HomeMy WebLinkAbout1972-03-23 - Orange Coast Pilot' 0 • a 1
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THURSDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 23 , '1972 .
·Had Se , •i1Hpeding Hash
VOL. •s. NO. fJ, 4 llCTIO~S, 41 ,A,011 ..
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.-• • ... , ••. ·=· ·• ~ • •. --' . . -· :' .. :::;:::==~---=~-' -=--· '_.:...· ~-~ ---¥~------, ·_· -~,) -L . --~ -crocery Price ~ump
........... _, ... ' '.). -·-. . . -. . ..
Biggesr-Ye
Better Get ,,__-~-~-~-~-=---'-~b-Net=-Pro~"=-A Good Alarm
br~n ID'I ar amu 1a W!Jr .._
... dow -at a CoSta Mesa irldiJsli-lal
. plant Thursday, ·wandered with im~
.. punity through n_umerous suites and
finally left with aboul $1,000 worth
of office machinery.
Officer: John Stoneback said of·
ficials or Solar Laboratories-InC.,
· Girl Dies-;~
.After.Fall .
··3[69 Red Hill Ave., are takliig in· ------------~ -
__ vent9ry, b_ut four" electric · · . -~ ~..ey~_iter~-:_and-ad~ing~ :111achijle!---·-7.Jl~~~ght;_r_:_o4rote~s~o~l ~rr·---~
_ are known.Jost. '"" . • . · . JJts i;;~r l!iclJ~d "Pancho" G:_onza1~ di~ _
Solar Laboratori~s des i g n s in Hoag Me morial Hospital Tuesday from
burglar alarms, .pohce noted. injuries she sustained when she was
-thrown from a horse -late Saturday-a!~ -
12 Seized
In Laguna
Pot Raids
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of tllt 01il)' Pilot Stfff
After a hectic evening during which 12
persons were arrested and his jacket was
chewed b;· two large dogs, Laguna Beach
narcotics detective Neil Purcell today
6peculated;
ternoon.
Mariessa Gonzalez, 10, had been riding
with a friend at the Irvine Equestria n
Center, 7385 E. Coast Highway, Corona
del Mar, when the accident occurred.
Maiiessa, who lived with her mother,
MidalyTI, and lwif sisters at 401 Via Lido
Soud, Newport Beach, died from severe
head injuries resulting from the fall,
hospital spokesmen said.
Funeral services will takt: place Friday
at noon at Forest Lawn Memo_rial Park,
Glendale.
Mrs. Marilyn Wolfe, whose daughter
Leslie, 10, had been riding with Mariessa
when she took the fall, said this morning
that circumstances surrounding the
mishap are still unclear. '-
,. "Nobody really, honestly knoWs what
happened," Mrs. Wolfe said, "She may
have been frightened and the .horse,
wbich belonged !o a friend of hers, may
have been spooked."
...
l
UP'I T•let>llOtl "Maybe all these stories about how
close we are to legalizing ma rijuana en.
couraged the folks to celebrate with a
few pot parties ... "
Mrs. Wolfe said · Mariessa Ind her
daughter have been taking riding#essOns
regularly during the week at the Irvine
stables. She said Mafiessa had been rid-
ing for Jess than a year.
This truckload or Antartica beer became a bit woozy
and Ieane'd to one side as it passed anoth~~ truck
on a street near Candelaria Square in Rio de Jan·
The Wednesday evening forays started
shortly before eight. o'clock when
Sergeant Purcell and officer Robert Rcr
maine accompanied two U.S. marshals to
21152 Laguna Canyon Road to serve a
misdemeanor arrest warrant and en-
countered the first party,
Mariessa was a student at Newport
Elementary School. 11n addition to her
. mother and Gonzalez, who lives In
~alibu, she is survived bY two sisters.
•
Solons Support Bill After some discussion at the door, the
officers entered. Two o.(_ the guests
assertedly fled via a window. A search
turned up a quantity of LSD, marijuana Washington (AP) -California's ·two
eji:Q, Brazil. ·
Doctor Says Navy Cleric .,
.
·Had Sex-preventing : Rash
and suspected dangerous drugs and the Democratic senators, Cranston and Tun·
five remaining guests were held on ney, both voted for a proposed Con.' JACKSONVILLE, na. (A·P) -A doc-ficer . He has denied having affairs with
charges of possession or marijuana and stitutional amendment that w o u 1 d 'tor testified today that Chaplain Andrew either woman.
being present where the drug was used. guarantee women equal rights with men F. Jensen was covered with a severe rash Wickham, a Navy doctor at. Cecil Field
They were Arnold Thomas Canup. 29, under federal aild state law which passed and boils Crom his belt line down to his where the court-martial is Jn progress; qr the address; Larry Warren Spousta, 18, the Senate W~nesday 8H. , said he examined Jensen in mid-June last
of 24932 Mosquero Lane, Mission Viejo; thighs July 8, the date a Navy wil~ year and found him covered with chigger
Marriann Simmons, 27, of the Canyon ad-claims to have had sexual relations with bites suffered on a fishing trip.
dress; Carolyn Moody Hedges, ill of 606 G uwis him in a motel. On July 2, he testified, a severe In.
Hamilton St., Costa Mesa, and i 17-y.ear· ary "Would Capt. Jensen have been able to fection caused by scratching ~d set in.
old boy. 1 • have sexual intercourse while suffering The entire area covered. by swimming
After booking the first group, Purcell Held ;n Drugs this infection?" defense attorney Ja·ck R. trunks, he added, was c.'Overed with bolls
and detective Gen~ Brooks accompanied " Blackmon asked Dr: ClinlOn Wickh~m. and a red rash. As late as July 16, he
the marshals to 567 Catalina St. to serve '!Il would hav~ been extremely unlikely sai d, there were still scabs -and some
· a traffic warrant on · Gary. Wayne NORTH HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -and very Painful" Wickham replied. . • . rash over the area. 1
Henderson, 26, of that address. Entertainer Gary Lewis, eldest son "Doctor,1' Blackmon continued, "If yoti • Navy wiveSr fellow clergymen and
When the officers id en ti fie d of comedian Je!ry Lewis, was .ar· ·-were the patient instead o( the-·doctor, fr iends_ took · the stind for ll\.e d"ef~nse
themselves, said Purcell, Henderson and rested on susp1c1on of JXlSsessing could you h<1ve performed ,a· sex act?" _ Wednesdaf and t~tified that Jensen ~was
his woman companion fled to the i;.ear of -l-1d><>a~gerou~ drugs early t~ay. afti;.r , "For me," Wickham said, '1it would a man o high moral character: The
the house. There the woman: Nancy..., hce said they f~nd-.pilb-1n-his--have been impossib le." chaplain and his wife are expected to
•Davenport, ,24. of 185 Flower St., .Costa car~ -Lora Gudbranson ,.a 40.year-<>ld supply testify Friday. .
'Mesa .allegedly was found attempting to Police said the 2&-year-old Lewis officer's wife, has testified that she had "I fttl the chaplain's innocent," 3 90\,..
flush ' about a pound of marijuana down was arrested sho rtly after mid· relations with Jensen four times. Another bing Margaret Huntsinger said in
the toilet. night. He was booked at Valley ·Navy-wife, 24-y':!ar....old Mary Ann,Curran. testimony Wednesday . "'
Both were booked on suspicion of Services j;1.i\. • said ·she had ~ations at least 17 times "I feel it 's my Christian dllty to help a •
~ssesslon of marijuana for sale. During the 1960s, Lewis headed a with Jensen aftit her husband employ~d fellow Christian1" said Isabell Jaquette, a
Leaving the scene, the officers sniffed popular rock and roll band called hfm as a marriage counselor . Sunday school teilcher at Jensen's chapel.
the familiar aroma of mar.ijuana floating Gary Lewis and lhe Playboys. Jensen Is being courtmartia1ed OR In addiUon to testimony praising the
!Ste FORAYS, Page I) charges of conduct unbecoming an of· !Ste CHAPL:'IN, Page II •
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Corrigan' s Son
Lost pn Flight
To San Diego
By ARTlltJR 11· VINSEL
Of rt'lt 0111~ ~lltl SIMI
Sky searchers were · crisscrossing the
Southland today for any trace of a ,plane
piloted by the spOrtswriter son of Santa.
Ana's fam ed aviator Douglas "Wrong
Way" Corrigan.
He tlnd a companion from Laguna
Beach left Orange Co11nty Airport Tues·
day on a short, sightseeing flight to San
Diego but failed to make a 4 p.m. return
scheduled. .. ,
Roy Corrigan, 22, of 2828 N. Flower St.,
·1s the youngest son of the man who
delighted the world in 1938 by taking off
from New York for Long Beach and lan-
ding two days later in Dublin, Ireland.
Ironi~ally, Wrong Way Corr\san's
original West Coast destination 34 )°'ears ~go ·is ~oday a search base fOr .his nliss-
mg son. .
Young Corrlgan's passenger on the an·
Ucipated 120.mile filgh\ Js identifie<l ~s
Roger Powell, 21, of 32 Cnstal ~e.
Laguna Beach. l The youths planned to fly ove a
t~aguna Beach site where the Po ell
family is building' a home, pbo!ograph it
(Ste CORRIGAN, Page ll
U.S. Foods
ikes Cost
~--....... -~--~
·Of Living •
WASHINGTOWTAP)-:;.;-The "biggest
junlp In-grocery prices i n· f4 ·yearslasr-·M--
...nr,t.h.JrJaier.ed.... the..... sharpest rise In _
Overall liVlng C9Sl-s since Jiefofe P"resiCftpt .
Nixon ilnposed-eco01Jfnic-contr01s, t~r ---
government reported today.
The Co11sum.er Price Iodex, measuring
typical family living costs, rose five--
tenths of 1 percent irf February, the
largest increase in nine months, the
Labor Department's Bureau of Labor
Statistics said.
Grocery prices, which include a
number of items that ·.are not subject to
federa l -price-controls;-soared-1~9-percent-;
for the greatest one-month increase since
March, 1958, tl\e report said.
The report followed the resignation or
t" ec AFL-CIO members of Nixon's Pay
Board, who charged the government was
rigidly holding down wages whUe lilt.ting ·
prices continue to climb. (See story Page
41.
The bureau also reported that average
weekly earnings or some 45 million rank--
and-file workers rose 35 cents a week to
$130.27, but that purchasing poWer declin·
ed 24 cents because of the rise in con·
sumer prices.
The February boost pushed the price
Index to 123.8 percent of its 1967 average.
This means it cost $12.38 last month for
every $10 worth of typical family
purchases five years ago.
The F e b r u a r y increase was the
g.reatest since a six-tenths of 1 percent
rise last June, two months before Nixon
imposed a 90-day wage-price freeze which ·
was rollowed by Phase 2 controls.'
The bureau said that in theVour month!'
of Phase ~ living costs have risen at an·
annual ra~ of 4.9 perc,ent, greater than
the 4.1 percent· rate in. the · si-x montht ,
:1see. COSTS, Page-%) .. • ..;c'.
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Orunge Coast
Weather
It's goi ng fO be sunny again
on Friday, according to the
weathcrlady. Highs along the
coast 62 rising to 75 inland.
Lows 45 to 55.
AY
Hijacking has comt lono way
since tht first ai linar WM
-seized on a 1imny ay day iti
1961 Qnd comma eartd to
Cuba. See story, Pag 8. .
l :M ... ~ti
' •o•Hnt
,C•lllOl'nll Cl•111t!t111
Com1e1
· cresswtN 0.11~ ~OtlCtl Edlletl•I ,IH lntti!1ln1M~I
l'in1Mt
l'tt 111• ftttffd
Hll'eKl•t
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-· Z DAILY PILOT s ~ Thursday, Mirth 23, Jqn
C'oancll Reports
State May Fail
'
To Support ·Life
l+---~SACRA.MJ!:NTO J U!'IJ -A blut:ribl!o.11
1 dy council has warned that California
may not be ''capable of supporting
tolerable human life within several more
4 Die, 21 Hurt
In YMCA Blaze;
22 Rescued
NEW YORK (UPIJ -Four pmons
died and at least 21 others were injured
In a fire which swept through corridors of
a YMCA residence on Manhattan's West
Side.
F===="'l'wlmty-t1'11Fpm<JIF°Wtl'e-tlkt!Fl!i>"'1 -
rrom . windows and )edges Wednesday
ni1ht to ur.ty by aerial ladders.
The blaze, fed by wall paint and
carpeting, engulfed two floors of the
Sloane House at 34th Street a'nd Ninth
Avenue. trapping many guests. About
l,000 persons were staying at the
transient hotel at tbe time of the fire . ·
, One man jumped from a aeventb floor
window ledge into a courtyiard and wa•
serioutlY injured.
"It's miraculous he'a still ;1llve;•• pollce
said.
Firemen arriving on the acerie urged
othen-trapped on ledges, not to jump.
Fire official• aaid the blaze. believed to
have 1tarted in a linen closet ahortly
before 10 p,m., was declared under con·
Jrol shortly after 11.
From Page l
Corona Trial
Change Sought
CORRIGAN SEARCH ...
and return after buzzing down to San
Diego. Thursday.
A check of McCarran Field in Las Vegas
and other airports in Nevada failed to
produce any results, according to CAP
officials.
"He's never been overdue before." the SACRAMENTo (UPI) -Citing "prej-elder Corri1an said Thursday.
lldice" ~galnst_M_etj~ans and ~maasjye_· -A-search command-Post-was est,lblish·
and harm ful " publicity, the attorney for ed by the .Civil Air Patrol at Long lfeach A team of four CAP aircraft hunted uo-
til dark Thursday and 10 more took of(
today, supplemented by Marine
heljcopers flying low-level missions.
Juan V. Corona has asked that the mass Airport to coordinate the hunt between
murder suspect's trial be shifted from Orange County Airport and the Mexican
rural Sutter County to a metropolitan Border.
area. No trace of the vanished Cessna 150
Richard Hawk told the 3rd Di~tr!~t had been discovered during the hunt
Court of Appeal Wednesday there is a centered on the coastline by 10 a.m .. ac·
Jot of resentment" against Corona am~ng cording to Capt. Ed Crankshaw, CAP
residents of the county where the boches wing information officer.
of 25 itinerant farm workers were found "We have excellent cooperation from la~.t ye.a~ in ~rchard graves. , the Marines at El Toro and Camp
Officials in Sutter C.Ounty said Juan Pendleton the San Diego Sheriff's Aero
Corona i_! the monster who dld this ," Squad and we ha ve a lot of CAP planes
Hawk said, asking the ap~llate court to pp searching the area ," he said. rever~e a lower court ruling an_d move Marine helicopters have been detailed
the trial. to scour the desolate coastal mllitary
OllAN51 COAST IT
DAILY PILOT
111• Or•* C91tt 041L Y 'ILOT, w11t1 Mtkll t. combl11ed th9 frltWI.,,..,, II l'Ublltfleif w
fh• Or•no• Cotti fllbll•hll'lt CofnJ11tny. $.,..
t •l1 edition., ,.,.. ""11dMd, MM!'•Y n1rOV91'1
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l!ty Slrfil, C:.ll MHI, (.tflfdmtt, tMJt.
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Pr•klll'll tnd f'vbl~ll•
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Tkom11 K11vll
Editor ,
reservations for Corrigan and Powell.
"We have excellent search weather at
least," said the CAP SPokesman.
Corrigan 's 65-year-old father . who left
aviation years ago to run his 20-acres of
citrus groves in Santa Ana , went up
Thursday with another son, Harry, in
search of the youngest Corrigan. ! "I was just rJding. 1 don't even have a
license rig hi now," said Corrigan, whose 1 33-hour, transatlantic flight .in a $300
plane he built himself caused a global sensation.
The search plane they used was owned
and Colwn by Robert Damskey.
He is the instructor who taught the
adventurous youngest Corrigan -he has
a private license and 300 hours Jogged
aloft -lo fly in the first place.
Chances are that Corrigan and ·Powell
stuck to the coastline but aerial teams
were assigned rugged areas or Riverside,
San Diego and San Bernardino connties.
"They're covering all areas between
here and San Diego and all the coastal
hills and valleys," said CAP Maj. Ernest
Johnson, mission coofdinator.
Young Corrigan recently returned from
a trip to Japan and has been planning a
tour of Europe but hadn't been working
in the meantime,
His father 's own 1938 trip to Europe
drew a stern reprimand but official wink
from U.S. authorities who had refused his
formal request for permission to make
the hazardous flight. He came home a
celebrity of international proparlions who
was enteriained by royalty, but retired to
near obscurity lo rai se oranges, lemons
and his three sons.
He beCan1e a public figure again briefly
ln 1968 when he showed up to accept the
Orange County Press Club's Headliner of
the Year Award in Aviation .
"My compass got s t u c k and I {!Ot
tu med 180 q~rees around.'' he still main-
tained at the banquel, 30 years later.
Today, Wrong Way CoITigan may be
hoping history will repeat ltsel!.
Tho1111• A. Mvrphi111
, •·.,, ' M,lnot!l'ISI Ealtor
Ch·1rl1r H. Looi IUcli1N P. Nill
Their search followed the coastline,
then crisscrossed a pattern over inland J d , D
areas seeking the white-winged Cessna ll 18llS ecamp
150, which has a yellow-orange fuselage. 'j I A»J111r11 MtMQ]fll (dliot1
Offlca
ee.11 M .. l m w ... 1 ••Y Sll'W
NIWJ*'f lttcl'lt 11» HtwJJOtt loulMrd L•lhl>M IMcll: m ir.,., Annvt
Hl.Mllntto., tlffCfl: 1111s 8ttch 1ovtev1"'
"" ~"; JU North El ClrnlM ~-I
Toi ....... 17141 •42 .. IJI
C,_HW A-1~11 •42-1'71
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Characterized as The Flying Irishman
tor his daring Dublin solo. Wrong Way At Old Mission
Corrigan says his son has rigidly followed •
the rules of safe fl ying.
The former Santa Ana Resister
sportswriter wou ld always telephone to
report any chan.1te in destination of
estimated return if he had filed no flight
plan.
-AJrport acquaintances said Corrigan
and PoweJJ, a friend since boyhood, didn't
plan to land at San Diego.
Powell '& father Tom. owner of a Santa
Ana neon sign company, said the youn.c
men had mentioned wanUng to fiy to Us
Vegas sometlme.
"They had apoken ol It in casual con-
versation ••• just for something to eo,"
he ssid alt.r t~~ truiU ess search 11,ighl
KIN G CITY (UPI ) -Indians cl11iming
ownership of all 21 Roman Ca tholic
missions in Californ ia ~ave stopped an It·
day camp-in &t Mission San Antonio de
Padua because they didn't WAJ'lt to be
Joined by ''militant'' su pporters.
The small band of Indians was serv~
eviction notices thts week, but remained
until Wednesday when Semu Huaute, the
medicine man for the group, said he was
informed. a group of militant Indians
planned lo join their encampment.
11 ( don;t want to fl.iht my own people,"
said Huaute.
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PROFESSIONA L
INTERIOR DESIGNE~l
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Fro111 Page 1
·FORAYS ... Party Member
Law Illegal
NORY.'ALK rUPI ! -The portion .
of the California Election Code re·
qulrlnJ a cand idate~
regi.st~!ed member of a po\lhcal ""
part,9 for 90 days prior to filing for
office h11s been declared un-
constitutiona l.
Superior Court Judge Vincent S.
Oalsimer ~aid Wednesday~the--!tate
had ··a right to require people to be
a member of party for a reasonable
length of tim e before running under
the banner or that party/' but said
!here should be y,•ays other than
registration to prove party af·
filia tJon.
From Page 1
CHAIJLAIN .. f
COSTS ...
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• ~-"'? _~luxur_iO.tf,~ spring' doiirri ------
and feat her sofas . . .
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• Optl'I Mol"I.,
Thttri. & Fri. Ever.
•
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ull
These handsome sofas were designed
to give you the ultimate in seatin g
comfort with down and feather
back pillows, deep spring down
seat cushions enveloped in down
and feathers and two dacron·
filled arm pillows. Choose from
a wide selection of fine
fabrics and sizes.
Three styles to choose from
2216 HARIOR BLVD,
COSTA MESA, CAL IF.
646.0275
now
399.
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~ T~. Marci> 23, tq12 s . DAILY PILOT :-:
Capo l\'lobile Home Tract Ol('ci Ove r Protests
A 336-acre mobile home tract ln the. San Juan Capistrano Cily Manager Don
norlh San Juttn Capislrano area was ap-Widener said · his council was "unim·
proved \Vednesday by the Board of pressed'' on a junket funded by Gohara lo
Su;trvlsors despite strong objections a similar trailer home deve lopmenl at
Crean the city. • ti.furrieta Ho! Springs ,.Jn soulh"•est Develo~r Irving Kah n of San Diego, Riverside County.
represented by Roy Gohara of CST Speaking for Capistrano ti.fayor Tony
Engineering. a former Orange County Forster, Widener said the city officials
__ Planning-Deparln1ent staff member ---rear-a SUrpTUS of n16bile hornes may be
pra.iscd the an1enities or the proposed the fate of their city . They have placed
trall er park such as a 12-acre public park. an )nlormal ratio of JO pcr(.<enl ot all
30 acre.s of recreational area, extensive und'eveloped land in and around the city
landscaping and untouched slope areas. as the limit on such developments.
Of the 330 acres, mobile home lots will "Our goal is a balanced cornmunily,"
occupy 185 wit h the balance open 'space, said the city manager. "\Ve have been
the planner said. Private streets will be aware of proposals which would lead to
built to county standards, 66 feet wide. mass development of trailer parks in the
S&~Juan Capistrano Valley, including
Dani Point and Capistrano Beach."
\llldener said when three of the coun-
ciln1en visited . the Riverside Coun ly
developn1ent by the sa1ne firm , they look·
ed at "a cluster of nlobile homes v.:ith Ill·
tie landscaping."
He said the cit}' · cou.ncU ha d
unanimously rejected the R a n ch o
Capistrano (Kahn ) concept as being "in
conflict with the development character
·of the.,city.''
Supervisors' conversation on the pro-
posal reve11lcd that although remedial
legislation has been dropped ia the
legislative hopper. mobile homes were
ta xed only by the Depart1nent of fi.1otor
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
ActQr Bares
His All for
Wonien's Ma g
NE\V YORK (AP) -Burt Reynolds is
no longer just anot her pretty race.
The brawny actor is Cosmopolitan
magazine's fi rst male nude, unbl ushingly
sprawled out in the centerfold of the
Apr il issue. an unadorned Adam for ogl·
ing by a readership of Eves.
Wearing only a grin, R e y no Id s
preserves the last modicum of modesty
by a discreetly_ J.!laced arm i!l.J!is lap.
Reynolds. 36-year-ald television and
movi e actor. is appearing on lht stage in
Chicago in "Th~ Rainmaker.'' He's just
completed fil ming "Deliverance" and
i;tarts "Shamus" in New York in April.
Why did he do it?
The naked truth, he said, is "I thought tt was good for a laugh. And_ it's
someth ing unpredictable. some thing I
like to be. It was .in tended as a spoof
take-off on Playboy.
··1 can 't believe chicks are turned on by
it. They can see more in a Sears &
'
"--.,,,, '
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V41hlcles and werf' pot s.u.b.iec:.t lo the
usual proP.erlY taxes on land and im·
provemenls.
~bate developed tht fact that ihe 3..10-
acre !railer park project, Ip an overall
l,271·acre development . met the city's
guideline for 10 percent devoted to mobile
home s.
Board Chairn1an Ronald Caspers, in
whose district the project is located, said
he had studied the plan and found it
satisfactory. "\Ve must be certain that
the hills are not carved up by such proj·
eels. and the open space and rescrea-
tional area provisions in this one are plus
fa ctors.''
Noise • Ill
Tht Superl'lsorS, sa<lSf.icd thliL the
developmenl north of the city between
the San DiegO Freeway and Crown Valley
Parkway v.'ould not run count er to San
Juan Ca pistrano's wishes, in· U1elr opi·
nio n. voted uniinimously lo approve the
ione change to planned conununily
distr ict from agricultural and single
fa n1ily residential .
They also approved the Rant•ho
Cipist rano Community Developn1ent
Plan revision to allo"' the trailer con1·
plex.
Another cont rovrrsial <levelopn1ent. of
interest to the city was held over for :IQ
dttr s al the request of the developer , C.
fi.lichael Inc.
'
Forest
Tb!-f\Fm wants-to build a 332·unlt con·
do1ninium in lhe ll.rea bc1ween De:I Obispo
and Alitpar. streets, east or Blue Fin
Drive, and 1,500 fert from the Capistrano
Ah;,port.
'the project "'a!I approved by the
Orange County Planning Commission la st
month in a 2-1 J'ot11-It Is oppo~ J>y
County · Director of Aviation Robert
Bresnahan , the Coun ty Airport Land Use
Con1mh~:slon And the city-of San Juan
Capistrano. t, ·
Bresnahan cite<! saf roblems even
though San Juan Cr£"Ck nel separates
the airport and the co Oomlnium pro-
posal. Planes n11ss1ng the n1nway in lhe
past. have ditched in the chan nel. he said.
Area Protested
By JACK BROBACK
Ot Iii. Oal!y Piiot Stiff
Noise pollution an d trespassing by
motorcyclists and dune buggy drivers in
the Silverado and Trabuco Canyon areas
of the Cleveland National Forest got a
thorough airing before. the Board of
Supervisors Tuesday .
Two resi dents of the mountain area
vigorously presented a protest and urged
county and state legislative action to cor·
rect the abuses. C~rl Baker. a Silverado resident, said
interim experi mental measures by the
Sheriff's De partment were only partiall y
successful.
"When the deputies were threre, iss u·
Ing JOO citations, there was silence," he
stated. "When they left th e noise and
trespas5 started all over. I have a 9·
mo nth-old boy and he seldom gets a map
under present conditio ns."
Whip Slatton, a Trabuco Canyo n resi·
cle codes regarding licensing and opera·
Lion of n1otor vehicles in the canyon
areas Including public roads in the
Cleveland National Forest.
-The County Traffic Con1n1i!tce study
possible selective signing on the roads to
reduce traffic. ·
-The Road Dfparlmen t study in·
stallation or a box culvert 1n place of the
dip and creek fo rd near th e f?ast end of
the paved roa d in Silve rado Canyon.
VPI T1l1ptior.
S l o 1·11 S1111e/c/1e1/?
-Real Prope rty Services defined public
rights along the road bel1\'ecn the
Trabuco Oaks and campgrounds in the
forest by past dedication or prescriptive
use . tPrescripfive use applies t n
unh indered use or private property over
the ye ars by lhe public. thu s es tablishi ng
permanent rights to such use). .<\nlhony Russo, a codefendant
...:..coonty Counsel propose legislation of Daniel Ell sberg.in the Penta·
designed to strengthen and clarify e;1.· gon Papers case, says a R.and
isling rode~ rega rding private properl y Corp. report. contains ''ein bar·
rights whi le accommodating public recrc· rassing f'ln ries of •U.S. atroci·
ation . ties and erin1cs against hu1nan· Roebuck catalogue. ·
~-''-When I li'-~lhe-three most unimportant--
events in my life. this will be one of
them . If anybody is shocked by it. they 've
been living in a cave the last 20 years. It
was fu n and a laugh . It's all completely
..., ... _ .. dent ...came on....strongu._:.~e.---hav.e..had
gun fights w1th those cyclists. fist fights
and l have been stabbed during alterca·
lions in recent weeks," he charged.
-. ~ Baker-5aid--l.he....Shcr.iff-.-whcn=-pre~--=--'-it~.l'Jct.u.au1_ l:le-accusei-l.ba-.---•
out of proportion: a lot of people don't Gettittg Acqtiaitated realize the humor in ii."
\Vhat effect does he th ink the exposure Carlene Ambrose, a La.e:una Beach policewoman, bends down to talk
will have ? \\•ith Scott Bail ey, 7. a fi rst grader at l.aguna's El Morro Elementary
"Nfl problems, professionally. It 's not School. Her appearance d uring the noon hour \Vas part of a police
going to· affect me. They asked me de artment ro ram to help children understand olice Oj).f!r~tions. --because-.l'm hot i:ighl-now. ---:::~"':"~~"c'::~~'="====-=:.::::.'.'.'..:::__:::_:-=:-=:=:=:":":":::=::O:::.:::.::._::::~
"Of course. I'm going to ha ve to take
"The problem can only be solved by
findin~ these people al)othe11 place to
play,' he continued. "The residents, who
have been ha rassed and insulted. are
ready to ta ke strong action . Cyclists are
allowed to invade our properly and then
you talk about public and pr:escriptlve
rights," he protested.. __
for increasf?d ;iction. passed 1he buck to governn1ent of suppressing the
the High1vay Patrol and th;it agency s;i1d study.
they had oo jurisdiction in a national ---'------------
forest.
The ad hoc committee suggested that it
be autho rized to continue its investii:iation
and report back in six months on the ef·
fectiveness of measures taken. 1 This was
moved up to 60 day s).
Bakf?r charged that six months was
FBI Eyes Phone
Extortio11 Plot
ridicu lool'!. "Wintt!r-will be here by then SACRA~tENTO (UPI 1 _ The FBl is
and _t.he forest ":!11 be closed for fire pro· investigating an alleged ex 1 0 rt io n .
(
liome flak . Guys are going to whistle at
me -unless they're about my size. But
----ir yOO'rt going lo do some[hin8;Cfazy, yOU
got t.o be prepared ·te>. take the con-
"They invade our lands and you want
lo stud}' so.called public rights through
dedication and prescriptive use. That is
DOar;J D. elu· C{a~fl~t.,_la--,y~\i~r 0-=-"'{~e~S~-gr~~~;;~i!~~;"!;:';m ptin~o ac1 D U 1 \. on recommendations of an ad hoc com·
mittee headed by Board Chairman
Ronald W. Caspers of Ne.wport Beach and
tecllon reasons. . . . bookmakin,C! scheme involving employes s~at to~~~un...up....wl';h~-lhreaL,,t-pacifu.4't>lcphonc-co-:-lrerr.f"'Nml~pa"'n~y---•
of 1mmed1ate 1nd1vldual &~~Kin to pro-spokesman ha s confirmed. •
seque nces."
* * * Magazine Stand T C II L d • B • d Including appropriate departme;t heads 0 a an scap111g l s such as the Sheriff, Fire Warden, Roads
and Real Properties.
The ad hoc group suggested that :
tect oµr liv es and property. The spoke1>man '!lid, \\ledncsday two
Caspers said lhe protest11 were a good emp\oyes have been susi)ended from
arg.ument toward acti vation of' a county duties. pending completion of the In·
helicopter patrol. vestiga tion. Their names were not
In the meant ime he suggested that disclosed. .
reside nts talk personally to Sheriff Jim The scheme reporlcdly I n v a J v es
Musick. "J-1e·s· an elected officiaJ so he telephone company workers mC111ttorlng
wil l no doubt listen and act if approached calJS (lf local bookmakers and then at· Has Big Rusk -_____ San Joaqµ_in -~hool Distric~ _ _!r~!_e_es __ Jll~!!Sh the ~~tire interm~ school
have reluctantly -very reluctantly -is .expected to cost $2 million by the time
·vote<! to_ idvertise for bids for an-· it is finished. the stnicture itSell -on
-The Sheriff. in_ coo peration With the
.£alil~-'Higbwa!l-~tr.o1..-enforce-veh · pf()j)erl}';"-l ·lhe sttpervisor ttd'ri se . -1empting-tcTmorrmt1m!Yi'rollrttfl!m.~---
On Ne ·w Nudie
COLUMB IA. S.C. <UPI\ -It wasn't
the usual sort of crowd that lines up for a
look at a nude centerfold in a magazine.
There were women of aM ages crowded
il)tO a small area of Bud and Merle Hul-
lo's newsstand Wednesday afternoon . all
trying to get a look at a fold-out picture
af a naked actor in the latest issue of
''Cosmopolitan'" magazine.
The centerfold showed muscular Burt
Reynolds-wearing only a smile and puf-
fing on a cigar with an arm modestly
placed on his lap.
"You could hardly move in here for a
few minutes when the magazine ca me in
and the wo men round out." said Hutto.
The newsstand was virtually sold out of
copies of the magazine within an hou r
after they went on sale.
"We've had people coming in here ask-
ing about this for weeks," Hutto saiQ,
mention i_ng that many were older women.
estimated $102 ,000 landsca ping project al which the eight percent formula would be
the new Rancho San J o a q u i n used -cost only $1.2 million, King said.
Intermediate School. The actual cost of on-site im-
The boo;i:rd's aversion to the project was provements, '4'hich King noted includes
evident Wednesday night when facilities parking lots, sidewalks and turf areas.
pla nning director Dave King told trustees amounts to about 13 percent of the proj·
the stale "·ou\d not pay for the project. eel cost and is over the state funding
Besides being an expensive project -limit.
the school is being-built on a 20 acre site Trustee Dennis Smith said he would
-the work does not include any vote to advertise for bids. but told King
decorative landscaping, but only basic to use allpossi ble means of auempting to
sprinkler installation , soil prepa ration obt~in state fundint for the expensive
and seeding. King said. Part of the project.
money will be spent to install a one ''I want to see evidence that all
quarter mile athletic tra.c k and a physical avenues have been exhausted," Smith
fitness obstac le course. said.
King said the state had origina lly in-1'rustee Preston Howell told King to go
dicated that the project cou ld be funded. to Sacramento if necessary to attempt to
but that now no funds are available. Un-get the money. Board president Gratian
der state allocalions rules. a district can Bidart said bids would be accepted. but
receive funding for on·site improvements that part of the project might have to be
up to only eight percent of the cost of the eliminated if district funds must pay for
facili ty: it.
·Awaiti1a9 fltacle Len •
One of F'ra?.ler's seven Wll'es pt~ls guard duty as
the venerab le "father of the year". (he has sired
34 cub..-ln thlf1)ast ye>rat. an age &lll""Jjalable tn
75 years in human a~e) catches up on his reH rt
Lion Cou ntry Safari in Laguna 1-lllis. Reader< ' r
Uncle Len 's column whicb appears Saturdays in U,e
DAIJ,Y PILOT have been invited to visit Lion Coun-
trr, free next Monday and 'l'uesdill':.i!!e admission
will be grantea !or hto children per eacn paying
adulL Kids must bring along an Easter card for
Frazier whi ch they design or make by them selves.
There will be prizes for the cards.
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DAJLV PILOT ThursdJY, M'rth 23, 1972
Women-'s Rights Bill Clear·s. Senate
-
SA vs. Irvine:
W ASH!NGTON IUPI I --A proposed
constitutional amendment gu1rantffjn1
women equal ri&hts with men passed
Congress and has'bten quickly ratified· by
HJw1i i. Its sponsors predicted it would
win final approval "with dispatch."
Hawaii's legislature ratUied the pro-
posed 27th amendment to the U.S.
Con1titution less than two houra after the
Senate passed the propostd amendment
84 kl 8. ending a congressional campaian
by feminists 1hat had spaMed almost
half a century.
The House earlier approved the pro-
posal 354 to 23.
Sen. Birch Bayh fD-lnd .1. who led the
fight for the amendment Jn the Senate.
1aid there would be a "scramble'-' by the
1tate1 to ratify the amendment He
predicttd final ratification woutd come
"with dispatch .• , ln a year or two."
Three-fourths -J8 -of the states
musl ratify -the--proposal befor.e it can be
added to the C.onstitulion.
The women 's rights amendment is the
first inv(l)ving women approved by
Congress ajnce 1920 when the 19th
amendment. giv ing women the right to
vote. was approved.
lt reads:
"Equality ofrii ts under the law shafl
not be denied or abridged by the United
States or by any state (ln account of stx.
The Congress shall ha,•e the power to en·
force , by appropriate legislation, the pro-
visions nf this article. This amendment
&hall lake effec t two year s after the date
of ratification ."
The House had approved the equal
· rights amendment each of the past two
years but its passage by the Senate had
been almost single-handedly blocked by
Sen. Sam J. Ervin !D-N.C./. who is con-
sidered the Senate's chief authority on
constitutional law .
Tn a voice break ing with-emotion,
Erv in argued \Vednesda y that the amend·
menL would •·repeal the handiwork of
God," who h11d created men and women
differently. Ervin predicted it would
destroy constitutional governrrltnt by ef·
fectively outlawing legislation I hat
recognized those differe~es ..
But nine weakening amendments of·
fered Qy Ervin were defeated by the
Senate.
Finar approval oI the amendment by
the states is eJpected to be followed by 11
series of court suits that will further
define its effects.
Chapter Eight
UPCOAST, DOWNCOAST: I announce
with a measure of pride that another
fearles s prediction of this comer has just
come to pass. The city of Sant.a Ana has
rued in an effort to dissolve the City of
Pay Unit Fight Escalates
)rvine.
Well, I'll have to admit that it didn 't
take the world's greatest crystal ball to
Ad1ninistration, Labor Chiefs Trade Angry Blasts
bring that Oite into advance focus . WASHINGTON (AP) -An exchange of who Withheld announcing any decision.
-nus must" be either the ei hth or ninlh bitter charges between the White House Woodcock is believed reluctant to quit the {il'netliarl-....-.= 1~ II ~ nin ~s_oL_board on the theory thaLhH=AA better
a ne toun~y seat mun Wpa j President Nixon's Pay Board appears to protect his union's contracts by re·
has flung itself before the bar of jusUce have thrust the administration 's wage· maining. in en effort to prove that Irvine really isn't there. price controls into the political arena as a "At this point we are not sure how we
AFTER EACH previous effort . the San· major election issue. will proceed," Ziegler said in discussing
ta Ana municipal .-pie have been "It is the President's vi.ew that a few the future of the Pay Board , but he added
i--y labor leaders representtng a small ii would not be disbanded.
whipped· before tthat particulay bar lo percentage of the 80 million wage·earners "The President will not allow any
!Uch an extent tthat they probably Jn this country will not be anowed to leader of labor or any member Or
needed to find solace and comfort at bot th 1· ht · t · fl t· d aa ~ge e 1g a_ga1ns tn. a i?,n a~ management -no matter how powerful
some other 1 kind of bar. the fight against higher prices, said -to put themselves above the best in·
Anyway, it's nice to know Santa Ana is White House Press Secretary Ronald L. terests or the American people '' he ad·
bl.ck in Iegil form . · Ziegler. ' -* "In the guise of an anti-inflation policy,
While the county seat city may not the American people are being gouged at
believe Irvine is real, it developed this the supermarket and squeeied in the
week that the City of Stanton believes It. paycheck." said AF'L-CIO President
The only problem is that certain Stanton Ull'1 T•~,. George Meany.
people are unhappy with lr"vine being quits Post Meany, President I. W. ADel of the
advertised on large billboards in their AFL-CIO United Steelworkers and 1Presi·
community. The big placards suggest, Najeeb Halaby has resigned as dent Floyd Smith of the AFL-CIO
''Live in Irvine." board chairman and chief International Association of Machinists
Some of the Stanton objectors believe executi ve officer of Pan ~tarted the fight by quitting the Pay
that should give them the right to post American World Airways only Board in a body with the accusation that
Bases Pounded
ded. •
"Because· they didn't gel the~ wa y,
they..d~idedJo...Walk..away from the wob-
1em." Ziegler said o( the AFI.,.CJO
leaders.
"There is one thing you can be sure of :
the stabilization program will continue."
he sald. "You can be "sure wage and price
controls will continue."
Backed by a una nimous vote of the 23
members of his executive council who at·
tended Wednesday's meeting, Meany de-
nounced Nixon's controls, Sev.in council
members were absent.
similar billboards in Irvine that urge, hours after the airline an· Nixon's C<lntrols are loaded in favor of
----·11ve m' -Stanton". ~ ------d · I · F ~ig business and against workers and -nounce its osses 1n ebr-uar-y--
ALL OF THIS became . particularly to~aled $10,859,000. unions. .
Viet, Cambodian Forces
Ree~ Under Big Attacks
But it is expecttd to tnv11.lidate 1uch
la\\'S as 1hose impo$ing ~reatP.r restric-
tions: on women's rights tn buy or 1ell
property or to conduct a bus iness, 1nd
laws setting different ages al which men
and women attain legal majority or have
the right to marry or become eliglble for
t~x-supP.Qrted retirement plans. ,
II also is expected to outlaw different
admission standards tor women in.. ta1·
supported educational lns titutiOf!S •nd
dif1erent fa£lllli~s and c!!fricu!! in public
schools. It probably will change laws
governing alimon y and child custody and
military service,
Ul'I Tl'*-"'" ·
s
Rev
"wll
Com
\\'3 S
brl
and
paig1
Da
the
gu11'
ID·t'
\\'ed1
con11
Tu
Com
(:Oflll
1om·
y
11
M
LO
scho
lllllr
1noth
Pol
·later
after
lo u
Th
Gary
ne"'~
youl
Pol
ciOVi'D
in th
the Irksome to· the Jnrine City. Council the Meany said politics played no part in SAJGON (lJPil -Oommulist forces Another Communist band. tossing 'Easy Hid.er'
other night because, for o_ne thing, they /· the deciai~n. by the executive council . of .. carrie<t out devastating attacks today in grenades and firing rifles, stormed · a -~di~n't-put-up·the-frvine--sign;·Jt ·belongs--to---. --_ _ __lbe l.3_._&----1Jlllhon-membtr labor..1edera1.imL .Soulh--V-tetnam--aOO.-(;ambodi3-alld heavi!Y~efe_!!!'iaj SOuth Yi~Jn!!TI~. tank .. __ Georgia Lt. Gov . Lester Mad~ ........___..._ ._._
the Irv ine Company, which runs the E t H 1 J o· t to pull ib representatives ()ff the Pay b . ~on Highway 3 in southern Cambodia~ rtursrrtves. at 'Slate-t~·~
Pol
after and-
Irvine Ranch, which likes to advertise gyp OWS U Board. rought up more tanks for their assault 75 miles below Phnom Penh sending after fast· spin on sporty motor•
that it's a nice place to Jive. The Ir vine • But the AFL-CIO's political strategists on the threatened Central Intelligence shrapnel and rocket grenades ripping cycle. He rode behind stunt
Ranch is large: than Irvine city. But it's For MJG23 Top ha ve been gearing Up for months for an Agency (CIA) base of Long Cheng in through some of the two dozen tanks man this time around, but said
ell called trvme, and that's why the ' expected all-out effort to defeat Nixon in Laos. there and killing 13 government soldiers. he would ride cycle on own
Irvine council figured it was wroni;:: for · his re-election bid next November. The worst damage was inflirted at Tay The defenders killed eight Communisti;;. in near future .
Stanton people to.blame the wrong Irvine R • Pl The unionists say they eipect Nixon's Nin~. 55 miles northwest of Saigon. the There was a serie.<1 of clashes within a
for the billboard. USSlllll ane economic record to be the No. 1 issue in stag~ng b~se for the So~th Vietnamese in· 20 mile radius of Phnom Penh, indicating In
of '"'
7
The Irvine council agreed that it was a the campaign. cursions into Cambodia. A rocket and the Communist threat to the city still ex·
·ridiculous flap and councilmen shouldn't BEIRUT (AP) -The SoViet Union has The AFL·CIO resignations left only two mortar attack there destroyed 1.5 million isted.
1----ibe spendin" their·good timefiscussing it. labor rejiiresentatives Qn the_Jlinfmher __ gallo_ns C?f fu~I --. e_n.olJ!lh to_fly __fil_fD.QSl Military SQO_kesman_ 1'.lso reported • agreed' lo set up a ractory in Egypt to board T t p ·d t • k E 7 000 h I t The decision not to discuss Jt took about . . • earns ei:s !"SI en . r ran . . · . e JC<JP er m1 ss1ons. massive-Communist artillery and morfar
'.Partying' Envoy _Lo
-th
30 minutes. ll_l~nljfacture MIG21 fighter planes, but F1t~unmons who said he will. continue Viet Con~ force~ also overran a heavily barrages at government bases and camps
1----.All._governmen War Minister Mohammed Sadek is press-serving on th~ board and United Auto de.fended village 1n the Mekong Del ta 45 just below the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ) Won't Take Part !'::';;
----''---m-it-1 * ing for a MIG2.1 plant; lhe indepindenl ·Workers-Pres1dent-teonant-Woodcock-'-tn.iles10ut~of-Saigon~killing-28-South-""-wherra-total--or-281aounds-hirta·ses
Meanwhile, the cities of Costa Mesa Beirut newspaper An Nahar reported to-Vietnamese .and wounding 29. The village there and one 15 miles south of Hue.
and'Seal Beach have found something to day. wat~ Tru~ Giang where the guerrillas hit Dispatches from Vientiane. the ad·· In China Talks "~~'
flap at county government about In that It said agreement to build the MlG21 Sena le weighing WI a . ar~age .of rockel grenades and ministrative capital of Laos. reported the
they fear the county is helping let their factory was reiChed during Prtsldent automatic nfle fire and then slashed into situation around Long Cheng 80 miles to \VASH INGTON (AP\ U , S,
c'ities go to tbe dogs. Anwar Sadat's visit to Moscow 1 t the town, ~estroying a police compound the north as "fluid," which meant both Ambassadnr to F'ran('e Arthur K. Watson
' BOTH COMMUNITIU ar'e displeased th IS F oreian Af fa1· rs and a housin~ compl~x. • sides were giving and tak ing ground . \\'ill not be handling subslanuve u S.·
with the quantity and -ityA · mThe..MIG21 .... now rornu....the..backbone.-of--__.__ _ • .0 _ ·--~-......,.__ ~. _,,. In Cambocha guerr~lla ~~gmen sank a _ ~aotian forces briefly .recaptured a Chinese negol1at1on~ 1n Paris, acC<Jrding
· 'dogcatcher services being provBd Egypt's air force but the MJG2.1 is th -pet~eum--tank-e-=-and "damaged""-a ~ehoopte1"1'wd-on SkyMne~Ridge overlook· fC>-Se"";'-'1.4V--Fulbr1ght· who-say"i'le-=was---
1-----'"'ongh the AnimaLE1eJ.aser:xic.e~oUhe --moiLa4vanetd...rplaM.-in-.t~v· ~ ·-'l.:feddli'"n a __ Pr-L ~ freighter . at t~e ~h~om Pe.nh docks, cut 1~g .Long C:~ng but lost it in .tieav_v. told this by Secretary of State William S.
Orange County Health Departme~ . arsenal. :it --i-ff ~ -~ -~me~ighwa-r5 -lea~-to .PhMm--flgMing> .. M1titary----soum!'!-,aidl'ttire•,...R~·~:rz · ·-="'Hi~-·
··c1tiuns-tri botll•O>sta-Mes·a-mlt"'Seal--· The MJG2l-is-a sin [e-sellfu1erce ·1.or-• ----.. Pen_h, <!_nd · atta_~ked p~nes at Phn?m Commun 1st tanks were r~ported six miles The Arkansas Democrat told newsmen
Beach have charged that by the time the with an extremely :lgh·altitude fl pin WA~HlNGTON , (UPI ) -~ Senate ~nti sv· rochentong ~irport. cau:nng from Long Cheng moving toward the \\1ed.nesday Rogers told him at a closed
county dogcatcher has responded to a capability and a top speed of about £1~ committee tentatively has decid~ fln .a u Je nam to halt flights there. base. sess10~ of the Senate Foreign Relations
c.au. the offending stray canine has had mlles per hour. bro~d iitudy . of rnrporate meddling in 1:r {::; ..A. Jo.. ..A. .A. Co~m1ttee. that _people "!"uch more ex-
tune not only to empty the garbage can, foreign affairii after th.e". releas~ of ~ W w w per1e~ced 1n China relations" ·would be
but carry it off as welL ' . documents alleged!~ chronicling IIT s el-u s c lls handling the talks. F'ulbright heads the
ONE COSTA ME s A official was forts to sto~ Marx1~t Salvatore Allende a Off T l'k committee.
P!ompted to suggest it has been so Jong DAILY PILOT from bec~ming president of Chll~. • • ' J. a s, .In a.nno~ncing the. talks arter President
since he 's seen a dogcatcher around that The action came after columnist Ja~k Ni~on s ~rip to Peking, the White House
he wouldn't even recognize the truck. DELIVERY SERVICE Anderson released an 82·p.age sheaf of in· said "primary purpose of this channel"
Wei!, that might work to real ad· ternal !'"emoranda attributed to the c •t R ds' PO w s d would be to handle travel and trade mat-
vantage if the county people ca n be prod-Delivery of the Dally Pilot International . Telephone and. Tele_g~a.ph l. es e *: llf"Wn ter_s ~nd tha~-Y!_atson _ _!IQ_<!_h{ajnl~~
ded into accelerating service to the two Is guaranteed ~rp .. co~cerning the C<Jmpany s activ1t1es (.(,li-4,...., Chtna s amabssador to France. Huang cities in the near future. ~ 10 ChJ/e 1n the fall of 1970 when Allende Chen. "will meet whenever there is
The dogs, Jong left to their own devices, Mon•u v.l"rld•v: 11 vau cio 11<1t "•v• vour came to power. . signific~nt business to be conducted." won't recognize the catcher's truck ,,.~r tir J:l!I p.m., c•ll 1m1 veur copv wu1 The docui:nents included reports ?f JTI' PARIS (AP )-The United States called 11As for meeting in the weeks that F'ulbright said Rogers told him that
either. " breu~111 ~ veu. c1rrs 1r1 t•t•n 1111111 contacts with the Central Intelligence off next week 's session of the Vietnam follow," he continued, "we believe it "the ambassador (Watson ) was never In·
7:J111 p.m. Ag_en~y, . t.he Stale Department and peace talks today because of the lack of would be preferable to awa it some sign tended to be the negotiator."
Tiny Quake ·Rattles
San Bernardino Area
RIVERSIDE IUPJ ) -Residents in the
Riverside-San Bernardino area felt a
slight earthquake measuring 2.4 fln the
Richter scale.
Seismologists at Cal Tech said \Ved-
nesday's temblor was centered north of
Loma Linda on the San Jacinto fault No
damage was reported.
s11ur111v 1r>a s1m~1y: " vou 110 not •ec1!,.,, Chiles m1htary leaders. Several. of th~m progress on the prisoner of war issue. ~rom yo~ that you are disposed lfl engage . Fulh~ight also said Rogers has prom-
;o,,:,;,~~11 .. :n: ;·:":•:;~·~ :;11~h~·;-spoke (lf .a CIA-backed eff?rt 1nvolv1ng U.S. Ambassador William J. Porter Jn meaningful exchanges on the various 1s.ed his committee a report on an in·
vou. ,1111 ,,, •~•" uniH 1~ '·'"· I'rf to bring on the eC<Jnom1c collap~e of also appeared to rule out regular weekly points raised in your and our proposals." c1dent appearing in a recent column by ~1Je and pave th e way for a military meeting s in the future. The thrust or Porter's statement Jack Anderson in which Anderson said
Telephones seizure before, Allende ~uld take over. "As you know," Porter told the Com-seemed to be that henceforth it would be Watson was drunk and became abusive to
M1ut or•llll• cmi"'Y ..,,e11 ........ ltt>Ull F Se~. J, Wilha.m Fulbr1_ght (D-Ark. /, the m1:1nist delegation at the session today, up . to the Communists to con vince the stewardesses on a Paris-lo-Washington
Hti••"w'" Hu"11110,0r. IHd• orei~n Relation~ chairman, ~aid the "President Nixon , -: . has declared next United Sta.te_s and South Vietnam that flight three weeks ago. Fulbright said
•11!1 W•ttminir•r , ........... ••un CO!f1m1ttee ~eneraUy agreed during a 90 week as a 'Weck of national concern for th~.Y are wilhng to come to grips with the Rogers told him the incident was greatly
''" ci'"'"'"· C•Plttr•l'ltl le•ci., ~inut~t~es~i.on to1 "study" the overall role our men held prisoner by you and your pn~~er ~uestion and other military and exaggerated. ~ i:nu l·na 1ona corporations on foreign associates. It would be a mockery of our political issues holding up a war settle-Fulbright said Rogers believes ''thal
poll.er. But the committee put off a concern for them to sit in this room wi!h ment. \•1halever happened was verv un· 1ecis1~~ w~her to subpoena witnesses you and listen to more of your blackmail "Let me emphasize that these ar· fortunate. but was not a pattern Or con·
:.oomd t e 1 and. as~embl~ a . staff to and distortion to the effect that the pris-· duct'' by Watson. Fulbright said Roftrs n uc a ar-reach1ng 1nvest1gat1on. oner of war issue is an "imaginary prob-rangemenb (or further meetina11 are in. has "very great regard for him (Watson)
I ' Th ef"" ·d d ot tended to preserve the utili·ty of th.ls d · em. er ..,,_e our SJ e oes n agree an . assu~1ng the fa ct.-; to be reasonably
Winter Grips Northeast
to a meeting next week. for~m should there be 1 corresponding accurate. 1t was an unfortunate act." On
des ire on your part to take it 1erlously " March 16, after Anderson 's column the Porter declared. 1
, State Department reiterated its con·
"We prefer that a settlement be
r~ached through discussions with your
side : and our action today reflects our
disappointment that over these several
years your side has chosen not to utilize
the forum established in Parls 1or th is very purpose."
fidence in Watson .
Sen. Frank Church (0-ldaho ) called for
a committee inquiry, saying he is con. ~er~ed about the effect of the purported
tnc!dent on .th~ U.S. negotiations with
m111~8!1d China. Watson has , conducted
pre11m1nary tal!_s for the United states.
I
St1(1W W•1 r1part1d •I S•ull $It,
M•rl•, Mith., ltckl1y. W. V1., Ind
l l"gh1mlt111. N.Y., 1nd Wltld 011111 til
UO . fo )I) mfl11 Ollr llevr wl!lplle(I up
1n11">" 111 OOrller" of Ml<lll11n.
lt1ln •<t&mP•"ltd lh• wintry ~term
In llel"Tlt1111 ol New !'n1l•1111. 11111 Rum·
ltlrd. M•lnt . r•oor11d 1TK1r1 1111n 111
ln<ll of r1l11 I" 11• IM>vri.
Ctild •Ir w•1 1ol"11ln1 tlYtr II>• Grt1i
l1ke1 •lld tM UIW!l'f Mhslul11pl V1Hty
•1111 ••rly motllf"ll ltmP1r11urtJ 1110~
to "'' '"n" Sc•ft.rlld 1how1r1 d•ml)tll'\t'd !ht
Nor1nw111 •lld tomt r1111 11"11 1now
w11 rtOl!t"l1d I" IM tll9h1r rnount1ln
'''''· A l•w 11!ow•r1 1nd thulldfr. 1torm1 llH ,,,..,.. r1&Mltd In -•lrtm•
Wiii T•••I '"II IOiltlwrn N1w Mt•lco.
l'1!r, dry wt•ll!tt jlfl Yll!ffl llYt r Ill•
r•m•IP!dt r ti! TM 1111lo11,
f•/'fy momlrio 1tm11tr11Ur11 r•ngfd
lrMI U 11 H.,'ICO(l, M!tll., to 11 ..
ll'llolnh!, 1"4t.
Coutal
"••llY clO\ldy fod•v. 1.lfht v1rl1&-1t
w!11111 nitl!t l!'ttl n'\C>tnl11t tlwr• '*""'' Int wetrtrlv.....10 to 11 tnalt 11'1 •fl•"
-• lod1y •NI ,.,ld•v. Hltf't foclfy,
""Mtl'I' '" '°" CM1t1I t1met1r1lur" r•r1:0• 1-rM!'I Ml
It ~ lnl•lld l'1'1'1 .. r1lvr.f r1n,t fMm
fl IO fl, W•T•r l1m11tr1IUr• st.
Kid11ap 1licti111
President. of lhe Fial Aul ..
-mo.bile Co. in Buenos ·Aires
says he is willing to negotiate
with leflisl kldnaper< of Fiat
executive Oberdan Sallustro
(shown in undated photo).
Sallustro W3' seized Tuesday.
•Legend' Dies
Ma.st,er Drug Expert Takes Life
MARSEILLE (AP) -Monsieur Jo, the legendary heroin chemist whose
11rrest last week reportedly save hlm from an underworld death h i....._
found dead In hl1 cell. • . • as "'"''
Authorities ,.Id Joseph Cesari, M. hanged hlmHlf Wednesday
Cesari -once deacribed by a U.S. na:q>llca agent •t "the uriest of the
hands" -was caught list Thursday In hh1 aecret l1bor1tory with S25 mlJJjld
worth of drugs. 4 on
Reports cirC1.1Jating thtn uid he was m11rked for death by gan sterl'I w tho~ghl he tumed in two loc1J drug dealers he considered to be ann~ylng' Pl:
petltors. , · -
Authorities said tht 26.\ pounds or heroin seized in the raid on. lhe Vllhi: Su
ianne in Aubagne. a Marseille· suburb. w1~ rt:ady for 1muggllng intt the United
States. Poll~ also found .hug1 amount& of chemicals ustd t<1 purUy~heroin ba
Cesari had ~crved si.t years_ in prison Altir being arrtsttd In l~ with tiea:?;
11s much heroin.
''II'•• tngedy," he told tbe pollc:e who cough\ him l.,t we.It.
"I. wi1 1olng to cl""' down the lib and roUro to the <0untry:• •
\1·erc
tione
in t
Balla
·dent __ !ocoe
Pol
~~
" I
r
•
Lil e's Allegatio11s •
Ex-IRS ~an ~S~ys
He Will Testify
SAN D1€GO tAP) -A forn1cr Internal
Revenue Servlee agent said ht! \VOuld
"\\1illingly'r l1·1J th e Senute Judiciary
Comm ittee the details ot hO\Y he says he
u•as refused pern1ission to tefltiiv in the
bribery trials or San Diego city .ofticlals
and \\'as th1raflcd in investigating cam-
pa.ign spending. it \\"as reported today.
David Slulz. 1101v an investigator for
the San Diego County District Attorney,
g:n 1· h\'o aides to U.S. ~ohn Tunney,
t U-t"alif.) a \\'ritlen statement here
\\'edncsday offering to testify before the
con1nHttee, the San Diego Union said.
Tunney , a member of the Judiciary
Comm ittee that is inve stigaUng the m
t·ontroversy and is considering the
1omination ol Richard Kleindienst as at·
Y outlt Arrested
Ju Neivs111a11's,
Motlier's Deatli
to1,11ey general. called \Vedncsday for
\Yidening the scope of the hearing in lisi;hL
or Life maga~in.e's charges tbal the Nix·
on ·Administration ·'.seriously tampered
·with justice in San Diego."
Stutz said Tuesday that "those facts set
rorth in lhe article relating to my
personal in\'olven1ent are true."
The article has also been described RS
accurate by Richard Hurfman. a former
specia l assistant to U.S. Atty. llarry O.
Ste\\·ard and now chief deputy district at·
torney of San Diego.
Other persons mentioned, hO\\'ever,
have &aid the article y,•as fallacious.
Sen . James 0. Eastland {[)..~liss .l,
committee chairman. said he \\'as con-
siderinti: Tunney·s request.
The Union said Slutz's signed state--
men!. gi\'en to Tunney aides Gordon J .
' Uchael T Thor e.s aid ••
have information relevant to sorne or the
Issues discussed in the Life article. and if
requested to appe;ir before the co1n-
mlttee. and legally pern1itted to testify
r egarding said information , I y,·ould \Yill-
lngly do so."
The reference to legal permission ap-
parently concerns Stutz's belief. ex·
·pressed in his statement written Tues-
day. that he is ''still subject to the
LOS ANC:E:LF.S (UPI) _ A junior high federal disclosure statutes'' and therefore
school student \\'as booked on suspicion of is unable to "comment on anything which
niurder in the shooting deaths of his t:ou\d be interpreted as a violation or
1nolher and her boyfriend \\'cdnesday. those regulations."'
Police said Donald Lichter 11·as booked In its current issue. Life n1a gazinc sa~s
late r that day under the Juvenile Code Stutz could have provided key prol:t·
after givin~ a statenient and subnlilling ccution testimony in the 19il trial of
to unspecified laboratory rests. then-mayor Frank Curran. \l'ho 1vith
The victims. killed in their sleep. \\'ere other city officials \Vas charged \\'ith
Gary ~1ayfield, 34, a Los Angeles Times bribery and conspiracy in connection 1vilh
ne\vsn1an. and Arlene Thoinpson. 34 . the thei r votes to raise taxi fares for the
·~'outh's mother. YellO\Y Cab Company ..
Police said the bodies 1vere found in a "I did not testify in the Ye1!01v Cab
do\\•nstairs bedroom of Mayfield's ho1ne trials ~ause I was denied pcrmis§ion by
in ihe Silver lake area. Both were shot in \Vashington ." Stutz said.
the head. Curran \l'as acquitted and later said
Polite said the ~·outh 1va~1 ·arrested 11e received a congratulatory telephone ,
a fter he report ed the de11lh at 6:30 a.n1. call fro n\ Nixon Arter .the }'Crdict. v.<a~
· andS ub"fnltted-Ule ·staremTnt:-lhe conrent-·de'livere<t-. ---------
of n'hich was not made public.
CALIFORNIA
Sta11dal'ds OK'cl
Fol' Pron1oti11 a ~
.State Colleges
LOS Al'\GELES API -Stand · ·
raisi ng sta te college l"a1npuses to the
status of state universilies hflve been op-
proved by the tru stees of the Californi a
Stille University and Colleges.
1'he fh·e Slllndards for\l'arded \\'ed·
ncsday to lhe Coordinating Council for
lliJ:!,her Education for adoption \vhen it
1neels A"pril 4 arc:
-Total enrollnlt>llt of 6,000:
-Size of gr~duate programs based on
nurnber of post·grad uale students and
nun1bcr or graduate degrees:
-:\umber of fields in v.·hich un-
dergraduate and graduate degrees are or-
fered:
-Quality 11s rneasured b)' nu mber of
programs accredited by national pro-
fessional groups;
-Percentage of faculty members
holding doctorates in fields v.•here it is
the final degree.
Under these erilt1ria, board sources in·
dicaled that 11 stat e college can1puses
could qua lify for university status. They
are : Long Beach. Los Angeles. San
Diego. San Jose. San Fernando Vall ey.
S-<1cra1n ento.. San Francisco. l'"resnu,
-1ta)'\vard; f<,ullert'on and-Chico.
~
State Ag
Chief Dies
Ti1 Crash
SACRAMENTO I ~p'
\\1illi::in1 Co\van hns taken orer ·
as C.lilrornla's acting
agriculture <.'hie! follo11•\ng the ;
denth of Director Jerry \\1,
Fielder in a plane crash. 1
fielder's single-engine plane
disintegrated \Vt> d n es d a v
1norning 11•hen .,.,.it nesses said
ir 11•as slruck by lightninS? 1
11·hiie tt·ylng lo I a n d
-~acr:.imrnto's Exe rut i v e
Airport. ~
Ccl\ran had bet-n Flelder':i
l'.hi~f deputy.
J•'ielder. 56. of Dixon, Cali£ ..
had flc11•n alone in his pl<i ne
frotn \lisnlia after address.inc;
an ag riculture grou p the night
before in 1'ulare. A fingerprint
l'heck confirmed the viclin1's
identit.y. I
\Vi1n?sses s;1kl his single· I
en ine Ii ht Jane \Vas ·
o 1J! 1 n1ng.
tearing ils \\'ings ofL The 1
plane 1.:rashed in a field t\VO ]
n1iles southeast of the airport.
Fielder, a Hepublican. was I
named by lleagan lo the
$30.00-a-year post in February.
1969. tie ran a department
1rith a $22 million annual
budget and 1.500 ernployes. l·Ie
11•as the key figu re in state ef-
forts to cw-bing use or DDT
and other so-c~l!ed "hard 1
pesticides.·•
A 19:!9 graduate of the
Universilv of Ca lifornia al I
Da,·is Fielder 11·as a Na,·v 1 dest~.ver officer during \Vorid
\Var JI.
He Figl1ts
·Deatl1 But '
-Gets Life
LOS ANGELES IAP> -A De1nocrats Said Ready :~:~t ·:11~2·~~~, ~~~~~~h~:~I 7 x ouths Held ended with a Su perior Court
judge sentencinl? him lo life in I
111 Boy's Deat11 T p t B' d t t v t r~~"ri~~,~·~:.~:~ingora . 0 U ll ge 0 0 e Doy le A. Terry. 43 , had been
_LOS A.~GEL ES lAPl -Se.1·., voulhs _ _ prepared.to act as his own at.
-lhree or then1 jU\'eniles :_ have been lorney in a fi(th penalty trial.
booked for investi gation of murder in .the • . Bui the case \vas resolved I
sl aying outside the Holly\\·ood Palladium SACRA~rE!\lO lt:PlJ Th c \\'ill not be able to hang th, delays on \Vednesday by the s ta t e I -cl-i-t&,~·e::ir.old vouth-who-refused-to· sur----Dcrnoci:atiG-chairman of-lho Assemb~y erubctat.Whi5--year. " upreme COu ff""ftil1ng e .
r ender ·h is JeathCr jacket. \\lays .and ~leans Com mittee say~ his Dr iving toward early budget passage in . barring the death penally. \
Official.Ii said \Vednesd1!y that lhe seven part:V: IS prepared. whether Republicans an effort to avoid again ov.ershooling the "l",The issue becomes moot
\rerc arre.~ted in their honies and ques-llke . 11 or nol. to press for . a. Ooor v~t r .June 30 d t a d I in e . Brown !Gld 110\1• regarding the penalty.
tioned al the f-loll y\vood Division station April 6 on a massn·e S7.9 b1Jhon version flepu blicans . ~"\\'het her you like it or not. The issue is ivhether the court
in the murder Moiidav of Robert Brooks of Gov. Ronald Reagan's budge!. you are going to vole on the budget April .should admit you to probation
Ballou. a Los Angel,·.s tiigh School stu-1'hc total is $253 million more than the 6 on the Assembly floor. or sentence you," the judge
· dent and the son of a Los Angeles at-governor \vants. For the past couple of years. the told Terr y. \Vho has
-:e ·lfilDe)!. ~----:-'"'-·· -· -= _,_ _ _, ----· -GhaiJ:man ·-\Villie--..&e.wn:·.:J.~l-::-&811 =:-.-bi.ckecing-1:.egislature -has~gnored 1he '-Tepres~nted-tlmself"""f0i' mOSt'."
Police said they were seeking at least Francisco warned Republicans during a deadline and state government briefly or the time be has been on San
IMOdllor~h~f:.-.;:oJ.~~nesday-.rngh . ...ftB~~~lftlgret~ .. ...,._ ·-· · Qt:1e11tin's-0etrfft-Row:-·~--
j... : •
SEE HOW MUCH
YOU CAN SAYE
ON THESE OPEN
STOCK PIECES:
e.t ... ,.
10" Dinner Platts
PllCI ••• ,, .•• 1.19
(
'
C...ltd lkltt• Dish
PRICE ...... , • 1,49
i ' l:i >;,.,.,,..,...<,[.<· .~/l .,'l·I
Soup/Cerul Bowl~ 12 .. L
,.RICI •••••••• 49c
r .. :'1 ~
~ f'
:.:e ·
l
s.,,~, Bowls, 4G-tz.
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PRICE ........ 79c
J9c TO
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Saturday 9 A.M.-6 P,M.
Sund1y 10 A.M,-4 P.M.
'
J
•Mdaf. Martlt 23, tqn DAILY PI LOT :i
2640. lftarbor Blvd.
-COSTA MESA
Hnlli~ti-~OURS: MON.-SAT. 9-6
Make Your Own
MINIATURE· GARDEN
in a bottle ... in a bowl. .. in a dish
TERRARIUM PLANTING
=/d~~::'.;t!=:;~R::\\4==::b:y_W..end.y .. .!W..oln-~--¥--~-r--
"EARTH 'n' WARE" designer
FRI. 12-5, SAT. 10-5
99c
Wendy will show you
how to plo nt ond tok e
c~re of d ish gardens,
bottle gordens '&
terrariums, ..
come in and
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TERRARIUM FIXIN'S
Everything you need to get into
the intrig~ing world of the minia-
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BOTTLES ro PLANT • , , ov1rvon• will •tk
/iow yoi.r 90! tli. pl•nh in th• bottl•.
GLASS CONTAINERS ••• lov•lv th•p•t !o
pl1nf 9 1rder ~ in .• , !hoy m •~• 9ro1t con·
lerpi11;11.
TlRRARIUMS , , , otrood y pl•l'li1d ind
grow ing. frolR 14.,5
INDOOR ,.LA.HTS • , • vining. troll·
in9, variog•lod, mo11y •.• •II ~i nd1
ond si111 to fit •ny coonl1inor. l'c
JUGS, JARS, CkOCKS in cou"trv•
loo~ eerlh colort .•• 9r1on1ry
loo~s qreel i" tho,o!
-4.00
1.98
c~~ -· ,-l j
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7.50
12.95
2.98
WROUGHT llON POT HAN•tlS t•
1how off indoor 9ro1 n1ry .
1fNWA.RI WATlllNG C0AN$ to 111• .,
to plont. '
IARTHINWAll "CUTI klD" ll911rln e
plenlor1 wiilt h•ppy 1mili"9 focot.
DRlfTWOOp , •• 1m•ll •nol1 •"d inf•r•
__ -. __ ~~in~.!t,.· "''=======•
PEllLIS • , , i moQth 1tbno1 •• •<c•nfl -f~r-ifnY"1J•rdm;-4.1..--..--___ -..
IASICm ••• lo hold dish i•rdon1 &
bowl pl•nlor1 ••. or fill th1m with •
h•iidfi.rl of lo,,.,/.,. p•bbl11 .
OPEN SUNll'AYS!
WE DELIVER EYERv'bA y
INCLUDING SUNDAY
HOURS: MON.·SAT. 9'6 SUN. 9.5
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. '
I ) D AU ,y PllOT .EDITORIAL P AGE
•
Low Income Housing,-;........,
.. The biblical a3iuranct that ye ihall -atway have-th housi ng-must neverth-eless~be faced . The UC lrv!ne"--PrOJ-
poor with JIOU ha.s •rtever ruffled America1u, who t.obk 1£ ect 21 Study group has made an investigation and pro-
/or granted that the Bible didn't mea1t r1gJ11 111 your ow1• duced some interesting rcco1nn1endation s. 'fhese include:
neighborhood. -Each of the county's municipalities should rec-
FTed V. C~aham ognize -an obligation to aC'cept its proportionate Sha.re of
Quoted in Report Published U1e county's low income \vork force, It should devise
for UCI Proje~i Study "\.. a tnaster plan that locates this fair share within its
, T~ issue of low·income hQ~slng in Orange (QUlllY _boundaries.
Js one that most politicians steer clear of. Jt is an emo· -A counly·wide housing authority should be
tion-charged subject that conjures visions of high den sity formed to coordinate a county masterplan for distribut·
apartments and racial ghettos, and these are things ing low income families. ~1cmbership by the cities should
that no one favors. be volun tary, and each Individual housing project shoufd
But low-income housing does not imply substandard require approvaL The county authority should aim at per·
housing with substandard people. Quite the con trary. suading each tom1nunity to accept its fair share of IO\\l'
Every city-needs its cleri caJ workers, its unskilled and income housing, and it should aJso protect each com·
semi·skilled workers. Every city produces a certain num· munity from becoming "flooded" by a disproportionate
ber of the elderly, of single parent families, and of lower· share.
rank servicemen. -The countywide authority 'should tompete ac·
These are all people who should have access to res· li vely for the federal g:rants that are probab~y th e only
pectable, safe and sanitary hou si ng at a price they can feasible method by \Vhich lo\v income housing can be
afford and at a location reasonably near the places they built. .
work. Changes in property taxation policies, zoning .and -
Yet this is a right now being denied to as many as build;ng codes and construction techniques also would
40 percent of Orange County's workers who make less be important, the report indicates.
f'--'------t,han--$.Ul.0.00 a year, according_to_a UC Irvine....P...r.oje.ct __ Low.-~neeme-housin , h·e -stu-d t ·am-ar Ui :s -e·d
'--------z1-Stud . no e e1t er 1g ensity or unattractive, if local au·
(As a point of reference, the report indicatc.s that thbrities make their specifications clear. The alternative
a family with $6,000 to $8,500 annual income can afford is gradual deterioration of all older housing into self·
monthly rentals of $135 to $175, or can purchase a home perpetuating ~hettos.
costing $15,000 to $21,000.) Today, virtually ·no J1C\V housing is being bu il t
The problem is partly due to the rising costs of land \vithin ·the reach of families making less than $10,000
and construction, and partly due to the. attitudes of resi· per :vear, the Project 21 report declares. Yet the county's
dents of mOderate and high inconie com·munities who are middle and high income hou sing continues to grow b.v
afraid of letting lower income groups in. leaps and bounds, and ne\v commercial and in dustrial
The problem is, therefore, very complex. It does no areas are mushrooming.
m<>re good to condemn high building costs than it does Public officials should lake action to correct this in·
to lament the attitudes of the higher income communi-equity before continually rising eonstruction costs and . ·~· .-. ties. There are good reasons fo r each phenomenon. land values make the problem of providing low incon1e
But the problem of providing decent low-income housing more difficul t th an it already is. SURVIVAL COURSE
The Average Dear
B eer Drinker Gloomy
Ota Federa~o Educa.tio1i •••
Around Nixon
Gus Is ' a Bi slob So . .Spii'n Agnew..rny~-r~ -WASl!IN.Gl'ON--1/n<!eHlle infltt<nee-m15eralllfln many cases-. -H~. ,~is-0fu-l~ly-~a""ci'"'vi_sc_r_s _sa_y_, 7he will lh,_c_n_s_ee_k_t_o_g_o th-,-.
C L ------.-+-dent in 1976. Does that mean we -of George Shultz, director of manage-aware of fhe Coleman Report that the at· rouie of a con stit utional amendment pro-
Does .Quick ~Turn
..
SYDNEY J. -HARRIS
maY be faced with a choice among mcnt and budget, President Nixon has RICH . .\RD WILS ON titude in the home toward educatlon has hibiting or limiting busing for purposes o( Agnew, George Wallace and Teddy undergone. a quick , transformation on more to do with the improvement of pupil
d l · I J th h 'I 1· d r<!cial integration. KennedyJ Please cancel my citi· federal aid to e ucat1on. . earn ing eves an ea v1 y 1nancc
zenship. This is not as dramatic as his turn federal programs. ·rhe long CQngressional and legal battle
h' Sh Jt N. • r · th:n looms ahead could be as time con· -G.W.T. around on wage-price controls nor is argued, would perpetuate the inequality u z overcame 1xon s 1nger1ng sunling as seeking a constitutional amend4 China initiative. but of education. Reform and re th ink ing were distrust and provided him wi!h a coun·
This 1111 • ••flKh •••d•••' Yle•• not b 1 h d · n1ent now. It will be seen 18 months from You may have noticed that all the beer ur ' in domestic affairs imperative. Underlined in his message of tcr a ance to t e propose moratorium
NC1n1rnr ,,,_ of "'' newt:PIPlf'. S!l>d • now if Nixon is any farther ;ihead on ads on TV are pretty much alike. That is Y•ur "' P••v• 111 oioamr o ut, 0111r P1101. it ranks high in the March 3. 1970 was the statement that on busing. Like so many of Nixon's other . , h
roster of Nixoni an ''the bcsl available evidence ·indicates programs there is thus consolation for stopping further bus ing lhan 1f he ad beca).lse they are trying to win pretty _revisionism. tie that most of -the C<lmpeRSatOry-eduf ation-• those -who disagree -.,..·ith-hin1. pressed for the immcdiate-.idoptioiror-a-
l----much-the4same-inan:-The-average-"stea11y THE PACKAGING . d t ·11 h wishes to change the programs have not measurably helped .The theme is fan1iliar. We are ~'ilh-constitutional an1endn1ent. drinke r of beer is a blue-collar male, age in us ry WI ave a game plan again d · " f v·ct a ··· " th t lot of sins to answer for. in the next · poor children catch up." 1:a"''1"c ram 1 ~ m In a wa~ a . THE INST INT STOP d 21 to 35. keyed to Contr'ary to preVi· . ~uth_\lict.nam 10 run...tts-,o.wn , 1 • .'.---or_,rr proposal, 1---~po_rts,Jhe_outdoors_.__ world if not in this and surely on_e of the us-advice-;whtctrin· ~-tl-lhe-heart'-4'>f~-tus-new~gram, affairs. Price and wage controls were im-~wevcr, has palit.1cal nienls, howev~r
and veneration of the · most grievous is its failure heretofore to fluenced Nixon to be· wh1.~h g~s along. with a moratorium on posed "in a Way" that would preserve the quick o: effective.. Jl may ·prov.e to ~ 1n
U.S. flag. educate Its customers ln the first maxim lieve th a t m 0 r e busing, is special emphasl.s on the free enterprise system. F'urther busing is preventing or rolling back busing. Nixon
He is ·also~ despite of publlc manners -namely, that your money was not the answer. Shult?. programs h~ once found 1nadequa~e. to be halted "in a way" that will follows a familiar pallern in this also. tfe
his profesSed patriot-, right to use ~h~ .can ror .Pleas.ure inyolv.es persuaded the President that the pou~1ng Payments will be made to sc.hooJs with guarantee every child an e ual education. has preen1pted lhe issue on which George
ism, the biggest slob ~ Y?Ur r~spons1b1lity for d1spas1ng of Jt w1lh on of federal funds reaches a "critical more Lhan 30 percent poor children r~or q \Vallace rode to victory in the f'l orida
In America,_ littering . discretion: mass" which , like a nuclear pile, then ex-which read. black) to provide special TllE SUPPORTERS nf busing, primaries. just as he previously has
!he country he loves . Beer drink.er s are mostl.Y gum4Chewers plod~s into spcctac~lar im.pro~ement cf train.ing ln basic. learning . such· <J.s _ however. are not being _ thu!i, c:_qns~cfl. _ P!~~Jllll_!_IC'.c!--l!l~ny_ f!L1®-)~,wes :oJJs.':' __
:..._ _lJ'.! JllYJ!Y_Jh_aJ _J!O!ll4 _ . ___ ~ro~n ol.der . J~-~I!! ~he_ ~'!_11J!...g~~-...µiW:10~~s.-Case-~9Qi1:s -.were --r-ead1ng;:: mathemahc!J7'c:ounsehng;.:nutn:.--'f'hey-are--reatly-~ tu cha1Jehge llie llem{)Cratlc and -liber<il -opposition -
dtsgrace a!f111ilefate-~ . -who, during Pllberty, st!ck olel gu!'" un~l!r recited to convince Nixon. tion ,and health. ·.A $300 per pup_~! e~:::._._Presiden~·~ f~e~..Jl!lJlE~11.8... ~rd!:!]_ if <:!rQQJJ.g _lhem, a..tninimumlloor .under-in-_
,, -~u~tµn~_O..lP.JR..~,Qllld~villagepJ.JiQU~®-~-seats -;w.ilh ::>-,su;ke.wng ----. · -,, -:----:----P':nditure; <!£~1ng-·tlrlh~l'f'eS1Clent, · adoptecJOy C?ngre~s. as unconst1tutlonal. con1e, revenue sljaring, price and wage
'Mf1ca. di.Sregard for ciean[1ness. THE '!CRITICAL f\1ASS idea is hard \~1111 cause the crihcal mass to explode. Nixon considers 1t quite probable lhat_ control, diplomatic overtures to China.
WHAT THE BEE R drinker loves -or 1\r IS LITI'L E wonder that most Euro-I() reconcH: with N.ixon 's l970 and l9?l some federal judge somewhere \viii Now he adds to that list !he issue of
thinks he loves -is 3n abstraction and a peans consider us as utter barbarians proposals 111 the. fields of e!ementary, THE INFERIOR schools are to be decla:e .such an act by Congress un· compensatory educa!lon. long and
symbol called "America;" but he treats when they contrast the defilement of our secondary and higher educah.on. Tho.se lifted up through a $2.5 billion ex· const1 tut1onal. .In that case the Just!ce passionately advocated and supported by
the actual physical country he lives in cities and countryside with their own propo.sals. cal.led . for a ~orat?r1um on in-penditure to CQmpensate for prohibitions Departmen~ will ask. for a stay of the Democratic liberals, at the same time he
like a peripatetic garbage dump. tosslng scrupulous regard for the natural beauty ~reas1n~ in.slJtutional aid u~t1l a new na-on busing children .to better schools for loWer courts order w1.th the prospect that bows to the widespread averslon to com·
his empty cans with conten:iptuous aban-and tidiness of their native habitations. tlonal mstJtute of ~ucation evaluated purposes of racial integration . the Supre.me Court will be asked to take pulsory busing. It is a disa rming tech4
don on hill and dale, river and lake, Even most animals won't foul their own what was al~eady being done. . Nixon readily admitted to Congress early .acllon: . nique \l'hich. temporaril y at least, leaves
street and highway. nests ys indifferently as we do. Merely doing more of the same, Nixon that the "catch up" attempt has failed If Nixon finally loses 1n the courts , his his opposition speechless.
In fact, the filth and ugli nes s created But the principal irony of this st inking
by thi s va st band of Yahoos have become situation, as I sai d in the beginning, ls
90 intolerable that the U.ttiJed States that the zealous Qe_gr-Qrjn,Mr Jeods to .be
Brewers Association , in a spasm of guilt, the most vigorous champion of "the good
shame and revulsion, has appropriated a old U.S.A." while at the same time he is
multimillion dollar advertising campaign desecrating the revered soil in a far more
to educate the nation's beer drinkers to disgusting and permanent manner than
Watsun Amendment Sham, Delusion
the rudimentarv fact that the land we the kooks who burn flags. When the
live on is not to.be confused with an open brewers themselves tacitly admit this,
toilet. you'd better belleve Jt.
Return to Cross-filing?
By BOB MONAGAN
Assembly Minority Leader
The 1913 progressive political reform of
cros s-filing greatl y altered traditional
politics in our state. Crossfiling -a
phenomenon unique lo California -is
part of the state's progressive heritage. A
dlrect result of California 's "anti·
partyism," cross-filing was rooted in the
very nature of the state's population. The
newcomers who pour into the state have
traditionall y been less party conscious,
realizing that the party affiliation they
broui;ht with them is not necessarlly a
valid guide for then1 in California.
THE FUTURE political life of
California was greatly affected by the
Progressives' 1913 primary bill which
established cross-filing. This law permit·
1ed candidates to file on all party tickets,
regardless of their own affiliation, which
was not disclosed. A candidate had to win
his own party's primary to qualify for lhe
general election, but could ensure vie·
tory by winning 011 other party bnllots.
Cross-filing established an o p e n
primary where most serious candidates
ran. By the 1950's, 80 percent of those
running for office cross-filed in the
primaries. And in J!>52, 72 percent or
those elected to state partisan office had
ensured their victory by cross-filing in
tbt primaries.
GUEST REPORT
cumbcncy advantage. In 1966 an in·
cumbcnt governor lost his re-election bid
as did incumbent senators in 1968 and
1970, \Vhile under cross-filing no incun1-
bent U.S. senator had been defeated for
21 yea rs.
IT IS IN California's progressive tradi-
tion that state Sen. George Deukmejian
(R-Long Beach) has introduced four
''election reform" bills. Most Im·
portantly, the bills would rcsinstitute
cross-filing. The result of the Oeukmejian
b;Jls would serve to minimize the unfair
advantage held by a wealthy or well·
funded candidate by shortening the cam··
paign and imposing expenditure limlta·
tions. The California 1',air Campaign
Practices Board would impose basic prin-
ciplc::i of "decency and fair play.''
"EXPERIENCE has shown that the
elimination of cross·filing has not Im-
proved the quality or legislation, .. the
senAtor said. "lt was largely due to biller
partisan battles that the 1971 LcgiSIAture
\\'as the longest in history. yet produced
•.. few concrete accomplishments."
The Daily Californian
El Cajon
Any scheme which promises property
lax relief has built-in appeal for millions
of Californians. So it is no surp rise the
Walson Amendment, a property tax relief
measure which will be on the November
ballot, has gotten the uninformed support
of n1any people.
The new Assemblyman from the 76th
Assembly District. Bob \Vilson. is one of
those who has been deceived by the
surface attraction of the Watson Amend·
ment. Foothill Taxpayers A~sn., a con-
servatively oriented group. also has
fallen for the alluring prom ise of reduced
taxes on homes.
Unfortunately. as the amendment
receives closer study, it becomes in·
creasingly evident that the measure is a
gigantic fraud made to order for large
corporations and utility companies.
ASSEr.1BLYMAN William Bagley. a
member Rnd former chairman of the
.Assembly Committee on Revenue and
Taxation, has exposed the hidden effects
of the meas ure -t1nd there is Hille in his
analysis for the average homeowner to
cheer. •
What makes the \Vatson Amendmcnl so
deceptively attractive, of course. is it.s
p!ecfge to reduce property taxes by :u!.5
per ce nt across the board. Few
homeowners would reject that appealing
feature.
The rub, of Cflurse, is th at the 38.5 per·
cent reduction applies to the property of
businesses and utilities·· which pay 65
cents of every property tax dollar .
So Mr. Bagley figures the Wat.son
B11 Ge tu•ge..---,
Sen11tor Deukmejian's proposal should Dear George:
be given careful consideration by the Do you really think Nlxon has a
Legislpture. There ce:n be no doubt that chance to win the election?
an overemphasis on partisanship has ' WONDERING
Amendment will produce a bonanza in
lax savings for business, some $1.3
billion ln fact. Railroads would enjoy a
$17 million reduction; telephone com-
panies, $79 million ; utilities. $95 million;
banks. $4 million; insurance companies,
possibly as much as $147 million.
AEROSPACE FIRrtfS. the oil and gas
industry. corporate farms, lhe timber in·
dustry and land speculators are similarly
favored with tax breaks.
How does the homeowner with a
modest income get hurt?
The revenue that will no longer be pro-
duced by the property tax must be
replaced . The Watson Amendment would
close the revenue gap by hik ing the sales
tax by 2 cents to get $1.2 billion. This tax
falls most ... heavily upon families with
several children.
True, the Watson Amendment raises
the corporation tax by 34 per cent. but
the corporations can well aJrord to pa y
thi,; piddling amount our of their property
tax savings and still have a huge bundle
left over.
The corporation tax increase would
replace merely $265 million; lhe loss of
property tax revenue has been pegged at
almost $3 billion.
IN ADDITION, the Watson Amendment
is underfunded by amounts estimated
from $700 mil lion to $12 billion. This
means other taxes will have to be in-
creased to raise the deficit. Most likely
candidate: the income tax.
Mr. Bagley points out another in-
teresting feature of the Watson Amend·
ment, one which should diminish its ap-
peal.
Although renters occupy 4S percent of
the total dwelling units in California,
Drugs Made Son Crazy
A man 's intensely personal account of
his child's descent into dru g addiction
and subsequent mental illn ess -the
parents' unavailing struggle to prevent
that human diitaster -the true story of
one middle-class family 's battles, loves,
( THE BOOKMAN )
hates . reconciliations, and contacts with NOW !l AND, LEGALLY his own
the drug and medical worlds -such arc responsibility. Mark is confined to 11 men·
the strong, stirring elements of "Wasted tal hospita l v:ith a sc h i z o P. hr en i c -The Slory of My Son's Drug Ad· diction ,'' by William Chapin (McGraw-psychosis. The years of confusion and
Hill. $6.9SJ. anguish, the fruslr8tion from obstacles
STARTING \VJTJI marijuana At the encountered in seeking help, the constant
age of 141 the author'S son, Mark. qujckly struggle to understand and deal with the
moved on to experiment with LSD and boy's deteriorating condition ar~ descri~
ampfletamlnes. ed in simpl_e, unemotional language by
"No one, including Mark, can say bow the author. The result is an unsR,aringly
large the quantities have been/' the honest and hauntingly poignant SOok.
m E EFFECT cross.filing had on party ·
nominations was the major rCa $on it was
abolished in 1959. A candidate ofttn failed
to wJn his O\VO part.Y's nomination ; part y
leadership was cut off from the grass
rools level. Officlall Jhus ndcpcndently
eJected wf rt of n relUctant to folloW
po:rty l!lrodl•es.
hampered the leglslativ(! proceu In tteent Dear Wondering:
years: nor~that cross-filing would serve. ~·--Of-course not. don't be Sllly."Nlj-
to reverse·thi.s trend. But .the benefits o( on·s entire record shows that he
cross-filing must be carefully. welghed has NEVER had a chance to win an
father recalls, j1but certainJy large A f<irmer newspaper journAllst -most
.._ rnough-10-me ss up hTs head, to rcamngc --recenny-m tnhc-San-Franclsco. Chronl· ..
the' cells In his head. He's crazy. I have cle -William Chapin currently teaches
lo say it, to write it down, to grind it toto. journalism at San Francisco State The high populaUon mobillly and lnOu.
of newoom•r& hu weaktned !he In-
•
a:ga~s,t the Joss of ,all Partisan ·com· election.
petition.and r<~ponslb1llty. '-------------'
my 0\\111 awarencu, to accept It: tie's College.
cra2y." C.rollae Harkleroad
•
!here is no provision ln the Walson
Amendment for giving then1 any tax re·
lief. The ''relief" will go to the owners or
apartment complexes and other' rental
units. and they are under no compulsion
lo pass that tax savings on to the people
who rent from them. · ~·
SINCE THE WATSON . Amendment
does not replace all of the revenue lost bv
property taxation, local governments ar'e
going to feel a pinch which could
jeopardize essentia l services and possibly
lead to the imposition of nuisance taxes
or service charges.
Moreover. the proposition w o u Id
unwisely freeze ihto the constitution a tax
advantage for the specia l interests at the
expense of people with lesser means. This
is hardly something the c it ii; en s
of Californi;i. on reflection. would \\'ant
to in1pose on themselves as 11 permanent
arrangement.
Pr?perty tax relief is a con1peUing need
fn lh1s state. But the vital question which
hasn't been asked frequ ently enough in
discussions on the Watson Amendment is:
Prope rty tax relief for whom?
OrtANG I COAST
DAILY PILOT
Rnbe rL N. tVeed, Publi slier
Thomns Kte v1/, Editor
Albi;rt \V. Boie.~
Editorial Par;e £ditor
The edJtort111 1m1tP" o r the OAily
rllot 11"ck11 to Inform 11nd 11\imu·
Ill.le rcadtr• by 11rc1cntlng UUs
nrw11pa.11er'• opinions 11.nd com ..
ml"ntary on tor1let of ln1t-r~t lnd
liJ;injtlc1u'<:('. by Jlrov!dlna: a fr,rum f(lr the CJt:pN'11tJnn Of l)Ut l'f'lldtra'
opinlof1!J.. 1nd by pf'tt('ntlng the d1venc sillwfll}int1 (If tnr.,rmrd ab.
5CTVttS and 1pokcim('.n on toptc5 of the day.
Thursday, Marth 23. 1972
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. ' DAILY "LOT 7
Television Executives Assailed MANUFACTURING AND FIELD REPS
OXEROXING .
__ ECC Official-Calls Big Sliots !..V-ic ious , Evil Influence' 0 ANSWERING SERVICE
0 DESK SPACE
0 l.A. LINES
WASHINGTON IAPl
Nicholas Johnson, 1 membtr of
the Federal Com munications
Commission, sa}'S the men
who are currently running
commerclal television In th is
country, ''are a vicious, evil
Jnnuence."
Johnson made his comment
before the S e n a t e Sub·
L. JH. Boyd
commitf'et on Com·
municat ions which is In·
vestigating v I o I e n c e on
television .
"The broadc11st i nduatry
now stands charged with hav-
ing molested the minds of our
nation's children to serve the
cause of corporate profit,"
said Johnson.
11Exeeutives whom one
Some Gals Just
Can 't Boil Water
--Don 't know how they round out, but the men of science
Insist no dog ever gets bored.
ALf\.10ST a third of the money we individuals owe -
man. it's murder -goes to pay off cars.
NOW the insurance boys say that a 65-year.old can can
expect to live another 16 years. his
wife or the same age another 19 years.
\·ou NO DOUBT know a few
women who can't cook. Not just don 't
like to. Bul can't. Wha_t 's most a_ptJQ_
cause this peculiar handicap. I'm told,
Is their inability to taste the differ-
ence in sublle ttavors. Only about
seven out of every 10 women are said
to inherit the dominant gene that gives
them a fine sensitiv ity to tastes. To the others. most flavors
just don't regi~ter .
'
TROUBLE -Latest sludv on what Most troubles the
troubled marriages lists the followini:: in order: Disagree·
ments over money, flirling. work. in-laws. drinking. temp-
erament, children, and that thing -shh~ -called sex.
TF ALL the stitching in Levi jeans last year were tied
1--1-.;,· kHttle-k>rtg-thf.ea&,Sllid thread-c.oold-wind-around-ihe
earth at .the equator more than 304 times. A Levi public
relations mari told me that. Oh, you guessed?
WH AT lhc history bovs are trying to comprehend is
why the Americans. althouf!:h they·ve always properly
placed the fork to the lefl fjf the plritr in setting the table,
never did fi gure nut ho~· to use the fork in the left hand,
as do t~e European types.
Q. "HO\\' BIG a batch of Arner ican ~·omen can be des-
cribe.d...as_entirely se.IC:.suppiortiog:?·'
WRITES a San fr<1n ciscan: "Never \\•ill you see a
native Chinese lridv raise her arms behind her head in Hi-.ubttr.ll'l~rscotci-1cte-!'lallTIJ5?illte:-~ad1es snow--
their legs, true. But not their necks and never their under·
arms.''
PUZZLE -ASKED ''OU about that fi sh which had a
head five inches long. recall? Its tail was as long as its
head plus half its hody. Its body was as lonit as its head
plus its tail. So ho\v lonR wi:is the whole f.ish? Got it. fin ally.
'Jusr40 ·inches. 'J'ry-""'Otlt "1ttis-Qtiery:·on-your. quic~itted .·· I
_ l!a~er. ~adam . I
NO\V IT'S reported · the divorce rrite is three times
higher among couples who sleep in twin beds. All right,
won't argue. But as to the claim the divorce rate is six
times hiJther among couples who choose Separate bed-
rooms. that's ridiculous. ~1ajority of such matrimonial
mates are retircri. And divOrre among the retired is not
extraordinary. nol even ordinary. Bunk. Splilups are far
rarer in the separate-bedroom set than in the twin-bed
bunch. ·
Arldrrs.~ mnil to L. M. Boyd, P. 0 . Box 1875, New-
port Beach 92660.
Pool Sharpie, 8,
'Wins Grownups'
DIA MOND SPRINGS tA PI
-Eight-year-old Louis Griffin
claims to be the sharpest
young pool shark in the Sierra
Nevada .
"The one+enrner bank shot is
my best." sa.vs the 4·10 Loui~.
"But I dicf mv first five-earner
bank on the ·eight-ball when I
was 7, and now I practice it a
lot.
"But what gels me is 1hat
every lime I do it. the guy rm
playing says 'Pfut -a slop
shot.' "
Lou is recently won a
Jaycees tournament. ai;i:11inst 40
players. mostly adults, and
now growhUfls are dropping in
from Shingle Springs or as far
away as Grizzly Flats and
Calaver;:is County to see if
they can beat him.
Pool has held a mystical
~rip on left·handed Louis since
his father Hubert brought home
a toy set when he was 5.
•·When I was 6, v.'e were
down at the Timber Club and I
asked my Dad if I could play
him on the big table, and he
won me but T won him back,"
said Louis. "Now I win him
most of lhe lime.''
J~e plays eight-ball -no
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his father. a disabled former
co"lstrucl ion_ drixer. take_him
lo a pool hall about every day.
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would a&s:ume lo be rich
beyond the wildest dreams of
avarice, each year seek eve n
more in salaries, expense ac-
counts and slock options," he
sa id. "They found they could
become richer still if they
\vould only take a whole nation
of children and train them to
be more violent."
The FCC Commissioner sug·
gested several proposals to
deal with the problem.
They included:
-Require all .. commercials
to be bunched on !ht> ~our and
half hour.
-Reduce the permissible
nuniber or comm er c i a I
minutes to one-half of current
levels.
-Requirt' that the three
co1nmercial networks provide
one-third of all prime time on
a nonsponsored basis for
en t er ta i nment. dramas,
cultural and public afafirs pro-
gramming.
-Require r oun-
teradvertising as the Federal
3 OR 4-INCH
Trade Commls.slon has pro-
posed. This would a 11 o w
organizations not liking a prod ·
. D TELEGRAMS, TWX;'
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uct to ob lain free teltvision t
time to show evidenct' why the la
product is not a good one. .. ~ .... 's "COM,.lnf COM.*UNfCAl/ONI .. , l'Oll@ COM.MANO""
-Requ ire that two com--LU IRVINE·AIRPORT INDUSTRIAL COMPLEX
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from every · haU hour con·\~:::'.:::'.:::'.==========~================~ laining violence and be made
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responsible professionals to
program information to child·
ren about the adverse conse-
quences of VQilence.
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Read the D AILY PILOT
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26 88
Thursd1y, Marth 23, 1'72
Plraey TJ.aeed
Hijackers Stay
One ~tep Ahead
_.Reporter Equal to Task Tricycle Fall
Stud y Sought
WASHINGTON JA PI -The
Department or Health, Educa-
wh • d' ' s ll' c f.eSt tion and Welfare has proposed ing -in l!er pe ing on a 123.000 study to fin'\out why
<? tots fall oTf tricycle.5.
Bar Throws
ATW\NTA (AP) -Elght· English I It er at u re, an proached, some<1ne passed out gled ''balalaika" in Rou.nd ~-The title of the proposed
.. nth cen1ury London had its architect. last year's winner h ts f JI f J "The winner is -B 1 111 e Th E I tloh d see o ye ow ooscap. Brown !" Cheers. The souna of study is" e va ua a.n White Hart pub, where Dr. -the state Public Service Sergeant at arms Wilson Parameteriution of Stablhty
Samuel Johnson, Sir Joshua Commission reporter -and 15 beer pouring Applause. and safety p e r f 0 r ma n c e
•-----'W.ASHIN.G.TON • (AP ) P.:residenl made mandatory Reynolds, Ale_xander PQpe and o t h e.r contestants -by cor-Pfilge called fOJ order. "'It's another blow ( O r Characteristics or Two-and
SkiMy litUe Antullo Ramirez such ground 1 e c u r i t y other neoclassics gathered fo r rectly s p e 11 J n g "phthisic," Twenty beer glasses hit the women's li b," cried the '71 Three· Wheeled Vehicular Toys
aeemed an unli kely sort of measures as metal detectors learned discourse and a ''gyve," "pyrrhic'' and table. twenty ballpoint pens champion, male chauvinist for Ridi ng."
pirate that sunny May Day In and baggage cheeks which the draught of ale. "jodhpur." poised over yellow foolscap, Dick Price. l;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=,
l9SlWhen be bur-st into the Federal Aviation Administra· Modern-day Atlanta has the This display of orthographic and the race was on. · · "Too bad for Price." com-
cockpit with kn lre and gun in lion had been urging for years. Stein Club -the only bar in pre-eminence earned me the The end of Round t spelled mented tlmekeOP'r Robert
bis trembling hands. As a resuJt of the 'MAYBl -r"li!Y'tL "f1.llNK Wf..'Rf.-the world. as . rar as its No. 2 engraving on the Annual heartache a n d intellect ual Hatcher• as he congratulated
"Let's go to Havana," he President's tough new pro-fKOM ME. WtJ.~OMt Wlt60N.• habitues can determine, that Orthographic Open plaque that humiliation for 12 contenders. me. "He wanted us just to go
stammered to Capt. Francis gram, security officers say the holds an annual spelling bee. ' hangs over the the Ste in Club Round 2 eliminated rour and ahead and hav' ditto marks
Xavier Riley. And away they airports and the skies have On a Friday night, it packs bar, a case of beer . a hand· Round 3, two more. engraved on the plaque this
went. six passengers and a never been safer. in more academic degrees per struck silver medal and a J was still in. I year."
crew of three arxl 120-pound How safe the government Museunl Gets square inch than you could certiflcate. My tablemales, hors de -==========o;ll
Antulio. can make air travel is yet to measure with a slide rule . Wearing my seventh-grade combat, rallied round. bending
To Cuba. of all pl aces, fro m be proved. Hence the spelling bee, fore· spelling medal from Bad to peer as J wrote "thysic,"
which refugees by the bun-Hijackings or A m er i c a n Loan by J uJ ie ing Stein Club regulars who Kreuznach, Germany, for con-and again as J scra tched it out
dreda of thousa nd s were pla nes have caused seven di spu\,& and debate year round fidence . I made my • way and substituted "phthisic."
fl eeing Fidel Castro's regime. deaths and a score or heart at· JACKSONVILLE. Fla. 1 AP i over Craft beer to put up or sit ' through the obscure hubbub in ··Gnathion" _ which, pro-
-It was a one-day sensation. tacks : Six accidents resulting _Julie Nixon Eisenhower has down each January , the main room to the back and nouncer pa u I Niblock ex·
Phone
64~-4321
V NITED
S T A TE S
NA TIO N AL
BA N K
SOUTH COA ST PLAZA
BRANCH
NOW OPfN
SATURDAYS
9 to 1 P.M. No one did much of anything. from explos ives P c aboard loaned the J a c k s 0 0 v i 11 e The Second Annual Stein took my place among the 200 plained, de.notes "the lower For
about it. commercial air: raft · e · Children's ~1useum a tea set Club Orthographic Open was speJling enthusiasts crowded midportio n of the human man· :R~:A~~URS. ~::! ::::
For no one foresaw that dur- United State ave killed 173 he' mother brought back from held in the back room of the at tiny tables and on the floor. dible"-stum_ped. me. But i! ---=-.W Kc iL 11 l -• 1 In _the next _ll_v ....... Ht_Ue. Chi ·r ·-·-T"'-,.nt\ .. 1ft.· .. ,ft_ •• ·----•-tatiousJufn•" ..... -•.. ..,.:;a !ft•• -. • . • ee on, .. i :_-1111-(7141 540-52 . occrt ... IH l====~fu]fo-woul ~~ . ac m . n "as-srui wne<f--Tnahe-'b'lu-•e-ia'n~-w-,h~1·1'e'~--,,-l-w-,·-11-'"""'r. __ ~="'-'"· t"".-.......ir-~ ~Im-I.Cl.I ,_....._ymg..w..i wm,,........mr --ema1n11\3 . -\.d.&: .... So;-;-Coasi ·Plan;-Citte-M~ r~ u ki bitz and stayed to conquer· my medal, I ex ch ang e d opponent, M art h a van
through the cockpit doors of lf!!ltators. Many unsuccess~u l remain on display in the main beating an ec on o m l c nervous jibt:s with fellow con· Dusenberg, too. Ad Vertis in! "111• vice '''1··M•n•••'
American planes by 176 hi-h1iackers were foun~ _ 0 lobb of the museum for-a ~graQl!_er, an engineer with testants. The final score wa s 48 to 45 ....., H. M. STO LTE
jackers threateni ng the lives possess newspaper clippings _'m~on~ih!:._ _______ _'•~m'.'.'.a~ster~s~d~eg~r:'ee~ln~M~l_'.':tld~l:• _ _:A~s:_t~h~e~t:'":l>o~h~o~ur=·o~f~8~'~t50•~P-~~io~f~a"_1'=-PoS~-~s~ib~le~50~w~o~r-ds~.~l~b~un~-b===~=-=====~'.I,,,=========' of 16,500 passe ngers and crew detailing how successrul air 1_ •
members. piracies were accomplished.
Each step in the evolution of The feat of "D. B. Cooper," a i r I i n e terrorism -rrom who demanded and g o t
bizirre Olghl3 to Cuba to $200,000 and escaped b y
political blackmail by Arab parachuting out of a jetliner,
revolutionaries to criminal ex-got banner headlines and a
tortioo-has caught industry rew comparisons to Robin
and government unprepared . Hood. Jn the next two months
1-----I*--wa1-nine-yeats-after--the--he was-copied by-£iVe-others,
flf'lt Am erican hijacking that all of whom failed .
Pr!sident Nixon formed the Yet for all that the actions
sky marshal force, spurred by of some sky pira tes may have
the hijfckini and bombing of seemed glamorous, the trut h
tJiree airlineh on the ground~ is that life has been harsh for
in foreign countries by Arab hijackers.
,Uerrillas. One hundred li ve a s
It was a year and a half fugiti ves in exile, risking
after an Eastern Airlines pilot senten~s of death or life in
was killed and his co-pilot prison ii they ever return to
seriously wounded by a bl-the United States. Fiye were
jaeRr On a filght to Boston · killed l n -hijcick" altemptS;
before the government pro-three others co n:i m i t t e d
posed th at cockpit doors he suicide. A dozen are in mental
1----made-bullet preof ...... ---imtitutiOM--and--3&-Mve-bee
Jt was after extortionists stntenced to prison for terms
had bombed a jetliner in Las r~nging upw ard from 50 years
Vegas two weeks ago that the to Ille.
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Thul'Sd.Jy, March 2.l 1CJ72 DAILY PILOo 9
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi Criticism
On Queen
To Stand me.
"When he
around.''
orders lunch sent in, be doesn't fool
SACRAMENTO (API -The
state 's auditor gene r a I ,
William H. Merrlfleld1 is
refusing a request by his
-legislative employers to make
changes in a report that
criticizes use of public funds
to finance the Queen Mary
project at Long Beach.
The six-member Joi n t
Legislative Audit Committee,
which has three of i t s
members· from the Long
Beach area, aske<l Merrifield
to make his report more
favorable to the project.
But in a letter made public
Tuesday. Merrifield refused,
saying, "If I allow changes to
be made in our reports
bet:ause of threats that are
made, I would lose the respect
of my staff, the Legislature,
state agencies. the people of
the sfate of California and my
!"-~-~~~~~~-~-~~~~~~===~===~-~=~~-trie-nt"it-11:nd-famil)'r.':~-~-~~.~~1~-~-=
H F h ·M d "I would lose my own self . ow renc a e respect More importantly. I could not be at peace with my
God:" he said.
Big· ·'Connection'
The report· the committee
wants changed originally was
written f o r Assemblyman
\Villiam Brown Jr. ([).San
Francisco). for his Queen
Mary investigation.
By TAKASHl OKA in white cloth and containirig a Merrifield was scheduled to
o1 Chrl,11•11 ki•"« Mon111r brownish powder -morphine appear before Brown's sul; MARSEILLE~ f'rance _ ase. ltt~e-Feb:-to•-. ----!---------
The only thihg . suspicious The car was then gi ven a But , the_ au~it comrpit~ee
about the passenger car, thorough going over. The same wouldn t give htm perm1ss1on
cusioms officer Jacques De small packets or brownish-because-the report 'had not
Angelis decided, was i ts powder were found stuffed been submitted beforehand to
Turkish license plates. under the front and back the audit committee, said the
The police. whose duty it seats inside the doors and in committee's chairman, Demo-
was to check the passports all ihe other nOOks and cratic Assemblyman Vincent
and identities of the car's oc· crevices of the car, which bore Thoma~ _of ~n Pedro.
cupants. had found all in a Turkish trademark, Anadol. Merr1f1eld s re~r_t gener<!;lly
order. Despite his angry protests supports those ~1hcal of the .
t h d · t · · hed I k · ' Queen revamping who say The distinguished-looking e . 1 s ingius -00 ing Long Beach made improper
m_an in . the backseat was Turk1s~ .se.nator was hustl.ed . use of public £unds to finance
· Kudret Baihan. a lawyer and a o!f to .Jail 1n .Nice, along with .81 f cilit' orlJ.h _,_ • -memb!l'Of'ilie-T(ff>lt~s dr1vervther.~gn:::r:: comm~~~-2s; e _____ --'-'-''-'-
-Senate He c a r r i e d relentless round of questioning shLotp. B • h ber 1 lh . ·. af th fb'df ngeacmemsoe · dJplomat1c passport. lrhomp 1.e naJrcdo. 1~. r!glah e .0 audit committee Democratic
In the front seat was his e o ice u tc1a1re, e in· A bl M. 'k C 11
d · lb h' Jk " al vestig.ative police ssem yman 1 e u en river, _ra 1m 1er, so a ., . · and Republican State Senator ~urk .. ~1s p'assport w a s No, ne1theJ'.° we nor the George Deukmejian, deny the
like"."'1se .1n or~e~. cust?ms knew m advance. th~~ city has done anything im·
. With five mdhon cars pass-particular car was ~omm~. prope~ and Jed committee ac· 1n~. the Menton ~rder dieck· recalled , Mar~~! Morm,. c~1,ef tion telling Mer~ifield to redo
point [rrtm l_taly .mtQ. F~nce _ _.Qf the br1~ade ~n Marseille. If his report to make it more
every year. exammaho~·had we had, 1tf m1ght have been favorable
-to--be....selective jf__the.-bcJder._moi:.U.n_tWsting_l\Qt_Jo hav_e ____ ·
authorities we1e not to*"c•use ·arrested the occupants but· to S
horrendous traf_fic jams all the ~ave trailed the car to see ff ospi' ta}
way up the Italian coast. where 1t went." _ 1--..;urt:JeAngelrsnaastana"1n~g~-,c~1~a•n"'a"e~sITbn"'e.-Tia~bo""'ra~l~or~1~es,------...._------I----------_:
in~tructi~ns to search al_! cars often descri~d, seldom found: Under Wav
with Middle East .. license are believed to operate at ir· · J
plates. regular •1fntervals in villas
The great artery of the along the Cote d'Azur or in At ff
narcotics traffic begins in Marseille itSelf. 3V8Sll '
Turkey , where. the pungently Last August, John Cusack.
SW__!et . ~aw. opium grow~ ~y then ~resel_l~tive o{ t_he LAKE HAVASU CITY, Ariz.
A:natol1an pt as a·n t' t s ·-Arnerican-Sureau of' Narcotics (AP) ' -. OffiCials· 8F'""C3'Ke "T-
transformed into _morpl}ine and Dangerous Drugs, caused Havasu City have announ~ ~ frith is 10 times les~ a furor wpen he was quoted as that construction has begun on
_ bulky_ and \(.'hich does not: saying ,,that ther.e Were "big a $2.8.5.million .hos pi toil ·
smell. wheels" pr .o t e ct i n g the Dr. Mel J. Harvey, president
to its final destination, ·the gents in the area. it. will be called the Lake
Uni ted States, by all the in. Jn all. customs a1ents seized Havasu City Medical Center
genious t r ad i ti on a I and kilograms (about 320 Hospital. J Andre Cold Duck. For.getaways and get·togethers. lt's the leader of the flock,
From Turkey. the route narcotics trade and t h e of the Lake Havasu Cfty
leads by land or by sea to ' laboratories 1n France. Hospital Foundation, said the
southern France and its great · Cusack has. since been 58-bed facility iS schedueld for
port of Marseille. Here the recalled. and the French completion within a year on a
morphine base is refined into police have substantially in· lS.acre site near the com·
pure heroin. and then shipped 1~creased their narcotics control munity's Civic Center. He said
modern ways that criminal unds) of morphine base The hospital is expected to
minds can devise. . g,om the Tufkish car, while employ more than 125 persons from the people who make only fine sparkling wines. To help you make any moment merrier.
Better put a few bottles of Andre Cold Duck on}ce now. And have a wingding tonight. So. the cu stoms offler pro-Senator Bajhan continued to with an annual payroll of
ceeded politely to undertake a in~ist that he knew nothing about $750,000, he said.
routine search of the car's in-about his illicit cargo and that The hospital, he said. will in-
terior. he was only on his way to elude compl ete surgical and
Feeling the back seat, he Lypns to buy some wedding obstetrical facilities. intensive
sensed it to be stuffed in a clo\hes for his daughter. care and coronary units,
strange manner. It did not · 1\-ansformed into heroin. the recovery room, emergency
take him long lo discover morphine base' w9uld have room and a few long.term
American Champagne & American Soarkhng Burgundy Sparkhng Wine. Char mat Bulk Process Na1urally FermecUed.
Produced & Bottled by the Andre Champagne Cellars. Modesto. Cahlorn1a
some small packets wrapped fetched $292,000, in France. nursing beds. ~~~~~~-'-'---~~~~~~~~-
..
..
Harpor Area .. ¥OLI deserve
better banking services
• ,.,
Were here to provide them!
'
•
.. -• . ' 'FT I
.,
•' ' .
•
•
0 DAILY PILOT Tnur~dAJ, Marth 23, 1972
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
Age11c y Cla1·if ie s
Quotas h1 Parl{s
Road Cited
As 'Scenic'
Ban Begii1s on l(il ling Mountan1 Lio11 s View Set
Of Hero11.1
SACRAMENTO fAP ) lour.ye.tr moratorium on the l) The fish and game agencv \li grizzly bear and the 1~·01(.' STINSON BEACH IAPl
SACRA~fENTO !AP ) -A I shooting . hon from going the \\'3Y of !l'ie
California mountain lion is in _O T DOORS under 1n!Uructions from the bolh extinct in California. The Audubon Canyon Ranch. State highway chief Jaml!s ff
"loe ha! added 23 miles of e edect to sel! .~; lh! big Legislature fl) study ' h e The Calirornia b1A c<1ts largest nestin;;: ground fo r
~ASHINGTON IL'PJ 1 -
Th~n cr 1or llcpartmf'nt hr.s
sn~ o t•lnr1fy confusion
ovc ii~ f'Xpc-riml'ntlll ·•quotA
i;ys ten1" foi: ttiree. nati.ollill
parks ar<'ilS this 11umn1cr by'
en1phasiztni:: it "'ill i·oncC'rn
only "rug~cd outdoor en·
lhusiasls" \\'ho seek ren1ote
wilderne~s Arell~
An Interior ~p<1kr.~n1rln s:iid
lhcre ha\·e been "cnll ~ frrlm
all <l\'f'r tht· :·ount r\" s1nc·c
Se<'rt>!<iry ltoi.::rrs . C H .
l\1nr:~ ·'1 ~rlfl(lUnt·cd rccenl Iv
lhe .!.ma!!-~C'f!le p1lnt project
for preservin~ the 1· :lrlernc.~s
areas fro m ll\!'!'U~".
"The:-e :ids hcen cnnfus1011
In th! p!!blic mind -ii h~lirf
tl1a~ "'e :.re J?:Oing 1o ·r:ihnn'
Ali visit ors to ;ill nRtion:il
park~ ... h~ said.
~!orion announc('(J 1he lri:il
plan will bcijin this surnmcr in
three _,parks areas.
'l'fiey are the hack countrv
sections of the GrC':il Srnoky
National Park in Nor t h
Carolina ann ·rcnnesscc. 111e
Rocky J\1nu ntni n N 11 1 i o n :i l
Park in Colorado. 1Jnd the Se·
quoia-Kings Canyon ~k1lnnal
Park system in Ca lifornia .
These areas "'ere sclcctffl
for the pilot project because
they ha \'e· been 1nost affected
by the overuse that destroy•
the very un spoiled qual ity the
outdoor enthusiasts seek, tha
spokesman said.
The depa rtment's Natlon11I
Parks Se rvice is working on
details and soo n will set up 1
permit system.
At S<-quola-Kings Canyon
Park. the ex periment wlll be
limited to 1 he H;:ir L11 kes erea,
expb1incd Jim •lo\\·ctl , 1poke!l-
man for The t11•0 Sequoia
parks.
llowcll said 1he park w1ll
pr atory CltlS ne,... protection populations and life hisior) l)f 1\lelgh up to 200 pound~ .'Ind heron on the> Parific '<·oast. Is place a' ct.ilin11..nf 15.000 \ is1ttJr California 33 in \\'tslern Ven· against human hunters. 1he cats. also known as i::ro"· 10 sc,-cn feet long The\
da 1•s on thr area during a 1u ra Cou nt y to the offici al The State Department of fD·Napa), \\'ho sponsored the cougars or pumas. The report range the fonth1Jls and n1oun· ~1 1111.1: the public a bird's eye
peftod fro m mid-June to mid· State Scenic Highway System. rish and Game said this week mountain lion preservahon is due in 1975. t;iins. i;enrr;ill~ at elevat1oni; 1·1r11 of the heron in their tree·
~ptemhtr. Rangers counted Th! new scenic highway lies that 35 of the powerful cats bill , estimates that fewer than If the study leads to an en-of 3,000 io 5.000 feet. fi."eding tor nesrs.
J 1.000 visitor day.s during !he had been killed iince-the sea-600 mountain lions are left in dan"'ered .snc.cies designation, nlatnly on deer T h " i r About 20 ncst..s or i::reat blue ·00 I t enlirely within the Los Padres ed N 1 · 0 th t t • • I e perched r·n the tops san1e per1 as year. son open ov. 5 -JU!t I e s a e. moun tain Hons would be pro-1}()\1crrul Jci;:s givr lhcn1 a icron ar
'"This 11'il\ be a ltn1porary National F'orest. days after Gov. Ronald Reag-Until 1969, the lions \\'ere tected vear-round fro in tremendous spring of JU to 40 nf red\vood trees on the r;inch.
;ind af\--Ol<perin1ental program The. designation covers two.. an signed the endangered &pe-classif.led as--Jio;estoek-destf'6y---httntt,..,-. -·---feet ;-----locaied. about J~ m i I e s
tn try and limit the visitatinn!I portions -one about 17 miles cies bill. The bill took effect ing predators and were fa ir But, during the moratorium. Pa ssage came "'ith the northwest of San Francisco.
ti' the "'llde rness areas to !ha t long and another about 6 miles rl!Cently . game for hunters y<'ar·round. a mou ntain lion coul l'I stlll be back ing or a group of 55 con· Visitors can climb a moun·
nurl\ber ol prop!e tha t the en· long, Moe slid. F'Lsh and game oHiclals Then, the Le g is 1 at u r e killed for threatening a farm scrvat1on organizations band· 1<11n !rail ann look dO\\'n on the
11rnnment can be compatible Moe acted on the recom· report that 213 tags were sold reclassified them as game ani mal. ed together a~ the Co;:i!Ltion to heron ac-' thev build thei r
\11th and so that \\'e can be me.ndation of the Sc:l!nic to hunters this s e aso n . animals. restricting t he Dunlap said he in!rocluced Save the California ~1ounlain n<'sl S. ronduct .mating ritual!
<issured that those area~ wall llighwa y Advisory Committee. A!semblyman John Dunlap hunters to 3'1 monlhli of his bill "to keep the mountain Lion. and fee<! their young. not be deslroyed or degrad·\---------------'--------'---------------"'--'-'---'-.:.:.:::....:::::...::::..:._..:._:__.:.:;:::::_ ______________ _;__.:_ __ _
ed ." ;\1 ort on said.
Rae Lakes is a popular area
for hikers along the John Muir
Trail. Located at the 10.000-
foo t evelvalifln. its tiny la kes
are formed by mel ting snow.
Rangers say Sequoia-Kings
Canyon Park use has more
than tripled in ni ne years from
57,188 visitor days in 1962 to
208.000 last year. •
-----rnedrama tic i n c re a 111!
resu lted in stream s and river :ii
heing polluted with human
\\'as les, pack A n i m a 1 s
overgra1.ini:: meadows a n d
camper 1tripping or felling
trees for firewood , rangers
added .
llowell said the park plans
to continue its pre v iou s
restrictions In the Ra! Lake
country. including one-night
camping.
The lS.000 visitor-day quota
wa1 based on experience and
ecologlc1I meadow 1iud ies.
Jiowell said, If the quola ls
reached by mid-summer.
rangers will "encourage peo-
ple lo plan !heir trips so they
pass through Rae Lakes ln·
1tcad or staying overnight.
"We think eventually there
wlll bl! a resl!rvatlon systl!m"
for vacationers who want to
use the area, he added .
Penneys, Kod ak and
·anitea-Airlines Bring
you a jetload of value s.
'
Special! 4 days only
13s a
3395 -----.---~-
Kod1k ln1t1m1Uc' X-30 outfit.
Automatic 1t1ctronlc· ihutter with
1p11d1 from 1/125 1econd to 10
11cond1 or more for use Jn low-
light 1ltu1tlon1. Flesh without
fl11ti ball eritl , bullt·in aoekets 1or
1rJpOd and cablt release. Outlit
Includes Kodalc color tllm, m1gi·
cube, battery tnd wrist strap.
Kodak lnstamatic" X-15 oullit. Flash
pictures without flash batteries.
E1sy thumb-lever 11/m advance,
"used flash" viewfinder signal.
----?JufJ1t ii1cludes Kodak CoTOf1i1iTI.r -~
mag ic ube, wrist strap ,
Convenient drop-in Kodak col or film
cartridg e ex 126-12 pri nts ..• 87¢
/
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Pick of the
Portables •
l iq Ac;.11 .,Color
w;th l11111ry ft•·
'"''' "' " rJ(l're·1 th1 t~f;t, y6"R lrird·.
91!. AFT, Autom•·
tic Cl ... om• co11 lrol,
Aceuli11! for fiddl1-
fr11 color. H1111d -
so m1 wood 9r1i111d
c•bi11 1f
SAVE
NOW!
' l!Q olOI I
18"0iagona Picturt
Stand I Optional
Extra
CHECK
OUR
ANNIVERSARY
SALE
PRICES !
Dependability
El TORO
Ntwport Beach Saddle ... ck Volley
~11 r. s.w,., .. ,..11 St. 2416' ltocltfl•ld l:d.
p0u.,.: f.t, s.r. ,,, C11•xt to so~·onl
646 1684 OoH,: 10·'· Th11r., Fri. 10·t
• Rl7°3A30
HUNTIN<OTON BEACH • FOUNTAIN VALLEY
l rHkhunt a Gerflel4 l11eit to Lwcily Miit.i
Mo111,. Wt4. ·''"'• 10·fi T1 ... , Th~r,, Slit. 10·' 962°5528
'
10495
Koda! XL-33 mOvi1 outrit Came ra
featu res super fast f/1.2 EJl;iar lens, ,
-230-shutter, extr1-1en1itive do uble·
vane CdS electric-eye exposure
contro ~ unique "binocul1r" design
fo-r smooth·moviellking. 6Uttit
Includes color film and batteries.
Kodak lnstamalic M85 movie
projector. Shows Super 8 end Bmm
films forward and reverse', plus
"still" projection. 400-foot reel
capacity. Avs ilable with 22mm f/1.5
lens or 20·32mm 1/1.5 zoom lens.
8995
Kod1k 65011 Carouser-slide
projector. Push-button slide change,
forward and reverse, or remote
control change, forwa rd or reo;erse,
with 12-foot cord. Smooth, depend-
ab le, gravi ty led. Easy edrl1'1g and
tray change.
JlYfhe~~
friend~skies
if United.
Kodak Boutique girls will be In stores Friday,
March 241 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.j Saturday, Ma rch 25, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Airline personnel will .be In stores Saturday, March 2s,
1 O a.m. to 4 p.m.
Free gifts will be given away during these days.
3!--1" x 3V21' Jumbo color prints
from your neg .•....................... 13¢
B~x of 3 General Electric Magicubes
wh ich take 12 flash pictu res ... 1.25
Friday, Saturday and Sunday only.
' J·CPenn ey
The value~ are here every day.
Ch1r91 it ~I those Penney stor1i: NEWPORT BEACH, Fashion isl•nd. HUNTINGTON BEACH , Huntington Center
•
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·Facilities 'Mus t'
Along Colorado
SAN BE;RNARDINO (UPl)-The San Bernardino C.Ounly
Board of Superv iso rs has passed an ordinance requiring
that campsites along the Colorado River have al least
one bath and toilet ~facility for every group of l to ~
campers ,
The measure also requires campers to obtain written
permission from properly ~wncrs before using a campsite.
Supe_Jyisor_ Wjlliam Betterley_saicLhe-proJX)ied tha
measure because of hea lth and sanitation proble n1s brought
on by an Increasing number of campers in hfs district.
~he influx of winte r campers along the Colorado River
also IS of conc ern to the Arizona Bureau of Land 1'.1anage-
rncnt Muttiple Use Advisory Board.
h1el Crosby of Yuma. deputy director of the Lo"'er
Coloradio District, said the number campers has brought
serious problems.
J1e said more. than 400.000 gallons of se1Yage effluent is
pum ped fron1 holding tanks of toilets each year for dis-
posal on the desert.
Crosby said a recent ban on camping without complete
i:;anitation faci1ilics 1 in California is expected to add to
problems in Arizona.
Special
Camp Due
Citations
Poss ible
lit Forests
Species
Recove rs
In State
7,; •
S111og lflove
Sl1uttle Service
Do11hlii1g ii1 1972 SACRAMENTO (AP\ -The
northern elephant s ea 1 ,
thought to be extinct 50 years
ago, has bounced back as a
thriving species . the Callfornin \'OSEl\11TE ~ATIO:\AI. PARK (APl-The free shuttle!·
Depal'tment of Fish and Ganie bus scn1ce opened"' for ,·is1tors to Yosem1tc V.lll~y last
reports. year is lo be doubled !his ~t.'.lr in an rffort to rurther re-
The department said its 1972 duce vehicle traffic 3nd :nnog-.
census of the c re at u .r cs Instead of lbC(" douhlc·dtl'kcd buses n1;ikin~ the seven·
counted 3,500 on San Miguel mile loop around thC' valley floor. thCtf''lt bt> f'i,i::hl of tho
Island -main elephant seal 125-passetlger vehicles. f)l1\l'f'red b~ IO\\-en1ission C'np.in<·~.
rookery in California wate rs. The~' have bigger than usun l \1'indn111s for siF:htsrc1ni:.
'Victory'
•
To<1 ste tl
At Fete
~F.SCADERO (AP I
OrfC'ndC'J"S or !hr ('Ill !rr.111n('nl
Inn(' rrlc.>hr:ilt•rl a dnttb!r \ 11.'-
lnry 1\'1th ;i b~rb!'<'l!t' pk·nk· HI
Sun ~taleo Count.~ P11rh ne-Hr
berf' hnndint, o\·rr ;1 Sl 1111llion
OUTDOORS
located 4-0 miles orr Santa and riders on top can ~a1e unhnmprrrd at !he ~oaring
Barbara. don1es. lliffs and "'aterfal!" l heck to the Snntn l'r•tl.
Th3t 's 300 more than ·rne National Park Seri 1cr h.1s banned rnotorcars be-Lumber Co. dur1ni.: t h c
counted there last year and yond Yosemite Village, /lnct ("ll'Oura~rs c;1n1pc.·r vrh1rlt·1i f(·<:· ii 11 il'li .
!he seco nd highest since the to, stay put at three c:unporounds ;ind their 011nrrs tn r1or I b · h '"' The l'hcc\.. rcin1bur!trd thl annua census egan e1g l bikes or take the shuttle ~cr1 ire ..
years ago, the departn1ent I\ bus runs every fuur tu !;Clrn niinult's ;ilnng hio linn for lnggin~ ri ght s to part
said . I h I f th a •· loops 11·hich provide accC'<1s 10 t 1c n1a1n s1gh1s. 1king tra1 s, o r P r,;.
Marine biologist John and tourist accommodations . Hi1 la~t i-:11vm1l l near the ·Carlisle, who directs the census. said Ca 11 f 0 r n i a's Last sumn1er. l.6 nullir.n persons 11s1lrd the p.1rk and p~rk i"l:1scd do1\·n. nuirking the
elephant seal population "i!; Jong queues immediatcl.r forn1rd for, thr bus servit·r. rncl (If hig tree logging in San
now considered quite stable.'' ··1t \1•as fascina Un i; lo sec lhe arcep1ancr ."' sa)s pRrk !llateo County .
superintendent Lynn 'fhompson.
Carlisle sa id_a~n~n~u~a_l ~fl_u~c·~=-~ll~"-~8a~Y~•L· Jl~n~e_Nu'atiana.l &LServi<"e is~twi)'.Jog.Jh<•--~~T~l~JC:,o_tc~l~c~b1~·a~l~io~n~a~l~so""n~ia~r~k~ed+
uation-in thnensus ls eausCd Yosemite ,system and is likely to adnpt it for use in other the d{'{'1s1011 !)~· !hr rrny
mainly by anitna\s leaving the national parks. rorps of Engineers to abandon
San •11·guel rookery a n d I · b 1 a Jl!an to blnck Pesradero " Long-range pans here envi,~1nn illlninr:i 11e nutnn10· l · l '! · r-\reek 11·ith a 400-root earth fill re urning o 11 cx1c:1n v.'atcrs bile altogether sun1e da)'. 1vith parking out<;ide ar.rl n1ass
earlier in some years than in lransportalion to 'haul touri-.;ts in and flround. but that 's a darn \l'hi eh \VC111ld ha ve in·
others. long i1·av off. sa;ys 1'hon1p!'on. undntC"ct t!1c p;irk.
DAil V PILOT J l
• Tes l :i:
SACRA.11E\TO J.\P I -I
1l()1v ttckcttnf! .... 1i.!(':'l f:ir ~!·1 !t•
parks IS el l'.!' I !11 ( I '
campers to n1;1kt• rc\t'l"\':ll!!lns
11t state pat b.!i 111 Jhc :>c:illlt.".
\\'Ct'k the1 p;n·k UJl Hild J..·,11.·
/o r Ille i.:r r.1t 01:td1~0r'\,
, f •. !!~1\ 1n;:: 11·tl'.'k
'.\011 . r:.'.l'Pl'f~ can make
rr·-. 'r1 .it1vng nn ~1andays for a
{':tM!)'illC bel;l!ln1ng Friday or
U1c ~.:unc. I\ eek.
Th<' ii\ ~l'tll !l;h11Vl'~ Jl!<:f onf'
d!l•' (lff thf" <'11rrrn! s1 -.: <1'1\
rnu11111u1 n r,·,rr1 ;;t ".i rJ1 ,,,.. .
thC' tfi ~1.111• 1r 11 h 11i 1.,, r 1r. ·1 _
~•lld th<• :in11°1u11··r1nt"ll fr,>111 t' 1·1c-kt'rtrr>n, lhr f·nn n.1u11•1
ANTHONY SCHOOLS But. und1•1 ti'" ''1 ! -;i··t ·1 Ph. 1714) 77•·5100
(',i1np"rs h:1d 111,fd ·ruc-~'d:n 1 • 1111 s. atoo~nurii s1. • 'lo;;;:;~~·~o:••:•:••~·~'~'~'·~·B:::H~~, ITI:ll\t' rC'"l'!l,'I .... tir [!It•'
* * * * * * * * * * *·* * * * * * * * MERCU RY SAVINGS
and loa1 3~5CC nl10ll
Open !1~tin. Thurs . 9?. t1l.·4 p.1n j rri. B a.n1.·6 p.m. JULIAN (AP) -A second
cRmpground for the han·
dicapped in California is being
built in Cleveland National
F'orest on Mount Laguna,
about 25 miles northeast of
Esco nd ido.
He noted that in 1970, when lie gets some co111pln1nts about the nr\1' sy:o;tcin , Sil\"s Th{' 1•11g111ccrs scttlC"rl for a
BISHOP (UPl) -Citations the mating and birthing ended Thompson. S::in1e claini !he brightl.v rolnrcd bu::('~ in:i.kc scr1C's nf smaller dan1s 11•hirh
iv ill be issued for the firSt earlier than u~ual, the island Yosemite look like Disncyliind. Qt hr rs objrct th<•I the~' arc thcv sa~· 11·ill proridc lh(' n:" .!
BUENA PARK ~':'cu·1 S;11i11~< ~· ': \'J!'1'y Vle·.·1 at lintoln
HUNTINGTON BEACH /,\Prc~r)' S»1 i~~s B'Jg., [dinger at Beach
TUS TIN r.\rc~;r S.Jving~ ~ rl~ ltvir e Blvd. at Newport Ave. time th is year to persons who count dropped to 2.200. In 1967 being deprived of "!he sacred right of driving.'' C'd flno<i ronlrol 11'ithout \l'tping
enter wilderness areas in na· it reached a high of 4,750. "But they"re \'Cry fcii•," sa~'s Tho mp son. out th'"p:irk . * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * The six-acre can1p 11·itl be
the first or its kind in Sollthern
California when it opens in Ju·
ly, U.S. Forest Ranger Bard
Beutler said.
liona l forests without a -------------------------------------------------------
A similar camp is located in
Inyo County.
1 Negroes
Ask 'Owi1'
Shrine
SACRAMENTO !UPI\ - A
drive has been mounted by
r\egro leaders. including some
le~islators. to convince the
Reagan administration to pro·
perm it. according to the
recreation officer of the Inyo
Nationa l forest.
non McCormick said the
pern1il requireffienf 1vent into
effect in 1971 in' all national
forests except 1or a section of
Sequoia -Kings Canyon Na-
tional Park. But the ruling
1vas not enforced last year.
''The first year was an
rducnlional ye a r ," said
~·tcCnrmick .. '"This year y,•e
1vill issue notices of violations
with sti ff enforcement begin-
ning in 1973." ~
Permits m y be aincd at
ranger sla · ns and Pe""ll>f--1
1vishing p mits in advance
may get t em by "'riting the
range r d. rict 1vhere they plan
to enter the forest.
vide fund s to buy land for the 11; ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I
propos ed Al len sv.·or th
Historical Park in Tulare
County .
Tbe_park could po..~ibly be
the first in the nation to
preserve a community found -]
cd by a Negro. Unt il recently,
--1 was a egro commun1 y,
But a supporter of the park,
Ed Pope. an em"ploye of the
stale Department ·or Parks
and Recreation. sald ir the
land is not purchased soon, it
1nay be too late.
·· All~nsu.·orth is_y~oi~i.og • .'..:.
he said, "and it is the last re-
maining evidence of a black
~ttli,>plcqt_in._Califor.@i ." ......,.
Assemblynlail Willie Brown.
(IJ..San Francisco\, has in-
troduced a bill requiring the
Deparlmcnt of Parks and
Recreation to purchase land
for the 24-0·acre park. which
wou ld be located midway
bet we en Fresn o a n d\
Bakersfield .
Are You
• IS
• , • with th• mayor's lead-
ership in view of the free-
way fl9ht, th• civic cen-
ter . fiGsca_ctnd c.urr,ent un· ---------,_. ..._ certainty on upprr boy,
hi9h rise and continu9tion
of :drrislry deYtlopmelits?
An addition<il $150,000 would I '
be needed in Gov. Ronald
Rcagan·s proposed $7.6 mill ion
budget to buy the land.
Ne-iv Site
'All Wet'
LA JOLLA (API -
California's newest stale park l
is all v.·et and a niile squ are.
Already migrating yellowtail I
and b<'lrracuda are swimming
into the San Diego-La Jolla !
U n d e r w a I e r Park and
Ecologicttl Resen•e n e w I y
opened off La Jolla shores.
Sealife in the area fronting
La Jolla Beach and Tennis
Club was hard to find a few
months ago.
But nov.' in one arm or the
La Jolla Subma ri ne Canyon
where 1vafer is deeper than 50
feet. colum ns of membriinous
eggs have been stac~cd 40 feet
high by squid. and fis h·of all
types swim about.
"It was enough to filte r oul
the light" a skin diver says or
the squids' egg pile.
The reserve is off limits lo
fishing.
Park Planned
In 'Wi lclerness'
WASHINGTON i UPfl
President Nixon has signed
Jegislalion establishing a
48.000 • acre Syc•more Can-
yon \Vildcrness Area about 20
miles southwesl of Flagslaff.
Ariz.
The area to be retained in
its primilive natural state is
localed in lhe Conconino,
Keibtib tind Prescott-national
, forests.
STARS
Sydney Omarr 11 ont: or ·
the v:'lrld'~ grrat astrolo-gem. Hii. column l! one or
the OAtLY Pll...C>TS · il'f&t
features.
PAUL RYCKOFF
CITY COUNCIL CANDIDATE
w•nts to keep end im..,.ove
th• unlqu• resldentia l char-
act•r of Newport Beach.
He believes the mayor has
not represented fhe resi-
dents as he ha s developer1
and commercial interests.
Endorsed by :
Tom Hy1n1 umn ll tll
l'rtd Sclln1kltr
EIRlnl Lfnlloll
••rll1r1 G1in1t Mr. & Mrs. D. I!. Slr•tter Dr. & Mr1. H1rold H. Co~
Mr. & Mrs. Jotln R. Tho1T111 R1lph Ev1~1
Rinll lyrn1
Mr. & Mrs. H. E. John~Ofl
Mr. & Mr1. H. E. lelltrl
Dorothy Ln1l1r
M. E. Pllm1n
Tom KllCO"fT'I
John 11. P1!11non
Lucll1 8ur91r
l 1rt>.tr1 WMte
Dou~ Drryer
Judy Dr1y•r
Sui P11t1r1on
J11n Crook1 Jt uth llomm H1rm~n Romm
M1rga1 Sltltll"!I "j•" aettt M r1hall Dllllltld
Tom Mauston
l<r1111k ltollJn511n D1rlM11 Anderton
C•rroll llltll
EUr11 ll1rc"'1nlu1
"Dick CltK.11
Loi1 Collini
S111 l<ict1r
Lylt Flnl9y M, C. JollnlOll
A. Vl11Ctnl Jo.,1n1rn
W•lttt Koch
1111 Lewd.,.
W!lt11m M•rlhl
l'lorenc1 McCIH
IMllll AllClrtWI PffM "'~' Cl. ltltl Je1tpl\ Rose1141r, Jr,
O.rl1 5t.rndtrt1M
P'orlf'ICI V•nfftrltl
"""" Whllllty J""n Hl9•1•n~
Nor• & H1r Lrhm•n
Mr. & Mr1, Fr1nll f rfi
It'' Your Comhtun1ty-
lt'' Your Yotel
VOTE (g]
JIOll P~RLILRi1CKOl"JI
FOil CITY COUNCIL
CITY Wl~I
c1mm11111 le tlt<t P1lll ll:yckoft
.. City (l""cn, ,..,, VI• CIHrt., New.
"" ·~· Ml.,., 5kllliftf. C.0,.ln• .....
BIG EASTER TIRE PURCHASE ••. COMPARE OUR PRICES ••. ·YMl'.S TO CADILLACS;-C -
• ; • ALL OTIIER TIRES MUST CO TO MAKE · ROOM FOR THIS HUGE PURCHASE, WHICH
INCLUPES ... FOREIGN, TRUCK, CLASS BEL-TED, ALL-TYPES, ETC .•. FREE INSTALLA TION!
~·-, -BA'lTEHIES
Mall
Ptp,1111 &ar1
'10-tlJf Fal£
Jle'f11ce111e•t G~ar.
~ Hf'g. ~7.9.J Ser,·iee
, . Alignment
\""fl· 5c \~:,;~·:.. .
Al'S!!"'""' '""'"" .. tth 2 Ti11 Pv"h1>1e, f ull
s ., .. U.S. CDn, in(lude1 (l,l(l o"d co,.ecl
«"'"'· «>lt\ber, toe ;,., wit••• ""'""ory.
l "clud•~g nit co"d•tioned CC:trl and Chry1!er
To,.ion Bar. ,
\'nft•r.
Ste,n.-llalanrinu s150
l'rr \I !,..,I t 11. , . .,1,1 • '
, Dyna st!/ lflreefs
/. 4 fi 8 99
WOW! FAMOUS AND BEA UTIF UL
)
So;per Sport Wheel1 in ~iz e1 1>1""
a nd 15" to fil ond beouti/y Ford1,
Chevies ond Plrmoo;!h1. Join lhe
1porly group, live ii up!
1.-INST.lll N£W DISC PADS ON fRONT
WKEELS
?.-TURN Alt FRONT DISC RDTDllS '
l. -REBUILD All fRDNT DISC CAUPCRS
4. -REPACK flt ONT WHEEL BEARIN;S
5.-ADD BRAKE FLUID & ll(IO LINES
5.-INSPECT MAS1ll CYLIHDCI
1.-INSTAtl All NECESSARY
HARDWARE & SPRINGS
1.-CH£CJI IRAllC HOSES
!. -INS I All N(W CREASE srns
11.-IOAO TEST rot SUETY
f'ufl Size r.:.s. {'ttrt •• ,
;\f,f ,,, "711 1~1·:1..t;
REGULAR
DR lJMTYPE
1.-lllSUll ll(W iDH0[8 JS.Ill Mil[
llNIN'
1.-1£1Ull 0 Ill Wll([l tYllfilDlAS l.-TlJ~N IMO IESUlflC! IU 4 ORllMS
4,-11[~1C• fRONI W~i!L ILIAlt;GS
),-100 IRll[flUll & ll!lO ll~(S
i ,-JNSIAll M!W t•1~t AUU~N &
llOl; Da'llllN SPllN'S
1.-IRC 'RINO Riil{ SllOfS
I -IHSlJ.ll ll(W flONT 'ILISI SEILS
I -fl{[ IDJUS{M!Nn FUl llF( Of UN/NC
ll-1010 f!Sf)OI Sli!IY
f "ull .\i::-e'r ...... ('ur10 .,,
88
* BEST DISC
UNIN; IOI Ill.II M41• t •lOOll'lt Wltl llOT 00 UH
Tfll4fll4SJ.ll lt-~(JOO! •
•hr IKI t"'!of ...... .,,..,, SS9.88 * Condltlont "''"'itting Oth•..,•lll. Eitro (IUI
10(.hJon ""' c.yllnd1'l,d•w"'" .. u 1ul1u1tt11,
"ltOl1• ·rli11der. h1>11•, wh•1I b111•i~91. etc,
l a Habra
""' w W~iUle• ,111 • • llrl tlMtJll t! 11111 !!of11t II ii ••!<I "lh lflt .... ,,
t! <11lt1 •Ultj "•111 l•llllUC! ,111ltmll 1~r1r. !lltJ
l+HI lt•to•ft ' llftrWt MtO 1<1•111. ll•l!i 'MO ••If\ JI ti
•111 111 IT'W llfll """'•Mt IOIU I! M (111 1(1'1 I Ufl
lee• 01 Wlll!li1r
& e.-.c.,l
~., ...
ll'nC•I\•~'!'!' 11, -Iii'!'.,..,.~
•
•
·I
1 ... , -·•h 1h .. 1toc~ R"""d
Who•• le,,et JC>Ol af p•tfOlfl!•
-~
11n10 Mo•• lit• lf•<HI "" lh• •ooM
for 9•~0•01 5•ob~l.ty /!. Co'""''."9· I~.._,_
;, o Qunl"~'T·1 .-:-for lt11<!;,;,., "''i•<>g• 1'.
'"'ool~ .. d., /!. l~e J>"<e "u~bel•~•<>bl e ! * --*
, · · rn ~ z rrrt-J1 /~:J~'~~I~ * * * * *
WHITli n 1~r~w1r. ~~) l!.iQJ 1J lJ 1.§i li\l 1<
F70/l 4 •24~:; G70/l 4 •26 it:>
'70/I 5 '26'° C.60/J 5139•·'
s2295 f!llU
If wr 1hould \rll oyt of your l;lt' ~ a '"rt1•n'h"~~"' will b" i\1urrl, OI•
•v!•"!l u 101,., d'!llivory o! theod.
""''•1l'd prote.
l•ut:i-1111
To~ 1•lt1
Unbel11"voh!r 1 for Qourmf'I nppf'l••e1 & i,.,..,.
hu•gf'r potk~1boo~1 th" BEST fl~[ PAlCE IN
TOV.'""1
:;.r.oxl :J
:;.r10:\ r:;
·rubrl""·'
88
'. . " .... I ""'·•'• '•· .. ' ......
l rti r11~1nl ,.. r1N I,.,, I~ 7 8 ."i t•ri ,.,.,
Belted Gla ss SJ 8 8.~ ',·.~ •. •;,;
I Pol yesttr \:"It :1 1; .. ~· • 1 1.Gnn~1 :1
G•rdon Grovt l Cos•:. Mesa
I. ••• "' ll•O!l~~un! i.t,•r.or B!
!CO• of Wt!!mln\!er n• 01 !!>••er & O•~hur11) J. HJrf)c)" m•l mn..o (ti•i ~fl em
Th• Uni•oyol 800 is a fl"• qual •1 •"'lo•' .. 11· I > 1·e>••,..;.n.,I B .. J""f>Drrd for
;,,(l .. men1 weather & b• PROTft lfOi Bvy n , .. , ,,,•1•y. t!.)w tll " you 'JO w1c11•g nl thi1
7 7• 14 ,., ... , · ;,x •·1111i, 7. 75xl5 t'~8/IS 1495
8
1.15/l •I
fo"ir.11 f,.'78/l 4)
fi .o"iff:r I :1
Fib(/1 78/IJ)
Blnd .. 01!1
, .. ~.1 11 .1:;.,,
s ~ I• r.d 1. To•
V11iroyn l. f'n .~trnk
,.;:;;,·",POL YESTER &
BELTE ... (;L A SS
W ITEWALLS
~-y s:
:llC<4J
'UNIROYAL
11Rl·:E
I 11 .•l:o II a I ion
.\ Hol11 1io11 ,..,,h purtl.n1•
Scrn<d 1onol! We mode o lremendou1 buy on these ru!w
o •igino l equ ;pmenl w .1.0 .E 78 GtASS BELTE D TIRES.
Thc,e c.11e all f;,~, q ual ity, & (It twice lhe price lhis would
be o great volur.. At !he~e price' you COJl buy o set for
yovr~ell & buy er 'ct fo r o friend. Don't mi's oul!
8 8 .
(~78/lii
•·01it lrnk
78 .~ttric•
'•""' l)·p• r.,i.. + 11 •J
lotf. c •. lo•
BELTE D lAR.fDO TUBflfSS WHITEWALLS
CLOSEOUTJ Th,. NlW 1 Roh lub•lc•t "2 1 111•11 wftich "'e\"ln
2 ply <o•d pl~• 2 ply Bfll ft,. you• 11•eol1r P•l>l•c!ior>,
lr:r>owr> /.,, '" 1••tlo•M111><• & ho"dl'"IJ• llt/1 hos 901 to b1
t~e LOWEST PRICt ""ywhf:•• fo, lhes. n1,.. l0f1do BflTfD
711e1,e1 WH ll£W4llS!
F7P./I I
f;';l!/I I
lliH/lj
23!);;
25 9 ·•
28!•.•
Jlfl/l,j
1178/1 I
J i K/14.
25 9.;
2895
2995
IJ /,,..1,,. . .,ff, $.!,Y,i l.,.~t!
~v!t. •• ·,i "' ~! IJ I ••I. t ... 1•~ 1,.,•dn
Buena Park I -Fullerton
"" '"' L!11toln 111 SI! (U(h~ (cor Ol l.lnc11111 II Bl~ N ~f &. Kn0ttl 11 .......... ll:W'f) (71~1 ·~ '"° 11\•I '10·0\1)0
J % DAILY PILOT ...., __ ,,,,, __ ~ '
Fo1· Tl1e
------~· Dissoltations
Of "Jflarriage
f'er Local B11slness
Zone Change 01(
In Sunset Beach
SANTA ANA - A change in \\'88 allowed subje<:I to dedlcn-
zonJng for a bJock or prope-rt_v tion to U1e county of acces~
on Pacific Coast Jligh"'ay at from the properly to the
Droad"·ay in· 'Sunset Beach high\\'ay, according to Second
has been. approved by the Or. District Supervisor David L.
, .. ,.,.,. """"1rv 1• C t B d C S B k 1t11tei. M•lefl I(. ,....; F••nk ,.., ange oun y oar o uper-a er.
lotvt, -;1•~ •,..!1ftlr11 •,,G Ytl•ml \'Jsors. Baker said the original re--Lov;••· M,•,~n. Rom• Loui1e 11\G O"•ld The change to local buslnes~ quest v.·ns for the rezone of
si::~~'Z.'.rv '"· '"'° 111,CM!or• R. ionlng with sign restrictions one lot in the block but the Id~. k•rt11 11'1G Deu1t11 L. County flannlng Commission
coroe1t. Jo111 A1111 •nd Ooufl•' Goioon, reccn11nei1d~d \\lednesdll\' thal
Oomlllt<iti, Armld1 •'Id £dw1n1, s )
S'On•. MtrltV "· t no le~e.e!l e. Stmday cl100 the en( ire block be changed
Dl111;1, V1r111 ~'· t '\4 Ftn!on J_ f '\ ·1 M1r!!n11. Nltatc IMI Sht Ht , or UIH orn11 y.
V1k:llv!1, ~ .. T\on 1nd S1llr S. T C u t" >I fl' e 5 I"" " 1.•ltdo•I. \llCY "' 1..c:t filebt•I c. eacl1c1· Guilty 0 n .r I a .l r ""' \\"ef"1'
Colffll1n. JoYce L. 1nd Ao1><r1 L. urged a speed.v study of ,
P1111111, Ocn111 Lee 111<1 ll u~oioti Po;, building heinht lirr,ifs in the fl•ow11. El111be1n "'"" 111d Ar11e11 C, · e> t-100~1n1, P11r1c11 E. a11d .1.101110 "· SANTA AN"A - A Sunday northwest county conlmunity.
Moll ntrl, SMlrltY Lt VOl'lnt I nd John 3Chool teacher WhO ~dmitted
Louis. 'They acted on complaint s
o ov lt. Mi r••n "· •nd 1.'i<h1e1 F . committing sexual misconduct from the Chamber of Corn·
Tllc!rn!Ol'I, JOllll .... tl'ICI Jt1man1 c. \lh 11 b th r ,,,.,,ie, 01n1 Ltt 1no Oon1111 Pe1•r. w one 0 wo yo ung ro e 5 merce Advisory Co1nmittee of F•~:.,~~~· Lvnn M1r!e 11\d Jon11n1 "'ho testified against him has Sunset Beach \\'h!ch !!tated
H1n"1•, 11:~111 Luclllt •nd Ar111ur been committed to Atascadero th at contractors were usin g a
ExPiringTerms Told
1
• ,WHArs NEw .ii
2 Co1n1nissio1iers Warned of Last Da y [ · HARBOR VIEW
Qverhilling
Trial Set
For May 31
SANTA ANA -A Fountain
SANTA ANA -Terms' of
Stan Northrup, &ln Clemente
city counciln1nn, and \Vlllla1n
c: "BjlJ " f\131'tin . former
nlayor ar Laguna Beach, oo
the Loca l Agency Formation
Conlmisslon. expire ?IIay t,
LAFC commissioners \\'tre
informed \\'ednesday.
Executive Secretary
ltichard Turner said notice to
the · commission t.vas given
early because of the hassle
~·hlch arose ta·st year 1vhen
the L A F C comrr.issioner
representing the p u b I i c ,
Charles Pearson. for m er
mayor of Anahein1 , expired
without mention.
thrlr rcpresentati~·es, a league lo th e San Cle1ncnte Council ,
subsidiary. The action wUJ be by Uu•
Pearson got bis seat back league \\'hlch plans t o[
when Supervisor Ralph Clark nominate candid~tes fo.r the
of Anaheim , sitting as an c<inimisslou post 111 Aprd nnd
alternate in-pl tee of Hie vote on them In ~lay.
absent Caspers. put through a Alternate c i t y represen·
motion giving Pearson a ne\v Af'C ~r four-vear te rm. Ca11per! '\•as tatJ~·e on the L • · ayor j · Tony Coco of Tustin, poinl<.'<I oulragedover this action wh.,e10.1 -ii01,;;11e;tmn league selection after
1
ht returned to the commission the !\fay 1 date \Vas legal .. 1ht1t
meeting minutes late~. commissioners serve unlll a
Northrup's term as a successor is nnmed or they
League or Cities represen-are reappointed.
tative can be rene\.red if he is ~Iartin is alternate-public success!u~ in being reelected member to Pearson. I-le 1rns
Cal Stat,e I
Prof Picked
the original chairman of the
LAFC.
Later LAFC commissioner!
·valley rnan indicted by the Ronald Caspers, Robert Bat·
Orange County Grand Jury on tin, both county supervi sor!,
allegations that he overcharg-and short-time member Los
eel the county for weed killing Alamitos Councilman Joe FULLERTON -Dr. Wayne!
·F'ol\0\1' the f;aster Bunny
: ur the hill lo ll aJ'bor-Vic"'·
_ S;in Joaquin llills Rd. off
1\lnr Arthur Bl\'d . Just east
.)f Fa5hion Island. • •
Cald11 ells Cu n d i r s Is
_·prcsenti11g E:istcr • .""Sooo. llipp1 y-hop Into ...,
Ht~!'11;·r., Ritr.••d e1r1 1no c1ro1e :fated H~pllal a;f 3 d mentall y loophole in county \a1v to build
'"==~--~' Ellff11. . sor er sex 0 en er. three and four-story struc-... ~-..Jl~nc;"-co.Ja><lflro.~JMti.--=-ernnge-€ounty-S-n-""-e--ri·o-r-t
1-lyde held an early morning E. 0\1erbeck, assistant pro-I
11ork has been ordered to face session and named Anaheim fessor or communications at
tria 1---May-3-l-in-Superior-€ouri.-attornev4lerb~ticker-to-suc----ea 1--s1ate fi'nllerton, -is --the·
OFfSIT •1'14 t mr• PRESS their shop & ~our E<isler .
·,-,,-.,~ .. -.• -,.-.-.-,.~ ... -.-.~~-.--tr-_'-wmrrb1-a.1iup't-;-;-;-.1'hen ~ r
•
(;eronlme. • -l" ure~.
,Tanrwr. Dl•n• 1nct G11n11 c. Court Judge \Vlllla1n ~urray The current countv coclc
S!•ldllr, O•nltl L. and C1ro! L. d d lh I t° f · · . sdiot11ben1er, Alk• v. 1 00 J1me1 E or er~ e ncarcera ion O limits bulld1ng lo 35 feet. Se-
Almtck, Doro1t>v 11:. 1n<1 A~Otrt a , Dennis Ray Barker, 2 6 · cond .Pistrict Planning Coin·
Hirt, Lou!'lt Fltr1 0 t nd w11t11m l •oct, A I I f II · B k '
VtM011. 11110 o uerr1ro 11111 oc .... 1d1 na Je m, O owmg ar ·er s missioner Howard K. Smith
k A11or1Y. 1 , plea or guilty to one of multi-said builders were getting YJO!I, Annt tnd M lo h1r1t1. .
Mob11v. Aavmond v111 •NI L•~U• G1v. pie counts of sex perversion, around the law by calling top
111111.e. Rlch•rd t . •1111 90!\nfe J, child m-0l est and sodom~. floors "att1'cs or mezzan1"11es" l!rlintr, f11rb1r1 K. tnd Robt rt S. . ;; ·
H1r<1enbvr11r. EY•1v11 Yt. •nd H1rr1 D. Barker. a Sunday school Smith urged that a thorough
Howe, Er~~~:;-11:,;~.~";s P•u11•·•· teacher with a west Anaheim study be made of the viability
Kt•tr. l ou111 1-Aarlo •rid 1to111n church. \\'8S arrested last July of the present height limit. D~~~i:0~; G1erge~ e . and Karin t.1. 30 after police investigated hi!! "\Ve \\•ant to be sure y,·e are
L•de. M1rv e. and v11u1 1m F. relationship with two young not acting just to please a fe1v Muiln1, 1J.1rY Th1rti1 1nd Guy Oon. b f h ' I " · sm11,,,----11:1c111Td "· 11111 Mvr111. mem ers o ,,1s c ass. people, he cauttoned.
l'lloom, 8~11Y e1r~o •i d G1r1ld ~!arrv
0 'Nt!1, Larry OtYIO 1nd M1urt1n
C11thertn1,
kt1109t. Maryl. I nd Robtrl P.
A1u1!1r. Dor• V. 11111 01n111.
WOOCll, SJc:ln1y l tl1t Y tricl 1"1!rlc.l1
Loul1a. •
C-tYN n•ra l uc!lll P, I nd LOUii A.
letlv1111. Jo Ann t nd fnom11. C1h(ln1. M1rrorl1 G. i nd ltldl1rcl
LDUlt. l:ow1rdt. CtndY E. t l\d 01vJo T. McD~n•ld, LaUllf !rent Ind /J.IChll
O•vld.
Neil, J1me1 A. i nd M1rlly11 J.
Ferrv. M1r911t1 Ann 1nd Mlc/\111
-C11rk1, __ l-l~mllflrf't', DT•11• C. •nd lor111 C.
ft•lfl'IUUl'll •nll FJoyd Allon.
AOboll, Loi• l11Je 11111 Vldar E1111n1. om. Acberl e. •!Id Lenor• o.
1!1nlo, lhlrlef Ann 1nd G1rv Edw•rd.
~. -H1mlltot1. J iii Eill1t1n •11111-Artltl,tr-
Areher. WIUl1m AIYtn end Shlrlev
J1tl\f. l"!ll!tr, enrabeth M. tlld L•wrel'ICe It,
t 1r1on, Ct rol Sue 11111 JOhn 01vld.
Powtrs, How•rd Al(htrd and l"tult
Jt•n.
9rtdy, K11lhryn A. •rod J1mle T.
P le(11ch 01inn1 E. and Pe:er A.
Mrrkk, Ros• V. tnd A lc~1rd Allen. P~nv, Helen A, •nd Aontld I!.
tAkh•tl, ~raere1 Ill. 1od Jnlln W.
RJ.c~trds, D11rrell D. end N1ncy C.
IJ.0r11n11n, M1urern L. •nll Wlllr.te
Jol\J>o ~
Scnultt, l lndl M1rlr 1PICI Den11!1 Let.
Slotn, P.tl'I' .O. t rid Annt B.
ttaH, Gr.let E1 •lld_Andttw C.
l!row11. Harri•! E. i nd 0~0111 J.
l!:mery, Jor'e Ello~ 11111 K•"Mlh
Otorae.
MOllOON ·
Vf(llel fl(1vl Mott Qoll. A•t 71 , of '1t Gtnev1. Hunllnfl!Dn llt1ct.. Otte ol dt1lh, M1rcn 11, un. Survived bY 111u1Mer, 8tverlY J. Pritchard; l lv1 br<1lhtr1, Jnhn, Rew, !ltrntrD 11nd Ed<!it Svmoson; Etntit She1>htrd; sl•ltf1I Liiv Kr11mer, l'torentt Othlbtroe, habt It P1~cock t nd Eveivn Slolft: and lour orend~hlldrtn, Gr1v1!Tdc iervlc•~· Fd d1v. J PM. P1clllc Vl<'w Memor11I Ptr•. Sm ilhl Morru1rv, Orr~·
10tl.
l"lltES lhomlS 0. P lktl. Att 16, of 217'1 Orltt~ l-l!t hwtv, Si n Ju11n t111l1tr1no. 0110 of "!'"' Ml•Ch 11, J9n. Gtl1Vt1ld1 5ttVICl l. F r dtv. TO AJlo, A1citn1lon Clmetfrv, £! Toro. Mc.Cormlck L11un1 11t1 ch Morru1ry, Olrtttor ..
WINK!'H I ACM
r:.1••••11 Vllnktllbltfh "'¥41, ol :IOI? r.l~d111m Avt .. Co~!• Me111 tit ot d11!h, fl.1rch 21, ltn. Surv eel bY two <1iil\lth1er~. Emmi Tl!IM"<Onll\ Co111 ~ltlll 11tltn CtrmoJln, Ntw Vork; s I l or •n d c t>lld •t n : rw11v1 J rttl• 11rtfldc~illlttn, Funtrtl '''" ~11 will be t>t!<:I Satu•dtv. fl.&•Ch 15. 1:)(1 "M. &ell eroedw&Y Ch•~tl. PrivtTt lnl!rment. &tll 6 r11a<1w&y Morh.+lrv, Dlrector1.
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTC.UFF MORTUARY
427 E. 11th St .. Cost~· ltlt:sa
14'"4111 • BALTZ · BERG ERON
FUNERAL llO~IE
Corona dtl !\Jar G7:J-!450
Costa l\lesa 64f.W• • B£LL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broadway, Cos11 !\1esa
LI 1·313~ • , McCOMDCK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARV
1715 Lapna C1 nyon Rd.
411·!01 • PACmc \'!Ell
MEMORIAL PAR~
Cemetery l\tortu1ry
Chap<!.
Judge Bruce Sun1ncr set the ceed Pearson. newly elected ext cut i v e
1 trial date for Edmund Varney, • The abortive action led to a secretary or the California!
57, of 18972 San Carlos. J-le series of lau·suits coupled tvith Intercollegiate Press Associa·
County League of C i t i e s tion.
• T It 4 COLOll:S fo lJO\\' i\lr. Cottontail iuto .; e Dlt: CUTT ING • \
• llHD EMIOSSIH~ Tbe Fri ugr Be n c r it ; ~-. I e TYi-l!IETTING
ordered the contractor l-0 f o b k d · to lh mu sical chairs action overt 1e · ver ec , a v1ser e1
: ~~Oll~Ay • lle\\"CSI OJ'ielltaJ designs On n .. :
return April 14 for a pretrial seat held by Louis ''Red " campus newspaper, the Daily
hearing. Reinhardt o{ Fullerton. Titan, was electeri to the only
~ -polyester \1·ith the look of ~
-, :silk tor you r. Ea s ter ;
Varney was arrested on Hyde had been named to office of the CIPA open· to a
charges tha t he over-billed Reinhardt's seat by a one-vote college or university faculty
the county by $200 in a fou r-n1 a r gi n that was over-member. The CIPA represents
n1onth period or weed-killfng tun1ed in 1iUbsequent ac-students and faculty at 24
"'ork assigned to him by con-tion by the City selection four-year state colleges andJ
.•'· iru ~parade. \\'ashable t\1·eed
Prlnter1-0tfic1 Suppl lt5-Slllio~ery · S\1·ealer f11hrie loo .... Put·. 1121'f Ml, l•ldy Clrclt
FOl/tfTAIN VAlLl!:'f the kids to "'Ot'k dur ing '
tract. Committee ot mayors and universities. ,,1.0201 ·school t·ar ati o n at 1 •
.-
-. • I
• Fe I I . .
..
,.
----..
Many people pay $50 to
$150 too much for cars. The
. money goes for higher inter-
est, because the buyer d.idn 't
.arrange his financing with us
before shopping for a car .
To help you save that $50
to $150, Southern California
First National Bank is intro-
ducing AutciCred it.
.AutoCredit is a card that
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our Newport area of-..
fices today. You never know
when you may run out of car,
E:astert i111r. Imp er I a I .~
~Hard"·are has specials on. ·
Scotts la1r11 seeds & ~
fe rtil izers: Plastic pipr
'fittings & all garden.;.
needs .... ''ou should see4
'.this! A movi~ stars an-
·. llcfue tr1i'nli sho11;ing at .. _
_;.Children Unlimited. Great'
·Ea ster selections for your
young-ones. • -.-.Forget -;
about :spring houseclean-.
· ing ! Let Lois Egan tif _' ..
·ltlacNab-lr\'ioe Reall y Co . ..:'
sho\1' you a ne\1' •!arbor
Vie1v home. 1'he, "·hole ·.
fan1ily's Easler Basket. ..
. Don't risk overdra"·ing :___
,.rour checking acct. Ar-;
· range a eash·reserve \Yhen ~ 0
~vou need ii. at So. Calif. •
t~t National Bnnk. llarbor ·
View office, 644·8511. , • •
No\v ?\Ir. Cotlonl ai l hops··
into Flo1-rers by 1\1orri to ""
see all lhe sprin g ar-
rangen1ents. Easter lilies.
glorious blooming planls ·&
beautiful contait ers. , .
So~! ~~ap! Soa :
Sandcasflt -· Gt f ;; "-"~ls~.'f---i
~ softsoaping you: such a
selection you never kne\1·.
Soap in boxes. ba skets too. ~
_ fancy navors just for you "'
... Guild Drug has a just
: arrived. ne\~ shipment of .
.. fine antique pieces to add ;,
:!-a touc h of roman ce to
1·our home. , . .Cameo
· Cleantrs \\'ill get you
!I ready for Easler L on thru
spring by blocking all
knils '1-S1\·eaters. u·ater
proofing and com p I e I e
"'alteration srrvice.
Spring ~ale begin~ 3·23
,t!Jru 3-27 at ll0\1'8rd~
,~utrition. Great savings
~on major \·ita1nin lines
'plus many other papular
products. Easter Bunnv
-frubs his hnnrny. yun1m};'.
. . .All kinds of lovely "'
.,Ea ster cards at Ne\''port
Stationers. \Vide selrctions
of Easter plates. ·napkins
. & cul out centerpietes .••
-ltlagic ltlirror 646·8040 is ·
featuring conditioners for ~ ·-. ·your springtime coiffure.··
· \lery nice skin care &
beauty products here loo. ,
:'. Jlnrbor View Shell is a
·clean. neat. u•ell ordered
all service station. Thev
. treat your car the san1~ ~
·\Vay.· .. I-laving the ram ily . ,
over for Easter? Let
·~Richards rilnrket give you;
a hand -The y can bake &
~glaze a ht11n. fix a "i[
marvelous s a I a d or · \ ' casserole. bake up a ~·
SSOI Pacmc View Dr!Vf
~'"'POrt Be1clt. Califonia
flW'llt • PEEK FAMILY SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FIRST NATIONAL BANK
special Ea~ter cake. They -
can do it all superbly & .
vo11 'll ha ve more time to •
enjoy the family!. •. ,\Ve ~ '
like to share \l'ilh you at ·
llarbor View, If ~·ou have
comment & views to share .:..
with us, lel me hear froin
.you.·· .Poques Heure ux!!
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HO!IE
1111 Bolta A•~·
Weslmfastu llWS!I • S)!ITRS' MORTUARY
111 Mala SL
R11tlqttnl klcll
51Mm'
ln th• Newport area:
llAYSIDE OFFICE
1090. Bayside Drive·
Phone 642-1141
WESTCLIFF OFFICE
1501 Westcliff Drive
Phone 642-3111
COSTA MESA OFFICE
230 East 17th Street
Phone 642-1660
HARBOR VIEW OFFICE
1666 MacArthur Blvd.
Phone '644-8511"
' ORANGE COUNTY AIRPORT OFFICE SUPERIOR OFFICE
200t Michelson Drive 396 Superior Avenue.
Phone~833-31 11 --Phon.e 64~·9511
Olher Orange County offices ln.Cypl'lll,.l)ll\&.~oln~ Fuller1on(3),-l!unllngton,Btl!ch(2). l.lguM-Hi111, Sin Clt1111111t; San Juan C1pf1lr1no, Sin!J. Ana,
Seal Be1Ch, Tualln and W11tmlnater. \ ·
"
·LOIS JOY , •
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FAMILY CIRCVS
"You don't 'spect me to play that do you?
fa ages th-ee to six --I'm SEVEN I 11
I t1s
~ -'2uasars Trigger
Big Scie11ce Row
·-'
By BrLL SToCKTON i;o1·ern matter on earth don't
PASADENA (AP I apply throughout the universe.
Twinkle, twinkle. little quasar. In facl. Dr. Ma a rt en
Are you near or a"re you far'? Schmidt of the California
Thal question is fueling ;in fnslilute of Technology said in
intense con l r 0 v er s v in an intervie"" the possibility
astronomy unparalleled siitce ll th;it science might ha ve lo
t1ilter debate split th a t embrace a •·new physics" is
normally sedate science in the really the heart or the con-
1930s. trnversv.
On the surface. the issue is 1 11 was Schmidt w ho
simple. Are quasars. the discovered in 196.1 that light
starlike objects that emit from the mysterious quasars
radio waves, on the very edge was ~really sM.ifted in color or
of lhe universe more than a wavelength tov.1ard the red end
billion trillion mi les 11w11y? Or of the spectrun1.
are they much closer. less Three decades earlier. a
than a million trill ion n1 iles? heated dispute d i v i d i n g Ir the astronomers who astronOmers h.:1d been resolv·
_ claifl_!. galactically speaki~. -ed when-j~ was-proved that-the -'
that quasars are close by can greater a space obj e ct ' s
"The p•u•ibllil!I
that s.-le11re mlghl
have to e111broee a
'11 e tc pJr11d.-.•' b
rea1J11 the henrl ur
the ro11frocer•J1''
redshift, the more dist ant the
object and the more rapid its
recession from earth .
The redshift is an intimate
part of the Big Bang theory.
because if our galaxy. !he
1\1il ky \Vay. v.·as near the
.. center of the primordial ex-
plosion. all objects outside the
gal<J:tY should appear to be
moving awa v. And the objects
hurled out fastest by the ex-
. -'
-----
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'vith easter pin.sh •. •
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--demonstrate-their-contenrton'·.,~. _,p~lowswioHn~no~w~swh~ouwl~d~be~~lhwec1 _____ _ farthest.
Anot her greol
Conimonweel'h
Toys
then: Over the years the redshifts
-The Validity or a basic obsrrved f0r celestial objects
vardstick used for f o u r t•t h decades to measure distances fit this idea nicely -un 1 t e
h . ·ti b . quasars. in t e universe w1 e serious-Their liJ?h! was shifted so
ly challenged. rar to\varcl the red 4t meant
-The widely held "Big -some of !_hem harl lo be on the
-Ba_ng" theory tha\ t h~ uni':'c~se edli!e of the uni verse. several
v.•as. created about n~ne b1l.hon billion trillion miles awa y.
__,.years ago when .an ~ncred1 bl.v _ .... HtIB:.~Ver. the QU.4§fil'.l'i · ~e ~tt-de~S'rtlbje~ '1!xpmded-exceed1nJ;!ly brighl. So bright.
w_111 be tn question. 1f not in r~cr. that theorists had dif-
d1sproved. . , , ficulty explaini ng how an o~
-The oppoSIJlli! S t e a d _Y ject sn dista nt could radiate St~te" theor y that ma~ler _is such energy.
being c_reated al_I the 1ti:ne in This paradox quickly led
the universe will receive a some astronomers to suggest
boost.. . . quasars reallv are quite close ~1ence. will be .'a.c.ed with __ ju!'I a ft"w "galaxies awa v -
the d1sturb1~g poss1b1hty t+lat anrt that !hev show a hia-h
gome physical laws t ha t rNlshift bec8use of some
Lordship
Will E1id
Sile rice
LO NDON I AP ! -From the
farmlands of Norfolk the
word has reached the Ho use
of Lords : Thomas \Villiam
Edward Coke . fifth earl of
Leicester. is preparing to
speak.
F'or 22 vears his lordship has
fa ithfully' followed the famil y
tradition and utlered not a
word in Parliament apart
from an occasional "hear.
hear."
Now he has gi ven notice he
intends to deliver his maiden
speech next monlh. His !>Ub-
ject will be farmi ng. which he
knows a lot a.bout.
The Earl. 61. explained :
"My rather never spoke there
Al all . My grandfather was
the're 32 years without making
a speech ' and my great-
grandfather WI\~ 11 member
for 66 vears \Vithout makinit a speech~ Now I've finl\lly taken
the plunge.."
His opportunity comes in a
debate on the environment.
The earl , as la::dlord of 27,000
acrt"s -a huge hold ing by
British standArds -is con·
cerned that urban sprnwl is
s"lllallowing good farmland.
He is de.'lcended f r om
Thomas C o k e , pronounced
Cook. who was among the 18th
century's greatest farmin~ In-
novators. Thomas Co ke helped
pioneer !he crop rotAlion
system and st:len!Uic breedini;t:
that helped reed the exploding
cities or the industri11J revolu-
tion.
The fifth earl said be:'s not ,
too worried bv his sudden ven·
lur e into public speech. ·
He added : ''I've been •t·
tendln1. the: Lords rt.11:UIArly
thl• year, tryln,tt to get the feel
of the ptact. I lttf •trongly 1~ut the subject. you stt."
11nique prop e r I y never
Ob!'erved before.
The debate began to warm
up early in 1971 v.•hen James
Gunn, a 32-year-old Caltech
astronomer, reported
discove ring tv.•o quasars of
high redshift sitting among
galaxies of equally h i g h
redshift. The distance of the
galaxies was a cc u r a t e I y
known from another distance
measu ring technique.
The conclusion v.'as that the.
quasars were associated with
the. galaxies and their large
redshift was real.
Then last summer radio
astronomers at Massachusetts
Institute o( Tech no Io g y ,
University of Maryland. God-
dard Space Flight Center and
Caltech's Jet Propulsion
Laboratory observed a quasar
that seemed to be blowing
apart al 10 times the speed of
light.
Such n1ove ment would seem
an impossibility. because the
speed of light. l86.000. miles a
second , is the 1nost inviolate of
physica l constants. Einstein's
relativily theories say nothing
is faster than light .
Explanations o( how objects
might appear to be moving so
rapidly proliferated, but left
most experts unsatisfied . And
proponents of nearby quasar
theories were quick lo nole the
problem disappeared if the
rapidly expanding quasars
were assumed to be near in·
stead of far ,
Next. Halton Arp . 4~. of the
Hale observatories operated
by Caltech and the Carnegie
Institution o f Washington.
photographed a quasar of
large redshift connected to a
local galaxy or much lower
redshift by a bridge. a.sort ()f
strand of in le r.g a J 11 ct I c
material .
Summing It up In Science
magazine in December, Arp
made a strong case for
quasars being nearby object~.
citing the photographs and
statistical distribution ·studies.
He suggested lhe possibility of
a "no"velocity redshift '' in·
trinsic to quasars.
·--'
-finished -·
--·--·-your--taxe~-=-. __ ._. ___ _ -
Save 30.00 commodore
adding machine
Our commodore edding ma chine takes the worry '
out of be;ng close. Wah prec ;se 8/9 key tot.I,
credit bo len ce, repeat key. automatic clea r end
many other delµx e feature~. c.horg e it on ou r
conven i•nl terms. 89 .99 value. 59 .99.
Save 15.00
copyinate dry copier
Use our copymote copier to keep you r
tox record s in top sh11 pe, all your
important papers c.on be dupl ic:oted
in a matter of seconds. And it's·
easy lo us e ' Reg. 39.99 . 24.99 .
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•
·-··-~ .......
•
Easter:
•
it's a11he hroadway
ANAHEIM
-------·
4444 N. l uclicf · (7t 41 IJ5 -1111 NlWPO•l "i UNTtNG TON IEACM . ORAN(;[ CEA RllOS
47 F1tltie11 l1l•11tl 17141 6•4-l?t ? 1111 E4111t•r Av111u• 171 •1 lt).))JI 2100 No. T~111" St•••' 1'71 •1 tt8-1 J ll 500 lo, C1,,;,0, Mt ll I ZI JI 160 .G4 !t
SMO' 10 A.M. to '·JO ,,M, ,,.ONOAY TMROUGH ~RIDAY. SATU•D.t.Y 10 A.~. fe 6 ,,M, SUN0 .6.Y t2 NOON to l 'M.
•
•
DAILV PIL OT
GOP Fundi11g Reque st Dies for Lael\: of 'First'
From "'Ire Strvlctt
A San Diego Visitors and
Convention Bureau request for
$250 Jn support of the GOP Na-
tional Convent.ion died before
lb< Clly Council.
Superior Court by a relative of
one of the victims.
'14'85 beginning his drive In
..:hange service hfe by m;ik1n~
the sailor's .IJfe mflre plenS1:1nt
and the Navy more efficient.
It ·enco uraged the assign.
ment of ship-ba'sed senior pct·
•• service Smith "'as ordered to
dive-st himself of control over
Golden West in 1969.
• • •
TAKE A PICTURE WITH
THE EASTER BUNNY
Now -Carousel Court
South ("oas_t 'Plaza
Mayor Richard Y.'. Parker
read 1he request. and only
Councilman Joseph Overton
was heard to respond.
Voltek Frykowski was one o(
!he persons found dead and for
\\'horn ~lansnn w•i convicted
of first deg1·ee murder. J{atllla
Prondsca. g u a r d I a n uf
fryknwski's son Bartyk. sued
the entire family -including
i\'lrs. Kasabian -in Los
Aogeles for $650,000.
'
ty officer~ to off icer of the
dec:k :ind quanerOOck "'atches.
Prev1ously, ooly commissiontd
nfricers had been aS6igned 10
lhesf'! "'at ches. The man on
\\'atch is in command of the
sh ip "·hen cnmmanding and
e.xecu!ive officers are absent.
Dr. \\'illiam F. ~l~oll
rtsigned from the St a t e
College Board of Trustees to
.sl'ek the Republican nom ina.1---------------------------------
''Pass.·· he whi11pt:red.
"I think the item dies for
PEOPLE
lack of a first."' the mayor
concluded.
r.-10 one mentioned that the
city's major hotel. the Del
Coronado, "'as designated to
house the California con·
vention delegation or thal a
Coronado resident. GOP na·
t i on a I . co mm itt eewoman
Elearior Ring, would ~ prime
hoste'ss for the convention.
• • •
Promisca wali J.: r a n I e d
$500,00J. The suit filed ag1tin~t
Mrs. Ka!;itbian "'hn reportedly
Jives in Milford; N.H. claims
thf' mone y y,•as n e v c r
recovered.
• • •
Ronald Kemp denil'd in Lon·
don making love to another
man 's ~·ife in rus minicar.
"Th ere "'asn 't l'nough
room ," he tnld Divorce Court
Judge Sir Neville Fa ul ks.
Sir Ne.,.ille dicln 't flgree .
'·\Vhere there's a will, there's
a way:• he told Kemp. and
awarded the hu sband a
divorce~
• • •
A GIANT 4-FOOT
STER
BUNNY
INCj)Ut•I AT YOU• TOY WO•LD OR TOY HOUSE
S1'0RES FOR DnAILS
• las~tt lirais • ttllt,,111_• flisiit l11ltts
• Pl1stic E11s • Sm:iu Ttrs
LOTS OF-PLUSH EASTER TOYS!
me et the
<B IQ vvheel's
little b!othe(
HICKORY FARMS
OF OE..~O
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SWISS
CHEE SJ=-
•
1r.1d11tr111 a ~ 1 1~ !t1<;: hrrilhr r.
~l•ti1·S11 1 \~ 1~ 1.1rr·!111!1'
r.ltt(·d , lhr•n ~r·;i]rd 111 1 !·~
1t nrl f'lPth;ip5 S\'.'PP.fPr .
1\'h1r:h rl 1<'rsP lflv r rs \\'i i!
fiod p:irl11ul:1dv drliRh rful.
l!s 1r'1~.t1di !\ 11111k rs /\·lini· C11t fresh
I . I . I 0 1111 ~1111.1 ,1 11r,1pp1r 11111'-S\\1~~ lh " prrfrrt 1'om ple-0 Any SlZP,,
!<J1n 1111: n1 111 .. 11111· .1 11 d f11I ! 1n1•11!!11r~;i11d11 irhr~.~;i l;irl~ Reg.$1.7Q/h.
r;i..,: \ I l.1 I or T )11 ~-!1.ol_!.I!!' l_;i 11 d s n "-2,_~ ~ ._JJ!5J--1!.J.i1.iQ..._;IJi_tss-1-D~ $,\\I~.~ r Jio r ·' ,~ 111: I ,i 111/IP ;::rr;il f(1r ;1ny OC:(.fl~inn l\'hr11 ijl
bit cld1f'r•·nl 11 h"n fl r •1ll1f·s 1riu 11.:inl to ser1e a finP • I
lo the ta~t".,, mor <> m"!lrnv cheese.
(-~~~&i~~, 9~r~~® ~~ OFOH!O
WESTCLIFF PLAZA TOWN ANO COUNTRY MALL OF ORANGE 106~ l,.hw ""· 777 Sovth Moh1 St. 215, H. Or ....... ell H..,_,. hoclrl Or•11t• Oroflft
642-0972 543-8011> 637-7111
-OPEN SUNDAYS FORl'OUR CONVENIENCE
AMERICA 'S LEADING CHEESE STORES •
• • • tion for Catifornia·s Zllth con·
Sen. }'raok t;. ~1oss ID-gressional di strict.
Utah ~. wants .to name the two The ~iouse icat is held by
giant pandas-gifts of the China Rep, If. All n Smith , i R·
govt'rnment -Ping and Pong. Calif. I, who said he won't seek
The suggeslion was qri~inal-re-election.
ly made-by-Mrs. H. G. Denk-:.--~TcCOlt, a v~1est Covinfl
f'rl' of O~den . l,;lah. !>.loss re· surgeon and former slar end
layl'-cl it to President Nixon. for Staoford and professional
"Mrs. DenJ\ers points out football 's Chicago Bears. said
that !he U.S. ptng pong team he submitted his resignation to
f DAILY PILOT )1
--,
HE HELPFUL GUIDE
FOR TODAY'S
HOMEMAKERS
was in\•ited to China several Gov. J4inald Reagan.
mnnrhs ago and that manyjjii•-----~;;;i;;-------------;;;;i:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;--;;;;;;;;;;--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-1
people feel lhis \.\'as the first
step in a more friendly re la·
t1onship bet\1·cen the t\.\'O coun·
tries," J\1oss said.
• • •
• • • •
Fina nciC'r C. Arnholt Smith
nt San Diegn reportedly has1 agreed In ;ippea r in ;i Civil
Aeronautics · Board hearing in
· \Vashington on the acquisition
of Los Angeles Airways.
The CAB subpoenaed SmHh 1
to produce records but intends I
10 ouash the subpoena because!
or Smith's agreement, it was•
rewrted. 1
Th e hearing Monday will 1
consider an application by/
Golden \\'est Airlines to ac·
ouire Los Angeles Airways, a
financially troubled helicopter
Lo ckheed's
CSA Planes
Assembled
MAnlEITA, Ga . {UPI)
Assembly wor k has begun on
the last or the controversial!
CSA Air Force transports at
Lockhred·Georgia Co. 's huge
assembly line.
A spokesman said the 8tst of
the hugl' planes. largest in the
world. was in I.he "sub·
assembly" stage at present. It 1
is scheduled to be completed!
in mid-1973.
There are also 26 other C5As
in var ious stages or assembly
at ,the plant , where 16,000 are
nov• employed as against
19.000 six months ago.
The spokesman said others
"\l'Ould gradually be let go"
during the yea r but th e com.I
pany was endeavoring to find !
mai:ket.&._for~.its produets to
keep as many p e o p I ej
employed as possible. I
The big transport slirred up
a biller controversy 1 n j
Congress because of cost over· I
runs. Lockheed wa!i to build
120 C5As for the Air Force ·
under the origi nal contract at
a cost of $3.2 billion, but the
order was eventually rtduced
lo 81 which will Cflst the
g-0\'ernment $4.9 billion. I
_ Artdy's F.u.11
Ask any kid. "Ask Andy" l!
fun. See It Saturdays Jn the
O~!L Y PILOT .
GREEN HAVEN PATIO
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rl'ceh
rradi
pers
·pncat
(or th
Ent
serur
Chari
Box
Los A
numb
Bool
are \
sloop
Club:
sloop .
Ore.
Stewa1
Franc·
Lou be
Riehm
The
sched
!he y
in the
s
Joe
Ea
Febr
F
f"' •• tin
for
9
F
DI
" 10
""
Ca~
1011
q
1 ~
Transpac
Club Seeks
E11tra11ts
The Transpacific "Yarhl Club
J1as issued an urgent plea for
entries in the 3,500-inile U:Js
Angeles to 1'ah11i
scheduled June 15.
Com1nodore Charles Booth
said 18 ftpp!i cations have been
received ror the "Race to
Pradise " but only four skir-
pers have backed up their Rp-I.!
'pllcations \vith cash on the line
for the entrv fre . y
Entry b)anks rnay be
secured fro1n race chairman
Charles W. 1Bud 1 Smilh , P.O.
Box 2376, 1'ern11na l Annex,
Los Angeles. 90054. 1'1•lcphone
number is l2131 58..1-3261.
Boolh said 1he firrn entr ies
are \Villiam Goodlry's 41 -foot
sloop Dakar, Del Hey ''acht
Club: Joe J>oiock's 58-foot
sloop. Min Sette. Rose City,
Ore. Yacht Club ; \V. L,
Ste\\1art's ~foot----Sief~.
Francis YC; and I r vi n g
Loube's Coluinbia-57 Concerto,
Ric hmond .YC.
'flu~ biennial race i s
schedule lo finish in time for
the yachtsmen !o partici pate
in the French fete.
Safety Sheri ff
Joe Higgins says:
FLEET'S IN -Rose111ary Eadie rcn1i11d s boating
fan s that the action 1vi\l be at the Anahei 111 Co n·
vention Center during the \Vcstern National Boat
and l'\'larine Sho"', .!\pril 1-9. Sail and pO\\'Cr boats
\viii be featured, along \\'i th n1arine accessories.
School to Lea~e Yacht
. ,,. ~-... ~. . ...
.Joint ENort
Yacl1t Clubs Tell
Plans for Racing
Pacific 1'1ariners Yacht Club
of Marina del Rey and Balboa
\1acht Club of Newporl Beach
ha ve announced the date for
their third annual-joint effort
In lhe Outer Jslands race.
The race will start off
P..1arina de\ Rey htay 26 and is
expected to be finished at
Newport Beach in time for the
Me1norial Day weekend
the Cal-40 Blue Marlin owned
by a !iyndicate of Pt-.l"t'C
members and skippered by
Phil Murray.
Electronics
Movi11g In
On Yachting Classes eligible are Ocean
Ra cing llOR Mark Il l PHRF,
and MORF. This year for the
first time, the clubs are ex-
tending invitations for a split Is yae ht in~ becoming an electronic sport? rig races for schooners and ketches. f irst it 1vas the use of com·
The 220.mile race around puters lo C'alculale lhe han-
the offshore islands is consid-dicap ratings of yachts in
ered one of the more rugged offshore racing.
a Then cam · lhe use or com-
nia yachting calendar. puters in calculating lhe
1'he JOR classes will start results of the Ensenada race
f\Iav 26 and sail the 220..mile and other major offshore
cou.rse around Anacapa, San events.
Nicolas. Catalina and San Cle-And now comes "instant
mcnte islands, lea ving them all replay." I
to port. Next to use the video tape I
PHRF' and MORF yachts system in recording the starts. ""'
will sail a 135-mile course fouls and finishes of a race
leaving Catalina and San was H\Jntington ~I a r b o u r
Clemente islands to port Yacht Club during th e
before finishing off th e Midwinter Regatta. The in-Ne~t jetty. The Outer stant replay was actually used
Islands Race iS also parf of to settle a couple of protests. I
the ~1acCameron J. ones Next to use the video tape
Bro\\'n 1>res1dcnt, said a Trophy Series for oce an system wa s the Lehman-12 1 special three-n1an commi!tee racers, and the Chuck Stein Association in the St. Patrick's
ED HIRTH
SEEKS TO
DAI LY PILOT J /S
SAFEGUARD YOUR FAMILY ,
BY ELIMINATING
HARMFUL TRAFFIC
CONDITIONS.
[8J NEWPORT BEACH NEEO·S THIS MAN!
VOTE-APR. 11--RE-£t£CT MA-YOR ltlRTif!-
BrO'i''n lin 1vers1tv, 11·hi ch
recently re criv.e d the
Am erica's Cup 12·mcter yacht
Valiant as a J::ift. has an-
nou nced plans 10 tense the
boat to the U.S. J\·lerchant
1'1ar inc Academy at Kings
Point. N. Y.
ivas fnrn1ed to ad,·ise hin1 on Memorial Trophy series for Day team regatla at Newport , .... !""~!!!"!""!""~""'"!""-!""----------~-""'"~~!""~!""!""!""~
ivh at the un1ver s11y would do PHRF. . Harbor Yacht Club. I-- -----
TO CITY COUNCIL, FIFTH DISTRICT, NEWPORT BEACH
BILL RING, CAMPAIGN MGR . -215 RIVERSIDE DR., N.B.
Race entry blanks and in· All competitors were able to y '-I l N I 1v iththe yacht. Thecorn mittee structions may be obtained ·view and review the races at OUr .1· OtllC OWl.l l C \,'S ll3}1Cl~ S
recon1mended lea.si ng it to from either BYC or PMYC. post race festivities at New-Tlte DAILY PILOT
Valiant \ra s presented to
Bro11·n on behalf of the \1aliant
fi.Vndiratc b~' Robert · \Y •
Kings Point for a two-year The 1971 race w~s won by port Harbor Yacht Club. period under an informal1 __ ...:.._...:..__...:..__.o..._ __ :..__:_ ________________________________________ _
ngrecment. Tbe r-.1 c r c ha n I
J\1arine Academ y 1\·ill ma lo-
tain the .vach"t as part of its • ~1cCullough of Riverside,
Cann_a 19~3 Brovin...gz:ad.UJtle_
1\'hO skippered the yacht in the
HliO Cup tr i<rls, He 111as
defeated bv Bill Ficker of
NewPQrt BCach in the yachl
Intrepid for the right to de fend
the cup.
agree1nr.!!L. ---~ -~----·-
Y'all give to
Easter Seals ...
heah?
·The Valiant \\'i \1 probably be
February 28-April 2 Or. Donald F. J·lorn l g,
chartered by ohc of the racing
sy ndicates for use as a trial
horse during !he 1974 Amer·
ica's Cup trials and '>''ill be
sold outright after that. Hornig
said.
40th ANNIVERSARY. CLEANING SALE
Full Service Dry Cleaning
f ull service guarantees you complete aa tlafactlon: expert cleaning, spot•
ting, finishing, and !pecl~I protecllolt
for trims and frag ile fabrics.
'
Save to
' 5U% an·d ·
more on
the finest
guaranteed
SUITS, DRESSES*
& COATS
SWEATERS,
SLACKS, SKIRTS~
Reg. value to $2
Save over 50%
Incl. Knits. Reg. value to 1.25
Save over 50%
•Up to 5 pleats, plain
4 DAYS ONLY
Sportcoats
Including Knits
Reg. value 1.25
Save over 50% 44~
4 DAYS ONLY.
90HU91 ' WASHABLE KNITS?
S3t CASH DISCOUNT COUPON BOOK There's not a weshtng machine Invented
fnta giant bonus ••• minimum $36 Cash 1hat can get out apota In you r wa1h1 bl•
Discount Coupon1 good at participating ltnils. Get •em done right .•. sweaters.
1toras on the finest cleaning for weoks slacks, $klrta--4-4¢-for -4 days only!
. .-to come. ·~
Interested In ow ng a Thrill-D·Lux Agency? C11ll 213-661-1163
Hrrq 11 Your N111111 P1ni~p1tin1 I j ! J ; 11 = 1 J ! j ! : ( ~ [$1 I !8 ;1
Capistrano Beach La9una B&ach
1040 Sevth Ce•11 Mlt li'!"°Y -
Costa Mesa Newport Beach
1176 Herb•r l lw4. JOl N. Ntwport l l•d·
$outll•rn Ca/iforni1 '1 L11111t
Santa Ana
1220A No. l ,flrol StrMt
102D s •. Mal11 5,,.,,
Wesl minster
1452 W•1tmhutff AW.11111
1 J772 GolHit Wttt Afflltte
•
The highest you can go!
' (with insured savings)
Inkrest rates may be falling, but at The Big M, Mutual Savings we're still
paying as high as 6%* and 5%% .. on insured savings.An d we're still offering
a host of free services, including a FREE Safe Deposi t Box with a mi~imum balance.
Take the safe climb to higher interest at The Big M.
Mutual §~Y.Jngs
Corona del .Mar: 2867 lost qi, .. t Highway, 4 blocks East of MacArthu,r Blvd. (At the Time and Temperature sign)
Othttofficta in Covin~,West At~di11"'Pa5adcn11 Clcnd:tlc and Canoga Park· Chatsworth
•1511$$,000 ll'llnlmum,1to10 re.an.. "~11,000MlrlllTl\lm, l IG 10yet'9.
'
'
•
• •
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f
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DAILY PILOT Thursddy, Mareh 23 , 11172
>EGAL NOTICE Mi(lflle of California in Middle of Now1tere LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
f'ICTITIOUS IUSINl:SS
'Tllf Oc:M" \IWw k"8cll Dlll••CI -..•U -( p~:~T~O~TS&TI~~'::/' Thi ffll~c!'i:.: ST~;!~,t:N~I 001,,_.
( ... lllot .. IN Dlf,lric• Qflo(t . 1tn Tit 101'° .... 1"' "''~ ,, 001 ... llu1•11#11 111.1.i ...... I>; W•r,_,. .t.11,_, t-1u11ll"tl0<! ltMlt, 10' ti ' TRAH5l"OltT 1,!A$1NCl LTD, llt) n•-Q nmunw (AP
... ,1.,. ~ Hf1cunur11 ~n•oM., t11• SCOTSONS TOOL$. po lo• 4172 LONJO. c..oti. Mltu v 1 1 N n 1 .v I -
kfl.ol l ttt No ii, C0111l1tl1>t of IS A<tH 111tJ S-f Ptt-'J•Clt. ltVlflt, ~. Mtrll" J, Horio", UOt ,0110".,.xocl h f C l'f ' ... , ... Mlrltl"' LO',..,,. 01 ... ,, """' ol J•""'' C1Uty It.I E ••• ,,. $1' COil• 1,, ..... $•11 L•~· cu,, V••" T e center 0 a._! orni.a s
•oi .. Cliilu. M1111mU111 etc"'"''' D a .• , .v.,,., ,,11,°'"'' Jotin c w1111,..,1, n• C•,,,.•b••· >•n populallon Is locattd prac-"" b• IN Botta ol Trvtftt• wlU bt i..ilO 00 111., l>l/ll114!ll II bo'lllt con<111U•O D• Ill ltk• Cfh, u1 .... • .cr~,.. ''''· Llfft ot1<•'•'""' 1, en lnalv;o1111 TM1 bu11t1t11 11 w1,.. «inav<'N oY • ti.call)• in the middle nf flier wlflf""lllf Dl1trlc1 Olflct. Bla1 wiu bt Jllm'I cruiv P•flntr~lllo
4!<<te•H w 10 11.00 •,,., .v..rr1< l1. 1•n Tl'lli "''e"''n' llll'd wirh 1~ '"""'" Mt•l111 J NClflOll no11.·hcrc. ).tore prec1sely1 its
P11t1Uth.o 0r1n11t C0t" 0a1tr Pllo1 ,1,,. " 0,,,.., c""'"' Oii Mtt(h "· T111, ,,,,,mtr11 11"1:1 w••11 1111 Cov"'" Jn an all.tilfa field.
Mli•ffi 11, n, 1112 110·'2 tt'1 lly f!l•vri1y J MtOcJO• Otovty Coi;n· (ltt• ot Ort!IOt '°""'"on F"tD. i,, lt/1
t, C••·-•r. Otvt11 • J, M1000• 011>11tY C1>11,,rv 1'he nation's l<1r"CSI ~tar , F116 .. (rk l:I
LEGAL NOTICE Pvoh""ed 0,,,,9• ctt1t o.n, p,101. , 11111 \\'Ith a!rnusl 20 rn 1111 on -.:u;;;c""°'°'"""""w";;;;;;~ll'""'."~'~'~'c'c·c•~·:.'.'~M'..''~·~,~··~·~·c'c'·:.'."~':'_ Jt....ci "11011,"fd O••"•t coo11 01.iv "•lo•, ,i 1 tcd d 1 th MUN ICIPAL COUll;T 01' C .. Lll'OIHOI... --M1rtn 1. 9. 11. JJ, 1911 ~4~-12 rt:Slyen s courr ur ng e
COUNTY 011: 0111AN01 LEGAL NOTICE 1970 fertc•ral census. has hur;:c
?linled the center or the
~tale's population near one of
1ho5e lown!'l -Buttonwillow -
in the southern San Joaquin
Valley.
Buttonwillo11.• has only 1,1 93
r esidents, but Bnkersrield, 20
milts
more
71.000.
• rrom the center, has a
urban populalion of
Using lattltude and longitude
s tatistics the Census Bureau
provided, Kern C a u n I y
engineers have spotted the ex·
acl center five m1lfS due nor1h
of Button~·lllo~·.
"The site i~ barren outside
cf the aUalfa grov•ing there."
said James Rado u m 1 s .
manager of the Kern Cou11ty
CriRrd of Tradr "I don't r'"11
e~cn a farmhouse:. Th e
'nearest thing of any conse·
qucnce is a freeway in-
ll'rt'hangc. and that's three
quarters of a mile away.''
Missile Tarik Will Be Serit to Eu.rope Soon . . ClftT•AL 011:,.,.01 COUNTY concentr111ion3 of people in t he
Juoici•L oisT•ic T 11:1cT1T1ous Bus1Nl!ss LEGAL NOTtCE · lll'O\C 1ts rorres in Europe now C•M NumMr 1u1t NAMf. STATEMENT south :iround l.11s Angeles and \VASl~INGTON (AP1 -The ago, can fire eithe r a 152mm enchances its accuracy.
" ~UMMON s "T111 10110 ... ti•O' i>e•.wthJ .,, 601119 ,,,..1 l'ICTtT1ous Bus1N1ss 400 n1iles north around S..in United States soon w i 11 shell or a Shillelagh missile. Early problem s w ith the lur· that the Vietnam ~'ar no l1lnlllh : ROA'4N A OIMEO "' r.u• •i· HAMI STATl!MEHT , j d ff ' !
Dtt•t111•n.1. ROeERr T MOO~e FUJITA l'ARMS, 7190 H•ztra ••tllUt. ""' 1o11ow1"' t>frtoni ,,. dcin• Francisco. streng then its army 1n Europe des igned t.o pierce any known ret have been so ve . o 1c1a s longer ls swall<nv!ng arms pro-
ToA '~ 1?•~nd~.,i'~ ~oBr:Rr ~11 M~RE VY•1•m·""t' ov,r.,.,~ •1= In between lie million! or w ith a m issile-firing tank in· armor plate. said. duct ion as lt did for yea rs .
.. 1.1n1 ~' .~'f"'.• ~' tiff" 1 ~ -:i •, ':'.: 1•d•~M Funt•, n•1 Rockmo"'· PLANN•NG s v ~ r E Ms ANO acres of farm land dotted by tended lo narrow R"•s1·a·s ad-A · l b ·1· ed I t •··retary of 0·fense ~1clvin ,111 11 •~'You .. you wt 0:111• i.<.••tmlnitu KIENCE~ COMPA•iY, 1,~11 Sit"• ...., uniq u e SD l lZ urre oX"\,; lA: i·s. rnilitarv. leaders long 1 ••11111· vou mv1t 1•1t In '"'1 '°"''1 ' ,,. ••• ,,,1 l'ull1•. fl! F•" D•lv• • .-.~, Sor. 11.o.11. 1'"1,.. 9:161ot ('()mmunities ran"in" from vantage in armor oo. "'er. enables the r,.160A2 tank crew R. Laird told Con11ress Ja~t W•lllf" Olfadln9 •" 1e1pon,t !C '"••com lOJ. Wr•l"'•n\ltr Robtll L ltlt, ltS!I Slerr1 SOIO ... r, to ssed bolJt
P1'1"1 tClf • ""''"n ,,.. ,,..,, olt•Ol1>9. 11 • """ .. v,,.,. .. a b•·n~ condvt•t<f "' • Rood. ""'tit"""' tinv towns to fnir-c;i~e<l cities. The tank. whic h h a d to fire while on the move. and week th at the United State!' i.!l h11.ve expre concern a
Ju••ke c°"'''1 •11111~ JC d••• '"'' 1"1~ ,,,,,,.,~111p M•" "· s ''"· H!ll ~1t"' 50'0 The Census Bureau has pin· technical problems two years a new laser range I,· n de r m ak1"ng a strong effort to im-the Sovie! edge 111 tanks. •u..,...,,..,s 11 M'•Vt<f Oii '°" Olll••wl\41, lid•!J'll ,,111111 Ila.er, lry1ne, 11&&4 \--:.::::_.::::::::_:::.::.:_::::_::::.;::::_ _ _::::::::::::_c:_::::::::::_:.::::_.:_:::::_: _ _::_:::.::_::::::..:..::.::~::..:_::_:::: _ _::::::::::_::_::::::~_::::::.::.:::_::: _________ -'. _____ _
You• lltf1u1• 111111 ~ tntr•fll"' 1ppllc••1"" T,.1, ,1.,~ • .,, 1•!"'11 w,1~ ''" c0.,11ty r111, 1W\11>en !1 11<'·"9 conauctnt or •
by "'' ol•l.,11•1 •no !flt court m•y lfl!tt • Cle•~ ct O•ino. County on ,...,,.,. 11. p•nne1lll!P
hid-I 111ln1! YOll lor ltw. mon•y O• 1912 BY B•••r!Y J . MaOdo~. Ot'i>ulvl llODr11 l T11r. cilller 1etlel •f<Wllttd ,., tllt como••lnt. C& .... ••v Cler-. Tl'l•1 lllllCIN'"' ldrd w1•n Jt>e Cou,.ly
" YIU \Olli.II •• H'l'lt , ... N Yl<t "' Ill ••. Fl•U•1C••·~ of 0••"11' (Ol,lnlv II"" Mite~ n. tor11tr II• IPll1 m•U••· '""' W'l!Mlld ., .. RICHA RO I . l YNN nn. B• 8<111ttlY J. M1aoo., ~PU•Y
:.:·.·.pity .. ""' '""" 1le1dln1, If IRY, "'"'"IV •I l•• (01,o1>ty C:lfr•
11t lllH " tlml, JSll Ntwpcirl C1111er O•lYt S111t1 Ill I I. FlllO Oiied HllW. f, 1110. "l.,..POrl Bt1dl (llllO<"Mll Hu.ct Publo\l'tPd Or~ntt Ca.sl millY p,101,
CDolllld L. Armour, Publli.lltd o •• ,... Co.t\1 0111IY Pilot. M~rcn 1l. XI, '"" Atrll '· l], 1911 7oS n ltr-By Sl'lt•lfl L. Sl•ict•lr. M1rc11 U. )0, 11n<f Atrll 6. ll, ltn 1 .... 71
"'~· 15EALl l.EGAL f<OTICE LEGA L NOTICE
URBANO •IMllJ>IMl!O FICllTIOU~ BU~INESS
401 Clvl( Clflltr Df"lvt Wtll NOTICE 01' IULK TRANSFER NAME SJATEMIE"ll
S11h1... NOllCE IS HE!i!EBY GIYEN TO TltE lh" !011~"'1119 pt•1o n1 are OCi,,~
S1ni1 A111, C•llfornl1 11701 CREDITOR$ OF" W,vQnn• J Gill, bY11nts1 a1:
Ttltph-1 (tit ) 1'5·1'11 Tr•n1letor, !hM •bull< tran,tf< •• abou! PAINflOW COUtlTRY 11EilLTf'I BAR. 1'-====~"~"-:l!or111v tor l'l•lt1tlt I bLm1de. bv. Ir1nsf1.1or. whou. 111.Bl=u )II Ml•lr~~ &a!bo.I U.l&na. 1~===~ ~DblTi!'i ••1111• NII 11ty Pllo!, I •es• IS 17J5 We1lcflff'" r v1, ') e · V e"r f lnlty, 1)1 Onv1<, NewDorf
M11•cl• 2l. )0, .,,., Al>r U '· 13, 1'12 16t-n ol Newoo•I El'''"· Ccunty O! Ot~ iu~. fl 'IK" _______ ..:_..:_.::__::_::.:_:_:.::::;1s1•tt ol c111lor"I•• Ind all of w1>011 Pllndv Joi.11•on, 1\1 Onv~, Newoort
bu1lnes• n•mes tf>ll 1ddre•~1 usf'd wll~'" e'&ch. LEGAL NOTICE 1111ee vear1 I••' Poll!, so Ill• 11 known 10 11111 bu~l"tH '" beln~ tOnd11t !ed bY a
-------,,::;-:::;:-------ITr1n1f'r1e. llrt! 11'1e Goldrn Hour Colt "••lner.hlo. aAR JMa r1111•. lllS W111c1111 O•!"'· NfWfltl•I P11nd1ll Johnsnn
SUPIRIOR COUltT OI' THE Beath, C1UI .• to Ron H Millet end T"il 1tairmen1 filfd ""''~ Ille Co1m!~ STATI! Ofl CAllP"ORHtA IN AH!) Syt11l1 M, Milltt, lr111>s!•r.~. wllo•• (lfrk of O•~n?e County on M~rch 1, 19/1.
FOlt THI COUNTY OF ORANGE b11slntu 1dllre11 1' ))I €1lhe1 ~t•ec!, In lly 9tvetly J, M1ddO•, Ocp~!y County
HO. A•Jloot Ill~ (llY ol Colle Me ..... Cwntv o! Ollln<JP, Clttk
NOTICE OF SALi! OI' ltl!AL Sllllt of Calllor11!a, All SIOC:I< In llllde. f,.. I' l•J'5
flROP(ll:TY AT PRIVATE SALi! l111e1. t'Ouloment Ind 9<1"><f will al a C••· Publllhld ·O••n~c Coll\I 01llY P<lo!,
In !he Miller 01 "' C llln Beautv S11IOfl bu•lnen linow" •• Tiit Mitch 9. I~. 11. JO. 1912 61S·12 the E 1 e cnM'rv•'"""lp ol Goldtn Hpur Colll11re1 and localed a• 17lJl----------------·l
COfli,,'v!i!e.°' \llOLET F, ME55ECAll, W"1!clill O•lvt. !,, tlle c11v of Ne1110011 L EGAL NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIV'EN I fltact>, Coun1y ol O•an<1r<. Stat~ "'l·---,,,,=,__oc,-ccccco-c----
•ller M1rcl\ 31 lf71 !Pie 11'11"' or Callk""11• and "'•I lhf lortoal"'1 bulk FICTITIOUS BUSINESS VIOLET ' ' """t'' ontd. Iran'''' will be con<umm11ted on "' ant• KASPAREI(. 1$ Conwrv111or el fAprll 141 Frldl!Y Ille 14111 day 01 Aprit NAME STATEMENT
·"-----"c'l!L.ElllJ1......111 V:~E.T t:.. "E,5ECAR lt/7 rl'itt110l'i E'crow Hirl'J.,,r.-11 "'' __ ti.. lollow'P9-Ptt40A.J.l.~4Pl,..._bulina&. --,~~~...:="~~~ ,,,°"'"'"''"'· will 1tll 11 P•lv11e ule to eic:ow dtlltt!menl ol t~t New~• 8trc~ ,, .
•
'
1 hl9r..11 Ml bidder •ublei;I lo tOfl· Branen of Stturil¥ P~cillc N"liO"•l llA~~ VIKING SWEOISl-f ~MOJH'iASBORD,
•matlO<I llv Ille •boYt·""lllled ~Ull'l'rlor 111 3~1~ Vii l ido ln the Cllr of Nt'IJl'Ort 14l E. 19th ~t .• C~la M•\" Ca
Cou•I •II of the •!vhf, tllt.. Fnt••tll """ llt~,n. CoulllV 01 Or•n'if, SMtt 01 Jtm1~1d 1Chc.,<1ndl1n. 3501 Wood•vlf est1lt ol lht ConM'•Y•let 111 1n11 1a 111t1 CaUlornla A11t., Lon11 Be.,ch
c:ert11ln •t•I l>'OllHIY loclled In lh• Ccun. OATEO 'M~rdl 13, ttn. lnil bu\1ntU i• be•n11 con11uc•t11 by •n
t\' of Orantt, Sl1lt of C11llforn!•. Otl(•lb· Ras' H Miiier Individual.
td •• l~tlftWl : T••"•le~ee ' Jtm~ll•d ICt>rlranaisn "~Pl:tl Ar Sylvia M. Mille... "'11111 i!alttncM filed wlln th•
•lie Soulhlrfv 316 Itel al Ille We1ter1Y Tttnslt•tf Clerk ol Or1n11t CounTy on M11•cn
Cou"ly
I. 1911.
County 13' Ifft •nll th• Wellrtlv 1' 11e1 ol !ht Pi;blli.hed Ortntt Cooit 0111.,. Piiot Br Bt¥tr1Y J. Maadox ~11u11
Nortnt•IY 100 It•! of tl'lt Wtlltrtv 1n Marcfl 23, 19n ;14.n Clt1k,
teet ol l at J of Tr11et No. 167 In tht Cl·i-c·---------------1
Iv of A"•llelm. Cou,,ty ol O•~"'"· s1Me LEGAL NOTICE P11bll•llf<I 011noe Coest
Me•Cll f, )6, 21, 311, 1~11
F UHi
Oallv P1IO!,
611-11 ol C1lllornl1 I \ per M10 lhereot recerd.
ed In Yo!ume '· Paoe .Hof M~ps in tt>el·---------------· l·----------------
cilffce of !ht Coun!y RICO•dtr cf llld U~1 Coontv. SUPERIOR COURT OF THE LEGAL NOTICE
"••ttl B' STATE OF CALIFOltHIA FOii:
Tne E111erty 1~ fee! ol !llt NDr!hl!'l'lV l'.H5.--C.QUH.'J..-.:..Oll' OllA"IGI.---STATEMENT OF 'ABANOONM'EHT 01'
100 let! ot 1111 Weale•IV lJ~ leet ol lat l N•.•A4!1Sl1 U!i~ 0(' FICTITlOltS
01 Tr1(t No. 162 In rne Cllv or An111elm, HCITICE OF liEA<!IHl'l OF PETITION BUSINESS NAME
---eo.,.,1y_ cl Or1n9e, Sttlt ol Calltor"la as .f'Qa -OROE'R--APPOOU~ING--TISTA 1ht IOl,-•n9 ft':ll!ll h~ve 1b1nd9!'r!!.
Pet NillP lhlP•"lll r~orlltdrl" Volumt 9• MEHTAllY TltUSTEE (BEFORE OfS· 1'1t USI 0 the klillous buslntis ~~me
P•9e 5'I ol MIPI In th• ottlc1 ~· Ille TRIBUflOH) DIVERSIFIED ENT.ERPRISES "t. 13)0 Ccu"IY Recorder of iald Counh. Es!11e of MA.MIGON H. TULANIAN. Lovan Avtnvt, Co1lt Me11, C1t.!orn•1
Sub/Kl lo: c11rt111I l••ti, ca111ninl!, ,0,,. Dt.ce•sed 92616. dlllo~s. 1rs!rkllans, ,,1,rvfllons, ,;~""· NOr1cE IS HEREBY GIVEN' 111~1 The flC1iljou1 buslnes1 n1mt reter.t11 10
rlthlt ol WIY Ind e•umtnti o1 rec:o•d. PAli!ANlZEM F'. lULAN!AN, E~tcvtrl• lbO'le ""110 llllHI Jn Otlrl<JI Counly gn
Bldt or olltrJ t re lnvltH for 1111 prgp.. of J he Witt or Ille aboYt namllll dtc.edent, Febr11••11 I, !911 , 1 .
r rty •nc:I mus! ht In wrlll,.. !Incl mtv be 11111 tiled he•~I" • pelll!Ofl lor •n o•Oer M•t·Olv-EnttrP1 M'S. Inc (Ca1otor"lal,
CHUverPd to tt>e COfl•ttv_,0, Clf 10 Ille 01. •PPOlnlln• tne pelll!OM• as Tri;stee of tl'le lJlD Lovan Avtnue, Cost1 Me>a,
fit t or he~ •llornev. Rltm(or & Ander"°"· Ttsllmtnrarv Trusl 10 fill the vacancy Cellfornle. 1111 Narlh !!roadway, Suitt 204, St nli caustd bY 11\e dKll"tlion of 11\e per50n Tf\11 .1~~1MH was canduc1ed by •
A111, Cttl!C111l• l1nil, ,,.. miy br !lied In de•ltnlled 111 lhe will lo 11ct 11 Tri;itee. CorPOll a
tl'tt olllc• of !flt Clerk of Ille Su11erlor reh>.rence lo ...,,lcl'I r1 madf lar li;rthtr Mac Ol11·En!ero•lse1. Inc. <;curt at 1nvllm, 1fltr Ille nrst oubllc•· p.orllc11l11s, 100 !hat the llmt and plact JMl'llh M. McGlllocu~~'
lia., of thl1 Nollet "'" betClfe !ht m•~lllll of t>~~rlne !hoe Hme fl11 bren se! tCI Apdl Filt _Na.
01 "'" s•I' 7, 1'12, 11 e.'.IO e.m. in !ht couiir1111m 01 Pubi.snea O••"vt Coai! D111y
Ttrm1 •llCI condlllons al s•I•: C•~ 1~ Dr11e1tment No J ot uid tO'"'' l'I ;O'l Mllten 1. '• l•, 1J, lt12
l•Wlul mo11tY of lh• U"Utd Slll"5 of Cl"'c C~t Orli<t WeJI, In 11\.t City cl
Amerlc•: 100. OI !tie 1moun1 bid to llC· Sanl~ Ana, (11!Uc•"I"
<OtnP•nv the o•~• 111C1 "'' b11l•ncP to be D1ttd Ma1cfl 20, 1911.
"110 Upon toiillrm11lon al w it b'I' the WIL LIAM E. St JOHN.
Suoarl0t (ou•I. T a~e•, rrnh. -•l'l!nt CounlY Cltrk ~"" mal"lell•n<• r /penw:1 •nd pre"11Ul')I AUSTI N H. ILLIS '"'
LEGAL NOTrCE
FICTITIOUS BUSINESS
NAME STATEMENT
Jollo'*lno lie•~ 11 <1eing bu1lnen
on l1>111r1nct 1ct~l1D!e to the ourchai.tr SU 'flnrllalh SlrHI ,.,
•h•ll be PfOrtltd 11 at 1"" dltt o1 lhe Les .. ""'"'' C1t\lornl1 tMlt ANE,THESIA HEWPOltT OFFICE,
rtoe:crdlnt o! !lit-tonve111nc•. ThP wller TM: Ulil 114·1211 J~I HctPllel ltd. Suar 413, Ntwl>fl!I
I-hall lurnlil\ buYt• et M'llt1'1 tKpen11 1 Altorn11 for: Ptlltlon1r 8t1cl'I 97660,
$11ndard C•llfornl• L•nd "'f lllt Anoc:ltlklll PuDUst>ed Or11nge Coast OtllY Pilnl, Orlla Elli•bell'I Dr11ge1e!, 39~ Og!e SI.
tiollcv ln1u1111t nur In boYe1 svblect 111 M1rcl'I 11, 24, JO, lt12 11)·1' No. 1. Cos1a M•s•.
llenl. tnc11mbranct1, 1111me1111, risllk·l----------------·I lhll bu,l11t$~ lt bel"O conductPd by""
tfon1. rlqlth ~nd condllfan1 ol •!!Cord •• LEGAL NOTICE lndlvldu111 l bcYt reler•fll lo. lh1 rec:or0!111 cl Ille Della Or1ge,,1
convtyanct 11T1ll be 111 !ht v:1>en•e or NOTICE OI' MARSHA~'S SALE lhlS 1tn1eme111 lll•d wl!n l~t Coun!v l>\lrc~11str or p111dianr1. Ha. c fll ?ft Clerk ot Or11nte Cou~tv on: Me•th l. 19n.
Tl'I, ~ndt11l9ned •PSt l\lfl ff\f rlgl'I! lo WESlE RN BOARD OF AOJUSTE~S. BY Bftvr•IY J . M•ddCK Deputy (QUnly
rel1e_r lrtY and Ill bids. INC .. Pl1ln!I!!. YI, WILLIAM BEHlL.f:Y, Clerk.
01le<1: M11•ch 11l. 197' SR " el 111. ~lend1"'·
V!OLET KASPAREK Bv vlrlur of 11n e~ecullon lssllll'I on Po1bll1/'l.fd Or1nge (Oil!
Maren 9, 1,, 13, XI. 1972 "''"· 00-77 8• Can~ ... ~rcif o• lllt Mire~ 14, 1972 by !he SuPt•lor Ccvrt.
Estf!f Ill fl'lc ltloY•·n•mtd '°"'1lr ~11£:... L.os._A~ .'S.liil!L.. 011:::::---:::;;;;;;-;:;::;;;:;;;;;;;:;-=::::::=+--l ---1 ·~onR'tvafet --l11Uortlla. 11oon • ludlilmtnf Vtt•1ed In • LEGXLNOTl!;E
•1IME1t-& AHDl!RSOH TiYi:ir oi Wesfern Bo11•i:r"J,Adlusfer1. !nc .• 1------------------
ll!J Horth B•oa.tw1y, Sullt-'04 1 C~l/fornl,1 corporal/on, as ludom•nl "11-Sll
llllt• Ane, C•Uf«nl1 '1711 c1edi!Clf 1nd 1gain1t 8111 Bentley. Sr., oli• SUPERIOR COURT OF THE Tt!tphcl,,., 11141 115--lnl . By: Rlcftinf l , Riemer Wltll~m Be11tlfV aka Willflm W. 8t~1i.1· STATE OF CALIFOllHtA FOii.
• alie Wiiiiam W~ster BtnlteY as llld11men• lH!: COUNTY OF ORANGE .. t1ar,..rs ~' Co11Hr¥1I•• arbtCI, 51'10wlnt 1 ""' b1l1nce ol tll.041 •I Ho. A 12405
Publlll'led Oranvt Coest Oa!ly Pllol. •ttuirll'I' due Clll said ludvmtnl on the dote NOTICE OF liEARING OF l"ETITtOH
M1rch 13, 1912 ''' '1 -----;-::::;:-::--:-:-:=:c::::---'-'-.Cj°' lhe lnuance of said t•,cullon. I llav• FDR '°ROBATE OF WILL A"IO FOR l""led 11oon .II !ht rl!lhl. Ill~ Jnd lnte•t•I LETTERS TESTAMENTARY
LEGAL NOTICE al u ld lu0Vme<1I debtor 1,, !hf P•OPP•I¥ I" Eslate ol GEll.il!.lJOE KLEl•J O~rfBI·
---:::::c-::cc:::-c::ccc-,-,----1 '"'"Coon!'!' of Oranpe, Stale of C1litornl1, ed.
HOTICf INVITING BIDI deK•lbtd as !allow•· NOTICE I~ HEREBY C.IYEH thtl
l<"l!OERALLY ASSISTEO PROJECT lot SI. Tr...:! 6111. record BDOI< 119 FRANCIS II , OWYER n~~ lilPd l'lf•t•n a
S>e•lf'll P•OP0'3IS wHt be •«tlllt'O at lhe pages IS lhrougll J1 l11cl11slvr of mlK. petition tor probatt ol wlll and lor lssu~nce
oUlce ol "" 1ecrrt1ry at Counh 5~"1111. m1ps, mo11 comma"ty k"own ••: ot ltllfts lrs11mtn!a•y to P~tJ1;011f•
!Ian Olitrlcl Na, l II 1(1!'4 Elli• Avrni;e tin S•ndCl!.llt OrlYt, CO•Ofll Oel ,,.,,, reltrentt to w~.:t11 11 medt for •u•llle• Save$100 & Double Bonus
King or Queen; Headboard plus
quilled bedsp1ead • 7win or Full:
..
•
lm1lll111 •Od•PSi: P.O. llo~ 1111), Fo1111. C11lllornia, p~•llcul1rs, ano Iha! th• !Im• 2nd P'a(f
l1!n Vtllt¥, (1ll!Clf"i1, t?ICI, o" at brlo•e NOTICE 15 HEREBY GIVEN llill' 011 cl heating !ht Sl mf nas been let for April
the 6tn d•y cl Abril. nn 1t 11 :00 1,m, •• Friday, A11t11 11,.1912, ti ?:00 e'clock PM. n. 1972, "' 9 JO " m .. in th• ca11r1roc"1 at
Whitt> lfmt 1ne1 w!ll bl 11ubllt!y ooenPd 111 5&7 Wes! 18111 St• (!•0,.1 al Oeo1r1men1 No. J ot 'aid court, JI 700
and •t•d In !ht otflte of tht Bo~rd of CourJMovst), City f"Jf (01!0 Mas•, Coontv Civic Cenlt• Or l¥e W~1! In !Mt Cl!r of
OlreclCli 11 lQU4 Ellli Avenue. Fotin!iln of 0•1n11e. St•lf or Calllornl1. ! wilt itl! S1n!~ Ana, Call!otnl•
V1 llev. C•lllor,,la, /Dr· al pi;b!ic IUCllon lo !he t>i9he•I bfddtr. fol OatPd MOrth 21. 1971 POWE~ RE:LI ABILIT) PROJECT cesh In law!UI m~"'' of thr U1111ed s'l•l'I, W. E ST JOl'I N
AT ~11 lhe rt9111, 1111e 11nd lnltrlJ! cl l~ld (ounl• Clrr~
PLANl NO, 1 lvdgmt"I debtor In !~t ebo11e drscrlb'd kOllnody and KennKlr
JOB NO. p7.70 pr('f)frty, or •o mvch lllcrto! 11 m1y be 11!0 Wll1hlr1 Bau!tv1rd. S111!1 501
Bids 1r1 re<iul•ed tor Ille •n11•• work necess1rv 10 ••li•lv s~ld t•ec111lon, with Li» A11oele1, C1Hlornl1 .0017
dt1c•lbed here;n, 1ccruea !11trre1! and costs. Ttl: UIJ) HUnt11v 1·1111
Tiie work Is to bt done •tto•dlno to tllt Oit!f<I ot Costa Me~11. Call!crnle. /.\erct> A1tornev1 fllf• Ptllllon•r
olan1 •nll IPKlllctlIOfli '" 111~ In !lie ,,._ n. ltn. Pu~1h~~a Cr11no~ coa11 OallY
flct of the HCrtl11r11 or lfle Dl•lrltr and OlllARO O. WILKI RSON, Ma•tll 1J, 14 • .JG, 1971
11ld P!1n1 •llCI Jl'e'clllc1tlon1 Me bv Ma•~h•l
rel1rtnce m•d• 1 01rl of !hli no!lce. Mu,,icl11el CoY•I, 0•1n11e County
Plan1, l11ttl!ic1tlo"1 '"" oth•• oroimial H11bor JUdl(iBl Dls!rlct
doc11m1"h m1y be rx1ml11K1 11 tnt ofllce Bv E11na M. Elaer,
of Ille County SenllallOfl Olsl•lcl Na. ! 11 Oe11utv NOTICE" TO CREOllORS l0114~ EIUI ~llfnue, Founllln Valley, B1r,,1rd F. 1(11111 SlJPElllOR COURT 01' THE
Calllor .. 11 (aplfl ol '"• Pll"' •n<f .. lli"lllf'I Allorn1y STATE OF" CALIFORNIA FOR
Sptcllicat!Ofls m1y bt obl•lr.ecl from Ille S11llt S06, GIDr1111r Towtr THE COU NT'!' OF ORANGE
LEGAL NOTICE
Pllo!
JIB n
above...,,,,!lo""" olllct ar 1 tost ol $10.00. t101 Wll•hlre Blvd. H1. A·1201t
Wlllcl'I cos! r, not relundablt ,191,dleis o1 BIYert' Hiiis, C•li~•11i1 f021t f 11at• at GEORGE ROGl!:RS, Dectas:
Whetlle• lht 11l1n1 allCI IPKl!kat!oni arr PuDlfllw<f Ortfl!le Cets! 0111'( Pllol. Pd.
relu1nPd or nol Pl'"' and IPrelllcellons M1rcl'I 21. XI and APrll 6. 1tn 11'·11 NOltCE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo 11\f
wlU be ..,,llf'd 10 o•otPttllve D!Ock,., u 1----------------·lc•lllll1a•• ol lht tbo11e namf'll atcedent
re<iuested, ror 1 ree f"Jf u oo (non.rrtun· LEGAL NOTJCf 1nat all 11t•1ort1 "•"!no cl•lm• •o•lr.st 1111
llablel lo co11t• 11\t cosr al P0,,11te. "''' decPde"' art •t'011lr!'d ta fllf ,,.,m,
All ti lO• mu1t be ..,.,,, In iccordance 11,0 with Ille ne1;r.11~ry vouthft"I. In tM olfl<e
wllh IPle 1111lult1 01 !ht Slalt of NOTtCE OF SALE OF RE•l ol 1"8 clert. of 111, 1bove t11t lt1ed court. M
C:arllOl""I•, wl!h local llWI •PGliciDlt .. ROPERTY AT PRIUATE SALi! lo Pltlf"I 1htm, wit" lne necessary
fhllt!O. Ind IS dl•Kll!<f In '"' P•'9'0••1 No. A·,7'« voucl\fr1, •a '"' 11nd•r1l11tw!d "' C/O Wit·
form, plans and IPKl!lcallonl. In !hi' SuDPrlor Covrl 01 '"e Slate OI llam M. Witco-en. 210 P••k Avtnut. l •·
Ofddtrs •r• htrttiv notlllf'll 11111 CalllClfnla. 10, !hf Cou"l'I' 01 Orll!lle. OYn• Br11cl'I, C1lllllfn!t 976.il , whlch Is 1hc
put111tnl lo P•oYlilOfll cl ll\f Libo• Cbd' In Ille Matltr of the Est~lt .OI Dl•c• al b~1lntn of 11\.e 11nderslgntd In 1111
ol tilt Slate ot C•lllat"l•. the Boerd ol FREEMAN LUSI(, I ll<) known ., maneri OfdMnong to 1ne es!lle cl said
Dlrec1or1 ti CounlY Sa11it~Jlon Olitrlct FREEMAN E. LUSI(, 0Kta$ed. deced•nt, wl!llln !our mon11!1 titer lht •• 1 • 1 __ .. flr11 ovbllctrion of tllll notlte . .. o. ..as •Kt•ta ·~ the pr1Y1j~ng •Me Not;c1 !1 hertbY gl~n 11>11 !he yn.
Cll lltr d1ttn w1oe1 a111>llcablP IO ..,, work drrs0gnt'd will stll 11 Pr!Yate 11le, lo ti\' Ctltd March 1• 1911•
la be dOllt /or lh• !oc:1lll11 In wh ltll 11111 h1ghe•I a..a btit bidder. lllbltct ta con A•tv!h Alkln'o"
work 11 to bf oe•rorm•d !n conipllence 11,ma!io" al said Su<>erlor Coi;rl. "" 0, E •etu•rl• or 111e Wiii
wl!h Secllon 1111 01 !lie Lebor Cnde of '"' ener !he )rd d~Y 01 Ao•il, 1912, ~I tt\e 01, ot the ~hove n~med dCCedtnl
Stile cl C1 lllornl~. i nd I! 15 lllf'<f In lllt lltt cl Gll:AY, JEPP$ON & GORHAM, WILLIAM M. WILCOJCl!H
olflce of the 1ecret••v o! C1111111• s~11ll1· 907s Wilst\lrt eoulev~rd, J>e"lhOUMI Suitt . UO Pirk Av1tH.1t
l!Ofl Ols!rlc! No. I, of Or•n9e County, Bfv"lv Hilli, Ci!ltornl~ 90111 CwlllY cl l t t un• 81t cl!, Ct. lllil
Tl'llt eon!11ct 11 1 F~er111 .t.ld Prolec! Los olnoeltl. s11tr of (4litornl1, 111 !he •t•·7u5
and nor leu 11111" 1111 P•tYlllllng '"'' or rlvM. tltlt •n<f lM~•tst 01 181d ~t~••~e'd A11arn•v !or li•K~lrl•
per dlf"' ••Ct~. II dtltrm1ned by 1ht ~!!ht !•me of d11th end 111111e righ!, tl!•r PvollsPlnl O••'l')C COfl$I 01lly PllM.
621·12 SKr••••Y cl labor I" ~ttO•Ol"c~ wl!h 11!<1 '"° lnltrt•I lt>at lt\t tsllle of said Merci\ t, 16• lJ, XI, l912
O•YlJ·B•tOll Ac1. sh•!l be 111/d lo• e...:h drceiil!<f "'' 1cq11l•t<f bv ooe•1llo11 or 11wl----------------
craf! or !YPf' ti wo•~1r11n nfedtd lo or o!htrwbt. QI/I.ft 11'18" or !" addition to LEGAL NOTICE
...,.,c,.,, 111.f co"l•ett lh•I ct 1ald decftW'd. at tllt t!me 011----------------
Bldde•s °" lllll 1110•~ will hr tfqulrN to dt~th, ln 1nd lO all !Me cerlaln •tll r:irao-5U .. ERIOR COUltT OF THE
comply wllh lhe l>rt•lllt1>t'1 E•tc:llh¥f ,,, ... !l!Utlftl In !he Coon!¥ ol O••rcr. STATE OF CALIFORNIA 11'011
Order Ho, llH6 r11, rf'QUltf'"'lf"!' for $tete o! C1llforni11, parlic11l•rlv described THE COUNTY OF ORA.NGE
blOdtrs Ind COflt•1t!or1 ""°'' '"'' ordtt 1, IOI owa !o-wl! CASE HUl ... 1111 i re e~olMntd In !ht 1p«1flt•!1ons ln't• lm1>roved •tal pr-"' 0-~1"
E•th Dia 111•11 bo' mt11t Oii 1114' P•ODOilll Oll"U~ ... ,retmtn! al Slit ••'fd SUMMONS (MAllRIAGEI
l(lfm f11•nl.,,.,, bv tllt 0111••<1 Ind enc!Os· Ftb•U••Y 71, 19111. bttwetn w1rr111 In re !l>e mar.l19e of Peto!l-r
.., In"" """"I°"' IUOOlll!d bY !ht Dlllrlcl Tvr .... , •nd ll1•DI•• r .......... 15 se:1rrt. MYRTIS ANN HE w M AN •nd
be1tll'l.t Ille t !It ot lllf wort tn<f !hf •'td lltcedtnl, •1 Buvtr. 11tecli'"1 ,,,1 Rt,portllefll JOHN L. NEWMAN, Sil
ntme I nd id!llM1 ol ll'ltl blOOfr will\ no o•l)pflrly In lht Cltv ot NtWllOrl Bel'th. To lhf lltlpol\denl• JOl'ln L. Ntwm•n.
'""' Oisl•'"IUhll•nv m1rk1 11 I• lt>t l'llt (:ouMY of °''""' Sr.It at C1lllo1nl•, Sr., r~110.111y at 'l>e b"-r ta lff 111~1 "" d'icr<brd es· The N '1 ol lot No. ll. lllt Ptlill""t' h11 lilPd • 11tlillo11 (on·
b<d li •tee.WO 1 .. p~per !!""' Any b•d Nr~Nlfl Htlgllts "'f••tl, ctrn!ft9 VOii• rrllff•l!lf You may l•t• a
re<PlYff •llfl lht Kh~11ltd tloil"' 11~ mo•~ cornl'flOlllY knl>Wn 11 • '711 l•111el writ!~ •HflOl!te wl!"I" tnlr!Y dlY\ 111 11\f.
for tKt•CI o! bld1 )ll•H bt rrlu•ntel to llW Pl•ct. N,wpor1 BtoK,., (f'tllfl•"••· dnte lh•t 11'111 s11mmon1 I~ '''""' on you.
blod'' Ul'IOl>ffitd T"m' cf !•It Clih In llY>IUI Mon!'¥ ot II YOO l•ol In 111 • I wr!!tan rr.tporttl
E1c11 b•Odf• mutt bl ll(•n~ 111 tllt '"' unlttd S111e1 on u111llrm1llCW'I cf '311!, w11"1n 111cn '''"'· vour dttavlt "''Y ~
Sl•1e ot C•lllOl"111A Ind 111111111..0 to 0, "'" ce11> end bll•~(' tvld•f'ltf'd llY entt11'11 •nd '"' courl m•Y lfl!tf' • ll/09•
••lorm 1111 _.i. dtO.C"l>iell in •~e cori· not• uci;rl'd b' Mo••••ve or T1v~1 De4'd\mtn1 (O~!l111hl1 ln!ull(livt or ctntr ordc••
Ir«! on Ill~ t1r0f)frly 10 1old, Ttn ""' ttnl al co..c,..11,n1 11lvl11on at l>fOPC'tlY, IPOlllll
It Ol'OCIO\ll IUl•lnltt ol not It" Ill•" •mount bid to be dtl>OlllKI wllt> b d. supnort. tl\ltd.-4111todY, dll!d IUOllO'"!, 11·
tf'll H•ctnl 11 ..... 1 ot "" to!ll bid 1mounl 81<11 Of' Olfffl •o bP 111 Wllliftt ~"" wUI IClflllYI' fffl, (011$. •11(1 tireh olller rt!lt1
11\afl accornPI,,.,. eKI! tile! •~ "'"" tw I" 11f rtre1lvl'O' 1t 'llt ''°''lfld olllc:1 ti '"' 11 m11 bt 1r1111e<1 by tilt coutl, tfll lorm at • bid DM<I Clf" <•ih!f'r'I 01 tlmt 111~r 1111 l!r11 p1.1bloc1tl0fl h11t a! •n<f 11 ycu wl1h h Mtk 1111 1d'l'IC1 ol '" 1t-
O!"llllH cMck PIYlblt !o !ht Otllfkl. btlOft .,.,, of '"''· I0<"41V II lhll m•lltr, YO\f lllovtO do t.o !ht 00ft1f O! Dlr..:tors ot tnt Covn1~ O.!Pd tnlt 1lt1 dtY o! Me•c/'P, ltrl p~mptly 10 11111 yovr "'rl!!tn rtlPlll\lf, II
a..1111itl!i Dl1trlct No. I r•1trvt1 In• JOl-!H O. LVSK 1n0 1ny, m1y Dt filed on llm1,
... lo ·~!l'CI •"Y Of •11 Old\ .,,,, IQ Wll,LIAM o, LUSK . bttl'd Dec. 30. 1111,
..... at!Y or •II it't"fll\,, ,,~, r:.-ttUIOI'' of the wm fSEAl.J
a Y OROER (If f!f[ • 01 f.1111 OfCftl~nt. Vll!tl.-m f! $1 Jolln, (ltl'l
IOAlllO Oit DIRf.CtORS. SRAY, JIPPSON & GOll:HAM flv JOll" -Mc8•1M, Of'pyty
(0U'6 TY ~A"l lTATIOW •vi VIUor A. oorh•M PliRK,lL AHO 'llfTY
DtllRlCT HO. l. tffS WW""".,,,.._ olfll (twit Ct11ltr Off'l'I WHl
Of O!•..,. '°"""'· C.t IDn1!1 lt¥"1T Hllllo Clllfofl'll• 1~11 S.1111 Anl, C1trl. t21tl J. Wt~N' ,.,.,...,ti... T1h nn1 CResh•llw WIU Ttl (114) ..... M, s.cr.t••' Allontt'I'• ,.,. 1.-auttr1 Attor11t,1 ,.,. Pttlllolttl' ~ Or.,,.. (1N111 0.llY Piiot, ~llllfl.ntll O•llltl C~d 01nv ,HOI, P11bUJ.Md Dr"lllft Cottt 01111 P#Lo!,
-U. -. In? ,...,, ~"'" ~ ,.._,, """' o, lj, 2' lO. 101' ,,,_,,
•
SAN TA ANA and
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
16131 Horbor Blvd.
' ol Edi1191rl N••I to Zodv"1
P~o11e r 119-45 70
~~~
ANAHEIM
1811 We it Lincoln Avenue
lelwtf" Eucli.d •nd 8roo~h11rit A "t "lltl
J111t .·;,,of F1d M•1t
Phone : 776·2590
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ORANGE
720 No. Tustin Avt.
O nt t tot.li: South o, Cofll111
111111 to MJt.h,•1'1 Mtikttl
Phone: 611·5102
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$Jl8_,_
The Queen
M11trU•1nd 101 Sprlllf
f11th1dH Orttlo-P1k •nd Ooubfe &cnu1
0
LA KEWOOD
4433,J:ondlewoad Avenue
Condlewood Shops
Phon1: 6)4·~1 ]4
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BEA ANDERSON, EDITOR
TllvrP.''' M1rch iJ. 1'11 1"111 ti
Ann Landers
Doctor
Needs
C eckup
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am so
furious I don't kn ow \Vhat to do. I need
your help. Last y,·eekend we had a family
reunion . The hou se was full of relatives
and I was busy in the kitchen a good bit
of the time.
A 17-ycar-old nephe\v seen1ed to be
hanging around our a-year-old daughter. I
didn't give it much thought until later in
the day when they both were missing. I
started to check the rooms. Well, I
caught the boy "playing doctor" with our
little girl.
She had all of her clothes off and he
\vas "cxa1nining her." I expressed my
anger in un1ni stn kable language. \Vhat
burned me .UP mo1·e than allylhlng \Vas
hi c-nsual attitude. I \Vas just messing
around," he said. -~\Vhat are you so ex-
cited about ?''
l·Ie asked me to do hlm a favor and not
mention the matter to his mother. So far
I haven't said anything to anyone. My
husband would thrash the boy within an
inch of his life if he knew. I don 't kno\v
"'}lat his ov:n father \\'OUld do. Am 1 mak-
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PARENTHOOD RE-PAIRED
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Lots of _good
I
.:.-
11t 11 potluck me11ns loh
of good cooks in the group . Sampling
, at a PWP picnic are Al ice Hayes I lef~)
and J11n Adams !right) with a gu est.
By JO QI.SON
Of Ille Delly f'll91 11111 _,
•·1 never thought this would happen to
me."
These possibly are the first \''ords or nil
newly divorced or \\'ldo1\·ed persons 111-
t('nding thcir first 1neeting of Parents
\VHhout Partners in so1ne 550 locutions
throughout the Unitrd Stntc.s nnd Ctlnadn.
But to bring the1n lo Pnrrnls \VHhout
Partne.rs, divorce or the drnth or a
spo1.i'S?i!<! reality nnd they n1usl tnke up
the challenge of going on by thentst'h't'S.
Parents \Vilhout Prirtners. the
organization dedicated lo helping single
parents raise their t•hild ren and find a
niche for lhe1nscl\'es in tht' "niarricd
\Vorld.'' cclebrnted il.!i 15th anni1·crs111·y
this week.
lt fir st 1rt1s conct•ired \\'hen l\\O Nl'\Y
having .both 1nnle ond fl•1nalc 11dult corn-
punion:;hip. •
l'\VP prClvldes both 1uen and won1 e11 11
vhu:e to co by then1sclves thnt, Is In-
expen sive, and for the '''onien. n good
\\'lly 10 tntk 10 n1cn \\•l1hout dntin,g
jll'('SSUl'l',
Son1r t•on1c Occ1111s1' they urc tired or tho
"bar route" nod \1•1111l 11101't' ln~lllng relt1·
~1onshi1is.
P\\'P gtvl'S 110111e11 n l·hanct' to learn to
rel:1le to n1C'11 ngc1u1 11•ilhou1 being "up
tight" :1ho111 it . ~lrs. Phel1>S snid.
Ne\\' In tht• Ornn ).ll' Consl Chnplt•r Ls
\'oung St'!, n subgrou p for 1nen1bt~rs in
lht•i r 2Us anti JOs.
This 1\'as slarlt'll scvt•ral nionths aµ;u by
l\ll's. L.v11n Bll'kl't , \rho ho1:ted a JXJ!luck
11inu1·r tu g1•t 1hings slartl'd ..
-Yorke~i f<}f;c!St1~nd-,J:intui-O.\V.N-J\(;.'l:l.\i.l'.l'.J.l1>•'~' -----------1
Btrnard, nict on a J\lel',o York b e a c h ''111 a1g S..:I !lll'1'1ht•t'S pla n theii· O\\'ll ac·
\vhere lheir children \\'ere pl11ying. a1ul 1il'i!il1S in addition to 1'(•~ular PWP
discus~ecl the need for singlt• p:u·c11ts to c\'t•nts, nnd 1hpst• llHl,Y include bicycle
gel together to talk O\'er n111!u11I pro\)-rides, sn1111• trips, housl' p u r Ii es ,
Jenis. 1list·11ssH1ns :11111 p:1 rti1·s \1•it h spt•cial
NE\\' El\A fh(•tnl's. Souu• of tht' :it·tivHics Include the
t•hildrC'll. 1'hcy pl;iced an advcrtise1nc11t in a Nt'I\'
''ork ne\\'Sl>aper late the fol\011•ir1i: "If ,l'Oll .~ugges1 so n1t·t hlng you'd better
win ter. and on March 21 .of the next y1•11r. bt• 11·illini;:: to pl;1 11 it." ~!rs. Phelps
25 persons g.-a!!lh""-l>LJl!LILJJlllli"-'"""'"-"-'---'""""-'"'"'~"l~-----~----------:-1
Greenwi ch Village to ushl•r in ;i Ul'\1 era
for single parents.
Fro1n the beginning, tht> goa ls or !'\\'!'
have been to provide singll' 1>11J'i.'11ls 11·it h
an opportunity to shore ideas, hc11r pro-
fessional speakers and lea rn 1vays ur
tlealing n1orc t•ffcclh'ely \l'ilh ~heir
.children.
People-.co111c to the grou11 for diffl•rcnt
reasons, said . !\1ar·\c:nc !'helps, 11
l'rt•:;ident of the OranAe Coast Chnptcr
is l\t•n l IHfolt'll, t·ha ir1nan or S.1n1a Ana
I li:.:h S1·hool's business C(hlcation dcpart-
nu·nt.
A nirn1l)l•r sint't' 19G.'>, I lngcn said,
"I've found lhnt l'\'e niel the greatest
bunl'h of people. It's Jik l,! n second fan1lly,
'·Thl' organ ization. hl.•ini:: devoted to
children. !'it'l'\'t'~ a very 1lcrinitc need lo
this conlrnunity.·•~ SJXlkcs1nan for Orange <;oast Cha1\lt'r 2H', •
Jfc IITT-i;cSt chnpfer-In 'Or;iiig(."t:OliillY~ -~r-smrin-tt'ti,~1-c11nrrrC'r; hC'nc1rrrt-t>y--
"\Von1l'n 1vant chilttrctl 's acti vities a111I
men want to participate in social ac-
tivities,·• she saitl. "A fc1v nicn arc in-
terested because of lheir children. l\len
mostl y are interested in the soc ial aspect
and sonic \11ant to 1n:irry."
The common dcno1ninator fol' all n1c1n-
bers is ht.rt .
\\'.illin1n H. C:r11v1lo11 , has a n1uch s1nnlle r
111cn1bt•r:-hi 11 1h;1n i!s 111011\er chn pl1·r.'1he
Orange Coast ('hnplrr .. 111d drn1vs inainly
frotn San C.:h•111t•111c. l~I Toro , l.a~una
Uench , San J uan Cn pislrano and IJan a
I 'oint.
1'his c·haplrr h:1s a 1najorily rif
mcn1~icr.'i 11.4. 1 ~e 30-60 nge bracket. bul
!ht• uHif'crs feel th111 !here ;ire n1any
"E\'eryone has his O\\'n !itory. The ~inglt• pnrcnt s in 1hc art'n In their 20s 1v lm
~~,_Jl__,.j~-----------:------------------------.==================::;----'!"~'w~e;r~o1~1e~s;a~r~e~m:;;;;o;re;--;h~u1~·1~."i,;slp1•:,;,•u~<~le~u;·--""llllJ-"'1lciJLJirlllJ1Jill!lnl>~·£hip>------+-I :.0 "Part of the meetings are spent lislt'nin,C! SAYF; !\1Altlt lAGI~
• Ing a mistake by keeping this to myself?
Please give me some ad.vice, Ann. I'm
very upset. -ST. LOUIS DILEMMA
DEAR Oll.Ef\.tMA: \\'hen two little kid!
''play doctor" it's nothing to become
alanned about -but a 17-year-old boy is
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-.. no Ilfili"kla.Y.OU !!lioiilifOotWo Uiffigs.--_-~
First, explain to your little girl that her
body is private and she should not allow
anybody ro take liberties with it. Instruct
her to tell you at once if anyone tries.
Seco nd , tell the boy's mother "'hat oc·--\
curred. If be is making a practice of
"messing around" with little girls bis
parents should take him for psychological
testing and treatment if It Is indicated.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : How do you
tell someone you love that a personality
trait or his drives people up the wall ?
Jin1 is so slo1v in conversation that it
takes tretnentlous self control to keep
from shrieking. ''For Lord 's sake hurry
up and get to the point!" You kno'v what
he is going to say long before he says it.
Friends and 1 i;la\ives suffer in silence.
Their discomfort is apparent to everyone
but Jim.
Employers are not so con)passionate.
Ji m just lost his seventh job in four yea rs
and he is very depressed. He has no con-
cept of how he comes across to others. in
spite of the hints. m considers himself
methodic~I and blames the job losses on
"people 'Who are out to gel him."
Th is trait is ruin ing our lives and I'm
so worried I'm sick. I can't bear to hurt
his pride by telling him he's so slow he
irritates people beyond belief and th at on-
ly friend s and relatives vdll put up with
it. -SIGN ME ILL AND TIRED
BECAUSE l'M BOTH
DEAR ILL ANIJ TIRED: For th e love
of heaven TELL llll\1 in plain language
exactly what you have told me. Your
silence is hurlin g him worse th an
anyt~ing you might say. Perhaps he can·
not conquer the habit completely, but be
11hould bt told so be can go to work on It.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : There are
several girls in our family and we all
have children under three years of age.
\Viii you please settle something? Shoul~
"''e leave porcelain figurines, crystal
ashtrays and fragile knickknacks within
reach of busy little hand s and try to
teach the children not to touch? Or is it
better to put nice things away until the
children are older? -P A.rwt .
DE.' R P.A.l\t.: \\lbea my own daughter
wa:,-soddler I never pat anylhing out of
her b. 1 ta11gbt her not to touch them.
1t1argo a5 trained Mr three children the
same way. The only lmf)Orfant lo ss I ever
suffered was a crack In a Dorothy
Doughty figurine -hy · a 55-year-old
guest from Seallle.
Are drugs O.K. if you learn how to con·
trol them? Can they ~ of help? The
ans"·ers are In Ann Landers' new booklet
"Straight Dope on Drugs." Jo'or each
booklet ordered send a doll ar bill. plus a
J&ng, seU.addresscd. 11tamped envelope.
(16c postage ), lo AM Landera, Box 3341. Chicago, Ill . !06$4.
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Ther e was something for everyone at th\
PWP "picn ic. At left, Dawn Feldman
tak es a nos e div e on the slide .
At -right, Bill Holt leads a
class in kite coristruction.
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Dolly Pilot
Photos by
LH P1yne
to them talk. They !let.m to need to get it .
out, to find out that they're not alo11!":
"Divorce really changes lJCople. So1ne
men are .hurt so bad they are bitter and
you really can't relate to them.·•
GIRL FRIENDS
\Vomen find girl fri cn<ls with \\'hon1
they can .shop. exchange baby-sifting an<l
redl'Cs-andlOke~-'-nTICl-male rrie.nds-to ctl1J·
on for emergency plurnbing or car
repairs, afid the children benefit fro1n
. .. ' "":>
"There \5 un increasing number of peo.-
p\e from new 111·eas like ~1ission Viejo
\l'ho thought pcrha11s a new home would
sa\'e lhcir rnurriage," !'lllifl ~1arge ~1 iller,
a pas! pl'csidcnt. . "hul the hea vier
ffna;ict·s tea r il'ap11 rl .'' --.....
She finds 1hur the ;1_1lc r:inge has movetl
do~!J_sintt sh~buc11 il.lC-.il 01c(J'lbJ.:.r Qt Ille
South Co11~t C:h;ipl er.
(See Jl\\'P, Pdge 20}
18 OAJLV PILOT
All She
1
By LAURIE KASPER
Of tM D1llJ "ltifl $tttt
' "I 140rked •ii my hfe.
never got rich a! Jt but I'm
rich In IJ>Jr1t."
And although Nelhe Sk1lt1,
77, jusf retired from an active
performing caree r. sht still is
quite spirited,
She wal ks down the hall at
Bethel Towers, a Costa l\1esa
apartment b u i I d i n g for
retirees. and compla ins that it
is too quiet. Although "]O\'I'
abound:ii" at !he place. she
would hke to liven it up a bi!.
"f thi nk aging is one of the
mos! deplora ble stages in
life." She advi ses. "To keep
from aging just keep busy "
The Nellie Skiles Co mbo was
booked for da nces in the
larger Palm Springs trailer
parks up through l\1ay but she
retired early because she
could not recupera te from a
bout 14'1th the nu.
•~---'_c'Wruhen y.ou_get up toJhe_top
Qf the ladder. that's the time
tG rel ire." she said. But most
people wa it un til they fall to
the bottom .
MUSICAL LIFE
Music was. and s!1ll 1s. an
important part of J\trs. Skil es'
life.
She has a small piano in the
living room of her tiny apart-
ment and she 's been asked to
leave the door optn so
ne ighbors can hear her pl.1y.
She also pla ys for soci al
events at the retirement co m-
plex and someti mes pairs up
wilh an organist who also is a
resident there.
She met her husband. Bob,
who was known as the
originator of the C.Osta J\tesa
fi sh fry and carnival. in an
orchestra pit playing the piano
for silent pictures in a sm all
N,ehraska town. .
They had one of the first
MOVED HERE
Needs
busi ness but Mrs. Skiles said
!hey still play the guitar and
trumpet.
Their youngP.r son, Bill,
performed wit h them In srhool
assemblies. Son1e of th e
routines be uses now came
from his ffllher who played
Is
homem ade Instruments I n
vaudeville . '
1'-1r. and Mrs. ~Idles moved
to the desert 16 'fears ago bu t
they returned to the coast
e1ch su mmer. "Really this
was my home all the time,"
llhe said .
Her husband died in 1965
just four hou rs after pll1ying a
dance. Mrs. Skil es sto pped for
a month and then started out
on her own.
' Allhough no\v retired. she
sUll is keeping ·busy. She
played for a golden wedd ing
anniversary soon a1ter her
retirement :ind expect ~ to do
more soci al e\'ents.
But .she a!so has a new cam-
paign .
She bel1ere.s developmenis
for retired people. are oftl!n
un"'ant ed in a city because
Music
O n a day
long gone ,
the Skile•
Fomily Ban d
takes a
bre ak by tho
roo dsi de
l--1C'l--du1in9 a
they are normally sponsored
by a religious G"roup "'hich is
tax.free .
She said the r e 1 i g 1 o u s
organizations wa nt to pay the
go\ ernment. ··r1n going to bP. a fig hte r
for that." she said.
Tex as tou r.
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The fa mily moved here in
1939 to join their two older
sons who had b eco me
me mbers of Fred Waring's
band , the PeMsylvanians. To-
day. both sOn~~~n an oth::_ --· ------~ ___ , -·------
Hughes Didn't
Support Jane
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NEW YORK . I AP I
Actress Jane Russell sayl!i
,_ __ _..H,,,o,,w,.,ard Hughe s did not design
that now f1mou1 brassiere 1he
wore in "The Outlaw." the
film that made her a llt11:r.
quaintances with th e wea lthy
industrialist. They were:
Ann F'-ranci~e-went-wilh
Hughes to a Loi;; Angeles club.
"He asked the orchestra
"Howard hirtd me for 'The leader to pl ay a waltz liO we
Outlaw' without ever seeing could dance. It was a jazz
me in person or t1lklng lo joint, but they played the
me,'' Miss Rus~ell said in the w~tz and we danced ." __ April j ssu! of j.,~~ies'_ Home -· J ournal. fetta--Yoiiftf: .. Howard
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Liberated View
Eyes Love Luci
NE\V YORK tAP I -Luci screening tests for \1olunteers
.Johnscin Nugent , daughter of for \1ision. . -
former PrP.sident Lyndon B. She said she had been a poor
Johnson. be I i e v es that student in gra mmar and high
~v.·ome!Ls liberatiqn 1s a ~good school until shP. lea rned that
.thi ng for other wo.D'1en , Red~ her problem was v is u a I ,
book magazine said. although her vision tested 20-
"I think the role of v.'omen 20.
will chan ge." ~1 rs. Nugen l "I \vas incapable of using
was quoted as having said, both P.yes togethe r nr interpret
"and that women not suited visual infor mation,'' she sa id.
for marriage or child rearing "As a result I wa s belligerent,
May Da te
Sel ected
ti.Ir and ~lr.s. R E \\\·ma;-i
nf Cost;i ~fesa ha \'f' ;i nnnl1nced
the engagrmenl of t he 1 r
daughter. r;iroiyn \\'~'ITI<IO lo
Jerry y,r Pickle. snn nf Marolrl
A. Pic kle of Ptrn Ri\er'a an rl
l-.1 r~. i\·largaret f O\l'ler of
Whill1er.
The future br1de is a
graduate of Estancia High
School and attended Orange
Coast Collece.
Her fian re 1~ a graduate nf
t;CI v.•here lie is studying for
his masters. degree.
•
jewe ls by jose~h
sea rc hes for iewe!J
Co>1v1r1 1111w111ttd 11w11,., tt llftlft .. l-
111 Cllfl lly 1111 le I flrlft ""-H -.,IN fll k"""led11, ur~tr1l11. •11d l11t11rlfy -, t•Aln Vf• c•rtful 1v1lu1IJ111 t i ,.
drr\'1 mtrkfl vt lue;
Wt wm be 1•e11ed If •~•m1111 )'fUr
11m1 11>11 1dvi11 t"•rdl"t llltlr di•
jlOllt
Hughes. the e I u s iv e was an ardent pur!uer. But
billionaire who made his there was no r o m a n c e
fo~t~rte-~Y--manufacturing-~bet"«'e!rr iis~-HC'Wi'si'ft good -
m1n1ng bits. was also a . . . . . pioneer aviator and film pro-t ompany from my viewpoint
ducer. because he decided what lo do
wj]! no!__ be outca§!.s_ as they ~sentful and ~~appy. __ --So utl.. C 11e 1f Pl111 1·
ha ve been in the past. Afte: an eye do cl o r 9,;,+01,111.., 5111 Diige Fwy.
JOAN GRUNSKY "But I ha ppen to P.nJOY im-prescribed glasses and ex-Coit• Me11 540·9066
menselv IM!ing female . 'and 1 erc1ses .. her er~des Improved ~~~~~~~~~~~
They 1"1ll exchaoge vov.·s
i1ay 6 in the Wymans' home.
Miss Russell said s h e and ~·hen to do 1t .. , My ma·
"might as well ge t something jor mmory of Howard is tha t
sll'aight" and that Hughes
~-· ·i 1ke"1>eing-a \\1fP.~and faisfng-'""a~~ Cid he.r life. . . · 1ff""'i;iii•;o;;;;;;;,_;;o;;;;;;._;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;,_;;;;;;;;;;:~-;;i;;ii;;;.i;ii -~
C I children. I lo \'e to do things When a person ~ hfe l.!i OU p e outside my home too. but not ch.anged as dra~at1ca11r as NEWPORT
at the expense of my family.'' n:iine was,-you c.an t sa~. Well 84-4.tc1zJ~ . . I m free. You Jllst can t \1•alk (:f[;; ·
tl1rs Nugent. 24. \Yas in· av.•av from it and not do FASFUC CENTER
WI· 11 Wed t~rview~ in Aus tin. where she anyihing about it."
"never designed the metal bra he was terribly possessive
I wore in tha t picture." about everything.''
Other_ actresses also recall· Mitzi Ga ynor : "Howard was
ed for ~e magazine their ac-always kind with gifts, and
often he used lo fly me and
my mother from one city to
another just to take us to din-
ner."
Joan El izabeth Grunsky of
La Jolla and Lynn Evans
Parker of San Diego will ex-
change vow.!i during June 17
wedding ceremonies in La
Jolla Presbyterian Church.
The bridegroom-elect is the
hves. with her h u s b a n d_. Mrs. Nugent said shP. ha5
Patrick J . Nugen t. and their ~en espP.ciall y plea sed that in KN ITS
ch ildre_n. Patric~ Lyndon , 4. the last few years her re la·
and Nicole ti.1ar1e. 2. tion.!ihip has im p~ed with
Besides attending an her sister. Lynda ~fd Robb. / ARE
English cla ss three da ys a , "f or many years we had a1
week at the University of Tex-very c om pet i t i v e re!a-,
as. Mrs. Nugent drives fre-tionship," Mrs. Nugent said. TI M EL Es s que ntly to a schonl near "When we were first in the
Johnson City. 60 miles i:iway. \Vhile House w~ began to
"'here she ad mini.!ilers visua l believe our o"'" publicit y."
Terry Moore: "I'll ne ver
forget the time Howard and I
were drivi ng in Glendale when
the car ahead of us hit a dog
and kepi goin1. H ow a rd
lllopped and ordered me to
telephone a v e te ri n ar y
emergency service. Then he
sat in the street, holding the
ble~~ina:. injured dog in h.ls lap
son of Mrs. Nad.vne Parker of ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,1 Newport Beach and Evans G. r: Fullerton Open Sun., 12·5 p.m. Learn to sew them TODAY
.The
start
of I
perfe c t
S pr ing
Wardro be .
A select io n
or many.
From SJ 0.99
to. Sl9.99
, .... l ... llf .. ......,. C111h1r ·--or..,. Jlltu ~"I C.il1r
Off#M 0f't'l't "'""' ~ ,., ... Cllfl MtM
'" PIM A,,., -·-T .. Cl'J
J $1111111911 .... -~·" .. °""fl .. _
Ida Lupino: On her 16th
birthday. Hughes gave her the
pre.sent she 1sked for. "Well. I
got th e finest pair o f
b!n001lars anyone ever o w."
Parker of Torrance. ThP.
future bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Grunsky
of La Jolla.
The betrothed will graduate
from San Diego State C.Ollege
in June. The bride-elect is a
graduate of C.Orona de! Mar
High School Her fiance is a
araduate of NewPo rt Harbor
High School.
EASTER GARDS
l 11t1r •••• Sprlflt •• , 11cit1171 1>1t w itl.. (t r91 1 11G pt rty 9e-eG, ''•"' .a,..,,,;,,~! G•••* 11 l1(1i1 11 of t ilh , +1 11! 1+'-'lf•d 1 11i!l'l1!1.
pett1rv bu11 11i11, r11i9 iou1 J1w1!ry 1119 r.ol1rful r.1 111111 11rr1119•·
l'llt llh,
sa a's
CARDS e GIFTS e CANDLES e JEWELRY
t04t Atl•ftN A ...... M .. Aell•
M11tl"lf'H .._h -t6 .. 0l I 1 -o.lly 1 O·•· ,..,,., '"'' w,., -••11t1•1Mt"tc•rf -""'"'' ro,..,
Half
Wow l
Whot a
selection
of pretty
ha!f·slie
dreue1.
Many are
budget mir:ded,
All are car,..
fully selected
to make you
look 1i1e1
1mall•r on
Ecr1tt r morning .
Co(Y'l1, choose
yours.
from $20
i
I
•
'
'
-·: ·y··
\ £{[a_ Ore,.; .. sho wn typical of our ttock
Nor's HALF-SJZE SHOP
I 1805 NEWPORT BLyD.
COSTA MISA f l/.J Ilk. H. 11th''·'
84 HUNTINGTON CENTER
HUNTINGTON l lACH
I N11t '' le'ker lr11. furllll}lr• I
1.1111 U' CIANOl"Alllt MAL\ llUll J l.TON
[
m BE
i
•
NOW YOU CAN MAKE TWO OUTFITS IN LESS TIME THAN IT NORM.t.LLY
T.t.KIS YOU TO Ml.KE ONE. LEARN .t.LL OF THE El.SY KNIT S'EWING TECH·
NIQUES FROM OUR TRAINED & LICENSED NEWPORT S·T·R·E·T·C·H & srw
TEACHERS.
JOIN THE THOUS.t.NDS OF WOMEN THROUGHOUT THE COUNTRY WHO
HI.YE LEARNED THIS SUCCESSFUL METHOD OF SEWING WITH KNITS TO
CREATE HIGHLY STYLED FASHIONS, INEXPENSIVELY.
• IT'S FUN & EXCITING
• IT'S SO PERSONALLY SATISFYING
•"IT'S EASY & INEXPENSIVE •'
KNIT SEWING CLASSES -ENROLL NOW
'"E·PAID AIG ISTRATION RE9UIRED
I ASIC TICHN19U !
2 HR. CLASSES EACH 'WllK
FOR I Wll KS SI S.00
fltrl! 6 Thlo'rtd•r Altt •ft(I011
Atr!I '' Trturtd•Y l v•"l11g
April 11. Tutsdly Mern1119 ........ .
411'!1 n. Tu111•y 1 vt"1111 . . .. A~rH lG, Trtttridty Mttrnl11t .,.,.,,,
At rU 11. M&"'lll Y Mtr11l1111
TEIN CLASS!S
,,~J 00
7:11(1.t ·ot
u .&c-n :DO
r;oo-1.00
•·OO·lf &II
t :>O·ll1l0
FOUR 2 HA. CL.ASSIS -sa.oo
Aprn J, Mttndty A111rn01tr1 . J:l'I -J::IO
.t.rrll !J. Tu1•d1y Allt r-n l :ll).l:JO
SWIM SUITS
TWO 2 HR. CLASSES -S4.00
411•11 '· 7h11rsd1y l vtn•11t 11JO.t1J11 April 11, M11M1y Mttrnl"t t;U-ll:U
NIW IDIAS
lllYI Cl.ASSIS -SI0.00
April 1" '4tt111t1d1y I Vtlllllt , ';M , JIM
CHILDREN'S WI.All
TH Aii 2·Hlt:. Cl.ASSIS -S6
St1ttrltw1tr • Hlthl Wttr • Ortuy
•11ril '), Mtt>1dtJ. f vt11l119 .,, ...... J :lf.t ,!I
AJrl! U. t 1rt1 1y MO'l'!l"t ........ ·; t :»-ll r.JO
MEN'S ATI IRI
SIX 2·H•. CLA SSES -Sl J.oo
,.,,,. Or111 Shl"1, Jltkll1, N~•tl11
A11r•I lJ, TllunClty 1 •1111111 ..... .. l:)&.t ,Jt
LI NGIRI (
111'11 2·HR. CLASSIS -S10.00
A11rH U. Thlo'rJdlY Mttr1'l11t t :J0.11:)!1 4frll 11, WMn1M1y l vtnl111 J:•t:M
MI N'S PANTS
TWO 2·Hll!. CLASSIS -Sl.00
A1,1r ll, Trt11r1111y l v1111n1 1;Mot :)t
FREE DIMONSTRATION-SATURDAY . 1:0.0 P.M. llSYP
CHILDREN'S IATHING SUITS
Wtstcliff Or. Cor,,tr
Mel'l.•TllUfl t f.lft. le 11 , Ill.
•11 4 S11. J '·"' lfl • ''"'
'
Irvine (Next to Coco's)
l'H ONI 641•S120 '
H
A
a l c
le
y
Be
PAT
s
T
Mr
Steff
have
ment
wedd
daug
and
1'-1 is
gr a du
High
son
West
Clem
Califo
Whitt'
'B
A
It
Amer
24. at
and
from
new 1
John
hall .
The
event
p.m. i
Conve
Fu nds
school
'
Frida
T
Merio
their
-.
Happening to Offer Ba sket of Fun
An Easter l·lappening \Vi'th the L.adybugs will raise
a little ;'lettuce " for Children's Hospital of Orange
County \Vedn esday, March 29, in the Fountain Val-
ley Co mmunity Ce nter. The guild-sponsored salad
luncheon and card and game party will begin at
. JO a.m. and tickets are $2.50. Ready for the fi rst
deal are (left to right) the Mmes. David Silno, Mar-
vin Adler and Ed Just.
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Capricorn: Stress Versatility
I
FRIDAY
MARCH 24
By SYDN~Y OMARR
ARIES tMarch 21-April 19 \:
Be ready fOr change, travtl
and a variety of experiences, • especially those involving the
opposite sex. You will be
popular. Publici(y .-will ac-
Judgment. intuition are on do anything in lukewarm man-
target. Take initiative. Stress ner. Go all the way -or
i ndependence, originality. nothing. If enthusiastic. you
CreAtive endeavor~ now are attract impartant ally. Leo is
likely lo succ~ed. Act ac-involved . B_ring forth creative
company your actions. Stre·ss cord'!ngly. Make new starts in resources.
creativity. Imprint your own 'new directions. We I co m e .CAPRICOR N (Dec. 22-Jan.
styles. heal!hy challenge. 19 ): What was obscured can
TAURUS (April 20-May 20!: VffiGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): be vie wed now with greater
You are able to feel secure. Work in conjunction with clarity. You may feel you are
You have solid foundation as special group, organization. drawn in two di rec t ion s
Pine for special ra d i o , simultaneously. Get second frame of reference. There is
. B television a pp e a r a n c e s . wind . Accept suggestion from
opdposition. ut Y?1" c5ao 1m1. eehtt Charitable enterprise can be one born under Cancer Money an overcome 1 • po 1g II 'ded b ff t · · £enters • on. completinn --or gre~ Y ai -~ iour_ e_or !:.·.....lS...invoJved .-. - -. . ..,.. . .--""'Pfsces person figures pr'ofu-transaction 1nvolv1ng land. inently. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
•
DAI LY PILOT l 9
ay sa e.
-y.
20%off
all Gaymode"panty hose.
Fantastic fit. That's what
you get with Gaymode. And
super savings. loo. Choose
from run-resist nylon
including nude heel, subtls
shaper light control or all
gheer styles. Pr oportioned s izes.
home. L\BRA (Sept. 2.1·0ct 22 ): 18): Lie low. Do more hstl!!n·
~r-11Nl--+May--2-1-Ju~t:-----Spotlighl on--fril!!nd~desires:-1"g than-talking-.-lf-you-.l-----l-----203 of. f •. ------So · t t · h be observe, yoo also I ' a r n . _ Visi ts are featured. Neighbors, n:ie impor. an w1s es can Permit mate or c Io s e
close· relatives enter picture. "fulfilled. Jncome through oc-s:,:iate tti' take initiative. • ·1r1's br·1efs or bl~s. -
PATRICIA STEFFENSEN
Steffen sens
Tell Troth
Mr. and Mrs. Donald D.
Finish one task at a time. cupational efforts is accented.
Old · d' ·d I ·d nse of humor is necessary. Being too anxious now could er 1n 1v1 ua can prov1 e
d · d H d Then what appears a setback cause mi nor setback. Key is to a ~ice -a n . su pport. ee could boomerang in
be fl exible":" but thordigh. voice o~ experi ence. If you do, favor. your
Check messages in connection you gain.
withi>roposed-trip. --.SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): PISCES (Feb. 19-March ·20 ):-
. Ambitions should be analyzed. Keep healt~ re~lutions. AVoid "'
CANC.ER (June_ 21 -July 22 ). You will get what you request. excess. Ma1nta1n steady pace. ACX'~nt rs on pa~1ng and col-Key is to be sure you know _ Q_et togethy _on social basis l~t1~g: You acquire va luables. what you need. One in authori-with work associate. Share ~ey . '~ to protect them. Make ty will be a close observer. knowledge. Cooperativl!! at-~nqu1 r~es .. Do some per5?nal Accept responsibility. Rewards titude is essential. Some pro-
1nvesl1gat1ng. Be anal~t1cal. will be great. Act in confident cedures may be outmoded.
Put . tog~ther ~uzzle p1e<;es. manner. IF TODAY IS y 0 v R F~sc1nat1ng picture w i 11 SAG IITARIUS (Nov. 22· mDAY you appreciate
e erge, Dec. 21): Obtain valid hint the ts, theater. Your own
11..EO (July 23-Aug'. 22l: from Scorpio message. Don't voice s resonant, unusual.
Steffen sen of San Clemente1 __________________________ _, ______ _
have announced the cngage-
menl and September garden
wedding plans of l h e i r
daughter Patricia Steffensen
and Da vid \V estgarth.
Miss Steffensen is a
graduate of Sa n Clenlcnte
High Sc hool. Her fiance is !he
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ken
Westgarth, also of S an
Clemente. and a graduate of
California ~ligh School in
\\'hil lier.
'Bye Bye, Miss
American Pie'
Jt will rn: .:·by~~ye ~1iss
American Pie Fr1 1arch
24 at 8 pm. wh · others and daughters vi<'Y' fa shions
from th e 40s. f>Os and 60s and
new loo ks for the 70s in the St.
J ohn th e Baptist School socia l
hal l.
The ~uxiliary - sponsored
event will feature dessert at 7
p.m. in the Sisters of Mercy
Convent adjoining the school.
Funds raised will go to a
school project.
Puppet Show!
Friday, March 24 thru
Tuesday, March 28.
free on the mall
Th e famous MjtcheH
Marionettes present ont of
•heir fa sci nating shows for
East er , Bring the
children to Huntin gton
Center tt Beach and
din9tr •t S•n Diego f/.wey.
J
l-hwaii
boy:>' cheete,..s
•
• -· .
+ite. SUnfr ~ ~IA2\'S? pri11 t
-bale!.\ ~kirt ·
7 fashion i1fon4, n•wport ctnter 6«-J070
2()%off accent r&lgS.
Elastic-leg rayon brief In
white or colors. Or, novelty
_ ~Uon b1r~aw_p.rinla.
Even, a nylon tricot bikini
in pastel colors . Sizes
4to16 in !he group.
JC Penney
Ttie values are here every day.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M . at the following stores:
BUENA PARK
NEWPORt BEACH
FULLERTON
ORANGE "THE CITY"
•
l
GARDEN GROVE
RIVERSIDE
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Charge ill
t
t -
\
. -.
~· -
. -
I
I '
Th11rsday, March 21, 1972
DOUBLES AS CLOWN -Ronald Alexander of Long Beach . who will bring a
scale model circus, frontier town and magic act to the Costa Mesa a n d r.1esa
Verde libraries during Easter week; points out miniature animals in the circus
parade.
No Bite on Pocketbook
' Peanut Butter Best -...
Natural Beauty Aid
MARCH
.f .: .;v_•
&&
COTTONS & POLYESTER "'M st 95
Lingerie Fabrics ... 112
Stretch & .Sew
OFF
Patterns ......... 112 OFF
SEW • T/NITS '"~.:~"~":."4• By ERMA BOMBECK your face 1 beUer profile. Of l~
I W&! walking along a center '-A T -couru you were planning to PH'ONE 540 3268
aisle of a department store the 1-\ have your teeth capped." l l~~~~~~~;;;;~;;~v;;·;;;~~;;;~;;;;;;ii other day When a represen-W/T 'S She worked on rue for over
tatlve of a cosmetic firm an hour. At the end of the
smiled and beckoned me over END session, I was laden with
to the counter. creams, liners, rouge, powder,
"You mearl rne?'' J giggled. ntrtrienl!, fake eyelashes, wig,
She nodded. Then she leaned waist cinch er, padding and
over. sized me up and drowsy." . auggesttd doctor• to cap my
"'hispered , "l can help." "You weren 't puttina: thtm teeth, fix my nose and outfit
I was overwhelmed with the on properl y,'' she 11 a i d me in oontact lenses.
way she looked and the way authoritatively. "Now, w~'ll "Thank you very much,'' 1
she smelled. There s u re aceent your chetk bones with stammered, "You 've certainly
~tFI,Y.~.~ .~!:~S ~~t
.._...-,.. FOR ALL YOUl JEWELlY Hll DS /liT
ltlP'Alll lNG-ltESEnlNG-CLISTOM DISIGN
Dl1mcN1dt, 1tubl11. frn1r1I01, S1pplllr ..
1M m111~ 1rt11r cv1 ''-"''., , .• lrem ,tJ ,0111tt 19 ~ ct1.
KAllAT GOLD MOUNTINGS
w1 1r1 llDW 1uocl1tld wifh ..,.,,,,1c1n G1molo0lc•I Lt bt, 11'11 ht"'
IYll 11rvlc1 fer 1n•lr11$ .i. 1opr11,11 of 111 ~tttl 1ron11. wasn't any peanut butter a dark make-up making your been a help."
under her fingernails. face look thinner. You are "Just one last bit of advice, 270 E. 17th St. in Hlllgren Square
··first. dear," she said, "I rather sallow. dear," she said 90ftJy touching Costa Mesa 645-1909
want you lo walk for me ." "We'll add th is rouge to :;~m;y~s;bou;ld;er;·~·~·B~e~y;o;ur;se;l;f·;"~~~g~~~~~~§§~~§~~~~~~ I fell hke a fool. Stifrly, I make you look vibrant and
swagge red out to handbags healthy . There now. Have you, ''•Id '•lltlctl Advtrlls•m~tl and back again. "Are you car-always worn glasses?"
rying your mone y in a knotted "Only .since college when I
handkerchief. tiecL_ to your Went stead ilh a arkin D-Hl·RfH ~~~~~~~~~~~~~-,.~~~~~~~knees:-==-=-~--=~-'.-'--~~m~e~Ie~r~o5r~t~r~ee~y~ea~r=•·""'""'"'ilf-~ ~~~~~~~ Librarians OK Clowning "Why? Am 1 walking Jun-"I would sugg.,t (.'()ntacts. n~;~ bit self-co nsc ious ~!y ~1~~sf~~~ t~~dey~~u~ CONTINUES HIS FIGHT pe rhaps," she said. "We'll nose. Are you happy with it?" ·
work on that later. Now, we "It works good."
are going lo create a new you . "I mean the shape ol ii. You TO ELIMINATE "First, your shape. You can know cosmetic su rgery is very
do all klnds of artificial things commonplace anymore. You
Circus Coming to Town
Easter week will be a circus
of fun for Harbor Area
children who go to the Costa
Mesa and Mesa V e r d e
--1ibraries Thursday, March 30,
Saturday, April I, and S1lur-
day, April 15.
At 11 a.m. on March 30, a
From Page 17
... PWP
film titled ';Lion Country" will Built by Alexander and his to change it. 0on·1 turn your should have it bObbed and give · ,
be shown in the Costa Mesa sister, LaShelle. both circus back to me. dear ." AIRPORT NOISE Library and a live baby veh~rans. the circus is the "I'm not," I said miserably.
lrilmal is slated to appear. stage for reproduc tions of "Oh . \Veil, all Iha! can be Color Lines
On Api'llJ. a fnlnlatate actual-Ringling-performances. fixed~with padding. As-f•or-------~---·11--------
circus will be brought to the In the "backyard" of the your hips and waisl. there are The Piccio ne' bridal message AND FUTURE
Costa Mesa Library by Jolly circus is Clown Alley, the cinchers to wear. No"'· for the for spring comes 'lJI crisp and
the Clown. who is Ronald AJei-place where ordinary men important part. Do you do clear. The message : color. All
ander of Long Beach . were transformed . into circus anything to your hair?" that is traditional is there. JET E p NS
A 1~·inch scale model of the clowns with greasepaint and "I put three rollers each But under the artistry of . x A ION·.
C. f 900 baggy trousers. morning on the side I slept on designer Ron LoVece, this new I Ringling Bros. 1rcus o 1 , · It I · the circus features hand-Aleiander will give his the night before .'· dimension resu s n a unique
painted a n d hand·sculpted magic shows as a clown at l l "Perhaps a wig,'' she mused , collection of gowns accented
waeons, buildings and figures. a.m. and 1 p.m. April 1 in the "We'll just slip this one on with a da sh of yellow, a splash
. Costa Mesa Llbrary and at for effect. No"·· whal about of pink, a st reak of turquoise. It includes the Big Top :and I shes ~" a flecking of .blue or a touch of parade boards depicting the 10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. April ey.~ 8 ·
Most chapters have a Jmall circlls parade march i ng 15 Jn the Mesa Verde Library. ~ Those fake ones make me the green.
• percentage of widows and tbroUgh Main St., U.S.A., past Tickets to all shows are rree
---'"idower~Jh.Coa&t ti!)y b u I I d i n g 1 reffill!lll!!&_aod.Jna;c_.be..oblaine<LaUbe"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii r• .... I II .1 :h~ of the 1900s. ·libraries. 11
--------
''-"11,.......r 0 OWS SW wit
·about 10 percent. Authentic, lm porteJ
Mrs. Miller also said the l;:;:================== PERSIAN number of people returning
alter their second divorce is
increasing.
See feels PWP is valuable
becluse it provides a sounding
board for single ·patents in
making decisions. "It provides
feedback,'' she explained.
DTERY
AIR STEP-llERNAll.00 -MR. KIMEL
SCHOLL SANDALS -PASSPORTS
MA GOESIAN -MISS AMER ICA
Ce,rectfw Shen fer ClllllllNit
225 E. 17th ST.-COSTA MESA
548°2778
RUGS
GRAND 0,INING Sl'ECIAL
1 s•1. DISCOUNT .. ~=~o~~~T
KERMAN PERSIAN RUGS & IMPORTS
21,5 "l :-Coott RWy.,
-_ ...C.U-HELIOTllO•I.).
Co,0110 •I Mer
675·7l40
-· [81 NEWPORT BEACH NEEDS THIS MAN! . .
VOTE APR·. 11-RE-ELECT MAYOR HIRTH!
TO CITY COUNCIL, FIFTH DISTRICT, NEWPORT BEACH
BILL RING, CAMPAIGN MGR.-215 RIVERSIDE DR,. N.B.
Mr~. ~si.e ~war_, ~_!:st
president of the Orange Coast
Chapter and past immediate
pruident of PWP"s Southern
Cillfornia Regions] Council,
reports thet three n e w
chapters rec~ntly bave b e_e n_I'===================== formed in Orange county.
Saddle back · Chapter, which
serves 'l'Ustin and east Orange
-County. wa11-1irst:-ThF lrvine-
Chapter was formed Oct. 18
and the Huntington Harbour
Chapter last month.
A!IEAS OF NEED
Mrs. Dunaway is
answering service coordinator
for the Southern California
Regional Council and kept
records of where the most
calls were coming from to
determine the areas o f
greatest need.
Keeping information con·
fidential is the most important
rule in any PWP chapter.
Names and ad dresses are not
given out and all applications
are kept confidential .
Members emphasiu that
PWP is not a "swinging
group ," and these precautions
mUJt be taken to keep out any
persons who might think
members are easy prey for a
thrill.
Mrs . Phelp! expresses the
senUments of most newly
divorced members who will
remarry when the hurt is
gone: "I'm enjoying the
freedom, but this can get old."
In the meantim.e, PWP will
stand in the 1.ap, providing
friends and 'Offering reassur-
ance and stability.
As Pat Clayton, a national
vice president, said, "For an
organl.zatlon of 1hook·up volun-
teers, it sure 1ets a lot done."
Boot Bounty
For aprin& the bootmakers
hl\lt: come up with a beauty In
white burlap. This pair r of
bootl has big silve.r eyelets.
na&ural burlap lacing and an
espldrtlle oole. --
W'S BE FRIENDLY
lf you hive new ntlihbon
or know of anyonf' mov.lng·
to our area, please tell vs
IO that ,.,.e may extend &
trJiendb' welcome ind hf'lp
them to become acquainted
1n their new 1urroundlna:a.
SI. Coast Visitor · 4M41' .,..,,.. I
llD(,Ylsltl'
*4174
..
ZENITH ...
eek end • r1ee
Mon.· Tu~s. 10 to 7
Wed .• Thurs.·Fri. 10 to 9
Saturday 10 to S:lO
Sunday 12 to 5
litz
WE QUOTE· PRICES OVER THE PHONE • • • CALL & SAVE
TABLE
MODEL
CHROMACOLOR
TO, YA.LUE WITH
LlnLI CAllNrT COST
---23-JNCH DIAGONAL
. 25 INC'H OIAGONAL
ABOVE SETS FEATURE e Autome +i, Fi!'le T u!'l ing e Autom1tic Tint e Hi nd Crafted Ch111is
• Al10 t•tlltbl, wit~ r1t110+1 •
conttol.
25 ~~~~NAL REMOTE
CHROMACOLOR 100
The COURBET • C'73JW
Moder n sty/Ing -Scandia bue
WALNUT CAllNITlY
FEATURING
SPACE COMMAND 600
n.,. 00¥'.t. • CA111P
,,_,., l',....,;Micrl rtyW __,.
l r.c .. C.WHtry
~crb 100 li'lc9\rlf Tuitt • Cunen.ired T~
• 1$• t'ilog. S!ljM!•·Scr1e" l'lch.lr• • Titon 110 ~i.d.S•crte Ch11n•t • S.ol•d·S*""e $vJMr Gole
VoMc Gvnrd Tu,..ng S.,.._ • Zel'li"' JiiC • ""'""''"O•M• !I'll"'<
TW Guorlf Comr&I • Ultraf¥IOl>t UHF ~
5e1Ktor • 9' °"'°1-0 $• ll!eo.ofld r,,.;rt-e-~-
Both-· Sets Av1il1b1e With Remote Control
The HAMl'SHlll
tl1MDEI Slt Nly Mtorllft·ll'IS,lr•
wd MM!l'frl'1net111 •l'f\. M torytill win. c-
tourtd hlll·••lllnl IMst llNI lllddt n c11t1r1.
Gen1,1lrl• •••• llnliMd O.• vt'll"rt Ind 11!1<1
N rdwOOCI 11111ds, tll·
cliKlw llf decor1ll'll
I r I n I 1nd 1v1rl~y..
wUll trl• IOoll el llflt
f liirtulnt. C 11 1 I e m
llr1totiltll!llK'I lfOlll It• ~ wllll t11111,1lt·
,.. CflU M!tl'I wtOd
ewtfl•'f· Vtj••m•llC VM, Cf'l•lllltl •lltltf,
25 lnclt di190n1I color
wukend no dl1col.l."t•r will match
I
WHY BUY
AT ABC?
We Know The Set Inside And Out
Not Just The Price
• 1 Y ffr Free Parts
• 1 Year Free Service
• 3 Year Picture Tube Warranty
• Free Delivery And Set Up
• We Seriice What We Sell
No Finance Char9es If Paid In 90
Days or No Down and 36 Months
to Pay I O.A.C. I
BankAmericard/Master Char9e
•
•
•
''"' c
I
"
C~r
WtrN'• l..•'11••1 Tr111•mlu ltll
$pecl1Utll
Wcel Deeter Wll Hew.ii
0'1Jil MOJilDAY NITll -
CLOSl:D SATU"OAY
"Wt trl' 11.ritd to ll'ltlf'lt vour CO!'lfltltMt"
UIM Dt111111 ''" llltl. (11Ur VNlt) C1•blr1ne INCll ffi.1211
Your
Insurance
Innovator
from
Great· West
Life
Quakes'
Action
P1islied
WASHINGTON iUPil -A
$30 million rese1rch program
to determine how buildings,
bridges and dams can be
made more earthquake resis.
tant has been proposed by sen.
Alan Cranslon ([).Calif ).
Cranston also called Tues·
day for a comprehensive
review or building codes he
sai~ had been proved in·
adequate by last year's San
Fernando Valley earthquake.
Sen. Tunney (D·Calif) is a
co-sponsor.
Although ching the 64 deaths
and S500 million in damage
caused by that Ca!Uornia
quake, Cranston told the
Senate it was not "a regional
·problem.
"Every state in the un ion
has at some time suffered
earthquake damage," he said.
Aide Disco mt ts Effects
On State's Residency Rule
. -
Coa$tline Bill
Action Delayed
B y Serwte Panel
... ' • , SACRAMENTO (AP) -Acun~ on I re-
SACRAMEN'T'O (APl -The U.S. QuiM 11id in ca.U!ornia "it probably quest from ii! newest member. lhfl
Supreme Court's decision today striking takes awhilt" to fij'Ure out local prob-Stnate NAtural Resource~ and Wildlife
down Tennessee's one-year residence re-!ems "but J wouldn 't think iL would take Committee has postponed making IJ
very long to understand st1te and na· choice between two sweeping bills aimed quirement for voting apparently voids tiona l issueg," at protecting California's coast from
California's 9Ck:lay residency rule, the Mar!hall's opinion did not state nauy jumbled development.
secretary of state'.s office says. how long a state can require a new resi· Sen. George Zenovich f[).Fresno ), said
But Tom Quinn. deputy secretary of dent to wail before voting there, but sug· ~1ond&y he wanted more time to study
state. said, "I tend to think it's not very gested 30 days might be proper . the rival bills by Seru. Donald Grunsky
significant as far as Californi1 is con· "Fixing 1 corutitutionally acceptable (R-\Vatsonville ), and James Wedworth
cemed'' bec&use it only means a 36-day period is iiurely a matter of degree," he (l).Hawthornel.
Cut in the waiting period for new stale said. -Generally, Hawthorne's bill gives loc1tl
If you're
25 or so, @
Farmers can cover
you with $25,000 of
life insurance for
under $15 a month.
voters. "' Thirty-three states and the District o( government more say over coastal Even less if you don't smoke.
Quinn noted the California Supreme Columbia employ 8 one-year residence development and Grunsky's more power
Court last yearruled lh• state's one-year I A th IS t t . . to state authorities. d t t lk t rue. no er s a es require six H bold Co Su . Ra _.1 A Farmers agent is a goo guy o a o requirement was unconstitutional. h On t h th th I um t unty perv1sor ymonu mont s. es ate as a ree-mon rue w. Peart. who said he won election on an about the remarkable Alpha Pol icy.
Now, voters must Uve 90 days in a and California 90 days. ecology platform, testi·r1·ed 1·n ra,•or of y 'II l.k · 1· d th any
d d · · t her . ou 1 e its many op ions an e m county an 54 ays in a prec1nc ore Among others, the one-year residency Grunsky's bill but asked that a Humboldt
they can go to the polls. laws or the District of Columbia, Harbor District, if one is formed, be ex· ways It lets you control your own future.
''It appears that our 90-day re-Virginia, and Tennessee, before the eluded from the bill 's provisions. Such a CARL SlrES-JERltY NELSON
quirement is no longer valid," said Supreme Court acted, have been declared district would have tough controls over 6411 IDINGIR, HUNTINGTON IEACH -89!,:6911
Quinn. '"We 're left with the 54-day limit. unconstitutional by federal d i s tr i c t development and pollution, Peart said. OR-
\Vith the Supreme Court's language about courts.· Wedworth requested th11t hi!I bill be l24 M•I• St., H.l .-Sl•·1414
•
' • . . . . • •
•
Missouri. he said, is the site
,---+t-of-the-most severe-earthquake
in U.S. hislory in 1812.
30 da ys being a reasonable-period , it's The Tennessee law 7quir.~ed:=v:Ooite:"rs'::7.tof-~°"'L:""""L· s_ubmlsslon aIJ,d_G,nruO!os~kKJ~'-:''!ll---1::.11 '01LJ4'\"''· 1'4.l.-t,2""44''
conce1vable--our-s:Fday-watnmlld15n'UC· have lived n es ate or ,~-months a measure was postponed U(ltil an Aprll -mos llllftter, r:.V.-1:1t.tl'H---11-----I
cessfully challenged in the courts." in the county for three months prior to committee meeting after the legislature's 11,lJ M°'"•11•• r:.v.-t•Z·J4tt
JOE QUINTANA
INSURANCE
4fJ·11Jl 4f3·33J7
JlfJI Cerni•• Cepl1tr•n•
II .t.40. P'lne, l1IN I
5n J11n C:.pl1trot1, Cellf.
f2'7
Ult, Hnfth, Group, AnllUlll••
Oreat·w..t Ufe ......... o-.-· ..
Cranston said 20 states have
suffered major earthquake
damage and experts say they
are likely lo suffer such
damage again.
141·1401 The court said Tennessee's one-year election day. Easter recess. Ill,,,,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ barrier interfered with citizens' rights to It was challenged by James Blumstein, !~
travel and live in other states. and did a young Jaw prufessor at Vanderbilt
not serve a •·compelling'' interest of the University who was barred from voting
state. in 1970 because he had gone to Tennessee Death Ruling Battled
The opinion delivered by Justice in mid-June, only five months before the LOS ANGELES (UPI \ -State At·
Thurgood Marshall was disputed by Chief election. l.orney General Evelle J . Younger says he
·Justice Warren Burger who said it didn 't Marshall's opinion seemed broad will file a petition with the U.S. Supreme
allow newcomers time to acquaint enough to be applied to durational rf!si· Court seeking a review of the state
themselves "'·ith state and local prob-dent laws 11'1 all the state!. They are like-Supreme Court ruling bAnning c11pital
Nearly Everyone
Listens to Landers
le~m~s~·----------'---"l ~t~o~ra~Uul~ik,._,Cl.!!,,_,o~f ~du~c~k~·~.,"--i· >•~--~P-urtishmen~.~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~~~~~~iiiiiiii::iiii::iiii::iiii::iiii::iiii::iiii::iii:iiiiiiiii:iiii:iiii:iiiiii~
Bay State Kills Easy Abortions
-RICHAR~ CARR -
THE ONLY QUALIFIED CANDIDATE
FOR CITY COUNCIL, LAGUNA BEACH . , ___ _._c.,u ... ,.,.aduat1 •. IA..dtttt•Juo.lltl$1!!J~·'--1-----•
LLI cl14Jr11 ht law e A warded Doctor• of Uw
lletr•• In 1961 e Admitted to practice befert
Wl1c0Mln Supreme Court, the Federal Courts 11114
the Supreme Court of the United Stat••·
. NEWI MASTEltCHARGE ACCIPllD FOR STORAGE CHARGES
FOR ni• "Artistry in Moving"
BEST .MOVE
BOUTIQUE
CLEANERS
OP
YOUR LIFE
CALL
494-1025
Jtl(~-~~;~~ACtt·· "'•~'·,~$YORA~ :
' .l •• ~, ~·'!$.~.~?··"1 . ·,1 •·~~·~
e Former 1nt..atlonol attorney e Corporate attorney and staff cou111el,
1pKlafl1htt In controct nttotlotlOll • klw • Loquna leach buslnes1man (motel
owner) anti home owner e Member, L09una leach Chamber of Commerce ·•.
hard member, lay'• Club of l.e<juaa l•tll • Member, the Sierra Cl•b • .\•
lnclepenclut cucfltlote With stdttd new lclN1 and 10lutlon1. Don't waste your
vote. Yett Independent. llect Carr. QUALITY & DEPENDAllLltY
AT A FAIR PRICE . ~ . ·::. : .. :.': ..
n-er-n-ate-C~ftl-er -sao Broad
C~rner of Warner & Springdale, Huntington Beach
. 842-2050
A Special
--. ~·
Announcement
..
to · Our · Readers
The All New
Christian Science Monitor
News Service--
With Its Deepfy Probing
and Highly Specialized
' ,
News Coverage--
Becomes a Part of . Your
'New' DAILY PILOT with the • ...
Advent of the Sunday Edition
\
I
-.
• • •
The Christian Science Monitor has long l)een recognized as one of
America's truly outstanding newspapers . Now , through the newly formed
Monitor News Service, readers of the DAILY PILOT (especially the new
Sunday edition) will enjoy even broader coverage of national a!J-d world
news. The Monitor's staff .of 60 correspondents operatin g out of 18 news
b~reaus provides a constant flow of news stories , photographs , maps
and other feature materiel directly to the DAILY PILOT.
The Monitor concept of prolling deeply in to news stories for causes,
effects and other si.gnificant facts matches perfectly with the journelistic
approach the DAILY PILOT proposes to use in its continuing development
of ·in-depth reporting of significant world events. The Monitor News Se r·
vice enables us to prov ide you, the reeder, with a greater degree of com·
pleteness in our news coverage .
In ·add iti on to timely news stories, you 'll also enjoy the Mon itor's
photographs , maps , charts end diagrams , ell of which are designed to
bring you e better understanding of the subject, whether it's e power
struggle in the Middle Eest or en economic crisis in South A".'e ric e.
• .
But , simply telling you abo ut this new addition is not enough. You
must see it, evaluate it and make your own judgment. If you are not al-
ready a regular subscriber, order conv enient home delivery today. Con-
tact your local carrier .or call 642 -4321 (or the DA ILY PILOT office near-
est you) to order.
•
•
•
..
•
• 2 2 DAILY PllDT
ChaJtlin Fe1:ed
HOLLYWOOD (AP I -Far
into the night the hands "''Ork
over J.he_clay, molding It into
the too-tight coat, the ~derby,
the cane and the bru:;h
mustache.
The form of Charlie Chaplin,
the LltUe Tramp:-ist for a
relief bronze plaque that will
be plaeed outside the Taft
Building at Jfollywood and
Vine.
Chaplin, 83, Y.1ho ls relurnig
lo the United States after a 20..
year absence, 1s invited to the
uuvei\ing of the 4-by.fi-foot
plaque April 11.
He will be awarded an
honorary Oscar by the ~1otlon
Picture Academy on April 3.
TPe llollywood Chamber of
Con1merc:e has voted to add
Chaplin's name and star to
Hollywood Boulevard's "\Valk
of Fame."
The bronze relief was com-
missioned by Martin H«!rsh,
owner of the office building.
who felt Chaplin had been ig·
norcd tor too long.
ilo !m 1m.111o 1 A
CONTINUOUS MATINEES
DAILY AT
12:30 . 3:30
7:00 • 10:00 P.M.
Actor's Market:
5 Plays Casting
By TOM TITUS
Of mt O•lly "llfl ~1111
Quick. nov; -\vhat do Pali Tambellini, Alex Koba ,
Ruth t-.1cCulley, Bill Verderber and yours trul y have in
common?
\Yell. If you've been scanning the en1crtainment pages
of this new spaper for the past week. you've probably
guc~scd the answer. We're all looking lor bodies. Live ones,
that is. Preferably with a little acting
experience, though this Is a flexible re-
qu irement.
1'he five of us have been charged
with the re sponsibility of directing the
closing production of lhe 1971-72 c;~m-
m-+~mun1ty--lhealer-season fot";-respecllve--
ly, the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse,
lluntington Beach Playhouse. Lido Isle
Playe rs. San Clemente Theater and Ir·
vine Community Theater.
TH E '!'HING IS, \\'E'ltE all conducting auditions be-
tween Saturday and \\lednesday of the coming week. and
among us we're looking for a grand total of 62 actors and
actresses. l)lus extras in Pall's ca'se.
Of the five of us, Verderber has the toughC'st row to
hoe -and not just because he's laking hls fir st shot al .. :r~~~i"~:=:~~~~~~~~~Q1~1~~-:the director's chair. He needs a cast of 22 for his produc-_b..,..t __ ,_-tj~ ion--of____..__'Fhe-F'ront-PaitcUo.-at-San-etcmcnte;crtheaterno ~.,.)~ overly farn ous for massive turnouts at auditions.
O' ~I My show. '·You Can't Take It \\'ith You" for Irvine, M~ ~· requires almost as large a cast 19 in all. And . like Bill's, ~ f l most of the roles arc male. This is a bit scary . since the
lt~Pti<?"~ ~ ~ gals nearly always outnumber the guys at tryou ts.
PATJ'S CAST Jo~OR "My Sister Eileen" at Costa Mesa
~·.::Jr nunlbers 13, along wllh a number of minor roles which , she
' says. will be double cast. Ruth and Alex should have easier 4 ' ~. ·-
ITS FOR
EVERYBODY!
A MAl1K RVDEU FllM
<lrlilll:-.0'1• lechnicdor • From Warre &os.,A ~ Ccmpariy P
NOW AT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS
• 1~• ti CIJllMA WU\i 1 •
Ch11r!ror1 He1ton "THE. OMEGA
MAN"
'IN TH W !N STI!~ CENTr:R
IN THI! Wl!STMINSTIE" Cl!NTE'rt 2lld TOP ATTIA(TION <Dl ;;::\•;., ~::~~ .. ,
Wfi-ll•' GOUKll wrn · "1 0 '' 41 WHAT'S THE MATTER WITH HT•n~ ''"Cit." c•~1 ' Ill• .. 110 re.s. HflENr'
· aint Eastwood
Dirty Harry o@
•
2nd OUTSTANDING HIT
James Garner
Skin
Game
"""" '""" • ltl_ .....
Pm_11!!Ch1a
•
sledding at Lido and Hunti ngton. respectively. since lhe '
comedies ''Absence of a Cello'' and "Catch t-.1e If You Can"
are geared fo r on~ seven performers apiece.
There's no doubt abou1 it -it'tt be an actor's markd.
along the.Orange Coast nexi ·weck. with the chances of w1itking-orrrof~OlitS.,virn-ascript in hand in.creasea-
severalfold . Jf don'\ make it at Irvine or Huntington
Beach over the weekend , you can bou nce back at San
Clcrnente. Costa 1\1esa or Lido Isle. ""' t~or the new or inexperienced actor. now is the time
to make your move. With 62 parts up for grabs. you can
bet that a good many new faces will be introduetd to com-
munity theater audiences during fi.1ay and June.
ANO •. JUST iN CASE you've mis.c;ed one or two audi-
tion notices, here's a rundown on v.•ho's holding tryouts
for what. when and wh<'re:
Irvine Community Theater -"You Can't Take It \Vilh
You ." Auditions Saturday and Sunday at I o'clock both
days in the basement of 1Bfi62 MacArthur Blvd ., Irvine.
-Twe ve men an seven women , me u mg a ac coupe.
Opens June 2 for four_ weekends.
Jiunlington Beach Playhouse -''Catch ,Me lf You
Can." Audillons Sunday only at 2 o'clock at the playhouse,
21 10 Main St.. Huntington Beach. Five men and two women.
Opens Mav 19 for five weekends.
Costa · J\1csa Civic Playhouse -"My Sister Eileen."
Auditions J\·londay and Wedn.csclay Al 8 o'clock in the Com-
munitv Center auditorium at 1he west ga te of the Orange
CountY Fairgrounds. Opens J\1ay 19 for three weekends.·
San Clcn1enlc Community Theater -''The Fron t
Pa~e. ·• Auditionfi Su111:lay at noo n and Monday al 7:30 p.m.
al the Cabrillo Playhouse. 202 Avenida Cabrillo, San Cle--
mente. Opens late in J\1ay for lh ree week ends.
Lido Isle Plnyers -"1'he Absence of a Cello.'' Audi-
tions Monda y and Tursday at 7:30 p.m. at the Lido Isl e
Clubhouse, 701 Via Lido Soud, Newport Beach. Opens May
30 for five consecutive da ys.
Good luck.
.... "'Mi1I~" ~rn"~~
···~
II riti"~ Jimi~ ti!" mL~!I~ ti~lill!"~ ~~~irl ~~iill
~iirlrn~ ~ij~i" J~~" M!1li1 ~IL~il~ t~"li mi"i ~ii~"
···~· ·~·· '., ...... '····~·· .. ·· .i:;~~;;:~.-:'.:;1;~;1!~:;:;;~~:!~ l ill.~I
1REc-.;·"'-i SHOWING NOW!
EXCLUSIVE ENGAGEMENTS ·
CONTINUOUS DAILY
12:30,l :JO, 7:00 , 10PM.
• • .._.,. •.I
Cast Call
AtSCR
They challenged the best of the sporting world
•.. with a no 'c ount hound/
South Coai;t Repertory ,has
put out a call for mature, ex·
perienctd actors for the ·east
of its forthcoming production
of the West Coast premiere of
"Pueblo."
Audit ions will be held on
Easter Sunday. April 2, at the
company's Th i rd Step
Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd .,
Costa Mesa, at I p.m.
"The ·large ca s t re-
quirements for this production
wilt necessitate our going
outside our regular acting
company for reinforcements,"
said f\.1artin Benson, "'"ho will
direct "Pueblo."
Prospective cast members
must be available f or
rehearsals during April and a
five-week run of the pro-
duclion beginning. May 12.
* Easter Time
·-ts-Furi2 Jn1e
at Kiiotts
~·~.
·' ....:'l ~~
GHOST TOWN. GYPSY CAMP FIESTA VILLAGE
•
Relive th e Golden Days of the West
on the original narrow-gauge steam
train.
Peek into the life of a typical Euro-
pean Gypsy setllemenL See and
hear ~pirited gypsy dancers and
singers.
Twirl and swirl on l he Happy Som~
brero rkie and enjoy the traditional
festive m11sic of old Mexico.
• ••••••••••••••••••
:" .10KK WAYKZ ·~
~ '&8EU'&~~ : • • ···········-········· •
FRIDAY-MARCH 24 SATURDAY.:_MARCH 25 SUNDAY-MARCii 21i mm mimmns MEL nws .Enm'r TUBB
Shows: 6;00, 7:30 and 9:00 PA and lhe Statesiders
Shows: 4:30, 6:30 ;ind 8:30 p.nT.
and the Texas Troubadours
Shows: 1:00, 3:00, 5:00 and 7:00 p.m,
WA9CIN CAMP
SATURDAY, MAR. 25-RED STEAGALL •nd the Count.y Store
Shows: 1:00, 3:00 and 5:00 p.m.
SUNDAY, MAR. 25-FLOYD COUNTY BOYS
Shows: 1:30, 3:30, •:JO lfld 6-00 p.m.
** COMING ATIRACTIONS **
MARCH 27 • 31
HEAR AND ·Now
MARCH 27 ·APRIL 1
BEAVER HILL STRING BAND
APRIL 2
BOBBY BURGESS
AND CISSY KING
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
MARCH 31 AND APRIL 1
THE RAIDERS
.STAIOlll>IG
PAUL REVERE ...
MARK LINDSAY
si-. &.JO, a,30, 10·30 •·•·
PUN YOtm EASTER mm Al' XNO'lTS
fn)oJ ono of Mrw. KnoH'o lsmous goldon-lrlod Chick., Dinnen or 1 Chor·Brolltd Steok In Knoll'• SIMlc HOQM,
ft~ KNDTT'S BERRY FARM.c1)4
IN BUENA PARK PHONE (714) 127·f77S
'
~
'
• • '
•
• •
' l
'
T
Tic
for "
&l!:COn
Full I!:
Com
al F
Plun1 r•r Quixo
JU{le 1
t at B
at 2.3
Rese
by cal
from l
1732.
' '-
..
•• ..,
• s • "TH • • • • • M • • BUE • • • 'AT • • • s • "WH • • • ~-IA • ood • :FOUNT • • •
"
Ill llDf ••• '"'" I
'La Mancha'
Tickets Set
Tickets are now 1\•a!lable
for "ri.1an nf La Mancha " the
second production of' the
Fullerton Civic Light Opera
Company which opens in June
at Fullerlon High School 's
Plunimer Audilorium .
Performances or the Don
Quixote musical will be given
JU(Je 16. 17, 23, 14, 30 and July
I at 8:30 p.m. vo'ith a matinee
al 2:30 on Sunday. June 25.
Reservations are. available
by calling the Fullerton CLO
from 10 a.m. to 8 p.m. at 879·
1732.
I_
o. ...... Tlwr. rl-""'·"'•-11• lOM Llllllllllll
"ltlLT JACIC" {Pl)
•• 'IOttl llAMllTOll
"£YEL IUUIVEL" IPGI
············~······ •
SHOWING NOW • "THE GODFATHER" • • • slorring • MARLON &RANDO • • BUENA PARK DRIVE·IN • • . • ·AT 7:00anlf10115 •
-4NO-• • SH01NGNOWI •
"WHAT UP, DOC?" • • • • storring
-1AAIRA-$T.REISAND ~
ond RYAN O'Nf:Al • • • FOUNTAIN VALLEY DRIVE-IN: • ATl:JO&l1 :45 •
---· ··--Ml-JMI
. •~01,0
Ill lllD(I 11 MUJf If Wllll titllff/IJ
VOUMI llAOUA t lS Il l
Plrtn' MAIOS AU or. tOW !'Ct
11' DOii MCHISl t
KIDS LOVE
UNCLE LEN
•
W axi1ig Poetic
Robert \Ventz gives a poetry recitation as Beth 1'itus,
John Ferzacca and Anger Salazar (seated) li sten in
a scene from "Night or the Iguana." giving final per-
formances tonight through Saturday at the Costa
~lesa Civic Playhouse.
NOmln11IN Jllr 1111 Actor --o•rat:-c:-scii1r ----
"HOS,.1TAL" tG")
Alto e "THI! ,.ARTY" '
E•clu1i¥• Or•n91 Cour1ly
Res.rvcd Se•I l!ng111m1nt
N.ominl!fd !tr I Academy """''~II "FIOOLER ON THE R00jll"
Clint E11lwdl:ld
"DIRTY HARl'!Y'' (II)
Hil•"ito111 Coni«ly Hit
"SKIN GAME"
"SOMETIMES A
GREAT NOTION" !G'°)
plu1 Ctfnt E111W9Gd
"PLAY MISTY FOR ME"
"'Th• Frtnch Connttllon" !RI
" "V1ni1hlng P1fnl". 1•1
Sein C•nn11 y
''DIAMONDS ARIE FOREVER"
Oebbl1 R1ynold1 "Wh•l'I Thi M1t11r Wllh Htltn1"
"fiddler L.."_8_M_1_~._~w_~. __ ::"""'~"";_·_,
-~ .. ~,~, ... ,. ·On the •
011.t.NGE COUNTY R9of lllSllllVED SEAT
Ei'fGAG£MENT
NOW />LAYING
SHOWING NOW!
llAR8AASTR[ISAN0 •RYAH0!oftAl.., WllAI':; ur>, DOC"" A "l'•t< B~~~l-C.•
Co-&r.,."'Q ll[HN[llt IMJIS . "USf1N Pf.NOtl ION• SORllCll llOOltC • MICHAll M>lllPU~
""-onQM-"Oll lN(:r:AttN • S.:--oy9y ll<ll.> 1111 ..... Ind 0...-0i'f-WI •JIOl:IO'•o 8.-r
si..,"'""-~' Dort<,.._.,ONl ~ll!IDT ""''" R,,.._~ -lfCttN•{OlOl'I•
r-w...,.e.Ot ,.-c--;-.c--..,, IGJ~..-. ... ,_ . .......:_:Jc
r:=:. ----···
•
DAil V '!LOT %:]_
'Annie' Musical Readied ' ..... ~ ~---~
The musical that 1ntroductd s1slers and broJrers. Round1ngl'""'~~~~~~~~iii}lr
the song "There's No Business out· the comP"ny are Tom ·· ~ !{
Like Shvv.' Rusiness" comes to Shelton. Bill Gros!i, Du1ne j fiJTlDfOI
TONIGHT'S
TV HIGHLIGHTS
Orange Counly nc:1:t month Lovull('f. PeJ:?i:::~· Sherer· _ .. ..
\\•hen the South Cllast Choral ~~,~~~;~:. Durnford and R('d Ht•PORT et•CH • OR l-ll~tl
and Llghl Opera Association
pres<!nts its annual produt:llnn, 1·0111 c;1eason is directinJ,: the
lrvlng Be rlin's •·Annie Get production . with Austin Buf-1
Your Gt1n." tun1 Sl'rvinJ:( as musical direc·
~larlti Small. ,~·ho played the tor and c;eor~dna (;c<'r ll:-l
title role in !he ~rnup's 1971 choreographer. 1'hc :-hn1~· v.'ill
produt·t ion or "(; y p s y," be presented in lhe 11{'\V San
re!urns In portray Annie C'lerncn1l' Con1 nuinity C.:enter 1
Oaklev in the-San Clemente a! the corner of Del J\1<'!r and l
n1usir.<'ll. 'Al Hartn1an is rast Seville <'1\'eJlU<'S.
opposite her as Frank Butler. Prrforn1nnces \\'ill be gi\en
20TH BIG WEEK
ALSO •
"DIARY OF A MAD
HOU SE WIFE" Other featured roles \l'il! be April 14-15 rind 21 -22. Tickel 1
pla,\ed by Alice Netzen as i11[orrnal1on is <l\ail<ihle b)) Conth•11ou' Sunday hom z P.M.
J:>ollv
1
·ate. George Donka as/~fc~a~ll~ir;1g;•~9~2-~5=i6=1~o~r;•~92;·;106~5;·~~:~~=~=~~=~1 (.'hai-lie Oavenport. Irv Grissel
as Buffalo Bill and Bob ~1oe Eve. Show St•rt1 7 p.m. as Chief Sitting Bu ll. _.. ... F .
Also featured in the large 1
cast are Patrick Griff in, I
LeSJ1e Conner, Ka ren I
Robert.c:on, Beth Hartrnan.
I-fans Hartman. Kelly Killi on. I
An1anda Burke, Lisa Austin
a nni
llklat
W r;i., T11ur1.. r1,
CONTIN)IOUS
DAILY FROM 1 P.M.
STARTING SATURDAY
The stirring saga of
a Grizzly Monarch's
conflict with A t10 W111lt Di1ney'1 (G)
man "PINNOCHIO"
THE ALL TIME FAVORITE
Stln lnlet'nallonal ProducllOflt ll'IC". •
• W/IOll-o....,. f~ l"'-""'-1 AA-•rs
Plus Speclacular
S_Kl Short
"Gel Hol"
A FAMILY TREATI
HELD OVER New-In Color!
,1111 211111 G-rfft ffft11re Surfing Thrills
''C--Af•--OW" Around The Worldl ·M llli Morocco-Ceylon
IPGI Portugal-India
ALSO-TH£ MULTI
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER
"LAWRENCE OF
ARABIA"
AT 8:20 ONLY
_..l"l> . ,,.,
..
lo -. '
•
NBC ( .. ) 8:00 -NCAA ..Rask&tball . Sem1ftn1I! of the
1P72 coll t:gt: ch,,.mpionsh1p tournr y p1l l.J\...LA ag11inst U>uls--
villr.
CBS (21 t :OO -"PromisC' Her . .\.nyth 1ng." This 1966
mo,•1e comedy reAtures \\'arrrn Really, Lt.slie Co!lron, Bob
Cummini;i~. Her1ninne Giniznld 11nd Kee-niln \\lynn .
ARC t7l 10:00 -"0\\'en ~larshall . r ounselnr at La\''-"
~1arshall ~Arthur H1Jll defend.~ A trenager <.'harged "'il h
lht murder nf A \1'nma n \\·ho cmplo~·cd him a! a b::iby sitter.
'
KCET 4281 8:30 -"Nl::T Playhouse Bingr;iphy." Max
\'nn Syctn"' "lars in thrre plays by t\ugust 0 St rindbrrg -"
"t\·11ss Juhr."' ''The Father" and ··1'he Bond ·•
Kl'LA 15 l 11 :lo -"The Heirr~s .. ~ Oliv1;i de Ha\'1lla nd
gi\'fl~ he:r Acactrmy A"·ard-\\·1nnin~ pf'rformanre as a plain fj
girl pr~<'d ·upon by a fortune hunler 1 ~1nntgnmery Clift). ~
KC.'OP 1 l~l 8:00 -Ro.x1ng. n url.v nobles meets Jimmy
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TV DAILY LOG
Thursday
Evening
MARCH 23
m "MERV"-Peter Ustinov, * Ernest Borgn ine, Cliff
Robertson, Broderick
Cra\vlord, Shelley Winters m Mrrv l:rilfln Sl!llW
l :DO fJ €1) News
Q (f_gj a:l Ntn
fJ r3J G)N1w1
ED 11"11 NCT l'l11h11uu l i111f•Pflf
··A.u1usl S1findbrr1·· Mix \lfl1'
Sydow slus in 1hret ol Str!ndbeit'1
plays: ''The f1lller," "Miss Ju!lt"
and ''The Bond." 0 (+1 Wild Wiid West ID The Flintstents
ffi I Dream ol Jea nnlt
(i~) The fren~h Chtl
flil Hod1opod11 lod1•
0.~ M1ybtrry ltFll
--_ti?i).ll--'iftt-. ----
9:00 E) rfl CBS Thursd1J Mevl1: (t)
(2111) "PromlSI Her A1'ylhln(' (com)
'6t;-W1111n Be"!!y, Le!lit Ctro"·
Bob Cumminp, Herminn1 Gin1old •
Ktt11an Wynn. A pir!ly french•\llrfdo#
--see~s.-. !11hu lor her \9'-"1911\fl• --~ &:30'U ltll· lht Clock old son. Sht m11vts to Gr1errw1tll·:
O Movie: {C) (90) "Mr. Jericho" V1ll1ge and conducts • c1mp1lrn to
(com) "69-Patrick Micnee, Connit m1rry her boss-the sllth most
Stevens. e\1g1ble bache!or 1n the c11untry,
(8i CllS News Willer Cion'.i,itt 0 BlllJ Graham Cl"u11d1
(101 Hollywood Squires 0 (3) fil Ci) Lon1str11t (R) "flt-m AndJ Griffith Shew ll' 111 Br1ss" lo112slre1t becomtl
(!) H1nnJ ind tht Profissor invol~ld i11 I mu1du cum-lhtll mys-
(fJl l lttk Joi1tna1 11ry st! 11.11 nst 1 New Or!ttns j11r
fEl [duc1li1'l 1 Ntlinn "The Chanz b~ckRround. Brock Peters, Jtnel
ln1 Arnt1lcan Comm•tmen!" R~poi! M1tl~thl1n. Robert OoQul •nd
lrom lht. r~tnf LBJ l1br1ry tdou ! lo~n R.i~zuut.
lllln sym posium, I ro Nnhts T1p1ti1'
'
with Y11I lryner u _ II' u "' _ --~ _aon~ ... ong=nawau1 _____ _
· ~ J.0!1-\H f~A~\ ~L~, •n<il ~ I In 5ear-ch.of a perfect ride! ~ Cetta.MeH. 5,4 ·2 1 . I
m Tr111ure I 09 The 'li11ini111
!:< Green Aa es Cl'.) N1\1ch1 ~t!Afiat;;,C.,~.,~"~'---.-l""-9·""s-Wtl~n-Fttllmtr•---------
Ci) Vic101i1 J1me1 Show rn.L1 Gil1
r Wk. O.yi ':U; SIL, Sun. 1:15
i "Som•lim•1 " Gr••' Notion"
~P·loty-Mi1ty-for M•" -
UYNm~ "What's
llllll!Y The Miltter
WINTlRS With Helen?' Kil!.@ COLOlll .__
Showtlm• 7:00 P.M.
Co11tl1111011s R11ttni119
Show S•11day 2:00
RatM IGP)
, ..
"THE ANDERSON
TAPES'' 1,.01
2 Showln91 Nlightly Thrv Match 28---7:00 & 11 :20
UASANTA ANA
"l •111
FOX FUll!RTON
CINEMA I W!STMINST!R
SHORT
SUIJECTS
,.,
"WHAT'S THE MATTER
WITH HELEN ?" (PG)
LA HABRA DRIVE IN
111 ,.,,
LA MIRADA WALK-IN"
l'f&O lo M:r1•1 II•'· Sil ttlO
HIGHWAY 39 DRIVE IN
••• ,.11 ••. ,, '·'· ,...,,
"TALES FROM
THE CRYPJ"
7:00 II Cl! Nen W1\tu Cron'.i,itt
Ci) AllC New, Smith, Rt1soner
0 l?J Ntws Jolln CIUl!CtUor IJ NYPD
(+:J Truth Ill Con .. qutnctt
li) D111ntl
fll Whtl'i MJ Une7
nGI Tam Jontl ShllW
m •I Lett lucy
(ID I DrNm If lt111nlt
(1'J Spttllna: FrHly
fD H1!h1yo11
€1) PIHln!t d• Amor
9 Fllfn: "Alsi Th1111 lor Mt"
10:00 0 \m) iI.) Flip WlllOll Gu1st1 •tt
Pit loon1 •nd 11mUy, Gtort• C.·
lin 1nd SU111 Ray Rnb1n111n.
0 Nen Geo1a1 Putn1m
0 ("U(J)&)Owtt1 M1 r1h1ll,
Coun5t1or 1t Ltw "Tl'rt 81b~ Sruu"
M1rsh11l lod Brand11n dtltnd Howie
Bo.,.ers (t'ary Grimes). 1 lttn11er
r.h1r2ed with the murder ol tilt
w~m&n whn j!mplorrll him 11 • b1br '
srUe1. How11 JS identifi1d by an 1ye.
wi1neis 11 !ht bey wh11 fled lro'1
!ht Muse ti lht hm1 of tht mur·
dtr. Howie, pr11resl•n2 ln110Cenc1,
VGlunleers to la~t t lit de11ctor
lest, but flunks 11. 7:30 IJ R11UJ11' •n tht Riffr Tomm) f) Th• 4i•mt 4i1r1M
Smothers 1uests. m Ntws Pr!t Miller, Ken Jonis CJ l.Jidlt "Se1rch 101 Yeslerd1y" (!) Ntn Hufh Wilh1m1
l1ss1t tnd her new found fri ends. ED fill Wolld Preu
Ron Holden tnd Dtlt M•lchtlt, 10 Gm Luthi Librt
prosp1ctin1 In t lhOst lawn. A flrt IO;JO 0 Yeur TurR te T11l Itel
Is 1ctldt~t1lly st1rted 111d lt nitts 0 C.n4ld C.111tra
• dyn1mit1 1xploslan, arid L1uie GI Saltri 11 Adv1t11hlr.
m111I mike 1 pe rilous effort to saw aJ Atorm1nttd1
Dale. OJ Fll111· "Sylvia'" 0 Mowit: {C) (90) "Thief tf 111-10:45 fJ1) [I) O.v1c1 UttltjOhft/Critic 11
dad" (fin) '61 -S1ev1 Reives lira•
Geor1i1 Moll. 11:00 0 Ci) @I) N1W1
@ To Tell th• Trut~ D ®I m Nm
fJI I Dr11m 111 Je111nl1 D !'~~ step l•Yoft• 0 MIUlon $ Mavlt: (C} (21tr) '1111 (6) Mi rshat Dlllo11 T1oj111 Korst" (1dv) '62 -Stt~• O (])a.> Niws
Rteves. J~hn Ortw Btrrymore, 0 Morie; "Tiit W11btl" (drl) '52 m Ho11n I Ktr011 -Vtn Htflln " [t11t L1mlltrt.
6) (1) Dr11net m Trtllh ff , Con1tq1111t11
ED H•WHtktrJ m F1sltlon1 In S.wlnr Luclflt lllvtr1 m To It An nounttd @ Ttltt111111: A Prot~n llltport
fl) M1ntr1p tI) flrinr U111
l •OO f) fl) Mt 1nd u,, Chimp The ll:lD GJ Movl1: (C) "Htllt, Frltu, Htllt•
, lltyno!ds f1m1ly IJ p1ck!d bJ 1 (mus) '4~1ct ftyt, John P1ynt ,
p11nt m1nul1cturln1 comp tfly as 11:15 @II CrtR Cine dtl Jutv~
!ht !d11I l1m11, tO du110nstr1lt 11:30 IJ Cl) CIS L11ti M1V11: (C) "Thi
!~elf product en lelevis!on bu1 Cttt11 JH1111" (xl·fl) '69-Robtrt
th ey're NOT p1tp1red to cop~ with Hor1on, Rithud J.atdltl, Ludt nt
Bull()nS. 1'1luui. An 11ttroid his steered out
Q fig) a:l NCAA 81skttb1ll S.llff. OI Ol'bll t nd is on I l1t1I colll1io11
fin 1!1 Sites 1nd !tams to bt 1n. aiu111 with !ht 11rth. Sp1tt Slttlon
r.ounc!d. Gamm• 111 is 01dered to blow Ult
!ht as!er11ld. lht1' llllCls itstll will• 0 IJ) (i) m Ali11 Smith Ind an tvtn mort perilous prnbl1m.
Jane1 (R) "Jjilbreak •l Junction D ([Q) m Johnnr Carton ()pert
City" Heyes ind Cu1 ry p1rfo1m 111, Be-wtrly Sills iuts!s.
brlllltntly when lhty 1r1 itpuliztd
to brlni In two h<l!dup min. Th-. 1J Movlt: '1h• Htltt11" {drl) '49
not only brini In tht two outlaws. -Oll~i• dt H1'11t!tnd, Mont1omery Clil!. but two 01her memb1rs ol th• 1en1 0 Cl) m ,,..,.. Dick Civttl T ind !ht $60.000 in loot. As lhtnks ~ w Ol'lf
lhty'rt •rreitid bJ !ht shtrlll. 1!1nd1ll Is th1 1u1sl·ho1t. m Andy Grillltlr Ula• m To Ttll !ht Truth m lotlnt rrofll !ht OIJfllpk RudJ lZ:OO m M~t; "Rtl1trr1 tf ltd: Sltdt'"
Robl1, met!s M•~• Pus1l1ri In 10· ~wu~ 55 -..lolln £rbon, Ntl'lllt
round m1ddltwelchl contest. l:OO (~~ O ({) OOl
:Jj1 Thirty Mlnlltn Willr • , • ' 0 Morie; "lnddt:t'~.. Silpn'"
0 l lltk JoM1nal (ldv) Odilit 'lt11G11, Pierri M1"lm1.
lt) 0 Stltw lh Loco '11ldu 1:30 IJ Movlt: "Ttuth 91 [vii" (SUIO)
mJ HiM '5!-arafllon Hts!on, Jtntl Leith.
1:30 0 (fl Mt lhrtt S&nl (R) Trimp 2:00 m !lt-Nltfrl '!"-: "ltun, PsKflt.
btcomts losl 111d h!11t Dod•I bt j Run tnd "Tlttirt 11 tit• Cl1iy"
urm11 Ml dtspo11dtnl tllll 81rb1r1 l ;IXI II M0¥11: (C) "PtwnM'" (im) '57
111~ 10 l•kt lltr 10 1 cl\ild psy· ~eor1t Montiornery, Loi! Albrlft!I.
,110101111. 5:00 m D1'1'1d Frost Sllow
Friday
DAYT1ME MOVIES
1:00 m (C) "H11v111 C•• W1i1" (CC/fl)
'43-Gtnt Titfntr, Don Amtcht
1:30 0 (C) '1111 Ctld111 Ko«l1" l1dv)
'SI -Ann Blyth lllV!ct f1rru
10:00 (}) ''We1111n In Hiiiin(' (dll) '?>D-
idi lu•1tt0, Ho•ud DYii
1:00 0 (C) "Tiit Wrtd ti !ht Mt'I
Dcrtrl'' (adv) ·~9 -G1ry Cooptr,
j ht rlton Hn1cn. m ''Wo1111~ Atbtlt" (d11) 'l& -
K1th1rli11 H1pb1nn, Vin H1llln,
1:00 ((1 "'lhr1d te H11111 10111" (com) '&2
-81n1 Cro.tly, Bob Kt'.11>1.
(fOl ICI "[wtfl'llW•1 lut lilt Trvth"
(com) '51 -Maurttn O'Hut, John
Forsyth•.
12:00 ~ "W1sttrn P•dlk A~lflr {·11t'1 4:00 lJ "W•it ti.1 1 Duron" (drt) ''6 ~I -Ktnt TA'{lor "lr11,ur1 II -)IC-I.Md, Mt l fOlrTlt,
Monie ~sto" (tdv) ·~ -lilt~
l1n1••. I 4:>0 J; S.111• n lOAM lltl111 ).
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D-'ILY PILOT Thunday, MJl'Ch 23, 1972
I
The-Sunday DAILY PILOT Puts it Together ...
A New,
! . .
Complete Newspaper
Here's
.. You
THIS SUNDAY ...
March 26
•
THE GODFATHER • • •
John V11lter111, DAILY PILOT staff writer of Italian descent,
takes 11 close look at "The Godfather" as the film makes its
Orange County debut in Newport Beach and •••
• • • THE GRANDFATHER
Words and pictures on the same page with "The Godfather"
tell the story of Thomas "Yonnie" Licavoli, now b8, on life-
time parole after spendiog 37 years in prison. It's the.profile
of 11 man who rose from the slums of St. Louis to 11 position
of power among the Mafioso.
OLE'S DREAM
Early San Clemente is presented, family album style, by
Mrs. Leslie Denison, daughter of the city's founder, Ole Han-
son, 11• •he recalls the tent meeting that inspired the seaside
village's development.
JOHN lT1 AYNE: ANOTHER VIEW
Columni•t Rex Reed talks to Mark Rydell, director of John
Wayne's "The Cowboys," and gets a new view of the Duke.
Rydell thinks the real John Wayne (conservative, concern-
ed, opinionated) is just great even though Rydell told Wayne
"I'm a liberal Jew" the first time he ever met him . Wayne
didn 't knock the chip off.
PLUS • • • EVERY SUNDAY
• Big, Local Classlfled Ad Section
• •
Color Comics Section
TV Week
• Family Weekly
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• • . AND EVERY SUNP.4 Y ·
• •• . ' . --. ' SUNDAY SPECIAL
' Stories by, of and for the Orange Coast as only a DAILY PILOT staff writer can tell them.
These page-topping storie• set the pace for Sunday's in-depth approach to news reporting,
DAILY PILOT style.
PEOPLE/QUOTES
Kings or commoners -they're aU people. And, sooner or later, they say something quotable.
It ma kes comments that are highly readable •.. just part of the exclusive package of staff.
produced features tailored for Sunday DAILY PILOT readers.
ORANGE COAST ROUNDUP
Coastwise, no one is more cpast wise than the DAILY PILOT. Weekly roundup of significant
happenings from Seal Beach to San Clemente helps readers keep up with all the communities
of the Ora~ge Coast. ·
SPORTS
Latest deadline for sports news in Southern California assures Sunday readers of the freshe•t
and most complete ~vernight coverage of local and global events in the sports world. Still
offering the most in-depth coverage of local area sporting events, the 'new' sports section
now offers more scope and depth on Sundays.
YOU ..
Focus on you and your friends and neighbors through this lively 'Section 3' every Sunday.
Feature "article leading off the section is exclusively available in the DAILY PILOT, often is
1taff written. New 'AT YOUR .SERVICE' column answers the hard questions, can even help
you fight city hall. Other 'YOU' features in section include 'You and Your Health', 'You and
the Law', 'Good Deed People' (your neighbors who have taken on the commitment to help
their neighbors). Columnists range from Erma Bombeck, quickest wit in the west; and Count
Marco, the man women love to ha"te; to Rex Reed, the celebrity-turned-columnist , who tells it
like celebrities wish he wouldn't. And the 'You' section also offers locally oriented and ex-
clusive entertainment and travel news.
-1
DAILY PILOT SUNDAY EDITION
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~ .Yoil'lt'~an your famiry to Qe:aress~
' in harmon~ ·with the season ', ... ' Jhe frend
is toward: the "put-together" .Jook, away
from the ·casual."' ~ from .this medley
of newly arrived fashions that ~ng
of Easter and Spring.
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DAILY PILOT PHOTO 8'( PATRICK O'DONNELL
FASHIONS COURTESY THI BROADWAY
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2-Feshton
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Old-time
Fashions
Reviving
Revival is the ke ynote ot
fashion tltis year. Ball gowns,
blaz.er!'I and platform s~
ha ve made stron~ comeback.$.
And hats -remember them?
-are coming hack big for
Spring . the seaMln \'>'hich had
traditionally bf'en known for it
"Easter bonnel J ~'i!h all the
frills upon it.·•
The most exciting "frill" for
h;its this year is the important
diamond brooch -never out
of fashion. but p e r h a p s
relegated lo a quiet role the
past few seasons. when the
ethnic and peasant look.$ were
having the ir day.
But elegance and luxury are
back ln fashion, and the
elegant. icy white diamond is
the most luxu rious accessory
-a-W-Oman-ean-own:-Diamonds-
are so special, they can ac-
tually accessorize an ac-
cessory. For example. a dia-
mond daisy with an emerald
center can be pinned to a new
flOppy hat, perhaps a straw
panama draped with organza.
The new shapes in hats are\
almost all from the twenties,
thirties. and fort ies. Close-fit-
ting cloches remind us of
Clara Bow and the Charleston
ra-;---great---bro ad--felrs---ur--
straws sport wide brims,
which can be pin ned back -
with a diamond and gold
brooch -or may take lengths
of filmy veiling, another
millinery revival.
The white, draped turban,
often swept to one side, is a
favorite dramatic look for
e\'enlng. Pinned with a
diaino nd-paved feather, or a
double leaf of pave diam onds At So11th Coast Plaza • -· and ruby beads. it makes a
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,___ --~ _...___. __ --.. -----~ _________ .... --_ _ ____ __ _ _...,..J!un~i~~!pok JQu_
John. and Kathy ,Klauser 1nodel ri.tay Co. spring fa shions for young people special spri~~ evening. . . • while visiting Easter Bunny at his "residence" on mall at South Coast Plaza. for !he trad1.t1onall y feminine
John, the suit is knit "denim teamed with a grownup-type shirt and tie. Kathy's trim of .veils, plumes. and
ankle-length floral voile suggests a "look" for church and; or party going. flowers will always enhance a
pretty face.
Country Look Coming Into Town
s
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\Vhen the country look came stage set right out of fragrances, too. (Of cOurse, grasses or· a meadow-in-the-S d l f
to Ulwn right out of the co~n-"Oklahoma." Stroll down the that's v.•here fragrance began, sun.· Made to wear with. the tr ijJe S tt1Z F 01Ue1·s P
h ----'rY-lanes . and th~141----s-t~-ee-rly-spring-d11y--t~:Ht-----mode-rn--synth.leh·.,:;-~~~~,;;.,;~.p~~C-""cc-_;__-;--__ :--;:--;---:--,.-~;---c;--,-:---~-~--C---:---:---:---:--:--:----:------------jf----
meadov.•s. 1t came to stay and you expect everyone to invented by ~iaster "Noses" likes of a flattering blouse and Patterns or young fa shions include the stripes of . brook suil is dou ble knit \rith navv hlue ;:ind \rhite
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awhile. It sent £reative girls break into "Oh \Vhat a tn the contrary nolwilhstan-skirt from S\mpllcity Pattern, Jamie Auld's suit and the flowers of the floral"ptiTit · stripes. !\:larcie's dre.ss· i~· a SuzzanC c·nd:i rt original
ba ck to . their sewing Beautiful Morning." ding). the whole thing becomes a dress modeled by Marcie Scjwartz. The fashions and by Johnston. The print ts ~reen, pink and \\hitc ~ct
machines. Crisp wh ile blouses, All this furor ahout out-One such is Wild Meadow, kind of ensemble -a new hair stylings are from Children Unlimited. Harbor off by \\'hite organd y collar anrl grec np;:itent belt.
big sleeves and wild print doorness , naturnlncss, the diffused by the pel'fumer's art kind of personal happening for view Center, Ne\vport Beach. Jamie's t\vO-piece !\fill-l\Iateria!. is dacronlpol .restcr/co tton .
skirts. worn buttoned or not, ecology bit, etcetera, has af-like a moist green \Vind over the girl who wants to have her
give the avenue the look of a fc<:ted the blends of nc1Y the 11un1bcrless flowers and own special aura .
, --DISCOVER HOELSCHER'S
MEN'S FINE CLOTHING AT TWO FOR JUST THE ONE PRICE
Our two for the one price policy assures you of extremely important, c;ontinuin9 savings in our ,
entire Fine Clothing Department. OVER I 000 SUITS AND COATS, ALL TOP QUALITY,
AND BRAND NEW FASHION STYLING. And you get what we promise, ab solutely first
class clothing. If you don 't need two at this time, bring someone to share your saving s.
H O:ELS CHER'S .
AN Bh 1 AST
DOUBLE KNIT __
.---DOUBLE KNIT
Our New Heather Check Caat
This new double kn it sport coat is town
tailored in 100 "!. Dacron Poly•ster and pat-
terned in multi-color heather checks. It's
incom parably comfortable, Un believably
wrinkle free. A brand new look of fashion
independence.
absolutely irresistible, oncl at
2 for $89.50
HOELSCHER'S · CiOTlliNG\'.
· • POUCV "' ' .. "'
Suits ...... 2 for $ 98 .50
Suits ...... 2 for $130.00
Suits .... 2 for $150 .00
Sport Coats 2 for $ 79 .50
Sport Coast 2 for $ 89.50
Slacks 2 for $ 28 .95
Slacks ..... 2 for $ 22 .95
Two can participate
ANTA ANA 'HU,NTINGTON llACH ANAHEIM
Dew11tow11 11 Hu11th'ltte11 Ct1tlft A11eltel111 c.,.,.,
4th 011d Sycamore leach e1111f ldlnttt 447 N. L"''
O•llr It,, • M•"" Tllufl .•. ,, .. 10 ,. t Mt"" Tllu,..,, '"'· u le'
lfrl. 10 tt t Tw•1., Wed,, Sii. 10 11 t Twtt .. WHI., Sii, 11 ti 11•
9uality men's wear for over 30 years. BankAmericard & Master Charge
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KIRK JEWELERS OF COSTA MESA IS NOW FEATU RING THE
NEWEST PRODUCT OF LITTON INDUSTR IES, THE FA MOUS "YAG"
(YTTRIUM ALUMINUM GARNET) SYNTHETIC DIAMOND WITH THE
HARDNESS OF 8-1 /2. THIS ITEM SELLS IN RETAIL STORES IN
SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA FOR $50.00 PER CARAT. WE AT KIRK
JEWELERS ARE NOW ABLE TO SELL THE SAME IDENTICAL ITEM
FOR AS LOW AS $25.00 PER CARAT! ! ! THIS OFFER IS LIMITED
TO SUPPLY AND DEMAND. DO NOT MISS TH IS ONCE IN A
LIFETIME OFFER! ! ! ALL SHAPES, ROUND, MARQUISE, EMERALD
CUT NOW AVAILABLE!!! THE MOST EXC ITING ITEM TO HIT
THE JEWELRY INDUSTRY IN MANY YEARS ! ! !
llllllANT CUT
Establlslttd 0 Yeenl
MAllQUISE IMEIAlD CUT
HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER
2300 HARBOR BLVD.,
COSTA MESA
545.9495
Sp
\Vit
blo
pri
he
so
ski
are
of
ten
av
tak ty
pla
one
stri
yell
on
If
dar
der
ma
ma
"Q-
wat
ligh
Long Line s
' Softly curving lines -the lissome look -is in for
spring. ~1odel Sharon Fischer demonstrates the
wh ole idea \vith hair style by Marti of Marilyn Der·
igo's Southern Comfort Beauty Salon and a gown
by Fred Rothschild Fa shions available at Foreign
Intrigue. Both Foreign Intrigue and Southern Com·
fort are at 29th and Lafa.fette intersection, New-
port Beach.
Bare Look 13iggest Neius
For Spring )72 Fas hion
The biggest fashion news for
Spring 19'f2 is the Bare Look,
with halter tops. one-arm.out
blouses and flowing sleeveless
shoulder wherever you want
all eyes to linger. After all,
with all these new fashions,
who needs hot pants?
print dresses stealing the lim--;;;;;;;~o;;~;;;;;o--Ojl
headlines. JONES
·After all, the eye must have-NEW YORK
somelh;ng to cling to, now that
skirts are longer and pantsuits
are an established fashion.
So shoulders have come out
of hiding for their share or at-
tention. Some members of the
avant garde fa shion set have
taken to decorating their pret-
ty shoulders with tiny stick-on
plastic flower s. \Ve even saw
one optimist in her one-sleeved
striped T-shirt with a sunny
yellow "happy fa ce" fXlpped
on her shoulder. AT
If you don't (eel quite so l
daring, or believe in un-]
derstated charm instead, try J EOJrl tnhl making your own beauty
marks. It's easy. Just dip a
"Q-Tips" cotton swab in WESTCLIFF PLAZA
waterproof eye liner and very NEWPORTER INN
lightly touch it to your
kid• like •••
• games• toys
and things to play on
mothers like •••.
• llttfe-girls' clothes
Piccolino •Johnson
Suntogs • Miiibrook
Dans kin • Ruth of Carolina
•little boys' clothes
Jr. Edition• Levi
Chips & Twigs
Doesp un • C_arltona
kids don't like •••
•haircuts-
but~ they love
we have
them 111 •••••
ohildten unlimited
Loc •f•d tt +h• ntw H.rbot Vfew Ce nter l'lt•t
F-•1hlon ltlt nd 1ir1 S111 Jo•qui11 Hil l1 Ro•d -
ont block 1111 of M.icArth11r (7141 644 -0IJI
,--
fhU'1d1r, Merch '13, 1972-Fu hion Supplement to the DAILY PILOT-J
J
'
hare
•
and
beautiful
A.
/
,
Bare is in. Here and +~ere you Clare
to reveal "more of you . , • let the lo ok
step down to your shoes
with sensuous sandals fas hioned with
straps 'delicate and narrow •••
prettily placed •.• very open ... very now!
By Tinto retto :
II. llci, 17.00
B. Ping. 18.00
By Life Stride : ..
C. Showgirl, white or navy, 17.00
D. Rita, 17.00
Fo shio n Shoes
r ,-..J ••
• Register lo Vol.el
Through the courtesy of ''Cal iforn ia Non.Part isan Vote r
Re gistration Foundation.' Dep ut y Reg istrars will be in th o
following Broadway slor c; fro m Morch 20 through April
13 to reg ister voters: Ari-:iheim , l ong Beach , Ora nge. Regis-
ter: 11 :00 o.m.·B:JO p.m., Mond or. thro ugh· F,;doys; 11 :JO
o.m .• 4:30 p.m .. Sat urdoy·.: 12 nocn·4:]0 p.m ., Sundoys .
•
at the hroadway
SHOP 10 A.M. to •:JO P.M, MO NDA~ THROUGH FRIDAY, SATURDAY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M, SUNDAY 12 NOON to SP M,
D.
•
\
..
ANAHEIM NEWPORT HUNTINGTON l EACH O RANGE CER klT0$ "
-44-4 N. E11tlifl C71-41 115·1121 • 47 F11hio11 hl.11d (71 41 644 ·1212 '1711 EJi11a1r A"t r11.11 (714) 192 .JlJI 2100 No . Tu,1in Sir•tt 17141 998-lll l 500 l o1 Ctttito1 M•ll • t 211i 160·04 ll
~~~s~~~M~t~DAILYPl~T-Th~d~·~~~M~tt~c~h=2~)~,~'~'~"~---------------------------------------------------
Thi s dacron-\vool double kn it sui l imported fr om
Spain by Nu-U 1t1en's J1aberdashery of Balboa
Island \Vi ii be shown at Las Florislas J.-l eaddress
Easter shoes. A.t prices that
leave you a little somethi'19
for everything else you need.
•
1--'L---B< IL<lll--Ap<il-28-in 1-Jos -Ang~-•pJ>;<-ugh,t--1--'----...:::
13.99 : •
I
•
•
\Veight is at home on recreation scene or in the bus-. 17 9 9 iness ~1o.rld. La s Floristas shov,i wil! benefit child-•
ren's speech and hearing clinic at use.
New Belts for M~n Men's monk strap slip-on. Broc:d
toe, soft grained leather in black
or redwood. Men's sizes.
Look 'GentlcmanlL.~~-
The re t u r n of the fashion-styled belts. there is a
"gentlem;:in'S JooK'.' in men's
apparel is reflected in the
neat. classic look of this
Spring's men 's belts. /\c-
cording to one of the !eadlng
man ufacturers of men 's
Old Look
le ss cluttered appearance in
men's belts with the buckle
look dominating.
Patent leather ~Its in both
solids and braids are expected
to lead the fashion parade.
report the designers a t
Canterbury Belts. U us a U y
associated with dress wear,
patent leathers are now at £ N·a t-i 1 rP • home w1th casual wear. Jn ad·
1-'.------''--'---L---L.LU.._ LL...U......\.-d·it-ion-hrm w-slyles--fi>r-t he··L ----
'
,
D.ominates ·
There are several strong
trends in fabric.~. in colors, in
prints. Bnt the strongest
overall trend is a continuR!ion
of the interG~t in the nartiral
and the classic.
This preoccupatio11 v.•ith old,
near.forgotten fa v 0 r i t es
manifests itself in gingharn.
That \voven classic is the hot
fab ric of the season. and other
fabrications 1r.v to duplicate it
with a new twi st. E\·en knits
are masauerading as
gingham.
The preoccupation with the
natural means a Jot of fabrics
\\'ill have flax contenl for a
nubby surface, or have the
colorations of unbleached
muslin.
Denim in solids <i11d prints ls
still a vital fabric, although
chinos are coming into the pie·
ture str ongly. As a companion
to denims. seersuckers are
stron~cr than ever. Leather is
part of the natural history too,
and fabrics are being printed
to duplicate skins.
THE
so\ id patent Je~cr belt, there
are no w "Krink lc" patent
lealh<'r belts in solids and
hand·braided styles. Eve n the
popular solid an d striped
stretch fab ric belts are now ~cented with 'patent lealher
tabs. .
Suede bells also will be
popular with· fhe'new Spring
apparel. Three are. designed
\vith overlay~ in ·the muted
Innes which are in fa.~hion .
One ls a multi·layer belt with
thre.c hori1.ontal strips of
suede, each narrower than the
one below; this is available in
two color con1binations: navy,
tan and burgundy ; and three
sh<1des of brown; another belt
has a continuous line of Ar·
l"O\\'~ in light and dark brown,
bJ11e burgundy and copper on
nHlur;i! tan suede: a third is a
silhouette cut-0ut of a city
scene of buildings and cars in
brown suede along the entire
length of a natural tan suede
belts. Each of th e belts has a
disti nctive buckle tr:eatment.
The wide look in belts with
two-inch and one-and·lhree·
quarter·inch widths remains
the riominant choice among all
dressers. fo r both dress and
casual wear.
RED
BALLOON
LTD.~.~
-·~·-~nee upon a time there were some
litt le boys and girls and their mothers,
grandmothers and aunts fo un d won-
derful th ings for them to wear for
Easter in our Young Peoples collection
6.99
Girls' crinkle patent vinyl tie
shoe with nylon tricot lining.,n
black or wh ite. Girls' sizes.
7.99
Boys' ${rap and buckle style in
bro~ black or whi te grain leather.
Pentred• sole and heel. Boys' sizes .
Bigger boys sizes 9.99
14.99
Men's dress oxford
in redwood smooth leather
witl'I redwood grain
leather. Men's sizes.
\
13.99
wom,n·s neat little pumps in black
oi white crinkle patent. Also
available in··fashion shades.
Women's sizes.
5.99
Girls' c;rinkle patent vinyl tie
oxfords in black, or white
Round toe, sizes
for growing girls.
8.99
Boys' 2-tone leather oxford with
perforated trim, cap toe. Brown
and brown grain tones.
Boys"sizes.·Bigger bo ys' sizes, 8.ff
Boys' buckle dress boot has
Pentred• heel and sole on antique
briarwood grain uppers. Boys· sizes.
Bigger boys sizes, 9.99 '
JCPenney
The values are h~re-every day. the most 1leligl11 fully 111111s11al
chlld1·e11•., dw11 hr the s1111tl1ln11d ·shop Sunday .noon to JS p.m. at the following stores:
Women's crinkle patent leather
heels in black, wh ite or bone.
Tricot lined.
Women's sizes.
4.99
Girls' shiny crinkle vinyl strap
pump in black, or wh ite
Synthetic sole. Girls' sizes.
8.99
Boy$' bu ckle two·tones In
black and brown. Bo ys' size s.
Bigger boys' sizes, t.99
-.-..:
.:. -·.~
..
Huntington Harbour 17 14) 84~·1666
NEWPORT BEACH, Fashion Island. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Center.
Charge it.
. *COSTA MESA, Harbor Center (*.Closed Sundty)
I
Ch
·Her
that
skir
sno
The
1 Plat . -----
I
,,
Be
Ano
coat
Geo
beig
Check This
Here's a three-piece suit in rayon/flax and polyester
that goes from noon till midnight. fts button-down
skirt sports black and white check for contrast"With
snowy \\•hite bl ?use a.nd spring-colored yellQw vest.
The ensemble 1s availa ~le at Jean Dahl, W:estcliff
· Plata. Ne\vport Beach. . ·-'-----
'
Beige Beaf/.t y
~~i·~!' . . . '
'
' 4 • . ,.
.An other J ean Dahl "gem" is this Bonnie •p ;ishin .
coat of imported wool tweed trimmed with leather.
Geometric pattern is in several different shades of
beige.
N y
T
H
I'
N
GOES
Ba lboa lsltnd
326 Me rin• Ave.
••nkArntf~nl
Dresses
& Bikinis
made to
order
la9un1 Beach
550 So. Coos! Hwy.
Mh!lr CMn11
·-:;
"
Thursday, March 23, 1972-Fuhlon Supplement to tho DAILY PILOT-5
,)
First time ever. Easter sale
•
of all boys' suits and . blazers .
Thru Saturday only.
Sale 1299
.... 15. ti A whole
wardrobe in itself.
--~M•DY"-W•Y-•.uitJncludts
jacket. vest and
· 2 pairs of flare· le;.
slacks. Rayon
with nylon, acetate · ·
or polyester. Sizes 8-12.
, ... ,,.
Sale
1899
Reg. 22.H. Sport
coat of 100% 1exturized
Dacron• polyuter.
Western styling In ·
bluet or browns, For
•i•ff 1 <f.20.
' .
\
Sale
1099
Rt<J. 12.98 The
supersu it! Wear it
many different
w ac
vest and 2 pairs of
flare leg slacks. In
single-breasted
matching or sportsuit
model. Rayon with
acetate, nylo n or
polyester. Sizes 3·7
reg., 4-7 slim.
,.--'------~-
JCPenney
The values are here every day.
3so
-e;ys·dres77h;';.ts.
(tie not included) Pen n
Prest«i polyester/cotton In
solid color&. Sizes 6-18.
2so
Boys• 100% polyester u ...
Redi-Tie style in fashion
patterns. 4" width.
Sale
1144
Reg. 13.98. Bluer
of texturized Fortrel•
polyester. Single
breasted with button
flap pockets. Blue
or brown solid colors
or patterns. For
sizes S-12.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 p.m. at the followlhg stores:
NEWPORT BEACH, Fashion lslond. HUNTINGTON BEACH, Huntington Center. *COSTA MESA, Harbo r Center . !*Closed Sundoy) Chorge It.
!'-~~~~~~~~~~~-'---~--''
•
,
!
•
•
6.-Pashlon Supplement to the DAILY PILOT-Thuroday. Much 23, 19n
Men 's Knits Moving In
Comfort-eonsclous men are
discovering that the newest
way to follow the sun is with
knits. For vacaUon and travel
W• C•rry .5i1•1 to 11
Wi .. ths AAA to I
to all points South -and
North, East or West, loo -
they're the ideal companions :
light in weight, they give com·
HIT THE NAIL
ON THE HEAD.
top brass
$23
-.Je> .. c~·
SHOETREE
SOUTH COAST PLAZA, COSTA MESA
UPPE R LEVEL -546-4791
12 do ors from rn•y co.I
Opti11 Su11d•y, Noon • 5 p.m.: ID • 9 Mon. thru Fri.
plete freedom of movement,
and yet hold their shape
wherever they go.
Whether roaming through
the historic towns o( Europe,
swimming in your own private
pool at Las Brisa:s, Mexico,
discovering great o p e n
beaches, roaming t h r o u g h
~atlve market! or joining a
Jetp caravan to a bull right,
there 's a knit for every con·
ting ency, and they pack with a
minimum of fuss. Travel el •
pe,rts at Aerona ves de Mexico
suggest, for most vacationers,
a small but flexible wardrobe
that combines C1lnstrvative
,though not necessarily formal
wear for the larger citles, plus
casual clothes for the beach
areas -and the new knits
certainly fill the bill.
Double knit suits, jackets
and slacks go sight·seeing in
style, cut In a sm0oth contem-
porary mood. There are blaz-
ers, sport jackets witlT western
detailing, and trim, well-fitting
slacks in a range of textured
patterns and solids that serve
as the pivot for many combi·
nati0fl3. Because they're in the
new miracle fibe rs. such as
American Enk&'s E n c r on
polyester and Enkalure nylon,
they wear without ever bag·
ging or wrinkling, and always
manage to come out of a suit-
case looking as fresh as they
did when they went in.
rmal mooct_
ideal for resort wear. there
are double knit jumpsuits -
the ne w kind of one-part
dressing, made even easier
because it's knit. And there's
the sleeveless vest-suit, with a
relaxed, easy look, and plenty
•
of sportive flair. It teams up K nitted !\1ystiqtte with some of the new boldly
colorfu l shirts, which in turn can be worn belted over Belted mock turtle tunic with full , blousy sleeve,
slacks, tunic-style, or tucked crocheted cuff and shown with hol pants by Nancy
in. for a smooth body.contour Logsdon is called "Mystique." It's available at .Kn it
Classica l
Jewe lr y
• In Style
t Fashion jewelry plays lt the
way the fashions lay for
spring. And that's classic,
romantic, sort and glamorous.
Those sensibles d e m a n d
decoralion and fashion jewelry
Is ready to take on all comers,
saucily dressing up the clothes
and the girl.
l
Themes keyed to Spring
favo r the fantastic neY>:ness or
all that's Oriental, the bri sk,
clean fun of the nautica l, the
colorful brightworks of the
Americana genre. And. the
J ewelry Industry Council has
discovered, there's lolS more
in-between: stained glass looks Girlish
and colors, pastel tinted · h stones, rhine stones, coral imi-Lynda liutcheson watches hers~lf in mirror as s e
tators . luscious true enamels. model s a real girl's dress of beige polyester/cotton
painted plastics, white and voile. }he "South of the Border". touc~ com~s f~om
gold. s i Iver and gold embroidered trim. This number 1s avail able tn sizes
toned partnerships. a silvery from B'h to 18 in Girls and Teens Dept., Lane Bry·
shine all alone. ant, South Coast Plau:-
Hanging pendants adopt all -r,~~~· ~~~~~~"IJ«:iiN'fii':•s~~~~~~~~ possibilities for every neckline II \'IK61 I A
from strapless to backless. SN1 P 'N STITCH SHO PPE
Wherever there's call for a 3334 Ea.st Coas t Hwy. e Corona d el Mar
cover-up. the pendant on Its Phone 07).8050
shorter chain is there flying
all the latest trends and ac·
c;o mpanied by e a r r i•n g s .
bracelets and even rings.
More glamor ideas for her
glamor clothes: white, always
the grand dame of sp ring into
su mmer . But plastic wears the
m o st glo\ving, color-happy
looks of spring, especially as
pins. And enameling pain ts the
juiciest fruits and berries to
pin on. a garden plot at a
lime. A world away but
sheltering in the same jewel
box are pins of enameling in
Oriental colers .• of jade: Jvory,
Spr ing is Here ,
Easter's Nea r!
Don't let Ea ster c•+ch you unprep ared thi1 year.
The 1tore is just bursting with be autifu l new
spring fabrics .
Come in fin d select from the be a utiful embroid-
ered cotton s and piq ues, crisp linen s, delig htfully
filmy voil es, polye1 ters in pastels, and prints
galore !
line. · Wit shop iri South Coast Plaza. Outfit inclU?!es ~ l------=====================!..,;:::;:;;_ _____ ==<t--s.i1i<;;e~vme1ess maxi cu[ 1n d1ari'Jond lace pattern and
h While pins may be a most
1
__ tr~im_m_e_d_w_it __ cr_o_c_h_e_t. _____________ , essential accessory. there's
10 • ' s.ti,,doy
Our comp etent selesladi11 s w.ill be g ~ad to hel p
you with •ny of your sew~_g,__n_•_•d_'·-·----
See You
JACKI E
Soon!
·-·
•
men's haberdashery
..
the one with·
Califo rnians Favoring
Soft Cl assica l Looks
In California, the feeling for buckles and bow trims add
fashion : classic a n d put-On into '72 shoes.
elegantly tailored with unob-f.iost platform soles range
trusive detailing and a soft from 314 inch to 1 !1 ioches w.ith
-wtrimslcal touch. · thinned downed heels from 2\1.t
Daytime: Quietly dignified lo 4 inches. Watch for the two,
. . . and very classic. Lots of three and four toned shoe -
suits, blazers. pleated skirts, brash go-witAI for spring
costumes and coat dresses. classics and non-classics alike.
Trim, topstitching and collar He·She Suits: "Manmade"
more to spring's chinoiserie,
than pins: hair ornaments,
pendants, earrings, bracelets,
rings and belts are well
represented, too.
•
e IANKAMIRICARD e MASTER CHA.RGI
LANE BRYANT--------. ,
•
••
'C . -~ --:-~~Sf;Jf.••El ~· 1=· ==-:=c=W~P=
and cuff interest become more jackets, slacks, shirts and
important. Cotton. I in en vests give an over-classified
blends, lightweight wool, silk spring a new shot of energy. ~=-==:=:-"-"'=-=1 -:onryol~l<o:/<>r= .~.::onQ..:jjolii:weight weor ·-· --11.!i:e-in vited=!O a ----na~~ral, ·cofuforta6le:-f1f. Red, go_ anywhere while polyester ==--¥-0 + ---
authority!
OPEN MON. THRU SAT. 10-9 SUNDAY 10-6
BALBOA ISLAND
673-B7B2
SEAPORT VILLAGE
LONG BEACH
597-0636
We strive to present the fines t
clothes from the best des ignerS
shown by soles lo ·. who core
~ For the Ea sler Parade ..•
Carlye , Honro, Am olfi, Porn os
Feinstei n, Goldworm, Nardis,
Aled, Alpe r Schwartz ..•
••• includ ing Jewelry by
Monet, Napier, Swoboda ..
Hondbogs by W olberg & Coldern
ond coots of fabric by Strock ond
Forstmon
DRESSES LONG and SHORT
COATS
SUITS
PANTSUlTS
ROBES BY VAIN TY FAIR
~i•es 6 to 20.
2515 E. Coast Highway
al MacArthur Blvd.
Corona del Mar
673.2990
Wocl 1(~11
Jumper
" l<.lm1Mr1~
Celora: ,.Oppy lt.t,
Aei!Nn 11111,
J11m!~ , Llgl'll Gr1y Htolt'ltr, tflvv.
$110.95
Your Ch1 rge Account We lcome •.• '•rklng Bthin'i Our Store
M11ltr Charge Avall1bl1.
Houro : 9:30 i. 5:30
white and blue Bfe favored al gabardine or satin tuxedo sil·
ma ny designer-houses. Flannel houettes take the dinner set
and dove grey combined with where they want to go. Add a
bold whites, reds and navies to tie or bowtie, and He-She
add unexpected softness to an Suites become the ultimate. in
American color s c hem e . elegant dressing.
Lemon yello_w loomed im-The Soft and Swingie s: This
po~tantly, ~n 1l3 own, and also group has particular junior ap.
paired with some co Io r peal. The flop crop is wkle leg·
~ohorts .. Pastels .are prom-ged and loose but never slop-
1nent. \~1th .peachier peaches py. Top interesl travels on
and rosier pmk.s. several wave lengths here :
Now that women have pep\um, tunic, shirred and
"discovered" pants in a draped designs, smocks. and
fashion and a practical sense, oriental sleeve in t e r e st
they will want them as an in· balance wide pant activity.
legral part of their wardrobe. Colors are varied, in muted
Even \\•ith the return to more tones, while prints cater to
rcminine attire. they "'ill not flowers, deco designs. and
desert their "new fr iends'', small animals and insects.
the pantsuits, the pants out· Seen in crepe, nylon and rayon
fits . European women can't blends.
pull them ·tin fa st enough, New1p;••••••••••il
Yorkers sec them as the most
fashionable necessity and CaJ-
ifornia designs them the "'ay
they've never been put to·
gether before.
New Nautical!!: Sailor stuff
In knits add pow prwer to bold
colors. Anchor. star and stripe
trim hold New Nauticals
steady. Battle jackets. midi
pullovers and surplus tops are
"big guns" in this group.
Straigbt.--Leg Slacks : a take-
off on yesterday's stovepipes,
but the leaner tit and fabrica·
tion. Straight. front creased
pants are newest in crisp
linens and p u c k ere d
seersuckers. Skinny fit shirts
and the "all in one' leotard top
appeals to a sleek and skinny
minded customer.
Evenin g: California likes
drama for after-dark, chiffons,
silk organza, matte jersey,
crepei silk and satin un·
fold. billow and slink out in
JEAN DAHL
HAS JAX
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
NE WPORTER INN
THE BEST
e v ery silhouette. Artificial Readl!rship p 0 t la prove
rJowers and rhinestone clips, "Pcan1:1t.s" ls one of the
buttons and buckles continue world's mo!t popular comic
"TALL" riffic
FASHION
HAPPENING
at our
~outh Coast 'Plaza \ ,
store ~"
SATURDAY , MARCH 25th
I I A.M. to 4 P.M.
REFRESHMENTS • DOOR PRIZES
French Girl
1rrives in fime for sprin g in
pastel gingham checks or dotted
swi ss.
100"1. cotton 1rnoc:kod ,,.;1h
lop11tr_y 1ppl!q ~• in till girl1
1i1•1: 10-2 0 ••••..• $24.00
!fer toll 9itli 5' 7''.6' ID"
011d overl
•
&outb Coast ?taza
•
i:
11,,... l1¥el-lrl1tel •t S•n Dl .. 1 ,rwy
ph11t1 540·1717
Sl9r• Hrs• M~ le l"M, ll·f:~1!. 1M S•M1y 11·S strong into evening. Shades of st~. Read It daily 1n the
evening cover every corner ofl~rnl=Y~P=ILOT~:·~=~~=~:;~~==~==~~~~=~=~~;~~~~=~=~~~=~~~~ the color spectrum -jet
black, rustic rose and murky ' multicolor prints command ~--. Spring fasion combines old
time walkers with ·72 styling w ·e CU a .Ir to prove ere IS an cager foot
for any d shoe.,,Ankle strips
and slin backs f I a t t er
feminine eel and ankles . . . •
11nd h g eels do slimming ~ '~~ ~~~~ things for legs. Crinklepatent, 1~.,......,.,-.-.....,,...,.-___.............,...,...,~~~;.,:..=...; ~;__..;;.. 67%-4186 · cloth, straw, leather and suede •tllll. i/I
go equally well with spring , • 1 ... foo~notea. Lou of •tr•Jl$· J;.._;;.:::.::.;:::..;:..:;:~::..J"-'l~~...;::..;.._.;.;._.-,_.._ __ .... _____ ..., __ ....,-. ___ ... __
•,
' • \
/
y
J o
as
j Sin
j eve
I• __ ch-Ii Na
• l •
• •
• • • • •
. • • I
~ , .
I
' • • ..
I
I
' ' l
' !
i
(
s
WI
•
COSTA
CC~TA
HUH1t
Cl:AN •••c
•
\
Fres hly Pi cked
You can pic k your 0\11n shoes "right off the t e at
Joyce Shoe 'free. \\'idc variety of stytewe a ilable,
as indicated by just ll\'O kinds of sprinW.-mer-y
Sin ger Sc11·ing Ccriter at South Coast Plaza has about
everything fo r the hon1e sean1 stress -fabrics, ma-
chines and patlerns -as demonstrated here by
Nancy Cherry, 111od eling a sclf-inade dress and sho1v·
•
·---SIN
STRETCH-YOUR-
DOLLARS SALE
NOW
529995
WITH CA RAYING CASE
REG. '349.95
One Touch Sewing stretches
your sewability. Get this
Touch & Sew • portable zig-
zag machine by Singer. One
touch starts a smooth, even
butlonhole. One touch winds
t he Singer exclusive Push·
Butlon Bobbin inside the
machine. Choice ol great
Singer stretch stitches.
Tht Singer 1 to 36' Credit Plan helps you have
your new machine nowL.withl n your budget. ,
SIN GE R T::z.·::.
For address of the Singer Sewing Center nearest
you, see White Pages under SINGER COMPAN Y.
•A T•l~trT11r~o! Tl.IE SINGE A C0'1PAf:."i
COSTA ,to\ISA-8roOol & 111nf;O\o\otr, I.out!! (~I Pita ,
COSTA MISA-2XIO lolarbcl• lil•d, HtrMr" Ctflttr , '
HUNTINGTON t&ACli-!.,tng'< 1! 1 .. (11 "1U"'ll"'llr511 lff(tl Ctfl!tr 117-100
Oll:ANGl-'1 ·J.lltnllOll EA1I. 'Tiit l:t!y" C If • • J41·1t4J
eAltOIN OltO Vl-nJI (11111m.~, Ortn~t County Pllt8 .... ,,., • SOI0•4011
• •
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numbers sho1vn by Vickie Kubashack. Sizes run
lo II and widths from AAA to D. The J oyce Shoe
Tree is at South Coa st Plaza.
ing olf inother one made from child's pattern. \Vide
variety of fabrics at the store can be seen 1n-back·
ground.
• -·---~._ Tl -::+-. =,_;-;.:._ On-
atSinger
This quality machine
at this low price!
Take It home In
Its own carrying case now!
The Singer 1 to 36• Credit Plan helps you havt lhla
value now-within your budget. SJ NGER
For ~ol llwi Sinoer~ Centernea~
you, Me~ P11C19S undlf SINGER COMPANY .•• ,,..,..,k el ntE s'"°u• ctJt,I,.,.,.
----Buy Now, Trade Now·----
COSTA MISA.-8rf111)I & Sll!lllO'Ntt, ~Ill (')IU Pl11• ....
CO~TA Ml~A-UOO l-lllrllOr 81\IG, Ma rbo• Ctr<i.r
J40.1tU
l(t f.11'J
HUNTtNGtON llACl4-l:Olng1r 11 le,cn, Munlln;!on aeacll C1111tr .. lt1-IO'I
OltANOl-ll J.l'I•"-ltlf. "Tl'll Cllv" Ct(!ttr J41·l"i
OAltDIN GllOVl-9'9)1 c11111m.'1, OrtftCjl '°"'"'" ,,.ll ............ IJMfll
..
ThurMl1y, Morch 23, 1972-Fuhl°" Suppla,,,.nl to the DAILY PILOT-7
•• •
TO COME SEE All OF
HOWARD WOLF'S SPRING
AND SUMMER COLLECTION
FEATURING 100% COTTON
Informal Modeling, between 11:00 and 4:00;
~ewporl store, Saturday, March 25
As you see -1hese are crisp, fresh,
!I ottering looks for everybady-
going everywhere-here, in o long
pique in black & white with
bright rick-rack, 70.00; a dash
of dots end stripes that d ip
low in bock with an edge of
white pique, 50.00; and a crisp
• sheer in yellow or navy with
daisy applique, 52.00
Drus Shep
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-----~--------------1-------------------~NEW,OU . •1 FASHION ISLAND . NIW'°U CINTU ..... no•. MON., FRIDAY,., .. TILL t ,)0 . OTMIR DAYS .10,00TtLL l 1IO , • ' .
r
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Llght acrylic wash and wear fabric and Carlyle de-
sign result in th is Jong dress and scarf for spring
and su 1nmer party wear. Authentic Bavarian fl ower
print des ign is in green, blue, orange, white, burg-
undy, Javendar and yellow. available al O'Brien's
Specially Shop, Corona del Mar .
•
• T ottch of Fashion
Size 'Eni Up
Cameo Shoes is the store at South Coast Plaza in Costa f\1esa where size is no
object. Dealing in Red Cross Cobbies a nd Socialites, the store offers customers
a ,vide variety of choice in sizes from 4 to 11 and in extra \vide \Vidths. From
fa shion-dictated dressy boots to "just plain shoes," Cameo is where fashion Jives
this spring.
• • ' . ~ 1
' A shoe to flt every man's
preference. Today there are
many different life & t y l es
and manyd l Cf ere n t mens'
Jshoe looks to express them .
Categories will include: jeans
shoes -hiking-type boots with
waffle-pattern soles, snub-nos-
ed updated western boots. new
sneakers, work boots. crepe II--""< +-<"'·e"'ttera-nd~upd'llteasanda'TS:" ,._ _ _.~
e l1nkAm1rlc1rd e M1111r Chilrg1
22 Ye.11"1 Ill 51m1 LKlll§ft
sophisticated jeans shoes for
dressy jeans -high heel
crepe shoes ~nd rough-out
spectators; fun shoes -wild
and funny paltern boots and 1~~~~~~~~~~~11 shoes: swinging high styles for Ii
sophisticated slacks -high
h9$l.slip-on.s and ties in plush Jla~rs and suedes; easy
elegant moccasins -suede,
buttery calf and crushed pa-
tent varieties.
@.~f!!.f.~~1!f.N6
Wo.,1u Appor•I lty
• Norman Wiatt e Bleylo
Alto Coif W11,r
2711 Eost Coost Hwy.
Coro110 d•I Mor
67l-4741l
CUSTOM
BIKINIS
mix 'n'
match
Stvt11 & 1i11t
prinh & 10!1ds
Compl1l1
l 11d1 AMirt
lllkln!-H1t1;
[OVl'l'•Upl
m1d1 10 your
1ptoelf!c1tion1
ISLANDER
BEACH FASHIONS
12l·2l rd Smet
Newport leoch, 67J-1511
Flowe red Material
Still Marks Sprin g
-
FER N VIOLmE
IS FASHION
FASHION IS
Men's and Women's Fashions
From 'round the Wo1·ld
380 So. Coast Hwy.
171 41 497-1600
Lag un a Beach, Ca., 92 b51
BOOTS
4973 New port Ave.
1414 1 225-1420
Ocea n Beach, Cet,-9'2 I 07
SHOES SANDALS
OUR THING IS • • •
•
From
-·--mari[ynDen{o · s ------Head--------
Southern Comfort to
Beauty Salon Toe
MARILYN *
TINA*
MARTI*
LAURA *
BEVERLY *
manlcurefi
permanents
pedicures
haircuts
shampoo
color ....
•
Boutique
Imported Gifts
-675-4100 675-7740
these fine shops located
at the intersection of
•
LAFAYETTE & 29th ST.
NEWPORT BEACH
For many costumes this spring the fina I touch of fashio n \Viii be a ring. Flashy
rin gs conies in all sizes, shapes, colors and moods at Kirk Je\velers (bot h the
1-luntington Center store, 1-Iuntington Beach, and the Harbor Center store in
Costa Mesa -shown above). fresh spring blossoms by
)Vear th e Best--Rain or Shine
Let fashion be your guide -
not the weather. come rain,
drizzle or shine, the fashion·
conscious man can nuw wear
th at nt>w suit or coal that fits
his mood v.'ilhoul regard
for !he clements. To-
day. any i::armcnls can be
made rain repellent !or dual·
takes is simply to spray his
fashionable apparel with
Scotchgard Fabric Protector.
TIME TO GET
BACK INTO
THINGS?
• MISS
ualiCraft
PRETEEN SHOES
Bright and pretty shoes for the young
tt purpose wear:ibilily. All it
One of the hottest news
items for men's s pr i n g
fashions is double kn i t s,
especially a single breasted
sui t with wide lapels and
belted back. It 's idea l for the
man on the go since it 's
lightweight and wrinkle.rrec. girl with grown-up ideas about fashion.
)
..... , ........ ~ ,, .. " .... ._II AJZF ... \. •11-'Vl
KNITTING MADE EASY
':'THE KNIT WIT WAY!
NOW You con knil your own •custom
Designed Sui I, Dress or Hof Ponls (os
easily os "Poinlirig by Nurnbcr")
either by hond or on a mochlne.,
.Complete ins truc.tions, Yarns .•
• Everything you need for a
•GUARANTEED CUSTOM
DESIGNED FIT!
\ '
EX ERCISE
SUITS
111 Ulu1lrllNI
Wiii!•, Retl, lll1c :,~~ ······ s5,
Ov1r"'"'' :,li ...... s3,
YtllGW L!lfc
~: ····-s5,
YtlloW
~~ ....... se.
Olfll•
irn&ll S!•ttcll mc'dlum ltrtY, '16'
1tr11• ctno"· U'M.
1!rtlcll
"YlOfl, Drll'f
btdy IUll.
THE HOUSE OF
billR\W
JOUTH COAST Pl.AU, COSTA MESA I
Plllt!t Mf.:tOU, lllwtt11 J. Mffl!l~
11111 U.S. N1t""1I Ila"~·
r::c· .. " .....
,1 :
; ' . . ··''
• •
•
J ,
\
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\Ji
7
Sweetly fem inine straps and lively ghillie ties
in su nny whitt:i ~rinkle. Come see all our
springtii:ne'Cfr~ss-ups. school favori tes and
playtimers. The se are 7. 99
SOUTH COAST rLAZA. lfhtel St . ., Solt Diet• frwy,.
Coste Mne
.. ""' ....,.... ..... -""'
------------------------------------------------------~----J
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,
Drtss
just t
. tion t
T
F
I•
,
. . ·-=-;tr - -
I/
Dress and jacket combi~d 1v1th soft felt ha t bring bac k
j ust the proper touc/1 of the ·3n~ 111 this 11ostalg1c add1·
. tion to the spring co/lect1on of fo sl11on ,,
Designer 's Sketc~book
For Spring, 1972
Duri?tg busin ess hours or after hours ••. this double
knit suit mal.'t!s both scenes. comfortably . .Jr-:/.:et L'i
longer, less "ch esty" and offers softer shou lder line.
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Three You ·can Do Yourself
I Th"""1y, Mlr<h 23, 1972-Fuhlon Supplement to tho DAILY PILOT-7 Y Ii I • -
~~141'\M ''tuflnt to tM fa.!hion scene for after·drJrk wear th i~
4f se/t thiff8t\ is offertd. in midi length. (ltj t ) and the 1:('.·
td in taff1t4 taith Chint1t·inspirtd print (right)
·-=-• •
~l"rirrg. Flnmaniic loot
·r '20.~ look is achit~
Fl11tt,r1ttQ /In's of thr rlrrt~ ore tnhanc~d by crewel embro1t"fe ry ertd al\klt·
length flrnrnce~ Ynu can make it 11011rself (S implicity Pottern No. 9112)
wftl\ Jabria from Senr.r. • -·
Be11uttfull11 simple. Thost ort tht word! for thi.s 1m.oek th.41 '"4U1 4 g1tdt
oo-t6gtthtr /Or t 1thtr altort.t or pant!. Po1y dt.s1on jtl~ric: la aCNm.-printtd
doublt kt11t polyeste r from Star.s' new American Heriltfc e•Uec:t1Mt.. ((Sim.-
Mo1t color nnd vtrsattlity nrt included i~ patcktD01'"
dt1ign of /abru: rrom Stnr~ you can ust to ?Mke: thii'
a!im and 1pla.shy 1umpsv1t fSimphctty Patter" No.
~llJ I. plicitu Patttrn No. 9754/. ·
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PLW's
11 Newsma~er
Knit"
It'• Bl1clc i nd Whit•
1rid Reef 111 ov•r,
th1nlc1 to •n 11tr1
' printing o, color on
thi1 witty doubleknit.
Gr11t w1y to 1pr11d
, flit f11hion wotd thit
Summ1r!
In D1cron@ polyester
witll th1 1h1p1m1king
n1w1 of 1 big Black
w1i1tb111d 11t 1m1rtly
into pl1c1. Al10 1
n1w1y light in N1yy/
Gr11n/Whit1. Si111
6 to 16.
$40.
Jfaln lnhl
WESTCLIFF PLAZA
NEWPORTER INN
HALLI DAY'S
SPRING CLASSIC
Traditional 'vhite buck skin, plain toe oxford
\vith red cushion crepe sole and heel.
$25.
l!EN'S TRADmON.IL CLOTHING
17th & IRVINE· AYE. -WESTCLIFF PLAZA
NEWPORT BEACH -Ph. 645-0192
Hourst 10 • 6 • ••• Mon.·1,.cl TJ.11r1,, 10. f
, , •one-stop' shopping
a.t its finest!
OPEN THURSDAY AND · MONDAY EVEN ING S-
The
/strapped
Sophisticate
Thi uninhibit1d look th1 t h11
ev1rybody telk ing. B1i91 tued1
Ii whit1 pat1nt, $21. ._
~!lf!fh.~ES
I 052 IRVINE -WESTCLIFF PLAZA
. ·I ; I
' .
I
PHONE 548-8684
'
illusion
by 1.~Gossard
-Artemis ·
A truly pro•oc•fiv• 1l••P·
w1•r coll•ction. P-S·M·L.
'f 11'1 whit•, c1 m10 pin•/
Ecru, Stir 11111/Ecru.
long $J4, Short $JD,
di
~.
""'· . ernon'S
,SPO.&TSWl:<lR.
1032· IRVI NE AVE.
-WESTCLIFF PLAZA
NEWPORT BEACH
. 548-4 121
Seulptured Cross
with Chain
adds a new dimension
to giving
~tcmbcr Amcrlctln Gem Society
•
,
..
Veta's PHONE
642·1197
CHARLES H. BARR
lftlMATI APPAi& --····---
Westcltff Plaza
Newport Beach, Callt.
Open Mondny and
Thursday 'tU 9 p.m.
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an
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WILT CHAMBERLAIN ARGUES VAINLY WITH REFEREE JERRY LOEBER AT CLEVELAND.
ild Pitching
recli s UCI
I
6·5 Lo ss
By HOWARD L. HANDY
DI t111 Dlll'f P'llol Stiff
TIP, of the standings in the fourth an-
nucil .Anaheim collegiate baseball tourna-
me· looks more like the Santa Ana
F ay at rush hour with · congestion .. .and .nfusio n the order of the day.
siof the eight teams involved in the
str#Je are tied with 2·1 records after
thr~ day:i of play as UC Irvine and
Ch.pnan College bit the dust Wed·
nesliy. Only Colorado and Cal State (Los
An~es). appear out of it in a spoiler's
role, with 0.3 record s.
tfi:t was the victim of defense and
pitoJijng wildness \Vednesday ni ght in
dropi}ing a 6-5 decision to Brigham Young
Uni.Wsi.ty at La Palma Park while Chap-
m~ost to Oregon State, 4-3. Both
g · Wer~ ·called shor,t, of nine innings
by , ,urnet time limit.
her action Wednesday Loyola
de Cal State {tA), ~I. ana CaJ
S Fullerton ) halted' Colorado, 4-3.
F)'eshman Steve Fox, a left-hander,
w~cheduled to start today's encounter
wi ·cal St11te (LA ). Fox, a graduate of
Fo tain Valley High, is the second suc-
ce e (reshman starter for coach Gary
Ais' Anteaters. ry Maras was the victim of his own
wi ess against . Brigham Yo u n g
W esday night in the first night contest
I ' VC!.
worked the first 4% innings and
charged with the defeat when the
rs scored three runs on two errors,
thtie walks and a pair of wild pitches by re.Iii specialist Jack Cleveland in the
•iii!!· IW all, four UCI hurlers gave up 10 wJlls and only five base hits bu! the fatal si"' eventually accounted for their
c!Oili<all .
.. en at that, the Anteaters threatened
to;,... e or win the struggle in the final in-
n . Terry Stupy opened with a single
a ·Dan Hansen followed with his third
h~f the night, a double to right field.
te r a patr of outs, Doug Himmelberg
led Stupy home and walks to Rich
na and Dave Lyons brought another
ss. The game ended on a popup with
bases loaded.
l1h1m Youn1 (61
1brllrbl
on, Jb 1 0 I 0 Ma!ln1, ct
UC lrvln1 (Sl
1b r~rtl
3 1 ' 0 I 1 I I
4 I 2 0
3 • 0 0
• 0 I I
0 0 0 0 4 I l 0
er, lb l 1 0 0 L~ons, lb
le-fl, 11 s a a o Coron1da, 1b
coon, rt ' 1 1 a M•llnoll, lb
Bnl, c 1 0 I l Sii/PY, t:
coon. "' o 1 a a 5ch1r11. or
• lb J 0 l 0 H1nl1n, II
"' 11 1 a o a Wllfflodl. 1r tf s o o I Siien<t. II
n. 21>3b • O l O Ptltr1, rt tty, .. l 0 0 0 ...... , ... ,
"" r>r I l o o Jordlft, " ... O o o o Be~er. IOh
Clt¥el1ncl, '
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lcet1 W lnn/1195
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2 1 • 0
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'HI ooo on 0--6 .! •
100 101 2-.J 11 i
After Shoeklng Loss
Lakers Still 1 Short
Of Tying NIJA Title
CLEVELAND !AP) -Th< Los Angeles
Lakers , who may have been taking vie·
tory for granted, have learned the truth
of the old cliche about any team being ,
ablf to beat any other team on a given {
day. ,
The lal<ers came here Wednesday1
night seefii.ingly assured of tying the Ntf
tional Ba sketball Associatior\ record f9r
victories in a season. They only needed, 'to
beat the Clevel8nd Cavaliers, who tfad
never beaten them in seven previ:'ous
tries.
But Los An(cles dropped behin<I by 15
points in the first ~uarter, and then , after .
a brief halftime tie, fell back in the sec.
ond half.
A furious rally cu_t the deficit to two
points, 122-120, in the la st minute, but
Cleveland's Walt Wesley scored with 14
seconds' left to lock·up.a 124-120 Victory.
The loss left ·the Lakefs sUll•one short
of Philadelphia's record of ~ victories,
set in 1966-~7. They'll need .t/' win both
their remaining games, against Phoenix..
Friday night and Seattle Sunday night, to
break the record.
Rick Roberson, the exuberant ex·Laker
who filled in when Wilt Chamberlain was
hurt two years ago, was the best of the
Cavaliers. He scored 29 Points, a career
high, and grabbed 14 rebounds.
Johnny Johnson had 28 points and 15
,Streak that ended Wednesday night , won't
/have an easy time in the playoffs.
The quest for the victory record has
made it hard for Sharmap to rest his
regulars, and the loss of Keith Erickson
starters .
will put an even greater burden on the
$larters.
Lit An11l1s 11Hl · C'9¥ellfld 1110 • • ' • • T C,...mberl1ln " ,. " ll11rct ' ., " GOOClrld1 " •·12 " ,,,, • ,., ' H1lr1ton ' ., I' Johh50ll I 11·12 " McMllll•n ... " 11.0btrilOll " ... ~ 11.Uey ' .. • Smith 12 l-4 " Trepp ' '' ' Sor1nt0n ' .. • Wttl " ,., " W11hlnglon ' ,., ' • Wrs11y ' .. • To1111 oll!I '"3' l:!CI Ta1111 .. :zt,Jj U4
L~ A1191Jn 15 u :it n -na
Clni1l1nd o10 :ia JO Joi -12'
FOtJltd 011! -LOt. Angl!ft, H.1lrs10n; Clt¥11tnd, lloblrJOn
TOlll fouls -Los Al!lltlts U, CllYlllnd 2-
Allt'l!d1nc1 -10,llt.
Dalton lrke~
Hopes Trades
Can Be Made
rebounds for the Cavaliers, who posted TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) -Members of the
perhaps the biggest victory of their two-California Angels would be welt advised
year history. not to get too settled in their present
Jerry West and Gail Goodrich scored 31 . homes. The Angels are looking for a
apiece for the Lakers and Chamberlain trade -or b"ades.
·added 23, but Coach BiU Shannan said 1"Some o{ the 'guys seem to be playing
his team might have left some of its fire \fith a ho.. hum attitude," said a
in Chicago Tuesday night. 4issatisfied general manager Ha?Ty
"We were a little bit tired from having Dalton Wednesday alter the Angels had
to play a tough game last night, and as a Jost to the Oakland A's for the second
result were not moving well defensively,"' straight day by the same 6-0 score. Sharman said .
b ht 100.. "We have made a couple of offers to The loss, following t e hard·foug J other teams and are waiting tor their 105 victory over the Chicago Buns, reply," Dalton said. demonstrated that the Lakers, at times
overwhelming in an eight-game winning Asked if any trades might come before
1 the season starts, the general manager --------------, sa id, "I hope so."
The Angels have lost five straight and
hadn 't scored a run in 23 innings going in-
to their exhibition here today with
Milwaukee. Against Oakland's Catfish
Hunter and John OdOm Wednesday, they
m·anaged seven singles, three of them in
the infield.
ERICKSON LOST
FOR SEASON
LOS ANGELES (AP I -Keith Erickson
of the Los Ange les Lakers underwent
surgery Wednesday to repair a torn·ligft·
ment in his right knee, an injury sufrered
at Chicag9 in.a game the previous nighl
Erickson will be confined to a hospital
'our to five days and his leg will be ln a
cast six to eight weeks.
Erickson only recently had recovered
rrom surgery on his left knee and had
played only 15 games for the Lakers this
season.
"The team appears sluggish,'' said
Manager Del Rice. But he added
• hopefully, "They've been working hard
all spring and it 's beginning to show,"
Dalton has said the Angels are looking
for a power hiUer, either an ouUielder or
a catcher. One name that's been men--
tloned is Oakland receiver Dave Duncan.
The Angels have pitchers to spare and
badly need a hitter who can provide the
long ball. ~ •
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~.-23.1912 DAILY ~!LOT
Louisville Duel
ln1 Semifinals Feature
LOS L ELES (API -Pupils
challenj_:acher&· everyday yet-tonight
at a comes a classic in confrontations as
John Wooden, and his defending basket-
ball champion UCLA Bruins face Denny Crujn and the Louisville Cardinals.
-'feacher Wooden must be favored as-·™ undefeated Bruins continue their bid
' tor a sixth straight national collegiate
crown and their eighth in nine years.
North Carolina and Florida State meet
ln the other semifinal, slated to start at
6, 10.
He and his crew face a club coached by
a a+year-old who played at UCLA and
assisted the head man for three years
when the Bruins won the NCAA crown
each season.
"I'm happy for Denny and I've beerl
pulling for him" said Wooden. "But we're
not playing him. We're p I a y i n g
Louisville."
Even though Crum was with UCLA lasl
year. Wooden doesn't think the knowledge
will help his opponent in this NCAA
meeting.
"There is no advantage in knowing
personnel a year before or as freshmen,"
he commented. •·Denny wouldn't really
know our team as well as, say, Jerry
Tarkanian of Cal State (Long Beach ) or
Bob Boyd ol use.
Having won so· many titles, Wooden
was asked what another Championship
might mean to him, and answered:
"Pride. You want to do the best you
can with Ule group you have. You start
Jiving in tlie past and you're done. You
live in the future and you 're done. What
you do in the present will a(fect the
future."
In Los Angeles, the North Carolina·
Florida State meeting naturaUy takes se--
cond billing to UCLA and Louisville.
However, the winner will be in the final,
scheduled at the l.los~ Angeles Sports
Arena on Saturday at 2: 10 p.m .. Satur·
day.
Florida State boasts height with
gophomore Lawrence McCray at &-foot 11
and Reggie Royals just an inch shorter.
North Carolina is shorter with Bob
McAdoo at S-9 handling the post position.
However, the club has experience and
Coach Dean Smith rates it favorably with
the 1968 team that went to the NCAA
final before losing to UCLA.
McAdoo averaged nearly 20 points per
game during the regular season and was
followed in the scoring category by senior
forward Dennis Wuycik.
North Carolina takes a 15-4 record into
the tournament with Florida State at ~S.
UCLA. the leader of The Associated
Press poll throughout the season, has a
•
BART STARR
Starr Uninjured ,
'In Plane Crash ·
SCOTI'SBORO. Ala. IAPI -Green Bay
Packer quarterback Bart Starr was
among three men who escaped injury
Wednesday afternoon when a Piper·Twin
Commanche airplane crashed and broke
apart while landing al the Scottsboro
Airport.
-Authorities said Starr, Rod Peevy of
Huntsville, the pilot, and James Lain, a
Huntsville Industrialist, walked away
from the smashed aircraft with no ,ap-
parent injuries .
Starr is president of Campus lnl)s of
America, Inc., and Lain is chairman of
the board.
A strong gust of wind struck the Diane
seconds before It touched down, airport
manager Bill Matthews said. The plane
then hit a hangar and an area just behind
the passenger compartment be said.
Starr's pilot first refused to identify
himself, saying the Federal Aviation
Administration had ordered that no
details be released until the crash could
be tnvestlgated.
Starr declined to make a comment or
allow hlmoelf lo be pholographod.
23--0 ma rk wi t· Louisville at 2&-3. Cardinals will use a zone defense against
Crum and iVooden had an -argument -·the Bruins.
during last year·~ champio~ship~. with All four coaches were in agreement
the ~ach O\'crruhng his assistants sug. that no radical changes will be made
gest.1on that . a zone derense be used either on offense or defense. agau~st certain teams. .. i "It would be ridiculous to make major -!~s week .• Crum declared, -I don t changes at this point," said Wooden.
Utin UCLA is unstoppable but I do th ink Al ho h h h I ·i· h ( It t ug t e t ree v st 1ng coac es e
011 TV T o11l9ht lhe Ions al the Spcrts Arena will be
ChcuuieJ 4 ·at II largely ~ro-UCLA. the Bruin coach
coach Wooden is the best in the COUO·
try!" ~
But while UCLA has been noted for R
pressing defense, Crum said o f
Louisville :
"He pressed in the preseason practice
and in our early non-conference games . ..,
We are not a good pressing team. We
haven't pressed in our last 15 games. We
are better when we are not pressing!"
And Crum doesn 't think that his
doesn 't see 1t this way and said, "A tee:m
may lose because of personnel or
coaching of the opposition more .ti)an any
psychological reason!" ,
He added. "Any tean1 that goes this. far
will be tough, You bavti: to be ready and
you can't pay too much attention to any
one particular team!" .
For tonight, however, he's paying
particular atfention lo Louisville and hls
ex-plRyer and coaching assistant, Denny
Crum.
Sports Clipped Sliort
Ex-area Athlete
Fans 19 Indians
Behind the hitting or Al Bannister and
the strikeout pitching of Westminster
High flash Eddie Bane. Arizona State
vaulted into the·lea d of the Riverside Na·
ti'onai' Intercollegiate baseball tourna·
ment Wednesday with a pair of resoun·
ding victories.
The Sun Devils, now 22·1 for the
season, thumped Tennessee 11·5 as Ban.
nister hit three doubles and drove in four
runs. Then ASU trounced defending
champion Stanford 7-2 in a night game as
Bane kept up hill remarkable pace by
fanning 19 batters. .
In 45 innings the Arizona State ace has
struck out 78 ba tters. He hasn't allowed
any runs the entire season until Stan.
ford's ~ Boone homered in the eighth
inning. •
TAMPA, Fla. -Frank Robinson drove
in two runs on a homer and a double,
leading the Los Angeles Dodgers to a ~3
victory over the Cincinnati Reds in' ex•
hibitlOn baseball action Wednesday.
Billy Grabarkewilz also hom ered and
Willy Davis batted in two runs on two
doubles and a single .
Robinson doubled home Ma·ury Wills,
"'-'ho had tripled the first inning, and
homered over the left field fence in the
third .for his second run batted in.
Grabarkewitz homered with none on in
the fourth, •
FORT LAUDERDALE , Fla.-The New
York Yankees traded veteran first
baseman-outfielder Danny Cater to the
Boston Red Sox Wednesday for · relief>
pitcher Sparky Lyle in a · straight player
dea l. •
PHOENIX -U.S. District Court Judge
Carl Muecke refused Wednesday to bar
former Virginia Squires basketball player
Charlie Scott from playing for the
Phoenix Suns.
Muecke also said a tria l should be held
to determine whether the star guard
violated hi s contract with the American
Basketball Association team.
•
INGLEWOOD -Rookie Marcel Dionne
scor'ed two goals and added two assists
Wednesday night to keep Detroit's hopes
for a playoff berth alive as the Red
Wings skated to a 6-3 victory over the Los Angeles Kings.
In continuing a hot streak, the 20-yeir.
old center upped his point production to
five goals and six a:isists In the last three
matches -all crucial wins for Detroit.
•
OMAHA -Joe Frazier will defend his
heavyweight championship here May ZS
against unranked Ron Stander of Council
Bluffs, Iowa , Slander's manager, Dick
Noland, said Wednesday night.
•
YPSILANT~. h-1ich. -E a stern
Michigan University basketball All·
America sophomore George Gervin ha1
sen! a letter of apology to Jay Piccola,
the Roanoke. Va. College player he
knocked unconscious in an NCAA collep
division tournament last Thursday.
Gervin l'!lalled the hand·wrltten.
two-paragraph letter to Plceola after
hours of conferring with Jim Dutcher,
who resigned as EMU coach Monday.
Gcrvin's letter regd :
"I would like to apologize for my ac-
tions in our basketball game. I can offer
no good excuse for what l did nnd ·hope
you can understand that l had nothln1
against you. I don't know what made me ·•
do it.
"I'm happy that if we couldn't win the
tournament you did. Please show this Jet·
ter to the rest of hour team."
UCI FROSH A,CE
ON ALL-AMERICA.
Dave Baker, UC Irvine's 6-3 freshman
center, was accorded All·Amerlcan
recognition on the honorable mention
roles by the Assocl'ated Press on the 1m
College Division Little All·America
team selected by sports writers and
broadcasters throughout the country t~ day.
Baker, an all-tournament selection In
Pueblo, Colo. recently al the NCAA
Western ~glonal tourney, was the loM
UCI player to be honored in the balloting.
Sam Cash of UC Riverside was ac-
corded a third team berth, the highest
selection for a West Coast player.
asehalJ Owner·s Hold Their Ground
. PETERSBURG , Fla. (AP ) -The a .. e was set today for a showdown
btfi'.ieen baseball 's club owners and
ers over a possible st rike before the
on gets underway. . 1 •
e owners, reacllng to a series of
·unanimous strike \lotes by the
ers over their pension plan negotia·
, came back with a show (If force or
I own Wodnesday, v<>ting oo! r.·add
any money to their previous offer,
Guss1e Busch,· owner of the St. Louis
Cardinals ~ articulated the tough position
taken by the brass, saying : "We voted
unanimou sly to take a stand. W~'re not
going to give another cent. And if they
want to strike,'"'-said Busch, "let them
strike." ·
That sent John Gahc.rin, the. owners'
representative in these negoliatlons, back
tn the bargaining table with Marvin
Mlllc.r. t~ecutive director of th' Playen
Association, carrying no better o(fer than
the on• !hat ha s ~reclpltaled the series or
1trike votes in major league training
campus this spring.
The two negotiators were scheduled to
meet in Arizona Friday.
The key Issue Is the pension agreement
which expires March 31 . The players are
zeeking Increases to match the 17 percent
cost of living increase during the past
lhree years. The owners, who have
already agreed lo ~Y increasod mo<llcal
an<I denlal costs, have balked over 111y
pension increase.
I
The owners are standing by their
previous offer of a one or four·year con~
tract. which would continue present
pension contributlons. The owners said
their offer would amount to an inGease
ol appro•imalely M00,000 annually to the
current 15.4 million plan.
The players have threatened to strlke
e.lthe.c on March 31, the expiration date,
or April 5, Opening Day. or every Setur.
day durlng the season when games art
televised ~tlonalJy.
BOf!·key's Gentle Totrela
Walt McKechn ie o! the Ctli!ornia Golden Seals tumbles over Sl Lou\1
goalle Jacques Caron as St. Louis' Terry Crijp f teers off Nor111
~ erguJ!>.n • .Ca(on & Co. won, 4-1. _
(
~--'" ,.
DAJlV ~ILOT
Distance
Saturday
11ir. finest distance fields -depth·wiJe
-in the mret's history wlll be on dlspl1y
Saturday lit Newport Harbor High when
lt\e seventh annual Beach Citi es lnvita·
l1onnl track 8nd field meet tak es place.
Looking first at the mile . a su re wiMer
(untes., he walkJ around 1he track nr
maybe steps into gopher hole 1 is ~ta
?.1esa 's Doug P..1acUan.
.Pt1acLean currently holds down the top
mile clocking in !he CJF Southern Sect ion
at 4:12.6 and there are proepec:1s that he
may lower that mark by a second or t,.,·o.
While the nashy ,Pi1uslang i:i far ahead
or his nearest competitor in Saturday's
Uneup -the other ruMers involv~ wiU
be out to push their·personal belts down
lov.·er.
On a level plane is Mission Viejo's Ed
}4.der~acher, . holder .of a . 4:22.4.
lifet ime best while showing a 4:22.7 tqp-
per this s~ason.
Not far behind Radermacher . i!I
N wport 's John Holcomb (4:25.9f, who's
been concentrating more on the two mile
(where he's run 9:29.3); and Marina
junior Ken Martyn. a con s is ten t
performer in the 4:27--4:29 range who has
ye1 lo bt seriously pushed.
In addition to the above five , a pair of
sophomores could figure in for some
paints.
The sophs worth mentiooing are Mesa 's
1'im Gollnick (4:30 ) and Dan Empfield of
Huntington Beach (4:33.8).
In the two mile, meanwhile, Mesa
shows the No. 1 runner as well.
However, with twins John and Tom
Olswang, it's hard to tell exaclly who's on
top.
The twins have been taking turns
beating each Other all season, and, at Otis
point, John is ahead in one-upmanship
With a 9: 15.S best to Torrt's~ 9: 11.a:-
f.,~ur othCr competitors are rated fairly
even on another tier behind the
Olswangs.
'{hey Jnclude. Newport's Dave Cross
(9:45."S). Huntington freshman Robert
Angel (9:45.4), Marina soph Gary Blume
(9:48.2) and Edison 's John Weston
(9:54.0).
Edison's John Weston has recorded a
1:54 .
111eet recorda which should be shattered
with reJative ease are Mike Solomon's
(Westminster) 4:20 mile mark of 1967
and the two mile standard of 9:29.I, set
last >':-r by Marina 's Dave Lockman.
Beach Cities
Field Events
Draw Stars
With Newport Harbor's Terry Albritton
and Corona del Mar's Howard Royster
perfonning the shot put and discus will
probably be the field events in the
spotlight the most at Saturday's seventh
annual running of the Beach Cities
lnvilational track and field meet at
' Newport.
However, the other three field evf:nts
nevertheless will showcase the best
athletes in the Orange Coast area in their
various specialties.
For starters, the high jump will feature
a seemingly unendlng array of leapers
who have already climbed 11bove the 6-0
mark.
An edge would have to go to Corona's
George Kent , a bespectacled Fosbury ·
Flopper who has already managed li-4
twice this spring and that'.!! the same
height as the meet record. set two years
ago by Newport's Lee Haven.
Costa Mesa·s Jon Marchiorlatti has
been hampered by bum knees this season
but he's flown as high a~ 6-5 in the past
Vlhlle mate Mason llungerford has a 6-1
to his credit this season.
High jumpers Jim Worthy I Hun·
lington Beach) Newport's Pat Honeywell
and 8ophomore Don Valdez have also hit
6-2 while CdM 's soph leaper Joe Denger
has gone 6--3.
Estancia 's Kevin Willingham (a soph)
and Ken Co n"ncr a freshman I have both
cleared 6-1 and they'll join Denger and
Valdez in trying to upset the more ex·
perienced jumpers mate Ken Malthan
and Marina 's Greg Lee have made 6-0.
ffoneywell (21 ·4) concedes a slight edge
to Edison's Ron Collings (21-10\2) this
M!ason and 22-6 hist year) in !he long
jump while others over 20-0 in the
horizontal event Include Marina 's Ken
Grosse (20-9 \.'4), the Mission Viejo duo of
Tim Mann f20-61nl 11nd so ph Rick Cun1.
mings (~). Fountain V1Uey 's Bob
Schenk 120-2 ) and Estancia'!! Steve
Ad•ms (20-1).
Founhlin V1Jley 's Sche:nk bo11sL~ the top
pole vault mark at 13-6 and Newport's
Dave Gunderso n has hit 13-0. ,
UCI Tries
_ Small · Shell
This Season
Those who know !he area best would
find it hard to believe that Jack of rain Jn
the San Francisco bay area ha s caused
the 1972 Western Sprints !crew races 1•to
be moved from Lexing ton Reservoir 10
Long Beach Marine Stadium May 13.
But that's the ca11e as coach Bob Ernst
prepares his UC Irvine crew for the 1972
season I hat begins Saturday. April J in
the North Lido Char.nel against UC San
Diego.
The new season ~·ill begin wit h a new
Italian-made shelf 1hat has been chri!I·
. teneri in honor of a form er ucr crew
stalwart, Roger James.
James was a member of the Uct varsi-
ty crew for three years, including last
season, but passed away during the off.
season wilh leukemia.
"We jus~ finished painting his name on
the shell and it looks real good ," Ernst
said by way of qu iet tribute to the un·
fortenate young man.
How is Ernst preparing for the com·
pi:lratively short season ahead~
STRONq ER WORKOUTS .
"We 've been able to go bac k lo us ing
small boats in practice again,'' he says.
''Last year we had lo use the big ones
almost exclusively and I 1.hink this hurt
us. We c3n get in much stronger
workouts in the smaller boats."
The Anteater mentor has his stalwarts
at the boat house early each morning for
an extended workout of rowing, run ning
and conditioning "nd in the afternoon
most of them work in the UCI weight
room .
One member of the UCI team is slill in
contention for a berth oo the U.S. Olym-
pic rowing team. John Davis, a 6-2, 200-
pound sophomore from Eureka , wlll row
in the No. 5 spot.
He hopes to be inVited to the Olympie
camp fn Boston beginning June 5 as the
U.S. will combine an all:slar tea m for the
Olympics for the first lime.
Other members of the varsity boat in·
elude Mike Sullivan. 6·2 and 190-pounds.
He is a sophomo re and is captain of the
crew, rowing in No. 6 position.
Ted Weyland , a 6-1, 180.pound junior
from Merced, will handle the important
stroke post in the varsity shell .
Roy Bevens. a 6-4. 204-pounder from
Redwood City, is another sophorriore and
rows No.4.
STONE IS COXSWA IN
Others in the boat include Bill Butler
(6-2, 185, No. 3f; 'Dave Graham (6--3, 190,
No. 2): Lance Kirkagaard (6--0, 180, bo~·);
and John fl.1cC ill (5-9, 165, No. 7J.
Ernst describes McGill as having good
timing and maturity.
Coxswair for the varsity shell is
George Stone, a valuable asset to Ernst's
plans. "He has been here since I started
coa ching and has done a lot as our
leader," says Ernst.
Others ready to move lo lhe varsity
shell who will compose the jayvee squad
include Phil Pearson. Bill Simonds, John
Walker. Steve Miller, Mike Beaman,
Bryan Alwood , Steve Hoslett.er and Nick
Turner .
Ernst is opl imislic about the season
ahead and fee ls UC! should improve its
record of a year ago when everything
seemed !O go ~·rong for the Anteaters.
With a new shell to compete in and a
brand new tra iler lo haul the shell to
mee ts in San Diego. Long Beach and
other west coast ports . everyth.inr i.s
shipshape for the 1972 season.
Black Bo ycott?
OAKLAND -The Oakland Black
Caucus . a group cl:1.Jming ~ members.
said Wcdnesrlay ii ~·ould urge black
baseball fans 10 boycott 0 11 k I a n d
Athletics' games if hold out pi tc it r Vlda
Blue doesn 't play this season.
Hot Drags at OCIR
Orange County Jntematlonal Raceway
wlll host the final round or the 1172 All·
Pro Championship Serles lhls Saturday.
with competition divided Into top fuel,
CuMy car and pro stock categories.
Qu•llfylng begins al noon while
ehminatlon racea follow at 7 p.m.
fuel driver Into the five-second br11cket.
Lowest elapsed time among the top
fut!le:rs entering into Saturday's com·
petJLlon is a 6. IS by FlortdA 's Don Garli ts.
.. ....-.The top fuel grouping. includes· F'ountain
Valley's Tom (Mongoosel McEwen.
Kanw driver John Wie be o.nd Don\(lhe
Sn•kel Prudhommt or Gronad1 HUii.
Funny c11r points lead ers fJary Burgin or Garde:n Grove and Ron O'Don nell are
c:c:pe:ctesf to_be ll_ard_presse.d by Gene.
Snow of F'ort \Vort.h, last year's All-J>ro.~
funny car litllst.
Lawndale's Butch Leal al ready has the
pro stock division Litle sewed up, t\avfng
kept the other 2S entries "''in'rss lhrougb
the rirsl three rounds of the A1l·Pnl.
In 1ddltion to the rqular prlze money
'''11l1ble, the raceway Is .contempl1ling po&<ini • l l,000 bonus rar <he Hnl top
,,
From Little Wahoo Comes
Big UCI Baseball Warrior
By llOWARD L. HANDY
ot !11• Dt !I, Pile! Slell
Jr pitcher Bob Barlow leLs out a ye:ll
that sounds something like, "Wahoo"
after pitching a ..victor-y for coach Gary
Adams' UC Jrvine learn, It wouldn't
surprise tho.~ who know him best.
Bob has become the No. I pitcher for
lJCI this year as a junior and has drawn
most of the Important st.arts.
And it all began in a lit!!' town in
Nebraska -Wahoo.
Not taken too much to eccentricit ies,
Barlov.• is a seri ous young man who
~-ould like to teac h biology and coach
baseball some-time in the future.
"J rettllY haven 't been too interested in
professional baseball," he says when
asked about his preference for playing
college It.Ill .
''I'm thinking about playing in the Cen·
tral Illinois summer le.ague this year and
may change my mind after that but I will
ha vl' to find oul. if I like it first."
Adam;; is high on his ace hurler, and
for good reason.
"He's the easiest pitcher I've ever
coached," the UC! mentor says in praise
of his young right-hander.
"You don't ha ve to tell him to run. he
jus t goes out and dOEE it. When he ·,
pitching in a game. he gets ahead of the
batter and stays in command. He 's very
consistent.
"When he came here he "'as 3 eom-
bln11tion 'outfielder. third baseman and
pitcher. He really wanted to play the out·
field but when I told him he would pitch
for us (we re.ally needed pitchers), he
went right to work at the job and has im·
proved each year."
What ls his big forte on the mound?
"He has excellent control and is con·
sistently low with his pitches," Adams
ptaises.
"How did Barlow look at the situation
t~at took him to UCI as a slugg ing thi rd
baseman and he wound up as a pitcher?
''I wa s surprised when he to ld me. I hit
pretty well in high school and played
third base most of the time . At the time I
came here, I wanted to play every day
but now 1 like pitching every fourth or
At West Point
BOB-BARLOW
fifth day even better."
What is his big pitch \vhen he is in trou·
ble on !he mound?
''My slider,'' he says wHhout hesita tion.
' ''I try to keep my fast ball tow. This is
one thine coach Adams bas lnatilled In
me.''
What about the curve ball?
'"J just use it to show the batter every
now and then . For a ch'!ngeup, I Hke to
use th.e slider with different speeds."
Is there anything special he does to
pre~re for a team like Colorado -a
team he hasn't seen and has no scouting
report about?
"Just use the basic rules of pitching -
keep the ball low and away as much as
po!!ible and make them hit it on the
ground. This is the way I try to pitch aD
the ti me."
Doe.s it bother him to get in tough
assignments such as Colorado, use.
UCLA, Cal Statet.(Long Beactt) and some
of the other top teams UC! has faced this
year?
.. Not really. I just try lo get myself
mentally ready for the game. then do the
best I can."
Barlow roomed with graduated Tom
O'Connor for two years at UCI and is
currently living with catcher Joe
Anderson.
''Tom and t talked every day about
pitching. When we saw a good pitcher
work. we tried to analyze what made him
good and what he did right to gain con-
trol."
Barlow gives Adams most of the credit
for his success but adds 1h1t talks with
Andy Messersmith, Dennis Ribant and
Wade Blasingame at various times on the
UCI diamond have also helped.
In his spare time he likes to hunt and
do some trap shooting. In the su1nmer he
ha s worked as a butcher in the steak
house at Knott 's Berry Farm in Buena
Park. He also co llects coins.
It 's a long way from Wahoo, Nebr.
when he is pitching for UCL
Perhaps that has something to do with
his thinking about playing in Illinois this
summer -it is closer to the town of his
birth. He might feel more al ease with
the Indian yell of Wahoo in that territory.
GIL NORMANOIE
MVWhiz
Normandie
OnAll-CIF
Mission Viejo High's Gil Normandie
has become that school's first ~ver All·
CIF basketball player as selected by the
United Savings Helms Athletic Foun·
dation.
Normandie, a junior. performed in the
interior offensively despite his 6-1 1iie
and muscled his way lo a sparkling 20.l
average for the campaign.
He and his Mission Viejo teammates
whipped CIF finalist El Modena twice as
coach Pat Roberts' quintet kept the
Diablos' six-year record of never having
a losing season intact.
The might of the Crestview League was
further enhanced with the selection of
Katella 's Mark Steinmeyer as player of
the year while a pair of Et Modeoa stan·
the year while a pair of El Modena stand·
outs were accorded fi rst team honors.
Senior Larry Johnson and junior Tim
Tiv enan made it for Bill E;rvin ·s squad
wh ile Katella ·s Jeff Hutton earned a 1e-
cond team spot.
OCC Swim Coach Runs
MD Stumbles
To 13-5 Loss
Jn all. fi ve spots were taken by
Crestview League pl.ayers in the mo!ll
impressive display ever by that loop 's
athletes.
First Team
Player School Ht. 0 1s1 Avg.
Carlson, Covina 6-2 Sr. 20.9
White. St . Bernard's 6-7 Jr. 11.3
New Computer Check
LONG BEACH - Mater De i 's
fl·tonarchs continued lheir downward
night in the Angelus League baseball
standings by dropping a 13-5 decision to
the St. Anthony Saints at Long Beach's
Wardlow Park Wednesday.
Johnson. El Modena 6-3 Sr. 16.0
Huston, Camarillo 6--3 Sr. 14.7
Patterson, Santa Maria 6-10 Sr. 22.5
Libring, West Covina 6-4 Sr. 16.0
OCC sw imming coach Jack 1',ullerton I~
attending the NCAA swim championships
this week at West Point. N.Y. -but in a
working capacity.
Fullerton is runn ing the computer pro-
gram -a fi rst for the NCAA Jn swim·
ming.
Jack and assistant Will Marshall have
bee n in New York siQce Sunday feeding
the computer all kinifslof statistical data.
The IHM Company, a corporation
which deals in computers. is taking care or the plane flight and room and board
for Fullerton and Marshall.
Fullerton pioneered t.he computer -. '
CRAIG
SHEFF
get a central site for the running events
after th is season.
Santa Ana hosted the affair last yea.r at
UC Irvine while Cerritos had it for the
previous 10 years.
* * * Allan Ha ncock College of Santa ·l\far,ia
wil l host the slRte basketball tournament
In 1173.
* * * Ed Sowash is the new foot ball coach at
LA Valley College succeeding Howard
Taft. Sowash was formerly the athletic
director and football coach at Barstow
College.
* * * Cypress Coll ege will meet Saddleback,
Santa Barbara CC and West LA in non·
conference football games in '7%. The
Charge rs open the Southern Califo rn ia
circuit slate Oct. 7 at Rio Hondo and
tangle with Golden West Oct. %8. The
Saddleback tilt ls the season opener
Now ().3 in loop aclion , coach Tom Car-
roll 's Mater Dci nine hosts league leader
Servile at I p.m. Saturday.
The Saints clubbed Monarch pitching
for 14 hits and took advantage of five
miscues while the visitors were only able
to push across two runs in the third in·
ning and three more in the sixth. '
In fact, the latter three fl.fonarch tallies
came on six consecut ive walks issued by
St. Anthony pitching.
Mel« 0.1 Ul 11. A1111'"11f IUl
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McElwtln. •
Ltn01lon, P
Murplly, II .,.,,,, .....
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Merenda . Montclair 6.t Sr. "20.0
Arthur, Charier Oak 5-10 Sr. 21.0
Tivenan , El Modena S.11 Jr. 15.9
Steinmeyer, Katella 6-2 Sr. 18.3
Second Team
Skopha mmer. Hart fi-5 Sr. 21.5
Schweitzer. Newbury Pk . 6--8 Sr. 23.6
Normandle, Mission Viejo '-1 Jr. %0.t
Mould . Cal High 6-3 Jr. lfi.8
Schader. Covina 6-5 Jr, 16.0
Hutton. Katella 6-4 Sr. 15..0
Talley. Antelope Valley 6-J Sr. 18.9
Davis. Rubiaoux 5-10 Jr. 20.S
McGlame ry. Camarillo 6--3 Sr. 11.S
Weinberg. Bellflower f>-2 Sr. 14.5
Third Team
Ollar. Apple Valley S-11 Sr. 18.2
Strozier, Oxnard 6-3 Jr. 14.8
McDonald, Garey 6-3 Sr. 15.0
Menatti . Sanla fl.1aria 6-7 Sr. 17.8
Scott, Hawthorne g..2 Jr. 18.8
rruhwirlh, Artesia 6:-8 Sr. 25.0
Smith . Camarillo e.s Sr. 15.0
Ballard. Garey 6-6 Jr. 15.3
Small, Mayfa ir 6-3 Sr. 17.S
Menzelos, Rolling Hills fi..O Sr. 15.0
Black, Righetti 6-0 Sr. 16.0
!Sept. 16 ).
sys t em a t s w i m m ee t s two se a so n s a go iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
M1!1r Ot.I
SI. Anlf\ony
••• OO~OOJO-!I !
llM: O!O -Jl 14 1 Smith, P ioneer 6-1 Sr. 21.5
and it was used al the Southern Cal and
State championships with great success.
* * * Orangt Coast College's Skip Williams
failed to make the California JC basket-
ball team lhat is playing In th e national
AA U tournament this weekend in London,
Kentucky -and that was due primarily
lo a foot injury.
"He might have had a shot et It but he
got In a motorcycle accident and bad tn
have eigbt stitches in a foot. So he really
couldn 't move \•ery well.·· says Barney
Newlee, co-coach of the lea rn. Ne wlte Ii;
the head man at Chaffey College.
rt1embers of the IQ.man team Include
forward1 Larry Pounds iPasadcna1, Rich
Plante (Long Beach), Ken Gray tEast
LA ), Don Ford (Santa Barbara) and
Tyree ,.,oster t Laney): centers Ro1eoa:
Poindexter (Fresno) and Floyd Allen
IConlra Costa): and guards Rick
Abcrel(IC and Brad Mc N a m ar 1
ff'ullertnn). Gr1tdy Allen (La ney) and
Wayne Kemp (Contra Costa).
Ce nter Art Wllllam~ (l\1crrltt) and
ICuards Jay l"lnnse th (Santa ~tonlca) and
Joe Smith (l\farin) were also cut from
lbe team Tuesday.
The JC team lcrt Wednesd1y morning
and I~ srhcduled to play 1 firs t round
game Frldar or Saturday.
* * * The So ulhern California J C spike relays
probabl y will be hosted by 11n Orange
County junior college each year In the
fut ure, according to Golden West tr11ck
and fi eld coach Tom Noon.
This year's meet tnext Thursday) I~
being hosled by Go lden West, but most of
lhe rest of the county Jaycees are taking
i Very RCliVe part in it.
About 4<>-45 !IChools are expected to
participate with approximately 8 O O
athletes on hand. While Golden West will
host the running events, the field ev~ts
wJJI be sl•ged four other locations -
Ortn1• Coos!, Fullertoo. C)'preas and
C<rrilDI.
"We ht'lpt! to have lhe meet In Oran1e
County every year and we're hoping to
538 CENTER STREET..:..COSTA MESA--646-1919
SALE
Leather Basketball
White With 3 Black Stripes
Reg. 10.95 • Sale 4.95
Imitation Leather All Purpose
Shoes -White With Black Stripes
Reg. 7 .95 -Sale 3.95
Adidas · Convetrse · lack Purcell
Tennis Shoes
Dunlop • Kramer -Bancroft
Davis • Rackets
Racquetball Rackets
Handballs & Gloves
Baseball Mitts
5.95 to 42.95
Little League Bats
Baseball Bats
• Softball Bats
Baseballs
Soft' Balls
Rale~h Bikes
Tires, Tubes
Accessories
Bike Repairi112
Ra~et S1ri112i112
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Coast Area Prep
S~imming Results I
Q)
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Al/Mid. Pa/Ma
'
• '"ATHLCTI: or TH~ OlCADI"'
I ~ ' l
I '
,:
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DAI L V PILOT 21
For Coast .A r ea W 0111en
•
Checki ng Out Golf
The Huntington S e a c 11 f f
Women's Go I f Association
presented its golfer of the
month award to U>u Gaskell
just after taking a few lessons
from distaff pros via film at
the club's monthly meeting.
88. "'1rs. Robbin Batchelor o f
Bramer ~92\ "·on in B and
Mrs. Ken Holloway ol Irvine
Coa11t l961 won in C.
play . She used a four-iron to
sink the ball from the tee on
the seeond hole.
•
'"' A11&lltl111 (Ml UI) M1rl111
l ·W.e.Meattv R1t1~ -I. M1rln1, Tl'T!t :
200 Fr" -1. Edw1rd1 (Ml t •••lnev IMI l. S11w1ro (Ml. rim.: 2:0•.3, .
11111 lrw:I, Mldlt'I' -I. Ellen lit.I f, r:P~ !Ml l. P•!"ll IMI. Time:
'in Free -1. C•rroll fAl 7 Weniter IMI 3. Cultln1119 (Ml Timi· 2S S 100 Flv -I. Horm..11 CMi '· Conr1d IA l 3. khl1lds (A). Tlmr: t:ot.t.
'M, .. , •'w''"' -1. C1rr~ll IA\ ' NellMNI . .,.,,r {M), Timi!: .56.0.. ~ 400 Fr~ -I, Edw•rd1 {Ml 1. a r11r.1'1' Ml l . no lhlrd. 71m.: ''"·'"
'
.',",.,''•' -L Mr1!!on Al 2. F1rreu .. . l1w•rl CAI. Tfft1t: 1·10.1.
'
100 !1•1111 -1. icst'-n CA.I 2. Smith A.1 l . Prime !ML Tlmt: 1 :1~,s. J:1f.4.FrN RtllY -1. M1r n1. Tlmt:
A111ti11m 1:i-rls11 M1r1t11
2, ;r,.Medl•~ A:111.,. -1. M1rln1. Time:
'~ Fr11 -I, Wtn•~· fMl , Hillier (Ml 3. C1m111ll (Al. Time: 1:1a.1. lflll 11111, Mt<lley -I. W!ll 11"'5 IAl 1. 911111 IM! J. Wltsl (A). l l<l'l1: 1:13.J.
'
•Y.J Fret -I, QIMlll !Ml 1. M1rtl1111 ,.) 3. McC1llum !Ml, Tl..,.: 16,,,
'
.S~ Fl,. -1. Qu11lla fMl 2. frlckJ.On M.I l. no llllrd. l'lmt: JI J.
1ao Fr"' -1. w~'lr {Ml 1. Heiner f'-\1 l. M1rtlne1 IA . lme: 1:01.0. 'A~)!11ct -1. H 11 /Ml 1. WllU1m1 . no th ird. Tlomo: )3,,,
5ft ~rresl -1. 81111 fM! 1. Wle11 fAI ,, Wilcher IMI. Tl..,.: 36.•.
1 :~1. Frfl.. ltrl1v -I. Merine. Tlm1:
V1ri1tr S•R Cltm•lt Uf flt) T~tl11 l :~~.MldltY Rrll'I' -1. Tu11 . Tl..,t:
)00 Fr11 -1. 0. Htnd {T l !. L~<ll!irook tSI J. Ll'ltn (SJ. T mr: i :37.4, 1~~ llld. Medi.., -1. Fr1nklln !Tl 2. D. WflllDll fSI J. !11U1y fTI. Timi : 1:09.1. !O Fret -I. Cl\ A:ol.tnd IT !, Sl>rlnoer CSl l. Cruml1y Cl). Time: 13.0.
TlfN: 2:11.t.
100 Fru -L 1'11rrls IHl t. Mefktt (WI l. "tll third. Ttm1 : J.01.0.
100 Ind. MftlltY -1. 81rrttt Ill.! 1, Cnott tW) ), No thlr". Tim•: 1•:
lO FrN -I. A Wi ll {NI 1. Horm1n
!Nl J. llteld !N). Time: 2•.1. 100 Fly -1. Schmidt (N) 1. C R1 ld
rw1 l. C1mr•an lN!. Time: ''°'·'·
IOO Fr11 -1. Witt IN) 2. Cw (WJ l. Sn11tl1r IHI Timt: l:Oj)O.
~ Fr11 -I. H1rrlt (NJ 2. M1rlltt
(WI l. C1m1r11n INJ. Time; '*U·'·
100 aack -1, 111rr111 CNl 2. A:tid
{NI l. A:tld rwi. Timi : 1:01.1.
IOD !lr1111 -I. Chai! IWl 2. C1nter tN I l. COJI IW!. No Time: "°° Fr11 •ell¥ -I, NeWPOrl. Tl ... r: ':07.7. ,_
H__.rt (441 1111 W1tter1
20ll Midi•~ ll:r!ly -1. Ntw-1. Tlmt: 1:11.4.
l'OCI Fru -1. Jol'lnson !Nl 2. Lloooldt
(N) l. :Hngf..by fNI. Tlmt!: 1:06.t.
100 11111. Mfdtty -l. Smhll INl 2.
S1mp IWI J. LOOll\l1 (NI. TOme: l:Oll.l .
$0 Fru -1. Crill (Wl. 2. Elder IN)
J. Olckt~ NI. T!mt: 16.6.
50 Flv -1. R1111er1 (NI 1 Loomis IN! l. M<M1nrtV1 CNI. Tlm1: lil.J.
100 FrH -1. Johnson fNI 2. LIPl>Ol~I (NI l. Crill !WI. Tlm1: JP.I.
.SO lick -I. Olc ke... fHl '2. R1111et1
NI l. S1mp IW ). Ttm1; ll.t,
l4 8re11I -1. 5ml1t1 !NJ 1 1C1L1rl1n
/NI J. JacklOll IWI, l rme: 34.l.
l'OCI Free R11ty -I . NeWl'Orl. Time :
1 :J •. J.
v1rsll'I'
itnor1 f)ll IHI L1911111
200 Medl1¥ Re11, -I. Sonort. Tlme :
2:1 •·'· 700 Frte -I. We111rv Ill 2. Sier~
(SI 3. H-ur (Sl. Ti..,.: 2;05.S.
200 Ind. MedltY -l.·T1vlor lSI 2.
ll:Obert• IL) l. Rldwlh (L), Tlmt:
1:20.f.
50 Fr11 -1. Morton Il l 2. H1rllol11
(LI l. UrM1er111hl (Sl. Tl..,.: :IA.4,
Diving -1. W1rr Il l 2. 01vldloOll (S)
l . C1rl\on ILJ. Pol~IS: 1'1.IS.
100 FlY -l . tie, MIN"llJfl Il l 1fld
T1vtor fSl 3. No third (xhool rec:,rcl. Timi: l :00.,,
100 Frte -1, Harbold Ill 2. Urlderd1hl (SI l . Powers ISL Tlmt :
.$1.0.
IO(I Free -1. Wllslrv Ill 2. Sltrn
ISf l . How1er CSI. Time: l :ll.S.
100 !lick -l. lhdwit1 !LI 2. Flynn ISl l. Na 111!rd. Timr: 1:1'.0.
100 !lre1sl -1. ll:CJOerls ILi 2. r 1vnn (SI J. No tlllrd. Time: 1:17.t.
«tO Frtt A:tllY -I. L1111n1 lie•'"· Tlmt 1:1'.I.
IOD Fly -I, Lvlt /Ml 1. Nlrbl!<ktr (Ml J. no third. i-1rn1: 1:02.1. ''I' FrH - 1 Rld'I !MJ l. Alld rtws IM l. H1rmon {Fl. lm1: Sf.,,
'llO FrH -I, Wood1 (Ml }• Block !Fl l. MllhlWl !Ml. l'Jm., •: J.o.
100 !l•clo, -l. Au:>ur11 CM! 2. r,[r.Tker (Mr 1. Gerich 11<1, r 1m1:
100 l rtlll -I. C1mobrll (Ml 2. OeC:roocl CM• l. Debore CFJ, Timi : 1.09.L
Tl=: "J~':,.o~•l•• -1. Ml11lon V\t !a.
'"' ll'IOfftlU (q i Utl Mlltlell Vl1!0 :!00 Ml'dltY Rlllf -1. Fooll!lll. Tl..,1: 1:5'.J.
100 F•ff -'r Wlll1 (Fl l. Zl•fltr (Ml J. HOWi (M. Tlm1: l:S7.I.
St~':r 1i°li l~::-1of (1F11~r::::, \~a!..l:
50 Fr11 -1. Furnl\1 Fl 2 Ok111t1i
'] J. O.t nlt ts !Fl. T m1: n •· FJy -I. Ml l1r /Ml l.· M. llVJh IM l. 5ocor \F ) Timi: I.I. ''I' Frff - . llll.""" l I 1 Ok11~k! IM l . H-t CMI. Time: ~.I lO !lack -Ji Stear CFI 1. Oswlld (Fl l . M. Bu1.h /,..) Tl..,.: lt.6. 50 !lre11t -I. Fur11l11 CFI '· N~it11 (Ml l. Mu•oh'I' (MJ. Tlmt: 31.2. , 'lOO'Frtt A:ti.Y -I. Foath!ll. Timi: I :31.4.
"'I'" H~ntlli""" usl .,., w111mtn11 .. 700 M'1ll1w 111 1v -I. Hunuoeron !lr1ch. Time: l :Sl.O.
<'OD FrH r I. Ju1d11 CWl 2. Altllnf CW! l . Fr1sonk1 (H). lmt: ?:01.ll. 200 Ind, Mldl1y -1. H11rwl!1 (Wl '1.
ICenvon 4HI J. Ktnl CW!. Time: 2:11.S. SO Fru -I. Ev1n1 IHI 1. Trl~1h1m /WI l . O·loole (WI. Tlmt: 7?:1?.I. Olvlnt -1. Nol'n (HI 2. Roblnsori !W! l. Gold1!1ln CW). Pcfn!1.: T!mr: $1.90. ''I' Fl¥ -1. ICtnl'On !H l ?. Hunlll'I' IW 3. S1u!~W . Time: 1:0!.i. 100 Fru -. O'T~!I IW l l· Alklris tWl l. llo11rt~ (W~. Tlmt: SI., • c~'f11.FHC:rwii 1(W :''r1~~:HtJi.o~Utdll
1~ lloc~ 1nt \WI 7. 01lt IHI l. Hvn!lev CWI. Timi: :01.•. 100 !lrrtst -1. Trlri1h1m CW\ 2. S1ul IW l l. Homen \HI. Time: 1:11.l. tOD F••• Rt •Y -1. W1stmln11ar. T!mr: l :Sl.5. ... , "1111t111911n !ti (Sil W11tmln1l1r 1Ull Ml!dle• Rt 1'1' -I. fbo!h lllml di1.Qu1lllllCI)
100 ~rtr -I. M\!!l•dY !W) J, PICI CWI J. Helley tWl. Timt: :10.0 .
100 lfld. Ml<rltY -I. Ttkoll (W! ),
I @ I @ I
I I I
I I I
I ~ I 0
'
HOW BALL POSITION AFFECTS HEIGHT Of SHOT
Today's lesson is concerned w ith the "loft'' of
the ba ll. In golf. there are two types of "loft" The
first is of the normal variety ••. the angle of tilt the
manufacturer has built into the club's face. The
second is known as "eflecti11e loft." Th is is related
to the amount of loft the clubface carries when 1t
actually strikes the ball.
Generally speaking, pos11.Joning the ball far back
into the stance reduces the "effective loft"' the club
will be carrying at imp act. At this point in the
swing as you see, the club is still moving downward ,
As the clubhead moves parallel to the ground.
its "e ffec tive loft" is equal to ils "normal loft."
Then, as the club begins moving upward, the "ef.
fe ctiv e loft., .is greater.
Thus, it becomes obvious •.. the farther back in
your stance you p lay the ball: the less wHI be the
''effective loft" at impact. The result is a lower •
s hot. Therefore, to h it low shots, p lay the ball back.
But to hit high s h ots, play it forward. allowing the.
c lu b 's "effective loft" to b.e greater at impact.
Capturing low net honors for
the day's lournamtnt were
Ann Mayi;, first flight with a
71 ; Pat Hood wilh a 72 in the
second night; and a tie b y
Norma Smith and i 1a rtha
Acheson with 74s in the third
flight.
l rvh1e Coa l
Pro Shirley Eng leho rn was
forced to cancel !he golf clinic
and exhibition match set for
April at Irvine Coast Counlry
Club because of recent
surgery to remove the metal
pins in an ailing ankle •
The c linic would have been
h e r third, and may be
rescheduled for a later date.
Irvine Coast a nd Santa Ana
Country Club women golfers
are looking ahead to the 16th
Annual Home & Home tourney
April 4 and 7. It's ICCC's turn
to host the eVent this year,
with co-chairmen He I e n
Peterman and Inez Stansbury
organ izing the three low baUs
of the foursome affair.
~~;_~i.11rdt cw1 J. CllCI 1111ro1. Tlmr: S llll'a A na
511 Free -I. Phllllps (WI 2.. HOider &. (WI l .. ~Pi:er fW), 1,,,,_., 1S:I.
(i>.f) .... 1, ........ 1 .... ~
IOD Fly -1. G-old1teln fwl 1. l•icoll
CWJ l. Hdtey fWI. Tlmt; 1: G.•. LOW SCORES! HIGH POWER! Gel plenty,, golfing '"' in Ar11old Santa Ana had 136 entries In tOO Fret - . !llOlh 111m1 dis·
ou111lledl P1lmer"s booklet, .. Tee. Shots ind Fa1rw1y Y.'oods." written et· its bi-annual g uest only day.
!\1rs . J\·1. J. Wasco of f\1esa
Verde took low net honors in A
n ight with a 7~: f\1rs. Byron
Allen of Arrowhead 172 l in B
night ; and J\1rs. G or d o n
M artin of Irvine (751 in C
flighl.
A highlight of the day wa~
~1rs. Manny Altman·s first
hole-in-one after 1$ years of
LAST
GASP
SKI
SALE
Caill our Ski
Sports Report
547.7545
Cosio ~le111
Barbara Morton and Gerry
\\tatson lied for top place In A
flight in the Costa ~1e.sa
\Vomen's Goll Club's most re-
t'enl '"'o tournaments, a bet•
ter n ine and a match vs. par
e \·ent. \'i Hoskins tied with the
See Golf Pnge 28
l111kAmork1rd
M1111r Ch•r11
Dl"•r• Clult
C•rt• ll•ncht
•NO LOWER
PRICES EVERI
• luy now & pay for your
ski vacation next year In aovln91 •
• lkl1 -.., •• ,. -fl0nl1 -pole• -,. ..... -•l't•• .. ,, .... ,. -
Nea..... l,s;"· .. ~~;~~·E~· ;;~~;·;~«>Ps
• S•nte An1, 219 (. 4th ICI 7·5723
• Fullerton, 601 S. ludid 171 -5911
• Ntwport C1nltr, ,,21 fashion bl. 6«·2121
SlOll HOUll1
IC.0 ll•t~ -I, P!illl lpi \W\ J, Holder clus1¥ely tor readers of 11111 column. A copy is yours for 20c: a nd · I (w1 J. rno lh!rd). r 1rn1: :1 ·'· _,, ,. P ... First ow gross was Dottie 100 II•••" -I. Sok., (W) 1. M••· 1 stamp.,.,, se.1.addressed envelope se nt to Arnold almat, 4 0 ''' 0 11v~•dt cw1 1no trilrd1. Time: 1:11.J. this newspiper. Huish of Glendora, who s wept 10 :.,~~' '•""' "'"•·•~11.,,.~, ..... a. f,i. •·lO·•
'~"TING ••GDS Po1~10• hl••d MH. &. Pd. 10.1,)0/
KVll -T~••, W•d .. !~"'' 10·0/Sao. Hl·6
Time: •:P t.
. • ~ Olvfno -1. Si>Mr !Tl 2. \lick IS! l. Form1n IT!. Na Po!nt1. ·-Sonar• (Sf) 1111 L19Ull'I 400 Fr11 ••l•Y -•· wt11m111111r.\~;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~A~n~;~~h~t~co~m~rt~i~t1~o~n~w~i~1h~a~n~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'·;·;··;·;·;";·;· ;'";"';'·;·;'';';· ;'';";.';;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;~, ,_
Hun1;n1lon (Jfl IUI W1"ml111!1t XIJ M~lev Rel11 -I. W1.1tmln1ttr. 100 Flv -1. 0. H•nd (Tl 1. SPtlr
'I:•• Ill J. Alklnson CS). Tlm1: 1:01 .0.
ltlQ Fret -I. Rol"nd \T l 1. O. Wll1on /Sl l. Crumley IT). T m1: 50.0. ~~o r1e -1. Fr1nkJln !Tl !. "'\ LlnebBck lSl 3. Llthbrook CS;, T ...,,, 4:C.1.5.
100 Back -l. !lallry !Tl t . M. Wlhcn IS) J, IC•-••d (T), Time: 1:01.,. 100 llr11st -1. 0 . Kin• IS) 1 . .!i1>11r ITt J. Ortigtr 111. Timi : 1:07.1.
olOD Free Rel1Y -1. Sin Cl1m1n11. · Time: •:ll.O. ••• S111 Cl1mtnl1 CUl ISll T111lln 200 Medi•¥ Rrl1• -1. Tuslln. Time: :OG.f. 200 Fr1t -I. T1lcolt ($) h M. L11!illroot (SI J. Clca1. Timi: 1: .O.
.100 Ind. Medle• -1. Feher SI f. Jovce IS) l . Tr•-11 IT!. Tlioie: 1:06.•. -, JO Fret -l,_!lrucr !SI 1. Vi<~ /SJ J. McCl1od ff), rlm1. 155. 100 Fl• -1, Tr111neU (Tl 1. F~er (Sl l . OlC1Uln IT). Tl..,.: l:U.O.
IOD Frtt -I. E11<1ulsl jl! 1. J. Mour1rmtn fl) l . Enorl I I. Timi!: $7,,.
fOO Frtt -I, Tolcoll tSl \· M. L1~htH'ooll tSl l. Close t tl l. lmt: ,:25.7.
100 !lick -1 llrixr I\! 1. McCl-1TJ J. ()!Quin (11. Tlmt· '!'·'· 100 8rfll11 -I. illfCf C ) t. Sh1W (Tl J. Grlttln ISL T mt: l:U.O. 400 Fru R1l1• -1. Sen Clem1nt1. Tlmt: l :Sl.O. No CttS. V1rtl11 HtwN11 UU If) WeSIHll
200 MeclltY R.111¥ -I, NtwPOl'"I. Time: l ;SS.I.
MO Frtt -1, Gl11l1r fN! 1. !Itek
(M l J. Surle1 fNI. Timi: l:Jt.7.
200 Ind. Medlev -1. Alhr CN! l,
Well 110 l. Cottier !Wl, T!me: l:U.1.
50 Frt1 -1. Quinn !NI l . Yount !NI
J. R1eoen (WL Time: ''·'· Ol~lnt -1. N1WC1Drt won by lorlelt,
100 Fly -1. At.111 /M l 2. Ftl,h!m1nn
(N) 3. Jol'ln$0!! CWI. Tlmr: SI.I.
100 F•tt -t. 8"8 (N I 1. YounrJ !NI
3. S11rlr1 (NI. T!mt: U.l. .a. Fret -I, Gl11!1r (NI J. Well !NI i. GrlY (Wt. T!mr: ,,u .1.
100 8Kk -1, Quinn /Nl 2.
F1lchlm1nn /Ml J. R1111n IWI. Tlm1:
1:02.1.
100 !lrt e1I -I. Oullll1m (N) 1. Jolln&On CNl l. No !Mrll. TlmP: l:tt,,.
400 Fr11 11:111 -1. H1wp0r1. Tlmt:
J:IO.O.
1111 HtwHt'I UO (Ill W11.trr11
100 Medley Rell¥ -I, NeWllOf'I,
Area Sports
Calendar
?OD MellltV A:fllY -1. Senora. T\me:
l :U.3.
200 Free -1. Chard (SI 1. Peden IL i
3. Ht!loc.k (Ll. Time: J:Oli.a.
100 Ind. Ml'dley -1. Reldtnl!aUOll
CSl l . lltrrv (S ) ). No third. Time;
':112.•.
)(I Frff -1. Thlrnely (Sl 1. Am!<l!ll
Il l J. N•ll1an (5!. Tlmt: lS.O.
100 FIY -1: Penct 4Sl l , llunt1nt CL )
J. NtllJOn IS l. Time: 1 :07.1.
100 Frr.t -1. lhoroleY CS! 2.
Am$dln Ill J. C1rfJ.On tL). Tlmt: iii.I,
•00 Fr" -1. Cl'l.ard !SJ 2. Pe<lt11 tll
3. Sullon CS). Timi: ':Jt.5.
100 11.tck -I. RtOdtnt11ug/I (Sl 1. Johnson Cl l ]. l(fr!.11 fS). Time: 1:01.I,
100 llre11t -1. l(er!.11 151 2. ll1r CS I l M1lon1 CL!. Time: 1:15.7.
CIO Free RrllY -I .. LatVnf 811ch.
Timi: ':Dl.6.
'~ $t110F1 (II) 141) LllVlll
XIO Mf'dlfy r.~la• -I. La1un1
811ch. Time: 2:11.l .
XICl Frtt -!. Otvor• fll 2. NNl!on IL) 3. F1rien CS!. Timr: 2:05.,,
100 tno. Mfdtev -1, Slmmon1 ill t. !ltn"°" ILJ 3. W1llKt Il l. Time:
l :Ol.•.
)(I Free -I. Perintv Ill 1. "'"'""fl Il l 3 Mor rr1le jLJ Time: 15.l . 50 Fl• -1. Slmmoru Il l 2. R:aoln.an
/Sl 3. O.Young {S). Time: 17.1.
100 Frtt -L 01...art !LI 1. ,t.msd1n
l ! J. NeWllJfl (L). T!me: ili.O.
Kl Bick -I. Plll!~V CL) 1. ~ct CL I ]. Oe'r'oonl (S}. TimP: 32.3.
)(I 8re1st -1. Ware CL) J. Benson
(Ll J Hciwtk ISi. Time: JI.I.
100 Frer A•l•v -I. L1tunt !lt~tl!.
Tlmt: 1:•1.6. V1rll!Y Foolh~I (U l (11 Mb1i1111 Viti• lOD Mfrll .. v Rel11 -1. Foollllll. Time: 1:41.S. • 100 Frer -1. Slrltl'ltn /Fl 2. F~lchlkoll (Fl l. Ccl\tn (Fl. Tlmt:
l :~~'·lnd MeciltY -l. SPU•ltn'I (F) 1 . Jol'n1on /F) 1. Secor /Fl. Time: 2:U.1. 50 Frtt -!. Sod1rc (Fl 2. Smllll IF)
l. !lonebr.tke (Fl. Time: r:·•· Olvln1 -I. H1stlngs F > 2. Habb1 (M l 1. McC•rlhY (Ml. Po•nrs; 2H.60. 100 Fly -I. Sodaro (Fl 1. P1'1Kh (M) l . Sml!n CF!. Time : l:OJ_f, 100 Free -I. SPVr?fl'I (Fl }, Jorinson IFI 3. Smltll CF) Tlmt!: 4t .. tOD Fret -I. Col'ltn !Fl 1. Qu1vlr (Fl l . no third. Tlmt· •:73.5. IOD ll1ck -1. 8onebr1lo,1 !Fl 1, P11cllfkofl IFJ 1. no third. Tlmt : !:09.J. tllO !lr••H -1. Str1chtn (Fl t . Sml:h If.I J. Sfcor (Fl. Time: 1;°'.1.
«>D Fret Rlll Y -I. Foothill. Timt :
l .•l.1. '"' l'M!hHI (7! (JI) M•1silfr Vlell l'OO Mtdley llt!IY -1. MlHlon Vitlo. Time: 2:°'.1. 200 Fr11 -1. 11:1111• IMI t AubUrlfl fMl l. MllMW9, fMl. Time: 1:01 .1. 100 Ind. Medley -1. C1mcbtll IM) 1. ~tC,roocl /Ml l. Wood' (Ml. Time: f:OJ.3. ~ Fret -1. Allll•l!WS (Ml 1. LYll iMl J, H1rmon (F). Tl..,1. ;J.,,
l lx,8: J;~·2:_ I . Puleo !Wl J. H1r·
rlo •. on (WI ]. Re nno !WJ. Timi; 1: 1.1.2. l , Ind. Mrdtey -I . Fr1n~!iouse (W! l. ~•ul lW> J. GlltlU1nd (H>. Timi :
1.01.2.
)(I Frfl -1. Lewl.1 lWl 1. Fri nk IMl J. ll•l<>hl !WI. Time: 2S.6. 50 Fly -1. GUUU1nd (Hl 2. Hiii IWl
l. S1ul !W). Tlm1: Jl 4, 1~1'flJ.F~~~nk i"1 i.P~l~,r~~1.l. Lewis
50 ll1ck -t. Fr1nkhciu1t fW! 2, Cu•hm1n (Hl l. k•rrington !WI. Time : l!.1.
·J. 'f._,!~~11.1ttHi.''r~~h>f1.I 2. Hiit (WI
100 F•ef Rtley -1. Hunlil\lfon !lr1Ch. Tl"lf : 1:5,.J.
FJC Tops
Rustler
Swimmers
Golden West's R u st l e r s
return to Southern California
Co nrerence dual meet action
r riday when they try lo ge~
back on the winning trail
against host LA Harbor in a
3:30 p.m. meet. 1
Coach Tom H. Mermstad 's1
Rustler mermen visited the1 powerful Fullerton Hornets in 1 a non-conference dual Wedn es-1
day and returned home with a
63-41 setback.
Only R us I I er s able to
garne r first place fi nishes at
Fullerton w e r e freestylist '
Keith C.Olton. breaststroker
Ros.o1 l\·lclnt yre and diver Ken
Stanton. 1
1
JC SWIMMING Golde11 Weit f41J u.u FullerlOl'I JC
400 Me«l'V ll1t1y -I. F11ll1rlon. Tlmr: 3,SJ 1. 1.mll Frtt -I. Polit {Fl 2.
'rt•11 CM1r. 141 8re1n1h1n {Fl J. E!ch !Gl. Tl~: [
&.stbtll -CD!'on1 del Mi r •I SA 1 'i~3·Free _ 1. Ro~ln'°'1 \Fl'· Collon V1UtY. Edl1r.n I I E111nc:l1, Fo1m!1ln s d. lGl l . MlllbY (G). Tim,: l :S,.I.
Hl rbor •• Hunllnalon !ltl (I\, a I ' ' ' V1ll1Y 11 Lin AlllT!llos, Ntwoort t n ngs )(I Fret -L McL1!n Fl J. WIHl1ms
W11!mln11tr 1t M•rlnsl Tu1Hn 11 Gl l. M11n1lltld (..,), T m1: 13.,.
Mlu !on Vli fo. Foothl I 11 5an 100 l.m. -l . F111uero• (F\ '· j Clemtnlt, Unlv~<1!ty 11 v111ncl1, S1d-Mr lntYrf fG) 3. Cr1wh1rd IF). T me:
dltbBck 11 L1oun1 !111eh (Ill II J:lSl, ANGELUS LEAGUE 1'~&1 Fly _ l. Roblo'on (Fl 2. Cotl• M111 1' M!QllCllll 11 &ov1rn w L GB · Seuoh.,1 (G) l. 11r11n1h1n CFl. Tlmr: P11'11 (7). u Irv~ II (II S!lll Servi!• 3 0 -2:0J '· IFU41trtonl I o.m., Or11nor COis!, St. Anthon¥ l I 1 100 F•tl -1. COl11Jf1 (G! 1. Mcl1ln Gofdrn W-11. S1cklttb8ct 11 Full1r!on SI. Piut 1 1 !Fl J. McOoual t \GL l lmot: )(I.I . T-n1i'n...,t. 1111111111 Amit 1, l l :!00 !11ct -. Cr1wlord (Fl !. Golf -Funrrion vs Or1na1 COili •I •iui x Jc~r.'On (Cl 3. !lrow1r (Fl T m1: lrvlM Cots! (_,try Club <1 :301. ll:lo M o 1 O l J 1:1&.0. HO!ldo I t Golden Wet!, Slddlrbldt ., ,, .. eWedMldlY'I Scorn ,00 Free -1. Polit CF\ 1. M11!b¥
Southwt!.ltrni. Hlvldl VI C lrvl.,. II l'' Anthon'( ll, Meter Otl S IGI J. 11111 (Fl. Time: S:U.,, $Int• Anf C\. (1 I II 11. ervllr I, 1'lu1 X I l1IO !lr11st -1. Mclnlvr• CG\ 2. Gvmne1lif1 -CClrQr\41 dtl Mir, I. P•ut t , !ll11'1oC1 Am11 2 Kru11 11'1 J. Wl!Jl1 (GI. Tl..,.: 2:2S.O. N1woort H1r•. Wntmlml•r 11 SlhmWI''• Gemes tOO F"rN 1'rl11 -1. F11!11r1on. t)mr: AJMhflm 1nvll1llon9I 11 p,m,J, Golden ll. Anlhcny 11 !1111\0P ~I J:1'.31 Wes! 11 •to l+ondO CJ\, trVlrt 11 M1t1r Oe! 01"' n• -I. Sll!nron (GI 1. P1<1nt !G) Swlmmlnci -lrvltie leaqUOI llrwlb II I. P.tUI 11 Piul X J. Crook (Fl. Potn11: 61.IS.
Esti ncli Unlviriltv
11
M!Ulon Vitia I 1i_iii_liliiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; II !boll! 11 J: U)C Goldtn W,11 11 LA M1rbor~ Ml. SA 11 OrlllCll Ca.11 (bo!h
11r!!(i -SA V'"'' •I C-dll Mer, Cosl1 Met.I 11 M.a/IOll1, E111ncl1 11 !.dlJOll· L• Al1mlla$ 11 Founl1ln \11111¥. H1111tlnottl<'I !letcll •I Hl'Wflllrt M1rbor M1riM 11 wntmln1t1r, Mlulori Vl1lo 11 Tv1lln, S•n Cl1mtnl1
llt Fooll!lll. UnlvtflllY 11 V1ltfttl1,
Lia11111 !le11cll tt S16dl1bltk (111 !' ):1$), Golden West 11 C't'lll'lll (2:)0 • UC lrvl.,. 11 Lonq !111ell Cl111k,,. ( 1'r1ct -S1nt1 Ant 11 Or1noe .,.1111 fJ) Slddllb!rck 11 A!versllP C2:JD),
' 11vMl•Y IM1r. "I Tri ck -!IHCll Cities lf!Y l1tlon1I I I Nrwoort H1rbol" (Include. N""POfl' CoroM dtl Mar, Ecllton, Cost• Meu. e111nc:!1. Fovnt1ln V•l\"I Hunl!!'lllton lleacn M11rln1, wn m n1\1r. Sin C!tminlt, Mlulon Vlrfol, Miter Oel 'c' !llll'M:IP Ami l R1l111 110 1.m.I U lr¥Jnp I I Cllrlmtl'll Rll1!¥S (1 :)0)1 a111bel1 -Strvl!I 11 Mater 01 (ll. 5oulh1rn C1lltornl1 Colllil' 11 C1I l utfli!r1n tdoublth11dt• •I '100nl, Or~f'ICN Cot11I Golden W11t Ind S•d· dl1b8tk II Fu/ltrlon llllH'nl¥, UC. lrvlflt
11 AMllllm fOU•ntv . T1nnt1 -UC lr..,1n1 .ti LOflll !l"'ch
Cl1•1k. ,. s , Crew -Or1ncit C1M11t VJ v... 1n • ••rb1r1 11 HtwPOrt (1:.10 11.mJ.
sw1mmlM -°''j!e ceuntv lll'IP r.11mplonshl~ •I 00111111 H I ct h Of1!t1mt 11 t 1.11'1., 1111111 II 1 D.n\.I ll11Ch.ldt1 COl'onl d1I M11r. COlll Mesa,
l"llUnliln vann . NeWPOl'l H1rllor, M1'ilOll Vlelf', M1r1nt, S111 Cl1mtnl1!.
Gymnastics
....... 11 1111 .711 \114,Jt\ W"lntlfi,,_.> LD!'ll HllfH -, SHullll119 (WI . S11rll t IWI l. HlntMcll (W). ,olnh:
··~ .... ht!'. -1, SHrln (W) t, Hol·
llntfl" (HJ 1. Anderto!'l IHJ, ,olnlt;
l .O:S.
'/"• l'IM.lf -1. s,ymoi.t' !WI l· GlllHfM iPO J, MOid CNI. 'olnl1: 1.f • H!th atr -1. C1rntrOt1 Nl J. ICMllM IWl l. Fiii! (H~. Polnt1~ s.•s, a1r1 -1. Holmtl I I 1. Tontdr' lo IWI l . W1tk1r (NI. l'tiln s: 1.~I tUnt~-1. lol•t 1w 1 ~. 11t111111 (Wl ), Holl 11Mr IN), P·,!nts; 1.1.5. I All rO\md -• Wtlletr !H) . Jltlnton IWI. Polnll: J.4.
~~ki Report
ME
IF YOU HAYE LONG HAIR AND WANT
A JOB, WHAT ARE YOUR CHOICES?
1. Gtt 1 hair cut, and pl ease your boss.
2. Keep is long like you like It, but not
get the job.
3. Come to Mallie11 t o try 1 1ho rt man's
wig a nd please e v e r y one.
IF YOU ARE LOSING _ YOUR HAIR, WHAT
CAN YOU DO ABOUT IT?
I. Wear a hat.
2. Buy a pair of 1ungl1ss11 and pretend
you ' rt that famous movie star.
3. Come to Mallit'I to try a m1n'1 wig
or toupee.
WE HAYE A NEW PRIVATE FITIING
ROOM FOR MEN ONLY!
MEN'S SY.NTHE TIC WIGS
~~~!~1~o~,1~tr•tch ~:!~7::~c.::_ NOW 124'1
MEN 'S HUMAN HAIR WIGS
~.~~·:,~~:~.~.~~.1'..~·.~~.~ ........ NOW '32"
1000/o Hu-Hair ToupH'• From $9'.H I
WIG
SALO N
250.D .EHi 17th St. -Hlllgron Squ1t1
Co1t1 Mo11 541-'1446
HEAVY DUTY EXPRESS
SALE
1 Mad! for trucks and trlilers In ton·
tinLiOl.ls hi1hw1y/n1r1I dtlivtry and
pitk·UP HNk• • M11imum pelfO/'m•
l llC.8 •I 1 lt1w lttw rrrir:e
SIZE SIZE Sii!. SIZE
6,DDx16 6.toxu
S1896 S2196
EXCllE TAX 11,IP TO ll.U
SHOCK ~ "'"""'' ~ ~Utm••r
-I IWllEllOUS
SALE ··~ l~j~
50°/oOFF UMITl!DTIM•
OFF•lt
ON SALC NOW FOlt ONLY ON MCOND SllOCK •st1 INSTALLED
High quality 1hock absorb•1s
a ive YoU I lmOOlhttr, Pftr "········· ..... rid• the )'t•r round, .. _,,.,..,, ....
FOR
Sleckw•tr .1lre.1 878·14. C78·14
•ltd £78·14 with tnide •nd f .E. r .
of 2.06 to 2.34 per-tire
SINGLE TIRE SALE PRICES
SILVERTOWN Regult r Sale f ederal Sile Price !'rice E.lcl1e T•11 BELTED 878-14 $30.iO ... $2i.U $2.06
''NEW CAR''TIRE
DOUBLE-BELTED FOR
~.!R~R:nT~ .. ~~~,.~ le~~~~'~
will 911 ou the tire you w anL Should we run out
·of your s e d uring this offer; w e w ill ba nappy 10
issue you a rain check •nd order vovr tire-it the
advertised price for futunt deliv8fY,
C78·14
E78·14
f 78·14
G7B-14
H78·14
F78·15
G78·15
H78·15 ' J78·15
t1a.1s I
3).10 27.•• 2 .10
14.10 28.8• 2.34
36. IS 2 •.•• 2.52
l9,5S 31.18 2 .69
41 . IS 3J.U 2.93
17.15 ..... 2 .58
40.55 Sl,88 2.78
44.15 34.U 3.01
SO.OD 3&.88 3 .12
52.00 40.88 3 ,28
Oller on bl.ekwans,. w~te"U.1 .1U1htty hi&llw
BRAKE RELINE
40,000 MILE GUARANTEE
e l...,t Wertt-'tl'
, ... 11.., Re,i.c. .... "' .....
SpM!.I Low f'rkK
GUARANTll
IALL"I ~
T~• 111v11Cty llr•k• 111111111 1n111lllf 111 y111r c1, •r. tNr•ni..I ,.,
.. ,oot mll11 wlltll lllH In ll9!Ktn'l1Mrcl1I llllllt'ftr car ""'le.•
ll!Oulll ttloe llnlft91 1111 '' ._,,, 111 •vrlng llrlt tl'lrllll. lltty -.ui k r111!1ted .., 1 ,,.._,,, .. t11.i1 ft111M lnt .,. mlt.1t1, Lhl'tll ...
le N1l1r •r 111r• 111rt1rmlnt 1rltln11 11rvlc1.
$
AIR WHE EL WHEEL
BALANC E ALIGNMENT
$149 ::~ s5ss SHOCKS ••• .... b~ $12.50
DlLCO & Many W•y1 To Buy
HI JACICIRS WE HONOR ALL s34so MAJOR CREDIT CARDS
INSTALLATION
AfAILAI LI
LINING & LABOR
let. Y•l1t• SJJ,91
MOST CARS
DISH DR SPOKE
MAGS
4for$99
-lmlMl!ICllO ! •
' -
·JO'NES TIR·E SERVICE ~e;;, ·•· 2049 HARBOR BLVD. I at Bay I
COSTA MESA
Phones 646-4421
540-4343
• • ·~·
•
I
%8 OAILV PILOT
""'-Prep, JC
Gymnastics
Su1n1naries
Uni's First Loop Conquest
Comes Like a Downpour
c•M ~tr., •r,T.:r·i~~-..
''" t:)'.t_r(l11 -! G••\t• t(! ?. Gcl'll•ltJ 1<;1 J l vtt" {()_ l'cln!\ t 4.
"1•11111 P,t rl -I M(l'1tlt l'IO t(I J, G•tUr /Cl t ttc«k (\I) Pol111J 11.
... ,,ll&l\!tl 811l -\ Mcl•1rl1r>d IC.I J Lt.cock IV!, . 0•1Mr (CJ. Poll'I"! ...
J;O"I M~'" -I (t>•\lf !(\ 1. Tr.fol ( ) 1 Sl'l•!l"1)tn (V\ 11011'11 1 1.
\ll)• ~(lortf -I, ltlCO(~. jV) 1 i..ood fVl l l it L1v1 fCl t nd •lllffl !(). "olnt1 1 l.
"l"O~ -!. Slltllf\orl'I IV) 7. McFt rl1P'ltJ ((! J, l;l'lit n !(). Pol1111: •• All ·•OU'ld -I G••'f• !(l 1' ,,
Gold•" w..i cu1.ue1 1n•.w i •io ,~ ..
'''' E •et -1 Mel'1v1 !GI f, Joi\"'"" IGl 3. MtllMl'I (Gl. Po!nh: " S•dtllotlt -I Ev,rttt /GI 1 Grlr"'" !G) ]. Joll"\.00\ 11;1 1>011111 1.l5.
ll!l'ltl -l JOll"~ IG) f Evt •tlt IGI ) M(Ft~I IG~. l'oil!tt~ l.t,
LOl'll 1-00rtt -l1 McF'1~1 IGi J, Mo•d IGl )_ Cl ,l\OI' lit . Pol11lt: t.l .
fl~rs -1 O'Ntill (Gl 1. E'vtr1ll (G) 3 Mc~1ul (GI Pcl11U: 1.U.
Hiell "•' -1, Jol\11!~ <G\ 1. 111tm1n !GI 3. MeF1ul GJ. Joo ntt: ·'· All Arci,md -I ""·c-"evt tG) J. JGl'nS.011 !Gl 3. C1no (iltJ, Po!111t; f 1J,
Wo1nen's
Athletics
r ..... 11
Oolcllfl W .. ! (1JJ i2Jl Or111t1 (NII
Wor1Mn'1 Slntr ..
o.ic1t11 w .. 1 1J1 111 o''"'' co111 M~1n1011l {GJ dll. Oretl 101 11.t . I· 11, 11·5. !'"''r !GI dtf. Smit!! 101 1.11. 11.J,
"''"'~''Id IGl dfl. S1r1to11 101 ,.11. 11·7
l'ert•dlnl !Gl <111. CMn!r 10) 11-1.
11.1.
11 -J,
ll-f,
11-.•n11t<1v !GI lml lo Oltl fO) 1·11, 11·
'· f·l 1. • O·l~~",~1. IGl lot! 10 0oo ... 11y roi 11.1,
,.r.~licllll! {G ) !011 to Hlbblrd IOl 7.11.
'
•110Hr! f(.) foll lo C. $!1rricttkt IOl l·I. t -11. 1.3. M1,ch /Gl 1011 to 01• eefl!Ol 1·!L 3· I<. ll~~•nllrkt (GI dtl. W11111r IOJ 11·1,
WOl'(llfl'I 001111111
lkllllll w"' 111> fU Ortntt (NII M<jt1lt1fl 1111d 1,,,1 (('1 Cltl, Grttf
tlld ll'lllfl IOJ 1-15. l.!-l, !S·l. Ormerod tl'ld fltr11rttl11I {(U !t•I l ftf.Ofl tnd COl'lf'ltr !Ol IJ-1: 11 ·15. ). •• IC11111tctv '"° Mt!Hllln rc;1 IOSI ~ ""Y l fllf Cll1I (") lJ-10, 6-lJ, 1-15. lll'lllOl'I t"d Vllllft! fGJ def. 0!1C111 t nd St1r11lltkt 0 1 !!·11, U·1', rs.JI. MltCll '"" Ster11ll1kt (G\ lctl W11n1r 1nd Hlbblrd 101 .5-15, ~-15.
..... , °"'bl" ..... Wiit I l 14,-0rt MI (Hit
IRVINE OF IRVINE -Low net winner John Irvine
of Santa Ana Country Club's Federated Seniors
Ass'n. tourney. A lO·handicapper, Irvine carded a
75 (net 65) to win by one stroke. He also lead his
team lo victory with a 22-under-par 122. Three
teams tied at 122 with matching cards putting his
group iry 1st place. Paul Lenk of Newport Beach,
Bernie Robinson of Santa Ana and Dr. Gene Wal·
lace of Tustin completed the winning foursome.
GOLF RUNDOWN • • • •
Contln11ed from Page 27
double winners in the second
tourney.
Fran Lewis and Barbara
Shepardson ~ h a r e d the
lime light (greenlight? I in 8
flight competition, w I th
Honora Murphy taking the
honors in C flight for the bet·
ter nine event.
Helen Drexelius (87 ) and Pat
Gulick (941 .
Je1n Abajian ( lo I ) ,
Margaret Westmoreland ( 104 l
and Hap McMullen (105J
away with C fllght prizes.
Rancho SJ
Jt 's nol often that any prep baseball team
collects as many as 19 bast hits in one game,
but when lt comes In your team 's flrst--ever
league encounter it has to be t ven more
satisfying.
Coach Ken Tratar's Unive rsity nine cla,,_,'ed
Saddleb3ck. 12-0, Tuesd1y in Orange League
opener Jnd four individuals accounted for
13 hits.
Brotherli Rick and Nick Peregud collected
1even binglea and five rbi between them
-----..r
ROGER
CARLSON ---===="'
while Steve Fargo and Dan Ruckel banged
out three safeties apiece.
For a team that had averaged less than
five hits per outing in accumulating a 24
non-league ma'rk, that's not bad .
"I just wish we could have saved a rew of
those hits for another time," quips coash Ken
Tratar.
Tratar has a pair of sophomores in the
starting lineup and the hitting and fielding of
catcher Nick Peregud and shortstop Bill
Ruckel have been major items in the Trojans'
success.
The No. I pitcher in the Trojans' arsenal
is 6-3 senior Rick Peregud, who has a major
league Rrm according to his coach.
Tratar and his crew have also been blessed
with almost unreal backing from parents and
boosters at University.
Additionally, hot pants attired bat girls
keep interest at a peak when the action on
the base paths slows down .
Considering the Saddleback conquest was
the Trojans' first league encounter, one
would surmise they wo uld be somewhat tight
for the game.
But Tratar says the only person wound up
(or the test was himself. "This team stays
pretty loose." 11ays the Trojan boss.
* * * Newport_ Barbar High baseball players have
...,
elec1ed not lo return to Co5t3 ~Ir.Sa Park
for night encounter1 ne:st )'ear. although
lbe)' ma~· be invoh•ed ln tbe f\'e"·port·~tesa
Olslrlt t lourney again.
They will be under the li•bts ""''Y from
borne. however, with a nocturnal vtsll to
Santa Ana Valley sc heduled.
The clly of Santa Ana ba5 plans for fltlng
up lbt Falc11ns' diamond with extensive
lighting.
~'e\\·port Harbor booslt.rs. incidentally, arr
responsible for an e.xcellent dugout at New·
port and chipped In for IWO·thlrds of 1be cost
nf Ne\\'port's new uniform s.
* * * Westminster football st.andoula-are settling
On where they 'll compete in the fa ll.
.Jlm Holland is slated for llnebacker duty
at North Carolina and Bart Frankhouse has
been accepted by the Naval Academy.
Gary Jenn ings ha s a full ride at UCLA and
Terry Young is set for Humboldt State.
Martin Schroede r is penned for Cal State
(!..-Ong Beach 1.
Jeff Siemens is being recru ited by Ne·
braska and Arizona State. among others.
Newport's outstanding senior Terry Albrit·
ton continues to be besieged by college re-
cruiters desiring his services in foo tball and
track.
\Vhatever he decides. he's indicated he's
seeking a college career that includes foot.
ball and track.
* * South footba ll coaches In the !\1ortb.SOutb
Sbrine Game are still In a quandary over the
players provided them for August's clasb al
Los Angeles Memorial Colls,eum.
It seems that defensive b11cks were over·
looked "'hen ll came time lo \'Ole for per•
so nnel on tbr. South rosier.
Westminster quarterback Jeff Siemens may
find blmself stalioMd at safety or co rn er ( tbe
latter he's never played I.
And with qu arterb acks Vince ferragamo
and Jamie Quirll also In the fold, it's a pos-
sibility that Bishop Amat QB John Sciarra
will be used at running back.
Mt11'1 tln1t11 Oti...,. Wt1I fl) Ill O'lnll Cotti
Betty Brown and Mai:ine
Assmus took first place in the
B and C flight. tor the match
vs. par tournament.
Rancho San Joaquin woi:nen
golfer! began Uieir s~x-week
team match play with a win
ove r San Clemente at San
Diego's Balboa Golf Course A\
this week, reversing last
yeai:;'s loss by three and a haU
points.
Harness Los Alamitos
Mhlld O~lt!H OOldttl Wiii fl) (fl Ottllft Cit"
Glrl1 t,•e-ce111 M111 1611 Ull Hvnt1111i.n (lJ) Fooll!ill llO LH -l, O Le11er (CJ 1. 0 . 0111 fH l ]. An$!!" fH). Tlmt: 11.1)
AOO Rtttv -I. Hu11ll 111t1111 1. Foctlll!I. Tlmt: l:S1.f.
UO -I. N, Ollt \H! 1. TllcmpMlfl ICI 3. VI" .Hoo-IC). lm1: 1:03 . .5. 100 -I, L.c:ktV IC) 2. 1rnantn IHI I. Pall1r11111 ICI. TJ,....t : 11.t. 880 -1. Grttn (H) 1. HcUd1Y !C) l , Jira IH) Timi : 2·3'1.1. "'° 1tii1w -I. C11.111 Miii 2. HVl\-tl11C1!on. Timi : J•.J. JO -1. t.tsltr !Cl 7. Arricld CHJ l. M~!llew1 IFJ. Tlmt : 6.i. Mill -l. 011w1n1 (tl l. Hiii CH! l.
Ffl(>ttl f(J. 'fl~: 610'.0.
Ao -I. M!lls 00 2 ThemPIOll (C:J ) et!lv (r !. Tim!!: 21.l.
edlev R1!1v -1. H11ntln••<m 2. C1111e Mesi. Tlmt : 2~01 f. W -I. ThompaOll lCJ 1. H. Otlt CN) 3. MJll1 jH). Tlmt: U·10VJ. .5P -1. Putcenclc !() 2. Vi n Hoc~
(Cl 3. Revnold! f"I Olatanc1·1 11-S. HJ -1. Mert n fO 1. Sm 111 (CJ l . 0 . Lester CC>. H1!1fll: i ·IO.
COSTA MESA
• Laguna Beach
Handicaps aside, the Laguna
Beach Women's Golf Club
braved l'I low gross tourna·
ment recently with some in·
t.eresting results -such as B
flighter Vangie Christiansen
ouUcoring all but one o( the A
nighters with an 84.
Top flight winners were·
Diane Stys (8.1 ), Janet Poor
f84 1, and Evelyn Hurlbut (85 ).
Victors in B·flight were
Vangie Christiansen ( 8 4 J ,
SANTA ANA
PLACENTIA
!lade
foteach
othet!
if you kMY'KS'
imported car
you'I
love it more
with -~
MICHELIN~
Together, they'll give you the kind of
perfcirmance you expect from your earl Precision
control ••• fast braking ••• sure, safe performance!
That's because Michelin ZX Is built to
meet your car's specifications, so it makes
the most of every special feature!
MICHELIN MAKES THE DIFFERENCE!
World'1Flr1t StHI llelteil Rld/-1 Tire.
"WE'RE BIG IN RADIALS"
AUTO • TRUCK • IORlllN • DOMllTIC
Com1 In And Check The R1dl1I Btst Sulttd to Your N1td1.
SINCE 1920
PLACENTIA ORANGE
14~ South Brtdford 1100 N. Tustin
I Sovtl't of Chtprflt") l81tw1t11 Kal,!lt I Coll r111J
AeNtl frtlfl fttw tlOll Mlfct
524-9210 532-3383
SANTA ANA COSTA MESA
209 Bush St. 1 n9 Superior Ave.
IJrd l lt11~I I I 7•1't l Ntw11ort I
The club also held an All
irons tournament with Sally
Owsley, (first flight ). Jeanne
Griffin and Jean O'Skea (se-
cond), Charlene Collins (thirdl
and Betty Poindexter (fourlh J
taking· the honors.
El Niguel
The El Niguel Women's Golf
Association sponsored a low
net and low gross tourney in
preparation for its large Mem·
ber·Guest affair Tuesday.
Low gross winners in each
fLight were Anne Teel (81\),
Edith C"arpenter (90 !. Opal
Greenlaw (98) and Margaret
Herten (110). Low net awards
were given to Nelle Townsend
174 J, Ces McCaffer)I (781.
Billie Mackensie (77 ), and
Jane Terhell (80 1.
1Ubs,lon Viejo
The Mission Viejo Golf Club
women's group held a low net
tourney as its most recent
event. Jean Metcalf scored ! 36
on nine holes to win the event.
Two strokes behind w a s
Nadine Maze.
El Toro
The El Toro Women's Golf
Association gave its top prize
to Celia Maxfield and Lee
Debella in a recent partner's
best ball event. Carolyn Soltes
and Sue Robert .. took second
place and Mary Mucciaccio
and Virginia Sayler came ln
third.
Big Cn11yo11
Ceil Martin (69) and Evelyn
Earnshaw '721 topped off the
A and B flights in medal play
!his week at the Big Canyon
Oluntry Club. Dean Helperin
( 72 ! came in second in the A
ni~ht and Peg Wells \13) took
second in the 8 flight.
In 11n earlier match vs. par
tourney. Karen Winterburn
and Dana Parker tied for top
honors in the first fl ight. with
B11 rbara De Franco winning
the second night.
Results
lfl Alamllts Htt'lllJI& ltelUHI
Wlfn1Mlf. Ml'C~ tt
c ... , .. 11111
DAVE RO SS PONTIAC
Lease or .Buy All Models ...
DAVE ROSS
PONTIAC
1410 HA•IOR ILfD, *' PAil DllVI ....
COSTA MISA --Ph. 5464017 ,.. ..... ""
547·1201 ~2-3384 l,lfrl 1 Dl'+'f A Wllx t i• A.M. TO lttff 11.M. ... --IUfrlOA\"1 11 AM. TO I ,.M. ,. •• 11
Harness Entries
"'
LEGAL )'IOTICE
lllCTITIOUS llU$tNISS
N.&MI lTATIMINT
fojlOW!"ll l>t'JOtl It 6of"CI t>VSlllf~~
LEGAL NOTICE
NOtlCI 011 TltUlTll'S IALt
ltll'I Ht. f'1-11
t i ll'lllllS' CALtrOltNlit. TITL E' COM IANY l~L f CON$l. CO• ll/ OCt<ll SI• OF O'IANG'° COVNTV. •1 dVI~ 1HOl"lld
fl•lll<ll 11!1,..,. Cal•/ '°"16 trutltt un~tf l!lt kllklwlnf cfti.crlbtd
.. arold W lOMlln. 111 Ota! $l • dtH ot l•utl WILL S!LL AT PUI LIC
811001 1111'10, (11!1 ~ AUCTION 10 THE MIGHE!t l!OOElt
Til•1 Ouflntu 11 bll1tt t:olldl.IC1te1 Dv '"IFO• CASH !o•v111tt •t llmt 01 .. 11 1,.
IN:flvldutl 11wrv1 m-v ol 1111 Vnl!td St11ttl oil
.,, H1•c1d "':· ~::",1'~1111 '"• Cov"tY t1gnt. 11111 •nd l111ert!I utnvtYtd lo tl'd ' I lllt•m~n .,ow lleld by It \ll'l(ltr u lcl Ottd OI T•vtt Cltrk ol Ort"0' Counr1 M Ftorut'V 71, I,~ ,11, o•cotrtY n~rtlnt!!•• dtlC•lbtd:
1977 fly Bevt rly J Mtd~J. Of-OU!Y ltRusrO•· ltUIE,.. •vsS E L L •"4
C011n1Y Clt•k. ll'lilH 'li:VBY RUSS ELL. ~Vlbell(I '1•d wlft .
Oubh•ntd OrtnGt (Ot l l D1l!y Pl1c1,1 8E'NEFICI AR Y": DEWl!Y I!!. STONl Ind
Mlr(n 1." 11, 23, 1911 :Sl'-IJ Vl•GINtA O. SfONE'. flV")•nd tl'ld wlf1, •·---------,,,,,,.=,---·I'' lol11t 1tnt111_., RKJ)rdtd J111v1•y •· ,. NOTICE 1t1G, ti lnsrr. No. ?.JXI In tlOlk t lll LEGAL PODt l3I ct Otllcl1t •K11rd1 In 1111 Olfltt ------~~-,,,,,,.,---lof tht Reco•dtr Ill O•t"9f Covn1V1 lfld
FICTITIOUS IUSINISS dffd ol 1tu11 dttc,llM\ fllt fdlowll'fll
NAME JTAttMINT pro111r1~:
Tne 1c11owfnt 11ers0111 i re doing th• Nortllw*t1trlv :SG.f! teet ol 1111
bv1ln111 ~1 : )Outne11rtflv ,,.,J.11 ''" OI fl\1
fNVlltO'JM(NTAl ENTE.llP•1Sl!S Ncrtne11t••l1 119.tS ff~t tl Lot 2f2, or
COMPANY' 11.M 5Pte• S!111r. Mun· Newocrt H111nt1 In '"" cllv OI C111 t1 11~01cn Betch. Ct ll!ornlt tU~I Mt11. ti "' m•• tetorded In ~ 4, Poou DelMar ~ll11111n, 6001 Ctlv1n 111,, t l 01 m!tt•ll•nKIV• m1p1, Jn lllt
Clrclt. HuMln•tcn &e1c11. C1lllotnl1 olllc• .,r 1~t counlV r1cerd•r ol 11ld
Dnn&Td (l\t tres T11mklntc11. 2332' (Oun!v
Gr1~1 Avt .. Torr•~t•. C1lifcr11l1 163 Etll 22nd $tr1••• Co1te Mtlt,
Tiii• bu11~e11 Is ot!nt conoucitd bv t c1111crnlt
Ptr!nt1'11iO (U t 1tree1 tOd•tu or (ftmmott
Rogt• 0 FIPPPlll d1Sl9n1li01> ls tt!Own t b<IV., llC w11rtnly
Dcntld C. Tl'll!mklll)l!n Is OIVtn II !O ill (On'llll!fl'ltlJ 0' COh T~·1 s11temeM filed with 1111 C011111v reuntssl
Cittk 111 0•1noe Cou11ty Cll\, Ml •Ch 1, 1972. Tho l)fln~firliry un<l~r ••Id DetO of
!Iv !tvtrlv J_ M1ooc~. D11>ulv Coun1v Trus!. tw re11011 111 1 b•tt'1' or dtftull 111
Clerk, tlle obllt1•lo~1 1tc11rt<I I It• r f b v ,
',",,3" l\1r1to!ort IXKultd •fld dtll\ltrM lo lllt P~bllst!td Oranve Co.ti Dellv 01. und~r1lonPC1 1 wrl11e11 D1c11rt1lcn ol
M1rcn f, 16. 2J. )Cl, lf12 116·'1 Oeftult tnd o.,...8no fer Self, 1nd wrlllt"
LEGAL NOTICE 'l(l!iC' ol bttf(/I t nd cl t lt CllOll 10 Cl!IM
lllt •>ndt•llt ntd to 1111 !lid 11rl!llf!rlV Ill
--cc,.,.,,.-,.,--,,cccccc:--,:::::---l"'1'1v 11ld 0111111!lc1>1, •Ml 1t1er1at1tr fl\1
5UP1!1101l COU•T 01'" TH! un!ler1!t 111d ceustd st !CI natlct of l!rel(h
STATE 01' Ct.L"'ORNIA l'O• and 111 etectlOI> lo be llKcrded Ofce"'~'
THI! COUNTY 01" OllAHGl 6, 1t11. 11 lnirr. No, ~ !n ~k f"J1 •
NI. A·1'll~1 Otte., •• cl 11ld Olticlt l li:tcllJ"dl.
NOTICE 01' HfAIUNG 01'" P'lflTtDN S1IC1 ltll will bt m1dt, 11!/I wllt!111.1t
1'01; P•OIATE 01'" WILL f'ND 1'"011: cov•ntnl er w1rr1ntv, eJpreu cr !moiled.
LEtTl•S T(5tAMfNTAI Y (tDND rt~JlrCllnt lillt , POS$tUlcn, Ot .. ,,..
WAIVED IV WILLI eumbr111ce1. to PtV !ht r1m11n1no prl11w
E•la1t of JOHN T, STOWE!tS, akt ci11at tum of !ht 11ot1lsl s1curtd by 1114
JOHN THOMAS STOWE RS. Otce11ed, Dtl'CI of T•ul!. wllh lnt1rt1I 11 In 11Jd
NOTICE !S HEli:EBY GIVfN !~II Ell• ncre 11r1Yle1e1. 1av1nce1. II 1ny. una1r !hi
S!OWtrl ·111s Ille<! hartln I PttllfOo tor lerm1 DI tllO 0 .. d Of Tr11i1, lets. Ch l rffl
proba!f of w111 e nd rer h1u1nce ol L111trf end ~~111n111 cl 1ht Trul1te 111d of lhl
Te1t1menrarv to Pet<tlone• (bond w1lveo 1111.111 erealjl(I bY 11ld Oeed ot Trus!.
bv will) tfftr1nc1 lo wnlch It m101 for St ld s1l1 will bt fltld on ,,;d1-.,, •~rll 7,
fvrthe• 1111•ic111ar1 . end Iha!'"' tim1 an.ct ltn, II 11:00 o'clock A.M .. 1! !ht S&Ulh
PIJ1ce 111 ~ee•lno !llt same 1111 l>etn sel (lrcnll 1ntr111c1 lo lht otd eeo.in1v
tcr April 4. 1911, 11 t ;lO 1.m .• 111 1~1 c011r!llouu . 200 flloct Wt lf S1n!1 Ant cwrrroom of Ototrtm1nt No. l of 111d 8oulav1rd, S1Mt Ano, c1u1c,nlt .
court at 100 Civic c~nlt• O•lve We1f, ln 0111; Mtrch lf , 1t1f.
the CUy 11! Se11t1 Ant, C1!ilcrni1, F!r1! Cl lllornl1 Tll!t
Oiied M••<M IS. 1972, Com111nv (lf-Ortntt County,
W, E. St JOHN, •t 11id Tru1lot,
(!llJlllY Clfrk BY T, D. st•V•C!
HURWITZ. HU•WltZ AND •l!MliJI COMPANY, A9enr
1'ttor111v 1t L•w Iv Wi lde R. Ht 1,tf ,
... o. Bt• Ut vice "'''ldenl
New1110tl flttUI, C1lllornoo SfA·ltl
Tel: ITU ) &1l·f0211 "ub!lshtO Or1n11 C011I Ot!ly Pilot.
Allor""'' lor ,.llJ!lon1r Mtr(h U. tl. lC, 1'72 '''·'2 Publl•nt d Or1n1e Cot11 Diiiy .,,101,
M1rcil 16, !7, 2J, lt12 7U·11
LEGAL NOTICI!: LEGAL Noncp;
,,
A
t
p
'" ...
' ... -.. ,..,.
, .... ? . '" ... ' 1•11
· • F ~l W[lhd
f.lc. A
'"' "'" c , Cr1
' "" " • Co1 v
"' Tlllt
tt•tlll
, Tlli1
.Clerk
lt11.
40Vlll
• Publ
Mtrch
'" bu1lnt
SA
'"' ' Orlv
'" •m This
Jll rtne
111;1
tv Cle 1972.
Pull II
·Mtrcn
.,,,,
I S: c
, ASSO , Ntw
'"' ·~lhl1
Jn<llvld
, .: Thl1
Cletk o ... ,,
IClt rk.
Thi I
J I: " ... ... ...
111:..JOJ.
' Thlt
fndlvld
'Thll
(lerk o
ltn. I
: y Cler
,.ubll•
'''" l
·' .,,,,
business
"' Cc1t1
Ooo
CCIII ,,
M111
Tlll1
P'trlner
Thi I
Cttrk ct ltn. e
COllntv
Publls
M•rcfl 1
' The bllll"''' AUT
Coste ...
Str"I, , ......
Ltt Vll
Th11 b
1"11rtn1r1
Tni1 s
<.:1t1k cl
1'12. ll
CcunlV
P'ub!lt
Mtrcfl l
'"' kttlllfll
SAR
30tll SI
St rt
oel M
Arst
dt1 M
This b
• J ncHv!dl•
Thls s
Ci.rt ~I lf71. 8
Ct11n1V
Tiit fo
•1:
'ON HAllt •t .. Co '" ...
Thfl b
l11dlvld ,
Tiiis 1
C:ltflt "' ,.,?. ,,
Covnlv c
Tiit f
llu1lntt1 " . Apl, I , , ...
~·' ,., 01r1v
Coitt
Tfltl
l"lrtntfl ,
0
lll(I •I
C:tt rk ol ,,,,_ ,,
'""""' c l'vb!l1fl
Mlr(.11 2.
I
GI\'.! Film U1·ging W orke1· Incentive
Clltltfln Stl~t MHllW
DE'l'ROI'I' -Genera l ~rotors's Che\•rolet division b
telHng every one of 111 100,000-
plus employes that a major
pOrtlon of the remaining battle
LEGAL NOTICE
STATIMINT 0, WITHD•AWAL l"lllOM
f'AllTNllllSHI,
O'IJIAtlNO UNOll f'ICTITIOUI • IUSINISS N.t.Mt:
n., followlnt "'llOI! htl Wltl'lclttWll .,
• tflltrtt ''''"'t ''""' lht p1rtn1r1lll t ot:>tt1tln1 11110tr lllt litlltlo111 b111l""'1
"''"' of 0 I. 0 OltNAMENTAL lllON t i Wt•! Mtl11 SI., T11ttl11, Ctlllol'lll.t.
' Tiit llcll!lou1 llv1l .... 11 ntme '11ttmt'll
tot rhe PtrlntrU.11 w11 flltd .., Nov. u .
''" In lllf Cou111r ol Or1n1t,
•• 1'1111 llllnt •1111 l lldrtll of tll• "''°" •lllldrt ·•111n1: Qol,1ld Ch1rlt1 Htnlctl 4(M
No ... C.11lnld1 l1n1, A.ntllt lm, C1Uto~nl1. Oontld c:. Htnkt l
P11blt1lled ,.JJtH
Ortntt CCMl~I O.llr Piie!, Mtrd'I 2, t. 1•, 2l. ltlJ i37·1J
LEGAL NOTICE
l"IC:TITIOUS llJ51NISS • NAMI STATA"MINT '" lollowlnt ~r1on1 "' OO!n• 11ii1IM•1 t t:
"' W,i.SH PltOOUCTS, , ... •• · Gr•nd, Stnl• .a.n1 ~101
• RObtr! J. LlllO, 2309 W. ,1.n•llUrU Pl.,
$1nl• •n• Rlcll1rd Htrrls, '"' Ntwl'Qrl 111Vd., Cott• Mtll Vt ldOn '· Stnroeder, ·~· NtWIMH I •lvd., Co1l1 Mt$f
'rnl1 llu•lneu !1 btin1 conducled b~ ~ ••rtner1lll•.
ROberl J. l •Od 1 n;1 1t1!1m1nt flltd Wl!h ~. Counrt .(Jtrk .. Or1nve County en : M1rc11 '" i tn. " l!levtrly
'ounly Clerk. J, M111do11, OtPl.llY
. Publltlltd Or1n11 CCMll! Dilly .. !let,
MtrU. :U, :IO Ind AprU 4, lJ, lt71 1S.·1i
LEGAL NOTICE . fflCTIT IOUS •USINESS
NAMlf STATEM-_NT
'"' follow In• J>ttsons ... dO!n1
bv1!111H ti: '· SAIL ''" lllOTEL. ,,,, Nt•.vporJ
Bo4.oltv1rcl, NP'<ll'POrl fle1C11, CA 91,.0
Robtrl W•rr1n Sf1w1 t!, .UOI Stlll\Ol"I
Orlvt . NtWl>llrl 11ttcll, CA
c111111r DOf\1111 M1llltWl1 ~' S•nl1 11:1111 RoM, Arc•Olt , CA
Tl\11 bv1IMs1 h condutrtd by • tt'Mrt l
~lrtnerlhlP.
Robert W1rrt n Siewert
Chtlllr Oon1!d ,.\111\tWI
'T11:1 sl1l.ITT1tnl WIS Ille'!! wlttl flit COUii·
tv Clerlt ol Or1n1~ County on M1rch ~1.
1912.
ffU•Sll PublilllMI Of•n•• CoJH Dtlll' Piiot,
Mtrcll 2J, :JO, •rid April ,, u , ir11 771·72
LEGAL NOTICE
,IC'TITIOUS austN•SS
NAM.I STA'Tt:MiHT
'Th1 tollaw1n1 '''Kin Is dolnt bu1inttli
11:
' CHUCIC S 'TE VEN S ••• ASSOCIATES, "'' tllrcl'I. Sui1e '· Newport t111ch, C1. 91'60
Ch1rlft s11erm1n St1vtn1, '" tl!oclle,!tr St., C°'l1 M1t1. Ct llf. t2•21
Tiiis 1M.11J11111 11 1191119 conducted b"I' •n
)l\CllVldUtl,
CMrlt1 S. St..,.en'
' 'lhl1 •llt....,•nt 1111<1 wi th !ht Counl'f tierk et Ori n•• CounfV on : M1rt11 ?, 1rn .
" a1vtrl~ '· Madclo•, OtPUty Counl"f Clerk,
'''"J Publ!lhed Or1n11 Co1" Ot:i"f .. 1101,
tA•r<h 9. 16, 2J, l!J, 1t12 •11·12
LEGAL NOTICE .
l"IC'TITIDUS IUllNl!IS
NA.1411!. STAT•M•HT Tri. lollowlnti person Is Golnt bY1ijne11 ,c
, FOUR SEASONS MOTOJl HOME
REN'TALS, lllD 1"11 SI., R...>OI, Newport
Bttch, C•. '2660.
Rt"f Chtrlts Emm0<>1, 11:» lttll St .•
It-XII. N-..,.-1 81tth, C•. '1"60.
This 11u1ln1u 11 titlnv ninauc11d b'f 1n
Jrldlvidu1I.
f11v c . Emmons
Thlt 1t1tem1nl !Ued "" '" '~"" C!ttk ,, Ort ntt County ~' Mt rtll "· ~,n, BY t11varl'f J . Mtdlla• Oepul., Coun-
: 'f Cle1k. ,. l'6U
,.ubll1~ed Or1nee (Oii~! DITIY Pl!c!.
p erch 2l, )), 1rld APrll '· I), 1911 7'2·72 . LEGAL NOTICE •
.. ICTITIOUS IUSIM•ss .. . . NAME STATIMIH'T .,,,, tollowin1 PMICH>S "' ~olnt
butlnHI '" PAINT l!IY "T''. 15J.o Superior Ave.,
Catlt Mts• OouQltt Jtmes 01n, <I06 £1tht r SI.,
Cotta Mes•
lt(llw"f TrJnltr, ~· Vlc.tor!1, C0\11
f.111•
Tiii• 111,11!nt n is btin1 conducted b'f •
P•rlJWr•lll1. .. Oa<lt ltt J. Din
Tiiis 1!1t1m1nt flltd "'iln '"• Counrv
l!!•rk. of 011n11 CounlY ~' M1rcn "· 1911. " tltvtrl., J, M•O'O'o•. o~uty
CounlY Clfrk. '""' l"ubllt~ed Or1n1e Co111 Dt!lY Piie!,
M1rc11 II, 13, .)0. •ncl APrll ,, 1'11 7°'-72
LEGAL NOTICE'
f'ICTITI OUS •USIHllS . NAME STATliMINT . '"' follow In• ptrJOns ... d1l111
1>v11,.e11 • .,
AUTHENTIQUES, 1•~t Ntwp01t llvd.,
• Co1l1 M111, Ctllf. tl621, . P•mrl• Stir Brel'dl"9, ... """ SlrHt, l11un1 l!lta<h, C1Uf. '2151
M•rl1 '· O'l!ltltn, "' ll:Ub'f Slr'1!1,
L11u,.. B11dl, C1lll .. t2651
'1'1111 bu1ln111 h t>tlnt conducled lll'f • ~•rlr.er1hlp.
P1mtl1 S. tltttdint
Tnls 1!1l1m1nt tll td wllh tilt CounT'f
(:ltrk ol Dr1ntt C1untv c~: Merell \4,
J9n. 11., 81.,erlY J . Mlddox. Oe1ulY
Cou11ty Clerk. •1ua1 Publll/ltd Or1n1r Co1~I 0 1!1y Pilot,
N.tr<ll 16, 23, .30. •nO' .-orll ,, 1912 ~72
' LEGAL NOTICE
against Imports must be car-
ried on by them.
l:faving done v.·hat it can by
v.'ay of desiHn, Chevrolet now
is banking on a 14-minute film
lo Inspire Its assembly-line
'''orkers. The message is that
building: these cars 1vell Ls ari
even mor~ crilic31 task and
one that is prima rily in their
hands.
"1'he Bue and the Beetle"
actually deal! indirectly v.•lth
a problem more serious to the
carmaker than the persistent
level or foreign-car sales In
this country. That problem is
the falling orr or auto-plant
productivity and eUlciency,
and1 to some extent, the quali-
ty of the Ameri ca n
automobile.
It is thi.! decline in quality
that has c o ntribute d
.significantly. but not entirely,
to the decaderlong climb in
foreign-car sales. It ha s con-
tributed also to the serious
problem o( custo1ner satisfac-
tion, \Vhich in spite of massi\'e
financial ouUays for im-
provement of design and pro-
duction methods, seems to be
getting worse.
Company programs to en·
courage the employe to be
inore conscientious about his
attendance and performa nce
on the assembly line have for
the most part been linlited to
slogans on plant posters and
pep talks which tell the
"·orkcr he should be on time
and \\·ork diligently.
Such efforls usually fall
short of the 1nark because the
only motive suggested even
subliminally see1ns to be that
the company is interested 1 In
in1pro\'ing its prorits and that
the absent or careless worker
!~ ialanding in the '''8Y of a 10
percent return or. Investment.
The Che\•rolet film tries to
bring home the point that the
employe's job could be nt
stake. Jn a \'try brief SUJ.:·
gested introductory speech
that iS accompanying the film
to each plant. managenient
announces lt seeks to infon11
the 'vorker of some "econof11iC
facts o! li!e."
"As you will see, 17 out or
e\'ery 100 cars sold in the
United States todily, as "'ell as
the components used t o
assemble these vehicles, \\'ere
made overseas .. That ratio v.·as
only 1 out or 100 tv.·o decades
ago. The problem is more
serious than ever before .. \\le
are not the only U.S. industry
lo face this threat. It has
already severely a f f e c t e d
other businesses."
Early in the film, after a
£e\v brief scenes or foreign.
built cars being unloaded at
Boston: Baltimore; Toledo.
Ohio; and Los Angeles, a
ne\\·scaster is shown speaking
out of a J apanese--bullt
television set \\"it h a clock
Fryers Put at Heacl
Of Gover1i1rten t List
WASHINGTON (UPll
Unlike a major ea! le r n
grocery chain '"·hich i.s ad-
vising consumers to su•llch
from red meat to chicken and
other foods if they u·ant lo
bring beef prices dou•n, the
government i.s not directly
suggesting any svt'itches.
But in an announcement
which makes no mention of
beef prices, the Agriculture
Depart'!)ent llas put broiler·
fryer chickens at the head of
its list of "best·buy" foods !or
May,
Officials said chickens "'ill
be the prime feature item for
1'1ay in their regular "plentiful
food s'' program. This is a
longstanding publicity cam-
paign designed to promote
foods which are in ample sup-
ply at' "attractive" retnil
prices.
Other "plentiful food s" on
the jusl·released ~fay list in·
elude several other protein
items -eggs, n1 ilk and nonfat
dry mJJk. 1\lso included are
fresh and processed potato
products, canned peaches and
canned fruit cockiail.
Officials said, in response to
questions, that beer last was
included in the go\'ernment
"plentiful foods" list nearly
five years ago -in June, 1967.
The new list said chickens
were be ing featured for Alay
because production in that
month is expected to be 7 per-
Clea1i Cars
Cost More
cent above a year ago, "and
prospects are good ror a plen·
tiful supply .... at prices at·
lractive to consumers .. "
On other foods, the-an·
nouncemellt added :
-f\lilk production will be at
or near its peak fo r the year
with ample supplies.
-Storage supplies from last
year's potato crop v.·ere near
record on Atarch I. This.
couplfd with spring crops \Viii
put pressure on fresh markets
and assure "economical pric·
ing ." In addition. stocks of
froze n french fr ies and instant
mashed potatoes are large.
-Egg produ ction in i\-tay
'viii be near the hi~h level of a
year ago, producing "at-
tractive prices."
-Stocks of Clin gstone and
Freestone peaches . . • are
heavy and should represent
'·good buys ror consumers."
-Canned frui t cocktai l
stocks continue hig h.
Tax Burden
Rise Seeu. -,
NEW YORK !UPll -The
annual gross lax burden of
Americans will rise about $200
in the current fiscal year to
$4,530 per household, Tax
Foundation, Inc .. announced.
The tax burden increased
more than 75 percent in the
1960s from $2.552 per
household, Tax Foundation
said ..
The foundation said public
spending is rising raster dur-
ing the current fiscal year,
which ends June 30, -than tax-
es. It said the increase in
spending will be about 12 per·
cent or from S363 billion lo
$405 bill ion.
SAN FRANCISCO (U PI) -
The ne\T pollution-free autir
mob i I es required to n1 e et
government standards for 1976
will cost the consun1er $360
more than· present cars, ac-
cording to an environmental Ip;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
study, • ROOM ADDITIONS
The sum is based on an • KITCHEN REMOOELING
15,000-mile life for the car and e PATIO SCIJllEN 11.00MS
behind him glv1n5 the tlme as
11 :58.
As the new·scaster reads
some dour tf.:0001nic news, the
narr~tor ticks off those. con-
sun1er iten1s \\'hich have
btcon1e substantially o r
nlmost totally foreign made.
The importer percentages of
shoes (2 out of 51. rndios \9
out of 10), clothes (7 out of 10
.S\\•eatersl. 1notorcycles (19 out
(lf 2tl), and baseball mitts arc
dramatica:Jly recalled.
The vie\\ er is I hen told that
U.S. lndustr~·. including the
auto1noth·c i n du s tr y , is
operating at 73 percent of
capacity and that I percent in·
crease in in1p0rted-ear sales
results in the loss of 20.000 in·
dustry·related jobs in the
United States.
Such slatislics are reported
dryly. The narrator does not
talk down to the audience. The
impact coines fro1n vie\ving a
rush hour exprcss\vay and
realizing thnt :1 staggering
nu1nber of i1nports are being
driven across the screen.
\Vh en it comes time for the
pitch , it also arrives quietly,
"Everyone must shO\\' up and
\\'Ork every day." the
assembly-line v.·orkcr is told.
"If v.·e can count on you \\'e
v.·on't have to count foreign
cars .. "
Stressed early in the film is
the belief that imports must
be regarded as competition
and not "the enen1y." Thus,
"\Ve are only strong "•hen \'l e
are willing to compete \\•ilh
the v.'hoie world . \Ve cannot
hope !or the gorernment to
save us. Tariffs and surtaxes
only help for a little v.•hi!e."
Though all assembly-plant
shots are taken in Chevrolet
plants. the famous name is
spoken onl y once : ··r~oreign
c;irs are well built, by people
\\'ho care. lt"s up to you to
build heller v a I u e in
Chevrolets. It's up to you to do
a better job."
This restraint has made the
film acceptable for viewing in
many places other than the
car division's 24 plants. Other
Gi\f tlivisio~s are borrowing it
to sho\v their 0\1'11 employes.
And Chevrolet is also pro-
\'iding it to schools. civic
groups, and business associa-
tions because the problem,
\\"hile serious at General
~lotors, is equally a s
formidable in other areas of
business and industry -and
lhe message, spoken ever so
q 1,1 i e t I y , has \\•idespread
relevance.
S&L Opens
In Beacl1
~1ercury Savings and Loan
Association announces that it
has been granted authority by
the California Savings and
Loan Commissioner to open
and operate a branch facilit)'
in 1-luntington Beach ..
This 'viii be Mercury's fifth
office, and is expected to open
in late 1972 or early 1973. Tl
\\'iii be located at the corner of
Imperial and Harbor
Boulevard.
AUTOMATIC
GARAGE DOOR
OPENER
SALE
ORANGE COUNTIES
VOLUME DISTRIBUTOR
LOWEST PRICES!
ln,tollollon Ir Serwito:t
Goroi;io Door Ho•dwo10
RO!-ploced
642-3490 covers the initlal cost. service
and replacement of t h e
emission control systems. "';Z:J.~0~/,,:~~':N•~s The study w·as spcnsored by .. ,.. 1!1Hm11tti
Htnetl C•1tt,.!Ulv1 "'1(11
"1n1t1cll19 Av1111•1t
Sea Coast
Builders Supply
1651 Placentia,
Costa Mesa
'Tf!I fo11ow1n1 PfrJOns 1•• 11orn1 the En\•ironmental Protection ~t!Mli I t;
Call 133·8833 SARA'S M.-R!Nt: SALVAGE, ~11·•13 Agency and a report issued by
)0111 Slr .. r, Ntwp0rt Bt•ch, C•lll. •1410 t•-' [ ff' h
St r• J. G•d1rl1n. ITC 8«1on!1, Coren1 _ _'.'.'.'~'.'..'.,r~eg~1~o~na:_:O~l~C:_e~e~re::· __ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~··======= Gtl Mir, C1!1t. -
ArMn• G1cl•rl1n.. iio Btoonl1. C1r1n1
dtl Mir, Ctlll.
'This bu$lntsJ ;, btin1 conO'udM b'f Jn
Jndl'fldl1I !hu1b1nd .. Wlft ),
Sir• Jo li•d•rl•n
'Tllil 1t1ltmenl flied with tM C111n"'
Clerk of Or•~•e Coun•., on: F1bru1rv :n,
lt12. Iv fln1rl1 J, Mtdioir, O""l'f
C1~nl'f Cltrk. flln•
1"ub1l1hed Or1n11 Cots! 01!1., 'llot .
M1rcll 2, 9. 14. 23, lt72 SlS.72
LEGAL NcrrTCE
f'ICTITIOUS •usn••s•
NAME STATEMENT
Tne toUowlnt person 11 deln1 lllll1Mu
11: JON GARIEPY ANO CDM ,.ANY
tiAIR MANAGEMENT, ''° El tf 17th
SI .• c o1•1 Mi ii tl621
Jen Anlllon"f G1ri11v, 16000 AYI .
A1roouerr1 Ho. Jt, S•n JUl n C11lll11ne
Tiiis 11u1tn1s1 Is titr111 CllfliuctH ,., '"
lndlvldUtl.
JOfl .-ntllonY G1rl111Y
'Tiii• 1111tm111t tllfd with ttll Cwnty
Ctlft; of Or1nt1 Countv tn: Mardi '"' ff11. ,., lt'ftrly J. MHO'o~. 01P111Y
CO!Jnf"f Clerk. "16M1
'11bll1lltd O'l"lf Cotlt Dell)' Piiot,
M1rcll l6, ~J. JO, 1nd A11 rl! 6, it n H1·n
LEGAL NOTICE
"ICTl'rlOUS •USINllS
HAMI STA•MINT
Tht lollowlnt '"''°"' 1r1 N IM ~~tlntll ••: M &. K l"NTl1' .. l!.1$11. t'4 C.brlllt
Alt!. I , (0111 Mttt, Ct lll. tHJ1
Jollfl WUll1m M(N"tt :tr .. '"' t1arnil .It! I , C11111 Met•, Clllf,
DN"IYM M<N utt. 2'4 C1•rlll1 All •••
(1111• Mu1, Ct lH.
Thl1 lllll1lnt11 II btiM Cltli\ICI"' •v I
'•llfllrlhl,. Jlll'ln Wllll•'" N-cN11tt Sf".
Dlr!Yfll MtNull
Tl'i• 1111-nl fllff wltfl tht twnty
Clt t\ ti Or•nff (oufll.,. lfl~ ,_1bru11Y tt,
1917. l "f ltverl'f J , MIHOll, Offl"ll'
C111t1ty Cl r.1:.
'"11blllhtd °''"'' Co•tt
.W.l'Cfl J. '· '" u. 1912
,,., ..
Otll"I' •11o1,
512.J"2
:Dir,,.,.,~ ii w:il1cr• offtr 10 "'u.,,. c 3101idJotlotc cf .. o/['1' ,. ,,., .--17. n. orm.c u-flfl/y ., 1/ie ",.,,..,.,.
.•
250,000 Shares
·@MITCHUM Mfr JONES& lJ TEMPLETON
ll'fCOkroaATE.D
Common Stock
($1 l'arValuc)
'111e~tA!ll-pricollos-cldanll""1bJM"rtdnnn,1onel4nmpldoll
J>......,l IO a1tQGit...,.l of tho Natioo&I Associatioo. ol Sa:uri(F Deokn, Inc.
tbOl-,.i.e be DO hiaho<tblll tb&t1"C011i11>.'Dlled bJ two indepond<nt iowot•
.... 1 llul:inc-. ilbdds'a: O>mpanyTncorpom.d aod Dooaldsoo, J.ullcitt
"'-., i..., w11o -iiot ]JAt1K:ip:1fi .. "' lbo di.<tn'batioa, ...ae 111o -• mlkiaa tbo m:a:nmcndatiom as lo price.
Price : $16.50 Per Share
<'49<f•l'I ' ... _,,,_,_IAt.,,.,"'~""'*".. 1lllfrt t# l'Nfiscf18811"' 'llpll, r6tr,,._ "'/l"Olll OfW..,. .. w ..... •-IWl•'1,,,.,,1111 _,,."""' .-.
Mitchum,1 Jones & Templeton
l«• ,...w
Mor<h 27, 1972
I
•
E 11.gi1 ieers
Iii De1na 1icl
Very Soori
DAVI S 1AP) -Th< goldeo
driys for e n gin e e rl n g
graduates -"'hen hundreds of
job recruiters rushed from
canipus to campu s courting
~·oung engineers -1nay return
in this df!(ade, a University of
California study concludes.
Reparts of urie1nploy n1e nt
among engineeri; has caused a
sharp drop in the nun1ber of
students s tud yi ng for
engineering degiees, s a y s
John D. Kemper, chairman of
a nine-campus UC Council on
Engineering Education.
But at the same ti1ne, the
den1and for engineers is in-
creasing in ah11ost a 11
engineering fields, including
electronics a n d elech·ical.
Kemper \\'rote in a university
survey announced Tuesday.
In short. supply is going
down and demand is going up,
lhe survey found, and there
v.•ill probably be a nationwide
shortage of engineers lrithin
three years.
Nationwide. about 38.000
• ne"' engineers are needed an-
nu ally, but only 40.000 \\'ere
graduated nationally in 1970
and follo\viug classes u•ere
smaller.
Kemper, engineering dean
at the UC Davis campus, said
there is still uneniployment
among engineers, but their
percentage of unemployment
is lov.;er than the national
average for all \VOrkers.
Furthermore u n em p Io y.
ment among engineers has
been concentrated in two
fields, aerospace and cJec-
tronics, a relatively narro\v
sector of the entire engineer-
ing field, he said.
DAILY ,ILOT 29
'Ove1·,vitltl1olcling' Flood
T1·easu1·y Witl1 Ext1·a Money
\VASHINGTON" (UPll seven·eijhths percenl note Income taxes ..•. " This
The Treasury Otpartmrnt has maturing ~lay 15, 1975. renect$ a new schedule or
reducM its borro"''ini re· Proceeds fro1n the note tale wlthholding that took effect in
quiremenls for the n e x t should meet the governn1ent's
stvtral nlonth;;, saying more cash needs through mid·1'ol11y January under provisions of
money lhan expected had "'hen tl1e: Treasury ha s the Re\'en11e Act of 1971.
flo,ved into g:overnme.nt ae-scheduled Its next quartel'ly For many v.•age eamtrs,
count s, chiefly due to refunding, this sho'i''ed up as a bigger
O\'e.r\\•ithholding by indil'lduo.l Tht' depart1nr nt also sald than usual amount withheld
taxpayers. Tuesday, it \Vas studying fron1 their paychecks for
In a l\vo part i ction. the possible changes In it5 drbt federal income. tat:.
depart u1ent: fina ncing techniques "to lden· The department said
_ Cut hllck "for the liLne Ufy ways its routine drht ove:r"•lthholdlng c.an be cor·
being .. ;.ioo inillion \\•hich \\'llS 1nanage1nent operA tions, in· reeled by filing ne\\' \V4 forms
added lo the regular "'eekly eluding both its refunding and \\'ith «"-mployrrs to bring the
auction of short t er m new cash raising operations. an1ount \\'lthheld into closer
securities on Feb. 17. The might be r a c i Ii tat ed .'' relation \\•Ith the amount or
departnient said SI .a bi!Hon lfowever, il said no change tnx thnt \\'Ill eventually be
had been raised through thrs.! was e:o::pecled during the next o1ved.
additions in the past four month. The problem particularly af·
\\·eeks The departn1ent said Its frcl!> taxp~)·erll \\'ho a:re the
-Announced it 'l\·ould auc-~expected nbundance or cash ;o1e v.·age earner for the htmi·
lion on ~larch 28 about $1.3 appe~rs r~lated to son1t ly and those in higher incon\e
billion of a 3·\·ear fl\·e and ~r~vithholding_of _personal brackets u·ith bigger thal'l
· LEGAL NO'l'JCE normal iten1iied deductions.
Firnis Auto
Subpoe1iaed
By Age1icy
-SU .. E i IOR COUii T-···~· ~·~·~·:-1•.;iiiii.:iii;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-. STATI op; CALl,.OllM'IA 1'011
THI! COUNT'f 01' OllANli~
H .. A·72ol0l
NOTICE O" Hl!All•NG O" "ITITION 1'011 "ROaA'TI op; WILL ANO 1'011
LITTERS T~STAM~NTAllY
E1t1!1 or VELll.\A JUNE 021AS, •Lio
known •I VE LMA J. DZtAS 0toCttlt<I.
NO'TICE IS llEJIE11Y GIV!;N f n1t
NORMAN R. DZIAS II•, 111"11 lltr•ln 1
P1!ltlon tor prob•ll ol wHI 1"41 lo'
ltllll n<t ol Letltr• lPl!t mr,.Ury IP Ptll· 11.,,,,,, rt11rence to wnlcll h mt<tt tGr
lurlh'' p1r!lc"llr1, l tid th1I '~' tlme ~ncl \\'ASHINGTON (APl _The pt11:• ol 11t•r1nq th'"'"'' 11a1~n111 t<ir Aprll 11, 1971, ti t:lCI •·"'·· ln In• Environmental Protection cDYrlroom 01 OtP1rtment No l ot 1,1ld
A ~ · h tDUrl, •I 700 Civic C•nl•r Orlv• l'o"~U. ln gency announc~, it as In• cu., ot s,",' Ant, c1111Q•~I•
issued subpoenas to IL more 01t•d M1rc11 21, 1tn.
d . 1, d r , 1 w. E. s1 JOHN, omes IC an ore1g n au o c ounty c 1 .. 1o:
companies for a hearing April 1 urt•11, O•"ldrn, Tn.i1u1n •Ml N•111n r 1•N $11.1111 ,.llflltt Av11111t, 10 on a request or a one-year w11111r1r. c1111ornl1
suspension of exhaust-po!IU,tion T.i, 111J> '"-Me' -m ·n11 . Att.i"n1vt for "•l!tlln1r
REAL ESTATE
INVESTORS
GUIDELINES
Monlllly ~lllktlllft w lll'I TAX s.-v ..
ING IOHI, INVESTMENT ldt•t, lnlO
on JlNllY 'Trvt", lAX SHELTER,
"'"" •v,ryont 11\!trHltd In 11.f , tlllluld know. lt1Cl1Jdlno 11l1ct R.E.
1111 on 5TOCK Mtl1r.tl. l'llEE con-111111n11-r1ltrr11 itrvlct w/11Jbtcrlt>
!Ion.
"'' TNlllE 11m11t "-IM f• !i lk, 1MMI 11.M M:
Realty Enterprises
standards . required of 1975 ,.1J1t11111e<1 O••n~• co111 0~•11 Pt101
models. ~i'~"~'~'~'·~·~•-~»~·!'~"~'i!iiiliiiliiilii~"~',~"~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iii:iiiiiiiiiiiii~i The EPA said the com·
panies included G e n e r a 1
Motors. Ford. Ch r y s I er .
Vo I k s wage n, American
~1otors. Nissan ~totors, British
Leyland, Daimler Benz , Toyo
Kogyo. Saab·Scania· and
Toyota.
The subpoenas, which EPA
-says are authorized under the
Clean Air Act of 1970, call for
each firm lo be questioned in
six areas: exhaust emission
dAt a. the i r emission-level
goals for 1975, major problems
encountered. plans to sol1•e
then1, schedules for 1975
models and '\l.·hat are the
highest interim standards that
can be achieved if the cQm·
pany contends it cannot meet
the requi re1nents.
The Clean Air Ac!. calls for a
90 percent reduction I n
emission or hydrocarbons and
carbon monoxide in the 1975
models compared to 1970
models.
1 lJri11ste1, lttl.
14 FAIHIOH SQUAM:
SANTA .ANA
TEL.. 547•A41
l'tNnb OW" f-.f.
•outfiwid1.
SEMI· TROPICAL SUIT
SiRl'fS. NOW ON
DISILAY,
Availlbll In Ow N_a.n.._ltMell
Wow ... ,, or Trtditi-1
DMnn-SWCIOI~
From Moon Mullins • • •
CoNGRATUL,ATIONS
ON TH' PAILY PILOT'S
New SUNDAY ED1r10N ! \WIEE!
NO .MORE:
ReAt>IN~
ci:~e:AL
BOXJ::S
BE'FORE:
SUNDAY
scf-{ooi.!
look for Moon (and ·other Great
Cartoon Characters) in the New
·color Comics section of the
Sonday I
* * * *
•
I
f
:
'
30 DAILY PILOT S Tl••>d'f, M>tt> 2l 1912•
Your Mmaey,s lt'orth
Amtra k's P1·og1·ess Reported
By SVL VIA PoRTER
11 yo-, rt among the m1lhons
or Amttfcans under agt 25
101! may rievtt havt sttJoot m
1 tralit. Or U you have )OU
prob.ably have bten turned off
by the dirt dela ys
bac kwardness of U S railroad
travel in general
But despite your 1m
press1 b n s
the year-cld
National
Ral l roa d
Passen gt r
Corp (Am
trak )ha s
been making
g1anl strides
toward
br1ng1ng our
system of railroad travel into
the 20th Century
Admllttdly 1f you measure
Amtrak s score aga1rut 1971 !t
glowing pubhc promises and
utterly unrealistic ho p es
Amt rak has been nothing
short.of a dismal failure
But if you measure Its ac
comphshments against the
enormous odds that 1t wouldn t
even survive lls record has
been r e ma rkable And
•!though Amtra k expects tn
lose $152 m1lhon this fisca l
year t ha t 1s less than ha ll the
estim a ted amooqt o ur p rivate
passenger trains would have
lost 1n the sam e ptr1od under
the old p riva te system
Amtrak s most spectacula r
s uccess has betn t he New
York Was hington Me trohners
whic h now make 12 round
trips a d ay ta ke three hours
o r .so ind are equipped w1lh
aleeplng ca-F9;-parlor cars
snack bars cocktail bars and
touch-tone te lephones o n which
you c a n r eceiv e 1ncom1ng as
we ll as m a ke outgoing calls
The 120.mph one way coa ch
fare Is $ts 75 (21 85 for parlor
c ars} Children 5 to 12 pay
half fare
Among other m oves ,
Amtrak has
• Cut the n umber of lon,iz·
h aul train trlps ne arly in half
to 214 a day to reduce flnan
ch~! losses an little traveled
routes
£dw• d II l'r•nlo.tl M 0.
~rnwitolatllit
HOMR TtltEATMENTS
ACNE· DANDRUFF
"'"''' ,, • fllf "''"'' II lhl\f, llffl\f''
111 l!hllf '"'·'''"·'·'""""''
Tht•t ~•• no 01..., more 1ttec1 ve
tiome ""t1TMnt1. I w•nt to 1cq~1 nt VOii Wlth mldle1llor!~ th•I hive prov
ed .-.1ect1ve tor "'1 P11tlffl!t Your
(O,..,plt.11lon 11111 'calp wut le1I ck!1n I~ I nd Mlllfly l l\tY w he O \'OU 100 -Or r 1i1t po.it(l\eM prl(e
wl 1 ti.-rtlunded ------Amerk111 Der!Ml•"1Y C14
••• 160 L1k1wooct t'OIU Q I t nclo1e ?SC .Ind I '!Imped It I .c1<1rtt1td 1nve'°"" tor SAMPLES
OI ADC MEOICATEO CLEANS..
ING PADS I 11 p1ijt(l\11e cerH·
flc1 le lt 1>&11• ACNE O,t..NORUFF 8Ul.LETtN P UI AOC X TRACT
CR Jntormtt 001 (oro1 .. .io,..1
blKkhe.1d removt•l D I enc;loM U tor eltl\ 1t1111r lrtll
ment kll lolui JOc Nt h tor m.1 l
lr>OI Cll~k On •ed kh O Dolndrvll to I "''') O Plmpla D Bl1ckhu d1 ...
N1me -
.t.dclrn•
'" MA lll TltAMSPLAHTATIOM
SKIN DISEASES -TUMOtltS OIE'flMAltltASION -ACNR
• Greally upcr1ded the
general quality of passenger
trains by p1c k1ng the bett
l 260 out oJ the more than
3 000 formerly on lhe tracks,
then redecorallng 11 con.
Sldtrable number or Lhesc
t.,!l;,,ll',u • QI" lbe rare schedult A= r.:g
• A.II or th1s-11nd much more ~
-could be a reality but only Pa?.:~·~ Admlr11 1 IF Amtrak gets the funds and A.,,,.~ 1 Afhll lf' 1f the gcrahead rrom Congress to ,~,.,,. c. A 11n 1z!
do the JOb It will not bt cheap : ~co'11 »a by any means A J 111C1ut '
' Set up a centralized t icket Tomorrow Am l r a k ' 1 :r1~:~n 1 \3
and reservation sy1tem and Promise To You ~1billJoc 1n•!~
started consohdatlng railroad !ic.~~1 ~
terminals 1n Chicago Alco s•d Al(Ol'I Lb
• Rc1n1roduced 18 long haul ""~==~:::=c:::ir'C:::----.,,.·~-----,,.-=:il!!1r:fc't }!
sleeper routes throughout the 0 h c ~ ~,Fruc1 , US ltxcept New ~ngland) -ver t e ounter !!'.:I;,"/ J
and started a complete :r:f(~ 1~
redesign or the cars to muke !11'[i~C! ~1 them more efficient and com llffr•,-.•••.,1111tr41111r ,....1111t111 11 .,",...1"'1'..., t ""' 1ra111 NA$D A'I' 1P1P°"••• ", , 11 1111 IMlllM relllt If m.1rlllu• m1rltt•-•t (tmntl1.tlt11 edl
fortable on the New York Los !W1d111~~~~
Angeles train lhcre as an NASO L1st1n91 for Wednesday Merch 22. 1972 ~ 1~,A~~ 1=
o vernight stopover 1n New .. ~ ... tn:'su l ~
Orleans during whic h s\eer.or Amb1( '.;'. r'"' 'JMll ouo1•11llf'lt G tot! C11 I(~ 1fU Sid It t' !i ''"" ~~~r1.f I lZ
passengers may use their ac ,uNllM b~ 1i.. "'• Gr•1>11 k :i ,. s11~ Hm , .. "••'-Am ~.s !''
modi ho!
1 S11kN $ ,,
com a l ons as te roams •loll•I Ai1«1e11on OI Grov• Pr 1~ 1 • S1•1w ctt 11v. I'• ~ ~)JFi!t ~
• Sharply improved C O n $t<utll n Oe•let1 Gvll lnht -""-.5 • 1u1»c tw I '"° A A Fjlt .;( l ff blO) 111d oll"s G~rOdw s.. I 'I l~~.:d l~.,_ r-Am A rllMa
nect1o ns on long hauls to •uotld tiY ov•• •r.. Hen•~ " •1111' •1 r111 ,,, .t.. 1 .... l1"" •"!','!! i'U
I I r COIMltr d•lllfl 10 Hoo..... 711\o\ ,,"' .. ' ·-e 1m nate many o todays tong ••(" 01...,. ., ot Huck Ml ' •" 14 '" .1. r11
walls for train!; at 8ucb t1::.S:1 T~•1 E~'u:l,n ~~.tP:A ,: • J"" f.~11G~:~ ,~),;, ,~:_ :~ ~~~ ,U •· Ch tlon1 do no! !nc:lvdt Hv•n C ~ :t9'i? T co "'o ' JV. A Ctn Pl l'l.lo crossroa= as 1cago r11111 m••k1i111 merk '" llkW A 1 , 1:i. i~d~G ll"',. Am C•m •k lloWfl or (-b l1tt SvCM 109 11j US Bk ,.,, \Ii l6\ A Ct.in l" • Madt n ot 1 c ea b 1 e 1m 1T0ti• .1nd c1o not ~ so u11 1t\\ 1 ~ us E~v'tt 11.._ 11\'o AmC so. • ttO•eMtll 1c;tu1I ISi Co pn 111> 1-14 l~~ 3V. AmCSi>t l 'N p r OVemefllll On ffi8flY train tre11)ocllon1 J+coOt Pl S Slli AmCv111 !V. IHDUSTltlAll Jtm W•t l~i 1W Am D •llU I
d1n1ng caris and 1n other food ANo TU1L1T1ts J•"",,, 13,. lJ.,, :oot }' l~
service fac1ht1es A completely M~~ir,"'\n ~!':.. F1~ ,r,; ,~ Gt1iners & Losers AOu• Pl ••1
d food d d I I la Ask KIO< pl l~. 11'-' AmEe, 1 If revise an 1 n n g Ar, lll<'lu• J 31.t I(• vi c l"1 1• , Am E•llllf1 AUto ll'ld lll:o io~ '!;~• & E u 11 Am £x1tt or service operation IS being 1n "/l" a1w 10 11 Kevn Fb 1n. 11\lo wew York ruP 1 T~e 10 low"" 1 11 .., F ns~ , 10
auguratcd -first on overnight :1~~ G~ i" ~It ~::. ~u~ l1 1~~ sriow1 111e 11cw:k• •~ar 111v• tone uP 1~1 ~ ~~a"d s"r:i
traln.s later on all t rains o n :~E~l~ 1J~,.~~ :~::Jo t1ur l"' .~ =~1en11~1 ~~notn1 11<1 "'°r~ b~~:r 1:' "Gn "' U
hlch food ·• V Am F1i1rn IS IJ~ l(M A .. 11"4 11 Cl!~nler m1rk1! 11 QIJOftd bv 111<1 NA~D :,;i:li I (Cl
W IS SCrVl.'U OWS Am GrH ~l ift 61 lo l<lllD<! ijj I'• f' Nd Ind ""t111teee cl\1no1s I I I~ A H Ill an o ff1c1 a l • The food w ill be ',",•Ult ·~"' l )fo LIC s ~i ~ . dllle •l'IC-3 :!ween ve1te dlV s 1•11 bid AH~:"' ! n tn ln 5''t 'i, L111'1 it'-" 7G P ct in ' •Y AA1~e~~ 11r1ce AmMo.o 11
better and less exrv>ns1ve :;~ 'M~.·, ,,'. ,,'l'Z L•,•,,•, 1~d, •:n •'~ ' .1.oA Fnd Xlk 1--..+ 1 uo » • Am in~ 1'1d r~ ~· l u 1lo 1 I l Woll C11 -11 ' t \;, UP n I ,. Med' lt
Amtrak s goal JS food fac1ht1es :''1:;'1 Hr ,.,,•, '••"•• f!", ,•.llF 1l1 ","' ~ 1 e1~ HI 1 nc ,o,, i•, u11 11 J ~M.~c': (~~ i~ 1~ ...., :ito •01t1 Teno1 1.+v.!uont
e n a ll trains makJng tr ips o f 1,:,:uA,o ,•,~. ,•,.1 "•'•' ,•,,•.• 15'11 ,~ • s 01>tnRood Inc 29 + , u.. , 1 AMIC "' ' • .. 1,.--. n 11 41''> iBf,fther Coro 1\.o+ '~Up 16 1""" Moror t hree hours or m ore and fuU 81•1,•~1 , ?1'11 1•'4 M•"'"-' 11 11 1• ~ ? P1k(o cas 1n , .,_. .,, uo 16 AmNc;1 1 XI
d .... """' '5\'o M(~Y 7,y, •1"' I ACMAT c Oo!O Jj -1 UP •• Amite• !lb 1n1ng cars on all trains e,,bb Ml• l\o • Mt11h•11 11 n ' l.lou donlc• in 2 ... ., Up ,. J Am Se11 11
I •t(~ ''-J Md d C 9 •~• o se...eo c0,,.,0 r 1 £' to UP 1 5 AmShlp tOv trave 1ng more tha n 12 hours Bll1ck Ht :11"' ls~ M dt•• '" 1"' 2 , Frlolt on , in 311,, • UP 11 0 A s-11 1.10 00~ f ! ... 1 M dwG T '20111 11 ~1 11 Am lllcK.ullu 1 Jo,\ ... VP 11 o A1"S Alf 711
• Started working loward Brown Ar lo 1 1~ Ml PO 11 '> IO ll ln11lt •k 7'11 .f. 4.o Uo 111 Arn Sl!ld ID rial\ WI 7'tlo :JO ... Mp I Git 39"' «1"9 • )(MS lnd ullr , I 1+ 1o UP O t AmS dPI IU
special t raining of a ll ticket !8~1ck:!tsv J; J;~ ~!, :,~n 1\lo i u Avuk ca P tn 110:.-1 11\ii uo 1o 1 Amsrt Ir ''
and r eser vation cle rks a nd a ll •,~on M0 '' " Mo , ic J!! ,, l~ t=t~ 1,31 ll#,t ~ • 8: '~~ :~ifi o1~ ,..,,, t;5 91 Mo!(I\ M al'I 1 I S...~rm•I fl 1 +I~ UP 91 AmT&T wt
service people on trains ::1 1l:" 3~, n, Motor c1 •l .OU'/ • N11 snve !11d lht "" UP , s 11.mw11 I'°
Young wom e n , trained In :0 lnt,A 1: I., ~= o~~ r ~~t: l~lt rr a'1t~~UI c~0 'I 'i I+ l : ~= ! ? ~::i::i' M
ri tr hool Ill be • '" , ~' NIS« Re l \1 • l1 D An COii ol• • t .,, UP 9 1 Ame ek 001 8lr ne alntng SC S W 11 N Gs 11\.'i II 1 NEn'I' G~ 17 't "" 23 AOw1nc:e titotl 111 +-o..,. Up I j AMF ln«1 I
bo d !II HIG1 11-., 11 NJ N•I I~ l7:i;, ?• El, r !ld\11!•1 l P • .. 11'1 Uo I Ami.It llO a ar to answer questions tie., u11 u 1' Hlct•hn •,,1,';! 4•'•'1) 2s Monfort gf co1 11 .. + • uo 1 1 '•"m',,,.,, t."
ld I hi 8 ! Mt tn Nels.tn A ,. ..-GU e passengers po Ot. 0 U t hrJ5 Sec Ill 1'1 NI~ sen B 4SV, fl LOSflfS AmD<!ll "
sites of s pecial rnterest ~fl the 1: 8: Y:-i ll"' ~~· :ti'f, lL>1. Ii 'Wlntt J1ck 111 l• -• 011 2p ~:::iir.'r c1°,;
w ay 1'1r~ro.. MJ ';~• ~~ ~~:Ji t~ ~ 1"V. j s~ .. ~~e i:: t,,..= l '> 8°:: 15 ~ All• Pl 16J law Cfo >•« ,,.. .... '' ., 4'"" • Rollo W11h n ?b-/,' 1 3 Amit of &a
A t k I " """' '"'' 9 S Gravt P ti• l-1 I l Am eo n 1 m ra personnc are now ~~1SH• JJ 5" §P' s.c:1n 11~ ,,\'. , .1.vt lndust e ,,.._ '\t g;•, 11 Am1e1 111 )0
d -..t P 16V. 11 monl 111,< n.-. 1 OPlk• Tt(Mo j• , , An1<0ticl• ress~ 1n snap py , new "" Rock ll lS 111r T P 21}lf: , , -• Anc""' Ho 1
r g on C-o 30 3 ve ~ NA oi v; l.eldv ~ a 0 1 U.-~ §" • J Af!CoroH •I uni orms hol pants a nd ru1c11 R 1::: 10 ... P11>11 a 11 1•.., ' Pt(lf c Vl'90 1 20\lo-'"" " • And ct 1 '!! " I .. p 10 e1ec1 o Oa 1 JV,-11 "1
t urtlenecks for the fe m a le
0
1n1!11M •,« ,1,1\ p•,~',",, p i ~ 11 E10.Cnt~ wls 14-ti '' APl(htC "' • lO lO\lo 11 tt ovatA 11 o lt'-§1'• 1 l ~oco 0 '
Passenger ser vic e represen o!~M°i~ ~·' ,',"" ;r •1e:, 1•v. u v, 13 Gff!C101 cop 1 ,._ ,... , 3 A<>«o 01c1 O.C I!"' II it•'°V. 14 AIOftCrem Lib 1to-I ,lAPL Cpi;o
lat1ves who help abaard the oer~°{ 1J~ 1; ~ g~ ;~In 1..':: """ 11" " St1nt1111 e Ml J~-~u .s 1 APLolc °'
tra in sp1££y outfits f or g;,ut~nf tlu fj~ ;0~~:'7.ic J!~ M~ l~ ?~ri~ri"1~ t~ ~·.= "' oil : I !~!1fN 1\~
t I I I •. Del nt llr J3 lfll> Prol G I s"' • .., 11 l.t11lv Pub DI•• • -~" J' A•therO!ll por ers rescrva ions c er 11.s ol'"" cr1 ".., 11({ P~bs N°M 11,, ,n1 ~ ~~oH~1~!~ ~ = i ll ~;A f < £nro
and others bath on tr ains and &:i ;t .J""' ~"' ~u~,,~·· ~::, 1~1~ ,, F n• w,,, "f'I 1 -,. 1t s • : 1!n~50 1 ~
1n st a tio ns All A mt rak~eJt'W ~'t~nz ;~1~0~~. ~;:.'~1)fi1~1~JR~,M~, ~~ ~ 8°1' 1::~~0 :1 1°';
person I Ill have th. OuM: n D 1J IJ'L RanitlCI ?I 11•~ 21 S.lnAn 11 on 11 -I 'I !I 5 3 A m '' 1 0 nC W neW~u fori IS is1 Rly(m 161 llo(••21Med(I Servt f l'-,,_ ff llAmuol o>:,
urufarm s soon ,<on L1b l J :<i R1ymd 21 1s " ,,,, Ck 10 fll(: Sy1 7 ~ 1io llMOV £<1 10 10'• NEW YORK (UPl)Tht 10 mos! Kt Am1sl ll 1 '6
• Cleaned u p lhe lratn rest EE , Nu(fl B • 1~ ttevn &II •Tl.I. •?'Iii Jve • oc:~s ' lded on 111e OTC m• ktt Aro Coro '°
rr m11 i ~ Raad f( Jl\4 31" WedntlOIY 11 •~PPI ed b¥ NASO Arv 11 nd I
rooms so that as a ne () 1c1al El•' ~uf 1 , 2i1 AoDb M• '' 10 Vo•vm• • d A1~td c~1 A•h o , 10
I .. .1)(1-1• 11 ; Ru1I Stau •Rio •& • Fo ttt 0 I CP 91 SOO 1}h 16 -~ A..ioc llrtw notes The who e tr a in no ,mos ou 11 :ni-. j •d tr w J 'o J\~ Ma1>u1i. e Aor 11100 73'11o ,. + lo As o .... c; 1.,.
I l ne ov c ll 1' 1¥1 Fda S?U, S•tn Nor C<!n! A 69.611G s iV.+ .,,. As~SP• 1 )0 onger s m ells I k e a,eciv tvOI 11 .u .., c1ntn ll'> 011 Com1>n1<11111Arn-S9JOO 11 :JJVi+ .\lo\s1oc Tins
b h re T1<; 111 1~ Sci Comp ] ] 1o Sii lln1 Horne• 51 XIII 10 11~.+ ,. .,,1\1_ 10d at room FF B CK.o 3 ... ''"' Sc IPOI H 11 :nv. Hrdtel Fd S••I S6 600 11 11'1)+ 1 Al (IYE 1 lft • M lloS!" fl,r. g.i Scrclo l~ • 8nk1m c1 CP S6000 li'\t 7.S:wi+ ll~ AIC E!ol n o Made m ()Ve S \O Case ,i1 Wt F 1 2 • Stven Uo ~"' 10\~ Ras.tmounl fl( S).000 11 11 Al Rlcl\fld 2
b I r l l k ls Th
'
'0 d F P 6 -61.o SoCI Wr 1'-' 15 .... Rink 0 911 Adr S ..lGO )9>.r, 79 ... h Altdl o fl>.:; uy ng o r ain IC e e , Foi Grnr JJ\, 3' !MINE Tet Jt\4 ,.,,. At tvl'I Btv •9.aDO l!F'i 11 -"-At llc 01 1 10
Old tariff books have been ~·:~~ ~~ !~\: 1•1 ~~(;~ct c:; ii 0 ffi: NASO Vo umt Tada~ 11•• 300 :• :,e" 0(~ ~
consohda led into one You can &f11~f" !~.,! 1:\lo ~~,,i~sv 1~~ 1!"-e~~~d 'lsJ !J,~fl(o.1'!
pay for your tic ket with c;1e11n w l~ 3'ViSt1n1ov 1 4IM 11~ TOI• ms Autornt tlld•
• ..,"J<:CO::::JOO::<:!::!::!::,,,C:::Z::,,,::S:S:::::::.:-::.::::::::;:::::i:,IAvcc Coro Am erican Express a f\1as ter --~ -" ' r"l Av,o Cn wts l\Y(O of J XI
Charge or a Rail Travel card AvervPd '' Avn1• eJd
An d thousand s of l r a v e I MUTUAL FUNDS ""11e 1" 01
a gents are being s igned up to !~,:,Pg t
1 N
m a ke a rrangemen ls ror tra vel _ _ -'o.O. ==n ;:~I ~
in the Amtrak syslem P1~11G11 1 1• o A k h ( N•W Yo k IU PIJ fATOM a LOOMIS Shim k ll {l) BllG• pf '"'-nd Amtra IS Optng 0 -Fol owln1 11 1 lit HOW'Alt O SAYl llSt SHAltE Hl.0 GltP !11noo Pn
1naug
1
urate barhga1n drareds tor i'J~io .. :~:uo::'i~ ~:.r~ Fi l: M-ll ll ~::1c1 ov ~~ ~ ~~ ~ com11 4 ~ 4" ii~~F,1 P1j~
trave a l n1g tan u r 1ng 1,.. NASO inc: s':.'M F 1 t~1fU Mutu11 1Sff1Jff En•P• 1is 1 14 Rn ko1NY ,
m idweek to expand and 1m WedM1d•1 s (k Fd I• 32 U 4's Lotto All• F1e1 Fd 'J1 '" an1is Tr 1 u Ml th 21 197' Et>ersld All ft I n 111 Martir t 02 t 16 ll.1rberOI 11
prove pa rking f3ClhtleS near Abetd 1~1 r~~ 1141111'7' Am llus ltl l13 LtOl l l ••S 111l:~e,111 ?~
I d l I l ADMt~A LTY EOIE Sp l915lt S 8rid deb l 1' 119 Poet Fd 12ot132111isk of Jiii m ajor ra1 roa erm1na s o ,. wt• 1 •• , 11 £FC MGMT GilltP Luthe n 11 SI 11 66 SH£A ttSON l'OS 1ta1e1M 115d ... .. fOIY Gr tn104l II increase trains betwee n key ln<om 1 IO s '' E<1 v Pr 4 51 5 01 M1vn1 tu l~ 12 APP c 21s.i3211 ,",••M 01 ,.' ln1un 11Sl1'11fF!ldAm ,oo, .. M111..C 11601111 ncom lt062093 •hnd
cities to overha ul completely ~~v~:r Fd ~ ,, 1~ ~ E~ ti Gt 1110 '4J M1nn111 s 10 ':r.1 """'t , 1" 13 os l:~~t t; Atuiure 1'111••!'u" Tri ~U 1 nMkl Gwl s11 S!1Sh Otan 11 1211'1ll•l'llllC• so ,t..Gf Fd 6?<16ll mev MASS co Siii! Fd 10911'0]Be1 nD• 51
Al1l.1te l3lll•l9e~~:;v ,_ 1~lll~~ Fre1m I U J 13 SIGW. FUWOS llee,Fd 1 16 A Phi Fd l•lJli9'Fertld 1j211Jl6 lndp F 100 111 C1p Shr Olllltll:,mo 1~ :~·&vr~ 1'~f1i'ti""" llu • 1 16 10 7• MISI "llHIJI• 11¥ 112l ll.l7 11e«nr ;Ji Am Eq!Y J •• "FO f._8PI 'JJ i It MASS f'NCL T s • JI 10 :If ge1coPI
AM eXP'tltESS ~~0o'LJTY MIT lJ111'3' venlvr ,, .. ,.os ,~d·~ ,
l'UNDS 11..0 oeb t 76 1067 MIG l•:J'l U65 Smllh B 13001300 'fi' ~ f::~ :;f 1t~ C111ll•I 11•1 •'2 MC l S41 \61fSB l&G llolll ~l t::.i~~~ liO f~Y• m I t7 t ~o Cont I '91 10 " MFC IS ~ 1' ,, S11 Ge11F l4 •• IS 17 Btndhf 1 "'
liMel 10 J n 16 8~ 1sstc 111 Mele• fy '0' 4Gt Sw11 Inv t4• 10 21 Bendt• "' l
tock t7'10 1S !~~1_.. 1Sll 1J :i&M1htr 1J9'115t1Swlnv G 11l t •4R:CCP1 ~~ '~ Grlll t .. 1 5C wertl 13 •l 1• U Mid Am 6 ll ''<I Sovr In \l 111~ ll B.r.eu!t In ..,., lnv1t i n s 11 Fund "II 11 JIM F I'd • i• 'l• 5PK1 A I 91 ' 13 8ttk1Y pr. ~N ~'(l, l ~ J~ ll P1i1rl n 10 811113 MIF G 11 6 4 6 lo( STATE BNO GAP 1r.11 SH I ANCHOlt S•em I' 516 630Mu0m ,r 01 ( l Com Fd SIG 613 o Jl!ld f
OltOvP F1Nt~2c 1AL?lll 7t 7'MuOm f'I II !zl Ov1sf S•l •U ll'f,kJ~kr ...
j•ot1 1 9t t tsp110G1t<1MS Mui $1\ri 17tol1tO Pots •90 75"a1Ts,lanln 1
tld1hlnv t511a Fn Oyn ·~ i tJM1i1t1 T 1 l Ol JOJSl•t• Fm 11' 4n 1rockHR M f'f.~~m 1J # 1i f~ Fin Ind • ll 4 63 Nit nd 11 .)0 11 JO Sii t Sir !10 S1 Sl 01 l11t18ell t,
V"'"lll• "ll >I •1 r1;orn1"c 1 'l'2 fl: NAT SEC FOS Am 1nd • " 4 ,, RobD. llr ~
W• N1fl lj 6' 1• 10 " Sotcll lJ SJ ,. " 8.1l1nt l 1 11 ",, Alla Fd I l1 I ll ao~:'c~ .ll :~~!':' " '~ )t il J1 Fouf~q F 10 u 11,. flond Sr ~ ,, s 1) Fklucv 1 St 7.5' !llll'ICI l!ldUI WHAT IS A
GOOD NEIGHBOR7
.,X I! • FOAHll'l.tN Dvldn ~~ •91 STEIN 110 1! FD5 BookMo 111 ll;iiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~IHOUGHTDH CF Sl ODIAH7 IJ 1 '° Pref Stk 1 54 116 Flt enc ll 01 23 01 Son:it n 120 II Ful'ld A se' •3' DNTCrwl 10 ,51100 lncom S• 1 11 CM>!! 11101170 llor1Wr I""
1"11111'1 B I 711 I tl "r UI 1 r s 61 ' 11 Sl«k Sr I ll t 0? S!ock 14 ft 16..tt' l::"l;-t ~
•Y TERRY GRANT. It Ph
Our de flnltlon takes ln a
lot of te:rrltor) It ls p('orlc
you cRn d,.pend on In both
emcraenclC's and Pvery day
Ji vin g knn\vlng that w hen
;you nttd htlp 1t 1s close at
hand Furthermore 11 ~ood
ncli;:hbor really c8rr!I about
you and your family
tt 1s the intent. and i;oal or our ph11.rn1aey to hf-con•
1l1di.:rrd 8 1itood neighbor by
everyonl' 1n 1hl!! ('ommunll;y
Wt promhi;e thaL you can d e
pt>nd on us to h11ve the mMl.I·
clncs and hes.Ith a ids that
you need that \\e Y.111 nl
'-'8Y" ~ whf'rt you or ynur
d octor can reach U!! qulckly
and ""'" v.111 &!Wal" cRre
about. your better health
YOU OR YOUll DOCTOR
CAN PHONE US when you
need a dell\'t:ry Wr. \.\ill de--
ll\'ier promptly \vithout extra
chug~ A iut&t many pco11le re:b' on u.s for their -health
need"' \Ve welcome requests
tor delivery 1 e r v I ce a nd
c:ha.rp aClcounU..
ltAltK LIDO 'HA•MACY
l5l Hospftal Re14 New,.,. INch '42 1 st0
,,... Dt:llwry
Mo.w00r~
MOTOR HOMES
SALES • RENTALS
11 ft to 28 ft
UTE LINER
IALIOA-PACE ARROW
LOCATED ON THIE NlW,OltT
FRlEWAY JUST SOUTH 01'
THI SANTA ANA FREEWAY
TAXI THE McFADDEN TUlt N
OFF TURN LIFT ON YILLA!il
WAY
0
N
f OlflGIA
> • ' u i
558-3222
1'..0:ks r i3J 'I~ Fr ncm 11f ,4J Grw!h 10~11•1 5 15 GltDUP &o.tElll I U BLC Gell! l l 9'0 rioi .,US Gv S 10 l! 1l 311 Ne1 Gwtl 10 JI 11 42 Grw ~ I 11 I 62 gourpi nc B1b,011 1jSl 10~ ,t:~sd~Ntlp71l l '1 NEL Sid 17.S?lt(M neom •Sl104l r1 nlll lk
81wr0< '' ••01tou• NEA Mt 10tt l1111 Smm l 1lOJ 1421 8rklllsS 1 20 8.11 ~ t r t 112 6 SI Comm 11 01 lj ns N1t11 Cenl 7 76 141 TMh~I I ti I 75 8rl1 MY I 20
g11cn HI l5tl l7 t mO•C •etl StNt1i1wt~ l'S21361Syn,0 'l0611 1 60:r1:PMlD~2 B~8~~ I( j1 1Jl~U ~'WiSi' Ir l~Jil-~Wewlon 70lln7J TMA Ap 11tol .. 2t 1~11111fH11t 1 Btrksh &.l1 490 r.itewv lltOll N New Wld 14J?UnT11<hf$ 11..51 1114 llwYHI pl 2 8ondslk '76 1 )t GE s 5 p l4.'3 NlC!'!l11 2f J72•17 Techncl 1 80 I t7 llfOCk GI 72 805 Fdn 11J611 ~·Gib I Gr 7 "1 ~" ll;b l lvlr 15 n 15 l't Temol G ~ 10 7..1.l BrUnG1 111 I Pwn 4.«I 4 t l OtitOUI' SEC OCeino t )f 13' Towe C 1 IJ 1 ft Brown Com ULLOCI( Allilll ,: I.IS t &a BtG OUP 11'1 FUNDS: B•I Fnd • '3 '44 C>me9• 7 ts • 07 Tr•n c"' In '10 Brn s~ 0 20 l ull Fd l-'15173' CornS k 1!51131SO Hell fd13"1'"Tr1v E<111 91ll llllrFtrr1 °' ~fn Fd ~t~ttflu!h FA"f 66 117 100 Fund 1f601lM Tudl!r H 14 9'\1ttllr1i1n1wk Ii
N ~ ~hr jll n 4 79 &•I~ Ind j4 00 ?4 00 101 Fund t '6 10 S6 1(1111 CG ' 1t 4 St Bue¥ E I 20 W~ w\le!I 3 ff ll~ H~l~d DA '~ 't ~ ne Wiii 1, :JI 11 JI 20 h Cl I •S 4 11 ll:et Co=
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COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK LIST
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Wednesda)·'s Closing Prices-Complete Ne,¥ York Stock Excha11ge List
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In Cautious Day
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Complete Closing Prices-American Stocli Exchange List
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1e w . " , n'-\\ ....-~ lS •Vi .,,. it has formed a team with
30 II.lo ui. 1N.+ 1 sit ~ Mt!• a.s nv. ll lJ"' ' C I El I u 1~\li 11 "' ... ,~ s11 111:1 1nc1 1: """ uto _ v. elltra ectr c: Co to bid on ~ 1h. 1°1!! n I IVJffi:'·r:" ,!~ 2:v. ~lt: ~l ,,= i..: the defin ition phase of lhe 'j', 111 r 10 • 1 l''' '°" r • 1,1 'i'" 21~+ h Venu11 :ipace mission series , .. ~ 61 't •1\-..-1 l/rt'I WI 1 1-
ll io: !'.. r,., ... "' iu•v• s~ .~ I~~ )II{, 'Ii!t \! The project w1ll be con
'!• ',,;t,•, ::i~ ,'"',,._= ,: ~.:~;~~.:_,· •0
... ~; ,~ ~n l~ J?+ , trolled hy the N it t 1 o n 3 1 ~·· "° .. ~o.. 'T' "" ! '~1 ~i\4 '{., • Aeronautics and Sp it c e f1 '" ' ~ .. 1 ~ 1..,,' L ~~, , 11 '~"' if";.. .. A d m 1 n I st r at1on s Am~!i fl 1::! 1:~ 1:'.! h 1~:·~~ c 1li
1f~ ll1 11'"'.:. ~ Research Cen ter at Morret t
4 ,g1! ~;;. ,t.,.*' 14' u•ow•n <P ~'' 1".(; 1f" 1 ~'" ' field Calif The objective 1.s
' ''' ' • •'-~ "' ~~vi1n ~ tf l:'~ I:~ ,','~ 1, lo study the comnn.r1tion of 1• 11 !ft.I~ H I"'"• loll ii I " ..... ~ V ~· I !11.o '~' '~tt-\~ 11n1r1 c '° ll: 1,,'• , "' , ......... ,~ enus s atmosphere T h 1 ''• ,, ... n! Jt(O ( o.. .. ' " bl 1 21. 1V1 \ 5 .,• ~ •1'\ ,,.~ or ting a n d itlmosph•rlc ,,,,., ,,,, , ~I 11 1t11 Ent 1 .-'• ,,~ .. 111o .... b -"" lJ ir-~ 11 .'t ! .,.._ \t
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t.,.., INli j~ ,;--,1,. prvvt"s are expect td to be sen t " 1~~ 1,i~ ;~-\~ Kl'I A•o•m u 1 ~. 11 .. Jl:!*'1 to Venus starting 111 Dttember
16 1 ,. , ,.,_ tmn o,,,. I~ 1 1 1976 ,1 .!" •'" .~--... ~=~~1,~·~~ •• ;I ,l' ,j ,,l ~-•• •o ,; !,. ~.-"" 'tet>rr•1 •n ,.,.. ,, .·: • C d E d '' tl1 ' tu.~ h T•c vrn CP '! , . . l.ll Oltt"Or e ye
JI "' .... tMi j •ll ~ Ill(' SI tt" 2!.., ,,"'. \lo D I '''" ll' a~ u •••• aim• ~ii~ I" •-+ ALLA s 1ur11 _ ~,,,,, H •tl'e , .. ,_ ~ Tt!t,.,m "' t,u, 11 , 1 "" 1f ~ 1~ Al °" t tu ~ jtt:_ .! tt ,,,, w11 ,.,., ,,.. ~ rways Inc has revealed I\
ll 1•~ 1'" lll'o l:~. c~~ f. !1: f, 1~--,: •~ laklng a c\o!ier look at th e '! j'U ;~ ,:t_ t, I~:~ l;: 1 1;: J:: ~, 1.. Angtirfrench s u p e r !i on t c 'I 1 ~,. 10\oi 1'"-~ i*''""'"' '" \', '••' , l's•• '••' , , transport plane and that one • ,,. 'JI ~ !~.,.~~~ ~ ~ 'tr. _ "' xP1.cr ,s:r 113 U • !: 11 of 1l5 pilots rece ntly flew the
1• 1414 i1u ,,'"_.. ~ l••• • c,11 J~ 1,.u ::: 1!: Concorde But tht company
'
l! iia \lli~ l~~ a t~r~~'r: I if;: 11,: l~ ·~ denl f!d that an imminent 1rlp lO u: .. '~ T~h~I"' IO H~ «•. r1,,,·-~ tn l..ondon b)' ch a I rm a n •r1 ' '1' 'Jt=ht Totcfl" 1"'1 Harding L1twrtnce and Vice
"• ffiil':'· 1'1"• l,,'..-+ 1: •. 1------------I p Id R
J .. , 1,.. Amerlf"Oll Sule• res ent u!lsell T h a y tr
1 ~ • .1i1:-~t \I I presage!! Immediate e.xecullnn t~ !!"' ~"'!.'U n 111rre of Braniff s options 10 bu(.
ff r.=• ll~ 11!! AMiii CAN J ltCH•HGI SALIS lhrtC! t;oncordts Th• lwo • vo U.. I• UllltH •tit l~ltf'nl 19~11 • •v. J•V.-14 ""'• '"' 10<' ·~· i otOOOO f1c\11l!! however wlll furlhu ! .i; ,ra 9*+ \ Si.a taj• "'' ••o •jt, l~
'' ~ >f:t: ~ ,luro1 r~, lliofld •• •• 11 .OOGI txplore the econamlcs o( the ., .,. SOl>d 1111t "'' MJe U 1.000 Co .> J ~ "-" ncorde while abroad
Finance
Briefs
11
•
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TUMBLEWEEDS
Mun AND JEFF
FIGMENTS
NANCY
. "
HE WAS THE
CENTER ON
OUR FOOTBA LL
TEAM···
[DA ILY CROSSWORD ••. by' A. POWER I
ACROSS
1 Drives in by a
su,cesslon or
l"'ltdium blows
6 ~!ext in li1"e
10 Punth:
Slang
14 Bring lo bear
15 Climb
lb··· Tors:
Producer ol
"Flipper"
17 ~·onel, for one
18 Sil' a
hindrance
20 Cliques
21 Small mass
22 "A poem
lovely as -
--": 2 words
23 Ring
25 Strips of
clothing
27 Disclose
30 Hidden
31 Command
32 Roof edges
33 Be indebted
'" Jb Divide:
SuffiK
37 Uncovers
38 Move a radar
bea"' over part
of Jhe sky
39 Explosive
compound
40 As -·-a
pi g: 2 word~
41 CllJ' on
Honshu
J.ipari:
Var.
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,,
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-·!: Certainly
11ot: 3 words
44 Drinks to the
health ol
45 An Arab
~1 Ta ll, thin and
un9ainly
48 Shopworn
49 Blood
re lation
50 Units of
energ y
54 "It's --!":
Yo u're late:
2 words
57 Revere
58 Period of duly
at a job
59 Sir Anthony
··<UK Prime
Minister
bO Ideal:
Slang
61 Pertaining
to Celts
62 Femal e
anil!lals
bl Ejects with
contempt
DOWN
1 Cerlain after•
noon social
gather in gs
2 Shalt on
lu,ns
3 C.Juse to
d1sa11oear
gr.vl1111llv
4 So1t1ethiri'J
expecl~d
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Yesterday's Puztl' Solved:
L ~L!I ~:.IE • !Tl •
.RE~S !!F.ft! ~ER!i
3 23 72
5 Eye lid 32 Erodtd
inflammation
6 ···and er1or
7 ln1imation
6 Supt"rlativ e
sullix
9 Born
34 Remain
35 5011 of Seth
37 Infant
38 AbsOfbed:
2 words
10 Straining
dev!ce ..
40 Plane surface
of a cut gem
41 2,240 01 2,000
pounds 11 Excessive
supplies 43 The physical
world 12 M<irk to show
a place of 44 Small flap
insertion on a garmeri!
13 leg regions 45 Sl)C lal positior
19 Rages 4& Shady garden
21 Country of bower
Asia: Abbr. 47 Second mort·
24 Consume gages, e.g.
25 Tllose opp:ised 49 Old World duc k
to war 51 Item cl ship's
2b Charles equ lll!T1tnl
Edward 52 Cultivated
--: Amer. 53 Weights of
composer India
27 Musical symbol 55 Investigator:
28 The Garden Informal
of ---Sb Artificial
29 Triumphant lang11age
30 200 miltlgrams 57 Foor
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By Tom K. Ryan
l'(XJfUU.J? SCOltH? ll00R80N? SC010
by Ernie Bushmiller
··-AN D THAT'S TH E
ON LY WAY HE CAN
THROW A 6ALL
PEANUTS
IT JJl5 T
<AME fN°™E
MAIL~V,
JUDGE PARKER
1\115 IS '/Et!!( EXCITING.
,,
'
GASOLINE ALLEY
We's beck where we
started.Joel! Seck4 still
ain't
qoin'
t'step
over
ti.a):
seat!
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
~she ain't,
~ufus! Hand me
t h' ,;iedqe!
Y•s,
MA'AM.
ANIMAL CRACKERS
~Ii! HEH! I 1J.L ~TAY
HERE., CDMPl.ETELQ
HIDDEN, U\l!TI. Tf'!Ai
\IJ,lil'fR BIRD 6a'S
A Lrrn .. e. Brr ci.osa::-
1'He/J ... CSl..OP /
llOO W>/.J M WeLL
GO HOME' ... :t WCJl,l1i "'° ~'Eif( lilAi m:i: ~IDie~~.
l
By Charles M. Schulz
WOJ.J! 17'5 A
REAL WllTV! "
WOOD>1llCK J UST ~NT IN
FOR A NEW NEST !
By Harold Le Doux
Mil. OUI NN MAS &EEN Pl.AC.Et> IN
INTENSIVE CA.EE ~ IT'LL &E A TOUC\.f·
ANP-()() SlfU.&.TION roir A COUPLE
OF DAVS ~ WMV DON'T VOU TRY TO
GET 50ME ~EST? WE'LL C.lLL
TMANKS,
POCTOR !
I'Ll. T•KE
&V THE WAY, CAROLYN ••
\.l,._YE YOU CMANGED YOUR .
NAME TO J"OYCE
HOW PIP YOU INTEND TO
EXPL ... IN ALL TMtS TO SEN· SA.IP I
A.TOE IMR5H WMEN °™E WAS GOING
MISS
QUIWN
MOME!
LEGA Y?
YOU IF THE~E'5 ANY (.MANGE!
~ (.,
MISS PEACH
ru7URE
Doc'l'oitr of
AMElllCA
Mt'Er
~e~.
-AND TI-IE"E SEfM TO 9E
A LOT OF COMPLAINTS
NOWADAYS ABOUT
THE 'cXOIU~fTANT
IN COMES , 01'
l?OCTORS.'
lWO 01= YOU APPLV l=O~ A TO MA~~
MARRIAGE LICENSE? PA.UL?
SUCH
COMl'LAfNTS
A1'1!'
GRO!:S!.Y
UNJUSTfFreD :!
By Mell
ONl.'f
TH f'
VERY
·Wl-lll..E
THE 1..A~Y
DOCTOR~
MEJrELY
MAK6
9LISY
ooc.ro~
EA1'N
fXOR8fTANT
INCOMES ,.
PIL ES
OF MONEY!
, ..
M<'<-L __ _c~i!!_-~,..q.;s.
PERKINS By John Miles
1·iJ nrt.no kt....,. J "-""---~ l)'Ulmll • •"Jl.U.
•
By Dick Moores
WflAT
f/A<'l'ENEO
TO fl tM?
IT LOOKS NICE,
BUT WHAT 11' I
FALL BoH IND JN MY
PAYMENTS? _,_
llet.J! HOW'D
qA l<HOlll I.
WM; HEit!:~
By Charles Barsotti ----
. :;-.... _-: ....
By Gus Arriola
By Ferd Johnson
By Roger Bollen
'.t ~e/>.D 1!1S
l3Au.cal 1/>l
THE FIRS!"
PAIJEI.. !
"" '-,o~-:, ,i.:::==~~~ .. ,<!. ::::::=::=:::::'.-=§;-*"
THE GIRLS
I
3·2J t-&
,;Is there anylhi ng at all these day~ you don 't have to
worry you'll be caught reading."
DENNIS THE MENACE
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$7
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$1
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$5
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-'
. ' Tlwtiiitl, l.Wch 23, 1972 DAILY PILOT 33 _,
Everyone Has ·
Something That
So meone Else Wants
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It,
Find It, Trade It
With a Want Ad · Jhe Biggest Mark~tplace oo the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5618 for Fast Results
General General
5 BEDROOMS· SINGLE LEVEL
This lovely home is located close to Catholic
church & schoo l, shopping & is an exceptional
property. I~arge famil y rm ., & n1any extras,
plus a 6% loan. $37,500.
CALL 675-3000 ANYTIME
General General
* BAYCREST *
LARGE POOL
Plus 4 bdrms., famil y rm., dining rm .. 3 baths.
Quiet street. Ivan \Velis construction. Beau·
tifully landscaped. I-luge gas BBQ under cov·
ered patio. Built-in vacuum center. High
beam ceilinged living areas. Elec. door open·
er to 21/2 car garage. All bit-in elec. kitchen.
Xlnt floor plan for living & entertaining.
For addilional details, call ·
CHILT ROBINETT
REAL TOR 644·7958 OR 642-8099
General General
"PARTY TIME" BAYCREST
FOR WHEELCHAIR
SPRING HAS SPRUNG
ON BALBOA ISLAND
THE CIRCULAR STAIRW AY leads you up
the stairs where you \Vil l find the living room.
dining room , kitchen, 1 bedroom, 1 bath
ALL CARPE"fED. Do\vnstairs, 3 bedrooms,
I bath . Great idea ...... , , , . , . , , . , $79,500.
WIKI WIKI
THIS WILL GO
IN DOVER SHORES \\'ith VIEW of Back
Bay. ''Skinny dip" in the privi.cy of your own
indoor swimming pool. 4 bedrooms 3 baths,
island kitchen with BUILTIN B·B-Q, formal
dining roon1, firJ?elace. study and a UNIQUE
\VRT BAR. Jn this house vou can reallv do
your own thipg! ....... : ........ $97 ,500.
"TOO GOOD TO BE TRUE"
IT'S FEE
IN TURTLE ROCK, 3 Bedrooms, family
room. 2 baths. atrium. builtins with self
cleaning oven, shag carpeting and custom
drapes. Large covered patio with super land·
scaping. WOULD YOU BELIEVE . , $47,900. * APARTMENT*
UNDER CONSTRUCTION
Make the changes you want NOW. 3 Bed-
rooms, 2 baths. bu.iltin kitchen with VIEW
OF JETIY. FRONT HOUSE -also has 3
Bedrooms. 2 baths, builtin kitchen. dining
-twWo .._.torSMt
General
C. F. Colesworthy & Co.
Realtors
YOU'VE FOUND IT
Just what you've been looking for. Cameo
Shores, secluded canyon view, swimming
General General
.. -
pool, 3 large bedrooms, dramatic dining ~
room. Mint condition. $72.500. call now for CbRONA DEL MAR-6 UNITS
an appointment.
ESTATE SALE
$33.500 and worth it! Newport Heights con·
temporary 3 bedrooms plus office, 2~ baths
including double pul1n1ans. Large master
sui te with separate dressing room. Custon1-
built for a particular owner. Like-new shag
carpeting and custom drapes. Storage and
wardrobes galore. Be Quick on this one!
Eastbluff Office • 640-0020
Bayside Office • 6 75-4930
General
4 U/'lllClUI: liUMI:
EXCITING HARBOR VIEW HILLS -4 Bed·
room two story on a fee Jot that's as bi~
as you could possibly want and the interior
is as sharp as you could ask tor! Beautiful
wa-1 1 coverings, lovely drapes and lush shag
carpeting. This quiet cul-de-sac location is for
an exceutive's family. PRESENTED AT
$85.950. PHONE UNIQUE CORONA DEL
MAR '675·6000
General General
oflnda J !J/e
PRESTIGE WATE RFRONT HOMES
SHOWN BY APPOINTMENT
57 Linda Isle Drive
Custom 4 BR., 3'/.i ba . ho111e on LRe:oon. J\1str.
BR . has sitting arae & frp lc. \Vaterfront fan1~
ii ):' rm .. 'v/conversation pit around the frplc.;
with sli p. , .................. , , .$189,500.
For Complete Information \
On All Homes & Lots, Please Call:
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 Bavside Dr .. Su ite I . N.B. 675-6161
General General
* * * * * *
ASSUME LOAN!
REDUCED!
LOW DOWN!
JL'~' REDL:CJ-..:0! LC's!I lhan
$2.2&0 do\\'n. Pa y n1 t" n r s
<11'11unfl $200 :<uil you" Dnn'I
nus.s this lo\'t'ly living morn.
Paul Bunyun fnn1Hy room
111lh open l)C•an1 cc1hng and
"aul!Nt~ Crl\cklins: f11'1'plat·C'.
Kin):! s11r lx'drooms. Don't
\V~ll, <.'All no1v: &154103. . . .
l'OR[\T [ OISO\ " ..... R£Al TOA'~
$43,000!
2400 SQUARE FEET
i)C's1i;:nl'cl fnr hnppy, lar~e
fanul.v t"'XC't'Uli\'C' l!ving 6.·
r11t<'l'!aln1ni;:. 4 h<'droon1s. 3
haths, hui;:e honuA roon1,
i'i•'lxtl'a!c fan11ly room \\'ith
pn,·att"' bath. Beautiful S\\<im
pool. 1''incst builtin appli-
aru·~·,.., d1sh1\!ash<'r, Inspiring
lit'l'plat'C' 1n isol11.tcd (a.n11ly
roon1. Patio -loads of d<'Ck-
111i;:, l11~h low 1nainf<>nance
111ndsc11p1n)'.:', Rest gf all -
no <1011·n U.I. lenn:<. 540-1720
TARBELL'
295.1 I [3rbor, Costa Mesa
HARBOR
HIGHLANDS
NEWPORT BEACH
Srarklinc :l hcdroom 2 hAlh
11nrl in1n1a('ulnlr? Modrrn
ht1111111 kitehrn, formal <!in·
1n~. :-:lnl c;u·pc!ing, L'Overed
hnek patio ancl fanlastl1·;i.Jly
];111dS<·apr<l. \Valk to MarlnC'r
Si·hoo\ 11.ncl \Vestcliff Ji\hop·
pin~. S:l!i.000.
Call 545·1Y124 (o!Jl"n eves.): * 5 fk>droom, 2 Balhs
.,.. F'ami\y Room
• Pool -Healed & Fli1ered
fl' Coverf'ff Patio
.,.. FHAIVi\ Term1: * S37,950 * Phone 546-2313
Built with extra "'ide halls &
dool""·ays, 3 Bedrooms, lam·
ily room. and dining room .
niN' yard \\!ilh fenct'd H&F'
pool ... Sfi(),000.
area. Now is the time to buy ....... $77,500. General General
PRESTIGE LIVING
AT ITS BEST
$47,900
TAYLOR CO.
PETE BARRETT
-REALTY-
642-5200 642-4353
General General
CROWN OF THE SEA
Great family ho1ne. Beaut. view of Pacific
& Catalina. 4733 CORTLAND. CAMEO
HIGHLANDS. OPEN 'SUN. 2-5. Paul Quick
BEAUTIFUL TURTLE ROCK
18751 SAN RUFINO. OPEN SUN. P.M. 4
BR., 2 ba .. huge fam . rm .. formal dining,
all elcc. kit., lovely decor. Great view.
$73,950. Fee. Belle Partch
NEW LISTING
Best buy on West Bay Ave. Charming 4
bdrm. home with lge. sunny terrace. Across
from Lido club. sandy beach-pier, slip.
$185,000. Biii Bents
HARBOR & ~AN VIEW
Ne\v listing. 3 BR ., F. sep. din. rm., in
Harbor View Hills, on hite Sails. Attrac-
tive decor. On large lot & lovely patio.
$59,500. Charlene Whyte.
FIRST TIME ON MARKET
Great 4 BR. & fam. rm. townhouse in Univ.
Park. end unit. Xlnl lac. & near every·
thing! Call to see. Offered at $35,900.
"Chuck" Lewis
NEWPORT BAY VIEW
Large two story with quiet location in the
Heights. Upstairs suite is terrific! 3 Other
BR's., formal din . & large tree shaded
yard. $72,500. Bill Comstock
STILL LOOKING ? ? ?
DO SEE THIS HOME WITH EVERY-
THING. 3 Lg. BR., paneled lam. rm .. for-
mal din. rm ., priv. patio, pr~me area, big
lot. Only $77 ,500. Bud Austin
EMERA~D BAY-$78,500
3 Bedroom. 3 baths: just listed this beauty!
Separate guest quarters. The priceless look
at a low price .• Jim Muller
FAMILY HOME WITH POOL
Large 5 Bdrm. house designed for full Jiv·
ing. Secluded living room. family rm. with
frplc. Gourmet kitchen. $89,500. Fee. Eileen
Hudson
LARGE FAMILY HOME
Fashionable Irvine Terrace. 4 BR .. 3 baths;
scp. dining rm ., red brick country kitchen.
3 Fireplaces, scp. den & fam. rm. Triona
Bergin
CAMEO .SHORES VIEW ESTATE
Nearly 'Ai acre, perfect for entertaining, Jge.
rooms. pool 1 cabana, terrific bar. 4 Bdrms.,
5~ baths. Call for picture folder. $175.000
George Grupe
' 133-G700
_._
Coldwell, Banker
644-2430 ··~
l lO NEWPORT CENTER DR., N.8.
•
Tahitian Pool
$255 ·Move In!
$25,500!
\\'OW! BARGAIN llU~'TERS
C0!\1E QUICK! Giant panel-
ed Jiving room. Counlry
kiTchen. DEN opens ro Ta-
hitian pool lined "'ilh lava
slone~ Big ovcrsi;:ed Jot!
Take over G.L LOAN "·ilh
annual perccnlagC' r ate of
ONLY 5%"'1> -OR -$Z>:l
AND MOVE IN! /!urry, it
won't last! Call 645-0303.
fORl.{I E 01.SON
'" !?£At.TOPS
~..QTHEREAL
\"\.. ESTATERS
• 1 r, '.' • r .•
PICK ONE
OF FIVE
GOV'T PLANS
·FOR HOME
OWNERSHIP
The gov'! "'anis ynu to enjoy
your own home: and has
many programs for little
CO~TS
$34,950 A
4 Bdr. + Family Rm . WALLACE
I ORl.\I L 01 \0\
R£"11T(>R<;
Romeo and Juliet
(714) s.G-8424 Owner lransf~rnd. 4 bed-REALTORS
rooms. 2 bath home wllh -546-4141-1--,N~E"W~O'="FF=E=R"'l"N"'G~-
separnto r.mily room. Ge.· (Open Evenings)
cious living room with in· !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!
viting fireplace. All electric M I • H EASTBLUFF
"Award"builtin range, oven Q Oney 5 OUSe 5 BR .. 3 baths; idE:al for large
& dishwasher. PresUge ad· Is No Baloney family. Nearly'~ acre with
dress of distinction. Quiet It is grea!, Inexpensive and paved boat storage area.
cul·dc·sac street. 540-1720. · $M 750
haA "n possible rinancu1g ·c·ORBIN
TARBELL
2955 Harbor. Costa Mesa
TREES, TREES
S'/. DOWN
Bt:>aulllul lrtt shad~ resi-
dential 1u·f'o, Popular 4 bed ..
room ~ bath home with
rlouble fireplace & indoor
available. ""ry clean, 3 •
bedroom!'!, 2 baths, new car-.
pct in~, Hrep\ace and •.II new MART IN gas hne and copper pipe. A
mu!>! 10 see at $31.0CO -
Call 646-7171. REALTORS 644-7662
B·B·Q, and 1111 builtins. Ill· --~G"1v=E""'Y"O"U"'R=-
nc5s for1"<'s immediate sale MORALE A BOOST!
-$31 ,500. Sec this lovrly 4-BDR!\f, 21Ai
$34,950
INOOORABLE -
OUTDOQRABLEI
Great term~ tool No down
G.I. -$3490 down sll others!
4 bedrooms. 2 baths, lt1rge
fam!ly room wllh Inspiring
ti.repla.ce, wlft'• ~ c 11 t e
bullttn dream k 11 c h" n,
dl~wa1her. Huge 16 x 26 fl.
Covered l glasene. paneling
~for yur round use with wet
bar-llrtplt. ~ar round fun
Call 545-8424 lopen rvc!I.) Bath Home: with Family Rm.
\outh .{~ oast
INTERVIE\VING R.E. Aale~
men '"''Or wlthOul e:xp. CcL\f
loc, Jlllt 6T:,..7225 •
Sell Idle ltem1 now1 Call
642-5678 Now!
find Brick FP. Very well
J1uulsca~. $31.000.
It entertaining. 842-6691.~
TARBELL
For but rt1u.ltaf 642-(,671
This 2300 sq. fl. home located
in f\.1esa Verde on a corner
lot is absolutely beautiful.
2 story featuring formal din·
log. model kitchen, deluxe
shag carpet throughout. huge
master bedroom suite down
stairs, 3 roomy bedrooms
upstail'!!, 21~ baths, 3 car
garage, executive· profes-
sional neighborhood, brick
raised hearth fireplaC'e,
heavy shake roof. This home
is a terrific value. Call for
appointment, 54&-8640.
2629 Horbor
Plush Lime Green
Carpets will tickle your toes
of this beautiful 31,i year old
SANDPOINT Home. 01vned
by an Interior Decorator and
Just Filled with Extras, in-
General
FIRST HOME?
BEACH-$19,000
SMALL DOWN.
A LOT FOR A UTILE! Per·
feet starter home \Vifh big
living room. Formal dinr.
20x20 'FAMILY ROOM ALL
IN KNOITY PINE! Cahin
kitchen. Cul de :sac Jot. Jog
lo beach. \Valk 10 shops.
Call now -645-030.1,
. .
HIRl\T E Ol.SO\ '" R£AITORS
PARK STREET
cluding AIR CONDITION-a Bedroom, hardwood floor
ING. Just a couple of min-home \Vith electric builtin
utes from South Coast Plaza . kitchen, 2 separate garage1
and this 4 bedroom beauty on this big corner Jot plus a
is priced at only $35,750, Call covered enclosed pa ti o,
~nn. Who's ti~t'.'
IO THEREAL
\"\.. ESTATERS
' ·.· """'
I Ol!I .\ I L Ol\O\
foll A I 10 .tl S
2 STORY HOME
''Best-of-Terms''
East11lde C.1\1. Beautiful 3
bedroom, 2 bath home, den
+ din area. Expanded large
rumpu1 nn. tor entenaining.
2 flt'l'places. double garagc,
pool size yard. F'rcsh paint .
Don't mi111 thl~ OM!!
274 Sherwood of Santa AnR
Lachenmyer
Re.iltor
673-7575
EASTBLUFF
3 BR.', 2 ba., f&mtty k!lchl"n.
t.Slory. Walk to park. bike
lo 11Chool. "Mint condition,"
144.150.
&14-lll.1 Anylimr 1\~.
I good want ad is a good
lnve1tment
'
$24',950.
Ne wport
at
Fa irview
~6-8811
(anytime)
DOLL HOUSE"'
Eruitside Cosla ~1C'Aa fnr
S19.!fi> full priC"eo. G1'11 no
<to\vn also $500 do" n Fl Ii\.
l)arllng homt"' AllUJUNI l)n
hugr. R-2 lot. Queen 11 itC' hM-
room!I;, gn"1ll c'O\lnlry·~lylc
kitchen, 11IM lot11 of tn.'e ....
\VhAl 6 pl<tC't! Let'lll ShO\~' l1
to )'Ou. Call,
Walker & Lee
Realtors
545-0465 Open 'Iii !I Pttf
STEPS TO BEACH
(.Ncwport-$29,500)
S BR., family rm .. 2 bath~.
bltn11, Pools, tenni1, rec.
Artll. CAU'.. NO\\'! t
CAYWOOD REAL TY * 548-1290 *
General
MRS. M. LIKES
ThC' clo!!Cne~s of the school
OWNER ANXIOUS
to move East
Off<'ring: bcaullfully improved
trilevcl Republic home for
imn1cdiate s11.Je, featuring 5
spacious hcdrooms, fCJrrnal
dining, oversized !amily
rootn, full builtln kitch w/
C'Bting nr<'a, 3 car gar.
Pri111e 1\·/r11a Verde location.
Now reduced lo $49,900. See
tO<lay!
Call 540-1151 (Open eves.)'
play yard for .. hcr son. This [ · I
.-;11,i.cious tour' bdrm., 2 hath n:n HDUTA~
home ha!I new drapes, dish· _ ~ RULTOllS.
11'ai;her & v.·ater hearer. ';;;;~~~;.;;;;;;~~'
Freshly painted, well land· !! NO DOWN
~Aped yard with sprinklrrs
11nd covered patio. FI-IA·VA, MESA VERDE -
~12,000. $27 ,000
Evening.~ Call 836-6960
ROOM FOR
POOL TABLES
$33,950
Two-story home in north
Costa Mesa. Features 3 bC'd-
roo1ns. family room and
hUA"C 19 x 25 rumpus room
"'ilh rough plumbing in for
"'"l bar or addillonal hath.
!las FHA appraisal for
S'.14,000, and nwner wanls to
t:<'ll in ~1arch, 1972, For ad·
rlitional information, please
phone 546-2313.
BY OWNER
L'l~e I IR50 sq. ft.) 4 Rr, 2 ~~
hath home in Sandpointe, 2
minur1·s from S, Coast Plaza.
No do'vn C l or auumption
on present loan your monlh·
ly payn1cnls will be only
$156 including taxes, prln·
ciple, lnlerest &: insuranrc.
3 bedroo1ns, 2 baths.. Bulllln
gas kitchC'n, a real wlfe-
savcr. Plush carpeting,
dra~s. No down G.I, terms
-low down Fl-I.A, too!
Prime locaUon! Walk to
everything, 540-1720,
.TARBELL
2955 Harbor, Cosla Mesa
First Time Offered
Bcauti[ul near new Eastside
Costa Mesa 2 5tory 4
Bedroom. 2 Baths. Large
Kitchen with eating area +
fonnal dining area. Family
room, all fenced, noor to
ceiling fireplace. BeautUuUy
dC<'OralM. Very q u l e t
cul-de-sac street. $35.950.
Submit !!.ll offers. Please
Call Today.
Living room 1vilh separate ~~~~~~~~~j dining arc:i, flrC'place, rou'ii-...
"' kllchcn wllh fam;Iy NEWPORT HEIGHTS room, shug Cl\ rpr t Ing
lhmughot1t. Patio, fully lan<I·
~ape-cl , fC'n<'('d yard. l block
lo rlcmt'nta.ry /\Chool and 3
$hnt1 l)IOl'·ks to new f)llrk ·
plHygmund. $.1<1 ,900. Call
!'157-:\111 li! no lln5Wl':r,
lt.12·96661 .
$30,500.
NO DOWN TERMS
All t•ltttrir pul'h button built·
in kl!rht"'n, 1k>uhlf' ovens,
rlt:-:h"·ashcr, lull dining room.
F11mily room with inviting
hrepl1trr . Fully cMptlrd,
mai!l1•r hctlronm whh 1nlr·
n'lrt'rl "'Ortlmhl"!I;. f'l'ont &
ri'AI' patios. M!l-1110.
TARBELL'
1%.'i ll arhor, Costa Mesa .
CLOSE TO BEACH
Lari::c 3 tlR. 2 bll. duplex
1,1•\lh :i. hrcplllcr5. SJ5.cm.
Canril Iron! Int ...... S20,IXX>
George Williamson
Realtor
l48Jol70 645-I S64
NE\V LISTING • 3 bdnnr .• 2
bBths, lam. room, fgP. llv.
room, 2 fir('placel'l, fonn&\
din, m'I, hit-Ins, nf'8.t new
cpl & linoleum, good Joca·
Lion -$46,00J.
"C" THOt,1AS
Rea ltor
2'24 \\.', Coast !fwy 5411.5577
NewpoM lkach Evt'. 545-564.1
BETTER
THAN
RENT
Livr th<' life of luxury In lhll!
:l bedroon1. 2 lmlh oondomln.
ium. jus1 J!IC'p1' to pool Md
clubhou11t . 2 C".Pr ga raa-<" wtlh
l'lll<.'y entry. Nn yttrd \.li'Ork
or oulstd(! ninlntcno'.lnC'e. All
ihis rer $21 ,~. Cati 546-23ll.
, • 1 03Uy Pilot 0111"'*'
d. 61~11
•
. •
"
:J4 DAILY PILOT
I -"'Salo I~ I .......... SM.
••
I~ Rt1r E1t1te, c.,..,,, Re»I Estatt,
Cener1I
Newport Beach Cemetery Mountain, 011ert,
Lots/Cry pts 156 Rt1ort 174
Irvin• Gent r•I General Gt ntr•I Corona del M•r Huntington Beach 1 ~-H--G-E--B-D_R_M __ 1 ;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;:;;;;;;;;; I """"""""""""""""""":;:;;:;:;;,j:AAiN;';x<i·rO'ouU:,;:., s:;.;..":;::.r.;;;,,!1 ".,4;;;hr· OWNER ANXIOUS 3 UST LI s TED 11
U SHAKE ROOF horn('s. lmfllet!, 0t;1·up. loll) Sh.u·v I BJrn1. & iamil). 4 Bdrms .. 31, ha'!I., fanlll.) Co~lll t.ies.R. liro.'ldl\'llY !-.i. ~ ftui;l1<' rxii•iiot· hou!f' lori.ir.~I da~'· Ai.ll"nt 61~~1m lllR. int:!. U1nlnx r rn. Bltll!. :: rm. Choice end uni!. Lo\\'
DEJ..JGJ-l'J'fVLLY tlf'L'Ora\t'd ,;;.:;,:;;;..,;...;..;..;.,_.,_.. __ _
3 Bit ram &: Din rn1. 2 Clt\'PTS, P•u~;r1~· Vle11.· **BIG BEAR LAKE
ONC,Y S9.~:0 -l'i1·tUI'(' yOUJ'
s1·lt 1'11lO) Ing Su11101f'r tn tht'
rnOulllti !n~ -1\'alK\ng 1n !he
11ood~. f•· '1:n.: thr ,.,qu11Tcl~.
"J'ry ll1i~ ·"u1iful A·frnn1c
l'ub1n II•'-.lr•d In •hr 11·00().~.
YClu'll ltk•· 11. \\'on't lasl long
ur this 1!11\' pl'i('c. Call Ross
17J~J 536-li:.S or 1vrilt:
JlarOOr V\t':w Jloml'5 Cariucl ;\Ienlo1·iaJ Pnrk. Sa\'i , t.:aU
n1odf'I. Clo~ lo park. f-'1•1' &l+-17()7.
i;lm pll'. By O\\'lll:J'. l-95! J)ott Commercia l
Chrl!Wa. Appl Pl t' a s t'. 158
8dr1ns.,"' 2 bath.If. 1\1:\sfer 1 1 .. ----1 baths 111 .... c:ti·p .t· u1'VP"'· nutlritenant'ti yanl: U/J'"'IHI · bdno is h• Wtlh frpl1" un u laJ'i:" :-l.lt' tvrn"r 0 • " \IAli:\lfll 'l'::\ 'I Vie1o1 J\iru t:ou:plc:ti;.:ly b.!\:ICk ltllt.'Cd cd & nlcc!Jy dc('oralrd lhru·
l..argt' Uv . f 1 Uii,: Lcd1·u111. 2 b~!hs \\. •• l1i.1:ht•$l Joe in C~nl, ~ Br, llui.:e c.:ov'd. ~no !or yea;
& \i'OOd t~,~~::ubN~~ dld d1 •t111·hc•d 1;.11·. Li.ir·ve EXCLUSIV E, QU IET f.1n 1 rn1_ (J;1r11•r 6-11--ll .i?, J'tluntl cnll·rluinnient, Arririk· out. 2.000 Sq. fl.&· otr+.:1'\'· ,... f11 'l."lor1n .,l:1tlo \1·ith ;;as SHORECLIFFS! for $:{6,500_ decorated .l ne,..., eurpc.·r.,, 1,~11.r 11,,. 1,11. C•ll nrJw hJ Cost• Mesa 1'00111 f<11' pool 111 this "-' ~ :-il"f) lv lht• bt·ueh. 'l HI{ I•· I A I b 1..a.rge ki t e ht• n \1ilh M·e lhnc ;1.t ra i"lt<un Jblln~ 1----------~ pnrk 11'1' .'l!t't. SOI.II llY
brcakflu;t a.roa. lt.-2 Joi ivllh $33,900 cl1t1rn1 ·r. Bta.utlful ~·o''!'ooolrn. SHAKE ROOJ!. f<ir $~,9:i0. 11] o ~ ... IP r Hi I lllll"y llCt'ti"~. Askll1g $.'12,!((I. '\'uu 011 n the 11lntl. SJ.,, . r
' CHOICE AREA BRIGHT-BOLD-BEAUTY ON ~ REALTY &
NtwPorl BEAUTIFUL EASTSIDr INVESTM ENT CO. Nr\\•port, J-ligh.land Dr. Very hlH•t'J1 :; Hft l<iJnily ~ (71 4 )645 -4085
Bdrm .. l baths & 111.rnily •t hon1e> -phoul' !J u'I: ,~l 1 llt·r J BDRMS -GOV ERNM-EN_T_
---1;lrullor
m1. l.JkC' nf''I, rrca;hly f•irview &l:.l·lf.!.'{i. I ·
pitinle<I. J\·Jnny extrna; in-GLAMOROU S A:-,um1· ti': annuul pf•rc(•nt· OWNED
"SINCE 1946"
1 .~f \Vestt'rn Bank Bldg.
eluding sliding gla),i; \\'(l.il 646.-8811 LINDA ISLE agi· t';1r1· GI loon l\'l!h lo\\· F1fA &: \',\ rrpo-:sessr·tl
·that o'look,· ~ spa.rkJ1ug (anytime) ·l Ull, '1 balh, ix'<H'll & !t·nni" 111~'"1111Y l1•1)iiir•nr. of only To1vnhouses & l1onl1'!f, U)11•
Unlversl!y Park
Days 552-7000 Nighh
l-i&1'' POOL. $-ti,(l()O. c.-our1. S!ip tor '15. 1·1·u 1.'"" ·f. ~I.ii JK'I' fll(>nth uicludlnS <l01\11. No poin1 s <ir f_;scro11' 3 BR, fan1 1111, !i11 rm y,.·/fpl,
I d spc.•1•!.lbo<it & r·uta1nuran. 11,1'('Ji K: JJ.O. ini;urant·I.'. fees. C~v·1 ptl)s •·Josinl{ sep din rm. I~ kilch, atriun1,
CAL,,L <:)' 64
''
2414 Large Poo An (JNL'\'. $lG9.51XJ. Al.SO, 1:11A;~A lr·;:~s 8.~.allablf'. c.'Osls. All price ranges. Call 2 ear gar_ $-13,950. See aft
A ,,. Covered Patio l'harn1in~:: BP., 3 halh !\Jed· Y'f' 1 us on(' : ore 1. s gon1.» 9684441 :1P:\l or wkends, 19532 Sierra
.. -~ I I r Ooly $28,000 11111 prw•. CREST REALTY Raio" Rd, Turli• R0<·k. Rt;,.,l.TY 8caul1ful atrium in !he C'n-!(•!'l'IH1t;:1n ;_d 011, f 01\' Walker & Lee
N,., N'wporl Pe •I o rr it ' 11'3.!l('e 10 11111> ('X{'C'l)llonnl 3 S \34.~! fur l!appy J~fl)' ront 1 -~=~c~====CC'-Laguna Beach J.i\·111,, D;1v1· C'nok 64.2-K2:::i. $1000 REDUCTION 1 _...::; _________ _ IX'dt'OOrtlS n•"I 2 baths, large S 1 $27,750 ·No Down
LOW PAYMENTS
Every door OP£•n!'I 10 8lluclou11
Jan11ly comfort. 3 bedrooms,
2 ba!hs, family toorn v.•llh
exciting fireplace, builtin•
(!rerun kilehen, dishv.·ashcr.
Patio. Pool sized 1,,'l'Ounds,
Landscaped to perfection.
No dov.11 G.r. H:n11s. 10
down FllA all oth e rs .
84G--OIJ04,
TARBELL
Lived In A Little,
But Loved A Lot
This 4 Bedroom home has
been up.graded so much
there just i511't room to 1cll
you. \\'e think it's better
than any MODEL you've
(''¥'Cr seen. Priced at ONLY
$37,950 AND we wiU take a
smaller home in tradC'.
Walker & Lee
REALTORS
842--4.455
JR. ESTATE
V2 BLOCK TO SCHOOL
$30,500
l(l tcht·n. f;1.n11ly r oom. ESTATE SIZE LOT "''""""' BEST OFFER WIN RURAL CHARM al · """"· <"harn1in" fan1 1ly-liv· ~'4.i·046:1 1)11•·11 '111 ~ Pi\f Open dad}. 8!\11 l.u:-.!'i Dr li11'ukra bl har. llugc \V kin "' "" Natural red1\·ood t>xterior. ln,·kl!t'h<'n, dl'!iJ,:htfuJ dininJ;: -*-5-BDRM-S, * tncu r rorner 11( (~arficld & 1·lu1K'ls, \'.t<lhl'drul s t o ne 4 Fireplacr. i Bdrn1s .. 1 1 ~ . 1 1 1 roorn arra ovt·t•Jooking larg1· ''''"'Y ... 1 . .,1~1. "a•·-l•d .. 11,1 :\'lagnol1;1l. Sharp 2 s!Ul'lo', 1 1 1 '" h ,11 /1ri•pJ:o('I'. l>IJl'tnk ers run • ,,.,. '" ,_ ,-~" .. . 2, /'\ >at l~. n11x1•J'Jl .. 11e C'n, ,., bl'k, 1<•1Tat-r. L:lr"c ~11rd. BR. fa11 11Jy rn1, ~ .,, + :u1d ri•ar. Outtlw1· lighting, "' 1Jr:ipi·d. s:l,X:JO Do11 n or 1/11s l'/l ll be yours /or
)loorn for ol,vnipiC' /IOI.ii. 1J1h >'llA/\'A 1,,,,.,,, Du<>'l dn-1nuny, man} t'.'l:lrt1s. Lart;e ~,
1
.. 'lerl',1·,. •ar,gc o n c n c r , n1uurr11 (\'>lJllll"/ 1v1ng .i ·" ' ,. ' Bft'Or fonnal DR. f';.i;hlr111• ('nclosc,tJ jlJJ'd, 11 u it· L "'2!'
9
,
9
.)(1, lovely area in setting of big a blC' Dover Shores. Rcnllll'k· lay! cul-<lc-sac. 'rR \' s :i O o O '1
ll'C'C'!I. Newport Be a ch• abl£· \'HIUC'. GEM DO\VN 10 C':>.lsllng 6~-' '"0
$'1S,500.00. BALBOA ISLAND-lGlO \V. Cn:tst Jhry .. N.B. G.I. loan. llur1y-!his \1·01i'L
~~----~---~-Lit1lc Jsland duplex or single Bf::l.\'G ·rransferrcd, Take -WALK TO OCEAN
PIER & FLOAT REALTOr. . .:,; 642-4623 la.~1! Bkr .. 1213) 43l-526S.
~,..'1f:!'l!W"I r111111ly. J_,.•ss IJ1un 5 min. to ovrr my 1';0 VA lon11 ror 2000 SQ. FT. l@fi·'.fJll1ll!ll'lfl)fl) Jct!y. Immaculate. Fabu-SZ900 iota\ c.'OsL 4 HR. i.ip-4 + DIN + FAM RM
Jous lilt:·<ition! $155,000. Toni prox:l~OO sq fl, Lrg fan1 nn. $26,SOO. If This Doesn't QucPn, 644·6200. J--? ina1nl y;1rd. By o1vner -01vn'-'r k·ttving area, mus!
M y Licensal Real f's I ate .sell! \V/\V ca1·pets, builtin ove OU snle.~n1an, Dy.~: .'>28-2744. /{/0, USf'd brick fil'f'plnct',
N0111lng: \\'ill. $~,9:,0 \Viii buy 1\f! 5:W • :iji -7:!Hi 2-baths. 1·xctlle11t landsc·:·1p-
lhls 4 lwdroom ho nl e r.eally 'Conipaii_v J."r:EEOO:\"J l loin~· ~Hr. gal', ing ! Subn1i1. ('it/18·!7-J2'll.
lo.·atC'd in 8 rt u i e I 4-6200 putio, I;; t'l-"rllent drivC', just SEYMOUR f:.E1\LT\', 171·ll n•1'"l•l.>orhood nea.r schools, 642-82lS 64 B I Bl I II " I " " pain1rd ln.~id(•, nf'11• l'rp1g, lr cac 1 \'( .. uni. nc 1.
i;hopping nnd f l' c e 1\i a Y s • -niee ft.>!l(·r•d .\'tL ~1 11 Congi'<'SS $20 500 J~vcn ha.<: roorn for can1pcr, l"."llUALITY "UILT , -
trulll'r 01· \\'Ila! have you. T D SI. Oi~t·r. :; BB. 2 BA, This is a hl'>-1111.1 !
& L ,_ Bed-111 'r.',a·t.•1'<ll' hOlll(' Jl\' O\VNJ::f:. :; HH, 2 BA.. r I W I k """' r. " ,, All erpts & •h·p~. e11c·e>c a er ee \l'i1h panoramic Vit'I\' Of golf 20X20 fan1 I'll~., fl'Jll C bJtl1S, yard, nlJ ~·le•(• ki!t·h, din l't!J,
t'Oursc, fea turing plai<!Pt· DI\', \1·/11· st'.a.i.: er~!: llrr~s, 2 car gar. $2000 iloii·n _ $Ji;:li H.l~ALTOR!:i
842-4455
$200 Per Ac:re!!
In Culil. '! Only 4 hn;. ~Jrlvlng
lime fi o1n Or<i nll'e. HtJnl
jack rttbbi t and quail on
your 01vn land. \Va lking
distancf' !o air strlp & 1\·ater
1vell, nt-ar boa t launching.
\ViU e>.1·hange or cru·t',I'
paper onJy $12,000. Call
6i3-S.i:,O.
1vuils, hard1vOOlJ rJ001·s. xlnt cond. S2S,900. 6•16-lz:?b. totiil rnu puynu:nt~. ~X'an1 1:ci_Jing~, rorniat din· 2 HR.l ~~ BA. Condoni.inium. ·
1ng, htul •1n krlch!'n <i.ncl, .fl:-Shag: t'arpcl, drapes. garage If
lached Uoub!e gacagr. f I "" .1;.. patio. Priva1e Party. Call -•
o<>ly -.,,,.,. '" 507-0141. . 531·5800 ( ,.n) 531·5800
1llage Real Estate
$26,SOO. B\;-0 \vNER:-M'ei;a Verde 3 SPANISH HACIENOA-llun ·y, l'all f>46-5&!0.
IOpcn f'\'(•s.) J:r.. 2 Ba homt'. c.'Qn1plt O\vncr is leaving the a1'<'a r rcdrcoratcd, Jrg. Io I . and this lovely near ne\\' IA /0 HERITAGE a.JG-6321 ho n1f' 'vhil'h features a ~ REALTORS FOR i<al~ by O\Vnrr, J BR. 1 s unken living roon1, garden ~;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;~~/ BA, hurrJ11·t1 floors. b"l.5x12;'>' kitr-hcn, roon1y fa111ily roon1
'! Jot Asking $25.000. l747 and 4 large bedroonts. Pric-SmalJ Problems? Or::inge Av1• .. :~Jl':-4607. err at an u n b "1 i e" a b J e
1'his hon1c 1vi ll help yo u cope B\' Qv.:ner: 3 Br .. 1~~ ba., $26.4~i0. Call 540-8555.
\\i!h lhenl. i\'x inade ror \\'/W crpts, bltns. x!ras. Im-SHE~Weeo RE~L.TY
AO/an
REAL ESTATE
1190 Ck'nllC}r!! S1.
49.1-!:l~i~: ;14~0316
1'0P 01 'fht• '\'orld. ocean
l'ie11•, Profess. rcdecor( in-
side & nut. 4 Btlrn1s., 1 ~.
lifl, Ne1v shag c p ts ,
1!t·coralor '\·allpaprrs. Liv-
ing r111. \l'/cathe>dral Cl'i!.,
l.Hn, J'1TI. \1 /frple. & 1ret
b:ti'. f1'11'\IU<'1 floor. Bit-in
liltchen 11'/brkf~t. a 1· ('a ,
L.~t'. 111astf'r BR. 11·/11alk-in
c'Ju;,1•1. \\lalk ro al! seliools.
$-12 .. j()(], (h\'Ol'I' tll O \' i n g
north. Call l!.1-1-:).;~.-,,
-FAMILY-DELIG~H~T~
2.s1ory stul'co; 5 lxln-ns., :t~,
ba's .. !iv. rm. \\-, frT.;lC'. f>'or· j
111111 din 1·n1. Lge. kitchen \II/
h1·krst. area. Good TI('ighbo r-
hood, Asking S41.50o. * 49fJ-2MOO *
~ ~ :li:'llM 00. C(lOll,SJ HW'I:
SOlfflf ~ CA.I.II",
G. I. terms -try 5% do1\•n
all others! 3 bedroon1s, 2
baths, lK'para te Fa m i I y
roon1 with a l t r fl cl i ve
fireplace, wile saver buillin
kitchen, dishwasher. Pa tio.
Many added wallpaper ac·
cents, rich \vood paneling.
new goid shag carpeting.
Near all Mopping, short
driy'e to freeways. 962-5.166.
$24,000 • No Down CH !LOREN. 4 bedroon1s, 2 lllac. $27.950. s.·!~3!}96. l:-!9b4 Brookhurst, t . \ .
baths, hullt-inf!, large rcnecrl AREA CONSCIOUS?
hack yard. YOU N AJ\1 E IT. East Bluff 4 + BONUS ROOM
TARBELL
TRI LEVEL
Newpon Beach townhouse.
Try carefree living in bea u-
Wul ..surroundings. Close
let bC!ach and only steps to
private pool. 3 Bedroonts, 3
balhs 811d Ior1nal d ining
room. Priced below market
and only $31.500.,
Call 546-5880 (Open eves.)'
PARK LIKE YARD
C. I. 1em1s. Lo1v Uo11•11 Fl IA
all others. Cool in· the sum-
nl('l', nice 'n c.'Ozy in 1he
w1 ntf'r . 3 ~11 ac.:iou s
bedroo111s. gracious front
living room !overlooks a
11rctty i'l'tlined street. Patio
for cscnping:! N"ar &:hools
& .<:hopping. 84.2-2561.
TARBELL
4 CUSTOM
HOMES ON
112 ACRE
PRICED AT ONLY $21,000. 2
CuH NO\\'. Eastbluff Realty . $3~, 00
Offers !he Jincsl in 1..'0ndo-l·lug:f' 20 xZO honus roo111. Walker & Lee mi11ltu11 ri ving: Single level. ~:ha1·1n111~ 2 story rcsiden('t.'
J BR. 2 bu .. only $34.~. in excellent nbrhOOll. close' 10
l"t}:ALTOB.S
842-4'155
WORTH EVERY
PENNY
S2!'i.i50. 3 Bedl'OOJll hOnlC' has
hrrJ\vd floors. \Vllh pla ni;
incl l or lwo more unils. Do
your 01vn IJuilding at yOUt'
O\.Vrt Jeisu!'t', orr Tulilln &
15th SL, Enstsklc.
' beach! 2 balhs. hreplaC'C. ;·;~"-.,. ;~/\V-crpts, sunshine brigdht · P, (' ... itch .. profes. I n d .<: c p • (_ • t l' l grounds! 0 1\'ne>r transfer-(.,'i.S[ ~: ·.~"' -0...._~/ n.-d. 1nust :-;ell -a ll le rn1s.
I Call 847-1221. SEYJliJOUR
.• · rca ly REALT\', 17141 Bf'ach "~.
:!414 Vista Dr/ Oro
Nc\vport Beaeh
G41·l113 AN YTl ~IB
Fountain Valley
Blvd .. 1-lunr. Bclc"~==~
Fa mily Expanding?
ll<'rl''s a beautiful 5 BR ..
family rn1., 2-sty. .J\facl'O
built ho1ne. Yard for c hi!·
drf'n, flogs & lrailer. $35.250.
MORGAN REAL TY
673-6642 675-6459
Laguna Niguel ..... . ...
01VNER Anxious lo &I!. :
Hr., <'rpls, drps, frplc ..
bltns. big yrd., n c \\' 1 y
paintt'd 21512 Via Valver<la.
612-2155.
Property 6-11-J~f,,
so. u·-,-,~fo-,,-.,1-.-cs~,~L-ol~,,-. .,--1n. First Time Offered
PlerJ:<lip. ,iHR, $210.tw Cl>a!il Thvy. (:(}l'Onll del !\tar
\\'at~i· dupll'x \\ffloat $6:>,000 3 Co11ut1crrial & duplr~
3 BR., drn. Bnllxla $59,500 Ss;i.000 0\VC TD(ii71f:<;(
i\larsh:.i!I Rrnl!y 675-4600
T1-I1':: BLUFFS 4 BR <.'Ondo East 17th Street
fully ;1ir 1,;011d, niany l'ut1ton1 Costa Mesa
featurt·i::. ll e du r l' d to ln1 p1'01't•d Con1111''1'1:ial
$-lJ)':il:Xl. Oii·rtf'r, 6-l4-2499. 11.~/; Spt•ndabl(' S115,000 On.
J{<'n!ouunui·s, Bkr. flj5·Gj{)I) SI/ORES, ii Br .. 3 Ba. f:Hn
3200 ~q . It. S\vim & tenn is. * Shopping Center *
A,::rnr. 675-7215 1-llR JO SatrUJtC' storl"s in sueei·~s·
ful center. Pritf; $351.'138. J-IEL.P! Anxious 0111ncr, 2 1!J.5' ~ spenilable on do1\'n
Br., 2 ha, s111im pool, good Ptl,\'!llt.
10<". Agl'nt. 675·7225. lllR. · THE IRWIN CO.
XL.NT buy 4 BB., fan1 rm.. Rea ltors .644-61 11
lg: yQ. $30,000 firn1. 2900 tilO Ke11·po1·1 C«nl!·r DI'.
SilVC'r Ln. Batk Bay, 640·0489 Sulll' 443 Nt•11 port ~1uel1
San Juan Ca pistrano c..Ur-.'lllig!111·;1y r1untug1·, ('.1
CU1'~ AS A BUG land & blr!g~. Agtnl. 6i:J-r.!23 11.!.r:.. 1\ro Ued1oon1. 1 \~ ln11h l1un1f'
011 large t'O!'TJ{'1· 101. ~e:ir Duplexes/Units
C.:ollegr. Easy fr,,c1\·ay <1c· safe 162
ccss. Nent <is a p111.
JUST S'.?7.~,00 DUPLEX. 3 BR. 2 _Bha .. 2 hBR·
FITZPATRICK'S 1 1~ Ba. Bit-ins, rlts \1·as er.
CaJ)istrano Valll'y Realty shag eµ1s, Urps, fr ple. 3 car
31j0l Can1ino Capisrrano gar. l cnr space. \Vashe.r
hookup. Priv fent'!'d yarrls, S:in J uan Capistruno
493_1124 patio. Nr. shopping & biink.
Xlnt loc. fi.IB-2787 befor<' 9 Realtors Since 1965 A'.\\ or nf\, 9 P'.\L Principals
Santa Ana only.
BY Owner 4 BR. 3 BA, fan1 UN tTS \l'nnted. l~a\'e bu;-,·f'rs
r m, formal dining rn1, for dupJf'xes lip to lge units.
CO\'ered pa!io. Grecian pool. AJ.,:"ent tij~7:.>z.-) l lJ H.
$45,900. 557-4215. Income Property 166 ~~~~~~~~,~,~I lfi~'~) IL«~.~~.~~~~ ~~l~T~'"' Mobile Homes
Mobile Homes
For Sale 125
CONTEMPO-
GREEN RIVER
1.rcat Fan1ily P ark
:\10 NTHLY SPACE RENTAL
F.ROI\f $69.50~
A great family <"on1n1un i!y
11·i rh C.'Olnfort & h t\Ul'Y for
everyone. Loc:itcd 10 n1in.
cast of Anal1cin1 on nc1v
Ril·<"rside F\,·y. Take Gre1·n
River orr.1·an1p nd,iacent to
Gr['('n R i\'er Go!f Cou rse.
4901 CrC'cn P..iver 0 1'.
Corona ••
.San Ditg:o Frr-P1\·uy & ll11n·
ti11g:ton $hopping \Pnter.
.Spat·iott.~ th1'<'C' Bcdroon1
n11'llf'l'S Suite. has 1.!'l:lO sq
rt plus Fircpla('{', Sll2,500.
Walker & Lee
ltl<".
lil\'1•i;tn1ent fJ1v.
:J7!l0 J !arbor Bl\·d-. C.i\I.
545-71 31
-~6~U-ni.ts Eas~t~bl~u~ff-
2 BP.. .. 2 ba1h units. 2 yr!';.
old, f'ully carp. & draped.
Covered parking, Best loca-
l1on. SJ50,000.
&75-&050
Ml~lll llUllfllfN\,Cl.,IJU:.
Sl)('nrer Rt•11I Estull\ P.O.
Hux 2.'<2S, B1i:; B('ur Lake,
California.
Real Estate
Exchange 182
Investors On Th•
Move Up!
Exchange 10 uni!, prirne
East side mon('y maker. 5 • 2
Bdrms. 11·lth fit-eplact's, also
j . bn l'll. qunrtl'rS. l ncomc
o\'l'r $12,tOO fll.'r ye a r .
$8~1.:i)Q.
E.\C"ha11gr Coroua (lei ~tar
t!Uph•x, :! • ! Bdrn1. :idjacrnt
iv ~·11111plf'\(' sho p p in a
('tl\!{'I', J l1/'0llll' $330 lllOll!h,
$~:?.;J()O, Also have Sll,IOO
;:>qu i1y In £'state sized Tt-1 lot
in Kail Ull·Konn, J{a11·:iii.
JNVl::ST~I EN'I' DIVlSION
546-1600
NEED
Shal'p IJuple,., Cd:\t
&rot•
Clean 4 Br 11111-Niec a rc3.
Cash R ll\'4•r
SAND CASTLE
REAL ESTATE
1786 So. Coas1 ifv.·y
Laguna BC'ach. 494-ao25
. I YOllNG ;1ttol'nry & family '
nf'f'd 4 BR, nt N.B. $2:"r
$3fi,OOO. 20~ do1vn.
Pay111C"n1s to $Z'l5. Reliable.
G7:!-52ti4.
C A R P EN 'rER 11·a n t s
distreF:.<:erl
Pl'\lJ)('ny
6i~r-13.~L
,~· fixc.r upper
up to $25,000.
Financial
200
DISTRIBUl C\R
NEEDED
&-in busints~ fo1· yourlll!,
fJa1·1 or full linie.
NfJ SF.LLlr\G
SERVICI:; DEALERS ONLY
Erono1ny r/Of's nol &Hect
Olli' t•USJIJCSS, profit pol~n-
1 l:J I . is rxt raord1na.ry. $90
for caeh 1fuy you t1·ork is
a t'Onscl'Vii !h·o• estimate. A
S294.0 investn1ent puts you
in IJusinr~~. h1,·<'slment
i<ecured \\'ilh a ~uarantCcd
buy·back. ~HERITAGE --~ RtALTORS East side Costa .J\'lesa. Beau·
liful ~tting \vlth lov.,ering
shade lr('es, $65,000 -pricl'
includl's lhc lan<I. llun y 011 I oii0iiOii0ii0ii0iiOiiOii0ii0•I
Ow11er -5 BR, J Balhs Up
[>l:nvn-liv, din. e!cc kit., den
& ba., fam rm. & soft. nr.
PAll KSIDE -
Euclid & F:dinger
CUSTOM DOWNTOWN
Beautiful home, extra s hVP
\\'ith separate guesthouSf'.
l\Ianicured ldscpg \V ith Jots
or fruit and vege table gar-
drn. Onf'-Of·a·kind. Only
$:}1.800. Ca!I 842-4466.
1Ui9MWQ
lido Isle
Bayfront lrlpl<'x. :1 BR. :l ba.
ea. Lease land $120,000
Bay(ront 4 Bf{ + fan1 l'lll
5 ))d, Pier & slip $19i,500
LIDO REAL TY INC.
Phone ~fr. Roland OJLLECT:
21-11241-9256
$28, 900 • No Down
4 BDRM+ DEN
G. J. ter ms. 4 big bcdroo n1s,
2 baths, secluded rear living
rooiu hoasrs a handso!ne
f~placc. All e le t·tr ic
''/\ward" builli11 kitrhli'n.
clish\11asher. 2 palios. Qui(•\
1·ul-dc·Sll(' ~tTC'E'L Enjoy cool
orean b1·t·czcs. Short t•ycle
to beach, 962-1373.
TARBELL
PRICE REDUCED
3 BR., family rm., J ·~.i balhs.
Bit-in kitch.; fl'IJic. St>c!Udl'd
palio. Good Eastsi<le Costa
l\tesa locnllon, S.U.750.
Gall : 673·3663 54S--0715 Eves.
associated
BROKERS--REALTORS
?OJS W Balboa 67l•J66J
BAYFRONT
this 011e>!
Walker & Lee $23,500. Open !louse Sut-Sun 2-5
3 Bl'clrnl, I \~ BA , t'l'Pl.S, drps, 16182 :\11. UJ11·e Cir. 83!4.'iS7.
1:n1lio, :;1orage bldg, sprink--c
9
, $2400 NO DOWN
Tcrn1s ror Gl's. for !h is l·i-. F"l·IA/VA l""<n<, CLEA1'l ,J BH, ~ story honH. I ., /···• 1 ,, b II RC'allor:; ~ " ~· s 1arp ,, -"-"Uroon1, · 4 a i.
54.5-949 1 · S3G.500, By Oi\·ncr. 6~• •,; hru·lhl'ood floor hon1e ii1-FHA·VA TERMS assu1nabli' Io an . Nr. $2 00 I CarliC'!d & B r 0 0 k h u r s 1 c.·luding buill ·in l'atigf' & 5,5 . 3 8t-'{Jrn1 +family rn1, large 96 .,,,. O\'l'll 111!h an l'X lra lnrgC' I hi '25 000 • 2-2~"'1• C II 0-3··· NO DOWN TERMS • f'JU ('-car· gar. "" • . yard. n 54 :x>!l.
Nn do1vn to vets-IQ\v <lo1vn Roy Mccardle Realtor .FOR Sale By O\i·ner: 3 Br .. SHERWeeo REAL TY
rtl l other~. :; bedroon1s. 'l 1810 Ne1vport Blvd., C.flt. 21h Ba., frple, 'lrg tlcn, tncd 18.%4 Brookhurst, 1''.V.
548 7729 yrd. sprinklers fr111 & rt'ar.1-====---~~-bn ths, RC'C'lltdt'd rear living • Bl'at1f. !rtdsepd. ~ ~ 3 • ;i 0 0 , BY ll\VNJ>.:11 _ 1ransrerrcd -
roo111 overlooks th!' pal'k "'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""""'"I ·1 yl' old <'it'r• hon1r, h1r1 hlic yard. LlL'l(Urious shag Balboa Peninsula 1-96-"-...:.3'_·i_i_. -------pool , atriun1. Span tile t'1'Xlf,
t·iu·rw-tin••-Prime area. \\'/'Ilk H t ' I B h '! Br 2 Ba I" LR 1!in rn1 .. ~ " BALTJOA PrniJl~llla horn~. Un 1ng on eac · • • . .,. . . lo shop!?, park nnd a ll fan1 r n1 , garden kit., take
schools. 54CJ-J720. Quit'!. near bn:v. nice area. YOU 'VE NEVER S70CO ro1· 1ny t'qui!y -take
Call :l~S-6 169. 54.>-35-1'.:. SEEN A HOME o'pym111s 011 h11 l $3.1.150.
LIKE THIS -6~. •,;, IQan CJr trfumnee. Crdl
because the 01\'ncrs have atl-Jack 71·1: 530-6920.
295fi 1-tarbor. Costa i\1esa JJ'' 011nl'r. Brs1 in ColleKc dctl a terriUc ne1v fa mily VERY ANXl'-o~u=s~I-* SOLO * l'k. 4 Bit '.l BA. Top cond. room plus a childrens ran1i-Beaut. pool hm<'. Heavy
! IO\\'Cver. escrow didn't ~o Sf'U at apprai~al. !"t40-83iG. ly roon1 in the bedroon1 shake roof. 3 BR, 3 Ba, :::
thru, l11s loss your guin. \1·i11:;. :1 beclroon1s. lo\'ely car gar, 2100 + sq. ft. Corona del Mar h 1 I N'1>t J-lciSthts loc. Cuti· housl' I-----------nc1v s ag carpc s, c.: can <ls 1-rousC'1vife's prldc & joy.
1101v 11vaH. S2.1,2W. LU$/\ Hnri>or Vie\\'. Unusual a \\'histl(' and <'lose 10 Xl nt nhrhd. Sar. S.1!r.
TARBELL Coll ege Pa tk
BALBOA BAY PROP. J(){:. Good dl't'Qt'. J\1otiv(ltl'd schools. \Yh1tt 11101'<" conic! * Century 21 *
Ch<irming :1 Br, 2 Ba. C(lndo. * 642•7491 * !'lt'lfl'I'. Agl'nr. 67:-r.7225 fflR . !~11 n~'~l!~r 0~:~~~·~? 11~~ REAL ESTATE 842-8821
Povf. fllt'1' ·" ~!Jp -$79,500. [)on't give up 1he :-hip : ~'tlPJ::l t 2 Bl' .. v'·,o ",,.", .. .!"'°°'· fv\0-8f>5:i. $ "'UICK $ 1'EO 1-lllBJ.-:f{'J' & .'\~C. "List" il in classified, Ship J;!fl':tl llat•bor ~ A"enr SH w• D REALTY .,.
3471 Via L!d() 675.SSOO 10 Shore Results! 6112-5678 675-722J l-llR. ., . ER e ~ WE BUY HOMES I:;;;;;;;;;;:;;~=====================-~~s~i;:~; ARA~~ ""KlAsSABAIANBIA"N'~' d.~'fl A1'-( -f)"C ~C.® F1'01n your srmcious kitchen
11n \lia Lido. N.B.
673-7300
BAYFRONT VIEW
Spacious 2 BR., den. din. r>ITl.
& \1-ct bar. Entry cour1yard
\v/foun1ain. LgC". pa!io on
60 ft lot. 3 car gar. $99,500.
'
bor.oaRI) laweon 1"-aeolco.
3416 Via Lido 675-4562
Newport Beach
$28,600
Seeing is Believi ng
• , .and v.·hat you see is
NP\l'(lOrt Beach Back Bay!
.Just off Tustin in hcoul.
Ne1vpo1•! Riviera.
i\to1v sho1\1ing -l bcclroon1, 3
baihs. lerraia £'ntry\1·ay,
l}('aut. 11·/1\' rrp1g &
(lt-'r.Or:'l!or drapts, s t on c
f1rt'p!.. ACl-J /FM intercom,
<llslnl'Sbr & bltns. ALL plan-
ned con1n1unity ~'ilh a eres
of rolling green. S1\i1nn1inR"
pool. pull ing grren, loads of
animities. To!al payment of \:)~ J.'"tJ .\..'t). (,,& IJ(J• ;J you t•nn enjoy the lovely
'The PUtzfe with the Bui/f .. fn Chuckfe ~:'d?~gbl:'~~!11! ~~e~:1~~-· REAL EST AT E $263 per mo. includes all.
O ~torronge Sellers cf tho --..,_,.'11'-...._ ~-... four ~romhled words be-"' ,
low ·10 form four 5imple words.
SAc, ~V~t~:~r.~.,-.~11~0-r~,~.,-,-,~, ~R~ro-,-.,-,,· I 3 Bedroon1, t1ro-.<:lory-from
<'d $1500. 3 BR. Prestige S2S,250. F\11/01v Irvine Norr h
Trac·!. Jge t'ncl. putio. Ne\v to Santa Isabel A\'e .. fol!o1\'
.<:igTts to modC>l or cnll shai.t 1 ·pt.~. 846-::.·,z.1. ~--540-5147. Vi l.LACE REAL 6 Bdrm Exec Home Estate f'XClusivr saJes agent.
Real Est.tie,
General
Acreage for sale
--.
150
The Real Estaters
Investment Division
AP A RT i\1EN 1' HOUSE
SPF,CJA LIST
7 Vie•11 lo1s. A1'Ch Bcuch lUs.
6210 ~-1-"airfa,;, L.A. 900:i6.
213/29~9361 .
Mobile Home/
Trailer Parks 172
1st TD Loans
6%% INTEREST
2nd TD Loans I GENID A 1 I I F I I· l
4 Bedrn1, 211l Baths. Ir~ fam-
ily rn1 11·/pool 111/JI(' & lil'f'·
plal'C-. \Vatking <ll~l;u11•p to
st'hQOll!, ~hoppi ng & ()('ll1'h
Call 1101v lei see Jhis ~pollt'),s
hon1c. \\'A \'NE f'ONC, t'l'l'~.
962-SJl!t
'! t!Pns , N1· O('t'an & Counlry
<"Jul., S46.::00 84G-G.171 TWO ON A LOT
LAHGE' & 4 13r, FHA ""· GI NO DOWN
J u~! lislNJ. Ii .unir.~. 2
brd1'00111s ca.ch, S 6 7 , 5 0 0 .
$10,000 d0\1111 gross i11co1nc
$1.!120. Should S('ll fasl. Buy
110\\' & !lave on 1972 !nxr!I.
INVEST~'I ENT DIVISIO:-J
U')1vcst tales Oransrl" <:o. DESERT CREST "WE BUY TO 'S"
" ... I, -t-j~. Y._t..,.11--ll t $. I I
11--i-r-'Urrl'
1
""ji'-I .:jr-ij ·" Girl' who ke ep engling •re
-olten left -• '"I ....,.N..,E:-=:-E -o-A,..-o -,I ' 3-u ~--r1.:..:T.Ji,:.,::1,:..:.1;.,.:.,J"'•-' C) Complefe ffie chot~r,. qvo1td I by ldhno lr1 tf!e ,,,l»ino WOL"d
-you dev11!op from $f~ No. 3 below.
$ PRINT NUMBEREO !ETTERS IN SOUA~fS
""' uNSC••MllU m ms I · V fOJr ANS\.YlR • 1111111 1
SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION BOO
• •
KASABIAN S:!OO dn. 968-8273
Real Estate 847-9604 1''. 1':. ()Iron Inc. RJtrs. Better ~t't' !hiii r:i~ \'a lue 1::::..~:,::,.,..,::,;;~::1 ;;::---.,;,.c___:;_;_'--'--J 1oony! :i bcdroo1n plus l I• Irvine bedroom home (Ill R-l 101. BUY LIKE RENT 3 bedroom now V3'anl tmd
Country slyle, i;:hnrp 3 nn Fa mily Growing? ready for immedlali' ex--
beauty w/2 btllhl'I, feahlrt:S \Vr hal'c an hnnui.culntf' 5 1.·upnnf'y. 1 bcdroont n>nlNI
IU\\1 01ID.nt ynrd, ni<'t'l.Y <'.rpl'I 8R.. faniily rni. hun1e t'ln al S120 per mOlt lh. Keep as
& dl'pd, tucktd In A lx:aut quif'l 1.111 elf' l!<tC' it!TN;!. Ne\\-rental or ui.'t' n~ ~lOU1t'r·in
park.Ukc a rea, ju~t n'lnult'S ly paintrd. move.in t'Undi-l~\v, houS<'. Only $2'1,000.
to San Oit"go Fr.vy. SM.000. tion. Prit'Cd al ontv $'1l,5()(1. \\011 t br :iround long. if· :··~:g .~~;;'.•I· . i) red hill w~~~~~0~ 9 ~~e
t•.2-4471 ':-.::.) 546·110J RL\LTI" 1 ~tUST SELL my be11uttru1
Univ. Pnrk C~nt('I', lrvinf' t.plil l~l hon1t n r
O\VNER-Spc>ci11) ~ Dr. frtrn Carl Anyt\1t1ro, 833.ostO Baycrcs!. Jl200 !i:q fl , .4 1;
nu. Xln'I ru'C'a , .\1any xtraJ>. I"'""'""""""'"""".,..,._,.. br, 3 bft -vle\1' on ft't lnml.
Aasun1ablt 6'r. loon. S3'i,COO. ~suits are Juirt a 'P~ Jugt reduced $.\000 10
~943. call av.•ay • 64.2-5618 $S4.500. Own~r 5'1.S..2514.
' .
1546-16001
Costa Mesa
I:: unils on E11sl sldr.
546-3:U.'i 5.~7-1 34G
Cemetery
Lots/Crypts 156
2 CEMETER'\' lots. lh1.rbor
Re~ Memorial, CO$fQ l\It!l.'i.
$.100. lor txtlh, about ,l
pril'e. C11ll f114l 3(.6..29-:13
l\tay 5Ce at Cl'mcrtiry lJTidi-r
nan1e or C1u1'tl!I & D.11'0th,v
1~1<"
Sell ltllc J1cn1s
642...:iGiS No\\1!
now: Call
Ovo11 ~·fJUr 0\\'11 JOI
GoJr. CLUBllOUSe;, Natura,~IJ.-...:~l':'r Mtq. Co.
l-fot Pools, $3,99'l to S7290 I 546-0611
f~ree Brochuros Sc · 1-1 bo 21 EOLR IOGE REALTY CO. rving ar t a rea yrs,
P. O. Box 600-0
Dc.~<·r! l·lot ~prlngN, Calif,
(714i 329-644·l
30' SP,\CE for 11.ge over :).l
yrr; 11'/h-O childl'C'n or f>Clb.
6-16-8-J&I.
Mountain, De sert,
Resort 174
t'RESJJ AfR-NO TRAFFIC
Goon USllbl•· VIE\V proptr ty.
8 ac. (Inly $SOOO total. Nr.
fishi~. bootlnic, can1plni.
<'l e. /j min. fron1 Oranizc
('<lun!y. Bkr. ('~4..4A70.
Stll UJe old 11tiift Buy lM
new .1otuU
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED ADS
p
c
r
I
' • c
ev
La
Ll
N•
IV
•• vi
!2
N
673
2
0
"' cp
4
LI
• d'
pa
67,
Ho
2B
1175 w.
" BR
Re
RE
$2'0
grt
$:1 sha
Ru
* 2 do.
CAL
54&-
VE R
1vhh
for$
ON L
IU <>
"r
J)riV ...
mo.
gard
3 B r .
Cos!
3 Br,
Pool
$2:11.
Lare
$145.
Roni
FO
c
• 'lllur!d&Y. Mtr<h 23. 1972 DAIL V PILOT 3f
f~ I ---l~I _,.,_ I~ ~I ... _" ..... _ .... __, ... l~ l ._._.,., .... lftl ( lips tnw11s 1'r ~
Money to Loan 240 Houses Unfurn. )05 House s Unfurn. -I;-"::-1\;;l~b:"'.u_y_you_r"'l,.nd"'°'r"o"', -Co1t1 M;s.·-----Irvine
lmmedlale eash, private
party. 6+f-'IB97 alt 6.
305 AptL F urn1
G1ner•I
360 Apts. F urn.
Huntlntlon llHch
360 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unlurn. 365 Huntington IHdt Apt. Unlum. J65
Co1t11 Met• Ce1t• Mes11 SEA AIR APTS • $130 S.nt• Ano
Mort91ge1,
Trust Deeds 260
INVESf .W.COl :\0\\
Collec-1 S83J.33 per month !or
36 monltls and retain
balance of Sl00.000 on du'-
date. Good ~uity. Call
Broker, 642-7171.
SEAS. 2nd bi.J.1t dttd disc. tn
yield ovtr ~<'I,, pa . to
maturity. Pri. pt)'. 67~3345.
HouM1 Furnl1hR 300
Ge neral
$?5 1 BR mobile hme
$100. l SR, 1t:nd pl!I OK
Sl25 11\flS ufll pd N.B.
Sl50 utl pd wlk/bch Lag Sch
S135 2 BR sngl11 or;:
Bach pads start $80.
R1nt·A·Hou1e 979·'430
Balboa Peninsula
PENINSULA Point. Hi blk to
Ocean & Bay. 3 BR. 2~ Bp.
Yrly. $275, Avail, April Ut. m-m-51'8.
Corona del Mar
OIAR.MJNG 2 Br, 2 &.
Capt! Cod Cotta.gt. Just
remode.Jtd. New kitcMn &
applns. sliding door operu; 10
1eeludf'd patio, ~ern housP'
& garden. Steps ro I..ittle
Corona Bt11ch & shopping.
$400 mo. Days 67>-1424,
eve1 644-2333.
LAGUNA HILLS
New 2 BR , 11,J Bath duplex.
\\'ell furn . Air cond. Double
gara1e. Lr& patio. Beautiful
view~ Short tf'nn lease avail
$250.
NU-V IEW RENTALS
673-4030 or 494·32411
2 STORY gllls!l tront vit'W
home. Balcony in hv. rm
over din. area. 3 BR, 2 BA,
bfosm clng, lrplc, ~·et ba.r,
cpl•. drp.s, bltnll, S350. mo.
494-5200 or 646-7si;2.
l ido Isle
4 Bdrm, 4 Bath home,
din-den, livin& room. 11.iry
patio. .Strffl to street.
67:>-2908~ ..
Houses Unfurn. 305
General
SlOO pvt cot!, tot OK
S115 pvt hme, kids /J)f!ts OK
$77.50 2 BR hme wtgar
SlOO country 11et 2 BR hme
Sl.25 2 BR alone on Jot
$145 2 BR kids/Pf!IS, C.M.
Sl50 2 BR everythinJ, C.P..f.
$160 11udent1 OK 2 BR hse
2 BR 2 BA hmt, kids1pe11
Da Pt.
2 BR. frp\. a:ar CdJl.f
$175 3 BR 2 BA Hunt Sch
WI! have 10 horse ranches
start $150 w/acreage w/2·7
BR's.
Ront-A·Hom• 979-1430
RENT or LEASE option sm · 3 Bedroom • 2 bath •
grten shag carpeting •
ftt1hly painted.
-ALSO -
$240 • CoUeie Park -Gold
shag ca~ring • nice oond.
CENTURY 21
Roal Estate 546-9521
LANDLORDS!
We Speclali!e In Newport
Beach • Coron1L de! Mar •
Laguna e k Dana Point.
Our ~ntal Service is FREE
to You!
NU-VIEW RENTALS
673-4030 (If 4S4-3248
+ SHARP, sharp 1600 t;q. f!.,
3 + f3miJy, r..1es11. Vffde
Highlands. avA.il 4/1 -$275.
-ALSO-
• 2 ~rm. comp!. furn. con-
do. S185.
CALL Stan r.1eyer, Agt :
~588:1 or 54~1366.
VERY Cl.EAN 4 BR home
\vith bltin.11 & lrir fenl":d yd
for 1265 Jl('r mn. F M lILTES
ONl.V. C11l111genl 546-4141.
Coron• del M•r
}"'OR Lf!aR -Irvine Terraet!'.
Beaut. 3 BR, din. rm., 2
baths, 30" liVing rm., com-
pletely returbis:hf!d w/MW
paint, wallpaper, drapes,
s unny y ellow ~hag
carpeting. complf!lf.ly
prtv1te pool, nutiid~ dff.JS-
i11& rm. k 1howtr. $495 pe.r
mo. include~ pool !-trvict! 1-
gardener. 673--5513 fnr appl.
3 Br .. 2 BA home" w/lrg ,;ar
washer/dryer/free:tl'r op-
tional. New crpls &: rlrp•.
Old Cd1.f, 3\, blks from
beach. Sl25 gardeMr tncl.
6T>-S.l.\1.
JUST remodeled 2 Sr .. 2 88 ..
frrlle., clolf! to o cf! a n .
A®l!s. $290. 317 Larkspur
61J..3315.
C0tt• Muo
3 Br, 2 Ba MontJullo Condo.
Poe!. v.1r IOfttntr. dshwbr,
$220. 546-1765. 557-:!039.
t..arte, vacant 2 BR-. pt.
S1'5. f'meed. lcldl/Pftl.
R1nt·A·Hou H 979-1430
DAILY PILOf
FOR ACTION .••
CA LL 642-5678
fOR RENT OR L£ASE:
3 BR 2 BA condo. S175.
3 BR 2 BA home sm . 4
BR 3 BA, pool S365. 2 BR
2 BA Apt S160. \\'e hll\'e
thtrs, no ltt: eau
542'4 IO~n tve1J
SOUTH COAST REA.I,.
TORS
DESIRABLE
HOt-.1E
2 Br. 2 ba, cptd, drpg, forced
t1ir het1t. G!IJ"b.d111p, blt-~n1,
frplc, pat1n, 111.raae. v.•a1er
turn. Adults only, no ()f'ts.
RATE REASONABLE
Across from Country CJuh
275 Me111 Dr. * Ph. 548-6106
3 BR 2 BA, sharp, bulltins.
Vacant ... , , •. , , • $210/Mo.
4 BR 2 BA, 1amlly, plush.
Vacant ....• , , , , , • $275/Mo,
4 BR 3 BA, near new. immac.
Pool .. , :. , ...•.••. $365/Mo.
Call 54S.M2• (0Pf'n eves.)
SOUTH ('OAST REALTORS.
e Darling Dump -2 Br.
tned )Td, nr I.hops, $120.
ALA Re n ta ls e 645-3900
•Need ~1ore Room! 3 Br, 2
Ba . c pl/drps, kitls. $155.
A LA R1nt1l1 e 645-3900
2 BDRM. • $125 MO.
tn be rented as 11 -unfurn-
ished duplex. Kids OK, En -
closed s.inrle garage.
642·2221 Anytime 646-9666
2 BR Broadway St., 2 Cllr
gar, blr-ins, tile kit-bath.
crpf'd, 12xl2 kit-11dults
(q1uetJ no pet,, $175. 1st &
Wt, cleaning. 67:\-5882 aft 6
2 Br, cpls, drp1, g.irage,
fenced yd, tl'f!f!s, quiet.
Adult couple. No pet.I, $155.
54s-s25l: 548-1405.
RENT or lease, 3091 Murray
Ln., C.~f. 3 BR&. Fam. rm.
S250. 8 33-1103, eves,
546-975-4.
$195 -2 BR, 1 BA . fncd yd,
crpt/drp. lnclds lawn cut-
ting :nn Run.I Pl. 6T,,.....f(J92
a.ti 5.
• Rough It! 2 Br, 1tv/rdrig,
all util inc. $120.
ALA Rontols e 645-3900
e E·Z Does It! 2 Br, fncd
yrd. encl gar. k1ds/ptt, S145.
ALA Rentals • 645-3900
MESA de! Mar temporary
~nta.! 4 BR hM'. Avail thru
June JO. S280 mo .. 546-4268.
Z Br house, bltn oven &
range. crptldrps. $185 mo.
Ca.II 961Hi216.
e Ntu Beach! l Br. tum.
Sml pet ok. Util inc S16.~.
ALA Rontols e 645-3900
e Ocean View -2 Br. 2 Ba.
cpt/drp, lml pel, util pd
S175.
ALA Rontols e 645-3900
Fount•ln V•ll•y
+ 4 Bdrmll, 2 Baths, new
crpts, huge yard, boatdoor.
SZ50. • Call 847-0318.
Huntlni:rton Be•ch
NO FEE
''RENT \VHTLE YOU BUY"
Thill lovely 3 BR 2 Ba home,
fencPd yard, dbl gar and
many, many xtras. Vacant!
S225. per month.
Roberts I. Co. 962-5511
Th1.~1.ACULA TE ex. lrg. 3
BR. 2 BA duplex, crpt1,
drps, bltns. lrg. love'ly
private yard. Gar + encl
huge prk'g. $195. Resp.
married couple. (Adults ).
842-3Tl6.
•\VE ha~ a tarie 31!leclion
of 3 and 4 bedroom homes
that ca.n be mo\'f!d into
almost Immediately on cur
Rent-Option plan.
SHERWOOD RE A LTY,
5411-1555
3 BR. 2 Bath + Den or Of·
tict. Bil-ins. Xlnl location.
$230/mo. AllO have vaca-
tion cnttage on CclO!'lldo
Rivf!r, 170 \\'k. Call 963-6187.
NR bch. 3 BR. 2 BA, Bll:n!I,
Crpts, Drps, Cov pat., Lov .
yard. S250, 952-5121 ,
962-2194.
NO FEE: 4 Bdrm • SZf(): 4
Bdrm . SJOO: 3 Bdrm -S235:
KATELLA 847~1
SingJe1 or families OK. 3 BR.
everything, oc bret':r:e.
Ronl·A-HouH 979-1430
FOR ~nt : Hause with 3 Br,
2 BA l Pool. $235,
846..4739
3 BR, l~ ba. l&.x28 encl
pA tio. Avail April 15. SU)
mo. CAii 962-1274,
$135 -2 BR. D\lpll"X fenced
child pet ck. New painl.
]8754 Beach Blvd 644-8392
I rvine
2 BR. 2 bath, den •••••• S.100
3 BR. 2 8ath, atrtum •• S.335
3 BR. 21,, ba., tam. rm. 1325
4 SR., 2!.t ba., fam. rm. S350
" BR. 2~.ba., ltm. rm. $390
.. , , I 'I 1 111 I I'll if .
. · 11 I -•. -11·11 l11r
""SINCE l!M!"
ht Western Sank Blde
Un!vtn:ity Park. Irvine
Days .552-7000 Nights
A aoocl ••ant ad ii a aood
1Jn•e1tJnent
3 BR. 2 ha. flm. rm ... $340
l BR. 2 ba. N'pt ••• $37:,/400
4 BR. 2 ~. N'pt. •••••. StlS
2 BR. 2 ba ......... sm1!00
4 BR. 21; both< •.•• lllS/375
3 BR. 2 ba. home •••••• S300
3 BR. 'tll AIJ.l.·furn .••• S400
ired hill
REALTY
UrUv. Park Center. lrvln•
Cal l Anytime, 833-0820
LOVELY Uni\'enity Park
Tov.'nhou~. 3 BR , 21.j BA,
fonn din rm., atrium: frJll .,
)Tly lea~. r-.1ust Atfl to a~
pret". Days ~3 3-7200,
Eve1/wknd1. 333-9254.
L1gun1 8e1ch
Top of the World
3 + Family mom, 1tove, re·
frig, carpets. drapes, deck
v.·/beautiful "Edge of Moun·
tain view"! Ll'g liv rm w/
lrple. sm.
NU-V I EW RENTALS
673-4030 or 494·3248
e Quiet Retreat -Bach nr
bt&eh, all util inc S85.
ALA Ront1ls e 645-3900
e Cheerful ~ 2 Br. nr beach,
cpl 1drp, util pd. Sl&:;.
ALA Rentals e 6.U-3900
1 BR. HOUSE
South Lagun&. Stove, retrig,
carpefs, drapes, yard, ~n·
closed patio, child/pet. Ae-
ctss to private beach. S20!l.
NU-VIEW RENTALS
673·4030 or 494.·3248
WOODS COVE
Studio Apt w 'stove, rtfrir ,
carpets, drapes & private
patin, Own steps to beach.
$155 all ut ilities pa.id.
NU-VIEW RENTALS
673·4030 or 494·3248
L1gun1 Hills -----NEW World. 3 br, condo. vu.
all ele-c, A/C, dbl gar,
patio, pool, S 260 /cpt.
8.37..4526
Me111 Verde
SHARP 4 BR, 2 BA home.
Great loc. cls to 1ch11. A
bargain at $275 mo. Water
incl. Avail aft Apr. 15.
,.,.3058,
Newport Be•ch
2 JR, 11/z BATH
Studio fcurplex, all electric
bulll·in1, carpets, drllpel,
garqe, patio & balcony.
Small pet ok. S190.
NU-VIEW RENTALS
6n-4030 or 494-3248
4 BR. fam rm. Jg yrd.
SJOO/mn. Refs ttq'd. 2900
Silver Ln. 640-0(89.
N1wpert Height•
NEWLY de<: 2 BR w/sundk,
fruit trees. cpl.I. drps. $200.
33ll5 Clay. 548-7892.
S.nt• An• Heights
2 BR Frple. FencM yard,
$175 month. Avail. now. Call
642-4239 aft 6.
NEW Luxurious 4 Br, 3 Ba,
26:10 sq tt. tri-level,
eathedral ceiling, wet bat,
cpts. drps. S315. (Prf'1tige
College Park) 213/4J0..5667
aft 6 p.m.
Univertity P•rk
3 BR. Village tit, crptl,
drp11, 2 patio!!, bltN. $3.10.
avail April 15: 213/355-7949.
Houses Fum. or
Unfurn. 310
811lboa P..-ilnsul•
BAYFRONT. Choice 5 BR. 4
BA. pier k float Summer
()r yearly. Furn. or Unfurn.
Owner. 673-2039.
Condominiums
Unfur n. 320
Cos ta Mes•
3 BR. 2 Ba, cpts, drp11,
blt-INI, dshwhr, 2 pool1, db.
house, s235. 546-Jno.
LEASE • Condominium beach
apt. 1600 sq. tt. 2 lrg. BR'1,
lrg liv rm. &: din atta, 2 lrt
bl.thnn's, full y crpt (new
shag) washf:rldryt'r & rttnc. 35."2S pt.tic. On thf.
ocean. Write r r an c I 1
C&rama.grio. 9580 Garden
Grove BJvd., Gm:len Gl"O'le,
Ca or call 534-4131.
Townhouse Unfur n. 215
Cost• Mete
2 BDRM all eJec. d1bwhr.,
refrig, prl. wuher ~ drytr.
cpt1. drpe, pri patio. Adults.
nc ~''· £vt1, ~l.
Huntington lle•dt
3 BR, 2 BA, frple, all bltl\1,
pxil & ree facil. $1.!IO.
96:z...tl67 evt: 553-157S d•Y·
Duplexes Unfur n . UO
Gen1r1l --------2 BR. 1 BA. Lowu unlta:.
Balboa, BldN, drps. my.r.
Cu. 1 w/frplc. Yr I y.
675-0496.
Coat• Mls11
2 BR, 1 i,i BA, ru. Sharp,
nice shac. S\.90./per m~
PHONE 642-2911
1
Bold New Concept
FURNITURE RENTAL
• Month to Month * 100" Purchase Option * Wlde Seltctso~
Style-CGl.or&
+ 24 Hour Dell''UY
511 W. 19th, CM 548·3'81
2T;i6 N. Main, SA 547·0314
---------
B•lboo lsl•nd
WATERFRONT 1 Br JT()und
floor, priv patio, ·parkinf.
Jnq : 400 s. Bayfr()nt, apr. 5.
La Quinta Hermosa
Sp&nlsh COu.ntry Estate Llv·
lna: Ir Spa.c.10U1 Apt•. Ter-
raced pool; sunkl"n au BBQ.
Unbt'liev11ble Living -Only
l llr uni $1511-fur• $175
2 Br uni $175-furn $210
3 llR S tudio -furn $275
t 4 blk& S. ()f San Dieao FNy
M Beach. 1 hlk W, on Holt
ta 16211 Park1idf' Lane.)
ITI4) 847·5441
1/z Ilk. o~ean
8 8l'h apt. Compl furn. Incld 'c
colcr TV. fuU kitchen & bl.th .
Lrr enough f()r couple v.·/
ehild. S130 in<'l utll,
NU-VI EW RENTALS
S73·4030 nr 494·324A
Bolboo Ponlnsul• , Ideal for Student
----------Private room k bath in tarse • S25 \VK &: UP-On Octan • home. all privil, ineluding
Lowly Baeh-1 Br-Rooms kitchen, laundry & phone.
Maid RrYlce-Pool-UW pd Xlnt location. SSO util paid.
e Call 67>-1740 • NU-VIEW RENTALS
• • 2 BR. Duple.". Furnish-673·4030 or 49+3248
ed. Near beaeh! Washer STIJOJO turn. SSl.50.
ava.U. $2('.(l. 613-3711>. Establi1.hed, salAried older
Coron• dtl M11r man. Nn pets. 494-8170.
Lido Isle ruRN . Bacbe.lor $110 incl
util. April L Male only. Ne
cookin&". no petJ. 61~737.
Co1t11 Met•
IJDO Norrl bayfront, Studio
apartment. SuJ)..Jet, $200.
month. 675-4922.
N•wPort h•ch
3 BR, cne block from beach,
NEW NEW ' NEW
VILLA RIVIERA
i..,. 2 BR. Cr><•. dr!'I. blou.1------E-N---1
I bl.le N. of Adams oll Beach ff ID D
Blvd. 729·•6 Ut1c1.
$J6.2196 or 336-1070 VILLAGE
WALK TO BEACH
J\JST FINISll£D HARBOR GRE£~S Br•nd new 1-2·3 BR Cpt., HOME-LIKE L IV IN G
F •mlli11 W tlcomel driu:. bltni. frril r, 12516th k No H1ll•-No Stalra 308 16th. 84'7·3..!\\1. ...
(1 0 2 B R, 2 FULL BA) 2 0 _, ~IOVE 1,. TODA\. 2'BDRM -2 ~ATII e Special t"•binel space ~room o r FR.01'.I $U!t
• Loc"k eara1e1 "''Iii itor F rom $139. l\1ds v.·eJromeo Cirpel• .t Drapes e Sm ctll e Lndry & Pa1!01 1 Bedroom l Oen 2 Br. ·.u xtru. pool. Air Cont1i1\ontd a O/Vl·Ditposal e Drape1 84i-M69 er 968-75lO En<:IOSftd pa.hos
e Dttp 2 color Ahli rp11 l lJt Ba or 1 Full B1ths '** f2l Nt'w 2 Br apts HEATED POOL e Special soundproofing Crpts, drps. bltn~. :'\f'3J' t"ol't'erl Alr Heal
• Nr. San Diei<> Frw. Har-].laster sb f' bertrooms v.·,b !Ch Brach! 84 7-lln a.ftr rnoons, Carporl & Stol'AJ e
borBlvd &schools bean1 eelllng1, larae llvln1 Irvine FAMILIESWELCOMEI
GAS Heat, Gas Coaklng room v.·lgas or \\'oocl bumina 2500 South Salt•
and \\'ATER-AU pAid. t1rt"plaee. Con\'et\lf'nt !aun· (rnlt'r 2 blks \V. of Briatol,
Month t o Month $1 IO dry •rl!a otf kitehtn. En· PARK WEST oU \\'A.rnt"r on Uoda Way,
621 H•mllton, C M elo.sed patios. 2 ~1·lmmlna APARTME NTS IOuth lo \V_ CentrllH
See MaT-1\lr. &-l\lrs. Hoban pools, 51.una. recreation 1 Bdrm. From $16(1 Santa An• e 546-1525 u•2Q62 facll.ities, __.. 2 Bdrm., 2 B•. South Laguna
ti!ODELS OPE~ From $195 DELUXE 3833 Park\iew Llne • BEACH LIVING AT ITS
APARTMENTS 54.0370 Irvine. /Just oH BEST ..•. Lease 2 BR, 2 ~ RA . olev. to hcarh. Adults. San Dit'go F\\y at Culver Rd) Air Conrl • Frplc's .,,. 3 Swim· 110 pets. From SJS(l. 31Th5
mlng Pool1 • Health Spa · ~--~------1 Cea.st H\\~· .. South Lquna
Tennis C1s • Game &: Bil· L11 gun• Be•ch * *' 499-2835.
]Jard Room. I ~!!!!!!~"!"'~!"''!"'!!!!!!!' --"--------1----------I
1 BEDROOM ON THURSDAY COASTLINE''""'· modfrn 2 A ts
FROM Sl6S BR . 2 BA . bltlns, derk, 1 blk PF '' U f 370 beach k shops. AdltJ, no urn . or n urn.
MEDITERR ANEA N the!'@·, time to enjoy Y>ur pe!A. s201. -i!M-3034 . Costa Mes•
VILLAGE picturebook kitchen .•. cne * NE\V, 2 &.. .'\ BR, ocnnl,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;; of the many luxury features I bl 122 I' "'M Harbor Blvd., C.'L I V d w ., ~k to beach. 5 & ............ l~ o your en ome apartment. "" ""~9 ~ "" ,,,.~
In'l "7 ••M LI . 2 up. "'1'r''.iv ...... "'1'1-"""'"· , .,., ~.ru ve 1n a '11rden v.•it h
RENTAL OFFICE bedrooms. 2 baths, plus &
OPEN 10 AM TO 6 PM handy l!Xtra room for TV,
sewlng or Grandma.
THE VE NOO ME
1845 Anahf'im Avenue
*NEW*
tt NEW tt
LA COSTA APTS. LAGUNA NIGUEL
A p1rtment1
CaU About Our New 6 ~to. l & 2 Bed room
CaU 642-2824, ?-.lrs. Phillips Casa del Oro
ALL UTILITIES PAID
Cmnpare before you rent •
Custom designed, futurinr: e Spa.cloua kitchen with in-
av&il April .lst. S325 mo. SPAC. 2 & 3 BR . apt. Sl40
835--0lDl dy, 675-5364 eve. 2 BR , 2 BA APTS ur. Pool, t"pt/drps, bllns.
VILLA NINOS Lea~e Pro,i1·11m AvaUa hle e Btl!Jt-in!I e Shq carpets
No1t.', l BR Sl54. 2 BR. 1 Ba e DrApel • \.\'alk ln closeta
Sl87. 2 BR, 2 Ba. $196 per e Swimming Pool
MOBfi.E Heme -Balboa Bay Super-Com1ortable-Qulel kids ok.
- 2 BR furn .• util pd. Sint:les Near Newport Back Bay. n:>6 College No. ~ 642-7035
or cpl. only. No pets. $220. Gas &: Wattr Pa.id. ti.lo. to 1996 ~1aple No. 1 642-3813 direct llahtirc
• Sep&rate din'r aru
• Hom~like storqe e Private patios
mo. yr, round. 673-2792. Mo. From $185. 3 BR-3 BA $335
FURNISHED trailer, 27x8'. Childrtn Welcome. On Bluffs. Great Vie1t.'. Frplc.
• Ooud ruaa:e w/atora1e
• Full I~ marble puU-
man
Adult park. $95/mo. Gas & I '23""2'':J:E~ld!!""j"jA~v~•;'jl•""64>40:::'""1"2 l,.'.Poo~l~. ~2~P~·~'-''_~_A_v•_il_A~p-r>I wtr pd. 548--0'73Z all 4pm. 15. se.1260. * LARGE * 2 S•n Clemente NEWLY DECORATED 1 &. ~room apt. Cp0;,
• Kina-a Bdrm•
• Pool • Ba.rbeque, -IW'-
rounded with plwh la.nd·
scaplna
drps. d1h11o·iihr., wtr pd,
• $130. MO. OCEAN VIEW * Beautiful Grounds S~S150. No chi!dren/~11_
3 rms., 1 BO, BA. lh. car 10 Minutes to Ocean 37R Avoc.aOO No. 7. 64Z-519i.
parking, nr Linda Lane, Clo11e to bus line & 1tore1
492-1209. G111 Heat & Stove. Wattr. QUIET 2 BR uppt'l'. Mesa
Garage. Rec. Rm. Laundry Verde, beaut. sha,g crpt, .Adult livinc a t Hs best
Large 1 BR $175
UTILITIES FREE Apt. Unfurn. 365 Room included. drp!. bltns. gar. S 1 ~o.
G1n1r11I I BR. S140 545-0760. 365 W. Wilson M2-19'71 2 BR. S160. Sl6.5. Sl75 l··,-•,..B'°EA=u'-'T"IF'°U'°'L-J,-,&""'2'°B=R=.
LOW WEEKLY
RATES FAMILY u:. 3 br, 2~ ba. nr. H•ciend11 de Mes• Contemporary Garden Apl11.
20IO Newport Blvd.
cx;c. C,uport + 11lor. 160 \V.\Vilr.on.Aptl ,C~f P11t l os .f rplc ,pool.
~.~~ •. no pets St 9n. HACIENDA $1SS.Sl70. Call 546-516.l
Co1111 Mes•
642-2611
STUDIOS I. l llR'S.
......,.....~ HARBOR +• 2 BR. Clean. Enc:lo1ed
B•ck B•Y 241 AVOCADO STREET yard. 1 child ok. No pet&.
AVAILABLE e Full kitchen
Adult!! only • No Pets Sl.50/mo. M6-L397.
XLNT location, 2 BR. 2 BA. 2 Bdnns. Avail * \VILSON GARDENS '*
Frplc, Lrg aundeck, Great Deluxe l & 2 BR. Pool 2 BR, 11-" BA. crpt/drps., • Heated pool e Laundry facilities vil!'W. Htd pool, Gai &: wtr Garate. Di1hwRhr . Paid util. encl patio. $140. 642-6811.
paid. S200 mo. 548--4845. FROM $150. 646-12.04 B • Free utilities.
• Fttt lil'lenr B.I•--Ponl nsulo C 1 11 ...,. 1 R. Stove, Ref r i c., -o dv.•e · .ca.nker k Co. Dishwasher, Crpt1, Drp1.
• T.V. A maid serv. ava.ll. e Phone servic• * $30 WK. I. UP* e studki & 1 BR Apts e Room $lS WK ii: Up. e 'IV &: M.\id SuviC4! A vaD e Phone Service:. Utll Pd
• All msJor -· ea:Us 2371 Newport Blvd. MS-9755
Thit Ad Worth $5 ()ft :Rent
Children A: Pet Section
Unbollovobly lleoutlful
VAL O' lSERE Garden Apia.
Adults -no pet&. Flowen
everywhere. Strtam ~
Waterfall, 45' ))001 Rec. Rm ,
Sauna, Sgil 1-2 Bdrm, Furn-
Unfurn. from S138. SEE IT:
2000 Parsons, 64US10.
By Monlh, week or year. 1
BR. will sleep six. Nr.
B e a ch I Ocean, ahoppg.
67>5810.
Coron• clel M11r
·e•~ '1Ll~!!'
ON TEN ACll!:S
1 A 2 BR. Funo. A Unluro.
Theplaees / priv. patlol.
Pools Tennls Contnt1 Bk11t.
91\\) S.. Lano. CdM "4-:ISll
(MacArthur nr Coatt H"7)
LRG. 1 Br., apt., unturn Charming 2 Br., crpt/drps,
Sl.25, furn $13.J. Adult!. r~ & refrlc. Located on
Lndry. Gu. Quiet. Nr. ~an side nt hwy. Lra:
mrkts. 1922 \\lallact, Ne. B. patio, Heated awimmina:
C.M. ~8-6518. No pell!. pool &: ca.rpot. All util in-
HOLIDAY PLAZA clud«t tt S250 "'' m<i.
DELUXE Spacious 1 BR. 642-8400.
tum apt. $135. Heated pool. CHANNEL REEF
Ample parkinJ:. Adults -no Unfurn apt for leue wate r-
petR. 1965 Pomnna Ave. CM front, 2 Br, 2 Ba, boa.I 1lip
LRG t BR, completely fwi1 avail. No pet.a er children.
w/bJtn!. Dlhwsr, Disposal, 1500 mo. ~73-5170, eve5
$1.10. 642-7913 alt 6 or 673·8509•
wknd1. *** Large 2 Br duple:r,
t BR $125 .\ $130. Pool, ter· private patio, earage I:
race, idnl for bachelor, no separaff! gue&t f'()()m w/
child/pell: 1993 Church st. bath. S235/mc. cau eves,
673-3687 . 548-9633. * WINTER RATES * LRG. 2 BR duplex. Frpl.
Attrac turn Studios Sill. l priv. deck. New carpet,
BR, ~., Ad··•i. •• paint & drapes. S250 per mo. I ,........,, Ill • l'lO pe .... ~••Eld M A I 6 Ag:1 . 673-6~10 , eves, ......,.. en. If· p . . 673-6778.
Furn. B•chelor & 1 I r 's. -:-""=";:--...,--:--=-:--
especl•lly n lct. 21 10 l BR., below Highway.
Bl d CM beamed et:ilinga, Ir p I c . Newport Y ,, • NEW paint, crptl. drp1. Sun
SHADY EL.i.'1S LAWN POOL porch, 1ar. adults. $27l.
Unturn. & Furn. 1 k 2 Br. 642-6.\11.
S140 Up. Children's Sect. WATCH the aunset in thi1
177 E . 22nd St. • 642~364.5 executive 3 bdrm. Ocean
S75 UP • 1 Br. Tl'•llers. Blvd. duplex. Ad ults only.
AdultJ only. 132 w. WUaon. $450 Mo. Arent 675-030,
C.M. 64!;...4530. 640-0020.
nJRNJSHEO 2 BR, Apt . UNIQUE c:hateau on Bl.yside
Utll. pul. mo1mo. 2277-B Dr. 2 bdrm. ~ ""' • dlll\nr
Maple Ave. 54&-5913. mom. Adults only. $375 Mc.
BEAUT. FURN.~2 ~B~R~ Al'"' 675-1930. M<>-00:.>.
Htd Pool. Adults (w/tttn okl * GREAT VIEW 2 an. +
No ~Is. S1S5 up. 642·9520. Frplc., bllnl, aundeclcl, pool.
2 BR. 1 ~ BA. 1ar. Sharp. $2()() up_ 644--6344, 675-5204.
Nlee 1hag Sl90. per mo. CLOSE to Beach, lr&. 1 Br .•
PHONE' 60-2951 2 •· be -1 J:M.., open ams, ... ,. e,
AVAIL Now! f'um 2 Sr, J'i; bltnl, 3JO.A Murut.rite.
.Ba.. Freshly painted twnh1t. 6'1J..0937 er 675--51216.
Pool . No pets. 645-4220. + 2 BR-View. Ptiot. frplc,
LRG 1 Br. ept .. turn'd, pool, 1~ &th dbl carport, $%15.
$13S mo. JA81 Monrovia Avt. 675-1386 or t7)..87J7.
No. l. MS-5470. 1 Mt. PenthOUse •pt., Ot'fllll
• t WEEK FR.EE! + Wi"" Pool. $235. Oran.ce
Bach., n11 dtc., no kit. Si'S. CoQt ~al Estate. 6"--4348.
1 Br .• $165. Adlts. M2-2181. Coeta Mei•
D1n1 Point 3 BR, tmnt. unit, 1ing.]e at)',
+ SAVE SS ON RENT! e 1MJ c:pt.. drp1, ttplc., Ice
Man11tr needed • t btautlfUI patio, nr. lhPI. 67l-1Sll0.
ocean view unit&. A~t cpl., • 1·2 I&: 3 Br. Ftplc. Bll·in&.
no pet&. lite dutJt1. 613-Q50'1. Coled iana:e. Near South
URGE 2 BR. dupltx, lf"at CMst Plau. !W~l32'1.
vie•·. sundec:k. I• u n dry, lb.IN ffuntin&? W•tch the
d .. >hr. l 1!5. 496-IW. OPl:N HOUS& oolwnn.
rta..naa:inc Agent 717 Jame1, S1l5. ~133.
BAY MEADf>W APTS. 2 BR. & d•n. 2 both•
2 Br, bum c~ding1, pnv pa· Some patios. All for
tlo, rec. 1acil., closed aar· n45 & SlSO. 546--7331
age. Gu heat, cookinc &: '"°"""°--.,--,.-.,.-.,.--,
water all pd. All adult1, no 2 BR spacious apt, Crpt &
pet.s. From $165. drp1, Sll5 mo.
387 W. Bay St., c .M. 67.J.-8145 eves &: wknds
Call 646-0073 1 BR SlOO mo. Partly
BRAND NEW l 1. 2 BR !umbhed. Stov• ~ ,..lrla.
FROM $130 * 6<2-8400 *
Near shops, encl oae d
garaces, built-1111, enc 1 . E•st Bluff
patios. attractive lndscpg. ~N=E"w°'p"°o=R°"T'""B"E'°'A"'C"H..,.....
AdulU: cnly, no pets. 1970 Vlll11 Gr•n•d1 Apts.
Wallace St., 5 4 8 -O 3 O 4 • Four bedrooms with balt"C»
546-2209. lei above&: below. Graclou11
Uleal:iBJIU 21 llvlng & quJet 1um>undlng
tor family wlth chlldl'l!n.
. Near Corona del Jo.far Hia:h
Sparkllnr 1 .\. 2 Bff: garden School. Fireplace, wet bar &.
apta. Pool -Ja cuu1 -lush built·in kitchen appliAnces.
ldscpg -garages -d!!c. 835 AMIGOS WAY 644·2991
appts -adlts -from $155. C'.old"A-ell, Banker&: Co.
!Sl E. 21st, C.M. 646-86£.6 Mana(ing Agent
e BRAND NEW e l 1. 2 BDRMS
Large 1 BR apt. Bronze me-Fuliy Carpeted & dr~ped
dallion. Crpts, drp1, 1arb. Covettd parking st~
di11pcs"al. Single car gar. Gas &: water pa.id
Gas .l wtr pd. Sl50/mc, 816 Amigos Way, NB
642-0563.
SPACIOUS HOME LIKE , , '7$.60S0 0
twnhse, 2 Br., 2 Ba.. mitt -,,,, 41 ca..a
bdrm htJ&f, bltns. vaulted ceili~, patic encl gar .. 1----------
club kw & ' pooli. Sl95. Huntington Be11dt
504179 aft 6 pm.
MODERN 1 Bdrm. 1 pt. Cpts,
drp1, dlhwlhr, b It-I n 1 ,
garag~. 1 child ok. All utU
pd. SlfiO/mo. 307 Avocadc,
Apt 9, C.M. 645--09&4 .
ON BEACH!
FURN. & VNFURN.
2 BR. From S265
ADULTS ONLY * . LOWER * Furniture AvaUabl•
GOLD Meda.!licn , tronl 2 Br, C a r p e1J.<fr•pes-<li1hwa!.her
patio, encl ear. laundromat. heated pool-taun.u.tenn1s
Adults, no pe!ii. S155/mo. rec f'()()m«ean vi~w1
645-3515, 642-6499. pallOHmple parking
l.RG. 2 BR. 1~ Ba., 11\ac
cpl. bltW. frplc. priv. pat)O,
~ncl ear •. I blk achls. 634
Hamilton. 645-6345, 830-32M
nr 54&-1941. * TOWNHOUSE * 2 Br. 11,\ Ba , cpt /~1. p.Rlio.
Security Guards.
HUNTINGTON
PACIFIC
n1 OCEAN AVE .• H.B.
< 71 ~ I 536--1487
Otc open 10 am-li pm Dally
WU.LIAM WALTERS CO.
Adlls. S165. 126 E. Mf!lod)i !I!'!!!!!!!!""'""""'""""'~ l.11. 5'8·5986 or 548·1™. LIVE near the ocean. esctpe.
•2 BR. 1 BA, Me.!iA. Ve-de,
garap, c:rpts/drpgfbltru.
Lre cklHts. SlSO. Adults,
NO PETS. ~7-M-00.
LRG 2 BR w/p.Rtio, Quiet.
Crptt, dl'pl, 1t0\tt, rtfrla:.
aar. aduJta, no p e 11 .
6'6-276ll.
to pe•ce k quit!. Nelfhbora
trli!ndly, be11ut. big 2 BR
1pts .. cloM!d aan.a:es. $145
mo. CaJJ tar detaU1, Tom .
536-576.3 ()r Loi1 5.16-1205.
2608 Encl.and St .. H.B.
*FRESH AiR
Wallt' 3 Blk• to Btacbl
2 BR duplex w/bll·ltll, patio Lgl!I 2 A: 3 BR. 11pb, newly
&: "'&raft. Im/mo. No ptl& dtt0r. W/w crpt1, drp1.
("Jiil 9-12 am, 642-1530 or bl1n11, txcept rttrig. $150 to
"Yf'.I:. S225. No mcla, no pet1.
SPAC. studio ap1. 2 Br .• 1\1 ~536-~1_ru_·~----
B• .. cpt/d'Jl3, pr1v. patio 2 Br. Apt. Clc1ed 1ar. Crpt1,
v.·/aar. •160. 546-0689. drps, ciUld, smaU pet 0 .K.
LRG. 3 BR. 2 BA, no pets. Sl40/mo. 847-2940.
O\lldrtn ok. Nr. schl1 Ii: 2 BR, patin, Jlove. reff'I'.
•hp'r . $1711 /mo. ~~!. • .A.dull• SUS. Cle .11 n I n 1
LOVELY. specious l BR. fte S15. ftefa. 847-0935.
apt, Nr. Shop'g, f'l'W)'I . LARGE 2 BR.. lto\'t, piitlo,
CXX: l UC Sl.35. 5S7-776'. 1arq:t. $165 mo.
R ~21 1 8 , bt'llm cell.. bllns .• -.c-:-:--=--="'
eup. drps. pool mo Mo. t BR. w /Gor. $1ll-
lll ~. l7lh Pl 6<J..ggs), Call !IJU.:mJ
monlh. e Bar-b·Quf'it
29041 AlomA Avf', 495-4272 e EncloRed Garaa:e
M e111 Verdlt
2 BR upper. locked garage.
Qu iet. Nr. •tarbor & Bakt'r
Shop'g. Adlrs, no pets. $140
me. &4~3515
DELUXE 2 & 3 Br. 2 Ba.
e.ncl i-"r. Sl50 up. Rental
Ole 3095 i\Iace A v ~ .
546-1034.
• 2 BR .. I 811 ., downst•irs.
Gar., ruet crpt/drpslbltns.
Sl.50. No pets. 557-8400.
Miss ion Vie lo
e BRAND NEW! 3 Br .. lt,i
b11 .• 2 5tory condo. Shag.
hHns . patio, pool, 1ar11t:;e. 8l<>-08n.
N ewport Beech
PARK NEWPORT
APARTMENTS
on the bay
Luxury apartment Uvinc ov·
erlooking thl!I water. Enj()y
$150,000 bea.Jth spa, 7 IWim•
mine pool1, 7 ll&hled ten.
ni1 caurts, plus mUes of
bicycle trails, putti.nr, shut·
fltboard, croquet. Junior 1'1
All Utilities Paid
Adulta:. no pell
\ValJdna: distance to
shopping center.
354 Avocado St., C.M.
642-970I
BRAND NEW
Adu]l s only ap&rtmtnhl
"'ith pool. tncloltd 1araat1
bullt·ins. carpets a. drapes
C()nvrn!enlly loc:ated
1 Or 2 Bedrooms
From $155 Per month
Drlve by 2311 Eldtn A\lt
Or call 645-5780
REALTORS
SINCE 1944
673-4400
--=-=:...-~ . =-
BRAND NEW
from $175 monthly; also 1 From $145. DJshwuher1 lhlc
and 2-bedroom plans and carpeting, walk·ln CIOHll.
2-1tory tcwn ba·se1. Elec-Forud Air heat, extra l.arp
tric kltcht'ns, private patios moms. BeautituJ.sam• room,
or balconle1, ca.rpetlnJ:, dr.t· heated pocJ. !!BQ· .. fllclOlo
peries. SubteJTanean park. ed earaies. quiet 1unound-
lng with elevaton. Optional 1ng1 &: close to ahopptni.
maid service. Just north nf Adult Uvin1 no peta.
Fa&hl()n Ia!a.nd at Jambor-EL CORDOVA APTS.
ee and San Joaquin Hills Xl77 Chari• St. 8'U47D
Road. Near Hubor &: Hanillton St.
Telephone <n4) 6"·1900
for renta.! informatlon
BREATHTAKING
VI EW
$275. Huge 2 BR Apt HI cm
Back Bay BluU w/ 2
private balconies. Frple.
Heated pool. Load1 cf
-= =-="----
* * * * El Puorto Mou Apll
... + ... ...
1 Bedroom Apll.
clogetl, 745 Domlneo Dr. $130 6 up incJ. ut1lltln. AJ1o
iCdM HSJ Call 64~12til. furn. Pool Ir Recreation
BRAND NEW
A ll Utllltlu Pold
20102 Birch St tnr. o.c. aJr.
ports, S. or Pallsarles ltd)
1 &. 2 BR From S™· Priv.
area. Quiet Environment.
OU street parkln&. No Olll-
dren, no peta.
Also Garacia For Rent
1959·1961 Maple Ave.
Cotta Mesa
palio. Billiard rm. jacuzzi. l"l!'!"!"'l'~'!'!!J!l!""!"!!!!!!!'l!!IJ
Nr. UC Irvlno. Mgr. 557-42461. PALM Mll!SA APTS.
BRAND N EWI MINUTES TO NPT. BO!.
ADULTS ONLY-PET OK J'URN. OR. UNFUJtN.
DELUXE 2 BR-$!M Unbellevably larae apt1.,
D11hwhr. tt·pJc., 2 Ba .. 1wim huae pool, Jacuu t e.lect bit·
pool. 557-212.5, 20342 Santa im. •ha1 crpt1, dJ'ps, Muna
Ana Avt . tte. Adults, no pets.
WATER VI 2 BR 2 BA SINGLES , • , • • From SU5
ew-• ' 1 BEDRr.f ...... From Sl40 approx. 800 sq. ft. D/\V, 2 BEDRM Fro f160
SIC oven, crpt'd, drp'.d,, You're right.".they·re. ~
gAr. Df!,ck. Side !JI! 111vail . priced! l.S6l Me11 Dr.
Yl!arly lease. 714:6n..S249 (5 blla from Newport Blvd.)
appt. 546-9860
NEW 2 BR·2 BA. llfe81:iBJIU 20
204.l:? Santa Ana Ave. (acro5& Sp1rltllni new adlt apt.
from Sanla An.a GoU Lush &atden 1et. amid tOWU'·
Courlitl . Heated pool. l.1J'r. Ina pine•
9?9-1268. l Bedroom •. , • from $1M.
LIDO ISLE. 103 Via AntibeR. 2 Bedroom • · · • from Sl!S.
OPEN Sat/Son 11-4, 2 BR (Incl. 1ara1e1l. 1as A: wa t.t.r
•tudy, 2 BA, nr h<'h & shcp. pd. ALSO av&ll tumllht!.d. 4t 111,1 rrn. DR. lrpl , adults, 114 E. 20th .. C.M. 548.0137
ltase. TI4:1SJ.On9 e SPACIOUS e
0 CE AN F' R 0 NT y r 1 y \Y!'U·Oeslpied Apt1
1pacloui 1 br apL beat part 1 & 2 BR.. w/ Tern.cu,
ct beach. Adults only, avail From Sl40 • S215/mo
411. $250. 64!>-0668. Sha1 cpti. drps, taunu_
Sin J uan Ceplstr11no
FOR LEASE OR RENT
2 Bedroom. t bath Apt1.
~!JI. drap,fs, gara1e1
Sl80 Ptr f\1onth
3 Bdrm. 2 bath for S250
FITZPATRICK'S
Capl ~trann Vallty Re11.l!y
31Sll C1tm1nn C11p\str&no
San J uan Orp1&trano
49~1124
Re1ltors Since 1965
pooJ, Jacuul, encl au.
Qul9t Adult liv:l n.r
MERRIMAC WOODS
•25 ~ftrrlmac Wa,y, CM
.... D RIVEBY
147 Flo~'f'r St., C.flf. 1 BR.
Furn. Be't lncaticn In C.~f.
646-0920 or 646-.38.lS.
BEAUT ntw XI unit adult
11pt 114 t:. 20th SL, C,M.
Bkr whclpaUon inY1tt<I.
642-4~ WEBB. Bkr.
1 BR furn , or untum .. erptf .,
drps.. 2515 Eld•n AV't. * 56-l&Sl •
l SR.. encl r•f"ii:"· new
det<1r. Stl'l/mQ Cul-de-iae Corona del Mer
st. ~109 or 896-JQ26. l BR. turn or unturn, mmpl!
A ;ood "'ant ad 1S a sood redtr, pa.no. a.oft wt:, l blkl
tnvtttmont IO br.h~ yrly IV' ~M.
• I
'
-D.AJLY PILOT . .
-
~~~~~;
-;t;;..,f A COH\lfNtfNT SWOl'PING •N : ,.
I~ ';;;I u·-''""'""';;;;;;;l;:;;;;:[g) I--...... Jr5J 1---l~l ---·-lr5J ·1 ][Il) 1.--I ~-1'7"•__,c j[IlJ
-0, l(WINQ GtJK)l" fOll: lHE Vocotlon R1nt1l1 425 Found lfrff od1) 550 Applitn<t Ropolr Controctor ~ Polnllni & Help Wontod,M & F 710 Help wento<j, M & F 7I O CW. ON 'tHl GO. ~ ----11!!!!!!1 _E_A_S_T_E_R_W_E _E_K_ & Porto Poporho"llint AUTO DISHWASHER wanled, nil•
Far •n ad ln Woman'• World
f'OUNDinWtslminster JACK Taulane-Repalr,
HOUSE atta, • lovable tml long· Discount Ap~ &pair rtmod., add1L J) yrs el(p, PAINT! ING: Inter I £xtr_r. SALESMAN :~~~Ide ~r. c~!.on; 6 ~e~
Coll Mary llolh 642-5678, oxl 330 SUO. 3 bedroom,. 673-8793 halrtd c11 . Vf!rJ lu1e tlul(y Wuhu, Oryu, Dith"-'ASher, Llc'd. My way c.o. 547-0036. Wa J~ wubed A minor
LA"E A h , 3 a 2 tall. Flta collar. 54Z.7096 or ·Di!po.$81 Etc. f'rf!e Est. rt'p1ur. at prices you can af. Mar. One Main Part! Re-Do and Save! "' rro"' ea"', r. G Electric•I• lo~. F-HI. R • r 1 • W&.nfed by nt'o\' Bf\f\\' Dealer. DRIVER pf/time' i-3 a_f. / Ba., furn ex~pt liMns. $75. 548-0813. UARANTEED * 5f6..S694 '"' • ......, .1'!!= Sl'!U New&: Ustd C11rs. Pi·t· l••·-··s wk. for ~., ••
1
.
I I
r
Juet one main part rno
aide seams!) to lhi& cool,
quick, nattering skimmf:'rl
Whip it up in a morning in
t:rocus.fn!sh, no-iron cotton
blend&.
Printed Pattern 9183 : NEW
Hall Sizes 101A. 12~1. 14~).
16~, l.Bt,.i. Size 14% fbust
37> takes l 5/8 yard.a Ql.
i~h.
.SEVENTY·f1VE CENTS
for eac9 pattern -add 25
cents for each pattern lor
Air Mail and Special Handl-
ing: other.vise third·class
deliver,y will take three
weeks Or more, Send to
Marian Martin, the DAil.Y
PILOT, 442 Pattern Dept ..
232 West 18th SI., New York,
N.Y:. 10011. Print NAME,
ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE
and Sl'Yl.£ NUMBER.
SEE 'MORE Spring Fash·
Ions and choose one pattern
b'ee from new Spring.Sum-
mer Catalog. All sizes! Only
50 cents:
7054
• ,
r·r
wknd . $150 ""t wk. M$-8519. FUU. ..-u.n whilte Ion g Boby1ittina ELECTRICAL \\'ORK. All •--~--~'.,,·,..-,:-------'""'" .r•' ""' r ~· .... ~ • t fer man with imported <·ar School. Over 21. NO specii1J
Rentals to Shar• 430 atraight hain-d cal • "''ell ON THE PENINSULA klnd1-:-8~1 or imdl Llc'd & No WuOflX t!xperiencc. Small Salc5 llrense rf'q't!, H.B. area I
rnannl!ttd & obviously 11. Ina. !'rft e~t. 546--0lll. * WALLPAPER * f'orce, good ~1·king condi· prt'f'd. Ml-3325. 1
\I/ILL •hart 4 br home pe-l, Vie. Sama.r Dr., C.?-1. Respon. mothtr w • n Is Wben you ca.U "Mac:'' Uo Cr
I S 8• "~" ~.,..,.... babyglfti!ll 5 days II. wk. _G_•_r_d_•_n_ln_a _____ <>•J"< •"1nt ns. C?ntart Bob evier DRAPERY-Ci\RPET Sales. w resp. persnn. :i • .no-~. '"°' "l"I ~ at CN-vtt'r Motors. 2()8 W. •
Bt'OOkhursl al Bush• rd. f"ull or pt. l\me. On \V. Al~'S GARDENING INTERIOR & Exterior P-,in-J,o;t Street, Santa Ana. E.xper dl'(:o~~tor t)'pe ~r-963-2717. •"ND. Feb. lD, Yoong tan & Ocean!ronl nt 1 c:,h ool . 835-3lTJ . wn Jor aclive. itore, Xlnt \~1ht tml. dog. Vk. N, Main 675-8430. for gard~ing "· •ma 11 tl112 minor repairs, non-dr11.v.• + comm. 492-2254. SHARE nu 2 aty. 4 br, J ha St.. S.A, nr. trv.y. Very la.ndscapmg 1e:rv1cts, call drinker, frtt ft:timatel. Auto . 1 home, Jiv rm & den ,,.,,Ibach R;t'ntle. 542-3784. CHILD C&J<e experienced & ~5198 f'ves. Ser v I n & Call e.W:ning5, 646-0477, DETAI l MAN Enf!rgrttc young man 18 yn: 1 in F.V. $100/mo 96.l-3219 I~::..,.,~~--'-~~~--dependable weekday1. In-Newport. CdM. Costa l\1e!Ul, PROF p . . incl 1 bt" or older to help in mail rm
FND. Fml. mixed-Te:rrier, fant to 5 yrs. Lunchea & Dover Shores. WestcUU. · am~tlli' . "O? s, De.tail V\\l'll, must expe.r. l\fust h11.vt 1'1\Vn trans. Mr.
UNIVERSITY Park rondo, Longhaired. )'ouni:. Bl.eek snack~. J."enced yard. OU ~--~-~~~~~·I aceoust. ceil, Lie & 1n1. ienced, muat have knowl· Kearns, 546-7360, N 0 r 1 h
Pri bath 1 child ok II •·g v · •·t •· Ja-nese Gardening Service F-· es!. 64~5191. •dge nt detailing. Applv in 0~~· 0,.~~ • ' 00 ar • no .... 11· It:. "' °" San Diego F""'. nr So. ,.... •= .,.-~ American CotTe:spondenct --D hi! '"M 67'1A"" .. ~ Also Clean-un. Frtt Est. person on!., 3 3 • ""',. · ,,.. .,.,,,, Coast Plau. 546-7487. 'PAINTING ~Honest, clean, ~· Schools, 4401 Birch St .. • 548-6029 aft 3 PM • 0 Aut s I GIRL, 21-28, to 1h11.re nict 2 &\fALL grey, orange & whit~ CIBLO Cai-e in my home. ~~~:...:::;:.,..c,~'-c=-:-1"'gwu-ante.ed v;ork. LicE'l'lsed range 0 G es Nwpl Bch.
BR. .F.V. apt. $86.j() + female cat v.·ifh inlant kit-Any tlrne. lfarbor·B11.ker are11... AL'S Land!eaping. Tree & insured. 675-5740. 10621 Gardtn Grovr. BL, G.G.1·£-X-E-'-CU-T_IV_E_Ser_.-y-lo_r_w_or_k
utilities. 963-lro<I 811 9pm. tens vie. Na!ional & Oak Call 546·4.145 ;:-;;a::a.uY~~ 1:mc~~~::'P"°'R~O~F=E=ss=1~o~N~AL~~p~.,~.-,,~ing->..VG $5 hr -Show Sarah in private medical ofti~ in
G'frages for Rent 435 ~S~'~"~c_.=M_.~64&-__ 1_°'~3-·___ BABYSI'ITER. 24 Houni. Repair sprinkl~. 673-1166• Inter & Exler. Reasonable Coventry Jewelry. No in· Huntington Beach. Send
F'NO. Beige cock·a-poo fml. Licrnsr.d. Jo'Pnced back Rates. 557-74.:;5. vest, coUect ., or deliv. Min. resume 10 Mis.~ Breyer, 246
WANT garage tor lifl'lrage. Navy & red collar . no tag. E.xpert Japanese Gardener a"e 20. sg7.3896, B40-9435, Ancona. Long Bt>11.ch. 9080.l Vic. \V. 17th & Monrovia, ya.rd . 642-lY.12. Complete Yard Service PAINTmG I P.o\PERING, 897-8564.
C.fl.f. 646-2132. ~l8~4.Coa.st Pl11.u, C.M. C,f:J-ILDAClare, 1tok 4dyrs ... Ful! Call 546-'!,124T k ~:~d~nR~~:.e64a2,_Llz.~=&. ~B~E~A~U7.T;:,Y:;-=o-~-,-~7tor--w~an-,,."""d.1 Eaxb;,E~o.Dregpa•~r'"'sp',:nkml•u~ ~
Laguna Beach, Complt>tely •me. so \~et en !I, ••lesa Recomn1e.nded RY a ata ~ .,.. ... .,.
private. Near Coast Hwy. BLK Standard ~ize poodlr. Ve:rcle area. 557-6190 NUl'S~'Y •.....••. .,Frtt' Est. YOU supply the pa I nt . Apply in person, u.se la"'" mov.,er equip, gd
V!c: Orangt Ave. k Roo in d 10 * + Kr 9'-0757 '* .. wages. 968-75&4.
SM. 49&-1981 547--0993 Rochf'sler St., C.i>f, Ca b inefmaking GEN. Yard Cleanup. New ·~1=s paC-'11' .. !1"~· Also BOAT TOUCH UP EXPERIE°'CED l dl Office Renfa1 440 646-7582. lawns, sprinklers, ifll!talled •.._..-.:.ior. 1U.,...,... V"ffi, • J'I' mo hg I~==~~-~~---CUSTOl\t Cabinet Making & & repairqd. Trees & ~hrubs. PAINTING. prof. All work Gelcoat Exper. Rf'Quirt'd machine opt"'rators. 1st &
AR CHITECT, Engineer, etc, FOUND Siamf!se Ca!, youn'l', Boat Work. Patios. Roon1 Ivy shapPd or renioved. gua!'n. Color 1 Pr.ci11. l Ii t Coast.aJ Recre11tion. Inc. 2nd shifts, Apply Bald\~·in
Orfices. 444 Old Newpor1 BaJboa Island. Ca/J ro iden-Addi!. Free Est. 64.6-5219. :rrE'e est. 642~. s42-43S6, 547_1441 . 940 W, 17th St. P!astic11 Co., 2650 So. Grand Bl"d 0 •• •·•PP''''''' Ex tify. 675-2671. Carpet •ervo·co Costa P..fes11 642-0542 Ave., S.A. . ""'°" w • · • ='='-=--'-'-~-~--~ EXP. Japanese Gardener. PAPER HUNG $30. --'--------1
te-r. entrance. i85 mo. FND Blue-f!yed pt. Siamese JOHN·s Car~! & l.JphoW'e ....... ry Complett y 11. rd ~iain-Any rm. + papt>r. 646_2449 Boat Repa irman EXP'D L 11. d y to do
548-5300, OPEN. ml. ca! w/bead collar \1lc. ..... ! F , 1 64" ""1 Perm. JOb, tringe benefits. housework, Costa M, sa •1-~~~~-~=---Cleaner1. Extra enance. ree s . ...-v.,..,PI t pt h R I B•y View Offices Orange Ave., C.:\-1. 646-8726. 545-5106. a1 er, a c • epa r Call <TI4! 3.17-2501, Lake area. Ca'll 545-5742. Dri-Shan1poo free St'Olch-
De/uxt, air-conditioned BLK Female dog vie. \\', guard (Soil Retardanti;~. Landscape M11.inlenance •PATCH PLASTriUNG _A~rr<>c....~"'=h~";od""M~"'=;"~'~'·;;---/fEMALE nurses' aidt, ex·
Redecorated. Lido area \Vil.son & Harbor Blvd. au~ Degreasers & all color By Japanese Gardener All types, Free estimates BOOKKEEPER per. pref.. 11mllll nursing
Realonomics. Bkr. 675-6700 ·Call 645-2683 or 557-1277. brigh!ene-rs & 10 minute Residenlial~ornmerc.ial Call 541)...6825 Bookkeeping thru trial bal· home. Call for appt. 494-8075.
LITE rnanufaeturing area. FEMALE Dalmatian, brwn & hleach for ·.vhite <'arpeti;, --=~*=8~47~·~294704~*=,,...-I Plumbing anee &: thorough kno1\'lrdgr FIBERGLASS 1 am i n a 1 n r
Make old chaira like NEW! Total 1880 sq ft. Will rent all "'ht. Vic. f"ounra in Valley Save your money by saving GREEN MANSION """'°~.,,.--,,_-..,--of office p~ocedur~s requir'.-d wanted. Exp'd needed .
Do it with the expert help or ~3· Near Gothard & Library, 968-1926. me ex-tr.a trips. Will clean Gardening &: Yard l\1ain-ECONO Rooter Servi c: e . to a1;~111te with I ~ 1 s Piece wotk. Apply a t
of thi' upholstery pallem. Edinger, Air cond/crptd, F'ND, Light brown niL"< rlog. livtng rin., dining rm. & tena.nce. Jot' EI mer , Drains opened $5. Main substantial ir;alrs organtza-Trabaca Produc!s 837 "'
Rescue tired cha.lrs; save CaU 842-2581. Long hair, v ie. f .V. liiiii hall $1.i. Any rm. $7.;;(l, 642-1137 line11 min. i12.50. Service lion. \1/e are looking for a lSth St., Costa Me~. '
money~ Step-by-s!ep direc-DESK space available iso School. 9G8-5&56. t'ouch SJO. Chair $5. 15 yrs.. COSTA MESA 534-4121 chrg. $3.50. Master Chrg. "'ell-groomed, mah.Ire book-F --1-8-E-R_G_L_A_S_S_M_ld __ I
tions show hov.· to retie mo. Will provide furniture. ----------t ."<p is '''hA! counts, not BIA. Blue Chip Stamps. kreper assislant l~O yrsl . ! 0 tf'6
springg, !lew rover1 in easy· at SS mo. Answering service FND. Fml. Toy pnoclle. method. J do "·ork myself. Nf!wport Bch-Laguna Niiruel 539-3161. with • min. of 5 yrs exp. Tl'~inees & expe~. All 3
to-foUo\V instructions. Pat. available, 17875 Beach Blvd Whlte. Vie. Heil & Beach Good ref. 531--0JOL Lawn Mowing & Please send typev.·rinen shills. 1631 Placentia, C.M.
7054 H f Be h 642-4321 Blvd. H.B. 847-4645 Comp. Service SAVE on home repain. Free resume: include salary re-FRY COOK, E>..'PER. . un 1ngton ae . STEAM Carpet Cleaning, ~~~=~~==~~• e~L Roofing, plumb., paln1,
SEVENTY-FIVE Ct;NTS DELUXE WO ,q. ft. office FOUND: Male dog pr ~agle, prof. Satist11.ction guarn. 111 * LANDSCAPING * Installations. hauling. Work qulrements to P.O. Box 2.128 e BLUE DOLPHIN e
for each pattern -add 25 suite, s85/Mo. Corona de! mostly blk w/tan & wht. Jowc:-st price1.. Frtt est. New lav.•ns, Sprnklrs. decks, 839--031'2 New·Port Beach, Ca for 3355 Via Lido, N.B.
cents tor each pattem fnr Mar. nr. Post Office, Snack Vic 1i!esa Verde, 557-li610, 962--0672. l'leanup. State lic'd. 536-1'225. -""-"=· =~~·~~~--appL FULL, P/Time. mg mt ,
Air Mail and SpeciaJ f-landl-Shop, Privall!! parking. loit 555 DISCOl"NT Steam Carpet EXPER Japanese. Gardf'!ller igE~R. :i~mbing & BOOKKEEPER I account· trne., no erxp. nee .
Ing: otherwise lhird·class Reaionom ics Bkr. 67~700 ----------Cleaning. Avg !iv rm/hall Complete yd service.. Neat eetrica Repair 11int for medium •i<:e CPA Sa I 11. r y IC om m. Fuller
deltvpry will takf' three KEYS (31 -I should say k Rella. Free. est. 642-4389. 642-2755 nr 642-1403 firm in Laguna Beach. Brush, 962-0416.
v.·eeks or more. Send to DESK sillpaee available $50 Ford, on gold chain at-Cup to 300 sq ft SIS. G42-ICMS. LEE'S LAWN SERVICE PLUMBING REPAIR Prefer data processi ng ex·
Alice Brooks. the DAILY mo. W provide furniture taehed to l•n•.,.r. red nutty arpenter N · b II _,,.,""'· M"sl •-. w•ll t " A · --' -.. "'-""'ndabl• • R-··nablo. 0 JO mo sm11. ,,~ " ""' PILOT 105. Needlecraft a -mo. nswenng RJ·vice powdu p"ff type bat Lo 1 ---.-------.....:-,,~ "" ,........, 64' -ail bl 222 F A • · s LARGE OR SMALL y,,, es!. 91•. 1088 <I···') * ..-31'"' * groomed, aggres.'5i11I!' & Dept .. Box 163, Old Chelgea av a e. orest ve, in Costa ~fesa . Please ~all ,,... UC4I
Sta.lion. New Ynrk. N.'I', 1 "!.agu~~n_a_a_,_,_,_h._<_94-_94_66__ 64~2142 11.fler 6 p.m. All Types Work : Cut door.'!, J IM'S Gardening, complete COLE .PLUMBING cii?ativl!! • nor a pt'0-
1 od 1 ti · h 2< hr 64•1161 c r a 't in 11 Io r. Degree Clerk, typinJ:. 10 kf"y adding 10011. Print Name, Addre.s~. CORONA DEL MAR. Furn. Pane • rem e · nts • la\11n & yard care, cleanups. · Sl"rvice. ,,. TERRIER Puppy, 10 wk old J · 1 962 1961 desirable bu_f not man· rna c:hint, filing, good pho"' Zip, Pattern Number. A/C. sec'y 'ervice. $15 mo. ranie. repairs, e c. · · 545-3662. Roofing male. Vic Lido Park Dr., datory. Publil' Rt'rounting voice.
NEEDLECRAIT '72! Cro-Agent. 675-7225 H.l.R. N.B. White under neck, 2 EXP. Remodt'ling, cabinets, PROFESSIONAL ,,-,.....-.,...------• x Pt r i e. n cf! desired Aclvancemrnt npportunitlet1. h I k ·1 I ~-d' · · I F · J G -~ . '-'-. e T. Guy Roofing. ~-• c e • ni · e c. ri-.:e irl"C· Office s -600 Sq. Ft. "'hi hind paws. 675-6621 or repa1rs, malll · urniture apanese a1ue.nlJ\f .x-rv1ee Direct. 1 do my own wo~rk~. 49-f-01611. Excellenl company bto:nefits.
tions. 50 cl!!nts. Costa Mf!s& e 646-2130 675-4567. refinishing. Reas. &:16-4224. F t * 646--0619 Co~ta ~fe!'a area. NEW! Instant "la~ran1e. ree e.'5 · 64>2780. 548-95ro. BOYS
B • R COMBO G Cement, Concrete EXP H .. G _. \\1ri1r Classifif!d ad • 10 Baslt", tancy knots, patterns. us1nea1 ent•I 445 1 erman Shep/Box-· awauan a."'ener Sewing/ Altera;ions Al!.e 10-14 to deliver papers D11.i.ly Pilot, P.O. Box 1560
$1. 1800 SQ. FT. 14c per foot. or er, male med. size w/no \\'INTER Rates! Concrete Complete gardening service ---... .. -in the Dana Point, San Cll!!-Cn!ita Mesa, Calif. 9~
£••1 art of Hairpin Cro-I.D, "Moose". C.M. arPa. floors, palioi. dr i ves, Kamalani. 646-4676. Alterations -642-5145 mente area~ . $250 """ month. Window R I 846 8360 . . chet -over 26 designs to ,..,... Os.a yn, -or 11idewalkli, Don. 642-8514. * QUALITY * Neat. accurate. 20 years exp. DAI l Y PILOT $ front. a ir, hPal, crprs. parti· 83.>-8035. GENERAL OFFICE
make. 1· boned to .1uit. Plenty of =-~=~~--=~-CF.MENT WVRK. no jobto Laivn & Gardening Si!'rvice Television Repair 492-41:20 p T ' $J h
Instant Crochet Book -p ART Scl·••""''~"I•, 1 Reliable. Free Est. 979--2639"---:~~:::-'.,..-.---CAR WASH HE-LP art •m• to r parking in Sherwood Shop-"' '"""' i;rnal , reasonable. Free 1 S Sl~arn by pictures! Patterns, ping Center. 821 So . brwn & blk, male. Fri.. vie Estim. H. StulliLk, 548-8615. Ex.per. Lawn care Ir :_ B_L~EAU'S TV * Sevrra\ positinns, 4 Locations. ::!~ 0~e;;ung~I p~fe~~~ndall•
· B kh A h · C II Ward & Ed\nger, F.V, hauling. Free est. .x-rv1clllg Branda F II • 1. G h Complelf! Instant Gift Bonk roo urst, na eim. a PATIOS, walk,, drive, ins1all ... 0~,, -·s ... Authorized Ma-•v--u « part 1me. rowt mail, phone!!, type, etc. Xln't. ·1 SI Mr. MrNam-96°'471 or Reward! 839-4090. "''' la n b k ,,. ~ • ~·w• "" r~n1pany Top •ay Met--more than 100 g1 ts. -. • "" _., w s, saw, rea , . . Knnwn for hone.sty 54G-431J .... · ,... · '" Newport Beh firm in the
GAL FRIDAY
IN5rANT SEWING BOOK
&eW today. wear tomorrow.
$1.
INSTANl' FASHION BOOK
Hundttds of fashion !acts.
SI.
Complete A.frhan Book _ 545-6446. LOST: Small S i a me 1 e remove. 548-8fi68 for E':!it. LA\VN .1eivice, experienced T"I Car Wa!!.h, 2950 Harbor rreative field. Top henr.tits.
Sl. 15C PER FOOT. 900 sq fl. w/lealher collar vie:. of CEMENT work, qu111ity work. and re I I II. b I e. Free ,.,,' ~·..,.--------Blvd., Costa fl1esa. Call 557-6122, Abigail Abbot
141 Jiffy Rur Book• -50 S.13.i per mon th. 821 So. 11712 Balboa Blvd ., N.B. Reas. rates, free est. M. estimates, 963-1072. CERAMIC tile new & CARRIER for early morning PPrsonnel Agenoy, 230 W.
B kh · Relurn or call 645--083.), 1 · c 1 M "V s ·1 209 SA cent1. roo ursl, Anahetm, Sui!e I -=77.c-c--,--~-~-7 Hamby. Anytime. 83()...6131. co Mp LET E Lawn & remodel. Free est. Small p11.per rou e 1n os a 1>sa, ~ arner. u1 e . , ..
8ook of 11 Priie Afghans. 13. Window tronf. air, hear, BU< & wht nuetered ma.le gardenin"' .1etvice. Hauling 1·obs we!:come. "'""2<'6. mu.st have dependable car. GENERAL OFFICE, N.B. 5o FLOOR \Vork & patios, ·-eo JJlr p $1911 Ca I cents. crpl.1, plenty of parking in cat. Answs to "Julio", d . &: clean-up. J im. 548--0405. ays approx a mo, I factory. lmmf!d --nlng.
Quilt Book 1 -16 pallerns. Sherwood Shopping CentE'r, Strayed from vie of fiOO L~::iw:y~~dse~~ ~~~ s • JAPANESE GARDENER 5'48-4752 before noon. Exper. req'd. 64&-7772.
SO c:ent1. Drive by. Call Mr. Blk .. Orchid, CdM. 675-5170. CASHIER
--• Ch'ld C Ex-• F,-E s! I I[ i •D GIRL ~!DAY.· Be r 1'ghl Muse.um Quilt Buua 2 -r.1cNamee, 962-4471 or I are r-· "~ •" 50 cents. 545-6446. HUGE, all whjte Great * ~7!73 * ~It Newport Beach firm seek ~ hand to lhf" bos.'l, Keep his
Py1i?nees Oooks like St. 2 YRS Pl d · !ti 11 2 t ·I 1 I I hi Quills for Tnday'• U vlnr THE FACTOD •~ exper. anne ac· GARDENING SERVICE cas er, o years o ex · appo1n men a 1 r 11 g . I~
Aptt.,
Furn. or Unfurn. 370
Huntington Beach
IruNTINGTON Garden Apls.
Hei! at Bol&a Chica .
M6--132J. Compare • See
what you·re missing. Fr.
$12'>$240.
APT. Poolside -1pacious
Bungalow. Pvt. :Patio. nso.
mo. to right adults , -=· 8 OCEAN \1IE\V-From $135.
1 Be turn or Unfurn. CASA
Pl.A.YA, 14th & Walnut,
H.B. Call 536-8Vi7.
RESORT LIVING
FROM $135
It's Oakwood Garden
Apartments ••• and it's
1un, fin~ nel~hbol'! and
prestige living in onr. luxur-
ious package. There's SI
mJJllon in 1·ecreatlon •••
swimming, tennis. billiards,
health clubs, saun11.s, pro.
shop, lndoor golf driving
~e. clubhouse., ere.
"'" •v:t Bernard) named "Krikor." ti vi ties. Lic:·d. 14 yrs, Mesa CLEAN uP TRrM per. Pleasant personality & Located in beautiful N.B. -15 beautiful patterns. JV in Cannery Village. 32 retail Ca.II 546-9251 (24 hrl. • · cents, Verrlf'. 546--0469. e 64&-7624 e Job W•nted, Male 700 11.bility to de11.I w/public 11 Start $500.
shops under l roof. 6 left 425 REWARD be ' I h · necessity. Xln'I Co. bent'fit~. CaU Jean Brown, ~,. =•
Apt1.,
Furn. or Unfurn. 370
Newport Beach
OCEANFRONT: 4 Br, 3 Ba.
New. Custom deror. Fam.
preferred. No pet!. Yrly.
SiiGO mo 613-8561.
'--' _R'"_1a1• __,J~
Rooms 400
LRG. Roon1. Private en·
trance, paho & b A th .
En1p!oyed n1ale. Arr 6,
54~3612.
Room & Board 405
PARALYZED Vpts or Elderly
people, living rogether who
need go1ne help. Persona.I
care, cJE"Bning, cook in g,
banking, ~hopping elc. J'm
e.xp'd., ~ car. good cook.
ambitious & reasonable. Or
ii you need 1 home I'U sup-
ply one for you. 893-~3.
30,h SI N.B. 64~2161. · ige ong air Controctor Gt ol S !co• Sr A ·~~ .,.. ner •rv . '"°""''"'· Tomp. or C 11 M W h I d C I A ft'tnale cat. Bluf.fs area. Li!. a r. eat er or , oa1t11 ge'ney
UNUSUAL Live in mod. apt.
·above your business. 675-7225
HIR Agent
tie girl's pet. 644-8836. ROOM Additions, Estimates, TOTAL SERVICES CO. perm. $6.75 ~hr. 15 y~1. F/C 644-5627. 2790 Harbor 81 at Ada.mi
I • I Pl b p · 1 r.-try exper. 979-2169, 540.-5426. GERMAN Short.Hair. re· Pans « ayout. single or 2 um g -a.in g-._.yen
male. Solid silver. Jo'V-HB gfory, L.T. Construction. Ele.c. Repair -Inst. 646-1809. Job Wanted, Female 702
Industrial Rental 450 area, Sat. aft. 642-6757. 847-ISJl. THINGS by Moo~, U . elect., EXPERIENCED Housekeep-
plumb, fence, tile, insUns., f!r/Babysitter. Week nf 2500 Sq. Ft. $250 Mo.
Modern bldg., Edinger St.
Nr. Frwy .. Sn. Santa Ana
Walsworth Real Estate
CALL: 639-4210
ltfETAL ·Industrial Building,
l~ sq ft, high ceiling, of-
fice gpacc, Cosra Mesa. S840
per mo. M8-5.i51 S AM to 4
P~-f. Sat 9 AM to 1 PM.
NE\V deluxe M-1 units. 3 ph.
Power. 173.1 Monrovia.
543-3145: 836-9798 eves.
R•nt•I• Wanted
WANTED: Storage garage,
Cosla 1'1esa, N.B. or CdM.
Plea.sf" eall 5.iS-2855 or
548-4818,
JUNE 1-mid Sept. furn 2
bdrm apt or mall house,
Cdi\<t. fi73-(}157
\VANTED. enclosed garage'
for storage on yearly basis.
P.O. Box 6ij Balboa
* EXECU'.J'IVE & family
de.1ire J or 4 bdrm. rt.n!al
\Vfpool irnmed. M&-3866.
Put a little ".1ool' 111 your Additions * Remodeling
Levis· sell those baubles tor Gerwick k Son, Lie.
"bucks". Call Clagsified 673-ro41 * 54~2170
642-5678, PUot Classlfied. 642-5678
* * * * * *
Trader's Paradise
lines
times
dollars
3 Homes -5, 4, &: 2 BR on
.,,;, acre, gross $7000, Sell
$55,000. Equity $25.000. Easy
rentals, \Viii trade property
or ? 968-01 n 833-9122
Balboa -4 units value 75M
!60M equity) 14-05 W. Bal·
boa Bl. Tr. pret Nwpt Hgts
lot or house, Max value 2SM
Owner Brkr 673-8327.
* * * Elderly Care ·Home. &:
carpentry. paint. 545--<mO. March 26-April 1, Daily or
Hauling hrly, 548-4950.
. NEED help at home? We
LOCAL MOVES, Hauling, have Aides • Nurses • Clea~up. expd c: o 11 e g e Housekeepers • Compan-
studenl. Ltg truck. Res, kins e HomemakeNt -Up-
534-1846. john, s.t7.fi681.
~ULING, clean-ups, mov-DA YWORK. Gen. cleaning. ing. Fre& est., eves. and
Sat. & Sun. 847-8664. Reliable. Transportation.
543-7006 or Ml-9.\10. T::: tra~h: ;~~;~~~~!: Help Wanted, M & F 710
Move & haul. 548-58ti3.
7.--c~-;:,..---;c.cc-c-;.,-· I Accountant Sr. $14K Ya.rd & Gaz:agr. Clean Up. Chem. Engineer S14K
Tree Rem<>val. Fl"ff Elt. Acrountant/Bkkpr $800
Reas. Rates. 6*-3488 Exec. Sec'y-Con11tr to $650
Hou1ecl••n.ing Legal Secretary $700
• (Corporate or Probate f
Sprint Cleaning: Ahead Sec'y Spanish. helpful $600
Call Dutch Ma.int. Service for Sec'y Permnnel $550
carpels, floors & window11. Cr. Clerk·Hospit11.l S500
S.17-1508. Mgr Camera-Ste.rl!!O $585
Dedicated Cleaning Med Receptionist $425
• WE DO EVERYTHING * P . T. rte Bkkpr-1.ag $3.50 hr
Refs, Free est. 646-28.19 F/C Bookkeeper $700
==~~=~.~~-~. Sec:'ys (sh 100+) to $625 EXPERIENCED in domestic Sf!c'ys fsh 80J to S5'15
\~l>rk. Beach areas please. Personnel!Payroll $450
SJ.;...46iO &fter 6. Sr. EDP·D.O.S. to $545
CHILD car1> & Ille housework. GIRL for live-in 1er;'y-
Z boys 6 & 9 yri;, t9 yr old housekeeper for traveling
'f'MR studP.:nt) 3 days wk • bui;inessman. 646-3566. !
nr~. flex!Ole. Occas. eve. & HADWRESSER San Juan I
\vknd .. s. CM area. aft 2 pm. Capo. Xlnt OP!Klrtunity i 548-3681. New Salon, 493--0040 J
CLEANING LADY w11n1ed l HOUSEKEEPER -O:iok
day "''eek. _ • _ Live·in Pvt. rm &: ba'.!
Call 67.'i--053.'i Beautiful home 642-9606. :
CLEAN ING lady .needed l HOUSEKEEPER, live in, ii
d
0
ay per wk. S2.2a pe!' hr. child, 18 mo. Laguna Beach,,
\Vn trans. C.:i.t ~0-6168. Mri'I'. Levinson, 494--0737. '
CLERK.Typisl, including lirr. HSKPRS Emplyr pays f bk,kpin~ Peacock l n s . George Allen Byland Ag:
4!1-.-1081 ~1r~. Bradley. cy, 106-B E. 16th S.A.
COCKTAIL Wa itress. l!'!'l:per. _54-'-1--0-'C39~5~·--~----/
Ne11.1 appearance. Apply in lm-.. di"ate person, Hotel Laguna, 425 ,, ...
So. coa" Hwy .. Lag. &h. Openings In
COLLECTOR -; n'; d' Costa Mesa lt'lephone, exp·d. Large
vol ume. Salary & com· Join the Red Carpet
mi8sion. Mr. He n k a , te•m and be the b•1t 1 64.~7300. ONLY Red Carpet ntfers: I
COOKr EXPER. 1. Telt>vision advertising as l
p 'I' M be 1 "' of 'J/2/72. 1 Jme. ust c ean . 2 Ext . I near, Apply. in per!'.On only. · e~~ive n e 1111 p a p e r
S . . 5930 1 ad11ert1s1ng. . urf & S1rlo1n, V, Coaat 'J. Call in listing leads.
Hwy .. N.B. 4. Continuouir profe!!ional
COUNTER sales girl • training.
Guoot Homo 415 I 11•1 Ptr1onal1
ITS, We have bananai;, And
net spendable! $172,000 fruit
plantation & small cattle
ranc;h in Australi11. FOR Cal.
prop. Agt. 675--72'25 H lR
St<1te Lic'd. formally Cttnv.
?\.1olivated Owner. Trade for
Property +, Ol' 1 ***
Broker G4S. 7555 '* • *
MESA Cleaning. Carpets, Bookkeeper $5.50
Windows, F loor e.tt'. Resld. Sec'y/Or&na-e to $575
& Comm'!. 557-6742, .548-41tl . Accbig r.Jcrk $350
Camera sales experitnce a 5. 155 offices in 3 ~tales.
mus1! Write qualifications & unequalled referral progrAJT),
salary desired to Classified 7. I n if i v I'd u a 1 broker
ad No. ~. Daily P ilot, P.O. supervision.
Box 1560, CO!lta Mf<Sa, 92676. 8. Ou!Atanding image and CUstom decorated s:lngle1,
1 4' 2 BR. Fumishtd & Un-
turnlsbed. No lease requi~
Models Open Daily 10 I<> 7.
*PRIVATE ROOM* ~;;;;;;;;;;:~ tor ambulatory pet'Mln. Good •
food, nice chttr!u/ surround-Personals S:IO
27' Motorhome, Jlke new,
only 7500 mi, 2 air con-
ditioners. deep ftte:r.r., TV,
etc .. loaded, Trade for re:al
estafe. 328-3401.
N'PT. Beach duplex. 3 BR.
2 ba. ea. unit, S65:000 Val.
Take 23 to 27 ft, travel trlr.
·as part do\vn. Owner/Bia.
RELIABLE Lady. Ex-NEWPORT
perienced &. ref. Hours Ptr•onnel Agency
COUPLE, live-in. Lido Isle. 9 repulation. .
Mut1t be expttienced. Phone · NO company reiJmtn·
Miss Wilbur.n. (TI4l S40--0500 tatlon. .
OAKWOOD GARDEN
APARTMENTS
CP.esort Livln1t tor
Adults only.)
ings. * Call 548-4'15.1 •
SMALL Gues-t Honie: Santa
Ana-Carden Grove Area.
Pvt Room for Clderly.
83t}.2925 or M:l-3410.
FULLY UCENSED
Renowned Hlndu Spirituali~I
Spiritual Reading given dai·
ly. 10 At.\f-10 PM. Advice on
all tnatters. I Cllll help you.
312 N. El Camino Real, San
Clemente. 49~136 o r
492-9034.
675-0968 Evenings
or e:ve:a It wknds (7141 lO'. _ Superior working eoD-
673-23.'\9 ditlons.
· All thi11 &nd more spell.a
Accounting Clerk DELIVERY boy, Canyo n n1ore dolla~ for ytiu. If You
lo $500 A11rn Supply, 843 Broadway, haven'! yet inve1ti,q-ated the
Htavy 111c:count~ payable desk. Laguna Bear;h. Red Carpet w11.y, do )'Ollntlf 8 14 i:".sc~Y e Con11ruct i on back· DELfVERY-Hei·aJdEx· IL f3vor -DO IT NOWJ
Mailed On Request ground helpful. amlne.r auto carril!'r. Capo liciemed or not, ('a 11
open. S2 & up. 642-8872.. 833 Dover Dr., N.B.
642-3170
Smiley Tax Service
Income T•x
NEWPORT BEACH
16th at Irvine
6'5.os50 « 642-8170
BOARD I Care I I..aundry.
Good meals. Semi $200. Prl
S2.JO. Men~\\lomEin. i'.l l-5414,
Summer Rtntal1 420 SEEK Adventurous J a d y
cabinmlltt 25-40 for v.·orld
wid~ cruise ~n s11 ilboat.
64:H019.
3 Duplexes + 3-on·a lot,
C.M. SOM tolal eqty. Ex·
change all ol pl for TD 's,
t'lcar mtr hme, campr. autl'I
or 3-4 BR hme. Agt 546-5580
}fAVE~ 21 ' C8bin Cruiser,
WIU. TRADE tor '68 Butck
Chrysler or Old' station
wtgon or horse trailer.
SPLIT level, 1 lenMt, protes
"1bldg, downtown C.M. Ten-
ant will sign least'. $24,500
equity. E."<change for va·
cant. Dania Realty 642-6560
HA VE: Beach equltie1 and/
or c:a.1h, Want : Reaidenth11J
units (20 or more). Or oom·
merc:htl. Orange Co. Reva
OJ'iOn ~2131 431-029 RJtr. ex.
w C p EXECUTJVE Bch & Dana Pl. area. 54&-8640 for lntt'rview. AAJc ,A, SMILEY• · ,A. PERSONNEL AGENCY 492-«4l for Steve Grannis, Alao ~: ~nyti;:~r ~~ Su~11: ~"·Coast H\\y.64~16 DENTAL ASSISTANT ::::. ~=~ courst ol-
ServlCf!. 2" YEAl'ts ~Xl'· in ADVERTISING Ch11irs.id<", • daya. J\tin. I yr
art'a. Personal smv1c:t In G~ttt opporlunfty for highly G.P, nit: ex~r. Mu1t be
your borne. Call for appt. motlvAted, highly ikiUtd JM!llf, pe.r$0nablt 4 ea.pa.ble.
546-n:U, Howard Clark & aeereta.ry lo work lnro brold· Long cone X·ray elll:pt.r. VISTA DEL MESA
Aportmonb
I • 2 BP-F\Jrn. & lint. Dish·
wa.shu .. StO\oe & Rf'kig •
Sbai apt'g.I...ge Rec centtr.
P.ENT •IMtJ ~
Irvine & Me•• Drive * S4MISS *
1 BR., Upst1irs. lUO \\1•
8'lbM Blvd. ll.11 yrcy.
~40or~eve1.
~1AKE your Summer ,·11ca·
lion reservation now. 2 (Ir 3
bcdroon1s ctJm pl f'te l y
furnished. o"" block to
()('!"an 111 Newport or Ct>n:tna
t!t>I ~ar. Ask kir P!t or
J im. 34~S3SS A:ent.
Vacation Rent als
BJG Bt!•t Cabin. 1
lrplt .. by lhe 1\etk".
f \ltl. 546--3836
425
BR.
Cal
ALCOflOLJCS Anonymous.
Phonf: 542-7217 or write P.O.
Bo.'t' 1223, C05ta Mesa.
PROBtL\f Pregnancy. Con-
fident, aym p a I hf' t I c
pl'f!gnancy coutt~Ung. Abor·
lion k ,\doption ref. AP·
CARE. 642-4!36·
*"* rRENCH or S\VEDJSH
Jl.tasMn. Wh11.t'1 your
pleasure~
ll.1-llllO
CAil 5.57·706.l
OWNER. Granadtt ~lllls 2
aty view hme, 2800 1q, fl.
ov.•nrs ctil S64M. 4 Br 3 Ba.
fem nn For •mlr bme CdM
or NB. li-«·45TI., 646-0439.
SILVERAOO, Oran.ge Co.
Ranch & ac. N1lt for'e!t, Mt<t
wtr. sprg &: wells. val $2100 ,
to S5000, Eq for F&C low
tu d!sert. SJS.466J all 6 pm
* * *
OWNER will trade $13.500
equity In Costa Mtsa 4-plex
fol' srnAll home or ?? in
Corontl del f.fi.r or Newport
Artll. 642· 1467 1.ft 6 pm.
"'ILL trade my interest in
26 acrts w/1300' of water
fronts~ on Colorado R.lvt.r
wl ln1Crtct Mly loan, lor
lu.mbtr •• Call 545-:i74!1.
* * *
John TQner. e.r ttSponrihiUtiet1 11.1 f11 sl· ~6'<--09:..;=;:;21:=:,..,....,..-,--,---,
P RO FESS ION AL Tax p11iced Newport ~aeh ad-DENTAL Acs l11t ant ,
114!rvlc:t ln the pri''acy ol vf!rti&lng agency. Brains, chairskle., Udo oft!~. Send
)'Our home-. Most i 1 ~ , lnitlarlve. A !h ~uired. resum( etc.. In P.O. Box -
I I I I
• ts'.21-.. -&17-2829. I Coll 833-1670 714. CMla MO\A, 92621.
' ATIENDANT DISHWASHER-DAYS INSOMNIACS for ~ R1:sldenti~I C11re Fac.UUy Appl)! In PtrR'ln project on deep diaotden. Landocoplng
* LANDSCAPING *
~ew Lawn, !Sprinkler
&I·~
I
I
, 11.7 Shirt Colony Kitchen 2.1-55 yn. Good pay tor 5
Older """"" f"'lerred ~21 l Hor bor Blvd. wks sniey. -ed 1!8. * 64~ • ;. C.01ta Ma11 5-6.PM wkda.}'s..
y
BE
f'tC
Coi;t "
Sf>c'y
SN''y
Pa.11 ti ,.
4'S E
LAD\
eldt-Y
bt1lh,
$200.
f.1 Ulil
l•g•
3
Minim
ll!lga ., .
NP\\•
Phon
LTTE
hr ..
rlexll"
LTVE-i
core
72-y r.
Dr ..
LU
c
So
Appl_
M
MALE
small
for a
MAN I
Desig
494-8
MATU
tenan
5 day
trical,
t ic.
Tillot
9-5.
MED
F /C
N• c
AC
rutl 11
f'Xp(!ri
Mon I
FO
COM
l1l
MEDI
ti mf',
be ' rtnni
salary
'T'illol
Com me
?\.fin
NURS
OFF
2 yr c
p
2043
Out
Pf':rm,
Call
Am>w
E
OA!L V PILOT 37
' ![Ill I. l~I l~I -· l[IJJ I Ii: Tr•nsportetlen [ ~· )[IJ) [ . ~ .... I~~~ )~ ~[ _r ... •_• V••__,J[i [ ...,::-~, )~ [
H•lp Wonted, M. lo F 710
INVEST IN
YOUR FUTURE
Jo'ull or p l!mt'.
BE YOUR OWN BOSSI
Men or Women
Lease A Y tilow
Tul C•b
C111l for Appl
546-1311
Aak for Hern1an
. ' ' . " . -,' 1 I / ;:. \I: . . /. ,.,,.._, rp,r· ,~ ~, "'-...
il'I '''
l~NE PERSONNEL
SERYICES "'AGENCY
F/C Bookkpr lo $800.
Cost Ai·(--0unti111! to S'IOO.
SPc'y Cal Corp Law 10 $700.
Src'y/lite SH !o $~.10.
Part timr Gf'n'l Orr to S.'!. hr.
~'rrl'IFcr Positio11s
4R8 E. 17th 1111 lrvinc!
642-1470
cr-.. t
LADY to live-In & e11i1·e for
eldf'rly lady. Q\\·n room &
balh. J\1on-Thurs & Fri. oH.
$200. + household e:.:pcnst'.S,
J\lusf rlrive. 54~241 . ---Legal Secretary
3 Position~ Available.
J\tinimu1n 1 yr t'XJX'rll'~r·r tn
litigation, probate. 1'0rporalr
or gf'neral businf'Sll. l..ari.:P
Ne1\'porf Beach 1;111· firm .
Phone Jo Ann, 557-9900.
LITE as~mhly "'ork, $1.8~
hr., age 16-27. Good manual
rle>:lerity. 645-7171.
LTVE-in V.'0"1A n To cook {(-
CR.re for pa.rlh1.lly d1i1ab!erl
72-yr. old. J5.'i7 1, Miramar
Dr .. Balboa. 673-71 ~1.
LUHRS BOAT CO.
Now Hiring
BOAT
CARPENTERS
Som!! !:xpcr. Nf'<.·Ps!,
Apply Br1..,,•n 11 & 10 A~1
J\1on thru Fri. Only
849 \\1• ]'Ith SI,
Cost a. Mf'sa
~fALE orderly, exper. prt'f.,
smsll nursing horn!!. Call
for appL 494-8075.
MANICURIST-Me~ll Hair
Design, Coron11. del Mar. Pll
-494-8209 rve~ & Sund11 yp;.
MATURE Part lim e main·
tenance man, 4 hf'lll per clay.
5 days per wrrk. Llghl elf!C-
trital. plumhinJi:, pa (ntini.:;.
r lc. Salary open. Call Mr11.
Tillot!IOn, 557-7676 bet..,,·een
9-5.
MED OFC MANAGER
F/C Bkkpng lo $600
Ne"•port Be1tr h Arl!a
CA.ii Dana. R32-1950
ACl\1E PERSONNEL
TUm-IN AG ENC\' ·---MED. RECORD
CLERK
F ul l time. llospi1al rodin~
f'Xperil'nce r~uirrd . Apply
Mon thru Thur!!'., 9AM·4Pr.-I.
FO UNTAIN VALLEY
OOMM UN ITY l!OSPITAL
JTIOO Euclid RI \\o'r.rncr
979.1211
MEDICAL Transrriber, full
timP, S-:i daily/5 d11.y, Mu~t
hf' P.xp'cl in mcclic11!
terminolog)'. 1t'st rPQuircd,
sala ry opt'n eonlact l\1r11.
Tilbtson, 5.'i7--6300.
NCR
PROOF
OPERATOR
Commercial Bank Experirnce
~1in 6 months rrquirecl
1714) 646-7121
Ask .Jnr Mr. Mrnrlonca
Equal Oppor. r:mplnyer
NURSE ATTENDAN-TS
A<!u lc experience. 3-11:30 Pr.1.
Apply l\1on thru Thurll,
Sam-4p1n .
FOUNTAIN Vi\LLF.Y
COl\tMUNITY HOSPITA L
]7100 Eurlirl 11.! W11.rr1er
979-171 t
OFFICE MANAGER
2 yr. rollrge. EDP r_xp
Call Mr11. &·hrnldt
\\if:!-11'CLIF'r~
?rrsonnf'I AR:rnc:y
2043 \VfslcJifl Or., NB
64!>-mO
Outboerd Mechanic
PPnn. Job, fringr btnrfit11.
C1dl <7141 l1T-25Cll, Lakf'
Armwhfitd MArln&_s.
OVERSEAS
ORE JOSS TllAN PF.OPLE
.. All 11dUs It. proreulon1
e , Jiigf\cf \\'.!l.IO • Lower
~pt_n1e1 e Tu ht'n~n1s e Frre 1'ran!portnllon
CALL 541-4345
Servlcfl Gut\rsnt11ed
Vntil employmr.nt 11.l"ct:pttd
OVERSEAS SERVJCES
1617 E. 17th St S.A . Sul!e 3 * PANTRY MAN*
EXPERIENCED;
Al.Kl hAfltJ.le
oy!1cr tw. Cal~ Gl'IOrtr.
548.fHll 2 Tn 5 P ~1
Help Wonted, MA F 710 Help W•nled, M lo F 710 Furniture t lO Furnltur• 110
PAR'r Tlme"-&eret1ry &
Publlc Rcl1hon11. Sat & Sun
rCQuil't'<l . Dana. Poi n t
1111.rbor. C•ll ~tr. Hulvert,
714: 526-3002.
SALES Lady, 'xpe r f n r
de l lc 11. tr111 n . Cf'rman
Sptltldn( prci rd. Apply In
pr rsnn, BPr l l ner
Rl'·1tnur.inl , JS.i82 Beal·h
Blvtl .. 11.B.
SEC TY TO $625
PERSO:N=N=E-L--
Thl11 i11 a ra1K·ina1ing ,.. b lh11I
h-ivolves a ¥reat dPal of F'Ef; PAID
publle eonlact In 11.l'l In-Top lt11't1 I O'lmplt.f\Y llpefls
lf'T"rllti ng ('(), that payll fl't. Exf'C 1'l'c-ly v.'lth excellf'n t
01hrr ft'P job~. To S4fi0. ~kill~. Exct'ption11.J fringe
Call .Jt'an Brown, 540·6055 bentf!t.~.
Coa11lal Aien<·y Al..C:O Ff:E~ JOBS
2790 llHrbor Bl at Arl•m ~ C1l1-ou:s<'I Personnel
P Age™·y
LASTICS 2010 IV. Linroln, AnahP!m
LAMINAT ION 776-7'50
lllGll QUALl'l''i WORt-:. AS-Secrttery
SOCIAT fo:O \V/AIRCRAF'T 3 Positions Availnblr. f>.I lnl·
COMPONE:NTS. APPLJ· 1num 1 yr <'Xperienc" In \\ti·
CANTS SHOULD 1-IA\IF. gation, prohall'. l'flrporatr
AF.RO-SPACE EX-PER. 40 or grn<'ral busin<'s.'f. Largt
Hit \VK. DAY Slll~'T. AP-Newport Beach law fi rm.
PLY IN Pt-:R'SON. EDLER Phan<.' Jo Ann, a57-9900.
INDUSTRI ES, INC.. 2101
DOV'' s-N B SERV!Cf-.: Sl alion A1lrnd11n l . "', . . !acros.~ rrun1 o.c. Aiqxir! 1 CXPf'r'd. Also in merh11.ni('s.
J\1ui;t be able in do 1urw-upll
PRAC'r!CAL nur~ 10 care 8, hrakrll. DA)'S _ t·ounlaln
for elderl,\1 IX!llple, live i11. Vallf'y 'fl'xaro, Brookhurst
C:c po Bf'il("h, car neC'f's~11ry. & Garfield.
Gi1·f! rr rerrn('r.~ &. salary. 1-"-:C:C:.:C.CC-~~~~-
\Vritc. CJasslfiPd Ari No. SERV ICE STATION
3f>O. Da lly Pi!ut, P.O. Box ATTENDANT. EX"P.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-
* * * Large A~rtment Complex USED FURNITURE SALE!!
SALE S~arts • Saturday
March 25th at 9 A.M.
HARBOR GREENS
APARTMENTS
2700 Peterson Way
Costa Mesa * 546-5025
* * * Appl lance• 802 Garage Sale 812
KELVJNATOR, n1ndel no.
766NR. Run~ pi'rrcr!, good
concl, 17 cu. ft. 673--7395.
$100.
~~RI & SAT -Potpourri' nf
l'aiuf!s~ Nifty hargain~~ 1559
E. Ocean Rlvrl, Ralhoa
• J<ENMORE-Rrpairn1an
h1111 "·ashcr/dryerldishwash-
<"r~. R:Uarn, 546 -521 8,
83~76:20.
Jewelry 815
l:JiO, Cos!a Mei;a , Calif, 2252 H1trbor, Costa Mrsa nEFRJGF.:RATORS·Vi1ashers
92(16. SHAMPOO girl & 1111s1~L Lic-. $30. &. uri Side·by·S!de $1 5ll.
DIAMONDS: 1 rRral S160
\\'Priding band 1 l"lll'al $285.
DIAJ\10NDS 01'" TREMEN·
DOUS VALUE S35. 10 1$50.
101\'et" than ..,,.h.,le. 67fr7.l2l
nr 5.'17-4098. PRECISION sher! me 1 a I & sharp. Apply in perron. (;uarantrcd. '"'lellverrrl ,
mechanic. Joh shop exp. !lair \Ve!)!, 3305 Nrwport 646-7R2Q.
Space T!!k. 1922 Placentia, Bl\'d, I ~G~"~---~~~--1 A.--. rangr . \Vc:dgev.•00< C.~1. SPORTIN"G GOODS SALES: I-lolly, yello11', 34". good
PH !V·A~T-f"-. _roo_m __ &_b_a_t_h P1-ominent rrtail outlet r·ond. SlOO. Phone 67:1-26.19
\1· oulsirlr f'nlranre, in f'X-i;eekin~ niaiure J)l'rson !or FRIGIDAIRE \Vasher S:-.0 -
chani;:P ror lii;:ht houselli'Ork. fine career oppor. Other rrfrigt'rator soo. Xlnf cond.
Arl I 477 ,-1 s c 'l department opening!'; also. u rs. o"·er !., .1•. "-~" -,-,,, 64&-7?.fi:i. To $.-l5.1. "·,.,.... ·
Call Bob \l'ilson. 54<)....6()5."i Washer & Dryer PROFESSIONAi~ phone Coaslat Agrncy * 546-0648 *
solicitor -Dana Pfliot, San 2790 Harbor Bl al Ada1n!t
C GE Refrig. 14 cu fl w/'YJ lh Clemente, apistrano area. --ST-EA-DY WORK \Vork in your own home. fref'zcr. "'·hite. fro!'il-free.
Best deal ln area. Phone Rrliable h11rd \l'Orker 11·ho 67J....2J9t
8X>-1465 be!wepn 9:00 .1.m. ·wants steady l'nlployrnent & \\'EDGE\VOOD Gas Rangt', 4
and noon. good 1nron1e, bencfit.<1, l-~ler·-bumrr. Perfect \VO rking
HA,'NF: SO~'T WATF.R-has lrolux, Div. of Consolidated condition $50. 673-8069.
OJ){'ning In F".V. & H.B. area Foods. Call Mr. 1-li;r.a, ii::JO-
lor 2 aggrP~il'r i:;alesn1rn, 11 AM. 496·2.\&l
<f-'. ALWAYS TOP j ·(-iiJ. ll'EMPORARY \I ASSIGNMENTS
Com. tn &: r.gister today
Yow'n be gkld yo1 did.
Ho fte ever. llU Da Pottf
Drive, Irvine. tJJ. 12'5
Furniture 810 -7 PC. VELVET &
SPANISH OAK
LIVING RM. GROUP
consisting of 8' velvet ~h1,
j'On!rastini;t velvet · accent
«hair, 2 Spanish oak E"nrl
l11bles. Spanish oak •·offee
lablt' & 2 Spanish lamps,
DlA.l\1 0NDS-Buy Direct * \VHOLESALE PRICF:S r
Da na Dia monrls 496-+3090
Mechinery 116
BL.ACK & Deckl!'t" radial
5a"'' ne\\' S&'i.
673-3826.
Miscellaneous 811
*AUCTION *
FRIDAY 7:30 P.M.
MARCH 24th
PF:RSONAL'. El<-FECTS or
CAMILLE ATO LL, MOVIE
ACTRESS & DANCER
Costumes, Clo1hes. Old hooks
& niisc. Cfllorrd TV's,'
Stereoi1, Brlrm srls, Bunk
lx-ds. Divan!!:. Mat 1resseS.
Drop leaf maple !ahlt', 7
chairs. Ot'sk.o;, Re.frlg·11:
\\111.shers, Drye1·~. Slnve11 &
MUCJI J\10RE~
WINDY'S AUCTION
Good t-ornmission & inrPn·
live progran1 . Call 897·1093.
RF:CT.PTIONIST: HO\I' would
\'nu like to work for the
·re.s!Pst growing rrRI f'Slate
& investn1ent eo?' )'flun)'.!
morlt"rn ro-v.-orkers will wt"l-
ron1e you. S400
Call ~frlt'n }Jayr!t 540-6055
Coasral Agency TELEPHONE Sales. Top
cc.mmis11ion1 11.nd bonus. Ap.
ply in person between 9.00
and J2 :00 noon ar RlSl Bolsa
Avenue, ?11idway City.
TRAVEL Ai::ency n1anage r
nttded for gro11o·ini; Nl'\vport
Beach offi ce. }.1inin1um 8 yr~ expe,r1ence. Sr n d
rE'!iume 10 Clasgili"!cl Ari No,
340, efo Daily P ilot, P . 0 .
Box 1560, C.M.
All FOR $199 COME BROVi'SE: AROUND
TERMS-ALSO 2075~ Newport Blvd. 2m<l Harbor Bl a t Adam11
RECEPTIONIST, fu ll fjme
in office, good typ ist,
C.enetlll office work .
Shorthanrl 'not nee. Appl y in
per!ll'.ln. Colwell Prop. In<'.,
220 E. 171h St., Costa J..1esa.
Reel Estate Career
N<'ll-' or pxperienced, join the
Comp11ny !h11.t'11 growing, If
you do not ha ve 11. license,
check on our
$49
Reel Estate
Licensing Cours1
Full 11a.les training program
-no cost. Management op--
portunitif's. Ask for J\'1.rs.
.Jon('s for informatipn at
842,5.W.
Tarbell Realtors
R.F:. SALES - The best
trainin i:: progriim in listln~
& se-rin11:. Up lo SO'"'n
rnmm·s. CRll Bill llaA.~ or
Phil ~lcNam('I'>. Vi l lag e
Rc11.I EJi;!Rtl', Fo unt II in
Vall<'Y for appointment.
!l.11-~q{j().
RJ-:AL E~1atr Salf"3. Llke
"'orking in Lilgun11 Beach?
l mmPdiR1~ opt;"ninl":' for two
quAlifiPd licen.<ied prrson~.
SANOCA!'ITLE Renl E.o;late
j Nr\v 0\.\'rlf'r I * * .. 494-802:1 * * *
ROOM Cl.ERK -M11lr. Ex-
rwril'ncrd. Call Mr. Perez,
Nr"•porlrr Inn. 644-1 700.
SALES
AGE IS AN ASSET
\Ve nrt'rl 11. goorl m11rure f)tr-
50n 4(1-6() yr5 or 8(1:{'.
NM\'JX'U1 Brnrh Co. "''ilh
many hent>fit11.
Gnn<l pay &. a v.·cekly cMh
l]onus plan.
\\'p h11vt' proplr v.•i!h us ov<'r
12 yrs & cnjfiy 1\·orking iri
!he local Arra.
PlrASI! phone for fln inter·
VU"\lo'.
644-0212
. . •• 10¢ ••
TROPICAL FISH MAN
\Vm·k ln pct store. 58 f'ashion
Tidand, N.B.
U P HOL STER ER exper
necessary. Apply 89ii: \V.
l6lh St., Newpo11 Beach
WAITRF.SS, exp'd dinner.
flver :21 . 11i1.e 10 to 1:2.
Grrman speaking prer. Ap-
.PlY in person, Berlilll'I'
Restaurant, 18$82 Beach
Blvd .. H.B.
\VAITRESS, exprr. tor rarly
shi ft. Married. Lh·e in l-1.B.
area. Eve11. 54R-J757.
\\I ANTED:
3 pieee dance band.
l\·lodcrn or popular music.
• 548-0072 •
\\'ANTED: Mature "·nm11n
lor "·ork in Jlealrh t<'ood
Store, 40 hr "'k, exp'd
ptPf'd, S-1~9jJ7.
* * WANTED BAR MAID
FOB. NICE BAR Ca J I
&12-488:2.
\\/ANTED, nur~er y
salesman, 1 yr <'Xperience
In So. Calif. Apply in
person. Lloyrl's Nursery,
2038 Ne1\·por! Bl vd. C.1\1,
\\!ANTED: \\Toman to care
for :l C'h ildrrn. Prefer nlclC'r,
mature person. Salary, $140
J><'r mo. plus room & board.
Call 847-43.'i9 alt 7:30 pm.
1'.1r. ColPman.
WOl\1AN, energerir, llt'lll.
\\'Ork in motel laundry.
Perma-Prr~ k to"''t'i11, no
ironin~. 494-1J96.
\V0?11EN -girl11 -ladies Earn
$3-$5 pt>r hr. Service estab.
r·uller Brush Ctrlllomers.
Mr. L!!l'irw, 962-0416.
LAY-AWAY PLAN &hind Tony's Btdg, i\1at'ls.
TRADERS Costa 1t1esa * 646-S6A6
FURNITURE OPEN DAILY 9 lo 4
202 N. Broadway, S.A. ·s ANSUl AM /FM/STEREO/
R.1:"1-1305 Open 7 rlays J\fPX _ "'ith "'11.lnut ca.~r
M0\1ING: Must Sacrifice. $139.95. BSR McDonald 310X
\1111.l nt!I homf! furnishings, profC.!iSlonal turntable t'Om-
RCA rolor <.-ombo, Zen ith ple1e v.·ith bass, d usl l.'OVcr &
port. TV, rernote conlrol. 5' Shure M75D cartridge $80.
Oar. formica top , 2 colfee & Pione('r Am b as s a rl n r
end tbls, 3 Mts dr11pcs, SJ)<'akers \\'ilh 12" bli ss, 6"
n1ap~ shelv<'.s, c 1 o c k s. midrange, 3'' 11uper lweelPr
la m p~. mirrors. 979-()567. -ra!ed 100 wa1t11 $299.95.
J~i72 Orchard. apt R, C.:'.1. Sale ptice complell! i:y,;lem
PVT Ply-Almost new cul
v('l vt:'I peacock blue Sflfa &
lovf'seal S345. Dk oak (sq &
ftP)l;J Pnr! !bl St't $5.
\\'rough! iron frp!P fool.s .t:
ba.!ike!. cu.st. m;irle $50. Xlnl
Krnn1or,. ,1·asher $ 6 0 .
P laypen $10 .• m is c
i1t>ms-~1arion ~3(}...6920.
EXEct.rrIVE Movinst t n
furnished home. Must
sacrifice sofas, game table.
hanging lamps. "·ashing
machine', baby furn., lt"R
lr<"chouse & s1\•ing sel.
aIB-1397.
\\'HAT A BARGAJ~!
GorJ;?eous Early American
sofa & cha ir. !ul!Cious t!ue
vrl\'PI, mu~t sell. 646--0404
or 642-36.'\0.
VELVET Jivini::-
11lso lferf'ulon
lnl'C~E'a t. All
6·1>1to1
room se!.
sofa &
l\kc new.
ALL green recliner C'ba \r,
naugh, like n€""'. S40. 23502
lkhnar. Laguna Niguel.
49>4114
9' DECORATOR cu s l o m
loose bil<.'k pillow couch. $95,
)l;lnt cond. Ba y.shore s
&t'>-3.'Wl4.
g1,• COUCH .• goorl. condition.
$40. Call 548-6255 after 5:30
Pl\1.
* CRIR & Mattress, like
lit'\\', clean. xlnt condition.
$75. 54~.-iJ,117.
\\IANTI:D: 4 Bent'olo'OOCI di·
nt'tte chairs. ?o.1ul'it be good
cond. 979-0;,96
DRU:\f TABLE. xlnt cotl<I.
Dark wood. $30.
Rl'\--03j):l
$299.95. U.S.A. S t er' o
Equip. \Varehouse, 179 E.
J 71h St., Costa J\f e s a ,
64j...2'142.
GALS & GUYS
Get )'our Bikinis & Swim
Trunk11 for Easter V1ca1ion
NAME BRAND S ..
DISCOUNT!
BALLIF SALES
16&4 Newport Blvd., C?o.1, rear
STEREO. Unclaimed l9n
Garrard set. Au!o turn!able.
air suspension s pea k er s
w fcr os1 °ov er system.
AJ\.I/1'~M/MPX radio &.
tape deck. Still brand new &.
guaranteed. ~Id for over
$300, pay oft balance of Sl20
or take over smal l
payment~. Credit Dept..
7l4/893-0501.
BAR EQUIP. SALE
NCR Cuk Register, Ice
makcr. Bannaster, Chairs
& lables. Likr. new. Comp!.
har f'qulp. Ca ll
714 15.18--4796.
CLOTHING, i;i;i.eir; 10. 12,
14. Handbags, j r. we Ir y,
s"·eaters. many othf'r ilPms,
all like nev.•. 2879 Ballow
Ln, Cl\f off of El Camino.
5~7-721)3.
WAREHOUSE SALE
Carpel rrmnant11 &. odrl lot
floor tile -Ix-lo"' NJS L .1717
Rfrt'h. Sui1f' G, N.B. Da.Uy
9 to S, 5411· 1~10,
POOL 15x30x4', oval, 11.hove
ground, Jilter. $1200. new,
used 1 season. Now $300.
968-9571.
LIKE new Philco range S!IO
Ml1cell•neou1
Wtnted 120
\\'ANTED: Tall lr3k"''OOd
dl'l'•M'r 8.lld 1rakv.'00d hf.nch
for stereo eon1ponen 111
540-2279 aft 5 PM .
\VANTED to buy 1968
Swe dl • h Ro rs tr ll n d s
Chrls1m1~ Plate, 644-4687.
Mu1ic1l ln1trum1nt1812
Fender Str1itoce1ter
S 160 or bf'st oHrr,
• 549-Z19:l •
Bf.AUTIFUL Bel <lf dnim~.
3 Lln11, 2 TlrMs, $2.00 ••••••••••! 801ts, Power llP04
''""'•1.1:: s,.,..,, 0'""' "'"'' -,.., 6-9--L-u-h-rs-2"'8-.-'urr, 9 yr11. old. ;\larv~lnu1
\.l.'AfCMo~. t:ood \\'/kid... Si>dan rrul$cr. 3'X) I-IP \'SI.
~. Trim labs. lull h!h1t1r rquip.
7 \\'EEK old p11pp1rs. moltlf'I" Only ~ hours. ~1a11;.-t').·
roc·kapoo f11 her terrier. Traic, Sll rr1h{·I'. 495-~191.
962-3980.' 25' Fau-lir.t'r. s.lps t Nrv.•
cnvl'r"J. Xhll l'Ond. B.t11t cash DARLING rockapoo pup~. fi offpr O\'f'r $2500 \8.kPs. Pulls
v.·ks. 8t'll1 rhl" Ea!lf'r bunrt)•. skirn. fiT:>--OSIO . 13631 ~(arbor. Ga.rdtn G.rove
536-11121 B t R t /Ch I' 911• 1 Blk. So. of G.G. Frwy. • ~1ED I U:'l1 11ze n111l,. dog 2 01 I, tn -er r '1(1 636-2J33 ~.~;.1~:~· Good w/childreo. CATALINA 27' SLOOP --J[-SJ-:..=O::::Rc,.IV=[--
Urantl nr11• bon1 Au.x. po11o·t'r. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 5Jrrp11 ILX, s 8 radl<\ RDt",
Zdrlian cymhlll§, must r;RI"., [ I[~ j S~. or best o!r 847-46.i-l. Ptts Mid 5uppll91 _ ~
P ianos/Organs 126 ~-------~~~
6'2" hf'11.drnon1, ronven1en1
1"f'1\ pnrl ~lip " plrnty nf
smrkinr:. Cluh ratrs. f'or info
l'll.11 ~7-9046 Aft 6 30.
the Midas Mini
Motor Home * PUBLIC NOTICE!
~rort' you buy yotJr pin.nn
or organ, be sure & sre us
for Best Selection
for H1P be!tl !Wrv11·r in
Soulhr n 1 California
At Lowest
Discount Prices
COAST MUSIC
SERVICE
1819 NP1vporl Bl at 1!11r\"l(lr
Costa M<'sa 642·21151
Orwn Sunrl11.ys 12 to 5pm
--0-RGAN • PIANO-
WAREHOUSE
Nf>1\'·Usrrl Fan1ou11 Br11nris
STEIN\\IAY, Ktf\1BAl.L,
CtlICKERING. f'\c. t01·"r
1000 pianos avail. l
l!A r.IMONO, KIJ\1BA LL I.:
CONN, <'IC., ()ri:Rns.
Belorf' you huy-Give us a try!
Larl":'est Df>aler in the \\'est
PENN'' O\\'SLEY CO.
714/897-1114
11357 Beach BL. S. of Ka1ella
Da ily 111-9, Sa! 10-6, Sun J:2-6
WOULD YOU
BELIEVE
FREE ORGAN LESSONS
L'I long 11.s :you like! No reg-
l.~tration. No obligati<in. Just
Came Mondays 7:30 pm.
COAST MUSIC
642-28S!
MAJOR BRAND ORGANS
From $395 inc. Allen .. Conn •
Hammond • \Vu rlitzer, e!c.
Al90 1-la rp sichords &
P ianos.
GOU LD MUSIC CO.
2045 No. Main, S.A.
547-0681 ** Sin<!e 19U
PIANOSttORGANS
Kawai, Stem•11.y, Hammond,
Allt>n, Br.ldwin. etc. From
$195. RENTAL5 $10 & up.
Daily 10-9. Sal 10-6. Sun 12-5
F)ELD'S PIANO CO.
18.'l.1 Nev.•port Blvd.
Cosla ~1e~a 714/64:;.3250
TOP PRICES PAID FOR
Str.inways & Hammonds
PENNY 0\VSLEY c 0 . I
892-3314
Pets, General 150 Boats, S•ll 909 Di!llributM by
CALL 968--0833 COLU~tBl1\ 2'1. Good ro1k't, Ken Crall Pl'Oth1ct.5
l pr. R1ngneck par~kt't'!s $20 Prif't'Ct In 5cll. Bf'! Ii CREVIER
1 Plumhead parakttl s1:1. ii 11:121-!17.lll 1\1 r . Stsn1· MOTORS
'l l~:.ianas 11.nd rag!! $10. haugh or ~lr Tlllf".
4 Corkatf't'lS $10. R'-TRI:\IARA..\'. ~u gl as~. 20!l \\', Jst Si ' S:tnta Ana.
Rinl":'nrck dov~s $1 ra.l11r. nylon s111t S\5(1 835-31_7_1 ___ _
Golri1·n pheas11n!s Sl.). J Ring 9fiS-!l!iil ____ 1 R ~~CREATIONAL Vehiclt~I
n1>ck phf'11st1ol' SlO for all 24· FIBf.RGLASS SLOOP for Rt'nt fron1 $75 to $Hlrl ,
Bob \Vhlte Qua il S2 rach -1 J\1us.! SPU rhl.<o 11 rrk' p<'r \llf'ek. plus i r per milr;
pr. 1\·h1 tf' dn\'eS $4. l\Tnkr Qffrr . , •. Bk!' li~J.022:2 Slt't'p! 4 In 8. Offer expiff•
f'E'r ~·00<1 'or dogs: Coor! RAC ING SllhO't~Si:1n illll~ .. 1l1ne l, 1977. 5.t6-02'Jl. 200~1 ,;urplul'I meR!. ok11 y 'or rlogs, good •'On<!, "'inninp; l'M:"oat. Bri11101. C.f-.1.
rlO! fnr hun111n foorl. :17r ;i fii.1-7529 M • p *
lb., l'Onlains m11ny vi!fl lllins , * arv1n earce
& niincr11!s. rr1 llc1tllh 1!'19:'! Boats, Slips/Docks 910
N•wpon "i ,· rl. c." sL1Ps AVAILABLE Motor Homes fi.1~37 Hrs. R--8 rla ily. f·ron1 40' 10 74'. ,JusT nfr \'ta
C••• 852 Lotlo. NA. Sales • Rentals
!714! 6·1:i.2120.
ADORABLE Burmese Kftrcns;1 ===--~~. -=I 558 3222 fron1 Honr.:: Kon~. Pe<ligrl'e CHOICE slip rn.r 50 m _ 6.r "'
Brili.!ih i::!ock. 67~.~1 . hoat. Sh p is~ v.·1dt . (114 ) 1•111 S. V1ll11.ge \Vay. S.A,
Dogs 854 67H606::::;·~~~~=--ll!l71 race Arm"'' motor 24 ',
Rl<i BAY SLIPS ~IN'pll l). A1r-<"Qnd . 4 K\\'
Standard Schnaui:tra Sifl<' rir~ f1'0m $2.25 fL s:f'n. fi.oon 111i. S 9 . 9 :i 0
Ch. sired. AKC reg. Black ft4~25!12 or 494-2671 f'\'C~. I !14 -R ·I 3 0 day 1 /t ve1
prrflE'r & salr. rem11lts. --BO-AT SL1Ps--:::96:::'-:.:.1-:.:"::3·:_ ____ _
Ears cropped, shots. \\'Orin-l\'""''fXll'! BtRt'h ~~·:22.'i.1 * * Rr:NT our '71 El DorA.c!·
Pd, paper lralrlf'd. Ex. '!!!~!!!!~~~1 [ motor hotnr. SIE'f'ps 6 full 1
"'a!chrlogs. 548-i987.
1
~ 1 ~ sdl-confaincd. Reser v '
T rh NOV!'!!! ~8-9.J,lJ SIBERIAN. Jluskys, ~how ransportation ml
qualify, AKC, 2 rn n · ~. ~. -------'· Trailtr1, Travel 94~
blklwht ft"m. pup~. Champ. 1.·-A-R-IS_:T_O_C_R_A_T_S __
~~~ck b 100 d 1 i n e 5 · Campers, Sele/ Rent 920 e NE\VPORTS
* OPENING Sperisl. $2.00 Fib I AlSCI. llevCral used $395 &: u·
Di11coun r. All bret'rl rlog erg aSS \\'ORSl.JA11 TRAILER SALE'
e AlITO-MATE''
xrooming. <'all N08h'• Ark ** Camper Shell 21ro \V, 17th. Street
Groon1ing Par lor. 642-9R2J. Fits ,68 • ,72 Santa Ana (n4) 531-25!1-
ENGLISJ-I Setler Pups !Or· Chevy El Camino 17" GOTEL. retrlg, !Cf' ho:\
1tnge Briton\ 7 wkli, AKC, C~OOO CONDITION 11tn""· tv.·in propane tank•
Chstockshots,\vormerl . MAKE OFFER ! 110 & 12 v llgh!log. Sips .1
96:2-2874 . Cell 837_5003 JnsuliitCrl "''/space heatrr,
MALTESE pulls, 1 femnle, 2 ply tires. elcc b t 11. k e
mah•, adorable, I o v a h I e '6.'. KAISER Jrf'p v a n "'{brake kll. $650. ~5-346li
puppies. xlnt bloodline", AKC 13·x8'x6' Right <li'i\r, aulo, AIRSTREA?>.f '63-XY twi n
reg, pri ply 846-3843. low milri1. $'165. Inll'tnatlonal. air/all ai·
TOOdles. 2 bl11rk & whitr. t l2l:l1 UN 5·:!54!1. ('(!'51;. 1\1\rit oond. Serviced.
1blond & "''hile, 5 weelt~. SlO IO" ALASKAN CA)lPF.R l'f'arly 10 roll . SS!m/offer.
each. 642-4818, 534-.1,RSr, 3148 sumatraPl.,C:\I Pvt. 'n..,,·ner. 673~0•4~.
aftrr 6. e 545-5373 e l-'6~1~'-c'~""cc:.· ---~---
PART S!rmoyan puppy $10, HALF Cab C 11 mp er. SF.E .the Qf!\V l9]2 ]5'
Part Labradol" pupp y, W/Jacks. Excellent Cond. Scotsman k Rorocir tratle?ll.
SEARS elrctric 18 chord ree:d sn1a!I, $7. 642-4818, 534-3885 :v!S-3049--Aft , 5 p,m. A hetter buy! Ml'Sa, Camprr
organ, play 'by number j f alter 6. -· SaleJ, 2036 i-1&.rbor Blvd ,'
rlesirecl. $139.95 value, $75 or ~='""'=------Cycles, Bike1, C.fl.1. 646-4002. be ff "'" ,..,,. DARLING t1mall miniaturP Scooters • 925 I -:C.:."-..:C:..C:~-----
st 0 er, ,>'tQ-\1,,.,:i. poodle. black $45. 642-41118, I"'"'.--,-------:-:~ 1966 Chalel ex p ll o dab I P-
TV, R•dlo, HiFi, 5..'H-3885 11.ftl'r 6. · 6 9 Hus q v ar n a 2 5 O ft berglaJS ·A. !tar{I•· camplflg
Stereo 136 Sportsman. v-., clean & trailer. Ha, -11~veo "4c9 box, LABRADOR RelriP.vpr pup+ '"'J ... I'• .,
FISHER
KX-90 40 wa tt stereo amp
(w/o tuner) + 2 Whar~ale
&chromalic bkshlf spkr:o;,
Amp-concen. bs I.: tr .. ldns.
ront., hi fil., tape mon., 4-+
tune. sel. Wal. case. Spkrs-
heavy duty \vfr. \v/indiv.
lnne cont. \\l::tl. ext. 3-w11y
system. Set orig cost $340.
~II fast S180. Ph. Mike al
R97-7791 art. S.
1,972 RCA k ZENITH close
()Ut saJP.. Absol ute-minimum
pricing cin a.JI '72 mode!11.
Some '73 models no_w in
stock. Save during our end
of modt'I year sal~. War-
ranty on all sel~ i1 3 yr pie·
lure lube, 1 yr parts &-1 yr
service. Terms availabll',
ABC Color TV, 902t Atlanta
at Magnol ia, Huntington
&ach. 968-1129.
2.l .. MAPLE COLOR TV
\\i(JO(J cabinet, reposse~sion,
regularly S569.95, floor sam-
ple, onr onl y ...... S429.AA.
STEREO COMPONENT
with spcakt"rs. regularly
S1 6H.9::i. sale $119.RS. floor
~an1plt', one only,
MONTGOMERY WARD
Huntlnglnn Ccnl('r 892-6611
ZENTTH. Porl11.ble 19"" Black
11nd whlll! TV, new pictu re
tut>r. 1 year v.'arranty SSS.
541\-1.195.
19'' TV, hlk & whl.. Ulled
l'l'T'y litt.lr.. 47 El PMeo,
N.B. Lido Tr11.ilt'r Park.
RCA 21 •• Colnr TV, new pie·
turP tu!w, 2 year w1L1Tan1y
$225. MS·l39.'i.
reliable. Ne1v rear knobby ~lf'eps 4. •ow ,.ht. 540 . ....,12. pies. Benutiful Ea11tcr gifts
130 ~·, 7 tire. F iltron. 21'" iron( 540--5312. • . no paptrs. =--1'1 0. I==="-'-------~ wheel . new MX handlebars. TENT !railer, t'Xpandahlc
TEACUP Toy Poodle. 9 wkl'I S475. fir m, 544-£831. hardtop sJp11 6, 11tove, 1lnk. old, silver. Ve,y reasonable. 84 642-4818, 534-.'l885 aft 6. '69 a..:;A Victor 441cc, set up dine tte. S7fi0. 6-1777.
for dirt rld inir, CU5tm seat TRAILER for 11 11. I "-
2 Beautiful n1 i n i a I u re & oil tnk. Magneto ignition Arislocr111 1.o .... ·!iflf!r, xl n1
Poodle!!. 9 "'eeks old. Might v.·ide bar!!. "400" tilt!l. Xlnt corw:L $1 250. '19'1-3720.
turn silver. 546-4J45. ncl $150 968--0889 c.-,;;;;;~;;;;;;,c;;;;;:;;:c:;;o;:::;:;;I:.'."''.'.'.'.:.!:~~;:~· '7..,--IAuto Servic.-, Parts 94? G Dane Pupt1 /Grown "Giant" 3 Girls Rlue' Bikes. Schwinn • -·---'-----
VelveJ blk-gld ra \vn-Onyx 121 26" Brttze & 20" GOOD¥EAR Po I y g La 11 ~
Brindle·l-larle·Rf'all 968-0590 Hollywood . Xlnt eond. No Blem11 11ill 11izes low priCf'
SCHNAUZER pups. Stud gears. 497-1926. 1-/ijackeNi S:W .00 -G60xJ "i
service, grooming. tenns. .67 Suzuki X--6 Scrambler. J60X15. L60Xl5 -29.95 +
• R-46--0839 • Sf.reel & dirt. Good bike. FET. US -AnM>n Americr1
SAMOYED puppie.~. AKC N!!t:'d& lini11hing $250 cash mags $15.9!1. Buy-sell-Ira<'~
Reg .• s wk!t, shnlft. Make of· -"~·:;;7-~226::;;:.9~. ---..,-...,.,.--open Sunday, C.M. 64~J5;. I
·ss G~tvl's, good cond. fer. 492-1851 Aft 2 pm & -l·~l.9'0~-~N~•~w~po~<~l~T~ltt~C~i~ly~.i v.·kf'nd . * r<.\11.ke Offer *
2 MALE min. pood!e11, 6 "'ks C&IJ 847·7301 1 Ir@' J
old, Sl5 & S25· '71 KAWASAKI 00, Lo mi's, ,. __ Aotoo __ "'_""' __ ~ I
646-8188 Allf'r ~::JO Jmm11c. Make offer. · -
AKC BEAGLE l\1ALE PUP-* * 842-2900 • +
PY, 11 wks. show qu11.Ji ty. l~ .• ~,~H7.0°'N"'o""A::.:::.,.:1ra=1:;:1 "'so"'.-m-od..,.el Genera) 950 i
$50. ~1526· CT 200. 21Z7 Miles. $150. ---------I
PULJ-Free. ARC. Ma I l! Phof'le' 5..16-27!4. 'SR GMC supe.r V!tn, bc!st or-!
Very a!fl!cli<ll'lflle. 2 yni old.1.::.::;~,=.:::-C~"-°"'cc.---fer over $1,0001 892--9210[
R33-J29:5. 2 HONDA 55 tra_il bikes i~'-'~"~'-'-·~·-m~·~-~-~0 , SJOO and $50. .. SHERRY'S POODLES * ....,o """I I 5 Antiquts/Cla1-1lc1 953' -~ a tl'r .p.m.
EASTER PUPPY SALE!
tiO. & Up. ALL COLORS. HONDA Trail 00 l.1ke new! 1940 FORD
546-2848. Only lfiOO mi, buddy St'al. Exccllrnl col'lcf. -S850
$200. 968--0889. or ht.st nlfe.r.
YORKSHIRE Pu p 11 ~AK C. l.ADIF'.S .1 wherl Hawthorne ~5672
Sho!s, 9 week,,. Bold-loving! b!cyclP. Ilk!! llf:-"W. CO'St $139. Dune Buggies f561
f\!11lrs/Feml!t. 897-8.150, no~ ss5 firm. 540-3178. 1
SAMOYED tem11 le pupp!t-s, 7 * INDIAN SUPER SCOUT. '71 HRDTP 1200 ee MU Flk1
wks. Reason&ble. Ch rl R ood C 11 Cosl $2100 new, Se.U .$1»1! ll3S-S9!l~ OPPf' · uns .S: • 11 Xlnl mnd. ~236. ' '' 963-2736 aft 4 pm weekdays. I
LABRADOR PUPS .70 Hnnda 51350 Trucks 962,
4 mal es lf'fl R.17·4704 GOOD COND. $.100 or
SUPER gre11l Dan~ pupll', i)r.sl offer. &1:)...53-48
Chan1p sired. '70 JIONDA ('h(ipper, lot$ ol * * 645-001!1 • * rhrm. :"Cini conrl, $100 &
GMC
TRUCK CENTER !
for 11. phone r11U roulrl 1111ve
you milrli of rlriviag. \Ve
nl'rd sales 11.grnts to reprc·
llE'nt a quali ty cli,n!ele. \\'e
hav' floor Um!!, full time
n>e<'plionisf, 11rnsll ~ales
stalf and opportunity for
good Pf'Ople, Call Nick
RogPr:t. 842-4466.
WOMAN FOR
APT. CLEANING
LARGE COMPLEX
Must be thoroughly expe ri-
enced in commercial clean·
ing.
SALl'~: Custom Spool Furn .
Tahles & chairs. Who!esal l!
prices. 548--0953.
Frid ge.I r·f"frl g, apl 111.e $75 •••••••••-Philco ITfrig w I hot 1 om
frf'ezer $60 Wurlitzer piano.
"'·a.lnul $27j, S.16-7904 e\'es
SllAKLEE Products {for 11
hcalthitr. clellflf'r. wl'althier
)'OU, 894-2564 or 1192-JIG.l.
ONF. t\1,<ln KQylon loom rub--
her ma!t/sprg. 11tHI lram~.
$fi0 . X\nt ron<I. 548-3259.
ADORABLE AKC York11hlr,. T.O.P. 646-8436 11!1 5.
puppie11, 7 1vk11. ?up 11hol11. '72 CB-3.'iO f-loflf!a , 1000 mi's,
Lllrge11t inventory In Ora.ngr
County. Ca.mpt':r~ &: Truck11. 1
Ovl'r fiO models to Choosl'
tmm.
Ieadership IJ REAL ~STATE
SALE MEN
Nl'.'td mtn \\'ho are ready to
JrA.rn lhe car busincu 11.nd
art "'1 11!ng lo train. ~fusi
have ltOOd JX't'SIOnallty, he
inlr l't'll lrd In 11. ful11N". drtit!I
well, 11alesn1inded . Benf'fltit:
f.)t'mo,, p;niu p inli., 1u11.ran-
trrd s11l;i.ry plu5 t'Ommili·
11lon!'I. Unlimltrd lnrnmr. Ap·
ply in Pl!t'1an. UNIV!.'RSI·
TY 01.0ID.fOBIT.F., 1%0
Jl11rhor Blvrl.1 Costfl M,.M.
SAl..£5 v.:oman, Some exper ..
htdllprtad11. drapt!'Me,-, t.lc.
l P't'CA, Sal It .. Sun, 'rlnffa,
&!. C';),,,.r P1111.11 M&-M17.
C•ll 546-5015
)~
Antiques 800
SCRAM-LETS
ANSWERS
Cainf'd -Gaily -Tulip -
Oe:adr n -DANGl.JNG
G1il1 ·wM krtp a1111lln1e 11rt
of1t•n /(If! DANGL ING.
LARGEST t1IOCk o( n"w k
ol<I Nfl"Vajo l!nd Orirnhil fUfl!!
in Orange Co. f>.·Ton -F'rl 2·6:
Sat 9-4. Shah 'n ShAh1 2D23
So. ?i1a in, SA M'1·1212.
\VANTED to' buy, 1968
Swed I a h Rorstrand1
Chrl"tm11~ Pl11 !t . 64~--4637.
S.:-11 the old sruff
SOFA, nev.• 8' And love ser.f,
bo1h for $150. s e "''Ing
machine S2.'i, 968-79\0.
4 Walnut bar 11ool!t, 24" gold
vinyl ~als.
• 1' 557-6926 all 5 p111. * •
Gerege Sal• 112
GARAGE Sale, Sat k Sun.
All De.)'. 2 m11.plt' end 1ab!et,
polr floor 111.mp. sofa bed,
r11.rlio.~. lamp~. rerords. ce-
rlar chest, l\nllque trunk11.
l'Lmall appllnnt·r~. JZ:ames.
ht1n<lbll.g11, cloU1 e11. deeorator
l1rm11 & ml~c. il1Jm3, ~
Cnrdill<'rR Dr. r..ns.,ion Vlrjo,
GARAGF. 5811": Clothing,
11h:r.~ 10, 1~, 14.\ like fl('""
jf''>l'r lry, houi;rhold i!'m11,
rlc All In good taste 2A7!l
Ballow Lant, C:\I off of El
Cnmtn11. 5;,7-7:!13.
ANTfQUE : ll"JZ <'hPSI of
r!M1o11o'f'f'3, trunk. 011.lc library
th!. ~ "'Bnnf'r, Other
unuSU&l It" ms. 67~ TfJO
Port·a-crib $20.
Almost New •••••••. !149-0706
IRVlNE COAST COUNTRY
CLUB MEMSERSl·llP
54!hl438 all 5 pm
HALr PRJCE SAJ~E·.---S~A~T~
A11sist11:nce l-'!aR:Ue Thrift
S~P. 505 32nd S!, N.B.
SELLING Out -All Rlkr
part!, nnne nvrr $Oc .J1tkr '11
J99 E. 16rh, c.~t cor. or
Oninge.
30 Inch El~c. r11.ngf. ex-
~lltJnt $4~. l:it:I Oran.gr
Avf., C-1\f. 642-Yi66.
~IUST Sell! Calnr TV. Otf\c'fo
fum1rure Exr rcyclr , Btlrm
~' D1ne11r ~t . ~7310
[ 11
, •546-2784 al>'''° p.m. All '"'\:f.;";;,,
rrte to You ~ JIONDA 70 .1\ilnl Trail .50. Ex·
3 Lints, :::CTimts, $2.00 [ &o.tsand l ~1 cone!. Priv11.1~ stttet use PONTIAC-GMC-FIAT
BILL BARRY
_ Marine EMmMt . only. Sl60. 494-9522. (1st St. 11.t S.A. F'wy.J 'i••·---~~;; '72 YAMAHA 125 ;\lX. Lesli 2000 E. ],111 St .. Santa AM COCKAPOO puppiPs, 7 \llkll I than 15 mlle11. ll\fMAC! 558·1000 ~~11 hold 'til Easttr. Bo1t1/M1rfne
904
&14-23.tl l-.ss=CH=F.V-.-v="',;"-'10-n-p-ic-ku-p,
PULi. AKC, male. Very 11.r-
ferhonal"· Z YN old.
R33-329.1.
old, SIAMESE cal. 1 yr
l;l)ll,VNI femllll', goo<! WI
<"h11dn"n, %11· 1117.
fMarc R~11glf' Trrrlrr~. Onr
year old, Frr~ n> c;oorl
homt'S. &14-IR47.
RF:AUTl~~UL ki11en~. very
ht-allh}', 6 wks olcl.
R4{M;.1Jj
R PUPPIES, 9 Wkli ('lid . 1;
Crrman Slwp. 1 011lmlf!An
M5-431:i afrrr l:Yl PM.
l V1>ry fuzzy lltUr hey '1tla.
1 1n\'11t)lr little ~rl. 9 v. k.5
1>4()-I!:i<l.
Equip. =E"l_ec_t~r7ic~C~•-r-,--~9"3"0 I Turho<lrlw.. Ctm lop shell.
BOAT TRAll~r.:R, ex 1r 1 cabult'ts -crpl. 1 owner ..
,111urdy construction, '72 He., * Etrctrtc Car AuloetlP. new 548-5261. ,
llt::htii & v.•lnch, $1 2."I. 7.j ru lire~. coorl ha111.'rie~, new t~ORD Plck.UJ) truck[
rr AC/DC r,fri...:. Pf'rfcct for pn int. 67l-2-462. w/f'amiwr. Rood All 1rourvl
hn11t, bsr. c11.n1ptr, rte., Mobile Homes 9l5 cont! .. mu~! ,,.,. to ~·
nt'~r nl"1v $130. 4!l9-3(i(i0. preciatr. 113()..1~2.
SHIPf\.1AT~: Co a 1/ Won d fl.AM I NCO • Doubl P\\'lrir, '60 Ford 1i Ton Pickup.
• "·· 11 •r.I up In nice p11.rk. Children ·'"--t~d. lum•-· ••c". 11urn1nl{ r11r11tr. <:.JI~ Pnt k pPl •t lro •~·· ..,,,. ""' • ~ condition$~. 5-16-JO:lt. 1 ,.,..,.....,',,.!'31!_l'.:"~2:;29'!.:_l -~=:I "i;il~00~.;;54:-"f!).~:11~1~0~. ~61':_,'j'~I~ 1 ~ ·;,g Chc.-v. Pick~up -4 spd .. Boats, Pow1r 906 Motor Homes 940 ~horl ~. new brakes.
'?.6 Ct.ASSlC Sltl)hr.ns 1f'd111'1 2."I' Lancl11.u 10, 19.000 mi. rtbuill V-8 rng. ~~208l.
w/mOl':irlna.. N,. w po r 1, Radin. hk~ nu. 19950. ~-'70 t~RD 11 ton pickup, au10
Sll,((K). Al! fl pm. 637-86-23, Diablo, TO. 11000 mi. 1ran~. r/h. 6'6" bed. x!nt
67~500.1, j2J31 8Z1~1M G11ntntor. •1r. $8950 . rondlrl11n. ~!lM.
1965 24' Owtns Crulstr. ~fM2T 1~'.'i FORD PICKUP.
r8d li,, bail fAnk. 225 lfP. Sell ldle 1tem.J now! C.U MEROJRY V--3 E'IGINr.
S--l«Xl/bt.it oUtr. &Tl--2000. &12-5671 No\\'~ SJ.YI, Phont fi.ll-9U.'
,1
•
U · D~L v PILOT Thursday, Maf'th 23. 1972
I l§J I 1§1 I · A1Jlo1 for Sil• l§J .__I _."'._''°'_Slle__,J~ .__[. _.,,,_""_'·'·_,J§l .__I _.,,._., .. _ •• ,._l§J I
True lei 96J Autos Want9d ~ Autos, lmporled 910 Autos, fmporttd 970 Autos, Imported 970 Aulos, lmporled 970 Autos, Imported
l§J L_I ;;~"";;'°'"'';;;;,;l~§J ~~§J.;990 1
-Autos, Ustd
970 Aulot, Us"' 990 ~.;..;..M_E_R_C_U""R"'Y~-1
'72 GMC
Truck-Camper
BRAND new 1972 GMC 1,
1on P.U. Fully l111ctory equip--
ped lnc:ludina V-8 enatne plu~
beautiful 8' cabover r.an1J)f'r
that t:leeps six. Serial No.
TCE142Z509!.16.
WAS $5063.21
'SAVE $1164.21
FROit STICKER
NOW $3899
A Tax, Lie. &. Doi.·. Ff't>
OR 1..EASE for only $11 5.50
mo. open <'nd 36 mn. Jc.ut.
BILL BARRY
GMC·FIAT·PONTIAC
(1st St. at S.A. Fwy.1
2000 E. 1st St .. Santa An&
558. JOOO
IniematSonal Harvester
RF.cREATION CENTER
ROY CARVER, Inc.
2925 Harbor Blvd.
Coata Mesa 546-4444
RECREATION
CONSULTANT
Buying a truck. camper, a
mini-home & .so forth! We
will advise yo"u as to your
needs. For info wrl!e:
P. O. Box 1470, Ccr.;ta Mesa
92626.
Auto Leesing 964
WE PAY TOP CASH
for u.wd can I: trucka:, jWlf
call Us fc.r tree f'stima tel.
GROTH Ct!EVROLET
Aak for Sales Manaaer
18211 Beaeh Blvd.
Huntington Beach
847.~7 Kl 9-3.131
\VE buy all makes of clean
used sports cars, paid for
or not, please drive in for
free appraisal.
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 \V. Coast lll'>•y.,
N~·port Beach
642-9405
Auto&, Imported 970
ALFA ROMEO
Alfa Romeo
NOW ON DISPLAY
Sales Service
Parts Sody Shop
COAST IMPORTS
1000·1200 W. Coast Hwy.
Ne"'fXlrt Beach 642-0406
AUSTIN AMERICA
* * '69 AUSTIN 1-lcaley
Sprite, $1300 or Best Offer.
67;).6684 eves.
BMW
BMW·
Automotive Ex~Uonce
&
ROY CARVER, Inc.
2925 Harbor Blvd.
Costa 1'1csa !i46--4444
DATSUN
'72 DATSUN 510
Big Sedan. 4 speed dlr. Vinyl
Roof. Under 4,000 m 1le.s,
Jt & J-[ + W~\V, Jo'UJI price
$2136. Can finance all.
(#23412.~) Call 494-68U aft
JO am 546-8736.
'70 DATSUN
4 Dr. 510 dlr. Auto. R.H. T.
Glass.Burket S C'al
Sacrifice: IOOOAVAJ 494-6811
flf! 10. 546-8736.
e DATSUN '67 Sia. 'A1ag.
Stick, R&H. Ruy a littlP
rc•o110my. Priced for. fas!
sri.le. $875 j4G..'lAGC1. Jim
Slemons Jmpor!s 557.5242
LEASE a 1972 Datsun
Pickup. $6!1.95/mo. or buy.
FIAT
• '71 Fial 124 Spyd<"r
Rd11tr-ma~. wit!& ova.IA,
FM s t " r e o-beaut ron(.1-
nsklnic blue bk value.
$211.'l, fCos! ovt'r $1000 ntwJ
Must Sell! Eves 8.~2--4-013.
f 'IAT Sport R50 Hl10, 21.000
mi. Llkt! new. By Owner.
$1350. 545-5180. &16-2810.
JAGUAR
ALWAYS
A Fine Selection
OF
NEW & USED
JAGUARS
''Speciali.dng tn Quality"
BAUER
Buick·Opel-J ag'-'ar
2'.s1 E . .17th St.
Costa Mesa 5'18· 7765
1960 XKE EO
Jaguar
Sell for parts or restoration.
All good shape. 548-2139 alt
6 Pi\-f.
KARMANN GHIA
POCAL LEASING & JN-'fi6, Xln1 mech cond. New
VESTMENT CO. ~.1'18-115.'l. paint job. Good inter .. R/H,
'63 Datsun P. U. Runs perf. _1 ~-__ li_rn_s._8_42-_265_"1_. __
Aflcr 5 Mon thru Friday, MAZDA
64~3400. Mr. Shea.
'69 1600 Roadster
'72 128 FIAT
BRAND new 1972 FIAT 128
2 DR. SEDAN. Motor trends
•·C'COnomy car of the year."
\\linnC'r or 7 automotive
a1vards throughoul Europe.
Standard equipment in-
cludC's: 4 speed trans. radial
tires, ft. disc. brakes +
many cxlras. Serial No.
128A0775008.
Sl 976.80
+ tax. lie, & doc. fee.
• NOW OPEN
Immediate Oeliv.ery
HUNTINGTON BEACH
"1 I .. _"1
17331 BEACH BLVD.
HUNTINGTON BEACH
' 2 M•lo Souln GI Wil'~'"'
Pn<>n e 842 • 6666
IMPORTS WAN'.J'ED
Orange Countle1
TOP$ BUYER
BILL MAXEY TCYOTA
18881 Beach Blvd.
H. Beach.· P~. 847·8555
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
ON 1972
Bavaria's or LEASE for only $60.50 mo.
open f'nrl :v; mo. lease
BILL BARRY
MERCEDES BENZ VOLKSWAGEN CADILLAC '67 MONTCLAIR
HOUSE OF ---A""H'"s"'o"'1---11--:,"'6""8""""'"VW="""B'"'U"'G"""-1 ·69 Coupe •• v111e tully 'Door H.T. Dir. v. Top., Air
TOYOTA
•TOYOTA 'TI Corona $2195 . . ttiulp'rl leather upbol, nu d d LI Dix h·~t . ... 4 spd. dlr. Has had loving tires, Call 642-l154. Co11<l. Af.:1 11,.J\1, Loa t · I·
MPORTS · .... .., op c~ .• air (.'(lhu., care! Excellent condition . t!t> old bttnkcr's t'llI'. (VOB· I vinyl lop, !Ur.II, 4 ""lpeed thruout. Take small down '65 CAD 2 door .• vinyl to?· 0491 Call 5'16-8736 alt 10
lranr., le111 than 7,0IXI miles. will tinanct J'>vt. Pty. Call Sell or trade. $7j(), 549-1250 494.fiRIL
"THE RESIDENCE OF IDJB2461. , 54S-87'..G ot 4>1-6811. '""' 5-8. ..:::.:..::c:.::o-=T"""'"'N"'G;;---MERCEDES-BENZ" • TCYOTA 71 Corona 4-dr. '62 CADILLAC 4 dr sedan MUS A $2195 Del · d t d • VW '69 Bug. Dead sh11rp. . · Now Off•ring · uxe air ron '• a ., fact air full pwr good radio htr. auto tran!I !Ser IIS60J Nl'W car Jrade. $1295.00 · • .,')~ e.~~ 2714 1'he La~~~s~;;;·~~tion of Ji~ Siemon~ rmPorts fZLJ\517). Stt a! JI m & heater..,.,., . .-:r . '66 ~1USTANG hrd top coupe,
V-~ atilo, P/S, air, 48.000 mil~s. 842-8069. SL Models 2201 s. MAIN, SANTA ANA Sl•mo"' l mpor1', 220_1 S. CAMARO
OPEN SUNDAY Main, Santa Ana orl --------= Jn Stiuthtrn California CAU. 557.5242 call !157-5242. '68 CAMARO. like ne\11. 327,
( 10 ) 190-280'1 VW's ""69 $99 On. 4 •pd. $1,59j or best offer. --------...,-
OLDSMOBILE
51 rt' low as GET OUR -1966 OLDS Delta 88 4 Dr.
a
1$t4a;5 O.A.C. Low payments, 30 dayl..:.67..:"-..:'::.168~. ==::-::=--sdn. Very clean local,
plu. • TOYOTA DEAL or 1000 m; guaran1eo, 321 E. CHEVELLE nr;ginal oar. Air, '"· $850.
d BEFORE You Buy! bl, S.A. Ph. M2-1831 Dir. "" 2083 Over 4-0 other pre-owne .,...,. .
Sedans & Coupes. '68 VW Motor under warran· '69 CHEVELLE WAGON •60 Olds, good tires,
EXAMPLE: n L ty, new tires, FM stereo. Full Power P/S-P/B. PW. Runs great
1970 280 SE SEDAN ftlliM ft11.:_. $1100 or bst reas oUer. __ 54::::,!>-;96::9~5 ~or~'::'c,'"',.:'~40=--$300 or offer. 557-9305.
Air. Aulo, PI S, AM -FM -WA UlllO 542-46112 '""· CHEVROLET -":.C..=~~~=-1 TOYOTA * '63 Olds 88 Station \Vagon, Special Sale Price . '68 ~ug: strong running, ---------r/h. air, good condition.
$5995. dinged fender. Below whsle '70 El C •
Authorized 1!l66 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 book. AT ONLY $800 !!! amino S2.)0· 675-7608·
Sales-Service-Lease 675-1161. Radio, I-feater, Auto Trans, PINTO
Hou se Of Imports. Inc. " •t't•U\$ VOLVO v-s. (973Enn. 123!15. "' " Tommy Ayres Chevy '71 Pinto. Lo1v mileage, e)(· 6862 ManchoSI"'. Boena Pk. m'"'•ts •·•llonl <~nd;1;on. $1,850. Alongside the •• GET OUR VOLVO Rad;o, fac brak". Musi
Santa Ana Toyota & Jaguar Dealer DEAL BEFORE ~!n~oa~a~~ivy. sell immediately -Room·
Freeway Authorized Sales It Service mate is moving! 531-1218
at Beach Blvd. turnoff 900 S. Coast Highway YOU BUY! 494·77441546-9967 af1er 5 p.m.
(714) 523-7250 Laguna Beach 540-3100 SAVE ON EUROPEAN Chev. '65-'67 Imp. S.S. ·n Pinto, Lov; mileage, ex·
'70 2SO SE Fully equip. Xtra '69 CORONA $1595 DELIVERY (4) <-·l'llent condilion. $1 ,850.
clean. Orig owner. Priced Automatic, air 739AQC Flexible financing, low pay-Radio, dise brakes, 1'1ust
for immed sale. Owner Santa Ana Toyota ·~ L rnents. 321 E, Isl, S.A. Ph. sell immediately -Roon1 ·
645-0022 ""1207 1t1111w 1 1it:_. 542·1831 Dir. I · · 1 "~11218 trans. • l)'flJ-• Service dept, open 7:30 am -WA UlllO ~~~~~~--.,--=---ma e is moving . .,.. · MG 'til 9 pm Monday thru Fri· VOLVO '65 Chevy Impala, 4 Dr., after 5 p.m .
day. . air cond, Xlnt cond. --.,P"'L"Y=M"""'o"u=T::-H-:--
• MG '70 Midget. Crisp as a
lady bug. Radio, heater,
wire wheels. Pirelli tires.
An exceptional buy & priced
to sell, (728BIM). Jim
Slemons Imports, 2201 S.
Main, Santa Ana 557-5242
MORRIS
WANTED for Morris Minor
hood, I. f. fen, bumpers,
rad, body parts 539-3ll9
OPEL
ALWAYS
A Fine Selection
OF
NEW & USED
OP ELS
"Speeializing in· Quality"
BAUER
Buick-Opel-Jaguar
234 E. 17th SL
PHONE 540.2512 $500. Call 494-7460
417 \V. \Varner, Santa Ana 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9300 * Chevy 1966 Impala. Air -P-ly-m-.-,-63_S_p_o_rt-F;;-
Toyotas '68-'70 $99 On '70 Volvo 164 4 DR Sedan. cond. Low miles. $825. H.T.
O.A.c. , -, .. poym•nls. 30 d•y. Au to, p/s, rad.io, air/cond., 846-TI71 • h,., 30·3 Mags 321 E UJ y ... ., spc~-.. •. o. cng. . . .
or 1000 mi guarantee. 321 E. 8 track stereo tape. Asking '62 Chevy 327, Muncie 4-spd, l st, S.A. Ph 542·1831 Dir.
lsf, S.A. Ph 542·1831 Dir. $3700. &16-2383 aft 5pm. Best offer. 1965 BARRACUDA, Jo \V
'70 Corona 4 dr sedan, P-1800 Volvo. Super Cheap. *• 646-7698 ** n1ileage. 1 ow!M'r, Xlnt
r/h, low mileage, $1675. (62) Priced for Quick Sale. '55 BEL AIR 2 dr, mech. cond. $600. 675-1400 9 to 5 * 644-002'1 * 4~202 aft 5 pm. perfect, 6 cyl auto trans. pm.
1970 Toyota station wagon, 4utos, Used 990 $200/besl of.fer. 54!ki577. '6.1.: P\yn1outh Fury JI!, 4 dr
excel cond, new t Ires. '63 CHEVY Impala hi, vinyl lop & interior, air,
830-4077. 10 Transportation Station \Vagon. $375 p/s. s1,015. 49-1-9522.
'70 Tuyota Corona, auto, r/h, Specials * * * 673-3486 * * * CONVERTIBLE '64 Valiant
lo mi's, nu tires. t1500. $399 AND UP Chev. '65 V..S-Auto. $595 V·S, 1 O\Vnrr, 55,000 mi's., ~2-5605. 100% Financing Available, Flexible financing. 321 E. ls!, r l h. $425. 5'.l6·!'!662.
TRIUMPH · Age 18 to 108. 645-5799. S.A. Ph. 542-1831 Dlr. e ~tusr SACRIFICE 1971
CHRYSLER DUSTER, $2400. CA LL
8J7-3910.
PONTIAC
'72 FIREBIRD
WE PAY 'J:'OP DOLLAR
FOR TOP USED CARS
U )'OUJ' car ii extra dean,
W; WI first.
F IAT-GMC-PONTIAC
llst St at S.A. F1vy.1
2000 E. l ~' St. Santa 1\na
558-1000
Costa Mesa 549-77S5
Brand nf'1v '72 Firf'birrl. Fully
fa ctory NJu ipned including
auto. trans, P.S., P.8., radio,
hf'atf'r. \\IS\.V tires, T. glass,
cl9ck. monarch yello"._ black
inlC'rior with black vinyl top. BAUER BUICK
23-1 E. 17th St. SEE US ABOUT
Costa, Mesa 548-7765 Overseas Delivery
WILL Buy Your car paid for CREVIER MOTORS
or· not. Call Ralph Gordon 208 W. 1st St., Santa Ana
6'/'l-0900-445 E. Coast Hwy. 135-3171
Newport Beach. 1 F~as-t -,.-s~,1"1a"'a-r"', -Ju",-, .-.~ho-ne
~ the o6cl •tutl call away. 642-5678
'' \V h It e Elephants" over-
running your house? Turn
them into ''CASH" -seU
them thn1 Daii.1 PI Io t
Classi r:ed, 642-5678.
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
642-5678
PEUGEOT * PEUGlOT * As Jow as $2.299. (No. 5545)
FRIT": WARREN'S
&rial #2S.S7DZ1\1526320
WAS $4089.70
SAVE 448.60
FROJ\.1 Sf!CKER
NOW $3650.10
Autoe, Imported 970 Autos, lmporled 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970
Sport Car Center
e ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
no E. 1st St .. S.A. 547-0764
VOLKSWAGEN AMERICAN LINCOLN Conlln<-ntal 1966 2
+ tax. lie. & doc, fee
or leas" tor only $98.50 mo.
open end 36 mo. lease.
BILL BARRY
COSTA MESA DATSUN
Our racing
champion.
The Datsun 240-Z. Winner: 1971 East Af·
rican Safari. Winner: 1970 & 1971 Ameri -
can Road Race of Champions. The 240-Z
il a name to reckon with in racing circles.
Engineering excellence has made it a chdm·
pion. The same ~ind of engineering excel-
lence you 'll find in every Datsun.
$
+ TAX & llC. & LOCAL FREIGHT
IMMEDIATE DELYERY!
ON THE FANT"STIC 1200 SEDAN
Our economy
champion.
The Datsun 1200 SeClan is our lowest.
priced car. And it's a champion in it5
own way, too. It's one of the most econ·
omical automob iles yOu can own:
aroul><i 30 miles per gallon. The 1200
has lots of other thing• ·going for it,
too.
• Safely front disc brakes.
• Full-vinyl inferior with bu~kel •eats.
• Four-speed fully-synchronized slick
shift.
• (3-speed automatic
optional.)
• Whitewalls.
transmission
I
• Steel unibody construction.
• And lots more, all included ·ti no
extra cost. If you're 9oin9 lo buy an
economy car, buy our economy
champion. Datsun I 200. It sure
beat5 whatever's second.
~~~~~~~
1200 Coupt 1200 Sedan SIO 2·Dr Seoan SJO 4·0r Sedan 510 Wagon Pickup 240-Z
S.. Our Complete Une of '72 Datsuns •STATION WAGONS• PICKUPS
2 & 4 DR. SEDANS • FASTBACKS • 240Z (LIMITED QUANTITY) '
GOOD SHOW! DRIVE A DATSUN ••• THEN DECIDE
PORSCHE
WE WANT
PORSCHES
ltIGHEST OFFER
AVAILABLE
DON BURNS
ASK FOR GLEN
636-m1
OVER 25
Clean, Reconditiontd,
& Guaranteed.
PORSCHES
91 l 's .. 912'1 • 914's
1957 to 1971
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
3100 \'V. Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach
642-9405
1972 Porsche 911T 7,500
miles, AM/FM radio ,
chrome r ims. many other
extras. cocoa brown with
tan interior 543-4070 after .(
p.m.
V' '67 VOLKSWAGEN DR. Gold w/ bl ack
Excellent condition! AM/FM American Motors upholstery. Xlnt cond. $1175.
Besl oiler, Call aft 7:30 p.m ....... G emlins ,..,..HOrnats Owner. 645-1260.
Art 646-8019. ~ r ~ 1962 Continental. Good con-1,,,,,,.--=~-=--~--, """Matadors Jill"Jevelins dition. $499 or lrade for
1969 V\V B~g, 4 &peed, """Ambassadors P/U tro k 645-7034 AM/FM radio, runs &oocl. Htige stock of '71's le •72•1 c ' ·
$1,100. ~2492. a· B' Sa . COUGAR '56 VW, Runs good, Needs ICJ• ICJ VlnCJS
trans work. 111s. Harbor American * * 642-9287 * * Home of C.onvenient
'62 V\V Bus w/'68 engine.
$1000 or best offer.
673-8793.
Payments
1969 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa 646.0261
'67 vw "'""rebaok, 28,300 BUICK mi., sun roof, new lires,1 ________ _
xlnt cond .. $1,200. 8"2-3610.. ALWAYS
'66 VW Squareback. Perfect
second car, 47,000 mi,. good
cond. $900. 644-1210.
'70 VW Bug, xlnt cond, new
tires. $132.i
64;).8614
'70 V\V Bug auto, und('r
13,000 mi 1845 Monrovia No.
Sfi. C.i\I. 548-4451.
A Fine Selection
OF
NEW & USED
BUICKS
"Specializing 'in Quality"
BAUER
'70 Cougar, lo mi's, $2495,
Vinyl top, immac. FM
stereo. 1463 Deauville, C.M,
545-3857.
DODGE
'67 Coronet 9 Pass Sta. \Vgn.,
318 V-8, auto, A/C, PIS.
P/8, radial !ires. $97J.
962-3976.
'J9 Dodge 4 dr Custm Royal.
X!nt mech8.Jlica1 CQnd. $195
Pvt Pty 548-69'!17.
'TI Dodge Coll. green, 4-dr
sedan. Lo mi's. Sacrilice.
545-8136.
FORD Bu ick·Opel-Jaguar bl . '66 VW Campe~, NEW re I. 234 E. 17th St. LTD .69 Brougham, low
1600 eng. $1850 Or offer. Costa Mesa 548-7765 mill'age, immaculate! Fully
673-5143 9 lo 11 a .m. Riviera '66 $1595 loaded private party. Days
'65 VW BUS, 9 pass. 1600 cc Very clean. Flexible finan-642-3768 or 833-2577 eves.
eng. radia} tires. clean cing, 321 E. 1st, S.A. Ph. LEASE a 1972 Ford Pin!o.
thruout. $97a. 494-6272. 542-1831 Dir. $69.95/mo. or buy. POCAL
'66 VW Bus. Moving. Must 1965 Buick Wildcat, '4 DR, LEASING & INVESTMENT
Sell! Just overhauled. $ll50. deluxe interior, full power, CO, 54S-1155.
Call: 557-2827 A/C. $900. 6751 Laurelhurst FORD LTD, late •70, 28,000
'67 VW Bug, am/tm radio. H.B. or call 847-9473· mi's. 2 dr. wht vin. top.
clean. Gd cond. Pvt. pty. '69 Wildcat, 2 dr, air, full r/h, air, tilt whl. $2350.
$850. 833-9047. pwr, xlnt cond .. $2200. 544-3779.
PONTIAC-GMC-FIAT
llsl SL al S.A. F\vy:)
2000 E. 1st St., Santa Ana
5.~·1000
'72 LE MANS
Brand ne\V '72 Le ~!an!!, fu!!y '
fa ctory equipped, wilderness
green with matching inter-
ior. Order # D25594.
WAS $3193.60
SAVE 498.60
FROM STICKER
NOW $2699.00
+ tax. lie. & dOC'. tee
or lease ror only $78.00 mo.
OJ)('n end 36 mo. lea.s1
BILL BARRY
PONTIAC -GMC-FIAT
(1st SL at S.J\. F\\'y. l
2000 E. Isl SI ,, Santa Ana
558-1000
'72 Pontiac Ventura 11
Brand new '72 Ventura n 2·
d r. Fully factory equipped
lnt·luding 6-cyl engine. Ser.
No. 2427D3L105037.
WAS $2958. 94
SAVE $500
FROM STICKER
NOW $2458,94
+ Tax, L!c & Doc Fe!'!
or LEASE for only S74 mo.
O~n end 36 mo. lease
BILL BARRY 70 Porsche 911T
Slereo, Mags, Private Party,
Days 839·9560, aft 5 -
8J3..3155. '69 VW, AM/FM, Air rond, * 644-5977 * c""o:.N..:V:...E..:R:.Tl_B~L~E~'6~9-G~al~ax~i.
Xlnt cond, $1175. '69 Sport Wagon 400. Full 500, auto, Pwr tp, P/S. PONTIAC-GMC·FIAT
'60 CAB. reblt eng & trans., ~ * * 96&-8549 ** pwr, fact air, nu tires, tlt P /B, A/C, radio, 29.IXX> mi. ~s1.s~stats~·~7]na
harrl & !!Oft tops, nu pnt. 'OO vw, recently reblt, brks. whl/rack. $2500 536-8691. Real Beauty. (71fJ 838·4501.
558
_
1000 Tmmac. $1495, 525-8414. eng, clutch. Great cond. CADILLAC BRONCO '71 Baja Type.
PORSCHE 91.f.'70, 16,000 $400/of.ler. 846-5645. Spec. Prep. By Fore!. MM)' 1971 PONTIAC Firebird, air
cond, auto trans, 11 mos miles, good cond. Radial * 1970 2 DR. SEDAN, lite LARGEST Xtras. Orig Cost $5500-Slle. old. Must sell. Excel cond,
tires, $2900. 644·60l6. blue. Radin/heater. S1350. SELECTION OF $3S20. 673-3690· Cost S4,200. 5acril.ice $2,950.
'59 Porsche, strong eng .. gd. Call 642-3187. CADILLACS IN 1968 FORD Econoline Van 675-6164.
body. Pirelli tires, $1Clp0. * .64 Bug. Oriainal owner. ORANGE COUNTY w/1967 270 C.I. 6 cyt eng. .,,.,_ GTC b •"' 0097 t 6 ... ON • uckct seats, P/!, ~ 8 t • RUNS GOOD. $425. SALES.LEASING $550. Runs well. Call days, new P /b. N<'w tires, AIC, e '68 PORSCHE 911 Targa e Call 642-3361 AU'lllORlZED ~906, nite 646-54M. R/H, Good cond, $.595.
Air-cond., mag wheels. 5 spd •71 CA.!'\IPER, 111,000 miles. • SERVICE. '70 LTD Wgn, air, 9 pass., 968-7840.
S3,750. Call: 675-3331 $3350. Prl. p&rty. Eves, Nabers Cadiftac xlnt cond, gacrifice/offer. '*:-:*c:'"'1o"P;:o:cn1"';,::,-, "'2;-d;-r-,_Le-I
RENAULT 546-5891. :161)1) HARBOR BL., 1..::,646-004::..;:.:5::·==-=co--,--Mans, p•/pb, "'"' Ures, ,.,,--..,-,,.,,..,0--..,.,0---l '60 VW Van. Good cond. new COSI'A MESA '61 GALAXJE, R&H, _auto, must sell!: 968·5280 **
' Rtneult '67 RJO 4-0r. paint & titea, Vinyl top. 5f0·9100 Open SUndl1 w/w. good cond. J.295, or
$595 832-7650. ' $·, VIII best c•sh olr. 5.16-6868. A I t . 11 . t 1,,,'""",...-------=,--, 6I .uan Dt t '70 Fon! T · Ai vin I u o. rans .. v1ny nten9r, o '69 Pop kip c&mper. Excel Gorgeous, billy luxucy equip-or1no. r, Y * * '66 T·Bird_...law mileage, ~ mpg. Weekend 1pecial. cond. New Urea. $2,600. ped. Jncludlng AM/FM top, tun p.,vr. Xlnt cond. nu tires, 11,tr. full pwr., no
(\VOMm). Private pty, • 644-QllG6. attreo. Factory Atr, of Best otter. -49$4678. mech probll'ms, prlv. puty,
. Renault '69 R-16 Sod. ,66 VW Sedan $900. "°""'· 642-0918 '64 Falcon V-$. 3 spd, good "$:;.91!0.;:..,.,,,.., 8"6-"o3444~.--.,.. __
1 Wagon Call after 6 pm, 646-1998 'OO"C a d I 11 a c Convertible, 6tr7~n!P°1...,rta.uon, $2'ra. Eves '6.5 T-Bird Xlnt running c:o~ Front wheel drivt", radio &: ,)'"\/ •-' uu
heater, vinyl tnlerior , 10 30 '59 VW Camper * $450 reblt lralll!i. Good palnt.1..:::;...:=:..· -~=~--1 Radio, alr, etc ••• $79S.
mpg, Ptrter.t ror family, '6l eng e 494-0072 r. r pt/up hol/tires. Full SURFER SPECIAL 557..(i742
buiiines!'I or run. Sf)('(:ial of • . power. Smog dev1ce. '72 lie. '66 Ford Cntry Sq., mag rims. VEGA '67 VW $450 $325 eash. 557-2269. xlnt tire1, $850. 548-4001. the week. $149$. R • II ... M•2
See 10 •pr.date IYRV6561 ~ · -~ '66 Conv De VU!<, all pwr, JEEP '71 Ve9a 2 Door
OVER !SO NEW A USED "Malet Room For Dad· c1 limate. con1troi ~ .. ste~. -------="" S!'l'rl $ed. dlr. llndt'r l-t,OOO RENAULTS ow mi .• x nt C01R.1. mutt * 'ef J'EEP WAGON.EER. b
TO OIOOSt FRO~f dy '', .clean out the sell. $laJCI, oUer. 540-4013. r/h, ~·whl drl~. xlnt cond mllet, OWJ1cd Y littlci old
man from LAJUn3. Has had 2'20.1 SO. MAIN, SANTA ANA prqe .• yoUr trash Ill CASH 1970 EL DOR.ADO full1 644-2033; 67S..8316. Jovui" c:Al'(! l~Cl. T·•·e ~7·"42 OPEN SUN. I ~-Id / hll . I ' -
T·BIRD
2845 HARBOR BLVD COSTA MESA 540 6410 with a DAILY' PILOT equp, uo w •· t "''ny '48 JEEP sm ond rlres. Small Down. Can Uniu·ic:e
,, , • •• a 08.lly PUot Ou•itiid lop, $191!0. 641--0900 •It 6 pm. tow bar. wheel hubs. 1treet pV1 . PlY· Call 146-87le all l'-!!!!ll!!!IB!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!...!1 !..:A~d!:_.-..!6'M6~~78~---Clustltd ad. C.SI 642--5678 A Saw! leglll. FOO mo1or. 557-.88~. 1n am 494-SSU.
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San Cle1nente
Ca istrano
' VOL 65, NO. 83 , 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES
..
EDITI ON
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
' . . .
Today's Flnal
N.Y. Stoeks
THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1972 TEN CENTS
School Finance 'Dis tressing,' Riles Says
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of tll• DellV l"llH Sllfl
California children "can't wait another
year'' for school financing simply
because 1egislators are involved in an
election year, State Superintendent of
Public Instruction Wilson Riles declared
Wednesday in Newport Beach.
Riles , speaking before more ,than 250
members or the Orange Cnun\y SchOOI
Boards Association at the Newwrter Inn .
said it was "distressing'' that 1egislators
can't deal with pressing school finance
needs during an election year.
"Part or the problem is that we in
schools haven't spoken the kind of
language Sacramento understands -
whether the people will· vote for it or
not," Riles suggested .
School officials will get the financial
proposals that they want "only if the pcG-
ple in the district also make it kriown
they want something done," he added.
The superint endent urged that all
school districts -rich and poor -"find
ways to work together financially."
He conceded that this "unity " is di!·
ncult to achieve because the financial
perspective of Beverly Hills is completely
ame
3 Locations
12 Persons Held
In Drug Arrests
By BARBARA KREIBICH
01 lflt Dally f'llll 5110
After a hectic evening during which 12
persons were arrested and his jacket was
chewed b!' two Jarge dogs. Laguna Beach
narcotics detective Neil PurcEij today
speculated:
· Tennis Pro's
Daughter Dies
After Mishap
The young daughter of professional ten·
nis star Richard "Pancho'' Gonzalez died
In Hoag Memorial Hospital Tuesday from
injuries she sustained when she was
thrown from a horse late Saturday af·
ternoon .
Mariessa Gonzalez. 10, had been riding
with a friend at the Irvine Equestrian
Center, 7385 E. Coast •Ughway, Corona
de! Mar, when the accident occurred.
Mariessa, who lived with her mother.
Madalyn , and two sisters at 401 Via Lido
Soud, Newport Beach, died from severe
head injuries resulting from the fall,
hospital spokesmen said.
Funeral services will takt: place Friday
at noon at Forest Lawn Memorial Park,
Glendale.
Mrs. Marilyn Wolfe, whose daughter
Leslie, IO, had been riding with Mariessa
when she took the fall, said this morning
that circumstances surrounding the
mishap are still unclear.
. "Nobody really, honestly knows what
tiappened," Mrs. Wolfe said. "She may
have been frightened and the horse.
which belonged !o a friend of hers. may
have been spooked ."
Mrs. Wolfe said Mariessa and her
daughter have been taking rjding lessons
regularly during the week at the Irvine
stables. She said Mariessa had been rid·
ing for Jess than a year.
Mariessa was a student at Newport
Elementary School. In addition to her
mother and Gonzalez, who lives in
Malibu, she is survived by two sisters.
"Maybe all these stories about how
close we are to legalizing marijuana en-
couraged the folks to celebrate with a
tew pot parties ... "
The Wednesday evening forays started
shortly before eight o'clock when
Sergeant Purcell and officer Robert Ro-
maine actompanied t\lo·o U.S. marshals to
21J52 Laguna Canyon Road to serve a
misdemeanor arrest warrant and en--
countered tbe first party.
After some discussion at the door, the
c£ficers entered. Two of the guests
assertedly fled via a window. A search
turn~ up a quantity of LSD. marijuana
and suspected dangerous drugs and the
five remaining guests were held on
(Ste FORAYS, Page %)
Doctor Says Sex
Story Unlikely:
Cleric Had Rash
JACKSONVILLE. Fla. (AP! - A doc·
tor testified today that Chaplain Andrew
F. Jensen was covered with a severe rash
and boils rrom his belt line down to his
thighs July 8, the date a Navy wife
claims to have had sexual rel ations with
him in a motel.
"Would Capt. Jensen have been able to
have sexual intercourse while suffering
this infection?" defense attorney Jack R.
Blackmon asked Dr. Clay Wickham.
"It would have been extremely unlikely
and very painful" Wickham replied .
"Doctor," Blackmon continued, "if you
were the patient instead of the doctor,
cou ld you have performed a sex act?"
"For me." Wickham said, "it would
have been impossible."
Lora Gudbranson, a 40-year-old supply
officer's wife, has testified that she had
relations with Jensen four times. Another
Navy wife, 24-year-0ld Mary Ann Curran,
said she had relations at least 17 times
with Jensen after her husband employed
him as a marriage counselor.
Mrs. GudbTanson said July 8 was the
date of one of her alleged meetings with
Jensen.
Jensen Is being courtmartialed on
(See CHAPLAIN,1 Page %)
different from Baldwin Park's, and he
repeated his opposition to reliance on
property taxes.
"I believe in Serrano," he said, refer·
ring to Jay Serrano, an East Los Angeles
man who initiated the landmark case
\vhich sa id it Is unconstitutional to dtpend
on the wealth of a district for school
money. .
Riles offered M financial solutions of
his own but did say he is opposed to the
Alan \Vatson initiative to be on the
November ballot.
It would put a ceiling on property taxes
ier's
of $2.05 and give some other tax pro-
visions !or raising funds. Riles said "it
would be very dangerous to freeze that
into the constitution; then there would be
no flexibility if conditions changed ."
On another matter, Riles enthused
about the Early Childhood Education pro-
gram, recently developed by the Depart·
meht of Education.
It allows children to begin a pre.school
type program when four years old.
'"Children grow at different rates and
learn at different rates,'' Riles said, "but
we set up a school system that pretends
• everyone does the same thing on the
same day in the same way."
The Early Education Program js su~
posed to ''create the environment " to en·
courage children to learn at their o.,.,•n
rates. .
Riles said another way schools and
district boards can add more flexibilit y to
their programs is to "look into having
high school representation on the boards" '
because those students "can present a
point of view we ought to Jutow about."
He said that Molly Magee. a student at
Los Alamitos High School in Seal Beach
UPIT• ......
This truckload of Antartica beer became a bi( woozy
and leaned to one side as it passed another truck on a street near Candelaria Square in Rio de Jan-
eiro, Brazil.
• Deputy Lauded Ill Arrests
Burglar Suspects Nailed by San Clemente Police
An off-duty sheriff's deputy today won
praise from San Clemente police for help-
ing to foil two major burglaries late Wed·
nesday night. Three men were arrested
after the incidents.
OffiCi!rs praised Deputy James Richard
Ohr of San Clemente who first noticed
the alleged burglars earlier in the even·
ing along A venida Las Bo~as. The officer
was in his garage preparing for a fishing
trip.
Later that night Aggie's Honda agency
was hit and more than $2,000 In loot was
stolen.
In the same North El Camino
neighborhood; burglars struck Topsy's
restaurant, slealing several hundred
dollars in cash.
Officers said the arrests moments after
the discovery of the breakins "went. like
clockwork."
In custody today are one local juvenile
and his asserted companions, Allen
Charles Taylor, 22,, of 26871 Las Palmas,
Capistrano Beach. and ·Bart Travis
Blackburn, 19, of 14461 Spa Drive, Hun·
tington B~ach.
Police said they learned cf the
burglaries shortly after midnight when a
private security guard found opened
doors at~he affected businesses and
phoned offic
Moments afte patrolmen arrived Orr,
a jailer in the Orange County. jail,
flagged cfficers down as he held Black·
bum at gunpoint a block away from the
burglarized businesses.
Other patrolmen sea{ched the area and
found an expensive new motorcycle and
other alleged loot abandoned in a field,
then placed Blackburn il1 a patrol car.
Blackburn then asked to be taken to a
residence in Capis trano Beach ''to tell his
wile of his arrest," police said.
After arriving at the Las Palmas ad·
dress, police arrested the juvenile and
Taylor.
All three were booked on charges of
burglary.
Much of the loot. Including almost a
dozen cycling jackets, a helmet and a
cash register, was recovered. Planners Okay
San Juan Tract Nixon Visit· Seen Soon? The register, however, was shattered
and a total loss, officers said. Official
praise for Orr, a rookie with seven
months' service In the sheriff's office,
will be sent to Sheriff James Musick,
local officers said.
A proposed 7~lot development off Del
Obispo Road south of Aguacate in San
Juan Capistrano has been approved by
the city planning commission.
Tract, proposed by the Del Obispo
Investm ent Company. has been 42
months in the planning stage!, according
to assistant city planner Phil Schwartie.
The proposed development is in an E-4.
so11e, meaning lots must be 10,000 square
feet minimum. Conditions for approv11l
wW be formulated at the next meeting of
the plaMlng commission.
Solons Support Bill
WASHINGTON (AP ) -California's two
Dtmocralic senators, Alan Cranston and
John Tunnty, both v~ted for a proposed
c<mtltutionaJ amendment that would
guarantl!t women equal rights with men
llnd.er federal and stete law which passed
the Senate Wedne.day 81-3.
President Plans Cleme1ite Trip to Accept Bust •
strong Indications of an active visit to
the South Coast by President and Mrs.
Nixon surfaced in San Clemente today.
and one function during that trip will two
official acceptance of the bronze. bust
purchased through local contributions.
An official anoounctmcnt detailing the
presentation will be made here on Fri·
day, it was learned.
White liouse Jides have remained mute
about the President's travel plans west,
~ut several fa ctors, beside$ the prese n·
talion of the art work. point to an im·
pending visit.
Next Thursday. March 30, the son of
Sen. Sany Goldwater will marry ln
Newport Beach and rumors there have
hinted at the President being among the
guests.
\
. .
Mrs. Nixon also plans public ap.
pearancu in the west early in Apr il aa
won.
It would be the first stay at La Casa
Pacifica by the First Family alnce
January.
Plans had been made to come west
almost immediately following Mr. Nix·
ori's return from Peking, but the visit
was scotched in fHvor or shorter trips to
Camp David , Md.1 and Key Biscaynet
Fta .
The presentation of the bust perKlnally
to the President had been promised for
months during Ille campaign by the
President's Project Committee to raise
money for the purchase.
Backers of the strlcily local tflort
stressed that tbe purehase of the $8,000
art work would. increase San Clemente's
chances in the quiet but 1trOng cam·
palgos for detenning a site for the Nixon
Library.
Committee spokesmen pointed to the l bust purchase by local citizens as a l strong selling point for local interest in
the library.
Contributions came from business
finns, service groups, private citizens -
even youngsters In elementary achools
who collected, then fttid newspaper1 and
alumlnvm cans to ra ise money for thelr
l'Ontrlbullons. •
The presentation; it ,waa promised, wHI
be made in public with everyone welcome
to 11tend.
But the extra .duty chalked 1..p by tbe
man Wednesday did not affect his plans
for today.
Orr wenl trout fishln1 on schedule.
Dana Hills High
Fills 3 Posts
Three appointmepts have been made to
positions at 8an Clemente and Dana •lllls
High School.
Alli• Schaff. hea~ coach •t Mark Kep.
pel High School in Athambra, has been
named bead fo"lball coach tit San
Clemente Hlah. He replaces Tom Eads.
Dana Rilll tppolntments are Jim Klein,
he1d of t.he ICJence department and Leon
Badham, l1ond director.
•
and the student representative to the
state board . has given ·•valuable input"
to his department .
He called on all school boards to have
their own self·evaluation and planning
units and lo improve their own efficiency.
"It's easy lo point the finger at some-
~ne else ." he said. adding that when
he look office there .,.,•as a high number of
districts that neve r received textbooks on
time. .
"I told the staff to go to work on it and
last fall all the textbooks in all districts
were delivered on time for the first time.
since 1914," he said.
Corrigan,
Lagunan
111 Plane
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of lh• Dilly PllCll $11ff
Sky searchers were crisscrossing the
Southland today for any trace of a plane
piloted by the sportswriter Mn of Santa
Ana's famed aviator Douglas "Wrong
Way " Corrigan.
He and a companion from Laguna
Beach le!t Orange County Airport Tues-
day on a short, •tghtseein1 fltsJtl !O San
Diego but failed to make a 4 p.m. return
scheduled.
Roy Corrigan, 22, of 2828 N. Flower st.,
ls the youngest son of 1he man who
delighted the world in 1938 by taking oU
from New York for Long Beach and lan-
ding two days Jafer in Dublin, Jreland.
Ironically, Wrong Way Conig1n'1
original West Coast destination '4 years
ago is today a search base for his mlss·
ing1 son.
You ng Corrlgan's passenger on the an-
ticipated 121).mile flight is identified as
Roger Powell, .31 , of 32 Crystal Cove,
Laguna Beach.
The youths planned to fly· over a
Laguna Beach site where the Powell
family is building a home, photograph it
and return after buzzing down to San
Diego.
"He's never been overdue before," the
elder Corrigan said Thursday.
A search command past was establish·
ed. by the Civil Air Patrol at Long Beach
Airport to coordinate the hunt between
Orange County Airport and the Mexk:an
Border.
No trace of the vanished Cessna l&o
had been discovered during the hunt
centered on the coastline by 10 a.m., ac·
cording to Capt. Ed Crankshaw CAP
wing infonnation officer. '
"We have excellent cooperation from
the Marines at El Toro and Camp
Pendleton, the San Diego Sheriff's Aero
Squad and we have a lot of CAP planu
up searching the area," he said.
Marine helicopters have been detailed.
to scour the desolate coastal military
reservations for Corrigan and Powell.
"We have excellent search weather at
least." said the CAP spokesman.
Corrigan's 6S..year-old father. who left
aviatJon years ago to run his ~acres of
citrus groves in Santa Ana, went up
Thursday with another Mn, Harry, In
aearch of the youngest Corrigan.
"I was just riding. I don't even have a
license right oow," said Corrigan.i whcme
38-bour, transatlantic fiight in a '300
(See CORRIGAN, Pap I)
Orange Ceut
Weat_her
It's going lo be sunny again
on Friday, according to the
wealherlady. Highs aloof the
coast 62 rising to 75 Inland,
Lows 45 to 55. > •
INSIDE TODAY,
Tlijacking hos com1 a lona 10at1
since tht first airUner was
se ized on a •wnny Ma11 do:11 fn
1961 and commandeered to
Cuba. See story, Page 8.
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Wwlf M"°' •
'
•
f 041LY PILOT SC
Capistrano
Candidate
Vows Figl1t
Thund ay, Mirth 2l, l 97Z
Gary Lewis
Held in Drugs
NORTH l!OLL YWOOD !UPI) -
Entertainer Gary Lewis, eldest aon
of comedian Jerry Lewl11, was 1r.
rested on suspicion ot por1e11tnr
dangerous drugs early today after
DOllce said they found pills In his
car.
'One of two San Jua n Capistrano city
cou.bdl eandldatt!I y,•ho may bt dis·
quaUfftd because of a techn icality has
vowed to fight.
Pollce said the 26-year-old Lewis
was arrested sho rtly after mld·
night. lie wa s booked at Vall ey
services jail.
During the 1960s, Lewis headed a
popular rock and roll ba nd called
Gary Lewis and the Pl ay boys. B9b. Olson, who hJs lived in the city on-
ly nlne cOnsec:utive months. said Wednes-
day that he has coritacted severf!I at·
torneys to determine a course of action.
Olson and George Friedri ch. another
candidate who has Jived in the city nine
tnonlbl, may not 'have fulfilled a legal de-
mand that requ.ires one year's residency.
The existence of such a statute is still
being studied by City Attorney Jim
Okazaki.
"I'm very concerned because I was
told that M days in the precinct was all
that was necessary," said Olson, who has
been a frequent critic of the incumbents
and city practices.
"I felt my campaign was going very
well."
Olson said he .was considering JegaJ·ac-
tion because a Huntington Beach two-
year residency requirefT\ent was recently
~ruck down and because the Supreme
Court ruled this week that residency re·
1qulrernents for voting a r e un·
oonatltutional.
: "I feel there are som"e definite legal
possibilities open to me," he said.
: Olson sa id his total residency in the ci·
·b' i3 almost two years, but he lived brief~
Jy lo Mission Viejo before moving back to
: ~n Juan nine months ago. + : George Friedrich, an airlines ex·
: ecutive, said he was 1< .. t surprised by the
• _possible disqualification because he, too,
questioned the residency requirement at
the time he filed.
"I'm sure it was an honest mistake,"
be said.
Friedrich said he would not seek legal
action because he doesn't want to cause
undue expense t.o the 'community.
He said he filed because he thought the
tncumbents were not going to and urged
everyone who might have voted for him
to vote for the incumbents.
Fro•n Pagel
CHAPLAIN ..•
charger of conduct unbect>ming an of-
ficer. He has denied having affa irs with
either woman.
Wickham, a Navy doctor at Cecil Field
where the court-martial ia in progress,
1aid he examined Jensen In mid-June last
yeir ln<I fol.ind him covered with chigger
bites suffered on a fishing trip.
On July 2, he testified, a severe in-
fection caused by scratching had set in.
The entire area covered by swimming
lrul\ks, he add!<!, was covered wit~ boils
and a red rash . As late as July 16, he
u.id, there were &till scabs and some
; rash over the area.
Navy wives. fellow clergymen and
friends took the stand for the defense
Wednesday and testified that Jensen was
•1 a man 0£ high moral character. The
~ Chaplatn ,and his wife are expected to
o testify Friday.
~ "l feel the chaplain's innocent.'' a so~ 1 bing Margar'et Hunt!:inger said in
. testimony Wednesday.
~ ''I feel It's my Christian duty lo help a
J fellow Christian." !laid Isabell Jaquette, r.
! Sunda y school teacher at Jensen's chape .
' Jn addition to testimony praising the
moral character of Jensen . defense
witnesses criticized one of the two women
who filed complaints against the 43-year·
old American chaplain.
Mrs. Huntsi nger, whose husband serve!!
at Cecil Field Naval Air Station with
Jensen, 11aid she worked on a chapel plan·
ning board wlth Mrs. Gudbranson.
.. On several occasions I had the feeling
he was trying to get away, but 1he
wouldn't let him . She had a way of sort of
getting everyo ne to move out so she cou ld
monopolize the conversation wlth him,''
Mrs. HWJtsinger testified.
Mrs. Jaquette also sa id she thought
Mrs. Gudbranson was "very aggressive
toward Chaplain Jensen. She ,·,·ouJdn't
give much chance for anyone else but
herself to sav an.vthin~ to the chaplain."
OU.Mel COAST
DAILY PILOT
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Mtn•etnt Editor'
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Dana Point
Density Foes
Win Victory
Another victory has been scored by the
Dana Point Citizens for Action who have
consistently opposed increasing density tn
their community.
The Orange County Planning Com·
miss ion voted unanimously Tuesday to
request their planning coordinato r to
defer all variances and use permits that
would increase density in Dana Point un·
til after the Capistrano Valley Master
Plan Is reviewed ar'ld updated.
The request was made by Com-
missi oner Arnold Forde after denying a
plea by Don W, Smith who wanted to
build four additional apartment units on a
lot that already holds three on Dana
Strand Road.
Hal Jillson, Dana Point Citizens
representa tive, told the comrhission his
group opposed the variance.
Their opposition was based On the fact
that the building would be three stories in
a suburban residential zone which
currently has a heigh t limi tation of two
stories. They were also against a reduc·
tio n in the zoning requirement of 3,000
square-feet per unit to 1.600 square feet
per unit.
''The density factor of the seven
apartments would be equi val ent to 28
units per acre, far in excess of the dens!·
ty provided in the zone, according to
Jiiison,
The Dana Point representatives said
the use permit and variance requests
have been widely used by builders and
developers as a me.ans to Increase the
number of apartments on one lot since
the Citizens for Action were successful in
obtaining a moratorium on rezoning until
the master plan Is updated .
Forde said the planners have been
deluged with similar requests which are
actually "thinly v e i 1 e d attempts to
rezone." .
Membert of the Dana Point l=itlzens
board, who have attended numerous
hearings in the last few months in the
role of communlty wa tchdogs, were
pleased wlth the· actlon.
Jillson and Walter Tempel praised
Forde as expressing "insight and un-
derstanding of one of the problems which
our area is pl-esentl y facing ."
From Pagel
FORAYS ...
charges of possessi on of marijuana and
being present where the drug was used.
They were Arnold Thomas Canup, 29,
of the address; Larry Warren Spausra. 18,
of 24932 Mosquero Lane. Mission Viejo:
Marriann Simmons, 27, of the Canyon ad-
dress; Carolyn Moody Hedges, 32 of 606
Hamilton St., Costa Mesa, and a 17-year-
old boy.
After booking the first gr oup, Purcell
and detectlve Gene Brooks accompanied
the marshals to 567 Catalina St. to serve
a trafflc warrant on Gary Wayne
Henderson, 26, of that add rts!.
When the officers identified
themselves, said Purcell, Henderson and
his woman companion fled to the rear of
the house. There the woman, Nancy
Davenport. 24, or 185 Flowe r St., Costa
Mesa, allegedly was found attempting to
flush about a pound of marijuana down
the toilet.
Both wer,e booked on suspicion o!
possession of marijuana for sale.
Leaving the .scene. the officers sniffed
the familiar aroma of marijuana floating
from an adjacent d"·elling at 5771,t Goff
St. and stopped to question a man emerg-
ing from the yard.
Thei r suspicions were further arou sed
they said, when the man tied back toward
the house yelling warnings of "The narcs
are here!"
The dogs -two large German
shepherd! -entered the picture when
the offic ers followed their quarry into the
yard.
Purcell and Marshal Dick Riniler lost
hunks of their jo11ckets \.\1hlle attempting to
/end off the anlmals with dog repellent.
"Tl's the same kind issued to
mailmen," Purcell explained . "Mace
daesn 't work on dog! -it just makes
them mad.''
The offi cers forced open a doo r. l!n·
tered !he house and aga in heard the
fam iliar sound of a fiushing toilet. Ttl ....... (714) 642-4J21 · a..,,... Amrtttl .. 64J·f'71
Sa c-i.,.. .... An De,.,.,... .... 1
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.. ...,... l!lfll,... ,.,. ff't'ti"llt-!1 111,.111 fN'f '9 ,....,.... Wllloot.ol "'9dfl ...,,
Breaking down a second door Into
a bathroom, they tound 1 repetitlon of the
e.arlicr scene and arrested Richard
,D'Amlco, 21 , on suspicion of destruction
ol evidence .
I"""" ... -"""'· . -~"""""""''" .. -~ C:..IJ!Oftlll, "'*""'"" ., a n'llf "*""'tyi-ll'f 1N1t si.11 -.,W• ·~t-.w "*'lll!l'
Hi• brother, Nick Charles D'Amico, 26,
who h•d called the warning, w., booked
on a charge of lnterferln1 with an officer.
and both were char1ed wJth posses11ton at
marijuana. The brotl!•ts 11ld they live ln
Orangt.
•
Food Costs
Take Giant
Leap Up .
WASfl lNGTON IAPI -Tht biggest
jump In grocery prices in 14 years last
month trigge red the sharpest ri:se ln
overall living costs since before President
Ni xon imposed economic conlrols, the
government reported today.
The Consumer Price Index, measuring
typical family liv ing cosL'I, rose five·
tentfis of I percent in February, the
largest increase in nine months. the
La bor Department's Bureau of La bor
Statistics said.
Grocery prices. wh ich include a
number of items lhat are not subject to
federal prlce controls, soared 1.9 percent
for the greatest one·month increase since
1111rch, 1958. the report said.
The report followed the rel'iignatio n ot
I ee AFI.,.CJO members of Nixon's Pay
Board, who charged the government was
rlgldl y holding down wages while lettting
prices cont inue to climb. (See story Page
4J.
The bureau also reported that average
weekly earnings of some 45 million rank-
and·file workers rose 35 cents a week to
$130.27, but that purchasing power declin·
ed 24 cent s because of the rise in con-
sumer prices.
The February boost pushed the price
index to 123.8 percent of its 1967 average.
Th is me ans it cost $12.38 last month for
every $10 worth of t,Ypical fRmily
purchases five yea rs ago.
The Fe b r u a r y increasf" was the
greatest since a six-tenths of l percent
rise last June. two months before Nixon
imposf;d a 90-day wage-price freeze which
was followed by Phase 2 controls.
The bureau said that in the four months
of Phase 2 Jiving costs have risen at an
annual rate of 4.9 perCent, greater than
the 4.1 percent rate UJ the six months
before Nixon's August economic freeze.
Prices had been held to an annual rate
or 1.7 percent during the rigid three ..
month freeze that preceded the looser
Phase 2 controls~
Price hikes in February included two
tenths of one percent for housing, four-
tenths each for clothing and medicaJ care
and one-tenth of 1 pe rcent for recreation.
Transportation costs declined six-
tent hs of one percent, lhe report said.
A steep rise in meat prices, it said. ac-
counted for about 70 percent of the rise in
food prices.
Fresh fruits and vegetables also rose
considerably, Dairy products rose instea d
of declining as usual in February, ahd
cereal and bakery products went up for
the first time in tour months, the report
said.
Raw agr icultural prod ucts, such as
frui ts and vegetables and eggs, are ex-
empt from federa l price controls.
Other increases included local transit
fares, property taxes and natural gas
rates, although the incr eases were
11maller, it said.
From Pagel
CORRIGAN. • •
plane he buill himaelf caused a global
1ensaUon.
The search plane they used w11 owned
and folwn by Robert Damskey,
He is the instructor who taught the
adventurous youngest Corrigan -he has
a private license and 300 hours logged
aloft -to fly in the first place.
Their search followed the Coastline
then crisscrossed a pattern over inland
areas seeking the white-winged Cessna
150. which has a yello\v-orange fuselage.
Cha racterized as the Flying Ir ishman
for hi s daring Dublin solo, Wrong Way
Corrigan says his son has rigidly followed
the ~ules of sa fe fly ing.
The former Santa Ana Resister
sportswriter would always telephone to
report any change in destination of
estimated return lf he had filed no flight
plan .
Airport acquaintances sa ld Corrigan
and Powell, a friend since boyhood, didn 't
plan to land at Sal) Diego.
Powell's father Tom, owne1· of a Santa
Ana neon si gn co mpany, sa id the young
men had mentioned wanting to fly to Las
Vegas sometime.
"They had spoken of it in casual con-
versation .. , just for something to do,"
he said after the fru itless search flight
Thursday.
A c,heck of McCarran Field in Las Vegas
and other airports Jn Nevada failed to
produce any results, according to CA·P
officials.
A team of four CAP aircraft hunteq un-
til dark Thursday and 10 more took off
toda y. supplemented by Mar In e
hclicopers flying low·level missions.
Chances are that Corrigan and Powell
stuck to the coastline but aeria l teams
were assigned rugged areas of Riverside,
San Diego and San Bernardino coun ties.
"They're cov ering all areas between
here <tnd San D!ego and all the coastal
hills and valleys ." said CAP Maj. Ernest
Johnso n, mission coordinator.
''oung Corriga n recently returned from
a tri p to Japan and has bten pla nning a
tour of Europe but hadn 't been working
Jn the meantime.
His father 's ow.n 1938 trip to Europe
drew a stern reprimand but off icial wink
from U.S. authorities who had re!used his
formal request for pennlssion · to make
• the ha1.ardous flight. He came home a
celebrity of tnternalional proportions who
was entertained by royally, but rtUret\ to
near obscuritf to ra ise oranges, Jer.tON
and his three sons.
He btcame a pub lic Oguro agato ·orltfiy
in 1968 when he shtrwed up to &t'.~ept the
Orange County p...,, Club'• l!,.dllner of
the Year Award in AviaUon.
"M» compass 1tot 1 tu c '· and I cot
turned 180 degrees around." ht •1111 m1ln· i.tned •t \he banquet, lO Ytttl liter. • •
Tod1y, W .. ng Way CotTi&ID may be
boplng hi.!lor;< will repeat ttseU .
Bus Service Studied
County Transit A lternati,ves Forecast
By JACK BROBACK °' "" 0.11"1' ,lltl '""
Bus serv ice in Orange County cities
and some intercity service with a basic
fa re of 25 cents was fore cast Wednesda y
to the Orange C:Ounty Transit Distric t
boa rd mem bers.
No time Ytas gi ven for initiation of the
first services but it was estinla ted that
some lines could be in operation within
tw o to three years depcndlng Up()n
receipt of federa l fina ncial ajd,
1'ransit district directors meeting in R
special session heard a report on thei r
Special Bus Needs study by consultant
Marty Bouman of Allen Voorhees Tnc. of
\'irginia.
Bouman in his interim repo rt offered
four alternatives but recommended the
third one. Alternative three would pro-
vide Wr a Series o( Intra-commun ity line!I
to serve activity centers on a 30-minu te
weekday schedule. Activity centers are
defined as schools, shopping centers and
such gathering places.
Schedules would be coordinated and ~gers could transfer to other routes
.-roht paying an additional fare. ac-
cording to Bouman's plans.
Jn addition, intra-community lines
\•:ould pl'ovide some service into other ac·
tivity centers depending upon the de-
mand . He said there might be three or
four trips daily from one community to
another_.
Under alternative three all existing
private and publi c bus line.sin the county,
17 in number would be evaluated and ma-
jor modification to existing routes made
to better serve potential users, Bouman
added.
The transit district board will give
further consideration to the r o u r
alternatives at their regular April 3
session.
If they adopt one of the proposals at
that time, the consultant will proceed
with a detalled study including costs,
routes, schedules, transfer paints and a
survey of potential users.
The consulta nt stressed that a strong
promotional program wa s important to
attract users regardless of what plan was
adopted,
He also suggested that service should
be geared primarily for the poor,
unemployed , handicapped, aged, youths
and students.
All alternatives presented by Bouman
are projected on a county population of
two million by 1980. He cautioned that it
might be six to eight years before a totaf
bus system could be achiev ed . He said
that the first lines could be ina ugurated
within two to three years.
Much of the new population growth,
500,000 by 1980. wi!J be in th~ undeveloped
areas of southeastern Orange County,
presenting a unique opportunity to
establish bus systems where travel habits
are not already fixed.
Richard Jenkins, representing VTN of
Or~nge County, a Newport Beach-based
consulting firm which is working with
Alle n Voorhees Inc. on the bus needs
study, warned that the existing 17"bus
lines in the whole county provide minimal
service. little lnte rcommunity routes. in·
frcquen~ runs , falling patronage and old
t'quipment.
Jenkins said operating costs of existing
lines range from 91 cents a mile for the
Southern California RRpid T r ll n s it
Distrlct lo 55 cents for the experimental
Santa Ana bus line Rnd the South Coast
Transit Corporation \1•h!ch serve5 Costa
t.tes a, Newport Beach and Laguna Beach
from Santa Ana.
Bouman said the proposed 25-cent fa re
Is based on bus operations throughout the
nation.
'Devil Cult' Death Trial
Delayed in County Court
A six.o.1:eek delay was ordered \Vednes·
day ln the Orange County Superior Court
trial of an Oregon youth accu sed of be·
ing a member of the gang that murdered
Mission Viejo teacher· Florence Nancy
Brown .
Judge William Murray held the trial of
· Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney, 18, over
to May 8 to allow the youth 's lawyer to
await a Supreme Court ru lin g that could.
he said, revive his cla im that Gibboney
should not be tried as an adult.
Earlier argu1nent s that Gibbone y "'as
17 at the time of Mrs. Brown's murder
and ineligible for tria l as an adult have
been dismissed in Superior and juvenile
courts.
Giboney is the only untried member 11£
a gang rounded up by lawmen in June,
1970, follow ing the hatchet killing o( a
Santa Ana service station attendant and
Freeway ,Murder
Case Set May 8
A Wilmiogton man accused of !he
murder of a fellow Mexican-Ameri can
whose body was found in a ditch near the
Pico offramp of the San Diego Freeway
in San Clemente has been ordered to face
trial May 8 in Orange County Super ior
Court.
Judge William Murray set the trial
date for Juan Suarez Puga, 37, and
ordered the defendant to return April 21
tor a pretrial hearing. Puga is charged
with first degree murde r.
Puga was arrested near the Mexican
border shortly after the killing Feb. 8 of
Jesus Herrera Roa , 47, also of Wllm -
ington . Roa was one of five occupants or
a car that ,was returning to Wi lm irJ,gton
from a trip' icilo Mexico.
lt was testified in muilici pal court lhat
Puga and Roa quarrelled throughout the
journey and that Puga struck Roa with
the kn ife as the car drove through the
San Clemente erfa.
the "devil cult'' slaying less than 24 hours
later of Mrs . Brown, 31, of El Toro.
Gang lead er Steven Craig Hurd. 20,
was found to be insane and is held in
Atascadero State Priso n. Arthur Craig
''Moose" Hulse , 18, of Garden Grove is
serving a li fe term for the killing Of at-
tendant Jerry Wayne Carlin.
Melanie Mae Daniels, the drug-using
drift ers' paramour and purse holder , is
srvi ng a one to 10 ye ar term in state
prison for her role Jn both murders.
It is alleged that Gibboney was one of
the group who dr agged ~1rs. Brown from 6 her ca r at the Sand Canyon turnoff of the
San Diego Freeway, mutilated her. drove r
her to an Irvine orange grove and killed 1 her to th e accompaiment of rites ,......
associated with devil worship.
Plal'iners Delay
Major Reviews
For Joint Meet
San Clemente plannin g commissioners
\Vednesday agreed to hold off on several
major recommendations on general plan ..
ning and architectural review for an an-
nua l joint session with city councilmen
late next week .
The annual event. seheduled for the
evening of March 29 at the city go!(
course clubhouse. wil l bring together
councilmen, planners, parks and recrea·
tion commissioners and Parking advisers.
The planners, who have discussed
items relating to new parls of the city
general plan, agreed to take the issues up
with the council· before drafting a formal
recommendation.
Councilmen already ha ve said they
believe more study should be given to the
plann ing guidelines to include possible
preferred land use s on unused acreage in
the city whirh recently went into the
hands of an Oregon college.
luxurious spring down
and feat her sofas • . . ,
PROFESS IONAL
INT~RIOR DES IGNERS Optn Mc"·•
Thu11. & Fri. Ivor.
These handsome sofas were designed
to give you the ultimate In seating
comfort with down an d feather
back pillows, deap spring down
seat cushions enveloped in down
and feathers and two dacron·
filled arm pillows. Choose from
a,wide selection of fine
fabrics and sizes.
Three styles to r.h ooae from
lll6 HARIOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
646·0175
now
399.
I
I
'I
"' ""'" E~tll ...
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undJ~ r .... 1 .. ,. ' ,_ ,. --DAILY riLOT~
Thw·sda)''s C1osi1ig Prices-Complete Ne\V Y ru·J{ Stoel{ Excha11ge Li st
Stocks Recover;
Trading Active
NEW YORK (UPI) -The stock market re gis
lered a sharp and broad ga1n today in fairly active
trading as investors came off the sidelines for some
selective buyuig
Shortly before the close the DO\\ Jones 1ndus
trial average of 30 selected blue chip stocks \\as
ahead more th an 10 points al 944 31 Standard &
Poor s 500 stock index climbed O 83 to 107 67
1\dvances held about a 5 to-2 margin over de
cl1nes among the more than 1 740 issues crossing
the tape
' .,, nn ' ' " ,i
" " " " 1.
.. ' "" ,.
··~· New York Vps ntid Downs
NEW YORK (UPI) -,.ht follow ng 111 PIOW\ lht 1lock1 lh•I ""'"' OOM 1111 !tie !'Mt! 1MI oown 111 .. 1"011 b.tHd on PPrcent or chtnge on ~ New Yo k Sl0<:k
E!tthl'l'!P •HI d ISi of VO umt Ntt tnd 11«ttnt11e ct11not' 1 • I~ d lltrft'IC1 betwttn y11terd1"!' 1 clo11119 prk:e
1nC1 lade"!' 1 clot .., pr ct
GAINERS l~~I Net l7 + tV. 11 -+ 1 'o SS +s ?• .. -+ 1 'W ". 1'" 2• ' ~ 1 o -I I
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U11 16 6 Oii GEn! 90 Uo It 1 S.tv/&.S 7• Up 81 ILFE Cnon Vo t? 9G~n R~ r~
Ul'I ~a O\/corCC j(I UD 1~11A Rchol l
Un 1711MF~ to '° l ~ 1l 8~ u1P '°° "' l 'c ~01 vsu 20d Uo 1 IS W COt!I 1M
Uo 1!16Glfl~of 1311 Uo 1 11 (hR cl UP
u,11 7 18 cu1ltrH 1 10
U ll 1' Kor~eoro " VP 1'0 L blly McNI VII' 11Av<1tD'1• VP ' 1 n Bond l<ldu1 ~'g ''""'"""'¥~ n • t 1' WPP111 .2ld 6 tt Ctnl Loi 4\11
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-
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YORI( !UP 1-Fo ow 1'111 • • he Amt r can Sock E•thl ll'H
S.lt~!hdtl Heh Low l 111 (hg
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32 1• 1 .. ~ ~ S • s~
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•• , . ' . • .. ~ ' " , .. u :r "
' . I • " ' .. 1 · ' . " ' ' .
j Finance
Briefs
e R<•mard Fund
NE\¥ YORK -F 1ve ma1or
alrlnws have agreed to un
derwrl!e a 1250 000 reward
fund to help apprehend 11rhne
hijackers a n d bomb-threat
extor1on1sls The compt1n1t!
are American Bastem Pan
American Trans World and
Unlled e Crash Control
CLEVEL AN D Ad
dressograph Multlgraph Corp
h11s obtained exclusiv e
markeLing rights to an elec-
tronic inventory and cash con-
trol system for rt!stauranls
devt!loped hy TR\Y Inc. af
Clevelnnd It IS Intended to
repl~ce lhe mechanical CA!lt\
reif1Ster parUcularly tn fa5t
food rc.stauraots
l
32 OAl~Y PILOT Thursday, March 23, 1972
DICK TRACY
TUMBLEWEEDS
MUTI AND JEFF
FIGMENTS
HE'S 60r AIEASLEG 50 KEEP HI.I\
IN BEP FOR Ar l.EA5r MEE PAYS'
: &;;~;.;; ........ ;;~;.:;.,....;:;-::.• -''"''''"-------
' NANCY
'~-------..I
, ' WHY POES J IMMY ·f: THROW THE BALL IN
" THAT FUNNY . WAY ?
HE WAS THE
CENTER ON
OUR FOOTBALL
TEAM···
I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by R. A. POWER l
ACROSS 42 "N ot - -
Yesterd ay's Puzzle Solved:
-!: CE'rtainly
1 Drives in by a not: 3 words
succession of 44 Drinks to the
medium blo ws health of
6 Next in time 45 An Arab
10 Punch: 47 Ta ll, thin and
Slang ungainly
14 Br ing to bear 48 Shopworn
15 Climb 49 Blood
l b ·-Tors: relation
Producer of SO Units of
"Fl ip~r" energy
17 Monti, for one-54 "It's --!": 3123n2
18 Be a You're late: 5 Eyelid 32 Eroded
hindrance 2 words inflammation 34 Re main
20 Cliques 57 Revere 6 ••• and errot 35 Son of Seth
21 Small mass 58 Period of duty 7 Intimation 37 Infant
22 "A poem at a job 8 SuJ)!rlative 38 Absor~d:
lovely as -59 Sir Anthony suffix 2 words
--'': 2 words -: UK Prime 9 Botn 40 Plane surfa ce
23 Ring Minister 10 Straining or a cut gem
25 Strips of bO ld~al: device 41 2,240 or 2,000
clothing Slang 11 Excessive pounds
27 Disclose bl Pertaining supplies 43 The physical
30 Hidden lo Celts 12 Marie to sho w world
31 Command b2 Female a place of 44 Small fl ap
32 Roof edges animals insertion on a garment
33 Be indebted b3 Ejects with 13 leg regions 45 Social positior.
I 0< contempt 19 Rages 4b Shady garden
3h Divide: 21 Country of bower
Suffix DOWN Asia: Abbi". 47 Second mort•
37 Uncovers
38 Move a radar l Certa in after·
24 Consume gages, e.g.
25 Those opposed 49 Old World duck
beam over pirt noon social to war 51 Item of shi p's
or the sky gatherings 2b Char lrs rq uipmen t
39 Explosive 2 Shaft on Edward 52 Cultivated
compound wh ich a wheel -: Amer . 53 Weights of
40As --a turns compost r Ind la
pig: 2 words 3 Cause to 27 Musical symbol 55 Investigator:
41 C!ty orr disappear 28 The Garden Informal
Honshu gradual ly of -Sb Ar!Hicfal
Japan : 4 Sornett1ing 29 Tr iumph ant language
Va r. expected 30 200 milHgrams 57 Fool
• 10 11 12 13
" •
"
..
..
By Al Smith
By Dale Hale
by Ernie Bushmiller
···AND THAT'S THE
ONLY WAY HE CAN
THROW A BALL
'
GASOLINE ALLEY
We's back where we
,\arted,Joel! Beck4 >t ill
ain't
qoin'
t' 'tep over ...
that
>eat!
SALLY BANANAS
II ' I M-<..
\'rm CP.
~
·~ "'"''
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
Hs1>•'s You1> Ne:w
UNIFORM>TIZZY: ..
'IOU CAN PAY FOR .
IT our OF YOUR
!':---. Wi>kl ES. r~
' .
So she ain't,
Rufus! Hand me
th',;ledqe!
,.,
ANIMAL CRACKERS
HeH! HEH! I 1LL 'STAY
HERE.1 COMf'lETElQ
HiDDEN 1 V/JTIL WAr
\l!AifR BIRD GETS
A L1rn.:e Bir ci.ose:~THe:~"' GI.OP/ 1'7'!!----.
qou Wf.J J>:;. IAJEl.L.
· oo HoMe .• "J: m~1r '°° l.)EAf! 'lllAr ~ !WWIE~~.
By Dick Moores
... :: ... ~···· .. · ..
By Gus Arriola
By Ferd Johnson
By Roger Bollen
:t l!eAD1He.
BALLCOO ttJ
'IHEFI~
PAJlEJ,.l_ t
l
~
§ ... ~ c.,,,,:! (W.ii~~~t~ ... ~-~~
PEANUTS
11U5 15 VE(I!{ EXCITING.
JUDGE PARKER
WOIJ! IT'> A
~EAL BEAVT~ !
'•
By Charles M. Schulz
WOOD CK JUST ,;ENT IN
FOR A NEW NEST !
By Harold Le Doux
MR.OUINM MAS 5EEN Pl.l.C.Et> IW
INTENSIVE CA!i:E ~ ITtl ae A TOUCH·
AND·OO SITUATION roll A C.OUPLE
01= DAYS ! WMY DON'T VOU TRY TO
GET SOME llEST? WE'LL CALL
gy Tl-IE WAY, CA~OLYN ••
l-IAVE VOU Cl-IANGEP VOUll
N.A.ME TO !OYCE
HOW DIP YOU INTEND TO ·WHO
EXPLAIN ALL Tl·llS TO 5EN· ~A.I P t •
;.TOR MARSH Wl-IEN Tl-IE WAS GOING
TWO 01= YOU APPLY FO~ A. TO MAlliY LEG" Y?
voa IF THER'E'S ,l.NV (H,l.NGE!
I
I
I
I
~ ~··
MISS PEACH
f'U'l'URE
Poe 'l'oitr of
AMEJ.ICA
M"'T
~e~.
PERKINS
-AND Tl-4ER!E 'SEEM TO ee
A LOT OF COMPLAINTS
NOWADAYS ASOUT
THf; "EXORBITANT
INCOMeS 01'
POCTOlil:S."
' I I
•
MAll~IAGE "LICEN5E-? PAUL?
SUCl-I
COMPLA INT~
A1'f;
GRO~Sl..Y
UNJUSTIFIED !!
ONL~
THE
VERY
911SY
By Men
•WHll..E
TME WIXY
DOCTORS
MEREL"JI
MA!<E DOC.TO lil:S
EAl<'.N
EXORBITANT
INCOMES ...
PJl.ES
OF'
MONEY !
By John Miles
•
THE GIRLS
."Is there anylning at all these days you don't have Co
worry you'll be caught readlng."
DENNIS THE MENACE
'
0
! I • ' l
1
L .
I y
0 s • '
30 DAIL y PILDT SC Tlt''ldiy M11th 2l an •
Your !Jlo11e11's 1fortfa COMPLETE-NEW YORK STOCK LIST
Amtrak's Progi·ess Repo11ed $• 11!1\chl Hltll Low Liii ,,,., "r'Pd , GI fl I! Ill 11¥ -A ,.,_ II Mllw C•
Nl!W YOA:I( IU' \-Fol ow"' 1 1 • lc1t pn 111t Nf'W 'l'Ot'I;! $rocli E11t111ntt
• By SYLVIA l'ORT~R
U you re among the m 1lhons
of Amencarui under a ge 25
you may never. have s et foot 1n
a train Or il you have you
probably have betn turned off
by th& dirt dela ys
bac kwardness or US railroad
travel in general
But despite yo a r 1m
p re.sst o n s
the year old
N a tion a l
Ra1 l r oa d
Passcn g c r
Corp (Am
lrak )has
been making
giant s trides
towar d
br1ng1ng our
system or ra1lrMd travel into
the 20th Century
Admittedly If you m easure
Amtrak s score against 1971 s
glowing public promises a nd
utterly unrealis tic h o p e s
Amtrak h as bee n noth mg
short o( a d ismal failure
But 1f you measure its ac
comphshments against the
enormous odds that 1t wouldn t
even s urvive its record has
been remarkabl e And
although Amtrak expects to
lose $152 million this fiscal
year that IS less than half the
estima ted amount our private
passe nger trains would have
lost in the sam e period unde r
the old private system
Amtrak s most spectacula r
success has been the New
York Washington M etrohners
which no w make 12 r ound
trips a day take three hours
or so and are equipped with
sleeping cars parlor cars
snack bars cocktail bars a nd
touch-tone telephones on which
you can receive 1ncom1ng as
weU as make outgoing calls
The 120-mph one way coach
fare 1s $15 75 (21 6S for parlor
cars) C hildren S to 12 pay
half fare
Among other m o v e s
Amtrak has
• Cut the nvmber or Ion)?
haul train trips nearly 1n half
to 214 a day lo r educe ftnan
c1al losses on little traveled
routes
Edw•rd 8 Fr1n-1 M 0
~tmllO og ti
HOME TllEATMENTS
ACNE • DANDRUFF
,.,,., ...... ,,,. ,., .. ,,, ..
II lhl\/ •• 11111\1""
Ill H i.111 111• t 11,.,f,f II l'fl/U "
'Til•t• ~r• 11p 01~1 mor1 1!1«"1 v1
llotnl trUllT'llMIS. I Wini lo leqlllilll
VOii with ....edk1!1Pnt 11"+11 lllw1 prow
td IHtc:llvt tor my Pit!ltn" YlllK complulon •nd Kl p w 1 let clean
fresll ind hfflllly Thry will he p
Y'O'I loo -or vour pvrch•11 prlu
wl I b• rrlunded ~-~'::.._~~~~
AIMrklN Olrllllt.i.tY Cl
.. J ,.. l•klWCM tt11• 0 I lt'Klosf 7Sc •nd 1 tt1mped st I
ldct es•-9 enwtloQI for SAMPLES Of AOC MEDI CATED CLE4NS 1NG PA OS I 11 PUrcll11e Ctrll flute 12 p11g1 4CHE OANOll:VFF
BUL LET IN p vs AOC X TA:4CT
Oii n1or,,.,.11on (11rol11tt-I
b iltkhe111 ernove l O I rncloll $6 for 11th 11.,rle lrell ment kif CP u1 lllC 11ch to ma I
lnol C~tck dt1 rfl! I< r 0 Deridrllff (O I nesi) 0 Plmpln O 8l•ckhlld1 ...
N1me _,, ... , ......
Add 1$5 -" HAl lt Tlto\NSPLANTATION SKIM DISEASES -TUMO•S DERMAaltASION -o\CNE
• Greatly u pg r a d e d the
gene r al quaUty or passenger
trains by p icking tht b(i:st
1 260 out of the more than
3 000 formerly on the lrack!
then r edecorating a con
s1d erable number'of these
AINl<ul ~ U 11\4 If'<! ll;.\ lllM ICJ If A~llL \ I l,l.I 10 , 6t\' ttl.t+ l\ p-l the fare schedult'! ~M 1 Ji ll\1 .... .it:io.-,... ,,r11:1 e1 ~"
h " ~: iM "f> ~ • i;t-. ,U -1l.. l=f' :: • All of thJ.5-a11d muc more M ., 4 1!, !1Vi I' 't ~ 11r 1 Cr111
-could be a reality but only ~c1M,,~1 1~~ ~:: ~ .... 3'°!:l ~ ~~! 1_: Admlr1 Cll 2'3 • 1 HUi '•'1+?'111 llroml Dt S (F Amtrak "els the funds and AA "'LI 1 ti 1'1 '2"1 " 62 rv11« .611 D Att ... ll DI 2 6 S.I::. 5)14 "'-+ \li rytlfl' wt
do the JOb ll will not be chea p ~i;"l'.,,,,:ro .111v 4t •?\~ •1"4 '\OJ ·~ n a..~ ' • ... j•:J ... tl ?)-+. nGpt
the go-ahead fro m Congrtss tn ... ~~· ,~: 1J l'! l1t: IJ~ ~ 11,/'~e'~ f1g'
by any m eans A J "°"'' 1 ' 01, •li ,._+ \ no Pl , 'Set u p a c entralized tickel Tomor row A mt r a k s ._ __ _, !','~•'•"", ''• 1t :>0 ~M ""-+ ~ nGEPt ·~
nd t d • o ,,•, lf"' 1,0,,. 1,U ln.Mll1 1 olO a r00eserva Jon system a n Prom ise To You :i::~toc'n'JI 11 l"' ~~ 'i1:!:+" ~ :l :;;ic1 J\~ start consohdahng railroad •1~r1in .lli ~~ 4 .. h ~ •i. l"'•sw 1 20
I I •<1n A to ,.. Xlt. ~ 20\it it lw lnw St
term na S In Chicago •1co sro u ' u 5'• " v. I' 1nw ""'' '"1r'"~.::.::e.---~~·------=-"!"" A con l b it •I pi• $7•1 t7 I ' I w n~ rc• 1 • Reintroduced 18 long ha ul Ai'l!'L Jld 2,i .~~; 1~·: 1 ~~:: ~ ~~~ ~s 0tfl'
sleseper routes throug hout thr: Over the Counter ~ ::~eVd 10~ ,, ~i~ J~i: u'1:~ ' ~:~ II 1 ii~ U (except New E ng la nd) -A•• Pw 1 .a 11,1 1.1 .. 11~ \.\t ~ •w,•C, '• ~
d ed Alltn El Ok '1 ... T ,.. IE
a n s tart a comp l ete A111c11 l zo :!O'I Jira " :x1V1+11 1•~E' P1 '°
d [ti k Ac!Mnl '' t ••I.It O•lt. ~ Otf»I 'J5CI re es1gn o 1e ca r s to m a e Ar ctM is is , 70 ,_ 1•u 1~-11en1 • "
th l< I nd lttflAMlllllWI /nl•r-clt111r 1t11t1i.tiolo1 II lllfll'Oxlmtf11'f' t 1 m ll'lm Ho\SD o\I dProd 61 JO ?l~ 17~1 n1Ao+ 'o ~Ip Pl I em m ore e d Clen a com l'nc.H ff M l lnc:!Wt rtl•ll 9f fl,.11rtli1• mlrtlHWll fr <O"'ll'lltWon 4 111tdSI 1 .0 2 0 3, 11 ).l\io J1lol +!lfo ji:j: &,111 I fg
forta ble On the Ne w York Los :11.rtL:' .... ~i r~ ~~ ,, ~" + lit N tl St 0..
Angeles tra in lhe re ls a n NASO L1st1n91 for Wednesday Merch 22, 1972 :•D~•';, ,1~ u • 13~ 1,,._" ~t:f l·~ , .. 1•1 Ttll.O-Vt ~,,,,_
overnight stopover In New -=--~~i~< 1 ~ ltl~' ',"~ n~ f5~: ~ ~~In e n:;
Orlea ns during which s leeper .\mer•\ ' XI ~ •l• 11.., "' • .-. "'-o1oo1I• 1 " the51 Ol/Otll Ol'I$ G IDll en u~ 10"6 Sid IU~ s .... 10 If vs Tri< L )9 ,. ..... A E•" '"° D •7 ., II • Vt ol l passengers may use their ac , .. , •• -,, 1111 Ni Gri.m Sc 7, 2,1.'t s11n .,.,., ..t st I.JD p..,p n 11v. A"' 11ss Old I"" .. \ d~~ 41 1.-.1 o1P!A~~ ~ .. ...... Sluk N s 211.. nv. Vinet Sii Ill.It •• A Hit pf J ' lJ 101* 111~ 101 .... , ... o1ir... llldlo COmmodal10n5 a5 hotel rooms llonll Asi.ocll lion cf Grovtt Pr 1~ V. {tr1w !"tt ~l~ "''°' Wellwlll 11 ~ 9 4 4 rF I IO XI rs~, 14" ,,,,.,_,_.. OIOftlll 51-• Sh I ed Slcv lies Ott er1 Gvlf lntst S\9 Sh Svbl< Tv 11, JV. Wtl(I~ Iii... 11.,. •A F t w! , 51 3~ 17 • Jlt\ ol ll)tU 1 to
arp Y improv c 0 n 1 e bids 1nd "tert GYrOClv !•• 6\l ~~~.~d ,l,t"'J1~ Wi1~k"1 1i' 1ti ~8'..t:' I~ 11 1;t; ;;.~ :i ::: \~ !lj>50"',,, '0: neCtJOnS On Jong haUlS to OVOIMI by ove Ille Henfed F 431h •S T~...-m A ~li(, ~Ioli Will., NG IO\.o IS A fl nd ) 7" 17? '-'°' UJto '' l Ol1ol" 1 to
I t , tod I covnter oe11e l to Hoover 7D'flo 71 T tin s J~ Webb A:1 s s ... A 8 <"1 70 SJ• ,it~ u •~~+,,.. olrln ol , e 1m1na e many 0 1 ay s ong r1c11 01"" • 01 ~vck Ml '1o "~ Tr1n Cc!.1 5 , ~i., • "' n , ~u. Am .e do 's , 50 .,..., ,..,___
waits for trains a( such f1~, T1111E~t::,.n ~~,,P:A 21-.. 2:~1 lr~0°t~ ~\o !-I~ w!~1"0M~ 11" 7?~ :~:~9f 1 ~ "1' ;~ ;;~ :~:' '' i!~~j
0 r d Ch lion• do no! lnclud1 Hw•!I C 3'~ 3t \ Tr dfl r I 4\1 5 • 11 Pvt>! 11 .. '9 Am '""' '~ 1 1•; 1\.o ,..,.., 1 Pict lk er ss oa s as 1ca go r1111 m1 kvo m1rt n stw A ,,.",,!"" vn McG 1 av: 1i.. "tr Fd 3s• M ~ A '"r" 1 60 ' l'" '~°' ,~._.._ l, i s 011 I" down or comms-\nlSWlf' VS 8kNt lh '"' K Plt 1"'2~"'"'C'"Sp 1j,I) ?I • ~ ... ,......_,.., omD E '° • Made n 0 t I ce a b I e Im slon •nd llo "°I ! !,(I II 2,•?1 2,~~ us Enve -, 17 ~ Wtdw En 1 f lV. A.~'~·.·, I 1•9 l'"11 3114 .tr1+ G mli!'' " IPl$etll I CIUI 11 Co Pll ., "" ,., I') ''1 '~ 71 "' y .O provements on many train 1r1nsilcllon1 JilcOl)t Fr s s...., AO • Tl 11,.0d JO Mil), J911 ~v.-, ·-·U ,. INOUSTIUAlS Jim WI! ,~1 ;.., A 0.1~ !1 t•Aj • t + •-d1n1ng cars and 1n other food AND TU1l1TIES Jemesb 11' 1J !'I •Do 1 Pf .... l fl 13 11 ~ mw '" 120
I we11ne•ct•w J ,,,. Fctt '"" 1•t Gai11er.s & Lo""ers A.mt:tr l 11 ., ,. ,. , ,,.""'_ .__. ,.-!0,•,M, ,,' service fac 1 1t1es A completely Mt.rch n, 1tn 1(1lsr• s1 1 s~1 1!1' "" o\m E""°'' i' • t'll ' j ~
lsed rood d •lo Atk 1C1li.er pl IV. 11~ ""' E•P of 12 a ,,~~ ,,. 7•V. 1 ~ Cw dDI 1 '° rev a n d 1 n 1 n g Air lndu• i ,,.. Kil var c n" ''"" A F nSY 1 10 • !"" 11'4 'lli-\Iii cwEd 1 wli A co lnd l'llo 1~14 l(euf & E 16 11 4 r.1>Bd 51'1 ~ 1V1 ?I )7 l ComEll 81"1 servic e operation IS being 1n A/ r,: e1v 10«. 11 l(ov11 Fb 11v. 111,1o New Yo k (1.J P•1-t111 10 ow no 111 A ct." '"s 5? '?: 22~1 2 "' n • v, COl'flw o • •
augura ted -first on overnight : ~°" G~ ~\ii ~.,., ~:~1 ~"'C' ll lll? ~~s !~ '~~~ ,,~~ "~~,'°':.~ '~ ~If\ 'H:1, ':g ~ ~;~ ~ :;~ ~ ~~~ U
tr I t II t •mEI Lb 1\1 I \• K no E '' J"' AV. Pft'tent ot cllanl'e °" 1111 0¥er tht A 11ome In 351 t \V. ••in ••~ ComPV r Ser a1ns a e r on a rains o n •m E•P' 1•2Vil,J'4 K 1>11 Kvt 111' 12 covnter niarket ,, <1volN bv i..e N .. sn A0 H,o/"" "' 2 1 l•I 1,1 ,,, -"' ComP11t son
h h rood ed V Am Fvrn Sl4 S"i ICMS Ind I 'o II.lo Net 1nd oercenr.,oe cl'Mlno•J • e Ille m"010 11 •• 4•'llo ,,,,. .,..,.. "' Con• Mllb W JC IS serV OWS Am G N 611!) '214 l(neH VI 3514 3'~ d rte l'lt r be wttn yrs erd,.v $ 1•! b d A.0mM!.'1v 1210, XI I \l I .\ 11'1/o• V. CnnM o Ud an ofhc ial The food will be ~nllevs 6J.lt. 63~l LAd su 55 60 Drlc• 1nd tod11v s 1st b d or ct ._ M'.1t,, 1~c , .. , 41 ' 4Jl~•I~~ conracc 611 ""~rn In 5 • SV> Lane• 69 • 10 GAINEA:' C• o P '67 ,.,, 11'1o ,,~. ~Con Ed l IO
better and less e xpens ive :.~~M~; 1~,1~~~:f,'..,,'~ ~~ ;!: ~~~~F,•0c1~'°,k ~\.±' ... ~", ',','°, .. ffi;r,:,M.,ii :~ 3;11 3.•1~.!: ~consEctD•'
A k l l I AH 2 FIJUU ~ ...... '""" ·~ 131 )11 37~~~t,"'con1Ed otS mtra s goal IS ood ac1 ltles A' fd r i'"' '"' Lrw1 e 7 lll. J beec ed Inc 10 ,_,,_ \to VD ll <1.m)i,s l'b in 10~ , "I ""Vl 1 ., ConEpt 4•5
all t ki t r 81wct14 o i~l:~~ClllJ1°"}; 15 ... M" ;~ ~Ind• I I VP 119 4m5ft1 11 16 1• ~,; .i..v.COt!$Fd I on rains m a ng r ips o s.,1,H E 11v. 17" M:I 11:i": 12" n 1 6 strtc~°" ,~"; 1~";_ ':i,, ~! ~~ :~~t"i 1~ 1a "" 'lo•• lt~• •• conr:ctPI '"
three ho urs Or more and full 81\'less 'l~ ?•I.lo Ml Ckl 71'-'t 791,. 1 P.tkto Cos In • .._ •1 UP 61 lm~ ._ 7fl ~ r,~ r,• ,", " "c~F~1,,•,•,, '! t I.a b ~"" 65\lo M(QuilY 14,,. 15"4 I o\CMAT c O~b s~ • ' UD • 9 Am S!nd •• 1 -· ' d1n1ng c ars on a ll trains e, bb Mf1 •'I ' MM 1 n 11 1J ' L <111 i:1on cs n 1 t UP • J 11m~ dr , 'i 14\9 i: '' ""'t "' COt1iNG 't.s rch 2•1 l Mi:ld C t 9•\ 10 se~co C~mpr 7 VP ?S A.mSlt 1 5, ' " ~ l:"' 1t> Con1m Pw 1 t ra ve!Jngmorethan12hours 8 1ckH • 3.i'l-l.Js Mldre•111 1-\t 2 1 11 Fr o trP11<" 1n 31 +4 VP ?OA.mT.\T 2 e.o 11~? ~~ 3c 4,;<+'!1ConP l>I t ' 8ooue E I~ 1 MldwG T 20'1:1 11~11? .. m Bocultve l i>.O-•-VP 110A"'T.\T pf , 1?t 61 ~ 6ft1 -ConP f>f t"1
• Slarted w or king toward gr~11n ~r1 U ... ~l~. MM•'•""'•• !!..~ :li'o 11 ln1ex1 tk iv,...-~ Up 11 • A.m T& T w1 o1111 "'" 1..,. "t I\ ConPpf t S1 e ~ ··~·" ... ~·.. • KMS lndu1t l. I .... I UP 10• A.mWalr ~ 20 l]\'f 11Vi IJV. Con! Air Ln SpeCtal tra ining Of all tJCket UC1 "" t ,,.. MO AKI> ,,,., 1 U Avllk Coro tn lP....0. 1'to Uo 0 1 AW Pl 1 1 ft l'I"• 1Yo 1~""-l• Cn CAn I t4 I W SY 11 11V. Moore Pr .... t 16 Coach""'" Ind ;9~.J. ?'ti. UD IC 0 AW!rpf I •l 100 1 C C
and reservation clerks-4llld all •non Ml '' '' Mori s .c 2011t 11 1 Cllr/T\ldC P M 36V.i J4 Up 91 •mft o" i.o 1 ~ 1'~ i,.., i;:t+ I'>' c:11 c:i:-'2 lnnon 8 9S 91 Mo ch M 6'h 1 I Stnil<> m.ttl El I J Up t 7 Am•te~ 601 7J 4 "' ('. service people on trams ilP T!'Ch J :;, •'Al MolQ cl •J .:iv. t Ne1 s1 ver Ind ••• ~~ UD , s AMI' ncp 1 1 1 l1 ?1:1. ?OV.-c nn P l>IT"> IP Sow •l• 7 Nilrd11 0 10,\_'> lDt'a 10 Al~llll!ltS Corp 111\,j, I I.JD • J Amli\ 60 ~ SA"t.-" Con! 11 43d Young women trained In IP 1, .. ,A ~ J\lo Nilf ilO c 17 .... 17JA 21 0 lel Co I II ,~. VD 'I •MP I>( "' ~~ ~v. ~~ If'"+"" Con! nvtl l •I n 7 2"11 N S« RI" t l'T t • 12 DIAn Cont 0 t 6'-T "' I.Jo 91 4mpe-op .l6 It I 7-\t 1v.+t~ Cano\11• .Ud atrJine tra1rung SChool5 Wlll be I I NN G5 !IV, IH1 NEn1 GE I TV. 11V. 2J Adv1nce ll:PS' ~+ 'h UD I' Amo.x Co 59' I I.do ii Conll Oii Iii>
d t s !Gt 17.\io !I NJ Nil G 1~ 170\li 14 EllK r tndv1 lSl;o+ 2"°" UP I J Amreo Co o 6& :116..... '4 ~J'.&f ~ Con! D fl/ 2 aboar to answer questions ,'f1 v11 11 " NchtnF •V.'7Ylts Mon1ort o1co1 11 .,,+ 1-1 up 1 1 •m11 110 31 ll~ "" "'c~s'"' 411 ar r 169 171 N t '-fn A 45\17 46 Ams ol .sa ll ~ 9V. t V. v. Cont Ttl 10 guide passengers point Out ~r 1 Ste Ill 1t1 N e11en e os;, ~ LOSEllS Amte n '° JI ,.,. '"" "' i~ con 01t•
sites of special interest on the er~ ~k ~ M; ~~ u~~ S!i b rt~~ li~ ll l ~~t~~.,~~i~ 1: = ~;, ~ 211, ::~d.:o I ~~ n~ ~~ n~+i :l ~::~pf '~
way C in -0 ' ",cz Hoo"'< Co !? v,,:1 3 V1rildrrie nc 1~-1" Oft 15 • AncoruN '8 I 3 ... I~ 11-. ""Coall. Vn 50 ~· ,.. "' "--' -.--, ' ROOD W11ll n 1~-01,1 I 3 Arid C 1 ?11<1 16 J~ il14 J~ \lo C-tnd 10
Amtrak personnel are now !;:: 5<.,•, ,"," s"• lL~, •,,,'! ,',"• ,',!'l: S Crowe Preis +--\~ Ot 1 l Ao.clleC JS 1u 1'\} lA 1' t't c-l •b 51 mwT "p 26h 11 ()" mont " "" 6 AV Ind~ e 4'1}-~ S?,'f 71 4oco DU 0 ~ XI~ 'XI 20Vo-'t COOP T 2,b
dressed In snappy .fl e w on A:ock 3J 15 otter T P i~~ wv. l f:!~! l~~~ ~'I·= -t" 011 ~ l ~or~ c~g 1~~ i~v. ~~ ~itlt ~ ~:O":f':1 f~
uniforms hot pants and ~~~1:11 ': r'~ ~A,. ~;fut ~~ a!)'t ~i1 1~ ~ilict ~ v'8~1~ ~~= " Off ! ~ :~r~ ~n: ,s,l .~ ,!?~ ,L~+t,~ ~:::1 ::~ae
turtlenecks for the female g~~ :Ss M Jj't ,~"' ~:~r'r, P i~ 1~ l~ ~::~~n1•:s ~i~ it: ~ §if ! ~ ~~~ iN 1 /~ 1 i~v. i7 11., -cor,, o 2Vi•
passenger serv ice represen o:~~M°1: ~ 11 ,~Yi ~:1r~e ~::Z J,'z 1~ ~~·::.,, c~.~ ~ !::: ~ 8~ ! ~ ~~~~~r~1 f .~ ~.... tt~ Hv.:. ),? ~:i~t d c~
tat1VeS Who help aboard the gri~ r> 1 lJ 'J l~~ ~~In '1:C ~~ ~u i: bc1a~ ~~m:I~& ?..:= ~ g:: : l :re, 1i>s Ero~ ~ ~~ ~ ~~li; ~;,c,::ll 1 ~
train s piffy out fits (or 0e1u~~ .. 4t tia 'Jv. ~o"krtnH K ~i.z JJ,~ 11 l~ FJd, tv co l 1-Dt1 6 .., ans o s ,", ,•, ... Jft ,,'",,-, ~. ~~~k•,F 1 ~
rt t I k ,,.,.,,_ n ,, ....... , , .... I Unv PubO~I • -Of s•A•n ll:rOv •• •VTO ., ... po e r ' reserva Io ns c er s 01 ' ., "" ... It Nill Hosp ii 1 • Orf 5' A mco st 1 119 n ~ 11~ 11.,.__ c romp .. "' O Im C t. 16 11 " PvbS NM 11 ":I 11\1 XI FOOdHDSI 1.JSA. ~ _ g I 5 t 4rm ot l O I :lO '11\ol ,.,.,.__ "" (fCIUioe Hn 1
and others both on trains and 0:~~: J ,.'.. •,~.· •• ~.· 1!~ !..,. 21 FJr11wnr Fn 2 -•· o 5• Ar""''' ao Do .11.19 •1 4,v.+ '4 ,,_, c • ......... ' ..., .... " ... ll 21 NillSecll:e j(ld • ,_ \<> OU 56 A mCPt l~ ZIO " 55 5! +iv, CrOWll Co<1< Jn stahons All A mt r a k .,, ......... Jon• •6' •lt.oi Pureoilc 13\i 1•V. 2l Info m Matn ,,,._ .,. Oil s 6 .-, ms!A: 1.ia • 41V. ''"" t1-. Crwn Zt 1 '°
0 veo8 f?"1117~PunC•P 5;oSV.1~SenAn ll\onl 21 -111 011 SJo\oCoro Kr t111.!o'1"11 ~!~+.\liCroolp1'4 10
personnel will have the new o~o"n ° ,', 1
1,l :il0•,•,: 11,l 1?!.,.. l! Mtd c• e v1 • .-"' 011 1 l A,','i"o""', .! 2~ "i'I-'o • 10 .. + ._ Cl Co •• E "" " ,., 1S9 16 .. jj 76 II+ v, C11! lo1n 21
Uniforms SOOn F~~~ ~:~ 3~'1 3,t a:-:dEo i~ 1~~ NEW YORK (1.J PllTMI 10 rno~ 1<1 A11'I001 1f0 1 57l.io l.lo 57~ Cvmmln H
• Cleane d up the lraln rest E,1 Nll(ef 11 1 1~ Rewn &A •P~ 41:w. Ive llock1 1 aded on '"' OTC m1rio;ei ~11g;: Ge f"' 1~ ,J" SA~ s:"'+ ~ cu,~r., owu:l llm10 ' ~ ltclld E~ Jli:. 17 ... Weo:h\.esd1y IS lVPPlfll bY NASO At 5v I ?O l 'lo ll .. ]ll.j, c
room s so that as one official ~ ";;"""' '" 1 1 A:obb Mw ,it,,_~ .. Fo "' 0 1 CP v~'fi: 1,t~Ai:,:i_c11:,. A:~0 Trans 1 •I• ,,,. '"--.. ~~·r;sHw ~
Th h I 150 I•~· ,. ~ ll:ui1 Stov , ... _.,. MID ,, " t "' Arh ON! IOd 11 17V. 11 12 -v. fYtlOPl l"' notes e w o e train no fEmDS o 1 711.-t 2111 Sid e w l"' J""' Ma 1us11 El Actr 71 t AUCtvE 1 "° is' 11"' 11"'4 1lv.+ • •-•• M• 1 > ne ow C lJ 14 S1v1 F6l S21'> 5'"'1 Nor Ctn Arl 69 60D S S\ ,,._ C e SB 51 SI ,... longer s m ells I 1 k e a ov Iv 0 1 1J , 1•'111 Sciln 1 n J,,. 414 Combned 1n1 o\m S9 :m J3 JJ"'1 "" A r Iv 01 • 1li v. v. "" ,, T!'C •~ •~•Sc Comp 3 l'o Strrna Homi~ Sl:IOO lOU 11v.+ '.ii A! R clllct 7 S1 65 61 6J -1!o Oimon co
bathroom F, 8 C!'Co l\lo ·~ Sc•IPP\ H 11 """ H dee1 Fd SV$1 56600 21 1t'h+ 1 •1ftc of i81) 167 Sl:W. ••h !l _, 01nR!w•r M st Sonn 13i:, 11 ~ S< Pio 1 3,.. 4 8nk1mrc1 CD 56.000 JS~ 75'\lo+ 1'o41 At lilc~ o J 6: 1o;~ 1oi Vi 10~ -5 A 01n1 Cp 1 '
' Made m 0 Ve II lO ease •I Ws F 1 2 Stwen Up ~ 40 \ A:osemoun nc SS 000 11 ll A ii$ C0to 61 1 • 11 11 1/o<I-'o g1r1 In »II
b l t k ls Th 140 Fct F p,. 6 \ 6~ SoC • Wt' 15~\ s~ Rink Oron Adr 51 300 71~ 19 + "" :Jf!m nee.it~ 37 U 'h 14 ,., u v.+2V. 1r!lnd pr 1 Uy lng 0 rain tlC e e Foil Grnt lJ :it SoNE T1l 1' lf\l AJ 1~h Bev Of IOO 1ai.. I -'-Au o"'t ndl '" 1-. 8 'I 1~.0-v: DIYCP 1 U
Id t r• book h be F Ink '" s • •V. So ~nd c lSl• 36'lt • c ... '' ,,. ,, + • OIYC "' ' o a r1 s ave en Frink Er 10~ 11 ,,, swGi CP 1s 1~ NASO vo vm1 TOC11w 1769 300 .. wco 0 " 11 5...., 5 , 5.,.,+ 1o Oilv " 1 ?•
Id led t Y Gn A: Est 1 9 Sow EIS~ 1711 ll' AdvenceJ 7l 7 ~~to Cy w,o 19 5\Vt SO"-so11 01vtonH 50 CORSO I a In 0 One OU can Ql1llelr 2l a 24" Speer1r J"io ; Vncll1noed lS19 veo o J 65 79~ 21h 21~-""' O•YPLI 1 U
pay for your tic ket wit h G1e11n w lJU l4V. s1111111v t •~ •IU fo11 ms :~~~';'Pd 01~ 131 13 0 13 13~+ ,,. 01PLlll' 1 10 4vr>e 11f 2 " • At\', /.llV> ~• IJ-1V. Off I &Co l American Express a Mast er ~---__..,.. __,. Avon Pd l.J5 ,,4 111\'it 11'"' 111v. OtlP&L 11 A1tec O I 6k 23 I !Tl'o UV.-\• Ori Mn! 110
Cha rge o r a Rail Travel card -a a-01 " "' 50
AL FUNDS l\ab&W I SS 1511 3 3"li 3 'o-V. OtHec nn
And thousands or l rav e I MUTU 81krrO I 10 11 ,,,,. ''" t~+ ... O•lone (p B• tG1s I " 19 JO\'I 7''11. )'ll'o• ~ Otnn •n 62
agents are being sig ned up to a iot 01 ·~ i30tl " 6J •• +"" Otnnr111: "°' 81nVOt Pn •I IS~ l~ 1~ Otnl$llfW 1
make arrangements for trave1 1.,,.-.,,.----::s:<::::-."""""'-"'"":r.:;a:::=::::::.::z=::z::""•ls enorP pf 1 l 76 25\11 ,, + !'I Otreco"' A ,_ 8kC1 If 1 ).I lJ 19\9 11V. ~+!"Ii Dertca pl' 8 1n the Amtrak system 8nk al NY 1 1ts 02v, o v. 41~-v. OeSolotn "° New Yor k tVPll EATON a LOOM 5 Sill"' -zl (J} 8nk1 T 11• 165 IU 62% 63 + \ O.elEdl1 1 40
"And Amtrak lS hoping to -FQ!owrno t. ISI HDWo\llD SAYLES ,,,,,,,,sHAA:EHlD GRP 81rberOU 21 7 d 'lo 41/. 011,1,+~ DttEpf fl?
t ba l re tor of b d ilncl •s~od ea n Fd 10 16 11 lD Canad 8i1rd C 253 5 71~ 71~ 7l 'lo-\ OtlE pf ''' 1naugurae rgatn as p lces on Mvtutl Qwtll F 1,0917.51 C•o av ll:)O!l:JO comst 451 411te111c 1n 411 3 '""' • t -i'o OttE l>f '"
travel at night and during f,.,~nd~.Jb j~'°" bY ,'!~, , ,•, !! 1,1 ll MvTv• 1s ., u n Er>trDr 1 d • 1• B•te>M Oki 16 n 1.1 1J"-13'1'1--,.. Oe1 E pl' sv.. ,_,_ ... -lO•D A•• Fl•' Fd ,l, ... ::~~ ~ JJ ,r. l ~,~ ,n t~ Bt:i'F~P ~
midweek to expand and 1m 1111~Ji"n;r''ftn ~•ldFd 1' 31 is '5 Alf 111 1 22 111 Ha t>r •in t u 8•~ e• L 1J s1 .,v, ""' 01v.+1 0 1 n ~ t IO
prove parking rac1hbes near -.~dn J~ ~~EDIE so x~n .Jlt :~ :: 1 :~,:~ ~!:! F~ 1~~1~~r :::~~~ ~ ~ :i~ ~Jt !~tt+1 R11:mi~~' ~
maJOr railroad terminals to "J>~AL T 7 SA 1 2, E.f0~1 Mg;Mrt g~: 41 Lu 11e n 11 se 11 "' SHEARJ<I N FOS ~f:~:d pf 1 ,6 f111:•l'l1,:s 1~~v. _,~ g~l~~:~n 1 ,'g
t a between key ncom •Ill s ,, E 0 , '' s o1 1on1 t 2' 1~ n A"" c 19 SI J2 71 8tckm 11d llO SJ\l S0'4 Sll'i+7"' f'llold '"" increase r ins nsurn 11 .sa 12" F:::Sw ,.,:, , 00 , u M•onC n '° 1311 1ncom 1• 06 2a tl s.c1""0 lO ~ ,, Jtv. t' +1~ I Gloroo 'iii ct hes \o overhaul oompletely 411v11er 5 u s ~ eo et ct 14 10 is 01 Manhtn s 10 t n ,,ve11 1 1 •4 J os BHCllAr 60 tl 21 1111> 22 + l,li lq •• Et101 4ern1 Fii 11'11'l?E1fun Tri "20tl M-t Gwl s11 511511Oean11•2U 42 8elcaP1 .SOii n• 1"11o 171.1t 17.,._'llo •1rnt11 «I -.1u1ue t 111•111Eme g 706 1n MA" co 5 ... Fd 10911203 80•,,•,t~ 1--10 l '134 23 1J -:lo llntPIA 2 -.GE Fd 6 :io 6 lJ Ene 9v u 96 2 96 "" 19,. JOo 20 19\IJ It • ltV.+ 11 MIC '°' -.11st1tr ll JI H lt EQV IV , 9 50 10 t] Fre1m • Ill • T.l SIGMA FVNOS 81 t&H I .ll(i 60 60'1/t 1•¥ 50!'. '"l" ., ~!Phil Fd "611! 9'1 Fil rfld 12 211l l6 ll(fp F 8 DO 171 Cilo S1'or 0 !2 11] eem sCo '° l 115-·~ 1..._ ~ lstJ s1· ~ l mCIO F 11 IS 1,7 fl Fm Bure 10 76 10 16 M1s1 F 11" 1] U In~ 12 lJ 1J JI Bind I< I 60 Jt 45\\ '5 ~t t'a l~rt fd In
f.m Ov I I I FO (<IP J ll s 1t M•SS FNCL Trsr 9 s 10 l9 ~·1111t" pf 13 nt ~~ ~~~ ~~+1~ ~y~e'pr l ~ ~ €:1:"1tEi :4 6s ~~OOE\,JL~TY" MIT l l 1143' Vtnlvr 12U uos e"'i:1..:' 12~ 10 ~ lJ:W. l~ tMn IO FUNDS 81'0 d~b 9 16 061 MtQ 'Y.11J6SS.mth S 1l001300 8en llDf SY, 111 196 lff 196 +\":! Fd 51d C"D'"I '96 10 19 Cea ti n ,, 111 M O lS t 16 14 SB &Gr J •l 1l t] Ben pf 4 lO t ,. t7'1' t1\'J ool uJ O"' lncom 'Sl 0 '7 c1111t 1 9 9110 10 MFD 15 !>' 10 98 So GenF 14 49 s II 8•n:~' tn 46.l •14 ~ I + 'h ni lly u ~vs 1m 1: ;[ 1T ~~ rv S!.ec • \7 M1t1s tv • 09 t 09 Sw\I Inv 9 " 10 ?I G! "e; 1 ~~ ill f'm )n_. l;~i 1o
0 ,~c '011Yf.. sf:tk v tt10 1s ~e.:•i 1~~1136 M1 1'lrr 1st11s •2sw nv G 17l 9••s1e l lnd 52 1 41 '' d "' ttYC o -.m Grit! 6'6 l!oO Ee~I llOl11.aMd Am 6Jl 6KISovr n ll Jl4 31 8 1o!=k0kr 1 l4 19 11V. •t !VJ er(p 71 -.m lnvll 511 571 Fund \7 1 1171 F Fct 16' t).ISPI'< a 197 91J811!rJ~ 41 '=2~ 20~ ~"" " w(h l lO
:"'N""'S t 5610-t5 P11r 1n 1G n111lMIF Gro 614 6USTATE 8NO GAP gl:t;~~I"?~ ~ ~ n""' ~y, r~!c tr~ 1.lrcHoR' )ff 413 Stiern F 516 6lt1 Muom GI fll (1) CO'""" ~to 62J 81vt8e!I '° c 51\/o 'Iii f1i? re.1st• ''° Ge~~~ •" , es ~\Nt'}11:cJ~{1 2l 2t" ~~0~,, 1~ 111 901~'~1 g ::'1: i :: ; :! ~rJ: c8r~ ~ H~ ~ !: Jl:i2tt ::t;~ 01 1~
F11d lnY 12 t .sa11z3 F n ov~ • s• ~ tl Mv11 Trs 201 ? OJ s a e Fm • 72 • 72 R:i: '1nt1" 1~ Jr~ l1m 11~-~ r1'~fu1Co.., f""'" 1 M19 , Fin Ind •?a • "3 N•t ln61.i 12 JO 12 ltl sr .. e. s so I? Sl 01 SookMo 1 ~i 11 11 _.., !ffit \\ • P 1Al V~n'fur d6.5 5'I Fin Inc 671 '.'7 NAT SEC FDS Am Ind 176 (7•aor0tn l 'XI 112 71\lo 2I Ao Vktpf ll8 w1 N"!I 1'6'1 16 10 ~c~l l JJSJ1?1~jf 8i1 1nc 11111116 ,.,lO Fii Ill l.JI Sorowr 1'o 126 31~ »>A. J lolo t;, ~;s>.:r•,,,.
WHAT IS A
GOOD NEIGHBOR?
A'1 Dn S33 jll Fovl'I F 101f11U eono Sr l 24 ,,J FldVC'f 7St 7J;t 8om•ns n 10 IMI '"' ·~ ~ne 13(1-Audilll" F 11 • I 57 F11:4NICLIN DIYl(ln •!It 4 9'l STEIN ltDE FDS 8111IEd 2 :14 3' 31¥1 31\4 :il"ii * VPl1n C 7k -.XE CUSTDOlo\N Prel Slk 7S6116 eai~e 2J012l 01 80SIEs>llM l l.5I0 11S ll:Mt.HS 'II vPonl 1\4d
1
1;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 0 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;9, HDVGH TDN Fr Grwl 7 A~ 1 lltl ""Sov ns Inc i 16 ~ 16\li U~ V. Pn pf O'h • Fvnd A 5 I! ' l6 ONTC 11 ts 12 oo ncom S 61 ' l3 C~s> I l '° 11 "" Bran If lk 2267 19 11\lo 11.\io ._ ~Pn pf JYI Fund 8 I XI lf1 Fr VII I !67 6 21 Slodi Sr t2S 911 Srock il9 \64ts kl<!sS 170 J1 lt ~ :It Jt --11111L 166
lty TERRY GltANT R l'h
Our dcfln1t1on takes in 11
lol of territory It I!: people
you can depend o n In both
emergencies 8nd every day
living knowing that "hen
you netd hr lp It Is elosc at
hand Furthermore a good
nPtghbor really cares about
you and your fl1.m1ly
It 1s the 1ntrnt and p;Olll
o r our ph11rm11cv to ~ con ~1dcred ll good neighbor by
everyone 1n th\~ community
Wr prom1!'C lhat you can de·
pend o n us to hllve the medl·
clnts 11nd health a ids thllt
you need 1hat \4 e will al
\I.RY~ be wh<!rt' you or your
d octor can reech us quickly
and we will al"ays care
a bout :,,our better hra lth
YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR
CAN PHONE US w hen you
need a delivery W e will d~
live r prom ptly without extra
charae A great m any people
rely on us for their health
~ \Vo wr:lcome .requestl
tor dellvtry s e-r v I c e Md
c harge a rcountl.
M~rW!.Cb
MOTOR HOMES
SALES • RENTALS
1Bhto21h
UTI LINElt
IALIOA-PACE ARROW
LOCAllD ON THI NIWPORT
FRHWAT JUST SOUTH OP
THI SANTA ANA FR!lWAT
TAKI THI McFADDIN TURN
OFF TURN LffT ON 'tllLAGL
WAY
> ~
to NGlll c
"'" j JI 't7 F,. lncm 'Jo 2 •S Gtw!ll 10 d 11 n SIS GROUP B \s My 1 ~ .>or st"° 571o!i S7~ \Ii llOLhl Pf 2 A•e Sci 12 557 USGv 5 OJ 11:Jll Nl l Gwt. 051 11'1 G""rh 711 16,8 tMyol 2 14 .Q m.., "'2 .. +'4 vrno lnd\li BLC Giii 1190 1301 cd MI dP 11171117 NEL Sid ll SJltO• nccm t.S110 •J 8 11Ptl 3'0 ilS 1~ 13i.., 1Jltl'4 nemlc CD •1:~:" 1~H ';:0~~3~1HC, NEA Ml 10 91 1120 Smm1 1lOl U 2tLr::'~1 :1 \ ~ ~ 1J~ 1:v. 7~,•~lePI t4 av k g• 102 6.s&comm 1,0112 n:1 N1111 Cent 7 7614lleo::lln 1~a1s soctG1 n l•2JOl!'t ~ttv. ~ eKOC~,so fltacn Ml jl 'l n •1 mp<1c t 69 10 Sf Nevwlll 12 52 It 61 Swncro F 10 61 1 60 BrVnG1 1 7'J 11 15'4 25 2 \4 \<Ii 1stern "'Ir
G•econ I( 1 ~f1j f, lrvivs Ir l •~~U 2'N1wton 20 112775TMll: Ao ll9016 ?1 8rown Cono ]2 It'll! ll'lll 1 :2+~ :::'tt1r 1t\ e:r~:;; 1 31 lPOr.~t:.l.v 1f=1~.'1 New W!d 14J1UTJT11dlrs 1151117•:rG;:io I~ 17 3' 37:V. f7 -1<4 aKocl l l)la
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C:HANNINO Imo I (p 11 16 n '° P1 Mvl S 07 S 02 Whlll1I 14 61 IJ" ~ "' C '' -<,, c,.-,. I'• ,., .. i , ·~.' ",!u ,'!I l"UNDS 1m~ Qr t Ol t to Pen11 Sn 1 tO 1 to UN 1TEO FUNOS ' 0 • •• E .. , ,.. ~1lntd If :n ll •6 nc:: lr!Am 1• J9 15 t$ Pf\ 1 Fd lb , 17 ,0 Atu.im I 09 t 17 ad•nce w'Mo 11 11.,, ll-h 11\1 i. Emo tnl SI om Slit 7~ 1 t ll't 80!1 7 18 110 < '' > 1ew t lal jl<t b~ '\l Emp,.. G1• rwth ''° 7~t n!I FAm S •1 J'\ P lorm 1 t.O 161 Cont ow UOI • •If ,:.,,nc I• '-1~ 1\.'I+ 'Ai Fna•llld Ill) 1ncom 7U t Jtlntri on 1011 1!P 111S .,02 1102 Col\/ Inc lltl1lllCill•fln "°'" t 11\~ 11 "'1 ll \\-\\En111 pf ·~ SP~CI J Jo 2 5' nv Cn A 14 61 \' nl Plan Ent I JI 10 '' ncllf'I\ M I 15 11 C1mA:Lk 4 •1! 3t>U :lo\~ JCl~l+ "''""' 18us F CHl~lf tnw Qukl II II Du p onr Fii 12 •7 ll •l Sc. enc fr f1l Cimo S I 10 1 3 ~ 30'-+ V. E'lv n> 11!1 IOSTOH rv l"llc 7f0 Plannd UlllJ. .. Vt~<>ll 10,t\1t1Ctn8rw ..40 IO 7t11 7~ ,.. FavG11 ??2
Flld e~1 U?1 1~10 1nv Sot 1lltllUol ,,0 '''''''" ,,,. ''' ,,,c1n P'< 61 It.I 1•u 16\>0 1•1'1 FovLle !Id F nn Co t 11 t9' INVIST GltOU, " II " C1n1 A: 1 G • 11 ~ 16\li 1"'-Enl " l~ ~11Tr 811~111•11gs NW6 I07 IOl'lllCEll0Wl"1 USAAC•(1IOl~i10CIS~ J160 19 60 <1-1\11 11!$!11 ~~I 11t2 ll 03 I SPt 5 N 4.J1 Grwll'I l d ~ 01 US Gvl5 10 $3 0 69 1p1!H d '6 51 •• 4]\lo •l\li-VI El'IU In~
.1'1tm fd Ol Mvt~•I 1050 tl t5 Nw Ert I Gt 10f VAl.Vi LINE FOS 1r~Cct '' r, ~ ~:z i'i'~!l"' h!::,~"' ii r.ruf'INIA~l !ll05 ~tel 2,un;: Nw HOt' ,.,, &1 VII Lne 71 1 117~:tUato ~ 1106" 1$\to 1in Fl1'ovlC• .. FUNDS v .. r P1y I •J • 111 ,, 0 ,:d n OS 17 03 VII In<: ! 11 ~n 1ro F I • ., 11 """ 111. (. '1"111¥1111 '.,,
ConVtf 1'0? 1nw A:11t W •ttPro Portl IGll 106 "11'11 SK 6 12 •11 rPL 1"4 .,1, ',L, ";t;" "m:.._"i','c"•'•'o' ~ Flultv 'fO ~ S I PNWld'I 5 l't S 11 VANCI! 1rpTtt 10 ,.,. Ii lt ""
Fllf'ld 1l(71 Grwt!I •fs 'tJ '•oYd Gt 194 t77So\HDlll:S 1rrl~C 6G ' d )t 18 !\.?tl"I xlndc1r1 r= 10 &l 1 V:.~f" VI ~ !1 ; 1 Prud SI, II '2t 12 12 8os Fnd I t• t ,, ·~:Ek '°J 1f m:; ff{; lra+ ~ F1~ H ~ Vtntvr 6 OS 6" Trtl $11 11 :a IJ,~ ,UTNAM 8ot Cm t I'/ lD 37 c11 T 1 10 lll'l !Jiit Ut,\ .UV. 1A !' or 60t alllum fi '' •111f 1tt•I Flld tt t7 2S611'UMDSI SPtcl 11 4'USOc't11 'coro n •14 Wt .v.-·~"(Im ,:~wNWL TH 1...., l"und I 11 117 EltU !Y 10 13 11 fl Vnclrtllt 1 • UI C I Cr~ Ill l Im 1"'°' 1~ _. : r ~F -3: " , I""' 1 n Jtl'llls Fd 11 09 17.ot Gto u 1111 ts v1ntr11 • 11 .. KP CP •• 1• ~ ~v-~ ,-1 ~''•' 1
c .n 1 ._JH•n 1111 1u '"° Grw111 ,,,6 11ttv1111 1ot0 •• •1•nesr 1 1•1 ~ v..:!.~"' 11' "" -omP ,, ,. t ll oh"'tn 2'13 2'7> Inc: 155 t ~v1rrrc1 1 so• 54 ettntP ~ lj se~ ._ S -"+ "'f '"' wf'l *>
•omo A1 '.\610 KE'l'STONll 111w tl410 64 Vlknl G• 7«1 104 :i:f:~n'coro s »>t 'oli 3' 4' '"'"1 I" rOfflo Co0 ',1u 1 M> (;vs! 91 lt 19 10 01 Vil 1 , 10 91 11 tt W1 151 tr l I? l(' 00 lf\Hud , .. II ,~ 4 10\~ 1r Wtl F n ~fom• ~ 9 1J1 ~!(VII a1 :IOIO»IO VrrtlO 1~1P11»W11h Mv ll'lll4..46 ntlL W It t-5 1 1~ 14'6-"'~==I = =d T2 lt 1<1 lt Cv1t 84 t Ot t H Atvtrt F 11 '11l OJ Wfln111 to Ult 11 lt 9j'111);11fl 1•~ ll" n\\ ..s,n m-1v1o FtcfflCo l ?!
ons pry lj"''JU C1111 lfl t:tt tltltll!rl ISOS164t Wl.lLINGTON :nll jO• :: 1j1 \,,•~ jj~tt:~l'~M't l)\ Cntln tw i4 ? Cvst Kt -104 1nSt1 11r 3tt Jft Oll:OU, 11MPw ~ •a • €°"rr!1'" 1TJ:1'"' CUii l l ?16'tl7 dl~lr ll 061t,., Elfllor U"7167t lf'l~W, ., v. ui, ·~+ ..,F"".l'"'~~ t'~o ld' ,,»117' Cull S2 ,,,,121•1CVOOt lt 'OS /Vf$f ll i$l060 e1111sov1 , •• 1· l'"' 21-.+11'f:~s·~" "'° fon!rv r. t~ll,lT,I Cv11 SJ fll10'1 lfllr Inv l~ff 1,1 Mortn tlll ).It "T•I t• 14 ,,_ f~\ !'"' ...... r~t I" r... '1,111 7ff 'lj c1111 '4 1«1 101 l11f't 161111•1 Tcllnlv • 1 "',c•,.,torJ_ 21" "" J\4 5"( ~ ""'m,' ,.,.
' '
>) j '''" .., 111 t4't U llo 14 n "11'1 Ot\lfC'" wn ¥ Al>O o U.J,1 IS '1 Com 11 IO 11 to Tn11t It ll IS.» tr1 10111 tQ Sl 4S 4' t5 j 1 .. "'•rro Cl! JI
R;v(r..,,•ll•'SJ Pa11n SM 6111 S11tt1I •-"'•" Wt•tv "'''l'' tun~A e.o M Jtl.li 7l~ ,., 1'""'""'d.,.. (l'tOI , l(~l(\r ~OS I !1 llCUll:ITY JIDS WI tn 1):1/f 11-11 lllbrn 1';5 d ~ ~ f ,_'Ai Fllfll"~ f ~
l)el'.-1 "l•1S'91<nkr G!ll tl,Jll1M E111.1fl'f 4.J1 41' Wllldlf f7J10<•1 f!l'«l!Jffl~l ii im'!t ,; • .u~ .. ·~r,:i,M~ 1'JG
nilw F 11"1M~ltnll" ll"d 14J Ill lnvtJI I ll •I? ~I Incl 61.) ltl fll"'~ .. I ' "~ J~ + ·--'"' '1 O PHAltMACY 0•111 T '' t I' Lt• Orlfl 11 n 1-M Uttr1 F 10 )I fl~ w rt.1P 1 » 1.01 llfttt~ ,. 1 a.u ~~ ""1;;: It'll' '> 'AltK LID l"'Bm'VnhCI tj1 \' 1 L•JL 11n11 11.Jt 11 g Sl!l fC TI D "DS t11f G111 '16 S.10 ~t.U1.t"'uJ IOI si. ~• oo-\lo c11c11.v1 ,,., 311 Hotplf•I ltlacl C:X j• Q 1' 41 LlblJ ~Cl f,OJ 1M Am '"' It.JI II U Wll<~ •-11 1.AI r MO! l « '< U. \.-•"' r~!(. 1 ~ ·• •••1•-1411 S VILLAGE WAY I r~'ll I!: ••,14.'2Lltt-lnlw ,,, ,,. On FCI 1''6 11JI rlll flCI )M l.U ,,. ..f• JI \II !'-FttM'9 M
558-3222
N..,,.,. l .. Ut -"" _.. Dll:IT,lil Oll:P llf1 Grw tJ) 1" ._I $llr1 11 5t lt ,, ttllt' 10 9' lt.GI ='.!,11 ,~~ 4~ Jf.1 ~ Jl'1 r t ~:i~(~"0~ J ,,_ Dlftvtry SANTA ANA, CALIF 2~ [11 jlltt!~l-P, 1 .. e <•11 11•1>.-~...i11111 •u1~" ,.,4v11JtN l!b(ii 1 , jf , m .. .i.11,1H1S• JStl
··--------------··--------------r;"\11~ a Ji lint Fnd (71 St11trl', 11 .. ll ll rllNVll •lll hOI! M ~ ,. J.f''.l-,~,1rNSl•n t
• \ '
•
GM Fil1n U1·gmg Wo1·ke1· Incentiv e
..
OE'lllOIT -General
' Moton'• a.tvrolet division 1,
-ten1n1 ••"l' one of Us 100,000.
plus employts 1hat a major
pol1io11 of thll rtmatni.nc bltUe
LEGAL NOTICE
iTaT•M•NT o• WITMDl AWAL P'ftOM ,AltTNllt$Ml l"
:t>llllATIN• UNOl l f'ICTIT l•U S
aUSINl t• NAMI
against imports must be car.
rled on by them.
J1aving done wh at it can by
"'IY of design, Chevrolet no1v
Js banklng QD a 14-minute filn1
10 inspire its asstmbly·llne
•»orkers. The meS$age i5 that
building these cars well is ar.
even more cri tic3l task and
one that Is primarily in thei r
hands.
workl!:r he should be on lime
and work dillgently.
Such eftorls usually fall
i;hort or the mark because the
only motive suggested evrn
~ublhn ln~lly sttms to be that
lhe company is interested ht
improving ils prof its and that
th<' absent or ct1reless worker
l~ standi ng in the way or a IQ
percent retu rn on lnvesttnenl.
behin d him giving the time as
11 ·58.
ks thr: nev.·scasler rrads
sorne dour ecoootnic news. the
narrator ticks off those <.'On·
sumt!r iterns l\'hich have
beco1ne substa11tlally or
aln1ost totally foreign mnde.
The importer percentages or
shoes {2 out of 5), radios '9
(IUt or 101, clothes 17 out of 10
Tbund11, Mart" 23. 1'172 DAIL V ~!LOT 29
'Overwithholdmg' Fl oods
T1·easury Wit l1 Ext1·a Money
WASHINGTON (UPI) seven-eighths pucent note
n1aturlng ~fay 15, 1975,
income taxes. . . . " Thh
reflects a new schedule oJ
withholding that topk efled ir
January under provisions o1
the Revenuei Act of 1971.
Tf\I fOllOWlll• Hrto11 .,., Wlllldrtwll ., • ",,.'ti P•tlr..r tr1m fllt "'"1111111111 '~11h1.t utW•r 11!1 tlC!llltu• bu111111J
ntmt Of 0 .. 0 OltNAMENTAl lltON •I ,1rt42 Mtl11 51., Tut1l11, C1Ufort1l1.
'"l'he Bug and the Be ell!""
actually deals ind irectly v.•lth
a problem more serious to the
carmaker than the persistent
level of foreign-car sales in
this country. That problem is
the falling off of auto-plant
productivity and efficiency,
and, to some extent. the quah-
ty of the A m e r i c 11 11
automobile.
The Chcv1·0Jel fil m tries to
bring home the point thnt the
t!mployl;!·s job could be nt
sta ke. In a ve ry brief sug·
~rsted introductory speech
that is accompanying the fil m
to each plant. man agement
announces it seeks to inforn1
the 11•orker of some "('{'()nomic
facts ot life.''
l\Weaters ), rnotorcycles {19 out .J
or 20J, and baseball mitts are ..
drarnatlctilly rt><:allcd.
The Treasu ry Oeparllnent has
reduced Its borro\Ylng r~
qulrement s for the n e x t
several month;;, saying more
money than expected had
!lowed into government ac·
counts, chiefl y due t o
overwithholdlng by individual
taxpay ers.
Proceeds lrom the note snle
should mett the government's
cash needs through mid·J\1ay
when the Treasury h a .s
scheduled its next quarterly
refunding.
The department also said
Tuesday, it v.·as studying
possible changes in its debt
financing techniques "to iden-
tif y ways its routine debt
management operations, in-
cluding both Its refunding and
new cash raising operations.
n1 ight be facilitated.''
~IO\\'e\'er. it said no change
n·as expected during the next
n1011th.
For many wage tamer~.
th.ls sh<lwed up a5 1 bigge1
than usual an1ount v.·ithhelf
from their paychecks fOI
federal Income tax. 'rllt tldlllou1 blitllltll "'"" llllflN'llt ,tor tltt .. rtllfrtl!lp Wll fl ... 1111 HOit. U, _tt11 lit.ttw c .... .,,.,. to! Cr•t19e.
Furr "''-•ncf .c1ctr1n Gf "'' "'"11 wllhdrtwll'ltl: Oontld Ch•tl" 11•1'11111. ~ • toi•. I. Cult1ld• l•M, A1111>tlm, Ctltforll~t.
Oo111ltl C. H1n~e.I
•·1"2t 1"111Hlllled Or•,,. .. Cw11 0111., l"ilO!.
ot.111c11 '· •· ii. n. 1•11 JJ1.n
LEGAL NOTICE
l"ICTITIOUI IUllN•IS
NAM• STATEMlNT
lhf tOtlowlllt H 'IOPU l •f 001111 ....,,lnas 11:
(Alt WAStf ~ltOOUCTS, 1.U S
Gr1nt1, S1nl1 An• tU07
lloHrl J, Ltdd, 7JOf W A~•hUFll l"I ,
S1nt1 A111
ltlch1rd tf111l1, l JOl Nt,.,.""' 11vd , Cosll N.111
\le-IOCW'I l , Scllrcitdtt, 2111 N ..... 1><111
l lvd .. Cos11 M111
l'M• 11111ln1u 11 btlll9 COr\GUC!floll DV •
1>1rtr1trt/'ll1,
l!:obtfl J. Ltdd
TMI llllttnenl flltd Wl!I! t!11 Countv
· •c1.ni 6' Ora,... '°"'"'" .,,, IMrct. 71, ~••7J. •v •-rv J , MHclO•, Ctl'Uh 'Cou11tv Clfl"tl .
l"utllfll!ld 0rff!ff CMtl DtllY .. 11of,
M•rm ll, • •lld Aorll •· 11, ftti 1,..n
LEGAL NOTICE
P'ICTITIOUI • USI N•ss
NAM• I TAT!:M•HT
'1'111 flll!OWl!lt MIJ.oflJ 1~1 llolnt
l-u•IMU. 11:
SA~l IN~ N.OTEL, 14~T Ntw~I!
9oultv•rd, Ntwpart llt!IUI, CA t1UO
JI:~ \lltrr.., 5t1101•rl, 1401 Se•tho•t
D~i\11. Ntwf!Ort le•dl, CA
ft is this· decline in quality
tha t has c on t ribu te d
signi fi cantly. but not entirely,
to lhe decade-long rlin11> in
foreign-car sales. II has con·
tributed also lo the serious
problem or customer satisfac.
lion, ·which in spite of massi ve
financial outlays !or irrr
provement of design and pro·
duction methods, seems to be
getting worse.
Company programs lo en·
courage th• employe to be
more conscienti:lus about his
attendance and performance
on tht assembly he ha\•e tor
lhe most part been limited to
slogans on plant poslers and
pep talks whi ch tell the
"'As yo u "'ill see. Ii out of
every JOO cars sold in lhe
United Statts tOOny, as v.•ell as
the component~ used I u
assemble lhese vehi(•lrs. were
n1ade O\'erseas. 'fhat ratio 11·a.s
only I out of 100 111·0 dccudes
ago. Thi: prob!etn is 1nore
serious rhan ever before. \Ve
are not lhe onlv U.S. industr1•
to fact? this ihreat. It ha's
already severely a f f e c t e d
other businesses."
Early in the film . after a
few brief scenes of foreign.
built cars being unloaded at
Bos ton ; Baltimore: Toledo,
Ohio; and Los Angeles. a
newscaster is shn v.·n speaking
out of a Japanese·bui!t
television set 11•irh a clock
Cl'IUll!I' O°"tld "'"l lt>IW'I, fA1 S•nll
lltos1 ltNd, A•<•dl1, CA
T~ll bulll'tSI II tondU<.ltd 11\1 • tl.,trt l ~1rlnerllll1.
Aotitrl \llt trln Srtw•rt
Cht11.-r CCINld Mt tlltw'
11111 tlt l.,..,t nt Wl l lli.d Wilf! l'llt Ctun·
TY Cltttc el Ot1n11 CouMy tn M1rcn '1.
1112.
P'1'Uf ;,ubfim.f Or'~ (Mil Dtilt l"llot, ·. ~ n, JO. t l'ld AOf'll 1. u . 1tn n 1.71
Fryers Put at H eacl
Of Go vern1lien t List
.. LEGAL NOTICE
PICTITIOUI •UllN•IS
fllA MI ITAT•M•NT
Tl\lt frof lt\1111'11 lltrton II clOlllt -ff'tll -••; ' C HU Ck S T E\IEN I o\NO
• AISOC IATIES. .001 llrd1, Sul!1 5.
'' Htwport IH(ll, Ct. t?UO
' Cll1rl11 5twrm11'! s11ven1, S 1 1
.-Roc11t11..,. 51 .. Coit• MtM. c 111r. tU27
• Thll llU1IMJI J1 bfl111 <MICIUCltd II' t n
• ll!Cllvklu•I.
• ClllrlH S. SllVll\J
Tl!l1 11111mrn1 flltd 1·.ltn lh1 Courlv
'Clerk or Or111H Cou1111t on: Ml ''" 7. i.n.
•v 81l'lrly J. Mlddo•. OtOlllY Cout1ty
Cl1tlt.
.. 16141
' 1"111141-ll'led Or1n11 Ce1111 Dt dY l"llo!. N.t rd• t, 16, 23, :;o, lt72 ' 411·11
LEGAL NOTICE
l"ICTITIOUI IUIOll!SS
NAMI STATiM•NT
l ltt lollowh11 otnon !1 d0Jn1 llu1i111Js
'•I;
l'OU J: SEASONS MOTOJI: HOME
Jl:EHTALS. IPI 11111 SI., It-JOI, N&wpOll
a1K11, Ct . '2660.
Jt1y 0.1rl11 Emmoou. lt>o 1'11'1 SI.,
lt-301, NIWJ>Ol'I B••do, C•. f'lut.
Thi• ll111lna11 I• bt\119 tOndu(!td llY l t'I
t nd!1tldu11.
" Jl:IY (, E"'mo<it
I, Th!• 1t•!lm1nt tllt'd with lt!e County
, Clttk of Ctl llff COi.iniy 011: Mi rth 21.
t l f12 , I Y ltY•flY J, Mldllo• DlllUIY (O\ltl-
IY Cltrlt. I" lUll
L• l"ubU1htd Or1ntt CO&SI C1!1y l"UoJ,
• Mirth 23, JO. 1ncf Aorll 6, 13, ttn 161·12
LEGAL NOTICE
•1CTITIOUI IUl tN•SI
NAMI STATIM•lllT
Tiii foUOWlfll 11tr1•111 1r1 dtlhl
llvt!MJI It:
l"AtNl I Y "l~, l}JO SuHllOI' Avt ..
Cost• MHI
Dovoltl Jll'IVI 0 1.,, -406 l:11f!1t St.,
COtll Mi i i
ltobt!Y l r•nltr, 611 Vlctorl1, co1t1
""' n.11 bu1!11e" 11 btln1 conducrM by I
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Un like a major e a s t e rn
grocery chain which is ad-
vising consumers to switch
from red meat to chicken and
other foods if they "'ant to
bring beef prices down, the
go,•ern1nent is not directly
suggesti ng any switches.
But in an announcement
"'hich makes no mention of
beef prices, the Agriculture
Department has put broiler·
fryer chickens at the head of
its list ()f "best-buy" foods for
May.
Officials said chickens will
be the prime !eature item for
May in their regular "plentiful
toods" program. This is a
longstanding publicity cam·
paign designed to promote
foods ll.'hich are in ample sup-
pl y al "attractive" relail
prices.
Other ''plentifu l foods" on
th e just-released ~lay list in-
clude several other protein
ite1ns -eggs, milk and oonfal
dry milk. Also included are
fresh and processed potato
product s. canned peaches and
canned fruit cocktail.
Officials said, in response lo
questions, that beef last \\'as
included in the government
"plentiful foods" list nearly
five years ago-in June, 1967.
cent above a year ago, "and
prospects are good tor a plen-
tiful supply ... at prices at·
tractive to consu1ners."
On other foods, the an-
nouncement added :
-Milk production _Will be at
or near Its peak for~hc year
\\'ith an1ple supplies.
-Stor.1ge supplies fron1 last
year's potato crop \\·ere near
record on J\1arch 1. This.
coupled 1vith spring crops \1·ill
put pres1'ure on fre~h markets
and assure "econom ical pri<'·
in g... In addit ion, stocks of
rrozen lrench fri es and instanl
ma shed potatoes are large.
-Egg production in 1\lav
will be near the high level of a
:vear ago, producing •·at-
lraclive prices.··
-Stocks ()f Ctingstone and
Freestone peaches . . . arr
h.eavy and should represent
"good buys for consu1ners."
-Canned fruit co c k ta i I
stocks continue higl1.
Tctx Burde n
Rise See1 i
The vie \\·er is then told that
U.S. indus lr)', including the
au tomotive 1 n tl u ~try, is
operati ng at 73 perctnt or
capaci ty and that I percent in-
crease in impor ted-car ~o les
results in the loss of 20,000 In·
dust1 y·relate<l job!s In the
Un ited ~lutes.
Such statistics are reported
dry!~·. The narralor does not
talk dov.n to the audience. The
iinpact comes from vie\\•ing a
1·ush hour expreSS\l'ay and
realizing that a i;taggering
nun1ber of 11nports are being:
driven across the screen.
"rhen 11 comes ti1ne for !he
pitch, it also arri ves quietly.
·-Everyone must show up and
\VOrk every day .'' th c
assembly·linc \vorker is told.
•'Jf \ve can count on you we
v.·on 't have to count foreign
cars."
Stressed early in the film is
the belief that imports must
be re garded as competition
and not "the enc1ny." Thus,
.. 11·e are only strong \1·hen \Ve
arc \\'illing to compete \l'ith
the \Vh<ile v.·orld. \\'e cannot
hope for the government to
save us. ·rariffs and surt axe s
only help for a litt le v.·hile ."
Though all assembly-plant
shots are 1.akcn in Chevrolet
plants. the !an1ous name is
spoken only once: "Foreign
cars are well built, by people
who care. It's up to you to
build helter v a I u e in
Chevroletis. It's up to you to do
a better job."
This restraint has made the
film acceptable for vie1vlng in
many places other than the
car division 's 24 ph1nts. Other
G:O.f div isions arc borrowing it
10 s/Jo1\· their 01\'tl enioloyes.
And Chevrolet is also pro..
viding it to schools. civic
groups. and business associa·
lions because the problem.
Y•hile serk>us at General
~lotors. is eq ually a s
formidable in other areas of
busi ness and industry -and
the message, spoken ever so
q u i e l I y . has \l'idcspread
rele\'ance.
S&L Ope ns
111 BeacJ1
l\tercury Savings and Loan
Association announces that it
has been granted authority by
the California Savings and
Loan Commissioner to ()pen
and ()perate a branch facilit y
in Huntington Beach.
r •rlntrsl!l11.
Doul 1ff J, D111
1ltl1 1111iment lii.d wll'h tt11 COi.int-,
'C1ttt; of Cr1"9t C.OUnly 011; Mtrth 14,
1912. I Y l 11t1rty J. M1CIC1011, Otputv
COUil,.,. Clerk. ,.,.,..
~ub111nect Crtn.ef (~SI OtiTy Pllo!.
.M&rm ll. 21. 30. 1nd APIH •• 1•11 701·72
The new list said chickens
"'-'ere being !eatured for May
because production in that
month is expected to be 7 per·
Clean Car s
Co st Mor e
NEW YORK IUPll -The
annual gross lax burden of
Americans \Viii rise about $200
in the current fisca l year to
$4.530 per household. Tax
Foundation , ln<' .. announced.
The lat burden increased
1nore than 75 percent in the
1960s ""from $2,552 per
household, Tax Foundation
said.
This \\'ill be l\fercury's fillh
offi ce. and is expected to open
in late 1972 or early 1973. It
will be located at the corner or
rmperia l and Harbor!
Boulevard .
LEGAL NOTICE
l'ICTITIOUI IUSIN•ss
MAM• STATl!.MINT
Tht lollowlnt 11tr1on1 ••• doi111 •:~•l~~tH':Nl 1QUES, 2411 Ntwport l lvtt ..
Cotl• M111, C•lll. '2427.
P•mel1 St ir t1r~lnt1. '" •ulrf Slrttt, l•Ouht l11cl!, Ct llf. t::l611
Mtrlt f . O'llrlftl, 1J• l!:vtl't' Slrttl,
l ltllnt l t Kh, Ct!!!. '2651
Tl!ll bUllMl l 11 lltln1 COflducltd lry •
"f'•rt111nhl1t.
l"tmtlt S. l rHlllnt
Thlt 111!1tmffll lllM wltll tllt COUfl!Y
Clttlt of Oft llff Ctu11tv Oii: Ml tth 1~.
1172. I Y tlt1t1r!Y J. M1dd••· Dt~lr
Coulltv Cit ric.
1"16NJ ~ l"UllHll'ltd Or1r1tt Co•st Otllv Piiot,
Mi rt h 16. n, 30. .. 11c1 A ~"I '· lti2 111·72
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI-) -
The new pollution·frff: autcr
m ob iJ es required to m-e e t
government standards !or 1976
will C<Jst the C<Jnsumer $860
more than present cars, ac·
The foundat ion said public
spending is rising faster dur·
ing the current fiscnl year.
which ends June 30, than tax-
es. Jt said the lncrease in
spending wi ll bf' about 12 per-
cent or from $363 billion to
$405 billion.
cording to an environmentai lp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
study. • ROOM ADDITJQti!S
The sum is based on an • KITCHIN REMO-b ELING
85.000.rnile life for lhe car and • PATIO SCREEN ROOMS
--------~~~
AUTOMATIC
GARAGE DOOR
OPENER
SALE
ORANGE COUNTIES
YOl UME DISTRlllUTOR
LOWEST PRICES!
l111tollotiort & Ser"it"
Gorri9e Doo1 Hordwore
Replaced
LEG.U. NOTICE and replacen1ent or I h e1 ~ 1118 ,.,.. • co\·ers the initial cost. servi ce ).
0 ~ii '{
l'lCTITIOUS I UllHl lS enliSSiOO Control SyslelTIS. ' ,.; um•
642-3490
Sea Coast
Builders Supply NA ME sTo\Tl'MIN'r The sludy \Vas sponsored byl ,.,., l!llllllllTti 1~1 1oi1owl111 per11t11 ••• colnt the Envirorunental Proteclionl "•nt11 Ctm11111t1'fVPrk •• "'-'1l11•u •s:
SAlll:A'$ MAJl:IWE SALVAGE. 41l·•1l Agency and a report issued by Fln•llClfll A~1 111•1•
30!11 Strttl. l'rll WPOrt •••ch, C•lif. 12''0 rr· h Ca ll 833-8813 1651 Placentia,
Costa Mesa S111 J. G1<:11r11n, •10 111onl•, Cor0fl1 -~the'.:.~re~g~i:on~a:l~O::::l:<•::..:::•r~•:·--~~~~~~~~~~~~ d1I Mtr, Ctllf. c...:=::....
Arw ... G1<11rl•n, 610 lttOl'llt , (Gt-
dt l Mtf, C1UI,
• • Thl• bu1ln1.11 i. lltlnt ccinduc•ect In •II
t nctl1tklt11 U111illlnd I wll•). I••• Jo G•C11d1n
Tilll tltltrMnf llltcl wrl!I ltll CllUflf'f
• Cltrk ol Or•"•• COUl'llY Oft: l'lllru1ry M.
1'7t. llY 8tYtr1'1' J, M1ddolt, OtPllly Cou11ty Clerk,
1'11141
.. ull11sfl"' Or1n1e Ce1111 Otltv fi'ltal,
Mt rtll 7, '' 1i, il. 1'12 11S·72
LEGAL NOTICE
PICTITIOUI IUSIJll!IS
JIAMll ST,liTIMl!NT
Trit tollowlnt ""°" 11 CIO;"' •u1ll'lfl1
'" JON GAJl:IEltY ANO COMl",liNY
HAlll MANAGEME NT, UO E•1t lilt! ii~ COAll /oM11 '7111
JOI\ AtllhoftY Ci1r:1.,., ''°°' Avt .
Alrot11tr!1 N•. ;?t, S111 Jv1n C•1lltr1ne
Tlll1 CW!neu 11 lleilll c111dll(ttd llr ,.,
IM J1tldu1I.
J111 A1111\cwt't' G11lt1v Tll!t 11•1tmt1!f nltiJ Wl!PI 1111 (-ty
ICMrk l't O•t llff CNlllY OA? Mtrch ''·
h 72. llt .a1w1t~ J, Mt«lo.oc, °"-"""' Ceul'ltv ci.nc..
P1Ul1 "'*["*' Or•"" C..11 Otl!JI l"llot,
Ntlrd'I 16, n. a. .. ,.., •••It '· 1t n M1·n
LEGAL NOTICE
l"ICTITIO UI I USINl lS
trtAMI I TAIMI HT
Tiit 11/lowlri• "'1111'11 111 .. lPll
"'Ulftlll It; M 4 K EMTflll"IUSliS, "4 C1!1rll10 NI. 1. tut• Mt11, C1!\r, m21
J.n11 wm l1m McNutt Sr .. '"' Ctbrnto ,\fl I . Coitt M111, CtHt,
D•rl't'M McHu", H4 C111rn11 Al>!. 1 . CM!• Mttt, Ct!ll. T~lt 'W,1MH It llfl'fll tl!'!elleltd lly 1 ... ""''"'"· JOllll WltlltM ,..CHutl Sr.
C11rlY"' M<Hvtl
Thi• tt•ltmtnt lltld "4111 trlt Cwnty
Utl't .r Ol'l1\te C9'mtt' em ,..,llll'Y M, ttn, IT a"1ffty J. ,._......_ O...,,ty
C...tr Clm:. .
.. '*iw..tt °"'""' CM1lf ~i.•,1a.n.1m
l
,111 ..
Dtll'f l'lleif •
11t-n
l1l/I .,.,.,,,,. II .. • Qff't'l IO •Q _,, • JOIJcilotiorf of Ol"I o§a-,. ""'*'-"'· n. or.n.,, 1r _,, """,,, 111< .rm_ ...
250,000 Shares
@ MI TCHUM
JONE S&
TE MPLETON
IN C Ol.PO R AT~D
Com mon Stock
(SI Par Value)
The 1"1bll<: oll'.,;.,·price bas bom delcrm~ned by Mildlllm, .1ooer & T<mplelOll
J>UtRalll IOa requinmJcnt .Clbe Natioo•t Mloc:iatioa oC Scauity D<aJcn, Jnc:.
tbat lllJCh )llioo bcDO.biJber than that.R<OlllDICDdod bJ' two fodcpendeot iomt-
ma>I banliosliml. Shicldl k Compmy lnoo!pcnl<dand Donak1m, Luf1tin
& ]-, Ille., wbo ate DOI porticipatioi ID 1IJo dlilb11ution,....., tllo 1ims
matia& .. ••11111<ocJatlm:B u to J>riet".
Price: $16.50 Per Share
CorW"'1 t4t l"rolptcJIU ltr01 H obtalnrJ from thl u11.1. >Jt'"td on/y 111 ltOf#
,,, -,.·/ij(}i IM PltMJl«lllS JM)' N lqnl/1• dl.1trtlill1rd Pr /ro1t1 01/trr tkol1n
., AW:;naio "WV' l411fu/IJ· lljft.r lhLr ltt•fJ/ ill JJIC/l JltJftr.
Mitchum , J ones & Templeton
:i-po,.t<f .
Man:~ 21, 1972
Engi 1ieers
Ii i De1na1id
Ver y Soo1i
DA\'IS (AP) -The golden
days for e n g i n e e ri n g
graduates -11'hen hundreds of
job recruiters rushed from
campus lo campus courting
yo ung engineers - may return
in th is decade, a University of
California study concludes.
Reports or unemployment
among engineers has caused a
sharp drop in the number of
students studying for
engineering degrees. says
John D. Kemper, chairman o[
a nine-campus UC Council on
Engineering Education.
But at the sa1ne lin1e. the
de mand for engineers is in-
creasi ng in almost a l I
engineering field s, including
electronics a n d electrical,
Ken1per \\'rote 1n a university
survey ann(lunced Tuesday.
In short. supply is going
down and demand is going up.
the survey found, and there
wil l probably be a nationv.'ide
shortage of engineers v.·ithi n
three years.
Nalion\vide. about 38,000
ne1v engineers are needed an-
nually. but only 40,000 were
graduated nationally in 1970
and follo\\'ing classes were
smaller.
Ken1per , engi neering dean
at lhe UC Davis campus. said
lhere is still unemployment
a1nong engineers. but their
percentage of unemployment
is lov.•er than the national
average for all \vorkers.
Furthermore u n em p I o y.
ment among engineers has
been C<Jncentrated in tv.·o
fields. aerospace and elec·
Ironies, a relatively narro1v
sector of the entire engineer·
ing field. he said.
In a 11\'0 p11rl action, the
depa rt 1nent :
-Cut back "!or the ti me
be ing" $300 n1illion "'hich 1vas
added to the regular v.·eekly
auction of short I er n1
securities on Fe b. 17. The
dtpartme nt said SI .8 billion
had been raised through these
additions in the past four
n·eeks.
-Announced It \\'Ou\d auc-
tion on J\larch 28 abou t $1.8
billion or a ~-year five and
Fir11is Auto
Subpoe1iaed
B y Agency
The deparlment said its
unexpected abundance of cash
"appears related to some
overv.·ithholding or personal
LEGAL NOT ICE
SU l"EltlOll: COU1tf OF TMI!'
STATI OF CA LI FOltNIA FOil
TME COUNTY 011 Oll:ANOI!
No. A·724'2
PtOTICI 0 1" H5AltlNG 01" rlTltlON
l'Olt l"ltOBATE Of' Will AND .. Olt
LETtlll:S TESTAMINTAll:Y
e111t1 of VELMA JUNE OZIA$, •ISO
k"°""n •1 VELMA J. OZIAS Dec:t111d.
NOTICE IS 11EltE8Y Gl\lfN Thet
NORMAN R. OZIAS 11•• !lied l!er1ln 1
pelllion lor prab-111 of win tlld tor
IUll•nce ot l•t!u• l 1111m1r1l•1Y I• Piii·
tl-r, rlfH1nc1 lo wtilth 11 mid• for
lutthrr 11rllcul1t1, tnd th•! tt.1 lime t nd WASHINGTON (AP ) _The 11l1ce of 1!11rlno lllt u~ hes Dllfl Ml lot ' April 11, 1t71. 11 •:30 1.m .. ifl tht Environmental Protection covriroom ol CeP111m1r11 No. 3 ot u !d
A d ·1 h CO\lf!, •t 7C.O Ci1tlc Cenrer C•lve v.·,11, In gency announce I as lt!e c itv o1 si n1• Ant . c1111~rn!1. issued subpoenas lo J l more c111d M11c11 n. un.
d I. d f · t W. E. SI JOHN, omes IC an oretgn au o counrv cierk
con1panies for a hearing April luM•~. (>1u1d1n, Th.,...1on ,,,. Nt11en
lo r 7')4 Stulf\ 1"1l111w Avenue, on a request or a one-year Wh11t11r, c1 111tr111t
suspension of exhaust-pollution Tit: c2n1 .. ,.,.., -m.u u
• A!i.rntr• ft r l'llili111er standards required of 1975 Publl5htd 0111191 co111 D••IY l"ilot
The department s 1 if
overwUhholding can be cor·
reeled by filing new \\'4 form~
v.•ith employers to bring thr
amount \li'lthheld into closet
rrlation \~·ith the amount o~
tax thet ,v\11 eventually bt·
01\·ed.
The problem particularly af-
!ects taxpayers v.•ho are thr
sole v.·age earner for tile rami·
ly and those In hlgher inCilnlt
brackets v.'itb bigger than
normal itemized deduclions.
REAL ESTATE
INVESTORS
GUIDELINES
Monthly puDl!ctliO!I Wlttl TAX $AV·
ING ldtlJ, INVEITMl!Nf ldut, ltllo
Ott R"lty Tru1t1, TAX SHElTEA,
lttn" tv1ry1nt l11!11nltd In J:.E.
'1\euld kflOW. lllCIUdlno tlff'CI R.11!;.
hos Ol'I STOCK Mtfilll. FltEf!: atn•
1ulll11t-rtf•rr•I s11ylc1 w/suDJC.rlp. lion.
,.,, TN1ta 'lf t •mol• bJw11 •11111 ti•
llUI, ltlltl t l.tt fl;
Realty Enterprises
U11le11•76 1141. 2662 H111tr.ll
M..._, Oltl. 44017
models. /'"l'ri";';";· ;";· ;";· ;";"~::::'~~~.,~, ;~~iiii~~~~~~~1 The EPA said the com-
panies included G e n e r a I
l\1otors, Ford, Ch r y s I e r.
Vo I ks wage n, American
Afotors. Nissan Motors, British
Leyland , Daimler Benz, Toyo
Kogyo, Saab-Scania and
Toyota.
The subpoenas, \\'hich EPA
says are authorized under the
Clean Air Act of 1970. call for
each firm to be questioned in
six areas: exhaust emission
data, their emission-level
goals for 1975, major problems
encountered. plans lo solve
then1. schedules for 1975
models and 'vhat are the
highest interim standa rds that
can be achieved if the co m-
pany CQntencls it cannot meet
the requirements.
The Clean Air Act calls for a
90 percent reduction I n
emission or hydrocarbons and
carbon monoxide In the 1975
models compared to 1970
1nodels.
1y IMl1st11, Ltil.
14 PAIHIOH IQUAllE
SANTA .ANA
TlL.147•A41 -ow -•outfiwh:k.
satl-TRO,ICALIUIT
SERIES. NOW ON
D15"LAY.
AYtntblt In Ow
NHBqlilMe ......
Wcwens. or Tt,.Stknl
OMrowtMIW.flliV.,
From Moon Mullins ..•
CoN<&RATULATIONS
ON IH' PAILY PILOT'S
N~W SUNDAY 5DITION !
--,,
I
WflEE!
NO .MORI:
RE'At>IN~
C~~EAL
BOX~S
BEFORE:
SUND.AY
SCHooi..!
Look for Moon (and Other Great
Cartoon Characters) • 1n the New
Color Comics section of the
Sunday
* * * *
)
I r
2
I
s
• •
Happening to Offer Basket of
An Easter l"lappening \Vith the J ... adybugs \viii raise
a little "lettuce" for Children 's J1 ospital of Orange
County Wednesday, ~1arch 29, in the Fountain Val·
ley Community Ce nter. 1'he guild·sponsored salad
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Fun
luncheon and card and game party will begin at
10 a.m. and tickets are $2 .50. Ready for the first
deal are Oeft to right) the Mmes. David Siino, Mar-
vin Adler and Ed Just. '
Capricorn: Stress Versatility
FRIDAY
MARCH 24
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARJ ES (March 21-April 19 ):
Be ready for change. travel
PATRICIA STEFFENSEN
Steff ensens
Tell Troth
i1r. and Mrs. Donald D.
Steffensen of San Clemente
and a variety of experiences,
especially those involving the
opposite sex. You will be
popular. Publicity will .. ac·
company your actions. Stress
creativity. Imprint your own
styles.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ):
You are able to feel secu re.
You have solid fou ndation as
frame of rererence. There is
opposition. But you can meet
and overcome it. Spotlight
centers on completion of
tran;;action involving land,
home.
GE,.flNJ (May 21-June 20):
Visits are featured. Neighbors,
close relatives enter picture.
Finish one task at a time.
Being too anxious now could
cause minor setback. Key is to
be flexible, but thorough.
Check messages in connection
wit h proposed trip.
CANCER (June 21-July 22):
Accent is on paying and col-
lecting. You acquire valuables.
Key is to protect them. Make
inquiries. Do some personal
investigating. Be analytical.
Put tojl'.ether puzzle pieces.
Fasci nating picture w i 11
emerge.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ):
Judgment. intuition are on do anything in lukewarm man-
target. Take iniliative. Stress ner. Go all the way -or
independence, originality. nothing. If enthusiastic, you
Creative endeavors now are attract important a lly. Leo is
likely to succeed. Act ac-involved. Bring forth creative
cordingly. Make new starts in resources.
new directions. We I co me CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
healthy challenge. 19): What was obscured can
VffiGO {Aug . 23-Sept. 22): be viewed now with greater
Work in conjunction with clarity. You may feel you are
special group, organization. drawn in two dire c t i o n s
Fine for special radio, simultaneously. Get second
television a pp e a r a n c e ~ wind. Accept suggestion from
Charitable enterprise can be one born under Caocer. Money
greatly aided by your efforts. is involved.
Pisces person figures prom-
inently.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Spotlight on friends, desires.
Some important wlshes can be
fulfilled. Inco me· through oc-
cupational efforts is accented.
Older in<hvidual can provide
advice -and support. Heed
voice of experience. If 'you do,
you gain.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): ·
Ambitions should be analyzed.
You will get what you request.
Key is to be sure you know
what you need. One in authori-
ty will be a Close observer.
Accept responsibility. Rewards
will be great. Act in confident
manner.
SAG l1TARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21 ): Obtain valid hint
from Scorpio message. Don't
AQUARIUS (Jan. 2G-Feb.
18 ): Lie low. Do more listen-
ing than talking. If you
observe, you also 1 ea r n .
Permit mate or c I o s e
associate to take initiative.
Sense of humor is necessary.
Then what appears a setback
could boomerang in your
favor.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Keep health resolutions. Avoid
excess. Maintain steady pace.
Get together on social basis
with work associate. Share
knowledge. Cooperative at-
titude is essential. Some pro-
cedures may be outmoded.
IF TODAY IS Y OU R
BIRTHDAY you appreciate
the arts, theater. Your own
voice is resonant. unusual.
have announced the cngage-1-~~~~~~~~~-~~~~~~-..,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1
ment and September garden
wedding plans of their
daughter Patricia Steffensen
and David \llestgarth.
Miss Steffensen is a
graduate of San Cle1nente
High School. Her fiancc is !he
son of l\'lr. and Mrs. Ken
Westgarth, also of Sa n
Clemente. and a graduate of
California High School in
Whittier.
'Bye Bye, Miss
American Pie'
It will be "bye bye Miss
American Pie'' Friday, March
24. at 8 p.1n. \\1hen mothers
and daughters vieV'! fashions
from the 40s, fiOs and 60s and
new looks for the 70s in the St.
John the Baptist School social
hall.
The 11uxiliary • sponsored
event will feature dessert at 7
p.m. in the Sisters of Mercy
Convent adjoining the school.
Funds raised will go to a
school project.
Puppet Show!
Friday, March 24 thru
Tuesday, March 28.
free on the mall
The femou~ Mitc~ell
M1r ionette1 pr1sent one of
thtir fescineting shqws for
Easter, Bring the
children to Huntington
Center 1t Beach and
Edingtr at San Oie90 F/w1y.
'
}iAlrG TEN fol'"-k,e.. boys
•
-th e iAh I l(jce. 1'.ieevy -Inv.I<. i!ip:s a.~
J \
$(,,) i M IA!ra:l .r
#\~ h idd"~ll•ocl
v.y loll\
~I
t he • sa 11d bo.e "
l-s'1i\-t
7 foshion i1lond, n•wport cent•r 64'"'5070
•
•
Th11rsd1)', March 231 1972 * OAILY PILOT ltJ
ay sa e •
• r1
• ay •
20%off
all Gaymode~panty hose.
20%off
Fantastic fit. That's what
you get with Gaymode. And
super savings, too. Choose
lrom run-resis t nylon
including nude heel, subtle
shaper light control or all
sheer styles. Proportioned sizes.
girl's briefs or bikinis.
(
20%0ff accent rugs.
NO.w's a great time lo
accent your floors with our
scatter rugs, all 20o/o off.
Choose from shag, sculp!ured or
sheared. ln polyesters, nylons,
blends, more. All sizes. Anh
all w1.th non-skid rubber ·~·•
backing. In handsome • -, ... . . decorator colors. / •
Elaslic-leg rayon brief in
white or colors. Or, novelty
cotton birdseye prints.
Even, a nylon lricol bikini
in pastel colors. Sizes
4to 16 in the group.
JC Penney
The values are here every day.
Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the fo llow Ing stores:
BUENA PARK
NEWPORT BEACH
FULLERTON GARDEN GROVE
ORANGE "THE CITY" RIVERSIDE
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Charge ill
•
I
DOUBLES AS CLOWN -Ronald Alexander of Long Beach. who will bring a
scale model circus, frontier''town and magic act to the Costa Mesa a n d Mesa
Verde libraries during Easter week, points out miniature animals in the circus
parade.
Lib rarian s OK Clo wning
Circus Coming to Town
Easter week will be a circus
or fun for Harbor Area
children who go to the Costa
Mesa and Mesa V e r d e
libraries Thursday. March 30,
Saturday, April I. and Satur-
day, April 15.
At 11 a.m. on March 30, a
From Page 17
. . . PWP .
film titled "Li on Country" will
be shown in the Costa Mesa
Library and a Jive baby
animal is slated to appear.
On April t, a 1niniature
circus will be brought to the
Costa Mesa Library by Jolly
the Clown, who is Ronald Alex-
ander or Long Beach.
A 11~-inch scale model of the
Ringling Bros. Circus of 1900,
the circus features hand·
painted a n d hand-sculpted
wagoru, buildings and figures .
Built by Alexander and his
sister, LaShelle. bolh circus
veterans, !he circus is the
stage for reproductions of
actual Ringling performances.
Jn the "backyard '' of the
circus is Clown Alley, the
place where ordinary men
were transformed in lo circus
clowns with greasepaint and
baggy trousers.
Alexander will give his
magic shows as a clown at 11
a.m. and 1 p.m. April 1 in the
Costa Mesa Library and at
10:30 a.m. and 1:30 p.m. April
15 in the Mesa Verde Library.
Tickets to all shows are free
I
No Bite on Poc ketbook MARCH &It ' Peanut Butter Best
Natural Beauty Aid
le_: COTTONS & POLYESTER .. 0M s1 95
Lingerie Fabrics
Stretch & Sew
... 112 OFF
Patterns ......... 112 OFF
SEW -J(N ITS "'~.:;:~~·:.. .. · By ERMA BOMBECK
I was walking along a center
aisle of a department store the
other day when a represen-
tative of a cosmetic firm
smiled and beckoned me over
to the counter.
"You mean me".'" I giggled .
She nodded. Then she leaned
over. sized me up and
whispl!red. "l can help."
I was overwhelmed with the
way she looked and the way
she smelled. There s u r e
wasn't any peanut butter
under her fingernails.
"first. dear." she said, "I
want you to walk for me."
I felt like a fool. Stiffl y, Y
swaggered out to handbags
andfback again. "Are You car-
rying your money in a knott'ed
handkerchief tied to yo ur
knees?"
''\Vhy? Am J walking fun-
oy?"
"A bit self-conscious
perhaps," she said. "We'll
work on that later. Now. we
are going to create a new you .
"first: your shape. You can
do au kinds of artificial things
to change it. Don 't turn your
back to me. dear."
"I'm not." I said miserably.
''Oh. \Veil , all !hat can be
fixed with padding. As for
your hips and waist, there are
cinchers to wear. Now. for the
important part . Do you do
anything to your hair?"
"I put three rollers each
morning on the side I slept on
the night before.''
"Perhaps a wig.'' she mused ,
''We'll just slip this one on
for effect. Now. what about
eyelashes ?"
"Those fake ones make me
I
AT
WIT'S
END
your face a better profile. Of
course you were planning to PHONE 540 3268
ha ve your teeth ca pped." Ji~~~~~;;;;~~~~·;;;~;;;;~~;;;j~ She worked on me for over
an hour. At the end of the
session, l was laden with
creams, liners, rouge. powder,
nutrients, fake eyelashes, wig,
waist cincher, padding and
drowsy." suggested doctors t.o cap my
"You weren't putting them teeth, fix my nose and outfit
on properly," she sa i d me in contact lenses.
authoritatively. "Now, we'll "Thank you very much ." I
accent your cheek bones with stammered. "You've certainly
a dark make-up making your been a help."
Rl,AlltlNG-RISITTING-CUSTOM lllSION
Ol1moowlt, lhr~le5, lm1r1la1, Slaf!hlrlt
11111 m1ny l!~tr utl ttoMt . , , •• from .12 ptlnll It l cl1.
KARAT GOLO MOUNTINGS
face look thinner. You are ''Just one last bil of advice, 270 E. 17th St. In Hlllgren Squa re
rather sallow. dear.'' she said softly touching Costa Mes• 645-1909
"We'll add this rouge to :;;m;y ~s;ho;u;ld;e~r,:'~'Be~y;our;se;lf;.':' ~~ig~~§~~~§§~~§~~~~~~ make you look vibrant and
healthy. There now. Have you, f'•kt 11>11111c11 •~~•rtl$tl'NllO always worn glasses?''
"Only since college when I
\\1ent steady with a parking
meter for three years."
"I would suggest contacts.
They really give the eyes a
new dimensior1. And your
nose. Are you happy with it?"
"It works good ."
"I mean the shape of it. You
know cosmetic surgery i.s very
c<>mmonplace anymore. You
should have it&bbed and give
Color Lines
The Piccione bridal message
tor spring comes on crisp and
clear. The mes.sage : color. All
that is traditional is there.
But under the artistry of
designer Ron LoVece, this new
dimension results in a unique
collection of gowns accented
with a dash of yellow, a splash
of pink, a streak of turquoise.
a necking of blue or a touch of
the green .
ED HIRTH
CONTINUES HIS FIGHT
TO ELIMINATE
AIRPORT NOISE
AND FUTURE
JET EXPANSION.
·~
Most chapters have a small
perctnta1e of widows and
widowers, and the South Coast
Chapter follows suit with
.about 10 percent.
It includes the Big Top and
parade boards depicting the
cirCus parade m a r c h i n g
through Main St., U.S.A .. past
tiny b u i I d i n g s resembling
those of the 1900s. and may be obtained at the ijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii libraries.
Auth ent ic, Ha nd Made, Im ported
Mrs. Miller also said the 1;::==================== PERSIAN number of people returning
aft.er their second divorce Is
ll'lcreasing.
See feels PWP is valuable
because it provides a sounding
board for single parents in
making decisions. "It provides
feedback," she explained.
• • Mrs. Susie Dunaway, a pa5t
DTERY
AIR STE P-BERNARDO -MR. KI MEL·
SCHOLL SANDALS -PASSPORTS
MAGOESIAN -MISS AM ERICA
VINER CASUALS -LIA
Edw1rd1 -G1rb1rich -Robin Hood
PF Fly1r1 -U.S. K1d1 -S1,.nm1r1tt11
C1p11io 01nc1 Sho11
Oa11c1 W11r by 01111ki11
Corrective ShOft for Cldldre11
225 E. 17th ST.-COSTA MESA
548 -2778
RUGS
GRAND Oll'l NING SPECIAL
15°/o DISCOUNT "~=~Lo~~~r
KERMAN PERSIAN RUGS & IMPORTS
2161 r. Con' Hwy.,
{AT HELIOTROPE) Coro11a clel Mor
675·7l 40
[Rj NEWPORT BEACH NEED~ THIS MA~!
VOTE APR. 11-RE-ELECT MAYOR HIRTH!
TO CITY COUNCIL, FIFTH DIST RIC T, NEWPORT BEACH
BI LL RING, CAMPAIGN MGR. -215 RIVERSIDE DR., N.B.
president of the Orang e Coasl
Chapter and past immediate
president of PWP's Southern
California RegionaJ Council,
reports that three n e w
chapters recently have bee nl'====================::
formed 'in Oranie County .
. SaddJeback Chapter, which
serves Tustin and east Orange
County, was first. The Irvine
Chapter was formed Oct. 18
and the Huntington Harbour
Chapter last month.
AREAS OF NEED
Mrs. Dunaway is
answering service coordin~tor
for the Southern California
Regional Council arid kept
records of where the most
calls were coming from to
determine the areas o f
greatest need.
Keeping inlormation con·
fidential is the most important
rule in any PWP ·chapter.
Names and addresses are not
given out and all applications
are kept confidential.
Members emphasize that
PWP is not a "swinging
group." and these precautions
must be taken to keep out an y
persons who might th ink
members are easy prey for a
thriU .
Mrs. Phelps expresses the
sentiments of mosl newly
divorced members who will
remarry when the hurt is
gone: "I'm enjoying the
freedom. but this can get old."
In the meantime, P\VP will
stand in the gap. providing
friends and offering reassur-
ance and stability.
As Pat Clayton, a national
vice president, said, "For an
organization or shook-up volun-
teers, it sure get& a lot done."
Boot Bou nty
For spring the bootmakers
have come up with a beauty In
wbite burlap. This pair of
boot& bas big silver eyelets,
natural burlap lacing and an
espadrille sole.
LET'S 8£ FRIENDLY
U you ha ve new ncl11;hbors
or know of anyone moving
to our area, please tell us
so that v.·e may eJ6li!nd &
friendly welcome ind help
thtm to b«:ome acquainted
ln their new 1urroundln11;1.
Sa. Coast Visitor
4f4.e57t 4M-fJ61
Harif risttor
MM174
ZENITH
eek end • r1~e
Mon.-Tues. 10 to 7
Wed .• Th un.-Fri. 10 to 9
Saturday 10 lo 5 :30
Sunday 12 to 5
litz
WE QUOTE PRICES OVER THE PHONE • • • CALL & SAVE
TABLE
MODEL
CHROMACOLOR
TOI' VALU E WITH
LITILI CAllNn COST
25 INCH DIAGONAL
ABOVE SETS FEATURE e Autom.ttic. Fin• Tun in g
• Autom1 tic. Tint e Hind Cr .. fted Ch1ssis
• Alie .... u.i,1, with t1mot1
te11trel,
25 ~~~NAL REMOTE
CHROMACOLOR 100
7NlrH
e SOllO.STATE
CH ROMA<OLOll110
25 " giant-screen del uxe console tv
Inell di19(lnll
'"""" ,.rovirtdol "fl.d ~
r.co11 Celtlfletry
~&lot 100 Pkture Tubl • C1.11,~1N Tuning
• 25" diag. Supe-•·Xre1n Pictu•t • fi1on 110
5olod·Slo~ Cllcn1i1 • S.Ol~·Stal1 Super Gold
Video Guo•d Tu,.;tlf S-,.i.111 • Z111iflo! N C • ~
Tint Gve•d Control • Ul!romcmc UHf Chor'll'el
S.i.t1er • f/' o.iol o!'ld 5° ROl.lftd Twlrt-C-~ert.
Bolh S.t• Av11I1blo With Romolo Control
Tlte HAM'5Hlll
(:4111011
s11111y Mocwl1'>-lllS~lr· Id Medittrr111H 11 11y1-.
Id COlll011 with c-
tol/rtd l11ll·r1t11rn 11111
l "'lf hJdd~n Clllll't.
G-e11111nt t11r11 r!nl1111d
Oflk VtftMrl l l'ld lt ltcl
h.erclwoad t(lllds, I X•
c!utlvt of dtcar1llv1
Ir o n t 1rid ov1rl•~•·
wllll tt11 loo-ot llM
dllltfS.llP19, C u 1l1 m llne-ft.11'1111.,,. ,,..,,, ••
n/!ChlOfl llrilll 11""'11•
led Cnlll hllldl wood ,wr11~. Uttr1flll!IC
UtH" c111n1111 StllCIOI'.
25 Inch dl1gon1l color
This weekend no discounter will m1tch our price
WHY BUY
AT ABC?
• We Know The Set Inside And Out
Not Just The Price
• l Year Free Parts
• l Year Free Service
• 3 Year Picture Tube Wa"anty
• Free Delivery And Set Up
We Service What We ~
No Finance Charges If Paid in 90
Days or No Down and 36 Months
to Pay 10.A.C.J
BankAmericard I Master Charge
,
17
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'
Laguna Beaeh
EDITION
'I'oday's }!'lnal
N.Y. Stocks
voe 65, NO. 83, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORl~IA THURSDAY, MARCH 23 , 1972 TEN CENTS
Laguna Drug Oifieers Atta~ked by Dogs
By BARBARA KREIBICH
01 lt11 Dilly .. lilt Iliff
After a hectic evening during which 12
persons were arrested and his jacket was
chewed b:• two large dogs, Laguna Beach
narcotics detective Neil Purcell today
1peculated:
"Maybe all these stories about how
close we are to legalizing mariju{lna en-
couraged the folks to celebrate with a
few pot parties ... " ·
Tbe Wednesday evening forays started
shortly before eight o'clock when
Sergeant Purcell and officer Robert Ro-
maine accompanied two U.S. marshals to
21152 Laguna Canyon Road to serve a
misdemeanor arrest warrant and en-
countered fhe first par1y.
After some discussion at the door, the
officers entered. Two of the guests
asse rtedly fled via a window. A search
--turned up a quantity of LSD, marijuana
and suspected dange rous drugs and the
five remaining guests were held on
charges of possession o( marijuana and
being present where the drug was used.
They were Arnold Thomas Canup, 29,
of the address; Larry Warren SPousta, 18,
)
Parking Avoided?
Fair Proposed
On Main Beach
By PATRICK BOYLE
01 tllt Oelly ,.It.I lletf
A proposal to have summertime park-
ing on Laguna's Main Beach may ha ve
gone to the junk yard Wednesday night
with the introduction of a counte'r·pro-
posal to maintain an arts and crafts fair
on the open land.
The City Co\Jncil was looking over
drawings of the parking plan when Ed
School Support
Stickers Seen
New bumper stickers -which
surprisingly have nothing to do with
upcoming elections -made their
debut in Laguna Beach this week.
The "Laguna Schools -Love
'Em or Lose "Em" stickers were
presented to members of the board
of education at Tuesday's school
board meeting by teacher represen-
tative Art Fisher.
Fisher said the sticker campa ign
was another way in w hi ch
members of the community could
show support for the school district,
In addition to writing letters or at-
ten.ding school board meetinfs.
Grocery Prices
Take Biggest
Jump in History
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tht biggest
jump in grocery prices In 14 years last
month triggered the sharpest rise in
overall living costs since before President
Nixon imposed economic controls, the
government reported today.
The Consumer Price Index, measuring
typical family Jiving costs, rose five-
tenths of 1 percent in February, the
largest increase in nine months, the
Labor Department's Bureau of Labor
Statistics said.
Van Deusen, active in the Laguna Craft
Guild. introduced the idea of running a
summer-long festival on the beachfront
property.
Van Deusen, noting that city council
candidate Beth ~s first thought of the
idea. said that hundreds of artists had
applied for only a few spaces at both the
Festival of Arts and the Sawdust Festival
for the coming summer. Only a few
spaces are available at each, he added.
"There is a lot of potential there if you
just let Lagunans do it," Van Deusen
said, "and you wouldn 't ha ve to aPologize
for the appearance.,.
The parking plan, which all councilmen
and City Manager Larry Rose agreed
would be "less than esthetically pleas-
ing," was proposed for the purpose of
making money. Chief Lifeguard Skip
(See FAIR, Page 1)
Tennis Star's
Girl, 10, Thrown
By Horse, Dies
The young daughter of professional ten·
nis star Richard "Pancho" Gonzalez died
In Hoag Memorial Hospital Tuesday from
injuries she sustained when she. was
thrown from a horse late Saturday af-
ternoon.
Mariessa Gonzalez, 10, had been riding
with a friend at the Irvine Equestrian
Center, 7385 E. Coast Highway, Coro na
del Mar, when the accident occurred.
Mariessa, who lived with her mother,
Madalyn, and two sisters at 401 Via Lido
Soud, Newport Beach, died from severe
head injuries resulting from the !all,
hospital spokesmen said.
Funeral services will takt place Friday
at noon at Forest Lawn Memorial Park,
Glendale .
Mrs. Maril yn Wolfe, whose daughter
Leslie, 10, had been riding with Mariessa
when she took the fall, said this morning
that circumstances surrounding the
mishap are still unclear.
•
or 24932 Mosquero Lane. Mission Viejo;
f\farriann Simmons, 27, o( the Canyon ad-
dress: Carolyn Moody Hedges, 32 of 606
Hamilton St., Costa Mesa, and a 17-year-
old boy.
After bookj ng the first group, Purcell
and detective Gene Brooks accompanied
the marshals to S67 Catalina St. to serve
a traffic warrant on Gary Wayne
Henderson, 26, of that address.•
When the officers identified
themselves, said Purcell, Henderson and
his woman companion fled to the rear of
the house. There the woman, Nancy
ier's
'
Davenport , 24, oI 185 Flower St., Costa
ti-1esa, allegedly was found attempting to
flush aboui a pound of marijuana down
the toilet.
Both were booked on suspicion of
possession of marijuana for sale.
Leaving the scene, the officers '·snif1ed
the fami liar aroma of marijuana floating
from an adjacent dwelling at sn~ Goff
St and stopped to question a man emerg-
ing from the yard.
Their suspicions were further .aroused
they sal~, when the man fled back toward
Keeping 'em Rolling
the house yelling warnings of "The narcs
are here !"
The dogs -two large Gennan
shepherds -entered the picture when
the officers followed their quarry into the
yard.
Purcell and Marshal Dick Ringler lost
hunks of their jackets while attempting to
fend off the animals with dog repellent.
''ltis the same kind issued to
mailmen," Purcell explained. "M3ce
doesn 't work on dogs -it just makes
them mad ."
Jenny Wilcoxen and Todd Elvins tackle the me-
chanics of bicycle repair, one of 21 enrichment pro-
grams offered lo students of Laguna Beach's El
Morro School. In this class, directed by math
teacher Pete Peterson, several bikes have been as-
sembled from old parts.
City Moves to Trash Pact
Further Talks Possible Before Sig1iing April 5
Laguna Beach city councilmen Wednes~
day awarded the city's trash collection
contract to John Lindley, but left the door
open for further negotiations of the docu·
ment prior to final adoption and signing
April 5.
The action came after more than two
hours of discussion and questioning of Ci-
ty Manager Lawrence Rose and Lindley,
owner or the Laguna Beach Disposal
Company and low bidder for the contract.
Much of the controversy' revolved around
whether the fi ve-ye ar-contract should
contain a "liquidated damages" clause
provi ding for a penalty if the trash
disposal firm fails to maintain ef(icient
collecUon service.
Rose, who was primarily responsible
£or many of the contract's provisions,
said the clause should remain .
"There must be some power remaining
with the city to enforce compliance,"
Rose told the council. "The only power
you would have without this clause would
be termination of the contract."
Lindley, who bas held Ute city contract
(or the past 13 years, disagreed. "This
will create riothing but problems (or the
city, the contractor and the public," the
trash collector said.
Under the liquidated damages clause,
Lindley would have to pay the city a
"fine" for spilled garbage, missed col·
lections and similar instancea of in·
efficient service.
City Attorney Tully Seymour said the
clause was "not intended to be a club"
and would probably only be invoked after
repeated offenses on the part of the con.
tractor. In giv ing Lindley the contract,
the council agreed to further discuss the
liquidated damages clause.
Another portion of the new contract
being left open to negotiation concerns
early morning collection service. The
orie:it:1al contract specificatio_ns, in
response to citizens' complaints about
.noise, celled for no trash collection in the
city prior to 7 a.m.
Grocery prices, which include a
number of items that are not subject to
federal price controls, soared 1.9 percent
for the greatest one-month increase since
March, 1958, the report said.
Charlene Put in. 'Lockup'
However, Lindley said he would have to
begin at 5:30 a.m. in the commercial
areas of the city in order to com plete
trash pick·ug before delivery trucks and
traffic begin blocking alleys.
"I don 't !eel that if we co ntinue (with
early morning collection) along the same
line that we are actually Improving the
noise pollution situation," Mayor Richard
Goldberg told Lindley. The Mayor sug-
gested the possibility or prohibiting park·
ing in certain areas during the early
morning hour s to accommodate trash
pickup.
The report followed the resignation or
t ee AFL-CIO members of Nixon's Pay
Board , who charged the government was
rigidly holding down wages while lettling
prices continue to climb. (See story Page
4).
The bureau al so reported that average
weekly earnings of some 45 million rank·
and-file workers rose 35 ce nts a week to
$130.27, but that purchasing power declin-
ed 24 cents because of the rise In co n·
sumet prices.
The February boost pushed the price
index to 123.8 ~rcent of its 1967 average.
This means it cost $12.38 last month for
ever} $10 worth of typical family
purchase.s rive years a~.
The Febru ary increasi-was the
greatest si nce · a !Ix-tenths of I percent .
rise last June , two months before Ni~on
imposed a 90-day wage·prlce freeze which
was followed by Phase 2 controls.
The bureau said that In the four months
or Phase 2 1rving cost! have risen at an
annual rate of 4.t percent. greater than
tht 4.1 percent rate In the 1ix months
before Nixon'• August economic fre.eze.
Battered Seal Pup Will Never Return to Sea
By FREDERtCK SCHOE~HL
Of tlle Deify ,.It.I Stett
Charlene, the battered elephant seal
pup that washed up on Laguna Beach's
Main Beach Monday will neve'r return to
her aquatic home.
Instead, her only hop6 of survival , ae--
cording to Larry Jackson of Sea Lire
Associates of Marina del Rey, is to slowly
be nursed back to good health and then
placed in a zoo or aquatic park.
Jackson. con ta c te d by local
veteri narian Or. 0. R. Ekeberg, l;ite
Tuesday took Charlene to Chino Stale
Prison where she will be ca red for by in-
mates who are participating In a .special
animal psychology and training project.
"Once these sea lions or elephilnt seals
wash up on the beach -as Char lene did
-they'll never make It in the sea
again... said Jack!On whose special In·
t•rost ;., study ol the ,.. lion:"
• "She's getting the best at Chino -good
old tender, loving care,'' said Jackson.
"We cleaned up her wounds and are
trying to stop a serious infection or lung
worm."
The disease, he said, kills countless
numbers of sea lions and elephant seals
each year and is currently the subject of
research by Jackson and Cal State Long
Beach biologist Dr. Murray Dailey.
Charlene. like most other elephant
seals In this area, was bom In a channel
Island tldepool where so,, feasted on a
species of perch 'which earry lhe marine
worms responsi ble for the dl.sea!e. The
worms, said Jackson, literally eat up the
lung tissue. Only the strongest ol animals
which make It through a •l"'5 period
earlier on In llfe mature to adufts.
"The unfortu.nate thlnf Is that we can
get the sick animal fat and sapy, return
It to the ocean, but all U "!!! do .lt ,.t
\
sick again," said Jackson.
Charlene was found early Monday
morning along Maln Beach by two con-
cerned residents who mded up contacting
the lifeguard department, police depart..
merit, city manager's ollice and SPCA
about the plight of the sick animal.
Lifeguard Jim Stauffer -with special
training in caring for pinnlpeds such as
Charlene -administered a tranquilizer
and antibiotics to combat Infection. lils
c(fort to heal Charlene was part or 11
new city polfcy stating lifeguards will
handle Injured or sick sea animals
whenever feasable .
Problems dev•loped when beacllgoers
refused to leave ChQ.t"lene alone , which
finally ended In t•ld,.. her to the office of
Dr. £keberg In Laguna canyon where
-ahe received (Urther care until Jacbon
\See CllAllLENE, P11e I)
The city 's present contract with
Lindley expires April I, but the council
and Lindley agreed Wednesday that his
fJnn will provtde interim trash strvlce
until Aprll 5, when the council will revltw
the outcome or the n~gotlatlons.
If the contract Is signed. Lindley wUI
provide service to all homes ln the city
for a Oat fee of $11 ,895. HJs original bid
was 112,495. but he agr•ed to knock off
l800 per mont/I ti he Is not required to
maintain an office In the city. His main
ofrlcts are In Costa Mesa.
Accordlng to manager Rose, the
·average cOsf per mldence for the man-
datory collectioo •ervle< will be $2.116 per
month. Under preM:nt plans, tht money
will be pold by residents u port ol the
monthly IUO wute maugeml!llL tat
CM'1Jtd proper!¥ OWn<rL
The officers foreed open a door, en-
tered the house and again heard the
familiar sound of a nushing toilet.
Breaking down a second door Into
a bathroom . lhey found a repetition of the
earlier set?ne and arrested Richard
D'Amico, 21, on suspicion of destruction
of evidence.
His brother. Nick Charles .D'Amico, 26,
"'Po had called !he \Ya rning, was booked
on a charge of interfering with an officer.
and both were charged wilh possession of
marijuana . The brothers said they live in
Orange.
Corrigan,
Lagunan
In Plane
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of lflt OeUy ,.llol 5!1tf
Sky searchers were crlS!lcrosslng the
Southland tod ay for any trace of a plane
piloted by the sportswriter son or Santa
Ana 's famed aviator Douglas "\Vrong
Way" Corrigan.
He and a companion from Laguna
Beach left Orange County Airport Tue,..
da y on a short, sightseeing flight to San
Diego but failed to make a 4 p.m. return
scheduled.
Roy Corrigan. 22, of 2828 N. Flower St.,
ts the youngest son of the man who
delighted the world In 1938 by taking off
from New York ror Long, Beach and lan-
ding two days later in DubJln, Ireland.
Ironically, Wrong Way Corrlgan't
orlglna! West Coast destination 34 years
ago Is today a search base for his mlss·
ing son.
Young Corrigan's passenger on the an-
ticipated 120-mile fl ight Is ldentUied as
Roget Powell, 21, of 32 Crystal Cove.
Laguna Beach.
The youths planned to fly over a
Laguna Beach site where the ~owell
famil y Is building a home, photograph It
and return after buzzing down to San
Diego.
"He's never been overdue before," the
elder Corrigan said Thursday.
A search command post was establish-
ed by the Civil Air Patrol at Long Beach
Airport to coordinate the hun t between
Orange County Airport and the Mexican
Border.
No trace of the vanished Cessna 150
had been discovered during the hUfit
centered on the coastline by 10 a.m., ac-
cording to Capt. Ed Crankshaw, CAP
wing information officer.
"We have excellent cooperation from
the Marines at El Toro and Camp
Pendleton, the San Diego Sheriff's Aero
Squad and we have a lot of CAP planes
up searching the area," he said.
Marine helicopters have been detailed
to scour the desolate coastal military
reservations for Corrigan and Powell .
"We have excellent search weather at
least," said the CAP spokesman .
Corrigan's 65-year-old father, who left
aviation years ago to run his 26-acres of
citrus grove.s in Santa Ana, went up
Thursday with another son, Harry 1 In
search of the youngest Corrigan.
"I was just riding. J don't even have a
license right oow," said Corrigan, whose
38-hour. transatlantic flight In a $30f
(See CORRIGAI)', Pap %)
Orange Coast
Weather
lt"s go in g to be sunny again
on Friday, according to the
weathcrlady. Highs along the
coast 62 rl&lng to 75 Inland.
Lows 45 to 55.
INSIDE TODAY
Hijacking has come o Jona wav
since the first airliner was
seized on a SU'n11]1 May day in
1961 and commandeered to
Cuba. Set stor11, Page 8.
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I I
' 2 DAILY PILOT
I' "
' Can Laguna Survive
Mucl1 More of This?
By BARBARA KREIBJCH
Of lllt Ol llY ,!lot lltlr
,, .
Aftermath of an election , ••
Jn April. 1970, three <'ouncilmen v:ere swept into office In Lagl.lna Beach
on a wave of hyper-emotional ''drive the dirty, drug-crazed hippies out of
town" campaignipg.
Burled deep in that campaign were more significant questions relating
to the entire future growth and development of the community, destined to
surface much later.
Since lhal fateful election, which established a new and unshakable
majority on t.he council bench, many changes have come to city haJJ.
-The entire planning commission was fired and only one or its members
reappointed. Since then there have been five more ne~ appoin.tm~nls to the
commission. due to resignations, totally disrupting planning contmu1ty.
-An independent, hard·hittlng city manager was the first staff member
to leave.
-A p01ice chief, apparently not su fficiently hard·hitting, departed for an
area more receptive to bis progressive ideas of Jaw enforcement.
-A city attorney who had served Laguna for 30 years was next.
-The direct.or of finance followed.
-A city clerk, appointed by the new counci l, also turned out to be in-
pendent and...»-'as advised her duties (and salary) would be curtailed following
the' next election, in Which she Is the only candidate.
-The city treasurer for 25 years decided to retire.
-'I1ie public works director left to become manager of the water district.
-A progrel!lslve young city planner, on the staff for six years, left for a
position of greater responsibility and higher pa y Jn another city.
Other unique developments accompanied and followed lhe city hall
"evacuation.''
Announcement that the council wa s considering adoption of a number of
"urgency" ordinances -controlling things like wa lking dogs, youths renting
hotel rooms, singing on the street and similar community hazards -produced
a Laguna phenomenon -the standing-room-only council meeting.
Bewildered and alarmed, citizens in record numbers began turning out
for council and planning commission meetings. -
There were, said the new council majority, "radlcal agitators" out to
intimidate and take over the town .
But their voices were effective enough to produce a little pulling back.
Threatened by a referendum, th e council thought twice about its dog control
ordinance and decided to modify it.
Planning commission hearings on a proposed hotel zone ordinance which
threatened to opfn a floodgate to high rise beachfront development drew a new
barrrage of protest.
The new city fathers were unable, or unwilling, to see the handwriting on
the wall and Jt finally took an initiative election and a 3·1 vote, in a record
turnout of the electorate, to convince them.
There were ot.her events. On July 4, 1970, a minor ruckus over illegal
fireworks on Woodland Drive wound up in a near riot, with units from six law
enforcement agencies summoned to "save" Laguna.
Jnspectors zeroed in on "hippie'' housing in what wa5 heralded a5 the
beginning of citywide inspections of substandard housing -but somehow never
got far from the original target area.
A beefed-up polJce force cracked down on long-haired youths for such
violations as sitting, standing and in some instances merely walking on city
sidewalks. ,....
But it turned out the "law and order'' concepts of the new mijorlty had
thelr limits.
A recall launched against one of the triumvirate charged misuse of tax-
payers' funds. The councilman freel y acknowledged he had taken his wife to
conventions, including one in Hawaii, at city expense, and iosisted he saw
nothing out of order about this.
A survey of other cities revea led it was indeed a most unusttal pactict.
'The former Laguna Beach city manager said that during his eight-year ad-
ministration, the city had been "sCrupulous". in refusing payment for expenses
for family mmebers traveling with councilmen.
The mayor, another ol the triumvirate. recalled deducting his wife's
expen ses unde~ the previous administration , but said the manager appointed
by the new cowicil condoned the proceduf'!, so he, too, had taken his wife along 1
(&o San .Diego) at clty,e1pense.
The third member of the trio has establi shed a near-record for council
inactivity, but has exposed himself to conflict of interest charges by represent-tf clients 0£ his architectural firm before the city's planning and zoning bodies.
. ..
Perhaps the most dan gerous maneuver or the new majority was amend·
men t of a chapter of the municipal code. which had been on the books for 30
years. and required a four-fifths council vote to overruJ e planning commission
denial of a variance or use permit .. Now it wilJ take only three votes.
•
Thi s vote has a special significance for Laguna . The building height limit
ordinance overwhelmingly approved in the initiative election is still facing court
challenges. If the courts disapprove it. the vote man euver so meday could enable
just three councilmen to grant a height variance in defiance of both the plan-
ning commission and the electorate.
The whole weird sag~ of the past two yea rs has polarized and virtually
paralyzed a small community once noted for relative domestic harmony.
As tbe 3·2 votes have been logged with monotonous regularity in the
minutes of city council meetings, it has become clear that the game was not
Jaw and order. but growth -how big and how fast.
Can Laguna survive much more of this?
Last Rites Slated
BEVERLY HILLS (UPI) -Mel11<lrial
services will be conducted Friday for ac-
tress Marilyn MaxwelJ who •was found
dead in her home Monday of an apparent
heart attack.
OIANGI COAST · LI
DAILY PILOT
1'1t 011111Qt CO.at DAILY PILOT, w!lti Yo'hktl
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.,,1~ ;, l'\lbllthrd $al11ro1ys <tnd sunc11ys.
T~e pri .. clwl Pllb1¥1n; Plt~I ft ti U!I West
BIV Slreer, C°'lt Mn., Ctlltornla, tHN,
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Ault!Wll Mt11tctfnci Eclllor1
1 .. 111• le•lll Offic.
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Fron1 Page 1
FAIR ...
Conner. assigned to work out the parking
propasal, said a net profit of about
$15,000 could be made from the parking
concessions with 180 parking spaces.
Under the Van Deusen proposal, which
he admitted was not yet worked out,
parking for about 80 cars would be pro-
vided on the Jot near the Recreation
Department headq uarters and at the old
El Paseo parking lot. The area in
between could be used for the arts and
crafts show.
Wh ile noting the city needed money for
Main Beach Park development . Mayor
Richard Goldberg agreed Van Deusen's
plan should be carefully conside red.
Van Deusen said the city could still
realize some $20.000 proflt, as planned. by
operating food concessions ,on the Main
Beach during the summer months. Profit
to the city from the art show could come
from either booth rental or a tax on com·
missions. he said.
He emphasized that the activity would
not be designed b::I compete with either
the Festival of Arts or the Sawdust
Fesllval. Van Deusen, Mrs . Leeds and
. councilman Peter Ostrander were ap-
pointed by Mayor Goldberg to work out a
firm proposal for council consideration
and try to come up with some revenue
t stimates.
Writer Arnold Hano, sitting ·'I the AU•
ditnce, suggested the art show bt called
lbe "Sand Castle Fair" and that such ·~·
Uv.1tes as sand castle building, fl'lr
ch1Ftlren and 1urjing Instruction for
r"ldeol! could •lso be provld~d al lilt
fair through thf: Rtcrtatlon Dep;irtment.
•
•
Preswent
To Visit
Clemente?
Strong indications of an active visit to
the South C.Oagt by Pre!ildent and Mrs.
Nixon surfaced In San Clemente today,
and one function during that trip will ~
official acceptance of the bronze bust
purchased through local contributions.
An oftlclal announcement de tailing the
presentation will be made here on Fri·
day. it was learned.
\Vhlte House aides have remained mu te
about the President's travel plans west,
but several fa ctors, besides the presen·
tation of the art work, point to an im·
pending visit.
Nex t Thursday, March 30, the son of
Sen. Barry Goldwater will marry in
Newport Beach and rumors there have
hinted at lhe President being among the
guests.
Mrs. Nixon also . plans public ap-
pearances in the west early In April as
wel l.
It would be the first stay. at La Casa
Pacifica by the First Family since
Janua ry.
Plans had been made to come west
almost immediately following Mr. Nix-
or's retum from Peking, but the visit
was scotched in fayor of shorter trips to
Camp David, Md ., and Key Biscayne,
Fla.
The presentation of the bust personally
to the President had been prom ised for
months during the campa ign by the
President's Project Commit tee to raise
money for the purchase.
Backers of the strictly local effort
stressed that the purchase of the $3.000
art work would increase San Clemente's
chances in the quiet but strong cam·
paigns for determing a site tor the Nixon
Library.
C.Ommittee spokesmen pointed to the
bust purchase by local citizens as a
strong seliing point for local interest in
the library.
Contributions came from business
firm s, service groups. private citizens -
even youngsters in elementary schools
who collected, then sold newspapers and
aluminum cans to raise money for their
contributions.
The presentation. it was promised. will
be made in public with everyone welcome
to attend.
From Page l
CORRIGAN. • •
plane he built himself caused a global
sensation.
The search' plane they used was ,own~
and folwn by Robert Damskey.
He is the lnstr)lctor wOO taught the
adventurous youngest Corrigan -he has
a private license and 300 tiours Jogged
alofl -to fly Jn the first place.
Their search followed the coastli ne,
then crisscrossed a pattern over inland
areas seeking the white-winged Cessna
150, which has a yellow-orange fuselage.
Characterized as the Flying Irishman
for his daring Dublin solo, Wrong Way
Corrigan says his son has rig idly followed
the rules of safe fl ying.
The former Santa Ana Resister
sportswriter would always telephone to
report an y change In destination of
estimated return if he had filed no flight
plan.
Airport acquaintances said Corrigan
and Powell, a friend since boyhood, didn't
plan to land at San Diego.
Powell 's father Tom, ownet of a Santa
Ana neon sign company. said the young
men had mentioned wanting to fly to Las
Vegas sometime.
"They had sp::iken of it in casual con-
versation ... just for something to do."
he said after the fr uitless search fl ight
Thursday.
A check of McCarran Field in Las Vegas
and other airports in Nevada failed to
produce any results, according lo CAP
officials.
A team of four CAP aircraft hunted un-
til dark Thursday and 10 mo re took off
today, supplemented by Marine
helicopcrs flying low-level missions.
Chances are that Corrigan and Powell
stuck to the coastline but aeria l teams
were assigned rugged areas of Riverside,
San Diego and San Bernardino counties.
"They·re covering all areas between
here and San Diego and all the co astal
hills and valleys ," said CAP Maj. Ernest
Johnson, mission coordinator.
Young Corrigan recently returned rrom
a trip to Japan and has been planning a
tour of Europe but hadn 't been wor king
in the meantime.
His father's ow n 1938 trip to Europe
drew a stern reprimand but official wink
from U.S. authorities who had refused his
formal request for permission lo make
the hazardous fl ight. He came home a
celebrity or international proportions who
was entertained by royalty, but retired to
near obscurity to raise oranges, lemons
and his three sons.
He became a public figure again brleny
in 1968 when he showed up to accept the
Orange County Press Club's Headliner of
the Year Award In Avia tion.
"My compass got st u c k and 1 got
turned 180 degrees around," he still main·
talned at the banquet. 30 years later.
Today, Wrong Way Corrigan may be
hoping history will repeat Itself.
Dock Work Disturbed
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The Mabon
ship ·1tncs said Jt may have to close Its
cargo container facility at Los Angeles
Harbor today If Teamster U n Ion
members continue to picket. there: The
T,.m>lers picketed the terminal Wadnes·
day for lhe lllird atralghl day in an· •!>'
parent dispute "itb the Loopboremen'a
Union.
. .
TA.LENT SHOW
SET A.T SCHOOL
Students at Aliso Elementary
School in South Laguna wlU pul on
a talent show for the community
tonight bfginnlng al 7:30 o'clock at
lhe school.
The shew has been entirely writ·
ten and produced by the students
and admission is free. The title of
the evening of fun and leughs is
"Shipwrecked, or How to Break in-
lo Show Business Without Really
Trying."
Candidates Give
Education Views
In Laguna Beach
The controversial question of in·
novative education popped into a Laguna
Beach City Council candidates' forum
this week.
A que9tion directed to all six ca n·
didates read, "Are you for innovative
leaching methods as used at Top of the
World and Thurston schools?"
Advised by their panel moderator that
the question, though unre lated to cit y
counci l work, was acceptable since the
public is entitled to be informed of can·
didates· views in all areas, the candidates
answered as follows :
Beth Leeds: Yes.
Roy Holm: Yes. very much.
Richard Carr: Unequivocally yes.
Frank Haller: I'm not qualified to
answer. My children have had a Catholic
education.
Harry Lawre nce: I don't see that this
has any bearing on the city council race .
Charlton Boyd: Very much in favor of
it.
From Pagel
CHARLENE. • •
was contacted.
"Doc Ekeberg did a marvelous job,''
Jackson commented late Wednesday. "If
she hadn 't helped, Charlene, I'm afraid,
would be dead."
Jackson, who has captured. trained and
acclimated sea mammals for a good
number of his 40 years, said "it is im·
perative for people to leave beached
animals alone and to contact so meone
who knows what they're doing.
"It doesn't do any good to try and take
It home. The animals won't eat and will
probably dehydrate and die. This stuff
that they can be raised in a bathtub is for
the birds."
Yorty Still in Race
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Mayor Sam
Yorty r;ays he's still a serious contender
for the Democratic presidential nomina·
tion despite his plans to limi t major
ca.n:ipalgnlng to the california primary.
Physicim1
Cites Boils
111 ·Sex Case
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. IAPl -A doc-
tor testified today that Chaplain Andrew
F. Jensen was covered with a severe rash
and boil.s rrom his belt line do\vn to hi s
thighs July 8, the date a Navy wife
claims to have had sexual relations with
him in H motel.
"\Vould Capt. Jensen have been able to
have sexual intercourse while suffering
this infection~" defense attorney Jack n.
Blackmon asked Dr, C!ay Wickham. ··rt would have been extremely unllkely
and very painful'· \Vickham replied .
"Doctor," Blackmon continued, "if you
were the patient instead of the doctor,
could you have performed a sex act?"
"For, me ." Wickham said 1 "it would
have been impossi.ble ."
Lora Gud branson. a 40.year-old supply
officer'~ wife, has testified 'that she had
relations With Jensen four limes. Another
Navy wife, 24-year-old Mary Ann Curran,
said she had relations at least 17 times
with Jensen after her husband employed
him as a marriage counselor.
Mrs. Gudbranson said July 8 was the
date of one of her alleged meetlng s wilh
Jensen.
Jensen ls being courtmartialed on
charges of conduct unbecoming an of-
fi cer. He has <lenied having affairs \.\-'lt h
either woman.
\Vickham, a Navy doclor at Cecil Field
\\•here the court·martial is in progrr.ss .
said he examined Jensen in mid-June last
yea r and found him covered 'vith chigger
bites suffered on a fishing trip.
PTA Pla1is Night
Of Food, Drama
At Laguna lliglt
A 15-cent·per-dip dinner and an evening
(If mus ic and drama will .blend together
lonight in a special Laguria Beach High
School PTA benefit for the music-depart·
men!.
Dinne r will be served in the high school
auditorium beginning at 6:30 p.m. At 8
p.m. the high school Chamber Singers,
under the direction of Fred Stouter will
perform. Follo ... ving will be one-act play,
'·The Brick and The Rose."
Since the play deals with drug use. it is
recommended for adults and high school
students.
Reservations for dinner may be made
by calling thQ follow ing class represen-
tat ives : frestinen, Mrs. Betty 'Dorris.
499·1 124; sophomores, Mrs. Marilyn
Pearsol. 499-2960 ; juniors , Mrs. Helen
Blurock, 494-1946 and seniors, Mrs.
Jean Cottam, 4t9~11S4. . .
G<1ry Lewis
Held in Drugs
NORTH HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -
Entertainer Gary Lewis. eldest son
of comedian Jerry Le\.\'i!, was ar·
rested on suspicion of possess ing
Dangerous dru~s early t~ay. alt'r
police said they found ptlls 1n his
car.
Police said the 26·vear·old Lewis
was arrested -~hortiy alter mid·
night. He was booked at Vall,y
Strvlces jail.
During the 1960s, Lewis headed a
popular rQck and roll band ceJled
Gary Lewis and the Playboys.
Original Cost
Of 'Main Beach
Overestimated
The city of Laguna Be.ach will need aJ.
least another $450,000 before the Main
Beach Park project can be completed ,
City Manager Lawrence Rose 1aid
\Vednesday.
Rose said original cost estimates for
the project had been too high and he now
figures the-entire park will cost the city
about $944.000 before it is finished. Initia l
estimates set the final cost at about $1.2
milli on.
The $273 .000 spent thu s far has gone for
land Requis ition, demolition and an
architectural plan. Demolition of the old
buildings was first estimated to cost
$52.500, but Rose said it had only cost
$27 .000.
He also noted that estimates of ac-
quiring the land on which the Shell and
Arco gas stations are now located could
be too high, therefore further red ucing
the flnal cos t estimate. Acquisition of
both parcels is estimated to cost $450,000.
However. th e city only has about
$336.000 from a federal gran t and gas tax
funds to spend toward beach develop-
ment. He expects lo also make $40.000
lro m use of the area this summer and
sard the city may sti ll get another
$120.000 in federal monies.
The ren1aining ba lance of $449.000 will
probably have to come from the sale of
bonds. which bas been approved by the
voters. he said.
Singers to Perform
The Saddleback College Chambe.r
Singers, under the direction of Donald A.
\Va Iker, will perform for members of the
Orange County Coast Division of
California', Retired Teachers· Association
April 3.
The program will be presented at the
Neighborhood Congregational Church, 340
St. Ann's Drive, La guna Bea ch.
luxurious spring down
and feat her sof O,S •••.
PROFESSION,t.L INT~RIOR CES IGNE ,\S Ope" Mon.,
Thurs, I-Fri. Evcu.
•
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These handsome sofas were designed
to give you the ultimate in seating
comfort with down and feather
back pilfows, deep spring down
seat cushions enve loped Jn down
and feathers and two dac~on·
filled arm pilfows. Choose from
a.wide selection of fine
fabrics and sizes.
Three styles to chooiJe from
now
399.
2216 H,t.R!OR ILVC.
COST ,t. MESA, C,t.LIF.
646.0l75
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Saddleha~k Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
voe. 65, NO. 83 , 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY; CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1972 TEN CENTS
•
Laguna Drug Offieers Attaeked by Dogs
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of tlle D•llY l"li.t St.tf
Alter a he<:Uc evening during which 12
persons were arrested and his jacket was
chewed b!' two large dogs, Laguna Beach
narcotics detective Neil Purcell today
11peculated:
"Maybe all these slorit;.s about how
close we att to legalizing marijuana en·
couraged the folks to celebrate with a
few pot parties ... "
The Wednesday evening Corays started
shortly before eight o'clock when
Sergeant Purcell and offi cer Robert Ro-
maine accompanied two U.S. marshals to
21152 Laguna Canyon Road ·to serve a
misdenleanor arrest warrant and en-
countered the first party,
After some discussion at the door, the
officers entered. Two of the guests
assertedl y fled via a window. A search
turned up a quantity of LSD. marijuana
and suspected dangerous drugs and the
live remaining g u es ts were held On
charges of ~ession or marijuana and
being present where the drug was used.
They were Arnold Thomas Canup, 29,
of the address; Larry Warren Spausta, 18,
of 24932 Mosquero Lane. Mission Viejo;
Marriann Simmons, 27, of the Canyon ad·
dress; Carolyn Moody Hedges, 32 9f 606
Hamilton St., Costa Mesa, and a 17·year·
old boy.
After booking the first group, Purcell
and detective Gene Brooks accompanied
the marshals to 567 Catalina St. to serve
a traffic warrant on Gary Wayne
Henderson, 26, of that address.
When tbe officers Identified
themselves, said Purcell, Henderson and
his woman companion ned ·lo the rear of
the house. There the woman, Nancy
Oavenpcrt, 24, of 185 Flower St., Costa
Mesa, allegedly was found attempting to
Oush about a pound of marijuana down
the toilet.
Both were . booked on suspicion of
possession of marijuana for sale.
Leav ing the scene , the officers sniffed
the familiar aroma or marijuana floating
from an adjacent dw elling at 577 \2 Goff
St. and slopped to question a n\an emerg-
lng from the yard.
Their su spic .. ions were further aroused
they said. when the man Oed ·back to\vard
the house yelling warnings of "Ttw narcs
are here !"
The dogs two large German
shepherds -entered the picture when
the officers followt'd their quarry lnto. the
yard.
Purcell and Marshal Dick Ringler lost
hunks or their jackets while attempting to
fend off !he animals ~·ith dog repellent.
"It 's the same kind issued to
mailmen." Purcell explained . "Mace
doesn 'I work on dogs -it just makes
them mad.··
The offi ct'rs forced open a door, ~n·
tcred the house and again heard the
(See FORAYS, Page Z)
ame ier's on un e
Planning lfnit
Irvine Receives
Zoning Briefing
Five members of the Orange County
Planning Department staff detailed plan·
ning and wning steps for· Irvine City
councilmen and planning commissioners
who met in joint session Wednesday.
Minimal lengths of time for ac·
com~lishing zone changes and tract map
approvals were two key items or interest
since the Irvine officials are weighing an
extension of the city's 9G-day building
permit freeze. It expires Tuesday.
Irvine resident and county planning of·
ficial Stu Bailey Introduced f o u r
.specialists who outlined thelr areas of
responsiblllity and the .services the coun·
ly departments will provide the new city
at no cost through June 30. ~
The 112-0ay zone change procedure
from the date a petition for a zone
'change is filed until it becomes Jaw. was
discussed by Dave Moore who handles
county zoning.
He noted the 112-.day process is the op-
timum length of time it takes to complete
a zoning case. Delays in setting hearings
and preparing the ordinance draft that
accomplishes the planning commission
policy could lengthen that time, he said.
Frank Scroggs discussed the process
for county approval of tract maps from
"day 38" when the developers' engineer
begins drawing a tentative map to ·'day
142" when a building permit might be
issued.
He too, indicated the 104 da ys set for
processing of tract maps by the county
were the minimum times allowed and
that delays due to staff or planning com·
mission changes in the preliminary plan
for a tract map might lengthen the ap-
Delay Ordered
In Youth 's Trial
To Check Status
A six-week delay was ordered Wednes-
day h1. the Orange County Superior Court
trial of an Ortgon youth accused of be·
Ing a member of the gang that murdered
Mission Viejo teacher Florence Nancy
Brown .
Judge William Murray held the trial of
Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney, 18, over
to May 8 to allow the youth 's lawyer to
await a Supreme Court ruling that could,
he said, revive his claim that Gibboney
should oot be tried as an adult.
Earlier arguments that Gibboney ·WIS
17 at the time of Mrs. Brown 's murder
and ineligible for trial as an adult have
been dismissed in Superior and juvenile
courts.
proval process.
Irvine councilmen have questioned the
need for extending the city's building
freeze because of what Mayor William
Fischbach described as a "de facto
freeze .''
County planning staff appeared to
substantiate such a "de facto freeze" by
(See PLANNERS, Page II
Top Hurdler
I of 12 Held
In Slaying
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Twelve
youths, including one of the nation's best
high school track hurdlers, were in cus·
lody today in the black leather jacket
slaying of a high school football star.
Eight youths were arrested Wednesday
and four more today in the Monday night
beating of Robert Broe.ks Ballou, 16.
Police said Ballou wa.s slain for the
black leather jacket he wore to a rock
and roll concert at the Holl ywood
Palladium. (See earlier story, page 5).
Among those held was Ricardo Sims.
18. a member of the Washington High
School track team, who has run the 180
yard low hurdles in 18.5, fastest time in
the nation , according to his coaches.
Sims' arnst came only hours before
the sc heduled track meet between Los
Angeles and Washington High Schools.
Ballou was a varsity football player at
Los Angeles l!igh.
Others held on suspicion of murder in-
cluded Erskine Jones, and Conrad
Williams, both 18; James CUnningham,
19, and younger youths whose names
were withheld. All are students at
Washington . police said.
Ballou, son of an attorney and cousin of
Mike Ballou, a former star linebacker at
UCLA , had gone to the rock concert wit h
four school mates from Los Angeles
High. All five wore black leather jackets,
police said.
When the five left the Palladium after
the concert, they were accosted in a
service station parking area across the
street by a band of youths. each of whom
wore a single earring. Ballou's com·
panions, who wert beaten, said the gang
demanded their black 9'ather jackets.
When Ballou refused, he was knocked
down , stomped and his head beaten
against the pavement.
Polite said black lealher jackets have
become. a status symbol among the city's
youth gangs.
Better Get
A Good Alarm
A brazen burglar smashed a win-
dow at a Costa Mesa industrial
plant Thursday, wandered with im·
punity through numerous suites and
finally left with about $1,000 worth
of office machinery.
Officer John Stoneback said of·
ficials of Solar Laboratories Inc.,
3169 Red Hill Ave., are taking in·
ventory, but four e I e ctr i c
typewriters and adding machinea
are known lost.
Solar Laboratories des i g n s
burglar alanns, police noted.
Egg Decorating
Contest Slated
At Art Exhibit
.. An egg decorating contest will be a
highlight of the art exhibit Saturday and
Sunday at the Safeway shopping center
on Muirlands Boulevard near Mission
Viejo.
The event, spansored by the Mission
Viejo Association of Artists a n d
Craftsmen. will be staged Crom 10 a.m . to
5 p.m. both days.
A new feature will be public judging of
arts and crafts. Three ribbons will be
awarded to artists in each category and
the winners will be determined by the
public vote.
The voting will be held on Saturday.
Egg decorating will be held on both
days. Children and adults of all ages will
be welcome to participate.
Space Leader Killed
ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) -Thomas Road·
man May, 50, president of the Lockheed·
Georgia Co. from 1967 to 1970, died
Wednesday in an automobile crash. May
began his aerospace care·er w i t h
Fairchild Engine and Airplane Co.
Physician
Cites Boils
In Sex Case
JACKSONVILLE, Fta. r AP) - A doc-
tor testified today that Chaplain Andrew
F. Jensen was covered with a severe rash
and boils from his belt line down to his
thighs July 8, the dale a Navy wife
claims to ' have had serual relations with
him in a mOtel.
"Would Capt. Jensen have been able to
have s.;,xuaI · ~rse· •!Ji\<< aulferilli
thlil infection?" defense 1tt6rliey Jack R.
Blackmon asked Dr. Clay Wickham.
HJt would have been extremely unlikely
and very painfu}" Wickham replied.
"Doctor," Blackmon continued, "if you
were the patient instead of the doctor,
cou.1d ·)IOU have performed a stx act7"
"FOr me,.. Wickham said, "it would
have been impossible."
Lora Gudbranson. a fO.year-old supply
offiter's wife, has testified that she had
relations with.Jensen.four tim~s. Another
Nav'y wife, 2~year-old Mary Ann Curran ,
said she had relations at least ·17 times
with Jensen after her husband employed
him as a marriage counselor.
Mrs. Gudbranson said July 8 was the
date of one of her alleged meetings with
Jensen.
ienSen is being courtmartialed on
charges of conduct ·unbecoming an of-
ficer. He has . denied ha~ing· affairs with
either woman.
Wickham, a Navy doctor at Cecil Field
where the court-martial is in progress,
said he examined Jensen in mid-June last
year and found him covered with c~igger
bites suffered on a fishing trip.
On J11.ly 2, he testified, a severe irt-
fection caused by scratching had set in.
The entire area covered by · swimming
trunks, he added, was covered with bolls
and a red rash . ..\s late as Ju1y 16, he
~ii:I, th~re w~rt stiU scabs and Some
(See CHAPLAIN, Page II
What~s in a Na1ne?
School Parents Soon to Learn
Residents of Irvine. Mission Viejo, and
Lake Forest all have something in com-
mon -a school without a name.
Dave King, director of facilities plan.
ning, is anxious for re.idents o~ th.e San
Joaquin Elementary School D1str1et to
submit names for four schools.
Two of the proposed schools are in
Mission Viejo. One is on Preciados Drive
in the La Paz Homes section and the
other is on carrillo Drive in the Eldorado
Homea .section.
The Lake Forest school is on Rivendell
Drive and the Irvine facUlty Is on Karen
AM Lane In lhe California Homes area.
Names can be historic, patriotic,
Spanish, geographic or appropriate in
some other way. The OOard in the past
has not selected names tied to a develop-
ment name.
It is board policy to name school.s as
soon as poossible. Suggestions should be
sent to King at tbe district office, 14600
Sand Canyon, East Irvine.
If a favorite name is passed over, it
may have better luck next time. There
art 15 new schools in some kind of plan·
ning stage in the San Joaquin district -
all without names.
Giboney is the only untried member o(
a gang rouoded up by lawmen in Junt!,
1970, following the hatchet killing of a
Santa Ana service station attendant and
the "devil cult" slaying less than 24 hours
Jater of Mrs. Brown, 31, of El Toro.
Tennis Star's Girl Dies
Gang leader Steven Craig Hurd , 20,
was found to be Insane and is held in
Atascadero Stat< Prison . Arthur Craig
"Moose" Hulse. 18, of Garden Grove is
serving a life term for the killing of al·
tendant Jerry Wayne Carlin.
Melanie Mae Daniels, the drug·using
drifters' paramour and purse holder, Is
1rving a one to 10 year term in state
pr150ft for her role In both murders.
ll is alleged that Gibboney was one of \.
the group who dragged Mrs. Brown from
her car at the Sand Canyon turnoff of the
San Diego Freeway, mutilated her, drove
her t.o an Irvine orange grove and \..illJd
her to the accompaiment o( i6I
osaoclated with devil .,orship.
Horse Tlirew and Injured M ariessa GonzaJ,ez, 10
The young daughter or professklnal ten-
nis star Richard "Pancho'' Gontalez died
In Hoag Memorial Hospital Tuesday from
injuries she sustained when she was
thrown !rom a horst late Saturday af·
ternoon.
Marlessa Gonlalu, IO, had been riding
with a friend at tht lrvlM Equestrlon
Center, 7385 E. Coast Highway, Corona
de! Mar. when the accident occurred.
Mari<S>a , who lived with her mother,
Madalyn, and two sister• al IOI Via Lido ,-
Soud, Newport B@ach. died from severe
head Injuries resulting from the fall ,
hospital spokesmen said.
Funeral ttrvlces will takt pllce Friday
st noon at Forest LaW'D Maoor1aJ Park,
Glendale. -
Mrs, Marilyn Wolle, who" dlqltltr
Leslie, 10, had bee!i ridln1 wtth Maitelsa
when she look tbt fall, .. id tills mornln1
that circumstances surrounding the
mishap are stilt unclear.
"Nobody rtally, hooestly lcnowa what
happened," Mn. Wolft aid. "srie may
•'
have been frlghle11ed and the horse.
'Which be.looJed ~o a friend of hen, may
have been rp00ked." Mrt. Wolle said Marie"• and her
clalllh!er have been taking riding 1,... ..
ftlUlariy durllll tbt ·week al tbt Irvine
atablcs .• She aald Marleua had been ild·
lnR for less than a year.
Marlessa was a student at Newport
Elomentary School. In addition to her
·mother and Gonulei. who lives In
Malibu, she 11 llirvlVtd by lwo lilttrs. ••
Bndd,les
John Lis·s. 5, tries out the
helmet of Wayne State Uni·
versity police officer John
Knechtges during a pre·s~hool
children's lour of the univer·
sity's safety builPing in Detroit.
The briefcase message reads •.
"Being a cop is more than just
a gig .. "
Grocery Prices
Take Biggest
Jump in History
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tht biggest
jump, in grocery prices in 14 years last
month triggered the sharpest rise in
overall livirig costs since before President
Nixon Imposed ecOnomic contl'ols. the
government reported today.
The Consumer Price Index, measuring
typital famil y Hvlng costs. rose five--
tenths of I percent in February, the
largest · increase ln nine months , the
Labor Depai'tment's Burtau or Labor
Statistics said. ·
Grocery prices, Which include a
number of item s that are not subject to
federal price controls, soared 1.9 percent
for the greatesl one-month increase since
March, 19f>8, the report said .
The report followed the reslgncition of
t ee AFL-CIO members of Nlxon's Pay
Board, who charged the government was
rigidly holding down wages while lettting
pr,lces continue to climb. (See story Page
4).
The bureau also reported that average
weekly earnings of some 45 million rank·
and·file workers rose 35 cents a week tO
$130.27, bul that purchasing power decli n·
cd 24 cents because of the rise in con·
sumer prices.
The February boost pushed the price
Index to 123.8 percent of its 1967 average.
This means It cost $12.38 last month for
every $10 worth of typical family
purchases five years ago.
Tbt F-e b r u a r y incrcaSf" was the
grtatesl since a slx·ltnths of l p<!rttnt
rise last June, two months before Nixon
lmpostd a 90-day wage-price frttze which
was followed by Pha~ 2 controls.
The bureau !laid lhat in lhe four mor •h•
of Phase 2 living costs hive risen a an
annual rate of 4.9 percent. grea ter than
the I. I ptrccnt rate In the ti• months
before NU:on'1 Au.gust economic (rctu.
Corrigan,
Lagunan
In Plane
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
01 tr11 ~Uy ~Utt Sl11f
Sky searchers were crisscrossing the
Southland today for any trace of a plane
piloted by the sportswriter son of Santa
Ana's famed avi ator Douglas "Wrong
Way" Corrigan.
He and a companion from Laguna
Beach left Orange County Airport Tues--
day on a short , sightseeing flight to San
Diego but failed to make a 4 p.m. return
scheduled.
Roy Corrigan, 22, of 2828 N. Flower st.,
Is the youngest son of the man who
delighted the world in 1938 by taking o(J
from New York for Long Beach and Jan.
ding two days later in Dublin, Ireland.
Ironically. Wrong Way Corrigan'!
original We.st Coast destination 34 year~
ago is today a search base for his miss·
ing son.
Young Corrigan's passenger on the an·
ticipated 120-mile flight Is identified as
Roger Powell, 21, of 32 Crystal C.ove,
Laguna Beach.
The youths planned to fly over a
Laguna Beach site where the Powell
family is bullding a home, photograph it
and return after buzzing down to San
Diego.
"He's never been overdue before," the
elder C.orrigan said Thursday.
A search command po.st. was establish·
ed by the Civil Air Patrol at Long Beach
Airport to coordinate the hunt between
Orange County Airport and the Mexican
Border.
No trace of the vanished Cessna 150
had been discovered during the hunt
centered on the coastline by 10 a.m .. ac-
cording to Capt. Ed Crankshaw, CAP
wing information officer.
"We have exceUent cooperation from
the Marines at El Toro and Camp
Pendleton . the San Diego Sheriff's Aer1>
Squad and we have a lot of CAP planes
up searching the area." he said.
Marine helicopters have been detailed
to scour the desolate coastal military
reservations for Corrigan and Powell.
"We have excellent search weather at
least," said the CAP spokesman.
Corrigan's 65-year-old father, who left
aviation years ago to run his ~acres of
citrus groves in Santa Ana , went up
Thursday with another son, Harry, in
search of the youngest Corrigan.
"I was just riding. r don't even have a
license right now," said Corrigani whose
33-bour, transatlantic flight in a $300
(See CORRIGAN, Page Z)
Orange
·Weather
It's going to be sunny agaJn
on Friday, according to the
wcatherlady. Highs along the
C:otlst 62 rlsing to 75 inland.
Lows 45 to 55.
INSmE TODAY .
liijackh1a has comt 4 long wau
.tince the first airliner wa.t
seized on a sun-nu /11ay day in
196 l a,1d commandeered to
Cuba. See ~fory, Page 8.
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2 DAILY PILOT IS
Party Merriber
'
Law Ill egal
NORWALK (UPI) -'!'ht pcrUon
of the C&llfornla Election Code re.
quiring a candidate to be a
registered member of a Political
party for 90 days prior to filing for
office has been declared un·
constitutional.
Superior Court Judge Vincent S.
Dalslmer said Wtdnesday the state
had "a right to req uire people to be
a member of party for a reasonable
length of time before running under
the banner of that party,'' but said
there should be way~ other than
registration to prove part y af·
filiation.
.Time Ebbing
For State's
. Resources?
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -A blue·r ibbon .. ftudy council has warned that California
:: .may not be "capable of supporting
•: tclerable human life within several more
:; decades'' unless the state adopts a long-
:• ierm environmental protection strategy. .. •• lo its second report to Gov. Ronald
:: Reagan and the Legislature, the Environ-.,
:~ mental Quality Study Council said
Wednesday that California is in ··severe :~ danger" of being destroyed as a place to
:: live: ., :. ". "Jt is even questionable_ whether major
•• portions of the state will be capable of
supporting tolerable human life within
several more-decades.'' the study said.
The 17-member council, appointed by
Reagan and the Legislature in 1968 to
study the state's environmenta!J prob-
lems, submitted 43 recommendations on
governmental organization. population,
air quality. land transportation and
energy use.
The council members urged both
Reagan and lawmakers to 0 act this year
and to act decisively.
"Only the boldest and m03t imaginative
rnecisures, implemented now, can prevent
the ullimate deterioration of the en-
vironment of this state," they said.
The council. submitted its first report
last year with a study on governmental
organization concerning environmental
problem~.
After,a series of public hearings, coun-
cil meetings and research, the panel said
its second effort revealed "an extremely
pessimistic picture about California 's en-
vironmental ills."
The council said some progress was
~ade last year in certain areas of pollu·
lion control but that a statewide
••cohesive strategy" to maintain en·
Vironmental quality still is needed.
The panel was particularly critical af
the defeat Jast year of a bill of
Assem.bJyman Edwin L. Z'berg (0-
Sacramento), that would have created a
state "superagency" to deal with pollu-
tion problems.
Jn regard to population, the council
said population distribution still is
, urgenUy needed. ''but it will no longer
· lllffice to design such policies with the
1tate. The problem is national in scale."
Fro1n Pagel
PLANNERS. ••
outlining the length of time approvals
require. Mayor Fischbach Tuesday was
told the tract map approval process
might take as much as 12{) days and
would automatically slow new develop-
ment in the city.
Other planners addressing the joint
council-planning commission meeting
Wednesday, were Dave Culbertson wh()
discussed zoning administration. and
Russ Jansen, who outlined the county's
master plan for arterial highways and
noise and airport problems related to
planning.
The Irvine planning commission will
meet at 7:30 o'clock tonight for its
regularly scheduled study session. The
meeting ls set in city hall. Irvine Town
Center, 4201 Campus Dri ve.
OllAMH COAST IS
DAILY PILOT
Thunda.11 March 23, ~912
Regtilar Sehedacle
County Bus Li:Qe
Service Viewed
By J~CK 8ROBACK
01 lt!t D11lv P'llcl! S!l'1
Bus service in Orange Ctlunly citie!
and some intercity servict with 3 basic
fare of 25 cents was fortra!t Wednesday
to the Orange County Transit District
board members.
rf they adopt one or the proposals at
that time , the consultant will proceed
u·ith a detail~d study including costs,
routes, schedules. transfer points and a
survey or potential uaers.
The consultant stressed that a strong
prornollona/ program wa5 important to
attract users regardless of what plan was No time was given for initiation nr the
first services but it was estimated that
some lines could be 1n operation wilhin
two to three years depending upon
receipt of federal financial Bid.
Transit district directors meeting in a
speGial sessio n heard a report on their
Speclaf' Bus Needs study by consultant
f\1arty Bouman of Allen Voorhees Inc. of
Virginia.
Bouman in his interim report offered
four alternatives but. recommended the
thlrd one. Alternative three would pro-
vi de for a series of intra·cnn1munily lines
to serve activity centers on a 30·minute
weekday schedule. Activity· centers are
defined as schools, shopping ce()ters and
such gathering places.
Schedules would be coordinated and
passengers could transfer to other routes
without paying an additional fare , ac-
cording to Bouman 's plans.
In addition, lntra-co1nmunity lines
would provide some service into other ac-
tivity centers depending upon the de·
mand. He said there might be three or
four trips daily from one community to
another .
Under alternative three all existing
private and public bus lines in the county,
17 in number would be evaluated and ma·
jor modification to existing routes made
to better serve potential users, Bouman
added.
The transit district board will gi ve
. further consideration to the f o u r
alternatives at their 'regu1ar April 3
session.
ado;>ted. ~·
He al so suggested that service should
be gcarecf primRrily for lbe poor,
unemployed , handicapped , aged, youths
and students.
All alrernativ..es presented by Bouman
are projected on a county population of
two million by 1980. He cautioned that it
might be six to eight years before a total
bus system could be achieved. He said
that the first lines Cou ld be inaugurated
within two to three years.
Much of the new populatiOP1 growth,
500,000 by 1980. will be in the undeveloped
areas of southeastern Orange County,
presenting a unique opportunity to
est ablish bus systems where travel habi ts
are not al ready fixed .
Richard Jenkins, representing VTN of
Orange County, a Newport Beach·based
consu lting firm which is working with
Allen Voorhees Inc. on the bus needs
study, warned that the existing 17 bus
lines in !he whole county provide minimal
.service. little intercommunity routes, in·
frequent runs, falling patronage and old
equipment.
Jenkins said operating costs of existing
lines range from 91 cents a mile for the
Southern California Rapid T r a n s i t
District to 55 Cents for the experimental
Santa Ana bus line and the South Coast
Transit Corporation which serves Costa
Mesa, Newport Beach and Laguna Beach
from Santa Ana .
Bouman said the proposed 25-cent fare
is based on ~bus operations throughout the
nation.
Riles Decries Politics,
Says Students 'Can't Wait'
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of tl'lt 01Uy ,Ult Sl.,t
California children "can't wait another
year" for school financing simply
because legislators are involved in an
election year, Stale Superintendent of
Public Instruction Wilson Riles declared
Wednesday in Newport Beach.
Riles, speaking before more than 250
members of the Orange Cnunty School
Boards Association at the Newporter Inn.
said it was "distressing" that legislators
can't deal with pressing school finance
, needs during an electio.o year.
"Part of the problem is that we in
schools haven't spoken the kind of
language Sacramento understands -
whether the people ~·ill vote for It or
not," Riles suggested.
School officials will get the financial
proposa ls that they want "only if the pee>-
ple in the district also make it known
they want something done." he added.
Off sl1ore Drilling
Boost Urged;
Safety Stressed
WASHINGTON IU Pl l -The Interior
Department today urged exp a n d e d
offshore exploration for U.S. oil and gas
resources, proclaiming that tighter an-
1.ioollut ion regulations have cut leaks and
offshore spills in half.
1-Iolli s M. Dole. assistant secretary for
mineral resources. told a Senate interior
subcommittee that the nation's gas and
petroleum resources are not being
cleveloped ".at adequate rates lo meet a()-
ticipated demands."
Dole also said some environmentalists
had "overreacted " lo oil spllls, but
stressed there is "no need to sacrifice en-
vironmental quality" while expandin~
outer Continental Shelf oil and gas ex·
plorations.
The Unlled States, he said, is develop.
ing shortages in natural gas and l'iince
1967 "has not been self.sufficient in oil."
The superintendent urged that .1111
school districts -rich and poor :_ "find
ways to work together financially ."
He conceded that this •·unity'' is dif-
ficult to achieve because the financial
perspective of Beverly Hills is .completely
different from Baldwin Park's, and he
repeated his oppo.sition to reliance on
property taxes.
"l believe in Serrano," he said, refer-
ring to Jay Serrano, an East Los Angeles
man who initiated the landmark case
"'hich said it is unconstitutional to depend
on the wealth of a district for 11chool
money.
Riles offered no financial solutions of
his own but did say he is apposed to the
Alan Watson initiative to be on the
November ballot.
Il would put a ceiling on property taxes
of $2.05 2nd give some other tax pre>-
visions for raising funds. Riles said "it
wou19 be very dangerous to freeze that
into the constitution: then there would be
no flexibility if conditions changed."
On another matter, Riles enthused
about the Early Childhood Education pro-
gram, recently developed by the Depart·
ment of Education. .
It allows children to begin a pre-school
type program when four years old.
"Children grow at different rates and
learn at different rates," Riles said, "but
we set up a school system that pretends
everyone does the same thing on the
same day in the same way."
The Early Education Program is sup..
posed to "create the environment" to en-
courage children to learn at their own
rates.
Riles said another way schools and
disf.rict boards can 8dd more flexibil ity to
their programs is to "look into having
high school representation on the boards"
because those students "can present a
point of view we ought to kl"ow about." Th.-OnllP ec.st DAILY PILOT, wntri wtifdl
k (OfT'lblMd tfle N•Wl·P.._, b PUt)llsfted a.y
tl1t Or•nt:• C0111t Pvllllt111nt CornPtnr. S.·
''"' tcUrlon1 lrto publlJl'ltd, MOndty "'l'Ollfl'I
FndlJ', tor (.oat1 M_,, Ntwp0r1 Bndt,
~imlln;to!I 8..c;~IF«.#!t1ln V1lt.y; l.lg11n1
BNd'I, ll'lllM/$10Cllfb:ldt ..t S.lt o-tll/
~" J111n 'C1pJ1tr1roo. A 1rnot• "'land
«lillon 11 P11bll1111d Slllll'dtya Ind $\JM•rt.
'tne ptln<IJMJ pubUtl\1'19 p!lnl 11 ti 330 Wnt
B•'r' $119tt, Co"" Met, (111fornT•, flU&.
Robert N. w,,,
JI~ '"" PvDlilhfl'
J1e\: It. C1tl1v
In the last 20 years, overall drilling ac·
tivity decreased by 93 percent, while the
National Petroleum Council estimates
that 436 billion barrels o( potential nil
resources remain to be discovered in the
U.S .. he testified.
He said that Molly Magee. a student at
Los Alamitos l·ligh School in Seal Beach
and the student representative to the
~late board, has given "valuable in put"
to his department.
He called on all ~chool boards to have
their own self-evaluation and planning
units and lo improvt. their own efficiency,
''It's easy to point the finger at some-
one else ." he said, add ing that when
he took office tht.rt. w11s a high number of
distr icts that never received tt.xtbooks on
time.
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Dole argued that oil tankers con·
tributed to 29 percent or the world's total
oil pollution of the occan5, while off shire
drilling contributed only 2 percent.
Reducing the supply of domestic oil and
thus increasing import~ via tankers
''C<!uld increase the potential for oil pollu-
tion of the oceans." he warned . -
The Interior Oep11Jrtment estimate.ii:
that by 1980 some 25 percent of its: gas
production could be produced frorn thr.
outer Continental Shelf.
'·To accomplish this." Dole urged,
"mort. shelf areas would have to be open-
ed for leasing. more wells would have 1.n
be drilled And many addltlonal mileii of
pipe.lines laid lo bring this vital rtsouroe
to miirket."
He noted that the departmtnt increa.sed
its funding for a lease mana-sement pro-
gram fivefold In ·tf'Je past three ye.ars,
revising operating regulal ions and con·
ducting safety studit.s.
''There has been 1 grtBl reduction ()f
lncldenl-s cf noncompliance wlt.h re~la·
Uons and small l'3ks and apills of/shore
h11 ve bt'e~ cut In half," ,bt s2id.
"I told the slalf to go to work on it and
l~st iall all the textbooks in all districts
"·ere delivered on time for the first time
since 1914," he said.
f'ro1n Page l
FORAYS" ...
fam iliar sound of 111 flushing toilet.
Breaking down " second door Into
a bathroom , they found a repetition of the
earlier scene and arrested Richard
D'Arnico, 21, on suspicion of dt1tructlon
of evidence.
His brother, Nick Charles D'Amico, 26,
who had called lhe warning, wu boolctd
en a chArge or inlerfulna wllh ao afficer
and both were charged with po!stsslon oi
marijuana. The br<>Lhers uld th•y Uv• In
Orange.
Gary Lewis
Held iii Drugs
NORTH HOLLYWOOD IUP IJ -
Entertainer Gary Lewis. eldest son
o( comedian Jerry Lewis, was ar-
rested on suspicion or possessing
dangerous drugs early today aflt.r
police said they found pills in his
car.
Police said the 26·year.old Lew is
w.;i11 arrested shortly after mid·
night. He was booked at Valley
Services jail.
During the 1960s, 1..e"·is headed B
popular rock and roll band called
Gary Lewis and the Playboys.
Fro111 Page 1
CHAPLAIN • • •
rash over the area.
Navy wives. fellow clergymen and
friends took the stand for the defense
Wednesday and testified that Jensen was
a man or· high moral character. The
chaplain and his wife 'are expected to
testify Friday.
"!feel the chaplain's innocent." a sob-
bing Margaret Huntsinger said In
testimony Wednesday.
"f feel it's my Christian duty to help a
fellow Christian," said Isabell Jaquette. a
Sunday school teacher at Jensen's chapel.
Jn addition to testimony praising the
moral character of Jensen. d~ense
witnesses criticized one of the two wome n
who filed complaints against the 43-year·
old American chaplain.
Mrs. Huntsinger, whose husband serves
at Cecil Field Naval Air Station wilh
Jensen, said she worked on a chapel plan··
ning board with Mrs. Gudbranson.
''On severa l occasions I had the feeling
he was trying to get away, but she
wouldn't Jet him. She had a way of sort or
gelling everyone to move out so she could
monopolize the conversation with him,"
Mrs. Huntsinger testified.
Mrs. Jaquette also said she thought
Mrs. Gudbranson was "very aggressive
toward Chaplain Jensen. She \·:ouldn't
give much chance for anyone else but
herself to say anything to the chaplain."
El Toro Restaurant
Burgled; $104 Lost
More than SJOO in cash was taken
Wednesday night by burglars who broke
inlo an El Toro restaurant and emptied
the cash register, Orange County sheriff's
officers said.
Deputies said the intruders forced open
the back door of the Deli-Shel restaurant,
24412 Rockfield Road. and removed
$104.25 from the till . The' incident is under
inves tigation today.
f'ro111 Poge 1
CORRIGAN SEARCH ...
plane he built himself caused a global
sensation.
The starch plane they wed was owned
and folwn by Robert Damskey.
He is the l11:structor who taught tht!
adventurous youngest Corrigan -he ha$
a private license and 300 hours Jogged
aloft -to fly in l'he first pla ce.
Their sea rch followed the coastline .
then crisscrossed a pattern over inland
areas seeking the white--winged Cessna
150. ~·hich has a yellow·orange fu selage.
Characterized as the Flying Irishman
for his daring Dublln solo. Wrong Way
Corrigan says his son has rigidly followed
the rules of safe flying.
The former Santa Ana Resistrr
sportswriter would al ways telephone to
report any change in destination of
estimated returo lf he had filed no flight
plan.
Airport acquaintances said Corrigan
and Powell, a.friend since boyhood, didn't
plan lo land at San Diego.
Powell's father Tom, ownei-of a Santa
Ana neon sign company, said the younlil:
men had mentioned wantl11g lo fly to Las
Vegas :sometime.
"They had spoken of lt ln casual con-
versation ... just for something to do,"
he said after the fruitless search flight
Thursday.
A check of J\.fcCarran Field tn Las Vegas
and other airports in Nevada failed tn
produce any results, accord ing to CAP
officials.
A trarn of four CAP aircraft hunted u,,..
til dark Thursday af!d 10 more took ofr
today supplemented by M a r l n e hell~ptrs fl ying low·ltvtl missions.
Chances are that Corrigan a11d Powell
stuck to lh~ coastline but aerial teai:ns
\vere assigned rugged areas of Riverside,
San Diego a11d San Bernardino counlies.
"They're covering all areas between
her e and San Diego and all I.he coastal
hil ls and val!evs." said CAP Maj. Ernest
Johnson. n1iss ion coord lnator.
Yo:ing Corrigan recently returned frern
a trip to Japan and has been planning a
tour or Europe but hiidn 't been working
in the meantime.
His fathei:'s own !938 trip to Europe
drew a stern reprimand but. official wink
from U.S. authorities who had refused his
formal request for permission to make
the hazardous flight. }le came home a
celebrity of in ternatio nal proportions who
u·as entertained by roya lty. but retired to
near obscurity to raise oranges, lemons
and his three sons.
He became a public figure again briefly
in 1968 when he showed up to accept the
Orange Couniy Press Club's Headliner of
the Year Award in Aviation.
··~ly eompass got st u e k and I got
!urned 180 degrees around,·· he still main·
ta ined al !he banquet. 30 years later.
Today, \l/ron~ Way Corrigan may be
hoping history "'!ll repeat itself.
Mesa's 'Bud' Franklin
Selected to Judgeship
Governor Ronald Reagan today named
Costa f\1esa attorney Selim "Bud"
'Franklin lo the Harbor .Judicial District
bench to take the $32,273·a·year seat
created last year by the California
Legislature .
Franklin was one of three Orange
Counly judges appoint-ed today by the
governor. Santa Ana attorney Patrick
McCray <\{Id Orange County juvenile
court referee Alan N. McKone were
named lo two vacant posts in the West
Orange County ·Judicial District Court.
Franklin, 42. is a trustee of the
Newport·Mesa Unified School District. An
active Republican, he has also seen ex-
ecutive duty wilh the Costa Mesa
Chamber or Commerce and !he United
Fund organization in the Harbor Area.
Franklin lives at 1928 Santa Ana Ave .,
Costa Mesa. with his wife, Dianne and
their four children. He was graduated
from Pomona College and took hi s Jaw
degree from Stanford.
Franklin was re-elected to the Newport·
Mesa Unified Schoo~ District Board of
Education last year. He .said today he
u·ill resign from the sc hool board. The
timing is dependent on the scheduling of
a special election to fill the remainder of
his term which run s until June, 1975.
"l am personally very pleased about
the appointment.'' franklin said. noting
"it is a way for me to continue serving
this community."
Franklin said he believes his swearing
in to the judgeship will oceur sometime
before mid-April. The appointment to the
municipal bench requires Franklin to
close his Costa Mesa law practice which,
he said. 1·1 am perfectly happy to do. I
am basically a service-ori ented person
and haven't viewed a big income as a
major priority ."
Franklin said he came to Costa Mesa
for the opportunities lo serve and recalls
he was president of the chamber of com·
merce before "I was 30," and was the ,
first graduate of Newport Harbor High
School ever to serve on the old high
school hoa rd. pr ior lo the unification or
Harbor Area school systems in 1965.
Yorty Still in Race
I.OS ANGELES (AP l-M•yor Sam
Yorty s~ys he 's srill a serious contender
for the Democratic presidential nomina·
lion despite his plans to limit major
campaigning to the California primary.
luxurious spring down
and feat her sofas ....
'~OFESSIONAl.
INT!RIOR OESJGNUS
:ill,.
Optn Mo1t.1
Thur1. & Fri. Evtr.
,ti::11,
These handsome sofas were designed
to give you the ultimate in seating
comfort with down and feather
back pillows, deep spring down
seat cush ions enveloped in down
and feathers and two dacron·
filled arm pillows. Choo.e from
a.wide selection of fine
fa brics and sizes.
Three styles to clwoae from
96"
121• HARIOR &LVO.
COSTA MESA, CAL IF.
. •46·0275
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now
399.
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Huniingion Be-aeh
Fountai1:1 Valley
• •
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VQL 65, NO. 83, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1972 TEN CENTS
City Fathers Want to Change Beach's Image
By TERRY COVU.LE
01 lht Otily ~llol Sltlt
In the next five years downtown Hun-
tington Beach will be : (I l an asphalt
parking Jot, (2) Miami west, or (3) surf
cjty.
It already carries the "surf city''
reputation. The streets are lined with
aurf shops, poster stores ani.'. health food
bars.
Bicycles and surfboards move more
frequently than cars in old Huntington
Food
Beach. A lot of people like it that way.
But civic leaders want to change the
image. perhaps to a f\.1iami atmosphere,
a tourist attraction with hotels and tiny
shops full of sales taxes.
The Top of the Pier plan, officially
adopted by the city in 1969, was supposed
to accomplish the redevelopment of the
downtown.
One of its key ingredients is the crea·
tion of a five-block city parking lot facing
the oceanfront. In November, 1970 the ci·
Costs
ty caused a tremendous uproar among
property owners by filing condemnation
procedures on the old buildings along
Paci fic Coast Highway ()n either side of
J\1ain Street.
However, the city attorney'~ office has
never served legal notice 'of the con·
demnation. which means no one has
started the parking lot.
City officials are finally admitting that
(See DOWNTOWN, Page 2)
Soar
Pr·ices Take Big Boost in February
.WASHINGTON (AP) -Tht biggest
jump in grocery prices in 14 years last
month triggered the sharpest rise in
overall living costs since before President
Nixon imposed economic controls, the
government reported today .
The Consumer Price Index, measuring
typical family living costs, rose five-
tenths of I percent in Fe bruary, the
largest increase In nine months. the
Labor Department's Burtau of Labor
Statistics said.
Grocery prices, which include a
number of items that are not subject to
federal price controls. soared l .9 percent
for the greatest one-month increase since
March, 1958, the report said.
The report followed the resignation of
t ee AFL-CIO members of Nixon's Pay
Board, who charged the government was
rigidly holding down wages while lettting
prices continue to climb. (See story Page
41.
The bureau also reported that ~verage
·' McCray, Frankliti
Reagan Names 2 Judges
To West Municipal Court
-Two vacancies on tHe West Orange
C.Ounty Municipal Court bench were filled
today when Governor Ronald Reagan
named two judges to serve that court,
located in Westminster.
Santa Ana attorney Patrick McCray
and Orange County Juvenile Court Ref·
eree Alan N, McKone were named to the
openings.
A third appointment to a county
munici pal court judgeship placed Costa
Mesa attorney Selim S. Franklin on the
newly created seat in the Harbor Judicial
District Court in Costa Mesa.
McCray, a Rep ublican, takes over the
West Orange County seat vacated last
year by Judge James Turner's elevation
to the Superior Court bench.
McCray. SO. lives in Santa Ana with his
wife, Ruth, and two children . He is a
graduate of Illinois University and earned
his Jaw degree at the Chicago College of
Law .
McKone. 47, has served as a juvenile
court referee since 1969.
The former deputy district attorney is
regarded as one of the county's foremost
authorities on narcotics and drug prob-
lems. He lectures on those topics at
Orange Coast and Golden West Colleges.
An active Republican. McKone lives in
Santa Ana with his wife, Barbara, and
three children. He was graduated from
New York University and got his law
degree from Loyola School of Law in Los
Angeles.
weekly earnings of some 45 million rank·
and·file workers rose 35 ce nts a week to
$130.27, but that purchasing power declin·
ed. 24 cents because of the rise in con•
sumer prices.
The February boost pushed the pr ice
index to 123.8 percent of its 1967 ave ra ge.
This means it cost $12.38 last month for
every $10 worth of typical family
purchases five years ago.
The F e b r u a r y increas~ was the
greatest since a six·tenths of 1 percent
rise last June, two months before Nixon
imposed a oo.day wage-price freeze which
was followed by Phase 2 controls.
The bureau said that in the four months
of Phase 2 living costs have risen at an
annual rate of 4.9 percent, greater than
the 4.l percent rate in the six months
before Nixon 's August economic freeze.
Prices had been held to an annual rate
of I. 7 percent during the rigid three-
month freeze that preceded the looser
Phase 2 controls.
17ice hikes in February included two
tenths of one percent for housing, four·
tenths eaCh for clothing and medical care
and one-tenth of 1 percent for recreation.
Transportation costs declined six·
tenths of one percent, the report~ said.
A steep rise in meat prices, it said, ac·
counted for about 70 percent of the rise in
food prices.
Fresh fruits and vegetables also rose
considerably. Dairy product! rose instead
of declining as usual in February, and
cereal and bakery products went up for
the first time in four months, the report
said.
Raw agricultural products, such as
fruits and vegetables and eggs, are ex·
empt from federal price controls.
Other increases included local transit
Cares, property taxes and natural gas
rates, although the increases were
smaller, it said.
He has practiced Jaw in Santa Ana
tince 1963 after serving .as a referee with
the U.S. bankruptcy court. He also hs
served in recent years as a Superior
Court Judge, pro tempore.
Pancho Gonzalez' Child
Baseballers Win
Game, Lose Gear
The Redlegs of the Golden West Pony
League won their practice game Satur·
day afternoon at Fountain Valley High
School, but lost off the field.
They lost a green duffle bag full of
catcher's mitts , masks, shin guards and
chest protectors.
A Redlegs player mistakenly threw the
bag of catchers' gear in the rear end of
the wrong pickup truck , which he thought
belonged to the coach.
The truck was a white Chevrolet and
the equipment was tossed in the back of
it about 4:30 p.m.
If the equipment is found, it can be
returned to the Redlegs by phoning Fred
Maisey, 817·3265.
Dies in Hoag Hospital
The young daughter of professional ten·
nis star Richard "Pancho" Gonzalez died
in Hoag Memorial Hospital Tuesday from
injuries she sustained when she was
thrown from a horse late Saturday af-
ternoon.
Mariessa Gonzalez, 10. had been riding
with a friend at the Irvine Equestrian
Center, 7385 E. Coast Highway, Corona
de! Mar, when the accident occurred.
Mariessa, who lived with her mother,
Madalyn, and two sisters at 4-01 Via Lido
Soud, Newport Beach, died from severe
head injuries resulting from the fall,
hospital spokesmen said. ,
Funeral services will takt: place Friday
at noon at Forest Lawn Memorial Park,
Glendale.
Mrs. Marilyn Wolfe, whose daughter
Leslie, 10, had bee11. riding with Mariessa
when she took the fall, said this morning
that circumstances surrounding the
misha p are still unclear.
"Nobody really, honestly knows what
happened," Mrs. Wolfe sa id. "She may
have been frightened and the horse,
which belonged !o a friend of hers, may
have been spooked."
Mrs. Wolfe said Mariessa and her
daughter have been taking riding lessons
regularly during the week at the IJ;:vine
stables, She said Mariess a had been rid·
ing for less than a yea r.
Mariessa was a student at Newport
Elementary School. Jn addition to her
mother and Gonzalez, who lives in
Malibu, she is survived by two sisters.
'School Funds Can't Wait'
Riles Scores Legislatige in Newport Beach Talk
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of tt11 O•UY Plltt Stilt
california children "can't wait another
year" for school financing simply
because legislators are involved in an
.election year. State Superintendent or
Public tnstructlon Wilson Riles declared
Wednesday in Newport Beach.
Rllts, speaking before more than 2SO
members of the Orange Cnunty School
Boards AssoCiation at the Newporter Inn.
said it was 'idlstrtssing" that legislators
can't deal with pressing school finance
needs during an election year.
"Part of the prob1em Is that we In
schools haven't spoken the kind or
language Sacramento Understands -
wbethtr the people will vote for it or
not," Riles sugge:md.
Scbool ollicials will gel the financial
proposab that they want "Olly il the pro.
•
ple In the district a1so make it known
they want something done," he added.
The superintendent urged lh~I all
school districts -rich and poor -"find
ways to work together financially ."
He conceded that this "unity" is dif-
ficult to achieve because the financial
perspective of Beverly Hills is completely
different from Baldwin Park's, a11d he
repeated bis opposition to reliance on
property taxes.
j'I believe in Serrano." he said. re(er·
ring to Jay Serrano, an East Los Angeles
man who in!Uated the landmark case
which said it is unconstitutional to depend
on the wealth of a district for school
money.
Riles offered no financial solutions of
bis own oot did say ht Is opposed to the
Alan Wal!On lnitlaUve to be on the
November ballot.
It would put a celling on property taxes
of $2.05 and give some other tax pro-
visions for raising ·funds. Riles said "It
would be very dangerous to freeze that
into the constitution; then there would be
no flexibility i( conditions changed ."
On another matter. Riies enthused
about the Early Childhood Education pro-
gram, recently developed by the Depart·
ment of Education.
It allows children to begin a pre·school
type program when four years old.
"Children irow at different rates and
learn at different rates." Riles aaid , "but
we set up a school aystem that pretends
everyone docs the same thing on the
same day in the same way. 11 ~
The Early Educltlon Program b •II!>'
(See FUNDS, Pap I }
-I
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~i
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DAILY P'lt.OT lltH Pllofit
'SURF CITY' IMAGE IN HUNTINGTON BEACH MAY BE REPLACEOSOON-BY WHAT?
Civic Leaders Want to Change Image, Toy With Idea of International Tourist Center
Corrigan's Son Missing
Search Begun for Plane Carrying Countian, Lagunan .
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of \ti• Dally ,llol Sldf
Sky searchers were crisscrossing the
Southland today for any trace of a plane
piloted by the sportswriter son of Santa
Ana's famed aviator Douglas "Wrong
Way" Corrigal)..
He and a companion from Laguna
Beach left Orange County Airport Tues·
day on a short, sightseeing flight to San
Diego but failed to make a 4 p.m. return
scheduled.
Roy Corrigan, 22, of 2828 N. Flower St.,
is the youngest · son of the man who
delighted the world in 1938 by taking off
from New York for Long Beach an'd lan-
ding two days later ln Dublin, Ireland.
Ironically, Wrong Way CorMgan's
ori ginal West Coast destination 34 years
ago is today a search base for his miss·
ing son.
Young Corrlgan's passenger on the an·
ticipated 120.mile flight is identified as
Roger Powell , 21, of 32 Crystal Cove,
Laguna Beach.
The youths planned to fly over a
Laguna Beach site where the Powell
family is building a home, photograph it
and return after buzzing down to San
Diego. .
"He's never been overdue before," the
elder Corrigan said Thursday.
A search command post was establish·
ed by the Civil Air Patrol at Long Beach
Airport to coordinate the hunt between
Orange County Airport and the Mexican
Border.
No trace or the vanished Cessna 150
had been discovered during the hunt
centered on the coastline by JO a.m,, ac·
cording to Capt. Ed Crankshaw, CAP
wing information officer.
"We have excellent cooperation from
the Marines at El Toro and Camp
Pendleton. the San Diego Sheriff's Aero
Squad and we have a lot of CAP planes
up searching the area ," he said.
Marine helicopters have been detailed
to scour the de solate coastal military
reservations for Corrigan and Powell.
"We have excellent search weather at
least." said the CAP spokesman.
Corrigan's 65-year.old father, who left
Heroism Good
For Busin,ess
One good deed has earned
several good deed!! for Norman
Ching.
Ching, the previously unidentified
milkman who helped a Huntington
Beach mother and her infant son
escape from a fire last weet, say!
his milk business is booming as a
result of his actions.
"People are stopping me on my
route in the morning and asking if t
am the milkmnn who was In the
paper," says Ching. "Then they ask
me to deltver their milk."
Ching soys he has picked up to
customers in the last week. Among
bis ne\Yest and most entbushutic
customers Is Mrs. Karl F.
Thompson -the mothtr he helped
escape from the Oame.s.
•
aviation ye ars ago to run his 2G.acres of
citrus groves in Santa Ana, went up
Thursday with another son, Harry, in
search of the youngest Corrigan.
"I was just riding. I don't even have a
license right now," said Corrigan, whose .
38-bour, tran satlantic flight in a $300
plane he built himself caused a global
sensation.
The se arch plane they used was owned
and folwn by Robert Damskey.
He is the instructor who taught the
adventurous youngest Corrigan -he has
a private license and 300 hours Jogged
aloft -to fly in the first place.
Their search followed the coastline,
then crisscrossed a pattern over inland
areas seeking the white-winged Cessna
150, which has a yellow.orange fuselage.
(See CORRIGAN, Page Zl
Doctor Says Navy Cleric
Had Sex-preventing Rash
JACKSONVILLE , Fla. (AP ! - A doc·
tor testified today that Chaplain Andrew
F. Jensen was covered with a severe rash
and boils from his belt line down to his
thighs July 8, the date a Navy wife
claims to have had sexual relations wit h
him in a motel.
"Would Capt. Jensen have been able to
have sexual intercourse while suffering
this infection?" defense attorney Jack R.
Blackmon asked Dr. Clay Wickham .
''It would have been extremely unlikely
and very painful" Wickham replied.
"Doctor," Blackmon continued, "if you
were the patient instead of the doctor,
could you have performed a sex act?"
"For me,,,. Wickham said, "it would
have been impossible."
Lora Gudbranson. a 4(}.year-<>ld supply
officer's wife, has testified that she had
relations with Jensen four times. Another
Navy wife, 24-year-<>ld Mary Ann Curran.
said she had relations at least 17 times
with Jensen after her husband employed
him as a marriage counselor.
Mrs. Gudbranson said July 8 was the
date of one of her alleged meetings with
Jensen.
Jensen Is being courtmartialed on
charges of conduct un becoming an of·
ficer. He ha s denied having affairs with
either woman.
Wickha~. a Navy doctor at Cecil Field
where the court-martial is in progress,
said he examined Jensen in mid.June last
year and found him covered with chigger
bites suffered on a fishing trip.
On Ji.;ly 2, he testified, a severe in·
fection caused by scratching had set in.
The entire area covered by swimming
trunks, he added, was covered with boils
and a red rash. As late as July 16, be
said, there were still scabs al)d some
rash over the area.
Navy wives, fellow clergymen and
friends took the 11tand for the defense
YMCA in Huntington
Sets Adventure Club
The Huntington Beach YMCA will
operate an Easter Week Adventure Club
tor youngsters 6 to tt, starting Monday.
The club will feature creaUve arts,
crafts, ,sports, trips, nature stttdy and
physical fitness. Youngsters will meet
from 9 a.m. to i p.m .. Mondoy through
Thursday or Easter week, at Lake. Park.
For further informa~on, phone the YM·
CA at 147-961:1.
Wednesday and testified that Jensen was
a man of high moral character. The
chaplain and his wife are expected to
testify Friday.
"I feel the chaplain's innocent," a sob-
bing Margaret Huntsinger said in
testi mony Wednesday.
"J feel it's my Christian duty to help a
fellow Christian," said Isabell Jaquette, a
Sunday school teacher at Jensen 's chapel.
In addition to testimony praising the
moral character of Jensen. defense
witnesses criticized one of the two women
who filed complaints against the 43·year·
old American chaplain.
Mrs. Huntsinger, whose husband serves
at Cecil Field Naval Air Station with
Jensen , said she worked on a chapel plarr
nin& board with Mrs. Gudbranson.
"On several occasions I had the feeling
he was trying to get away, but she
wouldn 't let him. She had a way of sort of
getting everyone to move out so she could
monopolize the conversation with him,"
Mrs. Huntsinger testified.
Mrs. Jaquette also said she thought
Mrs. Gudbranson was "very aggressive
toward Chaplain Jensen. She r:ouldn't
give much chance· for anyone else but
herself to say anything to the chaplain."
Orange
Weather
It's going to be sunny again
on Friday, according to the
weathcrlady. f"Iighs along the
coast 62 rising to 75 Jnland.
Lows 45 to 55.
INSIDE TODAY
llijacking ha! come a lono 'wa:y
since the first airliner war
seized on a sunny lt1CJy daU' in
1961 and commo ndeertd to
CubCJ. Ser. story, Page 8.
l.,M, ••1• ' Ann UMtrt " •tt!IM! " _," .,.,
Ctllforl!lt I M11tval f'•fllh ..
Cl•ultlfll JI.JI HlllMll l'itw'I • Cfll'lltl n Ofa11tt Cw11b' 11
Cl'ft1wer1I n Sr!Ylt ,trlW " Ottlll Httktt " SNtti ....
ldlto,l•t , ••• • S!Klt Mtttttl -lllltf'lll!tmtfll 1).11 TtltYhl"I " Pl11a11tt ''"' T~••"" Jt•IJ
lier !ht • tctnl " WH!lltf • ""'"'" " W•mtt!'f Ntwt , .. ,.
W1rltl Hfttt •
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2 o.Jl Y PILOT H
•t.
Better Get
A Good Al.arm
A bnltft bW'&lar smashed a win-
dow at a Costa Men induatrlal
plant Thursday, wandered with Im·
punlty through numerous suites and
llnaily leJt with about $1,000 worth
of office machinery.
Officer John Stoneback said of·
ficlals or Solar Laboratorles Inc ..
3169 Red Jflll Ave., i re taking in·
Vtnlory, but four e I e ctr l c
typewriters and adding machines
are knpwn lost.
SOiar Laboratories d e s I g n s
burglar alarms, policP no1ed.
.Westminster
Schools Eyed
In Big Poll
A communitywide polling operation is
under way in the Westminster School
District in an effort to rormulate a state.o
menl of the district's educational goa ls.
More than 30.000 qUestionnaires have
been sent out to parents, and tonight a
meetini of 100 civic organizations, the
mayol!, and the city council has b~en
scheduled to gather further community
input. ·
A statement of educational goals is r,.
quired by recent state legislation, but
other elementary districts within the
Huntington Beach Union High School
District have met the requirement either
by · contracting an outside educational
coosulting firm for . help, or by making a
limited sampling of parents.
Westminster school officials say the ir
approach is unique in the sta te.
A.'ff.member goals C!lmmittee has been
formed that . iDcludet1 teachers, students,
classified , school e m p J o y e e s , ad·
ministrators, as well as a broad sampling
of c.ommunity representatives.
The community operates on a regular
twice a month meeting schedule.
Tonight's meeting will be held at 7:30
o'clock in ·the board room at district of·
fices. 14121 Cedar wood Ave.,
Westminster.
• Top of Pier Plan
To Be Discussed
Thursday, MM(!\ ll, 1972
f.011aplaitat Cited
Harbour Studied
.For Waste Signs
City officials are investigating the
channels, bays and beaches of Huntington
Harbour for signs of pollution.
l,funtlngton Beach Councilmen ordered
a study or the Harboor ~1onday nlght,
based on the complaint of a llarbour res!·
dent about a polluted pr ivate beach.
"'Vc're getting a lot of moss and algae
on our beach," says Mrs. Sandra Blau,
16376 Ardsley Circle, Humboldt fsland .
"There seems to be a poor circulation of
water here."
"Geologically speaking. that beach ls in
the advanced stage of a swamp." Vince
Moorhouse, city director of harbors and
beaches, said today.
Moorhouse opposed construc!ion of the
private beach when the Huntington
Harbour Corporation built il. It now
belongs to 14 families who live around it.
Mrs. Blau said the Huntington Harbour
Corporation refused lo he!p clean it up,
and she contacted the city to find out
what could be done about the moss and
algae.
"The health department says the water
Is okay," 5he •explained. "Our only pro-
blem is the inoss and algae. It wasn't this
way during the summer,"
Moorhouse blamed most of the pro-
blem, which he said is not serious, on the
construction of the beach.
"It isn't used by as many people as the
public beaches and isn't maintained the
s;.me way. We regularly rake our
beaches and replenish the sand," he said.
Moorhouse said his department has
been studying the Harbour for several
months.
''We sent divers out there and took
water samples. The water is safe, It's
just a problem on the beach because sand
has made the water shallow ,'' he ex-
plained.
Moorhouse said overall water circula·
tion in Huntington Harbour is good. "It's
really a fairly clean harbor," be ex·
plained. "You can tell by the mussels on
the walls. They wouldn 't be there if the
wattr wasn't good."
Preliminary studies of the Jlarbour In·
dicate it does not sulfer the trouble.!i now
causing woes In Newport Harbor.
"Our biggest problem out there is what
we don't know, what erfects the current
population Is havinJ.t. Right now we are
mea surlng !he water standards so we will
have a record to note any change in the
water content ." Moorhouse said.
Es.senlially the runoff problem is no
different than it was years ago when the
:area was a marsh, the director ex-
plained.
"Nature intends to hnve runoff water.
The !and needs to feed nutrients to the
ocean. The problem now is people, too
many nutrients are put into the ocea n.
"Everyone who washes his car,
fertilizes his lawn or sprays DDT on his
roses adds a little to the Harbour pcJJu.
tion. When it ra ins it all goes there."
Boats are restricted from dumping
wa ste into the Harbour, but Moorhouse
says enforcement of that rule Is often dif·
ficult.
The city has asked the Orange County
Flood Control District to screen the ends
of its flood control channels to catch ma·
jor debris during storms, but nothing has
been done yet.
Some officials believe a channel cu t
across Warner Avenue into the Bolsa
Chica area and out to the ocean across
Bo!sa Chica State Beach would help the
water circulation considerably.
Moorhouse hopes to gather enough dat a
on the Harbour to know in the future
when significant changes occur, and if so,
why and what can be done to stop pollu·
tion.
However. the problem of the one
private beach is mostly one of main·
tenance, he says, and is not typical of the
general condition of the Harbour.
12 Arrested on Drug Raps
At 3 Locations ill Laguna
HEADS LIBRARY FRIENDS
Mr,, Alfred Wrobel
Office rs Named
For Huntington
Library Friends
Mrs. Alfred \Vrobel is the first presi·
dent of the newly formed Hunllngton
Beach Friends of the Library.
She heads a slate of officers that in·
cJudes: Mrs. Kenneth Martyn, vice pres!·
dent : Mrs. Eugene Bottoms, secretary;
and Mrs. Thomas Worden, treasurer.
Board directors are ~1rs. Robert
Sheets, Mrs. James Mason, Mrs. H. R.
Fore and Mrs. H. E. Johnson.
The Friends of the Library was
organized as a volunteer group to support
activities of th e city library, Its biggest
project at the moment is collection of
funds to buy volumes for the proposed
$2.8 millio n central library.
Woman Denies
Reca ll Threat
f"rom Page l
DOWNTOWN HUNTINGTON .. ·,
the park.in& lot concept i1 dead.
1'A downtown parking lot is the farthest
thin& from my mind," says new City
Administrator David Rowlanda. 0 1 would
hope We! couJd find some sort of
cooperative method, sucl1 as redevflop-
ment. to help the downtown area.··
Says Councilman Jerr: 1'1 a t n e y :
"There is no way there could be a five·
block city parking lot there. The cost has
gone completely out or our price range."
Latest estimates have put the figure of
land acquisillon at $10 million. The city
doesn't have the money.
City officials, led by Matney, have now
turned their efforts toward private
redevelopment of the downtown. Matney
ls working on current plans with Martha
Holt and Bob Terry, two of th e niajor
property owners.
Mrs. Holt is trying to buy options on
rnosl or the property near the ocean so it
can be put together for a package
development.
Preliminary plans for the private
de velopment call for construction of two
hotels with a total room capacity of 500,
F ro1n Pagel
' CORRIGAN. • •
linked by a shopping mall. souvenir
store!, banks and restaurants. .~n
overpass could be buill across P1e1J1c
Coast Highway linking the pier and the
downtown, ,
Now , Mrs. Holt has rt'vealed another
idea that adds further Jnterf"st to her
project. A Jarge tourist a1tra c1ion1 ttn·
tatively called "Music Town ."
''f\1usic Town" is the bralnchild of her
son . David Holl . a song\\1riter,. They won't
reveal details of 11, but pron11se it has the
potential or 11 Disneyland.
Mrs.. f.Tolt says she would llke to put
"Music Town" on land O'A'ned by the
Huntington Beach Company. near Lake
Street next to the other project. She is
currently dickering with Huntington
Beach Company officja!s over the proj.
ect~' possibilities. .
Mrs. Holt 's privatr development prOJ·
ect. the hotels. bas become a ho1 politi·
cal issue in this ye11:r's city co u n c i 1
campaign. Several chalt~ngers have
charged Matney with holding "secret''
meetings and not informing the public
about activity downtown.
Mrs . Holt ha ~ given her public backing
of Matney, stating she believe~he ls one
of the few councilmen "'ho really Un•
derstands the needs of downtown prop-
ert.y o"•ners.
"It's taken me the better part of eight
years to get someone in this city to
listen," she says. "We haven't had any
secret meetings, just pre I i m i n a r Y,
meetings ."
She, and Matney both emphasize that
all development plans are still premat ure
and there really aren't many details to Characterized as the Flying Irishman talk about.
for bi~ing Dublin solo, Wrong Way Mrs. Holt has also thrown her su ppor t
Corrigan says his son has rigidly followeQ behind two other incumbents running for
the rules of safe flying. re·election, George McCracken and
The former Santa Ana Resister Dona ld Shipley.
sportswriter would always telephone to "I have nothing aga inst th c
report any change in destination of challengers," she says, "But they don't
estimated return if hf' had filed no flight really understand the needs of the
p!an. downtown."
Airport acquaintances said Corrigan Whether or not the redevelop ment of
and Powell. a friend since boyhood, didn 't downtown remains a political issue. the
plan to land at San Diego. deadline Is rapidly approaching for some
Powell 's father Tom, owner or a Santa type of action. Holt and Terry have been picking up Ana neon sign company. said the young six-month options on property. Terry, men had mentioned wanting to fly to Las Vegas sometime. who has refused to endorse any can-
"They had spoken of it in casual con-didale, says there should be some type of
vcrsation , .. just for something to do," activity by Jun e l .
he said after the fruitless search flight "We are moving ahead ... he said. "And
Thursday. :::.;ity is no longer pushing the parking
A check of McCarran Field in Las Vegas Th k d I and other airports in Nevada failed 10 e major roadbloc to re eve opment,
according to Mrs. Holt, is a few holdout produce any results, according to CAP property owners \.vho won't join a project. officials.
A team of four CAP aircraft hunted un-She-.says that's where the city needs to becme active. Colleen Selanders, leader of a move-til dark Thursday and 10 more took off While Matney says the five.block park-
ment opposed to implementing an all· today, su pplemented by Marine ing project is dead, he says the city could
year calendar at two Ocean View schools, he licopers flying low-level missions. switc h to a redevelopment authority, or a
Councilman Jerry Matney will talk
about the latest activity involving the
ijuntington Beach Top of the Pier plan
tonight at the Lark View School Library.
By BARBARA KREIBICH
OI lht Diiiy ~llol Sl1ff
has denied threatening the school board Chances are that Corrigan and Powell combination of redevelopment and park· When the officers id en t j f ie d wi th recall if they don 't act on a petition stuck to the coastline but aerial tea ms ing authority powers.
themselves, said Purcell, Henderson and she is circulating. were assigned rugged areas of Riverside, "We hope to build an international
Dave Wickersham. ~an of the
After a hectic evening during which l2
persons were arrested and his jacket was
•chewed b:• two large·dogs, Laguna Beach
narcotics detective Neil Purce ll today
speculated:
his woman co mpanion fled to the rear of Mrs. Selanders was quo ted i n San Diego and San Bernardino counties. tourist and cultural center there,''
the house. There the woman, Nancy Tuesday's DAILY PILOT as saying: "We "They're covering all areas between Matney says. ''We're proceeding on it,
~ city's library board, will also explain the
city's current library facilities and
describe the proposed new central
library.
Da venpcrt. 24, of 185 Flower SL, Costa want to get SO percent of the families in here and San Diego and all the coastal but somebody ha's to come up wHh the
Mesa, alleJedly was found att empting to each area (to sign a petition ). If the hills and vall eys," said CAP Maj. Ernest cash."
''Maybe all these stories about how
close we are to legalizing marijuana en·
couraged the folks to celebrate with a
few pot parties . , , "
flush about a pound of marijuana down board won't listen to them. then we'll Johnson, mission coordinator, Where the cash will come from, nobody
the toilet. ha ve to start thinking about getting a Yo:.ing Corrigan recently returned from knows yet, but city officials have made it
Matney and Wickersham are the guest
11peakers at a meeting of the Sol Vista
Home Owners Associau'on. They will
speak at 8 p.m. The meeting is open to
the general public.
Both were booked on suspicion of new school board." a trip to Japan and has been planning a clear the support is now swinging behind
possession of marijuana for sale. Mrs. Selanders today denied saying tour of Eurooe but hadn 't been working private development, ra ther th11n a city
The Wednesday evening forays started
shortly before eight o'clock when
Sergeant Purcell and office r Robert Ro-
maine accompanied two U.S. marshals to
21152 Laguna Canyon Road lo serve a
misdemeanor arrest warrant and en-
countered the first party.
th is. ln the meantim e. • 1 controlled project. Leaving the scene, the officers sniffe d 1-----------------------------------'--'---------lhe familiar aroma of marijuana floating
Open Space Set
Fol Sym,Posium
Tfie \re lrvine program in social
ecology and Irvine Tomorrow have set an
ApriJ 29 symposium on the preservation
of open space in developing communities.
Ray Watson, Irvine Company vice
president, is one of four speakers ex·
peeled to participate. Other s~~Jters in·
elude Robert West, trvioe ,planning com·
missioner: Norm Em.ersoh.-" executive
director of the Joint Legislative Com·
mittee on Open Space and Jim Funk of
the Orange County Planning Department.
The symposium will be held from 1 to S
p.m. in UCI Science Lecture Hall. It is
open to the public.
DAILY PILOT
Thi 0~/'1111 Co.st DAILY PILOT, W1'fl ~kft
It .<omblntd ll'H! N•WS.Prts•, It P!Jbllshtd by
11\t Or1n111 Co.11 PubJlslllJ!ll COl'nNny. S•IH•
r1t1 fl!Jtlont 1r1 PUbU11!ecf, Mond1y tlrrovgl'I
Frld1y,._ for Cost1 MRSI, Ht~ '"<"·
1-iunllng!on 8t1cll/Foun111n' 'V1tlfY, l111un1
8t1c11, l,..il'le/S1ddlt11Nc1t and S.11 Cftml!l'llt/
Sin Ju1n C1pl11nino. A 1ln11!1 reogion1I ..,,,JtM 11 r;11blisllt:d Slhlrdtys 1tld S11rws1y1.
T~t 11~lnct1111 publislllng 11l1nt I• •t :UO We:tt
&It S!rttl, Cos" Mn1, ~8Ufot/'ll•, fl62f,
Robert N. W,,d
PrtsklerU •tWS Publisher
J•ck R:. Curl1y
Vr't Prald1n1 Ind 6-r11 Mlln111tr
Thom•• K11vil Ed!lor
Tholl'ltl A. M11rp~iM
Ml1141tlnll Edrtor C~•rl•t H. Looi R1~h1nl P. N•ll
A11lt11n1 Mlmotll'll Edllon
Terry Covtll1
Wttl O'llf\Oe County Editor
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After some discussion at the door, the
officers entered. Two or the guests
assertedly fled via a window. A search
turned up a quantity of LSD, marijuana
and suspected dangerous drugs and the
live remaining g u es ls were held on
charges of possession of mari juana and
being present where the drug was used.
They were Arnold Thoma s Canup, 29,
of the address; Larry Warren Spousta, J8,
of 24932 Mosquero Lane. Mission Viejo:
Marriann Simmons, 27, of the Canyon ad·
dress: Carolyn Moody Hedges, 32 of 606
Hamilton St., Costa Mesa, and a 17-year·
old boy.
After booking the first group, Purcell
and detective Gene Brooks accompanied
tl1e marshals to 567 Catalina St. to serve
a traffic warrant on Gary Wayne
Henderson, 26, of that address.
Huntin gton Man
Succumbs After
Traf fie Crash
A 59-ye:ar-old Huntington Beach man,
critically injured in a Monday night
multiple car crash. died Wednesday even-
ing at Pacifica Hospital.
Spokesmen for the county corone r's of.
lice said Harris Rogers. 17121 Courtney
Lane , died from multiple internal injuries
at 5:30 p.m .
Harris' \vife , Naydne, 50, and Delano
Mark Self, 37. who also were Injured in
the accident are still in satisfactory con.
dition at Pacifica.
Rogers and Self were injured wh ile
lrying to put gas into a car after it had
stalled on Adams Avenue, just east of
Beach Boulevard.
Another car driven by Jennifer Lynn
Gallehue, of Foun tain Valley, had stopped
to o~:-them assistance when both cars
were struck from behind by a vehicle
driven by Pilar Ortiz Di az of Huntlngotn
Beach.
Adult Surf Progran1
Set in Huntington
from an adjacent dwelling at 577 1/i Goff
St. and stopped to question a man emerg·
ing from the yard.
Their sus picions were further aroused
.they said, when the man fled ·b8ck toward
the house yelling warnings of "The narcs
are here!"
The dogs -tw o large German
shepherds -entered the picture when
the officers followed th eir quarry into the
yard.
Purcell and Marsha] Dick Ringler losl
hunks or their jackets while attempting to
fend off the animals wit)\ dog !"epellent.
"It's the same kin'd issued to
mailmen ," Purcell explained. "Mace
doesn 't work on dogs -it just makes
them mad ."
The officers forced open a door, en·
tered the house and again heard the
familia r sound of a flushing toilet.
Breaking down a second door into
a bathroom, they found a repetition of the
earlier scene and arrested Richard
D'Arnico, 21 , on suspicion of destruction
of evidence.
His brother. Nick Charles D'Amico, 26,
who had called the warning, was booked
on a charge of interfering with an officer,
and both were charged with possession of
mari juaria. The brothers said they live in
Orange.
From Pagel
FUNDS ...
posed to "create the environment" to en-
courage children to learn at their own
rates.
Riles said another way schools and
district boardS Can add more flexibility to
their programs is to ''look into having
high school representation on the boards''
because those students ''can present a
point of view we ought to kr.ow about.''
He said that Tvlolly Magee. a student at
Los Alamitos High School in Seal Beach
and the student representative to the
st3te board, has given "valuable input"
to his department.
He called on all school boards to have
their own self-evaluation and planning
units and t(I improve their own efficiency.
"It's easy to paint the fin ger a t some-
one else," he said, adding that when
he took offlce there was a high number ()f
districts that never received textbooks on
time.
"I told the 11tAff to go to work on it and
last !all all lhe textbooks In all dlstrlel'
wert delivered on time for the first time
since 1914," he said.
Last Rites Slated Cll!Yrltflt. "13. Or•IWI CMst 1'11tirt111r,,, cwno.11r. flfo MW• 11or1t1, nri.rt1r111on-. .91111~1 mefttr «' ld~wt~ti Mrtln l'l'ltY k ~ Wfltlol.lt &CICkl ,.., fnilllon ., CllJl'ffOPlt ......
Jtt'tlW <.Int ,..'"9 ,.,. •t .........., l•cll
W C.ll Miu Ctlf~ll. $1111Kt1ttl0n
W <"""1 ,,,IS;-""'°"ltllyl l19' !!Nill If.IS ...-ir1 mu1111r oa11r111-. WJ ll'IOll111ty,
The Hunllngton Beach Y M C A will
lauc:h an adult surfing program Satur·
day momlng on I he City beach.
Adult.t; who want to Jeatn surfing will
be taught by competitive ~urflng cham-
pions eacb S3turday morning, using
1pecially d.,igned YMCA surlboar<ls.
For detalls on the adult surfing cla,sses,
phone the YMCA al 8l1·9622.
BEVERLY HILLS (UPI) -Memorial
services' will be conducted Friday for ae·
tress Martiyn Maxwell wbo wu found
dead In her home Monday ol an apparent
heart attack.
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California Severe • Ill
SACRAMENTO I UPI I -A blue-ribbon
&ludy council has warned that Califor'nia
may not be "capable of supporting
tolerable human life wjthin several more
decades'' unless the stale adopts a long·
term environmental protection strategy.
In its se<.'Ond report to Gov. Ronald
Reagan and the Legislature, the Environ·
mental Quality Study Council said
Wednesday that California is in "severe
danger" o! being destroyed as a place to
live.
"It is even questionable whether major
Actor Bares
His A ll for
Women's Mag
NEW YORK (APJ -Burt Reynolds i•
no longer just another pretty face .
The brawny actor is Cosmopolitan
magazine's first male nude, unblushingly
sprawled out in the centerfold of the
April issue, an unadorned Adam for ogl·
in,iz by a readership of Eves.
Wearing only a grin, Reyno I d s
preserves the last modicum of modesty
by a discreetly placed arm in his· lap.
Reynolds. 36-year-old television and
movie actor. is appearing on the stage in
Chicago in •·Tue Rainmaker." He's just
completed filming "Deliverance" and
starts "Shamus" in New York in April.
Why did he do it?
The naked -truth , he said, is ''I thought
it was good for a laugh. And it's
5omething unpredictable, something I
like to be. It was intended as a spoof
take-off on Playboy.
"J can't believe chicks are turned on by
it. They can see more in a Sears &
Roebuck catalogue.
"When I list the three mosl unimportant
events in my life, this will be ooe of
them . If anytx>dy is shocked by it, they've
been living in a cave the last 20 years. It
was fun and a laugh. It's all co mpletely
out of proportion ; a lot of people don't
realize the humor in it."
What effect does he think the exposure
will have'!
.. No problems, professionally. It's nol
going to affect me. They asked me
because I'm hot right now.
.. Of course, I'm going to have to take
some flak. Guys are going lo whistle at
me -unless they·re about my size. But
if you 're going to do something crazy, you
got lo be prepared to take the con·
sequences.''
* * * Magazine Stan,d
Has Big Rush
On New Nudie
COLUMBIA, S.C. {UPI) -It wasn't
the usual sort of crowd that lines up for a
look at a nude centerfold in a magazine.
There were women of all ages crowded
into a small area of Bud and Merle Hul-
to 's newsstand Wednesday afternoon, all
trying to get a look at a fold-out picture
of a naked actor in the latest issue of
"Cosmopolitan" magazine .
The centerfold showed muscular Burt
Reynolds wearing only a smile and puf·
fing on a cigar with an arm modestly
placed on his lap.
"You could hardly move in here for a
few minutes when the magazine came in
and the wo men found out," said Hutto.
The newsstand was virtually sold out of
copies of the magazine within an hour
after they went on sale.
"We've had people coming in here ask-
ing about this for weeks," Jiutto said,
mentioning that many were older women.
portions of the state will be e11pable of
supporting tolerable human life within
sevtral mort decades," the study liaid.
The 17-member council. appoi.nted by
Reagan and the Legislature in 1968 to
study the state's environn1ental prob-
lems, submitted> 43 recommendalions on
governmental organization , population.
air quality, land transportation 1tnd
energy use.
The council members urged both
Reagan and lawmakers to "act this year
and to act decisively.
WOW Session
"Only the boldest and most imaginative
measures. implemented now, can prevent
the ult imate deterioration of the en-
vironmtnt of thls state." they said.
The couocll, submitted its first report
last year with a study on governmental
organization concerning en\•ironmenlal
problems.
After a series of public hearings. coun·
ell meetings and research, the panel sa id
its second effort revealed "an extren1ely
pesslmi~tic picture about California's en·
vironmental ills."
The council said some progress was
Kicking off a national \Vomen on \Vheels campaign, designed to aid
females in their knowledge of cars and car troubles and repairs, a
Grosse Pointe \Voods, Mich ., auto dealer offered enticement in the
form of coffee, can dles and cookies, The program consists of four
sessions and is run by Chrysler Corp. dealerships.
Pastor Says Girl, 10,
Has Stigmata Bleeding
OAKLAND (U Pl) - A Baptist pastor
says a pretty little JO-year-old member or
his congregation suffers from stigmata.
but doctors at Children's Hospital aren·t
so sure.
Stigmatization is the appearance on a
living person of the final wounds of Christ
on the Cross.
Cloretta Robertson apparenlly bleeds
-leaving no wound -from both palms,
both insteps·and the right side.
The Rev. L. L. Hester said Wednesday
Clorett.a started bleeding from the palm
or one hand a week ago wllile at Santa Fe
~hool. He said. the .bleeding has occurred
many times since the n and blood has ap-
pesred on the girl's feet and side.
Susan Carlson, the nurse at Cloretta's
school, saw the bleeding for the first time
nine days ago.
"Her palms were bleeding when she
came in," Mrs. Carlson said . "There isn't
any evidence of a wound. It was fresh
blood. I wiped It off and then after awhile
, .. it would appear again."
Mrs. Carlson said there "were no
puncture wounds. 1 looked with a magni·
lying glass."
But a hematologist at Children's
Hospital said she watched the girl
through a one-way mirror for two hours
Monday night and said "nothing hap-
pened in the observation."
But, he said , she retumed from IO
minutes in the ladies room with dried
blood on her lower righl chest.
"However.'' he said , "there was a
relatively excoriated area on the front of
her tongue -reactive and red -which
could be sign of bleeding there."
Other doctors said more tests would be
needed before they could make any com-
ments.
Cloretta, a religious little black girl ,
says shyly "it happens.
"I just sort of comes on . 1 don 't know
before. It doesn't hurt. I just look down
and it's there. I don 't know what it is."
Awaiting IJ1acle Len
One or Frazier's seven wives pulls guard duty as
the venerable "father of the year" (be hu sired
34 cubs in the past year at an age comparable lo
75 years In human 12el catches up on his rest at
Lion Country Safari in Laguna Hills. Readers of
Uncle Len's column whith appears Saturdays in the
•
DAILY PILOT have been invited to visit Lion Coun·
try free nexl Monday and Tuesday. Free admission
will be granted for two children per each paying
adult. Klds mu st brin~ along an Easter card for
Frazier which \hey deS1gn or make by themselves.
There will be prizes for the cards.
. '
Danger,
made last year ln certain areas of pollu·
tlon control but that a statewide
''cohesive s~" to maintain en-
vironmental ~uality still is needed.
The panel was particularly critical of
th e de feat last year of a bill or
Assembl yman Edwin L. Z'berg {0-
Sa cramento l, that would have created a
state "superagency" to deal with pollu·
lion problems.
Jn regard to population. the roun('il
sa id population distribution still is
urgently needed, ''but It will no longer
°""'"'"· Marth 23, 1972
Panel
suffice lo design such policies vdth the
state. The problem Is n1tional in scale ."
II called for cooperation between tbe
slates and the federal governmtnt to
regulate urban gro\\'th and population in·
nux ln certain area!. '
The council sa id the report is an. at·
tempi In "develop a much-needed. Jong·
ter mstrategy'' for protecting the en·
vlronmenl .
specification recommendations In·
eluded:
-Creation of a state environmental
quality board and eig.ht corresponding
H DAILY PILOT :J
Warns
regional board! to control air, water and'
land use.
-Adoption of a conservation and
development plan to specifically define
the state's environmental goals and
policy.
-State efforts for massive funding and
organizing of balanced lr1nsportaton
systen1s. '
-Creation of an energy conservation
and power plant si ting commission to
regulate energy use and power plant con·
struction.
Bus Service Studied
County Transit A lternati·ves Forecast
By JACK BROBACK
01 tll• 01Uy l'llel St1tf
Bus service in Orange County cities
and some intercity service with 1 basic
fare of 25 cents was forecast Wednesday
to the Orange County Transit District
board members.
No time was given for initiation or the
first services but it was estimated that
some lines could be in operation within
two to three years depending upon
receipt of federal financial aid.
Transit district directors meeting in a
special session heard a report on their
Special BuS Needs study by consultant
Marty &uman of Allen Voorhees Inc. of
Virginia.
Bouman in his interim report offered
four alternatives but recommended the
third one. Alternative three would pro-
vide for a series of intra-community Jines
to serve activity centers on a 30-minute
weekday sc hedule. Activity centers are
defined as schools, shopping centers and
such gathering places.
Schedules would be coordinated and
passengers could transfer .to ·other routes
without paying an additional fare , ac·
cording to Bouman's plans.
In addition , intra-community lines
would provide some service into other ac·
tivity centers depending upon the de-
mand. He said there might be three or
four trips dail y from one community to
another.
Under alternative three all existing
pri vate and public bus lines in the county,
17 in number would be evaluated and ma·
jor modification to existing routes made
lo better serve potential users, Bouman
added.
The transit district board will give
further consideration to the f o u r
alternatives at their regular April 3
session.
If they adopt one of the proposals at
that time, the consultant will proceed
with a d~tailed study incl uding costs.
routes, schedu les, transfer points and a
survey of potential users.
'J;he consultant stressed that a strong
promotional program was important to
attract users regardless of what plan wa.!
adoj>led .
He also suggested that service should
be geare.<4 primar.ily for the poor,
unemployed, handiccipped , aged, youths
and students.
All alternatives presented by Bouman
are projected on a county population of
two million by 1980. He cautioned that it
might be six to elght years l>ef<n a total
bus syste m could be achieved. He 11aid
that the first lines could be inaugurated
·within two to lhr~ years.
President Pushes Welfare
Reform Plan on Congress
""WASHING.TON /UPI \ -President
Nixon urged Congress toda y to approve
his welfare reform plan and other
measures designed to increase the in-
come of older Americans and allov.· them
to grOw old "with grace and pride and
. dignity."
There were few new programs outlined
in Nixon 's special message on aging, but
he renewed his request for passage of a
long list of plans pending before the
lawmakers.
Flames Damage
Spurgeon Home
Santa Ana firemen said to d a y
transient s may be responsible for the fire
that caused heavy damage to the historic
Spurgeon home Wednesday night.
The structure at 1617 N. Main St. was
built in 1910. It was the home of the late
William H. Spurgeon Jr., son of the
founder of Santa Ana. He and his wife.
Bee Dee, occupied the home from 1910
until their deaths, his in 1970 at the age of
86 and hers the ft?llowing year.
Firemen said !he old home had been
unoccupied since Mrs. Spurgeon's death.
William H. Spurgeon Ill, a nationall y
known Boy Scout leader and onetime
Irvine Company vice president. also died
in 1970, less than th ree months after his
rather.
Nixon de voted much of the 24-page
report to a renewed plea for his massive
welfare reform plan. which includes a 5
percent boost in Social S e c u r i t y
payments, elimination of the monthly
premium Medicare recipients must pay
for coverage of out-of-hospital doctor
bills. a proposal to guarantee automatic
cost-of-living increases In Social Security
and 8n increase from SI .680 to $2,000 in
the annual income a recipient may earn
without losing benefits .
In addition. Nixon said he soon would
send Congress legislation Increasing the
benefits for retiree! military personnel by
keying payments to the higher wage
scales for active personnel In effect Jan.
I. 1971.
As he did in his State of the Union
message in January, Nixon promised to
develop new ways of paying for the
public schools to relieve the burden on
the property taxpayer.
Although it is widely Known the ad·
ministration is seriously considering a
value-added tax -a form of national
sales tax -as an alternative to property
taxes. Nixon offered no hints of the
specific program he would propoae.
The President said two-thirds of all the
elderly own their own homes and are re-
quired to pay increasing property taxes
at a time when their incomes are low.
"The best way to help people in ~ It
not by having government provld~ them
with a vast array of I burei ucratic
services but by giving them money sd
that they can secure needed services lot
themselves," Nixon said.
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.._ .,_.,_ lfl.ft 1 ''"' c..._ s3 49 .....,., T• s..cAI 0. HM •
-j O~ILY PILOT
with
Tom
.urphine
SA vs. Irvine: •
Chapter Eight
UPCOAST, DOWNCOAST: 1 announce
Jith a measure of pride that another
ltarless prediction of this corner has just
<;ime to pass. The city of Santa Ana has
tJJed in an effort lo dissol ve the City of
I(vine.
J• Well. I'll have to admit that 1t didn't
tlke the world's greatest crys tal ball to
tiring that one into advance focus.
!TI1is must be eit her the eighth or ninth
tim e that the county seat munici pality oas fl ung itself before the ba r of justice
iii an effort to prove that Irvine really
fn 't there.
•.AFTER EACH previous effo rt. the San· t8 Ana municipal people have been
'hipped before ttha t particulay bar 10
tucb an extent Uhal they probably
needed to fi nd solace and comfort at
lome other kind of bar. r Anyway, it's nice to know Santa Ana is
~ck in legal form. ( ' * . Whil!!: the county seat city ma y not
believe Irvine is real, it developed thiR
peek t~at the Cjty of Stanton believes it.
The only problem is that certain Stanton ~pie are unhappy with Irvine being
jdvertised on large billboards in their
~mrnunity. The big placards suggest, ~Live in Irvine." ~ Some of the Stanton objectors believe
that should give them the right to post
Similar billboards in Irvine that urge,
:'Live in Stanton."
• ALL OF THIS became particularly
irksome to the Irvine ·city Council the
9.ther night because. for one thing, they
illidn't put up th~ Irvine sign. It belongs to
lbe Irvine Company. which runs the
lrvine Ranch. which likes to adverlise
that it's a nice place to live. The Irvine
tl.anch is larger than Irvine city . ,But it's ~I called Irvine, and tha t's why the
Irvine council figured it was wrong for
6tanton people to blame the wrong Irvine
Jor the billboard. l The Irvine council agreed that it was a
fidiculous flap and councilmen shouldn't t>e spending their good time discussing it.
• The decision not to discuss it took about ~minutes.
• Ah, government.
t * ! Meanwhile. the cities of Costa Mesa
'nd Seal Beach have found something to
flap at county government about in that
Ibey fear the county is ~elping let their
tities go to the dogs. J BOTH COMMUNITIES are displeased
Pith the quantity and quality of
~ogcatcher services being provided
hrough the Animal Field Seryices of the
range County Health Department.
Citizens in both Q:ista Mesa and Seal
J!;each have charged that by the time the
~ounty dogcatcher has responded to a
~, the offending stray canine has had
e not only kl empty the garb.age can,
carry it off as well.
• ONE COSTA M E S A official was
prompted to suggest it has been so long
1ince he 's seen a dogcatcher around that
he wouldn't even recognize the truck.
: Well, t.hat might \\'Ork to rea l ad·
~antage if the county people can be prod-
ded into accelerating service to the lwo
cities in Lhe near future.
The dogs, long left to the ir own devices,
won't recognize the catcher 's truck
either.
Tiny Quake Rattles
San Bernardino Area
-RIVERSIDE (UPI ) -Residents in the
'Riverside-San Bernardino area felt a ~light earthquake measuring 2.4 on the
:Richter sca le.
: Seismologists at Gal Tech said \\led-
)lesday's temblor was centered north of
:X.Oma Linda on, the San Jacinto faul t. No
,'.damage was reported.
Women's Rights Bill Clears
WASHINGTON (Ul'li -A proposed
constitutional ameodment guaranteeln&
women equal rights with men passed
Congress and bas been quickly ratified by
Hawaii. Its sponsors predicted it would
wJn final approval "with dispatch."
Hawaii's legislatu re ra tified the pro-
posed 27th amendment to the U.S.
Constitution less tha n two hours after the
Senate pa11sed the propoi;ed amendment
84 to 8, ending a congressional campa ign
by feminists that had a:panntd almost
half a century.
The House earlier approved the pro-
posal J54 to 23.
Sen. Birch Bayb (D-lnd. !, who ltd the
fl&hl tor the amend ment In the Senate,
said there would be a "scramble .. by the
states to ratify tht' amendment. He
predicted fin11l ratification would come
•·wit h dispatch ... ln a year or two,"
Three.fourths - 38 -of the 5tales
must ra tify the proposal before it can be
added to the Constitution.
The women 's righ ts amendment is the
first in volving women approved by
Congress since 1920 when the 19th
amendment, giving women the right to
vote. was 3pproved .
It reads;
"Equ111lty or rights under the law shall
not be denied or abridged by the United
States or by any state on accoun t of seir.
The Congress shall have the power to e.n·
force, by appropriate legislation, the pro-
visions of this articlt. This _a1nendment
shaU take effett l"'O years alter th e date
of ratification ."
The •louse had approved the equal
rights arnendment each of the past two
years but Its passage by the Senate had
heen almost single·handedly blocked by
Sen . Sam J. Ervin f.0.N.C. ). who is con·
sldered the Senate's chief authority on
constitutional Ja1v.
Jn a voi"e breaking with emotion.
Ervin argued Wednesday that the amend·
ment would "rePfAI the hand iwork of
God," who had created men and women
differently. Ervin predic ted it would
destroy constitu tional government by ef·
fcctively outlawing legis lation t h a t
retognized those diffe rences.
But nine weakening amendments of-
fered by Ervin were defeat ed by the
Sena te.
f inal approval of the amendment by
the states is expected to be followed by a
series of court suits that will further
define its effects .
Pay Unit Fight Escalates
quit• .1•01t
Najeeb Halaby has resigned as
board chairman and chief
executive officer of Pan
American World Airways only
hours after the airline an·
nounced its losses in February
totaled $10,859,000.
Egypt Holds Out
For MIG23, Top
Russian Plane
BEIRUT (AP) -The Soviet Union has
agreed to set up a fa ctory in Egypt to
manufacture MIG21 fighter planes, but
War Minister Mohammed Sadek is press-
ing for a MJG23 plant, the independl!:nt
Beirut newspaper An Nahar repo rted to-
day.
It &aid agreement to build the MIG21
tactery was reached during President
Anwar Sadat's vis it to Moscow Jast
month.
The MJG21 now forms the backbone o(
Egypt 's air force but the MIG23 is the
most advanced plane 'in the Soviet
&rsenal.
The MIG23 is a slngle-seat interceptor
with an extremely high-altitude flying
capability and a top speed of about 2,100
miles per hour. ..
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
O'livery of the Daily Pilot
rs guarantted
MOn(l1y..Frldey: t1 you <10 !'IOI have your
riaper by .5:30 o.m., c111 Ind vour copy will
ot brouo~r la vou. Calli •rt !•~tn unfit
1:JO (I.IT\.
S11urd1y 11'1d Surtd1y: II you (IO "°' ret f lwt
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vou. C1ll1 '" •ken until ID 1.m.
Mo1t Or1n111 County '*'rt11 •••. , . , . ~!·4l21
Nortl!w1st f.l uMln;l'!:tr. l!Hch
11\d WHIM1ln11er ..• • ,. ..... S<lf.020
Sin Cl1m1111e, C1ois!r1no eeeeli,
Sin Jwn C111lstrtn11, o.tn1 l'olnl,
Administration, Labor Cliiefs Trade Angry Blasts
WASHI NGTON IAP ) -An exchange or
bitter charges between the White House
and three resigning AFL-CIO membe rs of·
President Nixon 's Pa y Board appears to
ha\'e th rust the admini stration 's wage·
price contr ols In to the political arena as a
ma jor elec tion issue.
"It ls the President 's vie w tha t a rew
labor leaders representing a small
perc entage of the 80 mill ion wa ge·ea rners
Jn 1hls country will not be allowed fo
sabotage the fight against innation and
the fight against higher prices," said
White House Press Secretary Ronald L.
Ziegler.
"In the guise of an anti·i nflation policy,
the American people are being gouged at
the supermarket and squeezed in the
paycheck," said AFL-CIO President
George Meany.
Meany, President L W. Abel of t.he
AFL·CIO United Steelworkers and Presi·
dent Floyd Smith of the AFL·CIO
International Association of Machinists
&tarted the fight by quitting the Pay
&ard in a body with the accusation tha t
Nixon 's controls are loaded in fa vor or
big business and agains t workers &nd
unions.
Meany said politics pla yed no part in
the decis ion by the executive council of
the 13.6-million-member labo r federatio n
to pull its representatives off the Pay
Board.
But the AFL·CIO's political stral.egisls
have been gearing up for months for an
expected all -ou t effort to defeat Nixon in
his re·election bid next No vember.
The unionists say they exg_ect Ni xon·s
economic record to be the No. I issue in
the campaign.
The AFI..,.CIO resignations left only lwo
labor representitive5 on the 15-member
board, Teamsters Presid ent Frank E.
Fitzsimmons who said he will continue
serving on the board and United Auto
Workers President Leonard Woodcock
Senate Weighing
Foreign Affairs
Meddling Probe
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -A Senate
committee tentatively has decided on a
broad study of corporate 'meddling in
foreign affa irs after the releai;e of
documents allegedl y chroni cling m ·s ef·
forts to stop Marxist Salvatore Allende
from becoming president of Chile.
The action came af ter columnist Jack
Anderson released an 82·page shear of in-
ternal memoranda attributed to the
International Telephone and Telegraph
Corp. concerning !he company·s activities
in Chile in the fall of 1970 when Allende
came to power.
The documents included reports of JIT
contacts with the Central Intelligence
Agency. the . State Department and
Chile's mi.lita ry leaders. Several of them
spoke of a CIA·backed effort in\'olvi ng
lTf to bring on the economic colla pse of
Chile and pave the way for a military
seizure before Allende could take over.
Sen. J. William Fulbright (D·Ark . ), the
Foreign Relations chairman, said the
committee generally agreed dur ing a 90
minute session to "study" the overall role
of i:nulti·national corporations on foreign
poh_cr. But the committee put off a
decis ion whether to subpoena witnesses
from the ITT 1111d assemble a staff to
conduct a far·reaching investigation.
who withheld announcing any decision.
\Voodcock is beli eved reluctant to quit the
hoard on the theory that he can bett er
protect his union's co ntra cts ' by re·
maining.
"At this point we are not sure how we
\\•ill proceed," Ziegler said in discussing
the future of the Pa y Board , but he added
it would not be disbanded .
"The Presi dent will not ~ allow anv
leader of labor or any member Of
ma nage ment - no matter how powerful
-lo put themselves above the best in·
terests of the American people,'' he ad·
Bases Pou1aded
ded.
"Because they didn't get their way,
they decided to Walk aw.1y from the prob-
lem ," Ziegler said of the AFL-ctO
leaders.
"There is one thing you can be sure of:
the stabilization program will continue,"
he said. "You can be sure wage and price
controls will continue."
Backed by a unanimous vote of the 28
members of his executive council who at-
tended Wednesday's meeting. Meany de-
nounced Nixon's controls. Seven council
members were absent.
Viet, Cambodian Forces
Reel Under Big Attacks
SAIGON (UPI) -Communist forces
carried out devasta ting .at ta cks today ln
South Vietnam and Cambodia and
brou ght up more tank s for thei r assault
on the threate ned Central Inte{ligence
Agency (CIA) base of Long Cheng in
Laos.
The worst damage was infl icted at Tay
Ninh, 55 miles northwest of S<1igon. the
staging b<1se for the South Vi etnan1esc in·
cursions into Ca mbodia. A rocket and
rn ortar attack there destroyed 1.5 mill ion
ga llons o( fuel -enough to fl y almost
7,000 helicopter missions.
Viet Cong forces also ove rran a hea\'ily
defended village in the f\.1ekong Del la 45
miles south of Salgon. kil ling 28 Solith
Vietna me se and wounding 29. The village
was True Giang where the guerrillas hit
Wlth a barrage of rocket grena des and
automa tic rlflc fire and then slashed into
!he town, destroying a police compound
and a housi ng complex.
In Cambodia guerrilla frogmen sank a
petroleum tanker and damaged a
freighter at the Phnom Penh docks, cut
t1vo crucial highways leading to Phnom
Penh and attacked planes at Phnom
Penh's Poc hen tong Airport, causing
South Vietnam to halt flights there.
Another ,communist band, tossing
grenades and firing rifles, stormed a
heavily defended Soutti Vietnamese tank
base on Highway 3 in southern Cambodia.
75 miles below Phnom Penh sending
shrapnel and rocket grenades ripping
through some of the two dozen tanks
there and kill ing 13 government soldiers.
The defenders killed eight Communists .
There was a series of cla shes within a
20 mile radius of Phnom Pe11h, indicating
the Communist threat to the city still ex·
isled.
Mil it ary spokesman also reported
mass ive Communist artillery and mortar
barrages at government base s and camps
just below the Demilitarized Zone (DMZ )
where a total of 261 rounds hit bases
there and one 15 miles south of Hue.
Dispatches from Vientiane, the ad-
ministrative capital of Laos, reported the
situation around Long Cheng 80 milell to
the north as "fluid," which meant both
sides were gi\'ing and tak ing ground.
Laot ian forces briefly recaptured a
helicopter pad on Skyline Ridge overlook·
ing Long Cheng but lost it in heavy
fighting. Military sources said three
Communist tanks were reported six miles
from Long Cheng moving toward the
base.
* * * * * U.S. Calls Off Talks,
Cites Reds' POW Stand
PARTS (AP !-The United Sta tes ca!!ed
off next week's session of the Vietnam
peace tal ks toda y because of the lack or
progress on the prisoner of war issue.
U.S. Am bassador William J. Porter
also appeared to rule out regular weekly
meet ings in the future.
"A!l for meeting in the weeks that
follow," he continued, "we believe it
would be preferable to await some sign
from you that you are disposed to engage
in meaningful exchanges on the v11rious
po ints raised in your and our proposals."
The thrust of Porter's statement '
seemed to be that henceforth it would be
up to the Communists to coovince the
United States and South Vietnam that
they are wi!Hng to come to grips with the
prisoner question and other military and
Political issues holding up a war settle-ment.
Senate
But It is expected to In validate 1uch
laws as those imposing 11:reater restr ic-
tions on women's rights to buy or sell
property or to <.'Onduct a business, and
Jaws setting di!feren.t ages at which men
and women attain legal majority or have
the rig ht to n1<uTy or beCQme el!gible for
tax·supported retirement pl11ns.
It also is expected to outlaw different
ad mission standards for v•omcn in tax-
suppOrted educational in~titutions a~d
different facilities and curricul11 in publ ic
sc hools. It probably "'ill cha11ge laws
gove rn ing alimony and chlld custody and
military ser\'lce.
'Easy Riefer'
Georgia Lt. Gov. Lester Mad·
dox arrives at state capital
after fast spin on sporty motor·
cycle. lie rode behind stunt
man this time around , but said
he would ride cycle on own
in near future.
'Partying' Envoy
Won't Take Part
In China Talks
WASHINGTON (APl U.S.
Ambassador to France Arthur K. WaLc;on
\\'ill not be handling subslanti ve U.S .~
Chinese negotiations in Paris, according
to Sen. J. V..'. Fulbright who says he was
told this by Secretary of State William S.
Rog ers.
The Arkan sas Democrat told newsmen
Wednesday Rogers told him at a closed
sess ion of the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee tha t people "much more ex-
perienced in China relation5" would be
handling the talks. F'ulbrlght heads the
committee.
Jn announcing the talks arter President
Nixon's trip to Peking, the White House
said "primary purpose of this channel''
would be to handle travel and trade mat·
ters and that Watson and Mainland
China 's amabssador to France, Huang
Chen . "will meet whene ver there is
significant businl!:ss to be conducted."
Fulbright said Rogers told him that
"the ambassador (Watson ) was never ln·
tended to be the negotiator."
Fulhright also said Rogers has prom·
ised his committee a report on an in·
cident appearing in a recent column by
Jack Anderson in which Anderson said
Watson was drunk and became abusive to
stewardesses on a Paris·to-Washington
flight three weeks ago. Fulbright said
ROgers told him the incident was greatly
exaggerated.
Winter Grips Northeast
"As you kno1v," Po rter told the Com-
munist delegation at the session toda y,
''President Nixon . , . has declared next
v.'eek as a \veek of nationa l concern for
our men held prisoner hy you and your
associates. It "'·ould be a mockery of ou r
conce rn for the m to sit in this roo m \\'if h
yo u and lis ten to more of your blackma il
and distortion to the effect that the pris-
oner of war iss ue is an "imaginary prob-
lem.' Therefore our side does not agree
to a meeting next week.
•·Let me emphasize that these ar·
rangements for further meetings are In-
tended to preserve the utility of this
forum should there be a corresponding
desire on your part to take it aerioua:ly "
Porter deClared. '
''We prefer that a settlement be
reached th rough discussions with your
side : and our action today refl!Cts our
disappointment that ovtr these several
years your side has chosen not to utilize
the forum establlshed in P1rl1 for this
very purPose."
Fulbright said Rogers believes ''that
whatever happened was very Un·
fortunate. but was not a pattern of con·
duct " by Watson. Fulbright said Rogers
has "very great regard for him (Watson)
and, assuming the facts to be reasonably
accurate, it was an ·unfortuns.te act." On
March 16, arter Anderson's column, the
State Department reiterated its con-
fid ence in Watson.
Sen. Frank Church (0.Idaho) called tor
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Kl<l11t1p l'lcrlm
President of the r'iat Aulo·
mobiJ~ Co. in Buenos Al res
says he is willing to negoti ate
with leflist kid na per• of Fial
executive Oberdan Sallus tro
(shown in iindaled .photo).
Sall us tro was seized Tuesday.
a ~ommittee inquiry, saying he Is con·
cerned about the effect of the purported
incident on the U.S. negotiations with
mainland ChinA. Watton has conducted
preliminary talks for the United States.'
•Legend!' Dies
Ma.ster Drug Expert Takes Life
MARSEILLE (AP) -Monoieur Jo, the legendary heroin chemist wh.,.
arrest last week reportedly save him from an Wlderworld death, has been
found dead in his cell.
Authorities said Joseph Cesari, 54, hanged himHll Wednesday.
Cesari -once described by a U.S. narcotics agent at "the finest of the old
hands " -war caught Jaat Thursday Jn his secret laboratory with $25 million
worth of drugs.
Reports circulating then said he was marked for dca1h 1by gangsters who
thought he turned in two local drug dea lers he considered to be annoying com-petitors.
Authorltlt!s said the 265 pounds of heroin seiitd In Lhe raid fln the Villa Su·
zanne In Aubagne., a Marseille suburb. was ready for smuggling Into the United
St8tes. Police also round hu&e amoUtita of cliemicals used to pu rity heroin base.
Cesari had st:niid 1Jx years In prison aner be in1 arrested In 1964 wHh nearly
as much heroin. ,
"It's• trogedy," be told the polic~ who cauthl him 1 .. t week.
''I was going'to cloH down~ lab a~d rt!lre to (he country."
)
f 7
t
I
>
-. •
'
Orange Coast
N.l'. St ocks
.
VOL 65, NO. 83, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1972 N TEN CENTS
Candidate Pushes for Study of Police Copters
All but one city council candidate gave
the Ne~ police helicopters a
ringing endorsement before the Newport
Heights Homeowners' A s s o c i a t i o n
Wednesday night.
While several candid~tes urged study
of a coun ty network of patrol aircraft,
only Fifth District hopeful Paul H.
RyckoU called ''for a hard·nosed trial
period" for the program that has been
operating for a year and a half.
"1be cost needs analysis compared to
the results," Ryckoff said, asking, "can
the reduction In crime be attributed to
the helicopters." ·
Three candidates, Mayor Ed Hirth.
whose seat Ryckoff want s; Donald fl.icln·
nis, who's running unopposed in th e Se-
cond District and P. O. "Dee" Cook, a
Seventh District candidate, all asserted
that crime is down because of them .
Cook 's opponent, Jonas "John" Store,
endorsed the program, too, telling a story
•• • • l
~
about a lime he called at 2 a.m. to com·
plain about hovering helicopters to find
out they were apprehending a burglar
three blocks away .
Harvey 0 . Pease, who also wants
Hirth's seat, supported the program, but
urged acti ve efforts for regionallzed use.
saying that "at least the coastal cities"
sh 'luld get together.
He also called on use of the aircraft on-
ly in emergencies and not for routine
patrol.
Food
Al. six candidates pledged to do what
they can to cut down the traffic and noise
from Orange County Airport and Cook , a
former city councilman, said tbere might
not be a problem now if it hadn't been for
former mayor Paul liruber.
.iThe only route we can go now 'is to
keep pressuring the supervisors," Cook
said. "The error was made several years
ago, back in 1966, when I couldn't get the
mayor to go before the supervisors with a
resolution calling for lht airport to be re--
tained for .private use."
• Cook said as a result the county took
federal aid and "from then on, the
federal government wrote the ticket"
allcwing expJnsM>n of commercial use .
Hirfh . callln~ the airport "the greatest
threat to our city," also promised to keep
after the board pf supervisors.
Pease said the city will have lo
pressure Congress to get something done .
Store suggested lengthening the runway
400 feel so planes could lake off earlier
and get to a higher point before reaching
homes. He said this y,·ould not permit
larger aircrart because the runway Is not
strong enough to take bigger planes.
Cook also told the 125 residents at the
meeting that he y,·ould oppo1e any high
rise beJoy,· the bluffs on the inland side ol
Pacific Coast llighway through Mariners
1'1ile.
Prices Skyrocket
Cost of U.S. Groceries Highest in 14 Years
PIONEER AVIATOR'S SON MISS ING ON COUNTY FLIGHT
Roy Co rrig1n, 22, Shown With F1mous Did 'Wrong W1y'
'-
Flier Corrigan's Son
Missing on Plnne Trip
By ARTIIUR R. VINSEL
Of lllt .,.Uy l'lltt Steff
Sky searchers were crisscrossing the
Southland today for any trace of a plane
piloted by the sportswriter son of Santa
Ana's famed aviator Douglas 'j Wrong
Way" Corrigan.
He and a companion from Laguna
Beach left Orange County Airport Tues.-
day on a short, sightseeing flight to San
Diego but failed to make a 4 p.m. return
scheduled.
• Roy Corrigan. 22. of 2828 N. Flower St.,
Is the youngest son of the man \•:ho
delighted the world in 1938 by taking off
from New York for Long Beach and lan-
ding two days later in Dublin, Ireland .
Ironically, Wrong Way Corrigan's
... original West Coast destination 34 years
ago is today a search base for his miss·
tng son.
Young Corrigan's passenger on the an·
tlcipated 120-mile flig ht, is identified as
Roger Powell, 21, of 3l Crystal Cove,
Laguna Beach.
The youths planned to fly over a
Laguna Beach site where the Powell
family is building a home, photograph it
and return after buzzing down to San
Diego.
"He's never been overdue before," the
elder Corrigan said Thursday.
A search command post was establish-
ed by the Civil Air Patrol at Long Beach
Airport to coordinate the hunt between
Orange County Airport and the Mexican
Border.
No trace of the vanished Cessna 150
had been discovered during the hunt
c~tered on the coastline by 10 a.m., ac--
cording lo Capt. Ed Crankshaw, CAP
wing Information officer.
"We have excellent cooperation from
the Marines at El Toro and Camp
Pendleton, the San Diego Sheriff 's Aero
Squad and we have a lot of CAP planes
up searching the area," he said.
Marine helicopters have been detailed
to scour the desolate coastal military
reservations for Corrigan and Powell.
"We have excellent search weather at
least," said the CAP spokesman.
Corrigan's &&-year-old father, who left
aviation yea rs ago to run his 20-acres of
citrus groves in Santa Ana. went up
Thursd ay with another son, Harry, in
search of the youngest Corrigan.
"I was just riding. I don 't even have a
license right now," said Corrigan, whose
38-hour, transatlantic flight in a $300
plane he built himself caused a global
sensation.
Tt,ie search plane they used was owned
and folwn by Robert Damskey.
He is the instructor who taught the
adventurous youngest Corrigan -he has
a private license and 300 hours logged
aloft -to fly ln the first place.
Their search followed the coastline,
then crisscrOssed a pattern over inland
areas seeking the white-winged Cessna
150, which has a yellow-orange fuseJage.
Characterir.ed as the Flying Irishman
for his daring Dublin solo, Wrong Way
Corrigan says his son has rigidly followed
the rules of safe' flying.
The former Santa Ana Resister
sportswriter would always telephone to
(S.. CORRIGAN, Pal' Z)
Selim Franklin Appo~ted
Harbor JudgebyGovernor
Governor Ronald Re111gan today named
Costa Mesa attorney Selim "Bud"
Franklin to the. Harbor Judicial Dlslrlct
bench to take the $32,273-a-year seat
created last year by the California
Legislature. .
Franklin was one of three Orange
County Judges appointed today by the
governor. Santa Ana attorney Patrick
McCray and Orange County juvenHe
court referet Alan N. McKone were
named lo two vacant posts in the West
Oranae County Judicial District Court.
..
from ·Pomona Coltege and took hl.s law
degree from Stanford.
Franklin was l"H!lected to the Newport·
Mt,. Unilied School District Board ol
Educallon lut ytar. He said today he
will resign from the school board. The
timing is dependent on the schedulina ol
a special election to fUI the remainder of
his term which runs until June, 1975.
"I am personally very pleased about
the appointment," Franklin said, noting
''it is a way ror me to continue 11erving
thla community."
Franklin said he believes hls swearing
In to the judgeship will occur sometime
before mid-April. The appointment to the
municipal bench requires Franklin to
close h1i Costa Mesa law practice which.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Tht biggest
jump in grocery prices in 14 years last
month triggered the sharpest rise in
overall liVing costs since before President
Nixon imposed economic controls, the
government reported today.
The Consumer Price Index, measuring
typical family living costs, rose five--
tenths of r percent in February, the
largest increase In nine months, the
Labor Department's Burtau of Labor
Statistics said.
Grocery prices, which include a
number of items that are not subject to
federal price controls, soared 1.9 percent
for the greatest one-month increase since
March, 1958, the report said
The report followed the resignation of
three AFL-CIO members of Nixon's Pa¥
Board, who charged the government was
rigidly holding down wages while leJUing
pr ices continue to climb. (See sklry Page
~).
The bureau also reported that average
weekly earnings of some -t5 million rank-
and-file worken rose ~ ~ent.s '\ wee~ to
$130.27. but that purchasing power declin·
ed 24 cents because of the rise in con.
sumer prices.
The February boost pushed the price
index to 123.8 percent or its 1967 average.
This means it cost $12.38 last month for
every $10 worth of typical family
purchases five years ago.
The Feb r-u a r y increal!if'i was the
greatest since a six-tenths of 1 percent
rise last June, two months before Nixon
imposed a 91.ktay wage-price freeze which
was followed by Phase 2 controls.
The bureau said that in the four months
of Phase 2 Jiving costs have risen at an
annual rate of 4.9 percent. greater than
the 4.1 percent rate in the six months
Underwear Never
Would Have Fit;
Charge Dropped
JONESBORO, Ga . (UPI) -An all·
male jury has acquitted Clayton County
Commissioner Sharon S. Abercro mbie of
charges he spent $130.81 of the taxpayers'
money for a gift of bikini panties and a
black lace negligee:
Abercrombie's attorney, Albert B.
Wallace, ca lled upan the reasoning
powers oJ the jurors in final arguments.
The garments in question . he said,
were size five . It is doubtful. he said, that
the alleged recipient of the garments, ·
Mrs. Anita Doss, could get into them.
"Those big round eyes of hers, that is
the only pair of anything she had that
looked like it would be size live," Wallace said.
The jury, after two hours of delibera-
tion, found Abercrombie iMocent.
Franklin, 42. is a trustee or the
Newport-Mesa Unified School District. An
active Republican, he has also seen ex-
ecutive duly with the Costa Mesa
Chamber of Commerce and the United
Fund organlz.ation in the Harbor Area.
Franklin .Liv .. at 192$ Santa Ana Ave ..
Costa Mesa, wi~h hi.I wife, Dianne and
their lour chUdren. He "" graduated
he said, "f am perfectly happy to do. r
am basically ' service-oriented person \)
and haven'' viewed a big Income as a
major prlorlly."
NAMED TO I ENCH -
Horbor ·ArN'• Fr..,klln , ••
befor.e Nixon's August economic freeze.
Prices had been held to an annual rate
of 1. 7 percent during the rigid three-
month freeze that preceded the looser
Phase 2 oontrols.
Price hikes in February included two
tenths of one percent for housing, four·
tenths each for clothing and medical ca re
and one-tenth of 1 percent for recreation.
Transportation costs declined six·
tenths of one percent, the report said.
A steep rise in meat prices. it said. ac·
counted for about 70 percent of the rise in
food prices.
Fresh fruits and vegetables also rose
considerably. Dairy products rose instead
or declining as usual in February, and
cereal and bakery products went up for
Pancho Go1izalez' Girl
Dies in Coast Horse Fall
The young daughter of professional ten-
nis star Richard "Pancho" Gonzalez died
in Hoag Memorial Hospital Tuesday from
injuries she sustained when she was
thrown from a horse late Saturday af-
ternoon.
Mariess~ Gonzalez, 10, had been riding
with a lrJend at the Irvine Equestrian
Center, 7385 E. Coast Hig hway, Corona
de! Mar, when the accident oCcurred.
Mariessa, who Jived with her mother,
Madalyn, and two sisters at 401 Via Lido
Soud, Newport Beach, died from severe
head injuries resulting from the fall,
hospital spokesmen said.
Funeral services will takt place Friday
at llOQn at Forest Lawn Memorial Park,
Glendale.
Mrs. Marilyn Wolfe, whose daughter
Leslie, IO, had beeri riding with Marlessa
when she took the fall, said this morning
that circumstanCes surrounding the
mishap are still unclear .
"Nobody really, honesUy knows what
happened," Mrs. Wolfe said. "She may
ha ve been frightened and the h ors e,
which belonged ~o a friend of hers, may
have been spooked."
Mrs. Wolfe said Mariessa and her
daughter have been taking riding lessons
regularly dur ing the week at the Irvine
stables. She said Mariessa had been rid-
ing for less than a year.
Mariessa was a student at Newport
HORSE FALL FATAL
Mlries5• Gonza lez, 10
Elementary School. In addition to her
mother and Gonzalez, who lives In
Malibu, she is survived by two sisters.
Boils Covered Chaplain
In Sex Case-Doctor
JACKSONVILLE , Fla. (AP) -A doc-
tor testified today that Chaplain Andrew
F. Jensen was covered with a severe rash
and boils from his belt line down to his
thighs July 8, the date a Navy wife
claims to have had seIUal relations with
him in a motel .
"Would Capt. Jensen have been able to
have sexual intercourse while suffering
this infection?" defense attorney Jack R.
Blackmon asked Dr. Clay Wickham.
"It would have been extremely unlikely
and very painful" Wickham replied .
"Ooctor,"·Black.mon continued, "if you
were the patient Instead of the doctor,
could you have performed a sex act?"
"For me," Wickham said, "it would
have been impossible."
Lora Gudbranson, a 40-year-old supply
officer's wile, has testified that she had
relations with Jensen four Umes. Another
Navy wife, 2t.year-old Mary AM Curran,
said she bad relations at least 17 times
with Jensen after her husband employed
him as a marriage counselor.
Mrs. Gudbranson said July 8 was the
date of one of Mr alleged mtttlng! with
Jensen.
Jensen ls being coortmartla.led on
charges of conduct unbecoming an of-
ficer. He has dtnlcd having aUairs with
either woman .
Wlckha'Tl, a Navy doctor at Cecil Fltld
1 where the court-martial b In progress.
said he examined Jtme.n In mid.June last
year and found him covered with chigger
bites 1uf(.,.ed on • fishing trip. •
On Joly 2, he testified, 1 severe In-
fection tlUoed by ocrotchlng had 1tt In.
• • '
The entire area covered .by swimming
trunks. he added, was covered with boils
and a red rash. As late as July 16. he
said, there were still scabs and some
rash over the area .
Navy wives, fellow clergymen and
friends took the stand for the defense
Wednesday and testified that Jensen was
a man or high moral character. The
chaplain and his wife are expected to
testify Friday.
1•1 feel the chaplain's innocent," a sob-
bing Margaret Huntsi nger said in
testimony Wednesday.
"I feel it's my Christian duty to help a
fellow Christian," said Isabell Jaquette, a
Sunday school teacher at Jensen's chapel .
In addition to testimony praising the
moral character of Jensen, defense
witnesses criticized one of the two women
who filed complaints against the 43-year·
old American chaplain.
Mrs. Huntsinger, whose husba nd serves
at Cecil' l'leld N1val A~ Station with
Jensen, said she worked on A chapel pla""
ning board with Mrs. Gudbranson.
"On several occasions I had the feeling
he wps tr>:lng tp get away, but she
wouldn't Jct him. She had a way of sort of
getting everyone to move out so she could
monopolize the conversation with him,"
Mrs. Huntsinger testlflM. . ~
Mn. Jaquette Riso said she 'thought
Mrs. Gudbranson was "very aggressive
toward Chaplain Jensen. She 'ouldn't
give much chance for anyone else bot
herself to aay anything to the chaplain."
·'
the first time In four months, the report
said.
Raw agricultural products, such 11
fruits and vegetables an~ eggs, are ex·
empt from federal price controls.
Other increases included local transit
fares, property taxes and natural gas
rates, although the increases were
smalle r, it said.
Riles Says
School l(ids
'Can 't Wait~
By CANDACE PEARSON
01 th• 01Hy 111 .. 1 lt1H
California child ren "can't wait another
year" for school financing simply
because legislators are involved In an
election year, State Superintendent of
Public tnstruction Wilson Riles declared
Wednesday in Newport Beach.
Riles, speaking l;>efore more than 250
members of the Orange Cnunly School
Boards Association at !he Newporter Inn,
said it was ''distressing" that legislators
can't deal with pressing school finance
needs during an elecllon year.
"Part of the problem Is that we in
schools haven't spoken the kind of
language Sacramento understands -
whether the people wUI vote for it or
not," Riles suggested.
School officials will get the financial
proposals that they want "only if the peo..
pie In the distri ct also make it known
they want something done," he added.
The superintendent urged that al1
school districts -rich and poor -"find
ways to work together financially.''
He conceded that thi.s "unity" is dif·
ficult to achieve because the financial
perspective of Beverly Hills is completely
different from Baldwin Park's, and he
repeated his opposition to reliance on
property taxes.
"I believe in Serrano," he said, refer-
ring to Jay Serrano. an East Los Angeles
man who initiated the landmark case:
which said it is unconstitutional to depend
on the wealt.h of a district for school
money.
Riles offered no financial solutions of
his ow n but did say he is opposed to the
Alan Watson initiative to be on the
November ballot.
It would put I! ceiling on property taxes
of $2.05 and give some other tax pro-
visions for raising funds. Riles said j'lt
would be very dangerous lo freeze that
into the constituUon; then there would be
no nexlbillty if conditions changed ."
On another matter, RJJes enthused
about the Early Childhood Education pro-
gram, recently developed by the Depart·
ment of Edudltion.
It allows children to begin a prwchool
(See FUNDS, Page 1)
Ol'ange
It's going to be sunny again
on Friday, accdrding to the
weathcrlady. Highs along the
coast 62 rising to 75 Inland.
Lows 45 to 55.
I NSmE TODil 'Y
Hijacking has come a long way
since the first airliner wa.s
seized on a sunnu May da11 iA
1961 and commondetred to
Cuba . See sloru, Page 8.
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WtrMI HIWto •
:? DAILY PILOT "
President'
To Visit
Clemente?
Strong indications or an active vi!it to
the South Coast by Presicfent and Mrs.
Nlxoµ surraced ln San Clemente today,
and one function during that trip will bf
<>fflclal acceptance of the ·bronze bus-~
purchased through local contributions.
An official announcement detailing the
presentation will be made here on Fri·
day, it was learned.
Whlte. House aides have remained mute
about the President's travel plans west,
but .!leYeral fectors. besides the presen·
ta tion of the art work, point to an im·
pending visit.
Next Thursday, March 30. the son of
Sen. Barry Goldwater will marry itt
Newport Beach and rumors there have
hinted at the President beirig among tbe
guest~:
M~. Nixon also plans public ap.
· pearaiices in the west early Jn April as
well
It would be the rirs t stay at La Casa
Pacifica by the First Family since
January.
Plans bad Men made to come west
almost Immediately following Mr. Nix-
or's return from Peking, but the Wsit
was scotched in favor of shorter trips lo
Camp David, Md., and Key Biscayne,
Fla.
The presentation of the bust personally
to the President had been promised for
months during the campaign by the
President's P...roject Committee to raise
hioney for the purchase.
t..
B11ddle1
UPI TtltJfltlO
John Liss, 5, tries out the
helmet of \\7ayne State Uni·
versity pol ice officer John
Knechtges during a pre-school
children's tour of the univer·
sity's safety building in Detroit.
The briefcase message reads,
"Being a cop is more than just
a gig."
3 Locations
12 Persons Held
In Drug Ar·rests
By BARBARA KREIBJCU
01 ,~. 0111~ ,., .. , , ....
After a hectic evenmg during which It
persons were arrested and his jacket was
chewed b:· two large dogs, Laguna Beach
nare-0tics detective Neil Purcell today
speculated :
"Maybe· all these stories about how
close we are to legalizing marijuana en-
couraged the !olks to celebrate with a
fe\Y pot parties . . . "
The Wednesday evening forays started
shortly . before eight o'clock when
Sergeant Purcell and officer Robert RC>-'
maine accompanied two U.S. marshals to
21152 Laguna Canyon Road to serve a
misdea1eanor arrest warrant and en-
countered the first party.
After some discussion at the door, the
of{icers entered. Two of the guests
assertedly fled via a window. A search
turned up a quantity of LSD, marijuana
and suspected dangerous drugs and the
five rema ining g u es ts were held on
charges ol possession of marijuana and
being present where the drug was used.
They were Arnold Thomas Canup, 29,
of the addr.ess; Larry W<1rren Spausta, 18,
or 24932 Mosquero Lane. f\.fissio n Viejo ;
1'.1arriann Simmons, 27. of the Canyon ad-
dress; Carolyn Moody Hedges. 32 of 606
Hamilton St. Costa Mesa, and a 17-year-
old boy.
After booking the first group. Purcell
..._and detective Gene Brooks accompanied
the marshals to 567 Catalina St. to serve
a traffic warrant on Gary Wayne
Henderson, 26, of that address .
When the officers Identif ied
themselves, said Purcell, Henderson and
his woman companion Oed to the rear of
the house. There the woman, Nancy
Davenport, 24, of 185 Flower St., Costa
Mesa, allegedly was found attemptJng to
flush about a pound of mar ijuana do"'·n
the toilet.
Both were booked on suspicion of
possession or marijuana for sale.
Leaving the scene, the officers sniffed
the familiar aroma of marijuana floating
from an adjacent dwelling at S7711i Goff
St. and stopped to question a man emerg-
ing from the yard.
Their suspicions were further aroused
they said, when the man fled back toward
the house yelling warnings of "The narcs
are here!"
The dogs -two large German
shepherds -entered the picture when
the officers followed their quarry into the
yard.
Purcell and Marshal Dick Ringler lost
hunks of their jackets' while attempting to
fend off the animals with dog :-epe1Jent.
"It's the ·same kind issued to
mailmen," Purcell explained. "Mace
doesn 't work on dogs -it just makes
them mad."
The officers forced open a door. tn·
tered the house and again heard the
familiar sound or a flushing toilet.
S1'••ibolic Burial
An unidentified youth hurls a dirt clod at an old school bus buried
in Memphis, Tenn., as a protest a.e:ainst busing. The symbolic action
was sponsored by Citizens Against Busing .
, Backers of the strictly local effort
stressed that the purchase of the $8,000
art work would increase San Clemente's
chances in the quiet but strong cam·
paigns for de.terming a site for the Nixon
Library.
C.Ommittee spcucesmen pointed to the
bust purchase by local citizens as a
strong selllng point Cor local interest in
the library.
Contributions came from business
firm s, service groups, private citizens -
even youngsters in elementary schools
~ho collected. then sold newspapers and
alumioum cans to raise money for their
contributions .
1Woodcocl{ Quits Pay Unit
After Other . Labor Chiefs
Breaking down a second door into
a bathroom, they found a repetition of the
earlier scene and arrested Richard
D'Amico, 21, on !uspicion of destruction
of evidence.
His brother, Nick Charles D'AmiC1l, 26,
who had called the warning, was booked
on a charge of interfering with an officer,
and both were charged with possession of
marijuana. The brothers said they live in
Orange.
'Devil Cult' Death Trial '
Delayed in County Court
T'ne presentation, it was~promised, will
be made in public with everyone welcome
to attend.
DETROIT I A Pl - A De I r o i l
newspaper reported today that United
Auto Worker s Presidenl Leonard Wood-
cock plans to follow the lead of three
AFJ...CIO repre sentatives and quit the
.. Froni Pagel
FUNDS ...
type program when four years old.
• ''C!Uldren grow at different rates and
learn at dHferent rates," Riles said, "but
we set up a school system that pretend!!
everyone does the same th ing on the
iame day in the aame way ." ·
· The Early Education ·Program Is 1up-
posed to "create the environment'' to en-
courage children to learn at their own
rates.
Riles said another way schools and
district boards can add more flexibility to
their programs is to "look into having
high sc~l representaUon on the boards"
because those students "can present a
poirit of vjew we ought. to kriow about."
He said that Molly Magee, a student at
Los Alamitos High School in Seal Beach
and the student representative to the
state board, has given "valuable input" to his department.
He called on all school boards to have
their own self-evaluation and planning
units and to improve their own efficiency.
"It's easy to point the finger at some-
one else," he said. adding that when
he took office there was a high number of
districts that never received textbooks on
time.
"I told the staff to go to work on it and
last fall all the textbooks in all districts
were delivered on time for the first time
eince 1914," he said.
Last Rites Slated
BEVERLY HILLS (UP!) -Memorial
11ervices will be conducted Friday for ac-
tress Marilyn Maxwell who was found
dead in her home Monday of an apparent
heart attack.
OUN•I COAST •
DAILY PILOT
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.. federal Pay Board.
The report in the Detroit News was
denied by a UAW spokesman, who said
no decision had been made on the matter,
but was confirmed this afternooR by
Woodcock.
AFL-CIO President George Meany and
Presidents I. W. Abel of the United
Steeh~orkers .and Floyd ·Smith of t h e
International Association of Machlnlsta,
qult the Pay Board Wednesday in a move
precipitated by the board's reduction of
the West Coast dock workers settlement.
(See ilory, Page l)
"It would be completely illogical for
the UAW to remain on the board in the
light of the aclion by the AFL-CJO," lhe
Newsmen Barred
In Cheri Hayes
Adoption Case
Protesting newsmen were barred from
the courtroom today as Robert and
Jeanette Hayes of Costa Mesa began a
court hearing that will determine the
future of the little girl they took into their
home two years ago as a three-day-old
fo ster child.
Orange County Superio r Court Judge
Raymond Vincent excluded all but
witnesses from what is expected to be a
day-long hearing with the explanation
that state la"· bars all but participants
and prospective parents from adoption
proceedings.
Hayes. 32, and Mrs. Hayes, 33. of 1180
Bismarck Way, are asking Judge Vincent
t.o allow them to adopt the child they
know as Cherj Lynn Hayes.
Their petition is opposed by the Orange
County Social Welfare Department with
the argument that the little girl's status
with the Hayes couple is that of a foster
child and adoption wa s never the in-
tenJion of the department.
Cheri Lynn played \\'ith her father in
the courtroom today while Mrs. Ha yes
joined attorney John Schilling at the
counsel table to plead her case before
Judge Vin cent.
Deputy county Counsel Victor Belle.rue
is opposing the adoption petition for the
social welfare deplirtment.
Supervisors OK
Bike Trail Bid
Permission t.o use 1,000 feet of the coun·
ty Flood Control District's Grcenville-
Banning channel bank roadway for a
pedestrian and bicycle trail leading to a
small park site in Newport Beach has
b<en grantod by lhe Orange County
Board of Supervisors.
Flood Control Chief Engineer George
Osborne recommended the action Tues-
day. The Jsola ted park i! Joc3ted near the
mouth of the Santa Ana Rive r near
Nc"'J)Ort Shores .
Use of the roadway will b< limllod lo
·bike riders and hikers, the city assured
the district. No vehicles will be allowed.
Supervisors noted that the move en·
hancea 1h! county'a bicycle trail develop-
ment program.
News quoted a high UAW official as
saying. .
The UAW severed its ties with the
AFL-CIO in 1968 in a dispute over policy.
The only other independent union
represented on the Pay Board , the
Teamsters Union, is staying on.
The board's 12 remaining members
convened today and resumed work on
propcsals to drop wage controls from
small firms and to give some further
relief to low-wage earners.
Meanwhile. President Nixon has decid-
ea how to fill the gap caused by the
resignation of three AFL-CIO leaders
from the Pay Board and will announce
his decision thls afternoon, the White
House said.
Deputy press secretary Gerald R. War-
ren said Nixon will confer with members
of the Cost of Living Council and disclose
immediately thereafter his plans for
future composition of the board and its
m~thods of procedure.
Warren said Nixon made his decision
Wednes'day night -a few hours after
,Ml!any led him~elf and two colleagues of{
!he 15-mell_lber panel.
The President met for about two hours
Wednesday night with Secretary of the
Treasury John B. Connally, Director
George P. Shulti of the Office of Manage-
ment and Budget, Chainnan Herbert
Stein of the C.Ouncil of Economic
Advisers and Donald Rumsfeld, staff
chief of the Cost of Living Council.--
Warren, reporting this, said Nixon con-
tinued discussions on the subject today.
The press spokesman gave no clues as
lo the nature of the President's decision.
Frotn Pagel
CORRIGAN. • •
report any chan~e in destination of
estimated return if he had filed no flight
plan.
Airport acquainlances said Corrigan
and Powell. a friend since boyhood, didn't
plan to land at San Diego.
Powell's father Tom, owne1· of a Santa
Ana neon si gn company, said the young
men had mentioned wantil1g to fly to L3s
V!!gas some.lime.
"They had spoken of it in casual con~
versation , .. just for something to do,"
he said after the Cruitless search flight
Thursday.
A check of McCarran Field in Las Vegas
and other airports in Nevada failed to
produce any results. according to CAP
officials.
A team of four CAP aircraft hunted un-
i.ii dark ·Thursday and 10 more took off
today, supplemented by M a r in e
helicopers flying low-level missions .
Chances are that Corrigan and Powell
stuck to the coastline but aerial teams
were assigned rugged areas of Riverside,
San Diego and San Bernardino counties.
"They're covering all areas between
here and San Diego and all the coastal
hills and valleys," said CAP Maj. Ernest
Johnson , mission coordinator.
Young Corrigan recently returned from
a tri p to Japan and has been planning a
tour of Europe but hadn't been working
in the meantime.
His father 's own 1938 trip to Eurol"'
drew a stern reprimand but off1Cia1 wink
from U.S. authorities who had refwied his
formal request for permission to make
the hazardous flight. He came horve a
.celebrity or international proportions woo
was •ntertalnod by royally, but retire!! to
near obscurity to raise oranges, lemons
and his three ions.
He became a public figure again bi:Ielly
In !~ when he showed up lo accept. the
Orange County Press Club'a Heidllner of
lhe Year Award in Avlallon.
Indians Decamp
At Old Mission
A six-week delay was ordered Wednes·
day in the Orange County Superior C-Ourt
trial of an Oregon youth accused of be-
ing a membet of the gang that murdered
Missia!l Viejo teacher Florence Nancy
Kll'JG. . .CITY (UPI) -lndians..claimi~g~ B~ou~~e William Murray held the trial of
.ownership of alt 21 Roman Catholic Christopher •·Gypsy" Gibboney, 18 over
missions in California have stopped an 11-to May 8 to allow the youth 's lawYer to
day camp-in at Mission San Antonio de await a Supreme Court ruling that could.
Padua because they didn't want to be he said. revive his claim that Gibboney
joined by "militant" supporters. should not be tried as an adult.
The small band of Indians was served Earlier arguments that Gibboney wa s
eviction notices this week, but remained 17 al the time of Mrs. Brown's murde r
un til Wednesday when Semu Huaute the and ineligible for trial as an adult ·have
medicine man for the group, said he ' was been dismissed in Superior and juvenile
informed a group of militant Indians courts.
planned to join their encampment. Giboney is the only untried membey of
"I don't want to fight my OjVn ,~ple," a gang rounded up by lawmen in JUne,
said Huaute. ' ' 1970~ following the hatchet killing of a
Santa Ana service station attendant i nd
the "devil cult" slaying Jess than 24 hours
later of Mrs. Brown, 31, of El Toro.
Gang lea~er. Ste.Ven Craig Hurd, 20,
was found to. be insane and is held in
Atascadero Stale Prison. Arthur Craig
''Moose" Hulse, 18, of Garden Grove ts
serving a life term tor the killing of at-
tendant Jerry Wayne Carlin.
Melanie Mae Daniels, the drug-using
drifters' paramour and purse holder, is
srving a one to 10 year term in state
priso" for her role in both murders.
It is alleged that Gibboney was one of
the group who dragged Mrs. Brown from
her car at the Sand Canyon turiioff of the
San Diego Freeway, mutilated her, drove
her to an Irv ine orange grove and killed
her to the accompaiment of rites
associated with devll worship.
luxurious spring down
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Three styles w choose from
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,ROFISSIONAL
INTERIOR DESIGNHS Op'"M"on., 2216 HARBOR .ILVo:
'ihurs, & Fri. E•u. COSTA MESA, CALIF, ~================:::::======:::::====64=6·=02=7=5===-jlf,i~~~~~~
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Second floor module drops lnlci _place at George Air-Force Base, Calif.
The modul11111re made up from bulk Items auch as gypsum; plywood, hardware.
Al .much ·11nl1hlng u ~lblo 11 done In lht l1clo1J on tho 1111mblJ l)nt.
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THE days '\\-'hen you just took your ax, chopped your
timber and built yQur o\vn log cabin .are d~6nitely
gone. A ne'v housing project blooming out of the desert
at George Air Force Base, Victorville, Calif., is a pio·
neer venture, however, although of a d.ifferent kind.
Eventually the project \Vill consist of son1e 200 fac·
tory-built homes for enlistee! personnel. And each home
will have been constructed of modules mass-produced
and finished in a factory 15 miles away, brought to the
sfte by road, hoisted into place and put together-like a
... ..... M1rttt 23, 1972
giant gan1e of building toy l1ouses fron1 blocks.
The i>roject demonstrates t11e practicality of 1>rovi<l·
ing economical ancl attractive housing using stream•
lined industrial tecl1nic1ucs. It's a venture the Air Force
is undertaking ''dtl1 a $5,400,000 contract to Gcnerlal
E lcl'tric Com1>any nn<l the Del. E . 'Vebh Corporation.
'Ihe 1ncthod may seen\ to reve rse traditional house·
building J>roccdure. But, as the pictures on this page
sho\V', it gets attracti\'e results. And f nmilies already liv·
ing in factory-built homes feel-..very much at ho1ne.
This Wuk'1 PICIUR.E SHOW-AP Newsfeacutes.
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"art of a factory~bullt townhouse en route to speedy assembly on the building site.
Modul11111 quickly pul together on lhe site ... ... and an Air Forc1 l1mlly 11 ready to mov1 lnl
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%J OAILY PILOT Thursday, Marth 23, 1972
Chaplin Fete d
. HOLLYWOOD (AP) -Far
into the night the hands work
over the clay, mottling it into
the too-tight coat, the derby.
the cane and the brush
mustache.
The: form of Charlie Chaplin,
the Little Tramp, is for a
rellef bronze plaque that will
be plactd outside the Taft
Building at J~ollywood and
Vine.
Chaplin, a, who is returnig
to the""QJUted States after a 2Q..
year at>sence, is invited to the
unveiling of tile 4-by-6-fool
plaque April 11.
He will bi awarded an
honorary Oscar by the MoUon
Picture Academy on April 3.
The Hollywood Chamber of
Commerce has voted to add
Chaplin's name and star to
Holl ywood Boulevard's "Walk
of Fame."
The bronze relief was com-
missioned by Martin Hersh,
owner of the office building,
who felt C)laplln had been Ig-
nored for too long.
r.-m 11noor11ioliftl
CONTINUOUS MATINEES
DAILY AT
12:30 . 3:30
7:00 • 10:00 P.M.
EXCLUS IVE RUN
RATED <Gl
1:rsFOR
EVERYBODY!
Be lllM> them their cha...., to be men.
:iSL-:,, M>ll~ .....
&Ute
A MARK IMJ£ll FILM
anavisioi• Technioolor• Fr<ITI Warn!!' Bros.,A. Kinney Campany P
N WAT BOTH EDWARDS CINEMAS
2nd OUTSTANDING HIT
James Garner
Skin
Game
WALT llSllEY~ 'DleBhlt!tdt
Eater-
Actor's Market:
5 Plays Ca sting
By TOM TITUS
01 "" Delly .. Ill! ST•ff
Cast Call
A t SCR
South Coast Repertory has
put out a call for mature, ex·
perierx:ed actors for the cast
ol Jta forthcoming production
of the West Coast premiere of
''Pueblo.''
Auditions will be held on
Easter Sunday, April 2, at the
company's Th i rd Step
Theater, 1827 Newport Blvd.,
Costa Mesa, at l p.m.
"The large c as t re·
quirements for this production
will necessitate our going
outside our regular acting
Quick, now -what do Pa ti Tambellini, Alex Koba, company for reinforcements,"
Ruth McCulley, Bill Verderber and yours truly have in said Martin Benson, who will
common? direct "Pueblo."
Well, if you've been scanning the entertainment pages Prospective cast members
of t,his newspaper for the past week , you've probably mu st be available for
guessed the answer. We're all looking for bodies. Live ones, rehearsals during April and a
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They challenged the best of the sporting worf
... wi th a no 'count hound/
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...,.,v.;
ORANOICOUNTY
SHOWINGS
CINEMA VIEJO
SAi DllGO FW1' ATLA PU
TVlll Off 130-6ff0
WALT OISllEY~
ff!fr@P
CO·HITI
PINOCCHIO (G}
ORANGE 2 DllYE·IN
SAITAA•AfWY •• IAI CllAPMA
S47·M111 that is. Preferably with a little acting five-week run o( the pro--
experience, though this is a flexible re-dUction beginning May 12. ~
quirement. },.----=--=-~---------------------------------o:;:,,
TITUS
. The five of us have been charged
with the responsibility of directing the
closing production of the 1971·72 com-
munity theater season for . respective-
ly, the co'sta Mesa Civic Pla yhouse,
Huntington Beach Pla yhouse, Lido Isle
Players, San Clemente Theater and Ir·
vine Community Theater.
THE THING IS, WE'RE all conducting auditions be-
tween Saturday and Wednesday of the coming week, and
among us we're looking for a grand total of 62 actors and
actresses. Plus extras in Pati's case.
Of the five or us, Verderber has the toughest row to
hoe -and not just because he's taking his first shot at
the director's chair. He needs a cast of 22 for his produc-
tion of "The Front Page" at San Clemente, a theater not
overly famous for massive turnouts at auditions.
My show , "You Can 't Take It \Vith You" for Irvine,
req uires almost as large a cast. 19 in all . And. like Bill's,
most of the roles are male. This is a bit scary, since the
gals nearly always outnumber the guys at tryout11.
PATl'S CAST FOR "My Sister Eileen" at Costa Mesa
numbers 13, along wltfJ a number of minor roles which, s.he
says, will be double cast. Ruth and Alex should have easier
&ledding at Lido and Huntington, respectively, since the
comedies "Absence or a Cello" and "Catch Me U You can"
are gea red £or only seven performers apiece.
There's no doubt about it -it'll be an actor'3 market
along the Orange Coast next week, with the chances of
walking out of tryouts with a script in hand increased
severalfold. If you don't make it at Irvine or Hun tington
Beach over the weekend, you can bounce back at San
Clemente. Costa Mesa or Lido Isle.
For the new or inexperienced actor, now is the time
to make your move. With 62 parts up for grabs, you can
bet that a good many new faces will be introduced to com.
munity theater ,.. audiences during May and June.
... d" AND, JUST IN CASE you've mi ssed one o~ two au 1-
tion notices, here's a rundown on who's holdmg tryouts
for what. when and where:
Irvine Com munity Theater -''You Can't Take Jt With
You." Auditions Saturda y and Sunday at 1 o'clock both
days in the basement of 18662 MacArthur Blvd., Irvine.
Twelve men and seven women, including a black C()Uple.
Opens June 2 for four weekends.
Huntington Beach Playhouse -"Catch Me If You
Can." Auditions Sunday only at 2 o'clock at the pla yhouse,
2110 Main St .. Huntington Beach. Five men and two women.
Opens May 19 for five weekends.
Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse -"~1y Sister Eileen ."
Auditions Monday and Wednesday at 8 o'clock in the Com-
munity Center auditorium at the west gate of the Orange
County Fairgrounds. Opens h-1ay 19 for three weekends.
San Clemente Community Theater -"The Front
Page." Auditions Sunday at noon and Monday at 7:30 p.m.
at the Cabrillo Playhouse. 202 Avenida Cabrillo, San Cle-
mente. Opens late in May for three weekends.
Lido Isle Players -"The Absence of a Cello." Audi~
lions Monday and Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. at the Lido Isle
Clubhouse, 701 Via Lido Sowt, Newport Beach. Opens May
30 for five C()nsecutive days.
Good luck.
""'-Mirl~~ ~rn~fa
'" II ii ~iij~ Jimi~ Liiij m~~ir~ Li!lilli~~ i~~irl ~~ill
mir lm~ ~ii~i~ J~~~ MirliJ iii~ir~ L~ijli mi~i ~ii~~
.. •' . ..... . • C:O.UT HWY, AT VllC.ui!lt\11 llYO, •
llWl'Olrf IUC:H • Mol.;1to
PHONE 644·0760
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* Easter Time
isFuriTime
at Kriott$
GHOST TOWN
Relive lhe Golden Days of the West
on the original nam:JW118UQ9 steam
train.
m>AY -MARCK 24
-Eg-m mmmEBS
-g,oo, 1'30 aod 9JIO p.a.
GYPSY CAMP
Peek into 1he life of a typical Eure>o
pean Gypsy oettlemen~ See and
hear spirited gypsy dancers and
singe is.
• ••••••••••••••••••
:• .JOIUI WAYXZ ·~
~~~£~: • • ··········~-·········
SATURDAY-MARCH 25
MEL tILLIS
and !he SlatnidOf11
Sllcw$.4~6~uld3~p ....
WASO~CAMP
FIESTA VILLAGE
Tw irl and swirl on the Happy som--
brero ride and en}oy the traditional
festive music of old Mexico.
SUllDAY-MARCR 26 mmmrmm
end !he Texas Troubl!Cloln
SIH-.1,00, J,oo, SJIO Ml 7JIO ~m.
SAJUllDAT, lllAl. 25-RED STEAGALL ond the eo.ooy S1o<9
-1,00. 3,00 aod ~00 p.a.
SUllDAT, IU. 21-FLOYD COUNTY BOYS
Shon: ~:30, 3:~ 4-.30 lrld 6:00 p.11.
** COllN& ATIRACTIONS **
MARCH %7·31
HEAR AND NOW
MARCH %7 • Al'Rtl 1
BEAVER HILL STRING BAND
APllll z
BOBBY BURGESS
AND CISSY KING
FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
MARCH 31 AND APRIL 1
THE RAIDERS
PAUL REVERE ....
MARK LINDSAY
-~.30,·1,30, 1~30 II&
PLAN mm WTEB mmn 11' mm
Enj•J ... ol llrs. Knott'• l•mou• golden-fritd Chlcktn Dhwl ..... Chor-Brolltd Sleok In Knolf• .... k H ......
Itel:> KND?T'S DEBBY FABM ecl)tJ
IN BUENA PARK PHONE (71 4) 121·1nl
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Orange Coa·st Your Hometown
Dally Paper
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VOL. 65, NO. 83, 4 SECTIONS, 48 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, MARCH 23, 1972 c TEN CENTS
Mesa Hopefuls Take Show to Balboa Bay Club
An Alternative
T o Politics
Sprouting like spring flowers,
signs extolling the virtues of Costa
Mesa City Council candidates cur-
rently line Newport Boulevard as 2t>
office seekers make their charges,
counter-charges and promises ·to
voters. ·
The continuity is broken at Vic-
toria Street. however, w h e r e
several months ago the Green
Haven Nursery began placing
changing ads patterned on old
Burma Shave roadside signs.
Motorist! were treated to this
new series today :
While Politicians
Rave and Rant
Think of the Daisies
You can Plant.
Riles Says
Financing
Can't Wait
By CANDACE PEARSON
Of ttl• D•lly ,iltt Stell
California children "can't wait another
year" for school financing simply
because legislators are involved in an
election year, State Superintendent of
Public .tmtruction Wi!Son Riles declared
Wedne>day in Newport ~each.
~ Riles, .peaking ·before more tha" 250
.:..memOOrs of the Orange Cnunty School
Boards Association at the Newporter Inn.
said it was "distressing" that legislators
can 't deal with pressing school finance
needs during an election year .
"Part · of the problem is that we in
schools haven't spoken the kind of
language Sacramento understands -
whether the people will vote for it or
not," Riles suggested.
School officials will get the financial
proposals that they want "only if the peo-
ple in the district also make it known
they want something done," he added.
The superintendent urged that all
school districts -rich and pqor -"find
ways to work together financially."
He conceded that this "unity" is dif·
ficult to achieve because the financial
perspective of Bever ly Hills is completely
different frGm Baldwin Park's, and he
repeated his opposition to reliance on
pioperty taxes.
"I believe tn Serraoo," he said. refer·
ring to Jay Serraoo, an East Leis Angeles
man who initiated the landmark case
which said it is unconstiti.ltional to depend
on the wea1th or a district for school
money.
Riles offered no financial solutions of
his own but did say he is opposed to the
Alan Watson Initiative to be on the
November ballot.
It would put a ceiling on property t~es
of $2.05 and give some other tax pro-
visions for raising runds. Riles said "it
would be very dangerous to freeze that
into the constitution; then there would be
no fle1.Jbillty if conditions changed."
On another matler, Riles enthused
about the Early Childhood Education pro-
gram, recently developed by the Depart·
ment of Education ..
It allows children to begin a pre-school
!See FUNDS, Page II
candidates for the: April 11 Costa Mesa
city council election continued their
politicking this mprning during a
breakfast forum spoqsored by the
Newport Harbor -Costa Me sa Board of
Realtors.
The 8 a,m. meeting at Lbe Balboa Bay
Club drew all three incumbents and 10
challengers. In ·order of appearance, here
is a suminary<0f what they said : .
Dom R•citl1 jeweler : He said the
western portion of the city has been
neglected and proposes construction of a
bridge over the Santa Ana River at the
,.
foot of 19th Street. The bridge would be
financed with county moi:iies and would
provide access to the beaches. Hun·
tington Beach would have better access
to C.Osta Mesa sbOpping areas.
Al PM.nter, college teacher: Wants to
im prove the quality of life in Costa Mesa.
Painter believes that city problems must
be thoroughly analyzed to affect im·
provements in this quallty. The in·
cumbents, he said. have been in power
too long and are (ruslrating com·
munication between the people and their
city government.
PIONEER AVIATOR'S SON MISSING ON COUNTY FLIGHT
Roy Corrlg•n, 22, Shown With F1mous Did 'Wront Way'
F'lier Corrigan' s Son
Missing on Plane Trip ·
By ARTHUR R, VINSEL
Of"fM 0.lty '"" staff
Sky searchers wert crisscrossing the
SouthJand today ror any trace of a plane
piloted by the sportswriter lll)n or Santa
Ana's famed aviator Douglas "Wrong
Way" Corrigan.
He and a companlon from Laguna
Beach !en Orange County Airport Tues--
day on a short, sightseeing Oight to San
Diego but fail~ to make a 4 p.m. return
scheduled.
Roy Corrigan, 22, of 2828 N. F1ower St.,
is the youngest son of the man who
delighted the world in 1938 by taking of(
from New York for Lclng Beach and Jan.
ding two days later in Dublin, Ireland.
Ironically, Wrong Way Corrigan's
original West Coast destination 34 years
ago is today a search base fo r his miss·
ing son.
Young Corrigan's passenger on the an·
ticipated 120-mile flight is identified as
Roger Powell, 21, of 32 l'rystal Cove,
Laguna Beach.
The youths planned to fly over a
Laguna Beach site where the Powell
family Is building a home, photograph it
and return after buzzing down to San
Diego.
"He's never been overdue before,'' the
elder Corrigan said Thursday.
A search command post was establish-
ed by the Civil Air Patrol at Long Beach
Airport to coordinate the hunt between
Orange County Airport and the Mexican
1!9rder.
No lrice of the vanished Cessna 150 '
had been discovered during the hunt
centered on the coastline by 10 a.m., ac-
cording to Capt. Ed Crankshaw, CAP
wing information officer.
"We have excellent cooperation from
the Marines at El Toro and Camp
Pendleton. the San Diego Sheriff's Aero
Squad and we have a lot of CAP planes
up searching the area," he sa id.
Marine helicopters have beerf detailed
to scour the desolate coastal mHitary
reservations for Corrigan and Powell.
"We have excellent search weather at
least," said the" CAP spokes man.
Corrigan 's 65-year~ld father , who left
aviation years ago to run his ~acres of
oitrus groves in Santa Ana, went up
Thursday with another son. Harry, in
search of the youngest Corrigan.
"I was just riding. I don't even have a
license right now," said Corrigan, whose
38-hour, transatlantic flight in a "100
plane he built him.self caused a global
sensation.
The search plane they used was owned
and folwn by Robert Damskey.
He is the instructor who taught the
adv.enturous youngest Corrigan -he has
a private license and 300 hours logged
aloft -to fly in the first place.
Their search followed the coastline,
then crisscrossed a pattern over inland
areas seeking the whit't=-winged Cessna
150, which·ha s a yellow~range fuselage.
Characterized as 1Nf Flying Irishman
for his daring Dubmi solo, Wrong Way
(See CORRIGAN, Pap I)
Selim Franklin Appointed
I Harho~JudgehyGovernor
Governor Ronald Reagan today named
Costa Mesa attorney Se1lm "Bud"
Franklin to lhe Harbor Judicial District
bench to take the $32,273-a-year seat
created last year by the California
Legislature.
Franklin was one of three Orange
Couoly judges appolnled today by the
governor. Santa Ana attorney Patrick
McCray and Orange County juvenile
court referee Alan N. McKone were
named to two vacant posts in the West
Orange <:ounty Jud icial District Court.
Franklin, 42, Is a tru stee o! the
Newport.Me .. Unified School District. An
active Republican, he bas also seen ex-
ecutive duty with the Costa ?tfesa
Chamber or Commerce and the: Un ited
Fund organ lzalion In th< Harbor Area ,
Fr1nklin lives at 1921 Santa Ana Ave ..
Costa Mesa. with his wife, Dianne and
111<1' lo"' -llr .... vadllall<I
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from Pomona Q>llege and took his law
degree from Stanford.
Franklin w1s re-elected to the Newport·
Mesa Unilied School District Boan! of
EaucaLion last year. He said today he
will resign from~ the school board. The
timing is dependent on the scheduling of
a special election to fill the remainder of
his term which runs until June, 197S.
"I am personally very pleased about
the appointment," Franklin said, noting
"it is a way ror' me to conUnue serving
this community."
Franklin said he believes his swearing
in to the Judgeship wlll occur sometime
before mid-April. The appointment to the
munlcJpal bench requires Franklin to
close his Costa ?tfesa t1w practice which.
he said, "I am perfectly happy to do. I
am basically a service-oriented person
and. havtn't viewed 1 big IDcome u 1
1MJo' P' ... 11¥ ..
OAil.Y PILOT tt9ft .......
NAMED TO I ENC H
Ha• Area'• FNnldln
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Tom Manus, furniture v;orker : He
believes that youth nee<h representation
on the council and that councilmen must
work in harmony. Manus said the coun-
~rs efficiency has been disrupted by
dissent and petty squabbling too long.
David Leigb&on, property management :
Leighton charged Lhat the city has
mi ssed the boat by not building th Costa
Melia Marina . He added that the city
should abide by the new general plan in
re gard to toning matters. Leighton is
against establishing a building morator·
ium,.
Food
Jeffrey Kane, attorney : His .JTiajor aim
is "to make Costa Mesa more like
Ne"'port Beach." Kane said he would Like
to make them sister cities. •le would l\ke
to see better developments In Costa Mesa
for business and professional people, suc h
as the Newport Center.
Sam Ekovlch. mailman: Stressed the
need fo r improvements on the "·est side
of the city which has "been forgotten-and
•has become a ghetto section.'' Ekovich
said he is not oppOsed to growth. but does
not want the council to neglect the cur·
' rent assets of the city .
Costs
BUiie Golden. credit manager: M;s.
Golden said her platform is to beaufify
the cily and tha t she believes a woman is
!he proper person for the tas k. She is for
the involven1enl of youth in civic affairs
and . wants more good recreation pro-
grams.
Charlie Eifert. sales1nan : Eifert would
like lo build.the idenlily or the city. both
culturally and commercially. He said
development along Harbor J;loulevard is
excellenl but that the road empties into
"a sign·infested. ill·kept downtown area"
(See CANDIDATE.5, Pa1e II
Soar
Prices Take Big Boost in Febr JJar y
WASHINGTON (AP ) -Th• biggest
jump in grocery prices Jn 14 years last
month lriggered the sharpest rise in
overall living costs since before President
Ni1.on imposed economic controls, the
government reported today.
The Con!umer Price Index, measuring
typical famil y living costs, rose fi ve--
tenths of 1 percent In February, the
largest increase tn nine months, the
Labor Department's BurE.au of Labor
Statistics said.
Grocery prices, which include a
number of Items that are not subject to
federal price controls, soared 1.9 percent
for the greatest one-month increase since
March, 1953, the report said
The report followed the resignatkln of
three AFL-CIO members of Ni:l.on 's Pay
Board, who charged the government was
rigidly holding down wages while letttlng
prices continue to climb. (See story Page
4). . •
The bureau also 'fJlO!'!t!! that average
weekly taminp Of •90me ts !n.illlon rank·
and·file workers "roae 35 cents a week to
fl30.27, but that purchasing pc1wer declin·
ed 24 centl because or the rise in con-
sumer prices.
The February boost pushed the price
index to 123.8 percent of its 19$7 average.
This mean! it cost $12.38 last month for
every $10 worth of typical family
purchases five years ago.
The F e b r u a r y increaSf'! was the
greatest since a siJ:·tenths of 1 percent
rise last June, two months before Nixon
imposed a IO-day wage-price rreeze which
was followed by Phase 2 controls.
The bureau said that in the four months
of Phase 2 living costs hive risen at an
annual rate of 4.9 percent. greater than
the 4.1 percent rate in the si1 months
Nevada Refuses
To Give Okay
To Hughes' Bid
LAS VEGAS, Nev . (UP() -The
Nevada Gaming Commission unanimous·
ly rejected today an application to re-
juggle the power structure of Howard
Hughes~ gambling resorts in Nevada.
The commission, following the recom-
mendation of its enforcement arm, the
Gaming Control Board, said a face-to-
face meeting would be necessary before
any changes in Hughes' Nevada opera-
tions of seven resorts could be granted.
Jack Diehl, chairman of the' five-man
commisson, made it clear that Hughes•
recent meeting in Nica ragua with Presi-
dent Anastasio Sariioza and U . S .
Ambassador Turner B. Shelton indicated
to him that the Hughes demand for a 24-
hour privacy was changing.
Diehl said, in effect, U Hughes could
meet with outsiders in Nicaragua he
could meet with Nevada representatives
where he has financial invest ments and I!
responsible to some 8,000 employes.
"He did meet with outsiders, and it OC·
curred to me that he has an investment
in Nevada and 8,000 employes and none in
Nicaragua," sakJ Diehl.
Diehl also objected to comments made
by Hughes' akJes in Vancouver regarding
possible closure of Hughes' resort!. Diehl
said even though these closures were
later denied by Hughes representatives,
"this to me is an out and out threat.
"We can't live with this type of apec-
trt. If we allow this type of veiled threat
to have effect on our decision any action
we lake in tht future on any application
will be subject to Olis type of threat, 1'
Diehl said.
The application initial)) was designed
to Include New York attorney Chester
. Davis, a dirt:ctor or Hughes Tool Co. and
legal counsel tor the nrm, on the board of
directors of lhree operating companies of
the Hughes gambling empire.
Davis al!IO must be approved by the
stste of Nevada as a director of l~ughts
Tool Co., which bold. the gambling
license at lour ol the ln(usltlaU.l's
Nevada hotel cuinos,
..
before Nixon's August economic freeze .
Prices had been held to an annual rate
of 1. 7 percent during the rigid three--
month freeze that preceded the looser
Phase 2 controls.
Price hikes in February included two
tenths of one percent ror housing, four·
tenths each for clothing and medical care
and one-tenth of I percent for recreation .
Transportation costs declined six·
tenths of one percent, the report said.
A steep rise in meat prices, it said , ac·
counted for about 70 perce nt of the rise in
food prices.
Fresh frui ts and vegetables also rose
considerably. Dairy products rose instead
of decliriing as usual in Fellruary, and
cereal and bakery products went up for
the first time in four months, the report
said.
Raw agricultu ral products, such 1s
fruits and vegetables and eggs. are e1-
empl from federal price controls.
Other increases included local transit
fares, property taxes and natural gas
rates, although the increases were
sma ller, it said.
Pancho Gonzalez' Girl
Dies in Coast Hor se Fall.
The young daughter of professional teil.
nis atar Richard "Pancho" Gonzalez died
In Hoa1 Memoi:-ial Hospital Tuesday from
injurie. she sustained when she was
thrown from a horse late Saturday af·
ternoon. .
Mariessa Gonzalez, 10, had been riding
with a friend at the Irvine Equestrian
Center, 7335 E. Coast Highway, Corona
del Mar, when the accident occurred.
Mariessa, who lived with her mother,
Madalyn, and two sisters at 401 Via Lido
Soud, Newport Beach, died from severe
head injuries resulting from the fall,
hospital spokesmen said.
Funeral service! will takt: place Friday
at ooon at Forest Lawn Memorial Park,
Glendale.
Mrs. Marilyn Wolfe, whose daughter
Leslie, 10, had been riding with Mariessa
when she took the fall, said this morning
that circumstance! surrounding the
mishap are still uncle1r.
"Nobody really, honestly knows what
happened," Mrs. Wolfe said. "She may
have been frightened and the hor se,
_which belonged ~o a friend of hers, may
have been spooked ."
Mrs. Wolfe said Marlessa and her
daughter ha ve been taking riding lessons
regularly durlng the week at the Irvine
sta ble!. She said Mariessa had been rid·
ing ror Jes! than a year.
Mariessa was a student at Newport
Mesa Youth Hurt
_l.Q Freak Crash,
Hit bv Mirror
,/
Riding his bicycle around a parked van
that blocked the vision of both parties in·
volved, a Costa Mesa youth suffered
seriow injuries Tuesday night in a Ire ak,
headon co llision.
Richard J. Cassidy, 16, of 227 Mesa
Drive, was struck in the head by the rear
view mirror of a vehicle driven by Robert
S. Bradley, 18, of 282 E. 23rd St., Costa
Mesa.
He was listed In good condition at Costa
Mesa Memorial Hospital today. His scalp
and skull were gashed by the mirror,
The accident occurred on Santa Ana
Avenue at· Santo Tomas Street, just as
motorist Bradley flni!hed s Io w I y
escorting a friend with car trouble home.
police said.
Bradley said be passed his pal's Jeep
at about 10 miles per hour, at which time
Gasstdy came around a ptirked van and
they collided.
Yor ty till in Race
LOS ANGELES (AP)-Mayor S•m
Yorty says he's 1Llll a se:riou• tontender
fOr the Democratic presidential nomlna~
!Ion dupite his plans to llmlt major
cmnpal&Dlnc 1o the Cllllomla primary.
HORSE FALL FATAL
M1riess1 Gon1.1le1, 10
Elementary School. In addition to her
mother and Gonzalez, who lives in
Malibu , she is survived by two sisters.
Dock Work Disturbed
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The Malson
ship lines said lt may ha ve to close its
cargo container facility at Leis Angeles
Harbor today if Teamster Union
meinbers continue to picket there. The
Teamsters picketed the terminal Wednes-
day for the third slraight day in an 'f:
parent dispute with the Longshoremen 1
Union.
Orange Coast
Weathe r
It's going to be sunny again
on Friday, 1ccording to the
weatherlady. J-Jighs along the
coast 62 rising to 75 inland.
t.ow s 45 lo 55,
INSIDE TODAY
Hijncking ho' come a long UXJ!J
since the first airliner was
seized on a aU'l1nU Mau dau in
1961 and commandeered to
Cuba. Set story. Paoe 8.
L.M. l t•t ' •o" I.•'*'"' " 11111111 "
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J DAJL Y PILOT C
Bett.er Get
A Good ·Alarm
A bruen burf)ar 1mashed 1 wlfl.
dow at 1 c..la Mtsa lnduslrlal
plant Thundiy, wandtred with Im·
punity throuih numerous suites and
nnally left• with about 11.000 worth
of office machinery.
Officer · John Stoneback said of·
Oci1ls ·of Solar Laboratories Inc.,
3169 Red Hill Ave., are taking in·
ventory, but lour e 1 e ctr i c
typewriters and adding machines
are known lost.
Solar Laboratories d e s i g n s
burglar alarms, polict noted.
' Placentia Finn
Given Contract
At Mesa SchoQI
The Jack McCain Electric Company of
Placentia has been awarded a contract
· for $28,915 by Newport-Mesa school
trustees for Installation of lighting of the
alhjetic Oeld at TeWlnkle Middle School
Jn Crista Mesa.
McCain Electric was the low bidder on
the 45-day project, which includes $25,522
for instaJlation of lights and poles.
Expenses of '2.200 will go for covers on
the lights and a service platform on a 5().
foot tower In the field.
Other costs of $1,193 will provide
lighting on a blacktop play area and a
seven-day automatic timer.
High bid, submitted by P&G Electric
·eompany, Buena Park, was $39,500.
Costa Mesa bu said it will Provide
$13,500 of the $28,915 cost. because the
fJeld will be used for city summer
baseball programs.
· Bids were opened on the project March
18, 1b1rteen bids were received.
Services Held
For · Lagunan
Edward O'Brien
Ji'unerat services were held today in
Alameda for Edward T. O'Brien, a long·
time Laguna Beach resident · a n d
manager of the Q>sta Mesa office of the
Department of Motor Vehicles whb• died
Sunday following a short illness. He was
61 .
Mr. O'Brien worked for the DMV for 38
'years, the past 20 of them in the Costa
Mesa office. He also was a past president
'of the Califo~ State Employes 'Msocia·
ti on.
'Jtless' C·iteil
Costa Mesa Fire·
Still Flickering
The case or W1nda Klippel's clutter is
a true tale or out of the rrying p&n , into
the fire.
She was in trou ble off and on for rour
years as the Costa Mesa City Council
t..'Ontinually tried to force cleanup of her
property at 2012 Meyer Place.
Jungle-lik e foliage i n t e r t w i n e d
overhead, shading a hoard of boxes,
cartons and scores of appl iances. knick·
kna cks and other items saved over the
years in the cel1ainty they would some-
day be useful .
Attorney Selim S. "Bud" Frankli n Jr.,
who only today was appointed to a
judgeship in Harbor Judicial Di st rict
Court, £inally negotiated a settjement
with the city.
His client was to engineer the cleanup
in 30, 60 and 90 day stages and the city -
in turn -Wouldn't send its employes out
to do a job on ·what Was described a!: a
fire hazard.
Doctor Says Sex
Story Unlikely:
Cleric Had Rash
JACKSONVILLE, Fla . (AP) -A doc·
tor testified today that Chaplain Andrew
F. Jensen was covered with a severe rash
and boils from his belt line down to his
thighs July 8, the date a Navy wife
claims to have had sexual relations with
him in a motel.
"Would Capt. Jensen have been able to
have sexual Intercourse while suffering
this infection?" defense attorney Jack R.
Blackmon asked Dr. Clay Wickham.
"It would have been extremely unlikely
and very painful" Wickham replied.
"Doctor,'' Blackmon continued, "if you
were the patient instead of the doctor,
could you have performed a sex act?"
"For me," Wickham s~id, "it would
have been impossible."
Lora Gudbranson . a 40.year-old supply
officer's wife, has testified that she had
relations with Jensen four times. Another
Navy wife, 24-year-old Mary Ann Curran,
said she had relations at least 17 times
with Jensen after· her hu sband employed
him as a marriage counselor.
Mrs. Gudbranson said July 8 was the
date of one of her alleged meetings with
Jensen.
Well. \Vanda apparently didn't keep up
her end of the barga in.
And on March 12. the city didn't keep
its end of It elther.
The municipal employes w e r e n ' t
janitors. howe ver, but firemen and
policemen responding to the long-feared
holocaust, a $29.000 bonfire.
Roar ing flames virtually des troyed
everything as frantic firemen lore down
a fenCE:, taking 15 minutes to even get on·
to the fortress.Jike property.
Recentl y employed all a I i v e. i n
housekeeper , Mrs. Klippel herself descen·
ded on the sce ne to retr ieve whateve~
treasures she could and finally was
restrained by officers.
She was formally arrested later on a
charge of impeding police and firemen at
the scene of a disaster, when she waded
into the wet. smoking ruins again for a
charred birdcage and toy wagon . _
Considering the circumstances. any
kind-hearted judge would concede it was
for her own protection and dism iss such a
case.
City officials hinted off.the-record that
tragic as it might be, the Klippel case
was apparently closed.
History, however, is repea ting itself.
The blackened hulk of her house, the
charred remains of a treasure trove
twenty years in the gathering, and the
wreckage of two fences stil l lie await ing
the bulldozer's blade.
Her fence is the one firemen tore down.
Neighbor Don Rose'~ fence -which he
philosophically said at least hid the Klip-
pel clutter -burned to the ground.
"My wife used to hold the stepladder
for your photographers," Rose noted,
recalling DA1LY PILOT fora ys to shoot
pictures over the b~rrier to go with
stories of the city's repeated cleanup
campaigns.
"If you take another picture you'll see
what it's like now." Rose moans.
He wants to know who will replace hjs
fen ce. who will clean up the mess, when
it will be done and he isn 't the only
neighbor complaining for city action .
Assistant City Attorney Robe rt
Humphreys today has the case -a
voluminous file -back on his desk, as
City Hall fights Wanda KJippeL
The opJXlsing teams may be the same,
but you might say it's a whole new
ball game.
From Pagel
CANDIDATES .•.
Synibolic Burial
An unidentified youth hurls a dirt clod at an old school bus buried
in Memphis, Tenn ., as a protest against busing. 'l'he symbolic action
was sponsored by Citizens Against Busing .
Woodcock Quits Pay Unit
After Other Labor Chiefs
DETROIT {APJ - A Detroit light of the action by the AFl,..CIO," the
newspaper reported toda y that United News quoted a high UAW official as
Auto Workers President Leonard Wood-saying.
c;ock plans to fOJJow the lead of three The UAW severed its ties with the
AFL-CIO representatives and quit the AFL-CJO in 19&8 in a dispute over policy,
federal Pay Board . · The only ~ther independent un ion
The report in the Detroit News was represented on the Pay Board, the denied by a UAW spokesman, who said
12 Seized
In Laguna
Pot Raids
By BARBARA KREllll CB
Of "" 0111.-I'll•! S11ll
After a hectic evening during which 12
persons were arresltd and his jacket wa1
chewed b:· two large dogs, Laguna Beach
narcotics detective Neil Purcell today
speculated :
"Maybe all the~ stories about how
close we are to legalizing marijuana eir
couraged the folks to celebrate with a
few pot parties . , ."
The W!dnesday evening fora ys started
shortly before ei ght o'c lock when
Sergeant Purcell and officer Robert Ro-
maine accompanied two U.S. marshals to
2115.2 Laguna Canyon Road to serve a
misdemeanor arrest Warrant and en·
countered the first part y.
After some discussion at the door, the
officers entered. Two of the guests
assertedly fied via a window. A search
turned up a quantity of LSD, marijuana
and stiSpected dangerous drugs and the
five remaining guests were held on
charges of possession of marijuana and
being present where the drug was used.
They were Arnold Thomas Canup, 291 of the address; Larry Wi:irren Spousta. 18,
of 24932 Mosquero Lane. Mission Viejo;
Marriann Simmons, 27, of the Canyon ad,
dress: Carolyn Moody Hedges, 32 of 606
Hamilton St., Costa Mesa, and a 17-year·
old boy.
After booking the first group, Purcell
and dtt'e'ctive Gene Brooks accompanied
the marshals to 561 Catalina St. to serve
a traffic warrant on Gary Wayne
Henderson, 26, ol that address.
When the olUcers identifi ed
themselvu, said Purcell, Henderson and
his woman companion fied to the rear of
the house. There the woman, Nancy
Davenport, 24, of 185 Flower St., Costa
Mesa, allegedly was round attempting to
flush about a pound of marijuana down
the toilet.
Both were booked on suspicion of
possession of marijuana for salt.
Margaret Winkenhach
Services Saturday
no decision had been made on the matter, Teamsters Union, is staying on.
but was confirmed this afternoon by The board's 12 remaining members Funeral services are scheduled Satur.
Woodcock. convened today and resumed work on day for Margaret Winkenbach of Costa AFL-CIO President George Meany and 1 d t 1 1 Mesa who died Monday at the age of 91.
Presidents L W. Abel of the United proposa 5 to rop wage con ro 5 rom Mrs. Winkenbach, of 3072 Madison
Steelworkers and Floyd Smith of the small finns and to give some further Ave., has lived in Costa Mesa for two
lnternational Association of Machinists, relief to low.wage earners. years. She is survived by two daughters,
quit the Pay Board Wednesday 'in a move Meanwhile. President Nixo n has decid -Emm~ :ridemann of Costa Mesa and
· Mr. O'Brien, who Jived at 376 Alla Vista
Way. ts IUl'Vived by his wife, Gertrude;
h11 mother, Marie O'Brien of Alameda ; a
sister, Cltberine Balter of Alameda and
two brothers, James of O.kland and
Joseph of Alameda.
Jensen is being courtmartialed on
charges of cCinduct unbecoming an of·
ficer. He has denied having affairs with
either woman .
Wickha'll,. a Navy doctor at Cecil Field
where the Court-martial is in 'progress,
said he examined Jensen in mid-June last
year and found him covered with chigger
bites suffered on a fishing tr~p.
precipitated by the board 's reduction of ect how to fill the gap caused by the Helen Carmosin of New York : six
he would upgrade. the West Coast dock workers settlement. resignation of three AFL-CIO leaders grand chi l d'r en : and 12 great·
William SI. C\alr, incumbent. barber: (See story , Page 4) from the Pa y Board and will annoynce grandchildren . Services will be at 7:30
Interment at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery
In Hayward followed the morning funeral
service at St. Joseh's Church in
Alameda.
Tbe famlly ltJliesls that memorlala be
made In the form of contribuU0111 to the
American canc.r Society.
•
l\fesa Prowl Car
In Traf fie Crash
A Costa Mesa police palrol car and a
fiberglaas·bodled U.S. sports car collided
1t 7 1.m., today. Both drivers escaped in·
jury.
The Vehicles were put out of com·
mission and California Highway Patrol
lnvestlgalors who took the report listed
major damage to each.
The CHP handles accidents such as the
one at Victoria Street and Monrovia
Avenue, In which a local police agency's
persoMel and vehicle may be involved.
Drivers were identllied as Officer
James Watson, whose squad car sus·
tained damage to the front, and George
R. Maynardi 29, of 913 Cedar St., Costa
Mesa.
OlANel COAST CM
DAILY PILOT
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On J1..ily 2, he testified, a severe in-
fection caused by scratching had set in.
The entire area covered by swimming
trunks,1 he added , was covered wi.th boils
and a red rash. As late as July 16, he
said, there were still scabs and some
ra'sh over the area.
Navy wives, fellow clergymen and
friends took the stand tor the defense
Wednesday ind testified that Jensen was
a man of high moral character. The
chaplain and· his wife are expected to
testily Frlday.
"I feel the chaplain's innocent." a sob-
bing Margaret Huntsinger said in
testimony Wednesday.
From Pagel
• CORRIGAN .••
Corrigan says his son has rigidly followed
the rules of safe flying.
The former Santa Ana Resister
sportswriter would always telephone to
report any change in destination of
estimated return if he had filed no flight
plan .
Airport acquaintances said Corrigan
and Powell, a friend since boyhood , didn't
plan to la!'ld at San Diego.
Powell's father Tom, owne1· or a Santa
Ana neon sign company, said the young
men had mentioned wanting to fl y to Las
Vegas sometime.
"They had spoken of it in casual con·
versation , .. just for something to do,"
he said after the fruitless search flight
Thursday.
A check of McCarran Field in Las Vegas
and other airports in Nevada failed to
produce any results, according to CAP
officials.
A team of four CAP aircraft hunted un-
til dark Thursday and 10 more took off
today, supplemented by Marine
helicopers flying low-level missions.
Chances are that Corrigan and Powell
stuck to the coastline but aerial teams
were assigned rugged areas of Riverside,
San Diego and San Bernardino counties.
''They're covering all areas between
here and San Diego and all the coastal
hills and valleys," said CAP Maj . Ernest
Johns:on, mission coordinator.
Young Corrigan recently returned from
a trip to Japan and has been planning a
tour of Europe but hadn't been working
in the meantime.
His lather's own 1938 trip lo Europe
drew a !tern reprimand but official wink
from U.S. authorities who had refused his
formal request for permission to make
the haurdous Aight. He came home A
celebri ty of international proportions who
was entert11ined by royalty, but retired to
near obscurity to raise oranges, lemons
and bis thr•• "'""· lie became a public figure again briefly
In !Ml ·when he show•d up to 1ccept the Or•• County Pross Club·• Htadltotr of
the Year Award In Aviation.
•
Said he is an effective councilman >1Jnd "It would be completely Illogical ror his decis ion -'this afternoon, the · White p.m. Saturday at Bell Broadway Chapel. tha~~e as been responsible for bringing the UAW to remain on the board in the House said. · Priv ate interment will follow.
about changes toward a sound fiscal 1------'--------------------------------------polic . Described himself as an "ornery
son of a gun" who has the drive to get
·things done despite adverse newspaper
publicity against him.
Myra Kirschenbaum, real estate agent:
Mrs. Kirschenbaum stressed th'e need for
open space and downtown 'redeVelo pment
at the expense or property owners. She
said Costa Mesa must also have a voice
in the running of the Orange County
Airport, especially in regard to jet
.airplanes. .
Alvin Pinkley, incu mbent, pharmacist:
Said he Is proud of the accomplishments
of Costa Mesa and that downgrading the
city is no solution to any problem. During
his years in office Costa Mesa has
achieved financial stability and com·
mercial growth, said Pinkley. "We're
moving rapidly and we're not
stagnating."
Robert Wilson, incumbent, mayor:
Wilson also said he was proud or Costa
Mesa's financia l stability, Though he
described himself as a conservative in
financial spending, he said he is not
against taking fede ra l monies. Wilson ap-
plauded the general revenue sharing plan
of the Nixon administration.
James Agrusa, aerospace manager :
His experience in managing an aerospace
program of 150,000 people would serve
him well -0n the council, Agrusa said, A
member of Costa Mesa 's project 80 com·
mittee, he said he Is in favor of more ef.
ficient growth management during the
next decade .
From Pagel
FUNDS ...
type program when four years old .
"Children grow at different rates and
learn at different rates." Riles said. "but
we set up a school system that pretends
everyone does the same thing on the
same day in the same way."
The Early Education Program is sup-
posed to ''create the .environme'11t'' to en4
courage children to learn at their own
rates.
Riles said another way schools and
district boards can add more flexibility to
their programs Is lo "look into having
high school representation on the boards"
because those students "can prCsent a
point of view we ought to kf\ow about."
He said that Molly Magee, a.student at
Los Alamilos High School In Seal Beach
and the student representative to the
state board, has given "valuable input"
lo hi!i deparlrrient.
He ca!Jed on all school botrds to have
their own self--evaluation and plannz-n
units and to tmprove their own eflicien .
"It's easy to potnf: the finger at to t-
one else," he said. add1ng that when
be took olflce ther• was a high number of
districG: that never received textbooks on
time.
"I told the•staff lo go to work on It and
last faU all the texlbook1 ·Jn all dl1trlcls
Wtrt delivered on time for the first time
since 1914/' he sald.
luxurious spring down
and feat her sofas • • •.
.. ,
These handsome sofas were designed
to give you the ultimate inpatlng
comfort with down and feather
back pillows, deep spring down
seat cushions enveloped in down
and feathers and two dac~on·
filled arm pillows .. Choose from
a.wide selection of fine
fabrics and sizes.
Three 1tyle1 to c:hoo1e -from
'
now
399~
96 ''
H.J.GAR~EIT fURNll1JRE
PROFESSIONAL
INTERIOR OESIGNE ~S Open Mon .,
Thur s, & Fri. Evtt.
2216 HAOOR fl¥P.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
646.0271
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