HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-02-25 - Orange Coast Pilot' --
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.srae ~ anon
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Freileh.A1neriean Chou En-Iai Vows
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War en N areoties_
Finall·y Pays Off Effort for Peaee -·
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DAILY PILOT . .
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FRIDAY AFTERNOON, .FEBRU;>Rr 25, 'i 972
V_~. 61.·MO. .. 4 llCTtoNS. M<P'Aelt
Dad )Jelps Out
• (,.. • . . ;. ' ..
"""""'·' ..
'"BMIOving W.all'
•. r: • ,. Bonn Tells
Premier · Feted Of Dealing ;
With ·Arabs ·
~ u ... ;...,..,. . ' ' PHIL HALL TO HELP OTHER ·CHILDREN •LIKE CARllJE .ANNE
His D•ufjhl•r Mly Ho\.e'11Mn •Sp1rk for No'.v V•tl•y Program
Kids Get ·B ·oost , • " • I , • , f , .. , , •
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Valley Ma1~ ,,H ~-pds ~·schpol Ptog·ram·
' Phil Hall wlll never-forget that'hls own
flrst·born child BhoUld· by all odda have
beell aerk>usly handicapped.
Early in pregnancy his wile Carol Ann
developed German wastes, a disease
which nearl always causes childreii to
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Orange ' . '
Weather
' Hazy , 1U11shine js on the agenda
fot the Orange Coast again on
Stlurday. following the U!U&I low
clouds and fog. Highs at th~
beaches around 60 rising to 72 m ..
land. Lows 12 to 50.
INS.~E .. TOP~ 'l'
The !iUip!ltldru ' of iam<d
"Gulliver'• Travels'' arrilJt in
Huntington Beach thi.t weekend.
A. storv in todau'• WeekC'ndlr
tcU. vo• "'"'" 1<> uo to fmd
them.
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C.llfw"I• I CllMlrllll »-Jt ._.. " c..-• Ottfll ... itc:. II ...... , ... ' P!Mlltt 1,._11
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' ' be born deformed, retarded, -or worse. 1
The Fountain VaJley family did
everything medically that could be done,
of course, and' when their baby was born
· 1pparenLly""be81tbf, UieY brea't.htd a sigh
·of·relief: , . . . ' . . ' . ' But it was not to be. At four months
YQUng Carrie Anne· required heart
surgery to close a malformed valve, and
now at just over two years, she may be
suffering from a hearing impairment. .
"She's bright and chipper in most
ways," said, hei:. ... fattier, "bllt she's not
learning to talk as she should. She doesn't
seem to know any coll90nant soiinds and
we're afrald.tt\•· bec8\Ue 'she can't hear
very.well. .. .
But altogether, ' the Halt. consider
themselvea luckit'"It could ba've been so
much worse," said her father, "and we
kno\f'lt."' . ' .
Pa'rtly because or his lraining In
.paychology, bu plobably more because
of little Carrie ·Annt, Phil Hall 1got· an
unusual a'.sslirunent earlier this month
from his superiors at the Fountain Valley
School District. .
They asked him to plan a complete prr-,
• •ochool Pl'Oir""'for the handicapped ITld
the ret.rded, one! they asked him to do It
tn two weeks.
"It was one llaity usiamneht/1 he
1aid, "bµt It was Just tlie kind or thing 1
wa1 rtady t6 go to work on."
The reason for the rush wu that U the
program was to receive the federal fund-
ing vital to Its SllCCUI, a. complete pro-
-I hid to be tn Wuhington In 15 days.
"We got 1 letter announcing the funds
for the bandlcopped would be 1nil1ble,'"
!See HANDICAPPED, P11e l}
At Nixon Dinner
By HENRY HARTZENBUSCH
PEKING (AP) -Premiei-Chou En·lai
pledged tonight that ~na "will work
unswervlngly" for normal relations and
friendly contacts wit+.:the United States.
At a dinner in llis honor, the Chinese
leader responded to a toast in which
President Nixon declared: "We have
begun the long process of removing that
wall between us."
Seated it round tables In the Great
Hall of the People, the Chou and Nii:on
entourages ate a nine-course meal of
Chinese food except for grapefruit and
orange segments flown from the United
States. They sipped California cham-
pagne.
. Nixon began the toasting by expressing
appreciation for the Chinese hospitality
shown to the Americans the five days
they have been in Peking.
Chou and Nixon came to the dinner
from their fifth and final meeting, at
which they presumably reached agree-
ment on improving contacts through
cultural and other exchanges, with
diplomatic relalions some time in the
future : Recalling his visit Thursday to the
Great W.11 0£ China, Nixon said the wall
showed "the determination of the Chinese
people to retain their independence
througOOut their long history.
"The Great Wall is no longer a wall
dividing China from the rest or the
world ," he continued. "But it Is a
reminder of the fact that there are many
walls slill existing in the world, which
divide nations and peoples.
';The Great Wall is also a reminder
that for almost a generation there has
been a wall between the People'&
Republic or China and the United States.
You'll Get It
Earlier Noiv -· Earlier delivery of the Saturday edition
of the DAIDY P!LO'I' will be in full lon:e
Saturday morning, rr you don't get your
home-delivered copy by 9 a.m., please
call by 1 10 a.m.1 and we guarantee
dellveQY.
Call 612-4321 from most area•. From
South Loguna, Loguna Niguel, Dana
Point, San Juan Capistrano, Capistran!>
Beach Ind San Clemenle, call toll-free to
492-4120.
From Westminster Ind northwest Hun-
tington Buch, call tol~rrtt to $41).U20.
In the'se past four days, we · have begun
the long process of removing that wall
between us.'" ·
Nixon .~~ed!:lf., .Y.Ja.t .~h sides recognize tliere are great dil'ferences
between the United-states Ind China.
"But we are determined that those dif-
ferences will not prevent us from llving
together in peace," he went . on. "You
believe deeply in your system and we
!See NIXON, P11e lJ
Israeli Attack
Heaviest Since
1967 Fighting
By United Prts1 lnter-.ttonal
Israeli troops, annor, artillery and
warplanes attacked Lebanon along a fiO..
mile front tQday, in w!)at bpth Arab and
Israeli military sources called. the
heaviest puniUve strike by hrael since
the 1967 Six-day War.
AJ Fatah guenillas said as many as 30
Israeli jeta struck targets is close as .34
miles. from the Lebanese capital of Beirut.,
and followed up with arm6red regiments ·
into areas near the border.
The · semiofficial i:gypuan Middle East
News Agency said SO Israeli jell struck
into Lebaoon.
Guerrillas reported six Arab guerrillas
killed and three wounded. A Belnit com-
munique said one (ivllian was killed and
a aoldier wounded· and 20 houses
destroyed. Israel laid five guerrillas
were killed and ah ·unknown number of
house.a demolished, and the attack force
auffered no casualtie1.
Belrul dispatchea tonight lndlcated the
casualti•• mlgbt be far higher than an-
nounced. The Falutin J e r u s a I e m
Hospltsl In Beirut rtcelved 25 wounded
guerrillas. the ~11Jl.1uid. '!'hrte 'childnin 1n Helwa 'W~cboSpltalir.ed in
Zahleh from wounda IUffered In air raida .
IsrHII depu\y Premier Ylgal Allon
warned Lebanon loftjl}lt 1n • ndio lq· ,
tervle,w in. Tel Avlv ·lbil'there>..,.;ll! be
more Israeli •trikes Ir Lebanon permitted
more foraya 1crosa the border into
Israel.
The big lsraell llrite coincided with the
arrival In Jeruaalem of United Nation!
peace negoUator GuMar V. Jarring in on
attempt to revive hla peace mission.
Hil only comment after conference•
(S.. MIDEAST, Pa1e I)
"'' "''"""""' Sw~ethenrt
Karen Spellum, an 18·year-old
.University. of.NewiMexico co~·
from Albuquerque, was elect~
ed "Sweetheart of the Class o!
1975" at the U.S. Air Force
Academy.'
By HOWARb A. TYNER
BONN (UPI) ~ 1:he· West German
1overnment paid '5 million ransom to a
Palestinian commando group to obtain
the release of a hijacked .airliner and IC
oJ its . ..crew from · SoUtbern .Yemen.
Transportation Mini.!ter Georg Leber
said. today.
Five armed commandos releued thit ~ 1 $24.S·milllon 'Lulthlll!O Boelni '747 jlDDbo
jet and the crew members 'Wednesda7 ln ·
Aden, the Southern Yemen capital.
A secret code word-liad been OubOcl by
radio from Beirut to climax a cloak-and·
dagger operation carried out in three
countries or Europe and the Middle elJL
In the first govemme~. statement on
the outcome of the highjacklng Lober told ·
a news conference the declslori to pay the
ransom had been baaed on the 'assump-
tion that the lives of, the crew were in
1'acute danger."
He called the hijackers "the most
bloodthirsty group aeen until riow."
All 188 ~ssengen and crew mem-
bers a!Joard lhe Athem-bound. pl ... When
It WU hijacked Tllflday ,alter tok'foff
from New Delhi,. India have. since left
Aden-with the -Ible exception· of Ibo
fiye hijackers. . ,
They were quesµoned by lo C·l 1
authorities and later set free.
The plane returned tg Frankfurt 'I'burfoi • .,:.;.,
d ' ' • ay. . , .
Leber said a letter from a group calling
Itself the 110rganization for Victims o(
Zionism" and claiming reapon!ibility for
the hijacking arrived Tuesday at Luf ..
l~e RANSOM, P•1e l)
French-American War·
On Drugs Paying Off
By ~AIWlll Q~. , · Chrittiaft Scztltet Monitor Strtric1
PARIS -The "American connecUon"
is beginning to pay off for the French '
police.
Obscured by months or public wrongJ. ,
ing, French-American cooperation ln
narcotics control ls recording e~
couraglng relUfts. '
The latest i.. the arrest or Dominique
Martini In Pari! Saturday and hl1 being
formally charged Wedne!day wilh 1111'-
plylng 4U kilograms of pure herofn to
Roger Delouette. He was arrested at Port
Ellubeth, N.J., last Aprq on cbargu of
1111•~ilnl' I~ !heroin Into Ille'' u~
States.
The Delouette ca,. erupted lnlo oae; of
the biggest public scandals In Fri..,. last
~ ..... talllol .................. w
across the Atl.nUc-and within the '""'°" mlll• or French pollUca.
Delouette, k turned out, had worked ot
one Um1 for the SDECE, the ...,._
~lvalent of Ibo U.S. Cant ta I
inlelllgenco Agency. Aile' baJnc .,..
rolled, he claimed that he had been
supplied the heroin. 1fQl'th •12 mllllan °"
the block market tn New Yark, by •
!See DRUG.5, hit I)
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U,1 T•'-"to
Hughes Borrows Boat?
Recluse May Have Left Bahamas on Yacht
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) -A ¥Umore
advertising executive says he loaned his
yacht to Howard Hughes so the
billionaire could flet the Bahamas un-
detected.
1•1 did it as a favor for a friend,'' ~n
Shaffer Golnlck said Jn a telephone in-
terview Thursday.
Goinlck, owner of a BalUmore, Md., ad-
vertising company biaring bls name, said
he was a neighbor of HUghea for more
than a year in the Bahamas.
Golnlck said Hughes left the Bahamas
From Page 1
MIDEAST .••
with Foreign Minister Abba Eban was
that he was encouraged that his mission
was still alive.
early the morning . ol Feb. 16 In the
Cygnus; Golnlck's converted, a;.(ool U.S.
Navy sub chaser. He said Hughes a:tayed
aboard for the 22-hour trip to Florida's
East Coast.
"He got oU somewhere In Miami
Thursday morning , I'm not saying ex-
acUy where," GolDl~ Jald.
The dockmuta< at Hurricane Hole In
Nassau conllrmed that the CygnWI left Its
mooring last "Wednesday or Thuraday11
and had not returned . He said the aaft
was capable of making about 10 knots,
whlch would mean it would take about 22
hours to sail from Nassau to MlamL
U.S. OJ1toD11 officials refused to uy
whether Hughes went .through customs
but officials in Managua, Nicaragua, said
he arrived there last Thursday aboard a
jeUiner chartered from Eastern Airlines.
supreme C.Ourt for ez:amloatlon in two
lawsuits -:--.. one connected with tbe '°"
called Hughes autobiography.
Jrvln( bad been subpoenaed for pretrlal
questioning Thursday in I libel suit
against htmsell and Dell Publishing Co.
filed by art dealer Fernand Legros who
claims Irving's book "Fake1'' defamed
him.
Mrs. Irving bad been ordertd to appur
for enmlnatlon about Irving's disputed
Hughes "autobiography" In a suit rtled by
Rosemont Enterprises, 1 Nevada ~
that claims exclusive rights to Hughes'
life story.
AJ I result O( their fall\ll'e to respond to
tbe aubpoenu, attorneya !or the plaln·
tiffs could seek warrant& fof the.Ir arrest
or ror contempt citations . They d.ld not
say what they will d91 if anything.
WHO NEEDS SNOWPLOWS WHEN YOU'VE GOT ENOUGH WILLING CHINESE WORKERS AROUND? He did not mention the strike against
Lebanon.
Golnlck said that he did not make the
trip with Hugt\fs and that his captain,
Robert Rehak, skippered the CygnWI for
Hughes' trip to Miami.
A soutee close to the Irvings said tbe1
did not appear because of legal 1trategy
but W<>uld not elaborate. The couple and
their two children were still registered at
the Chelsea Hotel and reportedly spent Thia It Snow Removal, Peking Style; Brooms and Shovels Do the Trick ~~~~~~~~~·~~~ . ~~~~~~~~~~~ . Lt. Gen. David Elazar, the Israeli chief
of staff, warned Lebanon Thursday of
possible military reprisal for an ambush
In which guerrillas using bazookas killed
an Israeli couple returning from a Bar
A~ilzvah Wednesday night.
Golnlck declined to say whether he had
ever seen Hughes. the nlgbt there. • • •
From P.,e J
HANDICAPPED
sa1d Hall, •1ind we went rlgbt to work.
Our !Int meetlllg wu at 9 .o'clocll that
night, and we Joo kept working."
Late nJghts, weeken~ over break.fut,
Phil Hall worked .so singJeml.ndedly on
the grant pro~ that even twtyqr .. ld
Carrle Anne moo,bave'notlced.
Sbe-1eouldn't have known, however, that
U ledetal fUnd!Qg were •Jl!'roved, she
hmoll mlibl llOllledily attend the achooL
"Jt will be a pllC9 where the no~han
dlcapped ..., ml.led with the han.
dlcapped,'' aaJd Hau. ••ijopefully, Carrie
will be able to, attend al one of the Mn-
handlcapoed, au~ that we can lick
her hearing problem.'
The cpncept of mixing the handir,apped
and the non-handicapped ls something
about which Hall feels very strongly.
"How can a handicapped cblld deveJo'p-.
nonnally if be ls always around other
children who"" alao handicapped?".he
asltl. "In thls center the handicapped wlli
have modelll of nonnal behavior In the
non-bancUcapped cblldren."
The -wlli lel'Ve handlcapPed children between two and five years old.
At pre""t Hall said there la no place for
parents of these cblidren to go for help,
althoqh he beUeves h a n d i ca pp e d
cblidren need pre-schooling mor! than
the non-handicapped.
.. Adjustment to school Is enough of a
problem for a healthy child," aald Hall,
"Joo think what tt muat be like for oo-
meone with a serious handicap."
Hall said that tbe proposed new center
will help the cblldren not only with llOcial
adjW1tment to sohool, but will alao help
the children with their particular ban·
dicap.
"We will be a complete center for pre-
school services for the handicapped," he
said, "what we can't treat there. we will
know bow to refer to the appropriate
outside specialists."
All of this depends on federa1 approval
of the '37,000 granL Hall worked
feverlahly and completed the proposal
late last ~-It was approved by Foun-
tain Vallc7 lchool lrWltee• Tlluraday and
malled the next morning the latest possi-
ble day.
An announcement ls expected within 60
days.
Reds Launch Cosmos
MOSCOW (AP) -The So\let Union
launched another Cosmos satellite today,
the 475th in the series begun in 1962. The
Soviet news agency, Tass, &aid Cosmos
475 was put Into a high orbit of the earth,
with 670 miles the maximum distance
from the earth's surface and 607 miles
the mJntmwn distance.
OIAN51 coAIT
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* * 1:1:·
Networks Slate
China Programs
NEW YORK (AP) -The major
television networks gave this schedule of
coverage of President Nlxon's China vis.it
for tonight -all times PST:
CBS : 11;30 p.m. to. midnigbt -special
report if events warrant.
NBC: 5 p.m. to coqcluslon -coverage
of Nixon and EremJer Chou ~lal
departing Peking for llangchow.
*' * * From Page 1
NIXON ...
believe just as deeply in our system. lt is
not our common belief that have brought
us together here, but our common in-
terests and hopes."
Nixon and Chou applauded each other
during the toasts.
Chou began by noting that Nixon had
met with him and Chairman Mao Tse-
tung and ''we exchanged views on the
normalizatJon of re1ations between China
and the United States and on other ques-
tions of concern to the two sides.
"There ez:i.st great differences of prin-
ciple between our two sides," Chou noted.
0 Through eames\ and frank dilcu!1\on11,
a clearer knowledge of each other's posl-
tlons and stands baa been gained."
Noting the ·e x c h an c • s hd beea
beneficial for both, Chou continued:
"The times are advancing and the
world is changing. We are deeply con-
vinced that the strength of the peoples Is
PoWerful and that whatever zJgzags and
reverses there will be in the development
of hlstory, the general trend of the world
ts definltely toward light and not
darkness.
"It ls the common desire of the Chinese
and American peoples to enhance their
mutual understanding and friendship and
pr<mote the normalization of relations
between China and the United States. The
Chinese government and people wW work
unswervingly toward this goal."
The champagne was served In White
House glasses bearing the presidential
seal, flown from Washington. Many of the
Chinese guests took them home as
souvenirs. l
White-jacketed waiters and waitresses
distributed presidential gifts to an those
present. The gift was a clear plastic
paperweight with Nixon's card tmbedded.
The toasts, however, seemed more Jow-
key than those voiced at the banquet
Chou gave the presidential party Monday
night when both talked of opening the
gates to friendly contacts.
Before the banquet the Nixons toured
the fabled Peking palace of China's
,emperoN:, in a snowstorm.
The NiJ:ons say goodbye to Pl!king on
Saturday mornlng and Oy 710 mllea to the
southeast to picturesque Hangchow, •
faV-Orlte holiday resort of Chinese leaders
on a bay south ol Shanghai •
They will visit scenic spot& Jn the area,
tncludlng the remains of the 18th century
palace of the Emperor Chien.Lung, and
after·a night alongside the beautUul Hsi
Hu1 or Western Lake, they fiy to
Shanghai, their la!t'Stop in China.
The presidential party flies back to
Washington on Monday.
From Page J
DRUGS .•. Another guerrilla ambush soon af-
terward killed an Israeli soldier and
former superior in the SDECE, a Col. Israel struck back early today.
Paul Fournier. lfu charge was taken First word of tbe lsraeli attack came from Beirut Radio which broadcast a
seriously enough by the American coded message: "Beware of snakes in
authorities for a grand-jury indictment to area number 10."
be drawn up naming Colonel Fournier as Israel in the past has withheld an-
an accqmptice_ Qf Delouett~.. nouncement of punitive raids until its
SDECE offlclals Indignantly jlenied the Corces returned to Israel.
Delouette charge, and 'the colonel in ques-The b:raell attack brought immediate
tlon appeared before. a 'French j¢ge in-sharp reaction from Egypt. Government
vest.lgatio·g tbe case -JUdge 1Gabriel souri:es quoted by the Middle East News
Roussel _to aff1nn bis ~nee. Agency said the raids would not have
At Uris point a fonner employer or been possible unless the United States Deloue~, Cot. Jean Barberol, 8 onetime supplied Phantom jet fighter-bombers to Israel
A Baltimore newspaper· co1umnlst
wrote this week that Golnlck received a
c,a.11 from a Hughes alde about 3 a.m. on
Feb. JS, asking U Golnick would m~e
available hla boat and skipper within SO
mlnutea. Golnlck declined to confirm the
report.
"All I'll say is that I've got a bell of a
story to· tell someday when it won't em-
barrass anybody," Golntck said. "Until
then, I'm not talltlng. You . doo't do a
favor for a friend and then tell about it."
The Cygnus was moored at 1 Miami
dockyard 'Thursday but Rehak was not
available.
Meanwhile Clifford Irving and bis wile
Edith have opened themselve1 to possible
arrest or contempt citations as a result of
their failure tc appear in New York state
In another 'mat,ter, tha appellate
division of the atate Suprtme Court
upheld a lower court ruling permitting
Time magazine to print up to 1,000 words
of Irving's book but did not act on the
question of whether It could print IDY.
more. ·
Plant to Shut Down
OAKLAND (UPI) -SCM Corp.
t.1arcbant is closing its calculator plant,
putting some 300 persons out of work.
Henry B. Childs, general manager ot
the Marchant Electronics O~rating
Division, told employes this wffk that
marketing conditions in the industry ltd
to the shutdown.
French ambaMador to Uruguay and now An Israeli military spokesman said
head of an agricultural cooperation Israeli jets fJrst struck guerrilla en· From Page J
service believed to be a cover for French campments 22 miles above the cease-fire
intelligence agents, gave an interview line before armored forces began a seek-
saying that Colonel Founlier's real name and-destroy mission at Ain ata, a town of RANSOM DISCLOSURE • • •
was Paul Ferrer. 4,000 to 5,000 about 21h miles inside While American congre.ssmen accused Lebanon. thansa headquarters in Cologne.
French authoritie.s of collusion with d dir hi The letter, pol!ited in ·Cologne Rveral t' I nd The spokesman sai " . ect "ts" were hours after the jumbo jet bad been narco 1cs smugg en: a protecting the observed in three villages struck by the diverted to Aden, threatened to blow up
"big wheels," French newspapers had a Israeli planes -Yanta, Dir~·Ash.ir and the plane, demanded the ransom and
field day specul8ting about "a settling of Kafr Coque. · gave detailed instructions on how tbe
accounts'' within competihg French in-ln the bigger town of Ainata, the Israeli money ~uld be handed over.
telligence networks or even between spokesman said, the Arab population was "The messenger with the m011ey was to
SDECE and the CIA. flushed out of 20 houses and that tbe wear a black jacket and gray trousers
Meanwhile, French and American houses were then destroyed. He called and carry a case. in b1a right hand,"
police and narcotics-control agents were Ainata the center of guerrilla activities. Leber said. "He wu to fly by way of
patiently trying to unravel the full A Lebanese military spokesman in a Athens on a commercial airliner or one
dimensions of the Delouette case and the statement broadcast by Beirut Radio said of three German charter firms . .
much bigger story behind it-the smug· enemy warplanes and artWery opened "In Beirut, be wU to flnd a car parked
gling of larger and larger amounts of fire against southern vWagea iD the at the airport which 'bad Inside a picture
heroin from Fr~ into the United Rachaya area 34 miles southeast of of former Egyptian Prtsldent Gamal
·States. Beirut. Abdel ltasser. '1 ' 'l?
The drug reaches Marseilles in south-"A mte was to be left on the driver's
ern France from Turkey in the fonn of seat saying where to drive with the
morphine base, and is there refined into money."
the fine white powder that is pure heroin. MOS le ln Head The Borm government raised the case
French traffickers are estimated. to have Tuesday night -Leber deellntd to say
made $75 million from this operation in where -and ient it to Athens with a
1971. Jn Las Vegas Lufthansa 1ecurity agent •cling as
Last year the American Bureau of courier.
Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs bad 23 Wednesday morning, the courier new
agents working in Europe, mostly in LAS VEGAS (AP) -The Aga to the Lebanese capital of Beirut, found
France, while tbe French central Khan, spiritual leader of 20 million the car, drove to an undisclosed point Moslems, is here for a vi.sit that a ..... _ 25 il ·~d the \ty and narcotics squad had two liaison agents as more \nnn m es OUt.:u e c their "American connection" in New secretary describes as "strictly delivered the money.
York. business." "The code word was his rece.lpt," The Aga Khan leased a suite of Lehe 'd "H told to etum Working patiently and methodically r sat . e wu r as to th bet Sept ' and F b 7 the rooms at the Th~erbird Hotel on fast as possible to Beirut airport where ge er ween · "" e • • the St.rip amid reports he is in· the word would be relayed by radio to French and A m e r t c a n drug-control teresled in backing a. proposed $25-Ad Within alter the d autho1"1ities arrested 23 perso••,·. -· In . S ho en. moments wor af'o '" -·-million trip· tel-<asino.·project. r'ved m' Aden the p I an and crew
Leber said the hijackers wen from a
"daughter organization of the Front for
Palestine Liberation" which be aald wu
based In Baghdad, Iraq.
He said the same group was responst.
ble for the hijacking of a Pan Ameri<Jll
jumbo jet to Cairo In 19'/0. The ptaiie
later was destroyed.
.
Liz' Birtlida)·
Guests Arrive
LONDON (UP!l -The b<autlful
people b<gan leaving today to
celebrate Elizabeth Taylor's 40th
birthday party Monday In
Budapest.
Among those departing on a
•Ingle direct filght from London
airport were rome 20 of the invited
guests, including Beatle Ringo
Starr and his wife; film star
Michael Caine and hl3 new girl
friend, Baksh Shikira, who won the
Miss World title as Mis.! Guyana ;
actress Suzannah York; Ml!!
Taylor's daughter Liza Todd, and
members of the Burton's family .
None would reveal their birthday
gilts.
the UniJtd States, some here iJbFrance. 1 • e were free.''
It was charged that ..-these · personr· i·-'=~:::=~=~=~~~;;~;;;;;;iiiiiiiii9;;;;;;;;;!~~~~~~~~~~:~ belonged to a network beaded liY Joseph
Signol..i, manager of a bar near the Arc de
Triompbe, who was arrested with nine
others Jan. 17.
. The French police believe that Delou-
ette receiVf!(I the heroin he.am,uggled to
the UnJted Stafes not from Colonel Four-
nier but from Dominique Marjani, a
known crimioal said to be ·a ·member Of
the SifJ-011 network .•..
Mariani is said to have admitted Tues.
day that he supplied Delouette with the
heroin he took to the United States. His
adntission, if sustained, does not close the
Delouette-Fournier case, but it increases
the credibility of af!lrmatiorui by SDECE
authorities that neither they nor Colonel
Fournier bad anything to do with the af-
fair.
Zumwalt in Saigon
SAIGON (UP[) -The U.S. chief of
naval operations, Adm. Elmo R.
Zumwalt, arrived here today for a three-
day "routine update" on the status of the
Vietnam war, Navy spokesmen said.
SALE ENDS IN 2 DAYS
FINEST UPHOLSTERY IN THE AREA AT REDUCED PRICES
Large selection of up~olslory
from such wen •nown lines .,
Henredon, si..rrill, Marge
C..rson and others at rtduc•
ed prices, don't wail. Only 2
days left.
SELECTED GROUPS FROM HENREDON, DREXEL
~D HeRJTAGE AVAILABLE AT SPECIAL PRICES.
DREXEL'S
VELA RO
WELLINGTON PARK
. HEN.REDON
OFFICERS CHEST COLLECTION
CAPRI
•
Former Newport Officer
Makes Own WavesinReno
HERITAGE
GRANDTOUR COLLECTION
CAMEO
MADRIGAL
From Wlre Suvku
RENO, Nev. -This UtUe gambling
resort b far from the seashore former
Newport Beach police C.pL Jamea
Parker left a month ago, but the new
chief Is maJctng his own "aves l!:ere.
Ohle! Parker's first major edl<I !slued
two weeQ ago was to ban •hb men !roJBt
• moonlighting ., security guard• In
casinos.
Tb<y don't !Ute tt one blL
And th• Reno Police Protective
AslociaUoo met this week to map
1trateu ioward getUni Chief Parbr'1
contro•eialal parl-flme job bin 1truct
doll'tl. J. ' ''We are prepared to JO all Ille way to
the U.S. SUpreme Court," 1~ poll ct
unlon official Walt Norri&
'l'be nm 1tep will be to challenge Chit!
Parker's administraUve order at a local
court level.
His Intention was to avoid a posslbl•
conruct of lnterm amq policemen who
might have sens!Uve Ol><luty assignments
at gambling •P"-' where' they 'work while
of!-ducy.
'!'Ile .. rder by Parker bps literally ad·
cled Insult to lnjUJ'1, Ren~ Police P.tl'Ql
division members mos\ dfrecUy affected
are contending.
The jobs they are ordered to vacate are
being filled now bf sllelllf's depuUes
employed by Waslioe County, In which
Reno llu . ...._ , .
Washoe County Shed!! Bob Golll·181'1 ha
has no objection to hll deputies -ting
In the culnos, ...,,trary-fo Ollel j'vker'a
phUoaoplly ol proper Jaw enloroement
moonlighting.
•
•
DON'T WAIT
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE -KARASTAN
7tJ11111
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 W01tcllff Dr., 642·2050
OPIN ,ltDAT 'TIL t
INTERIORS
LAGUNA BEACH
345 North Cooat Hwy. 494-4551
T9RRANCI
23649 Hawthorn• Blvd.
lltll 171-1111 °"" M4or •111 '
,.,,_.,,,.. ...... ........... Awll•I• .tt.ID-HSID
,._ Toi -M,. ef ---llU
'
• \ '
com
a ban
of Sa
beaC
He
recei
who
Shore
years
the
woul
I~
sell a
turn
any I
for y ...
lengt
park.
ty.
Ne
Oran
purch
sup
Ap
ma
Si
F
BTI
pare
tem
I(
opok
sya
bett "
Queen of Ball
Penny Pai-sons of Laguna
Niguel reigns as queen of the
20th annual military ball of the
Cal Poly chapter of Scabbard
and Blade. She was chosen by
the ROTC Corps of Cadets of
the college's military science
department.
Lands Board
Supports Sale
Of Salt Creek
The sale of Salt Creek Beach, now
named Niguel Beach, to Orange County
for $1.7 million has been approved by the
State Lands Comnlission.
The approval Thursday marks the final
step in county acquisition of the 4,800-foot
beach for use of the public.
Avco Community Developers Inc .. suc-
cessors to the Laguna Niguel Corpora-
tion, will sell the property to the county
and develop 17 acres ol parking area and
two acres of access paths for an ad-
ditional $800.000.
As a condition of the sale, the county
has agreed to drop any additional
prescriptive right.s it might have to cross
Avco properties in the area.
The Salt Creek Beach controversy
surfaced more than t\VO yean ago at an
a~embly subcommittee hearing in
Laguna Beach.
Helen Keeley, a Laguna resident, told
committee members that the county had
abandoned in 1968 the remaining portion
of Salt Creek Road which once led to the
beach to tbe Laguna Niguel interests.
Her revelation sparked a long and noisy
campaign to gain acceu to the beach for
the public. Surfers. swlmmers and just
plain sunbathers joined in the fray .
At one point a recall campaign against
then Board Chairman and Fifth District
Supervisor Alton Allen of South Laguna
was started. It was this campaign which
many believe aided In Ronald Caspers'
victory over Allen in the 1970 primary
election.
The supervisors rollowed with an in-
vestigation of possible prescriptive rights
of the public to permanent access to the
valued beach.
The county counsel's office, after
receiving dorens or letters from persons
who said they had crossed the Niguel
Shores property to use the beach in past
years. reported that a lawsuit to establish
the public rights to use of ijle beach
would probably be successful.
lo 19'70, Laguna Niguel Corp. offered to
sell access rights to the county, but was
turned down. Corporation lawyers said
any lawsuit would block use of the beach
for years.
Avco, after taking over ln 1971, entered
lengthy negoHatlons to sell the beach
parking lot and access lands to the coun-
ty.
Negotiations were handled by the
Orange County 'Harbor District and the
purchase was finally approved by the
auprvisors last spring.
Approval by the laods commission ls
mandatory under state law.
Sip Champagne
From Fountain
In San Francisco
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -A cham-
pagne "fountain" which dispenses drinks
bytthe glass has been introduced here. "The only thing we oeed to add i.I the
popping sound of a cork being mnoved
as from a botl1e," a spokeaman for
Weibel Vlneyants laid In lntroductlng the
gadget. · The dispenser, developed for Weibel by
BT! COrporatloo of Sbennan Oab, ap-
parenUy 11uoceeded where almllar at·
te~y~ have failed, ~ companies, explained a
spokesman, have attempted to fubiou a
syllem after the mtthod used to dispense
~from kegs.
"Champagne 11 too ,.nsmve and
te and requires a much' more
cated sy1tem," the spokesman
cl. The lflspenm IOOlt 21> yeara to ckvelop
alld Is nld to be the flral operatlonal unit
of Ill l:lnd. It u,., nitroseo to compma
the sparkllOI liquid and Is "(Ood to the
tut CIUll." The lnit!al response to the <X1mpecl, JO.
gallon chamoagne fountain lw been
"outatandln&.'' the opokelman aald, and
should find occeptance In reataaronta,
wed<ilng recepl!om, omcu, clllbr and
private homes.
Viejo fi'a e i litfl
Hospital Growth
Plan Given Okay
By TOM BARLEY
Ot flM DlllY l'Mtt Sllft
Jubilant Mission Community Hospital
executives marched from the Santa Ana
county courthouse Thursday night with
the ,blesslng of the Orange County Health
PlaMlng Council for their plans to ex-
paod the Mis.sion Viejo facility by 89
beds. ,
They wer~ on the right end of a 2& to 12
vote in a heavily attended meeting that
produced allegations of overbedding 1n a
central valley area that wlll soon have
four hospitals -Mission Community,
Saddleback Community, San Clemente
Community and South Coast Community
Hospital.
But bmrd members supported the
recomm~ndatlon reached at a public
hearing last week by their faclllties
review committee. They slmllarlly back-
ed expansion porposals for Tustin and
Westminster COmmunlty ho!pltal!.
Tustin's plan to add 89 beds passed by
a 24 to 12 vote with two board members
abstaining. Westminster's request for 54
more beds produced the tightest vote of
the evening - a 21 to 17 approval.
The board's backing of the Mission
Community application will b r I n g
hospital's bed count to 213. Hospital of-
ficals said the new beds will be available
in 1973.
Board members were warned at the
meeting that the Mission Community ex-
pansion will conflict with a Saddleback
Community's plans to put a 150-bed
hospital in operation on its Leisure World
site by May , 1973.
They were also urged to remember
that the 15():.bed San Clemente Com·
munity Hospital will be opening at the
same time while South Coast Community
Hospital will be adding 116 beds to its
present 163-bed capacity.
Council members have been warned
that the proposed construction and ex·
pansion will hike the number of hospital
beds available in the area within the next
decade to more than 700.
Speakers at last week's public hearing
told the facilities review committee that
this is more than double the number of
hospital beds that will be required for the
area.
Several speakers Thursday night urged
council chairman Paul White to recognize
that Orange County's bed count will
mount in the next few years to much
more than the hospital bed per resident
ration recommended by state planners.
But facilities review committee
chairman Donald Klein drew cheers when
he pointed out that his committee had
considered the Mission Community ap.
plication "on the basis of the needs of the
area.
"We can use state statistics, planning
charts and the numbers game until we're
blue in the face but we can't allow such
figures to stand in the way of expanding
a hospital that's running at capacity,"
Klein said.
He said his committee had recognized
that Mission Community's present oc--
cupancy rate of 8S percent did not allow
the Mission Viejo hospital to provide vital
specialization and added patient care.
The committee last week rejected at a
stormy public hearing in Costa Mesa
arguments that population movement in
to the El Toro • Mission Viejo • Laguna
Hill! • Leisure World • Capistrano
Highlands sector was slowing down and
would prove in the next few years to be
considerably less than Mission Com-
munity planners had predicted.
Mission Community's application was
endorsed 12 to 2 by the faciUtles review
committee at a five-hour hearing In
which Saddleback Community Hospital
supporters were the targets of boos and
cat calls.
Klein also promptly rejected Thursday
night a letter in which Saddleback Com-
munity Hospital Pru:ident Frank J .
Schaeffer accused the committee of con-
ducting last week's hearing "in an unfair
and legally improper manner.
"The entire hearing was penneated
with prejudlce against the opponents,"
Schaeffer said in a Jett.er circulated to
health council members.
"At least ' four of the consumer
members of the committee were ao o~
vlously' against the oppooeoiJ that It
would not be possible for them to render
a fair and impartial decision .•. "
Schaeffer aaid the committee's recom-
mendation in favor of Mission Co~
munity was "not sustained by substantial
evidence and was taken in an arbitrary
and capricious manner."
Bu\ Klein refused to consider Schaef-
fer's suggestion that the council decision
be delayed and he also rejected •he
allegation that he had been lax In his use
of the gavel at the stormy Costa Mesa
meeting.
"There were boo& and outbursts and
Airwest Strike
Talks Falling Off
PHOENIX (AP)-A opokwnan !O!< Ille
llrtltlog Aircraft Meclulnlca Fraternal
Organization said ThfJrlday a 1JelUement
wtlh Hughes Alrwest appe.&rs farther
away than ever ..
"We were at least negotlaUng earller,11
nld LeRoy Whliaell , a member ol the
union'• negotlaUng commltte•. "But the
company hu taken a unilateral position
on the contract now and I think we're
lartber away than we were two monihl
ago.•
· Whitesell said his union cannot otetpt a
company proposal which would leave IO
percent of tbe union'• i:n.mben jobless.
applause on many occulons but I don't
think they interfered with the conduct ot
the meeting," Klein sakl. "I don't think
there was any bias or prejudice against
Saddleback among members of the coun-
cil at any time."
Klein reminded the council that Sad-
dleback's original application two years
ago for the construction of a 25&-bed
hospital in conjunction with the North
American Rockwell Corporation wu ap.
proved at a tlme when Mission Com-
munity Hospital's application was denied.
"They still haven't built although they
are down to a 150 bed hospital," Klein
said. "Mission Community did build
under the state's grandfather clause (a
specially approved grace period} and now
they justifiably want to add to that
hospital."
Council members contacted before the
meeting told newsmen that they expected
opposition during the hearing from an
Orange County physician who during the
week bitterly attacked hospital expansion
in Orange County and called for a ban on
all buµdlng In lhia area.
But the •tote on all three faciUtles was
taken without any comment from Dr.
Harry Slenionsma, the Orange County
Med.Jcal A!sociation director who warned
the council by Jetter tha't there are
already 1,000 empty beds In Orange
County.
Siemonsma had condemned the Mission
Community application as "incongruous"
in a Jetter that savagely attacked what he
said was "wholesale, profit • oriented
hospital construction -in an area that
doesn't need the beds now and won't need
them for many years to come."
Fonner Orange County supervisor
William HirsteiA also asked the council to
delay action on any hospital expansion or
construction until the present county
board's $100,000 health survey Is com-
plete.
Hirstein pointed out that many or the
board's inquiries will have answers in
June and the supervisors will be able "to
assess the role of county government in
hospital construction and determine the
future health needs of Orange County."
Orange County hospital construction
has also been condemnend in a Su~rior
Court trial that is scheduled to resume
next Thursday.
Lawyers for the California Health Care
Providers Association are asking Judge
Herbert Herlands to rule that building
permits granted for construction of five
Orange County hospitals were illegally
issued by the state and should be revok-
ed.
If Judge Herlands so rules he could
well set a precedent that will apply to 100
other California hospitals which also
received permits under what CHCPA
lawyers argue was an Wegal extension of
the state's hospita1 legislation.
Expensive Way to Go
President and Mrs. Nixon. with Secretarv of State
Rol!ers. view a burial suit made of small pieces of
jade sewn together with gold thread, dating back to
a Chinese dynastv in ancient time. The relic ls on
disp lay at Peking's Forbidden City after being UD•
earthed recenUy.
That Lady Not Hi s Wife?
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Charles
Ward is suing a clothing store and a
salesrqan for is,ooo on grounds that
"o verkill" salesmanship caused his wife
of 11 years to throw him out of his borne.
Ward, a 31-year-old San Francisco
ln\.emational Airport employe, flied 5Uit
in Superior Court Wednesday, claiming
he bought $80 worth of men's clothing at
the Ross-Atkins store Jan. 31. •
He said he was alone at the time, but
on Feb. 1 a pOst card signed by the
salesman came by mall to his El Cerrito
home. It read:
"Dear Mr. Ward -1 enjoyed assisting
you and Mrs. Ward when you were in the
store recently. Have a good day and
come Jn again. soon.".
Ward claimed that despite protests that
he was alone when he bought the clothes
his wife became angered.
The suit quoted her as shouting, "It's
bad enough that y9u should be running
around with another woman, but a
tlwusand times worse that yoU should be
buying her clothes . , ."
Bill May Speed
Bus Baggage
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Sen. Jam"
Whetmore (R-Fullerton), has lntroductd
legislation designed to 1ptfld up tht
handling of baggage by bul companies.
He said Wednesday hil bill would r~
quire bus companies to pu\ a passenger's
suitcase on the same bu1 the tr1veler
was taking, If possible.
l! the bus were full, the measure would
require the company to place the 8Ultcaae
on one of the next two buses going to·the
passenger's deslnatlon.
DEMONSTRATOR SALE!
1972 Colony Park
Mrs. Dick Johnso n's
Personal Sta tion Wagon
• • •
LOADED WITH EXTRAS!
BIG DISCOUNT!
1972 Mercury Marquis
Chas. Woodard's P ersonal
4-Dr. Brougham
Air cond., power seats, performance perfect to
suit our service manager.
SUBSTANTIAL . REDUCTION! • • •
Choose from ... Cou ~ar ... Continental
... All l 972 's ... All Demo s ...
"Orang< County's romllv of FIM em.•
ohnson & son
. '
l /r\1r 'll N r,1f l{f 'IJl\Y
C<JLJCit~f~ LllPl!I
2626 HARBOR BLVD ., COSTA MESA • 640·6630 l ·~~~~~~~~~~~-:-~~~~~~~~~~~~~-.~~~~---!· , .
•
I DAILY PILOT
.)
i.t: ~.San Clemente: .
=:Past, Present
MEMORY IANE DEPT. -Su
•.'Cletnente cltlz0111 in 1oln1 to dedlcate a
irltieir !2!0,llOO community center Sonday
• ,ond /or old-Omen alons the Orange
l•~ It will be a considerable time for
nostllsta. '
:· Today, we're 111 used to the practice of ilevelo~ who throw up a vast sea of
'·ltr1ct hOibu and then tou In a "com·
•!!"wilt)' ctnler" to demonstrate their ~!ciVl~mlndtdneu.
Soriie may conalder It a rather · in. \""nov1t6e pncUce.
OLE BAN!ON did Jt however In 1112'
l 'wllen be rounded the SJ)alll3h vluaae ol ~!San Clemente. He put up the Community
"'CIUbbauie before be had wurancea that
11aU the Iota would sell or that the
r·munlclpallty """1d actually oceur.
Lota or nal eatate lolb will tell you to-l>llaJI that llanlon w11 maybe 40 yean
•«head of Illa. Ume. CouLal blalory tends
GJo suneat tbll: Tbe new community of
·iMlaaloo Viejo, for eJ!IDq>lo, I> olmoll I
»'W'bob copy ol the ,&nd doa!in uaed by
HllllOll tn mattns tbe City ol San
.£1emeole four deoldoa qo.
San Clemente'• clubbouee, however, itl
SpanlJh We roof, white 1tucco w1U1 and
maHlve fireplace and Interior bellm,
stood at the center of the town for 43
years. It wu the showcase of the com-
munity •. Those who grew up in the
Spanlah • VWage rememt>:tr c h a s i n f
Easler eW on Ile lawn and following
Santa C1aus into the place at Yuletide.
TWO YEARS AGO, the clubhouse
burned. down. San Clementeans, after con-
siderable travail, set out to rebuild it.
Sunday, they'll have a dual celebntlon tn
I dedicatln1 the new community center
and in mark!og the 44th anniversary of
I the city's lncorporaUon which occurred tn
, Febnwy o! 1112'. t As noted, KllllOh's clubboU!e came : ::.~=·t~!t:J= ~ i: ~: i a oost o! 1bo<JI flOO,llOO. That waa quite a
•few dollm tn thoie dsya. I The renewed clubhouie, which carries
: much of the flavor and ~adltlon of th~
: old, cost '230,000. one main section olthe
(old bulldibg,_the Ole Hinson Room, wa's
1 aavad tn the rebuilding and nlurblthed,
, with Ile blr fireplace, celling beams and
I fll>anllh style lurnlture.
• OLE BOii HANSON, grandaon o! the
foun4et of lJie vntage, wJD be serving as
Faster of ceremonies when the new
edlcaUon gets under Wt)' Sunday af-
emoon at 1 o'clock. 1bert are going to
a lot of other old-timers on band too.
ctically the whole• Han90n clan, for
pie.
Alao scheduled to appear are Mrs.
mlll<n H. CoUun and ber daughter,
, former owners of the estate' which
u now become famous as President
on's Wesiem White House. Others in-
the senior l{anson's long-Ume
tary Ida Denning; Mn. Roy Divel,
• and family: Mn. Bernice Ayer; early :J>oUce chief Wendell Lovell and maoy
:"other• Crom San Clemente'• pioneer days. ~ YOU SUSPECT there may be con-
kiderable talk of the early times when ~ Clemente was C(lmidered just ~other crazy real estate development
'"5cheme. Alas, the lame or being selected )is the home !or the President ol the ~nited States came too late to be enjoyed
!;by the man who dreamed and built the
~lace. ~ But I'll bet you it wouldn't have surpris·
ed Ole Hanson. ?l He would have just commented. "The
bnan tw good taste."
~ ~y orty Opposes Trip
' ~ LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mayor Sam
orly says il he bad been Pr<sldent be
·:would oot have a;one to Qrlna to meet the
·leaders o! the Peking regime. Any such
:meeting, Yorty said, Thursday, would
'!have been on "neutral ground."
• •
' ,
Nixon Mixes Quips, Furrowed Brow
Pres·ident
Convivial
Sight,seer
PEKING (AP)-Pretklent Nixon toured
Peking'• Forbidden City tor nearly two
houri today and In high good bumor
cncl<ed jokes, Ignored the heavy ....,.
and told i!Us Cblnoae ho1t about an old
arm Injury.
Wearing a dark topcoat but bareheaded
as usual and without alove1, he walked
from building to building through the
snow~vered courtyards.
"We ,,don't want to see It all today
because we want to leave something to
come back to," Nixon uld aa be toured
the valt palace from which th& emperors
ruled China for nearly 600 yeara.
AJ he picked his way down one set or
Icy steps, the President turned to his
guide, Yeh C'bien-ying, vice chairman or
the Military Affairs C<8nmll!lon, and
remarked: ••u I fell it would make a
good picture."
Nllon recalled that while a member or
the House of ReprtsentatJves, be fell
down some staJrs and broke his left arm
at the elbow. Holding the arm out from
his body, he told Yeh he has never been
able to ·extend It fully as a result. "Ever
slnct J've been careful," be added.
Shown a royal recption room where
cblld emperora sat on a glided bench to
handle affairs ol alete which their
mother• pf9mpted from behlnd a screen,
Nixon cracked: '.'lt'a the· same today. The
worn~ are always the back seat
drivers."
The President also introduced Yeh to a
succession of American new1men, in-
cluding conservative William F. Buckley
Jr. "He's very liberal -sometimes,"
Nixon joked, then quickly added, "don't
quote me."
tn the museum section, the President
saw some gold ear.stoppers used by
royalty to keep out sounds they didn't
relish. 1'Glve me a pair, will you?" be
jested. ,_trs. Nixon wore the blond mink coat in
which she left \Yashington and also was
bareheaded as she followed her husband
around the pagoda-topped p a I a c e s .
secretary ol Slete William P. Rogers
helped her up and down each set of icy
steps.
The party tolaed ornate throne rooms,
the offices of emperors dead for cen-
turies !nd royal bedrooms. They they
moved at a leisurely pace through a
museum &ection displaying rare and
beauUful relics of ancient China dating as
far back as 7 ,CKX> B.C.
American news photographer• took pic-
tures ol !be Nixona peering lnln glass
cases filled with Han dynasty bronzes
thatr had never been photographed for
publication. even ln China. The Han
.. pieces 'were produced in the time or
Christ.
"Some oI the art work is just out of
this world," said Mrs. Nixon.
Sbe said she bas enjoyed Chinese
hospitality Lremendo"'IY and added'
"They have just tried so hard to make
everything pleasant."
Wicks
•
PRESIDEl>IT NIXON CLIMBS SNOW.COVERED STEPS IN THE FORBIDDEN CITY
Acc~mpanlod by Tung Pl·wu (L), Vice Ch1lrman of P1opl1'1 Republic
China Tourists
Observe Nixons
Visiting Palace
PEKING (UPI) -President Nixon
took a break today in his wearying 20th
Century diplomacy to marvel at the
Forbidden City, where almost five cen-
turies of emperors shaped Old China's
history from throoes o! gold.
Escorted by Yeh Chien-ying, China's
leading military figure, Nixon and bis
wife spent 90 minutes touring the
Imperial Palace's living quarters and
three throne rooms. The palace, in the
heart of Peking, now is a museum.
The Nlxons, bareheaded and smiling
despite heavy snow and tem pelatures in
the 20s, walked and drove through about
40 or the 250 acres in the palace grounds.
Several hundred Chinese tourists -
families with small children, teen-age
girls and off-duty soldiers -looked on,
quietly curioll8.
Nixon broke into a broad smile when he
saw the main throne in the Hall of
Supreme Harmony, elaborately fashioned
atop a six-foot dais and backed by an
elaborately curved screen.
In the third throne room, only a few
yards away, Mrs. NlJ:on showed special
interest in a collection of art works and
imperial treasures dating thousands of
years into China's history.
"She took a more female inlfrest in
what would be lovely in the home," said
UPI rtporter Helen Thomas, who ac·
rompanled the prealdentlal party. "Nixon
seemed more interested in the emperor's
court, . where he received atnbassadors
and that sort of thing."
The palace has stood in Its present
general fonn since 1407, when it was con-
structed by the third Ming emperor,
Yong Le.
Surrounding the palace itself was a
walled area, into whlch the Chinese peo..
ple were forbidden to go, called the Pur·
pie Forbidden City.
BuUdings inside the Forbidden City
were gradually opened to the publlc afte.r
the Manchu Dynasty fell in 1911.
Nixon entered the Forbidden City
through the massive red brick Gate of
Heavenly Peace, one of the few re-
maining parts of the old city wall.
Pat Sees Acupuncture,
V isi~ Tourist Swre
PEKING (AP) -Pat Nixon donned a
white medical cloak today to watch two
young glrls r~ving acupuncture treat-
ment at the Peking's Children's Hoapltal.
Then she went shopping, selecting a
palr of pajamas for her husband and a
set of china for her daughter Julie-.
At the hospital the First Lady and her
escort.a had to change to the white
medical cloaks as a hyglentc policy of the
hospital, whlch was founded in 1955. Mrs.
Nixon took off her fur coat, under which
she wore a brown and mustard yellow
knitted dress.
An aide at the hospital explained as
they viewed some photos on the wall that
acupuncture bas proved successful in
many diseases hitherto difficult to cure,
such as paralysis.
Mrs. Nixon said: "I have read you are
doing great v.•ork on deafness. Do you do
that here?" Ku Shiu-po, vice chairman of
the rtvolutionary committee of the
hospital, said they had had success in
some .semideafness case.a.
"Of 12 cases of semideafness, eight
were treated successfully and they can
hear well again," the First Lady was
told.
Jn another room, a girl or about IO was
being treated by acupuncture for
• Father's Neat
Diplomatic Feat
Praised by Julie
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Julie Nixon
Eisenhower said Thursday she has been
following television coverage of her
parents' trip to China "and I thougtit my
dad performed a real diplom atic feat
when he made one little glass of Chinese
wine last for 44 toasts."
paralysis. She had needles stuck in on her
right leg from hip to foot.
Treatment for this type of polio is once
a week, she was told.
Asked whether they minded her
watching. Mrs. Nixon told newsmen ac-
companying her, "They don't seem to
mind."
She got a brief rundown on the hospital.
lt ll a general ho1pital for children from·
infants to It-year-olds and has a staff of
more than 820 doctvrs, nurses, oUice and
other workers.
The hospital has nine departments -
Jnternal medicine, surgery, infectious
diseases, Chine!:e traditional medicine,
new-style acupuncture t r e a t m e n t ,
p h y siotberapy, ears-nose-throat, op-
thalmology and stomatology. It's 20
wards have 600 beds.
"The hospital has 2,000 out·patients,"
~{rs. Niton was told, "and between 500 to
600 in paUents." Eighty-five peretnt of
the staff are women doctors.
"Look at that piano," she exclaimed
when she saw a group of children
playing. Dr. F. T. Chu. bead of the
hospital, told Mrs. Nixon he had studied
at Boston Children's Hospital 40 years
ago. She shook hands with several
members of the starr and left for a
"friendship store," where foreigners
shop, a five.minute drive from the
hosp Ila!.
Mrs. Nixon shook hands with several
shop girls as she walked in. She looked at
several brocades, but decided not to buy.
Strain Seen
'
In· Arduous
Negotiation
PEKING (UPI) -HI> lace showing tilt
strain of dealing with a b o s t 11 1
philosophy, President Nixon.blnled tod,•Y
that be mlght soon relax the secrecy aur-
roundlng five days of talkl which have
arowed deep misgivings in an Asia in-
evitably to be affected by their outcome.
Nixon's final format session with
Premier Chou En-lal began at the
President's lakeside guest house nearly
three hours behind schedule. There waS'
no explanation for the delay.
American reporters and photographers
were kept so far from the gate they could
not .see who was coming and going.
This was Nixon's last day in Peking. He
goes Saturday in a Chinese.flown, BritlS'h·
built Trident jet to the resort city of
Hflngchow, 900 miles to the south, to
spend a day before a flight to Shanghai,
China's largest city with a population of
10 million. From there, Nixon departs
homeward Monday, ending the lon&ut
stay of an American President in a
foreign land.
Sometime before he leaves for his
return to Wuhington, Nixon wu ex·
pected to meet again with Chairman Mao
Tse-tung, father of China's C.Ommunlst
movement. Their first meeting was at
·Mao's residence Monday, shorUy after
Nixon landed in Pelting.
During a snowy tour this morning at
the "Forbidden City" -the walled,
moated palace compound of ancient im·
perlal emperors -Nixon was asked how
his talks with Chou were going. He hid at
that point met with the premier for a
total of 25 hours and his face showed the
ti:lraln.
The President brushed the question
aside but said he would "talk tonight"
during a toast at the huge banquet he is
giving for his Chinese hosts in the Great
Hall of the People.
The swpicion aroused by the utmost
secrecy surrounding the talks was
reflected in scornful statementa from
world capitals.
~1oscow dubbed the talka "the Peking
opera" and the Viet C.Ong accused Ni:lon
or trying to capitalize on the split
bet\\·een the Chinese and the Sovtt Union.
Japan, fearing it Is to be ed&ed out of
trading with China, also is worried about
Nixon's rnisJl.on.
Both the Vietnamese Conununlsta and
the government of Prealdent rJguyen Van
Thieu South Vlelnam suspect that Nix·
on and the Chinese may seek to impose a
solution on the war in which they would
ha ve no voice.
The air of cordlallty displayed by
Chinese and American officials and the
unprecedented buildup the Chin ... press
has given the Nixon mi.uion -it has
made Pat Nixon the "star" of Chinese
television -indicated that both sides
were pleased with their progress.
The scanty Information which was
available privately from l n form 1 d
sources showed that the future of the Na-
tionalist Chinese island outpost of Ch1ang
Kai·shek has been a stumbling block to
the general declaration of "peacefUI
coexistence" which Nixon and Chou hope
to issue.
Agreement has been reached on
cultural exchanges, efforts to increase
trade, and continuing diplomatic contacts
without formal diplomatic recognition.
. •
' East Alerted for Floods
The President's younger daughter,
vacationing thJs week at the Western
Whlte Houae in San Clemente, visited a
predominantly Mexican-American school
and dedicated a chapel at the East Wbil·
tier YMCA Thursday .
In a question-answer sesslon with
history students at El Serem Junior High
School, Mrs. Eisenhower said, "The day
after he was Inaugurated, my father calJ.-
ed Henry Kissinger into his office and
told him he would have to open the doot1
to China." " l . •
Storm Hits Area From New En.gland to IV. Carolin,a
«:allforni• Te111per•tures
TtmHr•lvrRS etW tnell'll•llOll fOr
tM JA llcoW "rlod wdlnf •I A •.lfto
Mltll 1..-l"c•
Albtlll' " 10 Al~ n 2'
Maybe Chou Took
Stacey's Advice
WICIDTA, Kan. (AP) -"If you tbinl:
It would gel Jooely, maybe you could send
two," 10.yeaMld Slncey Upton wrole tn a
lelter lo Chinese Premier ClllJU En·lal
asking for a panda.
Written last October, lhe lelter war
Rnt to President Nixon with 1 request
that be carry It to Chino.
Slacty, daughter ol Mr. and Mrl.
!Ucbanl Upton, upreaocl hope In ge!Ung
a C011ple ol black and white pondaa for
the Sedplck County zoo.
Choo bu llU10UDC'd thal he wlD make
1 gilt ol two pandas to the United Stal.._
"l think I speak on behalr of all !!"'
cblldnn of Wichita and In sumund;ng towna:" Sl1C01 llkl tn the letter.
);
.... _
MRS. NIXON COM,ORTS CHILD AT HOSPITAL IN PIKING
Adhettv1 StrlJK on L99 Covti "Acupun,tur1 Nlldl•
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...
SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPI) -Firemen
discovered el1bt more bodiea in the ruiri:;
ol the fire-ravaged Piranl building today
bringing lhe death toll of the wor1t blaze
In 8to Paulo in several decades to at
least JI pel'l<>lls.
Bodies of the lalest victims were foW1d
as firemen conducted a floor-by-floor
search of the gutted is.story building
from which helicopteNJ, bravine soaring
names, alrUfted more than 400 peraona to
aafety.
Most of the deaths resulled from burns
or injuries when lerr1£ied sboppera tried
to leap from windows to safety. More
than 400 persons were injured, many of
them when they jumped out of lower
floor windows to the ground below.
A!ore than 12 hours after the blaze
started it still raged out of control.
Sixteen helicopters braved the flames
and smoke to land on the top of the
Pirani building and airlift hundreds of
ptrsons trapped there to safety. It took
them six hours, sometimes with flames
all but surroundjng them, for the
helioopters to get everybody safely off
the roof.
'•Jt was a miracle how many people
they took off the roof," said Odair Guer-
ra, 21, a Brazilian air forct recruit ~·ho
helped in the airlift carried out by air
force, municipal, state and private
helicopters.
Guerra said "the hellcopters could not
at first get to the roof because the flames
were '° high," but finally managed to
land on a heliport atop the building. He
1aid a number of people taken to safety
were suffering from smoke inhaJatlon.
The fire in tbe 1().year~ld building
broke out about 3:IS p.m. on the second
floor. The first five floors housed a de--
partment store while the rest of the build-
irig wu devoted to office space.
Thtre wa1 no indication of araon, fire
official said.
Ul"ITI .....
BUILDING ENGULFED
At L•Ht 16 DI•
Manila-area Mayor
Killed in Ambush
MANILA (UPI) -Gunmen shot and
killed Cavite City Mayor Manuel S. Roi·
as and his driver today. opening fire on
the mayor's Dodge sports car from am-
bush.
Roxas, elected to his first term as
mayor last November, was the third
Manila-area mayor killed in the last four
months.
Deep Space
Probe Bears·
Message
By HOW ARD BENED!Cf
~ ..,.,._, wrnw
CAPE KENNEDY, Fl1. -In the rlnt
attempt to use a satellite to com·
rnunlcate with lnlelUgent beings In outer
1pace, a spacecraft scheduled for launch
Sw>day will carry a plaque that tells in
1clentllic symbols when It was launched,
from where and, by what kind of peep le.
Along with the .symbols, the plaque on
Pioneer 10 bears the naked figures of a
man and woman, the man's right hand
raised ln a gesture of good will.
The experiment ls strlcUy passive.
lnbabltant1 of another 1tar system would
!lave to capture the payload to 1et the
message.
Natlpnal Aerbnautics 'and S p a c e
Administration officials say the chances
are remote tbat anyone will find it.
But they· note Pioneer 10 Js the first
man-made object intended to escape our
solar system, that It will travel for
millions of years, perhaps forever, into
other galaxies, and that no one knows i{
other civilizations exist out there.
Pioneer IO's primary mission is to be
the first spacecraft to e:s:plore the largest
planet in this solar system, Jupiter, and
its puzzling red spot. To reach the dis:tant
target, the probe will be hurlJd away
from earth at 32,000 miles an ~our, faster
than any previous space vehicle.
Even so, It will take 22 months to reach
the vicinity of Jupiter. After
photographing and pr-0bing the planet
with sensors, it will zip deeper and
deeper into apace, beyond the reach of
the sun's influence.
Because of the ~lblllty that the.re is
int~Ugent life elsewhere in the univerae.
the idea of the plaque was 11uggested by
two Cornell University astrooomers and
the wife of one or them.
Dr. Carl Saaan, director of the Cornell
Laboratory for Planetary Studies, ex-
plained:
fr1dl)', ftbMry 25, 1912 DAIL'!"'-" f.
Pact Aeproved
I
British · Strike
I
By Miners Ends
LONDON (AP) -Britain's ZI0,000 coal
miners ended their nationwldt strike to-
day, c111ting an overwhelmina: majority
voto that suaranleed a ol'HdY wtndllp '!-
the power crtall dlmlpillll Brllaln '
c~y and ldltn1 mllllolll.
Bombs, Fires Ravage
Tbe miners vott<l 2t0,0le to 7,1181 t?_~~
cept • bll pay offer fr<lm tbe Nat...-
Cc>ll Boan!. Tbe offer of a IO perdnt Pl1
lncrease was b a 1 • d on the ncom-
mendatlons of a govemmenHppolnttd
court of Jnqulry. Miners WtN eamlng .. ~"
average of '49.&0 weekly before u1t
'trike.
•
N. lreland's Capital The miners will go back lo work Mon-
day .
The vote was taken over the put tw•
ri1ys and the resulte, announced today, BELFAST, Northern l,..!1nd (UPI) -
Explosions and fire hit tar1ets in Belfut
and several Ulster cities today Ip tbe 1ec-
ood comec:uUve day of bomb and lnOn
attacks in the capital and outlying areas.
An explosion ripped lhrou1h a bu.s 1ta-
tlon in Antrlm, severely damaging the
building and 13 buses, and fire rued an
unmanned customs post near Lon-
donderry, the anny said.
Bombs sma shed two phono1raph
record shops in the center of Belfast,
touching off burst! of anger among shop-
pers against the ouU1wed I r i 1 h
Republican Army (IRA).
"They should be shot -not interned,''
screamed a woman bystander when a
bomb 1hattered the Hart and Churchill
record shop and warehouse in Wellington
Place.
"This is murderous," a police
spokesman barked, as constables carried
away a middle.aged woman who fainted
when the bomb exploded.
An army spokesman said two men cir· meant that offlcl1l1 could 10 1he1d with.
rying guns planted the Wellington Place plans for an indutb1al recovery after
bomb and set a five.gallon drun1 of coal begins returnln1topoww1eneri:tinl
gasoline beside it to feed flames when the stations.
bomb blew up. C'r0vernment orflclal1 uld powtt cu:
Just before that blast, a youth bicycled were expected to conUnue for tever
up to another record shop ln Queen's weeks, until coal 1upplles art bu1lt up
Arcade, a few hundred yards away, again al power stat.Ions, but•that the vote
police said. He parked and locked his to end the strike would permit padually
bike then ran. easlni restrictions on power UllP. _
Police tried to clear the area and the The strike, first naUonwtde 1topJl*&e by
bicycle bomb exploded, slightly injurlng a the miners since 19281 bqan Jan. It.
British soldier, a policeman and five The miners orialnally ukld for I 41
civilians. All were treated in hospitai!I for percent average increue tn Ult ~c
flying glasa cuts, police said. weekly rate of f.4t.t0 for underafow\d
The youth escaped. workers. They later scaled dOwn th•lr
A bomb placed by four men ripped part demands to 11 percent and r•jected an
of the roof from the Mal-One Golf club in offer of 7.t percent.
suburban Belfast and cl~ other The government appointed Lo r·d
damage to the building, an army Wllbuforce, a senior judce, to hUd the
spokesman said. court of inquiry. Thl1 recommended a 20
The spokesman said British troops ar-percent average increase. Later nqot1a ..
rested 3S security 1uspectJ in the 24 lions produced more frinle benelltl, JD.
hours ending early today, clud.lng !oncer vacatlona . . ~======::;::::;;;;;i=========-===.
Senators Vote to Allow
Limited Bus Funding
WASHINGTON (AP) defeated.
Muskie Should Capture
New York Delegation
Working with sagan on the project were
his wife, Linda Salzman Sagan, a painter
and film maktr, and OP. Frank Drake,
direct.or of the National Astronomy and
lonosphe,.. Center at Cornell.
21 Americans
Hurt in Fight
Close to Saigon
With the support of tt• liberal
members, the Senate bu
voted to allow federal 1pe:rr
ding for busing only at the re--
quest of local school officials.
The pr-0vision was part of a
compromise amendment ap-
proved Thursday as a preface
to debate on several tough
proposals to outlaw busing.
The compromise proposal
offered by Democratic Leader
Mike Man1fleld and
Republican Ltader Hugh Scott
was adopted on separate vote1
on its three parts -51 to 37,
50 to 33 and 79 to 9.
The outcome was a setback
for senator1 who oppose all
busing. They denounced it ••
meanlnglesa and a hoax, and
said it· would not stop any of
the 00.lng now being ordered
by ft<leral coorta.
w• wlll b• clot•d
SUNDAY, FHRUARY Z7
for inventory
••
• •
'
By CLAY F. RICHARDS
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI) -Unleas he
stumbles in earlier primaries, Sen. Ed-
mund S. Muskie should win the lion's
share of New York's 271 delegate. to the
Democratic national convention.
Surprisingly, the strongest contender to
the 1.iaine senator in the scramble for the
CAMPAIGN '72
largest single delegation to the con-
vention is not New York City Mayor John
V, Lindsay, but Sen. Georae McGovern of
south Dakota. He captured the en-
dorsement of the party's left wing New
Democratic Coalition <NOC).
Developments in the 21 primaries pri-0r
to New York's on June 20 may alter the
picture. nut, at present, polls show
Muskie the popular leader, McGovern the
runner-up, and Lindsay back in the pack.
with Sens. J~ubert Humphrey of Min-
ne10ta and Henry Jackson of Washington.
The Republican party, which will send
a smaller 88-man delegation t o
California, ts tightly controlled by Gov.
Nelaon A. Rockefeller, who will work IC·
lively as President Nixon's campaign
manaier in New York state.
The Republican delegation should go to
the convention solidly pledged to the
President.
New York's Conservative Party en-
dorJt<l l\ep. John M. A>bbrook (R-Ohio).
a move that will not hive too much im-
pact on the Republican primary because
Sen. James L. Buckley, elected on the
Conservative line, has not joined in the
endorsement.
Neither A11hbrook nor Rep. Paul
McC!ookev (R-calil.), has campaign
organizatfons in New York and did not in-
dicate ii they will challenge Nixon here.
Both parties face a problem in ready-
ing slates for the primary. The
delegate. will run in 39 congrusional
districls which must be reapportioned
before the primary, a step t h e
Legislature is expected to take next
month. 1
The names of the presidential can-
didates appear nowhere on the primary
ballot. making it difficult for the voter to
pick the delegates who support the man
he wants.
Muskie, whose (amily still lives in his
home town of Buffalo, N.Y .. probably
contributed singilicantly to Humphrey's
400,IM»-vote victory over Nixon in 1958.
He drew large crowds in four recent
upstate vislll.
He has a strong organization in New
York State. John F. English, the state's
national committeeman, is Muskie's na-
tional campaign coordinat-0r, while Wil-
liam McKeon of Auburn is directing much
of the state operation.
Lindsay's recent conversion to the
Democratic party has not won him in-
stant loyalty from old line party leaders.
Albany Mayor Erastll! Coming U prob-
ably summt<t up their feellnp best
when he termed Lindsay a "political
ch1meleon."
There are no overwhelming issues
peculiar to New York state.
Flameproflng .Studied
SAIGON (UPI) -Thirty-lour
Americans were wounded in clashes with
Communist guerrillas today, including 21
in a five-hour battle only t2 miles from
Saigon and seven in an ambua:h of a U.S.
Army truck convoy in the Central
Highlands.
A number of sources said earlier Com-
muniJt1 planned a major offensive during
Preaident Nixon's trip to Peking but of-
ficers refuled to defme the increased
number of attacks as part of a new Com-
munltt drive.
The 21 men wowtded in the battle 42
miles eut of Saigon were the heaviest
American casualties since two American!
were kJUed and 34 wounded in a fi1ht 34:
miles northwest of Saigon on April 17,
Jr7l.
The wounded men were all members of
the 1st Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment,
which was Gen. George Armstrong
Custer's ouUlt at the batUe of lhe Little
Big Hom In 1176.
A 1poie1man said the battle near
Saigon started when a U.S. patrol from
Artillery Bue Cros1 Sabe.rs, located 50
miles east of Saigon, ran into a guerrilla
force.
The American~ called in jet fighter·
bombers, helicopter gunships a n d
artlllery. Tbe guerrillH broke off contact
and eacaped into the jungle five hours
later. 1ber was no im!Dediate report of
,uerrilla casualties.
Aides See Scarred Child
A vote was expected today
on an amendment b y
l\epubllcan Whip Robert F.
Griffin that would s t r i p
federal courts or power to
order buaing as a means of
achieving integratkln.
Southern 1enators are ready
with other antlbuslng rlder1 if
the Griffin amendment is
9 Missing
After Fire
FAIRBANKS, Alaska CAP)
-Nine peraons are mi.salng
and reared dead fn a frre that
destroyed the Nordale Hotel,
police reported T h u r s d a y
night.
A search or the rubble from
Tuesday's fire was delayed
wilil Thursday because of the
intense heat, fire oUiclalJ
saJd. No bodies had been found
by late Thursday, however.
Occupants of the hotel
jumped Crom second and third
story windows, to escape the
fire, but olficlala of Fairbanks
Community Hospltal aaid none
of the 10 penona treated there
suffered &eriou1 injury.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -In
1167, tbe 'year Elizabeth
Brtbm wa1 born, C.Ongreu
pt:Sltd a law requirlna
flameproofing standarda for
lblnp Jlke children'•
nJgbtwear.
When Ellubeth got I cotton .
nannelette n!gJllie for her
thin! birthday, there were still
no standard&. Put to bed at
ber uncle'• houae. Elizabeth
&r•bbed a. cuff link box off a
dresser. She lou~ a ctcarette
lighter Inside. II had no fiuld,
but tt apukt<l ellOllgb to bum
her nlghlie.
WORLD
SAVINGS
ISNOWOPEN
SATURDAYS
11,.T .......
OFFICIALS SEE FLAMl!·KAltRED CHILD
M,._ Brohm Hold• O.uthtor lll11Mth, 5
When her father got lo her,
ahe-wu engulft<l In flames.
The doclon tbouibt •be would
dlt but 1be dldn'l Two yean
and 30 operations I a t er ,
EllUbeth bu pn>blbly ml·
lered more pain than IDOi!
people endure tn a lifetime.
But obe'1 walkill( ap!n, and
Thunday she Wa\kt<l 0$ the
1t11e at the Commerce
Department auditorium and
1howt<l her IClr• to five
government. ofOc:iall who are
conalderill( an lndUl!ry pell.
t.loo to -the ..... llamtproofinc llandardl lor
cblldnn'1 nil!>hffar.
The Brlilma bove filod a
SU million IUlt In f•al
court oplnat Ille waver and
Ille nitailer ol tho aarment.
Commencing February 19, our
Regional Olfice In Laguna Beach,292
Sou1h Coast Highway at Forest Ave·
nue, 494-9481, will be open Saturdays
from 10:00 A.M. to 4:0Q P .M.
TheM added~ hot.11•1 are for our cu&-
tomers who work Monday ltlrough Friday
ond who we<11d lilt to condoc:t their ftnancial
-in the illaJroly-al the -••
The compromise was sup-
ported by a oomblnation of
liberal1 and moderates, many
of w horn said they hoped It
would allay much of the con·
cem a bout 00.lng
lt111••M1fic•'4 e M•tl•r ch•rt• ' '••"'i•11 111.,.1:',.:.,., ••• ,.,., ........ ,,
'
-------
FIRST 'QUALITY
IN OUR PARKING LOT
SAT. AND SUN. ONLY
1 GAL.
c
• FERNS , • AZALEAS
AND MANY MORE
TROPICAL VARIETIES ro CHOOSE FROM
JCPenney
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24 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH ONl.l
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• DAO.. Y PO..OT EDITORIAL PAG! • ti
Fixed .Terms Needed
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·IM . "" H
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A prnpo'sal that the Laguna lleach City Council
adopt some logical policy regarding terms of oflice for
plannlna commissioners could, ii followed through , hll
of grea( service In establishing continuity o! e!!ort !or
the comqilssion. ·
· In the past, planning commlsSlon appointments
have ca;rled no sptcific tenure, the ap~intees serving
.. lone .. they !ell like coeing with the Job, or the coun·
ell felt like keeping them m office.
ln the past several years1 planning comrnlssioners
have been . in and ouL of Office like yo-yos, one
appointee serving only a few weeks be.fore tendering
hi.a resignation. And. the last city council election was
fo.Uowed immediately by dismissal of an entire com·
mission -quite permissible under existing policy.
Wltb the .establishment of fixed terms, staggered
to provide continuity, appoiqtees could· be expected to
agree to 1 given term of service and a change in council
lnljotity could not result In wholesale dumping o! ex·
perfenced commissioners. '
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San Clemente's Growtl1
' San Clemente, like the r~st o! the Soutb Coas\,
finds itself facing runaway growth, armed· only with a
master 'plan and zoning that wi)I ·probably require a
new deep Study: ·• ·
Within the city, thousands of acres or undeveloped
ranch land now Jie in the bands of out-of-state universi·
t~s which ha!e planned to earn a profit. from the prop-
erty. · ·
Tbat ~ail 1 only mean large-scale development.
Thousands of those acres are a blank !pot on the
tlty general plan, yet will be on the market soon.
Coupled with the looming problem ·is the prospect
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o! adding ptrbaps ·five new. elements to the general
plan, Including -.n environmental segment.
The city's small planning stall already Is ·swamped
with workaday tasks of processing new development In
the city. There IE no time le!t to conduct an adequate
planning study.
Councilmen recently agreed to hire one new plan·
ning aide to help with the load.
But with what is looming, one new man might not
be enough.
A General Guideline
For a time during the intermediate discussions of
the land use element of Laguna's general plan, it ap-
peared that the entire docllment, like so many ~eneral
plans in so many communities, could easily wind up
on ·some dusty city hall shell.
While .. proponents and opponents or community
growth wrangled over Whether a population projection
o! ·20,000 would be more acceptable than a !igure of
28,000, planning commission studies of ·dependent ele·
ments -notably open space and hillside development
-\vere ·teft more or less up1in the air.
After a great deal o! word·and·flgure-juggling,
the commission and council at last have reached an ac·
cor.d, coming to the rather obv1ous conclu.sion that any
estimate of the city's 1990 population can hardly be
more than a general guideline and &hould be reviewed
at least annually.
The rest of the land use, element seems acceptable
to all and it now appears that ultimate adoption, and
implementation of an authentic general plan may be
more than a dream.
Triunaph for Kissinger, Too
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S;
n
of
Y• n
Sj
E s.
Warming. Up the Chinese
Miss Christie
Abandons Her
PEKINp, CHINA -For a few hours In
b1 the capital or the Chinese P<i>pte'a
sli Republic it looked u , if President .Nixon
t ~ had gotten off to • p0or start on his' Mian i 81 Peace Mission. lfis reception at the
! tt •irpott was correct but cool, and there
F were no ' crowds to
t sJ>eak .of' enroute to
; b the guest house
: 11 where he was put up • for his ftve<loy visit. ! h There were si,ens
1 that Nixon was dla-
: appointed by his re-
' Jt ception. The outlook
:0°1
1 q u I ck I y chang!'I
I when Chalnnan Mao
15' receiv'ed blm' for an hour's talk im·
I YI med~ly after his arriv.,1, 11 was cer--
1 ~ taln!J' _due Ill American President, and fit Premier Chou En·Lll put oQ I St.ate din-
Jl:. ner Jn ~he soaring Great Hall of the Peo-
ple which baa been the staging area of so ·
much revolutkmlry endetivor since it was
t built in the massive Teln An Men Square
jn, 1951-1951.
NO DOUBT SOME lies have been told
in the Great Hall, •S they have been in
many other government centers of the
world, but nothirig would be~ tnore
t1minou1 than tiavtnc wblt Chou En-Lei
and Nl>on talked Jtioot turn out tO ~
• I £alse. ~ :,,.
:-. •• ~ ~ .t' ~:
The way they acted, L'I much .as what
tbey said, indicat.ett a clear intention on
the part or both to create a new and con·
structl~e· rolalloilahli> between tbe two
huge 111:tions OD OPSIO'tle aides of the
Pacific. the plain truth Is they don't
know wblt thlt relation!hip will be ex-
cept that it thaD t.nd bostWUes and pro-
vide Ume fer tht totutlon or seemingly in-
:>i)' ,. ' t -.:)l ;~ Richard Will' 110D _,. ;f: ~ .. ~ '\
soluble problems.
IT WAS A TRIUMPH for Dr. Henry A.
Kissinger, tbo, and h~ sat practically pur-
ring whUe Nixon an~ Chou En·Lai pro-
claimed for all the world to hear . their
joint intentions or ending ·the era. Of
Chinese-American collision. Dr. Kissinger
had arranged it .u,,,and the ~ig ·gcene
was 'stage-managea e1act1Y "°· h11 ex·
pectatiOOs,fincludlng the1 discussion with
Chairman Mao right 1t \he hegl!llllng.
American official! had been. wo rried
about ·subtle hints 'from Ollnese of-
ficialdom that the President of the United
States could ·not be treated with any more
than formal respect and certainly not
with enthusiasm accorded China 's friends
from Africa or other parts or Asia.
"YOU OUGHT TO aee what we "Can do
in the way of receptions when we have
diplomatic relations with a friendly COUJ)o
try," one Chinese official said. Others
took the .line that the foreign office mere-
ly arranged for such visits. The
••government," Jt was said, decide4 such
matters as the warmth aod site of
organized ·receptions ..,..hlch have been
staged beautUully in the past.
In this case "the government" decid(d
to play it cool while giving Nixon e.xactly
what he wanted in the-form of high level
respect •nd the expressloni of lofty
aspirations, but without commitments on
such big problems as, the future of
Taiwan and the contlirulns Americ11n
military presence in Asia.
Nixon is spending the next several days
trying. ~ warm up the Chinese by such
Nixonian tactics as miiiJJg with the of-
fia.ial guest's sitting at round tables in the
Great .HaJI and sippinj innumerable
toasts with them from a tmy glass wh1ch
barely wet his lips.
' CHOU EN-LAJ sits through this kind of
thin~ imperturbably. like one American
pOliJician watching another pulling off
crowd.pleasing stunts.
A· great ·many Americans who are
watehln! Nix!)n's perfonnaoce' In Peking
find .it hard ;ta believe. They . pinch
themsel es to ·_make sure they1 are not
dreaming that "Nixon is frate~zing 'in a
great Cqmmunist power center, and that
It is ' really the arch-revolutlonaries Mao
and , Chqu witb whom this Oiice great
champion of·anti.eommunism· ls rubblilg
shoulders and exchanging toasts.
TO SUCH AMJ;;RICANS Peking is a
klnd or stage set. anyway, as lf dra.wo
from a revolutionary opera depicted in a
picture magazine. But it is a!l true·-·the
uniformly blue-clad populace on bicycles..
the· art form 0£ huge revolutionary
slogarus emblazoned in red Chinese
characters against tile drab background
or the mid·winter Asiatic scene:
And it was all true that Nixon ~ in the
Great Hall of the People on Teln An ~fen
Square With the hit:~he!t o£ficlals of the
Communist hierarchy who have lm))O!td
upon a nation of at least 700 million an
organizational infrastructure based upon
every principle Nixon is against.
The Chinese orcheatr.-played expertly
"America the · Beautiful" whilt Nixon
mingled with the members of Cho En.
La.i's power structure, and what could be ·
a better opening scene than that?
t
~ ·• i:e :. • Cr
They ·May Make Us All Sick
r-The 8udw1111: It's definitely a ~, polit~ year, acc.:onful.g ~ publishers' ·: atak>gues. and we ma1 be as sicll: of the
boob ,as n are· tbi rhetoric before
~ Novemba'. A 1ampllna, and this just Ior
:. aprinc:
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!~ GOU: VIDAL, professional Democrat :1 iod author of j'Myra Breckenridgt."
amm«i other titles, joins Philip Roth
("'Our Gang") and the: movie "Millhouse:
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A lihlle eom.dy" In atlempUng to
-Ult inClmlbenl Pmi<\enl. "A• 1: ...... 'lllllll lllcUnl NIHo,• (Random) u tho ten fll Yodal"s pla7, apparently
dtJDe m a •"'TMs ls Your Lile" format.
Bued .., Mr. -'I own •crda from
... --pollllcal ... ,..
•a•ICOAIT
DAILY PILOT
-"· 'll'nd, P'll>l#llv ,,_. ic-.µ;ro.-
AJ&m 1'.'-· r•1t1W,.,. £<ldor
-.. --., ... o.a,. ,., ...... -... •lhu· --·-·-£[ SI S ta ......... and ~
• I ...... fl.illlwt _.
... , g ... .,. ,. ...... '°""" .. ap• 111• fll_ ow rnnf d ...,.,. ,._..,. ...
.., ........ "' lnfor11H!d .. _,., ... JS JI ,,. ... • '°fib .. .,. .... .
~. rellnlary 25. 1m
Washington reporter Jqseph Albright
(Dodd) is a generally unflattering run-
down on the Vice President's career.
"Splro Agnew's Amertc1," by Theo Lipp.
man Jr. (Norton ), is a friendlier
analysis of his professional development.
"Wlllle Knight' The Riie of Spin>
Agnew," by Jules Wltcover (Random).
examine~ the "C09tradlctions" Jn bis
personality.
''TED XENNWY' Triumphs and
TragedltJ," by Lester David (Grosset ),
it a composite portral\ drawn from many
lntttvitws with the Sen.at<r's frif:nds and
!oea. "11le -too If l!'.dnnf Kt .. _,,,., bf Bwton Hersb (Morrow l. is
bolh a biocr•phy ond on 1oalyll1 of lhe
Kemtd1 eaptrieoce In Amutca .
"'>kGOVEllN," by Robert Sem Anson
(llollL ..umlnes the cmer ol Jhfs""" or
• 5oalll DUola mlnlllcr Wm birth lo hls
-..Scandldaq.
'"THI LAST Of' the Cold War
Ubcrala" ii 1 look at the. c1rta and
pOlltlcal ctdo fll Senalor Henry W. . ......,, J..._ by the team of Wllllam
~ md Richard W. Larson (Pren-
IDI •
~ IJNJ'INISHE1> JOUltNEY." by
Srnllor Edmund S. Muskie llloobleday),
"""'"" tbt Moint DomocraUc Senator's oo lriJ ramUy, environment,
JIOfm1. citiu, ....-11t1<s 1111t Km-
MQl, lllsmpbrq, MiU lfJnl6eld. Golda
Meir, Nasser, etc.) ..
"ALMOST TO THE PRESIDENCY, A
Biography of Two Americans," by Albert
Eisele (Piper), looks over the live• and
careers of Hubert Humphrey and Eugene.
McCarthy, their common origins and con-
Unuing rivalry.
"TUE McCLOSKEV CHAU.ENGE,•
by Lou Cannon (Dutton), !J a biography
of the maverick GOP Congressman and
Nixon critic. It follows McCloskey'& own
book, "Truth and Untr1111 , PoUtlcol
Deceit lD America" (Simon '-Schuster/.
AND PAT PAULSON'S "Ro• to Wa1e
a Sucees1fuJ Campalga for the Pretktft..
cy" (Nash) is billed u a handbook buecl
on the idea "You can rool all or the pe&-
ple some of the time."
William Uo1u
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Will the carrierw of lh• Ed Lorr
recall petition also c\tCUl1tt both
sides of the story! Probably not.
They,.n seJdom bl·factual, or even
unl·l•ctual.
-A. N. M.'
11111 ... ..,. rttft(ft ,..,,,,,, ...... ..
__..., ................. 191111
......................... pt ...
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True Metier
En route to a plane. I detoured iri tht
airport · long enough kl pick up a
paperback book for the flight. Seeing a
new Agatha Christie, J bought :u ori .the
fly, boarded the plane, and settled down
for, a ·good read. • · Que.Be catastrophe aetlane! A!
Hercule Poirot would be the first to ex-
claim. For in · this
book, called "Pas-
senger · to Frank-
furt ," Mii.s Christie
hu onlY one · Victim
-the unwitting read-
er who imagined be
'Yas getting: a mys-
tery story.
Jn this perfectly
dreadful ''extra-
vagan1.a." .u she calls it, ~ti.ss
Christie has abandoned the field in which
she is superlative , to engage in a spy
story or incredible witlessness, dealing
with a worldwide plot by "youth" to
overthrow lhe established order.
AS A GREAT fan of Miss Christie's in
the past, I found it hard to believe that
lhe same person wrote . this farrago of
nonsense; eicept th!tthere are too many
similar instances in literature and the
arts generally, where masters in one
Corm become dubs in another. And it
usually happens when they try to be more
ambiUous than they should.
·Jn this case, .Miss Christie ls obviously
so alanned by the current turbuience in
the world lb.at her own fears and horrors
have impinged on her dramatic senu, ·and ·
she has confused the reality with fic-
tion.
something of the same sort happened
to Sir Conan Doyle, who became con.
vinced that h!J Sherlock Holme! stories
were trivi.aJ, and wrote a number of
mediocre .. serious" novels that he felt
would immortaliu him.
IN MUSIC, Sir Arthur Sullivan felt
derilgraled by being 10tely ldent~led \fith
Gilbert11 C6mlc operas, and did som.e
solemn things on his own that merely
pointed up his second-ratednes1 as a
"great" composer.
Even the magnificent Henry Jam.es
came 1 cropper when be abandoned flc-
Uon for the theattr, and wrote some
plays that were, quite rightly, booe<I off
the London stage.
IOne of lhe few men who learned his
lesaon fut was Bernard Shaw, who beian
bis wrlUng career with five perfectly
awlul novels, and never ag•in wrote
another one after he became a successful
dramat!Jl).
JN OUR OWN TIME, Leonard Beni-
ate1n Is an embarrassing example •of1 a
talent who wlll not let well entJllgh alone;
a splendid oonductor, and • modish com·
poser of ucdlent popular scores, he
keeps trying to write "important" music
w hlch aucceeds oni, In being hollow and
prelentious. .
Alter to-some book• In the lll)'&lery
field, Mill Cbrill!1 1n111 bt )ll.!l!ilably
Ured of ptnnlng ttJtse , c r y p t I c
amuiements: but then ~ho thould retire,
and ~ot lnnlct upon her lar~e audience
art okl woman's conateroatKla at our
chaos, our criminality and out cult of
youth. Jant Marple would have ilnow•
bottar thaa lo step oUI ol chancier.
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Jaycee Sets the
Record Straight
To the Editor :
I take slrong exception to your recent
article concerning the Laguna Beach
Jaycee Dart Tournament. Your reporter
inferred that the Jaycees disregarded
lhe fire marshal's warning concerning
the crowd capacity of the Riviera Room
or the Hotel Laguna.
to set the reCt>rd straight, there v•as a
complaint filed with the fire deparlrrient
concerning the crowd Saturday. The fire
marshal came. to the tournament Satur-
da'y evening and met with tile president ~
Qf the Jaycees arid the hotel manager,
and advised them there were too many
peOple in the room. Since the events were
almost completed for the evening he
allowed us to finish the matches.
ON SUNDAY morning, the fire marshal
met the hotel inanager, · tournRment
chairman, l\fld the president or the
JayCffS. He told ~em that the room
capacity was lirniled fo 170 pe!"lple:
Everyone agreed to control the crol\·d.
The Jaycees established monitors at
the outsi<l_e entrance and turned away
spect.Btors when the room reached
capacity. The Jaycees also set up tables
and chairs outside the hotel on the beach
to enable players to sit outside while
awaiting their matches. 'l'he entrance lo
the dart board . areas were roped orf to
control the now of the crowd.
BEING TilE tournament announcer for
the entire event, J "8.nnounced before the
start of the events on Sunday that we
were limited to a capacity or 170 people
in the room. T advised the participants to
cooperate and to circulate between the
Riviera Room and the practice area
upstairs. Continued announcement.s were
made throughout the day.
At no time Sunday were there 300 peo-
ple in the Riviera Room as your reporter
indicated. Nor did any or our toufnament
officials tell yo"ur reporter there were 300
peaple in the. Riviera Room al any one
time.
THE JAYCEES hsve always
cooperat~ complet.ely with an the city
· ofticlals In our projects. '!t did cooperate
with the fire marshal Sunday when he ad·
vised us of the problem.
lt is a shame that after countless hours
of voluntary efforts on lhe Part of the ·
· Jaycees to set up and run a tournament
whose prQCeeds are used to further com·
munlty projectl, you~ reporter has cast
1111 In ·a bad light by inrerrlng we refused
to cooperate with the fire marslla1. M
has been explained above, this .... not
lhe truth.
JIM LAWLER
She Wa• Olltra11esl
To the Editor :
I attended a board of educaUon
mettin" last 1\lesday. To my dismay, l
hid to lloten wllh unbelieving ears to the
debate that raged between oor eauca1or1
and parllcularly three of lhe board
members thal suppt)ledly represent our
community.
l tried attentively to underwlaod Mr.
'll>omu, Mn. Giilette and Capt. Llnke's
point ol •lew, but lo no avail. Perhaps
nfll"l Ume they wlll enlighten me oo their
anll..,Jl"'lmenlal ettltudet.
WHAT CllFTRAGED me, lhouah. at this
meeting wu hurlng about people wbo
entered, our IChooiJ Incognito. l find It ap.
paUing that anyont, even thole In op.
poaltlon lo the ocbool programs, would be
oo lnaenaltlve u to disrupt the t .. chera
·and studenta 11 we.U 11 bre•t the law.
4 1ehool should not perm~ unaulhoriz.
eel peoplf lo mlll .... nd school rroun<b
and clHaea. P1ttnls ond l<hool peraoooel
1hould be CODCtrned about lbe Mletf of
I
Mailbox
'.
Letttr.s 1rom readers att wtlcomt.
Nornwlly w riters sl1ould convt11 thtir
n1t:ssages tn JDO u:ords 01' lt:u. The
riUh• to co11denst: l!'.:ttt:ri to fit space
or clhninatt 1ibel U reserved. All let.
ters must includt sii11iatt1rt and maif,.
tng addres1. Out flames may ba tofth--
htld on rtqutst if su fficient rtOlon
is apparent. Poeiru wtll not be pul>-
lished.
my child and .every Jll~er chlld.
110\\1 DARE nlESE people. whoever
they are, jeopardize the children by
beha ving in a crimi1\3l fashion~ I
respecUully ask all involved in the past
episodes to please nave more co~
s.ideration in the future.
MRS. GLORIA R. GINSBERG
San .Juan'• Groacl.h
To the Editor :
Much discussion has taken place lately
as to the fact the citlzerus are Up!:tt over
the too-rapid gro\vlh of San Juan Capi~
trano. ··
The landowners think , of course, that
the faster development takes place, the
sooner they can · get rid of their lax·
burdened acres. And, they are certainly
tax-burdened.
However. has. everyone £orgotten that
lhi! city ha! a zonina available, called
R-1 (single family )?
THE ~fAJORITY of the rtcimt zone
changes and developmenbl have been
towards hi g-h-d ens I ty types ot
development.
Perhaps the candidates for !he up-
coming council eleetf9n •hook! pubitcly
state their true feelings as to the reetnt ~~
zoning and, building trends going on in our
city, so that the cltliens can make sure
their dulret: are represented at council -t
level.
CHUC]( Au.EN ,.
llolm Offered Iler Job .:i
·10 the Editor :
Jt has been publicly Inferred ln Laiun• i ..
Beach that Councilman Roy Holm had I
never considered appointing: a woman to '""!
the . ~ncll or the plaMlng commW10t1 !
prior to councilman Ed Lbrr'a election to
the council.
Please allow me lo aef tlle record I
straight on lbe above polnL During Mr. 1
Holm's lenure on the. council (11118-70) •
there wu a vacancy on the planning
commluion 11blcb Mr. Holm asked me U
I would be lnterated In fl!lln(. I thank-
ed hl.m vuy kfndly and declined. M7 com-4
mttments to my family and to my actlvo
rolO In civic ond school orpnlzationl
would have 1ett me too lllllo limo sod
· eotrgy to servo Oil the planning ~
mllSion.
\JOHNA I. DEMETIUADES 1
Dear Georgo:
You are an anlf..woman dos,
• saying women can't do 1oyllllnc
right!
Dear GJorl1'
GLORIA
Th11t'1 "anlJ.ltomao pl1." Shipe
up, G.lorla.
• CS:nd your innermost problems
to George. Why kt<p 1 """'t •hen
JOU can blab It around!)
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·, L. 1tl. Boyd
Split After 40,
He'll Play Agai11
''Divorce Is not al"•ays In error; but aiways In
nrror ii what Ole divorced dream tbey will do next. I)
Arnold Wbldby
If ' the man is d·ivorced be{ ore age 30, it 's likely he'll
m~rry. again pp>mptly. But if ·he's divorced after age 40,
he s mQre' apt ·to postpone furiher matrimonial plans.
Such Were the finds in an extensive study of broken mar·
riai:es. The young fellow it's said,
thinks he made a mistake he can fix
right now. But the nUddl~ge:t. ma~4 appears to want one !'nllre cracll: at
the nightclub circuit. Jfe tends. to take
a lively interest in fancy females Jn
low-cut gown19. He may even allow
him self to be referred to for a time as
''Daddy."
--' _"'" .
'· , ""' :a r \~~ \v.1
. . . A. PENGUIN is stueid. Toss a
hye fish on the ground in (ront of such a bird and said
bird won't even recognize it as food. Yet wiggly fishes
plucked out of the water, are just about all a penguin·
eats. ·
THAT FELLOW up in Everett. Wash .. who checks up
on all the claims herein , has written again. Good. I've
m1~ him. All right, it's a fact you can get 26 million
bubbles out of a pound of soap. Certainly would like to
watch htm work this one out. ·
HUNTER -He "always gets his buck. this Montana
hunter. His trick, he writes is as follows : "I find me a
likely tree and hang in it a gallon jug full of apple juice
upside down with a little hole punched in the lid. That's
the night before. Next day the deer will show they'll be
there.·•
Q. "\\'HAT kind of wood makes the best butcher's
block?"
A. American sycamore . I'm told.
Q. "HOW MANY times does the average person fall
in love before marriage?"
A. Seven limes, insist the experts. Don't know, that
sounds high.
THE HARO FACTS -Ask 100 people how often they
visit their dentists. and 88 will say once a year. However,
the dental records show only 40 really do.
EXACTLY 137 of the marriages performed In Nevada
last year were annulled within a week of the wedding cere·
monies. Analysts blame liquor. ·
AN ·IRRITATED client who just Ounked his real estate
license examination ask! how man y citizens do likewise.
About 38 out of every 100 who .take the test don 't cut it.
"REDHEA DS are livelier," reported old Cedric Adams.
He based this claim on the studies of a London dentist.
"Blondes go under anesthesia the most readily, average
52 seconds. Dark·haired people take 62 seconds. But the
dear little redhead! resist for 68 seconds."'
Address mail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Box J875, New-
port Beach 92660.
•
Construction of Pipeline
'3 Months to Year Away'
WASHINGTON !UPI I · -
Construction on the Trans·
Alaska oil pipeline may still be
a year away. Interior
Secretary Rogers C.B. Morton
says. 1
However, Morton said, con·
struction could begln In about
thre~ months if court action
on a conservationist challenge
to the project ends soon.
1'-1orton made the statements
in testimony before an ap-
pr o priations subcommittee
headed by Sen. Alan Bible, ([)..
Nev.),
The secretary said an en-
vironmental impact repcrt re-
quired under the National
Environment.al Policy Ac t
would be sent to the council on
environmental quality by the
end of March.
A permit to build the $2
billion pipeline to carry oil
from Prudhoe Bay to the ice-
free port o! Valdez then could
be issued after -1 3().day
waiting period.
The enviro.nmental repcrt
has been changed substan-
tially, Morton said, in line with
a court order obtained by con·
servationists seeking to halt
construction of the pipeline.
Asked by Bible when con-
struction m1ght begin, Morton
said It depended on the courts
If the final decision was to
grant the permit. If appealed ,
Morton said, the project
"could be started in a year" if
approved by the courts.
If approved in a lower court
and oot appealed, Morton said,
the start of · cOnstructioli
"could be getting down to
three months."
Pacilic Goldfish Farm . '
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pl11mb;n9 "''''''"'' m•d• of touoh 10110 l•tll/19 pl•1llc,
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F .. em1n1sts
Suffer
No-hail Drive Launched DeeP,W:!ll Ranch in
Palm Sgrings. . " One of the Nations
finest investments.
'
Younger to Seek Rehearing of Deatli Pena~y Ba1i , Setback
l!ACRAMENTO (UPI) T w o
Republican> have launched an uphlll
drive in th e Democratie-control1ed
legislature to prtvent defendants such as
Angela Davis and Juan Corona from
beina: freed on bail during their trials.
~feantime, Atty. Gen. EveUe Younger
says he will seek a rehearing of tht state
Sapreme Court's historic ruling to abollsh
the death penalty.
He told a news conlerence Th1.1rsd1y he
will seek the hearing on grounds that
such a decision properly belqed to the
state legislature.
U)'I Tti.~elt
I! necessary, the stale wW 1ppt1! lhe
case to the U.S. Supreme c.ourt, Younaer said. "We're not goiJli to play dead."
In both houses of the leplature,
Republican> Introduced proposed con-
stitutional amendment.a to deny ball to
persons charged with crimes punlsh1b1e
by life imprisonment without poulblllty
of pat(
A spiooff of the court's landmark
decision wu to revoke the prohlbltk>n
against the granting of ball to person11 ·~
cused of capital crlmes. •
Miss DaVis was freed on $101,500 bail
Wednesday. The attorney for accused
mass murderer Juan Corona has made a
similar motion for his client. Corona is
accused of murdering 15 migrant workers
last spring.
Jf the anUbail legislation by
Ammblyman E. Richard Barnes (R-San
Diego) and Sen. H. L. Richardson (R~
Arcadia), now were Jaw, Miss Davis
could not have been released on bond.
"l don't thlnX that she is safe at all to
have on the streets," said Richardson,
who also introduced a package of bUls to
mandate life in prison without possibility
of parole for felons convicted of crimes
previously punishable by death.
Barnes agreed, "Gee whiz, I don't
know what's the matter with people tu~
ing that woman out." ·
SACRAMENTO (UPI)
The all·male stale Senate bu
handed t h ~ controversial
"Ms." blU Iii second setback
in thrte day1.
Th• bill by Sen. Mervyn
Dymally (P-Lo, Angeles),
would allow a woman to use
the prefir Ma. instead of Mias
or Mn. when she registers to
vote.
In addition it would require
that a man's name on a 1 voter
registration list and preeind
Inda be preceded by Mr. No
such prefir now Is required
foo men.
After a brief floor debate,
the Senate refused Thut!!lday
to approve a provision that
would enable the bill to
become law as soon as signed
by the governor and therefore
apply to registration of voters
this year.
The vote to approve the »
called "urgency" provision to
make it take effect im.
mediately was 25-i, two short
When you think of real estate investment, think
of DeepWell Ranch and P1lm Springs. You un
own a superb new condOmlnium or i.ndividu.;al
residence in that tabled l.;,and of Sunshine. Enjoy .
ir as a permanent home o< a desert retl'eat. It's
the easiest way In the world to ta"Ve money.
·And the most pleasant! Pillm Springs: where
su nshine bathes the airy~r·around. OeepWell
Ranch privacy is m.;aintained with a wa_lled
security entry. Enjoy swimming and tenn1~ Of
relalC in steaming therapy pools. All you ts W1th-
out work, since building exterior and ground
maintenance is provided. But hurry! Over SS'/1
million worth of DffpWell Ranch homes have
already been sold. Only 111 families will be
able to el'ljoy OeepWell Ranch irwestme,,t. Be
one of them! 2 & 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths. frot'ft
551 ,,SO fee simp~.
UeepWell llan.ch
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Write for complete ,inlorm11ion
E~st Palm Canyon Drive 1t DttpWcU R.o;wi
Pilm Springs, Qtifomia 92262
;'I don 't see any weeping or tears being '
shed for the widow of these victims of
murder," said the former Navy chaplain.
•;tf they're not executed, they should be
at least incarcerated for the rest of their
days."
Barnes said he didn't have "too much
confidence in getting the legislation
through the Assembly, but I'll do my
best."
of the necessary 27 votes. -~:::==========:::::::::::::::::::::~ Dymally said he will amend
u,1 T•~ 11;;:tb~•~ur~genc~y~c[la:u~se:fro:m:tb:•~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Posts Bo1acl bill and Hturn it for another
vote nert week. Rodger Alee, 33, Fres·
no area farmer, holds
bail agreement and
receipt he used in ob-
taining money to free
Angela Davis. He used
his farm as collateraJ. Assembly Speaker Bob Morelli
pointed out that a defendant is presumed
jnnocent until proven guilty and said Mis,., ----------11
Davis was entitled to bail. He added, "I ·ars
SEN. RICHARDSON SHOWS PRISON·MAOE HATCHET
Tells Pl1n for Eliminating Parole for Some Crim••
don't know that Angela Davis is guilty
and I don't think anyone else knows that
she is guilty."
Yowiger expressed doubt that Miss
Davis, accused of murder, kidnap and
Ma1i Held
l1i Churcli
Extortion . New Hampshire
conspiracy, would jump bail and flee
because she would stand. to lose "ex·
posure,'' "an audience" and financial
support for her defense.
EXCLUSIVE
McCloskeyHoardsCash Judges Demancl
Welfare Report
Froill Director
LOS ANGELES (UPI -A
66--year-old man who said he is
a Hungarian-born Jew is
charged with trying to extort
$13 miUion from the city's
largest synagogue by
threatening to bomb t h e
building.
SHOWING
at Sears Costa Mesa '
For One Large Splash Original Seascapes
by
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Some $50,000
in the red and running a tig!lt campaign,
Rep. Paul McCloskey of C811fomia has
hoarded his television and radio funds for
a budget blitz in the New Hampshire
primary which will begin after President
Nixon returns from China.
Oil Firms' Suit
On Drilling Ban
Sta11s Tuesday
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The suit of
four major oil companies challenging the
right of Interior Secretary Rogers C. B.
Morton to deny them drilling pennits in
the Santa Barbara channel is scheduled
for trial Tuesday in U.S. District Court.
The action was filed by Union Oil Co.
July 20 and joined by Texaco, Gulf and
Mobil Oil companies.
U.S. District Judge Francis Whelan will
near the bench trial (without a jury ), the
U.S. Attorney's office said.
The suit is among the litigation stem-
ming from UJe Jan. 29, 1969, blowout of a
Union Oil Co. drilling plaUorm in the
Santa Barbara channel which sent a vast
oil slick eight miles wide and 30 miles
tong flowing along the S o u t h e r n
Ca1ifornia coast in Ventura and Santa
Barbara counties, clogging beaches and
endangering wildlife. Last Nov. 25 the
four companies agreed tO pay heachfront
property owners more than $4.5 million in
uttlement of damage claim!.
Morton wilt be defended by Miles Flint
of the Justice Department's Land
Division in Washington and U.S. District
Attorney WilUam D. Keller.
Al Toffel, McCloskey 's young campaign
manager, said nearly $14,000' has been SAN FRANCISCO (UPl) -State
budgeted for television aild abOut $8,SOO Welfare Ch~ef Robert Carleson has 30
for radio for the final week in ·days to determine the huge but unknown
McCloskey's race against President Nix· price tag of a ruling by a panel of three
on and Rep ... John A'shbrook of Ohio in the federal judges.
GOP primary March 7. The judges said Thursay Carleson
AppearifliC with campaign spokesmen disobeyed a court order and directed him
for all candJdates In the New Hampshire to comply with due process before cutting
primary before the Washington Press aid to needy children.
ctub Thursday night, Toffel said $375,000 The panel stopped short of citing
has been raised. He saJd all of that has Carleson for contempt, as urged by the
been spent natkmally and the operating plaintiffs, but said his action was "at>-
deficit now stands at $50,000. dication of responsibility."
Toffel said McCloskey has slayed off Carleson was directed to report within • d 30 days on what he has done to make the air since 'I oo't see spending sure that the notices to welfare recipients
money" with Nixon's . China visit comply with requirements of due process.
blanketing all programs. He said "we He also was ordered to rescind all past
decided to put it all in the last week." determinations, suspensions or reductions
Jn response to a question, spokesmen in benefits without "full compliance''
for the other candidates gave some in-with previous court orders.
kling of their spending in the first·in·the--Th.e number of such cuts was believed
nation primary. to be large but was unknown to state of·
George Mitchell , deputy staff director ficials. The practices dilfered in each
to front-running Sen. Edmund S. 1\-fuskie county.
of Maine, said his camp will spend Carleson, the state director of social
"slightly less" than the $65,000 permitted welfare. was told to report to the court
in New Hampshire for media under an within 30 days just how great the ad·
agreement signed by a number of ministrative and financial burden on the
Marvin Von Steiner denied
1 any part in the plot when he
was picked up b'y police
.Thursday. On the contrary, he
said he orten attended the
services because it was "a
g<>O<t place to meditate."
The first extortion note,
demandlng $3 million. was
tacked to the door of the
Wiishire Boulevard Temple
two weeks ago, police "Said.
When it ·wa1 ignored, another
note appeared on the door ,
raising the demand ur $13
million.
One of the notes said a tun·
neJ would be dug under the
building and a bomb would be
detonated during the Jewish
holy days in the fan when the
synagogue would be filled with
worshipers.
Widow Free
In. Quarrel
Democratic hopefuls . state and counties would be because of
Mitchell said nationally "we're in the ruling Thursday. SAN DIEGO (AP) -Carole
the black ... we're having a difficult In Sacramento, Carleson insisted he McCune, the widow of
time raising money but we'll get by in all had complied with the requirements of millionaire Walker McCune, is
lhe primaries." due process when he instructed local back at her suburban home
Speaking for Sen. George S. McGovern welfare directors on how to serve proper here after a judge ordered her
of South Dakota, political director Frank not.ice to recipients that their aid was released from a hospital in tbt
ManldewiCJ said his Candidate would give being reduced or terminated. continuing legal battle over
a detailed account of conbibuUons Mon--"What the judges in effect are saying b the family estate.
day and urged other candidates to follow if I give an order to a county weliare Included in the estate is the
suit. He said about $800,000 to $900,000 director, it is my responsibility whether $&-million mamion McCune
has been raised. or oot he complies," he sai1f. built in Paradise Valley, just
Charlfs Roche, national campaign Under tenns or the new state welfare north of Phoenix, Ariz. 'M1e
manager for Sen Vance Hartke of Jn. reform Jaw, an estimated 100,000 families home features a 6 2 ·foot
diana said ·raising money is "l!ery dif· would have suffered reductions or marble.floored living room, an
ficult" and no "fat cats" are helping out. termination of their grants in the Aid to indoor ice rink, 26 bathrooms
Roche and Hartke will spend $35,000 to Families with Dependent Children and a JZ..Car garage. It has
Edward Barton
AMERICA'S FINEST
SEASCAPE ARTIST
Saturday
and
Sunday
February 26 & 27
Sears Costa Mesa
wu,,wics-e11. 3333 Bristol StreeL PARK FREE
$40,000 m New Hamps~hl;n;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;(AF;;;DC;;:);p;r;ogr;;;am;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ne;•;•;r;bee;;;n;oe<;;;u;p;ied;;.;;;;~!;;;;;:;;;;;;;;i;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:::~
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.-~--~--~~~~~~-QUEENIE
• "TU. a nille chau.W.t boss memo.''
Only Coast & Southern offers savers all three:
• 6% two to live year guaranteed certlllcat••·
• Saturday Service. •Th• Insiders Club.
Effective 5.00%·5.13% Passbool<. No minimum.
Annual 5.75%·5.92% One Vear C.rtifieat• $1.000 Minimum.
Earnings 6.00%-6.18% Two 10 Five VwCertiflcates $5,000 Mlnimom.
Up to 90 days loss of Interest on .amounts withdrawn
before maturity on all certificate accounts.
The Insider> Club: A new way to beat inflation. Its rnemt>er>hlp C¥d
permit• you to buy neorly everythina you need from the finest closed-
door showrooms at substantial savings-appUanCes, rurniture, stereo
equipment, sportin& aoods, draperies and much, much more.
You can ev@n buy e1rs at the. 'jfleet"price and mobile homes and
motorcycles at substantlal·savlngs. The lnaiders Club alao provides
big discounts on llclo!ls to sport Ins and entertainment events •.•
plus a whole list of frft services: safe dej)Olit bao<es, money order>,
travelers checks, notary services and'the UM of document
duplie1tin1 equipment.
Membership reqilln!mont for savers-$2,500 minimum balance.
Coast borrowers now NCelW assocl•fll ,,.,.,,,.,.,...,,. entltlln11hem
to all oulolde r1fern!l W\'lce•. Ask about folnlrw t1111y Coast office.
(
..
ANIMAlogk 1r '"'"" Enlistments Fail to Meet •• Little Cigars Making Big Surge
All-voluntee1· Army Goals WASllING'l'ON (AP) -11"M! foreshadow a new fight over December compared wltb C.l
tobacco Industry I.! manufac-the UtUe tlsar, which ao. bllilon Ip Dectlnbtr of ll'IO.
turing fewer cigarettes while tismoklng roret3 have labeled But the ownber of small
sharply lncreulng producUon "a cigarette in brown paper." cigars rose to 160 mllllon from
WASHINGTON (AP) -by mld·J973. cept, including acme t n of small cigars, a report by 111e llltlc cigar not only i~ the II.I million In Dteember
Despite two big pay raises and He said 70 pereent of today's C.Ongreu who predicted that the lnternal Revenue Service ex1.1mpt from the fedtral ban 1970,
choice asalgnments in Europe enlistees are true volunteers, !th th d 1 [Cf.J~lrln Sho\vs. on televised cigarette ad-In the sis montba that ended and Ha ti th Ar w out e ra t thl!i Army • .... I'll! th t wa • e my can't compared with 1u• percent two •-U In one month alone, last vertlslng but Is taxed at a Oecemu.:;:r , e repor m .. t tis l'·tm t 1 • w would 1.1oi:: composed of mos f-J~~~~=:.;la! ed tha the •··• ad en u:i en quota or years ago. Twelve percent December. production or 1mall lower rate than are clgarctlts. not t uiuwilry m e the COmbat b • h th the poor and the black. 0 -,,1 r , 1 _ th ... blltlo 1. t•·· r nc ea, e more high school graduates flclals S:Jld 12 percent of the ~~~, , . . ") .. ~~~·: cigars more than doubled over Dul the report sho\vs e -·• n c .. are wo.
moat-critical need in an all-enlisted last year than in 19'10, t · .,.ft '' :)." --'.--''t<l~ December lf10 whlle the num-s1nn ll ciuar still ls a lon° way Product.Ion of small cigars Volunteer r volunteer3 are back, about .J -"Ji.J. .I ~ 11 m Orce. replecting an improvement in the same proporUon as before tN'.if:.i...,.,~ r .,. ... _ ber of cigarettes manufac-!ro1n replacing the clgar~tte. ju~ from 457.l m Ion in
Although erillatments rote mental skills. the drive to raise an all· .. 1 POM'"T CAlll 1~ You~;~ ,.. tured actually declined . the IRS said the tobficcu in-the last sll months of 1970 to
dramatically in 1971, the Kelley also toolc i!.sues with volunteer force was begun la.st GARTER SNA.kf-DON'T'eNAP ... report said. dustry manufactured l 9 . 8 681 million Jn the last half of
ductlon loll In the tut hall ol
I'll! lo U blUlon, compared
with l .5 billion In the 1111 llall or 1rro.
Charges already hive bHa
made on Clpllol HUI !hit the
lobacoo lnduatry I.! ottempltns
to circumvent the ban oa
cigarette odvertltlni b 1
pushing the 1m11l cliar-
KIDS W\''E
UNCLE LEN general who oversees the critics of the volunteer con->tT ME.. .. The s tat Is t l c 1 nu1iy billion c I g a.re t t es last 1971 . But larse-clgar pn>
Army's recruiting efforts say·f-~~:::;:;;;;;;;;~~::;Y•;a;:r·====.:=====~~;;;======:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;::;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;:;;::;:::;:=;:::;:;;;:::;::;::::;:;;1--tbe. Army was unable to !Ill Its.I
5,000..rnan monthly quota of 'I .,.
volunteers for the inlantry, , I
armor or artillery.
"Even In Janu ary, the best
recruiting month, with an all·
out recruiting effort, with the
new pay scale and choice of
geographic assl1nment, we
fell 1,327 men shOrt or our
goal, 11 says Maj. Gen. Albert
H. Smith.
"I asaure you, nothing could
have been done except to
1sacrlflce quality," he said ln
~an Interview.
. Smith contende enlistments
would pick up considerably tf
the Army could begin paying
the '3,000 combat b on u 1
·authorized by Congress 111t
'fall as part of the draft-a·
tension act. But Secretary of
Defense Melvin B. Laird has
been reluctant to put it to use.
The bonus would go to any
man enlisting in the combat
arms for three years.
· Laird. who will detennlne
whether to use the bonus, told
an interviewer he Is waiting to
see effects of the new pay
raises -the first went Into ef-
fect into November, the se-
cond Jan. 1-which doubled a
recruit's pay to $288 a month.
The Army wants the bonus put
Jnto effect next month.
Smith s a i d preliminary
volunteer figures fr o m
February are short of the
Army's objectives ,
foreshadowing Pf9bletn5 for
March , April and May, usually
the leaner recrulUng months.
Army enlistments in the
combat arms reached a
monthly peak of 4,021 In June ,
plunged lo l,111 In Octobtr
and climbed back to 3,671 in
January. For the year, the
number of men voh\J'lteering
for the combat branches total-
ed 26,874, up from 1,200 per-
cent from 3,106 in 1970.
In testifying before the
House Armed Service& com-
mittee, Pentagon manpower
chlef Roger Kelley cited the
Improvement as one of the
"further Signs of progress
t o w a r d an all-volunteer
force," whlch t h e ad-
mlnlltraUon hopes to achieve
Proxmire
Cites Ne'v
CSA Waste
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -
Sen. William Proxmire, (D-
Wla.), says he haa new evi-
dence that the controversial
CSA mllltary cargo plane pro.
gram Is still being "grossly
mllmangcd" by the Lockheed
Aircraft Corp.
He said a recent govern-
ment study at Lockheed's pro-
duction assembly areas show-
ed that nearly l~ percent of
the employea were either Idle
or missing from their jobs.
., An audit by the General
AC<.'Ollnting Office p r o v e s
beyond any question that the
CM program Is still being
gn>!!Iy mismanaged," Prox-
mire said in a statement.
"The audlt. ... showed that
about 8.6 percent of the
employes we.rt klle and that
an additional 1.2 percent of the
employer' were absent from
their \\'Ofk statiOl'll."
'
·"
' . ' _. 31 f' llft1-SIPBOR
l&Lft. • " -Tllit bra11 ftolllwttb tbe
ll!lle lu""Y head on It.
'tWi1t witb the ting•••· no . ~tinv. •/}II• lnkle•,r darl.llol J!cii, r •
. ' .,,
·~·-
•a.oo PANELING
Does the kids room need rM!olng
agciln? We hav• a new 1hlpment of
pan91fln Briar ~alnut. Golden Oalr
and Snowdrift.
2'J.
DIM R
SWITCH
Hows your love
lite? Hcn"ing more
lit• hut eDJoying·
it 1111? Our wall
mount dltnmer
switch can •witch
your mood to
· romdnUc. ·
• ••
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D11 thlfl PVC sprtnk\er Ll_c_ LCTI. plp,e -lbllr .....
I'. 'x!O'. fuM wltb aome
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•
ZIMCPLAmi -SPmllJO
9EUS ~~~CaltlaCrillk p..._ lprlaldet ....
whn k• wa a kid INt
USY TRIM .·
IPBlllLD
VflDDIEI
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Lanrt Ziao p)ated
aprtDldor hoado 1/4, 1/2 •
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OUT
ltl ,,
l27c • . . . . . . . lf.t "x IO'
• ·' '
You don't have to go to Boulder to
'get 1imulated brick or roc:lr: garden
edging. Whats mor•. you don't
haY• to water or mow It.
2· LENGTH 6 7AcLENGTH
SCOTT SUPER BOllUS
Don't Jet your chondra di. Control1
gra11•1.' weed1. and ln1ect1. FertUlu1
dlchondra and help• bring Jt to g,..n•r
beauty. Doeo 2500 aq. ft.
$2 Off I 0'5 SALE Re;. 12.95 PRICE
POTrED MUMS
IN BLOOM 1C-:~--~·scOTr SUPER HALTS PLUS
Get rid of your crabby crabgra11 and
(are you ready for th11?) your poa
annua and 7 other probl•m weeds.
Does 2500 1q, ft.
If my Mum ITlr
gets potted
t'll call the Vicar.
Hahahabcthahahahahaho
ah ha. (Tanked again).
99L.
llftY KARE
-iw.rs m
$2 Off
Re;. 9.95 J95 SALE
PRICE
VACUUM BAGS
'"'Ibe Air Force o{flclals
responsible for the CSA pro-
gram are eJther lncredJbly
1low tearoera or completely
bUvioU1 to the taxpayers'
conctrn over this pro1ram,"
-;· Proxmire &aid.
lltty lare ts new, com•• ln
2$·lb. bag1 and it'• litter
lllce. You ought to try
writing this while the
Clean up on tbl• salt. Yacuum
clea:n•r bogs. all type•. You
meet an type•. don't you?
Perhap• ttt 1 the places you
frequent.
'
Kids Like
To Ask Andy
lt'1 1pringl Frt1h·
•n ywr wardrobe
with ' a 1tltcfion
from Jack's new
sprir14 ,hirts tncf
ties. Remi"'iltr,
the best is elways
at ..... •
14•7 vi. Lid•
N••,«f lo•cft
' 11eroo'1 ~lartng and 3 UCI
I\ 11ud•nt1 ON trying to help
you.
25 lbt. ··~· llAFCO YEGA
PURE YlllYL
FLOOR TILE
Pure 'flnyl floor tUe ·JI
tbe beat -and fl bnd1I
Loob like luo to put It
down.
7 77
45 1q, It. CARTON
f .
u
BOOKCASE
Jobn. Scott and Dal•
want me to IO"J'
tom•thlnSJ about caH
tb• jotot, but 111 Ju•t .... -..
eoy come look at tbl1
new 2•x3I boolr:caM
-you'll loTe tt.
• '
,.
LEGAL N011CB LEGAL Nam:E L£G.U. NCYl'ICE I
-NOTK:I Of' l"\l•LIC MIAI Ne 1.--,-..... -.~llLD UOKTINe, Ta WINMll
Pt.f14 PICTtTIOUt IUSIMISS etPfHtl TM• CITY couH1c1L OIOllllAMCI M.. ~ ICHOOl,.. MS'W..OIT-MHA UMll'llO SU,lllOI COUllT 01' THI NAMI STATIMIMT °' THI AN OIOINAMCI Of' THI CITY .COUM• ICHOOL OltTllCT, O•AMOI COU"4
STA.Tl OP CAlll'OllNl,t. l'Ollt TN follwl+MI HrlOll 11 dtl~ 111,1.i-. CITY OI' l'DUNTAllll VAUIY CU. 01' THI CITY Oii' COJTA MllA, TY CA\.IPOllNIA. THE COUNTY 0.. Oll:AHOI •t: NOT!CI 11 H•lllEIY OIVIM thlt on CALl11'9IMIA,. AMINOIMO SICltOH ' MOTIC• 1'0 llDO•llS ,.._ A•71HJ THI KOTSMA.M I HR. Cl~AtU!R.S e. TllftGay, M.trctl I, lf"1. II l ;to 11',M. 11'1 Ml6.I 0 .. THI'. MUNICll'AL CODI OI' 1 Nollet !1 llefeby fl-11\et lht IOlltd
NOTICI Ofll' Nl.ti•IMO 011' ll'OlllON COIM LliUNOJtY, w c E•tt l1ttl If ...... COl,HICll Cftlmbtr .. Cltr Hill. loalO THI (ITT Oii' COSTA MIU. 'TO., i-duullon ,, IM NfWP(lt'l-MfM \)Ill/led
MOl.OOllAl'MIC •1u. AND l'OR. Lill• C:O.t1 MHI, '1t11. $11"'° Av-. "-fllll VI I I• y, llTA•LISM ll'llD LIMJH CH Scl'loot Olllrkt 111111 rtcel..,. ~ tor IM
TEllS TJllTA.MINTAllT'. llodlrldt 111111 MKl<..W.. '°'' ANN C:11ttor11l1. ,,,. Cit¥ <»ww.M Wiii ......, • ~ .. ~':":!r:~·:u:. '"' of (Otll COMlrw:.llon ol flit' ••H l'ltld l lllhtll'4 ES11le 01 FltAHCIKO !NIGUEL 1t10 Or., H\mt. IH<'ll. itUblk ~I""' on the ..UOWlne: M Otill1 fol , FKtlllltl 11 TeWl'*t. khool "°"" C-kllOwn ... FllAHCtSCO INIOUEZ 01! Tii i• IMIM'I 11 1191no tondllCltd .bY Ill 1. bM ca.-. m -Aa1Pllc1t11111 llled M::a~ ~ ., s.ettt! ·~1 .. r".t , .. lrtc10n Ille! ,,, ncroutd lll l(Wfd.1111~
00 P i I I LUI$, Dec:e1t«1 ftwllvlclil1I, by El Jt•lldlo ~ ..... Ila tt ,._ .,.. ' 1111111 flll ,.rowfllon1 ol ll'lt Con1•1ctc• 1
More than 2 a c c NOTICE IS HellEIY GIV!M Tll•I lilocllrlck IOhl Madctnllt Pfftv lotlr.d ,, ..... """',,..."CO<' ... , .. Munlct-:01 .. c'". #It f'"' ot (Otll Mtl~ ll(lnM Ac1. tlllh wUI bt rttel ..... unlll
Catamarans and Hobie Cata EOVAllOO l'ELAEZ. 1lkl kllllWn 11 Tiii• •l•f"HYl•n' 1utc1 w1111 1111 C011111¥ w.,.,.., 111111 .,.., frltll Cl' c.-rc111, 1:~!!."~~~'::.,.:a,... 5!~:,J,~,"" ..,M:'. 1:00 •• rn. M•rcll 11, 1t12 In '"'' Ollie• cf
led •• IJo p (O PElAEt AVENDANO 1'111 tllH l'llrtln 1 Cll" at 0•111119 (ovlll'f on1 fM. 73. 1tn. ICl!l'llnhtrltl"O 1M t'tot.Nlon•I Olfkt Oddlllon """'"'"of lfll loll,,..lnt ' khOOI fl(llllle1, NtwPOtf•Mtlt Unlfl~d
II.re expec .... s w u r ptll!Jon ff!' Ol'Oblllt of fore111n Hofo-llr llitYttlr J. M1dOM °"""'" '°"'""' '°Cl lotll l111lnu1. "SUNlllLOWlfill AVENVlf . Ir 0 ,,, Sd!IOI Dllltlcf, ltJ1 Pl1c1n1l1. (Ott•
the London Bridge Regatta at 11r1tn1' wm •n4 1or l»u•11Ct ot l1n.,1 Cltrtr., 1rit1 fl'lllltr 11 Mint ,,_,,Hid 1t11r111.nt Hvllllll Avt<Wt 10 1,1111.,. ;,11,"° * ,..,.,., c1111orn11, •flfl' wtikh '1"" '"'
C . A .1 Te.l1menl1rr IO t'1Utl-r, rtlt•t"'' 10 t' "NI lo ll'lt l'llnn1,.. L.hn of fhl Sl1ft of Ml'H Oldt wlH bf ill'!bllcir , • .,; tloud. Anr
Lake Havuu Uy, Ariz. pr1 wi.ldl 11ftl~t1or turtf'ltr 111r11Cu11ri, 1nc1 J>ubll"'ed Of'•n" Coa11 D1llr Pllor. C111tornl1 10cw'1. Codot 46.000 11 •9"1.1 1nd !UNP'lOW£R. AVINVE ffllm •• clllm br 1 bltkllf" of trror In 1111 bid rnujf
15-16 The event has nrown to lhll tl'lt llrnt '""' pl1c1 of llt1rln1 1111 Ftbru•ry 2S, Ind M•rcl'I 3, 10, 17, 1m 1111 Founllln V•ller Zonlnt Orcll!W!Ct, 1111ne r1llr01d to Jii:1l,YI.;., •* '° llt ""'" Mfoo'• bid• "'' ~ « 111''-. • ., umt "'' Oetn 111 f9'" Mol<ch 1•, itn. •' 4'1-n Tiii Zonh11 0tdln1nc1, Zanini M•Pa.. 1NI Mt'H c111rn wn1 119 dllmld 111111/td, be the )argtst JnJand sailing t::JO t .m., In ttit ,ourtroom ot Ont•I· Eirhlllll• art 111 fllt Ill ll'lt Plllllllllf SUNffl.OWfllt AV!HUI" f, O'" 2, ll'lt Pl'OIKI tcn1l111 °' 11\t tcld!l1ITT1crf
regatta in the country men1 Ho. » « 111d court, 11 790 <:Jvlt °"''tt••11nt •nd ''' 1v1111011 w P1JbU( ,11~1..., ROid tt arllto1 ' S1rt0t 40 !IOI•'-tlOOll 1t1h11 •nd t1tc1r1c11 IK 1 •• ' (lflltt Drlve Wetl, 111 lllt Cllr ol S1nl1 LEGAL NOTICE ln1P11Cllon Ind .. 1rn1111non. Ml"H" !or &1\t Flt!d Lltl'llll\9.
The ffobfe Cats expect to Ant. (llllornll, ThOM 11Mlrl111 to ffflJ,., In 11¥0f f//f In SECTION 1 Thlt ordl11tnct ihtlf 1 TIMI •1111rd!nt1 -y In ClllllPlll!ICI wl:I\
h I I In both n. Dloltd ftlll'Uolrr 2l, nn PICTITIOUS IUSIHEIS OOPMl'llon 10 this propo11I will bt tlVtn 119(: I tllll. tftcl /Ill lot'< ftll .... t)Ol 1111 reQlllrtmlfll• ol ll'lt llbll!" COIN, Stl 1
ave arge c asses u1e w. E. s1 J OHN 1n OP~nll'f '' oo ... 11 fvrllltf" 1.... °'7, " 1 •,11., • • ·,;:,,'°' of c1u1or1'11. 1111 •K•rt•lr>l'd 111d MioP1•d 14 and 16-foot divisions and the C011n1., c1•11< Trie io1~!~.! sT!!.=•N:,. "'"' 1orm111on 11 .s.111tc1, ~ ,..._ c:ontm 111t =• ttt:" 10 ~111 ,qi1,'!':0:-!t'4':'n..r. tul 111t pr1v1u1111 11o11rrv 111•n ••••1. .t.11
P-cats wlll divide thelr fleet ~~TCNl"H, IL.AC, VlllLIOl!ll AHO blr1~~::"1MOUSTIUES -Mt TYME. :~=J~°:"::."" •I "1'2•:U .,.. rtltt :::: ~11-tt!' ~l~E~~.::Tw~~·,~ :-::!':~!"'..::~:.~·,~~cl w":.i:ek ,:~! ~~ ' •• A and B div'15'10"• llOll!llT M. SWllT "' CITY COUNCIL OF THI!! _. ll11td "'rtln. !flw ,..,. Mn W/li.llWt 1...,Mvard, littll p..... 19'11 Cowtnrr~. oHunU1111I011 ltar;ft. CITY 0" l'OUHTAIN VALLIY l'lLOT. l •llf¥ltlOIPI' "' tentr1I Clt(Ull· AA~ cliillflcitlon nOf 1n!l(lp1tltd t'ld
Two race! will be sailed on lOt ·-·"" C•lli.tnl• "'l• WIUl1rn T. Miia. '71S Arnie, Hu,.,. Mll'V E. Colli Hon. ,.,.,nftd Ind p1111Ulhlcl I~ IM Cltr "' blllow \llled th•ll 119 Hid ., mt (llUlnl
il • and Ttl: u1n Jll4'11 tlntlOI! lltl(h, Cll'f Cltrl< , .. ,. Mii.i. ~' wl!ll ll'lt ,,.,,..... ol Wl91 11t11 for Int •PPtlublt l•ICJ• Ind Saturday, Apr 1.,., One On AltM"....,I tel" l'ttl~ Jon M. TrtftlN:n. U3U Vii $.In Ju1n, PubHSl'ltd Or•nM tottt Olllr ,llot, IM mttnberl of flll City CouncH rilllne cliitlflci!lon In l'llKI wlll'I '"" 1bovt
SUnclay April 115-PubHlhed 0t1n1• C01111 0111v !:_t,"'-~ ~~f.1'~~7:e~·1191,,. uin:l\ICIW<I 1w , F_•IN"lll.-Y :zs, 1m ,,,.n ~:;:E·:~'::~ i:'~ao 11111 221111 ._, 111tec1 Tr.0.1 CoiJncllL H 1nr '''" 11111H1 ' . . Ftb<'wrv 2•, 15 1n<1 Mltcll 1. 1t12 -,, • below 1r• 11111 (untnl or •r• rtvlWd br
The neet champJOnshtp, won ~··l~~;':'~~ll'len LEGAL NO'l1CE .. F'°":i~r:·,~:'M WILSON l•bor 11r11m1nl1 Olltlnt 11'1• blddlno 1lm1
1ast year by Hobie Cat· 16 skip-Tl\!1 ,,,,_t !UH will! tt. C0<.11\h' M•Yor ., .. Cll'I' ot COlll Mt~ Of (O!lllNC!loll llfl'lt, "'"' '"'111°"1 111:::
W •-ha f f LEGAL NOrJCB Cllrll ol Orimrr CoullfY 0,., F~ 21. 1,n. ATTEST· 119 CONlOtrtd I 1>1•1 ol lht blllow lhl per ayne ,;x, e er 0 llr ll•wtrly J, MAddolr O.Plllr '°"'""' HOTIC• TO c11•D1TOllS EILEEN ... ,HINN!.Y r1t11. """ 11111llh, wt1t111. Ylttllon, oro-c · t B h C J S u I ,.._ A. 11•1 C ' 1 motion or otM• IM!Mflt1 &ll•H Ill In 10> apJS raoo eac • arr e l'ICTITIO I IUllHEI Cl&rk. SUPS:lltlOlll COU"T 01' TM• Ctl'f 1tr11 of fllp c IV of (Olltl MtSI dill I 1111 MloW lll!tcl lllfft tcllll
with it the Robert p , TM foll!t:;E,:~.:.;~~~:~, bvllntll Pllbll~ed OrtnM (Oll'I 0111.," ~~..!~ ST.Ala OP CALll'OllNI• POii ~t"',,.~"o~lci~~~~ : 11 O:rt~l'lll 11h1U Ill Plld for ;,ot,•
McCulloch Perpetual Trophy 11· Ftbru1ry 2S Ind Mlr<:h l. 10 17 THI COUNTY OI' Gt.AM•• u CITY OP' COSTA MESA ' Pfl'lormld Ill •• ,nl of ll'I• rt911llr d•Y I . CATALINA COIFFURE~ :JOO N n ' ' n E1l1t1 Gf GUY ELiltlCI( MllCES£ ' I lfllEEM p PHINNEY Cll'r Cl k ot 111otk Ind II lht r1I• for o~•rllmt ot !Ill
for one year N T · 1' 469• OKe•Hd. ' • ' " u11t 1"wo1yec1 • twPOtf 'led lullolmr, Suite II, Nolle:• I• Mrlby llYln to crtclllore of t11e Cttv ot COl'l1 M•11 Ind •~-ottlclc Holldivi 1111.;11 119 •11 f\Ollcl•V• r1c:ot1nlit4
Robert P. McCulloch Jr. flewp0r1 lleacl!, Cit '26'0 "" 111oYt ftlmtd dtcedtnt ""' 1M Cltri( of 1111 City COl.ttM:ll Clf IM cnv of In tllt cPlltcTlv1 1>1iro11n1119 111•"ment
h d h t t •n A11n M. Prlnc;lt, 21$2 Elden Ct., CMll LEGAL NOTICE person• 1!1rl1111 ct1Jrn1 1111ln1t Irr. wltl Cot!• M111, lllM't certlf'I' 11'11t the IDOW IPPllt1bl• to !ht p1r!lcul1r '''"• ea s t e even as rtga ..... M111, c11. '262' de(t<llnt 1,. ,.qulrld to ni. tt1en1. w1111 •nit ior11olnt Ordl11111C1 NO. n.1 w11 !~ diiilllcitl°" 0, •vPI 01 workmt•
director. Dave Shay Lake Tl'll• bu1ln111 I• bt11111 cooduc1ed by '" PICT1TIOUS IUSINllS 1111 111<11111., vouctitr1, In fllt ottlt• of trodtKlll •nd (on1ldtred wctlon b'f •tc-trnPIOvtd on '"'' prol1et, • lndlrldu1I. N•Mll ST.t.Tl!Ml!NT Ille Cltrk of tllt lbovl' tnlllllcl court, or llon 1t I rH11l1r "'"'Inf Of !hi llld CllY Cllllltlcitllll Hourly Wiii
Havasu Yacht Club, wlll be Ann M. Prlr1Clt Tht lollowlnt ptt•on• •rt clolr.a IP prtttnl 1111m wllh 1111 _..,,., COUflC11 lllkl on t1'11 7111 c11., of ftbru•rv. 1 1 kl 7 20
lit h · Thl1 1t111m.nt llled wlll'I 1ht Countr l'I to tlll ncltt I nlCI •t lfll lffct 1m, •1111 tlll1111ttr N»ed •nd ldoplf<I re •Y'' ·7
race comm ec c arrman. Clerk ot 011n111 Coun!Y on : Fib. 23. 19n. blr'1C:'EA·;;VE ENTERPRISES, IOlst' El :,Oll~:i;:oLD w.u NA;~. 1(12 !. ~'Id"" ••• who!• II ~ fffUl•r mllllnt cl 11lrS C1•ptl & Tile L1ytr ::s~
Br 8ev1rrv J . Mlddoir, O.pu!J' Counir Cir1tro, fc1intaln vittei. Orlvi. LM Aneeltl, C•HI. fl)(l;W, Wiiiet! Is City Coulldl llflcl on tht 22nd cll'f of !ltctr!cl•n ,,OJ
C!trk. Donlll c Smith. 1otS2 El Centre. 11'11 plK• of bu1lnru ol 11'11 unOtrtl1nld ln Ftbrulf'V, lt12, bV 1ht klHowlnt rPll c•N Gliil•r 7 :n
l'l6Nt f ountain V~lle'f 111 m1tter1Nrt•l11l111to11'11nl1t1ot11lcl 'folt: llll'ltr i•
200 Cats
Headed
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGAL N011CE
For Bridge
Solings In Action Yachting
Catalogue
On Stmuls
Publl!llt'd Ortnte Cc11t D11IY Pllnr, Ywonlll Glft>dt""lnt", lOlll LI ltt· eK~nl, wlll'llf\ tour rnoi\llll 1n.r tilt AYESt Councllmlln: Wtl1on, Jord1n, Ptlnler , f
Ftbn111rr ts, and M1rcll J, 10, 11, 19n r••• F0<.rnl•ln Ville¥ llr!I P11blk•ll011 of !I'll• notrct. Plnld1y, SI. Cllolr, HllTlml'lt Ptptrl'l•11!111r 4.tt •'1·12 ' > O '" I"-"'-· '22 ltn NOES: Courw;tr!flln: I.ICM Pl11rnll9r I.JO --------------1 Tl'll1 ~"!M$1 b bt nt tond\l(!W(I by • 1 ..,..~,,., ' AISENT• Coul\Cllmen· N-Pl11l1rer 4.US l'll'l1111r1l'll11 Edwtrd E. Mlk111ll · ·
Marly Gleich of San Diego (No. S34) sets a hot
pace in the Soling Class in lasl we~end's Mid-
winter Regatta. In this action at California Yacht
Club, Gleich gets the jump on 26 riyals, going on to
win the race and regatta. Gleich upset his class-
mate l.<Jwell North, a 1968 gold medalist in the
Star Class.
vv-.ne GlelldennlM AdmlnliftllOI'" of 1111 IN WITNE$1 WHEREOF I 111\'I Rooter •.2"1
Oonni C. Smllh E111t1 cl 111d cle.c:ecltnl. lltrtufllo "'' m'f hlM and 1ffl•tcl 11>1 5'1t S'-'! Metil 1.29
P'ICTITIOUI IUSINISS Tl'll1 1t1ttrn1"I lllPcl wllll 11'1e Cout'rtY Ml,_. W. NIM r.::,~fY 1°inCOlll Mtll. 11111 1Srd tliV ol Iron Wor~ttt
MAME ST•Tl!MlNT Ct.rk of Ora,_ Counlr on: FtbtUtt'f t , •t S. °""' Dr.... EiLE!irrl ,. ,HINNET' Rtlnforclng l.t! Thi 1ollDWlnt ptrt.on It dolllO bullntlf ltn. llY lellr J, l1r911tn, Oepul')I Cot.Inly Lii ..... ,.11 .. C11H, MM Cltr CJttlr. incl tx-offlclt Str1Klu11I I OJ
11, Cterk, Attltlll'r fir Ad1t1l11llhtllr Clll'li ot ll'lt CJl'I' Cou"'JI of F1"'1 IE11c:llr 7.lt
TRAVEL.AND or T RA I/ E LAN 0 , PIS7fl 'Hf OC tr11 Cltv flll (Olli Mrll l•DOAr J.IM.5
U.S.A., !l.rlll 103. ~1 lllrci'I $1rttl Pub111Md °''"" Cotll D1lty Piiot. l'ublllllld Ori"" COlll't Cltfl'fl7, I':~ Pub11lhld OtlftM ((11191 Dt11'( P11ol C.rp1nt1r 6.SI Hl"#POrl 8t1Cll, C1. '2660 Frbl1lolr'I' 11, JI. 2.S. M•rdl 3, ltn FtDtu.rr is. 11'11 M1rdr J, 10, •tt·n F1bn.o•tY 2S. lt72 412.,j Ol'EIATING l".NG INEEllS
JKlr. lov1, H01 5'1U1!1, Coron1 del 3S7·1l GtOUP I I.OJ The 13th consecutive issue of Ml« c1. t162S LEGAL NOTICE Gr11U9 1 1.21
Boat Owners Buyel'll Guide is Thi1 11<111ne11 11 belnt (O!ICl11c1rd bv 1n LEGAL NOTICE Grcup J 4.11
LEGAL N011CE
lrdlv!du11. LEGAL NOTICE SUl'lllllOlll COUlllT 01' TMI! Group • I •t
on the newst.ands or available JIKk LCYt SUPl"ltlOll COUllT OP THI! STATI Of' CALIPOillMIA PCll. 6-lp J .: ..
I Y chi-p bl' h ' Co Tiii• 1llltm1nl fllrd with !tit Countv l'ICTITIOUS llUSIHESS STAT• o" c•LIPOllNIA l'Oill TNI COUNTY OP' 011.AHOI Gl'Pl/fl • ..91 rom a IDg U IS lllg " Clt<'K of Ortnle C0<.rnll' en: FtDru11r 2J, NAME STATEMENT THE COUNTY 01' Oll•NOI N .. A n1w GrOVP 7 7.01 also publishers of Yachting 197'1. Ir lltrtr/'f J, MflclclPJr, DtllUl'f Tiit !Ollowlnt p1rJOn I• dolntl bullnlU CASI NVM••• G.*'1 0110•• TO SHOW c•USI Gr-I 7.IS , Coulll'f Cle,k, 11. SUMMOftS CMARllll•O•I t'OR CM.ANG• Of'' HAMI Gr0<.rp t 1.60
MagaZJne. PUISI . SCOVILL (Q., J,!S.C Tu1tln AUi.. In rt 11\t m1rrl191 Of PrHtlontr In till Mllttr of ll'le APPll<•t1on cl JIM· T!AMSlEllS Catalina Island Race
BOBG is a voluminous Pulll11htc1 0t1mre CC111t 0111w Pllor, ~n11 An•, n10$. LEON• ST•FFOAO •nd t1:'1pO!IOtn1; Mle AXALI• SAMP!11t1s1 ror Ch1r1119 of , vd Truck , . . frbru1ry 25, •nd M1rcll J, 10, 17, ltn Jlm l . R'fll'I. 5M-C Tu1t!n A.,., S•nl• JAMES STANLEY STAPFOllD N1rne. ~ . j yet. Trvc:k
catalogue listing everything m 47S.1t An•. 91705. To 1111 R••POnd•l!t: JAMI!$ STAHlEV WH!lllEAS, "'' •Pllllutton of JIMMIE •• 11 yd. Truck
the pleasure boat marine field LEG•' NCYl'ICE Thia butlne11 11 btln1 (O!l(l11c1ed br In STAFFORO Al'.ALIA SAMl'ERISI for Cl'llllllt ot "'"'' 12." yd, Trvck . ~ 1na1vldui1. TPll 111ll!lorM h11 lllld • Plllllon con-h•• bltn OUl'f flied w111\ JI!" ct.rk of tnll u . 1s vd. Tru(k Crom boats, yachts, equJ~ J im L, Ry1n cernlnt r011r m1rrl11•. VOii rn1r 1111 • Covrt, 1nd JI ,,,.,,,,.. #I-cm 11ld 11>-:n. olO rd Trvc:k
ment eJectroniCS _ and even f'ICTITIOUS IUSIMEIS Th11 s!1ttrnent /Heel with lllt Counlv wr111tn r1son11 wltl'lln lhlrty dlYI of !ht pllc11lon 11111 Hid 1p11llc1nt cl11lr11 to Trinill _r.iJ•.
On Tap for Saturday
I .OS ....
5. !l
1.21 ,_.,
5.1• . ...
By ALMON LOCKABEY
Of lfll 01llv r1111 11111
Los Anseles Yacbl Club's
New Boat
•
Measures
Introduced
SACIIAMENTO (UPll
Legisla'tlon tightening boating
safety regulations and enac·
ting a "good Samaritan'
boating accident law has been
introduced by Assemblyman
John Stull, (R·Leucadia).
Stull's bills would set a
speed limit of five. miles an
hour within 200 feet or fishing
piers and withing 100 feet of a
flag displayed by a skin diver.
One measure would remove
the civil liability of a1')'
person giving aid in connection
with a boating accident-if he ·
acted "as an ordinary
reasonat>Jy prudent m a n 1 '
would have acted u n d e r
similar circumstances,
The legislation also
authorizes peace officers to
report accidents to t b e
Department of Navig~tion and
Ocean Development and re--
quires the department to
release information to peace
olficers about an individual's
record concerning violations of
boating regulations.
CurrenUy such Information
ls only available to courts.
W.C.French
Joi11s Firm
In Newport
W illiam C. French has join·
ed Dure! as an account ex-
ecutiv e. 11e will serve as ac-
count e.xecutive on Jensen
11.farine and Ranger Yachts as
well as several other con-
sumer accounts.
Prior to joining Dure I ,
French was vice president and
general manager \\'ilh \Vest
Coast Afedia of Orange, a
CJeveland-based firm buy ing a
group of broadcast properties
in Soutbem California.
A former Air Forc e Captain.
Prench received a degree in
miJJtary science from the
USAFJ . French is a member
al lbe C.I 20 F1eet
Frtnc.h. his w ife a nd son
ruide In Balbooi.
\f ....... d ' I 19deT, ll9hf Y#"
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Whitney Series or orfshore
races gets under way Satur-
day with the sailiog of the ~
mile Midwinter C a t a I i n a
lsland race.
The Little Whitney Series
for sailing yachts 30 feet and
under also stages its 1972 in-
augural with the Oil Is1and.1
Race.
Back to defend her title in
the Whitney Series is the 57-
foot aluminum yatcb Light-
ning, skippered by T h e o
Stephens of St. Francis Yacht
Club, San Francisco.
Lightning was the a:irrected
time winner of the Whitney
Series last year, taking all but
two of the six races. One race
in the series is a throw-out in
determining the final winner
\Vithout the presence of 73--
footers in this year's Whitney,
Lightning is expected to win
line-honors (first to finish) in
many of the races. Last year
she was overshadowed in this
department by Jim Kllroy's
Kaloa II (a record 'Setter in all
but one of the races) and Ken
DeMeuse's Blackfill, also from
St FYC.
&th Kialoa ll and Blackfin
are enroute to the East Coast
where they will be cam·
paigned in major blue-water
races next summer.
Another yacht which will ·be
watched. closely in this year's
Whitney is tbe rototype
Columbia.SZ Tribute sailed by
a Balboa Yatch Club syndicate
composed of Dick Blatttrman,
Bill Lawhorn. Herb Riley and
Fred MacDonald. Tribute was
launched only a few days
before the Midwinter Regatta
and placed second in Class A
behind Lightning.
The Catalina Island race
will start Saturday at 1 t a .m
rrom Los Angeles Yacht Club.
First finishers should be borne
by midnight if winds are
favorable.
Southland
Yearbook
Released
• NAME sT•TEMENT Clerk ol oranet Ccunrv on: Ftb. 9, l9n. dill 11'111 ll'lls 1ummcna Is 11rvtc1 on 'tou. 1'11vt ntr n.1mts c:htnted to ftie orcPOse-d Wittr Tru(i:
a Score Or more Of services. Tiit followlllll Persons 1r1 dlllna 8¥ Belly J . B1r11J1en Oeollt'f Counsv II YOU !Ill to lllt 1 wrllltnlt rffPOnll nlmtl at JEMMIFEill JOlAN SJl.N.. Tiit tor1tolt1t IChtdUlt of lllllH It~: -J J ll<li! , Clerk. wl!l'lfn •~di tll'lll, YOU! dlf1u ml'f 119 PERISI. Id • The book is not reg1ona. t ~·&:~;, ENTERPRISES l '79t F 1m1 enltrtd Ind'"' COU•I m1v 1nt11. hod• NOW, lHEREFOlt.E, " 11 l'l•rtbv !•l ~n J0<.rr111vm1n wo,~Jnt d•Y ol •111111
covers suppliers and manufao-M.drMt Cir,, F0<.rnt11n Ville~ '2708 Publla/'ltd 0•11111• Coa!t o.1rv Piiot, rneni conlllnlnt lnlurw:rlv• °' othtr ortltr. oratrtd •nd tllrKled tNt 111 Hrf0n1 In· c0p1.;1·o1 tPHt ccnlrttl DPc:umenli rn.
turerS from throughout the na-Cl~:!..,t~in e~~~11f2~799 Mlndl"Oll Fl!Jruer'f l l, ll. ll, Ind Mlrc;fl J,~~~ ~=7;":ri11~"~:'0:. :f:i'~~:.~~ :~tdl~:e~ ~i:. i:: ,::11::"c'!i~ ~i:~"!i d;::.,1":: !:u;:c~:c~~~!tt~~= :
tion. Full ~mes and ad-F Mlrv1 CV ~rov•n, um Mlllrone ctr ~~'::~ ~':;.~c;9!'~n:..111C::,f.111' ,.1111 1~, .. ~!n";;"J, .~ S:i:°!·"'~;f;"'°"~l. '::: Frtcll,ldr. ••cwn AP0cl•••1. x.. C•mPUt
dresses are given, and even Tll':"'.:'u~nt:S e;', ':.1:i (onduc1tc1 11'1 , LEGAL NOTICE II .,_. w1111 te 1t11r: 1111 .-Vkl • 111 ti· 111e 111~ d•r d APrlt, 1tn. 11 '"" l'IOllr o1 ~:;,;;.n~'c:':':S..!!Tf"'~ ~~ :" "'"'i!
Prices where available Plr!Mrll\Jp ltnlf'I' lfl tlllt 11\lllw, -'" lhluN. M .. t :30 c'c1cck 1.m., ll'len il'lcl lllert to ltl<WI inwre 1111' tllvt'n lhtrl'Cll II 11'>1 . . . . Dl'nnl1 M. G1091n .,..m,.lr .. .,,., .,_ WrlflH '"""""' H tll.ISI, ff •nv tllfY Mwt. wl'IY th• IP. OO(umtnlt .,.. rtlUfftld In 00:0. COl'ICllll.:
It lS the only pubhcation of M1rv c. Grov1n "~cz;:,~o~:A::!.~NNE:s "'~· 1:'~ 111 7,",;;; t1m1. t11k111ot1 tor ""'"" d "'""' ll\ol.llcl no• wlTl!ln ''" (10) 01v1 1tll'r !ht d•I• Jtl ,,,,.
its kind designed for use by c~~I .,:1~·:.::::1 c:~ ":!.~Fi:::. 2~cr;:.r TM fol!CWlnt "''°" I• dol111 bu1fnes1 ($E~LJ I/II. • • ~ifs~·UlllTHER ORDERED .,... • :':!i"ri:. bl~':! fUll imoum ot ll'lt
th ~-ting -··umer dealer • • ' J -.. -· c IS: w. I!'. SI JOHN, Clltk COPY of 1111• orcltr be pllbUlhlcl In '"" ,. r . e uua. .. u.... . C~A.:verr . • ..... r 111""' HARllOR STORAGE OVTLF't, Pl ev l •I JOln Mtl•kll, DtPlll'I' Or•ntt c..11 Dlltr Piiot,. -NHf ol 11 ""'11 .,,.. rn•nd•lory u-"" (-and manufacturer. PlMn E11111m 5t•Nt, cost• M1i1. PIJlll1i.llld 01-1,,,. COiis! 01llr Pl\ol, 1_.-11 clrarltflan, orlntld ind w))!I~ 11;-tor 10 W1'lorn O:.,CQll~f•c1 ,::_•wTrOftl,
The price is $1.95 on l'LlbHihecl or•nee c:o.11 D•ll't' Piiot, DIYfcl "'" JulM!r. 4lt T~ll!K4rl Fwu1rv ll. is •l'NI Mlrdl). 10.~m 1n 1111 Cltv of cc.11 Mir111. c-iv ot :.v :0~1!s"":,n 1t1e':!i:" .:.c11~7~1::
newsstands. It can be ordered Flbnllry "' 11' 1" 25' itn n•n ~~1':":!11~ucoi1 bt11111 conc1uc111c1 by •n ·n ':c~..:..: ::: ~~.~ ~~~~··,..::: ::~11:':to'": -;i.;,~1. 11'1 '"'"' 111 1111
rrom Yachting Publishing Co., LEGAL NOTICE •nd1~•d110~v1c1 Kiy Juber LEGAL NOTICE ::;'.~ 10 of"" 111dl!w~ wt tor '"" No bldcltr" m1v W1tl'ldr1w hi• llld '°' 1
50 W t "lb St Ne York ™• 1111emen1 111tod wlfl'I the tountT 1'111 11 u ,..-lod ol forlr•rtve tU) d1Y1 11ttr Ille es .,.. '' W ' P'ICTITIOUS IUSINl!SS Clerk ot Or1ntt Coun.., Of!· ftb t 19... l'R.-125 HJI!~ a ... """., Ille ,._, dllt 111 lor 11'11 -lntr ol bkh. N '/ NA ! TA H '' • ' "• SUl'IRIOR COUllT Of' TN• Udllt .,. Pfrl« .-.rt Ol"llHI Ff'bru1rv 24 1tn . • M I Tl"MI T av l!tl!J' J. ll•r&Jll!I Cl•llUtr COlllllr STATI!. OP CALll'OllNI• l'Oilt Dlltd ftb. 23. lm N!WPORT..MEu. .,,'!" loltowlnt perJO!I Is dofne bui!rms Clerk. II' l!lnl TN• COIJNTY OP OllANGI nu.« VNIFIEO iCHOOl DISTRICT OF
• •••DERN TREE SE•">CE S'" ._ p >> ML A·71UI P'AUL M. Dau.AMANO, Orlllll' Counly C1lllllrnl1 mv • • "" .,....,.. ub i.lled Or1nee (C<Ul Dtllr PllDI, NOTICll OP' H•AilllHO (Ill' l'l!.TITIOM A"'""" 11 L-8y Dorolll• H~rv~ Fli.llv Y~1~Ho lt~u!llGu~5!S Cln'fon FllM:lloMY 11, ll. lS •nd Mardi .l.Jl~ 11'0111 PRO•AT• OP WILL AHO i<CJt US11 C~ ........ hitl ... 1'urc1'111lnt Afflll
Attll L"u"' euc:~ llSUAMC• CP' &.•nRllll "TaSlAM•H· TwrtMt, Coll...,_. toJlt MS.llCIO
li'lll bustneu It btl11t CO!lduclecl by 111 TARY TO "TITIOHlll. A"""""' Mt PttrtltMf' Publl1hlcl Or1n1t Coest 0111'1 PllOt, Jlllff\'ldUlt. LEGAL NOTICE E1l•lt Pl KATHRYN J . D•VIS, 1\10 T•tt11t.M lflSI JM.'111 Ftllrull''f ts 1rd fM'cl'I 3, 1972 .ft7·1t
L!nd!t'!' R Gumm lrnown 11 KATHRYN JEAN 0.t.VIS, 1111 Publllhtd Or1ntt CClll1 D1lfr Pllol,1-------------
Tllll flttemerit 'fUrd wllfl 11'11 County TUJ k.-n •s KAlHlt.YN FARA.AR. Otclllld. FtbnllrY U Ind Mlrdl :I. 10, 17, 1•71 LEGAL NOTICE
Clerlr. of Oranve COlln!y on: Feb. ,, un ll'ICTITIOUS llUllNESI NOTICE JS HEltE8V GIVEN 11111 .ga..n &'t &ev1r1., J Mlddoa, Dtpul'f Counly ltoOtrt L. O.vl1 h11 ffltd htttln • petition ••• _ Cl tk • N•ME STATEMENT tor Pl'cbllt ot Wiii •nd tor 111111"'• ot LEGAL NOTICE -~ 1 • Tl'I• followlnfl 0trson 11 dcln1 bu1lntu Lette11 Ttilo1mtnl11y 11 f'llHl-r C111 Mt. Jll'tt ll'llUI 11: r111rtnct 1o wl'llcl'I I• mide tor turlhtr NOTIC• 01' S•Lll OP fllAL
Pulllfsl!ed Or•nte COllll Diiiy PUO!. THE ELMORE COMPANY, UI DoYtr Plrllculiri. Ind ll'llt Ille """ Ind PllClt 74'1 PllOt'lillTY AT t'lllVATI! SALi!. Ftbn.olt'f 4, 11. 11, 2$, ltn 2tJ.72 DI" .. $lllll 10, NewPOr1 kid\. CIUI, ot ktirlng ltie umt NII btlft Ml lOI' HOTICI TO ClllDITOllS In 11>1 Su11ttlot' COllrt o1 tM St111 llf
,Boat Show
Attracts
362,028
'2660. Mitch l4, lm, If t :JO l .m., Ill thl OF •OLK TllAMIPIR C1lllornl1. In Ind tcr !l'le County 11f
Th N t ' I Bo l Sh t LEGAL NOTICE Rull\ P. WUU1m1, 167 N. l tncol11 courtrOOll\ ot Depi't""nt No. s of wld fs.c&. llft...,.1•1 U.C.C.J AtvtrJldt, e 8 !Ofla a OW a Pit«, Mcnrowf1, C11!f. 91011. eoun, II 700 Civic Ctrii.r Otlvt Wat, In Nollet Is htrlbY tlvtn 10 1111 Cl'9dllOMI In !ht Mllttr of lllt Es!llt of JOI
New York drew 3 6 2 I 0 2 8 l"ICllTIOUS IUSINlll Thll bvllntH 11 IM!lng CO!lduc1ecl br '" "" CllV ot S1nl1 An1, C1U10r1111. of JIM JOHNS •rd ELLA JOHNS, ARMOOOll •GUILAll. llMI k-•• . . . . N.l.ME STATEMIHT lndlvldu1I. Citied Ftbru.ry 23 1m Tr1n1t.ror1, ~ bu1l....U aoddrts1 11 JO~E AGU1l.AR Oe.c:111ed.
Vl!Itors this year, despite a Thi fo/lo'l'ln1 PrMIOn Is clolnt bu1lne11 R111h P. Wl1ll1m1 w. E. St Jo'HN ..,. St•tl!or'llJ err ..... New-1 lle•cl'I. NOTICE II HEREtlY GIVEN .... , !ht
Shortened format and earlier 11; Th11 1tttem•11t llltd wllll Ill• County Covntv Cieri< Cwntv ot 0!11111. Stilt of C1tlfornl1, th.II Vllder1llntd win 1tll 11 11rlv•lt 1111, to
, , PROPERTY DATA, P.O. lox '2277, Clerk ol Ortnge COllnlr on; Feb. 2. lfl'2. l.AIOWI •HD VINTJt•SS I bullr. frlNltr II •bout lo M midi le 1111 lllll>nl Ind Mil blOO.r, 1ubl1C1 to lht
closmg times. 1190 Adt"H c°''' """· '76.21 DOMAlO H. ll!lV•Al 1:1:2t WHI 1'1rl1 Stt'dl ROllElt.T v. MANN. Tr11"'""· Wl'IOtl mllllrm1ffon of IM •llovt tnlltled
M.namng director Peter M Tom C11'1nt, 3461 S..n11 c1111, coil• Anorllt'f 11 L1w L" Al!Hltl. C•llffrfll• tlt2' 11111IM11 ld¢tft.• Is U1 Gltnnt'fl't, llf'U"' Superior Court, on or 1111r '"" lOltr d•v ot o· . Mtu '262'6 UI °''" Dr .. s .. 1111 It lll: (till 114-fJU lledr, Coun!Y d Or1n111. Sltlt of Mlrdl Im II 10:00 A.M., II "" office ol
Wilson pegged the 8 percent Thl1 business It 11e1no conctut1ed b'f •n H•--' •••di. c111ttn111 t:I..._ Att1M1tY1 11rr """~ "t1fon111. Mc<>wtn. GrNn & s.,1v11, J50 E. cri.,....,111
d I I , '· J I lndhtldu•I P TM72 Publlll'ltd Or•Mt cont O.llt l"llol Thi' ~ to be t11111ttrred Is A'l'tlllll', Cllr of O•lnH, Coun!Y If rop rom ast year S wia a • T~ C1rtne Publlll'ltd Or1nlt!: Cc11! 01lly Pilot, ftbnll!Y 74 U ind Mlrdl 1 un .-.n loctted at 117 E11t 111h Street. COl11 011n91, S!1l1 of C1lllornl1. 111 111t rltlll,
tendance to conditions in New Thi• 1111""""' 111ec1 wllf\ file Cou111'¥ Febru•,., J, 11, 11, :u, 1tn m-n ' ' Mn•. c°"""" ot Cir•""· s111t of 1111e. 1nter•11 ind 111111 of 11ld dtcedttlt
. . Ci.rk of 011111e COllnl'f °": F.O. 2. lf77 LEGAL NOTICE C1Utonil1. 1111'111lm1 at dt•lh l1ld 111 Thi '191'11. 111i. York City which necessitated Br eevtrl'f .1. Mlddcrir, oe11u1y coun!Y LEGAL NOTICE S.ld ..,crp«tr •• dtkl'llltd 1" , • ...,,, •nd lntet••I 11111 Mid "'''' 1111 _.,...,,
Cutting the show's run to nine c1er1c. •••••••• cou•T 0 , TH• '" All "'"*.,11 tr~. ,..•11.t111~ ""•-'""""' bv -r•11on o1 11w, "' c01trw111. ottitr 11'1Kn Mid ..... H ... I ~"'" ,.., 11'1111 « In 8ddl!IOI! to lfltl ot ulcl die ..
days -against 12 last year -P11bll1"ttl Drlnle CCIII 0.11'1 P11o1 ll'ICTITIOUS •U,INIEIS ST•TE 01' CALIPOllHIA POil bu1lnl'Q k-II THE LAUHDilt'r' dtnl, ,, lllt llmt of de11lh, 111 Ind lo 111
nd the lh th lo Febru•rv ' 11 11 " "" n.i.n NAME sT•TlfMENT THIE COUNTY OP ClllAHO• lt.OOM Ind 111!;1ttd •I in E•d 11111 lt!al (t!1•1n All .,._,,., lllUlll In ""* a 9 p.m. ra er an ' • • • Tilt 1o11ow1110 Hr..,., 11 0olne ~slnr" Mt, A·ntU strett. co!t1 Mt1&. covnrv of Or1119•, Covntv of 01111pe. s111e of c1u1ornlt , 1nc1
P m closing time LEGAL NCYl'ICE 11: NOTIC• OF MRAR.tMO OI' PHITIOM st1t• d C1Utorn11. mot• P1ttlcul•rJy dlKrlbtd •• toucrwi 1• ' · ' BARTMDRE BEAUTY COLLEGES, 1'011 P It 0 I ... TIE 01' Will TM bulk tr1n1ftr wll1 bt conwmm1ttcl wJt· '
While regretting the 1ost ex-,-u Nortll 11~ow1v, $1nt1 AM. IHOL0011.APM1c1 •Ho P'Ofl un1•s 011 or •tttr"" 4111 cl~ Pl M1r,n, im 111 ·1mpr11Ytd ,,., •n»ertr 1oc11tct 1t ,_ th 'nd I . FICTITIOUS 8USINESI Cillfotnlt. Tli.ST.l.MEMT.t.llY 10:00 A.M. 11 l'ROFf:$$10MAl l!SCROW 1A702 N Ollwt In 111f Ctrv of posure W e I US fY aSSOCta· NAME STATEMl!!NT Scope 911111'1 En1ar11rls.s, tnc.. tA E$11hl of MAUDE CLAR.A SMITH, Sl!R.VICEI, 17U! Irv!"' 81Yd., Sul11 E.. Wes1m1ni11, Cou~ ot Otll\lt Siii• of
t j 0 n. sponsqred exposition, Tl'lt lollOWlne per$0nS 1rt lloln1 Calll. Ccrp,J, '150 Wll~lr1 lloulev11d, D..::r111ed. Tustin, COlllll'f of Or1nft, St1I! of C1lllorn1~. d~scrl119cl 11: '
il . ed th t d bu1lne's ~·: l o1 All8!le1, Cal!lornl1 90010 NOTICE IS HEREll'r' GIVEN 11'111 Cll,.. C1Utoml1. Thi! 0111 cl Lot l1 " fK«dld In W SOD poUlt OUt a Or erS "IRWIN, BROWN ANO ALBERS," :t900 Tlllt bu1ln111 fl tonduc:trd br 1 COl'l>Or· fon H, Smith h11 filed htreln 1 pell!IOll So fat 11 ti;-n to tl'le Tr1n1lffM, Ill 800k 2 P1g1 !11 of Mlsctlllntoui
WOrlh $56 4 million Were taken 1'111c VltW Lane, lrYil\t, C.llfotlllt 92ir4ol 1tlon. lot" pfcbllt al will (hol09tlohlt) ll'ICI lot bvJJ111111 nl!'flll 1rd fdcl'rn1t1 u•ed bv MIPI, llitc:ot'dl ol LOI A"~ CounW
xhl
' in J Dile lrwln, l9DO P1rlt Vlt111 Ltne, SCOPe BEAUTY ENTERPRISES, leller1 Te1t1m1nltrv reltrerw:e 10 wtlldl Tr1111ft(Ol"f for lhl' thffl Yllr• 11•1 Piii, C1lllot11l1, mott pit!lculirly clta<rlllfCi
by e ~ilofS, topp g aSt lrvln1 C1llfornl•. INC., 1 corpatlllon, II fft..:11 for turlhlr l'llttlcul11 .. Ind th1t 1re: nonl 11 follows:
Year's Order book by $6 2 John Alber1, )900 P1rk View Lant, 8y Mr'fer Lu$111n, ll'lt 11tne Ind PllCt ol l'IHfl"' the time Ollld: F1bru1ry 11, 1t72. llttlnnlnt 11 t POlnl 110 fNI Narlll on , • . · lrtl~e. C1llrornf1 '1664. Prelld~I ll1s btl11 111 tor M11dl 1,, ltl'2, II 9:30 Robllrt V. Minn, W111 Lint of Loi J7, trom Corner f1f
milbOn and barely mlSSlng the Gent llrown, 41M E11l <ketn AvenUt, ~ t .rn .. In lhl CPl.lrfr-.. of Dlf11Tl!flll\l Ne. TtllllltrN M1!n Ind 011V. Slttfh lhtr!Ct UO tttt
d $57 8 'IJ' ChJeved Lont lletcll, C1lltornl1, P117" l of llld tOllrl, 1t 100 Civic Ctnlff Ori.,. ll'lllOll'•SSIONAL •IClllOW SlllVIC•S E11I, tl'ltn.ct .50 fptf N~rlh flltnct 110 recor · ml !On a Tl'llt IM!t!neu It Cll!lduc:ttd 11¥ 1 llrn!ted P1iblllhed Orl!lfl C111st 01Uy Pllot. WHI. 111 IM Cllr OI Stnll Afll, C11tfotnll. l'.0, 10)( nt fHI W11I, llltntt 5outl'I kl '11'11 point of
at the 1969 show. 01rlnrrJllJ11. febnilry IJ, 11. 25 1nd Mlfch J, lt72 D•lld Ftbru1t'f ZI, 1'12. Im! lnilll ........ lull• • belfnnlnt. 0111 lrwfn 159-12 w. E. SI JOHN Tl1111t11. <•"""1111 fMll TERMS OF !ALE: C•"' In ltwl~I
Disrieyland
Seeks 100
Employes
Grr.erer P1rtne1 COllnl'I' Cltrk ll(reW N1 •• 1J .. 1•S '"_,, d 11\t Vnllfcl s11111 ot Arntrlci Oil
ltU·OC: LEGAL NOTICE WM. J. CUS•CK l'llblllllld Or'lnet Colst O.ily Piiot. conftnnitlon OI lllf, « part cell\ encl
tll1S1'1 Alllntl'f 11 LIW Ftbru•l'Y JS, 1'71 4'11-T.I bll•nct 1\'ldtnced llY nol• or notK
Dlllnlt L Gtl)lf-, Attr. tin WlllNrt II\'•. NCured br rnorlt•" or Trull Otf'd °"
11'2 °""°"' OrlYI, 1¥11• ,,. P'ICTITIOUI •USIMESS ...,.,,., Hiii .. C•IHlnll 'lilt LEGAL NC11'1CE Ille ,.._,,., IO M!lcl Ttn PtrCttrl ot NrMHrt l•1dr, C1llfltnl1 '2~ HAMI STATIMl!.NT "Tth (2111 VWff1 1mount pf bid to l«om....nr bid
Publ!shed Or1n19 Cots1 o.uy PllOI. Thi fll!lcwlno Pfl'llllW Ire clolns A"-r ,. Ptlll1-f' HOTICll 0' PV•LtC MIARIMO AH llld1oroffttl1"1U11 bt '" Wrll\!11 •116
FtOn.ot>'Y n. , .. 2J Ind Mlrcl'I J, ,,,, blr1l11111 a : Publl.ri.d °''"" COiis! D1llr l'llot, NOTICE IS NEREB'r' GIVEN "''' • win be tlC•twcl ti'"" •lortmtnllontd ol· 151-n TOWN ANO COVNTlltV KHIT SHOii', "lbru1r't 2J, :N 11111 Mlrm 1. 1'71 '9J.n. P!Jbllc liettl,. wlll bt Mid by 1flt Cltv fl(t, or left wlll'I Torl'f R.. Atullt"
1--------------1 11$11 llttdl 81\'d,. HU'lltlntl1Dn lrKll. Council of lllt Cll'f " Cotli Mell on Admln!str11,,,.. PltlO!ltllY or ""'" lit flltd' LEGAL NOTICE C~.!Yln F. Soutllwtnl Sr., ,._.1 LEGAL NOTICE Mlrdl 1, 1m, It 1111 '*''Of l:>o p,rn .. « wllll 1111' (llrt; of fllt tbOYe tntllltd Court
Grt10t'f lllnt, H\11111,,.lan 81&cfl, CtlH. •• -tlllrtllter " fM ""'"" m•'f bl •1 '"' ll1n1 "'" Ille tlr11 P11bllc1tr1t11 of
''CT'T'o" •• ".'H...
'
•--... d. 1 ... 1 G NOT><• .. OISSOLU-... , .. '" ... C--11 0..mtlft ot 1111 Cl!'f flrft rlollct Ind before rn1k lrt1 Nici Mii.
N•Mlf STATl!"MEMT L.!°.:::~u:i,,,;;;;; le:.,, Ctlff. fffCt"Y 011' l'AATMIUMlr Hiil. 17 P'1i;''"'crrtY1, COlll Mffl, ll!t Ad'rlllnl1lrl1or lltrttw rfttr\'M 1119
Tnt toll0w1no Pl•IO!I 11 dolnt buslnrst ll'lll bu!JntU II bllnt condudtd 11'1' • Hol'ICI h t lv.n PUllUlnt to Stctlon C:tlllllrflla, Oii "" flllowtnt pttlflO!ll tor rltl'll le relkt '"" « 111 bkll.
Disneyland's new theme 11. 1 1503:5.S of '"" CorNrl1\on c'" "''' ctr•"" 111 1-: DATED Ftbnl•l"r' 11. 1m
land'
"Bear Country," slated HARBOit l\QUOA, 1'27 A Hlrllor P•rlntr~~ln " SOlllllW•rd Sr ill08EillT SCMLICE, c. L WILLOUGHIV. lltltoN• ,.ITITION •·n.n. lltfno "" Tonr II. Alttllllr. Admlnl1tr1t0f"
Blvd., (O&ll Me••· c1nrorn11 LIUltn M. Soull'lw1rcl • INC., Mid MAUlll1CE H . CKAM-pttll\Ol'I ot "" Ca.ti Mal Pt.IM!nt COM-of fllt !11111 ot 1111 •bovt
to open this spring, will mean M. L1Ru1 H • r 'c ~ • t , l400 Tiii• •l•lwm•nf tllld wim "" Counf'f llERL.AHD, "''''otor• do/no 111t1111111 •• mlulon, ,..,., Gtllct 80ll 1200. cost• ntmed Ote:rdent Or1n11ell'lor11t, a11e111 1'1111, C1!1lllrnl1 Clerlc of Orintt Countr on· Feb 2 1912. P1rtner1 undlr ltlt firm ntmt of IN· Mtll, tor -"'! .. Ion tt r~ fl'Dnl 1112 McOWIN, Oilll•M & SYLVIA 100 new summer jobs for T111s blr11neu 11 bttne concluc:teci b., 1n llr lrvirlY J Mtcldor 0.,.11ti Counh' DEPENDENT CATERING. It 11u1 tflCf 11• te R...C.P, prOPtrtr loc•ttd 111 1t1t "', ,_•, c"'"""' A,,..,°''""' collf. O ange County unemployed lnd1v11111e1. • ' Ana11e1 Stl'tlf, G1rdlln .G,..,., ca11tror1111, HiWel ••• bl1WM11 1tt11 s1rtt1 •nd • 1 1n~1 """" r • M. l1 Rut Htrcourt Clerlc. PIJUt l'ltYI tll•solV'fcl tlltlr 111rtlllrth!p •• of HIMltlOll Sfffft llld bl'lwMn Pomon1 Altll'!llYI hr A•lftlnblr1lor
according to the Anaheim 1"111• "'''"""' flllcl wl!n 1111 cou111., P b1 tel 0 c ri Din., ,11 1 DKlrnbtr JI, 1971, ltr mullHI """""· Awrll.lt '"° P111e1 AYW\111. Publllhtd 0t1noe C0111t crtny Piiot,
amusement park. Clerk cl Ortnt• GootP!l'f on Feb. u. lf7J. fib~~~~ 4 I :·~r 25 ~.n 2ff.n MAUii.iC! H. c .. A M 11 "' l AM 0 • ••DH• ll'ITITION 111•7Hl. bl'lr!I "" Fl'llrutry 1S, ,, Ind M11cll 1. lt72 .ft).'2 ev 8tvtrlr J. Molddox, 011>111J' covntv ' ' ' 'rt11a1no 1t 1:J74l·1t Cll11ton Str1tt, Glrdln 1ttltlon If Genii K.w1m11r1, nt St. In addition td these newly Cl•tl( LEGAL NOTICE Grovt, c111tar111 .. th• ·w111111r1Wn rram JIMOI f'llct, 'NIWPOl"I 811c11. for LEGAL NOTICE
created positions, Disneyland P'Htn •nd Mt cHMd i. bt M*llltd In "" 11tnn1nton to rno,. fron'I Al 1o c1, "'~:1-------,,c------Pub111h1<1 0,.1'1111 COl51 O•ll'f Piiot, (l!!V1nt f11t llf tno ltu\1"'1.1, ~ klc1ttd In .... .-r•I lftl north ot 14M
will seek 1,800 employes to fill Ftt>nllry It, 2S ltnd M•rcll :J, 10, ,,,, P'ICITIOUI SUllNESS Furl!llr NIHCI ,. tlwn 11111 *" """ tt.t"" 01-.o FtW#f'/ and Wtsl. llttr HOTte• TO CllllOl'TOlt.t
Fifty-eight yacht clubs and . b • . '11-71 NAMI STAT•M•NT cllnl•"*' WUI not bo rt9"Nlblt '""" "'"'· Of' IUl..IC fa.A,"'"'• summer JO vacancies in Tiit 1on-1nt ...,.SOii 11 c1o1no bullne's ,,.,11 e11r °"' ,... 1ny oMl111t1ot1 frit\ll'rllf bY ·R.110Na ll'ITITIO. 111.n..-. "'"' lhl cs.a. ,,11,..,,, u.c .c.1
sailing clubs are listed ln the order to bring the park up to LEGAL NOTICE '" 1t11 PllMn In "*' n.trMt • In t111 111tnt Mfltlan of otwn11i.t lho#lno Clflttri. Hotlc. " Mrtbr ,.....,., 1o "" C:retllm• its full 6,300 peak employment IAiltTMORE &E•UTY COLLEGES, ot ""flrl'JI; ' lllCWHtlltC. dn Mec.tirthr.fl' -.,,11w,,,, of AlllH OAll!", IMC. Tr1n11 ........ wl'latr 1972 edition 0£ the Southern P'ICTITIOUS aUllNllS Ill SOUll'I Ltm0n $tr"I' Antlltlrn, OATIDl Dtwntiw JI, im MO. 0. ~ """" tOf """lttlon fo buJ!nftl lddf'wt1 11 Jiil W••I Cotll level. C•lllornl•. ,lf.AUllllCI "· tHAMllllll;ANO ,._ prOllOf'fY loc•IW In .. Mflit•I H~. ........,,.,, &Hdl, counrv pt
California Yachting Associa· T hi 1 NAME tTATIEMlfNT se-ltlllll'I' E11terprlM1, Inc. CA tfrl>« tri• ., tt11 "°"""'" cor"lll' of MM"bor ·er.,.., Sltte Gt ciilfetnr1+ ~ 1 !Nit
o meet t s increased abor 11~ 1ouow1n1 ""'°" 1, 6olnt ~.r,.... c1ot. c-•. 1. 415' wu.nlrt eou11\'lt'CI, P~lllhM OI".,... C•llt 0.111 ,.11.t. MU'°""• * Vktor'I• ur.t. ,....... tt1 io tf9ns• 11 "*" to bl '"'" "' w'"""'
lion Year Book ju.st released ~ demand. tht park's personnel HE1tNl1t.AN GA£GO• COMP•HY L• •11111t1. c1111or1111 •10. FIOtvlrv,,, 1tn .... n c1. ' c: ... 011 c.,.,."""' TtMJt""• w11o1t
The clubs are locAted .from starf Is now accepting 'ft... •lo "'1cl s1::!1. Nl!WJ'Ol't ltldl, T1<11s bu•!*• 11 <~ 'lrl • c-.. CE N0t1c1 is P'U•TM•• o1ve:H ""°' " ...._ ~ '' • w111t>1,. y-Cilltornli t26IO. ' or111on. LEGAL NOl'J MN 1ltM •~1 1111e1 Im ll'ld •• Pfl'10llt ......,.,., lonrtr Hiit.. CCMltY ., LOI
Sa 0 -~ nd plications and Interviewing for SCOl'f. ltAUT'V EHTEilt.Plt.ISEl, '""""',.. ""' ........ Mil bt ~ bY """"""'Slit. of C1lltom11. n lef(I to Mo J a ll1lllh N, lllktr, 213 VII Nlc:t. IHC:. -ll'ICTITIOUS IUll,•SI llW c:ttr'Clllncl( llf tttt (tty of Co.ft MfN Thi IWGPtrtY to bot lrtntt..-rtd ft
as far inland as Ari • summer employme.nt. ~~.i!:u~i i:I~~ ., .n ei Me"' l.ulal11o N.\Ml nATIM•"T "'"" 11..-lfMutd ~~NllltN. 1«11M at nSJ w.11 cci•t Hl..,.,,.
App I le ants must be 111111..idUlt Thi• ~!otl6tft-' w•• flied with"" cwn-Tllt followhta pott111 1t .-MIMu !2:.1f:le,7:~,,., of ~~W:11e11. c;_.,. « 0r111111, St•t• In addition to the club II bl 1 '-I k d · 1t1tdl N 11Mer 1 1•· ...... ,. Me ' • a va a e o ..... 5 n l\tlr uruig Thi. 1111-·, nie11 Wllh ""' couniy w C*k °' ar-1,... Ce\ll'ltr 011 "• '· 1m · illOIE"lltT ZlEOLllll a. '°"'• _.,41 c.11 • ..._., er.I Pllol !'Id ~ '' clotcrtbtd In """'"
listings the book also carries: the Easter vacitk>n (Marth c""k o1 o,.,... COUl'll., on Ifft. 11. 1m. nn« ,1,,,, Kth.!!11 L•M· H\tntl11tton .. Id\. . ,~u. ~--\' ,.11 :;..ti:..-=:,•.,";:; ftll~ :""~
A oompltte calendar o( sail 1.6-April 2) and on specified ~~l'Yerlr J. Meddolt. °'"""' tovnlY t'uen1111c1 or.,... C0111 cr.11'1 ,.oo1, H~=!:.!:!."'· 2014 K•fiUllt l1t11. l-.i " ~VIN• N:, ~~~:urMll ':
weekend! betwttn now and Pltttt lt"ttnlf!'Y n. 11. is. Mtrdl J.. 1m nii. llll•JMM 11 Mini ~ .,. 1111 t:&QAL NOTICB ~ " J1J1 wttt co.11 HI.....,.,
and pov.·er boal event! for I.be J 17 f dd" naJ . . Pu1111111tt1 Or•nt1 co.ii O•llV t'Uot, "°'"" llldl.....,11. -~~1e11, COIHllY of °'""' ,,.,.
entire year. une or a 1t10 lrawng. P'ttto.11ry 11. 2S 1n11 Mttcll a. 10. 1m J1mt1 I". Zl9'Mr • ll'KflTil!UI •us1N•t• Tiit bu!~ 1;,,n1fw Wfll ._ ,_.
"2t-n LEGAL NO'nCB ,,.,, ''''-"' """ •Ult ftlt CMtY ' ...... STATIM•MT "" .. ttltr 1111 "" tll't ., Mat-Ti'.%'
Editorial a n d h istorical LEGAL NOTICE c~ " °''"" Ctl.lnrt ori: "•· n. ''"· ""° t1111W1t11 ,.,,_ .,.. "'"' lo·Ot AJA. 11 ,..,.., M 111 111 • f. l---;;;_c:;;;:~~;y,;;_;;~i--1---;LEG~~AL~;N~QTI~~C~E'.__ __ .1 l'IC"TITIOt.lt •USIMISS Iv lllWl'l't J. M.od• .. O.UrY ~ •I_. 1,i ic0h1rntltr Cllf'ji • o•M, ... ~ maiulal 00 variow industry ,1ctn1ous •USINIJS .. AM• Sl'ATIMPT cm•. SOU"TH ca...sr INYISTM!MU -OllW Strfft. Sutt. sa. r~ Alltl ....
•AM• ITAT•MIMT ll'rcTfTIOUS aUSJNISS TM tilllow'IM ,,.,..... lrt dolnt Pullll-Or•l'lll Coet! OillV II'~= CIOCO ....... ~), ~ OvHnt, lllltt Clun1¥ Gf LOI A11t1.... 11111 9f and eervke organiuUons con--Thi fb4l ... IM totf"IOll .. OllM IJutlOWll .. AMI: ITAllMIMT MIMll •• , ,.-• .-•t. MMt:fl J, '" 17 ,,,; .. ......, -· (11lfornl1, ~~ ~·-..-t;u.... u : Tl'lt tol'°"'1M .. ,... ,. dtlltl Mr•I•• MAROA.RlT ~ILLS t.AMD &: IX• __ ,. ""I" Md ·-·-.... '•n 1!'1191M Tr!llolll. 17641 ll!ld;r-. II •• , .. ttlOWfl If lllt Tr1n1i.r1t •If A~'\CU ,...,.., ,.-............. 11JMIWI!." • u I L.O ING MAIM· It: PlORATIOlt COMPAH'f, , o.~ .,. "j~Jl:i.~m.. Ah ritflO Minott~ altd lddtl._ llMcl w ... ·~~u1 .. ol i m p 0 rt a n t T&HAHCll. 1u11 ••rtletl Ufll No, 1. THRiE: 'M' INlE.lllP1USaL "11 ~ H•wpof'f lllc:Pl, Clfltor'lltl ltMO • ~.. ~ ... ·-''=:! -' 1"rnmtw tor Ille tl'lrOI Wtr• "'' ""'· .;K:lll.'U. H11m1111111111 ....,., (•INorntt Or&tt lft,, Co!lta ""'4. C.11"1!'111• """"' """ l01• Srlt!ll\, l OftlMlll Unr, ~,.... AVI -...... ,... • ... I Simi.
•a I t I U E•rl M. '""""'· ,._,, 11rttt11 u..... Martt11 w. K«wi. -.. ,...., c.... ,.....,. IHCfl. Clllftrfll• tu. A.-.t "Tr tt ''·• um Olarro ~i f'lllnl1,., 11 1tn.
or• n z a o n mte ngs Mo " tt\l!ltlMftfl Ml<!\. c111tem11. M.•"· t.ni.nt.1 ...,., Tl!Prl'IOI Mllllfl lftWtrl. 1•• °"''....., 1'01'tcw .., ..,__,,_ ~-_,.,.,. c-i•'-wtrto, c111111( c.r,.,111en, thnKJ&hou.t tJI! year. 'nll1 IJUllntu II Ml"' Cl'llclUtttllll 11¥ Oii Tt!l1 bln!MJI ll Dfi111 «lftdllCtlll 9' 1111 CMoJt, CWOM dol Mar, C•llfotl'llo 1)'25 lfOIMllf'OWS,.Jl.ITY T'llt flVll'IW" la ~ Cll!'ldOCfM lw I T,...,..,_.
'l'hlllDboail -'-'"'c•·-I lndlvklull, lndlv~t n.11 11u.i-11 lllllW 4lllldUctH w • None. 11 lltr..., .._ M .,. _..,.. hrtNrtlt..., T -11: Tl'IOrMt 111. w.,._,
Na iica o • .,, M. '""""· Mlrtlfi w. ICerlOfl .,,_..,..,_ "'*'"" wlll l'llf M ,..a,,..,. flW ,,. •~ r l'~lftnt SCYA olfioen. TJt._ IMtlmerlf fl,.. WllJt lflo CIUM' Tlllt lt1frttnlnf l!Mf -9fl! tJ'to CwnfY l.trry T. Smllll ellllt """' tlllfl """°"' tfll "' lft9" lflll Tf'lll ·~ c «~""'II, ... 1'~ ,_ t.. ,...,.. "d....,.. ·~~·--... -'-', noo eU CJlrl d °'" .... c....tr. In, ... 11. •m.. eter. f/f or ..... Gwntr ... fl*'lll'Y 17. "T1lfl lf•'-111' m. ..,. .,.. C"'"'1 lltfe. Oft., ---w ... , .. ' ' ....... 1 Mlfllroli, ...... .,. ~ I""-"' -• ly """tr J, N~ o....tfr C-tr ltn. '' ...,.1¥ J. ~ °"'1f\' C/trll of crr1111111 CIPnf'f llfll "" Jo fin. DIMI fMI lPllll *' flf ,_.,, lfn .......... J, ..,_,.. OliMlfY '°"""' Clertl • O/lltart ,. .. lie. fi•W .... and prominent°'"-Cw11tr C:)lft. I? ~ J. ,.,,..... o.vt, ~ aRET a. STAGG C • '1__, • ,.._ Olfft ..,..._ ,--...ug PltNf l'·llfD Cltt11. lM NllllllNff I• ••~ h"I -7ad:dl:men of So 11 t h er n 'ultflliMll er.. c~ DrtllJ f'11t1, ,. .. 1..._. 0r..-c.Jf o.n. ,.111t 'tN.ll c.tt• ,...._ <afM. Ml..., ar... c.1 °''" ,.r11t, '-....., CllllnN ·~ C.JUornJ.a. If*-? ti, 1' """ ~" ... mt ,..,,.,., ..... .., Matcll .a. ... mi ~ ar-.. """ ~ l9fltl1 ~ ~ ( ... a.If' ....... ,...., Iii ,, II .. MM'Cll .. 1trr1~ l"Vtl ..... °'''* ""' r..~ ni... 4i.n a.w.1 "'"'"'"' " n. 11. ,,. 1m 111.n ,.......,,. 1'. 11. u. 1'1l a-n )0.11 '*-"' .. 1•11 an
\
•
IX M " .. Jo
0•
..... ... Im.
""'"" """" HQ-1111
~"' ·-lll'lllr
tlsllf,
cftlld ....
1.m ..
""'"" '""' !11111 •m.
"''"" ltmer
CMI~
"" G., of
"'" .....
loutll on.ity,
Ill b ...
'""' ,,,,.
"' DIA<
Lworn .. , . ....,,
H~ W1
"'~ ·-' ·-, .. !Tl.,
11
1
For The
Record
Dissolutions
Of Marriage
l!ltlrell ":'t:'TtJ," ~"'tJ."k.= Ind Jll'Mll It. ~~rn°tv ...... -t=•~ Anft
Tlndlw, R1ndllt kotf •nd P11tlcle Allll '
WIHll")l. Judith Ann Ind Dennlf W, Rost, "( 11\lrlt Ind Roti.rt Ltwf1 Corc.trtl'I, Dl1n1 Mtrll •nd Jlmft Anll'lo!W
•lllfflarn, Frtd P., 11 end lnlnlllldt I IYl'lo ......,1.., Jt1n end Jerrold Jot1i* Gu•rdlll'IO!ldG; Donna LM end .S.mllll tller•a CMnn. Gtoi"lle Fr1ncl1 and Ruthi L.o11 , ~•rlt. Dor• 1no Tho<N1 H•nrv tbb. Klftrttlll RIV I nd t.~1111 • ~ll'mott, EUUO.th J, ind ld~t.lnd ,
Lwcllt, ll.IMfl K. end $1tpllfn P. ~=ti!. Narinen L. 111d Diani
~i'~1n, sttvtn e . •nd llrtnd1 J lllllodl, :!:'-Liii Ind JGlln Glllldll H'f, JOM L. Ind Kirin J. mctl, A II Ind' Revrnond Sarr1111, J!lfn M. Ind Tlloml1 E.
Cllev1rrl1, "tbl<Ct Sut Ind R1rnlllo . .,
Tt1111llfon, (1ll•rlM I. Ind' JiY K.
l lYf;J{ ldtllt Wlnnltrtd Ind W11lec• f!_&rp~l:i!~1:"111111119=rJ~=-
P1«et. LMllt Annt Ind J1ck Riv D11rll1m, Loul11 J1nt Ind R111 Edward Heck1trwn. l ruc• W. end Milrv Arin Hl1laen, Chrl1tl1n E!. I/Id Joen
Mlid!tll, Loli 1nd Erntsl LOi"tnlO R eh. Phvll11 J. Ind ROfllld
l111trM l"ffrv1rr 1J Mllchell, Nill Okie •nd J•cob Fr1ur D1rllr11, Su11n C1rol 1nd D1wld Albert
P•lm. s111r1tv A. end wrn11
llrcchll, Noll D. Ind Edw•rd H. Htr!CM.on, L1wrtnc.t WIYnt Ind SI~ dr1 Ann Ptlt~ l/lr11lnl1 M. Ind Frld1rldt
M'i::t, S.nd•1 L. Ind R1lph D
l1rbour. Elllllee L Ind Ntll o.
80YU, C1rol A, ind l1rrr J,
P1r10nl, E1rllnt K. ll'OI Dollll R, , PvlH, Mtrry Ind CllUdt W., Ill
CClllClo., Nldlol11 J1m" Incl EllZlbllfl Sl\trwocd, Ar l1 II. Ind K1lhtHn L. Une1r1 Dorl lio\d Wll llam JOllPll Edler ' Mltlll'•I E. Ind Roeert c. Tr11man, Robt rt A!ldrtw, Jr, 1nd Lind• Loubt llrcldloot, Judllh. A, end Lawrt"e' I . Ptrsona, Antlllnellt II I nd Pl\111p R. PhelPI, Mltlent N, Ind Do\19131 E.
WllllllTll1 El'"n Ind Donlld Ev"nl l ar1011, Kr~ll,,. Alnna, Ron11d Ktn-
Enn:1Tnc1, S1r1 Jent •lld Wrtllarn L"I"' Line. 1nH Ltnlo Ind llrld Wl\111m oovnton, Gtr11dln1 1!1d 0ou,111 DI GloY1nnl, V1ltrll O. Ind AnllllnV J1mn H~•klN. Mltlllel Dtlll Ind Sl\lrrY Lu~~'." D1111 Dtrl-1nd lo1"ll D01Jtl11 Dfvll11. Marie Euff!'lll Ind Frtdttldt
M~d4oc:1r, Thomll S. 1!1d ll1tblrl II.
Alb1, 811ty Y~nt Ind J111i1 Mltll llUHI, \11111 JOY Ctr1ton Ind D1vld R•r
Killy, Thorn.II Ind ~111111 H, Kieffer, J1r Ind Eve T. Herrtrt, Sonclrl Ind lll'IQ,,.. Wffb Par1-Ruth Ind Cherlli: FtlN'lk rl'llrnbers, C1rol LM Ind Robtrt Lw !ei-tti.r, Htl«I F1v1 •nd Htrold Jolwl lundt1Ul1t, MWllfll L,, Ind R1vmond k~ler, Kenneth LM, Jr. end Slltrvn
M1rli:t11 ~~~nli:.:n·~~· Pllllt1p
Cr1l1 Etlon, WllW LM Ind C1rol
(rc.lfV, \t~~~~ .ln!I Ind Jlrntt Ktlth e """''" 1• Olltn. Dlborlll L, tnd G1tlln A.
Tl\ompton, June L end Donlld W,
MtllnlOl'I. Suun Ind All,.._ E. S!rlckllnd, Denver W. tnd larblrl I . Cochran, Robert Wood ln1 Mlldr~
Vlrelnla J11Utce, h ... RIV Ind Dorotll'!' J.
M1rlln, Edw1rd (. •!Id II.OH R M,,..1111', Ol1M H. Ind SteJ!heft • A911U1r, M1rl1 Antonl1!1 Ind PldM:I
G1Undo P1rlCll'I, Rcbln L" 1nd Jan Ir win J1cl1111on, RQblrt H1r!1n end Chrlr!IM
D!1n1 Dtnd1"41tr• Clllrm11ne Let ind J1rne1
l!lmlr E CDlllMtM. C•rol J~nne 1f'ld llobtrl •
'"""' !, L. llld l!tlltl D. _.,; C PfNIDl:I<, Kt11fll Join 1.... lrntr• .... . M1ttlllwl, All!tn H. end Wl"lh'~ C. Mcndlftn, Nldrf LH Ind Mlcl\111
Scribe ~ Recalls
Beloved ' ·Gaffer
. By TOM BAllLEY
01 ffll Dolll't '11.t Stilt , THIS IS 1 ghost story. Nol the good old bl U and chain
and hOwltng' in Ibo atUc variety IKrl about thn phantom
wbo has tramped with me in roceol w..U lbrough '°""'
ol Orange County '• highly .Ophisticaled credll rating op-eratiOnJ.
II waan 't hard to lmnglne tbal
Gaffer Tom was breathihg *wn my
neck on an assignment that }"U pro.
lesslonally lasclnalJni liUt (imooally .
revoltiDg. .
For I'd have said before I started
my lnvestfgation that my graitdlather
.. would ' go into gyrations if SOJl}eone
could penetrate slx feet of good Lin·
colnsbire soil to tell him that his fav.
orite grandson · wos vlsilin~ ol all
places, a credit bureau. ••"l-•Y
I'd have hurriedly explained as the Gaffer came bound.
ing from his final resting place that my investigation .in
no way represented' my ~ rejecUon of the views
be expounded so magnJflcently nearly 40 years ago.
LET ME tell you about them and him. ·
Gaffer Tom became a family legend at the age of 90
when he l<*!k his weekly three-mile walk through Illy
woods that hark back to Suoo limeo to pick up his be,
loved package of Dul<• of Weijington tobacco !tom a shop-
keeper in a oelgbboring village -the onJy man. in Lio-,.
coin shire, proclaimed the Gaffer, with brains enough to
stock the world's best tobacco.
He got a surprise on a wet April day. A Consenative
government (what else?) had raised the tobaceo .tu and
consequently put an extra hal!penny (bal! cent) on Gaf-
fer's baccy. ' ..
Gaffer always carried the right change for his be-
loved Duke and not a penny mOre. 0 Put it back on tJJe
shelf, lad," be grimly told-the shopkeeper, "I'll be back."
. I
"NAY, NAY, Tom Barley," protested the shopkeeper,
trying to push the tobacco into my grandfather's bands.
"It will do next week, no sir, please,. come back -"
Too late. Gaffer, his golden retriever at bis heels, the
rain dripping from his shooting hat and his stout ash
cane executing six circles a second was on hill way home
-three miles through his treasured lily woods with the
shopkeeper plaintively wailing 6ihind him.
· He was back later With' the · Correct change. 'nlen off
again to complete a 12-mlle route march on a wet day that
would have daunted mast men hall bis age in an' age when
mdl ilnew bow to walk.
THANK YOU for bearing with me this long. For I ,
think tJJls, in effect tells the story I was sent to Anaheim
to obtain -at 1eailt from my own particular viewpoint.
My attitude to credit varies little from the approach
Gaffer Tom so splendidly' demonstrated 1n a Lincolnshire
comm\Dllty that admired him to a .man as indeed we or
his family do today. , ,
"If you can't pay for •it1 you.can't afford it.' Ant;J if
you haven't the money, leave il," he would advise those
wbo 10ught his counsel.
· GOOD OLQ Gaffer. My aslgnment revived some gold-
en memories. M!~~n. K1lhlllft Merle Ind St1ev ,,,.._ .... .,,._ .... .,,._ ... .,,._ ...... ____ ..__....,. ... _...:, Midi:. Jr. _ _.0 MJOrl..,., Ir-1nd I rle Ktn""' l w1111e. John w11n1m •nd ortM
1!1111bell'I Ill , nd Debt• ~.=o..~lu1 ,;,.:,,,n Ind Edw1NI ·-· r.ull1ff, Robtrt A Md Geotll• L. D!'bbl. E11r1111 Sdlw11 N1vln, 1nd John
Gonj~
De•th l\'otitt•
cox
t:IMI M. Cox. 1'"2 Frnh Mltdow' LIM•
SIM 91Kh. 01!1 of P1lh, F1twu1ry JA,
1t11. s.rvlcn pendlno 11 P1c1ne Vin
Mortv1ry. 901TSCH
Mtnr'( C. G&ttseh. API 11, of ,11 lGlh SI.,
HlltltlnglOl'I a11ch. O.lf of death, Fttf.
ru.ry 23, t'72. survl~ by d•UOhltr,
"'""" Merrltt: two "°"'' J1rnn OGl'I alld Elmer Gotbctl. elf of Huntington ll11ch1
thter, Sfl"!1 Sw.ln, Alhalflbr•: 12 or•nd·
cl)lldrt"n1 ' 11n1t11T"11!dch!1drtn. Grt~I·
lldl Hnlka \11111 tit htld S1!11r4ey, 10 1.m.. Good 5heplltf'd Ctmt .. ry. smnllf
Mol1u1ry, Olr.cton.
JONIS
Slltl>Plrd It.~ J-102 Couftlry Club.
Stnll Anl. Ott. fJI <1e1tll, Fl'br\llrY ll,
1tn. servlcn ptl'ld!ng 1t P1c1nc Vltw
MO!'tuary. lllO
11mtr G. RMd. '7i' uurel. llellflowtf'. o.te of c111111, F~tv fl, 1972. Sur·
vl'ttd bY wlk, £111111 tw11 90M, Elmtr
G of Htwttiom.I tnd Htllry A. RHd,
ciit1 MH11 ,_ CS.ueht111i. Matlt A1-
burY UkfWCIOlll EYlrtl SfTDf19, C1rrl111U
l..wirr1 D1vr1. Lant lltKhl JOVl:I Ctr·
amlr.y FAsnol tltttr, l!llllh ll1!1ey, Ttll·
l'I brotlltr, Mii•• Reed. Arli11n11 14
11r1ndclllldr.n1 2 1r11!-t,..ncklllldren.
s.rvie.-, tocMIY· l"r1d1y, 3 p.m .. P1c1nc
View Cl\lpel. Entornbmlflf, l'Rlflc View
Memor1.. P1rtt. Pecllk VIN Mortll9ry,
Dl""on.
Report Says 3 Airports
' .
Have No Noise Problem
SANTA ANA -Declaratlo111
that Fullerton, Meadowlark
and Capistrano airports do not
have a noise problem within
'Decathlon,'
H eadNa1ned
the meaning of State. Noise'
Regulations have been ap.
proved by the Orange County
Board of SUpervlaors !or
forwar\llni. to ~ a I a.I e
Departinent of Aerooautic1.
Only orange County Airport
Is· considered to have a noise
problem, county ·Dlr,ector of
Aviation Robert Bresn•han
had prevlomly told lhe board.
SANTA ANA -James W. Thal problem is being at.
Decker ol Laguna· Beallh has lacked through an eleclrorilc
been elected . !972 pl'91dent of noise monitoring system.
the Orange County Academic · ~pprovil of the. report Was
Decathlon. held up for one day after
The Aoademic jlecathlon is . Supervisor' WUliam Pb!nlps ol
a contest in which high school Fullerton prote!ted that Buena
students are tested in 10 acil~ 1Park officials bad called his
demic areas. , 'attention to alleged nobe prob-
Other officers elected were lems at the Fullerton MUnlcl-
Stan Kautz of Irvine, division pal Alrport.
commercial manager f o r Phllllpt said Mayor Tony
PaclfJc Telephone Co., , vice iF.onte of Bu~na Park had ask·
president; Tom L a c • y· ed that Iba deelaraUon be held
of Garden Grove, Santa Ana until April IS.
ARBUCKLE & SON Wl!S'l'CLIFF MOR1UARY
m E. l'IUI SI.. Colll' Mesa
Ill 1111
office manager of Southern AS!lstant Dl.r8>r of Avia·
California E d i so n Co., lion Ron Chandler-t o 1 d
treasurer· and Marllyh Woods supervisors that Buena Park
· of Santa' Ana , service con-.-could appeal any declarations
sultan! !or Pacilic Telpbone to lhe state Department ol
• BALTZ BERGERO)i
FtJNERAL ROME
Corona del Mar 1'1U1iO
Cosio &fell W.1421 • . BILL BROADWAY
MOJITUARY
110 BroldwlJ, Cellio Med
u~ • • McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY ,,.. Ll._•t Ctn)'OD Rd. , . .,. "Nii • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMOllL\L PARK
C.meiery MortnarJ
Cllapel
• uet P~clllc View Drift
Newport Btl<b, calUonfl
lfU'I• • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
ROME
?111 11o111 Aft.
westmll1ter nwm • SMITHS' MORTUARY
ll'I Mila 8t.
Banll•llOI Beacll ....
Co., a aecretarj. Aeronautic_,,
• __,.
~~~
Man~ 62
Held Sane
-Guilty
SANTA ANA -An Orange
County Superior Court judge
has rejected pleas of insanity
and found an .elderly Anaheim
man gajlty of voluntary
manslau"ghter in the killing of
a real estate broker.
Judge KeMetb WI 111 ams
reached his verdict after
defendant Victor H u g o
Hughes, 62, waived a fury trial
on murder charges.
Hughes was arrested last
Dec. 17 shortly alter the
shooting ol realtor Albert Rod-
mon, 64, Westminster. Police
said Redmon was working
with the defendant's wµ'e,
KatJJerlne, 41, in cleaning a
Buena Parlr home prior to
renting the premises when be
was !bot in the throat by
the enraged Hughes.
Police said Mrs. Hughes told
them her husband had become
increasingly jealous of the
business relationship between
beraelf and Redmon. It was
testified on Hughes' behalf
that he was becoming in.
creasingly ill from
Parkinson's disease at the
time of the incident
WHAT II DURAGEN•
RUBB!R?
New Chief
Of Judges
Selected
WES'ITMJNSTER -Ker>
netb Mellie Smith has been
elected presiding judge al the
West Orange County
Municipal Court In
Westminster.
Smith, a Rtpublican, was
llral appointed to I h o
Municipal Court Jn 1968 by
Governor Ronald Reagan.
As presiding Judge h e
replace.! Lloyd Btanpted, wbo
has been elevated to the
. Orange County Superior Court
by tbe governor.
Blanple<l's departure from
. the WestmJnster court creates
two vacancies in the court's
authorized judgeships.
The Municipal Court in
Westminster handles traffic
citations, misdemeanor of-
fenses, preliminary procedure
for felony offenses, and small
claims for the West Orange
County area.
Smith came to t b e
Westminster court f r o m
private practice with the firm
of Guy and Smith of Newport
Beach. He was first admitted
to the Calt(ornia bar following
graduatklu from Stanford Law
School in 1952.
The 43-year-old jurist is a
member of the Orange County
Harbor B a r Association.
Carrier Feted
HUNTINGTON BEACH -
Letter carrier Calvin 0. Brown
has been selected "Driver of
the Year" by the safety com. mlrtoe of the Huntington
Beach Post Office.
Brown was picked because
of the evasive acti.on he took
in swervlnJ his Vehicle to
avJid ·striking a postal cus-
tomer.
Frida)', Frbruary 2,, 1912 DAILY PILOT JJ
2 Cf!llSt Laws Take -effect
The Stole Oeparlment of ceptlon ol abalonea, chlOMt,
Parks and RecreaUon bu cau. cltmS, cockles, c r abs ,
tioned Or""•• Coast beach lobotel'I', scallops and sea -~ urchins.
sPortfilhing license. S I n c o
...,. species are subject to
seUOl!I and bas llll!lta, out-
doonmen are ur1ed lo check
their sport!lshlng regulal(oa users about two new. regula· Tide pool fishtn must
Uons governing dOI• and tlde pouess a valid Calilomla
pools. 11-.~;;:::::::::::::::::::::::~:;; Visitors wbo bring !belt
booklets.
dogs into the parking areu of
Bolsa C h I c a , Huntington,
Doheny, San Cltmecl• and
San ~ State &e.cbea
must have a current doc
license or proof of a valid ,
rabies inoculat\on.
The new lule, which has
been In elfeet since Monday, b
designed to protect the health
and safely of park visitors.
Dogs are not allowed on the
beach Jtself but may be taken
to beach walkways and park-
ing lots .
A second rule, w h I c b
goverru1 sea life that may be
taken from tide pools In the
Kim·chat'ka
state park system, applies ·-----------~~~~~~~~~~ locally only to Doheny State Beaeh. o.1triblltld by Thi Alfred Hitt COCnplllf • 10 Proo! • 10011 Qfaln N1u1r1J Sptrtt•
As of h1arch l, inverebrate1r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; animals may not be taken11
from the pools with the ex-
Hospital
Gets Grant
FULLERTON -The James
Irvine Foundation bas award-
ed a $15,000 grant to
Fullerton's St. Jude HO!pital
for construction of a new
parking lot.
When completed, the new lot
will accommodate 470 cars
and provide space for a
heliport for future medical
emergency service.
The San Francisco-based
foundation is named f o r
James Irvine, founder of the
Irvine Ranch.
In
We Take Pleasure
Announcing That ••
FORMAX OIL CO.
AND
. .
H. J. KOMER & CO.
HAVE LEASED OFFICES AT
2192 DUPONT DRIVE, SUITE 211
NEWPORT BEACH 92664
GRUBB & ELLIS CO.
4300 CAMPUS DR.,
NEWPORT BEACH 92660
(114) 557-7900
when Y<Mf buy 1.t ti,. l'I our ~ulw
low Pfltt.
General.Jet CAMPER • Duragen• tread rubber
• Famout duel treed design
• "'-ply nylon ~rd 0
i TRUCK TIRES .... ''""' ""n" Ped.IL Ta --• ... OfP "'"" ...... ,,, ... 11.75
Duragen911 0.Mrlll TI,.'I Ill•
clu1tve tradm n11M tor our poty..
but1dl•n• aynth•tlc rubb9r
which la blend.cl with Sty1'9M
But•dltn• aynth•tlc rubb•r" (S.9.R.) to m1k9 SI,. trt1d rub-
b•r. Thi• proc••• lmprov••
tr••d w••r, rt1duce1 lr••d
Cl'ICklng and Iner••••• he1t r•1l1tanc• ov•r non•tre•t•d
S.B.R.,,. without 11crlflclng
llllCl!Onl .. ..,.. .... c.. 7.7S..t4
7.75-15 """' '27.SO j 800-16-5 • 10·16·5 ~ • • 12-16·5
...... 12.12
111.71 '2.11
tMPOATAHT: Coupon llema wHI M
honored only on d•Y• epecHied.
You mutt Pt9Mni • coupon M tli'N
of purc:hue for your 1rt1no1.
,._.,dean
... ,,. C.ni .
STARS 'N STRIPES
SPEC,IAL!
A lunch box for all members of your ftmilyl
Rustproof box, stt•I c1sln9 & f.lastle jecbf.
Easy to or.•n & close! O ne-pint p 11fic-jackeftd
Th1rmo1 or hot or cold b•ver19•s, with drink·
hu11 cup lid & handle. In patriotic 1t1rs 'n 1trip•1
de1l9n.
SALAMI SANDV/ICH s111 NOT INCLUDED!
DELCO'S LOW PRICE
TAKE YOUR PICK!
USED TIRES
• Lob ot 11 .. """" rr...i
s5~!" dot• 1M 10111 t••••
JlonlcAm.rlcard
M11tor Chorge
a.is-14
8.25-15
8.55-14
......
$31.00
t32.SO
t11.00 .2t
~ 6PLY-8PLY-10PLY! ttl.IO 12.34
ttl.25 , ...
0
COMPLETE BRAKE RELINE
SUPER
WIDE!
Beltod-Rolsod
White Letftrt
"60 SERIES"
F&0-14 or 15
$35.95
, .•. T.Ul•IM
G&0-14 or 15
$39.95
,.,l .T. UN.ti
95 mo1t
American care
Don'l gambit on br•k•• Utat pun ••• gr.'1
.••• , .. , .pongy ••• nud pumping. ltop ln
(the bfft wey JOM c•n) Ind let our Hnic.
.,ecl11i1I• rtllne th• four •he•I• on )'our
c•r.,, lnmptel drvmt end cyllndlfl, •• add
cru-lllJ hydr1ullo fluid ••. adJu•t br•k" to
full cont1ct.,, tnd lupect and 1dJU11 tftl'
•m•r1ency brtke. TMn you can 1top 111'1-
.~.,., ••••It·
USE GENERAL'S CONVENIENT AUTO.CHARGE PLAN
no money down ••• ~nlh1 Jo pay
SNOW CHAINS
ALL PAS11N•11. flUCl l
CAMPll Sltn
TlUCI l&Zl'~t
, ...... 1 • 71hl7
12-16-1 e I O';slj..I Jotd • , ... ,,
, ..... , .... HOsl 64.71111
U.S. INDY
MAG WHEELS
POID-CHlftOLIT-
PLYMOUTH-OAUUN-
TOYOTA
:~~.~~.sggoo
(
(,1111 tlPll .,.. hlltt) • ..... "'°" ...n .... fw ~ ••• c .... ,.,. .. .. .......
lllflltly ttftMr.
COMPLETE
CAR
CARE
Since 1969
Don Swedlund Haun: 7:30
to i :DCI Dally
COAST GENERAL TIRE PHONE :
• r
\
• I
I • • I
• i .
• I •
• • '
• • • • • • • v • • ;
i ' \
. -·
'
J 2 DAILY PILOT F~d.11. F~ 2S, 1972
WIRE JAMMED 8iftJND : CAPACITY WlrN HOM£
FIJRNISHINfJS Of ALL PESClllTIONS! WE MUSTNAYE llOM .FOl -. . .
NEW (;0()/)$ ON THE WAY/ PHICIS cqr IN Ji{ Piii/NG THIS EMERG£NCY . . . ' . . . .
SOFAS, LOVE SEATS, CHAIRS, TABLES, DINETTES,BEl>lOOM,8fDDING,OODS ErElfOS GALORE
8-IOOT
SOFA
0,114 ta .spanish ...
f16rlc "' ";,,;1. .• . 2.·PC. SOFA &
3-PC..SIANIJISPH. LOVli SEAT.
D£N .t;.RO. , . M1uwe.w10v1lfti10i1Tr1m
,.,,,,,,,,,. '
' . . . l!'!.!' f'f'f~·' ·~~:....:~====
S.pc. bunk ensemble
1 b•U, 2 •siringa. 2 loam
llunlc: pad1, la d d1r &
gucrrdraiL Sat'1!
SJ.VE 188 $31
lllldtll Sitt' IDfl
r.. ... ,r1aw -······· kUMa. f t I• •fJJH., a..ttit~colon.
SAY~ 'ff8 141 ,,,
CAie• 91 -. ... •ttlN. All wilk ...... ,. .. •nlPI•• •le. c. iu41 ,_,,,,,._
values ~If:
to Jl4.90 Y-J
Dt h••• 1lrelch. .. Ut COJa•
fort. K1.1ndr-t d1 ol •l••l
coUa. 2°pl1c1 .. t.
ni:h/y .
9111/f~t/
B-Foor
SOFA
~6'179 .5Ei.t.ER
dvsky Oak li~11ish .
DEl.UXG S.Pc
81/JllOOMS
ftiple ~ress~r ensem/J{ss
af!t~ 'If 8 .
r:hoost1 from Z(I •••
Y£i.VET
. ··· S-gFAs
. aaye.Jo~ '7'oi 50'-'
Pt/r:es 19~
'8t41i8f 7
., HOURS· MOM1AY thiu FRIDAY 10 ta 9 • SAllRIAY 10 ta 6 · SUllAY 11 to 7
ur, rrce1 7 Be Lower •••
because we buy from leading manufacturers,
plus monufactvring· beautiful furniture Jn our
I
own FQCfory onci sell direct to YOU . . . •
>WI RITIMW '10 &f~E.• .
FREE SET UPI
FREf·l'ARKIN'G fOlt HUNDREDS Of CAltSI
. D.F.C. I
BIDET PUii
• OPEN SUNDAY 'TIL 7
505 SOUTH MAIN'::-:c::!,SANTA-, ANA •
PHONE
Kl 1-2563
•
•
I r
1
• I
1
•
• •
~ , ... , ...
llJo
l
•• '
I •
UI
who
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"
bow> ,
.,.A;
Ilk"
gitl ''
1be'1
~t
All
Ila .
dW
J lust
doe<
" "'ti! -
I I
. ,,.
'
·B.rig
,
f eni:irrg
. '
•
;
Aon Landers
Di·rty . Dea·I Hurts
Poker ·Frjendsh ip
'
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I pl1y cards
with 1 grbup of women once a week. n,,
1takes are low -qickel and .dime poker ..
One of the girls cheall. She aays 1be.'1 in
the Pol and pretei\da to ant. up, but •ht
ruJfy ban11 on to the 7noney. Or she'll . ,
•~Yt "I'm making change," •D4 throw 1
ctuarter 1n and takes back 40.eenta.
We're all on lo her tricks but nobody
wants to· say anything . She~ a nice
Wson escePt for this one fault. Can you
·•uUest a way to 1et her to stop cheating-
•ithout di!gracing her ? -NOT BLTND
··DEAR N.B.: ne next time this "nice
pene1" polla He of lier lltue trtckl, call
~ • K -bot save lier face "1 1aytn1
yQ.11re•111rt It WH accldtntal. You woa't
' lailvt ·to do O;lt more tariu two er ~
ttii.t1 btfore Utt preblem lt IOIYed.
l
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Tht lelt.r
~ "Famlly Man Who Made "Ole
'
• ·~
-
'
-~
•• '" . ,/
• Sirllch" got-to: me. lie deacrtbed hlmaelf '
•
u ·a biaemal -a one-time clo11et queen
who opted to 1bandon lht gay world, 1e1
married and raiH a family.
i HorSeleathert, dear. A• a rulODlbly • 1'&1•nc:ed, f1irly content q,,... who
dpun't care for clOld1, T 1take luue with
•·ramny Man." Ht'• on1y · kkldiAa
himael/, That wife 9' rus ls a mama
filure.' 1n lprdo IO hide behind. A1 for hil
"aclonble" ~ no one knows yet
bow Ibey 'U ium out. '
· 'p:, W1io cruiled PY bors·if> college ~ Iii:~ fe11u 11t11er u..n lldlet 11111 100' d
• better believe tt. Mur)llng th1t "nice
gift'' .... I dli1y'lrick, unieaa, ol CO\H'le,
1he'1 1 little kinky. And It'• 1 Ille bel
thal 111t 11.
All Ibo llt.rature on !hit 1ubjec~
llittlnC with lhe Klnley ~ m1kt1' tt
dQr 11\al 1houl -tlllrd of Ibo mile
populallo• of lhll country hit llod 11
J if11I ollt homoluu.tl experllnct. Thil
cloesn'l lliun 1 111)1 ii Ill'• liu1 a ~
wholl four yun 1t eoUq.-••rt filled
wttb ••bizarre hamoauulJ t11ea,ades'1 JI I
.oot a~t to throw a 1wJtch and be con-
verted !'!!" I hlppj.fllitlly nlib. -PIN·
CURL CHARµ!: • ..
• DEAR P!N.ctJRL: TUU1 for 1 direct
Hu la ;,,. nlr' World, Raden Uke yea
ca. <1e 1 sr0.1 dw ia.edae11i ... 111....0.
-me lndaded, ud I thank yeL
' DEAR ANN LANDERS: Wh1I can be
done abOut 'In o:-brother--in-l1w w.ho
H.nds me hate c1rd1 for .e~·OCC¥ion.
nils person ii no kid. He'1 70 yeln old.
His recent contribution to my mental
health w1s a birthday card. The .cen-
terfold pictured .an 'aftg,ry 1orilla ·in the
act of · destroying the world , Thi
message: 4'Today is yoor birthday, but
why worry 1bout 1 mistake that hap-
pened so Jong ago?"
His valentine greetih( . wa1 another
tasttles1 horror .. On the .cover w1i tlhe
1ulemeo~ "When rtlhink of '{00. 1 ·1oae
' con~J.11 On. the Inside was: a picture"Of a
tittle ~ with I ~ look. The cap.
tioo UDder""tbe'doe11 picture ,,,.,, ''If >'°"'
don 't believe -me, you shoWd 01;et the
rug."
Thia mohtin1 I recei(red anou,er· card
-no sp0ei11occulon,jtist1 dii : ''Cheer
·~· .. ,ii •lid, "No MID .ii 'I . \oil\ lallute.
You can alw1y1 serve · ·~ 1 bad e1 .. ,
ample.' ..
ii Ihm • falf ag1inal Ibis lq'I of har-
rass:mut? When I let ·those large tn-
vtlopes I 1et very 'lllllO)'ed. Doel' a
peraon . h1•• Ibo richt 1o ·~ ... 111er
per.on thil "')'? Pleaae IChiH me.·-
NAPLEs, FLA.
DEAR NAPE: Tiit -ii -7 1 .,.,..._AM•--11-.a.11o•1
... lorealllq ........ Tiit -...
• ...... Wrtee 8Cl'MI .. ...... ..,... --·nil-.... ....... ' -~-, 111
•
' An you, or 10mtone you care about
111018il'I ll'Ollnd wllh dru11 -or "°"' tfderlnc ii? Are Ill dMlll bid?' Whit
1houl pot-if> modenllon? Ann Linden'
._ bookie!, "Slrllght 'Dope on Dnqi1"
lfpinlel tht llC\ from Ille llcllon. For
each bookJtt ordered -I dolJlr blJ~
J>IUs I · ,... Mif·lddttued, llamped,
.. vdopt, with fl e<nl.1 '""111-of 11.unpl
to AM Landti., Bos »41, Clllcqo, Ill.
IOMI, if> care IJI tht DAILY PILOT.
·~
.Angelllol de Oro lcnow how ful a
year eoes by.
l!:lpecio11y r.r 1 ·fltherfes•. •
ye1r .. 1d boy IJWOUJly 1w1ltlng the
fun weekend& IJl<ll\ with 1 Bia
Brother pl1yl111 volleyblll on tht
be1ch, 101111 to 1 planelll'lum, pic-
nicking In the canyon or' racin.C
mld1et e1r1 In the polio.
To mike IW't tht lmporllill
events of everyone's year are p~
perly scheduled and rtll\ember<d,
the An1tllto1 publlah their Gold
Book. or 1lorllied eng1gement
calendar.
The Gold Book er1tom1... lhe
oomp1nlonship Ioli o B.ia Brotbera
of Orange County and efforts bj Its
Angtlltoo 1uxlllary to. rll1t funds
from the community for the com·
mun lty.
Each donated page practically
pays for the e1perU1e, counse.lin1
and profes&ional work Involved. lit
matching one Bl& B~tber to the
re&ponslblllty ol one fatherless boy.
BUSY STAFF
The !Irr.I edition Is being edited
by Mra. Willer Cruttend .. Jr. and
In th'e midst of
editing the· Angelifos
de Oro Gold Book,
Mrs . Walter
Cruttenden. Jr. chooses ,
boyhood theme pictures.
to illustrate the ' '
11th annual date book
that benefits Big
Brothers.
' llEA ANDIRSON, Editor ..,...,., ,.....,, "' .. ,,. , ... '-
"Thank heaven for little · boys; they
grow up in the most delightful weys ,"'
could ~ the :slightly ame~ded
theme song of Big Brothers of Orange. County.
Ralph Brown and his son, Matthew, end
' Jimil'ty and Johnny' Auld re-cr•ate some
activities that ':"little brothers" enjoy
doing with : adult male guidance,
•
•
Mecihories:
• •
lllustr111d by Mrs. W"l'fell Jone1
with written Ind • pholo1nphtc·
,tubtlnce lti>m the Miil"· Edward •
E. Shll'p. llugh WrJaht 111d Edwin
F. Steen Jr.
~ualnHs det.llnire beln& hind!·
ed· by the Mmes. EdWard •F. Ward
. Jr .. W1lt.r J. Hein1ull, R. J. Slod· ,
dlrd and Albert H. Muted.
With Mra. &tor1e L. Woodford 11
president. Anaelltos Ile ln the
"be.lay season" of their lith yw of
lrlpl .. ht1ded fund·ralsln1 'for Bl&
Brothers.
The Gold Book Is a souvenir at
the Angelltos de Oro Boll. Mrs.
Wllllam Holstein Is In charge of the
• 1 • April 29 gala at Belboa ,.Bay Club
which wlll further benefit the 192
ni1n·little brother pairings In
Orange C.ounty.
The third sha.re of Angelltos'
financial llnd social help comes
· lroi:n Its pi.trone11sts. These Harbor
Area women who are active In
charlt.able and cultural projects,
along with sustaining and associate
· rriembers of Angellto were honored
at a 1 luncheon in the Donald K.
Washburn home.
P.ARTY 'DECQR
. Flowers decked the tables. patio
and bayfront deck 1s Mr 1 •
Washburn recelved. assisted by
·Mr1. Marshall Ne Idec k er ,
patroness chairman. and t h e
Mmes. Thomss F. Riiey, Donald
Woodward , Charles Thomas and
Spencer Honig.
A1 they enjoy these 50Cial
I ena•a:ements, Angelitos share the
feeUna.o!companionlblp that "lltlle
·brothers'' have when they are
'
ml~ up with ·I Bia a...o..ri. '"
male lmqe and volr:o of 1uthorlty
and concern.
Patronesses Include the Mmet" ,
D1nl•I 0 . Aldrich, D w I 1 h I '
Anderson, H1rry W. A_ 1 1 n 1 ,..
Richard Bailey. v. P. Biiker W~liam L. B1rker. Byron Jiu•
•nden. Arlh4r John B1um. G=• Brad.lord, Geor1• D. Bu ,
Lewis M. Boyl• Jr .. C • .!! .. Brok,w,
Bert B: Brew tr, John A. Ballahf.1
Stanley S. Burrill . 1nd Mill ~I
Blomquist.
Othtt ire the Mmes, Willian\ E. t .•
Chichester, A. De.Wt)' Cllllh¥,
Burton U. CoUlns. C. 'B1rrlqton' ~' ' . Clperton, Bertrum C. Coffey J"t., 1
Thayer Crispin, John Curci. Je111 1 ~
W. Curtis, E. Avery Crary, Warrtn1
H. Crowell . Randolph F. Doll,• '
Andrew Dossett, Richard I' ••.
Dwyer, Paul W. Elmqul.gt, E. L.,
Emett. D. Walter Elliott. Ronlld'
Foell, Edward H1 Groenendyke an<l, -:.
Sam Gurley Jr. ,,. •
Also listed are the Mmes: RoU..1 ~:.
R. Hays. W. Peyton Harrhn•1'~
Frank HJrrlngton, CJlfford E.+ ' ,
Hughes . Thomas T. tnch , Wilbur B ....
Jager. Ward E. Jewell. Emmett ·!'!
Jones, MacLeod Klug, M~ · -
Leonard Lang. John B. Llwson. E.' ::.
Douglas Lee, Lester C. Lowe,• ;
Douglas C. Llechy. J·u r I e•n · :;
Lorentzen, Carter Lowell, John D. :~
Lusk and Robert L. Lynch. •,,.
More contrlbutor1 are the MmUo 1 ... ,
Willia m 8. Malouf. WUUam H. •
MrGee. Shirley Meserve, Ha.rry ~
John March. H. C. McCray. Joh!\,,
Macn1b , Robert J. Merritt, J •• • -1
Robe.rt Meserve, Martin Mangold,"~\
Marshall L. Mor11n. W. PhtlS-.
(See PATRONW&'I, Pq .. IJ) ~.
<
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,l,_4,,___D_Al_L_Y_P_IL_o_r ________ ,,_1.s._,c.·-'_rbnl.?ry 2!i, 1CJ72
Your · Horoscope
~
Gemini : Sta rtli ng News
:May .. Have · Funny · Side
I ' , SATURDAY, CANCER (Junt 21.Juty 221: dlvidual1. Be yourself. Many
who are energetic are drawn
to you -for your Ideas. Ex·
p r'eas and develop
philo!IOphlcal concepts. Write,
advertlit and 'publish.
FEBRU,t.RY 26 Let some persona . know
lly 5\'DNEY O)JAllR that you do not own a monty ' j: ' Copricorn periona u• dut
'Ii 1iow for lli!pc'ovimtnll In
•· · ·arw: fjnanel1J, ~ti and • .ru.u...1 .. !!or
~ time, many native. ol
a r.odiacaJ sign fLiv~ felt
•1ck>aed off" from opportuplty.
I · chlng~ as JupU.,.
wltl throuch \ht dgn. !?JiiiinlLim replacea &. I o o ·m ,
tulatlons, C.l'l'~I
. : AlllES (March 2l·April 191:
4Vold -.y !<odtncy to be tl·
avapnt. Be c;reatlvo, but
,.ick 'to schadule. .What ap-l!Un: a contiadlotlon "W r..
_,clarified. Money area· ii ac·
~ livale<l· On• >elo$t to you may
make unreasonable demand.
• lit patient. . t TAVRVS (April iJO.May 20 ):
This is time for ICHDn. Jf you
c:ontinue to be plagued by
doubt, opportunity could fly
away. What ls an apparent
obstacle actually will protect
you. Family member does
mean well -and hu aome
answers.
GEMINI (Msy 21.JWI< 201:
Don't bt startled In re1u-d to
call, ll!ellal• auoclJt.d ·with
relative. What appean serious
• IDAY actually turn out to bt
r fumy. Utilize Innate sense of
-.~versatility. Means have
~,.ltemative1 at hand.
· ontemporaryfumlture
'.
tree. Includea; certaJn mem·
btn ol yoor famlfy, 11lost who
rush you1 cajole, plead or
threaten lhould bt finqred.
lit fair but firm -then
harmony .will be restored.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Take
lnitiltive 1n geUing project un-
der way. Ont Jn autborlty Is
Impatient. You can 'now be at
right place at proper time.
Revis< t.chniquea. Aili\ high
-,don't 1ell yourself short.
New contact proves. valuable. vmGO (Aug. 23-Stpt. 22 1:
Exchange of mesJages, cor-
r e 1 pond enc e could be
featured. Adhf:fe • to con-.
servative course. Av o Id
writing ln~inier. One whO a~
pears indilferent may actually
be very lntereated. Plan ahead
aceordingly.
UBllA IS.pt. 23-0ci. 221:
FriendS may have dispute-con--
cemlng .. money, Don't eet
caught in middle. And atrive
to finish what's Impartant to
you. Some now seem intent on
wasting your ittme. Permit
CAPRICORN (lltc. 22-Jon.
19): Nothing now is apt to OC·
cur halfway; it is all or
nothing. P I a n accordingly.
Don't play games where i!mo-
Uona are concerned. Stakes
could bt high -sod for k .. pa.
Member or opposite sex 11: in-
volved .
AQVARIVS (Jan. 2().Ftb.
11 ): Pace slacken!. There are
details which reQuire at.
tenUon. Don't delegate duties.
Be on top of situation, Your
security is invol ved .. Thorough
approach Is a necessity. You
could make Important
discovery -if observant.
PISCES iFtb. 19-March 20 1:
Forces tend to be scattered.
You may be trying to do too
much af once . Be more
analytical. Regain sense of
dittetion. Remember diet·
health reaolutions. Check ap-
paintments. Relative could
become aggressive.
logic to rult. EmotioM could . . IF T"DAY IS y O V R lead you astray. 1 , 1 v.A .. SCORPIO (Ckt. 23-Nov. 2ll: . BIRTRD Y.youhavequalitl~•
Hold off on 1 i 1 n i n 1 whk:b en'able ~ to succeed m
agreements. Best to wait for f:DlefF..Lse ol. your ~· You
additional information. Obtain ~an. ~le resP'!nslbi;!fty. you
hint from Ubra message. Ob-'. rer;pond .. ·1well in hm~s . o(
tain fresh viewpoint. eme.raency. In March, there
SAGITrAlUUS · (Not. tt. wlllbe ch4Pge of scenery. You
~· 21): Not necessary to try will be happier and experle.nce
to keep up wlth younier in-greater freedom or action. Few persons are able to ac·
tually discern your degree of
senaitlvlty. Thls means that
only a 1mall number knOw 'the .
real you.
, Cagey Woman
1cceisorie1 -
Pledged for 60
Shele Mccaa of Costa Mesa Girl Seoul Troop 836 represent. the 32 million
men, women and girls involved in Girl Scouting since Juliette Low began the
fir.i t troop in Georgia in 1912. Candles signify •ix decades of Scouting. Tradi·
tional Scout cookie orders will be taken Friday, March 3, to Monday, March
13.
Discover •• , ~
' . CIL-1 .BIDTIQUE ~
Zoo-keeper Finds Work Charming
hfA-M.t•l... o.,.,. ' lldweU Ola~
M'1 VIA LIDO
· NIW'°ltT llACH ;!
UMSll ,11
iii•~
SACRAMENTO
Snakes charm
Amemiya.
(AP)
Denise
MW Amemiya is the first
woman attendant hired in the
bi.story of the Sacramento Zoo.
"Sometimes I say, 'Now sure the toothy tenants stay
don't you bite me .' They do up on the grass. " preference program.
Her friends do not think
have personalities.you become Her only snap to date didn't much of her new career :
fond of them. I just talk to come from an a I Ii gator "Everybody says eu·u-uch !"
them the way I would to a dog through-it came when an And, her parents, Mr and
or a cat." Anaconda boa, not poisonous, Mrs. George H. Amemiya of
Troth News
Revealed.
Mn. W. H. Spur&<on m has
announced the engagement of
htr daughter Shtllty Spurgton
of Costa Mesa to James John
Lo/Us of Huntin&ton Buch.
Tht brldHltct I! I h e
daughter of the late William
Htnry Spurgton lli and the
great-granddaughter of W. H.
Spurgeon, founder of the city
of Santa Ana. The bridegroom·
elecl i1 the &00 of Mr. and
Mrs. Edwu-d James Loftb of
Anacorlts, Wash.
The couple plan an AUJUJt
family wedding In tht Newport
Beach home or Mrs. Spurgeon.
The future bride graduated
from Newport Harbor High
School, studied In SalzbUrg,
Austria and received a BA
.. ~gree In English literature
frO'rn the University o f Redi•nd<· The prospectiv•
brldegrodm. Is now studying
law enforcement at Golden
West College. ~
SHELLEY SPURGEON
All s~e· nee.els ls,.'
1 helping hand
from you ...
Give to
EASTER
SEALS ·
BED Pl~LOWS
SALE ' RED LABEL
LAS TS SS.971ACH ' DACRON
FOUR .... '"·" KING SIZll DAYS "-':,
Bed Ii Bath RIBhlOfl.~09Pi .,.
1"'1 MAJJt IT,. .. I ,.._ C..... -MUNTINOTON llACll .. ~ ..,,...aw,..
w• will be eles•d
SUN°" Y, FEBRUARY 27
for· inventory
ilt11kt"lt 1ic•rtl e Wl t lf•r ~h•'1 • ! ft1hio11 idt 111I, ,.,.,.,.rt c•11f•r 6-44-5070
Antiques Sale
Snakes we.re a new subject
In her life wben she started
work several months ago as
an attend11nt In the zoo's rep.
We building.
Now 1he speaks w i t h.
authority with affection as she
paints out the endearing
charlTUll of the 2 o o -s o m e
snake~ turUes, I i z a r d Ii ,
alligators and such who live in
the zoo's reptile section.
There is no forgi venesl' ror bit her wrist while "She was Sacramento, "They think I'm
being a female on this job. She putting water Jh its cage. crazy. My mom panics. She
and Kenneth Hoblett are the She Js all alibis for the of· keeps telling me ' b e
only sttendants in the reptile fender~ "It's a neWly acquired careful'....every day !ihe says
section, each working a six· A\\!'conda, and my wrist didn 't l._:i:_:t._" ________ _'.!:=~:::=:::;=::;:=::::'.'.'===:;==~=====' day 1hift followed by thr.. hutt_ at ·all."
days off. whlch mean! she 111 She does admit to feeling
II to 5
s.turc:l•y
& Sun da y
All en Antiques
7192 We1tminst•r
w.stminst•r
STOCK OF FINE ANTIQUES
20°/o TO 40°/o OFF
She .even . chitchats with
them while s.he cleans the 60
d.iajJlay e1sts in the reptile
house: ,
Newport S-t-r-e-t-c-h · & Sew
Low Pricji·~ .we Compete!
tremenao·us Selection
We Excell!
HIGH FASHION" IO(IT FAHICS FOR
THI STYU •CONSCIOUS WOMAN.
6000 •Cl• ft. of K11it Ft~ries -You must ~ to l:l•li•ve. Imports, besie selids,
cl1 si9n1r prift't11 111tir1 eeler lin1s, all in bl•nds Of Polyester, Lin•n, Flax-, Wool,
Alp•e•, Nylon, De,rsldn, P•rasu•cl•, Trevir•1 D~olen, in toP. na'!I• _brand's,
OUR IXPOllNCll> STAR' PROVIDES
.UIDANCI AND ADVICE
We l•y out ,.tf•Ms and help yeu'.s et.d n'.ot. mere fabrics+ but th• ritht ftbrie
for your ir14ilivi•uality. 1 , • .
NIWPOIT ~.& S6W TICHNl9UES
W• t•aeh tt in ovr modem plHt•nt cla11rooms by skill•d profassion1I t•aehers.
10 yeur t t wlng ••.'•rienc1 becom!! ttlf·t~tisfyint •nc:I can be completed in
so much '"' timt. • H .. H PASHION DflCTS -YISI
Our Str•tch & Sew t1chnlt1u" coml1t1 you r basic er••tivity with eur fine lln •
of Vogu•, l utt•riclc •• w~ll e1 Str•tch l Sew patt•'"• for th• eoj.iturl•r• and
hi9h 1tylei look. ·
' PlD DIMONSTRATION -RSYP
lqUAll NICI( RA.UN WITH COUAR -SATURDAY, I :00 P.M,
ls
I AllC llOllT
1 11r. ci.-...,, w• ·
IWIW-"UI. W I , f• M."11\ I .• 1:• P,,M. »• _.. t • • • t:• -."" • U:• •&
CHI Lllltlll'S wua
~h,... Mw. c1 .... u ......... , -. ......., _..., ,,_..'I'. -U • , 7111 P.1111.
TPN Cl.ASS I M~· A'{Tlll
-1 11r.ci..------__ .,..,. 1 •• 11a ,... ,.Ila 2 Hr. 0... ••2.M
\ ••••• , ... ff. ti••AM..
Lall-ltM Ur. ".'-• $10, .,....,., M_. U • , , , , • , f :JO ...,
..W •Uf "'• Cl'li• $10, W1•••1J• Mordt II.'. t :J0 -1 1iJO ..... ••rs PANT5-'-u.. e-... "· w .... ...,. . .,_. u .... t:1r .....
NEWPORT S.T·R·E·T·C.H & SEW
FAIRIC CENTEl
21tl w.tdlfll Dr. C.,,,., 17th A Irvine (N11t to C-'tl
- _ ...... ,,_,M.,. 645 5120 ..... a.. Prt.A S11.t1 ..... ,.... • ..........
J
on her ovm some days. P,Bin, ijlough. at feeding time.
Hoblett says. "She's great. Ii is part of her job to help
But I had misgivings when , raise rats and mice, then toss
they first hired a woman." tlltrn Uvl: to . the snakes at
. r . mealtime. l''hlch only comes tt 1~ understanda1~\~ when. he every nine days· ~escribes a chore hke tak~ng "It's getting better. but I
little twee.z.ers and pulling really felt rotten at first ."
away, the caps fr~m .~be. , At cleanin~ time, .l!ihe climbs
cobra s. eye~ when _he s ~ed-right into the larger display
ding ~s 1kin. Denise ha.a .to ; cllses "1 step Carefully" while
ho!d bis h~a~·and all the, while ,.the residents remain at home.
he II h~v~ his mouth. o~. ann ' If a poisonous or can.
be. t~ting around trymg ' to ~ke~CM.is s11ake i1 : involved,·
get Uli: . . . . she lifts i{ out wi~ a, pro.nged
Having warmed up WI~ ~at. slick aod stores itJn·a covered
horror story. Hoblett goes. o~ can while she clearui. !'Ith reli~h to ano~er "fllfJ · IJ'here is 8 Pee'pbole ,n each
Job. clearung the alligator pool.. idoor 50 she can spot J he rep.
The two ~t.tendanll Work · tile before optning its case,
togeth.er drammg the ~ater, · and sbe says, "They don't just
drt1ggmg the gates out of the leap' out at you ." ~I, the~ scrubbing away MJas Ame m i ya was
while keeping a wary eye to be graduated from the Unlversity
Fabrics
Foreseen
The fashion industry'1
already looking ahtld to 1973.
That'• right; '73.
of California, Davis where she
majored In biological sciences,
plaMing a career ln marine
bioloey.
She chose her "snake pit"
for a simple reason: "It was
the only opening." But having
dec.lded that reptiles can be
lovable, she says sh! would
not switch jobs now·
She was among 900 ap-
plicants when the Sacramento
1.oo offered two openinp and ytbat . do . they • e e ? ' announced it would accept Celanesee , doing the . . forecuUng, P.'f:did.a 1 boom'• women for lhe first bm~.
In lawn, voile, batiste and She scored at the top 1n the
.dlmity fabrics, a ''festival of V?"itten test.._ surpassed o~~y by
w'"b!te · gtound -spaced and 1 man who rece.ived additlona!
sprigged , florals", pleated lnts under the veterans
skirts by "th• millions," two-THE BEST piece 'suit dresses for both
juniora and mWes.
ntcka, backs and ahoul rs to
coaUlut and "a rash
lUva ~ apteially pe1 ,
oky 1ilile and aqua," ·
R,.d<nhlp poll• prow
°'PM.nu ta", it one of the
rld'1 most popu_l_ar comic
nps. Read It clailf Jn the
DAILY PILOT.
''SOR WATER IS
·CHUPER THAN DIRT''
RENT $275 S::oc1 .
· fl•14a OgYJ.,IAN MAM;"
534-2233
; •• I
MESA Oil MAI
'lll1 f•ln>ftw ... ,
Cosll MN (714) 142-MH
•
GARDENS ·
MISSION VIQO
24741 OriNnll Dmt
Mlff)Oft Ylolo 171•)137•7111
I
'
..
f
•• •
'
I '
•
•
Scholars' Dotlgrs Needed
Dollars for Scholars will be trumped up during lhe annual benefit luncheon
and bridge party planned by Newport Harbor Panhellenic al 11 :30 a.m. Mon-
i:iay~ March 6, in .the Stuft Shirt, Newport Beach. Following lunch a program Pf original vignettes will be presented by T. Duncan Stewart. Counti ng the
first ·dollars are (le!l ' to rigbt) lhe Mmes. Charles Glasgow, Lloyd L. McCollum
and 'El~rl C. Smilh, luncheon chairman. ,
· .. :·:Nearly Everyone Listens to Landers
• .. '
• .
' •
GORDON
NOBLE
·CONVERSE
•
I
J
F'dd.iy, F'ebru•ry 25, 1972 DAflV PILOT
In Russia, America
Similarities Seen •
In Woma~n' s Role
By LAllRIE KASPER
Of .... O.llY ,lltt '""
A dtaire for pelct w~ the
1, mesqge Mrs. Carl Ne.iMer sot
1\j while \•isiijng Russia Jul fall .
A~hough thert Is a greAl
deal of patrioti11m there. Mrs.
Neiaaer told the Women's
Division of the Newport
Donors
Cherished
Harbor Chamber or Com·
meree recent!)' that t b e
Ruaaiaru: told her, "We want
peace. We are turlfled o(
war."
"Their feclln& is of panic,"
she expJalned. because. they
loat '° many men ln war.
Mra. Nelaaer waa one of ~
women in the Distlngu\11hed
Delegation of A me r i c 11 n
Women invited to take a three-
week tour by women 's com-
. mittees In Hungary. Romanl11
and Rusala. The trip also was
sanctioned by the S t a t e
Department.
HUMAN LEVEL
The 1972 Cherish si,rlve Althoug~ all three of the
sponsored by Las Almas ' de countries are communist, ~he
Mardan wlll be opened during found ror th l11 trip that
a . champagne brunch in the ''Ideology Wllll no longer Im·
Harbor . Island home of Mrs. portant." lnstead , the said,
. Bernice Fishback at 10:30 !hey talked on a "human
a.m. Tuesday, Feb. 29. level " and di!!Cussed the
A representative fro m problem11 com mo n to all
Mar.dan School will be present women -''how to get alona
to explain the functions of the · with men.''
school, which offers .. edUca-Although clvil righl3 h11 ve
lional o p p o r t u n I t t e l.for existed for women ln the three
children with I ear n In g countries for 35 ye ars. 11he
disabi}lties. Mid, the womeft· are working
LAS Almas de Mardan. .:i hard to make sure the Jeglsla-
group organized to pi-o Vide lion stays and i1 adhered to .
!!Cholarships (o~ Mar d an The women · also want 008-
sludents, s po n 1 o r s one
meeting a year . for Cherish
member11 who donate •t2
toward 11Cholarshi ps.
Anyone interested in the
group may call Mrs. Garth
Bergeson of Newport Beac.h,
Mrs. Robert Moore of Q:mta
Me sa or Mrs. James
Waydellch of Balboa .
Astair Flair
Fashions Pants
Pants for 11pring move In a
looser, wider look. Some call
them bag11, says Mildred
Sullivan, director of the ·New
York Couture Business Coun·
ell.
M~ny are pleated In front
with Fred Astaire nare and
curred . The pants come pal-
. terned or printed with a solid
jacket, piped like men's pa·
jamas or spic and 11pan In
whi te flannel or gabardine.
Dabneys
Reveal
Betrothal
An Aug. 19 wedding is being
planned in the Flr11t Christian
Church, Huntington Beach by
Deborah Dabney and Robert
Hale.
New!I of the forthcomlng
event ha11 been announced by
her parents, Mr. and Mr1.
Joseph B. Dabney of HUD-
tington Beach .
Mis.• Dabney attended Hun-
tington Beach Union High
School, and her fiance , son of
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Hale of
Downey, w111 educated In
Downey.
metlc1. ready·made clothes
and better chlld cart facllltles:,
aht uld.
The majority of the doctors
In Russia are women but they
art not P'id as htgh RS aclen·
tlaU . The women also do much
ol the htavy labnr In thue
countrlu. Mrs. Neluer 1111\d,
but they get equal pay with
lilt men.
DOUBLE SHIFT
Russian women also are
entering political Ille ln the
vi llages and cities 11though
they have not yet reached any
of the higher spot...
One problem. she ~Bid. Is
tha t women work a "fjouble
shift.'' eight hours on 1~e Joh
and then 11ix houra 'Of work ,11t
home. "The men do very Ill.lie
to-help ," ,._1rtt Nelutr SA id .
and even the government ha!
put poster! in the buses urging
the men to help Jn I.he home.
Cafe:. ~nd cant"ll~ h11ve
sprung up ~IHlse the wt'lmen
no longer want to cook .
Divorce ratea are rising 11nd
there is 11 movement lo Umil.
the number o[ children ~ '
cause lhe women don't wan1 to
go home and work.'
"During the trip .'' Mrs.
DEIORAH DAINIY
Nel.,.r uld, "I• learned lh1t ...,_.,
push\111lJanort1nd you do It
with a amlle." People •re
alw1y1 walklni. 1he II.Id.
because they wanl to be alone
and they don't want to be
"""""'·" FEW QUESTIONS
The people stand In lhree
dl(ferent Unea ln stores ln
choose. pay for and finally get
their purchases. In 11ddltion,
11he said, they have tn go tn
four or five dlfftrent 11tnre11
for groceries hecau11e they still
have speciality 11lnre11. as a
blkery 11nd poultry 11tort .
The Russi an women asked
the Amerl<"11ns very few qut!I·
tion11. Mr11. Nei~<1er ~,11ld this
w1 11 probably hecause .. they
thought they 11lready knew
everything l h r n u g h pro-
pag11pd11 .
They wcrt surprise d ,
however, lo ltarn l h e
Amerlc11in women 111110 work .
Although Mrs. NeiMer said,
"We in 1111 honesty cou ld 1111y .
we wert having ,11 wonderful
time." t11he 11dm ittect that the
group thought "thank G n rt .,.
we're back on free soil" when
their plane landed In Swoden MRS. CARL NEISSlll
after leaving Ruul1
From Page 13
• • 0 Patronesses
Merickel, Edward M a yo,
Sherman Miller, Carl Neisser.
W!!ley Nutten and Yates
Owsley.
Olher11 are lhe Mme11. PAul
A. Pal mer. H11r vey ,J,
Pearson, Charle11 R. Peyton,
Bayard Ryder. Harry Rinker,
Edward ·A. Raul11ton, Charles
St.evens, E. A. Skinner. Max·
well Sturges, Ralph Sa mpson,
Mtlrtin I. Scott, Jonas Store,
Richard Steele, Walter H.
Seibert. George C. Scott,
Jame11 G. Scar b o r o u g h ,
Cheat.er F'. Salishury. .John
Howard &rugg1, Edward y;,
Schumaker and Ira Warren
Smith.
Mnre 11re lhe Mme11. Glen
W. Thoma•. Byron Tamut.ur
Sr .. Oscar A. Trippet, JlaY·
mond Tecklenbora. John
Steven11 Tedford. Charles ·s.
. Wheeler. Roscoe W h t l e ,
Crawford Westering, Horatt
S. W1!11nn, Allen 8. Weidman,
E 111 o t t Wllllam1, Chrl.stlhl!
Ward, A. Jame11 West, Reid
Waaao n. Elvin K. W\l10n , H:
8. K." Wllllf, John•Wayne , W:
ff. Yule ind' Gtllr~e Yardlel Jr . , . .
Concludln1 the li•l • are lhf
Mmes . Jame• Willet Decker:
Raymond Voc!ber. Robert Jl
MaM>n Jr., Wiiiiam P's
McGr11tb, Vincent McGulneS!f
Earl G. Sawye.f, Harvey Som-
erA, Ph!Ulp Arthur ThomPIOtti Henry Ulm•n, and William Tj
While.
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An Important New· Name
to Readers of the
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I I DAILY ; PILOT" l
Gordon Noble Converse is Chief Photog·
rtphtr of The Christian Seienet Monlior,
And now ,' through !ht-new Chr lslien'Sei·
once Monitor Nows ·Serviet, DAILY Pl.
LOT iubJeribers will enjoy seeing m1ny
of his unique •ncl meaningful pictures on
1 regultr b11is , right' long with the' fine
photography provided by tht DAILY Pl·
LOT'S own staff end a eonstant flow of
wire photos from other n~ws services.
Converse is unique largely because of his
own philosophy on nows photography.
"Photography, like music, is • universal
lan9ua90. Our grtetest nttd tod1y is to
underst1nd Heh other, ind photogrephy
Is a· tremendous tool in building brid911
between nation1."
Groot photogr•phy is just one of tho
m•ny benefits you , 11 1 re•dtr of the
DAILY PILOT, eon enjoy now that tho
al-new Chri1ti1n Scitnce Monitor News
Service is an intt9ral, part of tho DAILY
PILOT. If you are not olrudy. t doily ind
Sund1y subseribtr, why not order eon..,•·
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loc1I eorritr or coll tho DAILY Pit.QT of-
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•
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:Lake rs
LOS ANGELES CAJ'I -H!Jtory i1 on
:Jl!t aide of the IAs An&elta Laiers aa
llley boll CinclnnaU tonlfhl, bul they
... y -,,,.,.. than Uttt "' •top Ille !loylls' Nate /.tdllblld.
Ard!lbald, an unheralded 6-IOOH,
1eoond-year JIU'rd. l!Js been probably the
most spectacular player In the Natlon&J
~aketball Alsocialion since the All-Star
11me, ln which ht wasn't invited to play.
He bu averaa:ed well over 3(1 points a
DEFEAT NO. 117
FOR FRIENDSVILLE
MA!IYVILLE, Tenn. CAP) -Victory
-thlt elU1tve lady that's avoided
l"rlendlvllle Academy for 117 atnlghl
baaketball 1ames and Vonore Hilh for 21
atralcbt -ran out of place• to hide when
. UH teams met Thur1day. Vonore irabbed
lier, 17-IZ.
Vonore, led by forward Terry AdamJ,
'l9 oolnll, bad not won 1 11rr1e since the
eod ot 1u1 .eason. .Friendsville Academy, paced by c~
caplaln Johnny French wllh I!, has not
won 111mt 1lnce February of 1987.
• French'• fellow captain, Joe Housley,
Eame down with appendlcitil Wedneaday.
He listened to the came on radio in a
l\o•Pltal where he'1 recuperaUn& from
1ur1ery.
No Comeback ·
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Try Again Tonight
1ame, lncludinc 1 M-point performsnct
q1inll PorUand rwo nlahll 110. and ad·
ded 1 bundle of 111lsl1.
The Lakera. meanwblle, have tqualed
their bi&gest slump of the sea.son by los-
lna two 11me1 in a tt1'lf for the third
time. The first time it h1ppened they won
the ne:rt 33 1tr1Jght. and the second time
lhey won ti&ht in a row.
With the llS-110 loss to Houston
Wednesday nl&ht. l..Ds Angeles' le1d over
Milwaukee bu bff.n c:ul to 2\1 &&mes ln
the race for the NBA'• belt rtcord and
the hom~ 1dvanta1e in the playoffs.
'Mle Royals. who have woa their last
four games, aren 't out of the runnlnl for
the pl1y0Hs in the wuk C-entral Division,
despite a zi..44. record. They trlil second-
place Atlanta by 3'it a:ame1.
The Laltert have won two ol the lhrff
meetings between the teams. Los Anaeles
Injuries Kill Boxer
Threats, Death
Are Investigated
WINNIPEG, Msn. CAPl - A lull Inv.,_
tltatlori Wll launched Thursday into 1
four-bout proaram in which one bo:rer
alleged he waa threatened and another
died 11 a result of injuries.
The probe of the cerd at the Wlnnlpea
Arena Monday nl&ht was announced by
M1nltoba :Recreation Minister Larry Des-.
Jardin• after a provincial cabinet
meeting.
heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali
March 13 but postponed signing the con·
tr.act. His manager, trving Ungerman.
said later in Toronto he doubted
Chriltopher's accusations.
"Christopher must have taken 2$ to 30
serious blows in that fight," Ungerman
1 said. "I jwt can 't believe that statement
he made."
In Detroit, Christopher said Thursday
he would "wind t. up in the bo.1" If he
didn 't take a second-round dive in the
bout against Chuvalo.
won 119-107 here Oct. 29. and then lhe
teams didn't meet until Jan. 12 ln Cin-
clMatl. when Arcblbald and Tom Van
Arsdale led lhe !loyw to a lllf.107 vic-
tory.
On Feb. 1$ Archibald, who was ex~
peeled to misa the game with the nu.
played and scored 30 points, but Ille
Likens still won 125--113.
Los Angeles hosts the Chicago Bulls
Sunday night.
The Machine,
Awful Aussie
Hitting It Big
FORT LAUDERDALE. Fla. (AP! -
Golf's glamor gang -Nicklaus, Trevino,
Palmer, Player -couldn't dent par at
the beginning of Jackie Gleason'• $260,000
lnverrary Clasaic.
For heroes. you had ...
-Gene "The Machine" Llttler shoot·
lng a record 6.5 for the first round lead ,
displaying the fsceless precision that
magnetizes golfing perfectionists if not
tbe roaring majority.
-Bruce Crampton. the "Awful Aussie''
to some, close behind at 67 and e::r·
plaining how he is perhaps the moat
misunderstood man on the tour.
-And, other contenders at 68 with such
unmagical names as Bob E. Smith,
Benson Rayfield McLendon and Forrest
Fezler.
For Conigliaro;
Desjardlm, who h1ts jurisdiction over
the provincial bo:ring c:omml!Sion, recelv·
ed a formal complaint earlier in the day
from Jim Christopher , a D 1 t r o I t
heavywel&ht who was knocked out in the
RCOnd round of a bout with C&nadian
champion George Chuvalo.
Desjardins told newsmen the statement
received from Christopher'• lawyer Jton
Meyers claimed Christopher "took 1 dive
and that hil life was threatened."
"Someone came to my hotel and told
me either I take a dive in the sectind
round or else I would wind up in a bo:r -
meaning I'd wind up dead." Christopher
said 11t his home.
Jack Nicklaus began double·bo&ey,
double-bogey and "rallied" for a one·
over-par 73 on the 7,123-yard layout.
Arnold Palmer "played miserable" with
a 74. Lee Trevino shot 76 and marched to
the putting green for practice. Gary
Player was the best of the millionaire
clan with even-par 72.
MIKE. CONTRERAS, STARRING AT ASU. ..
Vision Sante
•
• LOS ANGELES -OU Iii elder Tony ~nialiaro 1ay1 his blseball career i1
OVIT, It Wll reported today.
.. Conigliaro reported that an eye te1t
&bowed his vision had not improved
eftoueh for 'hlln to. attempt a comeback
wllh lhe C.llf'11'nl1 AJll!ls this season .
"I feet I'm noUUni without b11eball,
but th1I time 1 can't flaht it," a ntwsman
IJ.~Oted ~ntcliaro. "I'v• been throuJh two
q>mebacka already and I can't do it
aialn.
..:~'U you can't Mt the ball you can't ... " f ,,
De1Jardfn1, read ing from the state-
ment, laid Chri!fopher claimed he was ·
appro11ched by 1n unJaentlfied white man
In bis hotel room and told. to lose the fight
"ii I w1nted to go back to Detroit alive."
Christopher said hls trainer. Lee
Krantz, witnessed the incident.
In 1ddltion to the Christophe.r-chuv1lo
probe, Desjardin.! said tht commission
was to lnYestigate suspicions raised by a
referee that one of the flahter~ in the
first two bouts may have deliberately
feiened 1 knockout.
ln the final fight on the card, Stewart
Gray of Toronto was knocked out b:Y
Can1dian light he1vywel1ht champion Al
Sparka of Wlnnlpaa. Gray' died 24 houra
later er held iJ'ljuries.
ChuvaJo was to ha ve sicned Tuesday In
Vancouver to fiiht former world
Lynn Seeks Gold
"What could I do?
" ... Chuvalo hit me with a hook to
the body and when I pulled away he hit
me again. l didn't go down. I was on one
lmtt .
"If It wasn't for that threat I'd have
gotten up and beaten him ."
"After the fight someone CC!lled me on
the phone and told me to get the hell out
of there," Christopher said. "I wasn't
running from nobody. When I left 1
w11n't running."
The 5-foot-11, 202-pounder, orifinally
from Milwaukee, said he wouldn' have
considered taking 11 dive il it hadn't been
for Vie threat, adding: "If I can't do
aometltlnc in boxing honest. I don 't want
to fight at all."
Chrilltopher, 29, who works at a Detroit
auto plant, said he had been boxing since
he was 15 .
He has had 31 professional fights, win·
nin& eight. he said.
Ex·Oifer Cage Star
Crampton. while not in the upper strata
of golf's glory squad, has always
performed well in h i gh -pa y ing
tournaments. The son of a Sydney cop
won a $50,000 payoff at the 1970
Westchester Classic .and ha s bagged
$120,000 in his three latest tour triumphs.
Contreras, ASU Mates
With $52,000 top money on the table this
week, Bruce headed around the first turn
in magnificent position behind Littler. the
lamily man from San Diego who gets a
kick out of tinkering with his three old
Rolls Royces, a Model A Ford and a 1955
T·Blrd.
Seel{ 2nd Place Finish
By PllII. ROSS
01 IM ~ll'f' f'Ue! Sl1H
As ls the ca se with the rest or his
talented. run-happy Ariiona S ta t e
Rookie Fezler. along with unheralded University teammates, ex-Huntington
campaigners Smith and McLendon. Beach High basketball whiz Mike Con.
played well during an unusually 'A'indless treras isn 't exa ctly sure what ha s gone
Florida morning. wrong during portions of the present
Sensational rookie Lanny Wadkins, season to keep the Sun Devils playing
Masters king Charles Coody, Engli shman below the ir potential.
• Ton)i Jacklin and Doug Sanders were Ccrfavored in pre s ea s 0 n prog·
games and then alternated with BUI KtJt.
nedy ind Jlhl O'A•ens," the S.2 , 180-pound
junior says. "But Owens got hurt and
he 's redshirting (being held in reserve
without losing eligibility l, 50 Kennedy iJ
the other starling guard with me thi1
season." MINNEAPOLIS. Minn . -A panel of •tg Ten athletic officials was scheduled
t«J •Mounce it.! flndlnas today in the
1uspensi6ns or Minnehota basketb•U
,1avers Ron Behagen and Corky Taykir.
• The results of a conference hearing
Thursd1y were: to be present.M to U.S.
~strict Court Judge Earl Larson. who
pve thf: Big Ten untU 8 p.m. today to
A Girl's Best Friend
among a group of seven players at 69. nosticalions lo make a blazing run for
In 111, 27 men cracked par on what was the Western Athletic Conference /WAC)
supposed to be a rugged Robert Trent title, Alon~ with defending champion _ ~gned cou~The Nlckl11us-P1lmer·Pl1yer·Trevlno bunch raced a Brigh1tm Young. coach Ned Wulk's ASU
Not known as 11 1corer but as 1 p~
ficienl shooter when he does take aim •
Contreras' value is shown fully in the
al'isis l! department, where he leads the
team.
"I don't crash the boards at all. Th!y
tell me to staf off the boards beeause Wt
ha ve enough big people to hal'ldle I.hat, ..
he goes ()n.
battJe todiy to make the 36 hole cu t. The ca~ers have fallen far short of their goal.
rr:affirm the suspensioM. .
·Behagen and Taylor were suspended
~ the se;i:st1n aftt!r the brawl with Ohio
~late Jan. 25 in MiMeapolis.
Three Ohio State pl1yers wete sent to
~e hospital for treatment.
Isn't Always Diamonds usuaJJy.tense Crampton loosened afte his Hnwe ver, recently. it seems. the Sun
five-under-par start and talked about a Devils have caught fire and have seen fit
reputation he believes is unfair. to improve their conference record to 7-4.
"I am misunderstood," said Crampton. As a matter of fact. the Sun Devils
''l am just as human as anyone else. t have won their last four in a row. in-
,,
, NEW YORK -Top-seeded Stan Smllh,
Am.erica's No. 1 star from 8ea Pines,
&..C., batllts veteran Ale:r Olmedo of
Ehcino tonight in the f e a t u r e d
qµarterfmal match of the $30,000 Clean
Air Tennis Clas$ic at the Seventh Reai·
JIW.lt Armory ,
Othe~ quarUtfinal! matches f I n d
ee1»nd·steded. llit N1st1u. Rtllftlni1.
meetinJ Jim Connors, the UCLA coll11e '4r from !leUevllle, lll .. aflAlr the Smith·
C!Imedo ao. ! TwO alla?noon matcbta pit tblrd·!ffdad ~ill ltlcliey, S.naota, Fla., a11Jnsl Ove
teoglaon, l!wed111, "llh two Spanllh
flars, Androll Gimeno and Juan Giibert.
-.cm, each alber in lhl 1econd match. t,• ; . ,,
' MIHNEAl'OUS -The dismiJall of
Anatoly Taruov 11 coacb of the Soviet
li:tional hockey squad Hf• like rtpllcina
flnce IAmbardl wllh 1 rookie hocQy
.,ach," the coach of the United State• ~llmpic hockey tum uld T!lurllday.
'Without Tarasov, Ruula will be like
n B1y WU without Lombardi:" ad·
ed Muruy Wllllamson. "P'or the hockey
ains of Ca111d1. the Unit.cl Statea.
hoslovaki• and Swedtn, It'• .,...1. A
. and new ball cme!"
Wllliamaon apoculated the firlnl of
Taraaov waa becl.uae. of a SovteC lft.
tlinaiion not to put "too much of a
f'OUight on ll'IY one lndlvldual." It'1 a
of lhe l!u1lltn1 • pollllcll phlloooplly.
said. .
aruov won nint stralaht world tiUes
Rullfa and three ..._.,live Ols'mplc
medalJ. lnclUifuli one In lhe recent
ympic malcheo Jn Sapporo, Japan. Tiie
nlted States tum, -by W1JUam. ...., three sames aJld lolt two to a allvar medal.
•
NEW YORK C APl -Janet Lynn
brought home bronze from Sapporo but
she says &he'll be digging .,or aold in Den·
ver in 1976.
"I want to skate for lnur more ye.a.rs
because I would really Hite to aet th1t
1old medal,'' said the 18-year~ld
Rockford. lll.. girl who captured her
ct1untry's only fiiure skating medal of the
1972 Winter Olympics.
' "But I'll take It one year at a time."
aaid Utt four·Ume U.S. National cham·
pion. "If competing ever ae~ t.oo much
for me, or ii I cet tired or decide to go to
•chool, I'll qutt. ..
Miss Lynn was speaking Thursday
from her Rockford home Whe.r! she was
confined wtth 1 aild that curtailed her
practice for the World Championships In
Ctlaary. Alla., llarUng March 6. "I
fiaw'ld out what was wron1." s1Jd the S-
foot-1 wisp ol 1 11r1 with 1 hoarse laugh. ·
0 1 haven't been takln1 my iron pills."
Miu Lynn, who w•s fourth in tht 1971
· World · Championships, flnlshM third to
Austria's Beatrl.J: Schuba and Canada's
Karen Mqnussen in the 1072 G1mes that
Billie Jean Bows
Jl!TffEsOA, Md. -LltUe Chrla Evert
awept paat Australia's Karen Krantzcke,
&-3. 6-2, Tburld1y nlahl but her ez]>ICted
rematch wtlh Blllle Jean Kine fillled
when Mn. King tumbled before Julie
Heldman of Houlloo. U , M, 6-1.
Mn. Kin&, top-ooeded in lhe Vir1lnl1
SIUN Women'• Invllationll Tenn I a
~at, hue, withdrew from the
doulllea comPfUlion claimlnf she did not
want to rlll ftirlher poS!lbl1 Injury to her
ltll 1111 lot.
'
an Put on . Paren.ts
Y OJ!.th Cage Referees Abused
.llENO (AP) -Parents of youn1sters partlcip•Una In a YMCA·
nJOrell Pee Wee basketball f'"ll'•m here have been temporarily n..i from 1am11 because o "Intolerable verbal and lnexcuaable
)'llw abwe" heaped on referees.
YKCA director William Berrum ordered the ban last week in I
... ~ Hiii io all .,.Unts and coacbe.. He slid It was for a week Of aames
take preuure ott players, coaches and oUiclals.
''.tlllfotlllnitW)', due lo several incldenu recenUy, the Pee Wee
oera.m fl be,U.nln& to resemble the LltUe Lta1ue lm•1• In term• of
ult inlerterenct," he 1ald.
Ht dld not al•• detaill of the Incident.! .of verbal and physiul abuse
111tloned In the memo.
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endM Feb. 13.
"I feet like I did just about the best I
could do for this year.'' Janet said of her
third place finish in the Olympics. "I
wts a llttle dlsappolnted in how my
figures went the second day but everyone
makes mistakes and I learned a lot from
mine. I worked hard and l appreciate the
fact that I even got the bronze medal.
"But I'd still like to &el that gold."
It Janet competes in the XII Games in
Denver in 1976 it will be her third Olym-
pics. At the age of 14 she was one "' the
youngest competitors in the 1961 Ga.mes
at Grenoble . She llnishe<I ninth.
,
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smile sometimes. If f win.. this tourna· eluding a 103-100 u11Set of previously
ment you'll see a big smile." unbeaten conference leader Brigham
Crampton is a grumbler on the course, Young two weeks ago in ASU's rea.son.
an intensely serious 36-year-old veteran .. _ ably small 4 ,~seilt campus ,gymnas1u.m.
"Don't you think those airline pilots Therefore, with RYU pract1cn\1y having
landing 7471 are serious?" he asked an the title all wrapped up. Contreras and
lntervlewer. "Did you see the Miami his mates can only realistically hope for
Dolphins smile after they lost the Super a possible runnerup finish and an invite
Bowl? How a~t the astronaut! taking to New York·s prestigious National
off from Cape Kennedy. Aren't they Invitation Tournament (NIT).
serious?" Dubbed "The Flying Chicono" by tpe 1 "Is there any other 'A'ay? Not for me. ASU sports publicity department, Con-
J've had to batUe my entire tile. I was a treras has made quite a name for
prem1ture baby born with yellow jaun-himself as the team 's playmaker and as
dice. When I was· 18 months old, I had a the one who controls the tempo when the
bad stomach. My mother was twice told I Sun Devil:; have the ball .
would die.'' .;Last year, l started the first eight
Caught ln the Middle
Lln~man l!Qo Finn Is In the unenviable pO<ltlon of
beina between Bullalo'I Tracy Pratt and Chicago'•
Keltli MagnUIOll (throwing the punch) in Thursday'•
•
NHL action. Lineman Bob McLaren Oelt) rushes in
to help. Buffalo won, S-3.
''A big difference here is the amount of
running we do. We ran a lot in hl&h
school but we .run a Int more here and we
fast break any time we get a chance.
"It's my jop to be In the middle of the
break and rece ive the ouUet pass from
the guy on the boards.''
One dr!wback to playing at ASU Is the
relatlvely·minute gym and the rans who
crowd into it.
C.On~reras says. "fans in places 1uch as
Utah are really good and \hey really ap-
preciate good basketball. But our fans at
ASU are just averaii:e ... sometimes, I
wish they 'd show more enthusiasm.
"Also. most of the other schools in our
conference have built nice new places: tb
pla y Jn while we 're stlll in our old gym."
Like former Hluntington mate Brian
Ambroiich, who pl1ys for rival IYU,
Contreras haa a younger brother who'•
an up-and~omtna: prospect..
Fifteen-year-old Raul Contrer11 was a
1~1rte.r on the once-be1ten 1ophomor1
hoop squid at Huntinston.
Poot > Oregon
Has to Face
UCLA Tonight
By Asl0Cl1ted Pre11
The University of Oregon'• "Dick
Harter Era" is nothing more than an em•
barrasslng slogan 10 far for tht Ducks'
41-year~ld basketball cdach.
11 J'm sure the seuon has been vtry
frustrating for him," said Pacific-t ts:·
ecutlve director Wilea HaJJoc-_Thurlday,
dl1cus1ing a technical foul (fiat Hutti'
drew In the D.icks' l1test loes.
Things should get even m o r t
frustrating for Hlrl<!r tonight, ., !ht last.
place Ducks take on unbeaten UCLA at
the )lrulns' Pauley Pavilion. UCLA hai
-won 30 straight home games. II beat
Oregon 93-61, early this 1e,10n tn Euatnt.
Oregon bas an G-1 conference mark !ft
Its flr1t ae•son under Harter, tbe formir
Penn coach. UCLA Is M ·and could
vlrtu11ly clinch Its olxlh ttralaht Pac-t ti·
Ue thla weekend .
Oregon Slate, W wllh four •tr•ilhl
conference victorie1. lJ 1t ucond-plac.
Southern Clllfoml1, M, In tontsbt'1 atbir
gs me.
Ore&nn meets use Saturday 1flamoon
In a re1loollly !flevlsed 1ame bom the
Lnl Aoielet Sporta ArlAI. OIU Is at
UCLA, Stanford II Wt blnaton and
C.lllomla 1t Washln&tnn Slate on the
S.turd1y ntaht ochedule.
Monday night, Stanford 1o0s 1" WSU
and Cll movd to Seallle lo play !ht
Huaklu.
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Frld17, F•i>nlMJ IJ, 1972 D4JLV '!LOT ll •
Marina,;Compton in Play~ff Duel
A loot-awaited rern•tch li1 In
th• ofllnr tonlghl In th• firol
round of the ClF AA.AA
basketbaill playoffs at Marlna
High when the. host · Vlk1n11
battle Compton's I n 11 ad Ing
Tarbabes.
· Game time is 8 o'clock.
The la!t time Marina's Vik·
Ing! met the TarbabeJ on the
hardwoods wa1 two years a10
in the Marina·Westmlnster
tournament.
On that auspicious occ11sion
((or Marina, anyhow l, coach
Jim Stephens' Yikes aneaked
past Compton, 74·70, to put the
skids on the Tarbabes' &&-
game win streak. one which
•
1tHI stand• as 1 C U·~ record
for victorious loncevlty.
The upeet wln happtned In
Steplwuu' llrst year 1t Marina
after he hid mov@d over from
the he1d hoop job 1t G1rden
Grove High. And the Tarb1bes
are ltchln1 to make amends
for that unexpected dlsaster.
Thi1 year Compl.On tied with
Long Beach WllJOn and Long
Beach Poly ror 1econd plact In
the Moore League behind
champion Millikan .
Poly then won 11 coin Oip ln
qualif)' as the clrculf1 second
CIF repr1stnt1tlvt w I t h
Complon and Wilson having
met 9.'edne5day night to
determine the leaaue'I third
playoff entr1nt.
That'• nt1w hbtory, 11 first ·
yur co1ch Ed Thom 1 1'
Tarbabt! blitzed Wllaon with 11
hot fourth quarter en roole to
a M-41 triumph.
Marini. meanwhile, took It
on the chin from Huntington
Beach, 73·S9, last Frldiy night
for ill only Sunset League
dtl~at of the season although
to p Vike defender Mark Ford
w1s not 1vailablt for that one .
Ford, a S·_ol junklr. tore some
knee ligament& two weeks a ~n
and ht '1 been practicing with
the squad tor the paJt week.
~ Stephens, "Mark's just
about 100 percent now and
hfl'1 our key defwlve playu.
upeelally on the pr&sa. where
he play1 the Jront spot We
wouldn't have made half the
mi1t1kes we made aga inst
Hunlln1ton if we woukt've
had him ."
Ford is ten~atlvely schedul-
ed to 1t1rt 1t guard tonight.
1lona wlth g.7 center Dean
Bogdan, rorv.·ards Bruce Miiler
(&-IJ and freshman Bob
Lo!ner (l·Sl and 8-4 M1rk
Adams Jn the other backcourt
1101.
The defel\,9e-minded Vikes
wlll bt confronted by
Compton'• 1·3-1 b11ic offense,
which is similar lo Huo--
tington '11,
Spur/l.,dln& lb< Tarbabes'
allock to 1-311 ""tor hl1h post
oper11tlve Robert Pitt, the
squad's le1ding rebounder and
bt11t shooter on the 1hor\·
range, In.side sturf.
Herbert Thompson, a s.2
se.nlnr, m11n1 one of the. winp
and Thomall h111 called him.
''the best pure shooter in lh1
Cir."
The above two ptW"Jled the.Ir
talentl ror 32 points and 31 re·
bounds aRalni;t Wiison and lt'.t
their pufnrmancea w h it h
prlm1rily dlct11:te whether the
T1rb1bes will 1tnk or swim.
Basketball
Playoffs
Continue
CdM Faces Lancers Surprising
MD Tests
Clfr' basketball pla'yoff ac-
tion is on tap tonight on all
fronts but two with starting
times slated for 8 o'clock .
Oilers Test Saxons Ra1nona
RIVERSIDE -MAI.er Dtl
Hlgh's 1urprlaln• Mnnartht
wtll bt. tryin1 lo upeet the
dope !!heel again tonight when
t011ch Jerry Tardle'11 Angelus
Lfague runnersup tingle with
host Romona High in a CIF!
AAA.A b.asketball p I a yo f
Opene r.
It's the first round o(. the
AAAA eliminations with four
Orange Coast area quintets
{Coron1 de! Mar. Huntington
Beach, Marina and Mater Del )
in action .
..........
Uplll!' ltlt-t l
Mcnlfbetlo vi Vtrllltm Dl!I 11
ComPIOll ColllM
Fo"l•n• ti Serv1t1
Ll!i Poir 11 S.nt1 Monie•
Monro¥1t ¥1 MDt"<'llnulClt t i ltedllndo
Hiii\ t51r.I
Cornpfon 11 ,,.,.,In•
Suftnr Hlll1 11 Monie vr111
P•lol V~dtl ti LOI Al1mlle1
Diii Putlllll1 11 Gltndtl•
lllJll'lll' lr•Clltf
(fnlt n<'llet •I l"t11odtn1
LI hr111 VI COM 11 Ortnt• Cotti
Avl1tlon 11 Mlllllltn
HB Meets
Ba y Loop
Champions
TORRANCE -Huntington
Beach lllnd North Tnrr1nce
High in CIF AAAA b1sketb11l
pllllyorf 11ction his 1 f1miliar
ring to it as the two lock horns
tonight in 1lht fir!ll round or
the elim inations.
\ h; _,. DAIL Y P'ILOT ltall ,ht!O
MEMORABLE EVENT -A grief-stncken Compton High basketball player is
<':Onsoled aJter losing a 74-70 decision to Marina in 1969 -a loss \vhich snapped
Compton 's 66-game win string. Tonight Co mpton and Marina renew their rivalry m the CIF playoffs al the latter's gym ,
l!i!tir "' Wtrren 1! Cr •rl!ot tS11.1
A•Ctdl1 VI LI Htllrl 11 Fulllrton JC
Ml!t• °*I 11 R.1mon1 It 11tart!I at II In lht North
•• For Coast Area ..
Molrt D1m1 t i 5tn Mt rcot
Huntln9!D!'I lfK1' •t "O. Torrl!llCf ... U'"' l rt tktl C1Wln1 VI An!tlopt Vl llt V 11 /l.fUll
Hlt h
S1n11 M1rl1 WI 1111'11!11 M&ttt1e.m1ry
11 511. Torrt...ct H\fh
51" ltrntrdl"D " Foolllllt ti Vlll t Ptrk
!telling H1!11 ¥t l!t M0<11n1 I I St"l• A"• Col!rer
U..r l r1dltt
Olrfcllt"I le
"trll• TDrrlMf Hltll
TAk• l~n Ditto l'•f.•WIY !ft
Cr1n$lll W 1ur1>11fl. Cr1n11'1w tur..ofl
•m&ll~• l"le lU Sr. Turn 1111 en l•N
St. t Pl<I orllCffd w111 1IMl<lt ,,.,, mllr.
Sclloo! loc;1!N1 11 .M70 W, 111"'11 $1.
Wrestlers
AtGWC
·Prep Track Results
11:11•111 YI (ti Hlt h 11 Ille HllnllO
Col!*'e
G1r1v " 1tulll!I011lf 11 lllver1!&1 Cltv
(011191
Wt1I C-lnt VI (1m1rlllo ti V~,..ur1
con ...
Mt rlt lr Vt Cll1rler Ol k It Ml. IAC ..
u-•••cll:tf
MurlOl'ly •• ""'dllo" Cl!llt<l'll t i Glodll!HI•
P1lm 5arln11 11 ltnftln1
Lt Cu\tD'I 11 C1lon
Torrance gym and at 11takt is
a second round berth in tht
pliyofrs against the winner or
the Notre Dame·San Marcos
clash.
Coach Elmer Combs' Hun·
lington Beach Oller11 are
Sunset League ru nner sup
while the Sa1ons or coach
Ru11s Bierley are the Bay
League champioi1s for the firth
time in si1 years.
Over 100 of the top junior
C1'11lege wrestlers In Southern
California will bid ror berths
in the state finals when G<llden
Wt!l College hosU the south
central division tournament
tonight.
Prellminary matches began
this afternoon with the finals
set to start,at A. Var~ty
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competed In divisions Ill and 11:::.5·-'· c'"ill' j·:f""'nu1 ILi J,
'
"''of th• Shorty Smith Relays 1 ,
lV Sl~~ (1~ ~!Li i.\cMtflUI IL/ l . ltlck mtel Thursdly at 5anta l!t Lowt ~ J"l iM Mine'-' II, •• ~·II •' Ol~nct· 17 • '"°' "'41 tg · PV -i. CO<'ll'llll" (l) L Ur i lt.I J, ~
, Only Malu Del medal ,, t11~#·~"Q.l~J:.i11• fll 1. c.111 1L1 J. ,prnered in dJvlllon 1n w111 • 1111p11,, l\.l'. OcT1~: • ;w,. 'Jourth platt fltti!~ behind win· Hiii _ Lf~.~1;[\1~ ·r~ (II 1.
'llln& La Quinta In tbe 880 relay L~ r_:1<time: ~ot! t. ci 11"""., n.i
"'1, 1:11.1. Greg Viviano. John '·(r!:rJj!!.!f.\'.!':;~,-· ,.,
V•nlealde, R1mon Sln~hu J. ~~~ ~T!;'°1(i'i'."t'iimlluli 11,
•nd Cllrl• Maritn ran for Ille , ~"~":Jr' "~~'·• .Monarchs. J. t I 'i. l'flll ! 1• .. (LI
~ I -I. a'tl~k I~ , w Niii lll
University, meanwhile, won 1. ~v:r-1 ). ~1 .~1 "; tbt dlvl11lon IV mUe relay wllh ~1 l \~ rJ;., 7'\'J· 'R:t -rti"' .~ qulllrtet or Jen')' Hall. Bob 11!J'i;! 'f,·~~t:~: \J!· l:1'r~~ 1t1 a.
·J'i'ad!ord. Jim Dykes and Jeff ''"'°-1~ ·i 1:;=•iiJ ~"' 11.1 J.
Green clocking S:2U.· ""3"-"1'. .'w'm.lb' ·',I;,. <LI •
,,mi. Trojan& lao placed IOC• "l'll''.."'l. W· ~!1,';''c1 i"""m (;Ad In the sprlnc medley at 11Tr1. or• l•~;~~fl'M' :a .
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CM Coacl1es
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OCC Hosts
Net Tourney
It was North Torrance
which fell lo Comb• and crew
in the CI F 1emlfinals at Long
Beac h Arena ln 1968 (72-71 1 in
wh11l is remembered by many
as perhaps the most signlfi·
c•nt Huntington Beach victory
.ever.
Any rese mblance to the Sal·
ons power o( that era to the
one furnished I o n i g h t ,
however:, 1oes no further lhan
the name , colors, mascot and
the fact they 're I ea g u e
champs again.
The Sa1ons' '61 team wa11
led by USC BUI Taylor and a
host of other glint starters. Orange Coast Colle1t'1 lSth This year's edition of Bay
annual invitational t e n n i 1 League toua:hles lists no one
tournament. featuring 11 high over ~J. with junior center
schools will be held saturday. Jim Dylcstr• htading -the
The one-day aff11ir will be group against HunHngton'1
held at the OCC courts from 9 double post setup or ~:i Steve
a.m. to 4. Brooks and 6-2 Jim Wnrthy.
High sc hools partic\peting "We've looked at Hun.
Include Corona del Mar, Costa tington's record f22·4 J," says
Mesa. Estanci3, Fount 1 i" Bierley. "and we feel like
Valle y. Edison, Hunt ington we 're playing a first place
Beach. Newport Harbor. team .''
Marina, We!tm.inster, L 1 Combs his e1pre11sed disa~
Quinta and Santiago. polntment with his team's ef-
Newport captured I 11 t fortl durln1 the campaign ind
year's tourney with 19 team 11ys the only thlna that can trlH the stigma ot A llecod points, followed by Edlaon plact finish Irr league play is with 10. Fountain Valley, h c F Can Costa ~tesa foolball the annexation of t e I Westminster, E 1 tan cl a, coach John Sweazy outfake Marina , LI Quinta, Coata crown. Los Angeles Rams receiver Brooks ls the: leading 1COrer Jack Snow. outmuscle Rams Mesa and Huntington finlahed In the Oran1e Co1at area with
lAcklt Coy Bac on or in that order. • 20.4 average ln 25 outings.
Lance ~ntzel? The tourney will ft1ture It'• bffn a bal111nced attack
That and several other que&-rour divisions : singlts (optn to that hat been Huntington'•
lions .will be answered Satur-any player): doubles (open ltl forte , however, with Worthy,
day at. Costa Mesa Ht ih Anyone): 1in1le1 (open to all Toni Crunk, Brett White and
School when Sweiu:y and hi• but varsity lettermen): .and Stott Whitfield cap1ble of dou·
fellow Mustang co.!lchell take dou.bles for non-var1lty let· bit fisure 1COring at any tin:ie.
on a Rams conti n1ent In termtn1 Rebouding Is the key to the
basketball. There Is no ad m I! s Io ri leJl -ll!I It h&11 been in each
Cypre1s, tht Southern
C1liforn i1 Conference winner,
and Mt. San Antonio of the
South Coast circuit, are.· the
tourney ravorites.
The four top individu1hr in
each weight division will ad·
vance to the tlate tinil!1, ·
March 3·4, at Skyline College
in San FranciSCi>.
Participating colleges In·
elude Golden Weit, cfr11nge
Coast, Fullerton , A n t e Io p e
V11ley, Barstow.C h a ff e y,
Colltlt of the Deser t,
Moorpark. Mt. Sail Antonio.
Rio Hondo, Ri verside. San
Bernardino, Ventura and Vic·
tor Valley.
Admission is SI for adult.I
and 50 cenl.I for students.
Lions Host
Mat Meet
Westm inster High wilt be
one of four locations S1turday
for the CtF' SOuthern Section
wrestling sectionals.
The other sites are Jo'ontan1
High, Covina'• Royil Oak
Hjgh and West Hi1h In Tor·
ranee.
Tent1tive 11tartln& time 11t
Westmin11ttr 11 IO::Kl 1.m.
while matchtt 1rt e1pecttd ltl
be completed ~ at a~
proximately 1:30 p.m.
Leaguu competing 1 t
Westminster include the
Crestview. F'reeway, Garden
Grnve, lrvine, 0 r a n g t ,
Suburban and sunset.
Four wrt1tler1 In e1ch of
the 13 weight dlvlslon1 1t each
sectional 1itt will qualify for
the CIF final• 1 wee.k from
Saturday at Arcadia. It gets under way at 8 charge. Hqntlngt()n outln1.
n'clock with tickets gelllng !orl.miiiiimiiiiim!iiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiji p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ::~~r:'.h with children under II DAVE ROSS PONTIAC
Aside from or f t r I n I L I Alf M d I lhemselves as· guinea pigs lor ease or uy 0 e s •••
the potent Mesa cagen, the
Rams will be available for
autograph sessions du r I n g
halftime and after the game.
COSTA MESA
FAIRGROUNDS
L.A. T -Birds vs.
N. Y. Bombers
Httftlflllt Mm~ ....
T 1rrl L,;.ck ""·
Te11•ll• K•'•l'fltt •
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
Al.L IU11 SJ .II
Tklten• .... ............... 14ff HUIOl ILYD. • •41l DllYI
COITA llPA
,., • ...,...""'-... 1""""91•
c.tJ ll-14171
'
Ph. 546·1017
I '
Sea Kings
In Maiden
AAAA Tiff Tipoff is al 8 And the Rams
OlrHlltflll M lllmt•ll Mltll'I
Cornn11 de! MAr Hi11:h's ~A
King!'! fAkf' their first-ever
crt1ck 1t CIF AAAA ba11ketb11ll
playofr competition tonight
l•k• "'• 11~••1••• l'••-w•v ,,...,.. II
iltlt •f!ld•. Taki M•dl11111 •u•l'lllN t~d
•u•~ ltl, ,,., Mt~lto11. P'•octttl w••I •~
MlllhD!'I, ltft Of! Mlt.,.111. 1 lotJ!l!ll II 1'1J MltMllt A
ll l>l*r•hl•.
when the Ir vi ne Ltaguf! co-124-2) ta ke the noor II
champion!! Cflllide with the La favorites to dispose of Tardle1J contingtnt. Serna Ll.ncer~ at Orang• The hosts pre!lent a
Coa!lt Cflllege. formidt1ble barrier with 8-7
ll ~el.~ under WAY 11t R And Dwight Tyler lht. central
ror cnach T11ndy Gilltl! ind his figure In the Rams ' potent
Sf.A Kin.11:.ir It i.ir 1t retu rn tn defense. ·
pl11yoH co mpetltlnn arter a one Hl.ir rebounding 11:bility and
yt1r 11b!lence. defensive edge I!! the Rama'
CoronA was In the AAA big weapon 1g1in!lt Mater
Dei 'll inside punch of 6-4 Rick elimin!ltion11 f o u r straighr Knlfrln . ye11r~ before injurie1 <'Ut into Knlfrtn'i threat ill the abillty
the Sea Ktn.11:11' ct111nce11 \1111 to outmuscle the opposition In·
ye11r. side and he's clicked in lhaf
Leading the wa y for Gillill' department 11 an 18.2 1ver1ge
fi ve 11re A1l·Or11 ngt County during the campaign. •
ch.-:icet Mike Stvier (6·$1 and Tyler challenges that facet
Casey Jones (6-l 1. • with his hei1ht superiority and
Rams coach Dou1 Stotkham
And the Sea Kings pos11e5., say1 hii moblllty and jumpln1
An excellent bench lo go with ability add.t anbther tri
1l.arler1 • Jo.hn Sumner (~), Jnche• to his · Jt•U.Uc1J ad·
Brtt Ma rches 18-5 1 and ~10 . vantage.
backt0urt ace Scott Cameron Mater Dei hat mide It te
(~10). ·the playoff1, however, with a
.With MAtt Keough. .left hair dozen other heroea and
Wha rton and Dan Grigsby also thAt includei junior forwardi
1v1llable It 's obvious that the Georie Herold and Ortl
CdM outfit c1n unleash its Green and the backcourt dUI')
m1n-to-m1n pre111ure defense or Jeff Kiley and. John Adama. without fear of foul trouble.
La Serna 's bl1 threat i11 it!'! Dave Nanry and Steve
reboundln1 1bllity. The Whit-M8rtind1lt ire 1111\lable for
mon\ League c o . c h a m p s 1pnt duty from the bench 1tv·
re1ture 6-8 Fred Haberecht tna T1rdle • well-rounded at·
and 6-7 Soctl Fullerton in tack.
!heir forward Wlllll and it's That combinllltion has ac--
that Combo th1t led to the Ji· counted ror aeven wins In th~
tie. · last el.&ht An1e.lu1 e~unter1.,
Cot-ona ·is a 11ight fa vorite to includlni J.hfee by twti point&.
knock orr LI Serna deiipltt the in tht,ja1t lour lssuu. .
vlsltora' advantage In siu. The two t41m' colllded In i
Amon1 Sea King vlCtlms prese'a10n scrlmm1iae a t
thi!I year ire Moore League Ramooa to lt'1 not a cue tif
champion Millikan, Sun1tt playing in new terfltory for •
Lea1ue champion M a r i n a . Miter Del. ..
Irvine Lta1ue co-champ Lo111.:;;;~~~~~~~~-,
Alamltos•nd Pacific League II • IOOM ADDITIONI
pl.1.1yoff el\'try Arc1dia. • KITCHIN llMODILIN•
The only setbacks of the • 'ATIO tCllllN IOOMI
year have been to Angelu11
League champion Servlte (Al·
80) and to Lo11 Alamitos.
And the blf re1son for the
22·2 rtcord is Sevier'• re-
bounding, Jone 11 ' all -rou nd
play ind' the 1uperior balance
of power employed by Gillll.
' . . :" ~ ..
.. _, c-,."""" ""°' PNM ... .1¥1011111
Coll IJJ·ltJJ
LEASING? LOOKI
NEW 1972 OLDSMOllLE
TORONADO
2 DOOR HARDTOI'
MONTH
24 MQ.
OPIN IND
INCLUDES: AIR COND .. FULL POWER INC. DOOR
LOCKS AND SEATS, AM .FM STE~EO, VINYL TO,,
TINT. GLASS, TILT WHEEL. IELTED W/W, AND
MORE.
W• lease all tpopular
make ca" anti trucks
LEASE DEPARTMENT
UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
lUO Ho\UOl ILYD. COITo\ MUA
CALL HOlM IUIDLOVI, 147-4750
f
I
'
Jf DAILV ·PILOT Frid<y, Ftbruir1 2'. 1972
,coas_t Area's Prep Baseball Outlook for 197
CoroN• llet M•r
Pltchlnc depth, uperlence,
eeven retumln& lett.umen and
a couple of brl&ht translen
i make coach Tom Tr1ge.r'1
; Corona del Mar l!lgh buebafl ~ team a !!Olid contendu In
Irvine League circles.
Tops In tbe Sea Kings'
arsenal Is Junktr Bob Palmer,
a converted third baseman
• who wllf I>< 1lternatlng at
l catcher tnd pltchfr tbl1 ye.ar.
Palmer hu a good arm, hit-! tins J>Otentlll and alu to back
~ him up. HiJ brother, Je>hn.
: tolled tor CdM last year and is
,.-now at Orange Coast College,
: Pomona High traMfe:r Matt
' Keough (ooo ol former major
: 1eague star Marty Keough) is
I penciled Ill for duly •I
: shortstop when he't through
~ pl1ylng in the CIF aaketball
• pb)'J)ffl.
Other basketball standout&
counted oo by Trager are
pitcher Dan Grigsby and in·
fielder Scott Cameron.
The lettermen that Trager
has back art seniors Mark
E r I c k s o n ( c atcher-first
basepian), ®t~ielders Brad
Baker and Scott Parker, Retd
Jo/won (ouUielder-third base)
iiiOelder Larry Denner and
outtielder Mark Sears.
Denner Is recuperating from
• an ankle injury and Sears is tpr.eaeatly involved in wrest!·
mg.
The possession <>I a le.tttr
from last yea.r, however, isn't
~ carrying too much weight with
•. Tragq. The CdM coach aays a
. number of top c1ndidates are
9 in camp and are solid threatJ
to take over starting positions.
Among them are junktr ill-
~ fielder John Andrews, senior
,,-Malcolm DeMille, Sonora High
I transfer Kevin M or r I 1 o n
•· (riiJithanded pitcher) and
·: &ophomore pitcher M a t t
'Wilkinson.
Senior pitcher Pau1 Conaty
glvea CdM fi" righthended
... hurlers. • . Otbt:rs Jn contention for
berths on the varsity are
senior outfielder Doug BatUe,
.·junior first baseman Steve
t Matt and Glendora High
~transfer Jerry Kohler. ,
Costa Mesa
Dtpth In pitching has been a
J Commodity not avJilable 11l
· Co.!ta Mesa Jn sever1f sta-'On.'
but coach Jim Hagey aays
·that's I.ht item that could put
his Mulltangs into the thick of
·~ the Irvine League baseball
. ,race.
11. Returning 1larler Andy
·•jMartlntt. (2.98 e.r .a. in league
•,Jut year), 80Uthp.aw1 Steve
H~lanan and Bill McRorie
• and righthanders M a r k
f'l j.'hri.sman, Frank Fregoai ind
• .-Mark Schrupp art currently
vying for starting
.. · 111ssianrnenU.
... Martinez and three other
monogram winners art lhe
-nucleui of the Mesa attack.
"'Chrisman lettered at first
• base but switches to pitching
'lifter ~verlng from an
'· • e:lbpw problem.
'· • Second baseman J e r r y
i: Golden is one or the better
'·'fielding infielders at Mesa in
uveraJ campaigns and Mike
" 'Caldwell has good speed and is
Jong bfJll thre:at. He's a left-
• handed outfield candlda.le.
'". Hagey ha! several other top _ J>l'O'pecls. led by catcher Tito
-M1y1 and centerflelder Mark • SCliru e· pp,
Mays is tln excellent
· 'de!emJve caU:her, • 1ood ::handl~r of pitchers and hu a
.J fine arm according to hls
coach. He's a 6-1, 200-pound
_ senior.
~, Third base appears set with ~ BJJI Clark returning to assume
: .lht dull" and he'! 1 JlOlenUll
, .300 hitter with good speed.
,_ Otuck Glaspy i!I up from the
junior varaft-,y at shortstop.
... Others instrumental In ·the
Mustangs' season are seniors
, JWtdy Fos8 and Ken Peterson
,. ,and junior Steve Baume.
,.. Hagey has lour night games
listed for his nine.
Edlse11
• Depth and coot rol Ill pitch-
ing mtk" lht Edlaon
' Chargers oolld contenders in
"the lrvl"" League basebaU
ract..
,,, Coach Bill M<>rris has a 1'quart.t of proopeCll In the
hurliJJ« departmeol led by
•,return.Ing senior lrtterm1n
" cnJ&' ll<nl&h. • lll!nialJ, although be still
• needs work with his control,
bu 1 nUty JUI ban from the
• porlllde.
• Otller pitchlJ!i h o p e f u I s
·junior Mlh Alba 1 n d
oophomore Dove White.
• Alba turMd in 30 "'!""
•'....,clve oooroJUI IMinp dur-
• 1111 -....... Uon ud Wlllk hid • polr ol llhuloull to
Illa """°'" 'l'lllf an bodt ap from the
ju111r ..,.ty ..,, "1llit la I
1 (ltll du nllo Alba tllrow
&om 1111 loft aide. ,_ ... ......,,.... •ltlit1
Jettel'Ql<D clOt the Cbaraers'
roster.
: Loadioc the list Is first
bueman Grtt Parker. Parker
hlt .270 last year In Jea1u1
circles and Is arnoos Edlaon'1
best bits:, along wjtb Mark
Slel, . Mark Ne:llMfn a n d
ooptiomore transfer · M I k e
SelWood.
'Slgl and Nielsen are rtturn-
1"1 lettermen at &hortstop and
the outfield. Other returnees
are senior Rick Thompson and
Gua Alba, a couple of outfield
candidates.
Si&! led' the team In stolen
bases last year.
Selwood is a slrong c;an-
didatt for catching and Simi
Hl&h tra11Bfer Mike Hioo
(senior letterman) ii 1n out·
lleld hopeful.
Others in the fold ire in-
fielders Jerry Lopez. Eddie
Weinberger and ruch Tachine
and Louie Casselle. along with
<1utfieldtr Dirk Zirbel.
Est•nria
Estancia High.'1 baseball
picture include• seven return·
ing senior lettermen and are
considered a contender in
Irvine.League circltj.
But coach Ken Millard is
realistic in appraiu.I <>l his
Eagles e.specially considering
the nalure of prep baseball.
"lt'1 • roller coaster ... I
just hope w~ have more ups
than dowo.s.," say1 Millard .
His seven monogr~m win-
ners are second baseman Jim
Schtlltz, catcher Totn Johnson,
pitcher Ron · Urimon, third
baaeman Mike Powell. pitcher
Jim Postel, lirst baseman
Dave Ronquillo and ooUielder
Gary Logsdon, all righthand-
ers.
And a couple of good pro!l-
pects ,are: junior Ed McCla.ren
and senior infielder J t f f
Gra11t.
McCla.ren is the only left.
handed player on . the team
and will operate at first and in
the outfield.
Grant is considered Ont of
the Eagle!' best hitters. along
with Johnson and Schultz.
Ste•• Brooks (oenlor tlghlJw>.
der with a &ood wortment of
pilchel), junior Brbn Sla&le,
IOl)homore Doua: Moll and Jim
Pruaala, a /ind in the p'1y1ical
educalM>n classes.
Moll 11 the younger brother
ol former Marina catcher
Vince Moll (now with USC).
Other lettermen ' n c I u d e
seniors Jerry (catcher) and
Jim (outllelder) A 1 h ford ,
Gary Rorabaugh and Brett
White (first base-outfield l.
Juniors Kyle VanAmersfort
(shortstop), Craig Kennedy
(second bast) are also \el·
Urmen. Kennedy is In a battle
with Kevin Cannon and Bob
Engstrom for the second base
job while third base is another
tossup be t w e e n letterman
Darlowe Troxell t 1 e n i o r )
junior Pal.ii Hornyak .•
Junior Randy Mills appears
set for right field while Outer
Is slated for first base duty.
Laguna Beach
Three all-league performers
return to Laguna Beach High"s
baseball team as th,Artlsl!
gird for Orange L e a g u e
warfare.
Coach Darrell McKibban
has second baseman Chuck
Corwin and first baseman Bob
Fee with which to build an in-
10Ulhpaw .senior). 1K1phomore
Greg Foster, ~nlor ltfty Mike
Beattie and 6-4 senior Kirk
Elli.son.
others who could break up
that quart.el are S c o t t
Wildeman (jr.) and aenlor
rlghthander Jim Saia.
All but Sala are returning
letterman and nther5 in that
category are senior1 Jim
Caine, Scott Wheeler. Rod
Brown , juniors Ron SwanllOn,
Kirk Kyler and Dan Wells.
Seniors Rod Harris, Hal
Bennington and Jack Dillon
have made the playing roster
while up from the: junior varsi·
ty to lend their talents are:
senktrs Ed Lopez, P a u I
Burdette and Saia .
Allen says his team's best
assets are pitching and hitting
and .states his ma jo r concern
at this time is keeping his
squad injury-fret and in in-
stilling all of the necessary
fine points of defense into his
squad as a unit.
When they 're not bu sy
pitching Pemberton a.nd Beat-
tie figure to see action at first
base while Elllison operates at
shortstop.
Foster mans hird base
while Wilderman usually is in
centerlield.
Jtlntflr Del
field arowid. Corwin was an All-Crestview Coach Tom Carroll has only
League WoiCf: a1 a SC'lphomore four returning letterme.n with
when he batted .429 in league whfch to mold an Angelus
circles. He tapered off to .2.15 League baseball contender
last year. He ha.ts left and around with Friday's non-
throws right and McKibban league opener with Edison
expects a return to hitting looming ahead.
form this year. The four are senior catcher
Fee hit at a .360 clip last Bill Clough, senior second
year in the Orange circuit. baseman Jerry Linnert. junior
And Mlke Moorman was 8 pitcher John McElwain 11nd
second team a 11 -1 ea g u e senior infielder John Kennelly.
shortstop for the Artists last Clough is versatile and may bt moved around if junior Bob year . k Two other varsity lettermen Freehoff can ta e over at
In the fold are Tighth.anded pit-catcher·
team II.YI a UM CmtvieW
~gue record wtll be Sood
enough to "In the circuit
crown.
And It appw-s his squad baa
the talent and savvy to taln
that kind of record with tke
presence of several aooct
pNllpec~.
First. ln line on the slab is
pitcher Rob Ferguson, 1 junior
rlghlhander who was a second·
team All-Crestview cholet last
ye.ar.
He had 1 pair of shutouta in
compiling 1 4-l loop mark and
he's expected to be the
Di1blos' No. I hurler.
Additional help Is available:
froftl righthanded seniors Brad
Harris and Clark Chisholm.
Both are up from tht tunior
varsity 11nd Chisholm j~ • con·
verted pitcher after toiling in
the outfield.
Hilke says Chisholm ls u
fast jS anyone in the league
and could be the extra edge
his team needs.
Transfer Jim Co r n e t t
(GBrdena High) batted .334
last year and has power and
speed despite his diminutive
(f>!l •In.
Senior letterman M i k e
Grime! ls slated for catcher
but monogram winners Joe
Jones and Jim Wand (aeniors)
are: being challenged at· ueond
and third .
Brit HendrickllOn and Mike
Moffitt, a pair of junion up
from the JV. are after the
starting berths.
Harris is . slated for
shortstop duty when he's not
pitching and Danny Brennan is
penciled In to back him up.
Others instrumerltal . In
Dijiblo plans are ouUielders
SOOtt Talbert (senior let-
terman), junior Nick Galvan.
senior Ray Grijalva and
sophomore Rich fklmmel. cher Nick Gill~spie and fellow Junior pitcher Neil Lendi1.on
'.nl·or "•rk Dierck3, an out-had a pair of starts at the 111.i t B b .. ~ t ·1 d r 1 t th ,.ewpor nr or fielder. a1 en o as year on e
Looking good at catcher hall varsity. Lendizon, McElwain Lack of pitching experience
been senior Tom Crawford and DennU Murphy, a 11 is the big headache at the mo-
while Tim Sweany rigurell to r i g h t h a n d e r s , are the ment for coach Andy Smith
be one of the Artists two top Monarchs' pitching staff. and hill Newport Harbor
h I "We're young and we'll •have baseball contingent as it g;·d• ur err.. to rely on speed and defense," ... Another pitcher Is southpaw say. 5 Carroll. in his first year for Sunset League hostilities.
St •.. , n~r1·gu-wh1"le Tim Smith ha• si.r. returning lei· • nuu '"' at Mater Dei after II years at
San Clemente Hl1h'• Trltons
will , be ll>oolb1g for a • third
1tralg)lt trip to th1 ~IF AM
baHball plo,yolfs th~ year but
coach Marahalf Ada)f may
need; 6 11\lm>r or two to ac-
eomplish It after lo1ln( a.lmost
all his lllenl .l!iroullh gr1du1-
tlon ..
Adair has cmly four return-
ing lettermen but be haa a
10lld pltcl1in1 duo to work
around. ,
Back are •enlor Terry
Niel,.. IJ1d Junior Rlchard
°"114lw for mound duty.
NitJ.sen turned Jn a I.I e.r.•-
and ·an W Ieasue mark last
year·'whJle Dou1tau ii a ._-2,
185-pounder with a n I c e
delivery . Both a're
righthandera and another in
the aame mold ls senior !i°ll
Day, pooslbly the Tritons' No.
1 riUtf hurler.
ShorU!op Mark ](Jng 11 back
alter-toiling al third base l8't
year and Toby Re.schan rDove.s
to catcher. '
Reschan earned all-luiuei
honor• at first base aa a
Junior.
Three tophomorQ_ w h o
figure in Adair'• plans are
third b a 1.e •m a n Mitch
McCo'mb, outfielder . M i k e
Stavro and Bill Springman,
who can operate·at first, third
or the outfield.
Mnior1 ·Rick Douglas, John
Springman, Seo~ Mltlo.! and
~v'' Griffin ar& a!M dtflnite
threab to grab 1tarting
bertba.
Junior c1tcher Pat Welther
Ct-2, 215) has looked good in
W<>rkouta and senior transfer
Kevin Wright U an oubtan-
di:ng lletenslve <>utflelder with
perhaps the be!t arm on the
team. .
Adair says his bascrunners
will have an adv1ntage this
season with the aid of third
base coach Gary Allen .
Unlver•itu
Six returning s t a r t e r s
among nine: lettermen, five
transfers and a returning All-
ClF infielder give coach Ken
Tratar's University H i'g h
baseba:ll team a .ICJlid shot 11t
the 0ran1e Leasue cham-
plonshfp alter list year'•
maiden voyaae itl free lance
competltloo.
He•dlng the TroJu (lick Is
senior Steve fat19
who ii awitchlnt to secood
from third base to bolster the
keystone combination with
10phomore shorlstop B 111
lluckel.
Farao batted .183" a Junlor
and bad 13 atolen hues and 14
RBis.
PltchJnc depth a p i> t a rs
available to Tratar wjth junior
Jeff Styers and senior RJck
Peregud probably • h 1 r I n g
starting duU...
leen Locke, Dan Rucktl and
Kevtn Moupan are al!KI on
call for !1\0llnd duty ..
Returning lettermen lnclude
Dennis Brothers, Ed Call,
Fargo, PhU Haocock, Tim
!foe, Bill Llorente, Bob Pat-
GWC Ace
·Honored
Golden West College's Jim
AnderllOn has been aceordfld a
second unit berth on the ~Au~
Southern C 1 l if or n i a Con-
ference baskelba11 t e am
lelected by the D A I L Y
PILOT.
Flrst Team
Player . Cellese · Ht. ·Yr.
Gray. East LA 6-6 SC>.
Boyer, LA Harbor g.7 So.
"Dlll'll<ll, Cypress 11-10 So •
Saulny, LA Haroor ~ So.
Bean, Rio Hondo 11-2 So.
Second Team
Anderson, G. West fi..5 So.
Perisho, Rio Hondo 6-S So.
Caldwell. LACC g.3 So.
Miller, East. LA M So.
Childs, Cyprt8' 603 So.
Honorable Men«ow
Golden We.st-Jeff SL Clair,
J11ck Kelch ; LA Southweat -
Ed Buchanan; Rio Hondo -
Bill Welsh, Kurt Kraushaar;
LA.CC -Greg Allen.
Player of the year-Gray.
Coach or the year-Bud
Naslund (Eallt LA).
teraon, l'erealid and s
Cljl n1111U Jn OU
Hlll1COCk, )100, and c
John Denamore. Ray
Moughan, Bill Moral.II
Dl~Ruc:kel,
Reregud flguru 11
when not Jlftchln&
Ruckel and transl
HolleU ~rt flghU•I
first ba.ie berth.
We1tmi11ster •
Coach Frank MUllOI
molding his team
returning lettermen
J.SUI Sanchel and four
moond. proepects.
Elgllt , leU.rmen are"~liit
fold Wt· Slnche1 Is .•
returnee· wltb pitch!
puitnce.
Other candidatu ·for
duty are Juniors MIU T
and Bill H~
sophomores Tim Rfcltanla
BOb l;fale. ·
Returning lelter,,,.,
catcher$ Garr Rungu
Miu Teesier, iecood ba
"3elf 'Sieinei>B. 1horlotop
Harris, th~d basenWt-
Blakely and outfieldert .
Nocll1nd and Pit Eapinol
All are tenk>rs. •.
Proopects tncludi ,, Jwtlilra
Min: Houle, JQll Al~ Accomando. 811) y,
Scott Bi~dley and Ml$r . a
Addlngtoil. '· . r
Mun<n aays IJe u~a
better defefls1ve ~' ~s
year but ts apprebellllt; lb
team 'a power ability.
Nodland b his best hi I
li11<1 di!Ye hitter from , rt
lido.
A couple <>f top juniors in
the fold are outfielder Joe
Baroett and infielder Tom
Valtere while sophomores who
could play a prominent role
are pitcher Steve Morton and
infielder-pitcher Tim Hayes.
~. rholt can operate on the tl'!rmen, all seniorll who to1"f-• vve St. Anthony High in Long eu mound or in the outfield. Beach. at other positions last year,--
Third baseman s~nior Paul He has three candidates at working as pitchers in an ef-
Millard haS five pitchers
avaJlable· to him but in-
uperience is the major prob-
lem.
Fountain l' nUeu
Car\son :ia1 good power and first base in i·unioni Mike fort to find the right stoppers.
D Coll (l I · n outf1"eld When they're not involved in an en r. Ill a Yost, Mike Amaranthes and and first ba.H candid11te. Don Catou.a while second is pitching it'll be H1ig White 1i
Th Utfl.eld as1"de from catcher, Bruce Wingerd at e o • between Linnert and junior Dierckll, appears open to r · p . shor4top, Dan Schindler at . 1m au1e. -first base, John Bowmin at seniors Tom White. \efty Craig Another 1·unior. Chris Mum-p ndGa F. ette seco nd base , Larry arsons a ry is · ford is challenging McE!wain
K"bb h. te · Halderman at third base and Mc 1 an aayr; is am s at Uiird while sophomore Dave
be t · d f nd th t Biii Ferree in the outfield. Only five seniors art on the st asse I! e ense a a Nai·era has looked good at
the h. f · th I k [ Outfield prospect! include Fountain Valley High baseball c le concern IS e ac o shortstop.
I b fl th t seniors Bill GUI and Rick roster as coach John Cole and a ong a rea · It Nai·era can step in ~t Dotsburg while juniorll Curt
his Barons regroup aftl!!r mak· Ma-rinct short it will free Kennelly for ~Herberts and Neil Burt have
ing the CJF playoffs last year. third base or outfield duty. looked good in workouts.
Cole·s No. I returnee is Coach Ray Allen <>f the The outfield berths are Herbert! is an infield can-
junior :Ray Eckles, a righthan-Marina High Vikings baseball be t wt en i u n i 0 r 1 J 0 e didate while Burt operates on
ded pitcher who can al10 play team is openly optimi!tic Bonkowski. Terry Rooney llnd lhe n'IOJJnd and io the outfield .
third base. Rboul his team's chances at Ray Callen . !IOphomore Jim The keystone combination ol · Shirt 'Jale
OPENING · THURS., FEB. 24™ ,.
·SHIRfS ••• $4~·i
COSTA MESA STORE:
333 E. 1rH, .......... ,_ ........ ,
o :rHll LOCATIONS: ln'llLY HILLS
WUTWOOD. HOLLYWOOD, WOODLAND .f1w
OPEN MON. SAT, 10 A.M •• 3 P.M.
JM HNn A 0., T• In.ti Y•• n.. , ....
Tel. 642°8788
. .
His arm and bat were In-the Sunset League cham· Gardea and seniors T<1m Bowman and Wingerd appear
strumental in many or last pionship this year with 11 Bonkowski and John Van tn be Newport's be!t asset
year's triumphs and he is returning letterinen and si1 Lifde. while lack of varsity e1J~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ counted on for a major shire pitchers in the fold . Mission \/iejo perience in pitching is
of the load this time around . Alle.11°1 top hurlers are definitely the hurdle the t
Other lettermen in the fold monogram winners Brock Coach Harry Hilke of Sailors must clear to contend t
11re catcher Randy Renk, in--Pemberton ( & • 3 . 200-pound Mlssion Viejo High'! ba.sebl.11 for the Sunset title. f
fielder Bob Carroll and out-1'-iiOi;;;;;;;;;;;;--;;;;;;.i;;;;;;;-;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;; .. ;i;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;i-;;;;;i;;;;;; _________ ,.I WE'RV T JO OKING' ! ':lif:;,. Barry Brainard, all" ~ .l.J . • ~
A•id• rrom Eck1 ... eo1. has Ambassador Elegance r three other juniors ind a I
soph.omore vying for pitching
berths.
They are righthander.s Joe
Mauler and Bob Maisey. lefty
Roger sailor and toth grader
Bob PaUson, R righthander.
Carroll will · oper1te at
shorlstop and when Eckle.s is
on the moond it will be
sophomore Rick Tessier at
third base.
Bill HaUiefd ha5 beelI look-
ing good at second base
following a knee operation and
senior Don Coleman ii m1n-
ning first base. .
Brainard has centerheld
tocked up but the rtmaining
two spots in the ouUield are
up for' grabs between senior
Art Bernhard, juniors .Joe
Pantalone and Brian H1ymes
and Sanor.
Junior C11rence Austin hAs
lhe catcher's position almost
l«UJ'ed 1nd utility infielder
Alan Zimmer (jr.) has sparkl·
ed ln practict.
ff1111tl11gto11 BefUh
Depth In pllchi11g 11 • plus
factor !or coach Don Ter-
ranove and hit HW'tlington
Beach Oilers as they prepare
for tlJe upcoming baseball
campaign.
But 1 major que&tion m11rk
bu oot be<n •nsw•red aul-
ficlently rrom a camping trip
1ccident last summer when he
llUfferl!d a tom tendon in ·his
rtghl ring finger.
Terranove oplnM t 1' 1 t
Deeter -·t gel back more
than &I percent dflci<I1C:)' and
Ui11t'1 definitely 111 blow tel the
onus' Sunset Ltague cham-
pionship pouibilities.
Anothe< handicap is the lack
ol fefthaoded batter1.
'!'but or• aome brighl spota.
howtver, with pltcttlng depth
and a boll of returning let-
termen doltl"g !ht roster.
Ttrr1DOvt'1 hurlers Include
1972
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SCHWINN c/o URBAN ASSOCIATES .
SEA SCHWINN ·CYCLERY ,,-,,
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For your added convenience, Sea Schwiitn It .
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of both American and EU'i'OjlWI' bicycles • •.
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Hlll'SwHATWlDO• ,·$3ss Jt1') gt1. Cluak., $lat• fu, to) ,
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7.75·14!7.S0-14 ~'~~l4eq
825-14/B00-1 41710-15/BI S-15 -
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ANY SIZE t u1nus s 11 00 . WHITEW~ o_R JLACK . . . .
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Nyl•11 ~7 ·
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"Frld1y, February 25, 1972.
EU ROPtAN.
COMMON MARKET -
~ -'DAIL V PILOT J 9
,,,..
DINMARW:
AT l llTAIN
Fitaanclal Unity
Great Britain , the Republic or Ireland, Norway and
Denmark have signed a historic treaty in Brussels.
mtiklng them meIQbers of the European Common
Market. The ~xpaJ'\ded economic union of Europ-
ean powers will take effecl next January 1.
W age, Price Control
System 6 Mon ths Old
By BROOKS JACKSON
WASHINGTON (AP I
President Nixon'• syatem of
wage and price control.!! has
passed Its aix-month an-
niversary with the ad-
ministration slaunchly predic-
ting eventual success despite
rlsini;i: prices, but with some
cri tics getting increasingly
worried .
All that can be said with
cer tainty Is thAt it· is too soon
to tell whether the year will
encl with the rate of lnllaHon
down to between 2 and 3 per-
cent: which i! Nixon's goal.
Without hard figures . doubts
have begun to grow. ta st
week 20 economists predicted
for the Bu!!lness Council . a
group of top executives, thAt
Inflation would nln at between
. 1 and 4 percent this yea r.
They expressed strong con-
cern that the adminislration's
deficit spendinJ 'l\'b u Id ~trniulate lh'e economy . ~
much that controls would tibt
be able to hold do'l"n inflation .
Meanwhile the business of
regulating wagei. and pricts
.has • fallen into nearly a
routine.
·The Price Com'ml8slon'11 700
staff members handle most
appllCatlons for price In·
creases. Thee om m,I s 1 Ion
meanwhile coritlriues to refine
Its pol.lcles.
THE PAV BOARD, whose
membera oooe Insulted one
another in public, appears to
have pa!lled its worst days
and hm quletJy buckled down
to diacmlng 1uch matter~ u:
what -size fringe benefits will
be allowed to pau through the
vague loophole C o n g t e 1 a
created ror them last year.
· The -CO.I of Living COtlncll,
Sifter trlmmlng back the reach
of controls until 21 percent of
the average man's cost of Jiv-
1ng· isn't afrected by them .
now· if reluctllntly consldertrig
reversing· COUrM to ·bring
skyrocketing food prices Wlder
direct control for the first
Coast Fitm
To M~rge
With Slick ' '
Louis E. Purmort, ch,rnnan
o~ the. board of united Slates
Fiiter Corporallon·or Newport
Beach and Raymond' A. Rich ,
chairman of the board ·of The
Slick . corporation have AM·
nounCed .• prellmiryait ri'lerg~r agreemer1t.
The propoted plan· calls f0r
each Slick common share to
be exchanged for one shar'e of
Filter common. Each share nf
Slitk's presently ouL,tandlng
convertible prelerml otock
will be exchanged for one
shirt ol M;: Flltor oon-
vortlbl• ~ed.
IJ•lted 'Slit.. Ftlter c!ur·
rently lt11 t.2 million oomrnon
and 47.000 preferred ahares
OUl3t1ndln1. Slick has U
million common •nd 11 . o
million preferred 1 h a r e 1
outstanding. Whin the merger ts oompleted United Statu
Fiiier wlll be the 111M<lvlng
company with the Slick com·
mon sharetfo1der1 owning •P.
proxlm1tel1 71 pei:cenl of the
then oulllanding 1.5 million
•haru.
THE BEST
Readership .. po 111 PtoY• ''l'tanutJ" ll one of \he wqrld'a moot poPIJlo• comic
•tifi:e:. Read It dally ln tht
DAILY PILOT.
lime.
But thi! is not considered a
likely poS3ibDlty. It pro bably
'would mean food rationin&.
black markets and angry
rarm-stat~ voters.
By and 18.fge, the wage and
price regulation.., now are
written. The admln istratlon
says they wi ll stay ln place
until the y work. The questions
are will the economy comply
with them, and U so , will they
work?
Succeas ls a tricky prop-
osition. U controls are foo
!levere, they might hold back
economic'growth that is need-
ed to whittle down the stub-
born unemj>loyment rate, cur-
rently at 5'.9· perctnt. If they
aren't strict eoouj(h , they'll
miss the goal of 1 lowered In-
flation rate .
Actually [nflattort ~had been
winding down .slowly. for
mo{lths when President Nixon.
OIJ a Suqday evenlnJ. last Aug.
15, announced to int 'nation
!hat he was ~eezlng )'•II•••
pric'e1 a,nd cents, ,
THE 11-llAY P'R EE Z l'l
worked. WholeJ1le price&,
which w·ent up 4.0 percent ln
the preceding year;· 1ctu11ly
declined three--tentha of one
percent durlng th• freeze .
The upward cr"p of the
Consumer Prlce Index 1lowed
down. It had risen 4.4 percent
)n the .prtcedlnt 12 . monlh11 ind went up at a yearly rat1
or I. 7 per~nt ilurlna the freeze .. ,
l!ul U\~ /rem w11 only tem-
porary becaU8e It WIS so UO•
fair to auch people a a
tea chera, who u1uall.y get their
raises In the fa.II , 1nd ,.t,o
landlorda ind buslnewnen
who had been holdlng the Jin•
onj>ricea while others were in.
creasing theirs. ,
What followed waa a more
fl!xlble. ~ beWUi:lcrlngly com ..
plex aystem of wage and price
controls. . •
Un<!er .thill system, referr,ed
to by the administration ·•s
"Phase 211 of the President's
new econornJc polJcy, prlCea ~re rlslhg r~pidly as landlordli:,
m e r ~hantl, manufacturer11
and other bu.sioessTnen ralae
rate8 that wel'1e 'hetct In check
during the rrffr.e. ·
Wholesale prices jumped a
whopping elghl~enths ol one
percent In Dttember. due
moaUy to 1 full 2 percent rise
In · larm · producta. T h 1
Consumer P'rke lndex aurged
four-tenth s or one pe:rc:ent,
'With food l<ading the lilt, up
1.1 ·pt~ent. · •·
A4mintstration offlcla'ls ·11y '
this price bulge was e,i:pectled
11nd will continue , for a few
more monlhlL '1 ··
O..plte this ur1e. which of·
flclal1 concede may 1et wone
before it gets better 1 Prict ~miufoii Ch 1 Irma n C,
Jackson' Grayson Jr. 9'YS C»f'-
trols are beglnnlns to take er.
feet.
Wages, too, ire IJC)lng up
after remalnln1 •taUc. durlnC
the rr .....
MOST SC)IEDULED rliotl
loot during the (,..... """" will
be p11d retl'Olctlvely by order
nl Congrw, U they 1rt11'I
·already In workera' pocketa.
The Pay Board, munwhll.,
hu 1pplled II.I I.I j>ercenl
wage 1tandsrd strictly for
sma ll wage uolll but Ma ap.
proved W"fte lntrellel Of Up lo
11.! percent for big. llrlk ..
prone unfonl pluding a varie--
ly ol 1peclal c .....
Some board members talk
ol "cl01lng the pte" once
these list fe,.-"cowa" are In
'but early indlc1tioila ore thll the board 1)11 Utile. ~och
for Jrhpmln& back 1 reported
27 petttnl rai.t that WtJt
Coast dock worktn1 """'*
more thin 130 day• lo sot.
\
. ' .
Frld<y, Ftb"'''1 ZS. 191)
Monet'• Worih
Medical Expen ses
Vital Tax Saving
lly SYLVIA PORTER
. A1 the cos1 of 'medlc1il care
'1plral1 upward. It becomes
, ever more vital for you to
• know exactly what type of ez.
pendltures might qualify a1 an
Itemized medical e 1: p e n a e
'deduction and thereby htlp cut
your tax bUI. In 1911, th•
cowU al\d the Trt&SUry
came up with dflClsiOll! and
rulings on medical outlays
· th1t cin 1l"h your laxes.
Jt'1 clear
that any of
!your unrelro-
:buned hospi-
tal bUI• qua!·
,lfy .. deduc-
lible medl-
.cal e1penses. ~ But say a 0 hospllal b
;overcrowd-tto•T••
ed, it can't keep yoti after
an operation to give you
'.the alter-care you require and
'you move to a nearby hotel
•within easy reach of the
hospital where you are cared
for by your wife and a prac-
. tlcal nurse. Can you treat the
hotel charges !Or meals and
lodging as deductible medical
expenses?
The Treasury and Taz Court
at first baned any medical
e1pense deduction for mea1s
ind lodglJ'lg outside t b e
hospilal -bul on appeal last
-year, the Seventh Circuit
reversed and ruled that the
bar against deductlJ'lg meals
• and lodging oulllde a hospital·
;type institution was designed
~to pr~vent vacation costs from
·being d11guised as. medical u ·
·penses.
'. If, then, necessary post-
.operative after-care was the
'.aole reason for any bot.el ex·
'pense1 you Incurred In 1971,
these expenses qualify as
deducUble medical care.
' WREN CAN ORDINARY
liousebold help be deducUble
:in whole or in part u a
;.inedJcal expense? To il-
.Mtllr.000 F l4lr.tb
. MOTOR HOMES
..
' : SAlES • RENTAlS
11 ft ... ll ft.
UTI LINlk
• IALIOA-PACI AAltOW
" J::OCATID ON THI NIWPOIT
ltllWAY. JUST SOUTH OP
jtt1 SANTA ANA P.lllWAY.
'TAii THI Mt•ADDIN TUIN
Off, TUIN Lift ON YILLACJI. ....
~o • ,. N
•' '
•
•
• ' 558-3222
i.J411 S. VIL LAGE WAY
'SANTA ANA, CALIF.
~~
HAla T!IANSl'LANTATION-OEaMAl!IASION
SKIN DISEASES, TUMOU I. ALLERGIES-ACNE
o.tr1111t.i.,.k M .. lfll S-k•
We eccept MeJi.Cel t 11J MeJi-Cer• pefie11h ----------~Lft: ...... City I AIMf"k•~ Dfr'IMl91"'1' Cllakl' .... "" hnkl
• (21JJ 114·1000 120J Ldewff4 ""'·· L .. _ .... 90712 ...... C..•ty
• IJOJ i..l-....4 II. I
" '--........ 90712
lnflr1111t9'ft ••li.tlll11 0"'" lr111.,i.t111t1"
~ °"""'t•r11\lfl n .H1lr l•u A Oltnllrwff A<M l"-11111 Q Wlrb Q kltlU Mtkos 'b Hhots Q Otftll' .......... Pf'·l
"'"" ........................................ . ... ~, ...................................... .
IJIJJ JJ1-742t I
Ii!'"!~ c •• .,.., 11•12,_,.,,., I
1, H•lt'f ... to11 IHcll
1714, 147~1544 I City •. , ....•.•. 111'-•..•.••... n. ........ ..
Would you pay an extra
$5.21 per month for
Full Ne w Car Maintenance?
'TM.fl all the extra it COit wtth a Johnson le Son J'\111
ll&intenance l.A'ase on &111 of our brand new Im
){san:ya. Jual think of It .•. no mort-&MO)'lnl repair
probltmt ... no more Unt'xpected exz>cmes and btat of
All , , • 11 betlutlful new tull du Mercury Marquis or
Moaterey to drive In abM\lult"ly pttf«:t condition at all
timea. ..Find out for youl"!lt'lf all thfo benefits and pleuurn um ~t.Utic leut proanm providts on all our Llncolsr
Mut"UrY Product..
C&ll BUD BOWEN at 540-MJO. , , • TODAY!
OVER THE COUNTER
KIDS W VE
UNCI.E LEN
I '
•
•
Compl te-New York Stock .List
•
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' •
DAILY PILOT
I
F1b(UAIJ
I'
•
•,
Qt.I». DUSTER ... $
'P¥.KA~E INC-C~D~, . ·
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Unique d91,.nce 'wh•1l ·cov1rs, 'Nhite tires,
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' ' I I· • .
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• . .
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VI, •utovn1tic, t1dio,. he1ter.
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'65 MUSTANG . . .
V8, eir CQn4., .. utom1+ic, .t•dio,
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' ' ~ A "Comp/.ete Guide
• ,. • ". ~
' . ,. . .
. 1 _ D~ep in a Russian mo{x/ is the Laguna
, I ' ~ . · Beach · Civic Ballet. Below, Hal O'Neal, • •
.,. · .. Meril.ee Magnuson and Charles
.· .''Colgan in "La Fi/le M.al Ga~dee" Scene . .. e, ~ •..
• • • •
•
DAILY PILOT .. -·--------•e!!z. •
' -· ••• Where • •• •·
to go What '" • •• to
. .
Hallet Contrasts Mood8
'
,
(
Two eontrasting wofks.\ffu be featured
when the Laguna .Beach Civic BJllet
Cotru>any presentl 11&-tblrd membeilhlp
proB:ram at the Laguna M o u l to n
Playhouae .or>. i;.turday,-.March I at !:30
p.m. , • •
"Moods or Ancient Russia" will be
teamed with "La Fille Mal Gardfe."
. Music .for "Moods," a, ballet in eight
parts. Is variations on a theme by
Tchaikovsky · composed by Anton
Stepanovich Arenski .. Choreography iii by
L~a Zali. Lead dancers in~lude Kristi
Moorhead, Hal O'Neal, IA>uise Frazer,
Joan Gair, Cynthia Tosh, Belinda Smith
..... and~t:"eV1 Smijlt';. .. • • ~ " flrat .prellllted. \t Bordeaut In tho
:rf ~ r . . ·-
South o! France In t789, "La FUle ·Mal ·
Gardee" represented a breakawaf\from
formal ba!le~ 1lnce It had the makings of
a musical comedy. Ferdinand Herold
wrote the music. The ballet found Its way
to St. Petersburg In 1885 and eventually
acro1111 the Atlantic.
Lead dancers in the Laguna production
ar, Merilee Magnuson, Hal O'Neal,
Charles Colgan and Steve Smith.
On Sunday. March 5 at 2:30 p.m. "La
Fllle" will be ·Presented in ·the ·third
"B.all et for Children" series, .also at the .
Laguna Moulton Playhouse.
Prices for the March 4 _performanct
art S3 for adWtl;' '2 for 1tudent1 of any
1gt and IUIO for ·children wider U. For
Gulliver's
••
' •
,
a Lillipufian ytprld . ,-. '
! Cynthia Baron of· Huntington Beach
•
•
A Ulllputlin world will be created in 1
Miniature 7•1r In Huntington Beach,
Siturday and SUnday, Feb. 26-27.
C.Ollectora and creator~ of new and an·
tique miniatures wlll display quilts,
fufitlture, paintings. dolls and dollhouses,
automobiles ind furnished shop~ and
buildings In the fair at the Sheraton
Beach Inn.
John Blauer:of The.-. Miniature Mart of
San Francisco, a well·known creator and
collector, will be present with one of his
displays.
A foul-.foot square, furnished oriental
restaurant and cocktail bar surrounding a
garden and shrine will be displayed by
creators Abt Baron ·and Larry Frost.
Irma Pari. a member of the National
Institute of American Doll Artists. will
demonstrate her .technique of making
1 clothea for mlnlature wu dolls, aomt
Jess than one tnch tau:
The fair will be presenled from 1 to t
p.m. Saturday and Jq a.m. to 5 p.m. Sun·
day by the The Dollhouse Club of Hun-
tington Bea.ch. AdmJsston 11 50 cents.
'the c!Ub f1 a group or six miniature
makers who meet each week to work on
individual or group projects and ex·
change ideas and 1ources of materials.
Mra. Patricia Baron , who helped her
husband with the oriental display 11aJd,
11There l1 a Jot of show and tell."
They hope the fair will 1tlmulpte otl)ero
lo form 1lmilar group.. It Iii not
necessary to1bi'a quality artist, claims
Afrs. Baron, ''Once they, are shown hovr
ea1y It 11, ind are capable. 111 they need
11 to be Interested and like to make
things with their hands."
or finer quality than toys , miniatures
and dollboultl orl,ln11ed In the Jllh cen-
tury, ICCOl'dlng to Mrs. Baron. ' ·-+
Wealthy people ongoged • k 111 e d
cr11ft1men to make exact min iature
dupllc1te1 or thtir furniture, silver and
gold pieces 11 a meant of tak1nA: In·
ventory of their household po11e8sion1.
They would tore them in cabinets for
Jbelr children to enjoy. and would change
&hem l.f household changes were made.
Most collections are now in mu&eums or private collections. Mrs. Baron ti•
pl•ined. but "Somotlm01 we get lucky
and find valuable antiques at swap
meets, aarap sales, 1udio1111 or col·
lector1 willing to sell iomo Jlema."
Con1tructlon of tbe orlenlal complex
tool elghl mon!ht. ind cotlectin1 u1111lly
II~" yoaro. Arr1n1ln1 the piecet, 11id
Mro. S.ron, "T1keo boun, dly1 and
weeb IOO'rittwe1."
March'-loU)ey!are $2 for adults and $1.50
!or children.
The 1tory o! "La Fllle Mal Gardee"
cond"erns a youthful romance that wins
out de1plte a mother's objedlon1 and
obstacles.
Young Colas, a farmer , Is a pleasant
enough fellow , but Lise's mother, Simone.
disapproves of him 111 a suitor for her
daughter. Believing she deserves 110me-
one with a bi~ger bank halance -
specifically; for 1nst1tnce, the somewhat
il)slpid hla.in. Lise lac,ks enthusiasm for
the gentleman, howev~r.
Throughout 'the whole ballet Mother
Simone deaper1tely t!IH to keep Liu
away from Coln and to thru•t her into
ARM IN CAST
Raqu1! Wilch
Raque~ W eU;li
Takes Big Break
In. Latest Film
Raquel .Welch suffered a broken rl&ht
wrist recently while practicing lpeed
skating for her 1tarrlng role ai a roller
games chmpfon In MGM'• '"Tht K1n111
C)ty Bomber."
Filming or the movie In Portland, Ore .•
waa ocheduled to begin thl1•rnonth. It hao
been po1tpon<Jl un ti l April. •
Miss Welch will be· required to wear a
heavy ca1t for two weeks, fo!Lowed by a
1malltr ca1t for four week1. Doctors et·
pect the.. aclre11 to be 1ble to resume the
picture In six wee.kl. S~ ls now resUn1
at her Beverly Hiiis homo. ,
J•rrold Freedm1n, director of "Th<
Kan,., City Bomber," said tha t Mill
Weloh ln1i•!t on octu•lly performing
most of the strenuous 1k1tlne: feats for
the drama MrseU.
.
Crimson Bridge Hits
Troubled Waters
The loorinc mlllic1! 1roup known 11
lht Crimson Brtdae has cancelled Ill
March I ~t et Stnll Ano Coit• t .
Bool<ed neorly 111 montho 11~. tht
ll'OllP dllbanded dut to I dilqreemthl
llllOlll prrooontl while oo 1 111Uoul tour •
the arms of the expendi.ble Alain.
Love triumph& In the end when Mother
Simone makes a c1ta1ti-ophlc11ly wronc
move. Believing she wlll be keeplnc Lisa
from dallying with Colas, 1he Jocks her hi
the
1
kbam, not knowln1 th1t Colla ll
alre ady Inside. ,
When Ala in comes to cl•lm his bride,
he is horrified to find her locked ln a
barn with Colas. Mother Simone Is cloa1
to apoplexy, bu1 finally gives her blenlng
to the young lover.1 wbo naturally. llvt
hllpp jly ever after.
Tickets may be purchased' ahead from
!ho ballot cen~r, l!IJ S. Coul HJ,iiw1y,
~ BeF, .. F~r~a~ ~,.,.. mi. .
TV Program
To Ffxplore
·.Earthquakes
.: •• ,. -.~ •• -.. ~ . . . . ~ ...
A new geological theory which NI
to the prevention. of earthquakea wilt-;&
e~plottd on ''The Restleu Earth,'' Mon·
d•y. Fob. 28, et 8 p.m,o~KCET. Chlnnel 2S, •
> The •P.<clal two-hour documenllry 11UI
explain the new (hfory ol .. plate t..n.
· nlcs," which malntttlns that the earth'•
<erust consists of cpn1t1ntly 1hlltlns ~'
ana aupporta the J>Opular Idea 'o! ~ continent... • ·
According to the theory, the ·mo\/eri..t
of these plates Is responaible for ~
quakes. volcanoes and the foJ'l'1.l~Df
mountain• and mtner1l1. ··-
Filmed In IS '<OUnttfet, the pr....-
vbllts sites where exlstinf t1rraln d~
1trates the theory 1 from Greenl~•to
Newfoondland to cyprua with 1 '!fl>.'•I Tam:anla'1~un1.1suat volcano, Uing4li::
A new 200-aquare-foot model or lht tMot
of the A:tlanUc Ocean -the m01t ~· .
ate and up-to-d11te model of ltt k -
wUJ be used , alon, with animated •
to Ulu1lrate the .. rth'1 bulc 1t~.
Among oiher thlw. the technlq'-""1 ..
veatt that the edgei of the Atlantic iothe
Amerlc:oo European 1ideo oould fli..,._ 1
ðer like I giant Jiluw puzifo.•,q
oclent!tll belle•• they did more tboa.1111
million yean ap•. ~ . . . .
WEEKENDER • IN8Wt: FEATllllEJ
n-l<!ay, l'tb,..,, 91 1m
> • • '
George Leida! ol the 0.llr PIM
Staff reviews the uptown v..-
of 'Tommy/ the rock:aptra, by tM
Wlio-Set "'" I\).
Golde to Fu Pqo H
la lloe Gallttie• .... U
OUt 'N' A.boctt
lntermlsaloo
Travel
Movie Gtdde
Uve Tbeater
Vlolho Coacert
KCET Aoctln
'Tommy' Jtev6ew .
Anlorlc1a Biiiet
'
,
• ••
DAILV ,lLllT • frid11, ,.....,, 25, 1972
61dde te .Fun
•
•
• Camel · Races, Horse Shows ~ighlight Date Fest.fval
ra.•-n
NATIONAL DAii •••-l""l"AL -JUverslde County's Nation-
-11 Doto F--lhn>ulh Sunday, feb. 27 , In
Indio. !Vall IMMll Iii Arabian Nigbls Pageant. dally
horte lho•I, camel ud ot:lrich raoe1, a parade, free stage
1Mw1 and nhAblla. Grounds admission, $1.50 for adults.
IO ctnb for chUdten~l-12, free under six, $1 for students.
FEB. '5 • MARCH I
WINTER FESTIVAL -Laguna Beach Winter Festival
throu&h March S. CrafL1man'1 Fair and art exhibit on festl -
val. lfOUllds daily from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m .. No admis-
sion charge. Other evtnta are safari show, Junior Repetory
Opera program, golf and lawnbowling toumamenl3, sand
caatle aculpturtnc con.,teit ind an antique show. Othert are
1 hotne 1nlf'11:1rden four, film festival, folkdancing exhibi-
tion, CAtamaran races, Oea market, ballet and concerts. A
brochurt 11 av11!1ble at the Chamber of Commerce, 205 N.
Co11t Hwy., LalUJI• Beach. <94-1011. ' ' FEB. U
STORY HOUR -Co1to Meaa Lib11ry, 516 Center St.. Costa
MIA, offera 1 children'1 ltory hour each Thlll'I .. at 10:30 a.m.
A Laure.I and Hardy film. "Busybodies," will be shown
Feb. 21.
FEB. I.I • MARCH %
PLANETARIJJM SHOW -Teuman Planetarium at Santa
Ana Colleae. 1530 w. 17th Sl., Santa Ana will pre!ent a
apeci.al ahow, "Winter Sky Spectacular,'' each Tues. and
'Dwr1. at 7:15 p.m. through March 2. Throu&h the eyes of a
m1jor observatory the audience will er.amine the Orion
In the Galleries
Nobula, tl\t Plelad , the Whirlpool g1Iaxy and !be Leo
cluatera of 1aJa1lu. A trip to Alaska to witneu a display
of the Northern U1hts will clo&e the &how which I.a: tree to
the public, but reservations must be m1dt. Phone 547·9611,
Ext. 314. I
FEB. %5 • MARCH 4
UCI DRAMA -Shakespeart's "Othello" will be stagtd by
the School of Fine Arb at 8:30 p.m. Feb. 25 throuah March
4, in lhe Village Studio Theater on campus. Tickets , '3 at
Fine Arla box office. 833-8617.
FEB. '5 · %7
lNDIAN SHOW -The Amerkan Indian and Western Relic
Show will lake place Friday through Sunday, Feb. 25-27, in
the Great Western E1hibit Genter, Los Angeles. A gathering
of tribes for a Pow · Wow is featured on Saturd1y and Sun·
day , including a dance festival and conttst. The show In-
cludes 100 exhibit! of American Indian art and handicraft.
General admlas.ion ls SL 75. costumed Indian dancers ad·
mitttd free .
FEB. %5
GUITAR CONCERT -George Sesoko, classical guitarist will
perform at 8 p.m. in the new theater on Golden West cam-
pus, 15744 Golden West St ., Huntington Beach. Feb. 25. Ad·
mlasion la free, reservations for seating may be fhade at
College.
FEB .. 25
CONCERT SERIES -OCC College Life Club present the
the second In a 1erie1, Sounds of Agape seriH at 7:30 p.m.
tonl1ht In the college eudilorium, 2'101 F1lrYI•• Rood. There
1J no admluloo cbarl• for the conc.rt which lncludea
Bruah Arbor, country and blu"; Sooi of the An1elea, IO
nutlst.t, and the forerunners, folk and clasalcal.
FEB. U • %1
CONCERT·DANCE -Paula Kelly and the Modern1lrea pre-
sent "Music Made Famous by Glenn Miller" tonl&ht and
Saturday, Feb. 26, at the Hollywood Palladium. Paula Kelly
sang with the original Glenn Miller orchestra back in the
40!. Tickets at '4 at1d $5.50 for Friday, $5.50 and SI for Sit·
urday.
FEB. U
LILY TOMLIN -Lily Tomlin or "Laugh·ln" will be heard
in concert in the Pavilion on the Golden West College cam-
pus, 15714 Golden w .. 1 SI., Hunttnaton Beach, at 8 p.m. Feb.
28. On· the ume program will be "The People Tret," a soft
rock croup. Tickets, $3.50 at Colle1e Bookstore.
FEB. U • %7
DANCE CONCERT -"Music Made Famous by Glenn
Miller" will be a dance concert presented by Ted Beneke
and the Modemalres at 11 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, Feb.
26-27, ln the Hollywood Palladium on Sunset Blvd. Tickets
are U-$5.50 on Saturday, $5.50-$6 on Sunday.
FEB. U • %7
CHORAL CONCERT -"Hommage a Igor Stravinsky,"
performances of Stravinsky's "Les Noces" and "Mass" by
the UCI Chorus under lhe direction of Maurice AJlard will
be presented at 8:30 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, Feb. 2&-
• 11, in the Vilta1• Tb11llr 1111 C4111)1111. TltNll, II at Fjltt,
Arts box office. UMetT. '
' rma.11 • FILM LECTURE -Dr. qua Hill ..uJ praaent a r!lm 1 ...
ture series. a~red by thl lowll''t Museum ol 'Slnta
Ana . in the auditorJum Of U.e City Hall Annex In Santa Anti,
520 N. Ro!e St. Comfortable theater 1eat1 ahould provide
audiences with more comfort and viewing pleasure. Free
parking ln rear lot. The pro1rlml all will be seen at 2:30
p.m. On Feb. 27 "Morocco," Ancient and New will be seen.
There la no admission charge.
FEB. %7
CONCERT -Orange Coast College Community Symphony
Orchestra, directed by Jostph Pearlman and presenting
aolo violinist William Kurasch will be heard at 4 p.m. Sun-
daf, Feb. 'II, in the college auditorium, 2701 Fairview Road,
Costa Mesa. There is no admisaion char1e. The program
will include "Sibelius Violin concerto." "Sympbolly No. 6''
by Tchaikovsky and lhe flverture , "School of scandal" by
Barber. There ls no admission charge.
MARCH 4
ROCK REQUIEM -Golden West Sir1gers and Symphony
wW perform in Lalo Schlfrin's "Rock Requiem'' at 8 p.m.
March 4 and 3 p.m. March 5 In the n.ew theater, Golden
West campus. 15744 Golden West St ., Huntington Beach.
In world symphonic premier. "Rock Requiem" is the com·
plete mass for the dead to rock music. Adm,ission is frte,
reservations for seatin& may be made at the college.
FEB. H • %7
CI.oAM FESTJV AL -26th Annual Clam Festival In Pismo
Beach Frld1y and S1turd1y, Feb. 28 • 27. Pand• belinl
at Il a.m. Saturday.
GWC Student Art . MARCH 4. I
CIVIC BALLET -Laguna Beach Civic Ballet presents
"Moods of Ancient Russia'' and "La Fille Mal Gardee" at
8:30 p.m. Saturday, March 4, In the Lasuna Moulton Play·
hou11, Tickets are p for adult.a, S2 for atudent.s and ft.JO
for children . under 12. "La Fllle Mal Gardet" alao wUt be
presented at 2:30 p.m. Sunday, MlfCh 5, during "Ballet fer
Children" series. Tickets are $2 for adult.I, $1.50 for chlldrtn. Put on Exhibit
GOLDEN WEST CO!LEGE GALLERY -15714 Golden w .. t
Ave., Huntiniton· Beach. Houri: Mon. • Fri., noon to 5 p.m.
Currently on exhJblt, 1tudent art work, "Directions and Re-
nections '71 • '72" throu&h March 3.
SADDLEBACK INN GALLERY -In the Saddleback Jnn,
Santa Ana Freeway at 1st St., Santa Ana, 1ixlh annual
Round-up of Cowboy Artist.. On exhibit throu1h March 20.
No admfssion charge,
OCC GALLERY -2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa. Hours:
Mon. -Thurs. 7:30 a.m. -10 p.m.; Fri., 7:30 a.m. • 5 P.m.;
Sun.; 1 to 5 p.m. C1osed Sat. African Art Exhibit through
Mar. JO, masks, wearing apparel and sculpture. Library ex-
hibit in .reference alcove. Hours: Mon .-Thurs. 7:30 a.m.·10
_p.m.; Fri., to 5 p.m.; Sun., 1-5 p.m. On exhibit. Feb. 23-
"March l~ 34 posters by American artists rrom Paris Review
: Magazine.
BOWERS MUSEUJ\I -2002 N. Main St., Sant.a Ana. Hours:
: • 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.in. TIJes.-Sat.; 1 to 5 p.m. Sun., and 7 to
· t p.m. Wed. and Thurs. Exhibit of Logan Lockabey photos
: on lifeguard servictJ In Newport ~c~. an~ collection of
: } old Valentines on display through <Feb. Z/, . t . .
NEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSEUM -2211 W, Balboa
Blvd., Newport Beach. Hours : noon to 4 p.m. Tues. -Sun.;
Closed Mon. In en' trance gallery, collection of unique art
books by So. Calif. artists; a sandal shop wall, and vinyl
objects create(I by Michael Davis, through Feb. 27.
SECURITY PACIFIC -II& E. 17!h St., Costa Meaa. On ex-
hibit during regular busiiiess hours, oil paintings by Peg11
.. Wilcox, lhrough February. . . .
!;l VCO SAVINGS AND LOAN -1310 Bristol SI., Costa Mesa.
.. ~ exhibit during regular ' business hours through Febru-
: ary, oil paintings by Marjori\ Ludlam. . ' !M~A VERDE UBRARY -2969 Mesa Verde Drive East.
!Costa Mesa . On exhibit during regular hours oil paintin&s
(by Fred Olds, through February. • Tree Taking to Notes
MARCH 4 ·I
SCOTS GUARDS -Her Majesty's Scots Guards perform
Friday, March 4, in the In1ltwood P'orum and Saturd1y,
March s, In lhe Pasadena Civic Auditorium. Kilt-clad mer1to
hen will perform wllh regimental drums, plper1 and danc-
ers. Tlcket.1 from $3 to $5.75 are av1ilable at all a1encte1.
MARCH I
SLIDE SHOW -"Mini Bikes, Motorcycles and Your'', will
be pruented by Officer Henderson of the Westminster Police
Department 1t 7 p.m. Sunday, Mtrch 6, In the W"tmlnaltr
Civic Center, l300 Westminster Avenue.
MARCH I. II
OCC PLAY -Oran1e COut Colle1e, 2701 F1irvlew Road,
Costa Meaa, will be producln1 "Tb• Serpent" by Jean-
Cl1ude v1n Ila.lie, directed by William Purkisa at a:30 p.m.
March S.11 in the college suditorlum. There ill no admll·
aion charge.
MARCH II· It
WORLD PREMIER -Cllifomla Sule College al Fuller-
ton presents world premier of Ray Bradbury's own play.
with adaptation of his book of short atorl~, "Dandelion
Wine," at 8:30 p.m. March 11).11 in the Uttle 'nteat.tr on
campUI. Author Bradbury is guest artist of the 1t71·71
season. Tickets, $3 at theater bo:s: office. 8~3371.
MARCH II
ORCHESTRA CONCERT -lo> Angeles Philharmonic
Orchestra at 8:30 p.m. Saturday, March 11, in Crawford
Hall , UCJ campus. Gerhard Samuel conducting and Marth•
Argerlch as guest pianist, apon10red by Oran1e ~Y
Philharmonic Society. Tickets. 1<·.SO ror adults, 12 for 1bt·
denls. 646-6411. \
Nancy Wilson says:·
"Your gift to' · •
Easter Seals 'COSTA MESA LIBRARY -~Il Center St., Costa Mesa. ion paintings by Pat Ingram on exhibjt durina re&War
:library houri through February.
' '
"The . People Tree," a soft-rock group, will join
comedienne Lily Tomlin at 8 p.m. Saturday, Feb.
26, in the Golden West College's· new theater.
Ticket. are available at the collei• bookstore and
the usual ticket •iencies at $3.50. is a gift of Jove to
a handicapped child." .t FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF OC -1&50 Adams St., Costa
SMesa. On exhibit during regular business hours, acrylic•
:rand watercoJors by Ferne Williams, through February.
?~NSAMERICA TITLE CO. -170 E. 17th St, Costa Me'8. :0n exhibit during regular business hours lhrough February,
:w.-tercolors by Beu lah Treadway. ~
' ~DOWNEY SAVINGS -3fJO E. 17th St., Costa Mesa. On ex-
'hiblt during regular business hours, oil paintings by Mancl
:Schontal, Lavene Charron, Phyllis McCarty and Alma Phll-
flips, through February.
)MUTUAL SAVINGS AND LOAN -2867 E. Coast Highway,
:Corona del Mar. On exh.ibil during regular busines.! hours,
!Paintings by Robert .DennJJtoun, through February.
• !LAGUNA BEACH ART GALLERY -307 Cliff Drive., Laguna
!Buch. Hours : 11.30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily. On exhibit ;Calli. arti1ts from Thomas Inch collection; ctramics
~by Allen Davis; 1eulpture of H. Frielicher, L. Heath and
•tings by Fred Kopp and Ruth Rossman, through Feb-
n11ry. D
¥AfUNERS LIBRARY -2004 Dover Drive, Newport Beach.
"/Jit~ exhibit through Februazy, during regular library hours,
~erican history artlract.l i watercolon and collaaes by
1~ise Davis Lleber. '
~RONA DEL MAR LIBRARY -4lO Marigold Ave., Corona
ilil Mor. on txlllbil lhn>UCll Febru1ry· during rtgular ll-
,&;1.ry hours. American history artif1cti. A~. watercolor
uhiblu by Rulli Hynda. .
CllAWS GAl>LERIES -13911 S. Coul Hlghw1y, Laguna
Buell. Houn: 1l a.m. lo i p.m. dally. Pn •xhibit Feb. !fl.
M1rdl II, recent painU1111 of Jon Kaspreycki and l!Ob Peck.
JliRJNEllS SAY.ING!! -1115 w .. 1cmr Drive, Newport f9cli. on uhlbtt durln1 regular buslneu houri; oil paint·
alld weldod wait sa1tptu11 by Dru J-, • th(ougb
ry. ,
Ah: GLENN GALLERY -28SI Etit Coist llil/lway, qr.... de! Mar. Hours< 11 •.m. to S p.m. dally. on ubibit
act paintings by Jolyi Cl<m Clari<• lh"""'1 March %3.
OP OALURY -Callromt1 Stolt Collea• ~( ,tuUerton,
11111 11. St& Collea• Blvd .. IUllerton. Houn : I lo 4:311 p.m.
-,·Frld11: dark Slltunf11 ; I to • p.m. &mdiy. On
~. li•tog 1rt ptec .. by Newton Huriloo.
c:AuP'OINIA MUSl!llM Oli' SCI.ENCE AND INDUSTRY-
,. -Dr! .. , Loi Angela. Hours: ID a.m. • s p.m. dilly.
~ct Mmaim llulldlnJ. Vieona Glorto.a, prtpate<I by City
.... V_ enuiilalhlnf clty'1 <Onlrlbullon lo 1eience. med!·
~ 1111 and muolc. Cruti•• Aullrla, pr.pared by Au,. i4rlM ,_, Cllambtr ol CofJlmerco; througb April U, ~&W .... T CIVIC q:NTµt GA!LERY -3300 Newport
~-llo!a<h. currently "' ullibi~ duriJtl "'"'ar ~ I EDI palnUn(s · by Bruct Hiaaelle throu1b F'tb-.-,.
GUINDAUI FEDERAL IA \llNGS -2n Harbor -Blvd.,
COoll -· On ulllblt ~ l"ebruory, dutlllf ..,war ' : m -. Dilr ~J Ab<o 'l'JI• TilCJloff.
} ,
Library to Post OCC Mixes
Concert American
"Paris Review Posters," an
exhibition of 34 framed posters
by Amrican artisl! will have a
three week run in the Orange
Coast College Library gallery.
The show runs Feb. 28
through March 16 and will be
in the second noor exhibit
area. Gallery hours are Mon-
~ay ' through Thursday 7: 30
a.m. to 10 p.m., Fridays 7:30
a.m. to I p.m. and Sundays 1·5
p.m. There is no admission
charge. ·
Jn 1966 The Paris Review, 1
Paris based literary
Katselas Picked
As Dir.ector
' '
HOLL YWOOO (AR)·
Milton K1tsela1 has been. sign-
ed by producer M I k e
Frankovich to direct "Forty
C111ts," which wlll begin
nlmint next summer.. i
K•tsel" recently complet..l .
the direction of 11ButterOlea
are rree." The new "film will
bt ocreened In Hollywood.
SOUTH SEAS
TROPICAL FISH o,..,. c • ...., .. fl.., _ .. T..,ic.ll'Wo -··""" e A9UAllUMI e MAINTINANCI SllYICI e UYI POODI e UYI PLAHTS
11• w. w1Lao., cona MllA ,.., ,,...,... •.. , ...,,,.,
.... ,_,., NUllfTUflTOfll laACllf
,,. .......... L~ -·
Exhibit
magazine, commissioned a
series of posters by major
American utists. Each poster
has been printed under the
direct supervision of the artist
and published in an dlition of
150, signed and numbered .
The collection c o D t a i n •
w o r k s by Anuszkiewicz,
D ' A r ca n.g e Io, p i n e ,
Frankenthaler. Indiana, Kelly,
Lichterutein. Lindner, Marca-
Relll, Marisol, Motherwell and
Neve Ison.
Al10 Oldenburg,
Ra uschenberg , Rosenqu ist.
Shahn, S t a m o s , Steinberg,
Trova, Warhol and Wesley.'
The exhibition •as organiz-
ed by Poster Originals. Ltd. o(
New York and circulates
un4tr the auspices or The
American Federation or Arts.
The second concert in a
year-long "Sounds of A1ape"
aeries will be held in the
Orange Coast c 0 11 e g e
Auditorium tonight.
There will be no admission
charge for the 7: 30 p.m. con-
cert, sponsored by the OCC
College Lire Club.
Three groups will b e
reatured. "Brush Arbor'~ is a
country and blue grass group
from San Die10. The "Song of
the Angels" features 1 0
flutists from the local area.
The last group, "The Forerun-
ners," Plays both folk rock
and claaslcaJ. .
Concerts are scheduled for
April and May. The series Is
in it.a lhlrd yur at the college,
located at-2701 fatrview Road,
Costa M~sa.
THE WIST~ ~tNIST IOOPISTOUS
I
HUNTER'S BOOKS
l'Ol 120 YIAlS-SINCI lUl
LocatMI Al
FASHION SQUARE
IN SANTA ANA
'Phono (7141 543-9343
H ,500 ..... l Po,.....b
12,000 u.....t ., .... ., c...i.
Ul•AIHS •ALOlll
OPEN EVENINGS 'Tl£ t P.lfl.
J
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
'
FEBRUARY 28·APRIL 2
Grower Connections That Are Unbelievable!
Buyin g produce her• i1 like "9rowin9 It your1elf." We ha"f'e the connection•
..... ith the growers! McGarro 9row1 our tomatoes in Santa Ana. They 9row_our
a 5p ara9u1 on Irvine. They 9row our oran9•1 in Villa P4rk. Nancy 9row1 our
1tr1wberrie1 "with 1tem1 too" in }ente An1. Our to11ad 11 \1d1 •r• pr•p•red
for us at 2 a.m. every day. Our cauliflower i1 the pride of the "Cet10 Farm•,"
Sante Ane . Wait 'til you 1ee them. Nancy'• f1ther 9row1 our celery in Santa
Ana ...• , • So, why 1attla for produce thet is "d1y1 or weeks" 9ettin9 to you r
store when you cen j,uy "today's" produce "today" at Newport Produce.
···················~·········· • • lv1ryMtly LovN '!°h... • lO OOO Sel4 Lett Week • Plrtt Of The New Cr., •
• OR,llANIC ' • TIXAI •
: GRAPEFRUIT : DAFFODILS : CUCUMBERS :
: 6 !!or 25C : 69C Dn. : 6 For ISC :
• Llmlt-12 J;.. • Llmlt-J Des. • Limit-' •
• With Thlt "C.u,..,-• With 'ft.It Cau9'M • With Thft (.UIMft • .................... , ......... .
• IOLIO a We 1-t Wlftt Pri4o Cltl,_l.MALL a
Small, lut What A Price • OUR ,AMOUI •
: ICllDG • GRAPEFRUIT • CELIRY :
LITTUCE : JUICE ~ I oc .... • • •
• • • I oc .... : 29C qt. : LIM-
• 1.1 .. tt-1 Llmlt-2 .... • With Thlt ,..,,... • Wltti Th .. Ctu,_. • Wttt. Thl1 c_,... • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS IXPlll MAICH 1
These restaurant• ~•m111d the fin11t for theirsu1tomtrs: Tha+'s why th•y f11ture
New,.,, Pr.-Ctl Petronit• them l Yktet H ... e.1 L•1una leech: fte.,.....
Newport• TH c,..,. HMM, La9una Nf9ual; P.m IH, Newport; TH V..htt'"
Coita M111a, end over 300 others. How ebout your callin:9 u11
•01a110• Counlf's Fa1~ll Growing Produce and Flower 0. nliatfon"
~~~~~~c
"IS y un ~ ~ucc "Wll#• qulll)I l.r U.1
l:MIO Hou" Onl<t' of 1111 ff°"""
ICHllHD ,-•UIT IMll'PP , HI • ytAaS.
•
I
I
J
t
c
$
$
t
f
' ,
' '
... . . . .. . . .. . . . . .... ' . . . . ... -. ' . . .... . . .
_,_,1_d""''--'-•_bn._.,,-'-~-''-' _a_n ________ DAIL v PILOT :tt;
--·--. __,..,._ • £ ................. ..a .. ..--...:~......,~--
1VEEKENDER O ·UT I N I AB-o u ·r •11
NOJUJ ST.41\'Ul'
ORANGE COUNTY'S REST iURANT, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERT AINMEN~ SCENE
Reuben's Newport
You would have to put Reuben's on or near the
top or any list or local restaurants that comes close
to being household words . Coco's, Plankhouse ,
Moonraker, Isadore's, Reuben E. Lee, some of the
other places operated by the parent, Far West Serv·
ices , Inc., would then automatically suggest them·
selves too.
Now the se names are becoming well-known to
diners in other parts of the country. Recent months
have seen the openin g of Reuben's, Denver, Colo.;
the Plankhouse, Sandy Springs, Ga .; the Moonrak·
er, Syosset, L. I. N. Y.; Coco's, Enfield, Conn.
HERE ELEVEN YEARS
While out 'n' abouters in these and other towns
like Lincoln, Neb. and St. Louis, Mo. might have
been enjoying their initial introduction to these Cine
establishments last \Vednehday night, we were com·
fortably settled in one that's been a long-standing
fixture on the Orange Coast. And small wonder that
Reuben's Newport Beach is so familiar to residents
of the area ; it 's now in its eleventh year of opera·
tion.
Even so, a visit to this institution isn 't likely
t-0 pass without a few surprises. For one thing, the
menu had been expanded since our last outing, and
secondly, a brand new union of two top musical tal·
ents -resulting in an entertainm"ent "must" -is
currently making a smash debut in the lounge.
Turning to first things first,· however, we scan·
ned the bill of fare from top to bottom in considera·
tion of the even dozen entrees offered. These in·
elude ground sirloin steak, $3.25; fresh halibut filet,
$3.95; rack of lamb, $4 .25; top sirloin steak, $4.95;
New York steak, $5.50; steak and lobster combo,
$7.25.
LOBSTER TAIL
In one of those rare occurrences when more
than one person is seated at the dinner table, all
five members of our party opted for a single item.
Real
Cantonese F11od
eat her• or
take home.
• STAG
CHINESE. WINO
111 21st pl., Newport lle1ch ORlolo .3-9~60
Ope11 YIW lro•MI Dolfy 12°12 -.:._ en4 s.t. 'tff J e.111.
This was the always reliable Reuben 's Ceature, one
Australlan lobster tail, served with rice pilaf, $~.50.
@
Everyone pronounced the lobster consist~nt
with the usual high standards -a· generous porUon
broiled with an unerring eye for maximum tender·
ness and succulence. Likewise enjoyed all the way
around was the hot bread (light and dark), and each
diner's choice of chilled salad -a tangy shrimp
vinaigrette or crisp mixed greens served with a
choice or dressing.
~-
Dinner was wrapped up with coffee for every
one and dessert for the two largest appetites in the
group. Their sweet tooth cravings were met by one
of Reuben's incredibly la rge sundaes and a dandy
slice of pecan pie.
FAMI LIAR
Then came our move to the Joun~e and the
consequent discovery of one of the areas fine new
entertainment acts. This is the teaming of Johnoy
Sheridan and Gregg Shannon , both well-known
performers from past appearances in Orange Coun-
ty, who are now making their debut as a duo at
Reuben's Newport.
As a solo artist, Johnny displa_yed his dlstin c·
tive talents as a vocalist and guitarist in numerous
spots hereabouts during the last couple of years.
These places include the Fleur de Lis, Laguna'
Beach; Reuben's Fullerton and Costa Mesa; Alley
West, Newport Beach and the Whistling Oyster,
J-funtington Beach.
OLD 'ROAD'
Gregg is perhaps best known to the undet·i-0
crowd who packed Isadore's in Newport Beach for
more than a year to acclaim the big rock beat of
The Road Home. As both founder of the group
(then a trio and later expanded to a quintet) and
lead guitarist until the recent shift in personnel, he
won a legion of fans during "Road's" long·running
engagement.
Both Johnny and Gregg got into music while
I
I
I
I
I
-----------· CONTINUOUS MUSIC THIS WIEKEND I
TIM THREE FOR
MORGON THE ROAD I
TUE. NllOHTS ONLY
GINO
LANZI ' I
•
attending College or Soulhern Utah In Cedar City
although they never met there during their campus
dayt. It remalned tor 1 later coming together In the
Marine Corps before they got acquainted and dis·
covered their common background and interest.
,,~
-~:.
Their first musical association wa~ la unched
while in the service when they became members
of a grour, called Crystal Clear. Upon leaving the ·
Corps. "C ear" stayed together for some time play·
Ing numerous club dates but ultimately disbanded
and each performer went his separiato way.
SONGWRITERS
Johnny. a native of Lubbock, Texas, and Greg~.
who hails from Provo, Utah, are also hitting th eir
stride as songwriters. Gregg has j ust been signed
as a writer and performer with Dunhill Records,
and recently started his own Road Home Publishing
Co. ·
0 'O
With the decision to team up for thelr first
duo venture, Johnny and Gregg went lnto extensive
rehearsals and developed a cohesive repertoire of
old numbers augmented by a wide-ranging selection
of new tunes. The results, happily, can be seen and
heard in the dynamite package of entertainment now
on tap at Reuben's.
WE LIKED
Sonp that especially car.tured our fancy In-
cluded 'Mr. Bo Jangles," 'Anytime She Goes
Away," 1'Leavlng on a Jet Plane," "Me and Bobby
McGee," "It's Too Late," "IC You Could Read My
Mind, Love." One truly outstanding composition by
Gregg was ••coming Back Down.''
Johnny's vpcals hit a high point in two numbers
popularized by the fantastic Mickey Newberrr, on
his best·selllng album, " 'Frisco Mabel Joy. ' In
both -"An American Trilogy" and "Mobile Blue''
" .,. ::a::z:r....,---•••l'J •
~ohnny comas startlingly close to Mickey's baunt-
lng originals.
~~_,
Open soven days a \\'Pck for lunch and dJnner,
Reuben 's Newpor t Bcarh 1s loca ted at 251 E. Co11!t
1-llGh\vay, a stone's th row soulh of the Reuben E.
Lee. Sheridan and ~h11nno11 stri ke up nightl y, Tues·
day through Saturday, al B 30 pm.
Boon Docks
. Again the other day \\'e \Ve re questioning the
w1ntcr-su1nn1cr arnbl~u ll y of our fnndnc!lii for tht
South ('oul'L Jncvit ably lh<'s<: 1nnnthii1 unfold a!! the
bc:-;t time of year Lo liv e in thr at'ca. then t:ome8
Au gust and we're f'irm 01 th e beli ef iL represents
the fin es t scnson.
This rather equivocal state or mind, needleti1111
to say, sets up a biL of conflict now and then . But
in the h>ng haul, we !!uprosl"! !here really l!!n't any
friction becau se r\JJ .. th e time is best tor living
here.
~vcn so, lry il ~·ebruary luncheon outing tn
.,,y restaurant al on~ Newport Reach'• waterway,;
and it's almost 1n1 pos~iblc Lo escape the dl11cord
~
with your summer·selr. At least that11 the way we
felt when we sat. down to our mlddaymoal at the
Boon Docks.
QUIET CHARM
Outside the restaurant's vost ex panse of pie·
lure windows was au the quiet char m of winter's
slackened pace. J lad it been summer, we thought,
Lh e boating and aq uatic activities would appear
frenetic by compari son.
The bright sunny day gave everythin g a sharp.
ness and clarity that's past remcmberJng in a July
haze. And the kind o( relaxing peace prevadtng
the whole atmos phere seemed to bespeak a mo-
ment you would like to i;cttle Into forever.
Finally, admitting there would bo no keeping
us out of the place come summer too -for all ol
Nightly Dinner llr====c_,._,"'.,1".,"•'d•o•n•P••.,g•=l6====~
Specials $J.CJS Ch' C . .
TAtE/u,WlIAtE
400 MAIN, BALBOA PENINSULA
PLENTY OF PARKING I 673·4633
I
lie . 1nese ws1ne
/!JI" COMBINATION
•....... , LUNCHEON PJ.ATU
---rRQM ·~ TEIR&ClE COMPLETE DINNERS FROM ia.et1
·1\ -'' Jo'flRturlnl{ TroplcaJ Drlnk1 X: 1t Orirnt11I Ctcktall Lounse
~lliiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiil~~ll I ""'-------.!~~~~~~~~ COCKTAIL HOUR-JUMIO DRINKS DAILY l;;o;;; II -ii
OPl!N ~'LV 11 AM•l1 ,,.-CLOllO MONDAY -THE BLACK KNIGHT
RESTAURANT
DINNER • COCKTAILS
SEAFOOD ·BAR
ENTERTAINMENT
LUNCH 11 :~O TO 3
Open Dilly 10 A.M. to 2 P.M.
Now Appearing
JERRY LAMBUTH DUO
330 EAST 17TH STREET
COSTA MESA 548-7791
RICK CHARLES TRIO
LITILE LISA
130 E. 17th STREET
COSTA MESA 646-8181
mI~L.f.I
MEXICAN RESTAURANT
"FINEST MEXICAN CUISINE
IN ORANGE COUNTY"
FOR YOUR DININlO r. DANCING Pl.EASUH
I ' I
MARCOS
AND THI
LATIN
MARKS TRIO
M. ea4 s.t. Nftlt!I
....... to 1 .....
547 W. ltft STREET
COSTA MESA 641-9764
r
I SAT. & SUNDAY BRUNCH~ I
Cjtolce ef
I 1. HUfYOS RANCHERO $ J 7 s :
2. STEAK &, EGGS I 3. EGGS IENEDICT
I
I {ANlorM Flth er C•na4l1n l•<•n)
1
1
Try Our "DAILY DOUIH" 5 pm·7 pm I Two Dlnner1 for $5.SO I
2601 Weit Co•1t Hwy., Newport Beech .. 548-1166 , __________ ..
THE BERLINER
German Family Restaurant
F1mou1 For
SAUERBRATEN with POTATO DUMPLINGS
2 Reasons to Celebrate
'#1 THE TRIO OF AUSTRIA
#2 PIGS KNUCKLES FEAST
( Cltoke ,.,. Slle•k wht1 S.l«trut I
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 26
lM'a All WMelM leek TM flM H•IM laH
0'1N DAILY fOl LUNCH
AND DINNll FROM 11 A .M.
CLOllD SUNDAY
BANQUET FACILITIES
18582 IEACH ILVD.
Town & Country Center
HUNTINGTON HACH
961-5800
ORANG E COUNTY'S l:(,EWEST
DINING lo NIGHT CLU'ii SCENE
f-t•turi119
CHU LAalT RIMING IN THI KITCHIN w... re .. Ae4 111clri .. f"4
MIXOC.0.llT IORY CALLO AT THI IAI
Wttti _..... ........
IWIN•IN• IONl-ITIUS 611.MAINI
WM 0-... .. rM Ill M.t. Ttl•
•
THE BULL AND BUSH
THE FRIENDLY BRITISH PUB
Proud ly Pr111nt1.
THI BIGGARMIN
! FROM IELFAST, NO. IHI.AND I
lrl119I"' Yo1 A H•,,Y 1 ... 1111 .. Lltl ...
l•llldtl1t9 Mlllk; 0114 S.,..
SATURDAY, FEHUARY 26th
"'"" t :N ,..M, ... ._, A .... .,. it'-Cfl•!I ti tmpertM ·-·r.: • llMI TrH1tiM11 "\llt M11h 111 111 ll'lflrlNI, lltllXM A IMl ... tl'I,
177 W. ltth St .. Cotta Mesa 646-H30
NOW Ol'EN WEDNESDAY THRµ SUNDAY WITH A
COMPLETELY DIFFERENT GOURMET MENU
EVERY WEEK OF THE MONTH
(}///~o/mv
NtWl'On MACH. "'-ll'°41"'1A ·-':!.':': (714) 644·1700
THE UNDERGROUND
, FEATURING DANCE MUSIC BY THE
RED NECK QUARTET
Nl9htly Wed. thru Sat.
WAYNE GABRIEL
IN THE LOUNGE
Tuesday thru Sat. -9 p.m. to 2 a.m.
SUNDAY .AFTERNQON~
MARK DAVIDSON
From .3 .p.m .. on
SUNDAY
CHAMrA~NI IRUNCH
11 to I
LUNCH e DINNER
COCKTAILS e DANCING
NEWPORT RACH
'41-4ZH
•• PHONE •• ~ .645-5110
1!3 EAST J7TH _..., COSTA MIS~
~~~ MEADOWLARK
COUNTRY CLUB
LARK ROOM
DINNER SPECIALS ..
Chelte ef Soup '' Sele4
l1k1~ ,at1lo ,, lite 'il•f e GerU• lr•d
l1v•r•9•
WED.-Top Sirloin Steak
THUR.-Prim1 Rib
FRl.-Sa1food N1wbur9
SUN.-Lob1tor Toil
$2.H
$2.10
$2.tl
M.H
INTllTAINMINT -We4....-, tttr. l111dey
The Only Ones w,,. ..,,..., .. ,, •• ,
IUDDY r. HELIN-Wed., Thur. & s ...
l111ciuet F1c:H/!111 u,. *• 410 '•oplt · ··
16711 •UH.AM 'AYINUI (At Wenet,
HUNTIN•TON IUCH CJ14J 14"'1116 f11J) ltS..lfM
•
' • .
r-· ...
ff DAILY ~!LDT Frld'1, Ftl>ruvy 25, 1912
' 12~1 WlST COAST MIGHWAf
N[Wl"Oltf SUCH '4~!>0~1
NOW
APPU.RIN{; RICK ROBINS
Wodnnclay thn1 Sunday 1:30 to 1 :30
IUNDAT llUNCH '*"'" fr•• 10 A.M. te 2 ,,M.
'ANQUIT FACILITllS
117 ,.t,·c1Ftc COAIT HWY,
HllNTINe.TON ~IACH
• O~!N 1 DAYI,,
"~M~ ANCHOR INN
HOUSI Of SU.FOOD
NOW OPEN FOR LUNCH
11 :30 to 2;30 Ton. thru Fri.
Night/~ Oinner-Coclrieil1 4 to 11 p.m.
Sunday 2 to 9:30 pm-Clo,ed Mondays
•
1814 N. Coast Hwy. IEI Camino Real!
SAN CLEMENTE 492·6571
THE "NOW SOUNDS" OF
DEREK
TAYLOR
ll•lt•l•t/YKalld
Open!"' Wed.....,iry, Morch 1
"SOOPER" HAPPY HOUR
4:30 to 6:30
CHAMPAGNE BR UNCH
ACAPULCO STYLE-Choice of 4 Entrees
SUNDAYS-fl o.m. to 3 p.m.
.·. "'' 11,,·~ 2530 W. Coost Hwy. Newport leach
548•1177
PALETINA'S
•
. WEEKENDER
I I' • ,;
. . . Continued from P191 25
f'ebruary's drawing power -we got around to the
busiriess at hand. Whi ch ls to say someone sug·
iested we'd better iet on with ordering lunch. '
.
Sunning the Boon Docks' relatively small b~t
nicely ba1anced menu , we noted so meth'ing in the
neighborhood of ten diffe rent en trees. These are
about evenJy djvided between offerings from the
"salad bar" and ··:sandwich board."
In the first category some nifty prospects are
crab or shri mp Louis, $2 .50, and the chef's salad,
with Julienne of ham , turkey. Swiss cheese. $2.25.
Sand.wiches include chopped sirloin on French
•bread. $1.50; Reuben, griUed on rye. $1.75; crab
salad, $1 .75, and junior club house, $1 .95.
WARM BREAD
Salads are accompanied b.Y very fre sh and a~
peLizi ng bread. Jn the sandwich department there s
also a choice of French Cries, potato salad or tossed
green salad.
The first order at our table went to a featured
special -the "Thin Man.'' For $1 .95; it netted a
generoui:: and perfectly roasted portion of sirloin
--·~
D•lly • .. .......... Lunch
$pHl•l1 ·~ .. ·~· 99c ~ ........
Ri!ll'XM ~.&<P/J/°6Pa And Casual
Intimacy TN[ CUISINE
Df coo•A1 AND KDRTNUM ITALY
Entertainment Nightly U fVtd h1ysidt
I• Newport Bt•c.JI 1vtry tv1nin1.
Corner of Park nd Morifte
Bolboo lslond 673-4530 ~
642·7880
3131 W. Co1st Hiatiw11
RESTAURANT
LUNCH e QINNER
COCKTAILS
SEA FOOD-STEAKS-PRIME RfB ·
INTERNATIONAL ENTREES
TRY OUR {;REA T HOUSE SPECIAL
CHAMPAGNE STEAK
Choice Sirloin with Gl1is of 'chf!m.p•gn•
$3.95-$7.50 FOR rwo ·
HAPPY HOUR, l-7 p.m ; NIGHTLY DANCING
PRIVATE BANQUET ROOM .
Your New Hostess •nd Chef-Jill I Claude
2645 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 545.f471
DANDIEST DATE
•
•
I ·
IN I
of .bee!. (1eryed 'boi oc cold, your option), sliced to-
matoes, hard·boiled egg "':edges and cottage cheese. . I
Next up from the "sandwich board," was roast
beef. au jus, on French bread, $1 .95. In this case
too, the meal was plentiful and handsomely pre·
pared -arriving at the precise shade of pin k to
insure flawless' me~ium rare.
AMP.LE SERVING
Last to come was the delicious salad Mediter·
ranean. $2. 75.~ Olli this highly-reco mmended item
you receive a large bed of very crisp and fresh
lettuce topped by a more than ample supply ol de·
lectable crab, shrimp, avocado and hard-boiled
egg.
At the conclusion of our pleasant repast we
had. to go back to the ordinary pursuits of winter's
work·a:day world. Driving up Newport Blvd . we
started wondering if summer would make life
easier -then abrupUy halted further discussion or the subject.
Open daily for lunch and dinner, except Mon·
day. the Boon Doc~s is located at 3333 W. Coast
Highway, Newport Beach. Sundays the midday at·
traction is a champagne brunch served from 11 to 3.
McDonald's
We had no more than taken note of the con·
struction activity when a pair of tbo.tamiliar gold-
en arches suddenly loomed along tile South Coast
a few days ago. And. that, needless to say, signaled
a ne.w McDonald's, which is now open for busi-
·ness at 700 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach .
· VISIT OLD JAPAN
®
mlYRKO
Luncheon Dinner Cockt•ll•
P.<\S.'\DE;'\'A 139 S. Los Robles • '71S·7DOS
OR.'\~GE 33 Town&: l'.:;oilnlry • S41·33D3
TORRANCE 24 Del Amo Fashion Sq.• 542-8177
MAGNIFICENT ADVENTURE
IN•fRENCH CUISINE
PARIS INN
C,l'O•M••LY KA•AM'SI
Exclu5ivt But Come As You Are
Dinner Ni9htly b to 11
Enterteinment 9:30 to 2 '
By Gene Oe Valli
Our Kitchen Under
The Direction of
CHEF MARIO LE FRANC
COCKTAILS e CLOSED MONDAY
501 W. 30th ST.
NEWPORT BEACH 675·0300 ... .. •• . ·
: :.r
POLYNESIAN
R•VUE
No Covlf-No Minimum
FRIDAY. & SATuRDAY NIGHTS
l AT ;
DON. THE BEACHCOMBER
3901 E. Coast Hwy. -Corona del Mar
Reservations 675-0900
MONDAY ~U~S~A!
AU THI Uvtl 99 r .. c.. '" .... C All THl ·CHIC1i1N 99C '•• c.. .... , ..
TUISDAY
TU•llY DI NNll
All n. Tr-.Jt'9 •• 99c
FRIDAY
All THI FISH
TM C.. l.t 99c
IUD FORD
;.·, ·HOUSE
WEDNESDAY
All THI Cl.AMI
'•• c ....... .
JATUaDAY
STLU DINNil IJ ff
All Y" C.. ,_ ..
IOIWIZA SUNDAY All THI CHIClrlN , .. c .. let •.••••.•
GRANT
PUZA
.. OOICHURST e AT e HUNTINGTON e
ADAMS IEACH
DAILY f :JO TO f .
SUN. 10 TO 6
h1 th• 1t1orlt•t for 011 orlt1 Ye11'll
f111ct iu•f ll!bo•t •Yer(ttilitt h1
••r cl .. lftff 1ectftfl.
Wt t vtn havt an ark on
our Sunday DAILY PILOT
comics page, Buntr's Ark,
that 11.
==~~
GRAND RE-OPENING
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
Tuesday Th'" Soturday Nights
PAUL LEMOINE GROUP 1 Sunday Nlglthi-Opeo J-SHS!on
And JAN DENEAU TRIO
Milnday Nlghh
MOJO COMPANY
•• "CLU,I 21" Mon.-Frl. 4 to 7
GAIGANTUAN DllNkl
DANCING NIGHTLY
FL,LEAUGRUDNE.AL. IS
Fiii PAl'ktN• IN .II.Al
0,IN 32"\'IN D4VS
1460 S. COAST llLVD.
LAGUNA BEACH
INTERNA TIDNAL Aa OwtstoMll11t
IV a .... Wltil A ,,_, ... , ..
An.y •f Celhll'llft
NOW ·-A..-..tfc DncM lmHl111 ,,. ... n.. ,.,
APPEARING . , .. , ..
hllttl "•'"•
ONE NIGHT ONLY ,., a...r..ti•ftl c.n 111.r212
SUNDAY.J_EB. 27 ·--JJI le. H......,
LUAU NIGHT _ ...
PIZZA HOME PELIVERIES
HAVE CHANGED A LOT
SINCE.THE,
\OLD DA);7S . '
Now Mo 'n td'I mobUoownt opood dol'idOus '
pl pi of.hot plmo to your-In 111lnutoo.
\.or prompt lerviet phono 64iJf36
(Newport Beach/Coota M-17111 ond Tusttn)
or 847·1214 (Hll!llinston IMlll loodl ond Hi41).
Gtt ttte Pim with Plmz
I
•
r
ABOUT
•
At tbe grand openlng ceremonies, City Council·
man Dick Croul and Bob Mccurdy, president or tho
Newport Beach Chamber of Co mmerce, cut a rib-
bon comprised ol 50 one-dollar bills. The unique
"ribbon" was then donated to the Newport YMCA
to help with their services to the youth of the a~ea.
Ron Juliano, manager of the Newport Be11ch
McDonald's, told assembled guests why the com·
pany decided to build the new restaurant. "lt's our
woy of keeping pace with the rapid growth of this
area and providing its families with a. service. One
of the hallmarks ol McDonald 's 1><1licy is that each
restaurant owner be involved tn, serving his com·
munity," he §aid.
~·
Billed as the most modern in design and equip-
ment, the Newport spot marks the 236th McDonald'•
in California. The limited menu, built around the
hamburger, also features French frie s, milk shakes,
soft drinks, coff,ee, fi:;h .sandwiches, the Big Mac
sandwich (O{fered as •· meal disguised as a sand·
wich) and a dessert item as American as the ham·
burger itself -hot apple pie.
The Newport McDonald 's is part ol the big na·
tionwide chain, which now numbers almost 1,800
restaurants in all 50 states as ·well as 1n Canada.
Nationally tbe chain has sold more than nine billion
hamburgers and is pow selling them at the rate of
nearly six million a day.
As a special grand opening treat for the kids
of the South· Coast, Juliano has scheduled a Ron·
aid McDonald personal appearance Saturday, March
4, at 2 p.m .. on the restaurant parking lot Every
child who coines will meet Ronald personally and
receive special &onald McDonald present&.
MA ITEO'S HO&'J'S SOCIETY
~~~~
RIVI EU '"-"· .. ltEST.AUUNT Seulell "' C11tt1r •illl
S1!1Jlel1, Scelli9"'· Continental Cul1lne Mutl'IP'Mrnt •1141
•.i WIM Cockt1ll1
~MOMCi H Stroing SILICT Lunch.ton and Dlnftff
DIN Nll INTllU Mondat1 through Saturdd11.
VINA Closed Sundays HA.-MEl
DUO
We are loe1ted next to
the Mey Co.
Co•st Pl•ia.
in South
JJJI L Mn1 .
141oJUO
//) We Promloe Y• GeM
l<\.e:Jlauran ~. OOM
and AMlllCAN CUISINI
TROPICAL COCKTAILS
POLYNESIAN
MUSIC
Fri. and S.t.
Nl1hh
8961 ADAMS AVE, (11 Me9noll1) 968 5050 HUNTINGTON BEACH •
o,. 7 hyt
OPINING TUE., 1"11. 2t
CA~ ROSS
Plant lar •nd COMHy
e.dtelllo •t9n•llllMltt
Weeldf Ha,..s: ll:JO A.M. N 12:Jt
Frldey •IHI Sen,..,: 111JO A.M. tti 11JD A.M.
S•'"'-rs: 4:00.12 MIDNl$HT
9093 E. AOAMS
HUNTINGTON llEACH 962·7'11
496·5773 499-2626
~ ·GOURMET DINING
OYSTER BAR COCKTAILS
I ' --·~
ENTERTAINMEl\ff
T"1~d•y tht• S•t.rd•y, l tJI te 11
BRANDIE BR.ANDON DUO
---.4~----. ---u.11 °"" _....,, LUN~H • DINN" • 11111 .... ~ UUNCH
11 .... -~,,... •i.it•.a,•'4p. ..
lJIOZ COAST HWY.
t•--~· U.•UNA Nl•U11.
I
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r. • •
•
t
J
21
1
,. • i • •
... . . . . ... . ... • • • • ,•4 •• -
t •. I
Intermission
Hollywood as It Was
By TOM TITUS
OI tft1 01lly l'Httl St11f
If you're familia r "''ilh Ten-
nessee Williams ' g re a test
play. "A Streetcar Named ·
Desire,'' end you tuned into
the recent "world television
premiere" of the well-Oscared
movie version , perhaps you
~arveled al the fidelity of the
film lo e produclion you mRy
ha ve seen on stage.
After all. Wiiiiams did write
the screenplay and three of
the four principal!! -f\.1arlon
Brando, Kim Hunter and Kar.I
Malden -recreated their
original Broadway r o I es .
Hollywood's ."Streetcar" pro-
bably came a11 close as any
movi~ adaptation prior to
"Who's Afraid o f Vlrgioia
Woolf?" to approxi mating the
original.
However, there were a rcW
differences -sublle .altera-
tions. which might eM:ape
anyone not vlrtua.lly AC·
quainted , line for line, with the
play. And these changes tend
to bring the •lollywood of the
Fifties sharply int.o focu!I in
~lmost laugh{i1)le contrast with
the !"Otion pictures of today.
ALlilY
DST
PRESENTS
GINO LANZI
M•11dey ttlr• WitdHtdrr
AN~l'ROM HAWAII
LIROY-6 to 10 p.m.
JOHN GLORIA-11 to 1 •.m. Thurad•)' thru Sunday
NATURING DINNERS
111 H.1 5111 Fr •11ei1co M1n111r
IA.Cl 0, LA.Ml
STUQ e IU.K>OD
5 TO 11 NIGHTLY
IUJINISSMAN'I LUNCH
11 :00 TO 5
SATURDAY-11 to S
LUNCH OR BRUNCH
Ll111••r e11d f•IMI
C.t9ri•t f•r Pertlas
·SUNDAY-BRUNCH
OPIN MIY DAY
ON TN• OC•AN ADJACl!HT TO·NaWl"O•T l•ACN l"l •lf
THE MOVIE WAS FILMED
in 1951. a good dozen years
after Clark Gable shocked the
nation by telling Vivien Leigh
that he, frankly, didn't give a
damn. But it still came a fe"·
years before Otto Preminger
broke another censorship bar·
rier by introducing the word
"virgin" to the mov ie screens
In "The Moon is Blue."
Consequently, when Miss
Leigh. this time as Blanche,
inquired about St a n I e y ' s
astrological sign . she didn't
continue the dialogue by An·
nouncing Iha! her own wa11
Virgo -which on stage draw11
a loud retort from Stanley.
And later, when s h e
poignantly tells Mitch of her
tragic fifst marriage. she says
that her first husband was
weak and unable to hold a job
-not that she on c e
discovered him a .com·
prom1s1ng position .. w i r h
andther man. HQmoseXuality,
even by implication, w a~
verboten in the;.,Fifties.
THESE ARE Bo.TH MINOR
points. admittedly to anyone
bul at the final fadeout of the
movie, TV audiences were
reminded that the "happy en-
ding sy nd r ome '' still
dominated Hollywood In 1951.
The sce ne is a classic one.
In the play. Blanche Is led off
to a mental hospital as Stella
sob!! in Stanley's arms -the
implication be.Ing that the "ln-
trudtr'' is out of the way and
the Kowalskis can be happy
together, a gatn. But in thre
rttovle. &tel\a "s last 1ct is to
announce thAt this ti me she's
Ie11vi ng Stanley forever.
Th is was the ha rdest tAboo
for Hollywood lo overcome -
the policy that If 80meone does
wrong (as Stanley did by
assaulting Blanche ) he cannot
be left smiling a11. the words
"The End" come on the
screen. Perhaps the most e1-
aggeraied ex:a mple is the
lightning which strikes t he
child murderess ln "The Bad
Seed ."
"Movie! are belier than
ever" they were saying in
those days 20 years ago when
TV wu backing the theater!!
up againsl the wall. If only
they could have had ·a peek in·
lo the future.
'Lotiely Nu1nber.'
Wolper· Film Underway
Paul Jenkin& ha!! been sign-
ed for a featured role in
MGM's ·"One Is A Lonely
Number," starring Trish Van
Devere and currently film ing
in S<ln Francisco under the
direction of Mel Stuart.
The Da vid ·L. Wolper pro-
duction also stars Mel vy n
Douglas, Janet Leigh, Monte
Markham And Jane EUiot.
Stan Margulies proclucea the
David Seltzer !I c re en p I a y
which i11 based on a New
Yorker short story by Rebecca
Morris: ,
.Jenkins plays the husband
of Tri~h Van Devere, in th is
story nf 11 woman 's cllpin'? 1
with the ordeal or impending
And unwanted divorce.
Jenkins recentl y appeared in
"The Organi7.ation," and has
been starrjng in the acclaimed
Sa n Francisco stage produc-
tion or '10ne Ji~lew Over the
Cockoo's Nest" for month11.
Shapely Sh.efH!-
Sheba, ttle r!cing camel, takes the forefront along with Linda Norris, Queen·
Schefierazade of Riversid'e County's National Date Festival which closes its
10-day run Sullday, Feb. 27, at Indio. Members of the Court of Beauty' form
welcoming committee.
Ac•de111y Aword
lut Cocument•ry
"THE RA
EXPEDITIONS" ..
l11'f'_fl rnet1M1••W.,trfll "'"' tM .flgllr•ll•11 ••cir Ct1111lry
·wALKAIOUT ..
---•• 1 1 • S !AO/UM " 1 :,·,·
t...-=r.~.._~
- - -ol l'> SIADIUM 1? ,. .. -·~ .... _.1~···----~ .. ~. SIAO/UM •J .
... .-..UJ ~:.~ --· _....,,,
SIAOIUM ·l : . .~
l
''MADI l"Olt IACH OTHllt"
I l".M, & 11 l':M.
"OH A (LI.lilt DA'f'H
1:(1 'l".M.
"KOTCH " "M "LOVlltS ANO OTHll
STlt..IHO••S"'
"SUND.fl'!', ILOCIDY •UNDAY"
11!4 °"'1• Sefll "WHllfl'S l"Ol'llA''
"
,. ! • . .
·May Company World Travel Bureaµ ,. -,•
' , 2106 W. OCEAN FRONT
.Nl!WPORT IEACH
presents the best in travel -featuring
.Club '\Jn .i:verse
CONTINENTAL CUISINE e SEA FOODS
CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS
New Ap""""9,
NORM PANTO DUO
0,.11 Dolly Mo11. ttir• Sot. -11 A.M. fe Z A.M .
Clotff l1111llrr
1670 Newport Blvd .• Costa Mesa 642·8Z9J
Fltte ltallau Culdtte Corktalb
2325 E. COAST HIGHWAY
673·8267
lnenotlo111
OpM D•lty -I p.M. te 2 •.111.
CLOSID MONDAY
TEMPLE GARDENS
Q1INB~Resta11rattt
RICKSHA
COCKTAIL
~~~~~E
M. & s.t, I to'
featurtni Exotic
"tropical Drinks
-.
Luncheon & Dinner Deily
IU,,ET LUNCH 11:J0.1 ::t0
M•n4ay thnt 'rlllay
1500 At'AMS (•t H1rbor)
COSTA MjSA
540-1'17 . " 540·1'2J·
8 Academy
Nominations
BEST FILM m FRENCH IJ!jo
COINECTION :"'~
BEST ACTOR m FRENCH f!!lo
CODECTJONff8'J?
BEST DIRECTOR
THE FREHCB l!!l•
CGINECTION if:'.&I
BEST SUPPORTING
ACTOR m FRENCH lil•
CONNECTION ff8'J?
BEST
CINEMATOGRAPHY
THE FRENCH lilo comCTION ~
BEST SOUND m FRENCH l!!l• CONNECTION ~.
BEST EDITING
TBEFmCH !!!I•
CONXECTION ~
BEST SCREEN
PLAY
• • f
. ' .
Japan Holiday 15 days-• Orient Highlight 23 days
Orient Crand Tour 35 days • Circle Pacific 35 days
Everyone Invited Free Admission
Thorsda y, Marth 2-7:00 p.m.
For Re serva 1ions Phooe.S46-9321
I COSTA MESA WOMEN'S CLUB · 610West18th Street, Costa Mesa
1For reservations phorit SOUTH COAST PLAZA
\o\AY CO. WORLD lRAVll BUREAU 546·9)21
WORLD
TRAVEL
M('VCO BUREAU
"THE MOST SATISFYING COMEDY OF THE YEAR."
PJt.1/me -J~/ !hr N1 • fm~rr
it's a love.story that
would make you cry if
.: it 1"'e.ren!t ~o fun y.
• I • I .,..
'
(
F'rldu, Ftbru1,., 25, 1972 DAil Y ~!LOT J7
Travel
A Carnival :~ .
• In Mazatlan
By STAN DELAPLANE
MAZATLAN, Mexico -All Maz•tl•n waa (till
of music when I got. hert'. ll is Carnival time. Tli~
Mard i Gras. The be!!t in Mexico are in Vera Crus
on the east coast and al Mazat lan on the west coast..
Strolling street musicians everywhere. Guitart)
pointing up the brass. It's ('O untry mut!I<: with the
swing of a country dance.
'i\Vhy dost thnu abandon inc , wo man7
.. Just because I am poor,
"And have Lhe m i~fortune
"To be alread·y ntarricd."
* Price!! are murh lo\ver I han Acapulco. (A sea
view room in the new dr luxe CAmlno ReRI is S28
R da y for lwo. Other I.op hotels are Playa Mar.atlan
and Hacie nd11.)
The sand is ~nod . The \Yater I!! warm . Ther&
are 11 Int mnre re staurants than when I was here
five years ago.
* '!'he i;wi ngiest place is the Shrimp Bucket. On
the cu.rve of harbor called Avenida Olas A1ta11;. tt
ha.!i the flavor of 1 Mexiran ('Anlina . The mariachi
mu.!iic i!I grand . The 'oysters out of this world. The
shrimp fantastic.
Five years a"o l ate my rlrst raw turtle eggs ·
here -I had two <traight tequilas •to ~t up
courage . They bang them up with salt. le mon juice
and enough hot sau ce to blow a safe. Down the
halch in one gulp ! (Naturall y. they a~ • powerful.
aphrodisiac. Not 1n season now . Pity.)
* Tnwn jammed. Every scat on Moxieana -two
hour< from Los Angeles -filled . Everybody here
getting hapgily smashed . tA nd I'm not dolnf too
bad either. le !)
* "W• have h11rd yOu· c1nnot drl~lc water ever'f" ,
where safely in Mexico. But what 1Nut t1qull1?"
\'ou are hearing 'il from a cat ' who ha s been
that route. Tequila does NOT have the i;ame power
that whiskey doc!! -no matter whai they i1ay.
Safe to drink. Three or rour onl y make you a mel·
low fellnw. Class ic way to drink it: Put salt In the
fold or your thumb and forefinger. Hold a lemon
betwee n the two. Lick the sail. Drink the tequill.
Suck the lem on.
* You can also ask for a chaser called aangrita.
ll's lemon and orange juice with grenadine. salt
and onion. Stepped up with hot •auce that will brlnf
tears to. your eyes, bullfight music to your ears.
* ", .. and some good buy1 in Mexico?"
l .eather is very good here In Mazatlan. Leather
jackets. Sandal11. Vests. Women's skirts. Black
pottery Jn Oaxaca.
• Resort fashions Jn Aca pulco -Try P•llY
Pena's. Sliver in Taxco Is getting overpriced, I thlrut. ·
Good brass ind tin ware oulslde Guadalajara at'
the town of Tlaquepaque . : * 1 Good driving these dayi1 around all Mexico·. :
Mexico is improving roads rapidly. The toll roads ·
are some or the betit in the world. Green jeeps
patrol the highways with mechanica: Give you free
roa d service. (But give them 10 ot 20 pesos tip.
'They need the money.)
ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATION
GLENDA JACKSON • BEST 4CTRUS
•
Glenda Jackson &er &ch
MunayHead
-"-'~ T.,.,._ M-"":~ ._Le. VMMl"dlll .........r .. P~dopeGilli1n ,,..._.~Jowpl\)lnni
IR l-u;::-";:::J-"lohn SchlainlfU ..._ ..... -ALSO
"Where's Poppa?"
11 (,l),[111 '" • 1:011! 1] ~1 li 1
•
Continuout Runninlj Show
Sunday Stcu'tln9 at 2:00
' '
' • I • • . • • .
• .
I
'
•
••
•
• • f ..
,... --JO DAILY PILOT F'rld.,, February 25, l "''l'2 . • l' 01ir G1aide to Movie•
Oscar Nominee Scott in 'Hospital'
. .
ldit Of''I Not t : Th i1
movie ouidt "' prtpartd
by the f ilms committee of
Harbor Council PTA. Mrs.
Harry Aftllor ii president
and Afr1. Bruce Nordland
i.! commltttl chairman. It
ii intt"ndtd ru a refert 11ct
ln de tt rn1inina suitable
1 i l m 1 for certain age
groups ·and u'i/l oppear
wetkl11. Your views are
1olicittd. Atall ll1t m !o lifer
vie Guidi!, care of the
DATiY PliOT.
ADULTS
Billy Jack IR): Bill Jeck, a
hall-brted, relurns disillusion-
ed from VletnAm w11r. Helps
children 111nd teenagers nn
reservation Freedom School
through the ir !rials of
pre1nancy, prejudice and the
unfairness of the powerfu l,
town sheriff. Stars Tom
Laughlin and Delorea Taylor.
ffOlpltaJ iPGI: Georg• C.
Scott portray1 hard-drtnkln&
doctor, who copes wtlh an
unsuccessful marriage and lhe
t'mergencies of a n un·
derstaffed , overcrowded, big
city hospital.
$COii Motll'I
Hot Rock tPGJ: Robe:rl
Redford, George Segal and
Zero Mostel portray 1. bunch
of thieves in the hunt for a
fam ous gem . _
. Lovers and Other Stran11er1
{R J: Havi.ng Jivtd together for
Seeks C.nr Cover
Paul Newm.ln stars as a tough. footloo se private
eye hired to track do,vn a missing millionaire in
"Harper." The suspense thriller will. be aired on
Channel 2 at 9 p.m. Thursday, March 2.
NOMINATED FOR
4 ACADEMY
AWARDS
INCLUDING
BEST ACTOR· Peier
Finch
BEST ACTRESS . Gte,,do
Joe k'on
BEST DIRE T
1he manaaes hi1 Ute, love and
'\treer.
two yur1. Susan and Mike police in 1purtult encouraced
decide to marry. Story about by blind 'Black radio dlic
th• interplay of her Irish j!)Clcey against hard mck MATURE TEENS
rel1tlve1 and his Ital lan raml · mu~ilcal background. ANO AOUJ~TS
ly -plus the side affairs of They Shoot Horte1, Don't Kotch (PG): Walter Mal-
"D1ddy," and the u1her who They? (R): Sltaiy dance hiall
II Ch.l;,1 the bride herHlf. ·d b k d 1 thau ls talkative, opinionated , prov1 es I C groun ° r lovable widower, retired fron1
Olrly Harry (ft): S.di1tic per!Onality stud y or con-hilrdwsre 1tore and Jiving with
plain clothesma n portrayed by test1nt.1 seekln1 !he Sl ,500 son 's !1tmily. Famlty tries to
Clint E1u1tm1n pursues a prize for winning of 62-day move h!m 10 rest home. Jack
demtnttd murderer In story of dance marathon d u r i n g Lemmon directs this drama-
crlminal violence. depression. Stars Gig Youn1, comedy dealing with three • I RI Jane Fonda and Red Buttons. The Frenc. Connect nn ( : generations under one roof.
Suspense mystery starring Monte Walsh (PG): Lee
Gene Hackman and Fernando Mar vin portrays a tough
Rey. Brooklyn police ·detec-cowboy who Jives to see the
live. move in on the American West outgrow the need (or his
connection to French-Amer!· kind of man. l~e and Jack
can heroin rin1 in a chase Palance ret urn from range 10
slory of violence. discover their ranch has been
Klute (RI : Jane Fonda bought by big company and
portray! aspirin& actr~s turn-their jobs are in jeopardy.
ed prostitute. Unal:\le to .....,. establish real relaUonshipa she Mc0v"" f"Otld• Walkabout {PG ): Sydney of-
The Tboma1 c!rown Affair fice worker drives ~ edge of regards her bu11lness as a Austra'li1n desert. s oots self f m Of • Ct I. n, Don (RJ: Faye Dunaway and Steve . or ., · and le1 ves six-year-old son and
Sutherl•nd Is policeman on ~~~eei~s~~~~c~n :i~o~~ 0!h~ teenage daughter to rend for
hunt for a mis1ing friend in themselves. Survive rigo'rs of thl! murder mystery. becomes an intimate com-b 11 d 1 Made For Each Other /PG\: pan ion of thrill-seeking out ack w er n es s on Y ·11· · h h t through efforts of young or 1 m 1 • c 0 m e d y of two m1 1on11re w om s e suspec s ho . 1 t ed b 0 'd
mismatched lovers who meet of masterminding a bank rob-a rig ne por ray Y av1
at a group therapy session in What Do You Say to a Nak-Gumpllil.
Brooklyn. Neither has been ed Lady? IXI ;. Comedy by The letter immediately
able to develop a healthy love Allen Funt ot Candid Camera. after the title indicates the
situation before. Rene Taylor 'Vhere 's Poppa? I R ) : ratin g given the picture by
portrays the Jewish nwrolic, George Segal plays a man torn the Motion Picture Code.
and Joseph Bologna t he between love for his mother Tiie Code And Ratin g pro-
nirtalious Italian. and a desire to kill her. From gram niau be fo1111d on 011e
Tbt Party tRI: Slapstick her telev ision oriented world, of the mo tion picture pages.
comedy occurs when disaster--~;.;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;1 J
prone Eut lnd;an aclor is;". NOMl .NATED2·· ACADEMY vlled accidentally to chic
11ollywood party. Peter Sellers
stars. FOR AWARDS Sunday Bloody Sunday !RI'
Gl.nda Jackson. Peter Finch BEST ACTOR -GEORGE C SCOTT and Mutray Head star in story
of a handsome young scul ptor
and the two people in love
with hlm : 11 sensitive, suc-
ce11sful Jewish doctor, and a
divorced career woman.
Str•w Dogs (RJ: Timid
Am e r i ca n mathematician
Dustin Hoffm an, takes sa~
batical year in Cor n Is h
farmhouse of his bride's birth.
Here he comes to grip with
manhood as be defends the
home again~t the rape at-
tempts by farm hands who
have laughed at his cowardice.
Summer of '4J l R ) :
Nostalgic return to early war
years depicting three teenage
boys awakening to romance
and sex. They while away
summer at an Eastern shore .
resort p I a n n i n g conquests.
Sensitive Hermie falls in love
with beautiful Arm·y wife. Jen-
nifer O'Neill and Gary Grimes
star.
bery.
Togelher (X): Clinlcal close-
up of the Sex act.
Va nls hln1 Point (PG)z Stars
Barry Newman as ex-cop, ex-
ract! driver who speeds from
Denver to San Francisco with
BIST STORY-& SCREINPLA 1'
. " .·
EbRIE C.SCOTT .. :
.. THE HOSPITAL,; ~
·•
-2nd FIATURl -(PG)
Peler "THE PARTY" Sellers 111
••• •• • • ••••••••••••••• • COAST HWY. AT MACARTHUR BLVD. *
. NEl!PORT BEACH • 1544-07IO
STARTS MARCH 22 •"THE GODFATHER"
SHOWING
NOW!
R ---·--...... ___,°' ...... -..... ...
LINT EASTWOOD in "DIRTY HA.ARY'' A Malp;:iso Comp:any Production Co·Sl1rrlng HARRY GUARDINO . REN
ANTONI · ANDY ROBINSON ' ·!OH~ LARCH arid JOHN VERNON 111 "Thf! Mtyor" · £11ecu11V11 Prt1duc er Rober ~l,y · Str,.,,npl~y lly H~rryJuhlln Fink & R. M. Fink and Oe;in Reisner• S!ory by Htrry Juliltn Fin~ AR. M. Fin
ro!'lutt d ~nri 01r1cred by Don SJegel •PAN.A.VISION" -TECHNICOLOR• -W11rn r ros. A Kinne 9m an
CO-HIT
Jnn1 es Corner
"SKIN GAME" ( R)
E-cept Horbor II
"WILD BUNCH " ( R)
IN MISSION VIEJO
E DWARDS
CINEMA VIEJO
·.~~ [)tf ',Q ~V AT,-P~l fUR~Olf
R J 1 Fonq,,
• • •l!ACH •LYD. AT •LLIS • ~ ....... COAITHWV. A IAN 011.•0 ~. 1147·••oe • lolVNTINGTO• •LloCM
MA T~EI S SAT. & :SUN. rROM 11 AM
-WAIT DISNEY --li!!llllln111bs and
lllruom5fl11:11s
TECHNICOLOR" ~---..,,
..... -o TWi(iGy •
"TIU' BOr mtrND"
.,; .. ._ ..................... _
-.. ~.~-o1 .... _.
-!GJ 1111"""""·'.,,.\I''°"' ,•,111' r HIU$10Pl1£1! r.Afll F
~~~ "WILD BUNCH"
"Olrty M1rry" Incl '"l~ln Gl"'t"
ALSO PLAYING AT IOWA•DS
CINlMA Vil JO, MISSION VllJO
J0-6990
'<152
WUf111llllRll • IOlDrll WllT • fti-uu
QfWfU """" G~ll¥1 I ...... llf•O lllYI
I
IRI• Al111 -Gflllllt C. Scoti"ln
THI LAST RUN "
'<DI
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wtlllf ... l •ft1•4t71 c GtM1M1-..to.JtOl9•!oloiot ltlNI--,
NOW 2ND HIT -GEORGE C. SCOTT in '~HE lAIT IUN" •• ,,. .. , .. ,,., ..... «•"• NOMINATED FOR 8 4CADIMf
SHOWING <92 locludi~1 AWA•os ,\':.."::"'J!:.:=:·.~.~~ BEST PICTURE-ACTOR ~~~ ·DIRECTOR
Wll~lfl • IOUlll Wltf • ltJ·•+.J 111 .. u llAltlJll 11111. • w 11110 nm.
Wlllllll
COlDUI GlOlf AWAlDI aur fllGllSK UllGUA'I 11 ... 1,.,.._
GLENDA JACKSO fl
PETER FINCH
Su11day
Bloody
Su11day I•>
PLUS
GE0li;£ SEGAL c::=
RUTlt'CIMOH •-.
"WHERE'S ~-POPP.A?''
"°'°'~ c~
TV Highlights
CBC (2) 1:00 ---To all My Friends On Shore." A ~ 90-minule dram 11 tell~ n( I black man'! stru1<
to prov ide for his family. St ars Rill Cosby, Gloria
Foster. and Denn is I-l ines. ('
Nill: ~4 ) 8:00 -"Sanford and Son" Lamont leaves
h-nie, and Fred mu st deal wi th his girldfrlends
ABC (7) 8:00 -Jacques Cousteau 's "A Sound of
Dolphins." r.ousteau hosts a special study of the
dol phins' unique sonar system.
Channel 28 8:30 -''Ivan the 1'errible." Parl I ol
Sergi Eisen stein's historic malerpiece explorinl
the early reign of the lege ndary czar .
Friday
Evening
FEBRUARY 25
Saturday
Morning
fEIRUARY 21
l:OO fJ 0 \11 0) m N1w1 1:00 ({)TV I Cl1W1M1" 0 !IJ m News •:30 0 111U EJ:ptrltl!Ctl o (})Wild Wild wert m i..rs "•' m Tll1 fllntston11 7:00 fJ I]) S11nrlst St111ttt.,
(EI Drt•m ol Jttnlllt 0 @) m Dr. Dotltllt ti1J Spt1kln1 freely fJ 00 Hrry lAwll ll'ltw Et1 Hodpplldat Lod11 G) T111111dtrtllrdt
CllJ M11b1rry AfD m Sjlld1nn111
fI1) U Arno 7:JD I) DustJ"1 Trtth1uu
l ;lO IJ Pltast Don't EJI tht D1isi11 GJ @D DtplltJ Daw1
(I Fight of the Century! D C1mp111 Pnilll• * ... ''KING KONG VS. 0 rt)(J) Ntws s,.dal "Prtstd1n1
GODZILLA''!!! COLOR! N11e1n's China Tri p"
0 Mo'li1: (CJ (90) "Xin1 1(11111 YI. Cl) TV I CllWDOlll
Godrllli" (lint asy) '63-Mithiel 0 Mowlt: "Mtl 111 Utt lt~ft~ {lft)'S·
l(e1t\ James Yaa1, T•d•o Taktshima. \try) 'liD-Bur11u M111drth.
(fl NtW1 ®} U11Clt luu
(JQl Nam• ol t~• G1mi m lrtlhtr luu: m Andy Crtlfrth Sho" @ IHtlt 111111 m /'hnny ind th• ProltUOI l:DO B ()) l up l unllf Em Thirty Mlnutu W'ith , , , 0 @D WO>OdJ Woodptdtr m W1nd11hisl 9 POPtJI 1nd frien,1
~Grun Ac1ti 0 CV@ Funky Phulll•
CiID Out!t tn P1Un11 ()) C.11Do11 C.r""tl m Yirlo1 i1 )111111 Show m A.M. Mt'riu: (C) "T1lt Dffr·
7:00 f) (}) 0 m /'fnn 1l1yer" (1dvt11tur1) '57-t1J Blfll
O tl'lt Alllemtn kt<. R~t Mortno. "ltlllltR ti Al~
@ Truth or tonu~uences u " (td¥tnt urt) '66-Clydt !ttlty,
[j) Dr12n1t (D S1111111n
0 Whtl'I My Lint? 1:3D f) Cl1 Sctobr·DM m I Levi Lucy 0 @1 m Pi11k Ptnlhu
(D I Drt1m ol Jtannit 0 Ctflt Autry
(ljJ Bm CCIJbJ on ftrejudlCI {R) 0 CIJ@ )KkMll Flwi Em History ol Art !J:OO fJ Hu!em G!Metrttttra
(ll Puen!t dt A11101 0 !1Ql ID Tht JltloM
f3) Movlt: "The FIJ" IJ MoYlt: ''f'tld It Kill" (""51ery)
7:l0 f) Cirtu1 • '54-0ant Cl11k. Ctellt Chevre1u.
(1 HoU,...ood SquaN!I 0 (JJ (j) ltwltt~
O Movin: (CJ (21/1hril ''Codritlt'I (Tl Cartoe11 ClrRlval
lttv1n11" '"d "R~tn" Kinj1 S,wara 0 Mll'fit: "Dttnp~ (d11m11 '51-
slirs tn both rno¥ili. Jdf Cll1ndl11, .kl•nnt Dru, Ju!l1
(jJ To Ttll lht Truth L1111don.
(Jl I Or11m ti J11nn l1 aJ Apttbntnl Huat.r'1 S~"
0 Millien $ MO'Yit: (C) (lhr) ED Cini •n Su C.11
"Stalplock" (wes1e1n) '66 _ Oilt !J:JD B Tllt Hair l11r llllldl
Robertson. D11n1 Hyltnd. 0 ~ID larrilf 11•1 m Hopn'1 Htrots Ci) Titu1n1 : WlnMe ti the Seltll m m 0111nel 0 (]) lldsYl!lt cw Wall St11et W1l-IO:DD tJ (fl P1bblts •llCI 1111111 .... m Tht CturH ol Our Times D OOl m T•kt. Cli nt ...
E?i) Lis Co•tdrts ,_., 0 (})@ ClriDlity Sht11 m Unt1111tcl Wtr1il lO:lO EJ (fl Arclli1'1 TY lu1111lu
G) Movie G11M 9 ltllu C111t
1:00 0 (JJ I 1•IC!All Te An Mr Flitnds fJ MD¥11: "ftrl Dotibia" {wa!1m)
011 Shore Bill Cosby", Gloria Fostt1 '58--Chnt W1!\tr, lrl111 ltei!h,
and Dennis Hlnu stir m '-tptl Sllsilll Jubll•
0 ®J EI:) S.nlonl 1nd Scrn !lJ I VJ:Lhlt
0 (]) (iJ m I ltlCWI J1qwu 11 :00 0 (11 S.brlnt
Cousteau ."A Sound or Dolpltln1~ B ®l m Mr. Win~ m AndJ Cirillith Sho• @ 11111 E.llllt R1ntall m Tilt Vlrsl1tlan 0 CIJ Jtnnr Quat
ED t1)l W1shln(lon Weik In Rhin !, lt/ttJ Wtijll
ttl'&clusiv1s u:i Lach• Ultft a!J Nino 11:301J [j) lodll 11111 !flt "'llftlb
l :JD 0 (@) m Chrrinolo1 "Thi Got.lb" 0 ®J m Tiit l u111off
A rllm by Pil rr1 bals:H1u on wl\11 0 (}) l1ncelet Uflk
lht wtr h1s dont IG !ht Ytelfttmtst m ! ipiC!4 I Otc ft. lJCU lllf•
d!i!dnn. MM! m Trvtll If CtltMqutnw m Mrrt1: *ltr11111 AWlllWN1
m !DJ Fil• °""" Mlvtn lltt Ttr· 4dr•ma) '56-&in Coopw, Mtlll
rlble" Part I tn1UU1. ,,ooo mrnm1o .. 222 Afternoon m Dt'tld Fr.st Sllow
ED Lt Gai r 12:00 1J (I} Tite Mtnktn ~The V'i1ti11i111 Q Hlftl Scbot1 hllltthlll CalN ti
$ N1tKh1 ttM Wttk Vertium Dtl vs.. NO(rt
1:30 0 (])I s•ipab I CI S l'l11hau11: Damt ti C<lmpton Junior Co!l111 II
"look Home•11d, An1el" G1r1ldint 1 Clf 11m1.
Paae, E. G. Mtrslll!I and Timo!hy Cf.I Movlt: "Thi ltdl111 Mt••llt"
Bnttoms st11 in 1n adapt1tion of l~t {mystery) '49-Jamu Muon, .!Ml
Pul1t1tr Pri1t·winnin1 pl1y based on Bennrtt. Ger1ldin1 B1oob.
Thomas Wo!ft•i tu1b11ltnl autGblq· 0 CII m AJntrkln ltnildaMI
1r111hlc1t novel~ O S1111!Dd Hoh1u ThtltN
0 (])@ GD The Odd Couple ltl Know You1 l lblt 0 Ntw1 Walth John Fullmer m Sporbcopt
ID Biii CosbJ Show a Uncle Wtldt
10,00 0 mill • ... O (3J ~Cl) Low Amtric•n Sfflt 12:30 IJ ())You Art Thert (R)
(J '.l)UnCil Otbtll 0 Llfl4t EI) T\" MllSICll @} Mt'rit: (C) ''Fffndllt~ (wultfll)
aiJ luchi Ubrt '51-Shtllt)' Win!trs, Joel MtCrtt.
lO:Jll IJ I iJIC1lL I Set How Thtr Run>, aJ Co':'-1111 llll'fijt htll·~OUf dowment1ry abc ut I m Alflatlturt IJSA
h11rt •-penmen! ttut btfln in Tot· (8 llotlrJ ind Flltll41
Janet He11Pil•1 and ended ti the l :Dll 0 ()) CIS Chil4rt1'• fll• Flltl'lll
Pi•u P11k M1r1tllo1 Run in Colo-•·ror BOJ1 Only t1 !Of' Girts.
u do last y11 r. 0.vtd Hillm.an 1111. 0 (l)Ct11t,. l11l1llJIJI San Frtn•
1111s. ci&CO 11 Seattle.
@l San Di110 P1110r1m1 al Ntn Nick Carter
Q} Safari lo Adwntu11 int CNSIMl'I Wtrtd
@ Vibr1tlons Viet°' !or11 1nd ~ Tht Add11111 F11"!1r
D1vt Brubeck ruesl Gl Cllrtlt!IJ Stlop
ED Soul! 1:30 O MO¥it: CCI "Thi C1111 Knr'
€?i) A\e1rme111ad1 (wes1e rn) '63-l!ary Ctlhoun, m Dr. Si111on Lotk• 0 ltHLAttlon
0) Cr11tu1t TI111tr1 (I.I Mobllt Ho!M Shn
11:00 0 0 Cl)[@ elm Hewa 0 Miwlt: ''Tt1n1tt11 ''"' Gtrt.tr
CJ.) M1nh1I Dillon Spact" (Kf·ll) '59 -OIY!d LOV1
0 CV m Ntws 01wn Anduaon.
fJ Mowie: (C) "Tt Htll With tD lkld11n '72
Htrotl" (d11ma) '6S-Rod T1y!or, d) Mt'lit: "Coptfihlt tf !ht Cllludr-
Cl1udl1 ~rdintlt, H•ITJ GutrdinG. (11lventu11) '42-Jtm11 Cl1tMY, m CoHeet ltsltlbtll USC vs. OU · f!) E.irffllllrtrt
son Sl1te, ta111 dtltr. a;, W111ci II Adttntu11 m FtaftJon1 In s..tn1 Lucillt 9 TH M111dlrl
Rlwtn 2:00 IJ (JJ J.nlt 11 .... ·IMrTtlJ 'olf
11:05'. 8 Confll l1sk1~1fl UCU vs. Ort· Cltult
ion Dutks, l•pe dtf8J. 8 GD nit WHll Ill NIA
11:10 m Mo'ril: "lttlt tf ttolltw Mou· Cl) 1111¥11: "Carry ff Cnlbl~f
t.aln" (Kl·fil '5&--Cuy M•dlson. (comtfy) '61-Sidlltf .ltrnll.
Pllrlcit Mtd1n1. ®) Wtlld ti Spttta flkntr.W
ll:IS GICintMa 34 m SHI Tr1l11
ll:JO 1J CIS lttt Morie: (t) ''\'Hltl' If iE Clnt 11111 Ttnlt
t11t o .. 1114" (hortorl '10--Gto11t a""' 1i1:tton
Stridtrs, B1rbl r1 Slltlley. A dilHln1 CD )oftllf Q11ttt
stO,, about !"ptrna11.rr1t d!ildr111 1111 t:JO g a CD Pidflc: tlftlillMI USC
tn Cn11rs11 Y1llttt. TruPns n. OrtllOfl Ducb, 11¥1.
D ®l ID •1< •-tit Clo!" 9....,. -"""'
'"'"' m l:OO 0 Cll Soll Qouk ~)i'tt,'::.~•c1 """ D CONSUMER ~~OTECTION m Dtl•' It * What's Rl&ht Jnd II~
U:OO D lflll l!l lolt•r "'"' !<"d· About Food al ... A..,d
ulrd au•sts Inell.Id• TtnntUM £rnlt Winnin1 Asrkulture UIA
Fifi, Bob Hol>f, Rtdcl Fon, ltiltft I"""'" .. UM ' U?JO 0 M"'o: .,, ...... Troll" C-""""" ...... ltffl} '41-Jo~li Lktl. fH 011t fldt
12:59 0 MMe: ."~11 It th CM" MW: (C) ,...._fl lit ...
(drtN} 'l~ltn 81nntn, ftpw' (w•IV") ·~ ,.,.
1:00 f) llJ Nm lo<. Cllod r .... tt .... M-
ID 11-111"' SMr. 'lh ,_ ~ -....._ -
-·· "Ill lnW• ...,.,. '" ID """' 'Fii"' -!111· ...,_.. Int) '41-loittt ,.,.,
l?JO D M"": 'A"'""' It llJ Anu• l:lO CiJ Oo """'
(dt1mt) '$~.Mt Nb'a. 8 IJ)"' ......, ,,. ON... _...,
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Sa
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Joini1ig in Harmony
Officers of the Santa Ana Chapter of the So~iety £or the Preservation and En-
couragement of Barber Shof Quartet Sing in Amerci a. Jnc., &re Carl Amenda,
seated , Cl a.ude Sheets, Ta Klaus and Lou Kopeny. The chap ter will stage a
program far 8 p.m. Tuesday in the Fir11t United Methodist Church, Sa~ta Ana.
Irish Actor Does Beckett
MacGo ·wan Stars on Television
Mesa Show
Of Crafts
Scheduled
More than 40 craftsmen will
participa~e iii.., a Crafts in
Action exhibit to be 1t11td
Thursday lhroUih Saturday.
March %.4, in South Coast
Plaza.
The artists and crall!men
will undertake work-ln-pro1-
ress, not demonstrating but
actually completing 1uch art
works as decoupage, nower
arrangement, pot throwing,
11hip modeling.
Among those participating
In the three day exhibit will be
Virginia Jenkins of Corona del
Mar who will instruct. how to
cul and sha~ bonsai plants;
Rachele Maflory of Costa
Mesa and Jean Bliss, will
bring their potters' whee.111 to
the Plaza ind Fred Smith of
Irwine will make herb pots.
Othe r cr11rt.s to be included
are jewelry maklng, papler
mache. tole, c1ndlemaking,
stitchery and biltlk, according
lo Mrs. Donna Frieberts-
houser, coordinator.
The exlfibit will be open
from 9:30 to 9 p.m. Thursday
and Friday and 9:30 to 6 p.m.
Saturday.
Star's Firm
Producing
A repeat 1 how I n 1 of clo11ed thla week in the Mark tlon1 of a studio 1oundst11e. Diahann Carroll'1 Hanncarr
KCET 's proclucp!ln. "Begin· Taper Forum. Sand, mounta ins and laku Product.ions ha1 entered Into
ning to End," will be preceded The introductory program provided excellent n at u r a 1 the development of televWon includei; filmed scents from game aho~·s in addition to by a 30-rninute introductory the desert loc11tion tapin,g and backdrops. 11pecials and features ac·
prl'lgram entitled "A Viewer's an interview with MacGowran In developing his one-m11n cording to Roy Gerber. crea-
Guide lo S<imuel Beckett" by producer Ltw\s Freedman. 11how, MacGowran said he live con11ultant.
\\'ednesd11y March l. 11t 8:30 Bi:is@d on M11cGowran's 1970 worked closely with Becketl. Veteran game prod u c e r
p.rn . on Channe l 28. off-Broadw1y show, "Be&ln-sifting through all of his Ginn Green and Lou Is e
In "Beginnini to End," first ning to End" includes eicerpts poetry, prose t1nd plays -a Adamo, who crea ted "Let's
seen on KCET last November. from "Embers," •'Molloy," project that took about fi ve Play Post Office'' for Griffin
Irish actor Jack M11cGowran "Waiting for Godot." "Words years. He 1dapt@d the show Productions. hive prepar@d
re-creates his one-man sho•·. and Music,'' "Krapp'• Last for tel evision at the request of several game sho~·s for prea-
reciti ng fro m works by Tape" and other works by the Lewis Freedman. ex~tive entation to net'works.
Samuel Beckett in a Mojave not~ Irish author. prrlducer of Ho 11 Y wood Hanncarr also co-produced
Desert setting:. It is si milar to The desert location was Television The11trr. "Julia.''
~M_a_c_Go~w_r_•n_'•~S_h_o_w~w_h~i_c_h~•-•_lec~led~_oo_•_""'~"'~-th-•_l_im~itA_·\~pi~~~~~il~jililililililililijijijji~
IRVINE COMMUNITY THEATER NATIONAL GENERAL THIATR!S
I A<H•"'Y Ne11111!1t• '"' ... ,,,.,
bread
THE sr•rr or urc
ALL IREAD LP's
'fl/UST
ll I s.s.n
COii[ Al fOl 1 CDGO Pl!CE Of llW ---------------1111 MUllC ltAU.
1P6I '.u.4IOH 1$4.A,.,D
rWl'On CIHT'fl
NfWfOtT NACK. WWotJ.ftA nMO
rlESENTS
RICHARD DOW
"The
fj
Amotous Flea!"
a bawdy musical <:omedy show
1d1pted lrorn Moliere's"Schoor for Wive•" ~
lillr""1•d "1
• Irvin E. Kim'h'r ••• ~uet10fl 1• exc•L1111t ••• c.,,,,•4"' r e:utr.11 ~!'ll"!IGDl'lt
•·;• •t•t11 e11i..rt11111111 ''"'"~"~··· ,. __ T.,., T!toJ , D1 ~17 Pt tot,
1.0!l!pln.1 l'lol!tre 11rc1 •••• """"' r:l'le ll'~!•tic wo:-:c ••
--"~,-,,~ ~~o:j-.1r., T•.1 l':o ~·ti :-.
C!N'l IDl.$3.00 STUDDrll.DO
CUITll! IT lrl, Fii. l SIT.
NUllltlll!S llll l'UYNOllS! u.c.t. c11rus
1110N! ~1·7733 fDI llS!IYITIO«S
ACADEMY AWARD
NOMINATIONS inclvdiog
BEST ART DIRECTION
COSTUME DfSIGN
SPECli\l EFFECTS
MUSICAL SCORE
BE ST SONG
"AGE or NOT BE LIEVING"'
I r
wALT ~o\Sana
~~ J\'OOmstielll
, .. _ Allll!LR DAVID
LANSBURY · TOffiUNSON · llWlilRu JtiffE
ot"•""V• .. ,...... "'-"""'_,_.. fr.I WM.SHWl>lll~ ;!.';.;· ~M SHtRMiJI ll!d labert8.SH£11M.IJI 1i'
~m --.. _.. -...~.. . KOSW. OonoW ll<MYl! lllWllSH ,...,STMNSOll TECHNICOLOR
l!lll!llltll'llMf'I ,.Ill ... Cllt11 .. """'~
(onti .. uo11t Moth•••
SATURDAY
& SUNDAY
FROM 11 A.M.
also Htld-Ovtr
Ind Hit 11 ~oth theitni
WaltDim•Y --<USVUNn
in rcft of th•
••
• Live \
Theater
"Mother Etrtll"
Ecology rock musical on
staae 1t South C o a a t
Repertory. 1827 N e w p o r t
Bl vd., Costa Me.111. at t p.m.
Feb. 24 : March 2 and 9. l\t&er.
vatlons -846-1383.
"Tbe A.morou1 Fle1 "
Concert Features
Noted V iolini.st
~ VidUnist William Kuruch Jncludln1 or ch e 1 tr a I ex-
wUI be the fe1tured performer perlence under L e o p o I d
when the Or1nae Co a a t Stokowskl, Eu11ne Ormandy .
C.Olleae Ccmmunlty Symphony Otto Klemperer, Bruno Walter
Otchtotra perform• Sunday, and Wiiiiam Stelnber1 .
Feb. 27. · He b currently Involved ln
The proara.m Is scheduled the studio ind recordin& field
fer 4 p.m. ln the OCC ln Los An&eles.
auditorium. The box office The Oran1e. Coast Collr1e
openJ at 2:30 p.m. Community Symphony is In its
Kuruch, the Los Anatles lt.nth 1e190n as a symphonic
vlolinlit, teacher and conduct-or11nlt1Ucn ind is co ·
or, Will perform the Bruch 1ponsored by Oran1e Coast
"Viclln Conctrto ln G Minor,'' Collere. the Cotta Mes a
wilh the orchestr1. Department of Parks and
The pro1ram also will In· Recreation, and v a r I o u 1
elude the overture "School for buaineu (inns and lndividu1Js
Scandal ," by Samutl Barber, in the Harbor Area .
DAILY '!LOT J8
MOVIE MTINOB
FDR l"AREN18 AND
WUNOPBJPLE
T,,. ..,.,11¥t ti ni.,... It M 1WtM """"' ,...,,,.~" """" ...... "' ........ ., """ .....
--------------------
®NO 01[ UIDll 11 JIMITTU
1•atll111tlllt)'¥wt
IA Ul'fl ll Mtt)
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
--· llB-lll--. ... ___ _ .. _""I ___ _
A musjcal b1s@d on a
Moliere comedy, on staae 1t
Irvin e Community Theater,
Humanities Hall on the UCI
campus, P'rl.-Slt. at 8 p.m.
through Feb. 19. Reserv1tlons
-547-7733, and Tach1ikow1ky'1 "Sym-Further informatinn about!-::::=::':========
phony No. 5." the or11nlzatlon and concert ·:···~·c·o"x.K'wt'S'°'H'c'o"~' ~ "Teahouse of Au,pst Moon " Kuraach ha s had a long and may be obtained by ca!Hn1
A comedy Ot p 0 11 1 w a r distinguished c1reer In music 834-5819. Tickets are SI.
Okinawa on sta1e 1t the·---'--------~----~-----• -.,,,,, . i..a:1una Moulton Playhouse. o •• " ... 111•1 •lf.noo
606 Lagun1 Canyon Ro1d. $Ourw COAIT 'L•!A 0_
La1un1 Beach, 1t f1 :30 p.m. c .... Iii••• • fll •l J.a.11'' MJ.,.,.
Tu.!!.-Sat. through Feb, 28.
ReservatJons -494.(1743.
"Star Spangled Glrl"
A co medy on stage by
Westminster Co m m u n I t y
Theater at Finley School ,
13S21 Edwards. Westminster,
Fri-Sat., al 8:30 throuah Feb.
26. Reserv1tions -897-1164.
"Tbe ln.nocentt"
A mystery on stage at South
Goist Repertory. 1827 Ne~
port Blvd., Costa Mua. Fri.
-Sun. at 8 p.m. Feb. 18 -
March 11 . Reservations -
646-1363.
"No, No, a Million Times No''
A musical melodrama on
stage at the Fountain Valley
Community Theater, Tamur1
School, 17340 Santa SuzaMe.
Fountain V11lley, Fri.-Sat., at
8 p.m. through Feb. ZS. Reser·
vatlons -847-9821 .
IXCLUSIYI OR.&N•I
COUNTY SMOWIN•S
GALA BENEFIT PREMIERE'
TUESDAY MARCH 14th
A NORMAN JEWISON FILM
on the "
CO-HIT :.:::~ "THE PARTY"
oaANOI
CINEDOME 20 °"""' ............. ,.,, 532·3321
Detective Harry Csllahan.
'rou don't assign him to murder cases.
'rou just tum him loose. ·
NOW!
21t4 •I Vlej1 t114 •I M•rkr • t
"SKIN GAME" "WILD IUNCH"
l •
........ , .. , (._,_
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-.. -------------------L----------------------------------'-------
Frid'1, ,.....,,, 25, 1972
'Tom1n y' Rock Qp era Stn_rs
'Super star' T edd y .Nee ley
~ lakeoU -over a subway station the expected confidence In
By GEORGE A. LEIDAL Into which are pulling 30 Neeley's ,only till then hinted
Of "" 0.11~ 't• s1ett trains. superstar status.
"Tommy," the mi snomered What m11ke11 this prOOuction Up to that moving moment.
rock opera by The Who cur. something less a rock opei:a Neeley's spellbinding has been
rently playing the Aquarius than say JCSS is the pacing, accomplished by h\11 Incredible
Theater in Hollywood , bi a often bad acting on the part of stage use ol his body, and
super-slick. Las Vegas style supporting cast members. and superprojected sensitivity.
vehicle for Teddy Neeley _ the choreography which too The Joel Rosenzweig lrl-
the Claude of "Hair" and often resembles the Oll.!ilage media production o( "Tommy"
superstar of "Jesus Christ antics viewed at the Pep-at the Aquarius certainly or-
Superstar" as it played on permint Lounge in Ne~ York fers more hardware and cast
Broadway. two years after the twist was than did the South Coast
Neeley as Tommy is no \es.'! · born. Repertory version of the same
a superstar. His is a truly Fo_r ardent lo~en of rock effort in Goats Mesa.
sensitive, athletic. bruisiog music , .t~e evening d.oes offer I suspect those who liked It
psychosomatically deaf, dumb an exc1Ung vaudeville ren· in Costa Mesa may be of.
and blind unw(lnted child who dition of the three-year old fended by' the Hollywood stag.
THE
LAST
PICTURE
SHOW
NOMINATEOFOA
8
ACADEMY AWARDS
INCLUDING
BEST PICTURE
BEST DIRECTOR
claws his way to stardrom via score recorded by The Who. ing, although it deserves to be
· b J h. 1 11 f A seen if only for Neeley's con· pin a 1 mac 1ne supercom. One spends near y a o ct t 'b t'
petence. I waiting for Neeley to bless',--'-' _u_m_n_. -------
Just as Nee.'iey excels, the with his fragile, t:Jear voice. In ~00111111 · .,,.,,. .. ,..w & ""n
BEST SUPPORT. ACTRESS'S
EllEN'l!URSTYN, CLORIS LEACHMAN
as mounted in the Aquarius by the shapely, sensual Acid
glossy, superficial production Act JI, following his LSD rape -~·
Theater fail s. Queen, danced and sung by I i:ilmlllliilz!!:~m!S j
The addition of a Moog Annette C ardon a , the l1
11 ' '•""'11,,•1
BEST SUPFIORTING ACTOR'S
BEN JOHNSON, JEFF BRIDGES
r:EAD IN 'JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR' NOW PLAYING 'TOMMY'
Ted Neeley Gives S.nsltiva P1rform1nc1 in Ho·IJywood Production
synthesize.r to t~e already transformed Tommy sadly has * * *-! ~11~~!~~}lS~
earthshaking scoring of the little more Lo sing. 'Kl~C... r
an:iplified rock onstage band , Yet, the_ closing. 1'Listening THE 01"....;(}fil LAURENTl lS
pointlessly adds a rumble to You" finale which brought ,.. ... ·!~
matched only by the com-down the house in the preview l1t
bination of a 747 during performance I saw. is worth
American Ballet Unit '?,~~-,'~
Set for Music Center
Natalia Makarova h a !I in ''Romeo And Juliet."
BEST SCREENPLAY
BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY
.Channel 28's 4th Annual
agreed l-0 take over two of the
three roles which Riling Carl11
Fracci was scheduled to have
danced in Los Angeles with
the American Ballet Theatre
in the Music Center's Pavilion,
which opened M o n d a y ,
through March S.
On the same bill are "A
Soldier's T11le," with Sallie
Wilson, Paula Tracy, William
Carter and Daniel Levins, and,
"The River,'' with John Prinz,
Cyrithia Gregory. Gayle Young
11nd Misses D'Antuno and I.:=========:'.::==================== Wil son. i· .
.. :TV Auction Geis Under Wa y . .
Eleanor D'Antuono al so hHS
agreed to dance in Miss Frac-
ci's third appearance.
New casting for the affected
ball els is as follows:
: KCET bas launched the "g ..
i<Wng" phase ol its fourth
annual TV auction.
.'Volunteer workers are busy
contacting stores. manufac-
turers, other types ol finns,
and individuals for dooations
Of. quality merchandise or
s'ervices to be offered to the
highest bidders May 6-13_ on
Channel 28.
. 'l!hey also are seelttng cub
d008tions of $5,000 from "auc-.
tiOn underwriters," which will
help defray tl)e pr oducUon
c6sts of televising the eight
nights ol bidding.
The community-supported.
Coming Feb. 26
public TV station ls out to
raise a much-needed $400,000
thi! year to offset increased
operational costs and keep
outstanding programs such as
Sesame S t r e e l , Hollywood
Television Theatre and Film
Odyssey on the air.
Among major Items receiv-
ed so far are a 1972 Datsun
fastback: sedan, donated by the
Los Angeles and Orange Coun-
ty Dal.sun dealers; a stained-
glau wiitdow (411 by 9 feet)
valued at $8,000 from Mr. and
Mrs . .John Burl.on: a sculpture
entitled "El~nor of Aqui·
taine" from Cybis Porcelains;
a coin-operated music box
!dated c. 1880) from United
Business Interiors; and an
assortment of unU8U.11 col·
Jectors' items from movie
sets, donated by 20th Century
Fox Studios.
All items donated must be
new. except artworks and an-
tiques, and must have a retail
value of at least $50. The
donor's name is mentioned
'each time the item goes on the
block, and again when it is
sold.
To make a donati on , call lhe
KCET auction office ~t 666-
6500.
On Sunday, Feb. 27, at 8:30
"La Fille Mal Gardee" will be
danced by Miss Makarnva,
Ted Kivitt and Michael Smuin.
The program includes the Los
Angeles premiere of Eliot
Feld's "Theater,'' with Feld.
Christine Sarry and Terry Orr
in the leading roles.
On Tuesday, Feb. 29, ''La
Fille Mal Gardee" will be
danced by Miss D'Antuono.
Kivitt, Warren Conover and
Smuin. The companion piece
on this bill will be "Les Pali·
neurs.'' with Orr in· the prin·
ciP81 role.
On Saturday, March 4, Miss
Makarova, Ivan Na:f ·. Royes
Fernandez and Orr will dance
Henry Fonda Returns
•
For Lead in Comedy
One of America 's foremost
actors, Henry Fonda. returns
to the Hun,tington Hartford
Theatre next--month for his
third starring role there in as
Plumstead Playhouse pro-
duction of William Saroyan's
Pulitzer Prize·wiMing com·
many yea rs. this time in the
edy, "The Ti me Of Your
Llfe."
T h t 1 wiU ,..._..,,#:
m's r k Fon·
da 's second
P 1 umstead
p r eduction
ticket agencies.
The comedy will open f'ri-
da}!, March 17, at the Hartford
and plays through Saturday,
April I.
There are four preopening
performances scheduled. be-
ginning Tuesday, March IS.
Tickets lo all performances
are also available by mail.
Red China
Talk Set
Miss Fracci, a principal
dancer with American Ballet
Theater. has been forced by ill-
ness to cancel her ap-
peirances with the company
during ABT 's eight-city winter
tour. Presently in her native
Milan. she has been ordered
by her doctor not to ny for at
least eight weeks .
Miss Fracci is suffering
from a persistent ear ailment
-otitis interna, an in-
flRmmation of the inner ear -
which also caused her to
cancel her final performance
with American Ballet Theatre
in New York in January .
The ballerina subsequently
returned to Italy, where she
was scheduled to appear in a
special all-Stravinsky program
.slaged.by her husband, Beppe
Menegatti, in Venice.
Two weeks ago Miss fTacei
annou~ the cancellation or
all her engagements in Italy
due to the pe.rsistenct of her
ear trouble , which affects her
equilibrium .
Staples Sings
F or Special
The Staple Singers have
been signed by producers Art
Fisher and Neil Marshall for a
guest star appearance on
''Monsanto Night PEETA.ET
Nancy Wilson'', 1 syndicated
one·hour special to air March
26.
Mc...,·. ,',f,r'.-: w• A J.'~r· P.d~· I :11::: u..1:.6Cr;, Co!::~'.::1 ;: ~0£ LE.[ 6•(()',','.!.: ·flPLX,[ Ot..r(i~
,,:~t lt..' l C· .. :~ , olS r ,.,·~ • I.'. . Irr JOI i V •• ~n~ · $cree· ;:-.r1 Ii-/ 1., g P~.t·~:1 & l~dr·~t ~1111'(, Jr
d .lj \', Am o~. ,:tfll".n;-· . rrrc J 00 d"d r 'f :!JI'.! tw '·'"~ R",'t)<>I • P.r. ,-.• c· ~ ~!l..h'\:J:l'.)l()'f!.
• • 11· .• ~, F.rr. ol, ~ , ., ,-. ' PG .-"":.~.::""'"""
a owA .. o•
"'""'"'"~••IC.,.·'••"•-..cM I " I ~· ....... ~.. . ..... __ .. , ....... ·-·
CO-HITS
(IJllMA-J,l,MIS SAi Ji fi
"SKIN GAME" l R )
,OU NTAIN VAll(Y
llOIGI HAMtlTON
"EVIL KNIEVEL" I PG )
The Staples will perform
thelr .million-selling gold single
''Respect Yourself" releasedl-------=---:--~--:-------------------
by Stax Records. For Ad t' ' ' Other guest stars include· Ver /Sing In
Sammy Davi•, Jr., Mike Out 'N' About at the Hart·
ford, the
fir st being
the triumph-
ant 1970 re-~
Douglas and Henry Mancini.
Lisa Hobbs. n a t Ion 8 11 y Michael Welnberger wrote Ph N S / known foreign correspondent, the special and Art Fisheo ,, On e crm tan ef
What It Takes
To Be A Cover Girl
Prior to her "last cover," in 1967, Wilhelmina had
made it as the number one fashion model in Paris
and New York. Now a models' agent. she's written
an insider's story of the business -especially for
FamilyWeekly readers-and posed, once more, for
the February 27th cover. Look for expert advice to
''pretty girls" who dream of seeing themselves in
magazines and on TV, and a fascinating retrospeet
on a dollar·a·minute model 's record·breaking
career.
e IN~IDE ROBERT GOULET -Star's own com·
ments about hls work, his personality ''.highs
and tows'' and his marriage to Carol Lawre·nce •
e MEAT AND BEAN S -Some everyday ingred·
Jent.a can make some very special dishes when
casseroled according to dire(tions from Food
~tor· Marilyn Haruien .
All Coming Saturday in The
I DAILY PILOT I
.. •
•
•
v i v a I of H•N•Y l"ONOA
Thor n Ion Wilder's "Our
Town:· which the 11ctor also
directed for Los Angeles audi-
ences. Las! year, he ag.,umed
the ritle role in "The Trial ol
A. Lincoln."
Tickets have gone on sale al
the Huntington H a r t f o r d
Theatre box office and at
CSF Singers
To Perform
The music of Hauler and
Shuti will be featured when
the College Singers o f
California St.ale CA'lllege at
Fullerton perform •I I p.m.
Feb. ti-27 in the campus Little
Theater.
l'he 44-volce choir, directed
by David 0. Thorsen, will in-
clude two motets for double
choir, two movements from
the Ma" in G by Franc~
Puleoc. seledtlons f r o m
Clnnina Burana by Carl Orff
and ohorter works by OrlMdo
de LaSR\IS, Willlam Byrd,
Johanna Brahm• and Halsey
Stevens. j
The program,wl!J !ncl\Hle a
group or •plrltuala and •
medley or aonga from 0 Man of
La M111cha". The Singers will
be maklnc 1 t«OOd European
tour th.la summer.
Tlck<ta, 11 JJ.10 general 11f.
mlsalon or II for •tudenta, "Ill
be 1vaU1ble at U1e door •
lecturer, and author, will directs for executive producer
speak tonight •I 8 p.m. st San-Jack SoheL 642-4321
ta Ana College on "Red ChinB•i------------'-------------------------------
Today" as President Nixon,·1',r----------------------------------------~ views ii on his current tour. II
During her recent lour of
China, Lisa Hobbs interviewed
a great many people. in
\'ariou.s places, and various
walks of life. from peasants in
the rice fields to doctors, even
in modern hospitals. using
acupuncture: includrftg an ln·
terview with one of the leading
officers in the Peking Military
Command.
She al:19 visited Peking
University, factories. cadre
schools. and old historic •ites
such as the Temple of Heaven
and the Forbidden City.
Author of four books. Lisa
Hobbs was tht onJy journalist
on an American newsp.11.pe.r
(San F'rancilco Examiner) to
get into China prior to the »
called CUlturtl Revolution.
The. revolution wu a major
upbeaVal a rew years ago
lhn>ughout l h e Communist
country, which contains within
its borders an estimated one-
fourth of the world's popul1·
ti on.
Llu Hobbs ' appearance
here i1 undtr the auspices of
S8nta Ana C.Ollege. As • com·
munity aervice free of charge..
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
SATURDAYS IN
TH E DA ILY PILb T
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TUMBLEWEEDS
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. FIGMENTS
ll:!V CAN WE BE .\\ISSIN&
TWO ~ AUlfADY f' I
..w.J6T 90.J64T THIS DECK \'£~1CRMY I
PLAIN JANE
.
OH IS 'Ill Ai SO I WELL, WI()
CAKeS, MR. '~ SilJFF ! °™ERE ARE l'Ll!lll'( OF 01lll!I! FISH IN TuE SE!A!
GOOPJYe1 YOU CAD!
))
I DAILY CROSSWORD ••. ~y R. A. POWER fi
ACROSS 42 Give the rf·
IKt of me lody
l 111..f!lannrrll'd 43 Kind of
person : Slat19 r~tl119lr
5 Indulged to 45 f.lt roya.l ly
txce!s 47 ·Prevents a
10 -Jahay ' pilot fr11111
M09UI lmporef flying
Yrstr1day's Punlr Solvt'CI :
of Hlndu.stan 48 Rornao wtelary 1
14 Thomu -deity
Ed i~ 49 PJrt pf the
15 The rnd lng human body
16 Actrrss -50 Common
Louise Europ!ln
17 Sfructurts ermint
used for SJ ContainJ,,g
locomotion three atoms:
18 241 days, Prefix
U hoors and S4 The universe
44 minutes: 58 H1ndy
2 '*Ol'dS 61 Neighbor of
20 Firth or -Rus111
22 Family 62 l'oktr stake
111emb1r 6) Ins.et lr1 an
Z3 lts capital ls adult staoe
New Delhl 64 ChtcksJn
24 Cons11111ed growth
?Ii Chtt11lcal 65 Btltlsh lttlS·
suffix ure of length
17 lll•ked by f>O Feminine
contact nickname ;o Piece of li7 Merriment
lumlt111e
)4 One who oper· OOWN
alts 1 lathe
JS Cllmb l C1te1t: Slang
powtff\llly 2 011: Prefix
)6 Friend: Ft, 3 Superiority of
37W•"" power: Prefix
l8 l>ld<rgo -4 Archetypes
lcal chanoe 5 ,.Onner
40 Office worker: lllOl'ltt ll'Y ml It -· of Fr11tee
41 F~t doltw Ii Eirclttd
bill: 11,,,.
ZIZSl7Z
7 Part of a car• 33 Causes a bel.
pentry joint to sound
8 GO"l~nm of 35 Settlr fron1
Alaslca prrssisr
'U.S. p11riotic 3' Quarterback's
group: Abbr. target
10 Rocks 40 Falling
11 Posterior sudden ly
U 01190site or: 42 Body
Pre fir pot!Uc
ll Sot.id of 44 lnterjl!Ctions
laughltr of diSlfll)rOVl l
19 One Who 46 Drudgtd
extracts ores 47 -on:
from the earth Activity
21Hounds' 4• Res inous
llUWry thorny trHS O
25 Hunting dog S. AMrltl
21i S,eech lflers 50 Prottudlno,
27 Symbcl of Isolated tock
authority 51--avall:
28 190) Nobtl 2 wOrds
Prize winner 52 Eilstenee:
2'I PllCt of caite Preffx
30 -Bt1nch#'d: 53 -and 1 half
Atwry foolb•ll SS Outer cMrlno
p11t of '°"'' seeds
ll·Squtlcflfd: 56 Clnl!elrt
2 words 57 Nowi nflr,g
J2 Frtt frOllll 5' p.., -pe111t
f-.ilt 60 Trlltbt ..;...,.,....,......,....,,.. 1 .. ,,.,,.,.
•
•Y Cliester Gould GASOLINE ALLEY
A C.lGAR IN VOUR
IClSSa~ WOUl.D ~ IT
MORI CONVINCING .
~AT ARI ¥Cl.I SIU.ING?
UNDlllll·WA'fP LOTS Oil
9Jl!ASS•MINE ACR~AC;f
•
ON TM'-MOON"P 'C...'
ly Tonr K. Ryan
..
By Al Smith
B&c;.6.USE WF:RAN OUT OF
MONEY/
ly Dede Hale
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
By Frank Ba9lnskl
PEANUTS
He!enSweetstorvMIS born ooe1small fannooAprils,1!50.
JUDGE PARKER
I WAS WOMPERING WHfl'MU
SOMETMltr!G WAS WltON6, MR.
C'llVER ! (.MAILEY USU-'LLV
CALLS OR PltOPS l5V A&OUT MIP~IGMT ••• &UT M
Pl"M 'T TONIGHT!
MISS PEACH
PERKINS •
ANIMAL CRACKERS
Ql1QE6. IT1~ VI!~
l/O!leRIJ A/JI:> t!:fl'ICl!:IJI:.,
By Charles M. Schull
(LL Al.50 511JP All 'TllE 5WFF
Mll1T HER 511Jf'10 Cllll1'HOOO ••
I'll 60 RIM 10 WHERE '!HE
ACTION llE 6AN ••
It was mininJ the n~t
of her hl~h-school prom.
ly H•rild Le Doux
TI!U. "'· JOE-MAS
I lrilEV&R H!ARO Vff, I ICNEW nQT!
HIM MEWTION ANY! YOU'VE WOll(l!P
I ClME 1UST Al'T!lt MRS.OUIMM ~E"l 15't' TllE WAV, CMAll.fV UiFt
A 1(EY FOR HIS APAtTMIN'r
HERE •• IN CA5E A.NYTM ING
VOU k:NOW I-IE HEllE QUITE A FEW CHARLEY
GO!' ANY
FAMILY?
LOST MIS WIFE VEAllS, H .. VEN'T
VEA.RS AGO! 'IOU, .J'OE-!' MAPPENEP TO MtM !
WHO
Wl!ITES
AL.L. T~E
,OTTIM
SOCKS
~CAM
T~l'I'
llllllNG-
TM!MilLV&S
TO WlrlTI
llOTTIM
•OOICS
'1
:,.1$
-By M1ft
:r
i>IJ!S' TMIY
G!T PAID
!Xru-.
\11,;-, ..... ~
.) . . ..
ly John Miies
. By Gus Arriola ·
By F1rd John-.it .
By ROCJ•r lollln
I
' • I . • •
THE GIRLS
•111 tbere uy wom1.a'1 m111z:lne at all tU.t dM•'* ~
bow macb 1 wtl&h?"
DENNIS THE' MENACE
ii. '
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• . . . . • . • • • • • • . • • • •
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• ,R D~LY Pl~OT . ~-----'-ri_dlY-"'-'-""""-'-ZS.-1_9n_ ,
BRAND
NEW · '72 PLYMOUTH'
DUSTE·R
•
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'72 SATELLITE ·
Atlas Service· Department .
welcomes and honors •II Chrysler
Corporation vehicles requiring service
ancf warranty work, regardless of whire car
· w'as purchased, We honor M1st1r
Charge, BankAmerlcard, Carte
Blanche, American Express
and Diners Club. '
/, • r
\
WHAT A TIME -
TO PURCHASE-!
During this month we have re·
duced pr'ices to great savings on
200;000 of new. '72 Chrysler·
Plymoilths and used cars to
bring our inventory do"Cn
to its normal level. ·
ASK ABOUT OUR
FREE TRIAL -
·EXClfANGE
·ON 'USED CARS
.
'69 CHEVROLET
KINGSWOOD ES.TA.TE WAG.
VI •utom1ti,, r1dio, h11t1r, l'flWl r 1t11r·
hHJ'· pow1r \,r1•11. 1ir cond itioniiit.' whit•
w•ll '"" f """ 9, . 1.7 5 ...
'69 PLYMOUTH
VALIANT
Auto. tr1111., r1~U1, h11t.r, )Mwtr tfffr· ;,,, IY~'$1195 -'
'65 CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER · · ·
v.a, 111+0 • tr1111., r1clio. h11h1r, ':S:, P.I.,
Power Windq,w1, Pow1r S11t1, Air Cond.
{PCK17"4 1
'
'69 FORD GAL.
SOD 2 DOOR . HARDTOP
v1,.1U't1m1tit,,r1dio, lri11t1r, pow~r ····~· Ing, pewir brikei, white w1l1 t 1r11, •1r
,.,da;.,;114957)
-
.
'66 PROWLER
C"AMP TRAILER
Fully equippetl 'wlth 1tov1, ev111, 1c1 bes.
•l•k, d;"""i95"" .
-
'69 VOLKSWAGEN ·
BUG
'67 CHRYSLER
NEW YORKER 4 DR. H.T.
VI 1 ulem1tic., pow1r 1l11rl11g l br1k11,
r1dio, h11t1r, 1ir c.onditio11h1g, ~inyl top, ::.:·'"';·f~ 1'.9s'·" ~, .. ,.
. '
'69 OLDS CUTLASS
'70 DODGE
ClfARGER
ASK ABOUT OUR
FREE US~D.-CAR·
··WARRANTY a....,. .......... 25% lllsce111tt ... ,..,..
21% llllco•ltt .. loltor. WM to IM 4HO M
Atta C.....,., "'91!1•iitli, IM.
'
1
'
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'
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Ftllf'1, Ftbtl"'1 25, 1972 DAI~~ PILOT H
ORANOI COUNTY'S ONE S TOP AUTOMOTIVE . HEADQUARTERS
\
, 4 Speed trans, 1600 CC eng.,
bucket seats, emission · ~:n~o~ YOURS IN THE COLOR LO~~w $ J 78 8
OF YOUR CHOICE TODAY PRICE
BRAND NEW 1972
2DOOR
. Fully synclmiired trans, 170
'69FORD
CUSTOM v.a, aulL trw.. p/11W;'*-heotw, ell crigid. YWN5SO •
FULL
PRICE .$1088 '
'70 MA·YERICK
2DOOa
J!MIO, hea1tr, (Zl.H206)
FULL
PRICE $1388
'65BUICK
LUA.Ill
V-1, auto hftS.. ~ Jtllring (WTE353)
~~:CE $488
'69MUSTANG
MDT,
l ocHo, hea1w, butktt MOtl (U.C6'2)
FULL
PRICE
BRAND NEW
RUCK & CAMPER
KING 0' THE ROAD CABOYIR
Eqjlt. with stove, sink, icebox, etc. #2509RV.
ON A NEW '72 FORD PICKUP
CUSTOM STYLESIDE
_ COMPLETE CAMPER PACKAGE
.
·=:~° KING O'THE ROAD
'71 CABOVER CAMPER
funy eqpt, wilh sink. slove, icebox. dropn. (2509RV)
FULLPRICI
ELDORADO
'71 SHAWNEE CAB.OVER
Self ciirt!oinlld (120267)
SAVI -. FROM $700 LIST , .PRICE
~!~.~r:;;~~;;';g :t~~." NEW $19 8 8 ~~J;~~'s';ihine. LOW LOW ..., ________ •_. ________ ...
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY PRICE -'71 PINTO 'i '70 CHEY
FULL $688 PRICE .----------------1 !DOOi ,. I IMPALA 160Qcc.11Wtt H011.C34KPH> •• v.e,,_.. u..n.,Jocroryair. 1cNou roo1.avn29J $2188 __ '-'-1-0,;__. ~.~_ .. ~.~-~-~_ .. 2!_~._~:r.~_.~E_$6_· ·8_8 BRAND Nf W 1972
-.. TORI NO
HARDJOP
"
Cruisomotic trons,oll new' NEW $2588 Torino des~n .. front dise'li~kes, lOWLOW · · · · direct a1r venHlahon, enusSM>n
control.O'l'lrYoursToloy PRICE. _ _
--.
FULL
PRICE
FULL
PR)CE
'68MUSTANG '69P .. YM .
FULL
PRICE
JUIT u-
V-1, Clltonm.,/ilW, fact oir~l1)
FULL
PRICE
'70 FORD . .-~ '70 FORD
GAi.AXii SOO fOIMAl GAWll 500
' '69 ~~!.~'~'~"PICKUP $1488
-_;
V-1, MO ln!nl.. foci air, rod"IO, htoltt;. wl!il.wa!l1, tfgloss, Spoif Roof, Y·l,ovto. trin.. IOl'l. air<ord~ nxliD. hi!O!tf, wli-1-------------------
w/toY•L knkiu lop (123ACH) 1aWOU1. t/tlo'H,. w/c.ovw1, londou top. vinyl int. (901 IMZ) J · $
BRAND NEW 1972 FULL $2188 FULL $2188, . 69 ~8.~~,E:.l.~~""""'"'""~'''· 1888 . FORD l TD. PRICE PRICE
... -,.·~·!!·~·Y·~·O•M.•T•H_..,_•,•7•1 •M•U•~·,.•A•N•G•. _... '69 t~~.~~~~~P.!! Van $1888
V-l,Ollto.ll'n..powwJfllrilg,tadlryalrnd(Vm517) V-l,outofJoD1.,p11w1t1J1w,ftictoty11ir,budll's.a1'. f-,..,-----------------{214CMI) . . '' 68 ~8~~'.'~~l~U~J.~~~~W .. Kl~I, ~1988, FULL
PRICE FULL
PRICE '
302V-8,cruisomatic. NEW '68 D~TSUN '71 G~LAXIE ~r_:_:~.'~.i~;'!" ... ~_:£_·r.~:~ .... L.o·w·L·olll!w __ $_.-_3 __ -_?_-.-.8!-~J~~~' .. ~ ~PUR~l ... CLE ......... -$'7'" 88 FUP-;:..,,R· ~.,c'i.'i;..E·;:-:-$~,2'.:r "S'fs· ""'s" .,.. TRUCK & CAMPER yoorchOiceof colortoiloy · . PRICE
' '
• . _ NIW 8' CAMPIR BRAND NEW 197 2 .. __ Ill, _____ ... _______ ... :!'.~';,~'"'""'"'""'"•"'"''"" $ ·
' . t •
'71 MERCURY '71 TORINO ONA · · HUNDERBI RD v-1.FACTOIYA-."~,;:. ..... ,_~ v.1,crJto~pow.-·~~--(243.CJO) :!!1.~~!~.~lOO ,
'llnyl "'°'· oll ~ INlriol" (~9Cll:)
COMPLETE CAMPER PACKAGE ' FULL 2DOOR
HARDTOP
FULL
PRICE -.$2 28 8 PRICE 11111111111111111111111111111111 lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
'69DATSUN
IDSTI 1600 Stries (XVS70l)
1
'70 FORD
LTDMDTr
loodtd i"d., fo"clory oir, auto Irons .. pow•r
11ttrillg/wirdow1/MOIS. landou rool. nrdio, htolw. (M2C~
FULL
PRICE $2488
LEASE!! A NEW 1972
FORD l TD at '71 PRICES
$116.95 PER MONTH -
24 MO. OPEN ENO LEASE
"72" GRIN TORINO 2 dr. H.T.
$101,71 Pia MONTH
24 MO. OPEN END LEASE
\
WEEEKEND RENTAL SPEC. -
RENT A 1972 FORD PINTO
From 2 P.M. Fridoy to 10 A.M. ,
Monday Complete Weekend Only
$1.5.95 +6cpermile
f.int 100 1111111 Fill
(
' .I 34 DAILY l'!LDT
• .
J Everyone Has
Something · lfi.t
Someone Else Wants
D•ILY PILOT CLASSIFIED .j\DS You Can Se ll It,
'find ft, Trad• It {
With •Went Ad ' .
•
BAY AND BEACH REALTY
2407 E. C. Hwy., CdM
REPUBLIC
5 IR-3 IA
2700 SQ. FEIT
Beau.Hful Reputtllc, • p 11 t * ** ** * -----------I level home ln Meaa Verde, featurirw breaktast area In -* * TAYLOR CO.
BIG CANYON COUN\RY CLUB
Luxury living in thb prestige area near New-
port Fashion Island. Lovely homes surround-
ed by golf course & private country club.
Guarded gate entrance. Brand new 5 BR.
hoine with FR. and formal DR. Elegant car-
HELEN C. ANDERSON
"A
LOOK •
AT
LEADER$Hlf"
Helen one of the best known real estate
sales.Women in the entire harbor area, has
establlsbed herself over the years with Bay ir BMcb Realty .. a leader•IJI our profe .. ion.
She hP malnta\!!.ed levels of accomplishment
& staoclardi qf, ~qnnance that have se.t
'ihe p tletb Mr od business. Helen enjoys
\he ooofidenceJil her clleoll, the respect of
her assoeia~tf, ,\he lleep and sincere app~e
clatlon of Bay & Beacl! RealtY for her con-
tribution to ~ur ever growing suece11.
OPEN HOUSES
kitchen, formal d t n i n &
room, huge step.down famJ..
[y room with v•et bar and
lin.'place, and a VftY lat1t:
muter suite. Situated, m
corntr lot i.n Q u I e t
nelghborbood .Owner
1rarmerre<1 to F\orlda and
property is priced lo sell
quJcldy at $56,900. For ad-
ditional infonnation, please
phone 5'1&-Zl13 ..
\0 THEREAL
'"'\.. ~:STATERS
' ·, .. " •'
UNITS!! $3000
OFF! INVESTORS
DREAM!!
· ~.EACH-PLEX!
LE'l' 'l'ENANTS PAY YOUR
WAY! Country kitchen fW.
·Jy equipped. FORMAL E>IN-
jNG. Klng &lze bedroom~
Almost l2lO lqU8re ftel: of
lovable llvfna per unit!
WSI' REDUc;EP 10% Call
Now 64!>0303
f:~&~:U~;· . OPEiii SATisml~~~
DOVE R' SHORES -VIEW -$79,500
Perfection plus! Movt; right into this pre>-
fessionally decorated borne on beautiful cor-
ner site with VIEW of bay. Lux cpting &
drapes. 3 BR, FR & study. Privacy. 3 Gar.
2042 GALAXY OPEN SAT/SUN 1-0:30
CORNER HOME AND INCOME
Excitingly different -good investment. Easy
yard care. Center of city {you can walk to
everythlog). Nice home and charming apt.
plus more. See to believe. Corona del Mar.
439 HELIOTROPE, OPEN SAT/SUN 1-5:30
LINDA ISLE -$155,000 EACH
'Pwo NEW bayfront homes read~ for immed·
late occupancy. Unusual deSign by well
known architects. Spacious open plan, high
1 TO ·5 P.M. SUNDAY i ., 1111{1 \I I. Ol \O\
ceilin gs, sun deck. 4 BR, FR, DR & study.
Owner will consider exchange for land, apt.
bldg., smaller home or 'J'D's. Hurry!
8 LINDA ISLE OPEN SAT/SUN 1-5:30 6P. POINSETTIA. Quaint yellow collage; 2 '
bdnns. plus guest qtrs., 2 used '&rick
fqllcs .; open beams, new carpeting &
'
I detorating lhruout. A real ®armer.
I $411,500.
1723 TERRAPIN. 'Eliceplional Baycrest cus-
tom home; 4 bdrms .• formal dining rm.,
wonderful pool & entertaining area. $69,500
2815 HARBOR VIEW DR., Forever view
from this great 4 bdrm. & pool Harbor
View Hills h~me. $77,500.
1026 SEA LANE .. Panoramic view from this
Harbor View Hills 3 bdrm. home. Fantas-
tic night view. $50,500
2605 VISTA ORNADA. Lovely Blulls home,
spacious & private. 3 Bdrm. end model.
Decorator's own home. $49,750
2004 VISTA CAJON. In The Bluffs; beaut. 3
. bdrm. condo with extra Jge. rooms. $46,000
<I '
•Your propeey ean be .11.lttd Nation-675 !l)ftM
wide at no extra CO!L Call -.JVIV
BAY & BEACJ..I HIA m " .......... ., ..... --·· .. ~
Rr '1 1T0Rl
C9RONA
DEL MAR
Go \ijlhill to this eleganl
Earlv American 4 bedroom,
family room, 3100 aq ft
home. Complete with en-
ticing rrounds. Below mlJ'o
ket at $84,500. Owner says,
"Make offer!" Drive up
Margarite lo Sandcaatle to
1452 Key 1j"iew Dr. Opt>n
Sunday 1-S p.m.
Take OVl'f this 7% FHA.Joan
with only $4,390 plua closq:
costs. A bargain doesn't
come along like thJs very
often. 4 bedrooms, 2 bathe,
fireplace, loll of extra built-
in storage space, sprinklers,
I~ corner k>t with room
'""!'°"'"""'"•!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•I for boat or trailer. Quick I'" 1 possession. Total monthly
General G•neral payment will be
S274/month. Total price
$33,990. Call 546-23.13 to ....
l
THE REAL \tz E~TA.TER;'3
RARE
BEACH DUPLEX I I
11111111 ... ~IBrlck I: ahlngle exterior. 4
Bdims., 2th baths each
unlt; We entry hall; trplc.;
dbl. ovens. Leastd for $lSO
each. C:all for app't.
1 4 BEDROOM + VIEW
Lusk Harbor View, OPEN SUNDAY 1-S. 994
SANDCASTLE. Only $69,500. Super clean &
well decorated. Be sure to see it! Jim Muller
IRVINE COVE OPEN HOUSE
SAT/SUN. 2-5. 2495 MONACO. 5 Surf views,
private beach, 5 bdrms., huge fam. room -
2 generation plan. Oceanfront perfectionl
$198,500. Geo. Grupe
A SPECIAL WAY OF LIFE
ls yours in '4The Bluffs." IAvely 3-4 BR.
townhse.. 2~ ba., fnnl. din., thick shag
cptg., billiard rm., bayfront lot. $57,900.
Belle Partch
NEW BLUFFS LISTING
Live a carefree life in this like new, one
level 3 bdrm., 2 bath condominium. Spa-
cious terrace on view side. $47,500.
Eileen Hudson
DON'T OVERLOOK THI SI I
A 3 Bdrm. fam. rm., formal diJt. rm. home
in BAYCREST. It has had lots of T.L.C. by
original owners. One of our BEST. $79,500.
Bud Austin
MUST SE LL! 4 BR. HOM E
Owner leaving country. Lge. rooms; xlnt
•treet In Harbor Highlands, convenient to
shopping & schools. REDUCED to $47,500.
Chuck Lelvis
BAYSHORE
Ohoice location ; 3 generous bdrms., large
living room, fireplace. All in tip top shape,
Only $59,500. Harry Frederick
BAY VIEW -CLIFF DRIVE
Here's a QUIET one! Gracious old 2-stozy
·home with 4 BR's., huge den with better
view, tree covered patio & private yard.
Just Usted. $72,500. Fee. Bill Comstoclc
Call: 673-3663 ~ Ewa
PENINSULA PT.
Large 4 BR., 3 ba. home
being redecor.; blt·in k:ltch,
lfeat for Jge. family,
Call: Sl3-366l 642-2253 Eves
associated
BROKERS-REAL TORS
1025 W Bolboo 613·3663
$30,950
NO DOWN • POOL!
Mesa North home with 3
spacious bedrooms, den, 2
baths, built In d re a m
kitchen. lamil)' room with
lireplace. loads of decking,
patlo. Enclose pool-safe for
amall chilctren. P I u 11 h
carpeilni, drapes. Great
family home! 540-ln>.
TARBELL
2955 Harbor, Costa Mesa
$40,950
Luxurlout 5 bedroom 2 thy
in prllQe location. Spartdln&
oond Inside il. out. Grand
pIAno stu living room,
country size ldtch & pool
me yard. Won't 1ut Jorw.
Submit an temu!
Call 54$-Wt (Open ..... , •
\ou_th , (. oast
MUST SELL!
UKE NOW!
HARBOR VIEW HOMES -$68,500
4 BR., 21h ba home w/view. Master suite has
charming living area. Formal DR. Family
nn. has fireplace.~ wet bar. Prof. decorated
with lllxurious cptng. & draperies. Garage,
bas many custom features.
1741 PT. SHEFFIELD OPEN SAT 1-5:30
BIG CANYON -$107,500
Prime location! Large pool-size Jot w /view o! canyon & hills. Popular plan w /conversa-
tion pit. 4 BR., lge. FR. & formal DR. Car-
peting included.·Near completion_
BIG CANYON -$99,500
Exclusive offering of a cust.omized 4 BR.
home near completion. Large family rm.,
formal DR. exquisite master suite & 3-car
garage. Enjoy the lux.ury of living in this
prestige area of Country Club atmosphere.
Guarded entrance. View of golf course.
NEWPORT BEACH '
Impressive custom·built borne on niCe cor-
ner site. 3 Spacious BR, formal DR. plus
huge recreation rm. (convert ii to 2 bedrms).
Ced ar panelling. Mex. tile entry. Enclosed
front courtyard. 3-Car garage. Room for boal
BAY ISLAND -$135,DOO
Enjoy the quiet peaceful livin~ on this pic-
turesque island away from noise & traffic.
Lovely, older 5 BR. home wilh ·pier & slip.
FABULOUS 3 UNITS .
On the water in Newport! 2 Braqd new spac-
ious 3 BR & one 2 BR remodeled. 134 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
for Newport waterfrt. home ....... $185,000.
B. C. COUNTRY CLUB -$89,900
Brand new 4 bdrm. !-story home with shake
roof. Fabulous kitch. w/all blt·ins. & trash
masher. 3 Car garage.
BRAND NEW -LINDA IS LE
Fantastic! One of a kind! Contemporary
Mediterranean home with 5 bedrooms, den,
huge billiard room, formal dining room &
4'f.i• baths. Rich wool carpeting, expensive
waJI papers, marble baths & Del Piso tile
entry. Superb quality thruout! ! .... $250,000.
FANTASTIC OCEAN VIEW
Prime, level Corona del Mar loc. on Ocean
Blvd. Overlooking the beautiful blue Pacific.
S BR., 3 baths, powder rm., 12 fl. cell . in LR.
64 Ft. wide lot. .. .. .. .. . .. .. .. . .. $135,000.
WATERFRONT -TO SETTL E ESTATE
6 Bdrms., prime bayfront Joe. on peninsula.
Pier & slip ......................... $150,000.
CORONA DEL MAR TRIPLEX -$69,500
3 LOVELY studio type apartments. 2 Bdrms.
in each. 1 Bath in 2 units -1" baths & fire-
place in 1 unit. Built.in range, oven & dish·
washers. Really sharp. 6 Garages.
BRAND NEW -LINDA ISLE
Select your own carpeting & wallpapers In
this brand new quality residence. Enjoy the
exp !nsive bay view from this 3 bdrm. plus
maid's rm. home. 2500 Sq. ft. Huge mstr.
suite with great closets. All tiled entry. Room
for 50 ft. boat. Bit.In vacuum. Island kitch.
w /electronlc oven formal dining rm. $250;000.
~ LINDA ISLE OPEN SUN. l.S:30
CHOICE WATERFRONT LOTS .
Dover Shores -'49,500
Linda Isle -$69,500-$75,00().$86,mflOO,OOO.
Office Open Soturday & Sundoy
''Our 27th Ye1 r'' LIDO ISLE MEDITERRAN EAN
~acious home for entertalnlng & family
hving. 3 BR., sep. din. rm., buge fam. rm.
& Jdtch. Best JocaUon on Piami. 'U0,000, Charlene Whyte
~~ ""'" • ... ~ no WESLEY N. TAYLOR CO., RHlton \IU'Wn \0 VA ~· VA ap-prulll U~500 646-7J71 . 2111 Son Jooqvln Hiiis Road
. NEWPORT CENTER 644-4910
SUBURBIA PARK
SPANISH
SPUT LEVEL
Every feature desirtd ln a
home Ls combined aJorw
with all Jml*'hlnt elementl
of ~ "Pet'feet Property."
Sltueted in 1 .. choice loca-
tlon/N~ with 4
bedrooms, 1&mily room,
formal d~ room, 211
baths and a dramatic 2h42
Swinunlng Pool. CustomJz.
ii\<, upgrad""' and lllXW'Y
features rarely found In a
h>me. AU in immaculate
condition throughout,
Replacement cost of this
home ii estimated a t
$62,000; Mwever it'11 priced
at Sf»,000 tor fast sa:le, For
additlonaJ intormation and
appointment, pleaae pbo~
~2313.
f:Q) THE REAL
\"' ESTATERS '. . ' ',.
6 HOMES
ON 2 LOTS
Hert'• a1't separale homes
on a Utt studded lot in
Eastside Costa ~fesa area.
They're an In fine condition,
with the front home a lovely
and comfortable 3 bedroom
2 bath with separate family
room and fireplace. Out back
Is a line SWIMMING POOL!
Let us show you how lo
live real nice and have TAX
SHELT:µ? loo. 01''!1er will
help firutnCt' the price ol
$97,500.
JCJa,,,., co: TS
'~WAL LACE
· REALTORS
-54Ml41-
(0ptn Evenings)
NEAR BEACHES
5 + F~MIL.Y +
DINING' UNDER
$25,006!1
VALUE! VALUE! Twin giant
palms hUlte this mini estate!
Kings living roofu., an birch
paneling -plUJ DWISive uaed
brick fireplace? Big famil)'
room cioaked in knotty
pine! .FORMAL-t>ININl;i!
All We gourmet ki~c~. ·6
qUeen size bedrooms. Joe.
to fieach! Don't mfS. thlf
best buy! Llttle do\vn! call
DO\\'. 645-0303
IORl.\I [ '11.,0\
' ''£A1-on~
"Eostside LOcation
Special"
Thia neat litPe home with
garage t'Onverled to studio
apt. on large R·2 lot makes
this a fine little in~ment.
House should rent for $200
per month and prage-apt.
tor $90.00, p!u.s room tor
another unit The price
$28,500. 'CAIL 546-Zl13.
lo \THEREAL
\"\{ ESTATERS
(" I '< Li 'iToi , "t.'
HOl\lESrI'ES
From;~ to 1~,acres. Some
with view, some with paved
road11, tome w i t h UD-
derifound utilities. II you
are looking for ·the right
spot to buikl from $13,500 to
$38,000.
Come to .... ·
CAPISTRANO
VAll.EY REAL TY
31501 Camino CapistranO
49~1124
MACNA&-IRVINE
FINER. tt OMES
•BEACON BAY
Private beach, teru\i..s, community docks. 2
BR, 2 bath, panelled convertible study. Just
excitinely redecorated. $64,llOO.
HARBOR VIEW l'IOM&S
Really choice model 2·story Portofino. 3 BR,
2 bath, p9wder room, for111;a1 DR, large FR.
1 bll<. to park & pool. $51,900.
BAYVIEW HOME
$47,500. Large 4 BR, 3 full bath,. Palos Verde
fireplace . Spacious. utility ·rm. Beautiful
landscaping. V.A. terms.
WANT CONDOMINIUM
Owner desires trade for glainorous, beauti-
ful newly decorated, on&-Of-a-kind home with
exciting pool, Jov~y fountain. Immaculate!.
3 BR • 2 bath. $89,500. -OPEN SUN. 1-5. 263
Ocean View, Newport Heights .
FAMILY KITCHEN-BAYCREST
This is going to sell! Old . fa,shioned family
kitchen, formal DR, masterJ3R.&uite. OPEN
• SUNDAY 1-S p,.m, 1915 '{radewinils, Newport
"Beach. ~ "
' DOVER SHORES
Sophisticated Spanijlh. S,!rlking !;Jome -prl-
'Vate couttya!rl, sparkling P90l. Swe0plng
View. 3 \QR DR, FR, garden rm., iundeck,
'high beamed ceiling, A' graceflll ~denee;.
· $139,900. Laszlq Sh1lrkany: _.. .•
LIDO ISLE
English Coll\ltry Atmosphere. Beautiful
wood panelling -Williamsburg fireplace. 4
BR, 4¥.a bath, formal DR. sun room, spacious
FR. Tranquil tree-shaded patio. Estate size
Jot. OHered at $122,500.
EASTSIDE COSTA M&SA
Trim 3 BR, 2 bath. Large FR, brick fire-
place. Electric kitchen. Harbor HJgh Dis·
trict. V.A. terms to qaalitied buyers. $32,500. . " MOVE IN NOW-BUY NEXT YEAR?
Lease.option this 19vely, spacious bayfront
home wtpier & float. Finest prestige area.
5 BR's, 512 ba~ -move-in condition -a
REAL BUY. OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1·5 p.m.
309 EVening Star Ln., Dover Shores. 1
COUNTR'( !'ST~TE LIVING AT ·ITS FINilST
-:Corgeous Saq•;llti8Jj Capistrano Estate, Ot'
acres, citrus,, ~998dos, ridin g riilg & pa&-·
ture surround t)iltc custom hl>me & guest
,house. Spectacular .ocean , valJey & mountain
VIEW. $270,000'.' Tom Queen 644-6200.
BAYSHORE MANOR
156' on the !>BY' will faccomodate your 100'
yacht. Dramatic sloping lawn accents this
gracious l~te Bayfro nt Manor. 4 BR,
study, FR, maid'• quartera. 5000· sq. ft.
$650,000. Shown by·appt. only.
LINDA ISLE BAYFRONT
Lowest priced !-floor Mediterranean model
-,fl34,500. ll\gh be111T1ed ceiling LR + formal
DR • 3 large BR's' - 3 baths. Slip for cruiser
+ runabout. Don't pass this up! OPEN SUN~
DAY 1-S p.m. •106 Linda Isle. Dave Cook
642-8235. ....
NE\'f·)A'.\' Vl£W HOMES
Final oppartnnlly to own a new Ivan Wells
custom home, Still time to choose your
d~cor. From ,$89.200 to $151 :000. Furnished
model OPEN bA!LY 10 a.m.-5 p.m. 2006
Galaxy Drive, Dover Shores. 646-1550
BALBOA .ISLAND RARITY
Quaint, charming, commercial bldg -on
Marine Ave. Used brk. fireplace • room for
2nd unit ·• now leased • asking $62,500.
Harriet Perrv 642-8235.
MACNAl-IRViNE
Real~ Company
• 6444200 , I 642•8235.
\H •rbor 'vtelit C~••.1 901 Dover Drive 1644 MocArthur 8fvd. · •
NEWPORT BEACH
Reiltor1 Sin'ce 1965 Gt neral G~;.1:1. •'", ,
$33, 900.No Down I;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;··;; .. ;;;·:;· ·;;·;;;";;:;;;;· --~··::;1;1;;·~1!01 ;;;·;;·joatl\il";;· ii'"
T..,... 200> "'· fl hom•. a ·fl. ·~:{J '.A , •' ' =er,;'!~ ~~~ oL.inJa J-d, le room. Separate launtry
room. 28 fL covered patlo.
~uilt·in range, oven, dilb·
washer, Carpelini, dnipeJ. I
540-1120. .
lf4i¥=i4••
2956 ltarbor, Cotta Mtsa
CONDOMINIUM
PREsrlGE WATERFRONT HOMES
~OWN BY APPOINTMENT
2. Linda I~• Drive .:.:. Open Su~y
BeautlfuJ ,oe'l\ 5 BR., 4'f.i !IA: home.'Watir-
front liYlrig rm\ & formal dhilng. Hancliome
oak r,anelled fam. rm., lrplc., wet bar. Larae
mas er suite' bas frplc. & cozy lounge aru,
view of Bay'& the mountains ..... , $178,500.
3BR 211A, q. -flll" •• ...... $111,9'!0. st Lift.ta I lo Drive • ",
s 'BR, BA. pllllh_A s BR., '"" ba.; OD Jacoon~ Lge W~I
lmmoC •••••• l2UOD. family rm, & llvlnl rm. Forz¥.1 tllnlni ,tm.
2 BR J BA...GOl-. · ~tom ~. dec!Jii: slip , ..•..•.. 1 'lft,oOo,
k1c •••••• SU,JOO. \ , ~ L...J..: ' • <>U ~ (4!f1<n ......,,. n .._., clo Drl ,
' " • • ' • · Beaut. 5 Bit 4 ba. home w /fotmnl din. rm.
& famU_y rm. $. Frplcs. OuWde 11P'~ay.
Built-In aun cabmet "' boobbelves .. r "' to .............................. : .3. \ou_lh (. oa st
USTBl.llFF
3 BR. 2 BA., FAM, RM.
$44,7~0
"SPARKLING"
New u.fu.a:, 6est Vllue In
this tine artt. Recent major
"overhaul"; new .carptts,
d r a p e 1, shuttetr, paint,
vinyl, TJIE WORKS! "Put.
tin& green'' front yard. A
bright & exciting small
home, ld•al ll>r 1~er fam-
ily or )'OWIB couple. On a
f:riendJy atrttt a: acroe from
your own park. Bettor call
today.
,.j)., '-;{~.
(.!(St •ill .fJJulf' /.,·~
Of EN 'HOU.$~
420 ~RGUEIRE o.m& aet!?tU ~t ~ ~ 1
1D S:!>. ~ means'
bulineu. HU reduced the
pr\c< $4000 .on .• ~.11.,.nie
unit. Rult!C J· ~. 2
bath home ..itb ~ ._,
•. All •lei' 111t!li ·,~ • ·~. """'II......,,. .. Frpl.~. beam' ~ntnt, plut
unlt over garage. Never ,va-
C&M. Now onJy $59.500. E-Z
tenns, Call 6'B-8550. I
'JAYSHORES·
EXCLUSIVE beach living at ,
its best. Hard to "fil'ld fl\"e
bt-droom with Jots ot ehenn,
Attractive' low lff.sehOld,
move In condl~n. Owner ·
has OU!et'O\vn A ls rtadY to
movt. Act quicldy on thb '
one. OHtftd udllliwl)t at
c:r cOLESWORTHY
& co.
-6'1">-4l30
All The
· LafeSt Features
rn home dtlign, atrium, zero me-yards, aarden Jdtdien, •
!rlih bo&1n celltng1, ·lor&o
11Jl\ily . room. 3 bedroo111. ~
Lots of patio, Bil au .
BBQ .. 80ft ..,, ... ter. 2 ye'&rl
ntW IOlkl mahogany walls.
On the end of a Meta Verde
cul.oo..ac. $35,950. 646-7171. ;
r;.·-THE RE AL \R1 ESTATEHS . · ..
ELBOW GREASE
plu• ]>&int, wW make a bit
dlttettnee! Nice famlly
home, complete w/;. bed· ~
rooms, fsm. rm., firepl, bit· 1 In elect kltch, lovely shake
roof and oversized db1 1ar.
NC>W vacant -needs decot'· ,
&ting. submit YOUR OF·
FE!!. Prlctd only $29,950.
cau 546-Mlll (Open eves.) 1
E1f ~:.'!j :
1 F.IREPLACEll
. ) ~26,500
3 ipa'clolll bodroom., dm,
muter suite ~th &ppeallr)I:
flrtplace, add1tl0rnal ustd 1 bt1ck llreplue in hup Wn·
Uy '""""· fUU dlnttw '"""" j Maaive covered paUO.
540-t120.. 11
• '
Condominium" I
N .. t 'I b..Jrcom. l•n>ll1
""""' 211 bothl, am/Im !1>< terpom. 2 QI' p.race, · end
unll l(OU oirn tllo 11.nc! • doot 10 pool all41'.ci.atlon
-Ol1QI 121.JDO &t&-1'111
O THf: REAL
'"\... ESTATERS
•
' '
YOUR OWN ISWD
11ntlt 11.t llCOt ()nod!UI
-_,,, llla>d. °'"" .. p-"-· a-., , tn<;t«,5ci..t•W!ld-. I
Oi!ll' fllt.:. .. 11.ltr • • sci~,:l; u; ·
*'I• ACU * --• Wottrfrorit Lll1 * * * * * * v'::~s~o~L · No., 'It: 3 Cat garage. l"acu·So~tb .. -.ooo. ~; ~ ~ !----------------W•terfl••>t ..,.. homt, , ., No. 56: North 1.agoon exposure , ..• $80,000. .,,,.,,,, ·-., c;p1o. ~
... ··-Coldv:ln.a.-~·-~
550 NEWPO RT CENT ER DR., N.I,
* SEE thlt cbolce toll 5 ~ View from moot ,.,. Comp~ lnferllllllon .,. .. bi-.. '"" loll ~~lot.~:.~'. Daily Pilot Classified Ads =~~ ;e.:~ 0n All...._. I.lift,..._ t.!h =-~ ~-=..";
144 OM. 1 111 o~ Ro~ftep, llLl GRUNDY, IEALTOll ""-· fNl!i. _.
s.-u "" .. uaold -Bey tbe for Action ••• Call 14•-5171 341 ~ ~61 341 11avs1c1t Dr .. s.,,. 1. N.1. •1~" ,. ..,._:;:r ~ •------~------'---IWb::::!l~~Ele~p!lan!:!:!~t~~~ .... ::::'.A~.IJ~M~l ·'l!!!!!!!!l ................... !!!!!'!!l!!Bl'l!!!!l!!! ... Bo.-coJI_-::'...,__,,_.-
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G.neral Uenerel
iiiiiiiiiiii
HA VE YOU HEARD?
Elniore Co11ipany . is Growing Fantastically
Do You Want Better Than The Best
Service in Buying or ·selllng Your Property?
PLEASE CONTACT US TODAY
FANTASTIC CHANNEL VIEW HOME
Location in $120,000 to $200,000 homes. 3 love-
ly bedrooms with 2 baths. Dramatic circular wet
bar. Large living room with fireplace. Completely
carpeted and draped. 2 gorgeous beaches w ithin
walking distance, and priced at only $85,000 with
a loan commitment of 80"/0 • Immediate pos-
session. Please call now to see this incredible
value.
EXCEPTIONAL HOME IN COLLEGE PARK
4 nice bedrooms I% baths. Dining room, large
living room with brick fireplace. Full copper
plumbing and brand new paint. Very nice yard for
your garden. Priced at only $31 ,000. w ith a 71/4 °/0
30 year loan available. Please call today.
881 DOVER DR IVE 645•4040
NEWPORT BEACH
General
COLWELL .!Jnc.
INCOME OR INLAW
$25,500 VA
Old-fashioned income homes near DO\VN-
TOWN COSTA MESA. Located on large level
lot with alley at rear. Spacious two bedroom
home with fireplace plus a one bedroom
rental. Fresh exterior paint • interior needs
loving care. HURRY!
QUIET STREET
General
IDEALLY
LOCATED
Thh1 delightful 3 bedroom 2
bath home with crackllng
fireplace 11 just Jive mln·
~from: * SAN DIEGO FREE\\IAY * NEWPORT FR.EEW A Y * SOtm-1 COAST PLAZA * ORANGE OOAST
001.J..EGE * COSTA ~fESA CIVIC
CENTER * ORANGE COUNTY
AIRPORT
Priced at $28,500 and 'vort.h
all of It. call 646-71 n
10 THC REAL
'"'-CSTATERS ' .
G1ner11I
• a • • • • • • • • • • • • I • • • • •
6'h 0/o LOAN AVAILABLE
ON THIS TOWNHOUSE
in BACK BAY AREA. 3 Bedroom. 3 bath,
builtin kitchen. COMM UNITY POOL &. REC
ROOMS including billiards, cards and SC\\'-
ing. CARPET & DRAPES allowance. Only
.. .. .. .. $26.250.
ll UNITS
WAITING FOR YOU
Five l·bedroom unfurnished. 11-1 bedroonl.
furnished, 1-2 bedroom unfun:ai shed, S..2 bed·
room furnished CLOSE TO SHOPPING near
Santa Ana freeway. OWNER WILL TRADE
UP at .. . .. .. .. .. .. .. .. . .. ...... $365,000.
"OLE' " WE SAY
IN HARBOR VIEW HOMES
Handy to schools and shopping. This SPAN·
JSH style 3 bedroom, 2 baths. dining room,
fireplace, extra large buillin modern kitchen,
carpets & drapes, two LEVEL PATIO. See
this extra sharp one year old beauty. $47.900.
"THE TALK OF THE TOWN"
IN BAYCREST
Lovely plinted ATRIUM ENTRY leads you
to the sunken Jiving room with all glass,
looking out to the professionally land scaped
patio and yard. 3 Bedrooms, 21;J baths, fire-
place, FORMAL dining room and large fam-
ily room. Kitchen is the gourmet's delight
with a builtin S..B-Q plus breakfast area. 3
CAR GARAGE. An ego builder for .. $69,950.
"BEAUTIFUL OCEAN VIEW
IN CAMEO SHORES"
Spaciousness and elegance, await you in this
3 bedroom, 3 bath CATHEDRAL CEILINGS,
dining room, (ireplace, carpets & drapes,
GOURMET KITCHEN, separate maids quar-
ters. Lovely POOL &. GARDENS. A lasting
investment in gracious living ....... $116,750.
REALTORS
644-7270
Sparkling, clean, freshly painted three bed·
room home with nice carpeting, brick Bar-
b-que, panelled garage and many more ex-
tras. Just lovely for family life and enter·
taining. VA/FHA TERMS, and priced right
at $80,500.
2821 EAST COAST HIGHWAY
CORONA DEL MAR, CALIF.
CAN'T FIND IT? • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
BE ENVIED
Three lovely well-planned units only two
years young. UPPER BAY area · excellent
EASTSIDE COSTA MESA rental area.
One THREE-BEDROOM, 2 bath home unit
with shake roof and quality shag carpeting.
Grand piano-size living room with fireplace.
A wall of fine finished cupboards separates
the dining room and large kitchen. Cove.red
patio, .fully enclosed back yard, and double
garage.
PLUS
Two 2-bedroom apartments with large Jiving
room, convenient kitchens and cheery dinette
area. Desi~ned for privacv and easy main·
tenance. TOP VALUE AT $69,500 for all
three units:
FAMILY LIFE UNLIMITED
Immaculate FOUR BDRM., 2 bath home with
rear living room. Fireplace, huge fami1y
room, wet bar, carpets. drapes and sprinklers.
Newly decorated in and out. Conveniently
located. $32,000 FHA OR VA.
IF YOU'RE FAR-SIGHTED
You'll recognize the POTENTIAL of this
Fixer·Upper. One Bedroom, One Bath home
with 1 ~ Car Garage. ZONED R·2. $18,950.
NO MORE WISHING
A bout space with four bedrooms. 3 baths,
plus familv room. And a real dining room!
z.story CAPE-COD type, large side y.-rd, quiet
CUL-DE-SAC. 2 car garage. ,43,000.
c 0 L UJ ELL P RO P ERTIES, INC.
REAL ESTATE
220 E.17 t hSt.
Costa Mesa 646-0555 • 549-1910
Evtnlng1 Ctll 979-1907 or 541-4569
Gener•I Gener•I __ 5_B_e_dr_oo_m__ OPEN HOUSES
Sat le Sun. 1-5 pm Harbor View Hiiis s br, 3\1 "" home
lllSt lllted so caU quickly on Duplex, 3 br I: 2 br
th1' well dtilgned hOme for Tripltx, 4 br, 4 br. 2 br
that """"'"' ramlly. i11 CALL: 61H225
H
* WILL BUil;D :YOUt dream General u>eneral
home. Have stiff for com·j'iiiiiiiii
plete home package. I•
Put your conftdenco In our
49 years of quality custom
home bulldlng.
~ example ol product at
:ioo& Galaxy, Doftr Shora.
Ivan Wells & Sons
A Rare Find
Newport .Heights
2 Story Building
Ju11t came on the m~el for
the firs! lime. 5 bedrooms, 3
baths. 65x150' lot 1~~ blockz
from Harbor HI. Great
family room. Immaculate,
large ~ma. A true
delight to see. Priced rl~t
at $49,SOO. To see call
fW&.7171.
'.p~THE REAL
'",)i ~~'.f ~'.!:E~,~
OPEN SAT/SUN. 1-5
614 POWELL
NEWPORT HEIGHTS
4 Bdrm., 2 b8th1: l1llO 1111· tt.
2 Used brick frple1. Qu!@t,
cul de sac 1lrttl. Walk to
Newport High .l erammar
school
$43,500 * 67>5726 *
'f"'t:S._ ,_
..-s~~ '''"''''s
DREAM HOME
$23,950
Manicured yard, bl!ns, dttp
shag CBrpellnc. do u b J e
garage, 3 br l 2 ba, Try
10?0 down, juat liM.ed. Hur· ..,,
. Call 54:>-M2"' Copen eves.)
1.rniq~~
THE BEST HOMES ......
... IN THE BEST AREAS
IN COVER SHORES: A 4 Bed•oom
There's a pool and the floor plan is designed
for family living and casual entertaining. Out-
standing pool area with cool deck_ing and low
maintenance, yet graceful surroundings.
Large formal dining and some bay view from
the promenade deck.
PRESENTED AT $17.000. e PHONE 67>6000
----o ---
IN MESA .VERDE : A Four Bedroom
A two story with three baths, a family room,
formal dining and a sunken living room.
Close shag carpet wall to wall throughout
kitchen, family room and bath. Rich wall
tones and pflpers. Neat yard. nice kids on
the block and near park and school .
PRESENTED AT $45,950. e PHONE .W..5990
2«3 East Cont Hiahw.-Y coron. a.I Mar' 87~ 28!50 Me-V•rcM Dl"IV9
Cotta Me-5"6-~990
'llewport '&f.Gdi·co:mlng IOOll
. -------
both& • Spaclollll kltdlfn
with eating space, plU1 "9tp.
dinl~ room. 85 foot '-'OI"
ner<d lot • W<ll lani!Jc<ped,
Aakq 174,900 Fine v3'ue In
,hut loCltlon caU ~.
1-0/THEREAL
·.'"'\:'. ESTATERS
. t R
' 1-Gen~-•r_•_l~~~~~1 G-•-ne~r•-'~~~~~
, DOLL HOU$E MEN LIKE
Hom• & lnvt1lmtnt ..,·'=R"'ED"'U""C::E"'D:-7$4.,..,000=-. -1Ea.s talc!< c.or. M' ' CONSTRUCTION
I 'i ',1 I I/
FIXER UPPER
Bnl: value -prime loct·
OOn. 3BR 2BA, family room,
all bltM I: corner toe. For lhe handyman and bqaln
·hlmtot -1211,SGO.
;C'all M6-M24 (open tva.)
Rtolly 119 950 tun ~ ' ~· am E. Cout }fwy., CdM Open I-louse sun. Feb. 27 ~ al ,!,. cedo. I!..'!° Ladlt'S li,lce OO'fl'lfort, eue ofl 10 am II) 6 pm In ..,.,., wn r fl.I•.
* 2 FOR 1 * Oo.rline hotnlt aituat~d on m1:1!n1tnitnc.•t'. both like tho I . If you fire looking tor 111n h R 2 lot Kl . 11re111ue of 3 tlM home In a 'h BLK TO BEACH ete1ant 3 8f, pool ·home In : • , ng-11re i:roo<I ~ighborhoorl Hert'•
• one of Newport'• flnc111 rooms, trtt•t O'.IUntry· 011" you will Uk; ln the Like oew 24t)r. 4 Bit .. 2 ba., a.real &: you want a REAL st)'lt1 kltchien, aJIO loll of . 1 11 001
formt.1 din rm., bllna; Wn. BARG°AtN _This ls It! Now tret1. Whal a plaetl Let'• ~ring, 4
1=· ~ a
nn. W/wet be.r ~ BBQ. only $58,500. _ $t,IXXl hektw lhDw It to )'OU, Call a:it~~loled pal'lo~ ~::: =.;.:. t";,·,duu:. ::.-i· Many, many ... Walker & lee 147"'°10·
Also • <:\alt 2 BR. c:otta(t. 1107 TRADE WINDS Both only 114,900. '4~ llttltonr OPEN llUllDAY5 1-1 ____ ___,, ___ mo ll&rbor Blvd. at Adami
~nerel
NEW -OCEANFRONT
INCOME PROPERTY
Six large units on New.PC?rt's beautiful beach,
located close to all activities. Property avail.
for !irsl user deprec. Ready to go for surn-
n1er rentals.
OPEN OAILY 1-4 900 E. OCEANFRONT
LOVE IT-FORGET IT
Delightful Bluffs 3 Bdrm .. 2~J bath, on green·
belt in secluded area. \Vhen you leave to\1•11
-Just close the door & walk a\vuy.
OFFERED AT $42.500
NEW LISTING
Eastbluff 4 bedroom. 21h bathl'I. View
Offered at $49.500
CORBIN-MARTIN
REALTORS . 644·7662
Newport· Corona del Mar • Cost• Mesa
General
CLOSE TO BEACH
Large J BR. 2 ba. duplex
""ilh 3 Hreplnce1'.
$55,lm · TEru.ts
George Will iamson
Realtor
54~570 645-1564
General
* BAYSHORES *
2 BH, l'OUY. dt'n, 2 bn .• 2 ()a·
I ~; 1lbl. gar.: profe11~. df'r·
or lhroour ill{'. shutter5.
--GEM--L
1610 W. Coa31 H>Ay., N.B.
RJ.:AL TORS fi.12-4623
Gtneral
MACNAB-IRVINE '
PIN&.R HOMES
Ja x B/iieJ Cure
:Jripfex a11,/, J/011Je
Room to build addit1011ul tr1plcx. Good rental
area. Extra large lot.
CAL L LOIS M!LLEH 642·8235
_,J} 1
Wcnnan '1 Jou ch
I las been given lo this sluny bright 3 bed-
roon1 & fa1nily roon1 boine. Sharp and in1-
1nac11late. Lovely \Yhitc brick. fir eplace.
1\ pi:.ice to tlt your pur~e. $29,950
rALL LOIS MILLEfl ti42·823a
MACNAB·IRVINE
REALTY COMPANY
644·6200 642-8235
Harbor View Center 901 Dovtr' Drive
1644 MecArthur Blvd.
NEWPORT BEACH
~ tllh ...., 4hectory wttll ,.. tlll1 WMleM • Y•• t• fle .... •u•tl111. Art the lecetle1t1 It.re.I hlew ....
-.Crlbe4 le tfffMf detoH by -'"'thl"t elMWMN 111 .. lllcry'1 DAILY PILOT WANT ADS. Petr•ftl. •wl11t .,..
'--fof Ml• .., to nHlt eN •rtecl te 1111 llKli lllfon1Mtle11 111 tld1 c•h•"'• eacli p,1d1y 1MI s.t11ufey.
HOUSES FOR SALE
(2 Bedroom)
**2718 Shell (China Cove), CdM
644-7270 (Sa l&. Sun 11-5)
(2 Br & Family Rm or Oen)
613 Poinsettia, Co rona def Mar
. 675-3000, $48,500 (Sun 1·5)
26 Beacon Bay, Newport Beach
642-8235 rsun 1-5)
(3 Bed•oom\
451 Cabrillo. Cos ta Mesa
548-5003, $33 ,000 (Shown by app't)
1819 Port Kimberly (Harbor Vu Homes)
NB, 644-7270 (Sat&. Sun 1-5)
*4539 Roxbury (Cameo Shores) CdM
644-7270 . (Sun 1·5)
1026 Sea Lane rHarbor Vu Hills) CdM
675-3000. $50,000 (Sun 1-5)
2605 Vista Ornada (Tb~ Bluffs) NB
675-3000, $49, 750 (Sun 1-5)
2004 Vista Cajon (Tbe Bluffs), NB
675-3000, $46,000 (Sun 1·5)
221 Milford (Cameo Shores), CdM
· 644-6200, $89,500 (Sat&. Sun 1-5)
** 106 Linda Isle. Linda Isle
642-8235, $134,500 (Sun 1-5)
1860 Port Wheeler Place (Harbor View
Homes) NB. 644-2430, $48,900 (Sun 1-5)
(3 Br & Family Rm or Oen)
2036 Galaxy Dr .. Dover Shores
646-1550, $89,200 (Dail y 10-5)
1915 Tradewind< (Baycrest) NB
642-8235. $66,500 (Sun 1-5)
1447 Galaxy Dr. !Dover Shores) NB
642-8235. $89,500 !Sun 1-5)
1808 Port Charles (Harbor View Homes)
NB, 644-6200, $51,900 (Sun I-4, sat 1-5 )
*263 Ocean View (Newport Hei~hts) NB
642-8235, $89,500 (Sun 1-5)
2313 Redlands. Newport Beach
642-8235, $48,500 (Sal&. Sun 12-5)
!1020 Cleveland, c'osta Mesa
$29,950 (Sa t&. Sun)
*!105 Kings Place (Cliffhaven) NB
642-5200, $58,500 (Sun 1-5)
1601 Tradewinds (Baycrest ) NB
642-5200, $55,500 (Sat&. Sun 1-5)
43.1 16th Place. Newport Heights
642-5200, $39,950 (Sun 1-5)
2042 Galaxy. Newport Beach
644-4910. $79,500 (Sat &. Sun 1-5: 30)
2473 Montrey Way, Newport Riveria
641;.7171 !Sun 1·5)
* 1901 Kings Rd ., Newport Heights
646-7171 <Sun 1-5)
14 Bedroom)
*4;.15 Orrington (Cameo Shores). CdM
644-1133, $92,500 (Sat&. Sun 1-4 )
614 Powell Place (Newport Height>), NB
675-5726 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
129 Turquoise ( BalbOa Island)
644-7270 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
*1723 Terrapin IBaycrest), NB
675-3000. $69,500 ISun 1·5)
*2815 Harbor View Dr., (Harbor View
Hills), CdM, 675-3000 , $77,500 (Sun 1-5)
(4 Br & Fomlly Rm or Otn)
2407 Windward Lane, Newport' Beach
646-596.1, $74,500 (Sat &. Sun 12-5)
2024 Galaxy Dr . (Dover Shores). NB
646-!SSO. ,120,500 !Dally 10-5)
*160!l Antigua (Baycrest) NB
642-8235, $89,500 (Sun 1·5)
::11 Augu•ta Lane, Big Canyon
642-8236, $97,800 (Sat & Sun 12-5)
**507 Bayside Dr .. Newport Beach
642-8235 (Sat&. Sun 1-5)
#29 Augusta Lane. Big Ca nyon
642-8235, $89,900 (Snt &. Sun lZ.51
2901 Catalpa IEastbluff), NB
644-6200 I Sat &. Sun 1-5)
**1641 Ba yside Dr., Corona de! Mar
675-1935 <Dally)
1001 Hampshire Lane I Ba.vcrest) NB
644-2430, $94,500 (Sat & Sun 1-4?
994 Sandcastle (Harbor View Hills) CdM
644-2430, $69,500 (Sun 1-5)
1707 Candlestlck Lane (Baycrest) NB
644-2430, $74,500 (Sun 1-5)
**8 Unda Isle Dr., (Linda Isle) NB
644-4910, $155,000 (Sat&. S\m 1-5:30)
1741 Point Sheffield !Harbor View Homes)
NB, 644-4910, $68,500 (Sat&. Sun 1-5:30)
**46 Linda Isle (Linda Isle) NB
644-4910, $250,000 (Sun 1-5:30)
245 Tulane Rd. (Co llege Park) CM
$83,500 (Sat & Sun 12-6)
20!10 Baltra (Mesa Verde) Costa Mesa
540--0204, $45,700 (Sat & Sun 10-5)
15 Br & Ftmlly Rm or Dtn)
2006 Galaxy Dr .. !Dover Shores), NB
646-1550, $151,000 (Daily 10-5)
**309 Evenlcg Star (Dover Shores) NB
642-8235, $169,500 (Sat &. Sun 1-5)
2495 Monaco (Irvine Terrace) CdM
644-2430, $198,500 (Sat & Sun 2-5)
3007 Park Green Dr., Corona del Mar
675-7225, 644-7767 (Sat &. Sun 1-5)
16 Pinehurst Lane (Big Canyon CC) NB
644-4910, $98,500 !Sat &. Sun 1-5 :30)
2401 Margaret, Newport Heights
646,7171 (Sat 1·5)
CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE
(3 Bed•oom)
308 Otero (The llluUs) Newport Beach
57;.5930 (Sun 1-5)
DUPLEXES FOR SALE
(I Br&2B•l
700 Begonia, Corona del Mar
673-6510 (Sat&. Sun)
(18r&3Br)
309-311 HeUotrope, Corona del Mar
673-6510 (Sun 1-5)
(2 Br& 2 Br)
408 Dahlia, Corona dcl Mar ·
644-8034 (Shown by app't)
f2Br&2Brl
4506 IV. Balboa Blvd .. Newport Beach
642-5200, $53,9SO (Sat &. Sun 1·5)
f3 Bedroom• I
420 Marquerite, Corona del Mar
673-8550, $59,500 rSat &. Sun 1-5 :!10)
(3 Br,& 2 Br)
5119 Ri ver, Newport Beach
675-7225 <Sat&. Sun 1-5)
(4 Br &2Br)
Corner Ooan &. So Bav. Balboa b land
675-6775, $167,000 (Sat & Sun 1·5)
TRIPLEXES FOR SALE
(2-3 Br. & 1-2 Br)
3507 Finley, Newport Beach
675-7225 (Sun 1-5)
HOME & INCOME
(2 BR Homt and 2 BR Af"'rlmont)
439 Heliotrope, Corona del Mar
644-4910. $72,500 (Sat&. Sun 1-5 :!10)
WATERFRONT LOTS FOR SALE
**1641 Bayside Dr., Corona de! Mar
675-1935 (Dally)
1tPMI * 'ttWeNrfrfft * * *''"' .... Wetetfr9'1t
-o'THEREAL
"'-ESTATERS . " . ·~ CAvwoop nEALl'Y 548-1290 _c.J_t &1_Mn1 __ ,_,.-+"'-' __ ,_s_ll-0_1GS_Ot><-"--n-'_tn_1_P_1 4' ~~~~~~~~ !.!::::::==========:;:=========~;::======:J
' ' • ~i
I
'\
l :JI OAJl Y PILOT
-I
frldl1, f-J 25, 1912
I~ r -.. SM< I~ .__I -_-1o1e_.JJ~ [ -~.. I~ I _ ....
t I~
r
I
..
GtMtal Genertl Gener•I Gintr•I Cotorta clef Mer j;:;;i;;:--T--f;;;A;;H~O;;;U:;S--f;;;o--f;;;t;;;h;;;1;i;A~U:;G--U:;--ST~MOO~~N:;;;;;;;;;liiiiiiiiiiiii~ijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ~~':tti: $100 Total
A true oriental fanta.y, overlooking the bay f) tR ~ & DUPLEX
bv day & IW!nklln2 l12hts by nltht Located './. l lf 'l on Bayadere Terrace in exclU$lve Irvine Ter· '• ti ti arre ea LU' Now finished A ttady to
race & nestled into a hillsifte. Secluded & d , ;::: ~~ ~a.rpn:w 1:,:
Down Payment
plus clolin&' coatt vet.I or
Jl'HA. Sun btatt n!ntln&. 4
bedroom•. 2 baths, added
pa.oded famil)' room, oorne.r
lot in Colla Mua. $24,001,
Call,
resUuJ atmosphere for Ut1.s unique home \Vith l:J er'• unit•, with 2 bdmu. ti
4 bedrooms & baths, including soothing Jap-pre6en, famll¥ rm., 2 balhl: trpte.
anese Furo Oke tub. Formal dining room, F.A. beat; blt.na, carpet-.
perched on the hill, with breathtaking views. CHECK UST FOR IUYERS A turtllc ""'"'"1Y tor ,ou
Dramat.ic sunken Jiving room, spacious S\Vim· MORGAN REAL TY ming pool in lovely Oriental garden, By ap-STABLE AND BARN, 2 bed.room, Back Bay, 67U642 67Sr645f
Walker & Lee
pointment. $187,400. 00 ~'acre. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · $44,050. 8achtlor'1 Paradtae Realtors
2700 Harbor 61vd,. a.I Adam.a
Yachtman's palatial home \Vith large pier &
slip. Elegant & ne\v, \\ ith very expensive ap-
pointments & refinements. Tastefully design·
ed & carefully built. 5 Spacious bedrooms,
bayside family room, 3 fireplaces. 2 Profes·
sional bars. Exp.an!tive bayside terrace.
$285,000,
CAMEO SHORES • VIEW
Executive's home on large VIEW lot, with
swimming pool , family room, 3 bedrooms &
servant's quarters. Dramatic design \\'ith for·
mal gardens on front terrace. Restful water·
fall, spacious dining room, $117,000.
HARBOR
COMPANY .
REALTORS
"SINCE 1944"
673-4400
Gentr1l General
MODERN SPANISH
, IN DOVER SHORES
Luxurious 4 bedrm, 3 bath + pwdr rm, lam,
ily rm \V/walk·in bar & fireplace, fbrmal
din, rm, Courtyd pool, fantastic VIEW, Super
plush inside and out $137,500,
ROY J. WARD REALTORS
SMALL RANCHO, 35 Acres, w/2 Bedroom 700 819onla
hon1e. . ......................... $3~.000. Just what you need to beat
the JR!, Llve In the nttlt
BAYCRfST·POOL, 3 Bedroom, dining room, 'tud!o apt, coll<ct ms Mo,
family room plus bobby room. ' .... $53,500. from the coiy 2 bdrm. home.
Only $5,COO down. CLIFFHAVEN.CUSTOM. 3 Bedroom, din,, Open Sat. & Sun.
den & pooL Fee land. , , , , , , , , , , , , '58,500, University RHlty
BAYCREST, vacant and ready 3 bedrooms, 3001 E. cm JJwy 673·6510
den and family/dining room, , . , , , , $55,500, FOR Sal" PANORAMIC
VIE'\\', 4 BR, 3 tull baths, BLUFFS, FranC'iscan 3 bedroom & dining Hv rm., ram. rm. all ap.
room. Many extras. . ............. $48,500. pliances. Fully crptd., a.II
NEWPORT HEIGHTS, huge family room with drapes, 2-atr i a r a i e ·
f la 3 bed Proreuional lndscpd. Loca-irep ce, rooms and dining roon1. uon, HarOOr Vlew Hllh;,
, , , , , ,, , , , , , , ,, , , , ,, , , , , , , , , , , , $39,950. Mint cond, Aaldng $79,900,
LAURELHURST, immaculate 3 bedroom, '4t-250t
515-9'91 Optn 'til 9 Pl\f
BY Owner: Xtra Lrg 4 Br. 2
ba, corn. Jot. Rm klr boat.
124,900, ~59,
East Bluff
OPEN SUN. l·S
llard to find "E" Plan con.
do. in the ~cirable Bluffs.
A 6 mog, nel\', charming 3
bdrm .. 3 bn. & lge. family
rm,
30a OTERO
(Vista. Dt'I Oro to Vista
Ornada, to Otero).
convertible den, , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , .$27,950, 'MOVE IN CONDITION
1.S ACRE ESTATE, spacious 3 bedroom, O\\ner sho\ving this spark!-362'.J E. Coast Hwy., CdM
b t'I I I d , I h & I ;,,. 2 BR,, ! BA home, * 67S.5930 * eau 1 u an scap1ng, rm or orses poo . Fl'{>lC'., lovely yard, space =""=':':=-,-..,~~-
.. , . , , , • , , , . , ............ , , ... , $89,500. for boat + R-2 lot. OPEN JO cumt 2 Br, a~clous living
& master rms. Pr i n c BAYFRONT, 3 bedroom and guest house, ~~~1• & Sun. or call ONLY. $.52,500. aft 5:30
pier and float ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, $169,500, 6#-5510.
OPEN SAT. & SUN, Fount. aln V1ll1• INCOME UNITS Harbor Vltw Hom11 '
Newport Duplex,2 bedrooms each $53,950, 4 Be, 2ba & tam nn, Country $1,825. DOWN
Two yr, old duplex, 3 & 2. Newport $58,000. French decor, $49,500, 1836
Four Units. Top rental area, nr·ne'v p 0 rt \Vestbourne, NB 4 BR plus bonus room
... , .....•...• , . , .• , ....•.... $79,500. £44-4034. Boy! \Vhat a buy! A lovely
home with Ju lot, clean as Twelve units & Coffee Shop, Newpt Blvd· BEAµTJFUL location 2 a pln, gd crfts & drp'f and
Will exchange. . . , , .....•.... $139,500. story, 5 br, 4 ha, 3 frplc. a fantastic hm?W room.
Agent 57;;...7225 1-IIR All elect kit, din rm, 2 car
Irvine Terr. View gar. Nr Warner & Bushard.
Charming 2 Bedroom & Den-Paymts leu than rent.
2 Ba., ideal for 11\·o. $57,500. If
TEO HUBERT ASSOC. 111.ige Reel [sti le •
Offlc1 Open S1turdays & Sundays
PETE BARRITT REAL TY
1605 WMlcllff Dr .. N.B.
642-5200
Gener el General _.,. _________ ...,..._
OPPORTUNITY
34n v;a Lldo 67~8500 531·5tol C ::::1 531·5110
DUPLEX -So oI h"'Y· 2 Br, DESIRABLE 4 BR condo. nr
1 ba each unit. Completely schls, access to pvt club -
remvated & prof decorated. h.se 8c pool. n-4--557-8582.
Call 64-J-8034. UNPRETENTIOUS HARBOR VIEW HOME Huntlngt°" BHch
Opportunity tor two licenatd SECLUSION 2 BR & d•n • • 64+1010 $19, 950
Real Estate people. Prime c a.a_
location, good walk In lt'af, O.tlghtlul family horn• In osla ~H IS THE PRICE
fie, unlimited potential. tranquil park like setting in VACANT & READY for this very lovely 3 1~""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'~""'!!!!'l"'""'""'""'""'"""[ Well establlshed oUlce -Upper Bay area ~f Ne~~ SHARP EASTSIDE HOI\tt bedroom. 2 hath home. The 'G.ner•I General 18 yrs one location! Your Beach. Large llvrng, din1n51 * 3 Big bednns Joan is high enough that you
1649 WESTCLIFF DR., N,8, 646-0228
I-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;:;;; •;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;:;.[ own desk & phone. Call for & family_rooms. Two raised * 2 Full baths. · can assume wtth payments
I• • intervle\\'. hearth fireplo.cesnlensant * Plush sha .. crpt of $160 per month which in. SEA LOVERS ALMOST ''N E W'' builtin kltchen \\ilh eating * 55' x 140' blot . eludes all. Modem built-in!>,
Just lifl.erl, that hard-to-find.
large 5 bedroon1 hOmC'
located only % mile from
tbe ocean. Huge fam rm.,
formal dining, marble entry
wa,y with step down Hvlng
nn. This art~t-OWned home
has unique wood panels and
area Md separate utility * Boat access deep pile carpets, nlso
HARBOR Vl.EW 1-IJLLS ~m. Gen_erous rnaBter * $27,500 lull price
4 Bedrm (could be 6 Bed· StUtf', beautifully rnanicur· FHA/VA TERMS AVAIL.• n1atching drapes. Double
tms), 3 Baths, large family 00 grounds and much more. *FULLER REAL TY* garage to boot! CALL
rm w/fJreplace, ldscpd rear Ofc 64&-3928 Res 673-4577 $59.500. On fee land. 546-0814 "--...i-W I k & L yanl, $84,500, land includ•d. Call 540rll51 (()pon I ............ ~~·~·• a er ee
NEED DOUBLE DUTY ev'8, NEAR PARK Realtors
OCCUPANCY? Doub!< lleau!yo Thi• ""' l~Mll 4· Bdcms, 2 baths, FA heat, 545-!ll91
4 LAR urious family home has the M •• ing, new Cpt/drps, large ''HI-HO SILVER"
GE Bedrms, 2% baths, 1.~;;~~;;;;;;;:;1 ard N comfort and stimulation of Y • ear Newport Hts. & carpeting &: parquet floors 2 doo ~ ' ' desi. ..... that will unite every rs uum Park A play. °'1.'Mel' says take it away, \V/Del Pi.90 tile entry, 2 .,.. OWNER tran. S ' h t I und $29 member of the family &.nd • panis s Y • gro · ,900. w'h.ich makes it euy to ac·
Huntlngfon 8Hch
WEEKEND
SPECIALS
1. l!ANDYMAN v{J12500 cash
will 1ee potent!at In thla:
home. \Valk to beach, po.rk
& achooll!. Lrt llvfng J;'OOm
w/frplc, J Bedroom-ONLY
$24,900
Irvine lrvl"•
•
2. TRANSFERRED 01mer
mu11t leave. Submit otter.
-SOLD-~~~;;v;c,;;~~HE' I •1
::;.=:•w::O:::v;;;1:;;;Ew=::v;;;;1 E;;;;W;I
3, VACANT, Spanl1h w/tile
roof, 2 trplc'1, Flim.11¥ mi',
secluded 4tn. 3-cv garage,
boot door. 4 Bedroon1s.
Room tor poot Immed
posse.sa, SUBMIT OFFER.
CURTAIN" From Via Menlna "'" can see all the wl.)' to Chtna. A
beautiful <I bdrm., 2 • ba.
Prt11d'et Jtome with 3 car
gar&Je and pool 11ize lot.
$81,990.
r~or Professional Service
in BuyiJli or SelliJli
Call JUNE BLAIR
Bkr's Agt. 96&-7m
14 Years Experience
•••• c;1 ••••
l\u n10ney needed, seller
pays all costs. First paymt
not 'Iii June 1st, 1972. 4 BR,
featuring firepl, eltct bl!Jn
R/O, dishwshr, serv Porch,
oversized dbl gar. lg tam
rn1, prestige nbrhood.
$32,000. F. P. This one iii a
fantastic buy!
1ll,1ge Re.ii Est 11•
Th.ls Huntington Beach beau--
ty is d~slgned ~nd built for
modem Uving with this ad-
ded feature of a 15xro rt.
tam.Hy room decora.tl!d in
excellent taste. TomoITOw
may be too late so don't
\vai.L ••. Call 842-2535.
'(iredhill
RE.A!.TY
lJni\I. Park Ceuter, Irvine c..n Anytime, 833-0820
--=-~-=-
Ybu'H Uke It!
Beautifully upgraded l BR,
2 BA, "Cambrl.d(e" model
Tow~ tn Univ. Park.
Prof. huu:lscpd atriwn. pa.
tio, xtras. End unH w/prlme
green belt loc. near pool.
tennls col!l'ts & ah&pplna. $35,500,
Call Owner 833-9131 'O 'THEREAL 1,,,.,J. E§J{lJ:ERl'! I' "M471 c:.::114MlH
235 PROGRAM $185 Per Mo. opfN SAT It SUN U.S 5
17&16 Rockrole Way oU
Seton, 3 BR, 211 BA, FR,
Tbat'.1 .Ji.ibt! A sbarp 2 BR Total payment IOr thit 3 Bed· m&ey xtru, $32,Sl'XI. Owner
condo w/$200. dn, and Gov't rm "'ithrum.pu1 room. Coun-~-__ 2335.:,-;,."""=':':.·~--
helpe: with the mo ~ta. try kit. a: extra tee fncd L•1utt• a..ch •
Huny, this \\'ill go fast. yard, Harry this \l1>n't last _-..,,_.,;.."-"'----
Price incls crpt:1, drps, re· at $21,000~ ROOM TO
rr;g, wsht', dry!' & blliu., Roberts l Co, 9'2-5511 GROW Also avail 2BR w /firepl,
same cond a.s above, \vill eo WALK to the BEACH \Valk to lfCbool., bea.cb &
121·02 program -that'• from this near new 4 bednn J1hopping from thiJ ,mo ,q.
still $~ total dn. Call home featuring bltin R/O, ti. family delliht. The euy
today! dsh\\.·shr & nice shag crptg. floor plan can hr custom
I' Full price $25,500. GI & FlfA tailored into 4 to 6 bdrtni!I.,
terms. Chl.·ner will help pay with large living room I
531·5111 I :::.1 531·5111 s'H~wee~1~~8i:'iy ~=:~,,,'":;'!d.';,1.:~
* STEAL' THIS HOME 18964 Bn>okh"""· F,V, pa!lo lend charm A Warmth
BY O\VNER -Charming 3 to one of Laguna'a most
Garden Kitchert· Bdrm home. Nw upgraded unulU&l properties. $65,9()0
NE\V SHAG CARPETS ocpt 'g lhru-<1ut/kitchen (1-1)
J King Sz Bedrooms crpt'g. Lrg 7Qxl00 fe~d
All Brick Fireplace corner lot. A·l Condition.
Here is a lovely tamily home Beach area. $26,iiiO. VA,
close tp the ocean. All bltns, FHA or CONV. ~n c.
I. 2 tile bath!.. Sparkling I ~!162-=7-31~3~, =~--~
clean lit: ready for, insiiec-OPEN HOUSE SAT.&: SUN
tion! ! ! 213!2 Greenboro • Lane
$27,500
Roberts. I. Co. 962·5511
SHOWCASE
vlOtan
REAL ESTATE
llilO GJl."'Meyre St.
494-9473 549--0316
SOUTH LAOUNA-
" many ban:! carved treasures
that can be yoors for
$43,000. You must see this
home lo believe lts value! • v. COATS
covered pe.tioll, Eastside eel with th ti I still ii segrtgates the . au en c arc.ies, CALL '-". 64,•1414 quire. No do\vn payment
C.M. $46,SOO. chiJdren for their activities. pillars, & wrought iron 91•-' and owner will pay your
3 B<lnns upstairs, large fences, Rich wood paneling, ,~ closing coslo;, balance is Jess
Owner txlra ·sharp 3 BR, 2
BA. ram nn. plush shag ept
& cust. dtp11 thru<>ut. Under
2 yrs old, corner lot. $33,900.
NEAR· THE-BEACH, 4 Bed-SUmm~rtield f Se a bury )
rm, 3 Bath, family rm. 'l'ract. 536-7239'
OCEAN,RONT
Beaut. 4 Bit, 3 be. 11pllt level
furn, home "'/priv. stairway
to Sercft.t Cove Beach: fonn·
er home of Charlie Chaplin.
31899 Sea Clift Dr .. by appt. WA~LACE family room down staJra. huge family rm .• entry hall, R.£AL TY than rent. This Huntington
Priced at $33,950. 847...ooio. rear living rm., brk. $30,500. Near Ne•••rt P••I O/flte Beach Beauty is only ;, REAL TORI
Open Evenings
• 962-4454 •
It·===== 1• MESA BARGAINl!r ~-'---~~
MODERN BEAUTY 3 + FOJlMAL $25,750 • No Down
\~, ·THE REAL ~ ESTATERS ,, '' '.,. ' " ' .
Medieval price, terms -3 bedroom, 2 bath,
no down VA DINING secluded living room en-
3 Bedt'OOm • luge fam!!y POOL $20 000111 hanced by appealing 1;,., room or 5 bedroom euy con· • 1 ••• place. Patio. Jr. estate
version, separate dining HONEYMOON SPECIAL! sized grounds, Alr condi-
Call collect. 962.-1373. ONE OF COSI'A MESA'S .$28,950,' Hurry Call 842-2535.
OWNER anxious cri.!ls-cross BEST BUYS. $23,500. &
Colonial CaP' Cod W-WI, Spic & ,... in & OUL 3 lrg, l!''flQ'l·I"{~,~ shutters decorative rooI queen sue bdnm., lovely 1Wi'ii ii_
line built-ins large kitchen kitch & live nn., bath
paniry, h .... Paneled family w/tub " sbowec, 3 lrg CALIF CLASSIC
nn., 3 bdrms + den· brk, pat.ios-1 c:overed, Park boat
$28,500. 842-6691. & trlr m te~d. bk yd. 3 BR 2 BA, bonus rm -
Assume 5~ % 1st T.D, could be 2 BR &: Jrg family
OWNER leaving. Assume Owner w/carry 2nd. after rm. Best ~rps. Priced
6~!% loan, apr. -4 Bdrm., 3 small dn. pymt. 645-0231. tor quick , V ta no dO\vtl,
baths, circular drive to 2 OPEN 1-IOUSE Sat & Sun or 5% to loan. Call
el~. kitch. Teenager or I~=~---=~=
mother-in-law room & bath BEAUT. area. 6962 Rio
separate. Best Showcase Vista. 3 yr. old, 3 Br .• ad-
floor plan. $39,900. Call joins H.B. Central Park.
842-4466 Xlnt 11hops, school, near
ocun. sls,00'.l. Real Estate
Store No. 5. Agl. (213)
RF.DllCTO fle'l.000
EMERALD llAY LOT
Lar911t Vlaw Lii
1127 EmeraJd Bay, , .$90,000
FC>r lots &: holT'"!S cnll:
8111 Orvncly, RHl!w I ea<lership .U REAL ESTATE
TROPICAL PARADISE
3 llR + 2 llR + POOL
$24,900.
439-Jru. 341 Bay~'~-?. f\•.,•t Blach
GREAT family home-For ,;;;:;:,,-=6::7.:S-6~16"1;,,.==· I
Sale by 0\\-ner. 4 BR, 3BA. While water -UNOBSTRUC.
2500 sq. fL New ahag cpt'g, TABLE -view twlm this
paint & paper. Close to 2-levd, 3-bdrm, 2\i bath,
scl1ls & 1 ml frcm bch. exciting, happy, bOme built
$3.S,COO Prine. only. 962-8983. on two Iota. Room to expand
rooni. buillin kitchen, fin· Giant living room opens to tioner, llhag carpeting.
ished garage incl tiled floor. large FORMAL DINING Near schools & shopping.
11 Large yard. North C.M. lo-R001'1! 3 king size bed-540..1720.
cation nr sch o o Is & rooms. 2 baths. PRIVATE
churches. SHARP -CLE.AN ENCLOSED PATIO! Spark·
_ NEAT -FHA -VA -ling pool! Act quick on this TARBELL
story New England styled l0-5 J"\...--_. __ ,.:..A · 842-4466
home. Picture windowa, ·. vw•ft::I· l'UlhNWI. Lrg.
shutters, family rm.. brk. Family Home. B e a u t.
trees $38 500 962.5566 yards. Prof. decorated 4 · ' · · BR, den, torm&l din rm.
•eade rship IJ REAL ESTATE
Best value in a..tta. w/w car-
pets in. ,kitchen A: dininC
room, beaut large pool SUI'·
rounded by xlnt tdscpg! SUb-
mU! Call 347·1221 ,
SEYMOUR REALTY.
1n41 Beach'Blvd., Htmt. Bch.
MEREDI'MI Gardens, 4 Br.,
2~~ Ba .. paneled ram. rm.,
cust. cpts, ;fr: drpr. Heated
pool. $51,IO'J. By owner.
968-3$2,
and grow. All built/in
kitchen -and vacuum!
\Vatch the DEER from the
back wtndowl -th@
~ f'roO'I all the rest.
145,900 by OW!ttt, 49M513, ------
$28,700. bargain. Call now-645-0303 2955 Harbor, CO!ta. li-1esa O\VNER. lg -4 BR &: lam rm. 2000 sq, rt. Many custom ex-
3 BA, form din, a.uume In, tras! 2030 Baltra (Mesa
$39,950. Prine only 557-1823. Verde) $45,700. 54()..020t. $26,500 Call 540-1151 IOpen Eves.) r l'llRl:\l' [ 01.,0\
" PC/il !0}.'> '
Enjoy The Security
of this attractive home. In a
mo1t desirable arta. Walk-
ing distance to !hopping,
B•lboe lslend ONE half block to Westcllff 4 BDRM. • 3 YRS .
YOUNG
Near Beach ~ Shopping
--1 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiol schools, church, beach and I EASTSIDE CHARMER '' golf'°"""'· 847~10,
OPEN SAT/SUN 11-4
325 AMETHYST
shopping. Nice EaJtside
hon1e, 3 bdnn., 2 bath,
fireplact', large lot, built·
4 Bdrms., 2 ba. Close to ins. Assumable 51i4. % loan.
North Bay. $59,950. By owner. Principals only,
* Century 21 *
Rtol Estate I $22,000.
, TREES, TREES,
I TREES'
Spotless 2 bedroom hon1t'.
Plenty o( roo1n !or camper
! and boat. Guest area, "·ork·
!!hop. Lo''" lo1v do"'·n. Hurry,
at th is price ii ~111 !!!ell fast!
(
Lachenmyer
Realtor
$33,000, 543-0003, E.4STSIDE ·THE REAL
' ESTATER" ... -' ' -' . Solis bury
R, 1!tv
1'"ille 3 Bedroom hon1e on LOCATION, Quality, Ele-
larre lot to an alley. Cul· gance, Value. See this -4 Br,,
de-Mc street, named Rose· 3 Ba., 1925' beauly. Finest in
n1ary Pl .. c.~1. Price just VERY nice 3 BR, 2 car 315 MARINE AVE. 673-6900 College Park. Near schools,
reduced to a lo,,·, lo\v of iaraae. Shag cplJ, Covered BALBOA ISLAND coU<"le, shopping, Sell at
S2-l,500. \Vhosc first? All patio, fenced yard. By BalbH ltlend appraisal VA or. 540-83'ffi.
terms avail. Ol\'ner who will pay closing BY Anxious ov.'lll't, 4 BR. 2
842"821
17877 Beach .Blvd., H.B.
EXEC. Prestige "$1900."
$47,500 or make oUer. 4 bed·
room 3 bath, over 2400 11q
ft. lux area. All terms.
Near Douglas.
Walker & Lee cos!" Full Pri"' S22,7l0, OPEN SAT/SUN. 1,5 BA. LI>< Jtrl lot 15il X 55,
Newport \Vlt.b mln. dwn., tot a I New corner duplex _ Opal & block wall fences w/alley. ''Realtors
at monthly pymt. oI SIM. So. Bay, $167,000 SUnken Jiv. Priced to sell. 270 Palmer 968-3371
F , 8JGr.l672, nus, raised din, nn 4 SL, C.M, 548-4351 51'\ART MODERN
airview IN Sandpointe nr. South kltch., bea.m cell's. Fine BY ow-3 BR. • BA bltn "'" ' CU.tom built for luxury Uv· 646-8811 Coa&t Plaza. 1875 sq, ft. 4 waterfront proputy. 100 &a.I aquarium, pool0table Ing, 2 l>tdnn 2 bath, teatur-
1860 Newport Blvd., C.1.f. ( • ) Br., 2'11 Ba., For. din., tam. Hinger ~alty . 6~775 + many more extras. 17th 1na .unJr:eo flrep! wttb eon-l>C~.U':J:64!>39:"ii'i28~'i'Evi':'e1'i,~54S-865::',":1 I '.'!~~~~~·,.n,.yt!!!!tm"e"'' rm .• 2 blks to ele. schl. 12 130 Agate, Balboa Island & Irvine. $39,500. 646-Jm. venation area. all mod blt· I ~ 9 min. to NB It Cdi\I bcM. Balboe Penln1ule 1100 Sq. Ft &ride' R-2 cor tn kttcb. Prt:rne1 loe. nr Lakt $32, 50-No Down INVESTORS s1<og crpt, fltlly tand>caped, p •• •M 500 ~ ... M .. , ..
F --·• ·• Le ha 2 lot. 2 drlve\\-ays, nn for trlr a .... -· • ....u ::on!.!-. -u B• .,med by •po·;ng In this PARADISE .. t. "~ '"· " I n BALBOA Peninsula horn•, & boa! 3 BR Hx24 Uv rm CR""T REAL TY
WHILE OTHERS
SLEEP!
you can pick this up for
$20,500.
3BR 1%BA! Gd tnm!
HAl'fDAL RIAL tY
842-44<.6 Eves: 81'1-8202
S OUICK $
WE BUY HOMES
MR, KASABIAN ' 847rll604
KASABIAN
·REAL ESTATE
BY Owner: Leavtna area
mUJt. sell brand nu cost. bit
3 br, ~ ba hm. 1i1any Jux. xtras, $36,500 846r8389,
LA CUesta Hm. Shq dpt,
water softnr, 3 br, 2 ba,
form din. S37,SOO. !)68...78(}4.
Irvine JUST LISTED ao.. th, l,bdrm, bunr&Jow
NEW LISTI NOS on valuable R-2 tot, 121.!00.
Let wi bow )'OU the ever ·* "499·~ *
poputu model "Jull!al'd", 3 •. ~
BR. dlnina-rm., 2 baths, ~ ~
wtth !11 wonderlul •18x>l tt, ;;..o;,.c;;;.-H:ll<
bonus nn. (~9ible 4th ICUl'lf~ora
bdrm. Over 2,000 ICJ• ft. · · ~._...,....,,.....
From $37,500 to $39,950. * OCEAN VIEW *
. 3 &inn. contern. )oc. on Laaun&'• lamtd • RMm
coastline.. FrplCI, ope n
beanu, bltqt, view dtCkl,
dining area, 131.EOO.
~USSION REALTY 4~1.
NEfl a 'iii( 2 BAi ...,.,.,
~ hOrht,., Ootan """'· llU,. -IP tloiots Ir -tr>-~~~·1•••4. .,.,., f!!..JJ.fS. ~ ;
S~\\~lA-"i!/l.s·
Tli• Pinle with the lu/ff./n CliucAle
lovely 3 bedroom, 2 bRth•. yrs. old. By owner. $34,900. Quiet, near bay, nlce area. $25,00).byowiitr. ~. ·• ~
dtn, tamil.Y room home with NE\V on market -Ea.stside 5j7-~ltl or 832-9666. Call S3S-6169, 545--3&43. CiOYERNMENJ
most attractive rorm:tl dfn-~·Plex. Good condl.Uo11. High LUXURIOUS BAYCREST 1'-tESA Verde .f Br~ Owne't .OWNED
I
!
' ' • !
l
Ing room. elegant fi.repll\c(', 1nco~ne -10\v ma1ntena~ce. 4 Bdrms. 4 bath•. Elegantly S.ycre1t truf. Reduced to $.U,500. No FffA a VA rtOOQtdfd
bullt·ln dream kitchen. Cus-Anxious oy,•ntr h~s priced kept. $89,500. Drive by. S dn. VA. 1616 Elm Ave., .Townhouse• Ir hoJne .. Low
tom interior. Bettulitul patio thi1 property at only $46,000. 1317 MARINERS DR. KY'S TllE UMJT 557-6151. down.~ No ..... t..tJ ot i:aerow __ ,,_ ••· '·tu NO do VA t ·1 Watch the at.an through the!,,,~--,=~~,_,,~ '""'' overl<NIUI un; pa: resque \VD enn• AVIJ · And call us to 1ee ~llding root of thit beautiful BY Ownt'r. 3 BR, \Vtlled kit, ftt\ Gov't ~· cJoefnc
rear yard. 540-rm. Huny on ttd1 one. Balboa Ba.y Properties executive home. 4 Blt.. 3 Ba, OQse to achoall. Covered cotfl. AU JX'lct l"tQet. C...U
TARBELL
S llorbor, Costa Mtaa
Doll House
lo11th of Highway
/Ult !Isled. 2 Br .. 2 Bl. houN
Ori choit.'C' ft.J Jot. Ca1J tor
detailJ And appt. to Mt.
~-
Call 546-5880 (0Jldl Eves) * oo.-7491 * pool. formal dtnlnt 1 IJ\llf'll, paHo. 2195 Me.ya P 1. 96MMl c l~HlllTAGtl OWNER mov.,, Beautltul 196,500, Euy t<'rml. 64&rl5711. CRESJ'l!ALTT
, ... 111'n Palot V•nles •tone trim, HAL PINOllN • ASSOC, VACANT 2 STORY REPO .m, ...... -.c-..:a"I ~ out1tandlng t')ctUior, large REALTORS 675-4392 S BR, J Bk Try $36.000. I• •-.,_.. ..
For s.i. or Trade roomo lhl'\IO\rt, 3 balhs, Coll ... Pork 'WW. R..i(15*rl'139, H1ntl119t• ._..
Indlan \VelJJ: nr Eldorado fa mily rm., 4 bdrm.1., dlnlna: AROlrrEcrs Home. J Br., Can )"OIJ ~ -walk. io
entry clb, .P,.c Condo, elh nn., brk. $34,900. 342.-.2561. FOUR. bl& bdnns, 2 ba., 1" bt. flm. rm., frple., Solt: Olhi!W ... eiljoy th.II: 1~
hot, "'1nl~ (IOli, poor, Comfortulo " Cozy Soocloul l!Wtg nn with m..,. 'xtru. By ..,..,., ,..., old cltumor. s
aaunu, 3 br, 3 ba, frplc. 2 BD!Uf home in th• Su custom tlre;place PI u • .$21,m s.&-71.&:i. .,, ~. b1,1p Jot and
b&r' owntt $53,!IOO or tn.rle Fernando Vallty 1.aundly ~ d Jn S n I . Cpta NEil> tqulty fbr e<l\lc&tlon. catch the Jlfke -only
fOr Nwpt B~ew homt or room, hardwood Boon ~--· us'~er All Mac a br, 1r& yud. Nr $32.500. Call now. U2-.2Ul.
du PI ex. n10 3«lrl256; l"'i' fenced yard, CrHI in'. ~ no IChlAI~ p!,llllO. 8IO 1-a·THE RJ:Al, ~ ESTATf.I<~ I llELP1 -ownrr, 2 ltr,
I bl. ""Im pool, sood -
m.17<1.l. ve1tment. 831)-3333 ev... 'T"I Govtrnor. Mf.09S2. -a i•!l't•1,1i.,,
"'\, f, 'T!l'IT f·" OWi:'ER must .. u, 4 Bdrm». OWNER .. mnc. 3 bed-.S eor.n. ;;; Mu VACANT' BR. REI'()
la<i< family rm • 20 1,.t In A din, 2 batlt&, fntry titll 4 tJMr ..,. olltttd. duplu. N.,. coqtl. point $24,300.1 _~==---==~
len;thl New ctrpe:ttnc. din-a p a c i 0 u , lMna tm, 1CMJth of hwy, oomp1f!ftl1 wm 1\etJty NI-Tm. MER£D1Tk Ga.rdent: l br.
Inc rm., hrt,, 131.500. Call 11..,ptoco, ltuUl,th ,..,.. l , tt[OVOll!<l with t ltclm>s In DAlLY PllDr for -f I bo. lormol dlnlnc,lmmoc.
..u.d! -· oven, bric, Ul.9110. Ml)rll20. lld> unit UW031. l'ar blll IWlllll NMm Jl3,000, Otmtr. 918-3:129, • ~ Aatnt. 115-722UIJR SCRAM·LETS ANSWllS IN CLASSIPICATION 700
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FrldAJ, feltnl.-y 25, lt72 DAILY PILOT :J7
l[il ~' _-_ ... _-_!~ I ..;.. ... _ I~ I._-_ .. _-_ :...;;~;;;, I .. t'
l!il I -~I -~ :~,.__! _-_-___,!~ I _,__
lOS Hewes ilnl'urn. . )IS He-• Unf""'-Income p,_r1y "' lvtlMlt ..,. • ClifUn• -' · · N-rt 11Mt1t • Mtllllt tt.nos • ........ Unfurn. I Fer·S•I• 125 2 SloQI, 3 BR. 2 llA, vl<w DUPLEX, 1 blll lo btoch. W.1--------
home. W1'0U&ht l ro n, NEWPORT, 3 Br., 2 Ba, tea Xlx57 FLAMINGO. 2 bdrm.,
I lhin&lea. btamtd celltnc. unit, ftplcs, walled patio, one b '.-a.b.e.. 2 bath,
ftlllc, wet hu, t'p(i, m,., tee sicnplf' land. Good m. washer I: drJer.
--------CORONA DEL MAR O ......... • 1~ -2 Duplae., ea. w/3 BR., 31..,-~..,....~--·--"-'::...•_.,.-...·-;;.•-~ O.ner•I
ho, -.ataln A 2 BR.. 2 DEADUNE for SHAKLEE
bl. uJ)lf&U,. Priv. patiot, DIST"Rl8l1I'ORSHIPS with
Coolo Me11 Hunllntton -ch
30S H.tuo11 Unfum,
Nowport Bloch
3 BR I. 4 Br home•, IM!&t
beach. Yearly lute. $125
mo. each. A1e_nt 548-1290. cov'd. p&rkJnr. LeA {ban l NO 1NVESTMENT I• Feb.
blttis. $41,500. 494-5200 or come. $65,000. 0 w ne r dilhwuher, Ir; new ahag-
~7562. .ll. , .. ~ &f5...f:245. carpel, ntw drape1, set-up
yn. old. lmmac. cond. 2!th. We "'Ill •poMOr It
I rMMAC. 3 BR i: t.aWl.\;;!;m1 'BY o;J;r: No down-VA, l 1D Jamtly park, pel ok.
$70.~ Each. train you, FRE!:1 Be ln-
2 BJ.. cplJ, drpl, bltlr11, ~ olli. 3 Br, 2 ha, 2 trplc'a, 531-72941
p&norlD\lc ~ ivsew. ~/drps, dbl gar, 1 blk"JS"10~~SH~"'AST=A,.--mo-1-orhom~-,-.
S38.500. 3030' M'Odntatn ~vw tich. $47,!IOO. Fee Simple. Sl"1>S 6, tuUy i;eU • con·
Dr., Top,.o.t :.f1ld, •9f.o.&9841 ~~ l'dl9. Ltewls. t&lntd. Ca~td, 13,000 ml.
NEW ~n VJtw>'L Bi .., Rilt + J iGl Juxuey home Excel. cond. call aft 5 pm.
-' &r• &O~O 0 d•pencl<nt ltav• Y 0 U R ;:;;;:; ~ , OWN nalural products
W ·st f L& bu&ineu. F\111 or part fun~.
C&lJ now: 54~.
TRIPLE). DF.CORA10R shop In cho"-
3 2-BR-Unlit, tncl prq:t:a. caM. k>O. An opPOrtunlty
Jn convmlent Collere Parlt. for )'Ol.lr own bu•ll'IHI at ttle owntt. 3 BR, 2 BA, l'IH.r -3 yn; old in Wett Back 540--8.179.
Ali.a BH.ch. S39,500. Prin-Bay. Fte Silnple fl4,S00.1 '1~o,ai=•~M"'ob""Ue-ho,...-111<-, e-nc-loted,.--~
clpe.11 anly . .s4-7644. 646-6963 cabana. Furn., In Adult
A&lume VA JoAn. mo.!lt de1lrable trnu.
JOHN READ REAL TY Boyd Rtalty 675-5930
Liguno Nlguol 2 BR Stucco. corner i'ot. Gd Park downtown C , M .
<..-ond. 1 bllt fr\>m od!!an.1-'-5'8--'-'59'-19_,.·~~---~
....... , 842-3"9
I BLOCK
TO BEACH • '1tfl'XI S'fto«. mtni ,,n~. , ~f¥k (enc;t, dbl ~ ,West llbi50" 19$9 Paramount, xln't
'St9.000. Un Java •h . ~eWJJOrt. Owkr. 6T&J6n6. cond al San J 1 c I nto.
Owntr "96-1513 BLUITS. Biahil Upgraded E· 646-0ui aft 4 pm. 4 UNITS BALBOA S75.000. Owner. 67l..&121 plan, 3 BR, 2}1 e.., fa.m.
Lhlo lilt rm. (tin. rm. On wide &f"ffn
1
~ · 21.UNIT
4 BEDROOMS btJt. By owner. 644--0901 1t1.i l 1tate, I 2 It 3 Br, 2 BL Nr lhop'r.
200 , C.ner•I 8231 Ellis Aw .. HB. S4a'.l M.
CloM: lo clubhouee. N~w NEAR Baycrest. 3 iCI .,.t '-----~ 841-3957.
j turne~ k water heater. split level elegai>«. 4"" br, ••••••••• I UNIT • Welk to Behl
I'.: Ow_9er'1will rtdecorate • or 3 ba. view, fel' land. $89,SOO. Acreage for 11lt 150 1 &: 2 BR. $110 M, $16 M dn.
"'l(e t'blll' (!fler· .~do u B ''.!'.Y;_•::w:;;ne~':_· ;;:548-;;;25:;'.!;4:·;·'-7-·l'::;-;~7"";~;;"":;;;-;;;"";r,
I f ,...,se!f.'!Sl.otlo. -*BY OWNER* BEST LAND BUY IN 1.,.,7119=c-P-•l~m,__. ~HB~8'~7•395~'~~ 4-Plex, all 2 Br, 1 Ba. Inc .
I howcmb laweon JAo T !''-500 /~WI\, ·11p,9A "' ~ ~l;JJl;fERN 1570 mo. No dn VA. 152.500.
· •oalCOP 0~ ov... ~· · CALIFORNIA Nr dcc. 557~51. Ml.6 Via Lido 675-4.562 Pafto, ~ W· , . CDM by owner Triplex 2 Br, "':.221r 1IOO'NORO , BY OWNl!R>• 380Acro1nrR1von1M,moa1-,,1 ea 1rpi bltn ncl I Ulo 2 stocy. 3 Bl\t-1-r,a~. Steps b'.rQlllllJ ¥,d that hq t>ttn · r~age~ pool~·~4.e . ~ I ~ ~ l < • I to best be8ch. I.Ike new. fanned. 20 , Water line on ,-'---~,-'-· "-=--,------.,,= l Brand new waterfront home. $36,SOO. 642-1526" · : property. Priced below mar-Lots for Salt 170
I .5 Bdrms .• 41-i baths. Lovely DESPERATE OWNER 2 BR ket at S1200 per acre .. 10.% I . wallpaper & carpeting. 1 . Down Ir: 1-2 yrs pr1pa1d 1n-
l .Frplc. '2 St&irway1. Deck & +den 21! Ba,aoo<f view. lerest. Darling Realty.
I di?ck-Agt. 675-7225 H.J.R. 499-45B8 or 616-1161 .
Biii Grundy, RHltor ~ 341, Bay&.ide, N'pl Beach Senta Ana ApproximateJy 18 acres ol
·675--4161 VERY nit'<' 3 BR 2 car R-1 property located in
OPEN SUN. 1.5 garaa:e. Shag cpts. 'eowred VUl1t Park. All utilities avail·
111 VIA KORON , pa4£>. re~. ;varo .By able to property. Alklng
, 'St 3 BR 3 "-di Owner who \VJU DAY ~~ price '!0·000 per. acre. or .-Ory, ·• D<t.., n. ull pr;~-$22 r;i0 furth~r lnformatiOn,
• ,· rm., h1mUy rm.. sundttk 'COSls. ~ ~ ' ' call Hll Loomi1 w ""1th vitw' SlrE'f'l fo street with min., dWft., toit.a 1 E kh ff I< A r t.fay le~/option, A&ldni monthly pym't. .~f. ,S184. C O 110
I' 836--:;&72. 541·31'i21 '. 179.500. Evet/Wknds 2!."427-9710
, W•lktr RHlty 67S.5200 San <C~l•~m~•!~"~'!'----i'""";;;'l!~~~~""""' I 3336 Via Lido, N'pt. Beach --·-INVESTMENT i'°'c=-""'""'-,,--'.,.---SHORECLIFFS: By owllf'r 4
Coast Hwy. Cor.
C-1 ZonP. Approx, 100'xl26'
Level. Prime Joe. SW,000
Wesley N. Taylor Co.
Realtor•
21U Su Joaquin Hill .. Rd.
Newport Center 644-4910
FOR M.Je; Loi, 63X135,
E-side C.l\1. Sacrifice.
•• 548-8425 ••
R·l Nr. Newport
165'x6~'-Lf'vel
$1.RO PPr sq. rt.
Wesley N. Taylor Co.
. Realtor•
BEx::AUSE of Illne11 .
Compl~e flf\llpmetrt ror
trff businf.u with '63 Ford
pickup. WU! teach. Bit John
642-4030
BEAln'Y t.Uon, 900 sq. It.
good location, plu• parking,
4 1tations 9 dryus, air con·
dition«!. Only SSOOO. Call
Ruth G+fri1TI Art
lnvtstment
Opportunity 220
EXCHANGES, investmenls
&: tax sheltera. Home &
Inveatment Realty. 675-7225.
lnv11tmtnt1
Wont,.i 230
INVESTORS for 5 trlple"X!!s,
Nt~'J)Ol'l Bee.ch att&, new
COflStruction. $15,000 aecur~
by tn.l!!I flef'ds. 83J...88:11.
Money to Loan 2CO
1st TD loans
6* % INTEREST
2nd TD loans
8% int based ml equity •
Alao NEW 95%
of sale-price Ioan.
Sattltr Mtg. Co.
642°2171 545-Mll
Serving Harbor area 21 yn. --------
3 BR., 3,S ~den" br. 2 b11., expensive wall OPPORTUNITY ,
playroom .......... $89,500 paper. drps, etc. Pvt. heh. 5 ~cre11 near Palmdale Int I.
5 BR. ~ bra.. atra~rner. ocean view S42 000 Prin· Airport. Xlnt irowth potent-
Pool .............. Sl~.000 clpala only ·By ~ppi. eve!. ial. Only $35.0CO -tcrnis.
2U1 San Joaquin Jtills Rd. If II! J Newport Center &14-4910 HouMt lor Rent .
LAGUNA NIGUEL SHORES I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
LIDO.'Rjio\&/TY INC. &W-llJS 0; <93-0JM. 0 .,, Bill Grundy, RHltor
33n Via Lido, N.B. 833_1611 ext 283!1. 341 Bayside, NB 675-616~
•7i.7aoo S34 500 Low dn lot 4 BR., Apartments for ••It 152
SACRIFICE I ,,;,,,. nn .. ,,,:: .d.x.1 & OCEAN VIEW
3 Bdrm, ntw!y decorated l\111.rina. Rm for boaUtrlr.
oJder home, frple, '8e dbl 493-4077, ~Bedroom. vecy e.lta~.
pn,ge, wet mooring avail. •btmanean parkin1, ei,.
548·13.?S. &12.Q63t. Sen Juan Capt1trano . w1or. ,,nv be11:eh, LAruna.
™MAC SHARP R . 114.000 • T14 , 772-5000
: • ! 3 B · 1% SURROUND YOURSELF Orten M1n1ion Inc. BA. Considt'r tradt'. $67,000. \\'ITH BEAl,TI'Y j-,,--------
8'9". 613-6'/;ili. Lush. gardens ~ake a ~rff'cl Cemetery
Mesa Verde Mrtllng for this charmmg 4 Lot1/Crypt1 156
Level view Jot, ocean zidt: of [ I
Coast Hl'<'Y.. i26.500. 10% HOUMI Furnished 300
down. Jack Godwin,---------
83()...5050.
Mobllt Homo/
Triller Park,
DESERT CREST
Own your own Jot
172
Golf, CLUBHOUSE, Natural
Hot Pool111. $3,990 to S7290
Frt'C Broehutt.
ELDRIDGE REALTY CO.
P. 0 . Box 666-0
~r1 !fol Springs, Calif.
( 714) 329-6444
General
EASTSIDE
COSTA MESA
Rnit at 1195 or option to buy.
3 bedroom. 2 bath, doubl!!
gara&!!, fenc~ yanl, new
shag carpebl:, freshly palnl·
ed. C&ll Broker 545-9491
Open Eve11.
$67.50 Ba.ch pad, ul.U pd.
$120/sngls ok, CdM
1---------1 bf!droom, 2 bath home. In-r----'"-----
0\VNER\ 3 BOl\T\1, t ~• bath, side is well planned for fam· 2 CRYPTS-Pacifk: Vi I! w
tJl\{W~ ,, Pl!"_tiirt',. ~autiful tly living &: entertainment. A1emorial P 1 r le. SA VE!
.Y'~. ,Jll'bO, fisb pond. The family room &: kitchen Call 644-4767.
carpthtd, dnpe:1i ~kl6e lO are a special joy to the ~ Movnt~ln, Destrt, ,.
! schools, $28,SOO. 540-2461. housewife.! Call &: let us Commercf1I Re1oi't 1 1 f74
Sl25 3. blk to bch, kids alt.
Sl50 pvt hmt: sn&ls vac.
,. ""E 3 8d f show you! Property 151 ~~ rm., am rm.. NOW JUST S35 500 ** BIG BEAR LAKE
2 BR • ocean frnt , kid!, NB
Sl.85 blk to bch, kld!i/pets
979-1430 AGISNT llrtel'OJJ?I. covered• pa.Ho, CAPISTRAN.0 COM Highway frcnta1e, C-1 SPRING. is. just. arountf.
many ofiatl'aa. 0 w n e r . land " bld ' VALLEY REAL TY •. 13• ~ the-coiner to, Ket atarttd * YEARLY RENTALS * t 546-llWB. 31501 Camioo Capistrano Agent. ST;>-722.; H.I.R. now finishing this Ir~ 2 story Finer Homes In Beach Area
Mi11ion Vitfo 49:..1124 coftdo,t,f"jJm1 "cabin·in·th~"·ood11" for Bill Grundy rutr. 675-6161
1 SI 1965 for Hie 160 only $6,795. PA N 0 RAM l C v I e w. Re1ltor1 nee OR TRY -thi~ !>ttluded, Dini Point
' Decorator'• dream J Br, South L ALL 1ftt1, prictl, finished c&btn for $6,950. ---------fam rm. Bt'llut. lndscpd, agunl d d ~ E-Z TERMS _..._ 2 B}h ~ lllb:li, polio -A payments 1n own .. • · tprnkln. outdoor ligbti,... BY Ownt'r. Monarch Bay payments. CALL 1 Call Ro1111 (TI4l 536-1738 or charming "Doll" h:>use, ~I)' crpt'd & drp·d.. Panel-Tm'B.oe. 5 lrg. Br, 3 ha. lpeci•llstl 546-.5411. \•/rite: Spencer Re~ Estate, S250. mo, 496-Dn.
.:.: :1r:-~~~t. Pool. cu1tom buiH, many Anytime e LARWIN e P .O. Box ~· Big Bear L•Dun• Beich , r • · xlre..~. 32402 Crete Reed. ~ r..b, Callf.orrua.
SY · 9W:NER, 'Prtmlum vlew $79,500. Principals o n I y . ~ IOwnm'1 • 3BR, 4 BA. ·~ NO $$ DOWN ** • SPARKLING View -Ex·
lot, 4 BR., 2 BA. Span tile 49&-4016. ..frp o, Cf1'1' 4fpa, patio. 2 19 No Price over S500 r Ac tra ni~ Bachelor, util Incl.
roof crpt1 pal..io w/ cover cU pf'. Gd Io ca 11 on · Pf' , • SllO. Yearly.
M&J\v xlta!. S 3 5. 1 O o: Westminster ~D. : ~~e1z:-::;,::0c:::;.t; ALA Rtntal1 e 645--3900
837-7742 WHY PAY RENT? LDVELY 3 hdrnt' .. ., OOn-• Good '"''"·Hunt ond Fish • COZY Flnplac•! ltur• 1
2 m" 3 BR & Oen. lri cov When you can own your own dominiu.ni, · 2 tireplatts, e 30 miles or easements iO BR. incl ear. Near beach.
patio, blln BBQ, cpt1ldrp1, home for only S186. per mo. privet~ patio, garde n • ~rith each parcel. $175.
bffut. Vie\.\1. i 3 7, ~OD. \Ve havl! It 3 BR with lush, Westchff att1t. Phone . Write: Ranch·m'I \Vellclitt ALA Rentals e 64.S..3900
BJ0..1901. gold shag crptg you'll love. 642.6349 or ~986 Suite 108·Newport Beach
Newport Be1ch 4:: liv rm w/Swedisb firepl Duplexes/Units 546-3676/644-4919 eve11. Newport hath
1, · g;v., It that warm, fwnlly 1110 162 GRASS VALLEY £ASJBLUF' F ) • TWO ON A LOT !oeHn.. 5 •er• parcel,' Novad< Covn-
G 0 * C I 21 UNITS wanted. Have buyen 'ty nr Yuba River 61) mi'• to I N DOWN en ury !OT duplox .. Up lo 1•• una.. Tnhoo or Sa.,,..;.,,._ Xfot "DOLL HOUSE"
llENTAL FINDER&
•II W. n-. COSTA _. --*Alita. * W.0111 * ...._; ....... 1 ft ..
FURNISllED 1
S125 -SJ·IARP! Fully fl.Im
I SR. Fncd yrd for klda, cal.
* $110 -BACHELOR, 1.qun.1.
Yearly, Furn. Utll pd. Small
... ok.
* UNl'URNISl!ED
Sl4:5 -VACANT & Ready! t
BR hou1t w/1ar. Stove, 1't-
lri1, cpVdrpg. Fncd yrd far
kids/cat.
* Sl.55 -JIARD lo }'Ind -3
Br. 2 BA, cpt/dt'Jl', kid11/
petllsin1Jes ok,
$185 -SPA!ious 3 81' w/ aar. Stove, T"ftf'rlf, drp1.
Kl<l1 all:. Avall 3/S. ·
* $200 -LAGUNA, YeAl'ly.
2 BR w/aar. S1ncle1/1mall
pet ok. Near water.
* ROOMMATE SERVICE -
Rentals 10 share, male or
fe:male, from $60.
BEACON * 64S.0111
• FOR VACANT mR. mo MO. REtfT • Chlldtto, pets OK. Sw1m
IMMACULATE 3 BED -pool, tennla etg. Ask far
ROOM, 2 b. f h home, KEITJI SNIDER 962-+tn Cl'
fireplace, dbl. Ill'., patio, 84l-3287.
redecorated. New 1 b a a I~-==.,_....,....,......,.,,_.,.-
t'rplll & drp11. No peta. 3 BDRM.. 1rplc" l % be.,
Avail March lat. $2'75 ptr bU.na, drp!t, dbl asnat,
E tel'KM'd yard. Peta ok, $200. ,~-~.t Bro&dway, C.hf. .. ~ "~' . mo. """""°''"·
3 BR 1 bath home Jn Oltf·
haven, ex larac yard. $.1Z
mo. 61'-811.i.
Hou1M flurn. M
Unfurn. 310
3,--,B"R"""J'"r...,.-.-..,l•-nc-<d...,..-y-1rcJ..,., 1 Corott• dtl Mar Lachenmyer firtpl. Nr trwy, Covd pa.Oo. JU~ ttmod~le:t 2 Br, 2 Bl,
S250 1"8~1!. 536-3777 or trplc, rlOU" lo oct11.n. Adult•
5J6..IJG6. U>O. :'!17 Lark11pur. 673-3315 .
Rc,1ltor
1860 Newport Blvd., C.~I. CONDO 2 Br., crpt11, drp!'I,
w11hrldry, pool, 841~7976, Condominiums CaJI 646-3928 Eves. men
e PRIVACY Auured -l ll47·9937. 34&-0SSl. Unfurn.
BR, front 1~ar porch, utU 4 BR townhH, S22.\ mo. Costa Me11 Incl S!XI. o.y call 6«rl226.
320
ALA Rentals e 64.S..3900 Eves call 64!)..4573 CONDO, 3 BR, 2 BA, oompl
LOVELY 4 BR,'4 BA, frpl.. bll-lmi. Mr. Qu~n. ore. e NEEDS Fatnll)'! 2 BR, c·pt/drp1. bltns, rir. fncd 54Q..11$l, homr 54~21l2. fncd yrd, encl 5[ar, $15(1. ., oMt!. ALA Rtnt•l1 • 64.S..3900 yrd. Xlnt loc. $260. 54..._,.,"· 3 BR, 2 Ba, cp11. dtp11 ,
POOL, 4 br. Vara.nl. $27$ hlt-111~. d~hwhr. 2 pool!, clb.
AVAILABLE t.larrh 4th , \V/pool fftl"\'. \VlU consider houllto. $235. 546-3710.
L&rge 4 BR home In prime I '"·' " ana. f'Ully C"arpetrd I 11el ing . .,.,~4..... Fountain V1lley
drapt!d, aJl blttn~. nlettly lrvlne 3 llf'dnx>1n, 2 bath, flrt:p\1ce.
JndACpcl., elMe IO P•rk. patio, 2 car KB.l'RKt., pool,
school & ahoppi~. l..eage UNIVERSITY PARK clubhouAe. $250. 968-8116.
$275 mo. Call ~5-8424 (0p!!n :1 BR. 2~~ ba, tam $325
Eve1. l SOUTil co As T .2 BR. 2 baths $265 3 BUM1 condominium, for
REAL ESTATE. 4 BR, 2% ba, tam rm. S340 N'nl, l~) ba1hl· LffM!' or
• S'tUOENTS! !lure 1 BR, 3 ... R, 2 Ba., a1rlum s~ montl\ly. $.100, 962.-3102
util incl $110. TlJRTLE ROCK Huntin1ton 8Mch
ALA Ront•ls e 64S.3900 l Bl,I.' 2\1 """ film HOO t BR ~. 4 BR. 2 ba., ram rm SJ60 • '-">C&1'1, crptdJ ~s.
e RANClfY RURAL-2 Br/ W'E ltAVE O'nlERS $.150. month.
t 'RPLC. Kid., It JH'IS ok. *' 9IL8-«l02 *'
Sl75. La1un£'1Cll
ALA Rtnt•ls e 64S.3900 • NE\Y 1 2 Br., 2 h111.ttt ,
HARD TO FIND 4 BR 2 BA d I • d·' h ei, crp s, 1111MJ, ~"''"' r. homP, Corner Joe. a>zy patio pool., benullful view.
firepl., dbl del rar., fenced yard maintained. No f)f't& or
yd &: ref'rlg. included. LeUf' "SINCE 1946" chlidttn. S775. 830-9672 .
$22.5 mo. Call 56-8424 (Opt:n 1st \Ve1tern Ba.nk Bld.J
Eve1.J. SOUTH COAST Univenllty Park, Irvine Townhouse Unfurn. 335
REAC ESTATE. D1y1 833.0101 Nights Loko Forost
Gr1nn'l1 Rttltors 3 BEDROOM 2 BAT I{
2629 ~::~66r0 Blvd. . H0~1E wllh fircpl , blt\n~. 2 BR. 2 ba ............. $300 NEWnd lblBI R, <P1~: drpcl,/'-~~ ~ lrg fe~d . ....1. V1tcan1. f'or BR 2 • b I t '"" 1..'0 • 1111, pa...,, poo ,...., ;ru 4 .~.,atui •.•••.• ...,..., 'S2!'l021332711$] Servini Newport-Costa ~1e11a family only a! $23:>/mo. c111! J BR., 2 ba. homt , • SJ00/335 ~~~ t • : -
area. Over 500 rentals avail-owner/Agl: 837~398 u r :1 BR., 21~ b11.. , .•.•..• $350 ec ·
able now. \Ve gulrinltt t1er· _'"6-1=_1,..41_. ~-~--~ J BR, 'Iii Aug .•• Furn. $400 Newport Be•ch v.ice and µ"ultt. Qur fee is , :--R "
$15.00. It we can't fina what 3 B ' flllnwy nn, llv nn. Nr. e· d h·11 * ADULTS PREFERRED *
you want, you don't pa,y. San Diego & Newpm"f t'\l'y~. ' • re I 3 BR, 2"' bl .. bltn1. \'llW
}"'air"' CaU $300, mo. ~ o r · now, 54&-.7S8\ crpt: dbl. car. pool. S2M
=~...,._.~~~~-REAL10R 04Ml6tl 3 Bedroom House, $200, Hu
Rtfrlr. A: Stove. Private
Yard & Patio. Families with
pets welcome~
AVAIL Mardi 25. 3 BR. 2 REALTY
BA, DW. lned yard, r;hait Univ. Park Center, Irvine Duplexes Unfurn. 350
.,... drpa, 12'J.I. '"' -t.oa t Call Anytlm•. 333.om B11l100 Ponn11ul•
mo. le refs ~·d, 545-3412 ~'!!'~!!!!""''"""!'!"""~ ~--------·I
COZV 2 Bdnn. flttplaCf', UNIV Park leue 3 Bdrm., 2 NE\Y 3 Br, 2 Ba. Frplc,
pool, small yard. Adults on-bllth, atrium nr. school~. blt·lna. $210, New 2 BR ln Tri·plt>X
with Drape~, ShAi Cpl.,
Fl~p1ace, Buill-ins. & Diah·
~·a.,h~r. Garagf'. Luxury
living in Co1ta Meaa'1 most
<..,,nvenienl location.
Jy. References. Ea11 side. $325. !Tl(). 494--9514: R33-1107. im-3449 or 673-014
$195. 646-6441. Lagun1 S.1ch Corona dtl Mar
On I.he Water. 3 Bedroom
plua Den. Self-cleaning oven,
Fireopla~, Pier A Float
$450. Mo.
l!!p pvt hmt-,. ldds/pds,
$95 2BR. kld•/Jielo ' .
S125 2BR bltn kit, kids/pets
$135 kld1 /pet1, H.B.
Sl40 nr. bch kids ok
S145 2BR, kids. C.M.
Sl50 2BR sngb, lg hrs Cti.f
~ Newly decorated
Ir Lai-p 2 BR h~. Garap.
• t~epced. $135. "Corrr·
;~ ~ if. 21.tt St, ftar • .£¥ * • 3 BR. 2'ifA. blt1ni, ~rj,11,
~1 le pel OK .
646-1434
2 BR. 19111-C Charle SI.
$145/mo. No dor•· 642.-2259,
646--7017.
3 BRDMS, kkls ok, no gel11.
Sl.80. mo. lM &: la1t +
deposit. 642-9764 Jollf!.
SITO 2BR -canyon, Irids OK 2 Br, cpt/drp, quiet, adlt11
Pvt hme walk to heh Cdf.I tJnly, no petii. Sl70. 231 ·F
S200 3 BR ocean view C.M. Avocado. 54S-8251, 548-1405.
3 BR, ma:Js ok, H.B 2 lrg BR. Range, cpt1. fncd,
Sl.65 2BR swim pool N.B. ,pr. $150/mo. Ava.ii AUr l
SlS5 hrs, mch l Acre, 2 stbl• , ~9536. "'° hn mch 38R, earl, Illar.,,=--~,---=-~.,..,..
979-1430 AGINT $235. Yoll' ,._ WOil side. 6&1 Senate. 4 br, 2ba, bltn1,
2 RENTALS """· drp•. S<&--0110.
4 Bnd, lrolhly peinted, -
Cl"J)ta & drp11, 2 BA. $250
mo.
-Al~
3 Bed, very clean, 2 BA. dbl
ear. S225 mo. art.
CENTURY /21
546-9521
Back Bay
LOVELY 3 Br., 2 Bl.
twnhae. ranct. ha.loony,
patio, pool. $225. 96&-2647.
3 Bedroom!!, Utilllie1 Paid,
$22.0, No pell. * * 546-4105 ••
J BR, crpl/dtp, [ncd yrd.
Cov'd. polio. l20tl/mo., ~
Natlonal1 67S:l82'l, 67;...f.aT ,
SHARP, J •BR, 1\1 B~.
OCEAN VIEW SHARP 1-BR. • .oround Coor
BHl'll, retrl1. &: PltSo & TREES 1200 Month Arent 675-.11211
Larre I BR duplex w/frplc. l'89un1 Beach
N~ kltt'hen. Stove, tt~.
crpt11, rara1e. Gard!!n •I· 2 BR, 2 BA, b 11 1 n l,
Ung. S185 all ulll. paid. we.ah/dryer, carpe!lt, pat1o.
NU.VIEW RENTALS h•kony, N. end. 1ns.
67!-40.10 or 494·3248 ~94-5123.
SPACIOUS 4 Br, S325. 2
Baths, ram rm. ·w/w crpt,
drps., blln.~. fncd yard, view. ~7330· I ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii::.~a
Logun• HI/lo
J BR, dllhw'br, cp!JI, drpa,
alr/cond, pool In front. Jm.
mtd. occuptncy. 830-6319.
Newport Btoch
THE BLUFFS
NEW & NEAR NEW
3 Bdm11., 2~ ba'1., 2·•ty.
Walled patio; 2 ear 1ar.
Cloat by pttrk ' ahoppinJ'.
S3M Month
4 Bdrm• .. 2\1 ba'a. Brand
new " beautiful. Choice end
UJ'lll. Lovely area. $425
Month.
Apt1. l'urn.
Gtnttol :"" ... i
lold New ConceP.t I
FURNITURE ROOAC
* Month to Manlh 1 * 1001'. PurchoM Op!loo * Wkf• Stlectkm. 1
Sbtle-Colon * 24 Hour Delivery
tter ·see thl.t n,re: value REAL ESTATE 142-4474 Agent ef'S..7225 HJR. properf.11 Huit" oe.k, fern.
today! 3 bedroom plU$ l Income Property 16' pine: &. C'tdan. 14500 to
bedroom home on Rr2 lot. 3 S9W>. E-Z terms. Bill Af~
btdtoom now v.acanl and
1
'~ 2 BED"~•I 1 d ••-Heride, Onr/Ag1; St a r
3 Bdrms., 2 ba'1,; family * 4 BR, tam. rm .. Ira. yard.
arf'a, 1-atory, Recently re-Ref's reqd. S300/mo. 2900
decoratf"d Ii; thaws It -a S t N
lenced yard, garage. 51T W. 19th, CM 54144ll
$210. • 548-3789 Deluxe .Go3 Bdrm., 2~ '?a· rpllt !mtl"-~N9-,IM~•·lnill~SA[iillli54ii7i<l3itj•I SMAU. 1 br ~ver 30 ~ftr· lt!'Vel" Iden Home," water 1 1 pre view. CoD'!P. upan,dod le B I'-• I I-~ ready for inunttliale OC· Mcbl•Homtl cm1 nvv Pus en, lllv Route Box 122 Gr a 1 1 · ' ,.... pl '-an \! Aero. 133.500. • 'C"-.ney. 1 bedroom rented Valley, Cal. 9611273-7996.
' 'at~ pa-month. Kup a1 -''--'>-' ~=-=-=--
rental or u• u Motht1r-ln-TRIP.:"-f='.X BY OWNER
law houu Only $24..500. Mobilt Homes 3 BR, 1%1 Ba; ftrepl, dhl 1ar Big Bear buaineu property.
Won't be .;,,und 1o,.. For-Sale 115 and 2-2' BR units. $49,950. 48' x 250·. S1ore i horllf!
w/3 lxlnns. l '>t baths, Iva Walker & lee M9.VE RIG~.:r }.K ;· • UNITS rm. !rplS:lt1$3l,OO!l.
I vtr Ln., .B. :.1vl"ly Imme for the rlsht I r""'--=-~-~--
party. Avail. 3/tS at S400 1.•-•_l_bo_•_P_•_n_in_•_u_I• __ _
per month, Incl ewerythln1! YEARL y
red l llO. 1>1t1!ul11 opp61"1<d. A • -I -_ ___ se_s_m_. ---I ,sirntJae t:iorn~ at S5&0 Month • WOMEN-4lnfl:le room.,
Huntington Beach iJ klt~hens/TV room . * * * * * * * AT BEACH THE BLUFFS R•decoratnd. 2 BR O.,pl<x • BEACHY Bach•lor Pod -
• "/,fPl'lk. Stm, _,..i .. , .oar-· 1\11 ufll lncl SSS. r • ·~• ·• ALA R1ntol1 e 64S.noo
;'fFJ.... DI -Wk -Mo. S50 Up. Crsr -~\} t1.iur ~~~NT I B•. f<P~. ;t. ~~ pvt. pa.llo, front rround ftr . 3 BR. plu~ den, 2 be.'1., ). ~e. Small ,yard I: pillo.
aty. Dbl. 111tio. Plan "K," P'JO.'\ , (
cul d• ,., Joc1t1on. nr. pool. NU0Vll!W RENTA S
~· .40Q S. Bayfront No. 5.
2414 v~1> Del Oro Btlbo. P'onln1ul1
. , Reallon "~8:.i. ~~~Ill\. on II 1cre 1ot. "9.500.
2790 H.-.Blvd. ,, Ad•m• ~-~edi. [~' . --r UNITS Avail. now at $425 Per month en-4030 or 494-3248
• U&l\E Todoyl.J BR.IUm.
Step• to beach. Kld1/pe11.
1125.
ALA Ronl1l1 e 645-noo 54>MSS Olien "1 9 PM ~ niir .. ~ PO\nt"if . Comer kicatlon. St00,000. -~ 1 BR Ir. seWlf\&' ml, pvt.
HlfiHLANDS ~!!:~ia=~/= Roy McCardlt Rtaltor R1ncht1, Firms, I~ Stove &: rilfr1g, cpt/drpa, 3 BR. 2 BA, elect blUn RIO,
~~ZN~ BAY VJEW-2 Br, sm. UfU
pd, Beach, pier, pr'k',.
• ~....1 ..... LA-· '· 11 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. I Cl roves-llO 5r. ··2 ~ ThnJ June -su:;. 673-7.fU. FA HT.. -11. n t w I" ......... .....,.. """'" ...... m Y humlng fl~pl. Skirts, &~'11-·~t :'!!: • ..... 1
rm. 21' baths, I: aep. J.aun· lnia. Garden. fully land· 541-7n9 VISTA 6 ac. horse ranch. "' 'b. U Colltgt Park painted, 60'"100' ftncd lot,
dry nn. Kltchtn bltn1, new 1eaped. Deilrable family !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! .... ~!!!!!!!!!!!! ' I --""-------1 d b I a a r . , I d a c p d , CJ)l/drpl, AND a spatkltna: 'par..k near heath. 10 UNITS pool COilage, ,voe.ado, citrus v rea r RENT/LEASE 3 8R. tam vacant. move In today. $11!t
JIU' POOL. Prime Jiarbor * '69 O.ampion. 1 BR. front n..ld• or own-•tp 1 ,,. ... _ Agent. 6~7225. JUR.. 2414 Via•• Del ,.._ ~~· 2 BA, bltin RIP. brkr.111 per mo. Vllllge Real E1ta.te
1--"''"'",,a" UJIXXJ ,., '""'' Del""' R I E t t viu IHlr, 2 bltin deW & hugr 962--4471 No tH: 546-8103 ll A"...., ..... area. ' · porch, tun 11k!rt1, patkl COV-lunli.sbed apll tn top cond. ea 1 • • Newport Beach booklhtlt, tlttpl, dbl illT.
CALL . Ci) , '••· 1414 f':r, carport. Lndscp'd, Adult Never a vacancy. Sl!'i,000 Exchange 112 -==6'4=·1,..l33..,.,AN=YT-=l"M"E"7"_ 1 huie bk yd• PtUo-rencf'd. •WE have a large aelecUoo
·•A ~llM ... "-'11 AlJo N-· ownl,.,,• .,,,,.... • ,.., • ear ' 1 app y. ....,.,, mo. that ••n be moved Into I}
'
Parle. Costa Mela. """"""· ,...()wner w\11 ttnance. ---------'"STORY 3 B" 2 BA N B 1 on! •'l.VI of 3 and 4 bedroom homes
..,.. ...... ...,~ · .. '" ' "'" ...... $115000 TRADE 4 Bedroom 1htrbor bay,BalboAPenlnsula . 55T""3113. ~
• EAL TY .Sestored Interior. New I • v •·w -· , .. 1--· 116 000 Wt'nter 1~-. 871 ·-. c al.molt Immediately on our
Nt&rNtw,-ert P•1•0fNtt tUhac:e iwtrheatl!'f.$55 c t 21 ft!' ' allU. ' """ -· oronedelMlr Rent-Option plan. STEPS TO oc~AN mo nml. Gardon Grow. en ury ... ,11 for UNITS . I nl'H"'o_u ___ ~u"nTfu_r_n_. -~a=o~s SHERWOOD REALTY.
BLOCK TO 9AY * '6.1 ~ A<eeh18, 2 BR Newpo.t or Cotta M<a•. LUXURY < Bdrm, 4 dtn, 54MJSS
tmmac. 3 BR. 2-•tar)I home , with add-a.room 7 " Jl. Call .._.1722 or 6"-8134. Gener•I din. rm. View. Brotdmoor
on Balbol Pen1n.l plus tn· \Yestmlnsltt art&. No re&· 642-Im ANYTIME H•rbor Vltw 1111111, $625 Mo. e RARE J~ -1 BR.
come unit to help &IY~ 11,>"8.ble oUer refused. 6 Units !aitbluff WANT be1ch propttfy for 3 LANDLORDS! On.nee Coe.11 Real Estate walk beach. Kldll/prta. Sil&.
way $59 960 ~·tt.J 64 Dltal Wlde IJx53 eut-homes in ruvenlde. 0-.-.-ner We Speclallte Jn Newport 64.........U 61~ 'E'w1 ALA Rentals e '4.S..3900
MORGAN RIA:tZ • tin ' made •'-eooclL 2 BR., 2 bath unlh. 2 yn. -Hal Evry. 351 So, Von 8-h • Coron1 d<I Mar • BEAUT ocean vlfw. J br. 2
67U642 ~ ·~ Compltta bU.n1 haclude \lie. ~y~carp. ~=:.' NHS, Lot Anatln. Calif. Lquna • '= Dana Point. bt., trpk, pool Ind m•lnl., ::..;"""""",.-:=-1'= rlte.ntr/dlhMr 6: bllbdtt. . r· • · RMI Eitett Wanted 114 Our RrntaJ Sttvtce 11 nt.EE wlhrtdn·er, $350. Adlt1. STIPS TO 0C • Fuli,lnd"!''d,akirta-•""" llOn. lll!l, · I------,--to You1 ~
2 Dupl~'"'· i ldo !lrlld•, t <na, porch.lflpermomit. 675-&050 ''WANTED, PDININSULA NU-VIEW RENTo\LS Cited tn toot! l't'6t&J at'f:& Weclmfmltt:r l1*. No M · ., . POINT AREA PROPER-TY. 873-«llO or •9'-324.! LOE. l BR, 2 ba. hoUM. Mo.
Newport kach/"3 Sctrm,_, IOM.bl~ offer ntul!d. W t'I' •11 ct..•. Prtvate par4,. '•anti to It> mo. ClOM 10 park.
2 bAlbl .,ch unit. 185.000 * .10 SlcyUnt Mld!O, ' BR. 2 -~· =~=~=--N•rchuo from prtVll• ""r-L ndFI REE 11 Roblo Boyd AJt. 67N930 ... h OC •-·-· • ords-Ownors 2 e ~c • BA, don, Sldrt<, -~. * EANFRONT * IY, tither duplox or "°""'· R, 2 Ito, UOO tq fl. ocean Ntwport Bt1ch Rtalty awnJnga. ltunt. Bch. 6 Let. u:nlts. new, ckM to Will oonllder property up lo We wlll ""ltt t~ll tn ytl!.I II bayv~. Ha.ttinr Vk!w
2627 N~ Blvd. * '63 Anaeh11 ~ J BR all actJvity; on Newport'• low $40'•· WlU cuh M':lltr FR.EE of ctwae • • • Mart)' 11111•. $325 Jew. 644-75.10.
Ntwjlcl:t Beach 175-1642 tum. Weoatflnltu area. belut. .. beach. Fll'lf: 11tn" out with required down Md desirable ttnanlt on our TWO Bt.OCKS TO BEACH
BY OWNER • HARBOR
VIEW 4 Bfdroom. Fee l1nd,
Imm@d. occup. VACAN't.!
S1I. 750. Call 6*-7122 or
1#-1134.
IRA y·s 1rl't0 ;:~~= E: E.~ ~:r=-~;,:,~ ~:=· :v: ,2,_:i_·-_;,...,_1 ~e.--_· _'.285
_m.wr_""'_-_,_._ .. _ ... ~ Corl>ln-Martln 6"·11S2 -. 1116 Drak• Rd., BR. 2 Slo<7 homo 1" prlmo _c_oot_•_Mell _____ _
a.to ~ Blvd, Stanloa l TIU.Pt.EXES In x1nt N.B. Art9dtL 213,/4.7"°43.j loc. nr, tehoOla. t'amillH 1 BDRM houtt. w/w cpfl., * ..-n4119:S-UU ** loc:. Great op~ tar be:sfnner. NEED i w ·' bdm house. only at PG mo. Aatnt fenced yd., pr1vatt pract.
No vocond"" Gmn Inc. MaA Venlo prdomd. S.U-· i ,,,~=1_,IL====--=-.-.,.-_ Adults only. ~o pill. l!T~
• 1lla''""il1-,Pllol=:-::w;;:aJ-.-:t--;-;Adi'tiaft "" nntts IJ't JQll • pltonl: $5700 • M,000, 0 w n tr tr ttady now I Doyle Co. llou• Huntuw? Witch tht mo. 2308 Ddtn A v I ••
IJtiPI"' elT· eoll •-• 64Um 1411 11111!1. , • 'l:Yel. &lM341. OPEN HOUSE cd\uM. 646-CrMI.
I
,_ ,
e SEA Shanty - 1 BR.
CLEAN! O:illd ok. SlZi.
ALA R1nl1l1 e 645-noo
2 Bf\, elect bltin RIO. FA
ht.. crpll, newly P1lntf!<I,
d~ pr., OO'xlOO' ff'nced ktk
Mov. In """". S185. ll<T mo. VWace R~al Eltatt
962-44n No r~~ 546-1103
SPARKUNO, 1Unl'I)', walk to
bftch le 1hoppa. 3 Br, bltns,
Mcludtd p1tlo, clo5td dble
pr, pool • ma.int. M&llY
atra. $240 mo. 831-7954.
BROOIOIURSI' 6 11&mU10n
aru. 4 bilrm.11to111, dropoa
A cwpetlnc. nar tcbool1,
,._,, ,.,., l30ll mo. Call
M,;-21)11 att ! pm.
UPPER Adk•. 303 E. Ed .. wattr
BACK BAY 1'1!71-2866.
3 + Famlly room, 2 Ba HOME like ~ Br ,dupldl:,
FlrepJacc Hom~. Blln1, CN":l mkStwial uea l'ltf1'
crpt1, drpa, dbl 1ar. Lri t>.ach. 1215 wtnftl\', n3--7!1fi.
fncd yl!'d. Covttnd O•lio. e M$ W .. Jiu~. ~-•, •. Children/pets. '250. .,,.. ,.... ~" ~
NU0VllW RENTALS Lowi1 lloch-1 s,..,Jlooml
67MO.'IO or 494-lUS MaJd strvic.-Poot-Udl pd
· • Call 6'754740 e • QUlET Rernat - 2 BR + ~--""~'-pool 1 BR ,apt maturt ad\lll onl,)t ... •w-, ·~--• $165. no pel1, SlSO w/util. )'rly
ALA llont1l1 • 645-3900 673-~t. I
e VACATION Yr Round! IHr;on Bay
Spac 2 Bft, tum. Yeuty. VERY Prl\lllf'. l'OOn'I)' 1
$2Z'i. Bdnn. apt. SIJO ,earl).
ALA Rental1 e '45-3900 6'f3..31J14 afler fi pm.
THE Bwrrs -1'nwnl>oulo. c.,..... dol Mor
3 Br .. 11! a... bltm, epts,
d-~~-hr f-'· Uo t Bdrm tum. Shq, no ranp. ·~. ~~· ' ...... .. ' pool prl\ll, s 3 2 $ / m 0 • St25, utU.-pald. ovtt. pn,ct. -6. walk brad>/--·
BAYCR~ i39S/mo. J Bt, Co1t1 Mtst
2\~ a., 11 .. DIR, FIR. HOLIDo\Y PLAZA
trpfc, Ovtrad kt1. Al., OEWXE .Spsclom I ea.
avail. Flm\lahed IC-45". tu t $135. H M * YEARLY, df:fwr~ 3 Br 6' A:pt:o ~Mdnir. ~';!i-f1 ~
den, 2 fltll BA, blb'll, priv peta, 1965 PvmoM Avt. ~
beach, lhq crpt1 lhruout. CHAJIMING. pv1 ' !tr p , ~. 64s.l101or113-76". •Pl ovorloolcJ .. ,..ir ...,~ * BWTrS, -4 iir, flm, 3 ba Gar., ~4nd faell, w1ter
frplc, beaul end ptllo. ~. pa turn. Tu rt1POft1. c I
tttnis, IChll S375. ~mo. only. No •\twltl, cMktr'tll •
LEASE/optmn. 2 br .r. d<n, 1,..s>e-::IL.,-,-ll..,lO=mn=. Ml _ _,",._~,.....,..
2'411 bl.. IOmt v1ew. Anxious. T\lrn unuud Utmt tnto -
AJont l'lf-ml HlR t:111 h, coll !<Mm
•
'
D D~ILV ,ILOT r~, Fftiruty 25, 1'72
,~1-iiiiliiiiiiiiii---~·1~~! ·mi!·-----~llt]~l~1-· ..... ·-.. ~ ... _ ... -~J1t~·~[ -~, ... ;;;_;.;lltl~ 1..-~ lit] [ ... ---11'1 .;I .. _-·-· _ .. -.;:l~~·:.:;I -~,_-... iii,;;~~~ I
Ap11. Fum. :NIAp11. Furn. :NI t. Unfum. 365 Apl. Unfum. 365 Ap t. Unfum. 365 Apt, Unfum. 165 Apt. Unfum. • 365.Af>t. Unfum. 365 Ap t. Unlum. -------lrvlM Irvine Co"'"" dol Mor Corona dol Mor Costa Mow Cllta -.i Newport -Newport BMth Huntl09ton Beach
Corona del Mar
for rent
Spectacular views for your family. From
this Harbor View hllllop above Corona del
Mar.
Dramatic architecture. Handsome inter-
iors. Pr1vacy. Pool, gardens, play areas.
Close to schools, shopping.
Two and three bedrooms, two baths.
Apls. Furn. l60 Apt•. Furn.
--------1-·------1
From $245. Ga~ and cablevision Included.
Cotto Mau
Casa del Oro
ALL UTILITIES PAID
Comi-tt befon: )'OU n!nl .
CultoJD deaiped, fe.alurlna::
• SOacimi. kitchen with ln-
dlrect 111ht1nc
• Separate din'& area
• ffome.llkt storai:e e Private J)ltiol
• C1oted Pf.ale w/storage
.. Full Jenelh marble pull· ....,
a Kil'll'.·IZ 9dnns
• Pool • Barbequcs • 1ur-iounded with plum Jand-
ICaPinr
Adult llVl"I at 1!9 but
Laree 1 BR $115 tlTILl'l'lES FREE
365 W. Wihon 642-197)
LIVE LIKE A KING
··At Budget Prices!
FURNJSHEO-
UNFURNISHED
*POOLS
*ENCLOSED
GARAGES
* CONVENIENT
TO ALL BEACHE$
FROM $135 MONTH
ADULTS PLEASE
VILLA POMONA
PHONE 642-201S
(1760 Pomona Ave.)
BAYVIEW APARTMENTS
LRG l hr upptr .
C r pl/ b I tnl/dishwuhtr.
Adul ts, l10 pets. aft 6.
San.Joaquin Hills Road, east
of MacArthur Boulevard
For Information, call 644·5555.·
642-4044. !!'!!!"'!!"~~!!!!!!!!!!!""""!'!!!!!~!!!!!~~~~=-*WINTER RATES* --• · Atlrac turn S1Udiot $115. 1 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn.
BR'1 $125. Adults, no pe t•. Corona del ~r.
2135 Elden-, )te;r. Apt 6. , '
BACHELOR apl, utllitiel UNIQUE chateau on &yaide
paid, 3l7-D E. 21.lt St. C\t, Dr. 2 bdrm. It den . ~lnlng
Sl•n .,.0 -·· room, AduJts only. $37;, Mo. ""'· ptr mo . ....._._..:>. Agent 675-4930, 6i0--0020.
FURNISHED 2 Br. apt. util 2 BR., Bltn1. \Valk to
pd. $170}mo· 2'.m-B Maple beach. $190. Orange C.oast
St. MB-5913, Real Estate. Call: ~i-4818
* GREAT VIE\V 2 BR. *
2 BR, 1\1 BA, al.BO 1 BR, nr Frplc., bltns. 1undecks, pool,
~an &: boat harbor, buiut., $200 up. 644-6344, 675-5204.
quiet location, healed pool CLEA.i'J 2 Br, no gar. Refs.
See •t 2UU Sa.Illa. Clara or $17.'.>.
ph 493-3039. 673-4171 all 6pm
Huntlnflon Baadt Coit• Mau
WALK to bHch, pool, nc DELUXE
rm. 1re apts in JMWeral APARTMENTS
blda1. Adult.. 219 15th St. & Alr C.Ond • J."'rplc's · 3 Swlm·
220 12th St. ming Pool11 -•teallh Spa ·
$90. Furnished STUD I 0 ,
Ntar beach, pool. Call :
SSG-3m J53G.. 72821536-1366
BACHELOR APTS
$85 &. $100 * 646-2687
Lagun• B••cil
Tennia Ctt1 -Game le Bil-
liard RoomJ
l BEDROO~f
FROM $160
MEDITERRANEAN
VILLAGE
2400 !!arbor Blvd ., C.M.
(114) 557-8020 BEAUTIFUL REl'ITAL OFFICE
NEW . NEW NEW
VILLA RIVIERA
JUST rrNJSJ-IED
Families WelcOme l
(1 01 2 BR, 2 FULL BA e Special cabinet space
e Lock garages w /lg i.1or
• Bm cell e Lndry e Patios e D/W-Disposal e Drapes
e Deep 2 color shag cpta e Special soundproo!ing e Nr. San Diego Frwy. Har-
bor Blvd & schools
GAS H~at. Gas Cooking
and \\rater-AU paid.
Month to Month
622 Hamilton, CM
See Mgr-Mr. & Mrs. Hoban
548-2062
}'01·ccd air heating
2 children wetoo'mc
J1ot &: CQ!d 1vatcr furn
3 Bdrm. 2 Bath. $100
Carpets and drapes
OCEAN VIEW OPEN 10 AM TO 6 PM
l.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!e I Nicest location ln Laguna! BEAUTIFUL
EXECUTIVE SUITES Smail I BR. Fully furn. S150
Built-in stove
Carport-stall shower
Laundry room.
uUI paid. Avail· Yearly, GROUNDS MOTEL APTS. NU-VIEW RENTALS Newly Deco ro led
2080 Newport Blvd. 673-t<l30 01• 494.3248 e SPANISH DECOR
Costa MeN Atr/cond, Gas, wlr. pd. Gar·
Fenced yard. No PE"ts
MESA VILLAGE Apts.
1046 El Camino Dr. •A
54'-7331
642·2611 STUDIO & l BR_ apt.I, com-age. Pool, Rec. rm .. l11un·
STUDIOS FROM $35 ple~ely fu_rn., incl TV & dry. 1 BR's, $140. 2 BR's ---------
1 BEDROOMS AVAJLABl...E maid service. ~l$-S200 mo. $160-Sl65-Sl75. BAY MEADOW APTS.
• Ful( kitchen or weekly. 98.J No. Coait Hacie nd• de Mesa 2 Br, beam ceilings, priv pa-
• Heated pool Hwy., 494-5294. Apartments tio. rec. facil., closed gar-
• Laundry facilities EXTRA Large modern l BR 160 \V, \Vllson, ~1gr. •I. age. Gas heat, cooking • e Free utillUes apt, mountain & ocean view. irater all pd. All aduJts, no
e T.V. 'lc ltlaid 11erv. avail. 493·303:9. 1 BR $125 up -2 BR Sl40 up 387 \V • .Bay St .. C.Af.
• YOU NAME IT l 1111. 2 BA. $ll9. Newly WHY PARK NEWll'C)RTERS l BR, 2 BA, lrpk, all bllnt, p&lnted. Qoae to ICb1a I . pool & rtt facil.iti~s '100.
·~·,.. .,.... II! Fer a>nven· ...-_. OlildTea ok. Open STAY HOME ON 962-1167 or 558-151>.
k!nce to ti~ lhinaa that Fr' t-7 pm, S.t 9 am..s pm. Lagun• Beach
count, """'..,. ...... k>catlon 1016 El Camimo Apt C, CM. WEEKENDS • ..... th•...,., library, .... 508-0744. UPTOWN!
me•'• club, lpy'a dub, • .,,.,.1.LRC==, .:.Br_st_ud_ia_,-1-\l-Ba. WOULDN'T YOU? l'llCE l BR. Slove, relri&,
club and ahoppin&. Unfum. Avail wlrnd of Mar crpts, drps. \Valk to beach * 2 BR, 2 BA, ":" 4. 1aldna: a P P I I c • t Jon s J~ 's all here for you to enjoy Saturdays and A shopping! $150. * Picture-book krtch,.n Carport: I: lndry, nr 5hop'1 Sundays and alJ week long, too. NU.VIEW RENTALS 'I: Pool, putll.na: srttn A schls. $160 + dep. 9911 El 67:i.'.4o30 or 494-3248
And more. at Camino, No. l CM. 546--04i>l. $750,000 health spa, 7 swimminJ. pools, 7 SECWDED 1 BR Geelllt
The Vendom• BRANO NEW 2 BR lighted tennis courts1 bicycle trails, putting "iew, $185. Large bachelor
1845 Anaheim Bronu Medallion, encl pr, green, shuffleboard, croquet. Spacious junior studio $150, Utll 11 d.
2 b'oek or: Newport Blvd. crpls, drps, bit-ins., aarb. l's from $170 monthly, plus 1 or 2-bedroom 494..g1n.
Call: 6U-28Z4, Mn. Phillips displ. l3J Albert Pl, East-plans and 2-story town houses with 2 or 3 NEW Ckean view Medallion
side. n6$~mo. G&ll ' water bedrooms. All with electric kitchens, private 2 BR, 2 BA i:: 1 BA. Alao
pd. 642-056.1. balcony or patio, carpetjng, draperies. Sub-J BR, 2 BA. S250-S300, m * LOWER * terranean parking, elevators, optional maid Arch. 4&'-3383, ttK-2339.
-21-GOLD Meda.llioa, front 2 Br service. Gourmet food market, dry cleaner, La•u Niguel
APARTMENTS p;atM:t, encl rar. laundrtunat. beauty salon on grounds. See beautifully fur-• na
3 BR. 2 BA .......... $255. Adull•. na ..... $155/mo. nisbed models today, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Other LAGUNA NIGUEL
2 BR, ll4 BA ........ $ISO. MS-3515 or 642-6499, times by appointment. Just north of Fashion Apartm ents
!Al.SO AVAIL. FURN.) 2 BR., 2 Ba., encJ. pr., tra Island at Jamboree and San Joaquin Hills call About Our New 6 iro.
N•w adult 9ard•n Apts. patio, roomy, quiet, clean, Road. !Aase Program Avallabl~
151 E. 21 st. 646 16•6 w/nu crpts Ii-dl'J>'. Mesa Now. l BR $15(. 2 BR, 1 Ba
"verde 4 pl.ex. Adults. $160. Telephone (714) 644-1900 for r•ntat information. $187. 2 BR, 2 Ba, $196 per
* * $170 * * 54>-1623. monlh.
3 B•, 1\i Ba, newly pamted.1-"::...:: .. =THE'---GA_B_LE_S_"_ PARK NEWPORT.-APARTMENTS 29041 Aloma Av<. 495-0TI
Bltns, cpt/drp, encl patio. 2 Br. w/gar. Adults, ept.s Oft the bay lido Is le
Nr IK"hll A: lhop'c. Children drps. bltns, fncd y rd '. -:--:--::7-----::-:--:--:--:~:------
0K, no peOJ. 880 Center St., ,v/patio wtr pd 6J6.412ll Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 ·* 3 BO RMS. * CJ\t. 642-8340 or 54!-2682. 2439-C ~nge A~. $15.'i 7,--;..._;.:,:...;;... __ ...:.;.:.,;.;:;,;;..;:::.:.;:;;;;;:_ __ ~:;;. Some View. Adults only,
Newport 8-ach Newport Beach yearly. $300 month. . BAOiELOR PAD 1 & 2 BR apts, $125 & $152.50. Call : 673.3663 968-2505 Eves.
Frplc., beams, cedar panl'g., Freshly painted, c r pt 1,
cpl!!/drps, pri patio, S150. <!rps, bkns, covered
Util. pd. No pet. 136 E. 20th. carports_. Chilmn & pels
64.>-1317. ok. 830 Center St. S48-4014.
2 BEDROO~I . carpet 1 n g 3 bdnn, 2 bath, $16.J. Finl &.
drapes built-in! iara,e-e last plus c I e a n -u p ! exttUe~t l\lesa ' v e r d ~ References. Childn:n OK, no
location, SlliO p e r month, cpe="::.· "'548--'-.-582.1=::.· -----1
962-9894. MODERN 2 Br, 2 Ba garden
3 BR, 2 BA, + den. $m2 apt. Frplc, dh\\"hr, Nr.
kidl>, no pets. Bit-Ins, CID, Ha~:t>0_r_ &: Baker. Adults.
'YID hkup, pa.Lio, gar. $1&>. ;).}7-1S40.
181-H Delmar. 548-8Z7S. 3 BR, l~t BA, dm\vhr,
NE\Y I & 2 Br dlx apts & lndry, crpts, dll>S, 2 child.
townhouses. Pool, dll11r. ok~ ~vail 4/1. S 1 7 0,
Jo'rom $155. 32~ · E. 20th ~c54~>-c..:.321='°-------1
6'15-4161. LRG 2 BR. $160/mo. Freshly
E-SIDE. Xtra large, quiet, 2 painted. 1;_-dl'Y .facil. carport.
BR, 1~2 BA. Grear patio, No pet~. S4&-8594.
walk to everything. Adltii • SHARP 1 BR, Close ta OCC
Small pets'! 261 Ogle St., & UCI, $135 mo.
Apt. C. 642-8439 alt 6. ** 557-T168 * *
SPAC. 2 I: 3 Br. Apt. $140 up 2 BR Upper, crpts, drps,
Pool, cpt/drjl., bltm, Kids ok range, oven, refrig. No pet.s.
1996 Maple No. 1 642-3813 $135. 968-1455, 548-T129.
2206 Collq:e No. 5 642-i035 e \VILSON GARDENS e
I BR1 Carport. Priv. patio. 2 BR, 111i BA, crpt/drps, encl
Crpts, drps. all eta:. Resp. patio. $140. 642-68U .
BEAUTllUL LIVING THAT
BABIES THE BUDGET!
From $155
REFRIGERATORS
DISHWASHERS
CARPETS & DRAPES
PRIVATE PATIOS
OLYMPIC SIZE POOL
BILLIARDS
GYMNASIUM
CARPORTS
Party Room With Firepl•ce, T.V., Stereo
Vista
Del
Mesa
Apartments
ln-iae I Men Drl.e
Ph. 545-4855
·~· ''-··
Prtftssltntlly MIMtttl ~ S.ulht"' C.untits M1mt. C...
Oeoelo oelll ~y Vllriil11 lti¥•1t..ie1111 l11e. & M;G.LC. fqwitiH c.j,. adul~ only. No children or EXTRA lrg new I Br. Bltns.
pel. $125/mo. 543-1322. Shag cpts, drps, enc I
* * BEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 BR. garage, Priv patio. 540-1901.1 !!!!!!!!![!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!l!!!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I
Contemporary Garden Apts. LRG 2 BR. New crpt &: Apt. Unfurn. 36S Apt. Unfurn. 365 Patios, fr p I c . pool. drapes. VJO/mo. ....;. _______ _
$150-$165. Call 546-5163. ** 548-7209 ** Huminlf9n. Beach Huntington Beach
associated
BROKERS-REAL TORS
2025 W 9olboo 67J-J66)
M•s• Verd•
DELUXE 2 I: 3 Br., 2 Ba.,
encl. gar, $150 up. Rut&!
Ole. 3095 Mace A v • .
546-lo:M.
N•wport Beath
SEACLlFF Manor. 1 BR. 11,S
Ba Studio. 2 BR, 1 ~i Ba.
POOL. Cpl!!, drps, bltns.
Sl aQ 10 Sl75/n10. Ask about
our discount. lj25 Placentia
A\'C. 543-2682
\.\'ANTED RELIABLE
COUPLE In yearly lease a
LARGE 2 BR, Dt'n, Hlde-a-
\Vay. Nr . ocean. REWARD
A steal $250? Appl. 613-1909.
OCEANFRONT yrly
spacious I br apt, best part
ol be11ch. Adult& only, avail
411. $275. 645--0668.
LARGE 3 BR, 2 BA, crpts,
drps. blrns. garBg~. 12 blk
to bay, l blk ocean. \'early.
$280 mo lease. 54S-2820.
e Free lineni 585 Glenneyre or phone * 2 \VEEKS FREE! * I pets. From $165.
• Phon. ··-·le• N t n. h POOL** 642-2181 Call 646-0013 ' . ..,, • . •WPor .... ac ---------* STUDIO APT * LARGE 2 Bdrm., newly
redecorated S l j 0 , 757
Shalimar. 64J....0913.
;;::;;:;===.=;;;;I
ON BEACH! * FRESH Alrt ,
Yrly Dix 2 Br-Batch
Ba., bltns., d l spl.,
dsh\\•shr., lndry ho o k up ,
gar! 21J: m-2257. * 2 & 3 BR. Frplc. Blt-ins. 1 BR. New shag crpt, lrg * 2 BR, 11~ BATI-1 SPECTA~ULAR_ Bay V l~"' Clo!K!d garage. N~ar South closets, nr shops. AdUs. Util *ADULTS onJy, POOL. * $30 .WK • .I. UP * e Stuc!Jo &. l BR Aprs
e Room Jl5 WK & Up ,
Bach. frplc. 7.J fl to Lido Coasl Pla1.a. 545-2321. pd. 1884 Monrovia. 548--0336. 1024--D Mission 54G-1559 Beach. Responsible adults 1 BR. Stove, Re frig.,
only s200. AH u!U. incl'd. Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 · Apt. Unturn, 365 Dishwasher, Crpts, Drps.
2 BR Unfurn Fr. $230/mo.
Furniture Available
Carpets-drape .. ..<fishwasher
heated pool-saunas-tennis
rec room-octan views
pa.ti06·ample parkinc
Security ~II.
• TV 1€. Maid Service Avail e Phone Service. Util Pd Yoa'I E en· fl " 717 James, n35. M0-6133. Y. v ings a t1. Irvine Irvine •rvine • All major credit cards
2376 Ne"wport Blvd. 548-9755
Tb!1 Ad 'Vorth $3 on Rent
673-4704. ---------------------------2 BR, apt., crpt'd & drps,
stove, rehig. Poot Lndty
faciJ. Chldrn ok. 646-8153.
Children Ir: Pet Section
Unbelievably BHutllul
VAL D' ISERE Glll'den Apta.
Adults -no pets. F1owen
f!'YU)'Wh~. • Stream le
\IJaterfaU, 45' pool Rec. Rm,
Sauna, Sell 1-2 Bdrm, 1',um-
Unfurn. from $138. SEE IT:
2000 Panons, 6'2-8670.
$125/t.fO. :\1ob. h o m c
1v/cabana1 oompl. furn .,
htd. pool. Adlts, no pets. 4
Season's l\fob. Es!. 23:>9
Np!, Blvd . :>48--63.12.
SlOO -iHOVE fN AJl01"11.ncc
Shady Eltns -La11•n -Pool
Children's Section
).'urn. le Unrurn l & 2 Br.
2 BR, 2 Ba, Oceanfront,
$185/mo util pd. \\linter.
J8l8 \V. 0 c r> an f rent.
494-1029.
YRLY 2 Br OVCI' garage.
Qu it! Cpf. No pets/child.
Nr l\farkel Basket. $170.
67;>..-49.)8,
2 BR, 'i block from beach.
Frplc, util pd. l~Glh St.
529-2.)42. 772-80-16.
2 or :1 Br deluxe duplex apt.
1 ~ blk to heh & bay. All nu
rurniturc. 673--0a2G.
ON \VATER-Beautiful 2 Bri.
furn apt. S2~ pc r n10.
\\'/frplc. 673-2861.
Apt. Unturn. 365
From $135/mo. Uri Back Ba y
171 E . 22nd St. e &12-3643.2 ·-B-R-.-. -,,-cc-l_b_l-ln-,.-, -d-is'"'po-,-.·1.1
LRG 1 Br furn . Gas heat, cpts, drp~. laud. hook.up,
C?ltc stove, .lihai c p I, heated pool, children OK.
carport, lndry. nr shop'&· Sl6j, n10. 673-6234.
$140 + dep. 998 El Can1 lno, B Ibo d NO, 1 C~'f. 546-4151. • a lslan
l BR. w/auto dsh1·•~r. \\'1!1 GRAND Canal -2 Br, 2 ba.
ti. ready. on or be(orf' 317 frplc, !rg patio. Ne11·ly
for occupancy. C11ll i\1r. or decor/crpt, no gar. 67j..41Jl,
Mrs. Tirrr:-at J.13-ij()(J alt
6pm.
e REAL Va.Jue! Crpts, dr?ll,
dsh1~·hr, pool, 2 BR. Slti
~1alUre adu.lts, no pcl~.
Quiol. 229,j Pacific Ave.
.)48-Q73 Or 642-4-429.
Ba lboa P•ninsula
2 BR, 1 Ba., ne\vly redec.
$1li Nr. ocean & bay. No
children or ~Is. 673-9591.
Coron• dt l Ma r
LGF. 1 br &pl, part. furn iiiiiiiiiiiii
St2~. turn Sl~:i. Aclul1s,
Lndry, Jl:lll". Qu1i't. N r
1nrkb1. l!t22 \VallRCf!' No, 6
5-tS-Wl8.
SHARP BEAUT. 2 BR.
Pool, Adul 111, no pC?ls (t ll'l"n
or infant ok l SIS!}, 642-9520.
SE E & GET BONUS
• 1 BR cleluxe $139. Prlv
pati<>1 tropical pool, Quiel.
l4j E. 18th SI. Apl 10.
84Nl29.
./ AVAIL NO\V! l & 2 Br.,
tum .. pool. 1·ec rm .. grl Joe.
No childtt.n or p e t s .
646-0821.
SHARP l Br. Pool. Nr.
1hopA, util pd, No ~ts.
Adultt. 1184 Monro v 1 a .
~
STUNNJNG 1 br, torn'd S160.
2 br unfllrn 1165. SSO dolW-.
w/"'~
!!..~ ~;
~
ON TEN ACJ\ES
l A 2 BR. Fure. I Untum.
Ftreplac:e1 I prlv. patio.I.
Pools Tennis Contnfl Bkt.tt.
900 Sea Lane, CdM &u-2611
ll\iarArthur nr ~at Hwy)
WWII TOii fH ~n · ae Park wea1
Culok to reserve an apartment ••. In our new adult section. (The
quicker you ar~. the better your chances of getting the floor plan
and location that flt you best.)
Park West apartments tend to filf up fast.
With Junior executives. And secretaries. And engineers. And
everybody else who likes·our location. (Close to employment centers
and freeways. Near shopping, schools, churches and the UC Irvin•
campus.)
With lady golfers. And everybody e lse who likes living across the
street from an 18-hole pYblic golf course.
With weight-watchers. And weight·llttert. And everybody else
who could gain {or lose~something from Park West'• fabuloua rec·
reatlon. (Swimming and therapy PoOIS. Complete health cltsb with
!rained attendants. Night-lighted tennis,.Volleybalf, handball. Large
lurf are8 for Jogging and toucl\. football. Plus lounge. game and
card rooms In the ~andsome two-story cl ubhouse.)
Park West has many other attractions, too. So even if you're not
an execuUve, or a golfer, or a weight>-watcher ~ •• you'll 1Ull flt In. II
you hurry.
(Families: you'll lit In here, loo. Special aecllons wllh tot lots.
Spec lat facll!Ues: Pre-school.Junl6rOlympic slz:e pool. Teen cente r.)
P.&BB wBS'I'
.&P.&R.'l'BJ'*N'l'S
3883 ParkYltw Lant, lrvlne. Just off thiStn Dl-ao Freew1y at Culver Road.
One bedroom, from S160. Two bedioom, two bath from S1 9S .
2 BR, uni., Clean, Cpt.s,
Drps, New paint. $135 mo.
770 Shalimar. 538-4741.
Dana Polnt
LGE 1 BR. Ocean view apt.
Bar, din area, Jiy rm. Lge
Br & BA. Balcony, ntw
shag crpt & dcps, bl.Ira
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
7ll OCEAN A VE., H.B.
<n4) 536-1487
Ofc open 10 am..fi pm Dally
WILLIAM WALTERS CO.
... trig. $165 837-3927 .... _____ _
837-5178. What do you w•nt
Eost Bluff
2 BR. 2 BATHS
Fully carpeted &: draped, up-
slkirs view apt. 2 covered
park'g stalls. Gas & \vater
pd. $250 mo., yearly, 816
Amigos Way, N.B.
• • . 175-6050 O· -··'--U..&
BRAND NE\V -fllO Amigos
Way. 2 Twnhses, 2 B:r, 2~i
Ba. 1 Duplex, 2 Br, ~ Jia,
Frplc's, crpts, drps, bltns,
pool, 2 car apace ea. $300
ea. 675-1380.
Huntington Beach
2 BR apt Oosed gar, cpta,
drps, children/sml.11 pet ok.
$140/mo. 847-2940 .
3 br, 1~ ba twnhse w/bltn
range', own &: refrig. Pvt
patio, 1190. 892-3Gl9.
NE\V Mobile Home, 2 BR,
adult park, Hunt Beach.
$300 mo. 213; ~ eves.
in an apartment~
H11ge \Valk in closet? Dish-
'vashers? Separate dinlni
areas'! Pools? Beautiful fm·
virOnment'! For all this and
more,
sea Bahia Puerto
2810 17th Street at Delaware,
. H.B. All remaining one bd·
rm units, $140. Phone
536-5008.
2 Wks Free Rent
\Valk to beach, new luxurious
lrg 1 BR, Shag crpt, Bltm,
drps, patio, lanai an1. bbq,
subterranean park'r , gar
avail. Balconies, frplc's,
lndry facil. 53 9-1661,
536--0109. 536-5015.
LRG. 2 BR. $140
Under New Management
Ask about our discount plan
.l move-in allow. Children Ir:
smllll peb Wflcome. Nrwl,y
-~-Sea Air Apt.s.
l blk N. of Adams Coll Stach)
729 Apt 6 Utica 536-2796
536-7070
LOVELY J BR, frpl. Walk to
beach. Lease.
ABBEY REALTY 642-38j()
'Valk 3 Blks to Beach!
lge 2 BR, apt newly decor.
\Y /,v c.rpts, drps, bltns. ex·
cept rerrig. $150, No .sng/s,
no pets. 536-1711 LGE. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Yrs lse.
$190/n10. 215 Prospect Ave.
2 BR. $150, frplc., dshwshr, Newport Sho!"f's. 49-t-9502.
bltns, l").early new shag and -----~~--~I
drrt. Very clean. nr. park &. XLNT Nwpt Hghts Joe, $160.
sch!!., children \\·eJcome 2 Br, crp1, drps, idove. Encl
968-863.1. '. ga r. Patio. 548-969.5.
BRAND new triplex l-2·3 br
\Valk to Broadway & Pen·
ny'1 Sehl & prk l blk. S140.·
$160 ... 185. -Call alt 3;Jll,
847-1064
2 BOR.\f. studio apartment.
All electric, cpts, drps,
bltns. $100. 537-7904,
536-9937.
I BDrm .. Yearly. Between
ocean & bay. Crpts, drll1
'tl'/lndry facUl!it'!. 67~7515.
San Clemente
ONE of a kind, Spttlacu1ar
view. Next to Pier, beach.
Lrg new 2 BR apU, 3 only.
Range, dsrwsr. crpts, drpt.
Pvt. decks. L8e $350 mo.
492-7576. BEACHWOOD APTS.
Brand ne\V 1-Z.J Br. \Valk NEW 2 BR .. l'' BA. Very
to beach. Cpt /drps, bltns, quiet neighborhood, n r .
frp). 125 16th St. 847·3957. l:>ench. AduJts only. 492-:xxrl.
2 BR, 2 BA, fresh paint, huge San Juan Capl1tr1no
rooms, sml lux. bldgs. Walk NEW 2 BR, Capistrano Con-
te beach. Pool. Rec rm. do, stove, refrlg etc. $170.
Adults. 220 12th St. * 675-2162 *
e 01EZ ORO APTS e Sant11 Ana
8234 Atlanta. 1-2-3 Br'R.
POOL. Private closed gar. 3 Heated Pools
Washer/dryer. SJG.-0336. La.rie Clubhouse etc. BBQ
LARGE 2 BR, 2 BA, cpts., Child Care Center
drps, encl. pati:> &: gar. Gttat new 1 2 It 3 BdrmJ
NO pets. SJ.55. 53fr.l5'15 includes r!':~e!:~ air cond.
2 BR, ""'" dl'I>', "1'1 ynJ.. SOUTH COAST chU""'n ok. na pe~. $135. mo . 847--VILLAS
BEACHBLUFF APTS. llOI M=r Blvd,
~ i l 3 Br, 2 ba, Pool, Pa-I ----'-'=:::....---I
ho, D!W. 8231 Ellis 847-3957.
2 BDR.\!, cpts, drps, bltns,
Laundry facilities. $135 mo.
894-2152 or 897-5491.
Large 2 BR studio, encl
prage, fncd ya.rd. $150.
Mo. No pets. 842-4549.
The
DAILY
PILOT
ORANGE
I
f
BEA\1J'ITUL STUDIO APT.
Frplc., bca.m ~ii., pr1 ...
patio. Adu'tta. no pet. $138.
336 fl lO!b. 6e-ll!7. I i"n.-<T.,-:r:::-c=,.,........, I COAST'S ' ' '
1 Br P30 A 2 Br $160. Pool I:
tomce, ldW for bachelon,
"' ctllldttn. 1193 O>Urcl>.
Ml l6ll
I BR turn SUO/mo. Gu •
"" pd, Ml\JIJ, .., Jl"(I. No
.. lldrtn. ~!Oii all I A .. -
l I
leading
~ Marketplace
I
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Are You Letting Cash
Slip Through Your Fingers
See If You Have Any
Of These Things A
DAILY PILOT
I
WANT-AD
Will Sell Fast!
1. Stove 29. Blcycle 57. Eltctrfe Train
2. Guitar 30. Typewriter SI. Kitten
3. Beby Crib 31. Bar Stools 59. Cl11sle Auto
•. Electric Saw 32. Encyclope<lle 60. CoffH Tobie
5. c,,mera 33. V1cuum Cleaner 6 l. Motorcycle
6. w,,1her 34. Tropics! Fish 62. Accordion
7. Outbo1rd Motor 3S. Hot Rod Equ;pm't '3. Skis
I. Stereo Set 36. Fili Cabinet 64. TV Set
9. Couch 37. Golf Clubs 6S . Wo rkbench
TO. Cl1rlntt 38. Sterling Silver 6'. Dl•mond Welch
T 1. Refrigerator 39. Victorian Mirror 67. Go-Kart
T 2. Pickup Truck 4ll. Bedroom S.t 68. Ironer
T J. Sewing Machine 41 . Slide Projector 69, Camping Triller
T 4. Surfboard 42. l1wn Mowtr 70. Antlqut Furniture
43. Pool T oble ' TS. Machine Tools 71 . Tape Recorder
16. Dlshw1sher 44. Tires 72. Sellbo1t
T7. Puppy 4S . Piano 73. Sporl1 Cer
11. Cabin Crul11r 46. Fur Coat 7 4. Mattress Box Spgs
19. Golf Cart 47. Drapes 7S. lnboerd Speedboot
20. Barometer •a. linens 76. Shotgun
21. St1mp Collection 49. Horse 77. S.ddle
22. Dinette Set so. Airpl1ne 71. Dart G1nM
23. Play Ptn ST . Organ 79. Punching lag
24. Bowli ng Ball S2. Exercycle 80. Boby Corrlege
2S. W1t1r Skis SJ. Rue Books 11 . Drums
26. Fr111er S4. Ski Boots 12. Rlfle
27. Sulticase SS. H;gh Choir 13. Desk
21. Clock 56. Coins 14. SCUBA GMr
Th1te or any other extra thln91 around the house
can be turned lnta callt· with a
DAILY PILOT WANT-AD
so •
Don't Just Sit there!
DIAL DIRICT •
642-5678
• . . . . ' . . . ' ..
1-N<-)~I ..... OM ....... )~
Apts., Apts.,
Furn. or Urtfum. »O Fum. or Unfum. 370
Cort• Mei•
Quiet end
Se rene
Atmosphere
for Adults.
l t Merri mar \Voods offers so many advan ·
tages. You'll enjoy truly lovely surround·
ings within in your o":n apartment and a
host of recreational facilities are available
within the apartment complex.
1 & 2 BR Apts w /Terraces
Furn. & Unfurn.-From $140
Shag carpeting • drapes e self cleaning
ovens • disposals • loads of closet space
• closed garages. Much more ~
':'i~it ou r model unit toria y to see how happy
hv1ng can be yours at ...
MERRIMAC WOODS Apartments
425 M•rrlm1c Wa y, Co1t1 Me11
Apt. Unfum. 36~
1
Apll.,
Sant• Ana Furn. or Unfurn. 370
Costa Me11
FAMILIES
I WELCOME!
I SINGLE STORY
South Sea Atmosphere
2 BDRM·2 DATii
f17S/mo.
Carpel11 11nri Dr~
Air Cnnrliriontd
Priv11r~ P11tkl8
HF.ATED POOL
Carpnrt k. Sll)l'lCe
Nr. ~MOO
Nr. Sn. Coa.111 Pl11i:a
HIDD!N VILLAGE
1 fill South Sall.a
(~nler 2 hlk11 W. of B61tnl,
ntt Wa.rn~r nn Llnda. Wa.y,
south tn 'N. c~ntrJ111H
Sanla An;t e 541>-152!'1
South Laguna
BRAND NEW
Fmm $145. Di11hwaahr.r, 11h1r
r~inr, w,.Jk-ln ck>MI•.
Forced a.Ir he11t, extra I.up
roonu. Jk11.u1Jrul RAme room,
h!!a~ J>(N)l. BBQ'.1, enc!Oll-
ed 1araro1, q1de1 aurrnund·
ln.g11 IE c~ to 111'1tlpptn1.
Adult llvln1. no pet~.
EL CORDOVA APTS.
2>?7 Owie St. '42-4470
Near Harbor le Hamilton Sl.
* 2 IEDllOOM * 1~ Ba TOWflhouse concepl.
Beam celllna1, f'..xtrn ltz
hl!drma, encl J fio, f'l!(t'f'Jlll·
tkm mi, a1unl' b..ths, etc.
Adult.I. Our SontlAy 1ftf'r·
nnnn B-B·Q'1 4rc. Fret Arl
I.aeon& 11t,artl~ Wlfln,
HAlllOR GREENS
§48.rit'l1ll
HACIENDA
HARBOR
241 AVOCA DO llTJlEt."r
Adults only · "" P.ts
Dtl!Ju I .l 2 BR. l'llol
Gvaci-. DbihWlhr. P11.lt1 utll.
**NEW**
LA COSTA APTS.
1 & 2 Bedroam e Rulll·ln~ e Sha.g rar~fl!
• Or•Pf"a • Walk in i:lnsets
• Swtmmlna Ponl
• Jh1r·b-Qul!11 e Enrlo!IM GMat'"
. All Utiltties Paid
Adu/11. no Pf"IA
\VJ111lkini dl8tancl! tn
shopping ~n~r.
3l4 Avocedo St., C.M.
6<42-9701
DAILY >!LOT 39
Apt a., Apta.. ~'··· Furn. or Unfurn. 370 f urn. or Unfurn. 370 Furn. or Unfurn. S70
1 RR unr Sl5.'I • Furn &eh
Sl40. Al.I tlet, twlm pntil,
"'k'I 111r, I hlk octan. 2lO
C"f'dar ~II~!. --------
~ ...... I~
Rooms 400
People .....
lff:~nM
NT<·~: room for \.lll'lrkll'lC mJllll'I
"/kllt-hf'n prlvll,.~t'R, i::.at
ro,;111 M,.IUI, f>l<l-OO:lfi.
Gu11t Home 415
*PRIVATE ROOM*
fnr 11n1bula.rory pl"rlll'ln. C".nnd
l!Wi, nl« chH:rful 1urround·
lnga.
• Call r.4~4'r.l.i k ParkW.s• 430
Apts.,
Furn. or Unfurn. 370
Dana Point
EXCEPTIONAi, ll'"wl'r :\
RR , 1'i RA. )rl, riw .. lrnn1
Sl!l:i, .1.1!1l2 A OJ\rwh1 : 2 Rn..
vi.-1v, SlliO. 216!/l C Cnrrlovi..
1!12-422.i. --------Huntington Bt•ch
OCEAN VIEW UNITS
fnr rrnr nn 11·rrkl,V, 1nonlhly
It yr11rly bll,;IJ11. In ll11rhour
r11rlfir, 11 nf'1v 1·11m1n11nl1y
nf 111udln & 1 BR unll• In
lluntin2tru1 ll11rhour. ~·u!'n It
IJnfurn r1•11111IJ11 in•·l11dr hltn
k\t!'IU~tl 11ppl'!1, 'ol'llli·lll·Wllll
o·rpl'i , d1 'Af)f'rir11, IMlHI 11Jlpa
fnr lrRJllf', 11111ld 11rrv!1·r,
thrn1py pool!! & lnt•Rtlnn 1
hlk fMnl hrR<'h. /111mrrl, or ..
4·wr. C.:111 714: IM6·1.'\61 nr
21.1: 5!12·1361 !or mrirfll n,..
l•il'I,
e 1\f()V~; IN TOQAY!
Kirls & prt~ 1~rtmmr. 2 Rr.
Imm Sl.19. All l'Xlr1111. "1nl.
g11r, J)fllin. f'urn1tur• AVRii.
17:\62-A Krrlicon Ln, 1-18.
847-.1669 nr 9611-7~10.
S!IAnF: lovlnR Ch r I 1 t t Jiii n
Srlrnl•(' hnmr. M11;l,./F'rmlllP..
A ---------1 $100. ClrJ111n, orrlt'rl.v, C"h,.,.r-
pts., fur. Nh 1mokina:, no tlrh'lk· Furn. or Unfurn. 370
Huntington Lleach
1na. Y'"Jl:f'l11.rlan. Wrlti-J 11.ntrl!:
f'Rlvrrt, 311 Al•h•m•, AJll .
~. lluntln11nn Rt'h. Tf'le-
---------1 rhnn,. ~18~ wktly1 hf'fnre
Al"T: PnnlRlrl .. , ,. pa(' in I[~ 1 /\.M. nr 11f1 g r .M.
h11nir11ln~ pvt p11t1n. SI~ ------n1n tn r12'hr 11rll1~. Mft-1.12:1. i;Hll., 22-23 In .11hano: nur ;'\ ___ _ __ Mrm Aptrlml'nl I 1,9 hk\t'kt
Newpo rt Beach lrnm hfi1rh. Call Donna,
~i''IA-11111 or """r 6 pm .
IW:...2957.
RESORT LIVING (;IRL. 21-'.Vl to I h. r .
1,,.11utlful bfoach l'iouat, Nft
11rl'1 S76.50 + utl l a . i
1142-155.1. • FROM $135
11'1 011kwnod Ga r den
Ap11rtmtnta .. , and It'•
ROOMMATF. wan!M (mAl•
ovf'r 21 I tn •hr nlc11 2 81
Bal. f,;J. •pt. i 151mo .
fl7S-~T0.1.
l • • -
fun, fine nr.h,l1hnr1 arnlSllAR.EMy Water rren t
pre1tlr11 ll1•l n.1[ 1n one h1xur. llnm11 w/tkx:k, man :wi.eD "
ioUll ' p11rkaR"e. There'1 ft yr.11. S'l:iO/mn, ~I r • t 1 ht . •
mllllnn In r'"l"r!'atlnn ••. _6'1!>-i.131. "
awfn1mln1t, terinl.•, hllli11rrl.11 , NF:WPORT -AllOm1ty will _.
hrallh ctuhJll .111111n11 PM-11h1u·~ trtal ho!.111! wtth l'OOI. ' ~. $1.'10. 645-l:io2
11hnp, lnrlnor 1nlf drlvln1 -Sl!===--c---~~~1 * ARE larrP.. ~utiful nnre, eluhhoou, etc. 11p1. on Of"l'11n •ide W/l'lrl
'Q••lnm rlemr11trd .11lnRI"•· nnly, C8.Jl 67 . ...,7ft97,
l ' 2 an. f'urn1shrrl /.,, Un-Offlc• Rental
fuml11t\M. No It'll~"! f'el'JUirM..1;;;;;:::;;::;;;;:::;;=;;:::;;:;
Mod~I• Open Dally 10 to 7, New WJ111.lf"tfrnnt Ofnces
OAKWOOD GARDEN
APARTMENTS
l"mm S:!OO Mnnth
rrimr l.ocallnn
.111 BJlysiril' Dr., N'pl. Reach
Biii Grt.rndy nur. 6Nl61 I
FROM tllO. 6*-ll>4 Otff "CTURI IS WORTH A THOUSAND WOllDS
l Br. S1l1 Up. Unfurn or
Tum. Utll I"'"'· N.wty o!«.
Betut, p:rd•n. JO(ll, ~.
Adullt. t'1t1 Pf'lt. 1961 M1plt
Aw, Qt Mir N,. L .U.O
ftJr rent -
I• •clVMtturol.tl -Come dhcov1r for you,1eH oh tft1
fonto1llc feotvrtt of ovr 1'Mountoin Gr11n1ry Aporlmenll ."
3050 S. IRllTOL, SANTA ANA •1, MU••"• 011our• co•n , ... ,.
1 & 2 bedroom SS7.0SS6 I
Adull livi ng
COST A ~fEAA •IOI'! bids ,
l!ll'l att ft , ) Pl-fktf'll IJACf'S,
Ctll '°'llf'J 4~3W,
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Some of America's 'Greatest Comic Characters
SUNDAYS · in COLOR in the 'DAILY PILOT
Ht(9't hert'a h•rt'•
CHARL.IE BROWN •.• and LUCY .•• and UNV8 ... and
GORDO
.
DICK
TRACY
I . '
TUMBLEWEEDS
lilt but not i...t.
hert'I hert'I
VIOLET •• , and SCHROEDER ••• Ind SNOOPY
FAMILY CIRCUS
MOON MULLINS
• • HILDEGARDE SOPPY
Look for All These and MORE in . die
New DAILY PILOT Sunday Edition Starting March 5
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DAILY PILOT FrldlY, Fei>Mty 25, 1972
,.____-_·-___.]~ I ~. I~ I l~I J~1.__[ _,,..,_,v .. __,J[I) I -~..,... J~l '--1 1'-'_· ----. Ji) .__I -_ ... _ .... __.!~
3 Une1,2 Tl-1, U.00
prurnlturo 11~ Gor-Sile • 112 Ml1hll111HUI 111 Pl1noofOr91n1 116 H.,,., au Camporo, s'.ilo/lt1nt '20 Tralltra, Trawl
S ROOM CROU, CIANT G&roat Sale • Udo
Jlle. Old tr\lnSc, m t n y
ALL NEW hoo.Mbold l~ma, book a ,
FURNITURE tyl)CM'lim, jewel.,., llMN,
c:orW1tin1' of t pc bedroom
croup, T tic Uvill( IWm
IJ'OUP A 5 po dinll'\I tet.
ALL l'OR $2,,,
TERMS.ALSO
LAY-AWAY PLAN
playpen, he•d Jr. ·ms,
Nevada bindlne•. boots .t:
poJe1, Mens 21S Head 1klt ,
ladies Humanlc: booll, toys,
S 1&1. aquar, belly bd.,
Jtuuell Twn F inn, Skin bd.
bilcn, Ladie1 • le boya aid
lhotaun A c:.ue. 14' outboard
bl. It trlr. Many other
ltemt. 673--2916. 111 Via
llhaca. Udo Isle.
SAU;: Once cherl1.hed
TRADERS b<iofwtnp inolu<U"C din nn
FURNITURE tabl•. 6 chn 131), 2 WMk-
-N a dw S A. lne TV sell S2S e•ch. 2 El•t' ••• ·" rH ay, · tralnl m. Baby !urn. miJc
m.U«;: Open 7 Days to)'• It fw'n. Sat A: Sun 2·1E
JtQVlNG INTO APT: NOC'le It 21. (9:3'J to 61, 2607 Alla
wuMr & {U _ df)'f:r Xlnt Vial.a Dr. Nwpt e c h .
• cond. $2XJ. sn,t. bdrm. Ml ~2524
(hdbrd. matt.; drt:111r, ~o'-R~n"'J"."---.-__ ,--dt prep, IHUIU .. W, lk, iamp). f7~ Comer electronic pool cflorllnator, ~ lllO. Mr. I: Mrs. I~ ~·-I •---•
*AUCTION*
FRIDAY 7:30 P.M.
FEBRUARY 15th
f'rom lnsuranct Company;
Qlflce dtlk:, file cabtnets,
6fllce chaJn. Coloml TV'•·
Stel'f!Oa, Bdrm sett, Chests.
Cott~ tables. Bunk bed•.
DIMttet. La.It model 1lde·
bf-side rtb1$'1, S!Ovr.a,
Wuht1'$ It MUCH MORE!
WINDY'S AUCTION
*TAX CLEARANCE* ADORABLE black SUsANsm1i!;,1abl":~.
coclH.-poo P<lt>l>Y· "°"'' VACATIONIER * SALE + ehDdttnl. 5 ~ old. Call In& lnhllnr • ie....,., Com IT'S NICE •, -'SEE
e ARISTOCRATS
e NEWPORTS
e AIJTO.MAT!:S Out lnvfiltOI')' ol Pianot .Ir 54&-&'W. ' Mtu 5C9-195.l. • THE BEST AT .•••
Orp.ru mU1t be reduced he-WEU.=~-.,-a -,-,-,-,-,-d--pt STUBBEN Saddle $17S. Hunt SCott' C•mptr'I Abo, MlV"ral uaed S39!li •up !~~ the Marth 1'1 tu dead· Coll~/Shepherd malll' dor. Coat Q>, BrffehN $25. 1114 N. Harbor Blvd. WORSHAM TRAll.ER SALES
uur. Shot LOVES h I I ct boots $25. 646-'1528. Santa Ana 2109 W. 17th Street * SAVEUPTOS2:IO •· . c: r~n 1~"!'~!""!'!'!!',."'!'-.""'ISllntaAna 1n41Ml·2S95 ON PIANOS I ~M+.ll=~\:19~·=----~ I' * SA Vt UP TO SlOOO ON AOORABLE bliu:k male Jrlt. [ loltl N I~ '69 DODGE 108 VJn, let' box. NEW '12 NOMAD 1 9 • SELEC1'ED CONSOLE ten, Sholl, box traintd, Mlrini ~rntnt t,f 11\nk, Mick' lbJJt, V4 $2,215. •hower, tollel, retri1. S229!t.
ORGANS . UP TO $$00 ON 6«--0139. . l':P~h.~----~.~· ----Scotti Camper.
SMALLER oRGAJ<s * SOFA 13' * • cY.ie1, Ilk... "' N. """"" a1vd.
Don1 t Del•y-Buy Now • • stS-~ '*.,, G.,,.r•I fOO Sc.oter1 tU =~,,;:s.;;"""~•;;:"'=:-c..:: At Tr•m•ndoua .. '!9, NlMRO.P Crowft Dix.
COME BROWSl: AROUND Dl1count1 Male Oac:hahund f'rff to EL PHCtdor i1 ~ti '66 Hl)n(fa 450 cc St Blk•, alpc 5, zip on rm, 1lnk, atove l'.m~ Newi»rt Blvd. Yamaha-Chlckttina:·Ji'iKhcr r\ahl home. Putt bred. delQ!ate, She dc1peratel)i complr n!blt ~. ru.li Ina It abJ, Gd cond. S'm.
Behind Tony's Bid&' Mat'b Kohler & CampbeU pianos • 5f0..l652 • wantJ It> &'ti out ~ c:atch than l ml, calm ttberal• 842-Wf4 aft 3.
C:O,ta Meu * 646-8686 F1lEE PUPPY JOme tl&h. fir Jutl c~. tank, mesa. Shari>. Need '70 Kf'mkW. 21' S. C.
OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 Thomu-C.onn-YamahaOfialll About~ wits old. Shf''• • 16: nbtral~ w/flJ money, MOO/oH~r S43-MU T1.ndem, hHch. roU up awn.
Im STEREO, SOUND NEW &: USED * 496-4413 * hp Mere. motor. \\'.011't mome. '61 BULTACO LoBlto 100 c:c in&:, x tra1. f2875. Pvl. Pty.
DESIGN • Carn.rd. com· COAST MUSIC LOVABLE 1 yr old f~male ~ne tueue her by ~lln1 Expanaio.n che..mber ~ ~W-::::.,;""'::::.·~-=-.-;;:;
ponent sy1tem .. AM/Jo'M/ SERVICE Duchlund, spayed. ~'179 ~11 5 ~m, Price tac tln!1. R111 • perti!ct. $115. TENT traller. Ward1 '68.
fM/MPX '1tertt1 8 rrack 1839 Newport lllvd., C.M. * * 642.-15:2 * * 1" only $850. ~1319. sleeps ~. 2 roll out beds,
complete turntable, bl.Sa rP-* * 642-2851 * * HALF German Shephf!rd/ SUMMER JN Nf:WPORT--30' ·n 350 HONDA Ferrlna: baa• $300, R4i.4187.
"1'"1 '-",~":,. IOld se~at-Oprn Sunday 12 to S pm C.Oll!e, femalf', 9 mos, ahot1 , yawl, on Newport Harbor le back-rest.' Low mUe1, 1A_;::u::loc.:S:;o:.r.::v::lc"'1-, ""P"1-rt"'1""M..,,
e Y or -·"· pay Ou lay-PRE TAX SALE housebroken, klvlrlJ'. 963.3742 :.0:1's1l.n I • 543-5411/Ewa. mu1I sell,. 544-1802. away balance $199.81 ar PY· • . .....a-v
Autos Wante« · f6I
WI rAY TD~
CASH
AJk tot Sa!ff Man11•
11211 S..cb Blwl.
Hunttnatoa Bttth
141.6087 Kl Ms.a
IMPORTS WANtliD
Ortnat CounHM
TOP I BUYER
Sn.I. MAXEY TOYOTA
1U8l Beacb Blvd.
H. Beach. Pl\, 147·M
WJLL Buy )IOUr CU' •PA'4 for
or nol. Call Ralph GordflA
673--09)) -549-3031, 1110
Harbor Btvtl., Coala Meu..
Auto1, lmporttll 970
ALFA .ROMEO hairs .,..,. Floor I t <t.i;; m ""' ~'""""'• tur uuaru1, c ....,. amp T""' sabot, '64 Buick wagon,
Small detk,. Dbl, ~adbrd., clothln&, Jcit 'Utentll•, ma.ny
Bowline." ball • lboea. Ski mort bU&afn ltema. Sat &
mt• at ~.SO monthly. U.S.A. Al( Piano's .l Or9•n1 LABRADOR.COtlle m 1 x • <l 14' u,,l'lt ' TUI T;raUer 191ho0 Harley xr.atb'k '"1'3"ooom Stereo Equip. Warehoutf', 1,,., ,,._,, OFF I puppies, 6 week1 old. Call . . Ml c pper atiow 1 e. . '~ E 17 5 C v-,.--,.. 549-2851. Bolh perfect oondU~on ....... ..,.,,., k 1 ,. '" • · th t:, Olla Me1a, AU, FAMOUS MAKE8-._ e OOS.:.SOll e ·"""""".u, as or "1m.
Ra3Ul t.T VW en1ine1, lr.eftl
air, 4o l;IP wl!h Bia Bon! lril . l---A-ll-a""'R_o_m-,-0--
40 bp 1tock. 1500 VW. All
J[Uan.nfted. VW floor pa.n II
trllll!mission 1967. T.t:T
Automotive, 01940 ,Placentla,
C.M. t :J0.5:30.
'boots. Mlle, pictures. Su •• H~' ·'33-1307, 1.1.'1--6497· n, 16...,, 1 •• .,and Dr ..
Nwpt Bch, 543-5.349 MAHOC. Cl'ldenu., aotq, I ·LE-""A::..V:.;IN=G:::..:::M:..::.::._ __ d
""'Ile ptaW:>nn • "" l v e 1 J any a: o o
?Ocl(er .. Jounee Chalr, both ~ms: R~. auir.ar1, amp.
llfUPh.Yde, lwbl M a P 1 e . Sew mach. ToolJ, ....._.a • .a. ,__ I dishes, utensils, ah rub 1 , """"°"' ..... • new, aunp tab e, '·-S 5, pc: dinette. set. .16" round m~. Sat· un. UM9 W.
T 1 l~at. 3)51 Vaill)' R.4, WillOf'I, CM
. CM. fi4S-.l365. . W~ .2 families Baby
MOV'G .. Qu.Wy 6 pc. maple thlna•, dinln.e mom tum.
hdnn., J_pc. Buhr°• R4ncfl tO)'s, electric' lawn mowe"r.
bdnn., maplt: c:ottee It 2 va{'llum cleMU. Quality
alt.JI end tabie1, wuher, pa etc. Sat A Sun. JD.:.!, Ul4
d-1 -'--Th"-Knottincham Rd, N.B. ··~~r. m.p.1. mix;. "'"' I"'=.,-;:;,:;"=-'-~-•Fri. si.L lb to 3 only. ~ A PATIO Sale: ~ta Mesa Att
Na.fhvW., H.~. Le a 1 u e Bldf. Fund.
LJKE·new·V•lvet liv nn Mt Jewelry, Antiques, Book1,
IOfa, Jove, ••t. curved JU~ Paintinp, Frame.. Mile.
back chain, pecan A Span. ~ulc" Sun Fle~_26-21M. U>.5.
, mk tablt1. Will •puat,. " en~r s . """la tn .
.Also llerculon I' 1 e fa GlANT ' Ga,..P ·Sa I e :
w/matc:!W11 1ov, seat fie. S • t IS u n • 26th, 27tti.
6'.>J.101 Cameru, baby i I em • ,
-• .. _ aport.11 equip. Lots o t lfl .. kclc. vi'tvet CnAln $75.
1 t.ovely CT\lahed vtlvet·90fa. goodies, 3140 Cou.otey Club
66-2442. PENNY OWSLEY CO. GERMAN Shorthair Pup •71 SUZUKI 500 cc, 6000 mt.
STERF.0, 1972 Garr a rd ll352 Beach Bl, Nr K11.te:lla female, purebred. 8 wk.a. &o.t1/M.rlo_t 'x1nt t:Ond. MUST SEIL.
model, full stereo chanier. M·F 10.9, Saf lo.6, Sun 12-6 frtt to &:d Mme, 646--84Zl. Equip. 904 Sftt oiler. -494-3193 ' ·
alt 1u1pensk>n speakers. WOULD YOU BLACK maJe Labr.ooi: pup-·n YAMAHA 360 Enduro.
AM/FM 1ll!lreo ndio + BELIEVE PY, fi mo5. Very lovi111 It_ MERC Mk. 20. O.B. mtr, Runs ............. S5Th. Alk for CHEV turbn hydro C.A. 400 .. -d• k S!W ~nd & -~ · •• , .A""" S250. Chev 557 & ~ ~ran~. ;~ · 7: ft • HEE ORGAN LESSONS gentle, 64z.+412· ';,~~r !;'. 1$150_.~~wat!:ri DtnnU!, '194-3004. politri'lction rear-end J.50_
unclaimed on lay-.a.way. ·~.Jong .ta you like! Nt> rtg-f1poodRE~ .. 10 ri'rl ~e, bMinl. 5'8-9&4.2 '
11
·n Yamaha 125 Endum Joe -~•·:..""-'=c:'°"""'·=-==
Sold for S325, 'Pi'IY oH mb'ation. No obligation. Ju.I -.., ma e. v•" rwn. mi's. Like new. $475. Ca.JI 4eustom whttll tit Fnrd
balance of $95 N' take over Omie Monday3 7:30 pm, Appmx 1 yr. 833--8991. SEXTANT rfe~ PI a I h 64&-9108 an 5pm. 0, ~--le'~ .. adapt,. VW . COAST Music Yachtsman. $195. ... .... ,... .,. ama1I pymnts. Collection FREE puppies, Auatralian , 1963 Honda 150cc. Excel. •u. •·'"ea all. 615-lMS. ' ... Al\._,.., • * 645-5.US ... ... ..,., ..... DepL, 714/~l. V'l-"~l Shepherd type. -494-5828 404 condltiOn. *· AUCTION * PIANOS ** OR-GANS Cyo Ael'<I, IA& Be•. Boat.i, Power t06 • 5.'lf>-0.1JO
Ktf·a1, Steinway, Lowrey, '70 Honda CL350 l§l F ine Furniture
It. Appllance.s
Auctiona Friday, 7:~ fl.m.
W indy's Auction Barn
1)751,2 Newport, CM 646-8686
·Behind Ton1'1 Bide Mat'l
1970 Marnavax ,fUrler, tape
recorder. phone Ir •pkn,
retails fur over $450. Wl:ll
aacrillce at $250. Marco
Polo elec. zuitar .l pickup
w/separate vol. controls,
new $j(). Keith ~3198 alt 6
S295 up. RENTALS. Ptts and ~ ~ cruiser. 300 HP VII. SS2.') e !!Q-9515 AJe:n, Baldwin. etc. From [ Jl~l . 169 Luhn 28r · Blue, xln! t'are, Ht'lmets.
Daily IG.6 Suri 12-5
FIELD'S PIANO CO. 'I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;: Trim tabs, hlll'tilhtn1,equip. MATCHLESS S:O.Sb-eet or Antique1/Cla11fc1 95l
183.1 Newport Blvd )1 Only 3& hours. MAny ex· dirt. Pr\~ at $225. 54-062 ----...--,--
Co«ta Mesa 7141645.3250 Catt 152 trill!. Sacritil'r. "495-5t92. ·Evea·. / '5l HENRY J
MAJOR BRANO ORGANS BURM·ESE male, 12 mo. nld '70 Formula Ttiundertiird ** '69 HONDA 125 ** SlOO. e "94·2405
From $395 inc, Allen-Conn. Sl5 ·!D ~home. AllO kit· OMC c11.mper top. 'ship ta Lo ml. Xlnt cond. $280. Dune Bu99ie1 t5'
Hammond • Wurlitzer, etc. teN S.25 ea. 4~1 •hore radia, "head. compaii, · Call R38-ll3'1 ·an ~ pm
Al & mftny nther xtras. Roni~~=,..,..=~,=== ."' Harpiichords &: BEAUTIFUL Siameae kit· GiU ~9.'!7 -'TI H6NDA 100 Moto Sport.
P1ano1. · XJnt Cf>nd. 3000 ml't. St. Go lt>n!!, Paper11, S~. .,.,. Cl!RJS SPORTS FISH~ · ULD MUSIC CO. M2-387J ,.. 540-5415 _, . · i:.n. legal. $345. 968-8996.
DUNE Bu11rY, not finished .
Clod HopJ)('r body, VW
tramf!. 540--1530.
.»t5 No. Main S.A. S Dbl. plkd. tlTh HP engine. 547~1 ** Since 1911 3 iame1e Kittens Radlo ·lJOUnder bail t41\k 1910 Honda SL~. low ml.,
LOWREY Church Model, 2 Sealpnt S15 ea 543.2533 1st n8oo lake5. 646.-!!<m. ,· Uke new. :i~ be1t offer.
... .,, 11-' $f40. MatchlnJ _o_,_. _M_•_ .. _v_mi_,_. __ _ .._,. p.m. J-yraeal $1!0. Carvfd FURNITURE. btrch
Sports, Rae•, Rods 959
ccc.ktail taJlles $40. Lamps ltedrm., de1k, tablet, dishee, 60 Wat I Hanna.n-KAJ'don
p . 538-ml. patto e:lt. Wia•, jewelry, •lt't'm AM/FM receiver,
-thin ""I .. ~-•p' Garrard SI.,558 turntable. vn.rGSIZE waf:frbed: in. eve.~ I m... · ..... .,. · ""d;du ma~u. f I 0 a r 8900 La Jtoca Ave:., Faun.. tx>th $75. Ne&.rly complete ..
"'
. V-"•• •-1 .. Sun Bonanza mini bike $2;, ~--. liner, ioam -d. 5, ---~~'-' ~-·-·-~· _ ll"&l1~ -, • M6--684t anytime yr. suarantet. Prl. partJ GARAGE Sale. Sat. &: Sun., ==-=-7-c~~--
manual, full pedal. special Dogs l.W 14' FB MitchE:1J, -40 hp . •71.100 Ce.nturlan S375.
effect8, ex. cond. $1600 • Johnlon t'fectric:. Very little
Priv ply 540-64.Z7 · F' REE 0 BED t ENCE UM'. Trailer, good cover. ·~250 Sidewinder $251).
• . ' LESSON Good bargain. $'950. '7S. l6.i2 642--0487 alter 5PM __
ANTIQUE E&tey P u mpW /AKC Germ Ship ,-,~-HARLEY-DavldiOn fully
Organ. Eler:. powered. Xlnt PURCHASE Bred · r or 12 Glasspar & trlr · dretRd like new '2795 Men-
DRAGSTER: 135" wheel
bale WJAvon Spttdma1ter
nrea, Borranl rim), l
blocks, 303 cu. In. SIJO or
br.11 otter. st>-822-4.
Trucks '"
NOW ON DJ SPLAY
Salf!11 Servi~
Part• l!od,y ShoJ>
COAST IMPORTS
1(1()().1200 W. Cout Hwy.
Newport Bf:ach 6U.ot06
'6 7 Alplla Romero
Duetto Spyder
with 2 topa. S apeed. wtfI'9J3
$1595
SANTA ANA'
TOYOTA
PHONE 540-2512
417 w ... Witmer, Santa Ana
AUSTIN HEALEY
''7 Austin H11/y $17'5
Overdrive, wire w he It' I• ,
while with black inferior,
fwe have many othenJ.
Newport Imports
3100 W. COllsl H'lll)'.,
Newport Se:aci!
'42-M05 w ~-~--Bdnn ,., AMER. Oriental Kan1tan $25,. 161-6833. l•1l't"r, ••,.I""• • •
Scuba gear. Dirt Bike, rug 9it12. Bt\ge wool 9x12.
?>AVENPOl'lT & Ola.Ir • Surfboards, Tables, Oothea Apt. ml. 18& a I o v e.
._ Offtr. Knpa: bed, &: IO forth, 21391 &wsprit Westinghouse elrc. All Xlnl.
'n GMC Truck C•mper '63 A. Htaly, MK . 3000.
BR.AND new 1972 GMC ~ ton Mech. AOUnd. Xlnr body .
cond. Sacrifit'e S 2 9 5, temperam~. show ,C.. In. S2ll. • s.3-2DJ. "~u Dr. ' CM t .... lIM --------548-5659 00 • .~ . leU\ience. M2--M!7. :Nl' SeAhunter, bait tank, ll5 lST S85 k H nd jO 5000 MOVING! Oliter Tonk prac. GERMAN SHEPHERD hp OB and trailer. S1825. miles . ::nt~ Se.~. !ruy: 414
upright piano w I bf! n t' h , Silver tip w/blk mask, m11ll!, 53l-lf;64. Cat&lina Dr., NB :~~P~:95. GE nfri.e.. :i moll. nld. $40. fi46-46n eves 1-4' Runabou.t 35 hp. motor, •67 TRIUMPH 500cc, CttiAnl
. . Prty, 673--6261. A: wknd1. 4':U&lom .trailer, Xlnt eond. lnrkt, high pipei S400 or btt
'. ~T! ~~~w 1;t Ln., Jf.B. 968-46SL oond. 67S..7CJ7.
~i30, 138--1542-e FURN. trofn 3 hooae1! DINE'l'I'E, 6 chr1. Dining
P.U. FuUy !aetory equip~ Removable H.T. S I J ~ O.
lncludins P, • t e ~ r In• , IW-13.'>4. ~Jru.
2auie1. ndln. t'lf'ater, Viii 1-~=~~~~=~
'""'"' plu• b<autllul ,. rob ASTON MARTIN
l'}Vtr camper that altt:pe; six. .S::"'-:::...::c.:._ ____ I Owrstu.fted aofa1, pine deak, t4blr & chn. CompH!te
Jl1tOWN eak bednlom Ml, cha.In. dlurch pewa, yoo flrepJa~ .c:rttn at'f. Ji'ine
mattr A: box IJ)rp, mafCh'J name II! 64~2883. 1935 Port chrs from JS, t...mps, step
1 dblt bed, dtt~kr, ·~· 1
2 Camey Pl .. N.8 . labl~•. a.ntlque hall tree,
A.rnQUE B.eE'nfOVEN' 8 EAU TI FU L kiveab\e 2431 Hqbday Rd. 5'3--JlM. 6fl". Nttd money. $-1334.
Upnzht piano. $251). German Shepherd J>Uppll!~. 16' Gluspar · w/15 hp eng, ,O Yamah.11 al5 Endnro.
-968-3852 -• Thornua'hb~. Pleaae call xlnt cond. Trall ridden only, $375. Ca.II s.naJ ..;;5 ::,;~LI. 1966 ASTON •
N~~3:J;:.! MARTIN 085
,.. tu, Uc .. ·doc. ree
PRIVATE PARTY WANTS 546-3219. filr1498 fi4+-05.43.
TO BUY PIANO FOR FOR your Easler &1ket, Boats Rent/Chart'r JOIE ~~1 -1 -1-,~---7,:ID= CASH. 8J5..2278. AKC whippell, I wk1 & , ec r c ar1
~~l:~: ~iJ uv., SAT I: sun: 10756 El Centro, power moWer It edger.
F .V. 10' dingy fiberclas1 •548=·204=7_· -.,..-,.,.--,--,~ ~POR.ARY c:rnth .._, lu I'·-t1q RUSTY, used boa! mooring
BILL BARRY SILVE'RTONE electric chord AKC l laJlan grtyhound1, 3 CATALINA 27' SLOOP ELECrR.IC Car. Xlnt cond, --'vet' .. ;. .. ch, .. Id, 8'. Ex-.,.,...., m ,..._...,, an ues, ··q '"" nuo-·-nt l1'1hlfng and ao chain, ;'" material, each .. "-nt. 1-or •-,1 ott•r. ·-· • organ. Seldom u~. Llkt' ITKWI. $."J01 .l up. 557-8408 Brand new ·boat. Aux. powu, Nl"w 10p It. curtain, Chufer,
new. $100, 842-5&7. s CH NA u z ER flu p 1 1deeps six. SIS radff?, RDF, S7J5. M7-M82 at.I 6pm. GMC·PONTIAC·FIAT
THOMAS electronic organ houRbroken, 11hot1. Stud 6'2" headroom, convenh!nt Mobile Hemet t25
wr.: ~ °"" .. _.. link 2-~" lon11:. 1%." wldt. r.1i Aft fi pm. , 557-3638 m\lOl rnott. ~ 50c per It. Marine SurplUI
pry dffk. lx5. walnut E,!~AJLUF .. Fv· ,.N•>thN "°"""'a SaL Co., 3.M7 s. Ma.In, S.A.
finish. · formlca · top. Top ''"" 11 · · · 545--65.'>I. ·~ ·-• Sa Dr J0.5, Baby furn.. drtuer,
Model G-1 w/Hammood tervh. Groom.Inf, terms. Nl"wport alip w/pll!nly nf ---------It.ft St. at S.A. Frwy.)
Solovox $325. ~1998 84fi.-0839. parl(ing. Oub r.:iiea.. For Info 2h57 FLAMINGO, 2 bdrm., D'.O E. l~~·00oSanta Ana cand •. _.. .._ mar · toys. Oothe1, h o u • e b o 1 d (2) 10' x 12' Shag nJJ8, tur. ~ mile. quoise, dark green, xlnl. SJJ ' · citll. S.57-9046. aft li:?.O, ane la kjnz-1!1.f!; 2 bath. i----""-'-'----Antique upright p i•no DOGS It ca.ls klv• ii. F'reth Boats S II '°' wuher l dryer, new
SACRif'ICE all 1 u r n . , I ·TW-O-lamil-.-,-..... --.-aal-e-. -9 -,. ,•"'•-"'-·_,m.&-~Uo:---,--,-it~ .. from luxuriool lake 5 Sal .. Sun Feb 26 • -Dicta............., Tn.velmuler, home. Wt Forest, El Toro ' '"' · · ~·· ,... ........ '131).3315t. 5211 Burrand)' C i r c I e . Xlnt for lrulurance age'Tlt
Irvine. Misc furniture « A.I cond. Joan, ~not ausr S!U: Spanish dining household )term. 13" CU.tom wheels, fit Ford
ar Chrytler or ·adapt to VW .
$40. for (. '7>1345.
lbl 91" x 3&" & cocktail tbl I =-"-"',.O.,"'--~~-~ "5' ·diameter. I.rs 09k deak. GARAGE Sale: Furn, .cirls m-14911. clothes u 4, S, 6. Wamen's
1D, 12, 14. :rorn Crai.let, 13J BASS Accordkln Sl25. = NEW cutt. 1' burnt H.B. Noon 'til S P M . Cup Vendinr Machine s,;o.
, couch. iunda. Rby'~ ~Ea 1 .,.™.·.,1s.&11i.soi;n;;; . .,..., ... .,.,. 96i-2818. f;S $45. T•&k e ta .., _., I' ="c=-~~_,.,--,--...,-
l..:'.::""235=7-. --~~--I NB GnndmotM'r'a Club No. MUBI' ~: Maytag rltt
UNUSUAL 10.pc dinins rm 419 Rwnma.ge Sale .. Feb. wuher ~ryer, Apt refrig,
-E -• Other miac. 64,S..5458. _., 2 CGUche.s, 1 ~th-26tW. 341). .' w• SI.,
!'W/m&tcttq c:hair. Pair M CM lo-4.PM Cartop carrier $15.
ond'1Abi... a.in,.-· I ;;;~;o;;;'r.'";;;;~~~ 1.=~·~><t).~22'19~..!•',........,-~ 1 1 ~-•-~.,, 1 Movinj: ndL wttk. ltallan KITCHEN cabinet.a, fonnica u.i.nu"" M • ..,, ....... u" e ' Prov ootfee table; ladle1 3 W-911 " table. Eltc:. •love & top incl. double ai.nk . 9~'
G:,._ and mott. & Knox apd bike, •~a.mer trunk, lq. $50. 646-1998. :~~CM strolltr l lobJ m I 1 c . ..,.. 557-1607 ELECTRIC Bed A mattrHll,
COUCH, lndltional, brown. 1 1&t new. ~ c:ond ~-ll9S Paularino ROU]'l,'O oak tab es. rom-$?-l540
.... made1, many other antique ---------
Sl25. * 56-1046 mnt, 20e lb. C 0 t I a.Ce ' • diahwuher Rhed 11el-up !ti
S rt' G l30 chttle, Ee lb. ~lft dellvtry famil -~..i. p 1 k po 1ng OOdt fir atcn pick.up. 557~. S4000 vaJue at half-pric:P. A t..,
1
...!~ t'""-'"• e o .
----------1,==--''-"'~-...-.c..cc__ sally, 11ta·worthy 19', Gaff .... -11>;1"1.
REWADING equ i pment WARM &: cuddly . mln1ah.1re rig:g.ed cullft'. Dacron aan..l~Mot~-0-,~H~om-,-,--~,=40
Hertrn P"'ss, RCSS. Diei Schnauur pupp1e1, AKC Jnbd. ens. Hd. But ttu.. oJ-i--,-------fOf' 270, 300 wby, . M-1 reg. All sOOts, Jot.nPe a/~r fpr taktt. Alie About etfe
rarbine, 2t1 win, 44 mai. 6 pm. 8-47-8929; 84~1. "flqan" 61~
CaR trimmer. RC BS MIN. Schnauzer, male.a. 7
Powder meu:url', m!llly wk.II, 1 black, 1 salt ,\ pep.
bu11Pl8, brau, p r i m er 1 , per. AKC ttg. Cb. atock.
GLASSPAR .Privalffr, 1a.1f
nnld $00p. 19' FG hull,
O.B well, 6 . hp Chrys. ·much equipment. SUS. far ~.
•vt>rythitll" !m-1319. L.~D-A~!t~L~l-N~G~-.--w-,.-k c,AL 11: lmmaculatr. ~ hp
LEfi' Hand 5 fl on t er R . OOt'kapoo b Inn d Sl5 oulboard. Ugti!s, head , 1J63t. Harbor, Garden Gmve
642-7°'6:
Weatherby 257 .m a g n u m 642-4818, ' 5M-3SS5 a.her 6 s • 6 9 s I Slk So t G G ~. , _ pold m!llly extn.1. ' . . . n . • ~ ..... y. ~a 3x9 variable Buelrr p.m. 644-0159. 636--23.1.1
mounts. brand new S32n.OO 1-'-=-. ------
Weath"rbY JOO m Ag nu~ • 2 St/Vf'r poodles. 6 wks old. 42' TRIMARAN •. parfie.JJy *Marvin Pearce*
Leapold ?.Kt variable Burler Call alt 3 pm: compl,, c:TON des1rn, m&ke
mounls $280.00. 97~1319. 540-0077 offer. 20371 Acacia-SL. San.
GUN eou . Ro . GERMAN Sheph<rd .... ~.. ,, ... "'1 ...... ·s.11-«110. Motor H01J1es
ection mingmn SlD each, 51~ wb old. White SNOWBIRD. zood ahape! ~:v!0;~nJ~~~ ~~a;!~ st-.ephml, ui. 5.16--0071. wi1h !Tailer. 2 aeu aailli. one Sales • Rentals
26" barre.ls SXK), llhllca WVABLEBlack Poodle pup. new. Beat ofh.r. $-3590. 551•3222
ModP-1 37 pump 12 ga. JO" VPry re11.ll0nable. 6 weeks cusr. blt Sabttt ty~ hull, ll.11.S • VWi w ... SA. 12t bartt! SUO. 979--U19. old. 548-4145. new, S:nl. Built by owner. · ie ~· ·
ruu. aiu Pool Table, he&"" Yorkle puppie1, AKC. 54>0932. •n APOLLO motor Home
.Avf. C.N. i49-J54S lterru:_ 543--l.995 Mleceltaneou1
UDP Jale: Marbtt oofftt SAT: tBeck 6&31> 2900 Silvtr Wanted ~. roll.a.way Md, Spanish · l M. /;:;:;:;::;;;:;;:;::;;;:;;;;;;;;, Ln. N.B Fum1bJtt !IC. ' Jtmp. ~. Items. R.eUomble!
i'i'A Bed, full 1iu, aqua 1-H-..,-... --'>old--G--t -Dd-1--1-14 tilue, hklf' new $65. 60-l>U _;..· ____ _.. .. __
,itu S pm. : PR. l\-'hi~ Oraptries. 164"
ea.. on w'1nut decorator
rodl. l pr. 172". $25 e1eh pr.
* WANTED * Used patio furnilure. Pretti'
rftlwood ()( wrought iran.
Must be reatonablt. OK it
nei!ds refinishini. Ca.II ah
g pm. 837-500.l
µJIGE Oak dffk. 71"xU"
tip. I Drawl!n, l1li. .,,...1!1
507-0634. '"'""""~""""""""""""'" Wiii -.... di u _ ...&.. 11, WANTED lo buy l 9 61 TE ........ Mite Rt rn111;11iMry s .. ed l abRorslrand•
ff/.f -chn., aea.ts l. Wu ---------SJJt. Askins S7$. 557-3032. 60 Tan }b'drauUc: Pt'!ll Chriltmas Plair. 644-t687.
., 1· 1 _, 3 •.. 25'. Aux. 4000 wall 1en. Male lop, complete w/bsll~. vtry iny em...,et. ....,, LIDO 14 No. 940. 2 &ell Wis, SJS.OOO. &44-J6.10 aftrr 5.
n ck &. CtJl!ll. Xlnl oond . •lud Mrvic:e • 89.1-9719 * S750. Sabot l1.50. 7!4 :1=~~-~-~-=
S6M. 613-9176. BOXER Pup1, AKC, pets. 637-3004. Trailers, Tr•vel M5
'10 HARLEY Davidson iu MuRt ¥crlli~. Boats, Slip1/Dock1 911 lNTRODUCJNG lhe 11maztng
golI cart, like new. .. * 7141962-8067 * * ALL FIBER Cl-ASS COM·
644-5244 6 WK OLD Germ-.n Shepherd Ooc:k tie up. Privl. f10 min. PACT TRAVEL TRAIL.ER.
US Divu aqua Jure &inile Puppy'• $5. ea. Mother frtt. Sail pref. Wtr/elee. 300 E. "The rnlnj car mtlch up of
71 w/J valve. Da.co; linale 549-325.l Edge.water, Ba.I. l-3'71·2866. !he year"
ho9e regulator. 646--06.11 SJLKY Terrier. female pup-SUP lor JJ' boat wat,r It Tof.al tanna1e we.l,s:ht 75 lbl.
TV' n-dlo HIFI piea. AKC. Right prk:e to elect. ivail, Peninsula area. Store' In your.raraa~ RJJh§i oU-~t iron "''IX>""''! nnil. drill .m ·ta~•• "J>lid 150 um. ovtne. ~1049.
-' , 673-6700. Slttpg 4. fi '6" ·htlctroqm. s>re•. Mu1ical ln1trument1 m Stereo 136 ttie light family! 545-2'191. 1---------!~;:!~~,,,,_-,_..;.: lc:RREA'fTJDao;',;-;'jp;,;p .. 17-w~kiiiL Bctatt, SPMCf & Skf 91 I Dta·Jl'lfd to M hauled by 197: " ''"' ANY IMPORT or COM· IJI GREAT Buy~ Fr n de r " ZENmJ A: RCA AKC HarlrqulnR A black '?O GLASSTRON 16' 75 hp PACT.
Mwta111t ru itar. Sea.rt 150 Televtllions. Lower ln pri~ Pel $.y, Show S250. ~7038. EvLn. V•naon bir A -ulp. Onl• u•,• •. •~ lt,..lh
' . ,.U hr Ill! '"'"· "2Alll66. Mlocell1noou1
RIQJHEll chair, black
muph]ide., liU ntw. $40.
Call MS4llO "'"·
2 Can, ·11 ~ It '51 watt amp. Mllllt St:U! f150 than the diJCOUfTten. 3 yrl-'-==·.=::__::...:.:-.:;c.:._~ ~-. ~ JI u• ·•
Pt)'lftouth. Both ha\• •71 for both. MJ.-6829 afl 6PM. pict\ft rube, J yr parts, 1 yr PUG puppln , 7 wetb. AKC, l lliiO. R. Taylor-evea, Set only •t the !!xclu1ive
Aetvice wuranty. Every •I l malea, 1 female. EJ!tellent' 673-fr97l Maler for U. btach area = run JOOd.5n;;o takn TROMBONE -bit bort. A&Je ..-__.. thru FU. 29th. papers. 49'-7971. ll' lAvo. SK etievy ~ cl1No .. JIM SLEMONS lM·
Ste: after pm at $14 w/triger to F , xtru. $135 ABC>''~-TV, ~-, TOY l'ooclll, 2 ...... old,......,., mint (Ofkf, •/custom fl.n-PO~R· TS
1
2'JJ1 S. Mal.I. 8.A. E. Octantront. Apt 6 , or belt. 54&-9&C2 ""'1W "''""''"' ,... • • ..., u:7 Ballu. Cbunl)''s 1 a r, ._at In-tf'n'\ai.. 'Cond witb children. ~ traUa. $3.IKXI. W.M?I .N
-~--"--~-~ 5 -= puttbftd. No papen. 1100. -__
• • -.
lntmlatlonal -RECREATION CENTER
ROY CARVER, Inc.
292S Harbor Blvd.
Cotta Mesa 546-4444
'70 FORD VAN
" Tl)ft. 340E V8, Auto, R4H
dlr. New tlr~I'. ShArp! Hr11vy
Duty Equip. Short WB.
18.17KJE~ S2J.95. 644·2950.
·n FORD Pick Up. Low BJu~
Book. I cyl, F·IOO, 8' btd,
cu.tom c:ah. XJnt eorwt.
$2195. 494-n.ffi or collect
6511-3622
WANTED 1964 thru 1968
Chevy or Ford Pkk Up
w/auto tran11. Mwl bf'
clean It rt a 10 ria ble ,
8'1-1>63.
IMW
IMMEDIATE DRIYERY
2002's &
Bavaria's
llE£ US ABOUT
OverM•• Delivery
CREVllR MOTORS
a w. l!f St .. "1uita Ana
W.3171
F'ORD Trallf'r tr1ctor. Xlnt Automotlv" ~Udot
rond. SI LM. '4"6 Utility & ~ ITJU1er. ivw tood. Stoo.
542-ll&,.;.
'61 Ranchm>. ml
"' ""'
0
""· ROY CAlYll, Inc.
s.&-381a . 2IZI' llaJ1>or •l•d.
'f!S Chevy Cam.,All :m. hie. 0..ta. Mesa 548 ''''
alr, pf1, '1lnt cond. $1375. * '68 BMW J«WJ, radlol &AiM.
!1.1645.lL MlchtUn flm, ,M,IJllO ml,
Auto L•••lnt ff4 It. t•.n. 11~-.5.1U'llll.
'5 BMW 2111:1 >Im .....,, like
ntW, 2TU E. Coall HW)' No. A. C.d.M, 641,IZ4 ·
Try our 1.... tl<pttf1 lor CrTIOEN l!a•inas • Sa&laction • s.,. I'::::::".=..;.:.;.;;.:;.;;..._
vi(:f:. CIT.ROEN' Uf4, JD JI, Xlt!I
WE LE.A$E AIL !'OPULA!! """'· 1<15. lrl-t:Mt Room
Im MAKES AT roMPP:n-.:;2211:;.:alt:.:;tt~~~=,,,.---I TIV~~;;:. Rlld tor DATSUN
1urtbtt llttail.A.
THIODORE
R.OSINS l'ORD
--Blvd. 00.C. ,._ UUOIO
Je11t ..-: OMenia1 Maple KIN'Gstz:E wa!ft'bed· in-Offiu FumJture/ depenMnl dealtr. 9 O 21 Pl. 66-2921. J6' SKJ boat 50 E..tnndt enc ••
llsMd9 G'', Xlnl: coa6. SI>. ~ matrrea, 1'1a 0 r Equip. 124 Atlanta, Huntinp>rl Beacb. MUBI' SdJ. Alaban hound. ~ whftJ tnller. '750. . ~ '.
• "-~. ~. ~ ~· SPECTACUU.Jl SALE ...... Silt 112 'f' ............ Pri. ....,. FAcn>RY SURPLUS-BOOE !IOI etmo ~/_;.,._.;_o.=· --=== ::':"!':::"'.:::":::::;:'-;;:;-:::;-l-~125:':.~-~-~---omCE ANO YAC10RY ""'""· mlnlcond l t lon GREAT DAI(£ PIJPPn;! [ . II•] ~-.. _. T-.:..-s.u.-..,. '""*-•n co1-cusr. bit .,.,.. 1p1in m. f"URNl'TlJRE IJSO. -66<llt1 """ ' 1 w.... "° """ T--.. -. ,_
...._ ltV ~. bn. Guitar A: cue s.;o T'aPt Detlts. Chatn. l.Jsht Ta Mu. pm WHk dt.>'•. &1l)'timt * 54t-2'122 • t, -8-~ >ladl mbc. 511 ,_.dti' no °"""' p1yr Cllalllhoanlo. Robort.., .... -.. H.,,.. 15' •
..... liq, JI.& 110 Girl's b111e $lO. Antiqlit c.m.ra. Cont.......,. Tabin. CURTIS MAntES colo< "'"' Alruaft ,15 ~ -!llmw.
Jl4.T--~C loU e I rJohe m. -· _..._ &Derw. ....... & Io It . 2 I '' TV , AQHA r<ldlnr, 1f m , 15 --Ail -,low -IAOl<lJ
·11 ...,.,. eyed . Warkbmdles. C o p y t r o n A.'4/FM/ML n.x. pbot». hands. wry ~el, 1entte. TaUdraaer fJf 1'ric:Jde • taJIS • .+ let $.1. 'JL 15acl0
-Ydfy M. on Cl..A.8SIC cwnar. Tamura p. Platemaker "Bnantrw•' Ca~ $299. m.«JO alt &. 1351) er l)at. otkr. ID-170 Your c:boke at NWrd ma.. sa.n HJ
• .....,. -Ill, Incl'"" f< -$1t5. -SIO<lfne M-lJ». 7!" Dn• n-•--"'-' TY PVT P-bu -• -DJAMOND AVIATION Jadml 134$ po, llrldJ<· mint l'Ond. Sid boolt, ._..__ r..i .. ' .......,. u.oovJ" ,..,.,.e -v .,.._., .-. ,_ ~ .... .L-. ...__ ... ..---... .... ,.._ ~E _, J.t.td H-0,...n~ .. ,,. ~\~...;: ..... 11DO.E1u:•u.rrtp/ctun.c.JJ _.YootlttdAdean. ....;;;;;;~~ =·······-··
AutetW-Ml
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
~Lo, lj.11. Jot 4 ..,., l!IJ, 511-nlO daA EVmY SATUIU>AY "2-IOOS. •+ -** 1" 540-:1112 *' :llGll W. CoMl 11..,., ~ "'" 1p11. XI••· llMlll..... HOW naw APRIL 21 Cj>UICI CASH c-, Salt/it.Im 1111-""~ CM -"....,... -'I! °"'-• • -· " ...
• GOU' -.... <Mt. t:tlO A.JI. • 1'111 P.M. per ' II' Tl:tUIY •lltdl pont1 ~~~'°~~·-~=~-ftm, r/lt ••-do Good "'*'>1111..-&M. powe1Jill WOllds, 1-M, i1 Oil1iosRodloC..-THROUGH A r -o •••• •d --. ............ Oii WZPAYTOPDOl.LAJ\ 1::;!"..;, ... ,;.;.,mt.:.;;..;;~;;,;..::.:;....,,.,__ • ~ or, o11 -.. '"""' Goat -ir-lrlW Jom-.. -ZEH1Tll 23 Ind!. rv. _,....au..,,.,..,.• Ice -... Modeo. s1 sot . rot1 TOP urm CAM '11 "' z. iii ma., 11-
'111 --. Wllllo. llllf iaHA-OwWS1.11t-. "-'-. ~ E=I.-. • DAl.Y PILOT ·Cd ....i.-. l4MlllJ1,,:,:-.:.:;;,::,..,...,=-.---, u,......, 11 atn dou. u , • """ lldlllo, Eortn
cMll; •I *I;.,,,..,_.. ROG: 1*ltm • ~ • EX1X.'lmV'E lAilaptd dnt, .. !" ol1U". MJ...4551 t'Vtl. W SHASl'A 1M6', .... .., ., !tit. dtu. N71D. "13,.
T::iilll: ..,, -..... --Lis -r>0c • ~ llledo -. <Mlr. m. PHILCO zr· co1or ...-WANT AD w ron1 I'll wi11i Nlnwl w Jut ~ • ....,.., BAUER 8llJCK -..... -! -Jll5I Old 2 bllc oldt -UI ft. All TY, l ,.,.. old U-war-L ~ ... 5,71_ '*111Pfll'. >Ont Olflllltloo! h:f. Xlnt """· llllO. 21'. E. 11111 lk -M.c:.,. 1'1~7. &A. m.u..i31· .. tl1WIK. ....,,m.~f _, -, • -• ~l161.1 • a.ta.-tlTilt
• • -, .
'I! !loin• ---· e..to&r.11"" -·
8
2
• s ,.,
ll
·;e
"' 11
J
Alw
'"" Jo
' P• , ...
N
1'69,
tin
II
...
Thb
"" ..
N
I
NU
1
Auto
• . .
I
'
rr ld11. F•b<llWY .:1,5, 1972
COSTA .
MESA l~I [ ]§] =' -~"'= .... ~· 1§)-=Q
[ l§J ~I ._ ....... _ .... ~]~[ .__ -_111_ .... ~l§l I • Auto1 for .S.le .. , )\ltot fOI' U.1 AulM forU. , 1§1 ._I -_ ... _ .. __,I§!
l·A_u_to_s._1mpo __ ..... __ ,_10.I A·-"'-°'-·-"'-' ....... ~~---n-:o ~~ ·~~~. "m Autos, lm110rtld '70 Autos, lm110rtOll 970 Jlutos, lm110rt ed 97P Autos, lmf10 rt"41 970 Aufot, Imported 970
DATSUN · MG 'P,OISCH! ..•
1970 240Z
$3795
'".MG •ut.m•llc OYER 25
Co!IVe(t.,Yeliol' wi!ll ,~lk-1 .. , CIHn1 Rocondltlonecl,
terior,, witt , whe~1,, &GU1rartttMI.
Air "°'1d" ' ·~· "'"· , AM/FM. 111115. PORSCHES Newport Imports Newport lmPOrts .911 •0 .912•,.914• ..
3100 W, C..11 Hwy.. · 3100 W. Coul Jfwy. 1'~7 to 1'71 Newport &ach Newport Stach . •
' 642·'405 . . 642-9405
'69 Datsun Wi§on MGI
4 Spd1 dlr, Ra:Ji. Sacrltlct.J:::;-:~~,----,
full price $1099. <WOK.190)' '61 MG8 Canwrt.. Wire
Take very llttle t1own1 Can wfieelt, 4-tpd, R/H, .Be•t
Ii.nan<:!" Pvt. Pty. Call offtr, Must 11ell. f7S-75f1 afl
546-8736 or 4!>4-6811. ' Spm. -
FIAT '67 MG/MGB xlnt "°""' nu _________
1
1op, Ju\l tuned, Sl,00. See •I
·'72 128 IU Lower '9th St, N.B. C.U
BRANO new 1972 Jo~lAT 121 , 644--UM.' ll'AVe mea1qt.
2 DR. SEDAN . Motor tttndll M MCB, green, Wfrt whtthl,
"rcooom)' car ot the year." rood cond. New top & to~
Winner nt 7 automotlyt ne'lu. 675-C.231.
award• throughout Europr.
Standard equrpml!nt i"· ·opn
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3lDO W. O>ut Hwy,.'
Newport Buch
642-9405
WE WANT
. POliSCHES
ltlClrE.'n' OITER
AVAILABLE DON BURNS
elude•: 4 1pt'ttl trana., radial ~:"'.:":".".~-O-=-
tlre1, t1 •• diM:. brAke• +
many txtraJ1. Serial No.
ASK P'OR GLEN BAUER BUICK · llJ6.mi
12BA078.S508.
WAS $1976.IO
SAYE $200.00
>"ROM STICKEi\
NOW Jp76.IO
+ lb, Uc, A: doc. lee
BILL BARRY
FIAT-GMC-
PONTIAC
flat St . at S.A. Yrwy.1
D:> E. bl SI., Santa Ana.
i!M-1000
The Ila-Are11 •59 Porsche Cpo. SffJ
Only Authorlud Blue w1t11 bJaclr irueriOr,
OPEL DEAr.:ER &OOd condition, nt&rly s coi.
Alwiylh&Ji an txctllerit M!· lectott llem. · ·
lec!ion ot borh New ' UMci Newport lm~orfs Opela. ,
"Speelallzl ng In Quality•• 3100-W. eo..•t Wy; . · BAUER Newport &ach 642.9405 '
luick.()pel.J19u1r PORSCH£ till, 'ti t•d, tt'd • 234 E. 17UI St. -~_l._ 'Coirta MeA. ~77M w/blk lnl, Weber CUl>I'+ 5 •Pl't; Kt:ml •hock1. arrt/hn, I
-'70 Opel 0 T trk attrt0, nu radlala. UlOO,
'•Pf!ed. Radio, fleater. Burnt 832-15."A.
Orana:e. 115ASI.. e 'A POJltBCHE 911 Tarp e · $21U
SANTA ANA AIHond, ma1 ....... a. •pd ••
13.n~ C&JJ, n>-33.11 HIUMAN -------TOYOTA , '&1 Poroche 1600 l!a<rlltc.
'59 Huaky, 11tAl'°'1 WAgon, PHONE 546-2512 Sm>. Mlaht take vw m
new paint, cltan, ruria sood. 411 w. w1.rmr. '81.nta ?\na trade 64&-5691t
mo. M6-5972 1'70 OflOI GT $2195 T<;)YOTA JAGUAR 4 Speed, rodto, bl"' w1thl ---------
ble1e Interior, very· cieaJI, '70 MARK II
BAUER BUICK "'' even a -chip. ·,=-~ ...... Radio, ....
n.. Harbor Artu Newpo" lmPOrtS $1"5 .
Only AuthMlud 3100 W. Coul Hwy. SANTA AM & JAGUAR OEALER • N.wport B<ach' ' • ,,..,
AIWIY' """' .. """"'"' ... 642-9405 TOYOTA
lectkln ·ot both New I-u~1 '·59""""o"'pe"""I ""c"'T"", -.. -w._,ba-t,..te-ry, PHONE M0-2512
J1guan:. ' ~ tfret, red w/blt llhr '17 W, W~mtr, Santa Ana '
"Spedal~;nR In Quall"" Im. Xlnt cond. I 11 GG . GET OUR
BAUER '"°.,""'s-lMl~·~~~~ Buick·OflOl·Joguor .,. °""' Kodette IW!ye 1900. TOYOTA DEAL ·
234 E. 11th SI. ' CC overhead cam. FM BEFORE YOU BUYJ
e.o.ta Mt1a M3-7763 radio, 4 'Pd. Gd. eohd. sn&.
DATSUN
Soo Ou r
Com-late
line of
'72 DATSUNS
l200~PI
--,,...,,T'°'o.,...Yo-T"'A'--
'70 Toyoto Mo rk II
2 Door lfardtop. 4 •P"rd.
r11dki, A 1lr t'Onditlont111.
3858Q8.
$2095
SANTA ANA
TOYOTA
PHONE 540-2512
417 W, Warnr~. SMI• AM
lllf!l lllf\liS
~, .• "'" TO)'Ota 4 Jaauar J)toalrr
Authorb~ Sall!'• Ar Srrvlce
900 S. Col•t UJahw11y
IAILm& &•ch 540-:u oo
SANTA ANA
TOYOTA
St>rvlce dept. open 7:30 1m
'U t pm Monday ttiru Frt·
.. y.
PHONE 540-2512
fl'' W. Wamrt; Sa:n!A Ana
· ~ '6' COROLLA WAGON
~ , 4 """'"· ...,u>. ZU<Jll5 -... $11'5
1102.o..s... SANTA ANA
" TOYOTA ·
IMMEDIAn
DEUYEIYI
• • • NO WAmNGI
PHONE 540-2512
'417 W. Wlmt'r, SN n111 An11:
'71 To)'Ola Coml'lll Marie JI,
hard1t1p , 11ir t't)nd.,
AUIQn,atir tranamlulon, low
mllt•, No. %12, Baricaln
priced fc:;r lmmel'll•lt Mii'.
JIM 5.1..EMONR IMPORTS
2'Z01 "· Main, '!.A, 557-5242
'71 TOYCfACorolli.. 1"1'r.·
lory Ai lr, Autn fTllM. Xlnt
conc;tlflon 1!37...fi.m
·a~Toyota ' rlr-,..-,.,.,-,,-
xfra lo mlk!11, $11 Th.
• 844.mllfi ..
"''6',....:;T,_.,.,"""1;-:--cON;i1-._--=24'°',000=:
ml'•, Prlrl!d fM quick ul,.,
MM~a alt 5 pm.
TRIUMPH
'" Jevuor XKE S2"t '7:1-:1265 e'"'· . · ~A• I .. _! ....
Rdatr. S.bel with conlac i~ 'Pl OPEL Kackt~ RaUye. fiUM\ LUU16
terio•. '""'""' """ w"""· Good ·-.• EXfrll. SUJO. TOYOJ'I ·o Triuml'!! TR4 ' $595 P~reUi tirtl, 1 b 0 w room -t94-n46 or 6519-3622 mll.' · . ft · w1~· ~l•,''Brlt~h ltaf'lng
ff'f' h Green, wilh bh11ck lntt"rior. N~;."rt lmP!l'1S .PEUGEOT t!l66 llotbor, c.... ......,,., .2845 N•wport Imports
3100 vJ.1 l:oatt 1fW)., '64 Ptua:fOl stadi:>n w.,on, 'ii TO)'nta Corona. 1'8ftO Jn.I., 3100 W, CoA111 J(wy.
Nt.._ Beach low mil.,, .._ 1-f 1 auto tnnt. """'°· Good cx>od, HARBOR N""J>'l'I "'"'" WANTED':';~: Sedan, by ;;';'SL~~o~iWJ.i~~ •IM TO::~~CCllOLLA, BLYD., · Dilly Pllo~.z:.~s Ad• hive
TRIUMPH
1969 TRfUMPll CTe+, r/h,
llflW Pln111 fires. fmP\lc.
11.<r.o. 67:1-5.:m
:.61 TRIUMP H TR-2s0
.SISJO • .. ~,7.7005
VOLKSWAGEN
'tOAf u1,k••t
C•l"llt ,,' 111tod, ii,ooo ,.,11,,, ,,...a,u ...
'71 ,,. 1140 ••
l t1>•d,•M•,k.o•t1, 11$ DIC
'6t (NtY
N ... t' '" 6 c fl. ..... 110<1<~ •odl., "4>1••t.Hlol It
'•AMI c1 ... 1. ,,l•e••• •~nv 1.,.,.,,,. ' .
'•t OATJUN
'0..1tt1 .... •.W. "'"'. ·•dlo ....... •• 11,DO!)"'il<ol, 14
,..
1969 Harbor Blvd.
VOL.l<SWAGEN
AMERICAN
MOTORS
DEMO .
SALE
. -..
v .1, ...,,., ,,.,, •. , p• ... , "••• 1~0•
• ..... h..,., ,,114,
, .. M .. tMllH .. 13 Or,
v ••• ·~· .. ""'· .., c.oM' ~-·,. ti..lltt ,1"'41.,, I,~"''' W10lf~
..,,,,,.,,.,f.
, • .,, .,.,.,, ,, • ., ... , • .,ie, ~'"'"'
' ., ••• , ... , .. i..
H, ...,,,.,,...""' Ht/ul 4 It!, 1$ "'~'' ~JS,()IA
priv, part" !ltqulr. air, , 2201 So. Ma in, S.:\; 167~ Xlnl cx>od. Call an.rt!rn<. COST A. MESA borplno p1o,.,
auto. Good "°""· low mile. Autn UHd : m All46-ulol~,' ic;; -=· 540·6410 •-~-U-~• 990 A t U··•
646~026·1 CALL fOl 1111 CllDIT CHICK
0 .. 0011 9·9·5ol.&S.o.to6
ImJll'rtanl, Mr; RoMnson.
1 iiiii.iiiiiiiii.._iiii.iiiii""'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-ii~-·ii'~·-iii' iiii.ii u ot, ._
'90.Autos, UNd
&12-1000.
'67 Jaauar '420 ttdan. whilfl!,
"Int cond. By riwne r .
507~ M 561-16'1'2.
KARMANN GHIA
1969, xlnt cond. iold. radial
Htt1, rec brka l ahoclcs.
$1400. o.m.o. '49:J..144S.
LOTUS
'ff Lotus Elon $2"5
Thi• tun ear 10 drive, coat
orlginl.11y S!i600. Excellent
cnndilion. one owneT.
Newport Imports
3100 w. CIJ&at)fwy.
Newpr>rt Stach
642-9403
MAJDA ,
• NOW OPEN
lmmecllolo Oollvory ·
HUNTillGTOl IEACll . I h "l JI M I ~
17331 BEACH BLVD.
~UNT1Nr~r0N l!lfl.CH
" " i!4:1 ' f 1,1
196B Mercedes
230 Sedan
Auto TraM, ~tr ~.
Powtt Brtkt•. Air c.ond.
1-mllffa•,, llPCYll31· $2'ff I
David J, Phillips
"'lck-Pontlfp.()pel .
110-.1.l<ollU'IOBHch •ion
.. lfEl!CZOES .... :Ill SE
led. Air, 18 • x I r e I •
.Nl<Mllno. llJ..1111 • r IC-I•-.
r ~tep· Up T·o LUXURY. • • . '•
1971 MARK'm ·
EXCEPTIONAIJ..Y CLEAN. Beauutul pewte r silver misl linllh with l<>bacco leather
interior and matching landau roof. Fully .luxury equipped including full power, climate
control ai r C<lnd ilion lng, AM/FM .stereo.· till. •leering wheel , cruise control and muc h
more. Thll attra.ctlvo car Js a ll)Ult lo••• and drive tooay. 163218).
ALL . THUE BEAUTIFUL LUXURY AUTOMOBILES ARE IMMACULATE, INSIDE AND OUT •..
YOU'LL NEYER RND A .BfTTER SELECTION OF PRESTIGE CARS THAN RIGHT NOW!
1969 CHRYSLER
N .. Ywkw 4 Dr. H.T.
-ulllul llme froat llnbh ""'" bl>ck tntmor and lond&u roof. l.wcur)' eciulp.
ptd. tun· power, autMNitlc trt:rvm&ilon.
aJr condll"'"'nc. power ti way .eat.
AM/FM 1*d1d. ete. fYQW 00
$2175
1970 MXRK III
IMJj\ACllLATI
Sal~ Priced.
•
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1970 CADIILAC
.c-..,. DeVllle
OM nwner. lmitt.cu!Atl'. Bl!autlful Bra..
zilla.n moon dUJt flnllh with belke Juth-
"1' and landau '1)(Jf, Lu.xury equlPP"d
~t. full power, l':llrNk tontrol
a ir. tfll-t"I" whHI, AM·YM llt-r~.
supr_r cliean. 196,'AUV)
$4475
MANY, MANY MORE
FROM WHICH TO CHOOSE
SEE THEM ALL TODAY
"Orangt Cotlntu'• 1amUu of YfM car1"
1971 MARQ UIS
II ,...,nt•r w.,on
Beautiful hrl'M'T1 ln"l•llle tl n~•h Wi lh
mat.rhlnt vinyl lnll'rlm, full ~I
f4.ctt7r)' •1r cond1tlnnln2. p-1Wtt W
pl.I! wlnltow, lu1uu•«' rark l,nw ml~
•Q:e and In trtp r.ondHVln 1761 OP.Al
$4275
1970 CONTI NE'1T AL
COU,L QUALITY ,LUI
Jlllrk bmwn 1U.mour ml'fallll' .. .vMr
•Ith ho""Y bt--lu Interior .l mat~hlrri
1.Andau rotJf, YuJJy luxury "ff!Jfppe.\ ell·
mtle control a ir. fWJ pnw,.,-, Ii -·ay
poiffT' Hit. "tC'. (81J1fn'94)
$4475
ohnson son
I
VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN
1969 V.W. BIG
J 'r11·,. Yitlllf thru 21a 112
DAV E ROSS
PONTIAC
2~111l lfl•rtwir Rlvtf,
f'n+1r11 M,..., M&-8017
VW's
1\1•• ti111.r ltt1ar111, C111nf)r/'ll,
""r•JJu-... 1111('1!1 a n1I ht111,
Nie• .Selection N1~' h~v,. l~',4 1n,..rh.11nl1'lJ
(;111tr11n!rl'
CREVIER MOTORS
:b'lll \!.', 1~1 NI , ~nla ,.\M
IJS-317 1
-·10 VW Cam_pe_r_
~;,.,,.,.1""'nally •·I""" ruu
e11m,-....r "41Ul1'prrl, ' •ptl°A.
'J1:1 VW-s;;-nt1 l11l-C11;1prr,
I ioitotl 'llfll•j•''. (1r11 11, Sl.t'fl
:'1"'-'i7'1 • f~~iny0Ayres Chevy
'fl~) V"' HUI(. N1••'f'lli ..... r111r111r Di'i ~. C1111-1 llwy.,
11•11111r W1U rnitk•· l(rf'111 l,.11ru1111 Rr11 r h
d11nr hllS:l(V. ':nl :r1!4--ll(ili6, ·~·7'1'44 /Mf).!Y,J!i1
'60 VW Y•n, R•blt •nt: ~JI~" )u~-a -pllonn-
.$7f11, • lWi2 l(!j[, t•11tJ llWJl)I • 6-t2..-ti(l7~
971. Autos, Imported
. WHY. BUY. '71 LEFT OVERS
WH~M YOU CAN BUY
'72 ·DEMONSTRATORS
FOR LESS
NEW . 1972 TOYOTA COROLLA
. STILL AT
~2000 ,I' '
I I , . . • • " 1 -i II( t1i<ft1 lf&W•r ~,.~fl, tffl't•if ,,.,, .. .f ., ... 1••11.1,,
w";1, w•ll tl••1, vr,..,.1 11111.io•. •JIS.10 , ,
Gll AIT f l l.I CTION-tMMIDfAITI ~WllY
• •
19-72 VOLVO
$97 DOWN s97 PER ,
MONTH OAC
IM MIDIATI DILIYllT
LET US ARRANGE YOUR
OVERSEAS DELIVERY!
SP EC IA LS ON flNE
IMPORT TRADE-INS
'66 VW FHtb•ck lutlltolt """"1i.I IVTM 6"'
' "
'69 FORD CorJlno
''''"" W._,.., A~l1' Tl~, •u1 ~I fVIC •14/
~688
$899
$999
$899
1395
,-J-0-CMEV.-Bel -Air $1595
' 4 .,.., """"· ""*'-''" ,, .......... IM. Alr, I'-•tr ...... if, HMlft' 1611 JlOJolj --'70 TOYOTA Mork II ... ~. ~.(.t tfllff, rf#lflM.I
170 · TOYOTA Mork II ., ......... ,.,,., ....,.,.,, .... ,
M..r•I 1m 11..XI
'69 VW l uo ~Mll'M ...... , ..... """""-.,
"t '"" ----'70 TOYOTA PICKUP 1'11 ...,,, • ...,, t.N/fl: Mrl11P".
~-•• '!
$J599
.$2199
$2395
$)695
VISIT OUR ULTRA MOO I RN
J ElllllCI! DEPARTMENT
PAINT.SHOPS e IODY SHOPS •
DEAN LEWIS
ORANG[ COUNT~ HEAOQUAPlf ~'
TOYOTA-· VOLVO
646-9303
1..,66 HARBOR BLVD
COSTA MESA
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[ ..... ,,,.. 1§11 ..... ,.... ]§] 1 · ........ ~ 1§) I Auto•"'... ]§11 '""'"'"• )§] I '"""'"'• )§] I ..... ~ ... ]~
910 Autos, Imported , 910 Aulot, UMd Auto1, Imported 970 Autot~ tmported' 990 Autos, Utod 99G'" Autos,' Uted --990 "° Autos, Utod ' . 1--------
VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO BUICK CHEVROLET
SIJARI' '6! vw BUit R•H, '63 VW-Po"''" t600 N GET OUR VOLVO BAUER BUICK auto, eompltltly ri!!blt -. l!nJrin@'. Unrll"r 10.000 ml'1, -·~ N · DE ORE T~ Harbor Affu Owntr a:nina: 0 v t r 11 e a 1 , I'\\ A1hllf'in11, ~" lmnt AL BEF
$1345, R.31-1114. f'nd. Chrm AP v.'hll, Si-ll"C'IO • Only AuthorltM , n 1 , YOU BUY! BUICK DEALElt ·•• V•'· Wk• -···. 4 ,.~,, urop, aN'rl " n" f! r 11,
" '"'"' 1.1• $950 07~~ SAVE ON EUROP£AN Always has an exce.Jlenf .e-lirt1, nf'w clutch, A.~/f'7i.f lllUi;?;AI. · ' · · DELIVERY 1.-ction of both New I. Used 6 cyltndtt ettcJ.IY., automauc
radio. • new shocks. S500. 'TI W 1 bu1 . .111n'1 mt. 1 pass. Buldc:s, tranamWion. f948«BJ
968-7281. LI.Ice rll"W, V"' ll"nt ~ tul:J • "Specializing in QWlllty" $1699 '"''h 1u,. '"' ;,,..1. sm•. -f\e.., L•1.:1 BAUER 'fi6 V\\' Bua Good condirion i>75-77li\ lUCt41A fAMIO
SAOO CAU afttr 6 rlurin& -=-~~ ---YOLYO Buick·Opel·Januar Pricf' valld thru 212@ 72
v.•N!k. anytime wk n d . MUST l'i!ll' ·7o f'11 "1~r. prifl 234 E. 17tlt Si. DAVE ROSS
S48-5000 lop, A~l/FM. xlnt C()ntl. 1966 ll ~ ~ M .,. "~' '"""NTIAC
000 . •=1· ... ,,,. "'"''· c . . ~·~-CMta M•.. 54.<n•I ....... -.-•7=1~VW=~9 (J 5 Ii, mi .• ,,., .>. '"'°" J.l'l'J
li1ust Mii: No r"ll ~. nlfrr ti'· pm.A--"'°-'.,· ,_u_.,.·oc1....,=....,-990_ '68 ~port W~9on Costa ':~arbor Sl\·~SOl1
tulltd. ca.11 Alt fi pm, &. itll '69 ~ Sqhck, iturn. 27m e HOT WHEELS e Autom11t1c, ractnry 111r, pow---~t =~-~-'--'---
lfay Sun, 646-911}.11. m1lrs. "'ill mnl'ildl'r trAdr.. '67 Pl YMOUTH t.r 1tffrln& It brake•. B@AU· 66 Impala
$1500/bll off,.r. 54~12.15 .. ,_,.,ti~ ,_ hl.ri. 11ful lilver aray. (XNB8681 '66 WRITE VW l'QUMf'hark, f'VP!I ••vu 01 ..,, an $2095.
lflOO. 4 spd. f.!.,cctptlonidly ---~ ----perlomiance and 2 Dr Hardlop, Yl!llow "'/ Blk
clean It good rond. $995. '71 SQUAREBACK, Au I 0 Al)ptATlll'K',.! Tommy Ayres Chevy Vlnyl Rool, Auto Trans,
CaJJ &It 3 p.m. 968-3878. tT11n11., AMlf~1 r 11 di o. 1-1UST SELL! . Power Slttrlna:, Air Cond. \\1htw11JJ~. Goort t-ondition. 548-m'l/$895, 946 s. Coa!ll Hwy.. New Paint, MuRt See to ap.
'63 VW Bug. R&H. ~!eren, 644-4/127. Laguna. Bch pre<:iate <•Bl11) ,..,. "''°· ssis. "" A. AMERICAN -, n S 1199 Maple Ave., Co!lla M!'~ll. 1964 VW ('llmpPr, fully ,.quip-:M· 44/546-9961
Pf"(!, 'fi7-tl'hullt f'n~1ne, g;i,.s ---.------1·,;;n°"sky=hui<=,-=."'b"'1 .. ".-·"1rc--ro-oo". CREVIER MOTORS
'TO VW CamJ>@r, Dtlu:it hf>Attr, nirltn, goo'I rond. · American ·Motors AM radio, very t'le11n, lo mi.
1968 CHM
CARRYALL WAGON
_____ ......,
CHEVROLET
LIKE ~w deluxe '70 Chevy
II Nova. Lnw mi~R. PIS.
A.IC. V-8, 2 dr. 642-9259
·63-NOVA Super Sport Gd
rond. See It! hPltevp. S:W.
5.'i7-9m, f)17-M37.
--~ '57 Ow!vrolPI, cran1portation
car. St:50.
• &12-2940
'69 KinR:sv.1nod Estate W1n.
lo mi, air, loaded, full pwr.
$2295. 673-4674
CHRYSLER
1968 Chry!ller ronvertible,
one o~'tll?r, 26.000 mile.
Loeded. Still under wAITan·
IY. fi45-74M.
CONTINENTAL
'66 Linroln, full ))~T/air.
C>OOl'i tlre!I. Sacrifice $1250.
64S-4400.
CORVAIR $2795. 341-7R55 .111t 5 b 3ll s1 1on. 714/962-7!114. """Gremlins ....,Hornets Give me UJO & ta.kf' -·~·~~w~"~k-'"~d~··----·1'-66VWCON-V-ER~T~1 =eL_E_ II -w 1•1 St ·-·1• A•• FOR. •-1 ,~. =-= ""Matadors VJ ave ns o'pymnl'I!. 54H900 11.ft 6 _, · 1,.3··17·~1 .. " ""'I! """'Corvair, and
1970 VW, J'ICk Up rnorleJ. S.595 * * 644·0481 VAmb1111dors wkd~: aJJ ~ wkncl!I; -vc:tra. E"ogine. MAkf' offer. ~~ w/~>1tra1. Must .'lf'll. VOLVO H11.1te s1ock of ·n·· &. '72's 1,,&1=."e"'u-,k"'k"'S"ky"'1'°'.,..,k-. "'V,-iny~l~t.-p. '70 ·Impala 5ta. Wagon Ca.JI mominrg. S57-lZ75 . Big-Big Savings arr cond. Bucket 11ea(!.. ·52 CORVAIR, xtnt coM. * * '6S VW. rebfl engin~. '69 VolV(), 142 Air mnd. Ra· Harbor American PIS, !'IB, PW, $ 3 2 5 . r11.ctory air, PS, &;:iuliful Lo"'· mileagf', ·s2!'il.
good tire• It int~r1or. $450. d. p 11850 '-1.7-!130::i. 1-·lo wh•.te ·with ••d"I• I• ~~-~'_1&-.1.5.f!2 962--€770. r to, vL party, · ·Home of Convenient '" " .... ,,.. -=--= ----* * 557-709.l * * PllymPnts * * '69 Le Sabre, a.Ir , ps/pb, trrior 12578Sl' I $26!15. '82 CorvQir 4 sptt.~ S200. 728
9= s::.!l~ri~(.'~rf!:; ·~ 544 Volvo. A.~ is, eniine 1969 Harbor Blvd. tinied _11'.IAAS, 100d tires, Tommy Ayres Chevy ~if'rl~ttip' m~t., Costa Mesa
runa. f.111kr nlff'r. Costa Mesa ~0261 $2295. 963-1211
delall1. 64>5747, fi73-28i1(]. ** 54~7216 * * 1~9=70~e~u~1CT<='~R~lv-,l•-r•-.-,o-,·I 1964 CORVAIR 1\1 on za, 946 S. Co&!!I H"'Y·•
Autos, New 980 Autos,. New 980 Auto•,. New 910 m!Je1ti;tf', full powf'r. $31650. La.gun!\ Bch Sharp, Nl'w llre~. battery,
--'---------'----------------645-~964, 64~1420, 494-7744/546·9!167 brakes. Prl pty. 675-7240
SOMETHING ..•. FOR
EVERYONE!
'72 GRAND PRIX DEMO
FULL POWER-FACTORY AIR COND.
·"·· 6DAYI
AWDK ..... ,.
11".M.
svnaY
11&.M.
FALCON
'631,1, Falcon Sprint, 4 1pd,
~ tires. nffd5 \\'Ork. sm.
4!M-3&19 eve• Of $2531
PIH,
FQRD
'69 Fon! LTD. 2 tk>or
h11rdtop, Topaz metallic with
white vinyl top. Full powtl',
1atereo, Broughll.m option,
Firestone 5lXl'1. Immaculate
1 owner clll'. Weekend
SpN-ial. Ul!'ll.
Jli\I SLEMONS IMPORTS
2201 S. Main, S.A, !157-5242
SHARP LTD
'69 LTD BroughM1 H.T. 1 rir.
P 'SP lfilW'! hl"flk eA, front..
RIH. Air l'tlnditionlng &. 390
2 ham'! Png. \\1th 47.00'.l ml.
S2195 nr beS1 otlf'r. 6.11·4156
Ah. 4PM weekdBY!, anytiml."
on "'f'l!kf'nd~.
'6.'i fALCON 4 dr, V·8, 11U!O,
air. $j9i
548-4371
Motor Home• MO Molor Homll
1972 INTRODUCTION
OPEN ROAD
ll' CENTER BATH
BRAND NEW
25' MOTOR HOME
ONLY SJO, 999
oaDll YOU•s TODAY
7 YUi flNANCING AVAIL.AILI
OPIN
7DAYS
AWllK
PJllCIS
EFFECTIVE
THRU SUN ..
'
. • ,,
s4999s~ULL PRICI ------· .. , ..... FIB. 13th -----~
IUND NIW '7T
VENTURA II CPE.
[)7Jl [)150-42) $254884 FULL
PRICE -------· -------'71 FIR·EBIRD DEMO
LOADED INCL.UOIN" PACTOlT All CONDITIONIN•
~
115 1' ! 10-4969 )
s3799ii FULL PRICI
------·------
'71 BONNEVILLE
OEMONSTRATOR $436989
f111l Pow1•, F1clory 1'ir, lo1cl1cl. l •til 1109967)
FULL
PRICE
------•------
lllAND
MIW
1911
COUPI
LE MANS
$259324 FULL PRICJ
'70 Cariill .11.c El Dorado,
stu@O, leather, fully loedett.
Xlnt Cf'lnrl. Low prict! $499S.
1624 Antigua Wy., N.B.
642-9980.
t67 SEDAN DE VILLE
Local car 1 'l1''nf'r. Sharp.
Only $2195. 644-:?!M.
1967 Cadillac conVf:"rtiblf'.
ExceHe:nt <'Onriifinn, original
O'WT'lf'r. All exfni!\ includi ng
IJf~l!'O. SZ,000. fi75-R.'l99.
For tt.11le by priv11te pArty,
1965 Coope rte Villf!. xlnt
cond. 833-124S art 7 pm
19n El Do., !uJI equipmfnt.
ltfllher !feats, priced lor lm-
medi11re Mlt· 8.'l(}..5~2.
1969 CAD Convert. all xtras.
88.etilicf' $100. under !Ml•
book. $2000. Ph: 499-4588.
CHEVROLET
CHEV. '611 Impl.
aut'l, PS, RB.
$1295. Pr/Pfy,
644--04n4.
'
V--8. 2 dr.
F11.ct, air
UH 550-
'6.1 CMv, Nov11. SIA. \Vgn,
Goon trkl'l!I. Cu. Runs hut
nPf'l'i~ ."!Ome \\'Ork. $125.
S.17-811.'i,
':¥.! Che\•. Pick·up • 4 spd ..
lhor~ bf-cl. M'W brlleg,
r .. 0Uil1 V-8 en,ll'. 37?i.OO
~..,_1)11,1
'70 EL CAMTNO, air rond,
pis A.\f/FM, tarp. new
Mkh .. lin tires-, t11m.U7 car,
hy llWfler. 6*-211'@
'67 MALlBU V-8, 2 dr. H.T.,
R&U1 v•hile "'Ill.A. UD), or
b6toll .... ~.
'6.1 Chevy n SS
Vt.ry c\e11n • Pvt. prt;y, * .. 644-894.t ...
1912 VEGA Wq,.i, • 1pd. •ir. ~ miles. Prl party.
67>7)40
'62 °""Y ll NOVI, -
b'a.nl. lo m.i'a. Xlnt ciaad..,
-. -tlt s,...
n"• ..,...,. lb& rill>• ttme a
tl""l'S lb& rlsbt ttl"°' tt
)'OU Watlt RESl1L TS! C&Jl
6U-.lm a p1a that Ill!
"""" "l
ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST CHEVROLET DEALER . . '
' }
IMMIDIATI DILIYl•Y
largest Trutk Selection In Oronge County. Dozens to
choose from.
Order Yours Toda ,!us lox' Lie.
'69 PLYMOUTH Belvedere
YAIC-4(1.1 '"'
'66 CHEVROLET
1h0 TON PICKUP
'66 CADILLAC
COUPI DI YILLI
170 PL YM .. Roadrunner $1:9', 8' 8 162 CHEVROLET
IMPAt:A surri sro1T
\ ,y ... f'VIOl'l'lllllit, rHlt, llM!ff', '11
OPlll6DAYSAWiiltU1t II PJl SVllDAT HA.M. T07 PJl
SE J!ABU'ESP ANOL TO
'
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)
TOfll $5J15 ,PllMOllTII qMOITNS
VQ,t..J7S
' "'""
71J.OSW
$1588
$2488-l
$688
'388
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WE' E PUT TOGETHER A .
-..~ .
SPECIAL PURCHASE
'71 MINI HOMES
RJLL Y EQUIPPED WITH ALL
THE TRAVEL CONVENIENCE
EXTRAS PLUS FACTORY -AIR
C 0 N D I T I 0 N I N G . PRICED
FROM ••••
ONLY
USED. LICENSE NUM BER b57DSK
MANY TO CHOOSE . .
FR·OM •• ··~ ••
1970 SUBARU 1969 DATSUN 510 1969 PONTIAC 1970 PONTIAC
CATALINA FIREBIRD
360 Mini Vin. 1766AST> Std111. Equippt d incl r11cly to drh•t
hom1 tocl t y. !YRF90JI
Coupt , R•clio, httft t, •ufom•lic, full Etonomic-;tl 6 cylil'!Gt r, 1ltndtrd
1966 CHRYSLER
Newport. \II, 1utom1tic, r1cl io, he1ftr,
power 1t11rin9 l br1•11, f1clory 1ir.
1427631 1
1969 BUICK SKYLARK
2 dr. H.T. Automttte, rodio, ht tfor,
pow., 1ltori"9 I .,rtkot, w1w, t ir
co~itio"i"9· IZCH216l
~2195
1968 OLDSMOBILE
DELTA II
Coupe, rtdio, httltr, outo"ltfic, eir
con41., white w1ll1, vi"yl roof. fWPI·
power, ftc:lory 1ir, ¥inyl reof. !ZSV. tr1111 .. rt1Ho, httftr, ~i11yl roof. l92J.
1161 AYS !
1967 BUICK SKYLARK 1968 CHEVROLET
VI, •ulom•lic frtn1m l11 io11, r1dit, IMPALA
h11!1r. (TVF"sl7l 2 D'r. H.T. Air Concl., 1ulo ,, P.S., P.I .,
r1cllo incl h1tl1r. !XSV559 l
1967 OLDS WAGON 1970 GRAND PRIX
Vi1t• Yuiq ,,. VI, tuf•fl'ltllc, .... cllo, VI, tufort1t lie, rtdit, h111t1r, powtr
hetter, pewor 1f1ori"9 l .,rtkos. ftcf, 1foorl"9 I .,rtkot, f1clory t ir, powor
1lr co"d., roof rtck. IFOZ465 ) wi11dow1 , ,.j11yl roof. (054A0VJ
1969 OPEL WAGON 1969 TORONADO
CUSTOM .
Excotle"t 2"cf cir. IYQCI07l Full pow••, f•ctory •Ir, vJ11yl roof, !42·
1966 CHEVROLET
STATION WAGON
Auto., ritclio, h11ltr, power tl11rin9,
powtr br1k11. ITEYIOll
1967 OLDS DELTA
Coupo. Rodlo, heolor, outo., pow1•
1f11ri119 I .,,,.,,, vinyl roof, IWPI·
''l I
~1388
1966 PLYMOUTH
SATE LLIT E
i119 I .,rtkt1. !TlA1161
. 2850 HarW,~r BIJ1~~
'• •
' •
VOLUME SAVINGS
EXAMPLE
SAVINGS
' BRAND NEW
'72 OLDS CUTLASS -
lo•ded incl. •u+o. f.r1n1 .~ power 1teerin9
•nd brak11, VI 1n9in1, ate:., etc:. I 101Jl21
ON
OLDS!
BRAND NEW
'72 OLDS 98 COUPE
Mo1t Luxury f11ture1 Incl. air ct n.I ., pow• •r •t••rln9, br•k•t, wlnclow11 tilt wh NI.
etc., •+c . 1411 005 I ·
oifiNGECOifffi'S1iRG"fSf . '• LEASING? HONDA INVENTORY
LOTS OF '72 HONDA COUPES LOOKI
NI W 1972 OLDS
CUTLASS
HARDTOP COUPI
VI, tuftl'ltflt lr•11tMl1tle", rt •
;r,, hottor, ,..,, 1t11'lltf,
, ...... .,,.k ••. ,,, ''"''•l•tlllfo 19•1• ........ g-' IN0, 14MO.
WE LEASE AU
POPULAR MAKE
CARS AND TRUCKS
ENTIRE 3 DAYS
FIRST 300 MILES ARi PRiii •
I •
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' . ff DAILY PILOT -Fridiy, Ftbrt111'Y 25, 1972
1st IN ORANGE COUNTY
LINCOLN·MERCURY SALES
FOR 6 CONSECUTIVE YEARS!
COMPARE OUR
SAVINGS•SERVICE -SELEalON
BEFORE YOU BUY
WE ARE PROUD OF OUR FACTORY AWARD WIN'NING DEALERSHIP AND
THE FRIENDLY PEOPLE WHO RUN IT. COME IN TODAY AND PROVE TO
YOURSELF THAT SANTA ANA LINCOLN-MERCURY DOES OFFER "A UTILE
EXTRA". ''There Must Be A Reason''
NEW 1972
COMET$
TWO DOOR
(570563)
FULL PRICE
----------------------------~---·----·-------------------------
NEW '72 MONTEREY
CUSTOM 2 DR. HDTP
Auto.•-air uN. "*'· 4i11t1, Nlrld W/W'i. el&. dock. wWryl rool ....r _.1 !SS31S7)
WINDOWSTKR
OUR PRICE
$5072.50
4130
$94258
NEW '72 MARQUIS
4 DR. BROUGHAM
Pwr, ~ltffing, do~S. ~IOll ond lock!. AM·fM, yinyl IOP, ooto
111111. 1oir cond, ~e«I con I~ bel!MI W{Yf s !llid mcrt.15'9100)
WINDOW STKR $6456.79
OUR PRICE $5351
DISCOUNT $1105 ' .
NO SHORTAGE OF
CONTINENT ALSI
LARGE $ELECTION OF
COLORS, OPTIONS, AND
BODY STYLES TO C~OOSEFROM.
NEW.'72 Cougar XR.:7 NEW '72 MON'TEGO
1969 M~R_K Ill
$4588FULL PRICE
An immoculale lu:w:ury cor completely equipped
wi1h fu!I power, AM·FM stereo, vil'lyl. roof, oir
condit1on'11g. etc.
10 PRE-DRIVEN
MARK lll'S IN STOCK
ALL
PRICE SLASHED FOR
QUICK CLEARANCE!
2 DOOR HDTP
Auio. lrnM~ P""· lilt<, and di~I, rod. ood i•ttto lofll, f70.14 wrw wid1 ow\1. oir, torn.ole. elec. tl«.k ond mor1. (S 1 •9J I)
4 DOOR SEDAN
351 V-8, oulo. lfnn~~ pwr. sttering, W/W's, di•, wheel <ove1s
rodio ond more.
WINDOWSTKR
OURPRICI
$4597.80
$4060
WINDOW STl<R
OUR PRICE
$3477.06
$2972.,
$5378 1! $506
OUR·YfAR·AROUND LINCOLN CONTINEN·
TAI INVENTORY AVERAGES ALMOST '40
NEW CARS READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELI-
VERY.
OUR PR!·DRIV!N SELECTION OF CONTINEN·
TALS AND MARK lll'S AVERAGES OVER 20
CARS.
NOW ON DISPLAY
FROM EUROPE! LET US SHOW YOU HOW OUR VDLUME
SELECTIONS ADD UP TO VOLUME SAVINGS!
Ju1t Arrived! Big Shipment
SEXY CAPRI FOR '72
READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
'70 MERCURY Cust 4 Dr.
V-8, oulo. lroos., lottory oir cPOd11iooinq. power steer-$ 24 8 8 ing, power (diK) broktl. rodio. heat..-, whi1ewlll1 tires,
lifiltd gloss, wM1\ covers. 567.,fZ
'68 MUSTANG 2 Dr. HT.
V-8, itick .shill. ~io. lleoler, ~itewo\I tire\, tinted $12 8 8
gloss, wtieel covers:W9H777 .
'70 MONTEGO 2 DR H.T.
(l'.l'lo, Irons~ power steering, pcwer (dis.c.) brokes. whirt--$19 8
won !_ires, tin1ed 91011 whttl covers. 15.000 octuol
miles. 975 Bl(
'70 DODGE Sportsman Bus ..,
V-8, ovto. Irons., power 11teriog. power (dil.C) brokts, s29 8
rodio, heote<, whitewoll 11r1s, llnitd glos_s. wheel cov1rs.
vinyl interior 10 poJStngff vocllfion sPec.1al 0•6-8MO
'69 LINC. Cont: 4 Door
CJlifO. Irons .. foc:lory oir tondil~irlg. loll power, 1nd111, $298 ~~/tr, whrtewnll tirts. tinttd gl1"s. wheel covers. 'ZYF-
'71 MARQUIS 4 Dr.
ou!o. hons .. factory oir cood1tioning, power steP.till!J.$
power (disc) brn~es, pow1r windowL AM-fM stereo ro· 3 6 8
rlio, heater, wtl1tewoll tirtt. linfed gloss. wh~el covers.
Laodou 1 • 11 .618 oc:luol miln. 55?-CCG
'66 MUSTANG 2 DR. H.T.
V-8, l!Ulo. trllfn., 1od,o. ~ler, whitewo\l tire~. lin11!d glo~1. $9 88
wheel 'ovtrs. XRM01S
'70 LINC: 4 Dr.
'66 LINC. Cont. 2 DR. H.T.
-8, ou•o. lrt1r1s., loctorv n.1 (Ond•honina, full pnwer, rG-$148 8 io. h!01tr, wh 1tewo!I 111 t i, vinyl 1001. !1n11d gloss,
eel cover s. Ste & Orrve to fl!'P•tc1o!t SAW 73•
'69 FORD MUSTANG .
;8, s!iclc: shift, r!td10. hro!er, whitewall tir1s. wheel $"148 8
overs. R:eol S!!orly. YCM b8b
'7l FORD Pinto 2 Dr.
4 S!lffd, foctorv oir conditionin;, radio, heoter, whi1ewalt$218 8
.tires, tinted gloss, 4••CIC
foctory oir tooditioning, full power,1 .powlfr,..sl~ring,
powe.-(disc) brakes, powt_r wind_ows, Pf""~ ~s, FM $39 8 8
l"lldio, heater, whilfwoll tires, v111yl roOf, hnlf gloss.
whee\ tOYt1s. 01tolll cor ZOU 4 76 . ,
'67 CAD Cpe De V1 e -y ow '""';''°""'· Ml pow•. powH ""'"'· $2 3 8 8 powe-(dist) broke5, powtr windows. pewer seots. ro-
dio, whir1woll Tir es, vinyl rool, ti11ted glos1, wh1tl ·
covers. eu honof Condition. UES 13'
'71 MERC. Comet Dr.
v.H1:l!:t C ~'•ering. r!tdio. heater. whi!ewo11$
tires. tinted lass, wti.el toYrrs, 542-(18
IMtlO . \ ' 4 door Sedan V-8 outo. ltnns.. factory oir condition'.irq,
powtr strtrifig, pawtf' brokes. ,xiww windows. pawl!!" $1
seots. rodio, whilewoll tir1s. vinyl roof, linted gloss.
wfteeltOYlfS.lOridou!op,7415 -.
All Sale Prices Effect ive for 72 Hours After Publication •
PANTERA
By de Tomaso
r
V-1, ~torv air condirionirQ, '°"'" S1tarirJ,j. pow•
llroktt. radio, h!Olfr", whitrwoll lifts. VZT780. OtWy
37,SOO acluQj m~••·
'70 OLDS: Cust: 4 Dr. H .•
oolo. 1ious., tac!ory oir coudiliooing, power s11e1i"'l, ·
power (djK) brokes, power windows, power seois, AM-$ 2 9 8 8 fM 51tt"RO, rodio, heoitr. wni1ewo\\ !ires, Yill'fl rocrl !i!\tld
glens, whetl covtrs. 772AGC
'70 COUGAR
y.e, CllJ!O. irons., loctory air concfilbning, power steer.nq, ~ 7 8 8 powtl" (disc} blokes, 1~111, Mater, whitt-..vn!I lire,, 14,·
t I il r79·8NN
'67 FORD Country Squire
l(ll'an. OIJ!O. lrD11S., lactory-oir conditioning. power \teer-$ 88 ;.iQ. powtr (dis.t) brllkes, rodio, heottr, whitewoll tores, 13
tin!ed glou, wheel ttvll".1. One O'Nnlf N1w cor Jodi TOW· 77 .
'71 CHEV Vega Wagon
A
~
a
(
v
$
Cl
al
m
!Sel
A
• • . '
I .. \ I
'
. . • •
DAILY PILOT 11
..... ~··· l§J ·1 .. ·~7 .... 1§1 I ....... w. I~ I -... ~ i i~ I ..... ~.. I~·~! _ .... _ ... _ .. ··~]§] ~[ _ ..... _..,_ .. ~!§]I
1.A_u_to_s,_u.,.s_ed ____ 990.,: Autos, UJOd 990 Autos. Jied 990 Autos, Utocl 990 Autos, Utoc1 990 Autos, UM<l 9911 Autos , Usod 990 A•u•t•os•, •u•,•ed---·990· Autos, Used
l§J I AutoaforStle l§J''
MUSTANG PONTIAC . . PONTIAC · ... "'"jiio'Nn~c .'. . T·llRD T·llRD f·llRD nMPEST .,.,. .
CLEAN '68MustangGT.CS, 1970 PONTIAC '72 PONTIAC 1969 ·PON~C GTQ •ST THUNDERBIRD. x1n1 ~Gr i''.Blnl:F..~ \"'""" F~;,. •1!168 THUNDERBIRD, •·ctr :69-.i•;;;i>t•IWq:hPct'.~
LINCOLN • . .
'70 .CONTINENTAL ~~~32 , J FIR llRD , cooct. SUOO. Call artt'.r 5 pm, h•iillc cond,. Sci> to ap. Landau. tmmac. cond. lhl'U· Jl1lft, di.to brka. •Ir. trtr
2 Door~ hardtop. All the ex· =~~---'=---GRANO p I E V8 autom1.ilc factory air S48-0201, APl1 B-3. Pl't!Cl&tt, &U-2352 out. ,Full 11wr., air, conct., hitch. beat ~r ~
trae on this 12.tn:> mile 1 l968 6 C)'I., JlO"'er •teering, R X BRAND new 1m Ftrebfnl, Jndltlcinlll&'. 'power steer-Ll.ke to tradeT OUr Trndtr'• Don't give up the ihlpl AM· l .. M sltrto. Surrund.v "Howard" \\1"1"1 art' ~T
o\vner. imm1tculate aulomo-ne\v llres & brakes. ~eel .. PS, PB, ridkl, hU.l~ra+\YSW i~ .. J,JOWer ·d..C \ti'ak8. . P&nadiH ~umn ts for you! "List" It In c\asilifit'd, Ship w1 blk, top. Blu. bk. Prlvale IAlll .oinethll'IT l'tnd II,
bilt. (9P7BOJ-I), ~· Gold. i!.250. 67>1070. ys .. a'toinatic. tr~u1smi!sion. tires It mlfly, many extra.s, ·v~J'root. fZA~) 5 Unee, ?i daya for 5 bucks. to Shore Rtsulla! 6't2-5678 P1y, M7·947'9 place an adl Mi.5811. · $4995 1966 T\fustang, 6 cyl., autc, ,factory air condlUonlna. Auto. tratu., ttnter f~. C'On· $l899
'72 lie. good tires, good ~er '$feer~. power BOif', Serial No. 2SS7D2N Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Uted 990 Autos, UMd 990
. • <.'Ond, $375. 64f-02'7~. brakes,, power windo\\·~. 522807. ROY CARVE~. Inc. -"'..::..:==='.'..__-'ta<lfi. I hulir. whl!iwall WAS $3912.65 ~ H3'bor 'Blvd.. OLDSMOBILE litef, Nlni!J roar. SAVE $600.00
Price vlJld ttn,1'2128/72
' ·DAVE ·ROSS
Co••• M... 5'6-4444 '69 OLDS LUX SEDAN . . . $3399 . FROM STICKER
MERCURY . . p,.:ce valid lh ru 2128112 NOW $3312.65
' . PONTl:\C ·
2480 ltarboi A1od. .
4 Dr. dlr. lull pG\\'er, fact. DAVE ROSS & la.'1'., lie. & doc. fee '69 COUGAR ak, Sieroo. ek, 1 ow"'r PONTIAC BILL BARRY
Cu8ta Mega 548-8017
'62 PONTIAC .Star j:~let, 4
dr. R&:H, , PlS, PI B,
spE:tial a.uto l.(alis.. n1ns
pttfect. Must be' ieen\to 11.~
P,l'eC· ~ 642--8941 after 4.
1965 Ponllac Catalina. '.2 Dr ..
•lard top, $400. or best offf'r.
Sharp! . Local 1 01vner, fac· Blue Book $2900, "'Ill sacrl·
toryatr.Buckels, Vinyl roof, fice S2675 IZNV424l. Call ' 2.,0.HarborBlvd. PONTIAC-GMC.FIAT
PS, PB, (X\'T270) SZ195. 586·11736 or 494·6811. Costa ~te• 546-8017 llst St. at S.A. Fl'\\')',) '
Tommy Ayres Chevy '60 Old•. PIS, P/B. Radio. '6~ J'OJ'jTIAC GTO 200 E. Isl St., Sanla Ana
heater. Good •tires, ru.ru '.:Cab po11 5.58·1~-558·1000
916 s. Co8't Hwy.. groat Good <ond. tn and 1971 PONTIAC ~1=96~8.~P=oN=T=iA--c -Laguna Sch out. $300. 5.57-930j, i. . . , 638·5&70
494·7144/546-9967 1969 OLDs· o.\\a 88 "'"•m • ' .!.i.~NO. PBIY '69 CQUt:.All Dr. hrdtop. full P"'" ~•ut ,,._JIM • . I\ " . , ;. , "'-gold & brown combo S200 • " f • 1 1 .
EXECUTIVE
Private Par!y. • Vei-y clean. below Blue BOok. 67~'7352. V8, .... 4utom;,t1c , ttaJ'lsmlhlon, Coupe. V8, automatic, factory
Full power inCI elec: wind· 1966 OLDS Delta gg . 4 . Dr. :~#~011'.j,;atr, , oondition.lrJ, air condltlonin1, po. w e r -'~"""'-c---:~
O'>''S, air con.d • ..-~c~ s .. tt: ~ ·sttri. Very clean local 'Wet.I 1teer.t111 •. power ·~1sc alttring, JlO\Ver .disc_ btf.ltta.. ·
IO\\' mll6age. Ute yellow \v / original car Air et ·$895• ,bra)cew, ·•powr!r \VlndoW,S. (ZZ.X709). •. ~lk vinyl roof. \\lire \vheels, Fi 54• 20&J • e: · ~-ratfr, 'vhlt~ aide-wall tkei,· ·$1399 tires like ne1''· S22!l5. rm ;r. • 'ra\tio','• *1~)1[ ~ '
644-2211 1968 442 Olds 400 '"· PIS. . ,, (liSSirA'l11io3) • · Wago1t : ·
,67 MONTCLAIR· posi-trac. Sharp! $1150, 1 ·~ i ,,tA399' 1
' Price val\11 thru 2/28'/72 .9 Passengei·. Gq.ld. .'v 1th
owner, 67j-5U6. '_; "-~·~. ; DAVE ROSS 111atching · inlerior. Autoina· 2 Door H.T. Dir. V.Top., Air '"O CUTLASS JI PONTIAC 1· I 'd I C 1 , must se , D..1,.. v~ld ti•-· • ,281-1c, a r con ., po1ver seer· ond, AM;Fhf. Loaded. Lit· 20 2 ,., •• ...., ... ~ 11• I '· b k (IVVl ASW) .000 mi., air l>O"-'er, dr., .. D'A E. ROSS 2480 Harbor Blvd.' · " ng-.,. l'll ef.·r -~
tie old bankers car. c:vo:e.. vinyl top, 493-9146. . . ~0 ·e Costa Mesa 546-8017 $2695.~ ;
049) Call 546·8736 aft JO ii NTIA T A d• l'h 494-6811. '69 OLDS 98. 4 Dr. luxury , , . '6T GTO hnllp, PD""'· 2 dr., ommy yr~ (Uflevy. ~. Fully equip, Xlnt cond. ~··~ · '1iar~...),3lvd. big engine. $1400. · .,
'71 Mercury Mont~ MX, 2 $2800. 67>l2i6. Costa ..MY&. • , 'l!i. 546-8017 540.1111 . , 946 s. Coru!~IWy.,
mo's old, 2000 mi's, Ne'v •-· d the n"'"T DAY cat \VBI'l'anty, P/S, PIB, '67 OLDS Sta \Vin.,· autu, air ~v·r~l',,,,_ ~ · . ,10 GIVE-A-LOOK $400 ' 'Ca.tuna. .~
Air, Vinyl top, vs, 240 HP cond., R&H, power steering rutt, • ~ ad, Don 1 , 494.7744; $1200. 557·6493 delM .. -,..ijll, toda~ 642-.5678. 66 Bon. 673·7730 ex 2 , ~ , , .
eng, $3200. 6'7>!982· . . . Autci~~•w , ,980 Autol, Ne• ·~.1 i80 Autos; New'~. ~: ~ 980
'70 MERC Mon\ego MX. Air, -~P~L~Y~M~O~U~TH~_. J ii9i#;ii:;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;F;p.;~i;ii;;;;;;o.'""i;;;;;;;~~~-:~;;;;;;;~77~;;;:;;; p/s, p/b. 1 .Jtt, ne111 brak~. _ ' · 1 , • <( ~
tire•. Ex<el rond. il,925. •. HOT WHEELS • . '): . ; 'WE'RE 'cLOSED SUNDAY . IUT ., '1 l i
541-4369 !>6; 5.\7-J608 "" '67. Pl¥1.\0µTH ~r~:~E.~~~ ::·OUR . P,Rl(ES . ARE · .LOWER;~ 19TI CAPRI, 200'.l CC, auto'.
\V/decor group, lo mi, xlnt
cond, $2500., 496·3326.
_ _..:;~::.:f.:::88~~ .. : : " THE REST 10F THE WE.K MUSTANG '" -: :
'67 MUSTANG
' Auto Trans, Po\ver Stetring,
Air Cond, Stereo Radio,
Must see this , tine .car to
appfeciate its fine value
1~~~~:r~c .: ::GET THE BIG DISCOUNT '·
·: ': :. Righ! ~o' At Terry B~ic~ :: ;·'.:
: ·, ~ow.est Ove'rffe d In So. Caht ..
FIREBIRD 400
(UER73ll • · • · · VS ' automatic lransmluiOO $1 099 l;clocy air" conditioning:
CREY. IER ·MOTORS powor •fe<nng, powor d;" • • brakes, (313CAOJ ,.. $2099 208 \V. 1st St., Santa Aila
i3S,.3J 7.I . ,
'67 MµSfANG· FASTB'ACK
V..S,' auto, p/s, factory air,
low mileage. Xlnt cond,
$1.295. Private Party .
Sl:l-0<33.
, '69 l\fUS'TANG
V-8, .f spd, power., beaV)' duty
IU!!lpension, low mileqe A:
very sharp. · $U!OO. Call
546-9!6l.
MUS"l'ANG '66, 1 owner,
Auto, 6 cyl, NeW be.t1iry, 2
new tires, $750. 833-1306,
833-007. •
1968 Mustang, air, heater,
new tires, Jo,v mileage.
$1600. 846-4324; 846--3375.
2480 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 546-80'17
1969 PONTIAC
FIREBIRD
VS, 4 speed transmission,
power steering, power diac
brakes. (ZXX3991
$1799
OPIN
lllNDAYI " .
OVER 150 NEW & USED
vw·s--yo CHOOSE FROM
''~····.. . i.J., •. , ~ · • Listed Below A • But • Ftw ,.. '
: · Of· Our Low Low 1 v1ryd1y Prl~11 .... · , ', ;
·.Ii\~_.: :72~1u'1cKrSKYLAlK 27'9"8' . 96 . 2 DoOl' Coupe, Model 3327, V8 ~nglne, radio, he&ter, ' 1 1 1 UE!lted 't!Tes, noW 'thril ventilation. Pl.us foaCls ot !It..· , · ' J
• 1taftdard BUlck equl,pment. Order This Great car Toda,. • . · ,
NEW '•7z IUICK LE SAIRE s35' f Q33
Turblhe drtve, powor ""'rtng & d\0< bcakos. . ~ •,I· radio, heat-r, etc.'BJg fu11 slze Buick.
LuxurY and "COmfort for such a Low Price.
·.w;, 'J2 IUICK ELECTRA 225 s439· 512 UnbellevabJy Low Priced for one of America'• mmit .
luxurtqu· autot111>bile1. Turb.lne drlve, power steering, , , , •
.P?'Yer ~raj(es. Doiens ot other extras. Order Yours Now.
•
, ... '. '
OPIN
SUNDAYS
LARGEST SELECTION OF
VW BUSSES & CAMPERS
. '68 VW S9UAREIACK ........•• :·SfH~' '70 VW IUG ........ : .. · ... :-. .... '.it,11
Lleht bll.lf, Ill.UC /rM,lor, r~l•I tlfn, Witt ff05. .,., ... A""9f!'lllllC, ""' ·-W/1111(11 Interior. lit, J1 • ICY. '
'63 VW LOVE IUG : ................ f~t ~ THUNDERBIRD ............. : ~ . ')R
Dlrlt bltM W1lfl l•fM !Ifft, Clllllln ... 11. lie. ,YC tu. ' ..i o1 ""JI p!IWW, 1Mf1Ulc ltfW, ltunt I.I M'lf, !HIC nt.
o , ' •>,~·s· . I .... , 68 VW BEETLE . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . " .vw S9UAREBACK ............ , "r
Wlll!t, W/b11Ct lnlll"lor, lltdlo. lk. WYO •12, ' ' ~ Gl'tlll·Mc.w Cir, lie. lll'F "'· .!· lJ , . . ""' . , . . 'st~n· 58' VW V~N 1 ................... :. ~ , 6B BUICK SKYLARK .. .. .. .. .. .. . ,
'
l•lt m:idtl "1'11)('., r ... L~ OL~ JM, ' ' : ' ... M{.flotlo· tM.lor f\111 """· ""°""'k. """' «IU.I 11111... t •h
• • . . $ '" 70 VW KARMAN GHIA . .. .. .. .. . 68 VOLVO ..................... · .•
Y.. , tHlt.. Lie. ... ;. t dor Md1n, ' .,... lrMt. t.k. IAD '1J, .... \ 1 • , iaJ. . . ' . ,,,,, '61 VW., BUG •• , ..............• , :{. '69 DODGE 'V1'N . . .. . . . . . .•. .•. . , ,. ,
' Dtrk .;,;I{ ,,..s.:-.mM 'nlnlior. Llc.'VO;U m. , '"'1""91\. ¥ft a12"'1w. . •
'67 oLl>s DELMONT 88 . . ,tiff.
•
'71 t vw. IUS · ................... .
. . . . . . . . . . ' . I F1111 ........ ,...,., •Ir CllMltlOn""'-Lie. 61 go. ....
..,....... '6B OPEL RALLYE ... : ........... f11 I
CPtrlfN "'{lftlt. t9'11'1t ltr!M, etc. Uc. WIG f#. • , ' i1Ht' '70 AUmN AMERICAN ....•..•..
~·Me,\IJM erwn. Lie. tNC·IG.
'
• I
BUY FROM ·ORANGE
COUNTY'S
NO· 1 CHEVY DEALER!
BUY:
WHERE THE
USED CARS
GOOD
ARE!
'70 MALIBU S.S. CPE.
396 cu, i11. VI, r1d io, l'.S., P.a., •u+o·
malic, air cond., 9019•0111 car, !P20·
69) ,.
. 52799
'67 CHEVY Yz 'TON P.U.
Vt, r1cl lo, pow•r 1l11ri119, 1utom1llc,
1ir cond. !Z74514l
51299
'71 FORD 10 PASS.
Cnhy. ••d. w19on. U11d1r 10,000
mll••· Lu99, ,., •• 1ut1., · R&H, P.S., ,,, "''sj699'"0"
'67 MERCURY MARQUIS
'67 COUGAR XR7 COUPE
Vt, r1dio, P.S., 1ul1., eir cond., ¥fnyl
•oof, '"'$1'5 99
'69 MERCURY MARQUIS
4 Dr. Ab1olultly •howroom frt 1h.
Elie. windwt, 1plit 111h, P-br••., tJlt
whl., ¥inyl roof, bl1t bwy. IYRM644J
52399
'71 NOYA COUPE
VI, 1utom1tic, pow1r 1!11dn91 1up1r
cl1111. IP2666 J
52499
'71 MONTE CARLO
Cpe. Vt, r1dlo, P.S., 1uto., 1lr c•rid.,
¥inyl roof nothitt9 nic1r. t6ttlQSI
53599
'70 MONTE CARLO
Cp1. R1cllo, ,.S., 1wto., 1ir, vinyl roof,
'''""'53199
'70 MALIBU 6 P.ASS. WAG..
'70 MALIBU 2 DR. H.T.
Air tond., P.S., •ulom•fic tr•111mi1·
1ion, r•dio. 111:259 ])
52599
'69 MALIBU 2 DR. H.J.
VI, ,yjrfyl ,roof, power tl11rin9, r1dlo,
111lom1tic, air i:o11d., I ow111r.
52299
'69 NOYA COUPE
,6 ,.,llndor, 111tom1tlc traM., power
1fo1rln9, I XfE5I 11
'68 CAPRICE COUPE
3150 cu. In. VI, •uto., l'·t••h, P·wl11•
dow•. tilt wh•1I, .-lnyl reof, 1lr cend.
!XUW062J
51699.
'68 CADILLAC
Std111. 01VUl1, AU th e 9ooifi1•, ¥]ny l
... r •• ,$2799
'66 OLDS COUPE
H.T. R1d io, pow1r •l11rln9, 1uto.,
¥h!yl roof, 1lron9 ctr. ISTZ7t61
'69 FIREBIRD COUPE
VI, bleck ¥i11yl reof, white ctr, now
rubb1r, r1dio, P,$., 1ufo., 1!r, ,,,102
mllH Ys259961Anl
'68 PONTIAC TEMPEST
'66 CHRYSLER 4 DR. SEO.
.
'69 DODGE DART CPE.
VI, r1cl l1, P.S., tuie., 1lt c.0114., •lft?I
•fff, ·'·~;;,
BUY:
WHERE YOU'RE
TREATED LIKE A
CUSTOMER BEFORE
AND AnER YOU ,
BUY!
'68 EL CAMINO
R•dlo, automatic, powor •f1orln1, •fr
co11d itlonln9, (P262')
'67 CAMARO COUPE
'71 CHEVY SUBURBAN
C1rry1ll. 4 whl. 4r1110, VI, ,,S., 4
(.{J''d, 11,000 11rof11I m/111. f 611·
XWI s4399
'71 SPORT YAN
'66 JEEP 4 WHER DRIVE
St1. w11011. Htt ''' l11Jclr Sk,yltrlr
1119., •ulom 1tlC, r1dl1, tW1ttr llft ''"'" $1'9995HOtll
'67 DODGE Yz TON P.O.
Autemtllc, r1ifl1, VI tn9l110. (Vlf• 2701 •
•
'68 FORD * TON STAKE
True•. 71/1'. 4 1p11cl, r1ifle, VI •1t•
,,,.,, ''2•1•1
'70 FORD Yz TON P.U.
VI 1n9ltt1, ,.cue, •lick •hlft. (17211AI
'66 ll CAMINO
WI ARI
ORANGE
COUNTY'.S
NO. 1 DEA~ER
CONNELL CHEVROLET
2828. Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa
546-1203
'
• • • . .. ... . . -
Fri,.Flb.25, 1972 la..u!IFU!.:D ,f.DVIATli'-lllL.\lj (CUSS11ll.D .lJ>V&ll'IUlttlfT)
CADILLAC NINETEEN SEVENTY-TWO
ON DISPLAY-READY TO CiO
1972
Coupe De Ville
Very low mileage bocutfvo car
factory air conditioning, vinyl roof, full leather cxter·
ior, AAt.f'At 1terco radio, po\rcr 6-way front 1cat ad·
juator, power door locks, tilt·telc11eopic atcering whet~
waw tiree, lamp monitors & m1ny other deluxe Cadillac
extru & ahowroom frcah (SER 188224)
1972
Sedan De Ville
Low mlleage lxecutlve car with electric 1un roof
Beautiful Firemist St Moritz finish, fuU leather inter•
ior, factory air cond., dual comfort front seal w/power,
6-way adjustor (both 1ides), al.erco Ali1·~t with &tcreo
tape, power door lock.!, trunk. opener, twilight aentinel,
rear window defogger, cruise control track.matter
brakes, cct., clc. lust about every dcluu Cadillac extra
made! (SER 111642)
•
LEASE A BRAND NEW 1972 SEDAN DEVILLE
Fully equipped With vinyl roof, AM-Ff\1 stereo radio, soft ray glass, fu ll powered 6 way seat, door edge guards, automatic climate air conditioning, tilt & tele steering wheel, twili~ht sentinel. (Stock #2325)
ONLY $185 PER MONTH 24 MONTH
OPEN END
'71 Coupe De Ville SALE PRICE
' Ital tt interior till 6 teletcopic -·heel, 1tereo. A~f.Flil radiB, F"to~ ~' <mdil;Minr. podd<d top, full '°""• '"""°"' doth $ 5 8 5 8 C"'' door lockl, moM every deluxe e1tra. Loca.I low milea1e 1uty lhat'1 atill t.bowroom. fresh. (613CXU)
70 El Dorado SALE PRICE
r"..,., ,;, <ond;u,,;.~ '"" '"'"" , ... .; ... '"" P'"" "'"'~ $ 4 9 4 9 m~t, Alif.Flif 1tereo multiplex radio, tilt & tele1eopic 1t.eerin1
wheel, Ji)'u door lockt, padded top, uwtJ other deiu1e straa.
(IJ6AS ) .
'70 Coupe De VIiie SALE PRICI
F"torJ ofr oondil;,.;,,, ,;nyl lop, full !"th" ;,..,;,,, oil "'"'' $ 4 5 4 5
incl. door lockl, lilt & teleteopic 1tetti.n1, 1tettd, mo1t all dlx. ,
ettra1. (716A.Sf)
'70 Sedan De VIiie SALE PRICE
' let er interior. 1tetto AJ\f.FJ\1 radio, tilt & 1ele1eopie !lrfring Fo<t:'J: o!r oondltion;n~ foll pow" "IWP'"'"' podd<d top. do1h $ 4444
vhttl. U&ht S!ntinel, power trunk lock, etc. (2) to eb.aoNI ( 125210)
(797AGE) Take your pick.
'68 El Dorado SALE PRICE
r"'°" .~ ~•d;tion;n~ foll '"th" fotu;,,, podd<d top. fo ll $ 3 7 7 7 power, tilt &: telucopic whttl. ltcrto. daor lock1. radii\ tire1, etc.
All .deluxe enru •nd low mile11e. Sbow1 the ultimate in care. (VSU250)
'67 Coupe De Ville SALE PRICE
B"•tifol •nnino wh!>, •/•Mt< ,;,y1 top & tk h t<d iwhu ;,. s2323
tcrior. f1etory 1ir condi1ionin1, lull power, tih & telescopic steer·
lna. AJ\f.Flil radio. Abt0lu1eJy be.utilul. (389AG C)
'65 Coupe De Ville SALE PRICE
F1et0l)' 1ir ct1ndi1ionin1. full powtr. Bcautiflll cloth I: /c11hcr s1313 interior. Alli.Fl\( radio, ttc. An exceptional buy. See to appreci1te.
IHOF394)
'69 T-Blrd Landau •
Luxuriou1 Hardtop Cpe. with only 22.640 rnilu. factory Air Ct.in· SALE PRICE
d;,;,.;.,, foll pow" ;nd. 1;h wh.,I. doo• '°""' '""· '""'· ud .. $ 3 0 3 0 htr~ wsw tim. cxqui!ite Adrl11ic turquoi.e with bl1ck ptddfd 100f
& luJurioua black vin)'l interior Loc1l beauty that'1 flawlm!
(S.SfCCPI
'68 Buick Electra SALE PRICE
Luxuriou1 •·225·• 4 door ttd1n. F1c1ory air conditioninr. vin)'l $1919 interior, power 1teering & brake~ automatic lrana.. r1dio a heater,
vinyl lop, w1w tirtl1, electric antcnnL (XC?.837)
LARGEST
SELECTION • OF
LATE MODEL
CADILLACS
IN
Orange County
. ' •• •
CHOICEST INVENTORY IN
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
•
'71 Sedan De Ville SAU PRICI Ordy 9,.UO milea. F1ctory air conditionina:. fan leather intrrior,
beautifttl C.uablanca Ivory with blaclr: top & bl1ck interior. Dual $6363 comfort fmnt 1e1.t, lh''reo with ,1trto t1pe, tih-telucopic -wheel.
po ... er door Jock'. rroiae co11tTol. AloM every deluxe erua & abao-
Jutely flawle1s 1hroughout. (012CXW)
'71 Continental Mark Ill SALE PRICE
F 1c1orr air condltionin1o padded vinyl top. LuJurious in1trior $ 59 5 9
•/dual comfort aeat. Ari-f.fM 1ttteo multip\ei:. doer IoCU. Cnti1e
control, electric trunk lock, tilt 1tettin1 wheel, etc., etc. (316DDK)
'70 <iadlllac SALE PIUCl
Convertiblt. Factory •ir eonditionin1. e1ecuti\~ black exterior, s4242 bl1elr: tli'erior, bJ1 ck full leather 1nd blaeJ.: IOp, FUIJ Jl!IWU, dtr~
radio, tilt & telc.acopic 1tttrin1, power door lcl.:.1, loaded with e1tras
and We priced. (199888)
'68 Sedan De VIiie SAU PRICI
Gor,eoua. Firemiat finish, factory air conditioning, full powtr, 'inyl $ 2 6 2 6
top. Full leather in1trior, tilt & teltte:opic sterin&. 1tt.rto, door
locka, etc. (WlDOO.Jl
'66 Coupe De VIiie sAu PR1c1
Factory air coild\tioflin&. full power incl. electric •ind<1w1 &: Kat, $1616
plush clotb & lealhtt intuior. Loadtd •/emu. Ste & drl•e to
apprt'ciate. ITSH076)
'66 El Dorado Convert. sALr PR1c1
Popular hird to find Fleetwood !lfriea with factory air condition-s 171· 7
ln1o fWI power, all leather inter., ltereo Ml.FM, door loch, tilt·
te!HCOpic atterini. li&ht .entry, uunk lock. etc., etc:. (TEH741)
'68 Jaguar XKE sAu Pa1c1
"Beautiful 2+2 coupe. Exquiaite uad beite w/pluah Enaiilh Siddle s3 7 3 7
leather inter. Fac1011 air conditionlna. 1uto. trant., A!il.FM ndio,
chrome wire wheel .. low 1nilea1e &: tnr.e mint condition. (• Al.695)
'68 Pontiac lopnevllle
,_
'65 Wagon
Col6'!Y P1 ~ p i I l'C' ""1e t.nlilJ w1gon with factory 1ir
c:onditionina. 1tetti8' ,owtr brakte. elec:trio •iAdow ..
chrome lu1p ,..,..U.yl lnthior, local low milea1e..
(PIX!m) '
•
SAU PRICE
• SALE PRICE
,,
SJ212
)'our Authorized Cadillac Dealer Serving the Orange Coast HarHr Are•
NABERS ' .
2600 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa
540-9100
SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN
'
•
.NABERS LEASING
LEASE DIRECT
lmmtdl1t1 Dlhlrf • bc1lltnt S1lactl1n
FrH Pickup and Dlhlry
FrH Lnn Can Whilt L111t Cir Smlcad
Pour •nd·on ... hetf •ere• of,...., •vthetltH
C•dnl•c focllltl•• de1l9ned te ......,. 1011
•nd 1ervlce Cadlllec -molllle1. 10 (w.n:
. •telb) ..,d 45 factory tnolned technl-1.
•
8:30 AM to 9:00 PM Mon. thru Fri. • 9:00 AM to 6:00 PM Sat. and Sun.
,
( '
WE
APPRECIATE
YOUR
BUSINESS
BRAND NEW
'72CHARGER
$199 DOWN $2288~g,
$199 is lo'1ll dn p)'lllf. $73 i11a1o1 mo'""'
FOR 36 Clp!lt cred'~ for 36 -. °"'"9d pym1,nc. $73 A MONTH """"'·"'""'"'""'""''"'""
MONTHSS2177 Ind.,_ & .._.,ANN.II.I. PEIC£H.
TAGEIATt 10.06'1.
TAKE YOUR CHOICE
IMMEDIATE
DELIVERY
$1·31100 . FULL
. PRICE
FUIT Ill HARDTOP
'l-1. Mm.,,...,..-. -.. poww' ......
... fttfQrf' lir ""*"il'llo11i112. 037 H
$J99DOWN
$43AMONTH
' FOR 36 MONTHS
'70 FORD ...
V-&.llttl. lrln. RICf;o, i.ts. ,_.
t r sr11ri119, fod. 1ir c•IMI~ wlwt:I ~S40AIZ
'70 CHEVROLET
SIDA.I
V-8, outo, 1n:ins. lottory air cand. power
stHring, ntdl•, M.t•r. much much
~-'22:5CGX
I I
BARGAIN CORNER
CLEANEST TRANSPORTATION
-... CARS IN TOWN
'66 p.1ymouth '70 DATSUN
SEDAN
y.9, ovro tntns. powtr st1tri119, t1dio. htattr. Am. ~ro. heattr. Rllllfyto go. 207 ANM
fN41E62219442)
IU G
' ..... tlick shift, l'Od'ia. Mot«, whlttwoM &-u.
whlll m1r1. rtd. PAH179
'68 Plymouth
• Roodrunner2 DR. H.T.
Y·8. IMO. tranJ-tar.lofy oir, powet sfttrirW, ""'io.
htllter, l'iolyl root, RM23HBA230843,
S688 FULl PIJCE
I
4 SptiM!t-.. Ilia
4 cy1, qint, di.::
brakts, healer.
bucktl wats. viltyl
iftrior, l!Kh n'Mtl _..,
OROEl YCUS TODAY.
THE ONLY IW'OaT 'M'TM OVUt 2000 AMSUCAH 50\'lt
FACUTIS llWOUT U.S. $)99 DOWN PIKISSTAITASLOW AS ~~.:~mg~~~~~.!1799 AIUMt l'llCOOAGE U.ff 11.'M 'JI.
'71 FORD500
$199 DOWN 560 A MONTH ~oR"l:s
$1888 ~~,·.::·;;;:.~~t·:::~:~
& all u.,.ryinq chorgn on oppr.
ued•I for 36 mo1. Oehrr•d
v.1, ••I•. tr1111 .. r•llllo! '"'''• prmt. p1ic1 S23S9 inti. tax & •••tr 1tt1rl119, ft,t, e1r c11f,, locMW. ANUUIJ. ,lRCENTAli£
,;.,1 11111ri11r. 164 CIC iu.n 11.35 ""
Friday, Frbruary 25, 1972
IUNDNIW
'72DART
lMllld ··"' ~ Wiii~ • 1f1, 11Jth Met IWt, lwo!tr,
'riny1 --. • ...-lllinor.
G9S•14 W... odlNJliMcontrol
1ru1a. hlth illlrt<I ,.int .,
-.lth!IMti --.ORDa: 'f'OOlS TODAY.
•
DAIL V Pilaf 49
•
5199DOWN
~~"-~.: .. ~~=':Z.:! 566 A MONTH FOR 36
1er" "'"· Dlf--i,.,....,.it• 1n1s n:t ,.. & MONTHS lkMY. NN.lAl ntCIHl'AGE J:ATE 'l,93% I
CllTOI Vll ·
IT COllTllT·
S~E AND DRIVE
THE FAMOUS
"COPPIN'' VAN
$1188 FULL
PRICE
BYFORD
Allie. ir..,. rtdlo, ilta!I!'.
k.wo9• r11:k, n..lhrv ''"' lilallOll. 422 OJI'
$199DOWN
$36AMONTH
FOi 36 MONTHS
'69CHARGER
$199 DOWN $30 A MONTH ~~~:~s
Aulo. fTons. flKt, a ir, $988 11tt1111ra1d •. ,, .. 1.110 .,101ot
I -. tJll'f. 1 .. t1. I••. l•Ufllt I. oil power st11 r 11g, po wtr (....,... 1~, °" -· ,....,. "" windowi, radio, heotor. FUU J6~ o .... ,.,,.,.,,. ,,.~, 51719 xsr 954 PllCI ' ... '"'-""'Ill~ P(f(!Oj. 11(.t ,Altllt~'..
'69 PONT. FIREBIRD '69 DODGE Monaco H.T. ''69DODGE VAN
....... "!"• ....... """'· $988 pow« tT111rq, b:t. 0 .. cond.. nu.
wh8ll covers . .540.ABZ PllCl
'68 BUICK Wagon
v.e, tailo. trans. Iott. oir con6.
pwr. tTMl"iig, rodio, htmr, U1
whttf COYft. XXG388 $1188
'69 VW DELUXE
dif. hlc!ttr, ril'lyl 111wior • .,.w d• ruu ilt-hi bock tiucket seah. XTN 3311 JILL Y·L., ............ -, .. $788 '"""'"""'·-"""''"" $888
kilt WlR40 PIKI , rltCI
'69 MERC. Cougar '69 CHEV. NOVA
v.9, ""'· '""'· wh;ltwoll $I 088 ..,,,, """-rndlo. """'· ZJ<C $888 tires. fi.111 whttl c•v•rs. block. nu 4-07
a!lltS rax:1
)·
" ,
, ... _ ........ '"'"'· -· $988 .. u wall tires. 5I036A PIKI
'69 FORD Galaxie
;::~;;:·.'.:;:,·,:: $988 "'" i.ow. ZBI 673 rtKI
'69 CHEV. Pickup
$1188 .=
t
•
•
SO DA!LV PILOT
THIODOll
IOllNS SL
TIME . m. ...........
\)HIOy-
Aw.4 fw 1t71
'
IS ALSO . PRICED
UNDER
$2000 .I
EVERY NEW '72 IN OUR HUGE
STOCK NOW DISCOUNTED TO
SAVE YOU HUNDREDS OF $$$! . . ' . .
NEW '72 LTD's NEW '72 T~llRDS
PRIS-1,~f COUNT:.: TO p'1~G2couNTs UP TO •. JlOM
WINDOW WINDOW
' STIClll STICICll
S•r. • 12J68Sll6.026) 1105) 12Jl7N1'40l•Ol (17Sl
NEW '72 'GALAXIES NEW '72 TORINOS'
PRICSf lf 11SCOUN!:o~P TO P•1ttf ldscouNT:,:! To
WINDOW . WINDOW
STICKll STICKEi
-Ser. #' 12J51H 1440'41 I f I 0151 Ser.:: 12Al1Nlll565l ( 10441
NEW '72 MUSTANGS NEW '72 MAVERICKS
PRI, IUSTER DISCOUNTS UP TO p11,~s2sscoUNT:,:! TO 500 FROM WINDOW WINDOW
STICKll STICKEi
----Ser.:# f2F02H I I 17~61 fl 50l Ser.# fZKtlTllll211 17161
BUT PINTO'S PRICE
INCLUDES SPECIAL DEMO CLEARANCE SAYE ON LOW MILEAGE
PRE DRIVEN MODELS!
TEST
DRIVE
PINTO
AND
COMPARE!
ALL FREIGHT AND
PREPARATION CHARGES
WE FEATURE
ONE OF
SO. CALIF.'S
LARGEST
PINTO
SELECTIONS
SHOWROOM
'FRESH
71 's·72~ -
Tremendous Discounts on Low Miieage
Staff and Exec. Cars that include Pinto,
Mavetick, Torino and Station Wagon
Models!
Save While They Last!
72 LTD HD TP $I 02"Mo. 400 VB. A/T, pwr. steer. It discs, 24 MO.
air cond., radio, tint glass. OPEN END
'72 GRAN TORINO HD TP
302 VS. A/T, pwr. steer. and discs,
air cond., radio, tint. glass.
'72 PINTO RUNAIOUT
24 MO
OPEN END
2000 CC Eng., A/T, disc brks., 24 MO.
WIW, accent1mr.DRIYIN MODELS AT SAvflfH Bia THIS!
WI LEASE ALL POPULAR MAKES AT tOMPITITIYE RATES •
•
' '
BIG SAVINGS ON 21/2 ACRES OF NEW CAR TRADE-INS
l.T.D. • Galaxie • T-Bird ·Ford Sale!
Maoy to choose from. '65 ,.,. '71 Models, Sport roofs, formals, 2 door I 4
door hardtops I .-., FuU power, air 'condltlonl119. W-ts GYallfflo.
EXAMl!LI: 1910 FOlD USTOM
•
Cntry. Squitt.Full pwr., air,' Sundial. 4 apeed. radio, 71 FORD 10 PASS. ~896 f '6' V.W. CAMPER $2396
root rack. (285CF'N) • heater, recond. engine.
ILUE IOOK PRICI $4115 , Good mites. {YEW848)
HARD TO FIND USED-ONLY 1,100 MILES!
... 1pttd, AM-FM , rtdio, 1'ittttr, it,li:, '72 VEGA G.T. MAKE OFFER rtcint 1lript , l door htkhht'k. widt
OYtl tirt1. ...itt. 1ptci•I ... h •• r ••
(720961
'61 V.W. IUG
Loaded. Good mllH.
CXSR931 )
SHILIY GT 500
~096
MAKE
428 Cobra Jet. Fllll •pwr., lir, OFRR
17,000 miles. Red beauty. Hard
to find. ~~77DL!'l
'69 FOID GALAXIE
4 Dr. Sed., fac. atr cond.,
power steering, radio, heat-
er, Vinyl root, V-8. (ZDX781)
'70 CHEVY IMPALA
CUit R~ auto., P.S.,
air, vinyl~~ -milH-C4"f:>Al'·XJ
ILUI IOOK ,RICI $2520
TRUCK SALE!
Many to choose from. 'I• ton ond 'I• tons. Flot ~ed. '64 tin 71 models.
EXAMPLE: '64 FORD 1/2-TON PICKUP
VI, t11fom1tic, ,.,...;,,body, 906' lftlltt. f50121 J
OUR PRICI $896
INCOME
TAX REFUND DUE?
WHY WAIT
BUY NOW-PAY LATER -
MAVERICK~PINTO SALE!
-4 1p11d1, l 1p•ech, 1970 to 1972'1 I 1uto1111tic mod1ls.
EXAMPLES:
7t MAYIRltK
'cyl., R &: H, auto ..
good miles ! (6 21AGCl
Some witlt Yinyl roofi. ·
'71 PINTO ~ 796 4 1peed, radio, better, ;-6-9~1-9~
Spd, au cond., iood mile& T I I :;:;-::::::=:"::":::::"'""CllJF'P
ILUI 10:.~~lE $1441 '71 MERCURY CAl'RI
dtcor group, vinyl root, Jow
mlles. (196CQS)
ILUE IOOK·PltlCI $22IO.
I '70 IMl'ALA•I Dr. H.T.
Auto. trans., P.S., radio,
heater, air cond.
C091AKU) $~50 Fully equlpptd. R~ rood '65 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill mu.,, (218BNPl
2 Dr. ff.T. R&H, auto., P.S.. air
' cond. Good miles. (PlT4M) '66 CHEY. MALllU S.S. VS, 4 1peed, iood miles.
(XWY940)
·-----·
?9&
tlC. P!l!S INC-Ii. IN Att
17·2ADVl!RTISED PRICES!
W•lllMIOllly '71 IUICK SKYLARK CUST, 2 Dr. Spt. VS. t8ct. air, vinyl
roof, good miles. (J.fSCOE)
ILUE BOOK PRICE $)495. '69 CORTINA DELUXE Sed. Fully equipped, auto.,
Low mDes. (368ASP) '65 MUSTANG H.T. VS, R&:H, autOmatle, Jl.S., air
cond, good miles. (NBB895l
$~96.
'896
.......... -------------~~~
CONSIDERED
TRADU ACCEPTED
PAID FOR OR NOT
.
HARD TO FIND USED-'72 PINTO RUNABOUTS
2000 Engines-Automatics-Radio-Heater with or without Vinyl Roo(....:.Low mUes,
CHOOSE FROM-MAKE OFFER
'6' CHEVY IMPALA
CUsl H.T. VS, R&H, auto.,
P.S., P.B., vinyl roof, air
cond .. good miles. fXTLm>
ILUE IOOK PRICE S1t7S __
'6' CADILLAC H.T.
DeVille. Full power, tact.
air, Gold w/vinyl roof.
(SHB004l
ILUE SOOK PRICE $1171
'67 'I• TON FLAT BED
Chevy. VB, fully fact.
equipped. Good miles.
(Q95421)
MUS.TANG· SALE!
Many to choose from. '65 ltmi '71 models. Coupes. hordtops. con•trtlblo ...i
2+2 fastbocks. Somo willl 4 speeds. olso olr coedltloofot ...i -models.
E,XAMPLE: '67 MUSTANG HARDTOP
11.tilio, ht1ttr, •11to111tfi,, •Ir ctnilitio11i119, 9ood 11"1ilt1. CUGS,0'97,
OUR PRICE $1096
SAUS DEPT.
HOURS
I AM TO f PM MOIM'tl
I AM TO 6 PM SAT
10 AM TO 6 PM SUN ' I·
PARTS-SERVICE
HOURS
7 AM To t PM MON
7 AM To 6 PM .• JUl.fll I PARTS DEPT. ONLY
• AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS
•
• ' 1 ' • '
1'
•
I
1
t
Today's Final
•
San Clemente
.Capistr•no EDITION N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 65, NO. 48, 4 SECTIONS, SO PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, FEB RUA-RY 25, 1972
eress ome
Federal Help
Fu.nds Expected
For Treatment
The $1.7-mlllion government grant to
pay for the expansion of San Ju1n
Capistrano's sewage treatment plant
became official today.
State Sen. Dennis Carpenter (R-
Newport Beach) announced that the
funds will be on their way soon to finance
the major expansion of the city plant
School Bus
Hit by Auto;
No Injuries
.
A school bus carrying 3S members o{
the San Clemente High School track team
was struck by an auto Thursday evening
in a freak traffic accident on the Santa
Ana Freeway.
There were no injuries, officials at the
school reported, aod damage to both the
bus and the automobile was minor.
'The bus was returning from a track
· meet in Anaheim when the accident oc-
curred at 5:4S p.m. in the 90UthbQund
Janes o{ the freeway near the First Street
offramp iD santa Ana, school oHicialJ
1ald. f ·
According to ·tr.n.Portatk>n supervisor
Jen Slrallon, the bus had '1owed to about
40 miles an hour in congested traffic
when a station wagon suddenly cut into
Its path, causing it to swerve into the
center lane of the freeway.
Mrs. Stratton said the center Jane wu
clear, but a driver in the fast lane ap-
parently saw the bus coming out of the
comer ol his eye and thought the huge
yellow vehicle was moving into his lane.
The driver, identified as Mark Stanek, 40,
of 18171 Meadowsweet Lane in Irvine,
awerVed into the center divider of the
freeway.
Mrs. Stratton said the Stanek auto,
after striking the divider, swung back on-
to the freeway and struck the rear of the
bus. The driver of the bus was identified
aa Gregory Miller, 19, of 33212 Bluefln
Drive, Dana .Point.
Assistant track coach Tony Leon,
riding in the front of the bus, was able to
provide California Highway Patrol of-
ficials with the license number of the sta-
tion wagon which was ''partially
responsible" for the accident, Mrs. Strat-
ton noted. The station wagon sped off
following the mishap.
Joseph Evinger
Succumbs at 62
Joseph K. Evinger, a well-known
realtor and Investment broker In the
CApistrano Bay area, died in Mission
Community Hospital late Thursday af-
ternoon after a sudden illness. He was 62.
Mr. Evinger, who had lived In San
Clemente and later San Juan Capistrano
for the past 20 years, had been ·active In
community affairs, including t h"e
American Field Service, chamber of
commerce, Masons and the Rotary Club.
Memorial services are scheduled for
nut Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Community
Presbyterian Church in San Juan
capbtrano, where Mr. Evinger had been
a member for many years.
Mr. Evinger, whose offices are at 211
Del Mar, San Clemente, leaves hl.t
widow, Bobbie j a aon, Robert and
daughter, Rita, all of the home, 31662
P-. Rita, San Juan Capistrano.
Sbefter Mortuary in Sao Clemente ii In
charie of amngemonts.
Son .· ·;ested
In Dad's Death
l.oNG BEACH (UPI) -A •year"'1d
machlnist wu beaten lo dulh during
family quarrol Thuroday aiJd Ills ICXI WU
muted on suspiciOll ol murder, police
!>ave 'teportocS.
'l1le Ylclim WU Ray Louis MOnJ. llil
IOO, Anthony. II, l1ed in a •an but WU
pldled up IO mlmlta lattt by two
poUcomm. lltle<llves aald the two
argued before fitb!inl.
which late this year w~I serve four
separate lreatment agencl~s under a
new, regional approach.
That expansion will also ease a growing
crisis in waste treatment which threaten·
ed to cause the freeze of new develop-
ment.
Specif.lcally, $1.2 million of the funds
come from the federal government and
$548,225 come from the state's own Clean
Water Bond Act approved by voters in
1970. -
City Manager Don Weidner said the
unofficial approval of the grant has been
common knowledge, "but it's always
more comforUng when you learn of the
final, offi cial approval ."
Besides the city, other agencies which
will share in the use of the plant will be
the Moulton Niguel Water District, the
,. Dana Point Sanitary District and the San·
ta Margarita Water District.
The agencies, banded together into the
South Eitst Regional R e c J a m a t i o n
Authority (SERRA), are now in the midst
of negotiations to actually purchase the
city plant to streamline administration.
Yet another grant, this one for $800,000,
is in the works to finance a proposed
further expansion of the plant to increase
ill ~4il)t capac_ity.
Other· projects 1illled lo tbe San Juan
plant is a jolnt use of an ocean outfall oil
Ddi·Point.
The larger 11lant Is expected to be com-
pleted this fall, in time to meet an iir
creasing demand on wa.ste treatment.
She's Not Lion:
She's Buff aloe£l
By Phone Calls
No lions lounge under the workbench at
Los Angeles' Mandeville Electric Com-
pany.
No zebras bound around among the
spoola of copper wire and castoff mot.ors
and generators.
Still, the telephone at the firm run by
Mrs. Bonnie McMaster rings 15 times a
day with requests for information about
Lion Country Safari tours.
They have Lion Country Safari's
number at Mandeville Electric Company
all right, onfy·they have a different area
code, WhlCh doesn 't necessarily help
much.
One day a Lion Country Safarl ex·
ecutive calling Crom New York got mixed
up, the way busy executives do, and dial-
ed' area code 213 instead of 714, the way
busy execuUves sometimes do.
"Sorry ... " Mrs. McMaster patiently
explained , when some people would be
TOaring like the king of the beasts about
the lSth time their work was interrupted.
So he promptly invited the McMaster
family to tour Lion Country Safari free of
charge on Saturday, March 4, to see what
all the calls were about.
Presumably, officials cf the local
African wildlife preserve will get the
same offer extended to them .
They take a few calls for Mandeville
Electric Company too.
Marine Arrested
At Capo Station
Paulng motorists could have been
forgiven Wedneaday nigbl for 1uuming
that Enco servtoe ltaUon 01mer Tony
Sliva had-pul • alght watcluhan In his
premlsu at 28&tC Camino Clpi!trano,
San Juan Capistrano.
Pllllng Oraqe Counly 1b<rilf1 of·
flccra _"1, IO IW'e llJld lhey loolf a.,._
and look. A third -and a check ol the
ptOIJ\bea led lo the arrat on charges ol
lllegal entry of Camp Pendloton Marine
Herbert Euaeoe Aleuader, :z:i.
Depuliu uld Alaander •mashed a '
window In the lube boy ... of the alo-
lion, dropped '1t.. • chair in front ol tbe
olfJOO window and fell uloep. Ho flnilbed
Ills nap In the Orange County Jail.
)
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D41l 'f 'tLOT llttt 'lttt9
Clementean
Transferred
To County
Convicted murderess A"tonl11 Thoma11
lawyer today successfully cleared the
first hurdle In hla 'bid to win freedom for
the Sa n Clcn1e11te woman.
Orange County Superior Court Judge
Wiiiiam Murray signed 11n order that
compels f<'ronter1 prison 1uthorltlea ID
transfer the 29-year~ld Flllplno detalnoe
to Orange County Jall.
Torran ce lawyer Dudley Gr11y said te>o
day she will be held there to aw1lt an
evldentlary hearlna acheduled for March
20 In Judge Murray's courtroom.
"It'• looking good and we're felllnff
rnore confident with each pa111ng day."
Cray 1ald this morning.
Gray represented Mrs. Thoma11 In twa
Superior Court murder trl1 l1. She waa
convicted In the second for the klllln1 of
her lnrant son J1me1.
Gray said he Intends to prove at the
March 20 session that the Orange County
dl11trlct attorney's of!ICf! reneged on 1
promise made lO him before the llrst of
two trlal11 .
Gray said It was agreed th1t vltal
evidence later Improperly used 11aln1t
bl1 client In the courtroom would be
tumcd over to the proaerutlon If Mrt.
Thomas failed to pa11 lie detector and
hypnosis tests. Signup Before Big ·Ga.,.-e Gr1y 1ald hla client 1ucc~1f~1 pa1aed . lh<>•• lo!l•. Bul,.he uld1 the pro1.CU!lon
J.ustin Norioga, 17-year·old multiple dystrophy. vic-
tim from Mission Viejo, looks on as Ro~ Giacomini,
!ell, and Greg Yo!ilJ&)sigq.·!1-~~~ "11l •be>
presented to ·Ndi!l• durint·hallilme o!'liasltet'ba11. ·
game Saturdal. Giacomini will play on the ~&n.
Clemente ):llgh .School' .var~lly and 1(oung on the lrnrncdlalely ull!lzed evidence that would tea~lelded b>' the,schoo! key club •. P.roce,dJ ·wlij 1 never have been allowed, lo PM• lnlo
go '1ifll'~1wr."rt~-me,. ~lillM; •' lbolr bad1 W\lbOl4 Ille -ltt !Ml 11 at i.rif."m16e~fan• • emente l:flrh Scnoor. • would no! bl Used a11!nll Mrs. Tho11111
,. . 7 • In the trial court.
Chou Pledges Cooperation
Chinese -Leader Promises to Aid Normal Relcitioris
By HENRY HARTZENBUSCH
PEKING (AP) -Premier Chou En-la!
pledged tonight that China "will work
unswervingly" for normal relations and
friendly contacts with the Unlted Stat.es.
At a dinner in his honor, the Chinese
leader responded to a toast in which
President Nixon declared: "We have
begun the long process of removing that
wall bctwee:i us."
Seated at round tables in the Great
Hall of the People, the Chou and Nixon
entourages ale a nine-course meal of
Chinese food except for grapefruit and
orange segments flown from lhe United
States. They sipped California cham-
pagne.
Nixon began the toasting by expressi ng
appreciation for the Chinese hospitality
shown to the American! the five days
they have been in Peking.
Chou and Nixon came to the dinner
from their fifth and final meeting, at
which they presumably reached agree-
menl on improving contacts through
cultural and other exchanges, with
diplomatic relations some time in the
future.
Recalling his visit Thursday to the
Great Wall of China , Nixon said the wall
showed "the determination of the Chinese
people to retain their independence
throughout their long history.
"The Great Wall Is no longer a wall
dividing China from the rest of the
world," he continued. "But it is a
remlnder of the fact that there are many
walls still existing 1n the world, whi ch
divide nations and peoptea.
"The Great Wall 11 also a reminder
that for almost a generation there has
been a wall between the People 'a
Republic of China and the United States.
In these put four days, we have begun
the long process of removing that wall
between us."
Nixon conceded that both sides
recognlu there are great differences
between the United States and China.
"But we are determined that those dlf·
ferences will not prevent us from living
together in peace,'' he went on. "You
believe deeply in your system and we
Lall:ldry Taken
To the Cleaners
Burglars used a roof ventilator as an
access to a San Clemente laundry before
da wn today and rifled a cash drawer,
police reported.
George Boaz, owner of the Continental
Cleaners at 810 N. El Camino RtaJ,
reported the burglary at about 8 a.m.
Police said the suspect or tu.speda
pulled back a fan In the roof ventilator ap-
paratus and crawled down pipes lntq the
building. •
The ioss, police &aid, was about $SI in
cash.
Capistrano Action
believe Just a1 deeply In our 1y1tem. Jt Is
not our common bellef that have brought
U4 together here, but our common In-
terests and hopes,"
Nixon and Chou applauded each other
during the toasta.
Chou began by noting Iha! Nl•on hid
met with hfm and Chairman Mao Tse--
tung and "we exchanged views on the
nonnallzaUon of relations between China
and the United States and on other ques-
t.ions or concern to the two sides.
uThere e1i1t great differences o( prin-
ciple between our two 1lde1," Chou noted,
"Through earnes t and frank dilcu11lon1,
a clearer knowledge of each other 's po1l·
lions and rtand1 ha1 been g1lned."
Noting the exchanges h1d bet•
bcneflcfal for both, Chou continued:
"The times are advancing and the
world IJ changing. We are deeply con-
vinced that the strength of the peoples la
powerful and that wh1tever 1.lezag, and
reverse1 there will be In the develOpment
of history, the general trend or the world
~ deflnllely toward llght and noi
darkness.
"It 11 the common desire of lM aitnese
and American peoples to enhanc.e their
mulual wldtratandlng and ltl<llilihlp and
prornoi. the nonnallullon o/ reJal!0111· belween China and the United Slatu. The
Chlne1e government and people will work
Un11wervlngly toward th!• goal.''
, Tbe champagne Wll terved Jn White
(See NIXON, Pore IJ
Board Snuffs Out Smoke
By PAMELA HALLAN
OI' ttie o.~ ... ~•i.t '"" Bob Beasley, Fred Newhart and
George White, ttusttts of the Capistrano
Unified School District, puffed their
last clgareltes lhis week -at lea.at in a
achoo! board rn«tlng.
The vote w11 4-1 with two abstentions
In favor ,of the ban on smoking in the
main board room and In the conference
room used for eucotive smiona.
"I wanted to qult 1nyw1y,'1 aakt
smobrNtwhart.
Leldlnc the batUe aplnst air pollulJon
we"' 1101HmOker1 Donald !Ala, and Bob
Dahlberg. They were joined by Btuley, a
smoker , wbo 11ld It w11 "hypocrltlcJl" ttl
l<tl youn( people not lo molte marlJu,n.
when board membora 1moko clgariltea
which authorlUt1 haYe proven haf}rifuJ.
Dahlberg Ilic! llDO!dn( waa ofrinllYe lo
him, be can'! atand hll cl~ •hen he gell home fron\ a meet , he has I
violent phy1lcal rtactlor,I lo ciprell•
amoke, and he wouldn:r dreem 1 of Im•
plnglnc hJJ personal lllbtll on ...,.... ""° louod them ollt.l!ll•e.
"1 'm allo okl-flflJloned enough lo think;
there's •able In ,.!line 111 ewop\< far
kid$.~ he aaid.
Board president Bob Hunt 11ld he
.J
found Dllny people who uld Ibey didn't
come or remain at board mettfug1
becaUIC of the amoke l1yer1.
Gordoo Peter10n, a non.tmokrr, wa1
tht lone .. no vote ffe Nkl he dJdJl't want
&o ttn tomeon. be could'n't nttclu a
perlOl)al rJcht and fell auch 1 rul<
couldn't be enforced.. ,
"Jf you can smoke -without cttatlng:
llTIOl<e .. lta all rtghl wllh me,'' quipped
Dahlber1. .
Or u Inlay°""' put k: "ll'a not lbal
we want to Impose our viewpoint on )'M.
Ua just that wt don'l want )'GU lo Im-your tune cancer on us."
Mrs. Thoma1 was convicted four yu r1
ago or the murder of her Infant oon
James Jr. following a lrtal In wlllch It
was aucc ... fully allegad that •he added a
CIUl!IC aolullon lo the mllk In hll leedlnl
bolll•.
The solution w11 never Identified and
Mrs. Thomas repeatedly denied in twD
dr1m1tlc trlalt>that 1he had ever fed her
child snylhlng other than his lor!nu!A or
that 1he had ever contemplated tti.
murder ot the baby.
Mra. Thoma• ha1 now HrVed fow
yea n of the Ufe aentr:nce she reeetv•
from Judge Robtrt Gardner ln April.
Jill.
Gray 1ald she 11 regarded by Frontera
authorltle1 111 "a model prisoner and
Ideal material for release and rehablllta·
lion."
Mr1. 'l'hom11 wu recently dlvotetd b1
her l\larlne Corps huaband James. Gray
uld hi• client's t-year..,ld daughter 11
now belng cared for by her c1-hu1bend'a
parent•.
Actor Walter Sande '
Services Scheduled
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Fu' n er 1 I
services will be held Saturday at Forest
Lawn Cemetery for Walter Sande,
veteran motk>n picture actor.
Slnde, 116, died Tuesday night after he
collapeed from a heart attack at O'Hare
Tnternatlon11I Airport. He had flown to
Chicago from Lot Angelu to appear In a
televllkln commerclal for a candy com-
pany and carr~ a return ticket 'In hll
pockel, police 111d.
OrPlfe
Wutller
Hazy sunshine II on the a&eiida
tor the Oranae: CoaaC apfn on
Satutday, lollowln1 lh• usual low
cloud• 111d log. mah• at the
beochea around IO rilln( lo 72 11>-
land. Low1 41 lo IO.
INSIDE TODAY
Th• Lt!Hputfan• of f•,,,.d
"GuUlver'1 TroNU" arriw-11'
HunlfnQlon Beach lhll .,.,qn,1.
A •tori/ In roda~'a W rcktlld<r
ttlfl iO" wll<re I<> QO I<> fln4
til<m.
I.."'-.... , 1 '•""""'' . =·"" ~ -" DHMo "'"°'" 11 MltlNt ,... ' ·-.... ,. .. "'-'Ill 11
1•1. I 1• .. ......,, ,, -. .... ., ..
}
"
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I
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2 lWLV t'ILLt1 ••
Lebanon Hit
• By Israeli
Fight Force
B1 U-Prua lat<rutlollll
Israeli troopa, armor, artillary and
warplanea 1ltlcked Lebanon along a IO-
mlle front today, In what both Arab and
laratU mlUtary sourcu: called th1
belvleal punitive otrlke by !Jrael llnct
the 1117 Six-day W1r.
Al Fatab guerrWu said as many u SO
lsrarll jets struck targets 'as close as 34
miles from the Lebanese capllal of Beirut
and followed up with armored reglmenlJ
into areas near the border.
The semiofficial Egyptian Middle Eut
N"'' Aaoney Aid IO llr1eU Jell llruck
lntb Lebanon.
U,I T•i.tt.i.
$5 •'''°" W. G~rmans Pay
• •
Ransom for Jet
By HOWARD A. TYNER
BONN (UPI) -The West German
government paid $5 million ransom to a
Palestinian commando group to obtain
the release of a hijacked airliner and lf
or Its crew from Southern Yemen,
Transportation Minister Geor1 Leber
said today.
Five armed commandGS released the
$24 .8-million Lufthansa Boeing 747 jumbo
jet and the crew members Wednesday in
Aden, the Southern Yemen capital.
A secret code word had been flashed by
radio from Beirut·to climax a cloak-and·
dagger oper ation carried out in three
countries of Europe and the Middle east.
seat 1ay)Jll where to drive with the money."
The Bonn govetnment raised the case
Tuesday night -Leber declined to ny
where -and sent it to Athens wlU. a
Luftballi& security agent acting u
courier.
Capo Endorses .
Ortega Highway
Scenic Status GuerrUlaa reported six Arab guerrUlas
killed and three wowlded. A Beirut com-
mUnlque aald one ctvlllan was killed and
a toldJer wounded and 20 houaes
destroytd. Israel said ftve guerrillas ·
were tilled and an unknown number of
houses demolished, and the attack force
suflertd no casualties.
WHO NEEDS SNOWPLOWS WHEN YOU'VE GOT ENOUGH WILLING CHINESE .WORKERS AROUND?
In the first government statement on
the outcome of the highjacking, Leber told
a news conference the decision to pay the
ransom had been based on the .assump-
tion that the lives of the mw were ln
A resolution calling lor the designation
of Ortega Highway as a state scenic
highway his been approv~ ~ the San
Juan Capistrano city co~ -..
This 11 Snow Removal, Peking Style; Broom• ind Shovtl1 Do tM Trick
Beirut dJJpltchH tonlght Indicated the
<asualllu might be far higher than an-
nounced. The Falastin J e r u s a I e m
Hospital In Beirut re<:elved 25 wounded
iuerrlllu, tbe ho1pltal uld. Thne
chlldnn In Heh" were hospttl!Jud In
Zahleh from wounda suffered in air raids.
laraell deputy Premier Ylgal Allon
wlrned Lebaoon tonight In 1 radlo ln-
terYlew Jn Tel Avtv that there would be
more !JrHll 1trtkea U Leb1non penultted
mart fon)'I acrou the border into
lsr1el.
New York Bank Drops
Rate to 12-year Low
'!be big !JrHll llrtke <Olnclded with the
arrival in Je.ruulem of United Nations
peace ne&oU1tor Gunnar V. Jarring In an
attmpt to revive his peace mi..ulon.
Hla only comment alter conferences
with Foreign Mlnllter Abba Eban was
that he was encoW'lled that hll mlsslon
wa1 still alive.
Ht did not mention the atrlke agalnot
Lebanon.
Lt. Gen. David Elaw, the loraell chlef
or 1t11r, w1rned Lebanon Thursday or
po1slble military reprisal for an ambuab
1n which guerrlllas using bar.ookas killed
an lJraeU couple returning from a Bar
Mllivab Wednesday night.
Another guerrilla ambush soon af·
terward tilled an llraell aold.ler and
Jara el struck back early today.
First word of the Israeli attack came
from Beirut Rad.lo which broadcast a
coded message: 0 Beware of snakes In
area number 10."
Jar1el In the paot has wltbbeld 111-
nouncement of punti1ve rald1 untU Ill
lo~• returned to Israel.
Th< Israeli attlck brought Jmmedl1te
aborp re1ctlon from Egypt. Government
IOUlttl quoted by the Middle Eaot News
Agency 11ald the raids would not have
been poulble unleaa the United Stites
oupplled Phantom jet fi1bter-bomber1 to
Imel.·
An !JrHll military apoke11111an 11id
!Jr1ell jets firot atruck guerrilla 111-
campments 22 miles above the cease-fire
line before armored forces began a aeek·
and-destroy minion at Alnata, a town of
4,000 to 1,000 1bout 2\1 miles Inside
Lebanon.
Police Progress
Topic of Meeting
San Juan capJ.strano's new director of
public aarety will describe progress in
building the city's first µolice department
at a public meeting of the chamber of
commerce tonight at the El Adobe
Restaurant.
Joseph McKeown, who assumed the
reins of the local department after a
career in Manteca, will explain the broad
scope ol. work falling under hls jurlsdlc·
tion.
All citizens are welcome to the meeting
starting at 8 p.m. Dinner before t.he
meeting is optional for anyone attending.
<>IAHH COAJT
DAILY PILOT
OltMn COAST PUll.lll+tltO COMPM'f'
ft•\•rt H. w .... ,,. .. *"' NlllW.
J•e\ ft. Cirrley VIII ,,.1111111 n o-t•I .....,
nolll'I•• "••¥11 ~4JIN'
n•111•• ,.,. ,.,,,,;,..
M.W!IQI l'lfliot
NEW YORK (AP) -Flrot Nallonal Cl·
ty Bank, the natlon'1 second largest, an-
nounced today JI Ja cutting Jta Doatlng
prime rate to •% percent, the lowest
level ln nearly 12 years .
The ~ percent reduction in the
mlnlmwn lnlerelt Clllbank char1ea Ila
most credltwarthy corporate customers
becomes effect.Ive Monday.
Citibank'• prlme rate, directly tied to
movementa ln the money market, Is re-
viewed weekly. Today'• cut brought the
New York bank's minimum interest to a
level -lii to %: percent below mMt other
large bank1.
Morgan Guaranty Trust Co., Irving
Trust Co., and Bankers 1nlst Co. are the
only large banks which currently have a
4y, percent minimum lendJng rate. Most
other major banks have held to the 4'H percent level.
Early last week, a small Cincinnati
bank, Provident Bank, reduced ltll prime
rate to 4% percent, but no other large
bank.! followed suit.
The Jast time banks generally offered
a pr ime rate below 4 If.I percent was in
May 1959 when it was at 4 percent. On
May 18, 1959, the rate was raised to 4 If.I
percent by most banks acrou the coun·
lry.
In another economic development the
government said today that wholesale
prices jumped another eight-tenths of 1
percent In January.
The rise exactly matched December's
increase and indicated that the expected
Phase 2 price bulge has not yet begun to
flatten out.
When adjusted for the u.wal seasonal
trends, the rise in the wholesale index
was only half as great, or four-tenths Of 1
percent, the Labor Department's an-
nouncement said.
The seasonal Improvement resulted
from a smaller climb in food and farm
products, which rose 3.2 percent in
December -the blgge.st increase for
Override Group
Will Host Brunch
For Capo Voters
A brunch for Capistrano Unltled School
District residents Interested in the March
7 tax override election will be held Sun-
day beginning at 9 a.m.
The event, spansored by ARVY's
Friends, a group of residents backlng
the tax override will be held at the Mon-
arch Bray Beach Clubhouse Jn Laguna Ni~
guel. A continental style breakfast will be
served and an information video tape
wil Jbe shown to residents.
According W school district spokesman
Joe Wymer, t.he tape ii narrated by
trustee Don Inlay and explains the
reasons for the tax overr.lde.
Voters March 7 will be asked to ap-
prove an extension of the 51).cent tax
override now ln force in the district. The
present override is scheduled to expire in
June.
Cfitt1H H. to.. 11.lc.hirl ... Nan Ahll'*l ,,,..,.. E.•li.n '---221 h,..t AftJ1t1•
Carol Person, Laguna Niguel resident
• and chairman of ARVY's Friends, says
she is confident the · measure will be
approved by voters.
11anrt1t .,,,...,, 1.0. ••• '''· t2•1z J-C-°""" 101 ~ I! Ca111la• a.a~ t26n --°"9 ~· .. w ... ..., .,.... = .... , .. ,......., ... ......,.,
1--11 .... WI llaOI ~
"I feel very confident that It will pass."
itrs. Person said this morning. "I think
people are becoming aware of the issues
and problems the district fa ces and of the
possibiUty of cut backs in the programs."
"There is no doubt about it passing if
the people understand what this tax
means," she 1dded.
You'll Get It
Earlier Now
Elrller dtll"'1")' or tbe Saturday edlUon
ol tbe DAILY PILOT will be In full fol'<fl
Saturday morning. U you donl get your
hom...S.llvmd copy by t 1.m .. plaase
call by 10 1.m., llld "" guorantee
dell vary.
Clll 142«1 from moot mu. From
South Laguna, Lagun1 Nigue l, Dina
Point, Su Jlwi Caplatrloo, Capl,mpo
Beach and San Clemente, <all toll·rrff to ·-From Westminster and northwest Hun•
Ungton Beach, call toll-free to l\40-1220.
those Ji.ibol Ill JO monthJ -and 1.3 per·
cent In January.
But there was no comfort for ad·
mlnlstration economists in the segment
of the index ·that covers ·industrial
materials and commodities. It increased
fiv&-tenth5 of 1 percent, compared with
four-tenth! of I percent in December. The
industrial commodities are considered a
better indicator of future p r I c e
movem.enta at retail than the food and
farm prices, whose movements are more
erratic.
Whlte House economists predicted
substantial increases in both December
and January, the first " two full month5
following the end of the 90-day price-wage
freeze. Early decisions by the Price Com·
. mission gave a green light to substantial
adjustmenta of prices frozen since Aug,
IS.
Surfing Contest
Among Activities
At Laguna Fete
The scheuJe of activities for the s~nd
weekend of Laguna Beach's ninth aMual
Winter Festival is as follows:
7 a.m. Saturday - A surfing contest at
Thalia Street Beach, and, for those who
prefer to stay on land, a Bicycle ride
departing from the Festival of .Arts
Grounds .
Capo Councilme1i
Go Step Closer
To Police Force
San Juan Capistrano city councilmen
have taken another step towards having a
city police department by agreeing to
lease a car with a police radio for the
city's director of public sa fety.
The council voted Wednesday to lease a
new auto at $112 per month and to
purchase a used Police radJo for the car
at a cost of $600. City Manager Don
Widener said it would be better to buy
the used radio rather than a new unit
because the county Is now in the process
of changing over to a. new county-wide
communications network with different
frequencies than the present sy1tem.
When the system la cblORed ovtr, he
said, a lK!W radl(I compatible with the
iystem could be purchased.
Widener said the radio was three years
old, but bad r.conlly been r"""1dllloned
ind would be Instilled In the leased 1uto
by tho county.
Public safety dlrt<lor Joseph McKeown
Is In tbe procw ol <kfeloplog 1 public
aar<ty department for llie city 1nd will
u1e the 1uto.
The city now 1'<tlves J11111ce servi..1
on 1 contnctual bula from the CIO\lllly
SherUrs Department.
From Page 1
NIXON ...
House glasses bearing the presidential
seal, flown from Washington. Many of the
Chinese guests took them home as
souvenirs.
\Vhite-jacketed. waiters and waitresses
distributed presidential gifts to all those
present. The gilt was a clear plastic
paperweight with Nixon's card .lmbedded.
The toasts, however, seemed more low·
key than those voiced at the banquet
Chou gave the presidential party Monday
night when both talked of opening the
gates to friendly contacts.
Before the banquet the Nixons toured
the fab led Peking palace of China's
emperors, in a snowstorm.
The Nixons say goodbye to Peking on
Saturday morning and fly 710 miles to the
southeast to picturesque Hang chow, a
favorite holiday resort of Chinr'e leaders
an a bay south of Shanghai.
They will visit scenic spots in the area,
Jnc;luding the remains of the 18th century
palace ·of the Emperor Chien Lung, and
after a night alongside the be~utiful Hsi
Hu, or Western Lake, they fly to
Shanghai , their last stop in China.
The presidential party files back to
Washington on Monday.
••acute danger." ,
He called the hijackers "the most
bloodthirsty group seen until now."
All 188 passengers and crew mem-
bers aboard the Athens-bound plane when
it was hijacked Tuesday after takeoff
fr om New Dtlhl, India have since left
Aden with the possible exception o( the
fi ve hijackers.
They were questioned by I o c a l
authorities and later set free.
The plane returned to Frankfurt Thurs·
day .
Leber said a letter from a group calling
itself the "Organization for Vlctlm! of
Zionism" and claiming responsibility for
the hijacking arrived Tuesday at Luf·
thansa headquarters in Cologne.
The letter, posted in Cologne severaJ
hours after the jumbo jet had been
diverted to Aden, threatened to blow up
the plane, demanded the ransom and
gave detailed instructions on how the
money should be handed O\'er,
"The messenger with the money was to
wear a black jacket and gray trouser!
and carry a case in his right hand,"
Leber said. "He was to fly by way of
Athens on a commercial airliner or one
of three German charter firms.
"In Beirut, he was to find a car parked
at the airport which had )nside a picture
of former Egyptian President Gamal
Abdel Nasser.
"A note was to be left on the driver's
Liz' Birthda)·
Guests Arrive
The council's backing of the plan came
almost two years to the day after the
state first contacted the city about the
po ssibility of giving a "scenic" deslgna·
tlon to the road, which wi.nda through the ·
mountains from the city limits to Lake
Elsinore. If so designated, the highwa y
would be subject to special restrictions
regarding signs, the cutting of trees, ad-
jacent development and utility pol~. "
City councilmen Wednesday noted that
the resolution was simply a statement of
µolicy needed by the state Division of
Highways to continue tbe necessary pro-
cedures Involved ln makfng the road a
scenic hlghway.
Mayor Tony Forster said city ofrlcial1
were still not sure what would be re--
quired of the city once the designation is
made. He said the requirement of un·
derground utilities along the route needed
no explanation, but added that the re--
quirements of sign control and landsc~pa
Ing required more explanation by the
state.
The city's resolution will now be
forwarded . to county supervi&ors, who
must also take action on tbe proposal.
9 Coast Cities
Named in Suit
By Xerox Firm
SALE ENDS IN 2 DAYS
FINEST UPHOLSTERY IN THE AREA AT REDUCED PRICES
L~r9e selection of upholstery
from such well known lines ••
Henrodon, Sherrill, Margo
Corson and others at reduc-
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days left.
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CAMEO
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LAGUNA BEACH
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1727 Wntcllfl Dr., 642-2050
OP'lH fAJD4T 'TIL. f
23649 H1wthorn1 Blvd.
llUJ J71>1J7t 0,.. PtW.y 'lfl t
--I-....,._ A-t.-.\10-NllD
345 North Coast Hwy. 494-4.551
,._ Toi .... M ... el -~ HO·llll
,.
•
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···~ ~N!IDYAI., .UNlllD~ ( TIRES ••• UNIROYAL .
-
Tulaefess Blc:iiclr111ral~I ....
6.So.13 Only $11
'Prus Fed E ea,
• 11.Ta1rS l.91
1.1s.1411.so.14
Whlttv.11/1
Add $2.95
Mort
~:~J.4 ...
s2s.14/soo.141no.1s1s1s.1s -
Onl~~-6 ••.
COU!'ON GOOD UNlll l«ICM JI, 1172
••••VALUE COUPON------·
aRAKI RILINI
.ALL FOUR WHIELS
(All 'ftiti N1 ~ 1kUIH lrtltt MMllt1kt}
I ... loci tfd 1i•IA1•,......,.. , ... u~ ......... 1)1\11•
•A.Ii~•, b<1k., Iv "'II .fV,. -i.rt
Niii~ •Pd~fl . ~;.:;: .. :·:~~.. $1895
llfld ,,_,_(, . '
DlH. lrt~lf ,..... UOli.,
IE,. J'l1CI Sil.ti <;. ,, 6 UMr
(Mtfl ""'"· Ctn) Ptrt1 '"" II NtH .. COUP'ON GOOO u~nl AAICM 31, lt72
'••--• Y:ALUl.COUPON ....... . . '
BUY 3 SHOCK
CIOIJf'Of.i GOOD IJMfll lfllA~ l l, ltn
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At o.r l"ry4•t ltw J'rk•
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only
r.1MOUI nAi. SMOCKS nrt INSfAtU.tlOH
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The rain tire !i;h:. ! Ql~I ¥11~ ~ ::-·-_ _,.., ~ ~,... -rJo.-: .::d' • a:;-~
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ANY SIZE TUBELISS
WHITEWAlL OR ILACK
fl, 1 Stcvrlty'• Tlrt lttrff• ft Ill ftr ••J ttHH t,nt,I rtr.frt.i•
,_,.,..., io~vtt •~!It l/l•t~ •I •• 11•11 •f tr11• ,.,., .,, t•• s11~:~ ....... ,.. ........ . If toe ...
CLOSE-OUT! . ' Glas-Belt -Slight Blemishes ' FASTRA.CK
llackwall
• 171-14
Only
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$
078·14
. $20.95
078·1•
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H71·15',
$24.95
178·1•
$26.95
45
EA.
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lh1ck·#Oll
rt.,. ,,r.T.
•f SI.II ,., ....
C11-1i 45 (J'l-14 ., .. ,. ,,.,_,, 45 or•·/• ,,. •• !I ' .1.
NJ'l•ll ,,,. .. ,.
HJ'l-11
JJ'l·l l
Pl• ,trf, f',, T•I •f 11.tJ
1 Ito SJ.t6 ,., fl,..
NO.TRADl·IN N!IDID . WHITFNAlL ONlY $2.9S MOR!
4 $8"8 170.14 $2545
IN ° ~~ ·~
· wlii~:.11 for G10.1 .. $2645 NO TWADE-IN NHDID ONlY ea.
· RAISED WHITE LETTERS ONLY 2.95 MORE
TIRES
for 1245 VW's
Blickwalls '"'
560.15 I.';?,~
Summer's End CIOSE·OUT
4 U.S. Indy MAGS
:0~~~1~s:~ $ 9 9 UNPOLISHED
14/7 Sprint Typo
lnclud11 Mounting
TRUCK TIRES
PICK·UPS CAMPERS
670·15 si g45 Tube
Type
700-1. •. .,, s244S "r'•"
700-16 • ,,, s244s
Hyl•"
750-16
... ,, $2"45
Nyl•1t 7 '
10-16.1
•·•'• s384s Nyl•11
--~~~~~~~~~~~..;_~;;;;.;~~~....,,..~~~__;~;.;._ l'OPlN DAILY I• 7
SAT. 8·5
1211 W. WARNE• AVL
(WAR,Nt• AT l•ISTOl.)
·S.40.1644
• I
927 N, IL CAMINO llAl
EUROPEAN
COMMON
MARKET @Nij.
DAIL V PILOT l•
Financial Vtaity
Great Britain. the Republic of lreland. Norway and
Denn1ark have signed a hislor1 c treaty in Brussels,
making lhem members of the Europettn Common
Market. The expanded eronomi r union of Europ..
can po wer5 will take effert ne xt January 1.
Wage, Price Control
System 6 Months Old
By BROOKS JACKSON
WASHrNGTON (AP I
President Nixon 's system nr
wage and price controls has
passed its six-month an-
niversary with t h e ad-
ministration staunchly predic-
ting eventual success despite
rlsln.1t prices , hut with somf"
rrltlcs getting in<'reasingly
worried.
All ~hat can be said with
certainty Is thitt It Is too soon
tn lell whether the year will
end with lhe rate or inflatinn
down to between 2 and ~ per ·
Cent .' whi ch ils Nixon 's goal.
Without hard figures. doubt.,
bave begun to grow. l.al!t
week 20 economists predicted.
for the Business Council , 11
i;roup or lop executives, lh8t
iJiflation would run at l>elween
3 ;ind 4 percent this year.
They expressed strong con-
rern that the adminiiitratlon;!I
deficit sptnding w n u 1 rl
1timul ate lhe M;Onom y IK>
much that controls would not
be $.ble to hold down Inflation.
Meanwhile the buslneM or
regulating wa5tes and prlce11
ha11 fallen inln nearl y a
routine.
The Price Commission'" 700
ata ff members handle most.
applications for price In·
creases. The c omm isi; lo n
meanwhJJe continuea to refine
Its policies .
THE PAV BOARD, whose
members once insulted one
anolher In public, appears to
have paued Its worst day1
ind has quietly buckled down
to discussing such matters a"
w~1t size fringe benertts will
be allowed to pas.111 through the
vague loophole Cong re 11
created for them last year.
The Cost of Living C:Ouncll,
!f~~C~m~~f ub;~k ~hr~:~:~~
the. average man'111 cost of liv-
ing Isn't affected by them,
now ls reluctantly considering
reversing course to ~ring
1kyrocketing food p,rices under
direct control for the flrat
Coast Finn
To Merge
With. Slick
Ll>uis E. Purmort, chairman
of the board of United Stat••
fl'llter Corporation oL Newport
Beach and Raymond A. Rich,
chairmi.n of the board of The
Slick Corporation have 3M·
nounced .a.prelimlnary merger
agree ment.
Th'e propoled plan ealll for
each Slick common share tn
he exchanged for one share or
fi'llter common. Each shart of
Slick'• presenlly ou,.lanillng
convertible preferted 1tock
will be exchanged for t>nf!
11hare of a new Filter con-
vertihle preferred.
United Stale• f'ilter cur·
rently ha11 l.2 million common
and 47 .ooo prelerred share.11
nuutandlng. Slick hao 4.3
mllUon comffW>n i nd 1 . O
million preferred 11 h 1 re 11
ootltandi ng. Whtn the merJter
Is completed United Slaltl
Filler will be lh< ourvlvlng
company with the Slick com·
mon shareholders owning ap-
proxi mately 11 percent nr t11e
thtn outttandlng J.; million
l hflN!I.
·THE BESr
Re11c1enhlp po 111 _Fovt
·~nou.. l• one or th
world'• moat popular c:omtc atrt1,._ Rf'Jld ft dally In tht
DAILY PUDr.
IJmc.
But thiJ Iii not considered •
lt kely po8slblllty It probably
would me111n food r1tlonlna1 hl111ck market111 and 11ngry
farm·sllto voter".
Ry ftnd large, the wage 1nd
price regul1tlo"" now ire
written . The 111dmlnlstnttlon ""Y·" they wilt stay In plice
until they work. ·rhe questions
11re wlll the economy Cflmply
with them . 1tnd U so . will they
work?
Succeu ls A tricky prop.
osltlon . tr t.'flntrnh1 Are too
severe, they might hold back
economic growth that la need-
ed to whittle down tht atub-
OOrn unemployment rate, Cw'·
rcntly at S.9 perceni. If they
arco 't strict f'nou~h . they'll
miss the goal of I lowered ln-
flallon rate.
Actually tnflallon had ht.en
w1ndln$f down alowly for
·month11 when Preaktent Nixon.
on a· Sunday evening la1t Aug.
I&, announced to the nation
lhol ht was fl'ffzlnf w1ae.,
prices and rMtl. •
'mE .._DAY FREEZE
worked. Whol .. ole prlcea,
which went up, 4.0 percent ln
the precedln'g year, aclually
t1ecllncd ~ three-tenthW of on&
percent during the freeze. ·
The upwl!lrd creep or lhs
\..on.sumer Price Tnde:r 11lowed
down. It had Msen 4.4 percent
In the preceding 12 month1.
Bnd went up Ill a yearly r•t&
or I, 1 percent during the
freeze.
But the fretu was ~nly tem-
porary btcRuse It w11 "° un·
fAir to iiuch people 1 ~
teachers, who u!ually gel tthh•
raises In lhe ·fall. and tll
landlord.I and bu11ineumen
who had been holding the Une
on .prlce1 while others were ln-
crea1ln1 their• .
What followed was a more
nulblt .. bewlld~rln111 com.
plex 1y1&:em of w11e and price controt1.
U~er this •Y!lem, re(erred
to bf the administration 't1s
"Phase 2" of the Prealdent'.t
new economic policy, prices
are rl1lng rapldJy 111rlandl<y'ds.
m er chant.I, manuf•cturer111
11nd othtr hu1lne1smen rt.lie
rates thflt were held In check
during the freeze.
Wholetale wic.. jumped •
whopplna: ellht·tcnth1 of one
percent In December. due
l)101lly /A 1 full 2 percent rlH
In farm pro<h,1ct1. T b e
Con.sumer Price lndex SUrged
f0Ur·tenlh11 nr noe percent.
with food ltadlnJ! the U.l up
1.1 percent.
Adlnlnlstratlon offlclalA aay
lhl• price b<llge "" expect"1
and wlll (!9ntlnue for a. few
more month.t.
__ Despite lhLo ura•. whk:h of·
flclal11 concede mey gel worM
before It gets better, J'rlce
Commlsalofll C h a I r m •·n C.
JackJl'>n (;rA)'IOn Jr. 11y11 con.
trol• are befillnlng lo like el· feet.
W1ge1, too, are aolng up
~rter remaining atatlc durtnc
the freer.e.
MOST SCHt:llULEO rolaeo
lollt dur ing the freeie IOOR w~
be paid retroactively by order
of Congrea.111, Ir tbt.y aren'•
•lrtady In worktra' pocket.I.
The P1y Bo11rd, mttnwhlla,
hu •pplled 1.. s.~ per .. nt
wage attnd•rd strktly for
small wage unita but h111 ap..
proved wage lncrea1t1 Of up to
18.! pe«•nl for bfg, otrtk ..
pr.one union& pleldlna: a v1rl&-
ly of spcdol c .....
Some bo11rd members ti.lk
of "closlni; the gi.te" once
thes& l11t few "cows" ar~ In.
but torly lodk:allono .,. thal
tht boa rd hu llltle llomach
for trlmmln1 boc:k 1 1<porte4
17 per .. nt r.lst that ..,.,.
Cout clock --more Uuin 130 days lo &el
l
tf ONLY PIJ.OT SC
M.onert'• 'Worth
Medical Expenses
Vital Tax Saving
By SYLYIA PORTER
As the coat of'medical care
spiral& up1tard, Jt become•
ever more vJtal for rou to
know euctly what type of e.x·
penditurea mlgtit qualify at an
ICemized medical e x p e n 1 e
deduction and thereby help cut
your tax bill. In 1971, the
courta and the Treasury
came up with decisions and
.rulings on mtdJcaJ outlays
that can slash your tues.
lt'1 clear
that any 'of
your unreim·
buroed hoopl·
Cal bills qual·
lfy u deduc-
tible medi-
cal expen~ei. 11 But say a
hospital b
overcrowd· "°1traa
' e:d, it can't keep you after
an operation to give you
the after-care you require and
you move to a nearby hotel
within easy reach of the
hospital where you are cared
for by your wife and a prac·
tlca1 nurse. Ca n you treat the
hotel charges for meals and
lodging as deductible ~ical
expenses?
The Treasury and Tax Court
at Jirst barred any medical
expense deduction for meals
•nd lodging out:side t h e
hospital -but on appeal last
year, the Seventh Circuit
reversed and ruled that the
bar against deducting meaJs
and lodging outaide a bospital-
lype Jmtltutlon was designed
io prevent vacation co!UI from
being disguised aa medicaJ ex-
pensea.
If, then, necessary post·
operative after-care was the
,ole reason for any hotel ex·
pe.nses you incurred In 1971.
these expenses qualify as
deductible medical care.
WHEN CAN ORDINA.RY
bouaehold help be deductible
in whole or In part as a
medical expense? To ii·
M~fUWb
MOTOR HO~ES
SALES • RENTALS
11 ft. to 28 ft.
UTI LIHIR
.IA1.aOA-PAC:I AllROW
LOCATID ON THI NIWPOIT
PllfWAY • .iUST SOUTH Of
THI SANTA ANA flllWAT.
TAKI THI McfADDIN TUIH
OPP. TUIN LIPT ON YILLAGI.
WAY.
0
N
> • x u t
f (UNGlA ~
HAIR TRANSPLANTATION-DERMAIRASION
SKIN DISEASES, TUMORS & ALLERIOIEs-ACNE
Dfl'fl' .. "lellc HN\11'1 Snvkt
W• •cc•pt Mtdi·C•I •nd Mtdi·Ctr• P•+i•11h
I ----------LM1~:r,s;-,;.::oo I ,.,,...,,,,. cwm•te1tt1 cu,.•c•' HNltlt i11·v1e•
L.A. Ceu11ry IJOJ ltiltewoecl 11,111., L .. ewoed 9071 J
520:& Lolt..,e•ll II. I ln .. rn11t1•" a111111fftuQ H•W Trtft1111tftlit"""
loltew .. 111, t071 J § DtrmtW••ltfl n .Mtlr 1.•11 & Dtnolrvtf AclM 0 ,.lfrl•ll1 n Wtrt1 Q ,,,,_
(21JI 111·7'420 I Mfl• 0 Hh·•· O"ll!Mt ... , .•... DJl•I
Or• ... Ceulltf '"',',',·, .. -•••• _....... I H•1111 •• ' ..... ' ••••• ''' •••• "'." ..... , ...... .. Alhlrtu , ...... , ... ,,,.,,.,,.,, ............ ,, •.
17141 147 .. 544 • C:lty ............ il•lt .......... 1111 ......... .
Would you pay an extra
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Ca1J BUD fJO\VEN 8t 540-~ ••• , TODAY!
Or.iiap C•••'1'1 •F.,,;'1 I/ F ;., Un"
ohnson&son
-$1--
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OVER THE COUNTER
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Complete-New Y()rK Stocli List
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~f.:,::rl4'1::::..• :..:'_,:=.!...:::25.:_;.:l t:,:71~$:.C ___ __;OA=IL.;_Y .;..".;_LO.;_T_.f-J.,
-Friday's· 00sing Prices:.complete New York Stock Exchange List ,
Stoek Leaden
MOST SHARES
I
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•• • "
.:: '-·-.. •• , .• . ' ..
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GOLD . DUSTER
PACKAGE INCLUDES
FREE VINYL ROOF
. Unique delux• wheel c0Yer1, whit1 tires,
d1lua1 pl11ted vinyl trim , c•~petin9. ,Spe-
cie! 9old duster stripin9, Plus 1t1nd1rd
feet. equip. Order tod1y for only $2195,
or choo11 from 1 l1r91 11l1ction of •p••
ciel 1111 pric1d Duster• in stock reedy for
lmm1di1t1 Delivery.
$
PLYMOUTH CRICKET
'TI , Gor9t11111 mtl1ll!t flnhh. <f 1pttd tr1111., ft/front dist
9r1•11, r1cl i1I ply t Jr11, l.ucl:'t f 1tth, r1e• I 1tlnio11 1ft1rin9,
eO.il •1trin1 1111pt111i.,n, llow thru Yt11til1ti119 •v•ft1r1. All tht11
f1tf11rtJ plus cl1lu.-,.cltc1r p1ck191 .I R1 ll1y Strip11. I J:<fC.
41JIR1l762Sl
•
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.. $11 T TOD -ORDIR IT TODAY •••
-t ~ ' At Hunti ngton Beach Chrys ler Plymouth
---------------~·: ·w1N A GOLD DUSTER! ~·
2 DOOR SPORT COUPE
NOT A STRIPPED CAR
l uf 1quipp1d with ] l I VI, J.ulo"'1fit Tr1n1., Pow1r St1·1r·
lng. l.18)0, Wl!it• Will l ir11, ti11t1d &1111, C1rp•ti119, Vinyl
i11!1rior. !~•l2 1&2&12020'J
WIN STOCK IN A GOLD MINE!
STAKING YOUI CLAIM
Viii! your ChrvJ1r-Plymoulh cl1•l1r .o ncl piek li p your 1n+rv in th1
''Ptn for Got,f' eonl11t now, Ew1ryont who t nttr1 wi111 • •rtpli c.1
of• Twtnty 0.,11,, Calif.,rni1 'il"ltl pi1c1,
SOLID GOLD
You m•v wh1 the llr1t ptit.-100 1htr•1 of 1toc'.k in t+i, tfill active,
nu991t-yi1ldi119 -Yt llow Kflift Co111ol iclat1cl Gelcl Mini , incl 1 1972
Plymouth Goold 'Du1t1r •
MOll WAYS TO 1Tllll IT llCH
' •Qrn!est ~ull!!., l . No PU'•th~u necess.rv. ). All V'l<.!t lm@d 11ro111 will bot •-rdld by rtl'IO!lrn d•~WIMI ''""' ll'll•f!' 111bm1tttd. No ti ll! 1ubllll\lttonl· * ltu•.
l. Con1iur "PM ICI 111 hc:..,1fd drive'°', lt y11r1 or older ' Conte11 C'8JH rnldnlgl'tl Mardi Jl, 'tl7· J. V"ICI !11 W11fll119ton. Wllelftl!n, MLllOUrl, 11\CI wl\fr9 ~
lllbllftl by !1w. 6. Winner\ ••• H1111t l!!r 111 111t1 1!'1d IK•I 1111.111.. 7, Not 1111111111 fGf prtrK ,,. 1moloYllft '"" l•S dtMnel111'1 11'1 Otry:11tr-l"JVl'l'IOVtli D1Yl1MW11 1'1 .s1111r1, ..c1vert111nt 1~1111, •ncl v11w1 s1,..,k 111, lrK.
~-----.
'72 FURY Ill
NOT A STRIPPED CAR
Bui tquiftptd with J JI VI , 1ulom1!lc lt1n1., powtr t+ttr1n9 ,
r1dio, rtll'Oft conl•ol f!'litror, ti11!1~ 9!1u, vi11yl 1id1 111olcfi"91.
I .tPH41 l20 I 06•56 )
NOT A STRIPP ED CAR· FACTORY AIR
Eciuipp1cf with 1 u I o 111 1 I I t. lr1111.. ptw1r 1!11,..
i"'' powt r di1t. &r1k11, tinttd ,1111, whif1w1lt ti rt1, r1cfit,
lithl p1clr1t•· r11111!1 c1ntrtl 1t1irror. El1ctTic it11ffio1t I~·
t1111. I sCL~ I MlC 1010341
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Lagu11a Beaeh
EDITION
Today's Flnal
N. Y. Ste.ck.I
VOL 65, NO. '48, <I SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25,· 1972 TEN CENTS
Laguna Detectives Arrest 10 • Ill Drug Raids
By BARBARA KREIBICH
O! tllt f'•1ly ,,let "'"
Continuing their drive on local drug
traffic. Laguna Beach detectives made 10
arrests in four separate Laguna locations
Thursday night.
Two young women and a pair of
teenage youths from Las Vegas were
among those taken into cuslody on drug
possession charges. One pair o( suspecl.!
.also was booked" on suspicion of car theft ••
The series of arrests began at 5:30 p.m.
when officer Oliff Nye, on patrol in the
Taco Bell area, saw two young men jump
Jnta a car and drlve off ''hen they spotted
his police un.lt. He later stopped the car
for a traffic violation at the intersection
or' Broadway and Coast Highway and
found the driver was unable to produce
the vehicle's registratkln and~ssertedly
claimed he "rould not remem r" where
he bought it.
A check of the freshly painted car
revealed the motor vehicle identification
number had been removed from the door,
and the occupa"ntis were placed under ar·
rest on suspicion of car theft.
When a search of the vehicle turned up
a hashish pipe and 300 unidentified drug
tablets In the glove compartment and a
pellet gun under the seat, the suspeetll,
Robert Louis Dowru, 22 and William
Gary, J8, both of Pomona, were booked
on suspicion o{ possession or dange~s
drugs for sale and suspicion of Jrtned
robbery as well. They face arraignment
today.
At 9:30 p.m., Sgt. Neil Purcell and
detectives Robert Romain and Anthony
Smith, ronducting a nm:ollca in-
vestlgalion in South Laguna, arrested
William Frank Bermel, 23, of 3168.!t
Laguna Girl Released
Officers Continue Probe of Explosives
Diane Michele Bayless of Laguna
Beach has been freed in connection with
the finding of a cache or explosives in San
Bernardino County, Deputy District At·
torney Dave Call confirmed today.
Freed along with Miss Bayless, 18, of
695 Temple Hills Drive, were George
Whatley, 21 and Robert Christley, 20,
both of Fontana.
Call said no formal charges were ever
flied against the trio and they were
released within lhe 43 hour legal time
limit.
The deputy DA said the case is .still
under investigation.
Two other su.s~ meanwhile are
being held on charges of reckless and
mallcloua JXl.Ssession of ei:plosive.s in or
near a private dwelling.
They are Robert A. Asemko, 20, of
Fontana, who is held in lieu of $62,500 bail
and Ronnie D. Pender, 21, of 318 Eighth
St., Huntington Beach, who has been
released on lt,250 bail bond.
Deputy Diatrlct Attorney Call said to-
day that Ponder was released before he
could appeal to the court to set a higher
ball figure.
"I didn't get my say," &aid Call , who is
also busy investigating a major murder
case.
The suspects were arrested Mcnday
when authorities claim they dug up 130
pounds of stolen military explosives from
the backyard of a Fontana heme.
Sheriff's deputies accuse Asemko of
being ringleader of a plot to blast lhe
complex housing the Fontana City Hall,
police department and rounty sheriff's
atation.
Asemko allegedly told interrogators he
.dislikes the establishment.
Councilman's
Recall Petition
Will Circulate
Circulation of petitions for the recall of
Laguna Beach city councilman Edward
Lorr will begin Saturday at Laguna area
aupennarkets.
Members of Citizens for Good Govern·
ment, the 1'1!Cail sponsor group, will
gather signatures on the petitions at
Safeway, Acord's, Albertson's, Gene's
and Alpha Beta market,, every weekend
until the required number, just ovtt 2,000,
ls rollected, acrordin&: to MW Bea Whit-
llesey, president.
The cache of 130 pounds of bigh ex.
plosives including C4 plasUc comPound,
blocks of TNT and sophisticated military
blasting materials was impounded.
The contraband included 100 feet of
detonating cord capable of burning at the
rate ol. 2,100 feet per minute.
Sheriff's bomb squad specialists said
all the supply lacked waa a detonator
device.
Experts said Thursday lhat if It had all
exploded at once, the powerful blast
would probably have killed every person
within a four-block radius.
Sl1ot Wounds Irish Officer.
. 44 ' l\.nown to Be IRA Targe
BE;LF AST, Northern Ireland (UPI) -
Jchn Taylor, home af~airs minlste.r of the
Northern Ireland government, was 1hot
in the head today and wounded outside
bis office in Armagh, police said.
Taylor, 24, is head of Northern
Ireland's security network and a prime
target for extremists among the Irish
Republican Army (IRA).
"He has apparently been hit a number
of times," a pollce spokesman said. "He
was apparently alive when he was taken
to a hospital, but we bave no further idea
of his condition ."
One witness in Armagh, 40 miles
southwest of Bellast, t1aid he saw Taylor
slumped over the wheel of the car, blood
pouring from his head, after three shots
were fired. The windshield was smashed.
Taylor is widely known as a Protestant
Unionist hardliner for his tough handling
of Northern Ireland's Roman Catholic
minority. ,,..
lie wu widely tbougbt to be one of lhe
prime movers behind the decision to
reinstitute internment without trial as a
means of curbing the IRA.
The shooting of Taylor ws the first al·
tack on a prominent Northern Ireland
Laguna to Hold
Wine Taste Fest
The line art of tasting French wine will
be spotlighted this evening at tile Laguna
Beach Art Gallery when the Laguna Civic
League sponsdrs Its contribution to the
Art Colony's Winter Festival, a French
Wine and Cheese Party.
leader since the assasslnaUon Jan. 11 of
John Barnhill, a member of Northern
Ireland 's upper house ol parliament, in
Strabane.
The shooting followed a tea1nd day ot
explosions and fire in the heart of BeUast
and surrounding areas. (See earlier
story, Page 5).
Israeli Attack
Heaviest Since
1967 Figkti1ig
By United Pre11 loternitloaal
Israeli troops, armor, artillery and
warplanes attacketl Lebanon along a 60-
mile front today, in what both Arab and
Israeli mllitary sources called the
heaviest punitive strike by Israel since
the 1967 Six-day War.
Al Fatah guerrillas said as many as 30
Israeli jeta struck targets as close as M
miles from the Lebanese capital of Beirut
and Jollowed up with armored regiments
into areas near the border.
The semiofficial Egyptian Middle East
News Agency said 60 Israeli jets struck
into Lebanon.
Guerrillas reported six Arab guerrillas
killed and three wounded. A Beirut com4
munique said one civilian was killed and
a S<lldier wounded and 20 bousea
destroyed. Israel said five guerrillu
were killed and an unknown number of
houses demolished, and the attack force
suffered no casualties.
Beirut dispatches tonight indicated the
casualties might bt far higher than alt'
nounced. The Falastin J e r u 1 a I e m
Hospital tn Beirut received 25 wounded
guerrillas, ' the hospital said. Three
(See MIDEAST, P11e ll
Wildwood Road ard Jay Scott Gilbert, 18,
or 316$7 Flortnce Ave., on marijuana
posseuloo charges at the Wildwood Road
address.
As they were checking the rt11ldence,
the officers saw two youths drive up In a
car and leave hastily when lhey spotted
the police activity. Following the vehicle
back to Laguna Beach, the oCflcers pUll~
alongside it at Broadway and observed
the occupants apparently h 1 d J n g
something In thetr pants waistbands,
Purcell said. .
·When a search turned up a quantity of
•
hlgll grade h11hlsh In plasUc bl1•. the of·
!leers booked Scott Lee Nachtlgall. 18,
and his t7-~ar~ld male companion, both
of Las Vegas, on suspicion of p<.>sscsslon
of the drug wh.h Intent to sell.
Shot1ly after 10 p.m., the same ofrl cors
broke up an alleged marijuana party In
en 4partmcnl house at I~ South Coast
Highway, arresting Larry De a n
Anderson, 20, and st.even Anws Stct1rns.
20, octupants of the apartment, and their
companions. Jane Elizabeth Stambaus:h.
20, a transient from North Carollno. and
r
1na
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' T : ,,.. Visitors at T:Ufepools
Seven Chilean students whi> have been guests ot Rev. Gary 11erbert·
son of Laguna United Methodist Church for two weeks 9!slt tidal
pools at Heisler Park· in Laguna Beach. They are studying environ·
mental problems. The students will speak at a meeting at the church
Sunday at 7 p.m. on '1Cha~ging Conditions In Latin America."
Lion~s · Crossed
LA Company Has Safari's Nu mber
NO llom lounge under lhe workbench at
Los Angeles' Mandeville Electric Com..
pany.
No zebras bound around among the
spoob of copper wire and castoff motors
and generatora.
SWI, the telephone at the !Inn run by
Mrs. Bonnie McMaster rings l~ times a
day wllh requesU for· lnformalion about
Lion Coon\fY·Sa!art tours.·
They hive · Uon ·eowilry Safari'•"·
number at MandeV!Ue Electr)o Company an rtlbt, ooJy !hey hive a dl!terent area
code. which doesn't neccssarlJy help
much.
One day • Lion Country Safari ti·
ecutive calling from New York 1ot mixed
up, the way busy e1tcutlve1 do, ind dial·
ed aret code 213 Instead of 714, the way
busy executives sometimes do.
"Sorry ••• " Mra. McMUl<!r patiently
explained, when tor:ne peop!•1 would bt
roaring like the ~lfli of the beaata about
the !Sib Ume their work wy 'interrupted.
On Thursday evening at 8 o'clock a
llecaU Rally will be held In city hall
council chamben to announce the
number of signatures collected over the
weekend and distribute petitions for
nelgbborilood circulation.
Wine authority George Starke win
serve as wine master, guid1n1 guests
through the intricacies of savoring the
special vintages.
The tasting party will nin from 6:30
p.m. lo 8:30 p.m. and tickets at 13 will be
available at the door. Teacher Works for Change
The recall SpoDIOrs have unhl mid-
April to collect sufficient signatures to
force a recaU election late in summer.
Sponaon have stated they hope to have
al lml 3,000 volid signatur<1 by Ille end
or tbe flrat 30 days ol th• collection
period.
Reds Launch Cosmos
MOOCOW (AP) -ihe So•iet Union
launched another Cosmo• 11telllte today,
the 4'15lh in the aeries begun In l96l. '11le
Soviet news ageoey, T11s, 111d Co11D01
475 ,.., put lnlo a high orbit of the earth,
with rn miles the maximum distanco
from the earth '1 llllrl ace and rm mllea
the mlnimwn diJlance,
•
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You'll Get It
Earlier Now
Earlier delivery ol the Saturday edition
of the DAILY PILOT will be In lull force
Saturday mornln(. U you don't get your hom&<lellvertd copy by I a.m., plwe
call by 10 a.m., and we guarantff
delivery .
Call ~t from most arw. From
South Laguna, Laguna Niguel, Dana
Point, San Juan C.plstrano. Capistrano
Beach and San Clemente, call toll-free to -From WeatmlnsW and nortbwal Hun-tlni1od Beach, call toU.lne to M0-1%10.
(
Laguna Educawr Given Funds for SW.Hing Revamp
By FREDERICK SCHOEMEHL
Of tflt O.llY PMt Htff
Thomas Duuer, coordinator of federal
projecta !or Laguna Beach 1ehoola may
be down, but he'• not out
Although UlllUCCW!ul In gelling the
IChool bolrd to approvt application !or
11110,000 In grant money to lludy 1,,.
dlvlduallud teachlnf methods, Dugger
hu been il•tn lhe bolrd'• go.ehead to
IUbmll m application for $11,000 to con-
tinue a differentiated lllalllfli project,
Bastc1Uy, be Rid, t.ochm can do bet•
!tr won by rnlsln& eurriculum, employ· Inf pmptolealonal wonen and ualnl D"1ble _.,u.,.
'
Duqer aubmltted the !..,,thy grant ap.
pllcallan to the Educational p......,,.1
Development Programs deptrtmeol ol
the U.S. Ollice of tducolloa Feb. 14.
Laguna Is ooe of 17 ichool diattld. ·
from throuchcM the muotry compellng
!or l!00.000 In the federal money,
"I thlnt "•'II be looked "II favorably,"
1f)eculsted Dugger. "We've had !he pr°'
wm &•In&. fqr two yean and U't been
1oocf."
-c.inpl<le dlffimdla.ltd lllalDll( ,....
gtams h.,i been Tritten !or both
Thurllon !ntenntd!ate and Top of Jbo
World Schools by t.ocb<n wllo hln been
employed daring lhe ,.....,. monthl
1 •
with put EPDA money. •
Uy reorpnl~Jli Jl<Oltlllll, Duper ell•
pbolned. apeclal lalmla of teachers can be
uted to teach a U the • atudenll In a ·
partlcular ichoot
"With lradlUona! programs, tbe ••·
poaurt or ltacbm Is limited to IO
atudtola -and that'• k," u.ld lhe
coordinalor.
'A major pOrl of lhe program, ouqer
(>Olnted 00~ fa a l(l<Cili IOJary ilCOle
..U,b, tn -pa)ll the' mort adlvt
tetchlr D)Ore money,
Tealbm will be e•alutled by •d·
mlnlstnlorl, fellow !acuity, and atudenll
(Seo STAFl'!N(l, Pase %1 •
Theres3 Marie Wagner, 19, of 1742 Glen-
neyre St .. Laguna Beach.
Ander~n. who &lle&edly jumped out of
.11 ground floor window when the o(flcers
knocked nt the apartment door, was
taken into custody outside the building.
Arter assertedly rinding about half 1
pound o( n1nriju1na ind marijuana
cigarettes in the apartment, ntflcers
book NI the I wo men on suspicion of
possession of lhe druit !or sale and the
~'Omen for pos~esslon and being present
where the drug was used.
• fill
Nixon Hosts
Red Leader.
At Banquet
By HENRY llARTZENBUSCH
PEKING (AP ) -Preml<r Chou En·lal
pledged tonlAht thot China "will work
unswervingly'' ror normal relations and
friendly contacts with the United Stites.
At a dinner !.n his honor, the Chinese
leader responded lo a toasl Jn whlch
President· 'Nixon ·dectar~:-··••we "'1*.te
begun the 1oog proce11 of removln1 that wall between us ."
·Seated at round table•• In U. Great
II all of the People, the Chou aJ\cf NllOll
entour1ae1 ate a nlnM.'OUrM meet of
Chlne1e food except for grapefruit an4
orange segmenta llown fl'om tho United
Stale1. They 1lpped CaUlornla chaa>-
pagne. ,
Nb'.on began the toastlna by e1pre1•tn1
apprtcJallon for tht Chinese hospitality
1hown to the Amer1cans the Jive daya
they have bean ln Peking.
Chou and Nixon ctme to the dinner
from their fifth ind final meeting, at
which they pre.1um1bly reached agre ..
ment on Improving contacts through
cultural and other exchanges, wfih
dlplomatlc relaUona tome tlme Jn th•
future.
Recalling his visit Thursday to the
Great Wall or China, Nixon aald the wall
showed "the detennJnatlon of the Chlnue
people to retain thelr Independence
throughout their lorig history. ' ·
"The Great Wall 11 no longer a wall
dividing China lrom the real ol tho
world," he continued. "But It 11 a
reminder of the fact that there are many
watla 1tlll exiaUng In the world, which
divide nation• and people..
"The Great Wall l1 a!IO • reminder
that for almost a generstlon there h11
been a wall between the People'•
Rejlllbllc of China and the United State1.
Jn these pa1t four day1, we have begun
th·e long process of removing that wall
between u1 ."
Nl•on conceded that both 1lde1
recognize there are great cUfrerence1
between the United Statet and China.
'1But we are determined that those dJf.
rerenoet will not prevent u1 from Jiving
together tn peace," he went on. "You
believe deeply In your 1y1tem and wt
believe just a• deeply in our 1y1tem. Jt ill
not our common belle! that hue brouaht
(l!ee NIXON, Pqe I)
0r ....
Weadter
Hazy sunshine ls on the 1genda J
tor the Orange COUl .,.1n on
Satun!ay,'!ollowln1 the uaual low _
clouds and log. Hlghi at the
beaches around 80 rl1lng lo 72 In·
land. Lowa 4.2 to lO.
INSIDE TODAY
The LU!lputlan1 of famed
"Gulllvtr'1 TroveU" arrive fn
HuntinQto" Btoch thil wct'""4.
A •tort/ I• t00au•1 W eikendt'
reltr vou where to go to find
them.
L M. ..,.. 7 ..,,_ .
Cit..i..., :It-• ..,.,. n
-n
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......... It.fl
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M ... 1tfr1 14 Allll .__,.,.. II -· . -....
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% OAILY l'!LOT LI
Ad Man Lent
Hughes Boat
For Escape
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - A Baltimore
: advertising executtve says be loaned bis
yacht to .Howard Hughes so the
bUllonaire could flee the Bahamas un-
delectcd. ,
"l did lt aa a favor for a friend," Leon
Shaffer Golnick said in a telephone in-
terview Thursday. ,
Golnlct, owner o( a BalUmore, Md., ad-
vertising 'company bearing hi.s name, said
be wu· a neighbor of H_ughea: for more
than a year In the Bahama•.
Golnlclt said Hughes left the Bahamaa
early 'the morning of Feb. 16 In the
Cygnus, Golnlck'I converted, 8.l-foot U.S.
Navy 1ub chaser. He sald Hughes stayed
aboard for the 22-hour trip to Florida's
East eo,;1.
"He got off somewhere in Miami
Thursday morning, I'm not aaying ex-
actly where," Golnlck saJd. -
The dockmaster at Hurricane Hole in
Nassau confirmed that the Cygnus left Its
mooring last "Wednesday or Thursday"
and bad not returned. He said the craft
'· was capable of making about 10 knots,
which wolild mean it would take about 21
hours to sail from Nassau to Miami.
U.S. Customs officials refused to 1ay
whether Hughes went through customs
but officlala 'in Managua, Nicaragua, said
he arrived there last Thur~day aboard a
jetliner chartered b'om Ea~tern Airlines.
Goliilck 1llld that he did oot make the
trip with ,Hughes and that his captain,
Robert Rehak, skippered the Cygnus for
Hu'lhes' trip to Miami.
Golnlck declined to say whether he had
ever 1een Hughes.
A .Baltimore newspaper columnist
wrote this week that Golnick received a
call from a Hughes aide about 3 a.m. on
Feb. 16, asking if Golnick would make
available his boat and skipper within 30
minutes. GolnJck declined to confirm the
report.
;,All I'll say is that I've got a hell of a
story to tell someday when it won't em·
barrass anybody," Golnict said. "Until
then, I'm not talking, You don't do a
favor for a friend and then tell about it."
The Cygnus. was moored · at a Miami
dO(:kyard Thursday but Rehak was not
available.
Meanwhile Clifford Irving and his wile
Edith have opened tbemselves to possible
arrest or contempt citations as a result of
their failure to appear in New York state
Supreme Court for examination in two
lawsuits -one connected with the so-
called Hughes autobiography.
Irving had been subpoenaed for pretrial
questioning Tbursday In a libel sult
against himsell and Dell Publishing Co.
filed by art dea1er Fernand Legros· who
claims Irving's book "Fake!" defamed
him.
Mn. lrvlog had been ordered to appear
for examination about Irving'• disputed .
Hughes "autobiography" in a suit flied by
Rosemont Enterprises, a Nevada firm
that claims exclusive rights to Hughes'
life story.
International
Art Show Set
When the International Art Exhibit of
the Laguna Beach Winter Festival opens
SatW'day at the Festival of Arts grounds,
30 artists representing 15 nations will be
O" band to display their works.
The two day exhibition will feature
artists with family backgrounds in such
far-off countries as Lithuania, Russia,
Turkey, Czechoslovakia, Italy, Denmark
and neighbors canada and Me1ico.
The show will be open from 10:30 a.m.
to 4:30 p.m. each day. Further in·
formation is available by calling 4:94-9890.
OUJUJI COAST
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NIXON'S PINAL
LIO Of CHINA TRIP
~/''""' 110111 VIA
AflCHOIAOl
EAST •
CHINA
SE A
••• ,
••
HERE'S THE REST OF THE PRESIDENT'S CHINA ITINERARY
From Pagel
NIXON P.LEDGED AMITY •••
us together here, but our common in-
terests and hopes.''
Nixon and Chou applauded each other
during the toasts.
Chou began by noting that Nixon had
met with him and Chairman Mao Tse-
tung and "we exchanged views· on the
nonnal.izatlon of relations between China
and the United States and on other que~
lions of concern to the two sides.
HThere exist great differences of prin-
From Pagel
STAFFING ...
to determine bow good a Job they are
doing.
"We think there are more ways to
reward a teacher than Just by the
number of college units and years in the
distrid," said Dugger.
He believes that students wlll also be
rewarded -1n an academic way -by
the program. The American Research
Institute, Dugger explained, tesled all
students In the third through eighth
grades last ye.ar and will test these same
students every year until 1975 to watch
. their progress from elementary, to in-
termediate and finally to the high school
Jevel.
clple between om two sides," Chou noted.
;'Through earnest and frank discussions,
a clearer knowledge of each other's posi·
Uons and stands bas been gained."
Noting the e :rc ha n ge s had been
beneficial for both, Chou continued:
"The times are advancing and the
world is changing. We are deeply con-
vinced that the strength of the peoples Js
powerful and that whatever z.igr.ags and
reverses there will be in the development
of history, the general trend of the world
ls definitely toward light and not
darkness. ,
"It is the common desire of the Chinese
and American peoples to enhance their
mutual understanding and friendship and
promote the normalization of relations
between China and the United states. Tbe
Chinese government 'and people will work
Wlswervingly toward this goal."
The champagne was served in White
House glasses bearing the presidential
seal, fiown from Washington. Many of the
Chinese guests took them home as
souvenirs.
White-jacketed waiters and waJtresses
distributed presidential g~ts to all t.11ose
present. The gilt was a clear plastic
paperweight with Nii:on's card imbedded.
The toasts, however, seemed more'tow·
key than those voiced at the banquet
Chou gave the presidential party Monday
nigbl when both talked of opening the
gates to friendly contads.
Before the banquet the Nixons toured
the fabled Peking palaoe of China's
emperors, in a snowstorm.
fll /ti Ulan
W. Gerinans Pay
Liz' Birthday
Guests Arrive
LONDON (UPI) -The lioauUlul
people loqm .1e1vlng today. lo
eele"brate Elisabeth Taylor's 40th
birthday party Maoday In
Budapest.
'
Ransom for Jet Among those departing on a
Bingle direct fl"ht from l,ondon
alrpon were some 20 of ·the Invited
cuests, lnclUdlng Belue Ringo
Starr and h1s wile; film star
Michael Caine and his new glrl
friend , Baksh Shiklra, who won the
MISJ World uUe ea Miss Guyana ;
actress SUzannab York; Miss
Taylor's daugh(or Lfia Todd, and
members of the Burton's family.
By HOWARD A. TYNER
BONN (UPI) -The West German
government paid $5 million ransom to a
Palestinian commando group to obtain
the release of a hijacked airliner and 14.
of its crew from Southern Yemen,
Transportation Aiinister Georg Leber
said today.
Five armed commandos released the
$24.S-million Lufthansa Boeing 717 jumbo
jet and the crew members Wednesday in
Aden , the Southern Yemen capital.
A secret code word had been flashed by
radio from Beirut to climax a cloak·and·
dagger operation carried out in three
countries of Europe and the Middle east.
In the first government statement on
the outcome of the highjacking, Leber told
a news conference the decision to pay the
ransom had been baStd on the assump.
tion that the lives or the crew were in
"acute danger."
He called the hijatkers "the most
bloodthirsty group seen until now."
All 188 passengers and crew rnem·
hers aboard the Athens·bound plane when
it was hijacked Tuesday after takeoff
from New Delhi, India have since left
Aden with the possible exception of the
five hijackers.
They were questioned by 1 o c a J
authorities and later set free.
The plane returned to Franklurt Thurs-
day.
Leber said a letter from a group calling
itself the "Organization for Victims of
Zion.ism" and claiming responsibility for
the hijacking arrived Tuesday at Luf-
thansa headquarters in Cologne.
The letter, posted in Cologne several
hours alter the jumbo jet had been
diverted to Aden, threatened to blow up
the plane, demanded the ransom and
gave detailed instructions on how the
money should be handed over.
"The messenger with the molley was to
wear a black jacket and gray trousers
and carry a case in his right hand/'
Merchants Make
Many Donations
To Big Auction
Leber said. "He was to ny by way of
Athens on a comn1ercia1 airliner or one
of three German charter firms.
"ln Beirut, he waa to find a car parked
at the airport which had inside a picture·
of former Egyptian Presldent Gamal
Abdel Nasser. ,
"A note was to be left on the driver's
seat saying where to drive with the
money."
The Borm government raised the case
Tuesday night -Leber declined to say
where -and sent it to Athens with a
Lufthansa securlty agent acting as
courier.
Wednesday morning, the courier flew
to the Lebanese capital of Beirut, found
the car, drove to an undisclosed point
more than 25 miles outside the city and
delivered the money.
"The cod~ word was his receipt,''
Leber said. ''He was told to return as
fast as possible to Beirut airport where
the word would be relayed by radio to
Aden. Within moments after the word ar·
rived in Aden, the p I a n e and crew
were free ."
Leber said the hijackers were from a
"daughter organization of the Front for
Palestine Liberation" which he said was
based in Baghdad, Iraq.
He said the same group was responsl·
ble for the hijack ing of a Pan American
jumbo jet to Cairo in 1970. The plane
later was destroyed.
Music Featured
At Laguna Beacli
Winter Festival
None would reveal their birthday
gilts.
From Pagel
MIDEAST .•.
children in Helwa were hospitalized In
Zahieh from wounds suffered ln atr raids.
Israeli deputy Premier Yigal Allon
warned Lebanon tonight in a radio i""
terview in Tel Aviv that there would be
more Israeli strikes lf Lebanon permitted
more forays across the border into
Israel.
The big Israeli strike coincided with the
arrival in Jerusalem of United Nations
peace negotiator Gunnar V. Jarring in an
attempt to revive bis peace mission.
His only comment after conferences
with Fore ign Minister Abba Eban was
that he was encouraged that his mission
was still alive.
He dld not mention the strike against
Lebanon.
Lt. Gen. Dnvid Elazar, the Israeli chief
cf staff, warned Lebanon Thursday of
possible military reprisal for an ambush
in which guerrillas using barookas killed
an Israeli couple returning from a Bar
?Ylitzvah Wednesday night.
Another guerrilla ambush soon af·
terward killed an Israeli soldier and
Israel struck back early today.
First word of the Israeli attack came
from Beirut Radio which broadcast · a
In line wit h its "something for coded message: "Beware of snakes in
' area number IO." everyone ' policy, the Laguna Beach Israel ih the past has withheld an·
Winter Festival will turn its spotlight on nouncement of punitive raids until its
music this weekend. forces returned to Israel.
Making its second appearance at the The Israeli attack brought immediate
\\'inter event, the ~piece West Covina sharp reaction from Egypt. Government sources quoted by the Middle East News Symphony Orchestra will present a con· Agency said the raids would not have
cert at 8:30 p.m. Saturday in the Laguna been possible unless the United States
Beach High School auditorium. supplied Phantom jet fighter·bombers to
The program will include Beethoven's Israel.
Symphony No. 6 in F Major: Strauss' An Israeli military spokesman said
Chit-chat Polka; Mozart's overture to the Israeli jets first struck guerrilla en•
Marriage of Figaro; selections from campments 22 miles above the cease.fire
Laguna area merchants have rallied Jerome Kern's Show Boat, fea turing line before annored forces began a seek·
Dugger pointed out that even the most
trad!Uonal schools In the local district -
such as El Morro Elementary and Aliso
Elementary -have differenUated staf·
fing patterm, such as the use of student
interns, teacher assistants, non-graded
claasrooma and team ,teaching.
With the $81,0IXI, said Dugger, ~ more
innovative programs 111ch as those at
Tburston and Top of the World mlgbl be
e:rpanded into the other schools, depend-
ing on how the money wu uaed.
around with donations ranging. from soloist Marjorie Hanson ; and Artie and·destroy mission at Ainata, a town or
Li I Le salami to a stainless steel sink, and a 15-Shaw's Clarinet Concerto, played by Curt 4,000 to 5,000 about 21ll miles inside tt e aguer foot totem pole to a treatment at a reduc-Bianchi. Lebanon. Director Robert Gr-n, who i's on the Tbe spokesman said "direct hits" were ing parlor for the Giant Outreach Auction ""'
T SI d in the Art Colony's Irvine Bowl, sched· national selection board of the Amerii:an observed in three villages struck by the ryOUts ate uled to start at 1 p.m. Saturday. Youth S~pbony, .b known for his worlJ: Israeli planes -Yanta, Dir"i!l·Asbir and
Famed Lucky Strike aUctioneer Speedy in building community orchestras anll Kafr C'.oque.
Tryouts for the 1972 Little League Riggs will lend his uniqµe vocal talents to has tO\ll'ed the Southland, Mexico and In the bigger town of Ainata, the Israeli
aeuon in Laguna Beach will begin at 9:30 the benefit affair, proceeds of which will Hawaii with his musical eru;embles. ~pokesman said, the Arab population was
Narcotics Forum
Slated Tonight
Sa·-~-t the ""h --'--I thleti go toward the Outreach youth services Concert tickets at $2 for adults and $1 flushed out of 20 houses and that the
a.m. Hu""°Y a ""6 ~ a c program in Laguna. for students are available at the houses were then destroyed. He called
fleBold. ed 8 and 10 should Four brand new cars have been con~ Chamber of Commerce, the Hotel Laguna Ainata the center or guerrilla activities. YI ag , 9 years 1 1 A Lebanese military spokesman in a • t 9 30 and bo ed 11 and s1"gned to· the 'auct1'on al lnvo1· t b trave agency and wil be sold at the repoi• a : a.m. ys ag ce cos Y at.:ditorium. statement broadcast by Beirut Radio said 1% years ·are scheduled for tryouts from 1 local dealers, along with a color enemy warplanes and artillery opened
p.m. to s p.m. television set and a IQ.speed bike. fire against southern villages in the
Tryouts will be held at the same hours Other items on the block will include } Rachaya area 34 miles southeast of A round table discussion on narcotics,
sponsored by the Laguna Beach Police
Department and the Volunteer Post, wUJ
be held at 8 o'clock tonight In Laguna
Beach city hall council chambers.
next Saturday for those unable to attend plants and nursery equipment. books, Zumwa t in Saigon Beirut.
this week. Applicants should be ac-watches and jewelry, a ham, cakes and "At the same time, an enemy armored
companied by a parent and must present health foods, clothing, shoes a n d SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. chief of force estimated at regimental strength
a birth certificate. handbags, musical instruments and many naval operations, Adm. Elmo R. and supported by two other regiments"
If participation in the Laguna Beach gift certificates for restaurant dinners, a Zumwalt, arrived here today for a three--struck the town of Ainata "where they VolWJteef Post director will serve as
moderator for a panel including Sgt. Neil
Purcell of the Laguna Beach Police:
City Recreation Department basketball bus trip and amusement ]lark ticket day "routine update" on the status of the blew up some houses under intensive air
~ l~~~ csf0~o~~c~~: . :~ed~:; ,-boo_ks_. _____________ V_ie_tn_a_m_w_ar_..:.' _N_avy_:_s..:po_k_e_sm_en_s_a_Id_. ___ co_v_:er_:,_"_:lh..:e..:•:.:po_k_e_:sm_an_..:.SBl..:'d_. ___ _
Department ; John Sousa of the Orange
County Drug Abuse Program; William
Thomas, president of the Laguna Beai:b
School Board; Dr. Edward Quass, Orange
County Drug Abuse Program; Jerry
Engelskirchen, attorney; Ann Patterson,
Laguna resident; Frank Moran, at·
tomey: and General Charles Quilter,
retired USMC Major General.
The public is invited to attend the pro.
gram, which will open with a SS-minute
discussion among the panelists, followed
by a 15-mlnute recess and a question
period. Written questions and recom-
mendations from the audience will be
picked up during the recess period.
report at the alternate time. Further' in-
formation may be obtained by calling 494-
0651
Actor Walter Sande
Services Scheduled
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - F u n er a I
services will be held Saturday at Forest
Lawn Cemetery for Walter Sande,
veteran motion picture actor.
Sande, 65, died Tuesday night after he
collapsed from a heart attack at O'Hare
International Airport.
Nader 'Aide' Proposes
Tax, Political Changes
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of tM IMllY 1'1111 lltff
''subsidies" he sald for the most part
benefit large land owners in central
SAN JOSE -A Sierra C I u b Callfomla.
spokesman's call for changes in ta:r and One large "fanner-welfare'' recipient,
political structures tn California sparked Keith sald, "received $6 million last year
controversy among 500 city officials at· not to grow cotton." Other subsidies
tending a California League of Cltlts noted by the young attorney which he
plarming institute ending here today. said contributed to urban srawl by fore--
Planners, planning commissioners and tng small farmers out o businw m.
clty councilmen Including 35 from the eluded:
Orange Coast Thursday heard Keith -Tar mechanisms such as capital Roberts, a San Francisco attorney and CQofounder of Callfomla Action Inc., spell gains which are avallable to large cor-
out bl1 views on what causes urban porate tanners but are not available to small farmers. sprawl. Roberts authored the water portion of -Water: Keith charged that SO percent
the Ralph Nader report, 0 Power and ol the low cost water from the State
Land In Callfomla." Watu Project to Soufhem,Callfomla will
He blamed urban sprawl 0 n go to Kern County. He aald It wll1 benellt
••economlcall,y motivated land use "four' large farmers and a,bandtuJ of oU
decl1ions," Ill-advised public policy c:ompanlea who own SI pt!Wlt of the Ir·
decisions and planning that Is nocessarlly r!ia61e land in Kerll l)ount1."
t•.superimposed OD 1 1ystem with bUUt·ln ·• -Roads, which bmetit developers who
eoonomlc lnceativos" CX>lltrary. lo pullUe profit ffOm ouur.ns eubdl¥illons at the
lnteresL . , eapense of peop • who ,tit paying state
He urged planning commlsslonm lo guollne tu.
"edUCAlt" cllliens and avoid decillonl • Roberll' remarks evobd hoot4 and
which plan urbo,n problems out or .. 1ca11&. However, what In• II tu I e
wealthy oommunitlet 11mply &hilling chilrman Sanford Gtlml,.llan J.,. piaJ>.
Ihm lnlo poorer communilles which are nlng dlrector, asked for qulet 10 Boberla
unable lo mlat the resu!U of had piaJ>. could oontlnue, a loud rou!ld of applausa
nlng. lndlcaled most of those preaeot wanted lo
Roberti outlined 1 g r I c:: u 1 t u r e hear mort .
SALE ENDS IN 2 DAYS
FINEST UPHOLSTERY IN THE AREA AT REDUCED PRICES
Large selection of up~olstery
from such well known lines as
Henredon, Sherrill, Margo
Carson and others at reduc-
ed prices, don't wail. Only 2
days left.
SELECTED GP,OUPS FROM HENREDON, DREXEL
AND HERITAGE AVAILABLE AT SPECIAL PRICES.
'DREXEL'S
VELA RO
WELLINGTON PAR'~
HENREDON
OFFICERS CHEST COLLECTION
CAPRI
HERITAGE
GRANDTOUR COLLECTION
CAMEO
MADRIGAL
DON'T WAIT
DEALERS FOR : HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE KARASTAN
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 Wnlcliff Or., 642-2050
Ol'lH ,llDAT ill t
INTERIORS
LAGUNA BEACH
345 North Coast Hwy. 49~5 I ,
TORRANCE
23649 Hawlh0rn1 Blvd.
r21J11n.1m o,. "'"., •tt1,
Prehuftnol J....tor o..s,_, A"1 ... ••-AJD-NSID
,..._ Tefl ,,,_ Mitt el Ot.,. Cffntr" M .. 1J6J •
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Saddlehaek . .
Today's Flnal
N.Y. Stocks
'
OL 65, NO. 48, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY,CALIFORN1A FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1972 ,TEN CENTS
Coast ·YMCA •Not a; Bich Man ~s Club
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
01 ~ 0.lf• ''"' Jltll
The Orange Coast YMCA has an image
problem.
It has an imposing new bulldlng with
two heated swimming pools, a health
cl\lb, handball ~urts, and a Newport
Beach address.
As a result, some people think of it as a
rich man's club with weallhy financial
backing.
But appearances are deceiving. The
YMCA Is runnl111 In the red.· And the
community 1ppears unwUilng to h~p it
out of Its predicament.
111 don't know of a rich man that uses
this place," says Don Muhlig, 42, the YM-
CA executive directo.r, who for the past
year bas trled to put the YMCA on solid
financial footing.
·~we're people with a real public rela-
tions problem," he explained. "The
building tends to hide our growing com-
munity program. Our youth membershlp
has recently tripled. But when we uk 'or
help we're told, 'You're over there. ~OU
got rich support.• "
The YMCA bulldlnr serves the com·
munities of Costa Mesa, Newport Beach
and Irvine. It wa1 built four years ago at
a cosl of around $650,000 including the
land. ..-
"We got here by accident,'' 1ays
Muhlig of the YMCA on 2300 University
Drive. "Thi! used to be county property
and the Y was meant to bekmg to no one
city. But by the Ume we dur the first
spade Into the rround it was annexed to
Newport Be1ch."
WhUe the YMCA has been saddled with
ill 0 rich" image, other almilar orcanlia-
Uons hive been able to maintain their
"poor" image. They get the donaUons
and the Y d...,n•t, 1ccordlng to Muhllg.
Even though the YMCA bas just com-
pleted a succeS1ful membership drive -
the goal was purposely set lo'tY to achieve
11-It wUl face 1 deficit of 11(,000 In this
Chou Pledges Friendship
Red Leader Seeks Normal Relations With U.S.
By HENRY HARTZENBUSCH
PEKING (AP) -Premier Chou En-lal
pledged tonight that China "will work
unswervingly'' £or normal relations and
friendly contacts with the United States.
At a dipner in his honor, the Chinese
leader responded ·to a toa&t in which
Pre&ident Nixon declared : "We have
begun the long process of removing that
wall between us."
Seated at round tables in the Great
Hall of the People, the Chou and Nixon
entourages ate a nine-course meal of
Liz' Birthday
Guests Arrive
LONDON (UPI) -The beautiful
people began leaving today to
. celebrate Elizabeth Taylor's 40th
birthday party Monday in
Budapest.
Amo111 !hose departing on 1
slnrJe direct flight from London
airport were some 20 of the invited
guests, including Bealle Ringo
Starr and his wife; ~film . star
fdichael Caine and hia: new girl
triend, Baksh Shikira, who won the
MW World tiUe as Miu Guyana;
actress Suzannab Y otk; Miss
Taylor's daughter Liza Todd, and
members of the Burton's family.
None wou1d reveal their birthday
glfls.
War Veteran
Tur1is Art Critic
SAN JOSE (UPI) -A disabled World
War II veteran has been arrested 1fter
he ripped down a photograph be con-
1idered obscene at the Civic Center Art
Gallery.
Thomas Woody, 49, was booked Thurs-
day on charges of entering a public
building with intent to deface or remove
property and of malicious mischief. He
was freed on his recognizance.
The photo, one of 19 on di.splay at the
gallery, depictJ a framed Army
discharge paper witll two words written
across it.
"'Woody called the picture a "disrace."
The United Veterans Council o Santa
Clara County recently objected to the pic-
ture on . grounds It was offensive to
veterans. The group demanded it be
removed from the gallery.
But the Civic Fine Arts Gallery
Asooclallon decided ti would b e
cen110rsbip to go along with the council'•
request.
0r ....
· We•ilter
Hazy ounshine i. on the agaida
tor the Orange Coast again on
Satunlay, following the usual low
cloudJ and fog, Highs at the
beeches around fO rlllnl to '11 In-
land. Lows 42 to 50.
INSmE TODA'Y
The LUlfputiani of .fam<d
"Gu'Uivtr't Traw:ll" arriw in
Hu'ntington Btach this Wttkcnd.
A Slo'1/ fn todav 's Wuk<n<l<T
ttlZ. Vo• where to go lo find
t/11111.
L. M. ..,.. 1 ·-. c........ ,...
-n ......... . °"'" flltfktt 11 .......... , ... f
P.Mnct "'" ,.... tfM ....... II -" ·-~ u -' -.....
T
--. ...,.... ......... °""" c...w 11 ----.. ....... '"'' ti.ct~ 941 T-. -,, ... ·-' .._.,....,1>11 --.. ·-....
Chinese food except for grapefruit and
orange segments flown from the United
States. They sipped California cham-
pagne.
Nixon began the toasting by expressing
appreciation for the Chinese hospitality
shown to the Americans the five days
they have been in Peking.
Chou and Nixon came to the dinner
from their fifth and final meeting, at
which they presumably reached agree--
ment on improving contacts through
cultural and other exchanges, with
diplomatic relations some time in the
future .
Recalling his viBU Thursday to the
Great Wall of China, Nixon 1aid the wall
showed "the determination of the Chinese
people to retain their independence
throughout their long history.
"The Great Wall i1 no longer a wall
dividing China from the rest of the
world /' he continued, "But it ls a
reminder of the fact that there are many
walls still existing in the world, which
divide nations and peoples.
"The Great Wall ls also 1 reminder
that for almost a generation there has
been a waJl ~tween the People's
Jl<publlc of China and the United Stales.
In these past four days, we have begun
the long process of removing that wall
between us."
Nixon conceded that both sides
recognize there are great dlfference1
between the United States and China.
Call for Change in State
S11arks League Squabble
"But we are determined that those dif-
ferences will not prevent us from living
together in peace," he went on.· "You
believe deeply ln your Jystem and we
believe just as deeply in our system. It ill
not our common belief that have brought
us together here, but our common in-
terests and hopes."
Nixon and Chou 1pplauded each other
during the toasts.
Chou began. by noUng that Nixon had
met with hlm and Chalrman Mao Tse-
tung and . "we e1.changed views. on the
normalization of relations between China
By GEORGE LEIDAL
Of !IM IMil'f 'IMf St11f SAN JOSE -A Sierra C I u b
spokesman's call for cha~ in tu and
polilical llructurel' In piurpbtia IJllrked
controveny amorw 500 city offlcilis at·
lendlns a Calllomla Lugue o Cities
planning institute ending here today.
Planners, planning commissioners and
city councµme n tncludlqg 3S from the
Orange Coast Thursday heard :K;eith
Robert.!, a San Francisco attorney and
co-founder of Callfomia Action Inc., spell
out his views on what causes urban
sprawl.
Roberts authortd the water portion of
the Ralph Nader report, "Power and
Land in California."
Ht blamed urban sprawl o n
''eeonomlcally motivated land use
decisions, 0 JU-advised public policy
decisions and planning that ls necessarily
"JUperlmposed on a system with built-in
economic incentives" contrary to public
interest.
He urged planning commissioners to
"educate" citizens aod avoid decisions
which plan urban problems out of
wealthy communities simply shifting
them Into poorer communities which are
unablt' to resist the results· of bad plan-
ning. ·
Pay Toilet s
S park Debate
HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) -The Public
Utility Commission I.! absorbed in the
free toilet vs. pay toilet issue.
"I believe the charge works a
particular hardship on poor people and,
lJl many instances, Is an inconvenience to
persons who find themselves in need of
the facility without the proper coin," said
Commissioner Louis J. Sparvero, who
Thursday headed a public hearing looking
into toilet tolls In bus, rail and air
terminals .
"Free tolleta encourage the con-
gregating of loungers and other un-
desirable elemeqts" and there's a bigger
maintenance prOblem, said Richard J.
Maguire, president or Capttol Bus Co.,
HarrisbUrg.
Roberts outlined. 1 g r 1 c u I t u r t 3nd the United States and on other ques--
" . . " . lhe Uons.or coi;ice~ to, the two aides.
1ub>1d1es be satd for mosl part ''T!lero •~I ,~ dllltr'!'C!~~
beoehl large land r· • In ~al.,· dllli=:-·1 .&~v.:s,_'f~ ' earnomia. J! ·.., i.•1ftr, -.r . ant~~~
One large "falmerlwel~" redplml, 1 (fear~ oocli~lo•poli!
Keith said, "received. '6 mlUlon last year tion(and 1£.ilda hU been gained.'•
not to grow cotton." Other 1Ubaidlt1 Notlnl th& t I c"!h a ft I e I hid ·beellll
noted by the young altomey which he benelichllfor both, Chou continued:
1ald contributed to urban sprawl by fore-. •'The Ume1, '1"• advancing and the
ing small farmers out of buslneaa In-world ta Changing. We are· deeply con·
eluded : Vincfl!1 that·tbe 1trenitb of, the peoples Js
-Tax mechanisms such 11 tapital powttfUI ahd th•t whatevet ligzag, aod
gains which are available to large oor· i"evene1 theit will be in the development
porate farmers but are not available to of h!story, the general trend of the. world
small farmers. · (Ste 'NIXON, Pase Z)
-Water: Keith charged that 50 percent
of the low cost water from the State
Water Project to Southern California will
go to Kern County. He said it will benefit
"four large farmers and a handful of oil
companies who own 31 percent of the ir·
rigable land in Kem County."
-Roads, which benefit developers who
profit from outlying subdivisions at the
expense of people who are paying Jtl.te
gasoline tax.
Roberts' remarks evoked hootJ and
catcalls. However, when i n s t I t u t e
chairman Sanford Getreu, San Jose,plaft..
ning director, asked for quiet so Roberts
could continue, a loud round of applause
Indicated most of those present wanted to
hear more.
Luverne Wales
Last Rites Held
Services were held thi1 afternoon In
McCormick Laguna Beach Chapel for
Luverne S. Wales of 25052 Greenbay
Drive, El Toro, who died Thunday In tbe
Beverly Manor Convalescent Hospital,
Lal(Wla Hills. She was rl.
Mrs. Wales ia survi·1ed by a IOO,
Joseph H. Wales of O>rvalliJ, Ore., a
daughter, Mrs. Maria W. stott Of La-e
Forest; four grandchildrea and six grtat..
grandchildren.
A native of Iowa, she ,had Jived in
California for 58 yean and tn the Laguna
Hilla area for the past aeven yean. •
Israeli AtUtck
Heaviest Since
1967 Fighti1ig
By Ualte41 Press latttutlonal
Israeli troops, armor, artillery and
warplanu attacked Lebanon along a SO.
mile front today, in what both Arab and
Israell military sources called the
heaviest punitive slrlke by Israel s1nce
the 1167 St•-day war.
Al Falah guerrillu said as many 11 30
Israeli jell struck tareet.s as close a• 34
miles from the Lebanese caplta1 of Beirut
and followed up with annored regiments
into areaa near the border.
The oemlofficlal EgypUan Middle East
News Agency said 80 Israeli jets struck
into Leba non.
Guerrlllaa.reported six Arab guerrillas
killed and lhree wounded. A Beirut com-
muniqUe sald one civilian was killed and
a IO!dler wounded and 20 hou!<s
d .. troyod. IJrael uld .nve aumtllaa
were killed and 1n unknown number of
bouJet demolbhed, IJld the attack force
llllfered,oo ca111a111 ...
Lion's Crossed
Beirut dllpatch., tonight Indicated the
casuaJUea ml1ht be far htghtr than an·
nou.QCed. The Falastln J e r u s a. I e m
llotpltal In Beirut received 25 wounded
auerr11111, the hospital 11id. Thr ..
children ln Hel'fra were ho1pitallzed In
Zahleh from wounda IUffered In air raids.
Israeli deputy Premier Ylgal Allon
warned Lebanon tonight tn a radio ln--
terview In Tel A•lv !hit there would be
more laraell llrlkU If Lebanon permitted
tnore foray1 1aroa1 the border into LA Company Has Safari's Number
No lion1 lounce. under the workbench at
Los Angela' Mandeville Electric Com·
pany.
No ubra1 bound around among tht
spools o( copper wire and castoff moton
and generators.
Still, the telephone at the !inn run by
Mr1. Bonnie McMu.r rlnp I~ Umea I
day with requwa for lnfomutton about
Lion Country Safari tours.
They h>ve Lion Country Safari's
number at Mandevflle Electric Company
all right, onllf they have a dllferent aroa
code, which doeao't necusartly http
much.
One day 1 Uon Counll')' Safari eI·
ecuUve caJUar from New Yor~ got mlJ:ed
up, the way .busy e1ecuUVe1 do, and ·diaJ ..
ed area code 213 lnatead of 714, the way
busy executives JOmetlmes do.
"Sorry ••• " Mrs. McMaater patiently
tiplalned, when some people would be
roarinr like the king ol the bellll about
the 15th time thelr worlc w11 Interrupted.
So he prompUy Invited the McMuter
lamlly to tour Lion Country Safari free of
ch>rre on Saturday, March 4, to ... wbal
all the calls were about.
Presumably, offlcllil of th< local
Afrlt111 wUilllfe ' PttserJI• will 1et tho
same otter ulended to Jbem.
They lakt a few talh: for Mandeville
Eleclri< Company too.
Israel. ~
The big loraell llrlu coincided wltll the
anival In Jeruaalem of United Nations
peace nq:otlator Gunnar V. Jarttn1 1n an
attempt to revive bll peace mil!llon.
Hll only comment after conferences
w!IJI FOHlllJI Mlnlttct Abba Eban WU
thal he Wll tllCOW'apl !hit biJ mlaalon
wu still alive. .
'He did nol menllon the driU 111hut
Lebanon.
LI. Gen. David Elasar, the J1r1ell chl<f
of ataff, warned Lebanon Thuraclay ol
poulblt mllltary reprllll for. an ambush
In whldl llltrrlllu ulln1 barooltla tilled
an Jnaelf ooupl1~ rttumtnc from a Bar
Mll!nh Wodnad.ar. night.
Anothel: auen1l • ambush soon af •
terward ll!lled an larltli soldier and
(stc MIDEMT, Pap I)
ti \-/
J year's operating budget.
Part of the problem w111 caused by a
short. United Fund contrlbutiqn. The YM-
CA wi~ to receive U5,0QO~ but got only
$24,000 since the United P'und was unable
to achieve its goals.
'ilt's the same amount we got laBt
year, but our youth program keeps grow·
ing. The youth program costs us money.
O\Jr adult ~mbership can't support it,''
the Y i!trtCtor &aid.
~ P,roblem area ls t~e YMCA 's
~
!350.0llll mortgage on the factllty ltJell
which Muhllg clcscrlhes as a ''very basic
building." ·
"We're kct>pin gour head barely above
water on pledges to pay the lntcr~t on
ou r capitnl deb~. \\'here tho money for
prlncl pal payments is going to come from
is our major wo rry ." said Muhllg.
An ebulltent, personable man, who has
!JUCcessfully bailed out two other problem
YMCA's in lhe Northwest, Muhlig
(See Yi\tCA, Page Z)
Utt~ Girl, Bfg Job
DAILY PILOT lllff ........
When you stand three !eet, &ix Inches the Jasl pastime you might con-
sider would be playiog on a girls' basketball team, but Linda Gramberg,
11 , Is' doing her best. She's one of 30 girls on the El Toro eleme•!Bry
school team which competes against three other schools in the Saddle-
. hack area: • ·
·Patrol Sergean~ Civilian
Get Award s for Rescue
A M~al of Valor, the highest decors·
lion offered by the CaUlomla Highway
Patrol , was to be awarded to a CHP
sergeant and a civilian Garden Gro ve
man today for pulling the unconscious
body of an El Toro Marine from the
flaming wreckage of an automobile.
Both Staff Sgl. Kenneth W. O'Learr, of
the Santa Ana CHP office and civ1Jian
James Bailey were to receive the hOl)Or
at 3 p.m. in ceremonies at El Toro Ma~ln ir Statk>n. ' ·
Dec. 31 the two men, both Iflend1,
resc d Ma&ter Sgt. Roy 0. J~e1, 42,
from car which had burst Joto Dames
after rlking a tree on a curvy portk>n o(
Trabuco Road. ·
Highway Patrol officials uld tht men
pulled tile badly injured Marine from the
vehicle and took him to the military base
for emergency treatment. They lat"r
returned and helped etxlnguish the fire.
Master Sgt. James tod1y said he hit the
tree after failing to negotiate a curve~ He
believes: the accident occurred on his
way borne after vl!ltlng friends but does
not remember much.
1'1 got a crack on my head aod the doc·
tors thouaht I had brain dama1e. J was
kno•ked oul for six ctaya afterward. I still
Reclama tion Center .
Clo sed in El Toro· f
The bottle Ind glus reclil!Ulllon cenltr
11 21442 El Toro Rold, El Toro Is belnr
<loaed lmmedhllely due to legal com.
pltcatlons, Edward C. Ireland, ad ·
mlnlJtrator of Holiday House announced
today.
' "The prospecUve owners, Holiday
llou,., are belnr forced to dl1<ontlnue
this ecology program due to Jeg•I mat.<
ter1,'1 said Ireland, "and we would Uke to
advise tlie public th>t the recl•m•tlon
center no Io111tr wilt be operattni at tllt1
addn1s."
don't remember what llappened for four
days before the accklent ," he said.
Today, James 1ay1 he is almost hdlJ
recovered but that he does not yet hav•
full use of his right hand. 0 The con-
cussi on didn 't hurt me too much ap-
parently 1Jnce I've been able to score
higher on tests than I ever did before.
Maybe the crack on the bead did me
'°me good,'' he •aid.
The award will be presented by CapL
Wally Edkln1, comrnandine officer ot the
Highway Patrol'• Santa Ana bureau.
''f'm gol111 to be'real ghld lo oee Sgl.
O'Leary and Balley 110 I can expre.aa my
appreciation for pulling me out of that
car and aavlng my life," Jamea said.
You'll Get I t
Earlier· Now
Eartlet delivery of the Saturday ed!Uon
of the DAfLY PlLOT will be In full force
Saturday morning. Ir )'OU don't get your
home-dtlivered copy by 9 a.m., ·please
call by JO a.m., and we guarantee
delivery.
Call 642-4321 from moat ll'eaa. From
South Laguna, Loguna Niguel, Dana
Polrit, San Juan Capistrano, Caplatrano
Beach and S.n Clemente, call toll·free lo
4~420.
Fmm WeatmlNter and nor:thweat llun-
U1111<1n Beach, call toll·frte to 540-!220.
Newlyweds Get Gift
PARIS CUPI ) -S.alonlng Al'fll It, an
Parilla• newlyind1 mlrtled at city hail
will recelva 1 gtn of alr -1 In -ol
United Natlono book ye1r. The JN1Cltap
will Include Viet« Huao·a "L ..
MJaerabler."
.
j
I '
' .
% O#JLY PILOT SS
NY Aetfon· I
Ba·nk Cuts · Rate
~To ·12-year Low
" NEW YORK (AP) -Flnt National Ci·
ty Bank, the naUon'.s ucond largest, an-
nounced todaJ ll Is cutting !ta OoaUng
pr1rne ratt to 4!i percent, the lowest
l<vel In nearly IJ yeara.
The ;a percent reduction ln the
mlnlmum Interest Citibank charges Its
most creditworthy corporate customer•
becomea effocUve Monday.
CIUbaok'1 prtme rate, direcUy tied to
movements 1n the mooey market, ii re-
viewed -Illy. Today!• cut brought the
New York bank'• mlnlmum intem:t to a
level * to 'IO percent below most other
Iara• banlll, . Morgan Guaranty Trust Co., Irving
Trust Co., and Jlanker1 Trust Co. are the
only large banQ which currently have a
4V4 percent minimum lending rate. Most
other major banks have held to the 41'
percent level.
School Bus .
Hit by Auto;,
No Injuries
A acbool bua carrying 85 members ol
tbt San Clamente Hlah School track team
.... ltruck by an aulO Thurlday .......
In a lrealt traffic accident on the Santa
Ana Freeway.
Tbere were no lnJu.rlea, of!lclels at tbt
achoo! reported, and 'damage to both the
bul and the automobile wu minor.
The bus waa returning from a track
meet ln Anaheim when the accident oc--
cumcl at 1:45 p.m. In the aouthbound
Janea of the freeway near the First Strett
oUramp 1n Santa An1, achoo] ottlclall
uld.
Acoonllng to tranoportation aupervllor
Jeo SlratlOn, the bua had •lowed IO about
40 mlleJ en hour In coogested traffic
when a 1tatton w1gon suddenly cut Into
it.I path. cawing it to swerve lnto the
center Jane of the freeway.
Mra. Stratton aald the center Jane wu
clear, but a driver In the fut lane ap-
parently uw the bus coming out of the
comer of h11 eye and thouibt the huge
yellow veblcie was moving fnto his lane.
'!'be drtver, ldenllfied 11 Mark Stanek, 40,
of 11111 Meadowsweet Lant In lrvlne,
swerved lnlO the center divider ol the
freeway.
Mrs. Stratton 1ald the Stanek auto,
alter llr!klni the divider IW1llll back on-
to the freeway and 1trud-the rear of the
bua. The cfrlvar ol the 'bu.s "" fdentUfed
11 Gregory Miller, 19, of 33212 Bluefin
Drive, Dina Point.
A111latant track coach Tony Leon,
riding In the front of the bus, was able to
provide Cellfornla Highway Palrol of.
ficlala wJth the license number of the sta·
tion wagon which was ••pa rtia lly
responsible" for the accident, Mrs. Strat-
ton noted. The station wagon sped oU
following the mlahap.
From PGfJe I
NIXON .•.
Is definitely toward light and not
darkne11.
"It Is the common desire of the Chinese
and American peoples to enhance their
mutual understanding and frjendship and
promote the normalization ot relaUo113
between China and the United States. Tbe
Chinese government and people will work
unswervingly toward this goal."
The champagne was served In White
House glasses bearing the presidential
seal, flown from Washington. Many of the
Qlinese gue!ls took them home as
souvenlra.
OlAH61 COAST
DAILY PILOT H...,.....,_ -·-... c.a ......
OMHO• COAST r"V•lllH INct COM'AHY'
l•~•rl N, W•e4 ,,....., ... ,.,,.. .....
Jee~ It. C1rley
-'"9Wwlf .... a-.1 ......
Tho11111 k•t'l"il
l•rtw·
t~''"'' A. M11111hl•• --.i. Id!.,
Ch1tTt1 H. L•., l lch1rl P'. Nin
.... ltl91'11 Mffltllr9 t:•'1tor• -C.hl -·! "' Wal •• ., """" Iii ...... l•cll: Ult HIW$ll>rt .... ~fYIF'f ~ •..cti1 m ttor..i ... _
..... , ...... llKfll 11'71 t..oi .... -......
.... OW.WI .. ...... II CtlftlM ....
"
Early laat week, a lllllll dnclnnaU
bank, Provident Bank, reduced Ito prlrnt
rate to 4% percent, but no other large
hanka followed wit.
The last t1rne banu g111erally oUered
a. prime rate below 4~ percent wu in
May 1959 when It was at 4 percent On
May 18, 1959, the ratt wu railed IO 41\
percent by lllOll banU aaoa lbt coun-try. .
In enother eoonomlc development !be
government aald today that wboleaale
prlCeJ jumped another efiht-tentbl of I
percent In January.
Tbe rl.se uacUy mai'obed December'•
locreue and Indicated that the upecied
Phaae 2 price bulge bu not yet beaun to fllltten out.
When adjusted for the usual 1u1on1I
trends, the rl.se In the wholesale Index
was only half as great, or foor-tenthl of 1
percent, the Labor Department's an·
nouncement 1ald.
The aeuonal improvement ruulted
from a smaller climb In food end !arm
productt, which rose U percent In
lleoember -the biggest Increase for
those ltema In 10 montha -and I.I per·
ceot In January.
But there wu no comfort for ad-
ministration economlatl In the aeament
of the Index that cover1 Industrial
materials and commodlUea. It lncreesed
fiv .. tentha of I portent, compared with
folll'tentlla of I percent In December. '!'be
lnduatrtal eommod!Ueo art conaldered a
better lndlctlm' of future p r I c e
movementr It retail than the food and
farm prlcel, wbolle movementa are more
erratic.
White Houae economlatl predicted
oubsttnUel lncmoes In both December
and January, the first two full months
following the end of the 90-day prJce-waga
freeu. Early declelona by the Price Com·
mlaslon gave a green light to aubsttntial
a.djustmenta Of prlcea frozen 1lnce Aug.
15.
Executive Says
Hughes Got Away
On His Yacht
MIAMI, Fla. (Al') -A BelUmore
advertlllng es:ecuUve 11y1 he loaned hll
yacht to Howard H11ghe1 10 the
bllltonalre could flee !be Bahamas un-
detected.
"I dld it u a favor for a fr lend, 11 Leon
Sbalfer G/IJnlcit 1ald in a telophone In-
terview 'Ihurlday.
Golnick, owner of a Baltimore, Md., ad-
verU&lnr company bearing hi• name, 1ald
he was 1 neighbor of Hughes for more
than a year 1n the Bahamas.
GolnJck 1ald Hughes left the Bahamas
early the. morning of Feb .. 16 in_ the
Cygnus, Golnlck'I converled, Bl-foot U.S.
Navy sub chaser. He said Hughes stayed
aboard for the 22-hour trip to Florida's
East Coast.
"He got oU 110mewhere In Miami
Thursday morning, I1m not 11ylng ex-
actly where," Golnlck said.
The dockmaster at HWTlcane Hole in
Nassau confirmed that the Cygnus left its
mooring last "Wednesday or Thursday"
and had not returned. He said the craft
wai capable of making about 10 knot1,
which would mean it wouJd take abOut 22
hours to sail from Nassau to Miami.
U.S. Customs officials refused to say
whether Hughes went through customs
but officials In Managua, Nicaragua, 1ald
he arrived there last Thur1d1y aboard a
jetliner chartered from Eastern Airlines.
Gol.ruck said that he did not make the
trip with Hughes and that hls captain,
Robert Rehak, skippered the Cygnus !or
Hughes' trip to Miami.
Golnlck declined to say whether he had
ever seen Hughes.
A Baltimore newspaper columnist
wrote this week that Golnlck received a
call from a Hughes aide about 3 1.m. on
Feb. 11, asking II Golnlck would make
available his boat end skipper within 30
minutes. Golnlck declined to confirm the
report •
"All 111 say ls that I've aot a hell ol a
story to tell .someday when It won't em-
barrass anybody," Golnlclr: uld. "Until
then, t'm not talking. You don't do a
favor for a fr lend and then tell about It."
9 Coast Cities
Named in Suit
By Xerox Firm
Nine Orang1 Coast commun1Ue1 are
among 24 county cities named with
Orange County as defendants today in a
Xerox Corporatk>n lawsu.it that charges
County A.uwor Andrew Hinshaw with
"constnictive fraud" end improper
assessment.
The dupllcaltng equipment manufac-
turers dMl.IDd a refund of hl,m.72 on
their 1'71·71 tu payment of $548.m.U.
They claim lllnsbaw 1rnproperly based
hil uswment total of ID.I million on
Ital prlcea for equlpment and accusorlea
IOld throughout lbt county.
Named u codefendenl.s with the county
are the clu., of COiia Mesa, Fountoln
Valley, HuntizlllOn S..~cb Laguna Beach, Loa Alamitos, New Beach, 8tn
Clemente, San Juan no and Seal
Beach. ' All Dint commun!Ues have lndlrecU,
hcnellted from the lax payment made to
the county, lhe lawsuit states.
,
E'rom Page J
MIDEAST .••
hratl llnlck back early today.
First word ol !be llraell attack came
from Betrul Radio which broadcast a
codtd m .. 10: "Bow..., of ..... ID --•11.• brael In the put bu wltbheld .,,.
nouncement of PunfUve raids unW ltl
forca returned to l&rael.
Tbe llTaell attack brought Immediate
sharp reaction from Egypt. Government
IOW'Cel quoted by the Middle Eut New•
Agency said the ralda would not 'have
been possible unle!S the United Stat"
supplied Phantom Jet fiabter·bombers to
Israel.
An llraell military 1poke1man said
Iaraell leta first ltruck suerrilla en-
campments 22 mllea 1bove the cease-lire
line before armored forces began a seek·
and-destroy ml!slon at Alnata, a town of
4,000 to 1,000 about 211 miles Inside
Lebanon.
'l\!~•JIOkeamtn 11id "direct hll.s" were
observed In three vlllageJ .truck by the
Israeli plinu -Yenl.s, otr .. 1.AlhJr and
IWr Coque.
In the bigger town of Alnata, the I1raell
a:pokesp>.ap said, the Arab population w11
flushed out of 20 houses and that the
house.a: were then destroyed. He called
Alnata the center of guerrilla actlvlUes.
A Lebanese mllitary 11pokesman in a
statement broadcast by Beirut Radio said
enemy warplanes· and artillery opened
fire against southern villages In the
Rachaya area 34 miles southeast of
Beirut.
'Hot Cap' Peppe1•s
Bell p~PP~ iren't the hot variety used in many
Sparush dfshe~ f~ flavor. These bell peppers, on
the Jack Hubbard ranch tD. Irvine, are hot in one
"At the same time, an enemy armored
force esUmated at regimental strength
and supported by two other regimentsl'
11truck the town of Alnata ••whue they
blew up some houses under lnteruilve air
cover 1" the spokesman said.
respect. The farmer has covered each pepper with
a 'hot cap' to make them grow faster. The rancher
plants 11,000 pepper plants per acre.
French-American War E'rom Page I
Orange. County
Water Factory
Plans Sell Out YMC . .\ ... The Orange County Water District bas
On Drugs Paying Off
a be!t 11eller on its bands.
somehow appears confident that he can Jt takes up about a foot on the
shore up the Orange Coast YMCA once bookshelf, comes in five volumes com-
the public relations problem lssolved. plete with schematic drawings, and cos~s
d $50 a set. ' In his one-year tenure he has alrea Y Not exacUy the &tuff or which
By TAKASID OKA patlenUy trying to unravel the full applied several cost-cutting measures best.sellers are usually made, but con--
Christian Science Monitor Service dimensions of the De.louette case and the and straightened out areas of 11tructlon plans and specifications for
PARIS_ The "American connection" much bigger story behind it-the smug-mismanagement. Some of these have of-elements of Wat er Factory 21 -a $22
II beginning to pay off for the French gling of larger and larger amounts of fended elements of his membership, milion facility that will purify 30 million
police. heroin from France into the United gallons of water a day by 1980 -have States. When he streamlined the operation of proved a smash hit.
Obscured by months of public wrangl-h ill th the swimming pool, handball courts and Three printings have sold out for a In h Am · r in The drug reac es Marse es in sou 4 g, Frenc · erican coopers !On em France from Turkey in the form of cut down some of the open building total of 250 sets, and officials report there
narcotics control Is recording en· morphine base, and is there refined into priv!leges to y members, feathers were is still a demand for more.
couraglng results. the fine white powder that is pure heroin. th 1 jllllll "There's been much more interest than
The latest Is the arrest of Dominique French traffickers are estimated to have ruffled to the point at some peop e · we expected, 11 said Neal Cline, asslnant.
Mariani 1n Paris Saturday and his being made $75 million from this operation in packed up and left. manager of the district.
formally charged Wednesday with sup-1971. Muhlig further dropped a majority of The water facility Is the first of Us kln•
plying .f.f.5 kilograms of pure heroin to Last year the American Bureau of service contracts, eliminated staff posi4 in the country, noted Clint.
Roger Delouette. He was arrested at Port Narcotics and Dangerous Drugs had 23 tions , trimmed down health and accident Water Factory 21 -to be located in Elizabeth, N.J., last April on charges of Fountain Valley-will desalinate enough agents working in Europe, mostly In insurance for members, cut down office h .smuggling the heroin lnto the Unled sea water and reclaim enoug aewage
S France, while the French central expenses and rearranged his ataff. water to meet 10 percent of Orange Coun-
tates. narcotics squad had two liaison agents as All of these are expected to have a ty's water needs by 1980, officials .say1 It
The Delouette case erupted Jnto one of ~~~. "American connection" in New money-saving effect, but not eno~.,to is the first project of Its kind 1n the coun-
the biggest public scandals in Franche Ja1edst cover the impending deficit. try.
year, entailing sensaUonal charges ur Working patiently and methodically Coples of the plan.a for the reclamaUon
across the Atlantic and within the rumor together between Sept. 2 and Feb, 7, the "We're just going to have to get rid of facility and support elements of the
mills of French politics. ' French and American drug.control the rich man'• club image," Muhlig desallnlz.atlon plant have been shipped all
. Delouette, it turned out, had worked at authorities atTested 23 persons, some ·in said. over the U.S.
one Ume for the StiECE, the French the United States, some here in France. "We hope that all t41s interest Will
equivalent of the U.S. Cent r a 1 It was charged that these persons I Sh D result ln lower bids, 11 sald Cline. 1'Wben
Intelligence Agency. After being ar· belonged IO a network headed by Joseph p ant to Ut OWll competition ta thl.s stllf, It sometimes
rested, he claimed that he had been Slgnoll, manager of a bar near the Arc de causes people to try a lltUe harder to
supplied the heroin, worth·$12 million on Triomphe, who was arrested with rune OAKLAND (UPI) -SCM Corp. keep the price down."
the black market in New York, by a others Jan. l~. Marchant is closing its calcuJator plant, Cline said that part of the ex-
former superior in the SDECE, a Col. The French poUc! believe that Delou-putting some 300 persons out of work. traordinary interest In the plant may be
Paul Fournier. His charge was taken ette received the heroin he smuggled to.-'Henry B. Childs, general manager of its novelty. He noted that copies of plans
seriously enough by the American the United ·States not.from Colonel Four-the Marchant Electronics Operating -not light reading material by any
authorities for a grand-jury indictment to nler but from Dominique Mariani, a Division, told employea this week that stretch of the lmaglnation -have been
be drawn up naming Colonel Fournier as known criminal 11atd to be a member of markeUng conditions in the Industry led mailed to some people who have no direct
an accOmpllce of Delouette. the Siinoll netwotk. to the shutdown. interest in bidding on the project. SDECE officials lndlgnanlly denied the . ..c....:.....:::=..:::==::::.-------'-'-----------------'---'-----
Delouette charge, and the colonel in que.s-
tion ap°peared before a French Judge In-
vestigating the case -Judge G1ibrlel
RoU3!el -IO affirm his lnoocence.
At this )Xlint a former employer of
Delouette, Col. Jean Batberol, a on~time
French ambassador to Uruguay and now
head of an agrlCuJtural cooperation
11ervice believed to be a -cover for French
intelligence agents, gave an interview
saying that Colonel Fournier's real name
was Paul Ferrer.
While Amerlcan congressmen accused
French authorities of collusion with
narcoUca smuggler.a and protecting the
"big wheels," French newspapers had a
field day speculating about "a settling of
accounls'' within compeUng French in-
telligence networks or even between
SDECE and the CIA.
Meanwhile, French and American
police and narcotics-control agenta were
Plaintiff Wins
Damages Claim
After Accident
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -It wu the
be11t of times, the worst of tlmes for the
courthouse punsters.
"Tusk. Tusk," said one.
''A weighty decision," said another.
Ending the most ponduoua peraonal l.n-
fury ault ever heard ln Los Angeles
Superior Court, Judge Juliua M. TiUe
awarded damage1 Thurlday.
Before the accident two yean ago, th1
plalntUf danced and water allled.
Theo came th~ Mafcb 311, 1961 car·
truck crub on lntenjate 10 In Rl•araldo
County In which tl\t .,Plaintiff 1uffered
wblplub.
Now, &aid her attorney, lh• 11 to
lethargic 1he rarely atands on two leas.
The Judge calculated the Injury
damqea at 14,lSOO.
Owner of tho vhlcle In whlcb tho p)aln-
Uff w11 rldlnf, Tlld De Wayoe, w11
awarded ~.850 dama~ froll\ tht defe .. dant, Michal J. Mathw , JS, PJi>o Rivera.
Tho plalnlllf, Bimbo · r., a performing
llephant who u1ed to eam up to $IOO a
dl'ly, was not in court when the verdict
waJ announced.
' '
SALE ENDS IN 2 DAYS
FINEST UPHOLSTERY IN THE AREA AT REDUCED PRICES
Largo selection of upholstery
from such well known lin es os
H1nrodon, Sherrill, Margo
Carson and others at reduc-
ed prices, don't woit. Only 2
doys loft.
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LAGUNA BIACH TORRANCE
SO North p oaal Hwy. 49USS1
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 Wtslcllfl Dr., 642·2050
OPIN P•IDAY 'Tll t
23649 MIW!homo Blvd.
12111 ,, .. ,.,, 0,.. ...... 'lff '
Pret..!Ntf f1""'-hilt_, AMIW. .......... lo-..MSID
,.._. T•M ,,_ MtMI .t 0...,. CMlltr 1'4 .. tlfl
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Fire l(ills
At Least
18 P eople
... SAO PAULO, Brazil (UP1) -Firemen
discovered eight more bodies in the rulns
or the fire-ravaged Plranl building today
bringing the death toll of the worst blaze
In Sao PaWo In several decades to at
lea1t II persons.
Bodle& of the latest victims were found
as firemen conducted a floor-by-floor
search of the gutted 2a.story building
from which helicopters, braving soaring
flames , airlifted more than 400 persons to
urety.
Most of the deaths resu1ted from burns
or injuries when terrified shoppers tried
to leap from windows to safety. More
than 400 persons were injured, many of
them when they jumped out of lower
floor windows to the ground below.
1\1ore 1han 12 hours after the blaze
started it still raged out of control.
Sixteen hellcopters braved the flames
and smoke to land on the top of the
Plranl building and airlift hundreds of
persons trapped lhere to safety. It took
lhem si1' hours, sometimes with flames
~JI but surrounding them, for the
hellcopters to get everylxxly safely off
the roof.
··it was a miracle how many people
they took off lhe root," said Odair Guer·
ra, 21, a Brazilian air force recruit who
helped Jn tbe airlift carried out by air
force, municipa l, state and private
llelicopters.
Guerra said "the helicopters could not
at first get to the roof because the flames
were so high," but finally managed to
land on a heliport atop the buil<ting. He
said a number of people taken to safety
were suffering from smoke inhalation.
The fire in the 10-year-old building
broke out about 3: IS p.m. on the second
floor. The first five floors housed a de·
partmenl store while the rest of the build·
ing was devoted to office space.
There was no indication of arson, fire
official said.
BUILDING ENGULFED
At L111t 16 Die
ManiJ a-ar ea Mayor
Killed in A111)n1 sh
!i.IANILA (UP I) -Gunmen shot and
killed Cavite City Mayor Manue l S. Rox·
as and his driver today. opening fire on
the mayor's Dodge spoi::ts car from am-
bush.
Roxas. elected to his first term RS
mayor last November. wa s the third
Manila-area mayor killed in the Jest four
months. -·
Deep Spa ce
Probe Bears
Message
By HOWARD BENEDICT
AP ·--<• Wrlt.r CAPE KENNEDY, f ie. -In the n .. t
attempt . to use a llatelllte to com-
municate · with intelligent beings in outer
space, a spacecraft scheduled tor launch
Sunday will carry a plaque that tells In
scientific symbols when it was launched,
from where and by what kind of people.
AJong with the symbols. the plaque on
Pioneer 10 bears the naked figures of a
man and woman, the man's rJ&h1 hand
raised in a gesture of good will.
The experiment ls slrlcUy passive.
lnhabitants of another star system would
have to capture the payload to get the
. message.
National Aeronautics end S pac e
Administration officials say the chances
are remote that anyone will find It.
But they note Pioneer 10 ja the first
men-made object intended to el':ape our
Jiolar system, that it will lrevel for
millions of years, perhaps forever, into
other galaxies, and that no one knows if
other civilizations exist out there.
Pioneer lO's primary mission is to be
the first ·spacecraft to explore the largest
planet in this solar system, Jupiter, and
its puzzling red spot. To reach the distant
target, the probe will be hurled away
from earth at 32.000 miles an hour, faster
than any previous space vehicle.
Even so, it will take 22 months to reach
the vicinity of Jupiter. After
photographing and probing the planet
with sensors, it will zip deeper and
deeper into space, beyond the reach of
the sun 's influence.
Because of the possibility that there is
intelligent life elsewhere in the universe.
the idea or the plaque was suggested by
t"'O Cornell University astronomers and
the wife of one of them.
Or. Carl Sagan, director of the Cornell
I~aboratory for Planetary Studies, ex-
plained :
Fr1<1111, F~uor1 25, 1972
Pact A pproved
British Strike
By Miners Ends
LONDON (AP) -Brllain'1 280.000 c<llt
miners ended the.Ir naUonwlde strike to-
day, casting an overwhelming major ity
vote that guaranteed n 11peedy windup oC
the powef crhd11 disrupting Brit.ain't
et'Onon1y and Idling milllona.
Bombs, Fir es R avage
N. lreland's Capital
The miner!! voted 210,039 to 7,511 to ac-
<'cpt a big pay offer from the Natlo~al
Coal Board. The offer of 1 20 percent pay
incre~se 1ves b fl s e d on the recom•
n1endttt1ons of a government-appoi nted
court of inquiry . Miner!! were earning tn
avcr11g~ uf $49.50 weekly before the
strike.
The miner."! will go back to work Mon•
dll\. -
The vote 11·as t11kcn over the pa11t twct da~ s end tl1r resu lts, announced tocfay, BELFAST. Northern Ireland CUPll -
Explosions and fire hit targets in BeU1st
and several Ulster cities today in the sec-
ond ronseculive day of bomb and arson
attacks in the capital and outlying areas.
An explosion ripped through a bus sta-
tion in .Antrim, severely damaging the
building and 13 buses, 1i1nd lire rated 1n
unmanned customs post near Lon-
donderry, the army said.
Bon1bs smashed two p hon o gr a p h
record shops in the center or Belfast,
touctllng off bursts of anger among shop-
pers against the ouUawed l r i s It
Republican Army (IRA).
"They should be shot -not inlerned ,"
scre<1n1ed a woman bystander when a
bomb shattered the llarl and Churchill
record shop and warehouse in Wellington
Place .
"This is murderous.'' a po 1 i c e
spokesman barked, as constables carried
away a middleaged woman who fainted
when the bomb exploded .
An army spokesman said two nlen car-mean! Iha! officials could go ahead with
rying guns planted the Wellingtcn Place plans ror 1111 industrial r!CQvery after
bomb and 11et • five.gallon drun\ or coal begu1s returning to power generating
gasoline beside It to feed nan1es ~·hen the st11tions
bomb blew up. Goverruurnt oHicials said power cuts
Just before thot blast . a youlh bicycled were cxpeftcd to continue for several
up lo anolhcr record shop in Queen 's week s, until coal supphr!I sre built up
Arcade. a few hundred yards aw ay, a~ain al J)()ivt•r sl&tions, but thnt the vole
police said. lie parked and Jocked his lo end tl1c strike would per1nlt gradually
bike then ran. easing rl•strictions on power usnge.
Police tried lo clear lhe area and the The strike, first nationwide etoppage by
bicycle bomb exploded. slightly injuring a thr miners since 1926, began Jfln. 29.
British soldier. a policen1an and five Thl' nllne1·s originally asked for ll 47
civilians. All were treated in hosplLaJs for percrnt average increase In the ba~lc
flying glass t"ul s. police said.. weekly r11tc of $49.40 for wtdcrground
The youth escnped, worker!!, Tl 1ey later scaled down their
A ~nib placed hy four n1cn ripped purl den1an1ls tu 11 percent and rejected an
of the roof from 1he Malont Golf club in offer of 7.9 percent.
suburban Belfast and caused other TI1e go\'ernment appointed Lo rd
damage tn the building, an arn1y \Vilberforce, a senior judge, to head the
spokesman said. court of inquiry. This recommended 11 20
The spokesn1an sa id British troops ;1r. percent nvernge incre ase. Later ncgotla·
rested 35 secu rily suspccls in the 24 lions produced more fringe benefits, in·
hours ending early today l'luding longer vaca tions . ,~======~==========~
Senators Vote to Allow
Lin1ited Bus Funding
WASHINGTON (AP 1 defeated .
Muskie Should Capture
New York Delegation
Working with Sagan on the project were
his wife. Linda Salzman Sagan, a painter
and film maker, and Dr. Frank Drak e.
director of the National Astronomy and
Ionosphere Center at Cornell.
21 ·Americans
Hurt in Fight
Close to Saig on
With the support nC its liberal
members, the Senate h1111
voted to allow federal .spen-
ding for busing only at the re-
quest of local school officials.
The provision was part of a
rompromise amendment ap-
proved Thursday as a preface
to debate on several tough
proposals to outlaw busing.
The con1promise proposal
offered by Democratic Leader
Mike M a n s fie 1 d and
Republican Leeder 11ugh Scott
was adopted on separate votes
on its three parts -51 to 37.
1
50 lo 38 and 79 to 9.
The outcome was a setback
for senatorl!I who oppose all
busing. 1'hey denounced It as
meaningless and a hoalt. and
said It would not stop any of
the busing oow being ordered
by federal courts.
w• will b• close d
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27
for inventory
e, CLAY F. RICHARDS
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI) -Unless he
stumbles in earlier primaries, Sen. Ed·
mund S. Muskie should win the lion's
sharf: of New York's 278 delegates to the
Democratic national convention.
Surpri!ingly, the strongest oontender to
the Maine senator in the scramble for the
CAM PAI GN '72
largesl single delegation to the ·con-
vention is not New York City Mayor John
V.1..indsay, but Sen. George McGovern of
South Dakota. He captured the en-
dorsement or the party's left wing New
Democratic Coalition CNOCI.
Developments in the 21 primaries prior
to New York's on June 20 may alter the
pict ure. But, at present, polls show
~1u:skie the popular leader, McGovern the
runner-Up, and Lind.say back in the pack
with Sens. Hubert Humphrey of Min-
nesota and Henry Jackson of Washington.
The Republican party, which will stnd
a smaller 88-man delegation to
California, is tightly controlled by Gov.
Nelson A. Rockefeller, who will work ac·
lively as President Nixon's campaign
manager in New York state.
The Republican delegation should go to
the convention solidly pledged to the
President.
New York'!! Conservative Party en·
dorsed Rep. Jolin M. Ashbrook (R-Ollio),
a move that will not have too much im·
.pact on the Republican primary because
Sen. James L. Buckley, elected on the
Conservative line, has not joined in the
endorsement.
Neither Ashbrook nor Rep. Paul
McC\oskey (R-Calif. ), has campaign
organizations in New York and <tid not in-
dicate if they will challenge Nixon here.
Both parties face a problem in ready-
lng slat.es for the p r imary. The
delegates will run in 39 congressional
districts which must be reapportioned
before the primary, a step t h e
Legislalure is expected to take next
month.
Th~ names of the presidential can-
didates appear nowhere on the primary
ballot, making it difficult !or the voter to
pick the delegates who support the man
he wants.
Muskie. whose family still lives in his
home town of Buffalo, N.Y., probably
contributed singl!icantly to Humph~y·s
400,00l)..vote victory over Nixon in 1968.
He drew large crowds in four recent
upstate visits .
He hes a strong organization in New
York State. John F. English. the state's
national committeeman, Is Muskie's na-
tional campaign coordinator, while Wil-
liam McKeon of Auburn is directing much
of tile state operation.
Lindsay's recent conversion to the
Democratic party has oot won him in·
l!llant loyalty from old line party leaders.
Albany Mayor Erastus Corning II prob-
ably su mmed up their feelings best
when he termed Lindsay .a "political
chameleon.''
There are no overwhelming issues
peculiar to New York State.
SAIGON (UPI J -Thirty -four
Americans were wounded in clashes with
Corrununist guerrillas today, includipg 21
in a five-hour battle only 42 miles from
Saigon and seven in an ambush of a U.S.
Army truck convoy in the Central
Highlands. ·
A number or sources said earlier Com-
munists planned a major offensive duriflg
Preaident Nixon 's trip to Peking but of-
ficers refused to define the increased
nu mber of attacks as part of a new Com-
munist drive.
The 21 men wounded in the batlle 42
miles east of Saigon were the heaviest
American casualties since two Americans
were Jtilled and 34 wounded in a fight 34
miles northwest of Saigon on April 17,
1971.
The wounded men were all members of
the 1st Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment,
which was Gen. George Armstrong
Custer's outfit at the battle of the Lillie
Big Horn in 1876.
A SJKlkesman said the battle near
Saigon started when a U.S. patrol from
Artillery Base Cross Sabers, located 50
miles east of Saigon, ran into a guerrilla
force.
The Americans called in jet fighter·
bombers, helicopter gunships and
artillery. The guerrillas broke off contact
and escaped into the jungle five hours
later. Ther was no immediate report of
guerrilla casualties.
A vote was expected today
on an amendment b y
Republican Whip Robert F.
Griffin that would s tr i p
federal courts of power to
order busing as a means of
achieving integration.
Southern senators are resdy
with other antibuslng riders if
the Griffin amendment is
9 1l1issi1ig
After Fire
FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP)
-Nine perS()ns are missing
and teared dead in a fire that
destroyed the Nordale Hotel.
police reported T h u r s d a y
night.
A search of the rubble from
Tuesday's fire was delayed
unlil Thursday because of the
intense heat. fire officiall!I
said. No bo<lies had been found
by late Thursday, however.
Occupants or the hotel
jumped from second and third
sklry windows, to escape the
fire, but officials of Fairbanks
Community Hospital said none
of the 10 persons treated there
suffered serious injury.
Flanieprofing Sttadied
Aides See Scarred Child
WASHINGTON I UPI) -In
1967, the year Eliza b eth
Brehm was born, Congress
passed a law requ iring
flameproo£ing stand1rds for
things like chi l dren's
u,,, ......
OFFICIALS SEE FLAMf·SCAltRED CHILD
M,._ Brehm Holda O.Ufhltr &liubeth, 5
•
nightwear.
When Elizabeth got a cotton
flannelette nightie for her
third birthday, there were still
no standard11. Put to bed at
her uncle's house, Elizabeth
grabbed a cuff link box off 1
dresser. She found a cigarette
Ughter inside. It had no fluid,
but it sparked enough to bum
he.r nightie.
When her father got to her,
ahe was engulled in names.
The docton thought she would
die but ahe didn't. Two years
and 30 operaUom I a t e r .
EllUlbelh has probably suf.
fered more pain thin most
people endurt in 1 lifetime.
But 1he'1 walking again, 1nd
Thursday 1he walked onto the
atage at the Commerce
Department auditorium 1nd
lhowe.d htt 1ear1 to five
gove.mment officlall who are
oonalderlng an Industry peU·
tlon to weaken the new
nameprooOng at.andardl for
children'• nightwear.
The Brehms have filed a
$1.1 million 11111 In federal
court against the wuver and
tbe retailer of the aarmenL
WORLD
SAVINGS
IS NOW OPEN
SATURDAYS
Commencing February 19, our
Regional Office in Laguna Beaoh,292
South Coaot Highway at Forest Ave·
nue, 494-9481, will be open Selurdays
Imm 10:00 AM. to 4:00 P.M.
Theee added MMce hours are for our cut-
tomers who work Monday through Friday
and who would rii.e to conducl their nnenclal
bulinesa in the llllurely 11mocphere ot the w-.
RtlOUICllfl#ftl00.000.000
WOBLDSA
ltHIJ L01oN AMOCIAnoN
HOW: c:mc£ l'l'NWOOD. CALIP'OflNIA
RegicNI 011iOee: Btwtwood/Folnlln Ylt11y /Llgona. 6eachfHortMdot/
°""""18'n-/8'n Dltgoiw. Mll<ll&/Wl-..... /
Woodland Hiii
!
The compromise was sup-
ported by a combination or
llbei'els and moderates, many
of wbom said they hoped It
would allay much of the con-
cern about busing
ii;;;;;;miii
bJ111\1,.u1ti t1ul e "'''''' th1r9e
7 fe1h lo11 11l111J, 111wpo,l 11;111l1P •44-1070
Cil ANTI
TRU KLOAD
PLANT SALE!
FIRST QUALITY
IN OUR PARKING LOT
SAT. AND SUN. ONLY
1 GAL.
c
• FERNS • AZALEAS
AND MANY MORE
TROPICAL VARIETIES
TO CHOOSE FROM
JC Penney
24 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH ONLY
>
• I
•
. '.' -.
• DARY PILOT· EDIT-ORIAL PAGE
Fixed Terms Needed
A proposa l that the Laguna Beach Ci ty Council
adopt so1ne logical policy regarding terms of office for
planning com missioners could, if followed through, be
of great service in establishJng continuity of effort for
the commission. •
In the past1 planning commission ap point1nents
have carried no srecific tenure, the ap~intees serving
as lon g as they lei like coping with the Job, or the co un·
cil felt like keeping them in office.
In the past several years, planning comm issioners
have been in and out of office like y~yos, one
•r,pointee serving only a few weeks before tendering
h s resignation. And the last city council election was
followed immediately by dismissal of an entire com·
mission -quite permissible under existing policy.
With the establishment of fiJced terms, staggered
to provl~.e continuity, appointees could be expected to
agree to a given term of service and a change in council
majority could not result in wholesale dumping of ex•
perienced commissioners.
San Clemente's Growtl1
San Clemente, like the rest of the South Coasl.
finds itself facing runaway growth, armed only with a
master plan and zoning that will probably require a
new deep study. ·
Within the city, thousands of acres of undeveloped
ra?)ch land now Jie in the hands of out-of-state universi-
ties which have planned to earn a profit from the prop-
erty. ·
That can only 1nean large-scale development.
Thousands of those acres are a blank spot on the
city general plan, yet will be on the market soon.
Coupled with the looming problem is the prospecL
of adding perhaps five new element! to the eeneral
plan , Including an environmental segment.
The city's smaU planning staff already Is swam~d
wi th workaday tasks of processing new development 1n
the city. There is no time left to conduct an adequate
planning study.
Coun cUmen recentl y agreed to hire one new plan·
ning aide to help with the load.
But with what is looming, one ne\Y man might not
be enough.
A General Guideline
For a lime during the intermediate discussions of
the land use element of Laguna's general plan, it ap-
peared that the entire docu~ent, like so ~any g-eneral
plans in so many .commun1t1es, could easily wind up
on so1ne dusty city hall shelf.
\Vh ile proponents and opponents of community
gro\vth \vrangled over whether a population projection
or 20,000 would be more acceptable than a figure of
28,000, planning commission studies of dependent ele-
n1ents -notably open space and hillside development
-were left more or less up in the air.
After a great deal of word·and-ligure-juggiing,
th e co 1nmission and council at last have reached an ac·
cord, coriting to the rather obvious conclusion that any
csli1nate of the city's 1990 population can hardly be
1nore than a general guideline and should be reviewed
at least annually.
'rhc rest of the land use element seems acceptable
to a!J and it now appears that ultimate adoption, and
in1plementation of an authentic general plan may be
more than a dream.
s
•
Triu11iph for Kissin9e1·, Too Miss Christie
A ban dons Her
Jaycee
Record
Sets the Warming Up the Chinese
PEKING, CHINA -Jo'or a few hours ln
the capital or the Chinese People's ·
1\epublic it looked as if President Nixon
had gotten orf to a poor start on his Asian
Peace Mission. His' reception at the
a:irport was correct but cool, and there
were no crowds lo
soeak or enroute to
the gue.st house
whtre he was put up
for his five-day visit.
There were si1t:ns
that Nixon was dis-
appointed by his re-.
ceptlon . The outlook
qulckl1 changed
when Cbainnan Mao
received him for an hour's talk im-
mediately after his arrival, as was cer-
tainly due an American President, and
Premier Chou En-Lal put on a state din-
ner in the soaring Great Hall of the Peo-
ple which has been the slaglng area of so
much revolutionary endeavor since it wu
built in the massive Tein Ao Meo Square
In 1958-11159.
NO DOUBT SOME lies have been told
in the Great Hall, as they have been in
many other government centers of the
world, but nothing would be more
ominous than having what Chou En-Lai
and Nixon talked about turn out to be
fal se.
The way they acted, as much as what.
they said, indicated a clear intention oo
the part of both to create a new and con-
structive relationship between the two
huge nations on oppaslte sides of the
Pacific . 11le plain truth is they don't
know what that relationship will be ex-
cept that it 1hall end hostllitles and pro-
vide time for the solution of seemingly in·
--
"' '•· i.
· Ricl\ard Wilson •
soluble problems.
JT WAS A TRJUJ\1PH for Dr. llenry A.
Kissinger, too, and he sat practically pur-
ring while Nil:on and Chou En·Lai pro-
claimed for au the world to hear their
joi.rl't intentions of ending the era of
Chinese--Ameflcan collision. Dr. Kissinger
had arranged -i~ ali. and the big· scene
was stage-managed exactly to his ex-
pectaticins, including the discussion with
Chairman Mao right at the beginning.
American offici!lls had been worried
about subtle hints from Chinese or-
ficialdom tliat the President of the United
States could not be treated with any more
than formal respect and certainly not
with enthusiasm accorded China 's friends
from Africa or other parts of Asia .
''YOU OUGHT TO see what we can do
in the way of receptions when we have
diplomatic relations with a friendly coun·
try," one .Chinese official said. Others
took the lipe that the fore ign office mere-
ly arranged for such visits. The
"government,'' it was said, decided such
matters u the warmth and size of
organized receptions which have been
staged beautifully in the past.
Jn this case 1'the government" decided
to play it cool while giving Nixon exactly
what he wanted in the rorm of high level
respect and the expression of lofty
aspirations, but without commitments on
such big problems as the future of
Taiwan and the continuing American
military presence in Asia .
Nixon is spencting the next severa l days
trying to warm up the Chinese by suc h
Nixonian tactics as' mixing with the of-
ficial guests sitting at round tables in the
Great Hall and sipping innumerable
toasts with them from a tiny glass which
barely wet his lips.
CHOU EN·LAI sits through this kind or
thing imperturbably, like one American
politician watching another pulling off
crowd-pleasing stunts.
A great many Americans who are
watching Nixon's performance in Peking
rind it ha rd to believe. They pinch
themseh•es to make sure they are not
dreaming that Nixon is fraternizing in a
great Ccmmunist power center, and that
it is really the arch-revolutionaries Mao
and Chou with whom this once great
champion of anti-cOmmun ism is rubbing
shoulders and exchanging toasts.
TO SUCH A~1ERJCANS Peking is a
kind of stage set, anyway, as if drawn
from a revolutionary opera depicted in a
picture magazine. But it is all true -the
uniformly blue-clad populace on bicycles,
the art rorm or huge re vol utionary
slogans emblazoned in red Chinese
characters against the drab background
of the mid·winter Asiatic scene.
And it was all true that Nixon sat in the
Great Hall of the People on Tein An Men
Square with the highest officials of the
Communist hierarchy who have imposed
upon a nation of at least 700 million an
organizational infrastructure based upon
every principle Nixon is against.
The Chinese orchestra played experUy
"America the Beautiful" while Nix on
mingled with the members of Cho En·
Lai's power structure, and what could be
a better opening scene than that?
They May Make Us All Si~k
The Ba.odwagon: It's definitely a
political year, according to publishers'
catalogues, and we ma y be as sick of the
boob as we are lhe rheloric before
November. A sampling, and this just for
1pring:
GORE VIDAL, professional Democrat
and author of "Afyra Breckenridge,"
among other tiUes, joins Philip Roth
("Our Gang'') and the movie "A1illhouse :
A White Comedy" in attempting Iv
dethrone the incumbent President. "An
Evening WUb Richard Nixon,'' <Random )
is the text of Vidal 's play, apparently
done in a "This "f-s Your Lile" forma t.
Based on fi1r. Nixon's own words from
his earliest political days.
"WHAT MAKES SPIRO RUN!" by
OAANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
.Rob<n N. Wrtd, l'oblish<r
Thoma.s K etvil, Editor
Alb1rt \V, Bale.s
Ed.Uoriol Paoe Edd.or
Thi editorlll ~ nt the Daily
PJlot .eekt. to Inform 11nd 1tlmu-
late rteden bi Pf"CM'ntln;: this
newapa,p!!l"a 01Hnlo111 •nd ootn·
mmtuy on toP'er ot lnl,.~1 11.nd ritftlOot.IK"f!, by prottklinR' a. forum
for !l!;! UIJfl'llfon of ·our re1.dcr1'
cipirdoM, •nd bf pttsenlint lhe di..enie "~wlnll (I( tnformrd ob-
9'fWl'I and apokeuntn on topla;
olU..""1.
Friday. t"eP,.uuy 26, IJ/2
..
The. Bookman
\Vashingtoo reporter Jo~eph Albright
(Dodd) js a generally unflattering run-
down on the Vice President's career.
"Spiro Agnew'' America," by Theo Lip~
man Jr. (Norton), is a friendlier
analysis of his professional development.
"White Knlgflil: The Rise of Spiro
Agnew." by Jules Wilcover (Random),
exantines the "contradictions" in his
personality.
"TED KENNEDY: Triumphs and
Tragedies," by Leste r David (Grosset ),
is a composi te portrait drawn rrom many
interviews with the Senator's fr iends and
l!X'!. "The F.ducatlon or Edw1rd Kta-
aedy,'' by Burton Her sh (Morrow ). Is
both a biography and at1 analysis of the
Kennedy uperltnce in America.
''Atl'GOVERN,'1 by Robert Sam AnSM
(Holt). uamints lhe ca:reu or thb 1011 or
a Soutb Dakota minister from birth to his
declared candidacy.
"THE LAST OF the Cold War
Liberals" ls • look at the career and
poUUcal cn!do of Stnalor Henry W.
;'Scoop" Jackson by tbe team of Wllllam
Prochnau and Richard W. Larson (Pren-
llctJ.
'4'11(E UNf'lNISUEO JOURNEY/' by
Senator Edmund S. Muskie (Doubleday),
contalos the Mafnt Democratic Senator's
1h9ugbts on hi1 ram.Uy, envlronmcnt,
poverty, ciUtJ, personallUe1 (the Ken-neey1, Hwnpbrey, Mike ManaOeld, Golda
l\leir, Nasser. etc.).
"ALMOST TO THE PRESIDENCY' A
Biography of Two Americans," by Albert
Eisele {Piper), looks over the lives and
careers of Hubert Humphrey and Eugene
McCarthy, their common origins and con-
tinuing rivalry.
0 TUE l\1cCLOSKEY CHALLENGE,"
by Lou Cannon (Dutton), i1 a biography
or the maverick GOP Congressman and
Nixon critic. It follows McCloskey's own
book, "Truth and Untruth: Pollltcal
Deceit in America" (Simon & SChuster).
AND PAT PAULSON'S ''How to Wage
a SuccessruJ Campaign for the Presiden-
cy" (Nash) is billed as a handbook based
on the idea "You can fool all of the peo-
ple some of the time."
William Hogan
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
Will the carriers of the Ed Lorr
recall pelilion also circulate both
~ides of the story! Probably not
They're seldom bi~tactual, or everr
uni.factual.
-A.N.M.
"''' ,..,.,,.. r.lltttt ,_,. .,,.... .. --ltt "'"' .. "" .........,, "-11111
... .... ..... " .... ., ..... Otlt¥ ""'·
True Metier Straight
To the Editor : '
l\failbox ·
'
En route to a plane, I detoured in the
airport long enoug h to pick up a
paperback book for the flight. Seeing a
new Agatha Christie, 1 bought it on tije
fly , boarded the plane, and setUed down
for a good read.
I take strong excep tion to your recent
article conceming the Laguna Beach ·-
Jaycee Dart Toumament. Your reporter
inferred that the Jaycees disreg arded
lhe fire marshal's warning concerning
the crowd capacity of the Riviera Room
of the Hotel Laguna.
To set the record straight, there was a
complaint fil ed with the fire department
concerning the crO\\'d Saturday. The fire
marshal came to· the tournament Satur-
day evening and met with the president
or the Jaycees and the hotel manager.
and advised them there were too many
people in the room. Since the events were
almost completed for the evening he
allowed us to finish the matchf:S.
Letter! trom readtt! are welcome.
Normally iorittrs should convey thtir
me!sages '11 300 words or less. The
righ: to condense letters to fit ipacc
or eliminate libel is re!trvecl. All let-
ters must incl<Wt sif111.0tlLre and mai£.
i11g address. Out namt.s may bt witJa..
held on request if sujficitnt reason
is apparent. Poetry will not be pub-
lished.
Quelle catastrophe aerinne! As
Hercule Poirot would be the first to ex-
claim. For in this
book, called "Pas-
senger to Frank-
furt ," Miss Ch~islie
has only one victim
-the unwitting read-
er who imagined he
"'BS getting a mys-
tery story.
In this perfectly
dread ru I "extra-
vagan1.a." as she calls it, Miss
Christie has aba ndoned the field in which
she is superlative, to engage in a spy
story of incredible witlessness, dealing
with a worldwide plot by "youth" to
overthrow the established order.
AS A GREAT fan of Miss Christie's in
lhe past, I found it hard to believe that
the same person wrote this farrago of
nonsense ; except that there are too many
similar instances in literature and the
arts generally, where masters in one
form become dubs in another. And it
usually happens w)Jen they try to be more
ambitious than they should.
Jn this case, Miss Christie is obviously
so alarmed by the current turbulence in
the world that her own fears and horrors
have impinged on her dramatic sense, and
she has confused the reality with fic-
tion.
Something of the same sort happened
to Sir Conan Doyle, who became con-
vinced that tilil: Sherlock Holmes stories
were trivial, and wrote a number of
mediocre "serious" novels that he felt
would immortalize him.
IN ftfUSIC, Sir Arthur Sullivan Celt
denigrated by being solrily identified with
Gilbert's comic operas. and did some
solemn things on his own that merely
pointed up his secood·ratedness as a
"great'' composer.
Even the ·magnificent Henry James
came a cropper when he abandoned fic-
tion for the theater, and wrote some
plays that were, quite rightly, booed off
the London stage.
(One or the few men who learned his
lesson fast was: Bernard Shaw, "ho began
his writing career with five perfectly
awful novels, and never again wrote
another one after be became a success(uJ
dramatj.,t).
IN OUR OWN TIME, Leonard Bern-
stein b an embarrassln& example ol a
ta lent who will not Jet well enough • IooO;
a splendid oooductor, and. modish com-
-of .,ce11ent popular scores, he
keeps trying to write "import.ant" mus.le
which succeeds only In beini hollo• and
pretenUoul.
Alter Ill-some books In the mystery
lield, Ml" Chrlalle may be justUiably
t~ed ol p<nnlni thtH er y p t I c
amusement.I: but then she should reUre,
and not lnruct upon her ~r.ge audience
an old woman'• consternation al our
chaos, our crlmtnallly •nd our coll ol
youth. Jane Marple would bavt known
bolter than lo 1tep out ol cllaraCIU.
\
ON SUNDAY morning, the fire marshal
met the hotel manager.· tournament
chairman, and the president of the
Jaycees. He told them that the room
capac ity was limited lo 170 people.
Everyone agreed to control the crowd.
The Jaycees established monitors at
the outside entrance and tum'ed awa y
spectators when the room reached
capacity. The Jaycees also set up tables
and chairs outside the hotel on the beach
to enable players to sit outside while
awaiting their matches. The entrance to
the dart board areas were roped off to
control the Dow of the crowd.
BEING TitE tournament announcer for
the entire event, I announced before the
start of the events on Sunday that we
were limited to a capacity of 170 people
in the room. I advised the participants to
cooperate and to circulate between the
Riviera Room and the practice area
upstairs. Continued announcements were
made throughout the day .
At no time Sunday were there 300 peo.
pie in the Riviera Room as your reporter
indicated. Nor.dJd any of our tournament
officials tell your reporter there were 300
people in the Riviera Room at any one
time.
THE JAY OEES have alwa y 1
cooperated completely with all the city
officials in our projects. We did cooperate
with the fire marshal Sunday when he ad·
vised us of lhe problem.
It is a shame thai after countless hours
of voluntary efforU on the part of the ·
Jaycees to &et up and run a tournament
whose proceeds are used to further com-
munity projects, your reporter bas cast
us in a bad light by inferring we refused
to cooperate with the fire marahll. At
has been explained aboVe, thls was not
the truth.
Sl1e Was ONtraged
To the Editor:
r attended •. board of education
metfln~ la.st TUe!Clay. To my dlmnay, I
had lo liaten with unbelieving ears lo the
debate that raged between our educators
and particularly three ol the board
members tho.I auppoaedly represent OllT
community. r tried attentively to undentad Mr.
Thomaa, M.rs. Gllletle and Clpt. Llnke's
point of view, but to no ava:ll. Pechal"!
oeil Ume they wlll enllgbt<n me oo lbelr
anti-experimental attitudes.
WHAT OIJ'l'l\AGED tne, tbOugh, at thiJ
meeUng waa hearing about people who
entered our ICbools incogntJo, I flnd It op.
pa111ng that anyone, even thole In op.
position to the achoo) programi, would be
. t0 lnstMltlve u to dl4rupt the t.eachen
afllf student. as well H bruit lbe Jaw,
A school lhould not permit uoau!hort..
ed people to mlll •round achoo! """""" and clissu. Parenb and school pe'10Dllel
should be -..cl •bout Ille aalet1 ol
I
my child a1.1d eve,y. other child.
HOW DARE TllESE people, whoever
they are, jeopardize the children by
behaving in a criminal fa shion! I
respectfully ask all involved in the past
episodes to please have more con-
sideration in the future.
MRS. GLORIA R. GINSBERG
Sa11 J11a11'• 6rowth
To the Editor:
Much discussion has taken place lately
as to the fact the citizens are upset over
the too-rapid gro\vth of San Juan Capis-
trano.
The landowners think, of course, that
tbe faster development take!' place, the
sooner they can get rid of their tax·
burdened acres. And , they are certainly
tax-burdened.
However, has everyone forgotten that
!his city bas a zoning available, called
R-1 (single family)?
THE MAJORITY of the recent zone
changes and developmen ts ha ve been
towards high-density types of
development.
Perhaps the candidates for the up-
~ming COlJOCil elecCioo should publicly
state their true feelings as to the rtcent
zoning and building trend1 goin'; on in our
city, so that the citizens• can md :e sure
their desires are represented al council "
level.
CHUCK ALLEN
• Dof,,a Ottered Der Job
To the Edilor :
It ha·s been publicly Inferred In Laeuna
Beach that Councilman Roy Holm had '•
never considered appointing 1 woman to
the council or the plan,nlng cotnmlaaion \. •
prior to.councilman Ed Lorr'• election to
the council.
Pleue allow me to set the record "
i•traight oa Ille above point.'Ourlng Mr.
Holm's tenure on the councll (11118-'IO)
there wu a vacancy on the plannlng
commissjon which Mr. Holm asked me If
I would be Interested Jn fUling. I thank-
ed bJm very kindly and declined. MJ com-
mitments to my famUy and to my acUvt
rote In civic and achoOI orpnlutlons
would have lelt me Joo llllle time Ind J
energy to S<rVe on the plal!lllni com-•
mlaloo.
DONNA L. OEME'l'RW>ES
a,, "-'"fie--
Dear George'
You are an inti-woman do&,
saying women can'J do ..,ylh!nc
right!
GLORIA Dear Glori.,
That'• 0 anti.woman pig." Shape
up, Glorla.
(Send your lnncnnoet problcma
In GeorgC: Wby k .. p a 1eeret when
YOU can blab ll aroum!!I •
•
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Huntington Beaeh
Fountain Valley Today's Fhlal
VOL. 65, NO. 48, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES
Beach
By TERRY COVILLE
Of IN DeHr l"llt! lltff
Police officials in Huntington Beach are
wrlting!,a stiller set of rules for lhe city
butldiiig code in an effort to cut down the
burglary rate.
If adopted, the new rules would
ellminate apartment car ports, prohibit
wJ~ows next to doors and require
tougher locks on doors and windows.
The rules would apply only to new con-
struction.
Police
Tbm we,.. 1,167 burglaries committed
Jn Huntington Beach during 1971, a 15
percent lncrel!e over .1970, police said.
The estimated value of items lost is
$393,000.
Those statl.sUa don't include car
burgJarles, which account for a large
share of thefts, according to Detective
Sgt. Forrest Lewis.
Lewis wrote most of the new building
code rules which will soon be turned over
to the city administration for review,
PHIL HALL TO HELP OTHER CHILDREN LIKE CARRIE ANNE
Hit Daughter May Have BHn Spirk for N•w V1lley P'rogr•m
Kids Get Boost
Valley Ma1i Heads School Program
Phil Hall will never forget that his own The reason for the rush was that if the
first-born child Ehould by all odds have program was to receive the federal fund.
been seriously handicapped. Ing vital to its success, a complete pri; posal had to be in Washington in 15 days.
Early in pregnancy his wife Carol Ann "We got a letter announcing the funds
developed German measles, a disease for the handicapped would be available,"
which nearly always causes children to said Hall, ''and we went right to work.
be born deformed, retarded, or worse. Our first meeting was at 9 o'clock that
The Fountain Valley family did night, and we just kept working."
everything medically that could be done, Late nights. weekends, over breakfast,
of course, and when their baby was born Phil Hall worked so singlemlndedly on
apparently healthy, they breathed a sigh tche g:anAnnet proposal hthat evet~ edtwo-year-old of relief. arrte must ave no 1c .
But it was not to be. At four months '' . She couldn't h:ave known, however, that
young Carrie Anne required heart if federal funding were ,approved, she
surgery to close a malformed valve, and herself mtght someday,attend the school.
now at just over two years, she may be "It will be a place where the non-han-
auffering from a hearing impairment. dlcapped, are mixed with the han-
"She'a bright and chipper in mo!l dlcapped," said Hall. "Hopefull y, Carrie
ways," said her father, "but she's not will be able to attend as one of the non-
learning to talk as she should. She doesn't handicapped, assuming that we can lick
&eem to know any consonant sounds and her hearing problem ."
we're afraid it's because she can't hear The concept of mixing the handicapped
very well. . and the non-hand.ic1;1.pped is something
But altogether, the Halls consider about which Hall feels very strongly.
themselves lucky. "It could have been so ,, . much worse " said her father "and we How can a h~nd1capped child develop
know it." ' ' normally if he ta al~ays ~round. ,~!her
Partly because of his training in children who are also hand1cappea. he
psychology, but probably more because a&ks. "In this center the handicapped will
ol little Carrie Anne, Phil Hall got an have model, of normal ~avlor In the
unusual assignment earlier this month non-handlcapped ~hildren.
from his superiors at the Fountain Valley The center will serve handicapped
School District. children between two and five years old. Ther asked mm to plan a complete pre-At present Hall 1ai~ there is no place for
achoo progra'm ror the handicapped and parents or these children to go !or help,
the retarded, and they asked him to do It all!1ough he believes h a a d I c 1 pp e d
tn two week.s. children need pre-schooling more than
"It was one h;tiry assignment," he the non-handicapped.
uld, "but it was just thl! kind of thing I "Adjustment to tchooJ 11 enough of a
was ready to go to work on.•• problem for a healthy chi!~," said Hall,
1' Just think wha~ It must be like for tc>-
You'll Get It
Earlier Now
Earlier delivery of the Saturday edition
of the DAILY PIL01' wUI he In !ull lore•
SalUNlaf morning. U you don't 1et your
homo-delivered copy by t a.m., pleue
call by 10 a.m., . am we-guarantee
de.livery.
Call -!lorn -.,.... Fl'Of!l South Lquna, Lqlma' Nllutl, Dana
Poln~ Son J.,n C.pillrano, Capistrano
lleach and San Clem..te, call wU.f,... lo m.wo.
From w .. tmln!ter ind northwest lluJI.
tin(lon Bead!, call toU.lnoe lo~-
meone wilh a serious handicap."
Hall said Iha! the proposed new center
will help 1he children not only with roclll
adjU!lmenf to 11Chool, but will olao help
lhe children wllh their 'rticular han·
dJcap.
"W• will be 1 complete center ror pre.
IChool wvlc" !or the hlndi<:Apped," he
DWI, Hwhlt wt can't treat there, we "lfUI
know how to refer to the appropriate
outside rpectaU.tl."
AU or lh!J depeidl on ledtrol·opproval
of the lfl,!!IO 1tanl 1111! worted
revmthly and ""'"Pleled the ~ •
late !&It week. ll wu 1pproved by FOlln-
laln V1Dey IChool ~ Tbunday Ind
malled the ...t morn!ni lhe Illes\ )IOI'~
ble dly. • '
An IMOlllletment l1'upecled within IO
days.
(' •
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1972 JEN CENTS
Seel{ Tighter Building Rules
before presentaUon to the ctty councD.
"The car ports In 1partment pro)<cta -
give us the most trouble,'' aays Lewla. He
suggests that all new apartment. be · re-
quired to supply fully enclosed garagea
for tenants.
Separate requlremen&a have been writ-
ten for homes, apartmenj.s and com-
mertlal shops, but they all · feature
similar restrictions.
A major factor is door locks. LeWls
wants a requirement for apecfal bolta on
Ill pound level door•. In wenct II
would be a double bolt, with one above
tlle door knob and and nol easily picked.
From the Inside, however, the seCurlty
lock (and door) could easily be opened
with one nick of the wrist.
"In designing thla. we had lo be careful
to pick a type of lock generally made by
all major coni1>1nlet," Lewis explained.
Some of the door-Jock requirements.·
however , can not bt placed on large
stores or facUIUes where there are Iara•
crowds, because fire safety laws require
doors that can be easily opened from lM
inside by pushing a "pank bar."
Better methods for closing and locking
windows. especially in stores, have •lso
been deslgned . And protective bars are
requlred on some commercial windows.
The ellmlnat19n or car ports applies on-
ly to apartments.
Lewis has also proposed the ellmln11·
tJon of louvered windows at ground level,
ne.ar balconies or at flre esca~s.
"It's loo eaty for a burglar to almply
pick out the window panes one-by-one ln a
louvered window," Lewis taid.
Another change Involves sliding &Ian
door1. Tht Lewis l1w would requlrt the
moveable 1ecUon of the door tilde to be
placed on the Jns~e or the flxtd Pottla•
ot the pa llo door.
Several small c:ttana:es apply lo door1:
-All wood doora shall be of oolld core
(Seo RU!.D, P11e I)
Beach Fence Assailed
fluntington Officials Criticize State Plans "t
By JOHN ZALLER
Of IN Dally r11et Sl1H
State plans to fence ·Bolsa Chica State
Beach have drawn sharp criticism from
Huntington Beach officials who say they
might renew an old city bid to assume
operaUon of all local state beaches.
"The beachea art our front yard," said
Vince Moorhouse, city director or
Harbors and Beaches. "We don't think
fences should be put up that make them
look like prison yards. We believe there
2nd Largest
Bank Lowers
Prime Rate
· ~W'YORIC (AP) ~tlonlt
ty Bank, the natlon\t lecb6(1'fargeal;·.&no11
nouneed-tod1y It II cutting its floaUng
prime rate to 4% percent, the toWest
level Jn nearly 12 yean.
The 11' percent reduction In the
minimum Interest Citibank charges U1
most creditworthy corporate customers
becomes effective 1'fonday.
Citibank's prllne rate, dlrecUy Ued to
movements in the money market, ls re.-
viewed weekly. Today 's cut brought the
New York bank's minimum interest to a
level V. to ~ percent below most other
large ba11ks.
Morgan Guaranty Trust Co., Irving
Trust Co., and Bankers Trust Co. are the
only large banks which currently have a
41/• percent minimum lending rate. Most
other major banks have held to the 4'4 '
percent level.
Early last week, a small Cincinnati
bank, Provident Bank, reduced its prime
rate to 4~ percent, but no other large
banks followed suit.
The last time banks generally offered
a prime rate below 41!, percent was In
May 1959 when lt was at 4 percent. On
May 18, 1959, the rate was raised to 41ii
percent by most bankJ acro!S the coun-
try.
In another ecooomtc development the
government said today that wholesale
prices jumped another elght,.tenths of 1
percent in January.
The rise eucUy matched December'•
increase and Indicated that the expected
Phase 2 price bulge has not yet begun to
flatten out.
When adjusted for the usual seasonal
trends, the rise In the wholesale index
was only half as great, or four-tenU11 of 1
percent, the Labor Department's an-
nouncement said.
$5 Million Paid
are better waya lo contain crowds. 11
City Administrator DIVld Rowland.
has requested a complete r~port on the
situation from Moorhouse as a '
preliminary to opening negotiations with
the state. '
The 1tate department of , Park! and
Recreation baa: announced plans for
$770,000 worth of Improvements to Bol11a
Chica state Beach, but Its lnsistence on
fencing the beach off from free public en-
try has . drawn the ire of Huntington
Beach offlcllls.
On its one mile of developed . city
beaches, the city relies on e1tenslvt
llndscaplng for crowd containment, and
there are no gates for locking out the
public.
Huntington State Beach, on which Im-
provements at Boise Chica are expected
lG be modeled, has a chain link and
barbed wire flnce around it and minimal
greenery. Jt also has gates which are
locked every night during the winter.
Rowlanda and Moorhou,. 111<1 lhey
would like to see all 11 mUe1 o( beach
between the santa Ana River and Stal
Beach developed uniformly on ltandardl
1lmllar to those of the city beach.
In !!lie, Hunttniton Boach olferod to
assume operation of a total of flv1 .mtle1
of that beach which 11 1tate owned. Il
said It would fully develop Huntlna\on
State Beach, to the IOUth of the city, and
Bolsa Chica State Beach, to the north, ua-
lllee BEACHES, P11e l)
Chou Pledges Cooperation
Chinese Leqder Prornises to Aid Normal Relations
By· HENRY HARTZENBUSCll
PEKING (Aj') -.,Premier qiou t:q.lat, ~-~~e . ll!d.
friendly contol:tl Jllth the Ulliled SW.1.
At a dinner m·'h11 honor: the Ollnese
leader r•ponded to a loll! In .wblch
Prealdent Nlxoit-declared : 0 We have
begun the long proc~11,o! removing that wall between UJ."
Seated at roWld tables Jn the Gre1t
Hall of the Peopll, the Chou and Nixon
entourage• ate a nine-cour1e meal of
Chinese food except for grapefruit and
orangt seementa flown from the United
States. '!'bey sipped C.lllornla cham·
pagne.
Nixon began the toasting by e1pres11lng
appreciation for the Chinese hospitality
shown to th' Americana the five days
!hey have been In .Peking.
Chou and Nixon came to the dinner
from their filth and final meeting, at
which they pre1umably reached agree-
ment on Improving contacta through
cultural ·and other e1chan1e1, wJt h
dif,lbmatlt relatJ0111 1omt Ume 1n the
fu ure.
Recalling hi• visit Thursday 14 th•
Great Wall of China, Nixon aald the wall
showed "the determination of the Chinese
people to retain their independence
throughout their long history.
"The Great Wall Is no longer a wall
divldlna China from the relit of the
world," he continued. '"But It Is a
reminder of lbe fact that there are many
walls atilt esistlng ln the world, which
divide nations and peoples.
''The Great Wall Is also 1 reminder
that for almogt a generaUon there ha1
been a wall between the People's
Republic or China and the United States.
In these past four days. we have begun
the long process or removing that wall
between us."
NIXON'S flt'AL
L,IG OP CHINA TRIP
. '
POUR fll•Hr
HOMl 'VIA
ANtHO .... I
EAST
CH I NA
SE A
••• ..
HERE'S THE REST OF THE PRESIDENT'S CHIMA ITINIRARY
Nixon conceded that both sldet
recognize there are great dlfrerencu
bfttwcen the Unlt-ed States and China.
"But we are determined that thooe dJf.
ference1 will not prevent ua from. llvln&
together In peace," he wenl on. "You.
believe deeply Jn your 1y1~m and we.
believe just 11 deeply In our 1y1tem. Jt 11
not our common belief that have brouaht
us together here, but OW' common .lo--
terest1 and hopes."
Nixon and Chdu· 1pplauded each other
during the toast1.
Chou begin by nollng lhol Nl1on had
met with him and Chalrmtn Mao Ts ..
tung and .. we uchanged vJew1 on the
normalization -of reJaUons between China
and the United Stalel 1nd on other que1-
tlons of concern to tho two old.,.
"Tbere Wit sr._t dlfferoncea of prtJ>o
cl pie between our two 1fde1," Chou noted.
11Throu1h e1rite1t aJJd frank dllcu11km1,
a clearer knowJeda• of eech other'• pa1l-
Uon1 ind stand1lw,been1slned."
Notln( tho e I eh In I 11 hid heft
!Seo NIXON, r.,. l)
Wild Ransom Plot Bared
......
,
By HOWARD A. TYNER
BONN IUPl l -The West German
government paid '5 mllUon ra1110m to a
Palestinian commando group to obtain
the release of a hijacked airliner and lt
ol its crew from Soulhern Yemen,
Transportation Minister Gears Leber
aid today.
Five armed cortunandot released the
124.f.mllllon Lullhansa llotlng 747 jumbo
Jet and the mw member• Wedneldly In
Aden, the Southem Yemeh capital.
ben 1bolrd the Athe""bound pi•n. "hen ti was hijacked Tueld1y 1rter takeoff
from New Delhi, India hive 1lnct left
Aden with lhe po11lbl• excoptlon of the
live hlj1ckm.
They were questioned by I o c a f
authorlUe1 ind later 1et free.
The pl1ne returned to Frankfurt Tbura-
day.
Leber said 1 letltt 1-a IJ'OllP ctlllng
ltMlf tile "Orpnhltlon for Vlcti1111 of
Zlonllm" Ind dllmlng r .. ponslbilltt for
the h!J•cklnc 11rlve<1 Tueoday 1t Ulf. lllillu ~ In Colope
ol thrte German charter ftrmt.
"In Belni~ he "U to llnd I W p&1ko<f
1t tlfe 1lrport which had lnsld• 1 plcturo
of former Egyptiah Pre.ideot OainaJ
Abdel Nwer.
"A note was to be left on the drlver'ri
aeat saying wher1 to drive wllh the
money."
The 8oM aovernment ralHd the Cite
Tuaday nlaJit -Leber dtdlned lo llY
whero -and aent It lo Alhent with 1
Lufthln11 aep1c1ty 11ant 1Ctf111 u
courJer. 1 "' •
.........
Huy s1u1slli~ II on the qooida
lar tlle Orlnit Cooll oplD Oii
Saturday, followlnJ the .-i low
cloudl Ind IOI. lflcllt 1t the
belches uound IO rlaJns lo 72 In-
land. Lows 42 to IO.
INSmE TOO-AW
Th• Lfllfp1ilf4nl of fomd
"Gwlliu1r'1 Trever." arrive ift
H•nlfR{/l<nt 81och tMI VIHMnd.
A •torv i,. todo1111 W11~r
ltlis. ~ .,,..,. to go 14 find A secret codt word had been llashed by
radlo from Beirut to clima1 1 cloak.W
dagger oporatlon carried out )II thnt
countries of Europe and the Mldflla ..,t.
Jn Ibo llr>l . ..,,.tmwmt ll"t:\' .. "-oufoalno ol .tb6 ltlgli11Cklnf, told
I -· confmn<t the ileciskift to PIY the r~lllOlll hid been baaed on the wump-
tlon Utat the Jives of the c:rew were In .. acute danier."
Tllo Wtsrir; ,... la ~ •vt<11 .=-~~. ~ ~b"-'~ I piano, dem.mded tho ronsom arid
gaye, detailed lllltructlol'f OD bow the
money ahould be binded onr.
Wednaday morntiw. Ille courter now to the Lebeneoe ei;llll!ol Bflrut, ldUnd ' tJle C!ll',' dro¥1 to ID undllclotod potn\
-· Ulan It rnJla oulftde tho cjt7 Ind dellvtrod the money.
lhl111, • f I
L.M. l ft" ' ~ • ·:::.:.:: ....: ;;;-= ~
He cllleil tho hljacur1 "the most
bloodlhlnlty IJ'OllP lffn unUI now."
All all IJUl<llfert 1nd uow mem-
"
"The m._,.ger_wlth lhe .,_,. w11 fo
wear a black Jtcktt and ll'•Y fTOUHtt
and C>tT'f I we In b11 rtafit hind,"
Lober llld. "H• wu to Oy by •Of of
Alhtlll '"' a -•la! airliner or ...
( .,
'
"The code won! "" his, receipt,• Leber llJd. ''fft WU fold to return II '
fut 11 po11lblo lo Btlrul ll'J)Orl wbtre •
the word ,...14 be rel1yod by radio lo Allen. Within momenll •rtar the word II'·
rived In Adtn, the p I 1 n e and cnw
Wert frM.~ '
'
c..-. If -....... iMf c:n....,. JI .,..,,.,. ....... • "c~ ': :c: ..... i::: ''"" .......... . "'*' .. ~ ,, ,......... ....
................ 4
Miit UllllW\ 11 wt....n .... •II ....... ' ...,.. ... ... ...... a.a ......... ..
•
'
••
% u~ ......... .
Narrow 43-40 1'
Senate Scuttles
• •
Busing Orders
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate
voted today to deny federal courts the
power to order busing of school children
on the basil! of their race, color1 religion
~r national origin. •
'l'bt Wle WU 43 lo 40.
Opponentl bnmedlately moved for
reconslderaUon, but the reoonlideration
move was defeated 44 to 41.
Absence of five Senate Democrats who
are campaigning for President -four of
-whom likely would have 'opposed the ban
Water Board
Publishes
'Best Seller'
The Orange County Water District has
a best selltr on 111 hands.
It takes up about a foot on the
bookshelf, comet in five volumu com-
plete with ICbemaUc drawings, and costs
$50 a set. •·
Not exactly the stuff of which
bestsellers .are usually made, but e<1rr
strucUon plans and specifications for
elements of Water Factory 21 -a $2%
milion facility that will purify JO million
gallons of water a day~ by 1980 -have
proved a smash hit.
Three priq.tings have .sold out .for .a
total of zso sell, Ulll oHiclals report !here
is atill a demand for more.
1'There's been much more interest than
we ezpected, 11 sald Neal Cline, assl!tant
ma¥ier: of tlie dlstrfcl . ·
The.water !acllltyls lhe !lrst of Its kind ·
In the country, noted Cline.
Water Faclory 21 -to be located In
Fountain Valley-will desalinate enough
sea water and reclaim enough l!lewage
water to meet IO percent of Orange Co~
ty's water need! by 1980, officials say. It
is the first project o! lb kind In Lhe coun-
try.
Coples of the plans for the reclamation
facruty and support elements of the
d~lnlzation plant have beeo shipped all
over the U.S.
"We hope that all this interest will
result In lower bids," said Cline. "When
compeUllon is this still, It aometlmea
causes people to try a Utile harder to
keep the price down."
·Cline aald tha t part of the ex·
traordlnary Interest In Lhe plant mar be
it& novelty. He noted1that coplet ot plans
-not light reading material by any
stretch of the tmaglnaUon -i.have.been
mailed to some people who baye nq direct
biterest In bl~dlrig oli the projecL
Mom Gets llelp
In Car Deliverv
¥
Seal Beach Police Officer Richard
Welsh was an ambulance driver before
coming to the Seal Beach Police Force
two weeks ago. This morning he had a
chance to use some of his previous
training.
Welsh and Officer Ben Garza were on
their way to the Orange County Sherill's
Office when they were flagged down by a
man who told them that a woman was
having a baby In her car.
By the time Welsh arrived at the car,
, Mrs. Anita Magana had already given
birth to a baby hoy. Wel&h helped detach
the umbilical cord, care for the baby un·
ti! an ambulance arrived to take the
mother and cliild to Orange County
b1edical Center.
Both are Jn satisfactory condition.
ORAN GE COAST H•
DAILY PILOT
OM.Heil COASf PUBLISHTNC> ~Mrt
•koMrt H. w,,4
Pr.etio.t Ind Pllbli.hll'
Juk R. Cllflty
\Ike p,..14tftt •nd G.wd IMlllO*t'
'nom•I K11'rd
Editor
Tliom•• A. Murpliln•
/MnlOlnl Edttar
T1rry Coville Wat Or1ras C11Unl)' Edi'-'
H111tth19 ... ,..,, Office
17175 l a•t.h lo11l1v1rcl
M1lli111 Addr••t• P.O. l ox 790, 92'141 0--l~ 'INdl: 222 Forst AWllOll
C..M Ma1: a» W•t ••t .Stl'llt WfWPOl"tlN~f »UN~B~lrl't~ 11~ a.mentt: as Hortll EJ Qlmlne lltd
-made the dUference in the vote.
The laoguage, proposed by Sen. Robert
P. Griffin ()).Mich.), was lhe strongest
congressional expression to date on the
politically esploolve busing 1aoue. (See
earlier story, Page 5).
Prior to Ille vole, Griffin took no~ that
all tive Democratic presldenli.aJ carr
dldates m the Senate were absent.
"I wonder U those presidential can-
didates who are going around the country
telling people Ibey are against busing but
don't want a constitutional amendment
would rather do U by ltatute,'1 be B&id in
a Senate speech. "I wonder U they're
going to be here to get an amendment
adopted that would really do aomelhlng
about busing."
The five Democrats, F.dtnuDd S.
Muskie of Maine, Hubert H. Humphrey of
Minnesota, George S. Mclklvern of South
Dal<o)j!, Helll\Y M. Jack!on ol Washington
and Vance Hartke of Indiana., also were
absent Thursdaf when the Senate voted
to rorbld me of federal funds for busing
unless local school districts voluntarily
requested such aid.
Griffin's measUre was one of some two
d9zen amendment.a proposed to a com··
promlae an.Ubualng plan worked out by
Senate Democratic Leader M I k e
Mansfield and Republican Leader Hugb
Scott and approved Thursday by the
Senate.~
700th Greeting
M.ade by Beach's
JT1 elcome Wagon
The Hufitington Beach Welcome Wagon
has only been on the road for a year but
two of its four members Thursday made
the organization's 700th greeting to a new
Huntington Beach family.
The call, made by Welcome Wagon
hostesses Mrs. Robert Gingrich and Mrl!I.
Paul Sites, came at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. James Simpson of 20872 Sldnuner
Lane.
The Simpsons recently moved to their
new home from Long Beach where
Mr. Simpsm la an art teacher at Iµig
Beach City College. They have two sons,
Tom, 61 and Th.ad, 4.
As is customary with each Welcome
Wagon greeting, Mrs. Simpson waa
presented with two baskets decorated
with artificial oranges symbolic of
Orange County, The baske!I contained
community information and a ma 11
prennts from local merchants in the
area.
Among tile gifts in the baskets were
tickets to the Los Angeles Zoo, soap
samples, a leather bound book· for im·
portant papers and informatkln on the
local library.
"Tiie presents and Jnfonnatlon in the
baskets will be very helpfuj to me," said
Mrs. Simpson. 11The biggest problem I
was having was finding a butc~er and
they've helped me do that too."
According to Mrs. Gingrich, the Hurr
tington Beach Welcome Wagon averages
50 calli a week at the homes of
newcomers and those who have changed
their addresses within the city.
"We find out about them through
neighbors, realtors, churches and then
there are many new people who just call
m," said Mrs. Gingrich.
The Welcome Wagon ls sponsored by
the Huntington Beach Chamber of Corn·
merce but it Is also part of an in·
ternationat Welcome Wagon organization
that greets families from throughout ilMI
United States, Canada, the United
Kingdom, Australia and Puerto Rico.
From Page 1
RULES ...
with a minimum thiclmesa of 1.75 inches.
-An interviewer or peep hole shall be
provided in each entrance door (for
aparmenls).
· -boors awlngtng out shall have non-·
removable hinge pins.
-In swinging exterior doora 3hall have
rabbited jams. ·
·-No window shall be placed within
ann's rear.h of the Ins.Ide door lock. ~wis estimated the cOl!lt of the restric-
tions at about $200 for an average home.
"But most of these are items already
built-in by the good builders," he ex·
plained. "But we want to insure that
everyone has that protection."
He said similar restrictions have been
adopted in Oakland and some cltlel!I Jn the
South and Midwest. Police officers from
L<>ng Beach and Orange have also showed
an interest in the proposed Huntlngtoo
Beach rules.
Lewis said the ordinance changes are
sUll being studied, and no date b11 been
set for prtSenleUon to the city council.
Top of the Pier
To Be Discussed
It the Huntington Buch Top of the
Pier redevelopment plan In jeoparcly ol
never gettln( off the ground?
Mayor George McCracken plana to
anawor. tllat question when ;be \Ilka lo
HllJlll,Dito0 Bucllfountalll ·v • .I I • 7
lllflllbera ol the United JlopubtlC411& oC
California Mooday n14hl · ._, l'he UROC meellni, open to the pu.,lc,
Is achedU<ld ot 1 p.m. In the oonffm1CO
room of the S<curlty Pacific Bant, 200lll
Brookbunt St. (near Adains A...ue).
•
U'ITt..,.._frl
.l'rot11 .-c11e I
NIXON •.• . ..
bonfflctal for bolh, Cbou continued:
· "Tb1 llml1 m advanctnc ond ~
'llVrld Is cllfnlll\C· We oro deeply con-
vinced that the strength of Ille peoples 11
powerful and that whatever dgzag, ind
reverses tbtrt: will be. In the development
of history, Lhe general trtnd ol Lhe world
Is definllely toward llgbt ond nol
darkness.
"It Is lhe,f<>mmon desire of Lhe Chinese
and American peoples to enhance the1.r
mutual understanding and !rlendahlp and
promote the normallutlon of relations
betweet\ China and Lhe United statea. nie
Chinese government and people will work
WlSWervingly toward this gOal."
The champagne was served in White
House glasses bearing the presidential
seal, flown from Washington. Many of the
Olinese guests took them home as
souvenirs.
White.jacketed waiters and waitresses
dlstrlbuled presidential gilts to all thoae
present. The gilt was a clear plutlc
paperweight with Nixon's card lmbedded.
WHO NEEDS SNOWPLOWS WHEN YOU'VE GOT ENOUGH WILLING CHINESE WORKERS AROUND?
Thi• I• Snow Remov11,.Pekin9 Style; Brooms and Shovels Do the Trick
The toast£, however, seemed more low·
key than those voiced at the banquet
Chou gave the presidential party Monday
night when both talked of opening the
gates to friendly conlacts.
Jury System
Debate Slated
By Teenagers
More than 120 .teenagers wqt gather in
Foun~ Valley Saturday to debate a
question that Is nearly nine cer1turies old.
"Resolved : that the U.S. Jury System
should be signilicantly changed" will be
debated by 62 two-man teams beginning
at 8:45 a.m. at Fountain Valley High
School.
The teams are made up of seventh and
eighth grade students of the Fountain
Valley SChool District. Each pair will be
required to debate both sides of the ques·
tlon ·in three separate rounds of com-
petition.
'The jury system was first introduced
by King Henry I of England in the 12th
Century. It was intended as a rt.form to
replace ordeals by fire and by battle as
means of arriving at just solutions in
matters of dispute.
At first juries were resisted, but even-
tually they were accepted into English
common law. Later the right to trial by
jury wu written into the U.S. Constitu-
tion.
In preparation for the debate, the
students have spent hours in the Fountain
Valley and UC Irvine Ilbraries, talked to
judges, lawyers, and members of juries,
and watched the Westminster Municipal
Court in operation.
"They've had to learn to analyze a
qu estion objectively, to look ~ it froi.n
several points of view, and to demand
documentaUon rather than simple op.in.
ion ," says Cindy Hager, a Lamb School
debate coach and eighth level instructor.
The preparation, she said, had been a
11mind·stretching activity ."
The public is invited to attend.
All H unti1igton
Candidates Due
At Public RUlly
A "c.;,.ndates ,rally'; !~luring all 12
Huntington Beach collDcll hopefuls will be
open to the pu6Uc from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.,
Tuesday in the cafeteria of HunUngton
Beach High School.
Two candidates for city derk and the
incumbent city treasurer bave also been
invited to the rally sponsored by the Hun-
tington Beach Coordinating COuncD.
There will be no speeches at the gather--
lng, .but the public will have a chance to
meet and talk with all the candidates.
Clndktates can U!e this time to enlist
~upport for their campaigns.
The high achoo! is localed at 1905 Main
St., and the cafeteria is behind th< main
Structure.
An even dozen residents are battling
for three city council seats in the April 11
election.
All three incumbents, G e o r g e
McCracken, ,Donald Shipley and Jer·
ry Matney are seeking re.election.
Their challengers include: two planning
commissioners, Mardis Porter and Henry
Duke; former city administrator Doyle
Miller; Dave Garofalo who won a court
order to allow him to enter the race;
George Arnold; Richard Belyea: James
DeGuelle; Charles S. Geers; and Jotepb
T. Wballng.
Incumbent City Clerk Paul Jones ha•
... challenger for his post, Bernard J.
Mahoney, an active member of the
Jaycees.
City Treasurer Wamn Han ls up for
re-election, bu\ bas no opponent.
New Talhert School
Becomes operation al
' 111• ti.I mlllloo Simuel E. Talbert scho!>l became fully.ope,raUonal lhls week
In Fountain Valley.
Loc~ed at 1101 Btabbam Strett, It Is
tht lllh school It) u..:Fountaln Valley
School District and lht thit<I to op<n thla
achoo! year.
Talbert '• 144 studenll. wm prevloualJ
buaed to other acbooll II tbt dlstrlcL
•
From Page 1 Before the banquet the Nixons toured
the fabled Peking palace of China's
emperors, in a snowstorm. BEACHES. ••
In~ proceeds from parking lot fees. Any
additional profit was promised to the
state.
The bid was turned down after a
Sacramento hearing and the city has not
renewed it. But now there is talk of doing
so.
"I'm new t.o this city," s;i.id Rowlands.
"I think this a very good time to start
looking over everything and to do it
right."
He said be would "very definitely"
enter into negotiations with the state, but
he added that "it would be premature to
say anything about,renewing our old of-
fer. We must first study the matter and
talk with state officials to see what they
say."
Rowlands said he wouldn't want to take
over operation of state beaches if the
state planned to develop them at·
·t.ractively.
Moorhouse cautioned that, even if the
city did renew its offer, the state mlght
not accept it.
"Those beaches are big money wffi..
ners," he said. "They might want to
hold on to them."
There are several dillerences between
city and state operated beaches. Fencing
is the most conspicuous.
"People who use beaches aren't wild
animals wbo must be fenced Jn," said
Moorhouse. "If you create the right kind
of 'ellvironment, they will behave prop-
erly."
Moorhouse claims that the crime rate
on city beaches ls, one--thlrd the .crime
rate on the state operated beaches.
However, state officials have pointed
out that most of their crime has been on
sections of &Isa Chica Beach that are
not yet feoced .
"If you establish a check point," said
Gene Junette, chief Ranger for state.
operated Orange Coast beaches, "then
you can stop all juveniles with alcohol
and also curtail nareoUcs use. Without a
checkpoint and a fence you can't do
this."
On weekend nights during the summer,
Junette aald, cars full of teenagers are
always searched fbr alcohol.
''We've found that the conduct of ptp.
pie improves if they must always pass
lhrough a checkpoint. They feel Lhal
they're entering a place where there is
going to be 90me enforcement of rules ."
Alcohol is forbidden on city beaches.
Moorhouse said that enforcement of the
ban bas not created serious problems.
Another difference between city and
slate beaches is operating hours. City
beacbe.s never close, while state beaches
are locked at 5 p.m. every night during
the wiilter months.
"Most beach use Js during daylight
hours in the summer," said Moorhouse,
"but we feel that members <if the public
have a right to use the beach whenever
they want to. 'Mle only excuse for closing
a beach would be for maintenance."
Junette said that lack of funds for
palrollng the state beaches b Ille main
reason that they are closed on winter
nights. He .said he had no immediate
hopes of extending open hours.
One other dilference stands out. City
beach officials place no restrictions on
the numbers of people who can me their
facilities . State officials aay they Ulte to
limit crowds to sizes that will allow each
individual beachgoer an average 100
square feet of sand.
At Bolsa Chica State Beach, for ei:·
ample, a maximum of 2,000 parkblg
spaces are planfied. for three miles of
beach. City officials, on the other hand,
say that 10,000 spaces are available for
tHelr four miles of beach, and 1bat this
ratio Is acceptable.
"We belleve in giving the beachgoer a
quality beach experience," said Junette.
"We like to restrict numbers so that
those who do come in can fully enjoy
themselves. For example, we couldn't
allow alcohol on our beache1 except that
we have few enough people so that it's
manageable. And we beUeve a fellow
should be able to sip a beer on the
beach."
Moorhouse, however, oootended that
while that philosophy might properly ap-
ply to, park,, in the mountains, it should
not apply to beaches in urban areas.
The Nixons say goodbye to Peking on
Saturday morning and fly 710 miles to ~
southeast to picturesque Hang chow, a
favorite boUday resort of Chinese leader1
on a bay south of ShanghaL
They will visit scenlc spots in the area,
including the remains of the 18th century
palace of the Emperor Chien Lung, and
after a night alongside the beauWul Hai
Hu, « Western Lake, they fly to
Shanghai, their last stop in China. to'
The presidential party rues back
Washington on Monday.
* * * Networks Slate
China Programs
NEW YORK (AP) -The major
television networks gave this schedule of
coverage of President Nlxon's China vis.i t
for tonight -all times PST:
CBS : 11:30 p.m. to midnight -opectal
report if events warrant.
NBC : 5 p.m. to conclusion -coverage
of Nixon and Premier Chou E&1ai
departing Peking for Hangchow.
Pay ·Toilets
Spark Debate
HAHRISBURG, Pa. (AP) -The Public
Utility 'Commlislon is absorbed in the
free toilet ,vs. pay toilet issue.
"I believe the charge works a
particular hardshlp on poor people and ,
in many Instances, Is an inconvenience to
persons who find themselves in need of
the facility without the proper coin," said
Commissioner Louis J. Sparvero~ho
Thursday headed JI public bearblg · ing
into toilet tolls in bus, rail and ir
terminals.
"Free: toilets encourage the con-
gregating of loungers and other un-
desirable elements" and there's a bigger
maintenance problem, said Richard J.
Maguire, president of Capitol .Bus Co.,
Harrisburg.
SALE ENDS IN 2 DAYS
FINEST UPHOLSTERY IN THE AREA AT REDUCED PRICES
Large selection of upholstery
from such well known lines 11
Henredon, S~rrill, Marge
C.,.on end others 11 reduc-
ed prices, don 't 1 .. ;1. Only 2
days left.
SELECTED GP.OUPS FROM HENREDON, DREXEL
AND HERITAGE AVAILABLE AT SPECIAL PRICES.
DREXEL'S
VELA RO
WELLINGTON PAR'.(
. HENREDON
OFFICERS CHEST COLLECTION
CAPRI
HERITAGE
GRANDT'OUR COLLECTION
CAMEO
MADRIGAL
DON'T W·AIT
DEALERS FOR: HENREDON -DREXEL -HERITAGE KARASTAN
NEWPORT BEACH
1727 W11tcllff Dr., 642·2050
OPIN Pl lDAY '!IL f
INTERIORS
LAGUNA BEACH
345 North Co11t Hwy. 494-6511
•
TORRANC E
23649 Hawthorn• Blvd.
llUI Jn.Tm --"' f ...._ .... I-holt"" A..i1•lo AID-NSID I"
l'hoo 1•0 -M..t of -c...y' H f·UH ·---------=;::=.a ..... ~=---------~. -..
• • •
•
I' ' ..
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rrld•Y. ffbfUM')' 2S,.l972 H DAILY PILOT S
French Crack Dope Bing With IJ.S. Aid
By TAKASUJ OKA
Chriltian Sdenu Monitor Service
PARIS -The "American connection''
ts btginnlng lo pay off for the French
J>Olice.
Obscured PY months of public wrangl-
ing, French-Amerlc11n cooperation ln
narcotics control is recording en·
coura.gl.ng results.
The lalest ls the arrest of Dominique
~1ariani in Paris Saturday and his being
rorma1ly charged Wednesday with aup-
plylng 44.5 kilograms of pure heroin l.()
Roger Delouette. He was arrested at Port
Elizabeth, N.J., last April on charges of
smuggling the heroin Into tbt Unied
States.
Tbe Oelouette cue erupted into ooe of
the biggest public acardols Ln Franco last
year, entaULng ...,..tlonal cbarge1 burled
across the AUantic and within the rumor
miJIJ of French polltlcs.
Deloueue, It turned out, bad worked •L
one tlme for the SDECE, the French
equJvalent of the U.S. C e n t r a I
IntelUgence Agency. Alter belng ar-
rested. he claimed that he had been
supplied the heroln, worth $12 million on
the black market ln New York , by a
former superior in the SDECE, a Cot.
Paul Fournier. flis charge was taken.
sertOU!ly enough by the American
authoriUes for a grand-jury indJctment to
be drawn up naming Colonel Fournier as
Heaviest Since 1967
Israel Smashes
Back at Lebanon
By United Press International and followed up with armored regiments
Israeli troops, armor, artillery and into areas near the border.
w~rplanes at~acke.d Lebanon along a 00. The semiofficial Egyptian Middle East
mlle front toaay, m what both Arab and News Agency said 60 Israeli jets struck
Israeli •military sour~s called tbe into Lebanon.
heaviest punitive strike by Israel since
the 1967 Six-day War.
Al Falah guerrlilas said as many as 30
Israeli jets stnlck targets as close as 34
miles from the Lebanese capital of Beirut
Laguna Girl
Turned Loose
In Bomb Case
Diane Michele Bayless of Laguna
Beach has been freed in connection with
the finding of a cache or explosives in San
Bernardino County, Deputy Dist rid At-
torney Dave Call confirmed today.
Freed along with Miss Bayless, 18, of
695 Temple Hills Drive, were George
\Vhatley, 21 aod Robert Christley, 20,
both of Fontana.
Cnll said no formal charges were ever
filed against the trio and they were
released within the 48 hour legal tiln~
limit.
The deputy DA said the case is still
un!ler investigation.
T\\'O other suspects meanwhile are
being held on charges of reckJess and
malicious possession of explosives in or
near a private dwelling.
· They are Robert A. Asemko, 20, of
Fontana, who Is held in lieu of $62,500 bail
and Ronnie D. Ponder, 21, of 318 Eighth
St., Huntington Beach, who has been
released on $1 ,150 bail bond.
Deputy District Attorney Call said to-
day that Ponder was released before he
could appeal to the court to set a higher
bail figure.
"I didn't get my say,'' said Call, who is
also busy investigating a major murder
cnse.
The suspects were arrested Monday
when authorities claim they dug up 130
pounds of stolen military explosives from
the backyard of a Fontana home.
Sheriff's deputies accuse ASemko of
being ringleader of a plot to blast the
complex housing the Fontana City Hall,
police department and county sherlff's
atation.
Asemko allegedly told interrogators he
dislikes the establishment.
The cache of 130 poundS of high ex·
plosives including C4 plastic compound,
blocks of TNT and sophisticated military
blasting materials was impounded.
The contraband included 100 feet of
detonating cord capable of burning at the
rate of 2,100 feet per minute.
Sheriff's bomb squad specialists said
all the supply lacked was a detonator
devict!.
Experts said Thur3day that If it had all
eJ.ploded at once, the powerful blast
wbuld probably have killed every person
within a four-block radlus.
Guerrillas reported six Arab guerrillas
killed and three wounded. A Beirut com-
munique said one civilian was killed and
a soldJer wounded and 20 houses
destroyed. Israel said five guerrillas
were killed and an unknown number of
houses demolished. and the attack force
suffered no casualties.
Beirut dispatches tonight indicated the
casualties might be far higher than an·
nounced. The Falastin J er u s a I e m
Hospital in Beirut received 25 wounded
guerrillas. the hospital said. Three
children in Helwa were hospitalized in
Zahleh from wounds suffered in air raids.
Israeli deputy Premier Yigal Allon
warned Lebanon tonight in a radio in-
terview in Tel Aviv that there would he
more Israeli strikes if Lebanon permitted
more forays across the border into
Israel.
The big Israeli strike coincided with the
arri val in Jerusalem of United Nations
peace negotiator Gunnar V. Jarring in an
attempt to revive his peace mission.
His only comment after conferences
with Foreign Minister Abba Eban ·was
that he was encouraged that his mission
was still alive.
He did not mention the strike against
Lebanon.
Lt. Gen. David Elazar, the Israeli chief
of staff, warned Lebanon Thursday of
possible military reprisal for an ambush
in which guerrillas using bazookas killed
an Israeli couple returning from a Bar
Mitzvah Wednesday night.
Another guerrilla am,bush soon af-
terward killed an Israeli soldier and
Israel struck ba,.ck early today.
First word of the Israeli attack came
from Beirut Radio which broadcast a
coded message: "Beware of snakes in
area number 10."
Israel in the past has withheld an-
nouncement of punitive raids until its
for~s returned to Israel.
The Israeli attack brought immediate
sharp readion from Egypt. Government
sources quoted by the Middle East News
Agency said the raids would not have
been possible unless the United States
supplied Phantom jet fighter-bombers to
Israel.
An Israeli military spokesman said
Israeli jets first struck guerrilla en-
campments 22 miles above the cease·fire
line before armored forces began a seek·
and-destroy mission at Ainata. a town of
4,000 to 5,000 about 2~~ miles inside
Lebanon.
The spokesman said "direct hits" were
observed in three villages struck by the
Israeli planes -Yanta, Dir-el·Ashir and
Ka!r Coque.
In the bigger town of Ainata, the Israeli
spokesman said, the Arab population was
flushed out of 20 houses and that the
houses were then destroyed. lie called
Ainata the center·of guerrilla activities.
A Lebanese military spokesman in a
statement broadcast by Beirut Radio said
enemy warplanes and artillery opened
fire against southern villages In the
Rachaya area 34 miles southeast of
Beirut.
Health P·lanning Council
Backs Hospital Growth
By TOM BARLEY °' tflt 0..., ...... llltf
Jubilant MJ.ulon Community lloapitol
eucutJvts marched from the Santa Ana
CO\lllty courthouse Tbursday night with
the blwlng ol the Orange CoWlly Health
Pllnnlng Council !or their plalll to ex·
pand the Mwlon Viejo !aclllty by 119
bedJ.
'l'pey were "" the rlaliL end of a IS to IZ
voi. ln,a hea9Uy attended meeting that JH!duced alleaatlons of overbeddtng lir a
ctllltal valley aru !hat will IOOD have
four hospitals -MJ.ulon Community,
Saddlebaclt Community, Sin Clemente
Commonlt.Y 1nd Sooth Coast Community
Hospital.
Bot board members IUPPorte<i lhe
recomm~nd1Uon rucbed at a public
hcarLng last wlek by their l•cllitles
review comml!Lee. Tl>ey 1lmllarlly back
ed upanslon 1JOfPOOI• !or Tustin and
Westminstet Communlly hosp!toil.
Tustin'• plan to add 119 bedJ passed by
1 24 to U vote with two bolrd nwnbera
1bltalnlng. W111tmlnstrr'1 request for 54
more bedJ prod....S the tlghtett vote of
the evenJng - a Zl to 17 approval.
The board's backing of the MJssion
C.ommunlty application will b r I n g
hospital's bed count to 213. Hospital of.
ficaJs said the new beds will be available
Ln 1973.
Board members were warned at the
meeting that the M!sskln C.ommunlly ex-
pansk>n will conruct with • Saddleback
Community's plans to put a J»bed
hospital in ope:ratlon on lta Leisure World
site by Msy, 1173.
They were also urged to remember
lhat the J!i6.bed San Clemente Com.
munlty H01Pll•l will be opening at the
same tlme wblle South Coa!t Community
ffospllal wlll be •ddlng 118 bedJ to lls
.present 1113-~ capacity.
O>uncll membert have been warned
that the proposed construcllon and ex-
pansion wUl hike the number of hospital
beds available In the area wllh.ln the next
decade to more than 700.
Speakers at last week'• public hearing
told the facilities review commitltt that
thb II more than double the number of
bospllal bedJ Jhal wUl be required for the
area.
an accomplice o! Delouette.
SDECE oUiciall indignantly denied the
Delouecte chargt, and the colonel ln quu.
lion •ppeand before a French Judge tn-
vestig•Ung the case -Jwlge Gabriel
Roussel -to affirm his innocence.
At this point a former em.ployer of
Oelouette, Col Jean Barbtrol, a onetbne
French ambawdor to Urugully aod now
bead of an agricultural cooperation
service believed to be a cover for French
intelligence agents, gave an lntervle\r
saying that Colonel Fournier's real name
was Paul Ferr:er.
While American congressmen accused
r~rencb authorities of collusion with
narcotics smugglers and protectl.ni the
••bi& wheels. .. l'rtDcb nrwspapen hid a
field .i.,, tplCll!aUDg about "a ltttllllg ol
account.s» wlthln compellnf French in-
lelU,enet nttworks or eve between
SDECE and the CIA.
Meanwhile, French and American
police and rcotlcs-control agents 'll'frt
patlenUy t Ing to unravel the full
dimensions e Delouette case the
much blgg story behind I amug-
glJna: of-Ia er and tar -amounts of
heroln from to the United
States.
The drug rt• es Maneilles in soulh-
ern France from Turkey hi lhe ronn of
morphine base, and is there refined into
the flne whlte powder that i.! pure htroin.
French traffklttts art estimated to have
made ~ mlllion from this operation 1n
LJl71.
Last year the American Bureau of
Narcotics and Dan11erous Dru.gs had 23
agents work.Ing In Europe, mostly Jn
Franct, while the French central
nart0tlcs squad had two llai.!IOn agents as
their "American ooMeclion" in New
York.
Working patiently and metbodlcally
together between Sept. 2 and Feb. 7, the
French and A m e r i c a n drug-rontrol
authorities arrested 23 person!, some in
the United States. 90me here in France.
It was charged that these persons
belonged to a network headed by Joseph
Slgnoll. man11er of a blr near tht Arc de
Trlompht, who wu arrested wllll nloe
otbus Jan. 17,
The French pollco believe JhaL O.lou-
etle received the heroin be 1mogled Lo
the UnJted States not from Colonel Four-
nier but CtGm DominJqUe Mariani, •
known criminal said to be a member ol
the Slgnoli network.
Marlani Is said to have admitted TUet-
day that he supplied DtJouette with the
heroin he took to the UnJted States. Hts
admission, II sustained, doel'I not close lhti
Delouette-fournier case, but it increases
the credlbility of affirmations by SDECE
authorities that neither they nor Colonel
Fournier had anything to do with the al·
fair.
Hughes .Borrows Boat?
Recluse May Have Left Baliamas on Yacht
UP'I Tt141~te
Smeethet1rt
Karen Spellum, an 18-year-old
University of New Mexico coed
from Albuquerque, was elect·
ed "Sweetheart of the Class of
1975" al the U.S. Air Force
Academy.
Newlyweds Get Gift
PARIS lUPl) -Beginning April 29, all
Parisian newlyweds married at city hall
will receive a gift of six books in hooor of
United Nations book year. The package
will include Victor Hugo 's· ••Les
Miserables."
MlAMI, Fla. (AP) -A Baltimore
advertising executive says he Joaned his
yacht to Howard Hughes so the
billionaire could flee the Bahamas un-
detected.
"I dld it as a favor for a friend," Leon
Shaffer Golnlck aaid in a telephone in-
terview Thursday.
Golnick. owner of a Baltimore, Md., ad·
vertising company bearing his name, said
he was a neighbor of Hughe! for more
than a year in the Bahamas.
Golnick said Hughes left the Bahamas
early the morning of Feb. 16 in the
Cygnus, Golnick's converted, 85-foot U.S.
Navy sub chaser. He said Hughes stayed
aboard for the 22--hour trip to Florida's
East C.oast.
"He got off somewhere in Miami
Thursday morning, I'm not saying ex-
actly where," Golnick said.
The dockmaster at HUITicane Hole in
Nassau confirmed that the Cygnus left its
mooring last "Wednesday or Thursday"
and had not returned. He said the craft
y,·as capable of making about 10 knots,
which would mean it would take about 22
hours to sail from Nassau to Miami.
U.S. Customs officials refused to say
whether Hughes went through customs
but officials in Managua, Nicaragua, said
he arrived there last Thursday aboard a
jetliner chartered from Eastern Airlines.
Golnick said that he did not make the
trip with Hughes and that his captain ,
Robert Rehak, skippered the Cygnus for
Hughes' trip to Miami.
Golnick declined to say whether he had
ever seen Hughes.
A Baltimore newspaper columnist
wrote this week that Golnick received a
call from a Hughes aide about 3 a.m. on
Feb. 16, asklng ii Golnick would make
available hls boat and !kipper within 30
minutes. Golnick declined to confirm the
report.
"All I'll say is that I've got a heU of a
story to tell someday when it won 't em·
barrass anybody:" Golnick said . "Until
then, I'm not ta lking. You don't do a
favor for a friend and then tell about it."
The Cygnus was moored at a l\.tiami
dockyard Thursday but Rehak was not
available.
MeanwhUe Clifford Irving and his wife
Edith have opened themselves to possible
arrest or contempt citatio ns as a result of
their faUure to appear in New York state
Supreme Court for examination in two
lawsuits -one connected with the so-
called Hughes autobiography.
Irving had been subpoenaed for pretrial
questioning Thursday in a libel suit
against himself and Dell Publlshlng C,o.
filed by art dealer Fernand Legros who
claims Irving 's book ''Fake!'' defamed
him .
ti.Irs. Irving had been ordered to appear
for examination about Irving's disputed
Hughes "autobiography" in a suit filed by
Rosemont Enterprises, a Nevada flrm
that claims exclusive rights to Hughes'
life story.
State Lands Board Okays
'Sale of Salt C1·eel\: Beach
The sale of Sa1t Creek Beach. now
named Niguel Beach, to Orange County
for $1.7 million hns been approved by the
State Lands Commission.
The approval Thursday mark! the final
step in county acquisition of the 4,800-foot
beach for use or the public.
Avco Community Developers Inc .. suc-
cessors to the Laguna Niguel Corpora-
tion, will sell' the property to the county
and develop 17 acres of parking area and'
two acres of access paths !or an ad·
ditional '800.000.
As a condition of the sale, the county
has agreed to drop any additional
prescriptive rights It might have to cross
Avco properties in the area.
The Salt Creek Beach controversy
1urfaced more than two years ago at an
assembly subcommittee hearing In
Laguna Beach.
Helen Keeley, a LagWla resident, told
committee members that the county had
abandoned In 1968 the remalning portion
or Salt Creek Road which once led to the
beach to the Laguna Niguel interests.
Her revelation sparked a long and noisy
campaign to gain access to the beach for
the public. Surfers. swimmers and just
plain sunbathers jolned in the fray.
At one point a recall campaign against
lhen Board Chairman and Fifth District
Supervisor Alton Allen of South Laguna
was started. It was lhls campaign which
many believe aided in Ronald Casptrt'
victory over Allen Ln the 1170 primary
election.
The supervl5or1 followed with an m.
vestlgatlon of possible prescriptive rights .
of the public to permanent access to the
valued beach.
DEMONSTRATOR SALE!
1972 Colony Park .
Mrs. Dick Johnson's
Personal Station Wagon
• •
WADED WITH EXTRAS!
1972 Mercury Marquis
Chas. Woodard's Personal
4-Dr. Brougham
Air cond., power seats, performance perfect to
suit our service manager.
BIG DISCOUNT!
SUBSTANTIAL REDUCTION! • • •
\,
Choose from ... Con ~ar ..• Continental
... All l 972's •.. All Demos ...
.. Ortmpt Cmmtu'1 FamUu of Ffnt Ctn'I,.
ohnson&son
llNUJI N 1\1 1 I~( I 1f-!Y
( 1-\PH I
2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA • 54u-5830
I
•
'
4 DAILY MLOT fri4111, Ftbnlllfl' 2$, 1972
Nixon Mixes Q~ips, Furrowed Brow
San Clemente:
Past, Present
MEMORY LANE DEPT. -San
Clemente cillzens are going to dedicate a
new $230,000 community center Sunday
and for old·tlrnen along the Orange
Coast, it will be a considerable time for
nostalgia.
Today, wt're all used to the praclict of
developers who throw up a vut sea of
tract homes and then tosJ in a "com-
munity center" to demolllltrate their
civic-mindedness.
Some may C<lnslder Jt a rather in-
novative pr8ctlce.
OLE HANSON did It, however, In 1928
when he founded the Spanish Village ol
San Clemente. He put up the Community
Clubhouse before he bad a!surances that
all the Iota would sell or t b a t the
municipalffy would actually occur.
Lots of real estate folks will tell you to-
C!ay that Hanson was maybe 40 years
ahead of hJJ time. Coastal hJJtory tends
to suggest this. The new community of
Mission Viejo, for example, Is almost a
, carbon copy of the grand design used by
Hanson in creaUng the City of San
· Clemente four decades ago.
I San Clemente's clubhouse, however, its
' Spanish tile roor, white stucco walls and
massive rlreplace and Interior beams,
stood at the center of the town ror 43
years. It was the showcase of the com·
rnunlty. Those who grew up in the
: Spanish Village remember ch as in g
Easter eggs on its lawn and following
Santa Claus Into the place at YuleUde.
TWO YEARS AGO, the clubhouse
burned down. San Clementeans, after con.
siderable travail, set out to rebuild it.
Sunday, they'll have a dual celebration in
dedicating the new community center
and in marking the 44th anniversary of
the city'• incorporaUoo which occurred In
February of J928.
Aa noted, Hanson's clubhouse came
before cltyhood. It wu started In July of
1926 and completed in January of 1927 at
a cost of about $100,000. Tb1t wu quite .a
few dollars in those days.
'Ibe renewed clubhouse, which carries
much of the flavor and tradition of the
old, COit SU0,000. One main section of the
old building, the Ole Hanson Room, was
saved in the rebuUdJng and refurbl!bed,
with its big fireplace, ceiling btams and
Spanish style furniture.
OLE BOB HANSON, grandson of tbe
.founder or the village, will be serving as
master of ceremonies when the new
·dedication gets under way Sunday af.
ternoon at J o'clock. There are going to
be a lot or other old-timers on hand too.
•Practically the whole Hanson clan, for
example.
Also scheduled to appear are Mrs.
Hamilton H. Cotton and her daughter,
Lucy, former owners of the estate which
has now become famous as President
Nixon's Western \Vhite House. Others in--
elude the senior Hanson's long-time
,secretary Ida Denning ; 11-1n. Roy Divel,
Sr. and family: llfrs. Bernice Ayer; early
police chier Wendell Lovell and many
others from San Clemente's pioneer days.
YOU SUSPECT there may be con--
siderable talk of the early times when
San Clemente was considered just
another crazy real estate development
scheme. Alas, the fame of being selected
as the home for the President of the
United States came too late to be enjoyed
by the man who drea med and built the
place.
But I'll bet yoo it wouldn't have surpris-
ed Ole Hanson.
He would have just commented, "The
man has good taste."
Yorty Opposes Trip
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mayor Sam
Yorty says If he had been President be
would not have gone to China to meet the
leaders of the Peking regime. Any such
meeting, Yorty said Thursd11y, would
have been on "neutral ground."
President
Convivial
Sightseer
PEKING (AP)-Presldent Nixon toured
Peking's Forbidden City tor nearly two
hours today and In high good humor
cracked jokes, ignored the heavy snow
and told this Chinese host about an old
arm injury.
Wearing a dark topcoat but bareheaded
as usuaJ and without gloves, he walked
from building to building throug h the
snow-covered courtyard s.
"We don't want to see it all today
because we want to leave something to
come back to," Nixon said as he toured
the vast palace from which the emperors
ruled China for nearly 600 years.
As he picked hls way down one set of
icy 1teps, the Pre1ldent turned to his
guide, Yeh Chlen.ylng, vice chainnan of
the Military Affairs Comml11lon, and
remarked: "If I fell It would make a
good picture."
Nixon recalled that whUe a member of
the House of Representatives, he fell
down some 1tair1 and broke his left arm
at the elbow. Holding the ann out from
bis body, he told Yeh he has never been
able to e.xtend it fully as a result. "Ever
sinct J've been careful," he added.
shown· a royal recption room where
child emptfrors sat on a gilded bench to
handle aUair1 of state which their
mothers prompted from behind a screen,
Nit:on cracked: 0 Jt's the same today. The
women are always the back se11t
drivers."
The President also introduced Yeh to a
succession of American newsmen, in·
eluding conservative William F. Buckley
Jr. "He's very liberal -sometimes,"
Nixon joked, then quickly added, "don't
quote me."
Jn the mUHum secllon, the President
saw some gold ear-stoppers used by
royalty to keep out sounds they didn't
relish. "Give me a pair, will you!'' he
jested. .
Mrs. Nixon wore the blond mlnk coat m
which she left Washington and also was
bareheaded as she followed her husband
around the pagoda-topped p a 1 a c e s •
Secretary of State William P. Rogers
helped her up and down each set of icy
steps.
The party toured ornate throne rooms,
the offices of emperors dead for cen--
turies and royal bedrooms. They they
moved at a leisurely pace through a
museom section displaying rare and
beautlfUI relics of ancient China dating as
far back as 7,000 B.C.
American news photographers took pic-
tures of the Nixons peering into glass
cases fllled with Han dynasty bronzes
that had pever been photographed ror
publlcallon, even in China. The Han
pltcel were produced In the time of
Christ.
"Some of the art work is just out of
this world," said Mrs. Nixon.
She said she has enjoyed Chinese
hospitality -tremendously and added :
'"Ibey have just tried ao hard to make
everything pleuant."
lflcks
PRESIDENT NIXON CLIMBS SNOW.COVERED STEPS IN THE FORBIDD!N CITY
Accemp1nled by Tung Pl-wu {L), Vic• Ch•irm1n of Peopl1'1 Republic
China Tomists
Observe Nixons
Visiting Palace
PEKING (UPI) -President Nixon
took a break today in his wearying 20th
Century diplomacy lo marvel at the
Forbidden City, where almost five cen--
turies of emperors !haped Old China's
history from thrones or gold.
Escorted by Yeh Chien-ying, China's
leading military figure, Nixon and his
wife spent 90 minutes touring the
Imperial Palace's Jiving quarters and
three throne rooms. The palace, in the
heart of Peking, now is a museum.
The Nlxons, bareheaded and smiling
despite heavy snow and temperatures in
the 20s, walked and drove through about
40 of the 250 acres in the palace grounds.
Several hundred Chinese tourists -
families with small children, 'teen.age
gitls and off-duty soldiers -looked on,
quietly curious.
Nixon broke into a broad smile when he
saw the main throne in the Hall of
Supreme Harmony, elaborately fashioned
atop a six-foot dais and backed by -an
elaborately curved screen.
In the third throne room, only a few
yards away, Mrs. Nixon showed !pecial
interest in a collection of art works and
imperial treasures dating thousands of
years into China's history.
"She took a more female interest in
what would be lovely in the home," said
UPI reporter Helen Thomas, who ac·
companied the preaidentlal party. "Nl<on
seemed more interested in the emperor'!
court, where he received. ambauadors
and that sort of thing."
The palace has stood in its present
general fonn since 1407, when it was con·
structed by the third Ming emperor,
Yong Le.
Surrounding the palace itself was a
walled area, into which the Chlnese peo-
ple were forbidden to go, called the Pur·
pie Forbidden City.
Buildings inside the Forbidden City
were gradually opened to the public arter
the Manchu Dynasty fell in 1911.
Nixon entered the Forbidden City
through the massive red brick Gate of
Heavenly Peace, one of the rew re-
maining parts of the old city wall
Pat Sees Acupuncture,
Visits Tourist Store
PEKING (AP) -Pa~Nilcon donned a
'vhite medical cloak today to watch two
young girls receiving acupuncture treat-
ment at the Peking'! Children's Hospital.
Then she went shopping, selecting a
pair of pajamas for her husband aod a
set or china for her daughter Julie,
At the hospital the First Lady and her
escort.. had to change to the white
medical cloaks as a hygienic policy of the
hospital, which was founded in 1955. Mrs.
Nlxon took o£f bet fur coat, under which
she wore a brown and mustard yellow
knitted dress.
An aide at the hospital explained as
they viewed some photos on the wall that
acupuncture has proved successful in
many diseases hitherto difficult to cure,
such as paralysis.
Mrs. Nixon said: "l have read you are
doing greet work on deafness. Do you do
that here?" Ku Shiu-po, vice chainnan of
the revolutionary committee of the
hospital, said they had had success in
some semJdeafneas cases.
''Of 12 cues of semideafness, eight
wwe treated succusfully and they can
hear well again," the First Lady was
told.
Jn another room, a girl of about IO was
being treated by acupuncture for
Father's Neat
Diplomatic Feat
Praised by Julie
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Julie Nixon
Eisenhower said Thursday she has been
following television coverage of her
·parents' trip to China "and I thought my
dad performed a real dJpiomaUc reat
when he made one little glass of Chinese
wine last for 44 toasts."
paralysis. She had needles stuck in on her
right leg from hip to foot.
Treatment ror this type of polio. la once
a week, she was told .
Asked whether they minded her
watching, Mrs. Nixon told newsmen ac-
companying her, "They don't seem to
Ind .. m .
She got a brief rundown on the hospital.
It is a &eneral hospital for children from
infants to 14-year-olds and hB.!1 a staff of
more than 820 doctors, nurses, office and
other workers.
The hospital has nine departments -
Internal medicine, surgery, infectious
diseases, Chinese traditional medicine,
new·style acupuncture t r e a t m e n t ,
physiotherapy, ears-nose-throat, op-
thalmology and stoma tology. It's 20
wards have 600 beds.
"The hospital has 2,000 out-patients,"
Mrs. Nixon was told, "and between 500 to
600 in patients." Eighty-five percent of
the staff are women doctors.
"l.A>Ok at that piano," she e:rclaimed
when she saw a group of children
playl!Ji. Dr. F. T. Chu, head of the
holpital, told Mrs. Nixon he had studied
at Boston Children's Hospital 40 years
ago. She shook hands with several
members of the staff and left for a
"friendship store,'' where foreigners
shop, a five-minute drive from the
hospital.
Mrt. Nixon shook hands with several
shop girls as she walkld in. She looked at
several brocadea, but decided not to buy.
Strain Seen
In Arduous
Negotiation
PEKING (UPI) -Illa faco showl!Ji tbe
strain of dealing with a h o st 111
philosophy, President Nixon hinted today
that be might soon relax the secrecy sur-
rounding live days ol talks which have
8l'OUSed deep misgivings In an Asia In-
evitably to be affected by their outcome.
Nixon's final formal session with
Premier Chou En-lai began at the
President's iake!lde guest house nearly
three hours behind schedule. Th.ere was
, no explanation foi: the delay .
American reporters and photographers
were kept so far from the gate they could
not see who was corning and going.
This was Nixon's last day In Peking. He
goes Saturday In a Chinese-flown, Brilish-
built Trident jet to the resort clty of
Hangchow, 900 milea to the south, to
spend a day before a flight to Shanghai.
China's largest city with a populaUon of
10 million. From there, Nlxon departs
homeward Monday, ending the longest
stay of an American Preilldent in a
foreign land.
Sometime before be leaves for hi s
return to Wa~n. Nlmn was ex·
pected to meet again with Chairman Mao
Tse-tung, father of China's O:>mmunist
movement. Their first meeting was at
r.1ao's residence Monday, shortly after
Nixon landed in Peking.
During a snowy tour this morning at
the "Forbidden City" -the walled,
moated palace compound of ancient im-
perial emperors -Nixon was asked how
his talks with Chou were going. He had at
that point met with the premier for a
total of 25 hours and h1a race showed the
11train.
The President brushed the question
aside but said he would "talk tonight"
during a toast at the. huge banquet he i!
giving for his Chlheae hosts in the Great
Hall of the People.
The suspicion aroused by the utmost
secrecy surrounding the talks wa!
reflected in scornful statement& from
world capttals.
Moscow dubbed the talks "the Peking
opera" and the Viet Cong accused Nixon
of trying to capitalize on the split
between the Chinese and the SOvet Union.
Japan, te11rlng it ls t() be edged out of
trading with China, also is worried about
Nixon's mission.
Both the Vietnamese Communists and
the government or President Nauyen Van
Thieu SOuth Vietnam IUSpect that Nix·
on and the Chinese may·l!leek to impose a
solution on the war In which they would
have no voice.
The air of cord.lallty displayed by
Chinese and American officials and the
unprecedented buildup the Chinese press
has given the Nixon mission -it has
made Pat Nixon the "star" of Chinese
television -indicated that both sides
were pleased with their progres.s.
The scanty information which was
available privately from l n r or med
!OU!'CeS showed that the future of the N1-
tionall.rt Chinese island outpost or Chiang
K.al-l!lhek has been 1 stumbling bM>ck to
the general declaration of "peaceful
coexi!tence" which Nixon and Chou hope
to issue.
Agreement has been reached on
cultural exchangu, efforts to increue
trade, and continuing diplomatic cont1cta
wltlxrut formal diplomatic recognition.
East Alerted for Floods
The President's younger daughter,
vacationing this week at the Western
\Vhlte Houae in San Clemente, visited a
predominantly Mex:ican-American school
and dedicated a chapel at the East Whit-
tier YMCA Thursday.
In a question-answer session with
history students at El Sereno Junior High
School, Mrs. Eisenhower aIDd, 11The day
a1ter he was inaugurated, my father call·
ed Henry Kjsslnger into his office and
told him he would ha\'e to open the doors
to China ." Storrn Hits Area From New E1igland to IV. Caroliria
•
l.11'1 WI A111lt IOTOCA$f.
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I
Ma ybe Chou Took
Stacey's Advice
WICHITA, K•n . (AP) -"U you think
It would get lonely, maybe you CCllld oend
two," IO.year-old Stacey Upton wrote 1n a
letter to Chinese Premier Chou En-lal
1sktng for a panda.
Written last October, the .1.iter w.,
sent to President Nb:on with a requeat
that he carry II to China.
Stacey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Rlch•rd Upton, ••pressed hope In gettln1
a couple of black and white pandas for
the Sedgwick County Zoo.
Chou has annQUnCed that he wlll make
a gift of two pandu to the United States.
"I think I speak on beball of all the
chtldren of Wlclllto and In sumiundlng
towns," St.coy aald In tbe letter.
U•l'f .......
MRS. NIXON COMFORTS CHILD AT HOSPITAL IN PIKINO
AdhfflYo Strlpo °" LOI eo .. r Acu~uncturo Noodloa •
I
f
Fh·e IGlls
At Lea st
18 Peopl e
...
SAO PAULO, Brazil (UPl) -Firemen
discovered e!ibt more bodies in the nlins
ot the fire-l avaged Plranl building today ·
bringing the death toll of the y,vrst blue
In Sao Paulo in several decades to •t
least 18 persons.
Bodies of the latest victims were found
as firemen conducted a noor·by·Ooor
aearch o( the gutted 25-11tory building
from which helicopters, braving soaring
flames, air!Uted more than 400 persons to
aafely.
Most of the deaths resulted from burns
or injuries when terrified shoppers tried
to leap~ from windows to safety. More
than 400 persons were injured, many of
them when they jumped out of lower
floor windows to the ground below.
~1orc than 12 hours after the blaze
started it still raged out'of control. .
SiJ:teen helicopters braved the flames
and smoke to land on the top of the
Plraru building and airlift hundreds of
persons trapped there to safety. It took
them six hours, sometimes with flames
all but surrounding them, for the
helicopters to get everybody safely off
the roof.
"It was a miracle how many people
they took off the roof," said Odair Guer-
ra, 21. a Brazlllan air force recruit who
helped in the airlift carried out by air
force, municipal , state and private
helicopters.
Guerra said "the helicopters could not
at first get to the roof because the flatnes
y.·ere so high," but finally managed to
land on a heliport atop the building. He
said a number of people taken to safety
were suffering from smoke inhalation.
The fire ln the t~year-old building
broke out about 3:15 p.m. on the second
floor. The first five floors housed a de·
partment store while the rest of the build·
ing was devoted to office space.
There was no indication of arson, lire
official said.
-. -•
BUILDING ENGULFED
At Leist 16 Die
'
Ma nila-area Mayor
' --
KilJ ed in Au1hush
MANILA (UPI) -Gunmen shot and
killed Cavite City Mayor Manuel S. Rox-
as and his driver today, opening fire on
the mayor's Dodge sports car from am-
bush .
Roxas, elected to his first term as
mayor last November. was the third
Manila-area mayor killed in the last four
months.
\
Dee p Space
Prob e Beai·s
Me ssage
By HOWARD BENEDICT
.,. A.,._. Wrttw
CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. -In tht Oral
attempt to use a satellite to com-
municate with Intelligent beings In outtt
space. a spacecraft scheduled £or launch
Sunday will carry a plaque that tells in
scientific symbols when it wu launclled,
from where and by what kind or people.
Along with the symbols, the plaque on
Pioneer 10 bears the naked figures or a
man and woman, the man's right hand
raised ln a gesture of good will.
The experiment ls strictly passiVe.
Inhabitants of another star system would
have to ~apture the payload to get the
message.
National Aeronautics and s pace
Administration officials say the chances
are n:mote that anyone will I~ it.
But they note Pioneer 10 is the first
man-made object intended to escape our
solar system, that it will travel for
millions of years, perhaps forever, into
other galaxies, and that no one knows if
other civilizations e~ist out there.
Pioneer IO's primary mJssiOn is to be
the first spacecraft to explore the largest
planet in this solar system, Jupiter, and.,
its puzz.Jing red spot. To reach the distant
target, the probe will be hurled away
from earth at 32,000 miles an hour, faster
than any previous space vehicle.
Even so, it will take 22 months to reach
the vicinity of Jupiter. A ft e r
photographing and probing the planet
with sensors, it will zip deeper and
deeper into space, beyond the reach of
the sun's influence.
Recause of the possibility that there Is
intelligent life elsewhere in the universe,
the idea of the plaque was suggested by
two Cornell University astronomers and
the wife or one of them.
Dr. Carl Sagan, director of the Cornell
Laboratory for Planetary Studies, ex-
plained :
rrlday, Frbru•ry 25, 1972 DAILY l'ILC: f
Pact Approved
'
British Strike
By Miners Ends
LONOON (AP) -Britain's 280,000 l'Oal
miners ended their n1tlonwlde strike to-
day, casting an overwhelming majority
''Ok that guaranteed a apet<ty windup of
the power crisla dl!lruptlng Britain'•
econon1y and idlin& millions.
Bombs, Fi res Ravage
N. Ireland's Capital
111e miners voted 210.039 to 7,581 to ac-
rept a big pay offer fron1 the National
Conl Board. The offer of a 20 percent pay
increase was b a s e d on lhe recom•
n1endations of 11 government-appointed
co urt of inquiry. Mine~ were eamJng •n
A\'era gc of $49.50 weekly before ,the
strike.
The n1iners 'viii go back to work_ Mon·
d;iy, \
1'h e \.Ole \\'as taken over the past two
BELFAST, Northern Jreland (UPll -
Explosions and fire hit targels in Belfast
and several Ulster cities today in the sec.
ond consecutive day of bomb and arson
attack! ln the c;apital and outlying areas.
An e1plosion ripped U1f'OIJgh a bus sta·
tion Jn Ant1'n, severely damaging the
building and )3 buses, and fire razed an
unmanned customs post near U>n·
donderry, the army said.
Bombs smashed two p hon o gr a p h
record shops in the center of Belfast,
touching off bursts of anger among shop-
pers against the outl11wed I r i s h
Republican Army (IRA).
"They should be shot -not interned,"
sc'rea1ned a woman bystander when a
bomb .$hattered the liart and Churchill
record shop and warehouse in Wellington
Place.
"This is murderous," ll po Ii c e
spokes1nan barked. as conslables carried
away a middleaged won1an who fainted
when the bomb exploded.
An anny spokesman said two men car· days and the resulll!, announced today, n1eanl that of£iclals could go ahead with
rying gllll8 planted the Wellington Place plans for an industrial recovery after
bomb and set a five-gallon drun1 of coal begins returning to power generating
gasoline beside it to feed nan1es when the stations.
bomb blew up . Governrnent officiHls said power ('Uh'I
Just before that blast, a youth bicycled \vcre expected to con11nue for several
up to another record shop in Queen 's weeks, until coal supplies fire built up
Arcade. a few hundred yards away, again at power staUons, but that the vote
police said. He parked and locked his lo end the strike would permit gradually
bike then ran. easing restrictions on power usage .
Police tried to clear lhc area and 1he The .strike, first na tionY.•lde stoppage Uy
bicycle bomb exploded. slightly Injuring a the nliners since 1926, began Jan. 29.
British soldier. a policeman and five The miners originally asked for 11 '17
civilians. All were treated in hospitals for percent average increase ln the hn~it
flying glass cuts. police said. weekly rate of $49.40 for undergrounfl
The youth escaped . \vorkers. Thty later scaled down their
A bon1b placed by four men rippert p::irt demands to 11 percent and rejected an
of the roof rrom the ~t alone Golf club in offer of 7.9 percent .
suburb an Belfast t1nd caused other TI1e government appointed Lu rd
damage to the building. an arn1y \Vilberforce, a senior judge, to he;id tho
spokesman said. court of inquiry . This recom1nended a 20
The spokesman said British troops ar-percent 8\'erage increase. Later negotin·
rested 35 security suspects in the 24 lions produced more fringe benefits. in-
hours ending early toda y. cludins: longer vacations. ,;::::::::::===================~
Senators Vote to Allow
Limited Bus Funding
dcreated. I WASHINGTON (AP •
Muskie Should Capture
New York Delegation
Working with Sagan on the project were
his wife, Linda Salzman Sagan, a painter
and film maker. and Dr. Frank Drake.
director of the National Astronomy and
Ionosphere Center at Cornell.
21 Am ericans
Hurt in Fight
Close to Saigon
With the support of its liberal
members, the Senate has
voted to allow federal spen·
ding for busing only at the re-
quest or local school officials.
The provision was part of tt
compromise-amendment ap-
proved Thursday as a preface
to debate on several tough
proposals to outlaw busing.
1'he compro1nise proposal I
offered by Democratic Leader
Mike Ma n s CJ e Id and
Republican Leader Hugh Scott
was adopted on separate voles
on its three parts -51 to 37.
50to38and79to9. I
The outcome was a setback
for senators who oppose all
busing. They denounced it as
meaningless and a hoax, and
said it would not stop any or
the busing now being ordered
by federal courts.
we will be clo1•d
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 27
for inv•ntory
By CLA V F. RICHARDS
ALBANY, N.Y. (UPI) -Unless he
stumbles in earlier primaries, Sen. Ed-
mund S. Muskie should win the lion's
share of New York's 273 delegates to the
Democratic national convention.
Surprisingly, the strongest contender to
the Maine senator in the scramble for the
CAMPAI GN '72
largest single delegation to the con-
vention is not New York City Mayor John
V. Lindsay, but Sen. George McGovern of
South Dakota. He captured the en·
dorsement of the party's left wing New
Democratic Coalition (NOC).
Developments in the 21 primaries prior
to New York's on June 2{l may alter the
picture. But, at present, polls show
~1uskie the popular leader, McGovern the
runner-up , and Lindsay back in the pack
with Sens. Hubert Humphrey of Min·
ne80ta and Henry Jackson of Washington.
The Republican party, which will send
a smaller 88-man delegation t o
California, is tightly controlled by Gov.
Nelson A. Rockefeller, who will work ac·
lively as President Nixon's campaign
manager in New York state.
The Republican delegation should go to
the convention solidly pledged to the
President.
New York's Conservative Party en·
dorsed Rep. John M. Ashbrook (R·Ohiol,
a move that will not have too much im-
pact on the Republican primary btcause
Sen. James L. Buckley. elected on the
Conservative line, has not joined in the
endorsement.
Neither Ashbrook nor Rep. Paul
McCl~key (R-Calif.), has campaign
organizations in New York and did not in-
di cate if they will challenge Nixon here.
Roth parties face a problem in ready-
irig slates for the pr Im a r y. The
delegates will run in 39 congressional
districts which must be reapportioned
before the primary, a step t h e
Legislature is expected to take next
month.·
The names of the presidential can·
dldates appear nowhere on the primary
ballot, maklng it dilflcult for the voter to
pick the delegates who support the man
he wants.
Mu skie, whose family slill lives in his
home town of Buffalo, N.Y., probably
contributed singificantly to Humphrey's
400,000.vote victory over Nixon in 1968.
He drew large crowds in four recent
upstate visits.
He has a strong organization in New
York State. John F. English, the state's
national committeeman, is Muskie's na-
tional campaign coordinator, while Wil-
liam McKeon of Auburn is directing much
or the state operation.
Lindsay's recent conversion to the
Democratic party ha s not won him in-
stant loyalty from old line party leaders.
Albany Mayor Erastus Corning II prolr
ably summed up their feelings best
when he termed Lindsay a "political
chameleon.''
There are no overwhelming issues
peculiar to New York State.
SAIGON (UPl1 -Thirty -four
Americans were wounded in clashes with
Communist guerrillas today, including 21
in a rive-hour battle only 42 miles from
Saigon and seven in an ambush of a U.S.
Army truck Cilnvoy in the Central
Highlands.
A number of 90urces said earlier Com-
munists planned a major offensive during
President Nixon's trip to Peking but of-
ficers refused to detine the increased
number of attacks as part of a new Com-
munist drive.
The 21 men wounded in the battle 42
miles ea.st of Saigon were the heaviest
American casualties since two Americans
were killed and 34 wounded in a fight 34
miles northwest of Saigon on April 17,
.Ji'IJ.
The wounded men were all members of
the Isl Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment,
which was Gen. George Armstrong
Custer's outfit at the battle of the Little
Big Horn in 1876.
A spokesman said the battle near
Saigon started when a U.S. patrol from
Artlllery Base Cross Sabers, located 50
miles east of Saigon, ran into a guerrilla
force.
The Americans called in jet fighler-
bombers, helicopter gunships a n d
artillery. The guerrillas broke off contact
and escaped into the jungle llve hours
later. Ther was no immediate report of
guerrilla casualties.
A vote was expected today
on an amendment by
Republican Whip Robert F.
Griffin that would s l r i p
federal courts o( power to
order l>using as a means or
achieving integration.
Southern senators are ready
with other antibusing riders if
the Griffin amendment
9 1M.is sin g
Afte r Fire
FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP)
-Nine persons are missing
and feared dead In a fire that
destroyed the Nordalc liotel,
police reported T h u r s d a y
night.
A search of the rubble from
Tuesday's fire was delayed
until Thursday because of the
intense heat, lire officials
said. No bodies had been round
by late Thursday, however.
Occupants of the hotel
jumped rrom second and third
story windows, to escape the
lire, but officials of Fairbanks
Community Hospital said none
of the 10 persons treated there
suffered serious injury.
Flanaeprofing Studied
Aides See Scarred Child
WASHINGTON (UPI) -In
1967, the year Eltz.abeth
Brehm was born, Congress
,.
passed a law requ iring
nameprooflng standards for
things like children's
nightwear.
When Eliiabeth got a cotton
flann~lette nightie for her
third birt.hdAy, there were Btill
no atandani,,. Put to bed at
her uncle's house, Elizabeth
grabbed a cuff link box off a
. dresser. She found a cigarette
lighter inside. It had no Ouid,
but it sparked enough to bum
her nightie.
When her father got to her,
she was engulfed In names.
The doct0!'1 thought she would
die but ahe didn't. Two years
....... 1 and 30 operaLions I a t e r ,
Elizabeth has probably 1Uf·
lmd more pain than most
Jl'!>PI• endurt hi 1 Uletlme. l!Ut 1be'1 walking again, and
Thursday abe walked onto the
stqe at tbe Commarce
Department auditorium and
showed her scara to five
government officiall who art
cooaldcrtng an lndUl!lry peti-
tion to weaken the new
flameproofing standards for
chlldrtn'1 nightwear.
The Brehm• have lltecY 1 . ' ""'T ...... • It.I mlllloo 11111 tn federal
rourt 1gslnlt lbe w.e.aver and
the rttalle( of Ibo earment.
OFFICIALS SEE FLAMl-5CARR ED CHILD ..
Mn. llrohm Holds D•119httr Eliubeth, 5
I
WORLD
SAVINGS
ISNOWOPEN
SATURDAYS
Commencing February 19, our
Regional Office In Laguna Beach,292
South coast Highway at Forest Ave-
nue, 494-9481, will be open Saturdays
from 10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M.
lllese added service hour'I are for our ous.-
tomers who work Monday through Friday
and who would Mite to conduct their financial
bulkleu in the laiturely atmosphere of the
weeltend.
----WOBLDSA
NfO l.(MH Al!ICIOATION
ta. OMCe LYNWOOD. CM.laM4 ""'""''°"""'····-1/al'ty/l>Q<N ..... /-/ o.no1a.. BetnM!lnO/S. DtegotWlll Arcldil/Wil~I
~tin.
&•"lo.•m1 ri,.rd • "'•1f•r ch•rt• The compromise was sup-
ported by a combination of
liberals and moderates, many
or whom said they hoped It
would allay much of the con-
. cern about busing
l f•thie11 itl•11cl, 11ewpert ct11f•r 644·1070 '
I ANTI
TRUCKL AD
PLANT SALE!
FIRST QUALITY
IN OUR PARKING LOT
SAT. AND SUN. ONLY
1 GAL.
c
• FERNS • AZALEAS
AND MANY MORE
TROPICAL VARIETIES
TO CHOOSE FROM
JCPenney ·
24 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH ONLY
•
..
"
• DAD,l:' PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
·should Cancel Electi9ft
Voters of the Hunlmgton Beach Union High School
District are scheduled to go to the polls June 6 lo decide
on a unification plan that virtua)ly no one favors.
Jt would eliminate the five elementary school dis·
tricts within the territor.y of the high school district,
merging them all into one colossal unified district, serv·
Ing children from kindergarten through twelfth grade.
In 1965 this plan was put to a vote and it went
down to defeat by a seven to one margin. It failed to
carry even one precinct.
If anything, resistance to "total" unification has
hardened since then. No ranking school official within
high school district Jwindaries now supports such a
concept, and almost alf of them have gone on the record
opposing il.
,\11 election on "total '' unifi cation would be a \Vaste
of LIAl:Jayers' money. Several school boards in West Or·
ange County have already taken this position formally
and asked that lhe election be called orr.
Special legislation Crom sacramcnt6 i.! necessary
to do this. Orang~ County legislators .Should make every
e{{ort to prevent such a useless election.
Flttoridation to a Vote
lion 's detractors the opportunity or proving lhe support
they claim. Supporters of fluoridahon will have their
chance to prove their point -if ,they show up at lhe
polls. ·
Those who so actively -and loudly -campaigned'
against fluoridation just could find thal lheir •uccessful
efforts to force a voter showdown may backfire on them.
Directors Ducked Reform
Orange County sanitation directors have ducked
the task of reforming their organization.
After 13 months of study. the directors balked at
a committee-recommended proposal that •\vould have
mer ged seven districts into one and cut the number of
directors from 37 to 25. The old zones would have been
retained as advisory groups.
The intent \vas to simplify the policy·making
process and to avoid duplication in directors' fees. The
duplication occurs because several directors sit on more
than one board and under state Jaw receive '$50 a meet·
lng from each district they represent even though tho
meetings are held concurrently .
Fountain Valley city councilmen have taken the
heat off the1nselves on a controversial issue by placing
the fluoridation question on the primary ballot.
On June 6 voters will presumably decide once and
for all jf enough fluoride is to be added to the city's
waler supply to bring it up to the one part per million
,;lrength required for increased dental health benefits.
Instead of adopting lhe recommended change, the
d irectors, claiming a loss of local.,control, decided to
.. seek a change in the state law that would allow, but
not require. individual districts to limit fees to $50 with
no duplication.
Fluoridation, though considered beneficial in these
minute quantities, has for years dra\vn fire from con·
servative elements.
A public election on the issue 'vill give lluorida·1
This move may get bogged down in the Legislature.
The proposal also does nothing to cut the number of
directorships -expected to grow to 44 if certain an·
nexations occur.
In short the directors voted for the status quo, not
reform.
H
Tritiuipli for K i ssi nget•, Too Miss Christie
Warming Up the Chinese
PEKING, C•IINA -For a fe-w hours In
the capital of the Chinese People's
Republic it looked as Ir President Nixon
had gotten off to a poor start on his Asian
Peace Mission. His rectption at the
airport was correct but cool. and there
were no crowds to
speak of enroute to
the guest house
\vhere he ·was put up
for his five.day visit.
There were signs
thal Nixon was dis·
appointed by his re·
ceptlon. The outlook
q u i c k: I y cllanged
when Chairman Mao
received him for an hour's talk im-
mediately after his arrival . as was cer-
tainly due an American President. and
Premier Chou ·En-Lai put on a state difl..
ner in the soaring Great Hall of the Peo-
ple which has been the staging area of so
much revolutionary endeavor since it was
built in the mass ive Tein An Men Square
in 1958-1959.
NO DOUBT SOME lies ha ve been told
In the Great Hall, as they have been in
many other government center!! of the
world, but nothing would be more
ominous than having what Chou En-Lai
and Nlxon talked ab::iut turn oul to be
false.
The way the-y acted, as much as what
they said, illdicated a clear intent ion on
the part of both to create a new and con·
structive relationship between the two
huge nations on opposite sides of the
Pacific. The plain truth is they don't
know what that relationship will be ex-
cfpt that it shall end hostilities and p~
vide time for the solution of seemingly in·
Ri chard Wilson
soluble problems.
IT \VAS A TRIU~1PH for Or. Henry A.
Kis singer, loo, and he sat practically pt,1r·
ring while Nixon and Chou En-Lai pro-
claimed tor all the world to hear their
joint intentions or ending the era of
Chinese-American collision. Dr. Ki!lsinger
had arranged it all, and the big scene
was stage-manag ed exactly to his ex·
pectatlons, including the discussion with
Chairman ~fao right at the begiMing.
American oUicials had been worried
about subtle hints from Chinese of·
ficialdom that the President of the United·
States could not be treated with any more
than formal respect and certainly not
with enthusiasm accorded China's friends
from Africa or other parts of Asia.
''YOU OUGHT .TO see what we can do
tn the way of recepLions when we have
diplomatic relations with a friendly coun-
try,'' one Chinese official said. Others
took the line that the foreign office mere-
ly arranged for such visits. The
"government,'' it was said, decided such
matters as the warmth and size of
organized receptions which have been
staged beautlfully in the past.
In this case "the government" decided
to play it cool while giving Nixon exactly
what he wanted in the form of high level
respect and the expression of lofty
aspira1ions. but without commitment s on
such big problems as the future of
Taiwan and the continuing American
milit ary presence in Asia.
•
Nixon is spending lhe nex t several da ys
trying to warm up the Chinese by such
Nixonian tactics as mixing with the of·
fi cial guests sitting at round tables in the
Great Hall and sipping innumerable
toasts with them from a tiny glass which
barely wet his lips.
CHOU EN·LAI sits through this kind of
thing imperturbabl y, like one American
politician watching another pullin g off
crowd-pleasing stunts.
A great many American s who are
watching Nixon·s performance in Pekln~
find it hard to believe. They pinch
themselves to niake sure they are not
dreaming that Nixon is fraternizing in a
great Communist power center. and that
it is really the arch·revolutiooaries Mao
and Chou with whom this Once great
champion o( anti-communism is rubbing
shoulders and exchanging toasts .
TO SUCH AMERJCANS Peking is a
kind of stage set, anyway, as if drawn
from a revolutionary opera depicted in a
picture magatine: But it is all true -the
uniformly blue-clad populace on bicycles.
the art form of huge revolutionary
sloga ns emblazoned in red Chinese
characters against the drab background
of the mid-winter Asiatic scene.
And it was all true that Nixon sat in the
Great Hall of the People on Tein An Men
Square with the highest officials of the
Communist hierarchy who have imp05ed
upon a nation of at least 700 million an
organizational infrastructure based upon
every principle Nixon is against.
The Chinese orchestra played expertly
'·America the Beautiful" \Vhile Nixon
mingled with the members of Cho En-
Lai's power structure, and what could be
a better opening scene than that?
They May Make Us All Sick
The Bandwagon: It's defi nl1rly a
political year, according to publisher:;;'
catalogues, and we may be as sick of the
books as we are the rhetori c before
November. A sampling , and thi s just for
spring :
GORE VIDAL, professional Democ rat
and author of "Myra Breckenridge."
among other titles, joins Phili p Roth
("Our Gang .. ) and the movie "?.1 illhouse:
A White Con1edy" in attempting to
dethrone the incumbent President. "An
Evening With Richard Nixon," (Random)
is the text of Vidal 's play, apparently
done in a "This Is Your Life " format.
Based on Mr . Nixon 's own words fr om
hfs earliest poli tical days .
"WHAT MAKES SPIRO llUN?" by
CMlANGI COAST
DAILY PILOT
.RObert N. Weed, P11b/1.~l1er
Thoma.r Kt.tlJtl, J:ditor
Albert lV. Bo tes
EditoriaC Page Editor
1'li! editorial pUe 11r the lMily :Pilot aetk• lO inform 1tnd ~un1ulate JUdP,1'1 by [lN!SCntl ng lht~
nt"A'IP9Pl!'r'• opinlont •nd mm· mcnt.ary on topics of lntcret •nd
QgntOca.nce. by providing • fon1m
for 1~ ul)fflUlon of 'oor l'ffdl'n,'
oolnlont. ll11d by r>tUt-nOn.r the
dJvtne viewpoints of lnfotrnf'd oh· ~I'll Md ipokttmen On toofa
of tho """· Friday, February 25, 1972 •
The Bookn1an
\\lashington reporter Joseph Albright
(Dodd I is a generally unflaltering run-
do\vn on the Vice President's career.
"Spiro Agnew 's America." by Theo Lip~
man J r. !Norton), is a rriendlier
analysis of hi s profess ional development.
"White Knight : The Rise of Spiro
Aa:new." by Ju les Witro ver (Random ),
exan1ines the ''contradictions'' in his
personality.
''TED KENNEDY : Tri umph s and
Tragedies." by Lester David !Grosse!),
is a composite portrait drawn from many
interviews wilh the Senator's friends and
foes . ''The Education of Edward Ken.
nedy,·1 by Burton Hersh (~1orrow), is
OOth a biography and an analysis or the
Kennedy experience Jn America.
"McGOVERN,'' by Robert Sam An son
(llolt), examln~ the career of this son of
a South Dakota min ister Crom birth to his
declared candidacy.
"THE LAST OF tho Cold War
Liberals" Is a Jook at the career and
political credo or Sena tor Henry W.
"&»op" Jackson by the tea m or William
Prochnau •od Richard W. Larson (Pren·
tlceJ.
j''mE UNFINISllED JOURNEY,'1 by
S<nator Edmund S. Muskie (Doubleday!,
conl.ah11 tM.Malne Democratic Sen.iitor's
thoughts nn his ramlly, environment,
poverty, clUes, pers6nalllle11 (the Ke!l-
nedy1, Humphrty, Mike Manslleld, Golda
Meir, Nasser. etc .).
"ALMOST TO THE PRESIDENCY,. A
Biography of Two Americans," by Albert
Elsele (Piper ). looks over the lives and
careers of Hubert Humphrey and Eugene
McCarthy, their common origins and con-
tinuing rivalry.
"THE McCWSKEY CHALLENGE,''
by Lou Cannon (Dutton), is a biography
or the maverick GOP Congressman and
Nixon critic. It follows ~lcOoskey's own
book. "Truth and Untruth: Political
Deceit in America" (Simon &"Schuster).
ANO PAT PAULSON'S "How to Wage
a Succetsful Campaign for the Presiden·
cy" (Nash) is billed as a handbook based
on the idea "You can fool alt of the ~
pie some of the time.''
WWlam Ho1u
Dear
Gloomy
Gu
Don't salute the flag or sing the:
anthem -have no tradition; don't
vote -have a minority rule:
don't support local polict -have
no commDnity; don't support the
military -have. no free country;
don't give a hoot -have a nice
day! -D. S. L
rlllt ff•hln "9fltett """'"" Ylt'n. -
lttet'ttlrllY "*" ., .... ... .... ,. ....
..,.;. "' "'" " • ....., On. Dlll'r ,IW.
•
. •'
Abandons Her
True Metier
En route to a plane, I detoured in the
airport long enough to pick up a
paperback book for the flight. Seeing a
new Agatha Christie. I bought it on lhe
fly. boarded the plane. and settled do"·n
for a good read .
QueUe calastropbe aerinne ! , As
Hercule Poirot would be the nrst to eJ·
claim, For in this
book, called "Pas·
senger to Frank·
furt ," Miss Christie
has only one victim
-the unwitting read·
er who imagined he
was ~etting a mys-
tery story.
In this perfeclly
d read f u I "extra-
vagan1.a." as she calls it, MW
Christie has abandoned the field in which
she is superlative, to engage in a spy
story of incredible witlessness, dealing
with a worldwide plot by "youth" to
overthrow the established order.
AS A GREAT fan of Miss Christie"s in
the past, I found it hard to believe that
the same person wrote this farrago of
nonsense ; except that there are too many
similar instances in literature and the
arts generally, where masters in one
form become dubs in another. And it
usually happens when they try to be more
ambitiou s than they should.
In this case, Miss Chrlslie is ob.viously
so alarmed by the current turbulence in
the world that her own fears and horrors
have impinged on her dramatic sense, 'and
she has confused the reality with fie·
tion.
Something of the same sort happened
to Sir Conan Dovie. who became con-
vinced that hil Sherlock Holmes stories
were trivial. and wrote a number of
mediocre "serious" novels that he felt
would immortalize him.
IN MUSIC, Sir Arthur Sullivan felt
denigrated by being solely Identified with
Gilbert's comic operas, and did some
solemn things on his own that merely
pointed up his second-ratednes!l as a
"great'' composer .
Even the magnificent Henry James
came a cropper when he abandoned fic-
tion for the theater, and wrote some
plays that were, quite rightly, booed off
the London stage.
fOne of the few men who lfarhed his
lesson fast was Bernard Shaw, who began
his writing career with five. perfectly
awful novel.s, and never ag•in wrote
another one after he became 1 successful
dramatist).
JN OUR OWN TIME, Leonard Bern-
stein ls an embarrusin& eiample of a
talent who will not let well •flOUgh alone;
• splendid conductor, and a modish com·
poser of excellent popular scoru, he
keeps trying lo write "hr1portant" m111lc
which succeeds only in being hollow and
pretenlloll8.
After ~some -. In the myslerJ
field, Miss Christle may be juaUfiably
tired or pennl\1g these c r y p l I c
amusemeoll : but lben •he ahould rel Ire,
•nd not lnOICI upon· htr lar(• audlenco
an old wom1n'1 constemavon at our
chaos, our LTlmlnallty and our cult of
youth. J1ne. Marple would hive koown
beUu tb•n lo step out of obaracter •
I
Public 1 Has Right
To Protection
To the Editor :
Why ha ve the sta lemenl!l lhat George
Jackson was shot "during what officials
at. ... San Quenlin .. , said was an escape
attempt " and that the incident is ''under
investigation'' (AP, DAILY PILOT, Feb.
21 ) been printed and the material facts
omitted so frequently? The omitted fact!!
arc that three guards and two trustie!l
were killed in I.he area controlled by
prisoners. Their loss was more tragic, if
not more ncws"·orthy, than the death or
Jackson ; after all . the death of the latter
may save li ves in the long rWl.
TO RUMOR IT was a frame up, to
create prejudice against I aw en··
forcement . or to incite riot and murder,
one could repeat such printed statements
and conceal the material facts. I prefer
to think AP's release was inadvertence.
The timing of the recent release with
the California Supreme Court's abolishing
the death penalty raises questions as to
how society can deter a lifer (or long
termer) from killing prison guards.
IS ISOLATION of a dangerous convict
unconstitutionally cruel and unusual
punishment? How many murders should
a convict be permitted before isolation or
execution? Some people liked Justice
Marshall McComb's dissent from the rul·
ing that capital punishment is unconstitu-
tional. The public, including prison guards
and law enforcement officers, have a
right to protection from dangerous per·
sons who have previously commitled vio-
lenrc.
ROY B. WOOLSEY
D ea t h P e nalt11
To the Editor:
1 wonder if the California Supreme
Court would have voted the death sen-
tence unconsUtutional if the Manson ·gang
had entered their homes.
Why shouldn 't it be unconstitutiooal to
spend the taxpayers' money to give these
killen a death sentence and then make
the taxpayers support these criminals?
·Who puts these hig'.h and mighty officia)s
in office, who art also supported by the
taxpayer?
MRS. ZOPHIA FLANDERS
Gra11t The n• A11111est11
To the Editor :
James Duvall's letter (Mailbox, Feb.
16 ) on the quesUon of whether or not
draft evaders should be granted amnesty
Film Poison
Preu -Commenl8
MeU:nt Otmens, fttlcb.1 M1~inb Daily:
"Ever watch someone ~e a photoa:raph
o( a lovely landscape wllli ooe of those in-
1tant-plcture .eamera.s -and then drop
tile wule portion of the film on aald
landscape? That's the hut01n 1nlmal for
you , also known as the litterbug. But the
problem of these cameru ls more than
just litter. According to Fr I end s
maga:!lna, lilt film conlainl noxloua
cbemical1. ii blown Into a lake, lhty
poison !he waler. If dropped In woods or
flclda, Ibey are often eaten by anlma1',
wltb ,....uma fatal ruulll. Thty ailo
stain cloth!"'. The anawor: A plastic Ill·
ter bag to carry the Scraps in unto they
can be dilpooed or pr¢ly. If •!IYbodY
·really caru aboul lhe l.tndacapc, lllat
ls."
Ma ilbox
)
Letters 1rom readers are welcomt.
Normally writers should convey their
n1essages tn 300 words '" less. TM
rigll: to condense letters to fit spa.ct1
or .::llmi11a te libel is reserved. All let-
ters m ust i11cli1de sig1l(Jl!lre and maiL-
ii1g address. but names may be with-
Jield on request if sufficient rea.son
i$ apparent. Poetry will not be pub-
li.shcd.
has triggered some thoughts In me that J
ll'Ould like to share with your reader s.
All of us have been touched by the Viet-
nam war. I have had fri ends killed and
wounded in Nam and so ha ve many of
your readers.
Jn my opinion, primary responsibility
for the casualties lay on the shoulders of
Richard Nixon , Lyndon Johnson , the Pen-
tagon. and all those who partcipated in
the institution of the cold war policy. In
moments when the horror of the war
grabs me, 1 curse the soul.s of those
people!
BUT TIIAT'S ~1Y side. Many believe
that the war has lasted so long, and that
they have lost their loved ones because
the United States has followed a n<rwin
policy in Vietnam. They feel that
students, peace freaks, and dove con·
gressmen have prevented the U.S. from
using ils superior firepower to win in
Nam and end the war, I imagine that
when the horror of the war touches you,
you rage against these people.
My thoughts now turn to am·
nesty-forgiveness. I am a Christian and
Jesus said to me:
"You have learned that they were
told, 'Love your neighbor, hate your
enemy.' But .. what I teU you is this :
Love your enemie! and pray for
your persecutors; only so can you
be children or your heavenly Fath·
er ... " !NEB , Malt. 5 :43-4~1
lF•'J AM TO be a child of God. then I
• •
am commanded to grant amnesty-to " i
forgive Richard Nixon, Lyndon Johnson
and the rest of the warmongers. l believe
that those whose enemies are draft
dodge.rs, peace freaks, and dove con·
gressmen, are commended to grant them
amnC!ty-to forgive them .
JOHN R. HAVEN
F rl'nt Page P ic t ure
To the Et(llor<
The picture l saw In Feb. 15 paper I en-
joyed seeing and reading. The picture
was on the front page 1t the top with 1
priest distributing aabes for Ash Wed-
neldl)I.
More articles like tbb ,would be much
better to ~ad than all ,of the violence
that is . going on In ...the world. Some
artlcle1 thal art positive lnste•d. of
negaUve mlghl really help your paper.
EDIV/-'RO J , ll<MAJI~
B" George _ ___.._
Dear Georg6'
You are an anU-woman dog.
uylng women can'l do on)'lhlng
right!
GWR!A
Otar Gloria:
ThM't "•nli·woman ptc." Shape
up, Gloria.
(Send your lnntrrriost problr!ms
lo George. Why keep • aecret when
yoo can blab 11 aroond!)
•
..
'/
I
J
I
Orange Coast
' EDITION
Today'11 Flnal
N.Y. Steeb
L. 65, NO. <48, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1972 N TEN CENTS
MCA Tries ' to Shake 'Rich People' Image
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of Nie Dmllr-'"" Stiff •
·The Orange Coast YMCA bas an image
pi'oblem.
Jt has an imposing new building with
two heated swimming pools, JI health
club, handball courts, and a Newport
Beach address.
As a result, some people think of it as I
rich man's club with wealthy financial
backing.
But appearances are deceiving. The
COASTWISE
YMCA II ninnlnJ In the rtd. And the
community appears unwilling -to help it
out of It• j>redlcament, ·
60[ don't know of a rich man that uses
tbla plac'e," 1ay1·Don Muhlig, 42, the YM-
CA u~Uve director, wbo for the past
year hu tried to pul the Y!t!CA on 90Jid
financial' footing. .
"We're peo'ple with a real publlc rela·
Uona problem," be ezplained. ''The
building teods:to hide Olll' growing com·
munJtY program. Our youth-membtrahlp
By Plt.U lllterlaKdl
-'
l
•
. . .--:· ~~A'
"l'VE LIVED HERE FOR YEARS. DON'T TELL ME WHAT TO DO/'
• • • ,
Nigi.~ .P:a· .roJ
City Eyes Copt,er. M(Jnitor
Ne!'P>rt Beach city oouncUmen Moo-
day will be asked .to make formal ·~
plication for a federal grant to finance
developrrient ot an infra·red monitor· !Or
the city's police helicopters.
Approval 11 expected since councilmen
authoiized a preUminary application for
the $125,000 several months ago.
''The' objective of the · system ls to
enhance the nighttime helicopter patrol
by increasing the viewing capablllty of
tM observer while at the same time
ftduclng _noise and the nettssity to use hllh lnten•lty lights." City Manaeer
Robert L. Wynn said today.
He explained that the viewing system,
1, camera mounted outside the helicopter
projecting ~seup images Oii a monitor
in the cockpit, will allow the hellcoptera
to fly higher, thereby reducing noise
levels. ·
"The low light level aspect of the
device will increase the effectiveness of
the patrols by enhancing the lllwninatlon
o( the images without requiring increased •
War Veteran
Turns Art Critic
SAN JOSE (UPI) -A disabled World
War II veteran has been arrested after
~ 1ripped down a photograph he con-
sidered obsetne at the Civic Center Art
Gallery.
Thome Woody, 49, was booked Thur:a-
day on charges of entering a public
bulldlng with intent to deface or remove pro~ and of malicious mllchfel. He
-wi.I freed on his recognizance.
The photo, one of 19 on display at the
1allery, depicts a framed A r my
allcbarp paper with two wonis written
ICl'OSS it.
1~Woody called the pltc:tare a 11d.1$graet.11
lfbe UnJted Veterans Council of Santa
Ci'1'a County recenUy objected to the pie.
tUre on grounds it was offensive to
veterana.. ne group demanded 11 be
umoved from the gallery.
·You'll Get It
Eilrlier Now
:S.rlllr dellvery "ol the SalUrd&Y edlUon
ol1ho DAILY PltO'l' wl!I he lo ruu -
··Saturday mornln(. 11 you don1 pt yoor
-liomMellvered copy by t a.m., pl-
Clll by IO a.m., and we 1111rantee
.dtllv.ry. can IC-4321 from moll areu. From
SoQth 4guna, Laguna Ntcuel. Dina
J'oint. Sa'n Juan Capillrano, CIJJ!atrano ~ach and San Clemonte, eaU tolJ.frte to
jlMOO.
From Westmlnller and oorthwut Hun-llnelon Beads, call loll-11'11 to l40-dl0.
...
llgbtlnil" W)'nn WI.
DI I report to councilmen, he ezplllned
that llio ·Iota! co•l -_ol developing the
•Ystein will he $11M,llllO. Tbe city's share. -
will ·he provided by· '"in-kind" "rvlces of
helicopter crews aitd 1 • g r a n t •d-
minla:tfation. u
The 11)1.lem will be develo~ under
contract with Philce>-Ford's Aeronutronlc
cUVlsk>n. ,
Wynn i!i6 uJd IOday that ht thlnkl the
1ystem ·•ill have ·national implications
"In view of the lfl"OWth of beUcopter use
by law enforcement igerlcles icross the
nation."
Wat~r ·Qµality
Unit to Study
Project Effects
Ball¥>& resklent Sue Ficker, the
ecologically-minded aecessionist, Tbun-
day persuaded. a 1tate water quality con-
trol board to tour Newport Harbor to
study possil>le effect• of the ·Irvine Com-
p.ny•s Promontory Boy 'project.
Miss Ficker once sugges~ that areas
like Balboa 1eeede from the city of
Newport Beach. in part to avoid ae-
ceptlng further nmoff from upland
developments.
The Santa AD• Regional W.ater Qual)ly
COntrol Board. Thonday adopted st...i.
anll cootrolllnf the way ground water
from excavation aunnc u. p'.roject'• con.
structlon is returned to Newport Harbor.
They Include ·a l)'ltem ol monitoring
and obeervipg wast.ea, disiolved aulikle1,
di111olved qtYin and mmatural color.
"Tbere-1bould be no problems with the
project ll they ~ate within the
parameters we '9tt' John Zaaadelnski,
staff engineer, 1ald.
Promontory Bay, a man-made lagoon
to he 1urTounded by lunry cu1tom-bullt
homes, has *" plal)lled for 1imost two
ytars. •
A toll! of..12 loll -with the homer
pllllled to -mcire than $ZIO,OOO -bas betn 1ppr .. ed bJ tllt City Coancll.
•
Miis Flem _..i _.,, o• the
-lot poalblo controlo' alllr tbe..:Ji ect ii -_c:oiapWed, especlaDy fl'llt
lropt alnoC .....
''She tanr.l 1brm lnlo eomlng dawn lo
review 1111-ptojed ...i Olfered bolta to
take them lhlotich. tho bad 1pot1," .
Zaaaclelnskl said.
The. tour ii now ttntaUvely llCheduied
far the week ol llmli II.
1'bo project Ill Bayalde D"i•• It beln(
dellped "In tho oclllstvt tradition ol
Liocla Ille," Irvine Compony olllclal1
sald.
\
>
hu recenUy tripled. But when we ask for
help we're told, 'You're ovtr there. You
got rich ' iupport.' " ,
The YMCA building serves the com-
munities of eosta Mesa, Newport Beach
and Irvine. It was built four years ago at
a cost of around $650,000 including the
laiid.
"We got here by accident," says ·
Muhlig of the YMCA on 2300 University
Drive. ''rhis used to be county property
and the Y was meant to belong to no one
city. But by the time we dug the first
spade Into the ground it was annexed to
Newport Beach."
While the YMCA has been saddled with
its "rich" image, other similar organiza·
Uons have been able to maintain their
"poor" image. They get the donations
and the Y doesn't, according to Muhlig.
Even though the YMCA has just com-
pleted a successful membership drive -
the goal was purposely set low to achieve
It -it will face a deficit of $14,000 In this
year's operating budget.
Part of the problem was.caused by a
short United Fynd contribuUon. The YM-
CA was to receive $35,000, but got only
$24,000 sinct the United Fund was unable
to actueve its goals.
"It's the same amount we got last
year, but our youth program keeps grow·
ing. The youth ,program costs us money.
Our adult membership can't support it,"
the Y director Slid .
Another problem area Is the YMCA '.s
13!11.llllO mortgage on the !aclllty Ille!!
which Mubllg describes as a "very basic
building. 1'
"We're keepln gour head barely above
water on pledges to pay the interest OD
our capital debta. Where the money for
prlncipaJ payments Is going to come front
is our ma/or worry," said Muhtlg.
An ebul lent. personable man, who has
surcessfully bailed out two other probttm
YMCA's in the Northweat, Muhlig
(See YMCA, Pa1e I)
No Tax Boost Ordered
Council Committee Cautfn,ns City Manager
A City Council committee today told
Newport Beach City Manager Robert L.
Wynn to make rure there is no need to in-
crease the city property tax as a result of
the 1972-73 budget he ls.preparing.
The entire City Council is upected to
say the same thing when it meets Mon-
day afternoon for a study session at l :)J
p.m. in city ball. The budget is due in
April.
The recommendation to prepare a
budget that will require a tax rate "JtOt
to exceed" the current $1.20 rate is part
of budget guidelines prepared by the
budget pollcy committee.
It was this same committee, consisting
of Councilmen Donald Mcinnis and Carl
Kym]a, that -Jut year drew budget guide-
lines that spurred a major feud with for-
11Jer city manager Harvey L. Hurlburt.
Hurlburt blasted the committee's pro-
posals and weeks later, resigned.
The budget guidelines last year also
resulted in a two and one-haJf cent reduc-
llon in the tax rate.
At $1.20 per $100 valuation, the city tax
on a home valued at $50,000 would be
$145. .
While last year's guidelines also
directed a 15 gercent reduction in
"maintenance· and operation" costs, the
committee this year said Wynn cannot be
expected to make another such drastic
cut but should continue to seek ways to
reduce such expenditures.
The guidelines also state:
-City employe uJary adjustment.
wlll be made following proper "meet and
confer" negoUationl.
-De~ent manpower level1 con-
tinue to. bti frozen as of July 13, 1970
levels,
-New department.!, positions and/or
functions beyond those on the exlstinl
roster will not be proposed or considered.
-No convenience and/or comfort Items
will be proposed or considered "unless a
(See TAXES, Page Z)
2nd Largest
Bank Lowers
Chou Pledges Cooperation
Prime Rate Chinese Leader Promises to Aid Normal Relations
By HENRY IWITZENBUSCH
. ,PEKING !AP ~-Premier Chou En-Jal
!IEW YOJIK JAi'). Natl°""' Ilk> '1!""!1111• 1111P1 ... I' China ~'¥1!'-k
ly6.-k, the ptlon'a .e<e.td JargeJI;" ..... ii\11we!'!llijlJ'."lor•~ rel~~~'
nounced today Jl 11 ·cuttlnC Ila iJi>atlnf · fr1~)1 ·000!*~7!ili the UR\l'd,Siltes. ",
pl-)liM nto to f lf pollo.n~ the lowelt' 'At>a ·-,lo;'Jl~J.ano.. the OdneH *veJ Ill ' leader' mJ!onoeo~to a tout· Jn llf1lcll 1
I -nearly 12 yean. • President Nixon dec1ared: "We have
. 'Ibe ,JA percent redqct1on In the begun the Jong process of removing that
minimum lntere.i Citibank charges its wall between us."
moat creditworthy corporate customers Seated at round tables in the Great
becomes effecUve Monday. Hall of the People, the .Chou and Nixon
Cl,~bank's prime rate, direcUy tied to entourages ate a nine-course meal of
movem~t.s in the money market is re-Chinese food except for grapefruit :and . , ' orange segments flown from the United viewed weekly. Today 1. cut brought the Stat ea. They sipped California cbam-
New York bank's minimum interest to a pagne.
level 'ii to ~ percent below most other Nb:on began the toasting by expre&sing
lar&e banks. appreciation for the Chinese. hospitality
Mor1an Guaranty Trust Co.. Irving shown to the AmericBJJs the Cive days
Ti-ust Co., and Bankera Trust Co. are the they have been in Peking.
only large banks which cwnntly have a 'Oiou and · Nixon came to the dinner
414 percent minimum lending rate. Most from their fifth and final meeting, at
other major bank.! have held toi the 4"4 which they preauMJibly reached agree-
percent level. ment on improving contacts through
Early last week, a small Cincinnati cultural Ind ot~r exchanges, with
bank Provident Bank reduced its prime dlolomaUc relations some time Jn the
,! ' fulure rate to 4ll percen~ but no other large aec· u· hi ·•··t Tb sd t th banks followed auit . a mg s Yl.lll ur ay o e
The tut. time ba~ks generally offered Great "".~ll of China~ Ni~on said the, wall
1 prime rate below 4i,z . percent was in .showed the determma~on ~f the Clunese
May 1959 when It was at 4 percent. On people to retain the1r independence
May 18 1959 the rate was raised to 4!h throughout their long history.
percent' by ~at banka across the coun· "The Great Wall Is no longer a wall
try. dividing China from the rest of the
In another economic development the world,'' he continued. "But it is a
government said today that wholesale reminder of trye ,fact that there are ma.ny
prlcea jumped another eight-tenths of l walls still ex1stmg in the world , wh1cb
perctnt In January. divide nations and peoples.
The rise exacUy matched December's "The Great Wall Is also a reminder
lncrease and indicated that the expected that for almost a generation there has
Phase 2 price bulge bas not yet begun to been a wall between the People's
flatten out. Republic of China and the United States.
When adiosted for the usual seasonal In these pet four day1, we have begun
trendl, the rise in the wholesale index the long process of removing that wall
was only half e great, or four-tenths of l between us ."
percent, the Labor Department'• an-Nixon conceded that both sides
nounceme.nt said. recognize there are great dUferences
fa Million Paid
·-._ ....
l!Ol.U flltNf HOlllf YIA """NOi-
EAST
CH l~A
SE A
•••
••
HERE 'S THE REST OF THE PRESIDENT'S CHINA ITINIRARY
.
between the United States and China.
·"But we are determined that those dif-
ferences will not prevent us from living
together in peace," he went on. "You
believe deeply In your system and we
believe just as deeply in our system. It ia
not our common belief that have brought
us together here, but · our common in-
terests and hopes."
Nixon and Oiou applauded each other
during the toasts.
Chou hegan by noting that Nixon had
met with him and Otalniian Mao Tte-
tung and uwe exchanged vlew1 .on the
normalizaUon of relatk>ns between Cb.lna
and the Unlted States and on other que&a
tions or concern to the two sides.
"There eilst great differences of prin-
ciple betweeq our two sides ," Chou noted.
"Through earnest and frank discus1ions,
a clearer knowledge of each other's posl-o
tlons and stands bu been gained."
Noting the exchange• had beea
beneficial for both, Chou continued:
1"I11e time• are advancing and the
world Is changing. We are deeply con-
vinced that the 1trengtb of the peopl., la
powerful and that whatever zlpafl 1nd
reverses tber1 wW be in the development
(Seo NIXON, Pare II
Wild Ranso.m Plot Bared
0r .. ,.
By HOWARD A. TYNER
BONN (UPI ) -The West German
government paid f5 mllUoo ransom to a
Palestinian commando group to obtain
the release of a hijacked airliner and 14
of its crew from Southern Yemen,
1 Transportation Minister Georg Leber
nld today.
Five armed comm1ndos releucd the
$14 ... mlllloo Lufthansa BoeinJt 747 jumbo
jet Ind the ...,. membm \!{ednetday Jn
Aden, the Southern Yamen capital.
A oecret code word had been Oiahed by
ndlo froni Belnit to cllmu • cloak-and•,
ctaaer operation' carried out In three
countries of l!:u?Ope and the Middle east.
In the flnl govunment statement on
the oukome of the hlJhJack1l!1, Leber told
a newt confetence tne 4tclsiOii to pay the
ranaom had been bued on tbi ...ump.
lion tbal the Jim of the atw wen In
'1 acuta danger."
He called tho hljackm "!M moot
bkKldthlrtty group seen untll ROW,''
AU Ill [l8Jlqe"I ...S crew ._ •
ber1 aboard the Athena-bound ptane when
it was hijacked Tuuday after takeoff
from New Delhi, India have 1lnce left
Aden with the pouible exception of the
five htjaclcera.
They were questioned by I o c a I
authoriUea and later set tree.
The plane returned to Frankfurt Thuu·
day.
Leber uJd a lettu from a l"'UP· calling
lllelf lbe "Orlan~tton for Vlct!lll.I of
Zlbnllm" and clalmlng respollllblllty for
th.e hijactlng arrived Tuesday al Lui·
thansa 'headcidarten In Cologne.
The letler, oosted In Cologne llOVeral
hours art.r tbe JQbo jet had been
diverted to Aden. ilutatened to blow up
the plane. demanded the ran90m and
gave .detailed !natnictlonl on how the
money 1hould he banded o<tr.
"The.,.....,,,.,._with the m.ey w11 to
wear a black )ackllt and ~ trousers .
and cirry a cue In his rl1ht band,"
Leber' ~d. "lie Wll to fly by way of
Athena oo 1 aimmerdal airliner or one
I
~
o! three Gennan charter linna.
"In Beirut, he was to find a car parked
at the airport which had ioslde a picture or former Egyptian President Gama!
Abdel Nasser.
"A note was to be left on the driver's
seat 1arlng where to drive with the
money.'
Tbe BoM government niafll the cue
Tlleaday night -Leber decjlned to IBY
wbtre -and 1ent it to Ajhens_ with a
LulthaMa aeeurlty 11en aclinl as
courier, / Wedj1esday rqornlng, thi courier O,;t
to· the JMa..,. capital bl Belnlt, fo\lnd
the Cir, drove to a" undllcloaad point
more than .25 mllet outalde the city and
delivered the money.
"The ~ word wa1 hit receipt,"
Leber aaid. "4Ht\WN told to return as
!1st •• po11ible Jo Beirut .airport whm
the word' -Id he reliyed by raiflo to
Aden. Within momenta afw tho word 1r-
rlVO<t In Adcn1 the p.J 1 n e and crew
were b'te..'1
' ..
We11 .. er
Hazy sunshine Js on lbe agenda
for the Orange Coast 111Jn on
Salurdoy. followtn1 the uauaJ low
cloods and fog. HJgha at the
beaches around 60 ri.sina to 72 In--
land. Low1 42 to SO.
INSIDE TODAY
Th• LiUlpwtlant of f01Md
11GUlliver'1 Travcll" arrive '"
HwnUngton Beoch thh 10tekcftd.
A 1to711 fn todllv'• Wtekrndu
.trlla vo• where to oo to fmd
thfm.
• •
Council .May
• .
Raise Beach
Parking Fee
.~
Newp;irt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposal! to double the fee
for the city's beach parking sticker and ·--~-··1--'-··~;~_., ___ -"~~"""""'--"
NewPOrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposal.a to double the fee
for the clty 's beach park.Jug sticker and .. _ -·-··1-~ .• ;_ ...... --...... ~~""'""'--i.
NewPQrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the clty's beach park.iog sticker and .. _ -·-··'-~ ... ;_ ...... -.....
Newport Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the clty's beach parking sticker and .. _ -·-··'-~ ... ;_,,.,.,_ ....
Newport Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach parking sticker and .. _ -·-··'"" ~ ... ;_,,., .. __ -"~~_,,.,.,,. _ _,.
NewPOrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposal.a to double the fee
for the clty 's beach park.Jug sticker and .. _ -·-··1-~ .• ;-.... ·--...... ~~-'"'"""'--i.
NewPQrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach parking e:ticker and
.. _ -·-··'-l... ... ;_ ...... -.....
Newport Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach parking sticker and
.. _ -·-··'-l... ... ;_ ...... -....
Newport Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach park.ing sticker and ... -·-··'"" ~ ... ;_,,., ___ -"~-....... ~ ....
NeWPOrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the clty's beach park.Jug sticker and .. _ -·-··1-~ ... ;_ ...... --.... ~ _ _,,.,.,,.~~
NeWJ>Qrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach parking e:ticker and .. _ -·-··'-~ ... ;_ ...... -.....
Newport Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach parking sticker and
.. _ -·-··'-l... ... ;_,,.,., __
Newport Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach parking sticker and .... -·-··'"" ~ ... ;_,,., ___ -"~~-'"'"""'-....
NewPOrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposal.a to double the fee
for the clty 's beach park.Jug sticker and .. ,.. -·-··1-~ .• ;_ ...... --...... ~~"""""'--i.
NewPQrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach parking e:ticker and ... ---··l--!.. .... ; ........ -..... -i...e.._..........J,..e.,i,.i.__4
NewPOrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach parking sticker and ... ---··I-!.., • .,;_,,.,., __ -""-"~>.h.-.J:
NeWPQrl Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the clty's beach park.Jog sticker and
.. _ ---·"-!.. .... ;-.... --......... ""-'.o. _ _... ... _ _,.
NeWPOrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the clty's beach parking sticker and .. ,.. ---··1--!.. .... ;-...... -..... ...i..._..~ch
Newport Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach park.Jug sticker and .. _ ---··'-\... ... : ...... --............... ~.""--{
NewPOrl Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach parking sticker and
£. ---··I-!.., • .,;_,,.,., __ -""-"·-"""""'--1.
NeWPQrl Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the clty's beach parking sticker and
.. _ ---··'-!.. .. -;~ .... --......... ""-'.o·-~""'---1.o
NewPOrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach parking sticker and .. ____ .. 1 __ !..,._;_,,., ___ ...-.._..~ch
NeWPOrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach park.Jog sticker and
.. _ ---·"--!.. •• -: ......... --................. ~ • .i..-.J:
NewPOrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach parking sticker and
.. _ ---··'-1.. •• -:-...... -..... -""-"~·.h.-.J:
NeWPQrl Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the clty's beach park.Jog sticker and
.. _ ---·"-!.. .... ;_,, ..... _ ......... ""-'.o. _ _... ... _ _,.
NewPQrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the clty's beach parking sticker and .. ,.. ---··1--!..,._;_,,., ___ -""-'.o~ch
Newport Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach park.Jug sticker and
.. _ ---·"--!.. .... : ......... --............... ~.""--{,
NewPOrl Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach parking sticker and
£. ---··I-!.., • .,;_,,.,., __ -""-"·~~""'--Lo
NeWPQrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the clty's beach parking sticker and
.. _ ---··'-!.. •• -;~ .. ---· .. -""'-'·~
NewPQrl Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach parking sticker and
£. ---••I-!..,._;_,,.,., __ ...-..._..~ch
NeWPOrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach park.Jug sticker and .. _ ---·"-\....-: ......... --............... ~ . .i..-.J:
NewPOrt Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the city's beach parking sticker and .. _ ---··1-!..,._;_,, ____ -""-"~·""--.J:
NeWPQrl Beach councilmen Monday
will consider proposals to double the fee
for the clty's beach park.Jog sticker and
.. _ ---·"-!.. .... ; ......... -..... -""-'.o·-~_,,, _ _,.
· ltlatts'1'•'s ~Law'
• + ·'
Autof Sleeping
Rule ' Rewritten
'Ibe Newport 'Bfi•cb clty attorney today eeat and other 1YP1ies, wu adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in history aJ M•ttson11 pers, trailers and ,other recreational ~,_,.,;._ _ _:_ ____ _:_ _____ Hllil' :lelLl>J~ cb.arui:ed the situation in r~
'Ibo Newport Belcl! city attorney today seal and other ll'Pll .. , wu adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordlnanCe that A WlilVt of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in history aJ Mattson'• pers, trallera and ,other recreational
_r...,;;.__::_ ___ _: _____ Witi<' :lu.hu c:haru!ed the situation In re-
'lbo Newport B<acl! city attorney today 8'al and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in history aJ Mattson'• pers, trailers and ,other recreational f-.Lo'"-_ _:_ __________ .nllli'cleiLl>lu chanted the situation in re.
'Ibo Newport Belcl! city attorney today seal and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinanCe that A ws.ve of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in blstory aa M;*ttson11 pers, traileri and ,other recreatJonal ~.1_o.;._ __ .._ ____ _:_ _ _:_ ___ .io.l>i'c!eiLl>J11 chanted the altuation .in re-
'lbo Newport Belcl! city attorney today aeat and other ll'Pll ... waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down In history u M•ttson'1 pers, trailer1 and ,other recreational ~.1_o;._ _ _:_ ____ _:_ _____ .l'!illicl0Lbu chin.led the altuation in r~
'Ibo Newport Belcl! city attorney today aeal and other 1YP1lea, waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordloanCe that A wsve of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in history u M*ttson11 pers, trailers and ,other recreational f-_..°"" _ _:: ____ _: _____ --'"thi<' :lei~ chanted the altuation .in r&-
'lbo Newport Belcl! city attorney today 8'al and other ll'Pll ... waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinani::e that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in his;ory as M•ttson11 pers, trailers and ,other recreatiooal f-_..-"" _ _:: ____ _:_ _____ --'"tbi<' :lei~ chanted the situation in re-
'lbo Newport Belcl! city attorney today aeal and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordioani::e that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in history aa Wttson11 pers, traileri and ,other recreatJonal f-_....;., __ _:: ____ __: _____ __;.,thi<· :!u~ chanted the altuation .in re.
Tho Nowport Belcl! city attorney today aeat and other ll'Pll ... waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in history u M•ttson11 pers, trailer1 and ,other recreatk>oal ~.Lo.;._ _ _:_ ____ _:_ _____ .nllli·c1eiLl>lu cb.1n.1ed the situation in re-
'lbo Newport Belcl! city attorney today seal and other ll'Pll .. , wu adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordloanCe that A wsve of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in history d M*ttson11 pers, trailers and ,other recreational ~,_,.,;.__:_ _________ ...iru· :i..~ c:haru!ed the situation In re-
Tbo Newport Belcl! city attorney today 8'al and other ll'Pll ... waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in his;ory as M•ttson11 pers, trailers and ,other recreatiooal f-.Lo'"-_ _:_ __________ .nl>i'cleiLl>lu chanted the situation in re-
'lbo Newport Belcl! city attorney today aeal and other ll'Pll ... waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordioani:e that A wsve of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in blstory aa M;*ttson11 pers, traileri and ,other recreatJonal
---..... .;._---"_ ____ _:_ _ _:_ ___ .io.]>l'c!eiLl>J11 chanted the altuation .in re-
'lbo Newport Belcl! city allornty today 8'al and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in history d Wttson11 pers, trailers and ,other recreational
_:_,_,.,;._ _ _:_ ____ _:_ _____ Hlru· ooLl>J~ chm1ed the altuation in r~
'Ibo Newport Belcl! city attorney today aeal and other ll'Pll .. , wu adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordloanCe that A wsve of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in history u M*ttson11 pers, trailers and ,other recreational ~,_,.,;._ _ _:_ ____ _:_ _____ Hllil' :!ftLl>J~ chanted the altuation in r&-
'lbo Newport Belcl! city attorney today 8'al and other ll'Pll ... waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinani::e that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in history as M•ttson11 pers, trailers and ,other recreatiooal
~,_,.,;._ _ _:_ __________ y,ttlhlilic:llt"'Lihlua~s chanted the situation in r&-
Tbo Newport B<acl! city attorney today aeat and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinanCe that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in history as M•ttson'1 pers, trailer• and ,other recreational >-L>~ _ _:_ ______ _:_ __ ___\~cles baa chanfed the situation in re-
'lbo Newport Belcl! city attorney today 8'at and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in history as Wttson'1 pers, trailers and ,other recreational >-L>~ ____________ £ehi.cles baa chanted the situation in re-
'lbo Newport B<scl! city attorney today 8'al and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequale.
was rewriting a municipal ordlnanCe that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in history BJ M_,*ttson'1 pers, trailers and ,other recreational 'f--'~-~--------'-----_JJ·ehi.cle1 baa chanaed the situation .in re-
'lbo Newport B<acl! city attorney today aeat and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of ca~
may well go down in history as Wttson'1 pers, trailers and ,other recreatiooal
c_,_,.,;._ _ _:_ __________ ,..tlhlilicc!le"'Lihlua~s chanted the situation in re-
Tbo Newport B<acl! city attorney today aeat and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequale.
was rewriting a municipal ordinanCe that A wave of popularity in use of cam-
may weU go down in history as Mattson'• pers, trailer• and ,other recreational c_i_..,~_.:__ ______ _:_ ___ _ulli'1cc!le"1Lihluu11 chanted the situation .in re-
'lbo Newport Belcl! city attorney today 8'81 and other ll'Pll,., waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of cam-
may well go down in history as bUttson'1 pers, trailers and ,other recreational
f--L·--------------'"ehi.cles has chanted the situation in ro-
'lbo Newport B<scl! city attorney today aeat and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequale.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down ln history as ~ttson'1 pers, trailers and ,other recreational
<f--'.•----------'------'·ehicle1 has chanfed the situation in re-
'lbo Newport B<acl! city attorney today aeat and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of ca~ may well go down in history as Mattson'• pers, trailers and ,other recreational f-.Lo'"-_ _:_ __________ .Y.tl•hlliicc!l!lesLhhlaua chanted the situation in re-
'lbo Newport B<acl! city attorney today aeat and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordioanCe that A wave of popularity in use of earn·
may well go down in history as M•ttson11 pers, trailers and ,other recreational >-L>~ _ _:_ ______ _:_ __ _,,.~cle1 baa chanfed the situation in re-
'lbo Newport Belcl! city attorney today 8'al and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of cam-
may well go down in history as Mattson'• pers, trailers and ,other recreational
il-_..•--------------"'ehi.cles has cha.nled the situation .in re-
'lbo Newport B<scl! city attorney today seat and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequale.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in history as Wttson'1 pers, trailers and ,other recreatJonal 'f--'~---------------"·ehi.cle1 has chanaed the situation in re-
'lbo Newport B<acl! city attorney today aeat and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of ca~
may well go down in history as Mattson'• pers, trailers and ,other recreatiooal
f-_i_...;._ _ _:_ _________ _...!hic. l!Ll>aa charu!ed the situation In re-
Tbo Newport B<acl! city attorney today aeat and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequale.
was rewritlng a municipal ordinanCe that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in history as Wttson11 pen, trailerl and ,other recreational ~,_..,~_.:__ ______ _:_ __ _J~cle1 baa chanted the situation .in re-
'lbo Newport Belcl! city attorney today 8'al and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down In history as Mattson'• pers, trailers and ,other recreational >-L>~--------------'·ehi.cles has chanled the situation in re-
'lbo Newport B<scl! city attorney today 8'11 and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequale.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down ln history as Wttson'1 pers, trailers and ,other recreational !!l--'~-~-------------'·ehicle1 has chanaed the situation in re-
'lbo Newport B<acl! city attorney today aeat and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of cam·
may well go down in history as Mattson'• pers, trailers and ,other recreatiooal f-i-,;._ _ _:_ __________ .Y.tl•h>licc!le011Lhtua11s chanted the situation in re-
Tbo Newport B<acl! city attorney today aeat and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequate.
was rewritlng a municipal ordinanCe that A wave of popularity in use of cam-
may well go down in history as ~ittson11 pers, trailer• and ,other recreational il-_.. __ _:. ______ _:_:_ __ J~cle1 baa chanfed the situation in re-
'lbo Newport Belcl! city attorney today 8'al and other ll'Pll .. , waa adequate.
was rewriting a municipal ordinance that A wave of popularity in use of cam-
may well go down in history as Mattson'• pers, trailers and ,other recreational i...~-------------'"ehi.cles has cha.nled the situation .in re-