the
astonishment of Reynolds and the cheer •
of ~Usalon Cornmunily supporter:t .
Festival Slate
W eekertd Highligltts in Laguna
The Patriot's Day Parade will kick off l.aguno Dench'8 annu nl \V lnttr
FestivaJ Saturday, marching oll through th' downtown area at 11 o.m. Ot her
weekend hJihllghta are:
SATURDAY .
-Surfing 1'leet. Thalla Slrfft Beach, 7 a.m. to noon.
-Arts and Crafts Exhlblls. f't11tlv1l o! Arts grounds, J0 ;30 a.n1 . to 5 p.m.
-Far West Do.rt Shootout, ltote l t.aguna, I p.m. to midnight.
-Lown Art Show. Laguna Beach Gallery, noon to S p.m.
-Lion OJuntry Safari Show. F'orum Theater. 1:30 p.m. to S p.m.
.-"Teahouse or the Augusl Moon." Laguna ~1oulton Playhouse, 8:30 ,p.m.
SUNDAY
-Surfing ~1eet, Thntla Street Bench, 7 a.m. to noon .
-Arts and Crafts t<;xhlbils, Festival grounds. 10:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.
-Far West Dart Shootout, Hotel Laguna, I p.m. IO midnight.
-"Musica l 1-~orest" by Junior Lyric Opera, Forum 1be1ter, 1:30 p.m. < and lt.30 p.m.
Senator Terms AlcQhol
•
'Biggest ·Drug. Problem'
If alcohol was .discovered today as the
newest drug , it would neve1 be legalized,
U.S. Senator Harold }lugh11 (0-lowa),
chairman of the Senate Subcommilee on
Alcoholism and Narcotics, 1ald 111uraday
in Newport Beach.
Hughes Is a recovered alcoholic.
lie emphasi ted the "devastating" ef-
fects of alcohol during a seminar on
·alcoholism in industry at the B1lboa Bay
Club.
The program was co-sponsorfll by
Raleigh Hllls Hospital, Newport · Beach,
and the University of Portland Oreion'1
Jnstllute on Alcohollam.
'lfup.1, IO, calltd 1bhol tji1 'lllOtt
abu!ed drug In the country.
The Iowa senator spons~ the Com-. prehenslve Alcoholilm A Of 1'70,. Jn
part, It c111i1for MO mJll) I li4111<• ~lencil and treatment pr 1ra111JI ~er llcoholiaril. ·
Hughes Hid ThlJl'adlY "Thia talk wor-
rles me because, If the system worb,
alcoholics in every state wUI he looking
for counseling. And we haven't ~ot one
percent of the counselors we need . '
He told the audience of about 200 that
Insurance c:ompanlea must slve coverage
for the dlstase 1nd all ho1pltal1 must
treat alcohollca.
"We're not a tttange group which
needs lo be abandoned, segregated and
treated like Inhuman animals," he said,
pointing out thal there are an atlmaltd
11 mllilon alcohollcs In America.
"Alcohol does reach Into every (1m1l1
Ill Al)ltrlca, '/, iUlll 11!J1 ~*""""bo aerved aa atrimer ,., t•• rot IN'H • term•.
Ao 18 blllloo econo"1e loaa oc:cun Hth
yw due '~ 1blil!IMlna UM by •l~hoil1m · • al lellt 11,11111 hllllway delthi a y art ·lfcoho~relltad, be
.. 1d.
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY ..
Continental
MARK IV
IN ALL OF THE 70's,
THIS WILL BE THE
UNIQUE AMERICAN ·CAR!
'
Mercury
~MONTEGO
THE ALL NEW
PERSONAL SIZE CAR!
2S28 HARBOR BLVD~ COSTA MESA • NI &al
: •
!-~~~..:..~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~-------~--~--------~-~~-----·----------
•
f ~All V PILOT
\
\ I ~ps
'Sou[ Slicer
Really Rolling
By THOMAS MURPIDNE
OI Wit 0111W Plllit Ill"
• Fr~u. Ftbnl111 18, 19n
...
CU1TING UP DEPT. -Alas, tiler<
were a few Wrong-Thinkers who scanned
this space the other day and figured It
was all a big pul-Oll when I discu.ssed the
state's Fog Cutting Machine. •
You remember the Fog cutter. That's
an uperi mental de\rlce being operated
by the State Division of Highways for the
purpoie of culling holes through the fog
along our roads and byways. HA. SO YOU THOUGHT nlAT FOG CUTTER STORY WAS A PUT.ON, DID YOU?
Spray Gun-mounted irvck M1k11 'Clumps' Out of Fog-It R11lly Does It sprays electrically~arged juice into
fog , causing the fog to gather in clL"'1J>',
get heavy, and then fall to the ground.
Jitdetd, some folks did figure thls was
al~ a big fabrica.tiOfl; of my mental
weakne!s.
* So, Foll THE assurance of faithful
followers, you will fmd just next door to
this space today a photograph of the Fog
Cutter in acilon upon th.e highways of the
San JoaqUin Valley, There it is, folks,
plying Its way among the mists. Spraying
away, confualng fog and causing It to
clmnp up and drop Oe.ad.
Jn thinking about the Fog Cutter, you
may have culled up an image of this
giant aopbisticated compt1ter·llke device_
with twinkling lights, reels ol tape, •pin·
ning wheels and the like.
'!be photo, you will note , looks
ouipla!ous!y lll<e an old otakebed truck
with a' couple of noizles spraying out the
back end.
Sorry to ruin all your fm•a... folks.
But lhat's It.
3 Londonde1Ty
Centers Bombed
By IRA Gunmen
By COLIN BAKER
BELFAST, Northern Ireland (UPI) -
Gunmen bombed three shopping centers
in Londonderry today and set fire to a
town hall near the border with the Irish
Republic. But in Bellast a shopkeeper
burled a bomb back at raiders.
In Dublin the lrlSh Republican Anny
reported "unprecedented police activity"
against the organization, involving the ar·
rests of a number or IRA members in the
republic. ·
An army spokesman said gelignite
bombs exploded within 30 minutes of
each other in three shopping centers,
causing extensive damage but no * casua!Ues. Gunmen w1lo planted the
DRUMBEATS DEPT. _ Just i bombs gave customers and employes in
rtmlnder that Laguna Beach's big winter the centers 30 minutes to evacuate the
Festival gel!I under way Saturday at 11 area, the spokesman said.
a.m. with 1 100-unlt parade winding In Newry, where Roman Catholics
lhrou h lhe d town streets of lhe Art staged lhe largest civil rights marcil .in Col g own · .the province's SO.year history Feb. 6, m-
. ony. .cendl>ry bombs planted by four armed That parade bas come a long way over l'!n damaged the town hall.
the years since ihe 111'111 P~trlots' !)ay af· 1 •·, , In BollMl;ll&vid Corbel~ 541 gabbed a
fair tootled Its W'f down Park A\renue. rlefcase containillg a 20-pcnmd gelilnite
Units new arive from all over Southern 1 ·bomb and burled it into the s1reet
Calttomla to compete for trophies ~d minutes after a gwmwi planted the
entertain UI coulal f91k'. I'd """ Its llev~)a bit news agent's shOp in the city
grown .,to ~ a near.match to min-. ilee.ttr. ·
ttngton ,Buch a: big extravaganza on the "The gunman said we had five minutes
fourth of July. Well worth ,..Ing, folks. to I•~ out," Corbett aald. "I ran and
Walch out for the special No Parklni grabbecl the briefcase and threw it into
zones, now. the middle of the street as the gunman's
* NO FLUNKIES DEPT. -I see where
the faculty out at UC Irvine wants to
elimlnate failing grades and just go to a
gystem of High Pass, Pass. or J -
whatever that is. For you traditionalists,
J guess you can interpret thqt to be A or
C and nothing else.
* GOOD NEWS DEPT. -Up to now,
about everybody that owns a piclr:up
truck baa to buy 1 COIJllnerclal llctnse
plate but Iha! may all change for yw
camper fans and others. The Dept. of
Motor Veblcla 1s con.lidtflng a ayslent
where non-cammerclal Uttn won't pay
as much for ltceiising the 11mall trucks.
Right now, as one official put it, about
the only way to avoid the commercial fee
is to promise "you won 't carry anything
i1' it except golf club.,."
* FINAL NOTES: Up SeatUe way,
they're going to auction off the giant
mockup of Boeing Aircraft's ill·fated
superaonic jet tra.ruport. n cost $10. 7
million. One wag wants to tum it into a
restaurant.
P.!aybe some school district down here
could use it for classrooms.
Wouldn't that tum on the kids?
car was pulllng away."
Army bomb disposal experts later
detonated the device. The blast wrecked
three cars ar¥f''smashed windows in the
area.
"l suppose I took a chance," Corbett
said. "But when a man sees bis livelihood
about to be destroyed, he has to do
something about it." ·
Bernadette Devlin, and 12 other civil
rights acUvists were sentenced today by
a Belfast court to serve six months im·
prisonment for taking part in an. illegal
protest March Day. All 13 wre released
on $2.SO bail pending their appeals against
the sentence.
Sbe had laced similar charges on
Wednelday for taking part In an illegal
Roman Catholic marth Jn Newry. That
case also was postponed.
Russ Craft Orbiting
Moon After Journey
BOCHUM, Germany (UPI) -The
Soviet moon probe Luna 20 went into
orbit ·around the moon today, Heinz
Kaminski, director of the Bochum
Observatory said.
Kaminski sald his instruments tracked
the moon probe as it went behind the
moon. It emerged on the other side again
at 47 seconds after 4:35 PST today.
Uncertainty-on Kennedy
Fogs Nebraska Primary
By JAMES R. QUINN
OMAHA, Neb. (UPI) -Th<re is no
Jack of candidate• in tbe Nebraska
DemocraUc presldenUal primary and the
possible deletion of one of tbem might
make little dillerence.
Or would tt?
The man in questlon is Sen. Edward
Kennedy, an avowed noncandidate who
nevertheless is listed among 12
Democrats on the state's May 9 prtsiden-
tial preference ballol
Under the law, those selecied for the
primary by Secrttary of State Allen
Beennann have until March 10 to get
their 118m .. off the list by filing affidavits
of noncaodldacy. 'Ibe candidate rnust
swear he or she is "not now and does not intend to become a candidate.••
But in Kenaedy's case it may not be
that easy.
The Nebraska law al.so provides that,
even though an affidavit of noncandkiacy
bas been filed, if the ~ "subse·
quenUy becomes a presiden'tlal candidate
CAMPAIGN '72
in any other state by any mearui
whatever, he shall be considered to have
purged his affidavit in Nebraska and such
affidavit shall have no force and effecl"
This quirk could throw the option to
Oregon, a state which bas no disclaimer
clause in its primary law and whos:e
secretary of state has not decided
whether to put Kennedy on the Oregon
ballot. tr Oregon does. Nebraska may.
Beermann, a Republican, will then
decide.
If he keeps Kennedy aboard, it could
throw the Massachusetts senator into a
Democratic donn ybrook with
SellS., Hubert Humphrey of Minnesota,
George McGovern of South Dakota, Ed·
mund Mu511ie of Maine; Vance Hartke of
Indiana; and Henry Jackson of
Washington: Reps. Shirley Ch~bolm ol
New York and Wilbur 1.1illuif Arkansas;
Gov. George Wallace of Alhllnbra ; May
ors Samuel Yorty of Los Angeles and
John Lindaay of New York, and former
Sen Eugene McCarthy of Minnesota.
It 1.!I hard to elicit predictions from un·
committed party leaders and delegate
candidates without firm word of whether
Kennedy will be on the ballot.
It is generally understood Kennedy will
not campaign in any case. But observers
agree he could siphon off votes from the
others in a state in which his brother,
RoMrt, grabbed off nearly 50 percent of
the primary vote in 1968.
Those Democratic observers at the
higher levels who will venture a guess in-
dicate a close fight couJd develop
between Muskie and MeGovern, with
chances for Humphrey and Jackson -
again, depending upon the l\fMedY fac-
tor. .
On the Repoblican ballo~ Pwident
Ni.on will be oppC>lled by Reps. Paul
McCloskey Jr. of Calllornia and John
Ashbrook of Ohio.
The sentlnment of leading Cornhusker
Republicans, however, c1n be summed
up in four words developed in previous
campaigns: "Nebraska is Nixon coun-
try."
Although Democrats claim Nilon Is
vulnerable in the farm and ranch coun·
try, Republican· seers holly dispute any
waning of the President's popularity here
and expect the McCJoskey and Ashbrook
candidacies to cause litUe more than a
ripple.
Nixon rolled up some of his best
percentage margins in Nebraska in 1960
and 1968.
(Mond<Jy; Maryland)
Mounties Capture ,Suspect
In Wisconsin Bomb Blast
By TOM SEPPY
WASHINGTON (AP) -The capture of
Karleton Lewis Armstrong by Canadian
police reduces the FBI's list of most·
wanted fugitives to 12, more than half of
them political revolutionaries.
Armstrong, one of four men wanted in ,
connection with a fatal bombing cm the
University of Wisconsin campus on Aug.
24, 1970, was arrested Wednesday night in
Toronto.
The arrest left on the FBI's most·
wanted list seven persons w i tlh
backgropnds as political activists or ter-
rorists.
The Royal Cinadian Mounted Police
said Armstrong, 24, was arrested without
a lllUple ln a rooming house. He ii
belni held 1,.. an lmmlgalion inquiry.
Blizzards Rip Minnesota Anmlro!I& w11 90Ulht u a resull of an
explosloo thal ripped through Sterling
Hall on the University of W!Jeonsin cam-
pus, a bullding Iha! cantaiMd the Army
MalhemaUcs Retearcb Center. The cen-
ter had been a tareet ot antiwar demon·
Winds Gusts Reach velocity of H urrica11.e ~1;:duall! !ludenl, Robert Fassnacht, was tilled 1n the blast. --
HAJl0HAl WIJ.lMll •ltYl(l 10tl(A111• 7AM l1t t • lf-11 '" 111e _,,,,,1,., ""'""" 1111n Olarged with Armstrong io the 1r1tY1llld wltlt llllM In tt1t * O.lorf1 aTnl foo b' b •~ D ",.. metrlY Sllllllt.._ wttll . _..,_x1mvrn1 --r OI are IS roun:r '-W' J g h t
"-----------------·--
t.-W."'-.!:r_:Mo!..111.,1.fi_.,:' Nlfl "'111fln Ar.rrutrong, 20; Frederick .tJurt, 23, of
nwi'=~• =., f::r.:idtd~ _. Darby, Pa., and Davis S. Fine, 19, of ~one e .. c11 ''""-~"'I ~ WUmln°ton. Del. Tbe three ....... al large ~ , lllH'b9nk ff.n, ~· W1119" o -~ Po .-';;J}i. n, 1ui1tt1 n-1,, P• m and are on the FBI's list or most-wanted 5Prlnes llthrllle d ,..,.., Sin ?;:r' . 11111 Anai.1,,,.s.n11 Me fugitives.
V.S. Suinnuarv The four are charged with collSpiracy,
win. ~11'19 _,, tt hwtrk•nt torn sabotage, deslroyinj[ goverrunewt prop-
11•11rre<1 m. rwt11tm Mt"'"' ~ erty and civll·rfghtl vlolatlonl', •II ~r~1:7!!:111~1ftM;ril:a!JUW·-federal counts, and on• state cbarae ot ,:! ,:!:' ..:'!~to:i 111= murder. ~onc1rt~ "' ""' lftMMll• l•t• More thin a year and 1 hall qo, the
... ~ .. "'To i:.""t!l:l'i::O «::I~ ''Teo Most-Wanted" list had If D1111es. • .!'P!!t. ,~ ~~-A~ li:r Seven m those named were, wanltd for r~'~it.~,:rtt1e'ri;'mr . such crimes as mutdet and bank 'roba ~r,.. 1 ,:'~1,.=,ft(:, bery. The other nine were a aewer breed, er 11 .. ~~~ ~1g: soulht ftom crimtl ranging from '8~ ~· ra~..!¥.:11,.. 111e fl'ttii1e tAge ind terrorist act11 to con11plr1cy. !t....~ .... ~"' . .. .now ~ caplured llnce then hive beeo blaclr: ~~=== ~ ~ .:# actlvlst H. Rip Brown and Armstrong. M,ull.~ • . The FBI put AnRela Davia oo the ll•t ,.,1r ·..:;.. ~., .,., .. rtott Ano J• JNM. and took her into custody 9f ~ Ml!f'I.! -0' ... ll'llf, .l.'""1"';r''."-w:..~. "l:'t Oct. IJ but replaced lhe black leader tht : "°""'"' *',,.. .,.. '•;;;( por11., follo'!IDI clay with .Bernad~ Dohm, • i~ TID!S ... COAirAL luder of the Weatherman ladloo, who Is
WEA'l'BER .. Pap 11) still aought far CONJ>iracy:
' .
JSO Strike•
U.S. Planes Hit •
Enemy
By ARTHUR WGBEE
SAIGON (UPI) -ll.S. 8121 and jet
fighter-bombera carried out nearly lllO
strikes againat Communist targels ln
south Vietnam today, foUowJ.na: up two
days of raida aCl'OIS the border ln Norih
Vietnam. '!be Air Forca uld the elgh~jet
8121 cmled out 10 raida ovor South Vie~
nam in the 24 hours ending at noon·toda.y.
During the aame period, ii ,.ported, tac-
tical flgbte~bomber crews flew 1st air
strikes,
'I1te heavy bombing ca~ on the heels
of 29 hours of llrlkes a.galnlt targets in
North Vietnam Wednesday and Thursday.
Intense missile fire over North Vietnam
brought down three U.S. Air Force' jets
during Iha bombint north of the
Demilitarl2ed Zone (D"!Z> and si. .
Italian Woes
Seen Despite
New Leaders
By ERNEST SAKI.ER
ROME (UPI) -Italy got a new
government today, but the cure may be
worse than the dJsease.
The new government ls a ruling body in
name only and politicians said worse
trouble may lie ahead.
After 33 days without a government,
new Premier Giulio Andreotti defied.
former coalition. partners Thursday by
setting up a one-party Cb r l s t 1 a n
Democratic cabinet without a majority in
parliament.
Political experts said the minority
government could last _thrte months at
best -which would bring it up to the
time to hold national elections. They said
the deepening rlit between Christian
Democrats and Socialists may plunge the
country into the worst crisis since Com·
munist·led riots overthrew a similar
minority government 12 years ago.
The new cabinet was being swom in
before President Giovanni Leone today.
Andreotti , 53, served as minister for 11
years in 17 cabinets. He accepted the
premiership Thursday -13 days after it
was first offered. He announced a 25-man
cabinet list composed entirely or Cbr~
tian DemocraUc party colleaguei.
Andreotti and his predecessor Emilio
Colombo, earlier failed to overcome di!~
ferences between the Christi an
Democrats and their Soclalilt and Social
Democratic coalition partners. The
dis putes, over issues ranging from
divorce to rising unemployment, caused
Colombo to resign as premier Jan. 15
after 17 months ln ofiice.
Leiul Lease Debt
Talks to Resume
. After Ten Years
WASHINGTON (UPI) -In a move
which t'OUld lead to increased trade, the
United States and Soviet Union have
agreed to resume negotiations after a
lapse of more than U years on RllS!ia's
outstanding World War II Lend Lea.se
debt to the United States.
During the war, the United States sup-
plied to the Soviet Union civilian and
mllitary goods valued at $10.S blllioo.
After the war, the United States at·
tempted to settle this debt abd simHar
debts owed by other a'11es, charging only
for clvilian z:elated items which could be
used in peace time. ' /
Thu•. the United States inilially !ought
from the Soviet Union $2.6 billion and
through negotiations from lMI through
l!l60 dropped this figµre1o l800 million.
The Soviets, ciilmtnj thal some
material was de£ectlve; finally .offered to
setUe for '300 million before ~ tilts
were broken off in January, 1960.
.
•• lll South
•
crewmen were loll, mJUtary 1-esmen
said today. , ,
The North VlelnamtH claim they 1bol
down seven U.S. warplanes Incl~
"several" pU~t.. , 1 , •
The alrcra!t, ac<ordln( tp Oie U.S.
spokesmen, l'(ere hit , by llD'lac.to-alr
m1ssu.. duri111 the w combat llriltes
flown Wedneeday and Tburlday againal
the new Sovt~Ulll 13(!\111n Deld IUDS
brought Into the DMZ area by the North
Vietnam.elf.
In another development, 1 Navy pilot
on a mission over Laos traded mlulle
lire with a surface-to-air otlt inalde North
Vietnam but there was no report ot
damag'e. And the carrier USS Coral Sea,
whose pilots participated ln the str1b in-
to North Vietnam, putled out of Ila poal-
llon oU the. Vletnameae coast for an 1111-
dlaclosed destination ·ror maintenance and
to give its crew shore leave.
Military opokemiieil ln SaiJ!Oll aa1d the
aircraft ~ over Norlb 1-0etnam
.,.,. two F4 Phantoms and ao Fl116
Thunderchlef "Wild WelMl'' jet which
carries aopblaUcated electronic tracldng
equipment. Eat;h Carries a IWO-man
crew. 1 • A
Uoofficial statistics showed tJ>e United
States hQ lost,'1.950 planes In air action
over North Vietnam sinl!e Aug. ~ 1961.
U.S. command spokesmen uld the raids
Wednesday and 'I1tursday destroyed or
damaged seven of the 130mm guns, five
85mm anUaircraft guna, tw,o SAM altet,
five SAM missile' transporters, two
missile launcliers and two trucks.
Military 19urces aa1d Navy gunners
Thursday fired on North Vienamese
personnel carrler11 moving at . night
through the soutbem sector of the DMZ
and that at least five COmmtuUst troops
were killed. ·
The lour-day cease-Dre proclalniOd by
the Communists for the Tet lunar New
Year bollday ended today and South Vilt.
namese mllltary spokesmen n1d the
Communl!ta iniUated 166 actianl clurjJlg
~~:.~ ~;ciandtha.:.:~= ~'::
ing.
The spokesmen aaid that during the
government'• 24-hour truce when ended
at g p.m. on Tuesday, 1S South VJet-
namese were killed and 21 wounded In 0
incidents initiated by Viet C.ong and
North Vietnamese forces.
Murder-suicide
Includes Top
U.S. Cost Aide
WASHINGTON (AP) -The murde!'
suicide ol a top officlal of the COst of LiY..
ing CollllCll and his wife apparenUy was
spurred by domestic troubles ariaq
from long hours on the job admJD1sterlnc
President Ntxon's economic progrui.
neighbors of the couple bav• told police.
Earl D. Rhode, 28, and his wife,
Delores, alto 281 were found Tbunday
night by police alter a neighbor asked of·
ficlals to invesUgate. ·
Police said Mrs. Rhode shot her hwt-
band once behind the rigbt ear with a .21·
caliber pjstol which sbe toolc -a
nelgbbor's bou5e aiia then killed beraell
in the same manner.
Police, mlving at the house in ·
suburban Silver Spring, Md., saw Rhode
through a window sprawled on a llvinc '
room divan and di!IOOvered Mrs. Rhode
wrapped in a blanket on a bed in the -t
basement with the gun bt!lide her. Tbiy '
said the shootingt occurred about 1 p.m.
Wednesday.
Friends andi neighbors of the couple
said Mrs. Rhode waa d~lfessed tbal ,her
husband .was ·working a seven-day week
iq his Job. listed ln a council direclorf u ••director, e z e cut iv e secretariat."
Rhode'• name waa listed third after
Secretary of ·the Trtuury John B. Con-l
nally's and council Director Donald M. l Rumsleld~a. • Informed of the shootings, Rumo!eld
called the deaths a ''terrible tragedy." I e
l
Deci1fmu, Decl1fons
Poor Charlolle Rampling. The 25-yell'Old actrw couldn't figure out
what to do. She loves Bryan Soulbcombe (left~ her manager. And
she alao lo•es model R>ndall Laurence (rigbl). The trio lived together
In happy bliss. Now Charlotte hu married Bryan. Randall, •ho wu
lbe best man , wun't too upoel Tile three of lbem will continue to
share their London suite together.
•
•
' •
l
DAILY ~PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Enforce
-Twice a month Huntington Beach city councilmen
join the list ol late·night creatures gropin& about town
In the dark -usually after midnight.
Late meetings have been a council problem for
yearl!I. Councilmen made an attempt to Sj!t 11 p.m. as
the curfew hour -they have yet to make it.
Councilman Al Coen raised the Issue again last
week when the meeting hit 11 p.m. with six agenda
items still untouched. "Let's establish our policy no"'·"
he urged.
"We could fin ish in the time you spend arguing
this issue," replied 1i1ayor George McCr.acken. He was
wrong, the session dragged past 12:30 a.m.
Meetings start at 4:30 p.m., so by 11 p.m. no coun·
cilrTian could be expected to have his decision.making
abilities in very keen shape. If councilmen talke~ less,
meetings would be shorter. \Vielding a tougher gavel on
public speakers might also help. .
But if neither choice is acceptable to the council,
meetings should still be stopped at 11 p.m ... Youths under
18 must obey a curfew -oouncilmen ought to be able
to obey their own self·imposed curfew.
P arents in Classrooms
Schools often become places divorced from the
communities in which they exist. They relieve mom of
her children for six hours each day, and th ey relieve
dad of a substantial part of his paycheck. And that's it.
Not so with elementary schools in west Orange
County. The Fountain Valley, Huntington Beach City
and Ocean View school districts have inaugurated parent
aid programs that are expected to net more than 100,·
000 hours of volunteer service this year alone.
the Curfe w
parillg Instructional aids for clwroom use. and two
distrlc!s -Fountain Valley and Ocean View -have
actually placed large numbers of parents In the clas ..
room.
While p_areots ad.minister tests . supervise on•
going projects and generally help out on routine mat·
ters, the more highly trained teacher can devote more
time to pure teaching. Often this means individualized
atl<lon for the child who Is either a little behind or a
litUe ahead of his classmates.
The volunteer program is good for the-schools,
which simply couldn't otherwise afford the services
that parents provide, arid good for the parents, who
become more involved with their schools and with the
education of their children.
!~proving Local Fishing
Building an underwater junkyard offshore from
Huntington Beach seems an odd method to boost ocean
-ecology -but it really works, according to the CalJ·
fornia Fish and Game Department.
The junkyard consists of an old Navy barge sunk
offshore Wednesday. The barge, say experts, will add
to an artificial reef built by the state from quarry rock.
The artificial reef is attracting numerous varieties or
fish and marine life not normally ·found on the flat,
sandy bottoms near Huntington Beach.
All three dl!tricts have put parents to work pre-
This boosts the marine life there and increases
sport fishing for local fishermen. City harbors and
beaches officials are happy, marine biologists are happy
and so is the Navy -it got rid of an old, discarded
barge at low cost.
H OVERl>UE N\-.. .. -c:...,... I -
Corate .,aptuo11s Political Auacks
They Help the Communists '
Homebuyers
Victims of
Social Policy Not
Corporation·'s Joh WASHINGTON -Historically, il ts
nectssary to go back a long way to find
precedent for the contemptuous political
attacks on President Nixon's peace ef.
fort. Logically. there Is no precedent.
Domestic discontent with I.he War of
18J2, criticism of the "unconditional Sur·
render" doctrine of
President Roosevelt
in World War JI -
these are precedents
to show that war
policies are not al·
ways popular.
But in the present
Instance, the di f-
ference is clear. An
enemy strategy is ha.std upon the collapse, not of the
armies in the field, but of American
public !Upport of President Nixon's pro-
gram ending the war. A presidential
peact plan, judged widely over the world
as fair, reasonable and conciliatory, is
under as strong attack from the
Prel!lident's political enemies as from the
country•s enemies.
~E ATTACKS benefit the enf!my's
strategy. 400 that Is as true now as it has
been for several years past when op-
position to the war has gained ascell-
d~. Presidential Aide H. R. Halde-
man 6 unfortunate use of the words "aid
and abet" corresponded to the constitu·
tional definition of treason . thus expos-
ing Haldema.n's crude innocence in
these matter.11.
But the angry response of the sur-
rendtr-ll·anr-J!f1ce: elements, that
Haldeman was accuslng Senator Edmund
S. Musk.le and Senator George McGovern
of treason, ls equally as crude and
dismally as innocent. Innocent because
these elements attribute to the Commu·
;.--
' .....
Richard Wilson
nist side humane motivations which do
not exist.
It might conceivably be different if
either Muskie or McGovern had found a
formula bridging the gaps in the
President's peace plan. But they have
not.
AT LEAST .MUSKIE has not.
McGovern's problem is a little difrerent
in that he cannot bridge the gaps for
A.mer.icans who do not reJlslt'. surrender
Md "fiumiliation in what began aa· a good
cause.
Mitskie's plan offers the COmmunJst
11ide little it could not get from Nixon. It
is to be doubted if the Communist side
trusts Muskie more , but maybe a little
more, than Nixon, which is not saying
much.
The Communist side know! that it is
dealing not alone with an individual In all-
. powerful control of a nation's policies. lt
knows that there is a historic continuity
of American policy, and it knows that
there is a difference between a man who
is running for office and one who has
been elected. That difference lies in large
part with those who advise him after he
is 'elected and with tbe 'sudden dawning of
information he had not had and
responsibility he had not shared .
SO IT IS NOT conceivable tllat
Muskie's proposal directly contributes to
a solution but may in fact delay it, as the
President contends. But there is another
..
poss ibility. Muskie's vagueness on the
most essential point of ro<'ltinued support
to a Saigon government supplies an ele-
ment of uncertainty which the Hanoi
government will wish to weigh in view
of the fact that Muskie has already
changed his mind about the war and
might change it again.
Hanoi might conceivably make a
clearer cut deal with Nixon at this stage
than if it took its cha nces on Muskie, who
will not, in 8DY case, be in a position to
act for nearly a year. Muskie then might
be ableJ.o cllim an indirect responsibility
for ending the w.ar through having chiv·
vied Nixon into making new concession!.
This kind of interplay shows what is
wrong with a candidate for Pre!ident
trying to be Prt!ident before he Is
e"lected in such a serious matter as end-
ing a war.
IT IS NOT A MA 1TER of treason or
patrioUsm. It is a maUer of judgment on
the course of action best calculated to
bring I.he war to an end at the earliest
possible date eoruistent with this coun-
try's interests.
Haldeman's oversimplification has now
been defined and redefined by President
Nixon and Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, and
even Vice President Agnew has ex·
pressed the thought In less blunt tenns
than Haldeman's.
Agnew's use of the term, "un-
dennining" the President's peace efforts,
is regarded by some of the instant peace
advocates as too strong . and it may be.
But it 11hould be evident by now that all
thf! politically inspired or patriotically in-
spired or humanitarian inspired attemplll
to bring the war to an end by circum-
venting the President of the United State11
are exercises in futilit y.
America's Expectation Gap
A patient rt.eovezinc frOm I nervous
breakdown ii likely to be Introspective.
So lt Js with a nation. Social com-
mentators are busy trying to describe
what wenl wrong in the United States in
the last decade -and what we must
guard against in the Seventies.
Although {,he terminology may differ, it
seems to boll, down to one thing: an ex,
pectation' gap. Collectively and in·
dividually .we h_ave been led to expect
fulfillments or national and personal iden-
tity that, if actually realized, would
signal arrival of the millennium.
With the Invaluable aid of hindsight, a
reasonable man can set that it was
foolish to nW1ure auch great ex-
pe(:tations. But our Innocent faith in the
ability of the United States to maintain
order abroad and spread afnuence at
DAILY PILOT
l!obtrl 1'{. Weed, Mlilher
Thom41 Ktelli~ Editor
' Albert II'. •Bac,r
EdHorlal Pool Editor
r
Edit0ri8.1 ·
Research ·--
home was easy to ma intain in the heady
days or the early-to mid-Sixties.
SOCIOLOGY PROFESSOR Herbert J.
Gans notes that whan aspirations rise and
people begin to hope for a better way of
life. they are only hoping. "But when ex-
pectations helgh~n. people ~me mora
impatient, more critical of their society
when expectations are not realized, and
eventually, more active politically." The
Apierican malaise. argues Gans, has
come about because of the realization
that "improvement Is no longer 11 easy
as it once was."
Even more damaging has been the in·
dividual aspiration gap. T. George Har·
rls, editor of Psyohology Today. com·
plaiJUI that "it's 11 if some 1dlot had rail-
ed the ante on what It takes to be a Person. and the rest or 111 accepted it
without.noticing." Al an n:ample.. Ha.rri1
takeJ a look at the <lanand.o plaotd on
ID¥M ones: '
"P'amUt members assume that they
ought ·co Jove each other, understand one
, anofhtr, or at least get their hostilities up
front. A-s any veteran of the Viclorlan
aovel knows, In the past, few mothers
and almost no rathers aought ttJch emo-
Uonal Juxurlea. A wife who ooce con-
The editorial pafe of the DaUy
Pilot a«ks to inform and atlmu·
late readM by prescntinc this
newspaper'• opinlona •nd com· mtntary on topl.Cl'of lnttr~t •nd
1lpUficantt, by~ a forum
f01" the cxpre11lon of our TMdelT
oplnloni. t:nd by prttentlng the diverse v\ewpoln.t. ot lhCormed ot>.
1 lt'f'Yftl and apokamen on topica or tbe dAY.
Friday, February J8, 1972
\ aide.red 1e1 a marital duty now ei~s to
be an or1asmlc playmate. lnle!leclu1!
companion, and growth-partner, 11 •ell
u an emotlonally lndepe.ndent puiOn, 1
uo55 between Madame Pompadour and
Madame Curie."
UNFORTUNATELY, it Is easier to
arouse expectations than It is to turn
lhem off. Professor Gans, for one, warns
that even if the Vietnam war can be end-
ed and the difficulties that came in Its
\Vake removed, "there remains the prob-
lem of which and whose expectations
can be achieved, and whose not." And
editor Harris concludes that we may
have become ''the victims of our own
sense of inadequacy -and easy targets
for the worried minds to whom nMtalgla
Is an Ideology.''
While realism may have serln on the
economic front. new expectations are
being created every day on other levels .
Young people hope to transform &OCiely
now that they can vote at age 18.
Women's Llb has turned houaewives and
sea-etaries into tigers prepared to flt1iil
for shored bousework and equal pay.
Dear
Gloomy
_Gus
Answering T. W. W. (GUI, Feb.
ll ): We elect councUmen to con-
duct city bu.!llness. not.. to run ev-
erything. Nor to takt private prop-
erty as they see fit, then burden
ta1payers with the oost of thtir
grandioee «hemes.
-P. E.W.
Overchargi11 g
,,.~ ......,. ~ . -~ ~-~lJ~clt&.d.~raolll ".
i +• t I ' ' • " -... .:...
WASHlNGTbN -Homebuyers are
overcharged $785 million a year by title
companies and title lawyers. Yet an ef-
fort by Senate reformers to end the
chiseling has bogged down.
The inaction of his colleague! has so
frustrated Sen. Wil!Jam Proxmire, D-
Wis., that he has
accused Senate
Banking Chairman
John Sparkman, 0-
Ala .. of stalling. ·
In an exchange of
letters meant for
one another1.11 eyes
only, Proxmire told
Sparkman that his
delay Of hearin&s
will rost Alabama voters $14 million 1n
title abuses.
"I BEIJEVE IT is vitally important,''
wrote Proxmire, "that the Housing sub-
committee take prompt action to reduce
real estate closing <ml.I ••• " He asked
for hearings on his reform bill so it could
be taken up in February along with
Sparkman's omnibus housing package.
Sparkman wr:ote Proxmire a courtly
response. "I pre!er to go ahead with my
original plans ," said the Alabaman.
But his meaning was clear : the title
company scandal would be swept under
the rug.
There Is an enormous amount of talk
these days about the · ' ! o c i a I
responsibility" of corporations. But a cor-
poration, actually. has only t \Vo
responsibilities: to show a profit, and to
do nothing that is
injurious to the so-
cial fabric.
Environmental , ec-
onOflllic, and human
problems are not the
proper concern of
corporations, except
in a negaUve sense :
they must run their
business with (A , de-
cent regard for the overall good of the
society.
BUT TJUS IS VERY different from
saying that corP,Otations should, or must,
involve thernsel~es in social policy. Who
decides which social policies a r e
desirable? Once the corporatic;in plunges
hip-deep into such matters, the dangers
outweigh the pOs11ible henefits.
If a corporation behaves .111 a good
citiun behaves, It would be fully
dl!charging its duties to the society. II its
product h1 sound, its merchandising
hooest, il! advertising reliable, and ii it
refrain.11 from injuring the environment
beyond reparation, then It has fulfilled Its
r ole.
Because socie(y at large has abdicated
Its basic responsibilities, we keep asking
1pecific in.11titutiorui to do jobs for which
they are not equlp~d.
WE DEMAND THAT educational in-
stitutions, for in11tanct, take over a host
of tasks they cannot handle. All. an
()rdinary school can do Is teach • child to
read. write. count, snd 1cqui re a few
creative skills . Instead. we expect the
schools to provide moral, peychologlcal,
vocational. and every other kind of
training that the family, the church and
other JmtUuUot11 1houJd be t1kini care
of. ' In the aame way, a corpor1Uon 11 part
of the market mechanl11ril of our
economy. Its function is narrow and wen.!
defined; If It performs that function well,
we can ask no more. And U we ask more,
we are liable to get both 1re1ttr cor~
porate dominance over our lives, and
greater governmtnt dominan ce over our
market mechanimls.
CORPORATIONS ARE rushing into tho
area of "social responsibillty'' as a way
of making amends for their previoo1
traruigressloru, and to Jmprt!s the public
with their "good cltiz.enship." But l!,1f
way to make amendl and to impreu t~
public lies Inside the b u s J n e s •
mechanism, not outside it. It consists In
turning out the best products at the
fairest price, with the maximum of com-
petition and the minimum or en-
vironmental degradation.
Government, at all levels, are tbe
proper instrument.t for effecting ch1nge1
In social polJcy. We mu!t make our
govemmentl more responelble to then
needs, and not pass the buck to buslneu.
SPARKMAN, ONCE a reformer
himself, didn't mention what bu becOme
an open secret in the Senate, For years,
he has demonstrated a special affection
for the banks which,· in tum, control
many title companies.
'Get Out of the U.N.'
As a result, all but the most pro-
gn:sslve banks are opposed to Proxmire's
reform plan. Proxmire, fully aware of
Sparkman's allegianct to the banks, shot
back a "Dear John" letter to him on
January 13.
"I was disappointed,'' he told Sparkman
bluntly. For Sparkman had already put
off executive sessions on the omnibus
housing bills for six months". Another
week's dela y, Proxmire felt, would cause
no legislative pincf\
ON THE OmER hand, II Sparkman
didn't allow the title relonn bearings,
this was "equivalent to delaying 1ny ef-
fective C:Ongressional action on the clo.-
ing costa problem for at least another
year," Proxmire said.
Proxmire cited an In.depth Was!Ungton
Poat series on kickbacks and other title
acandals In the Wash.inrton aru. On a
nationwide basla, the aver 1 g e
homebuyer, said Proxmire, is overcharg-
ed Sltl on closlne costs.
''I estimate thll home buyers In the
State of Alabama were overcharged $14
million for real estate closing cottl dur·
Ing 1971," Proxmire advised Sparkman,
who Is runn1n1 for reelection this year.
' SP Al\KMAN REFUSED to cha nae hiJ
mJnd. Jn a second, equ1Uy courtly letter
to PronnJre a few days ago. Sparkmat1
1tuck with lhe bankers and tiUe company
executives.
To the Editor'
·0nce again. the Un11ed Nations hu
lalled lo fullill the objectives sel forth In
Its charter - i.e., to prevent wara, lnlure
peace and further the econom ic progrw
of our troubled world.
Yet. In spite of such hlgh·IOUndlng
phraaeology !with endlea rhetorical
debatea ) at no time has any ronslderatlon
been aiven by either the Securlty Council
or the Gen~raJ Assembly to trying to
come up with a tolution to the years of
strife and destruction In Indochina.
EVEN WITH THE recent 1'1111 out"
peace plan of Ptesident Nixon, not one
member of the U.N. adviiinced any com·
menl3 on the merits of this proposal . This
further lack of concern climaxes the
many years or lndlrtcrenct displayed by
the U. N, -from th~ violaUons 11f the
Gtneva Conference by Hanoi to their con-
current complete disregard of the con.
venUoru of the IntemaUonal Red Cross.
as regards the treatment of prlt0ner1 of
war.
The conUnued "mental bllndntSS" and
''sins of omlsak>n'' b)' the U.N. were
rurthtr evidenced by the recent junket of
the Security Council to Addij Ababa. This
wu done at 1 COil 4f approximately
flll0,000. thereby •dding to the present
operatir11 deficit of 168 mlDiQn dollars.
According Jo the report. of Tlmts writers.
"Over 100 resoluUon1 were made in
verbal tscalatlons, with nearly nothing
acoompllohed ."
E .. cullve Vice Pruldent Wllll•m AND LET'S NOT forget either ho• the
McAulUfe o! the American Land Tille majority of the U.N. members voted the
Alloclatlon, the rich and powerful title U,S. down /with 1Jee) on our ruolution -
lobby, hotly disputes Proxmire'• view of' 'requeallng a "two China" poUcy!
the lndUJtry. McAuliffe told us the So, once 1giln. theK" membera of the
reform program might wind up lddlna to U.N. who have been reclplenll of over
hom<owneu' com by cultlna !he aupply $1tJ billion or U.S.-AID-ha•e expressed
or mor1p1e money. bi>th their dildaln aod ilcil ol concern ill
---·--·-----
Mailbox
'
' Lltltr't lrtnl ,_...... Ire wtklftl!· Nt""l llY
wrtlttt Wlllf ff!!""' ,,, .. , -..... "' .. ...-fl
'' 1n1. Tiit rltltt i. "°'"".. i.rim It flt -• Ir tllml11111 tlMI II rflf'""· All ltttl'-lllvtf "" ctvtt · t11111h1re 1/tf 111tlll111 t lllfrett. kt """" mtr .. w!flttlelll "' ,...11111 If •11fflcltfll rNMll ,. N •lrtlll, 'Htrr wHI lltf 11111 MllalMll
endeavorln& to find a solution to the In-
tolerable polltical 1t1d military co~
frontatlons In Indochina. In so doln1, can
it be that these 1ame members of the
U.N. endorst the prerent POW blackmail
and ran8()m tactics of Hanoll
>lert then. la further evidence u to
why the u .s. •hollld set out of the
U.N.-and lhe U.N. 1hollfd rot out of the
U.S.!
AL N. SEARES
B11 George --
Dear George: •
My brot.bcr--in·l1w ••nlt to get
In the newspaper buslneu. He
does nothln1 bu! hAJ\l around tho
comer 11loon •nd drtnll. however.
Do you kMw any new1papenn1n
who would be wllllnc to htlp him?
E. R.
Derr E. R.'
Yes , 1 great many. On second
though~ l think I'll run ovoa lo tho
11loon and help him drink my,.lf.
!When problems pile up nn• )'!IU ,
turn to C«>rge for 1ld ind com{art.
and.-nevermlnd, He !Ull loot blr
shove.I.I •
·-. J
Frldq, Ftbrlw'y lS, 1m DAILY PILOT &
Bugles, ·Planes Silenced
Nixon Spendi1ig Quiet l1iterlude in H.awaii
By RUTH YOUNGBLOOD
KANEOHE MARINE
CORPS AIR STATION, Oahu ,
llawail (UPI) -The bugles
were sUIJed today and the
night fighters grounded at this
l\1arlne Air base where Presi·
dent Nl:s:on is spending a day
the demonstration was aimed
at calling "attention lo the
increased b o m b I n g In
Indochina and the
deteriorating d o m e s t i c
economy."
On past visits here, Ni:s:on
has stayed in a hotel and
no eiplanation was given for
his choice of Armstrong's
home thb time. However,
Armstrong knew Ni:s:on during
his vice presidential. days
when the Marine was senior
pre3klentlal helicopter pilot
ror President Eisenhower.
and two nights in relative---------------------.
solitude before his trip to
China.
The President o«upied lht
home or base commander
Brig. Gen. Victor A.
Armstrong, a 1prawling two-
1evel. £our-bedroom yellow
cinderblock house on a bluff
overlooking the Pacific.
From it, the President and
.bis wire Pat had a spectacular
view of an extlt1ct volcaJttc
·crater rising from the sea,
, and cJllfs shrouded in mist.
It was this land that
Kamehamha the G r e a t ,
.. .(Hawaii's first klng, chose for
a royal meeting place. The
· peninsula became the sacred
Jand of Kamhameha. and to
this day is called "Mokapu,"
Hawaiian for •·sacred Land."
Shaggy Gift~
Nixon Eyes Musk Oxe11
SAN 'FRANCISCO (UPI) -President Nixon \\'ould
like to give Chinese Phemier Chou En-Jal l\\'O yowig musk
oxen named J\1ilton and Matilda, the City Recreation and
Parks Departmeqt disclosed Thursday.
Department general manager Joseph Caverly said
negotiations were under \vay between his igency and the
White House for the two shaggy oxen bred at the San
Francisco Zoo •
If the bargaining Is successful, Caverly sald, the two
animals will be flown from Travis Air Force Base to
Peking \•:ilhin the next few days.
J\fusk oxen reportedly are found only in Canada,
Alaska and Greenland.
Caverly said Nixon was particularly interested in
J\1ilton and J\latilda because they may well be the only
pair born in captivity in the United States.
Bugle calls, so much a part
of ~1arine life, were cancelled
during Ni.Jon's stay, a
spokesman said, from 5:30 '---------------------'!
a.m. reveille. to taps.
There would also be no night
flights to disturb t h e
Pres ident 's rest. the
spokesman said, and the
nutnber of daylight Phantom
jet nights scheduled for today
ltinocents .ti.broad
Armstrong, who now com ..
mands Kaneohe'1 1st Marina
Brigade, moved out of his
house and turned It over to
the Nixon.s for thelr stay. In
preparation for the arrival
ThW"Sday, new curtains were
installed in the 31-year-old
home, the carpet in the
master bedroom was cleaned
and lhe lawn and garden were
tidied.
The house, 15 miles from
the bustle of Honolulu, oc ..
cupies 4,030 square feet of
living space, is furnished in
cool shades or green and
yellow and ls kept cool by
the breezy trade winds on
the blufr.
The waler below the home
is considered too rough for
swimming, and the spokesman
said boats entering the area
wou1d be intercepted.
Secretary of State William
P. Rogers and Dr. Henry Kis!"
inger, assistant to the PresJ..
dent for national security af ..
fairs, were also staying 111
orncers' homes on the base.
The rest of the Nixon's staff
and the 87-member press
corps were at hotels.
PRESIDENT RICHARD NIXON RECEIVES TRADITIONAL HAWAII GREETING
Chief be~utiv1 R11t1, Studies, Enjoys Spect1cul1r View of Cr1ter
was reduced.
Four a11tiwar groups planned
a demonstration at t }Le
base 's front gate today, but
it \\'as unlikely the President
would see them since be was
not expected to lea ve the base
during his stopover. A
spokesman for the groups said
Watch Chinese Wine,
Nixon War11sNewsmen
See the best in
men's wear for
'72! The best SI•
lection in town for
double knit sl acks
end sport coats,
Remember, th•
best is always et China Denou1ices
Nixon's Policy
On Eve of Visit
)
TOKYO (AP) -Communist China de-
nounced President Nixon'• foreign policy
today u it prepared for bis visit.
"We firmly support the peoples of the
work! in their struggle against U.S. im-
peralist aggression," said the official
New China News Ag111cy in a long com-
mentary OD Nixon's State ol tbe World
report and Defense Secretary' Melvin R.
Laird's repoct to Congress this week.
The comp1entary mad\!( ~ onlf ooe
apecllic mentibn of Nixon's trip, saying:
".Referring to his l'islt to China and
Sino-U.S. relations, he said: "OUr new
, dialogue with the People's Republic ot
China will not be at the expense of
frierids. Nevertheless, we recognize that
this process cannot help but be painful
for our old friend on Taiwan."
ft added that Nixon declared bis in-
tention to maintain U.S. diplomatic ties
with and defense commilments to the
Nationalist Ollnese govenunent and said
this shows Nixon's government "has not
yet relinquished its idea or 'one China,
two governments'." But this was a
modification or Peking's usual complaint
against govunments which pursue a
"I-chinas" policy.
The Nationalist Chinese government 11has long been spurned by the Chinese
people," the Communist agency declared,
"and no force on earth can change the
resolve of the Chinese people to liberate,
'.raJwan."
'Maoistn Alliance'
Russ Allies i11 Most Part
Share Dim View of Trip
By The Associated Press
The Soviet Union is adopting an aloor
"wait and see'' attitude toward President
Nixon's trip to China. but the reaction is
n1ostly hos:U~~ among Moscow's Com·
munist allies in Europe.
Commentators in the oflJciaJ press of
Poland, Czechoslovakia and Bulg&ria see
lht_J'fiilt-eitber as an alliance of ~faosim
and American imperialism against the
Soviet Union or as a vote-catching glm·
mJck by Nixon !or the presidential elec-
tion.
But in Yugoslavia, commentators were
without exception more restrained, and
some even cautiously welcomed the
move.
In East Gennany and Romania lhe trip
was reporte(f briefly without comment.
And in Hungary a sardonic report about
the "Ni:s:on Caravan" and the sudden U.S.
fashion: in things Chinese carried no
political commenL
The most authoQtative political com-
mentator, Yuri Zhukov, wrote in the
Communist party newspaper Pravda :
"The Soviet Union regards as natural
steps towards normalization of relations
between the U.S.A. and China." He in·
dicated final judgment would be reserved
until Nixon returns to Washington .
But, he warned, the Soviets could not
disregard evidence that Peking and
"certain quarters" in Washington want to
use the contacts against the interests or
!he Socialist community.
However, some of the Soviet press ha s
portrayed China 's role in the meeting as
part of a "Machiavellian'' policy or mak-
ing China dominant in Asia. 1n doing so.
according to the official line, China has
abandoned any claim to leadership of the
Communist movement.
H'icks
""""' 'E . Ou · ,xcuse me, sir. r
Chinese chef insists 01i
being rei:ogni;ed.'
How Man y
Chi1iese? • Wlio Kn.o-ivs
WASHINGTON (AP )
China, as every schoolboy
knows, has more people than
any other country in the
\\IOl'ld. But how many? Not
even the Chinese know.
The estimates range from
753 million to 871 millon, says
the Population Reference
Bureau, Inc.
\Vriting in the gr o u p · s
Population Bulletin. Leo A.
Orleans, China research ex~
pert of the Library o f
Congress, says there is good
reason !or this uncertainty.
"The only Chinese census
that even approaches modern
demographic standards \\'as
taken in 1953 and the results
of that exercise are high ly
questionable. Birth and death
regislration, another means of
estimating population. h a s
been made only sporadically,"
Orleans says.
Orleans writes that China
appears to have gone through
the s a m e medical-public
health revolution that has
brought down the death rate
dramatically in many un-
derdeveloped countries since
World War 11.
. ·~
HONOLULU (AP) -Presi· tral Intelligence Agency" on
dent Nixon took time out the cover, he was asked jok-
Thursday to offer some advice ingly by a newsman whether
to ney,•smen accompanying the Chinese "'ould let the
him on the first leg of his party into the country ~·ith
journey to Communist China. that kind of material.
"Remember that Chinese Nixon, who apparently had
not seen the atlas before, ex-"·ine is like brandy -it's amined the cover. then
not 12 percent," Nixon cau-laughed loL:dly and said: ''This
tioned newsmen dur ing the HJ-will probably show ho\v much
. . .
hour flig ht from \Vashington -:.."..:'e~do:;n:;;'t::k:;;n:;•:;w:;;a::bou~l=Chi~·n=•=.°=' ==========; to Honolulu. 1r
Nixon spent most of the
nonstop flight reading and
meeting \vilh aides. news
secretary Ronald Ziegler said.
But shortly after the presiden·
tial jet took off, the President
and Mrs. Nixon \\·ent through
the aircraft chatting and shak-
in,g hands.
"Jsn't this exciting'?" said
an ebullient Mrs. Ni1on as she
joined her husband in greeting
newsmen in the plane's press.
compartment.
Asked if he needed to prac-
tice with chopsticks, Nixon
said he did nol. But he pointed
to Mrs. Nixon and said, HBut
she does."
Mrs. Nixon \\'as asked \\'hat
clothing she had brought
along. She replied she had
one suitcase filled y,·ilh boots:
an •·Jongies. ·•
She said that she \\'ould prob-
ably be seen over and over
again in U.ie same dresses
because of a limltalion on
luggage and slated that the
only purcha se she had made
!or the trip \\"as a heavy coat.
Nixon was shown a copy
of a China atlas prepared by
the Central Intelligence Agen·
cy. Pointing to a legend "Cen·
2500 sq. ft. bag
SJ77
. hmovmillfl ..
NeH' £ver8fl'-w
to,v '/?ices!
THE SHOW-OFF Artist of the Month:
Give your mixed dicbondra
and grass lawn the faste1t
shot in the Wcst ... of solid
green frowth. Apply any
time o year for 1hc most
"wanted" lawn on the block!
DICHOHDRA &
LAWN FOOD
TANK
TOPS s200
BIKINIS
s250
CAPRIS .
$)00 & $.2'°
Fri. Sat. Sun. Mon. Feb. 18, 19; 20, 21
' THE SHOW-OFF
22 fASHION ISLAND
NEWl'OltT llACH
-
• HUNTINGTON CENTER
HUNTINGTO N IEACH
--·------------~-
DONNA FRIEBERTSHAUSER
Exhibiting at our office now thru March 14
' The works of Dona Frlebert..hauser, a distinguished craftsman
in our community, w!ll be on display daily at our office. Come
meet !he artist and.see her unusual exhibits of sut"chery, weav·
ing, macrame, papler mache. batik and other crans. Mrs. Frie·
bcrt.hauser ls President of the Costi Mesa Art League and
instruct. for the Costa Mesa RecreaUon Department.
California Federal Savings
•1111 l.M!I Auldallpl • ,...,.. ....... ,,, ....
2700 Harbor llvd., Costa Mtu •
5000 sq. ft. bag
szg5
Tb010 fine dealers Iealure BEST Plant Food Savlnp:
AREA WIDE
• Ace Hardware St.ores
• Builder's Emporium
• Build n' Save
• Montgomery Ward St.ores
• The Handyman Stores
• True Value Hardware
Stores
• W. T. Grant.a
ANAHEIM
• Lin-Brook Hardware
2144 w. Lincoln
• Payless Drug
1860 W. Katella
• White Frant Nursery 2222 s. Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
e While Frool Nunery
3088 Bristol
El TORO e Glftl\ 'lbumb
21182 Bridger Rd.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
• Lln·Brook Hardware
I 7200 SO. Brcokhurst
• Woo!co· I!Oel Brcokhurat
FULLERTON
e Wan! & llarrlnglon
Lumber
301 S. Stale College Blvd.
GARDEN GROVE
• Hasty Lawn & Garden
Supply
10351 Garden Grove Blvd.
• TG&Y Home Center
12491 Valley View
• Two Guys' Dept. Store
12100 Harbor Blvd.
• Ward & Harington
Lumb<r
TlfTI Ganlen Grove Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
e Two Guys llepL Store
9882 AdamJ Avenue
LA MIRADA e Woolco
15300 Mirada Blvd.
LAGUNA NIGUEL e Niguel Harware
-Getly Drive NEWPORT BEACH
• J. C. Penney•s
Fashion Island
SAN CLEMENTE
• Bay Cities Hardware
106 Dtl Mar Avenue
TUSTIN • s. s. KrOlge
100 E. lit Slrfft
--.. --------~-----·-----·--.... __ -----------:..~-------
•
VO
N
ty t
Bal
hav
a I
, res
1ma
Ci
day
fo
w
mos
the
Dep
gove
alco
Th
prob
10
al co
Ame
"'I"' drll
]0"18
II
deal
of II
Th
lions
~r
" such
and
heed
-a
" • puOi
that
nerv
aoCi
drug
you
iden
AI
Dr.
new
and
It
ant
used
Cha deal
the
I
O~ang~ Coast Today's Fln a l
'N.Y. St.eeks
• VOL 65, NO. 42, 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAG ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, FEBRUARY '18, 1972 N TEN CENTS
Newport Wants County To Fund Canal Repair
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of tlM D•llY ~lief Sl1H
Newport Beach officials want the coun-
ty to pay for dredging and repairs to
Balboa Island's Grand Canal. City aides
have asked tht: county counsel's office for .
a legal opinion on the c o u n t y ' s
, responsibility fpr maintenance or various
amall~raft waterways.
City Manager Robert L. Wynn said to-
day he has obtained an opinion from
former City Attorney Tully Seymour that
Report Says
Drugs 2nd
To Alcohol
By CRAIG A. PALMER
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Alcohol ~ the
most abused drug in the United States,
the Health, Education and Welfare
Department told Congress today in the
government's first annual report on
alcohol and health.
There are nine million alcoholics or
problem drinkers in America -almost
10 percent of the wor-force ~ and
alcoholism . is an epidemic among
American Indians, according to the
report submitted under it new law
drafted by Sen. Harold E. HUlfhes (0-
Iowa), a rerormed alcoholic.
It said the 9roblem causes ·28,000 traffic
deaths In a fear and drains the economy
of $15 billion annually.
The report contained these observa-
tions from Dr. Merlin K. DuVal, assistant
seCretary for health and science at flEW:
"While we are horilfled by the abuse of
such drugs as hallucinogens, narcotics
and stimulants by our youth, we pay little
heed to the most abused drug of them all
-alcohol.
"\llhen this nation became concerned
about drug use among the young, the
puiJlic was finally forced to recognize
that adult use of alcohol -a central
nervous system drug which we use as a
social beverage -is actually the major
dtug problem in this country and that
young people~ learn from imitation and
identification with adults."
Alcohol does have medicinal value, said
Dr. Morris E. Chafetz, director of the
new National Institute on Alcohol Abuse
and Alcoholism, in an introduction.
It may be prescribed as a mild re1ax·
ant for aged and convalescent patients,
used as an occasional remedy for iD-
somnia or as a stimulant for lagging ap-
petite and digestion, or even for the relief
of pain, he said.
But alcohol abusers shorten their life
span by 10 to 12 years, DuVal added.
·Both he and Chafetz are medical doc-
tors.
The 1%1-page report defines alcohol
abuse as repeated episodes of iD-
toxication or heavy drinking, or con-
1iste11t use to cope. wttb life's problems.
An alcoholic "need& to drink, even
though he may know the polenlial
destructive behavior of h I s con-
sequences," it said.
An U·member task force headed by
Chafeti and including six persons who
dee.! regularly with alcoholics, reported
thest other findings;
-N-e mesis Final
Y acht Winn.er
Speclll lo tlie DAU. Y PILOT
' ACAPULCO -, Nemesis, Tom -. . Tobi.n's F.ridc.son JI out of the Sao
Diego Yacht Club, ls the corrected
time winner of the 11th San Diego
to Ac11pulco Yacht Re.ce.
Three Newport Beach yachts
wound up In ae<:ond, third arid
fourth places. Burke Sawyer's
Atorrante was ate0nd, B o b
Beacuhamp'a Dorothy 0 was thlrd
and Peter Grant's Nalu JV was
£our th.
Yachts stilt al sea today were
Alert, :I mlles ; Sangrita II, 1.15
miles, and Rainy Day, 192 milu.
None of these could afrect the
overall 1tandlngs, accordln& to nee
ofllcWs.
....... ------""--·--.,.__ ·-~ --A....--.
the eounty Harbor District lJ responsible
for repairs to the canal and:
-Balboa Island beaches.
-Balboa Island sea walls.
-The West Newport Channels.
-The Rhine Channel. .
-Street-end beaches on the bay and all
public channels.
-Street-end bulkheads on the bay and
public chaMels.
In these areas, and the tGrand Canal,
Seymour Said the hai-bor distrJct "'h~s the
. .
legal authority to perform lmprovemenU,
repair and maintenance work."
Harbor District oUicials said they had
seen the opinion, but weren't about to
abide by it without county counsel con-
currence.
"There's not too much we can say until
we get that opinion," said Larry Leaman,
chief of operations fur the district.
He said the district l;las the money , to
repair the canal now, if the Harbor Com-
mission and the county Board of
ans
UPI T1lt11ltele
It Was Inevitable
Rhoda Ralaelli models the latest fad - a Howard Hughes T shirt, iti a New York boutique. Hughes' Rosemont Enterprises have asked a
court inj unction against the people who are making and selling these
T shirts and buttons.
Newport Pai r1 Charged ;
Weed Haul Confiscaood
A Newport Beach man who police
allege was ' dealing marijuana wboleslae
is free on bail today, followiQg hii arrest
and the confiscation of 110 pounds of
weed believed to be worth $15,000 at a
Cliff Drive residence. . '
His wife was a1so arrested but released
on her own recognizance, promising to
appear tor arraignment later.
Gordon T. Connolly, 28, and Joy L. Con-
nolly, 27, of 3000 Cliff Drive, we.re ar-
rested Wednesday following a stat in·
.
Fertility Chair
'Works Wonders'
SOUTHBEND, Enaland (UPI)
There's one empty cbalt In the telephone
vesti.gation: ..
They are charged wilh possession of
marijuana !or aale.
Newport Beach police recommended
bail be set at $25,000 for Connolly, who
faces arraignment next Wednesday in
Harbor Judicial District Court.
His bail was reduced to $2,500 When he
appeared Thursday.
Narcotics Detective Sgt. Leo Konkel
said the alleged contraband would be
worth about $150 per pound ()TI the illicit
wholesale drug market.
He did not explain what led to suspicion
of Connolly and his wife but noted It wu oot a long probe.
~~glars " C.Ollect
$i.~ooo in Loot
exchange here. calculators a n d e.leictrlc type-miters
'1 wOllldn 't be oeen dead In I~" Glynla valued at near!y i1,ooo were .ioicn Thun-
MaM said. "The last three airla to ~ay night by buralars who smashed '!P"
sit in that chair all had to le.ave because the front door or • small bu!llness UJ!IJ
they be<ame pregnant" In the Newport Bea~lj -· " •
June Longbottom1 the last airl to use tw~~~ ~ ~ *' ~'
the chair, said Int bad been trying Ing calculator were _,; _.,. tdolli>'
unsuccesslully for three years to have ment carried from the ptemiscs or king
a .~~Y· 1 ~ Into ••-fert'lll . lndustrles, S71 A West 15th St., during ~ JOOn u movr:u \.lK: 1 1 _, the nigbt.
cba1r, l became pregnant," she · llkl. Deputies said the intruders 1ml8hed
"But I don't blame the otbtn for boycot-the ~ lock on the front door and ttng lbe choir. II ctrtainly ....,.. to then f the door open to gain en!<Y
ll'Ork wonders." to the buslne.a att1.
•
Supervisors approve.
"It's a bugaboo as to whether the canal
Is of regional or local benefit, though,"
Leaman .said.
ResidenU alone the canal have been
pressuring clty officials to at leist dredge
the waterway a.nd repair some of the
bulkheading for several months.
Wynn said this morning he bas not pro-
posed any money in the upcoming 1972-7S
budget for the project, however, because
he believes It is the c o u n t y • 1
6 to l Vote
Affects 105
In Prisons
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The
California Supreme Court, in an historic
decision, struck down the death penalty
today tn the 11tate with the nation's
largest Death Row.
The decision came on a &-1 vote with
Justice Marshall F. McComb the
dissenter.
A 4S-page majority opinion was readied
for publication in San Francisco today,
McComb flied a five-page dissent
~ rujlp~ cl\ll)e pn a sul .fll'!I }Y the
A~lvtl J.!berii" -Unqi and
argued '!an. S by Prot Anthony
Amsterdam, the ~nford University law
professor who delivered s 1 m i I a r
argumenll igalnst capital punishment
before the U.S. Supreme Court J&t. 17.
The nation's highest tribunal is et·
pected to deliver 11' own ruling within
two months --;-while 890 condemned men
and women in the United States await
the ruling, more than a seventh of them
in California.
There has not been an execution in the
United States for more than four years.
At San Quentin Prison, across San
Francisco Bay, Associated W a r d e n
Joseph O'Brien reported hope and e1-
pectation sweeping the huge Death Row
which houses 101 condemned men; in-
cluding some of the nation's most famous
murderers.
t'The Death Row prisoners. or course,
have heard radio and television reports
arld are happy to hear the good news,"
O'Brien said.
Gov. Ronald Reagan, a pr(lponent of
capital punishment, was in San Francisco
for a meeting of the University of
California board of regents.
"l will not make a comment on the ex-
pected Supreme Court rultng regarding
the death penalty until I've seen It,"
Reagan said,
The California case involved in today's
ruling was the death penalty imposed on
Robert P. Anderson for a 1965 killing. In
his arguments, Amsterdam, a soft spoken
36-year-old former prosecutor, said :
"For man deliberately and needlessly
to take We -which he does not un-
derstand -and to inflict death -whlcb
lead!: he knows not where -is an act
that eclipses every other cruelty humani-
ty can mete out or bear."
McComb said he did not agree with the
view of the majority decision that deaUt
ia crutl and unusual punishment.
"I happen to believe the death ~Uy
Is a deterrent to crime,'' he ·said. "Swift
justice for murderer11, including a speedy
and public trial followed by quick ap-
pellate review and execution, will help
curb the climbing crime rate."
He said executions are part of civiliza·
tion'11 legal.and !!JOral heritage.
"It has be'lii" a legitimate form of
punishment for 3Xl years," he said.
Last month, the New Jersey State
Supreme Court also struck down capital
punishment.
In addition ; nlne 11tate legislatures have
(See DEAl'll, P11e ·J)
'(jfi{na Stories
'
. Begin Toda y
The ,DAU. Y PILOT pr ... nis to-
day the flr'll ol i ~of apeclal pagu of ( lcIW'N , storiet on
~ lioolli trip to
~!Jla, • . -' ,,,_ tna!erlal wu gatbered by
pliotographer> and reporters of tlie
Auocl1led Presa Ind United Preso
lnt.maUonol.
TodaY'• coverage appean on
P11e i.
responsibility.
Wynn said the (act that lhe canal Is Jn
!act a dedicated public street is not
significant.
"It's long been established as a
navigable. waterway, 11 he noted.
Public Works Director Joseph T. Devlin
said the dredging alone could cost as
much as $20,000 while the repaira to the
seawall could run anywhere from $30,000
to 1100,000.
Earlier consideration or reconstructing
the entire canal has Just about been
dropped, Devlin noted, because ol the
$500,000 projected cost and the fact the
bulk of the cost would have to be paid
through an, assessment district which
residenU have already rejected.
"We 're going to have a conUnulng
problem with sand sifting back into the
canal," he pointed out, "because the
seawalls weren't built deep enough lo
allow deep dredging."
ena
'Clipping~ Judge
Tim e Off for Hair cut, Shave
By TOM BARLEY
OI tlHI D1llr Pllel Slllf
Orange County's "flogging judge" and a persuasive prisoner made 1
barg~in in court Thursday. The judge agreed to cut the prlsoner'11 jail sentence
provided the 77-year--old man got a haircut.
It all began when Superior Court Judge William Murray, who once
sentenced another county jail inmate to a flogging, firmly sentenced Michael
T~om~s Joyce of c;.osta Mesa to one year in jail for the long-haired prisoner'•
v1olat1on of probation. Joyce had been on probation as part of a sentence im-
posed two years ago for a burglary conviction and narcotics offenses.
. "Wow, man, that's a lot," winced Joyce, !Iha.king his shoulder length
hair.
"Get a haircut and I'll knock off 60 days," grinned Judge Murray.
"Right on, man. Where 's the barber shop?" replied Joyce. , · t
"Okay," commented the judge. "We've got WI a deal."
"Say judge," commented Joyce as Judge Murray got ready for lbe nert
item OQ bis calendar. "What about my mustache? It ouabt to be worth a UtUI
IO!q~I·" , . •
"'I'd say 30 day1, •-Judge Murray responded.
"Judge," announced Joyce, ''you've made yourself a deal.''
"I'm sure glad you don't W I magazine su~rlptlons, Mr. Joyee,"
chuckled J udge Murray to the dellallt of courtroom onlookers, ''you're a vert
persuasive prisoner/'
The happy Joyce left to begin Hla nine-month spell Jn Orange County Jan.
'"I11ere's a method Jn my madness," Judge M'urray later told a news.
man. Hit's going to be pretty hard for that well-trimmed youne man to ltep
back Into the drug culture." ·
Judge Murray's famous fiogging sentence was never C'lrrled out becauae
the county sherilf refused to administer the punishmenl The sentence later
was changed to a more modem fonn of punishment.
CocaineShip1nentBlocked
By French, U.S. Officers
FORT DE FRANCE, MarUnlque (AP)
-U.S. and French narcotics agents an-
nounced four arrests today that blocked a
shipment or tl.4 million worth of cocaine
into the United States.
Arreated at a beachfront luxury hotel
here was German Urrego, 44, a Colom-
bian. The French called him a major
figure in the narcoUcs route between
Latin America and the United States.
A second man, identified as Rogelio
Gomez, 36, a Colombian national, was
seized simultaneously with the arrest in
Miami of two other Colomblans, Gerardo
Moreno, 38, and Maria Lucia Salazar, 45.
Sources cloee to Ute investigation on Utls
French Caribbean Island said Urrego and
Gomez were arrested Wednesday In tbe
Diamant Roe Hotel. 1bey were arraigned
today Oil ch.a.rgea of "infractions con-
cerning the legislation on narcoucs."
"We just walked into their hotel room ,••
an . arresting officer said. "There was
abso)utely no resistance. They didn't
know we would be coming. Jn fact, they
were waiting for their money and we
llhowed up."
Urrego was described as a major
operative ln the system of transferring
cocaine and heroin by private plane, car
and other means to the United states
from Central and South America.
The heroin Is transformed from a
morphine base in the Marseille area of
France, bul LI tranJshipped to Latin
America wlth lncreu.ing frequericy to
avoid sllilened customs controlt on
Amt:rtca'1 Eut Coast
French narcotics officers t a I d
American omciall bad been tryln• to ap-
prehend Urttgo 1Ince 1961. 8,..nlly, U.S.
ofnclaLI Iearntid thol Urreg~ bid taken
· up residence In Fort De Franc..
The Unlte.r states wu plannlnl to ask
for his extred.It.lon when U.S. narcotics
bureau agentl nld they received ln-
formatkln that Un-ego Was about to
trarisle:r about 30 pound.t of cocaine -ap.-
parenlly In lhori oupply Jn the United
stala -Io MtamL
Th .. , both lbe French Ind .American
agentl moved Jo. A French ofOetr made
conlact with the Colombta!ll, paaalng
himself off u a buyer. n.. arrests
tollowed.
The kingpin of the LoUn operallon hu
been ldcnliflod by U.S. authorltlel u
Auguste Joaeph Rtcord, a Frenchman
whose organization reportedly haa ban~
died up to t2.5 bUlJon in narcotics a year
from hi& headquarters in Paraguay.
Ricord Is Jn a Paraguayan Jail, but
Paraguayan authorities have refused to
extradite him to the United States.
$60,000 in Diamonds
Stolen in Oa kl and
OAKLAND (AP) -A young gunman
has made off with $60,000 worth of cut
diamonds In the robbery of an Oakland
jeWelry manufacturing firm, pollcti aay.
The Harry Kahan Jewelry Manufac-
turing Co. wu robbed abortly before noon
Thursday,
We•t.ller
More huy atm.Sh1ne Is forecast
for Saturday, followlni momlns
low clouds ond toa. Tempero-
turts wlll be mild -Jn the 1t1'1,
Lcws tonight in the 40's.
INSWE TODAY
Rlt><r.ridc C01ln1J'I National Dou r .. ut>al If br!nginq Otd
Baghdad to So•tht,.. California
for io· dav• 1iartmg todav
through Feb. Z7. A •torv fn to-
day'1 Weekender give1 the d,.
toil.1.
L.M._. f
INllllt :t:I
Ctlli.n.1• II CltMlfltf &ft ._.. " c,.._, ,,
ONftt ,.,,_ If
•41..ntl ,... ' ,., .. _ ,.,. ..... "" ..... ,. ....... ,, ............. ,, ..... . -....
•
I
I
--~ .... ·-·-· -._ .. -· ... _ ...... __ ·-=-----··--__ ._ __ -.-... ------~·-...__ ___________ _
I
.• Dlll V PILC! N
Papt A.~o,.vred Presi,dent
Cannery Parking In Hawaii
' I
Plaguing Panel For Rest
lnadequ1te parking In 0 I d Newport
1g1in plagued Newport Be1ch planning
comm!Sskinm Thursday night u they
adopted a reoolulioo to esJablisb parking
requirements for commerclal UR! in in-
dustrial ......
Exprwinl cooctrn that that ordlnan..,,
!lcheduled !'or public bearing March 2,
would take at least 60 days to adopt,
co mmissioners also again asked the City
Council to adopt emergency parking rt-
qulremenll for the manufacturing (M·I )
area. '
City cooncllmen M'9nday rel~ lo
adopt such emergency legislation, saylng
they would wait for a master plan being
developed by the Cannery Vllla&e
Al!oclatlon to allow a parking loliltlon.
In the manufacturlng zone, commercial
Teachers Ask
Board Arrest
On Brown Act
By JOHN ZALLER
ot nit ~MW' Plltf St.tr
Huntington Beach City (elemenlary)
School Dillrtcl teochen are oeeldng the
arrest of their school board for violation
of Ibo Brown Ad.
retail stores are allowed without a UM
permit with no perking required.
Commissioners were concerned that
very dense retail Use9 -IOme 15 dwtll-
ing units per lot -were moving In. tak·
Ing advantqe o! the loophole In parking.
Bob Kausen, president of the SO.
member association, aaki any ordlnancts
would "stop the impetus of development
in the area" and that the association has
hired twa architect! to develop a master
plan by the end of March.
lie also said an Q{dlnance might
ellmtnate possibilities for centraliz.ed
parking.
Commissioner Donald Adkinson said
"this area lends Jtsell to creatJve park-tnf' but an emergency ordinance will
.. avoid irresponsible development until a
better aoluUon ls made."
Cornmissloners were allO concerned
that the Ca.Mery area commercial uses
were getting an economic advantage over
stores in other areas of the city where
parking ls required, 1
C<>mmlsslODer Wllllam Agee a!ked that
commission chairman OJrt. Dosh confer
with Mayor Ed Hirth to give the council
more background on the commission's
oplnlon.
He said the previous denial of an
emergepcy ordinance was due to "a lack
of communication."
Commissioners have suggested adopt~
Ing requirements of one parking space
for every 250 feet of gross floor space.
High Rise Hotel
Given Approval
By Plan Board
L1nd1,_Dozler, ezecutlve director of the
WeJt orange County Unlled Teachers,
Thursday requested that a criminal com·
plaint be filed against lour members of
the school board wbo dllcussed giving
pay raises to administrators 1.11 executive
session without listing the item on the
meeting's agenda.
Muimum penalty for each member of Newport Beach P I a n n i n g Com-
the board who is convicted would be siI m i s s i o n e r s Thursday approved unanimou.sly Emkay Development C.Om-months in jail ·and a $500 flne. pany's use permit application for a
Those named u 1uspects in • report geven-story, 218-room Sheraton hotel in
filed with lhe Huntington Beach poUce the "Newport Place" projeet.
are trustee Jack Clapp, Louis DaHarb, The hotel, previously designed for 13--
0rvllle Hanson, and Ivan Liggett. storlea, Js plaMed at MacArthur Asked for comment on the r;se, the at-Boulevard and Birch street.
tomey for the ptalnWf teachers replied, It will include banquet rooms,
"Oh, I didn't expect that the news would restaurants, meeting rooms and recrea·
get out this IOOn." tlon facilities .
The attorney, Donald Odell of Los Tbe secoad phase of the hotel project,
Angeles, continued 1ayin:g "I wasn't con-also planned for 2US room,,, will require a
templaUng any public tllformatlon on thls second use permit.
until we bad a chance to talk with the The pennlt passed with little discussion 1 .disttlet'flttorney." 1. .other than a qpestion Rf Pollce Depart·
He nld that he had requested a ment request tO approve P,rklng lot
criminal complaint through the police ligbtlng alandarda.
because 11that was the ~~ we were Community Development D I r e c t o r
lojd '!IF had to follow V we wanted to llichard llog111 explained that police
Pur.rue tJila thlnt. '' 1• Were conctrned' with crime prevenUon in
The poUce 'report, wh!Ch fs 'eJpected to I the lot and only wanted to lllaure that
be forwarded ' to the Orange County lighting was bright enough.
District Attorney nezt week states tha t Comm.Wionen revised that condltian
"the above .named comptskant (Linda to allow the police the right of review of
Dozier) accompanied by an attorney. , • ligbtlng a.s an advisory body.
filed this report ·BJld alleged that a viola-
tion of the Brown Act had occurred and
that a criminal com pl a.int was desired."
Mrs. Dozier was not available for com~
ment on the case this morning. But sfle Is
employed throll8h the Huntington Beach
Teachers' AsJOCiaUon, and presumably
has the backing or that group for her ac-
Uon.1
The compl;jint centers on a discussion
of pay raises for adminlslraton .tbat was
undertaken by lour member:.s of~ ,the
school board and executive sessla11 on
Jan. 11. The fifth member of the board.
Stephen Hold~ did not attend that meeting.. ' ·
The discusslo~ did not appear on the
agenda for that 'lneetlne and Mr,. Dozier
belleves'!hat the Brown Act requires that
It should have:.
On another occasion, Mrs •. Dorothy
McClure, president of the -Hlmtlngton
Beach Teachers' Association, added "We
want to stop the bo1rd f~m discussing in
closed session what must by law be
discussed in open session."
OWHCOAST
DAILY PILOT
CJIMIOE CQlST fVI' lllatlO tmPAM'r
........ N. w ... -... -J•e\ "· cm.,. "" ............. ~~
1\01!1n l..nl E•""
,,..,..,, A. M~fll• ._,.,. ,....,
L Pat" Jeri.,
""""" '-" C1ry Edltw
Pease Berates
Newport Beacl1
Leadership
The myri1d problems conlronting
Newport Beach today are the result of
Jack of le.adership, Fifth District coun-
. cllmanle candidate Harvey D. Pease
charged today, ·
Pease, who ls one o{ two challengers
for Mayor Ed Hlrth's council 1eat in the
April 11 elecUon, blasted both the maybr
and ·their mutual opponent, Paul B.
Ryckoff, in a statement this morning.
Referring to an exchange betwttn
Ryclroff and Hirth over Upper Newport
Ba y, Pease said, "The flap raised hy
Ryckoff ls merely his attempt to create
&omethlng to talk about.
"Ed Hlrth's comment, on the other
hand, is a smokescreen to the fun-
damental Issues."
Those issues, Pease .said, are "the lack
of leadership and failure of the present
City Qluncil to represent the people or
our community."
He said this council "has the worst
record in 25 years that 1 have been a
resident of NeW}Xlrt Beach."
Pease .said the controversy over the
pro posed Pacific Coas\ Freeway and
voter rejection of the civic center bonds
are examples.
"Leadership and failW'e s go hand in
By HELEN THOMAS
KANEOHE MARINE AIR STATION.
Oahu, lfawali (UPI) -On ground .sacred
to Hawailan antiquity as the meeting
pl1ce of kJngs, President Nllon rested
and 1Judled today !or hll hlltorlc trip to
meet the rulers of modern China.
Ni.J.on, accompanied by his wile Pat
and oltl cial staff, flew from snowy
Washington to .suMy Hawaii Thursday
for a tranquil rest to adjust to changing
time zones and for further study before
his departure for China Sunday.
The President stepped off the presiden-
tial jet "Spirit of '78" Jnto sunny 7S.
degree weather at this Marine Corps
base to the cheers of a crowd of 5,000
persons.
Draped with a colorful red flowered lei,
Nixon got Into a Jong, black Whlte House
limousine and went to the home of Brig.
Gen. Victor A. Amutrong, commander of
the base, 15 miles from flonolulu.
The Nli:ons will spend two nJgbta in
Hawaii and another on Guam before ar·
riving at Shanghai on Monday (China
time ) for a week of conferences with the
leaders of the People's Republic of· China.
The twCHlay stopover in Hawail and the
overnight stay on Guam Saturday night
were recommended by Dr. Walter Tkach,
Nixon's personal physician, to overcome
the fatiguing physical v:pense of chang-
ing time zones.
Nixon seemed d,.ply touched by the
warmth of the bipartUian congressional
sendoff he reteived in Washington Thurs-
day, aad a traditional aloha welcome on.
hls arri val in Hawail
Kaneohe ts built on a peninsula !till
called "Mokatu" -sacred because
Hawaii 's first king, Kamehameha the
Great, chose it as a site for a royal
meeting place.
"It's nice to spend a day in Hawaii
before mo ving across the world," he told
the airport crowd as he moved among
them shaking hands. "I waRt to sit in the
sun and get a tan."
With an entourage of al:K>ut 150 persons,
including White House aides and
members of the press corps, Nixon will
arrive in Peking via Shanghai at 11 :30
a .m. local Ume Monday (7:30 p.m. PST
Sunday),
Premier Chou En-lal will head tbe
welcoming recepUon for Nixon at Pe-
king Airport and plaMed to accord the
first American president to visit China
full ceremonial honors.
The President ~t most of his time
en route to Hawall Thlirsday Conferring
on the plane with national security affairs
advisers Henry A. Ktssiner and Secretary
of Slate William C. Rogers, his two chief
lor•l111 pol!ey i<fvlaers on the trip.
Whlle tJie agenda has not been set, the
secret meetings in China are expected to
cover a range of controversial problei;m
whlch have separated the two nations,
particularly Formosa and the Vietnam
war.
The philosophical part of the con-
versations were expecte(I to dwell on
way1 to relax tension between the coun-
tries aftir 22 years of coJd war hostility.
Ebullient about the trip for weeb, Nii:~
on nevertheless told a recent news con-
ference : "This trip should not be one
which would create very great optimism
or very great pessimism."
Hughes Staying
On Eighth · Floor
Of Latin Hotel
By CHARLES GREEN
MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP) -
Howard Hughes was presumably holed up
today on the tightly guarded eighth floor
of Managua's InterconUnental Hotel, and
a spckesman in the United States said be
would remain in the Central American
country indefinitely.
Both President Anastasio Somoza's or-
fice and Hughes spokesmen Jn the United
SU.tes conflnned that the eccentric
billionaire flew to Managua Thursday
after 15 months of living Jn seclusion ht a
hotel in Nassau.
He came on business, the gOYemment
said. ·
In La&" Vegas, a spokesman for Ute
Hughes Tool C<>. nld HU8beS' slay In
Nicaragua was indefmlte -••we aren't
saying how long he'll be there, but 'in-
definite' could indicate a certain degree
of permanence." "---))]] N..,.tt h•l•Yard
M1itio9 Mclniu: P.O. lex 1115, !16U --
hand," he said . .
Pease declined to elaborate f'Urtber. ·
"I don't think its necessary at this
point," he said, "these issues will evolve
a.s we go along ln the campaign."
He added that Hughes 11 considering Jn.
vestment.a 1n the country and "consider's
the economic and political situation
good."
C.N ._, at w.t MP "'-'
L....-a.dl1 m ~t •-.....,.,., 9wto: 11'1S ...,. ........,.,... .. a... ..... 11c..... .... M ailme1i Taking
G. W. Day Off
Regular mail won't be delivered on
Washington's Birthday Monday. Only
special delivery service. and collections
from white-topped air mail mailbozea or
those deslanatlllg a holiday collection schedule wlU continue.
But ~ office lobbies for min
d•JIO'lll, lock bo1 ac•:e11 and ldf-wvlce
slamp machines wW be open.
All Orange County elementaiy and blah
school& ind junior odll .... will be ctosod
M..a.y alto. Only Cltlpmin CoDqe and
Wm a...i Unlvenlit Will --in Opell,
OJwrty offices and most Orange C<>unty
clty halls wlll close.
MOii banb will cl.,. on Feb. 2L
Hughes reportedly left Nassau alter a
dispute with Bahamian officials over
work permits for the stall that tnsutates
film from physical contact wltb the
out.side W9rld.
He'll liave no such trouble ln
Nicaragua, which is run by the oldest and
one of the most ltC\lre dictatorships in
Latin America.
"This waa not a sudden thlng," said
another Hughes fool source In Las
Vegas. "Hughes dfd not just fly out of
the Bahamas at the list momenl wilh no
real Idea of where be wu going. Hughes
owns properties Jn Nlc:iragua and Is con-
sidering further invutmentJ."
He added that Nicaragua It now the
ba,. ol H11$hc$' owatlons, and that the
fi&.ye:!Mlld lnduslriellst almost certainly
wlll not rttum !Al the Bahamas.
There was specutaUon 1 m o n I
Nlcaragu.w that HU8bea mlgirt be tn-
ter .. ted In any one of ,.veral deals, tn-
cludlng eslebllllunent o! o casino and a
larile land pur<haae. .
OFFICER OF YEAR
Robort McCulloch SUPERVISOR OF YEAR
Sgt. Wayno Cc·:nolly
McClellan H el!1ring
'First' Under Optinn
Convicted killer William Westwood
"The Man" McClellan today became the
llrsl occupant of death row to face court
action taken in the light of the Supreme
Court's rejection of the death penalty.
McClellan. 30, of Alhambra was
ordered by Orange C.Ounty Superior Court
Judge William Murray to return to hi1
coortroom April 11 !or what is tenlatively
scheduled aa a pretrial hearing.
least one unanimous reaction to the news.
· They said prlsoners collflned to the
Superior Court holding tank loudly
cheered when someone passed the y.·ord
around.
From Pagel
' DEATH .•.
It is just as likely, Laguna Nlguel aJ. repealed ll But In one of them. West
2 Newport
Policemen
G'et Honors ..
A blue-eyed Irishman who mua tht
desk where decillOOI mu.st be made at
a moment's notice and another who
nabbed three burglary au!peeta 1Itiele-
handedly ab: da,ya earlier were honored
'l'hurld1y u the Newport Pollce Depart·
ment's Supervisor and Offtcer ot the
Year.
They are Sgt. Wayne Connolly and Pa·
trolman Robert McQilloch.
Chosen by a vote of fellow offlcen the
men were honored at 1 Newport Hai-bor
Exchange Club luncheon, one of manv
a c r o s s America winding up NaUonit
Crime Prevention Week.
A tenet of law enfon:ement ts th 1 t
a pnllet!man works 24 hours a day, but
Thu .. ~ay's honorees are also lnTOlvtd in <'"''!r activities.
Co!l::?ge, communtty ac~lvltln, aports
and families all take a measure ol the
men's time .
Chosen as Supervisor of the Year, Sgt.
Connolly is watch commander on the day
shift· with a wide range of 8.S!!llgMnents
as a background.
He lu!s been in patrol, vice. plain-
clothes Investigation, plus departmental
planning and training actlvJtles.
The fonner l4s Angeles Police De-
partment patrolman joined the Jo ca I
force In J966 aRd currently attends Cal
State. Los Angeles. where he Is majoring
in cri1nlnology.
He and his wife Pat and their three
f'hildren live fn the Harbor Area .
Officer McCulloch, cited as Officer or
the Year, was on patrol at ! a.m. in
Corona del Mar a week ago today, when
he spotted a susptcious car.
torney Tom Keenan said, that McClellan Virginia, the upper house of the
will be formally sentenced on that date to legislature voted last week to reinstate it. ~
Ille imprisonment for his kllling in 1967 of In Sacramento, the State Department
The vehicle bad a television set pro-
truding from the trunk, plus a hoard of
antique sterling silverware and other loot
tak en from an Emerald Bay home tn a
$5.000 burglary, '
two patrons at the Gas Light bar In Stan-of Corrections aald prisoners condemned
ton. to death will continue .to be handled in the
McClellan was to have gone through a same manner until the qu~on of capital
r<M1ll of the penalty Rhue o! the Superior punWunent has beon decided through the
C<>urt trial in which he was defended by appeal process.
Keenan. 11We suspect there'll be a Jot of ap-
The Alhambra man was one of a peals," to the Califoi-nla ruling, a
number of death row occupants who got a spoke.pnan said.
second crack at the penalty phase when In the CalUomla Legislature, State Sen.
the Callfornla Supreme C<>urt ruled that George Deukmejlan, (R·Long Beach),
trial judges had unfairly barred pros· , promP!ly introduced legislation allowing
pective jurors oppoeed to the death the Legislature to determine "hlch
penalty from deliberations. crimes would be punishable by 'death.
Keenan today predicted 1 l m i I a r The change would require a constitutional
reaentencing to ll!e terms tor two other amendment.
Orange County occupants of death row -Assemblyman Alan Sieroty (D-Beverly
Gary Phoenix of .Costa Mesa and _.)!llisl .~uthorol~b~!Ol'.eP!''!l'theAfath
Frederick Saltrfleld of Sarita Aria. pena1/y, called the decision "a victory for
Phoenix, 28 drew the death rap last the ctignity of man."
year on multiple counts of forcible rape In the last 79 years, Callfoml4 executed
and lddnaplllg w~ he,.., emsioy.d at 5112 PJl~ .. ~by banging ..i 19' by
a llunllngtoo lleacli haaltb >rpa" gas lri Sali Quentln'l (&al chamb<r. tour
Saterfield got tile death penalty for the were women.
kllllng of his commonl•w wife ana-..,her San Quentin's Death Row, expanded to
daughter at a time when he was on three cell blocks because oI its con-
parole from an attempted murder con-tinually incre3.slng population, Includes
v!ctlon. Sirhan B. Sirhan, ..,.$sin ot Sen. Rob<rt
Reaction among SUpeflor Court judges F. Kennedy ; John Linley Frazier. con.
and lawyers today to th( news of the high vlcted maa1 klller, and Cult Leader
court's abolltion of the death penalty ran Charles Manson. Man.son was tem-
about nine to one in favOr of the rulfng. porarlly in Los Angeles today for a court
Sheriff's deputies told newsmen of at hearing. '
He arrested the burglary suspects, who
are nO \V awniling prosecution, holding
them until followup officers arrived.
Officer McCUiioch and his wife Leona
:ind son live in the Harbor Aru, where
he "·orks out 11.t the Orange Coast YMCA,
playing handball and boxing.
He is 11.ttending Golden West College
a.s a police science major.
Frat Outlawed
111 Rent Hassle
PULLMAl'i l\'ash. (UPI) -The Kappa Sig~a frate~irY chapter .at Washington
State University ls on the black list fo-r
allowin g four coeds to move into the
fraternity house as paying nonmembers.
1The '!nlversily said Thursday , It of·
I h<a!IY. Iild withdrawn recognition of the
chapter as a recommended living group
on campus.
Grant McLean, frp.ternlty chapter
president, said the worilen were allowed
to move into the chapter house as an
economy move and were housed on
separate floors with separate facilities.
"We're in financ1al trouble and need
more rent-paying residents to keep the
house in operation," McLean said.
•
lllts• fine t•bles frotn H.,.ff1qe fvrnf.
ture •t• just • fari" of °"'' excitint mid-
. winter s1le which ;, now in full 1win9.
Select•d groups from such well known
lin•s •s H1nredon, Herifa9•, Dr•xel and
much more are available at suhst-ntial
1aving1.
llze: 02.._HD
.... , .. , SALE $135
Cameos erlensiye table coll.etion of.
fen classic Italian styling cr••f•d fo:r ,
a fum itu,. connoiss•ur. The1e fin• piec.
•• fe•tvr• burl wood tops and 1tai9'.
resistant pull tr1ys for your conve"'"
ience. /
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON
7etl•
i-
i I .
DREXEL -
INTERIO.RS
Sls-e W22·D2Wf21
• ... fl" 'SALE $135 . .
HERITAGE KARASTAN
TORRANCE NEWPORT BEACH
1721 W01tcllff Dr., 642·2050
oPIM NIDAY '11t-f · 23649 Howthorno 11..i.
lllJ) IJl.lt1t 0,...,,..,, 'tfl t
P'lill fa :al .............. a .A.t 'd'' AID-HSID -,. --., -"-' .... ,..,
.. -' \
-1
• I
I
--·t·"-
a
t
r
s
0
d
t
b
So
•i
reo
foo
abi
ord
•
. -DAILY ~OT EDITO~IAL PAGE
' .
All It Takes '_ ,Js Mon ~y
The cries for preservation. conservation. un~vel9~,
ment -or whatever -of Upper Newpott Bay c'1""
tlllue to grow.
·Almost daily now, especially .., the local political
waters heat up, the controversial Back Bay's future Is
a matter ol discussion. -
A U.S. Department of the Interior biologist .!a.lt
week said what his office has said before on paper -
that the bay would make an ideal wildlife preserve.
"You should all have etched Jn your minds that
we all have a stake in what happens to the bay," in·
toned the scientist from the Bureau of Fisheries and
Game.
There is of course one "ery simple way to insure
the con servationists' dream: let some public agency buy
w'hat the county doesn't own already from the Irvine
Company.
Supposedly, that is what all those countless Bat~
Bay studies are eventually going to recommend.
Along with the Interior Det>ar.1ment investigation,
the California Parks and Recreation Department, which
similarly has recommended preservation of the estQary,
is also lpoking at \Y&Ys to come up with some ,money ..
Certainly the future of the Back Bay is getting no
closer scrutiny than by the Upper Newport Bay Co-
operative Planning Project.
This group. comprised mainly of representatives ot county and city government, and the Irvine Company.
has been waiting for several months Dow for a staff
study on · feasible uses of the bay that would be com·
patible with a preserve', and a preserved environment.
George Dawes, Newport Beach harbor anl:t tide·
lands administrator. said those reports have been de-
layed pending the result of these federal and state
studies.
If. in fact, .the federal government does want to
buy at least a part of the bay for a wildlife .1anctuary,
then that must be ihcluded in any master plan recom-
mended by the coorerative planning group.
Throughout al this, the environmenta!Ists -~~ve
been mallln& a lot of commotion about the neod for
qbick ,doi<:Won•-Perh1p,a'they forget, however, th1t the
Uppei"ll"3' 'J& not -p ofttn has been claimed· -the la~ nahu-JJ utu.ary bttweth Los Angeles and the Me xi· ca~ ~er and these agencies have more thar:t this nea
to eonsidti:. · •
-fdeally, .th.at devel0pment will . be oriented to public
recre•liOll in a way that will allow large cumbers of
pe~.ple ~9 take a,dvantage of this attractive marine
setting, -'
Once pollution problems are worked out-and they
•bould be of first _ priority -then a wis"Jll.n to both
conserve · and utiliie this· wondrous body water must
be found II a Jocal level.
Sl1e Got the Job Done .
The . subject of ecology ls jleginning to draw the
.same reaction as that old saw aQOut the weather: every-
body talks about it but nobody does anything_. Aod too
often thbse who do tallc about It do so at dir!erent times
and on different sides.
.But Margaret Setterhoim, 1 corona de! Mar High
Schoor student, proved the adage doesn 't hold w1ter.
Last week she brought the talk on the Upper Newport
Bay together in one assembly of 600 students. Its pur·
pose was to "put all the sides out on the table," said
Margaret, president of Students for &:tvironmental
Action.
Margaret worked alone all year, making counUess
phone calls to prospective speakers, working with the
school administration and publici2:ing the event.
She even persuaded a member ol the U.S. Depart·
ment of Interior to speak publicly on its study o! the
possible preserve area, something never done before.
One speaker said she "pestered and heckled me all
year Ui come," and added, smiling, "but there should
be rpore-like her."
We agree. N
Conte mptu ous Poli tical Attacks Homebuyers
Victims of
Over chargi11 g
They Help the Communists
WASHINGTON -W.torically, it is
necessary to go back a long way to fi11d
precedent for the contemptuous poliUc&I
attacks on President Nixon's peace ef-
fort. L<>gically. there is no precedent.
Domestic discontent with the War or
JBU, criticism of the "unconditional sur-
render" doctr ine of
Pttiident Roosevelt
ill World War Il -
these are precedents
to show that war
policies are not al-
W•Ys popular.
But in the prestnt fnstance , the dif-ference is clear. An
e~my strategy Is .
based upon the collapse, not ,of the
armJes in the field. but of American
public support of President NixOn's pro-
gram ending the war . A presidential
peace plan, judged widely over the world
as flir, reasonable and conciliatory, i.s Under as strong attack from the
President's political enemies as from the
country's enemies.
m:r;.,p; A TT A.CKS "'nefit the enemy'!
straf.egy, and that is as tru~ now as it has
been for several years past when op-
positk>n to the war has gained ascen-
dancy. Presidential Aide H. R. Halde--
man's unfortunate use of the words "aid
and abet" corresponded to the constitu-
tkmal definition of treason, thus expos..
ing Ha\deman's crude innocence in
these matters.
But the angry response of the sur-
render-at.any-price element!, t h a t
Haldeman Was .,cimstng SenatOr Edmund
S. Muskie and senator George McGovern
of treason, is equally u crude and
dismally as innocent. Innocent because
these elements attribute to rbe Commu-• . .
r ~-,.. .. -~--. • • .
Richard' Wilsou'. l
~ ' ' .,, ,
nist side hwnane motivations which do
not exist.
It might conceivably be . di.fie.rent if
either Muskie or McGovern had found •
formula bridging the gaps .in .the
:president's peace plan. But ·they have
not.
AT LEAST . MUSKIE has not.
McGovern's problem is a little different
in that he cannot bridge the gaps for
Americans who do not r~ ltll're.tlder
and humiliation in what bee• lJ a good
cauS'e ' ~ · ' . . .
Muskie's plan offers the <:oinm~
side little it could not get from N'LJon. It
is to be doubted if the Comnluni.'!t slde
trusts Muskie more, but maybe a little
more , than Nixon, whicll Ls not sayin&'
mt1ch. ·
_·The Communist side knows that it is
dealing not alone with an individual in all-
powerful control of a nation 's policies. It
knows that there is a historic continuity
of American policy. and it knows that
there is a difference between a man who
is running for office and one who bas
been elected. That difference ).ies In large
part with those who advise him after he
is elected and With the sudden dawning of
information be had not had and
r~§POnSi~ility he had oot. shared.
SO lT IS NOT conceivable that
Muski e's proposal directly contributes to
a solution but ma y in fact delay it, as U:le
Pre,sident contends. But there Is another, .
..,.
possibility. Muskie'1 vagtlf.ntss on the
most essential point of.contlnued 1upport
to a Saigon government wpplies an ele-
ment tlf uncertainty which the Hanoi
government will wish to weigh in view
of the fact that Muskie has already
changed. his mind about ~ .war and
might change it again.
Hanoi might conceivably make a
clearer cut deal with Ntxon at Ulis stage
than .if It look iU ·chances on Muskie, who
Will not, in any case, be in a poaiti9n to
act for nearly a year. M~e then might
be.able to·claim ~indirect resl?'?nsibillty
for ending the war through ltavjng dliv·
vied tilxon intO making new concessions.
This lclnd of interplay shows what' ls
wrong. wlth a candidate for . President
1eying th be Pruldent hefore he is
elected In such a serious matte! as end.· hll .1 war.
IT IS NOT A MA'l1'Ell' of treasoo or
paµiC?ti!m . It is a matter of judgment on
the course of action best calculated to
bring the war to an end at the earliest
poS!i}:lle. date consi!tent with this coun-
try's interests.
Haldeman's oversimpllficatiOn has now
been defined and redefined.by ?resident
Nixon and Dr. Henry A. Kissinger~ ancj
even Vice President Agnew hu: tx4
pressed the thought ln less blunt tenns
than Haldeman 's.
Agnew's use of the term, ''un·
dennining'' the President's peace ettort8,
Is regarded by some of lhe instant peace
advocates as too strong. and it may be.
:Qut it should be evident by no\f ,that all -
the j>olittcally inspired or patriotically in-.
spired or humanitarian inspired attempts
to bMng the war to an end· by circum-
venting lhe President of the United Stat.e.s
are exercises in futility.
America's Expectation Gap
A p8Uent recovtMn& from a nervous
breakdown iJ Ukely tq be lntrospecUve.
So It ii 'With a naUon. Social corn·
mentators att busy trying to describe
w)1at went wrong in the United States in
the last OeciOe -and what we must
guard against In h Seventies.
Although .the lerminology may differ , It
seems to boil down lo one thing: an ex·
pectation gap. Colleetively · and in·
dividually we have been led to e1 pect
fulfillments or national and personal iden·
tity that, ·If actt1ally realized , would
aignal arrival of the milleMiwn.
With the \lnvituable aid of hindsight. a
wsonable .man ·can 5ee lhat it was
foolish to . nurture . sJ.lCb-.great ex-
pectatlona. But out' Innocent faith in the
ability. ol lbe United States to maintain
order · abroid and spread affluence at
, Oi.ANol COAlf ... ' .. ,,
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed, Pttblilh·rr . ' Thomas Kttt1il, Editor
Albert W. Batea
Editorfal Page Edi£or
Th• editorial t>t.? or th& Da.lly Pilot .et'ka to tnrorm and aUrnu-
Ja.te J"ffdm. by pretentln1 thl•
ne"''lplpct'J ·d'plnloos •M com• m~ntary ort ~ of lnteretil and alpl.5~ ~ridlns a forum for tM exprtWJOn ot-'.'our Tetldtf'S" oDJniona, and by prewnU nr the dlve'IV viewpolnll of Wonned ob-
·~ and l~tn Oft \opkl or U..4-y.
'Frida1, February 18, 1972
•• "' -1 ·r··~1~· .. ,. ' "' ,. l' .. 4 • •Ji! ' Edit~' "•
.. . -Res~arcn »
' { . .._ .... . I
1 home was'easy to maintain in the heady
d!ys of the early--to mid-Sixties.
SOCIOLQGY PROFESSOR Herbert J.
Gans notef that y,;ben aspiJ:allons rise and
people begin to hope ror a better way of
life , they a're only hoping. "Slit when ti•
pectations heighten. people become more
impatient, more_ critical of lheir society
when expectations are 'not realized. and
eventually, more active politically." The.
American malaise, argu'es Gans, ha!
come about because of the realization
that "improvement Js no longer as easy
as It once· was." ;.•
EVen more damaging has been lbe in·
div!dual aspiration gap. T. George Har·
r is. editor of Psychology Today, com·
plajna tha,1 "lt's "II I0!1le Idiot had rail-
ed the ante: on what It takea to be a
person, and the rest of us accepttjl It
wjthout noticing." Al an es:Jtnple,.R«rria tam ',: look at tb• dfmllllis placed on
lo..a °""" 1 -"1'1111lly members uSUnit !bat Ibey
ought th love each other, underrtand one
another. or •t least get their hostilities up
f(tlnt. As any veteran' of the Victorian
nov<J "1ows. In Iba P.a•~ few mothers aOcl .itno1t no fathers' sought such em ..
Uonal lu1urie1. A wile who once COO•
sidered "' • marltal duty now Upoct& to
be an orgaatnic playmatt, 1inttllectuaJ
companion, and lf'Owtb partner •• , well
u an emotionally tndtpendent penon. a crou belween Modame Pompo~ and
Madame Curle." " \JNFORTIJNATELY. ll -II easier to
arouse 1erpecta.Uons than it ls ' to turn
lhem off. Professor Gans, for t1rie, warns
that even if the Vietnam war can be end·
ed and the dlllicu:l.Ues' that came In its
w1ke 1-emoved. ''there remalns )he Pr9t>-
lem of whlch and whose expectatiO.. can be achieved, and whose not." And
editor Harrla concludes that we may
have become "the victims of our own
se'nse of inadequacy -and euy target.a
for the worried minds to whom nostalgia
is an ide<ilogy."
While realism may have set in on the
economic front, new expectations are
being created every d1Y on other levels .
Young people hope to tr1n1form· society
now that they can vote at age 18.
Women's Lib has tw-ned housewives and
secretaries Into tigen prepared to fight
for shared bowlowork and equal PIY·
1-Dear
Gloomy
·t Gm
! I ! • • • , ' ' t
Let11 Stop C<!D'Plalnlng about aov.
· emmental foot-draging and lnef-
.. ficiency whtn we can do much o{
lb&-envltonmental cleanup ,in New·
port Beath oumlves.
•
-L. M. I.
-J. K. !),
.,,. , .. ~ ~ ....... .....,. • .tt
lltellil••r11Y """ .r"" '""'"-'· loMI. ...... ....,. •• ......, ... ~tr Pl ...
•
• 1--
WASlflNGTON -Ht1mebuye.rs are
averc.harged $785 million a year by title
companies and title lawyers. Yet an tif-
fort by Senate reft1rmers to end the
chiseling has bogged down .
The~ inactlt1n of his colleagues has so
frµstrated Sen. William Proxmire, o.
Wls., that be has
aco.rsed S e n a t e
Banking Chairman
John Sparkman, 0-
Ala .. of staUlng.
In an exchange of
letters meant for
one uother's eyes
anly. Prormlre told
Sparkman that his
delay Of hearings ·
will cost Alabama voters $14 million ill
UUe .tbu.ses.
"l BELIEVE IT is vitally important,''
wrote Proxmire, "that the Housing sub-
coMmittee take prompt action tn reduce
r~al esiate closing CO!ta ••• " He asked
ft1r hearings on his reform bill SCI it cou~d
be taken up in February along with
Sparkman's omnibus housing package.
Sparkman wrote Proxmire a cou{tly ,
response. "I prefer to go ihead wUh my
oM.ginal plans," said the Alabaman .
But his meaning was clear: the title
company scandal would be swept under
the rug.
SPAR.KMAN , ONCE a refor m er
hlmselr, didn't mention what has become
an open secret .in the Senate . For years.
he bas . de.monatrated a speeiaJ 1ffecttoil
for the banks which, in tum, control
many title companies.
As a result, all but the moat pro.
eressive banks are opposed to Proxmire'•
reform plan. Proxmire, fully aware of
Sparkman's allegiance to tht banks, shot
back a "l)j!ar John" letter to hlm on
January 13. .~l 'flU disappointed." he told ~Jun·•
bJunU}t. For Sparkman had al!eidy put
off executive sessions on the omnibus
housing bills lot six months. Another
week's delay, Proxmire felt , would cause
no le.gislalive pinch.
ON THE OTHER hand. If Sparkman
didn't allow the title reform hearings,
this was ''equivale.nt ta delaying any ef·
fective CongreuionaJ action on the clos-
ing costs problem tor at le1st anolh~r
year," ProJJllire 11id.
Proxmire citt:d an ln-<lepth W1sb.lngtt1n
Post series on kick.backs and other title
scandals In the Washington are1. On a
nationwide basil, the a v e r a g e
home.buyer. 11ald Prounlre, is overcharg·
td '211 on cloelng coats.
11t estlr(late that home buyers in the
state of Alabama were overchar1ed $14
million for real estate cJostng COit.a dur-
ing 1971," Prorrnlrt advised Sparkman,
who L! running ror redectlon this , .....
SPARKMAN l\EP'IJ8ED to change h!J
mind. In 1 second, equally courtly letter
to Promtlrt a few day1 •So· Sparkman
sludt w1tb Ille bankers and UUe company
executfves. •
Executive Vice Prolident William
McAu!Ufe of the Amerlclll Land Tltfa
Ailoclatton. the rich 1nd powerful till<'
lobby, hOtly d\Jputel Prolllllre'1 view of
the lnduslry. McAulUI• !old UI tb•
reform progr1m mla:ht wind up. adding to
homeownera' cocll by cuUin& the 1Upply
of morli•I' mOMy. ·
-ll.---=-..,.,....·-·-· -~ -~ ..... -:. .... -..31//---.------~~--·-----------
OVER l>UE
Social Policy ·Not
Corporation's Joh
There is an enormous amount of talk
these days about the • ' s o c i a I
re sponsibili ty" ol corpora tions. But a cor-
poration, actually, has only f w (>
responsibilities: to show a profit , and to
do nothing that is
injurious to the so-
cial fa.br ic.
Environmental. ec·
onomic, and human
problems are not the
proper concern of
corporation.!, except
.in a negatlve se11se :
they must run the ir
business wlth a de-
cent regard for 1 the overall good of the
eoc:iety.
BUT THIS ts VERY different frOf"
saying that corporatiom should, or must,
Involve them.selves in social policy. Who
decides which social policies a r e
desirable? Once 'the corporation plUnges
hip-deep into such matters, the dange.ra
Outweigh the possible benefiU.
If a corporation behaves as a good
cititen behaves, it would be fully
discharging iU duties to the soci'efy. ff lts
product . is so~d. its merchandising
lionest, Its advertising rell able, and Jf It
refrains frt1m injuring the environment
beyond reparation, then It has fUlfillcd Its
role.
Because societx at large has abdicated
illl basic responii~llities. we keep asking
apecl~ic ins~~utlons to do jobs for which they. are not equipped.
WE DEMAND THAT educational In-
stitutions, for Instance, take over 1. host
of tasks they cannot handle. All an
ordinary school can do is leach a chlld lo
read. write , count, and acqu ire 1 few
creative skills. Instead, we expect the
schools tn provide moral, psychologicaJ,
vocational. an~ every olhtr kind of
tra inln1 that the Ja.rnlly. the church and
other JnstJtuUon1 ahould be takJns car•
of.
Jn the aarn& way, 1 corporation la part
of the market mech1nl!ITI of our
eco no"1y. Its function Js narrow and welt..
defined ; if it performs thlt function well.
WI! can ask to more. And tf we ask more.,
we are ll8ble Lo get iboth greater cor·
porate dominance over our lives, and
greater government dominance over our
market mechanlams.
CORPORATIONS A.RE rushing into the
area of "sociaJ reaponsibllity·1 as a way
of making amends for their previous
transgressions, and to lmpres~ the public
with their "good citizenship." But the
way lo make amends and to impress the
public Iles htJlde the b u a i n e 1 a
mechanism, not outside ii. It consists In
turning out the best products at the
fairest price. with the maximum of com·
petition and the minimum of en-
vironmental degradstlon.
Government, at ,all level s, are the
proper Instrument& for eff!ttlng cha.nJu
in social policy. Wr' must make our
governmenta more responsible. to these
needs, and not pass the buck tt1 business.
'Get Out of the U.N.'
To the ~r :
Once ,g'a.in. the United Nations ha1
f1;Ued to.fulfill the objectives set forth In
tta charter -i.e., to prevent wars, insW't
peace and further' the economic PfOi?'eas
of our troubled world.
Yet, in spite of auch high-sounding
phraseology (with endleu rhetorical
debates) at no tlmt has any consideration
been given by either the Security Councll
or the General Assembly to trying lo
come up with a 110lution to the years of
rtrlle and destruction in lndochlna.
EVEN WITH ntE re cent •·au our'
peace plan of President Nixon, nol one
member of the U.N. advanced any com-
ments: on the merits of thi! proposa l. Thi•
further lack of concern clim axe! the
many years of Indifference displayed by
the U. N. -from lhe violations of the
Geneva Conf,rence b11 Hanoi to their con-
current Cl'>mplete disregard of the con·
ventioDI o( the International Red Crou.
•• regard~ the treatment of priso ner• of
war.
The continued "menta l hllndnt!s" 11nd
1'1ins of omlsalon'' by the U.N. were
further evidenced by lhe rect.nt junket or
the Secwity Council lo Addis Ababa. This
wu done at a coet of approximately
IU0,000, thereby adding th the present
operating derlcit of 188 mlliion doll1rs.
Accordln3 to the report of Tttnes writers. "()Yer 100 rtsolutiool were made in
verbaJ eecalallons, wtlh nearly nothing
accom_pliahed. ''
AND LET'S N(lf forget oith.,. bow the
majority of the U.N. members vo~ th1
U.S. down (with glee) on our reaolutlon
reqU11tlng •"two China" policy !
So, once agai n, these members of the
u.~. who have: been recipient. of ovtr
1211 bttllon or U.S.-AIJ>--hove eiprell<d
batb their dildaln and lack of c<incern IA
-• i • •
Mailbox I ' I
Letters lrtm ,...,.,. ,,.. wek•IN. ""'"'""'
writ.r1 lfllut4 Cfll\I" l~•lr '""'.,'' hi )Ot ..,..
tr '"" Tiit '""' tt c.,,..,,.. ,."'" " ftt -· er ell111l11e9' lllltl l• """'""'· All .. tftt'I l!Mltot lolo
cltlfe 1t1111e"""' tM l!lmfl"" MfA.U, llMlt ...,...
'"'' 1M WlftllltN ell rtWffl H l"fflcl..it ,.. .. lit ,._.,.,,.. ,. .. try wltl Mt M H•ll....,.
endtavoring to find 1 801ullon to the ln-
tDle.r able politictl and milita ry coo-
front11Uon$ in lndochina.. In 10 dolnc, can
It be thal these 1ame. member1 of the
U.N. endorse the pr.,.nl POW blaclanall
and ransom l11ctlcs of Hano i?
Here then, 1111 further evidence as tO
why the U.S. should gel out of the
U.N.-llld the U.N. 1baufd 1•t out of !he
IJ .S.!
ALN. SEAREI
Bu George --.,
Dt•r George ; M.Y brolher-ln·htw want• to get
In the new1p11per bu.sines,,, He
does nothing but hana around the
comer aal ocn fDd drink:. howevtr. ~
Do you know any new1!)1perman
who would be wlllinc th help him?
E. R.
o .. r E. R.:
Yes a great many. Oo lf!COnd thoug~t. ( think I'll run ov'r lo lhe
11loon and help him drink my1e!L
rWhen .problem• pllt up an yo11.
tum to George ror a.Id and romfort
111d -nevermln~. lk ... t lo.st his
shovel. t
.
'
,_
DAILY PILOT f;
Bugles,.Planes Silen ~ed
PRESIDENT RICHARD NIXON RECEI VES TRADITI ONA L HAW AII GRE ETING
Chief Execut ive Rests, Studies, En joys Spectacular View of Crater
China De1iou1 ices
Nixon's Policy
On, Eve of Visit
TOKYO (AP) -Communist China de-
noun'ced Preaident Nixon's foreign palicy
today as it prepared for his vi.sit.
'Matrisni A lliance'
Russ Allies in Mo st Part
Share Dim View of Trip
the Socialist community.
By RUTH YOUNGBLOOD
KANEOHE MARINE
CORPS AIR STATION, .Oahu,
Hawail (UPI) -The bugles
were stilled today and the
n.lgbt tighten grounded at this
Atarlne Air base where Presi-
dent Nixon U: 1pendlng 1 day
lhe demonstration was alrned
at calling "attention to the
increased b o m b I n g in
Indochina and the
deteriorating d o m e s t i c
economy."
On past visits here, Nixon
has stayed in a hotel and
no uplanation was gi ven for
hil choice of Armstrong's
home this time. However,
Armstrong knew Nixon during
hil vice P""ldenUai days
when the Marine was 1enior
presidentJaJ helicopter pilot
for Pm1dent Eiaenhower.
and two nights in relative.-----,.----------------,
solitude before his trip to
China.
The President occupied the
home or base commander
Brii. Gen. Victor A.
Armstrong. a sprawling two·
level, four-bedroom yel!O\Y
cinderblock house on a bluff
overlooking the Pacific.
From it. the President and
1tls wife Pat had a spectacular
vlew of, an e.1tinct volcarllc
crater rising from the sea,
and cliffs shrouded in mist.
· It was th1! land that
Kamtbamha lhe Cl r e a t ,
Hawaii':i first king, chose for
a royal meeting place. The
penlnlula ·became the sacred
land of Kamharneha, and to
this day is ca lled "l'i1okapu,,.
Hawaiian for "Sacred Land."
Bugle calls, so much a part
or Marine life, were cancelled
during NU:on's stay, a
Shaggy Gift?
Nlt:o1i Eyes .Mus k Oxe1i
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -President Nixon would
like to give Chinese Phemier Chou En-lal two young musk
oxen named Milton and ?t1atilda, the City Recreation and
Par kl Department disclosed Thursday.
Department general manager Joaeph Ca'Yerly said
negotiations were unde'r way between his agency and the
White House for the ty,·o shaggy oxen bred at the San
Francisco Zoo.
If the bargaining is successfu1, caverly sald, the two
animals will be flown from Travb: A1r Foree Base to
PekJng wlthin the next few days.
Musk oxen reportedly are found only in Canadar
Alaska and Greenland.
Caverly sa id Nixon was particularly interested in
~filton and ~latilda because they may weJJ be the only
pair born in captivity 1n the United States.
spokesman said. from 5:30 '---------------------'!
a.m. reveille. to taps.
There lVOuld also be no night
nights to disturb t h e
Pre si dent's res!, the
spokesman said. and the
number of daylight Phantom
jet Oighls scheduled for toda y
was reduced.
J.~our aJltiY.'ar groups planned
a demonstration at the
base's front gate today. but
it was unlikely the President
would see them since he was
not expected to leave the base
during his stopover. A
spokesman for the groups said
Ho w Ma1iy
J1111oee11ts A broad
Watch Chinese Wine,
NixoH Warns Newsmen
HONOLULU (AP) -Presi-tral Intelligence Agency" on
dent Nl.1on took time out the cover, he was asked jok-
Thursday to offer some advice ingly hy a newsman whether
to ne\.\·smen accompanying the Chinese would let the
him on the first leg of his party into the coontry y,·ith
joumey lo Communist China. that kind or material.
"Remember that Chine.st Ni.1on, \\'ho apparently had not seen the atlas before. ex-wine is like brandy -it's amlned the cover. then
not 12 percent," Nixon cau-laughed lot:dly and said: "This
tioned newsmen during the 10-\\'i ll probably show how much
hour flight from Washington \\"e don't know about China."
Armstrnng, who noW C<Jm;-
mands Kaneohe's 1st ~1arine
Brigade., moved out of his
house and turned it over to
the Nixons for their stay. In
preparation for the arrival
Thursday, new curtains were
installed in the 31-year-old
home, the carpet in the
master bedroom was cleaned
and the lawn and garden wero
tidied.
The house, 15 miles fro m
the bustle of Honolulu , oc-
cupies 4,030 square reet or
livlng space, is lurnis hed in
cool sht1des of green an d
yellow and is kept cool by
the breezy trade winds on
the bluff.
The water below the home
Is considered too rough lot
swimming, and the spokesman
said boats enthlng the area
would be intercepted.
Secret.ary of State Willia~
P. Rogers and Dr. Henry Kiss-
inger, a$istant to the Prest.
dent for national security a!·
fairs , were also staying in
officers' homes on the base.
The rest of the Nixon's staff
and the 87-member press
cor~ were at hotels. ---
S•e th• b•s+ in
m•n's we e r for
'72! The best ••·
lection in town for
double knit s1ec::ks
and sport c:;oets.
Remember, i h •
best is always •t
04We flrmly support the peoples or the
world in their struQle against U.S. im-
peralist aggression," said the official
New China News Agency in a long com-
menlary on Nixon's State ol the World
report and· Defense Secretary Melvin R.'
Laird's report to Congress this \veek.
By The Associated Press
The Soviet Union is adopting an aloof
'·wait and see" attitude toward President
Nixon's trip to China, but the reaction is
mostly hostile among Moscow·s Com·
munist allies in Europe.
However I some or the Soviet press has
portrayed Chi.na's role in the meeting as
part or a "Machiavellian" policy or mak-
ing China dominant in Asia. ln doing so.
accon:ling to the official line, China has
abandoned any claim to leadership of the
Co1nmunist movement.
Clii1iese ?
W li o K noivs to Honolulu. ;=====================.
Nixon spent most of the !
The commentary made o'J one
specific mention of Nixon's.trip. saying:
"Referring to his visit to China and
Sino-U.S. relaUons, he siid: ~'Our new
dialogue with the People's Republic ot
Otlna will not be at the eipense of
friends. Nevertheless, we recognize that
thii' process cannot help but be pa inful
for our old friend on Taiwan."
It added that Nixon declared his in-
tention ·to maintain U.S. diplomatic ties
with and defense oommitments to lhe
NaUonali!t Chinese government and said
thia shows Nixon's government "has not
yet relinquished its idea of 'one China,
two governments'." But this was a
modification of Peking's usual oomplaint
against governments which pursue a
·•two-Olinas" policy.
The Nationalist Cltinese govemment
1'has long been spurned by the Chinese
people," the Communist agency declared,
"and no force on earth can change the
resolve of the Chinese people to liberate
TaJwan."
Commentalqrs in the official press or
Poland, Czecho.sJovaJtia and Bulgaria aee
lhe v.Wtreither as an alliance of Mao.slrn
and AmlBcan jmperiallsm against the
Soviet Union or as a vote-catching gim·
mick by Nixon for the presidential elec-
tion.
But in Yugoslavia, commentators were
without exception more rtslrained, and
some even cautiously welcomed the
move .
In East Gennany and Romania the tri)P.
w~ reported briefly without comment.
And in Hungary a sardonic report about
the "Nixon Caravan" and the sudden U.S.
Cashion in things Chinese carried no
political comment.
The most authorilative political co1n-
mentator, Yuri Zhukov, wrote in the
Communist party newspaper Pravda:
''The Soviet Union regards as natural
steps towards normaliz.ation of relations
between the U.S.A. and China." He in·
dicated final judgment would be reserved
until Nixon returns to Washington.
But, he warned, the Soviets could not
disregard evidence that Peking and
"certain quarters" in Washington want to
use the contacts against the interests or
THE SHOW-OFF
Ill I ft 111 ID ftl'ft ID'ft ..... _________ -------------ii··------------_@' ______________ ---··-··------·--...................... ._,
BIKINIS
s2so
CA PRIS
$100 & $1°
Fri, Sat. Sun, Mon. Feb, 18, 19, 20, 21
THE SHO W-OFF
Wic k s
...-::-, -~ J,,5 -\.:~
' ~ r
..;u.
WASHINGTON (APl nonstop flight reading and
China, as every schoo lbo y meeting with aides, news
knows, has more people than secretary Ronald Ziegler said.
any other country in the But shortly after the presiden-
worJd. But how many? Not tial jct took off, the President
even the Chinese knolv. and Mrs. Nixon went through
The e.stimates range from the aircraft chatting and lhak·
753 million to 871 milJon. says ing hands.
the Population Refer e n·c t; "Isn't this exciting'?" said
Bureau, Inc. · an ebullient !llrs. Nixon as she
\Vriting in the g r o u p ' s joined her husband in greeting
Population Bulletin, Leo A. newsmen in the plane's press
Orleans, China research ex-compartment.
pert of the Library o f _ Asked iI he needed to prac-
Congress, says there is good Uce with chopsticks, Nixon
reason for th.is uncertainty. said be did not. But he pointed
"The only Chinese Cl!nsus to Mrs. Nixon and said, 41But
that even approaches modern she does."
demographic standards was 1\1rs. Nixon was asked what
taken in 1953 and the results clothing she had brought
of that-exercise are highly along. She replied she had
questionable. Birth and death one suitcase filled with boots
registration, another means or an "longies."
. estimating population, h a s She said that she v.·ould prob.
been made only sporadically," ably be seen over and over
Orleans says. again in the same dresff:s
"'Excuse me, sir. Our
Chinese chef insists on
being recognized.'
Orleans writes that China because or a limitation on
appears to have gone through luggage and stated that the
the s a m e medical-public only purchase she had made
health revolution that ha.s for tbe trip V>'aS a heavy coat.
brought down the death rate Nixon was shown a copy
dramatically in many un-of a Criina atlas prepared by
derdeveloped countries since the Central Intelligence Agen-
World \llar It. cy. Pointing to a legend "Cen-
Artist of the Month:
DO NNA FRI EBERTSHAUS ER
Exhibiting at our offica now thru Morch' 14
The works of Dona Frlebortshauser, a dlslingulohed craftsman ~ . ,,
in our community, wilt be on display dally at our office, Come
meet the arU.t and see her unusual exhibits of stitchery, weav·
ing, macnme, papier mache, batik and other crafu. Mrs. Frle-
beruhauser Is President of the Costa Mesa Art Le•iU• and
inslructa for the Costa Mesa Recreation Department
Callfomla Federal Savings
tl'lilll UM A_,.lltt e .....,.,. ftW 11.f IN•
22 l'ASHION ISLAND
NEWl'OlltT IEACH • HUNTINGTON CENTER
HUNTINGTON BEACH 2100 Harbor llYd.; Cosio Me11
'
2500 sq. ft. bag
SJ77
Giv~ your mixed dicbcrtdn.
•nd grass lawn the fa slest
shot Jn the West ... o! solid
green frowih . Apply any
time o 1ear for the mo't "wante d lawn m the bloekJ
5000 sq, ft. bag
s2g5
. AnnovneftN. ..
NeW £vezyo'a;;
tfM'Priaes!
DICHONDRA &
LAWN FOOD
These fine dealers feature BEST Plant Food Savings!
AREA WIDE
• Ace Hardware Stores
• Builder's Emporium
• Build n' Save • Montgomery Ward SI.ores
• The. Handyman Stores
• True Value Hardware
Stores
• W. T, Granta
ANAllEJM
• Lin-Brook llardware
2114 w. !Jncoln
• Payless Drug
1660 W, KateUa
• WhJte Frant Nursery
2222 s. Harbor Blvd,
COSTA MESA
• whl!AI Front Nunery
80l8 Brll1ol
El TORO
• Green 'lbumb
2S7112 Bridger Rd.
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
• Lin-Brook Hardware
17200 So. Brool<hunl
• Woolco ltltMll Btookhural
FULU!;RTON
e Wan! I< HarrinJl.olt
Lumber
llOl S, Sta!AI College Blvd.
.
GARDEN GROVE
• Hasty Lawn & Garden
Supply
103.ll Garden Grove Blvd,
• TG& Y Home Center
12-491 Valley View
• Two Guys Dept. Store
12100 Harbor Blvd,
• Ward & Harington
Lumber
77f11 Garden Grove Blvd.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
• Two Guys Dept, SI.ore
9882 Adams Avenue
LA MillADA
• Woolco
1S300 Mirada Blvd,
LAGUNA. MGUEL
• Nlguel Harware 2f087 Gelty Drive
NEWPORT BEACH
e J:C. Penney's
Fashion Island
SAN CLEMENTE
• Bay Cities Hardware
106 Del Mar Avenue
TUSTIN
• S, S. Kreage
IOtl £, lat Stml
---------------· ----~,..~.......__ ___ _, __ ·-----... ------------... ------------------· ...... _____ ,,___ '·-·----~----'
Anteaters
Open Golf ...... ~ ···-·
Campaign
Sophomore Gary S I n g e r
heads a list of 10 players cur·
rently on the UC Irvine golf
team that began play Monday
against United States Interna-
tional University on the Santa
Ana Country Club course,
"We are a young team and
need a few matches under our
bell!," coach Jerry Hulbert
says.
"I'm sure we will Improve
as the season goes along but
when you have five freshmen,
It takes a litUe time."
Hulbert pinpoints Mike Mor-
ris, a first-year player fron:i
Tustin, as the surprise in early
action.
Another freshman, R i c k
Mayer from Newport Harbor
High, is the son of former U.S.
Open champion, Dick Mayer,
now the head professional at
Torrey Pines C.Ountry Club
near San Diego. t·
' Other freshmen Include Tom
Queen, David Bull f r o m
Brawley and Bruce Mallory 1
from San Marino.
Richard SOgn, after missing
last season, is back with the
team Ind along with Ron
Hooven, make up the most
experienced duo. Both are
seniors.
Juniors include Dan Bibb, a
transfer from Orange Coast
College, and Al Fehling, a
transfer from Chapman. M".
' '
' j
•
Slnll:er Is the lone sophomore
on the squad.
Highlights or the schedu1e
are home·and-home matches
with USC and the All·Cal
tournament at Berkeley.
ALERT LION -Jay Johnson (right), shown here with teammate Jeff Siemens
(22) and Marina's Dean Bogdan, has been a key Westminster basketball play·
er since the start of his junior year. The quick, S.1 sehlor leads the team in
assists ahd ts also an outstanding defender.
F•b. II -Laval• •nil l'10Pftdin1 •t
S1ntt ...... cc 111,))l.
,,,b, 11 -U. ol S111 Oltto 1!
St1rdu1t cc !1 l.
,,b, 25 -Ctl ll•lt !FU!\trton) It
s.~, ....... cc (1 !.
Mtrch I -UC lllvtnld1 I I Ovtll
L1~1 111. ,
M1rcll 6 -S•nl1 ll1rbtr1 tnd Lo't'o!1
I! LA Nv!ll (11.
M1rch 10 -Cll $1111 (l'"ulltrl°") "
l'ullertan !12:301 , M1rdl JO tncl f1 -All·(lllfOl'llll
Toutl'lllmltnl It lltrlctltv.
M1rc11 21 -N1vld1 ll11 \/"II) "
$11111 Int C Ill.
Guard Duties Only Part
Of Lion Hoop Flash's Job
Mtrct> l1 -Ch1111TY11 11 Gtffll tllwf' cc en. By PUll. ROSS have who dou thls (crashing
the boards) consistently." Aorll l -Cit Sit!• llt\ AntelN) et
5tn!t Ane CC Ill.
Of rflt 0.llJ 1'1111 llltf .
A,prll 1 -NeYadl flll VeQ"t) ..
NeYldl Ou<1n !I).
A11rll I -Ne~1d1 CL.II Vr1111) ti
NeYtll1 Ounn (1:31 •.m.I.
lor!t 10 -U. fif 51111 Oltvo 11 l"'I,..
• Cot•I CC (1).
All•!! I? -Ctl Stilt (LM A.rtff!n) •I
LM Aneeltl 111.
1.crll u -U.S. ln!ttntllor>tl Uni.
wriltv ti Wl'lli.oe•I"" Pt lma Ill.
Westminster High basketball
coaeh Don Leavey atarts h1J
ace -6-1 seolor Jay Johnson
-at a guard post. But
Johnson's duties go much
further than that.
In his second year as a
varsity slarter, Johnson is
descrlbed by the II 6 9 • 7 0
Sunset League coach or the
year as, "just an extension of
me on the court. H e
epitomizes the total dimension
in all aspeCts oC what I expect
from my pl(yers,"
April l, -USC 11 WU\hlr• CC (1).
Awll 11 -USC 11 !"'lllf C11a1t CC en. -'llrll 11 -UC Stn Ofeto 11 Lornlt
Slnlt F• (1!. Ml't' I -Cll11'f'\in 11 ltVll'll Co111I cc 111.
MtY 4 -Sal.Ill>"" Ctlllo111l 1
l11ter«tlle9!1t11 II Torrtv l"IMI.
MtY Jl, Ju!W I -T"°l111 lnvlt1tlanll
II l'omon1 Ntll-1.
Says Leavey, "even though
Jay is guard, one of the
reasons we have him go to the
boards so much is his tremen·
dous reach. He has the ap--
pendages of a 6-3 kid in spite
of only being 6-1 himself.
As the prirQary playmaker
for the Lion(. Johnson has
tossed in buckeli at an 11
point! per game clip in spite
of the fact that he'd much "Jay 11 the one guard we
Rustlers' First Six Games
Slated for Orange Coast
Golden West College will play Its first sir
football games of the '72 Uason at Orange
Coast, Rustler athletic di.rector Fred Owent
SMounced today.
The Rustlers will play a JO-game schedule,
opening• with district rival ope Saturday
night, Sept. 16. That's Orange Coast's home
game.
That will be followed by non-conference
tilt.s with Ml. San Antonio and Compton and
Southern Caliromia circuit games with Los
Angele& CC, East LA and LA Southwest.
COach Ray Shackleford's team then hits
the road for s game with Cypress, followed
by circuit tests with Santa Monica, Rio
Hondo and LA Harbor.
The latter two tills are away v.·hile the
CRAIG
I SHEFF
borne team (or the Santa Monlca af!alr has
not been decided.
All are Saturday night games with the ex·
ception of the Compton tilt. That's set !or
Friday, Sept. 29.
Golden West had planned lo open Ille '72
aeason at Phoeni1 , but that had to be
changed when the Rustlers were told that
they would stay ln the Southern cat ciricut
lnstearl of moving lo Ille 'south Coast Coofer-
ence.
"We looked Into ploying Phoenix a week
earliu (Sept. I), bul then we would not have
bad any acrtmmages," uy1 Owens.
Golden West plans to acrlmma'e Cerrllos
prior to the atart of the '72 campaign.
• I • •
Orange <Aa1t ls upecled to face Et Camhlo
nn:t football 1ta101, alt.bough tbe~J• no or~
flcla.I word on It yet. Both tu.mi \ave t"he
same by• date.
El Cimino won the 1t1te large achoo11 grid
tide l"tt yeer. · ,
"J uaderRand El Camino bas Us entire of·
tensive llM back 11ut 1e1r, so they 1bouJd
be Jl'etty toaah. But that's tbe tlod we lllte,"
1&y1 OCC dtfe.n1tve coardl111t:nr Jtck Fair. • • •
Three more top notch swimmera have. betn
1dded lo Ille alrea~y lalen~laden 'Golden
__..,.,~-----------
West College roster, reports Rustler coach
Tom Hennstad .
Rocky Ross, Robbie Robinson and John
Maltby all checked into the Rustler campus
at the semester break.
RoM graduated from Rancho Alamitos
High last June and Hermstad rates him as
one of the most versatile swimmers on the
squad. He is equally talented in the butter-
fl y. breaststroke or freestyle events.
Robinson and Maltby are freestylers. Rob-
inson prepped at Marina while Maltby at·
tended Huntington Beach High and spent last
semester at the Air Force Academy.
Golden West. third in the state last year.
could be even higher in '72-especially with
the· Rustlers hosting the state meet this sea-
son.
• • •
OCC'1 Diet Tucker and Saddleback's
George H1rtman were just two of nine bead
football coaches who received awards thJs
week for excellence in fll~ analysis and
training.
The award stressed tbe complete uUlllaUon
of fllm In the training prop;ram. They 1"ere
presented by the MoUon Picture SportsfOm
Proces1or1 of Sautbera CaUfornla.
Other coaches honored included Dennis
?t1cLaughHn (Btshop Amat), Fred Workman
~Dominguez), John Hangartner (Kennedy),
Roy Ben.stead (Lawndale), Marty Blackstone
(Rio Hondo), Bob Hltcbcock (Temple City)
and Jim Everett (Western).
• • •
The Mcttopolil.'ln Conference in the south
end the Golden Gate Conference in the north
baye been awarded the top seeds for the '72
sta:te JC basketball tourney at Vcntura Col·
le,1?e, March t.11 .
Each or the state's 12 conrerenctt is al~
towed one entrant In the state tourney with
an additional two spots available In both
the north and tOtJlh regionals for ec>i:ham-
plons in \be 16-team bracket.
The South Coast Conference hes been seed.
ed !tCOnd In th< 110ulll •. although clrc\111
Chan\J)lon Fullerlon wlll probably win II aU.
The Hornets were the first to qualify for
the state toume1 . FJC has a bye fn the
re<lonaf ,l'Oilnd.
Here are the fcglonRI J)l.Jirlnj:t~ (if tr.ere
are no co-champions ): North-Colden Gate,
bye: Central at Golden Valley; Camino
Norte. by1: Coast at Valley: South -Weet·
em Sl8te at M1~slofl : Snuth Coast. bye:
Soulhem Cll al llfsort; Metropolitan, bye.
• • •
Orange l:o11t'1 Skip Wlnlam1 iJ the !Olh
top cage 1cortr la $lie ·~~~,..wlUi a !1.7 aver.
1ge. Desert's Jim" W)'TlCJ< It No. I (IU}
and F JC'1 Brad McNamara ls MCOad (tl,4J,
rather get the satisfaction of
hitting a teammate with a
crisp pass.
Furthermore, using crisp as
a proper adjective to describe
one of Johnson's passes is 1
marked understatement, ac-
cordin,e: to Leavey.
Says the Lion cage tutor,
"Jay possesses great court
vision. We've had kids drilled
in the ear and in the back of
the head on his passes because
they simply didn't expect
them . After awhile he makes
some fine assists because some
of the other kids just start
looking for a pass out or sell·
preservation.
·~Jay will gi'tle up a good
shot to give a teammate a bet·
ter shot."
A natural lefthander who
can handle the ball deftly with
either hand. Johnson Is within
shouting distance of breaking
the school record for assists in
a single season, which was set
two years ago on the Liom'
Sunset championship qu jntet
by little Rick Mann at 130.
At present, Johnson ha s
recorded approximately 120
assists and. with one loop con-
test remaining, Leavey is
hopeful his 6-l 1lackcourt star
can eclipse Mann 's mark.
"Jay usually gets at least
fi\'e assists a game," Leavey
says, "but the difference
between he and Mann is that
Jay'is more of a scorer.
/"He picks up extra points
going to the boards and he's
become an exceptional outside ,
shooter who likes to drill them
in from about ~ fut on either
side of the key.
hJn comparison. last season
he had more of a driving·type,
lay·in oriented game."
Playing a role which has
seen him operating as a swing·
man1 between the backcourt
and a comer slot et tlmes,
Johnson's defensive work has
not gone unnoticed either.
In Leavey'1 mind, "Jay Is
Our best defensive player and
his defense has been a mAjor
factor, although his offense Is
catching up to it rapidly.
"With his quick hsnds and
long arms, we 1Jw1ys give
him the toughest defensive
assignment.''
As examples, the
Westminster coach notes. "for
instance, he held George
Golden of Western to only four
points at a time when Golden
was ripping the basket with
poinls . And that was the iey
to our win over Wettem.
"Also, I could probably pin-
point at least three or lour
c:JUier games In which his
deren&e has been a major fac--
lor bl our 11.Jcceu.
Another plus 11lgn o n
Johnson's 11lde has been his
Improvement In the mental
swing of things.
In reRards to this Ltavey
says, "Jay h11d to learn bow to
control his emotions after hit lo~more year since he mov·
ed right Into 1 v1r1lly 1tartln1
berth Qff Ille 10phomore to1m .
''f'd 1ay he'1 relatively
sedated out there this 1t1aon. n
• •
DAILY PILOT 'Ill
Vikes, HB Clash • Ill Finale
Tr•dlUonaJ riva11 Marina
ind HunUniton Buch club
tonl1ht wllh prestige the only
thlna 1t stake; In a Sunset
League bisketball test.
It cell under way at 8
o'clock and C'Qach J i m
Slephens' champion Marina
Vikings invade the Huntington
premises seeking their ltth:
slralght loop conquest 1nd
Jocking up the No. l title in
Orange County prep circles.
The Vlkes are No. 4 in the
CIF AAAA and own a Sl·SO
win over Huntington Beach ln
Lions Aim
ForCIF
Playoffs
Westminster High's Lions
will be trying to gain a CIF
AAAA basketball playoff berth
tonlght in the final salvo or
Sunset League warfare when
coach Don Leavey·s crew
hosts d1ngerous Loara.
Tipoff Is a o'clock and a
Westminster win coupled with
a Marina triumph over Hun·
tington would place the Lions
ln a tie !or second ln the final
Sunset standings -probably
Insuring a CIF playoff l:Jd .
Host Newport Harbor and
cellar dwelling Anaheim wrap
up the campaign at the same
time.
Leavey's Lions could make
the playoffs as a third place
team if room permits.
"Third place Iii really a
matter of· grasping at straws,"
says Leavey, we just hope
Marina remembers b a c k
about 54 weeks ago when we
beat Huntington Beach to put
Marina in a position of tying
for the league championship.
"We hope they have a good
memory ," says Le a\/ e y .
Leavey'1 memory is clear
about tonight's adversary, a
foe that erlended Westminster
before falling, 67·66, in first
round action.
"We made1 a mistake and
went to a delay type offJtbe
with about a 14-point le,t\. 1t
killed our momentum and we
just went dead in the water,''
he says.
Coach Dale }fa g e y ' •
Newport Sailors will be trying
to wrap up a disappoi~ting
campaign by h a n d. 1 n g
Anaheim its 2oth loss in 21
1971·72 starts.
It's the final varsity game
for seniors Bill AicKinney, and
Denny Cline.
Artists, Uni
In Final
Hoop Tiffs
Coach Jerry Fair'1; host
Laguna Beach Artists have
one final chance to finish
above the .500 mark in Orange
League basketball hostilities
toni1tht as they get the last
crack at unbeaten circuit
leader El Dorado.
That clash is slated for a
o'clock as are the Brea at
University and Sonora at Sad-
dlel!ack ~allies.
The Artists (6-5} were b!Own
out in the secOnd half in drop.
ping R first round, 69-49
verdict at El Dorado to the
pacesetting Golden Hawks. So.
a Laguna vtctory tonight
would be considered ·a major
upset.
All five starters for the
Hawks ( 11.0) are averaging in
double figures with forward
Mike Farra the highest scorer
At 15.t per outing.
Guards Nick Gillespie and
Chuck Corwin have been the
most consistent Artists as of
late and they 'll ha\/e to com·
first round 11rt1on. They lead
lhe OOerii by three games -
thus the standings won 't be af·
reeled rxcrpt that coach
Elmer Combs' ClF' pla yoff.
bound Oilers l'Ould hill Into a
second place tie w i t h
Westminster U they lose.
"It 's not a matter of wor ·
rylng about tying for second,
we just want to win. Yes, I
think a win does help your
momentum prior to going into
the pla}'offs." says Combs.
It marks the ninth lime in 12
years that a Combs-coached
quintet !ram Huntington is tn
the playoffs,
Huntlngton'a four idsses in a
20-4 record have been by "
total of eight points and
Combs rcnects. "Looking back
I think U we 'd been a little
more hungry we'd have won
all or them."
Stephens' crew figures to be.
loose and easy with the
championship wrapped up
and the Viking mentor agrees:
"Ii we had to win it would
be another matter but the kids
ire confident . , , , we don't
Veteran Netter
P1·odan Chos-en
NewNBTC Pro
plan to loM.!' . -- -_._ __
Hi~ Marin• quintet has: beta
revsmpt'd somewhat wllh M
junibr Msrk Ford still nursln&
strained knee Ii game nts,
Roger Speaks takes over at
guard with Mark Adams and
Brute Miller mans t h 1
forw11 rd post along w i th
freshman Bnb Losner and
center Dean Bo¥d•n (6-7 l.
Hunllngton'ii inside tandem
of Steve Brooks and Jlnr
Worthy ren1alns the nml
along wlth mates Tom c.ruok.
Scott Whitfield and Brett
While.
Sea Kings
Need Win
For Tie
W1!h a ~·in 11ssuri ng them of
no Y.'orse lht'ln a lie for the Tony Prodan , who once
played 11n exhibition wi!h Bill
Tilden in Phoenix, was the
double5 partner of UCLA ath·
letic director J. o. Morgan
\vhen 1.he t ~·o were students at
UCLA and participated in 37
championship doubles matches
with partner Earl Foote.
• champ ionship w it h Los
But only recently has he
achieved his lifelime ambition 1 at the ripe young age of 54 -
that or running a full t i me
tennis club.
Prodan will take over duties
as tennis director £or the
Newport Beach Tennis Club
next week according to owner
George M. Holstein , 111.
''This has to be the No. 1
tennis community of the
world," Prodan enthused wh ile
talking about his new assign.
ment this week. "It is
somet hing I have alwa ys
wanted to do."
Prodan will supervise a staff
of four teaching professionals
and describes his job in this
manner :
"I'll be running around as
the public relation s,
diplomatic, take-it·all guy. l 'll
be more of a super'tlisor than a
teacher with Doug Smith,
James Morrison, Mark Elliott
and Gail Hansen doing most of
the teaching."
Prodan has been associflted
with Newport B ea c h 's
Oakwood Gardens t e n n I s
facilities for the past three
years and owns a home in
Newport Beach. He has also
TONY PRODAN
been a. junior tennis instructor
at Compton College for the
past 10 years.
Whal are his early goals at
tpe Ne"•port Beach Tennis
Club?
''No. I will be to improve
our social tennis program with
more and better mixed tennis
competition. \Ve will also work
hard on the junior program
and hope to ha ve an active
group pla ying every day dur·
ing the summer ." .
Prodan reasons that the big·
gest contributing factor to
success of · tennis in this area
tNewporl Harbor is CIF
champion and UC lrvine
NCAA college division ti t I e
holdcfs for two years) Is the
a'tlailability of tennis clubs.' Pirates Bow
To GaucJ1os
In Spike£ est
"You go out and play on 1
public course once and forget
it. Jn golf you play on nice
green grass with a pleaSant
atmosphere and you return.
"I·think the tennis clubs in
this area make a big con·
Barry Atwood captured tribution to the success being
three events and Rick Geddes, enjoyed presently by these
Marv Francis and John Mac· youngsters. The ltids have a
key were double winners in nice place to play and they
leading Saddleba ck College's want to play as a result of the
track and field team to an 80-surroundings."
64 victory over 'tlisitlng Orange At UCLA as an un-
Coast at San Clemente High dergraduate, he and Morgan Thursday. The top performance of the qualified for the NCAA cham·
day came in the javelin when plonships ·in do u b I e 1 but
OCC's Randy Cantrell tossed · didn't make the ensuing trip
the sphere 197.9. to Haverford , Pa . for the com-
Four other javelin throwers petition.
were over the 18().foot mark. One junior he poinls to with
OCC 's AlviJl White had a top pride ls If.year-old Steve
toss of 189-8, and Saddleback's Marosi. ''T started him playing
Bob Milton and John FJetcher and he has been a winner,"
went 182·8 and 180-4. Prodan says.
s.a~c111111t11.J"' \"' o •• ,.., CN1t }le also was a doubles 100 -I. G tt.1 51. f. lllood 10), J. t . th M ,..,,,,.111 c81. w1,.,, .. , 11m,: •.•. par ne r w 1 y ro n no -L t'lkl11 IS!, 1. l!lklod 101. J. •1 N f UC! h th V111 Noll ( 1. Wlnnlnt llmt: J1.t. I• C amara 0 W en ey ~ -1, V111 Note 10). 2. •t klOtl I ed 'th D B d F' h IS), 1. 1111111111101. w1nn1111 um1: 50,,. Pay WI r. ernar inc uo -1, L tt vii'• 10111. G1r,11 111. and Jack Wall at the Los l. llM1111r COl Wlnnr,,. lm1: J·02.o
M111 -1. F'r1nc11 1s1. J. a1b111 !01. Angeles Tennis Club in past J. llllMrt1 IOI. w1r,1,..11 ..... : 4·JfJI.
:i..m11e -1. l"rtnc • 111 ' L.lllMr•• years. l?:'i,.i· °"'"" '01' wlnnl,_. 11'"': And his most recent doubles 110 "ltllls -1 Alwood (S)_, J, lltlHll
(0_1,_11 J-1 co). w11111r,., 11m1: 16.D. conquest came in the Pacific
Alamitos, the Corona del Mar
Sea Kings emhark on their
final Irvi ne Lea.tiue basketball
journey of 1912 tonight when_
they trek into the territory or
the upsel·minded Estancia
Eagles.
As is the case wit h all of ·
tonight's lrvlne tuss les, the ·
CdM·Eagles mnlchup is slated
to begin at 8 o'c lock.
In other loop action, Foun-·
t11in Valley's Barons 1\•iJI at · ·
tempt to reta in their hold on
th ird place and a possible CIF .
AAAA post.season p I a y o f t .
berth with a finale win over .I
archrival host Edison Santa ' . Ana Valley hosts the Costa ~
Mesa Mustangs and Magnolia •
is at Los Alam itos. All games :
areat8. 1..
Corona's road tlll at Esta!J.
cia ls interesting si nce the Sea··~
Kings got themselves into foul:'
trouble Wednesday night at··
Mesa before recording a nar~··1
row 8().76 escape over a
quintet whi ch they had
clubbed• 104-48, ln !he first round.
Coach Dave Carlisle's tiny ,
Eagles will probably use the "
same dlamond·and-one1,
defense and controlled tempo-
oHense which they showed ,
Tandy Gillis' Sea Kings in &IJ
earlier ~4-45 setback at CdM. ,
Dave Brown's young Fou.no~
-tain Valley Barons (8-5) h1v1?.
an opportunity of finish!~:
wlth a better record thin J1st:',
year's 8-6 mark which vaul~'t
them into the CIF AAA
playoffs. '
But the Edison five ot Dave:-'
Mohs always pases an obstacle·
for the Barons. who won jn the ·'
first round at Fountain ValleY. .,
by a 5f.M margin. ·
lltVINI' llAGUI' ll'AOltl l'll~tr, lchMI • Tl' '"'· I, Quinn, la. Al1mllos 1f 721 114
7. Ar(hlf', Coll• M!U u 13' i1:r •
l. &.rr11t, Ml1noll1 1J nJ 11 1. •. Mlllaf, LOI Al1mlto1 ,, ,1, ,.,, .
S. Snooll, !dl1tn 1) Xt5 lS.I 1.
Rustler Nine ,,
Falls, 5-2
SANTA MARIA -Golden ;.
West College's baseball team'.~
hoped to end a (our-game 105-
lng streak today against Allan
Hancock College in the si;cond
round of the J~ancock baseball ·
tournament here. 1 Coach Fred l·loover's Goldcrt
West Rustlers dropped a ~i ~
decl11lon to De Ania Thursdaf' _,
in the first round of the'
tourney, despite banging out
12 hits. -~
Golden West took a 1.0 lead .
In the flr11t Inning on a double
by Phil McCartney and Bl1ine
Calder's single, but De Ania.,,·
pushed acrou four runs In tb1
se<:a,nd Ind O!JO In the illlrd.
fs'r' 111~1-'w'''"11 101. 1. N-ooct Uo"':.\,.,.rd.:.._ 1~t.'Zl.::-Jc.'rilt.t.irtt. Southwest tournament at Uftll w"'.:",
Gldde1. CMdtrv •nd J1c~1111. J. Newport Harbor a year ago w Mc:C1rt11t'I' 11 I ' ...
Or11>ve Co.11. WJ1111l119 ilmt· .6. I".' Mc.Ctr!,_..,.; c
Mlle re11v -1. l1ddltMck~nStr~. when he teamed with Glen ~'[i.i:'"' rt Lo.:ono. JKk-ind G J, 2 1 ltl o •• ,... cotsi. Wlnl'll11t 11.,,.: : .1" · Turnbull, tennis director for u 11rti, c 4
Siie! PU! -1 l(t~Hr ISi. I, Hllrl h B Ibo CJ b Wll.flltl 11 I !£!· J. lleck•r loJ. w111"t"• t1f1!•1lf1: t e a a Bay u . 1>ac1c1, '1t1 01~.,. -1. tpu1111 101. '· T"'M' This tandem may control ti~iZ:~~r.' j~>..&.,;: ll11ek•r Cs!. wi1111111• t11•••nc:t: the destinies of the area tennis klu~••se ''' '
Ml•" lume -1· At...,D!MI 1s1tJ 11iooc1 clubs for vears to come -not ~1~~"1.D-: · ' l~), J, Mltkl't' CS). w 1;;n1111 ntl•lll: !-. • 0!1 I Jf
ton• 1um11 -1. M•,•tY 'IL 1 only In the office but on the ~.,.." 111111...-,
C•orm111 ! 5). l. 1!11n1U 10). W 11nl11t -urt as WCIJ, 01 ililllll /Ml 0CG ao&-.s dht111e1 : 11..J'lt. ..., Goldt11 west 100 ooe OIG-t
llon.,..,. !Of, J. Ill'"'"'" 11'f. w !""I"' Trlele lumii -I, Aolt~k~'t' (~1. ' 1ijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliii;;iiiiiii
df•l~n(I: ~1·10. J•v•tln -1, C111tr•ll 10), ? W~!!• lrl.t. s. Miiiin <,i, w 1n111111 dltt•11<1:
Gorm111 ), J, V1l,,1klt CO!. Wlnnln• l"oll Villl -I Atwllftd ($1. 7
htl ... 1: 1 •
Cage Scores
Would you pay an extra
$5.21 per 1nonth for
Full New Car Maintenance?
!I
,! l ' , .. 11 ,.:
J• ' .. . -bine their shooting with good ,,. ...
board play from Norm Bedell ~!:\Y!.~ 1~'~d:!ffai'U for1
and Vince ltfcCalls to upend ~·!~ 1b~J!,~~ r.01• 11111 s1
That'll all the t'X1ra It c~t wllh a Johnson Ir. Son Full
Ma.intenancl! U'Me on Any of our brand NW 1972
Mercurys, Jwt lhink ot It .•. no more 11nnoylnc ttpal,
probl,m1 ... no more unf'xpectt'd expenses And beat ot all ... a bt-Rullful nrw full site M•reury Marqul1 or
fl.1nntcrry to dri ve In ah!lolut~ly ptrfect condlUon at all tlmr~. find nut for yourite-lt •II 1hr Mnenta 1.nd pleuu'8 this fantutic h!·R~e proCTllm provide• on all our Uncoln-
fl.fercury Products.
El Dorado. °""""' ,., ~ort1•M 12 Tbe University Trojans or No<-lhlnl ArlllKll ... Mani• ... u
coach John Driscoll got eked, ~,t·~~~'1.~v~d!'il:~"" 71
4M8, by El Dorado last Tues-~!A''. ,r,·~;,,~1~~'),11
da y and being in the host 's ...itn'"" .v. ~ ••.. ;!1\w•()'k .. 61 role. they're fayored to bop .,. tt. w. Teirn ', 11 An11" "· 5dO!I 11411 11 winless Bret. 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
Brea teatures the loop's top • ROOM ADDITIONS
scorer (18.l l in M center • KITCHIN llMODILINO
Greg Tripp while &-2~ Tom e PA.TIO SCltllN ltOOMS
Mullinix is the Tr o J 1n1
leading light.
Call BUD BO\VEN 11t ~40-5630 , , .. TODAY!
Ort1"1t C1•~1y1 •F11•i'1./Fi•tC1n• t
• :c
. » .,
Jf OAILY PILOT Frldu, F'hnl.irJ l8, 1972
• · Ea g les' Confer Sea Ki ng
Spikers
Trip Lio ns-
.. A Gunrd' s-:r our
Amqng Timbers
By PIUL ROSS
ot IM 0.llJ P'llfl Sl1ft'
When you're only 6-1 and
you play center on a hlgh
school's varsity basketball
team , you had better be quick.
Estancia's Doug C o n C e r
knows it and he proves It
nearly every time he steps on
court for coacb D a v e
Carlisle's Eagle!.
While the Eagles are nearer
to the bottom of the Irvine
League standings than they
are to the upper echelon,
they're definitely no
pushovers.
And by a strange quirk.
there Ji somewhat of a
possibility that Cooler is one
of the better reasons for thl.s
Intent fear of the pint-sized
Eagles by the league's t¥>op
powers-that-be.
With Carlisle harboring a
plethora of players under 6-2
(the tallest is inexperienced g.
2 Todd Collins), Confer's role
in the post has b e e n
magnified.
Carlisle says, "Doug ls our
regular center because he's
th~ biggest boy I have with
va_rslty experience.
"He plays the post normally
but we also run him as a
swingman In our man-to-man
offense, which hu a passing
game without an a c t u a I
center."
Confer currently 1 e a d s
Estancia in both scoring and
rebounding and has been the
most consistent Eagle in a
seaS(ln which has be e n
earmarked by inconsistencies.
He has been able to pump in
points at a 12.4 per game rate
while also being In position to
generally grab between 10 and
15 rebounds in each contest.
"I'd have to say that Doug
has about equal offensive and
defensive ability. although he
may be a little better on of4
fense because of his scoring
potential," Carlisle claims.
Confer is a good driver with
quick inside moves but he's
pi'Qficient from almost any
spot withln 15 feet of the
basket.
According to his coach.
"Doug is not blessed with a lot
o( real basketball ability but
he does have very good
coordination. He's had to work
hard for everything."
C on f e r inadvertently in-
herited the center pasition
when last year's postman -6-
DOUG CONFER
1 !Ai ·Hank Moore -was lost tG
the team.
"We went to Doug for board
strength after Moore was
out," Carlisle says. "He was
the only size aod experience
we had carried over from last
year, when he started every
varsity game.
"He's our team leader and
we'd be lost without him."
Estancia 's stellar s e n i o r
came up throogh Costa Mesa's
Rea Intermediate School but
didn't play on the hardwoods
there.
When he arrived at Estan--
cia, Confer started out on the
freshman team, then moved
up to the junior varsity as a
sophomore and was promoted
to the varsity last winter.
As for his future, Carlisle
says of Confer, "he ran play
junior college ball and he can
probably play guard ... he's
a fair dribbler who is ex4
eeplion11Jy quick.
"He doesn't have the moves
of a Gary Orgill (former
Estancia ace now starring at
Golden West College), but
Doug is a Jot quicker than
Gary. With his quickness, he
can make up for mistakes and
cari recover fast on defense."
If it's any consolation to
Carlisle, when Doug graduates
the Eagles will still have a
Confer on their side since his
sophomore brother Budd y is
also currently a vars i t y
starter.
Prep Cage Results MD Clo ses
Jut11C1r V1r1llY lalktfNll (4M {6') Clll Cost1 Mtu
Wllll1m1 (4) F Cl) S"tr
AsMrv (10) F O•l S1111tr
Cl1rll (fl C (11) l(:h11,1pp
Slf'4f"1 {1ll G !11) Oe•me1
G,_rr (S) G (0) Hlckm1n
CdM KOrl"9 tutti: S1v1ge '· Jel·
trln '· w111 '· O.ukts 2. 51ck11t 1,
AllleMv 6.
CM acor!nfl sub.I : V1le11lln1 4, Alltn
4. Qulnllv1n 2. Smllti l .
Ht ll!llM -CO'M '1·22.
1!1 Moll-lffl Utl Sen Cltlll.., .. J'owtra (14) F 11'1 YOC1..-
S1mo.on ft) F (1t) Hoffman
W~elm Ill C (II ) Forem1n
1191.,. IZI) G (2) Wilson
¥/llllemt Ill G C6J Ha111
San c•-11 tcorlnfl subs: H1rnen· lier 2.
HllHlrM: Sen c~ •. 2o1-23.
Officers Set
For Anglers
Hunt111tlM Ull
T"I Ct) F
Kteton (I I F
Carlson Ct) C
Nrlll (12) G
Boucher !•l G Hur>llrli!ton aubl:
""''"' (61 Halttlme: 14·2~.
1•1 w .. 1-
001 cnrlsl..-tllfl
(I) Kretr
flll C11k1v
(jj Wrbrl91'11
{a) Roeerts
Boucher (6),
M1ulon vi.10 (44) Ull ,..,111m
Harri$ (21 F (UI Mun>hV
E1s1on (10) F CS) taoonoll
.Grftfl (61 C ()8) ,.lnkertori
H•llev llll G 16! Schcldmlv..-
Mottltt Il l G Ill Welnurf
MV scoring iubl: Rommel 4, Zogg l.
Htlftlm.-FOO'lhllt 2S.:l:J.
Mllltl" Del !UI 141) II. 1"1111
W!ltland 0 61 F !6) W1rw
0.ltllf"I (161 F (ll Wlnnln!l'hlm
McCauthev Ct) C 16) Ttrn'
Gra.IK'h (5) G (lO) Girdner
N1l1r1 {I ) G (101 P-e~
Meltr 0.1 l<Orlnll wbs: l(rltli..-s 1,
Can111 2. Scherf 1.
Halfllmt: M.!ltr Der :w, SI. Poul 13.
With Saints
No one could blame coach
Jerry Tardie's ri.1ater Dei
Monarch basketball team for
looking ahead to the annual
CIF playoffs when it en-
tertains SL Anthony High of
Long Beach tonight in the
final Angelus League game of
the year (8).
The Monarchs have already
qualified for the playoffs with
second place in the final
league standings a s s u r e d
Tuesday in a 74-72 win over St.
Paul.
1.ot>rto,,,.r• 1111i11111n 1 th I I h h M1111°" v1111 uo un ,,00, 11111 n e as game wit t e
Ho111 !2J> ,,. (121 st~u1tz Saints. Mater Dei won, 56-53,
O'Brien ()) F (Ill Huson b I h M1~1!1'" 1221 c 15> ~•mst~•d ut on~' t e starting five
Eoer1S1n fl5l G i21 Mur1>~Y dented the scoring column Conn1ll~ (I) G (6\ Combs
M!u lon v1e1o i cor•1>9 •u~' e1tr1 with George •lerold (15) and
newly elected president of the '· w1111~ s, G1111s 2, Co111 1. Miier Rick Kniffin (13) leading the 1, Foflrm1n 2
Dr. W. W. Nelson is the
Pacific Anglers sportfishing H11111me: Min ton v 1110. •1·16. way.
group out of the Balboa Bay:11-1""-·--•••-••..;--.-iiiiiiiiii;;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijill
Club following recent elections
for the 1972 season.
Serving with'Dr. Nelson will
be Lou Janssen as vice
president, Eugene W. Wooten
as secretary ar.d Al But-
terworth as treasurer.
Newly elected members of
the board of directors Include
Tim Tate, Troy Miller, Robert
D. J ohnS-On, Howard Ashby
and Paul McVay .
ROLLER
&Am ES
COSTA MESA
FAIRGROUNDS
L.A. r:Bird1 vs.
N.Y. B<>mbers
H•lfttMI Metd lee•
Toftll "Co11t1frv loy" c,...,
~.
11.otiftfo "P1yc.ho" Rain•
ALL HATS su • ---•• P.M" ,,...,
...,. .... ""'"" ... t,.,.,_,. w 111 t t.s1n
•
LEASING? LOOK!
NEW 1972 OLDSMOBILE
TORONADO
2 DOOR HARDTOP
MONTH '
24 MO.
OPEN END
~I
---
INCLUDES, AIR COND .. FULL POWER INC. DOOR
LOCKS AND SEATS, AM-FM STEREO, VINYL TOP,
TINT. GLASS, TILT WHEEL, BELTED W /W, AND
MORE.
We lease all popular
make can and trucks
LEASE DEPARTMENT
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
2850 HAllOl ILYD. COSTA MESA
CALL NORM HEEDLOVI. 547°6710
---.. ·-
ARTS~
-"
' \
MV, Tritons Put Lid
On Crestv iew Play
P ro Skaters
.Back a t CM
INVENTORY
CLEARANCE
SAVE
soro
CUSTOM LOMG MllER
4-PL'Y M'VLOM CORD TIRE
AS LOW AS
13 7 3 "" ,,,.,,
JfK!cwaU pllll :,:~!~
DYHACOR• RAYON CORD RADIAL 990
AS LOW AS RADIAL TIRES
AT LOW, LOW PRICES
~~~~~~~~ -"-·• Slit \ISll:l • 11-=k•aH ,i.
l'ET 11.6'
'"' !ndt•ll. .
BRAKE RELINE AIR HIGH
SHOCKS PERFORMANCE SHOCK
IUDCHl
TIRMS
All
CARS DELCO I
HI JACKIRS
34 50
WHEEL
BALANCE
:~ •• " $149
SALE
l HU.VY DUTY
INSTALLID R?'b
2 for 518 HEADQUARTERS FOR TRUCK
& CAMPER TIRES •.•
MAG & CHROME WHEELS
MOST CARS
DISH OR SPOKE
MAGS
4for99'
SUPllll
WIDE
"60 " SERIES
TIRES
NEW
CAMPER
CM.t.HGI OVfll
TIRES
$ 3 3 $ 11)'.
1
i6.S ...... 33 WHITI llTTllltS
, .... II PIVI T•X*'
COSTA MESA
Phones 646-4421
540-4343
i
• •
• ' •
• • • . • • • • • , • !
-.
' .
•
--------4 .. --4~ -
--:"--::7"-_ -.-·---.. ----~ --~-
--~-·-·-
•
..
Orange Coast T~ay's Final • •
VOL 65, NO. 42. 4 SECTIONS, 52 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA " . FRIDAY, FEBRUA·RY '18, 1972 c TEN CENTS
~our ans ea
Nixon,, Mqo
Will Meet
Tuesday .,,
By HELEN THOMAS
. KANE!!OE MARINE AIR BASE, Oahu,
Hawaii (UPI) -President Nixon is ex·
pected to hold his first summit meeting with Communist Party Chainnan MaGo tae Tung in Peking one day after he ar-
rives in the Chinese capttal, it was learn-
ed today.
~Informed sources said the Nixon-Mao
get-acquainted meeting is set for Tuesday
in the ancient Chinese capital.
Another meeting with Mao is expected
later in the week in Hangcbow, the pic-
turesque resort which serves as Mao's
.. Camp David," a place where he likes to
retreat for seclusion.
Most of Nixon's meetings on his Feb.
21-28 m1ssion to China will be with Chou
China Stories
Begin Today
nte DAILY PILOT presents f.o.
day the, first of a series of special
pages of pictures and stories on
President Nixon's historic trip to
China.
The material -was gathered by
photographers and reporters of the
Associated Press and United Press
International
Today's coverage ~ppears on
Page 5.
En-Lal, the 73-year~ld No. 2 Man in
China.
Chou will welcome Nixon at the airport
in Peking with a red carpet ceremony
when he arrives at 11:30 a.m. China time
Monday.
Nixon. accompanied by his wife Pat
and official stall, flew from snowy
Washington to sunny Hawaii Thursday
far a ·tranquil rest to adjust to changing
time zones and for further study before
~is departure for China Sunday.
The President stepped off the presiden-
tial jet ••spirit or '76'' into sunny 75-
degree weather at this Marine Corps
base to the cheers of a crowd or 5,000
persons.
Draped with a colorful red flowered lei,
. (See NIXON, Page %)
Fertility Chair
'Works Wonders'
SOUTHBEND. England (UPI ) -
There's one empty chair in the telephone
eichange here.
111 wouldn't be seen dead in it," Glynis
:Mann said. "The last three girls to
sit in that chair all had to leave because
the)'. became pregnant."
Jii'ne Loni:.bottom, the last girl to use
the chair, said she had been trying
unsuccessfully for three years to have
a liaby.
0 As soon as I moved into the fertility
chair, I became pregnant,'' she said.
••But I don't blame the others for boycot-
Ung the chair. It certainly seems to
work wonders ."
Nemesis Final
Yacht Wi1i1ier
Special to the DAILY PILOT
ACAPULCO -Nemesis. Tom
Tobin's Erickson 39 out of the San
1 Diego Yacht Club, is the corrected
time winner of the 11th San Diego
to Acapulco Yacht Race.
Three Newport Beach yacht&
wound up in second, third and
lourth places. Burke Sawyer's
Atorranle was second, B o b
Beacuhamp'1 Oorothy 0 was third
and Peter Grant's Nalu IV was
fourth.
Yachts still at sea today were
Alert, 37 mUes; Sangtlta II, 135
milea, and Rainy Day, 192 miles.
None of these could affect the
overall gtandlngr, according to race
o!flcllll.
It Was ltlt!vitafJle -·-. .
Rhoda Rafaelll models lbe llltest fad -a Howard Hughes T shirt,
at a New York boutique. fflllbes' Rosemont Entezyfises have asked a
court injunction against·tbe people who are making and selling these
T shirts and buttons:
CocaineShip1nentBlocked
By French, U.S. Officers
FORT DE FRANCE, Martinique (AP)
-U.S. and French narcoUcs agents an·
nounc.ed four arrests today that blocked a
shipment of $1.4 million worth of cocaine
into the United States.
Arrested at at beachfront luxury hotel
here ~as German Urrego, 44, a Colom-
bian. The French called him a major
figure in the narcotics route between
Latin America and the United states.
A second man, identified as Rogelio
Gomez, 36, a Colombian national, was
seized simultaneously with· the arrest in
Miami ,of two other COiombians, Gerardo
Moreno, 36, and Marla Lucia Salazar, 45.
States -to Miami.
Then, both the French and American
agents moved in. A French officer made
contact with the Colombians, passing
himself off as a buyer. The arrests
followed.
The kingpin or the Latin operation has
been identified by U.S. authorities as
Auguste Joseph Ricord, a Frenchman
whose organization reportedly has ban·
dled up to $2.5 billion in narcotics a year
from his headquarters in Paraguay.
Ricord is in a Paraguayan jail, but
Paraguayan authorities have refused to
e1tradite him to the United States.
6 to ·I Vote
Affects 105
In Prisons
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The
California suprtme Court, in an historic
deciSJon, struck down the death penalty
today in the state with the nation's
largest Death Row.
The decision came on a 6-1 vote with
Justice Marshall F. McComb the
dissenter.
A'45-page majority opinion was readied
for publication in San Francisco today.
McComb filed a five-page dissent.
The ruling came on a suit filed by the
American Civil Liberties Union and
argued Jan. 6 by Prof. Anthony
Amsterdam, the stanford University law
professor who delivered s i m i 1 a r
arguments against capital punishment
before the U.S. Supreme .Court Jan. 17.
The nation's highest tribunal is ex·
pected to deliver it.3 own ruling within
two months -while 690 condemned men
and women in the United States await
the ruling, more than a seventh of them
in California.
ntere has not been an execution Jn the
United States for' more than four years.
At San Quentin Prison, across San
Francisco Bay, Associated Warden
Joseph O'Brien reported hope and ex-
peetati:on sweeping the huge Death Row
which houses 101 condemned men, in·
eluding some of the nation'S most famous
murderers, .
':I'!S.,Dea\ll 1\1!1! ,llrlsone~, : '.eourJ!'. ti.ve Jll!m! 1'a11l<LAbil' teie .ttpqria a~_'.~ a1 ~' ~r the'!!~ ~/1
0':8riii . f• "'. ~ f ''. I. "
GOV. ~d Reagan;. a Poitent or
capital puliishmerit,'was m San J'.!BDCISCO
for · a meeting ~of the University of
California board o1 regeni..
"I will not make a commeqt on the ex·
peeled Supreme Court ruling regardhlg
the death penalty until I've seen Jt/'
Reagan said.
The callfornia case involved in today's
ruling was the death penalty imposed on
Robert P. AJtderson for a 1965 killing. Jn
his arguments, Amsterdam, a soft spoken
3f.year-old former proseeuf.or. said:
"For man deliberately and needlessly
to take life -which he does not un-
derstand -and to inflict death -which
leads he knows not where -is an act that eclipses every other cruelty humani-
ty can mete out or bear.''
McComb said he did not agree with the
view1of the majbrity dec ision that death
is cruel and unusual punishment.
"I happen to believe the death penalty
is a deterrent to crime," he said. "Swift
justice for murderers, including a speedy
and public trial followed by quick ap-
pellate review and execution, will help
curb the climbing crime rate."
He said executions are part of civiliza-
tion's legal and moral heritage.
· ••tt has been a· Jegitimate form of
punishment for 300 years," he said.
Last month, the New Jersey State
Supreme 'Court also struck down capital
!S.. DEATll, Page !)
•ctippi·ng' Judge
Time Off for Hair cut, Shave
By TOM BARLEY
01 .... ~llY l"llef 11•11
Orange County's "nogging judge" and a persua sive prisoner made 1
bargain in court Thursday. The judge agreed to cut the prisoner's jail sentence
provided tbe 27-year--0ld man got a haircut.
It all began when Superior Court. Judge William Murray, who once
sentenced another county jail inmate to a flogging, firmly sentenced Michael
Thomas Joyce ol Costa Mesa to one year in jail for the long-haired prisoner's
violation of probation. Joyce had been on probation as part of a sentence im-
posed two years ago for a burglar)' convicUon and narcotics offenses.
"Wow, man, that's a lot," winced Joyce, shaking his shoulder le.ugtb hair. I
"Get a haircut and I'll knock off 60 days, 11 grpined Judge Murray.
"Right on, man. Where's the barber shop?" repHed Joyce.
"Okay," commented the judge. "We've got us a deal.''
"Say judge," commented Joyce as Judge Murray got ready for the next
item on his calendar. "What aboUt my mustache? It ought to be worth a little
something."
"I'd say 30 days," Judge Murray responded.
"Judge," announced Joyce, "you've made yourself a deal."
"I'm sure glad you don't 'sell magazine subscriptions, Mr. Joyce,"
chuckled Judge Murray to the delight of courtroom onlookers, "you're a very
per!uasive prisoner.''
The happy Joyce left to begin his nine-month spell in Orange County J ail.
"There's a method in my madness ," Judge Murray later told a news-
man. 11Jt's going to be preUy hard for that well-trimmed young man to step
back into the drug culture."
Judge Murray's famous Dogging sentence was never carried out bee~
the county sheriff refused to administer the punishment. The sentence W
. was changed to a more modem Conn of punishment.
Reds Urged to Battle
FtJ;i:_Jndochiria Wins
. .
SAIGON' (UPil -Gmnilwil~ bfo•d·
cuts made public today tlifeatened
wldespte._d attaclt.9 on major cities of
Laos !Or l!ie llr!t lime In the Indochina
War and urged the VJet Cong to 11make
t~e greatest efforts to acore new vic-
tories" in South Vietnam.
The Patbet Lao and Viet Cong radio
broadcasts were timed to colncide with
President Nlxon's departure for Pekil'lg.
Mailmen Taking
G. W. Day Off
Regular man won't be delivered on
Was~·· Birlbday Monday. Only
!pec1al delivery service and collections
from white-topped air mail mailbo1.es1or
those designating a holiday collectloa
schedule will continue. •
But post office lobbies for mall
deposits, lock box access and self-service
s.tamp machines will be open.
All Orange County elementary and high
schools and junior colleges will be closed
Monday also. Only Chapman College and
West Coast University will remain open.
County offices and most Orange County
city halls will close.
Most bank! will close on Feb. 21.
U.S. military official1 In . Saigon haft
predicted major Communllt offensives
by Monday when NiJlon 1$ scheduled to
arrive In the Chinese capital. (See related
lfory, Page 4/.
Military analysts ln 5algon said the
Pathet Lao broadcasts threatening at·
tacks against such major cit.ies as the
royal capital of Luang Prabang, the ad·
ministrative capital of Vientiane and th11
southern cities or savannakhet and Pakse
could foreshadow a major escalation of
the war by the Communists.
The Vlet Cong broadcast called for
Communist troops in South Vietnam to
"make the greatest efforts to score new
victories greater t!ian last year" and to
"frustrate the VletnamizaUon of the war poli~y and the Nixon doctrine, chase out
t~e Americans, topple President Nguyen
Van Thieu, liberate the South and defeat
the U.S. Imperialist policy cf tot.al ag-
gression." ·
The annual Communist offen1ive in
Laos is far ahead of its normal schedule
this year. and offJcial! In Vientiane have
expressed fears that North Vietnamese
and Pathet Lao troops may try to over-
run cJtles previously left inviolate be-
cause of the 196% Geneva accords.
In Vientiane, acting Defense Minister
Prince Sisouk Na Champassack told a
news conference today the government,
with U.S. air support, launched an ot·
fensive against North Vietnamese oc·
cupying the Plain or Jars. Sources close to the in~stigation on this
French Caribbean lsland said Urrego and
Gomez were arrested Wednesday in the
Diclmant Roe Hotel. They were arraigned
today on charges of .. inftactions con-
cerning the legislation 'OD narcotics."
Alcoholism an Epidemic He said only small guerrilla units of
Jess than company aizt were involved.
But reliable military sources said It is a
major offensive involving 2,000 to 3,000
men and is aimed at easing Communist
pressure on the CIA base a~ !.-Ong Cheng,
whose fall would jeopardize Vientiane itself.
"We just walked into their hotel room,''
an S(Testing ofiicer said. •1Tbere was
absolutely no resistance. 111.ey didn't
know we would be coming. Jn fact, they
wete waiting for their money and we
showed up."
Urrego was described as a major
operative in the system of transferring
cocaine and heroin by private plane, car
and other means to the United Stale!:
from Central and South America.
The heroin is transformed from a
morphin~ base in the Marseille area of
France, but is transshipped to Latin
America with increasing frequency to
avoid stiffened customs controls on
America's East Coast.
Trench narcotics _ officers s a l d
American oUlclals bad been trying to ap-
prehend 11rto1• since 1956.-Rooentiy, 11.S.
officials learned that Ufl'eco had taken
up residence in Fort De. F~
The United statea wu ~hlg to ask
!or h1' ulraditlon wheA U.S.. narcotics
bureau ageni. said they. rtotived ln-
!ormatl<>n that Urrtgo Wlls about to
tra11sfer about 30 pound,! of cocalrie -ap..
parutly In short 1Upply In the United
Fish-crushed Man OK
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Ferman
Gusman, 48, wu reported In fair C'OD-
dition today after • 200-pound tuna
carcass !ell on him In Iha bold of a
lishinc boat whore be wu workio&.
Heavy Drinking Number 0 ne Dangerous 'Drug' -HEW
By CRAIG A. p ALMER young people learn from imitation and
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Alcohol ls the identificaUon with adulti."
most abused drug in the United States, Alcohol does have medicinal value, said
the Health, Education and Welfare Dr. Morris E. Chafetz, director of the
Department told Congress today in the new National lnstitute on Alcohol Abuse
government's first annual report on ~nd Alcoholism, in an introduction.
a~cohol and health. It may be prescribed as a mUd relax-
Tbere are nine million · alcoholics or ant for aged and convalescent patients,
PrOblem drinkers in · America -almost used as an occasional remedy for ln-
10 percent of the work force -and somnla or as a stimulant for lagglng ap-
atcobollsm is an epidemic among petite and digestion, or even for the relief
American Indians, according to the of pain, he said.
report submitted under 1t new law But alcohol abusers shorten their life
drafted by Sen. Harold E. Hughes (D-span by 10 to 12 years, DuVal addod.
lowa)1 a. reformed alcoholic. Both he and Chafeti are medical doc· lt'!aid.tt\e prOblem causes 28,000 traffic tors.
deaths in a year and drains the econOmy The 121.page report defines alcohol
.or $15 billion aanually. . abuse as repeated episodes of ID-
The report contained these observa-• tox1catlon or heavy drinking, or con-
'tlons from Dr . Merlin K. DuVal, assistant 1Jstent use to cope with llfe'• problems. aecretarY !or htaith and science at HEW: An alcoholic "Med• to driDlc, even
"While we are horrified by tht abll8e of though be may know the polentl•i
such· drugs as hallucinogens, narcoUcs destructive ' behavior of b I s con.
and 1Umulants by our youth, we pay UUle sequences," it bid.
hted to the most abu.!ed drui of them all An II-member task force beaded by
-alcohol. Chaleti and Including iii persons who
• "ll'he! this nation became concerntd deal regularly with alcoholi<s. reported
about drug uoe among tlle young .. tbe these. other !lndtnro:
public was finally forced to rteognize -Amoog American Tndlans alcoholism
that adult use of alcohol -a cential ts at.an epidemic level, a rate at at Jta1t
ntrVous aystem drug which we u.!e .... 10 ,percent of the Indian population and
IOClal beverage -ts actually,the major twice u high 11 Iha national average. On
drug problem In this country and that aamt r......,atlons, 11 maey 11 Olll lourtb
to half the Indians are alcoholics.
-Public drunkennes.s accounts for 2.5
million arres~ -one lhird of all arrests
annually at a cost of $100 million just for
the arrest and imprisonment pro-
ceedlnp.
-Dlnesoea associated with alcohol
abuse include emotional disordefl and
chronic progressive diseases of the
nervous systems and of the Jiver, heart,
muscles, intestines and other body orians
and tissues.
-Many public and private hospitals
itlii f,~ruse to treat alcoholi<s despite coo·
trary positions taken by the American
Medic I Aasotlatlon and A m e r I c a n
Hoopii.I Assoclatlon.
$60,000 in Diamonds
Stolen in Oakland
OAKLAND (AP) -A, young gunman
has made off with MQ,000 worth of cut
cllamonds In tht robbery of an Oakland
Jewtlry manufacturing firm, police aay.
Tbe Harry Kahao Je1"hY M.v>ulac-
turlnc Co. WN rob~ shortly belore noon
Tbunday.
_,
Orange C.an
Weadler
More hazy sunshine Is forecast
for Saturday, followiog morning
low clouds and fog. Tempera·
lures will be mild -In the !O's.
Lows tonight in the 40's.
INSIDE TODA 't'
Rivtrsfdt Countu's Nationcd
Datt Ftstival U bringing Old
BQRh.d4d to Southern California
for 10 days starting today
through Ftb. 27. A Stol'JI m lc>o
day's Wttkendt'r gives the df'o
toill.
_______ ,,_. __ ~---·--------~-~ ... ,-----""-~ ..._ =~ -·--,..---~ . ...._.:: _....,. ........ .i-.... ____ .,..__ .. ____.... -
; ~ OAILV PILOT "'°"· ,......., a. 1972
, CdM Ft•ee1vuy
State Interest
Band Wanted-
Hut No 'Kooks'
'Fair Platis Under Way
11
--iir ·Ro11te~Goo
lt111llbe~Emer ... ·.jo1>1o c G · Headie.s..E.v w 'A..c . '1.2' -=-~.~~~.i;..~!l;,,. __ Q.f!!JJl. Ql!p_ . en or tion · ...
~ Wodhetdar n101 by the Plana for the Orlqo County "Al;tlon
board to tcbedU!e and aupervtae "Tl" fair bePINnl June 18 are npldly
Wall Street Journal and Loi Angoo
Times to lttract a developer interested in
making the fairgrounds' S3-acre west end
lnto a recreational arta. The board 11ve
Its authorlZAUon to place more ad·
ve.rtlstments as they have received only
Inquiries for more Wortnatlon and no
direct proposala.
all special events !O< the 1972 lair laking shaJ>e foUowln( this week's
on the Costa Meaa lalrgroundl, Orange Counly Fair Board meeting.
Jubilant Harbor Area city officials,
munty road Agency men and business
leaders returned from S a c r a m e n t G
Thunday nigh~ confldent ol greater
state consideration of Corona deJ Mar
Freeway construction 1peedups .
accompanied the Orange County con-
• tlngent, along with County Road Com·
\russloner Ted McConvllle, Orange Coun·
ty. Chamber or Cornmtrce executive Ted
Flltra and Bob Eic kenberg, ot the Or.
llllie County lndll!lrlal Development
AaoclaUon.
Emerson is already being told what 1be board approved ~ta made
to Ado~.,,. written by hoard mem-=.::1on C<llJ:.':l'~~'rnl:fi~ t~!
ber Mrs. Mildred Goldthorp d~'°' administration buUtllng at the Costa ted hlm to "screen the 'rock' McClellan Hearing
•
The delegation went before the Slate
Highway Commi3skm for a JO-minute
scheduled hearing, anned with a booklet
oliUlnlng local traffic problems and pro-
posals:
Ma• fa irgrounds. group very carefully. We have . '!be comedy team of SklleJ and
some real kooks la. this arts." ll!nder>on I! ~eduled !or . three
pmfonnancts durlllC the fair.
'they addressed h I g h w a y com-• ml1sionen on different aspects of the
Specll1cally, they relale to the C.l'O!la
del Mar Freeway segment between the
San Diego Freeway and Unlvera\ly Drlve.
sev're tralllc problems Corona de! Mar
Frtlway construction will alleviate.
&Id Comml1sioner McConville said it
ts a primary key ln developing the coun-
ty'a aJterial highways network.
Teachers Ask
Board Arrest "They got so Interested in what we
were saying that they allowed us Petter
tban 40 minutes," remarked Costa Mesa
M•ycr Robert M. Wilson. NewPort Beach'a Devlin cited heavy
use of MacArthur Boulevard by UC
Irvine sludenta and faculty, shopper traf·
fie generattd by Newport Center and
Laguna Beach-bound drlver1.
On Brown Act Costa Mesa and Newport Beach clty
councils pa55ed resolutions calling tor full
speed ahead on the blgfl...prlorlly freeway
segment in December. at which time
they applied for Thursday's hearing.
• Rumors of possible withholding of con-
struction fllnds by tbe state -which
W\lson sald anticipated inter-city quar-
rtlllng over Coast Freeway con1truct100
-led to the clUts' team appeal.
By ape:edlng up C.Orona de! Mar
Freeway con1truction, the state would
create a through-traffic route to take off
part ol the losd.
By JOHN ZALLER
Of ~ D•lll' P"9f 111"
Huntington Beach City (elementary)
School District teachers are seeking the
arrest of their school board !or vlolallon
of the Brown Act.
Originally, COrona del Mar Freeway
conslnlctlon waa ..i for ll'lz.13, bul local
ofllc:Wo learned late 1aJt YFar the
timetable waa ,abov:ed back anotHer year.
Iodustrlalist Eickenberg added an
often-overlooked factor tn local traffic
problems, the heavy volume of truck
traffic 1ervlng manufacturing di.stricts
around Orange County /Jrport.
Mayor Wilaon noted In urging the state
to Joo.sen Jts grip on freeway comtructlon
money that Jt spent only $1 million ln the
county during 1971, while $25 miltion went
into )()(al industrial development.
Linda Dozier, executive dinctor of the
West Orange County United Teachers,
Thursday requesttd that a criminal com·
plaint be filed against foar members of
the school board who dl!cuased giving
pay raises to administrators In executive
session without listing the Item on the
meeting's agenda.
"I took them step by atep through the
reasons why we really need the C.Orona
del Mar Freeway now -not la four or
Ove years," Mayor Wilson said today.
Newport Beach Publlc Works Director
and hlghway apeclall!t Joseph T. Devlin
Questioned by the reportedly impressed
State Highway Commission on the
delegaUon's own preference fo~ a Corona
del Mar Freeway construction Um.etable,
be left them with an impossible plea.
Maximum penalty for each member ot
the board who is convicted would.be six
months In Jail and a l500 fine .
Longtime Mesan
Harry Burdick
Succumbs at 71
Harry C. Burdick of 246 Magnolia SI., a
36-yur reaident of Costa Mesa and
former fisherman and boat bullder, died
of cancer Wednesday at hls home. He
was 71 years old.
Memorial services wW be held at 2
p.m. Tuesday at the Cbaptl of Repose at
Westmiosler Memorial Park, with family
and close friend! attending.
Dr. C. Raymond Fowler. Mr. Burdick'•
nephew, will officiate at the service.
Survivors include a brother, Don
BurdJck' of Mesa, Ariz.; a ahiter, Ruth
Scholle of San Diego; 1 da¥ghter, CArolee
B. Slevens, 3025 Samoa Place, Costa
P.fesa; a son, Robert C. Burdick of
AnaheJm, and siI grandchildren, Carl R.
Stevw (Jr.), C&tberine Stevens, Clay
stev..,, Gree Burdick, Sheri Burdick
and Mark Burdick. ,
Mr. Burdlck was born In PeMl)'lvanla
and carne to Long Beach as a Hnl.or in
high school. He and Illa wile gradlialed
from high school and were married there.
They lived In San Diego and Newport
Beach before moving to Costa Mesa in
1935.
Be!ore World War D. Mr. Burdick was
a commercial fisherman and boat
bullder, and he was a house builder dur·
ing 'the off sea!On. Since the war he had
worked for himself in building con·
struction, doing mostly custom home
work. He buUt four houae1 on Magnolia
SI., all of whlCh his family lived In,
He was active ln the YMCA in Long
Beach and ·in the Costa Mesa prOgram
wilh hll own grapdcblldrtn. His -it&
were fishing, cultlng and pollahlng stonu,
golfing and boWllni.
Mr. Burdick was active in American
Legion lJtUe League basetiall in Costa
Mesa, u an organizer and official.
In bis later lie he wrote several
poems. A number were published and one
will be read at the memorial' iervlce on
Tuesday.
The family request! that cont:ribuUOD!
be made to the Orange Cwnty Cancer
SOciety or to the Vls!tiai N u r s e 1 Association.
OllAllel COAR
DAILY PILOT
~ COAIT PVIUllUftO CIU'M"r
l•MrtN.WH4 ,,....... ............
J•c': a. em..,
Vb ,.,.,,_,. ad "-" .....
n.. •• r • ..u l!lli!Ot
1\Pt•• A. M.,,,flt• --CllMfts H. lo• lticfi•rl r. N.n
AMlltaM ........ Ed"°" .,_ __
JJO w .. t Irr Strtet
M•Ui•t Ad4Nm P.O.,_ 11.0, '2121 --
"TomorroW morning -lf not today,"
he declared.
Those named e.s suspects In a report
filed with the Huntington Beach police
are tru!tee Jack Clapp, Louis DaHarb,
Orville Hanson, aid Ivan Liggett. No such recommendation was.included
Jn the presentation, only an urgent re-
quest to speed it up or at least ,not set it
back from the oi'lginal 1r7i.73 schedule.
Asked for comment on the ri se, the at.
torney for the plalnUff teachers replied,
0 0h, I didn't ezpect that the news would
get out this soon."
Hughes Staying
On Eighth Floor
Of Latin Hotel
By CllAllLES GREEN
MANAGUA, Nicaragua (AP)
Howard Hughes was presumably holed up
today on the tlilhtly guarded eighlh floor
of Managua's Intercontinental Hotel, and
a spokesman In the United Slata aa!d he
would remain in the Central American
country indefinitely.
Both President Anastasio Somoza's of-
fice and Hughes spoke!Dlen 1n the Unlted
si.tes confirmed that the eccentric
bUIJonalre fJew to Managua Thursday
alter 15 months ol llvlng In seclualon In a
hotel tn Nassau.
He came on business, the government
aald.
In Las Vegu, a spokesman for the
Hughea Tool C.. said HU&hts' stay In
Nicaragua was indefinite -"we aren't
saying how long he'll be there, but 'in-
definite' could indicate a certain degree
of permanence."
He added that Hughes is considering izl.
vestmenll in the country and "considers
the economic and political situaUon
good."
HUjhes reportedly left Nassau after a
dispute with Bahamian officials over
work permits for the ataff that inmlate!
him from physical contact with the
outside world.
He'll have no such trouble in
Nicaragua, which la run by the oldest and
one of the most secure dictatorships in
Latin America.
'iThls was not a sudden thing " aakl '
another Hughes Tool source ih Las
Vegas. "Hughes did not just fl7 oot of t~e Bahamis at the last moment with no
real Idea of wbert he ltaJ going. Hughes
owns properUes Jn Nicaragua and Is con-
!klering further investment!."
He added that Nlcaragua is now the
base of Hughes' operation!, and that the
66-year-old industrialist almost certainly
will not return to the Bahamas.
There was speculation among
Nicaraguans that Hughe! might be i,,..
terested in anf one of severaJ deals, Irr
eluding establishment of a casino and a
large land purchase.
U.S. Ambassador Turner Shelton told 1
reporter that two Hughes aides arrived
Wednesday and made arrangements to
rent all 17 rooms on the next to the top
floor ol the Intercontinental , which is on
a bluff overlooking Managua.
Hotel ofllclals refused Thursday night
to say U Hughes was there or even to
acknowledge that the suddenly in·
accessible eighth floor was reserved for
Hughes and his staff. The elevators wue
disconnected to th•t floor. and the fire
doors were sealed.
Hughes' filght came whOe court hear·
ings were in progress In New York on the
purJXJrted autobiography of Hughe. writ~
ten hy Clifford Irving, a book Ttme
magazine has called a hoa~.
A spokeoman IOI' U.S. Alty. Whllney
North Seymour Jr. decllnld to ny
whether a subpoena had been Issued for
Jlughes to appear be.fore the grand jury
or whether any statement. were so~t
from him while he was In the BlhamU.
Managua, steamy capital of thi s co~
lry or two million people on the C•nlral
American neck betwttn ffonduru ind
Costa Rica, II Hughes' third port of call
•Ince he left his Beverly Hills mansion In 11166. •
For lour ywa, he livo In a lightly
guarded penthouao at the Duer! hm In
Lis VtJlaa, lhtn slipped out on
'l'hanbglvlna evo 1070 and moved lnlo 1
nlntl>noor oulle In the Bri!Annla Btacb
Hote.1 in N1ssau.
The attorney, Donald Odell of Los
Angeles, conUnued saying "I wasn't con·
templating any public information on this
until we had a chance to talk with the
district attorney."
He said that he had requested a
criminal complaint through the police
because "that was the procedure we were
told we had to fellow if we wanted to
pursue thls thing."
The police report, which is expected to
be forwarded to the Orange Olunly
District Attorney next week, states that
"the above namtd complainant (Linda
Dozier) accompanied by an attorney .. ,
!Ued lhl! report and alleged that a viola·
Uon of the Brown Act had occurred and
that a crimlnal complabit was desired."
Mrs. Doti.er was not available for com-
ment on the case th.la morning. But Bbe is
employed through the Huntington Beach
Teacber1' Auoclatkm, and presumably
has the backing of that group for bet ac--
lion.
The complaint centers on a discussion
ol pay ra.15e1 for admlnistratora that was
undertaken by four members of the
school board and ezecutive iressJo, on
Jan. 11. The flftb member of the board,
Slephen Holden, dld not altend that
meeting.
, The discussion did not appear on the
agenda for that meeting and Mrs. Dotier
believes that the Brown Act requires that
it should have.
On another oceaslon, Mrs. Dorothy
McClure, president of the Huntington
Beach Teachers' AJsoclatk>n, added "We
want to stop the board from discussing in
closed 1es11lon what must by law be
discussed In open session."
From Page J
NIXON .•.
Nixon got Into a Jong, black: White House
limousine and went to the home ot Brlg.
Gen, Victor A. Armstrong, commander of
the base, 15 miles from HonoluJu.
Tho Nixons will spend !\VO nights In
Hawaii and another on Guam before ar·
riving at Shanghai on Monday (China
time ) for a week of conferences with the
leaders of the People's Republi c of China.
The two-day stopover in Hawaii and the
overnight stay on Guam Saturday night
were recommended by Dr. Walter Tkaeh,
Nixon's personal physician, to overcome ~he r~tlguing physical expense of chanr·.
JnJ{ lune zones.
Nixon seemed d .. pJy touched by !he
warmlh of the bipartisan congre!sional
sendoff he received in Washington Thurs.
day, and a traditional aloha welcome on
hJs arrival Jn HawaU.
Kaneohe Is built on a peninsula atill
called "Mokatu" -sacred because
HawaU's flrat king, Kamehameha th<
Great, cho3e it as a lite for a royal
meeting pla~.
"It's nice to •pend a day Jn Hawaii
before moving acrou the world," bl!I told
the airport ctowd as he moved antOl\I
lhem shaking hands. "I wanl lo sll In the
sun and get a tan."
With an entourage of about l'° persor11,
Including White Houae alde1 a n d
members of the prtSS corpa. Nllon will
arrive In Peking via Shanghai at ll:JO
a.m. local Ume Moodoy (7:30 p.m. PST Sunday).
The President apenl moat ol his time
en route to H11•ail 'Tlnl'aday con/ming
on the plane with nallonal Hcurlly alfall'I
advisors Henry A. KJsallltr'and Secrelary
of Stale William C. Rogm, hla two chief
fOl'ell!l policy advtser1 on Ibo trip.
While tht\ agenda has nol lieen ,.~ the
""1'1t metllngs In China are upected to
~er a rana:e of «i:ntrOveralal problems
which hava "Plraled U.. 1-... nallonl,
parti<ularly Formosa alld Ibo V1elDtm war. •
The phUosophlcol part of tho con-
vtmtlons were expecttd lo dwell on
waya to rela1 U!ns.ion bltween the COUDo>
trleo alter IS ywa ol oold war holtllllJ"
Col\untltee mem~ are att.mptlng lo
have 1 televlslon lhow .taped at · the
lalrgrounds or a H<Ordlnf Hlllon ol a
popular group.
For continua 1entertainmer\~11 the
amphlthealre or atrollln~ around th e
Calrgrounds, a stiltsman, 'clowns, strolling
minstrels, a Dixieland band, a special
children's show and a Mel.lean band have
hetn proposed.
The board eng•ged Larry Emmon ol
Pboeab: as supervisor of special events
to coordinate these hlghll&hts and th< an-
nual queen pageant.
Board Pmldent Richard L. Hualcn re-
quested the ~am conun.tttee present
the entire entertainment package at the
March m .. ung for further kleu and ap-
proval.
By unanlmoua decision, past board
member Cecil J, Maril was appointed
the official goodwill ambusador of the
Orange County "Action '72" Fair.
The lalrl""IJlds are taking new lhape
also. A new electrical 1ystem and public
addrw syalem are being Installed ind
more apace Ja being prepared for the
floral and gardeolng exhlhll All Im-
provements wW be completed by lhe June
lair opening.
Advertlsementa have appeared in the
NAACP Disavoivs
Race Bim Fight
Over Bordello
GOLDFIELD, Nev. (UPI) -Beverly
Harrell, madam of a remote bordello
several miles from this old mining town,
thinks the Nevada Equal Rights Com·
mission should have more important
things to do than worry about a bawdy
house.
Bertha Woodward, Jll'esldent of the
Reno-Sparks branch of the N1tlonal
Assoclation for the Advancement of
Colored People, agrees.
She called the <.'O!Dmlssion's concern
about the C.tlon!All Ranch at Lldo Jtmc-
tion "a grandstand publlclty 1iunt·" which
Ignored IJ!Or& 1ertous problems ol
discrtmlnadon In Joba, bouslng and
education.
The coDtroversy began last week when
Tony M"cCormi<:k, uecuUve' director of
the commlS31on, said a black man from
Arizona complained to the 1tate ·M was
refused entry at the Cottontail Ranch.
The rancb, trimmed In red llghl!,
Js a well-known house of prostitutJon
with a cluster of trailers parll:ed near
U.S. 95.
The operaition is legal -because state
law ls silent on lhe aub]<ct · of pros-UtuUon.
'First' Under Opi-,iion
Convicted killer Wllllarn Westwood
4'The Man" McClellan today became the
first occupant of death row to face court
action taken In the light cf the Supreme
C.urt's r<JecUon of the death penalty.
McClellan, ae. of Alhambra Wl9
on!ered by Oranc• Counly Superior Court
Judge . Wllllem Murray lo mum to hla
courtroom ~rll U for what II tenlatlvely
acheduled u a pnlrW hearing.
It ls Juit U likely, Laguna Niguel 11·
torney Tom Keenan did, that McClellan
will ba formally oentenced on that data to
lll1! Imprisonment !or Illa killing In 1967 of
two petrolll al .tha Gu Llght bar In Slan-
ton.
McClellan was to have aone throUJ!h a
rerun cf the penalty phase of the superior
Court trial tn whlcb he wu defended by
Keenan.
The Alhambra man was one ol 1
number of death row occupants who got a
aecond crack at the penalty phase when
the Ca!Uornla Supnme C.url ruled thal
trial Jud~• had unfairly barred proo· pectlve urors oppooed lo the death
penalty m deliberations.
Keenan today predicted t J m 11 a r
resentenclng to JUe terms for two other
Orange County occupants of death row -
Gary Phbenlx of C.sta Mtsa and
Frederick Saterlleld of Sant.\ Ana.
Phoenli:, 281 drew the death rap last
year on multiple counta of forcible rape
and lddaaping while he was employed at
a Hunllngton Beacb health spa.
Salerlleld gol the death penally !or the
killing of his commonlaw wife and her
daughter at a tlme when he was on
parole from an attempted murder coDo
vlctlon.
ReacUon among Superior Court judges
Miners lleceive
Pay Hike Off er
WNDON (UPI) -A three-man
governmenwppolnled Court of lnql\lty
today reoommended a l29U million 111'1
boost lot ,dai ''1ilneb wbooe nti'tly
seven-week strike has threatened Britain
with economic disaster. The miners said
It waa not enough, but did nol lormally
reject the pr~al.
In recommending an incrtase averag-
ing 20 perctnt for the 180,000 striking coa l
miners, the government commission
overrode the unofficial a percent limit on
pay hike.! on grounds the miners' case is
"exceptfonaJ."
and lawyers today to the new1 of the blgh
court's abolition of the death penalty ran
about nlne to one in favor of the ruling.
Sheriff's depuUea told newsmen of at
least one unanimous renctlon to the JltWB,
They iald prisoners confined to tht
Superior Court holding tank loudly
cheered when someone piued the word
around.
Frot1t Page J
DEATH •••
punishment.
In addition, nine state legl slature1 have
repealed Jt. But in one of them, West
Virginia, the upper hoU3e ot the
legislature voted Jut mek to' relnatate IL
In Sacramento, the state Department
of Corrections a•id prisoners condemned
to death will continue to be handled in the
!&roe manner UJ'.ltll the que.stion cf capital
punishment has ba>n decided th!ough the
appeal process.
"We swpect there'll be a lot of ap.
peals," to the CaWornla ruling, •
1pokesman said. •
In the Callfornla Legislature, State Sen.
George Deukmejlan, <R·Long Btuh),
promptly introduced JegislalJon allowing
the Legislature to determine which
crimes would be punishable by death.
The change would require a constitutional
amendment.
Assemblyman Alan Sleroty (~Beverly
HJIJs), author of a bill to repeal the death
penalty, called the decision "a victory for
the dignity of man."
In the last 79 years, California executed
502 persons, 308 by hanging and 195 by
aas in San Quentin 's gas chamber. Four
were women.
San Quentin's Death Row, expanded to
three cell blocks because ol Its con-
tinually increasing population. includ~
Sirh~ B. Sirhan, assassin of Sen. Robert
F. Kennedy; John Linley Fr•zler, con-
victed mass killer. and Cult Leader
Charles Manson. Manaon was tem-
porarily in Los Angeles today for a court
hearing.
Since 1162, IV!teh 11 W.re onculed, only
two executions have been perfonned.
Yet, deat h sentences have continued in
California at the rate of 10 to 15 per year
and "Death Row" was expanded twice.
Three of Manson'a convicted 11.c-
compllces, Susan Atkins, Leslie Van
Houten and Patricia Krenwinkel, are in a
special women's section of the row built
at the talifornla lll!titute for Women at
Frontera In Southern Calif or~ •
Cameo al
Sin: !124-Htt
.... s1sr SALE $135
C•meos •xtensive t•ble collection of.
fert cl111lc ltelian 1tylin9 creat.d lor
• furnltur• connoi1s1ur, Tlt•t• line plec-
•• feature burl wood tops •rid tf•i11
r•1i1t1nt pull tr1y1 for your convtn•
i•nct.
DEALERS FOR: HENRl;DON
.
DREXEL -
INTERIORS
LAGUNA BEACH
Th111 fine teblt1 from Htrit191 Fut11f•
tur• •rt just • ptrl of our excitlruJ mid·
Wil\flr sale wh ich is now in full 1w ln9.
Selected 9roups from such well known
line• ti Henredon, Herltage, Dr•••I and
much more are tvtiltble at 1ub1t1nfitl
11vin9s.
.... S15' SALE $135
HERITAGE -KARASTAN
TORRANCE NEWPORT llEACH
1727 Wfflcllfl Or .. 642·2050
OPIN PllDAT 'TIL f 23649 Hawth4rna lllw.
11111 111-117' o,.. ,.. .... 'Ill '
l'rolooo1-' 1-I• ....,_ A-i.-.t.10-Hllt
345 Norlh Coast Hwy. 49W51
,.._ T•lf ,,__ M_, -4 o,..,. C••"'Y 140•17AJ
•
•
•
)
I
-
,
.·
• DAD.Y PROT EDITORIAL PAGE
----:-Meet-the~-Gandidates
The 1at• ii up and they're off and runniJIJ, a fi-1<!
of 20· caodldates In the 1972 Costa Mesa City Council
election race with a finbh Une aeven weeb hence.
file; which ta a lot of candidatea to llaten to whe11
there's a &ood 8 o'clock ll\O'lle playtn(.
Some appear to be showing much early too~ as
horse racing tout& of yesteryear w.ould Hy.
Some votera couldn't care less one way or the other
who ceta elected.
Thi.-meam they" are dropping back badly In Ill•
first lap and mar not even legitimately finish.
Only five candidates wbose names will appear on
that March 11 ballot have made it to both of the fir&t
two Meet the Candidates' Nights. The Jirst drew 17; the
second only seven, while lncum~nts weren't even al·
Some voters already have their minda made up or
will cut ballot& for c1111dldate& who pay duea to the
aame club, go to the 11me church or prom!Je to do
wonderful thlngM . •
lowed to speak there. •
By tradition, a distinct pattern of attend,ance d~
velops at these forums fundamental to the democrat1c
process.
Sever&! more Mee.I the Candidates Nl&bta are due
in weeks ahead . '!'he DAILY. PILOT will r~port the times
and places 1n advance. Questions may be Hked In per·
son of the men and women seeking voter support by
personally stating their golls and qulllflcatlons for local
office.
The way it works -u we'll explain -ls unfair
to the serious candidates, the city itself, and those who
will be elected and should be given the toughest cha!·
Better to ask the candidates about the issues now,
when you have the widest aelecUon.
lenge." · .
You can only ask three of them questions during
the nut four yem.
Subtract the given number of candidates present.
r
I
Subtract members of their families. Take away their
1upporters or friends who turned out to see old }VbaVs--
His·Name get up iri front of a crowd and speak. Knock
off a coup1e of newsmen, say, and the League of Women
Voters' members.
Shotwell Served City Well
, And that leaves maybe three interested citizens
, sieking to ,form OP.inions on whom should be electe_d.
TheY.'••Y twn is company and three's a crowd, but
they meali. a cozier occ'aslon than a candidates' forum.
Veteran Costa Mesa Parks Department SUperlnten·
dent Laurel Shotwell has retired lo what every man
deserves, after a career working with what he loves:
people and growing thiJlgs.
The~ somewhat unfortunate pattern repeats itself
in every local ele;ctlob, despite a vocal minority's com·
plaints of yoter a~athy. .
A crowd of 125 well-wishers -it! size obviously
surprised him -gathered for a retirement luncheon
and sendofl for the 70-year-old Shotwell'• tours of Amer-
ica.
Certain legitimate reasons exist for absent candi·
dates ..:... the ilieumbt?nts weren't asked to oorne and
speak to vot~ra .~! ·Monday's affair -but repealers'
• oincerily snould be questioned. . . .
~uo~s af&p eXJst for some voter dls!ntefest. Right
at.:tl'e.\Qp · ls one' posiJlg a paradoxical qiiestlon. ~ul·
He &aid he feels about 40 and intends to • pursue
painting, photography and puttering sround his Yucca
Valley retreat in addition to traveling. Chances are
that Shotwell and his wile will journey at a leisurely
pace. ·
• fi~t'interest exjsted to lead· a record 20 ~~djdates ·to
Just about every U.S. town has a park that might
be'.& nice place to stop and look around. • c
·•
Contemptuous Political Attacks
They Help the Communists
WASHINGT\)N -Historically, It ls
nt<eSSar)I to go l>&ck a long way lo find
precedent for the contemptuous political
attacks on Pruidtnt Nixon's ~ace ef·
fort. l,.ogicllly, there "is no preoedeiit.
Do!nestic discontent with the · War of
181t crltldsm of the "unconditional aur·
render" doctrine of
President Roosevelt
in World War II -
these ire~prtcepenb
to show , that WJir
pollcles are not, al· ways wpuiar.
1B,ut in the pruent
!nstsm:<; the dU·
fertnce is clear. An
enemy strategy is -• baoed UJlC!ll tlie collapoe, not of the
armies m. the fi~ld,. but of ,American
public support of President Nl1on'1 'pro-
graht ending, the~ war-A ·presidential
peace plan, judged widely aver' the world
83! fair, reasonable ,and conciliatory. i,
under as stroni attack from the
Pri!!sident'1 political enemiea as from the
country's enemies.
THESE A"l'l'ACKS benefit the enmy's
strategy, and that is 81 true new as it bas
been for ttVttal years past when op-
po!ltlbn 'to . the War has gained a seen-
~ ~:i=~ill .;i~e~. -!rl.~~d
and abetl• corruponded to the, constltu·
Ilana!· definition ol treason. th11s expos-
ing Haldeman's crude innocence in
these ~tte~.
But tbei ,uigry 1 resPoDse ot .the IW'·
reoder-at·anl'pt'lce ." elements, th a t
Hald~ wss •=lni Senator Edmund S. Muolile aod Se!>Jllor_George McGovern
cl trtason. ~· equally u crude and
dlJmally as Am~~t. IJmOc'ent ~ause
thf!.O elem<lil& "Jilluf«to the Commu·
.
ntst side humane motlvatiOM which do
rmt exist.
It might conceivably be diiluent if
elQler Muskie or McGovern bad found a
fonnula bcidglng the gaps ln the
President's peace plan. But. they bave
noL
'
possibility. Muakie's vagueness on the
most essential point of cont10ued aupport
to a Saigon government suppUea an ele-
ment of uncertainty which the. Hanol
gove.mment will wish to welgh ln view
of the fact that Muskie has already
changed bis mind about the war and
might change it again.
Hanoi might conceivably make a
clearer cut deal with Ni1on at this stage
than If it took ii.II chances on Muskie. who
will not,.in any case, be ln a position to
act for nearly 1 y,ear. Muskie then might
be able lb claim an indirect responalbl.lity
for ending the war through havtng chl.v·
AT LEAST .MUSKIE hu not. vied Nixpn into making new concessions.
~cGovern's problem is a little cµHerent This kind of interplay shows what is
fn that Jte C8MOt bridge ~~ saps for 'W'f:ODg with a candidate for President Americans Who do not reuan wrrende.r tz1tlng to be Presldent bifore be \!I
and humiliation in what begin II· a rood elecled in such a serious matte aa tnd· cause. · mg·, war.
Muskie'• plan offers the Communist side little it cou1d not get from NiJon. Jt IT IS NOT A. MA'ITER of tr!uon or
is to be doubted if the Communist aide patriotlam. It is a matter of judgment on
trusts Muskje more, but maybe ·• little the course of action best calculated to
more, than Nixon, which ts not aaylnl brini the war to an end at the· earliest ·"' . TVMl•ible dale consistent with this coun· mu1,;.11. r--
The communist side knows that it ia try'• Interests.
d,ealing not alone with an lndividual in all· Haldeman's oversimplification has now
powerful control of a nation's policies .. It been defined and redefined by Preaident
knows that there ill 8 historic continuity Nixon and Dr. Henry A. Kissinger, and
of American policy, ~ it knows that~.,. even :VlCe President Agnew has ex·
thert b a difference between a man who pressed the thought in less blunt ttnns
ts running for office and one who has than Haldeman'•·
been elected. That difference Ues Jp large . Agnew's use of the term, ."un·
part with those who advJse blm after he dermining" the Prtsident'a peace efforts,
is elected and with the sudden dawning of is regarded by aome of the lnstant peace
informaUon he .,had1 not had l!ld ad~11t.u as too strong, an<i it may be.
respomlbillty he had not 1hated. 'BUI II should be evident by now tliat all
' the polWcallY. Inspired or patrlot1cally fn.
SO IT IS NOT conceiv8ble that
Muskie's proposal directly contributes to
a solution but may ln fact delay it, u the
, Pr.esldenl ":onlanm. Bui there II .another
1piri;d or humanitarian inspired attempts
to bring the · war to an end by circum-
venting ,the Pruident of the United Sta tea
are e1ercile! ln futlllty.
America's Expectation Gap
A 'flltlent.. te<ov<tjng froln a nervOll.9 br;al<do~ 1a.Jlkely0 to be introspective.
So · if ii with , a nalloo:, Social com-
m.~tolorl iri busy !eying to deocrlbe
w~t, went wrong In the United States in
th~ Jut ~ecacte -add what lie m111t
pan! against iJI the lltveoUes. ·
~lthouah th'e tmnlnology inay.dlfrer, tt
...,,,. lo"boll down, to one thJn}": an ex·
pOotallon gap. CollecUvely and Jn.
dlvldually w.e h1y.e been led to expect !ulllllmenta ~f n;unoal and personal Iden·
tity that, If adually realized, would
sign&! arrival •of the"mllleiuilum.
With ~ .Jnv'aluable aid of hindsight, a
reaaona~ ..man can tee that lt was
foolish to ~urture such great ef·
pectallon .. But our iMocent faith In the
1blllty of the United Slalet to maintain
order abroad and spread' alfiuence at
'. OaANOI• CO.UT
DAILY PILOT
. ..
Editorial
Ret1earch •
,,.. Madame CUrle."
UNFORTUNATELY, It Is eaaler lo
arouse ' upect1Uona than tt lB to turn
them off. Professor G'ans. for one. wam1
that even if the Vietnam war Can be end-
ed and the dlfficiilllea that came In Its
JI wake removed, "the.re rem.aim the prob-
lem ot which and whose erpectatlON1
can be achieved, and whose not." And
editor Harris concludes that we may
have become "the victims of our own
tense of inadequacy -and euy target8
for Ibo worried rninda to whom l10llalgla
is an Ideology ."
home w41 ea:sy to maintaln In the heady
daya or lbe early· lo mld-Slalles.
SOCIOLOGY Pl\OFEBSOI\ Herbert J.
Gans notes that when a!piraUon1 rice and
people begin lo hope for a betlar way of
life, they are only hoping. ''But when ex~
pectallons hel&hten, people become more
impaUent, more critical of their IOdety
when expectaUon1 are not realized, and
eventually, more active politically.'' Tht
American malaise, argues Gans, hu
come about because ol the re&lizapoo
thlt "lmprovement ia DQ longer 11 euy
as It once was ...
Even more darlaglng has been the if1..
dlvldual uplrat~ gap. T. Gtorge II.tr·
rla, editor of P1ycbology Today, corn·
plaint that ''It'• a1 U tome Idiot had rill-
ed the ante on whal It takes to be 1
person, and the "''t of 111 aooepted It
"ttbout noticing." Nan es.1mpl,, Bani1
lakea a look at the -ai><il placed on
IOvf!d onu: . •'ramlly members a1aime that tbey
oucht t.o Jove e1ch other. understand one
uotbor, or at leaat gel thelr•botWlll11 up
flwl, Al any volaran of the Victorian -er lmo"11, lJ1 the put, f"' mothers
and almost no !!Iller• SOUfhl aucb eJ!l.O"_.
1lbllll Ill%1ltlea. A wilt who onca ....
lldmd m a marltll duty -upecta to • bl an or•umlc playmate, llltelltcluaf
c:ompll1loi\, aiid crowth 111rtntt, u well
U ID emollonaJIJ.,,~,:peodent Perfon, I .,,,.. between t l'Glll\lldOUr and
While realism may have set In on the
economic front, new expectations are
being created every day on other levels.
Young people bope to transform society now that they can vote at age 18.
Women's Ub ha& turned housewives and
1ec:rell!l<1 Into tigers prepared lo fllht
for 1h1red bouaework and ..,&1 pay,
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Yoo can bet ti.I percent of Coota
MMllll don't want their tu
money Uled for downtown re-
development The owner bene-
fldarlei ahould fool the bin. OUr
tbanb to Councllman Hammell
but PbootY CID COW1cllman SL
Clair.
-R. S.
------------..,...~-.
Homebuyers
Victims of
Overcharging
.fl~M~~I ~ ~:~·~ . . , '
WASHINGTON -Homebuyers are
overcharged f785 million a year by title
companies an.d;title lawyers. Yet an ef-
fort by Suiate reformers to end the
chiseling has bOgged down.
The inactlon of his colleagues has so
frustrated Sen. William Proxmire,' 0-
Wi.s,. that he has
accused lenate
Rinking Chairman
John Sparkman, 0.
Ala., of Stalling.
1 In In exchange of
letter• meant for one aJtOther's eyes
only, Proxmire told
Sparkman that his
delay ot hearings
wlll cost, Alabama voters 114 million in
till~ jbuses.
"I BELIEVE IT i! vitally important. '1
wrote Proxmire, "that the Housing sub-
comrruttee take prompt acUon to reduce
real estate closing C08t8 ••• " He asked
fOr bearings on his reform bill IO It cou1d
be taken up in February along with
Sparkman's omn1bu1 housJng package.
Sparknlan wrote Proxmire a courtly
response. "I preler, to co ahead with my
original plans," said the AJabaman .
But his mean1ng wu clear : the Utle
company scandal would be swept under
the rug .
SPARKMAN, ONCE a reformer
himself, didn't mention what has become
an open secret il) the Senate. For years,
he ha1 demomtrated a special aff~n
for the banks wl!lch, in • tum,1 control
many UUe' companies.
AA a result: &JI bul tl1j! rnOlt prt>-
grt:sslve bank.a are opposed to Prolntlre·1
reform plan. Proxmire, fUlly aware of
Sparkman's aUeg1ance to the banka, shot
back a "Dear John" letter to him on
January 13 .
"I was disappointed," be told Sparkman
blunUy. For Sparkman had already put
off executive sesslon1 on the omnibus
houalng bills for ai1 month&. Anolker
week's delay , Proxmire felt, would cause
no legislative pinch.
ON THE OTHER hand, U Sparkman
didn 't allow the title rdorm hearings,
thl• wu "equlvalent to del1ytng any ef·
fecUve Congressional action on the clos-
ing C06ls problem for at leut another
)'tar," Prounlre nld.
Prol011in dted an l~plb Wuhlncton
POft aeries on k.ickback.t and other title
tc1ndall In the Wathlngton area. On a
nationwide basla, the a v e r • g t
hOmebuyer. saJd Proxmire, Is overchar1·
ed a211 on closing cottl.
.. , e1Umat1 th•t home buytr1 In the
Stile of Alabama wer~ overcharged $\4
mlltlon for re•l estate cloalng COits dW'·
lnJ 11'7l," Pronnlre advlled Sparkm111,
•1;'0 la runnlnc for reelec:Uon th IA year.
SPARKMAN 11.&l"llSED to cllan1e hlJ
mJod. In a aecood, equlfly oourtly ltUtr
to Proxmire a r..,, daya &JO. Sparkman
lluck with tho ba!Wr1 aod Utle compaoy
executives.
ExecuUvt Vice President William
McAu!Ulo. of th& American .Land TIUe
Aalodatlon. the rich Ind powerful l!Uo
lobby, hotly dlapolff Prol01\lre'1 view ol
the Industry. McAullffe !old ua the
reform program ml!hl wind"" 1ddlnR to
bomeownor1' coala bf t11tUn1 the supply er mort111e money.
•
OVERl>UE
Social Policy Not
Corporation's Joh
There ls an enormous amount of talk
these days about the · ·so c 1 a I
responsibility" o'f corpor atioos. But a cor·
poration. actually, has nn1y two
respon~ibilities: to show a profit, and to
rlo nothing that is •
tnju rlcm to the so-
cial fabr ic.
Environmental, ec-
onomic, and human
problems are not the
pr.oper c1>11cern of
corporations, except
in a negative sense :
they must run thelr
till!iness With )I de· cent regard for "°the overall good of tht
aociety. · ' ,
BUT TRIS 18 VERY different from
aaying that corporation1 should. or must.
Involve thenuelve1 in social po/Jcy. Who
decides whi ch social policies a r 111
d,sirable? Once '.\he corporation ·plunge11
hip-deep Into such matter1. tht danaera
outweigh the pos&ible benefits.
't! a corporation behaves as 1 good
citizen behave1. It would be fully
discharging Jts duties to the aociety. U it.B
product hi sound, its merchandising
honest, Its: advertising reliable, and if It
refrains from Injuring the envlronment
beyond reparation, then It has fUllWed \ta:
role.
BecaUM society at ·large has abdi cated
Ui basle, i:esponsjbllitles, we keep asking
specific institutions to do jobs for whlcb
they ace not equipped.
WE DEMANO TRAT educaUonal ln-
1tit\ltlon1, for instance, take over a host
of Iuka they cannot handle. All an
nr dlnary 5ehool cAn do Is te11ch a chlld to
re&d , write, count, and acqulr• a few
creative skills. Instead. we ex~ the
school!! lo provide moral, psychological,
vocational. tind every other kind or
training that the family, th1 church and
other lnstltutlona 1hould be tU.lna cart
·of.
In the same way, a corpor1Uon ii pan
ol the market mtchanlam of our
economy. Jt.3 function l! narrow and well·
defined; If It performs that tunctlort •ell,
we can ask no more. And If we uk more,
we are liable to get both fre•ter cor·
porAte dominance over our llvea. and
gi-eAter government dominance over our
m11rkel mechaolsms.
CORPORATIONS ARE niahlnR into the
area of "soclal rcsponsJblllty" as a way
of makln~ amend• for their prevloua
transgressions, and to impress the public
with their "good cltluip&hlp." But thfl
way to make amendl ind tn lmprt1111 the
public Ilea lntlde the b u 1 I n a s 1
mechanism, not out1klt Jt. lt conaJ•t1 In
turning out the best products at the
f1lre1t price, with the mulmum of com·
petJtlon and the minimum af eD-
vlronmental dearadatlon.
Government, at Ill 1evels. ire the
proper lnatrumenta for effecting cban&tl
ln socl&I policy. We mu1t make out
1overnment1 more retponslble to theM
need&, 1nd not pau the buck to b111lne11.
'Get Out of the U.N.'
.,.. the Editor :
Once &pin. th< United Natlo111 has
falle<i to fulfill tho<objectlv .. set forth In
U.S charter -I.e., to prevent wat1, Insure
peace and further the economic progrw:
of our troubled world.
Yet, In spite of IUCh hlgh·aoundlng
phraseology (with endless rhetorical
debates) at no time h11 1ny conslder1tlon
been given by either the Security council
or the General Assembly to trying to
come up with a 10lutlon tn the years of
1trlfe and deatructlon in Indochina.
' EVEN WITH TllE recent "1111 out''
peace plan of President Nixon, nol one
member of the U.N. advanced any cam-
menUJ on the merit.11 of this propas11/. This
further lack of conc,rn climaxes lh1
many yem of lndifferenc' dlsplaycd by
the U. N. -from the vJolatlons of the
Genev1 Conferenct by Hanoi to their con-
current complete disregard of thg CM·
venliona of the lntern•Uonal Red Cro~.
•S regards tht tre1bnent of prisoners of
w1r.
The continued 1'mental blindness" ind
"•Ins of ornls11lon" by the UrN. were
further evidenced by tht recent junket of
the Security Council to Addi• Abab1 . This
wu done at a cmt oJ approslmately
$150,000. thereby •dding to the present
operaUng deficit or Ml milUon dollar1.
According to the report of Times writers,
''Over 100 reSl)Jutlona l{ere m&de tn
verbal eacalatlons, with nearly nothina
10COmpllshed."
ANO LET'S NOT forget ellh<r how tho
majodty of tho U.N. Jnllmbers voted th•
U.8. down 1wlth glee) on OW' ruoluUon
requesting a "two CbJn1" policy!
So. once ag11ln, tbe1e members ot the
U.N. who h•vt be'n rrclple.ntl of over
n12 billion of U.S.·AID-have cx~r<'3Cd
both !heir dl1dain and lack or cooctm In
Mailbox
Lt"'" '"'"" fHffl"t ll't W.leMtt. Htnittl" .,..,..,.. tlMM!lt 19'1\'ft' tll~lr ll'IMlltft 111 .... ,..
., ltw. Tlit rltflt It ct11•"'" lllttn It fff llH<9 Ir t lllftlllf" llNI II ,...,,,..., .1111 .. Hen MWf i..o
Cklff tlt•ltwl 11111 Mlllhtt ....... (WI .._ ll'ln !If WlllllM .... rtwnf If WlllCl#I ,.._ 19
tHIN.t. 'Min' Mii Ml 11t .u•UMIH
endeavoring to (Ind a ao\utlon to the ~
tolerable political and military con-
frontatlona ln tndoclllna. In '° doing, ean
II be lb•t theM same members or the
U.N. endorse thf pre,.nl POW blackJnail
and r11UOm t1ctics or Hanoi?
Here thenl 11 furl.her evidence 11 to
why the U.S. should gel out of tho
U.N.-and the U.N. should ret out ol lbt
U.S.!
AL N. SEARES
B11 Gec>r9e ---.
Dear George.:
My brl'lllw-ln-Jaw Wilnt1 lo fel
In the newep&J)cr hu&iness. Ht
does nothing but hang around Iba
cnrne.r 1aloo n and drfnk. h11weve.r.
On you know ""Y newspaperman
who would be wlllina to help him!
E. R.
O.or E. R.:
Yes. a geal man1, On •l!Ctlllil
lbo1111ht, I ihlnk I'll run over lo 111 aaloon and help him drink myaell.
I i • i
I
i
f\Yhen problems pile up on you ,
lurn to Gtt"lrg for Jjd i.nd comfort
and -ntvermlnd. He JU<! lost hit
1hovtl.1 11
\
. •
' l
·,
-
•
-· ..
rrld.,. rtbtulll 19, 1972 DAILY PILOT fS
Bugles, Planes Silenced
Nixon Spending Quiet lnrerlude in Hawaii
By RtrrU YOUNGBLOOD
KANEOHE MARINE
CORPS AIR STATION, Oahu,
Ha wall (UPI) -Tho bugles
were stilled today and the
night fighters grounded at lbJs
Marine Air base when Presi-
dent Nllon is spending a day
the demonslratlon was aimed
·at callin( "a\tenUon to the
lncrtutd bombtns in
Ind ochina and the
deteriorating d o m e r t 1 c
economr.'' On •~~ visits here, Ni10n
has ataYed. in a hotel and
no explanation was given ror
his cholce of Armstrong'•
home this time. However,
Annatrong knew NIIon during
his vlce presidential days
when the Marine was aenior
presidential bellcoprer pllot
for Pre.sldent Eisenhower.
and two nlgbls In relative.-------------------,
Armstrong , who now com·
ma.ods Kaneohe's lsl l\.1arlne
Brl,gade, moved out of his
house and turned it over to
the Nlxona for thelr stay. In
preparation for the arrival
Thursday, new curtains were
installed in the Sl-year-old
Mme, the carpet in th1t
master bedroom was cleaned
and the lawn and garden were
aotltude before hil trip to
China.
1 The President occupied. the
home of base commander
B,rlg. Gen. V i c t o r A.
Armstrong~ a sprawling two-
level, four.bedroom yellow
cinderblock house on a bluff
overlQOkiDg lhe Pacific.
• From it, the President and h.ls wife .Pat had a spectacular
'View ol an extinct volcanic
,.-crater rising .from the sea, •· ind clllla,obrouded lifmb\, • -It was this land that
.JCam&hamha the Grreat,
. • ~WaU18 fir)t king, chose for
a royal meeting place. The
peninsula became the sacred
land of Kamhameha , and to
thb day is called "Mokapu,"
Haw ail an for "Sacred Land."
Sl1aggy Gift?
Nixon Eyes Musk Oxen
tidied. '
The house, 15 miles from •
the bustle of Honolulu, oc-
cupies 4,030 square feet of
living space, ta furnished in
cool shades of green and
yellow and is kept cool by
the breezy trade winds on
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -President NIIon would tbe blurf.
like to gtve ChinesC!: Phemier Chou En-lai two young musk The water below the home
oxen named Millon and MaWda, the City Recreation and is considered. too rough for
Parks Department disclosed Thursday. :;;;--,.i:..:sw~'.imming, and the spokesman
• Department general manager Joseph Caverly aald d boats enterlng the area
negotiations were under way bttween his agency and the '""'Would be tntereepted.
White House for the two shaggy OJ:en bred at the San Secretary of State Wjlliam
Francisco Zoo. P. Rogers and Dr. Henry Ki!!ls-
If · the bargaining is succe.uful, Caverly said, the" t~o "' inger, IS!istant to the PresJ.
animals will be flown from Travis Air Force Ba!!: to <lent for national security af·
Peking wilhin tJ1e next few days. fairs. were also staying in
M k rt~'-· lo·-• -•·· In Canada oUI'--· homes on the base. us oxen repo ~ are iwu VJ»J -, ce ...
Alaska and Greenland. The rest of the Nixon's staff
Caverly said Nixon was particularly intereated In and the 87·membcr press ~fllton and Matilda because they may well be the onJy corps Wtrt at hotels.
pair born in captivity in the.United States.
Bugle calls, so much a part
of Marine~life, were cancelled
duripg Nixon's stay, a spol(~an1 s~. from 5:30 '--------------------~!
a.m. reveille, 1fo. taos.
There would also be no night
flights to disturb the
Pres i dent 's rest, the
lnnoceiats Abroad
3pokesman said, and the e w· j.~";i~~~1"'t.;l~!:l r.~·i:.~ Watch Chinese 1ne.,
PRESIDENT RICHARD NIXON RECEIVES TRAD ITIONAL HAWAII GREETING
Chief Executive Resh, StucUt1, Enj oys Speet1cular View of Cr•t1r
\\'as reduced.
Four aaUwar groups plaMec5ir' '1 N" w N
a demonstration at the -IXOD arns ewsmen
See the best in
men's w e e r for
'72! The best se·
lection in town for
double knit slacks
•nd sport coats.
Remember, th•
best is always et Cliina Denozinces
Nixon's Policy
On Eve of Visit
TOKYO (AP) -Commun!1! China de-
1'°'metd President Nixon's foreign policy
today u It prepared for his visit.
•1'fuois11a Alliance'
Russ Allies in Most Part
I
Sl1are Dim View of Trip
lhe Socialist community.
base's fron! gale today. but
it was unlikely the President
\vould see them since he was llONOLULU (AP) -Presi·
not expected to leave the base dent Nil.on took time out during hl! stopover. A spokesman [or the groups sald Thursday to offer some advice
to newsmen accompanying
him en the first leg of his
journey to Communist China.
"Remember that Chinese
wine is like brandy -it's
not 12 percent,'' Nixon cau.
tioned newsmen during the 10..
hour flight from \\'ashington
tral Intelligence Agency" on
the cover, he was asked jok-
ingly by a newsman whether
the Chinese would let the
party into the countiy with
that kind of material.
Nixon, who apparently had
not seen the atlas before, ei·
amU!ed the cover, then
laughed locdly and said: ''This
will probably show how much
we don't know about Otlna."
. . .
•4'\.re firmly support lhe peoples or the
world in their struggle against U.S. im-
perallat 11gressioo," sald the official
New China News A1e1ey ln a Jong com-
menlary on_ Nixoo'1 State of the World
report and Defense Secretary l\felvln R
Laltd'1 report to Congress I.hi" week.
By Tbe Associated Press
The Soviet Union is adopting an aloof
"wa.H and see" attitude toward President
Nixon's trip lo China1 but the reaction is
mostly hostile among Moscow ·s Com·
n1unist allies in Europe.
• HO\\'ever, some of the Sot•ict press has
portrayed China's role in the meeting as
part of a "Machiavellian" policy of mak·
ing China dominant in Asia. In doing so,
according to the official line, China has
abandoned any claim to leadership cf the
Communist movement.
How Many
Chi11ese?
Wlio K1ioivs lo Honolulu. ,~===================, Nixon spent most of the
nonstop flight reading and
meeting with aides, news
seeretary Ronald Ziegler said.
But shortly after the presiden-
tial jet took off, the President
and l\.lrs. Nixon v.'1!nt through
the aircraft.chatting and shak· The commentary made onJy one
apecific men.lion of Nixon's trip. saying :
"Refming lo his visit to China and . ' Si.no-U.S. relations, he said: "Our new
diame wltb tbe People's Republic or
China wW not be at the expense of
trl~s. Nevertbeles1, we recognize that
thl1 proce11 CIMO! help but be p1inful
for our o1d friend on T11wan ."
It addtd that Nixon declared his in·
t.nUoq to lilainlain U.S. diplomatic ties
with and defenJe commitment! to the
NationallJt Cblnese a:overnment and said
tb1s shows Nllon's government "has not
,yet rellnqu.iabed jts idea of 'one China,
two 1ovemm1nts'.'' But this was a
modiDcaUon of Peking's usual complaint
against governmenta which pursue a
.. two-Chinas" pollcy.
The Natlonall.st Chinese government
"'haa long betn spurned by the Chinese
people," the Communist agency declared,
••and no force on earth can change the
resolve of the Chinese people to liberate
'Taiwan."
Commentators In the official press of
POiand, Czechoslovakia and Bulgaria see
the visit either as an alliance of Maoslm
and American imperialis~_ ~gainst the
Soviet Union or as a vote-~ching gim·
mick by Nixon for the presiilenlial elec·
lion.
But in Yugoslavia, commentators were
without exception more restrained, and
some even cautiously welcomed the
move.
In East Gennany and Romania the trip
w93 reported briefly without comment.
And in Hungary a sardonic report about
the "Nixon Caravan" and the sudden U.S.
fashion in things Chinese carried no
political comment.
The most authorita tive political com·
mentator, Yuri Zhukov, wrote in the
Communist party newspaper Pravda :
"The Soviet Union regards as natural
steps towards normalization of relations
between the U.S.A. and China." He in·
dicated final judgment would be reserved
until Nixon returns to-Washington.
But, he warned, the Soviets could not
disregard evidence that Peking and
"certain quarters" in Washington want to
use the contacts against the interests of
THE SHOW-OFF
Wi~ks
(
\J,t.ts
"Excme me, sir. Our
Chinese chef in&isls on.
being recognized. '
WASHINGTON (AP)
L'hina, as every schoolboy
koows , has more people than
any other country in the
n·orld. But holv many? Not
even the Chinese know.
The estimates range from
7f>l million to 871 millon, says
tbe Population Reference
Bureau, Jnc.
Writing in .the g r o u p • !
Population Bulletin, Leo A.
Orleans, China research ex·
pert of the Library o f
Congress, says there is good
reason for this uncertainty.
''The only Chinese census
that even approaches modern
demographic standards was
take n in 1953 and the results
or that exercise are highly
questionabl~. Birth and death
registration, another me.ans of
estimating population, has
been made cnJy sporadically,"
Orleans says.
Orleans writes that China
appears to have gone through
the s a m e medical·public
health r~vclution that has
brought down the death rate
dr,amaUcally in many un..
derdeveloped countries since
World \Var II.
'
ing hands.
"Isn't this exciting'?" aald
an ebullient Mrs. Nixon as she
joined her husband in greeting
newsmen in the plane's press
compartment.
Asked iI he needed to prac·
lice with chopsticb, Nixon
said he did not. But he pointed
lo Mrs. Nixon and sald, "But
she does."
~lrs. Nixon was asked what
clothing she had brought
along. She replied she had
one suitcase filled with boots
an "longies."
She said that she would prob-
ably be seen over nd over
again in the same dresses
because of a llmltatlon on
luggage and stated that the
only purchase she bad made
for the trip was a heavy coat.
Nllon was shown a copy
cf a China atlas prepared by
the Central Intelllgence Agen·
cy. Pointing to a legend ''Cen·
Artist of the Month:
DONNA FRIEBERTSHAUSER 'a11Jl!!Ullll!TRll'(! D!DTl!!l,,1!¥ li·11n1n•=1·==== ·-======;;;;-• lllV UI: W :;;a:iim&' ...
SALE
__..._.., I [
·TANK
TOPS
s200
BIKINIS
s2so
SWEATER
TOPS
s200
CA PRIS
$100 & $2'°
Fri. Sot. Sun. Mon. Feb. 18, 19, 20, 21
THE SHOW-OFF
21 PASHION ISLAND
NIWl'OltT BEACH • HUNTINGTON CINTER
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Exhibiting •I our office now thru March 14
Tjle works of Dona Friebertshauser, a di.!Ungu!Jhed craftsman
in our community, will be on display daily at our office. Come
meet the arllst and see her unusual exhibits of stitchery, weav-
ing, macnme, papier mache, batik and other crafts. Mrs. Frle-
bertahauser Is President of the Costa Mesa Art League and
isstruci. for the Costa lies• Recreation. DepartmenL -. Cillifornla Federal Sa1eings
.... .... ........ • ¥"t' .... ,,,, l lllltll
• 2100 ,tlarllor llvcl~ Cot!t "lou
I
I
'-~--------'~------~---------~---------------~----
2500 sq. rt. bag
SJ77
Give your mixed dichondra
and 'rass lawn the fastest
shot 1n the West ... of 10lid
a:rcen frowth. Apply any time o year fot the mo1t
.. 'Wltltcd" lawn on the blockl
5000 sq. ft. bag
szg5
Annovmey. ..
New £veri!/fl'fl!I
tflt'l 11-iees!
DICHONDRA &
LAWN FOOD
These fine dealers feature BES'.r Plant Food Savlnp:
AltEA WIDE
• Ace Hardware Stores
• llullder's Emporium
• Build n' Save
• Montgomery Ward Store&
• The Handyman Stores
• True V aJue Hardware
Stores
• W. T. Grants
ANAUEIM -
• Lln-Brook Hardware
2144 W, Lincoln
• Payleu Dnig
ll!O w. Katell.:
e White Fran! Nurzery
2222 S. Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
• White Front Nunery
30111 Brtatol
El TORO •a,..., Thumb
231U llrldger lid.
FOUNT A1N V AlLBY e Lin-Brook HaN!wart
17200 So. Btvokbunt e Woolco
111161 Brooldlunt
FULLEllTON e Ward le Harrington
Lumber
lOI s. Slate Collec• Blvd.
' .
GARDEN GROVE
• Hasiy Lawn & Gorden
Supply
1113!1 Gardin Grove Blvd.
• TG&Y Home Celller
12191 Valley View
• Two Guys Dept, Store
12100 Harbor Blvd,
• Ward & Harington
Lwnl>tt
\ Tll1J Gardon Grove Blvd.
lllJNl1NGTON BEACH
e Two Guys Dept. Store
988S Manis A venue
LA MIRADA
• Woolco
ll300 Mirada Blvd.
LAGUNA NIGUEL
e Niguel H""'are
29087 Getty Drive
NEWPORT llSACH
• J, C. Peliney'a
Fashion Island
SAN CLEMENTE
• 11<1)' CIUea Hardware toe Del Mar Avenue
TUStlN
• s. s. 1ttts1e
IOll E. Ill Street
•
•
'·
\
t
•